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12- The Daily Se'!t~el, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, May 28 1975

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Terr y (;ene Barrett, Myra
Ga il Bayes. Teresa Hayes
Beitzel , Sharon Lynn Bing,
..
Debora h Jane Black, Orrion
(ContiJiued from page 1J
(Continued from page 1J.
li.lan chard , Redent lh
formed "The National An- W.
Blev ins, V icki L ynn Brauer ,
them" ' "Maroon and Gold" ' Mi cha el B. Braun , Ronald has been broken off, and the pool is filled with rocks, cans and
·.
· _
•"The Alma Mater " and Kim Browni ng , Teresa Jean bottles.
Bu r ch ett , Debbie Mari e
Mrs.
Craig
urged
that
a
guard
be
hired
to
look
after the
another selectioQ.
Ca mpbe ll , Juli a Anne park during the night bours. She also suggested that the
George Glaze, Jr., minister Capehar t. Mandy Lee Car
of. the Middleport Church of der , Rodn ey All en Ca rl, parents of children doing the vandalism he cited into court and
Kay Ca rmichael. Jo fined for the offenses.Mrs. Craig said the parents penalized for
Christ, gave the invocation Candy
Lynn
Chafi n, Jenn ifer the offenses of their children willore apt to supervise them
and the benediction.
Carol ine Chapman , Ma r ce lla
James A. Diehl, Jr, an- Lore tla Char les, Da vi d better. The council discussed the need for public cooperation
nounced the class as George Eugene Ch ri sti an , La wrence and help in getting vandalism at the park stopped. Plans were
L Coates. Rosemari e Oal ene
Hargraves , Jr ., presented Col burn , Tim othy Lynn made for getting a citizens committee into operatiot! at once.
diplomas to the following Colburn , Rayanna Sue Cole.
The discussion brought out that some residents "do not
Gra ce Ann Colwell , Charles
graduates :
Conger, Ri chard Alan Couch, want io get involved" and that others are afraid to report acts
Vicki Lynn Abbott, S h~r on Robert Dennis Coun cil . Carla
Murray Albright, Robe r t Ne ll Cri sp, Mary Lou ·of vandalism for fear of reprisals from the young people.
Allen King reported again that the Meigs Local School
Icenhower Crow , Sandra Lee
Curtis, Delilah Darst, Carl R. District Board of Education has promiSed to reconstruct the
Da v idson, E . Ken ton '1 0av id ,
dug out on the pony league diamond at the park but that no
Gregor y C. Da vi s, Terr i
Bumgardne r Davis, Cynthia · action has taken place. Marvlli Kelly asked that some conLynn Demosky , Evelyn sistent policy be established on cuttllig and mowing at
Lorraine DeMoss, Kath y Jo cemeteries.
DeMoss, Roger L. . Dent,
Mrs. Craig who apparently will contlliue -to serve on
Ed ward L. Diddle, Bobby
Eugene Dill , Roger Frankl in council until some action is taken on her resignation, began
INTEREST ·
D i llard , Jr ., Bonnie L ou
serving on the body last fall replacllig David Jenkins who had
Dill on, Dan iel Mark Dodson, resigned when he moved from the community.
Linda Burbridge Donohue,
Darla Sue Ebersbach. Penny
Ma rie Eblin .
De~
Clinton Randall Faulk, Lois
Apr il Fraser, Larry Keith
Fridley , Belinda Victoria Kennedy , Eileen Ann Ken·
Friend, Cherie Fry, Vicki
Jane Fry , Barbara Joy Fultz, nedy, Anita Marie King,
Ray King, Dano Ralph
Cynthia Ann Garnes, Gary Danny
Earl R. Werner, 63, Rt. I,
King, David Mark King ,
Ray Georg e, Linda Anne Sonia
Kiser,
Scherry
Anita
Middleport,
construction
Gerard , F ranklin Dee Giles,
Roy E. Lawson, Jr.·, company operator, died
Nancy Ka y c&gt;illispie, Michael Lane,
Ninety day interest penalty
Randy Joe Lee, Debbie Kay
Kei th Gilmore, Richard J. Lemley,
if
withdrawn
before
Carol Ann Lewis, Tuesday afternoon at Holzer
Gilmore
,
Margaret
Ann
maturity date.
Diana
Lynn
Lewis , Tammy Medical Center following a
Griffil h, c&gt;ar y Eugene Rowena Luster,
. Diana Lee lingering illness. ·
Gruese r. , Rob e rt Michael
Lynch,
Kenneth
W.
Madden,
Haley, Will iam R. Hall, Jr .,
Mr. Werner was born Feb.
Cheryl Dian Haning, Danny Jr .
I,
1912 in Middleport, a son of
Irene
Malone.
Clifford
K . Harrison, Regina Dawn
Brent Manley, Cynthia Maire the late John and Rebecca
Harrison , Kenneth Allen
· Hawk ,
Timo thy
Paul Manley. John Jefferson Taylor Werner. He was also
Ha zelt on, Mariann Hen - Manley. Ruth Ernestine
Martin, Susan Kay Mash , preceded in death by a
drick s, Kenneth Lloyd Hoff- Joel
Maue, Ricky daughter, Carol Sue , a
man . Isabelle Lynn Hooper. Alan Frederick
Metheny
,
Brenda Kay
The Athens County
Mark D. Hudson , Joyce
Miller. Charles M. Mi ller , brother, George, and a sister,
Savings &amp; Loan Co.
EliZabeth Hutchison, Christy Christopher
J . . Miller, Edna.
296 Second 51.
Day Hysell, Donald Guy Kenneth Mitchell,
David
Surviving are his wife,
Pomeroy, Ohio
Hysell , Roger Perry Hysell,
Allen
Moore,
Josie
.Morton,
Jo Ellen Ingles , Arnold
Kathryn
Gibbs Werner; two
Debra Diane Mowery, Peggy
Patrick Johnson , David Ann
daughters,
Mrs. Rolland
Murphy, Jeffrey Grant
Dewayne Jones, Brian Keith
Musser,
Victor
E.
McCloud,
(Dorothy
Elaine)
Smith,
Jus tice, Sonia Jean Justice,
Sherri D. Ka uff, Carl Edward Jimmy Ba llne McClure, Elida, and Mrs. E. Wayne
Kennedy, Jr., Debora Carl Virgin ia Viola McCune, (Meda Jane J Stour, CinGregory Allen McKinney,
Samuel McKinney, Deborah cinnati; two sisters, Miss .
Kay Mclaughlin, Ralph Dale Kathryn E. Werner, MidMcMillin, Mar tha Ann Mc- dleport, and Mrs. Leo
FREE OFFER AT
Neal, Janet Lee Neal. Chris
E, Neece, Sandra Kay Russell, Denver, Colo.; a
Neigler, Roger Nelson, Vicky brother, John L. Middleport; ·
Sue Newell, Miachael Alan seven grandchildren, one
Nesselroad , Annette Nitz,
Nanette Mae Nitz. Pamela great-granddaughter and
Gay. Nottingham, Jeffrey W. several nieces and nephews. ,
Oh l1nge_r,
Phillip
M.
Mr. Werner owned and
Ph. 992-2635
Middleport
OChllnaer, Jack Louie Oiler, operated the E. R. Con. athy. Lou Osborne, Judith
Ann Owen , Rebecca Marlene struction Co.
Painter, Harry Ray Pettit, Jo
Funeral services will be at
Anna Peyton, Douglas 10:30 a. m. Thursday at the
Phalin , Mark Anthony
Pierce, Douglas Pope, Donna Rawlings-Coats Funeral
Jean Preasf, Barbara Lynne Home with E. Wayne Stout
Price, Debra Ann Priddy,
Mary Kay Quails, Rose officiating.' Burial will be in
Elaine Ramsburg, Ani Ia Gravel Hill Cemetery,
Rail iff, RodneY. Reeves, Fae Cheshire. Friends may call at
Kathryn Re1bel , Jeffrey the funeral home at anytime.
Ridgway.
Kenneth Wayne Rife, John In lieu of flowers, friends are
Patrick Riley, Gerri Ann asked to contribute to the
Rought, Rebecca Roush, · Middleport Emergency
Thomas .E. Roush, Daniel Squad.
Ray Russell, Terry Ray
Scaggs, James B. Scott,
Marlin Seelig , Randy K.
Shamblin, Bryan Shank,
DEATH NOTED
Gwen Sheets, Diana Lynn
Smith, Patricia Lou Darst
Word was received today of
Smith, Kenneth K. Snyder, the death of Mrs. Dan Gin·
Brenda Elaine Spires.
Brenda Kay Stanley, Kim. ther , Beverly. Funeral
berly Elizabeth Sievers, services will be at the
Thomas Sievers, Barry Jay Christian &lt;:hurch, Beverly, at
Stewart, William
Don
Stewart, Donald L. Slivers. I p. m. Friday.
Daniel Ray Stone, Daniel E.
Taylor. Debotah Kay Taylor,
Sam Terzoppolous, John
SQUAD SUMMONED
Randall Thomas, John
The Pomeroy Emergency
Stephen Thomas, Teresa
Lynn Thomas. Timothy T. Squad answered a call to 144
Thomas, Karen Sue Till is, Mulberry Ave. at 4:28 p. m.
Susan L. Tillis, Vicki Lynn Tuesday for Mrs. Mary Kern
Vaughan, Gregory Lee who was ill. She was taken to
Vining, Eugenia Lynn
Walburn, Gregory Lee Holzer Medical Center .
Walburn, Stephen Edward
Walburn, Alisa Walker ,
Danny Lee Walker. Drema
~· NOTICE OF SALE ~
Arlene Ward, George Reina
The real es,at e of Elsie B .
Ward, Tery Ray Warner, Bryan1.
, wh ic h •s
Mary Ann Weyersmiller loc_ated tnDeceased
Rutla nd V ill ag e,
Diana Clay While, c&gt;erald bemg tw o lot~ , see Vo l 25B.
Wayne White, Joy Christine Page 77 3, Meig s County Deed
White,
Terry
Shawn Records , will be offered tor
Whitlatch, Brenda Sue Will , sale at the offices of Crow .
&amp; Port er . Attorneys · at
Linda Diane Williams, Joel Crow
Law . Pomeroy , Ohio, at 10 : 00
Anthony Wisecup, Basheba A .M . on June 9th, 1975 . this
Ann Witte, Robin Mae Wolfe, property is appraised at
Randall Keith Yates.
'£7 .500 .00 and cannot b e sold
.

·On Certificates
Of
s1,000 Minimum
30 Mo. Term

Earl Wemer
.died Tuesday

Meigs Co. Branch

@

Ingels .Furniture

Cast, crews will meet on Saturday . :
All persons who have
aud tioned lor a part in
"Gallia Country" and others
who wish to participate but
have not auditioned, are
requested to meet in the
amphitheatre at Bob Evans'
Shelter House , Rio Grande, at
6 p. m. Saturday. Final
casting and assignments will
be made at that time by Murl
Rush, Jr., director of the
)listorical musical pageant.

Th

f' d
ree are me

Everyone. interested in
performmg m the chorus, as
a solmst, backstage work,
scenery, ma)teup or props, is
urge~ to attend Saturday
mgh\ s meetmg.
This year 's production of
"Galba Country" will be
presented the weekends of
July II, 12, 13, July 18, 19, 20
and July 25, 26 and 27th. In
addition to Mr. Rush, E.
Kimball ( ~ed) Suiter, will he
mustcal director and Mrs
G i 11 i a n
M0 0 r e :

. Three were fined one
forfeited bond, and one
person was placed on
SEARLES ASSIGNED
probation by Mayor Fred RUTLAND - Airman
Wayne L . Searls has
Hoffman, in Ml'ddleport
from the U. S. Alr
graduated
Tuesday.
Force's
communications
Fln.ed were Betty L.
equipment repairman course
McKinley, 31, Middleport, $5 conducted by the
Air
and costs, running a red Training . Command at
light; Paul Gene Sigman, 41 , Wichita Falls, Tex. The son of
Middleport, $30 and costs, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Searls of
operating a vehicle without
regard to safety, and Charles 235 Depot St., he is being
assigned to Seymour Johnson
R. Hysell, 23 • Pomeroy • $! 5 AFB, N.C. Airman Searls is a
and costs, speeding.
1974 graduate of Meigs High
Calvin W. Mayle • 22 • School. His wife, Debra, is the
Pomeroy, forfeited a $25 bond daughter . of Mr. and Mrs.
for failure to keep an assured
clear distance. James Smith, Thol'(las A. Schoonover of 99
Nelson Road, Rutland.
Middleport, was placed on 30 ·
days probation for disturbing
the peace.
KOUNS IN TEXAS
SYRACUSE - Airman
First Class Joseph B. Kouns ,
GROUP TO MEET
The Meigs County Regional son of Mr. and -Mrs. Don E.
Planning Commission will Kouns, has arrived for duty
meet at 2 p. m. Thursday at at Sheppard AFB, Tex. He is
the ASCS office, upstairs in a traffic control specialist
the Farmers Bank Building, with a unit of the Air Force
Pomeroy. Anyone interested Communications Service,
in housing is invited to attend. previously served at Loring
AFB,
Maine.
Kouns
graduated from South Point
High School in 1971 and attended
Mount Vernon
GUESTS COMING
Rev. Charles Norris and Nazarene College.
the Pathfinders Quartet ,
Ironton, will be at the An·
MEETING SET
tiquity Baptist Church at 7:30
Bud Wingett, chairman of
p. m. Friday. Their ap- the Meigs County Democrat
pearance is sponsored by the parly, requests that all
Men 's Fellowship of the members and committeemen
church.
attend a special meeting
Thursday at 8 p. m. at the
Episcopal Parish House.
HOP PLANNED
A record hop will be held at
the Rock Springs Grange Hall'
LOCAL TEMPS
from 7 to II p. m. Friday.
The
temperature
in
Refreshments will be sold downtown Pomeroy at 11 a.
and games will be playf9. m. today was 78 degrees
Those attending are to wear under sunrly skies.
clothes of the 1950's.

choreographer . Brant .:historicalmusicalpageant,iS,
Adams, who has wrlt!eh and an , orlgllial work of
arranged mu,ch . of the Durieux, Mt. Vernon, Ohio. ~
musi~al score, will be ac-. His musical "Song of Dixie" ~
companist for the third year. · ~as perfo~med successfulli
Mrs. Nora Price is also m MI. Vernon several years '
wardrobe mistress for the
'!Gallia Country" tracei
third year .
the history and character~
"Gallia Country", an who were lnstrwnental in the,
development of Southeastern.
Coaches to name .Ohio between 1790-1890, and'
uses historical fact IJiterlaced'
dream t~am today with music, dance and' .
dialogue to · provide a well'
Southeastern Ohio League rounded presentation for th; ·
baseball coaches will go to entire family.
.
Jackson this evenjng to
Headquarters for the Gallia
select the 1975
All· Dramatic Arts Society :
Southeastern Ohio League producers of the pageant, i3
baseball team
·
in the Chamber. of Commerce.
Ji'm ·Osborne and C· L· Building, 16 State Street,
(Johnny)· Eck er
Wi'II Gallipolis, phone 614-446-9446·
represent' .Gallia Academy
:
High School.

