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The Sunday Times-&amp;nlmel, Sunday, Jw1e 5, 1977

Area notices, briefs

Speaker Riffe will
receive OU honor
ATHENS, Ohio - Ohio
House Speaker Vernal G.
Riffe Jr. is one of four people
and the only Ohioan who will
receive honorary degrees

degree. He will be cited lor
his effective leadership in
making " the
General
Assembly a responsive and
accountable body," and lor
··representmg the interests of
Southeastern Ohio with U1e

ROCK SPRINGS - The
V!CA club at Meigs H1gh
School will sponsor a car
wash June 11 at Ellis Soh10
Station, Locust Stree t,
Pomeroy, beginning at 9 a.m.
Charges Will be $2.50 for a
large car inside and out; $2

a volunteer fire department
at 7:30 p.m. June 17 at the
Salem Center Elementary
School.

NELSONVILLE In·
spel110n of l&gt;udora Chapter
72, OES, has been changed to
6 p.m. on June 10 at the
econ~m y car, inside and out ;
Nelsonville Masonic Temple.
$3 trucks inside and out.

taken to Veterans Memorial

available when interviewed.

Hospital

Interviews will be conducted

POMBitOV
The
Pomeroy Emergency Squad
answered a call to the county
jail at 10:15 a.m. Friday for
Michael Althouse, a prisoner,
who was ill He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
for treatment. At 6: 15 p.m.,
the squad went to West Shade
for Peggy Hoffman who was
ill. She was taken to St.
Joseph Hospital In Parkersburg.

agency ollices located in the
Gallia County Courthouse,
CHICAGO (UP I) - A
the Meigs County Co urthouse doctor, advised by his
and the Central Office in insurance company to settle a
Cheshire.
malpractice suit seven years
The Gallia-Meigs Com- ago, Instead sued those who
munity Action Agency is an complained against him and
equal opportunity employer has been awarded 1175,000 by
and hires w1thout regard to a Florida jury.
sex, creeQ , race, co lor,
The American Medical
religion, n'it tional origin. News, in its latest issue for
political alliliatlon, or handicapped.
club secretary.
GALLIPOLIS
The
CHESIIRE - Making
Ga!Upolis Kiwanis Club will
application
lor a marriage
hold a steak cookout on
license
Friday
in Gallia
Wednesday, June 15, lor
Kiwaniannes and children County Probate Court were
beginning at 6:30 p.m. on Terry A. Krebs, 19, Point
Fortification
Hill.
All Pleasant, U. S. Army and
members are urged to ca Din Patncia Jean Schoonover, 17,
reservations to A. R. Durose, Gallipolis, at home.

in the community action

release Monday, reported Dr.
John B. Sullivan, an
orthopedic surgeon, won the
suit lids week against a
former patient, the patient's
attorney and the attorney's
law firm.
Sullivan contended there
were no grounds for patient
James Terry, attorney 011!
Parker and the firm of Fee,
Parker and Uoyd for suing
him in the first place.
Sullivan of Vero Beach,
Fla., was sued in 1971 by
Terry, then 73, who charged
that Sullivan had incorrectly
set his bcoken arm, the
newspaper said. Terry
complained Sullivan had lm·
planted a steel rod one inch
too long and it caused him
pain in his wrist, but the
''~t~~::::::::~~mi'&lt;'«'&lt;i".;:;:::~~:~:=&lt;*"''''';:·:·,.:,:::::;:,:::::::~::::::;&gt;:=::::::::;·&gt;&gt;:~~~,,~,:~:s=:,;f malpractice suit was dropped
the day it was to go to trial.
l. • •
SuiUvan then sued those
who had brought the action

POMEROY
Terry
RIO GRAND E - The
regular meeting ol the RJO Brewer, indicted by the
same vigor and intelligence" Grande Community College grand jury Thul'l!day is from
RACINE - The Racine ER
as he has given to the stale as Board ol Trustees has been Portland and 1s not the Terry
Brewer,
son
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Squad
made three runs
changed
!rom
June
8
to
honorary
degrees
are a whole.
James
Brewer.
Vine
St.,
and one on Friday.
Thursday
Wednesday,
June
15,
7
p.m.,
Genera)
Motors
Vi ce
Middleport.
Thursday
at 4:20 p.m.
in
the
Community
College
President Stephen Fuller,
Gheen,
Racine, was
Rebecca
office,
Allen
Hall
on
the
Rio
George
Washington
MIDDLEPORT
The
taken
to
Holzer
Medical
Grande
cmpus.
Mostly sunny today with
University Pfofessor of
Middleport
Emergency
Center
with
a
laceration
to
Medicine Ariel Hollinshead, temperatures In the mid to
Squad
was
called
to
the
her
left
leg.
At
6:10
p.m.
SALEM
There
will
be
a
and Appala chian author upper 80s. Turning cloudy
tonight . Probability ol special meeting of the Salem village jail at 8:59 where Mattie Circle, Racine, who
Jesse Stuart.
Riffe, who attended Ohio precipitation 20 per cent Township Trustees open to Clyde Brookover, a prisoner, sustained a possible fracUniversity, will be given an today , 50 per cent Monday. the publi c for further was ill. He was taken to tured hip, was taken to
discussion on the formation of Veterans Memorial Hospital Pleasant Valley Hospital. At
honorary doctor of laws Lows tonight in the 50s.
for treatment. Atl0 :17 p.m., 8:40 p.m. Phyllis Ritchie,
the squad went to Route 1 for Racine, was taken to Holzer
Julia Moodispaugh who had Medical Center.
received a possible leg
Friday at 4:45p.m. Myrtle
fracture in a fall. She was Proffitt, Portland, who had
FLEXSTEEL FINE FURNITURE
an Injury to her right hip, was
By Bob Hoeflich
BEGINS ON THE INSIDE TO ASSURE
taken to Veterans Memorial
··
QUAUTY, COMFORT, BEAUTY AND DURABIUTY
Hospital.
The squad during the
1
POMEROY- Isn't it amazing what ;so;;;miiiee=ffibilio;r::
SlAT CI.ISHIOWS WITH SUP'ERIOl
month ol May made 21 runs,
COMrOIIT ME IMll: IJ
drove 832.7 miles, had 122,. detennination can do.
(Continued from page D-1)
~ OUAl IJTD RUt8ll
John Hood knew nothing of building a house but decided to
011 HlAYT DEII511l
It also introduces tough man houl'll and made calls to
POUUIUHAN£ fWII WIAmD
construct
a new home for his family. He's done a great job and
IJI rot.ruru Flllf
wording about individual re- Racine, Letart, Chester, and
the
interior
is completed so the Hood family can reside in the
sponsibili ty, saying that Sutton and Lebanon townattractive
home
while Jobn aod whatever help he can recruit
rights and freedoms cannot ships.
the
exterior.
The only chore John didn't tackle was
complete
be "hannful to the interests
laying
the
block
foundation
.
ATHENS - Forty-two
of society and tbe state."
Sakharov, who won the 1975 Ohio University students
BARBARA PIERCE, THE GREAT indian of the &amp;cine
Nobel Peace Prize for his have been initiated Into Phi
Alumni
Associatioo, reports that four out-of-towners were left
civil rights work, said he felt Beta Kappa, one of the oldest
out
of
the
list attending the alumni reunioo. They are Clifford
the articles about citizens' academic honoraries m the
Beaver,
Grove
City, and Isabelle Wilson , ?a tty Tarr and Ruth
duties will make It easier for United States. Among them
Wingett,
aU
or
Columbus.
As busy as Barbara gets in staging
authorities oo apply the docu- was L. Donald Telle, Jr., ·son
the
alumni
event,
we
know
aU four will surely understand tbe
of Dr. and Mrs. Lewis D. Tell,
ment against dissenters.
oversight.
" The use of rights in 230 Lincoln Hill, Pomeroy.
Membership in the local
practice will be just tbe
MRS. OTTO HARTENBACH was taken oo Veterans
chapter
is restricted to
same . The practice ls
Memorial
Hospital by the emergency squad Thursday night.
expressed in a more definite students in the hberal arts
Her
room
number is 101 for those wishing to send cards of
meet
several
OAK) fUME!
way. Tbe phrase 'you don't who
encouragement.
QUI DRifD MD
observe the constitution' may requirements, including a
SOO.lD AGJ.INST IIIOISTUII£
be used more frequently," he grade point average of at
P'JNI-: Ul'l till HI t; m .lJ l''t1 UNI1'1 •tm
ROBERT WALDNIG ..UP RACINE way, found a one-pint
least 3.8 for seniors and 3.7
said.
glass
milk botUe along the river bank. The bottle is inscribed
Diplomats are studying key for juniors.
"Meigs
Dairy Co" and tlle plione number "635-L," which was a
sections to see if other
while
back
- The Waldnigs would like to have some idea on
GALLIPOLIS
A
changes could be in the
how
old
the
glass milk bottle - and haven't the glass ones
offing. They noted that the roi presentative !rom
faded
from
the
American scene - is.
wording about peasants' Congressman Clarence E.
private garden plots had been Miller's office will conduct an
WITHOUT THE HELP OF GENEVIEVE SWARTZ, Kathy
tightened, but it was not clear open door session from 10
Hood
and Mary O'Brien, Big,Bend Minstrelers, wouldn't have
if government policy would a.in.-12 noon in the courtgotten
the Middleport High School Alumni prowam together
house in Gallipolis on June 7.
be changed.
Saturday night. Genevieve came up with a coujlle of hard to
The document will be
CHESIDRE _ The Gallia . find pieces of music and Kathy and Mary came up with some
submitted for approval to the
Meigs Community Action orange and black garments used w~en Middleport High was
Soviet parliament in October.
Agency will be acceptin~ · g01ng stroog. Apparently, there aren I too many of the former
applications for the summer high school Items around any more judgin_g_ from the responses
program for economically to a wtde search for some of the memorabilia.
disadvantaged
youth
MIKE AND BARB MULLEN returned from F1orida more
(SPEDY ), June 6 through
than
impressed with an entertainer at the lounge of tbe
June 10. The SPEDY
program will employ youths Holiday Inn at Fort Myers. The entertainer so impressing the
between the ages of 14-21 Mullens is Terry Starr. Now - Terj'Y Starr is the stage name of
Terry Stalnaker, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harley Stalnaker who
years of age.
This additional application reside on Route 7. Mike says If you've heard a recording of
period will be for those in- Terry, that the recording doesn't do him justice, Mike also
dividuals who have not commented that Stalnaker who has an easy way with his
previously applied. Ap- audiences roceived a standing ovation one night in the lounge.
plicants must have their The Mullens were so impressed that they attended Terry's
social
security
cards show five out of sill nights. Terry is eJq&gt;ecting to be hack in the
Bend area for a brief visit in September.
during Ohto University's
commencement exercises
June 11
Others who will re.:ci ve

Weather

'·'

8ea

Soviets

an.~~~urseofmaipractice

litigation may finally have
turned
in
favor
of
physicians," the AMN said.
The AMN said Sullivan's
insurance company
Commercial Union -wanted
the doctor to settle out of
court for $7,500 but Sullivan
refused and the company
canceled his policy. Sullivan
then practiced without
insurance for a year until
another company picked him
up with greatly increased
premiums,
the
AMN
reported.

CAROLL K. SNOWDEN

4 dr. Hdtp., Bamboo Cream with matching vinyl top,
with elegant velour 60-40 seat, AM-FM stereo. power
seat. windows, door locks, one owner . Driven only
11,616 mlles

Real nice.

'2197

75 PONTIAC CATALl NA

75 PONTIAC.ASTRO
Hatchback, auto .. power steering , bucket seats,
burgundy , dr iven only 22,013 miles.

•3797

Air cond .. bucket seats, economy 6 cyt. engine 1 vinyl
roof, low miles, exceptiona lly nice, t his will go fast .

'2197
75 CHRYSLER

Newport, 4 dr., air cond., owned by a retired senior
citizen, 77 Buick trade. Driven only 32,55S miles. It is
sure t o pease the most discr iminating buyer .

'2997
74 PLY. VALIANT

4 dr .• economy 6 cyl., auto. trans ., power steenng ,
custom interior. Prem. t ires, low miles. Son ' t pass th is

up.

'2397

'3797
73 BUICK

Electra 4 dr. hdtp., air. power windows, seat, cruise
control. Radial tires, 77 Electra trade. This premium
car has been dnven only 15,003 miles. This Is not a
mlspr1nt

'3797

74 MONTE CARLO
Black, with block vinyl top, black inlerlor. Rallye
wheels. This popular mOdel has been dr iven onlY 36,058

miles. Super sharp.

fA ....

Like a good Highbor,
State Farm is there.
Sl•lt ' '"" IMu&lt; iftt r tomp~no r l
'IOifl! Qii ,.

11

! laom, n910~

lil onM

P 760 I

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

I

I
By United Press loteroatlonal
CIRCLEVILLE , OIDO - THE TED LEWIS MUSEUM, a
trtbute to the show business great who died in 1971, wa.s
dedicated here Sunday in the hometown he never forgot.
Former Columbus Mayor M. E . Sensenbrenner delivered tbe
dedication address and praised the famous musician not only
for his love and friendship for his hometown and its people but
for the fact that be never forgot Circleville in his travels.
Lewis was born here June 6, 1890 as Theodore Leopold
Friedman and was chosen by his parents to run the Friedman
Bazaar clothing store which was located three buildings east of
the museum. However, Lewis was not interested in the retail
business and be left home for a show business career.
By the time he was 20 he was appearing in New York night
clubs, and from then on he became to be known as one of the
nation's greatest showman.

matching vinyl top, AM-FM radio. Only 22,893 miles.

'4997

75 MAVERICK 4 DR

"""

74 MAVERICK

Expect the best.

4 dr ., wh1te w1th matching blue vinyl top. air cond .
Loca l owner, driven only 29,406 miles . Excellent fam Hy
ca r.

insurance~'

'3497
4 Dr . sed., auto . 6 cyl. engine, Marlin blue with

Century Luxus ~ 2 dr. hdtp .• air, AM.tape, chrome
plated wheels, one owner. we $Old It new, 38,256 miles.
New prem tires. Extra nice.

'3797
SUNDAY SHOPPERS

SAVE '7500

ASSEN THE NETHERLANDS - SOUTH Moluccan
gunmen hdldlng more than 50 hnstages surprised Dutch
officials Sunday by releasing two pregnant prisoners
imprisoned for two weeks aboard a hijacked commuter train.
Desp1te the women's release and the fll"st mediation
session with the terrorists Saturday, there was no substanllve
sign of a breakthrough in the crisis, which entered its third
week today . The Moluccans, seeking independence for their
island homeland !rom Indonesia , stili held about 52 h05ta2es on
the train and four teachers at nearby Bovensmilde school,
where they freed !05 child hostages 11 days ago .

ON GRANDFATHER CLOCKS
FURNITURE DEPARTM~NT, 3RD A.OOR
'

Cherry · maple - pine and oak finishes - famous
Howard Miller Clocks · Westminster chimes on every
quarter hour.
Here are clocks of historic authenticity with subtle
nuances of design that will enhance their appeal as
the years go by . They blend readily into any
traditional interior, of course. With the growing
eclecticism in decoration, modernists who combine
yesterday and today in their homes will also find
these clocks yielding just that special fillip they are
seeking .
Like all clocks produced by Howard Miller, these
are highly dependable, trustworthy timepieces.

WASHINGTON - THE SPACE AGENCY is developing a
planetary explortation plan that proposes a 1~84 launch of two
roving Mars vehtcles, a posstble robot landing on Mercury,
and flights oo Venus, Jupiter, Saturn, Halley's Cornel and four
asteroids. The plan also envisions a 1990 launch of automated
ships to land on Mars, collect samples of rocks and soil, and
return them to Earth.
"These are possible candidates for the future - high
priority mtsswn opportunities," said A. Thomas Young, head
of planetary and lunar programs, in an interview following a
series of presentations to a meeting of the American
Geophysical Union last week. He admitted only the Jupiter
probe is currently approved . The others could have budgeting
problems.

SAVE ON LAWN fll8NITURE
WAREHOUSE ON MECHANIC ST.
SALE PRICES NOW

73 BUICK

WASHINGTON (UP!) - Every man, woman and
child in America would have to work nearly three years to
pay olf the nation's rota! net public and private debt.
The Commerce Department said Sunday public and
. private debt mcreased lo $3.4 trillion in 1976 - about
$15,400 for every living American. That was an increase of
about $1,100 for each person from the $3 trillion owed in
1975.
Since per capita income after taxes was only $5,493in
1976, it would take nearly three years of continuous work
just oo get accounts squared.
Of course, the figure isn't as bad as it seems. It
includes every type of credit from retall stores and home
mortgages to business loans and government obligations.
Government debt after deducting investment income
from retirement pension funds, lease:; and other income
rose 11.5 per cent. Private debt climbed 10.5 per cent.
But the rate of increase for public debt slowed from
1975 when the federal government offered income tax
rebates and other fiscal stimulus to spur the nation to
re.:overy from its worst recession in 35 years.

"See me for car
home, life, health
and business

new.

76 BUICK REGAL

· EXTENDEDOUTLOOK
Wednesday through
Thursdu, chance of
showers Wednesday or
Thursday and fair Friday.
Lows in tbe 40s Wednesday
and in the 50s Thunday
and Friday. Highs in the
upper 60s and 70s.

Everybody works three
years to square all debts

74 PONTIAC Fl REBI RD

2 Or hdtp., Firetl"lorn with matching white Landau top
Economy V-6 engine, radial tires. only 7,642 miles .

anything yoo want to say."
Rhodes also conunented oo
a recent report that some
sites in Ohio are being studied
as dumping grounds for
wastes from nuclear power
plants such as the DavisBesse plant near Port
Clinton.
"There will be no dumping
of nuclear wastes where
there is a populated area,"
Rhodes said. "There will oe
no nuclear residue anywhere
without the legislature and
the governor agreeing on it.
We have enough difficulty
bu'1'ln@. rubbish."
Flanking Rhodes at a head
table was Port Clinton Mayor
Willard Bloom and County
Commissioner Helen G.
Rnfker.
Rhodes arrived at the 78year old Ottawa County
courthouse before' most
county officials arrived for

oold the county officials. "We
welcome constructive
criticism. You can say

Esprit, auto, power steering, 350 engine, Rallye
wheels, new Prem tires , only 28,535 miles We sold It

'7197

any closer than this,' 1 Rhodes

24 State Street
Phone 446-4290

...,_

76 OLDS REGENCY

PORT CLINTON, Ohio
(UP!) - Gov. James A.
Rhodes brought his flying
Statehouse
to
this
northwestern Ohio com.
munity today and urged his
cabinet members to "help
these county people out"
because state goverrunent
can't stand by and "let the
counties go broke."
Rhodes, who sea ted his
cabinet members in the jury
box al the Ottawa County
courthouse in Port Clinton,
heard numerous problems
!rom county and city officials
in his first stop of a four-city
flying tour.
Later in Ul'e day Rhodes
was scheduled to fly to
Bucyrus, Kenton, and
Norwalk
for
similar
meetings.
" You gotta help these
people out," Rhodes told his
cabinent members. "These
county officals are up against
the buckboard . We can't
stand on principle and let tbe
counties go broke."
At one point Rhodes dispatched state Transportation
Director David Weir and
"anybody else interested in
highways,
bridges
or
viaducts" down to the county
engineers office to meet on
transportaion problems.
"You're not going to get

·

Of the Bend

Doc Smith says:
Most of the cars listed are local, one owner,
low mileage, above average, new car trades. Expect
to find the cream of the crop. All carry a 100% warranty.

Rhodes' cabinet
told to help out

Man bites dog

Porch, lawn and patio furniture make wonderful Fath•r O.y's
Gifts. Save now on folding chairs, chaise lounges, gliden . roc"ers
by Launllte and Telescope- Lloyd spring boso choirs. Slott In,
make your selections . we'll deliver in time for F1ttter's O.y.

SAVE
ON MEN'S. SHIRTS
.
SPECIAL SALE PRICES
Our entire stock of men's neck size dress shirts, sport 1hirts, leisure
shirts and knit shirts - eJCcetlent liVings during our June Salts

events.

'

'

LONDON - QUEEN EUZABETH OPENS the most
important week of ber Silver Jubilee year tonight by
summoning her people oo celebrate a day of thanksgiving in a
form or communication as old as the nation - a chain of
bonfll'es. The Queen will light a small hill of brushwood near
Windsor Castie and watchers at more than 100 other beaconsmany of them on the same sites that rallied Britons against tbe
Spanish Armada in 1586 - will ignite theU"S in turn.
The flames burning in eight chains radiating from Windsor
and covering oflshore islands will serve as a reminder that
Tuesday has been declared a national Silver Jubilee holiday so
the country can give thanks for the 25 years of her reign. A
torch lighted at Windsor will be flown to Australia to start a
chain of hundreds of bonfires there . When the Dover beacon
bursts into name a rocket will be fired and Frenchmen on the
cliff ~ of Calais will light a bonfire of friendship .
•

work today.
Accompanying the
governor
were
state
Development Director James
Duerk,
Adminstrative
Services Director Richard
D.Jackson, Public Utilities
Commission Chairman
Luther
Heckman,
Transportation
Director
David Weir, Ohio Environmental Protectim Agency
Director ' Ned Williams,
Natural Resources Director
Rnbert Teater, state Tax
Commissioner Edgar
Undley, state Liquor Control
Director Clifford Reich and
state Health Director John
Ackennan.
Rhodes left in the state's
new turbo-prop Fairchild
aircraft at dawn from Don

:~II

Scott Field and arrived at
Port Cllnoon's airport, within
sight of Lake Erie, at 7:50

a.m.
Rhodes earlier this year
or
began
a
series
goverrunent - t&lt;Hhe-people
meetings with city and
co unty officials and had
previ o usly
visited
communities in eastern,

southeastern and central
Ohio.
The
governor
was
scheduled to return to
Columbus late today.
COFCTOMEET
The Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce
will
meet
Tuesday , June 7 at noon at
the Meigs Inn .

TROOP REUNION HELD - A reunion of Senior Girl
Scout Troop 221 of Middleport was held at the home of
Mrs Phyllis Hackett Saturday. Mrs. Hackett and Mrs.
Flo Grueser were leaders of the troop. Following a
luncheon , the women sang old scout songs, reminisced
about activities of their years together, and looked at
pictures and scrapbooks ol scouting programs. Attending
were, 1-r, front, Janice Schmoll, Susie Morris Baker,
Kathy McElhinny Hood, all Middleport ; Diana Davis
Fisher, Oxford; Ro:;e Ma;·ie Hackett Lilly, Dayton, and

•

at

e
VOL. XXVIII

NO ..36

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Mini-nuclear
device sought
WASHINGTON (UP!) -Fwtdsfor a new tactical nuclear
weapon specifically designed to kill people through the release
of neutrons are buried in a huge public works bill now before
Congress, the Washington Post reported today.
The 56-mile-range Lance missile for the first time
Implements the so-called neutron bomb 'theory which
scientists have spent years developing, the newspaper said.
Army generals have sought the mini-nuclear device rather
than nuclear bombs too devastating oo put into practical use.
Its production is authorized m an order signed by former
President Ford .
The Post quoted one Rules Committee today, the
nuclear expert as saying tbe newspaper said. ERDA, as
missile "cuts down on blast successor to the AEC,
and heat and thus total finances and sup ervises
destruction,leaving buildings research and production on
and tanks standing . But the nuclear warheads.
The Post said American
great quantities of neutrons it
generals ·
who
have
releases kill people."
The weapon gives off commanded the North
massive amounts of neutrons Atlantic Treaty Organization
which attack the central theater have argued for years
nervous
system,
and that the 7,ODO nuclear
according to "The Effects of warheads now in Europe are
Nuclear Weapons" published old, pack too large a nuclear
by the now defunct Atnmic yield and would therefore
Energy. Commission, causes never be used in a war.
The commanders believe
"almost immediate intllat the " mim-nukes" such
capacitation.''
Victims are stricken with as the Lance misstle have
convulsions, interm1ttent more value as deterrents to
stupor and a lack of muscle war be.:ause they could well
coordination, and death is he used in battle without
inevitable within a few hours provoking a fullscale nuclear
to a few days, the Post said. war.
Production of a nuclear
The appropriation for. the
warhead
must be personally
warhead is included in the
by
the Prestdent, and
ordered
Energy Research and
the
Post
reported
that the
Development Administration
for
the
Lance
warhead
order
portion of a $10.2 billion
by
President
was
signed
public works bill to be
considered by the House Ford.

Thieves sought
Meigs County Sheriff
James J. Proffitt's department was Investigating today
a breaking and entering that
occurred at the Charles R.
Houdashelt· residence, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy, last Wednesday.
CB rad10s. tools and
equipment valued at more
than $1,000 were stolen from
Houdashelt's barn. There
was no insurance on the
property.
Three accidents were investigated by the sheriff's
department
over
the
weekend. The first was on
Friday at 1:39 a.m. when an
auto driven by Steven Nease,
Mu,ersville, threw a rock into
the windshield of an auto

•

driven by Betty Schmitz,
Pomeroy, as Nease passed.
There were no injuries or
arrest.
Saturday at 7:45 p.m. on
CR 25 an auto driven by
Perry F . Hoffman , Middleport, struck a utility pole.
The vehicle went off the road
and through a garden at the
Howard Frank residence .
Hoffman was cited to Meigs
County Court for reckless
operation.
Sunday at 8:30 p.m.
Thomas E. Allen, Racine,
traveling on TR 100 went into
a ditch which caused him to
lose control of his ca r. The
veh1cle overturned. There
were no injuries or citation.

Volunteer units busy
The
Pomeroy
Fire Sunday the E-R to Route 33
Department and Emergency for Patty Klein, who was
Squad was busy answering taken to Pleasant Valley
several calls over the Hospital, and at 11 :08 p.m.
Sunday, the E-R to Union
weeken~.
At 7:23 p.m. Saturday the Ave . for Mrs . Lester
lire department went to the Walburn, who was taken to
Paul Simpson residence on Holzer Med1cal Center.
Rnse Hill where a clothes
dryer had caught fire ; at 8:50
ACfiON FILED
p.m. the E·R squad went to
Royal Oak Park !rom where
CIT Financial Services,
Kathryn Turner, who had Cincinnati, has filed suit m
suffered a possible arm Me1gs County Common Pleas
fracture, was taken to VMH ; Court for $5,046 .24 from
at 12:22 a.m. Sunday, and Tommy M. Pennington and
again at 12: 11 p.m., the fire Pamela Pennington ,
department to Dark Hollow Rutland. Filing for divorce
where a trash collector box was Jerry Back, Langsville.
was on fire; at 3:23 p.m. from Paula Bad;, olumbus.

