<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="15052" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/15052?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-19T10:38:38+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="47830">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/6015792d46e916e6ebbb1bf8703355a5.pdf</src>
      <authentication>4dfa87fa237326daad5103c9d7a24b00</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="48357">
                  <text>•

lt

IUIO::I,

V dU,,"lt

•I I\IU.I•\.P"I~\~1

lltU:I\1),\I, ti L'\IIIt.~iol\

It

\

J
cl

Voter&lt;.. m UJ.I,• N11t \A.aJk
( 'tt) S4 huol D1~lnd &lt;lJ&gt;JH tWt'il
n 4~naJI OfH.'!.-lltnJ lt.•n l,S83-

t

In

\

lid!

1.251

~ht•

Volt·rs lO t11e Mnllrue \illll
SehpoJ D1~tnrt w,tro do\\ n 11

H t'at~d

"' '"' 1111 nf lhl'

f q

\tJtt·~ !11

Jt {t':.tltd lJy ll

Ih

11 r 'I
llOHl'\f'!,
Ci&lt;l S 1flllH ;ltPd

•t Y.uul'l bf• held m
H'l(ltle."•fSl'
1);1 tNt

t

ltl.

rwl kt:'l p

1 t r 1l•&gt;tl ·1t th.e
I ouls may
I

·IJ!Iof

J

1

.t

~~

(;

tt t

rtrd
rh~m

w1 1 the

\ ,,tp

mst

.1

1twn, Uwn vof&lt;'rs
II")

1St ll\t'

I' 1&lt;;

flo

T:l1HIU.dt•

for

tJ ,:-, f 1]1t'\ ~trr. opp(lSCd lo
d&lt; &lt;; ~rel!alltfn,'
'SU td
(:$' ri·
I ~~·r

11Htl 1S H 4..UUft
!l(f Will !)(&gt; UtltJJ the
r ' 11 C'onrt r t..les on It, I
ll

&lt;'~lrl)'
h.aVL'

d'""PJlOU!ted
tht::i tu

drii!L'