HOSPITAL NEWS
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Pleasnl Valley Hospital •
ADMISSIONS - Ruth
DISCHARGES - Bravin•
Blo5ser, Middleport; Daniel Hughart, Point Pleasant; .
Davidson, Pomeroy; Melvina Mrs. Dewitt Browning, Point

~~r~:sa~~lli, ~-~d:~~~~~:; ~~:~~:~i~; A~~~~~a K~~~
Jane Snouffer, Pomeroy;
Barbara Brown, Pomeroy;
Clarence Norris, Racine;
Sharon Icenhower, Pomeroy;
Alice Mullins , Cheshire;
Barbara Smith, Middleport;
Paul McDaniel, Jr., Mid·
dleport.
'

Henderson; Mrs. MileS'
Carpenter, Vinton; Lillian,
Jones, Syracuse; Mrs;
Kenneth Tully, · Racine;~
William Addock, Rayville:
Ind.; Mrs. Dewey White, Jr .•
Gallipolis; Edith Memey •
Ripley, and Mrs. Lelan!l~
Selby, Point Pleasan I.
"
NEW CITIZENS - J;
DISCHARGES
Frank
daughter to Mr. and Mrs;
Potts, Bernice Barber.
Merrill Cox, Gallipolis.
~

••

ANNULMENT WON
SIX WIN HONORS
~
In Meigs County Common
Six Marietta Colleg;
Pleas Court Elizabeth Oiler students from Meigs Count!
was granted an annulment were named to the dean's liSt
from Harry Ric bard Oiler. for the second semester~
Dorothy M. Kent was They are Robert Coates J6
grail ted a divorce from Paul Ell~n Diehl, Pomeroy: N~cf
H. Ken I on charges of gross 5rn!th, Chester; David G~
neglect of duty and extreme Smith, Reedso,:ille; Michaet
cruelty.
B. May, Rutland, and Davi4;
B. Wolfe, Middleport.
·•
SQUAD RUNS
The Middleport
$20, NOT $200
;
Emergency Squad made two
Mrs. Virglliia Thomas, W.
runs Tuesday, one to take Main St., Pomeroy, will
Ruth Blosser, 577 Beech St., receive $20 worth of groceries,
to Veterans Memorial a week for the next 50 weeks
Hospital at 9:33 a. m. where as her prize awarded during
she was admitted, and the the anniversary observance·
other at 10:59 p.m. for Mary of Powell's Super Valu Store'
Elizabeth Archer, Bailey in Pomeroy. rather than $200
Run , to Veterans Memorial a week as was erroneously
Hospital.
stated earlier.
'

ELBERFELDS ·IN POMEROY
Short-Cuts
To ·
Summer

"""

Fun

·aig 22 cu. ft. Refrigerator

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'

Indicators in
•
economy rise
WASHINGTON (UP!) _ failed to rise in April.
Last month 's record rise
The government's index of
foll
owed a I per cent increase
leading business indicators a
in
March, the firs t consensitive barometer of fut~e
secutive two month gain m a
e~onomic trends, recorded its
biggest one month gain ever · year. Prior to March, the
in April, the Commerce index had declined for 11
straight months.
Depar tment said today ,
Since the index is valued as
Using a revised format
desi gned to discount the a guide to shifts in the
effects of inflation, the index economy, another month or
surged 4.2 per cent last two of upward movement
would be "strong evidence "
month .
Eleven of 12 indicators that the recession had hit
which · comprise the index bo ttom or would do so soon , a
increased. The money supply Commerce Department
·
was the only indica tor that economist said.
w:=::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::·:·=·=::::::~:~:::~=;=~=:=~::=~=:::=:=:::::::=:=:=:=:::::::=:::::::=::::::~:;.::·=~·$&amp;

f:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;::::::::::::: :::::::::::;::::: :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::·::::::::::::::::::}f

::1:

J

t

INews . • •in Brief~
By United Press International
TORNDOS SWIRLED ACROSS SPARSELY populated
areas of the Texas Panhandle today for the second day in a
row, but there was only slight property damage and no one was
llijured in the two-day onslaught of twisters.
Tornadoes were reported at Goldsmith, Midland and near
Plainview, Tex., today, but none caused any damage. Nine
twisters raked the Lone Star state Wednesday, but only minor
damage was reported.
The funnels swooped down out of powerful thunderstorms
which raced across the area, dumping heavy rains and pelting
wide areas with hail - some of it the size of baseballs.

Wall Disney 's
THE ISLAND AT THE
TOPOFTHEWORLD
(Technicolor)
Starring David Hartman
Also
. WaIt Disney's
WINNIE, THE POOH
AND TIGGER TOO
!Technicolor) ·
Rated "G"

Show starts at 7:00p.m.

Plus ...
UP TO
''

s1oooo
Trade In

On Your Old Refrigerator
-

_

Pnc f' s S tart
- At $399.95 ·--·

Devoted Tu The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area
VOL. XXVII

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT; OHIO

NO. 32

Ford is "~~~=r~; GOp
h Ope f UI

DARES SALAAM, TANZANIA- THE UNITED States is
trying to negotiate the release of two American students and a
Dutch woman held by Marxist guerrillas in the jungles of.
Africa. U.S. Ambassador W. Beverly Carter said the United
States would refuse to pay a ransom - "that is policy" - but
would consider all other moves to save the hostages.
By HELEN fBOMAS
"There has been no fresh contact with the guerrillas, but UPI White House Reporter
movement is continuing on that," Carter told newsmen
BRUSSELS ( UPI)
Wednesday. The guerrillas abducted the hostages May 19 from President Ford said today he
a remote wildlife reserve in Tanzania and took them across hopes to have "some sucLake Tanganyika to a jungle hideout IIi neighborllig Zaire.
cess" at movllig Egypt and
Israel back toward peace
A STRIKE BY GUARDS AT THE SOUTHERN Correc- negotiations when he confers
tional Facility at Lucasville, which began May 12, apparently Sunday
with
Egypt's
ended today when most of the corrections officers on the first President Anwar Sadat IIi
shift reported to work, a state Corrections Department spokes- Austria.
man said.
Ford made the optimistic
Joseph Ashley S&lt;~id pickets were removed from the front of comment on Middle East
the facility overnight. Pickets however remained at the diplomatic prospects as he
Chillicothe Correctional Institute and Marion Correctional began a NATO summit visit
Institute but the facilities were functioning at a near normal with a series of private, onepace .
onone talks with the leaders
of Greece, Turkey, Portilgal
USBON - PORTUGAL'S MILITARY REGIME cracked and othl!r members of the
down on a11 extreme left-wing Maoist group today with troops strained Western alliance.
and armored cars in a series of raids IIi which' they fired
Stepping right llito the role
volleys of shots into the air to disperse crowds. Dozens of of
peacemaker
and
Maoists were reported arrested.
troubleshooter, Ford l!lel
It was the first time the Armed Forces Movement has used first with Prime Minister
force against a national headquarters of any political party or Constantine Caramanlis of
· organization. Several such raids have been carried out IIi the Greece and then with
provinces. Tens of thousands of Communist supporters took to Premier Suleyman Demirel
the streets Wednesday night to show their approval of the of Turkey at the U.S. emmilitary government..
bassy residence.
And IIi a separate demonstration, several thousand supThe topics were the Greekporters of a Trotskyite splinter group protested the govern- Turkish confrontation over
ment's decision to let eight NATO warships dock in Portugal Cyprns, Greece's intention to
Wednesday for the first time IIi more than three months.
withdraw its troops from
NATO and the congressional
ALLENWOOD, PA. - JAMES W. McCORD, Jr., the man ban on U.S. arms sales to
whose letter to i federal judge broke open the Watergate Turkey which Ford opposes.
scandal, was released on parole today from the Allenwood
Durllig a get-acquainted
prison farm wbere he has been serving an abbreviated sen- chat, Caramanlis told Ford
tence for his conviction IIi the bugging incident.
he· woull) be seellig Sadat IIi
· Prison officials said McCord was picked up by his wife and Athens imd Ford .casually
daughter around 6:30a.m. EDT.
·
passed along an informal

r

Saturday and possibly on
Sunday. Fair Monday.
. Highs will be In the lOs and
lower 80s. Lows will be in
· the 50s.

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

message for the Egyptian
leader, with whom he will be
conferring in Salzburg ,
Austria, Sunday and Monday.
"Be sure to tell him we're
lookllig forward to serious
talks and achieving some
success in the stalemate" .in
the Middle East, Ford said.
"We hope we can be helpful
IIi achievllig some success
there. We feel very strongly
about the stalemate."

Plane crashes
loaded.- with
man••Juana

finances checked.

CHARLESTON , W.Va .
(UPl) - Federal grand
jurors appeared Wednesday
to have trained their investigative eyes on the
financial network of West
Virginia's Republican· Party
during the 1972 campaign.
Among a parade of witnesses behind the closed
doors of the federal building
were such state GOP leaders
as Elmer Dodson and John L.
Thomas.
Their appearance came IIi
the wake of a fresh round of
subpoenaes directed at two of
Republican Gov. Arch
Moore' s secretaries, summoning them likewise before
the U. S. District Coutt grand
jury.
Moore was in the Soviet
Union, and his surrogates
were mum about the
development.
Dodson,
a
former
Charleston mayor who was
called before the jury in his

ROCKWOOD, Tenn. (UP!)
- A World War 11-vintage
plane loaded with an
estimated 1,qoo pounds of
marijuana crashed today
shortly after take off from an
isolated airport in the East
Tennessee mountains, killing
both persons aboard.
The victims were not im·
mediately identified.
One of the Pomeroy Morgan County Sheriff
Cecil Byrge said te Middleport Lions Club flags
was taken from its location
marijuana was wrapped in
Mexican newspapers, plastic while on display Memorial
bags and plain brown paper. Day .
This was reported when the
Local authorities estimated
clubmetfor
a luncheon at the
the marijuana would have
Meigs
Inn
Wednesday.
Aclub
had a street value of about a
member said that he saw a
half million dollars.
Sixteen large cardboard young woman remove the
boxes, whicli may have been · flag. She is asked to return it
used to transport the to Clarence J. Struble or Lou
marijuana . to the airport, Osborne 1 at the earliest
were found near a runway possible time.
The club as a fund-raising
where the plane took off,
indicating the marijuana had project places flags in fr ont of
been smuggled in previously business houses for a fee on
and that the shipment was a holidays. On Memorial Day
shuttle flight to another city. the club placed 68.~ flags , .a
record participation . .The
Rev. William Middleswarth,
LOCAL TEMPS
president-elect,
was in
Temperature in downtown
Pomeroy today at 11 a. m. charge of the meeting. A
was 78 degrees under sunny· guest of Jack Walker was Bill
Hall .
skies.

role as treasurer of the
Committee for Arch Moore,
spent about 10 minutes with
jurors,
Afterwards, Dodson said he
was asked to brllig all records
of the Republican State
Executive Committee with
regard to the 1972 election.
Dodson was treasurer from
June of that year until the
election had passed.
others going before the
jury Wednesday were David
Nixon, chief of the elections
division in the secretary of
state's office, and former
state Banking Commissioner
George Jordan. The latter is
under
indictment
for
allegedly falsifying travel
expense accounts while
holding the state post.
Among those subpoenaed
this week were Moore's
executive secretary, Elaine .
Z. Davidson, and his· appointments secretary, Carol
Calvert.
Moore hadn't returned

·

Memorial Day

No one aboard a Southern
Local School bus was injured
in a traffic accident at 11:55
a.m. Wednesday on County
Road 31, two and five tenths
miles west of Rt. 124 in Meigs
County.
The Gallia -Meigs Post
State Highway Patrol said
the bus operated by Paul E.
Sellers, 53, Portland , collided
in a curve with a car driven
by Lawson , 71, of Portland.
Lawson was cited to Meigs
County Court for driving left
of center . There was
moderate
damage
to
Lawson's vehicle, only minor
damage to the bus.
Norma Drennen, 19,
Gallipolis, was cited for
changing lanes without
caution following an accident
at 8:05 a.m. Wednesday on

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Admin istr arors .

!5 1 18, !6 1 4 ,

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JANE COLBY KNOWS THAT

OF KNITS IN COTION &amp; POLYESTER
BLENDS FOR SEASIDE OR COUNTRYSIDE.

· Main Store, Annex and Warehouse
: Open Thursday 9:30 to 5 p.m.

ELBERFELDS

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THEsE YOUNG STUDENTS of the Meigs Community School enjoyed a game of
badminton Wednesday when a picnic was held for the students, parents, staff members and
guests at Forest Acres Park. The program for the school which serves the county's mentally
retarded will be greaUy curtailed or· discontinued if a 1.6 mill o)iel:ating levy does not
receive voter approval at the June 3 election. Areong those watching the game in th~
background Is Judge l$rming Webstllr, chainnan of the Meigs County Board of Retardation.

A PERFECT ASSEMBLAGE

SHORTS AND PANTS, SIZES 8' TO 18 '
TOPS., SIZES S-M·L

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THE CASUAL LIFE GO TOGETHER.
H~RE'S

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SUN-DRENCHED DAYS ANO

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:Hudson sentenced to pen 2·5 years
Following a two day jury
trial Denzil Ray Hudson, 43,
Racine, was sentence!!
· Wednesday to 2 to 5 years in
, the Ohio Slate Penitentiary
by Meigs County Common
Pleas Judge John C. Bacon.
Hudson was arrested In
October of last year on

charges of breaking a.nd
entering ' the Ohio Valley
Christian Assembly at
Bedfol'd .
He was removed from
Meigs County Jail and taken
to Chillicothe this morning by
the Meigs County Sheriff's
Dept.

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subpoenas were related to.
The jury has been investigating the state banking
llidustry and alleged kickbacks to state officials_ Also
recently, . Field's office
subpoenaed the records of the
governor ' s re-election
committee.
Also subpoenaed to appear
before the grand jury were
Nick Savas, president of the
bankrupt Diversified
Mountaineer Corp. and Ruth
.c. Turner and Emmanuel
Kostas, DMC board mem·
hers.
On May I, the grand jury
indicted state Treasurer John
Kelly, his former assistant
Joseph RyKoskey and lour
bankers on charges inciuding
bribery, fraud, extortion and
misuse of bank funds.
RyKoskey has since
pleaded guilty to some of the
lesser charges against him
and agreed to cooperate IIi
the federalllivestigation.
The first trial IIi that case is
Kelly's, scheduled July 14.

School bus, auto collide

Deceased .

CROW , CROW &amp; PORTER,

Attorn eys tor

from his trip to Russia and
his chief .aide, Norman Yost,
was not at work.
Yost's secretary said, "I
have nothing for the press."
She said Yost was out of the
office because of a family
illness and she didn't know
when he would return.
·The governor ·had been
expected tO leave Russia
Thursday, but the secretary
said she did not know his
intinerary.
The Charleston Daily Mail
said that in an effort to
contact Mrs. Calver she
answered the the phone in the
governor's office, asked the
caller to hold and another
employe came on the line and
said all calls were being
referred to Yost.
Mrs. Davidson also was not
available for comment. She is
the wife of a vice president of
the Charleston National
Bank.
U. S. Attorney John A.
Field nr would not say what
grand jury investigation the

Flag taken on

L awrence

L AWRENCE BOYD ,
JOHN P . BOYD
an d CHARLE S BOYD ,
administrators of the
Estate of
Elsie B. Bryan I,

PRICE 15'

THURSDAY, MAY_29, 1975

(Lightn ing ) Boyd , Midd l eport.
Ohlo-:-·Telephone : 99 2 3477 .

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en tine

at y

MEIGS THEATRE

c ontacting

NO PARKING - Parking spaces on one side of Pomeroy's Court Street were blocked
off Wednesday as workmen began repair to the side of the street toi'n up last winter when
new water lmes were laid. Blacktop was poured IIi the area later in the day.

