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'/'
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•

12 - Th~ Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, !\lay 8, 1975

HOSPIT AL ss.:year-old

Pony teams
have I week
to be signed

man injured

(Continued from page 5)
Communists - particull!rly
North Vietnamese - and
moderates - mainly Viet
Teams inte•·es ted in parHolzerMedkal Ct•nter
An 85-ycm-uid Rl. I, Cong - but there was no
M
·
M
Discharges
,
Ga
llipolis
. · t'mg ·m th
tIClpa
. e e1gs- ason
. man, had apparent confl."matl·on.
•.
County Pony League have
Mary Adkins ,_ Rubert minor injuries in a traffic
Political analysts said the
until May 15 to do so.
Allbrigh t, Karen Bates, Carol accident at 4:50 p.m. Wed· moderates appeared to favor
· Eq Kennedy, secretary- Belville, Kathy Bentley, Nora nesdayon Bunce Rd., one and giving anti-Communists a
trea su re r, reported the Birchfield, Mace! Bush, Laura four tenths miles north of voice in the South Vietnamese.
following rules for this Can terbury, Virginia Carter, Georges Creek Rd .
goverrunent, but the hardAccording to the Gallia- liners disagreed.
season:
Thelma Cordell , Christy
Entry fee of '25 and must be Dailey· Beatrice Davis, Irene Meigs Post Sta te Hi ghway There were no reported Viet
paid to Kennedy by May 15, Da\•is. Belva Frley, Alice Patrol, J ohn Null, Rt. I, Cong reprisals in Saigon and
the money 10 be used to Fetherols, Luther Greenlee, Gallipolis, ·was a passenger in life in the city returned to
purchase trop hies: rosters Shawn Harris, Edwin Hixson, . a car driven by Clarence E. normal within 48 hours of the
shall be turned in to Kennedy Millis Johnson, Ann Keating, Shriver, 63, of Rl. I, Gallipolis .. Communist takeover.
by May 22 ( 18 players Douglas Langhorne, Barbara
Shriver • driving north , But there were new scenes
maximum ), birth dates to be Ll oyd, Mar k Lon g, Amos apparently lost control of his - VietCong and North Vietincluded : the play ing season Lowe, Beverly McGowan, car on a steep grade. The namese shopping in the stillge!,s underway May 27: any Dewey McCoy, Lester Met- vehicle went off the road , open black market, Corrunuteam roster not turned in to calf, Frank Porter, Linda over turn ed,
and
wa s nists soldiers apd South VietRhodes,
Agnes
Riffle,
Ethel
demolished.
No
charge
was namese civilians chatting
.
Kenn ed y before the ftrst game
is played will result in a for- Robinson, Wayne Saunders , filed.
amiably,llighways open to the
fei! ; the final meetin g before Thelma Shane, Daniel Shee!,s,
Alma K. Kauff, 49, Mid- Mekong Delta.
the season's first game will be , Amta Stevenson •. Mrs. Frank dleport, was slightly injured in rn ·many ways, Saigon still
May 22 at Pomeroy City Hall Swa ns on and mfant son, an acciden t at 8:25 a.m. appeared to he a wide-()pen
NEW OFFICERS OF MEIGS FFA- Front row, 1-r,
Kennedy, student advisor, Bobby Johnson, secretary ;
al 7 p.m . Players must be 15 or Wilham Th omp son, Dana Wednesday on Rt. 7 at the city despite the takeover.
Rex Butcher, reporter, Jeff Arnold, treasurer, Tom
back row, Rick Macomber, president, Robert Butcher,
Turner, Leburn Vires, Cindy entrance to the James M. Black markets flourished,
1mder as of Aug. 1, 1975. ·
vice president and Steve McCune, sentinel.
For addiiional informaiion Waddell , Pans Wellman , . Gavin Plant.
dealing in American, South
those interested may contact Sherrian n Wood and . Mrs.
The patrol said Mrs. Kauff Vietnamese and North
Paul Stodola, president, of Michael Yeakle and mfant was a passenger in a car Vietnamese currencies.
Mason, 304-773-5809 or Ken- son.
operated by Harold E. Kauff, TheCommunistshaveyetto
nedy, Pomeroy, at 614 _992_
Births
54, of Middleport. Their car open banl\s a week after the
7512.
\Yir. and . Mrs. Ronald was struck by a pickup truck liberation, spurring the illegal
Coch ran.
Scottown,
a making a turn operated by money transactions that have
daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Cecil R. Miles, 31 , of taken place in the capital
Gibbs, Mason, a daughter.
Gallipolis.
duringthreedecadesofwar.
DAMAGE ASSESSED
A deer was killed in an Tran Thanh, a millionare
The Pomeroy Fire Dept.
accident at 5:45 a.m. Wed- businessman of Chinese
was called to the Gordon
nesday on the Bidwell-Rodney origin, turned out be a
Teaford reside nce at the foot Veterans Memorial Hospital
Rd., six tenths of a mile north Communist sympathizer and
of Rose Hill at 9:38 p.m.
of
Rt. 35: The animal ran into stayed behind when most of
ADMITTED
John
Wednesday where a fire had Flowers, Minersville; George the path of a car operated by his associates fled with their
started.
Damag ~
was Daniels, Pomeroy ; Hollis Dillard Sanders, 33, of Scot- cash.
estimated at $1500. The ca use Rupe , Cheshire; Jack Lyons, town .
But no important members
of the fire has not been Racine; Robert Clark, Letart,
of the previous pro-American
determined.
W. Va.; Regin a Adkins ;
goverrunents had emerged as
Pomeroy ; Leota Hubbard,
pro-Communists in the new
Ma son;
Eric Dunning,
administiation.
!TWAS DEBBIE
_.,
Viet Cong directives put
The artist responsible for Racine.
DISCHARGED
Alma
civil
servants back on their
the show boa t se tting for the
Pooler,
Timothy
Gaus,
Mary
previous jobs, although
musical of the Sali sb ury
Ir vin J . Wolfe, of 5867 Communists now hold the
Elementary School musical Randolph, Andrew Grover,
FF A BANQUET - At the Meigs High School annual
who was presented the Star Greenhand award, Dennis
was
Debbie
Ke nnedy, Iris Morris, Charles Hilton, Harlem Road, Galena, for- major positions.
FF
A
Banquet
Tuesday
evening
were
1-r,
Tom
Kennedy
Hann, McConnelsville, guest speaker, Everett Holcomb
The takeover of Saigon went
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ed Charles Hatcher, Bryan Korn, merly of Racine and
and
Aaron Sayre, FF A advisors.
Bobby
Rupe.
Pomeroy, died Thursday smoothly with a well-planned
Kennedy of Pomeroy, and not
and
political
morning at Grant Hospital in military
Dennie Ke nnedy as a
operation
moving
in and
Columbus.
typographical error ca used it
seizing
control
within
hours
of
Mr. Wolfe was a research
to say in Wednesday 's Daily
PLEASANT VALLEY
machnnist
with
North the surrender.
Sentinel.
By KATIE CROW
DISCHARGES Lyle American Rockwell.
and Parlimentary procedures Tractor Sales; Jack Carsey, Credit; Roy Eichinger, EbersBu.t isolated clashes broke
Tom
Kennedy
was
awarded
Austin, Gallipolis. Ferry;
by Steve Peyton. Closing Landmark; Manning Kloes, bach Hardware.
He is survived by three out as suicide holdouts fired on
' George Logan, Vinton ; Orpha daughters , Mrs . Vivian Viet Cong and North Viet- the Star Greenhand award, ceremony was conducted by Citizens National Bank;
A special thanks to InKbrdell, Jackson; Madie Stra tton, Ostrander; Mrs . namese soldiers at the Carl Davidson was named the officers. A buffet style Warren Pickens, Pomer oy ternational dealer, Mark
TONIGHT
McCoy, Bidwell ; Leycester Paulette Moreland, Waldo , presidential palace, the outstanding senior, and Danny dinner was served.
National Bank; Thereon Smith, for the donation of a
NOT OPEN
Coulter ,
Leon ;
J 1ames and Mrs. Mary Lou Jennings, Saigon zoo and a number of Good was . presented the Special recognition went to Johnson , farmer s Bank &amp; dynan ometer for Vo-Ag Shop,
Agricultural Mechanic s the followin g: Bob Miller, Savings; Rich ard Finlaw, and t.be cooks, Mary Hysell,
Robinson , Henderson; Mrs.
Sunbury; a son, Charles R, U. suburban areas.
Fri. , Sat .. Sunday
Award at the annual Meigs Ohio Valley Industries; Gravely Tractor Sales ; Dick Grace Abbott, Sadie Carl, and
Clyde Ramey, Vinton.
S. Navy, Norfolk, Va.; seven
The Cominunists attacked High School FFA banquet
MY NAME IS NOBODY
BIRTHS - May 7, a son to grandchildren, four greatSterrit, Jackson Production Avice Bailey .
( Technicolor)
Saigon on the last day of the Tuesday night at the hi~h Russell Brown , Brown's
Mr.
and
Mrs.
James
Barnett,
Starring
grandchildren , and three war from three sides -the
school cafeteria.
Point Pleasant, and May 8 a sisters, Mrs. Belinda NorNs,
Henry Fonda, Terence Hil l
north,
the
southwest
and
the
Rated " PG"
The invoca lion wa~ given by
son to Mr. and Mrs. Carse!
Rome City. Ind.; .Mrs. Dill northwest.
Colorcartoons
Jacki Doczi, and introduction
Stone, Jr., West Columbus.
Stewart, Parkersburg, and
By early morning, they had of special guests was by
Show Starts at 7:00p. m.
M~s. Cressa Nease, We&amp;t overrun a suburban police
Danny Good. Carl Davidson
Virginia.
station, taken control of the
Shop Friday and Saturday 9:30 to 8 pm
introduced the guest speaker,
Friends may call at the perimeter of Tan Son Nhut Air
Dennis Hann, of McConnelsDeVore Funeral Home in Base northwest of the capital
ville.
Sunbury from 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 and fought their way into Phu
Parents were introduced by
p, m. Friday . Funeral ser- Lam and Phu Tho districts
members of the FFA, Don
vices will be at 10 a . m. southwest of Saigon.
Yost
announced
the
Saturday at the Sunbury
Retreating South VietGreenhand winner, the creed
'
Church of Christ with the Rev. namese forces set up a lastwas given by Tom Kennedy,
Norman Gendt officiating. ditch ~rimeter at the norspecial awards by Rick
Graveside services will be thern end of Tan Son Nhut, but
Macomber, soil judging team
held at 1:30 p. m. Saturday at senior commanders fled and
by Robert Butcher, officers
Beech Grove Cemetery in the lines broke.
pins given by Carl Davidson
Pomeroy.
The victorious Corrununist
;;:
Women's Prison
,..
forces entered with a .tremen- ::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
dous display of military
,..
u . ~A.
11"S ON MAY 17th
might, awing the most jaded
Rated R
The Meigs High Athletic
observers of the Vietnam war. Boosters have set the date
Tanks, annored personnel for the All-Sports Banquet
..
carriers and trucks -both for Saturday, May 17 at6 :30
Communist-made and cap- p.m. in the high school
tured AmericanThere will be an
,..
·· MASON, W. VA.
·
,.. Rebecca Dunfee, Pomeroy, manufactured vehicles - cafeteria.
admission price of $1 per
has filed for divorce in rolled through the city streets.
person for the event which
Common Pleas Court against
Corrununist forces . moved
ry~
will recognize both boys and
Kendall E, Dunfee, Mid- quickly to pre-assigned posigirls sports at the school.
Y the Distinctive
dleport, charging gross lions, wheeled out the
Tickets are now on sale at
le of
neglect of duty and extreme firepower and prepared for a
the high school, the New
cruelty. Cheryl Lee Fry was final battle if necessary.
York Clothing House in
granted a divorce from Jerry
At the presidential palace, a
Pomeroy, the Rutland
Leonard Fry on charges of fight broke out at 4:30p.m. on
Department Store in
gross neglect of duty and the day of the takeover, but
Rutland and the Western
extreme cruelty.
outgunned loyalist troops
Auto Store In Middleport.
Organ, Drums, Guitar
Six other cases dismissed quicldy succumbed to the
were John P. Pickens, Sr., massive firepower put out by :;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:::::::::::;:;:::::::;:::::::
. NITELY
versus Samantha V. Pickens , the Communists.
Bonnie Neville versus Sterling
After that, Saigon was quiet.
TUES., W'ED., THURS .. .S:J0-1:00
CASES SETTLED
Neville, Virginia Pennington
The first dliy of peace in
FRI. &amp; SAT., 9:30-2:00
Cases settled in Middleport
versus Charles J . Pennington, Vietnam in 30 years dliwned
mayor 's court tuesday night
Southern Ohio Coal Co. versus on May 1.
by Mayor Fred Hoffman inUnited Mine Workers of
In other important developcluded
Tom Stewart, no adTO ENTERTAIN YOU AT
America District No. 6, Helen ments during a week of
dress
,
assault
and battery,
Lou Hemsley versus Ralston · goverrunent-enforced press
fined $20 and costs; Otto
Douglas Hemsley and Sylvia silence:
'
. J . Bliss versus Kenneth J .
- A communique published Johnson , no address , disorPH.
. POMEROY
derly manner, $10 and costs,
Bliss.
April 30 -the day of liberation
and Alfred Birchfield , Mid-promised "severe , punishdleport, DWI, $150 and costs,
ment" lor robbers, thieves
:kiay jail sentence.
and "disorderly elements."
•
'
- The defeated govern· :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::·
ment's Jast president, Gen.
OFFICERS NAMED
Duong Van Minh, told
RACINE - The Racine
newsman ai the surrender, "!
have decided to hand over Baseball Assn. last night
power to the people who have elected these officers for the
. . .the longer you own It
more merit than I."
1975 season: Shirley Dugan,
president; Jack Bostic, vice
president; Donna! Gheen,
the more you'll like the name
busineis manager, and
Joann Crisp, secretary·
treasurer.
SQUAD CALLED
RACI1'1E - The Racine E-R
II was noted thai coaches
squad was called to the Racine are still needed for the 1975
ball field at 4:25 p.m . Wed· season. There will be a final
nesctay for Eric Dunning who signup this Saturday, May
suffered a lacerated . right Ill, at the home of Don
lower arm in a game accident.. Beegle, from 9 a. m. to 12
He has been admitted lo noon only. Entry fee is $%.
Veterans Memori al Hospital.

NEWS

in accident

Irvin Wolfe

died Thursday

Awards made at Meigs High FFA banquet

MEIGS THEATRE

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY"

'******************************l

:.

.t

DOUBLE FEATURE .
FRI.-S.AT.-SUN.

:- ~~DOUBLE
i AGENT"

"CAGED
HEAr'

....*

~..
t.

:

Mother's

~

**
*
..*

Day

Gifts

Divorce suit

t.. MASON DRIVE IN THEATRE ·*~ filed in court

'******************************~

• Dresses • Coats
• Capes • Sportswear
• Handbags • ttosl'e

Frank Sisty

• Jewelry • Scarfs •
Perfume • Umbrellas

• Sleepwear • Ungerie
• Candy • Cookware
• Glassware • Sheets
• Towels • Bedspreads

TRIO

&lt;

• Tablecovers • Furniture
And Lawn Furniture

~) 1 ~ 1

'

THE MEIGS INN

(

.;,.

)

At The Mechanic
Street Warehouse.

&lt;

~

.

FLEXSTEEL

a

Cards and
Giftwrap
by Hallmark

BAKER FURNITURE

E

Middleport, Ohio

•

•

'.

Rhodes Unveils plan to drill 2,700 gas wells

Saigon

..

.

RFELDS IN· POMEROY
•'

COLUMBUS (UPI) - .Gov. James A. Rllodes todliy announced a propo&amp;l;d new program· to increase Ohio's natural
gas production by a! least 150 billion cubic feet per year within·
, .the next two years which would include the drilling of 2, 700 new
wells and an expenditure of a minimum of $250 milUon.
"Ohio's gas production must be nearly tripled ln the shortest
time po&amp;'llble to make up for dwindling supplies to industry ,"
said Rhodes ln a statement prepared for a news conferenCI!
here.
"Our goal ia to Increase production of Ohio gas by at least 150
billion cubic feet per year within the next two.)!ears," said the
governor. "Expenditure of a minimum of $250 million wiU be
necessary." ·
·

Food, cars to
cost more by
end o;f y.e ar
&lt;

•

By Richard Hughes, UPI Business Writer
.,

Americans are going to have to pay more for
food and new carsdt's · inevitable, experts say.
The Agriculture Department said food prices
will rise 6 to 8 per cent by the end of the year, and
Ford Motor's top executives said 1976 model cars
will be priced 3 to 6 per cent higher than 1975
models.
The prediCtions followed a report Thursday
. by the Labor Department that wholesale prices
rose in April after four consecuti, e months of
. decline. The White House said the increase means
"inflatio.· is by no means licked."
Wholesale prices of fann _food prices will be pushed up
products jumped 6.7 per cent by higher labor, energy,
last month, the Department transportation and packaging
said, in reversal of a trend · cO.sts. "There's no way we
' began last December toward can have cheaper food when
· lower fann prices.
most production costs are on
In a separate report, the rise," Schmuck said.
· Agriculture said food prices
In Dearborn, Mich., Henry
: would be 6to 8 per cent higher Ford II, chairman of Ford
' by the end of the year -if the Motor Co, and Lee Iacocca,
harvest ill good. During 1973 president, told newsmen that
· and 1974, food prices rose an 1976 model cars could cost
from $200 to $250 more than
average of 14.5 per cent.
James T. Schmuck, vice 1975 models. "Price ·in·
president of Del Monte Corp., creases are a foregone
told the Conference Board, a conclusion," Ford said.
business research group, that · "They'r~ Inevitable."

IN=!~~
CIN\fiNNATI -

THE NEW MOTHER OF QUIN·

'r;'!leY!;rJ'S says Bile Wll!l\Uo shun publlcity and help each of
her children grow up privately, Independently and not destined
to become "just one ol the quints."
·"My biggest challenge now," figures Mrs. Pamela Levy,
"Is to keep my filmily out of the publicity spotlight.
·
"I re~~Uy would like my children to have a private life," the
pert, 28-year-old said Thursday In her fll'st public appearance
since the births 16 days ago. "I want them to be individuals not known as "just one of the quints." Mrs. Levy and all five of
her children ate in excellent health, doctors said she should be
able to return to her suburban Fairfield home with at least one
baby "withlr) a week."
. HOUSTON - DANNY KIZER, 27, GOT married April 29.
On the same day a grand jury indicted him on three counts of
bigamy. After Kizer was Indicted, investigators learned he had
married 11 women without divorcing any of them.
"I don't know what the guy's got, but if this guy could
bottle it, he'd make a mllllon," assistant district attorney Bill
Camp said Thursday,
Camp said the marriages were characterized by a short
courtship and a. brief honeymoon. He said the fir.st marriage
look place 10 years ago and almost aU of Kizer's II wives were
in their late teens. He said he plans to ask the grand jury to
return more bigamy counts against Kizer. "I am reasonably
informed the estimate is II," Camp said. "II could go higher.
WASHINGTON -THE HOUSE JUDICIARY Committee
has given President Ford authorization to spend all the money
he needs to welcome and resettle refugees from Indochina. A
House appropi.ations sub-eornmittee has voted to let Ford
actually spent f405 million. Both bills should be acted upon in
the lull House WedneSday.
.
Thursday's 30-4 vote ln. the House Judiciary Committee
-(Continued on page.IO) ·

Rhodes said ihe money would be used to pay for the drilling
of about·2,700 new wells into the Clinton Sand formation "the
mlnlmillll needed to produce approxmately 150 billion cubic
feet" of natural gu.
Rhodes also reiterated that there was a large, untapped
reservior of gas in shale formations in Ohio.
The governor said to accomplish these goals he would:
- Push for the Federal Power Commission to change
"unrealistic regulations" which forbid states to use excess
pipeline capacity used in Interstate corrunerce.
-Work for passage by the Ohio General Assembly of the bill
creating the Ohio Energy Development Authority which will
have bonding power _to finance ener~ researc~ .

"Through this agency we ca n raise $15 million to begin
. immediately to drill, " said Rhodes. "In addition, I will include
inmy·proposed $2.5 billion bond issue, $60 million for energy
research to be a v~ialble upon passage of the issue in
November."
-Secure a federal grant of ~0 miUion to develop techniques
for tapping Ohio's huge reserves of shale gas .
.
-Organize Ohio drillers, gas utiltties and manufacturing
industries, who are spendin_g $150 million a year on gas
development on their own, into a cohesive unit so we can get
the maximum benefit for Ohio.
Rhodes said he would also attempt to attract drillers in the
Southwest, who are idle because of economic conditions, to

•

at y
VOl. XXVII

move to Ohio.
wiU use my expereince In Industrial development to try to
brmg one or more of the major oil or gas companies to Ohio to
expand our efforts to get gas," said Rhodes.
0
''While we are approaching the gas problem With a tw()oyear
all-out plan to produce more gas, we must also recognize-that
there is potential for a huge new gas industry in this region if
the huge shale reserves can be tapped, producing long-tenn
prosperity in Ohio," said Rhodes.
The governor warned tha't natural gas shortages "threaten
to cripple Ohio industry next winter" and "we inust act
•
together, now.''

:·1

•

enttne

Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area
&lt;.
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
FRIDAY, MAY 9, 1975

NO. 19

J~RLCE. J5'

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

Cuban thaw near?
WASHINGTON (UPI) The next move is up to the
United States in a sudden
thawing of relations with
Communist Cuba, Sen.
George McGovern, 0-S.D.,
said today.
Both the White House and
Cuban Premier Fidel Castro
indicated Thursday they are
apparently ready to take
s,teps toward smoother
relations between the· two
countries, less than 100 miles
apart.
But McGovern said todliy
after a four~ay Cuban visit
and 11 hours of talks with

Castro that the United States
must lift its trade embargo
against the island as a first
step toward better relations.
"He (Castro) made clear
that medicine and food are
the things they are most
interested
in,"
said
McGovern. "He made it clear
that all other questions can go
on the table for discussion
after the embargo is lifted."
Tlle United States broke off
diplomatic relations with
Cuba on Jan . 3, 1961, and
added a trade embargo in
October of 1962 on a Senate
resolution.

McGovern, who . returned
Thursday night, said Castro
told him such items as
compensation to U.S. companies
for
nationalized
properties, ieI.ease of nine
American political prisoners
in Cuban jails and return of $2
million in airline hijack
ransom money can "be laid
on the table for discussion
after the embargo is lifted."
White
House
Press
Secretary Ron Nessen said
Thursdliy Castro "seems to
have accepted what the White
House has referred to as the
mutuality of obligation in

Improving relations between
Cuba and the United States."
"His (Castro 's ) major
interest would be to resume
economic relations with the
United States," McGovern
said today . "I. think he is
deeply hurt ... it is a constant
injury to their pride."
McGovern was interviewed
on the NBC Todliy Show.
" I am going to recommend
very strongly that we lift the
blockade, " he said . " We
could send whea t, rice , dliiry
products to them. They could
provide us with sugar and
other things we need."

,_
,-

...

••''

..

'

I

Refugee ·camps full, bulging
United Press IDtemational
Thousands more refugees
fleeing the Conununists in
South Vietnam and Cambodia
today poured into camps
stretching from Guam to
Florida, heartened by
congressional action on funds
to help them start new lives ln
America.
Camp Pendleton, .the
"Little Saigon" in California
bulging with about 18,000
members of America's
newest minority group,
began shunting refugees to
Eglin Air Force Base, Fla.
.Ten flights to Eglin todliy
pushed that center over· its
planned capacity of 2,500. Ft.
Chaffee, Ark., was operating
at about half its 20,000
capacity, with more arrivals
expected.
- Abqut 10,000 of the 75,000
refugees to arrive on Guam
since the airlift began two
weeks ago were awaiting
transportation to the West
Coast and 3,500 more were
due at Guam and Wake
Island today. About 9,000
sailed from Subic Bay in the
Philippines Thursday for

Guam.
Uncertainty about the
influx of an estimated 126,000
refugees from war-torn
Southeast Asia was eased
Thursday by congressional
approval of ,rese\tlement
funds.
The Senate passed a "GoOd
Samaritan" resolution
.aut!\orizillg $! 7 million in
leftover military aid for
resettlement. The House
Judiciary . Commi,ttee
promised President Ford all

the money he needs for the
program and \he House
appropriations subcommittee
approved a $405 milUon bill.
Action by the House was
expected on both bills
Wednesdliy.
As Congress acted on resettlem ent of the refugees ,
reports poured in from across
the nation of American
families responding to the
influx of homeless people.
At least four men have
proposed marriage . to 24-

year-old Vu Thi Lan, a
Vietnamese r efugee who
arrived at Bangor, Me., only
to find the man who married
her in Saigon had since wed
an America n, without benefit
of divorce.
" She 's gotten
three
marriage proposais in the
mail and one over the phcne
from somewhere in"Indiana ,''
said police Sgt. Joseph
Friedman, who handles
responses to the woman 's
plight.

'

WE GOT HIM ~ Tornado third baseman Dave Bass is
about to apply a IBg on Eagle pitcher Randy Blake ready
to slide in at third in SV AC action at Eastern last evening.
At this time Southern was ahead 4-2, but a late rally, some
nifty base running, and some good pitching by Blake
brought the Eagl~s from behind to win 10-4. The offensive
team's third base coach is- as is customary - already
calling Blake "safe". See Page 3.

Linkletter has
new drug .views

COLUMBUS (UPI) House Judiciary Corrunittee,
Television personality Art which
is
considering
Linkletter, whose dliughter legislation altering the
· died six years ago after ex- penaltiesinOhiofordrug use;
perimenting with LSD, says possession and sale.
although marijuana is not · . "Marijuana is the hardest
addlCtlve 1t can be harmful. 10 talk about " he said.
a~e
more
Linkletter testified to that " There
·_effect Thursday before .the misstatements about it from
both directions than anything
else.. I don' t believe
marijuana is addictive. It is
habituating, but not ad·
dictive. And it does not lead to
the use of harder drugs, nor
does it produCe violence on
the part of the smoker.
"But people are equally
Youngsters on Bus 8 of the wrong to· say it is nothing .
PTA TO MEET
Meigs Local School District They say 'it's no worse than
Riverview PTA will meet
driven by · Mrs . Alice booze.' That's like saying
Monday at 7:30 p.m. when
Glohokar have collected $2.82 cancer is no worse than
grandparents
will
be
in the Ryan Scott Jeffers leprosy."
honored. The program will be
he
Linkletter
said
REGA'ITA FWWER SHOW - A golden eagle displayed here by Mrs. Margaret Ella,
public fund drive .
a visit to Colonial Williams·
discourages
people
from
Lewis will mark each of the classes in the "Progress: 1775" themed flower show on Regatta
Total of the fund drive
burg by a color slide .
weekend. Garden clubs last night drew for the classes in which they will be responsible for
underway less than two ll$ing marijuana Hor any
presentation.
making entries: With Mrs. Lewis, drawing for the Chester Garden Club, is Mrs. Bunny Kuhl,
weeks reached $2,555 .24 this other drug , including
· right. See report on Page 5.
morning. Ryan, 3, remains aspirin." But he said he had
confined to St. Mary's altered his hardllne approach
Hospital in Huntington as t~ to drug users and peddlers in
re$Ult of a severely injured the six years since his
foot in a power mower ac- dliughter's death.
"I was a vengefulDarent at
cident.
·shock, Mrs. Vale rettirned to · years before being employed having served as state Pome roy
Middleport
(UJntinued on Jlllle 10)
Latest contributors to the
college upon the advice of her as a county elementary treasurer and president of the Library Board and the board
fund
besides
the
passe~@!L
doctor who told her· \O "keep supervisor fpr the county regional group.
of the local cancer society. on Bus 8 are Mr. ·and Mrs.
busy." Through the . years, board of education. She has
For a number of years,
(Continued on page 2)
Richard Follrod, Donald and
she continued her college been in this position the past Mrs. Vale served· on the
Lenora.
McKnight, Frances
work attending dlll'ing the eight years.
Scholl,
Grace, Jack and
summer months and night
As a part of her "keeping
Gordon Warner, Ernest and..rffi•
ODe
classes.
.
busy," Mrs. Vale has been a
Sara
Collums,
Twin
City
Cab
.
And busy she kept!
member of Laurel Grange for
Co., Richard Mayer • Mrs.
The Meigs ~uniy Sheriff's .
She con.vinced the all male over 50 years. She is a past
Robert
Warner,
Bnan
Shank,
Dept.
investigated a two-car
Northwestern Board of master of Laurel Grange and
Harold Walker, J_De!"bers of accident Thursday at 7:11 p.
Education that she could cope the Meigs County Pomona
the Eastern Htg~ School m. in Orange Twp. on Twp:
with eighth grade boys and in Grange. She was presented a
Homemakers Club mcluding Road 279
·the fall of 1900 she was hired golden sheaf certificate for 50
Joan Smith, Judith Starcher,
Randy Riffle, 19, Chester
as principal and teacher of years membership two years
Lms Deem, Pam Hager, Sue Road Pomeroy traveling
the Salem Center Elemen· · ago.
.
Dye and Barbara . Hensley, north~est, roun~ a curve
tary School.
"
Mrs. Vale is a member and
Mr. and_Mrs. Maunce Reed, and saw an oncoming car
The old Salem Center pasfpresidentofDelta Kappa
Jason
Fife, Lou lngel, Sharon driven by Jane B. Baile¥, 3S,
School had burned and the Gamma, teachers' honorary
Ingel,
the Youth Fellowship Rt 1 Reedsville
new bUilding was not really society of Meigs, Vinton and
of
th~
Middleport
Rufle applied ·his brakes,
ready for occupancy in the Jackson Counties. She is a
Pres~termn
Church,
Roger
slid
left of center, and
fall. But Mrs. Vale occupied it member and past president
and
Linda,
Stewart,
TLmothy
collided
with the Bailey car.
anyway and everyone got· of the Middleport Business·
Knotts, Ernest and Brenda
Riffle sustained lacerations
along line. There were no and Professional Women's
Haggy, A, V. Bengel, Mr. and to his head and possible
books, ·no supplles, and kit· Club. 'She is this year's
Mrs. . Charles, Gerald, fractured arm. He was taken
chen utensils or furnishings "woman of the year" of that
Bethlehem l!aptist Church,. to Veterans Memorial
and ·other necessities for a • organization.
~lrgll and Mary Roush, Mrs. HoSpital by the Pomeroy ER
w'hile. Under Mrs. Vale's . A member· of the Salem
Edna
Hawk, Mrs . Grace
d. H
also ·clted to
leadership, everyone '.'made. Center PTA, Mrs. Vale was
squa . e was
R1'chardson • Mr · and Mrs. court
for driving left ol
do'' and the school's · presented a life membership
Lorain Sterrett, Mr. and Mrs. ~ cente
operation was soop on an when she left the Salem
Th;. wu eevere clamage
Chester Knight, Mr. _and Mrs.
MRS. NEWE VALE HAS retired after a long career
even keel. - ' Center . School. ~he is a
Edgar Abbott, Mr. and Mrs. to the Rlllle car and medium
·llli teacher, administrator, and superVisor in Meigs
Mrs. Vale remained at member of the Regional and
1e
Cleo
Kerns and Eleanor to Bailey's veh'lC.
County schools. .. ·
Salem Center School for 17 State Supervisors Assn .,
Rb
o son.

Bus riders
add sum .10
Jeffers aid

Nellie Vale: friend, booster of pupils and parents
BY BOB HOEFLICH ·
The one room school was
School students ami their . typical of back then, with its
parents will lose a real friend water bucket and dipper, and
and booster in the retirement the pot bellied stove in the
this year of Mrs. NelUe Vale, center of the room which
a Meigs County educator for provided hot ashes for baking
the past 46 years.
eggs and potatoes. Mrs. Vale ,
Uke het mother before her, loved to play games with the
Mrs. Vale was a teacher ln a children. The games were
one rooin school in Colwnbia old-fashioned too, Mrs. Vale
TownshiP.• known as t~e reports.
"Keepers-School." Mrs. Vale
"We wouldn't have lmQWII
atteodedthe8choolasachild, what a basketball or football
taught by her mother, and looked like," Mrs. Vale said.
then after attending Ohio . Two years after Mrs. Vale
.University, returned to the began · her duties at the
saine school as a teacher.
Keepers Sc;hools, the eight
"lndividuaUzed 'teaching" schools of Columbia Townbeing stressed today .is ship were consolidated into
nothing new to Mrs. Vale who -one school at Carpenter
was provldil)g such teaching ·where Mrs. Vale taught for 19
46 years ago at the Keepers more years. She setived as a
Sc;hool, one of eight Columbia f!U!Illher of the school board
Township schools ·way back and was treasurer for two ·
· when, aa she taught all eight . years ..
grada to 1001e 12 children.
Mrs. · V~le . gave up
· Not only waulte the teacher, teaching, but only· ternbut lhe receivi!d 10 cents for · porarily for misfortune
janitor work In the .morning struck. Her husband', ~- S.
and 10 centa lor janitor work . Vale, was ldlied in 1900 m an
ln the evenlnl. The janitor's accident leaving her with a
chorea included carrying 17-rnooth..Qld son, John Frank
water to the school from a Vale, to be reared.
neiJihboring farm house.
Suffering from ' emotional
.~

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I

C0 llisIOD
•
J"ured
i..

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\~

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�'

' I

Party ~ine budget on road to vote Tuesday
Senate for study and probable
reVIsiOns. The new fiscal
period begins next July I.
Republicans put up surprisingly little resistance
dcrmg the 2 ~, hour meetmg
before the Fmance Committee' reported the btU to the
floor on a party-line vote of
13-8.
They offered only two
amendments. Both failed,
and they denounced the
budget as underfunded and
full of mistakes
Republicans made clear
the bill belongs to the
Democrats. "This ts your
btU," said Rep. Fredertck N
Young, R-Dayton, ranking
Republican on the Fmance
Committee . " It's your

Hanoi brags
of victories
By United Press
Radio Hanoi said today the
collapse of South Vietnam
and Cambodia has ended U.S.
influence throughout the
world and will lead to a
pertod of " de-Ameri ca nizahon" in Asta.
The broadcast, monitored
m Bangkok, said soctalism
"has become the most important element wtth regard
to world development," while
capitalism " has suffered
heavy losses."
"Vietnam became a place
for the testing of the strength
and prestige of American im·
periallsm," the broadcast
said, adding that America's
20-year mvolvement m
Vtelnam "clearly proved that
strength is limited."
"America's defeat m lndochma and the cnsts m
America --a dtrect result of
the war - prove that
America will never be able to
play the role of an international policeman, or
even a regional pohceman,''
Radio Hanoi said.
It satd the people of
Southeast Asia demanded
separation from American
control and the aholishmenl
of American military bases in
that part of the world.
"De-Americanization, or
throwing the Amertcans out,
and the regaining of national
independence, is an in·
creasingly stronger struggle
of the Southeast Asian
countries," the broadcast
said. "The pro-American
forces will be eliminated."
In Saigon, the new Vtet
Cong government promised
to provide "favorable conditiOns"
for
foretgn
correspondents in South
Vietnam.
The leader of the Milttary
Management Committee
running Saigon said the
Communists wcluld protect
all law-abiding foreigners
the country.
"The
Miltlary
Management
CommissiOn
will undertake to ensure the
safety and create favorable
conditions for foreign media
people in Saigon to carry on
their activities," Gen. Tran
Van Tra said Thursday.
Radio Saigon, m a
broadcast monitored in
Bangkok, said Gen. Tra made

International
the promise during a speech
to ahout 100 journalists, meluding foretgn correspondents
The general accused the
United St.a tes of forcibly
evacuating South Vietnamese
adults and chtldren from the
country last month as the
Communists ttghtened thetr
rmg around Saigon.
" There were numerous
cases of forctble evacuation
of adults and forcible abduchon of children," he said
"The United States odiously
whipped up stones of a
'bloodbath • in Satgon m a btd
to force many Vietnamese to
flee to foretgn countries."
Tra admittell the new mill·
tary government faced prob!ems m establiShing a new
admmistration in South Vtetnam. "But these difficulties
are nothing compared wtth
those our people have known
over the last 30 years of war,"
he said .
He satd the people "will
surely have the spirit,
wisdom and capabililtes to
settle every problem so as to
qutckly restore and firmly
develop the normal Ufe of the
country.
"Our people how have independence and peace and
theconsciousnessofbemg the
master of their destiny, and
they will have 'everything,"
he said.
Tra sa1d the btggest task in
Satgon was to "normalize"
city life. He said his committee would do tts best to
keep order in the ctty and
"settle all other problems."
In other developments, the
Yugoslav news agency
TanJug said Thursday a 'llship South Vietnamese naval
squadron led by an admiral
had surrendered to the Viet
Cong.
The warships, carrymg
highranking officers of the
defeated Saigon government,
surrendered after being
promised amnesty, Tanjug
reported.
The squadron, which had
been sailing off the South
Vietnamese coast, gave up
hours after Gen. Tra pledged
the new regime "will forgtve
completely " all repentant
troo(ll in the defeated armed
forces.

responstbtlity tf this ts not
funded."
"Thts ts a legtslative budget," said Rep. Myrl H.
Shoemaker, D-Bourneville,
committee chairman.
The
GOP
members
claimed the Democra ts
overshot revenues by $139
mtlllon .
"Thts ts not fully funded, "
satd Yotmg. "There will be
problems. You've got your
ftgures terribly crossed on
this one."
The "continuatiOn" budget
contains virtually the same
amount proposed last March
by Republican Gov. James A.
Rhodes, when $650 million
· worth of capt tal Improvements and $828 lllilliOn
worth of highway funds are
counted, as they were in
Rhodes' $12.2 billton budget.
Democrats scrapped some
$420 million worth of Rhodes'
proposals and diverted t he
money to thetr own
programs.

I

Nellie vale

(Continued from page 1)
She ts a member of the
American Ass oc ta tlon of
Umverstty Women, the Meigs
County Chapter, and durmg
the swnmers ha s worked on
head start , readtng and
Saturday school proJects in
addt twn to attendmg an
uncountable number of workshops over the years.
How 's that record for
obeymg the "doctor's orders?" On top of all this, Mrs.
Vale has never neglected lier
church. She ts an achve
member of the Columbia
Chapel Christian Church at
Pomt Rock.
Mrs Valets the daughter of
the late Mr. and Mrs J . E
Radekin. Her parents and her
grandparents restded on the
same Pomt Rock farm and
Mrs Vale restded on that
farm unit! only a year ago
when she moved to Rutland 's
Salem St.
Mrs. Vale ha s a stster,
Neva Nir holson of Dexter, a
brother, G. A. Radekin of
Pomt Rock; the son, J ohn
Frank, who ts a supervisor in
electronics at Industrial
Nucleomcs m Columbus since
his graduation six years ago;
a daughter-m-law, and two
granddaughters, Stacy and
Chrishe Vale, Colwnbus.
Although her appearance
fails to reflect anythmg but
perfect health, Mrs. Vale is
gtvmg up her posilton for
health ·reasons. She has
suffered two heart attacks in
recent years and has had
surgery for replacement of
her hips which deteriorated
Her
thr ough arthntis
phystctan has recommended
rehrement and Mrs. Vale
learned long ago that tl's
rewardmg to follow doctor 's
orders.
"!love my work and my coworkers. Everyone has been
wonderful to me," Mrs. Vale
satd
In her retirement, Mfs.
Vale plans to hop back to ~e
county hoard of educatiOn
offtce now and again to lend a
helpmg hand and will do
some travebng, particularly
on Route 33 to Columbus
where she can spend more
time wtth her fast-growing
granddaughters.

Specifically, thev mcreased
appropriations for education ,
public weHare and mental
health and reU.rdahon.
They also wrote in some of
the strongest legtslative controls over spending and programs of the executive
branch ever deviSed m the
General Assembly.
Republicans grumbled ahout
some of them, but made no
move to lake them 0111.
The Democrats also closed
a $300 million gap in Rhodes •
budget through bookkeeping
devices and increased
revenue esllmates. The
major bookkeeping change
allows the dtrector of finance
to defer payments to colleges
and umverstties during low
cash periods for the sU.te.
The institutions would have to
borrow money if they needed
tt to operate.
This provision generated
the most heat of any issue
during the committee
meeting.
Rep. W. Bennett Rose, R·
Lima, proposed an amendment to furmsh $9 mtllion to
help the universities meet
interest payments if they
have to borrow. .
"!don't think it's fair to ask
the universities to decrease
their operating budgets to
pay interest costs," Rose
said.
HIS amendment, tabled on
a party-line vote, would have
provided the $9 million by
deferring a state employe
pay ratse until Jan. 1, 1976,

InStead of puttmg tt mto ef.
feet next Oct. I, as the
Democratic btU requires.
Th e only other change
offered by Republicans was
to abolish the state
Emergency Board, which
now considers only travel pay
requests. The Democratic bill
beefs up the board with new
legtslattve members, and the
Democrats knocked down the
amendment to ,abolish it.
They also offered some.
"cleanup" amendments of
thetr own which would :
- Require Ohio University
to justify a $3.6 million
spectal debt retirement
sub sidy by operating tis
revenue bonding program
more efficiently and making
dormitory living more
destrable.
- Provide an extra $3.4
million in federal funds to
libraries.
- Allow the attorney
general to use his salvage
funds to pay for some legal
services for other state
agencies.
- Lilt the ceiling on subsidies for nursmg home care,
another . provision which
Republicans said would not
be funded.
Fourteen other amendments were offered during
the committee meeting, most
of them clerical or technical.
Rep. James W. Rankin, 0Cincmna ti, lost on a 15-4 vote
when he attempted to require
that -any public assistance
recipient 18 or older be a
registered voter.

vhe @[p)[E~

ROAD
a.,.
REV. HOWARD C. llACK
ARCHITECTS OF HISTORY
Behind the design and structure of every strong and
beautiful building is an architect who has carefully drawn the
plans and made certain that proper materials were used in 1ts
construction. Behind every Ufe thei:~ is another kind of architect- the builder of character - the mother.
The Hebrews of b1bbcal times believed that whenever God
wanted any great work done He would first prepare a noble
woman to be the mother of a child which she would tram for
leadership. A church, some years ago, displayed this sign:
"God couldn't be everywhere, so He made mothers."
Good people are made, not horn. Good moral character is
never developed wtthout training and discipline. Mothers are
the chief craftsmen in building lives and the home is the
foundry for molding good wholesome character.
The Bible tells us: "Train up a ctilld m the way he should
go: and when he is old, he will not depart from it," (Proverbs
22:6 KJV) . The reason we have so many juvenile delinquents
today is because we have so many delinquent parents.
Sometimes, instead of the parents oot koowing where their
children are, the children don't know where their parents are!
Arthur c. James, in the "Young Calvinist" some years
ago, listed the following len-point Mother's Creed:
1. I believe in God.
2. I believe in the Word of God.
3. I believe m the f11mily altar.
4. I believe m the sanctity of motherhood.
5. I believe the home to be the sphere of the mother's
greatest influence.
6. I believe in a deep concern for the spiritual welfare of
my children.
7. I believe in making the ,home the most attractive spot so
that my children will not be forced to seek enjoyment
..
elsewhere.
8. I believe in an intimate companionship between myself
and my children.
9. I believe in pointing out the moral dangers llrwhich my
children are exposed, and not hidmg behind a false modesty.
10. I believe it is my (rivilege and duty to know the companions of my children and to be familiar with their fonns of
amusement.
Mothers are the architects of history and need to build with
purpose. The mother's influence on her children is the greatest
single influence they will ever know.

bR.LAMB
Abraham Lincoln was the
only prestdenl ever to undergo
enemy gunftre. Lmcoln faced
confederates' bullets at Fort
Stevens, where restored ramIS a malabsorphon syn- parts stand today a few mtles
drome? Is it a form of from the White House.
anemta?
.
DEAR READER - Mal
means bad, as in the word
malodorous, maladjustrilent
The Daily Sentinel'
or malfunction. So, it means
DEVOTED TO THE
bad absorption. It refers to
INTEREST OF
poor ability of yo,ur digestive
MEIGS-MASON AREA
C~ESTER L. TANNEHILL
tract, spectlically the small
Exec. Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH
mtestine, to absorb food.
C•tr Ed•tor
When the poor absorption
Pub l ished daily except
by The Oh10 Valley
leads to an mabtlily to absorb 1Saturday
Pubi 1Sh1ng Company , 111
important vtlamms, pat- Court St , Pomeroy , Ohio
45769 Busi,ness Office Phone
ticularly vitamm B-12, it may 991
2156 . Editorial Phone 992
21 57
cause an anetnla.
Second class post,.ge paid
Malabsorption problems hit Pomeroy , Oh10
Nat,onal
advertlslnr
often involve poor pancreas
representat1ve War'd '
function. Or, should I say
Griffith Company, Inc
Bottrnetn &amp; Gallagher 0111'
malfunctiOn of the pancreas?
757 Thlrc;t Ave, New York'
N Y 10017
'
For further information on
S ubscriPt•on rates ·
heart attacks write me in · Del1vered by carrier whert
75 cents per week,
care of thiS newspaper, P. 0. available
By Motor Route where
Box 1551, Radio City Slatton, Ct1rrier
service
not
•vailable
,
One
monthrl~':'i5
New York, N. Y. 10019, and By ma1lln Oh10 •nd W. Vl!l ,
ask for The Health Letter on On e Year , S22 00 : Six
mon t hs,
S11 50,
Three
heart attacks (number 2-10 ). Ynonths, $7 00 . Elsewhere
S26 00 year , Six months
Send 50 cents and a long, self- $13
50 , three months, S7 so
addressed, stamped en· Subscrtptton price includes
lsunday Times Sentinel . ,
_
velope.

Word mix-up in heart problem

,'

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - What
is the difference be tween a
heart attack and a cardtac
arrest?
DEAR READER - The
termtnology IS hopelessly
confused. The term heart
attack IS not a medtcal term
It has come to be used for
problems resulting from a
sudden blockage of an artery
to the heart muscle and
usually means a myocardial
mfarction , (damage to the
heart muscle l.
Heart attack is a term also
used by the public for attacks
of any sort that are sudden
and involve the heart. That
can include any number of
different forms of heart
irregularities, such as rapid
heart action. It can mean a
transitory pain correctly
called anginl pectoris.
A sudden a !lack causing
dlmqe to the heart muscle
(myocardial infarction ) may
also be aliSOCiated with a
'

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2- The.Daily Sentinel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, May 9, 1915

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!l - A
Democrat
sponsored
$10.688 billion state budget
reqwrmg no new taxes for the
next two years is on its way to
a floor vote in the House next
Tuesday.
Copies of the 269-page
document, hatched m pnvate
by House Democrallc leaders
and fiScal experts durmg the
last two weeks and reported
out of the House Finance
Committee late Thursday,
were to be driven m state
cars to members ' homes for
their study durmg the
weekend
After :!:&lt; House vote, the
record budget will go to the

..

senous lrregulanty of the Often the heart resum es
hear t called ventncular beating again on its own.
ftbrillati on. Thts is the one
When lftrst started testing
you see on TV where the Jet ptlots who were healthy
shock machtne ts used and young men, I was starUed to
big paddles are applied to the see the number who had
heart to get the heart beat complete stoppage of the
back to normal. This serious heart wjth breath holding, or
and ltfe - threate.ning whtle bemg tested on a tilt
irregularity is associated table like those seen on film
with no effective heart beat. strips of testing astronauts
The muscle literally lwttches after space fltght.
but doesn't contract. For thts
The cardiac arrests
reason the ePISode is often sometimes lasted only a few
referred to as a cardtac seconds and sometimes did
arrest. This trregulanty can not even cause a faint. In
also occur wt thou! havmg pther mstances they were
heart muscle damage. It c~n associated with famting .
result from inadequate
So, you can see from the
circulation to the heart above why I say the termuscle from fatty-&lt;!holesterol mmology is hopelessly
deposits, even though the confused. Cardiac arrest can
heart muscle is not damaged. mean at least two dtfferent
Then, to make matters thmgs Heart attacks cna
worse, the heart can just stop mean almost anything, m- totally and completely. eluding 'cardiac arrest which
This is true cardiac arrest. It may not be an arrest at all
can be calised by teflex but really ventricular
means. It is sometimes the ftbnlla twn Confused?
cause of a person fainting.
DEAR DR. LAMB - What

1

3- The Daily Sentinel, Mtddleport-Pomer~y, 0 ., Frtday, May 9, 1975

e

San Dlego hurler ~~o~~~h~:~~~fr~1~~~
i~ tough on R e d

We Hold These Truths ...

Summer
institute
scheduled

A. Chronicle of America

b

0

John Dickinson: ·
" [The news of Lexington
convinces me that]lhts most
unnatural and Inexpressibly
cruel war began with the
butchery of the unarmed!
Amen cans at Lextngton ..
[What ground] for recon· '
ctliation is now left for
[moderate] men who think
as I do?"

By IRA MILLER

UP! Sports Writer
All i,\ Will lake is a few more
games like Thursday night
and Randy Jones may find
himself pitching for the
Cincinnati Reds instead of
against them.
Jones is starting to achieve
success pitching for the San
Diego Padres this spring and
one thing that means for sure
is he had better keep hts hags
packed.
That's because the Reds
and Padres hav e had
something going the last
couple of years that remmds
folks of the New York
Yankees and Kansas City A's
in the 1950's.
Back then, whenever the
Yankees needed a player,
they called Kansas Ctty, and
unfailingly !hey wound up
with people like Roger Maris,
Enos Slaughter and Ralph
Terry.
The last couple of seasons,
when the Reds needed pitching help, all they had to do
was call San Diego, and they
got the same response the
. Yankees used to get from the

Meigs 4-H Club News

BY JACK ROGERS
A holt of seventh mnmg lighting at Mtddleport yesterday
struck pitcher Joey Gleason and the Point Pleasant Big
Blacks and killed 'em all.
In other words, the Big Blacks sailed mto the hottom of
the seventh leading Meigs 3-0 behind Gleason's three-httter
when the sky caved in. When the smoke had drifted away, the
Marauders had four runs and a 4-3 victory in as thrilling a last
ditch really as you'd care to see.
Don WoHe, 67-yearo()Jd coach of the Marauders, has won
many a baseball game in hts 30-year career as a mentor but
surely none sweeter than that one yesterday. And Mrs. Wolfe,
who follows her husband around with a scorebookk m her lap,
was positively beaming.
The win lifted Meigs' record to 10-and-5. They still have
eight games to go, including an tnlportant SEOAL visit to
"'
Jackson today.
Coach Davtd Rawson and his crestfallen Btg Blacks are
10-and-6 and wmd up regular season play tomorrow at Harmon Field when John Flowers' tomd Huntington East
Highlanders pull in fo r. a 4 p.m. tilt.
Although Joey Gleason had fanned only two, he had
granted only three hits as the bottom of the seventh moved up
and it appeared as if his fifth victory was sealed. As it turned
out, Ron Durst was called m to relieve, but Gleason lost his
first decision of the season.
The Big Blacks picked up one run the third on smgles by
Mtke Burgess and Bill Rardin and Gleason's RBI grounder.
They made it 3-0 in the
fourth wtth two run s after play, Ktm Henry to Burgess
two were out. Burgess
Then came that fearful
singled hard to center.
Metgs seventh. Carl Car·
platmg Charles Perry who mtehael opened with a
had walked. Then Barry scratch smgle off Gleason's
Henry, aboard on a walk, glove and Carl moved up on
scored on Rardm 's infteld Cottrill's errant ,throw past
safety.
first Gary George smgled to
Meigs biggest threat was left and pinch httter Greg
m third. Mtke Magnotta Smtih walked to load the
doubled to deep center with bases. The storm was
one out and Perk Ault and brewmg
Mike Nesselroad drew -bases
Magnotta drove deep to
left for the first out, one run
on halls to load the bases
But Gleason got off the hook scoring. Perk Ault drew a
when he snatched Charles walk to load them up agam.
Marshall's grounder to the It was 3·1. Coach Rawson
hox and started a double waved in Ron Durst in relief.

Seniors will
rmse money
in activities

Coast Guard
gives program

at New Haven

Dinner served upon birthday

THE PERFECT

SUPERLIGHTMfEIGHT
THE
ALL NEW

STIHL
020AV
THE WORLDS
FIRST and ONLY
"MINI· SIZE"
CHAIN SAW

GM coming -to J1.io Grande

\t

TIH!y will conduct 'an open
forwn In the College Dining
Hall at 2;511 with students,
IIICUlty and the general
public. At 5:30p.m. Monday,
they will have dinner with the
Rlo Grande COllege StiidiinC"
Government, and at 7:30p.m.
that day meet in the
basement of Davia Hall
dormitory with buslneu
administration atutlent.l and
the general public.
The afternoon 2:50 and
evening 7:30 l!lelsiona are
open to the publlc and are
free.

)

EASTERN - Larry Hemes
and hts Eastern Eagles got
revenge here Thursday afternoon for an earlier 5-0
shutou t by the Southern
Tornados, downing the cross
county rivals 10-4 on some
good base runmng , good
relief pttchmg, and timely
hittmg.
Earlier tn the season Coach
Htlton Wolfe Jrc and his
Tornado baseballers shut out
the Eagles on a no-httter by
BRUNDAGE DIES
BONN (UP!) - Avery
Brundage, 87, a towering
figure In the world of Olympic
sports for more than two
decades, died of heart failure
In a Garmisch - Partenkirchen hospital Thursday
night.
His doctors said Brundage,
president of the International
Olympic Committee for 20
years until 1972, entered the
hospital two weeks ago for a
respiratory infection. He died
at 9:40 p.m. Wednesday
following a heart failure.
His death is an enoriJ;J.ous
loss for everyone. He was a
man whose stature and
personality went far beyond
the world of sports," Willy
Daume, president of the West
German Olympic Committee
said.
1

'

y.·.·: ::::·=··=··=··::.;.:: :::· :=·: •• . ..