BAND BOOSTERS
MEETING TONIGHT
Meigs Band Boosters will
hold a special meeting
tonight at 8 p.m. in the
Band Room. All band
parents are asked to attend
as
there
will
be
reorganization for the
upcoming year.

Mrs. Grueser; and back row, Mrs. Hackett, Sandra
Humphreys Henderson, Olita Lewis Heighton, Margie
Harris Blake, Middleport; Carol Anderson Painter,
Columbus, and Debbie Grueser Gerlach, Middleport.
Unable to attend were Paula Theiss, Roanoke, Va.; Sue
t: ue Spell, in Texas; Connie Cook Pullins, Point Pleasant;
Stephanie Pullen Girton, Westerville; Christine Bailey
Sampson, Louisville, Ky., and Kay Ault Logan,
Middleport.

•

enttne
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

MONDAY, JUNE 6, 1977

Left winning in
Turkish voting

" The needs required for

the hand students are great
and the Boosters furnish
about 80 per cent of• these.
U we ~re to maintain the
band we need your help
now. Try to attend - after
all 1 it is your studeut," a

spokesman said.

Weekend
accidents
•
not senous
No one was injured 10 three
minor traffic accidents
reported over the weekend by
the Gallia-Me1gs Post State
Highway Patrol.
The first occurred at 4 :20
p.m. Saturday on Nibert Rd.
three miles south of SR 554
where cars driven by John L.
Mollohan, 21, Gallipolis, and

seats.
Ecevit said aides projected
his Republican People's
party would capture at least
222 seats, and as many as 235
when all ballots from
Sunday's voting will be
counted. He predicted 173 oo
186 seats for Dem1rei's party .
"The results are already
clear," Ecevit told a festive
early morning gathering ol
suppo rter s outside his
unofficial returns showed Ankara headquarters . "1
Ecev1t had captured 180 seats promised you I would be
m the 450-member National premier by six o'clock or the
Assembly, compa red to 148 stxth day of the sixth month
seats for the r ight-wing but it has happened sooner."
Ecevit said he would form a
Premier Demlrel's Justice
Par(y. Splinter parties government even if he fell a
accounted for an ~dditional 39 few seats short of a majority.

ISTANBUL, Turkey (UP!)
- Former Premier Bulent
Ecevit's party today took a
commandmg lead over
backers of conservative
Suleyman
inc umbent
Demirel in legisla tive
elections and may have won
enough seats to mstall
Turk ey's first left-wing
majority government.
With 81.5 per ce nt of
Sunday 1 S vote counted,

"The people will be tbe
government, " he said.
As expected, the 51-yearold Ecevil did best in the
more liberal" urban areas,
wmning by a two-to-one
margin in Istanbul, Turkey's
largest city .
whose
But
Ecevi t,
followers affectionately call
him Karaoglan after a 12th
Century Turkish version of
Robin Hood, more than held
his own in the traditional
conservative rural areas.
Ecevit's
party
also
outpolled Dcmirel in the
ultra-nghttst cen tral
province of Konya, home of
the whirling dervishes, the
mystic Islam1c se.:t.

Ambassador Young says:

Dr. King claimed· reward

CHICAGO (UP!) - Uruled
Nations Ambassador Andrew
Young says he thought it was
"a blessmg" when Dr . Martin
Gary Mann 1 Columbus, Luther King wa s killed
Sideswiped in a curve. There because the c1vil nghts
.leader done "ail he could"
was minor damage .
The first of two accidents and 1t was time to "claim hiS
Sunday occurred at 4:30p.m. reward."
oo US 33 at the State Park m
When
Kin g
was
Meigs County. A parked assassinated, Young said he
vehicle owned by Steven R. thought "that he was very
Bail, 17, New Haven, W. Va . fortunate - really that 1t was
rolled into an auto owned by a b lessing " Young was
Suzy Samuels, 17, Pomeroy. standing just a few steps
There was t:ninor damage. !rom King , his longtime asThe second accident oc· sociate, when his friend was
curred at 5 p.m. on SR 160, shot In Memphis, Tenn.
" 1 ~now th at so unds
two miles north of Vinton
where cars dnven by Steve strange, but we 've always
Harder, 21, Ewington, and viewed death as a blessmg.
Rebecca Powers. 17, Vinton, That's been the basis or my
life ~ ince childhood," Young
Sideswiped.
said in a Playboy Magazine
interview released Sunday.
"Martin had done all that
he
co uld .
He
was
JACOBS REENLISTS
misunderstood . He was
OKLAHOMA CITY
Master Sergeant Steven L.
Jacobs, son of Mr and Mrs.
Dale M. Jacobs ol 90 S
Second Ave., Middleport, has
Partly cloudy and cooler
reenlisted in the U. S. Air
tonight
and Tuesday UJW
Force at Oklahoma Ci ty Air
toni
ght
to 55 and hi gh
Force Station , Okla. His wife,
Tuesday
to
70. Probability of
Wanda , is the daughter of
precipitatiOn
70 per cent
Mrs. Gamet Roush of 2145
today, 20 per cent tom ght and
East~rn Ave. , Gallipolis.
Tuesday.

Weather

abused by black and white ..
God decided Martin had had
enough. It was time go on
home and claim his reward."

In the interview, Young
refused to apologize for his
open and controversial style
of diplomacy.
"Once the Xerox copier
developed, pnvate diplomacy
died," he said. "There's no

such thing as secrocy. It's
just a question of whether it's
leaked or revealed openly.
"( Former Secretary of
State Henry) 1Qssmger tned
to use the old diplomacy. B4l
11 didn't work for him, either,
so he tried sele.:tive leaking.
Instead of doing that and
talking about 'unnamed
sources' I s1mply say that I'm
speaking on the record."
Young also said :
- He behoves Cubans are
" ln control or An gola" and
"there's got oo be a process
whereby Angola is going to be
un1ted into one Angola or
Cuba will be m exactly the
same positiOn we were in
Vtetnam .~'

- That the Vladivostok
Agreement created arm s

ceilings so h1gh no n•tion
could reac h the limits. ·
" It mer ely sanctified the
arms race,'' he said. 11 lt was
the Ru;;sians and the N1Xon

administration conspinng to

deceiv'e the American people .
The Nixon administration
bent over backward for tbe
Russians and, in a sense, it ·
sold out to the Soviet Umon ."
Young waS asked If he
wished Ugandan President
ld1 Amln would "disappear
from pohtics. ' ' He answered,
" I want him to disappear
from the fa ce of the earth·. Go
on home and claim his
reward."

BOOSTERS TO MEET
The Meigs School District
Athletic Boosters will meet at
7 p.m. Wednesday at the htgh
school. There will be
nomination and election of
officers for the next year
Any resident interested m
any phase 'qf the athletic
program is as'ked to attend.

CLIN IC SET
The next cervical cancer
clime Will be held Wednesday
at Veterans Memoria l
Hospital. The free clinic for
Meigs women ha s some
openings. Women wishing to
make an appointment for the
chm c which w11l be from
12 30 to 3 30 p.m may call
992-7531 or 992-3382.

Cycle thefts can he stopped
Sheriff James J. Proffitt's
Dept., lookm g at th e alar·
mmg number of bicycle
thefts o! the past couple of
weeks, today urged residents
to act at once to curb such
thieves.
Following the suggestions
below will help, it sa id :
Most effect1ve is lockin g up
the bicycle.
Make sure your bicycle has
a factory stamped senai
number. The three places to
look for your senal num·
ber are directly under the
seat, on the bottom of the
pedal-crank housmg , and on

the left side of the back fork yard or driveway.
. Record the name and serial
opposite the chai n.
Every time it is left number o! your bicycle and
unattended even if for ''just a keep 11 m your permanent
records.
minute 1 " lock it.
Check your homeowner 's
Use a hi gh quality lock and
a 3-8" case hardened steel or renter's insurance to see if
cham . !Many cha ins ,have a the policy covers bicycle
plastic covering to keep from theft.
Sher i!! Prolf it\ further
hannmg the b1cycle fi nish.)
Avo1d locks which can easily suggests that the correct way
be cut with wtrc cutte rs, or to .lock a b1cycle IS to place
the chain through both
eas1ly picked, or broken.
Put your bicycle away 111 a whe els, th e frame, and
locked room. ga rage , or around a stationary obje.:t. II
basement when it is not bemg it is impossible to place the
ridden. Keep 1t out of sight chain through both wheels,
and not 10 ~lain view m your make certain that it goes

through
'• one
whe.el
!preferably the rear) and the
frame. Said the sheri!! :
"It is best to lock your
bicycle to something solid
like a tree or fence post, but
be careful that you do not just
lock your front wheel. That
co uld be the only thing left!"
Susp1c1ous acts, like observing someone putting a
bicycle in weeds, then leaving
it, should be reported. It
probably is a stolen bicycle.
C;,ncluded the sheriff :
"Cooperation of area
reSidents IS a must If we are
to do ou' job.''
'

�•

n;;~~;;t; '~Prepare school aid bm juggling act
COLUMBUS (UP!) - State Senate Democrats walkmg a
!1scal t1ghtrope are faced w1th scrappmg several bonus 1ncen
lives as they fold therr proposed state school 11d formula mto
the 1978-79 state budget tins week
!'he (Jemocra ts are preparmg to cut out rewards to school
distncts With above average wee~ly wages low fanuly mcome
lllld more than 35 mills ol real estate taxes despite the fact the

Senate Finance Comm1ttee has found a way to generate
another $43 m1l110n r..- pmnary and secondary education
And they warn that House-passed proposals calling for
subSidies lor g•fted pup•ls and a special comnuss1on to wr1te
muumum statew1de levels of comvetency r..- pnmary and
secondary school pup Is are m ser1ous jeopardy
The level of fund nR 1!! not what we expected sa•d Sen

Nine students charged
ATHENS Ohio )upl) Nme students were expected
1o face var ous ctiarges today
follow1ng a confrontatiOn
early Sunday at the edge of
Oh•o Umvers1ty between
pollee and about I 200
students
who
were
celebratmg for a second mght
the end of sprmg classes
Pollee f1red
wooden
kneeknocker pellets at
some &lt;\00 to 300 youUis who
refused to obey pollee orders
to leave the center of town
and go home
There were no m)urles
reported although beer
bottles were thrown by some
of the bmsterous students and
a wmdow was broken m a
..cond floor apartment over
lookmg the scene
One year ago the same
area was the scene of two
mghts
of
s1m11ar
disturbances which resulted
In 21 mjunes and 20 arrests
On Fr1day n1ght many
students congregated m the
downtown area after the bars
bad closed But no arrests
made although police closed
off some streets
Even more students turned
out Saturday mght and the
taverns were Jammed until
the 2 a m closmg hour when
the mebria\ed youths went
Into the streets They milled
about danced and played
games as hundreds watched
from the sidewalks and
nearby buildings
An hour later some 65
campus pollee ctly off1cers
and Athens and Washmgton
County shenff s deputies
armed with the knee
knocker guns ordered the
m !ling drowd to go home
When few left they
marched down the street 10 a
line facm~ an estunated 300
young men and women and
hred theu" guns at ankle

level
Most of the crowd left 10 the
next 10 nnnutes pollee sa1d
Three students were
arrested before the shootmg
and s1x were arrested tater
Sam Crowl ass1stant
professor of English at OU
who two weeks ago was
elected cha rman of the
Faculty Council was briefly
detamed by pollee who
thought he was mvolved 10
the 10c1dent
He was later released when
11 was learned that he along
wlth other campus officials
were present at the scene
trymg to a1d m dispersing the
crowd
Peg Black an OU spokeswoman sa1d five of those
p1cked up were 1dent1f1ed as
OU students the status of two
others could not be
determined •mmed•ately
and two others were enrolled
at the Hockmg State
Techmcal
College
at
Nelsonville
The youths arrested were

1denllf•ed by pollee only as
Glen Pawlowski oo home
address Bret Seaman 18
Uruvers ty He1ghts Megan
Fmley 18 Glen Head N Y
Jeffrey Hillen Athens John
Oss1pensky Brookly N Y
Jason Cli ldders Bel Aire
Md
Mark
Redman
Amherst and Randall Shoup
Athens
Pollee sa1d Oss1pensky was
to
be charged w1th
aggravated not ng and
Seaman for mc1tmg a r1ot
The other charges were less
seriOUS mcludmg IJl(OXlCa
t10n (allure to d sperse
disorderly conduct and
havmg an open conlamer of
an alcohohc beverage
All were released on therr
own recogmzance several
hours after the1r arrest
OC campus off1c als sa d
the actions of those arrested
would be rev1ewed under the
un1vers ty s code of conduct
Fmal exammations at OU
start Monday for some 14 000
students

Alfred Social Notes

Apple Grove News Notes

HEALTH

Impotence
a real problem

whose substitute bill IS expected to be sent to the full Fmance
Committee by Wednesday
Senate President Pro Tempore Oliver Qcasek D-Akron has
promised to add about $(5 mlllion m a1d ID bsslc education over
the House version of the budget He SBld this would brmg
spending to $250 million over the current amount
Celebrezze envls1oned some bnghl spots
We are gomg ID try ID guarantee thst nobody gets less
money than they got m 1975 he S8ld adding the Democrats
hope to guarantee full funding of the state s equal y1eld
S&lt;:hool a1d formula as rap1dly as possible
Although educallon experts are awaiting the results of
computer testmg of the formula on a statewide basi!! the most
optimistiC estll08tes are that the progrllD w1ll be only 75 per
cent funded by 1979 even With the extra $43 nullion
Celebrezze said spec1al education funding will rernam m the
plan He also said a reward w11l be offered to diStriCts w1th high
public welfare caseloada and that the current 20-null floor for
qualifymg for state a d w1ll be basically the same although
modified to conform w1th last year s new law on property tax
reappraisals
The senator sa1d the DemocratiC leadership will have to
make a deciSIOn on reqwrements for mmunum teache salaries
and class s1zes
The language bill mcludmg the school subs dy formula
prOVISIOns must be dealt w1th by the full Senate probably next
week before bemg forwarded to the House
It Is bemg handled separately from the money bill to prevent
Gov James A Rhodes from makmg line 1tem vetoes wh1ch he
can only do w1th appropnations
The $13 2 billion general appropr ations bill w1ll be heard by
the Fmance Comllllttee Wednesday It has already cleared the
House
Democrallc lawmakers are trymg to get both measures 1D
the governor s off1ce before the end of the month when the
current fiscal b1enn1wn exp1res
A separate $1 1 billion Department of TransportatiOn budget
1!! S&lt;:heduled for a palt of hear10gs m the House Fmance
Co!llflllttee this week It also must rece1ve Senate approval
before go10g to the governor
A $642 million capital unprovements bill already under
attack by the Democrats lS trailmg 10 the legiSlative process
The Senate Commerce and Labor Comnuttee IS to meet at S
p m today to take up a collective bargauung bill lor public
employes which was rewntten m subcomnuttee last week
The Senate reconvenes at 4 p m today and the House at 4
p m Tuesday

By Mrs Herbert Roush
and w111 be movmg there as
Mr and Mrs J1r0 Freeman soon as they remodel the1r
Mrs Terry Roush of
and ch ldren of lrw1n Pa house from the David
Aurora Ill spent a week with
were weekend guests of Mr Gloeckner reSidence
Mr and Mrs Allen Watts of her parents and Mrs Mary
and Mrs Robert Sm1thJ Sr
and Mr and Mrs
erry Austm Texas spent a week Roush Terry Roush arnved
Johnson
Racme
Mrs with Mr and Mrs Earl Sunday and w1ll spend some
Freeman and children Adams Mrs Gayle Wagner tLIIle w1th h1s mother before
remained for a week s v1s1t Barker of Columbus Mrs leav10g for the1r home 10
N na Wagner spent Memonal Aurora Ill Tuesday
w•th relat ves
Mr
and Mrs
Paul
Clarence Lawson son of weekend With the Adams
Rothacker
Woodland
Hills
Mr and Mrs Robert Lawson
M lhe Ripley of Charleston
and Rema Chaplan of Long W Va spent Memorial Cab! Mr and Mrs Sam
Bottom were un ted m weekend w1th Mr and Mrs Marrs of B1dwell v s1ted Mrs
marnage Tuesday evenmg at Herbert Shields and attended Mary Roush Saturday
Arthur Wilson of Marietta
the bnde s home m Long the Alumm Banquet at
v•s•ted
Mrs Erma W1lson
Bottom Attendmg were Mr Southern H1gh
School
Mrs
Kathryn
Hunt Monday
and Mrs Bob Lawson Saturday evnemg
and
decorated
graves of
children Cathy Debb1e Mr
Mrs Edna Roush ac
at
Letart
loved
ones
and Mrs Leonard Stover Mr compamed Mr and Mrs
and Mrs Ed Lawson Rev Walter McDade home to Troy Cemetery
Mr and Mrs Wayne W1lson
and Mrs Don Combs Rev Sunday for a three weeks
and
daughters John West of
Combs
performed the V Slt
ceremony Mr Lawson 1s
Mrs Douglas Johnson Racme Mr and Mrs Lyle
employed by Theodore Mrs Glona Manuel of Rae ne Hysell of Pomeroy Mrs
Pullms Long Bottom
v1s1ted Mr and Mrs Jack Erma W1lson were Sunday
Mr and Mrs Glen Swart of Adams Sunday Mrs Maille guests of Mrs Kathryn Hunt
D1xon Ill spent Memonal Teaford daughter Cheryl and lamtly
George Hunt of Pomeroy
weekend w1th her mother Melame Adams v1s1ted the
Gnmm
Mrs
Harold
Mrs Eula Wolfe and Aaron Adams Monday evening
Other guests were Mrs Nora
Mrs V1rgm1a Douglas Columbus Mrs Dor1s Hens
Lew1s Mrs Becky Stem and Columbus Mrs Paulme ler Racme VlSlted Mrs
two children of Pomt Polland of Milford Center Marg1e Hunt over Memorial
Pleasant Mr and Mrs Mitch spent Thursday and Fr day weekend
Hopkms daughter Heather w•th Mr and Mrs Marshall
Mr and Mrs Kenneth Theiss Adams and Raymond
Lancaster Mr and Mrs Tom
Mr and Mrs Lawrence
Wolfe Mr and Mrs Austm Ables of Canal Winchester
Wolfe Jerry and Amy Mr Mr and Mrs Lawrence
and Mrs V1ctor Wolfe Mr Balser and family of Tuppers
By GLENNE CURRIE
and Mrs Kevm Wolfe of Plams Mr and Mrs Carroll
UPI Lively Artll Editor
Racme Mr and Mrs Carroll Balser of Mansf1eld VISited
NEW YORK (UP!) -The
Norr1s Syracuse
Mr and Mrs Jack Ables musical Annie dominated
Bill Wheeler of Bowhng Mrs AI ce Balser Memorial
the Tony Awards Sunday
Green spent the weekend weekend
rught but the fact 10 other
Paul Ables spent Memor1al
w th h1s parents Mr and
shows shared m the 19
Mrs Alex Wheeler
weekend With Mr and Mrs awards presented live on
Mr and Mrs Paul Bowers Ronme Ables V1ck1 Ables at
ABC-TV was an mdication of
Douglas Barnette of Parkers Canal Wmchester
the high quality of the 1976-77
burg were weekend guests of
Mrs Ora Mae Hunt
Mr and Mrs Bob Spencer daughter Pam Mrs Debbie Broadway season
Anme won awards for
and Tracy
Tygrett of Ripley W Va best mus1cal best actress m
Mr and Mrs Don Bell VISited Mr and Mrs Dorsa
a mus1cal (Dorothy Loudon)
daughter Lorna and Bruce Parsons recently Other best book (Thomas Meehan)
Hart
spent
Memorial guests of the Parsons were best score (Charles Strouse
weekend at Indiana poll~ lnd Mrs Erma Farra Burge and Martin Charnm) best
They attended the In Mrs M1ckey Burge Mrs scemc
des1gn
(David
dianapohs 500 Races Sunday Jess1e Hussell of M1llwood
M1tcbell)
and
best
and watched the parade W Va
choreography (Peter Gen
through the town Saturday
Mrs B1ll Dye children
and saw mov1e stars Gr1zzly B1lly Kevm and Br1an of naro)
And 1t shared the best
Adams Ed Me MalUl Eva! Columbus spent Memor1al costume des1gn award
KmeaVll James Garner weekend w1th Mr and Mrs
(Theom V Aldredge) w•th
returnmg borne Monday
Marshall Roush and children
The Cherry Orchard
Mr and Mrs Don Bell and
Mr and Mrs Bob Casper of (Santo Loquasto)
Lorna v1s1ted Mr and Mrs Columbus were Memorial
The Shadow Box
Toby Myers Mr and Mrs week end guests of her
Michael Cri.stofer s Puhtzer
Calvm Engle at Letart W mother Mrs Dolly Wolfe and Pr1ze wmmng play about
Va Wednesday evemng
fam1ly
dymg got the best play
Memorial weekend guests
Mrs Ava Belles of Wellston award and 1ts director
of Mr and Mrs Larry spent Memonal weekend
Gordon Dav1dson was voted
0 Br1en and family were w1th Mrs Ferne B Hayman
Mrs Lowell Taylor Terry and decorated graves of best director of a play
Julie Harm who was not
Tommy Tracy Newell of loved ones at Letart
Radnor 0 Mr and Mrs Cemetery
Mike 0 Bnen and children of
Mr and Mrs Dan Sh ndler
and daughter of Amherst 0
Gallipohs
COLLEGE STATION Tex
Mr and Mrs Larry Grogle spent Memonal weekend
(UP!)
Defendmg
and fallllly Mr and Mrs w1th Rosalee Story and champiOn A J Foyt driving
Vernon Cady Lon and Jerry Clarence Story at Darwm and
a Gilmore Chevelle cracked
of West Jefferson v•s•ted Mr Mr
and Mrs
Erwm up on the wall m turn No 4 of
and Mrs Marshall Adams Gloeckner
the Texas World Speedway
and Raymond Sunday
Mr and Mrs Lowell and was forced out of the
Mr and Mrs Benny Burton daughter Sherry of Texas iiOO at the m1dway
Boggess have purchased the Columbus were Memonal pomt Sunday He was not
Russell Quillen bouse and weekend guests of Mr and
UlJured
store build10g m Letart Falls Mrs Vernon Donohue

Church Athens on Sunday
May 22 wh1ch she attended)
It was presented to the
church by Rev Thomas at
the May 29 serv•ce
The cookbooks for sale by
the UMW at $2 00 are go ng
fast The treasurer Nma
Robmson 1s n chatge of
sales
Da1ly Vacat•on B1ble
School w1ll be held at the
church here June 20 thru 25
w1th Thelma Henderson as
director
Mr and Mrs Cl!as D
Woode attended the Nor
tbeast Cluster Hymn Smg at
Church
North
Bethel
Saturday evenmg May 26
w1th '!/ fro'P ..vera! cbur
ches attendlhg The nex\ smg
w1ll be held at Tuppers Plams
on Saturday evemng June 25
Mr and Mrs Delbert Yost
and Ella Yost of Sugar Grove
were here to see Genevieve
Guthrie on Saturday and to
VISit the cemetery where the
family members rest and
also all went to West V rglma
Lawrence E Lamb, M D
where the Yost family are
buned and VISited the Denver
Yost fam1ly at the1r home a
few miles from Grantsville
W Va
Clara Follrod and Nma
Robmson attended the
alumm banquet of Coolville
H1gh School held there on
DEAR DR LAMB
My cy More recently Dr Harry Saturday even10g May 28
husband 1s 65 Until SIX mon LeVeen of Brooklyn NY
Chas and Helen Woode
ths ago he could have sex bas used an artenal graft attended Memonal Day
every n1ght He bas pams 10 (mfenor ep1gastnc artery )to Serv•ces at Chester Cemetery
his leg The doctors say he bypass the blockage to the on Monday May 30 and
bas hardenmg of the arteries pems and restore c1rculat10n vis1ted the Orange Church
that could not be operated He clamiS to have had good Cemetery on Sunday evenmg
upon They say he bas ..vera! success With his procedure
and the Alfred or Bentz
When he hrst tr1ed 11 he us Cemetery Monday All three
places that have blockage I
don t understand II but be ed a vein as they use a vern to cemeteries showed excellent
was m the hospital and they bypass blockages m the care and were beautifully
put dye m his artenes They artenes to the heart decorated
sent him home and there was However the vem expanded
Mr and Mrs George
so much and let so much Guthrie vlSlted Cl!as and
nothing they could do
What has aU this got to do blood flow mto the pems all Helen Woode on Sunday
w1th sex' Why can t be do 1t' the time that the mdiv1duals evemng and took them on a
It JUSt won t work He tnes I had a persiStent m8lWilwn drive m their car wh1ch they
told hun maybe he could get erecbon He has not had that had purchased new not too
trouble With the small artery long ago The men both have
some p1Us to get an erect10n
I have heard of men who he uses now
birthdays m May very close
havesexalotlongerthan65
There
two
other together
Don t laugh at me as 1ts not poss1bllil1es Urologists can
Mr and Mrs Vernon
msert two fleXIble round Swartz and family of
funny
DEAR READER - No one silicone rods that prov1de a Hockmgport v•s•ted h1s
Is laugbmg because you are permanent but fleXIble erec- parents Mr and Mrs Vere
descnbm~ one of the specif1c lion This IS called the Small
Swartz on Memor1al Day
causes for Impotence The Carnon pemle prosthesiS
A birthday card shower
dye mjected mto your bus- after the two doctors who was g1ven for Emma Fm
band s artenes enabled the developed 11
dlmg on her birthday May 25
doctors to see the nature of
The other poss1bllity 1!! the
the mam arteries to his legs Cadillac of the pemle 1m
If there were JUSI one area of plants developed by Dr F
In 1974 newspaper herress
blockage they could have put Brantley Scott professor of Patr1c1a Hearst was ind1cted
lit a graft to detour blood urology at Baylor College of for armed robbery m the
around the blockage W1th Medic10e m Houston It bas April 15 robbery of a San
lots of blockage 1t 1!! not poss1 collapsible cylinders that are FranCISCO bank
ble You cant mcrease c1r lrl!!Of(ed m the peniS The
culat1on to the foot by a cyhnders are connected to a ...--------~.,.
bypass n the gro10 if the reservOir of flwd and a tmy
arteries 10 the foot 1tself are pump Llllplanted m the
blocked
scrotum By pressmg on the
The artenes to the pems pump you can pwnp flu1d mto
comthe legs The obstruction the cylinders from the flUid
may mvolve these smaller reservolf and cause an erec
arter1es and prevent an m lion Or you can pump the
crease of blood flow to the flUid out and return to nor
perus to enable an erection It mal
There are many other
18 like blowmg up a balloon If
you don t have any a1r to blow causes of Impotency To g1ve
In 1! won t expand The perus you more mformat10n I am
expands because of an 111- sending you The Health Let
crease of blood flow and if ter number 3-12 Others who
that can t happen there 11008'-{ wllllt th1s Issue can send :;o
be any erection
..,., cents with a long stamped
There bas been a mtnLIIlwn self addressed envelope for
amount of work done usmg ma1Ung Just send your renucro-surgery to open up quest to me m care of th1s
these smaller vessels and newspaper P 0 Box 1551
restore ctrculation and paten Radio city Stat10n New York
•
NYI0019
,.,
1
Sunday School attendance
on May 29 was 39 The of
fermg $20 Russell Archer
assistant Sunday School
Superintendent was m
charge Worship serv1ces
were held at 10 45 w1th the
Rev Thomas speakmg from
Ezekiel 37 OJI the subject
Can These Bones L1ve'
Attendance at this serv1ce
was 32
Alfred church was one of
the churches to rece1ve a
Certlhcate of Award for
havmg met the1r fmanc1al
obligations 1n full (Th1s
award was presented and
rece1ved by Thelma Hen
derson on behalf of the
church at the District Con
ference at Richland Ave

