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1~ The Daily Sentinel,

'

•

MiddlePOrt-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, June 23, 197/

Coal field strikes spreading
CHARLESTON , W.Va .
(UP! )- Hoping to shore up
dwindling
health
and
retirement funds, 'district
leaders of the United Mine
Workers union planned to try
lo meet with UMWofficials in
Washington today in an
attempt to end a Spreading
protest strike which has idled

Reminder made

thousands of soft coal miners.
An estimated 31,000 miners
w..-e of! the job in West
Virginia, Kentucky, PeMsylvania, and Ohio to protest
cutbacks in the UMW Health
and Retirement Funds.
"We're going to do aU we
can," said Jack Perry, tresi·
dent of District 17 in southern
West Virginia, where 20,000
miners were m strik.e.

Nurse contract
averts strike

of reception
for Pikkoja

UMW President Arnold
Miller has blamed coal
opera!Drs for the cui in
benefits while fund trustees
and coal producers say the
funds have sagged because of
wildcat strikes.
Miners apparently were in
no mood 1o return to their
jobs until they get some
relief.
" It probably would take
some kind of action by the
trustees of the fund at this
point," Perry said. 11Thal
seems to be what il would

take.
They
(miners)
certainly want something
done."
"We want to ascertain just
what our position is, and ID
explore what any avenues of
relief there may be," Perry
said. " We'll use all the
resources we have.''
The cutbacks in funds have
forced miners ID pay 40 per
cent of their doctors' biUs
along with the initial $250 of
• hoSpitalization' costs, up ID a
yearly $500.
Ben Lusk, president of the
West Virginia Surface Mining
and Reclamation
Association, said the fault lies
with Miller ''more than
anybody else."
"He is trying to blame the
coal companies for the strike
and thai is tntally absurd,"
Lusk said. "He's passing the
buck. He h8S11'1 yet controlled
the miners. He can 't keep the
miners working."
E;lch day that miners stay
out, the health . and

DEFIANCE, Ohio (UPI) A
threatened
strike
Twelve years of travelling
Wednesday
by
the
Ohio
Meigs County on the book·
Nurses
Association
against
mobile has made Vilma
Pikkoja a well-known person Defiance Hospit~i was
averted when a new contract
to area residents.
After her retirement this was reached for about 65
month she will reside in registered nurses at the hosGallipolis but will keep in pital.
The new two.year contract,
touch with friends in both
agreed
upon Tuesday night,
counties.
is
retroactive
to June 12,
The Pomeroy-Middleport
when
the
nurses'
previous
Library trustees expect that
two-year
contract
expired :
as many people as possible
Kent
Williams,
assistant
will want to say "goodbye"to
Mrs. Pikkoja at a pubUc director of the ONA's
reception this Sunday. It wlli Economic and General
be a chance to wish her a Welfare Program, said that
happy
and . pleasant under the new agreement aU
nurses will receive
retirement. The recetion wUl aregistered
50
cent
per
hour increase in
be at St. Paul's Lutheran
the
first
year
of the contract
Church on Sunday, june 26,
and
a
similar
increase in the
from 2 to 5 p. m.
second
year.
The starting
Refreshments will be
salary
of
a
registered
nurse
served and there wfil be a
will
increase
from
$4.65
per
cbance to see photographs
hour
tD $5.15 in the first year.
and slides of Mrs. Pikkoja 's
retirement funds lose an
work in Meigs County. "Mr.
Eddy Educator", as the hardworking bookmobile is
known, wiD be on display.
Highlights of Mrs. Pikkoja's

additional $320,000 in
royalties that operators pay ,
according to a spokesman for
the West Virginia Coal
Association.
" It's going

to get worse,u

Lusk predicted.

Columbia Gas
likes prospect
next winter

interesting career in the

United States
presented,

will

be

the century.
Columbia issued the
statement following a reoort
from the Federal Power
Commission that natural gas
shortages may he worse this
coming winter than they were
la~i winter.
"Each natural gas company's supply situation is
different because each
company has different
suppliers," said Columbia in
a statement.
"In Columbia Gas of Ohio's
case, we believe our supply
situation will be as good If not
better than it was last year,"
the utility said.
"Therefore we feel our
situation does not fit the
general pattern as analyzed
by the •Federal Power
Commission, ' '

Columbia

said,

Corrie film ,
· , S 1mda. y
comrng
;t~iddl
rl •
to lr~,
. e/)0
"Cor~ie Behind the
Scenes with the Hiding
Place", a new run length
color relea!le from World
Wide Pictures, wUl be shown
at the Middleport First
Baptist Church at 7:30 p. m.
Sunday. Details of the fUm
have been published locally
prior to showing In other local
churches.

COLUMBUS (llPI) - The
Ohio Ethics Corilmission has
extended for two weeks the
deadline for some I,OOOpubllc
o!filllals and candidates who
fl!lfed lo file financial disclosure statements by the
statutory deadline.
Commission Executive
Director Richard G. Terapak
said letters would he sent
next week to 495 city and no
county elected officialS wbo
did not !Ue by the AprU 15
deadline for officials or the
May 9 deadline for J~~J~C
primary candidates.
He said complaints wiU be
flied against those "·ho &lt;lon'l
submit reports by . the
extended deadline of July 11.

·.
"

_Why do as a man

Meigs 4-H Club News

The
Willow
Creek
Roadrunners met twice
recently. On June 9 they met
atthehomeofRitaEblin with
fiye members and two ad·
visors present, when project
books were handed out,
members worked OQ their
projects, a demonstration
was 'given by Dixie Eblin on
completing a sewing box, and
refreshments served by
Barbara . Grueser and Kim
Eblin.
On June 16 they mill at the
borne of Valerie Jeffers with
seven members and two
advlsors present . A skating
party was discussed and the
riiemDers worked on their
1000 ami clothing projecis.
For recreation, T.V. Tag was
played. ·Refreshments were
served by Kim Eblin and
Debbie Wyatt. The next
meeting was set for June 21 at
the home &lt;l:o Fran Moxley
·with a picnic plaMed with
foodl"'m the prujeci books.
..,.Dfxle Eblin.

demonstration was given by
Davi&lt;l Thornton on the
. proper tools used for showing .
pigs at the fair. Horseshoes
and ball were played.
Refreshments were served
by the Dunldes. - Linda
Smith.

The Melga · County Dairy
Club met Jun~ 14 at the home
of Stephanie Radford with six
members and one advisor
present. Sweepstakes money
was collected and making
money in dairy farming was
'
•discussed. "' demonstration
The Fine Swine Club met on was given by Albert Holman
June? at the home of Mr. and on weighi~g a calf with a tape
Mrs. Dunkle with 11 mem· measure. Stephanie Radford
bers and one advisor present. gave a report on "Pink Eye".
State Fair entry forms, 4-H ·Refreshments were served
Tag Day and scrap iron by Stephanie Radford.- Bob
drives were discussed. A Lee.

TV•••in Review

He. 10¥.1 ~

He Jowr•• money;

poys bills by mail.

olimioaloa coarly
bill-paying trip•.

He ltoa recorda;

Htl hos r.ceipt1;

for

in tho form of

effici~~nl

conceited checks.

·FOR AS LlffiE AS ·

5fr PER MONTH

A Home Bank
For
Meigs County
People

(j)l

RACINE
HOME NATIONAL

BANK
RACINE

OHIO

NEW YORK (UP!) - "Do you watch 'The Partridge
Family1"' "Yeah, every day. I hate it." •·
Now what's a concerned parents...,.,.,.OO to make out of that
exchange?
. .
Some parents have an easy time. Their kids want to watch
bloodshed aDd sex, which everyone knows ts bad for them. The
virtuous, over-protective parent can censor the screen with
easy self....,.urance.
"
In Canada the Ontario Royal Commission on Violence In the
Communlcalions Industries came down hard on imported
American television violence and among other things sugge•ed special tuning and locking devices on sets so parents
could pre-program what their kids watch.
For parents whoae offspring think blood is groovier than
whimsy, declaions are simple. Other parents find themselves
in a gray area, uncomfortable with the qUality of what the kids
watch but unsure whether they should act, react or just leave
the room.
"I Love Lucy" is totally unobjeciionable - except for the
way it pictures men, women, marriage und the Englisb
language,
The kids watch "The Brady Bunch" and what do they think?
Does everyone 11ve like the Bradys, in a spacious house with
plenty of room for six happy children lind a good...atured,livein housekeeper to help M&lt;mmj with the chores?
Or does the pioneer slrnpticlty of "Utile House on the
Prairie" balance things out?
Not: only is the Brady home nothing like the less glamorous
dwellings of most Americans, but bow many kids live in a
family where mother and father never (not alm061 never)
never argue 1
,
"The Odd Cotiple" is being stripped now - that is, llhown
five days a week. What does a 9-year-old girl who adores the
program ma!&lt;e of those two?
_
How can the same chlld watch "The Partridge Family"
(which llhe says she hates) and ~g to stay up beyond her
bedtime to catch the latest epiaode ol "Upstairs, Downstairs?"
And, except for admiring Susan Hampshire's charm, to which
all humans are susceptible, what could a third grader make of
"The Pa!Usera" to keep her glued to the set?
It's not that the children will watCh anythlng that moves on
the screen. Some of the nobler efforts of network programming
for children gel the go-by, but "Gone With The Wind'' received
the same rapt attention as the armual "Wizard of Oz" rerun.
Protecting chlldrEII from .the excesses of television is not as
simple as the morallsta make it sound.
What worries IIOllle parenta is not tl'le effect of individual
shows, because objectionable programs can be forbidden and
taboos can be enforced.
But what is the overall effect on children of watchin!l televl·
sion 1 Wlu!t view do they get of life, what values do they learn,
what roles do they identify with?
There is so II~ poetry on television, but so much tele'lislon.

•

FRIDAY, JUNE 24th • SATURDAY, JUNE 25th__
9:30 A.M. TO 5 P.M.

MEN'S SHORT
SlEEVE SHIRTS

MEN'S DRESS
SLACKS

· This s~fal sale Includes - our

men' s dress shirts. sport shirts
and

Solid colors and patterns.
sizes 29 to 42 waist. Select
your proper length.

knit

shirts.

Excellent

selections. The savings ai'l

rl.d---"'f""l

~.J..--

MEN'S 110.95 Dress Slacks '8.20
Men's 111.95 Dress Slacks •. '8,90
Men's 112.95 Dress Slacks •.19.70
Men's 114.95 Dress Slacks 111.20
115.95 Dress Slacks 111.90
/

lerrlfLc.

Men's S5.95
Shirts
Men's $7.95
Shirts
Men's $9.95
Shirts
Men's $11.95
Shirts
Men's $12.95
Shirts
Men's $14.95
Shirts

Sale $4.4~
Sale $6.00
Sale $7.50
Sale $8.95

.MEN'S AND BOYS DEPARTMENT

Sale

«

Regular-118.99 Twin Size .. :............... 115.00
. Regular 'Z2.49 Full Size................... '18.00
Regular 133.99 Queen Size ..... , .... ,..... 127.00

NAlROBI, KENYA - PRESIDENT ID! Amin has
resumed his officlal duties, ending a week of speculation he
was killed or badly wounded in an assassination attempt by
dissident soldiers, Radio Uganda says. The government radio
Thursday 'denounced reports of an assassination attempt as
"malicious propaganda" spread by the British and warned
them lo stop interfering in Ugandan affairs.
In his first official function since he dropped out of sight
and sparked rumors of a coup attempt, the radio said Amin
111et Finance Minister Moses Ali Thursday. Vice President
Gen. Mustafa Adrlsi said in a separate announcement Amin
·was "very much alive and very fit~~" and was· ~~ resting and
planning for the future development of the country."
·

•3••

GIRLS
DRESSES

- Solids and prints .
- Sleeveless or short
sleeve styles.
-· Sizes S-M·L and extra •
.sizes.

- Sizes 12 mos.· 24 mos .
and 2 to 14.
- Entire stock Included .
•

Reg. 13.50....... Sale ~2.59

Reg. 17.00-'9.00
Sale •5.30 .

Reg. 14.50....... Sale

3J9
Reg. '5.50 ....... Sale 54.19

Reg. 110.00-113.00
Sale '7.49
Reg. 114.00-116.00
Sale '10.49

Reg.

Reg. 117.00-120.00
Sale '12.79

5

59.79 '

Reg. 119.00 .... Sale 514.29

'79.95

WOMEN'S UN·IfORMS
-SELECTED GROUP
- MISSY AND HALF SIZES

UPRIGHT SWEEPER
SALE '5995

Reg.

1

YOU SAYE '20.00

Reg. 113.00 to 115.00 ............... Sale '7.88

6 position cleaning height,' .heavy duty bag ,
edge cleaner, attractive tu-tone color .

Reg. 116.00 to 118.00 ............... Sale '8.88

1 21.9~

GIRLS' TOPS

PANASONIC FM-AM PORTABLE

-SIZES 2-14
-ENTIRE STOCK INCLUDED
REG. •3.50 ..................... SALE '2.89
REG. '4:so..................... SALE •3.69
REG. •S.SO ..................... SALE 14A9
REG.
. '7.00:.............. ,. ... SALE '5.69REG. •11.00... . .............. SALE '8.99

RADIO

- TELESCO~IC ANTE_NNA
-EARPHONE JACK
-CARKYING HANDLE

SPECIAL '11 18

CHILDREN'S
SLEEPWEAR

WOMEN'S DRESSES
large group of missy
and half sizes.

ENTIRE STOCK INCLUDED

Reg. SZO.OO to 124.00

REG. 3.75.... SALE •2:59
1

SALE· '14.49
Reg. 126.00 to 130.00
. SALE .1 18.79
Reg. 136.00 to 138.00
. SALE '25.99

REG. '6.00 .... SALE '4.19
REG. '8.00 ... SALE '5.59

Reg. 142.00 to 144.00
SALE •30.29

REG. 110.00 ••• SALE '6.99

Reg. '52.00 to '54.00

REG. '13.00 .. SALE '9.G9

SALE '37.49

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT
I
- nL
' .

~

ELBERF

I

.POMEROY
•.

.. .

-

~

. .. . . .

WASIDNGTON - AT LEASf FOUR children have choked By
United
Press
to death on baby rattles, and the Consumer Product Safety International
Commission ma;r. order a ban on some types.
A meeting in Washington
The commiSsion directed its staff to look into the between 13 miners from West
possibility of a ban, especially on rattles shaped like telephone • Virginia and Pennsylvania
receivers. It said there have been at least 14 cases of children and trustees of the United
with rattles lodged in Ufeir throat who narrowly escaped death, Mine Workers Health and
according to the agency's staff report. The deaths apparently Retirement Funds has had
occutred when the infants roiled over onto the rattles, pushing little effect in stopping a
them into their mouths, causing suffocati.on.
strike by thousands of miners
.
in several states.
COLUMBUS - DEMOCRATIC LEGISLATIVE leaders
The Bituminous Coal
have reassessed their position arx! decided to insert non- Operators Associations
controversial spending language in the $13 billion general estimated there were 3ii,OOO
appropriations bill to send illo Gov. James A. Rhodes with miners out in ·five states
emergency status early next week. The more contr~versial Thursday protesting cuts
language, including the state school subsidy formula, will planned next month in health
· remain behind for more careful consideration and 9&lt;klay and retirement benefits.
status, House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe Jr., D-New Boston, said
West Virginia and PennsylThursday.
vania were the states hardest
Any extra money specilied in the S&lt;H:aUed "language" hit by the strike, which also
budget bill, including school funds, would be aUocateli
retroactively when the measure takes 'effect, Riffe said. Thllplan was agreed upon during a meeting among Riffe and
Senate President Pro Tempore Oliver Ocasek, [).Akron ; Sen.
Harry Meshel, [).Youngstown, chainnan of the Senate
Finance Committee; and Rep. Myrl H. Shoemaker, D-Bourne·
ville, chairman of the House F;inance Committee.
.

'9.00 to 11.00 ................ Sale '5.88

•

Driver forced Cash prizes
off hill road
oHered in
in Middleport Rutland on 4th
he driver of a car going up
Middleport Hill, allegedly
forced to leave the road to
avoid a collision with another
vehicle, received a severe,lip
laceration at 2:01p.m. Thursday.
Middleport Police said
Timothy Mark Spires, 22,
Rutland, drove into a ditch
rather than collide with an
unidentified oncoming car
which was left of center.
Medium datnages were
caused to the car and Spires
was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the
Middleport Emergency
Squad.
The Middleport squad was
called at II :07 p.m. to the
New Lima Road near
RuUand for Charles Beller, a
medical patient, who was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. At 5:09 a.m. Friday
the squad went to 581 S.
Fourth Ave. lor Tammy
Tvree who was taken to
t'iealsant Valley Hospital.

'

I

•

l
\.

said. "He's related by blood
to a bout half the county. He
has a lot of relatives in this
area and some of them might
have hidden him in the past."
Hart was serving 40..140
years for rape, two counts

~

~I

backpa cker ,
a
real
backwoodsman type," he

! ,1'

\.

4" ~

BILL DISCUSSED - Sen. Oakley Collins and Mrs.
Maida Mora, Meigs rarm Bureau President, discussed
House Blll536 during a meeting in Columbus Wednesda y.
Mrs. Mora and her husband, Donald, right, of the Meigs
County Farm Bureau with other Ohio Farm Bureau
leaders hosted Ohio's senators toa luncheon to discuss the
bill strongly supoorted by the Ohio Farm BQreau. Tbe bill
bas passed the House. The bill proposes that growers and
processors of fruits and vegetables bargain in good faith
for terms and conditions in growers ' contracts.

or

kidnaping and four counts of
first-&lt;legree burglary at the
time he escaped after he was
(Continued on page 10)

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

-~'

the

en tine
FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 1977

WASHINGTON (UP!) - led four other justices to file judge federal court in ColumThe Supreme Court ruled their own views disagreeing . bus, which upheld the law's
!Dday a state may funnel with part of it.
numerous provisions, the
funds to church-related
The Ohio legislature passed American Civil Liberties
public schools for textbooks the law in 1975 after Supreme Union called the latest round
and for health and certain Court decisions indicated a "an end run" around the high
other services, but not for similar, earlier statute then court's earlier decisions.
instructional materials and under attack would be struck
Under these decisions, any
field trips.
law assisting parochial
down. Later it was.
The opinion in the Ohio case
In an appeal from the latest schools must have a secular
bY Justice Harry Blackmun decision of a .special three- purpose_, must have · a

Truck damages rural fence
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Department investigated a
minor accident Wednesday
evening on CR 49 near
Snowville.'
Thurman R. Haning, 22,
told deputies he was driving a
truck south at about 10:40
p.m. when he lost control
goirlg into a curve· upon
hitting deep bumps on the
roadway. The truck went off

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

hit Ohio, Kentu cky and
Virginia.
Pennsylvania miners voted
Thursday tD return tD the
pits, but roving pickets
seemed determined to keep
alive the walkout-protest.
Pickets stopped miners
employed in at least four
mines from going to work
later in the day.
The 13 miners from West
Virginia and southwestern
Pennsylvania met Thursday
with two trustees of the
United Mine Workers Health
and Retirement funds.
" It
' was
not
a
confrontation," ' a union
spokeswoman said of the
. meeting. "They just hashed it
(the issue of the cutbacks )

out some more."
After the meeting the
miners said they would send
a telegram to the BCOA
demanding a re-allocation of
assets that would avert
health benefit cutbacks
scheduled to begin July 1.
The cutbacks will force
miners to pay 40 per cent of
thei r doctor bills as well as
the
first
$250
of
hospitalization costs, up ID
$500 per year. They now pay
nothing in either case.
UMW President Arnold
Miller and Harry Huge, one
of three funds trustees, said a
reallocation by the industry
from other funds could have
averted the cutbacks.
But BCOA President

fa ceted test.
He also found costitutionai ·
a · tes tin g and scoring

an excessive gove rnment

program whose content and

entanglement with religion.
Blackmun
said
the
textbook loan program

results are not controlled by
the nonpublic school.
Blackmun's opinion gave

11

bears

a

striking

approval

to

money indicates that schools
' may have to he closed . The
analysis determines if
schools must be closed for
financial ,reasons and sets the
closing date.
The board has placed a 10
mill new tax levy before
voters at a special election on
Aug. lti.
The board accepted the
resignation oi Marilyn

Joseph Brennan blamed the
trouble on wildcat strikes
that cut off money normally
contributed by management.
· Wildcat strikes in recent
years-cost UMW Health and
Retirement Funds more than
$110 million in royalties paid
by coal companies on the
basis of coal mined and hpurs
worked .
A BCOA official said there
is little chance management
will change its stand against
reallocation. '
Howard Greene, a UMW
field representative in West
Virginia, said the industry is
balking purposely to eXhaust
stockpiled coal to raise prices
later this year.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Sunday through ·
Tuesday, mostly fair
Sunday and a chance of
thundershoWers Monday
and Tuesday. Highs will be
io the low or mid 80s and
lows will be In th e low or
mid 60s.

Weather
Variable cloudiness today

and toni ght, with showers
likely. Lows tonight in the
upper 60s. Chance of showers
Saturday . " Hi ghs to 85 .
Probability of precipitation
70 per cent today, 60 per cent
tonight. 50 per cent Saturday.

Powell, long tlme high school
office secretary and chirk·
custodian of the di strict
activity funds . Applications
will be taken for the position
until noon July 5 and are to he ·
sent to Supt. Bobby Ord. The
board will meet in special
session on July Sto review the
applications.
Employed· Thursday riight
were Janice Deem . as first
and second grade teacher at
Portland, Nancy Cross as
home economics instructor at

th e high ·school , Jess
Browning as majorette ad·
visor on a su ppleme ntal ·
contract, and Ray Proffitt,
who had resigned as a bus
driver, as bus mechanic.

The board approved the
clerk's financial statement

and bi lls and authorized
Clerk Linda Spencer to pay
the July and August teachers'
retirement by July 15 out of
the general fund as required
with the general fund to he
reimbursed when teachers

are paid. The board passed a
resolution staling that it will
not discriminate against the
handicapped in employing
personnel.
Board members present
were Robert Sayre, Jack
Bostick, Roger Adams and
Dallas Hill.

Parade

.

said noting that although in
many ways she is a typical
housewife, she finds time for
the host of other.challenging
and fulfilling activities.
An ' hour spent with her
revealed a young woman
whose secret seems to be in
her enthusiasm for life and
for the Cookeville Com·
munity.
"This is all a little em·
barrassing," Pat said, and
added that she hoped the
story would not draw at·
te~otion to herself as much as
it would be a challenge to
other women who feel they
are too busy lo be involved in
their community.
She is, in herself , a
cha llen ging woman, ·mother ,

wife, teacher, athlete, pilot,
bus

driver,

community

worker. She is a woman who
makes time lor the things she
considers important.
And the activity she is most
proud of and feels most
important is not really visihle
on her list of clubs and
organizations - · h ~

.,..

entnes
needed

a mother and wife, ·she says.
" My family is first ," she
stressed. " We do as much

RACINE - Pete Simpson,
cha innan of the 4th of July
pa rade here today asked
par~

together as time permits,"

persons intending to ·

Her . husband, Dr. Charles
Jorgan, is chief of staff at
Coo keville General Hospital

ticipate in the parade to call
him.

and an ear, nose and throat

are wanted and needed .
The nag raisi ng will he. at
the Raci ne .Junior High at
10:15 a.m. and the parade will
follo w a t 10 :30 . " In·
dependence Day" is th e
theme.
Trophies will be awa rded
fi rst and second place win·
ners in Best of Them.e and
Co mm ercia l. Third place

Simpson said noat entries

specialist. He is often busy
himself, but he shares a good
part of the credit for the
award given her, Pat said.
14
I've . had much en·
couragement from him, in

everything I've ever con·
sidered doing," Pat said. Her
enthusiasm for sports is a
drop in the bucket to his, Pat
says and both are active in
that area.
Patreferees intercollegiate
women's basketball games,
was a varsity athlete in
women's basketball herself
at Ohio State University and

winn ers

wil l

receive

a

She is currently treasurer of
the Coo keville
Tennis

savings bond . Trophies alS\)
will be given to first , second
and third place winners in a
best decorated bikes division.
Barbecue chicken will be
sold at noon at the fire·
station; there will he ga mes
in
the afternoon and a
fireworks display in the

Association.

.evening.

also is an avid tennis player.

Her official Is an official
for high school football
work as
(Continued on page 10)

'

diagnostic

resemblance" to similar sys- · speech,
hearing
and
terns approved by the court in psvcholo~ical services and
the past and pssses the three(Continued on page 10)

:·:·:::·:;:·:::::::::::::::::::::::·:;:::::·:::·:::::::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·

T enn
. e s s eean s 1•ik
·e
Pat Pric-e Jordan

BY KATIE ' CROW
Meigs County has produced
RUTLAND - Atalent show many fine people and Pat
with cash prizes to the win· Price Jordan Is one of them.
Pat is the daughter of Mr.
ners will he a highlight of the
and
Mrs. Clarence Price of
annual July 4th celebration to
he held under sponsorship of Portland.
Pat and her husband Dr.
the Rutland Fire J:tepart·
ment. Talented groups and Charles Jordan and two
individuals wishing to take children Kelly, age 6 and
part in the competition with Jodi, 3, reside in Cookeville,
prizes of $40, $20 and $10 to be Tenn.
Each year the Cookeville
offered the winners, are
asked to call Vernon Weber at Jaycettes sponsor a contest
742·2143; Jerry Black at 742· seeking the Outstanding
Young Woman of Putnam
2688 or the fire station.
The celebration, a day-long County. This year's wiMer
event, will be held at the park was Pat Price Jorda·n,
area nea r the Rutland selected by a panel of out-of·
gymnasium and will. feature town judges. Entered then in
also an ox roast, games, food· regional competition, she was
stands and a fireworks selected the most outstanding
djsplay.
young woman in the 11 county
region. She is now in state
competition.
TO MEET MONDAY
The Herald Citizen at
The Gallla-Meigs Com· Cookeville had this to say
munily Action Agency Board about Pat:
of Direciors will hold its
Women can limit themmonthly meeting on Monday, selves too much, the recently
June 27, at 8 p.m. in the vote "outstandin g Young
central ffice.
Woman of Putnam County"

primary effect that neither
advances nor · inhibits
religion, and must not foster

Board. asks cash study

the road on the right
- Meeting in
damaging a fence owned by regRACINE
ular session Thursday
Charles E. Trader, Rt. 2, night the Southern Local
Albany.
School District Board of
There were no injuries and
Education voted to request
no arrest.
the State Auditor's office to
The department is also do a financial cash analysis in
investigating the theft of a case
schools of the district
battery taken from a car have to he closed for financial
owned by Jim Riffle , reasons.
Syracuse, tliat was parked at · The ac\ion is required in
the Intersection of SR 7· and any district where the lack of
124.

Coal fields in turmoil

'9.00 ....... Sale '6.79

Reg:Suoo ...... Sale

Money needed
to send ,b oys
to Arrowhead

"Send a boy to camP" Js
the suggestion of Bob
Arms, Scoutmaster of
Pomeroy Boy Scout Troop
249.
Arms said help is needed
to send several members of
the troop to . Camp
Arrowhead July 111·17. All ·
donatloos to that fund wlll
be welc ome. Cost for each
JOHANNESBURG, sol.JTH AFRICA - POLICE killed i
boy is $35. Iodlvlduals,
black teenager and a runaway horse trampled two
organlzalioos or bus loesses
children tn ·death in mass demonstrations that ~rupted· Thurs- . who cao help are to contact
day in the blackghe.tto of Soweto and downtnwn Johannesburg. • Pa,t Wood, 992-2281 any
Fourteen black youths were injured and 176 arrested, police · time or Arms at 992·5487
said.
aoy time after Wednellday.
· Police, wbo were being "yiolentiy attacked by a large
mob" near Soweto's Orlando H1gh School, opened fire and hit ::::::·:::·:::·:·:·:-:::·:-:·&gt;:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:::-:·:·:·:-:·:·.
Tharnl Bunge,_a 16-year-old high school student, Police Maj .
Gen. Dawid Kriel said. Bunge died hours later in a blacks-only
hospital. Several thousand students threw stnnes, burned four
commuter buses and looted and plundered stores in the worst
violence this year to rock the dusty, sprawling gheltn of 1.2
million blacks .

.WOMEN'S TOPS

over

Court okays aid to church schools

the House made sure the manufacturers, retailers and

100 per cent dacron polyester. non skid
back, size 24x40 inches in oval and
rectangular shapes.
.
Big selection of solid colors and wh1te.
\

VOL. XXVIII NO. 50

employers had legal recourse against one another and that the
practice of law would not suffer. Both the House and Senate
:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::::·;. :·:::::::::::::::::~:
have adjourned for the weekend.
The product liability measure, sponsored by Rep. Vernon
F . Cook, D-Cuyahoga Falls, outlaws claims against
manufacturers for injuries or damages sustained from
defective products which are more than 10years old.

4.79 SCATTER RUGS

all

•

By United Press Interoadonal
COLUMBUS
LEGISLATION
OFFERING
manufacturers, retailers and employers limited proteciion
against lawsuits arising from defective products has cleared
the Ohio House and is on Its way to the Senate.
Before approving the measure Thursday 85-7, at!Drneys in

5

Quilted style. contempo design, multi color
patterns. Limited quantity for this Sj)ecial
sale .

.

relatives

county.''
An investigator who asked
not to he identified said
authorities beUeved Hart had
been hiding in the region
since his 1973 escape.
''He is an accomplished

•

e

i!VVews. • .zn Brzefsi\l

Special Purchase and Sale

BEDSPREADS

terrain, using the headlights from their tent. Two of the
of their cars ID illuminate the girls had been beaten to death
perimeter .
and the third strangled .
But officers feared a man Authorities said all three had
seen fleeing from a cave been sexually assaulted.
Thursday might have
A few hours after the
escaped through a gap.
charges were filed , searchers
Gene Leroy Hart, 33, a flushed a man out of a cave in
convicted
rapist
and Lhe rugged area and a
kidnaper who escapeq_ from manhunt was organized .
jail four years ago, was DOgs were brought in and
charg_ed Thursday with the handlers said they found the
murder of Lori Lee Farmer, scent at least twice, but lost it
8, Doris Denise Milner, 10, again.
both of Tulsa, and Michelle
Authorities were unable to
Guse, 9, of Broken Arrow.
identify the man who fled the
The area beipg searched is cave but said Ulere was a
about a mile from where the strong possibility it was Hart,
girls' bodies were found at who was described by police
dawn June 13 inside zipped as Han Indian and an expert
sleeping bags about 150 yards ba c kwoodsman with

Jr:::::::::=:::::::::::::::::::::;;::;:::::::;~:;;;:::::;=~=:=~=~=~=~::::::=~=~=:=~=:::=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=========:=:=:=====::::::::::=======l~

Send two wrappers any men's Hanes briefs.
T·shirts, A shirts or athletic shorts to Hanes
and they will send you a check for $2 .00.
Save $1.50 on two packages pf boys Hanes
underwear. ·
Offer
June 30.