•

Marauders edge Point Pleasant 4-3

.

faculty and inter~sted
citizens from outside the
college to discuss such areas
as air pollution, water
, pollution, auto safety, the
future of automobiles,
economics, future transportation, alternale power
plants, and multi-national
corporations.
Coming from General
Motors will be Ron Weaver,
who is in engineering ad: ministration
for
environmental actlvitlea, and
Dave Bodkin, with the Public
Affairs Office.

tripled, scored twtce and
~ •drove m three runs in the
VICtory over St. Louis. Greg
Luzinski drove m the other
three runs for the Phillies and
Jim Lonborg pitched seven
scoreless in rungs for the win.
figers 6, Brewers 4:
Rookie
Dan
Meyer
homered
to
snap
a
4-4
tie in
A's. First, Fred Norman Francisco, 3-2, Pittsburgh dethe
sixth
inning
and
John
came to help m '73 and last feated the New York Mets, 4Hiller
struck
out
seven
year it was Clay Kirby.
2, and Philadelphia topped St .
Now maybe the Reds will _ LouiS, 6-2. In the American batters-six in a row - m a
start asking about Jones, League, Detroit beat Mil· brilliant three-inmng relief
particularly after what he did waukee, 6-4, Texas stopped stint as Detroit beat
to them Thursday night-a Kansas City, 5-3, and Milwaukee. It was Meyer's
four-hit, 3-0 shutout victory. California blanked Oakland, second home run, both gamewinners, and Hiller's fourth
Jones, helped by three 5-0.
save.
Meyer had three hits,
double plays, faced only 28
Braves 3, Giants 2:
mcluding
a single that started
batters as he rmsed his
Atlanta's Tom House, best
four-run
rally in the fourth .
record to 4-2 and lowered his known as the relief pitcher a
Rangers 5, Royals 3:
.earned run average to 1.62. who caught Hank Aaron 's
Willie Davis hit a two-run
Last season, as a 24-yearo()ld 115th home run in the bullpen,
homer
m the seventh inning
rookie, the left-hander lost 22 came in to get the final two
to
he
the
game at 3-3 and then
games.
outs and end a ninth-mning
" I saw him in his last rally that preserved Ron drove in the winntng run for
couple of starts last year, he Reed ' s vtctory over San Texas m the ninth with a
was doing all his pitching Franctsco Dusty Baker smgle . Singles by Cesar
with his arm instead of using drove in two runs for the Tovar and Len Randle
his body," says Tom Morgan, Braves with a single and a preceded Davis' hit. Jeff
Burroughs followed wtth a
the San Diego pitching coach. sacrifice fly.
double
to score Randle.
Pirates 4, Mets 2:
Morgan spent the winter
Angels 5, A's 0:
workmg with Jones and
Bruce Kison got some help
Nolan Ryan struck out 10
changing his delivery, and frmn his defense in limiting
and
limited Oakland,lo four
now Jones says, "I've got a the Mets to seven hits. Kison
hits
as
he pitched hts second
more positive atlttude."
also bounced a two-run smgle
Gene Locklear had four through a drawn-in infield in shutout and won hts stxth
straight hits and Dave the fifth inning to snap a 1-1 game It was the 7oth 10
Winfield contributed hts tie. Bill Robinson doubled, stnkeout or better perseventh homer to help Jones homered and scored twtce for formance of Ryan's career.
Mtckey Rivers singled twtce
Pittsburgh.
beat Cincinnati.
and tripled and drove m three
Phils 6, Cards 2:
Elsewhere in the National
runs for Califorrua.
League, Atlanta edged San
Garry Maddox, playing his

Eas~ern

'

RIO GRANDE - Rio
Grande College . Rio Grande
Community College this year
will offer area high school
juniors the opportunity to
recetve college credit for
attendtng a five-week
summer institute in forensics. The institute will begm
Monday, June 16 and end
Friday, July 18.
-By Rou Mlc:IIIIIJie ond Jell Moc:Nelly.
The four-hour credit course
is entitled Speech 204
(Forenstc Activities) and ·
meets each day, Monday
through Frtday from 1 until 4
p m. High school students
Etght members attended Place A Mtlk Ftlter In A
who will be seniors in the fall
Ute April 28 meeting of the Filler Holder" . Refreshof 1975 are eligtble to par- Five Point Star Stitchers ments were served by Mrs .
ltctpate and earn four hours JuniOr Leader Club at the Hoi ter. The next meeting will
of college credtls trans- home of Pat Holter, advisor, be May 14 at the home of
ferrable to any accredited when dates for a trip to Stephanie Radford. - Patty
college or university.
Kmg 's Island, for a btke hike Pullins.
The program is under the to Forked Run State Park, for
THE LUCKY 13+1 4-H
direction of John Graham, a !rip to Grand Central Mall, Club met April 28 at the home
associate professor of speech for Mother's Tea, the days to of Donna Weber, advisor.
at RIO Grande College • Rio take self-defense lessons, and There were two advisors and
Grande Communtly College, project demonstrations were 12
members
present.
and Mrs. Joanna Ewmg, . diScussed.
"Recycling Tras~" was the
speech mstructor.
Pat Holter gave a toptc of a report given by Kim
This year, the mam theme demonstration on jewelry. Btrchfteld
of the Rio Grande Institute
Mter recrealion refreshTerry Thoma and Lori
will be the Bicentennial ments were served by Pat Snowden served refresh·
Youth Debates. Par!tcipants Holter The next meeting will ments. The next meeting will
m the institute will learn beMay19at the home of Mrs. heMay12at the Weber home.
about the types of debate , Holter. - Sherrie Starcher. - Robin Herald.
topics, rules and regulations
DOTIIE BARS were made
THE MERRY Munchers 4of the Bicentenmal Youth by the 11 members attending H Club elected officers al
Debate contests that will be the Apnl 28th meeting of the thetr April 30 meeting. They
starting across the nation in Bedford Gals 4-H Club, held are president, Kathy Blake;
the fall and wmter of 1975.
at the home of Camille and vice president, Pam Crooks;
Cost of the lns!ttute for htgh Paula Swmdell. The bars secretary, Mindy Long; '
school jumors ts $52. For were served wtth Kool-Aid for treasurer, Cindy Crooks;
more information concerning refreshments . The next news reporter, Phyllis Davis;
registration for the summer meeting will be at the home of recreation leaders, Ruth Ann
mstitute, contact the Ad- Angela Sinclatr . - Angela Blake and Nancy Wallace,
missions Offtce, Rio Grande Smclatr.
and telephone committee,
College, Rto Grande, Ohw, or
THE COLUMBIA Make It Angela Baker and Sheila
Professor John Graham, Rto 4-H Club elected officers at Horkey.
Grande College, Rio Grande, their first 4-H club meeting
Ohio. Telephone etther 245- March 31. Officers are
5353 or 446-4763.
prestdent, pam Holcomb;
In cOnJunction wtth the high vice-president, Debbie Birchschool ms!ttute, the RID field ; secretary, Marcia
•
Grande College • RID Grande Holcomb ; treasurer, Rachel
Community College Speech Coen; news reporter, Ruth
Department ts offering two Coen; safety chatrman,
classes m speech this sum- Bonetta Harvey and Debbie
mer for college students and Mtller ; health chairman, MASON, - Thursday a
graduates. Speech 263 and Monalee Peck and Julia sertes of fund raising events
Speech 463 are both seminar Johnson; recreatton leaders , was ' announced by the
classes m Directmg the High Betty Jordan and Jamie Ray. Wahama High School senior
School Speech Achvtty
At the second club meeting class, including a car wash,
Program. Each class carries on April 14 Ruth Ann Btrch- yard sale and "Slave Week".
three hours credit. For in· fteld helped the gtrls ptck out
The initial4!vents will be a
formalton on class times and material. The third club car wash at Flesher's Service
registration for these and meeting was held on April 29 Center in New Haven and a
other speech courses, contact when demonstrations were yard sale on the lawn of the
either the Rio Grande College gtven by Rachel Coen on high school this Saturday.
Offtce of AdmissiOns or Mr. "Different Types of Malena! Both activities will he from 9
Graham .
and How To Use Them"; a.m. to 4 p.m.
Julia Johnson , " Home
Items to be available at the
Weave", and Pam Holcomb, yard sale are varied and will
"The Correct Way To Give A include household goods and
Demonstration". The next clothing.
meeting will be May 12. "Slave Week" will be
Ruth Coen.
conducted by the seniors
SEVEN MEMBERS and after school all next week.
one advisor attended the Persons wishing to have
NEW HAVEN - The New Apnl30 meeting of the Meigs seniors cut grass, wash
Haven PTA met April 17 in County Better Livestock windows, etc. should phone
the school cafeteria, called to Dairy 4-H Club. Members the school office, 773-5539, bethe
Dairy tween 8 a.m. and 4 p.m. The
order by the president, Jenny discussed
Carpenter, followed by Sweepstakes, club dues, and students will be available in
any Bend Area community.
devotions led by Mrs. Hanlon. open class trophies.
Eddie
Holter
gave
a
The home room count was
won by Mrs. Baisden's fourth demonstration on "How To
grade.
The
program
lVaS
(resented by George Black
from the Coast Guard, and
Relatives gathered at the and Christopher . Others
Mrs. Hoschar's Phys .-Ed. ' home of Mrs . Lucy Gaul, calling during the day' were
classes performed folk Sumner Road, Sunday, April Mr. and Mrs. Rodney Gaul,
dances.
27, to celebrate Mrs. Gaul's Michael and Sara, Vincent;
The report by the btrthday anniversary. A and George Smith.
nominating committee was potluck dinner mcluding
given by Donna Thompson. roast turkey with all the
The election of new officers trimmings was served.
BARBECUE PLANNED
for next year's PTA will be
Attending were Mr . and
CHESTER - The Cbester
held at the May meeting. The Mrs. Paul Hoffman, Stephen
Volunteer
Fire Department
following were nmninated, Hoffman, Barbara Barr, Mr.
will
sponsor
a chicken and
p-esident, Carolyn Hesson; and Mrs. Nathanael Car·
sparerib
barbecue
Monday,
vice-president, Delores penter, Julie and David, Mrs.
Stewart; secretary, Ruth Kenneth Hartley, Mr. and Memorial Day, May 28, at the
Cbester Fire House. They will
Campell, and treasurer, 1
Mrs. Howard Caldwell, Jr . also serve hmnemade ice
Phyllis Scott.
and Martie, Mr. and Mrs.
The door ~tize was donated Roger Gaul, Rog1e and Lea cream ,Jlnd cake. There will
by Sonya Roush of Sonya's Ann, Mr. and Mrs. David be a parade to the cemetery·
Kut &amp; Kurl. Refreshments Brickles, April and John, Mr. followed by a (rogram. Time
were served by the sixth and Mrs . David Wandling, of the events will be announced later. The public. is
grade mothers.
Penny Ann, Davtd, Jr., Julie invited to attend.

RIO GRANDE - Rio
Grande College • Rlo Grande
Community College has been
selected by General Motors
Corp'orahon as one of the
select
Colleges
and
Universities to participate in
.a program called the GM
Colleg~ Campus Forum
designed to discuss various
toplca in the area of
~ GM expertise.
On Monday, May 12, two
represenlatives of General
Motors frorq Detroit wtU visit
the Rio Grande campus for
meetings with the students,

secondgameforPhiladelphta

..

• NEW •SAFETr
THIOTTLl LICK
• AUTUM~ TIC CHAIN OILING
• •um•l· CYUIID£R
'

~~~II

...•

..•

•

'•

Fr_ont End
Ahgnment

Totals

ph·Den. Bellamy 'I
Chas. Perry, rf ' 2
Rtck Simpkins, 3b 3
ph- Scott Stewart I '
Tim Cottrill, ss
4

0 0 0
I I 0
0 0 I
0 1 0
0 1 2

28 3 7 3

MEIGS

(4) ,

Player
AB R H E
Htke Magnotta, 1f 3 0 I 0
f'erk Ault, cf
2 I 0 0
M. Nesselroad, 2b 2 0 2 I
Chas Marshall, 3b3 0 o 0
Mtck Davenport,
ss
4 0 2 I
Bnan Hamtlton , c 3 0 0 0
Carl Ca rmichael,
lb
..,
3 I I 0
Gary George, rf 3 1 I 0
Ttm Cundtff, p
2 0 0 I
ph- Greg Smith 0 I 0 0
Totals

25 4 7 3

Btg Blacks 001 200 0 . 3 7 3
Metgs
000 000 4 • 4 7 3
x - 2 out when wmmng run
scored.
Left : PPHS 10, Metgs 8.
RBI· Gleason I, Rardm 1,

Blll gess I , Magnotta I,
Nesselroad 1, Marshall I,
Daven port 1.
2B Hit : Magnotta.
Sacrt ft ce
Ma gnotta,
Marshall
HBP · Perry (By Cundtff).
DP Gleason to Ktm Henry
to Burgess.
BE Gleason 5, Ctmdtff 5
SO Cundtff 7, Gleason 2.
Htts and Runs Off:
Gleason 5 and 4 m 6 +3t ds;
Durst 2 and 0 m 1-3rd.
Loser Joey Gleason (4-1).
WINNER Ttm Cun diff (3·
0).

Umptres:
George
Nesselroad (plate), Charles
Hamtlton rbases).
LINKLEITER TESTIFIES
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Television personality Art
Linkletter, after testifying on
a drug abuse bill, submitted
to questions by members of
the Ohio House Judiciary
Committee Thursday and got
a youthful vtewpomt

Meigs girls win

"
The ~'walking man 1" K1m
Henry, added to his new
local record of walks m a
season when he drew three
stratght bases on balls. He
now has 22 this year
Well, that's how it goges
The Big Blacks put on a
mighty two-out seventh
m'ning rally to overcome
Rtpley earlier in the season.
Yesterday tt happened to
them
.
Our
sincerest
congratulations to the two
Don Wolfe coaches, Mtster
and Mtssus. Don is an old·
time coaching adversary of
the wnter.
But we hated to see tl
happen to David Rawson.
BIG BLACKS (3)
Player
AB R HE
Btl! Rardin, cf
4 0 2 0
KimHenry,c
1 0 0 0
Joey Gleason, p 4 0 0 0
Ron Durst, p
0 0 0 0
Andy Wilson, If 3 0 0 0

0 0
2 0

Meigs High gtrls' won thetr
first track meet of the season
at Gallipolis wtlh 62 points
Wednesday, topping Gallia
Academy with 53 1-3 and
Southern with 24 2-3.
Demaris Ash of Meigs, high
scorer of the meet, look firsts
in each of the four events ~he
entered. The results;
High Jump - 4'0", threeway he, Holsinger, S, Sayre ,
S., and Niday, G, Becky
Bego, fourth, M,eigs.
Long Jump - ' 14'51'.!'', Ash,
M., Singer, G.; Sayre, S.;
Beth Vaughan, M.
Shot
27'·2", Kim
Grueser, M.; Pam Vaughan,

Vaughan, M.; Roseberry, S.;
Holsmger, S.
880 Relay - Galha, 2:08.7,
Meigs second.
Mile Relay - Gallia.
440 Relay - 1:06.4, Gallta,
Meigs.
880Medley - 2:1,3.8, Galha,
Meigs.
Mile Run
6:34 0,
Roseberry,
S.;
Beth
'Vaughan, M ; Hemphill, G.:
Tracy Burdette, M

EH-1

Spartans
to face

51~%
ON PASSBOOK
SAVINGS
51 ll per cent year pa1d on
Regular Pa ssbook Sav1ngs .
No M•n•mum
Interest
fr om date of d e pos1t to date
of

Withdrawal

Int eres t

co m pounded quart erly

1.@

MEIGS
BRANCH

The Alhens Counly
Sav1ngs &amp; Loan Co.
296 Second St.

Po me roy , Oh1o
A ll Accounts Insur ed
$40.000 by F SLIC

To

• •••

CHROMA(OlO(ll
23" GIANT..SCREEN CONSOLE

~&gt;G &lt;MO&amp;.

CHICAGO (UP! ) - Iowa,
Mtnnesota and Wt sconsm
looked forward to upsets by
Ohw Stale and !ndta na
aga inst front runmng
Michigan State and Mtchtgan
this weekend to put the
Hawkeyes, Go phers and
Badgers back into contention
m the Big Ten baseball race.
The Spartans lead the
lea gue wtth a 6-1 record and
play doubleheaders at Ohio
Sta te today and Indiana
Saturday. Michigan tratls by
half a ga me at 6-2 and plays
doubl eh'eaders at lndtana
today and Ohio State
Saturday.
Even a single loss could be
costly to etther of them smce
Mmnesota matches the Spartans m the games behind
column at9-4 and Iowa with 73 and Wisconsin 9-5 trail by
only half a game. Iowa and
Wtsconstn are tdle this
weekend and Minnesota
plays non conferen ce opponents, Stevens Pomt
Saturday and La Crosse Sunday.
The only other games in·
vol ving Big Ten schools are
Olivet Nazarene at Northwestern
today,
LewiS
College at Northwestern
Saturday, and St. Xavier at
Dlinois Sunday.

The Altair E4547M Early Amertcan Lowboy
Console. Chromatic ooe-button tuning.
Power Sentry System. AFC.

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Chrysler announces

TRACTORS
TODAY

a SlOO rebate to
help yOUr u.s. tax rebate·

BAUM'S TRUE
VALUE STORE
ct H "~L'r

Oh to
9fJ) JJO I

le of

go farther.

Up to $200 from the U.S. A full $200
from Chrysler when you buy or lease a '75
Duster, Valiant or Scamp. That's after
you've made your best deal with us. And
you don't have to wait lor your tax
rebate to get ours.
,
An offer th1s good has to be lim ited to
cars in stock, one per custome r, retail
customers only at partJctp a!J n~
Chrysler-Plymouth Dealers.

·ABSORBERS!

Organ, Drums, Guitar

CHRYStEH

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Here's more good news!
Accordmg to EPA's Buyer Guide,
Valt ant and Oyster got better gas
m1leage than the competitive 6's .
Room? According to Automo·
live lndustnes' Roominess Index,
Valiant and Duster are roomiest m th ei r class. Resale? Accord·
ing to Automotive Marketing
Reports, of allleadmg com·
pacts, a one-year-old
Duster and Valiant have the
highest resale value.

•u"o""'' "'ALER .l!!!f""CHRYSLER
. . . , . MOTOIII C0flf(IIIA11(1..

TUES., WED., THURS., 8:30-1 :00
FRI. &amp; SAT., 9:30-2:00

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No games, Nog1mmics

WHEEL HORSE

Frank Sisty

llfMONSTRAHOAJ

ana &gt;econd . Greg Cundiff
flied out, Riffle hit a ball
which could not he haitdled,
and both runners scored on
the error.
Eastern started its surge m
the ftfth , scoring four runs to
ga in the lead for the first time
6-4. Eichinger led off wtth a
walk, went to second on a
passed ball, to third on an
error on Sayre on a ptck off
attempt. and scored on a
single by Randy Blake. Blake
stole second and scored on a
single by Bob McClure, who
later stole second
TIJII Kuho then singled and
hoth scored on a double off
the bat of Mtke Larkins
Eastern added four more
InSUrance runs m the sixth to
put the game away making
thetr overall record 5-13 and
droppmg Southern to !HI.
Coach Hemes stated that the
most pleasmg thmg about the
victory other than the wm
was the fact, that the Eagles
swtped a new season htgh 12
bases in last night's contest
Southern 220 000 ll- 4 5 4
Eastern 110 044 X- 10 7 2
Rtffle (LP) Sayre (6) and

FULL LINE OF

c:n,Jov the Distinctive

'

Brady Huffman at Ract ne.
Yesterd ay, Junior Don
Etchmge r sta rt ed on the
mound for Eastern but could
not fi nd hts control and was
relieved by senior Randy
Blake in the second. Blake
pttched no hit baseball for the
remamder of the contest to
earn the vtctory Starting
pttcher for Southern was Jim
Riffle who took the loss after
leaVIng the contest m the ftfth
innmg los1ng 6-4. Mark Sayre
came on m rehef to ftmsh the
contest. Sayre gave up four
runs m the sixth.
Southern pitchers combined to walk seven and
stnke out onlf three On the
way to the Eastern vtctory,
Eagle pitchers walked five
and erased eight by
strikeouts. Blake recorded all
the strikeouts
Southern started the
contest by jumpmg out in
front 2-0 m the first when
Rtffle singled, Greg Dunrung
wa lked , and John Salser
doubled to score hoth runners Eastern scored once in
Its half of the first, and when
So uthern came to bat m the
second they repeated thetr
first mning total of sconng
two runs. Dave Bass and
Brady Huffman each lmed
smgles to put rtmners on ftrst

SEE OUR

M.

Dtscus
75'-7", P.
Vaughan, M.
Low Hurdles - 13.6, Wood,
G; Pat Vaughan, M.;
Holsinger, S.; Thomas, G.
100 Yd. Dash- 13.5, Ash,
M., Whitty, G.; Swartz, G.;
Holsinger, S,
220 Yd. Dash- 28.8, Ash,
M.; Velvet SWISher, M.,
third.
440 Yd. Dash- 1:9.8, Ash.,
M.; Cberyl Kennedy, M.,
finished foursh.
880 Run - 2:57.6, Pam

gets revenge

SHOCK

POMEROY

Main

Barry Henry, 2b 2
Mtke Burgess, 1b 3

WITH
BUILT·IN

HOME &amp; AUTO
606 E.

Mtke Nesselroad swung
hard at a pitch, htt it off hts
fist s, and PODDed a sm~le to
nght over the drawn m
Infield, George scoring.
Marshall flied out to deep
center for the second out,
Smtih tagging up to score It
was now 3-3.
Mtck Davenport ended it
all. He slashed a ground
single to center, Ault romping homt to climax the
darnedest wmnmg rally you
·ever saw Bedlam retgned.
For
the
wmners,
Nesselroad singled twtce and
walked twtce for a perfect
day. Davenport went 2-for-4.
Magnotta doubled whtle
Ca rmtchael a nd Gary ·
George were addmg smgles.
The Btg Blacks got a pair
of smgles each from Bill
Rardm and Mike Burgess,
hoth of whom were overdue.
Tim Cottnll starched a
smgle and pmch htlter Scott
Stewart scorched a base htt
to center. Charles Perry
smgled, walked, and was hit
by a pitch.

Dunnmg. Eichmger, Blake
(2) (WP ) and Winebrenner.

ROYAL CROWN

BOmiNG COMPANY
Middleport

TO ENT.ERT~IN YOU AT

THE MEIGS POMEROY
INN·

PH. 992-3629

PAA

C'~on in fOr a good deal on all our cars.

TOM RUE MOTORS ,

• 399 S. 3RD

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO •
)

�'

' I

Party ~ine budget on road to vote Tuesday
Senate for study and probable
reVIsiOns. The new fiscal
period begins next July I.
Republicans put up surprisingly little resistance
dcrmg the 2 ~, hour meetmg
before the Fmance Committee' reported the btU to the
floor on a party-line vote of
13-8.
They offered only two
amendments. Both failed,
and they denounced the
budget as underfunded and
full of mistakes
Republicans made clear
the bill belongs to the
Democrats. "This ts your
btU," said Rep. Fredertck N
Young, R-Dayton, ranking
Republican on the Fmance
Committee . " It's your

Hanoi brags
of victories
By United Press
Radio Hanoi said today the
collapse of South Vietnam
and Cambodia has ended U.S.
influence throughout the
world and will lead to a
pertod of " de-Ameri ca nizahon" in Asta.
The broadcast, monitored
m Bangkok, said soctalism
"has become the most important element wtth regard
to world development," while
capitalism " has suffered
heavy losses."
"Vietnam became a place
for the testing of the strength
and prestige of American im·
periallsm," the broadcast
said, adding that America's
20-year mvolvement m
Vtelnam "clearly proved that
strength is limited."
"America's defeat m lndochma and the cnsts m
America --a dtrect result of
the war - prove that
America will never be able to
play the role of an international policeman, or
even a regional pohceman,''
Radio Hanoi said.
It satd the people of
Southeast Asia demanded
separation from American
control and the aholishmenl
of American military bases in
that part of the world.
"De-Americanization, or
throwing the Amertcans out,
and the regaining of national
independence, is an in·
creasingly stronger struggle
of the Southeast Asian
countries," the broadcast
said. "The pro-American
forces will be eliminated."
In Saigon, the new Vtet
Cong government promised
to provide "favorable conditiOns"
for
foretgn
correspondents in South
Vietnam.
The leader of the Milttary
Management Committee
running Saigon said the
Communists wcluld protect
all law-abiding foreigners
the country.
"The
Miltlary
Management
CommissiOn
will undertake to ensure the
safety and create favorable
conditions for foreign media
people in Saigon to carry on
their activities," Gen. Tran
Van Tra said Thursday.
Radio Saigon, m a
broadcast monitored in
Bangkok, said Gen. Tra made

International
the promise during a speech
to ahout 100 journalists, meluding foretgn correspondents
The general accused the
United St.a tes of forcibly
evacuating South Vietnamese
adults and chtldren from the
country last month as the
Communists ttghtened thetr
rmg around Saigon.
" There were numerous
cases of forctble evacuation
of adults and forcible abduchon of children," he said
"The United States odiously
whipped up stones of a
'bloodbath • in Satgon m a btd
to force many Vietnamese to
flee to foretgn countries."
Tra admittell the new mill·
tary government faced prob!ems m establiShing a new
admmistration in South Vtetnam. "But these difficulties
are nothing compared wtth
those our people have known
over the last 30 years of war,"
he said .
He satd the people "will
surely have the spirit,
wisdom and capabililtes to
settle every problem so as to
qutckly restore and firmly
develop the normal Ufe of the
country.
"Our people how have independence and peace and
theconsciousnessofbemg the
master of their destiny, and
they will have 'everything,"
he said.
Tra sa1d the btggest task in
Satgon was to "normalize"
city life. He said his committee would do tts best to
keep order in the ctty and
"settle all other problems."
In other developments, the
Yugoslav news agency
TanJug said Thursday a 'llship South Vietnamese naval
squadron led by an admiral
had surrendered to the Viet
Cong.
The warships, carrymg
highranking officers of the
defeated Saigon government,
surrendered after being
promised amnesty, Tanjug
reported.
The squadron, which had
been sailing off the South
Vietnamese coast, gave up
hours after Gen. Tra pledged
the new regime "will forgtve
completely " all repentant
troo(ll in the defeated armed
forces.

responstbtlity tf this ts not
funded."
"Thts ts a legtslative budget," said Rep. Myrl H.
Shoemaker, D-Bourneville,
committee chairman.
The
GOP
members
claimed the Democra ts
overshot revenues by $139
mtlllon .
"Thts ts not fully funded, "
satd Yotmg. "There will be
problems. You've got your
ftgures terribly crossed on
this one."
The "continuatiOn" budget
contains virtually the same
amount proposed last March
by Republican Gov. James A.
Rhodes, when $650 million
· worth of capt tal Improvements and $828 lllilliOn
worth of highway funds are
counted, as they were in
Rhodes' $12.2 billton budget.
Democrats scrapped some
$420 million worth of Rhodes'
proposals and diverted t he
money to thetr own
programs.

I

Nellie vale

(Continued from page 1)
She ts a member of the
American Ass oc ta tlon of
Umverstty Women, the Meigs
County Chapter, and durmg
the swnmers ha s worked on
head start , readtng and
Saturday school proJects in
addt twn to attendmg an
uncountable number of workshops over the years.
How 's that record for
obeymg the "doctor's orders?" On top of all this, Mrs.
Vale has never neglected lier
church. She ts an achve
member of the Columbia
Chapel Christian Church at
Pomt Rock.
Mrs Valets the daughter of
the late Mr. and Mrs J . E
Radekin. Her parents and her
grandparents restded on the
same Pomt Rock farm and
Mrs Vale restded on that
farm unit! only a year ago
when she moved to Rutland 's
Salem St.
Mrs. Vale ha s a stster,
Neva Nir holson of Dexter, a
brother, G. A. Radekin of
Pomt Rock; the son, J ohn
Frank, who ts a supervisor in
electronics at Industrial
Nucleomcs m Columbus since
his graduation six years ago;
a daughter-m-law, and two
granddaughters, Stacy and
Chrishe Vale, Colwnbus.
Although her appearance
fails to reflect anythmg but
perfect health, Mrs. Vale is
gtvmg up her posilton for
health ·reasons. She has
suffered two heart attacks in
recent years and has had
surgery for replacement of
her hips which deteriorated
Her
thr ough arthntis
phystctan has recommended
rehrement and Mrs. Vale
learned long ago that tl's
rewardmg to follow doctor 's
orders.
"!love my work and my coworkers. Everyone has been
wonderful to me," Mrs. Vale
satd
In her retirement, Mfs.
Vale plans to hop back to ~e
county hoard of educatiOn
offtce now and again to lend a
helpmg hand and will do
some travebng, particularly
on Route 33 to Columbus
where she can spend more
time wtth her fast-growing
granddaughters.

Specifically, thev mcreased
appropriations for education ,
public weHare and mental
health and reU.rdahon.
They also wrote in some of
the strongest legtslative controls over spending and programs of the executive
branch ever deviSed m the
General Assembly.
Republicans grumbled ahout
some of them, but made no
move to lake them 0111.
The Democrats also closed
a $300 million gap in Rhodes •
budget through bookkeeping
devices and increased
revenue esllmates. The
major bookkeeping change
allows the dtrector of finance
to defer payments to colleges
and umverstties during low
cash periods for the sU.te.
The institutions would have to
borrow money if they needed
tt to operate.
This provision generated
the most heat of any issue
during the committee
meeting.
Rep. W. Bennett Rose, R·
Lima, proposed an amendment to furmsh $9 mtllion to
help the universities meet
interest payments if they
have to borrow. .
"!don't think it's fair to ask
the universities to decrease
their operating budgets to
pay interest costs," Rose
said.
HIS amendment, tabled on
a party-line vote, would have
provided the $9 million by
deferring a state employe
pay ratse until Jan. 1, 1976,

InStead of puttmg tt mto ef.
feet next Oct. I, as the
Democratic btU requires.
Th e only other change
offered by Republicans was
to abolish the state
Emergency Board, which
now considers only travel pay
requests. The Democratic bill
beefs up the board with new
legtslattve members, and the
Democrats knocked down the
amendment to ,abolish it.
They also offered some.
"cleanup" amendments of
thetr own which would :
- Require Ohio University
to justify a $3.6 million
spectal debt retirement
sub sidy by operating tis
revenue bonding program
more efficiently and making
dormitory living more
destrable.
- Provide an extra $3.4
million in federal funds to
libraries.
- Allow the attorney
general to use his salvage
funds to pay for some legal
services for other state
agencies.
- Lilt the ceiling on subsidies for nursmg home care,
another . provision which
Republicans said would not
be funded.
Fourteen other amendments were offered during
the committee meeting, most
of them clerical or technical.
Rep. James W. Rankin, 0Cincmna ti, lost on a 15-4 vote
when he attempted to require
that -any public assistance
recipient 18 or older be a
registered voter.

vhe @[p)[E~

ROAD
a.,.
REV. HOWARD C. llACK
ARCHITECTS OF HISTORY
Behind the design and structure of every strong and
beautiful building is an architect who has carefully drawn the
plans and made certain that proper materials were used in 1ts
construction. Behind every Ufe thei:~ is another kind of architect- the builder of character - the mother.
The Hebrews of b1bbcal times believed that whenever God
wanted any great work done He would first prepare a noble
woman to be the mother of a child which she would tram for
leadership. A church, some years ago, displayed this sign:
"God couldn't be everywhere, so He made mothers."
Good people are made, not horn. Good moral character is
never developed wtthout training and discipline. Mothers are
the chief craftsmen in building lives and the home is the
foundry for molding good wholesome character.
The Bible tells us: "Train up a ctilld m the way he should
go: and when he is old, he will not depart from it," (Proverbs
22:6 KJV) . The reason we have so many juvenile delinquents
today is because we have so many delinquent parents.
Sometimes, instead of the parents oot koowing where their
children are, the children don't know where their parents are!
Arthur c. James, in the "Young Calvinist" some years
ago, listed the following len-point Mother's Creed:
1. I believe in God.
2. I believe in the Word of God.
3. I believe m the f11mily altar.
4. I believe m the sanctity of motherhood.
5. I believe the home to be the sphere of the mother's
greatest influence.
6. I believe in a deep concern for the spiritual welfare of
my children.
7. I believe in making the ,home the most attractive spot so
that my children will not be forced to seek enjoyment
..
elsewhere.
8. I believe in an intimate companionship between myself
and my children.
9. I believe in pointing out the moral dangers llrwhich my
children are exposed, and not hidmg behind a false modesty.
10. I believe it is my (rivilege and duty to know the companions of my children and to be familiar with their fonns of
amusement.
Mothers are the architects of history and need to build with
purpose. The mother's influence on her children is the greatest
single influence they will ever know.

bR.LAMB
Abraham Lincoln was the
only prestdenl ever to undergo
enemy gunftre. Lmcoln faced
confederates' bullets at Fort
Stevens, where restored ramIS a malabsorphon syn- parts stand today a few mtles
drome? Is it a form of from the White House.
anemta?
.
DEAR READER - Mal
means bad, as in the word
malodorous, maladjustrilent
The Daily Sentinel'
or malfunction. So, it means
DEVOTED TO THE
bad absorption. It refers to
INTEREST OF
poor ability of yo,ur digestive
MEIGS-MASON AREA
C~ESTER L. TANNEHILL
tract, spectlically the small
Exec. Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH
mtestine, to absorb food.
C•tr Ed•tor
When the poor absorption
Pub l ished daily except
by The Oh10 Valley
leads to an mabtlily to absorb 1Saturday
Pubi 1Sh1ng Company , 111
important vtlamms, pat- Court St , Pomeroy , Ohio
45769 Busi,ness Office Phone
ticularly vitamm B-12, it may 991
2156 . Editorial Phone 992
21 57
cause an anetnla.
Second class post,.ge paid
Malabsorption problems hit Pomeroy , Oh10
Nat,onal
advertlslnr
often involve poor pancreas
representat1ve War'd '
function. Or, should I say
Griffith Company, Inc
Bottrnetn &amp; Gallagher 0111'
malfunctiOn of the pancreas?
757 Thlrc;t Ave, New York'
N Y 10017
'
For further information on
S ubscriPt•on rates ·
heart attacks write me in · Del1vered by carrier whert
75 cents per week,
care of thiS newspaper, P. 0. available
By Motor Route where
Box 1551, Radio City Slatton, Ct1rrier
service
not
•vailable
,
One
monthrl~':'i5
New York, N. Y. 10019, and By ma1lln Oh10 •nd W. Vl!l ,
ask for The Health Letter on On e Year , S22 00 : Six
mon t hs,
S11 50,
Three
heart attacks (number 2-10 ). Ynonths, $7 00 . Elsewhere
S26 00 year , Six months
Send 50 cents and a long, self- $13
50 , three months, S7 so
addressed, stamped en· Subscrtptton price includes
lsunday Times Sentinel . ,
_
velope.

Word mix-up in heart problem

,'

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - What
is the difference be tween a
heart attack and a cardtac
arrest?
DEAR READER - The
termtnology IS hopelessly
confused. The term heart
attack IS not a medtcal term
It has come to be used for
problems resulting from a
sudden blockage of an artery
to the heart muscle and
usually means a myocardial
mfarction , (damage to the
heart muscle l.
Heart attack is a term also
used by the public for attacks
of any sort that are sudden
and involve the heart. That
can include any number of
different forms of heart
irregularities, such as rapid
heart action. It can mean a
transitory pain correctly
called anginl pectoris.
A sudden a !lack causing
dlmqe to the heart muscle
(myocardial infarction ) may
also be aliSOCiated with a
'

t

.~

I

·I

2- The.Daily Sentinel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, May 9, 1915

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!l - A
Democrat
sponsored
$10.688 billion state budget
reqwrmg no new taxes for the
next two years is on its way to
a floor vote in the House next
Tuesday.
Copies of the 269-page
document, hatched m pnvate
by House Democrallc leaders
and fiScal experts durmg the
last two weeks and reported
out of the House Finance
Committee late Thursday,
were to be driven m state
cars to members ' homes for
their study durmg the
weekend
After :!:&lt; House vote, the
record budget will go to the

..

senous lrregulanty of the Often the heart resum es
hear t called ventncular beating again on its own.
ftbrillati on. Thts is the one
When lftrst started testing
you see on TV where the Jet ptlots who were healthy
shock machtne ts used and young men, I was starUed to
big paddles are applied to the see the number who had
heart to get the heart beat complete stoppage of the
back to normal. This serious heart wjth breath holding, or
and ltfe - threate.ning whtle bemg tested on a tilt
irregularity is associated table like those seen on film
with no effective heart beat. strips of testing astronauts
The muscle literally lwttches after space fltght.
but doesn't contract. For thts
The cardiac arrests
reason the ePISode is often sometimes lasted only a few
referred to as a cardtac seconds and sometimes did
arrest. This trregulanty can not even cause a faint. In
also occur wt thou! havmg pther mstances they were
heart muscle damage. It c~n associated with famting .
result from inadequate
So, you can see from the
circulation to the heart above why I say the termuscle from fatty-&lt;!holesterol mmology is hopelessly
deposits, even though the confused. Cardiac arrest can
heart muscle is not damaged. mean at least two dtfferent
Then, to make matters thmgs Heart attacks cna
worse, the heart can just stop mean almost anything, m- totally and completely. eluding 'cardiac arrest which
This is true cardiac arrest. It may not be an arrest at all
can be calised by teflex but really ventricular
means. It is sometimes the ftbnlla twn Confused?
cause of a person fainting.
DEAR DR. LAMB - What

1

3- The Daily Sentinel, Mtddleport-Pomer~y, 0 ., Frtday, May 9, 1975

e

San Dlego hurler ~~o~~~h~:~~~fr~1~~~
i~ tough on R e d

We Hold These Truths ...

Summer
institute
scheduled

A. Chronicle of America

b

0

John Dickinson: ·
" [The news of Lexington
convinces me that]lhts most
unnatural and Inexpressibly
cruel war began with the
butchery of the unarmed!
Amen cans at Lextngton ..
[What ground] for recon· '
ctliation is now left for
[moderate] men who think
as I do?"

By IRA MILLER

UP! Sports Writer
All i,\ Will lake is a few more
games like Thursday night
and Randy Jones may find
himself pitching for the
Cincinnati Reds instead of
against them.
Jones is starting to achieve
success pitching for the San
Diego Padres this spring and
one thing that means for sure
is he had better keep hts hags
packed.
That's because the Reds
and Padres hav e had
something going the last
couple of years that remmds
folks of the New York
Yankees and Kansas City A's
in the 1950's.
Back then, whenever the
Yankees needed a player,
they called Kansas Ctty, and
unfailingly !hey wound up
with people like Roger Maris,
Enos Slaughter and Ralph
Terry.
The last couple of seasons,
when the Reds needed pitching help, all they had to do
was call San Diego, and they
got the same response the
. Yankees used to get from the

Meigs 4-H Club News

BY JACK ROGERS
A holt of seventh mnmg lighting at Mtddleport yesterday
struck pitcher Joey Gleason and the Point Pleasant Big
Blacks and killed 'em all.
In other words, the Big Blacks sailed mto the hottom of
the seventh leading Meigs 3-0 behind Gleason's three-httter
when the sky caved in. When the smoke had drifted away, the
Marauders had four runs and a 4-3 victory in as thrilling a last
ditch really as you'd care to see.
Don WoHe, 67-yearo()Jd coach of the Marauders, has won
many a baseball game in hts 30-year career as a mentor but
surely none sweeter than that one yesterday. And Mrs. Wolfe,
who follows her husband around with a scorebookk m her lap,
was positively beaming.
The win lifted Meigs' record to 10-and-5. They still have
eight games to go, including an tnlportant SEOAL visit to
"'
Jackson today.
Coach Davtd Rawson and his crestfallen Btg Blacks are
10-and-6 and wmd up regular season play tomorrow at Harmon Field when John Flowers' tomd Huntington East
Highlanders pull in fo r. a 4 p.m. tilt.
Although Joey Gleason had fanned only two, he had
granted only three hits as the bottom of the seventh moved up
and it appeared as if his fifth victory was sealed. As it turned
out, Ron Durst was called m to relieve, but Gleason lost his
first decision of the season.
The Big Blacks picked up one run the third on smgles by
Mtke Burgess and Bill Rardin and Gleason's RBI grounder.
They made it 3-0 in the
fourth wtth two run s after play, Ktm Henry to Burgess
two were out. Burgess
Then came that fearful
singled hard to center.
Metgs seventh. Carl Car·
platmg Charles Perry who mtehael opened with a
had walked. Then Barry scratch smgle off Gleason's
Henry, aboard on a walk, glove and Carl moved up on
scored on Rardm 's infteld Cottrill's errant ,throw past
safety.
first Gary George smgled to
Meigs biggest threat was left and pinch httter Greg
m third. Mtke Magnotta Smtih walked to load the
doubled to deep center with bases. The storm was
one out and Perk Ault and brewmg
Mike Nesselroad drew -bases
Magnotta drove deep to
left for the first out, one run
on halls to load the bases
But Gleason got off the hook scoring. Perk Ault drew a
when he snatched Charles walk to load them up agam.
Marshall's grounder to the It was 3·1. Coach Rawson
hox and started a double waved in Ron Durst in relief.

Seniors will
rmse money
in activities

Coast Guard
gives program

at New Haven

Dinner served upon birthday

THE PERFECT

SUPERLIGHTMfEIGHT
THE
ALL NEW

STIHL
020AV
THE WORLDS
FIRST and ONLY
"MINI· SIZE"
CHAIN SAW

GM coming -to J1.io Grande

\t

TIH!y will conduct 'an open
forwn In the College Dining
Hall at 2;511 with students,
IIICUlty and the general
public. At 5:30p.m. Monday,
they will have dinner with the
Rlo Grande COllege StiidiinC"
Government, and at 7:30p.m.
that day meet in the
basement of Davia Hall
dormitory with buslneu
administration atutlent.l and
the general public.
The afternoon 2:50 and
evening 7:30 l!lelsiona are
open to the publlc and are
free.

)

EASTERN - Larry Hemes
and hts Eastern Eagles got
revenge here Thursday afternoon for an earlier 5-0
shutou t by the Southern
Tornados, downing the cross
county rivals 10-4 on some
good base runmng , good
relief pttchmg, and timely
hittmg.
Earlier tn the season Coach
Htlton Wolfe Jrc and his
Tornado baseballers shut out
the Eagles on a no-httter by
BRUNDAGE DIES
BONN (UP!) - Avery
Brundage, 87, a towering
figure In the world of Olympic
sports for more than two
decades, died of heart failure
In a Garmisch - Partenkirchen hospital Thursday
night.
His doctors said Brundage,
president of the International
Olympic Committee for 20
years until 1972, entered the
hospital two weeks ago for a
respiratory infection. He died
at 9:40 p.m. Wednesday
following a heart failure.
His death is an enoriJ;J.ous
loss for everyone. He was a
man whose stature and
personality went far beyond
the world of sports," Willy
Daume, president of the West
German Olympic Committee
said.
1

'

y.·.·: ::::·=··=··=··::.;.:: :::· :=·: •• . ..

•

Marauders edge Point Pleasant 4-3

.

faculty and inter~sted
citizens from outside the
college to discuss such areas
as air pollution, water
, pollution, auto safety, the
future of automobiles,
economics, future transportation, alternale power
plants, and multi-national
corporations.
Coming from General
Motors will be Ron Weaver,
who is in engineering ad: ministration
for
environmental actlvitlea, and
Dave Bodkin, with the Public
Affairs Office.

tripled, scored twtce and
~ •drove m three runs in the
VICtory over St. Louis. Greg
Luzinski drove m the other
three runs for the Phillies and
Jim Lonborg pitched seven
scoreless in rungs for the win.
figers 6, Brewers 4:
Rookie
Dan
Meyer
homered
to
snap
a
4-4
tie in
A's. First, Fred Norman Francisco, 3-2, Pittsburgh dethe
sixth
inning
and
John
came to help m '73 and last feated the New York Mets, 4Hiller
struck
out
seven
year it was Clay Kirby.
2, and Philadelphia topped St .
Now maybe the Reds will _ LouiS, 6-2. In the American batters-six in a row - m a
start asking about Jones, League, Detroit beat Mil· brilliant three-inmng relief
particularly after what he did waukee, 6-4, Texas stopped stint as Detroit beat
to them Thursday night-a Kansas City, 5-3, and Milwaukee. It was Meyer's
four-hit, 3-0 shutout victory. California blanked Oakland, second home run, both gamewinners, and Hiller's fourth
Jones, helped by three 5-0.
save.
Meyer had three hits,
double plays, faced only 28
Braves 3, Giants 2:
mcluding
a single that started
batters as he rmsed his
Atlanta's Tom House, best
four-run
rally in the fourth .
record to 4-2 and lowered his known as the relief pitcher a
Rangers 5, Royals 3:
.earned run average to 1.62. who caught Hank Aaron 's
Willie Davis hit a two-run
Last season, as a 24-yearo()ld 115th home run in the bullpen,
homer
m the seventh inning
rookie, the left-hander lost 22 came in to get the final two
to
he
the
game at 3-3 and then
games.
outs and end a ninth-mning
" I saw him in his last rally that preserved Ron drove in the winntng run for
couple of starts last year, he Reed ' s vtctory over San Texas m the ninth with a
was doing all his pitching Franctsco Dusty Baker smgle . Singles by Cesar
with his arm instead of using drove in two runs for the Tovar and Len Randle
his body," says Tom Morgan, Braves with a single and a preceded Davis' hit. Jeff
Burroughs followed wtth a
the San Diego pitching coach. sacrifice fly.
double
to score Randle.
Pirates 4, Mets 2:
Morgan spent the winter
Angels 5, A's 0:
workmg with Jones and
Bruce Kison got some help
Nolan Ryan struck out 10
changing his delivery, and frmn his defense in limiting
and
limited Oakland,lo four
now Jones says, "I've got a the Mets to seven hits. Kison
hits
as
he pitched hts second
more positive atlttude."
also bounced a two-run smgle
Gene Locklear had four through a drawn-in infield in shutout and won hts stxth
straight hits and Dave the fifth inning to snap a 1-1 game It was the 7oth 10
Winfield contributed hts tie. Bill Robinson doubled, stnkeout or better perseventh homer to help Jones homered and scored twtce for formance of Ryan's career.
Mtckey Rivers singled twtce
Pittsburgh.
beat Cincinnati.
and tripled and drove m three
Phils 6, Cards 2:
Elsewhere in the National
runs for Califorrua.
League, Atlanta edged San
Garry Maddox, playing his

Eas~ern

'

RIO GRANDE - Rio
Grande College . Rio Grande
Community College this year
will offer area high school
juniors the opportunity to
recetve college credit for
attendtng a five-week
summer institute in forensics. The institute will begm
Monday, June 16 and end
Friday, July 18.
-By Rou Mlc:IIIIIJie ond Jell Moc:Nelly.
The four-hour credit course
is entitled Speech 204
(Forenstc Activities) and ·
meets each day, Monday
through Frtday from 1 until 4
p m. High school students
Etght members attended Place A Mtlk Ftlter In A
who will be seniors in the fall
Ute April 28 meeting of the Filler Holder" . Refreshof 1975 are eligtble to par- Five Point Star Stitchers ments were served by Mrs .
ltctpate and earn four hours JuniOr Leader Club at the Hoi ter. The next meeting will
of college credtls trans- home of Pat Holter, advisor, be May 14 at the home of
ferrable to any accredited when dates for a trip to Stephanie Radford. - Patty
college or university.
Kmg 's Island, for a btke hike Pullins.
The program is under the to Forked Run State Park, for
THE LUCKY 13+1 4-H
direction of John Graham, a !rip to Grand Central Mall, Club met April 28 at the home
associate professor of speech for Mother's Tea, the days to of Donna Weber, advisor.
at RIO Grande College • Rio take self-defense lessons, and There were two advisors and
Grande Communtly College, project demonstrations were 12
members
present.
and Mrs. Joanna Ewmg, . diScussed.
"Recycling Tras~" was the
speech mstructor.
Pat Holter gave a toptc of a report given by Kim
This year, the mam theme demonstration on jewelry. Btrchfteld
of the Rio Grande Institute
Mter recrealion refreshTerry Thoma and Lori
will be the Bicentennial ments were served by Pat Snowden served refresh·
Youth Debates. Par!tcipants Holter The next meeting will ments. The next meeting will
m the institute will learn beMay19at the home of Mrs. heMay12at the Weber home.
about the types of debate , Holter. - Sherrie Starcher. - Robin Herald.
topics, rules and regulations
DOTIIE BARS were made
THE MERRY Munchers 4of the Bicentenmal Youth by the 11 members attending H Club elected officers al
Debate contests that will be the Apnl 28th meeting of the thetr April 30 meeting. They
starting across the nation in Bedford Gals 4-H Club, held are president, Kathy Blake;
the fall and wmter of 1975.
at the home of Camille and vice president, Pam Crooks;
Cost of the lns!ttute for htgh Paula Swmdell. The bars secretary, Mindy Long; '
school jumors ts $52. For were served wtth Kool-Aid for treasurer, Cindy Crooks;
more information concerning refreshments . The next news reporter, Phyllis Davis;
registration for the summer meeting will be at the home of recreation leaders, Ruth Ann
mstitute, contact the Ad- Angela Sinclatr . - Angela Blake and Nancy Wallace,
missions Offtce, Rio Grande Smclatr.
and telephone committee,
College, Rto Grande, Ohw, or
THE COLUMBIA Make It Angela Baker and Sheila
Professor John Graham, Rto 4-H Club elected officers at Horkey.
Grande College, Rio Grande, their first 4-H club meeting
Ohio. Telephone etther 245- March 31. Officers are
5353 or 446-4763.
prestdent, pam Holcomb;
In cOnJunction wtth the high vice-president, Debbie Birchschool ms!ttute, the RID field ; secretary, Marcia
•
Grande College • RID Grande Holcomb ; treasurer, Rachel
Community College Speech Coen; news reporter, Ruth
Department ts offering two Coen; safety chatrman,
classes m speech this sum- Bonetta Harvey and Debbie
mer for college students and Mtller ; health chairman, MASON, - Thursday a
graduates. Speech 263 and Monalee Peck and Julia sertes of fund raising events
Speech 463 are both seminar Johnson; recreatton leaders , was ' announced by the
classes m Directmg the High Betty Jordan and Jamie Ray. Wahama High School senior
School Speech Achvtty
At the second club meeting class, including a car wash,
Program. Each class carries on April 14 Ruth Ann Btrch- yard sale and "Slave Week".
three hours credit. For in· fteld helped the gtrls ptck out
The initial4!vents will be a
formalton on class times and material. The third club car wash at Flesher's Service
registration for these and meeting was held on April 29 Center in New Haven and a
other speech courses, contact when demonstrations were yard sale on the lawn of the
either the Rio Grande College gtven by Rachel Coen on high school this Saturday.
Offtce of AdmissiOns or Mr. "Different Types of Malena! Both activities will he from 9
Graham .
and How To Use Them"; a.m. to 4 p.m.
Julia Johnson , " Home
Items to be available at the
Weave", and Pam Holcomb, yard sale are varied and will
"The Correct Way To Give A include household goods and
Demonstration". The next clothing.
meeting will be May 12. "Slave Week" will be
Ruth Coen.
conducted by the seniors
SEVEN MEMBERS and after school all next week.
one advisor attended the Persons wishing to have
NEW HAVEN - The New Apnl30 meeting of the Meigs seniors cut grass, wash
Haven PTA met April 17 in County Better Livestock windows, etc. should phone
the school cafeteria, called to Dairy 4-H Club. Members the school office, 773-5539, bethe
Dairy tween 8 a.m. and 4 p.m. The
order by the president, Jenny discussed
Carpenter, followed by Sweepstakes, club dues, and students will be available in
any Bend Area community.
devotions led by Mrs. Hanlon. open class trophies.
Eddie
Holter
gave
a
The home room count was
won by Mrs. Baisden's fourth demonstration on "How To
grade.
The
program
lVaS
(resented by George Black
from the Coast Guard, and
Relatives gathered at the and Christopher . Others
Mrs. Hoschar's Phys .-Ed. ' home of Mrs . Lucy Gaul, calling during the day' were
classes performed folk Sumner Road, Sunday, April Mr. and Mrs. Rodney Gaul,
dances.
27, to celebrate Mrs. Gaul's Michael and Sara, Vincent;
The report by the btrthday anniversary. A and George Smith.
nominating committee was potluck dinner mcluding
given by Donna Thompson. roast turkey with all the
The election of new officers trimmings was served.
BARBECUE PLANNED
for next year's PTA will be
Attending were Mr . and
CHESTER - The Cbester
held at the May meeting. The Mrs. Paul Hoffman, Stephen
Volunteer
Fire Department
following were nmninated, Hoffman, Barbara Barr, Mr.
will
sponsor
a chicken and
p-esident, Carolyn Hesson; and Mrs. Nathanael Car·
sparerib
barbecue
Monday,
vice-president, Delores penter, Julie and David, Mrs.
Stewart; secretary, Ruth Kenneth Hartley, Mr. and Memorial Day, May 28, at the
Cbester Fire House. They will
Campell, and treasurer, 1
Mrs. Howard Caldwell, Jr . also serve hmnemade ice
Phyllis Scott.
and Martie, Mr. and Mrs.
The door ~tize was donated Roger Gaul, Rog1e and Lea cream ,Jlnd cake. There will
by Sonya Roush of Sonya's Ann, Mr. and Mrs. David be a parade to the cemetery·
Kut &amp; Kurl. Refreshments Brickles, April and John, Mr. followed by a (rogram. Time
were served by the sixth and Mrs . David Wandling, of the events will be announced later. The public. is
grade mothers.
Penny Ann, Davtd, Jr., Julie invited to attend.

RIO GRANDE - Rio
Grande College • Rlo Grande
Community College has been
selected by General Motors
Corp'orahon as one of the
select
Colleges
and
Universities to participate in
.a program called the GM
Colleg~ Campus Forum
designed to discuss various
toplca in the area of
~ GM expertise.
On Monday, May 12, two
represenlatives of General
Motors frorq Detroit wtU visit
the Rio Grande campus for
meetings with the students,

secondgameforPhiladelphta

..

• NEW •SAFETr
THIOTTLl LICK
• AUTUM~ TIC CHAIN OILING
• •um•l· CYUIID£R
'

~~~II

...•

..•

•

'•

Fr_ont End
Ahgnment

Totals

ph·Den. Bellamy 'I
Chas. Perry, rf ' 2
Rtck Simpkins, 3b 3
ph- Scott Stewart I '
Tim Cottrill, ss
4

0 0 0
I I 0
0 0 I
0 1 0
0 1 2

28 3 7 3

MEIGS

(4) ,

Player
AB R H E
Htke Magnotta, 1f 3 0 I 0
f'erk Ault, cf
2 I 0 0
M. Nesselroad, 2b 2 0 2 I
Chas Marshall, 3b3 0 o 0
Mtck Davenport,
ss
4 0 2 I
Bnan Hamtlton , c 3 0 0 0
Carl Ca rmichael,
lb
..,
3 I I 0
Gary George, rf 3 1 I 0
Ttm Cundtff, p
2 0 0 I
ph- Greg Smith 0 I 0 0
Totals

25 4 7 3

Btg Blacks 001 200 0 . 3 7 3
Metgs
000 000 4 • 4 7 3
x - 2 out when wmmng run
scored.
Left : PPHS 10, Metgs 8.
RBI· Gleason I, Rardm 1,

Blll gess I , Magnotta I,
Nesselroad 1, Marshall I,
Daven port 1.
2B Hit : Magnotta.
Sacrt ft ce
Ma gnotta,
Marshall
HBP · Perry (By Cundtff).
DP Gleason to Ktm Henry
to Burgess.
BE Gleason 5, Ctmdtff 5
SO Cundtff 7, Gleason 2.
Htts and Runs Off:
Gleason 5 and 4 m 6 +3t ds;
Durst 2 and 0 m 1-3rd.
Loser Joey Gleason (4-1).
WINNER Ttm Cun diff (3·
0).