Anthonv J Celebr~ze Jr DCiev~land m charJ!e of rewriting
the formula to be presented to a Senate Education subcom
m ttee later today
The rewards for above average wages low family Income
and school d1str1ct taxing effort were recommended by the
legislatures Education Review Corruruttee,Jast February
They were to be phased m if the state could fmd an extra $300
milhon f..- baSIC education over current spendmg levels
We can t even come close to that lamented Celebrezze

'Annie 'sweeps Tony Awards
present won her fifth best
actress Tony for The Belle
of Amherst while Ai Pacmo
was named best ac!Dr for
Dav1d Rabe s The Bas1c
Trammg of Pavia Hununel
Barry Bostwick was best
actor m a mus1cal f..- The
Robber Bridegroom
While numbers from the
nommated shows prov1ded
the bas1s of the everung s
entertamment the most
toucbmg moment came when
two dozen smilmg members
of the Natwnal Theater for
the Deaf used s1gns and mnne
to express the1r thanks for the
spec1al a ward giVen them
Other spec1al awards went
to Dwna Ross Uly Tomlin
and Barry Mamlow for solo
shows on Broadway and to
Actors Eqmty Theater m
New York the Mark Taper
Form Theater of Los
Angeles and producer Cheryl
Crawford for serVIces to the
theater
And there was all the
entertamment you could
wish Uly Tomlin domg her
wrutress number l~year.(}ld
Andrea McCardle beltmg out
Tomorrow from Anme
and the s1x young g1r Is from

trends. • .of the. • .TIMES
BytheUPI
CHICAGO- AN e1ght hour
rock concert at Cl!lCago s
Soldier F eld the longest In
the c1ty s history y1elded no
arrests and provided a
$150 000 windfall for the city
Park Di.stnct Off1c1als said
s1x persons were treated lor
drug overdoses three for
laceratlong and there were
untold cases of sunburn but
the first superbowl of rock
Saturday otherwise went
without me dent for 80 000
youngsters
Fans pa1d $10 to $11 a ticket
for the e ght hour festival
featunng a marathon of
mus1c by the group Emerson
Lake and Palmer under
surmy skies m 97-degree heat
The Clucago Park D1str1ct s
share was 15 per cent of the
concert s gross the concert s
promoters sa1d
THE ARABS Sunday
marked the loth alUltversary
of the outbreak of the S1x Day
War with a call for renewed
prep a rahons for another
M1ddle East conflict In
Israel the aMlversary q( l))e
Jewish stat~ ~ jlreate•t•
m•htary t(lumpH passe~
qu1etly
The anmversary came at a
particularly tense time In
Arab-Israeh relations due to
the v1ctory last month of the

r1ght wmg L1kud bloc m
Israeh nallonal electiOns The
L1kud led by Menabem
Begm has taken a hardline
pos1t1on on returnmg oc
cup1ed Arab lands On June 6
1967 Israel attacked the
Arabs on three fronts and m
the siX days that followed
captured the Sma1 Penmsula
from Egypt the Golan
He1ghts from Syna and the
West Bank from Jordan
But even as the Arabs
bitterly remembered the1r
losses they recalled With
pr1de their unproved per
formance m the 1973 October
war

control of schools
Barnes

said

KUWAIT A YOUNG man
camed aboard a Middle East
Airlines jet m a wheelchair
Sunday hijacked the plane
from Lebanon to Kuwait and
demanded a $1 5 m1llion
ransom for his 110 hostages
He was overpowered by army
commandos at Kuwa1t air
port and all the passepgers
were freed unharmed
Be1rut autbor1t1es sa1d the
hiJacker - bebeved to be a
'!/ year-&lt;Jid Lebanese named
Nasser Mobanuned Khaled
-boarded the plane In Be1rut
10 a wheelchair They said he
UPPER SANDUSKY Ob1o apparently bad concealed
- The orgamzer of a cam some kind of weapon m the
pa1gn to put a const1tuUonal wheelchair
amendment on the ballot that
would a bollSb state control of
LOS ANGELES - A total
schools sa1d today the present of 121 persons 30 of them
educatlon system bas juveniles were arrested on
resulted m skyrocketlng mostly drug related offenses
taxes and deter10ratmg dunng the weekend rock
education
concert featunng the groups
E DeMlS Barnes Upper Rufus Parhament the
Sandusky a former S&lt;:hool Funadelics and RAllis Royce
board member sa1d Ohioans
Authoribes said about half
are fed up w1th state those arrested were released
mandates and state threats w1th misdemeanor citat1ons
and the accompanY!hg higher but 10 adults were charged
taxes and poorer llducat10n ~ With felon1es About 3:i 000
The logical soluUon IS our persons attended the concert
constltutlonal
amendment at the Cohseum late Saturday
abohshing state control and and early Sunday
esta bhshmg local voter

,

the same show singmg and
dane ng You re Never Fully
Dtes....:l W1thout a Smile
the cast of Happy End
(w1th star Chnstopher Uoyd
on crutches) smgmg the
Brecht We1ll The B lbao
Song
Barry Mamlow s
New York C1ty Rhythm
D1ana Ross s Somebody
and a dozen others
Theme of the 31st annual
Tony Awards- presented by
the American Theater W10g
and orgamzed by The League
of New York Theaters - was
Survival
The b1g WIMer Anme
1tsel! IS a symbol of
SurviVal It was conce1ved
nearly 5\'i years ago when
lync st d1rector Mart1n
Charnm leafed through a
com1c stnp collect10n of
Uttle Orphan Anme
It took four years to reach
the stage at the Goodspeed
Opera House at East
Haddam Conn and even
then few thought 1! bad a
chance for Broadway But
Mike N1chols saw 1t and liked
11 ra sed the money
suggested some cha nges and
on April 21 a hlt was horn at
the Aivm Theater

Campers insist
they won't move
KENT Ohio (UPI) - Stu
dents at Kent State
Uruvets1ty have been urged
by attorney William Kunstler
and soc1al aCilVlSI Dick
Gregroy to cont10ue to camp
out on land where the
un1ver51ty plans to bmld a $6
million gymnaSlwn despite
off•cial threats of arrest
The students have erected
a Tent C•ty on the land
which 1!! near the spot where
four students were shot to
death during an anti war
demoostration on May 4
1970
The students want the s1te
preserved m mem..-y of the
slam students
If we reattacked we '!hall
not be moved
sa1d AI
Canf..-a one of rune students
wounded m the 1970 shootmgs
and a Tent City res1dent
If they take one of us
they II have to take all of us
But I really don t thmk 11 will
come to that They will back
down because of our great
unity and great strength be
SBld durmg a campus rally
Saturday
Tent City res1dents were
urged to stay on campus and
if necessary he down m front
of bulldozers to stop
construction
You Will wm antiwar
activists lawyer Wilham
Kunstler told them durmg the
rally You know they will
not massacre you agam
Kunstler who helped
defend 25 students charged
after the 1970 shootings
vowed to reorganize a
defense team for the
protesters
mcludlng
j,

former U S Attorney Gen
Ramsey Clark
They (the government
and
university
adm10i.stration) would rather
you dynanute that building
Said SOCial aC(lVlS! DICk
Gregory
who
urged
protesters to go on hunger
str1kes
But they can t
handle you s1tting here They
cant control and manipulate
that
Gregory added
The
Wb1te House the State
Department and the CIA are
getting da1ly reports of what
you re domg here
More than 500 people
attended the four.IJour rally
and got an Intense infusiOn of
spirit from Gregory Kunstler
lllld wounded V1etnam War
veteran author Ron Kov•c
Following the rally at
which Kunstler and Gregory
were given standmg ovahons
about 300 people marched
around the KSU campos
KSU plans to go ahead w1th
construction th1s summer
and w1ll arrest the 100
campers if they do not leave
a umverSlty spokesman sa1d
addmg that KSU would lose
1ts appropnatlon for the
gymnasiUm if construction IS
oot started on schedule
The uniVerSity which plans
to save $1 m1lhon by
connectmg the new bu 1lding
to ex1stmg steam and ut1hty
hnes mamtams 11 s not
covermg up the site of the
shootmgs because the nearest
wall of the proposed
gymnas1um 1s 120 feet away
from the shootings site

Weekend doubleheaders swept by Legion

Today's

Sport Parade

By Greg Bailey
Wellston pitchers struck out only one Meigs hatter while
The Me•gs American Legion telllll ra15ed 1ts rec..-d ID 4-2 walkmg SIX
000 000 ()....1) 3 3
over the weeke1 d sweepmg doubleheaders Saturday and w
240 100 x- 7 8 I
Sunday from Wellston and Lowell respectively Saturday over M
Wellston they got fine p tchmg and dumped the Vl!!ltors 9-land
Denny (lp) Milliken (6 ) and Parsons Triplett and
7.()
H81rulton
1n the f~rst game Me1gs spotted Wellston a 1-4 lead 1n the
On Sunday Me1gs travelled to Lowell and scored two come
second but the Me1gs hats came alive to score three runs m
each of the fourth fifth and siXth 10mngs Southern Hillb from behmd v1ctones
In the first game Me1gs went mto the top of the seventh
School s John Sayre p tched a one-llltter g1V1ug up only a
smgle 10 the frrst to lead off man Jeff Mon~omery Sayre mnmg trailing 5-2 Kelly Wmebrenner who bad just entered
the contest an lnnmg before led tbe mnmg of( w1th a single
faMed s•x and walked seven
Bnan Ham1lton led the wmners w1th three s10gles while and before the hosts knew what hit them Me1gs had plated 10
Galba s Terry Wall had a smgle and double R1ck Johnson had runs enroute to a 12-S Will
Here s how the rest of that innmg went Rick Johnson
a double and Mark Mitch Kelly Wmebrener and Homer Smith
smgle Sayre walk Steve Ba~rd smgle Wayland fielder s
each connected for a smgle
Maerker took the loss for Wellston as he teamed with cbo1ce Wall single Hamilton walk (tied the game) Johnson
error Davenport walk Wmebrenner tr1ple (bases loaded)
Stayton to fan three and walk four wh1le g~vlng up nine bits
W
010 000 Il-l 1 I E Johnson sacrifice bunt Sayre error and Baird s1ngle
M
000 333 x-9 9 3
Brent Johnson got cred•t for tbe wm although Ba1rd came
Maerker (lp) Stayton (6) and Parsons Sayre and B on m the seventh Together they fanned e1gbt and walked SIX
Holman was tagged With the loss as be and Sllllthberger
Johnson
The second contest saw Me1gs get another !me pitching teamed to fan three and walk seven
Wmebrenner led the hitting w1th h1s smgle and triple
performance this time from r•ghty Mike Triplett who went the
distance allowmg JUSt three harmless smgles Triplett struck Steve Barrd bad twosmgles and Wall Davenport R Johnson
Sayre and Mike Wayland each had one smgle
out four and walked only two
020 000 1!1-12 9 4
Me1gs got all the runs 11 needed m the first when they M
200021!1-553
plated two Wall socked a double and Brwn Hamilton reached L
B Johnson (WP) Barrd (7) and Hamilton Holman (lp)
on an error After a stolen base Brent Jobuson socked a smgle
that S&lt;:ored both runners The Meigs crew gave Triplett some Smithberger and Famesworth
breathing room when they got four more runs m the second
The second game of the day saw the Me1gs team g1ve up
Wall led the hitters w1th a double and single and M1ck
two
runs m the f1rst but come back for a relahvely easy 15-2
Davenport bad two smgles Gettmg a smgle each were
win
After that shaky first inning wmrung hurler Steve Ba~rd
Hamtlton Brent Johnson M1ke Wayland and Triplett In the
settled
down to blank the hosts the rest of the way as he y1elded
two Wellston games Cl!arlle Haffillton s crew stole 12 bases
just three hits (aMmg f1ve and walkmg three

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sportll Editor
NEW YORK (UP!) -When you ask Donald Grant whether
there lS any chance of recoriCIIiation between hun and Tom
Seaver he putut m theplamest possible words
I bave always loved Tom Seaver he says
In my oglnion be IS the greatest p1tcher of modern times I
have no mahce toward him at all He has expressed hunseH
and if he wants to change his mind 1t sup to him I agree pnde
goeth before a fall but if he thinks I m gomg to beg hun to stay
here with us be s wrong because I won t ever do that
So there 11 stands
Seaver the Mets three-tLIIle Cy Young Award winner has
SBld he wishes to be traded Smce he has the option of okal(lng
or ve!Dmg any deal be may be mvolved m by v1rtue of hl!!
length of sernce he has named four clubs be d agree to go to
- Los Angeles Cincmnat• P1ttsburgh and Phtladelphla
The Mets have talked w1th all of them still are m touch w th
some of them and a deal may yet be made Until now all the
offers have fallen far short of what the Mets feel Seaver IS
worth on the open market
Nobody has offered us anythmg that Seaver wouldn t
consider an lDSult if we accepted 11 says Grant
Seaver doesn t necessarily feel that way about It
If he lS trymg to embarrass me he says about Grant he
IS not succeedmg
Grant makes the point that when Seaver s1gned h1s last
contract with the Mets m March of 1976 he was so ecstatiC w1th
the terms he went out and celebrated Seaver doesn t deny t
But then was then and now 1s now Seaver saw what some of
the other free agents like Regg1e Jackson Gary Matthews and
Don Gullett Signed With other clubs for and changed his nund
about the three year contract he s1gned a year ago Now 11
doesn t look that good to h1m anymore even though 1t
guarantees him $225 000 a year and contalrl!! proVISIOns
whereby be can by his performance earn up to $250 000 a
year
If he feels we were so unfa1r w1th h1r0 why didn t he play
out his option when he Slimed hls last contract and became a
free agent at the end of th1s year• Grant asks He could ve
done that bad he wished but he d1dn t Instead he s ded w1th
Dave Kingman who asked us between $2 4 mill1on and $3
million guaranteed for f1ve years work with a good part of that
up front Seaver thought if Kingman got what he wanted then
be could come m the s1de door and ask us for more too
Seaver bas some arguments on blS s1de as well
It would be unmodest for him to call himself the f'1o I pitcher
m baseball today but he doesn t have to because the record
says 1! for him and so does Grant Seaver has been a good
draw £or the Mets Maybe the fans don t turn out to see hun
p1tcb as much as they d1d to see Sandy Koufax but he certamly
bas pulled m people mto Shea Stadmm He sees other players
gettmg more money than be 1s and he says to hlllSelf why not
me too?
When Joe Torre replaced Joe Fraz1er as the Mets manager
last week there was a feelmg that somehow things m1ght
change
They have to a degree The Mets have won SIX out of seven
lncludmg a sweep of Sunday s doubleheader w1th the Phi!Ues
under therr new manager That s one change and 1t s a good
one
The other change 1!! not so good Torre establiShed a new rule
prohibiting newsmen from entermg the clubhouse 30 mmutes
before each game and National League President Chub
Feeney will fmd a Wire on h1s desk today telling hLIIl how the
wr1ters feel about t
Meanwhile noth10g much has changed between Seaver and
Grant
Seaver feels some constructive purpose could be served 1f
Grant would call hun and Grant feels he s perfectly ready to
talk w1th Seaver 1f Seaver calls hun f1rst
What we re talking about her.e lS a Jlkent phone call For
lack of that Seaver and Grant each so far has av01ded
commumcating h1s deep true feelmg to the other and that
strikes me as the height of pure folly
1n the fmal analysis both men claun they are stnvmg for the
same overall DW'JlOse to helD the Mets wm S(J what does 1t
matter who does the dialmg

Johnny Bench has 5 RBls as
Reds humble Astros, 14 to 4

Me•gs pta ted one run m the second and two m the third to
take the lead for good They added one In the fifth and then II
b1g runs In the last two mrungs to let Baird breete home
Wmebrermer got three hits m that win maklns five
hits 1n a row for the Southern sem..--to-be Br1an Hamilton
almost went the crrcu1t as he connei!U!d for a home run triple
and Single Terry Wall had a tr1ple and s1ngle while Tun
Carmen connected for a double and smgle 10 the SiXteen hit
attack Baird Wayland and Sayre chipped m w1th a smgle
each
Three Lowell pltcbers combmed to ran three and walk four
With Wilson bemg tagged With the I&lt;XI5 Meigs next game 1!!
Wednesday at Syracuse agamst Belpre With the game starting
at 7 p m Meigs bas now stolen '!/ bases m therr first six
games
012 016 5--15 16 2
M
L

200 ()()() 0-- 2 3 6

Ba1rd and B Johnson R Johnson (7) W1lson (lp )
Smithberger (3) Allman (5) and Farneswortb

Pony teams post
wins on Friday
In Pony League com
pet1t1on
th e Pomeroy
Royals scored hve times 10
the fifth lnmng to down
v1s1tmg Eastern 7-4 Tom
Owens was the wmnmg
pitcher as he y1elded s x h1ts
farmed 12 and walked four
Darmy Spencer was tagged
With the loss although he
tossed a fme game g1vmg up
JU St seven h1ts a nd two
walks str1k10g out II
For the winners Steve
Oblmger had a triple and
smgle and Chris Taylor
cracked two doubles and a
smgle to lead the way Chi!
and Dav1d Kennedy each bad
a smgle For Eastern Greg
Wigal had a s10gle and double
while Steve Little bad two
smgles Bnan B1ssell and
Spencer bad a single each
Eastern
010 020 1--4 6 2
P Royals
002 050 x-7 7 2

M ke Nance each had a
s1ngle
Bob Williams took the loss
as he struck out three and
walked four He chipped m
w1th a double wh1le DBIUlY
Edwards had a triple and two
smgles to lead the hltt10g
Troy Brooks and Kim
Dewhurst each had two
smgles wh1le Dave Davis and
Cra1g N1cmsky each got a
s10gle
Meigs Mason County
Pony League
Standings