i!Wltft\

rt •,nUs m41Udt•d.
::t
111 thte ncnton~
r 1 ~t:. 1IL'Hl S• lJrvll IJlStJICt
t) ~ ll 1lxn pw 'll'd a 7 !lllll
r. J i '\
ttl( .V Vt1ted
~~~~~ ra! ttnl&lt;' · ln the
Uw mn:)t nwPu lly tn

!"

1 ·•~.:miX'L 1alk of dost ng 01
a.: m uLHi t tmg the schools

'""l ha\ e helped the vote,
Mallett unofflctally ol 1,7591.122
,\shlund City School
Dtsl1 i!'t \'~llrl s approved a !)..
"d 11
rt&gt;ne\\al of a 1 mill
'" ' p:ur ~1nd replncewcnt levy
.Ill I•&gt; 7:17.
\ oti rs '" the Painesvi lle
! '1t

1mol Distnct

r-

~pprovcd

', HC\\Cd :~.B-w tll ope1ating

lc

'IIL2'J5

1

lw \ uters uf the Cehna
1tv ':;. hMI dt"itricl passed a

I ,;,. 1111 •&gt;p·rotlllg levy 1,1321 lh.

Lo ld't'&lt;a t~ 1
voters
ilt..'h.'&lt;•Wd .t 4 !t-nu ll bond issue
67t,.HH
'I he Southwest Local
&amp;. lt~fQ ) Utsttttt won approvul
vf t l m 1ll operating levy 143llr:J

Vol&lt;n m Uw llr)'an Ctty
'; hr~1l UJstrll't vt11l:d down a
f.1.1 ~, Ht.~l h{lnd levy for a new
hu~h :-wlloo1 1,950-747
t t\M ()t}ij hond \SSUC

aud a
for iJO

• tdrnr uthll'llL' f:-tcJ itty 2,030.
lu U1e New Cleek West

t 111' Dtstnl'l of Wt&gt;st Umty,
a Sl.62 million bond 1ssue for
a new elemertUu y school .,., as
ddei!ted 427-243
- lleftance City School offi' wls won app•·vval 1,297~22
ur 3 1-mlll i.~su c to r~use
$900,000 for repair and
maintmntcnct! of schools
Central Local Schoo ls
111~t' irt voters voted 1511-136
111 f"'"' of a 5~n ill levy for
thrc

\l'ilfS

f H;.,:i;:-j

p111

f11T Schoo] bus

!1111 ,, l'tlfJ] rl'pHH S

''ri'ISVJHP Lo .tl S('hool
11

, ]{

t \otn

n5-:~t·d

a 5 5-

nl'lt

1encwal levy fo r
'I PI Jtmg expenses 288-77.
North eastern Loca l
D1stnct vote1 ~okayed a new
4-mlll levy for opera ting
cxpe ~tses 349·265
- In Swanton, voters came
out 718-303 111 favor of a 6 Z.
tml1 [or operatmg

le\),

lil ll

v.:h n

de"'

OJX'T;Itln~

,,, ...n

\"#

$

3 5·111111

~xpenses.

1 he Pike-Delta-York DIS·
u· c, .t fo62-!l25 '"a h1d for a

9~mll operatw~

, ,111

sc~ools

ayton city
I !&lt;' ~"

,JWolil

ISSUt' \\,IS dl•((',ltl-d

levy 403-241

576-

11 • havt.\ gone for
.t&lt;hhtu~us and rrnovatwn of

Jf,'} (t

\~a~

Lllst I If t

Tile Clt:s(\' ll'w fhStJut ,,f
V.iin Wfrt Count\ \'CJlt•tl down
a 4 &amp;-mill bond tssue f01
rcmo(Jl&gt;hnP. 568-489, 1ept.•at1ng

lose levy bid

HurNr ('ountH's, a 4 5l~null

hunti

'I ht·

IJulJthn~
\ i lt~rs

Hospital News

1n

the

l 'It'at fill k

IJJt a I Otstrtel of
Htcl!laml L'ounty BPJirOV&lt;-d a

J 55-uull bond 1ssue 4,825-744

levy 4111-397.
The

Graham

Local

Sch&lt;•Jls lost a btd for a J.&lt;nill
added upera tmg levy 854-j)69.
- Jn Shaker He1ghts a 12mtll addHtonal levy was
passed 4,742-2,i74 and a $4 .65
nHlilon bond tssue for
tmprovuH~ and renwdehng

Hol!er Med ical Cenler
(Discharges, J une 7)
Patricia Adleta , Mrs.
levy. The final unofficial vote David Ball and son, Bertha
Clark, Ira Clark, Mildred
tally WU&gt; 1!!&amp;-282
Voters in the Tiffin City ~·ranklin , Mrs James HatSchool district rejected a Z. held and son, Lois Henry,
rruli permanent hnprovement Mary Layne, Dortha Luster,
levy that was to have paid for Taulby Owens. Kevin Pope,
conversion of schools to alter· Randy Rhodes, Larry RICe,
nate sources of fuel by a vote James Shaffer, Herschel!
Sheets, Jacqueline Tubby,
uf 2. 02:1-1,948
- Voters m the New London Douglas Walters.
(Births, June7)
School Distnct approved a :;.
Mr. a nd Mrs. Ma r ion
•mil operatmg levy, 514-384
- North Ridgevtlle School Holcomb, a son. Ewtngton:
District voters approved a Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Mabon, a
7 8-lmll added levy, 1,676- so n, Wtlkesvllle.
1543.
,- Keystone School DtStrict
PLEASANT VALLEY
voters approved a 2.2-&lt;mll
DISCHARGES - Mrs. Roy
bond 1ssue for school Gilkey and son, Middleport ;
remodeling as well as a 3-m ill Mrs. Mabel Young, Ashton .
operating levy. The bond Mrs. Zelph1a Flora, Leon,
tssued was approved by a 572- Mrs. Vmme Long, Galhpolls
469 vote, wh tlc the operating Ferry; Mrs Earl Wallace,
levy won by a 590-451 rnargm. da ughter, Pliny; Mrs. Gtlbert
-Sheffi eld School DIStrict Buzza rd, New Haven ; Mrs
voters m Lora in County John Hill, Point Pleasant;
defea ted a 7-m•ll ad ded Kathlee n Tur ner, Point
operatmg levy, 813-509
Pleasa nt , Mrs Darlene Bmg,
- A 6-mill additwnal levy Gallipolis and Mrs. Olaude
was turned back by voters m Thornton, Leon
the North Olmsted school
BIRTH - A son to Mr. and
Dtstr lct, 3,64().3,397.
Mrs. Ronald Jones, Syracuse
- Westlake School D1stnct
voters approved a 5.7~ill
VETERANS MEMORIAL
renewal levy, 1,317-449,
ADMITTED - Angela
- Norwalk School District
Jones,
Racme; Shirley Ables,
voters a pproved a 4·mlll
Harry Sham ,
Ractne,
added operatmg levy , 1,5811Racine.
1,251.
DISCHARGED - Regma
- Monr oevt lle Scho ol
D1str1ct voters defeated a 9- Eakins, Marjorie Wtlt ,
mill added operating levy, Kathry n Demson, Clemente
Cooper, Beulah Rtckman
425-259.
Voters m the Berlin-Milan
School DIStrict approved a
1.5-&lt;mll added operating levy
to msulate schools, 559-458
- Amherst School District I
voters turned down a 3-mtll
EUNICE SPRAGUE
added operatmg levy, 1,667Mrs Euni ce Sprague, 99,
1,013 a nd defeated a 2.4.flllll Reed svil le, d1 ed Tuesday
added operating levy , 1,27(). afternoon at the Ar cad ia
Nursing Home In Coolville
735.
-E lyria Ctty School follow 1ng an extended illness
Mr s. Sprague was born in
District voters defeated a 2.4- Reeds
ville, t he daughter of
mtll levy for remodelwg &amp;nd the late George and Jane
new construction by a 5,317- Watson Shumway. She was
a Iso preceded m death by her
5,043 margm
f1r st husband, Orange Wilson
and her second husband,

In the Ot~ego DIStnct in ,, hool butldings was passed
Wood County an attempt to 5,144 to 2,388
get $3.6 nullwn through a 6 07
- In Solon, a 3 8 mlll
theu
di1 r lsl0n of
l:!st nnll fM .! new high schoo) r renew"llevy won by a vote of
Novembrr A }ear ago, demolllwn of the old juruor 1,105-396 and a 1.4-mlll
du;tnct \Olf.'r!;t defeated;:~ It'\: ! ugh drlll u ('\tnnectmg row of renewal levy for remodeling
3s}ong £01 .J htgher nullc.1~\"
Lla~"' ooms f(trled 1,289-S66
sc hool
buildmgs
and
Delphos Clly School wun \1(1ters also turned down an acqmnn~ land passed 1,064 to
npprovHl of an nt.ldJtwrwl 6. 7~ 8 08 mill atlded tax levy 1,000- 434.
null opeliltmg le' y 1.1!\:~ •)61
- In Warrensvtlle Hetghts,
925
...-------Pi.. r ry:-;lwrg
vot(&gt;r s a 19.2 m1ll renewal levy won
wma rd Ctty Sth~&gt;&lt;&gt;l okayt'll " I: 9 mtlhon )lond 1,310-459. A 5-mill renewal
lJ•sh·td defeated
t\!io tssue, ,, 2.&amp;7 null levy, for levy was passed 1,284-485 and
.1thhtwm1l k vu.·s \ l-mill ( un&lt;:trudwn and equtppmg of a I 90-&lt;mll renewal levy for
prnpo~al wrntdownllll-459 A
&lt;huols flrld the purchase of acq111nng school land and
l~nill l&lt;&gt;vy for a P''l'lllan&lt;•nt
,,,•w
estate 2,011-1,691 unproving school bUildings
unprov('mcnt fund
was
In Hossford a 3 9~mll was passed 1,271-496.
ddcuted 618-454)
:lthJed opcratmg !P.vy was
- In Chag nn Falls a 5 75- 'l'he Grandvsew School passed 1,084-931
mtll added levy wa s approved
U1strict in Franklin County
. -In I&gt;astwood a &amp;-&lt; mil 681-426
passed a 7.1!-mllllevy 1,1S:I tu cu.ldcd uper atmg levy was
- In North Roya Iton a .2 9471.
p:\sscd 1,0% 936
mill re newal levy was
- Hamilton Local S&lt; hools
- In Lake a 4 5-&lt;mll added approved 813-411.
got a 4 2-lmll atldttJonal levy oprratm~ levy was pussed
- Westlake School District
passed 496-287
1.11:1-4!05
voters okayed a 5 7-tmll
- Ill New Albany voters tn
In U1e () &lt;twfonl County rene wal levy 1,317-449
th~ Plains Loca l Dtstnct
distnct of Crestline, voters
- In North Olmsted voters
passed a 6-null additional approved an $805,000 bond reJected a &amp;-&lt;mil added levy
levy and a 2~mll cap &lt;Wl issue 554-289.
by a vote of 3,645 to 3,289.
unprovrment levy Dtslru:tRucyrus C1tr School Dls- In Parma a proposed 3 4wale
totals were~
nut U'Icl 'oters approved a 9-mill mtll added levy fa1led by a
avatlable, however
·•dd ttiOll~l IP\'Y 1,568·1,253
vote o£ 15,004.a,658
- In Wortlungton a 4-mtll
- fn Uw Wynford d1str1ct of
- The Polaris Vocational
additional levy was pdssed Crawfonl and Wyandot Coun- School won a 7-mill added
2,511!-1,362
ties a 5·tmll levy was levy 6,6 1 6~,2.18
- The Btg Walnut D1str1ct defeated 599-520.
-Cardinal School D1stnct
w Sunbw·y passed a o.9-&lt;mll
- Upper
Val ly Jomt voters m Cuyahoga County
iidd!tonal operating levy VocatiOna l School covermg approved a 5.7·rmll added
t,473·929
M1am1, Shelby and parts of levy 770-463
- The Medma City School Darke, Auglatze and Logan
- Teays Va lley Distn ct
D tstr~ct won voter approval
counltes won approv3l by an voters defeated a 5.3 m1ll
to bulld an ai!Jetic comJ&gt;Iex 8,02:l-2,923 vote of a 2 ~m)l bond lssue for constructiOn of
and to renovate the stadtum
renewal levy for operatmg a new JU nior htg h and
The 55.fllill levy 1ssue to expenses
expanston
of
several
ratse $7:i0,1100 passed 1,172-Stdney C1 ty Schools got bui ldings 1,050-516
1001.
epproval of a 3 5;mll added
- Logan Elm Local D•str1ct
- In tl1e Clbvedeaf Loca l operating levy 2, 092-997
votciS defeated a 3 5.flltll
School D•stn ct a 6 5•mll 5- 11JeShelby County Board added levy 588-467
year operatmg levy passed of Mental Retardahon won
- New Rtege l na rr owly
1,204-4!36.
11pproval by a 4,292-1,916 won aooroval of a 4 3 added
- In the Pa1 kway Dtstnct rnm gm of an additonal 1 2of Mercer. van Wert Count1es mill operatmg levy for
a G7-&lt;mll operal!ng levy was mentally retarded programs
•
(Contmued from page I)
defeated 519-238.
1n the county .
- In Mentor a 4.9-&lt;lllll addi- Voters 1n the Anna School God and the cullured values of man bave been vtndicated ."
tional levy ""s approved Dtst• tct passed a l 5-rmll Gay Task Force leader Jean O'Leary sees 1t as a backlash of
4,302-1,974
cap ital Improveme nt levy ''ignora nce and unmorality ."
- Voters m the Oak Htlls 464·381
Thetr conunents followed Tuesday's spectal election in
Schools dtstrlct voted 5,969·
- Fort L.ora mte School Dts· which Dade County voters backed M1ss Bryant by a 2-1 margm
2,807 agmnst a 7.&amp;-uull added tnct voters approved.a 4-null and repealed a "gay nghts" ordmance she called "an
operating levy
added ope1 atmg levy 57&amp;-212 obnoxtous ilssault on our m oral values.
--{;re.nville Ctty Schools
--:n1e Northmor Dtstnct tn
Morrow County faded tn an won approval of a 24ntll
"ttempt to pass a 13-nc ,.J bond 1ssue fo r $350,1100 for
tPmodeJ ng
and
added opera ling l&lt;:vy, 682-264
- Belpre t)ty School unprovements 2,569~74.
Honor bestowed Sandra Manske
- Arca num-Butler School
Distr 1ct voters defeated a 4 7Sa ndra
H.
Manske ,
Sandra wa s one of three
mill ~clded operatingJevy 777- Dtstnct voters defeated an
daughter
of
Mr.
and
Mrs. students to a ddress the
additiOnal 5-&lt;mll op,eratmg
706.
Harley Hendncks , Pomeroy, graduating class. Next fall
- In the Fo• t Frye Local
was graduated summa cum she plans to attend graduate
School DtStiiCt m Was]ungton
laude
w1th a Bachelor of Arts school at the UmverSity of
Co unty a 4.4-m ill added
deg
ree
from Webster College MISso uri to study chtld
operatmg levy wa s defeated
St Louts, Mo., May 4.
psychology
li()\)-481.
(Continued
from
page
1)
- .f rontier
Loca l
in
Washington County wanted
serrrchmg when Davtes came out of the
Before movmg to Galha County m
an average 7·null outs1de
hou•e from phomng E-H He proceeded to
1952, Porter was a successful teacher and
levy to rmse $105,800 for
the scene and 10111ed the hunt
coach at Ceredo-Kenova High School near
current operating axperL15es
Mr Porter was born Sept 6, 1904, m
Huntw gton.
The le vy was rejected 54&amp;-258
Krno&gt;a, W Va son of the late George
He was a popular member of the
-~'atrfwld limon schools
Alexander and Ehlabeth Hatten Porter.
Ga lha Academy Htgh School teaching and
WJJn a b!d for a 10-null added
He marncd Sara Rtggs on Sept 6,
C&lt;lachmg staff several years and a sum·
levy 99:1-754.
1921 , m Catlettsburg, Ky. She preceded
mer recreatiOn staff member a number of
- Pickerington
Schoo l
hun in death in November, 1975
years. Mr. Porter retired from the
Dtstn ct Voters approved an
One son, Ft·ank Porter Jr, Racine,
teachmg professiOn UJ 1971
8 9-m•ll added levy 949-920.
surv•ves along With five grandchi ldren,
Funeral servtccs w11l be held 1 p m
- In Amanda Clearcreek a
two step-grandchtldren and six greatFr1day at the Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral
7.7-milladded levy failed 559·
graodchlldrtn Seven brothers and fo ur
Home with Rev James Frazier of531.
ststers p1 eceded hun m death
ficlatm g Burial and graveside serviCes
- In Thurston's Ltberty
Mr Pmter was a member of Grace
will be at Dock's Creek Cemetery m
Umon d1stnct m Fatrfteld a 7Umted Methodist Chu rch, a member of
Wayne County, W. Va. at 3·30 p.m on
mill added levy failed 598-463.
l.afRyette Post No. 27, American Legwn,
Fr1day.
- In Plymouth, a d1stnct
Gallipolis Elks Lodge, Ga lha County Gun
Friends may call at the funeral home
that straddles Richland and
C'lub and the Galllpohs Golf Club
on Thursday from 7 until 9 p m.

n'" '

News •• in Briefs

Victim

Henderson voters name
carolyn Ramey, runntng on
the Progress Tlcket, was
elected Mayor ol Henderson
after stiff competition m the
town election on Tuesday.
Mrs. Rainey won with a
total of 73 votes, only 12 over
those of Leslie ' 1 Cotton"
Nibert, Citizens Ticket candidate, who followed wlth 61
votes. Edward H, McDanlel,
running on the Peoples Ticket.
and James M. Stewart, Jr., on
the Independent Ticket, each
received 19 votes In the

Mayor's race.
Sheila L. Thevenin will
assume the job of town
recorder for Henderson,
getting 57 votes. Votes of
others running for recorder
were: Eula McCoy receiv~.
47 ; Gail Wyant, 40, and Patti
M. Krebs, 22 for recorder.
Those who w11l serve on the
Henderson council Include
Woodsen
Austm,
who
received 61 votes ; Ronald

Wickline, 65; Ronald Mayea,
67 ; Roy A. Eads, 118 ; and
Cha rles L . Messick, 57.
Town elections were also
held in Leon and Mason.
In the Mason Town election
only one ticket made up the
voting ballot. All were incumbents.
Fred Taylor was elected
mayor wlth 62 votes, and Carl
Cline, recorder, wlth 57 votes.
Those elected to serve on the
coWJcU and the total number
of votes they received were
Charlotte Jenks, 61; Edward
Perry, 58; Dayton Raynes, 57;
Catherine Smith, 61 ; and
Lawrence Roush, 62.
Ruth Stsk received two
votes for coWJcll on the write.
in ballot, and Richard
Ohlinger received one vote for
mayor.
In the Leon election, Ronald
Dewell was elected mhyor
with 17 votes . The Leon
election ballot also had only
one ticket.

Buckeye Trail
being rerouted

be mvolved m the rerouting of
a 60-mile section of the
Buckeye Trail, Saturday,
June 11, according to the Ohio
Department of Natural
Resources.
The section of the trail to be
I
relocated extends from
and Ellsworth Johnson, both Miamiville near Cwcinnati to
of Gallipolis One sister Pike State Forest in Pike
preceded h1m in death
He was a World War II County
Navy veteran and was a
The new 1 more southern
member of the OAV of
route wtll mcrease the length
Columbus .
Funeral services wi ll be 2 of this portwn of the trail to
155 mlles, bringmg the entire
p m Thursday at the Waugh
Hal ley.Wood Funeral Home length of the Buckeye Trail to
wdh the Rev Alfred Holley
over 800 mtles, accordmg to
offtC!atmg Bunal w1U be 1n
Natural Resources Director
Prov1dence
Cemetery.
Robert
W. Teater.
Fn
ends
may
call
at
the
Edwar d Sprague
funeral
home
from
7
to
9
p
m
.
The
new
trail route will
She was a m ember of the
Wednesday
M i litary extend south of Pike State
Reedsville United MethodJSt gravestde
rites wlll be con
Church and United Method 1st
Forest to Serpent Mound
dueled by VFW Post 4~4 .
Women 1
Memortal
in Adams County
She Is surv1ved by one step .
ANDREW PHILLIPS
and
continue
south through
son ,
V 1r gll
Sprauge,
Andrew Russell Phillips of
portwns
of
Brush
Creek and
Call forma , three n1eces, Mrs
Rt 2, Horse Creek Road,
Don s Miller, Columbus. Mrs
Crown Ct ty , d1ed at 3 p m. Shawnee state forests in
Jane Hunter, L1ttle Rock . Tuesday In St
Ma ry's Scioto
County.
From
Ar k . and Mrs Dorothy Hosp1tal, Hunt1ngton. W Va
Shawnee, the trail will pass
Sheeder , New Castle, Pa , He wa s a ref tred constructon
northwest along the northern
one
nephew ,
Howard worker and farmer
Shumway, Raym ond, Ohio
He was born on Aug 17,
portwn of East Fork State
and several gr eat n1eces and
1914, at Glenwood, W. va , to
PArk 1n ClP.rmont County to
nephews
the late Jack and Nellie
Miamivtlle.
Funeral serv1ces will be Schr1v er Phtll!ps
"This new routmg of the
Thursda y at 1 p m at the
He JS surv1ved by h1s wife,
Buckeye
Tratl offers Ohioans
Reeds ville Un&lt; ted MethodiSt Mabel Hoover Phillips whom
Church w1th the Rev R1chard he mar ned on Oct 9, 1940, at
an opportunity to enjoy more
Thoma s offiCiating . Bunal
Gallipolis. Also surviv1ng are
of the state' s scenic
will
be m
Reedsville his children , Mrs Marlyn
wtlderness by hiking or
Cemetery Friends may call (Nancy) Mooney , Crown
horseback r1dmg along back
at the Wh 1te Funeral Home 1n City , Mrs. Dav1d (Jeanette)
Cool vil le anytime. The body Polly, Kenova , W Va , Mrs
country tra1ls and loggmg
wil l l1e 1n stat e at the church Roger (Jean ) Lemley, Salt
roads,"
Teater said.
one ho ur pnor to servtces.
Lake City, Utah Sons who
More
than 100 volunteers
survive are Robert and
wtll
assist
m the relocation by
Ronn1e of Chesapeake and
HOWARD JOHNSON
R&lt;chard and Randy , both at marking the new trail with
Howard T Johnson , 66, .482 home .
One
daughter
blue painted blazes on trees
West SecMd Ave .. Columbus . preceded h1m m death
or poles.
died at 1 a m Tuesday at
Also surviv1ng are ll
The Buckeye Trail extends
Veteran s Hosp 1tal , Dayton
grandchildren, one brother,
from
Headlands Beach State
lth Edward, and one sister, Mrs
He had been In fa&lt; I lng hea
Frances (Go!dtel Northup of Park in Lake Sounty south to
several months
A r et ired ca rpenter, he was Galllpolls.
One
si ster
the Ohio Rtver and back
bor n June 16, 1910 to Shertdan preceded him '" death
north along the Mtami and
and Bessie Hale Johnson
He attended Mt. Zion
Er\e Canal to the Maumee
He 1s survived by his w•fe, Church
Burial wtll be
Irene McKitri ck Johnson Saturday at 2 p m at the
River and contmues east to
Swan
Creek
whom he married Nov. 3, 1962 " church
Headlands Beach.
rn Col umbu s; one daughter , cemetery. The Rev Chester
The trail is maintawed by
Janet Johnson Columbus , L~ ml ey wil l conduct services
Buckeye
Trail
t
h' ld'
w
Fnends may call at the the
two s ep.c I ren ,
ayne Wa gh-Halley-Wood funeral
Association, an orgaruzation
u
n
Wat son , La k ewood , Mr s
Jan ice Hensel , Pl ckerton , home from 3 to 9 P m o
of individuals concerned with
ni ne step -grandchildren , Fnday .
supportiug a marked hiking
brother s and sisters, Mrs
and
bridle path enRu ssell (Gladys) Martin,
Those born on this date are
compassing
the state.
Mrs
Paul
(Frances) under the sign of Genum.
Eaggt eton , Mrs
Jewel l
lnfonnation a)lout the trail
American architect Frank
McCoy , Mrs . Roy (Norma )
IS available from the Buckeye
Hively, Russell Johnson , all Uoyd Wright was born June Trail Association, P. 0 . Box
of Columbus; Ebl 1n Johnson 8, 18&amp;.l
254,
43085.

Area Deaths

!

ELBERFELDS in POMEROY
SALE PRICESI

MEN'S SHIRTS
FOR FATHER'S DAY Gins

AT THE INN

AND YOUR FAMILY.
Includes our enttre stock of Men's
Short Sleeve Sheets

2 (~ALS
FROM PA RKERSBURG

Dress Shirts in sizes 14'12 to 11112
Sport Shtrts •n small. medium , large
and extra large sizes.
Knit Shirts - small. medium , large
and extra large.
Leisure Shirts sizes 14'1• to 17'12 .
An excellent selection of styles, color
and mater~als.

THU RSDAY, FRI DAY
&amp; SATURDAY
10 TIL 2

THE MEIGS INN

s.95 Shirts...... ..................... . ...... .

992-3629
POI\ffROY

Group

ME 'S SHIRTS
smn ll. medium , large. and
ex tra large, long anu shor t s leeve
styles. Se lected from regu la r stoc k.
Jilt

RICE

4.45

7.9SShirts ....................................

6.00

9.95 Shirts .. .. · .............. •• ...... ·.......

7.50

11 .95 Shirts............................... ..... 8.95
13.95 Shirts .......... . •... . .... .... . .. ··•· ···· 1u.50
15.95 Shirts. ..... . .. ........... . .............. 12.00

I

20.00 ShirtS ................. . ......... . ....... 15.00
9
OpenWeek
Friday
Other
Days:Joa.m.toap.m.
9:30a.m . to 5 p. m.

In Gallla County, the mock
tornado struck the City Park
in downtown GallipoliS at 4:30
p.m. wtth 25 victuns suffering
a variety ol Injuries from
minor to serious. Holzer
Medtcal Center School of
Nursing students played the
role of the "Injured".
Involved In Gallla County's
mock disaster efforts were
the Galllpolls City Pollee,
Gallla County Shertfrs offtce,
SEOEMS, Gallia County
Volunteer Emergency Squad,
Disaster Services volunteers,
with the Gallipolis Fire
Department on standby, all
coordinated by Mtke Swisher.
Director of Gallla Ccuniy's
Disaster Services Agency.
The uvictims" were transferred to Holzer Medical
Center for "treatment" .
Melgs County had 15 victuns as a result of the same
mock tornado striking In two
locations: the Meigs County
Fairgrounds m Rock Sprwgs,
(Continued on page 2)

By United Preas International
AGANA GUAM - A ClflCKEN FROM the island of
Ofrota In th~ northern Marianas set a world record by flying a
distance of 339.15 feet. Ofrota Mayor Antonio C. Atalig said
Wednesday, the chicken, named Antllong, is owned by Thomas
M Calvo, an Ofrota resident.
· Atalig said the record was established Tuesday at a
chicken flying meet on Rota, another island m the northern
Marianas. The previous record was set In May of this year by a
chtcken that flew 293.9 feet in Rio Grande, Ohio, last month.
WASlnNGTON- PRESIDENT CARTER today invited
still more lawmakers to the White House, and a key aide
predicted more of his legislation will be passed in hlS. first _year
thandurmga similar period of any other Democrahc Prestdent
In this century.
Since the beginning of June, Carter has held 12 separate
meetings wlth members of Congress on a range of bills, and
has more on tap today and Friday . He aiM scheduled a
briefing for the congressional delegations from Arkansas,
flllnois, Missouri, Kenlncky, Texas and Oklahoma, and set a
separate luncheon meeting with Sen. Hubert Humphrey, DMinn., who has become one of his staunchest allies in the
Senate.
, WASlnNGTON- MORE THAN 20 MIWON Amencans
endured unemployment at one thirne or another tn 1976,
including nearly 3 million who never found any job all year,
according to new Labor Department figures.
About 104 million persons meanwhile held jobs so'!'e.tune
during he year reflecting an Increase over 1975 and 3 million
- most of th~ women. It was the second biggest increase of
jobholders In the past two decades. Unlike regular monthly
unemployment reports, the annual figures' pub~ed
Wednesday fully reflect the hardship suffered by Amencan
jobseekers during a year.
HONOLill.U- POLICE SAY THEY HAVE evtdence that
missing entertainer Tiny Tim left for the mainland aboard

a

jetliner. The false! o-voiced ukulele player had "a ticket
waiting for him" at Honolulu International Airport, detechves
SBid Wednesday. They have been searching for Tim since hlS
manager reported him missing last weekend.
, .
Detectives also said callers claimed to have seen Tun,
born Herbert Buckingham Khaury, boarding a Los Angelesbound Western Airlines jet Saturday night.
ABIDJAN, IVORY COAST -A flashftre swept the Pasha
nightclub m the Ivory Coast CBJ?ital before dawn today,
trapping patrons Inside and causmg numerous casualUes,
police said.
First police reports said 41 persons, mamly Europeans,
were killed by fumes and flames. An estunated 12 persons
were taken to the hospital wlth second or third degree burns,
police said.
"Only a small number of P.Crsons managed to escape," a
wttness said. "They made theft way through the smoke-filled
hall to a backyard window one flight up and jumped out."
WASlnNGTON- DESPITE THE BACKING of President
Carter, congressional Democratic leaders, organized labor,
consumer advocate Ralph Nader and consumer groups
everywhere, the consumer protection agency ~ill apparenUy is
dead for this year.ln the end, the bill fell vteum to an l!ltense
lobbying camp&amp;gn by business, a crowded legislative agenda
in the Senate and dWindling support m the House.
At a White House briefing wtth Democatic Iader Robert
Byrd told Carter the bill would not be called up thiS sesston
unless the House passed it first. But key House sponsors satd
the bill was still 20 to 25 votes sby of a majority there. They
urged the Senate- which in the past has approved the bill by
hefty margms- to act first to provide momentum.
WASinNGTON- AN AGRICULTURE DEPARTMENT
repoct sllowlng a further 3 per cent boost to 1.528 million
bushels In the prospecttve size of the 1977 winter wheat crop
has strengthened chances the agency will have to make up to
nearly $500 million In support payments to depressed growers
later this year.
Officials said this was up from a May forecast because of
improved moisture conditions and left the crop only 3 pet.
below last year. It was 8 per cent below the record 1975 crop,
but wlth a surplus of 1.1 billion bushels of "old" wheat already
on hand as the harvest began, the new crop -the third btggest
on record - appeared large enough to more than meet needs
and add to the surplus.

FOR GRADUATION, FOR YOU

"TIGRESS"

·•

Three counties, their
hospitals, law enforcement,
lire and disaster services
agencies,
plus
their
emergency medical service
units cooperated m a coordinated Disaster Alert
Es:ercise on Wednesday,
JWJe 8, with a mock tornado
suwosedly striking at 4 :30
p.m . in all three counties.
Gallla and Meigs Counties
In Ohio, along wtth Mason
County in West Virgmta
participated m this three.
county, tw&lt;rstate uerCJse to
measure~ the emergency
capabilities of the medical
facilities and multitude of
agencies involved.
Approximately three and
one-half hours later the real
thing was flashed over Ohio :
"TORNADO ALERT
OVER CENTRAL OHIO"
At least four funnel clouds
were reported over parts of
Ohio - north of here, by
chance, but only one actually
touched down

DR. JOHN Rtdgeway, wtth the help of staff members, exanunes a tornado vtctim.
SlX

ELBERFELDSI•n PQM ERQY

ATHENS GREECE - TWO VEARS AFTER she had
quadruplets ~ 31-year-old Greek woman taking fertility pills
gave birth' Wednesday to octuplets, five girls and three boys .
A spok,sman at Hygeia hospttal m suburban Athens said
two of the girls and two of the boys died shorUy after birth. ~he
remaining Infants were •'doing as well as can be expected m
incubators. All four of the quadruplets the woman had m 1975
died shorUy after birth.
WASHINGTON - OHIO COMMUNITIES will recetve
grants totalling $151 million from the Economic Development
Administration this year to help reduce unemployment, the
state's two senators announced Wednesday.
.
The public works funding lS targeted on a formula bastS to
communities whooe unemployment rate averaged 6.5 per cent
or higher from March, 1976 to February, 1977, Sens. John
,.
(Continued on page 2)
,

THE SYRACUSE EMERGENCY Squad arrived ftrst on the scene with two trucks and
patients "inJured" m last night's tornado

Tornado (not really) struck Meigs County
There was a tornado tn
Meigs County Wednesda y
night.
Well - not really - even
though the weather conditions may have seemed just

COLUMBUS _ Three state
forests and a state park will

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

:

Disaster
simulated

Mrs. Rainey as mayor

right
emergency take place
How e ve r, dtfh c ulti es
All did not go well. stratghtened out and the show
ActuaUy, - all of the ex•
citement was a mock disaster Somehow, commurucations got on the road.
Pattents - senior citizens
planned to put emergency broke down and In some
units and hospital personnel localities the mock event was - at the fairgrounds and on
through thetr paces sbould an a b1t late UJ gettmg started Route 33 with mjur1es were

VOL. XXVIII

NO. 39

Contract awarded
to erect bridge
and W A Rice, all of Tuppers but for another person
A letter was read from
Plains, who asked help to
secure an EPA permit for a Common Pleas Judge John C.
septic tank at their new Bacon concernmg the need
for electrical work m the jury
chu(ch UJ Tuppers Plams.
The church, which has been room. Jones is to meet with
open for approxllllately stx Judge Bacon on the problem.
Probate' Judge Manmng
months, is still without water
and toilet facthtles because Webster proposed a contract
the EPA has not ISsued a under whtch the county would
agree wtth the Ohio Youth
permit.
The commiSSIOners w11l Commission to accept $8,000
assist in the matter,
as a direct prol!!!tion subsidy
Commissioner Richard for the Metgs County Juvenile
Jones said the board Court. The contract was
would meet with Gov . signed.
Ketth Wood, dog warden,
James Rhodes and hts
cabmet Frtday and would presented his weekly report
to the commlSston. Attendwg
seek hiS assistance.
Hugh Leifheit asked the were Henry Wells, Jones and
commission how one gained Jim Roush, commisslOners
admtttance to the county and Martha Chambers, clerk
Infirmary, not for himself,

What's next?, asks Otis Queen
- SALEM CENTER - If Otis Lee Queen of Salem
center believes in the old adage, "thmgs happen '"
three's", he lS probably a btl nervous fight now.
Friday, Queen, an employe of the Roush Datry
Fann In Salem Center was overcome by fumes from
green hay in a Sllo on the fann. He was revived by the
Rutland Emergency Medtcal Semce un1t and taken to
Holzer Medtcal Center.
At 1.28 a.m. thlS mornmg, the Pomeroy Fire
Department was called to Salem Center where Queen's
mobile home was on ltre. The home, owned by the
Roush Brothers, Orten and OrlS, was engulfed m
flames when the lltemen arrtved. The loss was set at
$12,1100.
Queen told firemen a smoke alarm unit in the
mobile home had awakened him, his wife and thetr son
and said that tbe urut probably saved thetr lives. The
fire was in the kitchen. Its cause IS undetermined,
Pomeroy Fire Chief Charles Legar satd

SR 7 closing Monday
SR 7 from Kanauga to
Pomeroy will be closed all
day Monday according to an
announcement by Lt. Ernest
Wigglesworth, commander of
the Gallia·Meigs Post State
Highway Patrol.
The Ohio Department of
Transportation (DOT ) will be
elevating the railroad tracks

north of Cheshtre durmg the
penod of closure
Thru traffic wtll be routed
across the Silver Memorial
Bridge and Mason Bridge
Local traffic w1ll be
mawtawed by usmg other
roadways. Flagmen will be
stalloned at both br~dges to
control traffic.

Kitchen gutted
in Middleport

Fire gutted the kitchen of
the one story frame home of
Mrs. Lenora Neal, 1039 S.
Second Ave., in Middleport at
12.34 p.m. Wednesday
Middleport assistant ftre
chtef Wayne Dav1s sa1d that
the f1re started from a coal
bummg stove whiCh Mrs.
Neal was usmg for heat. The
fire also spread to the attic
but was confined there too.
There was some water
damage to the rest of the
res1dence Damages were set
at between $2,000 and $3,000
There was no insurance.
E·R CALLED OUT
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad answered a call to
Hamsonville at 8.45 a.m.
Thursday for Elija Powell
who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital
RHODES COMING
Gov . James Rhodes and 12
of hts cabmet members will
be at the Meigs Inn Fnday at
1 p.m to meet w1th county
and villa ge officials and
representatives of township
trustees

Ohio losing $6.94 million
in federal medicaid funds
WASHINGTON (UP!) As a result ol madequate

revtew of patient care in
Med1catd nursing bomes and
mental instttutions, 20 states
including Ohio will lose $142
million m federal Medicaid
funds next month, the
Department of Health,
Education and Welfare sa1d
Wednesday.
New York tops the list w•th
a
$53,806,152
penalty,
followed by California at
$15,359,223 and Pennsylvania

at $13,593,459
Ohto will lose $6.94 million.
At a news conference m
Columbus, Gov. James A.
Rhodes said the governors of
states affected by the penalty
nught meet thts week and
travel to Washmgton to ftght
tbe cut
Rhodes sa1d he was alerted
to the cut late Wednesday
afternoon by Rep. Chalmers
Wylie, R-Ohto, who was
informed of the cut by Rep
Michael T. Blovlll4 R-Iowa .

The money can be restored
if appropriate changes are
made m the law, said HEW
Secretary Joseph Califano,
wbo promised a legtslallve
proposal soon to change the
law.
Money wtll be withheld
from the states in July
desptte past HEW practice of
allowmg appeals before
penalties are assessed, a