Umptres:
George
Nesselroad (plate), Charles
Hamtlton rbases).
LINKLEITER TESTIFIES
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Television personality Art
Linkletter, after testifying on
a drug abuse bill, submitted
to questions by members of
the Ohio House Judiciary
Committee Thursday and got
a youthful vtewpomt

Meigs girls win

"
The ~'walking man 1" K1m
Henry, added to his new
local record of walks m a
season when he drew three
stratght bases on balls. He
now has 22 this year
Well, that's how it goges
The Big Blacks put on a
mighty two-out seventh
m'ning rally to overcome
Rtpley earlier in the season.
Yesterday tt happened to
them
.
Our
sincerest
congratulations to the two
Don Wolfe coaches, Mtster
and Mtssus. Don is an old·
time coaching adversary of
the wnter.
But we hated to see tl
happen to David Rawson.
BIG BLACKS (3)
Player
AB R HE
Btl! Rardin, cf
4 0 2 0
KimHenry,c
1 0 0 0
Joey Gleason, p 4 0 0 0
Ron Durst, p
0 0 0 0
Andy Wilson, If 3 0 0 0

0 0
2 0

Meigs High gtrls' won thetr
first track meet of the season
at Gallipolis wtlh 62 points
Wednesday, topping Gallia
Academy with 53 1-3 and
Southern with 24 2-3.
Demaris Ash of Meigs, high
scorer of the meet, look firsts
in each of the four events ~he
entered. The results;
High Jump - 4'0", threeway he, Holsinger, S, Sayre ,
S., and Niday, G, Becky
Bego, fourth, M,eigs.
Long Jump - ' 14'51'.!'', Ash,
M., Singer, G.; Sayre, S.;
Beth Vaughan, M.
Shot
27'·2", Kim
Grueser, M.; Pam Vaughan,

Vaughan, M.; Roseberry, S.;
Holsmger, S.
880 Relay - Galha, 2:08.7,
Meigs second.
Mile Relay - Gallia.
440 Relay - 1:06.4, Gallta,
Meigs.
880Medley - 2:1,3.8, Galha,
Meigs.
Mile Run
6:34 0,
Roseberry,
S.;
Beth
'Vaughan, M ; Hemphill, G.:
Tracy Burdette, M

EH-1

Spartans
to face

51~%
ON PASSBOOK
SAVINGS
51 ll per cent year pa1d on
Regular Pa ssbook Sav1ngs .
No M•n•mum
Interest
fr om date of d e pos1t to date
of

Withdrawal

Int eres t

co m pounded quart erly

1.@

MEIGS
BRANCH

The Alhens Counly
Sav1ngs &amp; Loan Co.
296 Second St.

Po me roy , Oh1o
A ll Accounts Insur ed
$40.000 by F SLIC

To

• •••

CHROMA(OlO(ll
23" GIANT..SCREEN CONSOLE

~&gt;G &lt;MO&amp;.

CHICAGO (UP! ) - Iowa,
Mtnnesota and Wt sconsm
looked forward to upsets by
Ohw Stale and !ndta na
aga inst front runmng
Michigan State and Mtchtgan
this weekend to put the
Hawkeyes, Go phers and
Badgers back into contention
m the Big Ten baseball race.
The Spartans lead the
lea gue wtth a 6-1 record and
play doubleheaders at Ohio
Sta te today and Indiana
Saturday. Michigan tratls by
half a ga me at 6-2 and plays
doubl eh'eaders at lndtana
today and Ohio State
Saturday.
Even a single loss could be
costly to etther of them smce
Mmnesota matches the Spartans m the games behind
column at9-4 and Iowa with 73 and Wisconsin 9-5 trail by
only half a game. Iowa and
Wtsconstn are tdle this
weekend and Minnesota
plays non conferen ce opponents, Stevens Pomt
Saturday and La Crosse Sunday.
The only other games in·
vol ving Big Ten schools are
Olivet Nazarene at Northwestern
today,
LewiS
College at Northwestern
Saturday, and St. Xavier at
Dlinois Sunday.

The Altair E4547M Early Amertcan Lowboy
Console. Chromatic ooe-button tuning.
Power Sentry System. AFC.

ONLY'

'$498

Chrysler announces

TRACTORS
TODAY

a SlOO rebate to
help yOUr u.s. tax rebate·

BAUM'S TRUE
VALUE STORE
ct H "~L'r

Oh to
9fJ) JJO I

le of

go farther.

Up to $200 from the U.S. A full $200
from Chrysler when you buy or lease a '75
Duster, Valiant or Scamp. That's after
you've made your best deal with us. And
you don't have to wait lor your tax
rebate to get ours.
,
An offer th1s good has to be lim ited to
cars in stock, one per custome r, retail
customers only at partJctp a!J n~
Chrysler-Plymouth Dealers.

·ABSORBERS!

Organ, Drums, Guitar

CHRYStEH

NITELY

Plymouffi

Here's more good news!
Accordmg to EPA's Buyer Guide,
Valt ant and Oyster got better gas
m1leage than the competitive 6's .
Room? According to Automo·
live lndustnes' Roominess Index,
Valiant and Duster are roomiest m th ei r class. Resale? Accord·
ing to Automotive Marketing
Reports, of allleadmg com·
pacts, a one-year-old
Duster and Valiant have the
highest resale value.

•u"o""'' "'ALER .l!!!f""CHRYSLER
. . . , . MOTOIII C0flf(IIIA11(1..

TUES., WED., THURS., 8:30-1 :00
FRI. &amp; SAT., 9:30-2:00

,

Wheel

Balancing

Pomeroy

)ust Highest.
Interest Rates
In The Area

100% solid-state

Buckeyes

TRIO

; Your Complete Tire Center

.

No games, Nog1mmics

WHEEL HORSE

Frank Sisty

llfMONSTRAHOAJ

ana &gt;econd . Greg Cundiff
flied out, Riffle hit a ball
which could not he haitdled,
and both runners scored on
the error.
Eastern started its surge m
the ftfth , scoring four runs to
ga in the lead for the first time
6-4. Eichinger led off wtth a
walk, went to second on a
passed ball, to third on an
error on Sayre on a ptck off
attempt. and scored on a
single by Randy Blake. Blake
stole second and scored on a
single by Bob McClure, who
later stole second
TIJII Kuho then singled and
hoth scored on a double off
the bat of Mtke Larkins
Eastern added four more
InSUrance runs m the sixth to
put the game away making
thetr overall record 5-13 and
droppmg Southern to !HI.
Coach Hemes stated that the
most pleasmg thmg about the
victory other than the wm
was the fact, that the Eagles
swtped a new season htgh 12
bases in last night's contest
Southern 220 000 ll- 4 5 4
Eastern 110 044 X- 10 7 2
Rtffle (LP) Sayre (6) and

FULL LINE OF

c:n,Jov the Distinctive

'

Brady Huffman at Ract ne.
Yesterd ay, Junior Don
Etchmge r sta rt ed on the
mound for Eastern but could
not fi nd hts control and was
relieved by senior Randy
Blake in the second. Blake
pttched no hit baseball for the
remamder of the contest to
earn the vtctory Starting
pttcher for Southern was Jim
Riffle who took the loss after
leaVIng the contest m the ftfth
innmg los1ng 6-4. Mark Sayre
came on m rehef to ftmsh the
contest. Sayre gave up four
runs m the sixth.
Southern pitchers combined to walk seven and
stnke out onlf three On the
way to the Eastern vtctory,
Eagle pitchers walked five
and erased eight by
strikeouts. Blake recorded all
the strikeouts
Southern started the
contest by jumpmg out in
front 2-0 m the first when
Rtffle singled, Greg Dunrung
wa lked , and John Salser
doubled to score hoth runners Eastern scored once in
Its half of the first, and when
So uthern came to bat m the
second they repeated thetr
first mning total of sconng
two runs. Dave Bass and
Brady Huffman each lmed
smgles to put rtmners on ftrst

SEE OUR

M.

Dtscus
75'-7", P.
Vaughan, M.
Low Hurdles - 13.6, Wood,
G; Pat Vaughan, M.;
Holsinger, S.; Thomas, G.
100 Yd. Dash- 13.5, Ash,
M., Whitty, G.; Swartz, G.;
Holsinger, S,
220 Yd. Dash- 28.8, Ash,
M.; Velvet SWISher, M.,
third.
440 Yd. Dash- 1:9.8, Ash.,
M.; Cberyl Kennedy, M.,
finished foursh.
880 Run - 2:57.6, Pam

gets revenge

SHOCK

POMEROY

Main

Barry Henry, 2b 2
Mtke Burgess, 1b 3

WITH
BUILT·IN

HOME &amp; AUTO
606 E.

Mtke Nesselroad swung
hard at a pitch, htt it off hts
fist s, and PODDed a sm~le to
nght over the drawn m
Infield, George scoring.
Marshall flied out to deep
center for the second out,
Smtih tagging up to score It
was now 3-3.
Mtck Davenport ended it
all. He slashed a ground
single to center, Ault romping homt to climax the
darnedest wmnmg rally you
·ever saw Bedlam retgned.
For
the
wmners,
Nesselroad singled twtce and
walked twtce for a perfect
day. Davenport went 2-for-4.
Magnotta doubled whtle
Ca rmtchael a nd Gary ·
George were addmg smgles.
The Btg Blacks got a pair
of smgles each from Bill
Rardm and Mike Burgess,
hoth of whom were overdue.
Tim Cottnll starched a
smgle and pmch htlter Scott
Stewart scorched a base htt
to center. Charles Perry
smgled, walked, and was hit
by a pitch.

Dunnmg. Eichmger, Blake
(2) (WP ) and Winebrenner.

ROYAL CROWN

BOmiNG COMPANY
Middleport

TO ENT.ERT~IN YOU AT

THE MEIGS POMEROY
INN·

PH. 992-3629

PAA

C'~on in fOr a good deal on all our cars.

TOM RUE MOTORS ,

• 399 S. 3RD

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO •
)

�'··
.

'

'

.
'
5- The DaUy· ~.~~~!l, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, May 9, 1975

'-The Daily Sent~!. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, May 9, 1975 .

~».·:-..........·.·=·=·=·=~=:::::::~==:::::::::::::::~::~~:::::~::::::::::;;::::~·~~•

Wildcats ·surprise Vikings;
Pirates, Bobcats post wins
Hannan Trace surprised
league • leading Synunes
Valley, 6-4, in a home run
infested contest at Mercerville Thursday evening.
Three round trippers ·were
slugged in the contest.
Coach Dave Dunfee's
Vikings jumped in to a ~ lead
in the first inning on singles
by Carpenter and Terry Pine
and a three run homer over
the right centerfield fence by
starting and losing righthander Jaye Myers.
An error on Fry's grounder
and double by Terry Saunders provided the final SV

run .
Hannan Trace bounced
back in its half of the inn(ng
on Kent Halley's single, a
walk to Gibson and David
Shaffer's three run blast to
rightlield.

Coach Tom Belville 's
Wildcats plated two more
runs in the third inning on
·Halley's double and Mark
Swain's home run over the
r.ightfieid fence .
The final HT tally came in
the sixth on three walks and a
sacrifice fly by David Jones.
Leading hitters for the •
Wildcats were Halley two for
four; Shaffer, two for three;
Swain one for three and
Monte Sheets one for one.
Carpenter., Pine, Myers and
Saunders had one hit each for
Symmes Valley.
Wayne Hesson was the
winning pitcher. HT 2-7 in all
games and 2-4 in the SVAC
travels to Eastern Monday.
SV is :&gt;-1 in the SVAC.
Linescore :
SV
400 000 !l-4 5 1
HT
302 001 X-6 6 2

Myers (L) Christian (3)
Miller ( 5) and Pine. ·
Hesson (W) and Shaffer.
Coach Ron Janey's North
Gallia Pirates recorded their
ninth victory in 11 starts
Thursday night by edging
Wahama, 5-4 in a non-league
game at Bidwell.
The Pirates host Eastern of
Pike County this afternoon at
Bidwell in the championship
game of the Class A Sectional
Tournament. A victory would
vault NG into the District
Baseball Tournament.
The Pirates were led offensively Thursday by Fred
Logan and Gene Welch with
two hits each. Gene Payne,
Greg James , Calvin Minnis
and Mike Casey had one hit
each. Harmon and Smith
paced the White Falcons with

know

drove home 52 runs in two
months, he couldn't be accused of indulging in idle
chatter.
"I've always known what I
can do,'' said Locklear. "My
'problem is · convincing
others.
The second of Locklear's
base hits Thursday night was
a third inning double which
dropped between Ed Armbrister and George Foster in

Ugtrt &amp; Dark Blue
Special

$1,98 Yd.

."Patch-WOiil Denim
In Polyester Knit

'3.98

And

'4.98

In Case You're
Late,
We Have Many
Lovely
Mother's Day
Gifts.

THE

SEWING
CENTER
Middleport, o.

Cinc innat i (Gul let 3-1J at New
York (T at e 1-l l. 8: 05p .m .
San Francisc o ( D 'Acqu is to 13) at St . Loui s ( McGlothen 2-2l.

8 :30p.m .

Los Angeles (Hooten O-J) al
Pittsburgh (Rooker 2-0 . 8 :3!

San Diego at Ch icago

Cincinnati at New York
Ph i ladelphia at At l anta
L:.os Arigeles at Pjttsburgh
San Fran at St . Lou is, night
"American League

East
Mi lwaukee
Boston
Detroit
Cl eveland

Ba ltim or e
New York

w. I. pet. g.b.
14
11
12

9 .609
9 .571
9 .57 1
10 13 .435
10 l J .435
10 15 .400
West

1
1

DffiECTOR AND PIANIST for the variety show at
Southern High School this evening is Mrs. Lee Lee, seated
at the piano. With Mrs. Lee are two of several vocalists
who will perform, Larry Fisher and Mary Ann Older. •
Curtain time is 8 p.m.

4
,j

5

w. I. pet . g.b.
Oakland
15 ll .577
N BA Playoff Schedule
NHL Playoff Schedule
Texas
14 12 .538 1
Bv United Press International
Bv United Press International
Kansas City · 14 13 .519
w,.
(All Times EDT )
Semifinals
Californ ia
1&lt;l 14 .500 2
Eastern conf . Finals
Best of Seven
Minnesota
10 11 .476 2112
(Best of Seven)
Se ri es 1.
Chi cago
10 16 .385 s
Boston vs. washington
Philadelphia vs . NY· Islanders
Thur sda y's Res ults
(Washington leads 3-11
(Philad elphia leads J-21
Detroit 6 M ilwaukee 4
F ri. May 9- at Boston , 7 : 30 Sun ., M a y U --at New York ., 4
Texas 5 Kan sas City J
p .m .
p,m _
California 5 Oakl and 0
x Sun ., May ll ~ at washi ng - x -Tues., M ay 13- a t Phi ladel COnly games scheduled )
ton , 3:1 0p .m .
pl1 ia , 8 :05 p .m .
Today•s Probable 'Pitchers
x -Wed .. May l.t- ar Boston , 9 x- if necessary
(All Times EDTJ
p.m .
Series J .
Chicago (Kaat 4-0 l at Cleve Western Conf. Finals
Buffalo vs . Montreal
land (G . Perry 4-3), 7: 30p.m .
{Best of Seven)
&lt;Buffalo won 4-2)
Minnesota (Albury 2-H at
Golden State vs. Chicago
Baltimore (Gr i msley 0-J l, 7: 30 1
(Chicago leads 3-ll
National Basketball Assn.
p.m.
Sun .. May 11- at Chi cago ,
Ch icago 89 Golden St . 79
Texas (Brown 1-2) at Detroit 3: 10 p.m .
(LaGrow 3· 1), 8 p .m .
x -Wed .. May 14- at Gold en
National Hockey League
Milwaukee (Sprague 3-0l at
Stat e, 9 p .m .
NY ISlAnders 5 Phila 1 .
Kansas Ci t y ( F itzmorr is 3-2),
x-lf necessary
Buffalo 4 M Ontreal 3
8' 30 p.m.
Boston (Wise 2-2-l at Cali fornia (Hassler 3-2l. 10 : 30 p .m .
New York ( Dobson 2-3 ) at
Oakland (Abbo1t 1· 1'1, 11 p.m.
Saturday's Games
Texas at Detro it
New York at Oakland
Minn'esota at Balt imore
Boston at California, night
Chicago at Cl eveland , night .
Milwaukee at K~n City , nigh t

or
Batte!J~perated

9"
Diagcinal
Black &amp; White

PORTABLE TV

100 Pet. Solid State
Chas§is

WERNER
&amp; •

Diamond
Stunning
diamond sot In
sterling sliver

Rag. 13.95

MOTHER'S
PIN
· A b.lrthstone for
each of the
lolled' onesln

17M

fa"'liiY. ·
Diimond . her
Yellow void
PENDANT tmeo or steriJng.
Diamond tear·

Reg. 13.96

HORSE ·FEED

2 Eggs, choice of ham, bacon or
sausage, home fries, toast &amp; coffee.

MODERN SUPPLY ,
Jft W. Main St.

. ThtStortWIIh '' ALL KINDS OF STUFF"
For Pots · Sltbln . Large &amp; Small Anlm•ls . L...,s .

Gerdtns.

25

' '

I

I

1

DIAMOND
EARRINGS

~0FF
Per 50 lb. bag

Sm~ttly

dl:llinld pierced
diAmond eAr, rings In white
. or yellow told.

MOTHER'S
RING
A birthstone tor
ac:h of her

chlldron, FirS! • • •
' stone Included.
White or yellow .
solid 09ld mounting.

It Can Happen!

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Service

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Complete Line
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20% OFF
For Mothers

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Salon officers elected

LIGHTNING ROD MUTUAL

. CROSS

MARSH TURN· X INCUBATOR

BEGINNING .MONDAY MAY 12

.

. AC

SUNDAY,
MAY11

MAY 12 TO 17

Mrs. Jaeob Johnson and 20,000 girls and 3,000 adults in ·
FRIPAY
FILM, "The Road to Ar· Miss Mona Johnson, leaders Kentucky, Pennsylvania,
mageddon" featuring David of Rutland girl scout troops, West Virginia, Virginia and
New officers were elected Walker, Mrs., Brinker and
Wilkerson, author of "The will represent the Big Bend Ohio, rather than to have
outside
speakers
for
the
at
the Wednesday meeting of Mrs. Boyd. Mrs. Hampton,
Cross and the Switchblade" to Neighborhood at tbe annual
event.
Meigs
County Salon 710, first demi chapeau, presided
be s.hown, 7:30p.m. Friday at meeting of the Black
Participation
in
the
Eight
and
Forty, held at the in the absence of Mrs. Mary
Chester Church of God. Rev. Diamond Girl Scout Council
Martin, who is working out of
Dan L. Ayers, pastor, invites scheduled for Saturday, May program includes girls from home of Myrtle Walker.
the
age
of
14
up
who
are
Elected
were
Mrs.
·Lola
17, at the Parkersburg South
town .
the public.
active delegates along with Hampton, le petit chapeau;
Mrs. Walker served a
High
School.
MARY Shrtne 37, Order of
members of Council, Board Mrs. Ruby Marshall, first brunch and following tbe
The
meeting
will
focus
the White Shrine of Jerusalem
+++
members, leaders and demi chapeau; Mrs. Florence business meeting members
will meet at 8 p.m. Friday at attention on the theme,
DEAR HELEN:
,
guests.
Richards, second demi went to Williamstown, W.Va.
Recently my sister discovered love letters written to her the Pomeroy Masonic Tem- "Where We Were - Where
One
highlight
of
the
many
chapeau; Mrs. ·Julia Hysell, to tour the Fenton Art Glass
We Are - and Where We're
HR5.: Mon .. Fri. 9to 5
husband by her best woman friend . She left him, but he per- ple. Potluck refreshments.
faceted
program
will
be
the
Ia
secretaire; Mrs. Zuelelia Co. On the tour were Mrs.
5at.9tos
Going."
ANNUAL- MOTHER
suaded her to come back and try it again. (The woman's
music
provided
by
a
Girl
Smith,
l'aumonier;
Mrs.
Walker,
Mrs.
Davis,
Mrs.
Nearly. 200 delegates who
DAUGHTER dinner, potluck,
husband never knew it.)
were
elected at each of the 10 Scout Chorus directed by Mary Roush, l'archiviste; Richards, Mrs. Knapp, Mrs.
But she Is determined to hurt this other woman. So far we Friday, 6:30 p.m. at Trinity
Mrs. Robert Snyder of St. and Mrs. Catherine Welsh, Ia
(her family) ·have kept her from exposing the affair, but we Church. Program to follow the area meetings held last faU, Albans, W. Va. There will be concierge. Installation will Hackett, Mrs. Welsh , Mrs.
Iva Powell, Mrs. Brinker,
wiU be meeting for the first
dinner.
need reinforcement.
time
for
viewing
selected
take
place
in
August.
Mrs.
Julia Hysell, Mrs .
COONHUNTERS
Assn. time since the charter exhibits from each of the 10
Could you please tell her, via your column; that vinAlso
elected
were
delegates
Eileen Searls, and Mrs .
dictiveness Isn't the answer? The affair is ended. Why ruin Friday, Snowball Hill, 7:30 meeting of the Council in area meetings.
to the Ia marche depar- Hampton.
January;
1974.
The
discussion
L-.!~~!;!:!!~-J
p.m . Refreshments.
another marriage, just to get even? -WORRIED SISTER
An
afternoon
panel temental to be held in July at
of
topics
wiU
include
whether
"SWING INTO SPRING"
DEAR SISTER:
discussion will include people Dayton. They are Mrs.
Your sister should realize that revenge only deepens her Friday at Southern High, 8 or not to have limited of expertise, both associated Walker, Mrs. Rhoda -Hackett,
Cookie Sale,
own wounds. If she can forgive her husband, why not extend p.m., Southern High choir Brownie
proposed
objectives
and with the Girl Scout Council Mrs. Pearl Knapp, and Mrs.
this same charity to the person who may deserve the lesser under direction of Mrs. Lee
goals for 1975-78, and and those workin_g in other ' Welsh. Alternates are Mrs.
Lee.
shame of blame?
program experimentation. conununily youth programs. · Eunie Brinker, Mrs. RampHere's a good quote: "He (she) who has not forgiven an
SATURDAY
The theme, "Getting to The interest will focus on ton, Mrs. Veda Davis, and
enemy has never yet tasted one of the most sublime enEASTERN Band banquet, 7
Know You," prompted the what appeals to girls, how to Mrs. Richards, while the
joyments of life." - Lavater. -H.
p.m. Saturday; smorgasbord
"opting" for getting to know recruit both girls and adults, deleg~~tes at large are Mrs.
with Tuppers Plains area to
each other better in a council plus suggestions for im- Mary Martin and Mrs. Marie
take vegetables; Chester territory that includes nearly plementation of programs. Boyd.
. area, dessert, and Reedsville
The nominating committee
area, .salad;
everyone
report was presented by Mrs.
welcome.
CHICKEN
Barbecue
HY POLLY CRAMER
beginning ll·a.m. Saturday at
CHRISTIAN SINGING
fire station in Mason by Mason group "Ya Thu Bhu Tha"
Fire Department.
from Toledo featured Sunday
FISH Fry beginning 11 a .m. at senior citizens buildi~g at 3
Saturday by Middleport Fire p.m. Contemporary Christian
Why not? In the Middle Ages · Department at fire slation. music. Public invited free of
DEAR POLLY- How does knitting was considered Fish, french fries, cole slaw charge .
one remove brown stains man' s work, a real trade, but dinners or · just fish sandMONDAY
fro!JI that popular white graduaHy they lost out to the wiches. Auxiliary . of fire
POMEROY
BLEMEN·
porcelain-like cookware? . My distaff side. Reading that big deparbnent wiU hold bake TARY PTA, 7:30 p.m .
teapot is badly discolored and (in more ways than one)
sale beginning at same hour . Monday with safely patrol to
scouring pads and abrasive former
football
star
YARD SALE and Bake sale, be recognized by band ·
cleaners do noi help.
Roosevelt Grier does needle- Saturday, 9 a .m. to 3 p.m. students of David Bowen.
My husband fastens narrow point and of a burly
Rock
Springs
United Installation of officers;
strips of self-adhesive from policeman knitting helped Methodist Church. Sponsored refreshments by mothers of
weather stripping to his give them any needed· by the Teens for Christ MYF sixth graders; public invited.
Wind ... Storms ... Hurricanesl
trouser, hangers because the assurance that their hobby
to raise money for camp.
HEATH
UNITED
grooves in the hangers are was no longer considered
It's Wise to Pfay It Safe
MODERN WOODMEN Methodist Women, Heath
not enough to hold hi~ slacks. "sissy" and they join their
wives in dividing big lasks Satu:day, 7:30 p.m. at . Church, Middleport, 7:30
- MRS. L.R.H.
When bod weather rages it
DEAR MRS. L. R. H. - I such as needlepolntlng seats Burhngham Hall. Potluck p.m. Monday at the church.
supper.
Mrs. Nan Moore, ·program
have an electric coffee pol lor dining room chairs. ·
plays havoc with farms. Who
JITNEY Supper Saturday, leader, Mrs. Billy Jo
made of the same porcelain.,
We know most everybody is
devotional .
con tell when a storm might
like cookware. When the doing handwork bul how 4:30 p.m. at Syracuse Krawsczyn
Elementary
School
sponsored
leader,
and
Mrs
. Grace
Inside becomes stained I fill it much of this is needlework
occ::ur, but you can be properFrench, Mrs. Lavina Davis,
with ve'1 hoi water, add a that costs time and.mo.ney we by the PTA.
SQUARE DANCE Saturday and Mrs. Garnet Entsminger,
ly insured if it does. Come to
teaspoon or so of automatic don't know. It does bring '
8:30
to 11:30 at archery hostesses.
·
dishwasher detergent, let it enjoyment to the worker and
us for full form insurance.
.stand for about IS minutes adds up to real decoration for building at Royal Oak ,Park.
and then scrub the Inside with the home. Before. launching Music by "The Khord Kings."
COUPLE TO WED
Insure Now' With ...
the long-handled brush I use on any such project consider . Ad!nission age !2 to 99 $1.50,
COOLVILLE - Mr. and
MEIGS HIGH cheerleaders Mrs. A. Roland Eastman, Rt.
to remove food from dishes to color, design and scale
ENJOY THE CONVENIENCE
will
hold a car wash 9 a.m. to 1 Coolville announce the
go In the dishwasher. This carefully.
of no messy pot s or pans to scrub or scour . You cook on
FROM
clean~ the brush and the
Never buy and then work 6 p.m. Saturday at Welker's approaching marriage of
paper or glass.
Inside of tbe pot is gleaming anything thai does not have a Ashland Station, W. Main St., their daughter, Janice Sue, to
Paul A. (Sonny) Haynes, son
white. Rinse thoroughly with definite place to go whe_re It Pomeroy .
CAR WASH and bake sale, of Mrs. Ted Riley, Jr ,
SELF CLEANING "
very hot water. - POLLY. wlll be a contribution to the
1
114
Court
St.
992-5120
Pomeroy
Saturday;
beginning
10
a.m.
Middleport, and Mr. Horace
It is almost like ownlng a " Self Cleaning" oven . You
room's decorative scheme.
Homes- Cars- Mobile Homes
merely wipe lhe cool stainless steel interior, perleclly
DEAR POLLY. - One of Every room usually has a across from Racine Garage. Haynes of Columbus, ·Ohio.
clean with a paper towel - after each use. No baked on
Motorcycles
my Pet Peeves is to have one basic color or colors that stay Cost of the car wash is $1.75; An . ·August wedding is
particles .
of my favorite daily news· around for a long lime. Such sponsored by youth group. planned. •
paper columns. cilt short as colors may be determined by
SUNDAY
GIVE HER
· yours was twice last week. - an Oriental rug, expensive
More time to spend with you and your family land
REVIVAL at Guysville . . . - - - - · -.....- - - - . - ....
. .- - -. .
more leisure time) by laking the drudgery oul of her
DORA.
•,
plain carpeting, a glass or
Community
Church,
Guysday.
DEAR READERS · - porcelain collection· or he a ville, 7:30 each evening, May
.. · · .
.
· ·
.
.
Needlework in all lorms · favorite color. Accent colors 11-18. Gilbert Spencer, John
MOREl
·(knitting, crocheting, crewel may be changed at intervals Elswick and Dennis Tabor,
embroidery, needlepoint, and are not as permanent. evangelists: Gospel Tones to
Visit us and let u s prov e the numerous conveniences that will ease her work load.
booking, etc,) iii enjoying a Big handwork projects should be featured on May 17; special
· W8Ve of popularity. More be planned around the basics· singing nightly ,
MEAT - Baked Ham, Fried Chicken,
· Amana Radaranges Start AI 1229.95
women are plying their tbat wiD be arolllld for .years.
Roast Beef, Flounder Fish.
1eedle1 of (pte sort or another . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , - - . . . . . , - - - ;
.
.
and they have beea jolaed by
VEGETABLES
Baked
Beans,
Peas
mea and ,yOungsters. Some
and
Carrots,
Noodles,
Potatoes
(sweet.
say this great tranqUilizer
baked, mashed and home fries).
111ay be a rebellion against an
•Imott mechanized society.
SALAD .- Macaroni, Cottage Cheese, .
Nell!lltler what prompts such
Slaw, and Tossed.
hand\l'ork II can be a force
toward.. famOy 1111ily as one
.
.
PIE-Graham Cra.cker, Banana Cream,
•d aU jeln together Ia a big
Apple.
projecl~acb as making a rug .
~
Durlnl reeent' years such
werk ,... couldered to be
WOIIIIIn'a wark aad those lew
'
.
Hrs.: 10:00 A.M. tilll :00 P.M. Sun.· Thur.
mea who e1joyed h worked In
10:00 A.M. Til12:00 P.M. Fri. &amp; Sat . ..
secl111loa. Now tbey are open
. 992-2556
about .It and ofteu give the
W. -MAIN
POMEROY,O.
women stiff competUion.
Ph. 992-~35

Stained cookware
dulls her pleasure

MOTOROLA

r------------------,

On~

which will be used for ~lass
markers and patrtqtlc
plaques to he given to the
winners of the "best of show"
in the artistic arrangements
division, and the "sweepstakes' in the horticulture
division.
Exhibitors are to have their
entries at the showroom betll',!'en 9 a.m. and 12 noon,
June 21. Oral judging v.ill
begin at I p.m. and the show
wilt be open for public
viewing from I to 8 p.m. on
Saturday, and I to 4 p.m. pn
Sunday. Blue, red, yellow and v
white ribbons will be awarded in each class.
During the meeUng, the
Association endorsed the 1.6
mill operating levy for the
Meigs Community School to
be voted on in the June
primary.
Club members were urged
to get flower show or
publicity books to Mrs .
Elizabeth Lohse , so that she
can take these to the
Pomeroy library where they
will be displayed. Only books
pertaining to county shows
are being collected.
Mrs. Iris Kelton announced
that the fall regional meeting
will be held in Meigs County
on the first Saturday in
November.
Mrs. Bimny Kuhl of the
Chester Garden Club. gave
devotions.

Polly's PoinT£lf"'C'

and rebounding strength.
"Spoony (Weatherspoon)
has played them well," said
Elvin Hayes. "He's become a
fine pro and he comes In and
gives us a big lift."
Boston uses Paul Silas off
the bench in relief of Don
Nelson, but Silas is a
rebounder and playmaker
rather than a scorer. When he
gets · t
h .Ill 0 early foul lroitble as
Cee ~td Wednesday night the
lttcs have no t b .'
player to ta
es a lished
The key to~ u~ ~he slack.
08 n s succell8 ·

·SEE YOUR BIRD HArat IN A

99e '

only •1.50
Blue &amp;POMEROY
·Grey Restaurant

One Week

Social Two Rutland leaders to
Calendar attend co11;ncil meeting

which they ca n exhibit.
Assignments made
Each club was assigned
show responsibilities by Mrs.
Lewis as follow s: Rutland
Gard,en Club, the entrance
decoration; th e Rutland
Friendly Gard eners . the
publici ty book; Star Garden
Club , hospi tali ty ; Mi ddlepor t, a lso hospitali ty;
Middl epor t Am a teurs, acceptance and placement for
entd es in th e ar ti stic
arrang em e nts divi sio n ;
Pomeroy ,
ho s pita lity ;
Winding Trail, ribbons and
s weepstakes aw ar ds ;
Chester, slaging; Wildwood,
judges' clerks ; Bend 0 ' the
River , acceptance and
placeme nt of hor ti culture
entries.
Mrs. Jean Moore and Mrs.
Elizabeth Lohse were named
to handle registration of
entries and entry tags with
Mrs. Janet Bolin and Mrs.
Judy Titus to serve as advisors.
Mrs. Lew is di splayed
plaster of paris eag le replicas

The Perfect Gift For Her

Bullets can win East title tonight

·-------------------------·
'

not the offensiva performance of one player. '
bnproved team play is a
necessity tonight and in the
remaining games, if there
are to be any more games for .
the Celtics to play.

ONE OF THE HIGHUGHTS in the variety show to be staged this evening at Southern
High School in Racine, under the direction of Mrs. Lee Lee is a boys chorus line and dance.
The group will be singing and dancing to "WiUie the Weeper." Front row, 1-r, Keith Circle;
Tim Thorne, Donnie Dudding, John Sayre; back row, Mitch Nease, Tony Carnahan, Greg
Johnson, Larry Fisher and Glenn Simpson. Curtain time is 8 p.m. Tbere will be serveral
skits presented also.

Texas Steak on homemade bread,
french fries and 20c drink.

I

++ +

has always been IP•m play,

one on this team is ready to
give up or concede."
The Celtics do concede that
Washington has played
better, more consistent
basketball in the series to
date. And the Bullets, under
the ' guidance of former
Boston defensive star K. C.
Jones, have used the old
Celtic style of tight, team'
defense and penetrating
offense to take the series
lead.
.
. .
Washington also has been
beati~g Boston with a 7
sup en or bench, which always
had been a Celtics hallmark.
Nick Weatherspoon has been
un stoppable for the Bullets
and Jimmy Jones, out for the
season after suffering torn
knee ligaments Wednesday,
had ·
·

I

*'.

grandiflora, and climbers; . "Ap~il 19, 1775," Colonel · The junior classes are
1i I i e s ,
Madonna , Prescott, "Don't Shoot till "June 7, 1775," ' first Con.
Namerocallis and other; · you see the whites -{)f 'their tinental money issued, a
daffodils, Peruvian; house- eyes !," an arrangement .favorite design, and "Sept.
plants, foliage over two feet, using white.
25, 1775," the Green Mountain
under tw o feet , and
"April 19, 1775," The shot Boy, Ethan Allen, a dish
blooming; and allium.
heard 'round the world - an garden.
The artistic arrangement interpretive arrangement.
The educational classes are
classes ar.e:
''Aug. I, 1775.'' The flame for pesticides, books and
"March 23, 1775," Patrick is lighted ! An arrangement weathered wood. All garden
Henry, "Give My liberty, or using one or more candles. clubs were asked by Mrs.
give me death !"- a choice
" Win ter, 1775," Valley Lewis to take at least two
of arrangements in · two Forge - an arrangement pieces of either weathered
containers.
featuring flowers crafted wood or driftwood for the
" April 14, 1775," First from dried plant materials. display.
Abolition Society Formed These artistic arrangement
Mrs. Lewis announced that
modern desi~n using small classes, according to the club members may enter
amount of material.
s how rules, are open only to only one entry in each of the
"April17, 1775," Old North garden club members .
artistic arrangement classes,
Church
a religious
The invitational artistic butmayenieras many as she
arrangement suitable for use arrangement class is "Dec. 3, wants in any of the horin a home.
1775," first official American ticulture classes . Club
"April 18 , 1775, Paul flag raised on Commander representatives drew for four
Revere's Ride- a traditional Hopkins ' flagship , " The classes with the unmass arrangement.
Alfred" - an arrangement derstanding that some
featuringred,whiteandblue. member would ma ke an ·
arrangement for each one, a
measure to insure that all
classes of the show will be
filled. Drawing for classes,
however, does not restrict
members as to the classes in

·DEAR HELEN:
I'm going with a woman who says she really loves me, but
she's living with another guy. She keeps saying, "Wail a while
longer," but it's been over two years. Do you think she'll ever ·
make up her inind? - ON THE STRING
DEAR OTS:
Perhaps she already has made up her mind - she enjoys
keeping a kicker, because a pair isn't quite enough. If you don't
like her game, get out of it, but don't expect total fidelity from
a two-man woman. - H.

(All Times EDT)

·-WEEKEND SPECIAL-

Only

Patterson, Joy Neigler, Heidi Ashley, Sharon Evans, GaU
Evans, and Patty Robinson. The ·variety show Is being
sponsored by the Southern choir. Curtain time is 8 p.m.
THE DUKE IS ILL
NEWPORT BitACH, Calif.
(UP!) - John ·Wayne was
being treated for walldng
pneumonia today at Roag
Memorial Hospital. "It's
nothing serious - not a
recurrence of anything else,"
said Wayne's .son, Patrick.

By GIL PETERS
UP! Sports Writer
BOSTON (UP!) - Several
weeks ago, before the start of
the NBA playoffs, Boston
basketball fans were talking.
about the possibility of
another Celtics dynasty.
The talk today is much
more basic and realistic: Can
the defending champions turn
around 1-3 disadvantage in
the Eastern Conference finals
or are the Washington Bullets
simply the better team?
"Our team is not down
mentally or psychologically
or anything like that ," said
J ohn Havlicek, the team
captain who has played on six
of Boston's 12 tiUe winners.
" We've been the best team in
the league on the road all
season and we can win ... No

Regal~· flower show plans
were nu!lined by Mrs.
Margaret
Ella
Lewis
chairwoman and Mrs. Ann~
Turner a m~mber of the Star
Garde~ Club . was elected
contact chair~oman · during
the annual spring meeting of
the Meigs County Garden
Club Association Thursday
nigh t. at Grace Episcopal
Church. ·
Mrs . Chlorus Grimm
presided at the meeting.
"Progre.S : 1775" is the
theme of the Regatta show
which will be slaged in the
air-conditioned showroom of
the Pomeroy Motor Co. on
both Saturday and Sunday of
Regatta weekend.
Mrs. Lewis presented the
schedule which includes
horticulture classes for roses,
hybrid tea, floribunda,

DEAR HELEN:
, Last week my husband and I attended a dinner party at his
boss's home. When we arrived we found him and his wife in a
drunken stupor, and the dinner burned. They sent my husband
out to get some pizza.
·
·~
While he was gone, the boss's wife passed out on the sofa,
and h~ forced me into the bedroom and raped me .
My question is: need I write a thank-you note• - WON·
DERING
DEAR WONDERING:
Only if the boss paid for the pizza ... maybe:
Only.ifyou enjoyed it. (Hokey notes for hoaxy folks). - H.
DEAR HELEN:
I'm engaged to a man who wears his underclothes too long.
I would like him to take a bath, shave and clean his teeth, but
the more I hint, the subborner he gets. Also, he likes a lot of
loving. Help! !
I would dump him, except that he gave up his aparbnenl to
move in with me, and every time I try to call it quits, he.cries
about losing his apartment, and having no place to go.
I thought we could get married quicker by saving money, 3~s:s:::...~::dc.b.o......sese
but all I am saving is breath ...:. from holding my nose. WORRIED ABOUT BEING CLOSE
DEAR WABC:
It's your apartment so you can make the rules. Tell his
overripe fellow either his aroma goes or he.does! - He should
save his soft soap for the bath tub. -H .

QUASAR

1- - - - - - - - - . . , , p.m. Saturday's Games
Houston at Montreal

DENIM-

"SWINGING INTO Spring" at Southern High
School this evening will be this dance line. Dancing to
"'cabaret"' will be 1-r, Mel Waldnig, Kim Taylor; Connie

Major League Standings

p.m .

'

I

By United Press International

San Diego ( Freisleben 1-3) at
Chicago ! Burri s 3-1L 1:30 p.in .
Ph il adelphia (Ul1d erwood 2-2)
at At lanta (Harr ison 1-1) , 7 : 35
p .m .
Houston (R ober ts 2 2 l at
Montreal ( F ryman 3-0J. 8 :05

By Helen Bottel

++ +

Standings
National League
Eas1
w . I. pet. g.b.
Chicago
16 8 .667
Pittsburgh
12 10 .545 3
Philadelph ia
13 11 .541 3
New York
10 12 .455 5
St. Lou is
9 14 .391 6l h
Mc;mtreal
a JJ .Jal
6 ,! 1
West
w. I. pet. g.b.
Los Ange les
19 10 .655
Cinc innat i
16 13 .552 3
San Francisco 14 13 .519 4
San Diego
14 14 .500 4' '2
Atlanta
.., 4 16 .467 5112
Hou ston
10 2.1 .323 10
Thursday ' s Flesults
Ph ilactelph/a 6 St . Louis 2
P ittsburgh 4 New York 2
At lanta 3 San F ran cisco 2
San Diego 3 Cincinna ti 0
- Today's Probable Pitchers

Us •..

DE :\ R HELEN:
Any hoaxes lately? - LIKES 'EM
DEAR L.E.:
How about this one? - H.

-·

Jones, Locklear shine
in 3-0 Padres victory
CINCINNATI (UP!) - San
Diego Padres leftfielder Gene
Locklear has been told he
can't hit, can't run, can't
throw and has a bad attitude.
But, you might have a litUe
trouble convincing the 23,861
fans at Riverfront Stadium
Thursday night who saw the
Padres gain a ~ victory over
the Cincinnati Reds.
Because, the 24-year-()!d
Locklear, who began his
career in t.he
Reds
organization, rapped out four
hits, including a pair of
doubles, as lefty Randy
Jones, another 24-year-()ld,
pitched a four-hitter while
notching his fourth victory in
six decisions.
"I wouldn:t say I have a
bad attitude," said Locklear.
"I just get teed off sitting on
the bench so much watching
other guys play when I
I'm better than they are."
When Locklear, a fullblooded Cherokee Indian,
was in the Reds' organization
he led the Eastern League
and American Association in
batting consecutive years
while playing for farm clubs.
Gene went to the Padres in
the deal which brought
Fredie Norman ~ , the Reds.
Last year, he fQUild himself
playing in Hawaii in the
Pacific Coast League.
"I didn't lead that league
but I would have if I'd been
there the full season," said
Locklear. And since Gene
batted .350. hit 15 homers and

•

three hits ea ch.
Weich, the winning pitcher,
fanned three and walked' two .
He was reli eved by James in
the sixth and Minnis came on
in the seven th.
Goldsberry was the losing
hurler . .
Unescore :
Wahama
101 101 0-4 9 2
N. Gallia
112 010 X-5 8 3
Goldsberry (L) Thompson
( 3) and thompson.
Welch (W ) James (6)
Minnis ( 7) and Tackett:

Tim Lucas, Blll Metzner
and Dave Wise had two hits
each to pace the Kyger Creek
Bobcats to an 8-2 victory over
Southwestern Thursday night
in an SV AC contest played on
Evans Field at Rio Grande.
Coach Jim Sprague's
Bobcats are 4·2 in the SV AC
while Coach Mel Carter's
Highlanders dropped to 2-3
against league fqes .
Other Bobcat hitters were
Terry Lucas, Mitch Salem
and Chris · Preston with one
hit each. Getting hits for
Southwestern were Rick
Crouse, Larry Carter, Terry
right centerfield. Steve Huntz Carter, Mike Russell, Jack
followed with a single and the Walker and Jim Nida .
Padres had their first run off
Southwestern took a I.()
Gary Nolan who wound up l~~d l!!. the third inning but
with his second loss in three · the Bobcats came back for
decisions.
three runs in the fourth . Steve
Dave Winfield led off the Baird, sophomore rightfourth with his seventh homer hander, was the winning
of the season, tying him for hurler.
the loop lead with Los
Jim Nida, senior rightAngeles' Ron Cey as the hander, took the loss.. He was
Padres went ahead, 2.(1.
relieved by Terry Carter in
the fifth.

·Regatta flower show classes announced

Helen _Help

...

MOTHERS DAY
SPECIAL

FREE SUNDAE
FOR MOM

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

Adolph's Dairy Valley

'

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Sunday, May 11, Hrs. 8:30-2:00
Weekdays 6:00-8:30
.
3rd St.
Ph. 949-3551 Racine, Ohio

Ingels
I

(

'

Furni~ure
.J

)

..

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�'··
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'

.
'
5- The DaUy· ~.~~~!l, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, May 9, 1975

'-The Daily Sent~!. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, May 9, 1975 .

~».·:-..........·.·=·=·=·=~=:::::::~==:::::::::::::::~::~~:::::~::::::::::;;::::~·~~•

Wildcats ·surprise Vikings;
Pirates, Bobcats post wins
Hannan Trace surprised
league • leading Synunes
Valley, 6-4, in a home run
infested contest at Mercerville Thursday evening.
Three round trippers ·were
slugged in the contest.
Coach Dave Dunfee's
Vikings jumped in to a ~ lead
in the first inning on singles
by Carpenter and Terry Pine
and a three run homer over
the right centerfield fence by
starting and losing righthander Jaye Myers.
An error on Fry's grounder
and double by Terry Saunders provided the final SV

run .
Hannan Trace bounced
back in its half of the inn(ng
on Kent Halley's single, a
walk to Gibson and David
Shaffer's three run blast to
rightlield.

Coach Tom Belville 's
Wildcats plated two more
runs in the third inning on
·Halley's double and Mark
Swain's home run over the
r.ightfieid fence .
The final HT tally came in
the sixth on three walks and a
sacrifice fly by David Jones.
Leading hitters for the •
Wildcats were Halley two for
four; Shaffer, two for three;
Swain one for three and
Monte Sheets one for one.
Carpenter., Pine, Myers and
Saunders had one hit each for
Symmes Valley.
Wayne Hesson was the
winning pitcher. HT 2-7 in all
games and 2-4 in the SVAC
travels to Eastern Monday.
SV is :&gt;-1 in the SVAC.
Linescore :
SV
400 000 !l-4 5 1
HT
302 001 X-6 6 2

Myers (L) Christian (3)
Miller ( 5) and Pine. ·
Hesson (W) and Shaffer.
Coach Ron Janey's North
Gallia Pirates recorded their
ninth victory in 11 starts
Thursday night by edging
Wahama, 5-4 in a non-league
game at Bidwell.
The Pirates host Eastern of
Pike County this afternoon at
Bidwell in the championship
game of the Class A Sectional
Tournament. A victory would
vault NG into the District
Baseball Tournament.
The Pirates were led offensively Thursday by Fred
Logan and Gene Welch with
two hits each. Gene Payne,
Greg James , Calvin Minnis
and Mike Casey had one hit
each. Harmon and Smith
paced the White Falcons with

know

drove home 52 runs in two
months, he couldn't be accused of indulging in idle
chatter.
"I've always known what I
can do,'' said Locklear. "My
'problem is · convincing
others.
The second of Locklear's
base hits Thursday night was
a third inning double which
dropped between Ed Armbrister and George Foster in

Ugtrt &amp; Dark Blue
Special

$1,98 Yd.

."Patch-WOiil Denim
In Polyester Knit

'3.98

And

'4.98

In Case You're
Late,
We Have Many
Lovely
Mother's Day
Gifts.

THE

SEWING
CENTER
Middleport, o.

Cinc innat i (Gul let 3-1J at New
York (T at e 1-l l. 8: 05p .m .
San Francisc o ( D 'Acqu is to 13) at St . Loui s ( McGlothen 2-2l.

8 :30p.m .

Los Angeles (Hooten O-J) al
Pittsburgh (Rooker 2-0 . 8 :3!

San Diego at Ch icago

Cincinnati at New York
Ph i ladelphia at At l anta
L:.os Arigeles at Pjttsburgh
San Fran at St . Lou is, night
"American League

East
Mi lwaukee
Boston
Detroit
Cl eveland

Ba ltim or e
New York

w. I. pet. g.b.
14
11
12

9 .609
9 .571
9 .57 1
10 13 .435
10 l J .435
10 15 .400
West

1
1

DffiECTOR AND PIANIST for the variety show at
Southern High School this evening is Mrs. Lee Lee, seated
at the piano. With Mrs. Lee are two of several vocalists
who will perform, Larry Fisher and Mary Ann Older. •
Curtain time is 8 p.m.

4
,j

5

w. I. pet . g.b.
Oakland
15 ll .577
N BA Playoff Schedule
NHL Playoff Schedule
Texas
14 12 .538 1
Bv United Press International
Bv United Press International
Kansas City · 14 13 .519
w,.
(All Times EDT )
Semifinals
Californ ia
1&lt;l 14 .500 2
Eastern conf . Finals
Best of Seven
Minnesota
10 11 .476 2112
(Best of Seven)
Se ri es 1.
Chi cago
10 16 .385 s
Boston vs. washington
Philadelphia vs . NY· Islanders
Thur sda y's Res ults
(Washington leads 3-11
(Philad elphia leads J-21
Detroit 6 M ilwaukee 4
F ri. May 9- at Boston , 7 : 30 Sun ., M a y U --at New York ., 4
Texas 5 Kan sas City J
p .m .
p,m _
California 5 Oakl and 0
x Sun ., May ll ~ at washi ng - x -Tues., M ay 13- a t Phi ladel COnly games scheduled )
ton , 3:1 0p .m .
pl1 ia , 8 :05 p .m .
Today•s Probable 'Pitchers
x -Wed .. May l.t- ar Boston , 9 x- if necessary
(All Times EDTJ
p.m .
Series J .
Chicago (Kaat 4-0 l at Cleve Western Conf. Finals
Buffalo vs . Montreal
land (G . Perry 4-3), 7: 30p.m .
{Best of Seven)
&lt;Buffalo won 4-2)
Minnesota (Albury 2-H at
Golden State vs. Chicago
Baltimore (Gr i msley 0-J l, 7: 30 1
(Chicago leads 3-ll
National Basketball Assn.
p.m.
Sun .. May 11- at Chi cago ,
Ch icago 89 Golden St . 79
Texas (Brown 1-2) at Detroit 3: 10 p.m .
(LaGrow 3· 1), 8 p .m .
x -Wed .. May 14- at Gold en
National Hockey League
Milwaukee (Sprague 3-0l at
Stat e, 9 p .m .
NY ISlAnders 5 Phila 1 .
Kansas Ci t y ( F itzmorr is 3-2),
x-lf necessary
Buffalo 4 M Ontreal 3
8' 30 p.m.
Boston (Wise 2-2-l at Cali fornia (Hassler 3-2l. 10 : 30 p .m .
New York ( Dobson 2-3 ) at
Oakland (Abbo1t 1· 1'1, 11 p.m.
Saturday's Games
Texas at Detro it
New York at Oakland
Minn'esota at Balt imore
Boston at California, night
Chicago at Cl eveland , night .
Milwaukee at K~n City , nigh t

or
Batte!J~perated

9"
Diagcinal
Black &amp; White

PORTABLE TV

100 Pet. Solid State
Chas§is

WERNER
&amp; •

Diamond
Stunning
diamond sot In
sterling sliver

Rag. 13.95

MOTHER'S
PIN
· A b.lrthstone for
each of the
lolled' onesln

17M

fa"'liiY. ·
Diimond . her
Yellow void
PENDANT tmeo or steriJng.
Diamond tear·

Reg. 13.96

HORSE ·FEED

2 Eggs, choice of ham, bacon or
sausage, home fries, toast &amp; coffee.

MODERN SUPPLY ,
Jft W. Main St.