w L

M•ddleport
Pomeroy Royals
Ractne
Syracuse
Eastern
Mason
Pomeroy As
Rutland

another by Joe Morgan were runs the Reds scored m the
three of 17 bits pounded out f1rst mrung
The VICtim of the uprl!!mg
by the Reds who still trail the
Los Angeles Dodgers by 10 was James Rodney R chard
games m the National League Houston s 6-8 right-hander
Richard a 20-game wmner
West
M..-gan s homer his e1ghth last year doesn t have much
of the season followed first luck agamst the Reds HIS
mnmg smgles by Pete Rose loss Sunday was h1s seventh
In other achon host
and Ken Griffey and m 10 deciSions aga1nst the
accounted for three of five Reds smce be came on the M1ddleport downed V1Sll10g
Mason 4-2 as Billy Elkms
Major League scene
Bench s first homer teamed w1th rei ever Bntt the professional
followed a s1ngle by DaMy Dodson to lumt the VISitors to do t yourself
Dnessen and a double by two hits Together they carpet cleanmg
faMed II and walked 9
George Foster durmg a four
Dodson got a double and system
run fourth mnmg
A walk to Foster 10 the f1fth Dave Hysell two s ogles to
w th two out preceded lead the hitters Getting
s ngles were M1ke M1ller
Bench s second home run
which boosted h1s season RBI Terry Gardner Steve F1fe
m the second run of a two-run roue Jays 7 Alhletlcs 3
By BILL MADDEN
REtJfAL
Roger Carson and Jack
s1xth mrung wh1ch was all the
Otto Vel~ h1t a p81f of total to 37 lops on the club
UPI Sports Writer
Gary Nolan and Pedro Humphrey
There was an uproar m scormg Boston needed Ex homers wb1le Doug Ault and
Bod1e Davis had the only
Beantown when popular Twm B1ll campbell burled John Scott added one each to Borhon did the p1tching for
R1co Petrocelli was g1ven four !Mings of shutout rehef help Blue Jays rook1e ace the Reds Nolan working the two h1ts for Mason a home
hs
uncond1t1onal
re to gam his n10th save while Jerry GafVlll to his seventh f1rst s1x mmngs gamed h1s run and s ngle Don Russell
Velez
also fourth VICtory m as many took the loss as he struck out
lease but Butch Hobson Regg~e Cleveland 4 3 was v1ctory
contributed a smgle and a declSlons while restncting e1ght and walked just three
Petrocelli s he1r ID the third the w1nner
Elsewhere m the American sacrifice fly In a perfect 3-lor the Astros lo one run and six
base JOb has made a gOQd try
It was a night for the home
League
New York outlasted 3 day at the plate wh1ch hits before g1vmg way to
at makmg tllose Boston Red
NSENVAC
teams
as host Syracuse cR eans
Ch1cago
~
Kansas
C1ty
Borbon
helped
deal
V1da
Blue
h1s
Sox diehards forget hun
he way
downed Rutland 1).5 although
W1th the lead we bad
43
In Sunday s 5-1 v1ctory over shaded Balllmore
seventh loss
p ofess ona s do
there wasn t any sense m they were outh1t 10-6 Ronn e at a I ac on
M1rmeS(Jta Hobson smgled Seattle put away Cleveland Mariners 6 Indians I
o f he cost
6-1
Toronto
toppled
Oakland
Rookie Ruppert Jones Nolan p1tchmg any longer He Dav1s got the wm although he
home a pair of runs while the
had
a
shot
mto
the
scar
on
h1s
needed
rehef
from
Chris
7-3
Texas
edged
Milwaukee
belted his lOth homer and
veteran Carl Yastrzemskl
contributed a tw&lt;Hun homer 7-6 and calilorma drubbed added a palt of smgles m r ght shoulder w1thm the last Hupp m the last mnmg
dr1vmg home three Seattle week sa1d Reds Manager Together they faMed 10 and
The two RBI however gave DetrOit 5-l
walked just two Rick M1ller
runs Jones hit a soolo homer SparkY Anderson
Hobson 36 for the season - Yankees 8 White Sox 6
W1lhe
Crawford
s
three..-un
got
two smgles for the win
Homers by Thurman 10 the f1rst and smgled m the
tops on the club
homer
off
Borhon
10
the
ners
and John Dav s cracked
That man HobS(Jn has Munson Carlos May Regg~e fmal two Marmer runs m the
mmng
gave
the
Astros
e1ghth
a homer wh1le Hupp got a
Jackson Gra1g Nettles
seventh John Montague S-3
done one helluva JOb for us
triple Joe Bnb Hemsley and
smd Red Sox Manager Don George Zeber and Bucky spaced mne hits m hurling h•s the1r !mal runs
The Reds after scormg
Z mmer
It may seem Dent provided all the Yankee f rst complete game m the
nme
runs off Richard added
DICk
T1drow
hurled
4
offense
majOrS
unusual for a h1tter batt ng
two
m
the hfth two more m
1-3
mrungs
of
rebel
to
gam
the
Royals
4
Orioles
3
e1ghth m the order to be
the
s1xth
and then wound up
wm
Alan
Banmster
knocked
Ex
Chicago
Cub
Pete
leading the team m RBI But
Amer can League
Ma or League Stand ngs
their
scormg
m the seventh
East
10
two
runs
and
Oscar
LaCock
hit
h1s
first
American
that s the kmd of a team
By Un ted Press nternat onal
W L Pet GB
when
rook1e
Ray Kmght
Nationa League
Gamble
hit
a
solo
homer
for
League
home
run
a
two
we ve got
18 22 560
East
Ba m e
tr
pled
home
Dave
29
23
558
Ch1cago
run
shot
off
JLIIl
Palmer
m
W L Pet GB New Yo k
Hobson s ( rst smgle drove
27 23 SAO
30
B
625
Boston
Concepcion
the fourth mnmg - to pace
Ch cago
2627493 2
29 B 617
2
M lw
P t Sbgh
The game closed out a
the Royals wm behmd Andy
22 25 468 A
29
22
560
3
C
eve
nd
Sf LOU S
2028477
home
stand for the Reds who
Hassler
and
two
rel1evers
262353
4
Deo
Ph a
20 30 400 8
2 28 429 9
To on o
open
a three-game senes
Mon rea
Palmer 7~ also yielded two
west
2 30 412 10
New Yo k
agamst
the Mets 10 New York
W
L
Pet
GB
runs m the first on an RBI
West
M
nn
3
20
608
W l
Pet GB
double by George Brett and a tomgbt
Ch cago
28 2
57
2
LOS Ang
36 6 692
Pat zachry 1s scheduled to
sacrifice fly by AI Cowens
Te~as
24
23
51
5
c nc
25 25 500 0
ca
1
25
24
5
0
S
go
agrunst the Mets Tom
Rangers 7 Brewers 6
SanD ego
25 3
446 3
Oak and
25 26 490 6
Houston
22 30 423 4
Tom Gneve hit a solo Seaver
Kan c y
24 25 490 6
San Fran
22 30 423 4
Sea
1
e
22
34
393
homer
m the second and then
By
FRED
McMANE
At an a
20 34 370 7
game IS over sa1d Torre
Salurday s Results
saturday s Results
capped
a three..-un rally m
UP!
Sports
Writer
referrmg to a pmcb.IJ1t home
Ba mo e 5 Kan C y 4 s
New Yo k 2 Ph ade ph a 0
w1th an RBI smgle
the
hftb
K
C
14
Ba
t
13
2nd
0
nns
Torre
made
1t
s1x
Joe
run by b1s buddy Tim
Mtl 8 St Lou s 7 3 nns
Boston 5 M nneso a 2
Vlctortes n seven outmgs as McCarver which enabled the Gaylord Perry !Hi was the
Ch cago A P t sburgh 3
To on o 4 Oak and 2
Atlanta 7 San F anc sco 1
the new manager of the Mets Plnll•es to tie the score m the wmner for Texas but was
New Yo k 8 Ch cago 6
Houston a C nc nnat 1
M
w
3
Texas
2
0
nns
when his club swept a nmth mnmg
charged w1th all s1x
Los Ange es 9 San D ego 4
De o 9 Ca fo n a 6
Sunday s Resu ts
Milwaukee runs m 5 I 3
doubleheader from the
In other NL games
C eve and 7 Seat e S
New Yo k 3 Ph Ia 2 st
Sunday s. R esults.
Phlladelphla Phill es Sunday Montreal topped St Lows 7 1nnmgs mcludmg homers by
New Yo k 7 Ph a 5 2n&lt;1
New York 8 en cago 6
The sudden surge of the 5 San Franc1sco mpped Sal Banda Cecil Cooper and
Montrea 7 St Lou s 5
If a trash f re gets out of control 1t can burn a ot more
Bos on 5 M nneso a 1
c nc nnat 4 Hous on 4
Mets has been dramatic Atlanta 10 9 Cmcmnatl Charlie Moore
Kansas
c
ty
.4
Ba
t
mo
e
3
than t ash It con start a forest f re If your trash f e gets
san Franc sco o A an a 9
Toron o 7 Oak and 3
under Torre They suddenly routed
Angels 5 Tigers 1
p ttsbu gh s Ch cago 4
14 4
Houston
Sea
t
e
6
C
eve
and
1
out of contra you reI able for the damages You could
Los Ange es .4 San 0 e90 2
are playmg exc•tmg baseball Pittsburgh and Chicago
Frank Tanana became the
Texas 7 M waukee 6
Today s Probable P tchers
end up pay ng them f very payday fo r the rest of your I fe
Ca o n a 5 Oet o t 1
The team 1s takmg 11 upon 5-4 and Los Angeles defeated hrst nme.game w1nner m the
(All T mes EDT)
Today s Probab e P tchers
Los Angeles Hoo on 4 2 a t
themselves
Torre sa1d San D1ego 4-2
maJor leagues w•th the help
AI T mu EDT
Ch cago R Reusche 6 2l 2 30
Ba more
May
65
a Sunday after watching h1s
of
Bobby Bonds tw&lt;Hun
Boston downed Mmnesota
pm
M waukee Rod guez 2 B JO team wm the opener 1).5 m 10
double
10 the s1xth 10mng
Atlan a (LaCo e
S
a
5-1 ToroniD topped oakland
pm
Mont ea (Brown 4 7 35 p m
mnlngs
on
a
wild
p1tch
by
Tanana
fanned four and
New
York
(Hunter
1
3
at
7.J New York beat Ch1cago
C nc nnat
(Zachry 3 6) a
Texas
A
exande
6
2
8
35
Tom
Underwood
m
the
last
walked
two
and nussed a
New York (Seaver S 3
8 OS
8-6 Kansas C1ty edged
pm
pm
mmng
then
take
the
shutout
when
Jason
Boston (T an 2 4 a Kansas
Baltimore 4-3 Seattle beat
Hous on M cL.augh n 1 2 a
C
y
Leona
d
3
5
8
30
p
m
nightcap
~2
on
Dave
King
h1s
e1ghth
Thompson
h
t
Ph ade phi a ( Chr s en son 4 5
Ch cago ( Bret 6 J a M n man s three-run homer m the Cleveland 6-1 Texas topped
7 35 p m
Milwaukee
76
and home run of the season n the
neso a Zahn 6 J 8 30 p m
San Franc sco Kneppe 0 0
C
eve
and
Dobson
0
5
a
mnmg
fourth
Califorma
downed
Detrmt
5- fourth
at P tsburgh Cande ar a 1 l
Oak and (Med ch 52
0 30
Torre was referrmg mostly 1 m Amer1can League
7 35 p m
San D ego (Sh r ey 4 6 a St
F drych
02
a to two mstances 10 the first games
Lous~Oenny70 83Spm
Have we got news
Ro~s
22
10 30 game when players went on
Tuesday s Games
Expos 7 Cardinals 5
Los Ange es a Ch cago
their own and not on
Rook1e
Sam
Me11as
At anta ,a Mont ea n gh
for you and
nstruct10n
from
the snapped a !Hi be w1th his first
c nc nna I a New Yo k n ght
Houston at Ph ede ph a n gh
manager to set up runs In maJor league homer m the
san Fran at P tsburgh n gh
the hfth mmng Bud seventh mnmg to lead the
weather and
San 0 eoo at S Lou s n gh
Harrelson stole third on h1s Expos over the Cardinals
own and scored when catcher Tony Perez Gary Carter and
Major League ResulTs
sports. and
By United Press nternilt ona
Bob Boone s throw went down Andre Dawson also homered
Netlona League
004 001 ooo- 5
the left field !me and m the for the Expos while Tony
t 1st ljlame 10 nn ngs)
-Cable
Phi o
012 00 00 o-- 5 11
lOth inmng pmch-h Iter Jerry Scott connected for St Lou1s
N y
100 0 0 300 - 6
Grote la1d down a perfect
l.erch Garbe
71
Unde
sacnflce bunt w1th two
wood (9) and Boone
Todd
Channel 13
Myr ck
(4)
Sa dw n
(6
str kes after the bunt s1gn bad
Apodeca (8) and S earns WPbeen lifted The bunt led to
Apodeca (1 2 LP-Underwood
('2 1) HRs Ph adelph a Boone
the Mets wmmng run
C'2 McCarver
New Yo k
The Mets are makmg 11
Stearns (7)
000 001 OJG- 4 9 0 look easy for Torre but he
Hous on
C I'IC
500 422 OX
4 17 0
C2nd game)
R cha d La son
4
Pen z admits t hasn t been all that
OPTOMETRIST
0
9
2
Ph Ia
0 0000001
(5l and
Fe guson
No an
OFFICE
HOURS
f 30 to 12 2 TO 5 (CI,.OSE
smooth
N v
oooJoooo• 3 e sorbon 7) and Bench P um
Keat Brusstar 5) Reed 7
It
s
not
easy
espec1a
lly
AT
NOON
ON
THURS
) - EAST COURT
and Boone swan Lockwood rne 6 WP No an (4 0 LP
R
chard
4
5
H
R
sHous
on
when
you
want
to
choke
your
ST POMEROY
(7) and Grote WP- Swan 3 4)
cawtod 2 c nc nnat
LP
Kal!lt 1 3) HR
New
best fr end when the first
__,
Morgan 8 Bench 2
CINCINNATI (UP!) Johnny Bench says h s legs
feel great now
The
Reds
catcher s
remarks weren t surpmmg
even though he had been
bothered per adlcally this
seaS(Jn by sore knees
But a pa1r of home runs and
five RBI more often than not

can cure aches better than
medication
And Sunday Bench h1t hiS
lOth and nth bomers of the
season and drove home five
runs as the Cmcmnati Reds
closed out a four-game ser1es
w1th a 14-4 v1ctory over the
Houston Astros
Bench s two homers and

Hobson makes Bosox
fans forget Rico Petrocelli

0
0
1 0
I 0
1 0
0 1
0 I
0 I
1
1

lilT . . .

tAf,.
~£~OfFER

Mets sweep two
off Philadelphia

Your next trash fire
could cost you $75~000.

N. W. COMPTON. 0.0.

York K ngman 9

i

I

r

�•

•

Major Lugue leadert
By United Press lnternaTtonll
aattlng

(baud on 100 at bah )
Nat ional League

Trillo Ch i

GAB. H. Pet.
47 165 61 .310

Porker Pit

&lt;47 193 70 .363

Scott St .L
Mmphry St .L

4A 116 3' ,336
42 l06 35 .333

Randle- NY

33 115 38 .330

Rose Cln
Slmmns St . L
Smith LA
Ste-neff P it
Lznskl Ph il

so 194

Onhro~ Ch i

45 143 47 . 3~
63 .325

4~

166 54 .325

49 171 55 .322
.47 174 SS .JU
41 158 SO .31lt

Amerlnn U1gue
G A&amp;. H. Pel.
Carew M in
49 200 75 .375
Bailor Tor
38 1-11 49' .3.48
washngln Tx
31 121 42 .3•7
F isk 8os
AB 168 57 .339
Bostock M in
47 179 60 .335
Sodrhlm Chi
41 144 48 .333
Slnoltn Bal
.n 143 1.1 .329
Hisle M in
SO 187 61 .326
Chalk Cll
45 157 51 .325
Poquet KC
36 127 41 .323
Home Runs
N1tlon11 Lugue : Cey , LA 14 ;
Bu rroughs, All and Smith , LA

13 ; Bench l!md Foster, Cln end
Winfield, SO 11 .

Amerinn Le•gue : Zisk, Chi
lS ; Nertles . NY 13 ; Scott . Bos ,
BondS. Cal and HISI!, M inn 12.
Runs Batted In

Na11onal League : Cey. LA 51 ;
Burroughs, Atl and Winfield ,
SO t4 ; Garvey , I.. A and Parker ,
Pitt 41.
American
League :
Hisle,
Minn 47 ; R.udi , Cal 42 : Munson .
NY tO ; Zlsk , Chi and Velez. Tor
39.
Stolen B•ses
N11ianal League : . Taveras,
Plft 22 : Morgan. Cln and
Cedeno, Hou 20 ; Royster , At I,
Cabe-l l. HoiJ and I..OptoS. LA 18.
American Le•guto : Remy , Cal
19 ; Patek , KC 17 ; Norris , Clev
16 ; Bonds, Cal and Rive-rs, NY
IJ .
Pitching

Most Viclories
NltiOMII L. . gue : Rhoden , LA

8-2: Denny, St .L 1·0 ; Can delaria, Pitt 7. 1,· Forsch , St . L 1.
• 2 ; carlton, Phil 7-3 ; Rogers ,
Mtl 7·A; B'urrls, Chi 1 -S.
American League : . Tanana ,
Cal
9.2;
Rvan, Cal
a.s;
Figueroa , NY and Garvin , Tor
7-3; Palmer . Batt 7·5.
E•rned Run Aver1ge
( bued on 54 Innings pitched)
·Nation.! Le~gue: Candelaria.

Pitt 1.71; Rogers, Mil 1.92 ,·
Hough , LA 2. 14; Koosman. NY
2.85.; Sulton , LA 2.92.
American L11gue : F igueroa,
NY 1.80 ; T idrow , . NY .1.92
Tenana . Cal 2.00 ; Blvleven , Tex
'l.l-4; Langford , Oak 2..47 .
StrllleGuts
N1tion11 i..tiDut: Rooers , Mtl
83 ; Niekro, Atl 70; Rlchi!lrd,
Hou end Halicki ,- SF 63 ;
Koosman, NY 61.
AmeriCin Le•gue : .Ryan, Cel
124 ; Tanana. Cal 99 : Palmer,

e

azers c aim
weiSk op f wins Kemper

ra1
Leaders

Middleport Alumni association meets

Kareem Ahdui.Jabbar as the
cornerslooe of any team 1
coached, bees use Bill is so
great at all facet.s of the
game.
In the title winner, he had
20 points, 23 rebounds, 7
assists, 8 blocked shots, but

PORTLAND. Ore. (UPIJ All of Oregon is floating in the
magic or
dreamland ,
especially Jack Ramsay, Bill
Walton and the Portland
Trail Blazers who vanquished
the Philadelphia 76ers, 109107 Sunday, to win the NBA
championship.
And it Isn't over yet. The
mayor proclaimed a parade
today for the championship

was more concerned with

trophy to Portland owner outbreak by the Blazers gave
Larry Weinberg and Ramsay Portland a 67-!i:&gt; halltime
following tlle game.
lead, from which tlle 76ers
Ramsay said his first neve r totally recovered
season in Portland turned out although they got to within
to he "atlnost more than I two points will! 18 seconds
ever dreamed. This is the left .
finest team, the finest
l.Joyd Free put up a shot
players,
the
finest from the corner with five
organization I have ever seconds to play hut Gross
worked for. Yes, it is my blocked it, grabbed the ball
dream come true. I always hut came down with it on the
wanted to coach a world end line. Free fed it lo
champion and that day has McGinnis, who took a jumper
tllat missed, Walton tapping
come."
While Walton won the MVP it lo Davis and it was all over.

making it a team victory.
Five Blazers were in double
figures , headed by Bob
Gross, the second-year
forward out of Long Beach
State and most unheralded
player on the championship
of the title series, Julius
club, with 24.
But also there were Lionel Erving proved to be one of the
Hollins, with 20 point.s, rookie NBA 's more brilliant stars.
Johnny Davis with 13 and He had 40 points in Sunday's
Maurice LUcas with 15. They loss, and even. George
McGinnis came out of his
are Walton's kind of guys.
slump
with 28, but it wasn't
Walton, a vegeterian who
enough.
drinks an occasional beer,
Portland exploded for 40
turned down the champagne
points
in the second period
that was flowing in all
directions when NBA ·after the 76ers used team
Conunissioner Larry O'Brien basketball for a 'J:I.'%/ firstThat
presented the championship period standoff.

Blazers, never a winner in six

previous seasons. Under
Ramsay, a former 76er coach
and native Philadelphian,
and Walton, they turned it all
around in the seventh season
to win basketball's most
coveted prize.
Philadelphia Coach Gene
Shue paid Portland the
ultimate compliment, saying
"I would love to have Bill
Waltoo," who was named the
championship series' most

valuable player.
He's the man of whom
Portland Coach Ramsav
said, "I would take him over

e

Open by two strokes

CHARLOTIE, N.C. (UP!)
- Naturally it was a
disappointment for Bill
Rogers and George Burns,
but veteran Tom Weiskopf
said he needed a victory as
Shue, who congratulated rnuch as his hungrier
Ramsay, then wenl into :m- challengers.
minute seclusion because " I
"This is one of the most
was very disappointed. But important victories of my
defense really did us in. You ca reer." said the sometimes
don't give a team 67 point.s in temperamental Weiskopf
th e first half of a after his two..stroke victory In
championship ga me and .U!e Kemper Open Sunday.
expect to win . ... I'm satisfied
"It was important because
with our success tbis year. I was thinking about getting
My goal was to get to the away from the game, I was
finals and we did. But I sw-e just
frustrated
and
would love to have Bill confused," he said.
Walton ."
Weiskopf, whose last
victory came in the 1975
Canadian Open, started the
final round deadlocked with
Burns and Rogers, at nine
under par.
Alter five holes, he was
three strokes behind Burns,
who jumped to 11-under. But
he moved into a tie with
Rogers and Burns at I!-under
starter Jeff Andrews, who at the tum and took the lead
was the loser.
for good with a birdie on the
Western's Randy Brock hit 10th hole.
11 Experience
the game's only homer, a
turned' it
second inning shot with one around," he said.
man on. Padua threatened in
The field fell ·away from
U!e first, loading the bases him as he played consistent
with one out, but a double golf over the final eight holes
play ended the threat.
with a lone bogey, while
Western Hills ended the Rogers and Burns slipped
year with a 26-10 record, nine under to finish in a tie for
while Padua ended with a 27-2 second.
mark .
"I felt like if I hung in there
In the class A tut, senior and played the game I'm
Mark Niese drove in four C&gt;~pable of playing, there was
runs and oitched 5 2-3 innines no reason why I shouldn't
of one-run baseball to lead win/ ' said Weiskopf, who
Miller City to its 4-2 win over took home $:&gt;0,000 for his third
Versailles.
Kemper title and 12th career

Western Hills and Deer Park
capture Ohio diamond titles
of the first 13 batters , ended
the year at 19-1, pitching in 20
of Deer Park's 29 games. The
Cincinnati team ended the
year at '%1-2.
.
In the AAA clash, Western
Hills scored nine runs in the
first two innings enroute to its
11-4 rout of Parma Padua.
Western Hills ' winning
~pitfher
Brent Nichols fired a
In
the
class
A
two-hitter
and allowed only
championship,
it was
one
run
until
the bottom of the
undefeated Miller City
seventh
when
Padua scored
coming out on top, beating
three
times.
·
Versailles 4-2 for the title.
Western
Hills
sent
12
men
A Cincinnati player, senior
Peer Park pitcher Jim Gross, to the plate in the second
was the star of the tourney. inning and scorlid eight runs,
Gross fired a two-hit most coming off Padua
shutOut Saturday in leading
Deer Park to its win. He
struck out 11 and walked only
one and also pitched the semiflnai game Friday and struck
out 10.
Deer Park jumped on Coldwater starter Chip Otten for
five runs in the first inning,
including a three"'un homer
by Bob Boyce, and added
another run In the fifth .
Gross, who struck out nine
cheer about this past
weekend by winning state
tiUes.
Cincinnati Western Hills
captured U!e state Class AAA
crown, defeating Parma
Padua, 11-4, and Cincinnati
Deer Park won the Class AA
division by heating Coldwater

COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
Cincinnati Reds may be
ha vlng their problems this
year, but two Queen City high
school baseball teams gave
area residents something to

Girl leaders
in fast pitch
are disclosed

The Meigs High Girls
Fastpltch Softball team
completed its first season
with a 12-3 record, capping its
first season by winning its
own tournament. Kim
Grueser
proved to be the
BC~It and
Blyleven , Tex 74 ;
most
effective
pitcher as she
Eckersley. Clev 59.
won all three tournament
games · and finished the
sealon with a 7~2 record, not
counting t.he tournament
wins. Her ERA was 5.04.
. Tracy Burdette was 3-{) on the
RACINE - Soulbern
season, Kellie Burdette was
Rl&amp;b ba~ebaU eoaeb Rllton
2-1, and Beth Bartrum had
Wolle Jr. Ia publicly
the best ERA with 4.67.
llulnklllllhese wbo belped
Based on 40 times at bat
make Ibis put aeaoon so
and-or 10 games, here are the
l!leeellful one: Mr . . 1977 leaders: Mary Boggs
Adamo, Mr. Ord, Carl
fanned only six Urnes, and on
Wolfe, Greg BaDey, Jolin
defense, Glenda Brovill had
DHdlq, Mn. Carl Wolfe,
the most assists with 30. K.
Vtcld RUJ, Delores Wolfe,
Burdette had the most put
Ray Proffitt, BW Cozart
outs with 61.
ud Mr. JeDIIIDp Beegle
On offen!!let Kim Krueser
without tbelr belp aad
led the team with a .500
eoopenllo• !be tum
batting average while Kathy
woald not bave betll a Howard had nine walks. Pam
IUeeeU. .
Vaughan led In seven
Also, we wilb to lbaak categories: 66 at bUts, 33
1be RadDe Rome Nalleul
runs, 31 hits, 9 doubles, 7
llaJit fGr •JIOIIICIIllliP of triples, three home runs and
ladlvldaal tropble1 ud ·41 RB!s. Pat was fast on the
aebeclaltl aad Ro1er bases as she led with 15
Adami aad Deaay EVDI
steals.
lor tbe Leapt treplly.
Sonia Ash led the reserves
with 20 runs scored, only two

Team says
its 'thanks'

victory .
Rogers, whose best finish
this year was a tie for fourth
in the Crosby, said he
couldn't complain about his
secondiJlace tie.
" Needless to say, I'm extremely happy with my play
today," he said after a final
round 72. "I lost the tournament to a true champion.
May he some day the Kemper
will be one I'll win ."
Burns, who lost the World

Open in the final round last
!aU, said he had a chance to
put pressure on Weiskopf but
couldn't make tile birdies.
"When Tom hit a bad shot,

1 tried to place the ball," he
said "On the 13th, I tried to
get ~ cute, Instead of going
for the middle of the gr~."

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Problem?

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Calendar

strike outs . and nine walks.
She also led with 13 defensive
assists. Tonia Ash led the
team with a .600 batting
average, four doubles, and
tied with Beth Bartruin with
four stolen bases.
·
Shari Mitch led in four
departments, and tied in
strike outs with two. Shari led
with 25 at bats, 14 hits, four
doubles, and three triples.
Terri Wilson had 25 put outs,
led with 18 RB!s, and four
home runs.
Bartrum led the Reserve
pitching with a IHl record
with a 3.66 ERA. The team
ended with a S-1 record.

SOVfHBRN TORNADOES' PINAL STATISTICS
1977 S.V.A.C. CHAMPION$

17-3

••

H

BRIG DUNNI!r.

45

MARK l'ORBES

SAC

ttBL':;

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A lot of people believe that higher .electric
bills are caused by higher electric rates.
In part, that's true.
But a big reason many electric bills are up
is because the amount of electricity we use is up.
Today, for instance, an aver~e family
uses about four times more electncity than in
1950. And for a lot more things.
In 1950, most of the electricity used in the
home was for lighting, cooking, refrigeration :
. and washing clothes.
·
Now, less than half a family's electricity is
used for that. Instead, more than 50%is used ·
for air conditioning, color TV, dishwashing,
clothes drying and hundreds of other electrical
conveniences you wouldn't want to be without.
Unfortunately, inflation has drastically
increased the cost of supplying the electricity
needed to meet this steady growth in demand.

.·Ohio Power
•

And with new families continuing to join
the ranks of our customers every day, the
demand is going to keep on growing.
So, keeping the power coming, and fmding
ways to keep its costs down, is getting tougher
every day.
But, while we continue to do everything
we can to hold down our costs as we keep up
with this grmyth, there are some things you can
do to help keep your co~ in line, too.
· .Use the .appliances you have more
efficiently. Make sure your home is properly
insulated And, when it comes time to buy new
liPPliances and systems, look into energy savers
like the heat pwnp.
If everyone makes an effort to do just a
few' of these things, we'll have a..brand nfiW .
source of energy to rely on.
Ourselves.

' }Vorking together is the only way.