Special Salel

REGULAR

,,

1.25

MEN'S HANES UNDERWEAR

Special Sale Prices On
,.. Entire stock ·of boys short sleeve shirts and
knit shirts.
•Men's and boys' lightweight jackets.
&gt;1- Men's sport coats and suits
*'All of our boys blue jeans and fashion jeans.
lf- Men's broadcloth pajamas, regular length
and shorties.

VANDA!JZED- One of several signs that have been
placed through county by REACf has been painted
over with black paint. The signs were erected to assist
molorists in trouble by advising them to call REACT over
CB chaMels 9, 11 or 19. This sign located on SR 143 will be
moved and another one painted and placed in a different ·
location.

· Sale $9.75

.SAVE '2.00
When You BUJ 2 Packages

Big Savings This Weekend

SALE!

By GEORGE BOOSEY
LOCUST GROVE, Okla.
(UP!) - Police and an
unarmed posse using 40
lrained tracking dogs today
swarmed the brushy hill
country
of Northeasl
Oklahoma in an attempt tD
corner an escaped convict
charged in the sex slayings ol
three girl scouts.
"This has changed from a
search for evidence to the
search for a kiUer," said
Highway Patrol Capt. Don
Mentzer.
During the night an
unanned posse of more than
400 volunteers formed a
human cordoo around fivesquare-miles or the rough

SALE PRICESI

SALE I

The Chester Farm Boys
met June 7 111 the home of
· Charles Frecker with three
members and one advisor
present. Election of officers
was held and selection of
projeci books wa&amp; discussed.
For recreation, the members
~:burned ice cream and
refreshmentsl)Vere served by
Mr. and Mrs. Frecker. -Ed
Holter.

·WRITE A CHECK?

Because: -

TWO DAY SALE

COLUMBUS (UP! )
Columbia Gas of Ohio said
today it believes its gas
supply "wlli be as good if not
better than It was last year"
'during the severest winter of

Posse hunting suspect
in Girl Scout killings

•

9:30 A.M. TO 8 P.M.

Deadline moved
off two weeks

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY .

PAT PRICE JORDAN

•

Simpson may be 'reached at
949·2118 after 5 p.m. or write
to him at Racine.
~

.

�'

--

•
3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Friday, JWJe 24, 1977

2- The DailySentmel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday , June 24, 1977

HEALTH
Lawrence E. lamb, M.D.

· Trouble with milk

.W.-Y PC

can I ever thank you. For
more than ten years I have

I 'l

·from the cafeteria of the Buckeye Hills career Center at
Rio Grande.

YOUR PERFECT COMPANION - Is what (W) YPC
stands lor in the call letters of the new high-powered FM
.station to b&lt; dedicated and "turned on" Sunday at 8 p.m.

Powerful WYPC goes on
.air at ·Sunday dedication
Precisely at 8 p.m. Sunday ,
give or take some seconds,
1~, 400 watt WJEH-FM will
become WYPC (Your Perfect
Companion) with an electronic kick rated at 70,000
watts.
That's the format for the
official changeover coming at
WJEH·FM of Gallipolis
which has been in business

since of December 1961 . The
occasion will be a dinner fof
350 invited friends of the
station in the cafeteria of the
Buckeye Hills Career Center
at Rio Grande starting at 6
p.m. and ending at 7:30p.m.
catered by Dean Circle.
Three speakers, none longwinded on words, wlll be on
the program. They are

Kawasaki
JetSkr
For the ride
of your
life!

William (Bill) Miller, vice
president

and

I"Jys showed a thing and I was
finally diagnosed as having
an irritable oowel and told it

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - How

general

mannger
of
Wagner
Broadcasting Co., who
will emcee the eve:
ning; Bill Gray, recently
appointed manager of Your
Perfect Companion station ,
and Paul E. Wagner.
of
Wagner
president
Broadcasting.
Guests arriving at the
Career Center will be
welcomed by a committee of
staff members and have the
·opportunity to inspect a
picture display of the station·
and its new equipment.
Following dinner, hopefully
at 7:30p.m., depending upon
the completion of the RedsDodger doubleheader
baseball game broadcast, the ·
program will be aired over
WJEH-FM. Miller will give a
brief welcome and short
. history of the FM station.
Gray, veteran sports
director, will detail the
programming policies as
related to music, news, sports
and public services, and Mr.
Wagner will conclude the
speaking portion of . the
program.

mented that his biggest
ambition was to ''awaken the
" Sleeping Giant,' "
a
reference ' to th e FM
station wbich has been
operating slnce its inception in 1001 with an effective radiated power of
fifteen thousand, four hun·
dred watts, although it has
been licensed to operate with
a maximum or one hundred
thousand watts.
Serious planning began on
the 35,000 horizontal · 35,000
vertical watt WYPC early last year when the
in·
company
started
vestlgation of electronic
equipment available for the
expansion. Once the equipment was selected, the top of
the hill west of the present

As the magic hour of 8 p.m.
approaches, Miller will turn
the attention of the audiences
to the fading moments in the
life of WJEH·FM. The dinner
guests will hear this portion
of the program over FM
stereo sets placed at points of
vantage in the dining room
through the courtesy and
. cooperation of various local
appliance. dealers.
At approximately . 8 p.m.,
Miller will officially "Sign
Off" WJEH·FM lor the final·
time and, after a few seconds
silence, will "Sign On" its studios, was cleared and a
consulting engineer, M. L.
successor, WYPC.
Myers
of Portsmouth, Ohio,
This event, in itself,
was
engaged
to make the
promises to be original and
unique in the annals of necessary engineering study

broadcasting , involving a
most unusual procedure.
Following the "Sign On,"
the beautiful music of WYPC,
"Your Per£ect Companion,"
will carry the program to its
conclusion at 8:15, when
Miller will present closing
remarks.

When. purchasing WJEH
and WJEH-FM from local
attorney, John E. Halliday, 10
years ago, Wagner com-

to determine the location of
the new towe( and transmitter building atop the hill.
A new 240 foot FM tower
and antenna has been eracted
on top of the hill, along with a
new 21 by 13 foot transmitter
building which houses a
25,000 watt transmitter. A
new road connects the hilltop
area with the preSent st~dio
bu~ding, which has been
enlarged to house the additional FM equipment. This
i

was my nerves .

When you wrote about the
had real problems with my
digestion, lhen one or your trouble that milk could cause
columns about milk gave me it sounded exactly like the
problem I had b&lt;en having all
a new life.
ol these years. So I quit drink·
~· or yearS" I .was troubled
with sev~re bloat, cramping ing milk entirely and stopped
in my stomach and often diar- using it in any cooking. In a
rhea. The doctors Jested me week my problem was over.
for everything. None of my X All that gas and distention
stopped and my sore aching
stomach muscles stopped
hurting.
I can eat anything as long
includes all new FM
facilities, such as, the stereo as I avoid milk. Just how
control panel and associated · coll111,linon is this? I had
equipment, the new computer heard :il&gt;&lt;)utchildren, P:'r·
• controlled BUtOIIJa\iQn 1 (ICU[at)~ h!1'jf _babies ha.VIO~
equipment, the FM-100 .music trouble w1th m1lk ~utI d1dn t
library, productiqn studios know 11 could affect an adult
and offices lor the FM' ation
DEAR READER- Yours IS
manager and the program . a familiar story to me.
librarian. This arrangement Studies suggest that more
confines the FM operations to than 50 million Americans
the western end of the cannot tolerate milk. Nearly
building, while the AM two:thlrds of these people
operations· (WJEH) are be~mto hav~ symptoms after
situated in the eastern end. drmkmg as little as one glass
These

improvements,

which also include a new
transistorized transmitter lor
WJEH, represent an investment in excess or
$150,000. The new AM transmitter will go into operation
later . Two employees have
bcen added to the satfl; a
receptionist- secretary and a

o£milk.

The problem is must com·
mon in adults, not children.
· Infants may not tolerate milk
because of an allergy, The
milk p~otein m~y be absorbed undigested mto the blood
stream through the mcompletely matured Illtestinai wall. This is a dif-

newsman.

The public will have an -..
opportunity to see the improvements
and
new
LEGAL NOTICi:
equipment during the ,week of
June 27 when "Open House"
The Public Utilities Commiswill be observed. Visiting
sion of Ohio has set for pu!r
lie hearing Case No .
hours for the public will be
76-~HL·FAC, Subtile A. to
from 6 p.m. until!) .m. each
revi~w the operation of Ohio
. day,
Monday
through
Power company's fuel cost
Saturday, at the studios; 117
adjustment clause, and its
Portsmouth Road (State Rt.
fuel ·procurement practices
141 ),
Gallipolis. Staff
and policies, 00 Monday.
members will be on hand to
June 27. 1977, at 10:30
welcome visitors and escort
A.M.. at the offices o! the
them through the station's
Commission, 180 East Broad
Slreet. Columbus. Ohio
new facilities .
43215. All interested persons
will be given an opportunity

ONLY

1

$1595.00
A great new water sport
with everything going
for it. Thrills, excitement,
fun ... all in one super

ride. See one today .
A ne l" way to let
the good times rolf I

J&amp; R SPORT SHOP
748 E•. Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
92-2184

By' GREGORY GORDON
WASHINGTON \UP!) President Carter, who has
spent much of his early time
in office threatening vetoes of
congressional overspending,
is getting a taste of his own
. medicine.
The House Thursday approved an across-the-lioard 5
per cent cut in carter's
foreign ai.d program, slashing
nearly '' billion from his
request in approving a $6.7
billion bill by a vote of 208-174.
The "meat-ax cut''
its
critics termed it - was
offered in an amendment by ·

-as

Rep. Clarence Miller R.{)hio,
and apprQved, 214-168, in the
closing minutes of a two-day
debate.
· Both the White House and
State Department were
expected to react strongly,
insisting the action. would be
a serious blow to Carter's
effort to ease conflict arising
from the widening disparity
between the world's rich and
needy nations.
The House also defied the
administration and adopted a
Republican amendment that
would ban fWlds from going
directly or indirectly to Cuba.
An earlier amendment
banning funds from Vietnam,
cambodia and Laos drew
criticism from the White
House Thursday.
·
The House Ways and
Means Committee, which
sounded the death, knell for
most of Ca rter 's muchballybooe&lt;rl~x and rebate
energy-saving plan for motorists, today faced a dilemma
on the last remaining

rem~ant -

,,

tl,l~ gas-guzzler

tax.
The committee lear ned
tllat the tax:.•it tentatively
approved to ·lake effect in
1979 on big, ga,-wasting cars
would affe&lt;;t only the
Chrysler N•1'1 Yorker that
year. As a re~ult, the $12,000.
car would be ill a competitive
disadvantage :with Ford and
General Mbto~s products and
Chrysler could be forced to
close its New,Yorker plant in
Detroit.
Up for consideration today
were amendments by Rep.
William Broadhead, D-Mich.,
to iower the first-year
standards and avoid a tax on
the New Yorker, and by Rep.
Martha Keys, IJ'Kan., to
delay the tax until 1980 and
stiffen tlle standards that
year.

· ~.:·

In another energy development, Sens. Henry Jackson,
D-\vash., arid Frank Church,
D-Idaho, .s\!id they are
wOrking on a compromise on
the

nuclear

" breeder "

reactor which creates bombready
pl~tonium.
Committees :in bo!h houses

Matching Hardware for Your Entire Home

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CHAR-BROILED STEAKS WEEKDAYS6 a.m. to 7p.m. SUNDAY 8 a.m. to' 2 p.m.

&lt;~Steamboat Intt
·;Real Old-Fashioned Home Cook111~".

Jrd St., RACINE, OHIO
PHONE 949-2515

COMMISSION OF OHIO

By Randall G. Appleg"e.

Secretary

SENSATIONAL LOW PRICES

J'trestone

Double fiberglass belt for strength and
:·m.ileage, polyester cord for a smooth ride .
. '".

~~ ·-

SizeA78-13

"

THE DAILY SENTINn.
DEVOTED 11) THE

INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA

Whitewall.

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

4r.r

4ror

*126

Plus $1 .73 F.E.T.
per tire and
4 old tires .

Plus $1.88 to $2 .26
F.E.l per tire and
4 old tires

Sizes F78-14. 16;
. 078-14,15 I '

Sizes H78-14, 15;
J78-14, 15; L78·16

' CHE!TER L. TANNEHilJ

E.lK.Ed.
· ROBERT HOEn..ILll
PubliShed daily eli.L"t!pl S.turd&amp;J

by The Ohio Y•lley Publishing Com-:
any, lll Court St., Pomeroy, OtUo'
457&amp;9. Business Qfrice Phurle m.
ZJ:i&amp;. Editorial Phone 992·21~7 .
Second t'lass post.a~e paid Yl

Pomeroy, Ohio.
National advertising representative W~trd • Grillitll Company,
Inc , Boltindli ant.! GallaKher Div.,

157 Third Ave .• New York, N.Y.
1111)1 1.
Subecrlption rates: Delivered b)'
carrit!r where avail111ble 7S C!tiWl per
week. By Mot... Route wnert carrier
~rvice no~ av111Uable. One month ,
$3 .25. By mall in Ohtu and W. Ya ..
One Year, $ZUlO: Six months,
fll.50; Three month!!, $7 .00;
Elsewhere p!.OO year; Sii munHl!l
513 .50; 'Titr.-c months. $7 .50.
Subscription jlf'ice mcludes Sund~:~y

l'ilnetrSt!nlincl.

;_

4r.r

Red Rose Dog Food.

*146

Dog Nuggets •
Dog Meal
ALSO SURE WIN &amp;
CASH SAVER DOG MEAL

Plus S2.421o$2 .65 Plus S2.80to $3.12
F.E.T. per tire and
F.E.T. per tire and
4 old tires.
4 old tires.

BLACKWALLS $8 LESS PER SET OF 4
·

Load range B

·

By RICK VAN SANT
CINCINNATI (UP! )
Tom Seaver, a Superman
cape draped over his new
Cincinnati Reds uniform ,
Hicks a gigantic " LA" statue
with his finger and the
Dodgers crumble.
At ·least, that's the way it
happened in a Cincinnati
newopaper editorial cartoon
this week.
Tonight, the Reds begin
finding out if indeed "Tom
Terrific " can help them

crumble the Dodgers.
Seaver, with six days rest
since firing a brilliant threehitter against Montreal in his
debut with the Reds last
weekend, will be the starting
pitcher tonight as the Reds
open an important four-game
series against Los Angeles.
All tickets at 52,000-seat
Riverfront Stadium have
been ~old for: all games.
And, says Dodger second
baseman Davey Lopes of the
weekencl set, "I'm going to
treat it like a World
Series."
Why all the fan interest and
player concern?

Merely the fact that the
series could mean a
difference of eight games in
the National League West
standings. When too dust
settles SWlday evening, the

Reds could trail tlle division·
leading Dodgers by as few as
41h games or by as many as
121&gt;.
LA goes into the series with
an 81&gt; game lead over Cincy
and it would take a sweep by
the Reds to whittle the
margin . down to 41&gt; .
Likewise, the Dodgers would
need a sweep to enjoy a 121&gt;
game advantage.
While neither team would
be gravely hw-t by a split,
obviously the Reds need to
win more than tbe Dodgers.
"This series is not nearly as
important to us as it is to the
Reds," observed LA third
baseman Ron Cey. "The
pressure is on them because
they're
the
world
champions."

But Lopes contended the
series also is "critical" for

the Dodgers.
"We don't want to give
them any momentum,'' he
said.
The Reds have been
picking up some momentum
in the past month.
Four weeks .ago, Cincy
trailed the fast-starting
Dodgers by 13'h games. But
by last weekend, tbat gap had
narrowed to 6'h. TWo Reds'
losses at Philadelphia this
week while the Dodgers were
winning put the margin back

Today's

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Spot18 Editor
NEW YORK (UP!)- What Leo Durocher wouldn't give to
manage again.
Eddie Stanky tried it, for one day, anyway, and foW1d out he
dicln 't like it.
.
Not that he didn't like managing so much as he hated the
idea of being away from his wife and family, whom be's utterly
devoted to with the type of consuming love you only read about
in story books .
With Leo Durocher it's different. His heart, his whole life,
bas always been wrapped up in baseball, and still is even
though he has been out of the game since leaving Houston ill
1~73, and be's. busting to get back in.
Nobody questions Durocher's managerial ability. He has
proven tbat. The only two questions about him are his health
(he underwent heart surgery two years ago), and his age,
which is 71.
Durocher has been given an excellent bill of heaitll by no less
a medical authority than Dr. Michael DeBakey, the celebrated
heart specialist from Houston. As for his age, that doesn't
necessarily mean he can't handle a hall club anymore,
particularly when you take into account Casey Stengel
managed WI til he was 75 and Connie Mack until he was 88.
Durocher would love to manage another ball club. I know
that for a fact because he told me so when I called him in Palm
Springs, Calif., and asked him about it.
"All it would take is a telephone call and I'd jump on the next
plane," he Said. 1.'There'd be no fight over salary, either, like
with a Iotta these ballplayers. Money isn't a big thing with me.
I:m getting bored, there's nothing to do. lf.the right offer came
along, I'd love to go back to work."
'
"How's your health?" I asked him.
"Never felt better in my life," he said, his voice strong and
vibrant as ever.
"I'm 38," b&lt; said, his enthusiasm fairly crackling over long
distance . "I just got through Walking six miles. I do It every
day. Dr. DeBakey doesn't like !Jie to walk six; he wants me to
walk only two, but I feel so good, so full of pep, I just keep
walking. He tells me 'You're in better shape now than you were
25 years ago. All your vital signs are perfect."'
Durocher was operated on in Houston on Dec.17, 1975.
"!didn't have the faintest idea there was anything wrong,"
he said. "!went lor a physical and Dr. DeBakey said, 'We've
never given you an angiogram."'

.DOU.BLE-BELTED DELUXE
WHITEWALLS
,

Superman Seaver .:: :.;
~~JUn~t~dg~~~~·.~r~;;~.,ional
takes on Dodgers

Applesauce, Peaches.

Walk-up Window Hours: Weekly hours, 7 to
10 p.m., Sunday, 2 to ·10 o.m.

·,

"After they did it on me, Dr. DeBakey and his whole staff
came into my room," said Durocher. "He sat on the edge of the
bed and said"UJ me, 'I'm looking at you, but I don't believe it .
Your heart ·was.bioclied off in two places! I'm amazed I'm
sitting here talking to you. Guys have dropped over dead with
much less. You must have some kind of body."'
Durocher admits he was "a little scared" over what he
heard.
"why don't you operate right now," he urged.
"Not right now,'! said DeBakey. "You're my MVP. You'll be

99?-711',
M.•lberry

Ave.

Pomeroy

992·2094

manager laughed. 11For this

weekend? You must be
kidding. '!be Dodgers are in

town.''
In fact, today there were no

weekend hotel or motel
vacancies between the
extreme northern suburb of
Hamilton, Ohio, and the
extreme southern suburb of
Florence, Ky.
" All tickets for Friday
night, Saturday and Sunday
have been sold,'' Reds
officials announced late
Thursday. ''One-thousand
standing room tickets for
each game will go on sale at
the stadium three hours
berore each game."
Sunday's doubleheader was
sold out a month ago and the
lew remaining tickets for
tonight and Saturday were
gobbled up Thursday.
Seaver (8·3) will be
opposed tonight by Tommy
John (7-4). Saturday, Dodge•
ace Don Sutton (11-2) faces
Woodie Fryman (2-5) and in
Sunday's doubleheader LA
will send Rid&lt; Rhoden, at I~
the National League's
winningest pitcher, against
Fred Norman (7-3) and Doug ·
Rau (6-1) against rookie Paul
Moskau (0-0).

Senior girls'
softball play
In senior Girls Softball
action, Syracuse romped
over Pomeroy 25-1 with C.
Teaford getting the win.
Leading hitter for the win·
ners was Sonya Ash with a
homer, Teaford and Cundiff
had three hits, and Hufhnan
had four. A. Fitch and S.
Rought each had two hits for
Pomeroy.

UPI Spot18 Writer
Eut
Rod carew, now batting·
W. L
Pet. GB
.m,
says he's too old to bat
Chicago
A2 n .6S6
Pnlla
36 ~ .ss.t &amp;1h .400 but the five-time
Pif1sbgh
35 29' .541 7
American League batting
St . Louis
35 31 .530 8
New York
29 37 ...39 u
champioil !s the only currM
Montreal
28 36 .•38
player batting expet18 f~i
West
might
make it.
W. L
Pet. GB
Los Ang
A.S 23 . 662
"! wish I were f.ive years
Cinc i
JS JO .SJS 8'!2
San Frari
31 38 .449 IA 112 younger," he says when
San Diego ...,.. 31 41 .431 16
asked about his chances of
Houston
29 40 ..no W h batting . 400. "I'm a little too
Atlanta
24 44 .353 21
old. The bat gets heavier as
Thur&amp;dly's Results
No games scheduled
the season goes along."
Tod•v' s Prob1ble Pi1ctlers

t•

New York at Chicago
Los Anoeles at Clncinnafl
San Fran at Houston, 2, twJ .
night
San Diego at Aflanta, niQht
Philadelphia at St . Louis, night

American League
Eas1
W. L
Pd. GB
6o5ton
New York
Baltimre
Clevelnd
Milw
Detroit

Toronto

41

25 ,621

37 31 .54&lt;1
35 32 .522

5

6,,11
7 'h

31 .508
.485
29 36 .446 1 ~ v~·

32

33 35
'24 41

West.

W. 'L Pc1.
cnlcago
37 29 .561
Minn
38 30 .559
Kan Ci ty
33 33 .500
Texas
32 32 .500
Calif
32 32 .500
Oakland
29 36 .446
Sea tt le
32 41 .438
.
Thursday's Results
Minne!ota 12. Te~eas 2
California 10, Chicago 6
Cleveland 4, Toronto 0
Basion 7, Baltimore 3

GB

Pomeroy, 0.

Sports transactions

CINCINNATI (UP!)- The
Cincinnati Reds bolstered
7lf2 their
pitching line-up
81!2
Thursday night by recalling
righthanded relief pitcher
Joe Henderson from their
Indianapolis !arm club.
Seattle 8, Kafl City· 6, 10 Inns .
Henderson; 30, led the
Today's Problble Pitchers
American Association in 1976
(All Times EDT)
Toronto (Lemanczv~ 5·6 ) at witll the lowest ERA and had
Baltil'}'lore (R. May 9·6), 7 : 30
a 5-3 record and 3. 76 ERA this
p .m .
Boston ( L.ee 4·1I l!lt New York season with. Indianapolis.
(Hunter J .J), B p .m .
Henderson joined the Reds
Chicaoo (Wood 1·11 et Min·
nesota
(Thormodsgard 4· 4) , in September last year and
8:30p .m .
Seattle (Montague 5.4) at was used in four games,
Milwaukee (Haas 4.4), 8:30 compiling a 2-0 record.
p.m .
To make room, the Reds
Cleve land (B ibby 6·4) . at
optioned the contract of
Detro it (Arroyo 5·4), B p.m .
Ka nsas City (Leonard 4.8) at righthanded relief pitcher
Oakland (Med ich 5.3), 1'0 :30
Tom Hwne, 24, who had been
p.m .

NOTICE 11

We are not on strike and even though we advertise with
the Jones Boys and enjoy a fine relationship with all of
the folks at the Jones Boys, Country Cousins is not
related to, or a part of the Jones Boys.

with the Reds since May 21.
In eight appearances, he was
credited with three losses and
a 12.50 ERA.

fornia (Tanana n . J), 10 &lt;30 p.m .
Saturday's Games
Kansas City at Oakland
Texas at California
Chicago at Minnesota
Cleveland· at Detroit
BOston at NeW York
Toronto at Bait. 2, twi·nlght
4 Seattle at Milwaukee, night

THISTLEDOWN
NORTH RANDAlL, Ohio
(UP! ) - Favored Jay Jay
Blue clocked I :45 1-:i over I
mile and 40 yards Thursday
to win tlle featured eightll
rnce at Thistledown.
Tommy Meyers rode . the
winner to pay $5.60, $3.40 and
$2.80. Second was Hi Proof
and third w~s Snips Indian.
The dally double paired
Count Knave (5) and Deputy
John (6) for $49.60.
The attendance was 3,503
and the mutuel handle totaled
$382,41~.

• EFFECTIVE AGAINST FLEAS AND TICKS
• KILLS FLEAS FOR UP TO 4 MONTHS .

.

"•
[O FFER GOOD FOR LIMITED TIME ONLY)

•

MODERN SUPPLY

...•

399 W. Main St.
992-2164
~meroy, 0 .
THE STORE WITH " ALL KINDS OF
STUFF". FOR PETS, STABLES, LARGE
&amp; SMALL ANIMALS, LAWNS AND
GARDENS.

Teus (Perry 6·6) at Cali ·

ROYAL CROWN
BOTILING COMPANY
Middleport

~lawn&amp; garden tractors

OUR WHEEL HORSE TRACTO

E

SUMMER STAMPEDE

• SPECTACULAR PRICE CUTS ON THE
BIG BED MACHINE
'
.''
• FLOOR SAMPLES • DEMONSTRATORS '
• LIMITED QUANTITIES
CLEARANCE PRICED· WHILE• THEY LAST ..
• EXTRA SPECIAL VALUES •
1976 LEFT OVER MODELS
REG. SALE PRICE SAVE
. 52569.00
$2076.00
~93.00

t-C160, 8 Speed
(Includes 48" Mower)

19" .,.... COLOR TV
• High Polformlnco 10o% Solid Slltl Modullr,
Challil • "ln-Une" Mltrix-Strit)t Plctur.- Tullo
• "s- lnstamatlc" ColOr TunlftQ
with (IICti'On~ Light sen.

1-8100,4 Speed

~"==.~~1;

(Includes 36" Mower)

SEE ONE

Control • In·

172 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport.

. "'

$1835.00

S14P2 .00

1343.00

$2005.00

s1633,.00

S372.00

(Includes 36' MoWer)
1

·
SB9.00
1499.00
1-A6o Rider
(!ncludu 26" Mower)
NEW 1977 MODELS INCLUDED IN THIS SALE. STOP IN.

$

90.00

FOitYOURSELF
AT •••

WERNER RADIO
o.

'

plimning tomorrow
with research tod~

r&amp;lWHEEL HORSE

\-880, 4 Speed

1•

1:-:1 Purina ...

NORQ.ll~LD'
NORTHFIELD,
Ohio
(UP!) - Thaddeus McRae
Jr. guided Mystic Boy to a w.
length victory over Classy
Heritage in the featured
$3,000 trot Thursday night at
Northfield Park.
The winner covered tbe
mile in 2:~ 1-:i and returned
$11, $S and $4.20. Marne Key
was third.
The loth race big triple
combination of 9-5-1 was
worth $889.80.
A crowd of 3,250 wagered
$304,661.
Missouri Time leads a field
of eight mares in tonight's
$15,000 Red Coach Realty
Stakes series at Northfield.

+
..
Q uasa
.,.

tor Picture

Country Cousin's Cookshoppe

-a one .year conlract.
College
Western Connect icut State Bi!l
Sferro
announced
his
res ignation a;s head football
coach .
Western Carolina Unlversltv
- Appointed Steve Cottrell as
head basketball u:oach , l"eplac .
ing Fred Conlev .'tl

Henderson up, Hume down

ENJOY A TRIPLE AT
COUNTRY COUSINS TONIGHT

EXPIRES 6·30..77

FLEA OOLLAI\,
FOROOGS

By United Press lnte ...national
Thurselav
Baseball
TPxas
Eddie
Stanky
resigned as manager and was
replaced temporarily by thi rd ·
base coach Connie Ryan.
New York Mets - Slgned
outfielder Mookle Wilson of the
UniVersity of South Carolina to

4
4
4

Forest Run also beat
Pomeroy, this time 23-11. Kim
Grueser got credit for the
win, and Terri Wilson led the
hitter~ with a home run, t)Oo
doubles and two singles. S.
zlrkle led the Pomeroy team
RIVER DOWNS
with two singles and a double.
CINCINNATI
(UPI)- WilForest Run also got a win
liam
Clinch
guided
Signal Six
over New Haven, 4-1. Pam ·
to
an
easy
21&gt;
length
victory
Brauer
and
Kim
Thursday
in
the
feature
race .
Winebrenner led the hitting
wlth three singles each while nt River Downs.
Signal Six returned $13.80,
Grueser picked up another
win. Terri Wilson socked a $6.40 and $4.40. Second was
Nada's Star and third was
double,
Flame Chance.
the winner took tlle lead at·
New Haven then beat
the
top of the stretch and ran
Bradbury with Pam Burton
the
one mile and 70Crds in
getting the 21-8 win. Tammy
1-:i.
1:15
Kimes led the New Haven
The
da.ily double teamed
hitters with a homer and
My
Tresty
and Hamblin' Sam
three singles while L. Hobba
$42.50.
Thursday 's
for
had a triple and three singles.
attendance
was
4,011
and the
For Bradbury, Faye HeJ'!Yian
handle
totaled
$372,700.
had a double and single,
Mary Wise had two singles,
GAME REPORTED
and T. Wise had a homer.
The Tuppers Plains T-Ball
In · Junior Girls action, baseball team traveled to
Letart downed Syracuse 7.6 Reedsville Tuesday night and
with D. White getting the win, defeated Reedsville T-Ball by
and D. Michael taking the a score of ~14. Hitting safely
loss. R. Hermon and L. were J . Myers, J. Caldwell,
O'Brien led the hitters with B, Durst, L. Spencer, C.
two singles and a double Jones, A..Tripp, C. Spencer,
each. L. Roush led Syracuse M. Weber, C. Sinclair, A.
with a single, triple and home Connolly, E. Sams, E. Bailey,
~ while D. Michael had S. Fitch, S. Bennett, B.
-three singles.
Bailey, K. Caldwell, J. Black·
Syracuse (ben got on the wood, M. Halley and D.
winning trail by squeaking by Tripp.

WITH THIS COUPON
BUY ONE TRIPLE
AND GET ONE FREE

PlRNA.

