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                  <text>'10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday_,_June 20 , 1977

Human rights policy stays

Local Bowling
Tuesday Morning Women ·
June 7, 1977
~son Bow ling Lanes

W. L.
J2 8

Team~

Greeo Ghost
Cll"" Coostructloo
Team I

32
28
18
16
14
10
10

Erw in Construction

8
12
22
2~

Team 6
26
Quality Print Shop
30
Headquarters
30
High Individual series Shirley Mitchell, Phyll is
Cll"" -4112; Patti Williams 46-j ;
Barbara Whlttlngtoo «5.
Hioh indlvldu31 oame -

Shirley Mitchell 200; Patti
Williams 172; Phyllis Cline
170.

High team game - Team ~
739; Cline Construction 726 ;
Green Ghost 702.
Team high series - Team 4
CANOE RACE WINNERS - Taking first place in the canoe race were Bryan arXJ '
Nathan Yonker of Rt. 3, Pomeroy. They took a purse of $30 for the event. Shown I~ are,
Bryan, Regatta Queen Niese! Duvall and Nathan.

HOSPITAL NEWS
VETERANS MEMORIAl.
Saturday Admissions David Ebershach, Syracuse.
Saturday Discharges Ada Whited, Margaret
Rudolph, Edna Stiles, Wilma
Wells, Esta Daylong.
Sunday Admissions - Fred
Holcomb, Point Pleasant
Timothy Eynon, Reedsville;
Kay Warden, Racine ; Ruth
Dailey , Portland ; Bobby
Winebrenner , West.
Columbia ; l.inda Hawley,
Middleport.
Sunday Discharges Antone Uter, Chester Fouty,
Melody Redmond, John
Hinkle.
PLEASANT VAl.LEY
Discharges - Glen Sayre,
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Edith
Byer, l.eon ; Roy Smith,
Apple Grove; Mrs. Marjorie
Shaver, &lt;;lallipolls; Mrs .
Anna Belle McDermitt, Point
Pleasant ; Mrs. Johnnie
Russell and daughter, Bid·
well ; Kevin Bonecutter ,
Point Pleasant; Pamela
Glassburn, Sidw~ll ; Willard
Jeffers, Glenwood; Eugene
. Staats, Sr., Palatka, Fla.;
Mrs. Risden Miller, l.akin;
Mark (Tony) Garduer, Po~
Pleasant; Mrs. Robert l.yle,
Point Pleasant; Mrs. John

Craig, Buffalo; Mrs. Charles
Rayburn, South Liberty, 0.,
and Mrs. Ida Whitt, Point
Pleasant.
Holzer Medical Center
(Discbarges, June 17)
Jo Ann Allen, Josephine
Baldwin, Sandra Brumfield,
Joanne Byers, Thelma
Carter, Gerald Chambers,
John ·Gray, Halley Howell,
Mrs. Dailas Janey and
daughter, James Kunath, Jcr
Anne l.yons, Russell M~­
Daniel, James Milstead,
Mary Morgan, Myrtle
Morgan; Phyllis Newland,
Betty Proffelt, Ronnie
Rainey , James Roberts,
Mary Roberts, Kelly Rose,
Mrs . Samuel Rushn and
daughter, Virginia Roush,
Shelia Saunders, Danny
Saxon , Bobbie Schmidt,
l.eona
Spires,
Karen
Stapleton, Thomas Stephens,
Mrs. Roger Taylor and
daughter, Delphia Tribby,
Dana Williams Jr ., Mrs.
l..arry Wiseman and son.
(Births, June 17)
Mr. and Mrs. Billy Shelton,
a sort, Jackson. Mr. and Mrs:
Jerry Roese, a son, Rio
Grande.
(Discharges, June 18)
Larry Bailey, Jewel
Brumfield, Janet Bryant,

rN;=;;~·:: : : ;:::;: ,: ::;i:;:·&lt;:·Jj;i';j;tl

Judy Chapman, Mark Cline,
Vickie Coon, Richard Dow,
l.ucille
Fisher,
Rosa
Holschuh, Paul Kerns, Anna
l.ambert, Carolyn Lorbach,
Claren ce Mahle, Mariano
Merri ck, Teresa Miller,
Deborsh Ousley , Edgar
Payne, Marcella Phillips,
Mrs. Charles Price and son,
Harrison Robinson, Ullina
Rotzenburg, Clyde Shamblin,
l.uther Smith, Jr., John
Thompson, Mrs. Thomas
Vanco and daughter, Preston
Webb, Bradley White, Cloyd
Wiggins, Earl Winters, Lee
Wood Sr.
(Births, Jone 18)
Mr. and Mrs. Rickey Goff,
a son, Jackson. Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Jones, a daugh~r.
Langsville. Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Jones, a daughter, Crown
City. Mr. and Mrs. John
Wellington, a son, Bidwell.
Mr. and Mrs. l.arry Weil, a
daughter, Middleport. Mr.
and Mrs. Donnie Adkins, a
son, Proctorville. Mr. and
Mrs. Joseph Hall, a son,
Pomeroy.
(Discharges, Jone 19)
Judy Canter, Ora Crabtree,
Mrs . Max Grueser and
daughter , Walter Morris,
Mary Pullins, Taylor Roush,
Janet Stebbins, Iva Whaley,
James Wonts.
(Births, June 19)
Mr. and Mrs. Dewey
Ketley, a son, Oak IDil.

2092 ; Cline Construction 2058;
Green Ghost 2014.

COLUMBUS, OlllO - GOSSIP, NOT HARD-HITTING
exposes have filled newspapers and broadcast reports since
the days of Watergate says Carl Bernstein, the . fJ)!'IIler
Washington Post reporter, who helped uncover the political
scandal. "Despite tjie self-congratulations that followed
Watergate lite real significant trend in our profession is nol
toward Investigative reporting but toward gossip or celebrity
journalism," Bernstein told 350 persons Sunday at the closing
luncheon of the natibnal Investigative Reporters and Editors
coovention here.
Post reporters Bernstein and Bob Woodward won the
Pulitzer Prize for their investigation of the Watergate scandal.
Bernstein said he did not know the reasons for the popularity of
gossip journalism but did note, "it is cheap and requires no
conunltment of resources."
·
"It puts our profession on the level of pandering. Thai is, to
give the public what we think they want inslel!d of the truth,"
he said.
ATHENS, OlllO - THE 1,380 DELEGATES to the 40th
annual BUckeye Boys State will be voting in elections lor their
mock week-long government program today, ualng !he
computerized system used in regular elections in Athens
County.
The delegates Sunday picked their party candidates in
primary elections conducted on paper ballots.
WASifiNGTON - COMMISSIONER DONAlD Kennedy
says his Food and Drug Administration's plan to han the use of
saccharin may be delayed "possibly a couple of months" by
· the new study linking the sweetener to bladder cancer in men.
The FDA had hoped to impose the ban in August, but
Kennedy said a delay probably will he necessary so scientists
and the public have a chance to study and comment on the new
lnfcrmation, and possibly broaden the ban. Meanwhile, .he
said, "If a male member of my familiwere drinking diet soft
drinks (which contain saccharin) I'd sure work hard to get him
to stop."
GEORGETOWN,. OlfiO - POUCE CHIEF OONAl.D
McElroy and investigators say arsonists possibly armed with
an incendiary device were behind the fire Saturday that
heavily damaged the historic Brown County Courthouse. The
$400,000 blaze broke out in a wooden stairwell about 4 a.m. It
destroyed the dome and the second floor area, where the
Brown County Commoo Pleas Court was located. A four-yeat
, remodeling project had been finished a month prior to the
blaze.
Many records in the 1851-built courthouse, a National
Historic Monument, were soved. Residents got out of bed and
forn1ed a human chain at tbe town square , to pass books,
manuacrlpts and other recorda away from the fire scene.
"'lbere ill a 100 per cent chance of arson," fire chief Donald
McElroy said.

be the first or regular
moothly meetings helween
the two.
On Thursday nlgbt the
President files to New York
City for a Democratic Party
fund raiser. His appearance,
in part, luimed at im)l'ovlng
relatioos with leaders or the
party.
Carter and his f!lmlly

HAROLD' PRICE

AJ , a
resident of Xenia, died at his
home ot 6: 15 a.m. Sunday.
Harold Keith Price ,

Mr . Pri ce was a selfemployed ca rpenter , borri In

Gallipolis on Aug.

13, 1935,
son of Cecil E . and Genevieve

(Jonesl Price.

He Is survived by hi S wife,

Clara Johnson Price and his
pa re nts,

who

reside

in

Gallipolis; three daughters.
Judith Ann and Rhonda Kay
Price and Allsha Johnsoo. all
at home t four sons: : Brian
Brian Keith, at home ; Eric,
with the U. S. Army In

Loan and

Arizona ; Terry, San Antonio,
Texa s and Bruce Allen ,

Xenia.

Four sisters survive: Mrs.

Phrllls

Pa rlc ia

Frances

Plymale,

Mullins,
Rlfe and

Mrs .

Mrs .
Mrs .

Alberta Ely , all of Gallipolis;
four brothers.

Jack and

William , both of Gall ipolis;
Ray, Marion and Carroll,
Columbus.
Funeral services will be
held 2 p.m. Wednesday

READY TO WEAR
DEPARTMENT 2ND FLOOR
Classic
Doubleknit Pants
in your size

'

approved

She married Clarence
Gilmore of Cheshire In 1917.
They had two ~ns , Norman
Dale of Lowell. Ohio and
Paul, who was killed In an .

•

'1400

\

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Tuesday, June 2I, 1977

coming from the front of the structure as ht! drove south on
SecoodAve. about 5:10p.m. Before getting to the traffic tight,
Skinner said there was a loud expl06ion. The front doors blew
open, and flames shot oot of the church hall-way across Secood
Ave., barely missing another passing motorist.
No cause has been determined ot this time, aceordlog to lire
and pollee authorities.
After fighting the lire nearly two hours, it appeared firemen
had it under control shortly after 7 p.m. However, it broke out
again on the roof. Huge black clouds of smoke covered that
area as the lire continued out of control until around 8:20 p.m.
when it began raining.
Hundreds of onlookers were on the scene as the structure
cootinued burning.
Some church members, with the assistance of bystanders,
began moving furniture out of the new section tv the rear, but
after the fire was brought under control, the items were
returned inside.
Earlier In the day, a lire in the outside trash bin was
extinguished by a church official. The blaze was reported by

three teen agers.
It was reported this morning by a church spokesman that the
!~year old pews which were reconditioned two years ago
suffered damage, but only five or 10 were destroyed (by falling
beams).
, The original chandelier was not damaged, and most of the
priceless stained gl&amp;ss windows escaped damage. Several
historic church gilts, however, were lost.
There was only smoke and water damage to the fellowship
room.
·
·
The churcb celebrated its centeoo.lal anniversary last year.
Considered one of the largest United Methodist Churth
structures In southeastern Ohio, Grace United has 1,050
members with a weekly average altendance of 400.
District Supt. Wesley Clark, Athens, was on the scene . It was
reported he was trying to contact Bishop l.ooden for possible
future help.
Tentative arrangements call for services to be held in the
church parking lot this Sunday.

en tine

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 28, No. 47

Dowler given contract
for three more years

These Dotty Mann pullon pants are of
doubleknit 100 pet. polyester with stretch
waistband for super fit. Well tailored 22·
inch flares in a good selection of solid colors
and plaids . Sized 8 to 18.

The contract of Charles L. Dowler
as superintendent of the Meigs Local
School District was renewed for a three
year period when the district's board of
education met in lengthy session
Monday night at the Meigs Junior lngh
School in Middleport.
Before voting unanimously to renew
the contract of Dowler, effective Aug. I,
1978, when his present contract expires,
the board held a short execl\tive
session. He was rehired at his present
salary.
A wide range of business was
carried out by the board during the
meeting including actions to purchase
new bleachers for the Meigs Footb8ll
Stadium in Pomeroy and refinishing of
the Meigs High School gym floor.
Upon the- recommendation of
Dwight Goins, director of noncertificated personnel, the board voted
to purchase seven sets of aluminum
bleachers lor Meigs Stadium from
Branstrator, Fort Wayne, .Ind. , for
$3,612 with delivery to he made in time
lor the fall football season.
The bleachers will seat some 350
persons and will' be used with present
bleachers which are still satisfactory
on the visitors' side oi the field. The
board agreed to accept the low bid of

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Home with the Rev . George

Oiler officiating . Burial will
be In the Gravel Hill

Cemetery, Cheshire. Friends

may call at the funeral home
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p. m.
Tuesday .

'100
I
Home
is no place. for
your valuables ...

~~ ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;1; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;~4-~CY~C~lE' Al ~. FAB Ic
Ill

A

ELECTRIC DRYER

COME SEE

ALL THE

It's after midnight. Do you know
where your valuables are? Chances
are they're safe and sound right
where you put them , but when
you 're talking about important papers, jewelry and other irreplacallles .. . why chance it? By keepin!l
your valuables in a Safe Deposit
Box, you'll have the security of
knowing they're protected from
theft, misplacement or damage ...
for just pennies a day!

SPEEQ QUEEN

WASHERS
DRYERS

SALE

AND

ON

TODAY!

FAMILY CAPACITY
WASHER
• Whitl nlppl.d PQftell in tub.
• Multi-cycle timer.
• 5 wllh/rln se 11ml)lflltUill
te1tin91 for 1ll f1bric. ,
• Limi1ed 1 O.v•• wwlllflty ·
on 1r1n1miMkro plrt:l .

• PERMACOTE•drurn.
• 4 eyelft: Automatic; f or
herly end nonn .. flbrlcs ;

Aulomltic tor dellcltl

10«11; Timt Dry, or Durtbte
Pr-.'Knib.
• 5 llll"'f»&gt;'lture •nlngc ~

111 fwbrk:l. '
• ln-t-door lint K:rten .
e In hii'IHT: IIQtd,I¥0CtdO,
copptrtoM, white.

.INGELS FURNITURE

Tonight and Tues.
June 20-21

3 DAYS OF
TME CONDOR

·Farmers Bank
POMEROY , OHIO
t

0

¢ ¢ d

$40.000 M8limum Insurance F'" Each
Member Federal

Oe~X"it

Oepos~tor

106 N. 2nd

~ve.

llilldleport, 0.

Be Sure To Stop In and Shop Our New Jewelly Dep'.

Insurance Corporation

"R"
I

taken by Keith Wilson on Secortd Ave.,. next to the old
Holzer Hospital facing north .

Council balks at
•
health mcrease

00

MASON DRIVE-IN

I

at

AND

MONDAY evening's fire at Grace United Methodist
Church was at its peak shortly after 1 o'clock. Photo was

William E. Swatzel, Teresa
C. Swatzel to Michael G.
Bendine!li, Patricia l.ynn
Bendlnelli, Lot 8, Fairview
Heights, Chester . .
Anna M. Ryther, .Com.,
Charles C. Foster, dec: to
Edna Lena Foster, Lot 13,
Bums Add., Letart.
Freda Ferguson, Roy
Proffitt, Ullian . Proffitt to
William W. Russell, Sharon
C. Russell , 2 acres, l.ehanon.
William Carter, Mildred
Carter to Her~rt Barker,
Betty Lou Barker, I&gt; acre,
Chester.
Leonard A. Fry, Bernice E.
Fry tv Joseph Reiser, Edith
Reiser, 1.21 acres, 160 acre •
lot, Pomeroy.

UPSTICK

According to Fire Chief Jim Northup's report this morning ,
the first alarm was turned in by Bill Williams in person at 5:10
p.m. Twenty-eight Gallipolis Volunteer Firemen, five trucks
Including the aerial ladder, were rushed to the scene at the
corner of Second Ave. and tedar St.
Firemen battled the bla2e until miduight. A skeleton crew
remained on duty throughout the night in case the lire broke
out again.
Firemen fr.om Pt. Pleasant, Middleport, and the Gallipolis
state Institute assisted local firemen in the seven-hour battle
to save the structures. No injuries were reported.
Approximately 200,000 gallons of water Wa$ required to
bring the fire under control.
Church personnel usually leave the business office by 4:30
p.m. Apparently the lire started shortly thereafter. According
to Northup, the blaze originated on ti\e first floor (front) near
llllllcl118ey.
the stairway. It spread to the first and second floors of the old
1be kitchen and dining room suffered smoke and water section.
damage. The educational wing was not damaged. Firemen
One passing motorist, Tom Skinner, a member of the Daily
said a lire wall protected that area.
Tribune's advertising department, said he noticed smoke

the Huntington Products Co. for
She was told that the board plans to hire
refinishing the gym floor at Meigs
an additional person in art, in the
High. The price will run between $3,400
elementary field, this fall to meet
and $3,600 and work will begin in July.
requirements of the new legislation and
Goins also reported on the conditions
that the board will have .to review the
situation for the 1978-79 school year.
of roofs on buildings of the district and
The board accepted resignations or
it was agreed to proceed with a com·
plete repair job at the junior high
retirement letters from Eric Hart, as
building and to have patching done at .Principal of the Rutland Elementary
two grade school buUdings. Additional
School who will continue teaching in the
work is also needed at the high school . district, however; Grace Drake as
but the finn making repairs is still
secretary at the high school, retiring ;
under bond and has been contacted to
Dorothy Woodard, retirin g as a '
do the work. The finn of George
teacher; Mildred Long, retiring as a
cook. Janis E. Schmoll, a former
. Hackett, Jr. was hired to do the ad·
teacher In the district, was granted
ditional repair work al a cost of about
another year on her leave of absen~e to
$4,200.
Present was Glenn Enslen
continue work at Indiana University. A
letter from Phyllis Ha ckett was
representing the Meigs Jaycees. Enacknowledged. The ietter from Mrs.
slen thanked the board for use of the
Pomeroy Stadium lor the Big Bend Hackett, who has been on leave of abRegatta frog jumps and said the sence, also indicated that she has accepted employment in Licking County
Jaycees will leave the field in better
this fall.
,
shape than they found it. He asked
In accordance with. board policy,
b(lard members to contact him if there
the board grant~\~! severance pay to
are any problems over the use of the
Bernice Carpenter, Martha Husted,
field. He ·also volunteered the labor of
Jaycees for helping with establishment ·Dorothy Woo!lard, Annette Knight,
of the new track area at the high school. · Mildred Long and Grace Drake. The'
Mrs. Jeanne Slawter addressed the
total pay will amount to about $8,051. it
hoard on new legislation which requires was reported.
additional education service personnel.
(Continued on page 12)

Law catches up
with gun thief

Meigs
Property
Transfers

Plus

State Fire Marshal Frank Eisnaugle, Jackson, today began
a probe Into Mooday evening's lire which gutted the sanctuary
of Grace United Methodist Church.
Estimated damage to the 101 year-old portion of Gallipolis'
largest church building is between· three-quarters of a million
and tt million according to Rev. James V. Frazier, pastor.
It was the second major fire in the old French City within
live months. The old Queen Bee Hotel was destroyed by fire on
Feb. 20.
One church official said it will take approximately $1 ¥..
m!Won to replace thai part of the edifice damaged Monday
evening. The structure was insured for $1.3 million by the
Wiseman Agency.
.lull two yean ago an exteoslve $%%5,000 remodell!lg project
was completed on the front portion of the church which housed
the bulloess office, parlor, chapel, conference room and

'1200

Announcement was made
todoy by Congressman
Clarence E. Miller and the
Fanners
Home
Ad·
ministration that approval
has been given for a $268,000
loon and a $150,000 grant to
the Gallia County Rural
Water Association.
1be new loan and grant will_
be used for an extension of
tlie existing rural water
system, ren9vatton of the
plant, installation of 42 new
miles of water lines and
construction of a new well.
The extension will allow for .
an additional 248 customers
increasing the system to 2,800
customers.
The loan will run 40 years
at 5 pet. per year according to
Association President Ish·
mae! Gillespie.

"R"

Church fire loss may top $1 million

Bulavllle Christian Church
near Gallipolis. Burial will be
Mrs. SUsan Marie Potts , 59,
In Rlie Cern etery .
Friends may call from 2·4 Route I, Scottown , Ohio,
and 7·9 p.m. Tuesday at the formerly of Syracuse, died
McColough Funeral Home, Sunday evening at Holzer
Xenia and from noon Wed· Medical Center .
Mrs. Potts was born June 2,
nesday until the hour of . the
services at the church.
. 1918 In Middleport, the
daughter of the iate Mr . and
Mrs. 'Charles Lambert. She
was alsorr~ceded in death by
MINA AMOS
her firs husband, Melvin
Mlna Leona Amos, 77. a Lee.
resident of Rodney, died at 4
Surviving are 11er husband ,
p.m. Saturday In Shelby Clarence
Potts, Jr .. and three
Hospital, Marle.tta.
stepchildren .
She was born March 23,
Funeral services will be
1900, In Cheshire, daughter of held
at 2 p. m. Wednesday at
the late Asburg and Elizabeth the Ra'wllngs.Coats
Funeral
Winegar Hood.

grant are .

.

attended a private religious
eervlce at Camp David, aloog
with aome 30 stalfent at t.he
mountain retreat Sunday, a
spokesman said.
Mrs .
Carter,
after
returning lo WashlnJlton,
then flew to Phoenix, Arb.
and the start of a weeldong
trip that includes stops ln San
Francilco and Hmolulu.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

---------------------------,
! . Area Deaths · !

~

I
By United Press lnteruatlonal
LOCUST GROVE, OKl.A. - IN T!!E WEEK since three
Girls ScOuts were sexually molested and murdered, officers
have interviewed more than 100 persons, administered a hall·
dozen polygraph tests- and searched the murder· site with
trained dogs.
· ·
·
They have made no arrests, but one of the men in charge of
the investigation · says the officers are getting closer to
determining a suspect. "Every day that we proceed we are
getting closer. There has never been a period that it hasn't
been more productive as we go along," District Attorney Sid
Wise said Sunday. "Every day we are discovering new lhlngs
to look at and analyze and interpret."

strength "is obviously a
WASHINGTON (UPI) Declaring that his hwnan matter that has no relatim at
rights policy " will not be all to the human r ights
changed," President Carter commitment," and asked :
has responded sharply to a "How does it serve the cause
chorge in the Soviet of human rights for the
new!lpllper Pravda that his Soviets to be attributing
campaign is designed to motives like this to us ?"
cover a new· U.s . arms
The Communist party
newspaper said in its weekly
buildup.
Hill camp~~ign, Carter said , international review that
is im embarrosament to the "many
reports
from
Soviet Union "and to ather Washington" concern new
countries with totalitarian weapons programs, which it
saw as evidence the United
goverrunents."
"Our commitment to States is " preparing the
human rights Is independent ground for another dangerous
of other motives and wtll not spiral of the arms race ."
"Apparently the noisy
be changed," said Carter oo
. arrival at the White House campaign around human
from a weekend at Camp rights is called upon to cover
up quite different designs
David, Md., late Sunday.
He said U.S. military than defense of those rights,"
Pravda said.
Carter said the human
rights campaign "dramatizes
the issue and has aroused the
awareness of the human
I · rights question by all national
auto accident near Cheshire leaders."
In 1950. Her first ·husband
Carter scheduled a series of
died In 1940.
meetings this week to lay the
The marrJed Everette
groundwork for converting
Amos In 19~3 . He preceded the government to zero-based
her in death In 1966.
Spe spent most of her life in budgeting.
After relaxipg with his
the Cheshire community . She
was a cook in the Cheshire family at Camp David during
schools for more than 10
the Father's Day weekend,
years.
Carter
will participate during
Mrs. Amos was active in
the week in a series of budget
the senior citizens and was a
member of the Rodn ey meetings designed to. help
Methodl•t Church. She had familiarize him with some of
been In Lowell the past two
months. Alter bacomlng Ill the specific needs of the
various government
last Wednesday , she was
hosp italized. ·
departments and agencies.
Funeral services wlll be 2
The sessions, in the long
p.m. Tuesday at Miller's run will help Carter plan the
Home for Funerals with Rev.
'
strategy necessary m
Dameron Stapleton
of ficiating. Burial will be In convertin~ the government to
·Gravel
Hill
Cemetery .
zero-based budgeting.
Friends may call at the
Carter has a late afternoon
funeral home after 4 p.m.
meeting
today
with
today and up until the hour of
Democratic Party Leader
the services.
Kenneth Curti s. A White
House spokesman said it wUI
SUSAN MARIE POTTS

•

Pomeroy 'Council Monday
night took no action on a
request from Howard. Frank,
county auditor, to appropriate additional money to
the Meigs County Health
Department.
Mayor Clarence Andrews
said the money would be used
for salary increases.
The mayor further stated
· · that ot the present ttme the
village is doing work that is
the responsibility of the ·
health department.
Mayor Andr ews asked
councilman Dr. Harold
Brown and Phil Globokar to
meet with Frank, discuss the
problem and get more infonnotion as why the request
was made.
Money for • tjle health
department is outomatically
taken from the semi·annual
apportionments sent to
villages and townships.
Mayor Andrews pointed oat
that In 1978 Pomeroy's share
to the health department was
$5,182.78, in 1975 it was
$5,008.52, and in 1974 it was
$3,11$7.
Harry Davis reported that
the rear end was out of the
International truck. It was
noted that $1,069 was spent on
the vehicle since the latter
part of l9'1fl. Davis is to check
to see if there was a warranty
oo the lm repair of the truck
if not have it repaired by
atikher company.
The signs at th e in·

tersection of Nye Ave., and
East Main Street were again
discussed . Brown asked if
those who have signs in tfie
area have been approached
adding that they are on public
property . Brown is to make
contact in regard to the signs.
Lou Osborne reported that
a lens was out of a flashing
light at Nye Ave., and thatthe
Air Pollution Control Agency
in Charleston; will attend a
meeting at Wahama High
School on June 28, at 7 p.m. in
regard to the coal tipple being
erected on the West Virginia
side across from Middleport.

Flags and s1on_
"'f!&gt;~

still missing
An American Flag and an
Ohio State Flag used by two
pick-up boats during the boat
races, and a magnetic sign
with the words, "Merri Ault,
last year's regatta queen,"
have not been returned to the
Pomeroy
Chamber
of
Com merce office.
Bill Quickel asks that the
fla gs be returned to the
Chamber office or to the
office of the Western &amp; Southem Life Insurance Co. at
once . Anyone havin g in·
formation about the sign
plea se call th e Chal\l.ber
offic~ .a 992-5505.

Osborne also reported that
he has asked Ernest C. Neal
of the Ohio EPA for federa l
ass istance in completing
Pomeroy's sewer system. He
is to be advised by Neal If
money is available.
It was reported that three
parking meters and posts had
been taken from Sycamore
Street.
Attending were Mayor
Andrews, Ralph Werry,
Osborne who opened th e
meeting with prayer, Davis,
Globokar, l.arry Powell, Dr.
Brown, co uricilmen, Jane
Walton, cle rk , Chief Jed
Webster, and Jack Krautter.
Council's next meeting falls
on July 4. Due to the holiday
they will not meet. 1be ne~t
meeting wiU be on July 18
unless the Mayor calls for a
special meeting.

PHRASER DIES
CARMEl., Calif. (UP! ) Fairfax Mastick Cone, the
advertising executive
credited with the phrase
· "Lucky Strike means fine
toabcco," died at his home
Monda y after a long illness.
· He was 74.
Cone, founder and, former
board chairman of Foote,
Cone and Belding - one of
the 10 largest international
advertising agencies
worked in the industry for 48
ye~ rs.

President

of hoard
•

resigD.s
EAST MEIGS - The
resignation
of
board
president David Smith was
accepted by the Eastern
l.ocal School District Board
of Education in recessed
session Monday night. No
cause for Smith's action was
made.
The board has 30 days to
name a replacement for
Smith and if action does not
· take place by then, the BJ&gt;'
pointment will be made by
· the. co unt y board . Doug
.Bissell, vice president; will
not serve as president.
The ·board interviewed
three applicants for the high
school principal's post being
vacated by the retirement of
Chester Gooding. The board
employed J . Clark l.ees, 60,
who has 10 years experience
in administration in the Clea r
Fork District in Bellville.
l.ees will start on Aug. 8.
The board agreed to place a
new II ve mill operating levy
before voters of the district
with Aug. 25 set as the target
-date. The levy would be in
effect for three years. Voters
of the district turned the levy
down at a special election on·
June 7.
Mrs. Eloise Boston, clerk,
was authorized to make
transfer within the approprialions and to request
an advance draw to meet the
June payroll.
The board purchased two
new 66·passenger buses from
the Meigs Equip1/)ent Co.,
(Continued on page 12)

ficer.
When Smith failed to aP'
pear to be sentenced, a bench
warrant was issued . for his
arrest.
.
Smith was transported late
by
Monday
afternoon
Deputies Mike Zirkle and
Dana Aldridge to begin his
term. Also transported to the
Ohio Correctional Medical
and Reception Center at
Columbus were Terry
Brewer, 31 , Portland and
Robert Joe Stewart, 19, Rt. I,
KELLEE BURDETTE
l.angsville.
The sheriff's department
reported the return Monday
evening from the Fairfield
School for Boys, Lancaster,
18-year-old Raymond E.
Brown, Coal Grove, who is
Kellee Jo Burdette, Paula
charged with the March 27
June
Eichinger and June Ann
::;:·:::::::·:·:::::::·:·:·:;:·:·:;:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:;:::::::·:::;:·:::;:;:::;: theft of a 1971 Mustang owned
W
amsley
are recipients of the
by John Tillis, Rt. 1, Reeds·
SQUAD CAl.LED
1977
Health
Caree rs
ville.
The .Middleport E·R
Scholarships
awarded
by the
Brown and a juvenile ,
Squad was called MondJ!y
Meigs
County
March
of
escapees from the Fairfield
at 10:44 a.m. to the office of
School for Boys at the time, Dimes.
Dr. J. J. Davis for Hazel · allegedly brought a stolen car · Each of these young women
Stone who was taken to
from Enterprise (Hocking will receive $300 during their
Holzer Medical Center. · · County) and abandoned it a first year of training lor a
profession in the health field.
:·:·:·:·:·:::::·:::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::·::: . short distance south of the
These
sc holarships are
Tillsi residence on SR 7 north
awarded
by the local March
SQUAD CAl.l.ED
of Eastern High School.
of
Dimes
organization to
The Middleport E·R Squad
The Tillis auto was
was called Monday at 10:44 recovered several days later encourage young people in
a.m. to the office of Dr. J . J. in Clark County as the careers that will give them a
Davis for Hazel stone who juveniel was driving; chance to help prevent birth
was taken to Holzer Medical however, Brown fled officers defects.
During the past months
Center. At 12:15 p.m. Leah on loot. Brown is scheduled
applications· for this award
Weddle, Harrisonville, who for court Friday morning.
have been collected and the
had stopped at town hall was
taken to Holzer Medical
final decision was made this
Center. At 5:23 p.m. the :·:·:·:· :·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·::;.;.;·:·:·:·:::::·:::::·:·:·:·~·:·:.:.;.;.:::: :::::· month by members of the
tanker truck was called to
March of Dimes board.
SECOND MEETING
assist with a fire on the Grace
All three of the scholarship
Middleport Mayor recipients hav e been acMehtodist Churc.h comer of
Hoffman was Informed cepted at universities and
Second and Cedar Streets,
today by lhe Air Pollution will begin classes this SeP'
Gallipolis.
Control Commission of tember. June Wamsley and
West Virginia another (the Kellee Jo Burdette plan to
second) public meeting to earn bachelor of science
bear vtews on the proposed degrees in nursing at Ohio
Zuspan coal barge facility State University . Paula
Clear tonight, lows in the
at
Clifton, W. Va., wfil be Eichinger will attend Capital
upper 50s. Cloudier, wanner
held
ln the Wahama Hlgb University where she hopes
Wednesday, highs In the mid
School
gymnasium to ea rn a B.S. and become a
80s.
Probability
of
Tuesday,
June
28 beginning nurse anesthetist.
precipitation near zero per
at 7 p.m.f
cent today and tonight, 20 per
All three wqmen were
cent Wednesday.
·:·:·:::::::::·:·:::::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·::::;.;:::;.;:;.;.;.;::.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:• members of tll'e National
A rural Meigs County man,
released last year pending a
pre-sentencing investigation
after conviction of stealing a
gun, has been sentenced to
one to 10 years in a co.rec·
tiona! Institution by Common
Pleas Court Judge John C.
Bacon according to Sherilf
James J. Proffitt.
Jackie Lee Smith, 24, Rt. I,
Albany, was picked up in
Athens County last Saturday
night and returned to Meigs
County where he went before
Judge Bacon to be sentenced.
Smith had been charged
last year with theft of a gun,
had entered a guilty plea, and
was released pending his presentence investigation by a
State Parole-Probation Of.