•

- - - - - - - - -. . for
than ofthe
valueless
. Terms
sale appraised
are cash .
and . th e prop erty will b e sold
sub1ect to real estate ta)(es for
'
19? 5. The right is r eServed to
ret~ ct any and all bids. T he
Tonighllhru Thurs.
property may be seen by
NOT OPEN

Fri., Sat., Sun .

~~~~:!~~~!~~pa~==-~ed i i

;':' to give a "breathalyzer" test to motorists suspected of ;:;;:
( driving while under the lnRuence uf alcohol, the Ohlo
· ;:;: Supreme Court ruled Wednesday.
.
;:;:
{
The Supreme Court made the ruling In a case in· {
volving Roland V. Baker, Dayton, arrested In-October, .:;:;
:':' 1972, by Kettering police.
:;::
;{
Baker was taken to the Montgomery County jail :~:~
~::;: where he was told that the City of Kettering does not }
:::;: administer "breathalyzer" tests.
:;:;
::::
Baker was told by police he could have such a test at }
Jam es L. Pate, the COIJI· :;:: his own time and at hls own expense but Baker refused. :;:;
merce Departm ent 's top :::: Baker was found guilty of driving under the influence of t
economis t, cautioned against ::;: alcohol. · ·
·
:;::
over optimistic analysis ·:..\\.\.
His attorney contended Baker's conviction should /
based on the two-month rise . .·.· have been overturned because he was not given the test. /
But he quickly added : "The { The hlgh court disagreed.
:;:;
siz e and breadth of .:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::~:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::~~~:
the ...increases in the leading
However,
the · un - revision that scrapped all but
indicators is encouraging and
precedented
inflation
of 1973- four of the 12 previous inconsistent
with
other
1974
distorted
a
number
of dicators.
evidence s suggesting that
The new series of 12 are
re cession has reached bot- indicators with the result that
the index kept rising long timelier and less likely to
tom. "
after
the recession had give off false signals in an
Through the years, the
atmosphere of rising prices
index has shown an uncanny begun.
Embarrassed by this trend, since many are ~~ d eflated ,"
ability to reverse direction
shortly before the overall government economist s or computed from a base
pushed forward a major year of 1967.
economy turns around .

Serving on the jury were
Mildred Shuler, Richard
Poulin, Margaret~West,
Dorthea Fisher, Dorothy
Craig, Carl Roach, Robert
Shook, Leonard Gilmore,
HERBERT PARKER, right, was presented a plaque by Jennings Beegle ·principal for
Helen
Swartz,
Frank•
39
years
of servtce mthe Southern Local Schoot District from the staff or sou'thern Jr. High
Do~~glas, Ezra Sheets, Joann
Williams and Sam Curtis, · from where he Is retiring. The presentation was made at the school's awards assembly
Wednesday.
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alternate.
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Rt. 35, two ten ths of a mile
east of Rt. 160.
The pa trol said the
Drennen car in changing

Shooting
probed in
Reedsville
Meigs Coun ty Sheriff
Robert C. Harten bach 's
Department investigated an
accidental shooting at 12:30
a, m, today at the Rex
Argabrite residence ,
Reedsville.
James Argabrite, 18, who is
home on leave from the Air
Force, had been hunting
Wednesday and decided to
clean his gun, a .22 calibre
rifle , when the gun accidentally discharged. The
bullet struck young Argabrite
under the left arm and went
in to his chest.
He was taken to Camden
Clark Hospital; Parkersburg,
by SEOEMS ambulance .
According to dispatcher
Lou Evans of the sheriff's
department, he is listed in
good condition this morning.

lanes sideswiped an auto
operated by Kathy Jo Woods,
18, of Point Pleasant. There
was minor damage.
A deer was killed in an
accident at 10:55 p.m. on Rt.
160, three tenths of a mile
south of Adney Rd. The patrol
said the animal ran into tbe
path of a vehicle driven by
Robert W. Ruggles, 20, of
Wellston.
There .was
moderate damage to his car.

Girl hurt
•
m
street
A seven year old Syracuse
girl is confined to Veterans
Memorial Hospital as the
result of Injuries received
when she was struck by a car
on E. Main St., Pomeroy, at
4:50 p. m. Wednesday .
Police said Karen Hemsley, 7, daughter of. Mr . and
Mrs. Jimmie Joe Hemsley,
Syracuse, ran across the
street into the path of a
westbound car driven by
James Rice, 46, j:Ioward .
Suffering a possible con·
.cus.'lion and llitemal injuries,
she was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the
Pomeroy Emergency Sqt~ad.
·No charge was filed against'
the driver.
At 8:06 p. m. Wednesday,
the squad was called to West
Main St. for John Milton
Stivers, a medical patient,
who was taken to Veter$11s
Memorial Hospital where he
was admitted.

SUBSIDY ARRIVES
Meigs County's three local
school districts received a
total' of $192,381.17 after
deductions for retirement
and allotments to the.county
board as the May state school
foundation subsidy payment.
Eastern Local received
$412,525.87; Meigs Local,
Sll0,757.11 and Southern,
$40,098.13. The county board
Considerable
cloudiness
received a total of $10,362.62 tonight and Friday, shllWers
which included a direct and thundershowers Ukely.
allotment of $5,641.17 plus the Lows tonight will be 80 to 65.
allotments from the three Highs Friday in upper 70s and
local districts.
· lower. 80s.

Weather

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' Field Day at·Portland

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3- The. Daily
Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , ').'hursday, May 29, 1975
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PORTLAND - Principal Larry Wolfe and
teachers at Portland Elementary School _

Athens, Gallipolis and Ironton
place lour each on 'Dream Team'-

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Five repeat; Wright

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has best mound mark;
Wilson top batsman

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SCHOLASTIC AND CITIZENSIDP AWARD WINNERS - At Portland Elementary
School, 1-r, Danny Talbott took the scholastic award, and Diann Ward and Bonnie Boso,
citizenship awards.

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Champion Athens and runnerup Gallipolis
and Ironton each placed four players on the 1975
All-Southeastern Ohio . League BaS'eball Team
Wednesday night.
The "Dream Team" was selected by conference coaches at the L &amp; K Restaurant in
Jackson.

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OUTSTANDING STUDENT at Portland Elementary
for the 1974-75 school year was Janet Middleswart.
Presenting her with her trophy is Larry Wolfe, principal.

Alfred

Social Notes
SWlday School attendance
on
May 25 was 46. The of'
fering was $22.17. Worship
services were held at 11 with
arHER AWARDS MADE -Other citizenship and scholastic award winners were front,
-1'1", Missi Sprouse, Christie Lawrence and Troy Ward; hack .row, Lisa Willford, nanette Howard Flanders leading
Weddle, Sherry Beegle, Mitch Bable, Tanmiy Meadows and Danny Weddle. Absent were devotions and Rev. Meece
Charlotte and Kelley Pickens.
speaking. Attendance at ,this
service was 24, offering $15.50
and pledges, $12.00.
The Wednesday afternoon
Bible
Study was held at the
The Swiss watch industry is
said to be running down - home of Juanita Swartz last
because of the weakening of its week.
trade mainspring - the U.S.
The usual Wednesdav
dollar.
evening prayer service was

held at the church .
Mr. and Mrs . Chas. D.
Woode went to Parkersburg
on Wednesday for her
checkup with her doctor, Dr.
Robert Gustke.
Nina Robinson, Evelyn
Well and Mr. and Mrs. Chas.
D. Woode attended the
Chesler hymn sing at the
Joppa Church, Saturday
evening, May 24.
Several local families
attended Baccalaureate and
Commencement services at
Eastern High School Sunday,
May 25.
Many
folks
visited
cemeteries in ttie vicinity and
services at Chester over
Memorial weekend .

DR. LAMB

Breathe slowly to quell attack
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PERFECT ATTENDANCE - Receiving awards for pefect attendance at Portland
Elementary were, front, 1-r, Richard Wolfe, Elaine Smith, Mary Evans and Tammy
Proffitt; back row, Mike Bable, Kusta Johnson, Flint Greer, Bonnie Boso, Leah Greer and
Becky Autherson.
TABLE TENNIS CHAMPS- Table tennis champs at
Portland Elementary were Elaine Smith and Bruce
Johnson. Portland is one of the few schools promoting
table tennis.

81;2 ·cent stamp, 5-cent
card proposed .by judge

, FIELD DAY TROPHY WINNERS - Winning trophies at the annual field day at Portland Elementary School were, front row, I~. Wade ConnoUy, Vicky Barber, Theresa
Barber, Charlie Boso, Jeff Connolly and Steve Teaford; hack row, Kim Sprouse, Cindy
,Evans, Leah Greer, Alicia Evans, Danny Talbott, Richard Wolfe, David Talbott and Debra
;Bryant.

WASIDNGTON (UPI ) The chief administrative law
judge of the Postal Rate
Commission
Wednesday ·
recommended that ·the price
of a first class stamp be
reduced to 81f.o cents for
letters and a nickle for post
cards.
Seymour Wenner, the
commission judge, also
recommended substantial
increases for . second , third
and fourth class mail and for
parcel post.
The present rates of 10 ·
cents for letters and eight
cents for post cards, which
went into effect in ·March,
1974, provide an Wlauthorized
subsidy of more than $700
million to other classes of
mail, Wenner said.
"The Postal Service has

become a tax-collecting
agency , collecting money
from first class mailers to
distribute to other favored
classes ," Wenner said.

"Every· time a person pays
10 cents to mail a first class
letter he is contributing
almos t two cents to pay the
cost of other services."
Wenner recommended the
changes after holding
hearings on rate increases
sought by the Postal Service.
The increases put into
effect 14 months ago were on
a temporary basis pending a
final decision of the Postal
Services' board of governors.
The Postal Rate Commission
will consider the initial
decision and then sulimit its
own recommendtions to the
board of governors.

Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - My
daughter is legally blind and
is 28 years old. For about two
· years she has been having
attacks which the doctor says
are hyperventilation. She
·doesn' t know why it happens
and is very distressed about
them.
Her hand sget numb and
she breathes awfully fast and
'a few times she got dizzy.
I. can 't afford to be going to
different doctors all the time,
aQd $e wants help so badly.
O'he/ doctor gave her
"tranquilizers and that didn 't
help at all. The doctor said
something was troubling her
and that causes the attacks,
· but she doesn't know what
she is worried about, and it
happens when she is relaxed
and having no problems. No
doctor has helped her. Could
you please give us some
reason why it could happen
and please could you tell us
what could be done for it.
The first day she took the
prescribed tranquilizer she
fell and split her forehead
quite badly . The doctor
reduced the dose, but it didn't
help her one bit.
She has several attacks a
week and then may-not have
any for ·a couple of weeks.
They happened twice in
church. We tell her to relax,
but she says she tried and it
just scares her when her
hands get numb.
DEAR
READER

Hyperventilation attacks are
simply attacks of over· breathing. You have noticed
that she breathes rapidly
when one of these attacks
occur. Our body chemistry is
very sensitive to changes.
When you · overbreathe you
blow-off too much carbon ·
dioxide, and it upsets the
body chemistry. The change
affects the acid-alkaline
balance.
The chemical change in
turn causes the small blood
vessels to open up too much
and if a person ns standing
upright or even seated
upright he may feel dizzy or
actually develop a d~ep faint.
There· is even a change in
the state of calcium in the
body. These changes cause
the spasm of the hands that
you have noted.
The cause of overbreathing
can be anxiety. The trick is
finding out what causes the
anxiety.
Just having a medical
problem and not un. derstanding it can make a
person anxious. That is why it
· is so important to make sure
a pati~nt understands his or
her itiness if she has one.
There Is no way I can tell
why your daughter is having
attackS of hyperve~tilation.
One would need to imow her
and her concerns, ambitions
and relations with other
people, in short, some of the

psychological factors that are
important to her responses .
She may not be aware of
beiQg anxious , and mos t
people who hyperven lila te
won't notice they are doing it
WJtil it starts causing symptoms as you describe. ·
Regardless
of
the
psychological factors you can
do something to minimize the
problem. First recognize that
it is not a ·serious medical
problem and it is not going to
cause her any harm .
Second, when .~n attack
does occur, or she feels the
sensation starting, she
can
concentrate
on
breathing slowly and very
shallowly. This will help
her build up her
level of carbon dioxide in the
blood and readjust her
chemistry. I don't advice
breath-holding though as that
can precipitate a faintinl(
episode. If possible she
should lie down during the
episode to avoid any tendency
to faint. If she controls her
breathing the attack will
subside quickly.
Send your questions to Dr.
Lamb, in care of this
newspaper, P. 0. Box 1551,
Radio City Station, New
York, N.Y. 10019. For information on low blood sugar
send 50 cents and a long, selfaddressed, stamped envelope
to the same address and ask
for The Health Letter on Low
Blood Sugar, Hypoglycermia
(number 3-9).

$enate
democrats set up ·energy, resource unit
..

Seventeen boys make up
Meigs honorees were Mike
this year 's all-star squad. Mag notta, junior leftfielder
Five players received who hit .310 on the year and
honorable mention. Twenty- · Mike Nesselroad, senior
three boys were nominated. second baseman who hit .397
Five of the first team on the year .
honorees are repeaters from
last year's squad - Mitch
Wright, Logan ; Scott Dailey,
Athens; Larry Brammer and
Jeff Brickey, Ironton and
Mike Nesselroad, Meigs.
Logan's Mitch Wright,
senior; owned the best
p1ound mark of the allstars. Wright, who batted
Official results of the 1974.358, posted an 8-2 season
75 All-Southea stern Ohio
record. He fan ned 114
Athletic League All-Sports
batters In 72 Innings and
Trophy
race were ann ounced
compiled an earned run
loday
by
Tom Metiers, ofaverage of 1.16 during the
ficial league statistician .
1975 campaign.
This is the fourth year the
Gallipolis second baseman
SEOAL has awarded the AllBrett Wilson was the top
hitler among the all-stars . Sport,s Trophy , Ironton. and
Athen s ca ptured previous
with an impressive .4tl mark
honors, Ironton in 1972 an d
in 22 games . Wilson hit safely
32 times in 72 times · at bat . 1974 and Athens in 1973.
The Gallipolis Blue Devils
Inside the SEOAL ( 14 games )
claimed
thi s year 's All.Sports
Wilson was 22 of 46 for .478. •
Trophy
award
. The rotating
The 1975 "Dream Team "
trophy
will
be
presented to
has 10 seniors, five jWJiors
and two sophomores. Besides
four players each by Athens,
Gallipolis and Ironton, Meigs
had two, Wellston, Logan and
Jackson had one each.
The all-star team includes
five pik!hers and five second By DAVID MOFFIT
.basemen .
UP! Sports Writer
Making the selections
ATLANTA (UP!) - This
last night were: AI Burger,
may be heresy here in the
Jackson; Jim Osborne,