.369 161h

· ~~ella io"GiartGutrd':Fil·

Pomeroy Horne· &amp;Auto
500 E. Main

at 81&gt;.
The Reds-Dodgers
confrontation is a boon for
motel
and
restaurant
operators.
"Vacancies?'' a lOcal motel

club lor only one game.
Larry Hisle drove in two
runs with a bomer and a
double as the Twins pounded
out I~ hits. Dave Goltz
allowed II hits and two walks
but struck out seven and went
the distance for his seventh'
victory against lour losses.
Nelson Briles was routed
during a six-run first inning
and lost his fourth game of
the year for the Rangers.
The Boston Red Sox
defeated the Baltimore
Carew, who is known Orioles, 7-3, the Cleveland
(All times EDT)
New York. (Koosman S·1l at among American Leaguers
Indians beat the Toronto Blue
Cl'li cago CR: . Reuscnet ~Jl. 2:30
Jays,
4-(), the California
as
"the
man
with
the
magic
p.m .
San Diego (Owchinko 2·1) at wand,'&lt;had two singles and a
Angels topped the Chicago
Alla.nla { Hargan 0·1) , 7: 35p .m . double, scored two runs and White Sox, 11).6, and the
Los Angeles (John 7-A) at
Cincinnati (Seaver 8·31. S:OS drove in one Thursday when Seattle Mariners scored an fl.
p.m .
the Minnesota Twins routed 6, W-inning victory over the
Montreal (Twitchell 1·51 at
Kansas City Royals in other
the
Texas Rangers, 12-2.
Pittsburgh (Kison 4·3 }, a ~ o5
p .m.
The Rangers were playing American League games.
San Francisco (Knepper) at
interim Manager Th~re were no games
Houston (Lemongello 1· 10) , 8 : 35 under
p .m .
Connie Ry~n. who asswned scheduled in the National
Philadelph ia (Lonborg 1·01 at command of the club early
League.
St . Louis (R asmussen 5·81, 8 : 35
Thursday when Eddie Stanky Red Sox 7, Orioles 3:
p .m .
Saturday's Games
Butch Hobson drove in two
resigned alter managing the
Montreal 111 Pittsburgh
By FRED DOWN

National League

New
Haven
7-6.winDebbie
Michaels
got the
while . .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - •
Lisa Roush led the hitting
my first man tomorrow morning.''
with four hits in four trips to
The following morning, DeBakey performed an intricate · the plate. D. Gilliman led
.
.
.
-~
double by-j&gt;ass aroW1d Durocher's heart. It took five-and-aNew Haven with a single,
triple, and home run.
balf hours.

11

SUGAR RUN MiltS

·Carty also homered for the
Indians. Jesse Jefferson Wall
the loser .
ADgelo ID, White Sox 1:
Bobby Bonds drove in two
runs, scored lour and stole
three bases to lead the
Angels' triwnph over the
White Sox. Bonds' basesruns with his nth homer of . filled single scored Jerry
tlle season and a double and Rerny and Dave Chalk in the
Steve Dillard singled across seventll inning and broke a 6twq other runs for the Red 6 tie. Dyar "!iller picked up
his fifth victory in relief while
SoX 1 who dealt tile Orioles'
Mike Flanagan his eighth loss Larry Anderson was the
against two wins. Ferguson loser. Lamar Johnson hit his
Jenkins pitched a sixhitter sixth homer lor tbe White
and struck out seven, raising Sox.
his rec;ord to 7-:i lor the Red MariDen 8, Royals I:
Craig Reynolds' bloop
Sox.
drove in the tiesingled
JndiBDS 4, Ja)'li 0:
run and the
breaking
Wayne Garland, an earlyMariners
added
another on
season re-entry draft disapan
error
by
Fred
Patek
in the
pointment, pitched a fourlOth
inning
to
top
tbe
Royals,
hitter for his fourth victory
and first shutout of the season who had tied the score at ~
as tlle Indians won their on an eighth~nning single by
eighth straight game and Patek. Enrique Romo, the
remained unbeaten under the fourth Seattle pitcher, won
leadership of new Manager his fifth game while Mark
Jeff Torborg. Buddy Bell hit a Littell suffered his third loss
two-run homer and Rico for Kansas City.

Carew has little hope
BASEBALL of hitting magic .400

Apple and Cherry.

~

ChyEdUor

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

.

MENU FOR SUNDAY, JUNE 26

Commission ol Ohio.
fflE PUBLIC'UTIUTIES .

TOTH PRAISED

LOS ANGELES (UPf)
The CitY CoWlcil Thurs&lt;iay
passed a resolution praising
Los Angeles Times' repot:ter
Robert Toth for courage
wb&lt;n be was detained in
Moseow la$t week by Russian
secret police. '
"Toth, who was released and
re,tur'ned to Los Angeles ·
Sunday, accepted the
resoiutiorr and thanked the .
council for il!i efforts on his
behalf. The council sent a
resQ)utio.n. to President
,carter last week urging him
,1&amp; PllSfi rOlf Toth's release.

that delights ...

tacting the Public Utilities

have approved the 'first'
breeder - the Clinch River,
project at Oak Ridge, Tenn.
- defying opposition from
Carter.
Also Thursday:
- Federal Reserve
Chairman Arthur Burns told
a
House
Banking
subcommittee he opposes a
bill to make the chairman's
term coincide more closely
with the president's, saying it
would leave monetary policy
to "a political hack in the
basement of the White
'House."
-The Senate approved a
fiveyear, $5.8 billion mass
transit bill. Sponsor Harrison
Williams, D-N.J., said it was
needed to 1'flll the gap left in
President Carter's energy
progr::lms.' ' The White House
had asked for more time to
develop its own bill.
-Army Secretary Clifford
Aleitander urged Congress to
end the divisiveness of the
Vietnam
War-era
by
permitting GJ benefits for
military offenders who have
had less than honorable
discharges upgraded.

about this. Others who want
thi~ information can send 50
L-ents wilh a long, stamped,
self-addressed envelope lor
it. Just send your request to
me in care of this newspaper,
P.O. Box 1551, R&lt;\dio CitySta·
lion, New York, N.Y. 10019.
There is an enzyme powder
calle&lt;t Lact-Aid that can be
used to split the milk sugar
before you drink the milk. II .
will help many people witb
this problem. It is marketed
by SugarLo company, and is
a fairly new product.
Commercial buttermilk
and yogurt cannot be used
either by people with lactose
intolerance. Commercial
yogurt often has bad dry milk
powder added as a thickener
and it actually contains more
lactose than milk.
Some people develop a tem·
porary lactose intolerance
because of infectious diar·
rhea from food poisoning or
from antibiotics that kill off
the normal intestinal
bacteria, but the majority of
individuals with lactose intolerance have it as an inherited characteristic.

FOOD

to be hearU. Further information may be obtained by con-

Congress .dispersing C1Y1er medicine
.

!erent problem.
In adull!i with milk in·
loleran&lt;--e the usual cause is a
loss of lactase e'IZ)'me. This
enzyme is in the cells of the
lining of the small intestine.
ll splits the double sugar in
milk, lactose, into single
sugars. Unless the double
milk sugar Is split it cannot
be absorbed. ll then pulls
nuids into the small intestine
and sets off the rhain of ·
events that causes diarrhea,
gas, abdominal cramps and
all the unpleasant symptoms
you have experienced..
This condition is particularly common in adult Blacks
and other non-Angi&lt;&gt;-Saxons.
The enzyme to split milk
sugar begins to disappear
from the intestine in early life
and is moot severe in young
adults and tiJereafter. A com·
parable change occurs in
sucking animals. After the
weaning stage the lactase enzyme begins to disappear.
I am sending you The
Health Letter nwnber 7-2,
Milk Products: Good and
Bad, so you can learn more

BAUM LUMBER
CHESTER, 0.

915-3301

•

..

..

'•
.,
•

�\

~The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, O., Friday, June 24, 1977

4- The Daily Sentinel, MiddlepOrt-Pomeroy, 0 .. friday , June 24,1977

Nation's jobs
are published

Vilas, Ramirez
• •
upset vzctzms
By MORLEY MYERS
WIMBLEDON, England
(UP! ) - Wimbledon dipped
into Its bag o f surprises
Thursday and left Argen·
tinian Guillermo Vilas and
Mexican Raul Ramirez the
victims of two unheralded
young Americans.
The )eft-handed Vilas,
seeded third, was guMed
do)"ll &amp;-2, 6-4, &amp;-2 by Billy
''The Kid" Martin in a 90-

minute, third-round match, to
move into the last 16 ol the
Centennial Championships.
Tim
Gullikson ,
the
righthander of the tennis
twirls from Onalaska, Wis.,
e d~ e d seven 1h. se eded

Rafnlrez 6-3, 6-1, ~. 8-9, 6-1 in
a second-round match lasting
three hours, 50 minutes.
Martin, who moved from
his Evanston, Ill., home to
Palos Verdes, Calif., to advan ce his tennis career,
completely overwhelmed the
French Open champion with
his serve-and-volley game to
record what he described as
"the best win of my career."
Gullikson, suffering from
cramp in the later stages of
his game, said : " I just
couldn't believe I'd finally
won the match. I feel
physically terrible.
Top-seeded Jimmy Con·
nors, the 24-year-&lt;lld left·

Carner favored
PLYMOUTH, Ind. (UPI )- . yard Plymouth Country Club
The fourth Hoosier Classic course for the second LPGA
$50,000 LPGA tournament stop in a row in Indiana, some
opens Friday with JoAnne traps have been enlarged,
Carner, who has won the trees were added to the
tourney two out or three layout since last year, the
years, the odds-on favorite to fairways were narrowed and
the rough is up.
beat.
Carner skipped the tourney
To toughen up the 6,225in Noblesville last week as
did Kathy Whiteworth, who is
laking another week off froin
tour play.
Ma ior League Leaders
The Noblesville match was
By United Press International
won
by Judy Rankin, another
Batting
top contender.
(based on l 50 at ba ts )
Nat ional League
Betsy Cullen, the Plymouth
G. AB . H. Pet.
witmer
two years ago but
Tri llo Ch i
63 225 80 .356
Parker Pit
64 260 92 .354 eight strokes off the pace at
Mphry St .L
57 150 51 .340
Simmons St.L
61 219 7A .338 Noblesville, also will be back.
LUzinsk l Ph il
57 218 73 .335
other strong con tenders in·
Gr iffey , Cin
65 272 89 .327 elude Jane Blalock, Sally
Va lentine M t l
58 239 78 .326
Little, Sandra Spuzich, Laura
Hebner Phi l
42 151 .49 .325
Bonnel l At'l
42 152 49 .322
Baugh, and Japan's Chako
St enn ett P it
61 234 75 .321
Higuchi, winner of the recent
American League
G. AB. H. Pel. LPGA championship.
66 271 107 .395
Carew M in
, Jan Stephenson , the
64 241 83 .3.44
Bostock M i n
64 226 77 .341 veteran Mickey Wright, and
Fisk Bos
54 156· 53 .340
Dade Cle .
ss 201 ., .m Hollis Stacy were among the
Singleton Bal
other notables.
49 175 58 .331
Poquette -K C
45 160 53 .33 1
A .Wpods Tor
A field of about 85 was
40 155 51 .329
Wshingtn Tex
expected.
53
205
66
322
Bailor Tor
64 238 76 319
vas Bos
Lori Garbacz, who as a 17·
Home Runs
year-old
won the Indiana
National League : Foster , Cin
20 ; Burro u ·g h s, Atl and
Women's championship last
Schmidt , Ph il 18; Cev and
year, heads the amateurs.
Garvey LA 16.
American League : Scott , Bos Lori now is No. 1 on the
20; Rice, Bos 18; Hisle, M lnn
University of
Florida
11 ; Zlsk. Chi 16; Fisk, Bos and
women's
team.
Gross. Oak 15.
Runs Batted In
National League: Foster , Citl
63 ; Garvey. LA 60 ; Cey, LA 59 ;
All 56 ; Winf ield, SD

~troughs.

American

League :

Hisle,

·

.

bander from Belleville, 111.
turned on the charm In an
attempt to win back the
crowd's respect in defeating
Texas-based S&lt;&gt;uth African
Cliff Drysdale, &amp;-2, 7-li, 6-1, in
another third-round game.
Drysdale, 36 years old and
past his best, took advantage
of some lackadaisical play
from the 1974 champion to
give Connors a good workout.
In other men 's singles
matches, Sweden's defending
champion and second :jeed
Bjorn Borg ousted Yugoslav
Niki Pilic, 9·7, 7.,';, 6-3, but
Bob Lutz, the 15th seed from
San Clemente, Calif., bowed
to Australian Kim Warwick,
6-1, 3-3, 6-1, 2-li, IH&gt;.
In lhe women's com·
petition , title-holder Chris
Evert, complaining It was
hard to concentrate when
bored, swept aside Britain's
Winnie Wooldridge, 6-Q, &amp;-2, to
set up a third-round meeting
with 14-year-old Tra.cy
Austin, from Rolling Hills,
Calif.
"Frankly it's tough when
you're IHl, 2~ up, not to get
bored," said Evert, who
thought Austin, the youngest
player ever to play in the
tournament in Its 100 years,
would put more pressure on
her.
On center court, 11 years
after their last meeting here
in the final , six-times
champion Billie Jean King
defeated Brazilian Maria
Bueno in a third-round match
awash with nostalgia since
that 1966 meeting won by
King.

) ..
/

FLAG PRESENTATION - The Junior American l.egion Auxiliary of Drew Webster
Post 39 presented a flag to Meigs County Girl Scouts for day camp activities at Camp
Kiashuta next week. Denise Marshall, junior Auxiliary president, pre~ented the Oag to Judy
Werry, Day Camp director, at the tent site Thursday. Pictured with them , left to right, are
Betty Lane, flag' ceremony director, Robin Campbell, junior Auxiliary chaplain, and Sherri
Marshall, sergeant at arms. In front are four of the expected 100 scouts who will be
attending day camp, Crystal Lane, Debbie Werry , Trina Reeves, and Suzan Thoma, left to
right.
·

the Sermonette
POLLY·s POINTERS
Polly Cramer

Yellowed blouse challenge

.

Mlnn 65 ; Rudl. Cal 53 ; By ED SAINSBURY
Yastrzemskl. Bos SO ; Hobson, UPI Sports Writer
Bos 48 ; Munson , NY 47 .
.
stolen Basu
.OAK BROOK, Ill. (UP!) National League: . Taveras , Led"" thr
1 If' '
Pill 28 ; Morgan. Cln 24 ; Cabell
"'
ee o go s 'young
and Cedeno . Hou and ·Rtcl'1ards, lions," the Western Open
SDA~~rlcan League ; Remy. Cal . field of 156 appeared ready
and Patek, KC 23 ; Bonds . Cal today to destroy the myth
19; Norris, C\ev 17; LeFlore, that ' Butler National Golf
Del and RIvers, NY Is .
Club offers too many UQusual
challenges for the touring
pro . .
Bruce Lietzke, 26, and Gary
McCord,, 211, led, the field, after
Jun'e 22-23-24
the first round with fiveunder-par 67s, and Bill
POM POM GIRLS
Mallon, 24, posted a 68. Five
shot 69, five were at 70
others
"R"
and seven at 71.
A year ago, only four
Plus
players broke the par 71 on
the first round, while this .
SUPER CHICK
year, with par boosted to (2,
20 players improved on
regulation in the first round
and 13 were under 71.

MASON DRIVE-IN

WITHHELD BLESSINGS
"YOUR iniquities have turned away these things, and your
sins ba ve withholden good things from you." Jeremiah 5:25
"For the Lord God is a sun and shield: the Lord will give
grace and glory : no good thing will he withhold from them that
walk uprightly." Psaim 84 :11

---

1~

unfilled at the end of each
month also rose more than 60
per c.ent.
Lahor Department officials
described this new mont)lly
publication as the " first
large-scale national effort
designed specifically to tell
job seekers and young people
preparing to enter the labor
market what jobs are
available, what they pay, and
where they are located."
For example, the report
showed there were 1,829 jobs
for typists averaging $6,581 a
year available through the
Employment Service last
month - most of them in 16

The 45th annual Spencer quellne, l.'ylmda , Kristen,
reunion was held recently at Jeff' Jodi, Mr. and Mrs. John
the Twin City Shrine Club Argabrete, Mr. and Mrs.
Park in Racine.
Chuck Hay, Mae Spencer '
A basket dinner was served Van ce Spence r , Mary
at noon to friends and DeGroot a nd daughters,
relatives of the Spencer fami - Leona , Laura, and Henrietta,
ly. David Spencer had Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Bing,
prayer. Games were enjoyed Joyce Bing, Mr. and Mrs. Jim
and prizes given during the Dodrill and sons, Vaughn and
afternoon.
Shawn, Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Recognized and presented Bing and son, Randy, Mr. and
gifts were Mary D. Groot who Mrs. Waid Spencer and son,
traveled the farthest; Jessie Ray, Esther Mays and sons,
Orr, the oldest woman ; John Jeff and Dean.
Rasp, the oldest man; Randy
Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Bing, the youngest boy; Spencer, and son, Keith , Mr.
Krtsten Frederick, the and Mrs. Tom Spencer and
youngest girl.
•
son, Jared, Mr. and Mrs.
Attending were Mr. and Daytop Spencer, Mr. and
Mrs. Arvil Holter, Mr. and Mrs. Ron Spencer, Tricia and
Mrs. Gary Holter, Gary, Jr. , Donnie, Mr. and Mrs. Elson
Brenda and Bill Frederick Spencer, Larry Spencer, Mr.
Sharon Riffle and daughter' and Mrs. David Spencer, Mr.
Gr.eta, Mr. and .Mrs. Harry and Mrs. Ike Spencer and
Spencer, Mr. and Mrs. Harlin son, John, Mr. and Mrs. Ker·
Stahl, Mr. and Mrs. Perry mit McElroy, Gene McElroy,
Orr, Mr. and Mrs. Allen Orr Mary Buck, Virgil McElroy,
Mr. and Mrs. John Rasp.
' Viola Rwnfield, Mr. and Mrs.
Elva Hammer, Mr. and Clifford Wood, Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Ted Groves and Jason I C. Powell, and Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. David Harber' John Hayes.
Jayne, Abbey, Mari, Jil, and
Brad, Sharon Zimmerman
WOLF CONFffiMED
and son, Gary, Jr., Mr. and
WAS!UNGTON (UP! )
' Mrs. Clayton Rasp and Milton Wolf of suburban
children, Johnny and Marla Shaker Heights was con·
Goldie Frederick, Mr. and firmed Wednesday as U. s.
Mrs. Jerry Frederick Ambassador to Austria by the
Melissa and Brian, Mr. and Senate with no dissenting
Mrs. Jack Frederick, Jac· votes.

specific areas.

Tliere also Were 332
openings available for
weavers concentrated in sill
towns with an average hourly
pay of $3.13, and 1,755 jobs for
high school teachers in seven
areas.
The report showed 459,000
jobs were listed at the Em·
ployment Service last month
and ahout 246,000 - or 54 per
cent - of them were filled or
canceled by the end of the
month.
The remaining 213,000 job
openings still were available
June I , and officials
predicted as many as 300,000
new jobs would be listed this
month. Hiring patterns in
June Were eJq&gt;ected to be
much like May .
The report said demand
more than doubled since
January for workers in in·
dustries including building
and construction, lumber and
wood products,
retail
building materials,
amusement and recreation
services, agricultural ser·
vices and concrete produc·
tion.
Job opportunities also
doubled since January in
Little Rock and ru'" !
Arkansas; New Hampshir

The Roman penny was made with the image or likeness of
Caesar slamped on it, and those who used the coin were
counted as his subjects and expected to be obedient to his laws.
When God created man He stamped His own image on His
creation in such a way that man cannot find real satisfaction
outside of the will of God. God wants to bless His people with
good thin!:", but the prophet Jeremiah reminds the people that
their "iniquities have turned away these things, and your sins ' Beaumont, Tex.; Canto1.,
have withholden good things from you." The context mentions Columbus and Youngstown, ·
the rain that was withheld, but there are many good things
Ohio; Indianapolis; Maine,
withheld !rom the disobedient. Let us notice a.few of the many and Reno, Nev.
things that are withheld:
The Blessing of a Good Conscience:
It is like heaven on earth to live with a clear conscience.Jn
Proverb.'! 3: 24 we read, "When thou liest down, thou shalt not
be afraid: yea, thou shalt lie down, and thy sleep shall be
sweet." St. Paul said, "And herein do I exercise myself, to
have always a conscience. void of offence toward God, and
toward men." Acts 24:16
Sin Withholds Many Material Blessings:
Flower
We realize maoy who give no thought to God, are blessed
with the material blessings of this life, for Jesus Christ testifies
Shop
that God "maketh His sun to rise on the evil and on the good,
andsendeth rain on the just and on the unjust." Matthew·5:45b
But there is much money spent on sinful indulgence that robs
many familie s from the necessities or life. The standard of
living for many families would be higher If the income were
put to better use.
Sin can Withhold Good Health:
. No one is immune when it comes to sickness) but many
Our Interest Is
people are suffering from physical ailments and diseases
Greater For You
because of living in sin. The writer knows of those who.could ~
altve today if they had lived for God instead of destroying their
bodies by sinful living. In Proverbs 11 ' 19 we read, "As
righteousness tendeth to life: so he that pursueth evil pursueth
it to his own deatll."
Sin Withholds Heaven:
On 90-Day
In Relevations 22: 11·)2we read, "He that is unjust, let him
be unjust still: and he which is filthy, let him·be filthy still: and
Certificates
he that is righteous, let him be righteous still: and he that is
holy, let him be holy still. A.tid, behold, I come quickly ' and my
5.75 per cent paid
reward is with me, to give every man according as hls work
90
day Certificates of
shall be." But we hasten to say that in the final analysis it is not
Deposit.
$1,000.00 '
sin that k~eps a man from heaven, but man's refusal to accepi
Minimum.
Interest
Jesus Chnst as Lord and Saviour who is waiting to forgive the
sinner and cleanse him from all unrighU!ousness. In I John 1:9
Payable Qua.r terly.
we read, " If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to
forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from- all
A substantial penalty is
in&gt;Joked on all certificate
unrigheousness." Listen to Romans 10:8-9, "But whatsaith it?
accounts withdrawn prior
The word is nigh thee, even in the mouth, and in thy heart : that
to the dale of maturitv .
IS, the word of faith , which we preach; That if thou shalt
confess with thy mouth the Lard Jesus aod shalt believe in
thine heart that God hath raised Him fro~ the dead, thou shalt
.
be saved."
Yes, God wants to bless us. Will you allow him to take
charge of your life and bless you, if you have not as yet reached
such a decision? - Lloyd D. Grimm, Jr., Pastor, Rutland
Church of the Nazar ene.
The Athens County

POLLY'S PROBLEM
remove the mustard stains
DEAR POLLY .. My work slightly warm glycerine
daughter has a white blouse into the spois, scrub, pretreat
COLUMBIA, S.C. (UP!) - (65 per cent polyester and 35 · with detergent and then
Center fielder Mookle Wilson, per cent cotton excluding or· launder as usuaL Should the
the leading hitter for College namentation and elastic) and "stain remain, sponge on a
World Series runnerup South the collar and cuffs are a lace mixture of one part alcohol
Carolina, signed a contract design . The blouse was ac· and two part!; water ..This can
with the New York Mets cidentally bleached and the be used on acetates and col·
collar and cuffs turned ors.
Thursday:
.
As for the blouse you may
Terms of the agreement yellow. I hope someone can
have a bit more of a problem.
were not disclosed but The tell us h9w to remedy this.
Also I would like to know Launder. frequently using a
State newspaper reported
Wilson will receive $35,000 how to get mustard stains off detergent that contains
and a promise the Mets will of a cotton . tablecloth. _ special brighteners. Work
this into the d~mpened collar
pay for the remainder of his PATRICIA
DEAR PATRICIA _ To and cuffs by hand 'squeezing
college education.
to thoroughly distribute it.
Let soak this way fur about 20
•
,
minutes. This 'should work
but there is certainly . no
guarantee. -POLLY.
The 69 shooters included Open.
DEAR POLLY - Several
"I had·a hitch in my swing · years ago my daughter had a
defending Western champioo
AI Geiberger, 1964 winner Chi and I made one sm.a ll snow white nylon blouse but
Chi Rodriguez, Frank Beard, change," he said, adding his even with careful washing it
Andy North and Bob ~urphy . game was "scary" since he was not too long before it was
The group at 70 included Tom was playing so well.
not so white any more. Not
"I'm very excited the way daring to use bleach oh it I
Watson, who won the crown
I'm hitting it," he said . "It's picked a good sunny day to
at Butler in 1974.
like
the scary feeling I had wash it and witl\out wringing
"I'd say the coitrse is a shot
.
the
first five weeks this the water out hung it outdoors
to two shotS easier than when
year."
I won," Watson said, while
on the line to dry. I did this
McCord declared be had a several times w1til it came
Lietzke declared, "it's two
shots easier. Never before different game too after 10 out snow white once more.
could you look at a coll!ile of days of rest and relaxation Soine wash days when it was
birdie holes. Now it's a lot including surfing at his San not too windy i used to spread
Diego borne.
more fun."
my towels on the ground in
"Last year, I was trying to the sun on the grass and ihat
U.S. Open champion
fade the ball half the year and works as well as any bleach.
Hubert Green agreed.
"The course has matured not playing goo~. but I kept -BERTHA.
and they're using shorter playing and' killing myself.
DEAR POLLY .. A
tees," he said. "It makes it Now I'm hooking again."
gentlem;m fri end of our !ami·
Mallon, accompanied by ly came over one day just as I
much fairer. Low scores
don't mean that it's easy," his wife of 12days, the former was about to put "flour in my
Green, talking about his Karen Kurtz, took a break cake pans so he gave me the
11
own 77 in his first competitive from ffiY best rowtd ever," following Pointer. When mak·
round since winning the at Butler to I 'buy her a couple ing a chocolate cake instead
Open, said, "call it a letdown of Cokes."
of buttering and flouring the
A!ter"today's second ro\llld, pans butter them as usual but
or whatever. I hit a couple of
rear bad shots, which I'm the field will be cut to the lol" use cocoa instead of flour.
capable of doing at any time. ' 70 scorers and ties, and it This eliminates the whitish
looked like 150 or perhaps 149 look on the layers plus it adds
I did not play well."
Lietzke, a winner at Tucson would make the cut. There an extra flavor of chocolate to
and Hawaii this year, played were 78, exactly half the field, the cake. When I do not hapwith a new swing, adopted who shOt 75 or better pen to have cocoa on hand ·I
. ~dway through the U.S. Thursday.
substitute a chocolate drink
mix (dry, of course. ) ' - .
MARGIE.
DEAR POLLY- When you
need a can of DRAINED fruit
A thoughi for the day: In
or vegetables instead of using his last, dying words on
a strainer just make holes in . March 8, 1887, . clergyman
the top of the can with an Henry Ward Beecher said
opener that makes triangular " Now come~ the mystery."•
holes. Make holes all around
the
lid and the size will vary
I
by the amount of pressure
•
you use. No strainer to clean.
When you purchase new
sheets (of t'Ourse, you shop
the sales ) matching
pillowcases are expensive if
you like to have extra sets for
frequent changes. However if
you buy one extra double size
flat bed sheet you can get
three pairs of pillowcases out
of it and fur a fraction of what
they would cost. I make two
cases that have the wide top ·
hem and then two others that
utilize the narrow bottom
hem and two more cases
·rrom the middle. They will
have to have their own hems
W. PhiJUp Keller
made.- DOROTHY Z.
Polly wifl send you one of
her signed thank-you
newspaper coupon clippers if
she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
l . -- - -I NN.oiiiwti:AYAILA8U ATt
her column. Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this
MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE
MIDOI.IPOIT, O .
nc
wsp~:;~per .
" MtLL sflttn

N_ew_er s,wmgers
· .Iead· mg
•
·

By SARA FRITZ
UPI Labor Reporter
WASIUNGTON (UPI)
There is a need for typists in
New York, lor weavers in
South Ca rolina a nd for
teochers in S&lt;&gt; uth Dakota,
according to an un·
precedented Labor Depart·
ment listing of the nation's
most abundant job openings.
The listing, published
Thursday, is designed to tell
unemployed workers exactly
what industries are hiring,
where the jobs are located
and how much they pay.
Called " Occupations in
Demand ,"
the
report
provides these details for the
105 jobs that were most
plentiful during the previous
month at the U. S. Em·
ployment Service . It Is
designed to show the pattern
of jobs opportunities on a
month-by-month basis.
Anyone interested in the
report can pick it up at the
local employment office.
The May data provided
additional good news for jobseekers - showing these job
openings have increased 64
. per cent since the start of
1977. The number of jobs left

Spencer family rH;.;;~::: :ii';i:p:: :. : :: :::m:::;:;:;;:;;;;::;:;: :::-11 Girl Scout
eni01JS
reunion I Us • • • By
I Diary .
'1 J

•

5.75%

.."
,.'

Tuesday- Wednesday· Thursday
4:oo-11:00
Friday and Saturday
4:oo-1 :00
SUNDAY
4:00-11:00

PHONE 9924t304

giving the praye r. St&lt;vc
Pickens presided at the
business meeting. The dos·
ing prayer and blessi ng ..ere
given by George Pickens.
Refreshments were sen ·ed
by th o Rutland Church of
Christ members.

'

Friendship program-slated
_,
A program on fricn\Wtip
was presented ,b,Y Mi~s
Eliz.abeth Fick when Fri\'nd·
ly Circle of Trinity Church
met Tuesday evening at the
Route 33 roadside park.
A picnic supper preceded
the vesper service with table
grace by Mrs. Pearl Mora.
Selected scriptures and .. a

. poem, '1The :Mora. World
, Would be a Ntcer Place" by
Helen Siemer Rtce, and a
IN ITIATION
· meditation on the " Wealth of
Bethel 62, International
Fr~ endship " were incl uded in
Orde~ of J ob's Da ughters,
MISs Ftck's program"
Will
have a practice for inilia·
M ~ss Mary V. Reibel
lion
at 10 a.m. Saturday. fn·
preSided at the busmess
itiation
will be held Monday
meellng when a letter of apnight.
.
prectatwn was read from
Mrs. Glenroy Ewing by Mrs.
Thomas Young, cheer chairman. Mrs. Carl Bilikam was
welcomed back after a winter
in the south and also greeted
were guest!;, Mrs. Lucille
l..eifheit, and Mrs, Belva
Sloan . There will be no
Choose from
meeting in July.