Weathe~

'

't ·
PAULA EICHINGER

March of Dimes scholarships
awarded to three Meigs women

JUNE WAMSLEY
Honor Society during high
school and showed ability in
biology and physical science
courses.
·
II an y of them are
prevented from using their
scholarship funds the unused
portion may pass to an
alternate candidate who has
been chosen . She is Brenda
Sue Lawrence of Portland a
graduate of Southern High,
who aiSO&gt;t. plans to eWn a
degree In nursing .

�•
2- The Datly Sent mel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Tuesday June 21 1977

:lrezltnev, d 'Estaing debate on arms
By ARTHUR IJIGBEE
A
spokesman
said
PARIS (UPI } - Sov et Brezhnev expressed concern
leader Leonid Brezhnev and that President Carter s
French Prestdent Valery statement s about Soviet
Gtscard d Estamg squared observance of hwnan .nghts
off today m a blunt debate tn threaten to restart the Cold
whtch
Brezhnev
satd War
disarmament talks w th the
Glscard said JUst as bluntly
Umted States are gett ng that real detente means
nowhere and accused France respect for human nghts But
of ltptoemg back mto the bnefmgs by press spokesmen
U S led North Atlanuc after the two leaders 212
hour verbal exchange m
Treaty Orgamzat10n

tomato alright

grow m low-actd foods and

offtctals said some wrtters
had warned that yellow
orange and small tomatoes
were too low m actd to be safe
for home canrung

But spokesmen said today
that followmg a two-year
study
sctenltsts have
concluded that new tomato
varieties are no lower m actd
than older types
And what the public has
been told about yellow
orange and small tomatoes
bemg low m actd and not
suitable for home canmng Is a
faUacy offtctals satd Small
and ltghtcolored vartelles
actually tend to have more
actd than other types they
srud
Some high-actd tomatoes
may taste sweet But that
may be caused by a high
sugar content not by low
actdity experts noted
U home canners are careful
to avotd over-rtpe or decayed
frutt and If they follow
approved canning
procedures vtrtually aU
currently available tomatoes
have enough acid to prevent
of
botultsm
growth
organisms offlctals satd
Millions of Amencans eat
homHanned tomatoes One
Agrtculture Department
survey recently mdlcated

that about one out of every
four households In the natiOn
canned tomatoes m 1975
Offtctals srud the actdlty
study headed by Dr Gerald
Sspers a research sctenttst
at the department s Eastern
Reg onal Research Center
Wyndmoor Pa mdicated
there has been no conSlstent
change n actdity m tomato
vartettes Introduced m the
past 25 years The studies
checked 350 vartettes and
more than 200 current
breed ng ltnes
Offtclals satd only four
vartettes were found too low
m actd to be reconunended
for home cannmg One
Garden State ts no longer
commercially avatlable
spokesmen satd
The other three -Ace Ace
55 VF and cal Ace - were
developed for commercial
farmers productng tom a toes
for fresh markets
One expert satd there was
no way home canners buytng
tomatoes could tdentify the
three Ace vartety tomatoes
and noted that the plants also
are offered to home
gardeners In some catalogs
Consumers who want
extra msurance that home
canned

tomatoes

reacted matter-of factly to
G1scard s r ema rks about

detente
The French president satd
detente must
tnclud e
moderation n the conflict of
deolog es respect for human
rights not mterference m
detente must be worldwtd~
Soviet spokesman Leon d
Zem attn told reporters that
these four prmctples are
just one httle part of many
other pr nc pies embodted m
the Hels nkt agreement of
1975 wh ch we stgned and
whtch we respect He quoted

Brezhnev as saymg

so far

w th U S Secretary of State
Cyrus Vance and subsequent

which may lead to a new Cold
War
Zamtaltn
tndlcated
Brezhnev wsa talking about

diplomat c exchanges It t.s

Pres dent Carter s crLhcJsm

as concerns the recent talks

not posstble at thts ttme to of the Soviet handling of
th nk that any progress has pol tt cal dtss dents
been ach eved
n the
Brezhnev Zamtat n sa d
Strategic Arms Lim tat10n
expressed hts preoccupatiOn
w th France s tncreased
Talks
Brezhnev Zam1atin sa1d cooperat on wtth NATO
told Gtsca rd that reduction of France withdrew ts milttary
offensive weapons must forces from NATO m 1966
follow the 1974 Valdtvostok
The spokesman satd
accord
based on full Brezhnev was worried about
equality of states Zanuatm statements by French of
also sa d that Brezhnev ftcers that In the event of war
condemned certain Western France would feel free to
policy moves wh ch do not ftght on allted soil outs de Its
help detente and contradict own borders
the Helsinki agreement
Wtth whom ' Brezhnev
Asked what Brezhnev wsa quoted as demandmg
meant by thts Zamtatm satd French spokesman Jean
the Carter Admmtstratton ts Phtlippe Lecat sa d G scard
no longer wagmg merely an replied evenly that France
tdeologtcal contest but ts
follows an mdependent
wagmg an tdeologtcal war defense poilcy

enough actdtty can add one
fourth teaspoon of cltr c actd
or one tablespoon of bottled
lemon JUICe per pmt of
tomatoes when cannmg the
department satd
The department report
warned strongly against
trymg to can decayed or over
npe tomatoes or tomatoes
from dead vines because they
can be exceptionally low 10
actd

Lawrence E Lamb, M D

Skin ulcer on foot
The older cells m~grate to the
surface and are flaked off
The reptiles shed the old skin
A cancer ts nothing more
than the normal cell growth
gone wild Let s say tt ts a
cancer of the liver The ltver
cells mvolved become abnormal m that they rapidly
reproduce and the new cells
are dtfferent from the
ortgmal cell structure of liver
cells Usually the greater the
difference ts the more mahg
nant the cancer wtll be
This cancer would be a
pnmary cancer of the liver
If some of the abnormal cells
are carr ed by the blood or
lymph to dtstant parts of the
body they can start another
area of cancer growth there
The cells m this new area wtll
be surular or even tdenltcal to
the cancer cells m the liver
This ts a metastasis or spread
of cancer When a pathologtsl
looks at the cancer ltssue
regardless of where the ltssue
comes from he can usually
tell where the onglnal or
prtmary cancer started
We know there are many
different things that can
cause nontllll cells to become
abnormal and start the wtld
growth pattern Tars as found
m ctgarette smoke ts one ex
ample Radiatton ts another
example At least m some
animal expertments virus m
fecttons can be a factor Apparently anything that upsets
the cell s normal reproduc
!ton cycle is capable of tng
germg cancer growth That ts
why cancer may be several
different diseases and may be
caused by many factors
Because of the volume of
matl Dr Lamb cannot
answer your letters personal
ly but he wtll answer
representative letters of
general tnlerest m his col
umn Wnte to htnn m care of
this newspaper P 0 Box
1551 Radto qty Statton New
York New York 10019

By SARA FRITZ
WASHINGTON iUPI}
Conswner prtces rose 0 6 per
c"nt m May reflecting some
mOO.eration m the recent
surge of food pnces the
Labor Department reported
today
May s mcrease translated
mto a 7 2 per cent annual
rate somewhat lower than
tbe monthly average smce

the beginning of 1977 Prtces
have been rtsmg at an annual
rate of nearly 10 per cent
s nee January
But the May mllalton rate
was still constderably htgher
than average mcreases m the
last hall of 1976 and offered
little comfort to Amencan
consumers
The 0 6 per cent rtse m May

Court charged with returning
to days of backroom butcher
By CYNTHIA MIJL&lt;;
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Opponents say the Supreme
Court s rulmg that states
need

not

fund

elective

abortions for poor women
stgnals a return to the
backroom butcher But
antiabortiOn groups call tl a
ftrst step to vtctory
The dectston unleashed a
storm of emot10nal reaction
from all stdes m the
continumg clash over the
abortion Issue

Rep Henry Hyde R 111
sponsor of a law which bars
federal spendmg for most
abortions sad Mondays

rulmg gtves htm conftdence
the JUstices will uphold tIn a
pendmg case
Advocates of ltberaltzed
laws satd they would
concentrate on blockmg In
the Senate a Housepassed
amendment that would not
even allow federal funding
for aborllons needed to save a
mothers life
Joseph Raub of Amertcans
for Democrattc Action called
Monday s rulmg a natwnal
tragedy forcmg poor women
mto back alleys for thetr
aborttons The Amencan
Civtl Liberttes Uruon satd 11
was
among the worst
decisions by a SUpreme Court

genera11y msens ttve to ftghtmg the House passed
mdtvtdual rtghts
Jegtslahon
A Planned Parenthood
Congress can no longer
off eta! satd the court count on the court to take us
elimmated m !973 a two- off the hook he srud Were
class system of med1cal care gomg to have a floor fight no
m aborlton - one for the matter what we do
affluent who could often fmd
The Senate Approprwhons
ways and means to obtain Commtttee voted II to 0
safe abortions even when t Monday to make no
was tUegal and one for the recommendation to the full
poor who so often fell vtctun Senate on the amendment
to the backroom butcher
hut dectded afterwards to
Sen Bob Packwood R reconstder Its stand later
Ore satd the court dectston
The Supreme Court ruled 6
was
so
unfatr
ami to 3 a state cannot be forced
discriiillJI8tory agamst poor under the Soctal Securtty Act
women that 11 may help or the Constitution to fmance
rather than hurt those elective aborhons for
Medtcatd paltents even
though
tt
substdtzes
childbirth for needy women
It said lower courts whtch
held tn Connecticut and
Pennsylvama cases that
states must fund aborttons

Cathloics straying from

have

HEALTH

By Lawrence E Lamb, M D
DEAR DR LAMB - Is
there any cure for a skin
ulcer which Is the result of
poor ctrculation• The ulcer ts
on the top of my husband s
foot at the ankle area He ts a
vtctim of strokes
DEAR READER - What
needs to be done depends entirely on what ts causing the
ulcer I suspect from Its loca
lion that tt ts caused by
vancose vems nol from m
adequate blood flow through
the artenes to the foot If tt ts
artenal disease the bottom of
the foot or the toes are more
often affected ftrst
Vartcose ulcers of the ankle
area are a comphcation of
vartcose vems The best approach ts to decrease the
pooling of blood m the lower
part ol the foot by usmg support stockings or elasttc ban
dages Another solution ts to
get the foot up above the
heart level so that the vems
drain down hill toward the
heart If a person can stay m
bed enough that wt11
sometimes help heal such an
ulcer The problem Ill that the
bed rest can be harmful too
A good compronuse Is to
wrap the foot or put on effec
live suport hose before gel
ling out of bed and then when
sitting up keep the foot
elevated as much as posstble
To gtve you more tnforma
lion a bout the treatment of
vancose ulcers and the role
of surgery m vanocose vams
I am sending you The Health
Letter number H others
who want this Information
can aend 50 cents wtth a long
stamped
self addressed
envelope for It
DEAR DR LAMB - What
exactly 11 cancer? What act.ually causes 11 •
DEAR READER - Our
cells are capable of reproducmg themselves Your skm IS a
good41bmple Theikin cells
constantly produce new cells

spo kesman sa d Brezhnev

other countries mternal
affa rs and a recogmtlon that

Small, light
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Home canners preparutg to
put up tomatoes thts
swruner can use new small
and hghtcolored tomato
varlettes wtthout fear of
nsklng deadly botulism food
potsomng the Agnculture
Department says
Botulism orgarusms can

dicated nellher took offense
at the others remarks
Followmg the second of
three daily sess10ns of talks
at Rambowllet castle south
west of Parts a Sovtet

Consumers get
small relief

for

traditional sex teaching
By PATRICIA McCORMACK
UP! Health Editor
NEW YORK (UPI) - A
fouryear study of sexual
practtces among Roman
Cathohcs m the Umted States
mdlcates mcreasmg nwnbers
of them are turnmg away
from tradtltonal church
teachmgs and have taken

charge of thetr own sex
The study was launched
l ves
four years ago by the catholic
In addthon to the Theologtcal Soctety of Amerl
wtdespread lay revolt agatnst ca s Comrruttee on Hwnan
traditton the report ctted Sexualtty tn the face of what
another survey mdtcatmg Stster Agnes CUnnmgham
only a small percentage of soctety prestdent called a
Amertcan priests now are masstve breakdown of
wtlhng to support the Catholtc adherence to
church s absolute ban on tradtltonal church
btrth control
teachmgs
Sister Agnes and four other
theologtans authored the
report and stded wtth the
dlsstdents
No prtest
btshop
archbtshop cardinal - not
even a pope - can Interfere
wtth the relahonsbtp between
a person hts well mformed
daughter Sandra L Likens consctence and hts God on
were all taken to Pleasant sexual matters the report
Valley Hospital for treatment concluded
of vistb)e tn]Urles Mrs
Sister Agnes srud she and
Likens was admttted for a leg her fellow autbors do not
mjury and lacerations She ts constder
the
report
m Satisfactory condttlon
controverstal even though t
Both
vehtcles
were breaks wtth tradtttonal
demolished Gabntsch was doctrme on such things as
charged wtth DWI
arttfictal contraceptton and
A deer was killed m an premarttal sex which she
acctdent at 12 15 a m today satd at hmes can be
m Metgs County four tenths morally JUS!ifted
of a m le west of SR 7 The
Not all would agree on the
aruma! ran mto the path of a pomt of controversy
car operated by Dallas K
Observers at the Vatican
Weber 55 Rutland
smd Pope Paul VI ts believed
to have had the report m
mind Monday when he told
nearly
100
Amertcan
cardmals and btshops to
beware of challenges to the
teachmg of sexual morality
And Cardmal Wtlham
Baum of Washmgton DC
head of the Bishops Doctrme
Committee satd his group ts
preparmg a
detatled
of
the
study
analysts
Lemme E Neal Wanda L
The
authors
said
Neal to Jack L Neal Joan E
questtons
and
crises
occur
Neal Lot Pomeroy
Paul E Smtth Donna J these days among both
Smtih to Paul E Smith laymen and pastors 'but
Donna J Smith Lot Mid most laymen accordmg to
the theologians already
dleport
Robert R Moore to Robert have taken charge of thetr
Cunmngham Sharon Cun own sex hves
Some of the proof ctted
nmgham I 006 acres Sutton
- Etghty ftve per cent of
Estil Johnson aka Estel L
Uruted
States Catholics reJect
Johnson Reva Johnson to
the
church
s offtctal teaching
Mtchael L Johnson Ann Y
on birth control
Johnson 35 acre Salem
- Forty-three per cent of
Thomas L Moore Wanda
Amertcan
Catholtcs now apJ Moore to Shtrley Btshop
prove
of
premarttal
sexual
Parcels Rutland
mtercourse for engaged cou
pies
A study among
Amertcan
prtests
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
commtsstoned by
the
Thursday through
Nattonal Cottnell of catholic
Salurdoy 1 chan.e of
Btshops showed only a
obowen In western Ohio
mtnortty are wtlhng to
Thursday and the entire
support the church s offtctal
state Friday and Satorday
teaching on birth control
HiJbs mostly wftl be In the
The study wllJ be published
IIIIo and Jowo ta the 50s or
Thursday by the Paultst
low 60s Thursday and Ia the
Press under the !ttle
60s Friday and Satorday
Human Sexualtty New
Dtrectlons.: tn Amertcan
catholic Thought

Mason men in
stable condition
Two Mason County men are
listed In stable condthon at
the Holzer Medtcal Center
where they were admttted
followmg a headon collisiOn
at II 10 p m Monday on SR 7
just below the entrance to the
Stiver Bridge Shoppmg
Plaza
Donald A Gabrttsch 20
Rt I Pomt Pleasant and
Davtd A Carhsle 20 Rt I
Henderson

are listed

1n

stable condition tn the
hospital s Intenstve Care
Umt
Gabrttsch drtver of one of
the cars mvolved suffered
mult pie facta! abrastons and
contustons Carlisle had
facta! lacerattons and con
tustons A thtrd person m the
Gabrttsch car Joseph R
Carltsle 16 Rt I Henderson
was treated and released for
facta!
contustons and
abrasions
Accordmg to the Gallta
Metgs Post State Highway
Patrol an auto drtven north
by Gabrttsch ran off the
rtght stde of the htghway
strtkmg an auto operated by
Granville L Likens 30 Rt I
GaUJpobs headon
Likens hts wtfe Betty 27
and their six year old

Meigs
Property

Transfers

poor

women

ffilstnterpreted a landmark
1973 declSlon striking down
most anltaborhon Jaws
That optmon dtd not
declare an unquahfted
constttuttonal rtght to
abortton the majortty said
A state may make
childbirth a more attractiVe
alternahve tl said without
mterfermg unduly With a
woman s freedom to have an
abortton
She contmues as before to
be dependent on private
sources for the servtce she
destres It said
The court also ruled tn
favor of St Lows offtctals
who had been ordered by a
lower court to provtde
abortions for poor women m a
ctty hospital staffed by
Roman catholics
Over 250 000 abortions a
year are federally substdlzed
at a cost of $40 nullion to $50
million Funding continues
pending Supreme Court
actton dn the Hyde
amendment whtch may
come Within a week

Methodists
• •
giVIng

more

to church
LAKESIDE Ohio (UP!) East Ohto Conference Uruted
Methodist Church members
contributed $32 3 million thts
past year to the work of thetr
denommation an mcrease of
$1 7 million over the prevtous
year tt was announced today
The contrtbuttons were
part of fmanctal reports
presented to delegates
attendmg
the
annual
conference at Lakestde s
Hoover Audttortum
Thomas A Letzler Stow
conference treasurer satd
the per capita glvmg of local
church members now stands
at $121 56 an mcrease of $8 45
per member m the past year
Although ftnanctal
mcreases were made
membership tn the 920 local
Umted Methodist churches
decreased durmg the -}'ear
accordmg
to Wtlllam
Heffelfmger of Lodt the
conference statistlctan He
S81d conference membershtp
now stands at 266 380 4 517
lower than last year
Featured speaker at
today s sesston of the
conference meeting was to be
Rev C Davtd Wrtght
supermtendent of
the
Cambridge Dlstrtct He was
to present the traditional
State of the Church mesaage
on behalf of dtslrtcl
supermtendents

compared to mcreases of 0 6
m March 0 8 per cent m April
and January and I per cent
last February
Food pr1ces rose a
moderate 0 7 per cent m May
less than hall the mcrease
recorded m April This was
attributed prunmrly to a
sharp 13 5 per cent declme m
vegetable prices
Fuel pnce mcreases also
were more moderate m May
Non-food commodites rose 0 4
per cent for the third stratght
month and service costs
clunbed 0 7 per cent
The Consumer Prtce Index
stood at 180 6 m May
reflecting a 6 7 per cent
mcrease over the past year
This means that goods and
servtces costmg $100 m 1967
now cost $180 60
Food and fuel prtces have
led the nation s accelerated
mflattOn rate since the
begmmng of the year But
excluding food and energy
ttems prtces also rose 0 6 per
cent m May
Although grocery prices
moderated durmg May ad
mlnlstralton economtsts
expect theae food ttems will
not begm to show any
stgnftcant decline until the
end of the sununer Thus
mflation ts expected to
continue at an accelerated
pace through the next few
months
In addition to the raptd
decline m vegetable prices
frutts eggs and beef costs
also declined m May Coffee
nonetheless contined to rtse
Also mcreasmg were poultry
datry products fats oils
pork and sugar
Among the other com
modities new car prtces rose
0 9 per cent reflecting m
creases m the manufacturers
Jist prtce But thts was offset
by a I 3 per cent drop m used
cars
Gasolme and motor oil
prtces rose 0 8 per cent about
the same as Aprtl but
considerably less than m
other months thts year
Clothmg
prtces
also
me rea sed
As usual medtcal and trarr
sportation costs led the increases among servtces both rtsmg 0 9 per cent
Hospital charges continued to
cltnnb along with local trallSlt
fares Mortgage mterest
rates rose 0 5 per cent
Desptte mcreasmg prtces
the real spendable earnings
of the natton s average
worker mcreased a sltght 0 1
per cent durmg May
On thts day m history
In 1945 Japanese defenders
of
Okmawa
Island
surrendered to Amertcan
troops

Carter
visits
leaders
WASffiNGTON (UP! ) President Carter convinced
his relationship With capttol
Hill ts Jmprovmg plans to
spend mcreasmg amowtts of
ltme wtth members of
Congress particularly the
leaderstup according to a top
at de
Carter lllVlted the leaders
to breakfast today In their
regular weekly meetmg and
planned to meet later wtth
Speaker Thomas 0 Neill Jr
and Senate Democratic
Leader Robert Byrd
The a t d e characterized
carter s attitude about his
congressional relattons as
netther overly optimistic nor
overly pesslOUSsttc
He always has felt be
would be more successful (In
dealing wtth Congress} than
the public predictions and a
Jot less successful than he
would like to be the atde
satd
Carter suffered a sertes of
setbacks m recent weeks
partiCularly
on
hts
comprehenstve energy
package but also hts
consumer advocacy btll
which appears dead for thiS
year But he rebounded wtth
vtgor In recent days
The House voted to
continue the water projects
that Carter wants to kllJ but
by so narrow a margm tt
would be unable to overturn a
veto The House Agrtculture
Commtltee voted
overwhelmingly for carter s
plan for free food stamps for
the poor
The House Ways and
Means Committee approved
his proposed wellhead tax on
crude otl a key part of the
energy program The Senate
Rules Comm1ttee approved
public financmg of senatortal
elecltons
and
House
Democrats agreed on
amendments to a modifted
voter registration bill
It would be a mistake to
assume everythmg was
rosy the rude satd but the
perceptions leading Into last
week had been far too
peSStmlstiC
The atde said carter would
continue hts sertes of
frequent mornmg meetings
wtth groups of congressmen
and woilld spend mcreaslng
amounts of hts personal ttme
wtth them espectally tbe
leadership
A crowd chanting Juruny
keep your promtseS stop the
Bl bomber
remmded
carter Monday of another
declSlon he must make by the
end of June - whether to
butld the controverstal
supersomc military plane

term in office
reltgtous meantng of our
socteties he satd
The text of hts message was
released m the Israeli capital
after Begtn appealed m
Parliament for negoltations
wtth the Arabs to end the
Mtddle East conflict
Begtn describing the
Carter message as a very
warm letter told reporters
earlier Carter had Invited
him to Washington July 18
and he would go
He added, I express my
gratitude on behall of my
colleagues m the govenunent
and myself to Prestdent
Carter for his congratulations
of
hts
and
warmth
conunumcations
The Carter message was
disclosed after Begin won a
vote of confidence tn ParUa
ment and urged peace
negottations wtth the Arabs
Much blood too much
has been shed tn the region
Jewish and Arab Begm told
the Knesset (parliament) at
the start of a bitter eight-hour
debate that climaxed in a 6353 vote of conftdence just
after midnight
Let us put an end to the
hateful bloodshed
Begm went to outgoing
Prime Mtnister Yltzhak
Rabin s office this mormng to
toast Rabin with a goblet of
red wme and take the reins of
power aa Israel s first ~on
Labor party prime mlnilter
To the life of the people of
Israel and to continued fr'
dom he said In his toast

•

*~z

Kaat stops Reds, 10-4
PHILADELPHIA (UP!) Until Monday night Jtnn
Kaat was feelmg like excess
baggage
Kaat
pitched
the
Pluladelplna Philltes to a 10-4

By WESLEY G PIPPERT

Begin beginning

By ALLEN ALTER
JERUSALEM (UP!)
Rtght-wmg leader Menahem
Begm took over as prmne
mimster
today
and
announced he has recetved a
very warm message from
President carter tnvtting htm
to Washington to hear hiS
tdeas on peace wtth the
Arabs
carter s message satd he
wanted to JOin With Begm m
a partnersbtp of pnnclple
and added
I am deeply
comnutted to helpmg Israel
and tis netghbors seek a
lastmg peaceful resolutton to
the confltct between them
I am sure that this ts an
obJective I share With you
the President satd I woilld
welcome your tdeas on how
progress towards peace can
be achieved
The message delivered by
U S Ambassador Samuel
Lewis congratulated Begin m
taking office and offered tbe
best wishes of the American
people for the success of your
goverrunent
Gtven the depth and range
of our mutual mterests I
believe It unportant that we
meet at an early date to
establish a personal relation
ship and exchange vtews on
the negotiation of a peace
settlement and on other
matters of mutual concern
Carter said
We both are blessed with
the hiltorlc opportunity to
give ~ substance to the

••
•

3-TheDallySentmel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Tuesday June21 !977

wm over

Clnctnnau breaking
a nmegame losmg streak
aga tnst the Reds that dated
back to last season
It was Kaat s ftrst complete
Rome of the year

~
BASEBALL

another reprieve

PI Sbgh

By RICHARD L SHOOK
UPl Sports Writer
DETROIT (UP!) - It was
a sober and seemmgly
chastened Btlly Martm who
faced a barrage of reporters
and televlSion sportscasters
Monday mght after bemg
granted hts second reprteve
U1 SIX weeks as manager
when club Prestdent Ga be
Paul talked Yankees owner
George Stembrenner out of
ftnng htm
But tt was a reheved
Martm who faced reporters
after Mark Ftdrych of tbe
Detrott Tigers tumbled hts
team to ts fourth straight
loss wtth a three-btl 2-1
VICtory
Wasn t that mce • he
asked notmg the standing
ovatton Detro t fans gave him
when he brought out the

33~5327

18
27
Wesl
W
44
34

Los Ang

36
35

438
435

3

l

Pet
667
540
463
443
48
3 48

GB

22

3

C nc
19
San F an
3 36
San D ego
3 39
Houston
28 39
AI anla
23 43
Monday s Resu ts
AI anta a N Y ppd
an
Houston 6 Mon ree 3
Ph ade ph a 0 C nc nna 4
Ch 0 San Fran 9 12 nns
P sburgh 5 San D ego 3
Los Ange es 9 S Lou s 3
Today s Probab e P tche s
(AI T mes EDT)
Hous on
(Fo sch
44
a
Mon ea
Roge s 8 s
7 35

pm

C nc nnat
Ph &amp;de Ph a

pm

Moskau 0 0 a
Le ch 5 1 7 35

A an a Messe sm h 4 3 a
New Yo k Esp nosa 4 4 8 05

pm

P I sburgh Cande a a 7 2 a
San 0 ego Jones 4 7
0p m
S Lou s Denny 7 2 a L os
Angees Rau61l 0 JOpm
Ch cago Krukow 5 .&lt;1 a San
Franc sco
Cu s
1
10 35

pm

Wednesdays Games
at San F anc sco
Hous on at Mon rea n ght
At an a a New Yo k n gh
C nc at Ph ade ph a n gh
Sf Lou s lit Los Ang n ght
P tsbu gh a San D ego n gh
Ch cage

Amer can League
Boson

Bat me
New Yo k
Cleve nd
Mlw

De o
To on o

East
W l
38 25
35 29

Pet
603

GB

36 30

547
545

3
3

W L

Pet

GB

556
554

29 31 483 7
335470 8
28 35 444 10
2.4 38 387 3
West

Ch cago

35 28

M nn
Ca f

36 29
3 30

Texas
Kan C ty
Oakland

3 30
3 32
29 34

508
492
460

Seat e

3

443

39

508

3
3
4
6

7

Mondays Results
C eve 8 To onto 5
nn s
Boston 4 Ba more 0
Detro t 2 New Yo k
Seat e 4 Kansas C ty 2
Texas 2 M nnesota
Oak and 7 Ch cago
Today s Probable P tchers
(A IT mes EDT
Sea t e Abbo 3 6 a Kan sas
C y (Co born 7 7 8 30 p m
Texas
A exander 6 3
a
M nneso a CZahn 6 5 8 30 p m
Cal forn a
Ryan 9 6
at
Ch cago S one 7 5) 8 30 p m
New York
Gu dry 5 2 a
Del o I Rozema 6 3 8 p m
C eve and
Wa s J 0
at
To on o (Ga v n 7 4
30 p m
Boson
Tan 4 S at Ba
t mo e D Ma t nez 6 4 1 30

pm

Oakland
M wauke e

pm

M che
oo a
S a on 5 6
8 30

Wednesdays Games
Boston a Ba mo e n gh
c eveland a Toronto n ght
New York a Del o t n gh
Oak and a M waukee n gh
Ca fo n a a Ch cago n gh
Texas a M nneso a n gh
Sea I eat Kansas C y n gh