spokesman . said. He said
states can appeal the July
(Contmued on page 2)

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

THURSDAY, JUNE 9, 1977
: .·;. ·.·

The btd of the Ohto Bridge
Co., Cambridge was accepted
to build a new bridge In
Sutton Twp. by the Meigs
County Commtsstoners in
regular session Tuesday
night. The only bid recetved,
it was for $26,138. Work wlll
begln Immediately. The
bridge is on CR 29 in the
Bowman's Run area .
Wesley Buehl, county
engineer, and Dave Spencer
of the county highway
department, told the commission the new pavmg
machme has been delivered
and repairs to county roads
would be~ in today on CR 82 In
the Texas community.
Also meeting wtth the
commtssioners were Carl
Barnhtll, Hobart Vmeyard

enttne

at y

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

hospital. Due to weather
cond1t1ons a helicopter
scheduled to participate, did
not. However 1 emergency
umts of Pomeroy, Syracuse.
Middleport and _Racine did.

•

•

e

transported to Vet erans
Memorial Hospital to be
examined by doctors and
staff members and moved
wto proper quarters.
Photos were taken at the

..

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

,·

.;: ·:=:·· ;.. ·.·: :::: :;:;:;: .:.

VICTIM DROWNED
Death by aectdental
drowniDg bas been ruled as
tbe cause of deatb of Frank
W. Porter, Sr., Galllpolls
by Meigs County Coroner
Dr. R. R. Pickens. Mr.
Porter drowned wben he
apparently Jell from a boat
In whlcb he was llshlng at
the farm Jake of his soo,
Frank Porter Jr., near
Racine, Tuesday morning.

Solons
balk at
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - The
Ohio House of Representatives has once agam been
handed the sticky issue of
collectiVe bargaining for
public employes, and the
problem may now be compounded by a mint-revolt
over a teacher tenure bill
MaJority Democrats in the
Senate fought ofl a
threatened boycott by several
of their own members
Wednesday and sent the
controversial bargawmg btll
over for the House to wrestle
with.
The btll, whtch would
authorize a luntted right to
stnke for OhiO's estimated
500,000 public workers,
cleared on a party-line vote of
21·12, but not before a key
amendment was mserted to
pacify several Democrats
and ensure solidarity.
Meanwhile, the House sent
hack to the Rules Committee
on a 49-16 vote the teacher
tenure measure m the face of
warnmgs 1! could cause legal
problems UJ concert with the
collectiVe bargaming bill as •t
ts now written.
Both proposals are major
Democratic poltcy btlls long
sought by organized labor
It wa s a separate
bargainmg umt concept that
may have made some House
Democrats nervous as they
joined wtth Republicans to
shtp the teacher tenure
measure back to the Rules
Conumttee
The btl! provided "due
process" for prmctpals and
assistant prmc1pals as well as
school teachers m dismissal
proceedings , and some
members warn ed there
would be a conll1ct w1th the
bargaining blll If both
became law.
.·:· , .
::·· '
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Saturday
through
Monday, lair Saturday and
Sunday and a chance of
thundershowers Monday.
Highs "Ill be In the 70s
Saturday and rising to the
80s by Mooday. Lows will
be In the mid 40s or the low
50s Saturday and between
55 and 65 by Monday.

Emergency
levy wanted
RACINE - The Southern Within the 10 mill limitation
Local Dtstrict Board of wtll be insufficient to provide
Educa\lon Tuesday mght an adequatre amount for the
approved a resolutiOn to necessary requirements for
place an emergency school Southern Local School
operating levy before district District, therefore be It
voters at a special election w resolved by the Board of
August
Educatton of Southern Local
Supt Bobby J Ord said this School Dtstrlct, tw&lt;rthirds of
mommg the levy would be for aU members elected thereto
an add1t10nal 10 mills for concurring, that it ls
three years . Although the necessary to levy a tax in
date of the electiOn is not excess of the 10 mlll
altogether ftrm, It IS expected lunttation for the benelit of
to be on August 10.
Southern Local School
Members Robert Sayre, District for the purpose ol
president, Denny Evans, VICe mamtenance and operation of
prestdent ; Ja ck Bostick, the schools."
The board will next meet In
Rodger Adams, and Dallas
Htll, approved the following regular session on June 23 at
7·30 p m m the high school
resolution :
"Whereas the amount of cafeteria.
taxes whtch may be raised

Pennsylvania boy
winner of 'bee'
WASHINGTON (UP!) John Paola, representing the
Pittsburgh Press, today won
the 50th Nallonal Spelling Bee
by
correctly
spelling
1
'cambtst "
Paola, 14, •s an etghth·
grader at St. Bona venture
School m Glensllaw , Pa.
Runne r -up was Joan
O'Leary , 14, of Yonkers,
N.Y., wbo represented the
New York Dally News. She
mlSSJX'lled sesqutpedahan,
meaning a word w1th many
syllables,
spelling
it
''sesqwspedtan. ''
Paola then spelled her word
correctly, SJX' lled "cambiSt"
- a mooey-changer - and
won the champtonsh 1p of the
tournament sponsored bv
Scripps-Howard newspapers.
Paola, who finished 22nd
last year, said his favonte
subjects are algebra, history
and readmg. His hobbles arll
the organ, word games and
volleyhall. He is president of
his class and a reports for the
school newspaper.
His father , Joseph, works
for a natural gas company.
John has one sister.
John , who wore Navy blue
slacks and a wh1te T-shirt
with blue stripes, clasped hiS
hands to hlS face when he
realized he had spelled the
final word correctly and woo

Weather

Clear and cool tonight , lows
in the upper 40s. Sunny and
wanner Fr~day , htghs In the
mld 70s . Proba bthty ol
prec ipitation 80 per ce nt
today, near zero per ce nt
·:&lt;&lt;·:·:&lt;·:.·,.:·:·:. tonight and FruJ,ty

the champ10nsl1ip.
HGreat, I'm really happy,"
he sa1d afterwards.
"When she spelled 'veery'
r~ght, I thought it was all
over," he satd. A veery LS a
kind of thrush
John also said ne was
fr~ g hte n e d , " mostly today
when I started to miss."
Even after he was
presented hiS gold cup, John
nervously ftngered hlS good
luck charms - a skeleton
key, a small rock and a small
plastic monster he got as a
pnze from a cereal box four
years ago
John sa1d "the words are
ge ttmg harder" and "this
year was a lot harder than
last year ''
He also pratsed h1s runnerup, saymg, ''Oh, she was very

rwod."

CALL ANSWERED
The
Middleport
Emergency Squad answered
a call to Happy Hollow Road
at 12· 47 a.m. Thursday for
Lawrence Hysell Mr Hysell
was dead upon the squad's
arriva l

ARTICLES FILED
CO LUMBUS - Aartlcles of
incorporation for profit have
been filed tn Columbus with
Secretary of State Ted W
Brown by the Southeastern
F uel,
Inc .,
principal
stockholders being Ernest,
Larry and Ronald Wright,
through thetr agent, Ernest
Wright, Rt 1, Langsville. by
Atty M D Slavens, Jackson,
Ohio.

..

�3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, JWJe 9, 19'77

2 The Dmly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, JWJe 9, 1977

E n ries invited for races
1-l•ll Quicl&lt;el, chalnnan of

fill out the coupon below and
mail to the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce, Box
526, Pomeroy, Ohio ~5769 as
soon as possible.

thi' ; ear's Big Bend Regatta
loca l bo.at races, asks that
r ;ons who plan to enter this
) r's. com petiUon to please

The local boat races will
have nine classes and will be
held on Saturday, June 18 all
p.m. Classos are :

Locol Boat Owner Race&amp;
Big

B~nd

June 18,

'

Regat~a

1 p.m.

' t token and
Ge

1.

Canoe- -a c rosa river to Ju d g e .

2.

Electr ic Tro ll ing

3.

&amp;o und cou rse-- 3 H. P. Maximum--two rounds.
Ma~.--two

M otor~-same

~eturn.

as c anoe.

4.

10 tt.P.

rounds.

5.

30 H.P. Max.--twc rounds.

t,

60 II . Pt

M&amp;x.--a i ~

7.

YO H.P.

Max .-- 12 rpund8.

~.

U l a l~ mi t ed--15

9.

!lg use bcats--below bridge and back.

rounds.

rounds.

•
Name
i'l.d. d r es s

Carter likes

Billingham blanks NY Mets, 5-0

tax audit on

Presidents
WASHINGTON (UP!) President Carter has per·
s.mally confirmed that the
Internal Revenue Service is
auditing his 1975 income tax
return , and said "they should
do It every year while I am in
office."
Vice President Walter
Mondale's 1976 return also is
being scrutinized, according
to his spokesman.
At the end of a day of White
House statements, some of
which Press Secretary Jody
Powell acknowledged as
" misleading" and " in error,"
ca ner personally confirmed
the audit Wednesday night
and said IRS had "checked
my inco me taxes almost
every year lor the last 10
years,''
"I think it's a good thing for
them to do and we 're
suggesting they do it every
year while I am in office," the
President told reporters who
trailed him to a dinner
engagement. He said he did
not ask for the 1975 audit.

NEW YORK (UP!) -The
Cincinnati Reds, at .500 for
the third time this year, are
still hopeful of playing .600
baseball from here on out and
catching the Los Angeles
Dodgers.
The Reds reached the .500
mark for the latest time

c las a

1

"

THE POMEROY EMERGENCY Squad bringing a

patient inlD the hospital.

ASTRO·GRAPH Disaster
Bernice Bede Osol

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

Quilt contest entry is to!
Area· Deaths :
he made immediately
'!,~~·~::.~~:dE~:yNthat t::r:;c~~E~y:!~~~~~~.'

..

r..zrocfua

... ..,....

·- ----

HEALTH

Lung talk

defensive back Rod Foster of
By United Press tnlernationa1
Harvard , quarterbacK Jim Ku·
Wednesday
back i of Harvard , running back
8aseba II
Bluef ield
San Diego - Signed shor tstop John Monroe of
Barry Evans . the Padres' No. 2 ( W .Va .) State. defensive end
cho1ce in the free agent draft. Louis Ross of South Carolina
and assigned · him to Walla State ilnct wide receiver Dave
Shamblin of Nebraska , all free
Walla,
Toronto - Placed pitcher Bill agents .
New York Jets Signed
Singer on the 21 -day dis abled
si xth -round dra ft choice Joe
list .
Klecko, a defens i ve tackle from
Pro Football
Cincinnati - Signed eighth · Temple, to a series o f three
·.
round draft choice Jose Saint · one .year contracts .
Seattle - Signed tackle Bill
Victor , an offensive lineman
Westbeld fr om Dayton . the
from Syrac use .
llth -round
draft
Detroit ........ Placed veteran Seah awks'
defensive back Ben Davis on pic k .
College
waivers.
Cincinna ti -Appointed Terry
New Oflea ns - Announced
that punter -quarterback Tom Carlisle of Florida State as
swimming coach .
Blanchard w ill not r et ire and head
Kent State - Ron Lynn . a
releesed wide receiver Bruce defensive
backfield coach and
Hemphil l of Louisiana State ,
coordinator at Kent
defensive ta ck le J.D . Holmes of defensive
State , r esig ned to become an
Gram b I; n g, defensive back assistant
football coach at San
Jerry Reese Of OklahOma. Diego State
.

In
this

.a real

slugfest, Letart
week downed host
Portlaod 18-11. Scott Hupp
wa s the winning pitcher as he

teamed with R. Bable lo fan

five an~ . wal~ eight. Ward
took the"loss and was reli eved

by Talbot, and together lhey

fanned two and walked f ive .

For Letart, Jim Hupp and

Paul each had two triples.
and double hitters were :

&amp;EAR UP
FDRniE

·Ohio

Hospital News

Court actions
are reported

News •• in Briefs

Missionaries
meet Rosalynn

In Pony · League action
Tu es day , Middleport,
Syracuse and the Pomeroy
Roy a ts kept at the top ·of the
league as they posted vic·
tories along witl) ·Eastern.
Eastern is now 1·1 while the
leaders are 2..fl.
Billy E lkins tossed a threehitter as his Middleport team
downed host Rutland 2..fl.
Scott Ranson , rom Cummins,
Elkins fanned 12 and walked
John Roush , Hupp, Roush , only one. Terry Gardner led
Scott Hupp, and
Allen
Tucker . Getting si ngles were the winners with two singles
S. Hupp, Cumm i ns , and while Mike Miller , Brett
Bable.
Dodson, Dave Hysell and
Johnson led Port land w ith a Roger Carson each had one
grand slam homer. Two-base
hits were stroked by Steve 'single.
Rutland dropped its second
Teaford and Wade Connoll y,
and getting sing les we r e contest in as many tries as
Teaford , Kevin Bryant. and Bob Williams was tagged
Connolly .
with the loss. Williams
Last week , Letart downed
six hits while fanning
allowed
Syracuse 8-6 with Paul Roush
nine
and
walking just four.
getting the w;n: Tony Riffle
was tagged with the loss. He also led his team at the
Cummi ns socked a home run plate as he stroked two
to lead the winners w hile Eric
.Cunningham got a doub le for singles while Paul Michaels
got the other hit, also single.
Syracuse.
L

263 304--18 14 1
070 40Q-1 1 6 4

p

s

040 002--6 3 3
320 03x-8 8 1

L

~

.l~·t

', I

_,

~
·•.

a:· ;..:_;_

.

"' ' .
· I· · ~
.'~
Wilen you ..,..... ...
'.,J

hi!V€ real work to do, put
our exclus•ve B·speed, all·
gear transmiSSIOn on your
side. With no belts to slip,
come loose or break . And
positive powei stra ight into
the mower attachment
W&lt;th a choice of 40· or 50·
1nch center mount Or 40inch, front-mount mowers.
You'll cut a wide, smooth
swath. And Gravely has
attachments for
compost1ng, hauhng, leaf ·
removal-a whole lot more.
Those are some of the
reasons why Gravely is the
"choice of the pros." Come
in and see for yourself.

GRAVELY
TRACTOR SA' ES
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone 992-2975
OPEN
9-5 Mon.-Fri.
9 til Noon Sat.

Powe l l' s Giants downed th e
host Mason Rangers 10-9 by
plating one run In the top of
the seventh. Randy Stewart
got the win and was relieved
by Mark Boyd !n the seventh .

Together they had seven

strike outs and four walks .
Stewart got a home run and

triple as did Greg Taylor.

John M c K inney had a triple,

and Jack Howell and Bill

Holcomb each had a single .
For the losers Lyons took

the loss. VanMete' led lhe
hitting wit h a tr;ple, double
and single. Laudermi lt had a

double. Zuspan two si ng les,
Tr oy Dudding and
Lauderm i lt each a single .
G
250 020 _1- 10 1 3
R
004005Q-971

and

The v isit ing New Haven
Cubs . downed the Pomeroy
Pir a tes 7-3. Pomeroy made ·
five errors and each team

had five hits.

Brad Layne got the wi n as
he fanned six and walked
seven. Darren Gilland and
Rod W eave r had tri ples ,
Layne and Mike Russel l had
~doubles , and Weaver had a
si ng le.

Todd Fife was tagged with

the · loss even though he
fanned thirteen and walked

just five. Nick Riggs got a
double while Fife had two
singles . Ray Justis and Brx an
Betzi ng had the other h1fs,

both singles.

c

130 102--7 5 0
000 003-3 5 5

p
Tuppers

Plains

downed Chester No.

No . 2

2 by the
score of 11 -7. Jim Bauhman
was the winner and had

mouhd help frorn Brian Wel l

and

Mike Co llin S;. Brian
a triple. Well
Tom Everett each a

Bauhman had

and

debate at ftrst base in the Mets loaded the bases in the
fourth, before Lee MauiUi
eighth inning.
BiUingham, 7-3, had only grounded out to end it. Jerry
one bad inning, when the Koosman took the loss.

Wednesday evening at throw went over the first
Syracuse, the host Meigs sacker's head.
Mike Dolak went aU the
American Legion team fell to
Belpre in a rain-shortened six way for Belpre and did a Cine
inning
contest, l!f-2. Belpre job as he faMed six and
:-· .... ··s::·~~..,~;-~·v::..,.·.;..::::re:w.«-' ' w*• •...--:-··~
SOOl:.;;:~m?;~::::..-w:::::..~~:xw.::::::-::=::~:~~~;:;~$:::3~~~?::(-;.:::::tt · plated eight runs in the top of walked no one while giving up
the first inning, and the hosts just three hits. He also
chipped in with a single at the
couldn't bounce back.
In that first inning, Meigs' plate. Bierbower led the
~
:·:·.-: starter Steve Baird of Kyger Belpre hitters with two
Creek gave up five walks singles, and Gates added a
spaced by three singles. A triple .
Baird was tagged with the
Meigs error let in two runs
and Brent Johnson of Gallla loss as he and Johnson gave
came on in relief with two up just six hits while faMing
and walking five .
By MILTON RICHMAN
~......
..... men out. From then on, four
Besides
Hamilton's ~homer,
;:=*''
UP! Sports Editor
~:::i' Johnson allowed just two
Brent
Johnson
and Davenruns and didn't give up a walk
NEW YORK (UP! ) - Baseball people give me a laugh when
port
had
the
only
other two
the rest of the way. Those
they boast about all the changes they've made Ill improve the other two runs came in the Meigs' ttits, both singles.
game the past few years.
Meigs is now 4-3 on the year
third inning, and that gave
They talk about the designated hitter, artificial turf and
with
their next outing coming
the visitors a 10-0 lead.
modern style uniforms, but never mention the one thing that
Meigs got their two tallies Saturday when they travel to
hasn'tchanged in over 50 years - their own thinking .
for
a
in the bottom of the fourth Lancaster
The majority of those in baseball today use the same old
doubleheader. Sunday they
when
catcher
Brian
Hamilton
warmed-&lt;Jver ideas and methods which were used in 19TI.
return home for another
More and more, !Dday's ballplayers aren't buying that led off with a homer over the
had three singles and a largely because they' re more knowledgable and aware than 330 mark in right field .. After twinbill, this time against
double. Cliff Kennedy had a those players of the past generation and have seen where an out, Mick Davenport Glouster.
802 000- 10 6 1
singled, stole second, and Belpre
triple and single, Tom Owens
many of these .traditions are completely outmoded. .
.
Meigs
000 200- 2 3 2
.had two singles and getting
scampered
home
when
Mike
Some of the brighter, more enlightened players, like Tun
Dolak and Bowes. Baird
one hit each were Chris Mccarver of the PhiUies, have a faculty for picking up things Wayland laid down a bunt
Woods, Steve Ohlinger , like that quickly . He's more perceptive than irreverent when and the third baseman's (LP ), Johnson ( I ) and
Hamilton.
Randy Murray and Brian he says much of baseball's so~alled tradition is religiously
Swan .
adhered to without any logical reason.
·
For Racine, Dale Teaford,
"Many of the practices, beliefs and instructions Ill players
Kent Wolfe and John Pape are completely outdated," says McCarver. "How about some
combined to fan nine and of the things they tell every pitcher? Uke, ·you can't throw
walk eight, with Teaford .this guy a high fast ball,' or 'You have Ill pttch aroWJd tilts
being tagged with the loss. guy.' Why? Because that's the .way it's always been done
Kent Wolfe got the only extra
before? That's nonsense.
base hit, a double. John Rees
"People don't give ballplayers credit for havin~ any
got two singles, and Jack intelligence of their own. They think we're cha nneled m only
Lyons, Paul Cardone and one direction. Hell, we're not vegetables. We have mmds of our
Teaford each got one single. own. The traditionalists feed you a Iotta adolescent stuff when
P. Royals 531 000 6-15 15 2 you're not going well like, 'Hang with 'em ... don't worry ... a.s
000 100 0- I 6 6 long as you're making contact' and so on . Ballplayers don t
Racine
want that kind of bull . They want sornethmg tangtble,
EASTERN WAS the only something tbey can sink their teeth in!D.
AT THE INN
home club to pick up a win as
"Another thing, everybody borrows sayings from one
they downed visiting Mason another in baseball. You'll hear a manager say, 'The most·
7-4 behind the 3-hit pitching important. thing is Ill have the respect of my players.' To an
of Dan Spencer. Spencer extent that's true but I think it's more importan\ for a
struck out 10 and walked only manager Ill be liked personally. If his players don't like him,_
2GALS
two as he got help from . he isn;lgoing to be able to communicate with them. They won't
batterymate Brian Bissell listen Ill anyone they don't like.''
. ·
FROM PARKER.SBURG
who slammed a home rWl and
Tim McCarver has been a fine ballplayer for the Cardinals,
triple. Spencer helped his Expos Red Sox and PhiUies the past 15 years, and if I had Ill
THURSDAY, FRIDAY
own cause with three doubles. pick a future manager among all the play~s today , he 'd ~ tbe
while Steve Little got a one because I think he has all the capacity for malting some
&amp; SATURDAY
double and a single.
ball club an excellent manager one day. McCarver is usually
Don Russell was tagged intuitive and imaginative. More impor.tant than that, he has a
10 TIL 2
with the loss although he way of getting along with people, which is absolutely vital for
fanned ten and walked only anybody trying Ill lead young men today.
. ,
two. Bodie Davis socked a
"I:m not sure if that's what I want," says the Phtls 35-yeartriple, Russell got a double, old backup receiver and pinchhitter about managing a. ~all
and Shawn Fields stroked a club after he's finished playing. "I've done some teiev1ston
single to account for Mason's work in sports and have been thinking about going into that
992-3629
hitting.
when I'm through. There are too many problems with play~rs
102 100 f)..,.ol 3 today that you didn't have 10 years ago, and I'm not talkin~
POMEROY
Mason
022 030 x-7 7 about money . . What I'm talking about is discipline, the
Eastern
traditional discipline . While I don 't go along with a great deal
Meigs-Mason County
of baseball tradition, I feel traditional discipline is something
Pony Standings
Ulat's necessary."
··
WL
Mccarver says Minnesota's Gene· Mauch is the best
2 0 manager he ever saw.
Middleport
..
.
2 0
Pomeroy Royals
2 0
Syracuse
"He doesn't live Continued
and die on.page 4
I I
Eastern
I I
Racine
t!EMPSTEAD, N.Y. (UP! )
I
I
Mason
- The New York Jets
0 2 Wednesday signed defensive
Pomeroy A's
0 2 tackle Joe Klecko, their sixth·
Rutland
Remaining games thi s round choice in last month's
week:
National Football League
Thursday, Racine at draft, to a series of three oneMason; Friday, Syracu~e at year C()ntracts.
Middleport, · Rutland at
Klecko, a 6-foot-3 , 262·
Pomeroy Royals (Meigs High pound' native of Chester, Pa.,
Field ), Pomeroy A's at was twice club heavyweight
Eastern (Eastern High boxing champion at Temple
School).
University.

Dodgers' 4-2 victory over
Chicago, left the Reds 9Y,
games back of Los Angeles in
the NL West, eight in the loss
column.
"We can still turn this thing
around," said Johnny Bench,
who doubled in another I7un
for the Reds in the third. "We
have 10 games left with theDodgers, Our formula is to
pick up one game per week."
The Mets, meanwhile. were
losing for only the second
time in nine games Wlder new
manager Joe Torre. But just
to keep the fans entertained,
Torre got his first ejection as
a manager after a heated

:~-~ Today's

..
1
'~'~

~1~
~@

Roger Ba lser , M . Gaddis, and

V. Gillilian each a single .

D. J . Ra ndolph was tagged

with the loss ~ T . Crow socked
a homer and D. Gaul a double

to lead the Chester hitting .

Crow and· R. Maxon each had
a single to round out the
, Chester hitting .
1
1115. T
721 lOx- II 10

af &amp;L-P
UU:

c

o2o oos-

4

NOW IN PROGRESS

H78X15
Full4 Ply Ployester
White Wall

Mounted &amp; Ba Ia need

FREE

SYRACUSE CAME from'
behind to score sil runs in the
fifth inning for a 7~ win over
host Pomeroy A's. The A's
outhit the winners 14-9, but
Syracuse unloaded for four
home runs to make the dif·
ference . Getting round·
trippers were Mark Davis,
Jack Dully, Ronnie Davis
and Dave Nance . Mike Nance
and John Davis also chipped
in with triples, and Chris
Hupp had two singles and D.
Nance one.
Hupp was the winning
pitcher as he lamed fourteen
and walked just three.
Getting triples for the
losers were Jerry Fields and
John Beaver. Double hitters
were Fields, Cliff Murray,
Robbie Davis and Harvey
Whitlatch. Chris· McKimey
and Murray each had two
singles and Fields, Rod
Cannichael, Whitlatch and
Ricky Allen each had one.
Syracuse
100 000 0-7 9
Pomeroy A's 101 220 0~ 14
THE ROYALS had an easy
time as they romped over
host Racine 15·1. Tom Owens
got the win as he fanned 13
and walked seven. Chris
Taylor slammed a home run,
triple and single to lead the
hi\ters while David Kennedy

Crenshaw
looks ahead
to U.S. Open
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UP!) Ben Crenshaw, playing
without a former president at
his side, began the Memphis
Classic golf tournament with
another goal in mind.
wTIIis week is important~
but it will be the proving
groWld for next week - the
U.S. Open," he said . The
Open begins June 16 in Tulsa,
Okla.
Crenshaw teamed with
former President Gerald
Ford in Wednes.day's pro-am
event of the 72-hole
tournament and, despite the
obvious distractions, shot a
tw&lt;HJver-par 74.
Although he was six strokes
off the pace set by 'Mike Hill
and Chi Chi Rodriguez, who
had the day 's low score of 68,
the 25-year-old pro from
Austin, Tex., said he was
satisfied with his roWld.
"! was just trying to relax
and have some fun and help
him (Ford) have some fun
too. This has been a funny
sort of year for me anyway.
Even though I have won
$100,000 this .rear (making
him the fourth-leading money
wimer on UJe PGA tour) , I
really haven't played that

well."

••

Snort
Parade
·r

!:\~\l

\~\ \l
\I\l

"TIGRESS"

THE MEIGS INN

with,'b~a~se~b:a~ll~tr=adi:ll:on:·~H:e~thi:n~k~s~~;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;:;:;::;::;

"

v.w.
AMC ·JEEP

RIVERSIDE

double. and Riddl e, Connolly,
J. Bau hman, Troy Guthr ie,

~ Chair:e

I!)

Pony ball games

Youth ball swnmaries

.

CWI-

,

have been at .500 and each
time before we have fallen
back," said Reds' Manager
Sparky Anderson. "We have
to break the barrier. We have
10 games left with the
Dodgers. People say our
pitching
has
been
incoosistlmt but our hitting
has been, too."
"Being behind is a new
situa\ion foc us, but that
doesn't mean we can't do it,"
said Joe Morgan, the Reds'
two-time National League
Most Valuable Player. "If
one team can get a 9Y..game
lead in 50 games another
team can make it up in liO."
The win, combined with the

Wednesday night with a 5-0
victory over the New York
Mets. George Foster struck
the key blow for Cincinnati
with a a UJree..-un homer in
the first , his 12th, while Jack
Billingham hurled an eighthitter.
"This is the third time we

Sports transactions

(Continued from page I)
"
Northwest of Pomeroy and
UJe Roadside Park on Route
$4.
Return with entry form to Pomeroy Ch amber of
En t.r y fee
'"
33,
also northwest of
Co mmerc ~ Courthouse, E. Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio ,
Pomeroy. The Meigs CoWJty
45169.
Sheriff's Department along
Juno tO, 1177
Dealings you have with large with Middleport, Pomeroy
•
·'
groups or corporations coul d be and ail village police and fire
and five
quite lucky for you this year. departments,
Don 't be Intimidated by the size volunteer emergency , rescue
the entity you're approaching . squads, including SEOEMS,
·
·
I
I of
To find out more of what lies
al"lead for you send for your copy took part. Director of the
Disaster
11
of Aslro-Graph Letter. Mail 50 Meigs Co unty
ret ired Methodist minister ,
1, Middleport, died early cen ts for each and a lorig , self- Servic e~ Agency ,. Charles
the Rev . W. Scott WesterThursday morni ng at his addressed , stamped envelope to Legar, coordinated the Meigs
Perso n!; interested in number, and will be on man, 82 , died at the Methodist home .
Astra-G raph . P.O, Bo x. 489 , County effort. with their
competing in the Big Bend, exhibition Friday, Saturday Home in Chelsea , M ich. , on
~e was born June 11 , 1916 in
Radio City Stalion. N.Y. 10019.
Pomeroy , a son of the late Be sure to specify your birth "injured" being taken to the
Regatta quilt contest spon· and Sunday at the Trinity June 2.
Mr . Westerman was born
Wa lter and Mary Searles sign.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
sored by the Trinity Church Church.
fV\ay 1, 1895, the son of Mr .
Hy sell . He married the
in
Pomeroy.
are aske&lt;i to complete the
Prizes are, first place, $10 and Mrs . Walter
S.
former Nell ie Pierce on Aug . ARIES (Merch 21-Aprll 19) A
Senior
Citizens of Meigs
e11lry fon11 below and return gift certificate from local Westerman in Adrian, Mich . 21 , 1937. She survives along busy day is In store for you. but
County
played
the roles of the
During his 40-year ministry
wi th four sons, Lawrence E.. don't let it concern you. The.
11 to the Pomeroy Chamber of store; second place, ribbon in
•
he
served
churches
i
n
and
R
ichard
A
.•
both
of
Rt.
1.
gs
you
have
to
juggle,
more
thin
disaster
victims.
A helicopter
Commerce, P.O. Box 256, each categorie; third place,
•
Mi chiga n and Gallipolis and
M idd leport ; Will iam P ., the better you perform.
was on hand at Veterans
ribbon in each categorie.
Pomero)'.
•
Dayton , Ohio . He had lived at
laPorte, Ind. , and Robert E.,
Quilts wHI be judgetfby
the Method ist Home since his Crystal Lake, Il l.; three . TAURUS (April 20-Mey 20) Try Memorial Hospital, operated
retirement in 1960.
daughters , Mrs . Ida E . not to overplay your hand or be by Jack Crisp, to make any
Mr . Westerman attended
Smedley ,
Mrs .
Dav id too asserti•Je today. Your advan- " necessary transfers" of
public
schools
i
n
Adr
ian,
and
(Frances)
Haggy
and
Shi
rley tage lies in letting others com.e to patients to a larger medical
(1)
' .
was graduated from Adrian
Hy sell , all of Rt . 1, Mid- you .
facility .
High School· In 1913. He
die port ;
four
brothers ,
The Mason CoWJty disaster
received his AB degree f rom
Elmer,
Harr i sonville ; GEMINI (Moy 21-June 20) Be
the Un ivers ity of Michigan
Charles , Rt . 3, Pomeroy both hopeful and positive today . alert exercise consisted of
School of Music In 19 17. He Norman, Long Bottom. and It you can mamtain an optimistic five "mini-disasters'', with
•
also sludied at Columbia Nathan, Rt. 1, Middleport ; . outlook . things happen the way the tornado doing damage
Un i versity, and the School of
four sisters, Mrs . Martin you want them to.
English Church Mus ic in
(Cora)
Woodard.
M rs.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) and ·injuring "residents" of
London
before
hi
s
ordination
.
William
(Annie)
Carswell
,
Jtl.-1
1
.
,
•
•
-~~ac~
Qg.U
w
THIS DIABETIC V!Gr!M was in shock as the result of
(S)
Luck may play an active and for- Pt. Pleasant, New Haven,
Mr. Westerman organized both of Pomerov Route 3;
tunate ro le 1n your affairs today. Mason, Apple Grove and the
the
!Drnado.
and directed the conference
Mrs .
Honier
(Rose) This plus your tenaci ty and im ~
Lakin
State
Hospital.
The
Minister's Choir and was coLongerbone, Columbus, and
llotey ,.. - .1.00
founder and f irst president of
Mrs . James (Betty ) Johnson, aginat1on should make you a emergency service units in
the Dayton Choirmaster's
Mason , W. Va .• and several winner.
all five of those locations;- great deal of advance warnin g for Franklin,
C.t.n:OORI
Club . He was a member of the
nieces, nephews and cousins . LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Where along with the Police, Fire
planning and the total Madison, Delaware and
Executive Committee of the ·
Als6 surviving are 17 ot hers may ~ee only the dark
Department,
,
Sheriff
and
cooper alion of all of the Licking counties at 8 p.m.
Hymn Society of America
grandchildren and two greatside . you see rays of sunshine .
State
Police
units
cooperated,
and the
Fellowship of grandchil dren.
,
agencies
, hospitals and shortly after receiving a
Thus you can br ing hope in1o
Methodist Musicians.
Mr. Hysell was a retired people's lives .
transporting the "injured" to professionals involved. .This report of a fwmei cloud
After his retirem ent he
coal miner .
w~--------------------------~ directed
Pleasant Valley Hospital. In is the third year for such an sighted near Plain City.
a project of sending
Funeral services will be 2 VIRGO (Aug. 23·Stp1. 22) All y
addition
the Civil Air Patrol alert; and all who participate
taped recorded music to p. m. Saturday at the Rutland yourself with power l ul ·
Another twiste,r over nortll·
Ameri can soldiers in Viet Free Will Baptist
Church associates and depend on th~m unit based in Point Pleasant feel it is well worth the time ern Columbus was reported
nam.
with the Rev. Leland Haley 1o lea d the interference today . fl.ew over the three counties
and effort exerted, so that to NWS a short time later and
Over his ·lifetime he officiating . Burial will be in They'll get you over the goal li ne to survey 11 damages", and
should
a real disaster strike, a third was sighted east of
recorded major polit ical · Miles Cemetery. Fr i ends where you couldn't yourself.
the Medicopter of th e the three counties are more New Albany in Licking
events,
irkl
uding
the
Ni ~on.
may
call
at
the
Rutland
\
Gua·rd
from adequately ·prepared.
Kennedy
debates
and Chapel of the Wa lker Funeral LIBRA (Stpl. 23-0c1. 23) Do;ng National
CoWJty about 8 : ~.
broadcasts on space flights . Home from 2 p. m. Friday whal comes natura lly today and Charleston participated in