DEAR HELEN :
Dor17 wanted a baby but not a husband or lover. She asked
me to oblige, making me sign a legal paper that 1 would not try
to see ~e child, I later discovered she Ui a lesbian. Now I want
my child, as I think she couldn't be a fit mother. Do 1 have·a
chance? -RON
DEAR RON:
You'll face a messy legal battle without much chance of
winnljtg. Jn_rour liberal state I believe you'd have to prove the
mother unfit on groWids other than homosexuality. But don 't
Brownies and Juniors Mon·
take my word - consult a lawyer. - H.
day evening.
Brownies and their guests
DEAR HELEN:
attending
were Kim Adams,
Belatedly, I answer your colwnn on swingers. You said
Mary
Baldwin,
Heidi Cobb,
you had heard from only four , nationwide. Perhaps, like us,
Kim
Cogar,
Wendy
Fry,
most don 't call themselves swingers.
lm·
Tracie
Hubbard,
Jayne
We have a su~ssful . double marriage. Both couples .
hoden,
Jane
Jet!,
Darla
entered this expemnent wtth a decade of warm marriage
behind them, and we talked a lot before we acted. The first two Lambert, Regina Nance,
years were~~~ solving problems : Can it be do'ne? (Yes.) Do Sherri Sisson, Kathy Pickens,
we want to live m the same house• (No.) Does Hubby II (Mine ) Veronica Provo, Wendy
~veto. sleep with Wile I when her husband; Hubby I, sleeps Triplett, Alicia Van Meter,
!!ith Wife II (me )? (No.) Will this hurt wife I's feelings? Or Shelly Wolfe, Mr. and Mrs.
Hubby l's? Or Wife trs? (Not any more). Who asks whose Jim Adams and Todd, Kathy
Father's Day services were
permlssloo for what? (That was a problem. ) Who sits with Baldwin Sandra Cobb, Mike
and Kathy Fry, Nancy Hubheld at the Apple Grove
whom when we doubledate? (Who cares?)
Uni\ed Methodist Church
. When H-!1 dates W-1, I'm free. Sometimes I go to the bard, Elma Imboden, Janet
Sunday with special recugni·
lilrary, the gym, a concert. S&lt;&gt;metimes I viSit female friends. Pickens, Susie Murphy and
tion being given to the fathers
Sometimes I ~pin on H-1. Meanwhile, H-IT spruces up the Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Sisson.
Juniors
and
their
guests
present.
bous:',' plays With our kids. (they appre~iate this "daddy
Mrs. Russell Roush · had
time ), tucks them into hed. W-1 usually arrtves at our home in were Janie Amberger, Jenny
charge of the program which
time to kiss the children good night before retiring to the Bentley, Shari Cogar, Debbie
opened with prayer and
bedroom with H·II. He walks her home around 10 p. m. and 1 Michael, Kim Morrow, Penny
JENNIFER LEE
Wolfe, Kim Sayre, Billy
group singing of "l"aith of
return around 10:30.
Jennifer Lee, daughter of
Cogar,
Eddie
Wo.
l
fe,
Shirley
.
Our
Fathers" with Mrs. Bess
He's eager to share the tales of both our evenings and
Mr .. and Mrs. Larry Lee
.
Wolle,
and
Roger
Hubbard.
Parsons
at the piano. Mrs..
oftener than I would have thought possible we end up m~king
above, and Tony and Todd
Roush
had
a Bible quiz spell·
love too.
Lee, their twin sons ,
ing
out
"Father's
Day" with .
Is it worth it? Well, at my high school reunion an old friend
Pomeroy, durin g May
words
from
the
23rd
Psalm.
caught me holding hands with my husband (H·ll). Her
celebrated their birthdays.
were
"
Father's
Day"
Poems
~mment was "Good grief! One would think you two were still
Jennifer was eight, and her
by
Mrs.
Herbert
Roush
;
mlovel" -WIFE II
brothers were six. Mr. and
"
Praise
to
Father"
by
Karen
Mrs. Carl Lee of Long But·
Rhodes; " My Father 's
Got a problem? An adult subject for discussion? You can
tom joined the Lee family
Hands" by Georgia Wolfe;
ta!k tl over in her column if you write to Helen Bolte!, care of
~~ their Pomeroy home for
"Closer
Today to Dad" by
thts newspaper.
·
the celebration of Jen·
Linda
Young; " Happy
nifer's birthday, and then
Father's
Day : by Lucille
. F;RIDAY
entertained at their Long
Rhodes
;
','Dad's
World Series
THE CHRISTIAN · AIRES Bottom home with a
Madness"
by
Mrs.
Roush.
of Country Hymntimers
cookout for the birthdays of
GUESTSPEA.KER
attended
with
the
Thirty-one
singing at Church of Christ in
the twins.
The Rev. Henry Fletcher
being
$56.00.
offering
Christian Union Camp,
will be guest speaker at the
Hartford, Friday, 7:30 p.m.
Mt. Moriah Baptist Church,
SATURDAY·
Middleport, Sunday at 10:45
DAN HAYMAN and the
a.m. the afternoon he will con·
County Hymntlmers will
duct the Hocking SuiMiistrlcl
have hymn sing at Poplar
Missionary Convention at the
Ridge Church Saturday 7:30
Mt. Moriah Church at 2: 3fl
p.m. The church is located off
p.m.
LETART FALLS _ A SR 554 at Cheshire.
0 LD
FA S HI 0 NE D
surprise birthday party was
given in honor of Mindy outdoor hymn sing, Saturday,
Morris by Melissa Yonker, 6:30p.m. home of Patty and
Wilson and Edna Harold Russell, Vinton-Eno
Robin
SON BORN
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs. Greene at the Letart Falls . · Road, Morgan Center. All
Farrell Shuler of Forf Community Hall Saturday singers welcome. Take lawn
chair~.
Lauderdale, Fla. are an· evening.
Mindy
received
many
SPECIAL MEETING,
nouncing the birth of their
lovely
gifts.
Games
were
Shade
River . Lodge 453 ,
first child, a son, May 3
these
guests,
F&amp;AM
Chester,
will be held
played
by
weighing 8 lbs., 13 oz. at Fort
Jimmy
Hupp,
Tina
Hill,
Ruth
al7
p.
m.
Saturday
with work
Lauderdale Hospital. He has
Greene,
Ann
Adams,
Tracy
in
the
Master
Mason
degree;
been named Robert Travis.
Mearns,
Ricky
Babies,
Linda
all
Master
Masons
welcome.
Grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Guy Shuler, Rt. 2 Racine O'Brien, Robin Burnem,
SUNDAY
Leslie
and Dwight Krause, Fort Carol O' Brien ,
. APPEARING THIS WEEKEND
ANNUAL Hill ReUnion
Lauderdale. Mrs. Schuler I!Qberts, the honored guest Sunday, Portland Park.
.spent a month with her son and her mother, Mrs. Betty Potluck dinner at noon. All
and ·family in Fort Lauder· Morris. Refreshments were relatives and friends or the
served.
dale.
late Albert and Liza Hill are
welcome.
MIDDLEPORT Masonic
Lodge 363 observe annual go
·to church Sunday at 9:45a.m .
at Mason United Metliodist
Church, Mason .
MONDAY
RUTLAND Garden Club,
7:30 Monday evening at the
home of Mrs. Elizabeth
Turner with Mrs. Chris Diehl,
co-hostess.
AMERICAN Legion Aux·
iliary, Racine Post 602, Mon·
day, 7:30p.m. at the hall.
BETHEL 62, International
Order of Job 's Daughters,
will have initiation at 7:30
p.m. Mondaynight at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
'
. PRACTICE for the fifth
degree will take place Mon·
"
day night at the Rock Springs
Grange hall, 8 p..m.
TUESDAY
POMEROY CHAPTER,
OES, Past Matrons, will meet
at 7:30 Tuesday at the home
of Mrs. Norma Parker.

our collection
of matching
KEEPSAKE
WEDDING
RINGS

Father's Day

observed at

.,'
'

.
\

••'

Bea utifull y c ra fted to
sy mbolize you r lo ve ...

designed in 14K yello w
or wh ite go ld . . . with 1he
Keepsake: a ss ur:tnce of

timeless quali ty.

Keepsake®

.

Miss Morris

'

.

honored with

.·II'

surprise party

j

''
'.'
.
\

•

•
0&lt;('CUi ive r rod uc er WHII.lm F. Brown

rrod uc('(l by frA.nk R.lo\cobson
Conc eived ;md Diree1ec1 by l.imrs CoUif:r
Mu.,ic T~dd Smith

The Hiding Place, a true story based on the experience
of Corrie ten Boom.
The film oHers a great lesson in the perserverance

oh personal faith in a dark and trying period of World
Hostory.
. The showing of Corrie Is open to the public tree of
charge.

·

First Baptist Church, Middleport, Ohio
SUNDAY, JUN£ 26th, 7:30 PM

Meigs Co. Branch
'

~

Savings &amp; Loan co.
29' Second St.
Pomeroy , Ohio

AT THE

INN PLACE

t

&gt;

'id!J

River-Brew
3 PIECE ·GROUP

FROM .·"EW BOSTON, OHIO

.

"

TONIGIIT &amp; SATURDAY

A,,,.
FullS Year
Tube Warranty

SAVE WITH THIS 18.3 CU, FT.

,,'

Gibson Freezer
More freezer ror your
dull;u m th1~ \ 8 3 cu h
m Odet Will\ 4 l u lt·w o:.H I\

shel'tles efi1C1enr foam 1n·
sutat1on. safety tock w1111
POP-Ou t kev

Uorgt 1~ J cu 11
toam u&gt;sul&lt;l to on

corrosiOn rf!·
&amp;111411'1~

atlim!l'lull'l

17.0 CU. FT. FROST*CLEAR
REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER

10-2
••

SOUTHERN
Band
Boosters Tuesday 7:30 p.m.
in home economics room at
high school.

$33800
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Cancer.
/
Anne Morrow Lindbergh,
author and wife of famed
American aviator Charles
Lindbergh, was born June 22,
1907.
\

\

Gene Evans, Walter Bunce

Social
Calendar

the

OPEN:

InSearchofaLastFrleod...
Dear Helen :
I've read articles about locating lost relatives through the
~ Cross, anny, etc. Why is it then so hard to trace a lost
frtend ? (I ~an't afford a "search" agency. )
·
I'm trymg to located a special girlfriend of my teen years
!Jut I only know her maiden narne.l've written the city clerk 0 /
our former town , but he says soch information cannot be given
out. She may even still live in this area, but how can J find her•
- A LOST FRIEND
·
DEAR FRIEND:
A visit to your hometown could reunite you and your
friend. Even though she has moved, long-time residents may
remember her and keep in touch.
Or who not write a letter to the postmaster? lilt's a small
town, and he's the helpful type, he (or she ) might relay your
query.
. Newspaper editors will sometimes print letters seeking
informatioo on "lost" persons. It doesn't hurt to try. Good
luck! - H.

By Charlene Hoef11ch

Day Camp at Camp
Kiashuta, Chester, will open
Monday.
Some last minute registra·
tions lor the' day camp program which will be held over
a five day period are being
accepted by Mrs. Pat Thoma,
103 Wolfe Drive, Pomeroy.
Eleven troops participated
in the Regatta' parade last
Friday' night. In the parade
were Pomeroy Junior Troops
1276 and 1180, Rutland
Brownie Troop 1293 ; Racine
Brown ie Troop 1247;
Syracuse junior troop 1204 ;
Chester junior Troop 1049 .
Chester Brownie Troop 1061;
Pomeroy Brownie Troops 1271
and 1254 ; Harrisonville
Brownies 1052 and Harrison·
ville Juniors ll!i5.
Pomeroy Juniors 1276 serv·
ed as hostesses for the Regal·
ta Variety show. in the group
were Suzan Thoma, Crystal
ume, Debra Werry, Teresa
Garnes and Karen Spencer.
A swimming party was
held at the Syracuse
Municipal Pool for Syracuse

Plans lor a family pienio
and a OO.th at th e Meigs ·
County Fair were made dur·
lng a meeting of the· Melt:"
C.unty Men's Fellowship
hdd at the Rutland Churrh of
Christ.
L. D. Hartinger reported on
a recent trip tu Grundy Mounlain Mission at Grundy, Va.
Group singing was led hy

.

a
layman
looks at

MEIGS INN
PIZZA SHACK

~~l

on the revival will be handed
oot in the conununily.
Youth groups of area
church are invited to sing at
the services and those in·
te res ted are asked to
telephone 992-7369 or contact
Desi Jeffers, Route I, Mid·
die port.
Slave day was se1f•Jr Saturday beginning at 10 a.m. and
any of the youth can be contacted for odd jobs. Choir
.-ehea r,sa l was held preceding
the meeting.

Apple Grove

on

In 1975, an Eastern Airlines
Boeing 727 en route from New
Orleans to New York City
crashed al' Kennedy Intern&amp;· '
tiona! airport, killing i14
persons.

Helen Bottel

Youth revival planned
Hevi1·a1 services to be held
at the Bradbury Church of
ChriSt, July 3-3 were planned
duri ng a meeting or the youth
Wt•dnesday night at the
church.
Evangelist for the revival
will he Tony Ma ple with the
youth to ha ve complete
charge of the services. The
evangelist will also speak at
the Sunday services of July 3
and also that day a Sunday
sehoul picnic will be held at
Forest Acres Park. l,.eaflcl!;

•

Picnic and booth
planned fo r fair

THE MEIGS INN
992-3629

POMEROY, 0.
•

'

'

�s-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,
0 ., Friday, June 24, 1m
o. m , morn1ng wors h p 10.30 Sunday

CHURCH
NEWS
TRINITY CHURCH Rev W. H .
.Pemn , pastor ; Roy Moyer , Sun
day Khool supt. Church School .
r,, 1S om,; worship servic e, 10:30
a. m Chotr rehearsal. Tuesday ,
7·30 p m under dtrect 1on o f Mrs.
Paul Neos•.

POMEROY CHURCH OF THE

NAZARENE Corner Umon ond
Mulberry , Aev Clyde V, HenderJon . pastor. Sunday schoo l . 9·30
om , Glen McClung, supt .. morn
109 worship, 10 30om : even1 ng
service . 7 :30 mtd-week serv1ce
Wednesday . 7·30 p m
GRACE EPISCOPAL , The Rev
Harold Deeth , rector. Chu rch ser·
vtces 10:30 a .m , Holy commu nio n ftrst Sunday of month ,
church school 10·30 am , fo r
nursery through 12.

POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST.
Richard E11an son pastor . Bible
school, 9:30a .m .· worship , 10 30
a. m.; adult worsh ip serviCe ond
young people's meettng , 7 30
p m Combined B1ble study gnd
prover meeting, Wednesddy , 7 30
p. m.
THE SALVATION ARMY , Envoy
Roy W Wining , officer In charge.
Sunday ,
10 o. m , Holtness
meeting, 10·30 o .m , Sunday
School. Young Peoples Leg•on , 7
p m , Thursday, I to 3 p.m.,
Ladies Home league , 7 p m Prep
clones.

BURLING TON SOUTHERN BAP ·

TIST CHAPEL . Route 1, ShadePa stor Bobby Elkin s Sunday
school. S p .m . Sunday wor~h•p .
5·45 p m ., Wednesday prayer ser vice, 7 ·30 p .m

ST. PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH,

Corner of Sycamore and Second
Sh ., Pomeroy. The Rev. W1IUom
M iddlesworth , Pastor
Sunday
School ot 9 45 a.m . and Church
Serv1ces 11 a m
SACRED HEART, Rev Father
Paul D Welton , pastor Phone
992-2825 Saturday even1n~ Moss ,
7 30; Sunday Mass. 8 and 10 o .m ,
~onfe sslon , Sa turday , 7-7·30 p m

POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH

OF CHRIST 1 200W. Main St. , Jer ry
Paul. m•n•ster , ph one 992-7b66
Conservative, non· 1nstrumenfal.
Sunday w orshtp, 10 om .. Btble
study , 11 a .m , worshtp, 6 p.m.
Wednesday Bible study, 7 p m .

OLD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN
CHURCH,
Re\I . Ralph Sm1th
pastor Sunday school. 9 30 a .m.
Mrs Worley Fronds , superintendent. Preaching servic es ftrsf &amp;
third Sundays follow1ng Sundoy
School.

GRAHAM UNITED METHODIST.

Preoehlng 9·30 o m ., ftr$1 and se
cand Sundays of each month.
thtrd and fourth Sundays each
month , worsh1p serv 1ce at 7·30
p.m . Wednesday llil'll&amp;nlngs at
7·3Q. Prayer and Bible Study .

&lt;fiEVENTH·DAY

ADVENTIST.

Mulberry Heights Rood, Pomeroy.
Pastor , Albert D11tes, Sabbath
School Superintendent,
Claro
Mcintyre, Sabbath School , Saturday afternoon at 2:00, wtth War·
ship Service following at 3: 15

RUTLAND

FIRST

BAPTIST

CHUACH- Drewy Gore, supt .
Sunday School. 9.30 a.m .. mornl ngworshtp, 1045o m
THE HILAND CHAPEL, George
Cas fa postor. Sunday School.
9·30 am .; evening worship , 7:30.
Thursday evenmg prayer serVICe,
7 30p.m .

POMEROY

FIRST

BAPTIST.

William Watson, Sunday School
Supt . Sunday school 9:30 o .m ;
mormng worship, 10 30 a.m . B'VF ,
6p.m . ; Bible study, Wednesday , 1
p.m ., followed by cho1r practice
at 8 30 p .m. Kerby 01ler will be
guest speaker on Sunday

FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, 282
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy , Paul J.
Whlte, Pastor, Gary Basham, Sun day school supt. Sunday school.
9·30 o .m ., morn ing worsHip,
10.30; evening worship . 6.30 p .m.
Midweek prayer sennce, 7 30
p.m .

MIDWAY COMMUNITY CENTER.

Dexter Rd., Longsvtlle Ohio Rev .
Clyde Ferrell, Pastor . Sunday
School
11
a m.
Saturday
preaching serv•ces 7.30 p .m.
Wednetdoy evening Bible study
at 7:30p.m .

FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH,

Batley Run Rood, Rev Emmett
Rawson, pastor. Handley Dunn ,
supt. Sunday school , 10 o m Sunday evening servic&amp; 7.30; Bible
teochtng, 7·30 p .m Thursday.

DYESVILLE

COMMUNITY

CHURCH , Roger C. Turner. pastor.
Sunday school, 9·30 a m ; Sunday
morning worshtp, 10:30, Sunday
even1ng service 7·30.

THE SALVATION ARMY, II 5
Butternut Ave. , Pomeroy. Envoy
and Mrs . Ray Wimng, officers 1n
charge . Sunday holinen meeting
10 a.m ; Sunday school, 10·30
a m leader YPSM Elo1se Adam s
7:30 p.m. sol.,.oti on meehng .
Lodles Home League, 12 noon to 2
p.m ., Thursday; prayer meehng
ond Bible study, Thursday , 7 30

pm

MIDDLEPORT

MT MORIAH BAPTIST , Corner
Fourth and Mom , M1ddleport.
Rev . Henry Key , Jr , pasto r Sunday School, 9 30 a m ; M rs Er\lln
Baumgardner, supt. ; Mornmg
worsf-tip , 10.45 a.m .

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF
CHRIST IN CHRISTIAN UNION ,
Lawrence Manley, pastor; Mrs
Russell Young, Sunday Sci-tool
Supt. Sunday School 9:30 a m
Evening worship, 7:30, Wednesday prayer meeting , 7 30 p.m .

MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD

Rac1ne Route 2, the Rev James
M. Muncy, Po'stor. Sunday ~c hool
9:45 o .rp. , mornmg wonh tp , 11
a.m ; 8\/emng worship, 7 30
Prayer meetmg, Tuesdoy 1 '7.30
p.m ; Young people's meettng , '
7:30p.m. Thursday .

MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST.,
Corner Stxth ond Pol mer, the Rev
Peter Granda! , pastor , Manni ng
Klaas. supe:rintendent Sunday
School WMPO Rodta program
7.45 a .m .. Sunday School. 9 15
a. m ; Morning Worship , 10 15
o ,m ,
Youth acttvUies and
fellowthip for lunior and semor
high . students, 6 p .m . Sund.oy
evenmg worship, 7:30 p.m. Mtd wMk prayer- sarv1ces, Wednes ·

doy, 7:30p.m.
CHURCH OF CHRIST. M•d·
dleport, 5th and Main , George
Gloze, mln1ster, Mike Gerlach,
superintendent, Tarry Yankey,
youth minister. Bible school , 9·30
o.m . ; morning worship , 10 30
a.m .. evening wont·up, 7 30,
prayer service, 7 p.m Wednes-

day

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF THE

NAZARENE, Rev. Jim Broome,
pastor ; Mrs. Mary Lathey, Sunday
1chool 1upt. Sunday school. 9 30

1

a m ;
Sunday
ev onge lis r 1c
m ee hng, 7 .30 p .m
Prayer
me(!!ling, Wednesday , 7·30 p m .
UN IT ED
P RES BY T ERIAN
MINISTRY OF MEIGS COUNTY ,
Ow tght l. Zollt lz, d irector.
H A II R I S 0 N v 1 L L E
PRESB'VHRIAN
Re v
Erneu
Stncld •n . pasto r Sunday church
school 9:30 om ., Mrs . Homer
Left., supt .. morning w o rsh ip ,
10:30.
MIDDLEPORT , Sunday school ,
9 30 o m , R1chard Vaughan. supt .
Marnl ng wars hi p, 10:30.
SYRACUSE, Mornlng worsh 1p , 9
a .m , Sunday schoo l 10 0 m. Mrs
Sampson Hall , supt.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD
Rev. James 0 Guynn .' pastor :
Sun~oy sch ool. 10 0 m ., Sunday
w anh1p , II a m.. Sunday even.ng
serv•ce, 7 p m ; Wednesday wor sh• p ~erv ce 7.30 p.m .
HAZEL COMMUNI TV CHURCH
Near Long Bottom , Edsel Hart :
pastor . Sunday school, 10 a.m :
Church , 7 30 p .m .. prayer
meet 1ng, 7.30 p m, Thursday
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL ,
Thtrd Ave , the Rev . Wdltom Kmt·
tel pastor Ronald Dugan Sunday School Supt . Clones fo r all
ages, eventng serv 1ce , 7·30· 8 1ble
study, Wednesday . 7.30 p .m .
youthserv 1ces , Frtday 7·30 p m
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPliST , Corner As h and Plum, Noel
Herrman , pastor . Saturday even mg ser-v 1ce, 7 30 p .m ., Sunday
School. 10 30 a .m.
MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISH
METHODIST CHURCH
RobertT Bumgarner,
Otreclor
POMEROY CLUSTER
Rev Robert Hoyden
Rev. Jomes Corbttt
O IESTER , Warsh 1p q 15 a. m
Church School lOam.
POMERO'V , Worstup, 10:30o m
Church School 9.30 a.m . UM'VF
6 30 p m
ENTERPRISE , Worship 9 a .m
Church Sc hool10 a m
ROCK SPRINGS Worship 10
am
Church School 9 lSo .m
UMYF 6 30 p .m .
FLATWOODS. Worsh ip 11 a.m.
ChurchSchoollOo m
MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
Rev Rober t Bumgarner
HEATH , Robert Bumgarner ,
Pastor
Worship
10.30 a .m .
Church School 9·30 am UMYF 6
p.m.
RUTlAND, W 11bur Hil t, Pa stor
Worship 10 30 o.m. Church School
9·30 a m
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
Aev. Harvey Koch, Jr
ASBURY , Worship 11 a.m .
\ Church School 9 SO a.m. UMW
first Tuesday . Blble Study Thurs
7.JO p .m .
FOREST RUN , Worship 9 a .m .

SYRACUSE, Church School 9.00
Rev . Timotny Smith
Cluster Leader
Rev. Steven Wilson
Associate
BETHANY , (Dorcas), Wort hip
9·30 a m Church School 10·30
a.m .
am . Worsh ip 10.30 o .m 2nd and

Fourth Sunday 10 30 a. m. Wor·
shl~ 2nd Sunday 7·30 p m Ath
Sunday 9 .30 a.m .. Prayer mealing
Wedneadoy 7 30 p.m. UMW 1st
Tuesday 7 30 p.m
.
WESLEYAN fRacine), Sunday
School 10 am , Worship II o .m :
Jr. UMYF Wednesday 3:30 p .m ,
B1ble Study Thursday 7 p.m. Choir
Practice Thuudoy B p m

Sn Hth , pastor

~undoy !:lchool

ble

9 30 o m : Closs leader [@o H1U,
wor ship serviCe
10 30 om
church7 .J0 p m
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
CHRIST . Elden R. Bloke , postor
Sundoy School 10 a m . Howard
McCoy. sup! . Morntng sermon.
11 am ; Sunday nigh t !!oervtces
Chu sho n t: ndeovor, 7 30 p .m .,
Song service, 8 p rn : Preoch1ng
8· 30 p .m . M 1dweek Pro y&amp;r
meettng, Wed nesda y, 7 p m , Roy
Adams , loy leader.
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST ,
Located ot Rutland on New l1ma
Rood, neJd to Fores t A cre Pork ,
Rev Roy Rouse pa stor. Rober t
Musse r. Sunda y School iupt Sunday school . 10:30 om ; w orsh1p
7' 30 p .m .B•ble Study Wed nes ·
day , 7·30 p m , Sa turday night
prayer servtce. 7 30 p .m .
HEMLOCK GRO VE CHRISTIAN
Roge r Watson, pa sto r. Jess1e
Wh •te . Sunday school su pt M orning worship , 9:30 am . Sun ·
doyschool , 10 30 am , eveni ng
serv1ce. 1 30 Wednesday B1bl e
Study , 7 30 p.m .
MT UNION BAPTIST , Rev . John
ElswiCk , pasto r Sunday schoo l
superin tendent , Don W•lson Sun
day school, 9 45 a m .. e... enttl g
worship , 7·30 p m
Pray e r
meeting, 7 30 p .m W&amp;dnesdoy
TUPPERS PLAI ~S CHRISTIAN
CHURCH . Eugene Underwood ,
pastor, Howard Caldwel l, Jr.,
Sunday School Supt : Sunday
School, 9 30 a.m .. Mornmg Se rmon , 10:30 a m ; Sunday evening
servtce. 7 p.m.
LET ART
FAllS
UNITED
BRETHREN , Re... . Freeland Norris
pastor , Floyd.Noms , supf Sunday
school , 9 30 am , morn1ng ser ·
mon, 10:30 a.m. , Prayer servt ce,
Wednesday 7·30 p m
CHURCH OF GOO OF PRO·
PHEC'V , 0 J Whtte Road off 160,
Rev . George Groyle. postorSun ·
day School, 10om ; Arthur Hen son , Supt . Morn1ng Worshtp . II
a.m Young Peoples serviCe , 7
P·"'·· Evening serviCe 7:30p .m ..
Wednesday Mid-Week Prayer
Ser ... lce, 7 30 p m . Youth
meet mg . b.30 p .m E'lenlng worsl-up , 7 30 p m
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE , Re v. Herbert Grote,
pastor Wo rship serv1ce, 11 a.m
and 7.30 p.m. Sunday . Sunday
School , 9·30 o.m R1cho rd Borton ,
sup! . Prayer mee ting, Wednes ·
day , 7 30p m
BRADFORD
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST. Gobrtel Mtrs . po stor Btble Sunday School9 ·30 om ; mar
mng church 10.30 a.m. Sunday
even 1ng servtce, 7 00 p m
Wednesday ser\IICe. 7.30 p .m .
LAUREl CLIFF F~EE METHODIST
CHURCH , Rev Floyd F. Shook ,
pastor, Lloyd Wrtght, Sunday
School Supt ; Morning Worship
9.30 a .m .. Sunday School 10.20

~tudv I .:tOp m )unday evvn

mg worsh1p 7.30 p m,, Cho~r Proc:
he~ Thursday, 7 p m
OEXfER CMU R&lt;H OF CHRIST
Chorl~~ Russ&amp;ll Sr . mmts.ter
R1clo. Mocombe1 , !&gt;up! Sunda y
school 9 JO om., worship ser
vtce , 10 .30o.m 8•bleStudy . lues·
day . 7 30 p.m .
REORGAN IZED CHURCH OF
Jl:SUS CHRIST OF LATTER OAV
SA1N TS, Ponlond Ronne Rood .
Will tam Roush . pastor
Tom
Stobor t, Sunde'( School 01rector .
Sunday School . q JO a.m ., M orn tng wors hip, 10·30 am , Sunday
even •ng servtce 7 p m Wednes day evenmg praye r services , 1 30

pm
BETHLEHEM BAPTIS T, Rev Earl
Shuler , pastor. Wo1sh tp servtee,
9 30 CJ m Sun day school , 10 30
om 81ble Study and prayer ser'lltce Th ursda y. 7 30 p.m .
CA RLETON CHURCH, Kmgsbury
Rood G ory Ktn g . pastor. Sunday
school. 9 30 p m ; evening w ar
sh 1p , 7 30 p .m . Proy&amp;r meeting.
Wed nesday , 7:30 p.m
LONG BOTIOM CHRISTIAN .
Bru ce Sm1th, pastor Wal lace
Damewood , Supt Bible School ,
9 30 om
Preochtng service ,
10 -i5 o m. No e vening ser vice
HYSELL RUN FREE METHODIST
CHURCH, Rev Herbert A t ling,
pa stor . Sunday School q 30 a .m .,
Morn tng servic e, 10 30 o .m ..
yo uth
service , 6 . 45
p m
Evangelistic service 7:.30 p .m
Prqyer meeltng, Thursday, 7:30
p .m .
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at
Bold Knob
Re-v,
Lawrence
Gluesencomp ,Sr , pastor ; Ro ger
Wtllford . Sr. S{mday school supt.
Sunday school 9 30 o ., Sund(ly
evenmg service 7 p.m Prayer
meeflng, Tuesday , 7:30 p .m
Ernes t Docter , cl ass loader
Youth mee tmg, Wednesday, 7.30
p m
w1th Don and Martha
Meadows , leaders.
WHITE 'S CHAPEL , Cool.,.t lle RD
Rev Roy Deeler , pastor , Sunday
school9 30 o m , wor shtp serviCeJ
10 30 am B1bl8 study,and prayer
serv •c e, Wednesday, 7.30p m .
RUTlAND
RUTlAND CHURCH OF CHRIST.
Oenn1s Sm1 th , pastor 1 Fronk
Young ,Sunday s c ~ool Supt . Sundoy school ond communion , 9·30
om . Worshtp and comumon ,
10 30o .rn .
RUTLANO
COMMUNITY
CHURCH. Sunday School , 9 30
o m ., worsh ip servt ce , 11 o m ;
Wednesday prayer mee ting, 7.30
p.m . youth services, Sunday, 7
p m , Sunday n1ght worship , 7 30
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE, Re... . lloyd 0 Gr1mm ,
Jr .. pastor Sunday school, 9 30
om .. worshtp serv •ce, 10 30 o .m .
Broadcas t live over WMPO; young
p eop l e ' s
service ,
6 AS ;
evangel 1stic serv tce , 7·30 p.m.