Suit named
PR director
NEW ORLEANS ( UPI}
Greg Sutt who served as
sports mformatton dtrector at
the Umvers ty of New
Or leans for four years has
been named assistant public
rela !tons director for the New
Orleans Samts
Hts appomtment was an
nowtced Monday by Jerry
Wynn the Samts pubhc rela
!tons director
SUit 28 produced four
pubhcat10ns whtch won
nat onal awards whtle at
UNO In additton he served
as asststan\ to the athletic
director
A native of Cinctnnalt Swt
graduated from Mtamt
(Ohio) Umverstty where he
was sports editor of the
student newspaper for three
years He was a reporter for
the Mtddletown (Ohw)
JoUi nal for 18 months after
his graduatton

Rock Springs
splits with
Mason team

In Independent Baseball
League actton Sunday Rock
Spnngs spht a doubleheader
w th host Mason County In
the f rst game Rock Sprmgs
plated ftve runs m the stxth
mnmg to notch a 6-5 Win as
Jeff McKmney had perfect
control fo ptck up the wm
•
McKinney fanned stx and
walked none
Sports Transact ons
Ronme Clonch and Mark
By Un ted P ess nte nat ona
Tannehtll were the big httters
Monday
Baseba I
for
the winners as they each
M nneso a
P aced ca t che
Glenn Bo gmann on he d sa socked a home run and single
b ed I s and ca ed up ca che
while Eddte Young had a
Terry Bu ng from 0 ando
double
and smgle Dave Boyd
Ch cago Cubs
S gned r ght
handecf p cher Randy Mar z of and Charhe Marshall each
the Un ve s y ot Sou h Ca o
had a s ngle
na
and
ass gned h m
o
J 1m Tatterson wsa tagged
M d and Tex
P sbu gh
S gned
ef
With
the loss although he
handed p tchers M chae Shoa f
struck
out 10 and walked only
and Casey Hagan f s base
man Char es Va ey and nf e d one Rtce and RICk Hesson
er Kev n Ma on c a
ree
led the hosts wtth a homer
agen s
Ba 1 more - s gned ou e d and double
double and
er 0 ungo Hazewood he f rs smgle respectively
p ck n the regu a pMse o he
100 005 0-6 8 I
f ee agent d a
and
h d RS
baseman S eve Po an
her M
203 000 0-5 11 I
:!th p ck
In the second game loser
Mont eal
S gned
gh
handed p tchers Sco
Sande
Brady Huffman allowed JUst
son and Scot Ande son the r
three
htts but walked etght
th rd and fourth p cks espec
tvey nl eeagen d at
as the vtsttors fell 6-3 Rtck
Footbal
Hesson got the win as he
Atlanta - S gned h ee d at
fanned
seven and walked
cho ces Ke h enk ns defen
Wll e
s ve back C nc nna
three A btg hfth Inn ng m
Pllcker w de ece ve
M ss s
whiCh the hosts scored four
s pp Stele a11d Don Pa r sh
defens ve end P sbu gh
ttmes was the btg difference
C nc nnd
S gned w de
Harbrecht had a homer
rece ve
Atex Perc va
he
2 h round d af cho ce from Rtce a double and Ktm Henry
Mo ehouse
P tsbu gh S gned
ne a single to account for the
htts
Charlte
bllcke Rob n co e her op wmners
d ltf cho ce from New Mex co
Marshall
led
the
Rock
o a four yu con rae
Sprmgs
team
with
three
T aded
an
M nnesote
und sclosed 976 drll chO ce o doubles and I'Y'oung had a
Ph ade ph a fo
sa f e y B
home run Clonch Tannehill
Brlld ey
Oet o - P aced on wa ve s Jeff Marttn and Jon Buck
ve e an
unn ng back J m
Hooks and free agen ottens ve had a smgle each The spit!
tackle M ke W I ams o F o da left the vtsttors still leadmg
and I nebacke Roy McTernan the league wtth only two
OfSeonH.!!il
Seatt e
S gned tou h round losses
draft cho ce La y Se ve s a RS
000 002 1-3 3 0
w de ece ver from he Un ller
M
101
040 x-&lt;&gt; 8 0
sty of Tennessee and 1 ee

Sports
transactions

agent k eke

Bob l gda f om

Butler
Col ege
W scons n
Announced the
rea gnllt on of B I Pe r n as
head lrllck and fed coach

soccer

Ch cage NASL
Named
W y Roy as head coach
rep ac ng B Fou kes
Hockev
Lila Angetes - s oned ve e

an veteran fo wa d Gene ca
and m nor eague defenseman
J m W he spoon to one yea
con ac s and e eased ve e an
~ wa d F ank 5
Mars e e
and m no eague M ke Us a
0

~

get the hillers out anymore
Kaat added But I ve never
felt that way
The PhiUtes scored m each
of the ftrsl SIX mrungs to wm
thetr fourth stratght Thetr
11-htt attack was paced by
M ke Schmtdl who drove m
three runs wtth a two-run
homer and a stngle
Sclunldt suffermg from a
pulled leg muscle slanuned
out his 16th homer of the
season wtth Jerry Martin
aboard m the ftrst
I wasn t gomg to play
tomght but I m glad I did he
sad
It (the mjury }
defm tely hurts my mobility
but my swtng ts getting back
tn the groove and I wanted to
stay m
Most of my offense has
been on the road this year
he srud
I have trouble
relanng here because I guess
the fans expect too much of
me They probably would
expect less if I was drawmg a
miiUmal salary
A second Ph Is homer
Larry Bow a s caree r htgh
thtrd home run of the year
gave Phtladelphta a 3 0
advantage m the second
All my home runs are
acctdents Bowa satd I
dream about bemg a btg guy
but my responstbthty ts
defense and gettmg on base
The Reds narrowed the
lead to 3 2 m the third when
Pete Rose s ngled tn one run
and the second scored on a
wild pitch
The Phtlltes scored agam tn
thetr hall of the thtrd when
Bob Boone drew a bases
loaded walk and two more
scored m the fourth on a
sacrifiCe fly by Jay Johnstone
and Schmtdt s smgle Boone
trtpled home two more m the
ftfth and Rtchte Hebner
doubled home another patr m
the stxth

Sport Parade

By FRED McMANE
UP! Sports Writer
Bobby Murcer ts domg hts
best to make Chicago Cub
advocates forget
Btll
Madlock
Cub
fans
protested
vehemently last wtnter when
Madlock was traded to the
Gtanls for Murcer But the
31 year-&lt;1ld outfielder so far ts
compthng the kmd of
statlsttcs that could make
htm a hfellme hero m
Chicago and help brmg the
lineup card It came at a
CUbs thetr first pennant m 32
great time when I really
years
needed tt
Murcer was the key ftgure
I feel secure a far more
agam Monday night when he
somber Martin had satd
drove m SIX runs wtth hts lOth
earlier after emergmg from
homer and a double to help
a pregame meetmg wtth
the Cubs defeat the Giants
Stembrenner and rtght
10-9 m 12 mnmgs Mick
ftelder Reggte Jackson I
Kelleher s runscormg trtple
plan on bemg here until told
m the 12th actually was the
otherwise
wmnmg hit for the CUbs but
Paul who satd tt wasn t
11 was Murcer who brought
club pohcy to digrufy rumors
them back from an apparent
by denymg them had called a
Joss tn the nmth tnnmg wtth a
press conference Jus! 10 mt
three-run double that gave
Martm s expresston spoke volumes
nutes before the game began
Ch
cago a 9-8 lead
It tsn t the most pleasant thing he satd
to do exactly that
I can only remember
Paul was r ght on target m one respect though when he said
There are a Jot of rumors
drtvmg
m stx runs m a game
a lot of attention was gtven a certam me dent the other day
unconfirmed rumors of
He dtdn t bother tdentifymg the certam mctdent which of once before m my career
changes m our orgamzat on
course was The Btg Boston Blowup between Jackson and said Murcer That was last
he satd There is not gotng to
year when I was wtth the
Martm last Saturday
be a change regardless of
Most of those who witnessed the eptsode on thetr televtston Gtants hut I can t remember
what you have heard
screens last Saturday were utterly fascmated at the rare who 1t was agamst
Some tbings that needed
In other NL games Los
spectacle of a manager lookmg to bowtce a few line drtves off
to be stratghtened out have
Angeles routed St Lows 9.J
one of h s players 10 public vtew
been Billy Martm will Paul
downed
Not everybody was fascmated though Some people who Phtladelphta
satd emphastzmg the word
saw what transpired smnply had to laugh and Calvm Griffith Cincmnati 10-4 Pittsburgh
wtll
continue to be the
beat San Diego !&gt;-3 and
was among them
manager of the New York
Griffith owns the M nnesota Twtns and m the course of Houston topped Montreal 6-3
Yankees
operatmg them he has had occasiOn to admire Marttn employ Atlanta at New York was
The things that needed to
him and f re hun He was watchmg the Game of the Week from ramed out
be strmghtened out mcluded
Detrott mpped New York
Boston on the TV set m his home last Ssturday and he had to
Martm s relationship wtth hts
Boston
blanked
laugh when he saw how Martm had to be restramed by two of 2 1
star rtght ftelder and owner s
Balttmore 4 0 Seattle
his coaches from gomg after Jackson
favonte Jackson The two
What made calvm Griff th react the way he dtd was hts whipped Kansas City 4-2
nearly came to blows m VIew
recollect on of B lly Martin with the Twms and part of that Texas edged Mmnesota 2-1
of a nat ona l televts on
recollect on had to do wtth the way Martm had once knocked
audtence last Saturday
out h s best pttcher Dave Boswell while managmg the club
durmg the second of New
That mc dent took place outside the Lindell Athletic Club In
Yorks three stra ght losses
Detrmt whtch was then a favortte dr nkmg spot and hangout
n Boston
for professiOnal athletes and there were any number of
Martm yanked Jackson
con n ctmg clauns afterward Martm sa d Boswell had come
from rtght fteld m the mtddle R werdowns
after hun and Boswell countered by saytng Mart10 wasn t
of an tnnmg for allegedly
tellmg the truth If he sa d that
loafmg after a double htl by
I th nk Martm can never get over the fact he was a
PITTSBURGH (UP!} Jun Rtce of the Red Sox
CINCINNATI (UPI )
ballplayer sa d the Twtns owner That s the way t was Robm Coles the Pittsburgh
A lot of attentiOn was patd Takealetter beat Condado by when he was managmg w thus lie always wanted to associate Steelers No I ptck m the
to one parttcular mcldent 2\'.lengths Monday to wm the
wtth the ballplayers I spoke to hun about that any number of Nallonal Football League
recently Paul said No one $4 000 feature race at Rtver t mes and told him that for any manager to be effecttve he draft has already dectded
mctdent deternunes whether Downs
can t run around wtth hi!J players
who the 1977 Rookie of the
a club or team keeps a
Gwllermo Mtlord ptloted
Mart n was ftred as manager by the Twtns eight years ago Year IS gong to be
manager The things that Takealetter over the SIX fur
even after he had led them to a western dtvtston lttle and he
Robin Coles
were dtscussed were of great longs m 1 12 good for payoffs has been ftred by Detrott and Texas smce bqt m one regard he
And if hts prediction holds
Importance Everybody ts of $3 60 $3 4{) and $2 40 Scott
hasn t changed at all As Gr fftth says he sttll can t get over up he knows his agent wtll
happy And I think the results Alan came m thtrd
the fact he once was a ballplayer
make sure the Steelers pay
wtll show tl
A 3-6 datly double of Lorelis
Feelmg that way he denttftes much more olosely w th h s him what he s worth
Absolutely not Paul re Catch and Raymte pa d players than most managers and that penodtcally gets hmn
Cole and his agent Dr
plted Monday when asked $23 80
mto trouble when he trtes to usurp some ol the authortty whtch Harold Damels of Los
directly if Stetnbrenner had
A crowd of 3 310 bet
normally belongs to such people as the general manager Angeles Calif Joined the
requested Martm s ftrtng
$34l2 470
president and owner m the front off ce
Steelers
Monday
m
announcmg Cole s stgmng of
a four year contract
Dantels a 6-foot 7 291).
pound former football player
who holds a doctorate m
philosophy teaches college
mathemattcs produces
By FRED DOWN
Rodrtguez
tie breakmg smgle by Ttto Fuentes and a mmngs for his thtrd v ctory of movtes
and
owns
UP! Sports Writer
smgle whtch tagged Don double by rookte Steve Kemp the year Dan Ford smgled d scotheques along wtlh
Mark The Bird Ftdrych Gullett w th hts thtrd Joss
In other Amer can League home the Tw ns run off workmg as a player agent
the Detrott Tigers sensalton agamst sur: wms
games Boston defeated Bal
reliever Darold Knowles n refused to reveal the dollar
of 1978 who got a slow start
Reggte and I have some ttmore 4~ Oakland beat the etghth
ftgure of Cole s contract he
thts season because of thmg gomg
Ftdrych Chtcago 7 1 Texas shaded Mariners 4 Royals 2
beheves pub! c knowledge of
damaged knee cartilage laughed after the game He M nnesota 2-1 Seattle topped
Lee Stan ton knocked m such flgnres can lead to
suffered tn sprmg !l'atmng wanted to bet me a steak Kansa s Ctl y 4 2 and three runs w th two smgles to Jealousy on the part of
won his fourth stratght game dinner every tmne he gets a Cleveland scored an lh'i wm
lead the Martners to their teammates
a 2 1 hit I buy hiiJI one and every m 11 mrungs over Toronto wm Gary Wheelock recetved
Monday mght
But Damels dtd reveal that
nationally teleVIsed victory tune he doesn t he buys me
Naltonal League scores cred t for his third vtctory the
contract contams
over the New
Phtladelph a 10 although Ennque Romo ncenhve clauses that
York one He owes me three were
Yankees
dinners from last year and C10cmnat1 4 Chicago 10 San I mshed up Denrus Leonard provtde for Cole to be
A crowd of 47 236 10 Detrmt hasn t pa d off yet He must Franc1sco 9 m 12 nrungs
was tagged w th his fourth compensated for any out
cheered vtrtually his every owe me seven dinners by Pittsburgh 5 Ssn D ego 3 loss agamst e ght wtns The standing achievements such
Los Angeles 9 St Lows 3 and Royals runs came on solo
move
whtch mcluded now
shoutmg thanks to Reggte
Ftdrych now 4-2 allowed Houston 6 Montreal 3
homers by Tom Poquette and
Jackson when the Yankee the Yankee run m the fourth Red Sox 4 Orioles 0
Hal McRae
Jmn R ce had a run scormg Indians 8 Jays 5
rtght helder nusJudged a mnmg when Thurman
routtne fly ball whtch led to Munson and Chns Chambhss tr pie and three stngles and
The Ind ans won thetr thtrd
the Tigers wmmng run m the smgled and Jackson htt a Carl Yastrzemsk hit a two stratght game under new
seventh tnmng Jackson s sacrifice fly The Ttgers t ed run double as the Red Sox Manager Jeff Tohorg when
play was followed by Aureho the score m the fourth on a mcreased the r lead m the AL Ray Fosse hit a three-run
Eas tern Dtv swn to 3 &gt;2 tr pie m the lith mrung
games R ck Wtse pttched a Cleveland had tied the score
two-hitter and struck out mne :Hi on Frank Duffy s etghth
for h s fourth wm while Rudy 1nnmg homer Reltrver Pat
May suffered the loss lor the Dobson won his second game
Ortoles
for the Indians wtth Mtke
A s 7 White Sox I
Wtllts tak ng the loss
The A s snapped a f ve
game los ng streak wtth a 16In Pony League act10n last
Chris Woods was the Josmg hit attack wh ch ncluded
week host Mtddleport kept tis pitcher He and Steve two RBI each by Rodney
record clean at 6 0 by Ohlmger combmed to fan Scott and Earl W ll ams Rtck
INGLEWOOD Calif (UP!)
down ng Eastern 6-5 Wmnmg four but walked 14 Chff Langforp went f1ve mrungs
Apprentice sensa! on Steve
pitcher Btlly Elkms tossed a Kennedy had two smgles and for h s f fth w n wtth Chrts cauthen the nation s leading
two-httter while fannmg 10 Steve Ohltnger one to account Knapp the loser Scott and nder m both races and money
and walkmg seven Elkms for the Royal hittmg
Rob Ptcc olo each had three won Monday accepted an
helped hts own cause by p
0000020 237 hits for Oakland
nv1tahon
to rtde
m
crackmg a homer and Mtke M
315 lOll x 10 4 I Rangers 2 Twins t
1-lollywood Park s annual aU
Miller Chrts Judge Terry
888
Toby Harrah s seventh star jockey race Sunday
Wayland and Jack Humphrey
In Little League act on the mmng homer stood up as the
Cauthen 17 suffered a
each stngled
host Mtddleport lnd ans w nnmg run for the Rangers broken r ght ann m a sptll at
Danny Spencer was tagged downed the Raccoon Valley as Dock Ellis makmg hts Belmont Park May 23 but ts
With the loss as Eastern s Ptrates l1 3 Dave Follrod got ftrst start for Texas allowed scheduled to resume nding
record fell to 3-2 Spencer th e wtn Dave Hoffman 10 htts but no runs m 6 I 3 th1s week tn New York
fanned mne and walked seven homered Eddte Mtller
wh1le crackmg a two-base htt tripled and Follrod John
Greg W ga l got the other hit Cremeans and Hoffman
a s ngle
doubled whtle Andy Janerelli
socked two doubles Get! ng
Mason
downed
the smgles were Iannerell
Pomeroy
Royals
10 2 Cremeans J mn Farley Allen
although they out hit the Kmg Ralph Smder Mtller
Royals only 4-3 Don Russell and Danny Thomas
got credtt for the wm as he
Wayne Maynard was the
Bodte Dav1d and Shawn loser and Brian Hicks tripled
Ftelds fanned ntne and and smgled to lead the hll
walked etght Bodte Davts led tmg Jeff Batley and Mike
the hlttmg w th three smgles Knot got a smgle each
and Dave Burton had the R
000 1211-- 3 4
Mtddleport 0
other btl a s ngle also
M
012 f2x~ll 14

Martin granted

By Un ted Press Internet ona
Nat onal League
East
W L Pel GB
Ch cage
40 22 645
Phill
35 185565 2
St Lou s
3430537

New York
Mon rea

I felt like I was draggtng
the ball club down before
tonight (Monday) he satd
I felt hke excess baggage
smce sprmg trammg
It s been satd that I can t

::::

Cubs outlast
Giants, 10-9

By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sports Editor
NEW YORK (UP! ) - Btlly Martm tsn tout of the woods yet
He wasn t offiCially pardoned only reprteved and nobody
realizes that any better than him
He also knows his reprteve could be as temporary as a week
or a few days and that were 11 not for the fact club Pres dent
Gabe Paul saved him from be ng ftred for the second time m
less than stx weeks he would ha ve been gone because that was
the way owner George Stembrenner wanted tt to be before
Paul persuaded hun otherwise
You really want to know how far the hrmg of B lly Martin
had progressed?
Th s ts how fa r the Yankees already had g ven another
Amertcan League club permiSSIOn to talk wtth Martm about
hirin g hmn as thetr manager
Paul lrted to make tt sound as if Monday n ght s meeltng tn
Detrott attended by Stembrenner Martin Regg e Jackson
and hun was merely to get things stratghtened out and had
nothmg to do wtth Mart n s unmment dismissal but who ts he
kiddmg • Certamly not Martm
It answer to a direct questiOn Paul demed Stetnbrenner
wants a change m managers but that didn t even fool Martm
who knows much better
Prtor to Monday mght s nationally televised game between
the Yankees and Tigers m Detro t Howard Kosel! put It
straight to Martm Howd d he feel about remamlng as manag
er wtth a ball club whose owner he knew wanted htm out•

Oakland routed Oucago 7 I
and Cleveland downed
Toronto lh'i m II mnmgs
Dodgers 9 cardinals 3
Rtck Rhoden aided by four
homers became the NL s
ftrst 10-game wmner by
pttchtng the Dodgers to
VICtory over the cardinals
The trtumph coupled wtth
Cincmnatl s loss boosted the
Dodgers lead m the NL West
to 812 games Rick Monday
hit two homers for Los
Angeles whtle Steve Garvey
and Dusty Baker chipped in
wtth solo shots
Phlllles 10 Reda 4
Mtke Schmidt drove In
three runs with a two-run
homer and a smgle to spark
the PhllJtes rout of the Reda
Larry Bowa also homered for
the Phillies while Bob Boone
chipped In wtth a two-run
trtple and Riehle Hebner
added a two run double
Pirates 5 Padres 3
Phil Garner s homer
snapped a 3-3 tie m the eighth
mnmg and enabled the
Pirates to snap a seven-game
losmg streak Ptttsburgh
benefitted from a patr of
errors by Padres shortstop
BIIJ Almon to score three
unearned runs m the fifth
Astros 6 Jijxpos 3
Joe Ferguson doubled
home two runs m the seventh
mnmg and Enos ca bell hit a
two-run homer tn the second
to pace Houston J R
Rtchard who htt a solo
homer scattered etght hits
and struck out nme to even
his record at !H; Gary carter
drove In aU of Montreal s
runs wtth a single and his 12th
homer

Coles feels he can he

'Rookie-of-the·Year'

'The Bird' stops Yanks, 2-1

as bemg named Rookie of the
Year or an AU-Star
And in Cole s opmwn that
means he U be makmg more
than hts base salary this
year

THIS WEEK SSPECIAL

USED CARS

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IMPALA 4 DR.
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Karr &amp;VanZandt
You II LtkeOurOual ty
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Open Evenings III6 00
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Middleport pony team
record is unblemished

DOWNING CHILDS
INSURANCE AGENCY, INC.
092 2342

�..
5- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ••Tuesday, June 21. 1977

Indians take 8-5 victory in 11th
TORONTO (UP I)
"They're playing like a bunch
of little leaguers," Cleveland
manager Jeff Torborg was

Toronto Blue Jays, their third
since Torborg took over the
team Sunday from Rank
Robinson.

saying . "Everyone is so

The Indians had loaded the

and up for the game.
Half the guys are hoarse from

bases on a single to Jim

e~cited

yel1ing.''

Roy Fosse's bases loaded
triple in the 11th inning
Monday night led the Indians
to an ~ victory over the

Norris, an intentiona l walk to
Buddy Bell and a walk to
Larvell Blanks.
The Blue Jays, who opened
the scoring with two runs in
the se!'Md and two in the

fourth, led unt il the eighth
winn ing when short stop
Frank Duffy hit a solo home
run to tie it 5-5 and force extra
innings.
"Our club came back a
little bit at a time," Torborg
said. "We didn't get upset
when we were behind."
The roo ki e mana ger said a

fourth inning double play

Connors in trouble
···-"

lly MORLEY MYERS
WIMBLEDON.
England
(UP!) - JiffilllyConnors. the
man the British press loves Ill
hale, is in trouble at Wimble·
don before he has even

stroked his first two-fisted
backhand .
Connors. seeded first and a
9-4 favorite to win the men's
singles despite an injured
right th umb, began hi s
attempt today to recapture
the title he last won here in
1974 with Fleet Street's
criticism blasted from almost
E&gt;very newspaper.
'

Champion in disgrace ,"

primed f,pr an upset. But his

challenge did not get off the
ground as he fell , 6-4, 6-4, S-1,
in the first round Ill Niki Pilic.
Pfister
said,
" That
Wimbled on atmosphere
really gets to you. I didn 't do
a thing right from my first
serve which I dropped after
leading, 4{)-15."
After t.he men's singles had
occ upied the whole of the first

day, the women saw opening-

round action Tuesday with
defending ' champion Chris
Evert
playing
fellow
American Ruta Gerulaitis on
But both Billie Jean King,
bidding for her record 20th
overall title, and Tracy
Austin, at 14 the youngest
player ever to compete in the
championships,

pen."

center court.

received

firSt-round byes and will be
idle.

Membership prizes are

The critidsm concerned

Connprs' refusal to take part
10 a parade of past champions
Mon day
marking
Wim bledon's IOOth yea r .
Instead he practiced on an
outside court while the duke
of Kent gave
away
commemorative medals Ill 41
other champions.
Connors made things worse
by saying first tbat he didn't
know about the ceremony,
then that he Hwas busy" and

awarded over weekend
Bend Regatta Weekend.
W inners were : $50 gift
cert ificates at Kroger store

-

Frank Gheen . Judy Flagg ,

Tom Aronha lt , Verna West ,

C. W. Henderson , Lloyd King .
Kay 's Shampoos &amp; Sets Billy
Wa ll ace,
Emma
Wayland, Michael Fraley ,
Yvonne Grove , Floyd Brown ,
Lois Wyant , Pete Morarity ,
Leslie ·eu·rnside,
Kerry
M il ler , Emma Clatworthy ,
W. Gordon, Karl l&lt;rautter , E .
J. Robinson. Keith Cleland ,
Ha r ry Lackey , Margaret
Bailey , Velsla Roush, Norma
Wilcox, Kr i sten Anderson ,

Wanda
. Cros s,
Gen.e
HoiJdashelt , V Icky Fraley ,
·Ted Lehew .
Farmer 's Bank $50 Savings
Bond. Vio le t Walker .
Stiffler ' s $25 , g ift cer ·
t ificate, Ric Abel.
Elberfeld's S75 g i ft cer t i ficate ~ Madel ine Painter .
Admiral Radio , Baker
Furniture, Ruth Bumgarner .
Holsum Bakery, ten loaves
Gay Nineties Bread - Jean
Custer, Tom Sca lley, Ka thy
Riggs. Dennis Musser, In a
Meadows, Ed Baer , Karen
Amrine, Doug Wi I son, Don
Mayer . Jerry Col mer .
25 g ift cert i ficate for

finally that he had been with
his doctor.
Slighlly . Used Casket Ewing's - Judy Roberts .
tiThe committee is very
$10
g i ft
certificate ,
upset. There is a lot of bad
Marguerite · Sho·e Shop fee ling ,"
Maj .
Mills , Marilyn Wolfe .
Larry Barr .
secretary of the All-England
SSO bond, P. H. Bank , Lewi s
Craw's Chicken Dinners Oub, said. "Jirruny Connors Osby Mart i n. Judy Arnold , Hudson .
SlO g ift cert ifi cate, Land )Viii not be receiving a Bill Bryant. Charles Neece , mark,
Charrls McDaniel.
Ken11eth
Longstreth
,
Diana
commemorative medal."
One Cycle Helmet, J &amp; R
Rapp. Clarence Fraley ,
An expected hostile crowd Denver Rice, R. .E. Boice , Sport Shop. Debra Brooks .
10 lbs . Frog Feed, Sugar
at Wimbldon might not affect Orval Hogue. Pal McKnight,
Run
Mill. Jean Atten ,
Roy
McCarty,
Joyce
Thoren
,
·Connors as much a·s the
One Case Oil, Fref1ch's
Harry
Roush.
Angela
Manno
,
bandage on his thumb. Fortu- Debbie Nida , Jay Brown, Bob Sunoco, Jacin da Mullen .
nately the injury is to ·his Duckworth , Dave Miller ,
Heiner ' s
Bakery ,
10
r ight thumb and only Dav id Horton , Milton Hood, coupons of bread, Rober t
hampers him on his double- Van Johnson, Ra lph Nuzum , Morr i s, Rachel Downie ,
Edith Jividen, Eric Thor en ,
Resa Sawyers, Ruth Tuttle .
fisted backhand.
Jan Miller. Bill Ellker ,
jlC Bollling. 10 cases John Uoyd, ranked third in Bertha Ebersbach, Steve James M. Miner , James
Morris, Brian Mullen , Frank
Britain, prndt~ced the only · Coats,
Guy
Sarge~nt l
upset of the first round with a Wallace Bradford , Lucil le Hoffman .
3-6, 64, 6-4, 6-6 victory over Wil li amson , Ken Cleary ,
Roscoe Tanner.
"I think all the seeds have a
tendency to get nervous in the
fi rst round. " Lloyd said.
"That's the time to beat
them. Once they have a NURSE CONTRACI
match under · their belt
DEFIANCE, Ohio (UP!) U1ey're always tough. "
Defiance Hospital officials
Hank Plister, a S.foot-4 and the Ohio Nurses
Californian from Bakersfield, Association are negotiating
came to Wimbledon with furiously on a new con tract
for about 65 registered nurses
Tuesday Morning Women
at the hospital.
June 14 , 1977
The nurses have indicated
Mason BOwling lanes
W. L.
they will strike at 7 a.m.
38 10
Wednesday if a settlement is Team 4
Green Ghost
38 10
not reached before then.
Cline Construdion
30 HI
Negotiations, which began Team 1
20 28

.BOWLING .

April13 , are proceeding "in a

Erwin Construction

gond healthy atmosphere".
according to R. Michael
Barry,
hospital
administrator.
Federal Mediator Don
Power of Toledo is involved in
the contract talks.
The nurses ' two year w.ork
agreement expired June 12.
Negotiations are centered
on salaries and benefits plus
clarification on the wording
of the old contract regarding

Team6
Quality Print Shop

noneconomic issues.

18 30
16 32
16 32
1~

32
Green
Ghost 2022 ; Qualily Prlnl
Shop 1989; Team 4 1955.
Headquarters
Team high series -

H igh individual series
Marlene Wilson .509; Patti
Will iams 468; Wanda Teaford

440.
H igh team game - Team .4
725; Green Ghost 717 ; Team 6

706.
High individual game Wanda Teaford 181; Marlene
Wilson 180 ; Patti Williams

177 .

.lRNER MILL &amp; SECOND ST.

•

:Marion, Ind., a crisis

~oun·

,..,ling center in East Lansing,
Michigan, numerous summer
caiJlllfl and varioiWprograms
for the mentally retarded.

lo

GAS MARCH

CLEVELAND (UP I) The Unemployed Workers
Organizing Committee led a
march of about 30 people on
the downtown East Ohio Gas
Co. offices Monday to pr.otest
to
gas
cutoffs
and
demonstrate for lower gas
rates.
"Basically we're putting
th~m (East Ohio) on notice
that next winter if they think
they can just come in and cut
off people's gas that the
unemployed as well as the
employed are going to
continue to organize and put .
up a fierce battle," said Carol
Beckman, acommlttee
member.
Ms. Becknum said the committee will be in Oeveland
Municipal Court today when
Emily Campbell, arrested
April 18 for trying to stop the
g~~s company from shutting
off her gas, goes on trial for
disorderly conduct.
"Support has grown lor Ms
Campbell," Ms Beckman
said. "Recently, they (East
Ohio) offere¢to drop charges
but we'll be in court."