Il)
central
Ohio
the
UP!
The Ohio Highway patrol
He donated his collection to until 11 : 30 a . m . Saturday being tactful and cooperative the exercise by flying to
said
there
were
no
serious
w1
th
others
will
get
you
just
about
said that tornado touched
the Eastern
Mich igan when the body will be taken to
anyth ing you set your mind on . ·Pleasant Valley Hospital to injuries or damage reported down in a field, but caused no
University Library in 1974 . the church . The famlly will
Mr.
Wes te rman
was receive friends f rom 2 to .4
SCORPIO (Oct 2•-Nov. 221 supposedly transport one of as the severe weather, which damage. The fourth twister
preceded in death by his wife and .7 to 9 p. m. Friday.
lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
Dedicated . work to ward the the "victims" to Charleston dumped about one-half inch near Carroll was reported to
Frieda Wuerfel In 1973. They
achievement
of some goal can for further treatment.
of rain at Port Columbus the Fairfield CoWJty Sheriff's
had been married since l9l7 .
fruitful
lor
you
today.
The
be
To
coordinate
a
three·
International Airport, passed office at 9:20p.m.
l:l is son . W. Scott
possibility of large gains Is very county, two-state, three· through the area ,
Westerman. Jr., served as
The tornado warning was
prom1sing .
sup4;'rintendent of schools in
hospital disaster alert
The
Nat
fonal
Weather
(Continued
from
page
1)
canceled
at 10 p.m.
Ann Arbor from 1968 to 1971 ,
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc. exercise of this size takes a Service issued a tornado
before
going
to
Ea
stern
By Lawrence E. Lamb
the capacity to stretch to the
cutoffs after they are 21) If there's someone influ"emtial
Michigan Univesrity to head
imposed.
who coUld be an important conDE AR DR. LAMB - There maximum might be limited.
the curriculum and in·
.Califana said,
"The tac t try to mix socially with him
is much talk today of IWlgs,
No, blood from the hands or struction depar1ment.
Mr. Westerman also leaves Medicaid program already today . You'll bonefit from a
but there are some answers I any particular part of the
· closer relationship.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
never get.
body does not go to just one a daughter , Mrs. Wesley E . makes heavy fiscal demands ·
ijrashares
(Ellen )
of
ADMITTED - Deanna
In an active child or super part of the IWJg, All of the Plymouth , Indiana. ten on the states. The law must CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jon. 19)
Norris,
Pomeroy; Goldie
lnltia!ly things may not go ex.actly
athlete du tbe IWlgs grow oxygen-poor blue-blood . col· grandchildren and six great be enforced, but it urgently as
you programmed them . Don't
Roberts
,
Racine ; Pauline
larger than they do in one lects in the right side of the gquidchlldren . A d~ughter , needs Ill be changed Ill be '"' this dismay you . You're a tar
who spends much time just heart and is mixed there. All Mrs. Frank J . Feely, Jr. reasonable , equitable and stronger fin isher than you are a Perry, Dexter ; Carol Wines,
died in 1967.
Athens;
Dana Covert,
s1arter.
watching TV.or reading?
of this blood is then carried to (Joanne)
Cremation has taken place effective .. We have already
Pauline Riley , .RECIFE , Brazil (UP!)
Pomeroy
;
If a mature person with the IWlgs UJrough one arte.ry and memorial service will 6e begun
Roman Catholic priest from
Cons u It in g AQUARIUS (Jon. 20·Fob. 19)
Long
Bottom.
First Lady Rosalynn Carter , St. Louis, and Thomas
large lung capacity leads an - the pulmon~ry artery held at 2 p. m . on June 17 in Congressional committees on Just because people do th ings a
DISCHARGED - Jessie in a dramatic gesture of Capuano, 24, a Mennonite lay
this."
certain way doesn't mean that
iJmctive life does· he or sbe which divides into smaller Chelsea .
Geyer,
Clinton Pierce, Mary concern for human rights, worker from New York, who
Rev
.
WesTerman
was
Callfano
said
HEW
is
you
should
follow
suit
.
Be
1m
brea the less deeply? Do parts and smaller arteries to
pastor of Grace United
Howell
,
Kenneth Goborik, Wednesday met with two said they were held
considering
atl
additional
aginative
and
creative
and
you'
ll
of the IWJgs go dead?
distribute UJe mixed blood to Methodist
Church
in
think of something better.
and
Gilbert
Wilson.
American missionaries wbo incommunicado, beaten and
Does the blood from say the !be IWlgs.
Gall jpol is from 1937 to 1948. $377 million in penalties for Tl
sa
id they were unjustly '1\arving during their threestates, including Ohio and PISCES (Fob. 20-Merch 20)
Holzer Medical Center
When a lung is removed it
hands, get renewed by going
several
others
on
July's
Several
channels
whereby
you
TO
HAVE
PICNIC
imprisoned,
beaten and :lay imprisonment.
I Discharges, June 8)
to a certain part of the IWJgs simply limits the amoWlt of
can gel things you really want
in
a
Brazilian
jail.
starved
Return Jonathan Meigs penalty list. The additional are open today. 1f you tind one
Joseph Adams, Marilyn
only?
IWlg available to exchange
The men, both bearded and
Mrs.
Carter
made
a
hasty soft spoken, told her of tbe
When one lung is removed air. The remaining healthy Chapter of the Daughters of penalty being considered for door closes, hasten to knock on Barron, Debbie Burdette,
anolher.
Roberta Crabtree, Nancy schedule change to confer for conditions faced by political
can the other really do a com- lung is quite adequate to pro- the American Revolution will Ohio is $9.4.
Downard, Brian Freemen, 25 minutes with the prisoners and the poor who
vide ventilation and oxygen · have a picnic Friday at 6 p.m.
States re ceiving federal
plete job?
Pauline HUI, Nancy Holland, missionaries in this Brazilian are confined in jails without
We read of over ventilation, exchange for all of the mixed at the home of Mrs. Thereon Medicaid fund• are required
will
Johnson,
regent.
Speaker
by
I9721egislation
to
monitor
Cinda
Mink, Lovern Montez, coastal city. It was her most charges and without the right
~ what happens witlJ Wlder venoxygen-poor blood at rest and
be
Boyd
Ruth
on
conserva·
the quality and cost of
Wilbur
Myers.
Flovd direct involvement so far in of coWJSel.
ti!Htion?
with reasonable amoWJts of
the human rights issue, which
lion.
New
officers
will
be
in·
Newman,
VIrginia
Porter,
medical care provided Ill
1 EAR READER - The exertion. As UJe amoWlt of
stalled.
Hostesses
will
be
strained
U.S.- Brazilian
Clyde
Rogers,
Clara
Pullins,
needy
persons
in
nursing
IWJgs )lave a range of capaci· IWlg tissue·is removed the ef·
A
dissolution,
djvorce
and
a
Mrs.
Johnson,
Mrs.
Paul
relations
earlier
this year.
Connie
&amp;mine,
Debra
Scott,
homes, hospitals and other
ty. When you are sitting still feet is really noticed in the
suit
to
quiet
title
have
been
Eich,
and
Mrs
.
Robert
Mrs.
Carter,
scheduled
to
Alice
Weddle,
Welton
Woods.
health facilities.
you need far less o~en than limita lion of the amount of
filed
in
Meigs
County
Com·
leave
today
for
Bogota
,
Ashley.
Members
may
take
If a state cannot show it has
when you are jogging. In exertion that a person can do.
Weddle, Welton Woods.
mon
Pleas
Court.
ASK TOWED
guests.
Colombia,
raised
the
human
Meat
and
beverage
a so~a lled utilization review
those circ umstances the
(Births June 7)
To give you more injorma·
A, marriage license was
David
Young,
Rutland,
and
rights'
issue
during
her
talkS
will
be
provided
but
members
plan in effect or if the
Iunr.s need venWate only as lion on how the IWJgs work I
Mr. and Mrs. Donald
required review is not Deborah Young, Rutland , Woodie, a son, Northup; Mr. with Brazil's President issued to David Gerard
rnuch air as needed to pro- am sending you The Health are to take a covered dish.
Marcinko, 22, Tuppers Plains
performed in every facility filed for · dissolution and and Mrs. William Durst, a Ernesto Geisel.
vide thllt.sma Uamount of ox· Letter number 2-1, Keeping
MEETING SET
and Lisa Kay Paulk, 17,
Donna
Jean
BrookS,
Tuppers
She
told
reporters
Geisel
;gen. When you are exercilr Your Lungs Fit. Others who
The amual JWJe meeting of with Medicaid patients, HEW Plains, filed for divorce . daughter, Pomeroy; Mr. and
Tuppers Plains.
wanted
to
talk
in
detail
about
ihg or working hard the body want this infonnation can · the First Baptist Church of is required Ill reduce the
Mrs . Terry Finn, a daughter,
against
Ralph
Brooks,
needs more oxygen and the send 50 cents with a long, Rutland will be held Sunday. state 's share of federal
Wellston ; Mr. and Mrs. .U.S. relations with the Soviet
lungs exchange more air to stamped, self-addressed The Rev. John King of the Medicaid funds , aCCilrding Ill Tuppefs Plains.
Herbert Elliott, a daughter, Union but she kept bringing
THE OAIL"Y SENTINEL
James L. Hupp and Opal
the discussion back to human
provide the increased amoWJt envelope for it
DEVOTED TO DIE
Triedstone Baptist Churc~ of legislative interpretations of Huw. Racine, filed a suit to Rutland.
INTEREST OF
rights.
the
law.
of oxygen.
Underventila lion leads to a Gallipolis and his choir will
MEIGS-MASON AREA
quiet
title
against
Charles
"
!
had
to
let
him
know
in
The
U.S.
Comptroller
Sl:' ce the lungs are reallr build up of carbon dioxide in be guests for the morning
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL
PLEASANT VAU.EY
detaU about human rights,
·Exec. Ed.
storage chambers for air it is the body. 'This affects the service . Afternoon speaker General has directed HEW Ill and Evelyn Manuel, Racine.
DISCHARGES
Mrs.
ROBERT HOEFLICH
The
marriage
of
Larry
R.
which
are
so
important,"
true that ·exercising them to chemical balance and can will be the Rev. Edward reduce funds to states not in
Chy Edlwr
Hoschar and Wihna Hoschar Thelma Schoonover, Mrs. Carter said. "We have
Publishtd daily eXl.-ept Saturday
the maximum capacity will cause an increased tendency Buffington, pastor of Mt. Zion compliance witlJ tbe .law.
Gallipolis
;
Mrs
.
Edith
by Thie Ohio Valle)' Publlilhlng Com-.
help improve their capacity. to sleep. You sometimes see Baptist Church of Athens. HEW said it is informing was dissolved. Granted Simpkins, P\, Pleas;tnt ; Paul some points of disagreement, any,
ill Court St., PomerOy, Ohio'
divorces
were
Betty
I
really
believe
he
but
That is why a vigorous this in very overweight peo- Dinner will be served in the governors of the affected
4Si69. Dusmtas Office Phone 992Buck,
Pt.
Pleasant;
Mrs
.
.
Ferguson, Middleport, from
listened carefully to wbat I 2156. Edi torial Phone 992-21$1 .
states.
athlete tends ·to have a ple. In extreme underventila- dining room.
Donald Smith, Clifton;
Second claas posLoJ!e paid al
Jerry
Ferguson,
Middleport,
said."
ureater lung capacity than a tion as witlJ emphysema the
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Bonnie
Sanders,
'
Pt.
and Sandra K. Jenkins, from
Describing her talks as
Nationul atlverli!li nl! represen&gt;e&lt;lent •ry individual. 'This build-up eventually can cause
Pleasant; Mrs. Wavie Stone,
t.Htive Ward • Griffith Company,
John
A.
Jenkins.
"some
of the best discussions
,np'l n.1.kc any difference very serious problems.
LeOn ; Mrs. Delores Jean I've had so far, 11 Mrs. Carter Inc., Bulline.lll 1:1nd G11 llag~r Oiv.,
757 Third Ave., New York, N.Y.
Beca use of the volume of
"hen they are both sitting
RQse, Evans; Mrs. Nancy
IQOI7 .
said
she
thought
She
had
mail
Dr.
Lamb
cannot
(Continued from page I )
.s!tll but tt•e guy wiUJ unexerCrawford, Pt. Pleasant; Mrs.
Subs cription ralesl Dellvered by
"narrowed misperceptions"
where av&amp;U..We1.6 CC!ntl per
cised lungs may not be able to answe.r YO!Ir letters personal· Glenn and Howard Metzenbaum, both Mbio, said.
Oscar Priddy, Buffalo; Mrs. between the two countries on ~rrier
week.
By
Motor Route where CltTitr
MISSION
OPEN
ly
but
he
will
answer
sustain as much vigorous
Pt.
Norma
Holcomb,
CommWJities that did not meet this figure will not receive
servlre not ttvallable, One moolh, ·
both
human
rights
and
SYRACUSE
The
representative
letters
of
work for a long period ol time
$3.2:i. By maU in Ohlo and W. Y1.,
Mrs.
Mary
Pleasant ;
public works aid and higher sums are allocated to those
nuclear proliferation .
~e V e~tr, · 122.00: SU months,
as, the athlete. However ~ general interest in his col- subdivisions with higher concentrations of WJemployed, they Syracuse Mission is open
Francisco, Pt. Pleasant ;
Sll :to: Three months, $7.00 ;
Carter
abruptly
Mrs
.
Friday
evenings
at
7:30
p.m.
umn.
Write
to
him
in
care
of
effect is not notlced wtlh
Howard Scott Kayser, changed her schedule Ill fit in El,ewhere 126.00 yeM r; Stx months
said.
Uoyd Hoffman and Blaine
this newspaper, P.O. Box
$13.50: Thne monlh1, $7 .$0.
short periods ol aertioo.
Racine , and Emmalee
Cincinnati will get UJe largest grant - $10.5 million
the meeting with Father Sut..scrl~lun pri ce includes Sunday
Vance,
eiders.
The
public
is
1~1,
Radio
City
Station,
New
No, parts of l.h!! 111118 do not .
Goody, Gallipolis.
followed by Cleveland $9.5 million and Toledo, $8.3 million.
.
Lawrepce Rosebaugh , 42, a 'llmN-&amp;:nUncl.
welcome.
gu dea•from lack otuse but York, NY 10011}
Wha t

Legion trimmed
10-2 by Belpre

A field of 151 golfers joined .
Crenshaw in the $200,000
tournament but last year's
winner, Gibby Gilbert, was
not one of them.

72 Ford
Pinto

IMPROVE
ITII!IIII

Paint Up
NOW

With Our

" Four Cylinder",
automati c, radio .

EXT .E RIOR HOUSE PAIN
White
and Colors

71 Ford
Maverick Grabber

•LATEX
eQIL BASE

Automa t ic, 6 c yl..

'1295
Monte carlo
L~ndau , AM, w-tape,
A.C.. V·lop, power

windows , rad i als .
Tilt wheE"I .

•4995
Stop by and see one of these courteous
salesmen: John Sang , Maury Mittleman,
Doug Lease, or Jim Walker.

LATEX

sg95

GALLON

OIL BASE
GALLON

$1255

On fiVe Gallon lots You Receive 10' Per Gallon Off.

Ebersbach Hardware
PAINTING SUPPLIES

Phone 446-9800

110 W. MAIN

992-2811

POMEROY '

�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport.-Pomeroy, 0 .. Thursday, June9, 1971

Oakland Athletics edge Indians, 3-~
said Robinson

OAKL.AND ( UPI I
" Every time I look up .
Illere's Ill at guy again ."
This was Cleveland Indians

HOXIE,
any American circus, performs with seven

pachyderms in a super elephant display by John
and Laura Walker. Performing lions and tigers, horses
and ponies, dogs and elephants, plus many other thrilling
and exciting acts are coming ID Ga.Wa County on June 22
when the Hoxie Bros . Circus gives 6 p.m. and 8 p.m.
performances at the Gallia County Fairgrounds. Advance
tickets are being sold now by members or the Fraternal
Order or Police . Tickets may be purchased from members
or at the Libby Hotel , room 101, June9 through 16from I to
5p.rn . For additional information call44&amp;-7167 or 992-2302.

seem to have his good stuff
and in that situation I wanted

a fresh ann ."

The fresh armed turned out
ID belong ID Rick Waits and
Jorgensen greeted him ,with
an off.fieid drive which was
misplayed by Paul Dade. The
hit was a rising liner ID left 011
which Dade first carne in. BY
pitcher . wh at more can you flle time he realized the bail
say than that." said &amp;&gt;bin· was ~till sailing, it was too
son, who came in for some late.
second guessing by two of his
"If I'm going to lose a bail
pla yers for a move he made
game," said Ecker sley, "l'd
in the seventh inning that rather it be by myself.
decided the game.
Besides, I still had good stuff .
KOOlllSOn femoved starter May be my slider was not as
Dennis Eckersle y wi th · gond as it Should be, but all
runners of first and fllird. two my other pitches were
out and flle Indians nursing a working .''
2-llead. Eckersley, who had
given up only four hits was
upset at his removal and even
more so a little later alter a
double by Mike Jorgensen
drove in two Oakland runs
By BILL MADDEN
and made Eckersley the
UPI Sports Writer
losing pitcher ,
Steve Rogers, flle Montreal
" Dennis was struggling,"

11

Cha Ola '' Muldowney 's first

National Hot Rod Assciation
national title comes her first
major challenge for world
title . And she's lool\ing to fllat
challenge with a business-! ike
attitude.
"We're still ahead in title
points for the world
championship, " she said .
"But Don Gar!its is closing in
and if I don't win this
weekend I'll be behind. I
won't chase for points, fllere
just isn 'I enough money ID do
that. "
So Miss Muldowney must
win this weekend ID stay
ahead in the world point race.
With the kind of competition
She'll be facing in fllis year's
NRA Springnationals at
nearby National Trail
Raceway, she's not taking
any chances.
"We're going to be aU
business this weekend, ' 1 she
said. "All of us. We are going
drag racing,"
It isn't that ilhe hasn't been
all business before, but the
little problems have been
plaguing her and her new top

a

no-hitt~r

m a nager Frank Robinson

a

two starts ago and a one·

against Cali£oi'nia

hitter over six innings in his

most recent outing, Shrugged
hi&amp;',Shoulders.
"He still had good stuff,"
volunteered ca tcher Ray
Fosse. " I th ink he could have
fin iShed it up."

fini shing J oe

Colema n ~

iuef car: Despite Ute fact fllat

"So I feel pretty confident
this year , too ," she said. "Of

especially when you have
men on hase. Milwaukee had
jumped out in front and it was
nice to get a couple of runs, ''
said Dent.
In other American League
games , Boston trounced Baltimore , 14-5, Minnesota
nipped KanS8s"City, 9~, in 10
innings, Texas clipped
Chicago, 6-1, Seattle IDpped
Detroit, :J.2, Oakland edged
Cleveland, :J.2, and California
outlasted ToroniD, 2-1, in 13
innings,
In the National League,
Philadelphia topped Houston,
:J.2, San Francisco nipped
Pittsburgh, 3·2, Monireal
6-0,
blanked
Atlanta ,
Cincinnati whitewaShed New
York, !HI, St. Louis zipped
San Diego, ~. and Los
Angeles defeated Chicago, 42.
Red Sox 14, Orioles 5:
Butch Hobson hit a threerun horner and scored twice
during an ll~nning outburst

Strapped
for fun
A handsome smooth·lealher slip-on with a
grainy-leather mid-section . Topped with a
s moo th stra p, topped with a grainy s trap , ·
just for a das h of lash ion fun .
And to bottom it oft . a velvet-fi nished
leather sole and fa mous Massagic
constru ction. For luxury unde rtoot.

Nor ris.

Lacey , meanwhile, came

" I knew in my mind how I
wanted to pitch boih of those
guys (Mel!Dn and Norris ),"
said Lacey, "and it worked
out just fine. I was in perfect
communication with my
catcher (Jeff Newman ). We
had it all figured out right ."

on in the ninth to close out the
Indians. Frank Duffy had
singled ID start the inning,
who

had snuffed out an eig hth
inning rally.
The fi rst thing Lacey did
was commit a balk.

Available in an tique brown

course, I've learned through
experience ID feel confident
anytime I get iniD my car. It's
well prepared because I have
one of the best crews around
· andasfarasanytrackinthe
.East is concerned, I'm glad
this race is at this track."
Mi.s s Muldowney's fi.rst
step in meeting that
c h a II eng e
tow a r d
maintaining flle points lead no.w . His record stands for
and gaining her second
Springnationai title begins itself."
The difference this year,
IDday with tbe first of fllree
according
ID Rogers, is the
days of qualifying and time
addition
of
seven
pounds over
trials. Final eliminations for
flle $273,000 event are set for the1 winter.
'I.'ve improved because
noon Sunday.
gained strength and
I
've
Also competing in the J9n
added
velocity," said Rogers.
Springnationals will be funny
Ellis
Valentine 's RBI
car, pro stock, pro cornp,
double
and
Tony Perez '
cornpetion , modified, super
sacrifice
fly
gave
Rogers the
stock and stock classes.
ooiy·
runs
he
needed
in the
"It's going ID be a very
first
inning.
Chris
Speier
also
strong field out there," Miss
hit
his
first
horner
of
Muldowney noted. " There season in the eighth the
for
always is, But I feel good
Montreal.
about getting into my car and
Elsewhere in the N~tional
winning. I don't know if
League,
Philadelphia edged
anyone has noticed, but I've
Houston,
:J.2, San Francisco
changed my driving style
Shaded
Pittsburgh,
:J.2, Los
from le&lt;:t year. "
Angeles downed Chicago, 4-2,

~r

black.

ll's the "Raphael;' from Weye nbe rg
Massa gic. Sty le d to gladden your fe et.

WEYENBERO
~

St. Loui s blanked Sa n Diego, Chicago 1; Oakland 3,
Qeveland 2; Minnesota 10,
~. and Cincinnati put away
Kansas City 8 in 10 innings;
New York , :Hl.
Expos' a ce right-hande r
Over in the American Seattle 3, Detroit · 2, and
hurled his second straight League it was New York 9, California 2, Toronto I in 13
shu!Dut Wednesday night in a Milwaukee 2; Boston 14 , innings.
IHJ vic!Dry over the Atlanta Baltim ore 5; Texas 6,
Braves.
The victory gave Rogers
eight lor the seaS&lt;ln - one
more Ulan he had ali last
Continu ed from page 3
year , whil e his s ev e n
strikeouts improved hi s for himself and has brought innovations into the game because
National League-lea din g .of his own secur ity and confidence. Gene Mauch is willing ID
total to 90.
make a mistake and if he makes one, he doesn 't care wh~t
"Rogers doesn't have ID anyone thinks. When your thinking is channeled like that, you
take a back seat to aoyone," don 't make as many mistakes as you might ofllerwise."
·said Expos' Manager Dick
Among the flle yo unger managers, McCarver relates best to
Williams. "I've handled some Joe Torre, who !Dok over the Mets last week and is only 36
great pitchers .. . but Rogers himself.
is right up tliere wifll them
" I Ill ink he 's going to be flle same kind of manager as he was

Sports parade

· Father's Day Special
20% Discount on all Men's

Drau Shoes thru June 18th.

a plByer , and you know how good a player he was," says
Mccarver. " He's relaxed, he's confident, he 's secure. That ",..
means a lot. Some managers run scared because they 're

insecure. They relay fllese feelings ID their players and when
fll e players hit the field, they're insecure aiS&lt;l. rt was
refreshing ID see the Mets make .Joe their manager because be
isn't a member of fllat same old managerial rnerry-t(o-

Marguerite's Shoes
BETTY OHLINGER
102 E. Main
Pomeroy, Ohio
-

~

around ."

--·~

liKeaPeekatt/Jesetfloney-S!avei'S/
AFRIN

off the lOth to overtake · Ron
Cey of Los Angeles as the
major league RBI leader with
Wise even his record at 2-2. · 52. Glenn Borgmann's two·
nm homer tied flle score with
Twins 9, Royals 8:
Larry Hisle hit his 14fll one out in the ninth for
horner of the season and Minnesota .
second of the game leading

NASAL
SPRAY

in flle second inning, Hobson

also drew a bases~oaded
walk in the third to help Rick

Special Assortment

.TIMEX
WATCHES

ONLY

REG. 20c

3

OLD SPICE

lAAlEQUE

After Shave

GRILLS

BALM
l 1h oz.
REG. $3.00

·cANDY BARS

13 OFF

BARBECUE liMB f

ICY HOT
ANALGESIC

ONLY

1

RED-HOT VALUES FOR

FOR

BAYER
ASPIRIN
lOO's
- -

43~

KOTEX

12's

- ~

REG. $1.59

83~

ONLY

CHLOROSEPTIC
6 oz. with sprayer

REG. $2.50

ONLY

or
8 oz. Bottle

sg95 .

Reg. $1.89

4% oz.

UP

ONLY

99~
BOND EX
Malor League Stand_i ngs

By United Pren lnfernalional
Nalianal league
East
W. L
Pet. GB
Ch icago
32 19 ,627
Pittsbgh
29 21 .. 580 211
St . Lou is
30 23 .566 3
Ph ila
'29 23 ' 558 31 ,
Montreal
23 28 ..4 51 ?
New Yor k
22 31 .415 11

West

American League
By United Press International
East
W L
Pet. GB
New Yo r k
31 24 .564
Battim re
'29 24 .547
Boston
29 24 .547
Mil w
27 29 .-ta 2 4' '7
Clevel nd
23 · 26 .A69 5
De tro it
22 29 . 431 7
Tor onto
21 31 .J04 ev,
West

Los Ang

W. L
Pd . GB 37 18 .673
M inn

W. L
33 21

Pet. GB
.611

Cln ci
San Fran
San Dieg o
Houston

26
25
26
22

29
26
26
26

.520
.500
.491

26
30
33
33

.500

9 'n

.455 12

.441 l3
.400 15
Atlanta
20 36 .357 171n
• - ·• Wednesday ' s Results
Los Angeles 4, Ch icag o 2
Montreal 6. Allan!~ o
San Franc isco J, P itt sburgh 2
Philadel ph i a 3, ·Houston .2
Cinc inna rl 5. New york o
St . lou is 3, San Diego 0

Today's Probable Pltctlers
(All Timts eon

Chica go
Te)(as
Ca tl f
Oak land

23
. 24
26
27

.558

3
5
6
61 1

;::~. . . ~:~·. ~.~ 59~
-BONDEX-WATE R PROOF

CEMENT
PAINT

. '229
'739

All Star

Kan Ci t y
25 27 ..tal
7
Seatt le
:23 35 .397 1:2
Wednesday ' s Results
Oakl and 3. Cl evel and 2
Bos ton 1.4 , Bal tim or e S
Mi nn 9, Kan City 8, 10 inn s.
New York 9. M i lwa ukee 2
Te xas 6, Chic ago I

Q.T.
COLGATE
OR

5 LB......... . . .
25 LB...•.....

Daily Sentinel. Mtddleport.-Pomeroy. 0 .. Thursday, June 9.

CREST
TOOTHPASTE
7

oz.

ONLY

GOOD NEWS

LOTION

CHICAGO (UP! ) - More
than 1,000 federal, Illinois
state and Chicago city
employes were l cc"bsed
Wednesday of collecting
millions of dollars in illegal
welfare payments.
Chicago's morning news.
papers, Ule Tribune and the
Sun-Times, reported the
workers held government
jobs and at the same time
received welfare payments,
oorneas high as $6,000 a year.
The Tribune said more than
"1,000 persons on city and
federal payrolb collected $25
million ID $30 million in
welfare payments. The Sun·
;Times said as many as 3,500
;persons collected several
million dollars illegally.
~ The newspapers · said
:Jndictments will be sought
against 75 to 100 persons--the
worst offenders-later this
monfll. The Tribune said of
'those so far confronted with
the evidence, 90 per cent
con!esaed. Some of those
were reported plaruti(tg to
repay the aid money.
Investigators said the
Illinois
Public
Aid
Department already has
dropped some of those
involved from welfare rolls
and several hundred other
employes will be cut off
welfare rolls soon.
Investigators said persons
who earned $10,000 or more a
year in government jobs and
had been on aid rolls for one
year, collecting at least $2,400
in welfare along with their
government salaries, will be
prosecuted.

REG.
$1.79

for

govenunent

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Tbe
profits of Ohio's 13 largest
gas, electric, and telephone
companies increased by 29
per cent last year, the
technical advisor for the
state's Office of Conswners'
Counsel IDld the agency's ·
governing board in a report
today.
Philip Miller, head of the
counsel's technical division,
said the 13 firms recorded
actual profits !Dialing $158
million in 1976, up $166 million
over the year before.
The largest increase was
recorded by Ohio Bell and "
amounted to $45 million, a 73
per cent jump over the phone
company's 1975 profits,
Miller said.
He said the 13 utility firms
received nearly $6 billion in
total revenues in 1916, $753

million

more

Ph iladelphia (Lerch 5-2) at
Atlanta (Ei!J!sterly 2·3) , . 7: 35

p.m .

Ba ltim or e ( Pal m er 7-5) at
Bost on (Lee 3-11 . 7:30p.m .
Ka ns as Ci t y {H a ssler 2-ll at
p ,~Os Angtles fRhOOen 8-2) at M i nnesot a { Red fern 2-3), 8::10
St. Louis { Forsch 7-21 , B:JS p.m .
p.m .
Chic ago lKna pp 5 21 at Texas
FriUy's Games
( Perr y 5-5&gt;. 8:35 p.m
San Francisco at Ch i cago
De t r oit
(R obert s 3-1) at
Ptlllldtlphia at Atla , nignt
seattie &lt;J ones 0·41. 10:30 p.m .
Montreal"' Cinc innati, night
Friday ' s Games
New York at Houston , n ight
Toronto a t Seatt1e, night
san Diego at PlttSbgh , night
Detroit a t Oakl and . night
. Los Ang ..,t St. Louis, n ight
Cleveland at Ca l i fornia . n ight
Kan City a t Milwau kee , n ight
Chicago a t BtJ,I im ore . n ig ~t
.
M inne!Wfa tll t "New Yo rk . n tg M
• Texas at Boston , night -

the

of 14 per cent. ·
The largest increase in
revenues was realized by
Columbia Gas, wifll receipts
in 1976 of $150 million more
Ulan the year before, an
increase of 31 per cent.
Miller also said Ohio
electric companies received
$470 million last year as the
result of an automatic fuel
adjustment clause , which
allows the firms to pass on to
customers the costs of fuel
required
to
produce
electJ:icity.
The largest amount in fuel
adjustment charges, $32 million , was passed on to
customers by Ohio EdiS&lt;ln,
flle report said.
Miller's account of utility
company rev'enues and
profits comes on the heels of a
report
he
gave
the
Consumers ' Counsel
Governing Board May 25 that
Showed the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio last year
approved rate increases
totaling $665 million for
utility !inns around the state.
Staie Consumer Counsel
William Spratley said the
utility companies spent at
least $4.9 rnlllion to present
their cases to the PUCO
during 1976 in order ID win
commission approval of the
rate increases.
The figure represents only
money spent by utilities for
flle hiring of expert witnesses
and lawyers and does . not
reflect the time spent by
utility company employes ill
rate cases, he said.
"The amount spent by
utilities ID present their cases
for rate increases in 1976
alone is nearly half a rnillioo
dollars more than the two·
year
budget of
the

Po me

C

Co mmercial

~

Non - commercial.

one stroke off the pace in last
year's LPGA championship
behind Betty Burfeind!.
Burfeind! is having her
troubles this year after
undergoing knee surgery at
flle end of last season.

GIFT
.,·--..
For FatherS Day
.;.__~_DEAS

Otarleston drops

4 games off pace

PANT SUITS

Shellacked,
In other games, Tidewater
nipped Toledo :J.2, Richmond
edged Rochester 8·1 and
Syracuse at Columbus was
rained out.
Papo Rosado doubled in the
bot!Drn of the eighth ID drive
in the winning run as the
Tides downed the Mud Hens.
Toledo had tied the game 2-2
in the top of inning when Gary
Woods scored on a sacrifice
fly by Dave Hii!Dn.
Braves' homers by Dale
Murphy and Pete Varney
overcame two Red Wing
hornets by Rafael Liranzo
and one by Mike Fiore.
Reliever Norm Angelini, 1-2,
was the beneficiary and ·
Randy Miller, 1-3, the victim.

NEW LINEMAN
CINCINNATI (UP! )- The
Cincinnati Bengais have an·
nounced the signing of
Syra c use
University
offensive lineman Jose SaintVic!Dr.
Saini·ViciDr, 23, ~ native o!
Haiti, was a thre~-year
starter at Syracuse. The 8-4,
258-pound lineman was the
Bengal's eighth-round draft
choice.
".Jose is a fine blocker and
he 's highly intelligent," club
General Manager Paul
BroW1) said Wednesday. "He
was a tackle at Syracuse but
he'll be a guard with the
Bengals."

SHIRTS
and 1..areer

ITS&amp;
SPORT COATS
by Merit. Curlee,
Hubbard and Warren

UNDERWEAR

DRESS

DENIM JEANS

lover
by Arrow, Jockey.
Puritan &amp; Moss

STRAW HATS

PANTS
by Haggar

NECKTIES

and Hubbard

by Levi's

WALL£TS &amp; KEY
CASES

Just Received Ladies' Cotton Dresses
For Summer

Mon . thru S.t. 8 :00 1.m. to' p.m.
Sunday 10 ;30 to 12;30 and 5 to 9 p.m.
PRESCRIPTIONS
·
PH.9t2· 2955
_ijjendly Service
112 E . M~IN
"Upen Nighlstil9
POMEROY.O .

SUGGESTIONS:
•SANDALS
•MESH SHOES Black, brown and
•BOAT SHOES
•DRESS SHOES Thorn
MeAn
and Rand·
eBO():rt' Dress. and Casua Is
by Dmgo

JEANS AND KNIT

2Q%0FF

SHIRTS

PILLOW CASES

ON ALL

-

PR.

SHIRTS ................. •3.33
JEANS ....•............. '6.66

FATHER'S
DAY
GIFTS

••• 0 0 0 0. 0

• 0 ••• 0 ••••• •

••••••

Maybe it's because they think
of him as a salesman instead
of the friend he can be.
You won 't find any sales men at our agen cy.
We 're insura nc e agents. professional people
who specialize in your insurance needs. If
you have any question at ali regarding in·
surance , drop in and ask us . We won't try to
se ll you a thing .

Davis Insurance Service
Pric~• Good thru Sunday, 12th

-

·

GIRLS

PERM PRESS
. (One Pattern)

OPEN FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

LLI:OO

heritage house oF sHoEs

992-5120
114 Court St.

Pomeroy, 0.

Monday thru

N. 2N

AVE .

OPEN;
Thursd1y &amp; Saturday 9 : 30 to s
9 ;30

'

" '

OTHIEMIDDLEPORT .0.

N 2nd AVE

.'

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

by Meeker

BAHR

I,;)

Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph. Chorles RIHit. R. Ph .
Ronald Honninv. R. Ph.

o.

The four ~ay IDurnarnent is
being played over the 6,3()().
yard Bay Tree Golf
Plantation course, the first
time the LPGA's premier
event has been played in the
South in its 23-year history.
A total of 99 women are
entered in the event. The last
two rounds of the IDurnarnent
will be nationally televised.
Top prize is $22,000.
Among the favorites are
JoAnne Carner, who woo last
week by five strokes, Jane
Blalock and Judy Rankin.
Whitworth says Rankin,
who was second las!" year and
who has won two events fllis
year, could take flle LPGA
title.
"She is hitting the ball right
down the middle,'' Whitworth
said . "You need ID do that oo
Ulis course."
Rankin, third on the aUtime money winning list with
a total of $4n,899, finished

Reg. $21.95-0nly $16.00
Reg. $30.95 Only $23.00

FILM

2 oz.

ENAMEL PAINT ·

992-2848

NORTH
MYRTLE
BEACH, S.C. (UP!) - Kaflly
Whitworfll, all-time leading
money winner on the LPGA
IDur, figures ilhe needs ID
make a comeback of sorts
after missing the cut last