. ThtStortWIIh '' ALL KINDS OF STUFF"
For Pots · Sltbln . Large &amp; Small Anlm•ls . L...,s .

Gerdtns.

25

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DIAMOND
EARRINGS

~0FF
Per 50 lb. bag

Sm~ttly

dl:llinld pierced
diAmond eAr, rings In white
. or yellow told.

MOTHER'S
RING
A birthstone tor
ac:h of her

chlldron, FirS! • • •
' stone Included.
White or yellow .
solid 09ld mounting.

It Can Happen!

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Service

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STEAMBOAT INN

SUNDAY MENU

•7U
Complete Line
RED ROSE

Also Broods the
Chicks · After
They Hlltch.

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drOp pendan·t
In Sterling
sliver.

HMt ·Control. E,ao• turne&lt;! from autSidt.
Equipped with fuming rlng·ror 24 quail egos. 11 .,._.nt
.,.. or 12 chick., egos. lnc...._tcr with one lumlng ring: .

20% OFF
For Mothers

Davis

crou.

·. Automatic

Salon officers elected

LIGHTNING ROD MUTUAL

. CROSS

MARSH TURN· X INCUBATOR

BEGINNING .MONDAY MAY 12

.

. AC

SUNDAY,
MAY11

MAY 12 TO 17

Mrs. Jaeob Johnson and 20,000 girls and 3,000 adults in ·
FRIPAY
FILM, "The Road to Ar· Miss Mona Johnson, leaders Kentucky, Pennsylvania,
mageddon" featuring David of Rutland girl scout troops, West Virginia, Virginia and
New officers were elected Walker, Mrs., Brinker and
Wilkerson, author of "The will represent the Big Bend Ohio, rather than to have
outside
speakers
for
the
at
the Wednesday meeting of Mrs. Boyd. Mrs. Hampton,
Cross and the Switchblade" to Neighborhood at tbe annual
event.
Meigs
County Salon 710, first demi chapeau, presided
be s.hown, 7:30p.m. Friday at meeting of the Black
Participation
in
the
Eight
and
Forty, held at the in the absence of Mrs. Mary
Chester Church of God. Rev. Diamond Girl Scout Council
Martin, who is working out of
Dan L. Ayers, pastor, invites scheduled for Saturday, May program includes girls from home of Myrtle Walker.
the
age
of
14
up
who
are
Elected
were
Mrs.
·Lola
17, at the Parkersburg South
town .
the public.
active delegates along with Hampton, le petit chapeau;
Mrs. Walker served a
High
School.
MARY Shrtne 37, Order of
members of Council, Board Mrs. Ruby Marshall, first brunch and following tbe
The
meeting
will
focus
the White Shrine of Jerusalem
+++
members, leaders and demi chapeau; Mrs. Florence business meeting members
will meet at 8 p.m. Friday at attention on the theme,
DEAR HELEN:
,
guests.
Richards, second demi went to Williamstown, W.Va.
Recently my sister discovered love letters written to her the Pomeroy Masonic Tem- "Where We Were - Where
One
highlight
of
the
many
chapeau; Mrs. ·Julia Hysell, to tour the Fenton Art Glass
We Are - and Where We're
HR5.: Mon .. Fri. 9to 5
husband by her best woman friend . She left him, but he per- ple. Potluck refreshments.
faceted
program
will
be
the
Ia
secretaire; Mrs. Zuelelia Co. On the tour were Mrs.
5at.9tos
Going."
ANNUAL- MOTHER
suaded her to come back and try it again. (The woman's
music
provided
by
a
Girl
Smith,
l'aumonier;
Mrs.
Walker,
Mrs.
Davis,
Mrs.
Nearly. 200 delegates who
DAUGHTER dinner, potluck,
husband never knew it.)
were
elected at each of the 10 Scout Chorus directed by Mary Roush, l'archiviste; Richards, Mrs. Knapp, Mrs.
But she Is determined to hurt this other woman. So far we Friday, 6:30 p.m. at Trinity
Mrs. Robert Snyder of St. and Mrs. Catherine Welsh, Ia
(her family) ·have kept her from exposing the affair, but we Church. Program to follow the area meetings held last faU, Albans, W. Va. There will be concierge. Installation will Hackett, Mrs. Welsh , Mrs.
Iva Powell, Mrs. Brinker,
wiU be meeting for the first
dinner.
need reinforcement.
time
for
viewing
selected
take
place
in
August.
Mrs.
Julia Hysell, Mrs .
COONHUNTERS
Assn. time since the charter exhibits from each of the 10
Could you please tell her, via your column; that vinAlso
elected
were
delegates
Eileen Searls, and Mrs .
dictiveness Isn't the answer? The affair is ended. Why ruin Friday, Snowball Hill, 7:30 meeting of the Council in area meetings.
to the Ia marche depar- Hampton.
January;
1974.
The
discussion
L-.!~~!;!:!!~-J
p.m . Refreshments.
another marriage, just to get even? -WORRIED SISTER
An
afternoon
panel temental to be held in July at
of
topics
wiU
include
whether
"SWING INTO SPRING"
DEAR SISTER:
discussion will include people Dayton. They are Mrs.
Your sister should realize that revenge only deepens her Friday at Southern High, 8 or not to have limited of expertise, both associated Walker, Mrs. Rhoda -Hackett,
Cookie Sale,
own wounds. If she can forgive her husband, why not extend p.m., Southern High choir Brownie
proposed
objectives
and with the Girl Scout Council Mrs. Pearl Knapp, and Mrs.
this same charity to the person who may deserve the lesser under direction of Mrs. Lee
goals for 1975-78, and and those workin_g in other ' Welsh. Alternates are Mrs.
Lee.
shame of blame?
program experimentation. conununily youth programs. · Eunie Brinker, Mrs. RampHere's a good quote: "He (she) who has not forgiven an
SATURDAY
The theme, "Getting to The interest will focus on ton, Mrs. Veda Davis, and
enemy has never yet tasted one of the most sublime enEASTERN Band banquet, 7
Know You," prompted the what appeals to girls, how to Mrs. Richards, while the
joyments of life." - Lavater. -H.
p.m. Saturday; smorgasbord
"opting" for getting to know recruit both girls and adults, deleg~~tes at large are Mrs.
with Tuppers Plains area to
each other better in a council plus suggestions for im- Mary Martin and Mrs. Marie
take vegetables; Chester territory that includes nearly plementation of programs. Boyd.
. area, dessert, and Reedsville
The nominating committee
area, .salad;
everyone
report was presented by Mrs.
welcome.
CHICKEN
Barbecue
HY POLLY CRAMER
beginning ll·a.m. Saturday at
CHRISTIAN SINGING
fire station in Mason by Mason group "Ya Thu Bhu Tha"
Fire Department.
from Toledo featured Sunday
FISH Fry beginning 11 a .m. at senior citizens buildi~g at 3
Saturday by Middleport Fire p.m. Contemporary Christian
Why not? In the Middle Ages · Department at fire slation. music. Public invited free of
DEAR POLLY- How does knitting was considered Fish, french fries, cole slaw charge .
one remove brown stains man' s work, a real trade, but dinners or · just fish sandMONDAY
fro!JI that popular white graduaHy they lost out to the wiches. Auxiliary . of fire
POMEROY
BLEMEN·
porcelain-like cookware? . My distaff side. Reading that big deparbnent wiU hold bake TARY PTA, 7:30 p.m .
teapot is badly discolored and (in more ways than one)
sale beginning at same hour . Monday with safely patrol to
scouring pads and abrasive former
football
star
YARD SALE and Bake sale, be recognized by band ·
cleaners do noi help.
Roosevelt Grier does needle- Saturday, 9 a .m. to 3 p.m. students of David Bowen.
My husband fastens narrow point and of a burly
Rock
Springs
United Installation of officers;
strips of self-adhesive from policeman knitting helped Methodist Church. Sponsored refreshments by mothers of
weather stripping to his give them any needed· by the Teens for Christ MYF sixth graders; public invited.
Wind ... Storms ... Hurricanesl
trouser, hangers because the assurance that their hobby
to raise money for camp.
HEATH
UNITED
grooves in the hangers are was no longer considered
It's Wise to Pfay It Safe
MODERN WOODMEN Methodist Women, Heath
not enough to hold hi~ slacks. "sissy" and they join their
wives in dividing big lasks Satu:day, 7:30 p.m. at . Church, Middleport, 7:30
- MRS. L.R.H.
When bod weather rages it
DEAR MRS. L. R. H. - I such as needlepolntlng seats Burhngham Hall. Potluck p.m. Monday at the church.
supper.
Mrs. Nan Moore, ·program
have an electric coffee pol lor dining room chairs. ·
plays havoc with farms. Who
JITNEY Supper Saturday, leader, Mrs. Billy Jo
made of the same porcelain.,
We know most everybody is
devotional .
con tell when a storm might
like cookware. When the doing handwork bul how 4:30 p.m. at Syracuse Krawsczyn
Elementary
School
sponsored
leader,
and
Mrs
. Grace
Inside becomes stained I fill it much of this is needlework
occ::ur, but you can be properFrench, Mrs. Lavina Davis,
with ve'1 hoi water, add a that costs time and.mo.ney we by the PTA.
SQUARE DANCE Saturday and Mrs. Garnet Entsminger,
ly insured if it does. Come to
teaspoon or so of automatic don't know. It does bring '
8:30
to 11:30 at archery hostesses.
·
dishwasher detergent, let it enjoyment to the worker and
us for full form insurance.
.stand for about IS minutes adds up to real decoration for building at Royal Oak ,Park.
and then scrub the Inside with the home. Before. launching Music by "The Khord Kings."
COUPLE TO WED
Insure Now' With ...
the long-handled brush I use on any such project consider . Ad!nission age !2 to 99 $1.50,
COOLVILLE - Mr. and
MEIGS HIGH cheerleaders Mrs. A. Roland Eastman, Rt.
to remove food from dishes to color, design and scale
ENJOY THE CONVENIENCE
will
hold a car wash 9 a.m. to 1 Coolville announce the
go In the dishwasher. This carefully.
of no messy pot s or pans to scrub or scour . You cook on
FROM
clean~ the brush and the
Never buy and then work 6 p.m. Saturday at Welker's approaching marriage of
paper or glass.
Inside of tbe pot is gleaming anything thai does not have a Ashland Station, W. Main St., their daughter, Janice Sue, to
Paul A. (Sonny) Haynes, son
white. Rinse thoroughly with definite place to go whe_re It Pomeroy .
CAR WASH and bake sale, of Mrs. Ted Riley, Jr ,
SELF CLEANING "
very hot water. - POLLY. wlll be a contribution to the
1
114
Court
St.
992-5120
Pomeroy
Saturday;
beginning
10
a.m.
Middleport, and Mr. Horace
It is almost like ownlng a " Self Cleaning" oven . You
room's decorative scheme.
Homes- Cars- Mobile Homes
merely wipe lhe cool stainless steel interior, perleclly
DEAR POLLY. - One of Every room usually has a across from Racine Garage. Haynes of Columbus, ·Ohio.
clean with a paper towel - after each use. No baked on
Motorcycles
my Pet Peeves is to have one basic color or colors that stay Cost of the car wash is $1.75; An . ·August wedding is
particles .
of my favorite daily news· around for a long lime. Such sponsored by youth group. planned. •
paper columns. cilt short as colors may be determined by
SUNDAY
GIVE HER
· yours was twice last week. - an Oriental rug, expensive
More time to spend with you and your family land
REVIVAL at Guysville . . . - - - - · -.....- - - - . - ....
. .- - -. .
more leisure time) by laking the drudgery oul of her
DORA.
•,
plain carpeting, a glass or
Community
Church,
Guysday.
DEAR READERS · - porcelain collection· or he a ville, 7:30 each evening, May
.. · · .
.
· ·
.
.
Needlework in all lorms · favorite color. Accent colors 11-18. Gilbert Spencer, John
MOREl
·(knitting, crocheting, crewel may be changed at intervals Elswick and Dennis Tabor,
embroidery, needlepoint, and are not as permanent. evangelists: Gospel Tones to
Visit us and let u s prov e the numerous conveniences that will ease her work load.
booking, etc,) iii enjoying a Big handwork projects should be featured on May 17; special
· W8Ve of popularity. More be planned around the basics· singing nightly ,
MEAT - Baked Ham, Fried Chicken,
· Amana Radaranges Start AI 1229.95
women are plying their tbat wiD be arolllld for .years.
Roast Beef, Flounder Fish.
1eedle1 of (pte sort or another . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , - - . . . . . , - - - ;
.
.
and they have beea jolaed by
VEGETABLES
Baked
Beans,
Peas
mea and ,yOungsters. Some
and
Carrots,
Noodles,
Potatoes
(sweet.
say this great tranqUilizer
baked, mashed and home fries).
111ay be a rebellion against an
•Imott mechanized society.
SALAD .- Macaroni, Cottage Cheese, .
Nell!lltler what prompts such
Slaw, and Tossed.
hand\l'ork II can be a force
toward.. famOy 1111ily as one
.
.
PIE-Graham Cra.cker, Banana Cream,
•d aU jeln together Ia a big
Apple.
projecl~acb as making a rug .
~
Durlnl reeent' years such
werk ,... couldered to be
WOIIIIIn'a wark aad those lew
'
.
Hrs.: 10:00 A.M. tilll :00 P.M. Sun.· Thur.
mea who e1joyed h worked In
10:00 A.M. Til12:00 P.M. Fri. &amp; Sat . ..
secl111loa. Now tbey are open
. 992-2556
about .It and ofteu give the
W. -MAIN
POMEROY,O.
women stiff competUion.
Ph. 992-~35

Stained cookware
dulls her pleasure

MOTOROLA

r------------------,

On~

which will be used for ~lass
markers and patrtqtlc
plaques to he given to the
winners of the "best of show"
in the artistic arrangements
division, and the "sweepstakes' in the horticulture
division.
Exhibitors are to have their
entries at the showroom betll',!'en 9 a.m. and 12 noon,
June 21. Oral judging v.ill
begin at I p.m. and the show
wilt be open for public
viewing from I to 8 p.m. on
Saturday, and I to 4 p.m. pn
Sunday. Blue, red, yellow and v
white ribbons will be awarded in each class.
During the meeUng, the
Association endorsed the 1.6
mill operating levy for the
Meigs Community School to
be voted on in the June
primary.
Club members were urged
to get flower show or
publicity books to Mrs .
Elizabeth Lohse , so that she
can take these to the
Pomeroy library where they
will be displayed. Only books
pertaining to county shows
are being collected.
Mrs. Iris Kelton announced
that the fall regional meeting
will be held in Meigs County
on the first Saturday in
November.
Mrs. Bimny Kuhl of the
Chester Garden Club. gave
devotions.

Polly's PoinT£lf"'C'

and rebounding strength.
"Spoony (Weatherspoon)
has played them well," said
Elvin Hayes. "He's become a
fine pro and he comes In and
gives us a big lift."
Boston uses Paul Silas off
the bench in relief of Don
Nelson, but Silas is a
rebounder and playmaker
rather than a scorer. When he
gets · t
h .Ill 0 early foul lroitble as
Cee ~td Wednesday night the
lttcs have no t b .'
player to ta
es a lished
The key to~ u~ ~he slack.
08 n s succell8 ·

·SEE YOUR BIRD HArat IN A

99e '

only •1.50
Blue &amp;POMEROY
·Grey Restaurant

One Week

Social Two Rutland leaders to
Calendar attend co11;ncil meeting

which they ca n exhibit.
Assignments made
Each club was assigned
show responsibilities by Mrs.
Lewis as follow s: Rutland
Gard,en Club, the entrance
decoration; th e Rutland
Friendly Gard eners . the
publici ty book; Star Garden
Club , hospi tali ty ; Mi ddlepor t, a lso hospitali ty;
Middl epor t Am a teurs, acceptance and placement for
entd es in th e ar ti stic
arrang em e nts divi sio n ;
Pomeroy ,
ho s pita lity ;
Winding Trail, ribbons and
s weepstakes aw ar ds ;
Chester, slaging; Wildwood,
judges' clerks ; Bend 0 ' the
River , acceptance and
placeme nt of hor ti culture
entries.
Mrs. Jean Moore and Mrs.
Elizabeth Lohse were named
to handle registration of
entries and entry tags with
Mrs. Janet Bolin and Mrs.
Judy Titus to serve as advisors.
Mrs. Lew is di splayed
plaster of paris eag le replicas

The Perfect Gift For Her

Bullets can win East title tonight

·-------------------------·
'

not the offensiva performance of one player. '
bnproved team play is a
necessity tonight and in the
remaining games, if there
are to be any more games for .
the Celtics to play.

ONE OF THE HIGHUGHTS in the variety show to be staged this evening at Southern
High School in Racine, under the direction of Mrs. Lee Lee is a boys chorus line and dance.
The group will be singing and dancing to "WiUie the Weeper." Front row, 1-r, Keith Circle;
Tim Thorne, Donnie Dudding, John Sayre; back row, Mitch Nease, Tony Carnahan, Greg
Johnson, Larry Fisher and Glenn Simpson. Curtain time is 8 p.m. Tbere will be serveral
skits presented also.

Texas Steak on homemade bread,
french fries and 20c drink.

I

++ +

has always been IP•m play,

one on this team is ready to
give up or concede."
The Celtics do concede that
Washington has played
better, more consistent
basketball in the series to
date. And the Bullets, under
the ' guidance of former
Boston defensive star K. C.
Jones, have used the old
Celtic style of tight, team'
defense and penetrating
offense to take the series
lead.
.
. .
Washington also has been
beati~g Boston with a 7
sup en or bench, which always
had been a Celtics hallmark.
Nick Weatherspoon has been
un stoppable for the Bullets
and Jimmy Jones, out for the
season after suffering torn
knee ligaments Wednesday,
had ·
·

I

*'.

grandiflora, and climbers; . "Ap~il 19, 1775," Colonel · The junior classes are
1i I i e s ,
Madonna , Prescott, "Don't Shoot till "June 7, 1775," ' first Con.
Namerocallis and other; · you see the whites -{)f 'their tinental money issued, a
daffodils, Peruvian; house- eyes !," an arrangement .favorite design, and "Sept.
plants, foliage over two feet, using white.
25, 1775," the Green Mountain
under tw o feet , and
"April 19, 1775," The shot Boy, Ethan Allen, a dish
blooming; and allium.
heard 'round the world - an garden.
The artistic arrangement interpretive arrangement.
The educational classes are
classes ar.e:
''Aug. I, 1775.'' The flame for pesticides, books and
"March 23, 1775," Patrick is lighted ! An arrangement weathered wood. All garden
Henry, "Give My liberty, or using one or more candles. clubs were asked by Mrs.
give me death !"- a choice
" Win ter, 1775," Valley Lewis to take at least two
of arrangements in · two Forge - an arrangement pieces of either weathered
containers.
featuring flowers crafted wood or driftwood for the
" April 14, 1775," First from dried plant materials. display.
Abolition Society Formed These artistic arrangement
Mrs. Lewis announced that
modern desi~n using small classes, according to the club members may enter
amount of material.
s how rules, are open only to only one entry in each of the
"April17, 1775," Old North garden club members .
artistic arrangement classes,
Church
a religious
The invitational artistic butmayenieras many as she
arrangement suitable for use arrangement class is "Dec. 3, wants in any of the horin a home.
1775," first official American ticulture classes . Club
"April 18 , 1775, Paul flag raised on Commander representatives drew for four
Revere's Ride- a traditional Hopkins ' flagship , " The classes with the unmass arrangement.
Alfred" - an arrangement derstanding that some
featuringred,whiteandblue. member would ma ke an ·
arrangement for each one, a
measure to insure that all
classes of the show will be
filled. Drawing for classes,
however, does not restrict
members as to the classes in

·DEAR HELEN:
I'm going with a woman who says she really loves me, but
she's living with another guy. She keeps saying, "Wail a while
longer," but it's been over two years. Do you think she'll ever ·
make up her inind? - ON THE STRING
DEAR OTS:
Perhaps she already has made up her mind - she enjoys
keeping a kicker, because a pair isn't quite enough. If you don't
like her game, get out of it, but don't expect total fidelity from
a two-man woman. - H.

(All Times EDT)

·-WEEKEND SPECIAL-

Only

Patterson, Joy Neigler, Heidi Ashley, Sharon Evans, GaU
Evans, and Patty Robinson. The ·variety show Is being
sponsored by the Southern choir. Curtain time is 8 p.m.
THE DUKE IS ILL
NEWPORT BitACH, Calif.
(UP!) - John ·Wayne was
being treated for walldng
pneumonia today at Roag
Memorial Hospital. "It's
nothing serious - not a
recurrence of anything else,"
said Wayne's .son, Patrick.

By GIL PETERS
UP! Sports Writer
BOSTON (UP!) - Several
weeks ago, before the start of
the NBA playoffs, Boston
basketball fans were talking.
about the possibility of
another Celtics dynasty.
The talk today is much
more basic and realistic: Can
the defending champions turn
around 1-3 disadvantage in
the Eastern Conference finals
or are the Washington Bullets
simply the better team?
"Our team is not down
mentally or psychologically
or anything like that ," said
J ohn Havlicek, the team
captain who has played on six
of Boston's 12 tiUe winners.
" We've been the best team in
the league on the road all
season and we can win ... No

Regal~· flower show plans
were nu!lined by Mrs.
Margaret
Ella
Lewis
chairwoman and Mrs. Ann~
Turner a m~mber of the Star
Garde~ Club . was elected
contact chair~oman · during
the annual spring meeting of
the Meigs County Garden
Club Association Thursday
nigh t. at Grace Episcopal
Church. ·
Mrs . Chlorus Grimm
presided at the meeting.
"Progre.S : 1775" is the
theme of the Regatta show
which will be slaged in the
air-conditioned showroom of
the Pomeroy Motor Co. on
both Saturday and Sunday of
Regatta weekend.
Mrs. Lewis presented the
schedule which includes
horticulture classes for roses,
hybrid tea, floribunda,

DEAR HELEN:
, Last week my husband and I attended a dinner party at his
boss's home. When we arrived we found him and his wife in a
drunken stupor, and the dinner burned. They sent my husband
out to get some pizza.
·
·~
While he was gone, the boss's wife passed out on the sofa,
and h~ forced me into the bedroom and raped me .
My question is: need I write a thank-you note• - WON·
DERING
DEAR WONDERING:
Only if the boss paid for the pizza ... maybe:
Only.ifyou enjoyed it. (Hokey notes for hoaxy folks). - H.
DEAR HELEN:
I'm engaged to a man who wears his underclothes too long.
I would like him to take a bath, shave and clean his teeth, but
the more I hint, the subborner he gets. Also, he likes a lot of
loving. Help! !
I would dump him, except that he gave up his aparbnenl to
move in with me, and every time I try to call it quits, he.cries
about losing his apartment, and having no place to go.
I thought we could get married quicker by saving money, 3~s:s:::...~::dc.b.o......sese
but all I am saving is breath ...:. from holding my nose. WORRIED ABOUT BEING CLOSE
DEAR WABC:
It's your apartment so you can make the rules. Tell his
overripe fellow either his aroma goes or he.does! - He should
save his soft soap for the bath tub. -H .

QUASAR

1- - - - - - - - - . . , , p.m. Saturday's Games
Houston at Montreal

DENIM-

"SWINGING INTO Spring" at Southern High
School this evening will be this dance line. Dancing to
"'cabaret"' will be 1-r, Mel Waldnig, Kim Taylor; Connie

Major League Standings

p.m .

'

I

By United Press International

San Diego ( Freisleben 1-3) at
Chicago ! Burri s 3-1L 1:30 p.in .
Ph il adelphia (Ul1d erwood 2-2)
at At lanta (Harr ison 1-1) , 7 : 35
p .m .
Houston (R ober ts 2 2 l at
Montreal ( F ryman 3-0J. 8 :05

By Helen Bottel

++ +

Standings
National League
Eas1
w . I. pet. g.b.
Chicago
16 8 .667
Pittsburgh
12 10 .545 3
Philadelph ia
13 11 .541 3
New York
10 12 .455 5
St. Lou is
9 14 .391 6l h
Mc;mtreal
a JJ .Jal
6 ,! 1
West
w. I. pet. g.b.
Los Ange les
19 10 .655
Cinc innat i
16 13 .552 3
San Francisco 14 13 .519 4
San Diego
14 14 .500 4' '2
Atlanta
.., 4 16 .467 5112
Hou ston
10 2.1 .323 10
Thursday ' s Flesults
Ph ilactelph/a 6 St . Louis 2
P ittsburgh 4 New York 2
At lanta 3 San F ran cisco 2
San Diego 3 Cincinna ti 0
- Today's Probable Pitchers

Us •..

DE :\ R HELEN:
Any hoaxes lately? - LIKES 'EM
DEAR L.E.:
How about this one? - H.

-·

Jones, Locklear shine
in 3-0 Padres victory
CINCINNATI (UP!) - San
Diego Padres leftfielder Gene
Locklear has been told he
can't hit, can't run, can't
throw and has a bad attitude.
But, you might have a litUe
trouble convincing the 23,861
fans at Riverfront Stadium
Thursday night who saw the
Padres gain a ~ victory over
the Cincinnati Reds.
Because, the 24-year-()!d
Locklear, who began his
career in t.he
Reds
organization, rapped out four
hits, including a pair of
doubles, as lefty Randy
Jones, another 24-year-()ld,
pitched a four-hitter while
notching his fourth victory in
six decisions.
"I wouldn:t say I have a
bad attitude," said Locklear.
"I just get teed off sitting on
the bench so much watching
other guys play when I
I'm better than they are."
When Locklear, a fullblooded Cherokee Indian,
was in the Reds' organization
he led the Eastern League
and American Association in
batting consecutive years
while playing for farm clubs.
Gene went to the Padres in
the deal which brought
Fredie Norman ~ , the Reds.
Last year, he fQUild himself
playing in Hawaii in the
Pacific Coast League.
"I didn't lead that league
but I would have if I'd been
there the full season," said
Locklear. And since Gene
batted .350. hit 15 homers and

•

three hits ea ch.
Weich, the winning pitcher,
fanned three and walked' two .
He was reli eved by James in
the sixth and Minnis came on
in the seven th.
Goldsberry was the losing
hurler . .
Unescore :
Wahama
101 101 0-4 9 2
N. Gallia
112 010 X-5 8 3
Goldsberry (L) Thompson
( 3) and thompson.
Welch (W ) James (6)
Minnis ( 7) and Tackett:

Tim Lucas, Blll Metzner
and Dave Wise had two hits
each to pace the Kyger Creek
Bobcats to an 8-2 victory over
Southwestern Thursday night
in an SV AC contest played on
Evans Field at Rio Grande.
Coach Jim Sprague's
Bobcats are 4·2 in the SV AC
while Coach Mel Carter's
Highlanders dropped to 2-3
against league fqes .
Other Bobcat hitters were
Terry Lucas, Mitch Salem
and Chris · Preston with one
hit each. Getting hits for
Southwestern were Rick
Crouse, Larry Carter, Terry
right centerfield. Steve Huntz Carter, Mike Russell, Jack
followed with a single and the Walker and Jim Nida .
Padres had their first run off
Southwestern took a I.()
Gary Nolan who wound up l~~d l!!. the third inning but
with his second loss in three · the Bobcats came back for
decisions.
three runs in the fourth . Steve
Dave Winfield led off the Baird, sophomore rightfourth with his seventh homer hander, was the winning
of the season, tying him for hurler.
the loop lead with Los
Jim Nida, senior rightAngeles' Ron Cey as the hander, took the loss.. He was
Padres went ahead, 2.(1.
relieved by Terry Carter in
the fifth.

·Regatta flower show classes announced

Helen _Help

...

MOTHERS DAY
SPECIAL

FREE SUNDAE
FOR MOM

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

Adolph's Dairy Valley

'

'

Sunday, May 11, Hrs. 8:30-2:00
Weekdays 6:00-8:30
.
3rd St.
Ph. 949-3551 Racine, Ohio

Ingels
I

(

'

Furni~ure
.J

)

..

•

�•

-

I

WPdn osday ' p

worsh rp ser vr cc fo ll()wmq at
3 1"1
p ..m
Op e n
Br bl e
dr sc ussron --1 30 p r) l .:~ I the
chur c h each Thursday
FIRST
SOUTHERN
BAPTIST 16 1 Mulberry
A ve . Pomeroy , affllrat c d Wtlh
S B C • t he Rev
Br a dl e y -

Spenc e r

POMEROY
POMEROY TRINITY
Rev W H Perrrn pastor
Roy Maver , Sunda~ school
supt Church school. 9 15
am • worsh1p ser1J 1ce , 10 24
a m Youth chOtr rehearsal,
Monday , 3 JO p m und e r
dlrecflon of Mary Skmner
senior choir rehearsal, 7 JO
p m Thursday w1th Mrs Paul
Nease directo r
POMEROY CHURCH OF
THE NAZARENE - Corner
Un10n and Mu lberry Rev
Clyde V Henderson pastor
Sunday school 9 30 a m , Glen
McClung , supt . morn rng
wors h tp , 10 30 am
evenmg
serv 1ce , 7 30 , m 1d week.
servJCe Wednesday , 7 30 p 01
GRACE EPISCOPAL- The
Rev Harold Deeth . rector
Chur c h sen1r ces 10 30 a m ,
Holy communron frrst Sunday
of month , churc h school 10 30
am for nursery through 12
POMERDY CHURCH OF
CHRIST - Terrell Gronrnger
pastor Brble school . 9 30
am
worshrp . 10 JO a m ,
adult worShiP serv1ce and
vovno people 's m eet 1ng , 7 30
p m
Combined Brble stud y
and prayer meet rng , Wed
nesday , 7 30 p m
THE SAL\IATION ARMYEnvoy Ray W Wtntng , off rcer
•n charge Sunday , 10 am ,
Hol iness meetrng 10 30 a m ,
Sunday
Sch ool
Young
Peop le's Legron , 7 p m
Thursday . 1 to 3 p m Lad•es
Home League 7 p m Prep

study , Wednesday , 7 p m
c ho1r pracl rce, Wedn esd a y,
B 30 p m
POMEROY
WESLEYAN
HOLINESS
CHURCH
Harrt s onvtl! e . Re v O' Dell
Manle y , P as tor . He nry Eblrn ,
Sunday School Supt Sunday
Sc hool 9 30 am , Even rng
wo r shtp 7 30 p m Prayer a nd
Pra1se se r\lr ce , Thu rs da y, 7 30

pas to r
Troy
Zw 1II n g Sun day sc hoo l supt
'

Sunday

Schoo 1•

9 30

am

mornrng worshrp
lO 30
Sundav evang~lrstrc meetmg.
7 JO p m
Pray er meellng
Wedn e sdav

7 30 P m

MO~SE

Wor sh rp II a 111
l s i a n d Jr d
'. u nd,W'i
Chur c h '1 c hoo l
10

am
PORTLAND
Wo r s htp
~ ~ P m Chur c h Sc hool 9 30
SUTTON Wor shrp
11

1

am 2nd and 4th Sunda ys ,
Chur c h ~c noo l 10 a m
NORTHEAST CLUSTER

Rev Robert Meece
Rev Stanl ev Brandum

JO

PPA -

Worshtp 10 am

TUPPERS
PLAINS
CHRIHIAN CHURCH E ua cnc Un de r wood pas tor ,
t1 oward Caldw e ll J , Sunda y
Sch ool ~ u pl
Sun d ay School
9 J\1 a m Mo r n1f'IQ Sermon ,
Sund a y e venmg
10 JO a m
se r v rc e , 7 p m
LETART FALLS UNITED
BRETHREN
R ev
~re el and
N or r~s .
p a stor,
I loyd Nof'rrs
s upt Sunday
sc hoo l 9 30 am
mornrng
se rmon 10 30 a m
Pray er r
se rvr ce, Wednes day , 7 30 p m
CHESHIRE CHURCH OF
GOD OF PROPHECY - G P
Sm lth , pastor Sunday School.
10 a m . Arthur Henso n,
Sup t , Mornrng Worsh rp , 11
a m Yo ung People 's serv 1ce ,
7 p m , Even1 ng s e rv1c e 7 30
p m
Wednesday Mrd Wee k
Pr a yer Serv• ce 7 30 p m
Youth meetmg , 6 30 p m
Evenrng worS hi P 7 30 p m
CHESTER CHURCH OF
THE NAZARENE Re v
Herbert
Grat e ,
pastor
Worsh rp servrce , 11 am and
7 30 p m
Sunday
Sunday
School
9 30 a m
R 1chard
Barton , supt Prayer meetmg ,
Wednesday , 7 30 p m
, BRADFORD CHURCH OF
CHRIST Clifford Smrth
mm1ster Sunday School 9 30
a m
mornmg chur ch 10 30
a m , Sunday evenmg s erv1ce ,
7 30 p m Wednesday serv1 ce
Bp m
LAUREL CLIFF FREE
METHODIST- Rev F loyd F
Shook pastor Lloyd Wr rght
Sunday sc hool supt Sunday
s c hool, 9 30 a m , Mornr ng
worShiP 10 30 am
evenrng
worsh rp , 7 30 p m
We d
n e sday , Chrrsttan
Youth
Cru s ade , 6 30 p m Choir
pr ac trc e , Thursday , 7 p m
DEXTER CHURCH OF
CHRIST - Charles Russell,
Sr , mrn rster , Norman C Wtll.
supt . Sunday school. 9 30
am
worsh1p servrce 10 30
am
Brble study , Tuesda y,
7 30 p m
REORGANIZED CHURCH
OF JESUS CHRIST OF
LATTER DAY SAINTS Po r tland
Rac1n e Road
Wrllram Roush . pastor Denny
Evans ,
Sunday
School
Drrector Sunday Schoo l 9 30
a m Mornmg worshtp , 10 30
a m Sunday evenmg servr ce
7 p m
Wednesday evenrng
prayer serv1ces , 7 30 p m
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST Rev Earl Shuler pastor
Worshtp serv1ce 9 30 a m
Sunday sc hool. 10 30 a m ,
Sunday evenmg serv•ces, 7 30
p m B•ble study and prayer
serv1ce Thursday 7 30 p m

MIDDLEPORT
Church School 9 am
Pray er
MT MORIAH BAPTIST _
Me etr ng Wednesday 8 p m
LONG BOTTOM - Church
Corner Fourth and Main . s e rv•ces , 9 a m
S unday
Middleport Re\1 Henry Key , Sc hool 9 AS a m , B1ble Study
Jr
pastor Sunday Schoo l, e very Thursday , 7 30 p m
30 am
Mrs
Erv rn
NORTH
BETHEL
Pm
- 9Baumgardner
, Mornmg - Worshrp 11 am
Church
SYRACUSE
FIRST worship , 10 45 supt
a m
s
CHURCH OF GOD Re v
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES
c hOol 10 am
George O il e r , pa stor Sunday
ALFREO - Sunday s choo l
e ach s unday
sc hool. 9 45 am
mornrng - Larry Carnahan pres•dm g 9 45 a m
Sunday . • B•b le prea chmg at II am eac h
prea c hrn g .
11
am . mmrster
lecture 9 30 am
Watch Sunday Prayer m e etmg . 7 45
evan ge lrs t rc se r v.ce . 7 30 p m
p m
Wednesday
WSCS, 8
Prayer m ee t rng Thursday , tow e r study . 10 30 a 7m
Tuesday , Brbte study.
30 p rn on third Tuesday eac h
7 30 p m
POMEROY
WESTSIDE p m , Thursday , mtnrstry month
service
REEDSVILLE Sunday
CHURCH OF CHRIST, 200 W school, 7 30 P m
8 30 P m
h00 1 9 30
Ma rn St
Jer r y Paul, meetrng
MIDDLEPORT
CHURCH sc
am • preachrng
m 1nrster
p h one 992 7666
OF CHRIST IN CHRISTIAN 7 30 P m
Sunday , prayer
Conser v ativ e
non
M
meet.ng , 7 30 p m Tuesday
UNION - Law r enc e
an ley WSC S 7 JO f•rst Thursday
mstrum e nta l
Sunday wor
pastor
,
Mrs
Russell
Young
each
month
sh rp 10 am
Brble study 11
Sunday School Supt Sunday
SILVER RIDGE - Wo r shrp
am
wors h rp 6 p m Wed
Schoo l 9 30 a m Eventng 10 am Ch urch Sc hool, 9 am
nesday B•ble study , 7 p m
TUPPERS
PLAINS
MIDWAY
COMMUNITY worShip . 7 30 Wedn es day
prayer meetmg , 7 30 P m
Worsh 1p 9 a m
Ch ur c h
CHURCH
~n on
de
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF School 10 am
nom 1natronal ) , Langs
GOD- Racone Ro ule 2, the
KENO
CHURCH
OF
VIlle De xter Road , the Rev
James M
Muncy , CHRIST - Geor g e Freder rc k,
Wo r le y Haley , pas tor Sunday Rev
pastor Sunday schooL 9 45 supt serv 1ce - weekly , 9 30
sc hoo l, 10 am
e~o~enrng
a
m . mornmg worship, 11 am on Sundsy Prea chmg
worShip 7 30 p m
Prayer
a
m , evenmg worsh1p , 7 30 f~rst and th.rd Sundeys of
meet ing , T ues day 7 30 p m
Prayer meetmg Tuesday , month by Clrfford Sm rth . 9 30
youth gro u p , F rtday , 7 30 p m
RUTLAND
FREEWILL 7 30 p m , Young people's am
HOBSON - CHRISTIAN
BAPTIST Roger Turner , meetmg , 7 30 p m Thursday
MIDDLEPORT
FIRST UNION- Darrell Doddrlll.
pastor S u n day schoo l. 10
BAPTIST - Corner S•xth and pastor Sunday SchooL 9 30
a m , Sunday e11enmg serv1ce
Cleo Y am , Leonard G1tmore , firSt
7 30 Wednesday B1ble study , Palmer , the Rev
Boyd, pastor Danny Thomp elder , evenmg servrce , 7 30
7 30 p m
Wednesday
prayer
cla~ses
OLD
DEXTER , BIBLE son. Sunday Schoof supt p m
WMPO rad10 program , 7 45 meetrng 7 30 p .m
ST
PAUL LUTHERAN CHRISTIAN CHURCH -Rev
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF
CHURCH,
Corner
of Ron Terry , pastor Sunday am Sunday SChOOl , 9 15
Sycamore and Second Sts , school 10 a m Mrs Worley am mornmg worship, 10 15 GOD - Racrne Route 2 The
am
Youth activities and Rev Charles Hand pastor
Pomeroy The Rev William Francts
superrntendent
fetlowsh rp for 1un ror and Sunday school, 9 45 am
Mtddleswarth , Pastor Sunday Mornrng worshrp
11 am
senror htgh students . 6 P m morn 1ng worsh rp , 11 am
School at 9 AS a m
and Sunday even1ng ser1.1 rc e , 7 30
Church Ser vices 11 a m
GRAHAM
UNITED Sunday Evenmg Worsh•P at Evenmg serv1ces , Tuesday
SACRED HEART - Rev METHODIST Preach rng 7 30 Mtd week prayer ser and Fr 1day 7 JO 0 m
BEARWALLOW
RIDGE
Father Paul 0
We lton , 9 30 a m
frrst and second voce , Wednesdoy , 7 30 pm
CHURCH OF CHRIST, CHURCH OF CHRIST - Bobl e
pastor
Phone
992 2825 Sundays of each month . third
Saturday evenmg Mass , 7 30 and fourth Sundays each Mrdd leport. 5th and Ma1n , Study 9 30 a m , mornmg
Sunday Mass, B and 10 am
mo nth worshiP serv1ce at 7 30 George Glaze . mrntster , worsh 1p, 10 30 am , even.ng
Sheets,
superrn worshtp , 6 30p m Wednesday
Confesston . Sat urday , 7 7 30 p m Wednesday evenmgs at James
tendent B1ble school, 9 30 Brble Study , 7 30 p m
pm
7 30 Prayer and B1ble Study
MT OLIVE CHURCH POMEROY FIRST BAP SEVENTH
DAY
AD· am mornmg worshtp . 10 30
TtST- Robert Kuhn pastor
IIENTIST
Mulberry am , even rng worsh rp , 7 30 , Long Bottom , Sunday School
Wtlltam
Watson , Sunday He1gh t s , Pomer o y Pas tor prayer servrce, 7 P m Wed 10 a m wrth W 111ard P lgotl
school supt Sunday school, G1rard Seton Sabbath school nesday
~ supt Evangeltst•c message
9 30 a m , BY F 6 p m B1ble every Sat ur day at 2 p m and
MIDDLEPORT
Churc each Sunday even•ng, 7 30 by
01
The
Nanrene Elder Russell Clme , mrn rster
Rev
Don Cote , pas of the ApostoliC Fa1th , Bib le
tor
Alfred
R uschet Study, Wednesday 7 30 p m
Sundoy School sup! Sunday
STI\IERS\IIllE COM ·
'
CARLETON CHURCH SChool , 10 am • mornmg MUNITY CHURCH - Sunday Kmgsbury
Road Gary Kmg ,
worsh rp , 11 am • Sunday school serv1ce, 10 am , pastor Sunday
school 9 30
evangelrstrc meet1ng , 7 30 Prayer mee t rng , Thursday , 7 am , even•ng worshrp
7 30
P m .
prayer
meet rng , p m Sunday e11en1ng serv1ce
p m Prayer meet1ng . Wed
Wednesday, 7 30 p m
7 p m
nesday , 7 30 p m
T H E
U N I T E D
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST
PRESBYTERIAN M~IIGN$ - Pomeroy
Harr~sonvllle
LONG
BOTTOM
ISTRY
OF
Road M1ke Grrton , pastor , CHRISTIAN Mr Robert
COUNTY, DWIQht L Zav1tz . Steven Stanley , Sunday school Wyatt pastor , Sunday School
Pastor D1rector
supt sunday school . 9 30 sup t , Ronald Osborne Brb le
HARRIS 0 NV ILL E
a m , mornrng worShip and SchooL 9 30 a m
preach rng
Sunday Church School. 9 30 commun 1on , 10 30 am , 10 45 a m l:1.1 e nrng serv1ces,
am, Mrs Homer Lee , Supt , s unday
even rng
youth 7 30 p m
Mornmg WorShip , 10 30
Chrrst1an endeavor , 6 30 p m ,
HYSELL
RUN
FREE
MIDDLEPORT Sunday worShip serv1ce . 7 30 p m
Church School . 9 30 a~ · Wednesday evenmg prayer METHODIST CHURCH By DAVID E. ANDERSON
John F Fultz , Supt • Mornmg meetmg and Btble study. 7 JO Rev Paul Nev r11 e , pa stor
mtertwmed and enmeshed m
Worsh•P· 10 30
pm
Sunday School 9 JO a m ,
UPI Religion Writer
this country's expansion, its
SYRACUSE Morn 1ng
ST
JOHN LUTHERAN Morn rng servtce 10 30 am ,
Amencan churches are social
development, : its Worshrp , 9 am · Sunday CHURCH, Pme Grove, The youth serv rce , 6 45 p m
EvangeltStiC ser11rce 7 30 p m
moving into the Bicentennial economy and 1ts mstltutions." Church School 10 am • Mrs Rev Wlllram MtddleswartH, Prayer meetmg
Thursday
Sampson Halt. Supt
Pastor Churc:h Services 9 30
observance w1th an mtens1ty
RUTLAND CHURCH OF am Sunday SchooiiO 30a m 7 30 p m
Not all of the response to the
FREEOOM
GOSPEL
GOD Phollop Whotley
BRADBURY CHURCH OF
and zeal that is reminescent of role of rehg10us bodies in the pastor
Sunday school. 10 CHRIST- B•ble School. 9 30 MISSION at Bald Knob FO! ev
a reUgious revival.
b1centenmal celebration has a m , worsh rp servtce, 7 P m • am , morn 1ng worship 10 30 E J Gr~ff1th 1 supt of ch urch
Rev '' L R- -(;tuesencamp ,
That IS not to say the vanous been exclusively enthusiastic, 7Prayer meettng, Wednesday , am sunday evening worsh1p pastor , Roger W1llfred , Sr ,
~O~Z~L
COMMUNITY servrce,7pm . cho rrpract rce Sun day School supt Sunday
observances, celebrations or however.
7 p m Rev Jeff
CHURCH
N ear l ong Wednesday
s chool. 9 30 a m , pray e r
Ranson , Pastor
programs associated with the
James E Wood Jr., for
mee t rng Tuesday , 7 30 p m ,
Bottom , Edsel Hart. pastor
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST churches' marking of the example, recently wrote the Sunday schoo l. 10 a m · Rev Freeland Norrts . pastor: yo uth meet mg . 6 p m Sunday ,
leaders Ada Va n Meter and
Church , 7 30 P m · prayer Sunday s r. hool 10 a m
nation's 200th birthday will be offiCial b1centenmal organiza- meeting,
Gretta Suttle Sunday evenmg
7 30 p m Thursday Church serv 1ce
7 p m
MIDDLEPORT
PEN·
'
worship , 7 p m
through
a religious revival.
tion - the
American TECOSTAL
- Third Ave ' the ~~dnesday Bible Study , 7 wmter months
Rather, the churches recog- Revolution Bicenten01al
MT
HERMON CHURCH
Rev Wolllam Kn ittel, pastor
RACINE CHURCH OF THE
nize Bicentennial tune as a Admmistration - challengmg Ronald Dugan . Sunday School NAZARENE- Rev Wrl l ram OF THE UNITED BRETH
REN IN CHRIST - Robr.rt
period of both reflecting on some of their plans for flllldlng Supt Classes for all ages. Bartholomew pastor , Sunday Shook
pastor Sunday school,
evening serv1ce, 7 30, Brble school. 9 30 a n1 , Gera ld
and acting on the unique role nonprofit bicentennial study
Wednesaday , 7 30 Wells. supt
mornmg war 9 30 a m , Russell Spencer
Wednesday supt worShiP servrce , 10 dS
religion )!as played in projects that would include p m youth services, Friday, Ship. 10 30 am
am
eventnQ
worshrp
7 30 P m
serY1ce 7 p m
American history_
the churches.
FREEWill BAPTIST RACINE FIRST BAPTIST a tternat.ng W1fh C E at 7 30
p m
on Sunday
Prayer
Corner Ash and Plum , Mid - Walter p Brkacsan , pastor
It is also a time for the
The ARBA wants to prov1de dleport
.
Noel
Herrm~n. Ronnre Sa lser , Sunday school meetmg , 7 JO p m Wed
various religious strams matching grants of up to 50 pastor
Alfred Wolfe
lay
Saturday evenmg supt Sunday school. 9 30 nesday
leader
within the country to re- per cent for projects lUI• sel"v1ce, 7 p m Sunday school am morn 1ng worsh 1p , 10 40 .
WHITE ' S CHAPEL
10 am · Sunday evening Sundayevenmg worshtp , 7 30,
eumlne their own sense of dertaken by religious and worshrD, 7 o.m
Rev
Roy
Wednesday eventng Brble Coolvrl te R 0
Deeter . pastor Sunday school
MEIGS
study 7 30
Identity, their uniqueness other pr1vate, nonprofit
worshtp serv•ce
COO:f: ~~11/E
DAN\ItllE WESLEYAN- 9 JO a m
from and commonaUty with groups.
10 30 a m Btble study and
_
THE UNITED
Rev Le lon Glasure pastor prayer
each other in the American
METHODIST CHURCH
Sunday School, 9 30 am , 7 30 p mserv rce , Wednesday
Woods, executive director of
Robert
T
Bumgarner
youth and 1un 1or yout h ser
pageant.
RUTLAND
the Baptist Joint Committee
Director
1nce . 6 45 p m , even rn g
1f\T"fi:AffD
CHURCH OF
One of the first serious on Public Affairs, told the
POMEROY CLUSTER
worship. 7' 30 p m , prayer CHRIST Rod Kasler
Rev
carl
E.
HICks
~n~
pra
1se
,
Wednesday
7
30
entrants in the Bicentennial ARBA it did not really llll·
pastor V H Braley , Sunday
Rev D. Wm . Sydenstrocker
SilliER
RUN
FREE school supt Sunday school
field was the Roman CathoUc derstand what the relationship
CHESTER - Worshop 9 15
30 am , worShip serv1ce
cnurch School 10 am BAPTIST- Rev Ralph Dean 9and
Olurch. The American hierar- between religion and America am
10 30 am .
ENTERPRISE_ worshtp, pastor
Sunday School, 10 youthcommun1on,
meetmg , 6p m , Sunday
chy's commission on the was all about.
9a m Church School. lOam am. Leon Miller. supt evenrng serv1ce 7 , regu lar
_ WorShip Evening serv1ce, 7 30 p m , board meetmg, thrrd Satur
Bicentennial chose the well- "A part of the genius of the 11 FLATWOODS
a m
Church School 10• J)rayer meetmg, Thursday day
, 7 p m
'
'730pm
phrase "Liberty and Amencan ,experience has
RUTLAND
COMMUNITY
Worsh &lt;p
CHESTER ' CHURCH , OF CHURCH -S unday
, JUBtice For All" and planned been the separation of church a ~OMEROY _
School
10 30 am , Church School 9 1S GOD Rev Dan .A: yers, 9 30 am , Worshtp service,
11
an audac1ous program to and slate," he ssid . "To am , UMYF 6 30 p m
pastor Sunday school. 9 30
am . Wedneasdy prayer
ROCK
SPRINGSWorship
am
wor.
s
h•p
se~v
r
ce
,
11
· lreathe new life Into the bridge that separation In
meetmg , 7 30 p m Sunday
10 a m , Church School9 am
a m . e1.1enmg serv1ce 7 30 , ntght
worsh•p . 7 30 p m
· phrase while attempting to order
youth serv1ce , Wednesday ,
to
celebrate
its UMYF 6 30 p m
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
7
MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
30 P m
relate cathohc teaching, existence is a logical and
THE NAZARENE Rev
Rev. Robert Bumgarner
lANGS\IILLE CHRISTIAN Lloyd D Gnmm. Jr , pastor
ellpeclally social teaching, to perhaps legal contradiction."
HEATH WorShip IO 30 CHURCH Ted Jones , Sunday schooL 9 30 a m ,
a m , Church Schoo l 9 30 pastor Sunday school, 9 30 worship servrce , 10 30 am
· the American expeneqce.
It adds up to religiOus ob- am
, UMYF 7 p m
am , Roy S1gman , supt ,
broadcast lrve over WMPO .
' The Catholic program, servance that will, if nothing
RUTLAND- WorshiP 9 15 morning worShip,
10 30 , young people's servtce, 6 45
m
,
Church
School
10
a
m
Sunday
evenmg
seryrce
.
7
30
,
a
' featuring open hearings else, continue to mark the UMYF 7 p m
m 1d week service , Wed e1Jangehst1c serv rce, 7 30 p m
Prayer meeting, Wednesday.
around the country -two have great diversity of religious
SALEM
CENTER ·
nesday, 7 30 p m
7 30
rss!onary
Worsh 1p 9 am , Church
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF meet rngp, m7 , 30 M
. already been held and a third values m American !He .
p m
f1rst
School10o m, UMYF Thurs THE
NAZARENE - Rev Wednesday of month
Ia planned for the TWin Cities
day 7 p m
Howard C Black, pastor Bob
MASON COUNTY
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
Moore, Su~da~ School 'S upt,
THE HILAND CHAPEL,
area of Minnesota-Is to
rhe Almanac
Rev Richard E Jarv 1s
Sunday Schoof,! cfass,es, 1for a1t, George
pastor Sunday
ASBURY worsh•p 11 ages. 9 30 a Jm , mornmg School, Casto.
culminate In Detroit next year By United Press International
9 30 a m , even.ng
a m , Church School 9 50 worsh ip 10 45, NYPS SundBy, worship
7 30
Thursday
with a major conference on
Today IS Friday, May 9, the a m , wscs. 1st Tuesday
6 30 P m . eiJangei•Stlc ser evenmg prayer
Ser\1 rce , 1 30
FOREST
RUNWorshop
voce
,
Sunday
.
7
30
p
m
Mod
9
jultlce.
129th day of 1975 wtth 236 to a m , Church School
pm
10 am , week prayer meettng, Wed
Already, however, the follow.
MASON FIRST BAPTIST WSCS 3rd Wednesday 7 30 nesd~y,-7 ,'30 p m , MtSS1onary Second
and Pomeroy Sts ,
'
meeltng ,. second Wednesday.
CathoUc program hss run mto
The moon IS approaching 1ts p m '
Stan Cra1g , pastor Sunday
7 0
MINERSVILLE- Worsh &lt;P
NON - school , 9 45 a m , worsh•P
IeVere criticism from within new phase.
1fED FAITH
lOa m , Church Schoo l 9 &amp; m , DE NOM INA TIONAL - Rev serv rce , 11 am
tramtng
the ranks of the church.
The morning stars are Mars WSCS , 3rd Monday , 7 30 p m
SYRACUSE _ _ Church Robert Sm1fh, pastor Sunday un ron , 6 30 p m , evenmg
worsh1p serv1ce . 7 30 p m
Sociologist Andrew Greeley, and Jupiter_
School, 9 30 am , worsh rp school , 9 30 a m ; class M1d
week prayer serv1ce,
leader . Leo Htlt , worsh1p Wednesday
for example, has b1tterly
The evening stars are Mer- serv 1ce, 7 JO p m
, 7 30 p m
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
serv 1ce 10 30 am , church,
MASON
CHURCH
OF
attacked the program as cury, Venus and Saturn.
730pm
R ev. Stevrn W1t1on
E O E N
U N 1 T E 0 CHRIST, P 0 Box 487, Mrller
"attempt to celebrate the
Those born on this date are
Sl , Mason, w Va Sunday
Rev. HowardShoveley
BRETHREN IN CHURIST BETHANY CDorcas)
B1ble Study 10 a m Worsh1p
bicentennial of our repubUc by under the sign of Taurus.
Worsrup, 9 JO \ am , Church Elden R
Blake . pastor 11
am and 7 p m Bible Study
Sunday School 10 a m , Wednesday
taring down the American
Scottish novelist Sir James School 10 30 a m
7 p m , Vocal
CARMEL WorShip , 11 Howard
McCoy,
supt , mUSIC
1Ccompli8hment to pieces." Barrie was born May 9, 1880. am , 1st and Jrd Sundays , Mornrng sermon, 11 am ,
FIRST , SOUTHERN
Church School 10 am
Sunday
n1ght
services
Catholics are not alone in
On this day In history:
BAPTISTCorner of Second
APPLE GROVE _ Sunaay Chr1stran Endeavor. 7 30
the field.
In 1502, Christopher Colum- Schoof. 9 30 am , worship, P m ~ong servtce , 8 p m , and Anderson . Mason Pastor ,
Cloud Sunday school ,
At the recently concluded bus set sail from Cadiz, Spain, f~rst and thrrd Sundays , 7 30 Preachmg 8 30 p m , M•d 9Walter
45 am , worsh1p serv1ce, II
p
m
,
prayer
meeting
,
Week
Prayer
meet1ng
,
meeting of the American 011 his fourth and final voyage Wednesday
P m
Wednesday , 7 p m , Ray a m and 7 30 p m Weeki y
7 30
Bible study , Wednesday , 7 30
Je'lriltl Congress, the AJC to America .
Fellowship' supper. f rrst A~a~JA 1 ~k tea~e~
JESUS pm
'
Soturdl'(,
6
p
m
U
M
W
CHR
S
MASON ASSEMBLY OF
launcbed a program to en- In 1926, Cmdr. Richard E. second Tuesday, 7. 30 p m
I T
Located at GODsecond St , Mason , w
Cllllll'lge American Jews to B d
d Fl
EAST LETART - Sunday Rutland on New Lima Road , Va Chester
Tennant. pastor
ltecume Involved In reaearch yr an
oyd Bennett school 9 30 am
worship
neJ~~:t to Forest Acre Park
became the first men to Oy se
d
d f
th' 5 d
' Rev Ray Rouse, pastor , Sunday school, 10 am ,
con an
our
un ays, Robert Musser , Sunday School mornmg worsh ip , 11 am ,
Cll the Jewiah component in over the North Pole.
7 30 P m • prayer meetmg, supt Sunday school
10 30 evangelistiC servlce, 7 30 p m
Wednesda~
,
7
30
American history as a part of In 1946, King VIctor Em- U M w , first Wednesday,p 7m 30, am . worsh1p 7 30 p m' Bible Brbte study and prayer ser
studJl, Wednesday, 7 30 p m , \lice , Wednesday, 7 30 p m
their observance of the• manuel Ill of Italy abdicated, p m
W~SLEYAN ( RICtne) _
Saturday n1ght prayer ser Phono 773 5133
HARTFORD CHURCH OF
birthday.
- leaving the throne to biB son S d
h 1 10
vrce. 7 30 p m
un a Y sc oo •
a m •
H E M l 0 CK
G R 0 II E CHR 1ST 1n Chnstran Union AI a llrst step In that Crown Prince Humberto
' worshrp,
11 am ., Bible study, CHRISTIAN- Roger watson The Rev W•lllam Campbell ,
Thursday, 7 p m
cho•r
' pastor SundlW School 9 30
JII'08I'UD the AJC Ia publlahlng In 1970 United Auto practtce,
Thursday, 8 P m . pastor, Ray Whaley, supt , am
. James Hughes , supt ,
a booklet, "Jews In American Workers President Walter Fellowshtp supper. first Morn1ng worShiP 9 30 am
evenmg serv1ce . 7 30 p m
Wednesdav
Church
school.
10
30
am
,
o
p
m
6 3
Life: A Guide to Local Reuther was killed in a lJ M w fourfh Monday
Wednesday even1ng prayer
, 8 p m ' young people's meet1ng. 6 30 meet1ng,
7 , 30 p m Youth
programming
for
the Michigan plane crash
GREAT BEND_ Worshop P m , evenong worship, 7 30 prayer
serv1ce each Tuesday
lllc:tntennlal...
.
11 am , 2nd and 4th Sundays , P m Bible Study , Wednesday,
FAili\IIEW
BIBLE
School, 10 1 m
7 30 P m
CHURCH, Letart, W \Ia, Rt
In 111 lntroductiCil to the A thought fer the day: Church
LETART FALLS Wor
MT. UNION BAPTIST - ) Rev George Hoschar.
....... Dr. Gladys HAllen American ltatesman O.nlel Sh1p , 10 a m , Church school. 9 Rev Cectl CO)C , pastor pastor
Sunday School 9 30
am . B1ble study , 7 30 p m
Sunday School supt , Joe a m ~rayer and B1ble study
1111111 llutt ''the FOwlh of the Webster said, "There is everv
Tuesday
Sayre Sunday school. 9 45 7 30 p m Cottage Prayer
JewiJb
community
In nothing so powerful as trulhMORNING STAR - Wor
am . Sunday even1ng war Service 1uesday , 10 am "'
9 30 am Churctl School shtp . 7. 30 Wednesday prayer Worshrp Servtce , Thursday,
Alllera hu been lnUmately IDd often nothlns so ltr.lllfe-'' ship
10 30 a m , Mid Week Service, and B1ble study , 7 ~0 p m
730pm

Religion m America

.