002 000 011-

Phila

211 222 OOK -

'
'

CANCII!R

:

NO WASTE

(~une

21-Julr 22)

Someone Who 's fond of )'OU
yearns for the sound of your
votce. You could make hla or her
day by an Impromptu phone call.
To find out to whom you're

•'

MINUTE
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MON. THRU SAT. 9 AM 10 9 PM
SUNDAY 11 AM 10 6 PM

lrtendthlps .

~end

~:~~:.~. . . ~ . 8g~

;

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birth algn.

••

LI!O (JuiJ 23-Aug. 12) Sup-

•
'

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BACON
ENDS &amp; PIECES

FRESH &amp; LEAN

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BEEF

LB.

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5LBS. OR MORE

IOIIELESS BEEF STEW .............. ·~"' s139

show you how to aspire to
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about.

Leaders
Major League leaders
By United Press International
Battin g
(based on 150 at bals )
National League
G . AB. H . Pet.
Trillo Chi
61 211 79 .364
Parker Pit
62 251 91 .361
Luzinski Ph il
55 209 71 .340
\lalntne Mtl
56 232 76 .328
Simmons Sl.l
58 211 69 .327
Templin St.L
59 252 82 .325
Stennett Pit
59 226 73 .323
Griffey Cin
63 2tll 84 .322
Rose Cin
63 249 80 .-321
Morales Chi
59 214 . 68· .3 18
American League
G. AB . H. Pet.
Carew Min
63 257 98 .381
Bostock Min
61 229 80 .349
FiSk 80S
61 216 74 .343
Sing leton Bal
55 194 66 .340
Poquette KC
46 16~ 54 .329
A.WOOd$ Tor
44 155 51 .3'29
Falrl v Tor
52 177 58 .328
vas Bos
60 221 74 .326
Ba ilor Tor
50 191 62 .325
Rivers NY
59 233 74 .318
Hom e Runs
National League : Burroughs.
Atl and FoSter , Cin 18 ; Cev , LA
and Schm idt , Phil 16; Garvev
and Smith; LA and LuzinsKi,
Phil 1.5.
Ameri can League : Scott . Sos
18 ; (;. Rice , 8os , 2':1sk , Chi and
· Hisle. Minn 16; Gross, Oak 15.
Runs BaHed In
Na1ional league : Burroughs,
At I 56 ; Foster, Cin , Cey and
Garvey, LA 55 ; Winfield , SO 51.
American · League :
Hisle,
Minn
60 ;
Rudi,
Ca l
53 ;
Yastrzemskl, Bas 49 ; Rice, Bos.
MUnson , NY and Ru .Jones , Sea
Bases
"·NationalStolen
Leag ue: . Taveras,

Pitt 28; Cabell, Hou 24 ;
Morgan , Cin and Cedeno, Hou
23 ; Richards, SO 22.
American League : Remy . Ca l
22 ; Patek , KC 19 ; Norris, Clev
17; Bonds. Cal and Rivers , NY
15 .
Pitching
Most V ic torie~
National Leagu e: RtJoden, LA
10-3; R.Reuschel. Chi 9-2;
Carlton , Phi l 9 - ~ ; Sutton, LA B~ ; Billingham and Seaver, Cln
8·3; Andujar , Hou and Forsch.
St.L 8·4; Roger s, Mtl and Barr ,
SF 8-5; Burris, Chi 8-6.
American League: . Tanana ,
tat 11 ·3; R.May, Bait and
Ryan, Cal 9-6; Palmer, Bait 8·
6 : nine pitchers tied with seven
vic tories .
Earned Run Average
( btsed on 63 innings pitched)
· National League : Candelar ia.
Pitt 2.06 ,· Roger s, Mtt 2.46 ;
Fingers . so 2.51 ; R.Reuschel.
Chi 2.55 ; Sutton , LA 2.58.
American L,eague: . Tanana ,
Cal 1.81 ; Blyleven , Tex 2.13 ;
Guidry , NY 2.51 ; Ryan , Coli
2.63 ; Slaton , Mil 2.64.
Strikeouts
National League : Rogers , Mtl
96 ; Niekro , At1 94; Koosman,
NY 85'; Richard, Hou 83;
Seaver. Cin and· Halicki , SF 80.
American Lea gue: Ryan , Cat
167 ; T&amp;nana , Cal 117; Palmer,
Bait and Blyleven , Tex 93 ;
Leonard , KC 83.

GROUND LB.
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001 020 OlD- 4 11 o
Norman , Murray (4) , Hume Boston
000 000 ooo- o 2 o
(5), BorbOn (7 ) and Bench ; Bait
Wise And Fisk ; R. May ,
Ka·at and Boone . W- Kaat , 2-S.
L - Norman . 7-3. HRs - Philadel - Drago (91 and Dempsey . wphia , Schmidt (16] , Bowa (31 ; Wise , 4-2. L ..:...R. May, 9-6. HR Boston , Hobson (9'1.
Cincinnati, Bailey (1).

Twin Pak

DETE.~GENT
'

...

Seattle
101 000 02D- 4 8 o
Kan City
100 000 OlD- 2 8 0
Wheelock, Kekich (6J. Romo
( 11 innings)
(8) and Stinson ; Leonard and
Chicago
aoo a.o o23 001 - 10 "3 Porter. W- Wheelock. J-4. L Leonard,
4-8.
HRs- Kansas
san Francisco
000 023 031 000- 9 15 2 City, Poqeutte (1) , McRae (6) ,
Burr is, Hernandez
(6), , ,
001 0001()0- 2 50
Reuschel (7) 1 Sutter (8), Moore Texas
000 000 OlD- 1 12 1
(9) , R. Reuschel and Swisher; Minn
Ellis. Knowles (7), Dev ine
Barr, La.,elle (8). Moffitt (10),
(7) , Lindblad (9) and SundCornull {12) and Hill. wMoore. 3-0.• L- Cornutf, 0-2. btra ; ThOrmoctsgard and Wyne Ellis, 3·6. L HRs- Chicago, Murcer CIOJ, gar . w Morales (4) ; Sltn Fransciso, ThOrmodsgard , ·4-4. HR-T.exas,
Harrah {9).
Clark (7). - St .L
000000003- 3 80
001 014 001 - 7 16 1
l. .A .
OJO 240 oox- 9 11 1 Oaktnd
000 001 000- 1 6 1
Falcone, Urrea (4) i Dierker Chicgo
LanQtord , LaceY (6) . and
(5), Carroll (51, Eastwick (8 )
and Rader ; R h otd en and S,anguillen ; Knapp, H.!llmilton
(6) Kirkwood (8) aond Esslan . W
Yeager . W- RhOderi'J 10-3. LFalcone , 2 6 . HRsr Los An · - Langford. 5·5. L Knapp, 54.

AQUAIIIU. (Jan. 20-flb. 11)

PLAZA

there's something you reallv
need , a little atretching can make
It attainable.

'

"

I.SS.

HI .ORI

oz.

DR. PEPPER

79~

59~

DIET RITE

8PAk 99~
COLA.•••••••••••••••••••••••
THURSDAY ONLY

R.C. COLA
8 16 OZ. BOTILES

$}09

COLA
8-16 OZ. BOTTLES

59•
HOT SAUCE . ...........................................:!;:,~ 65'
ITALIAI DRESSII(i ............................... ~:;:,~ 79•
KOSHER SPEARS ..... ... ................... .'~;:·

WISHBONE

SMUCKER$ PRESERVES ..................... .'~.:· 69'

IMUCKUI

PEACH PRESERVES ............................... '~.:·

59•

WAGNER'S

9
10-oz. ~~~

32-oz.
B.ottle

Jar

~

LIPTOI SOUPS ............................... .. ~-~ 59'
2

ARMOUR DRIED BEEF ......................... ~;:· 69'

ELBOW MACARONI ...:........ ';;:

29c

. WYLER$ ICE TEA MIX ...................... .'~;':

48-oz.
Bottle

$1 5'

COFFEE ......................................... ............ •j;;

;.~:.

.. .

Smooth or Crunch y

PEIIUT
BUTTER

18-oz.
Jar

7ft

(RACKER JACKS ........................ ,......3 ':;;; 39'
1 -ct .

89•

PLANTERS PEAIUT BAR ................ ',:::· 65'
r;pr

SUG.AR.fREE

7-UP THE UICOLA .............. 8 ~:;.~;; $1

A&amp;SOATEO VAR IEl'tES

PIUI Oepoait

.

PURINA TEIDER VITTLES ..............3 :;::;
AII50ATED VAAIETIU

,,~

KAL KAI DOG FOOD ........................3 ·~;::

°9
1

1

MURIIE CLEAR EYES ....... ............. . ..:;::,~ s12'

;

~"::;:;::;::::;
'

;_ 4
~

...

• -o207· J

King Size
Box

JOOOSTORES ~J~ot~·~I~I~J~::t~l~:ll SAFE DAY DEOIORAIIT ..............:....... E•ch 99'
.,L_. ·-·--~ • • • • •••ll••• ............... .

rt. , $159
\:'f-'1

)

~~

no11u ~
Woote ., .,..,. ::::~~·::~.~.
.
00201111

,ill

4o SlOIIlS ~!lit f:iliM,!ii4,Li cA~Or~Al t\l"
STORES • CAIIOINAl FOOOSlORES

"•

l ll., ll ton ,.;m co""""
o,. &lt;OV~"" P• • lom ll,

.

q,O SI ORFS
jijeliJ:Iltel:l

~O SIO RI S •

i
'-'
'£:

lfOOOSTORlS
NAB ISCO COOKIES
--

CHIPS AHOY
&lt;~~&lt;~pOn

Lim lo on•.,.•"' &lt;loiiH&lt;'I
" ' lol!llly.

o,.

D

14 \lt -ot
Pkg.

~

HAIDI-WRAP ................. ............ -~ .... 2':'!,~

79'
'
DIXIE REFILL CUPS ....... ~.-.~ :.~~~... :I.......,=~~~- 99'

·~

79~~ ~:
~
~

20• OH lABEL •

·

LIQUID DAWN ...................... !~~:;

$10'

IS . CAROINA(IOOO STOIII S
RUG CLEANER

GLORY

$179 ~

l lm lt """ w oth ~

Ono cou pM F••

Vllll(i MOPS ......................................... ""'

Xft.XiliJ•l:l
•z

.__~

1

II'J ~ DI

89'

I

Bpwl

BOIDEI'S CHEESE KISSES ................ !.:; 79'
BORDEI'S c•ESE SIIGLIS .:............':;:" '1 n
FRESH COTTAGE CHEESE ................. ~ 79•

BUnERMILK ..................... 2t.:.~;$12'

~

10

DRAllE1
JUICE ~~~·

59;

MAGIC PRE .. WASH ~
~::::·.::::.:;::.:;;; 11 ·01.

99~

Bo n1e

...,
.

~

-,liT CIUIOIN.ll ROY4l ll UE ITO RIS

:i;

t - .l\lft•U 1111

lAllA LEE

APPLE PIE .......~:-::·.:~:.~': ~.:~.~~::.. 3~;:~ 99c
59•
SUIDI WHIP TOPPII(i .................. :;-::; 49•
RICH'S COFFEE RICH ............ ......... '~;:·

SARA LH PEACH PIE ........................... ',!;:' s1 zt .

- ICE CREAM BARS .............................•...';,;;:

89'

~•

~

.G
CAAilJNfll I~
00 2001

MILD Dr TANO'f

V)

HlOO STORtS J3eliJ ille]:l

3 ::;::; $1

1· Lb .

~

....... J _ l t liH
0000 4 T CAIIO I"'.ll ~ O lll ~ l lU.l ITORU

CARDINAL
BREAD .. ..... .. .... ....... ....... ..... ... .....

IKIMOI'I

~- · - •

I...._J""• a , 1tn

•

$1 89

DAYTIME PAMPERS ............................':;.:'·12n

MAIIAIINE

-

L,jm ll ""t """" ~~"

1-\'o·l&gt;lt,folid or 2 -111. Roll On

"

i';

0

o ... "'"""" - .......1.

STYLE HAIR SPRAY ............................ .'~;': 99'

•

n

89'

IIEGULA R 011 IUPEII HOlD

CARDINAL SOFT

" .. .war with capltallstlc
nations is not inevitable."
Communist China replied:
"War is inevitable as long aa
Western imperialism exists."
In lll63, cardinal Giovannj
Battista Montini was elected
ponUff «the Roman Cathollc
church. He cho..., to be called
Pope Paul VI.

5

1 59

lliGELFOOD CAKE MIX ................... ~·.~;'' 85'

AE·G..

j oiifit'.Mf

$1

DUNCAN HINU

SPEARMINT LEAVE&amp; BIG BEll! J ELLI ES

BRACH'S CANDIE$ .................2

$1

TASTERS CHOIGE

2-ct.
Pkgs.

limit three With
.
SlO
coupon artd
00
·
PUrchase exclud'
bper, wine and c'1
mg
•
U• rettes.

2.,

TOMATOES ......................... 4 ~;~:

SPICETTES, ORANGE ILICU

I

,

1

TIP TOP

PETER PAN

OIL

tl

SEASIDE BUnER BEAlS ................3 ·~;:: s1

ON ION OR ONION MU I HAOOM

Umlt one with coupon 1nd
$10.00 purchl". excluding
beer, wine and cig1reues. ·

~Q SIORES .

WIVE·

89'
CLIFFSTAR CRANBERRY
JUICE
.
. ..... ·~;~· 89'

TO: RONALD 0 . THOMAS.

In 1960, Soviet Premier

Z'

; SOFT

BLACK PEPPER .... .. ................... ~;~
16-oz.
Can

LEGAL NOTICE

Nlklta Khrushchev said :

Assorted FIIV Ort

M ~C OIIMICK

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN -,I

Whose last known address Is
2012 Clel'\eay AVenue, Nor wood , Oh io. ancl whose exact
address is unknown
TO: Karen L. Thomas, whose
last known address Is 2 01 ~
Cleneay Avenue , Norwood ,
· Oh io, and whose exact ad dress is unknown
You are hereby notified
that you ha ve been named
defendants In a legal act ion
en1ill ed
Athens
Coun1y
Sav ii'\Q! &amp; Loan vs . Ronald 0 .
Thomas, et al. Thi s action hliiS
been assig ned · No . 16,363 In
the common Pleas Court
Meigs Cou nty, Ohio .
Theobiect of this complaint
is to acqu ire judgment ·
agai nst Ronald 0 . Thomas
and Kare n L . Thomas In the
amount of $18 , ~ 82 . 18 plus
In terest an d costs, and for
foreclosure of mortgage on
the following described real
estate .
Said r eal estate being
situated in th e Village of
Middleport , County of Meigs
and State of Ohio.
Being Lot 21 In said v illage
located on Second Str eet be tween Rutland and Walnu t
Stre ets . Also all th e righ t t 1r1e
and Interest in and to the six
Inc h strip of land and the
party wall therei n off of the
north side of Lot 22. also in
said vil lag e of M idd leport,
said strip of land ad(oming
and be ing contiguouS to sai d
lot No. 21.
You are required to an .
swer the .complaint Within 28
days after the last publication
of thiS I'IDtict. which will be
published once each week for
six consecutive weeks. The
l ast publl c~ flon will be made
on June 21 and the 28 days for
answer will start on that date .
In case of your f ai lure to
anSwer or otherwise respond
n required by the Ohio Rules
of Civil Procedure lv.d gment
by default wlll be rendered
aga inst
vou
for
relief
demanded on this com plaint.
LAR: RYE . SPENCER
Clek of Cou r ts
Com man Pleas Court
Meigs County, Ohio
Pomeroy , Ohio 45769
(5) 24; 31 (6) 7, 14, 21, 28, 61C

,

CAMP BELLS

appeaL

RED TOMATOES ....... " · 39•

Ff!AN!(S

ARMOUR SLOPPY JOES ..................... ~·c~:· 79'

NAS
.

PEPSI

VUSIC

Ell

INSTANT

FANCY !iOLIO

•ocrGPc:rQ'DDDDDDG

ITIIA WIUIIV OI'IIEIOLUI ILA CICIE II!t Y

MAXWELL HOUSE

RED RADISHES ....... 5 ~;: 5 1

PEACHES ..................... u. 39•

PliCEI (Fob. 20·Morch 20)
Two se emingly unrelated
situations can be tied togetheF
today to benelh you and olhero.
You can do It effectively as the
middleman.
··

CRtSP TENDER

TASTY SWEET SOUTHERN FRESH

• ON THE CORNER •

,., s1

GREEN PEPPERS ...... 5 ,., 5 1

LEMONS ......~~..~~-. 2/29•

MUELLERI
i· ) ' ' '

GREEN
CUCUMBERS .............5
APPLES ........... J1 ~.s.-•. 89• THICK MEAT!O

JUMBO

There's more elasticity In the
family budget than you realize . It

~ex

LONG GREEN SLENOER

Daod Old Summert\me

In meeti ng someone new today,
don't be overwflalmed by who
and what they are. Slmpty be
yourself. You'll ma~e lhe most
favorable lmpresalon po11lbla .

;t

20 OZ. BOX

NY.

00010000Q-l 31
Det
000 100 lOx- 2 s 1
Gullett and Munson ; Fidrych
4nd Klmm . W-'fidrych , 4-2. L
- Gullett , 6.J ,

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jen. 11)

~

8-16

POTATO
CHIPS

BREADED CHUCKWAGOI ....... ':;;~ 1 16'

IAOmARIUI (Nov. 23·Doo.
21) The race goeato tho swift today where your career .Is concerned. Get your licks In early if

QII!MINI (MIJ 21-~uno 10)
You're quite clav.r tQ beg in with ,
but today you're particularly
gifted at brightening your ourroundh\go with 1 dab ol point or
a bold strip of cloth.

ROLL

BUCKEYE

meet, you'll feet like oldrJrlends.

superabundan.ce of

PAPER TOWELS

geles, Garvey (15) , Monday 2
(91. Baker (13).

'

E

BREADED PORK PATTIES ....... ':;:• 516'

TAURUI (Aprl 20•MIJ 201 Today you're favored with a

TRASH CAN LINERS

BA

..

you Is paving tha way for v.ou
with a pal Of here. When you

· Thoae who weren't all th,at lm·
pressed may get a few ting les
whtln they take a second look-.

·~

GlAD BAG

SALE DATES:
JUIE l2 - 25, 1977

person who staunchly supports

!

BEEF PAniES .............................. 2~:· 516'

•1••

BREADED VEAL PATTIES

yourself money.

~

7

HILLSHIRE SAUSAGE ................. _....,, s1n
HILLSHIRE SMOKED SAUSAGE ..... ··'""' 1 1zt

Pound

ARMOUR

ARIEl (Morch 21·Aprll Ill You
won't gat It by b8Uing on dice.
but II you work alii. you're Jdept
at "evlalng ways to make or save

BANQUET

39~

39~

lWIN PAK

, POTATO CHIPS

JUICE

VALLEY BELL

~

~:~0. . . . . ~~·. 89~
.

BATTER DIP FISH ................. """' 89c
II!IFO!t I'OLIU

you want to be a winner.

PRINGLES

ORANGE

.EGGS
. DOZ.

..

SEA STAill

LIIRA (lhPI. 23·0ot. 23) Let

HOME MADE
BROUGHTON

GRADE A

99

$109
CK

FRESH

DINNER BELL

your heart rule your head today
in being generous to those less
fortunate, even though your
kindness coats you a few dollars
in the proceae.

FRESH LEAN

SUPERIORS
ALL MEAT

ARM
POT ROAST "'""'

liEF CUBE STEAl ...................... ''""' sl't

Imagination and creativity are
s1rong In y()u today. You may
fear some of your Innovative
ldea1. but they are good and
deHrve a try.

Ell
79c Cl CK

79c

U .S.O .A CHOICE

Pound

SLICED IEIF LIVER .................... Pound 59'

porters In high places are eager

to help you today. They may

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

ENGLISH
CUT ROAST •~·•

liE

YIRQO (Aug. 23-l ept. 22)

59~

JIIENDLIIST SEIV

LOCUST &amp; PEARL STS. • ON THE CORNER • MIDDLEPORT
CARRYOUT SERVICE
WE GLADLY ACCEPT FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS
U.S.D.A. CHOICE

Bo• 489, Radio City Station. N.Y.

FRESH LEAN

(FORMERLY BIG JIM'S)

lor

your copy or Altro~Graph Lener.
Mall 50 centa for each and a
long. nlf-addreased , stamped
envelope to Aalro·Graph , P.O.

ICORPIO (Ool. 24-Nov. 22) A

American League
(11 innings)
Cle
000 02 1 110 03- a 12 2
Tor
020 201 OOo 00- s 12 0
Fitzmorris, Dobson (4) , Kern
( 11) and Fosse ; Byrd , Johnson
(61, Willis (11 l and Ashby . wDobson , 2-6. L - WIIIis, 2-2.. HR
4 9 0 - cteveland. Duffy (2 1.

Ptsbgh
000 030 11(}-. S 9 I
San Ogo
010,020 o®- 3 7 2
0 . Jones, Tekulve (7), GoS ·
sage (8) and Oyer ; Shirley ,
Fingers (91 and Davis. W:rekulve, 4.1. L- Shirley , 6-7.
HR - P!Itsburgt; , Garner (SJ.

Some very lnterHIIng people
Will move Into your circle this
year. A few ot the relatlon1hlpa
will be of ahort dura11on. Oth«t
will blossom lnlo luting

;

Blue Jays' veteran Ron
Fairly who played right fleld
Monday hit went 4-for 5 and
scored two runs. He has now
hit safely in 19 of his last 21
games.
"A few of our losses have
been really close and that 's
frustrating," Fairly said. "A
few victories in a row will

Houston
120 000 201- 6 9 2
Mnfrat
200 001 000- J 8 1
Richard and F e r g u so n ;
Brown and Carter . W- Richa rd ,
6-6 .
L- Brown , 4-5. HRSHouston , Cabell ( 6) , Richard
{1); MontreaL Carter (12) . ·
Clr,cl

-21,1177

We Reserve the Right To Limn Quantities

BOTTlES

'

: The Gallia · Jackson •
~elgs Community Mental
Heaith Center is announcing
employment of David
Jerasner in the pO~ition of
social worker in the Center's
tubstance AbuljO Program.
j{rasner's primary duty will
be focusing on outreach
!herapy in the thre"'-"lunty
)'egion.
' Krasner was reared in Ne¥·
:Vork and received his un~ergraduate degree in social
work from Michigan State
:University. This spring he
:Was granted a master degree'
'in . social work by Indiana
:University at Indianapolis.
: His past ezperiences in•clude working at a Veterans
!Admlnl$lration Hospital in

.10 10 10

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

We Accept Federal Food Stamps

DAVID KRASNER

Social worker
'
'
Jidded to GJM
'
eenter
staff
'

I

SUNDAY

Results, line scores
By United Press International
Nalional League
Atlanta at N.Y . ppd ., rain

Bemice Bede Osol

OPEN DAILY
910 10

help us out."
A l arge number of mem bership prizes have been
awarded by the OHio Society
for the Promot ion of BUl l
Frogs in connec t ion with Big

ASIIG•&amp;IAPH

MARKET

three runs .

ul'm very pleased with
him, 11 said Hartsfield, whose
team has lost seven of its last
eight. "He pitched over 100
pitches when we pulled him.
He was losing a bit of his
sharpness and we'd felt he'd
gotten us into an area when
we were safe going to our

4

was the haMer headline on
the Daily Express. "Connors
snubs Royals," said the frontpage headline in the Sun.

with the baSes loaded was a
turning point in the game.
"We . were lucky to get out
of tbal with them only scoring
one run on the play," Tor borg
said. "Then we came back at
the top of the next inning and
scored our first run.''
Torborg and Toronto
manager Roy Hartsfield had
;1rong praise for Blue Jays
starter Jeff Bird, who made
his first appearance lor the
team after being recalled
from Jersey City.
The 20-year-old righthander went five innings
allowing only five hits and

IIIIESf SAVIliS II TOWII

s.,. ,_ 21, 1177

For . . .

SUPER

4 - The Daily Sentinet,Middl•port-Pomer~y. 0 .. Tuesday, June 21. 1977

�.·

tm
6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, June 21. 197i

Rutland United
Methodist closes
Bible school
RUTLAND-A total of 91
students and helpers attend·
ed the opening night of the
daily vacation Bible school
held at the Rutland United
Methodist Church last night.
The Bible S&lt;:hO\ll is C'Qsponsored by the Methodist
and the Rutland Church of
Christ.
Classes are being held for
children from three through
the ninth grade, ·a nd
transporation is provided for
children from the areas of
Happy Hollow, Shotgun
Hollow, Hysell Run, Clark
Road, New Lima. I ""ding

Actress Brooks is dead at 49
QUIOGUE, N. Y. (UPI) - Geralcbe Broob, tl, a
veteran actress who was aomlated oeveral Umet f,..
Tony and Emmy awardl, died Saday at a Leq bland
hospital of a bean attadl.. !llle wu married to aalbor
Budd Schulberg and ~y te ltlevlaloa COOiedy
writer Herb Sargent.

Creek and Beach Grove with
the children being picked up
at6p.m.
The school will continue
through Thursday , and then
will reswne on Monday with a
closing program and picnic
for the students , their
parents, and the helpers on
Tuesday night.
Special of the worship ser·
vice tonight will be presented
by Dennis Smith of the
Rutland Church of Christ,
with the Wednesday night
feature to be Mrs. Hazel Hilt
with a flannelgraph story.

Ohio Baptist women
gather at Denison
A TRAPEZE ON WHEELS adds to tlle excitement of tlle unicycle display of the Diaz
Sisters. They wiU be appearing at the Gallia County Fairgrounds on Wednesday, June 22,
with tlle famous Hoxie Bros. Circus\ Performances are at 6 p.m. and 6 p.m. at Gallia County
Fairgrounds. Buy discount advance tickets now from members of tlle Fraternal Order of
Police. Ray Maniey of Meigs County will be at tlle Gallia County Fairgrounds Wday selling
tickets for tllose who wish to s top by.

•
Sally McKay
POLLY SPOINTERS honored
Polly Cramer
with party
Stuck with carpet squares
POLLY'S PROBLEM
finally the other things that
DEAR POLLY- We have are to be kept cold. I can do
sha g carpet that came in I he c1ean}·ng 1n
· a more
squares that a re stuck to the leisurely fashion and not put
floor and now want to remove the food back In the
tl. But we can 't until we hear r e frigerator until the
from someone who has done temperature h~s returned to
it as we have heard it is that desired .
a lmost impossible to do . One
An easy chair I have was
person suggested that we just very " noisy.., after it was
leave it to use as a pad w1der covered with Naugahyde and
the new carpet we are going J solved this by using a
· to buy but we do not want to . popular white cleaning wax
do this. -GOLDIE.
(liquid ) on the loose cushion
DEAR GOLDIE - I' have that squeaked. Be generous
talked to several profes· with this wax.- DOROTHY.
sion.a ls about your problem
DEAR . POLLY - When
and all agree it iS really a job. painting window screens with
The only method I have learn- aluminum paint r tack a two
ed is to insert a putty knife or inch by six inch strip of old
flat pointed trowel unper a carpeting to a block of wood
corner and push until you can a nd use this instead of a
break the bond and then brush. It does a better job .
PERHAPS you can pull it off. with no excess paint and no
Ii not, you will have to con· paint brush to clean. tinue the same way until all is HOUSEWIFE.
·
removed . There will be a
DEAR POLLY -Instead of
residue uf rubber pieces or discarding toilet seat covers
adhesive that also will have that do not fit the over sized
to. be scraped off. A cleanser ' lids enlarge them by single
wrth a lcohol rrught help this crocheting with matching rug
a long .. I was told the carpet yarn all around the edges.
you now have should make an Kee p increasing each row
excellent pad under the new and fitting to the lid for the
carpet and you would be sav· desired size and then
ed the cost of buyi ng a new decrease until the new edging
padas well as lots of back fits and holds securely on the
breaking hard work. - POL- lid.- MRS. w. f\.. H.
LY.
DEAR POLLY - Before
DEAR POLLY - My Pet wearing a new garmenttouch
Pecwvc ts more of a sugges· the center of each button with
lion. I wonder why g reeti~g clear nail polish. This seals
card compames do not m- the thread so' the buttons stay
elude tn thetr bo~es. of . on longer. This is especially
assorted cards more 'fhtnk· good for children 's clothes. ing of You" c~rds. They fit so MRS. P. T.
many occasiOns and help
Polly will send you one of
sh~t:ms ~nd others who fmd het s ig ned thank-you
wrttmg dtfftcult.
. .
newspaper coupon clippers if
WJ.en cleamng the l!lStde.of she uses your favorite
my rcfrrgcrator I use my m- Pointer Peeve or Problem in
sulated picnic basket for tern· her colt'unn. Write POLLY'S
porary food storage. I place POINTERS in care of this
· tlle ice cube trays in fir.;!, newspaper.
then the frozen things ond

Men and women golfers
meet at Pomeroy course
urganiz.aunnal meetings of
the Men and Women's Golf
Associations were held
recently in conjunction wrth a
chicken b&lt;irbeeue at the
Pomeroy Golf Course.
Officers elected for the

men 's Mgani za tion

were

Uonel Bogg;&gt;, president; Bill
Childs. vice pre&gt;ident; and
Jamie Thomas, secretary·
treasurer. :-/amed to the
board of dtrectors were Bub

Stivers, Dick Follrod , and J .
D. Story.
Women's Association of·
ficers are Mrs. Betty Fultz,
president ; Mrs. Margaret
Follrod, vice president; and
Phyllis Hackett, secretarytreasurer. The association is
currently sponsoring ladies
days·every Tuesday morning.