week for flle first time in her
brilliant !&amp;.year golf career.
Winner of 80 career
victories and $702,851,
Whitworth was two strokes
over the cu!Dff during tbe
first 36 holes in last
weekend's Talk Classic at
New Rochelle, N.Y ., but
hopes to return to the style
that put her on IDp of this
year's money list in the
$150,000 LPGA Championship
which begins today. She won
this event in 1967, 1971 and
1975.
"I'm having my troubles
right now because I'm just
not hitting the bali real well,"
she said Wednesday. "I'm
having a tendency ID hook it."

Bal&lt;er Furniture

REG.
51.60

MOORE'S

Entry
Grueser and
Raymond Boice, M.D., lert to right, attended the Central
Ohio Heart Chapt.er annual meeting in Columbus May 25
at the Neil House Hotel. Grueser and Dr. Boice were
delegates, Dr. Boice as tlie medical delegate as he is
currently serving as president of the Meigs County Heart
Branch. Both were honored as part of the Chapter
Presidents' Club at the luncheon where Woody Hayes was
the keynote speaker.

szso

$777
.........•.........

Addre s s

ONLY

ALL STAR

ALL COLORS
EXCEPT WHITE

Na me

Ph o ne

loternutlooal League
Roundup
United Press Ioternaliooal
lf the Charles!Dn Charlies
had it do over again, they
would proba biy decide to stay
in West Virginia.
. A fllree-game series in
Model CF866 8.2 cu : ft.
Pawtucket seemed like the
Compact Freezer ,
perfect opportunity for
Charles!Dn to go from one
Walnut-Grain Color Lid
game behind the frontDeluxe Zero- Guard f:eez er
running Pawsox to two
assures better ma intenanc e
games
ahead in the
of true-zero cold . Counllert:oo
International
League race. It
height! Featu res s lid ing liftdidn't
happen.
In fact, Pawout basket.. interior light,
tucket
rallied
Wednesday
counter-balanced lid .
ConsUmers' ~ounsel office ,"
nlght
to
win
9~ and sweep the
Spratley said .
series to stretch its margin
over the second-place
Char lies to four ,full games.
With Pawtucket trailing 8-4
ASK TOWED .
See the full hne of these fine Admira I Freezers from a
going iniD the bottom of tbe
Marriage licenses were eighth, Rick Berg led off with
fo 25 cubic ft. si1es.
issued to Jack Lee Of- a single. Kim Andrew and
fenberger, 32, Marietta, and Luis Delgado singled ID load
Lenora Lee Stewart, 26, flle bases before Eddie Ford
Syracus~; Timothy Alan
walked, forcing in a run . John
Baurn, 21, Chester and Doherty then singled home a
Marteena Yvonne Caldwell, run and Bo Diaz drove in the
Middleport, Ohio
20, Tuppers Plains.
tying run wlth a ~o.run
single. Sam Bowen ~ingled
horne the game-winner with
his third hit of the game , He
had earlier clouted a solo
horner.
Though Charleston
matched Pawtucket with 16
hits, · including a three-run
homer by Larry Wolfe and a
MEN'S
Ladies' Summer
solo blast by Craig Cacek,
winning reliever Rick
Kreuger, 5-3, hung tough for
the Pawsox while Mike
Cosgrove, 1-3, was getting
2 Pc. and 3 Pc.
Size: 10-20·
J4ll2-24'1&gt;

SPORT
SHIRTS

proceed to Pomeroy. The
Pomeroy Chamber
of
Commerce who is sponsoring
the event hopes to make this
yeat's parade the largest
ever.

Sale Priced

94~

124 W. Main

than

'

..

Pomeroy Chamber ol
Commerce,
Box
526,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 as soon
as possi ble.
The parade will he held on
Fri'day, J une 17, leaving
Middleport at 6 p.m. and

Kathy not hitting ball well

previous year, or an lncrease

Cincinn8t i ( Norm an 5-2) at
Today ' s Probbable Pitchers
New York (Matlack 3 ~ 6 &gt;, .t p .m .
( All Times EDT)
San Francisco ! Ha lic~ i 5-5) at
New Yor k {G ullett llf,2) at
Chicago ( Bonham 6-Sl. 2 : 30 M i lwau k ee ( Haas 4·2L 2:30
p .m .

J im Frecker, chainnan of
th is year's Big Bend Rega tta
pa rade asks that persons who
plan to enter this yea r's
pa rade to fill out the co upon
below and mail to th e

e mployes.

The investigation began in
illinois after a similar probe
in Michigan turned up 80
Michigan employes illegally
collecting aid.
Some public employes are
entitled to welfare payments,
such as those who have a
large number of children, it
was reported.

Utility profits
•
zn Ohio up

Paint Special!

Se a ttle ) , Det ro it 2
Calif 2, Tor onto l. 13 inns.

Regatta parade entry form

matched against information

The Tribune said th e
welfare cheat ers included
city workers .S well as
employes of the Chicago Park
District, Chicago Transit
Aufllority, Chicago Board of
Educati on, Met r opolitan
Sanitary District, U.S, Postal
Service and General Services
Administration.
Computer printouts of
welfare recipients were

---Ad mira

DISPOSABLE
RAZORS
Reg.
2/29~
2 for 50'

By
Coppertone

tm

Hundreds of welfare
cheaters exposed

Freezers

Yanks take over first place
By MIKE TIJLLY
UPI Sports Writer
The New York Yankees
today are in first place in the
American League East
because of Bucky Dent's
power rampage.
· "Let's not be ridieulous,
I'm not really a horne run
hitter," Dent said Wednesday
night, after giving a good
imitation with two homers
and four RBI as New York
scored a 9-2 victory over the
Milwaukee Brewers.
-- Mike Torrez hurled a fivehitter and Roy White and
Reggie Jackson added back·
tO-back homers as New York
regained sole possession of
the Eastern Division lead for
the first time since May 20.
Dent now has five homers,
equaling his career seasonhigh, set in 1974. He has
homered four times in as
many games and is beginning
to scare enemy pitchers.
"It's fun to hit home runs,

"I

Rogers blanks Braves

she has been in an obviously

stronger machine, in several
ca ses in the past few
nationals, she hasn 't been
able ID get past !he first round
of eliminations.
"Sure, we 've made
mistakes , there was a
mechanical error that took
me out of an elimination and
once I was red lighted," she
said. "This time we're going
in as perfect as we can. We've
g,ot a week to get the car
ready. We're using only the
best equipment and I fllink I
run harder than 95 per cent of
flle men out there. So, believe
me, We'll be tough to beat. We
have ID be."
She couldn't have chosen a
better track to take on this
new challenge . It was ,last
year that ilhe became th~ first
woman to win a major
professional racing title by
winning
the
1916
Springnationals top fuel
category ,
•'Somehow last year , I
knew we would Win it here in
Coh,unbus/ ' she said."[ don't
know why, we just did.

think !faked out my fi rst
basema n," said Lacey,
meaning Dick Allen, "so I ate
Ule ball . ll was a good call. I
halked all right."
Faced with the tieing run
on second, Lacey threw out
Rick Manning on a sacrifice
bunt that moved Duffy ID
third. BiU Melton pinch-hit
for Duane Kuiper and struck
out and then Lacey wound
things up by also !anning Jim

Told Robinson pulled him
because hB thought he was
struggli ng, the good-looking
righthander, who had pitched

talking about the A's relief
relief pitching rookie wonder
Bob Lacey, minutes after the
A's had scored a 3-2 victory
over the Ind ians Wednesday.
"He looks like a ROOd

Cha Cha eyes world title
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP! ) Just one year after Shirley

''He didn't

~ The

Ml

PORT, 0 .

�1-·The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, June 9, 111'1'1
&amp;-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Thuroday. June 9, 1977

Attends retreat

Dr. Strafford to speak at
Holzer nurse 's commencement
The 54th graduating class
of the Holzer Medical Center
School of Nursing includes 37
students, two young men and
35 young women in ·the Clas~
of 1977, with the graduation
ceremony on Friday evening,
June 10, at 8 p. m. in the
sanctuary of the Grace
United Methodist Church in
Gallipolis.
Hugh P . Klrkel, president
of the Holzer Medical Center,
will welcome the graduates,
their families and guests
attending the graduation
exercises. He will also introduce the guest speaker of
the even·ing, J . Craig
Strafford, M.D., a member of
the medical starr of Holzer
Medical Center. Dr. Strafford
will speak on " Visions Past, Present and Future''.
Born in Portsmouth, Dr.
Strafford graduated from
Ohio University and the Ohio
State University College of
Medicine. After completing
his internship and residency
in Obstetrics and Gynecology

at the Indiana University
Medical Center in Indianapolis, he joined the
Holzer Medical Center Clinic
in August of !975. He holds
membership in the American
Medical Association, the Ohio
State Medical Association
and the Gallia County
Medical Society
Following Dr. Strafford's
address, Ja net M. Byers, R.
N. , Director of Nursing
Education will present the
c)ass to receive their
diplomas from Max W.
Morrow, Chairman of the
Board of Trustees of the
· Holzer Hospital Foundation.
Pins will be awarded to the
graduates by their class
advisor, Christine Gregory,
R. N., and their student
government advisor, Barbara McKinley, R. N.
Two special awards will be
announced by Hugh Kirkel,
one to the student with the
highest grade point average,
presented by the Gallia
County Medical Society, and

\

DR. STRAFFORD

GRADUATING NURSES - The Holzer Medical
Cente r School of Nursing Class of 1977 includes: (first
row, left to right) Judie Dahse, Amesville; Anne Crook,
The Plains: Pam Short, Rodney ; Sue Jones, Bidwell;
Valerie Lowe, Sciotoville; Vicky Michael, Pom~roy; Lora
Jenkins, Wellston ; Teresa Fraley, South Pomt; Mary
Krawsczyn, Middleport; Janet Frazee, Gallipolis; Cecile
Harris Ashland, Ky. (Second row) Cathy Hoylman,
ChUlic~the: Tina Nieri, Middleport; Jennifer Risner,
Portsmouth; Linda Jones, Oak Hill; Becky Kouns,

Syracuse ; Joann Patton, Jackson; Belh Dawson, New
Haven, W. Va.; Vivian Burks, Ironton; Joann Blevins,
Middleport; Barbara Moles, Leon, W. Va.; Diane
Withers Point Pleasant, W.Va.; Pat Perry, The Plams.
(third ;ow) Deneda Foster, Jackson ; Diana Bailey ,
Thurman; Connie Malone, Chillicothe; Doreen Norris,
Gallipolis; Jane Smith, Athens; Pam Heading, Wellston ;
Dave Ridenour, Gallipolis; Gilda Jones, Detroit, Mlch.;
Melinda Webb, Lancaster; Teresa Chichester, Long
Bottom; Susan Clark, crown City ; Joy Meade, Wellston.
Not pictured is Kenneth Kughn of Gallipcilis.

Several ladies of the
Gallipolis Christian Church
attended a weekend retreat
at Howells Mill Christian
Assembly, Ona, W. va., June
:\--1. The theme for the retreat
was " Every Day with Jesus" .
Special guest speaker for the
event was Janet Wilson from
College of the Scriptures of
Louisville,
Ky.
The
workShops in keeping with
the theme were, Diaper Daze,
Work Daze, Golden Daze and
Self-acceptance.
The Christianaires, gospel
singing trio of G.C.C. sang at
the two-&lt;lay event. The triO
members are Sue Bran·
deberry, soprano; Linda
Miller, second soprano, both
of Rio Grande and Barbara
Scites, alto, of Pomeroy.
They were accompanied by
pianist, Sharon Wilson of
Pomeroy. The trio sings at
many local churdhes and
functions as well as other
areas of the Tri-litate. After
singing at the retreat they
were invited to sing for the
College of the Scriptures.
Bonnie Tawney and Edna
Tawney of Rt. 3, Gallipolis,
also atten&lt;!ed.

the other to the best all
around student, from the
Holzer Medical Center Clinic.
Recipients of these two
awards will remain a secret
until the time of the
CARDS INVITED
presentation. ·
Mrs. Ruth Smith, Rt. 2,
The Rev. David Strang will
Pomeroy, is confined at Fort
pronoun ce both the inHamilton Hughes Memorial
vocation and the benediction.
Medical Center, Room 253,
Merlyn Ross will conduct the
Hamilton, Ohio, 45013. Cards
Plans for the annual by Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Evans
vocal selections by the. class,
may be sent to her In care of
Polly Cramer
Eastern Star-Mason picnic and Mrs. Mary In Wilcox.
accompanied by Mrs. Merlyn
the Center.
were made during a meeting
Ross.
of Evangeline Chapter, Order
A reception will be held at
o! the Eastern Star, Thursday
Davis Hall for relatives and
night at the Masonic Temple.
Vacation Bible School will ·fair will be held on Saturday friends . of the graduates
The picnic will be held on
be held June 13·24 at the Zion from 1-3 p. m. for advanced following graduation.
under the sofa or a table. The
POLLY'S PROBLEM
July
24 at Forest Acres Park,
purpose~.
planning
same
goes
lor
large
purses.
Church of Christ on Rt. 143.
DEAR POLLY - I would
Shelter
House L Paul Darnell,
A
bus,
to
pick
children
up
The rirst meeting will be In
like to know how to make a Home is the most dangerous Mrs. Noami King, and Mrs.
one
hour
prior
to
Bible
School
the evening as it is the last
zipper work easily. A friend place there. is and only Kathryn Mitchell were apday of school. All other each morning, will travel the·
of Inine has a pair of fifteen because people are so stupid. pointed to a commitee to
Then there are those folks
meetings will be held from following route :
inch boots and has to use the
Down Rt. 143 to Bailey Run,
who
ask you to visit them and work on a mother-daughter
9:30 a. m. to II :30 a. m.
pliers to pull the zippers up
route
124,
out
to
Rt.
7
bypass,
when you get there the TV is banquet, the date for which
Refreshments will be
and down. - DORG'PHY.
will•be announced later. It
served each day and the last back toRt. 143 and travelling ~
DEAR DOROTHY - Rub a on and they leave it on. First was announced that at the
day a wiener roast will be to Harrisonville. There it will ~
cake of soap on the inside of they turn it down a little and next meeting a special offerenjoyed immediately tum in the school yard and
the zipper and it should work when they cannot hear it turn ing will be taken for the
THURSDAY
following )lible School. The return to the church .. There
YOUNG ADULT Class, easier. Petroleum jelly may it up again. How can people ·
V.B.S. program will be on will be side trips to Ball Run Bradford Church of Christ, " also be used. Both of these do possi)lly "visit" under such educational educational loan
Sunday evening June 26 at 7 road, Wolf Pen road, and the will have a picnic at Fort work better on metal zippers circumstances? Perhaps pe&lt;&gt;- fund.
Committees for the year
p. m. There is no cost but a road at the top of Homer Hill. Meigs, 6:30p.m. Friday. All bvt can be used on the nylon ple do not know how to hold a
were
honored with the worthy
If your child cannot attend members are urged to attend. ones; There is a wax stick conversatiQn any more Since
rree will offering will be
matron
presenting each one
taken each morning to be sent the pre-registration fair but
sold for this purpose that is we have the "idiot tube." We with a book mark. Initiaiion
ROCK
SPRINGS
can attend V.B.S., or if
to a mission.
GRANGE, annual inspection, very inexpensive. - POLLY. have two sets but neither one was held for Lorena and
youwould
like
additional
Classes for nursery age
DEAR POLLY - I have a ·is in the living room so we can Merri Ault. Several inspec8 p.m. at the hall.
infonnatlon,
call
Kathryn
A.
children through teens wiU be
couple of Pet Peeves I must give our full attention to tion invitations were read
RACINE OES 134 in·
hel4 and a pre-registration Johnson, 992-11195.
get off my chest. One is with guests who went to the trouspection
Thursday
at those folks who kick their ble to. come to see us. - along with thank you notes
·. SEE US FIRST AND COMPARE OUR
and a letter from the Easter
Masonic Temple at 8 p.m.
shoes off and they wihd up in ULUAN.
Inspection of Eastern Star held
Sylvia Midkiff, deputy gra~d
PRICES. QUALITY MATERIAL AT
DEAR POLLY - A good Seal Camp. Mrs. Kathryn
the middle of the floor for soon
ways
Mitchell
reported
matron, will be the
mREASONABLE PRICES.
meone to' trip over. It is all way to clean the glass doors and means noting that
Inspection of Evangeline Farie Kennedy, Maryln spectlng officer.
01 ovens is to dip a damp
right
to
take
your
shoes
off
Chapter, Order of the Wilcox, Ann Thomas, Euvet-. PAST Council Club of
WE
sponge or cloth in baking several itertlS had been purCASH&amp; CARRY
Eastern Star, was held ta Bechtle, and Kathryn Mit- Theodorus Council 17 D of A but dJLPut the darn things soda and use just as you chased for the kitchen.
DELIVER
PRICES
recently at the Middleport chell.
Mrs. Bessie King is chairThursday home of Ema Jesse
would use scouring powder. Masonic Temple, with 73
man of the sale of Estarl
Past patrons . introduced 7:30 p.m.
L.W.D.
members and guests atten- were Raymond Wilcox,
DEAR POLLY - Do not stamps, a project of the worMEIGS County Humane
ding.
Harry Chesher , Allen Society, 7:30 Thursday at the
throw away those old gloves thy grand matron and asked
Distinguished guests Hu~hes, Paul Darnell, and
but cut the fingers out and use those who are interested in
Thrift Shop across from the
presented were Roberta K. Bob
King.
Also
them to cover the handles on purchasing these to contact
Mindling, past grand presentedwere Evelyn Lewis post office.
your casement windows and her.
THE RIVERVIEW Garden
matron; Sylvia Midkiff, and Grace French, 50 year
Sunshine page was Mrs.
there will be no more marks
Club
will
hold
a
Hawalian
deputy grand matron of members of Evangeline; and
made by these handles on the Marie Hawkins. The altar
District 25; Patricia Wilson, Ruth Swisher, 50 year Luau Thursday, June 9; at 8
window shades. Hold the was draped for Jessie Peck,
grand representative to Kan- member of ·District 24, and p.m, at the home of Mrs.
on the handles with past grandmatron of the
Harless Frank. C&lt;&gt;-hostess
sas in Ohlo; eight worthy grand page, Gracie Wilson.
.rublber bands, plastic ties or Grand Chapter of Ohio. Pr&lt;&gt;matrons from Harrisonville,' · Eighteen past matrons and will be Mrs. Roy HaMum.
tems for the meeting were
pipe cleaners.- MARIE B.
OHIO VALLEY Grange
Belpre, Marietta, Athens, two past patrons of other
DEAR POLLY - My kit- Mrs. Mitchell, chaplain;
923 S. Jrd Ave.
Middleport, 0.
Glouster, New Marshfield, chapters were presented. 2612 meeting at hall at 8 p.m.
chen
co~r top has sharp Naomi King, Adah; Genevee
992-2709
or
992-6611
and from District 24, Sunshine pages were Mrs. Thursday; potluck refreshcorners that are just the right Chesher, warder: Bill King,
Open: 7:00to5:00 Mon.thru Fri.
. Cheshire and WilkesviUe, and Hawkins and tvlrs. Chesher ments.
height for my grandchildren . sentinel, and Harry Chesher,
7:00toJ:OO Saturday
MEIGS LEAGUE of
three worthy patrons from with the proceeds going to
associate patron.
MICHAEL SELLERS .
to
crack
their
heads
on
as
Racine, Belpre, New Mar- Estarl. The two candidates Women Voters, 7:30 p.m.
Refreshments were served
they play. I cut a clean
shfield.
initiated were Beverly Wilcox Thursday at Pomeroy Public
sponge in two and taped a
Past matrons from and Donna Stewart. Library.
piece over each counter corEvangeline
Ch&lt;tpter Mrs.Wilson was soloist with
FRIDAY
ner and have saved· a lot of
presented were Genevee Jane Wise as her acMARY Shrine 34, order of
The birthday of Michael head bumps.- JUNE.
Chesher, Marie Hawkins, companist. Pr&lt;&gt;-tems for the White Shrine of Jerusalem Allen Sellers was celebrated
DEAR POLLY- When takRoma Hawkins, Grace evening were Mrs. Wise, will meet Friday at Pomeroy at his grandparents' home, ing frozen pot pies out of the
French, Evelyn Lewis, organist, and Mrs. Mitchell, Masonic Temple .at 8 p.m. Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Roush, at freezer I slip each pie out of
Naomi King, Virgina warder.
Refreshments will be served. 240 Condor St. Pomeroy Tues- its pan, grease the inside and
Buchanan, Bessie King,
day evening.
SATURDAY
put the pie back in and when
Attending were Kay, Mistie cooked they are not stuck to
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Youth Fellowship of the St. and Rodney Grue~er; Mr. the pan. -HELEN.
Paul United Methodist and Mrs. Kenneth P. Lee and
Church will hold a bake sale sons, Robert, Scott Staats,
and car wash begiMing at 10 Aunt Sylvia Roush, Mr. and Choral group to
YOUR MANUFACTURED
a.m. Saturday at the Sohio Mrs. Curtis Roush, the
Service Station at Tuppers honored guest's mother, hold rehearsals
HOME!
Joyce Sellers, and his sister,
Plains.
Rehearsals for the Voices
CAR WASH Saturday at Amy Dawn.
of
Liberty choral group will
Ice cream, mints, and
Ellis Sohio Station, Locust
be
held at 8 p.m. each Thurs60 ROLLS OF CARPET IN STOCK.
St., Middleport, sponsored by koolaid were served with a day beginning tonight, Mrs.
Mickey
Mouse
cake.
Sending
Meigs VICA Club. Large
Harvey Van Vranken ancars, inside and out, $2.50, gifts but unable to attend was
WE HAVE WHAT YOU WANT .IN STOCK
nounced today .
,
economy cars, inside and out, his father, Sgt. G. E. Sellers.
The rehearsals will be held
$2, and trucks, $3.
AT EVERYDAY LOW PRICES.
at the Pomeroy United
SOUL SEEKERS, musical
Methodist Church. The group
group from Lancaster, at the
will present a Hi minute pr&lt;&gt;Syracuse United Methodist
gram In the Regatta variety
Church at 7:30 p.m. Saturshow on June 16 and will
day; public invited.
repeat the bicentennial pr&lt;&gt;\
BETHEL 62, Iniemationai MASON, W. Va. - At- gram at Royal Oak on July 3.
Order of Job's Daughters, tendance at the Faith Baptist
7:30 at the Masonic Temple Church June 5 was 78. Three
ON DEAN'S LIST
with installation of officers. Bibles were presented to
Four
Meigs
County
three graduates of Wahama
THE
SOUL Seekers High School. They were students attending Marietta
YOU choose the home
musical group of Lancaster .Shelia Ohlinger, Barbara College named to the dean's
will appear at the Syracuse Johnson and Jacqueline Van list lor the second semester of
you want to live in!
1976-77 are Steve E. Walburn
Asbury United Methodist Meter.
and
David B. Wolfe, both of
ChUrch at 7:30 p.m. SaturA ball game was played at
Middleport;
Michael B. May
day. The public is Invited.
Select from our big group of
Good News Baptist Church
of
Rutland,
and Richard J.
BAKE SALE and car wash, . Friday evening with the score
models with spacious room
10 a. m. Saturday at Sohlo 10 to 9 in favor of the Mason Stettler, · Tuppers Plains.
arrangements. Beautiful color
Station tD Tuppers Plains by team. A game will be played Stettler was 4.0 on the
St. Paul United Methodist each Monday and Friday semester.
coordinated decors. Top name
Youth Fellowship.
with different teams.
appliances.
CHURCH COOKOUT
Vacation Bible School is
THEME NOTED
The Bradbury Church of
being planned, time and
LETART, W. Va.- "Sing
Christ. daily vacation Bible
place to be announced.
Out for .Jesus", is the theme
Church schedule : school • will conclude Friday
of the Oak Grove United
preaching at 9:45 a.m. and with a wiener roast at 5:30
Methodist Bible School which Sunday School10:30; Sunday p.m. at the church. Parents
commences June 13. · The
Open Friday &amp; Saturday 9:00 A..m. 7 P.M.
evening at 7:30 .and Wed· are invited to join their
school opens on the 13th at nesday Is Bible study 7:30 children for the wiene~ roast.
6:30 p. m. and lasts until8:30 p.m. Supply Pastor, Ivan Sunday morning at 9:30a.m.
"For The Finest In Manufactured Housing"
949-2814
. Racine, Ollio
and will continue through Cardwell, The Plains, Invites the Bible school program will
PaiiOIIS
•
Owner
June 17. The freclor is everyone.
be presented by the children.
992-7034
1 roo E. MainJistreet
Martha Friend.

POLLY'S POINTERS

Zion Church to hold
vacation bible school

Eastern Star-Masons plan
annual picnic for july

Soap helps zipper slip

and

Social
Calendar

building materials

BUILDING OR REMODELING?

VALLEY LUMBER &amp;
SUPPLY
CORPORATION

Has birthday .

BONAN

Faith Church
plans events

Kingsbury Home

•

Sales, Inc.

honored at party
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond

recognized at

Wileox: hosted a gradualwn

awards assembly
·"

...
;
,
·,
,,
.~

..
'

'

.

'I

"

.,

Awards were presented at
an assembly program
Wednesday at the Pomeroy
Elementary School.
Given special recognition
were 18 students selected by
the school as top academic
achiever. at the request of
llep. Rnnald H. James who
sent each one a personaliz~d
cetti!icnte of excellence.
In this group were Matt
McEwen , grade 3, son of
David McEwen; Parker
Long. grade 3, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Harold I.&lt;&gt;ng, Route 2,
Porneruy; Kimberly Hanun,
grade I, daughter of Mrs.
• Mary V. Hamm, Route 4,
Pomeroy; Sus:\n King, grad.e
2, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Ch~•rlcs King, Route 4,
Pomeroy; Jennifer Swartz,
grade' Z, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Hoger Swartz, Route 4,
. Pomeroy; Sharman Slavin,
grade 1, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Slavin, Syracu.•e;
Dena Manley, grade I ,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
John Manley ; Kim Calvert,
dau ghter of Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Calv ert, Pomei·oy;
Otis Norris, grade 1, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Oti.• Norris,
ROute 4, Pomeroy; Erin
Anderson, grade 2, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. William
llmlerson, Pomeroy; Glenda
Gum, grade I, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. George Gum;
BI adley Young, grade 4, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Victor
Young, Pomeroy; Bryan
Bctzing , grade 5, son of Mr.
aud Mrs. Donald Betzing,
Pomeroy; Vnughan Spencer,
grade 5, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Jlilly J. Spencer; Nicky
Higgs, grade 5, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Keith Riggs, Pomeroy;
Ginn Johnson, grade G,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Johnson, Houte 4,
Pomeroy; Barbara Grueser.,
grHde 6, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Tom Grueser, and
Tracy Harding, grade 6, son
of Mrs. Bonnie Harding,
Route 2, Pomeroy .
·Special awurds presented
b~ Robert Morris, principal,
· Wl'nt to Sherry Clark, high
solwol student helping as nn

t'OOkout recently honormg
their daughter, Beverly, a
graduate of Meigs High
School, and Greg Browning, a
graduate of Eastern. Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Rufu:; Browning, Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Wilcox and
Darla, Nancy Stanley ,
Sharon Kuhn and Lisa and
Laura, Mr. and Mrs. Lee
Roush, Cheryl, Rodney, Joe
and Beth Ann, Allen Roush,
Mr. and Mrs. S. W. Wilcox,
the hosts and hteir son,
Bryan.

/

aide in the kindergarten
under the direction of Mary
Carolyn
Wil ey;
Brad
Robinson, definite academic
improvement, grade 3; David
Hubbard, definite academic
improvement, grade 3; Annie
Knight, school bus driver
retiring after 24 years;
Christina Smith and Billy
Anderson, certificates for
"facing physical problems
with a smile''; Dawn Thomas
and Matt McEwen, most
improved academically;
Brad Robinson, most improved In spelling, grade 3,
and Robyn Brown and Ronnie
Hanning, grade 3, most '
impruv~d in reading.
Other special awards
presented by John Arnott,
grade 6 teacher, were lor
dictionary, with Deanna Van
Meter, lirst,·a $2 award; and
Kim Rou sh, runner-up,
receiving a $1 award.
Trophies and pins were
presented by Amott, safety
patrol advisor, to Todd
Grover, DeAnna Van Meter,
Matt VanVranken, Robin
Buffington, John McKinney,
Kim Roush, Priscilla Herdman, Edie Grimm, G.ene
Klein, Tracy Harding, Angela
Hubbard, Brian Spencer,
Gina Griffith, Suzan Lightfoot, Micky Reed, Teresa
Harden, Hoxorme McDaniel,
Mike Hawk, Lois Roush,
Angie VanCooney, Shawn
Gilmore, · Julia Spencer,
C.lmrles Bailey, Jr., Debra
Thompson, Ken McCullough,
Cindy Curtis, Jeff Ginther,
Rod Manley, Karla DeMoss,
Mark X}oeglein,
Mike
Goeglein, Mike Whitlatch,
Anna Baxter, Vicki Morrison,
l!ecky Handley, Barbara
Grueser, Jeann .. Pauley,
Beth Gloeckner, Todd Fife,
Clifford Icenhower.
Perfect attendance awards
were presented to Rebecca
Handley, Mark and Mike
Goeglein, Lois Roush, Jon ·
Perrin, Angela Baker, Laura
Van Meter, Kevin Knapp, Joe
Fields, Brenda Robbins,
Mike Maniey, Owen Morris,
Darll!y Carl, Bill Elam, and
Hubert Eason.

In l943, Congress passed an
act providing lor "pay..asyou-goincome
tax
deductions . It authorized
em ployers to withhold
payments from salary
checks.

HIGH ACHIEVERS - Numerous Pomeroy
Elementary School students received recognition for
achievements during the past year during an assembly
Wednesday, the closing day of school. Here Robert
Morris, principal, left, presents certificates to Matt
McEwen, outstanding academic achievement, third
grade student of Mrs. Bonnie Fisher; Brad Robinson. also
a third grader, recognized for academic improvement
during the past year, and Mrs. Annie Knight, retiring
school bus dtiver,-for "providing safe transportation lor
hundreds of Pomeroy students over many years."

THE ATHENS COUNTY
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.
CLOSED ALL DAY
SATURDAY,
JUNE 11, 1977

Angie VanCooney, DeaMa
VanMeter , Matt
VanVranken, Ivan Carl, Marc
Fry, Anna Marie Baxter,
Timothy Braley, Cindy
Curtis, Karla DeMoss, Todd
Fife, Jeff Ginther, Beth
Gloeckner, Mark Goeglein,
Mike Goeglein, Barbara
Grueser, Becky Handley,
Annetta Hudson, Clifford
Icenhower, Gina Johnsori,
Rod Manley, Vicky Morrison,
Russell Nitz, JeaMa Pauley,
Wayne Pearson, Henry
Rider, Mike Whitlatch, Ken
McCullough , Jimmy McDonald.

••

OLD FASHIONED PRICES NIGHT.

HAMBURGERS- 30c or 4 for s1oo
CHEESEBURGERS-35c or 4 for s1 31
TRIPLES-65c or 4 for s225
ALL THE SAlAD YOU CAN EAT- 39c
;

IUI't Miss These Values on Saturday Evening.

of

,,

p

I
j

.

NOWAT YOUI\ FORD DEALER!
GI\AMA.DA $~,960*

Photo

Spectacular

Have A
Problem?
CAll

CRISIS·tiNE
992-5554

Family Size
LTD

REG.$9.95

MASON FURNITURE

Bring in your slide or print (no
negatives. please). The picture
will be reproduced in 8x10"
size, in full COLOR on the frorit
of the shirt. Be sure to indicate
size: Men's, S-M-L. or Children's
S-M-L. Keep that spacial somaone close to vour heart!

STORE HOURS
Mon ., Tues .• W~d. &amp; Sat. -8:30.til5:00

THURSDAY TIL12 NOON

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

VILLAGE PHARMACY

MASON FURNITURE
773-5592

Herman Grate

Mason. w. Va.

'

.Middleport, 0.

271 N.2nd
99f5759

•

SATURDAY NIGHT IS

r--·------·'4!

I

'

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

Hysell, Dawn Thomas, Matt grade; Lisa Haddox, Scott
McEwen, Gary Coleman and Roseberry, Susan King,
Kurtiss Braley, Mrs. Marlene Ronnie Callahan, and
FiSher's third grade; Sherry Clarissa Pferce, Mrs. Ida
Teaford, Traci Casto, Joan Diehl's second grade;
Simpson, Christi Sauters, Melissa Tyree, Terri Roush;
Patricia Davis, Beth Ann Parker Long, Ronnie Haning
Pierce, Keith MattoJ, Beth and Kim Wilson, Mrs. · Mae
Ewing, Janelle Burton, and Young 's third grade; Penny
Valarie Van Meter, kin- were Tom King, Rolland
dergarten, and Ricky Mohler, Landaker, Gerry Reynolds,
In 1976, former Postmaster
Karen Grover, Mark Reit- Mike Manley, Ray Justis, General James Farley died in
Morris,
Paula New York at the age of 88 and
mire, Anna Jo Patrick, and Owen
Denise Bentz, special Derenberger , Charles famed British actress Sybil
Bailey, Robin Buffington, Thorndike died in London at
education.
All of the kindergarten Shawn Gilmore, Gina Grif- 93.
children were presented fith, Edie Grimm, Todd
diplomas by Mrs . Mary Grover, Teresa Harden,
Tracy Harding, Mike Hawk,
Carolyn Wiley, teacher.
Mr. Morris, on behalf of Priscilla Herdman, Angie
the Ewing Funeral Home, Hubbard, Terry Johnson,
presented Bibles to all of the David Jones, Gene Klein,
sixth graders and special Susan Lightfoot , Roxanne
education students who will McDaniel, John McKinney,
· go to the Meigs Junior High Micky Reed, Kim RoUsh, Lois
School next fall. In the ~rnnn Roush, Brian Spencer, Julia
Winners in the "Draw. 0_ur Spencer, Debbie Thompson,
Bank" contest each recei:'!"g
munication from the state $1 presented by Mrs.
councilor, Dorothy Hen- Maxine Griffith were Jeff
thome, who completes her Roseberry, Dena !',lanley, 1 Your " Extra Touch"
Florist51ncel957
!
term of office in August. .She Gary F . Hysell, Jr., Juhe [
Baity,
Wendi
Dunfee,
Mrs.
extended thanks to district
!
deputies, council deputies, Jeanette Thomas' first l
-A..-M,,•,~ . !
·and councils lor work during grade; Dream• Bentz , I
/L..-"-'(..(1--'
I
the year and commented on Dennis Harris, Tracy Smith, I
I
rallies, the last of which will Jonathan Dunn, and Teresa
FLORIST
t
be Saturday. She also an- Johnson, Mrs. Dorothy
l
nounced the state session to Woodard's first grade; Erm
be held in August at the Neil
Anderson, Jenni!er Couch,
PH, 992-2644 !
Charles Callahan, Duane
I
House in Columbus.
Howell
and
Huey
E~son,
Mrsd
E.
Main,
Pomeroy
!·
A thank you note was read
352
Eleanor
Blaettnar
s
secon
Ywr
FTD
Florist
~
from the Maude Ross family
.._.__,,._.._.._
.._.,.__...__
for flowers and cards sent her
while hospi"1lized . Mrs. Ross
is now at ;~ mtrsing home in
Wellston.