state of Georgia, but, the
Gallipolis; Mike Burcham,
Atlanta Golf Classic has a
Ironton; Blll Woodall, betterfield than its neighbor,
Athens; Garrett Powers, the Masters.
Wellston. Meigs, Logan
One
of
only
two
and Waverly · votes were
"designated" tournaments
called In.
this year on the pro golf tour
Mike Burcham presided. - the other will be the
Each all-star will receive Tourn.ament Players Chaman All-SEOAL certificate · pionship at Fort Worth in late
August -the Atlanta Golf
later this spring. ·
Gallipolis' four honorees Classic began its four-day run
were seniors Jim Niday and today with everybody who is
Jim Perry, pitchers and presently anybody in profesfielders; junior Brett Wilson sional golf scheduled to play .
But even with that starand sophomore Brent
Johnsll_n, infielders.
spangled field, the $225,000
The Arctic tusked whale, the tournament still has a
narwhal , swims in broken ICe favorite. That, of course, is
fields usually above 65 degrees Jack Nicklaus the brightest
North latitude . The whales have sta f th
been sighted only four times as
r 0 em ·
far south as Britain and once off Nicklaus and his . current

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the new agency could draw ' . of Uie ODC, has said a
for its basic foundation.
federallyfunded coal
Republican opponents of gasification plant which Is
the bill argued that the being contested by several
governor is respollllible for states, including Ohio, would
ensuring an adequate energy not be productive for at least
supply in Ohio and should 10 years.
have the right to determine Six GaaHlcatlon Plants
tile composition of an energy
The six coal gasification
authority with such broad plants, using intermediate
powers.
BTU coal rather than the high
The ODC, created by the BTU coal planned for the
Generai Assembly little more federally funded plant
than a year ago, recently proposed· for Belmont
proposed construction of County, would be located in
intermediate
coal ·. creveland, Toledo,
gasification plants in six Youngstown-Warren, AkronIndustrial regi0118 of the state Canton, Dayton and Midand Is expected to continue dletOwn.
that project under the , The intennediate BTU coal
broader powers of ERDA if gasification plants would
the legislation Is signed into supply only larg~r industries,
law.
but could be delivering gas
W.R. Purcell Jr., ' director collimerclally within three to
five years, ,PureeD has said.
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The Senate also approved
and sent back to the House for
concurrence on amendments
a bill giving approximately
900 stale employes classified
civil service status.
'Ibe measure, passed 21-to11 'on straight party lines,
awards clvU service atatua
without examination to
current clerical employes of
stale libraries, the Public
Utilities Commission, the
Industrial Relations Commission and the Ohio Lottery
Conunisaion.
RepubUcans, who oppoeed ,
the bill in a bloc vote, said the
legislation would give the
projection of civil service to
employes hired IJI'Imarlly because of their political con:vlctions in the administration
.of Gov. John .J . Gilligan,

ClvD Service Proleetloa

legislation exemptjng antique ,
Sen. Michael J. Maloney, cars from equipment and
RCinclnnatl, noted· the inspection requirements.1 ,
political majority of the three
-The House defel!ted by
commlsslons would change ooe vote a bill which would
within the next year because have allowed
of
of .the change of l!d- certain
non-profit
mlnlstratlons, but organlzationa to bring liquor
RepubUcana would not be Into municipal and COUnty
permitted
the
hiring convention centers.
flezlbillty granted prevtoua
-Sen. Donald L. Woodland,
administrati01111.
D-Colurilbus, Introduced
Sen. Morris Jacklon, 1).. legislation authorizing the
Cleveland, said the Primary state Board of Building
Intent of · the bill was to Standards to enforce energy
provide
~lvll
aervlce conservation measures In
protection for slate Ulnry construction.
employes who have been
-The Senate unaninwallly
employed by the libraries for approved House-paaaed
aa long aa 15 yean.
legislation allowing four
In other legislative · weeks of quarter bene ~clng
developments Wedllellday:
in 8 county llllltead of two.
-The Senate unaniJnoully
The Senate adjourned until
asreed with House amend- Thursday at 11 a.m. and tile
ment and sent to the governor . House adjourned unW 1 p.m.

members

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PLAY ER- Pos.-S~hool
Jeff Conroy. p of. Jackson
x' Mitch Wright , p-int , Loga n
Jim Perr y, p-int, Galli polis
Jim Niday, p-ot, Gallipolis
x Scot! Dailey, p-of, Athens
Tony Deal , c. Athen s

Avg. Yr.
.340

.358
.m
.408

3
4
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Twins top Tigers,
A's blank Orioles

By BILL MADDEN
UP! Sports Writer
4
The last time anyone heard
4
from
a pitcher named Jim
.408 3
.365 3 Hughes, he was a hard-luck
.444
3 r-ighthander for the old
.310 3 Brooklyn Dodgers with an
.397
4
.325 4 affinity for throwing high
.405 2 hard ones in the late innings
.364
4 to people like Joe Adcock and
.387 2
Stan Musial.
Well, the Minnesota Twins
have come up with the
baseball's "latest" Jim
Hughes and like his
sometimes
maligned
predeces-sor of the 1950s, he

all

Holl~.nd .

F~

Sisty _

.TRIO
Organ, Drums, Guitar '

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

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4

Na tional Leagu e
Bal ti mor e
ooo 000 ooo- 0 4 1
Atl anta
100 02 1 000- 4 7 0 Oakland
000 003 02•- ~ 4 0 · '
004 100 OOx - 5 9 0
Chica go
Torr ez (5 -3) and E tc heba r Mor ton , Thom pson ( 5), Bea rd re n ; Blue (9 2) and Tenac e.
(6), L eon (BI an d Cor re ll ; HR s-- Bando
(M h), William s
Bonha m , Zah n (5), Za m ora (6) {7 th l. Jac kson (9th) .
an d Mitter wa ld . WP - Zamor a
(3 0) . LP - Mor ton (5 -5) .
Clevelan d
002 000 40 3- 9 9 0
Cali fornia
002 000 000- 2 8 2
( 10 innings)
' Raich , L aRoc he (8) and As hby ;
S. D.
000 130 010 0- 5 11 0 Ryan , L an ge (8) and Egan . WP
SI. L
104 0000001- 61 2! -- Raich ( 1.QJ. LP - Ryan (8 -JJ .
H Rs-- Bell (Jrd ), Low ens tein
Spillner , Folker s (J). Fos ter I Slh ).
(4 ), F r ise ll a (6) , Tom lin (8 ),
Gr ei f ( BJ and Ken dall; McGlo th en , Hra bosky (8), Ga r man
TAX CHIEF NAMED
f 10)
and
Simmons.
W P~
Gar m an (2 2l . LP - Gre if ( 1-2) .
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio
H R- Smith (7th )
Houston
000 000 000- 0 9 0
Pi tt sbg h
020 001 OOx - 3 d 0
·Robe r ts, Granger ( 8 ) and
Jutze ; Br e1t ( 4-·21 and Sangu il
len . L P Ro bert s (3 -5) . HR Park er fS th l

Attorney General William J .
Brown announced Wednesday the appointment of
John C. Duffy Jr., Columbus,
as chief of Brown's taxation
section.
Duffy , 30, an assista~t
attorney general since 1972, IS
a former chemistry and
history teacher at St. Francis
DeSales High School here.

?!Reel
estate

Ughtweight
Easy

I

To

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ROOF PAINT

Property
Transfers

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For longer Usting
Paint Jobs Use Our

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TIRE CENTER

QU~ITY"

RUTLAND.
ROOF PAINT

e.Aluminum

For The
Mentally' Retarded

CJrd ).

throws right-banded. There,
however, the similarity
x-La rry Brammer, lb, Ironton
ends- at least off the Minx-Jetf Bri ckey, 2b. Ironton
nesota rookie 's pitching
Arnie Chonko, 2b , Athens
Fr nc isco 020 00 1 003- 6 10 1
performance thus far this San
Ji m Derrow. 2b, Wellston
Phil a
010 210 40x - 8 8 1
Fa lcon e. Wi ll iams (5). Toms
Brett Wilson , 2b, Gallipol is
season.
and H i lt : car lton , M cG r aw
Mike Magnotta, lf. Meigs .
Hughes, who wouldn't even (7J
(91 an d Boone WP- Ca rlto n (3 x- Mike Nesselroad , 2b, Me1g s
he in the Twins' starting SI LP - - Fa lcone {d-4 ) HR sScot! Wylie, ct. Ironton
rotation now had it not been Ander son (2ndl , Martin ( 1st) _
Brent Johnson, 3b, Ga llipo lis
Ken Cartmil l. rf , Athens
for assorted injuries to other
Mike Brown , ss, I ron ton
Cinci nnati
000
l
000 120
000 21x
000-- 06 8
2 0 ~'-=~~-----,
frontliners
Dave Goltz, Joe Montrea
Bl a ir, War th en, Ta y lor ( 8)
x- Repeater s
Decker and Vic Albury, won and Fo ote; No lan ( 4-3) and
HONORABLE MENTION
um ,u..
1 "good
Bench . L P- Bi air (2 -6) H R---"
IRONTON - Jody Vass, c, senior.
his sixth game in seven M
organ !41h l .
..
neighbor" who can
WAVERLY - Steve Thomas, ss, junior.
decisions Wednesday night,
LOGAN - Kerry Meadows , 2b, senior.
protect your
Angeles 100 OOJ 000- 3 7 1
hurling Minnesota to a 5-2 Los
JACKSON - Reed Mann, ss, junior.
N .Y .
300 000 Olx- 4 7 0
ATEHSN- Mark Altier, p. junior.
Rau , Messer smith (81 and
victory over the Detroit
Yea g er ; M atlac k , A poda ca (9)
Tigers. In addition to striking and Gr ot e. W P- M atl ack. (6 -3) .
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:::::::::::::::::;:::::;::::::::::::::::::::·
out seven, the 23-year-ald L P-- Rau ((54) .
palm ball specialist stranded
Bill Freehan and Ron
Am er ican Leagu e
431 001 000- 9 12 0
Ch
icag
A St ate farm MobileHomeowners
LeFlore in the fourth and fifth Mi lw o
000 002 010-- 3 6 4
Policv protects your mobilehome,
innings after each . had
Bah nsen 13-4) and Down i ng;
its contents and includes personal
Slaton , Cas tro (2). Rod r ig uez
liebilitv coverage,
smacked one-&lt;Jut triples.
(6 ), M ur phy (Bland Port er . L P
all in 11 single, low"He was brought through -- Sl aton (3 .6) HR - Scott (5th ).
cost packaoe. Call me ·
the minor leagues the right Bos ton
for all the details.
011 11 0 000- 4 10 2
way-a step at a time," said Tex as
000 000 010- 1 4 0
Steve
Lee (7 .d) and Blackwe ll ;
Twins Manager Frank Jenk
Snowden
ins (54) and Sundber g .
GAHS during the Meigs- golf title and finished second third , five for fourth , four for ~iliCi7-"He picked up a palm
New York
002 040 OOQ- 6 9 1
Gallipolis fo otball game on . in football. The Gallians tied fifth, three for sixth, two for ball · and Cal Ermer Ka
n Ciiy
10000 1 000- 2 6 0
M ay
( 4-2)
an d
M unson ,
Memorial Field (first home for second in basketball and seventh and one for eighth. (manager of the Tacoma
Br i les, Spl ittorft (5), Patti n (5),
farm
club)
told
us
to
keep
league game ) on Oct. 10.
In case of a tie for one or
basebalL
Mingori {8) ,- Bird (9) an d
GAHS compiled 34 poin l.'l
Poinl.'l are awarded on a more positions, poinl.'l for him throwing it. The thing Healy , L P-- Br iles ~4 - J J . H Rs1out of a possi~le 40) in five
basis of eight for first place, those places are divided that's made him so effective Bonds 2 C81h &amp; 91h l.
SEOAL sports this past year, seven for second, six for between the teams involved. is his ability to change
speeds ."
edging Ironton by one-half
"The change-up helped me
poin t. Alhens was third with
BREAKDOWN OF ALL-SPORTS TROPHY POINTS
but
I don't think it's made
30•·, poin l.'l.
TEAM
FB BB G TR BA TTL
me,"
said Hughes, wbo was
1
7 6 8 6 / 2 6'12 34
Jackson was fourth with 20, Gallipolis
Ironton
8
6
s
8
6'/
2
33112
given
his
key support by Tony
Well ston fifth with 18, ·
Athens
6 3 7 6'/2 8
30'12 Oliva's two~un tie-breaking
Waverly sixth with 17, Logan Jackson
5 6 3 3
3
20
single in the seventh inning.
seventh with 16", and Meigs Wellston
4 2 6 5
I
18
Waverly
1
8
2
4
2
17
" If you had asked me in
last with IO'fz.
Logan
3 4 4 1
4112 16lh
spring
training if I'd be &amp;-1
Gallipolis won the SEOAL Meigs
2 1 1 2
4112 lO lf2
right now, I'd have to say no .
ALL-SPORTS TROPHY I figured I'd be used ln relief.
POINTS
I wouldn't be starting if it
Gal lip olis
3'
Ir on to n
J)l
weren't for sickness to one
Athe ns
301 :.- ·guy and an injury to .
J a ckson
20
Well s ton
18 another."
Wav erly
II
Steve BraWl had a two-run
Lo gan
16' 'I
No. 1 golf rival, Johnny more than $2.4 million in less Me ig s
10 ' , homer_LOLMinn.esota whil e
Miller, are both in position to than 14 years, leads this
Detroit scored il.'l two runs on
FINAL STANDINGS
vault past the $200,000 mark year's money list with more
a homer by Tom Veryzer and
I SPR lNG SPORTS)
1975 VARSITY BASEBALL
in earnings so far this year by ,than $166,000 and Miller, last
a bases-loaded walk by
Lightweight- only 8',&lt; lbs. - for easy handling. Plenty
TEAM
W L R DR
grabbing the Classic's $45,000 year's top money winner, is A then s
12 2 71 30 Hughes.
of powe r , 1% H . P ., fa handle any home proiect . Has
first prize.
second with more than G all ipoli s
9 5 92 . 41
new Sa lety Switch to help prevent accidental starts.
Elsewhere ln the American
I r onton
9 5 82 56
High 5,500 RPM cutt ing speed . Cuts 2 3-16" at 90
Nicklaus, who has won $155,000.
M e ig s
8 6 64 72 League, Chicago bombed
de
gree, P /4" at 45 degree. Handles tough mafer i als,
And don't overlook Tom Logan
8 6 61 57 Milwaukee, 9-3, New York
too
.
Model534
Jack son
6
e 73 89
Weiskopf, Nicklaus' partner Waver l y
4 10 37 68 put away Kansas City, &amp;-2,
American League
in the team championships. Well s to n
0 14 39 106 Boston upended Texas, 4-1,
East
Weiskopf,
third
on
the
money
w. L pcf .
1975 VARSITY TRACK MEET Oakland blanked Baltimore,
22 17 . 56d g.b. list with nearly $128,000, tied
I r on t on 13 d, Athe n s 67.
east on
21 20 .512 2 with Nicklaus for third last Gall ipoli s 67, well sto n 59, :;.o, and Cleveland routed
Milw aukee
Wav erly 5], Jackson 41. M eig s California, 9-2.
Detro it
18 21 .462
26, L ogan 18.
19 23 .452 : , 2 , week in the Memphis Open,
New Yor k
In toe National League, it
18 23 .43 9 s
Clev eland
won
by
veteran
Gene
Littler.
was
New York over Los
16 26 .381
7' 2
Baltimor e
Arnold Palmer rushed back INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Angeles, 4-3, Philadelphia On
West
'w . I. pet . g .b. from England, where he won
United Press International
top of St. Louis, 8-6, PittsOakland
27 17 .61 4
l.pct
:
g.
b
.
'
w
.
2
that
country's
PGA
for
his
Kansas City
26 20 .565
Tidewaler
25 18 .581burgh W h I' t ewaS h1ng
Minn esota
22 18 .550 3
80th professional victory, to Rochester
25 19 .568 1' ' Houston,~. Chicago shading
Te x as
22 21 .512 4 1 1:,~
Charl eston
25 19 .568
:;
play in the Atlanta Classic. Sy
California
22 24 .1178 6
racu se
25 20 .556 1 Atlanta, 5-4, St. Louis atop
Ch icago
20 23 .465 6"2 South Africa's Gary Player,
Toledo
20
23 .465 5
San Diego, fl-5, and Cincinnati
Wednesday ' s Results
19 24 .442 6
who, like Nicklaus, skipped Pawtuc ket
Chicago 9 Milwaukee 3
Richrn ond
19
25 .:1
.'n
6'1 ', . J11..':o~vz:eraMioi"itrieail~,ill-033.:r::!:r::!:ll:lt:i:I:II:ICJCCICCICCJCCJCISISIS:a:a:a:a:a=s::~::~=s::~~:~:~~:~:~~:~:~
Bos ton 4 Texas 1
18 28
91 8
the three events after the Memphis
New Y ork 6 Kansas Ci ty 2
·-· · Wednesday's Result s
Tournament of Champions, ~RiChmond 6 Roch est er 2
Minn esota 5 Detroit 2
Oakland 5 Baltimor:e 0
has been third or better in Charl es ton 2 Paw tuc ket 1. 11
Clev el and 9 California 2
inn .
Thursday's Probable Pitchers four of the past five Atlanta
Tol ed o 5 M e mph is 1
CAll Times EDT)
T idewat er 5 Syracus e 4
Classics
and
must
rate
as
a
. New York (Dobson d-51 at
serious contender. '
Tex as ( Wr ight 0-JL 9:00p .m .
In 1972, President Ri~hard
(Only game sch eduled )
Player
predicted
lowerNixon and Soviet Communist
Friday'S Games ·
thanusual scores here this party
Chicago at Detroit, night
leader
Leonid
Kansas City at M it w , night
week - and play in · Wed· Brezhnev ended their
Boston at Minnesota , night