Dr. and Mrs. Joseph
McKay of Warren entertain·
ed with a reception Sunday
afternoon honoring their
daughter, Sally, on her
gradua\ion from Warren
High School.
A:nong the many guests at·
tending Were her grand·
parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. V.
Rupe , and Mrs. I... .E.
Reynolds, Middleport; Mr.
and Mrs. Val Reynolds,
Gwynn and Lynn, Morgantown, W. Va .; Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Munns and fam·
ily, Pittsburgh, Pa. and Dr.
McKay's parents and their
family of Byesville. A.
graduation cake and punch
were served following a buf·
fet dinner. Sally will be atten·
ding Kent Staie University in
the fall.

..
The Almanac
United Press lnternallonai
Today is Tuesday June 21,
the 172nd day of 1977 with 193
to follow.
This is the first day of
summer. (6:14 a .m. EDT).
The moon iS between its
last quarter and new phase.
The morning stars are
. Mercury, Venus, Mars and
Jupiter.
The evening star is Saturn.
Those born on tllis date are
under the sign of Cancer.
Martha Washington, first
lady of the United Stalel;, was
born June 21, 1731. This is
American actress Jane
Rl!Ssell's 56th birthday.

Church.
The conference .ws held
from Jw1e 6 through 10 and
was attended by 725 women.
Theme for the next two years
will be "Women of God Yet"
while the theme song will be
" Mine Are the Hungry." Mrs.
Caddie Wickham reported on
spiritual growth,
Mrs.
Margaret Bailey told about
the white cross display which
ranged from cake mix to
diapers for Christian Centers
in Ohio and West Virginia,
and Mrs. Caryl CO\lk gave an
overall report pi conference
acti vi lies including · the missionary _ speaker, · group
singers from Cushing Junior
College in Pennsylvania, the
candlelight· corruuunion service and Bible studies. Mrs.
Wickham and Mrs. Bailey
were ushers at tbe chapel
while Mrs. Cook served as a
hostess.
Mrs. Phyllis Skinner
presided at the meeting.
Refreshments were served
by Mrs. Harriet Sterrett and
Mrs. Bailey. Also attending
was Mrs. Maria Foster.

WHILE
THEY
LAST

she

PRICES GOOD THROUGH SAlURDAY, JUNE 25, 1977

JUNE BRIDE
SILVERPLATE

WE ACCEPT FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS

· ·&gt; ~
·'-

Miss Broou began ber eareer •• Broodw.y wheD
wu
about 1$ Ill "FoUow tltte Glrll." He( flnt 111m

DEALERS PLEASEI

Gift
Sill tliOII

OPEN MON. THRU SAT. 9 A.M. TO 9 P.M.

was playlug an timtalloa of aclral Katharine Hepbunt
as the film daughter of the late IICII'fts JOIID (:rawford
Ia "Possessed." She allto played In ~everal televllloa

OPEN SUNDAY 9 A.M. TO 6 P.M.

series.

QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

She won a Tony nomiaatl011 Ia 19'12 for
"Brlghtower" and Emmy aomlnaU0111 for rolea In
episodes of "1be Defeoden," "BonaD!a" aDd for •
television special based on the Broadw.y play "IIJJda
Crane."

SMOKED

CALLA
HAMS

Mrs. Bamitz receives company
Mr. and Mrs. . Robert
Stuisbergen of Omaha, Neb.
spent several days this past
week here visiting her grandmother, Mrs. W. 0. Barnitz
and other relatives and
friends.
Both Mr. and Mrs .
Stuisbergen graduated
recentlY from Creighton
University. She graduated

LEAN &amp; JUICY

sununa cum laude with a
bachelor of science degree in
nursiqg, and he with a degree
in phannaey.
Another visitor of Mrs. Bar·
nltz on Friday was her grand·
son, Charles Young of Colum·

LL59e

bus.

.

PORK STEAK ..........................~~·-·
FRESH

.

99

PICNIC HAMS........................~:.

79
PORK SHOULDER .............. ~~: ..89
SLICED

~

EXTRA LEAN - STORE MADE

SAUSAGE ....................... ... ~.~:.

~

FRESH &amp; LEAN

.

BY THE PIECE

SLAB BACON ................ ~~: ..

89~

tine A
Problem?

REUNION
The annual Hill reunion will
be held Sunday, June 26, at
Portland Park. Potluck
dinner will be served at nO\ln.
All relatives and frienda of
the late Albert and Uza HiU
are il!vited to attend.

CAll.
CRISIS LINE .

992-5554
,,•

.

r--------------~=..,.--i

T•t Our ~_Strawbeny
cake, with 01 without
•
Wfi!pped Cream.

.

'

Bread Tray $17.50

ADOLPH'S

Goessler

DAIRY VAU.EY
HRS. , to ,oo A.M. til,t)_, oo P.M. sun . . Thurs. ro,oo A.M:
til 12 ,00 P.M. Friday ailcUaturday.
. .
·~e
At- the Pomeroy ~end Bridge

Us

JEWELRY STORE
Court St., Pomer11Y

'.

WHILE
THEY
LAST

I

I

Part&lt;:er family
vacation ends
Mr. and Mrs. Leland
Parker, and children, Patty,
Kathy, Jim, Joe, Mike and
Chuckle, have returned from
a short vacation in Ten·
nessee, Kentucky and North
Carolina.
The
family traveled
through the Smoky Moun·
tains to Cherokee, N.C. , went
to Oprylarict at Nashville, and
then returned to Kentucky
where they visited Lincoln's
birth p!ar;e, My Old Kentucky
Home, the old state house at
Frankfort, the Kentucky
Historical Museum, Daniel
BO\lne's grave, and Jessie
Stuart's Lod~e.

S&amp;E TWO WAY RADIOS
FACTORY- tiCKLOAD SALE

3 DAYS ONLY

lHUR.-FRI.·SAT.
JUNE 23-24-25

"PRODUCE"

coyPoN__ j

GREEN PEPPERS
SLICING CUCUMBERS

TOPPING
.
'

SAYS MAC WAS RIGIIT
NEW YORK (UP!) -Film
star Gregory Peck - known
as a political liberal - says
Gen. Douglas MacArthur
may have been right when he
clashed with President Harry
S. Truman and was fired for
advocating expansion of tbe
Korean War into China.
Peck, in. an interview with
tlle Ladies Home Journal,
said, "According to many
people
in
the
State
Department .. . llle Chinese
were not ready to wage a war
in 1951. If we had taken a
strong stand and established
our authority in Korea, many
things would be different
today."

No. 105

• With exclusive built-in 2-way inter-com

WAS $179.95

60LbOl '

NOW s59.95

78~

W/C

ROBYN SX-007 PACKAGE
• $21.95 value trunk or roof mount antenna
• $ 9.95 value 6" weather proof speaker
• All necessary hardware and cable for
complete mobile installation.

FIRST LADIES

SAVE ON OTHER 23 &amp; 40 CHANNEL UNITS

TRASH BAGS

S&amp;E TWO WAY RADIO
r

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO.

W/C

32 oz. btl.

COU PON

COUPON

CLOROX 2

POST

VANISH LIQUID

W/C

E)(pires June 25, 1977

RAISIN BRAN
15 oz. box

68~

3BARS 98.;

W/C

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88~

SAFEGUARD

No. 205

W/C

No 105

W/C

Coupon Expires June 25, 1977

TWIN CITY GATEWAY

16 oz. btl.

38~

COUPON

BATH SOAP

TWIN CITY GATEWAY

No. 105

·

DISH DETERGENT

TWIN CITY GATEWAY

&gt;r

-

LUX

Coupon Expires June 25, 1977

.TWIN CITY GATEWAY

No. 105
4Uoz.box

$148

&amp;

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CITYGATJ;WAY

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

20 d. box

Coupon E)(pires June 25, 1977

DRY BLEACH.

3DAYS ONLY

'

DRAIN OPENER
No. 205
58~32 oz. btl.

No 305

W!C

TWIN CITY GATEWAY

COUPON

HEFTY

WV23P SIMILAR 10 ABOVE COMPLm KIT BUT
.
WITHOUT 2 WAY INTERCOM£ FEATURE ................................................ '53 95

EACH

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.)

$}48

33 oz. can

Coupon Expires June 25, 1977

COUPON

j

'

Includes:

No. 155

RED RADISHES

TWIN CITY GATEWAY

COUPON _

LEMONADE

CELLO BAG

Coupon E)(pires June 25, 1977

•

COUPON

COUNTRY TIME

DREAM WHIP

W/C

Coupon E)(pires June 25, 1 ~ ', 7

TWIN CITY GATEWAY
•

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COUPON

MARGARINE
No. 105

W/C

Coupon Expires June 25, 1977

TWIN CITY GATEWAY

LB. CTN.

48~

~

99
$}29

STEAK.~~: ...

CUBE PORK
~

.

.l..

SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) First Lady Rosalynn Carter
arrived in . San Francisco
SIMON SAYS
Monday on the second leg of a
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Western states visit for the
Former Treasury Secretary President's Commission oo
William F. Simon became a Mental Health.
PROGRAM SLATED
radio commentator Monday.
An honorary chairwoman·
" Ring All the Bells of
Simon's daily five-minute on the commission, Mrs.
Freedom" will be presented commentary on political and Carter - accompanied by
again by the Voice of Liberty financial affairs is being her daughter Amy, who
Chorus at the Rorat Oak Park carried by 27 stations, said clutched a battered teddy
at 8:30p.m . on Sunday, July Harry O'Connor, president of bear - will head up sessions
3. Joe Struble will narrate the the firm tllat produces the on mental healtll Tuesday
program and Kenny W&gt;ggins program. "Bill Simon's and Wednesday, before
will be soloist. Practices are knowledge of the economy, traveling on to Hawaii. They
issues
and are expected back in
being held each. Thursday energy
night at 8 p.m . at the International trade, along Washington on Sunday.
Pomeroy United Methodist with his free enterprise
"I'm going to stay hoole for
this a while after that," said Mrs.
Church. Fireworks will be philosophy, make
program unique."
he ld following the program.
Carter.

'

Reports on the recent Ohio
Baptist Women's Conference
held at Denison UniversitY at
Granville were given at
Wednesday night's meeting
of the Missionary Society of
the Pomeroy First Baptist

PIRI'ICT

W/C

Lotuo••n Expires June 25, 1977

INCITYGAT WAY

�•

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Tuesday, June 21, 1977

I
i

Generation Rap
By Helen and Sue Bonel

Christy- Y~_U:ng reunion held

I Mtss Stephanie Ord

~i:~":=::::$:::=:::::*~:::::::::::*~~-;~:*"~~::m::::=::::::.:::::~-::::::::;::;::::::::;::;:;;;;;;:;:;:;:;:.:·:·:·::~:::::

\\\\

DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
Wer~ad muc~ aboul rape lhese da~s. but until il happens to
you, 1t s somet1mes not " real." Beheve me it can happen 1
Luckily, I escaped.
'
·
. A female friend and I were walking in a wooded national
park. This man jwnped out of the bushes, exposing himself
and pulhng a kmfe. We realized he was no mere exhibitionist
and we ran in opposite directions, aware we might be killed:
We weren't going to make it easy for this degenerate.
God must have been with us. The man had many opportunities to run one of us down, but we escaped. over a steep
mow1tainside. He has nol been apprehended! Perhaps his next
victim won't be so lucky.
When I tell other males about our experience, they are not
generally sympathetic listeners. They do not seem to feel the
fear women have of rape and do not understand the hwnilia·
tion which accompanies it. If men reading my letter do feel incensed at my near-attack (and at rape in general) let them
prove me wrong by taking women's safety seriouslY. We need
stronger laws, tougher sentences, and better treatment of
women who have suffered rape. ·DIANA
DEAR DIANA:
Despite the vast modern outcry against it: Rape Crisis
Centers, Women Agamst Rape organizations, media coverage,
general awareness that females are victims, not " teasers "
the incidence of rape is ·increasing faster than that of almo~t
any other crime.
Why?
Possibly you've hit on the answer Diana: many men still
don 't.take rape _seriously, unless it's accompanied by murder,
or children are mvolved. And whether we like or not men still
dominate the criminal justice scene .. HELEN
'
NOTE FROM SUE: If.you males dislike our charges, we're
open to rebuttals.
DEAR RAP :
My _name _
is Bruce. That automatically labels me "gay,"
espf!'lally smce Our Lady of the Orange Juice cracked
" Homosexuality must be abnormal or else God would hav~
made Adam and Bruce."
Must I change my name, or fight ] · NOT BRUCIE BUT BIG
BADBRUCE
'
DEAR BIG, BAD:
I quote another Bruce who recently wrote, "On behalf of
thousands of Bruces in America, I say to you Anita in your
earwithtepidbeer.\
'
'
Don't let it bother you, friend, and il it does ask people to
start calling you " Bo.' '·HELEN
:

•

completes wedding plans
Plans have tteen completed
for the open churc~ wedding
of Stephanie Lynn Ord,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Bobby Ord, Syracuse, and
Michael Edward Ash, son of·
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Ash,
Syracuse.
The wedding will be an
event of Saturday, June 25 at
7 p.m. at the Asbury United
Methodist Church of
Syracuse. Pre-nuptial music
will be presented by Rose
Anne Jenkins with special
selections by Tonia and Sonia
Ash, sisters of the groom. The
music will begin at 6:30p.m.
Randy Crawford, Mason,
b~other-in-law of the groom,
w11l perform a vocal nwnber.
Miss Vicki Wolfe, Racine,
will be tbe maid of honor, and
the bridesmaids will be Mrs.
Megan Manuel, Ra&lt;ine, Mrs.
Roma Sayre, Racine, and
Mrs. Diana Mills, Syracuse.
Shannon Slavin, Syracuse,

t'ousm ot the brtde, will serve
as flower ~i rl.
Homer Mills, Syracuse,
will be best man and the
ushers will be David Smith,
Syracuse, J ohn Baird,
Cheshire, and Verne Ord,
Pomeroy, brother of the
bride. Lee and Jaye Ord,
Syracuse, sisters of the bride,
and Demaris Crawford,
Mason , sister of the groom ,
will register the guests and
hand out the rice bags.
The Rev. Harvey Koch of
Syracuse will officiate at the
ceremony and there will be a

The 28th annual Christy·
Young reunion was held JuHc
12 al the Lan cas ter
F'ai r~rounds, Lancaster.
Dinner grace was given by
Garrett Christy and following
the meal, a business meeting
was conducted by Carl Barnhill, president . Officers'
reports were given. H~ndling
ooft drinks, ice and the table
preparations were Carl and
Hazel Barnhill.
The 1978 reunion will be
held at the same time next
year at ihe same place. Of·
fl eers elected were Jack
Christy, president; Clarence

&gt;:*-:st; ::·«· ~·:. m.::::w~·
immediately ,,
I·

Soc al

M~l'tin,

vice president;
Dorothy Stout. secretary·
treasurer.
Traveling the farthest
disumce for the reunion were
Pauline Abbott, a guest of
Ethel
Christy from
Washington, and Dr. and
Mrs. John Chamberin and
Christy of Bowling Green,
Ky .
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. cart Barnhill, Mr. and
Mrs. James Stout, Connie and
Terri, Mrs. Edith Betzing,
Tuppers Plains; Mr. and
Mrs. C. W. Martin, Athens,.
Edith Christy and Ethel

Bradbury Variety

reception
following the wedding .
Hostesses wiU be Cindy Ord,
Pomeroy, sister-in-law of the
bride, a11d aunts of the bride,
Mrs. Rita Slavin, Syracuse, ~
Mrs. Tene Barcroft, Hur- ':':
Decoupage plaques were
ricane, W. Va . and Mrs.
made
during the Thursday
TUESADY
Shirley Henerman, New
meeting
of the Bradbury
RUTLAND Women's
Plymouth.
Variety
Club
held at the home
Auxiliary Tuesday 7:30 p.m.
of
Mrs.
Arline
Davis with
Last meeting until SepMrs.
Bernice
Winn
presiding.
tember. AU members urged
Mrs. Davis had the devotions
to attend.
.
SPECIAL meeting of and also conducted roll call
gave
the
Racine Lodge No. 461 F&amp;AM and
Tuesday. Work in the EA secretary'sreport.
Mrs. Evelyn Murray gave
degree.
the
flower fund report and
WOMEN'S Auxiliary,
members
signed a get-well
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
card
for
Mrs.
Olevia Cotterill.
7:30 Tuesday in the hospital
Plans
were
made
for a picnic
cafeteria.
for members and their
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY
MID· families and friends in
mother ot tne prospective
August at Krodel Park, Point
groom, Mrs. Judy Coates and DLEPORT Lions Club, Pleasant, W. Va. Mrs. Winn
Shannon, Mrs. Lily Dyke, Wednesday noon, Meigs Inn .. had grace preceding the
OHIO VALLEY Com·
Mrs. Wanda Williams, Mrs.
mandery
24, Knights Tern· potluck dinner. Next meeting
Jane Williams, Mrs. Mabel
Will be on July 23 with Suzan·
Hannon, Mindy Spencer, plar, 7:30p.m. fortheexpreSB
na
Richmond. Others atten·
Mrs. Terri Williams, Miss purpose of electing and in· ding the meeting were
Connee Williams, Mrs. Ger· stalling officers and other Carolyn Searls, Evelyn Mur·
trude Miller, Mrs. Judy regular business. Officers to ray, Amy Searls, Hilda King,
Miller, Miss Lorraine Miller, take rituals.
Jackie Hoover, Peg Hutton,
Mrs. Flo Grueser, Mrs. Jesse
THURSDAY
Virginia Whitlatch, and a
Mae Brannan, Marie FranHEATH United Methodist guest, Sharon Wright.
cis, Mrs. Edythe Jay, Mrs . Church Women will have a
Kathy Reed, Mrs. Jo Ann picnic at 6 p.m. Thursday on
Francis and Susie, Julie the parsonage lawn. Those
Sloter, Mrs. Kathleen Fran· attending are to ,take their
cis, Mrs. Susan Rawlings, own table service. · The meat
Miss Nina Rus5ell, Miss and beverage Will . be furMildred Hawley, Mrs. Beulah nished. Mrs. Euvetta Becqtle
Roush, Mrs. Mabel Walburn, is the hostess chairman.
SURVIVORS NOTED
Mrs. Ctyda Allensworth, Mrs.
Sur~ivors of Mrs. Susan
Becky Glaze, Mrs. Drema
Marie Potts, who died Sunday
Roach, and Mrs. Martha
.
evening
at Holzer Medical
Childs.
.
Cent
,
er, no!listed ear11er in an ·
Sending gifts were Mrs.
account
of her death include
Margaret Francis,· Mrs.
three sisters, Mrs. Dorothy
P~yllis Young, Mrs. Eulah
Madd
C 1 b
M
ey, O urn us;
rs.
Francis, Mrs. Alice Parker,
.Helen
DehS.nkie,
Detroit,
Miss Peggy Murphy, Mrs.
Plans have been completed Mich., and Mrs. Mildred
Jeanette Thomas, Mrs·.
Milhoan, Reynoldsburg; a
Elizabeth Lohse, Mrs. Jen· for the open church wedding
nifer Sheets, Mrs. Lila Mitch of Deloris Ann Elliott, brot her, Clarence Byers of
Middleport, and aunts, Mrs.
' and Shari, Mrs. Clarice Er· daughter of Mrs. Julia
win, Mrs. Kathy Williams, Elliott, and Randy P. Snider, Susie Deith and Mrs. Roxie
Mrs. Joanne Williams, Miss son of Mrs. Mamie M. Oiler, both of Middleport.
Terri Russell, Mrs. Carol Stephenson, Pomeroy, and .
Wolfe, Mrs. Reva Beach, the late James P. Snider, at
Mrs. Donna Stewart, Mrs. the Pomeroy Church of the
Donna Glaze, Mrs. Cathryn Nazarene.
The wedding will be held on
Ervin, and Mrs. Bea Stewart.
June 25 at 7:30 p.m. with the
Rev. Clyde Henderson,
pastor of the church, to per·
'
fonn the ceremony. Music
Will be provided by Patty
Phillips.
The attendants wiU be
has accepted a position as a
Shari
Colmer, bridesmaid; ,
special education teacher
Mrs.
Tammy Johnson,
with the Indianapolis Public
honor, Tim Elliott,
matron
.ol
Schools beginning in Sepbest
man;
David Johnson,
tember.
bead
usher;
John
Elliott, ring
Mrs. E. A. Dodderer,
bearer; Lonnie Van Cooney,
Coolville, grandmother of
Miss Dodderer, attended the nower girl; and Jimmie
graduation ceremonies. Mr. Snider and Jeff Elliott,
and Mrs. Dodderer and their ushers.
A reception will be held in
daughters, Teresa and Jane
the
church annex immediateAnn, accompanied her home
ly
following
the wedding.
for a short visit.

Calendar

Club meets at

Miss Trudy Roach

·United Methodist Women
meet and plan picnic

Elliott-Snitkr
plans made

hour and groceries shower

Laurel Oiff News Notes

•II'

FAIRGROUNDS

-

•

••'

Pictures, text by Judy Owen

i• :•

••

! : INTERS!' ATE AFFAIR-Fans from both sides of the river e~joyed

waters. Spectators line the Pomeroy levee while the West Virginia shore
is packed with viewers.

~y•s Power Boat races which saw sunny skies and generally calm

..•• "

•••

.

~

"

RECRUIT NO MORE
WEST COLUMBIA Marine Private Tim L.
Crites, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Vane E . Crites of Route 1 has
completed recruit training at
the Marine Corps Recruit
Depot, ParriB Island,S. C. He
joined the Marine Corps in
February, 1977.

.

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.......

__.__

I · Simple facts everyone who
owns a home, car or business should know

IHow to Get

the Best Insurance Buy for
selechng your coverage . A
company's reputation lor
Monev
Your
Thebestwaytogetatrue service
and
claims

bugain on insurance Is to
shop for lt. eut there are

paymeht is critical.
And i1 vou have a claim,

more,.than three thousend
nlling
in ·

In a position to support you.

-companies

vour independent

aunt

is

SENIOR CITIZENS PARTICIPATE - Clifford
Christy washes down a hamburger before starting on
another. Sponsored by the R. C. Bottling Co. in
Middleport, Christy was one of 15 Senior Citizens
participatin~ in the Country Cousins eat-a-thon.

urence policies to protect T9 be on
hoi'nes.

cars

and

your side In
t'lelplng vou obtain a just,

business.es, and it iSn't
practical for you to check

equitable
Promptly.

That's why it's · a good .
Idea to consult an independent
insurance
agent. An independent

~mptove~ local business
man, an mdependent agent
knows his responsibility .is
to his . custome·rs . His

each and every one.

agent does not work tor an
Insurance cOmpany . He
work~ for you . Which
meanS ne can plan the
coverage that protecfs you
bes~ . And then place it with
the most ·suitlble ot tt'le
several insurance e:ompanies he deals with.
Many people make tt'le
e:os'ly. mistake of assuming
~ that insurance policies are
all the same. The trutn is
they are not. Not only .does
the quality . . . of coverage
vary from policy to policy,
but the cost often varies
too .
.
Remember that orlce is
not the only . basis to.r

I

settlement

Because he is a self·

succes-s'' baud on serving
his customers in three key
iHeas
I : He provides the beSt
Insurance coverage at the
lowest true cost_to you .
2. He is available dav .and
n·ight to respond to your
qeeds .
. J . He handles all types of
1nsur!lnce , and deals.
through strong. reliable
companies.
T~ matce sure you have
•n •ndependen! insurance
ilg_ent on your s1de, loek lor
th•s symbol or consult your
Yellow Pages . tf he can't
heto you,
~
·· .
no_body can .
'I'IOI.IIt
.

c

11

"The Insurance 5tore

Re.uter-ilragan 111aunance
·
992-5130
.
'
._._____,,
~-~-----~~
~--~

•

214 E. Main

"'

I

;

I

~~

-· ...... ·'

Po m~

,I

'

.

h rl ·•f'

J.,

· WINNER IN RARE FORM ~ First pU,ce winner Bill Brown in boat number 950 put on a
crowd pleasing performance to capture the high .speed class JP title.
;

-.t

r,•

·'T
f

I
•

.

.

.

'

•

~, A WINNER! - Art Tobin, first place winner in the
adult division, gets ready to devour his firsi of 12 burgers.
Tobin also won the highest sponsor award by finding over
50 sponsors to boost his per hamburger figure to $6.95.

,_____,lawn &amp; garden tractors

Roy Howell.
Mr. Vern Story, Columbus,
spent the weekend here with
Mrs. Story and son, John.
Mrs. Jean Wright was
hostess to the Laurel Cliff
Health
Club
Tuesday
evening. Contests were won
by Ruby Frick, Ladonna
Gilmore and Ann Mash. The
next meeting will be a wiener
roast at the roadside park on
SR 33. Refreslunents were
served.
· Mrs. Kathy Pullins is a
patient in Holzer Medical
Ceoter.
Mr. and Mrs. Lenny Lyons
and children, Rock Springs,
visited recently with Mrs.
Enna Fox. ·

LEGAL NOTICE
The Public Utilities COOl!lliS·
sion of Ohio has sel for public hearing Case No .
76-534-El-FAC, Subtile A, lo
review lhe operation of Ohio
Power Company's fuel cost
adjuslment clause. and ~s

fuel procuremerll practices
and policies. on Monday,
June 27, 19n, . at 10:30
A.M., at the offices of lhe
Commission, 180 East Broad
Street , Columbus , O~io
43215. All inleresled persons
will be given an llj)poftunity
Ia be heard. further informa·
tion may be oblained by con·
laeling l~e Public Ulililles
CommiSSIOn of Ohio.
"THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION Qf OHIO
By Randal G. Applegale,

·

·

STORE HOURS

1-BIOO, 4 Spoed

( lncludn 36" Mower)
(lncludn 36" Mower)
1-A60 Rider
(Includes 26" Mower)

S1S.9.~

52076.00

1493.10

$113$.00

SIU2.00

U43.00

S200S,OO

' $1633.00

$372.00

s

589.00

Mason, W.Va.

.. '
'

....

put on display

1'0.00

NEW 1977 MODELS INCLUDED IN THIS SALE, STOP IN.

-

773-5592

. QUEENS LOOK ON- Debbi~ Holsinger, first runnerup in the Regatta Queen contest,
sips a cola JUSt pnor to part1c1patmg m the Hamburger eat-a-than while second runnerup,
Trac1 Weese, looks on .

REG. SALE PRICE SAVE

MASON FURNITURE

MASON FURNITURE

had finished a crowd pleasing
run for the money.
Taking home the money
and first place titles were
Bruce Allen, Mansfield,
driving boat 312 in FS; Jerry
Hopkins, boat 718 in SE;
Dean Reynolds, driving boat
243 in UJ and SJ, Mansfield ;
Bill Brown, Akron, boat 950 in
JP ; and John Cacha\, Rocky
Rl ver, in GP with boat 677.
Placing second and third
for $50 and $30 prizes
respectively, were : Gary
Funkhouser, Ashland, Ohio,
and
Charlie
Rodgers,
Ashland, FS; Tim Toth,
Bedford, and 1'om Toth,
Northfield, SE; Doug Click,
Ashland and Jerry Calkins,
Dayton, UJ; Ken Rosa,
Wellington and Click, SJ;
Allen and Rodgers, JP; and
Craig Burkett, Akron and
Glenn Jeffers, Akron, GP.

Center programs .

1976 LEFT OVER MODELS

1-BIO, 4 Speed

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

BY JUDY OWEN
One of the major events
and crowd attraction of the
{ _DISPLAY CRAFTS-Jessie Grueser, a volunteer aid with Group Therapy at the MeiJl!
13th
annual Big Bend Regatta
Qlmmunity Mental Health Center, displays plaques and pillo:Ws handmade by the programs
was
Sunday's power boat
Pfirticipants, referred to as "Special Friends." The group meets every Wednesday
races
.
Spectators lined the
Jihernoon at the center and is part of the Personal Advocacy program.
Pomeroy levee and parking
lot walls to see 18 boats in the
six classes compete for
number one finishes which
brought drivers $80 each.
The fir&gt;'! race, featuring SE
(Sport type boats), UJ
(unlimited), and FS (family
style boats ) classes got un·
derway around I :30 p.m.
Each driver ran in four heats
· - and winners were determined
by tabulation based on the
best three of those . By six
o'clock the second and final
race of the afternoon was
over and the drivers of the
high speed JP (J-production ,
. 150 horse-power) , GP (Gproduction, 85 hp ), and SJ
(Sport tunnel boats, 150 hp )

• EXTRA SPECIAL VALUES •
(Includes 41" Mower)

.

proved popular

• SPECTACULAR PRICE CUTS 01 THE
BIG BED MICBIIE
• FLOOR SAMPLES • DEMOifSTUTOBS
...• LIMITED QUAITITIES
CLEAUICE PRICED-WHILE THEY LAST

1-C160, 8 Speed

Mon., Tues., n'ed:&amp; 5ar.-8:30til5:00
.
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

Power boat races

OUR WHEEL HORSE TRACTO
SUMMER STAMPEDE

Secrelal)'

'

.......
r ·

•
r '

Sarv;_j~a
.

R_ACE FOR THE FINISH UNE -. Dean Reynolds, driving boat nwnber 243, battles it
Calkins. tn boat 426. for first place in Class UJ. Reynolds finally won the race
With Cawkms commg m third behind Doug Click. Reynolds also won first place in Class SJ.
o~t With J~rry

WHEELHORSE

.Miss Dodderer graduates

Pastor welcomed with fellowship

Regatta
weekend
.
.
action pictures

6&amp;8 P.M.

Christy, New Lexington;
Mary Shahan, Breman;
Pauline Abbott of Port
Angeles, Wash.; Bernice Hoffman, Rutland; Mr. and Mrs.
Orville Christy and Jada, Colwnbus; Mr. and Mrs. James
Gteissner, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Christy and family, Lancaster; Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Christy, Mark and Gina, Col·
wnbus; Mr. and Mrs. An·
thony Sargenti, Amesville;
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Hartley,
Hamilton; Mrs. Ross Hoon,
Chesterhill; Mr. and Mrs.
Keith Jacklin and Maney,
Reynoldsburg ; Ada and Bill
Swank, Akron ; Eloi.se Hampton, Diamond; Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Stalter, Colwnbus;
Mr. and Mrs. Garrett Christy,. Grove City; Dr. and Mrs.
John Chamberlin Christy,
Bowling Green.