p m .. M•u.onorv meeting

1 30

p m f1rst Wednt»doy o l mon th .
MASON COUNTY
MASON FIRST BAPTIST. s.t&lt;ond
ond Pom erov SIS . Ston Cro ig,
postor Sunday school, iii do .m ..
wor$ht p servtce 1• a m ; tro.ning
union, b 30 p m.· evenin g w or·
ship servtce. 7:.30 p .m M td Wee't
prayer ser vice , W edne sday . 7:30
p m
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST , P
0 Bmc 487, Mtller St., Mason, 'N.
Va Sundo v B•ble Study lO o m .,
Worsh•p 11 a m. a nd 7 p.m Bible
Study Wednesday 7 p .m., Voca l
mus.ic
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, Corner of Set:ond and Ander son.
Mason . Pa stor, Wolter Cloud
Sunday schoo1 9:45 am ; wars h1p
ser'lllce, 11 om . and 7.30 p .m
Weekly Bible study, Wednesday,
7 30 p .m
MASON ASSEMBlY OF GO O,
Duddmg Lone, Mason , W. \Ia
Ches te r Tennant, Pastor. Sunday
School 9 45 a .m ., Children's
Church 6.45 p .m . Young P.aple's
Ser vice 6 AS p m . Evangeli stic
Ser vice 7:30p.m Women 's M1sSlonory Council 10om fi rst ond
third .Tuesdays . Prayer and 81ble
Study, Wednesday . 7:30pm
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST
IN CHRISTIAN UNION , The Rev
W1 l liom Campbell , pastor . Sunday
S&lt;hool . 9:30o m , James Hughes ,
sup! ., evening !ler vice , 7·30 p m
Wednesday even1n'iJ proyer
meet1ng , 7·30 p .m You th prayer
serv1ce each Tuesday .
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH ,
le tart , W Vo , Rt 1 Rev . Charles
Hargraves . post or. Worshtp ser·
vtces , 9·30 om : Sunday school ,
II a .m . evening worsh1p, 7 30
p m
Tuesday cottage prayer
meetmg and B1ble study. 9 30
a.m . Wor!lhip serv•ce, Wednes day 7.30p .m
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH , 26 N
Second , Middleport pastor. Cur
tis Stephen. Church school. 9 30
o m , preaching services , 10 30
a.m and "7 .30 p .m. Wednesday
evemng B•ble study , 7 ·30 p m
INDEPENDENT
HOL I NE SS
CH URCH , INC. - Corner Fourtk
ond lincoln Sts , M1ddleport, Rev .
ODel l Manley pastor, Sony Hudson , Sunday School superinten ,
dent. Sunday school. 9:30a m ,
evening worship, 130 p m ;
prayer and pro1se service .
Wednesday 7:30pm
THE PEOPLE S CHURCH OF
POMEROY - Corner Motn and
Court St s, third floor over
ltghthou5e Restaurant. Henry
Cook , pastor Sunday school , 10
om , mo rning wor shtp , 11 om ,
even1 ng serv•ce, 7 30 Wednes ·
day even1ng ser vice, 7·30. In terdenommat•onol , full gospel.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOO Pas tor Denn1s Bol es
Sunday
School , 10 o m : worship servtce,

m"tm g, Wedn•sdoy, 7.30 p m
RUTLAND APOSTOliC CHURCH
OF JfSUS CHRIST , Tho mas l
HolMes, pasto r . Bib le study,
SoturdCJy, 7.30 p ,m , E¥CJng•hsh c
p.m ., prayer meet mg, fuesdoy .
7&lt;)() p m.. &amp;4ble Study . Thursday ,
7 30 p .m
POM E R0 Y
WE Sl EVAN
HOLINESS - Harri sonville Rood :
Dewey K1ng , pastor ; Ed1s0f1
Weaver , assis ta n t, Hen ry Eblin .
Jr. , Sunday school supt Sundar
school , 9,30 o .m , mo rn ing wor sh ip , I I om Sunday e'l erling se r v1ce, 7.30. prayer meetmg , Thu rs day , 7 30 p m
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF:
GOD - Not Pentecostal, Rev
Geo rge Otter . pg~tor . Wors h •p
ier vice Sundoy, 9:AS om ; Sun ~
doy school, 11 a .m .. wo r5htp s&amp;r v•ce . 7 JO p .m Thursday pray e r
me eti ng , 7 30 p m .
MT. HERMON Uni ted Brethren
Church Sunday School 9 30 a .m.
Wo rsf-t1p se rvice 10..4 5 om .
Preochtng services every Sunday
oltarnatlng wtth C E. Wednesda y
prayer meetlng 7:.30 P m Re ¥ .
James leach , pastor. DO\I'I d
Holter loy leader
JEHOVAH 'S WITNESSES. l mtle
east of Rutland , Junction of Route
124 and Noble Summit Rood (T·
174 ) Sunday B1ble Lecture, 9 30
a... Watchtower study , 10·30
o.m . Tuesday , B1ble study, 7 and
8 15 p.m . Thursday , theocrat ic
school, 7 ·30 p m . serv •ce
mee ting, 8.30 P m.
.
HOPE BAPHST - 570 Grant St .,
Middleport. Bobb)l Elki ns, pastor
Sunday School. 10 am .; worship
ser\ltce, 11 a.m •. evening serv tc e ,
7 30 p m
Thursday prayer
meeltng and Bible study . 7 ;30
p .m .
RUTLAND FREEWILL BAP TIST
Church - Leland Holey , pastor
Sunday school , 10 am .. evening
service , 7 30 p.m
Prayer
meeflng, Wednesday , 7 30p.m
CHURCH OF GOO of Prophecy ,
locCJied on the 0 . J. White Fl ood
off highway 160 Sunday School
10 o.m . Su permtenden t John
Loveday Ftrst Wednesday mght
of month CPMA serv1ces second
Wednesday WMB meettng , th ird
th rough ftfth youth service
George Croyle. pastor .
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL - 570
Grant St, Mtddleport, Rev " Bobby
Elk•ns . Sunday school . 10om ;
l'f'O rntng worshi p, II , eo~entng
worsh1p, 7:30 p m ; Thursday
e¥ening Bible study and p(ay er
meeting, 7 30 p.m . Aff iliated with
S.B.C.
HYSELL
RUN
F R EE
METHODIST- Rev He rbert Ati ing , pastor . Sunday school. 9 : 30
a.m ; mornmg worship , 10 15 to
11 om . Evangel istiC serv 1ce, 7 : 30
p.m ., prayer meet mg, 7 p m
Thur sday
BRADFORD
CHURCH
OF

Sundot settoo1, 9.30 o tn ; morn ·
- ,ng ch.urc~ 1030 a .m. Jun1or
chu(th program un.der dJrectton
ol Koren M rol for ch ildren . 2-10.
during re gular church hour ln
churc h basem en t. S.Undoy e ven·
1ng sen-.ce , 7 p m.: Wtdnesdoy
strvice . 1 30 p.m

•

MOTHER AND 1 ARE
GREATLY RELIEVED.

Meigs
Property ;•
Transfers!•
Ernes! J Dee!er. Audell e
Oee!er !o Ell is McMillan ,
Phylli s McMillan . 1. 0~2
acres. Chester.
·
G Roger Morgan, Ruth E.
Gollhard!, Ronald L Gci.
!hard! !o Gladys J . Morga~.
part lois 166, 167. Pomero~ .
Gladys J . Morgan to Leo
Vaughan ,
Rowena
Vaughan, Interest in

NOW PI' YOU
UNDSR5iAioJD WHY
I 51\IP TH!RI!'!J NO

MEIGS TIRE CENTER INC.

LINDA'S LADY FAIR
BEAUJY SALON

MEIGS PLAZA

John F. Ful!z
Ph. 992-2101
Pomeroy

ELLIS &amp; SONS SOHIO

TIM!! TO COUWT
THS MOioJEYf

Pomeroy

Middleport, Ohro

r.,______________...,_

Dana L. Kessinger,

parcel I ,

Orange .

:

Lillian R. Roush !o Walt't"
D Roush, lol, Middlepor!
Woodrow
Schaffe( ,
Kathryn Schaffer to Ray E
Adams, Forrest T . Adams,
a7.136 feet. Olive.
James , Casey ,

..

Conn ie

Casey !o Royal Jerome Cook,
Ann Cook, lot, Middleport.
Enzo Barsotti, Jean Balisalt I, Carl Barsotti, Kathryr
L Barsotti to Raul L Cast.-.,
Gemma M. Cascl. lot, Mlt
dleport

·,

Pomeroy.

;

Homer Brlckles, Helen 11
Brlckles to Homer Brickle~,
Helena
Bnckles ,
Iota.

The Almanac
By
United
Press
United Press International.
Today ls Wednesday Ju*
22, tile 173rd day of 1977 wift
192 to follow
...

WE 5HA1L
"'E E1 AT ltlf

OlO SHACK

SY THf

CREEK OHE •

The moon is between its
last quarter and new phase.

HOUR AFTEI!
DARK!

The JI).Orning stars are
Mercucy, Venus, Mars and

Jupiter · •

'

~

•

ULABNER
BUZZ OFF,

SMITH NELSON
INC.
500 E . Matn

1---..0.------------1

Pomeroy

FRENCH'S SUNOCO
SERVICE CENTERS

(For 1 reol auction call the Real
McCoy)
I. 0. ( IMC) McCoy
915-3944

282 W. Main- Pomeroy~ 992- 9962

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

~

510 N.2nd, Middleport-992-3451

' ' OH QUITTINGTIME ALREADY?

I

MORSE
CHAPf,L , Worsf-tp 11
p.m
.
a.m .. Church School9.30 a.m .
PORTLAND , Worship 7 ·30 p .m :
Church School9 :30 a .m.

at 9 30 a.m . Worshtp services at

7:30 p m B•ble study ond Youth

meeting
at
Wednesdays

8

p m.

on

THE STORE WITH A HEART
Racine
Ph. 949·2626

Ph. 949-2000

J...--------------1
1M son

Gilmore, first elder, e'llening ser·
viC e, 7 :30pm Wednesday prayer
meet1ng , 7:30p .m .

MT MORIAH CHURCH OF GOO,
Rocine Rout• 2. The Rev, Charles
Hand, pastor . Sunday school , 9:AS
o.m .. morning worship, 11 a .m .
Eve nmg services, Tuesday and
Friday, 7·30 p m .

BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH
OF

CHRIST. Doug Seamon ,
minister. B1ble study, 9:30a. m ..
morntng worshtp, 10.30 a.m .;
evenmg worship, 7 •30 p .m .
Wednesday Bible study, 7 30 p . m
~ENO

CHURCH OF CHRIST.

George Fredertck , supt. Sunday
morni ng servtce, 9.30 o.m. with
preaching on first and third Sun ·
dav of month by George Pickens.

STIVERSVILLE

COMMUNITY

CHURCH, Sunday School service,
10 a.m ., Prayer mHtlng, Thurl·
cloy , 7 p .m ; Sunday evening service, 7 p .m .

ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST.
Pomeroy-Harrisonville Rd ; Don
Kennedy , pa1tor. Bil l McElroy ,

PLL'A6E ?rr

ThirdS!.

Racine

'-------------1
Ph . 949-2882

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE
SERVICES
214 E. Mlln
Pomeroy
Ph. 992-5130

1----------------1
WAID CROSS SONS STORE
GROCERIES&amp; GENERAL
MERCHANDISE

Ph. 949-2550

KEN GROVER PHOlOGRAPHY
PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
Atrlai-Sc:hoOII·Wtdcllnga
Ph. 915-4155
Chester

RIDENOUR TV &amp;APPLIANCE
GAS SERVICE .
ChH11r
915-3:107

lubricatin'!

The Almanac
United Press International

BRIDGE

Ph. 949-2487

On this day m hi.story :
In 1665, Thomas Willett
became the first mayor of
New York City.
In 1940, more than a halfbilliOn
dollars
was
transported from England to
Canada in the face of a
possible Nazi invasiOn of
Brrtain
(which
never
materialized).
In 1948, Russia blockaded
the weslem zones of Berlin,
settmg the stage for the
"Berlin airlift" to support tbe
two million people in tbe
divided German city

Today IS Friday, June 24,
the 1751h day of 1977 with 190
•
to follow .
The moon 1s in its first
quarter.
drawing trumps,. South should
The morning stars are
21
NORTH
cash lhe ace afid king of Mercury Venus, Mars and
• Q6 3
diamonds and lead a club •If Jupiter.
• Q9 64
etther opponent takes the
Th
t KJ 32
tr icks and leads a diamonll ~r
Th~s~v~~:~go~t~ is:teturn.
· spade, Sou th wou~ be sure of
d
.
IS
are
lii:t" co ntract so " the be~t un er lhe stgn of Cancer.
WEST
EA~
defense would . be a secodd
Amencan cle r gyman
• J9 a 5
• K7 2
clull ' This hme . South should • Henry Ward Beecher was
: :;
, : ~ 10 a!
d• scard h1s sma ll diamond , born June 24, 1613
"' K J a 6 4
"' A Q 53 2
The defense would have two
SOUTH ID) 11- - ·
Jm:lls m, but na .w.a;:.. .to. get
~
• A 10 I
I
more tha n one othc;r
\!I lid 'ifft\f
D 1t
THAT SCRAMBLSD WORD G~ME
• A K J 8 s 2 ! · '.': ;t,Cfu61ead would alla.J §.;uth 0 ~ ~
" .!!l
w
oy Henn Arnolo ano Bob Lee
1
t t\ 7 6
ruff tn dummy a nd discard' a ,; u nscramble these tou r Jumbles. · "ra::---:::~;:"'-

South off by 10 per cent
\) I

2\6E. Second
•Pomeroy
Ph. 992-3325

Il0; I

..

But wherever it

sh m~s

. . there are shadows.
I

Wherevet there are golden opponun ttJCS there are also sombre tragedies.
Some fa1l to grasp thetr blessings.
'
Ours is a nat1on whit:h guanmtees to every ch ild the opponuntty for rehgmus
tra1n1~g

Yet ours ts u nat1on wh1ch smart s under the scourge of a moral diseaseJUvemle Uelmquency.

'
Wednesday
Acrs
22 · 1-21

8. 1·21

the scourge of delmquency, a free nation mu st leave to your c:onsctrtlce the
quest1on of your child's moral and reltg1ous education.

Fridny

G~ has ~lessed America . With a neart!.y Church read)' and eager to provide
&lt;;hr1 st1ap tra tntng for your child, and rehg10us foundatton for your fam tly's
ltfe-the Sun shmes bnght. But there are shadows You must decide'
Copyrigtlt1977 K~ttsl..-"

Scnptures selected by The Amencan B•bte Soctely

HEINER'S BAKERY
BAKERS OF GOOD BREAD
Hun1ington. W. Va .

RACINE PlANING MILL
Ph. ,2.:1971

Langsville

Saturday
f Cormthtanl
14. 1-20

Ph. 742·9045

SALES-SERVICE
Fire Ex11nguishers
Fire Dept. Equip.

~w

--+.;;

MARK V STORE

YOUNG'S CARPETING
Feo!uring

For All Your Shopping Needs
Ph. 992-2178
234 E. M.lln
Pomeroy

Middleport, Ohio

K&amp;C JEWELERS
Keepsake Dlomond Rings
212 E. Mlln
Pomoroy
Ph. 992-3715

'

•

• lO

•
•

Well

Ph . .:.::o:1eom Extr~~~i;',"~-7630 :
Rt. 3, Pomeroy

••

••

•
'•

•'••

•"
I

•

•
•,•' .

BEN FRANKLIN STORE

.'•

•
••
•·

North East

1
r;tb

~:ss ~::: ~ ·

Opening lead - , 3 •

••

RAUS
Middleport, Ohio

::::

•
•
•
••
•

spade

Netlher vu lnerable

•••

••

-,.

rn

..•

/0 1·15

Ad¥-trt•ling Servtee, Strasburg, Vtrg•Na

SEAR'S CATALOG M

BING'S MARKET
&amp; TEXACO SERVICE
yornon &amp; Btrt!Y Bing

For The llfs! In TV Viewing
Call992-2505

I Cormthians

~--~.;.,.;,;.;,;;;,;:.;:.,;;;;::.,

' BORN LOSER

POINTVItW CABLE TV
SYSTEMS, INC.

Thursday
R ommts

In bless ing you wtrh a son or daughter. God has entrusted to you a precious
soul, You are required by law to give your child a secular educatiOn But desp1te
1

CARS&amp;TRUCKS
1
461 S. 3rd
Middleport I
Ph. 992-21?6

.... ,

IJ

DAN THOMPSON FORD, INC.

t---------------+_..,.________.,. ,. __'1"_______,______
Rtcine

wu1

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD SR.
REALTOR..

THE FiNEST IN MOBILE
HOMES
Pomeroy

RACINE PWMBING
&amp; HEAnNG

need

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

&amp; SERVICE, INC,

George Frederick , supt. Service I"'
weekly. 9:30 a m, on Sunday .
Preaching first and tl-urd Sundays
of month by Cl1ffard Smith, 9:30
Dor re ll Doddrill , pastor . Sunday
School , 9:30 o .m .; leonard

TIMMY I

IT'S BEEN SO LONGSINCE ~ HELD A
CHILD IN MY AI&lt;MS!

He's out! All he

Racine

BOB'S MARKET Ph. 773-5721
KINGSBURY HOME SALES

am . Worship 7:30 p.m .; Prayer
Meeting 7 30 p .m
Tuesday,
VtSitotion7:30 p m lstThursday.
SILVER RIDGE . Worship 10 a .m.
Church School9 a.m.

om
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION ,

YOU WERE SO
ANXIOUS FOR
ME TO MEET ?

A...,.,.,,
MAY I HOLD HIM?

t\Est&gt;IE?

BRADFORD AUCTION CO.

UMW 3rd Tuesdoy Bp m
._..;,1;,;100;,;.:E:.;·,;;MI;;;,;l;,;n_ _ _.,;P.,;h;,;·;:,";;2;.,·7:,;0;;;3;;,4-1
REEDSVILLE , Sun~oy School9:30 r

KENO CHURCH Of CHRIST,

THAT!

HERE HE 18 ...
BI RDIE1S SO N 1

il-l IS YOUNG- MAN

Pomeroy

296 W. 2nd

2 CONVENIENT MARKETS
Pomeroy
MIDWAY MARKET Ph. 992-2512

a m ; Worsh1p 10:45 am ; Prayer
meeting Wedne$day 7 45 p m.,

TUPPERS PLAINS. Woroh1p 9

IMN WE'D LIKE
YOU lOMEETI

WHER:: IS
'MOM?WEVE
GOT COMPANY
FOR DINNER!

Ph. 992-3863

NORTH BETHEL. Worship 11
o m.: Church School lOam
ALFRED. Sunday School 9:30

a m. Church School10 om .

1HING5 YOJR
FIRST DAY BACK
ON 11-&lt;E JOoLAIZE
YOU 11AUNT 11 •

OH, WINNIE, l 'M
AFRA ID I:M MUCH
lOOOLD FOR
ANYTHING LIKE

THE ATHENS COUNTY
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.

NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Rev. R1chard Thomos
Pastor
Duane Syden strfcker
John Douglas
A&amp;soc1ales
JOPPA, Worshtp 10 a .m ..
Church School 9 om .: Prayer
Meet1ng Wednesday 8 p.m .
lONG BOTTOM, Sunday school

A VERY
SPECIAL YOUNG-

OV£RI/01Nf3

MEIGS COUNTY BRANCH

RACINE FOOD MARKET

a.m. Worsh1p 1st and 3rd Sundays
10:30 a .m

~SY!

Nationwide Ins. Csa. of
Columbus, 0 .
Pomeroy
B04W. Main
Ph. 992-2318

1-------------------------~

SUTTON, Church School 9 30

Ell.lt&lt;E FUES
WHEN )OU 'RE

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

Ph. 949-9130

~ERE'S

YOU 1RE NOT
MYL.il-IE TIME

ROSEBERRY'S PENNZOIL

Racine

WEEKrr

Ph. 992 -2174

Pomeroy

McCOY AUCTION SERVICE

MORNING STAR. Worsh1p 9.30
o.m .; Church School 10:30 o.m :
Mid-Week Service Wednesd!iJy 8

IUJ~-r

MOTO~S,

LET ART FALLS. Church School r

lst, 2nd, 3rd Sundays 10 15 a .m .
4th Sunday 9.1S a m ; Warshtp
ht, 2nd, 3rd Sundays 9:15a.m .;
4th Sunday 7 :30p.m .

1-lQ\ESr,
HUMB/...e

BUICK- PONTIAC-GMC

WE FILL DOCTORS
PRESCRIPTIONS

m .2955

HONIDLEAP

TA/..K!"-

r

CONS ~:)YoUR - THGY FIRGD YOU
5~ FbSDfCK !"- YO.Ul&lt;E-,..--11 f36LAUSE: YOU
NOT A G URU r- YOU'RE'
WEP.Ja-J' r WORTl-1
EVEI-J A COP~r
$,22 50 A

WG

KID5 "!'- YOUR GURU A/JD I
IW/5H TO HAVE: A
I
PRIVATE' U 'L
'

BAKERS OF GAY90 BREAD
Middleport
Ph. 992-3030

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY

U~ .

;

Gladys J. Morgan to L""
Loring Vaughan 11. intere~ t
In lots, Pomeroy.
•
Roy F. Riftle, Frona K
Rllfle 1o Fred Kessinge~.

BETSY ROSS BAKERY

Complete Automotive Serv•ce
locust &amp; Beech Sts Middleport
Ph. 992-9921

Call949-2838 For Appatntment
Rae me, Ohto

THOUGHT THEY'D
DID THEOY? ... WI!LL ,
T H~Y · ve GOT ANOTHER
THINK COM!IoJ(;:

THE FlJ217.

TRAP

.
loti,

THESE MESSAGES OF OUR RELIGIOUS HERITAGE ARE SPONSORED EACH WEEK BY THE FOUOWING

SOUTHERN&lt;LUSTER

.4th Sundays.
APPLE GROVE , Sunday School
9:30a .m. Worship 7.30 p .m . 1st
ond 3rd Sundays ; Prayer meeting
Wednesday 7.30 p m. Fellowship
tupper first Saturdoy6 p.m . UMW
2nd Tuesday 7 30 p.m .
EAST LETART , Chruch School
1st, 2nd, 3rd Sundays , 9.30 om .

Sunday

~~o:EN~O~M~IN~A~TI~O:N~A~L;:.,~R:•:·~·~R~o:be:r~l_::•~·m::;,;~w~ed~n:•:•~do~y~P:m~y~e:r~o~n~d~B~I·:.,_~P~ro~y~e~r:::.;:::l;.·W~ed:n:•:•~d:o:v~7~30~~11:30~o~.m:..~o:nd:.:7:·3~0~p::::m:·~P~r~o~y•:.'_:c~H:R~Is:T:::G:a:b:r:I•:I.:.M~ro~z~._::p:os~t~o:':._.,!Th~e~e~v~e~n~in~g~s~t~ar~.~is:,1S~atur:n~.
•

a.m . Worship service 7·30 p .m

CARMEL. Chruch School 9.30

supt.

school, 9.30 om .: mormng wor ship and commumon . 10: 30 o .m.;
Sunder evening vouth Christian
Endeovor, b p.m., wonhlp , .,.
vice, 7 p.m Wednesdov e¥en•ng
prayer meeti ng and B•ble st udy .
7 30p m
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH,
Pine Gtove. fh• Rev . W tlltom
M tddlesworth , Pastor
Church
ser\lices' 30 am . Sunday School
10.30a .m .
BRADBURY
CHURCH
Of
CHRIST . Mr . Donald Roley , poster .
Sunday 1chool, 9:30 am .. worsh1p servtce. 10 ..30 am Sunday
services . 7 p.m., youth group,
Wednesday. 1 p .m .
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST, Rev . Earl
Shuler , postor. Sunday school
9·30 a.m .: Church serviCe, 7 p.m..
youth meet ing, b p m .Tuesdoy Bi ble Study, 7 p.m.
RACINE CHURCH
OF THE
NAZARENE, Rev. John A Coff
mon , pastor Sunday School , 9.30
a.m .. Gerold Wells, supr . Morn
ing worsh1p, 10 30 a .m .. Sunda¥
evemng worshtp, 7:30, Preyer
meetlng, Wednesday , 7 30p m
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST, Don l.
Walker . Pastor, Ronrue Salser,
Sunday school supr , Sunday
school . q.30 a .m ; morning wor
sh1p, 10 4:0am ; Sunday evemng
worship, 7 30, WedneSday evenlng Bible study , 7.30.
DANVILLE WESlEYAN , Rev R
D Brow n pastor Sunday School,
9.30 a.m ., morntng worship
10:.. 5 )lOUth terv1ce, 6 AS p.m.,
evemng worship, 7 :30 p.m.:
prayer and proise , Wednesday,
7 30 p .m .
SILVER RUN FREE BAPTIST,
Mtles Traut, pastor. Sundoy
school , 10 o.m. Ste .,.e Li ttl e supt
Evening serviCe, 7 p .m .. proyer
mee ting, Thursday, 7 p m
CHESTER CHURCHOF GOO,
Rev Bobby Porter, pastor Sun·
day school , 9·30 am ., worship
serv1ce, 11 a.m .. ~tventng serv1ce.
7 30 yCI)u th service, Wednesday ,
7·30 p .m.
lANG SVI Ll E
CHRISTIAN
CHURCH , Ted Jones . pas1 or . Sunday school. 9.30 a.m.; Roy
Stgmon , supt , morning worshtp,
10.30, Sunday e'1en1ng service,
7.30 mtd- week serviCe, Wednesday , 7·30p m
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE
Rev
Dale lklss
pastor.
Bob Moore, Sunday
Sch ool sup! ; Sunday school
classes for oil ages , 9.30 o.m..
morni ng worship , 10:.45 o.m .,
NYPS , 6·30 p.m.; e...angelistlc 1 er-v 1ce, 7 .30 p m. Prayer ond fasting
Tuesday. 10 om ., Midweek
prayer serv1ce, Wednesday , 7:30
p.m.: men's prayer meetmg
Sqturday. 7 p.m ; m•nlonary
meeting , second Wednesday,
7:30p.m.
UNITED
FA IT H
NON .

1

Church School I o a.m .
N,I NERSVILLE, Worsh1p 10 a .m.
Church Schaol9 a .m .

school

BARNEY

ByOswald&amp;James Jacoby
South dre w trumps with two
I BEEN BAKIN' GINGER
leads , cashed th e abe of
'
WHOLE
diamonds,
finessed dummy's
COOKIES TH
jack unsuccessfully and evenBLESSET MORNIN'
tually wenL down one trick
wh en diamo nds fa1led to
break , spades misbehaved
~'"- -LIS&gt;J" scandalously and the defense
failed to drop dead
L
" l guess I Just lost a 90 per
L-.-o-1 cent contract," complained
South .
"No, you lost a 100 per'cent
contract ," replied North .
"You had a sure thing pia~ ...
North was right . After

---r-----~-:_-----~-~
I AIN'T
LAID E\.fES
ON IT,
PAW ---

n-v-;:::::c:::1

A spade lead

wo~1d

hold the de fens~ ,lp" OQ.e., spade
tnck and a diamond le4d
would also be h~~~~-·

I

one tetter to each square to 1p1 m
, fg ut qrd1nary wo rds.

And I'm

1 00%

still single!

.....

1 ,.,

'

,I KLU FE :

~ · I" ....I,,.• K~ tJ

A Utah reader' wSnts .to

~~r;-

the correc t opening bid

li&gt; AQxx• ¥ xx + ~tAQp)l

j

v •..,...,._ . . ...... ..- ...,

! HAIKK
I I

V

J "J.

The standard open1ng bid 1s
L_L _..ll\.
"-a_- L
. __J_
one spad e, but 1f you want to ~ ' -~
open with one club you Will be
followmg the practice of some
)
experts. Whatever you dp ,
don't pass
L J'-&lt;:L__JL_L_.L__J
(Do you have a Qvesf1on for

ALFFEB

I

the flxp erts? Wn te ' 1Ask l~e
Jscobys ' ' ca r e of th is
newspaper. The Jscobys " will
answer i ndiVJdual questions 1!

stamped , sell-addressed
snvelopas are enclosed The

DUNBOA I

&lt;;;HE WAS FIT

A5 A F117DLE 1
BUT COULI71\J 'T
0 ET THIS.
Now arrange the ctrcled let1ers to
lorm the .surpnse answer , as svggesled by the abOve car1oon

J I

Print answer here:

most interesting q1Jest1ons wtll
be used In th ;s column and will
receive copies of JACOBY

MODERN)

I

D I I I J"
11

[

(Answers tomorrow)

1
Ves lt~ rday

s

I

J umbles

Answer

•

DELVE GAUDY NICELY CRABBY .
What the G I gol- THE "GENERAL 'IDEA

'

'

�....:·

15 Wunl.s ur Undt:r
C..h
Ctwrt:e
100
I !.I

1 lilly

ISO

Ztiays

3daylil

180

&amp;days

300

,.,

190

'"

EM1 h wurd vvtor Uw mumnwn I~
wurds ~ 4 u!nLs ~ word ~r doll)'
All$

W.yi

rurumlfl utlwr Ul&lt;lll cUI\k'\!UtlVt
WUI bt- dutr~e&lt;.l it! the I dtt)'

I'lilt'

In memory CMrd ul Ttulnk.ll tlnd
Ot.lth&amp;llry 6 1..~11\..s ~~ wvn.l 13 W
lllUIIJII W II Cash Ul &lt;ldVIill l~

Mvbllto Homt! Nlt'll11tkl Vau d Sllld.:

lil t' &amp;6Ct.~ll'11 'JUly Wllh clelh Willi
urtkr 2fll'e.nt d w.rt!tl for IH!!i um•y,

NoticH

SPI NET CONSOLE PIANO S"LE WANTED TIMBER cutten, s ktdde r
end doutr operators Phone
Won te-d R11spons1ble party to
992 5397 or 992 3861 after 7
toke over Sp net P1ol\o Easy
p m lrt State Chtpplng Inc
terms Can Qe seen locally
Wnte Cred1t Manage r P 0 MIDDLE AGED woman to cor• for
80)( 207 Carlyle II 62231
e ld,dy couple L•11e tn If tn
tersted cnii 8B2 '1973
Kays
CAll GR ACE Jo hntan
Beau ty Sa lon
M•ddleport
~2 77'15 starttng June 29th
FREE PUPP IES
, Britton Sponte!
Phone 949 2162
For Rent

u1g. Box Nwnb.!r In C1:1re ot The~~~·
und

Tlll' Pubhsl~r r~r\'t's U~t: IV:ht '

to edit ur rdet.111111)1 11ds ~111c d tib-

J~dtUfUtl

rfil! Pubhsht:r Wlilllul. 00
rt&gt;!;ponslble fur Ilk~~ t' Uum one mt or

~1 Ulllt!'rtlon

Phone 002 2156

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
Munday
r

Noon on Saturday
TtJr~ y

thru Fnd01y
4PM
lilt' day lM!fo t c VUbllliiiiUI
Swtdliy
4PM
Fmlay aftetnoun

I

PIANO LESSONS ch ldrens and
adults
Mr5
Harvey Van
Vranken 992 2270
2 KITTENS FOR gtveoway

One
long hatred block and wh1te
ane flger str ped
Phone
992 3361 onyl 1me or q92 77q1

~!~~--

TO GIVEAWAY 1 yr old mole
short haired po1nter Great
watchdog end great with ktds
Phone 742 3162

HMA
Problem?