nesday's proam backed that Moscow summit meeting
New York at Texas, night
Balt i more at Calif, night
forecast.
with a joint declaration of
Cleveland at Oaklan d , night
"I say this for two peaceful co-existence.
reasons," said Player.
"First, I've never seen the
the Lowest
course in better condition.
And, second, I can't
Ti.re Prices
remember when I saw a
stronger tournament fi~JI-"
In the Area
However, the weatherman
Curtis C. ROush, Fern forecast thunderstorms
Roush Ferne' Roush to Paul throughout the tournament ,
It's
A: Dillard, parcel, Mid- and if they continue as heavy
dlepori.
as the one that inundated the
'
Danny L.' Turner, Patsy M. course Wednesday afternoon,
•
Turner to Paul D. Weyand, 45 the couriM! could start playing
and
two-third
acres, longer ailcj the greens slower,
Mason, W.
Columbia.
Jacob Wilbur Lee, Vinas L.
Lee to Frank Cleland,
.::
Delores M. Cleland, parcels,
Sutton.
·
Frank Cleland,- Delores M.
• W.YAIIIMD PAINTS
Cleland to Jacob Wilbur Lee,
Vinas L. Lee, parcels, Sutton,
Elctremely durable purt alkyd Plinll
formulated for maxlmu111 &amp;IOU rtlwl- .
Helen F. Baer to Gerald L.
tlon and weather reslstaftce. Excellent _
Dill Sr., Irene M. Dill, 1.6
for metal roofs, bulldinas, wood trim,
shutters, lawn !U(nlture al!d . t~~~IP.
acre, Sutton.
:
rilent. Prime new plvan1l:'ld
William Harold Gillogly,
with SP-1361 VInyl-Zinc; ~
Daisy M. Gillogly to Daniel .
Metal Conditlontr: bldly ·rusted sut,,
••urLAII eGreen
flces with No.. 84-A Red LAid Primer.
w. McLaughlin, Barbaru J.
~~J-'10
McLaughlin,
I
acre,
$pnledl,. ,....
. 500
eRed
sqUIN , feet per pllon, •
Ill •
PAINT
Columbia.
iurlact condlll~.
11
Charles Stanford Beegle, ::
Faye Beegle to Frederick J. ':: THOSE
'
Stobart, Earline Stobart, lots,
RUSTED
Racine .
SHOP.OUR COMPL£TE PAINT DEI'IIKTMENT
Chester Buckley, Nancy
ROOFS WITH ... Buckley to Mamie Buckley,
RUTLAND ROOF
.24 acre, Olive.
·
"'
John Hayes, Elizabeth
"'
PAINT
...
Hayes ' to Roland McDole,
•
162.48 afre, Chesler.
Carl Buckley, Mamie
110 W. MAIN
Buckley to Chesler Buckley,
Hrs.: 9 - ~ : 30 Mon .- Thurs. HARDWARE CO, · 9:00-l :,oo Fii., sat .
Nancy Buckley, parcel,
. 773·5583
Mason, w. Va .
Olive.
: : ::
.303
.349
.397
.360

Nicklaus is favored

•

which the governor made a controlled by a bipartisan
·plea for urgent action before board of trustees consisting
a joint session of the General of 15 members, including the
Assembly last week, is current nine-member Ohio
currenUy stalled'in the House Development Center board of
Energy Committee .
trustees.
Under provisions of the
Other members of the
Democratic bill, ERDA ERDA board would include
would be empowered to two legislative members
construct power plants, from each party, one
. gasification or fuel refinery member of the Public
facilities, or any other Utilities Commission and the
facilities necessary for the chairman of the Energy
conservation of energy.
Emergency COIIlllli8alon.
·The agency could also
Meshel noted the governor
make loans and grants · for would have the power for
energy development facilities significant executive Input
. to he financed by revenue into the agency by virtue of
bonds md notes.
making the majority of apCoolrolled by Board
pointments to the board.
Sen. Harry Meshel, DHe said there waa no need
Youngstown, chief sponsor of to create a neW bureaucracy
the bill approved by a 21-to-11 when the ODC was already
vote, said ERDA would be engaged in energy research
and development on which
..

1915 ALL-SOUTHEASTERN OHIO
LEAGUE BASEBALL TEAM

.
Major L eagu e R; esuits
By Un it ed Pt"ess Internati onal

Official results of All-Sports
Trophy released; GAHS winner

•

'
Bt VICI'OR LANIAUSKAS
UJ'I Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS {UPI) ' rAgislation creating an Ohio
Energy and Resource
Development Agency to
etimbat the stale's dwindliilg
erjergy supplies is headed for
tltj! House after gaining
llfjProval along strict party
li'es Wednesday in the
Democratlc~ntrolled Ohio
senate.
!!'he Democratic-eponsored
mNSW'e varies from similar
Ietlslatlon backed by the
$Jinlstration of Gov. James
~Rhodes in that it would use
the existing Ohio Development Center as a foundation
loW the new asency Bl)d
p&amp;vides for significant
le41slative Input in energy
r&lt;$earch and development,
Pie Rhodes leglllation, foe

:::::: ~:: :::::::::::::: :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·

Unescores

GREEN"'

•ETAL PAIIII

--

''SUPER

..

-

eRm
tGREEN

Wl.UMINUM

-

IU.,._

-awox=

..

,

Paid Pol. Adv. by The Citizens Committee
for Mentally Retarded
r
'

PICKENS

..

�.. .

-. .
'·

. I ''

'

'

' Field Day at·Portland

. ..

"'"

.

3- The. Daily
Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , ').'hursday, May 29, 1975
.

'

.... ;

t

I

\

PORTLAND - Principal Larry Wolfe and
teachers at Portland Elementary School _

Athens, Gallipolis and Ironton
place lour each on 'Dream Team'-

I

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::;!;!;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::: ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;~:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::=:::::::::::;:::=::::;;;:;:·

i

' I

Five repeat; Wright

\J

has best mound mark;
Wilson top batsman

'

...

-

SCHOLASTIC AND CITIZENSIDP AWARD WINNERS - At Portland Elementary
School, 1-r, Danny Talbott took the scholastic award, and Diann Ward and Bonnie Boso,
citizenship awards.

\

i

Champion Athens and runnerup Gallipolis
and Ironton each placed four players on the 1975
All-Southeastern Ohio . League BaS'eball Team
Wednesday night.
The "Dream Team" was selected by conference coaches at the L &amp; K Restaurant in
Jackson.

·•
OUTSTANDING STUDENT at Portland Elementary
for the 1974-75 school year was Janet Middleswart.
Presenting her with her trophy is Larry Wolfe, principal.

Alfred

Social Notes
SWlday School attendance
on
May 25 was 46. The of'
fering was $22.17. Worship
services were held at 11 with
arHER AWARDS MADE -Other citizenship and scholastic award winners were front,
-1'1", Missi Sprouse, Christie Lawrence and Troy Ward; hack .row, Lisa Willford, nanette Howard Flanders leading
Weddle, Sherry Beegle, Mitch Bable, Tanmiy Meadows and Danny Weddle. Absent were devotions and Rev. Meece
Charlotte and Kelley Pickens.
speaking. Attendance at ,this
service was 24, offering $15.50
and pledges, $12.00.
The Wednesday afternoon
Bible
Study was held at the
The Swiss watch industry is
said to be running down - home of Juanita Swartz last
because of the weakening of its week.
trade mainspring - the U.S.
The usual Wednesdav
dollar.
evening prayer service was

held at the church .
Mr. and Mrs . Chas. D.
Woode went to Parkersburg
on Wednesday for her
checkup with her doctor, Dr.
Robert Gustke.
Nina Robinson, Evelyn
Well and Mr. and Mrs. Chas.
D. Woode attended the
Chesler hymn sing at the
Joppa Church, Saturday
evening, May 24.
Several local families
attended Baccalaureate and
Commencement services at
Eastern High School Sunday,
May 25.
Many
folks
visited
cemeteries in ttie vicinity and
services at Chester over
Memorial weekend .

DR. LAMB

Breathe slowly to quell attack
'

PERFECT ATTENDANCE - Receiving awards for pefect attendance at Portland
Elementary were, front, 1-r, Richard Wolfe, Elaine Smith, Mary Evans and Tammy
Proffitt; back row, Mike Bable, Kusta Johnson, Flint Greer, Bonnie Boso, Leah Greer and
Becky Autherson.
TABLE TENNIS CHAMPS- Table tennis champs at
Portland Elementary were Elaine Smith and Bruce
Johnson. Portland is one of the few schools promoting
table tennis.

81;2 ·cent stamp, 5-cent
card proposed .by judge

, FIELD DAY TROPHY WINNERS - Winning trophies at the annual field day at Portland Elementary School were, front row, I~. Wade ConnoUy, Vicky Barber, Theresa
Barber, Charlie Boso, Jeff Connolly and Steve Teaford; hack row, Kim Sprouse, Cindy
,Evans, Leah Greer, Alicia Evans, Danny Talbott, Richard Wolfe, David Talbott and Debra
;Bryant.

WASIDNGTON (UPI ) The chief administrative law
judge of the Postal Rate
Commission
Wednesday ·
recommended that ·the price
of a first class stamp be
reduced to 81f.o cents for
letters and a nickle for post
cards.
Seymour Wenner, the
commission judge, also
recommended substantial
increases for . second , third
and fourth class mail and for
parcel post.
The present rates of 10 ·
cents for letters and eight
cents for post cards, which
went into effect in ·March,
1974, provide an Wlauthorized
subsidy of more than $700
million to other classes of
mail, Wenner said.
"The Postal Service has

become a tax-collecting
agency , collecting money
from first class mailers to
distribute to other favored
classes ," Wenner said.

"Every· time a person pays
10 cents to mail a first class
letter he is contributing
almos t two cents to pay the
cost of other services."
Wenner recommended the
changes after holding
hearings on rate increases
sought by the Postal Service.
The increases put into
effect 14 months ago were on
a temporary basis pending a
final decision of the Postal
Services' board of governors.
The Postal Rate Commission
will consider the initial
decision and then sulimit its
own recommendtions to the
board of governors.

Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - My
daughter is legally blind and
is 28 years old. For about two
· years she has been having
attacks which the doctor says
are hyperventilation. She
·doesn' t know why it happens
and is very distressed about
them.
Her hand sget numb and
she breathes awfully fast and
'a few times she got dizzy.
I. can 't afford to be going to
different doctors all the time,
aQd $e wants help so badly.
O'he/ doctor gave her
"tranquilizers and that didn 't
help at all. The doctor said
something was troubling her
and that causes the attacks,
· but she doesn't know what
she is worried about, and it
happens when she is relaxed
and having no problems. No
doctor has helped her. Could
you please give us some
reason why it could happen
and please could you tell us
what could be done for it.
The first day she took the
prescribed tranquilizer she
fell and split her forehead
quite badly . The doctor
reduced the dose, but it didn't
help her one bit.
She has several attacks a
week and then may-not have
any for ·a couple of weeks.
They happened twice in
church. We tell her to relax,
but she says she tried and it
just scares her when her
hands get numb.
DEAR
READER

Hyperventilation attacks are
simply attacks of over· breathing. You have noticed
that she breathes rapidly
when one of these attacks
occur. Our body chemistry is
very sensitive to changes.
When you · overbreathe you
blow-off too much carbon ·
dioxide, and it upsets the
body chemistry. The change
affects the acid-alkaline
balance.
The chemical change in
turn causes the small blood
vessels to open up too much
and if a person ns standing
upright or even seated
upright he may feel dizzy or
actually develop a d~ep faint.
There· is even a change in
the state of calcium in the
body. These changes cause
the spasm of the hands that
you have noted.
The cause of overbreathing
can be anxiety. The trick is
finding out what causes the
anxiety.
Just having a medical
problem and not un. derstanding it can make a
person anxious. That is why it
· is so important to make sure
a pati~nt understands his or
her itiness if she has one.
There Is no way I can tell
why your daughter is having
attackS of hyperve~tilation.
One would need to imow her
and her concerns, ambitions
and relations with other
people, in short, some of the

psychological factors that are
important to her responses .
She may not be aware of
beiQg anxious , and mos t
people who hyperven lila te
won't notice they are doing it
WJtil it starts causing symptoms as you describe. ·
Regardless
of
the
psychological factors you can
do something to minimize the
problem. First recognize that
it is not a ·serious medical
problem and it is not going to
cause her any harm .
Second, when .~n attack
does occur, or she feels the
sensation starting, she
can
concentrate
on
breathing slowly and very
shallowly. This will help
her build up her
level of carbon dioxide in the
blood and readjust her
chemistry. I don't advice
breath-holding though as that
can precipitate a faintinl(
episode. If possible she
should lie down during the
episode to avoid any tendency
to faint. If she controls her
breathing the attack will
subside quickly.
Send your questions to Dr.
Lamb, in care of this
newspaper, P. 0. Box 1551,
Radio City Station, New
York, N.Y. 10019. For information on low blood sugar
send 50 cents and a long, selfaddressed, stamped envelope
to the same address and ask
for The Health Letter on Low
Blood Sugar, Hypoglycermia
(number 3-9).

$enate
democrats set up ·energy, resource unit
..

Seventeen boys make up
Meigs honorees were Mike
this year 's all-star squad. Mag notta, junior leftfielder
Five players received who hit .310 on the year and
honorable mention. Twenty- · Mike Nesselroad, senior
three boys were nominated. second baseman who hit .397
Five of the first team on the year .
honorees are repeaters from
last year's squad - Mitch
Wright, Logan ; Scott Dailey,
Athens; Larry Brammer and
Jeff Brickey, Ironton and
Mike Nesselroad, Meigs.
Logan's Mitch Wright,
senior; owned the best
p1ound mark of the allstars. Wright, who batted
Official results of the 1974.358, posted an 8-2 season
75 All-Southea stern Ohio
record. He fan ned 114
Athletic League All-Sports
batters In 72 Innings and
Trophy
race were ann ounced
compiled an earned run
loday
by
Tom Metiers, ofaverage of 1.16 during the
ficial league statistician .
1975 campaign.
This is the fourth year the
Gallipolis second baseman
SEOAL has awarded the AllBrett Wilson was the top
hitler among the all-stars . Sport,s Trophy , Ironton. and
Athen s ca ptured previous
with an impressive .4tl mark
honors, Ironton in 1972 an d
in 22 games . Wilson hit safely
32 times in 72 times · at bat . 1974 and Athens in 1973.
The Gallipolis Blue Devils
Inside the SEOAL ( 14 games )
claimed
thi s year 's All.Sports
Wilson was 22 of 46 for .478. •
Trophy
award
. The rotating
The 1975 "Dream Team "
trophy
will
be
presented to
has 10 seniors, five jWJiors
and two sophomores. Besides
four players each by Athens,
Gallipolis and Ironton, Meigs
had two, Wellston, Logan and
Jackson had one each.
The all-star team includes
five pik!hers and five second By DAVID MOFFIT
.basemen .
UP! Sports Writer
Making the selections
ATLANTA (UP!) - This
last night were: AI Burger,
may be heresy here in the
Jackson; Jim Osborne,
state of Georgia, but, the
Gallipolis; Mike Burcham,
Atlanta Golf Classic has a
Ironton; Blll Woodall, betterfield than its neighbor,
Athens; Garrett Powers, the Masters.
Wellston. Meigs, Logan
One
of
only
two
and Waverly · votes were
"designated" tournaments
called In.
this year on the pro golf tour
Mike Burcham presided. - the other will be the
Each all-star will receive Tourn.ament Players Chaman All-SEOAL certificate · pionship at Fort Worth in late
August -the Atlanta Golf
later this spring. ·
Gallipolis' four honorees Classic began its four-day run
were seniors Jim Niday and today with everybody who is
Jim Perry, pitchers and presently anybody in profesfielders; junior Brett Wilson sional golf scheduled to play .
But even with that starand sophomore Brent
Johnsll_n, infielders.
spangled field, the $225,000