Mrs. Davis ' home

Shower given for

The Primary Department
teachers of the Middleport
Church of Christ hos\ed a
bridal shower for Trudy
Roach Friday evening at .the
church. Miss Roach will
become the bride of Mark
Williams on Sunday.
Hosting the shower were
Mrs. Nora Rice, Mrs. Debbie
BRUCE :
Gerlach, Mrs. Betty
Labels are for laughing off. (Which is what I did when I was
McKinley, Mrs. Sharon
"A Boy Named Sue," till the song went off the charts .• . And 1 Stewart, Mrs. Debi Honaker,
didn't grow whisker:&lt;&gt;ne.) ·SUE
Miss Thelma Boyer, Mrs.
Lorraine Neff, and Mrs.
(GOT. A PROBLEM] Or a subject for discussion, twoPhyllis Baker.
generation style? Direct your questions to either Sue or Heleri
Games were played with
Bottel • or both, il you want a combination mother-daughter
prizes going to Mrs. Dorothy
Roach, Mrs. Terri Williams,
Mrs. Becky Glaze, and Mrs.
Jane Williams. The door
prize was won by Mrs. Susan
Rawlings.
The cake was haked by
Mrs. Sharon Stewart and was
inscribed with " Congratula·
lions, Mark and Trudy." It
A picnic was planned for Grueser presented "The
was decorated with wedding
July 20 at the Syracuse Park · Guidepost for Fathers" and
rings, doves and a hasket of
when the United Methodist "The Birth of a Nation."
flowers. The cake was served
Women met Wednesday at
Mrs. Teresa Rellbhaw sent with punch, mints, and wn·
the Minersville Church.
a c~rd of thanks for flowers brella replica nutcup favors.
· Members quilted during sent to her while hospitalized. The tables were decorated
the day and had a business There wsxa was a report on
with wedding bells and a
meeting following a lun- money made from rugs and it
and groom on top of a
r cheon. Mrs. Karl Grueser was noted that Mrs. Mary bride
large bell used on the gift
presided at the meeting Pugh's brotherin·law recent·
table.
whi~h opened with group ly died. A card was sent to .
Attending besides the
smgmg of "America" and Maude Grueser confined to a
hostesses were Mrs. Dorothy
"Faith of Our Fathers." Mrs. Colwnbus hospital for eye
Roach, mother of the brideKathryn Miller presented the surgery.
elect, Mrs. Iris Williams,
program reading "You May
Attending besides thoSe
Count That Day," ·"The Gifts named were Mrs. Elsie
·of God," 14 Too Late" and an Forbes, Mrs. Ullie Starcher,
article entitled "Thoughts of Mrs. Stella Grueser, Mrs.
An.Unknown Soldier" written Helen Maag, Mrs. Fannie
by Joyce Stedman, a senior at Phillips, Mrs. June Sayre,
Teresa Lynn Dodderer,
Grafton High School. Mrs. Mrs. Mary Russell, and Mrs.
daughter'
of Mr. and Mrs.
Mildred Phillips read "On Gertrude Mitchell.
M. . Dodderer,
Hobart
Father's Day" and Mrs.
Swanton, formerly of Meigs
County, graduated June 11
from Bowling Green State
University with a bachelor of
science degree In education.
Miss Dodderer majored in
elementary education,
learning disabilities and
APPLE GROVE - A thains and Philippians. The behavior problems. She is a
fellowship hour along with a group sang "B lessed member of Alpha Lambda
shower of groceries for the Assurance" with Bess Par· Delta, an honor sorority. She
pastor and his family was sons at the Assisting with the
held Sunday evening at ·the program Patsy Laudennilt
Apple Grove United Lucille and Karen Rhodes:
Methodist Church.
Mrs. Buc~ closed the serVice
Plans for the event were with a poem, "Let Us Give
Attendance at all services
made at a recent meeting of Thanks" and led the group in
at the Free Metbodist Church
the United Methodist Women prayer.
at the church. Mrs. Donna
Mrs. Lucille Rhodes and June 19 ·was 160. Sixteen choir
Hill presided at the business Mrs. Parsons were hostesses. members were present.
Mrs. Sandy , Dorst arid
meeting. It was reported that Attending besides those namDeean
and Tina Hamlin
the recent I'wnmage sale was ed were Anna Alley, Georgia
visited
over
the weekend with
a success and plans were Wolfe, and guests, Karen
her
parents,
Mr: and Mrs.
made for another one at the Rhodes and Dolly Hill.
.
James
Gilmore.
church in July.
Mrs. Ruth Douglas and
The birthdays of Georgia
Mrs.
Rose Ann Hines, Guys. Wolfe and Alice Balser were
ville,
visited Saturday with
observed. Mrs. Eileen Buck
Mrs.
Enna
Fox.
had charge of devotions using
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Ernie Haggy
as her topic "Blessedness of
and
children,
Middleport,
Being Thankful." She told of
DAUGIITER BORN
the many material blessings . Mr. and Mrs. Herb Eltlott, visited Sunday with Mr. and
we have and spoke of the need Rutland, are announcing the Mrs. James Gilmore.
·
to thank God for them. She birth of a daughter, Rebecca
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Poulton
!lllked the group to pause in a Ann, at the Holzer Medical and children, Mr. Vernon
moment ofthankfulprayer.
Center on June 8. The baby Howell, Canton, spent the
Mrs. Dolly Wolfe read weighed eight pounds. Mr. weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
scripture pertsining to the and Mrs. EIUott have two
topic from John 15 and Corin· other daughters, Angela
Faith and Amy Lynn. Mrs.
Iva Stewart, Rutland, and
Mrs. Thelma Elliott, Point
Pleasant, W, Va. are the CHIP USTENING
CLUB MEETS
grandpaTents.
!.OS ANGELES (UPI)
Mrs. Marie Leifheit hosted
Chip Carter says he is touring
a meeting of the Chatter Club
the country "as my father's
at her home Thursday night.
ears" to listen to the gripes of
Hostess gifts were presented
local govermnent olficlala.
to her and Mrs. Lee Enoch
The President's son met
PARTY PLANNED
received an anniversary gift.
with
County
~irl Scout troop 1100; Monday
Games were played with
Sahsbury, will have a bowl- Superviaor Kenneth Hahn to
prizes going to Mrs. Hattie
ing and pizza party Thurs- dlscusa Los An&amp;eles. water
Fisher, who also won the door
day. Members are to meet at and transportation problems,
prize, Mrs. Linda Van Meter,
the school at 1 p.m . and must and is e:rpected.to meet with
Mrs, Suaan Cleland, and Mrs.
have a permission slip. aides of Gov. Edmund G.
Esther Harden. Sandwiches
Parents are to pick up their Brown Jr. He will spend a
dessert and beverages we~ ·
week in California.
children at 4 p.m.
served.

rr::i~'''''}:::::;::::::::::rn~:~:~:~::~rtr:::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::r:r::::::~:::::~::::~:::~::::;:;::;;::::~:::~::::r::rr::::::::::::::::r::~:::~~~~~:r:~:r:~;:;::;:::;r::m;i~!

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
WED., JUNE 22

BAUM LUMBER
985-3301

CHESTIR, 0,

•

l

I

....

CLINIC &lt;OORDINATOR, Nan Mykel, left, shows off the center's group therapy room.
Located oo the second floor. of the former Meigs General Hospital building, the room aLso
11ef1H!S as a waiting room. W1th Mrs. Mykel is Pat Leegan, director of Women's Issues.

BY JUDY OWEN
Saturday In conjunction ~with
"We want to get to know the the Big Bend Regatta
community and let them get festivities.
to know us," said Nan Mykel,
Mrs . 1\olykel also showed off
Coordinator of the Com· the P)fns for the new building
munity Mental Health Center which will house not only the
at Open House Saturday.
Mental Health Center but the
To accomplish their goal of Community Health Center
" desensitizing the com· and the Senior Clt.izens acmunity to coming into the tivities as well. To be located
center," the Mental Health near Veterans Memorial
Clinic staff showed films, Hospital, the projected
discussed their programs, completion date for the
and displayed crafts made by ·complex is two years from
participants in group activity last January.
terapy from 1-li p.m.

DISCUSS WOMEN'S ISSUES- Pat Leegan, direcior of the Women's Issues program
was one of the many staff heads who participated in the Open House this past weekend. Her~
she looks rer posters made to illustrate key poin~.
'

�11- The Daily Sentinel, Middleporl-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday. June 21. 1971

~iEAPON'1Television

DICK TRACY

IS Words or Undtr

c..h

IW.)

Lllltr~t·

100
150

tilit)11
ll.lt~.).li
6liii)'.li

""

,00
uv~

Eold1 wonl

12!'1
100

,,
J75

tht.• muuH' Wll !5

\'enl,:j pt:l wur tl pc1 1i&lt;t}

wur~ lB ~

A&lt;b ! Ull llll~ utllt'l U10•11 \: UflM-'1-:Uil \ l'
w1ll be that~t"CC il! the I du)
tiilt!,

da}li

In memt)l") Card of Tllltn~ otlld
ObtUW I'Y 6 tents pt'r word $J 00
llliiiUIIUUl (:ash Ul t~.dVIUI~l'

'

LARGE DOC in K•ngsbury ,

LOST

Roods 1de fork oleOS&gt;
Long t-.ou , mos11y blocM w1tn
some wh•ta Has a sash chotn
collar
Phor'le Bud Wilson
~2 7283 01 9-il:l 2126
Rt

33

lOST LADIES blue wallet Sunday
It found please contod Cheryl
Sm1 th at 992 2191 No questions

asked 1f money 1s mrssing

Mobi le Home SC~Ics Mnd Yl!l"d sa ll'S
Mre IH.'l't'pll'ti only wnh l'Hsh With
01 tlcr ~ l'l'nt

r h;u ..:e I ur atls t llll)'u•g Box Number In C..rc of Tht• &amp;m·
tmel
The P ubhliht'r le:;t'tVeto the n,.:h1

to t"dat vr re/ed cmy 11d.'i dt'l'lllld o!J
)l'( tlunae l. T It' Publt11hcr 14111 uvt IJt

l'eSpt.Jll!iiiJlc fol

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Phune9'n·2156

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT ,
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
No 16, 448

LAVADA WHEELER .
Roule J , Box l,
Pomeroy , Ohio 45769 ,
Plll~tntlff,

• VS •

UNKNOWN
HEIRS ,
DEVISEES , LEGATEES ,

DISTRIBUTEES ,
MINISTRATORS .

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
Monday

Noon on Satur tl_!ty
Tutsd&lt;~&gt;

thru F 11d.ay

the dt:~)

&lt;P M
befu1 e pullht t:~I W II
SWI\Uty
4? M

Ftltlay aflern wn

LEGAL NOTICE
TO BIDDERS
sealed prpposals will be
rece•ved bY the Veterans
Memorial Ho~pifal , Metg s
Countv , Ohio , at the Ve teran s
Memor i a l
Hospttal ,
Pomeroy , Ohio unt1l 12 00
Noon , Eastern Dayl 1ght
Sa~t~ings
T•me, Wednes day
June 2Q, 1917 and at the time
will be opened public ly and
read , for the furnishing of all
labor and material necessary
for the Remodel of the In
tenslve Care .and Coronary
Care
Units ,
Veterans
Memor i al
Hospital ,
Pomeroy, Ohio All work
shall be done accord ing to the
drawings and speciftcations
as prepared by Hayes,
Donaldson , Wittenmyer &amp;
Partn ers, Architects , 601
Eighth Street. Portsmouth ,
Oh 10
Separate proposals will be
received for General Work ,
Electncal Work. P lumb.ng
Work; Heating , Ventltalmg
and Air Conditioning Work
Proposals shall be sub
mltted on Proposa l Form
c ontained
In
th e
speclfica,lons and other
contract documents, whtch
documents are on file l!l t the
Hospltrtl and at the office of
the Architect, and are
available to all prospec t1ve
bidders during reg ular office
hours until the closing of b 1ds
One complete set of bid
documents, for the purpose af
bidding , may be obtained
from Hayes , Donaldson ,
Wittenmyer &amp; Partners ,
Architect, 601 Eighth Street,
Portsmouth , Ohio
Upon
deposit of F Iffy CS50 00)
Dollars, which deposit will be
refunded upon return of bid
documents In good co nd it1on
Within a period of fifteen (15)
days after open ing of b1ds
Contract documents will be
mailed COLLECT , upon
written request and depostt
submitted
All proposals must be
accomi)enled by a Bid Bond
bound In the spec ifications
end executed by a bonding
company licensed by th e
State of Ohio poayable to the
order of the Owner In an
amount not less than five {5
pet ) percent of the amount o f
the bids The bond or check
shall be forfeited If the bidder
falls to enter Into a co ntrac t
with seld Owner The bonds
or checks of the three lowest
bidders will be held until the.
execution of the contract and
the furnishing of the requir ed
performance bond , after
which they will be returned
on demand The checks of
other bidders will be returned
on demand after the bids are
canvassed
A performance bond and a
labor and material payment
bond , both of 100 per cent of
the amount of the contract,
w ith satisfactory sureties,
will be required from th e
successful bidders for the
faithful performan ce of the
work for each co ntract
awfirded
Bids shall be submitted to
the Owner only upon the
plans and speclflcatrons that
have been obtained from the
office of the Architect
The r lght Is reser~t~ed by the
Owner to re(ect any and all
bids , and no bidder may with
draw his bid for a per 1od of
Sixty (60) days
By Order of the
Meigs County Hosp1tal
CommiSSIOn and
Veterans Memor ial Hospital,
Inc
Pomeroy, Oh lo
(5l 31 , l6l 7, 14, 21 4tc

PUBLIC NOTICE
Bids will be rece ived by the
Village of Middleport, Ohio,
Meigs County et the Mayor 's
Office of the VIllage Hall, 237
Race Street, until 4 00
; PM . July 7, 1977 tor the
tollowlng materials ·
850 Tons, more or less ,
As~haltic Concrete in place
and rolled .
350 Gallons, more or less,
Tac:k and-or Primer In place
A list of Streets being
considered for repalr rng IS
available at the Mayor's
Offfce, 237 Race Street,
Middleport, Ot'IJo.
The VIllage reurves ttte
rlgl'tt to re(ect any or all brds.
Gene Grete ,
Clerk -Treasurer
June 21 , 28, July S

Iii

19'13, Prsident Nilt:on
and Soviet leader Leonid

Bruhnev

signed
an
on an 13month
reacll a permanent

acreement
eftort to

I1'1D8

pact.

A

lhouibt

for the day:

Brltub aclentut Havelock
EDia tald, "A man llllllt not
IWillow more beUefs than he
can cl,jjlut."

AD ·
AND
EXECUTORS , IF ANY , OF
THE ESTATES OF JAMES

DAVIDSON ,
MARV

ANNA

DECEASED ;
DAVIDSON .

DECEASED
DANIEL
DAVIDSON ,
DECEASED ,
CORA
CUNNINGHAM ,
DECEASED ;
DAVID
DAVIDSON ,
DECEASED ;
SADIE
BELL
DAVIS ,

DECEASED ;

Help Wanted

Help Wa.nt..d

Loot and Found

FLORENCE

DAVIDSON
McKAY , aka FLORENCE
HOWELL
DAVIDSON ,
DECEASED ,
Addrenes Unknown ,
HOWELL

DAVID WAYNE DAVIDSON ,
who se la sf known address
was Pomeroy , Ohio, Addre ss
Now Unknown ,
UNKNOWN
HEIRS ,
DEVISEES , LEGATEES ,
DISTRIBUTEE$ ,
AD MINISTRATORS,
AND
EXECUTORS , IF ANY , OF
THE ESTATE OF DAVID
WAVNE
DAVIDSON ,
DECEASED ,
Addres s
Unknown ,
Defendanh .
- SERVICE BY
PUBLICATION TO THE DEFENDANTS
ABOVE NAMED ·
Yo u are hereby nol1f1ed
that you have been named
defendant s m a legal action
entitled
" L AVA DA
WHEELER vs ME LV INA
DAVIDSON , etal" m the
.. a mmon Pleas Court of
Me tgs County, Oh10 , Case No
16,448 The oblect of the
Complain t being to pa r:ttt1on
the fol lowing descnbed real
estate, to w1t
Situate m the Town s hip of
Sal •sbury , 1n the County of
Metgs and $tate Qf Oh10 ,
sut1ated In Section E1ght (8J.
Town Two (2) and Range
Thtrfeen (1 3) in the Ohio
Company 's Purchase. and
bounded and described as
follow s, to w 1t Begmnlng at
the corner of John Folmer 's
heirs proper ty, near the
corpori!lltlon line of th e Village
of Pomeroy , and On th e
Pomeroy a nd Chester Road ,
t hence West along the north
line of John Folmer 's heir s
property lo t he e11st lme of
Clara M
Dow property .
thence a long said east line of
sa ld Clara M Dow property
north l4 degrees wes t about
three hundr e d forty e 1ght
{148 ) feet. ' thence north 82
degrees east on e hundred
ninety five {195 ) feet to the
Pam eroy and Chester road ,
then ce
in
a
southerly
direction along said road to
the place of beginning ,
contatnlng on e and forty
hundredth s (1 40) ac r es,
more or less
Save and except the coal
and other mtneral s un
deriving t he above descr ibed
premises, and the right to
mrne and remo¥e the same ,
without unnecessary tnlury to
the su r face
Also the rtght for a drarn or
ditch to the road from the old
bank mouth !n front of t he
Folmer Home
Referen ce Deed vot 236 ,
page 867 and vo1 236, page
869
and the demand or the
Complaint 1S to sell Defen dants• mterest In the above
described premises .
You are notlf.led thaf you
are reQutred to answer the
Compla int wtlh in twenfy
eight days affer the last
publlcatton , Whi Ch wrll be
publiShed once each week tor
six consecutl~t~e weeks . The
last publication wttl be made
on the 26 day of Jul y , 1977
In case of your fa ilure to
answer or otherw.se respond
as perm1ttect by the Otllo
Rules of Ci vil Procedure
Within the trme s tated,
judgment by default will be
rendered aga inst vou for the
relief demanded tn the
Completnl
Larry E Spencer,
Cle rk of Courts
Me1gs County, OhtO
(6) 2t. 28 (7J 5. 12. 19, 26 , 6tc

LEGAL NOTICE
TO · RONALD D THOMAS,
whose last known address Is
2012 Cleneav Avenue. Nor
wood, Ohio. and whose exact
address Is unknown
You are hereby notified
that you have been named
defendant In a legal acton
entitled Pomeroy Cement
Block Company vs Ronald o
Thomas , db I All Weather
Roofing &amp; Construction, et al
ThiS actton hU been assigned
No , 16,402 in the Common
Pleas Court, Meigs County ,
Ohio
The Oblect of this complaint
Is to acquire 1udgment
against Ronald D Thomas,
dba All Weather ~ooflng &amp;
Construction and Ronald D.
Thomas in the amount of
12.668 05 plus lnter!!St and
costs
You are required to answer
this complaint within 21 days
after ttre last publication of
this notice, which will bt
published once each wee k for
six consecutive weeks. The
last publication will bt made
on June 21 and the 28 days for
answer will start on that Clift .
~
In case of vour fallvre to
answer or otherwise rtsponct
as required by the Ohio Rults
of Civil Procedure ludgmtnt
by default wlll be rendered
agelnst
you for
relief
· demandtc~ In this complaint
LARRY E . SPENCER
Cltrk of Courts
Common P'leas Court,
Mtlgs County,
Pomeroy , Otilo 45769
(!l 2o, 31 l6l 7, to, 21, 21, 6tc
;,

COAl ltme'!i tone ond colc1vr11
chlonde and colcn.1m brme for
dust control and spec1dl mnung
sa lt lor formers , (:occels1or Soh
Works Mom Streel Pomeroy
Ohro or phone 991 . 3l:t91
CAMPER
S600 Also
horse
trot1er $t1 50 Phone {614 1 b98·
3290

ACAREER JOB IN
CONSUMER FINANCE
Gain recognltJon and presf•ge through a career In
consumer finance Consumer finance Is an Integral and
important force In ou r cou ntry's economic growth and
progress .
A position here wtll give you econom1c secu rity The
cons umer finance business Is steady - even during
recessions
You can win promotion rapidly . You will be paid a
good starting salary and r ece1 ve exceptional employee
benef1 ts
Ther e are Branch Representative positions open now
for high school graduates Must have au to.
Phone Mr . Snodgrass today for a confidential.
personal mterv1ew Ca ll 992-2111

SPRING GARDEN Suppl1el Cob
bog&amp;, caulif lower
broccoli ,
and head lelfuoe plants ,
yellow , whne, and red anton
sets . anton plants , Kennebec .
cobbler, Kotohdtn, Red Pont+oc
ond Red lo s od~ seed potatoes
Bvlk garden se&amp;ds. poH1ng so•l.
peal moss fru1 t lrees and rose
bushes
Midway Market ,
Pomeroy
Oh1o
992 2582
Bobs Marke t, Mason, W Vo
1304 ) 773 5721

1 42 Ill cost 1ron k1tchenS1nk, 1
bos•n and I dram board, hang
on wall type , while 1 3 burner
gos , hot plot e. Phone 992 5714
ECONOMY TRACTOR w1 th oil otII.N EQUAL OPPORTUN !TY EMPLOYER
lochme nts l1ke new , ask tng
$2250
Phone (6 14)698 3290
LOCAL INSU RANCE agency~needs WANTED TIMBER cutlers sk1dder
~omeone to represent them on
Qnd dozer operators Phone GOO D RI€H To p s01l Charles R
992 5397 or 992 3861 of fer 7
on establis hed temto ry Good
Hotf1 eld Back hoe Serv iCe
wages excellent benif1ts ll
p m Tr t- Stote~~p p t ng Inc
Phone 742 2008
you con meet people don t po 1s
COAL AND Wood cookstove red
thts up No expenen ce re
tick hound 1 year old Birqu tred, only the w1 ll to work
ProfesS!om&amp;Sen-iues=
dhouses
Pt cmc tables Phone
Send resume to Box 672
985-4124
Pomeroy Oh ~57b9
NEW COMPANY - Btg Bend
~
Developers Fmest tn remodel KAWASAKI 175 - d1 rt brka $400
LI CENSED PILOT fo r ha rbour
Suzuk• 72 · street b1ke $750
mg, pomt1ng and concrete
work Apply 1M person at Tn
Call 949 2463 eventngs after 6
wo rk lntertor and extenor
Sto le Motenol s Corp
Ap
Fr ee es trmotes
Phone
plegrove Ohto on St . Rt 338
prn
992 ·3573
HANG
ING
BASKETS pots and
JOB OPENING Porttttme RN for
geron1um s
C l eland s
o reo Hea lt h Agency. Mus t hove EXCAVATION · COMPLETE se phc
Greenhouse
Geraldtne
!&gt;ystems Spnngs developed
own transportation General
Cleland Ro c•ne OhiO
All work IS guaranteed Brad
knl;)w ledge ol a re o Hours 8 4
l ew 1s phone 742 2451
Cal l 992 5912 between 8 and 4
Equal Opportun1ty Employer. • EXCAVATING BACKHOE . dozer
......,.....
trencher , low Boy dump truck
tru cks, ·s eptic systems Bill
Pullins , phone 992-2478 day or
_mght
SOFTENER?

Business Services

-=

-

-----

-

- - ---

-=-::--:-

----

N¥ces :::c: ~~ _

NEED A WATER

- =:~if""

PIANO LESSONS ch tidrens and
adults
Mn
Harvey Von
Vronken . 992 ·2270
CONCRETE WORK Pot 1os steps
walks and dnvewoys Phone
992·22.44
50 to 60 Acres of crop land FOR
RENT 1n Rut land Phone (5 13)
539· 7::4::.
39~---~-'-,-~
NEW BARGAINLAND now open
New glassware d1shes pons
s ma ll appl 1onces radios , g•fl
tfems , toys, beoch , campmg
ont:lsportmg suppl1es, dothmg,
so me new and used furn1ture
and much more tn Me!gs Plaza ,
409 Pearl St M•ddleport Open
dorly 10 Q m. to 5 30 p m e xcept Thur s~y and ~u~doy
MEIGS COUNTY Coon Hunte rs
assoe~at to n wtll have a meeting
Friday June 24th at 7 30 p m on
Snowball H1ll, Elechon of new
ofl1cers w1ll be held and
refreshments w11i be served

-------

2 KITTENS FOR gtveoway

One
long ha ired block ond wh1te,
one flgt r str1ped
Phone
992 3361 anytime o r 992 7791
ofler 4 p.m.

RISING STAR Kennel Boordt ng ,
Indoor Outdoor runs groommg
all breeds , clean sontlary
facthflesoe367 -7112 Chestrtre
Phon• (614)367·0292.
HOOF HOLLOW. Buy, sell , trade
or trom horses RUTH RE"EVES
framer Phone (6 14 )698 3290
AKC SHETLAND sheep dogs
(Mm ) Col ltes , 2 females , 7
weeks old. Shots ond wor med
Phone (6 14 ) 367 -0292 or
367 7112
MEIGS COUNTY Humane SoCiety
Animal Corel1ne 992-7680 or
offer 6 p m. 9'92·5427 .
REG TREEING Walker fema le
coo ndo g 8 yrs old Phone
992 3068

6 FREE KITTENS Phone 742·3063 .
DOGGIE BEAUTY Parlor , all
breeds sty led the way you l1ke
No drugs used Call lor ap
potnlment 742 3 162 _,..............

WanteiftoBii.,..,-

-=

-~-

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

CASH p01d for oil makes and
model s of mob ile homes
Phone orea code b1~ · 423 9531
TIMBER , Pomeroy Forest Products Top price for standtng
saw ti mber Coli 992-5965 or

279 ,95

Let us
Free.

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

BISSELLSIDING CO
A local contractor
Phone 949·2801
or 949-2860

water

100 WEST LINEAR fo r sole , $95
Coli 742 2184

HEAVY TYPE hens fo r sole Phone
992 2524
KAWASAKI 100 On ond Off Rood
Motorcycle , l1ke new w1th
helm•l Coli 1614)667 3333

1973 HONDA Xl250 ru ns good
$300 C~.!!_.~9~~f!_!r.: p.m.
_:LD~R:.:A::I:l:::RO::-A-D-,..I~.TNQC USED FORESTRY EQUIPM ENf
O
John Deere 540 Sktdder Pet
Hock tng Valley K &amp; M and
llbone
Super 8 Cory L1h, Pren·
others Also all ktn~s of steel
fl ee G -RMT w 342 bypos ~ g'rop
traps , Phone (014) 367-7433 or
pie. Contact Dennis Smurr ,
wnfe John Ye1th , Chesh1re
(614) B38 -534'::5"::c-~~
Ohro 45620
HOOVER UPRIGHT sweeper 1977
Model on so le for 1ust a froct 1on
of the ongtnol cos t reduced to
$26 50 Cosh or terms Call
IF YOU have a servtce to offer
992 5146
wa nt to buy or se ll !&gt;Ometh1ng
oe look1ng fo r work
or
whatever
you 'll get results
foster w1th o Sent1nel Wont Ad
New Co-Op water sof ·
Coli 992·2156
teners, model VC -SVI.
Only S279 .95
YARD SALE , 829 S Th1rd Ave.
Save sso .oo on a new
Middleport
20th, 21
22
H otpomt Refrigerator.
Clot hmg, d1shes , cofteemoker
1 New 20 CUbiC It
go ss tp be nch , drapes and ldts
Chest Freezer
S319 95
more
Now in stock, complete hne
of bulk garden seeds .
YARO SALE
2 sets pony 1 Good McCullough Chain
harnesses and fre ezer One
Saw
S65
mt ie off 124 o n Happy Hollow
1 Good Used Poulan Cham
Saw
S50
Rd Phone 742 2991
1 Good Used Untco
3 FAMilY Yard Sa le Wed and
Dryer
$80 DO
Thurs Corner of laurel and
1 Good Used G.E Dryer US
Sycamore , M1ddleport 10om
1 Gooo us e o nurpofnt
4
F r o s t Free
Coppertone
Freezer Refrigerator
4 FAMILY Yard Sole. Start 2~
comblnatron A r e al steal
24 , 9 t1l 5 logon St
at S250

FOR SALE

Pomeroy Landmalll
•

Jack

EXPERIENCED
Radiator ,...--....,
Service

Phone 992-2181

-- ·--

(jiii._pn;~r~ ~

Pomeroy Landmark

9a
IAiil.

Route 3, Pomeroy, 0 .
Carpet &amp; Upholstery
Phone M1ke Young
At
992·2206 or 992-7630

CRAFTY LADIES
HANDICRAFT

''The Onginators
Not The

Imitators ,~

2-23·1 mo.

,:_1-UNI(

..

CAPfAIN EASY

OVEil. fHEil.E l WE HAD TO SEDATE
BIIT HE'!&gt; C0Mii&gt;J6 OUT OF IT! ...
LET 'S SSE THE ll.AI&gt;JSOM!

804 WesiiMtn SlrHt

'

Just Below lhe Jonts
Boys' in Pomoroy, Ohio
Phone 992-21fl
6· 15--1 mo.

WHADPA 'lA MEAI&gt;J •
;!0 T IME" L. WHEIII
IT COME$ TO F IVI"
MIWOIII e,ucKS, I
DON'T TAKE ANY·
80VY'5 WORD!

SWAI.N'S

Mtddl~port,

FREE ESTIMATES
BlOwn
lnsulal1on Semces
Ftlllntlnl ~watllble

•

Blown rnt6 Walls &amp; Atttts
STORM
WIIIIIOWS I DOORS
~LUMINUM

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

LARRl,,.~~f~DER

I'll. HZ.ZI74

Ph 991·3993

Reedsville, 0 .