Mrs. Helen Wolf was
pianist for the meeting.
Others attending were Mrs.
Ada Neutzling, Mrs . . Betty
Roush, Mrs. Letha Wood,
Mrs. Leona Hensley, Mrs.
Mary K. Holter, Mrs.
Margaret Tuttle, Mrs .
McPeek, Mrs. Ada Morris,
Mrs. Ada Van Meter, Mrs.
gthel Orr, Mrs. Erma
Cleland, Julie Rose, Mrs.
Newell, Mrs. Charlotte
Grant, and Joe Bissell.

:l

•

•

DUE TO DATA PROCESSING
CHANGE OVER

·gives Mrs. Newell award
CHESTEH - II 25-yeur-pin
was presen~d to Mrs. Inzy
Newell at the Tuesday night
meeting ul Chester Cow1cil
323, Daughters of America,
held at the hall.
Mrs. Newell was escorted
to the altar by the flag bearers
with the presentation being
made there by Mrs. Mae
tvlcPeck, comlcilor.
Mrs. Leona HeiL•ley, chairman of the ways .and means
conunittee turned in $100
made rrorn various projects
duri ng the year. Sl1e extended
thanks to thooe members who
had helped wiU1 the project
wut·k. A report on the
Memorial Day parade was
l!lven by . MI·s. Mary K.
" olter. She noted that
members currying American
llags, mm·ched from the
Chester Grade School to the
'Cemetery, approximately
one-half mile, and that there
the flagbearers, the Goddess
Liberty, Uncle Sam, and
U1e members !ormed a circle
,arow•d . the speaker's stand.
~tl'hdr part on the program
co~tsisted of a tribute of love
.and respect for deceased
ulcrnbers by Mrs. Erma
,Cleland who noted the deaths
Ill Helen Boatright, and Lucy
!'Kim since last Memorial
'Day, a reading by Mrs.
;tfolter, and a song by Mrs.
l!VIarguret Tuttle · and Julie
Rose with guitar accompani' inent. by Mrs. Tuttle, and a
prayer by Mrs. Betty Roush.
It was annOI.mced Uiat
"qu arterly birthdays will be
celebrated on June 21. Mrs.
'Tuttle read the !itwl com-

'••

WILL BE

.Daughtef's of Ametica

RACINE CARPET SHOP
to

Beverly Wilcox

High achievers

In 1899, James Jeffries won
the heavyweight boxing title
by knocking out Bob
Fitzsimmons In New York
City.

POSTPONF.D
The Riverview Garden
Club Hawaiian Luau has been
postponed until June 23.

~~ · $5;128*

·Sa$ed on manutac-ttJrers suggested retail price.

FORD

�•

8-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Thursday. June 9, 1977

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Item.~ Into Cash

WANT AD
CHARGES
Cllilr~e

100

""
""

300

12&gt;
190
22&gt;
3.7!1-

E.lll'lt wont uvl'r thr munrnwn 15

Wtlrd&lt;i I~ .. Ct'lll!J pt'r vtV!tJ l)t'r d;~y
AW rwmu~ vU~tt U\om tuiLWI.'UU~·c
Ud)'!l "-Ill lJt&gt; d w.r~&lt;;l'tl at lht&gt; I d.i~'
r Mit&gt;

lu Jllt'IIHII) , Ultd u( Tluwk&amp; arlll
OlnlLl.ll.ry li ('~Ill~ J)l'l' wurtl, $.:1 00
uununurn C&lt;il!hlll iidv;~nH·

Muhrlc ll uml:' !i&lt;!k!i HrKJ Ya rd s.alt•.s
are IU'l.'t'pted ~,~ttly wtth Ut,;h wrth
t.~nt

order 25

dwr jiC lvr iltb urtJ·

Utg Bux Nunr!Jcr lrr Ciu t! oll'l11: Sen·
lind
Tl~ PuUhsllt'r r cM"rvt'~ Utt: ~~~
to l'l!Jt trr rcjct'l any ad~ lh~·uwd ub
Jt....:liOilill Tht! PuOil sh~·• · wtll nut U..
n:l!pousrbk fur IIH!Il' them vnc IIK!UI ·

n ,•l'lt!ISt"rln.l'lr

Phont&gt;992-2100

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
Munday

Noon vrr S&lt;ll ur~)'
Tt w W&lt;~Y

Uu uFttday

4 PM
he d&lt;~) U.,.(vn· pubh~.;&lt;~Uu n
Sundoy
&lt;p M

fr td!l) ilftcnlooll

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
~EPAIROF

PARKING LOT
FOR
.
MEIGS LOCAL
SCHOOL DISTRICT

Sealed

proposa 's will be
recetved by the Board of
Education ol tile Me1gs Local
School Dist r ict of M iddleport,
OhiO at the Clerk's office until
1'2 00 Noon on June 24, 1977
and at that time opened and
read by the Clerk 1mmed 1ate1v
thereafter, l;,bulated and a
report the r eof made by the
Cler k to said bo ard at its next
meef•ng .
Description of Im provement
located at Me1gs H1g h Sc hool ,
Pomeroy , Oh iO
Sp ec• f •catlons
a re
as
fo llows .
1 To patch and seal
park1ng a reas at the Me1gs
H1QI'1 School - appro&gt;omately
16,000 sq yds
2 - To patch badly broken
a rei!I S with 40 4 as pha lt•c
conc r ete
3 - To ch ip and seal p.;~r kl ng
areas w ith RS 3 and No . 8
l1mestone ChipS
A certif ied check payab le to
the clerk -tre asurer of the
above board of edu ca fion or a
satisfactory bid bond executed
by tile bidder and the surety
co mpany , In an amou nt equal
to f1ve percent of tt1e bid s1'1all
be submitted w1th each bid .
Sa id board ,of education
reserves tl'1e r ight to wa ive
informalities , to accep t or
r e ject any and all, or parts of
any and all b•ds .
No bid s may be w ithdrawn
lor at least thirty (30) days
aff er tt1e sc heduled closmg
tm~ e fo r recei pt of bids .
"Board of Edu cation
of Meigs Local
SchOOl DistriCt
Jane wagner,
Clerk .Treasurer
south Th ird Avenue
Middl e port , 01'1io 45760
( 6)

6, 9, 16, 23, .4t c

PIANO LESSONS duldrens Qnd
adults
Mrs . Hon.. ey Von
Vranlo.en . 991-2270
LOOK lNG FOR good home for

RISING STAR Kennel Boordmg,
Indoor -Outdoor runs. groommg
oil breeds , dean samtory
faol1ties oe 367 7112 . Cheshire'Phone- (614} 367 -0'292.

Los! and found

,
•'

B1g black coondog w11h
wh1te spot on head Call
949 2253 or9.C9· 2851

FOUND -

For Sale
COAl , l•me"tone , and colc•um
chlorrde ond coburn brine for
dust control and spectol mt;.;rng
salt lor formers . b:celstor Salt
Wor..,s . Ma1n Stree-t Pom&amp;roy,
Ohto or phone 992- 3891
CAMPER , $600. Also, horse
trodor , $•50 Phone (61•) 698·
3290.

Business Services

Fovnd block dog port Coll1e and
port German Shepherd, rh MidHOOF HOllOW Buy sell , hade
dleport by sw1mming pool tog
or tram horses RU TH REEVES.
has El Paso County on 1t. Coli
trainer Phone (61• ) b98·3290.
992-3873 or 992 · ~81 ,
m -3361 or the Humane Sonety AK C SHETLAND sheep dogs
01992-7680
(Mm ) Collies , 2 females , 7 lOSJ MEIGS class rmg. lmtioli 5 PC . MAPLE wooden din1ng oun .
MLP lost rn vrmc1ty of Royal
weeks old Sho ts and wormed.
WANl EO · someone to d1smDfltt fe
ln111iltian Sonices
with caproin choirs Real gooo
Oak
.Pork hword offered .
Phone
{614
)
367
-0292
or
old bu tlding · Racine 8opt1S I
cond itiO(!, $100. 7 pc dinmg
fiooo&lt;.... Aillllo
Phone992-31o(J
or992-3602
367 -7 112.
Church. Also accep ting sealed
room outfit choirs been recent 8-1014W111Uft&lt;l
btdt for ont1que gloss, pews ME IGS COUNTY Humane SoCiety
ly up holstered, $50 Phone
Slllll
and any woodw01k o r frommg
G len R Blssell9•9 2801
'
An imal Carelme. 992 -7680: or
111/IDOWSIDOOIS
materials Con lad Don Wa lker ,
ofterbp .m ., W2-5427
wheel
Alignment.
1!~1/IE/Il
9.119 71 nor 949-2867 .
REG AKC Dovermon P1ncher puptune-up,
balancing,
~
REWARD OFFERED for in lormo
Nobil Summit Road
pies Chomp1on blood hne l:le.lp Wllllleil
M.lllll•u•
brake work1 minor
110n lead ing 10 the recove ry of
Rl.l
Phone 8• 3"23.. 1.
LADY
TO
s
tay
b
days
and
n1
gh
ts
a
SIDI!MrSOffm
large female Hound whtl e w1th
repair.
Middleport,
o.
week No work . nrce fom •ly
GUTTt~/RjL_
black patch over left eye
992-5724
Behind Rutland Grade
and
good
pay
.
Coll992-5207
for
Wearmg black studded collar
Sales
and
·complete
StrickiV wholesale to all.
School. Evening work by
rnformOiion.
Phone 99'1 7735
'Service and
·
Not less than V2 case.
appoinlment. Ph. 742-2005.
rh tt2-3ttl 4-10-/ m~:
CO NCRETE WORK Pohos s teps tF YOU hove o serv1ce to offer . ATTENTION MANAGERS &amp;
6-5-1 mo Pd.
I
Demonstrators
Fnendly
Home
wan
t
10
buy
or
se
ll
somethmg
,
walks , and driveways Phone
Toy yarlres has opemngs for
oe loo k1ng for work
or
992-2244
managers ond dea lers in your
whatever
you II get res ults
area. Toy Party Pion eJ~ ·
Iosier with o Senlmel Wont Ad .
penance helpful
Cor &amp;
Coll 992·2156
A-utomatic
Telephone necessary , co li col
Route 3, Pom-eroy! 0.
PORCH
SALE
·
277
Mom
Sf
M1d
leer
to
Corel
Day
(518)
489-8395
CASH po1d for oil makes and
Tran•mi•sion
Service
dleport. Thursdoy and Fndoy. 9
or wnte Friendly Home Port1es
1210 Washjnglon Blvd.
models of mobile homes
o m to 4 p m In case of ro1n
20 Ra ilroad Ave .. Albany , N Y
Belpre, Ohi1'
Phone a rea code 614 -A23· 9531
Wi ll be cancelled
12205
Installation, samples
TIMBeR Pomeroy Forest Pro
brought to your home
du cts. Top pnce lor standing 3-FAMILY YARD sole , Thursday TRA CTO R· TRAILER dr~ver . 25 USED FORESTRY EOUIP¥ENT.
and Frldoy
Across from
yeo rs mm1mum oge . 3 years
sawtimber . Col! 992 5965 or
Dov 1d Brown Trector Modal
with no charge .
Rocksprings Met hod1st Church
tl-)Cpenence
Must pass I.C C
Ke.!_11 Han~y . 1-446 ~~70
990
Prentrce G-BC w-342
One lourth mile pas t Me rg s
requ rrements App ly alter 10
bypass grapple Toy lor S81-V s-n
County fo~rgrounds on County
COI NS . CU RR ENCY, tokens . o ld
Co rpot-LinQ.-Tile
o m ot Mounto1n Motor Ex
11684745 2-0etroit Otesel
pocket watches ond chams,
Rd 10 Phone992-7738.
Phone Mike Young at
_ press 537 H1gh St . M•ddleport
engme. Contact Denn1s Smurr,
Si lver and gold . We need 196.4 GARAG-E SALE sponso red by
992-2206 or 9U-76JO
phone (614) 838-5345
EXPE RIENCED FARMER who
and older s1 lver coins Buy , sell ,
Reedsville, 0. Ph. 378-4250
Pome
ro)l
Youth
Ba
s
eball
understands modern farm ing B FOOT com per top rn good condior trOOe' Colt Roger Wamsley .
5-27 -TFC
2-23-t mo.
l ea gue Thursday ond Fndoy ,
'"- 9t2-2174
eqvtpment , planting ond beef
742 2331
tion Phone98S-418 1
June 9th and lOth' from 9 o m
cattle Veor round employ
to 3 p m. at Hunnel's on Rose
":ASHI I t lor 1unk cars Fryes
ment, good housing cond1t1ons
REMODELING , Plumbrng , healing
Truck ond Auto. WRECKER SER
Hill Turn o ff Rout e 33 JUS! post
and ot her fringe bemf1ts Wr1te
Superior
and oil types of general rep01r
CB
SPECIAL
Pomeroy corporol•on Follow
VICE I Phone 7A2 ,208l
P 0 BoJ~ 685 l=ombndge Oh10
Work
guaranteed
20
years
ex
ITEMS
FOR
sole
B
frock
lope
Stea
m
Extraction
sig ns
Ch rld r en ' s
and
ROBYNWV-23
•3725
OlD FURNITURE , rce bo)(es , brass
penence. Phone 992-2409.
player wr th AM-FM rodio, bdby
odu lt'sdolh1ng, record players.
beds . etc . comp let e
stroller, hrgh cho1r
baby 5eWING MACHINE Repairs, ser
CB Mobile Transceiver
books and mtscelloneous NEED EXPERIENCED man lor
households Write M D Miller .
walker, 30 cup coffee moker,
mechon1ca l
work
and
complete wi tt1 weattler
household
•I ems_:__ _ __
11ice , all mok.es, 992 22S.. The
Rt A, Pomeroy, Oh1o or coli
proof PA spea ker , 2 way
record player and records,
lownmower repair Reference
Fabric Shop
Pomeroy
Route 3, Pomeroy. 0 .
YARD SALE Fridoy &amp; Saturday ,
992-776/J
base
loaded
CB
antenna
,
telephone
stand,
blue-gloss
required. Apply at Wdk 1nson
Authonzed Smger Soles and
for
roof
top
or
trunk
mount.
June
10-11
9
am
td
5 pm
end tables, o ther m1sc items.
Sma ll Eng1nes , •98 locust St
WANTED · CHIPWOOO Poles
Carpel &amp; Upholster y
Serv1ce We sharpen Sc•ssors .
Power cord, coax, antenna
Phone 742-2078.
Mtddleport between 9 o m and cable
::::•::::k::R:::d~-~--:­
Max d•ometer, 10 .nches on --.-Leoding_::C::_r•
and all tlardware
Phone Mike Young
EXCAVATING.
do:r:er
.
loader
and
10 o m or_. p m to 6 p m Ex
largest end. $8 per ton, bundl · YARD SALE June 9-10· 11 , Books.
rncluded
backhoe
work
dump
trucks
perienced
on
ly
need
opply
,
At
ONLY
antiques , tools dishes stone
ed slobs $6 per ton Delivered
ond la-boys tor hire; w1ll haul
to Ohio Pollet Compon,- , Rt 2,
tor , 1963 Ford wogon 8 om 111
992-2206 or 992-7630
fill dirt . to so1l, limestone and
$69.95
PUBLIC AUCTION Ft~doy n1ght. 7
P ome roy . Oh1o
Ph o ne
6 p m )1m King County Rd 32
gravel.
Coli
Bob
o
r
Roger
Jefp m. at Jrm's Pfozo 1n Mid '' The Originators
992 -1bll9
1 Y1 m1les from Rt 7
ELECTRIC POWER
fers, day phone 992-7089,
INS'TRfJ(;l'ION
dleport New &amp; used merchon ·
Not The Im itators"
WANTED TO BUV · run 1or m.e 3 FAMilY yard sole June 9-10 10
night phone 992-3525 or 992WEED AND
D.-n -~ ".r ,.~ tnu....,
d1se. Cons1gnments welcome .
motorcycle helmet . Phone
o m. td 6 p .m Up tram Meson
5232.
2-23-1 mo
Cal/304-773-5&lt;71.
nlm~ll--1 ,.d .,.,... , rHNf' ntnliltt•
GRASS TRIMMERS
949-2425
Car Wash on FosterDrtve
EXCAVATING dozer. backhoe
TRAILOR WANTED Sol up on lot VARD SALE June 9· 10 01t lonps
Cuts w rth heavy duty nylon
and d1tcher Charles R. Hotline - a$ good as the best.
m Me1gs Counfy oreo Phone
de press ion gloss, guns , fu rfield , Bock Hoe Ser1.11ce , BRADFORD, Auct1onecr, Com
AT ONLY
plete Serw;e Phone 949 2487
949-2353 or 992-5502.
niture ond other 1lems On Co
Rutland. Oh1o. Phone 742· 2008
14 ' X 70' three bedroom Hollyporh
..
,_.
,,
''"'
us.
D.tpl of t.IHw
or
9.49-2000. Ro c1ne Ohio Cr'll t
Road 32 tu rn fro m Rt 7 by
1
$29.95
trader 1 / 1 acres 3 m1les from WILL do roofing, construction ,
hrn• oflAbor 1wUtia.. hUnitt #11175
Bradford
Me1gs Memory Gardens and go
mine number one on SR 325.
plumb1ng ond heot1ng. No 1ob
-----~~-6 mdes on Eagle R1dge and
Storage burldmg olumrnum , lao large or too small Phone ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR NO FUTURE? IN A$$ RUT?
Bo ~h on Rood Phone 9•9-2566.
underpinning , concrete front
Sweepers, toasters., 1rons, oil
Will do odd JObs, roofmg, pom
742·23A8 .
porch wrth own1ng . reor sun
small oppl1ances . l own mower.
tlng , gutter work Phone 992- FRIDAY AND SATURDAY- 9 om
deck . Olr·conditlon.ng, furntsh - CARPENTE R, floortng , ceiling ,
7A09
to 5 p m Basement So le . 16.45
Jack W . Carsey, Mgr .
ne x t lo Stole H1gh woy Go rog ~
ponel1ng. Phone 992-2759 .
ed with many exlros . Phone
Lrncoln He1ghts Aquonums,
on Route 7 Phon o (614) 985-r
Phone 992-2181
SEWING· ALTER AT I 0 N S
fish , furn iture , clothes coins,
614-7&lt;2 ·3008 .
382S .
MOBILE Home Repo1r, Elec ,
Upholstering ,
drapes
more
plumbmg Qnd heot1ng Phone
1973
GREENBRIER
Mobrle
Home
.
reasonable. 572 South Third -~:::C-----~~~99;1 5858.
65 X 12' roll-out off of ill.llf'IQ
Ave . Middleport
Phone HUGE PATIO and Yard So le . 6
room
.
porch
ownmg
and
cenmdes eost of Chesteron 2A8
992-6306
HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex COAL AND Wood cpokstove red
tral o1r cond1 t10mng Phone
from June 10, 8 am through
covoting , sepJic systems , --- -"- -----~
......
tick
hound
,
I
year
old
.
B.r
PIANO TUNING , Lane Domels. 12
949-2876.
June 11 noon . Household furConsider a Prof~f Caruer
do1er, backhoe, dump truck ,
dhouses P•cn•c tab les Phone
yea rs of s~rv•ce . Phone
ort ure ,
glassware .
limestone, grovel , blacktop
Driving a "BIG RIG". We are a
MONTEREY Mob1le Home, Two
985-4124
992 2082
refndgerptors ,
sewtng
paving. Rt . 1.43. Phone . 1 (6U )
Pnvate Traimng School offer·
bedroom
Gas
heat
Phone
CLARINET FO~ sole , e xcellent
mach1nes . Roya l manual
698-7331.
PIANO TUNING by Electron•c992·5001.
ing a PART Ttme or FULL Time
condit1pn . Used 2 yeors . Phone
typewriter . 3 tables Of'ld choirs.
Compar•son Ac c urate .
Tratmng Program lf you are
1972 FLEETWOOD mobtle home HARRISON'S TV Repa1r. Serv~ee
992-6309.
3 rad1os , •ron grate ond on ~ron ,
Reasonable 992-3718 .
Colis . 276 Sycamore, St .. M•dworking, Don't Quit Your Job,
14x65, 3 bedrooms , 1 1/ 1 beth,
clothmg and numerous 1tems
Rabbits, breed1ng doe, pets or
WILL 00 baby Sitting 1n Tuppers
dleport . Phone992-2522.
attend our Weekend Training
unfurnuhed
,
d1shwosher
,
fryers Phoneew2-7013
Pla1ns ontO. Phone 667-3065 or YARD SAlE aJ the Jean Stout
washer and dryer, underpin·
program or attend o..- 3 Week
res•dence ,
College
Rd
667 ·3360
14 -FT ALUMINUM Boss boot with
ing. Phone 667-6385 alter 5
FULL rome Resident Trainmg.
Syracuse , Fndoy &amp; Saturday. 10
p.m
troilor
14
horse-power
Sears
MAIN
R111Ct1 T'&lt;KiwTruikr Tr.lllurJIII~
am - ?
eng1ne and one two-speed f4 'x bO MOBILE HOME . Front
POMEROY, 0 .
PARKERSBURG
trolhng motor $550. Phone
SIX FAMILY Yard Sole , June 9-10
porch bock pol10 on 2'/l acres
742-2315
9 o m to 3 p m ot Gory Wolfe 's
JUST LISTED -5acres422-4080
w1th new born Phone 773 -5233 HOMESITES for sole, I acre and
up Middleport, near Rutland .
off East Main St Roc1ne Signs
WANT TO RENTMobtle Home
-:.!.'-:-_ __
4 yr . old brick home, has
(Fiotwood oreo)
Coii992-7A81
5pou tn Racine
Phone
posted
everything .
Moder•
6
ROOM frailer, aluminum patio
949-2A95.
"''Uipped
kitchen.
;J
2 FAMILY YARD sole R1tl e toys , HELP WANTED to repair metal
and underp1nnmg tn good cooborn roof ond shed. Must corry
bedrooms , bath , basement
HOUSE IN COUNTRY Married
games , dothmg, furniture , and
di.tion
B•rch
ponelhng
on
tn ·
~New Co - Op wate i- sofown insurance . Phone (6U)
has kitchen, bath, rec:.
couple wtth no ch1ldren Runn- ·
more Rorn or sh1ne 12-6 Fnside . Good as new, has to be
teners. model VC -SVI.
067-3368
ing water not necessary . Will ' doy, 9·3 Saturday . 369 Beech
room, fireplace . ullllly .
moved
.
Phone
247-2252.
Only $279.95
do repons
Coli collect
St . Middleport.
This
IS a home that you
LOCAL INSURANCE agency needs
Save SSO . OO on a new
1-614 -585-2633 .
must see $45,200 00
someone to represent them on
H otpoint R efrlgerator .
R~Al TOR
LOOK, ABOUT V2 ACRE
1 New 20 cubic ft.
,
~""'
an estobl1shed ferritory . Good
VIRGIL B. TEAFORD, SR.
Chest Freezer
5319.95
wtth ntce Mobile Home, 2
wages , excellent benrf1ts II
Now 1n stock, complete line
REALTOR
b e droom s, bath, large
you con meet people don I pass
of bulk garden seeds.
NEW 3 bedroom house , 2 baths ,
216 E. Second Street
3 AND 4 RM furnrshed and Uf'l1h1s up. No expenence reliving and k llchen. slorage
1 Good McCullough Chain
20' TRAVEL TRAILER, sleeps 6, 2
all elec ., 1 ocre , Middleport,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
furmshed opfs. Phone 992qutred only the w1ll to work .
bldg
8x16
excellent
Saw
$65
axles, self-contained, 8 J~ 12
clo5e to Ru tland Phone 992Phone 992-3325
5434 .
Send resume to BoK 672
ne ighborhood .
JUST
1 Good Used Poulan Chain
owning ready ro go. $2600
7A81
Saw
su
$8,000 00
COUNTRY Mobile Home Pork , Rt . _:P_:o:::m:.:e,._r::
oYc:·_:O
:::h:::·_:4::
57,_,6,_,9_:__ _' Phone992-7375.
'1 Good Used Unlco
SMALL farm tor sole, 10% down ,
DRIVE -IN - Building,
EXCELLENT - Not very
33 ten miles north of Pomeroy . - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
Dryer
$80.00
SWISS COLONY travel trollers
o
ld, 3 bedrooms, living
Lorge lots w1th concrete pot1os .,..
owner
fmanced
.
Monroe
Coun
·
fixtures,
dishes
and
Janet
1 Good Used G .E. Dryer $8S
custom mode, MAPLE LEAF
sidewalks, runners and off
ty, W. Vo . Phone (304) 772Only $10,000.
room has fireplace, bath,
1 Used Lawn Mower
sso
tandems 16' up, CRICKET truck
s treet parking Phone 992-7,.79 .
MIDDLEPORT - 4 years
3102 or (30&lt;) 772-3227.
utility room , full basement
campers specia l of Me1gs 28 or
with
lots of room for
COUNTRY
farmland
with
s.eclud·
old
3
bedroom
ranch
style
32 to Boshon Owner, Robert FURNISHED APT. Adults only, no
recreation, nat. gas F.A.
ed woods , water and good ochome. Nicely located. Citv
pets
Phone
992·
387.4
,
M•dCodner . long Bottom , ot-uo
lurnace. $18 ,000 .00.
cess m Monroe County, w. vo .
water and eat. fn kitchen.
dleport.
MIDDLEPORT ~ Lovely
$1,000 down, coli (304) 772Central heating and shingle
Jack w. c•rsey, MIHI
ONE BEDROOM furn1shed aport·
3102 or (304) 772-3227
roo I. $18.000.
ne ighborhood, 4 bedrooms,
Phone
992·
2111
L
ment in Middleport
Coli
CHESTER~ Large6 room
2
baths,'
ca rpeting,
m 5.434 or 992-3129
Commercial property opprox. 17
frame home with lots of
paneling,
2
car
garage
wltn
1970 FORO F250 p1ck up Camper
acres, level land, located at
closets. Natural gas . Has 2
2 BEDROOM MOBILE home it1
apartment
over
Lot
speool. automatic , Power
Tup~ers Plains on Oh•o, Route
outbutldings and large
1976 SASS BOAT. Fully equlped .
Roc
me
area
Coll992-5858
60x100.
Very
nice
at
just
steermg, Power brakes . Low
7 P one (6IA) 66 7-6304
barn . Room for your
Phone 992-6305
527.000.00.
m1loge, mce cond1tion S1295 . AVAILABLE AT Rl11erside
NEW
3
bedroom
house,
built-1n
chickens
and
goat.
Close
to
POMEROY
2
story
1972
GRAN
Torino
PS,PB,AC.
Harold Brewer , long Bortom .
ments , one bedroom , $105 per
k1fchen . both and 1ft, Phone
stores. $14,000.
frame, 4 bedrooms, bath,
New battery and brakes . Good
Oh10. Phone 985-3554
month , 2 bedroom, $138 per
742-2306orcontoctM•IOB. Hut·
MIDDLEPORT
4
total of 9 rooms, nat. gas
cond1t1on $1100. Also western
month Phone 992-6098 Equal
WIDE 8 foor p1ck -vp. Bed , mce
chison
,
Rutland
,
Oh1o.
bedroom
brick
home
on
Hous1ng Opportunity
saddle and bridle for Iorge
heat.
Immediate
cond1 t1on. Pl'\one 985 3Ss.A ,
corner lot . Large living
horse $75 Phone 992-611 S or VA-FHA , 30yr . finonong Ireland
possession . $6,725 00
Harold Brewer , long Sotfom , HOUSE FOR rent, 3 or 4 bedrooms
992-5616.
Mortgage, 77 E State, Athens ,
room with gas burning
ROUTE 124 - AV2 yrs. old .
At
Oh10
with built in kitchen . 2 borhs
phone (6 14) 592-3051
fireplace and
formal
Lovely frame &amp; brick, 4
7' CASE mower, 3 point hhch:
located
A m1les west of Har992-2156
1976 FORO F250 4 wheel dr~ve
bedrooms
,
bath,
nice
REDUCED
AGAIN
3
bedroom,
dining.
Natural
gas
central
1
New Hollandboler, almost
2 11
risonville House will be shown
Or Stop In At
truck. Co117•2-2590
kitchen,
utility,
central
air
both,
bi·
level.
1
mile
north
of
heating.
BeHer
take
a
look
new;
Drag
disc
;
fork
for
round
on
Monday
and
Tuesday
June
~~111 Court St.
cond and nat. gas heat.
F1ve Pc1nt , $-42.500. Phone
for only 524,000.
boles, New Ideo manure
13 and 1• by appointment only.
1973 Cornaro 350, • speed , 01r
m -2&lt;92.
NEW LISTING - Nice 3
spreader. ca·n oiler 4 p.m dur carpeting. 'h acre. V.A.
Call dunng week of June 6th
P.S., P B . AM &amp; FM radio , foePomeroy, Ohio
bedroom. 1'12 bath, lully
approved 528,500.1&gt;0
thru 11th , 8 om till 10 am . to
Ing week , Ray Myers b98 JAil .
tory Mags. Phone992-7869.
For more information
145 ACRE FARM , 7 room house m
carpeted home with city
make appointment
Phone
BACK ON THE MARKET
KOWASAKI 175 - d1rt btke. $400.
1969 FORO von , 6cyl, good body
Rutland. lots of privacy Phone
water, and central heating.
(502) &lt;39·5331 '
45 acres. good 3 bedroom
Contact Clrffofd Ha rt, Cl1lton,
Suzuki 72 · street bike. $750.
742-:.1057 after 6 p.m . or on
Has garage and nice corner
home, part basement, out
Coli 9•9-2463. evenings after 6
W.Va.
VILLAGE GREEN APTS MULBERRY
weekends
lot .
cellar, barn and other
HEIGHTS . LUSURY LIVING IN
p.m.
1972 VW von , recently overhaul1WO
EXCELLENT
buUd;ng
loco45
ACRES ~ Woods and
butldlngs, garage. tobacco
NEW
2
BEDROOM
APTS
.
ed ang1ne , 63 ,&lt;XJJ miles Phone
tions
,
Eastern
S&lt;:hool
Distnct,
brush
.
Rural
water
tap,
base. luel oil heal . JUST
TASTEFULLY
DECORATED,
KIT
SPRING GARDEN Suppl1es Cob·
mn77.
on good rood, T.P . water,
electrlc,andseptlctank. At
$10,500.00.
"
CHEN APPLIANCES FURNISHED.
bage , co uhtlower, broccoli, 1 NEED A WATER
acreage if desired
Phone
the end of the road . Owner
RUTLAND - I f' ..or plan
FULLY CARPETED. STARTING
and he-ed lettuce plants,
9A9-2770. Owner will help
will sell on land contt act .
AT S117 PHONE 992-6365 SYBIL
has 3 bedrooms, bath,
yellow , whUa , ond red on1on
NOTICE OF
SQFTENER?
finance if necessary.
$12,000.
AND
JIM
WOOD
,
MANAGERS,
central air cond. and nat.
sets,
onion
plants
,
Kennebec
APOINTMENT
APT 10
LARGE COUNTRY store. always a
POMEROY - A bedroom
cobbler , Kotohd1n , Red Pontroc
gas
heat ,
carpe ting ,
Cue Na. 2:1126
let Pomeroy Landm1rk
money maker, upstairs cou ld
home near stores, 2 baths, 2
Cue of Edgar E . Mitch lWO BEDROOM olt electric
and Red losodo seed potatoes .
paneling , 1 level acre.
soften &amp; condition your
Otctasld.
Bulk garden seeds . potting soil ,
be mode •nto on apt . Owner story. all electric. and on
JUST $12,765.00.
.
modern ranch home, I mile
Notice is hereby given that
water and 1 Co-op water
will help tinonce 1t necessar-y .
corner lot. $16,000.
peat
moss
,
fruit
trees
and
rose
AVOID
THE
PITFALLS
IN
from
Ractne.
$125
per
month
.
Len a K . Ness.e lroad of
Phone9&lt;9-2770.
bushes
M1dwoy Markel , ,soltener, Model UC-XVI.
NEW LISTING ~ Lot
SELLING YOUR HOMEReferences and deposrl re Pomeroy, Ohio, has been duly
Pomeroy
,
OfHo , 992-2582 ,
Now Onlyr
2 BEDROOM HOUSE, Locust St..
1.50'x200' with city water
CALL US TODAY.
appointed adm ln rstralrix of
quired . Phone 9•9-2413.
Bob s Market, Mason , W Vo
the Ellate of Edgar E . Mitch ,
M1ddleport. $1A,SOO. Phone
available.
HENRY E. CLELAND
(30&lt;)773-5721
d@ceased , late of Meigs THREE BEDROOM mobile home ,
I L-et
us test your water
992·3436ond992-52&lt;8.
PROPERTY IS ON THE
REALTOR
unfurnished, $110 .00 month
County, Otl lo .
Free .
RISE BUY NOW AND
Hank,
Kathy &amp;
TOMATO
,
PlANTS
Cabbage,
plus utilities and deposit.
Creditors are reQu ired to
New house lor sale, 3 bedroom, 1 SAVE.
broccol1 , cauliflower, brussel
Leona Cleland
fi le the ir cla ims w it h said
References required On St . Rt .
1 y, bath. rae. room and
G. BruCI Tuford
sprouts, egg plonls , hong1ng
Associ1tes
fiduciary
within
three
1•3 Phone 7A2 -3186
garage
Lee Construction ,
Helen L. Tuford
months
baskets , pols, geron1ums.
992-2259-985-4112
phone 992.3A5A or AA6-9568.
Associates
NEWLY REMODELED house m
Dated tt1ts 27th day of May
begonros , flats , petunias.
Phone 992-2111
1977
Chester, Full)' carpeted and
mangolds, pansies, saltla,
FOUR
BEDROOM
natural
gas, twohou$e.
acres, Bath
and, 1
panelled. R.asonobl.-rent to
balsam , dianthus , snap
Manning D. Webster
Ohio power elec:trtc . $14.000.
nght party Phone 1 (61•)
dragons, alynum , Vinca , col - FARMALi. M trodor With 3 bottom
14 Inch drag plow w1th
Judge
866-1731.
Phone 742-3031
eus , Cleland s Greenhouse ,
(6) 2, 9, 26. 3tc
hydraulic
lift. Good cond1t1on.
Roc me. Gerald me Cleland.
$1500 . Paul life. Rt.1 Success SYRACUSE VIEW of river. neat 3
bedroom house with 2 cor
l-A2 ln cost iron kltchCK111nk , 1
Ad. neor Tuppers Plo1ns. Phone
garage on 6'/J acres . Front on•
basin and 1 dratn board , hong
1-61•-667 ·35&lt;&lt;.
both St . Rt. 124 and Snowball
on wall type , white, 1-3 bYrner
Mr. and Mrs. rt&gt;JU Wise, SMAll NEW IDEA Monvre
1971 SHORT bedtruck cam per,
Box !01L.Pomeroy. Ohio.
Hill
. Acreage would moke
__
,!o!,
hot
plo_!!:~.!.!!!:S71•
.
Beverly, attended services
spreader , 1959 Chevrolet I ton
Ootsun spectol ; 1971 Olds
Pllone614-915-4186ofter
4:00P. M.
beautiful
wood
sub·div1sion.
truck w1lh vert body ond power ECONOMY TRACTOR with all atCutlou Supreme, 1976 Jeep cJ5
Sunday at the local church.
or see me at Tuppers Plains, Ohio.
Starky Reol1ty Phone Ron
tadgote, good cond1110n New
tachments. Like new . asking
w1th headers and b1g w1de
Mr. and Mrs. Moore have
McDade, 592-2419 or V1cWolfe.
Holland Manure s preader , 163 ,__S2250 P~no ~~~)_~8·3290 _
hras, 7-pie-ce breakfast set, us·
LISTINGS WANTED
occupied the home they
9&lt;9 -2:=
=·---,-----~
bushel, good cand1fion 3 point
ed Cobra 1II CB
Phone
G000
RICH
Top
1011
Charles
R.
Residential
homes,
land, commercial. buildings,
hitch, mower, '7 It cut, good
recently purchased from Mr.
NICE 3 Bedroom home. New butlt.
949-2636
Hatfteld Backhoe Serv1ce
forms,
ospeclolly
In
the
Tuppers Plains Arh where the
cond1tion,
Tandem
trailer
type
In
k1tchen,
new
furnace
and
hot
and Mrs. Dick Forner .
PIGS, 7-9 wHks old $30 eoch.
future
of
Meigs
Colftlty
looks bright. Financing
fertilrzer spreader, Q9od cond1· ..~Phone 7•2-2008.
water
heater,
newly
decorated
The WMS of the local
Pi'tone 9•9-2115. ~
lion , Model 64 International FORK LIFT model, .a..llis Chalmers.
available Ia quollflod appliconls.
l1ving room with tire place Onc:burch met )'uesclay at the
combtne . good co~_1t•on : Will
1)1 $1A,800
3.3 acres in
A900. good condition. Phone MALLARD Dt.JCKLINGS &amp; rabbits .
home of Berfla Parker.
Glen A. 8isse1L C•9-2801
_!oke trod!_•~ _p~o!l•_,_9~-- _
Phone 9•9l&lt;'2881 .
langsvrll!: !~~~~~762 . _
Lo-::~--------------------"""
lr01ned female pup, 7·8 mos.
Port Ge..-mon Sl-lepord,
black and ton , good wi th
children . If interes ted coli
old.

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

Case No. 22,131
INA HOBACK

Estate of
Deceased .
Not1ce is hereby given fhat
Befty Br lckles of 109 Kmeon
Dr1ve, Gall•polis, Ohio. t1as
been duly appo1nted Ad ·
m1nistra rn x of the Estate of
In a Hoback , deceased, late of
Racine
V1 llag e ,
Me 1gs
County , Ohio
Creditors are reQuired to
file tt1e ir c ta rms Wilh said
fidu cia r y
wifhin
three
months
Da ted th rs Jist day of May
1977 .

Mann1ng D Webster
Probate Judge of
s aid County
(6) 2, 9 , 16, Jtc

Laurel Oiff
News Notes
Attendance at the Free
Methodist Church Sunday,
June 5, was 89. Choi r
members present was 15.
June 19 the film Corrie will
be shown at 7:30 p .m .
Rev. Shook held semces
Sunday morning at Royal
Oak Park.
Mr. and Mrs. Mickey Buck,
Zanesville, Mrs . Pauline
Haley, Crooksville, visited
recently with Mrs. Georgia
Diehl.
Mrs.
Kathy
Pullins
remains a patient in HMC.
Mr. Mark Stahl, stockport,
Mr. Paul Stahl, Columbus,
Mr. Fritz Stahl, New Marshfield, visiled recently with
Mr. and Mrs. Norman

Schaefer.
Mr.
Paul
Archer,
Columbus, spent Saturday
with his , mother, Mrs .
Georgia Diehl.

Mr. and Mrs. Johnny
Douglas visited Sunday with
Mrs. Em.o Fox.
Mt. and Mrs. Roy Howell,
Salem, 8pellt the 11'1!t!k at
their home IJere.

~Susan Tract remalnl

"

FREE~~~TES

"•

DUGAN'S

•

~

FRONT END
ALIGNMENT

cAsE LOT

CAN GOODS

Miller Produce

&amp;
Garden Center

••

.,.DOllS

STOP AND WAI'r !
WHEN THE PHONEO
RIN6' A'r El&lt;.ACT~Y
12:01, TE•L HIM rO
HOP OUT AND
ANSWER!

H~' RI6HT
•
YOU WN&gt;IT MIHO
PUT HIM ON~

•

LARRt~~'~DER

.
SWAJN'S

PARTS - LABOR
GUARANTEED

Young's Carpeting

EXPERIENC:ED

·Radiator
Service

Free Estimates

••
•
••

RATES

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

~~ ®

••

I

'

FAHFCb

I KX

I NURYG!tj
LUFNIX

LI'ITLE ORPHAN ANNIE
•

•
••

9!!€STIOHS ·· BUT

,., JUST UETTIN'
~15 SETUP

•

I M A GREAT

Answer here:

l iSlENER·· BEEN
GEt Tlli' AROUHO

HERE ST~AK!HT,
1 1111NK-

"'

SOME--

Yesterday s

••

•

•

I

"

~;::;;-;-:::--~-=======i~:::~:=====d
REAL ESTATE BROKER

Geoige S. Hobstetler Jr.

-- ---------

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

IT

KI I )

(Answers tomorrow)
INDICT THORAX

GUMBO

Ans wer "I lake it- 1have to tell
thotruthi? "~"AN OATH"

5 Addis~
10 Medicmal

4ll Concur
41 Shortly
DOWN
I Former
lives

plan I

~

•

2 Apportion
3 Art process

11 Cons1der

•

13 Animal's

(2 wds, )

track

4 Seine
5 B1blical
condition
mountain
IS Measure
6 Crooked
for wool
16 Table scrap 7 Suffix with
lever
17 Prohibit
8 Ideological
18 One of the

14 Blood

&lt;
•
''
D
oca

"""'

1hedoor
worit open! Luck~

we

She's bad stuck
Miqht take a
spell!

Joel's workin' on it.

JeS sit an
1

happen
alonq!

"'

•

''

••

chaser

9 Daughter

l2 - of con-

of Minos

tention
French
author
25 Gaited
horse
Z6 Pitch
27 PhiUppme
island
28 Altar
constella·
lion
29 Fireplace
32 Bulgarian
coin
33 Generation ~
34 Kmd of
dance
35 One of the
Reeds
11 " Ammal

Yesterday's Answer

16 " The Good 25 Chirp
Earth"
27 Battle

23

30 Human
trunk

31 Rugged

l~raeli

greeting

24 Name

12 One's
" Irish"

23

cry

heroine
19 Loyal
(Scot.)
22 Ali ~

meaning
" golden"

-chaps
33 Hackman
or Wilder
36 Man (Lat.)
11 Monk's tiUe

FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 1977
6 ·()()-Summer Semester 10.
6 I~Farm Report 13.
6 · 10-Not For Women Only 13
6 30---Columbus Today A; News 6, Summer Sti'mester
8; Overseas Mission 10.
6 As-Morn ing Report J .
6 :5G'-Good Morning. West Virginia 13.
6 55-Good Mo rn ing, Trl Slole 13.
7·00--Today 3.4.1 5; Good Morning America 6.13: CBS
News 8 ; Chuck While Reporls 10.
7 05-Porky P ig 10.
7 · 3~Schoo/les 1o
a 00--Howdy Coody 6; Copt . Kangaroo 8,10: Sesame
St. 33.
B· Jli--Big Valley 6
9 :00-A.M . 3; Phil Donohue 4, 1J, IS; Andy Gri ffith 8;
Mike Douglas 10; Childhood 33 .
9 :30-Cross-WIIs 3; Edge of Night 6.
10 oo-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4,15 ; Dinah 6 , Here' s. Lucy 8,1 0;
Mike Douglas 13; Oosls In Space 33.
10 J~Hollywood Squares 3,4,15: Price Is Right 8,1 0;
Studio See 33.
li :C&gt;O--Wheel of For/une 3,., 15: Happy Days 6,13, Bit
with Knit 33
11 : 3Q-Shool for the Slars 3,4., 1S; Family Feud 6,13,
Love of Ufe 8,1 0; Erica 33.
11 :55-CBS News 8: Ms Flxlf 10.
12 :0G-News 3,A,6,10; Name That Tune 15; Divorce
Court 8; Midday 13; Forsyle Saga 33.
12 · 3~Chico &amp; /he Man 3,15, Ryan ' s Hope 6,1 3, Bob
Braun ~ ; Search for Tomorrow 8, 10.
1 ·ro--Gong Show 3; All My Children 6, 13 , News 8; No/
For Women Only 15; Young &amp; the Restless 10. Nova
33
1 .3D-Oays of Our lives 3,.4,15, As The World Turns
8,10 .
2 :ro--S20o000 Pyramid 6, 13; Een Festival 33.
2 . 3~Doctors 3,4.15; One Life to Live 6.13: Guiding
Light 8, 10.
J :ro--Another World 3,4,15: All In The Family 8,10
Crockell's Vlclory Garden 2D; Blf With Knll 33.
3 · lS- General Hospllal 6,13
3 : 3~Match Game B,ID; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20: MD 33
4 ~ 0D--Mister Cartoon 3; Gong Show 4,15; New Mickey
Mouse Club 6; Lucy Show 8; Sesame St. 20.33;
Movie "The Barbary Coast" 10; Dinah 13
4 J~My Three Sot1s 3: Star Trek 4. Emergency One
6; Partridge Family 8; Hogan' s Heroes 15