CAll
CRISIS LINE
992-5554
TWO SEALPOINT Slcmese cats
Mole &amp; female neutered Affec
f!onote need good nome 3
years old Coll992 292B
_

FOR GIVEAWAY .. part mlmture
8 4 part Beagle pupp1es 7 wks
old Free to anyone Phone
992 70B5

SEW n SEW cutlet Store Mom St
Racme Oh (former Post Office
bu1ldlng) Fabrtc Sale All fobr1c
m store only $1 98 yd
polyester double kn1ts open
9 4 Mo~_._ lhru Sal

JONES BOYS
NEW STORE HOURS
9a

BA SEMENT SALE ot Burtha
Rustiell, at Wo lfpen Rood
Th\ir sday Fr day Sat\irday &amp;
Sunday 9 5
MOVING SAL~ ~ lb45 lmcoln
He1ghts 9 om
1 p m Fur
ntrure wtg!l clothes co ms
much more
YARD SALE Thurs Frt &amp; Sa l
June 23 24 25 Storlmg at 9
a m ol 778 01 ver St Mid
dleport Omette set range e~t
lro k I chen cha~rs toys bicycle
gloss wore gtrls ond women s
clothtng lo ts more
GA RAGE SALE June 24 8. 25 At
7 2 2 mt north of C::hester
Desk chcurs old bed toys
games
all stzes doth lng
glassware
J FAMILY VARD sole Thurs Fn
and Sot June 23 24 &amp; 25 from
9 30 to b p m 2 mHes from
Langsville on Rt 325 1 Y, mtles
up_ -YARD SAlE June 24 &amp; 25 10
a m to 5 p m 1 block from
pool 617 H gh St Mlddleporf
Toys swtng set lounge choir
household 1tems
,.. --~----YARD SALE ,:ndoy 12 30 4 30 &amp;
Saturday 10 00 3 00 of lorry
Pickens res1dence Route 124
gomg to Rutland Up to dote
~clothl~~d ~~tt ure__ _
6 FAMIL V YARD sale Wdl be held
at Ir-ene Gtlmores &amp; Moxme
M1choels Sot &amp; Sun June 25 to
June? Call 992 7665

-

-

-

VARD SALE Thurs Fr1 Sal June
23 2-4 25 9 30 to 6 p m 2 ml
lrom langsville on Rt 325 5th
house up Some cnttques
clothJng 8 mise Items

RISING STAR Kennel Boord1ng
Indoor Outdoor rum groom•ng
all breeds
clean sanitary
facthttes oe 367 7112 Chesh~re
Phone 161")367 02~---HOOF HOLLOW Buy sell trade
or train horses RUTH REEVES
tramer Phone (6U) 698 3290

-----AKC SHETLAND

--~

--

sheep dogs
(Mm ) Collies 2 females 7
weeks old Shots and wormed
Phona (6U) 367 0292 or
367 7112

----------------MEIGS COUNTY Humane Society
An1mol Corel me 992 7680 or
otter 6 p m 992 5427

-DOGGIE

----

BEAUTY Parlor
all
breeds styled the way you ltke
No drugs used Call far ap
potnfmenl 742 3162
_ _

REG AKC DOBERMAN Pmcher
pup Champ1on blood lme
Phone 843 2341

FRIENDLY SERVICE'
SUPER SAVINGS!
TO GIVEAWAY Abandoned pup
py 8 wks old Small Ch1wawo
type good wtth ch1ldren needs
good home Phone 992 2244 or
9'12 5207

-·~~---:--

WHITE k1ttens to gtve away
Phone 992 2817

GOING OUT of bustness prtces
reduced on all fcbrtcs 40"¥. off
notmns Turn of Church of God
layne Sf Fabric House 167
Layne St New Hoven W Va
WATEFt WELL dr1lllng Phone
W•ltlam P Grant at 742 2ol79
after6 p m

MEIGS
Equipment Co.
POMEROY,O
PH 992 2176

1976 HONDA CIVIC CVCC good
cond1hon Good go' m1leage
Ph~ ne (~41_6~~084 anrt~e-

CORVETTE
75 Must sell lm
maculate like new all eJiltras
13 000 m1les Best offer Phone
I 446 B502

---- ------1969 FORO Good 390 engine &amp;
transm1n1on
$75
Phone
992 2192 between 9 30 and 5 30
and ask for Cheryl or may be
seen at 655 Sycamore St tn
Middleport
1q76 FORO F250 4 whe•l dnve
$3900 Call 742 2590
~- -----~
1q73 FORD ptckup tru(k 59 000
miles Phone 742 3167 after 5
-~ 9923615 ___ - 1973 MONTE Carlo landau V 8
engme power sleermg power
brckes otr cond•tmnmg steno
8 track wtth AM rod1o Phone
985 -4123

SWISS COLONY travel trotters
custom made MAPLE LEAF
tandems 16 up CRICKET truck
campers spec1al at CODNER s
CAMPERS
Rcmbow R1dge
Open evenings Take Metgs 2B
or 32 to Bas han Owner Robert
C~ner long Bottom Oh1~
1a FT LEISUFtE TIME Camper self
conto1ned e,.cellent condttlon
Phone 992 23B6
WILL SACRIFICE 1977 28 sell
contained travel troller factory
atr Tandem wheels Carpel
lots of ext ras See anyltme
Shady Waters Campground 10
m• south of Pt Pleosont on Rtl
2 Galhpohs Ferry W Vo
-

-

R-

5th ANNUAL CHILDREN FISH DERBY
The Me1gs Co. F1sh &amp; Game Assn. will hold
a catf1sh derby Saturday, June 25, 8 A M. to
4 P.M.

Young's tarpeting

Pomeroy Landmark

The •1• limtt Is 15 ya•n and younger boys or g1rls

1. DEPINIMBIUn

Allllnment,
wheel
balancing,
rune-up,
brake work,
minor
repa1r.
Behind Rutland Orotle
School Ev111i.. _.k by
appointment I'll 742 lOtS.
6-5 1 mo I'll

804 West Mil in Str"t
Just Below the Jonn
Boys' in Pam.,.oy, Ohio
Phont99222fl
6·15-1mo.

2. COMFORTABIUn
3. AFFORIMBILITY

....•:;

EXPIRIINCID _
Radiator
Service

SWAIN'S
Automatic
TransmiSjJOn Serv1ce

PARTS • LABOR
GUARANTEED

:•
.,
••••
•
- .......

Vtnyl &amp; Aluminum
S1d1ng,
Storm
W1ndows
&amp; ·
Insulation.
Ca II Professionals

Continuous

one

piece

gutters We hlng It, or do II
yourself Spectal prtces ta
builders

1

CARTER'S

109 High St
Pomeroy

PWMBING &amp;
HEAnNG INC.

Weddmgs
Portra1ts
Passports
Ann1versanes
Spec1al Occas1ons
Bob Hoeflich

992 5292
t.-22 I mo

________

-

----

----

WE LOT

CAN GOODS

---

-----

Miller Produce
&amp;
Garden Center
1210 Washington Blvd
Belpre, Ohio

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

----

HAY FOR sole Col/949 2870

----

19 In BlACK and Wh1te Phllco
Excellent cond lion
Prtcecl
re~s.?~~ly Call ~2 2276
SPARKLERS
PARTY poppers
snakes
other July 4th
nov'e llles
Adults
only
Defm1te ly no ftrecrocke rs
F fe s S 3rd Mtddleport
PEEK A POO
DOG
house
broken Phone 992 7074 or
992 3465
FOR SALE - One white com
mode wosh bosm ond shower
stall like new One four
cylinder
header
~hoM
992 5501
FERGUSON FARM tractor and
eq , pment for sole
Call
949 2172

NEED A WATER
Let Pomeroy Landmark
soffen &amp; conditton your
water and a Co-op w•ter
soflener Model UC XVI
Now Only

'279.95

Let us test
Free

your

water

- Pomi!UJ Landmark
¥.~JociC W Ursey, Mgr

~

Pho. . 992 2111
J

l

It's

Suzuki

from the word Go/

New'76 &amp;'77 RM's
PRICED TO 00 1

~~A ••••••••••• !699
~~A .......... }849

~~B ..........$1199
~~A .......... ~l199

JUST LISTED - Heres what you ve been asking tor
Beaut1ful6 yr old all carpeted home wtth 3 bedrooms
I 'h balhs utility room Nice kllchen with dln1ng area
Concrete por-ches Nat gas FA furnace Nice country
sett jng w1th approx 3~.. acre land m Eastern Dlstrict1 2
m l oil Rt I Asktng $29 BOO
JUST LISTED- Five bedrooms nlce11;, story house.
large living room with shl~lng oak flooring, largo
kitchen i\'ilh dining are&lt;~ 2 lull baths, 2 bedrooms down
and 3 upstairs Completely lnsulaled with F A nat gas
furnace Large porches &amp; garage Loc In Chester
Price $19 BOO
MINERSVILLE- 4 bedroom house mostly carpeted
wrap around porch, garage. large lot, all overlooking
the Ohio River Asking $16,500
EASTERN DISTRICT- 1'12 acres of level land nice
12x64 all carpeled mobile nome wllh 2 BRs living
room, kitchen and bath, 2 rooms built on, nice family
room with fireplace, plenty of garden space some fruit
trees Large workshop and block cellar City water and
S!ptlc tank Nice county settmg on County Rd 28 Pnce
$15,900

.

Become A Wmner'

AlliENS SPORT

CENT£R
140 Columbus Rd , A!liens
Come in I Let us show you
why A S C IS your Best Bet
In Motorcycling

UPPER SYRACUSE - Good 2 bedroom house with
bath Two more small J:&gt;edrooms could be finished
upstairs \ Also gara9e, storage building, strawberry
patch and garden space Driveway ts electric heated
Nice Ohio River view Furnilure can be bOught extra
Ptlce lor quick sale Hoose and lot, Sl2,600
Call J1Mmy O..m Al949 2318

SATURDAY, JUNE 2.5,1977

6 DO--Summer Semester 10
6 311--Matters of Life 6 TV Classroom B, Treehouse

••
••
•

•
d
••

No reasonable offer refused on any new or
used car or truck

'•
••
••
•••I

Buckeye Golden Card Honored On Parts &amp; S.rvice

DAN THOMPSON FORD

.

.

FOR ONE YEAR WITH ANY
FREE OIL
NEW OR USEO CAR OR TRUCK 2000 MILES
BEFORE
SH Pat Hill, Rocky Hupp or Darrel Dodrill
For a Good Oeal on a New or Used Vehicle
1
open evenings ttl 7 oo except Thursday and Saturday
Closed Sunday
992 2196 j
Middleport, 0

992-6282

&amp;AM lo4 30PM
SALES AND SERVICE
6 23-1 mo Pd.

-

'

fteld
Back Hoe Serv•ce
Rutlcnd Ohto Phone 742 2008
do roof1ng. consfruct•on
plumbmg and heattng No JOb
too Iorge or too small Phone
7•2 23•B
CARPENTER
floortng
cetl tng
paneling Phone 992 2759
_,_ ____
MOBILE Home Repotr
Elec
plumb ng and heotmg Phone
992 585B
HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex
cavattng
sept ic sys tem s
do~:er backhoe dump truck
limestone gro vel
blacktop
po..,.lng Rt 143 Phone I (614}
69B 7331
HARRISON S T V Repa r Sen• ice
Colis 276 Sycamore St M1d
...dleport Phone 992 2522
WILL

------_ ---------

0.0.

BRADFORD Auct1oneer Com·
plete Service Phone 949 248?
or 949 2000 Racme Ohio Crltt
Bradford

OFFICE
2
5 (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS ) - EAST COURT

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers toasters Irons
I
small oppltonces Lawn
next to State H1ghwoy Garage
on Route 7 Phone (614) 985
3B25

IN THE COURT OF

'
IN THE COURT

REMODELING Plumbing heatif!g ,
and all fypes of general repair
Work Q\ioronteed 20 yeora ex 1
perlence Phone 992 2409

t&gt;
n

SEWING MACHINE Repairs nr 1 '-:l ...
vtc&amp; all makes 992 228ol The
Fabric Shop
Pomeroy ..
Authorl~:ed Smger Soles and
•
S'!'rvlce We sharpen Sclsson ~

EXCAVATING dozer loocter and
backhoe work dump lrudu Oi
end lo boys far hire wilt haul :.:!,
f1ll dtrl to so1/ limestone and
grovel Call Bob or Roger Jef
u
WILL 00 electncol work res1den
fers
day phone 992 7089 t ..
tlol and commerc•ol
Coli
mght phone 992 3525 or 99:2 ., "
992 5726
5232
J:
NEIGLER BUILDING Supply for
buddtng
houses
Phone
949 2508 Guy Ne•glet Rocme
SAVE ON
0

-

~

--~-------

CARPUING
••

1•••
"'

r:m&amp;IP;-'fteiifUETiliL

---

Candy Strip

72 MAVERICK b cyl WIt sell or

Rubber Bed!

trade for larger cor of equal
value Phone 882 321 q

Regular S6 95
Save $4o.l8 5o! Yu.
I RoliBI... She;
I Roll Brown Shlg

Both Rubber leek
1971 CAMMERON 3 bedroom lui
1_., ccrpefed 10 ,. 30 ownmg
bock porch 10 »e 10 butldtng
furnished Second tra1ler on
rtght •n CO\Jntry Mob1le Home
Park Phone992 6161 .....,_ . _,__,_

- -----

___

1970 MONTEREY mobtle home
12x:60 2 bedroom $3600 Call
992 5001

Regular $195
Sale S5 18 5o! Yd

:JO rolls of corpet in stock.
Good seiKtion Ill on salt
Installed wilh poddleg,
e•tro to poy

ellll742·2211
TALK TO
WENDELL GRATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

RUTLAND
FURNnuRE

PIANO TUNING Lane Dantels 12
year!. of serv•ce
Ph one
992 2002

~

--

-Wlll BABYSIT 1n my home

5 d~ys
c week any sh1ft Rutland Call
741 2445

no

742

:r.m

1

OF COMMON PLEAS
MEIGSCOUNTY OHIO
AOA YVONNE TACKETT
Rutland OhtO
No 15 844
Pla!nttff
-vsFRED TACKETT
co Anna Wel&lt;:h
Middleport Oh10
Defendant
NOtiCe by
Publtcatlon
To Fred THcketl whose
last known address was c o
Anna Welch, Mlddlerort
Ohio you are hereby no if ted
that you have been named
Defendant m a legal act1on
entitled Ada Yvonne Tilckett
Plamt1ff vs Fred Tackett
Defendant This action has
been assigned case No 15 844
and• Is pending In the Court of
Ccrllmon Plus of Meigs
CoU(Ity, Pomeroy
Ohio
45769
TPie object of the complalnt
Is f~r divorce care custody
and control of the minor
children ot the parhes and
oth!r relief
Yp,u are required to answer
the,complamt within 28 days
au.- the test publlcat1on of
this' nottce which will be
pub, I Shed once each week lor
slx , success1vt weeks The
laslipubllcatloll Will be made
on July 1 1977 Btnd the 28
da-b for answero will com
ml!i.ce on that date
111 case of your fa1lure to
a(l~wer or otherwise respond
as tequ1red by the Ohio Rules
of ,Clvll Procedure dtvorce
W1lt be granted
Dated May 24 1917
i
LarrY Spencer
:
Clerk of Courts
Meigs county
•
CommOn Pleas Court
(5)~ 27 {61 3 10 17 24 {7) I 6tc

!NOTICE ON FILING
OF INVENTORY
ND APPRAISEMENT
The St•te of OhiO Meigs
cou ty court of common
Pie s, Proute Division
T6 the Executor or Ad
mlnlstrator of the estate, to
su~ of the follow ing 115 are
reSi:tents of the State at OhtO
viz:"_ the survlv1ng spouse
the" next
of
kin
the
bentfic 1arles under the will
and:; to the attorney or 1111
tor_uevs representing any of
the aforementioned persons
G&lt;Jy Midkiff No 22071
Beciford Twp Meigs Co
v",Pu are hereby notif ied
thal the Inventory and AP
prMsement of the estate ot
tht aforementioned
dec~ued, late of u1d County
Wefe filed In this court Said
Inventory and Appraisement
wlt~be1or hearing before this
co r:t on '"e 27th day ol June
197 at 10 oo o clock AM
/IJ.y person dt!slrlng to file
exqeptlans thereto must f1le
theJll at least five days prior
to fhe date s•t for hearing
Given under my hand and
se•l of said court this Uth

~

day of

COMMON PLEAS,
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO
DAVID B HERDMAN
Pomeroy, Oh•o
Pla•ntlff,
vs
LINDA HERDMAN
c o Wayne Fullle
General Delivery
waynesville. Missouri ,
Defendlnl
No 16 419
Notice by
Publication
To Linda Herdman, whose
last known address was C a
Wayne ..J Fullle
General
Oell..,.ery
Waynesv ille
Mlssourt
you are hereby
nottf1ed that you have been
named Defendant m a legal
action entitled Oavtd B
Herdman Plalntiff vs Ltnda
Herdman
Defendant Thts
acttOn has been ass1gned
case- No 16 419 and is pen
d1ng in the Court of Common
Pleas of Meigs County
Pomeroy Ohio 45769
The oblect of the complaint
Is tor d1vorce care custody
and control of the m Inor
children of the parties and
ather rellef
You are required to answer
the complaint wlthtn 28 days
after the last publ1&lt;:ai10n of
thfs nat1ce whtch will be
published once each week for
SIX successive weeks
The
last publlcat10n wtll be made
on June 24 , 1977~ and the 28
days for answer will com
mence on that date
In case of your failure Ia
answer or otherWISe respond
.as required by the Oh10 Rules
of C1vtl Procedure. divorce
will be granted
Dated

May 20 1977
Larry Spencer
ClerkotCourts
Me1gs County
Common Pleas Court

(5) 20 27 (6) 3 10, 17 24 6tc

•

Ju~:n~17:g

D Websler
Judge

By carolyn G Thomas
Deputy Clerk
(6) 17 t 24, 2tc
t

I

Club 10, Kenlucky Afield 13
1 ~)(;--Saturday Reporl 3 Children's Theatre 4, Eddie
Saunders 6 Treehouse Club B U S Farm Reporl
10 Advenlures of Gilligan 13
7 311--Bullwlnkle 3 World ol Survival 4 Valley of the
Dinosaurs 6 Way Out Games 8, Oddball Couple 13
Sesame 51 20
B oo-Woody Woodpecker 3 4, 15 Tom &amp; Jerry Mumbly
6.13 Sylvester &amp; Tweety B 10
B JG--Pink Panther 3.4 15 Jabberjaw 6 13, Clue Club
8 10, Mlsler Rogers 20
9 oo-Scooby Doo Oynomult 6 13 Bugs Bunny Road
Runner a Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10 Sesame St 20

I

., •
J
•
•
'

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration
300 Mllin St
Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone

2 DRS. &amp;4 DRS. IN STOCK NOW

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FRIOAY, JUNE24.1977
5 oo-Blg Valley 3, Brady Bunch B Mister Rogers
Neighborhood 20 33 Emergency One 13 Mission
lmpooslble 15 5 JO-Adam 12 ~ ~ News 6, family
Altair 8 E lee Co 20,33
6 oo-News 3 . ~. 8 10,13,15, ABC News 6 Zoom 20 33
6 30-NBC Newsl ~ 15 ABC News 13, Andy Griffith 6,
CBS News 10 Vegetable Soup 20 VIlla Alegre 33
1 oo-Truth or Cons 3, To Tell the Truth 4 Liar's Club
6, $12B,OOO Question 8 News 10 To Tell lhe Trulh
13 My Three Sons IS LO!lk At Me 20 Black
Journal 33
1 311--Porler Wagoner 3 Gong Show 4, Candid
Camera 6 Treasure Hunt fl Mac Neil Lehrer
Report 20,33 Andy Williams 10 Pop Goes lhe
Country 15. Name That Tune 13
8 oo-Sanlord &amp; Son 3.4 15 Movie • The Brain" 6 13
Movie 'West Side Story' B,IO Washington Week In
Review 20 33
B 31l--Rocklord Flies 3,~.15, Wall Slreet Week 20 33
9 OG---Lowell Thomas Reme'l!bers 20 Documentary
Showcase 33
9 30--Qulncy 3,4,15, Movie 'Hands of lhe Ripper
6,13 Oasis In Space 20
10 oo-News 20, Firing Line 33
I 0 31l--Woman 20
II oo-News 3 ~ 6,8, 10,13 IS Monly Pylhons Flying
Circus 20, Balck Perspective on the News 33
II 311--Johnny Carson 3,4.15 Baretta 6 13 Movie The
Couple Takes a Wife' B Mary Hartman 10, ABC
News 33
12 oo-Movle • The Shuttered Room 10, Janaki 33
12 411--Mod Squad 6 Ironside 13
1 oo-Midnlght Specl&lt;~i 3 ~ 15
I 411--News 13 2 3{)-News 3, 3 QO-Movle 'The Mark
of Zorro • 3
4 3o-Movle 'It Could Happen to You • 3 6 GO-FBI 3
Movie Chlnnel- 5 and 9 p m -From Noon Til Three,
7 anti II p m - Inside OUt
Coble Chennei s- 6 3o-Testimony Time, 7 oo--Paul
Gaudino, 7 Jo-Wresthng, 8 oo--Sports Travel
w. ld, 9 oo-Oaylime, 10 oo-100 Club, II 311-Paui Gaudino

,.
:

Free Estlrnetn
No Sunday ~Is Please
6131 mo

THE PH010 PLACE

.

Pomeroy LandtNIII·I

LTD II

~

TEAFORD(B

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:
:

A local contractor
Pf)one 949-2801
or 949·2860

RACINE CARPET
SHOP

616-1 mo

TELEVISION
VIEWING

BISSEll SIDING 00 :•

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

Ill"

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I'UtZZI14

GurrER SERVICE

aijl.

..

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RATES
Ph 371-6250
5 21 TFC

lTD

-.

REASONABLE
Reedsville, 0

77 LTD OR LTD II

FRONT END
MJGNMENT

CRAFTY LADIES HANDICRAFT

FREE ESTIMATES

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WITH A

DUGAN'S

SEE US FOR ALL YOUR
CRAFT AND ARTIST
SUPPLIES
CLASSES OFFERED IN
OIFFERENT
CRAFTS
OPEN 6 OAYS A WEEK,
ID DO to 5 DO

1977~
:~:;.,.;.:-:·:·:·:·:-:·:-:·:·:·:·: ·:·:·: : ·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·&gt;:· :·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·:·:.·:·;:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·::i:

, Fnday, June 24.

"'YOU'RE
THREE WAYS

.:

S600
Also
horse
CAMPER
Superior
tro ler $450 Phone (614 ) C98 HO ME SITES for sale 1 cere and
up M ddlep o rt near Rutland
Steam Extrachon
32'10
Coll992 7.48 1
28 track stereo w th AM FM NEW 3 bed room house 2 baths
all elec 1 acre M1ddleport
rad10
record player and
close to Rutland Phone 992
records htgh cho r telephone
Route l, Pomeroy, 0
7481
3 AND 4 RM f\irntthed and un
stand
boby walker
other
Carpet &amp; Upholstery
turn shed opts Phone 9'12
1tems Phone 742 2078
SMAll I arm for sa le 10 ~. dow n
5434
o wner f nan ced Monroe Cou n
Phone M1ke Young
STARCRAFT 10th a nn versory sale
ty W Vo Phone (3CU ) 772
COUNTRY Mobile Home Pork Rt
At
- Galax le fold down w1th
3107 or (304) 772 3227
33 ten m1le$ north of Pomeroy
shower $2700 Gola ~tle $2375
992- 2206 or 992 · 76~0
Lorge lots w1th concret• poflos
Stormastar $2015 Starfltght COUNTRY lormlcnd w•th seclud
sidewalks runners and ofl
"The Originators
ed woods water and good a c
$775 11 ft SC tro1ler $3999
stre-et pork ng Phon•992 7479
cess m Monroe County W Va
Not The Imitators''
mtnt mofon $10 850 Compare
51 000 down call {30-4) 772
p nc e and quohty Open til 9
FURNISHED APT Adults only no
2-23-1 mo I
3102or(304)772 3227
p m Camp Conley Storcroh
pets Phone 992 3874 Mid
Sales Rt 62 north ol Pt Plea CommerCial property appro,. 17
dlepor t
son!
a cres level land located of
2 BEDROOM MOBilE homa m
Tupp•rs Pla ins on Oht o Route
KRAUT CABBAGE $1 bushel Cut
Ra ci ne areo Call q92 5858
1 Phone {614} b67 6.304
you r own James Htll Form
AVAILABLE AT R1venude Aport
Phone NEW 3 bedroom house budt •n
ments on• bedroom $105 par 1970 TOYOTA $700
k1tchen both and , Phone
mof"'th 2 bedroom $138 per
985 3B33
7•2 2306 or contact M• IO B H\it
month Phone 992 6098 Equol 1970 FOAO y, ton flatbed ptck up
ch1son Rutland Oh to
Houstng Opportumty
0o cyl 300 cub1c •n el-l engine
Can be seen on S 3rd St m VA FHA 30 yr ftnonctng Ireland
2 BEDROOM unfurn•shltd houu
Mortgage 77 E Stole Athens
Cheshire or coli 367 0157
Cotl992 5434 or m 3129
phone (0.14) 592 3051
3 BEDROOM MOBilE Home r"""""===~----­
Nobil Summ11 Ro~d
New house fo r sale 3 bedroom 1
located tn country near Ho r
Rl I
CEI
SPECIAL
1
y,
both
rec
room
and
rt5anvttle on St Rf
143
Mlddl~port,
0
garage
lee Construction
Beout1ful location with large
ROBYNWV 23
"
,
5724
phone
992
3454
or
446
q568
yard and ga rden Oepostt re
Complete
Sales
and
qu1red Phone 742 3186 or
NEW HOUSE for sa le 3 bedroom
CB Mablfe Transceiver
Servtce
and
Suppllles;
.
742 3122
comple te w ith weather
l Yt bath
rec room and
goroge
lee Construct on L _ _ _ _ _ _..::;;.::.~~.J
proor PA speaker 2 way
HOUSE FOR RENT ~ 244 Walnut
base loaded c e antenna
Phone 992 3454 or (611. )
St 7 rooms and 2 baths Con
for roof tap or trunk mount
•46 9S68
toct Raymnd 8arnefl Rt 1 Bo)l
Power cord coax antenn!l
BS l etart W
Va
Pho ne
cable and all hardware
HOME &amp; BUSINESS location m
Blown
8B2 3149
mcluded
Pomeroy Lorge lot 115 fran
ONLY
toge on E Main St and 208
lnsulabon Samces
AVAILABLE at Village Monor
depth fo Condor St Modern 6
Aportmenh- 1 bedroom fully
FlniOCIOJobllilblt!
t69 •s
room home w th ftreplace 8
carpeted wtth k t t~hen ap
Blown 1AI6 Will$ &amp; Al1tcs
carport
A frame bus ness
pltances lurn1shed Starling at
STORM
bu1ldmg wtth paved porktng
$104 per mont Phone992 7721
WIIIIJOW$ &amp; DOORS
area 2000 sq ft storage bldg
~Equal housmg opportumty
REPI.IC£-ENT
fronts on Condor St $75 000
UNFURNISHEO UPSTAIRS Apl
WINDOWS
Shown
by
oppo
tntment
0!'11Y
a _Jack W Carsey Mgr
fac1ng Ohio River lnqu1re 300
AlUMINUM
Phone6U 992 3q21
Phone
"2
2181
Mom St Ca11992 6282
SIDINirSGIFm
10 LOTS 25)(100 In New Haven
COUNTRY HOUSE 4 m1 west ol
W Va Phone 882 3219
Harnsonv1lle 3 or 4 bedrooms MAYt AG WRINGER washer wtth
tubs Old Engltsh Sheepdog I
built tn k1tchen 2 baths carpet
yr ol~cle Call J92 2395
dowhsfalrs Pnvote and seen c
410 l mo
For mformatlan call between 8 FOUR POOL ta bles 3 pc state (2
10 a m Mon thru Saf (S02)
Brunswlcks 8 2 homemade)
439 5331
30 000 BTU alrcondlf1oner
~----~Phone 992 5993 after 5 p m
NEW COLONIAL
I. bedroom
REALTOR
house fully carpeted
1 ;, PURE BRED JERSEY ftrst calf
VIRGIL
B
TEA
FORO,
SR
3 BEOROOM HOUSE ot 167 layne
baths 14 fool garage on 1 acre
Helfer Her Sl)l week old Jersey
St
New Hoven W Vo Full
REALTOR
lot call ~2 3.,54 at {/q2 5455
Hereford Bull Calf goes wtth
basement renled 1976 all etec
216 E Second Street
her Reason for sellmg too
frlc house trader on two add•
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
m\ich mtlk lor our use I 5300
t1onal lots By owner
Call
Phone992 ms
Coli Roger Karr ot 985 3909
•
304 895 3529 even mRs
afte r 5 p m
SPRING GARDEN Suppl•es Cob
RENOVATED
3
TRACTOR
MINNEAPOLI S Mohne
bage cau!Jflower broccoli
bedroom frame home 2
wtth stde mounted mower
ond head lettuce plants
baths natural gas furnace
good t1ras goad condttJon
yellow whtte and red on1on
and ctty water
near
5500 or trade for hoy 3 goof$ 2
sets omon plants Kennebec
shopping
$11000
Nanmes
and
1
B1lly
$20
each
cobbler Katahdtn Red Pontiac
Phone 985 1.274
NEW
LISTING
and Red lasoda seed potatoes
Carthage
Hills
3
Bulk garden seeds potting sot I
bedrooms
bath, rural
peat mou fru1t trees "Oncf. rose
FOR SAJ,E
water electric heating and
bushes
M1dwoy Mcrket
MAIN
New co Op water sof
nice lot $16.500
Pomeroy
Oh•o
992 2582
POMEROY, 0
leners,
model
VC
SVI
Bob s Market Mason W Va
RUTLAND 4 room
,.
Only S279 95
frame with 2 bedrooms,
JUST LISTED -AbOut 2
Save uo oo on a new
(~~·) 77!3~' bath front porch and large
Hotpoinl Refrigerator
yrs old, 3 bedrooms,
1 42 n cost ~ron kttchenslnk I
I New 20 cubic fl
lol $11 000
Master has own lull bath
bas1n and 1 drain board hang
Chest Frener
$319 95
S YEARS YOUNG - 4
on welt type wh1te I 3 burner
modern kitchen dinette
Now in stock complete line
bedroom frame home
small deck large living R
_ g~ ~~ pl~e Phone992 ~14
ol bulk t•rden seeds
Balh,
birch
kitchen
Central air 1 acre S31 000
1 Good MI:Cullough Chain
ECONOMY TRACTOR with oU at
SIW
$65
disposal
and
level
lot
A
MIDOLEPORT- Close to
tcchments Like new asktng
1 Good Us"' Poulan Ch1ln
good buy at $16 000
school - 4 BR, 2 balhs
$2250 Phone (614) 699 32'10
S.w
SSO
POMEROY - Large older
equipped kitchen large
l GOOd Used Unlco
GOOD RICH Top so1l Charles R
home with natural gas
rec room a1r cond
FA
Dryer
UO 00
Hotfteld Backhoe Servtce
central heating Up to 5
1 Good Used G E Dryer $85
heat bar storage and
Phone 742 2008
bedrooms and 1V2 baths
other features
2 car
1 Good Used Hotpo rit
Prost Free
Coppertone
Full basement and large
HANGING BASKETS r.ts end
garage S45 ooo
Freezer Ref!'lgerator
lol $24 000
geran i ums
C eland s
POMEROY- Lovely view
combtnatlon A re-al steal
Greenhouse
Gerald1ne
57
ACRESGood
gambrel
of
the river 3 BR bath,
at S25D
Cleland Rocme Oh1o
roof barn w1th water
equipped kitchen garden
.....__--.--e~ectric and concrete
space storage bldg Part
USED FORESTRY EQUIPMENT
floors 3 bedroom house
basement $12 500
John Deere 540 Skidder Pet
with bath and FA furnace
JUST
LISTEO
3
rlbone Super 8 Car~ L1ft Pren
LARGE 4 bedroom
lice G RMT w 3.,2 bypass grop
bedrooms bath carpeting,
frame horne. 2 baths,
pie Contact DenniS Smurr
nat gas heat carpeting,
natural
gas
central
l614i_BJ6_53&lt;_5_ large lot 518,000
ONE BROWER 100 tgg Incubator
heating, family room.
POMEROY Peacock
2 LOTS fer sole 112x50 each On
Coll742 3150
garage and large lawn
Ave
3lf&lt;~ acres, water,
corner of Sy&lt;:amore &amp; Ash Sis
2 BUILDINGS - lor the
sewer available Could be
Middleport lnqwe ct 291 '4 FT AlUMINUM Laudau Bou
price of one on State Route
Syca~ore ~~ _______ _
developed $5,800
Boat wtth 14 h p Sears molar
Qlly $B 500
ond 2 speed lrolltng motor
CLOSE TO MINES 4
1975 HARLEV Dav1dson Sportser
2 BEOROOMS - In town
trotter_...,...........
mel $550 Call742 2315
acres
has
several
building
lOOOcc Chopped
Lot$ of E)(
on quiet streel Modern
lots, Township Rd 344
tras e,.cellant Cond1tlon less 23 CHANNEL MIOLAND C 8 bose
balh,
dining
room
and
level
Asking
fust $4,600
radio wtth upper end lower
than 1200 actual m1 les Contact
lol
CLOSE TO FORK EO RUN
Ke1th Curtts 992 5073
sldelond wtth D 104 m1ke For
NEW LISTING Just
LAKE - 6 acres, almost
mora1nfo coll985 4247
~---outside ot town Is this fully
new double wide, 2 BR
50 lb Bog No 2 new potatoes
furn1shed 3 bedroom home
bath din1ng R garage and
$3 00 See Delbert Lawson or
with city water, natural
2
bulld1ngs 517,000
Delbert Petterson ot Greet
gas partial basement and
AVOID THE PITFALLS IN
Bend
large bach yard Just
SELLING YOUR OWN
GREEN BEENS p tck your own lur
$1000
HOME~ LET US SELL IT
Strickiy wholesale to all
nlsh your own container Ar
WITH GOOO CREDIT
FOR YOU
Not less than 111 ease
nald Hupp &amp; Sons Produce
ANO A FEW HUNDRED
HENRY E CLELANO
Form
Lefort Folh
Call
DOLLARS YOU
CAN
REALTOR
247 2623
HAVE A HOME OF YOUR
Hank, Kath &amp; ~eoha
OWN
Cioiond
G. Bruce Tuf1&gt;rd
Associates
Helen L. Tuf1&gt;rd
992 2259 or 985·4112
Associlltos