4.10 I mo

GUTIER SERVICE
Continuous

one

I I I

piece

gullen. We heng II, or do II
yourself. Special prices to

rJCI

RACINE CARPET
SHOP6·16·1mo. ,

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

-Rea:l.~tat;:tOf:Safe~;--:.- :e:
-

=-

-~

-

=-

SMAll form for so le, 10% down,
owner ftnonced Monroe Coun VA·FHA , 30 yr finonc1ng. Ireland
ty W Vo Phone (304) 772Mortgag e, 77 E State, Athens
31
02 o• (304)772 3227
phone (bl4 ) 592 305_1 _
- COUNTRY farmland wllh seclud
New house for sole 3 bed room, 1
ed woods water and good ac1111 bath
rec
roo m and
cess m Monroe County, W Vo
garage
Lee Construct1on ,
$ 1,OOO down , coli (304) 772·
_yhone ~92 3454 o r 44~~ 3102 or (304) 772 3227
NEW HOUSE lor sole 3 bedroom ,
1 1/J both , " rec . room ond Commerctal properly opprox 17
acres , leve l land located at
garage
Lee Construcllon
Tuppers Plo.ns on Oh1o Route
Phone 992 3454 or (614 )
7
Phone (614) 667 b:l04
4.46·9568.
1975 SHULTZ 12 x 60 Mobile home NEW 3 bedroom house, bu1lt-tn
kitchen, bath and '/, Phone
w1fh cement porch Dnd owning
742-2306
or conto&lt;: t MilO B. Hut·
T)ie block garage . cellar
ch1son , Rutland Oh10
bulldmg wtlh utd 1ty room
overhead on 2 Y1 a cres of land . b ROOMS w1th both on 4 ocres
l ocated nea r langs v ille ,
Phone
$14 000 Phone992 5589.

5 ROOM HOUSE 1 bath 2 pm
ches , one screened , garage
and carport , gas furnDce Walk
mg dtstonce to town and lo
sc hool Coli after 5 992 3488
HOUSE FOR sole one th1rd a cre
ground m Boshon oreo Phone
949 2432

HElP

YCXJRSflf~

POMEROY,

TEAFORD[g
REALTOR
'
VIRGIL B. TEAFORD, SR .
REALTOR
216 E. Second Street
Pomeroy, OhiO 45769
Phone 992·3325
RENOVATED
3
bedroom frame home, 2
baths, natural gas furnace
and ct ty water , near
shopp tng $17,000
NEW
LISTING
Carthage
Hills ,
3
bedrooms, bath, rural
water, electric heating and
nice lal $16,500
RUTLAND 4 room
frame with 2 bedrooms ,
bath. front porch and large
lot $ 11 ,ooo.
S YEARS YOUNG - 4
bedroom frame home .
Balh,
birch
kitchen ,
disposal and level lot. A
good buy at $16,000
POMEROY- Large older
home with natural gas
central heating. Up to 5
bedrooms and 1112 baths
Full basement and large
lot $24,000
57 ACRES- Good gambrel
roof barn with water ,
electric and concrete
floors. 3 bedroom house
with bath and FA furnace.
LARGE 4 bedroom
frame home, 2 baths,
natural
gas
centra l
heatmg, famdy room,
garage and large lawn
2 BUILDINGS - for lhe
prrce of one on State Route .
Only $8.500
2 BEDROOMS - In town
on qutet street. Modern
bath, dining room and level
lot
NEW LISTING Just
outsode of town is this fully
f1Jrn1shed 3 bedroom home
with city water, nah.tral
gu . partial basement and
large bach yard Just
$7,000
WITH GOOD CREDIT
AND A FEW HUNDRED
DOLLARS YOU
CAN
HAVE A HOME OF YOUR
OWN.
G Bruce Tealord
Helen L. Teaford
Associates

O.

JUST LISTED - About 2
yrs
old, 3 bedrooms ,
Master has own fu ll bath ,
modern kitchen, d1nelle.
smal l deck, large living R .
Central air 1 acre $31,000.
MIDDLEPORT - Close to
school - 4 B R, 2 baths,
equipped kitchen, large
rec room, air cond., FA
heat, bar, storage and
other features, 2 car
garage, $45,000
POMEROY- Lovely view
of the river, 3 BR , bath,
equtpped kltchen, garden
spate, storage bldg Part
basement $12, 500 .
JUST
LISTED
3
bedrooms,bath, carpeting,
nat gas heat, carpet ing,
large lol $18,000
POMEROY Peacock
Ave. , l lf.t acres, water,
sewer avarlable, Could be
developed 55,800.
CLOSE TO MINI;$ - 4
acres has several bu1ldlng
lots, Township Rd. 344.
Asking just $4,600
CLOSE TO FORKED RUN
LAKE - 6- acres, almost
new double w 1de, 2 BR,
bath, din1ng R., garage and
2 buildings . S17.000 .
AVOID THE PITFALLS IN
SELLING YOUR OWN
HOME - LET US SELL IT
FOR YOU .
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
,
Hank, Kath &amp; Leona
Cleland
Associates
992·2259 or 985·4112

.

0 K ;zAt.IEY'--YOU
HAD YER AIR 1 NOW
6ACK IH YER

Yes terdays

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers toasters, 1rons, all
small oppl 1onces lown mower
ned to State H•ghwoy Garage
on Route 7 Phone {b14) 985
3825 .
REMODELING Plumb1ng, heol1ng
and oil types of general repa1r
Work guaranteed 20 years ex
per~en ce Phone992·2t109 .
SEWING MACHINE Repa~rs , serviCe ali makes, 992 -2284 The
Fobr1c
Shop , Pomeroy
Aufhonzed S1nger Soles and
Servtce. We sharpen Scissors

answ~r here:

Ju mbles LIMIT

rI

HITCH

33.

I I I I]

(Answers tomorrow)
EXTANT BEADLE

Where they make bread rn some c•t•esTHE MINT

Answer

HOLE! ,..--_.

BRADFORD , Auctioneer , Complete ServiCe Phone 949-2487
or 949-2000. RaCine Oh1o, Cnlt
Bradford

~
by THOMAS JOSEP!i

ACROSS
1 Of ships
( abbr. )

5 Stockpile
10 " - fair in

·,

love

"

II One of the

BORN

41

Sports Site

42 C ity near
Phoerux
DOWN
I Of ships
2 Ralph
Kramden's
mate
3 Rat-race
symptom
4 Part of
Mao's

McGees
12 Ev1ldmng
SE:~SfLt:SS, AS OPFOSED
13 Unw1llmg
Yesterday's Answer
TO Wf\~H
14 Intrepid
15
Pod
27 Surmount
flyer
companions
30
Mother
15 Bakery item
n~me
18 Kmd of
Hubbard's
16 Tell - glance 5 Honey of
pollution
qu.e st
(2 wds 1
a place
19 Indited
( 2 wds.) ·
17 Loewe's
6 Brttish
22 Itahan
31 Warbles
mwncal
award
city
32 Street cry
partner
( abbr I
23 Pilot
of yore
19 Caprtce
7 Sara h 's
24 Leavtng a
34 Memory
20 New World
husband
vahd Will
bank's
a lhance
8 Unruly
25
lnslrl!ment
storage
21 Storm
9 VIsionary
for 35
37 Exclude
L...:~::d!:=:!:::=:!!::=----:-:--....::.:::._-==:::J 22 The - m
II Vanity and
Across
38 Not masc.
the fire
Scarborough
( 2 wds )
25 Four·
bagger
qood
26 Arden and 1,.-+.,.....f-+-~
others
27 Boozer
28 Asce nt

1\1Bi&lt;E W/&gt;6 A SE:NSI:L.eSS
IZII..I..IN0 01-1 THE:

BASI' St et TODA4 .,

EXCAVATING, dozer , loader and
backhoe work dump trucks
and lo-boys for tme will haul
hi I d~rt to soil, limestone and
gravel Call Bob or Roger Jef
fe rs
day phone 992·7009,
n1ght phone 992·3525 or 992
5232
EXCAVATING , dozer, backhoe
and dttcher. Chorle5 R. Hgt
fteld, Back Hoe Serv•ce ,
Rutland , Oh1o Phone 742-2008
Will do roofing, cons tru ction ,'
plumbmg and heatmg No 1ob
too Iorge or too small. Phone
742-2348 .

MAIN

Print

LITTLE ORPRAM AMMIII:-PLACII: KICK
YOU '&lt;t.IOW THE.
POOR OtD
DUfFER IH TIIERE·-

NEW 3 bedroom ~ou se, 2 bolh s ,
a ll e lec 1 acre Mtddlepor t,
dose to Rut land Phone 992
7481

!3ENT ON HAV IN6
A DF&lt;:lNK.

\GLOBONj

builders.

-s-·
=
HOMEStTES for so le I acre and
•up Mtdd leport, near Rutland.
Coll992 7481

11 . 2G-Explorallons In Shakespeare 33
11 :Jo--lt's Any body' s Guess 3,4, 15, Family Feud 6, 13;
Love of Life 8,10
11 · •s-&lt;&gt;ur Living Language 33.
11·55-CBS News 8; Ms. Flxll 10.
12 ·QO-News 3,,4,6,10 ; Shoot for the Stars 15; Divorce
Court B; Midday 13; Forsyte Sago 33.
12 : 30-Chlco &amp; the Man 3,15 ; Ryan's Hope 6,1 3; Bob
Braun 4: Search for Tomorrow 8, 10.
1: ~Gong Show 3; All My Children 6. 13; News 8.
• Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not for Women Only 15:
Soy Brother Pays Tribute to Webster Lewis 33.
Jo-Oays of Our Live-s 3,4,15, As The World TI.Jrns
8, 10 .
2 · 0()-$20,000 Pyramid 6,13; Women's Conference 33 .
2 3G-Doclors 3,4, 15, One Life to Live 6, 13; Guiding
Light a, 10.
3·01}-Anolher World 3,4,\5 , Allln The Famlly.8, 10. On
Aging 20, Bit With Knit 33.
3 !~General Hospital 6,13
3 3G-Malch Game 8, 10, Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20, Erica

INSHIF

PADRE. - t.1A'f8t:

3 BEDROOM house w1th 1'I~ both
. f1replace beou hful locohon tn
M1ddle por t $1 b 900
Phone
992 3457

u ..-,

Ph. 371..150
5-27 TFC

9 a.m.

SIOING-SOfFITT
oUTTEifS.AWNINGS

byHennArnoldandBobLee

RATES

Phone 949-2814
to 5 p.m.

WINDOWS

~~ ,..

REASONAfll E

0.

992-5724
Complete
Sales
and
Service and Supplies.

l..!:!J

Thanks for
the weddinq
qift, Melba!

CARPENTER
floormg
ce1 hng,
panel1ng Phone 992-2759
MOBILE Home Repa1r , Elec ,
plumbing and heating Phone
992·5858

1

Brinq th'
rope an'
th' juq!

WILL 00 e lectncol work restdenhol and commercial
Call

1

c.,-,,.

YOLJW.ANT~ I WNJI-BUT-Cii-

ARGUMENT
I'LL SAY

PIANO TUNING , lone Oon•els 12
years of servtce . Phone
992· 2082.

bullet
wound
33 Coiffure
gadget
34 Late Mr
Blocker
35 - Be1der·
becke
36 Moorish
drum

D;:iYi~::iE;J:(1ii£RE~&amp;:;~;;;;~;-:::
rANYTiH
15 ._,,_.mE TiHIN~39
NG

TO AVOID

DO

WEST

¥QJ6
•K I0953
• 10 3
• J 954
.. Q J 10 7 3
.. 9 2
SOUTH
• A64 2
¥87
• 872
oloAKe&amp;

Baptismal
vessel
Revolve

Both vulnerable

Aeo&gt;/

""R:);{'&lt;

(abbr.)

West

Is

Here's

how

to work it :

I.ONGFEI.LOW

One le tter s tmply st ands for anot her In t h1s sample A is
used for the th ree L's, X fo r th e two 0 s l'lc S1ngle le tter s,
ap ostropJ1es , the le ngth and forrn ntwn of the words are all
hmt s Each day th e code INters are &lt;hfferenl
CRVPTOQUOTES

us

WINNIE
... AND /}j/5 IS OJR SAIDN 1
~UNT' e&gt;ESf&gt;IE, WHERE

LOOKS LIKE YO.JR. .?1AFF
COU LD UBE SOME HELP
RIGHT NOW

'
FHB

50CON.SIOER ME /JACK
ON YOUR PAYROLL Ao
OF 7JIISMORN!Nr3! r::-::~=.J_ G c J K A G
C HEEHR

READY!

KEG
HS

K

AKNUGVN
KVYGE

FHB

LBVMEGM
JLUVG CG

uv

HVG
RUT T

MKF C

HS

AEHPGEW

Yesterday's Cryptoquole: SOME PEOPLE REGARD
DISCIPLINE AS A CHORE. FOR ME, IT'S A KIND OF ORDER
THAT SETS ME FREE TO FLY - JULIE ANDREWS
fll977 Kint Fut.wes Srnd1c1te, Inc .

.

"
MARCIE,HAND

MRS 8AI&lt;TLEL(

HER

21

EAST
.. Q 10

• KJ9

AXVDLBAAXR

WHENEV!;R YOU'I&lt;E:

··~······················?·

Proper trump manage1taent
¥AI 2
tAK Q8
.64

DAILY CRYPTO(}UOTE-

fO{I'LL 13E WORKING •..

'

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

• a 7 53

40
THEY'~L~~~~~I/1-1
AS~D
M l.T
'!',•
=
graduate

J970MONTEREY Mobile Home, 12
K 60
2 bedroom plus ut11ity
room and 150 ft fence Underprnnmg and fires mcluded,
$:1800 Phone 9'12·5001

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••
•• ' BUY, SELL OR TRADE? :
••
LISTEN TO THE
•••
••
•
SWAP SHOP
••
••
•
•• 7 PM - WMPO • 92.1 FM •••
•
••
•
••
92 in the Counby
:
••
•••

BRIDGE
NORTH (DI

IT,'(.

TWO BEDROOM trotter Browns
Trailer Court Adults only
Phone 992 3324

a,

It's jes' soap ...
smellln' soap!

~

HARRISON S T. V Repair Serv1ce
Calls 276 Sycamore St., M1d
dleporl Phone 992-2522

197tl 12x60 All electric 3
bedroom mob de home . furmsh
ed , w1ll take smaller 12 wrde on
trode Phone (304) 882-2466

4 011-;Misler Cartoon 3, Gong Show 4, 15; New Mickey
Mouse Club 6; Gilligan' s Island 8; Sesame Sl
20,33; Movie "Susan Slept Here" .10; Dinah 13
4 ·3G-My Three Sons 3; Star Trek 4; Emergency One
6 , Andy Griffith 8, Hogan's Heroes 15.
s :ro-Big Valley 3: Brody Bunch 8, Mister Rogers'
Neighborhood 20,33, Emergency One 13; Mission
Impossible 15.
5 3G-Adam 12 4, News 6; Family Affair 8, Elec. Co
20,33
6 · 01}-News 3,4,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33
6 · 3G-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; CBS News8,10;
Vegetable Soup 20; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33.
7 ·01}-TruthorCons 3;ToTelllheTruth4; Llar'sCiub
6, Pop Goes the Country 8 ; News 10, To Tell the
Truth 13; My Three Sons 15, Consumer Survival Kit
20; People &amp; Places 33
7 3G-Baseball 3,4, Match Game PM 6, $25,000
Pyramid 8, MacNeli -Lehrer Report 20,33; Break
the Bank 13 ; Wild Kingdom 15
8 · 01}-Donny &amp; Marie 6, 13, Grizzly Adams 15, Good
Times 10; Nova 20,33
8 3Q--Marllyn McCoo &amp; Billy Davis Jr. B, 10.
9 · 01}-Barelta 6, 13; Movie " Sands ot Ka lahari" 8;
Dance In America 33;
McCabe &amp;
Mrs.
Miller" 10, 3 Girls 315, At The Top 20.
10 ~Kingston: Confldenllal3, 4, 15, Charlie's Angels
6, 13, Movie "The 81st Blow" 33, News 20
lO·JG-Montage 20
11 OQ-News 3,4,6,8, 13,15, Monty Python's Flying
Circus 20.
11 2o-.News 10.
11 3G-Johnny Carson 3,4,1 5, Rookies 6 , 13; ABC News
33, Movie " Carrie " 8
11 so--Mary Hartman 10
12 2G-Janakl 33
12 2G-Movle "Desire Under the Elms" 10
12 4G-Mystery of the Week 6, 13
1 oo- Tomorrow 3,4.
'J 1{)---News 13

.bz.(~~.~ 1 29 Shght

HOWERY AND MARTIN e•.
cavattng , sep ltc sy s tems .
dozer , backhoe , dump truck,
l1meslone
gravel , blacktop
povtng , Rt 143 Phone 1 (614) '
698 7331

1971 CAMMERON 3 bedroom ful ly carpeted , 10 x 30 owning,
bock porch , 10 x tO buddmg,
fu rnt5hed Second trotler on
nght in Country Mobtle Home ...
Park . Phone9q2 blbl

~Summer Semester 10.

6 · 1 ~Farm Report 13.
6 20- Not for Women Only 13
6 20-AG USA o, News 6, Summer Semesler 8.
Christopher Closeup 10
6 45-Mornlng Report 3.
6 50--Good Morning, West VIrginia 13.
6 5~Good Morning, Trl State 13
7 01}-Today 3,4, 15, Good Momlnq America 6, 13; CBS
News 8; Chuck Wh ile Reports 10
7 05-Porky Pig 10
7 JQ--Schoolles 10
8 ro-Howdy Doody 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8, 10, Sesame
St. 33.
8 .3G-Big Volley 6.
9 :oo-&lt;:ross·Wih 3: Phil Donahue 4, 13, 15 ; Andy
Griffith 8, Mike Douglas 10, Biography 33
9 JQ--A M 3, Edge of N lght 6; Concenlrollon 8;
Canterbury Tales 33
10 · ro-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4, 15; Dinah 6; Here's Lucy 8, 10;
Mike Douglas 13; Lowell Thomas Remembers 33 .
10: 3G-Hollywood SquaresJ.O,lS; Price Is Right 8,1 0,
Walsh's Animals 33
11 :01}-Wheel of Fortune 3,4,15, Happy Days 6.13,
Community of Living Things 33.

Unscramble lhese four Jumbles
one letter to each square to form
four ordmary words

PARTS • LABOR
GUARANTEED
NobiiSummot Ro~d
Rt 1

WEDNESDAY. JUNE 11,1977

6

';1jJ\f~ ~1} ~ THATSCRAMBLEDWORDG,t,ME

~

Automatic
Transmissron Service

RE~·ENT

w Carsey, Mgll

GIVE A-Way one female k1tten 3 AND 4 RM furnished and un furn ts hed opts . Phone 992
Gray and tan tn color Phone
543.t
992 2o28
ElECTRIC SWEEPER completely
COUNTRY
Mobtle
Home
Pork
,
Rt
rebutlt w1th ottochmenls Only
PART NORWEGIAN Elkhound ond
33 , ten m1 les north ol Pomeroy
$45 00 cash or term s Coli
German Shepherd w1th 4 mo le
large lo ts w1th con&lt;: rete patios ,
9'12·5146.
pups
7 weeks
Richard
s
•dewaik s, runners and off
Coruth1111rs , Bunker H111 .
for sole ll2x50 eoch On
2LOTS
street pork1ng Phone 992-7479
corner
of Sycamore &amp; Ash Sts
GIVE-A-WAY 6 week old pup·
Middleport , Inqui re at 291
p•es 'IJ Ge rman
Shepherd FURNISHED APT Adults only , no
pets Phone 992-3874 M1d ·
Phone 992-3640
_SyCDm_o_re St ;--·~--:--~:c
o
_
••
~
--~~~~----1975
HARLEY Dav1dson Sportser
COlliE PUPS To gtve away
2
BEDROOM
MOBILE
~ome 1n
JOOOcc
Chopped -- lots ot Ex
Phone 949 2632.
Rocme a reo Col1992 5858
tras Ew:cellont Condit1on less
thon 1200 octuol mdes Coptocl
AVAILABLE AT R1verslde Aport
Ketth Curt1s 992-5073
ments one bedroom , $105 per
month , 2 bedroom , $138 per HAY FOR sole Coll949 2870
1970 FORD PICKUP truck , $800
month Phone 9q2-6098 Equal
19 1n BLACK ond Wh 1te Ph tlco
Phone 992·5301 .
~ using Opportun•ly .
EKcellent condthon
Pnced
1975 GMC VAN Good Ttmes" 2 BEDROOM unfvrn1shed house
reasonably Ca11992 -2'!?6
automohc carpeted, complete
Coli 992 5434 or 992 j129
c_c_~1967 BARRACUDA 3 speed stan
w•t~ smk, ~eebox. bed and -----~- ~
tab le, has Captains Seats Rea l CAMPING SITES along the Oh io _j ord 273 V - 8__!~one qq2 -5197_
River lor rent on Stole Rr 338
~harp , $4900 Cali 742 -2217
See Robert lew1s or call 1-2 year o ld seve n-erghts
Charo lo• s ond one e1ghth
1976 HONDA CIVIC CVCC . good
843·2432
Brown Swtss Bull , all wh1te ,
condttlon Good gos m1leoge
3 BEDROOM MOBILE Home
good d,spos1hon . Appro )( 1200
~ne(614)6961084anyflme
located 1n country neor Horlbs. Contact Kenneth Hoger ,
1974 FORO Golox1e 4 door. 26 000
n so nv dle on St Rt
143
Coolvi lle Ohio 45723
actual mdes New Gloss Beltek
Beou t1 ful locahon w!th lt~rge
NINE 10 week old p1gs. $25 eoch
tt res
e xcellent cond 1hon
yard ond garden Oepostt re
for ent•re lot or $30 eoc
Heavy duty rear end Phone
qurred Phone 742·3186 or
se parately ~one 742 25.45
992 281&gt;0
742-3122
USED WHIRLPOOL washer Phone
CORVETTE
75 Must sell lm
742·2754
maculate li ke new , all extras
13,000 mrles Best offer Phone For 'Sale
1·446 8502 .
1969 FORD Good 390 engme &amp; T'vVO MACH 60 G60 14 tires two
CB SPECIAL
Mach 70 F70-14 four Crager
transmiss ion
$75
Phone
wheels $250 Phone (614)
ROBYN WV-23
9'92·2192 between 9 30 and 5 30
b67 ·3737
ond osk for c;:heryl or moy be
......
seen ot 655 Sycamore St 1n MARANTZ MODEL 4060 two and
CB Mobi le Transceiver
• Mtddleport
complete with weather
fo ur channel amp. Also
proof PA speaker, 2 wa v
Marantz. Model 60100 turntable
base loaded C 8 antenna ,
w1th Stanton Cortndge Two
for roof top or trunl&lt; mount
Bose 301 Speakers $500 for
Power cord , coax , antenna
system Also . 1975 Bultoco 250
cab le and all hardware
SWISS COLONY travel tro llers
Pursang 11.1st been rebuilt
mcluded
wsrom mode, MAPLE lEAF
mony new ports now $650
ONLY
tandems 16' up CRICKET truck
Phone 992 2307
camper~ spec rol ot COONER s
169.95
CAMPERS
Rambow R•dge 14 FT JOHN BOAT, 5 h p motor
and oars $325, 1968 Dodge
Open evemngs. Toke Metgs 28
new hres S300; 85,000 BTU
or 32 to Boshan Owner , Robert
Moster Space Heeter $175 ,
Codner, long Boflom, Ohto.
Coli 742·2352
18FT lEISURE TIME Camper . sel l
Jack w Carsey r Mgr,
cantomed, excellent condttlon KRAUT CABBAGE . $1 bushel Cut
Phone "2-2181
your own James H1ll Form .
Phone 992 2386

t

Alil)nment,
wheel
balancing,
tune-up,
brake work,
minor
repair.
_
Behind Rutland Grade
School Evening work by
apporntmenl Ph. 742-2005.
6 5-1 mo. Pd

-~--

1973 AM X, new t~res cus tom
wheels V8 Good cond1 t1on
Coli 742 2930

Young's carpeting

FRONT END
ALIGNMENT

Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
-

•,

(.l ·. "

SEE US FOR ALL YOUR
CRAFT AND ARTIST
SUPPLIES.
CLASSES OFFERED IN
OIFFERENT
CRAFTS.
OPEN 6 OAYS A WEEK,
lO :oo to 5 : 00

DUGAN'S

~

t.___....:.__:.P.:h;.:O;:n:.:;e:.9:.9!:2~2.:;18::_1:.__J

Superior
Steam Extraction

Free Estimates
No Sunday Calls Please
6· 13· 1 mo .

Pomeroy Landmark

~K~""' Honb~

1 446 as7o
CO INS CURRENCY token s old
pocket wotches and cho•ns ,
silver and gold We need 19b4
ond o lder s1 lver coms Buy sell,
o~ trade Co li Roger Wamsley
742 ·2331
OLD FURNITURE , ICe bo xe s, brass
beds
etc , com pl ete
households Wr1te M D Mtller
Rt 4 Pomeroy Ohro or coil
992·771&gt;0
WANTED
CHIPWOOO Poles,
Max d1ometer JO 1nches on
largest end $B per ton , bundle d s lobs, $6 per ton Del1vered
to Ohto Pallet Company, Rt 2
Pomeroy
Ohro
Phon e
992-2689

test your

1

7 3G-Regolto Highl ights
9 3G-Consultatlon
10 ~700 Club
11 3G-Paul Gaudino

TUESDAY, JUNE 21, 1977
8 3G- Laverne &amp; Shirley 6.13 .
9·0D--Pol1ce Woman 3, 15; Rtch Man , Poor Man 6,1 3,
MASH 8, 10; Mark Russell 20,33
9 JD--One Day At A Time 8, 10, Best of Ernie Kovacs
20,33
10 ro-Pollce Story 3, 15, Hollywood Squares 4, Kotok
8,10, News 20 ; AI The Top 33
I0 ·3G-American Llleslyle 4, Black Perspective onlhe
News 20
11 · 01}- News 3,4,6,8.10,13,15; MacNeil Lehrer Report
33.
11 JQ--Johnny Carson 3.4 .. 15, Mov ie " The Stoolie"
6, 13; Mc Millan &amp; Wife 8. Mary Hartman 10, ABC
News 33
12 .01}-Movle " The Delphi Bureau" 10, Janak! 33
I .oo-- Tomorrow 3,4
I 3G-News 13.
Movte Channel 5 and q p m - Russian Roulette
7 and 11 p m - Family Plol
Channel Five 6·3G6 •3G-Testimony Time
7:01}-Paul Gaudino

&lt;-' vfZ..l.

•

....

CAPITAL FINANCE SERVICES
300 West Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

-

,.....

t 'or :Sale

logfor easy viewing

IF YO'RE ALL DONE EATIN',
PAW- - I'LL PUT AWAY TH'
LEFTOVERS

two rounds of trumps w1thout
givmg the defense a c hance to
play a th1rd round
Thts 1sn'l too difficult He
Simply leads a low trump at
tr1ck two It doesn 't matter
who wms the tnck and what Is
led back Suppose East wms
and leads back a seeond club
South wms and cashes his
ace of spades Then he ruffs a
club Next come three high
d1amonds from dummy . West
can ruff the third ot discard
fl doesn 't matter there IS no
way to keep South from ruf·
fmg h1s last club w1th dum·
my's last trump

Nortb Ean
I t
Pass

Pass

2•

Pass

Pass
Pass

34

Pass
Pass

Pass

Openmg lead - Q olo
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Here IS a good hand fo r use
of the code word ARCH At
least South needs the "C"
(Count yo ur winners an d
losers ) and the " H" !How can
I make th1s hand' I
There are two sure trump
losers, a very likely heart
loser and two poss1ble club

losers
South ' s problem is to handle
those two club losers and he
can do lh1s With proper trump
management
He mus t fmd a wa y to play

A Toronto reader asks the
proper opening b1d w1th .
.AKQJ876¥ AKJ2 t x olox
Playmg standard Amer1can
or Acol you open two spades
If you play two clubs ·as your
only forcmg b1d . open two
clubs The hand IS too powerful for a four-spade opemng .
(Do you have a ques110n for

the experts?
Jacobys "

Wr~te

care

"As k the

or

th i s

newspaper The Jacobys w111
ans wer lnd1v1dw.tl questions II
stamped, self-aeldress ed
envelopes tue enclosed The
most inreres(tng questions will
be used rn this column and wilf
rece iv e cop1es of JAC OBY

MODERN J

�12 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, June 21, 1977

President
(Continued from page 1)
chassis at $9,792 each, and
Edwin Davis and Son, Langsville; body at $6,287 each. The
two firms were low bidders.
Delivery will not be made
until late December or ea rly
January so that the costs can
be paid out of the 1977
calenda r year funds.
The resignation of Jennifer
Machir as vocal music and
language arts instructor at
the junior high sehoul was
accepted.

MASON DRIVE-IN
3 DAYS OF
THE CONDOR
. "R"
Plus

LIPSTICK
44

R"

Court actions
filed in court
Disolvi ng

of

Dowler rehired
, (Continued from page 1)
The board granted permission for
Mildred Bail ey to attend a vocational

tw o

ma rria ges , a suit for

hom e

can ~

eco nomi cs

conf ere nce

in

Columbus Aug. 8-10 and for John W.
Blaettnar to attend a distributive
education conference in Columbus,
Aug. 15·17. The cooperative agreement
with the Meigs County Board of
Education for the work-study coordinator for the next school year was
renewed a s was the coopetative
agreement with the Gallia County
Board of Education for the special
education supervisor for neXt year.
The board voted to renew an
agreement to let the Meigs County
Senior Citizens continue using the
Pomeroy Junior High School fa cilities
another year and granted Helen Hood
seven days of sick leave. A special
meeting wa s set for June 28 to consider
awarding a bid for the repair of the
parking lot at the high school, hiring of
personnel and to approve the payment
of retirement to the state by Clerk Jane
Wagner.
Bill Thornton and Nonnan Wood
were employed for a maximum of 80
hours, a maximum pay of $3.10 a nour,
to work as substitute mechanics in
preparation for the annual bus inspection on July 27.
Employed by the board also were
Janet Williamson as high school

cellat ion or contract , ap·
proval of a bond and a
divorce action have been fil ed
in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court .
Filing for dissolutions were
Walter D. Roush, Middleport
and Lillian L. Roush , Racine,
and Robert H. Bratton ,
Middleport and Ramona
Lynne Bratton , Syra cuse.
Robert C. O'Brien, Pomeroy
filed for cancellation of
contract against Dale K. and
Eunice J . Starcher, St.
Albans, and Rt. 4, Pomeroy.
Prime Builders Ohio Inc.,
Pomeroy Cliffs, Ltd., filed for
approval of bond agairist TriCounty Paving, Chauncey,
Ohio, a!!d Owen BlacKwood,
Rutland Is asking for divorce
from Kathleen Anderson
Blackwood o~ Athens.

secretary to replace Grace Drake,

Charlotte Dillard to take the bus route
of Annette Knight, and Addalou Lewis
as a cook. Ed Bartels, Sam Crow and
Carol Ohlinger were awarded con·
tinning contracts. a diploma was approved for Charles Burton.
The board voted to eliminate the
Spanish program at the Pomeroy
Elementary School. Principal Bob
Morris advised that there · is no continuity to the program since It goes only
through the sixth grade and Supt.

sa
tboxes
ashierandtravelerchecks
moneyordersandnotary!