5·0Q-Big Valley 3: Brady Bunch 8: Mister Rogers '
Neighborhood 20.33; Emergency One! 13; Miss ion ·
Impossible 15
5 3~Adam - 12 A; News 6. Family Aflalr 8: Elec. Co
20.33
6·oo-News 3,4,8,10,13, 15 : ABC News 6; Zoom 20.33.
6:30-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Gr/fllth
6 ; CBS News 8, 10, Vegetable Soup 20; VIlla Alegre
33.
7 : OQ- Truth or Cons 3; To Tell the Truth • : Liar' s Club
6 : 5128,000 Question 8; News 10; To Tell the Trulh
13; My Three Sons 15; Ohio Journal 20; Blilck
Journal 33
7 .3o-Porter Wagoner 3; Minor League Baseball 4,
Candid Camera 61 Treasure Hunt 8, MacNeil Lehrer Report 20,33 ; Andy Williams 10; Nome Tho/
Tune 13; Pop Goes the Country 15.
8 oo--Sanford &amp; Son J, 15; Movie " The Great A meri can
Cowboy" 6.13 ; Code R 8, 10; Washington Wwk In
Rvlew 20,33
a 3~Rockford Flies 3: Wall Slreel Week 20, 3~; Bil ly
Graham Crusade 15
9 ro--CBS Reports 8,1 0. Lowell Thomas Remembers
20 ; Documentary Showc ase 33
9 Jo-Quincy 3, 15 , Movie " Lovin' Molly" 6,13; Oasis ln
Space 20 .
10 : 0Q-Bobby Vinton 4, News 20, Firing U no 33
1 0 : 3~Gong Show o, Lock. Stock &amp; Barrel 20 .
11 :QO-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13,15, Monty Pyt~on's Flytng
Circus 20, Black Perspective on the News 33.
ll · Jo-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Baretta 6-,13 ; Movte
"Ginger In the Morning" 8, Mary Hartman 10, ABC
News 33
12 oo-Movle " Five M illion Years to Earth" 10 , Janak!
33

BRIDGE
Oswald and Jim Jacoby

"Z" recall&amp; old memorlea
9

NORTH IDI
oil A 3
• 54 3 2
t A 54
"'A K tO 9
WEST

EAST

• J 972
• Q J 10 9
t K976

•&amp;

.4

b+--+-

.

~

~

'

flgurativ~
ly ( 2 wds .)

20 Smgular
21 Withoul the

'

....

barrier,

Stevenses

D

Pomeroy l.andmarll

~ !jo:!'.e!!'ta:~.::'

Jumbles. FATAL

ACROSS
I Chessman

WANTED

~

XI XI ]

by THOMAS JOSEPH

Jt;;;.lEst;fuclotSiif.,.

1279,,,- '

JUST(

~

••
•

L

Now arrange the drcled letters to
form ttle surpnse answer, as s ug gested by the above cartoon

KJ

I

I HATE TO ASK

OH, BUT I WAS !

~

Pomeroy l.andmarll

CONTACT
THE DAILY SENTINEL

ONE WAY 10 DEAL
WITH A TICKLI5H
P~OE51-EM,

------

ROIJT( CARRIERS
FOR
WFION, W. VA.
Aport· ~ &amp; SYIOOJSE, OHIO

byHennArnofd.andBobLee

I,......In.oo..-·-r . ..__n_

.,""

of•'-'$18,300,,~

[g.

12 :ro--Movle " Interrupted Melody " 10; Jona H 33
12. 40-Movle " The Last Grenade" 8,
1 :OQ-Tomorrow J ,A; News 13

j

LOOFI

Young's tarpeting

FOR SALE

33

Unscramble lhese four JumtJies,
one lener to each square, to form
four ord1nary words .

...'
-"·

REASONABlE

\!:!)

39

' TRIES

t82

East-West
Weat

One letter simply :;tands for another . In thts samp le A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc Single letters.
apostrophes, the length and formatwn o! th e words are all
hmts Each day the code l&lt;' tters are dtfferent
CRYPTOQUOTES
wtNNII!:
YOU MUST HAVE

NEEOE/7 IT... AFTER
THAT t.ON0 PLANE
TRIP AND ALL!

WINN IE, I. WAf; 50 OOSY
TELLIN0 YOU MY
Tl'!JIJBLE&amp; YESTERDAY .l FORGOT TO
A5K --- Wlt'IT

HAPPEN£!) TO
80NNAZ?

l SlOPPED ON MY
WAY FROM -mE
Ali2PORT1 ANO 771E

/3(1/LPING'S
(30NE!!!

rrS A LONG 510RY,
BIRDIE -rnAT'5 WHY
I 'M TAKING- THE DAY
OFF•.. 50 I CA N FIL L
YO U IN ON ALL THE
DETAILS 1""":--o'&gt;f

VXB

BEH

f CWB
UNRR

VXB

MQ

UNRR

F B

BTBEVDCRRZ

WNTNRNKCVNME . -

XDYCE

V X C V

I T

H N B

MQ

BYBIAME

Yesterday's Ccyploquote: THE FRUSTRATING THING IS
THAT THE KEY TO SUCCESS DOESN'T ALWAYS FIT YOUR
IGNlTION . ~ RoGER C. MEYER
"~RNEY

I WISH I COULD
GO TO BED, BUT
I STILL GOT
ONE MORE
CHORE
STARIN' ME
INTH'

FACE

•Q876 5

SOUTH

.J 3 2

interest
See
18 Across

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it:
AXYDLRAAXR
Is L 0 N G f E L L 0 W

-ro

¥ K 86
• QJ 10 3

•KQ I0654
¥A 7

38 49'er's

. THE
: II'OOJ
•
: 6/J&lt;L

20 .

11 : JG-.Johnnv Carson 3,4,15 : Geratdo Rl¥era 6.13i
Kolok 8; Mary Hariman 10: ABC News 33.

ft\1'~1.\.41 fi5)~ ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~

J~Woman

11 ·oo--News 3,,.,6,8, 10, 13, 15; MacNeil -Lehrer Repart

5 · oo-Big Valley 3; Brady Bunch a, Mlsler Rogers'
Ne(ghborhood 20,33; Emergency One 13, Mission :
Impossible 15.
5 :30-Adam-12 4; News 6; Family Allalr 8; , Elec Co
20,33
6 :30-News 3,4,8,10,13, 15, ABC News 6; Zoom 20.33;.
6 · 3~ NB C News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Grllllth 6,
CBS News 8.1 0; Once Upon a Classic 20,33 .
7 oo- Truth or Cons. 3; Blue R~ dge Quartet A; liar' s
Club 6: Muppet Show 8; News 10; To Tell the T ruth
13; My Three Sons 151 Almanac 20; Consumer
Surviva l K II 33.
7: 30--Hq//ywood Squares 3, 4; Ohio Stale Lottery 6;
Price is Righi 8. MacNeii · Lehrer Report 20,33;
Wild Kingdom 10; Nashville on the Rood 13; Oolly
15.
8 ·oo--Ptlot 3,A,l 5; Welcome Back, Kotter 6,13;
Wa/lons 8,1 0: Billy Graham Crusade IS, Tribal
Eye 20; Masterpiece Theatre 33 .
8·J()--What' s Happening 6, 13.
9 · ro--Movle " Charlie Cobb : Nice Night for a Hanging"'
3,_., 15; Barney Miller 6 ; Hawaii Five 0 8; Movie
&lt;~ Marriage on the Rocks" 10; Movie "The Legend
of Amaluk" 13; Age of Uncertainty 20,33
9 !~Fis h 6
10 -0Q-ABC News Special 6,13; Barnaby Jones 8, AI
the Top 33 , News 20

-.'

.

TEAFORD

a patient in VMH.

Television log for easy viewing

,I

DICK TRACY

10

Pets for Sale

IS Wunb or UrKk•r
c~h

~The Daily Sentinel, Middl•nort-Pomeroy. 0 ., Thursday. June 9, _1977

Pass

vulnerable

Norlb E11t
14
Pass
1 NT . p..,
4•
Pass

1.

Soulb

3.

Pass
Pass
Opening lead - Q ¥

Pass

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Old Man Z who used to play
the dummy in the auction
bridge columns of the roaring
'20s was back a t the club

agam.
He wo n th e hea rt lead w1th

his ace and remarked : " Thts
looks like a Sidney Lenz ha nd
of 1922. If everythmg IS right I
Will make SIX. but undoubtedly everyLhmg IS wrong and 1
had best try Lo ins ure my contra cL "
He promplly led a c lub to
dumm y's ace and proceeded
to draw three rounds of
trumps. Then he led his jack

WOMAN'S WORK
IS NEVER

DONE

of clubs'
West couldn' t do h1mself
any good by rulfmg so he
chucked a d1amond . Z was 1n
dummy with the king of clubs
and led back the 10. Now East
had a Hobson's cho1ce . If he
played his queen , South would
eventually get to d1 sca rd a losmg diamond on the nine of
clubs . if he ducked , South
wouldn ' t Jose a club tnck Z
was sure of 10 tricks a nd a top
score .
Note that 1f Z had no t played
that c lub at trick two he would
not have been ab le to make
the contract

A reader asks what you respond to a Blac k wood four
notrump when you have one
ace and are void of a SUll
This IS a very sticky question since 1t d epends on
partnership agreement. The
s traight Blac kwood ru le IS to
JUSt b1d five diamond s to show
one ace, but most experts res·
pond SIX d1amonds 1f they
think that thm VOid Will be a
valuable one

Under no carcumstahces do
Lhey respond five hearls Lo

show two aces.
(Fo r a copy or JACOBY
MODERN send $1 to " Win 81
Bndge ," 'c/o this newspaper,
P 0 Box 489. Rt1d1 0 Ctty Sfatwn,
New York. NY J001g )

�10-The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thur!;day , June 9, 1977
~f:::::::::::~=~:::::::::--:::~::::::::;::::::::::;:~:::::~:::~:::.:::::::::::::::::::::::=::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::;:;.::::::;::::.:·:·:·:·:·:-::;;,;

~l~

Generation Rap

~~

By Helen and Sue Hottel

i

r-------------------------------------------------------~

~f~

Dou't Take 'Hartman' To Heart
Rap :
After watching "Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman," I've got
a good idea to make money . I'll find a couple who wants a
baby, get pregnant, and seD my baby to.them . What's really
wrong with that ? - 21 AND READY

JUNE SALE CONTINUES
More items sale priced - Shop in every department • Visit every
floor and the Mechanic Street Warehouse - Remember-Father
on his day, Sunday, June 19th.

Dear 21 :
Three things : What you suggest is illegal, inunoral, and
fattening . Get sensible. - HELEN AND SUE

+++

Dear Helen :
You really flubbed your answer to the girl who wrote ,
" Mom tells me if I want The Pill, go to Planned Parenthood,
but don't tell her anything about it !" Then she asked, " Why? "
You said, "Because your mother is ostrich-like." You were
wrong! If my two daughters, now married, had wanted birth
control, I would have also said, "Don't tell me about it."
Why?
First. because this would be transferring the responsibility
to the girl , where it belongs.
Second, should my girl go that route, I would know she was
in for certain heartbreak, and why should I be forced to worry
until it happens ?
Third, getting the mother 's consent is almost the same as
getting her approval. - NO WAY !
Dear N.W.:
Sorry, I'd rather know where my teenage daughter stands
than he left with my head in the sand. We'd discuSs the
hazards, I'd neither condemn nor condone, and I'd make sure
she assumes responsibilities.
And, of course, I'd try to talk her out of it - but not with
chest-beating histrionics. (If I listened well enough, she might
talk herself out of it.)
·
But I'd never insist her choice meant " certain heartbreak." That's no way to bring honesty into the conversation.
- HELEN

+++

Rap :
Here are a few things I'd like to say:
Being young is something you'D wish you could be after
you no longer are. But right now it's being bored 1o death at
school, and having your mom yell at you when you get home.
It's getting caught with a cigarette and getting grounded ,
even if your parents knew you smoked (but just pretended not
to) . It's being able lo forgive them when they do these things,
knowing they have hard and boring days too.
Being young is trying to pass for 20 when you're only 15.
It's going out with friends and having such a good tiqle you
never want 1o come home again, but then where would you go?
If you run away, you'Dlose all that love and security that you
sometimes call "bossing."
lt'shaving a mad crush on someone who doesn't even care
about you . It's thinking about your first boyfriend, and how ·
dumb you acted. It's having all the friends in the world, even if
you don't know it. It's parties, work, love, fun; exciting daring,
depressing, scary times; being proud, ashamed, rejected, and
wanted. It's dances, coffee houses, school, detention, but most
of all- well I guess it's wonderful after all. -T.

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TILL 8:00·-------1
Polyes ter double knits in s izes 29 to 42 . Solid
colors and neat patterns - entire stock
included.
MENS$19.95 SLACKS. ... ...... ."........ $ 8.20
MENS$11.95 SLACKS ................ .. $ 8.90
MENS 512.95 SLACKS .................. $ 9.70
MENS 514.95 SLACKS .................. $11.20
MENS $16 .95 SLACKS ............. . ... . $12.70
Also Special June Sale Prices on Entire
Stock Men's Fashion Jeans.

Regulars , slims and
huskies . Sizes 9 to 18.
Entire stock on sale
now.
PRICES

WAREHOUSE

FURNITURE

PORCH SWINGS

-Sturdy solid oak construction.
- Inc Iudesc ha ins and ceiling hooks.

---------·---

-

,._.,_..._

--..-.-

Special June Sale
EUREKA

$79.95

SALE

I MenS '5.50 TieS................. ,... '4.00
I M ' I.e 50 Ti
'4. go
"
I ens ·u. 185 .................... .•
J _M 1 s7 50 Ji
Sl:.60

1

BOX

&amp;

SPRING

SALE

1
I'

'6995

·

$488 00

,

'89 00

Special June Sale

I

CROCK POTS

I
I

quart size, steam
vent on lid . Includes
94 page cookbook.

~ttachments,

1

!

I

This June Sale is on our
entire selection of table · ~

-Heavy Vinyl
- 6 Colors

covers. Ovals, oblongs,

REG. $23.00 ............................ SALE 518.39

squares and rounds. Many
colors and patterns, c:loth,
vinl
ted
d
y cloth
coa
cover an
terry

SALES2879

SALE. PRICES

Reg . $45.00

I

'35.90 PRES?BURGER

SPORT COATS

HAMBURGER
COOKER

SALE

tl

~:;;;,]u::&amp;le

MEN'S

•

· $35•

Featuring the IIddie
griddle. broils closed
wlthokut sp~atterblng. good to

!I
i

'4995SportCoat
Sale'349() ~ coo
am urgers ,
sanc;Jwiches, steaks, eggs.
$39 95 Sport
Sale '299() I ~a~re~~kingsurface, easy
·
Coat...........
' I
$24 44 I
•

••••• ••••••

1

Fine wale corduroy in

f l ytJur -P*~7 /JH ~!!!"tin¥

BOYS' SHORT

\FURNITURE DEPARTMENT

-

/,1 ,., o,. &lt;" _ _ , , ... f14~
7
..J"~Y/H/ (.wrl ~.tlrlft~~) lfoc././
A Home Bank
For
Meigs County
People

RACINE
HOME NATIONAL

BANK
OHIO

Sport shirts of cotton polyester blend fabric. Entire
stock plus all of our boys' knit shirts, solid colors,
stripes and paHerns.

BOYS $2!95 SHIRTS ••••••••••••••••••••••.•••••
BOYSS3.95SHIRTS •••••••••••••••••••••••••••
BOYSS4.9SSHIRTS •••••••••••••••••••••••••••
BOYSSS.9SSHIRTS ... . .. .....................
80YSS6.9SSH IRTS ·••••••••••••••···•••••••••

$2.35
$3.15
$3 .15
S4.75
S5.55

BOYSS7.9SSHIRTS ........................... U.35
--.--~~-~---~--.-.------

Special June Sale-

WESTBEND 125.95

FRYmE ELECTRIC
DEEP FRYER
Uses just 2 cups of oil, fries 1 or 2 servings.
No stick finish inside and out, plastic cover,
special frying spoon included.

-Br~~~i~~~LS

l

I

l
~

- Early American &amp;
Contemporary styles.
values to $69.00

SPECIAL

l

'38"

------

OW

I

l

~·

Our entire stock is included~
Sizes 12 months to 24 months, 2 to 1 '.
·

:::::::::::::

- - - 's;~~i:i]~;e ..Sale

BOYS'
LIGHlWEIGHT JACKETS
Sizes 8 to 20. 100 per cent nylon. unlined,
zipper front .
·

I

D-'

UUJ~

'7.95 Jackets.................. S612
•

Boys' '9.95 Jackets .................. '7J2

-----.---·- ... ·- _
Special June Sale

Boys' su.95 Jackets ................ '912
_.. ............. _....-_.._

WOMEN'S

&amp; PRE-TEEN

SWIMWEAR

cotton
blends .

SALE

polyester

PRICES

_._L _ _ _ _ _ _ _.._..
.
~

REG. $9.oo' •.••••••••.••••••••••••• SALES 7.19
REG. S10.00 ."...................... SALE $ 7.99
REG. $15.00 ............ .'.......... SALE $11.99
REG. $17.00 ..... , ................. SALE $13.59
REG. $23.00 ..... , ................. SALE $18.39

._,_,_,_.,_.__...___, ---·...
-··---:.....--.;··~
'~

Special June Sale

GAUCHOS &amp; SHIRTS
.

I

.

-Assorted colors and styles.
- Sizes 3-6 to 11-14.

! REG . S 8.00 ....................... SALE $ 5.99
1 REG. sn.oo ....................... sALES 8.29
I REG. S14.oo ....................... SALE $10.49
REG. S16.00 ....................... SALE$11 .9t
REG. $20.00 ....................... SALE$14.99

on delivery contracts; still
haven't enforced short falls
Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric .
-Consolidated Natural
Gas , parent company and
major supplier of East Ohio
Gas, receives only part of its
supply from Tenneco, which
is being investigated by the
Securities &amp; Exchange
Commission and the Federal
Power Commission.
The committee staff of
attorney Elizabeth Blake and
accountant Robert Ramsdell
, also found that Columbia Gas
Sysiem buys Its natural gas

for less than what Con·
solidated pays. However,
they found that Columbia
charges its residential and
business customers more
than Consolidated.
Spokesmen for Columbia
Gas of Ohio and Columbia
Gas Transmission would not
comment on that difference
or any part of the report.
They said comment would he
inappropriate on a report that
has not been released
officially.

RE~cr ~ONITOR - Mrs. George (Sharon) Folmer, Jr ., Pomeroy, is one of seven
persons m Me1gs County who monitor for the Meigs Radio Emergency Assn. Citizen Team
REACT. The purpose of REACf 1s to help motorists in case of emergency At p-esent'
persons needing the service may call over CB channels 9 and 11 and one station ~ver channei
19. Acc'?'"ding to Guy D. Hysell, president, during May, 620 man hours were spent
':"Omtor':"g emergency calls. Calls received in May were, accidents II stalled cars 5 road
obstruction or traffic hazard 8, reckless driver 4, requestfor road info~tlon 2 vehicie fire
1, relay of three per~nal caDs, four vandalism, and five miscellaneous for a
of 41 caDs.
Hysell sa1d persons man emergency are not to ask for REACf but to go to station 9 11 or 19
and ask for assiStance.
'

tot.d

•

enttne

at
NO. 40

-

Suppliers allowed to fault

•

Cancer Society
standing firm
against Laetrile
SAN DIEGO ~UPI) The executive board of the
American Cancer Society
voted to stand fast In Its
condemnation of Laetrile
as worthless In cancer
treatment, bul not to opJM!Se federal tests brought
on by Increasing ac·
ceptance of th•
controversial drug.
The board, concludlDg
three _days of meetings
Thursday, voted however
to Insist that federal
scientific test procedures
be loUdwed without exception. ·

LADY COACH- Baseball coaching is definitely not
for men only, as proven by Marvlene Beegle, PorUand,
who coaches a little league and pee wee team. This is the
second year she has coached. Marviene has three
children, Sherry, 13; Randy, 8, and Junie, 4. When she
isn't busy with housework am! coa.chil1g she farms .
Marviene's Portland Little League team defeated
Syracuse Tuesday, 12 to 11.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS .

FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 1977

Voters to have another shot
at Eastem schools tax levy
A new five mill tax levy

At the same time last night,
the board agreed to request a
46 votes in the Eastern Local state auditor's financial cash
School District at a special analysis as required when
election Tuesday, will be put · there is a danger that a
again before the voters.
district must close its schools
This was the decision due to financial problems.
following a lengthy meeting The analysis would deter·
of the district's board of mine If closing the schools is
education Thursday night. necessary and the closing
The board will investigate date that would be necessary
costs of placing the measure due to lack of finances .
before voters at . a special
election as compared to in·
·:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: eluding it on the ballot at the
next regular election in the
fall.
.
The board will meet again
June 20, hopefully to reach a
decision on what the future
steps will be in regard to the
proposed operating levy.
whi~h went down to defeat by

., , i,~-:.-: , , , , , ,'*' ' ': :' ' ' ~' ' '~' ' ' ' ' ' 'i' ' ' ' 'i'i' ' ' &lt;,.,.,., , , , , , , , , , , ~, , , , , ,~, , , , , , , , , , ~, cheating

i 7\.Tews.•.....•. ...•·z·n.. Brz·e.J4.f.s·\t¢;l
:d'~
~i

~~

By United Press International
.
TEMPERATURES THROUGHOUT OIDO FELL TO
REOORD or near record lows early loday. The National
Weather Service said record lows were reported at Zanesville,
Marietta and Cincinnati and tied at Dayton ,
Zanesville recorded a reading of 40 degrees which eclipsed
the old mark of 41 degrees set on June 10 in 1946. Marietta had
a reading of 41 degrees which broke the old record of 45
degreea set in 1913 and Cincinnati recorded a 40 degree
reading, besting the old record of 46 degrees set in 1913.
WNDON - QUEEN EUZABETH waved goodnight
Thursday to thousands of cheering subjects gathered beneath
her Buckingham' Palllce balcony, capping a day of Silver
Jubilee celebrations on the River Thames that ended in a blaze
of red, white and blue fireworks. They cheered as she and her
family stepped out onlo the blacony at midnight.
Just an hour before, Britain subjects and foreign visitors
alike began singing "God Save the ~een" at the end of the
half-hour fireworks spectacular, the largest ever seen in
London. The queen, Prince Philip and other members of the
royal family watched the colorful display - set 1o music from the 24th.floor balcony of the Shell building on the South
Bank of the Thames.

COLUMBUS- SENATE DEMOCRATIC LEADERS are
bridling at the latest state revenue projections by the Office of
Budget and Management (OBM) which show a drop of $60
milllon from p-ior estimates.
Majority Democrats, now reassembling the budget, have
vowea to stick with their own figures which parallel the ones
originally offered by the administration· of Gov. James A.
Rhodes, The OBM confirmed Thursday that director William

·.

.

Language bill reported out
COLUMBUS (UPI) The Ohio Senate Finance
Committee Thursday night
reported out a 500-page
"language" bill containing
' the state school subsidy
formula and stipulating the
terms for spending the 19711-79
general appropriation.
The measure was cleared 6
to 2 along party lines
following a seven·hour
committee meeting which
included discussion on 36
amendments.
Sen . Harry Meshel, D·
Youngstown,
committee
chalnnan, said the measure
would go to the Senate floor
for a vote .next Wednesday.
Then It will be forwarded to
the HoWl•.

,.

The $13.2 billion general
appropriations bill, con·
taining the bulk of the money
to be spent by the state during
the next two years, is still in
the Finance Committee and
is scheduled to go to the floor
in two weeks.
It has already cleared the
House but will probably have
to be returned lor con·
currence in amendments.
Meshel said the giant
"language" bill, drafted by
majority Democrats to tailor
state spending and accounting to their wishes
without risking item vetoes
by Gov. James A. Rhodes,
would provide legislative
control over the bud~et .

is found
.

WASIDNGTON (UP!)- A
Medicaid doctor cheated the
system one year by billing
taxpayers for 26,000 medical ·
procedures - an average of
one every five minutes, HEW
Secretary Joseph Califano
said Thursday.
Another example · of
"flagrant wrongdoing," he
said, involved a druggist who
dispensed 102tablets a day to
the same Medicaid patient
for 204 consecutive days.
Califano told a news con·
terence that these two In·
stances were among 172
cases computers have un·
covered in HEW's continuing
investigation of cheating
among Medicaid doctors and
druggists. He did not name
those involved.
He said the incidents
involve "what appear to be
the worst physician and
pharmacist oflenders against
the Medicaid system" and
include 92 cases involving
doctors and 80 Involving
pharmacists in 45 states.

Family needs
clothing etc.
following fire
The
Meigs
County
American Red Cross Chapter
has issued an appeal on
beha If of the otis Queen
family, Salem Center, which·
lost all of its possessions in a
fire early Thursday.
The family needs clothing,
household items, furniture,
hedclothing and other items
necessary to maintain a
home.
Mr. Queen wears a 15 shirt;
34 waist trousers artd 10'h
shoe; Mrs. Queen, a 42
blouse, 18 slacks, dresses in
· 16 or 18, and 5~ shoes. A son
wears size 4 pants and shirts
and size 8'h in shoes.
Residents having any items
to contribute may call the
family at 742-2481 or the Red
Cross through Mrs. Rhonda
Dailey, 949-2249.

The new Ohio Centennial
Homestead program requires
only thatthe land was held by
the same family for 100 years
or more and requires no
minimum of acreage.
Interested people who have
held land continually in their
family for 100 or more years
and who wish to participate in
the program should write the
Centennial Homestead Of·

COLUMBUS (UP!) -Gov.
James A. Rhodes today
vetoed a hotly-debated
partisan bill which would
divide the Hamilton County
Municipal Court into three
districts for the election of
judges.
The veto was Rhodes
second in this session of the
Ohio General Assembly. He
vetoed part of a voter
registration bill last month,
but majority Democrats
overrode Rhodes' objections.
The bill, sponsored by Sen.
William F. Bowen, ~cin­
nati, would require that five
municipal court judges be
elected from the City of
Cincinnati ; five other judges

Parttimejohs
to be offered
in Meigs area

,.

that negotiations with non·
certified employes will begin
In July.
Twenty-&lt;&gt;ne applications
for the high school principal's
position have been received
and were screened. The
board hopes to have the
number narrowed down for a
recessed session on June 20
and possibly will hire a
replacement for Principal
Chester . Gooding who Is
retiring at that time. The next
regular meeting was set for
July 18.
Attending the meeting were
Supt. John Riebel, Clerk
Eloise Boston; Meigs County
Supt. Robert Bowen. and
hoard members Doug Bissell,
David Smith , · Dorothy
Calaway, Bob Davis and
Dorsel Larkins.

Regional meeting
set in Pomeroy .

Funds presently are being
allocated through Title IX of
the Older Americans Act, to
each state to provide part·
time employment (25 hours
per week ) for low i.ncome
persons age 55 and over.
This program is ad·
Mostly sunny Saturday,
ministered through the Area
h,ighs
to
low er
80s:
Agency on Aging for eight
Probability
of
precipitation
!ice. Ohio Historica l Society, countie$, Meigs, Hoelting ,
I-71 and 17th Avenue, Athens, Washington , Noble, near zero per cent today and
Columbus, Ohio 43211 and ask Perry, Morgan and Monroe, tonight, 10 per cent Satur~'Y ·
for an applicant form , or they and will begin as soon as
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
may be secured through lhe funds are available.
su 'nday
tbrough
Meigs County Pioneer and
Employment has to be in
Tuesday,
a
chance
of
Historical Society. Box 145, areas such as Home Main·
showers
through
lhe
period
Pomeroy, 0 . 45769. Ap· tenance·Chore Service ,
wllh highs In the 80s and
plications for this year's Homemaker-Home
Health
lows In the 60s.
listing must be in by July 1, Aide, Bus Driver, Cook at
:::::::::::;:;:;:;::::::::::::.;:::::::::::;:;:::::::;:;:::;:;:;:;:::;:;:::::;
1977.,
Nutrition Site, and Out Reach
The initial filing fee for the Worker or other areas which
ADAMS DIDN'T
program of $25 is non· serve older persons.
RACINE
II was
refundable.
No person can be hired
reported
In
last
night's
If the application is ap- whose income is over $2,800
Sentinel
that
Roger
proved, an additional fee of per year if single and $3.700 if
Adams
,
Southern
Lo&lt;al
$75 will he required to receive married. Applicants must he
School
Board
member
,
the bronze plaque and cer- able to pass a physical exapproved
the
resolullon
tificate. The legislation mi~ation and be willing to
accepted by the board
creating the Centennial · work 4-5 days a week . Apconcerning the emergency
Hom~stead
program plications are available at the
school levy. Mr. Adams did
stipulates thai the applicants Senior Citizens Center in
not approve the resolution.
must bearthe total cost of the Pomeroy and must be
pro~ ram.
returned by June 20.

Centennial Homestead
program is underway
The lllth Ohio General
Assembly authorized a new
Ohio Centennial Homestead
program which will lead to
identifying in its first .year
Centennial Homesteads in
rural Ohio where land has
been passed from generation
to generation. In 1978 the
emphasis will shift to towns
and urban areas.

In another matter the Chester and Carolyn Franz,
board approved student third grade teacher at
accident insurance for the Riverview School. Mrs.
next school year through the Roush and Mrs. Franz are
Personal Service Insurance retiring . The board trans·
Co. with Dale Warner as !erred Michael Will from
agent.
· junior high school to teach
Three resignations were third grade at Cheshire next
accepted, including those of year and . hi~ed Donna
Pamela Stecker, first grade Downie, to teach llrst grade
teacher at Chester ; Betty at Chester, and Rrlger Karr to
Roush, third grade teacher at teach mathematics at the .
junior high replacing Will .
Karr taught in the Athens
City Schools last year and
Mrs. Downie has not taught
previously _
It was agreed to send a
mechanic to a bus mechanics
workshop in Columbus, June ·
27·30 and to authorize the
clerk to transfer funds within
the budget for balancing
elected from Hamilton
accounts. It was reported
County exclusive of the city:
and in 1979 three additional
judges not now authorized
would be elected at-large
from both the city and the
county .
Currently, all 10 judges of
the court are elected
countywide.
The
bill,
according to Republican
opponents lo the measure,
The Meigs Co unty Pioneer
would allow more black
and
Historical Society haS set
judges to he elected and give
July
9 for Region 8 of the Ohio
control of the court to the
Historical
Societies to be
[)emocratic Party.
hosted
by
the
local chapter.
" Under the procedure
Hours
of
the
Museum on
established
by
this
legislation, many residents of June 19, Heritage Sunday,
Hamilton County will lind will be 12·5.
It was read into the record
themselves standing before a
judge whom they had no at the meeting where the
voice in electing,, said above actions were taken that
Rhodes in his velo message to the RSVP Volunteers "are
doing a line job" keeping the
the legislature.
" As long as we elect museum open Fridays from
judges, we must continue lo 1-3 p.m .
A film taken in Meigs
make them responsible to the
County
during the 1936-37
people by whom they are
school
year was show n
elected," added Rhodes .
Rhodes also noted that bar following the meeti ng.
associations in Cincinnati, several persons, then school
Dayton and Columbus, as children from Rutland ,
well as the Ohio State Bar Harrisonville, Salem Center,
and Dexter were identified.
Association objected to the
Teachers identified were
bill.
Seth Nicholson, Miles Nelson,
Evenlyn Ward Montgomery,

Rhodes vetoes
partisan bill

High rate

(Continued on page 10)

1
I

OPEN SATURDAY
!
9:30 TO 5:00
ELBERFELD$
IN
POMEROY

-One and two piece styles .
- Sizes 32 to 40 and 3-6 to 11 -14.

I

-{)hio utilities have not
taken any legal action to
enforce any supply contracts
by Columbia Gas System and
Consolidated Natural Gas.
-C olumbia
Gas
Transmission
has
not
delivered its full contract
amount to any of its
distributors since Nov. 1,
1973. Neither has It received
its full contract amount from
independent producers .
Columbia Gas Transmission
is the major supplier for
Columbia Gas ol Ohio and

'

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

...

REG . $20.00 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• SALES15.00

MEN'S
Sizes 3,6 to 46. Solid
colors , nylons and

will

=~~~~~~epsrsin0trsnayn1d0np.astels,

I
1 REG
·
SAL E$5.30
·1· REG.S.$7.00••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
· 6.10
9.oo ............................ SALES
1 =~~: ::~:~~::
~:t~ :~~:!:

filled

JACKETS

The report containing a
series of facts was given
Thursday to the nine-member
Senate Energy Committee
which has been investigating
the causes of last winter's
severe natural gas shortage
for six months.
The committee will use the
facts to draft a final report,

-

~

beds,carpllloworfamily
room . Polyester foam

-----s;;;,~~~s;,;----~;:~liu:;&amp;~e!s;~:l;~;&amp;k

today.

include
~tlons to avert
81111ther natural gas crisis in
the state. The report is
expected later this mooth.
Sen. Neal Zimmers, 0Dayton, committee
chairman, · asked
his
colleagues " to keep the
report lo themselves" but
Scripps-Howard Newspapers
obtained a copy.
Zimmers would not discuss
the report other than to say
that evidence of lack of
aggressiveness to secure supplies of natural gas could be
the most damaging lo Ohio
utilities:
Here are some of the other
findings listed in the report:
which

Our entire stock of men's dress shirts- knit
shirts · sport shirts · leisure shirts and
Western shirts.
A truly fine selection and the savings
are terrific.

decorator solid color. Use
as a throw pillow, bunk

$2 99

. COLUMBUS (UP!) .Ohio's utilities did not
_aggressively look for new
,supplies of natural gas and
allowed their suppliers to
default on contracts, accord~ng to a confidential
legislative report, ScrippsHoward newspapers said

MEN'S SHORT
SLEEVE SHIRTS

•3.59
UTILITY
PILLOWS

push search for gas

----S;e:w];;;e-&amp;J;

;;;;c:;t;,;;;;Sale

!
l

77.

VOL. XXVIII

WOMEN'S

Our entire stock of sizes 5 to 16 is included .

Ohio firms failed to

BABY DOLL PAJAMAS

'39.95

I

Save
on
these
candles .
Discontinued line . 3
inch
diamet er
candles, tapers and

Secreted report says

REG. $12.00••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• SALE $9.59

------~._.._.._.._._,....

RIVAL

-The chairman of the
Public Utilities Commission
of Ohio, C. Luther Heckman,
said Ohio utilities merely
"went through the motions' '
and did not aggressively seek
special gas purchases in 1976-

-Sizes S-M- L-XL
-- SALE$4.39
REG. S s.so .............................
REG. s , .oo ............................. SALE $4.79
REG. $ 7.00 ............................. SALE$5.59
REG .S 8.oo ............................. SALEU.39
REG . S9.oo ............................. SALES7.19
REG. SlO.oo............................. SALES7.99
REG. SII.OQ ............................. SALE 58.79

'69.00

I
I

LINGERIE DEPARTMENT

l
I SALE pRICES
~~~~i::;:~::~::==~·-t-~:~::~-----+--~~~~.
! .--~--------~------...
SpecUJl June Sale
I Special June Sale 1 Special June saleJ'
_ Special June Sale
! TABLE l BEAN BAG 1
LlffiE GIRLS
LONG DRESSES I COVERS l CHAIRS I DRESSES
, You save $29.95 during this sale on this
quality sweeper with
edge