and wretta Roller, ll&lt;lpre,
Kellee Jo Burdette,
Rayanne G~azdowsky ,
daughter of Cherole Blake
North
Ridgeville; Kenneth
Burdette and Newman
Murray,
Morgantown. W.
Burdette, Middleport, was
Va.;
Coleen
OhlJnKer, Dunthe recipient of the $400 Susan
can
Falls
;
Stephanie
Girton,
G. Park Memorial ScholarDelaway
,
James
Bowles,
ship awarded Salw'day night
Point Pleasant ; Kathryn
at the annu&amp;J Middleport
Swanson,
Sodde, Tenn .;
Alwnnl Association banquet.
David
Jenkins,
MarietApproximately 230 alwnni
ta;Olivia
Lockett,
Cleveland.
of Middleport Hlgh School
Randall Bowles, Shaker
and their guests allended the
Heights,
Marsha Martinez,
banquet served ill the MidCleveland ; Sandra Schilling,
dleport Elementary School
Reynoldsburg; BiU Russell,
auditoriwn. Mike Gerlach
Parkersburg; Paul Wiley,
was master of ceremonies.
Belpre, Belly Hammer, Col·
Trustees Charles A. Bradumbos ; Lynn Kitchen,
bury, Mildred Bailey, .and
Mason, W. Va.; Milton
Nan Moore reported the
Wayland, Belly Allensworth,
selectjon of Mills Burdette for
Grovewrt;
Carl Painter, Col·
the scholarship award. She
umbos;
Paul
Smith, Manwill attend Ohio State Univer· KELLEE JO BURDETI'E
field.
Paul
Moore,
Columllity where she will pursue a
bus;
Charles
Winebrenner,
degree in nursing. A member
Newbury; and Betty Fields
ol the National Honor Socie- Brown, Albany; Udell Conk- and Vera Covert Brewer.
ty, she graduated this spring right, Springfield; Charles
Following the banquet a
from Meigs High School. She Delay, Colwnbus ; Nonnan
dance
was held in the Meigs
was on the girls' varsity Edwards, Cambridge; Gene
Junior
High School
volleyball, basketball and and Cinda Abbott, Carroll;
auditorium.
Decorating for
softball teams, and in the Harold and Janet Hinkle,
the
banquet
and
dance were
marching and concert bands. Chesapeake; Edward and
Gail
Hovatter,
Mick
Childs,
She is a member of Heath Ruth Tewksbary, Wellston ;
Susan
Morris,
Kathy
Hood
United Methodist Church and Charles Dain, .Scottsboro,
and
Sandy
Henderson.
Serv·
the choir and youth Ala.; Louise Stewart ,
fellowship.
Athens; Kathryn Tuckerman ing on the nominating comDuring the business and Edgar Tuckerman, mittee were Susan Baer,
meeting, Bradbury resigned Athens; Steve Coates, West Margie Blake, and Kay
as a scholarship trustee, and Plains, Mo.; Madeline Derr- Logan.
appointed to fill the position ing, Grove City; Mary
was Mrs. wis McElhinney. Walburg, Powell; Robert and
Several letter from alumni Mary Mitch, Wheeling, w.
were read along with a thank Va .; Mike Hackett, Fort
you note from Pearl Myers, Fla.; Virginia Betz,
~ynoids, unable to attend Hllliard; John and Gloria
BY CLAKICE ALLEN
due to illness; for a potted Case, Colwnbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Allen
plant sent by the Association.
Jeanette Jarvis, Port
Mrs. ~ynolds observed her Washington; Helen Fox, spent Thursday night in
55th anniversary this · year Marysville ; Jennings and Colwnbus with Dr. and Mrs.
and was recognized for her Frances Keefer, Colwnbus; Billy Robert Allen. On Friday
faithfulness through the Ruth Jenkins, Portsmouth ; U!ey went to Allentown, Pa.,
years.
Jane Rice South Webster; where they were houseguests
· Recognized and given cor- Roger Lightfoot., Galloway ; of Mr. and Mrs. Peter E.
sages or boutonnieres were Ron and Susan Cheadle, Col- Simms. On Sunday they all
William Grate of Charleston, wnbus; Judy and John attended the commencement
of
Lehigh
W. Va. and Kathryn Swanson Allensworth, Tiffin; William exercises
University at Bethlehem,
of Sodde, Tenn. celebrating Grate, Charleston, W, Va.;
their 50th anniversary; Willard McMaster, Hudson; Pa., where Billy Robert Allen
Esther Vale, 54th year; Hazel Michael
Garden, received his Doctor of
Thomson, 53rd year; Oneida · Barnesville;
Herschel Philosophy in Chemical
11baY, 53rd year, and Jenn- Knapp, Sabina; Norman Engineering. They returned
mgs and Frances Keffer, Manley, Columbus; Richard home Tuesday evening.
52ndyear.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Knight
Also recognized for being
and daughters, Cincinnati,
the oldest alumni present was
were weekend guests of Mr.
Mrs. ,Vale, while Gene and
and Mrs. Howard Knight.
Janet Harris of Sardinia, Ita·
Mrs. Jean Stratton and Mr.
ly, were given special
and Mrs. Fred Dresch,
Perrysburg,' spent. the
recognition for having travel·
ed the farthest. The 1957
weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur DeTray.
championship baseball team,
six of whom attended the ban·
Mr. and Mrs. Henry
quet, were also recognized.
Frederick, Westerville, were
MONDAY
L. W. McComas had the inweek.end guests of Mr. and
CHESTER
Township Mrs. Oris Frederick.
vocation. The presiding officers were Susan Baker, Trustees Monday, 7:30 p.m,
Recent callers of Mr. and
president; Sandra Hender- at town hall.
Mrs. John Hayes have been
REVIVAL at Coalton Don
son, vice president; Kathy
Roush,
Phoenix,
Freewill
Baptist Church, Arizona, Mrs. Ann Algeo,
Hood, secretary; and Ruby
Vaughan, treasurer. Officers Coalton, Ohio now in progress Athens, Mr, and Mrs. Perry
elected for 1978 were Iva through June 11 with J. W. Orr, Mr. and Mrs. Allen Orr,
Stewart Sisson, president; Elswick, evangelist from Columbus, Mr. and Mrs.
Nancy Morris, vice presi- Athens. Pastor is Marvin David Coil, Gahanna, J. M.
dent; Barbara Fry·, Markin. There will be special Gaul, Sumner, Mr. and Mrs.
secretary; and Ruby singing. Public invited.
Gerald Hayes, Logan, Manda
Vaughan, treasurer.
s
1 Eastman, Mt: Herman, Ruby
Mr. and Mrs. Milton Hood
SOUTHERN High choo Burk and Jane Pullins, Alfred
provided ari arrangement of football players Monday, 7 and Mr. and Mrs. Henry
flowers for the speakers table p.m. at high school.
Frederick, Westerville.
in memory of their son, Sam
· TUESDAY
Saturday evening dinner
Hood. Flowers for the other
ROCK SPRINGS Grange, 8 guests of Mr. and Mrs. Henry
tables were provided by the p.m. Tuesday, practice for in· Thomas were Mrs. Selina
Middleport Garden Club.
spection.
Call and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Mrs. Hazel ThOjllSon .ac- - SUT'!'ON Township DeTray.
Miss Barbara Jo Wilson,
companied the alwruli for Trustees Tuesday at 8 p.m. at
singing of "The Orange and Syracuse Municipal Building. Rochester, N. Y. visited with
Black." The program was
POMEROY Garden Club Mrs. Jessie Weber, Thurspresented by the Big Bend Tuesday, 1 p.m. at the home day .
Minstrel .Association
under
Ro ede1.
Mr. and Mrs. Karl Kloes,
the directiOn of 8 ob Hoefl'1ch, of Mrs. J . 0.
Syracuse, called on Denzel
who opened the show with
Celand Saturday evening.
"Breezln' Along with a
Mr. and Mrs. George E .
. WEDNESDAY
Breeze" backed by a dance
Conroy, Jr., Akron. and Mr.
line. Charlene Hoeflich and
MIDDLEPORT LIONS and Mrs. Jack· Conroy,
susie Soulsby presented a . CLUB, Wednesday noon, ~t Columbus, were weekend
comedy routine with Alice the Meigs Inn.
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Erroll
Nease singing "Some of
POMEROY CHAPTI\:R, Conroy and Mrs. Alice
These Days", and Jajlne Royal Arch Masons, 7:30 Dodson.
Hoeflich, "You Gotta Be a p.m. at the Pomeroy Masonic
Mr. and Mrs. George
Football Hero" joined by a Temple .
Genheimer were in Belpre
dance line.
BOSWORTH COUNCIL 46, Wednesday evening to see
Jim Soulsby sang "The Royal and Select Masters, her brother, Lawrence Rose,
Green, Green Grass of 8:30 p.m. Wednesday at the who is quite ill. ·
Home", Linda Mayer, Pomeroy Masonic Temple .
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Wood,
"Moments to Remember"
Springfield, spent the
WHITE ROSE Lodge, 1:30 weekend with Mrs. Letha
and Kathy McElhinny Hood,
"Second Hand Rose." With p.m. Wednesday at the Wood. Callers were Mrs. Ivan
special lighting Velvet American Legion Hall, Mid· Wood and Mrs. Victor Wood .
Swisher, Cathy Blaettnar and dleport. All members urged
Mr. and Mrs. Spence
Jayne Hoeflich danced to "I to be present.
Tedrick, Old Washington,
Ain't Got Nobody" and
called on Mr. and Mrs. John
THURSDAY
presenting "Cigareets and
Wickham Su)lday.
ROCK . SPRINGS
Whuskey and Wild, Wild
Mrs. Helen Hines and Mrs.
Women" were The Conunit· . GRANGE, annual inspection, Ina Faye Harr, Athens, were
tee composed of Bob Buck, 8p.m. at the hall.
calling on their relatives here
Alice Nease, Debbi Buck, Bob
Ia~ week.
and Charlene Hoeflich, and
Jim and Susie Soulsby.
Miss Hoeflich gave a
recitatlon on memories of
DR . RONALD F. RIVIERE
Middleport High School and
OR . A. J. STAEHLI- DR. 11: . H. CHUNCJthis led into the finale with a
OR. VICTOR V. liANG - DR . 0 . J. STOMBAUGH
niaj 0rette dance and the enOne or two day
tire cast singing "Grand Old
Flag." Joe ·Struble · was
full denture service,
emcee for the show with Mrs.
partial dentures
Oljve Weber at the piano. In
the dancing lines were Velvet
FOR PRICES
Swisher, Jane Sisson, Jayne
OHIO TOLL FREE
DR. RIVIERE
Hoeflich, Paige Smith, Susan
Wright, Becky Fry, Shari
1·800·282-6411
Mitch, Cathy Blaettnar, and
Stephanie Rought. Assisting
bacbtage and with the lights
were Roger and Susie Abbott,
illlck, and Lila Mitch.
AIWIUli from out of the
RIVIERE CENTER 949 E. Livingston·Ave., Columbus
Robert Hennesy, Gallipolis;
Weekdays a : 30 A.M. to 6:30P.M.
Oenida Shay, Akron; Stanley
'Yo ~..t"ll.'im ilt! Tomoruw 1 i •J!.i '!''•~ ,. f ' , , . Of )' rJIJ/ J ,.,.,h I mlv~.'
Bryan, Columbus; Eber
c~=~=~=~=~=~=x~~=~~~Mic.=
Lewis, Mason; Clarence

DENTURES- DENTISTRY

·

r~==~~Y.:»'$:·=·=·=·=:=:=::-:!:=:=:=:=:::~:=;=::===~====-=~~-;:::=::;:;:;:;::::::::·=~:--=;:;:;;;9~

®

I

Helen Help
USo • • By H&lt;kn Bouel

:~~

i

This Is Welgbly Dlscrimlllatloa!
Dear Helen :
I am female, in the Air National Guard, which I enjoy very
much, However, there is a U.S.A.F. weight chart that says a
man, 5 feet 6 inches and 36 years old, can weigh 181 pounds
maximwn. But a woman, 5 feet 6, age 36, can only weigh 145
poWlds tops in the Air Force.
I am under the male weight, but could be pot out of the
A.G. or not quallfy lor U.S.A.F., even though I'm doing a good
job, because I'm overweight, femalewise.
I'll grant that women are "supposed to weigh less than
men," but 36 pounds difference for the same height seems too
much. - HEAVY PROBLEMS
Dear Heavy :
You say, "could be put out of the Air Guard." But you
haven't been threatened with expulsion, have you).lf you're
doing a good job, I doubt that a little extra weight will throw
you.
As for female discrimination, if the chart you read is up to
date, I'd say you have a point. A 36-pound differential for the
same height seems a blt much. - H.

+++

Dear Helen :
I read in your column about doctors expecting to be called
"Dr."I could call some of them a few more names!
On health insurance, we are expected to pay the doctor
when he tresents his bill to us, then collect from the insurance
company.
We who need our money badly watch the mail month alter
month foc our checks, then discover the doctor's office has
never put in a claim. The excuse is 11 too much paper work."
But I'll bet it would be different if it was the doctor walling for
his money! - NO. NO.
Dear N. :
Perhaps you should find a doctor who bills your Insurance
company "with assignment," which means the company sends
U!e money direcily to the doctor. (Or talk to your phyllician and
see If this can be arranged.) - H.

+++

Dear Helen:
These people who tout ''marriage at age-30 when you know
what you're getting Into" : Some people are mature partners at
16, others will never be mature enough, no matter what the
age.
I was married at 16 and we had our first baby a year laler.
'lhree months after her birth, my husband, Tom, and i were
awarded custody of his two younge" sisters (ages 8 and 9) .
When I was 19, and Tom not much older, our second child was
born, aod two years later, a third.
I more or less raised the five .kids myself, as Tom Is a truck
driver on the road a lot. We think having our children young is
a big advantage because we grew with them, relating to them
better.
Oor two court wards are now married, with babies of their
own - and they were teenage brides also.
Of courSe, very young marriages isn't 'for everyone. But
then neither is marriage at any ag~ . It doesn't take
superhuman maturity and sacrifice, but it does take a lot of
love and caring, as well as understanding. - STU.L VERY
HAPPYAFTER12YEARS

Miss Brown honored ·
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Sisson
entertained recently with a
surprise graduation party
honoring their niece, Teresa
Brown, graduate of Meigs
High School.
She was presented gifts. A
cake decorated with a
CHRISTENING
Elizabeth Knox Harris,
. four month old daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Harris, Columbus, was
christened Sunday morning
at the Heath United
Methodist Church. Attending
were Eliza~eth's .sister,
Cammy, two, her grand·
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Harrist

Sardinia,

diploma and hat, was served
with ice cream, punch,
coflee, mints and nuts. Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
William Brown, Kally Brown,
Paula Brown, Mrs. Pauline
Markins, Mrs. Iva Stewart,
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Elliott,
Angela and Amy, Andrew
Hoover, and the Sisson
children, Rob, John and
Melissa.

POLLY"S POINTERS
Polly Cramer

A thoughtfor the aay : Just
before he was hanged by the
British as a Revolutionary
War spy, patriot Nathan H.ale
said, " I only regret that I
have but one life to lose lor
my coountry."

Hope for broken appliances
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I have a
number of small appliances
such as toaster, percolators,
waffle irons, etc. that have
been replaced by new ones as
they did not work. I hate to
throw them away and would
like to give them to some
electrician who would repair
and make.use of them but I do
not know how to locate one.
Others must have the same
problem so what can we do
with them? - THRIFTY.
DEAR THRIFTY - I suggest that you call the Goodwill, Salvation Army, St. Vin·
cent de Paul Society or some
other organization that likes
to have such items for their
workers, perhaps the handicapped, to repair. Then
they are sold or given away,
as the case ntay be, to those
who may really need them. POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - Recently
someone at a hostesslng
group meeting mentioned
that .it is always so hard to
remove the first piece of
anything made in a square or
rectangular pan. They seemed quite happy with my suggestion which was to remove
the second piece first. It really works like a charm and I
hope the other readers like it,
too. -A. P.
DEAR POLLY- I want to
tell Vonnie what I did with a
lot of marbles. ! filled a large
glass kerosene container and
an old two-quart canning jar
with my marbles and made
them into lamps by using
lamp kits such as one can buy
at hardware stores. The
lamps are very heavy so ideal
lor porches, dens, etc. and
quite colorful, too. I also use

is now so expensive I take the
leaves and very lOp. stems
THE TOTAL NEW
and cook them in water until I
feel ~11 the substance and CL~ANING SYSTEM!
flavor are extracted, then
strain the liquid into i~-e cube
trays and freeze. When frozen
the cubes are put in freezer
hags and are ready to use in
soups, stews or anything that
might be improved by the
flavor of celery. -MRS. J . H.
DEAR POLLY -In order to
~-onserve both energy and
water I leave my teakettle
over the pilot light on the
stove so there is always
warm water to start
something cooking, to wash
my face or hands, etc. When

o.nly a small amount of warm
water is needed it is all ready
and I do not have to keep running water from the tap until
it is warm. -MRS. C. R. C.
DEAR POLLY- I use those
sure grip plastic barrettes
that little girls wear in their
hair to secure plastic bags of
macaroni, popcorn, etc. after .
they are opened. They are
great and save time and the
frayed
nerves that
sometimes come from using
the traditional twist ties.
These barrettes can be open-

1266

• Edge Kleene( ge ts that last
tough inch along the
baseboard
• Motor-d nven beater bar brush
deep-cleans carpeting , even

shags
• Aoto-Matic• head adJuSts
automatiCally t o any carpe t
height from low nap to high

ed with one hand and are
more secure as well as wearshags
'
ing much longer than ties. • Deluxe con trol panel with bag
MARGE.
guard gauge tell s when bag
DEAR POLLY- I find the
needs c hang ing
large plastic trash bags make • Complete se t of attachments .
fine garment covers to go
over men's suits, overcoats
and ladies' clothes, too. BETIY.
Polly will send you one of
her signed thank-you
newspaper coupon clippers if
106 N. 2nd Ave .
··
she uses your favorite
Middleport, o.
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
her column. Write POLLY'S Be sure to shop our
marbles as a "cover~up" POINTERS in care of this new jewelry dept.
around spiked flower holders newspaper.
when making low based ar.,
rangements .. - ELSIE.
We
are
pleased
to
have
DEAR POLLY - As celery

INGELS
FURNITURE

·.

.

MASONS TO MEET
Pomeroy Chapter, Royal
Arch Masons, will have a
stated convocation at 7;30
Wednesday night i;t the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
John T. Jarvis of McArthur,
district deputy grand high
priest, will he at the meeting
to present toW. Lester Hart a
50 year pin and certificate.
Officers will be elected and
installed that evening also.
Following · the meeting,
BOsworth Council 46 will
meet to elect and install new
officers.

Dumne jewell join our staff
at janet's Hair Go Round,
Third Street, Mason, W. Va.
We •re oft,rlng a 10 Pct . Ol~count every Wednesday
for Senior Citizens on all services. Sped a Is for the

week of June 6th . lith . are :
SENOR PERMS, Reg. $25
UNI PERM, Reg. S20

NOW $23 .50
NOW SIB. 50

Call Rita, Dianne or Janet
For Appointment 773-5404

'·

Italy ;

Nancy Harris, Columbus, and
Mr. and Mrs. John Blake and
children, Middleport.
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Myers,
Leonard and Bruce Alan, are
vacationing at Lake Erie.
Miss Billie Long spent
Thursdsy night with Mr. and
Mrs. Hobart Newell. Miss
Misty Newell visited on
Wednesday evening.

PREVENTION
IS THE

BEST POUCY
As

an

independent

insurance

agency , our
primary function is to
provide pol ities which
afford financial protection
In case of loss .
But, we also have a vital
int@rest i n loss prevention ,
as should our clients. We
encourage care, caution
and safety ... preventive
measures which can keep
that car accident from
happening , · that building

fire from

starting,

that

home burglary from being
committed .
Prevent io n saves lif@,
limb and proPerty ... and
helps control insurance
costs and premiums .
When losses do occur.
ourpolicyholder,scan count
on protecting and serving
in time of need . But we still
say ...__ prevention is the

besl policy .

DALE C. WARNER
992-2143
J02W. Main

Pomer,y

We have a full line
of equipment for whatever
· line you~e in.
What's you r line )
Real estate) Ladies' wear? Building supplies)
Whatever it is, General Telephone has the equipment you need.
Our pushbutton phone systems can give you up
to 20 lines and 36 stations.
Our solid-state switchboards can handle as many
lines and stations as you need. While our high speed
dat a terminals process your writt en informati on as

fast as 7600 words a m&gt;nulc.
And our automatic dialers, paging sys tems and interco ms can help you el1minate the last vcsligcs vf
inefficiency.
.
Call our business office ;mcf ask lor a Com mun ications Consultant. H e' llnot onl y tell you a lot more
about our equipment . but show you ho\..: it c;m ma kc
your business a better business.
Th~t 's his line.

liji*
6EnERALTELEPHDnE
The complete communications company

1

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CHARGES
ISWurU.''' L11~1tor
('¥.~~h

llill~

Jl.la)N

'Wt.\ .!i

I,Stl

l.ts
101

I"

:!;!a
.I. iS

.1.00

fo;al'll Wllnl U\'..-r

tilol'

Want...! lo Buy
PIANO lESSONS . d'uldrens ond

oduhs. Mrs. Hor.,.ev
Vronken. 992 ·2210

Von

Wtlf do odd JOb~ roofing , pam·
t.ng. gutter v.oor~ Phone 992·
7409
.

111111\lll:Ufll ~~

lll 1&gt;rtbi IS • l't'III:S l)t'l "' VIII j)!' l dil) ,
Adz. rwunul( ~ll w·r UwnuMIM.'\UI IH'

w. ill bf

WI~ s

l

llllrttt'tl 111 tlw.· I

tiM)

fllh'

In

If YOU ho'le 0 sery[ce to offer .
want to buy or nil something,
ae lookll'lg for work . . . or
whoteYer .. , you'll ~~ r•sults
foster wtth o Sentil'lef Wonl Ad .
Call992·2156
TWO FAMILY yard 10le June 8,
9 JO till 3 9 f1sher St. Pomeroy
Baby 1temt lhrougl1 adult

Coird uC 'flwmU ~uwJ
Ol&gt;iHJ.lU'Y 6 ~~nb ~r wvrtJ. J;l 00
IIM;"IUllll"\ ,

IIIUIUIIUIII . Ci&amp;J!h lll iKl\ lilll't' ,

M1obtW H un~~ It-t; 1111d 'rani ~k'»
lltt' ~~l't'jl'l\.'&lt;1 ulll}' With n t!!Oh wtlh
LH"Jto t . 2$ l' l'lll dli:lrt(t' f iN" il.lb l' UIT)' ·
111.: &amp;x Nwntwr In C~m· u( TI.c S\•rt-

1111111

Tlw

Pul.lhil~t:r

FOUR FAMILY carport tole . June
6. 7 8 lO a.m . to 5 p.rn Turn
_rl gh~
68~. follow sl~~· _
YARD SALE. 829 S 3rd AYe. Mid ·
dleport . Monday , June b
through Friday, June 10.

f t&gt;lit!l,'t'll tht• rl,l.ll n

illll'

to t'Wt u1 r t! jt'l'l
MILl lll't'llll...t tN&gt;,It.'t'IIUI I.HI Tfw Pull ISht'l' 111'111 not l,lo.•
l't'!Jf)VJI:Jtbl;: (Ill Ill• lit' thllll '"lt' 1111'111 •

'!!

l t'\1 UISt!tiklll

Phont• 99-l-i l$1;,

--

~-

----

-

YARD SAlE June 6·1·8, 9 am to
S p.m 565 North Front Street ,
Middleport Pkone 992 -7754 .

NOTICE

Large garage sale 204 Lcnley
Street, Pomeroy. acrou from
old Sugar Run School. June 7th ,
8th of'ld9th , 9o.m. til?.

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

Basement sole, Cook s Gop H1ll
Rt. 12-4, I mtle eo1! of Rulland ,
all week .

MlllKI11)'

Noon on Satutd.il)

T"'""''

tlu u FnllYy
4PM
t ht! da)' Ut!fort' pulllil'llllun

RISING STAR Kenn•l 8oard1ng .
lndoor·Outdoor runs , groom ing
oil breads , clean l0n1rary
focl lltiea oe 367·7112. Chesh.re .
Phone(b14) 367·0292

SwJtlfl}
4P M

Ft1t!ay Kflernovn

~OF

HOLLOW Buy. sell. trade
or tro•n nones RUTH REEVES ,
trainer Phonw (61.4) 698-3290

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

AKC SHETLAND tt'leep dogt ,
(M1n ) Colhea , 2 femalet , 7
w..kl old. Shot&amp; and wormed .
Phone (6U ) 367-0292 or
367-7112.

CIU No . 22114
Estlte of EDITH CALVERT
1k• EDYTHE D. CALVERT

Oectllld .
Nollce rs hertby Ol¥en that
Relph C Calvert of Poml!roy ,
Ohio, hn b'een dutv appointed
Admln(strator of the Estate
of Edith Calvert aka Edythe
0 Calvert, decnsed , late of
Me igs County, Ohio
creditors are reQuired to
file their claims with Slid
f iduciary
within
three
months
Dated this lsi day of June
1977 .

MEIGS (:OUNTY Humane Society
Animol Coreline 992-7680 or
after6p.m. , 992-$.427.
GIVE-A-WAY yeor old three·
quarter Call•• pup, male . Home
1n countrv Also, f•male mixed
t&gt;mall dog . Phone 992-3988 .

FREE KITTENS. Phone Don Nelson ,
992-7313.

Manning D Webster
iudoe
Common Pll!as Court,
Probate 01vlslon ,
Meigs county , Ohio

1975 MOTORHOME. 20ft . Phone

m .n56

(6) 6, 13, 20, 21C

20' TRAVEL TRAILER, sloeps 1&gt;, 2
oxlet , setf·COf'ltalned, 8 )( 12
awn1ng , ready to go $2600
Phone 992-7375.

NOTICE OF

PUBLIC SALE

The following described
Item will be offered tor public
sale to the highest bidder on
the premlst!S of The City Loan
and Savings Compan~ . 125
East Main Street, Pomerov .
Ohio. on the 15th day of June,
1977 , at 10 :00 o'clock AM
1972 Chevrolet pick up ser .
No ccs 1425199470
Terms of Sale · Cnh
Seller reserves ttle right to
bid and to reject any and all
bidS .

1.4' X 70' thrH bedroom Hollypark
trallor , 1v, acres 3 m1les from
mine number one on SR 3:25.
Slorage building, aluminum
underpinn1n&amp;~ . concr•le front
porch w11h awf'llf'lg, rear 1un
deck , olr·conditioning, furnllh ed w1th many extras . Phone
61&lt;·7&lt;2-3008.

(6) 6, 7, 8, Jtc

NOTICE TO II DOE AS
REP,..lR OF

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

'{/iJJ]fJ
1

June7,1177
Conditions could suddenly
Shift this year where your career
Is concerned People who are
fond .of you could bring about
advancements that have been
elusive Tofindoutmoreofwhat
lies ahead lor you aend for your
copy of Astro·Graph letter Mill
50 cents tor each and a long,
self·Bddressed, stamped
1
t A t G
h po
enveope o sro-- rap ·
·
Sox .(89, RadiO City Station, NY.
1001g, Be sure to specafy your
birth sign.

ARtl!l (Merch 21·Aprll 11)
lmaglnat1on and resourcetulneas
In busmess IS tf'le order of the
day for" you toda A 1
1
'i
c ever mprovlsatlon could turn you a
handsome prol!t.
TAURUS (April 20·Mar 21) It
behooves you to parttclp1ta In
social act1vilies today where you
could meet r~ew people You
could be mtroduced to someone
very Interesting.

PAWK1N~

LOT

,OR
MEIGS LOCAL
SCHOOL DISTRICT
sea teo proposal• will be
received by tile Board of
Edvcetlon of the Meigs Local
School District af Middleport.
Ohio at the Clerk's office unt i l
12 .00 Noon 011 June l.t, 1977
and at that time opened and
read by the Clerk Immediately
thereafter, tabulated and a
report thereof made by ttle
Clerk to said board at lfs next
m~e:~~~lptlon ot Improvement
located at Me los High School ,
Pomeror, onto .
Speer lcatlons
are
as
follows .
I To patch and seal
parking area$ at the Meigs
High School - approximately
16,000 SQ yds
2 - To patch badly broken
areas with 40A -asphaltic
concrete.
3-Toctllpandsealparklng
areas with RS -3 and No. 8
limn tone chips.
A. certified ctleck pavabte to
the clerk-lreuurer of the
above board ot education or a
uttstac;tory bid bond executed
by the bidder and the surety
company, in an amount equal
to five percent of the bid shall
be submitted wllh each blel .
Said board of education
reurves the right to waive
informalities, to accept or
reject any ana all. or parts of
any end all bids .
No bids may be withdrawn
for at least thtrty 1:101 days
after the scMduled closln~
tir.~e tor rece1pt of bids

GEMINI (Mar 21·Juno 10)
Something advantageous may
occur in an unusual manner today To take full advantage, you
must be able to Identity It and act
qulc~ly

Board of Educe lion
of Meigs Local
School District
Jane Wagner ,
Clerk -Treasurer
Souttl Third Avenue
Middleport , Ohio 45760

CANCER (~une Z1·~uiJ 22)
There are occasional limes when (6l 6, ' · t6 , 23, Ale
It's wise to take a calculated risk
7._.26-AV·ORO
to gain something you desire .
LIEGAL NOTICE
Today 1&amp; one of those da)IS.
Notice Is hereby given that
LEO (~u., ZS·Aug. 22) Don't the PubliC UtllltteS COM ·
keep putting off that pleasant mission ot Oh10 seek~ to
amend Chapter 1 of the Ap .
surprise you've been wanting to pend
ix to Section 4901 1-36
spring on your family. Today'a (formerly Section 1.361 of lts
the day to do It and make them Code
of
Rules
and
lhtjivlatlons, pertaining to Its
all happy
Star~dard
F i ling
VIRGO (Alii. U•hpl. 22) Just Requirements. for rate case
because the solution to a diHicult processlno . A public hear ing
problem occurs to you today will be held commencing on
11. 1977, at 10 00 a .m .•
with no apparent effort doe~n't July
E oT at the Office of The
irflply that It Is without merlf Try Public Utllltlts commlnlon ,
it.,
110 East Broad Street.
LIB"A (Sept. 2:S~Oct. H) You io tuamnb~s , Orh~ Co~l~s 1 ~h~
are very clever tod1y In turning Requirements. both those
your expertise or a service you present~ In l!'ffect and those
offer Into .. money . Don't sell f::~o::e 'ot'ncl/s ~eTh~b~a~~o~
youraelfelthertooshortortoo Util•lles
Commission,
cheaply.
Docketing Oepertmenr .
ICOIIPIO (Ocl. 24•NOY. 221
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
One-upamanahlp Ia • game you
BV Randell G. Applegate,
are unbe,table at todly, If Secretary
someone ct'leHengea you thfiy'll
come oul 141Cond beot.
.:,&lt;6;:.,1,.,;.;6,:-:l::t~c:-=-~:-:~:::-:--:=:-::IAGITTAIIIUI (Hoo. U·'*'· AQUARIUI ("""· 20·'""· 11) II
21) The open1ng may come to your ambitions are at a low ebb,
you today to put the trnlahlng
recall what lney mean to )IOU by
touches on 1 matter you'val1ad
means of remuneratlon or
trouble 1/nallzlng. Go 1o 11 with
reward This may be the stimulus
• you need
g usto!

o:

1

0

,,

CAPIIICOIIN (IIH. 11-J.,; 1•1
The name of a friend you·ve lost
touch wllh may pop Into your
m ind today. H's to your advantage to contact that perton.