Dowler said the program was not

conducted in any of t)le other grade
schools. Mrs. Cecelia Hart who has
conducted the program will be placed
at the high school as an English

teacher. Oowl er said.

A tetter from the Ohio Assn. of
Publ ic Sc hool E mployes was
ac knowledged
decla ring
that
negotiations between the boa rd and the
locaiOAPSE Chapter a re at impasse. It
was reported that Kenn eth C. Murch
has been named representative o! the
chapter on the impasse panel and
Dennis Whaley was named the board's

representative. It was reporte,d that the
board and the chapter employes are at
impasse on some 37 points at issue.
It was agreed to request Columbia
Gas of Ohio to include Meigs Local
Schools in the special schools category
being established for the next sehoul
year. To be included would mean not so
much curtailment on the district's gas
usa ge .

The board reviewed the budget
report of the county library board and
granted a vacation to Roger Holman,
bus mechanic, who would not have been
eligible for vacation until . October
possibly a time when he would have
been needed more than during the
sununer months.
'Upon the recommendation of
Principal John Mora the board adopted
a closed lunch period at the Meigs
Junior High School. Only students who
can walk to and from their homes for
lunch In the allotted one,haif lunch
period will be permitted to leave the
building. Parents will have to sign
permission for these children.
Clerk Mrs. Wagner was granted
permission to pay utility bills when they
arrive and to make necessary fund
transfers to balance accounts. Dan
Morris and Dowler were given pef.
mission to apply for Title I funds . A
report was given on the North Central
Association of Colleges and Schools
inspection showing no violations at the
high school.
Dan Morris, who was employed
several months ago to serve as director
of curricula and instruction, giving up
his post as assistant to the superin·
tendent gave his first report at last
night's meeting.
Morris reported he has held staff
meetings at all schools and curriculum
committees have been established in

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

!

Area Deaths
HENRY SMITH
Henrr A . Smith ,

s1

re~iden of Porter died at th~
Holzer fv'edical Center 7 p.m .

The town Crier's trying to say that we have a
full ran&amp;e of banking services available to
you. We're a full·servlce bank and that means
extra convenience. Drop In and we'll fill you
In on all our banking services

Monday. He was born_on July
12, 1885 in Hurricane, W. Va .

son of the late James and
Isadora Rowsey Smith. He
was twice married. To the
first union one son and one
daughter survive. Two sonS
by his second marriage
preceded him In death .
Surviving son is Odell Smith
of Vienna. He· is also survived
by one daughter Freda .
His second marriage was to
Sadie Scott who preceded
him In death in 1967 .
Two
sons
and
one
daughter by this marriage survive. Mrs . Ben

"THE
FRIENDLY BANK''

\Beilyi-Bunch of Urbana and
Hubert and Larry of Porter.
One daughter preceded him

In

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

grand ·

the Porter United Mothodlst
Church.

Member Federal Deposit Insurance

Arrangements will be
a.nnounced later by . the ·
McCoy.Moore
Funeral
Home.

. Corpor~tion

DEPOSITS INSURED

death . Seven

children and one sister, Mrs.
Georgia Cottrill of Porter
survive. One brother and one
sister preceded hlni in death .
He was a member of the
Masonic Lodge in Hun ·
tington , W. Va. He attended

ro

Admiral

--

----~~--

COLOR SYSTEM

Now Adm~ral_gives you the exclusive new Era II Color System,
televJSlOn s ftrst 100% Modular Solid State System. With a
brilli!lnl big-screen picture tube so reliable the tube is covered
by A~miral's exclusi~e 5-yea~ protection plan. Era II is viewing
at tis Qnghtest and nchest w1th Color Master JI single-control
color tuning. "Equal Ease" tuning with your choice of lighted
dial or electronic digital display read-out. Exquisitely styled
and crafted cabinetry in a variety of motifs.

I.
I

!
I

BENI~ARRYIAlVfS

Ben .{Harry) Alvis, 87,
Tampa, Fla ., former resident

of Rutland died Sunday at

Tampa Veterans Hospital.
He made his home In
Florida since his retirement
He is survived by his wife;
Ethel , daughter, Mrs. J. C.
(Virginia) WyaH, Pomeroy,
one son, Vernon; H. Alvis,
Columbus, one brother, Rudd
fl.:· Alvis, New Straitsville.
f1ve grandchildren and two
great.gritndchi ldren .
Funeral services will be
held Wednesday at 10 a .m . at
the Tur:-ner Funeral Home,
Brooksville , Fla .
-

Big-screen viewing at its brightest and clearest.
Era JIM~dular Color Syslem with Negative Black
Matnx P1cture Tube for ease ol servicing . "Equal
Ease" UHF/VHF tun ing. Mediterranean
cabinet in simulated Pecan finish on
wood, wood veneers, and plast ic .
281 Y,e"h, 42%''w , 19·1fe"d.

Amin remains _m issing

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Sixty persons reported to a
bloodmobile at the Pomeroy
Elementary School Monday
' to contribute 55 pints of blood
to the Meigs County
American Red Cross Blood
'Prograrri.

One half of the persons
were giving replacement
blood and three were .first
tirile donors. Martha Hackett
became a two gallon donor
and Leo Vaughan became a
13 gallon donor. Richard
Barton became a 15 gallon
donor. ·
Working with the unit from
the RSVP program were ·
William Frecker, Henry
Turner, Jerome Cook, Homer
Cliff
Christi,
Young,
Lawrence Fields, Paul
Smart, Nellie Turner,
Clarence Struble, Bernadine
Meier, Pat Ingels and Lula
Hampton.

Serving as nurses were

Child development program
recommended· in Meigs Count
By Charlene HOI'flich
Funding for child development programs in Meigs
CoWlty Is available through
the Buckeye Hills-Hocking
Valley Regional Development District, Gary Little
announced Tuesday at a
meeting of the Human
Retources Council of Meigs
CoiUity meeting at the Meigs
Inn.
A child development
specialist, Mr. Little said that
while some counties are
losing funding this year, since
their programs have been in
operation five years, Meig~
and Monroe Counties are

eligible to start new child
service programs.
He described these as day

care centers, education in
nature rather than a
babysitting service, Comw

:::::::::::::::::::::::::;.;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:::::
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
A eradual warming
trend, with a chance of
showen or tbunderahowen
each day. Hlgho will be In
the low or mid 80s Friday,
warming to the upper 80s
or low lOB by Sanclay. Lows
moeOy will be In the lOs.
•
:::::::::::::::::::::::::=:&lt;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.

bined with speech and children up to six. He • said
hearing clinics, complete that many things can be
medical services, and written into the program,
learning experiences lor even transportation, and he
children a~es zero through volunteered to begin work
s1x, all primarily for low- with agency representatives
income families.
here.
For the first year of
Also speaking at the
operation , funding is 95 meeting was Lee Nonnan,
percent
Appala chian project employer counselor
Regional and five percent of the Ohio Job Services,
local which must be in cash, Gallipolis office. Norman
not " kind." The second year said that job service provides
of operation, he said, would employers with a wide range
be 75-25 ratio , 10 percent of benefits and placement
being cash, '15 percent in se'rvices which can save Ume
kind.
and money and produce
The first step ·toward improved employe pergetting a program in formance.
operation here would be a
He talked about the applanning session with all plication lor assistance which
agencies , including welfare, includes a work history with
the county commissioners this infonnation going into a
and the Community Action job bank which is a comAgency being involved.
Cooperation among agencies
is essential if the program is
to "get off ground," Little
emphasized.
The initial plan must be in
by September or October this
year for funding in October,
1978, the speaker explained.
Little emphasized local
Involvement is necessary if a
profe'ssionally oriented
program is to provide a good
VOL. XXVIII NO. 48
heal thy de veI opmen t for

Holzer Medical Center
1Discharges, June 20)
John Bartell, Maude Day,
Deborah Fisher, Rosa
Griffith, Georgie Hale, Lori
Hanunond, Raymond Hatfield, Dollie l;fayes, Grace
Holi~ger, ~wis Johnston,
Chet Lambert, Hartford
Morris,

John

Nic,holson,

Douglas Raike, Sarah Riffle,
Mrs. James Rowe and son,
Mrs. Billy Shelton and son,
Winnie Stout, Ruth Webb,
Mrs . Larry Well and
daughter.
(Births June 20)
Mr. and Mrs. Randy
Scarberry, a son, Jackson.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
ADMITI'ED - Ida White,
Rutland; Paul Houdashelt,
Pomeroy; Gloria Kapteina,
Columbus; Imogene Walker,
New Haven; Ernest Lambert, Rutland;
Wilbur
Whaley, Shade; Okey Pullins,
Coolville; Edith Sauer,
Middleport; Wanda Faulk,
Pomeroy; Douglas Halfhill,
·Pomeroy; Kathryn Evans,
Portland.
DISCHARGED - Jeanette
Lawrence, Jennie
Williamson, Goldie Lawson,
Carl Jeffers.
. .

Ryan, Dorothy Sayre.
Pt. ' Pleasant Hemlock Grove - Sharon Graham .
M. Welker. ·
Reedsville- Roger Hawk,
Linda L . Wilson, Macel
Barton, Richard Barton .
Minersville - Carolyn

Rutland
Donna
Davidson,. Eldon Vining.
Kanauga - Lyle France .
langsville - Ellis E .

Mvers.
TAX TAKE UP
Retail sales tax receipts in
Meigs County for May this
year were up 49.14 percent
over receipts for May, 1976
according to the report of
Mrs. Gertrude Donahey,
state treasurer. Receipts for
the month this year totaled
$80,054.74 compared to
receipts of $53,674.12 for May,
1976, an mcrease of $26,380.62.
However, motor vehicle sales
tax receipts were down 22.82
percent for May, this year
compared to May, 1976.
Receipts for May 1977
totaled ~.606.45 co~pared
to receipts of $46,134.57 for
May, 1976.

Jayne

MECHANICAL MONSTER- This machine picks up large trees and places them on a
conveyor tbat carries them into the chipper that chews up trees into chips. It will chew up a
tree, 2 incbes in diamerer in one minute. The machine cost $150,000. See Page 5 for more
pictures of this new area industry.
.

Mrs. Vern Story and Mrs.
Lenora Leifheit with doctors
serving including Dr. L. D.
Telle, Dr. E. S. Villaneuva
and Dr. Sellm Blazewicz.
Mrs. Leifheit also served as
chairman of the canteen
handled by the Rock Springs
Better Health Club.
Clerical workers were
Mary Nease, Jean Nease,
Juanita Sayre, Jean "Sayre,
Mace! Barton, Grace Drake,
LIKE ATHLETICS?
Joyce Hoback, Beulah
All persons interested in
Strauss, Alice Wolfe, Theresa the athletic .program of the
Star, Sue Starr· and VerDon Meigs Local School District
t;ease.
are asked to attend a meeting
of
the district's Athletic
'oonors by community
Boosters to be held at 7:30
· included:
·
Pomeroy
Robert p.m. Thursday at the high
Vaughan, Dennis J . Gilmore, school. Offi~ers for the year
Harry E. Clark , Barbara
Riggs, lois J. Wyant, David will be elected.

MID SUMMER CLEARANCE SALE

~::::::::::~====:::::::::--:::::::::::~:=::::::~::::~:::8~~=:=~::=:=~=:=:=====:~====:=============:=:=:===:::::===:=:=:=:=:=:=:=~==:====:==::::

SALE BEGINS WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22
IMPOS
VINER
JOYCE
COVER GIRL
RED HOT
lWIX TEENS
HUSH PUPPIES

Spritzer

VALUES TO 124.00.SALE P.RICED

'5·'10-'15

FOR THE MIN

FLORSHEIM • JARMAN ·RAND
VALUES ro '40.00' SALE PRICED '1 0 fO '25
All Shoes Displayed For Easy Selection

ALL SALES FINAL - NO RETURNS •, TEA PLANNED
The Meigs Christian
Sheri Clark. JoSeph Jeffrey
L~Y-A-WAYS
Kllleary, PaHy J, Barton, Women's Fellowship will
William W. Radford, leo meet at the Pomeroy Church
Vaughn, Robert L. 'Fields,
Gerl L. Walton, Homer B. of Christ at 7:30 p.m. ThursSmith, Mark Tannehill, day. There will be a tea
Gerald Rouqht; Robert W. honoring ministers wives and
Smith, Virg1l K. Windon, girls who attend a Bible
$SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE$
Wallace P. Hatfield, Richard
E. Eblin, Frank A. Vaughn. college.
Patricio Vaughan, Sheila J.
Taylor. Marvin E, Taylor.
· Middleport - William W.
TV VIOLENCE
Harris, Timothy J. King,
Joyce V. Bertrum, Robert
SANFRANCISCO(UPI) MjDOLEOF UPPER BLOCK
King, Martha J. Hackett,
Edward W. Durst, Sarah J. The American Medical
POMEROY, OHIO
Fowler, Leafy Chasteen, Association says "the weight
OPEN:
James Whitlatch, Clara J . of medical opinion" backs up
9
t
France, Connie Dodson .
the belief that television
a.m. o S p.m. Mon. thru Thurs.
Cheshire - Rodney Spires.
9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Friday
Racine - Jean Burnside. vioience ..causes mental and
William H . Hoback. Kay physical traumas in children . . ,__....._ _ _ _ _ _ _s.ialotliilliorda vi.io9iiia .1imiol.iitliio.iSiolpii.oimiiio.
1111 11

NO

REMEMBER THE DATE JUNE 22nd, 9 A.M.

HARTLEY'S SHOES, INc.·

--------1&amp;1..,;.1

enttne
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22, 1977

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

By EDWARD K. DeWNG
the pipelines are contracted
WASHINTON (UPl) - Tbe to supply, will total 7.2 trillion
Federal Power Commission cubic feet," the FPC said.
said tnday natural gas shortThe FPC defined "curtailages may be worse this ment" as tbe difference becoming winrer than they were tween the amount of. gas a
last winter.
· pipeiine is required by
A report prepared by the contract to deliver and the
FPC staff and based on gas amount it is acutally able to
company projections deliver. "
· · ' . POSSE WINS TROPHY-Randy Carpenter, lei~ and .Joe Young a.re pictured with a
trophy awarded the Me1gs County Mounred Posse as tbe best mounted unit in the annual Big
estimated the interstate
It said the im)lacl of
Bend
Regatt~ Parade. Carpenter and Young are captains of the poss~.
pipelines will hl\ve 169.9 interstate pipeline
billion cubic feet less gas curtailments on ultimate
available for delivery during consjuners, such as homes
the 1977-78 heating season and factories, could not be
than they did last year.
predicted ' from its figures
An FPC spokesman ·said because about 90 per cent of
the
estimate
means the gas carried by the
to
shortages could be worse in pipelines is sold
the coming winter than · distributors who stand as
during the last one even if the middlemen between the
pipelines and consumers.
weather is normal.
The FPC staff also
" Several major factors
Ron Keske, and Steve Program. Haner was told County Infirmary, asked that
estimated ma'ndatory have effected the end-use
Miller
of Wright, Keske, they could not provide funds a parttime cook be hired to
curtailment of gas deliveries impact
.on
ultimate
Kutscgan
Architects Inc., for his program because of fill in during vacations, and
from November, 1977, to consuiners .. . including both
meeting
with
the Meigs mandated commitments and th e request was granted .
March, 1978, would total warmer tha,n normal ani!
County
Commissioners
. financia,l b~rdens presently
Sbe was also told that she is
about 1.66 tr.illion cubic feet, ' colder tban normal winrer
Tuesday
night
obtained
imposed
on
the
county's
responsible
fo r keeping time
or 23.03 per cent of the weather," the FPC said.
approval
of
his
finn's
plans
sheets,
and
to schedule sick
budget.
amount required under
It said a repeat of the
for
the
rjew
multi-purpose
Rory
Mack
of
WMPO
leave
and
vacation
for _her
existing contracts.
record
cold
weather
building.
The
commission
inquired
as
to
the
present
CETA
employes.
,
By contrast, it said, curtail- experienced last winter, for
Keska
to
send
the
authorized
situation
of
SEOEMS
in
The
dog
warden
reported
ments last winter were 1.53 instance, might result in
trillion cubic feet or 21:09 per increased delivery levels if plans to the state authorities. Meigs County. He was told that he had made 27 calls and
Bob Haner, director of the that the county would be had 79 pickups during the
cent of requirrnents.
there were a return to
Community
Act.ion Agency unable to provide any funding week of June 13 through the
"Next winter's firm emergency purchases and
Energy
Program,
asked the for SEOEMS after June 30 19. Attending were Henry
reqUirements, or gas which
(Continued on page 12)
commissioners to provide this year.
Wells, and James Roush ,
matching funds for the
Mlldred
Jacobs , c omm issioners, and Mary
Meigs-Gallia CAA Energy superintendent of the Meigs Hobstettcr, acting clerk.

Commission ·approves
··c ounty building plans

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

HARTLEY'S. SHOES ·INC.

at

be reduced

SIZES S, M AND L '6.00
SIZES 40 to 46 '7.00

POMEROY, 0.

•

•

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

brown . sea foam green.

AT

Ohio Job Services. Tbe speakers, left to right with Mrs.
Glenna Crisp, retiring Council chairman, and to her left,
Vernon Nease, newly installed chairman, were Lee
Norman, Ohio, Job Services; Gary Uttie, Buckeye Hills,
and Les Paster, Social Security.

HUMAN RESOURCE COUNCIL meeting Tuesday at
the Meigs Inn, Pomeroy, heard reports on services
available through Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley Regional
Development District, tbe Social Security office, and the

e

Wear this one and
see for yourself.
Textured knit
of Dacron®
Polyester .
S leeveless .
Cool.
Washable.
Great I
White , black. navy,
red. bone, coral,

Charles, Mark J . Matson.

Pl;d~~.gton - Robert S.
Syracuse - Kathy J.
Cumings, lawrence S.
Ebersbach .

puter1zed system that
provides a daily listing of job
openings through !he employment service office. He
advised that his agency never
checks with past employers,
although prospective employers have this privilege .
Discussing special
assistance to veterans and ·
handicapped persons, Norman said special care is
taken in placing· the han·
dicapped in jobs for which
they are adapted. Retention
of jobs is good, he reported.
Les
Paster ,
field
representative for the Social
Security Administration ,
Athens olflce, aruiounced the
toll free telephone service
from Meigs County with the
number 992~22. He advised
(Continued on page 12)

Natural gas
supplies to

can a tank top be!
Mr. and Mrs . Raymond
Bititoe, a son, Wellston.

D_o nors give 55 pints

M . King , Homer Baxter,
Michael D, Oiler, Jerry W.
Colmer, Mary L. Starcher,

Model 2JC798 23" (dlag. meas.) :,..
ERAll Color System

the elerflentary and junior high schools
for a better level relationship in studies
and that such committees will also be
formed at the high school level. He said
pOssibilities are being investigated for
NAIROBI, Keaya tUPI) - Uplldn ollldalo uld
establishing high school departments
today tbey are atW oarehJDC for Pfttldealldl Amla,
so that budget requirements can be
who cllsappeared four dlyl ago after a reported
haqdled more efficiently. New courses
IIS.Iautoatloa attempt. Veteraa oblerven aad U. S.
are being offered such as U. S. History
offlclals aalcl Amlll waa hlcllal from Ills woald-lle
at the high school and a music theory
killen.
course and plans are underway for
"We are siW lryiJII to IIDd oar president," 811
program ex pans ion and remediation in
official at AmlD'a EDtebbe atateh0111e told UPI by
social studies and language arts as well
telephooe. "SID"" Friclay, "'"don't kllow wbere be II.
as industrial arts. Testing of students
We have oo other illformalloa."
will be studied further and the results of
For the aeeood atralghl day, Radio Up11dl laday
testing put to use. Special education of
did not dlrec:Oy mendoa AmiD ellber, u aau•1 ·
. the handicapped will be done under a
occurreoce.
comprehensive plan and will have a
yearly review.
Morris said that work in the area of
talented and gifted Is being carried out
and program possibilities do exist. A
fall meeting on the matter is being
planned .
Morris wrote three IV.C project
propOsals from which only one could be
funded. One was funded for $14,000 to
improve pre-reading skills of first
By UDited PresolalenlaUonal
graders and will be carried out at the
Pomeroy, Salisbury and Salem Center
COLUMBUS -STATE SENATORS from both parties,
Schools. Parent advisory councils are . wary of compromiJiing Ohio's excellent road safety rec«rd
to be set up on Title I programs and with a costly and bureaucraUc vehicle inspecUon system
$2,100 has been provided for in- barboring potential kickbacks, bave dealt a resounding defeat
structional materials in the dlsad- to mandatory periodic inspections.
vantaged pupil program. Plans are
The inspection bill, sponsored by Sen. M. Morris Jackllon,
being made to establish a multi-media 0-Cleveland, was trOWlCed Monday by a vote of 7 to 21 despite
center. The Apple Crate has been claims it would reduce !be number of unsafe vehicles on !be
painted and will be visiting all schools highways. It was the worst defeat suffered by a bill on !be
with instruction materials.
Senate floor in recent memory as foes warned !be measure
Morris said recruiting is being would be a bonanza for auto dealers and mechanics, and was.
carried out for a junior high .in- flatly opposed by the Ohio Department of Highway Safety.
strumental music teacher who will
assist the band director and maybe also
will provide help for the vocal music
teacher. He said vocal and in·
strumental participation is up among
students. Morris concluded by outlining
pains for conferences with principals on
grouping, grading, promotion practices
and evaluation.
Attending the meeting were Supt.
Dowler, Morris, Goins, board mem·
bers, Wendell Hoover, Jennifer Sheets,
Joe Sayre, Dr. Keith Riggs and Virgil
King, and principals, James Diehl,
ULTRIANA'"
Robert Morris and John Mora.
How glamorous

fNews . . . in Briefg'

'

~
By United Press International
COLUMBUS - AN AMENDED BILL mandating that
. school districts adopt rules to require a "period of silence" of
no more than one minute to start each public school day was
defeated Tuesday night by the Ohio House Education
. Committee.
.
Even the bill's sponsor, Rep. Dale Locker, D-Anna, voted
agaltlst the bill after his original draft had been amended by
committee chairman Rep. Robert J . Bnggs, D.Jefferson. "As
amended, it would allow the bill to be declared
unconstitutional," said Locker afwr a motion to favorably
recollllll&lt;!lld the bill was defeated 4-ll.
NAIROBI, KENYA - UGANDAN PRESIDENT Idi
Amin 's dreaded secret police have launched "a rampage. of
killings" ofsuspects in an assassination atwmpt against Amin,
Kenya's government news agency said today. All indications
were that Amin was alive, although his disappearance since
the reported ambush Saturday had sparked speculation he wsa
dead, recovering from wounds, or being held captive by his
ambushers.
Dipiomatic sources in Cairo said Amin had conferred with
vlaitlng Finance Minister Brig , Moses Ali on Monday, but tbe
minister refused to discuss Amin with journalists. The Kenyan
news agency said 'Amin was wounded in a carefully planned
ambush in the town of Entebbe and was undergoing treatment
somewhere in Uganda or possibly Libya, which hl\s close ties
with Uganda.
·
TOLEDO, OHIO - TOLEDO RESIDENTS, ignoring
warnings that public schools will be forced to close next fall,
bavedefeared a 7.8-milllevy for the fourth straight time. Tbe
vote in Tuesday's special election was 19,136 for the levy and
,29,908 against as less than 40 per cent of the city's eligible
voters turned out.
Last November, voters, for the third time in 20 months,
turned down a 7.7-milllevy which forced scbools to close for
moat of December and officials said before Tuesday's election
If !be levyfalled schools would be forced to close again.
WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT CARTER was ready
today to sign legislation whose provisions barring U.s. finns
from joining the Arab trade embargo against Israel were
macle milder under pressures from the White House.
The President also planned today to welcome, and meet
with, Australian Prime Minister J. Malcolm Fraser, beginning
a two-day working visit in Washington. The boycott measure
placea a pJ'OOibition on American companies complying with
!be embargo. It does not apply, bowever, to firms operating
witbln an Arab country.
TEL AV'N, ISRAEL - PRIME Minister Menahem
Begin's Ukud bloc failed today to win control of the powerful
~
)
(Continued on page _,')

D di

.

e cation
0 f p001 set
on July 4th
SYRACUSE ~ Syracuse
·Mayor Herman London told
his town council Tuesday
night dedication of the new
swimming pool will be on
July 4 at 2:30p.m.
Following the dedication
othe pool will be opened free
to the public until 9 p.m. The
pool facilities are for everyone in the county.
Council voted to change
adult swimming (18 and up)
from Wednesday night to
Thursday night beginning
Thursday, June 30.
Council· also approved the
third and final reading of the
gas rate ordinance.
Mayor London told council
that scuba diving lessons
m•y be given at the pool.
Nothing is definite, however.
Cindy Baron, if enough
interest is shown, will give
synchronized swimming
lessons. If not enough people
are interested she will give
senior life saving lessons.
· Attending were Mayor
London, Troy Zwilling, Eber
Pickens, Barry McCoy, Katie
Crow, and Jimmy Joe Hemsley, council members, Mary
Chancey, clerk, and George
Holman, treasurer .

Weather
Cloudy, chance of thundershowers tonight and
Thursday. Lows tonight in the
low eos·, highs Thursday in the
upper 70s. .. Probability of
precipitation 20 per cent
today, 40 per cent Thursday.

.

.

Stripped auto
found in forest
Meigs Sheriff James J.
Proffitt reported today a 1973
Mercury Gomet stolen in
Colurpbus on June 19 has
been recovered at Shade
River State Forest in Curtis
Hollow near Long· Bottom.
The vehicle· was stripped.
Found early Tuesday when
the Shade River Ranger was ·
making his rounds, the
vehicle was towed to local
storage and the COlumbus
Pollee Department auto theft
bureau notified.

.Disturbances draw fines from
Mayor Hoffman iri .Middleport

The breaking and entering
of the Stanley Wells trailer
located on SR 7 south of
Tuppers Plains is under investigation . Apparently
nothing was taken.
Deputies are investigating
a complaint by John Young,
Rt. I, Reedsville, that his
Gennan Shepherd dog had
been killed and deputies
checked out several com'
plaints of prowlers in the
Tuppers Plains area early
Wednesday morning.

Fined by Middleport Mayor
Fred Hoffman Tuesday night
were Gary D. Black, 23, Portland, $25 and costs, convicted
of disturbing the peace, and
$25 and costs, disorderiy
manner; Thomas E. Grady,
18, Racine, $2S and costs
each, disturbing the peace
and disorderly manner;
Roger E. Brauer, Jr., 18,
Racine, $10 and costs,
squealing tires ; Melanie
Walters, Middleport, $25 and
costs, disturbing the p~ace ;
Doretha Robinson , Mid-

Boys State governor is sworn in·
ATHENS, Ohio (UPI) - C.
William O'NeiU, chief justice
of the Ohio Supreme Court,
Tuesday night swore in Greg
Roberts, 17, of Chesapeake,
County,
as
Lawrence
governor of the 1977 Boys
State .
He also told the high school
boys assembled from across
the state that not the future but the present belongs to
them.
"I've made a lot of com·
mencement

addresses/'

O'Neill said, "and I used to
11!11 the graduares that future
belongs to you. I pon't tell
them that anym ~ re . The

present belongs to you."
In time for the next
presidential elections, every
Boys Stare participant will be
voting, the justice said, and if
they and all young people
voted tbe same, 11 Which you
won't" they could easily ,
decide who would be the next
President.
That, O'Neill said "is the
power or youth." It is a

power, he added, granted by
adults who "trust you and
have faith In your ability, Tbe
future depends on you,"
Roberts, a Federalist
defeated
Nationalisi
c~ndidate, Rick Metzgar 17
'

'

Grand Rapids, Wood County,
for the top post in the election
Monday.
Three otber Federalist
candidates joined Roberts in
victory in other state
administrative offices.
David Wilkins, 16, Newark,
was elected secretary of
stare; Bill Schweinfurth, 17,
Warren,
was
elected
treasurer and David Merrell,
17, Geneva, auditor'
The Nationalists captured
two offices. Gary Schettino,
16, Youngstown, was elected
lieutenant governor and
Michl\el ,&amp;1cDonnell, 16, of
Trenton, · lttorney general.

dieport, disturbing the peace,
$25 and costs; Robin
Moodispaugh, Middleport,
$25 aJl\1 costs, disturbing the
peace; Paul Reeves, 43,
Albany, disorderly ma-nner,
$25 and costs.
Forfeiting bonds were Jack
M. Srolovitz, 46, Avon Park ,
Fla ., $300 posted (or DWI, and
Randall R; Reeves, 18,
Pomeroy, $27 for speeding.

Fundin~ comes

for hiring- of
older persons
Funds are being allocated
through Title IX of the Old er
Am eri cans Act to each state
to provide part-time employment (25 hours per week)
for low income persons age 55
and over .

This progra m is ad ministered through the Area
Agency on Aging for eight
counties and will begin as
soon as funds are available .
'
Employment has to be in
up
areas such as !lome Health
Aide, Bus Driver, Cook at
Nutrition Site, and Out Reach
Worker or other areas which
Doug Bissell, who has been serve older persons.
Appl icants must be able to
vice president of the Eastern
pass
a physical exani.ination
Local School District Board
of Education, is now serving and be willing to work 4-5
as president since th e days a week. Applications are
resignation or David Smith available at the Senior
Citizens Cent er in Pomeroy
earlier this year.
and
must be' returned by July
Monday night the district's
I.
board purchased two new
school buses . Deli ve ry
however will not be made
ASK TOWED
until late December or early
Marr iage licenses were
January so that the cost can · issued to Fra nk Milt on
be paid out of the 1978 · Col we II , 21, Vinton and
calendar year funds.
Pamela Sue Offenberger, 18,
A report of the Monda y Rt. t, Middleport ; Charles
meeting erroneously listed Norman Curfman, 21,
the age of J . Clark Lees, new Racine, lll!.d Tamara Denise
high school prir.i'ipal, as r.o. Tallent, II'. Racine.
l&gt;.

Bissell steps
to board's
presidency

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