The Arctic tusked whale, the tournament still has a
narwhal , swims in broken ICe favorite. That, of course, is
fields usually above 65 degrees Jack Nicklaus the brightest
North latitude . The whales have sta f th
been sighted only four times as
r 0 em ·
far south as Britain and once off Nicklaus and his . current

•••
•

, ,_.,~

r~J'I'

.

...

:.J~

.

the new agency could draw ' . of Uie ODC, has said a
for its basic foundation.
federallyfunded coal
Republican opponents of gasification plant which Is
the bill argued that the being contested by several
governor is respollllible for states, including Ohio, would
ensuring an adequate energy not be productive for at least
supply in Ohio and should 10 years.
have the right to determine Six GaaHlcatlon Plants
tile composition of an energy
The six coal gasification
authority with such broad plants, using intermediate
powers.
BTU coal rather than the high
The ODC, created by the BTU coal planned for the
Generai Assembly little more federally funded plant
than a year ago, recently proposed· for Belmont
proposed construction of County, would be located in
intermediate
coal ·. creveland, Toledo,
gasification plants in six Youngstown-Warren, AkronIndustrial regi0118 of the state Canton, Dayton and Midand Is expected to continue dletOwn.
that project under the , The intennediate BTU coal
broader powers of ERDA if gasification plants would
the legislation Is signed into supply only larg~r industries,
law.
but could be delivering gas
W.R. Purcell Jr., ' director collimerclally within three to
five years, ,PureeD has said.
l'

I

The Senate also approved
and sent back to the House for
concurrence on amendments
a bill giving approximately
900 stale employes classified
civil service status.
'Ibe measure, passed 21-to11 'on straight party lines,
awards clvU service atatua
without examination to
current clerical employes of
stale libraries, the Public
Utilities Commission, the
Industrial Relations Commission and the Ohio Lottery
Conunisaion.
RepubUcans, who oppoeed ,
the bill in a bloc vote, said the
legislation would give the
projection of civil service to
employes hired IJI'Imarlly because of their political con:vlctions in the administration
.of Gov. John .J . Gilligan,

ClvD Service Proleetloa

legislation exemptjng antique ,
Sen. Michael J. Maloney, cars from equipment and
RCinclnnatl, noted· the inspection requirements.1 ,
political majority of the three
-The House defel!ted by
commlsslons would change ooe vote a bill which would
within the next year because have allowed
of
of .the change of l!d- certain
non-profit
mlnlstratlons, but organlzationa to bring liquor
RepubUcana would not be Into municipal and COUnty
permitted
the
hiring convention centers.
flezlbillty granted prevtoua
-Sen. Donald L. Woodland,
administrati01111.
D-Colurilbus, Introduced
Sen. Morris Jacklon, 1).. legislation authorizing the
Cleveland, said the Primary state Board of Building
Intent of · the bill was to Standards to enforce energy
provide
~lvll
aervlce conservation measures In
protection for slate Ulnry construction.
employes who have been
-The Senate unaninwallly
employed by the libraries for approved House-paaaed
aa long aa 15 yean.
legislation allowing four
In other legislative · weeks of quarter bene ~clng
developments Wedllellday:
in 8 county llllltead of two.
-The Senate unaniJnoully
The Senate adjourned until
asreed with House amend- Thursday at 11 a.m. and tile
ment and sent to the governor . House adjourned unW 1 p.m.

members

('

PLAY ER- Pos.-S~hool
Jeff Conroy. p of. Jackson
x' Mitch Wright , p-int , Loga n
Jim Perr y, p-int, Galli polis
Jim Niday, p-ot, Gallipolis
x Scot! Dailey, p-of, Athens
Tony Deal , c. Athen s

Avg. Yr.
.340

.358
.m
.408

3
4
4
4

Twins top Tigers,
A's blank Orioles

By BILL MADDEN
UP! Sports Writer
4
The last time anyone heard
4
from
a pitcher named Jim
.408 3
.365 3 Hughes, he was a hard-luck
.444
3 r-ighthander for the old
.310 3 Brooklyn Dodgers with an
.397
4
.325 4 affinity for throwing high
.405 2 hard ones in the late innings
.364
4 to people like Joe Adcock and
.387 2
Stan Musial.
Well, the Minnesota Twins
have come up with the
baseball's "latest" Jim
Hughes and like his
sometimes
maligned
predeces-sor of the 1950s, he

all

Holl~.nd .

F~

Sisty _

.TRIO
Organ, Drums, Guitar '

'NITELY ·
TUES., WED., THURS.. B:30-1:00
FRI.-&amp; SAT.,9:30-2:00

TO ENTE~tAI.N_ YOU AT .

· THE
MEIGS
INN
.
·
9.92:3629
·
- .. . POMEROY
.PH.

They Need Your
Support!

4

4

Na tional Leagu e
Bal ti mor e
ooo 000 ooo- 0 4 1
Atl anta
100 02 1 000- 4 7 0 Oakland
000 003 02•- ~ 4 0 · '
004 100 OOx - 5 9 0
Chica go
Torr ez (5 -3) and E tc heba r Mor ton , Thom pson ( 5), Bea rd re n ; Blue (9 2) and Tenac e.
(6), L eon (BI an d Cor re ll ; HR s-- Bando
(M h), William s
Bonha m , Zah n (5), Za m ora (6) {7 th l. Jac kson (9th) .
an d Mitter wa ld . WP - Zamor a
(3 0) . LP - Mor ton (5 -5) .
Clevelan d
002 000 40 3- 9 9 0
Cali fornia
002 000 000- 2 8 2
( 10 innings)
' Raich , L aRoc he (8) and As hby ;
S. D.
000 130 010 0- 5 11 0 Ryan , L an ge (8) and Egan . WP
SI. L
104 0000001- 61 2! -- Raich ( 1.QJ. LP - Ryan (8 -JJ .
H Rs-- Bell (Jrd ), Low ens tein
Spillner , Folker s (J). Fos ter I Slh ).
(4 ), F r ise ll a (6) , Tom lin (8 ),
Gr ei f ( BJ and Ken dall; McGlo th en , Hra bosky (8), Ga r man
TAX CHIEF NAMED
f 10)
and
Simmons.
W P~
Gar m an (2 2l . LP - Gre if ( 1-2) .
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio
H R- Smith (7th )
Houston
000 000 000- 0 9 0
Pi tt sbg h
020 001 OOx - 3 d 0
·Robe r ts, Granger ( 8 ) and
Jutze ; Br e1t ( 4-·21 and Sangu il
len . L P Ro bert s (3 -5) . HR Park er fS th l

Attorney General William J .
Brown announced Wednesday the appointment of
John C. Duffy Jr., Columbus,
as chief of Brown's taxation
section.
Duffy , 30, an assista~t
attorney general since 1972, IS
a former chemistry and
history teacher at St. Francis
DeSales High School here.

?!Reel
estate

Ughtweight
Easy

I

To

Use

\f£J!J[J@(JD!iJlll@

ROOF PAINT

Property
Transfers

-

For longer Usting
Paint Jobs Use Our

BEND
TIRE CENTER

QU~ITY"

RUTLAND.
ROOF PAINT

e.Aluminum

For The
Mentally' Retarded

CJrd ).

throws right-banded. There,
however, the similarity
x-La rry Brammer, lb, Ironton
ends- at least off the Minx-Jetf Bri ckey, 2b. Ironton
nesota rookie 's pitching
Arnie Chonko, 2b , Athens
Fr nc isco 020 00 1 003- 6 10 1
performance thus far this San
Ji m Derrow. 2b, Wellston
Phil a
010 210 40x - 8 8 1
Fa lcon e. Wi ll iams (5). Toms
Brett Wilson , 2b, Gallipol is
season.
and H i lt : car lton , M cG r aw
Mike Magnotta, lf. Meigs .
Hughes, who wouldn't even (7J
(91 an d Boone WP- Ca rlto n (3 x- Mike Nesselroad , 2b, Me1g s
he in the Twins' starting SI LP - - Fa lcone {d-4 ) HR sScot! Wylie, ct. Ironton
rotation now had it not been Ander son (2ndl , Martin ( 1st) _
Brent Johnson, 3b, Ga llipo lis
Ken Cartmil l. rf , Athens
for assorted injuries to other
Mike Brown , ss, I ron ton
Cinci nnati
000
l
000 120
000 21x
000-- 06 8
2 0 ~'-=~~-----,
frontliners
Dave Goltz, Joe Montrea
Bl a ir, War th en, Ta y lor ( 8)
x- Repeater s
Decker and Vic Albury, won and Fo ote; No lan ( 4-3) and
HONORABLE MENTION
um ,u..
1 "good
Bench . L P- Bi air (2 -6) H R---"
IRONTON - Jody Vass, c, senior.
his sixth game in seven M
organ !41h l .
..
neighbor" who can
WAVERLY - Steve Thomas, ss, junior.
decisions Wednesday night,
LOGAN - Kerry Meadows , 2b, senior.
protect your
Angeles 100 OOJ 000- 3 7 1
hurling Minnesota to a 5-2 Los
JACKSON - Reed Mann, ss, junior.
N .Y .
300 000 Olx- 4 7 0
ATEHSN- Mark Altier, p. junior.
Rau , Messer smith (81 and
victory over the Detroit
Yea g er ; M atlac k , A poda ca (9)
Tigers. In addition to striking and Gr ot e. W P- M atl ack. (6 -3) .
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:::::::::::::::::;:::::;::::::::::::::::::::·
out seven, the 23-year-ald L P-- Rau ((54) .
palm ball specialist stranded
Bill Freehan and Ron
Am er ican Leagu e
431 001 000- 9 12 0
Ch
icag
A St ate farm MobileHomeowners
LeFlore in the fourth and fifth Mi lw o
000 002 010-- 3 6 4
Policv protects your mobilehome,
innings after each . had
Bah nsen 13-4) and Down i ng;
its contents and includes personal
Slaton , Cas tro (2). Rod r ig uez
liebilitv coverage,
smacked one-&lt;Jut triples.
(6 ), M ur phy (Bland Port er . L P
all in 11 single, low"He was brought through -- Sl aton (3 .6) HR - Scott (5th ).
cost packaoe. Call me ·
the minor leagues the right Bos ton
for all the details.
011 11 0 000- 4 10 2
way-a step at a time," said Tex as
000 000 010- 1 4 0
Steve
Lee (7 .d) and Blackwe ll ;
Twins Manager Frank Jenk
Snowden
ins (54) and Sundber g .
GAHS during the Meigs- golf title and finished second third , five for fourth , four for ~iliCi7-"He picked up a palm
New York
002 040 OOQ- 6 9 1
Gallipolis fo otball game on . in football. The Gallians tied fifth, three for sixth, two for ball · and Cal Ermer Ka
n Ciiy
10000 1 000- 2 6 0
M ay
( 4-2)
an d
M unson ,
Memorial Field (first home for second in basketball and seventh and one for eighth. (manager of the Tacoma
Br i les, Spl ittorft (5), Patti n (5),
farm
club)
told
us
to
keep
league game ) on Oct. 10.
In case of a tie for one or
basebalL
Mingori {8) ,- Bird (9) an d
GAHS compiled 34 poin l.'l
Poinl.'l are awarded on a more positions, poinl.'l for him throwing it. The thing Healy , L P-- Br iles ~4 - J J . H Rs1out of a possi~le 40) in five
basis of eight for first place, those places are divided that's made him so effective Bonds 2 C81h &amp; 91h l.
SEOAL sports this past year, seven for second, six for between the teams involved. is his ability to change
speeds ."
edging Ironton by one-half
"The change-up helped me
poin t. Alhens was third with
BREAKDOWN OF ALL-SPORTS TROPHY POINTS
but
I don't think it's made
30•·, poin l.'l.
TEAM
FB BB G TR BA TTL
me,"
said Hughes, wbo was
1
7 6 8 6 / 2 6'12 34
Jackson was fourth with 20, Gallipolis
Ironton
8
6
s
8
6'/
2
33112
given
his
key support by Tony
Well ston fifth with 18, ·
Athens
6 3 7 6'/2 8
30'12 Oliva's two~un tie-breaking
Waverly sixth with 17, Logan Jackson
5 6 3 3
3
20
single in the seventh inning.
seventh with 16", and Meigs Wellston
4 2 6 5
I
18
Waverly
1
8
2
4
2
17
" If you had asked me in
last with IO'fz.
Logan
3 4 4 1
4112 16lh
spring
training if I'd be &amp;-1
Gallipolis won the SEOAL Meigs
2 1 1 2
4112 lO lf2
right now, I'd have to say no .
ALL-SPORTS TROPHY I figured I'd be used ln relief.
POINTS
I wouldn't be starting if it
Gal lip olis
3'
Ir on to n
J)l
weren't for sickness to one
Athe ns
301 :.- ·guy and an injury to .
J a ckson
20
Well s ton
18 another."
Wav erly
II
Steve BraWl had a two-run
Lo gan
16' 'I
No. 1 golf rival, Johnny more than $2.4 million in less Me ig s
10 ' , homer_LOLMinn.esota whil e
Miller, are both in position to than 14 years, leads this
Detroit scored il.'l two runs on
FINAL STANDINGS
vault past the $200,000 mark year's money list with more
a homer by Tom Veryzer and
I SPR lNG SPORTS)
1975 VARSITY BASEBALL
in earnings so far this year by ,than $166,000 and Miller, last
a bases-loaded walk by
Lightweight- only 8',&lt; lbs. - for easy handling. Plenty
TEAM
W L R DR
grabbing the Classic's $45,000 year's top money winner, is A then s
12 2 71 30 Hughes.
of powe r , 1% H . P ., fa handle any home proiect . Has
first prize.
second with more than G all ipoli s
9 5 92 . 41
new Sa lety Switch to help prevent accidental starts.
Elsewhere ln the American
I r onton
9 5 82 56
High 5,500 RPM cutt ing speed . Cuts 2 3-16" at 90
Nicklaus, who has won $155,000.
M e ig s
8 6 64 72 League, Chicago bombed
de
gree, P /4" at 45 degree. Handles tough mafer i als,
And don't overlook Tom Logan
8 6 61 57 Milwaukee, 9-3, New York
too
.
Model534
Jack son
6
e 73 89
Weiskopf, Nicklaus' partner Waver l y
4 10 37 68 put away Kansas City, &amp;-2,
American League
in the team championships. Well s to n
0 14 39 106 Boston upended Texas, 4-1,
East
Weiskopf,
third
on
the
money
w. L pcf .
1975 VARSITY TRACK MEET Oakland blanked Baltimore,
22 17 . 56d g.b. list with nearly $128,000, tied
I r on t on 13 d, Athe n s 67.
east on
21 20 .512 2 with Nicklaus for third last Gall ipoli s 67, well sto n 59, :;.o, and Cleveland routed
Milw aukee
Wav erly 5], Jackson 41. M eig s California, 9-2.
Detro it
18 21 .462
26, L ogan 18.
19 23 .452 : , 2 , week in the Memphis Open,
New Yor k
In toe National League, it
18 23 .43 9 s
Clev eland
won
by
veteran
Gene
Littler.
was
New York over Los
16 26 .381
7' 2
Baltimor e
Arnold Palmer rushed back INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Angeles, 4-3, Philadelphia On
West
'w . I. pet . g .b. from England, where he won
United Press International
top of St. Louis, 8-6, PittsOakland
27 17 .61 4
l.pct
:
g.
b
.
'
w
.
2
that
country's
PGA
for
his
Kansas City
26 20 .565
Tidewaler
25 18 .581burgh W h I' t ewaS h1ng
Minn esota
22 18 .550 3
80th professional victory, to Rochester
25 19 .568 1' ' Houston,~. Chicago shading
Te x as
22 21 .512 4 1 1:,~
Charl eston
25 19 .568
:;
play in the Atlanta Classic. Sy
California
22 24 .1178 6
racu se
25 20 .556 1 Atlanta, 5-4, St. Louis atop
Ch icago
20 23 .465 6"2 South Africa's Gary Player,
Toledo
20
23 .465 5
San Diego, fl-5, and Cincinnati
Wednesday ' s Results
19 24 .442 6
who, like Nicklaus, skipped Pawtuc ket
Chicago 9 Milwaukee 3
Richrn ond
19
25 .:1
.'n
6'1 ', . J11..':o~vz:eraMioi"itrieail~,ill-033.:r::!:r::!:ll:lt:i:I:II:ICJCCICCICCJCCJCISISIS:a:a:a:a:a=s::~::~=s::~~:~:~~:~:~~:~:~
Bos ton 4 Texas 1
18 28
91 8
the three events after the Memphis
New Y ork 6 Kansas Ci ty 2
·-· · Wednesday's Result s
Tournament of Champions, ~RiChmond 6 Roch est er 2
Minn esota 5 Detroit 2
Oakland 5 Baltimor:e 0
has been third or better in Charl es ton 2 Paw tuc ket 1. 11
Clev el and 9 California 2
inn .
Thursday's Probable Pitchers four of the past five Atlanta
Tol ed o 5 M e mph is 1
CAll Times EDT)
T idewat er 5 Syracus e 4
Classics
and
must
rate
as
a
. New York (Dobson d-51 at
serious contender. '
Tex as ( Wr ight 0-JL 9:00p .m .
In 1972, President Ri~hard
(Only game sch eduled )
Player
predicted
lowerNixon and Soviet Communist
Friday'S Games ·
thanusual scores here this party
Chicago at Detroit, night
leader
Leonid
Kansas City at M it w , night
week - and play in · Wed· Brezhnev ended their
Boston at Minnesota , night
nesday's proam backed that Moscow summit meeting
New York at Texas, night
Balt i more at Calif, night
forecast.
with a joint declaration of
Cleveland at Oaklan d , night
"I say this for two peaceful co-existence.
reasons," said Player.
"First, I've never seen the
the Lowest
course in better condition.
And, second, I can't
Ti.re Prices
remember when I saw a
stronger tournament fi~JI-"
In the Area
However, the weatherman
Curtis C. ROush, Fern forecast thunderstorms
Roush Ferne' Roush to Paul throughout the tournament ,
It's
A: Dillard, parcel, Mid- and if they continue as heavy
dlepori.
as the one that inundated the
'
Danny L.' Turner, Patsy M. course Wednesday afternoon,
•
Turner to Paul D. Weyand, 45 the couriM! could start playing
and
two-third
acres, longer ailcj the greens slower,
Mason, W.
Columbia.
Jacob Wilbur Lee, Vinas L.
Lee to Frank Cleland,
.::
Delores M. Cleland, parcels,
Sutton.
·
Frank Cleland,- Delores M.
• W.YAIIIMD PAINTS
Cleland to Jacob Wilbur Lee,
Vinas L. Lee, parcels, Sutton,
Elctremely durable purt alkyd Plinll