•

SEWING ALTERAT I ONS
Upho ls ter 1ng
drapes
reasonable 572 South Third
Ave , M1ddl eport
Phone
..2 1&gt;306
PIANO lUNING. Lorle Oan1el1 )1
years of serY1ce . Phone
992·2082
PIANO TUNING by Electromc
Comparison
A cc urate ,
lhrosonoble 992 3718

LOST - fEMALE English Setter ,
wh1te w1th block spots Slack
fleo collar lost Rt 33 near b81
intersectiOn
by
Darwin
Reward Phone 992 -58.48

-FOUND • Btg block coondog w1th
~

wh1te spot on head . Coli
fJoi9·2253 or 9o4q·2851
Found block dog , port Calha and
port German Shephard , In Mid
dleport by .sw1mmmg pool tog
tlos El Paso County on it . Call
992 3873 or 992 2081 .

OLD FURNITURE , 1ce boJies, brass
beds , etc , co mplete
Jlouseholds Wnte M D M1ller ,
Jlt o4 Pomeroy Oh•o or coli
9fi2·776fJ
I
WANTED · CHIPWOOD Poles
Max . d1ometer . 10 inches on
lorgest end, $8 per ton, bundled slobs $b per ton . Oel1"'ered
to Ohio Pollet Company, Rt . 2,
Pomeroy , Ohio , Phone
..2·268'1 .
WANTED TO BUY
1umor Stl.e
motorcycle helmet
Phone
949-2oi25
gent le
HORSE
Must be
Phone
Rea sonab ly priced
992-7847

OLDER RESPONSI BLE lodv to h"'a
irl and core tor aged widow 1n
Rutlond , Oh1o Not inYol1d nor
ser~lle . Light housework and
cooking No lourldry
Coil
?oi2·20781or inlormot 1on
lADY TO slay 6 days Orld n1ghts a
waek . No wor.k . mce fom•ly
and good pay Ca ll 992·5207 for
information.

WANTED
ROUTE CARRIERS
FOR
WflON, W. VA.
&amp;SYRACUSE, OHIO
CONTACT
THE DAILY SENTINEL

·,

For Sale

COAL , hmes lone . ond colctum
CASH patd lor oil mokes and
1.hlonde and colc1 um bone lor
model, of mob•lv homes
llu~t cont1 ol and spec ial monng
Phone or eo C"ode 0 14·423-9531
salt l or former$, E.o:celt 1or Soft
Work\ M01n Street . Pomer oy,
TIMBER , Pomeroy f orest Pro
on.o or phone 992· 3891 .
du&lt;ts Top pnce l o( standing
sowftmber. Call 992 5965 or CAMPER , $600
Also. horse
Kent Hanby , l -o4oib·B570 .
trailer. Soi~ . Phone (bioi } b98·
3290
COINS , CURRENCY , tokens , old
pocket welches and chains.
sd ... er ond gold, We need 1%4 5 PC MAPLI: wooden d1nmg outltt
ond older silver co1ns Buy , sell.
wt lh captain cho1rs . Real good
or trade' Call Roger Wam sley.
&lt;;ondthon, $100. 7 pc. d1n11'!g
7•2 2331.
room outl1t chotrs been re&lt;ent ·
ly upholstered . SSO PhOf'le
CASH! I! lor 1unk cars. Fry9's
Glen
R Blssell949·2801 ,
Truck and Auto. WRECKER SER·
VICEI Phon9742 ·2081.

3 AND 4 RM furn ished and un
lurn1shed opts Phone 992
51113-i.
COUNTRY Mob1le Home Pork, Rt
33, ten mdes north of Pomeroy
Lorge loh w1th concrete pat1os ,
stdewo lk s, runner&amp; and otf
street po0ing . Ph o~e992 - 7 4 79.
FURNISHED APT Adults on ly no
pets Pho ne 992-3874 , Mid
___di!P~
ONE BEDROOM lurntshed apart·
ment in M1ddleport . Co li
997-5.43.4 or 992 3129

-2 BEDROOM

MOBILE home 1n
Roc1ne a reo . Call 992-5858 .
AVAILABlE AT R1vers1de Aport
menh , one bedroom $105 per
month 2 bedroom. $1 38 per
month Phone 992 .wq8 Equal
Housln~ O~portvnity

At
992-2156
Or Stop In AI
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
For more information

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?
Lef Pomeroy Landmark
soften &amp; condition your
water and a Co-op water
soft ener, Model UC-XVI.
Now Only ,

279 ,95

Let us
Free

test

your

water

Pomeroy Landmark

I ¥.~ Jack W. Carsey , Mgr.

1

~

Phone 992 -2181

USED FORESTRY EQUIPMENT .
Oo..,id Brown Tractor Model
990, Prer\ttce G-BC w-342
bvpos.s grapple Toy lor 581 -V s n
11084745 2·Delrott 01eutl
eng1ne Contact Denms Smurr,
phone (614) 838-53.45 _
FARMALl H Block w•th power
po ck
Ken neth
Hoger
Coolvd le, Oh .45723 .

FOR SALE
N ew

Co· OP water sof·
tem~rs, model vc.svt.
Only S279 95
Sa ve sso .oo on a new
Hatpo•nf Refrigerator
1 New 20 CUbiC ft
Chest Free:zer
S319. 95
Naw in stock, complete line
of bulk gardef'l seeds.
1 Good McCullaugh Chain
S6S
Saw
1 Good Used Paulan Chain
Saw

Business Services
Superior
Steam Extraction

1

Route 3, Pomeroy , 0 .

Carpel &amp; Upholstery
Phone Mike Young
At
992 -2206 or 992-7630
nThe Or.iginaton
Not The Imitators"
2-23·1 mo.

SWAIN'S
Automatic
Transmission Service

PARTS • LABOR
GUARANTEED

REASONABlE

RATES
Reedsville. 0 . Ph. 371-6250
5·27·TFC

Television log for easy viewing

GUMR SERVICE
Continuous one piece
gut1ers . We hang tt1 or do it
yourself . Special prices to
builders .

Phone 949-2814
9 a.m . to 5 p.m.
4 28·1 mo.

Dryer
S80 .00
1 Good Used G .E . Dryer S85
1 Used Lawn Mower
SSO

Real"Esla.te:fur Sal_!' ~ ~-::_~

-em,

•• •woffll "' th U S. Drp1 rf l.dor
••,.. G{bblf.,UDt~ ,..,.. "6'1J.

NO FUTURE/IN A$$ RUT?

Conaider 1 ProfN&amp;IOOII canMir
Driving a "BIG RIG". We •• a
Private Training School offeringaPARTTinwtorFULL Time
Troining Progrom. ~ 'f'!U ....,
working, Don'1 Ouit Your Job.
mend our Weekend Training
program or mend our 3 Week
FULL T"me Resident Troinlng.
Jlil.rt~«• 1 ,.Mw Trvikr

fubi!UtJ(IIt:

SMALL NEW IDEA
spreader: 1959 Chevrolet ton
lruck w1th YOn body and power
todgote , good cond1t1on, New
Holland Manure spreader , 163
bushel , good cond1hon . 3 pomt
hitch mower, 7 fl cut, good
condlt1on; Tandem tro1ler tyf}e
lertlll:rer spreader, good cond•
t1on Model 64 lnternotionol
comb1ne good cond1tion . W1ll
take trades , phone 949 2770

SPRING GARDEN Suppl1es Cob
boge, coul.llower , broccol.,
and head lettuce plants,
yellow , white, and red on1on
sets, on1on plants , Kennebec,
cobbler , Kotohdm , Red Pontiac
and Red Losada seed potatoes
Bulk garden seeds , poftmg soil,
peot moss, fru1t trees and rose
bustles
M idway Market ,
Pomeroy, Ohio , 992·2582 ,
Bob .s Market, Mason , W Vo.
(304l773·5721 .

PARKERSBURG

TOMATO, PLANTS , Cabbage,
broccoli , cauliflower, brussel
422-4080
sprouts, egg plants , hanging
baskets , pots , geraniums ,
begonias , flats , petunua
mar•golds, pansies , salzia,
balsom . d•anthus , snap ·
drogons, alyssum , VirlCO col·
1972 VEGA GT, good condihon ,
eus Cleland 's Greenhouse ,
52,000 miles, 29 mile5 to
Rac1ne. Geraldine Clelond .
gallon . $1000 CQII 992-3705
after 9 30 P M.
1-.42 1n cost •ron k1tchensmk I
bosm and 1 drain board , hang
1'175 GRANADA 4 dr . I&gt; cyl. $2800.
on wall type, wtllte, 1·3 burner
Call 985·&lt;2&lt;5
gas . tlot plate. Phone 992-5714
1971 MONTEGO , p s , p b., air
conditioning, low mileage ECONOMY TRACTOR w1th all at
tochmenls L1ke new, osk 1ng
$795. Pkone 9oi9·2801 Glen
$2250. Phone (614 ) 696·3290.
Binell.
1972 PLYMOUTH Cnckett , small GQQO .RIC-4-i Top so1L Charles R
Hatfield Backhoe Sennce .
economy car 2 new hres , 33
Phone 7oi2-2008
miles per gallon , good student
'c--~---..,..car, $2,000. Call U2-2}60, 1 AND H Beams , 8, 9 and 10 inch
3l ,000 miles.
• _C_?'.'_!92·~~::
· ---.---:·
1966 OLDSMOBILE . $400. 1975 TWO HORSE horse trailer. $700.
Kawasok1, $400. Coll7o42·2608.
----~

~~· {61~) 698 -3~90
KAWASAKI 500. very good cond1·

---

MAIN
POMEROY,

o..

JUST LISTEO - 5 acres A yr old brick home. has
everyth1ng
Modern
equ1pped
kitchen ,
3
bedrooms, bath , basement
$69.95
J1as kitchen, bath , rec.
ELECTRIC POWER
room, fireplace , utility.
This is a home that you
WEED AND
must
see. S45,200 00
GRASS TRIMMERS
LOOK, ABOUT 'h ACRE
w1th nice Mobile Home, 2
Cu ts w1th tleavy duty nylon
l 1ne - as good as the best.
bedrooms , bath, large
AT ONLY
llvmg and kitchen, storage
bldg
8x16
excellent
$29.95
neighborhood
JUST
SB.OOO.OO
EXCELLENT - Not very
old, 3 bedrooms, living
room has fireplace, bath,
Jack W . Caney. Mgr .
utility room . full basement
Phone 992 -21 81
with lots of room for
recreation, nat gas F.A
furnace, 518.000.00
MIDOLEPORT - Lovely
Rabb1ts, breeding doe, pets or
neighborhood. A bedrooms,
fryers , Phone992-7013 _,____...
2
baths ,
carpeting,
paneling, 2 car garage with
CB rodio· Teabe rry model T "tube
apartment
over .
Lot
tvpe' power m1ke-Turner Plus
2 desk m1ke 150 waft lmear·
60xl00. Very nice at just
Demeo Demon bu il l 1n pre amp
$27 ,000 00 .
Super Sconner An tenna and all
POMEROY 2 story
wire , two sechans tower ond 10
frame, A bedrooms, bath,
h pipe, regular des k m1ke ex·
total of 9 rooms, nat. gas
ternol speaker $350 00 or will
heat .
Immediate
sell any pbrt . ~2 -2265
possession
.
$6,725.00.
-~
ROUTE 124 ~ 4'h yrs. old .
Lovely frame &amp; brick, 4
Real Estate10F-Safe.
bedrooms,
bath,
nice
kitchen .. utllity, central air
NINE ROOM HOME, both , carpet ,
cond and n!t. gas heat.
f•reploce , two porctles double
carpeting, 112 acre. VA.
carport , 1/1 acre , outbu1ld1ngs
approved . $28,500 .00.
Oes1re so le by June :lO Pnced
BACK ON THE MARKET
to mo ... e Phone 992 7210 for
- 45 acres, good 3 bedroom
appotnlment
home, part basement, out
TWO EXCELLENT bulid1ng loco·
cellar, barn and other
t1ons. Eastern School D•stnct
buildings, garage, tobacco
on good rood , T P. water,
base. luel oil heal JUST
acreage tf deslfed Phone
$10,500 00 .
949-2770. Owner wdl help
RUTLANO ~ I lloor plan
_f1nance if n~ess.ory
has 3 bedrooms . bath ,
central air cond. and nat.
LARGE COUNTRY store , always a
gas
heat,
carpeting ,
money maker upsta•rs could
be mode 1nto an opt. Owner
paneling. 1 level acre .
wtll help flnonc:e 1f necessary
JUST 512,765.00.
Phone 9oi9-2770.
AVOIOTHE PITFALLS IN
SELLING YOUR HOME12 x bA ALL ELECTRIC tro1ler , two
CALL US TODAY.
extra rooms bu il t· on , 2
HENRY E . CLELANO
f1reploces, cinder block cellar,
REALTOR
good outbuild1ng, young
Honk, Kothy &amp;
trees . Qf0p8Yin8S , uc:ellen&lt;f _
garden 1 1~ acreo land , Co.
Leona Cleland
Associ1tes
Rood 28 F'\eor Boskan , Ch,ster
water . Contact Albert Hill Jr
'1'2-2259--985-41 t 2
__!!_!_· 1, Long Bo ~m , Oh1o
992-2548
2 BEDROOM HOUSE, Locust St. ,
Middleport
$14,500 Phone VA FHA. 30 yr. financing. Ireland
992·3&lt;J&lt;&gt; and 992·S2..::
48"".~
Mortgage, 77 E. Stote, Athens,
phone (61.4) 592-3051.
FOR SALE BY owner , b yeor old
home , 3 bedrooms. Iorge ll11ing HOUSE IN Tuppers Plains 2
room, modern kitctlen , centro!
bedrooms alec . heal , double
f1eot , natural gas , 11/ , baths,
garage . 1 lots . Phone {614)
fully carpeted, garden space ,
667·3065 or bb1 ·33b0. ...
fruit trees 3 ocres ol land ,
S29.000. 3 mdes rlorttl of REDUCED AGAIN , 3 bedroom , 2YJ
both , b•·level. 1 m•le north of
Chester off Wes t Shode Rood .
F1'1e Po1nt $.42 ,500. Phone
Don Pooler . 985-4293 or con tact
992 2492
Barbaro Pooler.
New house lor s9 l ~ . 3 bedroom , I 145 ACRE FARM . 7 room nouse 1n
Rutland Loh of pnvocy . Phone
11 , both, rec 1 r6om and
7oi2 3057 alter 6 p m. or on
garage
Lee Construct1on ,
weekends.
phone 992 -3.4 54 or .toi6 9568

Pomeroy Landmark

L

--

---

.

/

FOR loll' TO SWITCH CJIJ
THE WALKIE·TALJ&lt;"IE ANP
CAL.L. FOR ''AL.P HA"!

THE INSTRUCTION&amp; Ffl.OM
MeKEE"5 KIDNAP"'&lt;$
WEI'IE FOI&gt;. 5HIVAUN TO
1&gt;1 MfDWAV PAI'IK •••

Alignment,
wheel
balancing,
tune-up,
brake work, minor
repair.
Behind Rutland Grade
School. Evening work by
appointment. Ph. 742-2005.
6·5·1 mo Pd .
BRADFORD , Auctioneer , Complete Ser... ice. Phone 9~9- 2487
or 949·2000 Roc1ne. Ohio Cntt
Bradford.
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers, toasters, 1rons , all
small appliances ,Lawn mower,
next to Stole Higkwoy Garage
on Route 7 Phone (bl4 ) 995
382S
REMODELING, Plumb1ng, heotlng
and olltvpes of general repair.
Work guaranteed 20 years ex·
perience, Phone 992 2409.
SEWING MACHINE Repa~rs . ser·
v1ce, oil makes. 992-2284 . The
Fobrt c Shop , Pomeroy .
Authorized Smger Sales and
Seni'ICe We sharpen Sc1ssors.
EXCAVATING , dozer, loader and
backhoe work ; dump trucks
end lo·boys ·for t'llre, will houl
1•11 dtrt, to soil, l1mestone and
grovel Coli Bob or Roger Jef·
fers , day phone 992-7089,
mght phone 992-3525 or 992·
5232
EXCAVATING . dour, backhoe
ond d1tcher. Ctlarles R. Hal·
f1eld
Back Hoe Service ,
Rutland . Ol11o. Phone 742·2008.
Wlll do roofing, constructiorl
plumbing and healing NQ rob
too Iorge or too small . Phone
742·23&lt;6.
CARPENTER . tloormg, ce1lmg,
paneling Phone 992 2759.
MOBILE Home Repair, Elec ,
plumb1ng and heatmg Phone
992·5858
HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex·
coyatmg , sepltc systems ,
dozer . backhoe , dump truck ,
limestone , grovel , blacktop
povmg , AI 1.t:l Pkone 1 (614)
1&gt;98·7331 .
HARRISON 'S T V Repair Ser..,1ce
Colis 276 Sycamore , St , Mid·
die ort . Phone 992-2522

NEW 3 bedroom J,ouse , 2 baths ,
all alec .. 1 acre Middle-port,
dose to Rutland Phone 992 ·
7481
SMALL form for sale, IOo/, down ,
owner llnonced Monroe Coun·
ly. W. Va . Phone (304) 772·
3102 or(30&lt;) 772·3227.

•••
:

1
1
.
•
•

Fiftatttltt&amp;AniiiWe

'tf'flflrul]e}'tf

Blown 1nto Vhlls &amp; Attics
STORM
WIIIDOWS &amp; OOORS
IEP\AC(,!IIT
WIMDOWS
AWMINIJII

•
•

•

·.

SIDING-SOifm

Ph. !192-1993

I I I

... YOU HEARD 'IM ,
LADY! GeT i&gt;'OVIN '!
~0

I·IO·l

I AMWACb
I I K

Young's Carpeting
Route 3, Pomeroy, 0 .

Free Estimates

:
I

KJ

1

0

I

ISAMOUFt

Carpel- ~lno.- Tile
Phone Mlke Young at
992-2206 or 992-7630

Kj I J I

ALECK MEDICAL 5TUDENT
!:&gt;AID

WHEN ASKED

WHAT THE "6LOOD
COUNT" WAS.
Now arrange the c1rcied leners to
form lhs surpnse answer, as sug·
gested by the above canaan.

Print answer here: 11 [
~I~I,....I&lt;T?"""ICT?""'&lt;IT7"""'&lt;"1,.,.....;.,.J"

U"ITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

2-23· 1 ma

TO ACT IK A
HOUSE -- 9UT
Tt4ANK5 JU5l
TH' SAH\f-

Satuoda ·s
Y

I

(Answers tomorrow)
Jumbles· CANAL HOARD CIPHER FASTEN
Answer What people who look for " soft" JObs are nof
apt to lind mu ch oi-"'HARD'" CASH

.

~
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
38 Types
I Gael
39 Actress
5 Sophisti·
Rowlands
cated
40 Jackass
10 Lifted with 41 Make -

Nob1l Summtt Road
Rt. I
Middleport, 0.
992-5724
Complete
Sales
and
Service and Supplies.

effort

II Jeremiad

M4, llJH/1-T A PRHTl{ 6ABl1 C::OU... 1
i.UHAT\7 HBR NAMe~

'PI! UA.M6D 40\JR DOW..
THE: FNJ.IY,:h
..:..-:~

SHEUJ.f ITMPU'
Wf..S A. rl:l~ ?

I Take form

14

2 Witches

historic

REALT OR

17

VIRGIL B. TEAFORO, SR.
REALTOR
211&gt; E . Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone 91'2-3325

18

Sur!lx wtth
infant
Dinner

course
20 Marine
recruit
21 Proceed
22 Gaelic

DRIVE·IN Building.
fixtures, dishes and land.
Only $10,000
MIDDLEPORT - 4 years
old 3 bedroom ranch style
home Nicely located. City
water and eat-In kitchen .
Central heating and shingle
roof. $18.000.
CHESTER - Large 6 room
frame home wi1h lots of
closets. Natural gas. Has 2
outbuildings and large
barn
Room for your
chickens and goat. Close to
stores. $14 1000 .
MIOOLEPORT
4
bedroom brick home on
corner tot Large living
room with gas burning
fireplace and
formal
dining Natural gas central
heating. Better take a look
for only $24,000
NEW LISTING - N ice 3
bedroom. 1'h bath, fully
carpeted home with cily
water, and central heating.
Has garage and nice corner
lot.
4S ACRES - Woods and
brush. Rura! water tap,
electric, and septic tank At
the end of the road. Owner
will sell on land contract.

23 Wmter

f!ASOLINE ALLEY

Doqcomes
with -the

driving
hazard
Mario
Andretti

25

apartment~

our
ven..J
own
door.
step'

meet .

DOWN

13 Maintain
Without
delay
(2 wds.)
15 PrefiX with
fervid
16 Pref1x with

TEAFORDm

group
3 Considered
an adult
(3 wds.)
4 Prefix
with
centenary
5 Bellowed
6 Tardily
7 Caesar's

" I love"
8 Retiree

.....

MT
w....s
on ., ues., "" '
8: 00tt"l 5:00
Thursday 8 til Noon

ARNOLD GRATE

23
24

( 2 wds.)

9 Surround

12

honey
and
PQiar
German
prison
camp
Football
stalwarts

25 Depend

Wobble

(on)

27 Horse
race
bel
30 Chan
portr.ayer
31 Zola
heroine
and
others
33 S1dekick
36 - alert
37 Sufftx w1th
broker

Monday. Juna 6

BRIDGE
Oswald and Jim Jacoby

Trap springs on unwary

items

28

34

with gee
Prefix . with
room
Fonner
Dodger
skipper
Rocketeer
Willy
Snoop
Stevedores

• 62
• 10 4
.A76432

WEST
.KQJIO
•Kt08

H£:AI&lt;TED JQI-IN!"- W£

37

SLEEJ~

J&lt;NOWIN' )0' WAfS
TOSSIN' Ai'-l' TlJRN/N'-

EAST
4)17513

•J973

, t'Q52

tK9876

4)1JI05

35 Without

50FI-

6

NORTH
• A 88

union

ULABNER

· SOUTH ID l

• 92

ethics
Moslem
call to
prayer

• A Q 54

+A J 3
• K Q 98
Both

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTEIs

Here's how to work it :
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

Wes1

Pass

vulnerable

..

and st1ll get ready for \ hal diS-

card ."

3 N T Pass

l N T.
Pass

Pass
Openln1 lead ~ K •

Rubens have produced a book
CRYPTOQUOTES
called ' Test Your Play as
Declarer' wh1ch gives 89
problem hands . Some are ex·
U C YCN tremely complicated, but
J R B 0 Z
QC
MN C H
B
most show a fairl y simple
RYJ
ACNW , common sense approach to
GRPQE
ACNW
the problem "
Oswald · " Their first hand IS
OWEE
RYJ
RYJ
QUWCNZ
from rubber brtdge . West
leads the king of spades
PRNOZOW
QU CA RE
OWEE. aga1nst your three-notrump
contract which looks ltke a
Saturday's Cryptoquote : BUREAUCRACY: THE RULE m·
dnch. There appt!ar to be six
NO ONE HAS BECOME THE MODERN FORM o~·
club trick s and the other three
DESPOTISM. ~ MARY MC CARTHY
aces.
"
(llt97, Kina Fe.t.ures Syndic:l1l", Inc:.
J1m : " That IS too Stmple

.. ;:T:J&lt; ALL 1 Yl5

eoDY

WA5 .~ c:v::R

i=OUND E IW ~R I

'

BACK PAINFUL

McMORIE5 ...

• • ••

•fe•
"
[:
•

,- •

"~HNEY

I GOTSOME

PLUMB-GOOD
SNAPSHOTS
OF TATER
LAST WEEK,
PAW ·;

I DON'T KNOW ..! THINK

CAN
BE PROUD OF

I SHOULD HAVE LISTENED
TO M'&lt; FATHER ...

'(OURSELF

.!

RU-..AND.:

··················4~·····

..

..

.

.

•

HOW ON AIRTH
'
.DID
'iE EVER GIT TH:
LEETLE WIGGLEWORM TO SET

ST.ILL?

spades Or if West shifts South

can duck a spade on h1s own

Sou1b

the length and formatiOn of the words ;;~rc aH By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
hmts Eac h day_Lhe code letlers are d1tTerent.
Jim : " Paul Lukacs and J eff

I. . I WAS

trap for you Can you find the
trap?"
Oswald : " The trap wa sn ' 1
rea lly set for us , but tt 1s there
for the unsuspecting rea der .
SupPQse clubs break 3.() Then
when declarer plays clubs he
Will have to Win the third 10
dummy and the e1ght or nine
will block the suit "
J1m
"South ca n guard
against this by ducking the
first spade and the second
spade TI!en he Will be able to

North E11t

2postrophes,

WINNIE

These wnters must have set a

chuck a club on the ace or

One l etter simply s tan ds for an ot her. In th as somw le A 1s ':--::--:-:-:--:---:--:---l
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, &lt;'t c Sing l{' l etters, :

.

•

16 Confined
19 Della 20 Kodiak,

27 Prefix

32

A"'R"IID IT
WOULD C&gt;RING

...

Yesterday's Answer

1s one
26 Larder

29

POMEROY - 4 bedroom
home near stores, 2 baths, 2
story, all electric. and on
corner lot . 516,000.
NEW LISTING Lol
150' &gt;&lt;200' w oth ci ty waler
available.
PROPERTY IS ON THE
RISE BUY NOW AND
SAVE.
G. Bruce Teaford
Helen L. Teaford
Associates

RUTLAND FURNITURE

742-2211

WHAT THE 5iMART-

DOURNAr

Installation, samples
brought to your home
with no charge .