SOFTENER'
Children must furnish thetr own bait - "fish worms
only" Tlllsevlflt will be held at the FISh &amp; Game Lake
which Is located 2 miiH - • t of Rt 7 on Shade River
RNd Toke county rood 12 w..t off Rt 7 Follow lhe
llgns"FIIII &amp; Go me" County Roodl2 Is one mile north
of CJIHter on Route 7
Tills event will be held "Rain or SIIIM"

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Business Services

COAL ltmestone and ca lc1um 3 BEDROOM hou5e w1th 1 r both
firepla ce- beout lui locat ion •n
chlonde ond colc•um brine for
Mtddl epm t
51f&gt; 900 Phone
du1t con trol and spe&lt;:10 l ml,.tng
992 3457
soh for larmets EIO!c:elsior Salt
Works Mom Streel Pome roy
Ohio or phone 992 38qJ
Real ~!:state £or Sale

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m til 7 p m Dally
Closed Sunday

~

IF VOU hove a servtce 10 alter
want to buy or se ll somethmg
oe look•ng for worl~
or
whotever
you II g•t results
laster w1th a Sentinel Wont Ad
Co 119'12 2156

,.

Auctmn

for Sale

Help Wanted

~The Dally Sentinel, Middleport Pomeroy, 0

PUBLIC NOTICE
TO Opa l R1chards
No known address
You are hereby notlf1ed
that you hue been named
Defendant In a legal ect1on
entitled Leroy R: lchards
Plaintiff
-v s Opal
R tchards
Defendant
that
thiS cHuse has been ass1gned
case No 16 443 and Is pen
ding 1n the Common Pleas
court of Me igs County, Ohla
Pomeroy Ohio 115769 The
oblect of th1s Complaint Is for
d•vor&lt;:e d ivision of P:roperty
and other proper reltef
You are reClulred to answer
wlthm twenty e1ght days
after the last publl&lt;:af•on of
thts notice, once each week
for s ix S\iCCUStve weeks The
lasl publicatton w•ll be on
July 1, 1977 and the twenty
e1ght days Will commence on
that dale
In case of your failure to
an1wer
or
otherw lse
respond as requ1red by the
Ohio
Rules
of
Ctvtl
Procedure ludgment by
default will be rendered
against you for the relief
demanded In thtS claim
LARRY E SPENCER
Clerk of courts
Meigs County
Common Pleas Court
(5) 27 (6) 3 10 17 24 17) 11.
6tc

10 oo-Speed Buggy 3 4 IS Tarzan B,IO Once Upon a
Classic 20
10 JG--Monsler Squad 3,4,15 Krollt Supershow 6,13
Batman 8 10 Zoom 20
11 DO-Space Ghos!s Frankenstein, Jr 3 4 IS
Shazam Isis 8 10 Consumer Survival K11 20
11 311--B•g John Little John 3 4,15, Superlrlends 13.
Btg B1 ue t• 1rble 6, Best of Ernie Kovacs 20
12 oo-Land 01 the Lost 3 1 15. Short Story Special 6
Movie 'Bad Lands 4 Vlewpolnl 9. Fat Albert 10
Action News tor Kids 13. Crockett's Victory Garden
20
12 311--Kids lrom CAPER 3,15 American Bandsland
13 Soul Train 6 Ark II B 10
1 oo-Ara s Sports World 3 Movie 'Stagecoach Kid"
4, Children s Film FestivalS Movie • Trapeze' 10
Wrestling 15 Nova 33
1 311--Greatest Sports legends 3 Point of VIew 6
Movie 'That s My Boy' 13
2 oo-Grandstand 3,4,15 Bewitched 6 Racers B
Documentary Showcase 33
2 IS-Baseball 3 4 15 2 30-Bowllng 6 Movie
Bengazl' B 3 OQ-Cancer Life or Death 33
3 311--Mod Squad 6, M~vle Our Man Fllnl 13 Book
Beat 33
4 oo--Goil B 10 Woman 4 311--Minlature Golf 6,
Montage 33
5 Oil--Wimbledon Tennis 3 4 15 Wide World of Sports
613 Space 19998 Sports Spectacular 10 Catch 33
33 , 5 30-Austln City Llmts 33
6 oo-Lawrence Walk 8, News 10 6 311--NBC News
3,15. ABC News 13 News 4 6 Lilias Yoga_&amp; You 33
7 oo-Muslc Hall America 3 Lawrence Welk 4 15, Hee
Haw 6,B, In The Know 10, Lets Make a Deal 13
World War I 33
1 30-Dolly 10 In Search of 13 Best of Ernie Kovacs
33
B GO-Emergency 3 4 15 Wonder Woman 6 13 Mary
Tyler Moore B,IO Say Brother Pays Tribule to
Webster Lewis 33
311--Bob Newhart B 10
9 oo-Movle • The Day of the Dolphin" 3,4.15 Slarsky
&amp; Hutch 6,13. All In The Family B 10 American
Short Story 33
9 311--Aitce 9,10 10 OD-Feather &amp; Father 6 13 Carol
Burnett 8 10
Turbulent Ocean 33
II oo-News 3 4.6 B 1013 IS, Janak I 33 11 15-ABC
News 61 Film 15 11 311--Mary Hartman 3
Weekend 4,15. VIctor Sporls Awards 6,8 Movie
Cheyenne Autumn 10, Movie "Is Paris Bur
nlng?" 13
1 oo-Movle ' 1 Gamblt 4 Peter Marshall 6 Movie
'Lost Women 13 1 Ill--Mary Hartman 3 I 311-News 3 2 oo-Movle "Moon over Miam1 3, 2 31)ABC News 13
3 311--Movle "The Secret of Convlcl Lake' 3 5 llO-Movle • The Builllghlers • 31 6 OG--Salnl 3
MOVIECHANNEL4-5andlpm ~Family Plot,9
and 11 p m - Dog Day Afternoon
CABLE CHANNEL 5 I 30 p m Regatta
H1ghhghts

s

Alfred

Social Notes
Sunday School attendance
June 19 was 51, the offenng was $30 80 Fathers
were honored at the close of
Sunday school with a g1ft to
each of the 11 present and
sent to those unable to attend
Fathers were complimented
on their faithfulness to duty
and model fathers and the

on

song 11 Fa1th of Our Fathers"
was sung
Worship serviCes were held
at 10 45 With an attendance of
32 With
Rev
Thomas
speakmg from II Cor 4 on the
subject ' Ufe After Life"
The cllo1r sang "Fill My

Cup"
Dally Vacation
Sible
School began here Monday,
June 20 and will go on through
Fnday, June 24, with a p1cn1c
lunch Fnday at noon and a
closmg program Fnday
evening at 8 o'clock All are
welcome
Local folks attended the
services for Clara Guthrie

O'Bnen and visited White's
Funeral Home at Coolville
Bunal was at Burlingham
Cemetery
Harry Swartz has recenlly
undergone surgery in the
Holzer Hospital at Gallipolis
We w1sh to publl~h a
belated happy event that we
didn't know about last week
Terry and Nancy Swartz
became the proud parents of
a baby son, Ty Matthew, born
June 10 Ill a Parkersburg
hospital Congratulations to
the happy family
Mr and Mrs
Millard
Swartz are grandparents and
Mr and Mrs VereSwartz are
great-grandparents
The
maternal grandparents live
m Huntington. W Va
Mr and Mrs Lee Henderson and Mr and Mrs
Harold Hender110n attended
services for Mrs Chase
(Verlle) Km1es (their cousm
in Columbus). this past week
after a long ser1ous IUness
Mr Kimes IS also qutte
poorly at his home 10
Columbus

EVERY

USED CAR

USED CARS

BUY

76 Cadillac Sedan DeVIlle ................ '8900

IS

76 Cadillac Cpe DeVIlle ...................'8800

A

75 Cadillac Coupe DeVille ................. 16800

FuU power and a ir

Full power and a ir
Full power a1r

74 Cadillac Sedan OilVille ................. 15500

HIT HEREI

Full power. air

75 Pinto 4 c:yl. auto...................... 12495
75 Ford LTD 4 dr......................... '3595
74 Ford Galuie 4 dJ..................... '2495
74 Buick Regal 2 dr ..................... '2695
74 P~. FUIJ Ill, 4 dr ....................11995
73 Chev. Monte Carlo ~?:.d.~ ............. '2695
73 Ford LID 2 dr .•.• ... •...•.•.•.. .•• •.• 12295
73 Toyota Corolla Sta. Wagon~~~!9 ........ '1595
73 Chev. Impala 4 dr...................... '2295
72 Pontiac Granville 4 dr ................ '1295
72 P~. fuiJ 4 dr ......................... s1295
72 MercuiJ Comet...•••••••.••••..•...••••. '995

75 Cutlass Supreme Coupe •.~.~!'!'!..~'."... -14495
75 Chevy Monte Carlo ~?~~~-~~~.~!~ .......'4695
74 Olds 88 Royal Cpe. ~~:v.~r..a.~~.a.':...... '3595
74 Chevy Vega GT Cpe. 4 spd .............11995
74 P~. Golduster Coupe········:: .. •·••• 12795
74 Chev. Nova 4 Dr., V8.~~!? .. ::'!'.~1 • Root •12795
.
O
VInyl Root. Air ,
74 Grand Tonno 4 r ••.
. .•..•••..• 2695
73 CuUass. 4 dr., air...................... . '2495
73 Buick Repl HT Cpe................... 13495
73 Dodge Charger Couoe. Air .•.•.•.•. 12195
73 Cutlass Supreme 4 Dr., air.....••.••. 1ZII!I5
73 Cutlass 4 Dr. Vinyl roof· ... •· .... ···· 127!15

73 Olds Cutlass S Coupe

72 P~mouth Duster Twister ............•• '1395
72 Dodge Charger 2 dr................... .'1695

71 MerCUIJ Marquis 4 dr.•• •.•. •.•.•••••.• '895
71 Pontiac Catalina 2 dr ••••.•...•.•...... 1595
70 Ford MMricU. ~-~U.~1?.............. '595
70 Dodge 4 dr .............................. '49~
70 Ford 4 Dr. Wagon •.. .•••••.. .... •.••.•• '295
69 Pont~ac 4 Dr............................ '395
68 Chevy 4' Dr.............................. '295
68 Chevy Nova 6 cyl. 4 dr................. 1695
69 Pontiac 4 dr ............................ '395
69 Plymouth 4 dr........... ............... '295
67 MercuiJ Cougar••••.•. ···•· .... ••··•·•·· '395

Whlte red vinyl lntenor air condition SS wheels
AM and tape cru1se control 455 V 8, 50 000 mt

'2895
72 Olds 88 H.T. Sedan ..•••.~.;:':'.'•.~ 1:•••'1795_
72 Chevy Impala HT Cpe••..............• '1495
72 Buick 225 limited 4 dr HT ;.~.~~~r '2495
72 Chevy Impala 4 Dr., atr ........••••.•••. 11295
70 T-Bird, full power &amp; air .............. s1395
72 Buick Elec. HT Cpe..................... '2295
72 Ford Tonno 2 dr......................... '1395
11 Ford lh Ton Pickup ..•..........•..... '1695
11 Olds 98 Lux., power &amp; air ............ '1995

...

71 Ponbac Catalina 4 Dr., atr..~:~~~.~??~ ...'895
See one of these courteous salesmen
Burns or Marvm Keebaugh

TRUCKS
74 Chev. Suburban C/20 ................. '3295
73 Chev. Custom VB ...................... '2695
73 Chev. Cheyenne Super. ........•...... '2495
72 Chev. El Camino .•.••...•..........••. '1595
69 Dodge Van 6 cyl...... ................ '400

RIGGS USED CARS
Roger R1ebel
Located on St Rt 7
Chester, Ohio

NOTICE
To Abe F Miller whose
address JS unknown but
whose last place of res1den&lt;:e
was co Queen Bee Motel
GalliPOliS 01'110 45631 You
are hereby nollfled that you
have been made defendant m
the case of Oh10 Casualty
Insurance
Co
et
al
Plaintiffs vs Abe F M1ller
Defendant Th1S a ction has
been ass1gned No 16 280 and
1S pending 1n the Court of
Common Pleas of Me1gs
County Ohio Pomeroy OhtO
45769 The ob1ect of th1s
Comptatnt 1S far money only
and c:;.ontalns a demand for
IUdgment against you tn the
amount of S721 86 on behalf of
Ohio Casualtv Insurance Co
and Manning and June Klees
and costs You are requ tred
to answer the Complaint
W1fh 1n 28 days after the last
publtcatlon af th1S not tce
which w111 be published s l,.
suc&lt;:ess1ve weeks The dale of
the last publtcat1on will be
July 29 1977 and the 28 days
will commence on thai date
In case of your failure to
answer or otherwise respond
as requ1red by the Oh1o
Revtsed
Code Of
CIVIl
Procedure
judgment by
default w 1ll be rendered
agatnsl you far t he relief
demanded 1n the Complamt
Dated June 22 1977
Larry E Spencer
Clerk of Courts
Me tgs County Oh•O
{61 2• {7) I 8 15 22 29 6lc

Notice of Appointment
Case No 22,109
Estate of George F
Rtt
tenhouse, Deceased
Notice •s nereby g1ven that
Donald A Calderone of Suite
'205
26949 Chagrin Blvd
Beachwood Oh 10 44122 has
been duly apo.nted Executor
of the Estate of George F
Rltltmhouse deceased la te
of Racine Metg's County
Ohio
Cred•tors are requtred to
file their chi1ms W1lh satd
fiduciary
Wtth1n
three
months
Dated th1s 6th day of June
1977
Mannino D Webster.
Probate J'fdte
Meigs Coun.tv
Common Plus Court
{6) 10 17 24

Ray R1ggs

985·4100

P,rofes~ces
NEW COMPANY
B g Bend
Developers Ftnest m remodel
mg pa1nt1ng end concrete
work lntenor and e)lter or
Free est1mote s
Phone
992 3S73
EXCAVATION COMPLETE sept c
systems Spnngs deve loped
All work IS g\iOronteed Brad
Lewt!i phone 742 2451

Pete

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
"You'll Like Our Ouafltv Way
Of Domg Busmessr
992 5342
GMC FINANCING
Pomeroy
Open Evemngs Unhl6.00- Til 5 p.m. Sat

~
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
of
regret
5 • Rosc oe'
11 lnsmcere
lalk
12 Scrape
13 Arab
chleftam
14 Pay a VISit
I2 wds I
15 Famed
Egyptian
sultan
17 Flight sked
abbrev1at10n
18 Auto style
19 Tmy 20 Unearth
21 Footwear
%2 Racmg

1 Word

DOWN
scores
2 Fernando 3 Old
womarush
4 Bestnde
5 Taking 1n
tow
6 Black
7 Nlgenan
tribesman

1 Golf

8 -

Yesterday's Answer

16 Insh

30 Blot out
assembly
31 Montague•s
21 Mahc1ous
son
22 Furtiveness 33 Bemg ISp )
23 Itahan c1ty 34 Monster s
2' D1sentangle
loch
25 DISmissed 36 Bankbook
27 Dillydally
abbreviation

A

Tram
(2 wds )
9 Issue

number
10 Dubbed

anew

EXCAVATING BACKHOE dozer
boat
trencher Low Bay dump fru ck
trucks sephc s ystems Bil l 25 Ignore the
Pull ns phone 992 2478 day o r
budget
mght
26 Polyneslanlo,. .t--t--t-SPEC IA,LIZE ALLIS CHALMERS
forest god
farm
equ 1pment
and 27 Wahme's
outomol ve rep1r Also lawn
neckwear
and ga rden fracto r (A C)
Rea sonable rates Coli (614) 28 Shp
667 b253
29 Bury
32 Sky Allar
33 Begm
(2 wds I
35 Batlung
:n Renown
W~~nt&amp;bto:Buy
38 Thirty

b--+-+---t-

b--+-f-+-

CASH po•d for oil makes and
models of mob1le homes
Phone oreo code 614 423 9531
TIMBER Pomeroy
du cts Top pnce
sowt1mber Cotl
Kent Hanby I 446

Fore5t Pro
for stand ng
r,q2 5%5 or
8570

COINS CURRENCY tokens old
pocket watches ond chotns
silver and gold We need 1964
ond older s•lver co tns Buy sell
ar trade Call Roger Wamsley
742 2331
OlD FURNITURE tee bo,.es brass
beds
etc
complete
househo lds Wnte M 0 M1ller
Rt A Pomeroy Oh1o or call
992 771&gt;)
WANTED
CHIPWOOO Po les
Max d•ameler' 10 mches on
largest end $8 per ton bundl
ed s labs $6 per ton Delivered
to Oh•o Pollet Compony Rt 2
Pomeroy
Ohto
Phone
992 2b89
OLD RAILROAD lanterns TNOC
Hock ng Volley K &amp; M and
others Also ell kmd s of steel
t raps Phone (b14 ) 367 7A33 or
wnte John Vo1th Chesh re
Oh•a 45620 \

39
40

IFr )
W1elds
Beach

wear

u

Camllo
andothe:rsL_L-L-L-L-L-

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE is

Here's

ho"

to "ork 11

AXYIJLBAAXR
I ONGFELI OW

One letter stmply stands for ;m other ln th1s S[lmple A is
U"&lt;'d for tiH thrcr 1 s X to1 the tw o 0 S (' tc Stn g iC' letters
apostrophes the len J.,! th rmd formatwn ur 1he \' o rds are all
h ~nt s E!lf'h d 1) the code letlers are d 1ff e rrnt

CRYPTOQUOTES

J
I V

UVCYAHKTVU

UPVM
CP

AYJQ

H J T' M

UP

SEYT

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SPACE

I X
EJM

GKADKTKJ

SE J C

RJT
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TPCEKTD
CAVRNYA

Yesterday's Cryploquote COMMON SENSE IS INSTINCf
ENOUGH OF IT IS GENIUS - GEORGE.J!ERNARD SHAW
«J 1911 KJnl Fe•~ures Synd,cllt.t Inc

�•
J()-]'h&lt;!_ Daily Sentinel, MiddlcP'!11-Pomeroy, 0 .,

Friday. Jwll' 24, 1977

:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-;-;-:-:·:·:-:-:·:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:

President praises Congress
By WESLEY G. PIPPERT
WASHINGTON ( UPI) President Carter , i n his
biggest plunge into public
politics since taking office,
used an audience of
Demo cr at!(' £inancial supl))rters as a forum to t'Urry
new favor from Congress.

Carter made a three-hour
visit to New York Thursday
night to speak at a $J,OO().a.
plate Democratic fu ndraiser . The heart of his 20.
minute talk contained lavish
praise o£ Congress, where
some of his key proposals
have been stalled.
After walking from table to
table in the Grand Ballroom
of the Waldorf Astoria, he
told the cheering tuxedo-dad
audience that members of
Congress have achieved four
of the five goals he presented
to them prior to his
inauguration : strict ethics
legislation for Congress, an
economic .stimulus program,
authorization to reorganize
the Executive Branch and a
bill he hopes to sign by July 4

to

create

an

energy

department.
"Four of the five .major
issues I asked for have been
completed, an absolutely unprecedented achievement on
the part of Congress," he
said.
Of his fifth objective, an
energy proposal now being

marked up by the House
Ways and Means Committee,

are strong, that housing pro-

Carter said

' 'is

grams, control of crime, job

making good pr ogress
desp ite tr e mendous
complexity and tremendous

opportunities are centered

Congress

grams, transportation pro-

LOTTERY WINNERS
This week's winning Ohio
Lottery numbers :
PolO' Gold
Three-digit number
093.
Thre-dlglt number - 785.
Five-digit number 75726.

for a change in areas that
have been deteriorating in
pressure from
special the past but which will c'O me
;.;.:.:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:interest groups." .
to light in the future.
"To sum up, my own
"Those members of my
feeling for the Congress is one Cabinet who are direcUy
or appre ciation for their responsible for these major
achievemen t and for the programs are here tonight to
relationship
we
have reaffirm our commitment to
formed," Carter said . " I'm the great cities of ou r
new in Washington and In this country .''
brief time there has been a
A spokesman for the Demo·
rema rkable demonstration of cratic National Committee
compatibility and mutual said the dinner grossed $1.3
purpose between the White miUion and netted $700,000
House and Capitol Hill."
after expenses. The DNC paid
The gala was attended by Carter's expenses on his
two
senators ;
seven biggest venture into public
members of Carter's politics since taking olfice.
Cabi net ; 10 senio r White
MC CONNELLSVILLE,
House aides ; and his sister,
Ohio {UPI ) - A search was
evangelist Ruth Stapleton,
started in a wooded area near
and son, Jack Carter, and
here early today for two men
their spouses.
who are wanted for armed
(Continued ·from page II
But two of them got by far
robbery
in Washi ngton
the most applause - Sen. remedial programs for the County , the Morgan County
Hubert H. Humphrey, who handicapp e d. Remedia l sheriff's office said.
rode to New York with Carter services are to be offered by
A spokeswoman for the
aboard Air Force One, and public employes only on sites sheriff's office said the men
U.N. Ambassador Andrew not physica lly identified with were wanted for the armed
Young. Carter praised Hum- the nonpublic school , he robbery of the Smith Oil Co.
phrey as "the greatest Demo- opinion noted.
Purchase and loan to pupils in Marietta and a grocery
crat who lives in our
or their parents of in· store in Beverly, Washington
country .' '
County.
In his speech, Carter also stru ction a l materials like
Units from the Athens
stressed his commitJr.cnl to maps and charts, on the other County sheriff's office, the
rebuilding the nation's cities. hand , wE're found to have a Washington county sheriff's
"I want to be sure our cities primary effect of s ub- office, the Morgan County
stantially advancing secsheriff's office and the Ohio
tarian educatirm.
" It would exalt form over Highway Patrol participated
substance," Blackmun said, in the search.
A
Highway
Patrol
to distinguish between a loan
helicopter
was
also
brought
to an individual and to the
school. Such loans to schools into the search at daybreak.
The men abandoned their
have been disapproved in the
car
and were believed to be
past .
on foot, the Morgan County
Blackmun said the timing sheriff's office said. ·
and frequency of field trips
meeting."
are controlled by the sec-

Robbery
suspects

hunted

Court

Carter directs
fun at himself

By CHERYL ARVIDSON
jjOriginally,
we
had ·,
NEW YORK (UPI) thought
about
having
this
President carter charmed
in
Queens,
but
Andy
supper
the crowd at a posh
Democratic fund raiser Young figured it would be
ThW'sday night by poking fun best downtown," Carter said,
at himself and his five-month- alluding to a recent rellll!rk
by the controversial U.N.
old administration.
Ambassador
that residents of
Carter began his comedy
Queens
were
"racist."
routine by telling the blackHe
said
Young
also "made
tie audience :
itclearthatl
was
not the only
"This Is the largest crowd
one
who
gave
a
Playboy
I've seen since we had our
interview.
last White House staff
"Sometimes it's hard tn
know exactly hOw lie means

Posse
(Continued from page 1)
transferred from the prison
at McAlester to the Mayes
Cqunty jail to BPPI'Br as a
witness in a 1trial.
Part of his prison sentence
had been spent at the Granite
reformatory and there he
worked with a former prison
photographer and apparently
belped process some pictures
the photographer took at a
wedding, authorities said.
· One of the women in the
pictures.was the daughter-inlaw of another reformatory
employe.
Two of the wedding
pictures, faded and torn,
were found near the murder

scene. Although officials
would not confirm it, the
phOtographs
apparently
provided a major break in tbe
investigation.

tarian schools, ,whic h reCeive

the service rather than the
children, and therefore are
nqt a permissible direct aid to
sectarian education.
" The
public
school
authorities , will be unable
adequately to insure secular
use of the field trip funds of
the nonpublic teachers," he
said.

uThis

would

create

excessive entanglement."
The state has been
prevented from carrying out
the law by a lower court

things, as you may . or inay

order, which was modified to

not have noticed. He pointed
out to the Playboy people that
r still was filled with lust but 1
didn't discriminate ." ·
carter said he has "learned
a lot" in five months as
President and likened his
experience to that of the
young man who climbed New
York's lJO.Story World Trade
Cent~r "and after great
exertio~ got to the top and
found that his reward was a
$250,000 lawsuit."
"! ran for two years, and
the only thing I've got out of it
so far is. an income tax
audit," Carter said.
"My taxauditls coming out
Okay. " he sat'd. "The only
thing they've questioned so
far is a $600 bill for
toothpaste."
As the crowd roared with
laughter and applause,
Garter hastily added, "But It
paid off - I'm President."

permit the textbook loans.
In the 1974•75 academic
year Ohio's nonpublic schools
educated more than 250,000
students. About 96 per cent of
these
·schools
are
denominational, and of this
number 86 per cent are
Roman yatholic.

THE
BANK
THAT'S

BUILT FOR

TWO

.Pay bills safely, quickly, economically.
Ask 'for a his-and-her Checking Accou nt.
At the ban k
.
where you make the difference.

HOSPITAL
NEWS
!folzerMedlca!Center
I Discharges June 12 )
Lowell D. Allen, Mrs.
· Howar d Bl.essing and son,
Carl Bonecutter, Ernest
Caldwell, Kieron Calhoun,
John Coleman, Jeffery Dray,
Brook Faber, Earl Fout,
Deborah Hembree, Clarence
Jones, Ethel Nottf, Donna
Lambert, Matthew Long,
Katherine Maines, Phyllis
Maynard, Virginia Neville
Mary
Prince,
Emery
Ramsey, Doyle Sargent,
Reba Sorver, Lena Sloan,
Ha~ld Smith, Melvin Stapf,
Anlla Stevens, April Tan·
nehlll, John Tuttle, Gainsford
Upton, Mrs. Raymond Zitvi toe, and son, Mrs. Johil
Wellington and son, Carol
Wood, Roy Yeager.
(BfrlhsJuneZ3)
Mr. and Mrs. William
Bloomfield , a daughter,
Coalton. Mr. and Mrs. David
. ,
Bl an kens h tp
a
son,
Gallipolis.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
ADMJT'j'ED .
Opal
Cummins, Middleport ;
Geor,ge Conde, Syracuse ;
Eugene Fisher, Pomeroy;
Rolland Smith, ·Middleport.
DISCHARGED - Cynthia
Hazelton, Ruth Dailey, Carl
Gheen, Sr., Wilbur Whaley.

Wiener roast held
Tht· annual wit.•ucr

rna~l

uf

Bak~r,

and Mt s. Haym,md

lht· Humcbuildcrs Clasl'i uf Ihe

Kathy

l\1iddlcpurt Chur&lt;·h uf Christ
was held Tu~sday t.&gt;Vening at
the y,,rcsl Acres Park.
Attending were Thelma
Buye r, Mr. and Mrs. Lennard
Van Meter. Mr. and Mrs.
Herman Kinuid, Mr. :md

Paul,
Mr s.
Shirley
Baumgardner, Mr. aud Mrs.
William Grueser, Mr. and
Mrs. Clay Tuttle, Mr. and
Mrs. Csrl Roach, Randy and

Mrs. Mac Stewart, Mr. and
Mrs. Raymond Cute, David
and Raeanna, Rodney Bailey,

Mr.

and

Mrs.

William

Tolbert, Judy Tulht&gt;rt. Mr.

and Angtla,

Mrs.