Sizes 36 to 46 regulars and longs . A fine
group of solids and patterns.

Jt111N

!.
!

l · lf2 PRICE l ~~n~wa;ee~ooo~:r~~~ ·I

-----s;;;;,-:;;;:e-s7e----

''R.

RACINE

UVINGieRooM

MATTRESS

l CANDLES

=~~: !!~:~~.:.:.:_:.:_:_:_::_:_:::::.: :::::::: :::~·l:~~ !~~:::

ND

l

REG. s 44 . 00 ............................ SALESlS.l 9

jlfft:HeS-r'
Pll r~£11 r J
IN~,-,
II

I

__
-·Special June Sale

...._...

UPRIGHT

REG 53600

lf/fl p

L
!

DE!~!M~NT

l
__ ·1l ______

REG. $32.00 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• . SALE 525.59
REG . 534.00 ............... . ............ SALE$2719
.

,,1iIll£

furniture . A great gift for
~~:~se from gliders,
rockers, chaise lounges,
spring base chairs, tables,
umbrellas or fol~ing

Twxm
· s·fie Mattress or
SUITES
Bo
Jusl13 SUIIes with regular
pnces from $638 .00 lo
$789.00 . ConsiSts of Early
ea.
Amer ica n
and
F 11 s· M tt
Contemporarystyllngwith
u
tze
a ressor
nylon or herculon covers. ~o_x
SALE
ea
•
•
•
__..

Reg. '46.95 4 fl Swing ... Sale '38.95
Reg. '54.95 5 ft. Swing ...Sale '44.95

SWEEPER PLUS
$1995 ATTACHMENTS

"PG"

stock of ·lawn and pat.io

I
I

SAL£

~~~~~~
hi\_:;v~;~~~ti~l: ~rpl:?nth~~~·~r ~~
patterns.

Sale prices on our entire

----s-;;;;:~l]u;;;s;,"k· ----·..,....-~-;ialiu~-s:k i ~;"f,r;;;;;-i;i;T-~!.-~;;;;~i·;~;;-i~~.......,

Final listing of seniors
for Wahama honors
MASON, W: Va. - The · Carrie Hatcher, Robert ·
final honor roll for the Senior Jarrell, Vickie Moore, Sheila
Class of 1977, each student Ohlinger. Terri Proffitt,
with a 3. average or better: Carolyn Shirley, Jim Smith,
Cheryl Adams, Mike Golds· Jennifer Weaver, Carla
berry, June Pamela Garnes, McFarland, Kim Conard,
·Shirley Kearen, Linda Test,
Danny Weiss.
MASON DRIVE·IN
Also, Belinda Zerkle,
Tonight &amp; Frid~y
·Chuck Zerkle, Karen Smith,
June 9-10
Pam Burton, Donah Myers,
HUSTLE "R"
Plus
Christi Kearns, Jill Ohlinger,
MARATHON MAN" R"
Jay Layne, Ramona Weaver,
Sal. thru Tuesday
Kent Yonker, Linda Dye,
June 11· 12-13-14
Gilbert Russell, Cinday
KILLER FORCE
James, Judy Needs, Debbie
,. R"
Ord,
Lois Peters.
Plus
Special Delivery

~

JEA.NS

I

SALE

I

BLUE DENIM

Cause of gas shortage
is pinpointed in report

Weather

Theft reported
by McNickle
Sheriff James J. Proffitt
reported today Lowell Me·
Nickle, Bowmans Run Road,
has had an electric motor,
fishing tackle and assorted
tools stolen off his place .. The
incident is under investigation.
Thursday at 3:30 a .m .
Thomas Casey was traveling
south on U.S. 33 at Darwin
and went off the highway .
Casey was taken to Veterans
Memoril!.i Hospital by a
sheriff's deputy where he was
admitled for a laceration to
his foreh ead. At 9:30p.m. on
U.S. 33, one mile north of the
state park ," a vehicle driven
by James F . Taylor struck
anct killed a deer.

Dorthy Ledly, 0 . 0 . Pat·
terson, Eli Fulton, Bart
Hawley, Evenlyn Nicholson,
Mildred Hoppes,
Earl
Bratton, Delbert Luckeydoo,
Marcus
Roush,
John
Cameron , Evenlyn Lanning,
Hobe Nelson , Grace An·
derson Furbee, Burl White,
Archie Nelson, Miss Philson
and Howard Pond.
·
Other businesses and in·
dividuals identified were
Fred Dunfee, John Spires,
Mabel Ruth , Della Rife, Bob
Musser, Preacher Bolin,
Chris Dill, Dale Folan, Paul
Eblin, Ann Chapman Webster
and two children, Paul
Patterson, Floyd Nelson,
Floyd Miller Stdre, W. R.
Amos (Dexter). Carl Me·
Clure , Ward 's Grocery
(Langsville), Sugar RUD Mill,
Warneu's B·a rher Shop with
Herman and Francis Warner
and Aline Weaver, Lorenzo
Davis, Bob Jacobs and
employees of Ben Franklin,
Atkins Chick s, Schaegel's
Shoes. Jim Tracy, Elher·
fel ds, Dawson Electric,
Goessler, Norma Goodwin
Florist, Kincaid Studio, Farm
Bureau Co-op, The Meigs
Grocery Co. (MiddleJM&gt;rt),
Philo Radio, H. M. Cross,
Rawlings Dodge - Plymouth,
Ebersbach Ford, Rutland
Railroad Station, Theobald,
and Sohio-National Brand
Store .
Many people in the film
have not been identified.
Persons attending one of the
schools in the Rutland ,
Harrisonville, Dexter or
Salem Center area in 1936-37
are likely in the film.
Showings will be a
feature of Heritage Sunday,
June 19 at the museum, every
half hour from noon to 5 p.m.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="791">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11326">
                <text>06. June</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="48359">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="48358">
              <text>June 9, 1977</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="29">
      <name>hysell</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7566">
      <name>westerman</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