.

'il

ULLKS

ALLEYOOP

LARRZ.~!~~DER
I

li ·QO-Wheel ol Fortune 3.4.15 ; Happy Days 6,13. Bll
With Knll 33
11 3o--Snoot for the Stars 34, 15, Fam i lly Feud 6, 13;
Love ol Life 8.10; Erica 33 .
11 : 5~BS News 8; Ms. Flxll 10.
12 .oo-News 3,4,6, 10; Name That Tune 15; Divorce
Court B; M idday 13; Forsyte Saga 33 .
17 : 311--Chlco &amp; the Man 3,1S , Ryan's Hope 6,13, Bob
Braun A; Search for Tomorrow 8, 10.
1: co-Gong Show 3; ; all My Chil dren 6. l3 ; News 8,
Young &amp; the Re stless 10, Not For Women Only 15 ,
Masterpiece T heatre JJ.
1· 30--0ays of Our Lives 3,4,15 ; As The World Turns
B,IO.
2:DO-S20,000 Pyramid 6,13, Great Perrormances 33
2: 30--Doclors 3,4,15; One Life 10 Live 6,13; Guiding
Ught 8,10.
3:QO-Another World 3,4,15 ; All In The Family 6.10;
Consumer Survival K1t 20; Bit with Knit 33 .
3: 15-General Hospital 6.13 .
3"3D-Match Game 6. 10; Llllos Yoga &amp; You 20 ; An ·
tlques 33 .
4 oo--Mlsle' Cartoon 3; Gong Show 4, 15. New Mickey
Mouse Club 6; Lucy Show 6; Sesame St. 20.33;
Movie " Gunfight" 10; D inah 13
4:30-My Three Sons 3, Star Trek 4. Emergency One
6; Partridge Family B; Hogan' s Heroes 15.
S oo.-Big Valley J, Brady Bunch 8i M ister Rogers'
Neighborhood 20,33; Emergency One 13; Mission :
Impossible 15
5:30--Adam .12 4; News 6, Elec. Co. 20.33
6 oo-News 3,4.6.8.10.13.15; Zoom 20; Surgery of
Violence 33 .
6·311--NBC News 3,&lt;,1 5; ABC News 13, Andy Grlfllth 6,
CBS News 6.10; Vegetable Soup 20.
7 oo- Trulh or Cons 3, To Tell the Truth 4; Lrar's Club
6, Country Carnival 8, News 10; To Tell the Truth
13; My Three Sons 15; Anyone for Tennyson? 20:
Lowell Thomas Remembers 33.
7:311--Hollywood Squares 3,4; Let's Deal Wllh It 6 ;
Match Game PM 8. MacNeii· Lehrer Reporl 20,33;
In The Know 10, Wild K ingdom 13; TV Honor
Society 15.
8:QO-Baseball 3.4; Happy Oays 6.13; Baa Baa Black
Sheep 15; Billy graham Crusade 8, 10, J erusa lem
A Special Report 20,33 .
8·311--Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13.
9 ()()--Rich Man, Poor Man 6,13; Billy Graham
Crusade 6, Police Woman 15, Mash 8,10
9·3()--Qne Day at a Time 8.10; Best of Ernie Kov acs
20,33 .
10:1)()-ABC News Closeup 6,13; Pollee Story lS. Fight
Ag4lnst Slavery 8; K.o\ak. '0; News '2.0; At The Top
33
.
•
10: 311--That Good Ole Nashville Music 3; Bobby Vinton
4, Black Perspective on he News 201
11 Oil--News 3.4.6.8. l0.13, ]5; MacNei i ·Lehrer RepOrt
33
11·3o-Johnny Carson 3,.4, 15; Movie " Honor Thy
Father'' 6,13; McMillan &amp; Wife 8; Mary Hartman
10; ABC News 33.
'
12 10o-Mov1e " Mr Klngstreet's War " 10; Janaki 33
1 . oo- Tomorrow 3 •.4 .
1· 3D-"-News l3 .

by Henn AmoldandBoblee

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one le"e' to each square, Ia form '7-=
tour ordmary words
r

~lf!T!_RUl'MIIIGS

Close Sat At 5 P.M.

• •

TUESDAY, JU N E 7, 1977
5.oo-Queen Elizabeth ll 's Sliver Jubilee 3•• , 15.
s 311--Queen Ellzabethl\'s Sliver Jubilee 6. 13.
6 GO-Summer Semester 10.
6 30-Summer Semester 8; Concerns &amp; Comments 10.
7.oo-CBS News 8, Chuck White RepOrts 10
7.05-Porky Pig 10.
7 311--Schoolles 10
8: oo-Queen Elizabeth ll's Sliver Jubilee 3,4,6,13, 15;
Capt Kangaroo 8,10. Sesame Sl . 33.
9 ()()-Andy Grlflllh 8; Mike Oouglas 10; Chlldhood 33 .
9:311--Concentratlon 8
10:0()-Sanford &amp; Son J. ~. 15 : Dinah 6; Here's Lucy 8, 10;
M i ke Douglas 13; Studio See 33 .
l 0:3D-Hollywood Squares 3,4, 1S, Pr ice Is Right 8, 10;
Once Upon a Classic 33

~ THATSCRAMBLEOWORDGAME

~ ~ ~~~ ®

..:• ~ FRIDAY TIL 5
.
...
:
.
...
• ••
• •
:
···•••••••· :
•
•

J.&lt;.6.8. IO,I3,1S: Monly Python's Flying
Circus 20; Black JourXat 3~
1l 3G-Johnny Carson 3,.4, 15; S(reetSJof SlH'I Franelsco
6.13; Kojak 8: Mary Hartman 10; ABC News 33 .
12 DO-Movie "The Sherl1f of Fractured Jaw" 10;
Janak! 33
12.411--Toma 6.13; Cool M illion 8.
1 oo- Tomorrow 3,,. ,
1: 5&lt;&gt;-News Ia.

lnsul•lion SIIYites

$12,000

HOMESITES for sole, 1 acre Ond
up. Middleport , near Rutland
Coll992-7.481

rt IJO-.News

Blown

DUGAN'S
FRONT END
ALIGNMENT

Ill'

CB Mobile Transce1Yer
com plele with weather
proof PA speaker , 2 way
base loaded CB antenna,
for roof top or t ru nk mount
Power co rd , coax, antenna
ca bl e and all hardware
1ncluded
ONLY

.: ~

CAPTAIN EASY

.' .

•

MONDAY, JUNE .,1977
•O•
5 »-Adam 12 4: News 6. Family Affai r 8. Elec . Co
1
20,33
6 00-News J,oi,6,8, 10,13, 15; ABC News 6. Zoom 20;
American Odyney 33.
• 30--NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC New$-13, Andy Grllfrth 6,
CBS News 8.1 0; Vegetable Soup 20 ; VIlla Alegre 33 .
7 :IJO-. T r ulh or Cons. J; To Tell the Truth &lt;; Liar' s Cl~lt
6; Buck Owens 8; News 10, To Tell the Trufh 13i My
Three Sons 1$; Americana 20; Montage 33 .
7 . JO- That Good Ole Nashv1lle Music J ; In Search of 4;
Muppet Show 6; Gong Show 8; MacNeil Lehrer
20,33; Pr ice Is Right 10; Candid Camera 13; Nash
ville on the Road IS .
8·JJO-.Litlle House on the Prairie 3••• 15. Blansky 's
Beauties6, 13; B1lly Graham Crusade 8. 10; Decades
of Decision 20,33 .
8· 30--Baseball 6,13.
9.QO-Movie " A Sens1t1ve, Pass1onate Man" 3,4,15;
Julie &amp; Jack!@ . How Sweet II Is 6; Palllsers 70,33;
Julie &amp; Di ck in Covent Garden 10.
10·00-Sonny &amp; Cher 8, 10; News 20, Austi n Ctty Limits
33.
10:311--Farm Digest 20.

INSIDE
THE
WALK-IN
FRIDGE

FREE ESTIMATES

4-"'S-1 mo .

Pomeroy Landmark

INSfiWC'IION

....... $18,300,.,;·

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

-~

•

VOUR VICTIMS.
HAVE FUN Wll'M THEM \NHILE
WE GET THE POLICE.

I WOULD~ 'l
KHOW HOW

' ROBYNWV-23

'Driwrl -~ "' 11'1"

Owner
Shirley (Jeffers) Wolfe

Rl(jHTS ?

RIC,HTS YOU GAVE

lOOK ~EH INP T~E STATUE'
OF MlllAIZD Fll.LMORE

A local contractor
Phone 949-2801
or 949·2860

Syracuse·

AND WHAT
ASOUTMI

NOUGHT
WANTS
TO PEE~

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

BISSELL SIDING CO.

John St .

E~O

--

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

Shirley's Beauty Nook

TO DEATH!

VOU HAVE THE SAME

fiiOI tiro "'""'

Behind Rullond Grodo
School. Evenlng work by
appointment Ph 742 -200.5
5·6-1 mo. pd

Free Estimates
No Sunday Calls Please
4-24·1 mo.

r'LL FREEZE

EXPERIENCED
Radiator
Service

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

S50

1 Good Used Unico

--

nNIIIpnwl , . , . . . . . . . ..,..~ -~

DUGAN'S
FRONT END
ALIGNMENT

Young's Carpeting

HOUSE FOR rent . 3 or 4 bedrooms
CO UNTRY IQrmlond w1th seclud·
w1th bu1lt 1n k1tci1en . 2 baths
ed woods , water orld good oc·
located 4 m1les west of Hor·
cess m Monroe County . W Vo
nsonville House w1ll be shown
Sl ,000 down . call (304 ) 772·
on Monday or\d Tuesday , June
3~
10_
2_
or~(3~4) ;_
77:.:2:..:3o:2::.
27:.:__ _~
a -Jack W . Carsey , Mgr
I
13 and 14 by oppomlment on ly . ~
Ptlone 992 -2181
CommerC1o l property opproJI 17
Call durmg week of June bth
acres . le ... el land . locoted ot
thru 1Jlh , 8 o m t1li I 0 a m to
Tuppers Ploms on Ohio , Route
make oppomtment
Phone
B FOOT camper top 1n good cond1·
7 Phone (61&lt; l 667·6304 .
(502)439·5331 .
tmn Phone9B5-A181
ATTENTION
MANAGERS
&amp;
NEW 3 bedroom house , budl-1n
~
Oemonstmlors . Fnendly Home 4 ROOMS and bath oil lresh COAL AND Wood cook stove red·
kitchen, both ond Y1, Phone
po1nt
.
Phone
992-3090.
Toy vorltes has openings for
11ck hound , 1 year old B1r·
742 ·2306 or contact M1ID 8 Hut,managers and dealers tn your VILLAGE GREEN APTS. MULBERRY
dhouses . P1cmc tables.. Phone
ch•son, Rutla nd Oh•o
area
Toy Party Pion e~e ·
HEIGHTS LUSURY LIVING IN
1Jl85·4124 .
perience helpful. Cor &amp;
NEW 2 BEDROOM APTS CLARINET FOR sale . e)(cellent
Telephone necessary, call col·
TASTEFULLY DECORATED, KIT
cond1t1on U!ied 2 years Phone
l&amp;&lt;:t to Carol Day (518) .499 8395
CHEN APPLIANCES FURNISHED
992-6309
or write Friendlv HOme Parhes
FULLY CARPETED STARTING
20 Railroad AYe , Albany , N Y
AT$117 PHONE992631&gt;5SYBIL
12205.
AND JIM WOOD. MANAGERS.
CB SPECIAL
APT 10
.

19N VW. Inquire ot 390 Second
St . Middleport after 5 p.m Al l
flon, S600. Coli 9.49·2628 .or
~day Saturday and Su~d~- _
949 2626.
1967 NOVA 6 cyl1nder 3 speed 1975 HONDA 550Super Sport See
Posl· lraclion $275 See ol 247C
Joe Imboden on Welchtown Hill
-~~~~ AYe Pome~v__ _
P:::m.:.:·-,-m M1ners.,.,l ~e after 5 r.
1970 FORO F250 p1ck -up . Camper 6FT BLACK Am -Fm stereo radio ,
special. oulomattc , Power
tope pfayer , record player all
steenng, Power brakes , low
co mbined .
$200
Phone
milage, nice cond1hon . $1295
7&lt;2·2705.
Harold Brewer, Long Bottom,
HOOVER UPRIGHT Sweepers ,
Phone
-Ohio
--· -985-3554
-----··
I Q77 models. on sole lor 1ust o
WIDE 8 foor pick -up. Bed. rlice
frocllon of the anginal cost
cand•loon
Phone 985 ·3S54 .
Reduced to $26 50, cash or
H
ld 8
L
8 If
oro
rawer, ong o qm ,
terms . Call992-5146
Ohio.
ELECTROLUX SWEEPERS , com·
1976 FORO F250 "" wheel driYe
pletely rebu i lt with at ·
y u: k . Coll7 &lt;2·2590.
lochmenls Only $.45 Cosh or
lerm s. Cqll992 5146
197&lt; Chevrolet Vega Stallon ·
wagon , auto , 197~ Ford P.nta 30 GALLON Acquarium and com·
Rounoboul, 4 spead Phone
plete seH.1p. $100. 2 storm wm992 ·7013.
dows. one 31 one-qvarter 1n·
l973 (omoro 350 oi speed a1r
ches by 58 Yr 10 . other 28'h in
P.S. P B., AM II. FM radio , f!lc·
by 55 10 , $10 each 180 square
tory Mags Phone 992 7969
l"t of floor hie, Peel and Stick ,
!O"CII C'•-· 20·MitGh !20)
9 2 7309 .,,. 1
74
Plymouth
Cudo
360
~
·
borrel
""
~Coll~
Situations with potential could
with outomotte; on floor, 37.000 FORk LIFt model, Allis Chalmers ,
awe you today because you r~
miles , (rogers , all orovnd ,
4800 9ood cond111on Phone
they're beyond your s~ope
metol1c green . Phone 992·3090.
Glen A. BISsell. 949-2801 .
Relate them to past expertence
Vou'll find the handle

1

\

7- The Daily Sentinel. M•ddlePQit·Pomeroy, 0 •• Monday. Jw1e ti, 1977

DICK TRACY

Cl~ r~l'

1.00

:!WI)li

\

A Cah £orma reader wants to

know the correct response to
partner 's one-cl ub opening
Y our hand IS

X:.

• K .I X X . AX X • K 10 X
QX
The correct response is one
d1amond to g1ve you the best

chance to explore s lam 1f
par tner has a b1g hand and to

find the best game contractm
case partner has a mmimum
or near m1mmum
A two -notrump response
crowds the b1ddtng
( For a cop y o t JA C OBY
MO DERN, s9nd $1 to · " Win a l
Bndge. · cl o thiS newspaper,

P.O Box 489 R8dtO Crty Station,
Naw York . NY 10019)

�"a ill· Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday. June 6. 1977

8

1

Brezhnev deno·u nced Stalin's tyranny
MOSCOW ( UPI l - In a
rare public reminder of the
bloodspattered past. Soviet
leader Leonid Brezhnev has
denounced the tyranny or the
Stalin era and dedared "il
should not repeat. "
Brezhnev said " solid
guarantees.. against any
future abuse of wwer or
violation of rights were
provided in a new draft
constitution
t11at
was
prepared under his direction
to replace one writ! en in !936.
Hls remarks came in a
speech to a meeting of the
Communist party Central
Cormniltee May 24, but kept
secret until their publication

in newspapers Sunday.
It was at the same session
or the central conunittee thai
President Nikolai Podgorny
was abruptly removed from
the party Politburo and
began a rapid descent to
oblivion.
" We know, comrades."

Brezhnev told the central
committee , "that some years
after the adoption of the

eonstitution 's provisions,"
Brezhnev asserted. " The
party
has
resolute ly
condemned this practice and
it should never repeat."
Brezhnev did not mention
Stalin by name, but it is
extremely rare for a Soviet
leader to speak publicly of the
corruption and terror of the
past , even without being

•
But BreW!ev al!O made it
clear
that
the
new
constitution would not bring
to the Soviet Union what he
described as "the perverted
and vulgarized interpretation
of democracy and hwnan
rights" that is popular in the
West.
The 711-year~ld party chief
said the draft constitution
"proceeds from the assumption" that right~ caMot be
used against "our social

specifi c.
cu rrent constitu tion were
The
new
Brezhnev
darkened
by
illegal constitution, which appeared
repressions, violations of the in public for the first time
principles of socialist Saturday, offered some new
democracy and Leninist guarantees against Stalin-&lt;!ra
norms of party and state life . repression, including a right
VETERANS MEMORIAL
"This was done in to make complaints against
Saturduv Admi ~R1nns co ntravention
of
the officials.
Julia Moodispaugh, Mid,
dleport ; Kenneth Gaborik,
Racine;
Jack
Seelig,
Pomeroy; Maggie Gilmore,
Racine ; Kathryn Denison,
Middleport.
Saturday Discharges Brenda Templeton , George
Meinhart, Robert Fetty, Jack
Seelig, Mabel Wilkinson ,
George Conde, William
Vi cksburg some of the it," said Wince, who has Collins, Julia Moodispaugh.
entertainment greats of the missed but two Sunday
Sunday Admissions time, including Ray Charles, church services in !9 years. Leona Winnings, New Haven ;
Fats
Domino ,
Dinah "So I started on the prayer Marjorie Wilt, Pomeroy ;
Washington, Lionel Hampon, room before I even got Jennie Minear, New Marsh·
finished."
B.B. King, Little Milton .
The prayer room, which field; Paul Qualls, Pomeroy.
"I had them all in. I was the
Sunday Discharges first man to bring the big has stained glass windows, Herman Michael, Lena
bands into the area," he said . biblical statues and a rosary, Nesselroad.
Wince moved his nightclub has been one of the popular
to a new location in 1972 and attractions at Wince's club.
PLEASANT VALLEY
started the Barrel Club . "People from all around
DISCHARGES
- Darvln
Before he opened that come to look at my prayer Bleemoe, Gallipolis; . Jeff
establishment, he said a room. They can't get over it Bragg, Mason; Mrs. Pauline
being in a nightclub," he said.
unique idea hit him.
Carpenter, Vinton, 0 .; Paul
"I was working on the bar, "! pray every day. So I Maynard, New Haven; Mrs.
getting it ready when some· figured, 'why not have a Christy Haley, Gallipolis;
thing came over me and told prayer room where I work." ' Charles Kinnaird , Apple
'lle to put a prayer room in
Grove; Mrs. Charlene Chase,
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Eleanor
Knick, West Columbia;
Zelma Rayburn, Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Gordon
Sebrell, Leon; Mrs. Orin
Durham, Jackson, 0.; Bob
Moore, Syracuse, 0 .; Mrs.
William Hunt and son,
CHICAGO ( UPI)
•· damaged.
There were scattered incl- Ga'lllpolis; Mrs. Loretta
Scattered incidents of rockthrowing and .. gunshots dents or gunfire, rock- Fillinger, Gallipolis; James
marred an uneasy peace throwing and looting Sunday. Mitchell, West Columbia;
Ten policemen were Leland Walters; Point
early today in the rubbleSunday, · none Pleasant; William Duncan,
strewn streets of the injured
Humboldt Park area where seriously. One officer Gallipolis Ferry; Theodore
weekend riots left two reportedly was hit by a Stevens, Point Pleasant;
persons dead and more than ricochet bullet Sunday night. John Hall, Henderson; Mrs.
100 injured.
The other injured officers Robert Wamsley, Point
Helmeted police patroled reportedly were hit by rocks Pleasant and Harry Davis,
Point Pleasant.
the area.
or bottles.
•
More than 130 persons were
Authorities said a police
arrested, eight stores were car was fired on from a
Holzer Medical Cepter
looted and ·two buildings were passing' car Sunday night.
(Discharges, Jun~3)
burned during disturbances The gunman was arrested
Georgia Allen, Ossie
ln the Northwest Side . and suffered minor injuries in
Auxier, Lena Bowles, Ger·
community Saturday and a scuffle ·with police.
Sonday, police sald.
A parked police motorcycle trude Byer, Willard Clagg,
Two persons were killed in was carried away and thrown Julia Combs, Owen Cordell,
a gunfight between police and into a lagoon in Humboldt Carole Coyan, Robert
neighborhood gang members Park, where police had set up · Damschroder, Patricia
Davis, Floyd Drummond,
Saturday night. Scattered a ,command post.
Naomi Eckard, $baron
outbursts of gunfire left six
Edwards, Ruth Flowers,
others wounded.
Ruth Greaves,
Mason.
Police said 48 policemen
Grirmn, Mrs. Charlea Howell
and more than 80 civilians
and daughter, Gay jeffers,
were injured in the disorders
Linda
Jones,
Annette
that began during a Saturday
ASK TOWED
Lambert,
Lester
Lee,
night Puerto Rican Day
Marriage licenses were Tamara Massey, Joann
celebration . Three police issued to William Mitchell,
McClintock, Hazel Michael,
vehicles were destroyed by 65, Rt. 2, Pomeroy, and Alice Frankie Neigler, Mrs.
fire and 14 others were Captalo Darnell, 41, Athens;
Michael l.'licholson and
Brian Keith Justice, 21, Rt. 4, daughter, George Nutter,
Pomeroy, and Jacqueline James Parsons, Jr., Clyde
Bemeice King, 19, Rt. 2, Porter, Robert Schoffler, Sr.,
Pomeroy; William Edward Ruby Sexton, Marie Slone,
Carte, 21, Charleston and Dahlia Thacker.
Geneva Carol Coffman, 19,
(Blrtbs, June 3)
Racine ; Raymond Lester
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Bush,
Little, 47, Cheshire, and son, Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs.
Dorothy Mae Kent, 34, James Blake, daughter,
Cheshire.
Point Pleasant, W. Va.

cotton field to posh club

Humboldt Park
in uneasy truce

Eating Fun for The
Whole family J

JOIN UP!

Our Vacation Club
Makes the Going
Easy! ·
Say "bon voyage" to the problems of
financing your vacation! All it takes
is 49 weekly deposits into our
Vacation Club, we pay the 50th
FREE. Start now!

@Farmers Ban
t

A

A

'
system and to datnaRe
the
interests of lhe Soviet
people."
Nobel Peaee Prize laureal&lt;!
Andrei Sakharov, the nation 's
most outspoken civil rights
rampaigner, said after the
constitution appeared that he
fel1little change would be felt
in Soviet society.
"We have an unshakable
society and the constituion
confirms that ," Sakharov
said.

HOSPITAL NEWS

Tom Wince makes it from
VICKSBURG, Miss. (UP! )
- Tom Wince wears a 10.
carat diamond ring and fancy
clothes and runs a nightclub
thai has its own prayer room.
It's a long way from the two·
room shack in the Mississippi
Delta where he was brought
up.
"I thought I would pick
cotton all my life. I'll never
have to pick cotton again,"
sa id Wince, 66, now a
respected night spot owner,
dubbed "Fancy Tom" by his
associates in this Mississippi
River city.
"My ,family was so poor
that all we had to eat was lard
and cornbread and the lard
was tlle butter."
Wince, decked out in sports
clothes and a gold necklace,
stood behind the bar at his
business, The Barrel Club.
"I beat it into my mind thai
you had to work hard to get it.
The Uner things in life
became impOrtant to me."
Wince has had the finerthings for almost 40 years since he opened a nightclub
called the Blue Room along
Catfish Row in 1937.
" f was a bellhop at the time
and was making $4 .50 a week.
I had four children and just
couldn't support them. Some·
thing just told me to start
seiling beer and Cokes. I've
been doing it ever since,"
said Wince.:
During a more than 30-yeaf
stay at the Blue Room hefore
it was closed because of
.urban renewal, Wince hosted
what he called "every big
band of the time."
"When I had Louis Arm·
strong in my place it was
packed. We had both blacks
and whites. Alter a while, the
blacks and whites were
dancing On the same floor
together,'' he said. ''This was
·unheard of at that time . I
made so much money that
afterwards it took me aU
night to count it."
Wince
brought
into

A

'

some places
have pretty
good chicken.
Some offer fair soft drinks. Others not-too·
bad cones and shakes. But there is only one
place you can get the best of all these things
THE DAIRY ISLE in Middleport.

(Discharges, Juoe 4)
Cindy Baker, Cora Bren·
ner, Ina Cantrell, James
Church, Sadie Cooper, Betty
Crouse, SaUy Holman, Ruth
Holt, Blancne Klrby, David
Ueving, PhyUis Meadowo,
Robert Mullins, Jr., Donald
Phillips, John Ray IV .
Amanada Raynes , Helen
Rice, Mrs. Roger Saltsman
and son, Shirley Shaffer,
Linda Shambaugh, Clyde
Shamblin,
Ada Slone,
Jemima Sprouse, Mae
Thomas, Brian Walker.
(Btrtbs,June4)
Mr. and. Mrs. David Cogar,
daughter, Point Pleasant, W.
Va.; Mr. and Mrs. James
Hatfield, son, Jackson; Mr.
and Mrs. David Ball, son,
Gallipolis.
(Discharges, June 5)
William Burris, Mrs.
William Eggleton and son.
Doldie Ewing, Jesse Ewing,
Mrs. Richard Fetty and son,
Louise Haffelt, Janet Jones,
William Keck, Connie
Martin, Luther Smith, Jr.
(Births, June 5)
Mr . and Mrs. Perry
Crosier, son, Jackson; Mr.
and Mrs. Everette ,Tribby,
daughter, Wellston.

Police report
two accidents
in Middleport
The Middleport Police
repOrted two accidents today.
At 2 p,m. Sunday a car
driven by Ruby A. Cundiff,
17, Middleport, traveling east
.on Locust St., turned in the
path of a westbound pickup.
truck at Broadway St. driven
by Jim Janesky, Columbus.
Vicki McCune, Middleport,
was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospitaf for
treatment of minor injuries.
She was a passenger in the
Janesky vehicle. There was
medium damage and Miss
Cundiff was charged with
failing to yield.
.
At 3:37 p.m. Friday on
Broadway St., a truck driven
by Cecil . Midkiff; 28, Mid·
dleport, struck a parked car
owned by Virginia R. Grimm,
Middleport , causing light
damage. Midkiff was not
charged.

FATAL ARGUMENT
BRISBANE, Australia
(UPI) - An American was
sbot to death by his neighbor
in suburban Fortitude Valley
Sunday In an argument over
a lawnmower interfering
with television reception,
police said.