formulated for maxlmu111 &amp;IOU rtlwl- .
Helen F. Baer to Gerald L.
tlon and weather reslstaftce. Excellent _
Dill Sr., Irene M. Dill, 1.6
for metal roofs, bulldinas, wood trim,
shutters, lawn !U(nlture al!d . t~~~IP.
acre, Sutton.
:
rilent. Prime new plvan1l:'ld
William Harold Gillogly,
with SP-1361 VInyl-Zinc; ~
Daisy M. Gillogly to Daniel .
Metal Conditlontr: bldly ·rusted sut,,
••urLAII eGreen
flces with No.. 84-A Red LAid Primer.
w. McLaughlin, Barbaru J.
~~J-'10
McLaughlin,
I
acre,
$pnledl,. ,....
. 500
eRed
sqUIN , feet per pllon, •
Ill •
PAINT
Columbia.
iurlact condlll~.
11
Charles Stanford Beegle, ::
Faye Beegle to Frederick J. ':: THOSE
'
Stobart, Earline Stobart, lots,
RUSTED
Racine .
SHOP.OUR COMPL£TE PAINT DEI'IIKTMENT
Chester Buckley, Nancy
ROOFS WITH ... Buckley to Mamie Buckley,
RUTLAND ROOF
.24 acre, Olive.
·
"'
John Hayes, Elizabeth
"'
PAINT
...
Hayes ' to Roland McDole,
•
162.48 afre, Chesler.
Carl Buckley, Mamie
110 W. MAIN
Buckley to Chesler Buckley,
Hrs.: 9 - ~ : 30 Mon .- Thurs. HARDWARE CO, · 9:00-l :,oo Fii., sat .
Nancy Buckley, parcel,
. 773·5583
Mason, w. Va .
Olive.
: : ::
.303
.349
.397
.360

Nicklaus is favored

•

which the governor made a controlled by a bipartisan
·plea for urgent action before board of trustees consisting
a joint session of the General of 15 members, including the
Assembly last week, is current nine-member Ohio
currenUy stalled'in the House Development Center board of
Energy Committee .
trustees.
Under provisions of the
Other members of the
Democratic bill, ERDA ERDA board would include
would be empowered to two legislative members
construct power plants, from each party, one
. gasification or fuel refinery member of the Public
facilities, or any other Utilities Commission and the
facilities necessary for the chairman of the Energy
conservation of energy.
Emergency COIIlllli8alon.
·The agency could also
Meshel noted the governor
make loans and grants · for would have the power for
energy development facilities significant executive Input
. to he financed by revenue into the agency by virtue of
bonds md notes.
making the majority of apCoolrolled by Board
pointments to the board.
Sen. Harry Meshel, DHe said there waa no need
Youngstown, chief sponsor of to create a neW bureaucracy
the bill approved by a 21-to-11 when the ODC was already
vote, said ERDA would be engaged in energy research
and development on which
..

1915 ALL-SOUTHEASTERN OHIO
LEAGUE BASEBALL TEAM

.
Major L eagu e R; esuits
By Un it ed Pt"ess Internati onal

Official results of All-Sports
Trophy released; GAHS winner

•

'
Bt VICI'OR LANIAUSKAS
UJ'I Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS {UPI) ' rAgislation creating an Ohio
Energy and Resource
Development Agency to
etimbat the stale's dwindliilg
erjergy supplies is headed for
tltj! House after gaining
llfjProval along strict party
li'es Wednesday in the
Democratlc~ntrolled Ohio
senate.
!!'he Democratic-eponsored
mNSW'e varies from similar
Ietlslatlon backed by the
$Jinlstration of Gov. James
~Rhodes in that it would use
the existing Ohio Development Center as a foundation
loW the new asency Bl)d
p&amp;vides for significant
le41slative Input in energy
r&lt;$earch and development,
Pie Rhodes leglllation, foe

:::::: ~:: :::::::::::::: :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·

Unescores

GREEN"'

•ETAL PAIIII

--

''SUPER

..

-

eRm
tGREEN

Wl.UMINUM

-

IU.,._

-awox=

..

,

Paid Pol. Adv. by The Citizens Committee
for Mentally Retarded
r
'

PICKENS

..

�..

.. r

4 -The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Th~~sday, May 29, 1975

-- '

Fed-up student kills teachers

•

-

Nolan posts fourth win

place ."
Police Chief Doug Burrows
the loth inning lifted St. Louis
By FRED DOWN
Expos. Nolan struck out five single in the sixth. Doug Rau over San Diego, which tied
confirme~ ~1r's. Wright was
UPI Sports Writer
,
and walked two to raise his was the loser, with Andy the score in the eighth with
one of the two teachers
Gary Nolan has "a new record to 4-3 and enable the Messersmith making his first the help ~f two errors.
named in the note, which was
founc\ at the gunman's home, lease on life" and the Cin- Reds to move to within m relief appearance since 1972. Reliever Mike Garman
Pirates 3, Astros 0:
but would not identify the cinnati Reds have fresh hopes games of first-place Los
received credit for the vicKen Brett pitched a nine- tory while Billgreif was the
other teacher. Police would that they can beat the Los Angeles.
Ken Griffey drove in two hitter and Dave Parker hit a loser.
not release the text of the Angeles Dodgers in the
note, but Burrows said it National League's Western runs and Johnny Bench had a two-run homer for •Pitts-- Cubs 5, Braves 4:
which
dealt
key double to lead Cin- burgh,
indica ted he planned to harm Division race.
. Don Kessinger , Pete
Houston
's
Dave
Roberts
his
Although only 27 years old, cinnati's eight-hit atta ck,
the-two teachers and "anyone
LaCock
and pitcher Bill
Major league Standmg s
Nolan is trying to pitch bis which dealt 20-year-old fifth loss against three .vic- Bonham had two hits each for
else
who
got
in
his
way."
Bv Unite(! Pr ess International
Slobodian's sister, Donna, . way back to stardom · after Dennis Blair his sixth loss ·tories. The win was Brett's Chicago, with ()scar Zamora
Nafional L eague
fourth compared to two
East
told a newsman, however, more than two years of against two wins.
picking up the victory in
w. I . pet . g .b.
The New York Mets defeats .
211 19 .5SB.
that in his note Slobodian frustration . He developed a
Chicago
relief.
Atlanta's Carl Morton
Phlllles 8, Giants 6:
P1ttsburgh
22 18 .SSO
sore arm just before' the 1972 defeated the Dodgers, 4-3,'
'
'
vowed
to
"eliminate"
Mrs.
suffered
his fifth loss against
N ew York
20 18 .S2 6
I' '
Rookie Jerry Martin's two2
Wright and science teacher All-Star game and in the last · Pittsburgh heat Houston, 3~.
P h llad e ~phia
22 '2 1 5 12
five wins.
dl9
st , Loui s
5
two seasons pitched a total of Philadelphia topped San run homer and Mike SchD.R.
Bronson.
The
teachers
·~
2J
1
J
24
Montreal
376 7' '
had reprimanded him for 16 in']ings for Cincinnati and Francisco, 8-6, St. Louis won, midt's two-run double were
West
big
blows
for
w. I. pet. g . b. skipping classes, she said.
Indianapolis.
·LUCKY BUCK W~ERS
6-5, in 10 iimings, over San the
Ange l es
29 19 .617
Philadelphia,
which
broke
CLEVELAND (UPI) ...:. Los
Nolan
says
the
turning
Diego and the Chicago Cubs
Bronson was in another
C1 n c innali
77 20 .565
Jl .,
AT
point was when he underwent shaded Atlanta, 5-4, in otlicr open t~e game against San
. The Ohio Lottery Com- San Franc isc o 23 21 .535 4
part
of
the
school
at
the
time
73 13 .500 5
Francisco with a four-run
mission Wedn.esday iden- SanlanDtaiego
surgery last fall which NL games. '
·
22 25 .468 6, ·.· of the shootings and was not
DCOLUMBUS - Effective tified the following persons as M
1
outburst
in the seventh. Steve
H o uston
18 31 .375 11 ;relieved the constant pain
In the :American League, it
injured.
Wcdnc sday' s Result s
June I the ratio for new C-1 $100,000 winners in the lotDonna said her brother caused by a calciwn spur in was Chicago 9 MilwaUkee 3, Carlton received credit for
Chicago s Atl anta 4
ON RT. 7
and C-2 permits will be one tery's Lucky Buck game:
St . Louis 6 San Diego 5, 10 wrote that "he was fed up his right shoulder.
Boston 4 Texas I, New York 6 his third victory with ninthfor each 1,000 population or
"I'm still young and I have .Kansas City 2, Minnesota 5 inning relief help from Tug
- Kathleen A. Kilway, 4800 innings
with life" and intended to
P i ttsburgh J H9vston o, night
portion thereof for each · Dalebridge Rd., Warnesville
Philad elphia B San Fran c isco commit suicide.
to look to the future," he said ' Detroit 2, Cleveland 9 Cali- McGraw . Mike An1ferson also THURS :, FRI., SAT.
6, n 1gh t
taxing district, Director Heights, Ohio.
at
the start of this season. fornia 2, and Oakland 5 homered for the Phillies.
and SUNDAY
Neighbors described Slobo~
Cincinnati 6 Montreal 0, night
Clifford E. Reich of the Ohio
Cardinals 6, Padres 5:
New
York
4
Los
An
geles
3,
~
"I'm not going out on a iimb Baltimore o.
- Joel G. Vassar, 258
10:00
to
6:00
dian,
the
youngest
of
four
Department of Liquor Margaret Pl., Perrysburg,' night
Luis
Melendez'
single
with
Mets
4,
Dodgers
3:
but
I'll
say
I'll
he
in
there
.children, as a "loner" and a
Today's Games
Control has announced.
'
(No gam es sc hedul ed J
Ohio.
Felix Millan singled and the bases filled and two out in
karate expert who didn't pitching this year." ·
Friday ' ~ Games
The Director stated that the
The
6-foot-3,
21
0-pound
eventually
scored on Ed
-Edward J. Dittmore, 2312
hiive-much time for girls.
Los Angeles at Chi cago
change in ratio is a result of a Jacob St., Wheeling, W.Va.
San Diego at N ew Yo r k , night
"We used to call him righthander pitched his best Kranepool's sacrifice fly in
H o u s to n at Philad el phia ,
Liquor Control Commission
- Pedro G. Munoz Jr., 1466 ni gh
'Priest,'"
said a one-time game since 1972 Wednesday the eighth inning to give New
t
amendment to Regulation Schuyler Rd., Toledo.
A tlant a at Pittsburgh , night
classmate. "He always acted nightwhen he turned in a two- York's Jon Matlack his sixth
A NEW
LCc-1-64. The regulation
Cincinn at i at St . Loui s, n ig ht
-Fred Petti, 4365 Prasse San Franc isco at MontreaL in such an aloof, solitary sort hitter to give the Reds a IHJ win against three losses. Los
previously set the ratio at one Rd., South Euclid, Ohio.
n 1a ht
victory over the Montreal Angeles had tied the score at
SUPER-SPECIAL
of way."
permit for each 500
~ on Ron Cey's two-run
population or portion thereof.
VALUE!
A C-1 permit allows the
sale of 3.2 percent beer for
carryout only. C-2 permits
allow: the carryout sale of
high-powered beer, wine and
scored any kind of triumph at back to his work in the coal barrassed.
in the 800 meters. He was
By MIL'l'ON RICHMAN
certain mixed cocktails (up
all in the men's competition mines.
·Later, he presented ~Hall clocked in 1:48.8. Fred Luke
UP! Sports Editor
to 42 proof).
until the final day, WedHall sought to lift his with a special iron ball of Seattle also made it three
PEKING
(UP!)
Any C-1 or C-2 application America's triumphant track nesday, when L Yun-piao, a Chinese opponent atop his costing $300.
·
straight in the javelin with a
· filed on or after May 16, 1975 and field members return 37-year-old coal miner, heat shoulders after they finished
2 oz. size, a $6 50 value
"It's the hest one I've ever throw of 265 feet, 6 inches
.
'
will be subject to the new home tomorrow, praised by AI Hall of Charlton, Mass., in their event, and the crowd, seen, " exclauned
the U.S. · and Dr. Delano Meriwether
ratio, because no permit may their coach for a job well done the hammer throw with a toss realizing what the U.S. team hammer thtower.
NOW
of Arlington, Va., took the 200
be issued until at least 15 days and by the highest ranking of 197 feet, 7 inches.
captain was trying to do,
The Chinese also achieved meters in 21.2 seconds for his
after the application is filed U.S. official in China for
"We are good friends," cheered its appreciation.
two other victories'on the last second conquest.
(as required by Ohio Revised improving the growing explained the affable, 6-footBut
Li
courteously . day of competition, in the
Most impressive U.S. perCode Section '1,303.2
1,
254-pound
Li,
who
now
goes
declined.
He
was
too
emwomen's
long
jump
and
formers
during the two-week
friendship between both
There are now ap- countries.
javelin throw. Otherwise the series were distance runner
proximately 200 "C" class
Americans grabbed 13 of the Dick Buerkle of Rochester
"Our team did an excellent
permit applications pending. job," said Coach Bob Giegen16 final day events.
N.Y., and Fred Newhouse of
Those applica lions which gack. "As . for the Chinese,
Keith Francis ,of f'lew Bed- Baton Rouge, La.
C\\01
Sf'&gt;'l/\.y
cannot be issued before June they were perfect hosts.
ford,
Mass.,
was
the
leader
Buerkle
won
the
I
,500,
5
000
By Mrs. Francis Morris
Jozie of Gallipolis were
CO LO G t t C
I, 1975 will be taken out of Nobody could possibly ask for
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard guests of Mr. and Mrs. Roy with his third win of the series and 10,000 meter events ~d
process.
'
Newhouse came home in
any more than they did for Lawson and Mrs. Haskell Riffle .
·
front
in the 400 three times as
us ."
Compton of Columbus atMelvin Riffle of Columbus
well as being part of three
George Bush, former U.S. ~nded the alwnni banquet spent the weekend with Mr.
,/
winning relay efforts.
ambassador
to
the
United
and
visited
friends
Sunday.
and Mrs. Roy Riffle.
A thought 'for the day: In
Among the women, Francie
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Wagner
Mr . and Mrs . J'ames
his 1961 inaugural address, Nations and now chief U.S.
Larrieu, Los Angeles, won
President John Kennedy Jiason officer in China, was and children oJ Griffom Air Spargur and daughter, Lisa,
How lo bea t the high cost of givi ng
the I ,500 meters event in all
among
the
60,000
who
watForce
Base,
Indiana,
spent
of
Waynesville,
spent
several
,
said, "Let the word go forth
some thin g terrific to Da ds and gradsthree cities and Robin
from this time and place that ched the American athletes the holiday weekend with his days with her sister and
choose a handsome, hefty flut ed bottle
Jeffery Charles King is Campbell, Washington,
make
a
clean
sweep
of
their
. parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ed- family, Mr. and Mrs. David ,home from Children's
the torch has passed to a new
fill
ed with cit rus-crisp Ca noe spray co logne.
good-will series with the ward Wagner and attended Parry.
l09ked good in taking the 400
g~neration of Americans."
Hospital in Columbus where
Mad e by Dana for the guy who makes it
Chinese at Peking Workers' the Alumni.
•
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth he had open heart surgery. meters twice. ,
everywh ere.
Stadium Wednesday and he
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Sayre, Krider of Columbus spent
Visitors
of
Mr
.
and
Mrs(
expressed his personal praise Freddy, Frank and Eric, and Memorial bay weekend with
Charles Ellis were Mr. and
for them, as well as for the Mr. and Mrs. Mark Sharp and Mrs. Grace Krider.
Mrs . Guy Ellis of Marion, Start losing weight today or
Chinese.
Mrs. Edna Balsley of
child~en ·all of Bowerston
Ohio.
They visited at the money back . ly\ONAOEX is a
"I guess my feelings can he were here for Com- Cleves, Ohio visi~d friends .
easy to take .
hospital
with Bess Ellis and tiny tablet and
will help curb
summed up by pride in the mencement and were guests
Mr. and Mrs. Bud Simspon also visited his sister, Mrs. MONAOEX
your desire for excess food .
accomplishments," said of Mr. and Mrs. James of Seymour, Ind., s)lent a few
Eat les.s · wei 'g h less. Contains
no da ngerous drugs and will
Bush. " In addition to a Roush, Mrs. Ethel Johnson days with his mother, Mrs. · Frances King.
Visitors of Mr. and Mrs. not make you nervous. No
fantastic performance by and Mr. and Mrs. Roy Gretta Simpson .
cMercisc . Chang e
Franklin
King were Ali"" strenuous
vour life . .. start today .·
great men and women Dowell .