Churches intent
on bicentennial

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

m

CHAF"'EL

~--'i'?~rs~~~•~ru;;;:;-;;--;-A-;-;-LL;:D,~D's;::-, t
~~Z(;I,OtQC::&gt; CAR
GONE!

MY STARS, YES:
IT E)(.CITCt.J' ~
OUR LITTLE ~UG TER
MAKIIJ' HI? PUBLIC
DE-BUTT AS
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BORN LOSER

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11i175 Keister Advert ising Service Inc , Strasburg VIrg inia

. .

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Unscramble these four Jumble~
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WHAT A W IFE

I I
f:;tS;:;P.;,.;.;~;.;'/Y);q.=L'-f~--,----r---, I I I
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With the hope it wilL in some measure. foster and help sustain that
which is good in family and community life, this feature is sponsored by
' the business firms and organizations whose names appear below.

GE.T5 FOR BEINS
SHAii:P ANI/ KEEPtN6
TH IN65 TOGETHEI&lt;:

For Saturday, May 10, 1975
ARIES (March ;!1-Aprll 19)
Your f1nanc1a l aspects continue
to be prom1s1ng, 1f you use
common sense Don't take a
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Now arranre the circled letters

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Something may happen today
that w1lt slow your mttlatlve on
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You II have enough determtnat•on to carry on

to form the aurpnse answer, as

~~-==.LJ=:::::::::::::::·:;:~·:::;~0. ~"";':'~•;•:ted~ by the abo•e cartoon.
1 Prill ~ SIIIPIIISUIISWIII 11re 1
J
J

r x x r xx x x

(AnlwerJ lomorrow)

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Tuesday -

Pass

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how t~ work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

CRYPTOQUOTE

" The Friendly Folks"
Pomeroy, Ohio

PCFFVMBQQ

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THE DAILY
. SENTINEL

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Yesterday's Cryptoquote: A HOST IS LIKE A GENERAL; IT
TAKES A MISHAP TO REVEAL IllS GENIUS. - HORACE
(C) 1975 Kt,. F.. tuns Syndloale, lne.)

Norlh

3"'

Pass

Eosl

Pass
Pass

Your

Birthday

South

1.

The btddmg has been
West

North

East

South

I"'

+

Pass
3•
Pass
4
Pass
4•
Pass
4"
'-- - - - - - - - - _ _ J Pass 5 •
Pass
'
You, South, hold
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
.KQ985¥A2+K4+A9B7
Almost all bndge players feel What do you do now'
'
illat the gods of chance take par- A _ Bid five diamoods Tills
ucular delight m setting traps for shows oecond round control o( lbt
them The losmg player falls or SUit
even dashes mto these traps , the
u•1
w1r.ner f1nds ways Co avo1d them
TODAY'S QUESTION
South s tarts off by seemg dum Your partner JUmps to stx spades
my 's kmg of diamonds clobbered by over your f1ve diamonds What do
East's ace Dtamonds are con- you do?
'•'
tmued and he ruffs the third lead
The wlnmng player notes that the -:-~-=-:-:~-:-:-=:=~:-::::::::=
hand Will be a cmch If trumps break Send $1 lor JACOBY MODERN
2 2 or the ace of hearts IS held by book to "Win at Bridge," (cfo ltils
West Then he asks htmself " What newspaper). P 0 Bo• 4Ml, Radl,~
can 1 do 1f ne 1ther of thdse mce City Station, N9w Yorlc, NY 10019
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN)

I 'f \"\,I

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.
\

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\•

9

4•

Opemng lead - Q •

M dleporf, Ohio
..

C'.AtPENTER'S MARKET

W•st

One letter simply stands for another In th1s sample A is
used for the tllree L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostl'ophea, the length and formatton of the words are all
h1n1s Each day the code letters are dtlferent.

"

POWELL'S SUPER VALU
.

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 201
Take some t1me to,.day to weedout plans you now know to be
unworkable You 'll be able to
concentrate more on Important
goals

..:::!==

-

@J UST AS I $ UBPECTED
GREGORY KDNIDS IS
TIGHTENIN0 ~E
S CQEWS

Nationwide Insurance Co of Columbus, 0
307 Spring Ave.
Pomeroy

Groceries &amp; General Merchandise
Racine
Ph 949-5772

TH'
6."
SHES

-...c

~

WINNIE

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

WAID CROSS SONS STORE

KINGSBURY HOME SALES
&amp; SERVICE, INC.

•

Middleport, 0 .
Gallipolis, 0

46 C6urt St.

cU. .

11

);,!,
•

rwo LOCATIONS

59 N. Second St

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 191
A famtly problem for the past
weeks wtt! start to fade as those
mvolved begm to see thmgs m
perspective

Winners try to avoid traps

~
36
37 Scandinao;::;:::;::~~::::::!~~~::::::~::~U~~~~~::!:~C.:.:~~..:~~~~EJ~= 38 vian
cap1tal
::~;~::_
All over
bc-+-t---+--t---

@-fr!"u

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
191 A meeting begun In a light
vem niay prove to be very im·
portant later when you and an
old fnend find you share an 1n ~
terest tn somethmg vttal

WIN AT BRIDGE

60TTA .9:/AI&lt; MAH
HEAD FO' A FEW
DAYS-

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE PHARMACY

SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-DK.
21) Before you mvest 10 a new
ptece of eqUipment , try to
make~ do wtth what you have.
Your Yankee mgenu1ty could
save you $$$

. Becl&lt;i4

t;;;-+--t-i-

Bakers of Gay 90's Bread
Middleport ·
Ph. 992-3030

Ph. 949 9591

220 E. Mam

Ph. 992 2550

BETSY ROSS
. BAKERY

ROSEBERRY'S SERVICE STATION
Racine

M iddleport

CANCER (J..,. 21-July 221
What a frtend has to say to you
today may be a boiler poll lo
swallow Later you It agree 11
was for your own good

LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 Be perSistent tn pursumg your goals
today
An event may
overshadow your honzons, but
It wtll cause only a temporary
delay
'

3 Permit

JOlDt

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) It
may be awkward lfut If you
want someth 1ng you loaned
re turned, you'll have to make a
d ~rect demand

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
You and a partner w1ll be faced
w1th a d1ff1cult and cruc1al dec•·
s1on It's up to you to stand up
for what ts rtght Your partner
may w1lt under pressure

.I

me'

.

"\

great scope
Molly-"
(4 wds.)
12 Edison's
4 Wallaba
GASOUNE ALLEY
middle
5 Grew
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
needs ,.. ,.....,,...
name
smaller
Ther' 4' qo, Nevvtoln!
You II encounter a small but
Yesterday's Answer
!-low L.JOU It ke be1n' a
difficu
lt problem Ieday II you
13
Actually
6
Nickname
frtqhten'
hold onto'
Success 1s more l1kety for you
15
Actor,
27 Waste
base
your react•on on past
(2
wds.)
of
1936
d1-rector up on th'
th1s
year rt you put to good use
'--L'
ain't.
Jack 28 Vocal
stmllar e&gt;&lt;pertence. you II
lessons
learned from pamful
14
Be
Situated
7
Perrrusstve
board, Newton'
qotn' -t,'
resolve 1t eas11y
18 Shme
vlbrapast exper 1ence You now
15
Summer,
10
phrase
21 Entreaty
twn
m1nd 1 Caen
know what should be dtscardLIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) In
( 4 wds. )
22 Overeater 29 Salome's bus10ess dealings today, don t
ed
16 Japanese
8 Insculpture 23 11:lectromc
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPR ISE ASSN )
stepfather
liquid
9 W1tty answer
sound
34 Bmd
measure
11 Bishop's
24 Unadorned 35 To what
17 Empowered
headdress
25 - ray
effect
19 Growl
r.-""I'!:'""T:-r.-"
Trep1dat10n
Military mstallation
,--- - - - - - - - - - - , tlungs happens' "
Ending for
:-o:-+-+--1--+--+-~
NORTH
9
He sees he can afford one round
kilo
A K lO 9 3
of trumps Just m case all four are
UL ABNER
23 Melancholy
¥ K Q5 2
gomg to show up m one hand So he
+'K 6 4
cashes h1s ace of trumps and
?----------""'--r-,;=:-------..,...-~~;....,-----------""'!"" 24 Mr. Mm1ver 1:-::-+--t----J~
4 75
everyone follows Then he leads a
NATCHERLY !r- AH'LL NAIL THIS
25 Ooze
WEST
EAST
heart East s ace captures dumHERE~ L.INBEARA.BLES
ON
PQSTCf=FICE' WALL 50 26 Coloration
"" J 7 5
• 2
my's queen and a club comes back
PITCHER, AN' !&lt;IN ELY
..____ A
L /&lt;IN
W.HA-r
'1:1 Furtiveness
¥ J 9 76
" A 10 4
South wms thiS and then starts a
'r'l
~ (;;
'1
30 Belg1an
+
Q
.I
10
•
A
8
7
3
2
successful
cross ruff Heart to the
EXCOOZE ME. AH
.......,
GITTJN'commune
"'J 4 3
4 Q 10 8 6
kmg ruff a hear! cash the second
31 Dilly
SOUTH (0)
high club, ruff a club, ruff dummy 's
A A Q8 6 4
last hea rt , smile and clatm smce
32 Before
" 83
wtth two !ricks to go he st1ll holds
33 - Island,
+9 5
the queen of trumps and a club
~3?)~::::::;~
Ny
• AK 92
while dummy 's two cards are the
J
e&gt;35 - shirt
kmg and 10 of trumps
Ea st West vulnerable

It l&lt;imda

M iddleport, Oh1o

'

DOWN

1 Surmount
2 Exhausted
(2 wds)

11 "Sweet

S -9

GOEGLEIN READY MIX

__

8 DO-Emergency 3,4, 15, Kung Fu 6, 13 , All In The
Family B.IO; Book Beat 33
8 31}-The Jeffersons B. 10, B1ography 33
9 00-Movle "The Bridge at Remagen" 3 3,4, IS; Movie
"Nicholas and Alexandra" 6,13, Mary Tyler Moore
8, 10, Theafer In America 33
•
9 JI).-Bob Newharf B, 10
10 00-Carol Burnett 8,10
11 01}-ABC News 6, News 8, 10,13
II. Is-Movie "Scream of Deafh" 6
II 21)-News 3,4, Don Kirshner's Rock Concerf 15
11 ·31}-Movte "Living If Up" B. Movie "Inside Daisy
Clover" 10; Movie " Jungle Woman" 13
11.51)-Movle " Companions In Nlghfmare " 3, Movie
"Blindfold" 4
I 00-Don Kirshner's Rock Concert 6, Movie "Secrets
of fhe Blue Room" 13.
I 31}-Movle "Lilith" 10
2 00-Movle ''Never on Sunday" 4
2· 31).-ABC News 13
3 31}-Movle"The Candy Man " 10
4 30-Movte "Nevada Smith" 4

I Dl

Sc ri ptural aelec!Pff by The American Bib le Socl11tr

MEIGS TIRE CENTER

·~_...

be backward about tnSIStlng
tlpon the qual &lt;ty you're payong
tor Be ready to haggle

Sunday
Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Frtday Saturday
James
John
Acts II Kings
Deuteronomy Ephes1ans I Kmgs
8.1-3
1.18-21 8·22-24
1.2-6
17·9-12 1 6-9 2.9-12

•

. ·•

~l!ll!OOID'lli~® u..t 41;-d/.1 .-I,-..

In our turbulent soc1ety, tranquility can only be found inside a
person. Such stab11ity and serenity could be your greatest g1ft to
your child .

t, ,J'

'

12 .00-Jefsons 3,4, 15, These Are the Days 6, 13, Harlem
Gtobefrotters 8, 10; Mister Rogers 20
12 31)-Soul Train 3. Ameror•n Bandsfand 6, 13, Go

Some parents today have abdicated their respons1btlity to gu1de
the1r children . They have broken the family bonds too soon Their
children pay for th1s negligence: They age-but they don't mature.
Whims are fickle . and momentary. The Church stnves to replace such elustve goals with something more substantial, something more stable The inner values of character and faith remain
as vital today as ever.

_._ .........

oo-

II ~Star Trek 3,4,15, Hudson Brofhers 8, 10, Zoom

Motherhood is security
but only for awhile And the human
mother IS no more able to perpetuate the bond of total protection
than is her wild counterpart.

, worn

J

Kil LER ClJ ll1~ ~T.
'PL1 Ollttlf TO
-----~ BIN "SSOVIB./

You don't need to know much about polar bears to get themessage here This cub hasn't a worry m the world . But one day he 'll
grow up to know all the frustrat1on s of life in captivity.

___

4, 15, Faf Alber! B, 10.
1 oo-World of the Sea 4, Children's Film Fesflval
B. IO; Big Time Wrestlllng 15, Silent Years 33
' l 31}-Water World 3; Flshln' Hole 4; Soul Train 6;
Other People, Ofher Places 13
2 00-Arfhrlfls Drive 3, Dugouf Dope 4, Baseball
Warm Up 15; To Be Announced 8; Movie 10; Bill
Dance Outdoors Show 13
2 11}-Basebalt 3,4
2 Is-Baseball 15
2 31}-Fisherman 6; Flshln' Hole 8; Harold Ensley ·
Sportsman's F Friend 13, New Music In Brass 33.
J 00-Mtnlature Golf 6, Viewpoint B. Celebrity •
Bowling 13, Enslow Prolect JJ
3 31}-Golf 6,13, To Be Announ&lt;ed B. Movie " The
Bengal Tiger" 10)
4 'OD-Wresfllng 8; Making Th1ngs Grow 33
4 31}-Lef's Grow a Garden 33
4 4s--Pettlcoat Junction 3, To Be Announced 4.
5 DO-Bonanza 3; Wide World of Sports 6, 13, Bonanza
4, Young People's Concert 8, 10.; Outdoors with
Ken Callaway 15, The Romagnolls' Table 33 .5 31}To Be Announced IS; Course of Our Times 33 .
6 00-News 3,4, 10, Lawrence Welk B; God Has The
Answer 15, Catch 33 33 .
6 JI).-NBC News 3,4, 15, Reasoner Reporf 13; News 6;
CBS News 10; Zoom 33
7
Treasure Hunf 3, Lawrence Welk 4, Hee Haw
6,B, $25,000 Pyramid 10, N Newsmaker '75 13;
Lawrence Welk 15, world Press 33
7 31).-Jeopardy 3. Antmat World 10, Fesflval of
Family Classics 13

FRIDAY,MAY9,1975
10 OO-Pol1ce Woman 3,15, Get Chrlshe Love 6,13;
News 20, Paul Nuch1ms 33
10 31}-To Be Announced 4
11 00-News 3,4,6,B, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 33
11 31).-Johnny Carson 3,4,15, Wide World Spec 1at 13,
Sammy &amp; Company 6, Movie " Valley of the Dolls"
8; Movie "Dear Dead Delilah" 10, Janakl 33
I OD-M1dnlght Spec1al 3,4, 15; Wide World Special 6
Movie "The Mystery of fhe Wax Museum" 10:
News 13.
2 31}-Sfar Trek 4
3 JI}-Movle " The Pmk Panther" 4
1
'
11-Movie "War Hunt" 4
SATURDAY, MAY 10, l97S

6 OD-Sunrlse Semesfer 10
' 6 31}-Fun for Everyone 6; TV Classroom B. World
Around Us 10; Almanac 13.
7 OD-Safurday ReportJ, Aware 6, Treehouse Club B.
Treehouse Club 10, Kentu.:ky Afield 13
7 JI).-Jabberwocky 3, Farm Fronf 4, Eddie Saunders
6, AbboH &amp; Costello B, Man From COSI 10. Tennessee Tuxedo 13; Sesame 51 20
B·OD-Addams Fam1ty 3.4, IS; Yogi 's Gang 13, Jab
berwocky 6; M,y Favorite Marflans B; Popeye 10
8 JC)-Wheelle &amp; fhe Chopper Bunch 3,4, 15, Bugs
Bunny 13, Speedracer 6; Speed Buggy B. M1sfer
Rogers 20
9 OD-Emergency Plus 3,4, 15, Hong Kong Phooey 6, 13,
Jeannie B, 10, Sesame St 20
9 31}-Run Joe Run 3,4, 15, Adventures of Gilligan 13
Big Blue Marble 6, Pebbles &amp; Bamm Bamm 8,10
10 00-Land of fhe Lost 3,4, 15, Devlin 6, 13, Scooby
Doo, Where Are You B, 10, Elec Co 20
10·30-Stgmund &amp; the Sea Monsfers 3,4, 15; Lassie 6, 13,
Shazam B. 10: Sesame St 20.
II 00-Ptnk Panfher 3,4, 15, Super Priends 6, 13, Valley
of the D1nosaurs B, 10

AI~'T

1

I,

t

_..

Television log for e,asy viewing

I

CAPTAIN EASY

Coprrlght

..__..,.._,______________________

.

\
8 -The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, May 9,1975

)

I

1

�•

-

I

WPdn osday ' p

worsh rp ser vr cc fo ll()wmq at
3 1"1
p ..m
Op e n
Br bl e
dr sc ussron --1 30 p r) l .:~ I the
chur c h each Thursday
FIRST
SOUTHERN
BAPTIST 16 1 Mulberry
A ve . Pomeroy , affllrat c d Wtlh
S B C • t he Rev
Br a dl e y -

Spenc e r

POMEROY
POMEROY TRINITY
Rev W H Perrrn pastor
Roy Maver , Sunda~ school
supt Church school. 9 15
am • worsh1p ser1J 1ce , 10 24
a m Youth chOtr rehearsal,
Monday , 3 JO p m und e r
dlrecflon of Mary Skmner
senior choir rehearsal, 7 JO
p m Thursday w1th Mrs Paul
Nease directo r
POMEROY CHURCH OF
THE NAZARENE - Corner
Un10n and Mu lberry Rev
Clyde V Henderson pastor
Sunday school 9 30 a m , Glen
McClung , supt . morn rng
wors h tp , 10 30 am
evenmg
serv 1ce , 7 30 , m 1d week.
servJCe Wednesday , 7 30 p 01
GRACE EPISCOPAL- The
Rev Harold Deeth . rector
Chur c h sen1r ces 10 30 a m ,
Holy communron frrst Sunday
of month , churc h school 10 30
am for nursery through 12
POMERDY CHURCH OF
CHRIST - Terrell Gronrnger
pastor Brble school . 9 30
am
worshrp . 10 JO a m ,
adult worShiP serv1ce and
vovno people 's m eet 1ng , 7 30
p m
Combined Brble stud y
and prayer meet rng , Wed
nesday , 7 30 p m
THE SAL\IATION ARMYEnvoy Ray W Wtntng , off rcer
•n charge Sunday , 10 am ,
Hol iness meetrng 10 30 a m ,
Sunday
Sch ool
Young
Peop le's Legron , 7 p m
Thursday . 1 to 3 p m Lad•es
Home League 7 p m Prep

study , Wednesday , 7 p m
c ho1r pracl rce, Wedn esd a y,
B 30 p m
POMEROY
WESLEYAN
HOLINESS
CHURCH
Harrt s onvtl! e . Re v O' Dell
Manle y , P as tor . He nry Eblrn ,
Sunday School Supt Sunday
Sc hool 9 30 am , Even rng
wo r shtp 7 30 p m Prayer a nd
Pra1se se r\lr ce , Thu rs da y, 7 30

pas to r
Troy
Zw 1II n g Sun day sc hoo l supt
'

Sunday

Schoo 1•

9 30

am

mornrng worshrp
lO 30
Sundav evang~lrstrc meetmg.
7 JO p m
Pray er meellng
Wedn e sdav

7 30 P m

MO~SE

Wor sh rp II a 111
l s i a n d Jr d
'. u nd,W'i
Chur c h '1 c hoo l
10

am
PORTLAND
Wo r s htp
~ ~ P m Chur c h Sc hool 9 30
SUTTON Wor shrp
11

1

am 2nd and 4th Sunda ys ,
Chur c h ~c noo l 10 a m
NORTHEAST CLUSTER

Rev Robert Meece
Rev Stanl ev Brandum

JO

PPA -

Worshtp 10 am

TUPPERS
PLAINS
CHRIHIAN CHURCH E ua cnc Un de r wood pas tor ,
t1 oward Caldw e ll J , Sunda y
Sch ool ~ u pl
Sun d ay School
9 J\1 a m Mo r n1f'IQ Sermon ,
Sund a y e venmg
10 JO a m
se r v rc e , 7 p m
LETART FALLS UNITED
BRETHREN
R ev
~re el and
N or r~s .
p a stor,
I loyd Nof'rrs
s upt Sunday
sc hoo l 9 30 am
mornrng
se rmon 10 30 a m
Pray er r
se rvr ce, Wednes day , 7 30 p m
CHESHIRE CHURCH OF
GOD OF PROPHECY - G P
Sm lth , pastor Sunday School.
10 a m . Arthur Henso n,
Sup t , Mornrng Worsh rp , 11
a m Yo ung People 's serv 1ce ,
7 p m , Even1 ng s e rv1c e 7 30
p m
Wednesday Mrd Wee k
Pr a yer Serv• ce 7 30 p m
Youth meetmg , 6 30 p m
Evenrng worS hi P 7 30 p m
CHESTER CHURCH OF
THE NAZARENE Re v
Herbert
Grat e ,
pastor
Worsh rp servrce , 11 am and
7 30 p m
Sunday
Sunday
School
9 30 a m
R 1chard
Barton , supt Prayer meetmg ,
Wednesday , 7 30 p m
, BRADFORD CHURCH OF
CHRIST Clifford Smrth
mm1ster Sunday School 9 30
a m
mornmg chur ch 10 30
a m , Sunday evenmg s erv1ce ,
7 30 p m Wednesday serv1 ce
Bp m
LAUREL CLIFF FREE
METHODIST- Rev F loyd F
Shook pastor Lloyd Wr rght
Sunday sc hool supt Sunday
s c hool, 9 30 a m , Mornr ng
worShiP 10 30 am
evenrng
worsh rp , 7 30 p m
We d
n e sday , Chrrsttan
Youth
Cru s ade , 6 30 p m Choir
pr ac trc e , Thursday , 7 p m
DEXTER CHURCH OF
CHRIST - Charles Russell,
Sr , mrn rster , Norman C Wtll.
supt . Sunday school. 9 30
am
worsh1p servrce 10 30
am
Brble study , Tuesda y,
7 30 p m
REORGANIZED CHURCH
OF JESUS CHRIST OF
LATTER DAY SAINTS Po r tland
Rac1n e Road
Wrllram Roush . pastor Denny
Evans ,
Sunday
School
Drrector Sunday Schoo l 9 30
a m Mornmg worshtp , 10 30
a m Sunday evenmg servr ce
7 p m
Wednesday evenrng
prayer serv1ces , 7 30 p m
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST Rev Earl Shuler pastor
Worshtp serv1ce 9 30 a m
Sunday sc hool. 10 30 a m ,
Sunday evenmg serv•ces, 7 30
p m B•ble study and prayer
serv1ce Thursday 7 30 p m

MIDDLEPORT
Church School 9 am
Pray er
MT MORIAH BAPTIST _
Me etr ng Wednesday 8 p m
LONG BOTTOM - Church
Corner Fourth and Main . s e rv•ces , 9 a m
S unday
Middleport Re\1 Henry Key , Sc hool 9 AS a m , B1ble Study
Jr
pastor Sunday Schoo l, e very Thursday , 7 30 p m
30 am
Mrs
Erv rn
NORTH
BETHEL
Pm
- 9Baumgardner
, Mornmg - Worshrp 11 am
Church
SYRACUSE
FIRST worship , 10 45 supt
a m
s
CHURCH OF GOD Re v
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES
c hOol 10 am
George O il e r , pa stor Sunday
ALFREO - Sunday s choo l
e ach s unday
sc hool. 9 45 am
mornrng - Larry Carnahan pres•dm g 9 45 a m
Sunday . • B•b le prea chmg at II am eac h
prea c hrn g .
11
am . mmrster
lecture 9 30 am
Watch Sunday Prayer m e etmg . 7 45
evan ge lrs t rc se r v.ce . 7 30 p m
p m
Wednesday
WSCS, 8
Prayer m ee t rng Thursday , tow e r study . 10 30 a 7m
Tuesday , Brbte study.
30 p rn on third Tuesday eac h
7 30 p m
POMEROY
WESTSIDE p m , Thursday , mtnrstry month
service
REEDSVILLE Sunday
CHURCH OF CHRIST, 200 W school, 7 30 P m
8 30 P m
h00 1 9 30
Ma rn St
Jer r y Paul, meetrng
MIDDLEPORT
CHURCH sc
am • preachrng
m 1nrster
p h one 992 7666
OF CHRIST IN CHRISTIAN 7 30 P m
Sunday , prayer
Conser v ativ e
non
M
meet.ng , 7 30 p m Tuesday
UNION - Law r enc e
an ley WSC S 7 JO f•rst Thursday
mstrum e nta l
Sunday wor
pastor
,
Mrs
Russell
Young
each
month
sh rp 10 am
Brble study 11
Sunday School Supt Sunday
SILVER RIDGE - Wo r shrp
am
wors h rp 6 p m Wed
Schoo l 9 30 a m Eventng 10 am Ch urch Sc hool, 9 am
nesday B•ble study , 7 p m
TUPPERS
PLAINS
MIDWAY
COMMUNITY worShip . 7 30 Wedn es day
prayer meetmg , 7 30 P m
Worsh 1p 9 a m
Ch ur c h
CHURCH
~n on
de
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF School 10 am
nom 1natronal ) , Langs
GOD- Racone Ro ule 2, the
KENO
CHURCH
OF
VIlle De xter Road , the Rev
James M
Muncy , CHRIST - Geor g e Freder rc k,
Wo r le y Haley , pas tor Sunday Rev
pastor Sunday schooL 9 45 supt serv 1ce - weekly , 9 30
sc hoo l, 10 am
e~o~enrng
a
m . mornmg worship, 11 am on Sundsy Prea chmg
worShip 7 30 p m
Prayer
a
m , evenmg worsh1p , 7 30 f~rst and th.rd Sundeys of
meet ing , T ues day 7 30 p m
Prayer meetmg Tuesday , month by Clrfford Sm rth . 9 30
youth gro u p , F rtday , 7 30 p m
RUTLAND
FREEWILL 7 30 p m , Young people's am
HOBSON - CHRISTIAN
BAPTIST Roger Turner , meetmg , 7 30 p m Thursday
MIDDLEPORT
FIRST UNION- Darrell Doddrlll.
pastor S u n day schoo l. 10
BAPTIST - Corner S•xth and pastor Sunday SchooL 9 30
a m , Sunday e11enmg serv1ce
Cleo Y am , Leonard G1tmore , firSt
7 30 Wednesday B1ble study , Palmer , the Rev
Boyd, pastor Danny Thomp elder , evenmg servrce , 7 30
7 30 p m
Wednesday
prayer
cla~ses
OLD
DEXTER , BIBLE son. Sunday Schoof supt p m
WMPO rad10 program , 7 45 meetrng 7 30 p .m
ST
PAUL LUTHERAN CHRISTIAN CHURCH -Rev
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF
CHURCH,
Corner
of Ron Terry , pastor Sunday am Sunday SChOOl , 9 15
Sycamore and Second Sts , school 10 a m Mrs Worley am mornmg worship, 10 15 GOD - Racrne Route 2 The
am
Youth activities and Rev Charles Hand pastor
Pomeroy The Rev William Francts
superrntendent
fetlowsh rp for 1un ror and Sunday school, 9 45 am
Mtddleswarth , Pastor Sunday Mornrng worshrp
11 am
senror htgh students . 6 P m morn 1ng worsh rp , 11 am
School at 9 AS a m
and Sunday even1ng ser1.1 rc e , 7 30
Church Ser vices 11 a m
GRAHAM
UNITED Sunday Evenmg Worsh•P at Evenmg serv1ces , Tuesday
SACRED HEART - Rev METHODIST Preach rng 7 30 Mtd week prayer ser and Fr 1day 7 JO 0 m
BEARWALLOW
RIDGE
Father Paul 0
We lton , 9 30 a m
frrst and second voce , Wednesdoy , 7 30 pm
CHURCH OF CHRIST, CHURCH OF CHRIST - Bobl e
pastor
Phone
992 2825 Sundays of each month . third
Saturday evenmg Mass , 7 30 and fourth Sundays each Mrdd leport. 5th and Ma1n , Study 9 30 a m , mornmg
Sunday Mass, B and 10 am
mo nth worshiP serv1ce at 7 30 George Glaze . mrntster , worsh 1p, 10 30 am , even.ng
Sheets,
superrn worshtp , 6 30p m Wednesday
Confesston . Sat urday , 7 7 30 p m Wednesday evenmgs at James
tendent B1ble school, 9 30 Brble Study , 7 30 p m
pm
7 30 Prayer and B1ble Study
MT OLIVE CHURCH POMEROY FIRST BAP SEVENTH
DAY
AD· am mornmg worshtp . 10 30
TtST- Robert Kuhn pastor
IIENTIST
Mulberry am , even rng worsh rp , 7 30 , Long Bottom , Sunday School
Wtlltam
Watson , Sunday He1gh t s , Pomer o y Pas tor prayer servrce, 7 P m Wed 10 a m wrth W 111ard P lgotl
school supt Sunday school, G1rard Seton Sabbath school nesday
~ supt Evangeltst•c message
9 30 a m , BY F 6 p m B1ble every Sat ur day at 2 p m and
MIDDLEPORT
Churc each Sunday even•ng, 7 30 by
01
The
Nanrene Elder Russell Clme , mrn rster
Rev
Don Cote , pas of the ApostoliC Fa1th , Bib le
tor
Alfred
R uschet Study, Wednesday 7 30 p m
Sundoy School sup! Sunday
STI\IERS\IIllE COM ·
'
CARLETON CHURCH SChool , 10 am • mornmg MUNITY CHURCH - Sunday Kmgsbury
Road Gary Kmg ,
worsh rp , 11 am • Sunday school serv1ce, 10 am , pastor Sunday
school 9 30
evangelrstrc meet1ng , 7 30 Prayer mee t rng , Thursday , 7 am , even•ng worshrp
7 30
P m .
prayer
meet rng , p m Sunday e11en1ng serv1ce
p m Prayer meet1ng . Wed
Wednesday, 7 30 p m
7 p m
nesday , 7 30 p m
T H E
U N I T E D
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST
PRESBYTERIAN M~IIGN$ - Pomeroy
Harr~sonvllle
LONG
BOTTOM
ISTRY
OF
Road M1ke Grrton , pastor , CHRISTIAN Mr Robert
COUNTY, DWIQht L Zav1tz . Steven Stanley , Sunday school Wyatt pastor , Sunday School
Pastor D1rector
supt sunday school . 9 30 sup t , Ronald Osborne Brb le
HARRIS 0 NV ILL E
a m , mornrng worShip and SchooL 9 30 a m
preach rng
Sunday Church School. 9 30 commun 1on , 10 30 am , 10 45 a m l:1.1 e nrng serv1ces,
am, Mrs Homer Lee , Supt , s unday
even rng
youth 7 30 p m
Mornmg WorShip , 10 30
Chrrst1an endeavor , 6 30 p m ,
HYSELL
RUN
FREE
MIDDLEPORT Sunday worShip serv1ce . 7 30 p m
Church School . 9 30 a~ · Wednesday evenmg prayer METHODIST CHURCH By DAVID E. ANDERSON
John F Fultz , Supt • Mornmg meetmg and Btble study. 7 JO Rev Paul Nev r11 e , pa stor
mtertwmed and enmeshed m
Worsh•P· 10 30
pm
Sunday School 9 JO a m ,
UPI Religion Writer
this country's expansion, its
SYRACUSE Morn 1ng
ST
JOHN LUTHERAN Morn rng servtce 10 30 am ,
Amencan churches are social
development, : its Worshrp , 9 am · Sunday CHURCH, Pme Grove, The youth serv rce , 6 45 p m
EvangeltStiC ser11rce 7 30 p m
moving into the Bicentennial economy and 1ts mstltutions." Church School 10 am • Mrs Rev Wlllram MtddleswartH, Prayer meetmg
Thursday
Sampson Halt. Supt
Pastor Churc:h Services 9 30
observance w1th an mtens1ty
RUTLAND CHURCH OF am Sunday SchooiiO 30a m 7 30 p m
Not all of the response to the
FREEOOM
GOSPEL
GOD Phollop Whotley
BRADBURY CHURCH OF
and zeal that is reminescent of role of rehg10us bodies in the pastor
Sunday school. 10 CHRIST- B•ble School. 9 30 MISSION at Bald Knob FO! ev
a reUgious revival.
b1centenmal celebration has a m , worsh rp servtce, 7 P m • am , morn 1ng worship 10 30 E J Gr~ff1th 1 supt of ch urch
Rev '' L R- -(;tuesencamp ,
That IS not to say the vanous been exclusively enthusiastic, 7Prayer meettng, Wednesday , am sunday evening worsh1p pastor , Roger W1llfred , Sr ,
~O~Z~L
COMMUNITY servrce,7pm . cho rrpract rce Sun day School supt Sunday
observances, celebrations or however.
7 p m Rev Jeff
CHURCH
N ear l ong Wednesday
s chool. 9 30 a m , pray e r
Ranson , Pastor
programs associated with the
James E Wood Jr., for
mee t rng Tuesday , 7 30 p m ,
Bottom , Edsel Hart. pastor
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST churches' marking of the example, recently wrote the Sunday schoo l. 10 a m · Rev Freeland Norrts . pastor: yo uth meet mg . 6 p m Sunday ,
leaders Ada Va n Meter and
Church , 7 30 P m · prayer Sunday s r. hool 10 a m
nation's 200th birthday will be offiCial b1centenmal organiza- meeting,
Gretta Suttle Sunday evenmg
7 30 p m Thursday Church serv 1ce
7 p m
MIDDLEPORT
PEN·
'
worship , 7 p m
through
a religious revival.
tion - the
American TECOSTAL
- Third Ave ' the ~~dnesday Bible Study , 7 wmter months
Rather, the churches recog- Revolution Bicenten01al
MT
HERMON CHURCH
Rev Wolllam Kn ittel, pastor
RACINE CHURCH OF THE
nize Bicentennial tune as a Admmistration - challengmg Ronald Dugan . Sunday School NAZARENE- Rev Wrl l ram OF THE UNITED BRETH
REN IN CHRIST - Robr.rt
period of both reflecting on some of their plans for flllldlng Supt Classes for all ages. Bartholomew pastor , Sunday Shook
pastor Sunday school,
evening serv1ce, 7 30, Brble school. 9 30 a n1 , Gera ld
and acting on the unique role nonprofit bicentennial study
Wednesaday , 7 30 Wells. supt
mornmg war 9 30 a m , Russell Spencer
Wednesday supt worShiP servrce , 10 dS
religion )!as played in projects that would include p m youth services, Friday, Ship. 10 30 am
am
eventnQ
worshrp
7 30 P m
serY1ce 7 p m
American history_
the churches.
FREEWill BAPTIST RACINE FIRST BAPTIST a tternat.ng W1fh C E at 7 30
p m
on Sunday
Prayer
Corner Ash and Plum , Mid - Walter p Brkacsan , pastor
It is also a time for the
The ARBA wants to prov1de dleport
.
Noel
Herrm~n. Ronnre Sa lser , Sunday school meetmg , 7 JO p m Wed
various religious strams matching grants of up to 50 pastor
Alfred Wolfe
lay
Saturday evenmg supt Sunday school. 9 30 nesday
leader
within the country to re- per cent for projects lUI• sel"v1ce, 7 p m Sunday school am morn 1ng worsh 1p , 10 40 .
WHITE ' S CHAPEL
10 am · Sunday evening Sundayevenmg worshtp , 7 30,
eumlne their own sense of dertaken by religious and worshrD, 7 o.m
Rev
Roy
Wednesday eventng Brble Coolvrl te R 0
Deeter . pastor Sunday school
MEIGS
study 7 30
Identity, their uniqueness other pr1vate, nonprofit
worshtp serv•ce
COO:f: ~~11/E
DAN\ItllE WESLEYAN- 9 JO a m
from and commonaUty with groups.
10 30 a m Btble study and
_
THE UNITED
Rev Le lon Glasure pastor prayer
each other in the American
METHODIST CHURCH
Sunday School, 9 30 am , 7 30 p mserv rce , Wednesday
Woods, executive director of
Robert
T
Bumgarner
youth and 1un 1or yout h ser
pageant.
RUTLAND
the Baptist Joint Committee
Director
1nce . 6 45 p m , even rn g
1f\T"fi:AffD
CHURCH OF
One of the first serious on Public Affairs, told the
POMEROY CLUSTER
worship. 7' 30 p m , prayer CHRIST Rod Kasler
Rev
carl
E.
HICks
~n~
pra
1se
,
Wednesday
7
30
entrants in the Bicentennial ARBA it did not really llll·
pastor V H Braley , Sunday
Rev D. Wm . Sydenstrocker
SilliER
RUN
FREE school supt Sunday school
field was the Roman CathoUc derstand what the relationship
CHESTER - Worshop 9 15
30 am , worShip serv1ce
cnurch School 10 am BAPTIST- Rev Ralph Dean 9and
Olurch. The American hierar- between religion and America am
10 30 am .
ENTERPRISE_ worshtp, pastor
Sunday School, 10 youthcommun1on,
meetmg , 6p m , Sunday
chy's commission on the was all about.
9a m Church School. lOam am. Leon Miller. supt evenrng serv1ce 7 , regu lar
_ WorShip Evening serv1ce, 7 30 p m , board meetmg, thrrd Satur
Bicentennial chose the well- "A part of the genius of the 11 FLATWOODS
a m
Church School 10• J)rayer meetmg, Thursday day
, 7 p m
'
'730pm
phrase "Liberty and Amencan ,experience has
RUTLAND
COMMUNITY
Worsh &lt;p
CHESTER ' CHURCH , OF CHURCH -S unday
, JUBtice For All" and planned been the separation of church a ~OMEROY _
School
10 30 am , Church School 9 1S GOD Rev Dan .A: yers, 9 30 am , Worshtp service,
11
an audac1ous program to and slate," he ssid . "To am , UMYF 6 30 p m
pastor Sunday school. 9 30
am . Wedneasdy prayer
ROCK
SPRINGSWorship
am
wor.
s
h•p
se~v
r
ce
,
11
· lreathe new life Into the bridge that separation In
meetmg , 7 30 p m Sunday
10 a m , Church School9 am
a m . e1.1enmg serv1ce 7 30 , ntght
worsh•p . 7 30 p m
· phrase while attempting to order
youth serv1ce , Wednesday ,
to
celebrate
its UMYF 6 30 p m
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
7
MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
30 P m
relate cathohc teaching, existence is a logical and
THE NAZARENE Rev
Rev. Robert Bumgarner
lANGS\IILLE CHRISTIAN Lloyd D Gnmm. Jr , pastor
ellpeclally social teaching, to perhaps legal contradiction."
HEATH WorShip IO 30 CHURCH Ted Jones , Sunday schooL 9 30 a m ,
a m , Church Schoo l 9 30 pastor Sunday school, 9 30 worship servrce , 10 30 am
· the American expeneqce.
It adds up to religiOus ob- am
, UMYF 7 p m
am , Roy S1gman , supt ,
broadcast lrve over WMPO .
' The Catholic program, servance that will, if nothing
RUTLAND- WorshiP 9 15 morning worShip,
10 30 , young people's servtce, 6 45
m
,
Church
School
10
a
m
Sunday
evenmg
seryrce
.
7
30
,
a
' featuring open hearings else, continue to mark the UMYF 7 p m
m 1d week service , Wed e1Jangehst1c serv rce, 7 30 p m
Prayer meeting, Wednesday.
around the country -two have great diversity of religious
SALEM
CENTER ·
nesday, 7 30 p m
7 30
rss!onary
Worsh 1p 9 am , Church
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF meet rngp, m7 , 30 M
. already been held and a third values m American !He .
p m
f1rst
School10o m, UMYF Thurs THE
NAZARENE - Rev Wednesday of month
Ia planned for the TWin Cities
day 7 p m
Howard C Black, pastor Bob
MASON COUNTY
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
Moore, Su~da~ School 'S upt,
THE HILAND CHAPEL,
area of Minnesota-Is to
rhe Almanac
Rev Richard E Jarv 1s
Sunday Schoof,! cfass,es, 1for a1t, George
pastor Sunday
ASBURY worsh•p 11 ages. 9 30 a Jm , mornmg School, Casto.
culminate In Detroit next year By United Press International
9 30 a m , even.ng
a m , Church School 9 50 worsh ip 10 45, NYPS SundBy, worship
7 30
Thursday
with a major conference on
Today IS Friday, May 9, the a m , wscs. 1st Tuesday
6 30 P m . eiJangei•Stlc ser evenmg prayer
Ser\1 rce , 1 30
FOREST
RUNWorshop
voce
,
Sunday
.
7
30
p
m
Mod
9
jultlce.
129th day of 1975 wtth 236 to a m , Church School
pm
10 am , week prayer meettng, Wed
Already, however, the follow.
MASON FIRST BAPTIST WSCS 3rd Wednesday 7 30 nesd~y,-7 ,'30 p m , MtSS1onary Second
and Pomeroy Sts ,
'
meeltng ,. second Wednesday.
CathoUc program hss run mto
The moon IS approaching 1ts p m '
Stan Cra1g , pastor Sunday
7 0
MINERSVILLE- Worsh &lt;P
NON - school , 9 45 a m , worsh•P
IeVere criticism from within new phase.
1fED FAITH
lOa m , Church Schoo l 9 &amp; m , DE NOM INA TIONAL - Rev serv rce , 11 am
tramtng
the ranks of the church.
The morning stars are Mars WSCS , 3rd Monday , 7 30 p m
SYRACUSE _ _ Church Robert Sm1fh, pastor Sunday un ron , 6 30 p m , evenmg
worsh1p serv1ce . 7 30 p m
Sociologist Andrew Greeley, and Jupiter_
School, 9 30 am , worsh rp school , 9 30 a m ; class M1d
week prayer serv1ce,
leader . Leo Htlt , worsh1p Wednesday
for example, has b1tterly
The evening stars are Mer- serv 1ce, 7 JO p m
, 7 30 p m
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
serv 1ce 10 30 am , church,
MASON
CHURCH
OF
attacked the program as cury, Venus and Saturn.
730pm
R ev. Stevrn W1t1on
E O E N
U N 1 T E 0 CHRIST, P 0 Box 487, Mrller
"attempt to celebrate the
Those born on this date are
Sl , Mason, w Va Sunday
Rev. HowardShoveley
BRETHREN IN CHURIST BETHANY CDorcas)
B1ble Study 10 a m Worsh1p
bicentennial of our repubUc by under the sign of Taurus.
Worsrup, 9 JO \ am , Church Elden R
Blake . pastor 11
am and 7 p m Bible Study
Sunday School 10 a m , Wednesday
taring down the American
Scottish novelist Sir James School 10 30 a m
7 p m , Vocal
CARMEL WorShip , 11 Howard
McCoy,
supt , mUSIC
1Ccompli8hment to pieces." Barrie was born May 9, 1880. am , 1st and Jrd Sundays , Mornrng sermon, 11 am ,
FIRST , SOUTHERN
Church School 10 am
Sunday
n1ght
services
Catholics are not alone in
On this day In history:
BAPTISTCorner of Second
APPLE GROVE _ Sunaay Chr1stran Endeavor. 7 30
the field.
In 1502, Christopher Colum- Schoof. 9 30 am , worship, P m ~ong servtce , 8 p m , and Anderson . Mason Pastor ,
Cloud Sunday school ,
At the recently concluded bus set sail from Cadiz, Spain, f~rst and thrrd Sundays , 7 30 Preachmg 8 30 p m , M•d 9Walter
45 am , worsh1p serv1ce, II
p
m
,
prayer
meeting
,
Week
Prayer
meet1ng
,
meeting of the American 011 his fourth and final voyage Wednesday
P m
Wednesday , 7 p m , Ray a m and 7 30 p m Weeki y
7 30
Bible study , Wednesday , 7 30
Je'lriltl Congress, the AJC to America .
Fellowship' supper. f rrst A~a~JA 1 ~k tea~e~
JESUS pm
'
Soturdl'(,
6
p
m
U
M
W
CHR
S
MASON ASSEMBLY OF
launcbed a program to en- In 1926, Cmdr. Richard E. second Tuesday, 7. 30 p m
I T
Located at GODsecond St , Mason , w
Cllllll'lge American Jews to B d
d Fl
EAST LETART - Sunday Rutland on New Lima Road , Va Chester
Tennant. pastor
ltecume Involved In reaearch yr an
oyd Bennett school 9 30 am
worship
neJ~~:t to Forest Acre Park
became the first men to Oy se
d
d f
th' 5 d
' Rev Ray Rouse, pastor , Sunday school, 10 am ,
con an
our
un ays, Robert Musser , Sunday School mornmg worsh ip , 11 am ,
Cll the Jewiah component in over the North Pole.
7 30 P m • prayer meetmg, supt Sunday school
10 30 evangelistiC servlce, 7 30 p m
Wednesda~
,
7
30
American history as a part of In 1946, King VIctor Em- U M w , first Wednesday,p 7m 30, am . worsh1p 7 30 p m' Bible Brbte study and prayer ser
studJl, Wednesday, 7 30 p m , \lice , Wednesday, 7 30 p m
their observance of the• manuel Ill of Italy abdicated, p m
W~SLEYAN ( RICtne) _
Saturday n1ght prayer ser Phono 773 5133
HARTFORD CHURCH OF
birthday.
- leaving the throne to biB son S d
h 1 10
vrce. 7 30 p m
un a Y sc oo •
a m •
H E M l 0 CK
G R 0 II E CHR 1ST 1n Chnstran Union AI a llrst step In that Crown Prince Humberto
' worshrp,
11 am ., Bible study, CHRISTIAN- Roger watson The Rev W•lllam Campbell ,
Thursday, 7 p m
cho•r
' pastor SundlW School 9 30
JII'08I'UD the AJC Ia publlahlng In 1970 United Auto practtce,
Thursday, 8 P m . pastor, Ray Whaley, supt , am
. James Hughes , supt ,
a booklet, "Jews In American Workers President Walter Fellowshtp supper. first Morn1ng worShiP 9 30 am
evenmg serv1ce . 7 30 p m
Wednesdav
Church
school.
10
30
am
,
o
p
m
6 3
Life: A Guide to Local Reuther was killed in a lJ M w fourfh Monday
Wednesday even1ng prayer
, 8 p m ' young people's meet1ng. 6 30 meet1ng,
7 , 30 p m Youth
programming
for
the Michigan plane crash
GREAT BEND_ Worshop P m , evenong worship, 7 30 prayer
serv1ce each Tuesday
lllc:tntennlal...
.
11 am , 2nd and 4th Sundays , P m Bible Study , Wednesday,
FAili\IIEW
BIBLE
School, 10 1 m
7 30 P m
CHURCH, Letart, W \Ia, Rt
In 111 lntroductiCil to the A thought fer the day: Church
LETART FALLS Wor
MT. UNION BAPTIST - ) Rev George Hoschar.
....... Dr. Gladys HAllen American ltatesman O.nlel Sh1p , 10 a m , Church school. 9 Rev Cectl CO)C , pastor pastor
Sunday School 9 30
am . B1ble study , 7 30 p m
Sunday School supt , Joe a m ~rayer and B1ble study
1111111 llutt ''the FOwlh of the Webster said, "There is everv
Tuesday
Sayre Sunday school. 9 45 7 30 p m Cottage Prayer
JewiJb
community
In nothing so powerful as trulhMORNING STAR - Wor
am . Sunday even1ng war Service 1uesday , 10 am "'
9 30 am Churctl School shtp . 7. 30 Wednesday prayer Worshrp Servtce , Thursday,
Alllera hu been lnUmately IDd often nothlns so ltr.lllfe-'' ship
10 30 a m , Mid Week Service, and B1ble study , 7 ~0 p m
730pm

Religion m America

.

Churches intent
on bicentennial

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

m

CHAF"'EL

~--'i'?~rs~~~•~ru;;;:;-;;--;-A-;-;-LL;:D,~D's;::-, t
~~Z(;I,OtQC::&gt; CAR
GONE!

MY STARS, YES:
IT E)(.CITCt.J' ~
OUR LITTLE ~UG TER
MAKIIJ' HI? PUBLIC
DE-BUTT AS
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BORN LOSER

ITS 111E ~EI)J!;Sf \IUD

11i175 Keister Advert ising Service Inc , Strasburg VIrg inia

. .

.. .