SURGERY TODAY
Racine - Mrs. Mattie
Circle, Racine, will undergo
surgery today at Pleasant
VaUey Hospital for a broken
hip. Her room number is Ill.

We feature :
Sundaes
Banana Deluxe
Zombies
Hot Fudge
Cake
4 Cone Flavors
Strawberry
Shortcake
Sodas &amp; Coolers

PEPSI
CARTOON
Gl-ASSES &amp;
16
PEPSI

oz.

Rent o BLUE LUSTRE shompooer
lo get the scmDDing action voo
need to loosen and lilt oot
grouncl·in dirt ond grime. And use

BWE WSTRE shampoo 10 gel
your carpels or~hl . clean ond
plush'

Watergate pair
in the clink
on June 22nd
WASHINGTON (UPI)Jobo Mltcbell aod H. R.
Haldema g, today were
ordered to prison Juoe. Z%
lor tbelr pari lo tbe
Watergate eover- up.
U. s. Dlslrlet Judge Jobn
Slrlca told the two top aides
of former President
Riehard Nixon they bad
two weeks to clean up their
personal allalrs before
beginning tbelr seoteores
of 30 months to elgbt years
for obslrucllng justice,
conspiracy and perjury In
Amerlea's worst political
scandal.

Death penalty
curbed·in 5-4
court ruling
WASffiNGTON (UPI)
The Supreme Court ruled oto
4 today that a state may not
make the death penalty
mandatory lor the murder of
an on-duty pollee officer.
The five-page unsigned
opinion came in a Louisiana
case which has caused the
justices problems from the
start.
Chief Justice Warren
Burger and Justices Byron
White, Harry Blackman and
William Rehnqulst dissented.
But the majority said the
Louisiana law under which
Harry Roberts wsa sentenced
to death for the fatal shooting
of officer Dennis Mcinerney
at Mardi Gras day in New
Orleans in 1974 constitutes
"cruel and unusual punish·
ment" in violation of the
Constitution..

Wolfpen.
News Notes
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Griffith and Robert L. Haning
of Dayton were weekend
,guests of Mr . and Mrs .
Eugene Haning . Also Sunday
dinner .guests were Mr. and
Mrs. Brady Knotts, Tim and
Brad of King 'Hill, Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Tuckerman, Mr.
and Mrs. Jack Elam and
family and James Gibbs, all
local,
Rhonda Haning celebrated
her birthday May 10 at the
home of her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Eugene Haning, Cake,
ice cream and tea were
served to those attending,
Mr. and Mrs. James Reeves,
Bryan, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Elam, Bill and Carolyn, Mr.
and Mrs. Fred Tuckerman,
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Darnell
and Jeff and James Gibbs.
Mrs. William Sayre · of
Columbus was Sunday
(Mother's Day ) visitor of Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Sayre.
Miss Patricia Thoma of
Kentucky and Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Thoma and family
were weekend visitors
of Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Thoma Sr.
Saturday dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Harley T.
Johnson were Miss Patricia
Thoma, Mr. and · Mrs.
Howard Thoma, Sr. and Mr.
and Mrs. Howard Thoma, Jr.
and family.
Sunday visitors of Mr. and
Mrs, Charley Smith were Mr.
and Mrs. Doyle Knapp, Kail
and Kevin and Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Arthur McGhee and
Mathew of Grove City.
Mr. Robert Reeves, Bryan
and Jamie and Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Darnell were supper
guests of Mr. and Mrs. James
Reeves.
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Smith
of Kanauga were Monday
evening visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Charley Smith.
Mr. and Mrs. William
Boyce of Columbus were
weekend visitors of Mrs.
Bertha Russell and E'a rl
Russell.
Mr. and Mrs. William
Boyce of Columbus and
Bertha Russell, local, · were
Monday callers of Mr. and
Mrs. Harley T. Johnson.
Julie Stevens and friend,
Barbara Steadman of
Fairfax, Va. visited with Mr.

..

,

MASON
.
. DRIVE·IN

For Each Depositor
Member Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation

Apetition containing 3.19 names asking a referendum vote on
the $5 permissive auto license tax has been filed with Pomeroy
Council.
Mayor Clarence Andrews presented the petition to council
Monday night. The referendum would be placed on the ballot in
the general election in November provided it is certified by the
County Board of Elections.
Coun~ihnan Harold Brown invited the people who had signed
the petition to meet with council to ieam the full meaning of
council's action .
Councilman Harry Davis said there is a "sunshine " law that
enables people to attend any and all meetings.
Councilmen also pointed out that there was a period of six
weeks (three meeting•) before the ordinance for the lax was
passed when the public did not come forward to object.
Councilmen Phil Globokar and De vis both felt that if the
ordinance had not read that it was for cleaniAA only, but for
repair of streets also, they would not have had any problems.

U.S. AIR FORCE MASTER SGT. Steven L. Jacobs is
presented the Commandanta Award at Oklahoma City Air
Force Station, Oklahoma City, by Senior Master Sergeant
John C. Viti.He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Dale M. Jacobs
of 90 S. Second Ave., Middleport. He graduated with
bonors from the Air Force Communications Service
Noncommissioned Officer Academy.. Sgt. J t cobs received
the
Commandant Award
for
outstanding
noncommissioned officer qualities. He is a maintenance
management technician.
The sergeant is a 1957 graduate of Middleport High
Scbool. His wife, Wanda, is the daughter of Mrs. Garnet
Roush of Gallipolis, Ohio.

::;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:

Globokar added that if streets other lnan u.~ uuwnwwn area
were to be cleaned and repair of certain other areas each year
were included , council would not have the problems it has.
The resignation of Phyllis Hennessy, treasurer, effective
June 1, was read by Mayor Andrews.
Council accepted the resignation and appointed Jane
Walton. clerk. as treasurer on a temporary basis until the end
or the year.
In other business council hired Donald Stivers as a
dispatcher for the police department and approved a week or
vacation for Chief Jed Webster. While Webster is on vacation
Henry Werry wiU be acting chief.
Larry Powell, councilman, disclosed he is seeking funds to
either renovate the old senior high building or lear It down.
Mayor Andrews informed council that the governor's offiee
had called him and informed him that there was a million and
hall dollars that will be issued in Ohio. The mayor said the
money will be distributed to villages thai have made

TONIGHT I&lt; TUESDAY
JUNE 6-7
RETURN TO
MACON COUNTY "PG"
PLUS
SIX PACK ANNIE
" R"

application for federal grants and that no new applications will
be considered.
Pomeroy submitted an application sometime ago and all
that has to be done is change the location of the bulld111g from
the senior high to the present location.
The mayor further added that the ser.ior high building is in
the flood plain and no federal grants would be given to repair
or tear down the building. However. a grant could be obtained
to lear down the present city hall or restore it, the mayor
stated.
Meeting with council was Helen Lyonsiri regard to the wall
going up Wyiiss Hill.
Mrs. Lyons told council that she did not erect the wall and
it collapsed before council repaired it. She stated that she had
no intention of repairing the wall.
It was pointed ~ ut that the wall is holding up the road and if
it comes down the road would be washed out. Davis said that
the road is forcing the wail over. Council agreed to repalr it as

•

at

Pomeroy-MiddlePOrt. Ohio
Tuesday, June 7, 1977

!

Area Deaths

1

AUTTA HIGGENBOTHAM
Autta A. Higginbotham. 75.
a former resident of Mid-

dleport , died Saturday at
Barberton. Ohio.

He Is survived by a sister,
Mrs . Dorothy Evans of
M i ddleport; a brother, Er nest
S.
Higginbotham ,
Farmville, Va ., a:nd a halfbrother, Melvin Roush .·
Parkersburg, W. Va. Funeral
services will be held Tuesday
at Akron .
·

HAROLD VOGELSONG

The · Rev .

Harold

W.

Vogelsong. 60. of 1512 Carroll

Ave., Portsmouth, former
Meigs County resident, died

Saturday at Mt . Carmel

Hospital
in
Columbus
following a long illness.
A native of Ironton, the
Rev . Mr . Vogelsong was
pastor of the New Boston

United Methodist Church and
Terminals United Methodist
Ch\Jrch . He formerly served
as pastor at Bethel Church in
West Portsmouth and at
Moore' s Chapel Church i n

Blue Creek ,

He had been a Western

Union

Te legraph

office

manager for 40 years, was a
member of the Ironton
Masonic Lodge, and a
veteran of W. W. II. From

Burk,

brothers, Wayne and Donald

Vogelsong , both of Ironton ,

and several n i eces and
nepheWs.
Funeral services w ill be

held at 1 p. m. Tuesday at the

New Boston United Methodist

Church with the Rev. Hughes

Jones officiat i ng . Fr ie nds
may call at the Pennington
Funeral Home i n New Boston

from 2 to 4 p. m, and 7 to 9 p.
m . Monday . Buri al will be i n
lhe Woodland Cemetery ,
Ironton .

HAZEL MICHAEL
SYRACUSE
Hazel
Thompson Mi chael , 71 ,
Syracuse , died
residence Sunday .

at

her

A daughter of !he late

Edward and Nora Tracy
Thompson, she was also
preceded in death by her
huSband, Oylvan M ichael and
one brother , Glen Thompson .
She Is survived by two sons,
Gerald E.. Syracuse, and

Ralph A., Los Angeles; a ,

daughter, Nora Shook ; a
sister, Helen Bowers, both of
Akron; 17 grandchildren, five
great -grandchildren, and
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be 1

p. m. Wednesday at the
Ewing Chapel with the Rev.

1941 to 1951 he managed the

Western Union Tel eg raph
office in Pom eroy
Survivi ng ar ewife,
Evelyn Knopp \ l&lt;f I song ;
daughter , Mrs . Melinda

Cemetery . Friends mar call
at the funeral home a ter 7
this evening.

and Mrs. Harley T. Johnson
and Mrs. J. R. Murphy
Sunday evening and Monday
rooming. Julie .Stevens is a
cousin of Mrs. Harley
Johnson.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Thoma were Friday vlsiiors
of Mr. and Mrs. Harley T.
Johnson.
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel
Worley, Stacy, of Beckley
were holiday weekend
visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Charley D. Smith.
Charles Knapp spent the
weekend with grandmother,
Mrs.
Lena
Knapp,
Langsville.
Mr. and . Mrs. ·Daniel
Worley and Stacy visited
Sunday morning
with
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Harley T. Johnson.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Barr
and famlly of Rutland visited
Monday with Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Thoma and with Mr.
and Mrs. Harley T. Johnson.
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp,
Kail and Kevin, local, and
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Worley,

Koch

off i ciatin~ .

Harvey

Burial will be In Bunker Hill

Stacy· of Beckley were
Sunday and Monday dinner
guests of · Mr . and ·Mrs.
Charley Smith.
Mr . .and Mrs. Jack Elam
and family visited With Mr.
and Mrs. Homer Fouch of
Hurricane, W. Va. and their
daughter, Delorice and her
famlly and girlfriend, Jewel
· and family, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Fouch, Mr. and Mrs. Earnest
Fouch, Huntington, and with
Jack's half-sister, Mrs.
Thorunn Woods .and her
husband, . Mr. Kristinn
Egelsson and his brother
irom Blekaraut Keflavik;
Iceland.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Elam
and family, Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Tuckerman and Ronald
Haning visited with Mr. and
Mrs. Earl Bratton, Albany.
Mrs. Arvilla Donahue,
local, is spending some time
with her daughter, Mr: and
Mrs. Wayne Johnson and
Sammy of Della Drive,
Lexington, Ky.

·~

Frank Porter Sr.
accident victim

Sclotovllle ; , two

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l fNews .. •in Briefs\\
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By United Presslnl&lt;!rnatlonal
LONDON - QUEEN ELIZABETH GAVE thanks in St.
Paul's Cathedral today for her Silver Jubilej! on the throne in a
day of religious and secular celebration that filled the streets
or London with colorful processions and immense crowds.
The queen paraded from Buckingham Palace loSt. Paul's
in a gold.Jeafed carriage to begin a national day of thanks·
giving commemorating the 25th anniversary of her ascension
to the throne. Tens of thousands, many of whom slept out. in
cold and rain to win good viewing positions,lined the two-mile
route from Buckingham Palace along which the ~een and her
husband, Prince Philip, rode in the golden coronation coach
drawn by eight white horses.

FRANK PORTER SR.

.

BRASll..IA, BRAZIL - ROSAL YNN CARTER, in the most
challenging task of her Latin American tour , begins meetings
today with Brazilian leaders angered over the Carter
administration's stand on human rights and nuclear power.
The Flrst Lady arrived in Brasilia Monday from Peru and
was scheduled to meet Foreign Minister Antonio Azeredo da
Silveira and President Ernesto Geisel during her thr~'&lt;iay
stay. She was expected to hold a news conference.today .
Mrs. Carter's already delicate goodwiU mission was
rendered more difficult Monday when student leaders handed
the American delegation a letter decrying "the grave ills
which beset our nation ." Mrs, Carter's assignment was to
press the Carter administration's commitment to human
rights and its opposition to nuclear proliferation without
offending the military leaders of South America's largest and
most powerful nation.

Divers were still searching
the farm pond of Frank W.
Porter, Jr. near Racine late
this morning in an attempt to
locate the body of Frank W.
Porter, Sr., 73, Gallipolis,
who apparently drowned
whHe fishing .

COLUMBUS - · THE FIRST LEGAL MOVE has been
made toward attempting to repeal election day voter
registration and permanent registration in a November
statewide ref~rendum. Ohioans for the Preservation of Honest
Elections (OPHE) filed a sample petition with state Attorney
General William J. Brown Monday, asking him to approve the
form as quickly ;IS possible to permit a citizen vote on the
provisions "which threaten the continued integrity· of this
state's electoral system."
A spokesman for llrown said the state's top legal officer
·would try to rule on the sample petition by the end of the week.
This would permit OPHE to proceed with collectiong 184,321
signatures by Aug. 29 to get the referendwn on the fail ballot.
In a related d~velopment, Brown is to meet Wednesday
with Senate President Pro Tempore Oliver Ocasek, D·Akron,
and House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe Jr., D·New Boston, to
.discuss the possibility ofa lawsuit to halt the relerendwn.

Ohioans voted today on 192
school rinancial packages
With the largest additional
operating levy up for a
decision In Northmor school
district in Morrow County
where residents voted on a 13
mill levy .
The Ohio Education
Associa lion said there were
Ill additional operating
levies on hallots around the
state, 18 renewals of existing
24
permanent
levies ,
improvement levies for usc in
building maintenance and 39
construction bond i'l5ues.
Three of the largest
additional operating levies
voted on were in Fairfield
County where voters cast
ballots on a 10 mill levy in the
Fairfield Union school
district, an 8 mill levy in the
Pickerington school district

sr. MERE·EGLISE, FRANCE

- AMERICAN veterans
who took part in the Normandy landing starting the hattie for
Europe on ~y 33 years ago were guests of honor at
commemorative ceremonies held Monday. Foul weather with
gusty winds and low-lying clouds didn't allow Bob Murphy, 51,
(Continued on page 10)

Mr . Porter, with two
friends, had gone to the pond
early this morning to fish
with Paul Davies and Hoyt
Mullins of GaUipolis. Mr.
Porter was in a boat a few
feet from shore when the
other two men, fishing from
the shore heard a splash and
call for help. They went to the
Porter house located on the
·farm and notified Porter's
son, a Pomeroy attorney, who
dived into the lake but was
unable to locate the body.
According to a witness, the
boat had not overturned.
Porter, 73, was born Sept. 61
!904 , He taught and coached
three sports at Ceredo·
Kenova High School near
Huntington · from 1930 until
1952 .when he became an
·assistant football coach · and
summer playground director
at Gallipolis. porter retired
from the staff at Gallia
Academy High School in 1971.

'

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• ' t

and 7.7 mills in the Amanda
Clear Creek scbool district.
Voters in Shaker Heights in
Cuyahoga County cast ballots
on a 12 mill additional
operating levy, Bucyrus· had
a 9 mill opera ling .levy on the
ballot while voters In the
Bluffton school district voted
on an 8.5 mill operating levy.
The Ostego school district
in Wood County had an 8.08
mill additiona l operating levy
on the ballot while the
Monroeville school district in
Huron County tmd a 9 mill :::::::::·:::::::::::::·:::·:;:·:::::::;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:::::::::;:;:;.
levy to be voted on and lhe
EXTENDED FORECAST
Grandview school district in
Thursday through
Franklin County had a 7.8 Saturday, fair ~nd quite
mill levy on the ballot.
cool Thursday. Gradually
warming
Friday and
Saturday. Highs Thursday
in the 60s, warming to the
Fair tonight and Wed· upper 60s and 70s t' ridny
nesday , lows tonight to 50 and and Saturday . . Overnight
highs to 75. Probability of lows in the 40s Thursday
precipitation near zero today, and mid 40s aod low 50s
10 per cent tonight, 20 per Friday aod in the 50s
Saturday.
cent Wednesday .

Weather

Wood Countian is
picked ·by Carter

J junior sizes 5-8 to 11 -14.

·No one knows
it's there
but you I - the

WASHINGTON (UPI) Nelson Cruikshank, 75, a
native of Bradner, Wood
County, Ohio, was named
Monday by Prfl;ident Carter
as chairman of the federal
Council on Aging.

UNDERSHAPER
ol FIRM, AIRY
POWER NET

The announcement was

that slims you
into this
paisley-draped swimsuit .
Nylon/Spandex
In color tones
keyed to red.
Sizes 34-40
Also on the 2nd flilor ·children's
dePirtment. swim suits for
girls in sizes 8 to 16. Select
yours now.

·

~

~IYilANI

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

NEWLY PAINTED - The Davis Insurance building located on the corner of Court and
Second Streets has been painted attractively in keeping with the clean-up and restoration of
Pomeroy,

made by Vice President
Waller Mondale .ill a meeti.ng
of more· than 3,000 members
of the National Council of
Senior Citizens meeting here.
Cruikshank ,
a
1922
graduate of Fostoria, Ohio,
High School, has headed the
council for the past eight
years.
Mondale said (.'ruikshank is
older than the combined ages
of Hamilton Jordan, Carter's
.top advisor , Jody Powell, the
White House media secrewry
and Amy Carter, the
president's &lt;laughter .
But anyone who wants to
know what a full day's work

is like should try keeping up
with Cruikshank, Mondale
said.
"A person is never old until
regrets take the place of
dreams
and
Ne lson
Cruikshank has not slopped
dreaming," said Mondale.
A graduate of Ohio
Wesleya n
Col l ege,
Cruikshank
served as,
director of Social Security for
the AFL.CIO lor 10 years
before he retired in 1965 .
In 1969, Cruikshank was
elected presiden t of the
National Council of Senior
Citizens, which now claims
3.5 million members.
Last year he was co·
chairman with Ullian Carter,
the president's mother, of
Senior Citizens for carter·
Mondale.
·
Cruikshank's appointment
as chairman of the Council on
Agi ng is subject to Senate
11 pprovai.

Vol. 28, No. 37

-1

today ; Rutland, Pomeroy and Salisbury will close
Wednesday, and on Friday Salem Center will close. Last
in closing will be the high school and the junior high school
which w1ll conclude classes next Monday. Closings varied
due to the different times students were out due to
weather and the energy shortage.

Amm· may crash

See our selection of Swim

Suits in the ladies' sportswear
department on the 2nd floor one and two piece styles in
women's sizes 34 to 40 and

~ •·

OPENING AT 3 - Normally, despite high winds
Monday . the Middleport Community Pool would have
been the scene of action. However. with the late closing of
Me1gs Local schools the pool is not opening until 3 in the
afternoons. Business is expecl&lt;!d to improve with school
closings begiMing today in the Meigs Local School
District. Bradbury, Middleport and Harrisonville closed

NAIROBI, Kenya (UP)) President ldi Amin flew out
of Uganda before dawn
today, apparently to try to
cr ash the Commonwealth
conference in London.
Radio Uganda said Amiri
"left for overseas aboard a
friendly country's aircraft
which took him from one of
the country's air force bases
at 3 a .m. (8 p.m .. Monday
EDT) ."
·
The radio gav e no
indication whi ch country
provided the aircraft or the
location of the air hase.
It did not say where Amin
was flying, btl\ repealed a
statement
from
the
unpredictable president, first
broadcast Monday, that he
intended to show up uninvited
at the Commonwealth
conference.
Amin said Monday he
would fly to a country near
Britain and then cross to

Fifteen Cents

I .

I

'

Ohioans voting
on ·192 levies

ELBERFELDS.IN POMEROY

soon as possible.
Eddie Martin also met with council in regard to a water
leak on Condor Street. Council •uggested that Martin meet
with the Board or Public Affairs in regard to the matter.
De vis reported that Rutland Street ha• been made a dead
end and signs have heen posted. He also told council they need
to purchase weed killer to kill weeds in the village especially
on the parking lot wall.
Davis also reported that he can obtain limestone lor S4 a
ton that cah be pla&lt;ied along the curb along Main Street and on
the railroad tracks.
Council praised the ~forts of Paul Simon ilr the
beautification ol Pomeroy by cutting weeds along the river
bank side of the highway.
·
Attending were mayor Andrews, Davis, Brown, Lou
Osborne, Glpbokar, Ralph Werry , and Powell, council
members, Jane Walton, clerk, (llie! Webster and the Rev.
William Middleswarth who opened the meeting with prayer.

en tine

---------------------------1

'1'1•'

POMEROY, OHIO
$40,000.00 Maximum ln~urance

·Petition asks car license tag tax referendum

.

London by boat, but gave no
further indica tion of his
plans .
For weeks Amin has been
playing a war of nerves with
Britain , threaten.ing to attend
the C ommonwealth
conference dressed in a
Scottish kilt and with a 2511man delegation .
Sunday. however. Amin ap·
parently backed down. He
announced he had received a
letter from British Prime
Minister James Callaghan
b a.r ring Uganda • s
' participation at the meeting ..
Amin went on to threaten
that he might retaliate by
doing "something serious" to
the British - presumably a
threat against the 200 British
m iss ion a r i e s
and
businessmen still living in
Uganda .
Monday night Amin once
more switched signals and

Rail .users

Queen'~ . party.

threatened again to . attend . in Europe.
Diplomatic observers said
They said It still was
the most likely aircraft Amin unclear whether Amin would
might have used would be a actually try to reach Londoo ,
Soviet one . The Russians in or whether he wisbed merely
recent years have re· to' plunge the gathering into
equipped the Ugandan armed renewed col1!usion.
forces and ' Russian military
In the last few days Amin
advisers are stationed in the has launched . repeated
country to train the army and attacks not only agalrist the
air force.
Britisb, but by implicatioo
However , the observers · against all the
Com·
said they had no idea where 1monwealth
leaders
at· .
any aircTaft would take Amin tending
the
meeling.

Appalachian plan
to he developed
The Buckeye Hills-Hocking
Valley Regional Deve lop·
ment District will host on
Tuesday, June 14 from 7 p.m.
to 9 p,m. an Appalachian
Reg ional Commission public
meeting lor preparation of a
pian for the Appalachian
Region at the Athens City·
County Hea lth building.
The Appalachian Regional
Commission shall, in accord
with
the
Appalachian
Regional Development Act,
prepare and adopt an overall
Regional Development Plan,
establishing a set of goals,
· objectives, · policies and
priorities for the entire
Region for the planning .-nd
coordination of local, State
and Federal dev elopment
efforts fo r the best use of
public funds and the
stimulation of private in·
vestment for development.

Teenager of

In the preparation of the
regional plan, as mandated
by Congress, there is the
requirement of publ~c par·
ticipation in the plannins
process. Each of the 13 state•
is required to conduct public
meetings to solicl~ the
opinions and Ideas of concerned citizens throughout
the Reg ion . In order to
generate interest in the
public sessions and to help
prepare people for active
participation. the Com·
mission published "Questions
. for Appalachia." Members of
the . BH·HVRDD General
Policy Co uncil received
copies of the publication at
the April 19 General Policy
Co un cil meeting held in
Athens.
Citizens wishing to, have a
· copy may receive it by
stopping at the BH·HVRDD
offices in Marietta or by
calling the office at (614 ) 37~
9436.

Coolville is·

Resurfacing

cited by OSP

work noted

invited to
meet Thursday .
.The Meigs County Rail
Service Committee will hold
a public meeting al 7:30p.m.
Thursday in the form er
co uncil chambers of Mid·
dleport Villa ge Hall,
Topics will be how to obtain
continued Chesapeake and
Ohio Railroad se rvice to
Middleport a nd Pomeroy ,
subsidy arrangements, and
possible shortline operations.
The meetin g is intended
primary for Meigs County
rai1 users but everyone in-

terested is welcome.
Chessie service was to have
ended on May 11 , 1978.
However it will now be ex·
tended beyond that date, for
at least several weeks, as the
result of an appeal filed by a
Gallia County shipper, the
Public Utilities Commission
of

Ohio 1

and

union s

representing railway em·
pioyes . ·The appeal ha s
delayed issuance of the final
Int ers t ate
Co mm erce
Commission abandonment
order and has also resulted in
an extension of the subsidy
offer period.
MEET TONIGHT
RACINE - The Southern
Local School Board will
hold a speCial board
meeting at 7 p.m. June 7.
The meeting, open to the
public, will be held In the
Southern High School
cafeteria .

Charles C. Arnott , 16,
Coolville, was charged with
driving left of center
following a headon collision
·at 5:15 p.m. Monday on TR
276, one tenth of a mile south
of SR 681 .in Meigs County. ,
The Gallia·Meigs Post
State High way Patrol said
Amott's car collided with one
operated by Jackie Parker,
17, Pomeroy. There was
moderate damage .
A deer accident occurred at
5:40 a.m. Monday on Cl\ 3,
north of SR 124. The animal
ran into th e path of a Mei gs
Co unty sheriff's cruiser
o perated by Ronald L,
Hollon, 21, Alhany. There was
minor dam~ge .

CHARLESTON - Nearly
365 miles of resurfacing and
other improvement work in
41 counties throughout the
state will be opened for bid
June 14 by the West Virginia
Depart ment of Hi ghways.
The oontracts, which call lor
hot laid bituminous concrete
wearing course unless
otherwise noted, in Mason
County are :
1.7 miles, Ohio River Rd. on
W. Va. 2 to widen six feet and
hot laid bituminous Cllncrete
wearing course; 2.21 mile•,
Jackson
Avenue,
Pt.
Pleasant, on W. Va. 2, and 5.7
miles, Mason-New Haven Rd.
on U. S. 33,
I

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