Peggy Brickles, Pclc and

for a society without capital

punishment, narrowly voted
Thursday to override his veto
of legislation to reactivate the
death. penalty in California .
The law enforcementsponsored
bill
would
&lt;'Siablish death as the punish-

ALBANY, N. Y. (UP!) Snickering state senators
Thursday gave final approval
to a bill requiring New York
City and Buffalo dogwalkers
to carry " popper scoopers"
to clean up alter their pets.
"At times it seems like New
York City has become one

Thursday while the measure
was being considered. "It's
gotten so you ha've to zig-zag
your
way
down
the
sidewalk."

Leichter, armed with a

counties enjoyed a potluck
supper and social hour with
an evening of singing, music,

Officer's widow suing for million
NORWALK, Ohlo(UPJ ) - Drema Budd,
the widow of a New London pollee officer
shot and killed by a patrolman early this
year, has filed a 11.5 million negligence
suit agabist 10 individuals, firms and In·
stitlllioos.
·
Mrs. Budd, executrix of her husband's

estate, filed the suit in Huron County
Common Pleas C&lt;&gt;urt Friday on behalf of

U.S. Route 60 West-Huntin,gton
Closed Every Monday except Holidays

her sell and her 5-year-old son Bradley.
Sgt. Timothy Budd, 24. was shot to death In
the New London police station just alter
midnight Jan. 7, by Patrolman Robert
Sklllicorn.
Police reports indicated the two were

ENTRY OMITTEO

The Meigs County

~addle

Sitters 4-H dub participants
in the Big Bend R~atta
Parade, was not listed tn an
earlier account of the event .

joking, holding a fast draw contest when
Skillicorn's gun discharged. Three hours years has taught a water~Ior class at the
later, Budd was dead.
·
Lancaster YWCA ..

By Mrs. Herherl Rousb
Mr. •and

Mrs .

Russell

OPEN FRIDAY N IGHT TIL&amp;

EUR

gigantic fireworks display on Monday,

July 4.
In between, the three-day event will
· offer something for everybody according
to -Mike Kamman, general chairman. ·
The aMual event is sponsored by the
Gallipolis Area Chamber of Commerce in
cooperatj.on with local service and Civic

1-positlon
BACK IN THEMO
NEW YORK (UP I) -Steve
Cauthen, the sensational 17·
year-old apprentice jockey, is
back in the saddle - and
· back in tbe winner's circle.
Cauthen, who suffered
severe injuries in a spill a
month ago, guided his mount
"Little Miracle" to victory at
Belmont Park racetrack
Thursday in his first race
since the accident.

DIAl·l-NIP"
t _

'-0"...\.

EJII.")

t.oG' "\,£

Big disposable dusl
bag has a huge
560 cu. m. capacit y'

· Cleans Shags!

Home Furnishings Dept., 1st Floor

LELAND McCLEl.J.AND, artist, in his studio.

ttdittt
MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY

7 weeks in Meigs

~

'
'
•
•

~

..•
•

•••

..••

..•

I:

MIKE KAMMAN Is general
chairman of the River Recreation
Festival.

50 entries
signed up

•
•'

.

Deadline for submitting entries for the
1977 parade is Wednesday, June 29 . Units
may be registered at the Gallipolis Area
Chamber of Commerce office, 16 State St.,
phone ~96.
Parade co-chairmen Mike Kanunan
and Tim Betz Saturday announced the
names of 19 sponsors for the 16 parade
trophies which will be awarded various
wiMers in !:!_categories.
Sponsors are : First National Bank,
Gillingham Drug Store, Marchi's carry
Out, Smith Buick and Pontiac, Carroll
Norris Dodge, Larry's Wayside Furniture,
Tope's Furni!ure, Thaler Ford, Last
Chance Carry Out, Willis Tire Co., Carl's
Shoes, Ohio Valley Baak, PJ's, Inc.,
Empire Furniture, The Bastille, Com·
mercia! &amp; Savings Bank, Russ's Glass,
Buckeye Rural Electric and Jim's Farm
Equipment.
Trophies will be presented at 5' p.m.
near the band stand in the Public Square.
The co-chairmen reminded parade
participants where they will assemble
July 4. Vehicle units are to follow signs on
the Gallipolis State Institute grounds
where they will assemble, starting at 10:30
a.m. The vehicle units will depart the GSI
da 8 t II 45 am
groun
· ·
Equestrian' units
will form at the
oorner of Spruce St., and Fourth Ave.
Walking units will assemble at the corner
of Spruce St., and Second Ave.
If all goes as planned, the parade
ohould arrive in downtown Gallipolis at
12 , 30 p.m. on Independence Day.

POMEROY - Six students In a
variety of health fields arrived Friday to
begin a seven week stay In Meigs County
when they will get acquainted with its
rural life.
As a part of their stay in Meigs County,
the students will be helping with II
multiphasic health screening clinic for
residents of all ages at the Meigs Junior
High School in Middleport, July 18-.21 .
There. will be no charge for any of the
services offered at the clinic except a

Coronation at the queen and en·

tertainment by Mike and Dan Rowan and a
country and western show with Tex
Harrison and the Valley Boys will con·
elude Saturday's activities.
barrow races, rope skipping, sack races,
·Sunday features includes a chicken
tarpan races and skate hoard competition. barbecue, open house at "Our House"
There also will be. an art show sponsored museum and a gospel concert all afternoon
by the French Art Colony.
·
and ittto the evening.
Saturday evening brings official
Monday highlights include a gigantic
opening ceremonies and a vocal concert by parade through downtown Gallipolis at
the Gallla Academy High School 11:30, patriotic ceremonies, prayer break·
Madrigal•.
fast, paraChute jump; ski show, and the

Students starting

• Exclusive &amp;·way Dial-A-Nap• rug
height adjustment ·
• Top lllllng disposable dust bag
prevents clogs, keeps ·suction
strong
• Edge Kteenercleansthatlasttou,ghl
Inch along baseboards
'

Mit: u R £~A I

COMMISSION TO MEET
POMEROY - The Meigs County
PlaMing Commission will meet at 3:15
p.m. Monday in tht conference room of the
Farmers Bank Building. Up for discussion
will be the final report on capital Improvements, house numbering update and
a property transfer proposal.

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 1977

GALJ.JPOLIS - Kids activities will clubs, nurses, boat club, churches, hoosier
kick off the 1977 Gallipolis River clubs, police and fire department officials,
Recreation Festival on Saturday, July 2. and school organizations.
The 12th aMual Independence Day
Festivities will begin 2 p.m. July 2 with
celebration will be concluded with a kids day activities which include wheel

Q)mmerce spokesman.

.
$5995
ONLY
=t

will also he divided according to age.
Ribbons will be awarded In all categories.

PRICE 25 CENTS

Kids ·fun kicks off River Festival on Saturday

GALUPOUS - More than 50 units
have been registered thus far for the July
Fourth River Recreation Festival Parade
according to a Gallipolis Area Chamber of

Super Sale Price

-,.

t I

amateur categories, and the amateur level

tmts

GALLIPOLIS-POINT PLEASANT

NO. 21

I

REG. 179.95

'-'"

are
represented in the permanent collections
of the Columhos Gallery of Fine Arts, the
Zanesville Art Institute, Schumaker
Gallery of Capital University and many
private collections. He is ooe of the three
judges of the City Beautiful Awards
Prograrruand has been since its Inception.
He and his wife wbo was his high
school sweetheart have two children a
daughter Susan a~d a son Jef! who 1s' an
attorney In Columbus. They also have
three grandchildren.
Leland McClelland will be 1n Gallipolis
00 Wednesday to judge the entries in the
River Recreation Festival Exhibit. En·
tries will be judges in professional and

.

Tennesseeans

ELBERFELDS

1~ 1

•

unba
'YO. 12

(Continued from page I)
leagues and also shares her children's choir.
She has a Bachelor's and
interest in tennis.
Master's
degrees
in
Her Interest In sports
reflects in part her love of the education, has taught PE and
outdoors, Pat says and love of coached women 's basketball
challenge. " I'd be much - one area she hopes to
happier if I can be outside," return to once her two girls
she said, and listed horseback are older.
But for now, she's enjoying
riding, Silow and water skiing
and . camping among her being a housewife, pilot,
athlete, bus driver, Sunday
favorite activities.
school
teacher, referee and
"Flying is another interest,
community
worker.
partly because or the
As
the
Cookeville
Jaycettes
challenge she says and she is
said
whey
they
presented
the
particularly proud of her
award
to
Pat
Jordan
,
"She
is
pilot's license.
most
certainly
an
out·
But her interest in sports is
just a small part of the active standing yoUng woman."
•
Cookeville woman's life she likes being invoh•ed in the .: Pat was horn and reared in
community, working with Portland . She graduated
children, teaching.
from Racine High School
She is president-&lt;!lect of the (Southern now) and Ohio
Cookeville Junior Woman's State University. She taught
Club and· president of the physical education at Meigs
Five
County
Medical High School one and a half
Auxiliary. She teaches a years while her husband was
fourth grade Sunday school stationed in Vietnam.
class at first United
Congratuations to a fine
Methodist Church and drives young women. Meigs County
the . church bus for the is proud of her.

GALJ.IPOLIS - An artist who has
ethibited nationally since 1970 as well as in
numeroll! local jurled shows, and IS the
Director of Fme Arts at the. Ohio State
Fair, Leland S . McCieiiand, Wl~l !udge th•
River Recreation Fest1val Exhibit entnes
sponsored by the French Art Colony. He
has had his . own Fme Arts Studio m
C&lt;&gt;lumbus for the past 14 years.
Born and educated in Colwnbus, he
attended Ohio State Un_lverslty and
graduated from the Chicago Academy of
Fme Arts. For 22 years~· alas a cartoonist
for the old Columbus Citizen, ereating the
Sunilay cartoon ~ge..
..
He started to pamt Ill 1959 and began In
water~lors. He h~s _cont.inued to work in
all medw but spec1alizesm watercolor. He
is the founder of the Central Ohio
Watercolor Society and a member of the
Nat.lonal Cartoonists Society.
McClelland is ·past president of the
Columbus Art League, Bexley Art Gulld,
Arts Council of Columbus, Downtown
Lions Club and the Athletic· Club of
Columbus. He is a part time instructor of a
watercolor class at the Columbus College
of Art and Design, and for the past eleven

..

~~

,.

Cannel News,
By the Day

CAMDEN PARK

,

•

CLUB TO MEET

and
special
numbers Roush attended the wedding
following
.
Rev
.
Freeland
Saturday, of Charles Burge
and family, Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Stanley and Anna, Norris and a group from and Patricia Smith at the
Edison.
Anna
Stanley Racine had numbers for Cottagevilie Methodist
remained here at the home of Meigs County. State Grange Church and reception at the
her grandparents for a officers present included Kera House at Ravenswood.
State Master James Ross,
The birthdays of Mrs.
vacation .
Relatives here have State Junior Director Mary Charles Lawson and her
learned that Eddie Jordan Ross and State E~ecutive granddaughter, Michelle
has undergone surgery and is Committee member, Ralph Morris, were cel~brated
Sunday at the home of Mrs.
confined to John F. Kennedy McColinell.
Hospital in Lake Worth, Fla. · Inspection l-as held when Lawson: Michell~ was
Mrs. Anna Halliday was an Columbia Grange No. 2435 celebratmg h_er thtrd btr·
overnight guest of Mrs. Ida held their June meeting on . thday. Attendmg the dinner
Dennison and Ivan Halliday Friday evening. Deputy and I?"rtY were Mrs. Cmdy
Master Mendal Jordan was Moms, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
was a caller.
inspecting
officer and gave Lawson, Cathy and Debbie,
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey
his
report.
It
was announced Wilda Lawson, Charley
were dinner guests qn
· Father's Day at the home of that the Women's Activities Lawson, Mrs. Dorothy
their
son·ln·law
and Committee had sold more Parsons, Mr. and Mrs. Ed
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Roy than 100 cookbooks. The toy Lawson and son, Eric of
contest is being planned for a Syracuse.
.
Wiseman, Harrisonville.
Mrs. Gloria Manu~!, Angie
Alex Vinson, son of Mrs. later date.
Mrs. Goldie Gillogly spent a~d Amy ~anuel of Racine
Maxie Crabtree, former
resld'ent here, called on Mrs. Sunday with her son-in-law vtsited Mr. and Mrs. Don
Arthur Crabtree and William and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Manuel Sunday afternoon.
Mrs. Dolly Wolfe visited
C. Peck on Monday evening. Arthur Crabtree and in the
Alex, whO is soon to retire afternoon they called on Mrs. Russell Roush Wed·
.
from the U. S. Navy, is HaMah Greg9ry at Huston nesd~y_.
Home
near
Hamden.
V!S!t'!'g
Mrs.
Edtth
Manuel
Nursing
located in Maryland.
who
.'s
tll
were
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Mrs.
Gillogly
and
Mrs.
Rev. and Mrs. Ray Biddle,
and
_LewiS
Hudson,
Mrs.
Flossie
Gregory
are
sisters.
Mr.
Birmingham, Ala., called on
Mr. and Mrs. Reed Jeffers on Mrs. Carl Crabtree and sons Bush, Mrs. Marvin McGuire
Tuesday afternoon . Rev. called at the Crabtree home and Ragina, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert BaUey, Mr. and Mrs.
Biddle, former minister at on Sunday evening.
More
than
40
young
people
Bobby
Bailey and Michael of
the Carpenter Baptist
attended vacation Bible Long Bottom, Mr. and Mrs.
Church, is -now retired.
Guests the paSt week at the school classes at Temple Harry Roush, Joy~e Manuel,
home of Mr. and Mrs. United Methodist and 17 adult Donnlta and Robm Manuel.
William Culwell iricluded Mr. and youth teachers and
and Mrs. Lawrence Tackett helpers taught lessons from
and Bertie Tackett, Flat· the parables with Jesus,
woods, Ky., Alkia Fraley, Teach Me as the theme. The
Ashland, Ky ., Goldie White group enjoyed a clown act
and Mr. and Mrs. John each morning as a special
Culwell, Columbus, along feature. A picnic was held
Mrs. Robert Lee and
with Mr. and Mrs. Dwaine Friday noon and the group
Bob Bill arid .J enny
Becky,
Jordan, Bryan, Keith and presented a program on
of Logan, who spent
qrueser
Sunday morning following
Sarah, local.
a
few
days
·with the Lees,
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Jeffers Sunday School. The program
spent the past weekend with was well attended by parents spent Sunday afternoon with
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Orr of
their
son-in-law
and and ·friends.
Chester.
daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Earl
Michael Lawson in Colum- ·
bus.
Johnson and Sheryl LeAnn
Mr . and Mrs. Arthur
visited with Mr. and Mrs.
NOW YOU KNOW
Crabtree and grandson ,
Big Ben does not refer to Douglas Johnson of Racine on
Kevin Crabtree, Earl Starkey the clock or the tower that Sunday evening.
and Mendal Jordan of houses it, but to the bell that
Rev. Richard Young and
ColUmbia Grange were at rings the hour. It weighs 13 son, Eric, Sidney, spent a few
Rodney Grange in Gallia tons, and was named for Sir · days last week with Mr. and
County for a 5 county grange Benjamin Hall, who was Mrs. Edson Roush.
gathering on Saturday commissioner. of works when
William Carleton of Racine
evening. Grange members it was installed.
called on relatives and
friends in the community
·recently.
'Mr. and Mrs. James Circle
of New Haven were at the
home of Mary Circle on
Saturday and Sunday.
SATURDAY-JUNE 25th

OPEN TO PUBLIC AFTER 5 P.M.

.

U Columbia accepta the governor's proposal, another hurdle would
be getting enough drilling rigs Into Ohio. Rhodes promised that the state
would pay for advertisemenlll in oil and gas trade journals to lure rigs
now in Appalachia and the Southwest to Ohio.

diversion to military or

The Meigs CoUnty Setter
large open toilet of canine
Livestock Dairy Club will
waste," Sen. Franz Leichter, _ meet at 8: 30p .m. Tl,lesday at
0-Manhattan, told the Senate the Leland Parker home.

OF
ENTUCKY WEST VIRGINIA GAS CO.
AND
KENTUCKY HYDROCARBON CO.

FDIC

expenses. ·

Pooper scoopers are legislated

.,EMPLOYEES' OUTING11

~•r

COLUMBUS tUPI) - Gov. James A. Rhodes has uk.ed Columbia
Gu of Ohio Ill initiate a massive drilling program and develop 400 new
natural gas wells in Ohio by Nov. 1. Rhodes said Friday thl! new wells are
eaaentlal to protect Ohio's reeidentlaland induotrtal gas consumers from
mrtag.. again lhb winter • heating season.
Columbia of Ohio board chairman Marvin E. White pr&lt;llllbed Rhodes
be would cmsult with his parent company, Columbia Gas System, Inc. of
Wilmington, Del., before committing C&lt;&gt;lumbia of Ohio to such a ..-oject.
"PoUcy ded!ioos have to be made before we embark m such a
..-ogram," said White, wbo estimated the cost of drilling the wells at $40
million. Columbia wolild be expected to pick up a large share of the

1 WASHINGTON

PARK RESERVED

X••

for 400 new Ohio natural gas wells

Senate overturns Brown veto
SACRAMENTO,
Calif.
(UP! ) - The California
Senate, rejecting Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr.'s hopes

Leland McClelland
to judge art w!~l!a~cUeUand

Gov. Rhodes 1111ks Colwnbia
Ga Co.
'

By JAMES HILDRE'l1l
-strategic uses is of serious
{UPI )
concern."
Apparently mistrusting
Rauer Meyer, director of
l&gt;arJn, Mr. and Mrs. Bud Russian intentions, the Commerve'sOffice of Export
Wilson, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Carter administration has Administration, said It allows
Evans. Mac Stewart had the rejected a request by an exports "only when it can be
blessing. Mrs. Martha Hun- American company to sell a satisfactorily determined
$1~ million computer system
that the transaction would not
nell was reported Ill .
to the Soviet Union.
make
a
significant
C o m m e r c e contribution to the military
Th e
Department said Thursday It potential of those nations that
would not issue an export would be detrimental to U.S.
-. license to Cmtrol Data Corp., and Western security."
of Minneapolis because of
" Af t e r e x t e n s i v e
ment for 15 specific kinds of . "serious concern" the interagency review," Meyer
murder and Is designed to computer system - known as said, "it was concluded that
meet U. S. Supreme Court Cyber 76 - would be used by such a finding could not be
guidelines for fairness. A 27- the Soviets for military made in this instance."
William Schneider, a
12 vote, the exact two-thirds purposes, such as missile
on
private
consultant
margin needed, se nt the guidance.
The Soviets had asked to military uses of computers,
measure by Sen . George
Deukmejian to an uncertain buy the system for weather has said the Cyber 76 system
coold be used by tbe Soviets
fate in_the traditionally more research and forecasting.
liberal Assembly which will 1 The license rejection came " to build better nuclear
ilfter President Carter had weapons, more efficient mis·
consider it in August.
expre~sed
strong sllesandwouldpermitthem
reservabons about the " to interconnect all of their air
. proposed sale. Several defenses to effectively block
congressmen urged the an American second strike
which would follow any
transaction be stopped.
A
Commerce
Department
surprise
attack on tbe United
waist-high " popper s~ooper,"
statement
said
the
export
States."
offered to demonstrate the
The Pentagon uses tbe
ease of using the tool, but was li~nse was denied "because
1t
ts
far
more
powerful
than
same
generation
of
ruled out of order, amid hoots
any
computer
known
to
be
computers
for
missile
and calls from his colleagues
available to the Soviet Union guidance and other military
to "bring on the dogs.''
(and) the likelihood of uses.

Carpenter Personals Fairview
. Mr. and Mrs. Reece from Meigs, Jackson, Gallla, News Notes
.Prather of Westerville spent Vinton
and
Lawrence
Saurday night with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
Smith and were joined on
Sunday by another daughter

Sale of Cyher 76
to Russia halted

will be available for giving inoculations to
children.
The six students will be working under
preceptors, that is, licensed and highly
trained personnel. They wlll have offices
in the senior citizens center and housing
has been secured so that the students will
be living in the county. Residents are
encouraged to invite the students to visit
their homes so that the students can be a
reflection of life here.
The program is designed to encourage

minimal charge for blood tests if they are these students through their involvement
desired. Services will include testing for in community life of the county to return to
hearing, speech, visitation, tuberculosis, practice in their fields in rural America.
high blood pressure and urinalysis. There Pictures of the visiting studentS: ar:e on
will also be a dental ~creening and service . Page B-7.

Scteen prmctured
GALLIPOLIS- A plaallc ball from
the audience punched a hole In the
upper lefl·hand corner ol the Colony
theater S&lt;nen at 8:55 p.m. Friday.
The elty pallce blotter reparted that
·two poUcemen went to tbe movie house,
and the Times-Sentinel'• Don Wright,
who was there, said that the Ughu
came on, cops strode tn, and proprtetor
Harry Wheeler talked briefly.
Wheeler offered $50 reward for
Information leading to ooavlctlon of the
vandal. Then the llghl8 were doused,
aDd tbe movie, Walt Disney's "Freaky
Friday," cootiaued. A big crowd was
preSent.
The blotter said oo arreot was

made. The charge will be destructloa of
property If one Ia made.

Bob Evans Farm to dedicate
new 'Ma Gatewood hiking trail
RIO GRANDE - Grandma Gatewood,
a legendary lady from Gallla County who
hiked the entire Appalachian Trail from
Georgia to.Maine at the age of 69, will be
· remembered Saturday, July 9, at
dedication

ceremonies for

a

new

"Grandma Gatewood" hiking trail on Bob
Evans Farm.
The approximately five kilometer trail
Is one or four hiking, backpacking, and
bridal trails
opened on
the
sausagemaker's farm this sununer. In
keepiqg with the vitality of Grandma
Gatewood, the Gatewood trail is the most
rugged and ch'allenglng.
Originally from Raccoon Creek
(Gallla County) Grand Gatewood was born
Enuna Rowena Csldwellln 18tl7. She grew
up in a log house as the middle child of a
farm familyof 15. She later had II children
of her own and spent the majority of her
life cooking, gardening: doing the laundry,
and raising children.
.
But instead of retiring to a rockin g
chair alter a long life of work, Grandma
Gatewood took up distance hiking. At the
age of 67 she became the first woman to
walk tbe 2,000 mile Appalachian Trail
consecutively in one season. She hiked the
entire distance alone, covering an average
of 13 miles per day in slow galt, lor 146
days. The year was 1954 and Grandma
Gatewood was just getting started.
In 1956 she hiked the Appalachian
Trail from one end to the other again. She
later tackled long stretches of the trail in
1957, 1!158, 1960 and in !963. Rapidly she
became well known to many of the
residents along the route, a legend among

Bll.J.IONS MORE IN,DEBT
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - Federal
spending exceeded income by $6 billion In
May, swelling the government's deficll
this year to 143 billion, the Treasury
Department says. The deficit In May hikers. Everyone knew her and spoke o£
contrasted to a $4.46 billion surplus in ' her as "Grandma."
Grandma's hiking equipment and
April, the !li-st time monthly government
income had surpaosed spenc!jng since the techniques were as unique as she was. She
fiscal year began Oct. I, the Treasury shuMed conventional hiking gear and
Chose Instead sneakers and a denim sack,
!&gt;eJM!rlment said Friday.

which contained her trailside essentials. fn
It she Carried such things as a sweater,
jacket, needle and thread, a Swiss Army
knife, flashlight, first-aid supplies, a
spoon, and soap and towel.
She carrie&lt;) simple lightweight
foodstuffs - cheeie~dried meat, bouillion
c-ubes, powdered milk, raisins, nuts or
crackers. These were the mainstay of her

diet while on the trail. At night she slept in
trailside lean-tos. under a tree, in a bam or
in a home near the 't rail.

Grandma Gatewood died in 1973 at the
age of 85, but not before she had hiked all
of the famous eastern trails and several

paths out West.
Some or her relatives, friends and
amateur hikers from across Ohio wlll be

on hand for a special dedication ceremony
of the newly 'cut Grandma Gatewood Trail
on the Bob Evans Farm at 1 p.m., July 9.
Two other hlkingtralls on the farm are
the Adamsville Trail, named alter the now
defunct Gallla County Village, and the

p 8Ir b0Ufid over
o

tO. grand J"ury

Nehemiah Wood Trail, the namesake of an
early settler on the farm.
These crlsscros\. a challenging Bridal
Trall and are now open to the public for .
day and overnight trips plus primitive
camping in the simple and natural

tradition of Grandma Gatewood. With few
exceptions hiking and camping supplies
are limited to what an individual can
carty, either on his back,.or by hol'lleback.
As a result the rolling hills of the farm
offer visitors a remote and natural ex·
perlence unique to this part of the Mid·
west.
Trail use Is free although vlsitol'll are
asked to register at Adamsville Outfitters
Shop located on the Bob Evans Farm. The
shOp is equipped to rent or sell tents, hack·
packs, cooking and eating utensils, and

•

and Dan Rowan, and selections from

Gallia Country.
Throughout the three day festival ,
food and drlnks will be offered by 17
concession stands spaced through the

festival ground
The annual River Festival is designed
ror family entertainment, giving area
residents an opportunity to enjoy a fun
weekend without traveling on crowded
hgihways.
·
Any organization or individual wishing

to enter the Fourth of July parade should .
fill out the coupon in the local papers or
contact the Gallipolis Area Chamber of
Commerce on State St. in Gallipolis prior
to Wednesday , June 29.

Addison wells
ntake oil, gas
'

By J. Sherman Porter
GAl.J.JPOLIS - Two wells are on
production in Section 17 of Addison
township, turning out 20 barrels of oil and
100,000 cubic feet of gas daily.
The news came from Dean Harris,

production superintendent for Orwig Oil
C&lt;&gt;., Logan, Ohio, who said the wells
reached 1,800 feet into the second Berea
sand.
r
This Work is being done on strip--mined

Harris said.

· There are oil wells in that area drllled
by Columbia's predecessor, Ohio Fuel
Gas, which are still producing 40 years
alter they were drilled, Harris said. Judge
IIetz added that the ROJ corporation,
formed Aug. 28, 1970, is a real estate
holding company. Its land Is leased to
Brasel &amp; Brasel (rhymes with dazzle I of
C&lt;&gt;lumbus, oil and gas brokers; who farm
the land out.
Orwig got three sites, Including this
one, Judge Betz said. He praised R. Gene

land formerly owned by Ohio River
C&lt;&gt;llieries, according to Judge Robert S.
Betz, president of the ROJ corporation, Bra~l as a young business executive of
which owns 4,500 acres of that kind of highest qualifications. Charles A. Orwig,
ground in Addison, Morgan, Springfield, wllo heads the lessee company, has homes
and Cheshire townships . Virginia Kay Betz in Logan, Ohio, and Sarasota, Fla.
A visit to the Addison township site
is secretary-treasurer.
·
PennzoU buys the oil at 110.52 a barrel, shows a dozer or dozers, which level the
Harris said, while Arabs sell their oil to the land ; a rig, which drills the wells; a
logging and perforating truck : hydroUnited States for $16 to $18 a barrel.
"We're the only industry," he added, Cracking tools which pump water and sand
•:still under federal control . If they'd tum and chemicals intO the ground to make it
us loose, there's be no oil shortage - oil
people would find it if they could sell it for
what it's worth."

Natural gas from the same well is
piped into Columbia Gas of Ohio's lines,

more porous, and, finally~ the completion
rig, which puts In the tubing and gets the

flow started.
A sepcirator divides gas from the oil.

Federal Mogul strike
ended by union vote
-.

GALLIPOLIS - It was 11 :24 a.m. 12:30-4 and 4-7,
Friday that the strike at Federal Mogul
Curry said that th e pi ckets are
ended, for it was at that hour that the signs members of Local 347, Food Store Em·
came down, according to Jo Johnson, in ployees union, Charleston , where the union
personnel. ·
president, Jack Brooks, lives. He said that
The Federal Mogul strike of 200 th e negotiating committee has these local
members of Local 1885 United Auto members: Jeff Hart, Paul Hollingshead,
Workers Union of America started at 6 Judy Fuller and Mike Campbell.
p.m. Sunday, June 19, with the placement
of pickets.

The

pickets

were

gone,

dehydrated foods to individuals or groups • motorists noticed, at noon and Friday
in need of equipment.

In addition to hackpacing - hourly,
daily and overnight horseback trips are
available. Overnight trips include two paid

•
CHECKING FOR JOBS
There was a union meeting at 10 a.m.
PITTSBURGH (UP! ) - The United
Friday, when it voted 125-23 to accept the Steelworkers union and the nation's top
Federal Mogul terms which, management basic steel producers will form a joint task

for meals, singing aroUnd the campfire,

said, had been offered a week before. '

and a three hour ride to and from camp.
These depart each Tuesday and Friday
evening in groups from 6 to 20.

In the meantime, the Jones Boys in steel mills, as outlined in the labor
strike continued, plcliets standing in the agreement signed by the USW and the
Saturday rain to let the public know that a steel industry last ApriL Each si de has

Negotia•ti"ons will
,

begin on Monday
GALLIPOLIS - John L. Reynolds, 23,
Gallipolis Ferry Friday was bound to the
GaUia county 'grand jury under bond of
15,000 on a charge of armed robbery.
Reynolds and Philip Daniel Davis, 18,
Kanauga, were accu.•ed In !he stickup ol
the Burger Chef June 12. Both men waived
preliminary hearing, and both were bound

. COLUMBUS (UPI) - A ·senate-House
conference committee is scheduled to
meet at 10 a.m. Monday to begin
negotiations on the state's $13 billion
general appropriations bill containing the
bulk of the budget for 1978-79.
Legislative leaders believe there is little
of substance standing In the way of an
over, each with the same amount of bond . agreement even though the Senate added
However, Reynolds at first had about $150 miUion to the spending level
recommended by the House.
requested a preliminary hearing.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
_,.

area's largest fireworks display to be

presented at 10 p.m. by the Gallipolis
Volunteer Firemen and the Retail Mer·
chants Assn.
Entertainment will be provided by the
Ole Tyme Chorus, the Garfield Barbecue,
Ward's Key hoard and Friends, blue grass
music with the Dwane Jolly Group, Mike

..

· afternoon.

force to explore employment opportunities

.strike was on. One of the early morning named five representatives to the group
pickets, Mike Curry, said that two pickets that will explor e the range of income and

hold forth from 7 a.m. to 9 a.m.: then there job security in the mills. The report must
are three shifts of six pickets each, 9-12:30, be complete by November, 1979 .

Tour made of Gavin power plant
Bailey, White and Butcher were guests

MIDDLEPORT - Engineers Tom
White, Mark Bailey and Dave Crabtree led
members of the Middl eport-Pomeroy J
Rotary Club oo a tour of the huge Gavin
Power Plant Friday evening. Assisting
them was Jim Butcher, employed in the

Crabtree nlade a detailed presentation of
how power is produced using a lighted,
diagra m board in a conference room at the

laboratory of the plant, a son-in·law of

plant preceding the tour.

Rotarian Charles Blakeslee.

of the club for dinner at Heath United
Methodist Church here before the tour.

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