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--

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Unscramble these four Jumble~
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary words

WHAT A W IFE

I I
f:;tS;:;P.;,.;.;~;.;'/Y);q.=L'-f~--,----r---, I I I
X~

With the hope it wilL in some measure. foster and help sustain that
which is good in family and community life, this feature is sponsored by
' the business firms and organizations whose names appear below.

GE.T5 FOR BEINS
SHAii:P ANI/ KEEPtN6
TH IN65 TOGETHEI&lt;:

For Saturday, May 10, 1975
ARIES (March ;!1-Aprll 19)
Your f1nanc1a l aspects continue
to be prom1s1ng, 1f you use
common sense Don't take a
llyer on anything nsky

Now arranre the circled letters

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Something may happen today
that w1lt slow your mttlatlve on
an 1mportant undertaking
You II have enough determtnat•on to carry on

to form the aurpnse answer, as

~~-==.LJ=:::::::::::::::·:;:~·:::;~0. ~"";':'~•;•:ted~ by the abo•e cartoon.
1 Prill ~ SIIIPIIISUIISWIII 11re 1
J
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r x x r xx x x

(AnlwerJ lomorrow)

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Pass

Tuesday -

Pass

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how t~ work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

CRYPTOQUOTE

" The Friendly Folks"
Pomeroy, Ohio

PCFFVMBQQ

.
YUUDVMJ

K&amp;C JEWELERS

THE DAILY
. SENTINEL

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EBCW. - CABY
JZBBM
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: A HOST IS LIKE A GENERAL; IT
TAKES A MISHAP TO REVEAL IllS GENIUS. - HORACE
(C) 1975 Kt,. F.. tuns Syndloale, lne.)

Norlh

3"'

Pass

Eosl

Pass
Pass

Your

Birthday

South

1.

The btddmg has been
West

North

East

South

I"'

+

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3•
Pass
4
Pass
4•
Pass
4"
'-- - - - - - - - - _ _ J Pass 5 •
Pass
'
You, South, hold
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
.KQ985¥A2+K4+A9B7
Almost all bndge players feel What do you do now'
'
illat the gods of chance take par- A _ Bid five diamoods Tills
ucular delight m setting traps for shows oecond round control o( lbt
them The losmg player falls or SUit
even dashes mto these traps , the
u•1
w1r.ner f1nds ways Co avo1d them
TODAY'S QUESTION
South s tarts off by seemg dum Your partner JUmps to stx spades
my 's kmg of diamonds clobbered by over your f1ve diamonds What do
East's ace Dtamonds are con- you do?
'•'
tmued and he ruffs the third lead
The wlnmng player notes that the -:-~-=-:-:~-:-:-=:=~:-::::::::=
hand Will be a cmch If trumps break Send $1 lor JACOBY MODERN
2 2 or the ace of hearts IS held by book to "Win at Bridge," (cfo ltils
West Then he asks htmself " What newspaper). P 0 Bo• 4Ml, Radl,~
can 1 do 1f ne 1ther of thdse mce City Station, N9w Yorlc, NY 10019
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN)

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Opemng lead - Q •

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W•st

One letter simply stands for another In th1s sample A is
used for the tllree L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostl'ophea, the length and formatton of the words are all
h1n1s Each day the code letters are dtlferent.

"

POWELL'S SUPER VALU
.

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 201
Take some t1me to,.day to weedout plans you now know to be
unworkable You 'll be able to
concentrate more on Important
goals

..:::!==

-

@J UST AS I $ UBPECTED
GREGORY KDNIDS IS
TIGHTENIN0 ~E
S CQEWS

Nationwide Insurance Co of Columbus, 0
307 Spring Ave.
Pomeroy

Groceries &amp; General Merchandise
Racine
Ph 949-5772

TH'
6."
SHES

-...c

~

WINNIE

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

WAID CROSS SONS STORE

KINGSBURY HOME SALES
&amp; SERVICE, INC.

•

Middleport, 0 .
Gallipolis, 0

46 C6urt St.

cU. .

11

);,!,
•

rwo LOCATIONS

59 N. Second St

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 191
A famtly problem for the past
weeks wtt! start to fade as those
mvolved begm to see thmgs m
perspective

Winners try to avoid traps

~
36
37 Scandinao;::;:::;::~~::::::!~~~::::::~::~U~~~~~::!:~C.:.:~~..:~~~~EJ~= 38 vian
cap1tal
::~;~::_
All over
bc-+-t---+--t---

@-fr!"u

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
191 A meeting begun In a light
vem niay prove to be very im·
portant later when you and an
old fnend find you share an 1n ~
terest tn somethmg vttal

WIN AT BRIDGE

60TTA .9:/AI&lt; MAH
HEAD FO' A FEW
DAYS-

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE PHARMACY

SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-DK.
21) Before you mvest 10 a new
ptece of eqUipment , try to
make~ do wtth what you have.
Your Yankee mgenu1ty could
save you $$$

. Becl&lt;i4

t;;;-+--t-i-

Bakers of Gay 90's Bread
Middleport ·
Ph. 992-3030

Ph. 949 9591

220 E. Mam

Ph. 992 2550

BETSY ROSS
. BAKERY

ROSEBERRY'S SERVICE STATION
Racine

M iddleport

CANCER (J..,. 21-July 221
What a frtend has to say to you
today may be a boiler poll lo
swallow Later you It agree 11
was for your own good

LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 Be perSistent tn pursumg your goals
today
An event may
overshadow your honzons, but
It wtll cause only a temporary
delay
'

3 Permit

JOlDt

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) It
may be awkward lfut If you
want someth 1ng you loaned
re turned, you'll have to make a
d ~rect demand

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
You and a partner w1ll be faced
w1th a d1ff1cult and cruc1al dec•·
s1on It's up to you to stand up
for what ts rtght Your partner
may w1lt under pressure

.I

me'

.

"\

great scope
Molly-"
(4 wds.)
12 Edison's
4 Wallaba
GASOUNE ALLEY
middle
5 Grew
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
needs ,.. ,.....,,...
name
smaller
Ther' 4' qo, Nevvtoln!
You II encounter a small but
Yesterday's Answer
!-low L.JOU It ke be1n' a
difficu
lt problem Ieday II you
13
Actually
6
Nickname
frtqhten'
hold onto'
Success 1s more l1kety for you
15
Actor,
27 Waste
base
your react•on on past
(2
wds.)
of
1936
d1-rector up on th'
th1s
year rt you put to good use
'--L'
ain't.
Jack 28 Vocal
stmllar e&gt;&lt;pertence. you II
lessons
learned from pamful
14
Be
Situated
7
Perrrusstve
board, Newton'
qotn' -t,'
resolve 1t eas11y
18 Shme
vlbrapast exper 1ence You now
15
Summer,
10
phrase
21 Entreaty
twn
m1nd 1 Caen
know what should be dtscardLIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) In
( 4 wds. )
22 Overeater 29 Salome's bus10ess dealings today, don t
ed
16 Japanese
8 Insculpture 23 11:lectromc
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPR ISE ASSN )
stepfather
liquid
9 W1tty answer
sound
34 Bmd
measure
11 Bishop's
24 Unadorned 35 To what
17 Empowered
headdress
25 - ray
effect
19 Growl
r.-""I'!:'""T:-r.-"
Trep1dat10n
Military mstallation
,--- - - - - - - - - - - , tlungs happens' "
Ending for
:-o:-+-+--1--+--+-~
NORTH
9
He sees he can afford one round
kilo
A K lO 9 3
of trumps Just m case all four are
UL ABNER
23 Melancholy
¥ K Q5 2
gomg to show up m one hand So he
+'K 6 4
cashes h1s ace of trumps and
?----------""'--r-,;=:-------..,...-~~;....,-----------""'!"" 24 Mr. Mm1ver 1:-::-+--t----J~
4 75
everyone follows Then he leads a
NATCHERLY !r- AH'LL NAIL THIS
25 Ooze
WEST
EAST
heart East s ace captures dumHERE~ L.INBEARA.BLES
ON
PQSTCf=FICE' WALL 50 26 Coloration
"" J 7 5
• 2
my's queen and a club comes back
PITCHER, AN' !&lt;IN ELY
..____ A
L /&lt;IN
W.HA-r
'1:1 Furtiveness
¥ J 9 76
" A 10 4
South wms thiS and then starts a
'r'l
~ (;;
'1
30 Belg1an
+
Q
.I
10
•
A
8
7
3
2
successful
cross ruff Heart to the
EXCOOZE ME. AH
.......,
GITTJN'commune
"'J 4 3
4 Q 10 8 6
kmg ruff a hear! cash the second
31 Dilly
SOUTH (0)
high club, ruff a club, ruff dummy 's
A A Q8 6 4
last hea rt , smile and clatm smce
32 Before
" 83
wtth two !ricks to go he st1ll holds
33 - Island,
+9 5
the queen of trumps and a club
~3?)~::::::;~
Ny
• AK 92
while dummy 's two cards are the
J
e&gt;35 - shirt
kmg and 10 of trumps
Ea st West vulnerable

It l&lt;imda

M iddleport, Oh1o

'

DOWN

1 Surmount
2 Exhausted
(2 wds)

11 "Sweet

S -9

GOEGLEIN READY MIX

__

8 DO-Emergency 3,4, 15, Kung Fu 6, 13 , All In The
Family B.IO; Book Beat 33
8 31}-The Jeffersons B. 10, B1ography 33
9 00-Movle "The Bridge at Remagen" 3 3,4, IS; Movie
"Nicholas and Alexandra" 6,13, Mary Tyler Moore
8, 10, Theafer In America 33
•
9 JI).-Bob Newharf B, 10
10 00-Carol Burnett 8,10
11 01}-ABC News 6, News 8, 10,13
II. Is-Movie "Scream of Deafh" 6
II 21)-News 3,4, Don Kirshner's Rock Concerf 15
11 ·31}-Movte "Living If Up" B. Movie "Inside Daisy
Clover" 10; Movie " Jungle Woman" 13
11.51)-Movle " Companions In Nlghfmare " 3, Movie
"Blindfold" 4
I 00-Don Kirshner's Rock Concert 6, Movie "Secrets
of fhe Blue Room" 13.
I 31}-Movle "Lilith" 10
2 00-Movle ''Never on Sunday" 4
2· 31).-ABC News 13
3 31}-Movle"The Candy Man " 10
4 30-Movte "Nevada Smith" 4

I Dl

Sc ri ptural aelec!Pff by The American Bib le Socl11tr

MEIGS TIRE CENTER

·~_...

be backward about tnSIStlng
tlpon the qual &lt;ty you're payong
tor Be ready to haggle

Sunday
Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Frtday Saturday
James
John
Acts II Kings
Deuteronomy Ephes1ans I Kmgs
8.1-3
1.18-21 8·22-24
1.2-6
17·9-12 1 6-9 2.9-12

•

. ·•

~l!ll!OOID'lli~® u..t 41;-d/.1 .-I,-..

In our turbulent soc1ety, tranquility can only be found inside a
person. Such stab11ity and serenity could be your greatest g1ft to
your child .

t, ,J'

'

12 .00-Jefsons 3,4, 15, These Are the Days 6, 13, Harlem
Gtobefrotters 8, 10; Mister Rogers 20
12 31)-Soul Train 3. Ameror•n Bandsfand 6, 13, Go

Some parents today have abdicated their respons1btlity to gu1de
the1r children . They have broken the family bonds too soon Their
children pay for th1s negligence: They age-but they don't mature.
Whims are fickle . and momentary. The Church stnves to replace such elustve goals with something more substantial, something more stable The inner values of character and faith remain
as vital today as ever.

_._ .........

oo-

II ~Star Trek 3,4,15, Hudson Brofhers 8, 10, Zoom

Motherhood is security
but only for awhile And the human
mother IS no more able to perpetuate the bond of total protection
than is her wild counterpart.

, worn

J

Kil LER ClJ ll1~ ~T.
'PL1 Ollttlf TO
-----~ BIN "SSOVIB./

You don't need to know much about polar bears to get themessage here This cub hasn't a worry m the world . But one day he 'll
grow up to know all the frustrat1on s of life in captivity.

___

4, 15, Faf Alber! B, 10.
1 oo-World of the Sea 4, Children's Film Fesflval
B. IO; Big Time Wrestlllng 15, Silent Years 33
' l 31}-Water World 3; Flshln' Hole 4; Soul Train 6;
Other People, Ofher Places 13
2 00-Arfhrlfls Drive 3, Dugouf Dope 4, Baseball
Warm Up 15; To Be Announced 8; Movie 10; Bill
Dance Outdoors Show 13
2 11}-Basebalt 3,4
2 Is-Baseball 15
2 31}-Fisherman 6; Flshln' Hole 8; Harold Ensley ·
Sportsman's F Friend 13, New Music In Brass 33.
J 00-Mtnlature Golf 6, Viewpoint B. Celebrity •
Bowling 13, Enslow Prolect JJ
3 31}-Golf 6,13, To Be Announ&lt;ed B. Movie " The
Bengal Tiger" 10)
4 'OD-Wresfllng 8; Making Th1ngs Grow 33
4 31}-Lef's Grow a Garden 33
4 4s--Pettlcoat Junction 3, To Be Announced 4.
5 DO-Bonanza 3; Wide World of Sports 6, 13, Bonanza
4, Young People's Concert 8, 10.; Outdoors with
Ken Callaway 15, The Romagnolls' Table 33 .5 31}To Be Announced IS; Course of Our Times 33 .
6 00-News 3,4, 10, Lawrence Welk B; God Has The
Answer 15, Catch 33 33 .
6 JI).-NBC News 3,4, 15, Reasoner Reporf 13; News 6;
CBS News 10; Zoom 33
7
Treasure Hunf 3, Lawrence Welk 4, Hee Haw
6,B, $25,000 Pyramid 10, N Newsmaker '75 13;
Lawrence Welk 15, world Press 33
7 31).-Jeopardy 3. Antmat World 10, Fesflval of
Family Classics 13

FRIDAY,MAY9,1975
10 OO-Pol1ce Woman 3,15, Get Chrlshe Love 6,13;
News 20, Paul Nuch1ms 33
10 31}-To Be Announced 4
11 00-News 3,4,6,B, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 33
11 31).-Johnny Carson 3,4,15, Wide World Spec 1at 13,
Sammy &amp; Company 6, Movie " Valley of the Dolls"
8; Movie "Dear Dead Delilah" 10, Janakl 33
I OD-M1dnlght Spec1al 3,4, 15; Wide World Special 6
Movie "The Mystery of fhe Wax Museum" 10:
News 13.
2 31}-Sfar Trek 4
3 JI}-Movle " The Pmk Panther" 4
1
'
11-Movie "War Hunt" 4
SATURDAY, MAY 10, l97S

6 OD-Sunrlse Semesfer 10
' 6 31}-Fun for Everyone 6; TV Classroom B. World
Around Us 10; Almanac 13.
7 OD-Safurday ReportJ, Aware 6, Treehouse Club B.
Treehouse Club 10, Kentu.:ky Afield 13
7 JI).-Jabberwocky 3, Farm Fronf 4, Eddie Saunders
6, AbboH &amp; Costello B, Man From COSI 10. Tennessee Tuxedo 13; Sesame 51 20
B·OD-Addams Fam1ty 3.4, IS; Yogi 's Gang 13, Jab
berwocky 6; M,y Favorite Marflans B; Popeye 10
8 JC)-Wheelle &amp; fhe Chopper Bunch 3,4, 15, Bugs
Bunny 13, Speedracer 6; Speed Buggy B. M1sfer
Rogers 20
9 OD-Emergency Plus 3,4, 15, Hong Kong Phooey 6, 13,
Jeannie B, 10, Sesame St 20
9 31}-Run Joe Run 3,4, 15, Adventures of Gilligan 13
Big Blue Marble 6, Pebbles &amp; Bamm Bamm 8,10
10 00-Land of fhe Lost 3,4, 15, Devlin 6, 13, Scooby
Doo, Where Are You B, 10, Elec Co 20
10·30-Stgmund &amp; the Sea Monsfers 3,4, 15; Lassie 6, 13,
Shazam B. 10: Sesame St 20.
II 00-Ptnk Panfher 3,4, 15, Super Priends 6, 13, Valley
of the D1nosaurs B, 10

AI~'T

1

I,

t

_..

Television log for e,asy viewing

I

CAPTAIN EASY

Coprrlght

..__..,.._,______________________

.

\
8 -The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, May 9,1975

)

I

1

�8- The Daily Sent mel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy 0 Frtda) May 9 1975

'

Clld of Thanks

Notice

'hE: WOULlJ I 1\e to th anlo. .-111
o.ur re lat ves and frum'ds
IU

esoectally the run•o r cmo
s.entor members of Dr ew

Webst er Post J9 for the
Vts ts c ards f lowers and

g ifts

sent

to

For Rent

Dorothy

FlEA MARKET

I.;,E' the t Wh tle sh e was at Mt

Cerme t Hospttal
Veda Da v s and
Jo hn son

/\1m~

apartm en t
adult s onl y tn M dd le po rt
Phon e 992 387-l
3 25 tfc

4 9 li e

I IIE II.: lHM lri't l t.:r

P110 lC

99 7 ?/. I

Help Wanted

'i 9 H e

Thursday, Fnday
and Saturday

SOMEONE to srckle h liS de

(!all 992 52JJ

a pi tur n shed J rm
a p t tu r nrshcd 1 rm (tpt
u I fl es pt'l d
I chr l d cl C
cc pt ed 1\lso tt x1 S rnobrl e
ho m e for sal e Jo h n '-,hee l s
1 11 I&lt;'S so uth o f Mrdd lc por
Rl 7
58 61 p

HOU S E K EEPER
an d
babys fter "Var e d hours
( app r o x J 30 hours per
week M u st have car Phon e

Sunday Open
10AMto6PM

99 2 2832

5 7 61C
L OO K IN G tor a n exc trn g and
prof tabl e
c ar ee r
w th
fle XIble
h ou rs")
L ke
m eetmg the publ c") Have a
ca r' We l come Wa g on want s
you
Representar ve
Pos t on open n Pomeroy
Wr te Oox 729 W c o Dally
Sent ne t
Po meroy
Oh1o
Welcom e Wa gon a n equa
opportun ty emp o yer
5 7 6tc

Not1ce
PUB LIC

SHOOT

CAS H pa d for all makes and
mod e l s of mob rl e homes
Ph on e ar ea cod e 614 42 3

953

4 13 lf c

J UNK autos co mpl ete a nd
de l ivered to ou r yard We
P•ck up a uto bode s and buy
a l l k nds o f scrap metals and
ron
R1der s Sai"Vage St
Rl
124 Rt 4 Pom eroy
Oho Ca tt9 925 468
10 17 t fc

Employment Wanted

Me gs

Muzzl e Load e r s
t zaak REMODELING
P umb ng
Walton Farm
Ches ter
healmg and a ll type s of
Ohro May 13 197 5 Tuesday
g eneral
r e pa r
Work
e"Ven ng 6 p m
gu arante ed 20 years ex
5 8 4t C
p er.en ce
Phon e 99 2 2409
s I tfc
GUN SHOOT Ma y 0 7 p m
at Mile H 11 Road Fa ctory PA IN T ING g ra ss c utfr n g
c hoked gun s on l y
Span
c te an 1ng any odd to bs
sored by the Rae ne F re
Phone 99 2 3597
Department
I 7 3tp
5 8 2tc

SHOOT ING
R 1dg e

LO ST n v em ty of Po meroy
El ement a ry School a g o l d
Conn tr um p et n blac k case
small r ewar d Ph one 99 2
56 2
5 9 6tc

5 8 31p
BLOOMER S

CL ELAND S

Open ng May 5t h F low ers
plants and p rod uce Fa r
pr ces
courteous serv rce
next door to Steamboat In n
J m Cleland Rae ne Oh o
Benef1t tor the Oh o Va ll ey
FellowshiP
58 St c

L O ST Thursd a y n Ru t land
L angsv lie are a ar ge m al e
Walke r hound blac k br o wn
an d wh rt e "Very Shy If seen
call 7J2 31d 1
5 6 6tc
Santa Gertr ud s r ed
he fer Lost near Bowman s
Run on 124 Ca ll 949 3654 or

949 2832

56

lip

72

Ohro

W

Also

4 19 38 t p

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

BCAUTIFUL s e l ec t on of
flowers pots baskets an d
sprays fo r Memor~a l Day
Cl ff s Pla ce N Second Sf
M ddleport
5 4 tfc
- ,_
QUAR, TE R
you ~g'
MA~

horse

at

srr e of rac e and show hor
ses Ran wrthrn IOOth of B
se c ond of AAA t me befor e
he was 2 Off e ra! AA wtth an
89 speed rnde x
hal te r
contorma t 1on
and best
d1Sil"OSt f1on Fee $'100 al t me
of serv ces wrth I ve foal
guarantee Phone 992 7888
...
A 2() 26tc

AU CTION Thursday n1g ht 7
p m
at M ason Auc t on
Horto n St n Mason w Va
Consrgnments welcome

Phone (30 4) 173 547 1

2 2 ttc

---.,----------FOR your
O tl nt Mmk

Phone

BROWN S 992 5113

1 7 tf c

-NO-W----------se llin g Fuller Brush
Produ c ts

phone

s

---- - - - -----YARD SALE
F r1da y and
Sat ur day
Ch u rc h
Harrrsonv lie

992 34W
1 24 tfc

------------AO H A Stall on Serv rce -

D1am o nd Cha n
Go Man
Go D1am on d Cha r g e blood
I nes Extellent d spo s 1t ron
16 2 l1 ve fo al gua r a n teed

SIOO Phone 992 7300

4 27 111p

Rd

5 8 21 C

stud

son of THE OLE
AAAT a lead on g

Cosmettcs

G I GANTIC
yard
sa l e
Saturday an d Sund ay 9 30
a m ttl dark Harr son"V li e
Watch for s rgns Depress on
g lassware a r condrtroner
and mrsc
8 3tc

RUMMAGE SALE sa l t and
pepper sets d shes c loth es
furn lu r e
F r 1day
and
Sunday at Car l Taylor h ome
on 12 4 near Ru tl and Pho ne

992 3497

5 8 2tc
2

2 FAMILY YARD sa l e at
H o l s t ern s re s den c e on
corn e r of Co ll ege Rd and
Brrdg m an Sf
~ yracuse
Thurs d ay and F r day May 8
and9 9a m r fl4 p m
58 2tc

- ------ --

Y A RD
SALE
Th ursday
F r day and Satu rd ay m
Rae ne across f ro m Gulf
Sery ce Watch for srgns

5 8 21c

--- ------

MULTIPLE FA MI L Y Garag e
Sa l e Saturday and Sunday
May 10 a nd 11 from 10 a m
to 6 p m West Shade Road
1 m rte o ff Rl 7 north of
Chester Oh10
4 a 3tc

--------- -

Y A RD Sate
Thursday and
Fr day May 8 and 9 John
St reet
Syrac use
Anttque
bed and cha.r 2 rockers
re cord pla yer Other rems
tao n u m ero u s to menton 10
a m to 'f p m Phone 992

MOWER

Reasonable Rates

Phone 992-7665

Pom eroy

~ 992-3092

Ground
Also ReparrS On All
R tdmg Tractor s
498 Locust St
M dd teport Oh o
5 9 1 mo

'72,90&lt;KD)

For Sale
REFRIGERATOR

$50

Ph on e 991 78 36

5 9 3tc

'104,95&lt;KD)

F I SH B AIT - fr sh bart We
ha"Ve our ba t m
nrg ht
craw ler s
l arge
mea l
worms worms r ed worms
blood bart
lnd an Joe s
Sport and C B Shop 308 Page
St Middleport Phone 992

POMEROY LANDiifARK
9. _Jack w Carsey Mgr

3509

4 9 30tc

-----------

HOME grown tomato plants
mpro"Ved Mex can a nd
He nz 1350
Ac r oss from
Mun 1C pa l Park n Syrac usE&gt;
Tho mas Ha yman
4 28 30tc
TOMA T O
cab ba ge
and
p eppe r plan ts Al so sw eet
potato plant s a littl e lat er n
season J m 1f es no r th wes t of
Chester on We s t Sh ade
Roa d Rete 1 only Dw1ght
Spencer phone 985 38 38
5 9 He
1969 DUO 14 f berglass boat
1970 E "V nru de 40 h p mo to r
1969 Sh ore I ne 1111 1ra11er all
safety and sk equrpm enr
e xc e llen t co nd t ron Sl 200or
b est offer Phone 985 3830

59 21p

TR AV EL tra11 er 11 ft a c
se lf co n ta n ed 1972 Pont ac
Cata lm a low m tleage ltk e
n ew
Gas range
good
cond to n
Ph one 7~2 540 3
9 Jt c

s

6

Craftsma n r d1ng
H P
mow er $150 Call Ch ester

985 3889

I 9 31c

liJ4 MX
Yahama
goo d
he l m et to match br ke S400
Phone 949 d40 1

59 31c
GUN S an d
Am m o
O ur
su m mer stock
s now
arr.vrng
st 11 at l ast
yea r s prrces 22 MAG
r f l es w nchester Mos s
berg and Marl n Ha ndgu n s
44 MAG
T w o 22 1 r

6jf

Real
7

We'l ~ f/1&lt; find the ri&amp;llt !ehicle lor IOU - New or used

3

The Service- Mter the sate. IOU,.

FOR FREE
ESTIMATES
On atummum replacement
wtndows S1drng storm
doors and wmdows ra1hn~ ,
phon e
Charles
Lrsl e,
Syracuse
Ohro
Carl
Jacob
Sales Represen tativ e

THINK ABOUT THAll

----------------------------------------1he Three Point Plan May Make Your
Next Car or Truck Purchase the Best Ever.

V. V. JOHNSON
AND SON, INC.

Condor Sf

Now op en for season Now
a"Varlable - mos t vartettes
of vegetable plants &amp;
flow ers plu s potte d flower~..:

NEIGLER
Building Supp~
Racone, Ohto
We Buold the Best and
Repa1r the Rest
- Cabonels Installed-

Bissal

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR

ChestJr, Ohio

dark red flntsh A real cream puff'

Swe epers to asters .rons
all sm all a p pl a n ces Lawn
mower next to State Hrgh
way Garage o n Route 7
Phone 985 3825
4 16 lfc

Construdion fA

1970 CHEVROLET BELAIR

1968 IMPALA
5795
2 door coupe 8 cylinder automatic A real va lue
1972 CHEVROLET
lf• Ton 8 cylinder 4 speed 9 Fleetslde

4 16 30ic
P

andO.rages

rad10 1

owner

992 3509

Home Building
Room Additions

S1295

4 door V 8 engme standard t ransmi SSIOn

L A W N m ower repa r
JOB
Page St M dd lepor t Phone

Ph. 985-4102

Call Before 7 30 A M
Or Afler6 00 PM
949 3604
57 lmo

'

Bl~liiS

mo.

4 17 I

mclud1ng a1r

full power &amp; whrte genutne leather

mileage Htghly metalliC gold f n sh

low

J Hom e Ma1ntenance
Refr g e rat o n
A
C
Heating Phon e 992 3509
&amp;

USED CARS
75 Olds Cut. Supreme Sedan ............ 14695
Drover s ed car Sl tck er proce new $5545 40 Fully
equopped woth 60 40 seal AM FM radio steel radtal
t1res factory air low mileage

7 4 Olds 88 HT Cpe., pow., atr•• f.~~~! .. !4595
73 Olds Omega Hatchback Cpe, • ~.!f.~. 12895

S.

Cpe, auto.,!'. ~•• ?~. ~~W~ '3095

71 FORD TORIN0.......................1995
2 Dr H T

70
MERCURY, 1 OWNER ............'895
Good condltoon
69 CHEVY 4 DR WAG................ '95
69 FORD TORI NO....................· 1895
2 Dr H T

69 PLYMOUTH .........................'695
Fury Ill 4 Dr H T

69 OLDS DELTA 88 .................. '695
4

Dr H T

1973 Ford V8 Maverick 4 Dr. Sedan

73 Olds Cut.

Aor condtlioned only 14 594 easy moles Fully equ ipped
luxu ry model rea lly sharp

73 Cougar XR7, v-roof, a1rr power........ 13695

68V8 MERC.
2 DR HI ...................'695
auto P S

1973 Chevrolet % Ton

73 Vega Hatchback 4 sp.t radw ••••••••• 12195

65 CHEVY CHEVEU.E.. ...............'595

73 DODGE Pol. Cus. 4 Dr. HT., :~~--~.r•• 12395

4 Dr Small V 8 auto P S

Four wheel drtve pickup 350 V 8 eng me power stee rrn g
ortgtna l red f1n 1sh low mtleage new Ford t rade tn

1974 Ford Pinto 2 Dr.

1973 Chevrolet Camero 2 Dr. Hard Top
350 V 8 full operatmg console wtlh auto lrans A real
Cream Puff
2300 cc engme auto trans luggage rack Very low mo leage
L1ke new

1970Piymouth6
cyl. Duster 2 Dr. Hard Top
Extra n1ce
Ford Four Wheel Drive
QUAun Motor Co. 1966
'I• ton pickup low mtleage 6 cyl
1974 CHEVROLET' IMPALA
$4195
24 FT. OPEN ROAD MOTOR HOME
4 door only 10 400 miles fully equopped oncludtng a or

Vrnes and Begon 1as

5 - 1 - 1m~

New ltstrng

2 SIGNS Pomeroy
OF

2 000 hang1ng baskets of
Petunras Ivy Geran1ums ,

TOP QUALITY AT
LOWEST PRICES
992 5776

Showroom clean Almost everylhmg m equipm ent posstble

1974 Pinto Sta. WalOII

OUR SPECIALTY over

OPEN9a m to6p m
Mond a v 1hru Saturday
W e wilt p ck up &amp; deft"Very
Spectal tow prrces on all
m ec han1 ca t work

POMEROY, OHIO

PH 992 2174

1973 Thunderbir~ 2 Dr. Hard Top

Power steenng powe r brakes One loca l owner shows best
of care

Smith Nelson Motors, Inc.
500 E. MAIN ST

UNDER "1,000 BARGAINSI

75 Chev. tap nee 4 door ... .............. 15595
Sold new for over $6700 Full power atr stereo V roof
1 500 miles New Cadollac trade

1974 Ford FlOO 1h Pickup

r• 7 00 p.m Sat fj 5 00 p.m

"DO BUS/1\ ESS WITH A LEADER "

In Syracuse

Pom eroy 0 .

PROVIDED WITHIN REASON

Very low mtleage One local owner auto t ra ns lo ~e new

See Sm1Nn Ar1 Aruries, Ceward Cahert or Bil Nelson

Hubbard's
Greenhouse

PHONE 992 2823

llUfMI hands.

I

Free Eshmates
Phone 949 5961
Emergency 949 2211
or 992 5700
4 2 75

Wolfe &amp; Ward
Garage

11

111 m• your ur )1111 ~ And Mare!

A1r condtfton1ng plum
bing
heattng, rootrng
spout1ng general sheet
metal work

Grand Opening

YOUR PRICE
SALE ENDS MAY 31ST

• Senict manapment witb ower ZO ,.,. UIJIIltflct Three
Mt.A.S.E. Clttified MechaniCS. Catnplete Radiatll! Senict hum smoltest
htlllf COli Ill latpst dou&lt; core The newesl11 Sun Ilia~ Equipll!lll

Dulenh1p Open Mondly Fn

busoness room to let
100 ACRES M or L - Hunttng
land deer grouse etc A real
thtekel for a weekend or
summer collage All mmerals
and lhe last of the wtld $225 00

22"-3'12 HP
Self Propelled

111

In apprectatton of the fact that you have made us
No 1 dealer m Me1gs County for almost every
month of the past year, we are offermg 35 new
and 26 used cars and trucks at

THINK ABOUT THAll

HElL
Racine Plumbing
&amp; Heating

mo

4 10 I

REWARD!!

We'l he~, you w~h IU1cinc and msurance Wo'lt maile IOU a l UfMI olhr
on a fw •• friend~ mann11

Phone 992 5367 or 991 3161

Syracuse Oh1o

Ph 992 3993

The Transaction- we friend~ .,d helpful

777 Pearl Street

FREE ESTIMATES
Blown
lnsulahon Serv1ces
Blown onto Walls &amp; Allies·
STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING SOFFITT
GUTTERS AWNINGS
LARRY LAVENDER

Sales &amp; Serv1ce

2.

VALUE
RATED

'
'
'

THINK ABOUT THAll

l'lltddleport Ohoo

4 10 1 m~

and models o1 Buicts,

-lcll M 11M lrlditilltlally higll resale rat....

B-K EXCAVATING
COMPANY

FREE ESTIMATES

WILKINSON
SMALL ENCiiiN~

and v tew of the nver wtth

WE HAVE MANY P
WANTING SMALL
WITH LARGE HO,fiAES.
992 3325 RIGHT,. ..,. T.

20" Jlh HP

Sleeps 6, fully self co ntatned w1th dual atr
condtftontng
RENT THIS BEAUTIFUL MOTOR
HOME BY THE DAY OR WEEK
SEE: FRED BLAETTNAR, DARRELL DODRILL

$2250

Cpe., power, a1r •• '2895

72
FORD LTD COUNTRY SOUIRE'1895
4 Dr Wagon

Chev. Imp. Cust. Coupe, power •••••• • 12295
stereo
72 Butc k El ec. 3 Dr., HT, Pow aor......
. .. 13195

71
FORD MAVERICK ................ 11595
6 cyl auto 4 dr

73 Olds Cut. Sup.

HT

72

72 Olds 98 HT Sed. v-roof, power, atr... 12895
72 Olds 98 HT Sed., Hoof, atr ........... 13295

71 PONTIAC CATALINA ............. 11295

72

Olds Toronado Cpe. v-roof, •••••••••••• 13095

4 Dr H T, a or

72
72

Chev. Imp. Cpe, V8 auto., ps ••• ••••• •12195
Pontiac

Cat. HT

Cper power, air...... 12695

70 Olds 98 Hoi., Sed., power, air •••••••11495
69 Ford Gal. 500 4 Door .............. . ... '895
69 Corvatr 2 door, standard ............... 1395
69 Ford LTD

HT,

Cpe, V-roof, a1r ...........'995

69 Butck LeSabre 4 dr, v-roof, a1r....... .. 1795
sed pow air
u:
69 Pont1ac Bo nnevt IIe HT, ................. ·;J 95
68 Cad1llac Cpe. DeVille .... ~:: ••~·~.......11395

4 16 301c
66 Pont1ac Cat. 4 Dr., V8, auto.

551 mo

·-------------------------

(as ISJ.~. '295

2 Dr H

r

71 MERCURY MONTERrt ........ 11595
73 CHEVY CHEVEu.E ........... ·· ·• •'2295
V 8 auto P S P B fad atr 2 dr

73 PINTO 4 CYL AUTO............. 11895
73 PONTIAC LeMANS .............. 12995
2

Dr Sports Coupe, extra ntce

73 FORD MAVERICK 4 DR ........11995
Small VB auto P S

72 PINTO 4 CYL 4 SPD ........... 11495
Racong stnpes mag wheels

72 PINTO 4 CYL AUTO............ 11495
TRUCKS

Phone 992 2181

Estate For Sale

2 s l ory
hou se
RM
a lum nu m
s rd rng
w lh
Shut t ers
Comp l et el y
remodeled w l h wa ll 1o w all
c arpet ng
u psta rr s a n d
do wn
Worksho p
and
ga r age See by appt on ';'
ph one 949 30 25
5 4 6tc

3 BE D ROOM home on 4 ac r es
of ground full basemen t
fuel 01
f ur n a ce
a c
breez eway a nd larg e garag e
n the co unlry bu t c lose to
town On hard t op road 2
trader setups rn clude d Ca ll
992 7649 aft er 4 p m or 991
25 19 any t me for a p
po ntment
4 30 26t c

2 OR 3 bedroo m h ome wrrh
bath
full
basement
alumrnum std ng and slor m
w rn dows .;~nd door s Fenced
y ard for ced a r hea t Phone

992 3702

I

4 61p

LOT near Ra e ~e Phone 8.4 3
2253 afte r 5 p m
5 4 71c
SERVIC E statron and garage
Rutland
w II frn ance or
lea se Ca ll 7d2 5052
4 9

261C

1 72 ACRES of l and and loc.ust
posts Phone 742 3656

4 20 261p

------------ 1
HOU SE NEAR C HE ST ER

OH IO L sha p ed br t k 3
bedrm
ranch st y l e r ur al
home
15
acres
full
basement
garage
t rep lace Ca ll 985 394 3

-------

Strout Realty

~--B"ncft Manag.!':.. __

I

Ph 992 217 4"

car.port and n tce garden

Not ce on F1hng of Inv entory
1639
And Apprarsement
The State of Ohro
Me1gs
5 7 3tc
County
Court of Common
Pleas Probale Dt"V s10n
TWO F am ly Yard Sale
AMMO 22 Mag H P $3 a
I 7 l ie
C o thrng tur n ture bottl es
To th e A dmm str atr x of the
box S27 50 p er 500 r ound
and m any ot h er
t em s
estate to suc h of the fo ll ow ng
ca rton
Remtngton H g h
Thursday and Fr rday 9 30
a s are r esi den ts of the State of
L ARGE lots r ura l wa t er
Vol 22 H P S2 10 per 100 pk 2 a"Varlabte
to 6 p m Sa t 9 30 to 4 p m
Ohro "V z
t he sur 11 "V ng
Har d road
3
Get th em whrte th ey l ast
405 4th St
Rae ne Phone
spou se the n e.~~:t of k n th e
m les fr o m by pass on
Phone 992 5177 V llag e G ~J n
949 JJ71
benef1 car es unde r th e w II
Lead ng Cr eek Road Phon e
Shoppe 266 M rll St
M d
an d to th e attorn ey or at
5 7 3tp
7 42 3 08
dleport
Oh
ro
torneys represent ng any of
5 9 30 t c
s 9 7t c
the afor emen t oned pe r sons
No 21484 Paul Raymond YARD SALE Fr1 da y and
Monday at T homas Manuel
1 B E D ROOM trarler an d lot n
deceased
A lb any
Oh o
1972 ST ARCRA F T Camper 20
Rt 2 Rac1ne tur n t ure and
town Ph one 99 2 397 5 or 99 2
Scr pro Townshrp
ft
l
ong
Phone
(30.4
)
882
c lot h ng Phon e 247 2670
21 71
You are he r eby not1fred that
21.42
5 8 31c
the
In ventory
and
Ap
4 9 tf c
5 8 3tc
- ...
pra semen t of the est ale of th e
aforementroned
d eceased YARD Sale May 9 10 and 11
1970 CHEVY NOVA 350 4
lat e of sa rd Count y was fled
at the home of Es ther Mays
spee d .46 ooo mt les $1400
1n t h s Court Sa1d ln "Ven tory
Coun ty Rd 25 J unct on of
Also 1968 fo ld down camper
and Appra semen! wrll be for
Rt 7 and 248 at Chest er
sleeps 8 ssso Phone 991
hearmg Defore thi S Co urt
7378
Sponsored by Young W "Ves
the 23 r d day of May 1975 at
Club of Chester and Tupp ers
4 APT COMPLEX - On
5 8 41p
10 00 o c lock A M
Pia ns
3
3 a ground apt air
Any person desiring to t te
5 6 5tc CO NTEMPOR ARY
condtlooned &amp; furnosh ed
Mod~n
e)(cep t1on s th ereto must fde
........_-- ~--wei nut stereo am fm rad o
beaultful country selling
th em at l east f i"Ve days pr ror to
4 speaker sou nd system 4
the date set for hear ng
speed ai.Jtomat1c c hang er
G1ven Under my hand an d For Rent
POMEROY ~ 3 or 4 BR
Balance S103 29
Use our
sea~ of sa d co u rt th1 s 7th d a y TRAILER spac e for rent tn
home
full base on large
bud
get
terms
Call
992
3965
of May 1975
M dd lepor t
Ca ll 992 2625
c tty lot overlooktng rrver
S
7
tfc
Man n ng 0 We b st er Jud ge
4 27 tfc
Good buy at $18 500 00
By Ann B Watson
2SO
7 F T locust posts Call
Oepul y Cl er k MOB I LE HOME furnrs hed
742 3063
C5J 9 16 2tc
CHESHIRE - older home
a c p atro tn Racrne Phone
5 7 3tc
A lbert H1ll 9.49 2261
on ntce lot has hookup for
s 8 6tc
1974 CJ 5 Renegade Jeep
mobile home sa 000 00
Phone 949 2981
NOTICE
ON FLOOR PLAN 4 rm s and
Not rce s hereby Qtven that
5 7 6tc
POMEROY - Business
ba th 10 Albany r ef er enc e
the unders rgn ed ntends to
bldg
wtlh 6 room apt
Phone
Gal
lipoli
s
446
173.4
make appl1cat on to th e
5 8 3tc VAR IETY OF cabbag e
upstairs Bldg now leased
Probat e Court of M e gs
tomato an d pepp er plants
as busoness Good buy at
County Oh !O for an order to
Also ca uliflower brocco11
$1850000
change her name to K1mberly TRA ILER spa ce 1 mile from
bru
sse
l
sprouts
egg
plants
Pomeroy
Phone 991 SB58
Carol Ball
Beddm g plant s - pans es
5 2 lfc
Sad a~plrcatron wrll be b y
petunia mar gold sa lv1a
IF YOU QUALIFY - for
petit on to be fried n sard
phlo;~~; portulaca .!gertum
FHA loan we have some
Probate Court on or afl er th e 2 BEDROOM mobile home
alyffum lrnpat1en.s coleus
a c '" Rac1ne area Phone
FHA approved hom es for
1-ith dav of June 1975
Var1ety of ge ran iums also
992 5858
sale
Dated thr s. 7th day of May
pots
of
petun
as
and
mum
s
5 2 lfc
1975
Hangmg
baskets
K rmbl.!'rfy Carol Stewart
petunias ''~~Y gert~n1um
307 Sprmg Avenye
a m1nor S years of ag e SMALL cottage surta b le for
tobella
ferns
wt~nder1ng
tw o men
60x 12 mo b1le
By I rend• lall, her mother
Pomeroy
992 2298
1ews porch boxes
large
h ome on
Roush Lane
and next tncnd
hearty red azt~lea~ Clela nd
Chesh ire Phone 1304) 773
The Stolo of Oh1o Me1gs 5873
Greenhouse
Ra c rn e
CONTACT
County
Gerald ne Clela nd
LOIS Pauley
l 4 ~1; (5) 9 He
A 13 tfc

ion

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

NEW LISTING - 3 bedroom
home bath automaltc heat
pane long carpeltng porch

TURF TRIM

1968 F I REB l RD tor $700 Ca ll
99 2 25 37 a fter 5 p m
5 7 12tc

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

Unro n Athens
10b prrnt1ng

NEW LISTING - Business
loca lton wolh 2 bedroo m
apartment Modern ktlchen

.''

Bit lllllti1J comlorbble, dependoblt,

• P1111tlacs 0pe1s and GMt's.

Dozer Backhoe Trucks
Limestone &amp; Fill Drrt
Commercial Residential
ConstructiOn &amp; Remodel

Pleasant R1dge
Pomeroy, Oh1o

Nathan B i ggs
Radrator Spec1ahst

1

The Product-we !ell a11 -

Water
E l ec trlc
Gat
Sewer L1nes
Installed
Work guaranteed

0. J. LAUDERMILT
ROOFING

From th e larges t Tru ck or
Bu lldozer Rad1ator to th e
sm all est Heater Co r e

TW O N E W 3 bedroom hom es
w rt h 1 car ga rag e carp et ed
FH A or ba nk flnan c rng
Ph one 712 36 15 or see M ilo
Hu t ch n son R utland
S 8 tf c

per acre

5 8 3tp

Oh o Call 99 2 7760

TERSHOP PLU 5

EXPERIENCI:D
6.·... '
Radiata '
I
Service ~'

BRI C K HOU SE on Second St
Pomer o y rn dow n tow n
Surf ab l e lo r 1 v ng qu arter s
up s t a r s sma ll b US in ess
down Off 1ce or home W th n
walkrnq d sta n ce of all
s tores Ca ll 991 3&lt;l 89
5 8 3tc

The Da1ly Sentmel
BE D RM
h ous e at 20 1
Po me roy
M ulber ry Ave
NEED A new hom e bur tt on
F urn she d
a c
gas fur
Pomeroy , Oh1o
your loP Con tac t M il o B
nace May be seen Satur
H u tch so n
Ru tl and Oh10
da y M a y 10 from 2 noon trll
Phon e 742 361 5
I p m
HOMEGR O WN
t omato
5 Btfc
pi a 1 s $30 p er t hou san d or
5 6 Jtc
se ll sepa r at e Ha rr y Hrll
l c tM I Phon e 247 21 42
3 1\ND 1 ROOM !urn shed an d
5 e 3tc
ap art n en ts
unl ur n Shed
Phone q91 5-l J J
I 12 tf c CLO SE OUT on new Z rg Zag
sew ng
mach nes
F or
P R IV A T E nee tng roo m tor
sew ng stretch fabr1cs
any orQanr zat ron phon e 992
buttonho les fa nc y des rgns
J97'i
Pa n t
Sl ightly
etc
b l em shed
Chotce
of
3 1 tfc
car r y ng case or sew ng
APT Ik e n ew J r oom s w h
stan d S49 80 cas h or ter m s
NEW LISTING - 60x12
ava table
Phone 992 7755
arge bath ta bletop ran ge
larg e c los et Ea stMan St
12 18 ff c Skyltne mobole hom e wtlh 3
bedrooms modern kttche~
Pa n eroy See o app r ec al e
-Phone G a llrpo t s dur ng day
MA,KE MOTHER hap~y thiS With cook and bake umls
l-l 6 9699 ev en ng s J-1 6 9539
year wrth a llvrng room su t e Refrogeralor and large lot
4 10 ft c
near town
fr om J acks Fur n rture
Many st y l es and colors to FISHING CABIN - AI Forked
ch oose from A ll suites sale Run
3 rooms wa t er and
Pets For Sale
prrced startrng as low as electroc avatlable
$2900 00
Sl 39 00 and up Al so a n ce
TWO
brow n
Dach s hund
selec t on of sw vel ro c ker s POMEROY - Near stores 3
bath dmong
PUPPie s
I mal e and 1
at S89 95 J acks F urn ture &amp; bedr ooms
fema l e S30 each Phone 992
concrete porch base ment gas
Upholstery Supply 236 E
5783
FA furnace storm doors and
Marn
Pomeroy
Oh 1o
Ph one 992 3903
5 8 3tc
Windows 517 500 oo NOW
5 1 IOtc $1250000

1968 VW Good condtt ron Ca ll
985 3901 after 4 30 p m

O L D t urnrture
ce boxes
brass be d s or comp lete
households
Wr te M
D
MIte r
Rt 4 Pomer o y

10 7 7.4
L..-,, - - - -- - ----JW A NTED
O ld
upr.ght
MOTOCRO SS Ra c es th s
p anos
any
cond to n
Sunday 1 P m Br.mstone
Payrng S10 each F irst floor
Raceway
Coo l v li e
1n
only
wr te
and
g ve
format on Pho,e 667 3670
d~rect ons to w tte n P ano
58 3t c
Co
Box 188 Sar d s Oh ro
d39d6
QU I CK r'RI NT Lly marl from
5 8 61p
camera ready copy Qne
page SS 55 f1rst 100 $1 15
eac h addrt ona l 100 Send
c opy
check
to
LET
Yard Sale

COU NTR Y Mo b lc
H on e
Pnr k R 13 t: n m l cs no r th
of Pomeroy La rg e lot s w th
c onc r ete pat os s dc w al k s
runn er s and of f s tr c{' t
p:-rrk nq P one ~9 " 7 79
1? 31 lf c

Auto Sales

Wanted To Buy

1239

I RO OM HOU SE w rth bat h 3
acre s n coun tr y on hardtop
road Co Rd 3 Ph one 74 2
3266

Lar ge
CORNER
( 733
ftcre} on Well traveled St
Rt 1 eas tt y accesstble to
larg e Me1gs Athens W va
market s wrth ex pan s1on
po§srb te toward the '"
creasi ng campmg toun sm
needs m Eastern M c tg s
Southern Athens Counr. es
Re ptr es to co Bo x 729 K

FORD

.

I===B=u=s=i=-=
n=e=s=
s=S=e=r;;:v=ic=e==s====i'

31p

I 6

DAN THOMPSON

That MakeS Car Buying Easier and Belter

5 8 3tp

STRAW B ERRY plants
Rt
Mabile Homes For Sale
33 8 n ear Rac rn e Lock s
Cha ri e F oster
SELL you r mob le ho me for
A 29 12tc
cash 15 ho m es wanted 1958
thru 1972 mod els
Phone
F LOWER S fo r Mothers Day
(614) 4d6 1415 Galltpoll s
Smalley s
G rft
Shop
3 9 781f
Chester Oh o Phon e 985
3537
.4 29 l Ot c

- - - -- -- - - -- - - -- - - - , LO ST
1- - , - - --- -

Campbell s Swap 'n Shop
yard sale &amp; flea market 2
blocks from Dairy Queen,
Jericho Rd , Pt. PI, W Va
Sat. &amp; Sun , Aprlll2 &amp; 13 10
a m - 6 p m Every weekend
through Oct: For mf call675-

Es tabl Sh t: d lu cralr"V e used
f urn lure
bu s m css
&amp;
prop erty w t h ex ce ll en t
fu r l~ er
grow th p ot ent a t
for
mmed a re sa te &amp;
po ss e s 1on du e to h ea lth
.r ea sons

I '\'\
I ( l
t.:.
1J rth
2
bcrtroo r s o as hea t w th
lo t 55 0 Sou t h Thr r d Av enu e
M ddl epo rt Phone 99 2 5078

--------

Lost

MATCH Wrndy
Gun
C lub
Harrrson"V le Sunday M a y
11 1 p m F a ctor y choked
guns onl y

~

'I J( M

OPEN AT NOON

58 3tc

The Three Point Plan

Real Estate for Sale

For Sale

I U RNI SHED

AI
CROSSROADS
Sl Rt 124

.!-The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 _,_ Fnday, May 9, 1975

For Fast Results Use Sentinel Classifieds

~ MALL breed pupp C'S to Q tV('
to 9ood ho me Phon e 99 2
\ 62'9

•

J

608 E
MAIN
POMEROY 0
A CB RADIO OPER
ATOR S DREAM - Htgh
on a hi ll and very pr vale 2
n ce BR bath ut llty R
Nat gas furna ce porches
garage Ph acres JUST
$13 000
A CHARMING NEW
HOUSE that needs only
your

presence

to

be

a

home 2 BR bath ntee
k1 tc hen Ref &amp; Range
carpeled fu ll basemen t
wtlh carpeted Rec R
carport &amp; slorage R 1
acre and close on $22 700
2'12 ACRES - All on lawn
now
garden
space
buildmg sties faces on Rt
7 - Home has new steel
std tng 2 BR bath dtnmg
R par t basement own
well and ctly water A
STEAL AT JUST $10 500
135 ACRES ON RT 681 close to recreation
hunhng m1nerals

good

ct1y

water available ALL FOR
LESS THAN $125 PER
ACRE
BE INDEPENDENT - A
RENT BEATER - Needs
some repa or 1 large BR
bath par t basement. large
lot S4 non
GOOD USED HOMES ARE
BEING TAKEN
UP
RAPIDLY CALL TODAY
992-2259
Bus1ness Serv1ces
CA RPE T tnstallatron
$1 25
per ya rd
Ca I R c hard
West Phone 84 3 1667
5 4 26 tc
~~T I C TANKS CLE ANED
R ea sonabl e R AT E S Phon e
146 4 78 2 G a ll pol s Jo hn
R usse lt own er
4 9 t fc

D &amp; D TR EE Trrmm ng 1rJ
yea r s expenen c e I nsur ed
free es t rmates Call 992 3057
Coo l v ill e
Phone ( 1) 667

3041

4 30 lfc

------LANES

GARAGE

Sta le

Route 338
Apple Grove
Oh o A ll k mds of mec han1c
work Phone 247 2257

5 8 12tp

Merle Norman
Cosmetics

lOlA'S
BEAUTY SAlON
John St , Next To
Grade Schoo I
992-2549 Syracuse , 0

GLEN R.
Bissell
tREE ESTIMATES
PH. 949-5184

S EW IN G

MACHINE

Re pa rs servrce Nil makes
99 1 2284 T he F abr c Shop
Pome r oy A ut ho r. :led S1nger
Sal es a nd Serv 1ce
we
sh a rp en Sc sso r s
3 29 fc
DO ZER work la nd clea r ng
by th e ac r e
h ou rly or
contra c t
Fa r m
ponds
r oads etc L arge dozer a nd
op er a tor w rth over 20 y ear s
ex p e r en ce
Pu l l n s Ex
cav al n g
Pomeroy
Oh o
Phon e 992 2478
12 19 lf c
SEPTIC T AN KS c leane d
Modern Sa n Ia !ron 992 3954
or 992 734 9
9 18 tfc
E X CAV A T IN G do ze r loader
and backhoe work sep tr c
t an k s
nsta ll e d
dump
tru c ks and lo boys for h re
w rtl ha ul fill d~rt to p sorl
l 1m estone and gravel Call
Bob or Roge r Jeffers d ay
ph one 992 7089 n ght phone
99 2 3515 or 992 5232
1 II tfc
SEPT I C tanks a nd leach lrnes
nstalled A lso f eld drarn
t l es A ll work g uara n teed
L ewr s E x cava tmg
Rt
1
Rutlan d Oh10 Ph one 7d2

37 12

4 24 26tc
SH A LLOW Wells dug spnngs
developed and CIS t e r ns
rn sta l) ed to ap pro x mate ly
18ft Lew 1s Exca"Val ng Rt
I Rutland Phon e 7.41 3742
4 2d 26tc
McDANIEL
C u st om
But
che nn g State and F"e d era l
In spec ted
s laughter
c ut
an d wrap Pho ne (304) 882

54 I m o

EX C A VA riN G
Dozer
Back ho e d tcher water
1 nes toot ers drarns roads
and brush c l ea n ng No tob
too small no w eath er too
bad
Phone C har l es R
Halfr el d
Rt
1 Rutland
Oh o Ph on e 741 6092

5 2 52tp

READY MIX

CO NC ~ETE

del1vered r1ght t o
prote c t F a st and easy
es ttm ates Phon e 991
Goegte rn Ready M1x
M ddleport Oh o
6

your
F r ee
3284
Co

30 tfc

Ma
foil

1
re~ id ence of the late
Leah B Schaefer Si tua ted at
230 L mcol n H rll Pom ero y

Handmade
glassware
per so nally sel ected by the
Kuhls '" Oklahoma for
bea uty &amp; craftsmanshrp
Swans
Baskets
Swan
Boat s Trumpet Vases from Max r to Mml
n
radrantly c le ar: colors of
orange amber yellow
green coba lt b l ue purple
&amp;
se"Veral un que com
b nation s $3 98 ea ( M•x•
Vases SS 98 M1n1 swans tn
mrtk glass $1 49)
A l so several one of a kmd
handbl own
decorator
prec es

Ohro Th rs resrd ence s qn e of
th e tmest hom es n Me rgs
County
2
The s tor e burld ng
sr t uated on West Ma n Street
n the V t tl~ge of Pom eroy
Ohro formerly known as th e
Red Anc hor
Th is pr operty
extends fro m Main Stree t to
Second Str eet n the VIl lag e of
Pomeroy and •ncl udes a store
bulld•no tro n ttng on Court

St reet

n

Cobalt elephant dk brown

bull I eltoro J f sh m blue

or r ed yellow S14 95

ea

T he nght s reserved to
re tec t any and all b1dS
For mformatlo n concerntng
the
property
and
ap
po•ntm ents for vrewrng the
property confe ct Bernard F
Fu l tz
Pomeroy
Oh o
Telephone 992 21e6

Wal l ace Bradford
Nancy Mol t
Joan Stoneburner
Co E xecu tors of the

COOKWARE - heavy duty

Weare"Ver alum num 1 qt
sauce pan S2 95 Sk i llets

14

50

!with Teflon It 14 95)

E~tate

In sets

LET

us DO fTI

I

Carpeting
501 NYLON
99 Square

4

Yard

RUBBER BACK
W e have hundr eds of
carpet values Yo ur tob ca n
be compl e ted m 1 to 2
week s
No long wa1tmg
per 1od Our nstall er ha s 28
years e&gt;&lt;per ence
Expert
mstal l.atJ.On You J1 l 1ke
what you get

CALL742 4211
TALK TO WENDELL
GRATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

RUTLAND
FURNITURE
742 4211

Rutland

(4127 30(5)2 4 7 9 11 14 16
9tc

pc 524 50 ( Sets rn harvest
gold
avocado or shiny
f1nrsh not all sets
ava1lable tn all colors)
GIFTWARE from MeXICO
39
t all
Grape G1rl '
statues n white With an
trque or g old fln1s h - an
elegant add1t on to a for
mal 111 ng ro om S12,
d ec orattv e
vases
&amp;
strawberry po ts
S6 up
han g mg flower pots S4

Specoal
Once In

One Ot A Kind
A Llletome Gllh

Mahogany cased grand
fath e r \s c loc;:k w rth quarter
hour Westmrns ter Chtmes
a beaut ful bargain UOO

..1..!

~

..."•,
......
.;

...'",'

'I·

.......
...,
.
:;,
...•"••'
.....
•••

,,
"

90 1nches of elegant French
Provrnttal sofa ex
cellently crafted fru1twood
tr1m upholstered 1n rich &amp;
heavy off white brocade
Not an ant1que but a

TREASURE for any Mom

With a fermat hvtng room &amp;
chr l dren who ve passed the
"strcky finger stage
UOO

AI Caution Light Rt 7 '
Tuppers Plains Ohio
Phone 667 lUI
Open Everyday 9 5
E)(cept Man &amp; Tues

~

I

Sunday
PH. 992-7777
POMEROY

~

FARM MACHINERY, 40 HEAD HEREFORD CAT
TLE &amp; ANTIQUE FURNITURE
BMILES SOUTH EAST OF ATHENS, OHIO
Take Sl Rl 33 south out of Athens 7 miles to Shade
Turn on Co Rd 44east at Swartz Grocery Store to first
crossroad - turn lett on Co Rd 42 then left on Co Rd
25 to the Jarvos Farms Due to Ill health and retiring
will sell complete line of farm machinery, saw mill
equipment 40 head Hereford cattle, and antique
furniture
SEE THIS PAPER THURS, MAY 15 FOR COM.
PLETE LISTING
o
,
Clip th is ad for lime and dl•ectlons Sale held oul!lde
regardless of weather House w 22 A for sale by owner
Lunch on premises Positive ID Terms cash day of
sale Not responsible for accidents
OWN ER-MR LEO JARVIS, PHONE 5f3 6135
AUCTIONEER- BILL JANES

NOW
OPEN ,

.
.,••
..
:t
...
,,,,

SUNDAY MAY1hJ11 lOAM

MOBILE tllME
SALES. INC.

1 · 6 pm

......
..

PUBLIC AUCTION

LARRY'S

•••
•••
ro
~·

4 27 12tp

of

Leah 8 Sc haefer

4 pc 16 95 7 pc 119 9S 1
pc 121 95 9 pc $23 95 10

3224

(

Th e foll owmg do cu m ents
we re rece ved or prepared by
The Oh10
Environmental
Protec tron Agency durmg th e
prevtous
week
Anyone
aggrieved or adversely at
fected by ssuance o r r enewal
of any per m t(sl ! cense(s}
or var ance(s) may request an
ad tudrcat1on
hear ng
by
wr rtten request pursuant to
Oh o R e"V sed Code Sec tio n
3745 07 Wlfhm thirty (30) d a y s
of th e Dtr ec tor s porposed
actro n to tssue or deny such
do c uments That statute does
not pro"V d e for heartng
requests to The OEPA on
appl cattons
revocat ons
mod h c at lo n s complamts
vertfred comp larnt s
ce r
t1f lcat ons leases orders or
f1na1 acttons
Wtth n 30 days of publicatiOn

.~::

:.:#

See Our
Special Sale
Ad In Sunday's
Newspaper

"

Racine Social Events

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

You'll L1ke Our Quality Way
dmner guests Sunday of Mr
and Mrs Donald Wolfe and
of Do mg Busmess"
attended the 25th weddmg
992 5342
GMC FINANCING
Pomeroy
anmversary honormg Mr and
Open Evenmgs Unhl6 oo- T1IS p m Sat
Mrs Harold Sargent
l.ciOCIOIIOitOoOOOOOOOOOOOO_ _ _ _ _ _ooooooill
Mr and Mrs Wtlham
Hayman and Mrs Grella Ye Shall Be Wttnesses Unto
Simpson spen I Sunday wt th Me' Scnpture, Acts 11-lland
Mr and Mrs Mtke Hayman group smgmg "I ll Go Where
You Want Me To Go '
25
and farmly at Dunktrk
Several from Racme
Mrs Isabel Stmpson spent a In the busmess sesston,
Mr Guy Bolm rece1ved
Chapter OE S attended week m Phoemx Artz regtstralton for the Women's word that hts brother AnFnendsh1p mgh t at Mason v1s1tt ng Mr and Mrs Kelly Conference m Colwnbus June derson of Akron passed away
of this no t ce any person may Chapter OES mas on W Va
9-1().11 was taken care of and Mr Bohn was unable to attend
Weller and daughter
also
{ 1J subm tf wntt en
comme nts relat ng to actions Wednesday evenutg Apnl 23
John Bentz spent the a newsletter from Kod1ac funeral servtees due to ill
proposed act1ons complamts
Mr
and
Mrs
Salon
Butcher
weekend wtth Mr and Mrs E Bapltst Mtsston was read by health Mr Anderson Bolm
or "Venfred complamts
(2 1
request a publ c mee ttnQ of Spencer, W Va
were A Wmgett He returned to the Mrs Nondus Hendncks It was 92
regarding proposed a c ttons
home of hts son m law and was reported a package had
Mr and Mrs Robert Allure
and or (3 ) reque st not rce of
further
acti ons
on
daughter, Mr and Mrs been sent to Bacone College and Ray VISited Terry Whaley
proceedmg s
PUBLIC NOTICE
Russell Rhoades at Manetta and a letter from Dayton at Galhpohs on Frtday
Reques ts for heanngs on
B
d
s
w
II
b
e
re
ce
r"V
ed
a
t
th
e
fmal actions to rssue deny of f1c e of Bernard V Fult z
Todd Taylor of PI Pleasant Chnsllan Center was read by evemng
modrfy
revoke or renew A ttor ney Po m er oy N at onal
was a weekend guest of hts Mrs Edna Pickens
Mrs Ava Gtlkey would like
permrts li ce nses or var iances Bank Pomeroy Oh1 0 u n trl
Ded~ealton of the Love G1ft to thank the Semor Citizens for
that are not preced ed by Saturday May 10
grandparents Mr and Mrs
1975 at
proposed act rons and so
offenngs of Ruth and Esther the lovely lap blanket they
10 00 0 Clock AM for the sa l e Frank Cleland
rdent1f1ed n th s notrce should
of the Lula Whea ton Dav1 s
be sent to The En"Vrronm ental prop e rty Si tua t ed tn t h e
Mr and Mrs Harold While Ctrcles, $115, was 10 charge of presented her
Board of Revtew Su te 505 33 un ncorporated V rltage of
Her
of
Langsville were SUllday Nondus Hendncks
We are sorry to learn that
North H rgh Street Columbus Portland rn Lebano n Town
scnpture
was
Matt
28
19
20
Oh 10 43215
guests
of
Mrs
Grace
Knder
Clarence
Jordan IS m the
ship Me gs County Dh10 Th e
All other requests for ad sale of the prop ert y s subt ec t
and a medttallon, "What IS the mtenstve care ward at Holzer
Mr
Crtlt
Bradford
of
tUdrcat1on heanngs and other to the appro 11a t of the Court
Worthmgton spen t the Church supposed to do" The Hospttal wtth a heart attack
co mmunrc atrons
concernrng The rr g ht IS res er ved to retect
publ •c
hear nos
publ rc any or all b1ds
weekend w1th Mr and Mrs A mstallalton of offtcers
Recent vtsttors of Ava
meet rngs
ad I ud real ron
followed wtth Barbara Gheen G1lkey were Rosalie Sayre,
hear1ngs compta1nts of any
C
Bradford
Ed w m Mcleod
k nd and regulations should
Mr and Mrs Dale McGraw and Olhe Mae Cozart m May Mason, Jane Gtlkey, Guy
Guard1an of
be addressed to The Legal
Lui a Wh eat on D a11 s
Records Secllon Ohio EPA
have returned home from charge usmg as the toptc, Bolm, Brenda Btshop and Mr
P 0 Bo • 1049 Columbus (5J 2 4 5 6 7 8 9 7tc
Flortda after spendmg the The Seed- ASecret Force " and Mrs Chnton Gtlkey
Oh•o 4~216 (61 4) 466 6037
For closmg all read together
Unless oth erwrse stated Ill
wmter
Mr and Mrs Robert Alkire
partrcllfar nohces all other
and
prayer
by
Mrs
Btksacson
Mrs
Hilda
Hart
spent
the
vtslted
his aunt Mrs Chas
ORDINANCE NO
communrcat1ons
rncludrng
followed
by
the
hymn,
"Lord,
1028
75
weekend
w1th
Mr
and
Mrs
comments on proposed ac
Turner
tn
Lancaster,
ttons and requests for public
Speak to Me
Har
t
at
Newark
and
Gerald
recently
An Ord1nance
for
th e
d
m eet nos should be addressed
The Esther Crrcle members
poso l on of Ass sian I Park Mrs Helen Simpson VISlle
erther to The New Sour ce Air
Mr and Mrs Kenneth
or NPDE S Perm t Records D1rector and Pool Manager her son, Mr and Mrs Bnan served refreshments m the
Payne Jr are unprovmg thetr
Sect ron
whrchever rs ap
and to fiX the sa l ary for the
d t
Sw•mm ng In structor
Stmpson after an eye OC or basement on the table home wtth a large cement
proprrate at The Ohro EPA
P 0
Box 10.49 Columbus
Be 1t orda ined by th e appomtments m Colwnbus beaultfuily decorated by porch
Ohro .43216
Councol
of the Voltage of
Mr and Mrs Elza Birch Grella Simpson and Vera
i.tlt f?phcat on for mod1f lcat ron Mrdd leport as follows
Eugene Young ts slowly
to t:.IPD~tES Perm 1t condlt ens
sec I Thai th ere be took Bert Hunt for hts treat- Beegle A mtsstonary cake, unprovmg
Grim Mrnlng Co
establoshed
the po~ol•on of ment at the hospttal m baked by Helen Sunpson and
ASSIStant Park D rector and
Orange Twp
M A Epple ts pamtmg hiS
Orange Twp Oh ro
Pool Manager
Parkersburg
decorated wtth the words "Go house
Rece1vrng waters
Mergs
Sec II The sa l ary fo r th e
h R
b t
pos it ion ot Ass.stant Park
Jtm Brace oft e tver oa Ye" was also served after a
Creek
Dana Turner ts shU a
Appl cal •on No P0763~X D,,ector and Pool Manager Capt Elza spent the weekend ca ndle hghltng program patten! at Holzer Medtcal
sha ll be $180 00 per month for
asstsled by Mrs Dorothy Center following a heart at
(5 1 9 ltc
June July and Augu st lo" With hts famt 1Y
cont nue for lhe period oft me
The young baby of Mr and Badgley and eight members
=~ICShwr~sm·~~r~0~l~~s rr:~ Mrs Roger AdamslS a patient who h t candles to represent,
Memoroal Day through labor m Holzer Medical Center
Love, Togetherness, Today, Mich , was a guest of hiS
Compassion,
Prayer, mother, Mrs Edward Foster,
D~~ c 111 Be ,t furlh er Weekend guests of Mr and
resolved that a wag e for lhe Mrs Ralph Badgley were Mr Sacrtftce, Educalton, Ap- at Pomeroy and hiS parentsSwrmmrng In stru cto r be and
B dgl
d
m-law, Mr and Mrs Ralph
the same os hereby f &gt;ed at and Mrs Steve a ey an prectalton
Mrs
Mayme Mallory Webb the past week
12 50 per hour
Kelh of Colwnbus and Mr and
Sec IV That Ordrnance No
d
Mrs Alleyne Rees spent a
1025 75 os hereby repea led
Mrs George Sunpson an son returned home after stx weeks
MON thru SAT
Sec V Thai thos Ord•nance George Charleston W Va m Holzer Medtcal Center She week m Colwnbus wtth her
os hereby determ ned
to be an
Mrs V101e t F1sit er of near ts gradually improving
three children and famlUes
e m erg e n c y
m ea su re
necessary for lhe ommed lale Akron spent a week wtth Mrs Jean (Spencer) Lind- Mr and Mrs Wtlham
preserval•on of the peace
h d D1
d
health safety and genera l Henry Rous an
a e an sey of Groveport spent a McKenzre, Philip, Jeff and
830 E. Main
welfare of the •nh&amp;b&gt;tants of Mr a11d Mrs Linley Hart
weekend here with relallves Joue, of Gallipolis were
Pomeroy, Ohto
the Village and lor the reason
f h B th
lhal t Is necessary thai thIs
The meeting o t e er a and frtends and vtstltng guests Saturday of Mr and
~~~!r~~~".ffe~t~;gme m M , Sayre MtsstoFnaryt SocB te ty relaltves at Mason , W Va , a Mrs Roy Rifne
Todd Taylor of Pt Pleasant,
Sec VI Thos Ordnance Sha lt was held at the trs ap1IS1 few days
take effect and be In Ior ee Cl\urch Tuesday evemng, May
W Va , spent the weekend
Mr
and
Mrs
Ralph
Webb
from and alter Apnl 28 1975
1d
Passed the 2Bi h day of Apr 1 6 An organ and p1ano pre u e attended a dmner meeting of With hiS grandparents, Mr
1975
by Mrs B1kacsan and Lilhan the 1968 Deputy Grand and Mrs Frank Cleland
Mr and Mrs Albert Hill are
Attest Gene Grate
Hayman preceded the openmg Matrons at the Impertal
Clerk
of the meetmg wtth devottons House m Colwnbus on a recent spending a week 10 Colwnbus
M L Kelly
l
S
wtth Mr and Mrs Watd
President or counc 1 by Mrs He en tmpson, Sunday
Joseph
Foster
of
Livoma,
_Foster
and children
(5 J 9 16 21c
prestdent, usmg the subject,
.Hy Mrs. Francis Morris
Mrs Nondus Hendro cks,
Mrs Grella Sunpson, Mrs
Ollte Mae Cozart and Rev W
P Btkacsan attended the
Sesqwcentenmal of The Ohto
Baptis t Conventwn dinn er
meeting at Martella Bapltst
Church Fnday evemng Apni

l~

•

6

cyl standard long wtde bed

63 WillYS CJ5 .. -............. ·.. · '1395
4wheel drtve studded snow !Ires removable hard lop

59 WILLYS CJ5 ......... ... ... .. .. '1095

4 wheel dnve good condition

72 FORD RANGER XLT ........... '2295
V8

auto P S P B tong wide bed

Harrisonville

Society News

.OPENe
6DAYS
A WEEK

D&amp;D MEAT '

--

'l .,

72 FORD F-UMl aJSTOM ........'1895

Ptckup

PUBLIC NOTICE

AWMINUM &amp;
VINYL SIDING

58 1 mo
PRIC E
Const ru ct on
Co
Roof ng Spou t mg Ge m nr
t I n re pl a c e m e nt W1n
d o w s complete remodel ng
Phone f&lt;l2 6273 o r (3 04 ) 773
5684
5 9 261p

23 New '75 Olds Ready for Delrvery

GOOD SELECTION OF CHEAPER CARS
See Ray R1ggs or Roger Raebel

RIGGS USED CARS
985-4100
Located on St Rt. 7

tack
Mrs Ruth Donahue and
daughter are v18tting Zettie
Artx
Mr and Mrs Elda Carsey
vtstled the Dale Wtlhams
Sunday
Mrs Gary Gtbson was a
recent med1cal patten! at
Holzer Medical Center
Mr and Mrs Jack King
went to Colwnbus to Vl8tl thetr
son at Chtldren's Hospttal,
who was operated on for open
heart surgery His condition
was senous but ts somewhat
unproved
Mr and Mrs Jr Payne and
chtldren, Donald Terry ,
Cindy and Kevm were dinner
guests Sunday of hiS mother.
the Joe Carseys
Mr and Mrs Gordon Atkins
and children of Mtchigan were
weekend guests of hts mother,
Mrs SteUa Atkins and hts
aunt, Ruby Dtehl
Mr and Mrs Boggs of
Chester vtstted the Earl
McGrath Sllllday and Mrs
McGrath cared for the
chtldren while they sang for
the stck of the community
Mrs Adrienne French IS
home from the hospttal and is
much unproved
The ambulance - took
Margaret Allen hack to the
hospital for moretsurgery
Mrs
Frances Young
recetved word that her
brother-m-law, Dwight Seiple,
was marrted Sunday, May 4
and wtll live in ColwnbWI
Mr and Mrs Arthur
Goodwm of Albany called on
Mrs Ella Anderson and
family, Sunday
Mrs LOulae Dixon is improvmg her property by addmg a cement porch on the

Chester,

o.

front and both stdes
Recent vtstlors of th~
Robert Clarks were Mrl &gt;
Clyde Dalton and daughter;
and Mrs LouiSe Dixon
,
Mr Roy Ellis of Rutland II
bwldmg a house for Mr and,
Mrs Denrus Ash

Eden News
Attendance at Eden Sunday
School was 70.
Mrs Sol Bigley and MrB1
James Carter and Jimmr
VISited Sunday with Mr and
Mrs WUUam Gillilan and
family at Canton and Mr and
Mrs Hiram Shaffer, Bar-;
berton
Mr and Mrs Virgil
Holsmger and family and Mrs.•
Martha Holsinger vislte~
Sunday wtth Mr and ,Mrs•
Rodney Holslngfr and fll!lli4'
at Greenfield
_;
Mr and Mrs Roy Shaffer 111
Pataskala visited recentl)'i
wtth Mr and Mrs Clint.
'
Holsinger and famlly
Mr and Mrs Sol 8lileY.
Aleshia Holsinger and Mn.
Martha Holsinger vllitecl
Friday evehlng wiUt Mr and
Mra Alva Holsinger Jr a~
famUy at Racine
Charlotte Rood visited Mr•
and Mrs VIrgil Holainaa' .....
Martha Holsl1111er, MandaJ
evening
-Martita Bt' 1 a . .;'

r--;;;;;;;;,;~-~
ily»VVDODT
""

-a D

Shopa the

s--------.,.;
WAIT AD .WAY

�8- The Daily Sent mel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy 0 Frtda) May 9 1975

'

Clld of Thanks

Notice

'hE: WOULlJ I 1\e to th anlo. .-111
o.ur re lat ves and frum'ds
IU

esoectally the run•o r cmo
s.entor members of Dr ew

Webst er Post J9 for the
Vts ts c ards f lowers and

g ifts

sent

to

For Rent

Dorothy

FlEA MARKET

I.;,E' the t Wh tle sh e was at Mt

Cerme t Hospttal
Veda Da v s and
Jo hn son

/\1m~

apartm en t
adult s onl y tn M dd le po rt
Phon e 992 387-l
3 25 tfc

4 9 li e

I IIE II.: lHM lri't l t.:r

P110 lC

99 7 ?/. I

Help Wanted

'i 9 H e

Thursday, Fnday
and Saturday

SOMEONE to srckle h liS de

(!all 992 52JJ

a pi tur n shed J rm
a p t tu r nrshcd 1 rm (tpt
u I fl es pt'l d
I chr l d cl C
cc pt ed 1\lso tt x1 S rnobrl e
ho m e for sal e Jo h n '-,hee l s
1 11 I&lt;'S so uth o f Mrdd lc por
Rl 7
58 61 p

HOU S E K EEPER
an d
babys fter "Var e d hours
( app r o x J 30 hours per
week M u st have car Phon e

Sunday Open
10AMto6PM

99 2 2832

5 7 61C
L OO K IN G tor a n exc trn g and
prof tabl e
c ar ee r
w th
fle XIble
h ou rs")
L ke
m eetmg the publ c") Have a
ca r' We l come Wa g on want s
you
Representar ve
Pos t on open n Pomeroy
Wr te Oox 729 W c o Dally
Sent ne t
Po meroy
Oh1o
Welcom e Wa gon a n equa
opportun ty emp o yer
5 7 6tc

Not1ce
PUB LIC

SHOOT

CAS H pa d for all makes and
mod e l s of mob rl e homes
Ph on e ar ea cod e 614 42 3

953

4 13 lf c

J UNK autos co mpl ete a nd
de l ivered to ou r yard We
P•ck up a uto bode s and buy
a l l k nds o f scrap metals and
ron
R1der s Sai"Vage St
Rl
124 Rt 4 Pom eroy
Oho Ca tt9 925 468
10 17 t fc

Employment Wanted

Me gs

Muzzl e Load e r s
t zaak REMODELING
P umb ng
Walton Farm
Ches ter
healmg and a ll type s of
Ohro May 13 197 5 Tuesday
g eneral
r e pa r
Work
e"Ven ng 6 p m
gu arante ed 20 years ex
5 8 4t C
p er.en ce
Phon e 99 2 2409
s I tfc
GUN SHOOT Ma y 0 7 p m
at Mile H 11 Road Fa ctory PA IN T ING g ra ss c utfr n g
c hoked gun s on l y
Span
c te an 1ng any odd to bs
sored by the Rae ne F re
Phone 99 2 3597
Department
I 7 3tp
5 8 2tc

SHOOT ING
R 1dg e

LO ST n v em ty of Po meroy
El ement a ry School a g o l d
Conn tr um p et n blac k case
small r ewar d Ph one 99 2
56 2
5 9 6tc

5 8 31p
BLOOMER S

CL ELAND S

Open ng May 5t h F low ers
plants and p rod uce Fa r
pr ces
courteous serv rce
next door to Steamboat In n
J m Cleland Rae ne Oh o
Benef1t tor the Oh o Va ll ey
FellowshiP
58 St c

L O ST Thursd a y n Ru t land
L angsv lie are a ar ge m al e
Walke r hound blac k br o wn
an d wh rt e "Very Shy If seen
call 7J2 31d 1
5 6 6tc
Santa Gertr ud s r ed
he fer Lost near Bowman s
Run on 124 Ca ll 949 3654 or

949 2832

56

lip

72

Ohro

W

Also

4 19 38 t p

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

BCAUTIFUL s e l ec t on of
flowers pots baskets an d
sprays fo r Memor~a l Day
Cl ff s Pla ce N Second Sf
M ddleport
5 4 tfc
- ,_
QUAR, TE R
you ~g'
MA~

horse

at

srr e of rac e and show hor
ses Ran wrthrn IOOth of B
se c ond of AAA t me befor e
he was 2 Off e ra! AA wtth an
89 speed rnde x
hal te r
contorma t 1on
and best
d1Sil"OSt f1on Fee $'100 al t me
of serv ces wrth I ve foal
guarantee Phone 992 7888
...
A 2() 26tc

AU CTION Thursday n1g ht 7
p m
at M ason Auc t on
Horto n St n Mason w Va
Consrgnments welcome

Phone (30 4) 173 547 1

2 2 ttc

---.,----------FOR your
O tl nt Mmk

Phone

BROWN S 992 5113

1 7 tf c

-NO-W----------se llin g Fuller Brush
Produ c ts

phone

s

---- - - - -----YARD SALE
F r1da y and
Sat ur day
Ch u rc h
Harrrsonv lie

992 34W
1 24 tfc

------------AO H A Stall on Serv rce -

D1am o nd Cha n
Go Man
Go D1am on d Cha r g e blood
I nes Extellent d spo s 1t ron
16 2 l1 ve fo al gua r a n teed

SIOO Phone 992 7300

4 27 111p

Rd

5 8 21 C

stud

son of THE OLE
AAAT a lead on g

Cosmettcs

G I GANTIC
yard
sa l e
Saturday an d Sund ay 9 30
a m ttl dark Harr son"V li e
Watch for s rgns Depress on
g lassware a r condrtroner
and mrsc
8 3tc

RUMMAGE SALE sa l t and
pepper sets d shes c loth es
furn lu r e
F r 1day
and
Sunday at Car l Taylor h ome
on 12 4 near Ru tl and Pho ne

992 3497

5 8 2tc
2

2 FAMILY YARD sa l e at
H o l s t ern s re s den c e on
corn e r of Co ll ege Rd and
Brrdg m an Sf
~ yracuse
Thurs d ay and F r day May 8
and9 9a m r fl4 p m
58 2tc

- ------ --

Y A RD
SALE
Th ursday
F r day and Satu rd ay m
Rae ne across f ro m Gulf
Sery ce Watch for srgns

5 8 21c

--- ------

MULTIPLE FA MI L Y Garag e
Sa l e Saturday and Sunday
May 10 a nd 11 from 10 a m
to 6 p m West Shade Road
1 m rte o ff Rl 7 north of
Chester Oh10
4 a 3tc

--------- -

Y A RD Sate
Thursday and
Fr day May 8 and 9 John
St reet
Syrac use
Anttque
bed and cha.r 2 rockers
re cord pla yer Other rems
tao n u m ero u s to menton 10
a m to 'f p m Phone 992

MOWER

Reasonable Rates

Phone 992-7665

Pom eroy

~ 992-3092

Ground
Also ReparrS On All
R tdmg Tractor s
498 Locust St
M dd teport Oh o
5 9 1 mo

'72,90&lt;KD)

For Sale
REFRIGERATOR

$50

Ph on e 991 78 36

5 9 3tc

'104,95&lt;KD)

F I SH B AIT - fr sh bart We
ha"Ve our ba t m
nrg ht
craw ler s
l arge
mea l
worms worms r ed worms
blood bart
lnd an Joe s
Sport and C B Shop 308 Page
St Middleport Phone 992

POMEROY LANDiifARK
9. _Jack w Carsey Mgr

3509

4 9 30tc

-----------

HOME grown tomato plants
mpro"Ved Mex can a nd
He nz 1350
Ac r oss from
Mun 1C pa l Park n Syrac usE&gt;
Tho mas Ha yman
4 28 30tc
TOMA T O
cab ba ge
and
p eppe r plan ts Al so sw eet
potato plant s a littl e lat er n
season J m 1f es no r th wes t of
Chester on We s t Sh ade
Roa d Rete 1 only Dw1ght
Spencer phone 985 38 38
5 9 He
1969 DUO 14 f berglass boat
1970 E "V nru de 40 h p mo to r
1969 Sh ore I ne 1111 1ra11er all
safety and sk equrpm enr
e xc e llen t co nd t ron Sl 200or
b est offer Phone 985 3830

59 21p

TR AV EL tra11 er 11 ft a c
se lf co n ta n ed 1972 Pont ac
Cata lm a low m tleage ltk e
n ew
Gas range
good
cond to n
Ph one 7~2 540 3
9 Jt c

s

6

Craftsma n r d1ng
H P
mow er $150 Call Ch ester

985 3889

I 9 31c

liJ4 MX
Yahama
goo d
he l m et to match br ke S400
Phone 949 d40 1

59 31c
GUN S an d
Am m o
O ur
su m mer stock
s now
arr.vrng
st 11 at l ast
yea r s prrces 22 MAG
r f l es w nchester Mos s
berg and Marl n Ha ndgu n s
44 MAG
T w o 22 1 r

6jf

Real
7

We'l ~ f/1&lt; find the ri&amp;llt !ehicle lor IOU - New or used

3

The Service- Mter the sate. IOU,.

FOR FREE
ESTIMATES
On atummum replacement
wtndows S1drng storm
doors and wmdows ra1hn~ ,
phon e
Charles
Lrsl e,
Syracuse
Ohro
Carl
Jacob
Sales Represen tativ e

THINK ABOUT THAll

----------------------------------------1he Three Point Plan May Make Your
Next Car or Truck Purchase the Best Ever.

V. V. JOHNSON
AND SON, INC.

Condor Sf

Now op en for season Now
a"Varlable - mos t vartettes
of vegetable plants &amp;
flow ers plu s potte d flower~..:

NEIGLER
Building Supp~
Racone, Ohto
We Buold the Best and
Repa1r the Rest
- Cabonels Installed-

Bissal

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR

ChestJr, Ohio

dark red flntsh A real cream puff'

Swe epers to asters .rons
all sm all a p pl a n ces Lawn
mower next to State Hrgh
way Garage o n Route 7
Phone 985 3825
4 16 lfc

Construdion fA

1970 CHEVROLET BELAIR

1968 IMPALA
5795
2 door coupe 8 cylinder automatic A real va lue
1972 CHEVROLET
lf• Ton 8 cylinder 4 speed 9 Fleetslde

4 16 30ic
P

andO.rages

rad10 1

owner

992 3509

Home Building
Room Additions

S1295

4 door V 8 engme standard t ransmi SSIOn

L A W N m ower repa r
JOB
Page St M dd lepor t Phone

Ph. 985-4102

Call Before 7 30 A M
Or Afler6 00 PM
949 3604
57 lmo

'

Bl~liiS

mo.

4 17 I

mclud1ng a1r

full power &amp; whrte genutne leather

mileage Htghly metalliC gold f n sh

low

J Hom e Ma1ntenance
Refr g e rat o n
A
C
Heating Phon e 992 3509
&amp;

USED CARS
75 Olds Cut. Supreme Sedan ............ 14695
Drover s ed car Sl tck er proce new $5545 40 Fully
equopped woth 60 40 seal AM FM radio steel radtal
t1res factory air low mileage

7 4 Olds 88 HT Cpe., pow., atr•• f.~~~! .. !4595
73 Olds Omega Hatchback Cpe, • ~.!f.~. 12895

S.

Cpe, auto.,!'. ~•• ?~. ~~W~ '3095

71 FORD TORIN0.......................1995
2 Dr H T

70
MERCURY, 1 OWNER ............'895
Good condltoon
69 CHEVY 4 DR WAG................ '95
69 FORD TORI NO....................· 1895
2 Dr H T

69 PLYMOUTH .........................'695
Fury Ill 4 Dr H T

69 OLDS DELTA 88 .................. '695
4

Dr H T

1973 Ford V8 Maverick 4 Dr. Sedan

73 Olds Cut.

Aor condtlioned only 14 594 easy moles Fully equ ipped
luxu ry model rea lly sharp

73 Cougar XR7, v-roof, a1rr power........ 13695

68V8 MERC.
2 DR HI ...................'695
auto P S

1973 Chevrolet % Ton

73 Vega Hatchback 4 sp.t radw ••••••••• 12195

65 CHEVY CHEVEU.E.. ...............'595

73 DODGE Pol. Cus. 4 Dr. HT., :~~--~.r•• 12395

4 Dr Small V 8 auto P S

Four wheel drtve pickup 350 V 8 eng me power stee rrn g
ortgtna l red f1n 1sh low mtleage new Ford t rade tn

1974 Ford Pinto 2 Dr.

1973 Chevrolet Camero 2 Dr. Hard Top
350 V 8 full operatmg console wtlh auto lrans A real
Cream Puff
2300 cc engme auto trans luggage rack Very low mo leage
L1ke new

1970Piymouth6
cyl. Duster 2 Dr. Hard Top
Extra n1ce
Ford Four Wheel Drive
QUAun Motor Co. 1966
'I• ton pickup low mtleage 6 cyl
1974 CHEVROLET' IMPALA
$4195
24 FT. OPEN ROAD MOTOR HOME
4 door only 10 400 miles fully equopped oncludtng a or

Vrnes and Begon 1as

5 - 1 - 1m~

New ltstrng

2 SIGNS Pomeroy
OF

2 000 hang1ng baskets of
Petunras Ivy Geran1ums ,

TOP QUALITY AT
LOWEST PRICES
992 5776

Showroom clean Almost everylhmg m equipm ent posstble

1974 Pinto Sta. WalOII

OUR SPECIALTY over

OPEN9a m to6p m
Mond a v 1hru Saturday
W e wilt p ck up &amp; deft"Very
Spectal tow prrces on all
m ec han1 ca t work

POMEROY, OHIO

PH 992 2174

1973 Thunderbir~ 2 Dr. Hard Top

Power steenng powe r brakes One loca l owner shows best
of care

Smith Nelson Motors, Inc.
500 E. MAIN ST

UNDER "1,000 BARGAINSI

75 Chev. tap nee 4 door ... .............. 15595
Sold new for over $6700 Full power atr stereo V roof
1 500 miles New Cadollac trade

1974 Ford FlOO 1h Pickup

r• 7 00 p.m Sat fj 5 00 p.m

"DO BUS/1\ ESS WITH A LEADER "

In Syracuse

Pom eroy 0 .

PROVIDED WITHIN REASON

Very low mtleage One local owner auto t ra ns lo ~e new

See Sm1Nn Ar1 Aruries, Ceward Cahert or Bil Nelson

Hubbard's
Greenhouse

PHONE 992 2823

llUfMI hands.

I

Free Eshmates
Phone 949 5961
Emergency 949 2211
or 992 5700
4 2 75

Wolfe &amp; Ward
Garage

11

111 m• your ur )1111 ~ And Mare!

A1r condtfton1ng plum
bing
heattng, rootrng
spout1ng general sheet
metal work

Grand Opening

YOUR PRICE
SALE ENDS MAY 31ST

• Senict manapment witb ower ZO ,.,. UIJIIltflct Three
Mt.A.S.E. Clttified MechaniCS. Catnplete Radiatll! Senict hum smoltest
htlllf COli Ill latpst dou&lt; core The newesl11 Sun Ilia~ Equipll!lll

Dulenh1p Open Mondly Fn

busoness room to let
100 ACRES M or L - Hunttng
land deer grouse etc A real
thtekel for a weekend or
summer collage All mmerals
and lhe last of the wtld $225 00

22"-3'12 HP
Self Propelled

111

In apprectatton of the fact that you have made us
No 1 dealer m Me1gs County for almost every
month of the past year, we are offermg 35 new
and 26 used cars and trucks at

THINK ABOUT THAll

HElL
Racine Plumbing
&amp; Heating

mo

4 10 I

REWARD!!

We'l he~, you w~h IU1cinc and msurance Wo'lt maile IOU a l UfMI olhr
on a fw •• friend~ mann11

Phone 992 5367 or 991 3161

Syracuse Oh1o

Ph 992 3993

The Transaction- we friend~ .,d helpful

777 Pearl Street

FREE ESTIMATES
Blown
lnsulahon Serv1ces
Blown onto Walls &amp; Allies·
STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING SOFFITT
GUTTERS AWNINGS
LARRY LAVENDER

Sales &amp; Serv1ce

2.

VALUE
RATED

'
'
'

THINK ABOUT THAll

l'lltddleport Ohoo

4 10 1 m~

and models o1 Buicts,

-lcll M 11M lrlditilltlally higll resale rat....

B-K EXCAVATING
COMPANY

FREE ESTIMATES

WILKINSON
SMALL ENCiiiN~

and v tew of the nver wtth

WE HAVE MANY P
WANTING SMALL
WITH LARGE HO,fiAES.
992 3325 RIGHT,. ..,. T.

20" Jlh HP

Sleeps 6, fully self co ntatned w1th dual atr
condtftontng
RENT THIS BEAUTIFUL MOTOR
HOME BY THE DAY OR WEEK
SEE: FRED BLAETTNAR, DARRELL DODRILL

$2250

Cpe., power, a1r •• '2895

72
FORD LTD COUNTRY SOUIRE'1895
4 Dr Wagon

Chev. Imp. Cust. Coupe, power •••••• • 12295
stereo
72 Butc k El ec. 3 Dr., HT, Pow aor......
. .. 13195

71
FORD MAVERICK ................ 11595
6 cyl auto 4 dr

73 Olds Cut. Sup.

HT

72

72 Olds 98 HT Sed. v-roof, power, atr... 12895
72 Olds 98 HT Sed., Hoof, atr ........... 13295

71 PONTIAC CATALINA ............. 11295

72

Olds Toronado Cpe. v-roof, •••••••••••• 13095

4 Dr H T, a or

72
72

Chev. Imp. Cpe, V8 auto., ps ••• ••••• •12195
Pontiac

Cat. HT

Cper power, air...... 12695

70 Olds 98 Hoi., Sed., power, air •••••••11495
69 Ford Gal. 500 4 Door .............. . ... '895
69 Corvatr 2 door, standard ............... 1395
69 Ford LTD

HT,

Cpe, V-roof, a1r ...........'995

69 Butck LeSabre 4 dr, v-roof, a1r....... .. 1795
sed pow air
u:
69 Pont1ac Bo nnevt IIe HT, ................. ·;J 95
68 Cad1llac Cpe. DeVille .... ~:: ••~·~.......11395

4 16 301c
66 Pont1ac Cat. 4 Dr., V8, auto.

551 mo

·-------------------------

(as ISJ.~. '295

2 Dr H

r

71 MERCURY MONTERrt ........ 11595
73 CHEVY CHEVEu.E ........... ·· ·• •'2295
V 8 auto P S P B fad atr 2 dr

73 PINTO 4 CYL AUTO............. 11895
73 PONTIAC LeMANS .............. 12995
2

Dr Sports Coupe, extra ntce

73 FORD MAVERICK 4 DR ........11995
Small VB auto P S

72 PINTO 4 CYL 4 SPD ........... 11495
Racong stnpes mag wheels

72 PINTO 4 CYL AUTO............ 11495
TRUCKS

Phone 992 2181

Estate For Sale

2 s l ory
hou se
RM
a lum nu m
s rd rng
w lh
Shut t ers
Comp l et el y
remodeled w l h wa ll 1o w all
c arpet ng
u psta rr s a n d
do wn
Worksho p
and
ga r age See by appt on ';'
ph one 949 30 25
5 4 6tc

3 BE D ROOM home on 4 ac r es
of ground full basemen t
fuel 01
f ur n a ce
a c
breez eway a nd larg e garag e
n the co unlry bu t c lose to
town On hard t op road 2
trader setups rn clude d Ca ll
992 7649 aft er 4 p m or 991
25 19 any t me for a p
po ntment
4 30 26t c

2 OR 3 bedroo m h ome wrrh
bath
full
basement
alumrnum std ng and slor m
w rn dows .;~nd door s Fenced
y ard for ced a r hea t Phone

992 3702

I

4 61p

LOT near Ra e ~e Phone 8.4 3
2253 afte r 5 p m
5 4 71c
SERVIC E statron and garage
Rutland
w II frn ance or
lea se Ca ll 7d2 5052
4 9

261C

1 72 ACRES of l and and loc.ust
posts Phone 742 3656

4 20 261p

------------ 1
HOU SE NEAR C HE ST ER

OH IO L sha p ed br t k 3
bedrm
ranch st y l e r ur al
home
15
acres
full
basement
garage
t rep lace Ca ll 985 394 3

-------

Strout Realty

~--B"ncft Manag.!':.. __

I

Ph 992 217 4"

car.port and n tce garden

Not ce on F1hng of Inv entory
1639
And Apprarsement
The State of Ohro
Me1gs
5 7 3tc
County
Court of Common
Pleas Probale Dt"V s10n
TWO F am ly Yard Sale
AMMO 22 Mag H P $3 a
I 7 l ie
C o thrng tur n ture bottl es
To th e A dmm str atr x of the
box S27 50 p er 500 r ound
and m any ot h er
t em s
estate to suc h of the fo ll ow ng
ca rton
Remtngton H g h
Thursday and Fr rday 9 30
a s are r esi den ts of the State of
L ARGE lots r ura l wa t er
Vol 22 H P S2 10 per 100 pk 2 a"Varlabte
to 6 p m Sa t 9 30 to 4 p m
Ohro "V z
t he sur 11 "V ng
Har d road
3
Get th em whrte th ey l ast
405 4th St
Rae ne Phone
spou se the n e.~~:t of k n th e
m les fr o m by pass on
Phone 992 5177 V llag e G ~J n
949 JJ71
benef1 car es unde r th e w II
Lead ng Cr eek Road Phon e
Shoppe 266 M rll St
M d
an d to th e attorn ey or at
5 7 3tp
7 42 3 08
dleport
Oh
ro
torneys represent ng any of
5 9 30 t c
s 9 7t c
the afor emen t oned pe r sons
No 21484 Paul Raymond YARD SALE Fr1 da y and
Monday at T homas Manuel
1 B E D ROOM trarler an d lot n
deceased
A lb any
Oh o
1972 ST ARCRA F T Camper 20
Rt 2 Rac1ne tur n t ure and
town Ph one 99 2 397 5 or 99 2
Scr pro Townshrp
ft
l
ong
Phone
(30.4
)
882
c lot h ng Phon e 247 2670
21 71
You are he r eby not1fred that
21.42
5 8 31c
the
In ventory
and
Ap
4 9 tf c
5 8 3tc
- ...
pra semen t of the est ale of th e
aforementroned
d eceased YARD Sale May 9 10 and 11
1970 CHEVY NOVA 350 4
lat e of sa rd Count y was fled
at the home of Es ther Mays
spee d .46 ooo mt les $1400
1n t h s Court Sa1d ln "Ven tory
Coun ty Rd 25 J unct on of
Also 1968 fo ld down camper
and Appra semen! wrll be for
Rt 7 and 248 at Chest er
sleeps 8 ssso Phone 991
hearmg Defore thi S Co urt
7378
Sponsored by Young W "Ves
the 23 r d day of May 1975 at
Club of Chester and Tupp ers
4 APT COMPLEX - On
5 8 41p
10 00 o c lock A M
Pia ns
3
3 a ground apt air
Any person desiring to t te
5 6 5tc CO NTEMPOR ARY
condtlooned &amp; furnosh ed
Mod~n
e)(cep t1on s th ereto must fde
........_-- ~--wei nut stereo am fm rad o
beaultful country selling
th em at l east f i"Ve days pr ror to
4 speaker sou nd system 4
the date set for hear ng
speed ai.Jtomat1c c hang er
G1ven Under my hand an d For Rent
POMEROY ~ 3 or 4 BR
Balance S103 29
Use our
sea~ of sa d co u rt th1 s 7th d a y TRAILER spac e for rent tn
home
full base on large
bud
get
terms
Call
992
3965
of May 1975
M dd lepor t
Ca ll 992 2625
c tty lot overlooktng rrver
S
7
tfc
Man n ng 0 We b st er Jud ge
4 27 tfc
Good buy at $18 500 00
By Ann B Watson
2SO
7 F T locust posts Call
Oepul y Cl er k MOB I LE HOME furnrs hed
742 3063
C5J 9 16 2tc
CHESHIRE - older home
a c p atro tn Racrne Phone
5 7 3tc
A lbert H1ll 9.49 2261
on ntce lot has hookup for
s 8 6tc
1974 CJ 5 Renegade Jeep
mobile home sa 000 00
Phone 949 2981
NOTICE
ON FLOOR PLAN 4 rm s and
Not rce s hereby Qtven that
5 7 6tc
POMEROY - Business
ba th 10 Albany r ef er enc e
the unders rgn ed ntends to
bldg
wtlh 6 room apt
Phone
Gal
lipoli
s
446
173.4
make appl1cat on to th e
5 8 3tc VAR IETY OF cabbag e
upstairs Bldg now leased
Probat e Court of M e gs
tomato an d pepp er plants
as busoness Good buy at
County Oh !O for an order to
Also ca uliflower brocco11
$1850000
change her name to K1mberly TRA ILER spa ce 1 mile from
bru
sse
l
sprouts
egg
plants
Pomeroy
Phone 991 SB58
Carol Ball
Beddm g plant s - pans es
5 2 lfc
Sad a~plrcatron wrll be b y
petunia mar gold sa lv1a
IF YOU QUALIFY - for
petit on to be fried n sard
phlo;~~; portulaca .!gertum
FHA loan we have some
Probate Court on or afl er th e 2 BEDROOM mobile home
alyffum lrnpat1en.s coleus
a c '" Rac1ne area Phone
FHA approved hom es for
1-ith dav of June 1975
Var1ety of ge ran iums also
992 5858
sale
Dated thr s. 7th day of May
pots
of
petun
as
and
mum
s
5 2 lfc
1975
Hangmg
baskets
K rmbl.!'rfy Carol Stewart
petunias ''~~Y gert~n1um
307 Sprmg Avenye
a m1nor S years of ag e SMALL cottage surta b le for
tobella
ferns
wt~nder1ng
tw o men
60x 12 mo b1le
By I rend• lall, her mother
Pomeroy
992 2298
1ews porch boxes
large
h ome on
Roush Lane
and next tncnd
hearty red azt~lea~ Clela nd
Chesh ire Phone 1304) 773
The Stolo of Oh1o Me1gs 5873
Greenhouse
Ra c rn e
CONTACT
County
Gerald ne Clela nd
LOIS Pauley
l 4 ~1; (5) 9 He
A 13 tfc

ion

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

NEW LISTING - 3 bedroom
home bath automaltc heat
pane long carpeltng porch

TURF TRIM

1968 F I REB l RD tor $700 Ca ll
99 2 25 37 a fter 5 p m
5 7 12tc

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

Unro n Athens
10b prrnt1ng

NEW LISTING - Business
loca lton wolh 2 bedroo m
apartment Modern ktlchen

.''

Bit lllllti1J comlorbble, dependoblt,

• P1111tlacs 0pe1s and GMt's.

Dozer Backhoe Trucks
Limestone &amp; Fill Drrt
Commercial Residential
ConstructiOn &amp; Remodel

Pleasant R1dge
Pomeroy, Oh1o

Nathan B i ggs
Radrator Spec1ahst

1

The Product-we !ell a11 -

Water
E l ec trlc
Gat
Sewer L1nes
Installed
Work guaranteed

0. J. LAUDERMILT
ROOFING

From th e larges t Tru ck or
Bu lldozer Rad1ator to th e
sm all est Heater Co r e

TW O N E W 3 bedroom hom es
w rt h 1 car ga rag e carp et ed
FH A or ba nk flnan c rng
Ph one 712 36 15 or see M ilo
Hu t ch n son R utland
S 8 tf c

per acre

5 8 3tp

Oh o Call 99 2 7760

TERSHOP PLU 5

EXPERIENCI:D
6.·... '
Radiata '
I
Service ~'

BRI C K HOU SE on Second St
Pomer o y rn dow n tow n
Surf ab l e lo r 1 v ng qu arter s
up s t a r s sma ll b US in ess
down Off 1ce or home W th n
walkrnq d sta n ce of all
s tores Ca ll 991 3&lt;l 89
5 8 3tc

The Da1ly Sentmel
BE D RM
h ous e at 20 1
Po me roy
M ulber ry Ave
NEED A new hom e bur tt on
F urn she d
a c
gas fur
Pomeroy , Oh1o
your loP Con tac t M il o B
nace May be seen Satur
H u tch so n
Ru tl and Oh10
da y M a y 10 from 2 noon trll
Phon e 742 361 5
I p m
HOMEGR O WN
t omato
5 Btfc
pi a 1 s $30 p er t hou san d or
5 6 Jtc
se ll sepa r at e Ha rr y Hrll
l c tM I Phon e 247 21 42
3 1\ND 1 ROOM !urn shed an d
5 e 3tc
ap art n en ts
unl ur n Shed
Phone q91 5-l J J
I 12 tf c CLO SE OUT on new Z rg Zag
sew ng
mach nes
F or
P R IV A T E nee tng roo m tor
sew ng stretch fabr1cs
any orQanr zat ron phon e 992
buttonho les fa nc y des rgns
J97'i
Pa n t
Sl ightly
etc
b l em shed
Chotce
of
3 1 tfc
car r y ng case or sew ng
APT Ik e n ew J r oom s w h
stan d S49 80 cas h or ter m s
NEW LISTING - 60x12
ava table
Phone 992 7755
arge bath ta bletop ran ge
larg e c los et Ea stMan St
12 18 ff c Skyltne mobole hom e wtlh 3
bedrooms modern kttche~
Pa n eroy See o app r ec al e
-Phone G a llrpo t s dur ng day
MA,KE MOTHER hap~y thiS With cook and bake umls
l-l 6 9699 ev en ng s J-1 6 9539
year wrth a llvrng room su t e Refrogeralor and large lot
4 10 ft c
near town
fr om J acks Fur n rture
Many st y l es and colors to FISHING CABIN - AI Forked
ch oose from A ll suites sale Run
3 rooms wa t er and
Pets For Sale
prrced startrng as low as electroc avatlable
$2900 00
Sl 39 00 and up Al so a n ce
TWO
brow n
Dach s hund
selec t on of sw vel ro c ker s POMEROY - Near stores 3
bath dmong
PUPPie s
I mal e and 1
at S89 95 J acks F urn ture &amp; bedr ooms
fema l e S30 each Phone 992
concrete porch base ment gas
Upholstery Supply 236 E
5783
FA furnace storm doors and
Marn
Pomeroy
Oh 1o
Ph one 992 3903
5 8 3tc
Windows 517 500 oo NOW
5 1 IOtc $1250000

1968 VW Good condtt ron Ca ll
985 3901 after 4 30 p m

O L D t urnrture
ce boxes
brass be d s or comp lete
households
Wr te M
D
MIte r
Rt 4 Pomer o y

10 7 7.4
L..-,, - - - -- - ----JW A NTED
O ld
upr.ght
MOTOCRO SS Ra c es th s
p anos
any
cond to n
Sunday 1 P m Br.mstone
Payrng S10 each F irst floor
Raceway
Coo l v li e
1n
only
wr te
and
g ve
format on Pho,e 667 3670
d~rect ons to w tte n P ano
58 3t c
Co
Box 188 Sar d s Oh ro
d39d6
QU I CK r'RI NT Lly marl from
5 8 61p
camera ready copy Qne
page SS 55 f1rst 100 $1 15
eac h addrt ona l 100 Send
c opy
check
to
LET
Yard Sale

COU NTR Y Mo b lc
H on e
Pnr k R 13 t: n m l cs no r th
of Pomeroy La rg e lot s w th
c onc r ete pat os s dc w al k s
runn er s and of f s tr c{' t
p:-rrk nq P one ~9 " 7 79
1? 31 lf c

Auto Sales

Wanted To Buy

1239

I RO OM HOU SE w rth bat h 3
acre s n coun tr y on hardtop
road Co Rd 3 Ph one 74 2
3266

Lar ge
CORNER
( 733
ftcre} on Well traveled St
Rt 1 eas tt y accesstble to
larg e Me1gs Athens W va
market s wrth ex pan s1on
po§srb te toward the '"
creasi ng campmg toun sm
needs m Eastern M c tg s
Southern Athens Counr. es
Re ptr es to co Bo x 729 K

FORD

.

I===B=u=s=i=-=
n=e=s=
s=S=e=r;;:v=ic=e==s====i'

31p

I 6

DAN THOMPSON

That MakeS Car Buying Easier and Belter

5 8 3tp

STRAW B ERRY plants
Rt
Mabile Homes For Sale
33 8 n ear Rac rn e Lock s
Cha ri e F oster
SELL you r mob le ho me for
A 29 12tc
cash 15 ho m es wanted 1958
thru 1972 mod els
Phone
F LOWER S fo r Mothers Day
(614) 4d6 1415 Galltpoll s
Smalley s
G rft
Shop
3 9 781f
Chester Oh o Phon e 985
3537
.4 29 l Ot c

- - - -- -- - - -- - - -- - - - , LO ST
1- - , - - --- -

Campbell s Swap 'n Shop
yard sale &amp; flea market 2
blocks from Dairy Queen,
Jericho Rd , Pt. PI, W Va
Sat. &amp; Sun , Aprlll2 &amp; 13 10
a m - 6 p m Every weekend
through Oct: For mf call675-

Es tabl Sh t: d lu cralr"V e used
f urn lure
bu s m css
&amp;
prop erty w t h ex ce ll en t
fu r l~ er
grow th p ot ent a t
for
mmed a re sa te &amp;
po ss e s 1on du e to h ea lth
.r ea sons

I '\'\
I ( l
t.:.
1J rth
2
bcrtroo r s o as hea t w th
lo t 55 0 Sou t h Thr r d Av enu e
M ddl epo rt Phone 99 2 5078

--------

Lost

MATCH Wrndy
Gun
C lub
Harrrson"V le Sunday M a y
11 1 p m F a ctor y choked
guns onl y

~

'I J( M

OPEN AT NOON

58 3tc

The Three Point Plan

Real Estate for Sale

For Sale

I U RNI SHED

AI
CROSSROADS
Sl Rt 124

.!-The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 _,_ Fnday, May 9, 1975

For Fast Results Use Sentinel Classifieds

~ MALL breed pupp C'S to Q tV('
to 9ood ho me Phon e 99 2
\ 62'9

•

J

608 E
MAIN
POMEROY 0
A CB RADIO OPER
ATOR S DREAM - Htgh
on a hi ll and very pr vale 2
n ce BR bath ut llty R
Nat gas furna ce porches
garage Ph acres JUST
$13 000
A CHARMING NEW
HOUSE that needs only
your

presence

to

be

a

home 2 BR bath ntee
k1 tc hen Ref &amp; Range
carpeled fu ll basemen t
wtlh carpeted Rec R
carport &amp; slorage R 1
acre and close on $22 700
2'12 ACRES - All on lawn
now
garden
space
buildmg sties faces on Rt
7 - Home has new steel
std tng 2 BR bath dtnmg
R par t basement own
well and ctly water A
STEAL AT JUST $10 500
135 ACRES ON RT 681 close to recreation
hunhng m1nerals

good

ct1y

water available ALL FOR
LESS THAN $125 PER
ACRE
BE INDEPENDENT - A
RENT BEATER - Needs
some repa or 1 large BR
bath par t basement. large
lot S4 non
GOOD USED HOMES ARE
BEING TAKEN
UP
RAPIDLY CALL TODAY
992-2259
Bus1ness Serv1ces
CA RPE T tnstallatron
$1 25
per ya rd
Ca I R c hard
West Phone 84 3 1667
5 4 26 tc
~~T I C TANKS CLE ANED
R ea sonabl e R AT E S Phon e
146 4 78 2 G a ll pol s Jo hn
R usse lt own er
4 9 t fc

D &amp; D TR EE Trrmm ng 1rJ
yea r s expenen c e I nsur ed
free es t rmates Call 992 3057
Coo l v ill e
Phone ( 1) 667

3041

4 30 lfc

------LANES

GARAGE

Sta le

Route 338
Apple Grove
Oh o A ll k mds of mec han1c
work Phone 247 2257

5 8 12tp

Merle Norman
Cosmetics

lOlA'S
BEAUTY SAlON
John St , Next To
Grade Schoo I
992-2549 Syracuse , 0

GLEN R.
Bissell
tREE ESTIMATES
PH. 949-5184

S EW IN G

MACHINE

Re pa rs servrce Nil makes
99 1 2284 T he F abr c Shop
Pome r oy A ut ho r. :led S1nger
Sal es a nd Serv 1ce
we
sh a rp en Sc sso r s
3 29 fc
DO ZER work la nd clea r ng
by th e ac r e
h ou rly or
contra c t
Fa r m
ponds
r oads etc L arge dozer a nd
op er a tor w rth over 20 y ear s
ex p e r en ce
Pu l l n s Ex
cav al n g
Pomeroy
Oh o
Phon e 992 2478
12 19 lf c
SEPTIC T AN KS c leane d
Modern Sa n Ia !ron 992 3954
or 992 734 9
9 18 tfc
E X CAV A T IN G do ze r loader
and backhoe work sep tr c
t an k s
nsta ll e d
dump
tru c ks and lo boys for h re
w rtl ha ul fill d~rt to p sorl
l 1m estone and gravel Call
Bob or Roge r Jeffers d ay
ph one 992 7089 n ght phone
99 2 3515 or 992 5232
1 II tfc
SEPT I C tanks a nd leach lrnes
nstalled A lso f eld drarn
t l es A ll work g uara n teed
L ewr s E x cava tmg
Rt
1
Rutlan d Oh10 Ph one 7d2

37 12

4 24 26tc
SH A LLOW Wells dug spnngs
developed and CIS t e r ns
rn sta l) ed to ap pro x mate ly
18ft Lew 1s Exca"Val ng Rt
I Rutland Phon e 7.41 3742
4 2d 26tc
McDANIEL
C u st om
But
che nn g State and F"e d era l
In spec ted
s laughter
c ut
an d wrap Pho ne (304) 882

54 I m o

EX C A VA riN G
Dozer
Back ho e d tcher water
1 nes toot ers drarns roads
and brush c l ea n ng No tob
too small no w eath er too
bad
Phone C har l es R
Halfr el d
Rt
1 Rutland
Oh o Ph on e 741 6092

5 2 52tp

READY MIX

CO NC ~ETE

del1vered r1ght t o
prote c t F a st and easy
es ttm ates Phon e 991
Goegte rn Ready M1x
M ddleport Oh o
6

your
F r ee
3284
Co

30 tfc

Ma
foil

1
re~ id ence of the late
Leah B Schaefer Si tua ted at
230 L mcol n H rll Pom ero y

Handmade
glassware
per so nally sel ected by the
Kuhls '" Oklahoma for
bea uty &amp; craftsmanshrp
Swans
Baskets
Swan
Boat s Trumpet Vases from Max r to Mml
n
radrantly c le ar: colors of
orange amber yellow
green coba lt b l ue purple
&amp;
se"Veral un que com
b nation s $3 98 ea ( M•x•
Vases SS 98 M1n1 swans tn
mrtk glass $1 49)
A l so several one of a kmd
handbl own
decorator
prec es

Ohro Th rs resrd ence s qn e of
th e tmest hom es n Me rgs
County
2
The s tor e burld ng
sr t uated on West Ma n Street
n the V t tl~ge of Pom eroy
Ohro formerly known as th e
Red Anc hor
Th is pr operty
extends fro m Main Stree t to
Second Str eet n the VIl lag e of
Pomeroy and •ncl udes a store
bulld•no tro n ttng on Court

St reet

n

Cobalt elephant dk brown

bull I eltoro J f sh m blue

or r ed yellow S14 95

ea

T he nght s reserved to
re tec t any and all b1dS
For mformatlo n concerntng
the
property
and
ap
po•ntm ents for vrewrng the
property confe ct Bernard F
Fu l tz
Pomeroy
Oh o
Telephone 992 21e6

Wal l ace Bradford
Nancy Mol t
Joan Stoneburner
Co E xecu tors of the

COOKWARE - heavy duty

Weare"Ver alum num 1 qt
sauce pan S2 95 Sk i llets

14

50

!with Teflon It 14 95)

E~tate

In sets

LET

us DO fTI

I

Carpeting
501 NYLON
99 Square

4

Yard

RUBBER BACK
W e have hundr eds of
carpet values Yo ur tob ca n
be compl e ted m 1 to 2
week s
No long wa1tmg
per 1od Our nstall er ha s 28
years e&gt;&lt;per ence
Expert
mstal l.atJ.On You J1 l 1ke
what you get

CALL742 4211
TALK TO WENDELL
GRATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

RUTLAND
FURNITURE
742 4211

Rutland

(4127 30(5)2 4 7 9 11 14 16
9tc

pc 524 50 ( Sets rn harvest
gold
avocado or shiny
f1nrsh not all sets
ava1lable tn all colors)
GIFTWARE from MeXICO
39
t all
Grape G1rl '
statues n white With an
trque or g old fln1s h - an
elegant add1t on to a for
mal 111 ng ro om S12,
d ec orattv e
vases
&amp;
strawberry po ts
S6 up
han g mg flower pots S4

Specoal
Once In

One Ot A Kind
A Llletome Gllh

Mahogany cased grand
fath e r \s c loc;:k w rth quarter
hour Westmrns ter Chtmes
a beaut ful bargain UOO

..1..!

~

..."•,
......
.;

...'",'

'I·

.......
...,
.
:;,
...•"••'
.....
•••

,,
"

90 1nches of elegant French
Provrnttal sofa ex
cellently crafted fru1twood
tr1m upholstered 1n rich &amp;
heavy off white brocade
Not an ant1que but a

TREASURE for any Mom

With a fermat hvtng room &amp;
chr l dren who ve passed the
"strcky finger stage
UOO

AI Caution Light Rt 7 '
Tuppers Plains Ohio
Phone 667 lUI
Open Everyday 9 5
E)(cept Man &amp; Tues

~

I

Sunday
PH. 992-7777
POMEROY

~

FARM MACHINERY, 40 HEAD HEREFORD CAT
TLE &amp; ANTIQUE FURNITURE
BMILES SOUTH EAST OF ATHENS, OHIO
Take Sl Rl 33 south out of Athens 7 miles to Shade
Turn on Co Rd 44east at Swartz Grocery Store to first
crossroad - turn lett on Co Rd 42 then left on Co Rd
25 to the Jarvos Farms Due to Ill health and retiring
will sell complete line of farm machinery, saw mill
equipment 40 head Hereford cattle, and antique
furniture
SEE THIS PAPER THURS, MAY 15 FOR COM.
PLETE LISTING
o
,
Clip th is ad for lime and dl•ectlons Sale held oul!lde
regardless of weather House w 22 A for sale by owner
Lunch on premises Positive ID Terms cash day of
sale Not responsible for accidents
OWN ER-MR LEO JARVIS, PHONE 5f3 6135
AUCTIONEER- BILL JANES

NOW
OPEN ,

.
.,••
..
:t
...
,,,,

SUNDAY MAY1hJ11 lOAM

MOBILE tllME
SALES. INC.

1 · 6 pm

......
..

PUBLIC AUCTION

LARRY'S

•••
•••
ro
~·

4 27 12tp

of

Leah 8 Sc haefer

4 pc 16 95 7 pc 119 9S 1
pc 121 95 9 pc $23 95 10

3224

(

Th e foll owmg do cu m ents
we re rece ved or prepared by
The Oh10
Environmental
Protec tron Agency durmg th e
prevtous
week
Anyone
aggrieved or adversely at
fected by ssuance o r r enewal
of any per m t(sl ! cense(s}
or var ance(s) may request an
ad tudrcat1on
hear ng
by
wr rtten request pursuant to
Oh o R e"V sed Code Sec tio n
3745 07 Wlfhm thirty (30) d a y s
of th e Dtr ec tor s porposed
actro n to tssue or deny such
do c uments That statute does
not pro"V d e for heartng
requests to The OEPA on
appl cattons
revocat ons
mod h c at lo n s complamts
vertfred comp larnt s
ce r
t1f lcat ons leases orders or
f1na1 acttons
Wtth n 30 days of publicatiOn

.~::

:.:#

See Our
Special Sale
Ad In Sunday's
Newspaper

"

Racine Social Events

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

You'll L1ke Our Quality Way
dmner guests Sunday of Mr
and Mrs Donald Wolfe and
of Do mg Busmess"
attended the 25th weddmg
992 5342
GMC FINANCING
Pomeroy
anmversary honormg Mr and
Open Evenmgs Unhl6 oo- T1IS p m Sat
Mrs Harold Sargent
l.ciOCIOIIOitOoOOOOOOOOOOOO_ _ _ _ _ _ooooooill
Mr and Mrs Wtlham
Hayman and Mrs Grella Ye Shall Be Wttnesses Unto
Simpson spen I Sunday wt th Me' Scnpture, Acts 11-lland
Mr and Mrs Mtke Hayman group smgmg "I ll Go Where
You Want Me To Go '
25
and farmly at Dunktrk
Several from Racme
Mrs Isabel Stmpson spent a In the busmess sesston,
Mr Guy Bolm rece1ved
Chapter OE S attended week m Phoemx Artz regtstralton for the Women's word that hts brother AnFnendsh1p mgh t at Mason v1s1tt ng Mr and Mrs Kelly Conference m Colwnbus June derson of Akron passed away
of this no t ce any person may Chapter OES mas on W Va
9-1().11 was taken care of and Mr Bohn was unable to attend
Weller and daughter
also
{ 1J subm tf wntt en
comme nts relat ng to actions Wednesday evenutg Apnl 23
John Bentz spent the a newsletter from Kod1ac funeral servtees due to ill
proposed act1ons complamts
Mr
and
Mrs
Salon
Butcher
weekend wtth Mr and Mrs E Bapltst Mtsston was read by health Mr Anderson Bolm
or "Venfred complamts
(2 1
request a publ c mee ttnQ of Spencer, W Va
were A Wmgett He returned to the Mrs Nondus Hendncks It was 92
regarding proposed a c ttons
home of hts son m law and was reported a package had
Mr and Mrs Robert Allure
and or (3 ) reque st not rce of
further
acti ons
on
daughter, Mr and Mrs been sent to Bacone College and Ray VISited Terry Whaley
proceedmg s
PUBLIC NOTICE
Russell Rhoades at Manetta and a letter from Dayton at Galhpohs on Frtday
Reques ts for heanngs on
B
d
s
w
II
b
e
re
ce
r"V
ed
a
t
th
e
fmal actions to rssue deny of f1c e of Bernard V Fult z
Todd Taylor of PI Pleasant Chnsllan Center was read by evemng
modrfy
revoke or renew A ttor ney Po m er oy N at onal
was a weekend guest of hts Mrs Edna Pickens
Mrs Ava Gtlkey would like
permrts li ce nses or var iances Bank Pomeroy Oh1 0 u n trl
Ded~ealton of the Love G1ft to thank the Semor Citizens for
that are not preced ed by Saturday May 10
grandparents Mr and Mrs
1975 at
proposed act rons and so
offenngs of Ruth and Esther the lovely lap blanket they
10 00 0 Clock AM for the sa l e Frank Cleland
rdent1f1ed n th s notrce should
of the Lula Whea ton Dav1 s
be sent to The En"Vrronm ental prop e rty Si tua t ed tn t h e
Mr and Mrs Harold While Ctrcles, $115, was 10 charge of presented her
Board of Revtew Su te 505 33 un ncorporated V rltage of
Her
of
Langsville were SUllday Nondus Hendncks
We are sorry to learn that
North H rgh Street Columbus Portland rn Lebano n Town
scnpture
was
Matt
28
19
20
Oh 10 43215
guests
of
Mrs
Grace
Knder
Clarence
Jordan IS m the
ship Me gs County Dh10 Th e
All other requests for ad sale of the prop ert y s subt ec t
and a medttallon, "What IS the mtenstve care ward at Holzer
Mr
Crtlt
Bradford
of
tUdrcat1on heanngs and other to the appro 11a t of the Court
Worthmgton spen t the Church supposed to do" The Hospttal wtth a heart attack
co mmunrc atrons
concernrng The rr g ht IS res er ved to retect
publ •c
hear nos
publ rc any or all b1ds
weekend w1th Mr and Mrs A mstallalton of offtcers
Recent vtsttors of Ava
meet rngs
ad I ud real ron
followed wtth Barbara Gheen G1lkey were Rosalie Sayre,
hear1ngs compta1nts of any
C
Bradford
Ed w m Mcleod
k nd and regulations should
Mr and Mrs Dale McGraw and Olhe Mae Cozart m May Mason, Jane Gtlkey, Guy
Guard1an of
be addressed to The Legal
Lui a Wh eat on D a11 s
Records Secllon Ohio EPA
have returned home from charge usmg as the toptc, Bolm, Brenda Btshop and Mr
P 0 Bo • 1049 Columbus (5J 2 4 5 6 7 8 9 7tc
Flortda after spendmg the The Seed- ASecret Force " and Mrs Chnton Gtlkey
Oh•o 4~216 (61 4) 466 6037
For closmg all read together
Unless oth erwrse stated Ill
wmter
Mr and Mrs Robert Alkire
partrcllfar nohces all other
and
prayer
by
Mrs
Btksacson
Mrs
Hilda
Hart
spent
the
vtslted
his aunt Mrs Chas
ORDINANCE NO
communrcat1ons
rncludrng
followed
by
the
hymn,
"Lord,
1028
75
weekend
w1th
Mr
and
Mrs
comments on proposed ac
Turner
tn
Lancaster,
ttons and requests for public
Speak to Me
Har
t
at
Newark
and
Gerald
recently
An Ord1nance
for
th e
d
m eet nos should be addressed
The Esther Crrcle members
poso l on of Ass sian I Park Mrs Helen Simpson VISlle
erther to The New Sour ce Air
Mr and Mrs Kenneth
or NPDE S Perm t Records D1rector and Pool Manager her son, Mr and Mrs Bnan served refreshments m the
Payne Jr are unprovmg thetr
Sect ron
whrchever rs ap
and to fiX the sa l ary for the
d t
Sw•mm ng In structor
Stmpson after an eye OC or basement on the table home wtth a large cement
proprrate at The Ohro EPA
P 0
Box 10.49 Columbus
Be 1t orda ined by th e appomtments m Colwnbus beaultfuily decorated by porch
Ohro .43216
Councol
of the Voltage of
Mr and Mrs Elza Birch Grella Simpson and Vera
i.tlt f?phcat on for mod1f lcat ron Mrdd leport as follows
Eugene Young ts slowly
to t:.IPD~tES Perm 1t condlt ens
sec I Thai th ere be took Bert Hunt for hts treat- Beegle A mtsstonary cake, unprovmg
Grim Mrnlng Co
establoshed
the po~ol•on of ment at the hospttal m baked by Helen Sunpson and
ASSIStant Park D rector and
Orange Twp
M A Epple ts pamtmg hiS
Orange Twp Oh ro
Pool Manager
Parkersburg
decorated wtth the words "Go house
Rece1vrng waters
Mergs
Sec II The sa l ary fo r th e
h R
b t
pos it ion ot Ass.stant Park
Jtm Brace oft e tver oa Ye" was also served after a
Creek
Dana Turner ts shU a
Appl cal •on No P0763~X D,,ector and Pool Manager Capt Elza spent the weekend ca ndle hghltng program patten! at Holzer Medtcal
sha ll be $180 00 per month for
asstsled by Mrs Dorothy Center following a heart at
(5 1 9 ltc
June July and Augu st lo" With hts famt 1Y
cont nue for lhe period oft me
The young baby of Mr and Badgley and eight members
=~ICShwr~sm·~~r~0~l~~s rr:~ Mrs Roger AdamslS a patient who h t candles to represent,
Memoroal Day through labor m Holzer Medical Center
Love, Togetherness, Today, Mich , was a guest of hiS
Compassion,
Prayer, mother, Mrs Edward Foster,
D~~ c 111 Be ,t furlh er Weekend guests of Mr and
resolved that a wag e for lhe Mrs Ralph Badgley were Mr Sacrtftce, Educalton, Ap- at Pomeroy and hiS parentsSwrmmrng In stru cto r be and
B dgl
d
m-law, Mr and Mrs Ralph
the same os hereby f &gt;ed at and Mrs Steve a ey an prectalton
Mrs
Mayme Mallory Webb the past week
12 50 per hour
Kelh of Colwnbus and Mr and
Sec IV That Ordrnance No
d
Mrs Alleyne Rees spent a
1025 75 os hereby repea led
Mrs George Sunpson an son returned home after stx weeks
MON thru SAT
Sec V Thai thos Ord•nance George Charleston W Va m Holzer Medtcal Center She week m Colwnbus wtth her
os hereby determ ned
to be an
Mrs V101e t F1sit er of near ts gradually improving
three children and famlUes
e m erg e n c y
m ea su re
necessary for lhe ommed lale Akron spent a week wtth Mrs Jean (Spencer) Lind- Mr and Mrs Wtlham
preserval•on of the peace
h d D1
d
health safety and genera l Henry Rous an
a e an sey of Groveport spent a McKenzre, Philip, Jeff and
830 E. Main
welfare of the •nh&amp;b&gt;tants of Mr a11d Mrs Linley Hart
weekend here with relallves Joue, of Gallipolis were
Pomeroy, Ohto
the Village and lor the reason
f h B th
lhal t Is necessary thai thIs
The meeting o t e er a and frtends and vtstltng guests Saturday of Mr and
~~~!r~~~".ffe~t~;gme m M , Sayre MtsstoFnaryt SocB te ty relaltves at Mason , W Va , a Mrs Roy Rifne
Todd Taylor of Pt Pleasant,
Sec VI Thos Ordnance Sha lt was held at the trs ap1IS1 few days
take effect and be In Ior ee Cl\urch Tuesday evemng, May
W Va , spent the weekend
Mr
and
Mrs
Ralph
Webb
from and alter Apnl 28 1975
1d
Passed the 2Bi h day of Apr 1 6 An organ and p1ano pre u e attended a dmner meeting of With hiS grandparents, Mr
1975
by Mrs B1kacsan and Lilhan the 1968 Deputy Grand and Mrs Frank Cleland
Mr and Mrs Albert Hill are
Attest Gene Grate
Hayman preceded the openmg Matrons at the Impertal
Clerk
of the meetmg wtth devottons House m Colwnbus on a recent spending a week 10 Colwnbus
M L Kelly
l
S
wtth Mr and Mrs Watd
President or counc 1 by Mrs He en tmpson, Sunday
Joseph
Foster
of
Livoma,
_Foster
and children
(5 J 9 16 21c
prestdent, usmg the subject,
.Hy Mrs. Francis Morris
Mrs Nondus Hendro cks,
Mrs Grella Sunpson, Mrs
Ollte Mae Cozart and Rev W
P Btkacsan attended the
Sesqwcentenmal of The Ohto
Baptis t Conventwn dinn er
meeting at Martella Bapltst
Church Fnday evemng Apni

l~

•

6

cyl standard long wtde bed

63 WillYS CJ5 .. -............. ·.. · '1395
4wheel drtve studded snow !Ires removable hard lop

59 WILLYS CJ5 ......... ... ... .. .. '1095

4 wheel dnve good condition

72 FORD RANGER XLT ........... '2295
V8

auto P S P B tong wide bed

Harrisonville

Society News

.OPENe
6DAYS
A WEEK

D&amp;D MEAT '

--

'l .,

72 FORD F-UMl aJSTOM ........'1895

Ptckup

PUBLIC NOTICE

AWMINUM &amp;
VINYL SIDING

58 1 mo
PRIC E
Const ru ct on
Co
Roof ng Spou t mg Ge m nr
t I n re pl a c e m e nt W1n
d o w s complete remodel ng
Phone f&lt;l2 6273 o r (3 04 ) 773
5684
5 9 261p

23 New '75 Olds Ready for Delrvery

GOOD SELECTION OF CHEAPER CARS
See Ray R1ggs or Roger Raebel

RIGGS USED CARS
985-4100
Located on St Rt. 7

tack
Mrs Ruth Donahue and
daughter are v18tting Zettie
Artx
Mr and Mrs Elda Carsey
vtstled the Dale Wtlhams
Sunday
Mrs Gary Gtbson was a
recent med1cal patten! at
Holzer Medical Center
Mr and Mrs Jack King
went to Colwnbus to Vl8tl thetr
son at Chtldren's Hospttal,
who was operated on for open
heart surgery His condition
was senous but ts somewhat
unproved
Mr and Mrs Jr Payne and
chtldren, Donald Terry ,
Cindy and Kevm were dinner
guests Sunday of hiS mother.
the Joe Carseys
Mr and Mrs Gordon Atkins
and children of Mtchigan were
weekend guests of hts mother,
Mrs SteUa Atkins and hts
aunt, Ruby Dtehl
Mr and Mrs Boggs of
Chester vtstted the Earl
McGrath Sllllday and Mrs
McGrath cared for the
chtldren while they sang for
the stck of the community
Mrs Adrienne French IS
home from the hospttal and is
much unproved
The ambulance - took
Margaret Allen hack to the
hospital for moretsurgery
Mrs
Frances Young
recetved word that her
brother-m-law, Dwight Seiple,
was marrted Sunday, May 4
and wtll live in ColwnbWI
Mr and Mrs Arthur
Goodwm of Albany called on
Mrs Ella Anderson and
family, Sunday
Mrs LOulae Dixon is improvmg her property by addmg a cement porch on the

Chester,

o.

front and both stdes
Recent vtstlors of th~
Robert Clarks were Mrl &gt;
Clyde Dalton and daughter;
and Mrs LouiSe Dixon
,
Mr Roy Ellis of Rutland II
bwldmg a house for Mr and,
Mrs Denrus Ash

Eden News
Attendance at Eden Sunday
School was 70.
Mrs Sol Bigley and MrB1
James Carter and Jimmr
VISited Sunday with Mr and
Mrs WUUam Gillilan and
family at Canton and Mr and
Mrs Hiram Shaffer, Bar-;
berton
Mr and Mrs Virgil
Holsmger and family and Mrs.•
Martha Holsinger vislte~
Sunday wtth Mr and ,Mrs•
Rodney Holslngfr and fll!lli4'
at Greenfield
_;
Mr and Mrs Roy Shaffer 111
Pataskala visited recentl)'i
wtth Mr and Mrs Clint.
'
Holsinger and famlly
Mr and Mrs Sol 8lileY.
Aleshia Holsinger and Mn.
Martha Holsinger vllitecl
Friday evehlng wiUt Mr and
Mra Alva Holsinger Jr a~
famUy at Racine
Charlotte Rood visited Mr•
and Mrs VIrgil Holainaa' .....
Martha Holsl1111er, MandaJ
evening
-Martita Bt' 1 a . .;'

r--;;;;;;;;,;~-~
ily»VVDODT
""

-a D

Shopa the

s--------.,.;
WAIT AD .WAY

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...

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I\

. 10 - The,Qaily Sentinel, MiddlePOrt-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, May 9, 1975

Legion post to
•
al
stage M em 0 rl
Day parade
,,
•'

READY TO THROW - Eastern third sacker Bob
McClure has just scooped up a ground ball and will "look"
a runner back to second before throwing the batter out at
first. See Page 3.

.;

Package rejected
The
Eastern
Local
Teachers Assn. Thursday
evening
rejected
a
negotiation package
proposed by the Eastern
Local Board of Education.
After four months of
negotiations, agreement still
has not been reacbed on the
overall package, including a
clause for a re-opening
negotiations when new state
foundation money is received

MEIGS THEATRE

by 'the system, and a "fair"
dismissal policy .
Final negotiations will be
held this weekend and the
teac hers negotiations
conunittee is empowered to
call for a work stoppage if
settlement i&lt;; not reached by
noon Sunday , a spokesman
said.
RIDERS NEEDED
Senior citizens desiring to
take the May 15 afternoon
excursion on the boat ,
"Chaperone," are · asked to

Tonighl lhru Sunday
MY NAME IS NOBODY
(Technicolor)
Starring

Henry Fonda, Terence Hi ll
Rated " PG"

Colorcartoons

Show Slarls a! 7:oop.m.

phone their reservations to
the Senior Citizens Center.
Payment is not made until
boarding, however. Mrs.
Eleanor Thomas, director,
said tha t because so far only
about 175 have indicated they
plan to take the excursion
other counties will be invited
to go on the boat unless more
register at once.

*******************************
...

......~

Tonite lhru Sunday

1 "DOUBLE

Hospital-News

"CAGED
HEAT"

:
!
AGENT'
*
.*

!...
:
...

:... Mason Drive-In Theatre

i

:
:*
*
:

don't have·

...

The 1.'6 mill operating levy
for the Meigs Community
School was endorsed by tbe
Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority at a
meeting Tuesday night lit the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co.
Officers for tbe 1975&gt;76 year

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Mike
Hudnall, Point Pleasant;
Mrs . Donald Houdashelt,
Syracuse; Lettie Doolittle,
... Point Pleasant; Jesse Likens,
Gallipolis Ferry ; Mrs. Harry
Godfrey, Point Pleasant ;
Emmons (Bill) Selby, Point
Pleasan.t; Bryan Hannon,
Bidwell;
MrJl . Nelson
Rayburn, Point Pleasant;
;:
Women's Prison
Clarence Meaige, . Gallipolis ··
U.S.A.
: Ferry ; Bias Montez, Pliny;
Rated R
Altha Roush·, Point Pleasant;
...
...
Mrs. John Bass, Pomeroy;
Geneva Bays, Gallipolis
... Ferry; John Boston, Letart;
:
MASON, W.VA.
: Mrs. Garland Jordan and
Hartford and Ruth
~****************************** son,
Laudermilt, New Haven.
BIRTHS - May 8, a
daughter, to Mr. and Mrs.
Rubert
Rulen,
Point
Pleasant.

Double Feature Program

it

Busy.
. Morning 'til night.
See us today for a quick,
low-cost Appliance Loan.
· Give Mom a break. .

a.m. alter which the post
members and other participants will move to Sacred
Heart Cemetery for salute to
the dead at 11 a.m.
Hollie Mitchell, Jr., and
Hollie Mitchell, Sr., were
welcomed as new members.
Harry Davis, Russell Moore,
Leonard Jewell and [In•,
Hunnel ~ere named to the
nominating committee which
will report on June 3 with
election to be held June 17.
The post went on record
endorsing and supporting the
1.6 mill · tax levy to raise
operating funds for the school
for the mentally retarded to
be voted upon on June 3.
A memorial service was
held for post members who
died during the past year.
Honored were Tom Crow, Sr.,
Harry Hanning, - W. R.
Hayman, Ernest Lallance,
Jessie C. Proffit, Walter
Reibel and Floyd E. Shultz,
World War I, and Keith Goble
and Kenneth A. Grueser,
veterans of World War II.
Refreshments were served
by first vice commander,
Clarence Smucker.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Jane Ann
Cundiff, Syracuse; Ida
Christie, Pomeroy; David
Davis, Pomeroy; Randy
Riffle, Pomeroy; Mark
Markham, Pomeroy; Mary
McCarty, Pomeroy,
DISCHARGES - Archie
Cox, Dewaine Walker, Sylvia
Parsons, James Sears,
James Partlow, Joseph
Quivey.

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
The Pomeroy . E-R squad
answerep a call to old US 33
at 3:40p.m. Thursday for Ida
Christie who was ilL She was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital where she was
admitted.

.

rlllland

=-·

SING SCHEDULED
A hymn sing will be held at
7:30 p.m. Saturday at the
Hazel Community Church
with Dan Hayman and The
Hymn Timers to be present.
The public is invited.

FINAL SIGNUP
There will be a final signup
for the Racine Baseball As§n.
this Saturday, May 10 at the
home of Don Beegle, The
·hours to sign up are from 9
a.m. to noon only, There is a
$2 signup fee. Coaches are
still needed.
SEVERAL FINED
Fined in the dour! of
Pomeroy Mayor Dale E.
Smith Thursday night were
Jerry Stobart, Middleport, $5
and costs, following too
closely; Joe Russell, West
Columbia, left of center;
Larry Phillips, Pomeroy, $10
and costs, reckless operation
and Duane Wolfe, Racine, $10
and costs, speeding. ·
LODGE TO MEET
White Rose Lodge will meet
at I :30p.m. Wednesday at the
American Legion Hall in
Middleport.

$300,000 will assure trip
CLEVELAND (UP!) This week's winning
Mrs . Donna Barnett of numbers in the Ohio lottery
Warren won the top $300,000 are:
prize in the Ohio Lottery
Numbers 582 (five-eight.
Commission's Buckeye 300 two) In any box on ticket wina ·
drawing here Thursday $20.
night.
Numbers 090 (zero-nine- ·
She said the unexpected. ' zero) and -732 (seven-lhreemoney would "would assure :two) In gree11 and blue wins
us a trip to Germany in July $500.
to see our new grandson:•
Numbers 090 ~ 732 In blue
Mrs. Barnett said she and her ·boxes wins $1,000.
Numbers 090 and 732 In
husband had previously
planned the trip to visit their green boxes · eligible for
· son and his wife,
$300,000
drawing
and
Those gettillg $15,000 prizes automatically wins 115,000.
were Myrtle C. Biedenbach of
Cortland, Albert V. Cross Sr.
LOCAL TEMPS
of Leetonia, Merlin C. WellTemperature
In downtown
man of Huntington, W. Va.,
Pomeroy
Friday
at 11 a.m.
Lorene M. Paramore of .
Crestline and Frank C. was 72 degrees under partly ·
cloudy skies.
Booher of Painesville,

News ••· bP-Briefs

(Continued from page 1j'
•
would authorize "such swDll ~s may ~·p~saary" for refugee
aid, Rep. Elizabeth Holtzrruin, J).N.Y:, pi-oposed a $50'1 million ,
ceiling - the amount Ford said was needed to cover traDSportation, health, employment, and . other costs for an
estimated 115,000 refugees. It lost 18-16.
Earlier Thursday, a House appropriations subconunittee ,
voted $405 million to finance the r~~lement programs. That
is a reduction from Ford's request because the estimated
number of refugees now is lower than when the measure was
submitted. It was sent to the full Appropriations Coi'nmlttee,
where it is expected to pass.

Linkletter

STEAK
HOUSE

•
Home

of
the Fabulous

992·5432

Spring-Time

prices. free ddivery,

I

• r

'

'

Wide

FLOWERS

Selection

Our

''

LOOM IN
PLANTS.

Filled with Annuals That Will
Bloom All Summer.

BAs-KETS
Fuschia,
Begooia
and Geranium

ST~

&gt;

I

.

'

Give Mom A
· -flowet To Wear

HANGING

MIDDLEPORT, ·OHIO
'

Jerry Lee Markins, theft; Douglas
Burns and Rex Darst, breaking and
entering and theft; Ronald L. Voglar
and Karlecn Voglar, four counts,

of sale of hallucinogen, for sale of
ba}luelnogen and maintaining a house
for .sale of hallucinogen,
.
The Indicted will be arraigned later
In Meigs County Common Pleas Court.

:;::
{
)
:;::
::::

:~:~::::::::;:;:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::;:::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:::::::::;:::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::;:::::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::::;:::::::;:;:;:; :;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::\:

Weather

A·,CORSAGE

;tf~'·il.'J'I·.· n

,

·

B.RIGHT FOR
MOTHERS LIVING
WHITE FOR
· MOTHERS MEMORY·

Roses, Carnations,
Cymbidiums, Orchids
,.

....

, MRS. Alice McAllister, 'Rt. I, Gallipolis, was named
wmner of the Gallipolis Merchants Associa tion's third annual
"Mother-of-the·Year" contest Friday, Mrs. McAllister's 12year-old daughter, Cindy, submitted the wl:ming essay in this

•

Partly cloudy Sunday. High
in upper 60s and 70s. Chance of
showers Sunday night and
Monday. Low in 50s. High in

year's contest. Mrs, McAllister is pictured above with a
dozen red roses furnished by Ruths F1oral Shop, with
daughter Cindy looking on. Vic Mullins, left, and Danny
Davies, right, co-chairmen of the 1975 contest, presented the
mother and daughter cash awards.

Your .Invited Guest
Reaching More
Than 12,000
Families

tmts

60s .

Devoted To The Greater Middle Ohio Valley
VOL 10 NO. 15

GALLIPOLIS-POINT PLEASANT

SATURDAY, MAY 11, 1975

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY

PRICE 25 CENTS

Young Gallian
dies in crash
GALLIPOLIS - Kevin B. Stewart, 19,
Rt. 2, Gallipolis, died Friday night in the
Holzer Medical Center of injuries suffered
in a traffic accident at 8:29 p.m. on Portsmouth Rd., 600 feet west of Burkhart Lane
inside the city limits of Gallipolis.
A spokesman at the· Holzer Medical
Center said Stewart was pronolUlced dead
by attending physicians. No ruling was
made by Gallia County Coroner Dr.
Donald R. Warehlme but it is believed
Stewart died from internal injuries.
According to Gallipolis City Police ofAMONG 34 city and county teachers participating in a
•wo-day metric workshop in the GAHS library Friday and

Saturday were, left to right, F1ora Dailey, Gladys Lusher and
Michael WadcDe. Dr. , Charles H. D'Augustine, professor
Ohio Un\yersity, discusses work project with'Gladys Lusher:

Schools, and was made possible by Ohio
University, Dr, Charles H. D' Augustine,
Ohio University professor, was one of the
princ.ipal speakers.
Mimilus Fults, Gallipolis City Schools
curriculum coordinator , Adelaide San-

ders, Gallia County Elementary
supervisor and Eugenia Gardner, individualized instruction supervisor also
participated in the program activities.
The workshop was an in-service
training project in which teachers may
.. earn-college credits for their work. The
teachers are preparing themselves to
teach the metric system in the near future.

Engineer will studr- slippages

See

. 59 N. SECOND

M~ddleport, Ohio

•

May term Grand Jury Thursday
returned 10 true bills,
Indicted were Jimmy and Brenda
Graham, felonious assault; Earl
Phelps, theft; Mark Haley and David

GALLIPOLIS - Thirty-four teachers
participated· in a two-day me!ric system
workshop in the new Gallla Academy High
School Library Friday and Saturday.
The workshop was sponsored jointly
by Gallipolis City and Gallia County Local

smce 1952.

Baker Fumiture-

\
)
:;:;
;:;:
:':'

Measuring relearned

'

All Accounts Insured to $40,000.00 by the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.

McAllister with a dozen red roses fur nished by Ruths Floral Shop. Cindy
housewife and she loves us."
McAllister received a cash prize.
On behalf of the Gallipolis Merchants
Cindy said she was going to use the
Association, Vic Mullins and Dan Davies, ·
money to .. buy some spring clothes."
co-chairmen of the even t, presented Mr s.

~:(''' ::;~~~~~~·: : : :: ~~;: =:;;~:: :::~::=~;:;:: ::~:::;:= ;;~~~;;;==~:=;;~ :~~;;~=::;::;:~;== :,::~~;;:;;;=~~:::~t~~:;=;~~;~~~;~: :~~~~~~~;;~ : : :

Elberfelds_ln Pomeroy

Serving you has been our business

1A:HIMd 1172

She is doing a very good job of supporting
us, but she is not in good health and !love
her still . She is a good mother and

Amiex and Mechanic Street Warehouse

terms, service when you need it. ,-

theCinlllry

;~

my mother took over and ·went to work .

All Three Floors, Home Furnishings

the bank of

. ·'

this Mother's lJaJii~

From Our Large and Complete Stock On

20 % OFF CASH &amp;CARRY

convenie~t

ofgreetings on

Make Your Mother's Day Gift selections

MUMS, HYDRANGEAS
PORCH BOXES
AND
COMBINATION POTS

.

the "Mother of the Year." Judges were
Rev. Tura Hayes and Mrs. Paul Wagner.
Twelve-year&lt;•ld Ci ndy McAllister, a
sixth ·grade student at Bidwell-Porter
Elementary School, submitted the winning
essay. She wrote:
"My father got hurt bad on the job and

tochly ...,,.,.,.,.,
Page 27 in the
Times-Sentinel

SHOP SATURDAY 9:30 TO 8 PM

SANDWICH
Order by Phone
And Take Em Home

GALLIPOLIS Mrs
Alice
McAllister, Rt : 1, Gallipolis, F~iday was
named Gallia County's "Mother&lt;&gt;f-theYear" in the third annual Mother's Day
con test sponsored by the Gallipolis Retail ·
Merchants Association .
·
Mrs. Joe Plantz, Kanauga was the 1974
honoree and Mrs. Richard Thomas,
Gallipolis, was the first honoree in 1973.
Mrs . McAllister was chosen from •a
field of 75 candidates entered in the contest
by their children .
Judging was completed Friday afternoon . Entries consisted of 50 word
essays on why the child's mother should be

f~ture

OPEN TONIGHT UNTIL 8-PM

ALL
MOTHERS
LOVE .

·~

'

Gallia's mother
of 1915 named

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

tROW'S

appliances at the lowest ,possible

PGitLeroy

LEVY SUPPORTED
The Syracuse Fire Dept.
and emergency squad gave
its full endorsement Thursday evening to the 1,6 mill
levy for the operation of the
school for the mentally
retarded. The levy will be
voted on at the June 3
primary.

(Continued from page ll
that time, and I'd like to
retract some of my speeches
of those first two years," be
installed were Mrs. Debi said.
Buck, president; Mrs. Janet
Since then, Linkletter said
Dowtlie, vice president; Mrs. he has spent some time "out
Darla Hawley, recording in the street and in crash pads
secretary; Mrs. Pat Shrlvers, and haHway houses" and has
treasurer; and Mrs. Kathy talked to "some of the top
Fry,
corresponding drug smugglers in the
secretary.
world." The result,he said; is
Mrs.
Connie
Bailey that he favors alternatives to
presided with Mrs. Sandi jail for experimental users of
Sargent, social chairwoman, drugs and campus sellers
announcblgfinalplansforthe who :ire supporting a habit.
Mother's Day tea to be held
"I do not have this same
Sunday at 3 p.m. at the home charitable feeling toward tbe
of Mrs. Shrivers. Also an- commercial drug salesmen,"
nounced was a picnic to be . Linkletter said.
held in conjunction with tbe
He added he feels an in'
next meeting with invited dividual convicted of heroin
guests to be those sorority use a second or third time
members recently advancing should go to jail. "We've got
into the Xi Gamma Mu an obligation to society," he
Exemplar Chapter.
said.
· Mrs. Joyce · Bartimus
pre.sented the cultural report
entitled "Be True." Refreshm~ls were served by Mrs.
Bailey and Susan Oliver.

You 'II find a ~reat selection of fine
furniture, floor coverings and .
PDibilf

J~ck Slavin of Syracuse,
art mstructor at Meigs High
~hool widely recogl)ized for
his skill as a wood carver and
a sculpturor, entertained a
family night audience
following dinner at ·Heath
United Methodist Church
Thursday evening.
He drew quick sketches
featuring caricatures and
improvisation Of faces and
people from letters of the
alphabet.
The program was arranged
by Mrs. Betty Fultz and the
Eleanor Circle, Mrs. Donna
Byers, president, was in
charge of meat and drinks
prepared at the chtirch, the ·
rest comin_g as covered
dishes.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Sunday
through
Tuesday,
chance
of
showel'l! Sunday or Monday
and fair Tuesday. Highs
will be In the upper 60s and
70s and lows will be In the
mid 40s and 50s.

School levy is en,dorsed

'

i...

' '

Tentative plans for the
annual Memorial Day observance have ·been made by
Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legion: As worked
out at a meeting earlier this
week:
A parade will be held on
May 26 as a part of the observance, The . parade will
form.on the upper parking lot
in Pomeroy at 9 a .m. and will
move down Main St. at 9:30.
The parade will go out
Butternut, up Second to the
· Courthouse Monument for a
salute to the war -dead, and
then will move, by foot, to
Beech Grove Cemetery.
The observance is being
held in conjunction with the
community .and the Pomeroy
Fire Department. The high
school band, boy scouts,
baton groups and others will
take part in the parade.
Everyone wishing to take
part is welcome,
At the cemetery, William
R Davis, who .retired as a
lieutenant with the State
Highway Patrol, will be
speaker. The services are
expected to start at 10:30

Slavin gives ...
entertainment

..

.. . - ...

.1

.

'

~

GALLIPOLIS --:- City- commissioners,
during a special hearing here Saturday·,
agreed to meet at noon Monday to act ~pon
an emergency ordinance to- employ an
engineer to begin work on a study of the
drainage and other related slippage
problems on Orchard Hill and Hedgewood
Dr. Residents of both areas are expected
to attend the session .
That was the major decision agreed
upon during Saturday's three hour hearing
before a jammed Municipal Court room in
the City Building. The city engineer will
make a study of the existing situation and
what steps should be taken to resolve the
problem.
·
City Commission President John
Allison said, "Th~ city will take action to
prQvide a solution if fWlds are available."
Commissioner Arthur (Pete) Nibert Indicated he was willing for the city to finish
its work on tlie city waterline and, If
possible, place a drainage line in the
existing right of way of the city.
,Commissioner Douglas Wetherholt
emphasized that the commission had
taken action to work on the problem, "We
have discuSS&lt;ld the situation many times at
OW'

commission meetings," was

. had viewed the · area and agreed wlth
Fisher's recommendations. He said that
all four had es\imated it would take between $100,000 arid $200,000 to repair the
drainage and slippage problems, but there
still w~uld be no guarantee that the road
woulll:'remain after the work was completed. It was pointed out that borings
would have 'to . be completed and all
properties must be stabilized before repair
work begins.
Questions were asked on just who is
responsible for the slippage, the city, the
insurance company which insures city
property, or developers.
One resident was of the opinion that if
the developers had not cut underneath the
property, there would be no problem.
Another said it was the city's problem
since it put in the waterline.
It was noted that the legality has not

a com-

ment made by a commissioner.
Dr. Stanley P. Fisher, profess&lt;ir and
chailJilan of the Oepartment of Geology at
Ohio University, reviewed a study he had
made concerning the slippage problems. .
Dr. Fisher stated the three major sUps,
two since February, were due to drainage
problems, possibly caused by the unusual
heavy rainfall the past two years. Fisher
indicated that there had been 150 pet. more
rain than normaL He also said geological
studies have revealed signs of pre-historic
slides.
.
According to Dr, Fisher, the biggest
problem is to keep the water from draining
in to the red shale, He stated that there was
•
· no immediate hope for the residents of the
Hillcrest area in stopping their yards from
sUpping away because the drainage had
already gone too lar. -·
HAPPY MOOOR'S DAY -It Willi a
· At that point, City Manager Paul
happy day for Nora Mllla, MldcDeport, ·
Willer read a letter from Dr, Fisher
when she received by mail Friday,
regarding recomme~dations on Hillcrest.
direct from Hawaii, a dozen Hawaiian
·Willer said that four licensed engineers
Orchids from her son and daughter-infrom GalUa ColUlty, Paul Stull, Glenn
law, Don and Pat Mllla, who are
Smith, Phil RobertS ~d Clyde Ramsay·
vacationing there.

been determined and may be determined
only by a law suit,
· Commission President Allison said:
"The city may have responsibility on
Hedgewood Dr., but not above." When
asked if the city has a responsibility to
landowners on Hillcrest, commissioners
said, "No, we have never made any public
statements that we did."
'
Other questions pertained to drainage
on Oakwood Dr., the slippage problem ·at
Dr. Joseph Brady's residence and what is
going to be done now and in the future.
A large- amount of time was spent
discussing a possible law suit to deiermine
exacUy who is responsible, Residents were
of the opinion they had been ignored and
that there bad been a credibility gap be·
tween them and the eity.
It was agreed that either an insurance
attorney's ruling or "friendly lawsuit"
would have to be made to' determine the
·exact party responsible for the problem . If
the city is ruled libel lis insurance would
have to pay, .
'
Among those participa ling .in the
question-answer session were Joe and
Helen Fenderbosch, Gil Corliss, Billy
Houck, Ike Wiseman, Harold Wiseman,
Junior Simmons, Lou Ford, Charles
' Reiinund, Atty. Warren . F. Sheets, Dr .
Joseph Brady, Tim Hennessey, .City
Solicitor Dean 'Evans and others.

Roberts, 15, of 919 Second Ave. ; Anita S.
Halley, 17, 2106 Chatham Ave., both of
Gallipolis and Dave A. Jenkins, 19, of Rt. 2,
Patriot, miraculously were not injured.
Stewart, a construction worker, was

born Dec. 31 , 1955 to Carl and Betty
Hampton Stewart of Rt. 2, Patriot.
In addition to his parents, he is survived
by his wife, Pamela .Paxton whom he
married Nov. 16, 1974, a sister, Mrs. Bud
!Linda) Jackson of Westland, Mich. , a
brother, Carl Stewart, Jr., of Westland,
Mich ., the paternal grandparents, Mr. and
ficers, Stewart apparently lost controJ of Mrs. George Stewart of Hillsboro and the
his 1969 Chevrolet van when a right tire maternal grandmother , jllrs. Anna Maude
blew out .
Hampton of Waterloo.
The vehicle faileci to make the curve.
Last rites will be held at I p.m. Tuesday
struck a guardrail post, went through the from the Crossroads Church with Rev,
guararail down a 62 foot embankment and Ernest Baker officiating . Burial will follow
struck a tree.
in Flagsprings Cemetery.
Stewart was rushed to the hospital by the
Visitation will be held from 3-4 and 7-9
Gallia County Volun teer Emergency p.m. Monday at the Waugh·Halley-Wood
Squad.
FWleral Home. The body will lie in state at
Three ·passengers in the van, Trilla L. the church one hour before the services.

Afternoon swim by boys
ends in death for one
GALLIPO.LIS FERRY, W. Va. George Franklin (Frank) Harper , 16,
Gallipolis Ferry, drowned while swimming with two other friends in the Ohio
River early Friday afternoon, near the old
ferry landing here,
Time of the drowning was approximately 1:05 p.m. , according to a.
report filed by Deputy N. E. Benson of the
Mason County Sheriff 's Department.
The body was recovered by several
members of the Point Pleasant Volunteer
Fire Department at 5:15 p.m. ap·
proximately 100 yards from the location
the victim went under.
Two friends .who were with Frank
Harper at the time of the tragedy have
been identified as David Siders and Tim
Harper, both Gallipolis Ferry teenagers.
Tim Harper is a cousin of the drowned
victim.

Pleasan t Volunteer Fire Department.
Also aiding in the dragging efforts
were units from the Mason Rescue Squad,
the New Haven Emergency Squad and the
Gallipolis Rescue Squad.
The body was taken to the Wilcoxen
Funeral Home, where Dr , ~ohn Grubb,
coWlty coroner, determined that the cause
of death was drowning.
Frank Harper who was just completing
his sophomore year at Point Pleasant High
School , is· the son of George and Barbara
German Harper. He attended the Jordan
Baptist Church of Gallipolis Ferry.
He was preceded in death by two
grandparents, Cecil Harper and Guy
German .

Besides his parents, other survivors
are three sisters, Anna, Terry and Lila, all
at home: two grandmothers , Mrs. Ruth
Harper of Gallipolis Ferry and Mrs. Anna
Stearns of Point Pleasant, and several
aunts and uncles.
Funeral services will be held Monday
at 2 p.m, at the Wilcoxen Funeral Home.
Rev. William Bud Hatfield and Rev,
Charles Moses will officiate. 'Burial will
follow in the Jordon Baptist Gemetery of
Gallipolis Ferry. Friends may call at the
funeral home after 2 p.m: Sunday.

According to David Siders' father ,
Harry Siders, all three boys had gone to
lhe river to fish Friday morning, then in
the afternoon ·they ·decided to go swimming.
At approximately 1:45 p.m. both
David Siders an'd-Tim Harper returned to
the Siders' home and related, the tragic
events of' how their friend had drowned.
They said they- tried to rescue him, but
failed although they had gotten hold of him .;:;:::::::::::::!:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::;:;:::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::
'
twice.
~m
::
Calls were then made to both the
sheriff's department and the Point

Missionary aviator .
has unique ·position

I

I

· By Bob Hoenlch
directing lield operations in the Republic
of Panama.
POMEROY- How would you like to
fly 20 minutes and go back into
Reared in Akron, Jim was active in
civilization of some 100 years ago. Or
Christian activities as a youth. And, by
work in a position of helping others to the · the way, during his youth lie frequently
extent that yo~ l'Ive In almost a posiiion of
visited relatives in Meigs ColUlty during
worship? ,
•
.
. the summer. In . the Boy Scouts, Jim
Thisisthewayltiswith the Rev. Jim
attained the rank of "Eagle'' and was
Russell, son of Mr. and Mrs. Willard
awarded a " Prince of Peace" speaking
Russell, Olndor St., Pomeroy, who
award by the Council of Churches and an
probably holds one of the most unique · "Hunor Sea Scout" award by _!}oodyear
jobsin the world, You see, Rev. Russell is
Tire CJ. He ,has always had !Jn intense
a missionary-aviator affiliated with lhe
interest in flying a"d started the airpraft
Maritime .Faith Mission Fcll,wship
Continued on page 2 ..

LITTLE MISS POPPY - Sheryl
Leann Johnson , 4, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur E. Johnson, Route I
Racine, has been named "Lillie Miss
Poppy" of the juniqr unit, Racine
American Legion Post 602, American
Legion Auxiliary . Sheryl 's grand·
parents are Mrs. Betty Van Meter,
Route I, Racine , and Mr. and Mrs.
Douglas Johnson, Racine. Mrs. Eunie
Brinker, Racine , is the greatgrandmother. Sheryl, who has been·a
member of the junior unit since birth,
was selected to the honor by the senior
auxiliary.

Rutland asked
to join cleanup
RUTLAND - Let's make Rutland a
"Bloomin' Clean Town" say the Rutland
Friendly Gardeners. For entry in the
Sears Community Involvement Program
(SCIP ) contest the Friendly Gardeners
are lalUlching an all out effort to clean up
their village. To do 'this the club has
enlisted the cooperation of Rutland Mayor
Gene Thompson and the town eouncil, Cub ·
Scout Pack 240, the Leading Creek Conservancy, Quality· Print Shop, Rutland
Elementary School children in a "litter
walk", and .the Rutland Branch of. the
Pomeroy National Bank which has
donated flower seeds which have been
distributed to residents.
To further the project the village is
providing a free trash pickup on May 21
and 22. All Rutland residents are urged to
take advantage of this by cleaning up their
properties and placing the trash by the
curb so it can be picked up on the
designated days.
A Bicentennia) theme will be used, "A
beautiful America begins at home. The
success of the project depends on you, the
residents of Rutland." Everyone is urged
to clean up, paint up, and plant up their
property.

a

..

'.

'

..'

,

'

.....-.-.__

...J

.• i\

'•'•

FIRM CHARGED
ASHTABULA, Ohio ( UPI) ~ The Panar .
Corp, of nearby Rock Creek has been
charged with violating Ohio's air pollution
regulations and causing a public nuisance.
Attorney .General William J. Brown fUed
charges , Friday against Panar and Ita
parent company, Combustion Engineering
Inc ., Stanford, Cona·., in AshtabUla County
Common Pleas Co6rt,

·"

... ,

I

•i

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