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hart, Mr.' and Mrs. Lesiie MONAOEX
cost $3 .00 for a 20
athletes, there's a lot more to
Rev. and Mrs. O'Connor of Hayman of Westerville spent
day suppl)'. Large economy
it here as we develop this Urbana visited Mrs. Edna a weekend with Mrs . William Jerrell and children of size IS SS . OO . Also try
AQUATABS : they work gently
Durham, N. C.
relationship.
Pickens and other friends Hayman.
to help you lose water -bloat.
• Also visiting Mrs. Frances AQUATABS - a "water pill"
"The friendship tbey 've Saturday.
.
Mr : Todd Taylor of 'Pt. King and other King families that
works $3.00. Bo1h
heard so much. about in the
Mrs. Dottie Brown of Texas Pleasant spent saturday with
guaranteed and sold by :
were
Mrs.
Leota
Norris,
Mr.
Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy .
past few days really came and Mr. and Mrs. Rock his grandparents, Mr: and
112 E . Main, Pomeroy
and
Mrs.
Jimmy
Norris
and
through. Our people con- Young and Andy and Larry . Mrs. Frank Cleland .
Ou1ton Drug Store
children of Akron.
Middleport
dueled themselves with a Wilcoxen of Columbus were
M ,· Ordt::l ~ t i:led
Friends were sorry to hear
sense of maturity, a genuine here to attend Com- NO WNGER SERIOUS
that Dana Turner is back in
feeling for the other side that mencement exercises.
INDIANAPOLIS (UPI)
can only make our job easier
Race driver Tom Sneva lias Holzer Medical Center.
Visitors of Frances King
in the long run. It was a line
Mr. and Mrs. Max Wolfe of been , removed_ from the
also
were Mr. and Mrs. Jack
group conducting themselves Sandusky spe_nt Memorial serious list at Methodist
King
and children, Mr. and
in the great tradition of our Day weekend with his sis~r. Hospital and is now talking
about getting back into a race . Mrs. William King and
country, and I'll tell you I got Mrs. Helen Simpson.
children and Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Brian Simp- car within a month.
a big kick out ofit.l got a kick
out of seeing them winning son, Lisa and Darin, of Sneva, a former school Edward" King · Jr. and
and I got a kick out of Baltimore spent the holiday principal from . Spokane, children.
Visitors of Mr:· and Mrs.
meeting these guys and girls weekend here 11nd at~nded Wash., sustained first, seco11d
''
William
King and children.
and just reveling in their Commencement exercises. and third degree burns over
were
Mr.
and Mrs. Orville
They were guests of Mrs. 15 per cent of his body when
accomplishments."
From the outset, the Chester Simpson and Mr. and his car crashed during the Marks and children, Walter
Indianapolis 500-mile race King, son of Mrs. Frances
Chinese made it plain that Mrs. Ralph Badgley.
King, of Chauncey.
their three track and field
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Badley Sunday.
meets with the Americans in and Kelli of Columbus spent
Style
Shown
Canton, Shanghai and here Memorial Day with his
In
would be based on "friend- parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Bone
ship first, competition Badgley.
second.''
Mr . and Mrs. William
There would be no medals Bentz and Mr. John Bentz of
awarded, no point score kept, Coshocton spent Sunday here
Here's the thrifty place to
shop for summer items .
and so it was, which in the and attended morning
end proved just as well worship services
First
because the Chinese were Baptist Church and went to
FENCING AND CORNERS
simply outcla~sed in the the cemetery at Plants.
IS in.Kl6 in.Mlfa" Fenct!
87c
20 in.IC18 in.x'l~" Corners, Reg . S1 .17
Special 96c
actual competition.
It Mr. and Mrs. Phlllp Miller
The U.S. team won all three spent a weekend with her
••
~eels_
ea_sily, rolling up 91 parents, Mr. and Mrs. George
. Betty Ohlinger
The Supers c:ope CRS-162 IS e un•que AC/ Battery
PICNIC
supplies
paten t- pendi ng e ~ecl us lve : A condenser mic roportable system tha t comb ines a ste reo cauette
102 E. Main St.
Pomeroy
VIctones m 99 events.
Neigler. Mrs. Neigler
napkins, plates, cups, table
phone built Into ea ch deta chable apeaker to lve
record ing system Wifh an AM/FM Stereo Aadlo In you ma &gt;etmum .separatlon and c larity for your~l ve
clofhs, forks, spoons .
The Chinese, m fact, never returned home from Holzer
on e exciting uni t. Aou n ~ tng out the packag e ere
stereo record1 ngs. The St.Jpersoope CRS· IS2 18
two detacheble speakers that boast a Superacope truly th e most uni que re corder of Ita. kind avall&amp;ble
Medical
Center
Saturday.
.
•
Miss Ruth Ellis and Mr.
Pl ay Bu tt on
Cassette Compartment
Stereo Headphone Jack
Stop/ Eject Button
Howard
Bingman
of
Slsep On/ Off Switch
Right Speaker/ BuHt·ln Condenser
SUMMER
toys
Toy
·
Columbus and Miss Kathryn
Tap e Mode lndrcatora
Microphone Assembly
l.awnmowers, sand pails,
LAWN
FM Antenna
L. eft Spe aker/ Bu il t, in Condenser
Philson and Miss Edith
DECORATIONS .
sand toys, garden sets,
, M 1croph.ono A 8se mblyo
Rad io Tunln l'j Knob
Hayman were Sunday guest,s
Stre lght· lin P DI R~ 3 bo..;k Vo iU!ht' Con trol
DuCk
8.
ducklings, · sprinkling cans.
. FM Stere o Indic ator
AD01TIONAL FE ATURE S
of Mr. and Mrs. Thereon
roos1ers ,
flamingos ,
·
Straight·Li ne Stere o Balance Control
1 A ut omat1c Shut·Off
Johnson .
egrets, wild geese.
AFCSwitch
·
2 . 1-.utomal lc Rec ord Level Co nlru t
Straig ht-Line Pl ay Back Tone Cont rol
3 . Built-In Aecharg 1ng Circuit ry
Mr:and Mrs. David Nease
STOP IN TODAY
Funct ion Sel ecto r
4 . Opt 1Cn91 Ni-C!I d 0 91tery Pa ck
and son, David, of Baltimore
Record Level Battery Streng1h lndtcelor 5. M icro phone Input Jacka
Record Button
U ne Input and Line Output Jaclc.e (for Tape
were weekend guests of his
Rewind Bt.JUon
6. De ckar d Tuner Operation)
mother, Mrs. Carrie Nease.
F••t Forw1rd Button
7 A ccepta Ceramic Phono C1rtn dge
Mr. and Mrs. George
Tassion and family of Cincinnati were weekend guests
of her mother, Mrs. Lillian
2 Miles out on Rt. 141- Right Side of Road
.
Lee.
Mr . and Mrs. William
.
Watch for Sivn
·
'
_MIDDLEPORT, 0..
Ph. 446-7886
McKenzie, Philip,l Jeff and
John Slinger, 17, who stumBRAMPTON, Ont. (UP!)
bled
unaware into .the
- At 16, Michael Slobodian
said he was fed up with life. washroom , was the first
Wednesday he entered the victim. He staggered into the
Centennial Secondary School hallway and collapsed with two rifles concealed in a dead.
Slobodian, firing randomly
guitar case and went directly
at students with two rifles,
to a first..floor washroom·.
He had sworn in a suicide then approached the art room
note to kill two teachers who where he shot and killed
had reprimanded him for Margaret Evelyn Wright, 25,
skipping classes and "anyone one of the teachers on his
who got in his way." He death list.
After wounding another
wasted little time in carrying
student nearby, he com6ut his vow.
mitted suicide with a single
shot in the head.

Before he died, Slobodian
killed two persons cand injured 13 students - nine
seriously.
"The gunman ran along a
hallway, opening classroom
doors and shooting at everything in sight," one student
told reporters. "Panic
erupted throughout the whole.

Classes end in revue

'

C-1, C-2 ratio

is halved
in new ruling

FLEA MARKET

THE CROSS ROADS

Americans advance Chinese-relations

CANOE

$400

Blue, bkzck slacks
are.big collectors

____

POLLY'S PROBLE~
DEAR POLLY - I have a
pair of navy blue acrylic
washable slacks that draw
anything and evey thing like a
magnet and never look clean.
Is there anything I can use
when washing them that
would remov e this static
electricity and would not take _

IN ONE DAY
WE
CUT
· CAN
YOUR
FUEL

IN HALF

INSULATE

NOW!
CALL US TODAY
FOR FREE ESTIMATE
,.

FOREMANand

ABBOTT
Middleport, Ohio
992 -5321

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fo
PI
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r1

·Marguerite's
SHOES ·

CRS-152 AM/F~ Sl~~o C~sS~:Itc RadioRcwrd~r

DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Peeve is with th e way
supermarkets and di scount
stores put the candy and gum
displays so they are at the
side of those waitin g in line to
get to the cash register. The
cashier cannot see and does
not have time . to see the
young children crying for
candy and making scenes as
they try to get the parent to
buy it. The parents usually do
not buy it but just slap the
children around. Stores
should keep the candy and
gum where the children are
not tempted and do not stand
and see it and even handle.
They often handle such things
like .they were nothing and
often end up taking some any
way.
Also my Pet Peeve contin~es on to . thos~ grownups
who are standing in line to
check out and read a paper or
magazine out of a nearby
rack as they wait. When their
turn comes at the resgister

A SPECIAL BUY
~

SUPERSCOPE

at

away the body so they would
become limp? I would appreciate any i~formation . MRS. L.
DEAR MRS. L. - Navy
blue and black seem to be the
worst offenders . Brushing a
dozen limes a day does no
good . I have had me same
trouble with a pair of navy
dacron and polyes~r slacks
and have found the greatest
help is to turn them wrong
side out when washing in the
washer . After any washmg
·add fabri c softener to the last
nnse ·water. They can be
maddening but the above has
practically eliminated the
problem for me. Go!)d luck!
- POLLY.

From A Famous Maker

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Ii
' ! t1

·
~.
, .. •- r ··

I ,.

I. I

l)

SIZES •

$599

S-15 ·

ALSO
SL-IGHTLY IRREGULAR
JUNIOR JEANS

Assorted Colors

'·

Sizes 5-15

REG. Sl2.00

SALE

'7"

MIDDLEPORT
DEPARTMENT STORE
Middleport, Ohio

accessories and their role in
. By Charlene Hoenich
Learning to look bet~r for achieving the well-{)ressed
less is what. sewing classes look.
She said that accessories
are all about."
Two such classes - mostly personalize clothing, add
beginners - taught by Mrs. variety to the wardrobe, and
Martha Guilkey, Meigs give point and distinction to
County Extension Agent, the basic dress or suit.
"graduated" last week via an Suggestions for choosing
informal style revue and a becoming and appropriate
rap session on accessories. accessories and for · com;
The ~rments, most of bining them . to compliment
which featured simplicity of the costwne were given by
design, were made during the the extension agent, who also
10 weekly lessons which took cautioned that figure,
the beginners from fabric and coloring, personality and the
pattern selection through occasion must be selection
guides.
al~rations for fit, cutting and
Modeling their garments
marking the material, single
unit construction, and finally were Janet Venoy, Eileen
getting it all together with the Bowers, Eleanor Leonard,
fastenings and finishing Angie Sisson, Mary Buck,
Pomeroy area; Evelyn
touches.
As each of the women Lucke, Syracuse; Jean
modeled her garment, there Kennedy, Rutland; Debbie
was a general discussion on Sanders, Nina Sanders,
fit and style along with some Reedsville; Aretta Brickels,
personal 'comments on un- Mildred Wolfe and Connie
fortunate sewing experiences Dodson, Middleport; and
to be avoided on the next Helen Wolfe, Long Bottom.
Others in the classes were
project.
Miss Guilkey using an Judy Humphrey, Gene&gt;:ieve
assortment of purses, gloves, Burdette, Helen Franks,
hats, scarves, collars and Naomi Ohlinger and Alice
cuffs, pelts, jewelry and Freeman, all Pomeroy area.
flowers gave tips on the ri~ht

,, . L.-.,--~-..;,;..~....:.--.....;.;....___'""":••;-1
l

Social..
Calendar

THURSDAY
. XI GAMMA Mu Sorority
p1cmc, Fort Meigs, 6:30p.m.
Hosted by losing attendants. '.
Cui lure report by Iris Payne ~
and Susan Baer.
·,
SCHOOL'S OUT party .'·
sponsored by ' women's ;'
Auxiliary at firehouse In
Reedsville 7 p.m.; 25 cents ·
admission.
MIDDLEPORT CHILD
Conservation League, annual
dinner meeting at Seddons onthe Mall, Parkersburg.1
Members are to meet at thti.
Upper Parking Lot in'
Pomeroy at 6:30 p. m.
FRIDAY
REV . CHARLES Norris:
and Pathfinder Quartet;,
Ironton, will be an Antiquity.'
Baptist Church at 7:30p. m.;
Friday under sponsorship or:,
Men's Fellowship of church •.
Public invited.
'
RECORD I!OP, 7 to 11 p. m.;
at Rock Springs Grange Hall; ~
refreshments to be sold and)
· games played. Dress of the~
1950's.
SATURDAY
,
Fl~H FRY, 10 a.m. to 4 p. i.
m. at Pomeroy Fire Stationsponsored by Pomeroy;
Volunteer Fire Dept. Fish,':
french fries and cole slaw willi
CONNIE DODSON, A BEGINNER, models a dress
be served. Those wishing;
she made in the Meigs County Extension Service classes
delivery
in Pomeroy may call,~
«
this spring.
992-2663.
the June meeting. A dessert
Cravats for the Po~eroy course was served to those
GOSPEL SING, 8 p. m. at•
Emergency Squad w1ll be
Guysville Community_'
named
and
Mrs.
Mildred
made by the Sew-Ri~ Sewing
Church, SR 329just off US 50, '
Club, it was voted at a recent Wells, Mrs. Martha Hoffman,
12 miles east of Athens, '
meeting of the club members Mrs. Lucy White, Mrs. Flo
Mrs.
Kathryn
Wise,
Mrs.
Homeward · Bound ' Trio i
Mrs. Wilma Parmalee
at the home of Mrs. Barbara Strickland, Mrs. Nettie
Elizabe
th
Gardner
and
Mrs.
Huntington,
will be lea lured~'
Boyer,
Mrs.
Pandora
Collins,
hosted a meeting of the Busy
Mullen.
Alice
Freeland
were
noted
.
Public
invited.
Mrs. Ann Browning had Mrs. Lenora McKnight and Bee Class of the Middleport
First Baptist Church Thurs- Mrs. Roina Hawkins
charge of the meeting with Mrs. Shirley Baity.
presen~d the program using
day night at her home.
OPEN HOUSE
Mrs . Betty Wehrung and Mrs.
thoughts and poems from a
Mrs.
Leora
Sigman
Evelyn Gilmore giving the
VISIT MOTHER
welcomed the members to birthday book and closing
'
secretary and treasurer's
SYRACUSE - Mr. and the meeting and devotions with a poem prayer "To
report.
Mrs. William Bartels ,
Begin the Day With".
Mrs. Carolyn McDaniel Stevensville, Mich., were were given by Mrs. Par- Hostesses were Mrs . Parreceived a birthday gift from weekend visitors of his malee who gave readings, malee, Mrs.' Eloise Wilson,
Inv ites the public to attend
her secret sister. Mrs. mother, Mrs. Emmett "The Perfect Church," " All 1 Mrs. Souders and Mrs. Goldie an open house af the
Work for I'll Leave Beliind."
ANIMAL CARE CENTER
Gilmore will be hostess for Bartels.
and "Count Your Blessings". Roush. Mrs. Elizabeth Slain
and
1.,
BOARDING KENNEL
Members sang " God So took pictw·es of the class.
Loved the WQrld" and signed Others at the meeting were on Sunday, June I, 1975
I : 00 ·5 ' 00 p . m.
cards for Mrs. Ferne Mrs. Eva Hartley, Mrs. Edith from
Located
'I• mile from the ,:
Bradbury, Mrs. Rose Mary Sa uer, Mrs. Freda Edwards,
Shadle and new Silver !
' ·
Lyons and Mrs . EJecta Mrs. Iva Turner, Mrs. Nelle
Bridges on U. S. Rt . 35 In '
By Helen and Sue Bottel
Souders. A sympathy card Werner, Mrs: Ethel Hughes,
Henderson, W. Va .
/·
Mrs.
Pearl
Hoffman
,
Mrs.
was sent to Mrs. Dana
Hamm , whose brother Beulah Whi ~ , Mrs. Frances
Refreshments witl
Bearh s , Miss Ka thryn
Cure for School Boredom?
recently died.
be served .
A bakeless bake sale was Werner and Mrs. Isabelle
Rap:
held and the birthdays of Winebrenner.
As a student I know what it is to he bored. So here's a Mrs , Lucinda Daines, Mrs.
column that appeared in our school paper:
.Maude Betz , Mrs . Cora
WHAT 1'0 DO iF YOUrRE BORED IN CLASS?
Pullins, Mrs. Ruth Johnson ,

Young people !i ' ' '5;:;:;==';/:b'='·~~'='='::'k:'''';;;~:;;,,, , , , , Jij
gtve pro6aram

BY POLLY CRA~ER

Summer
Fun Time

E
l

Tuppers
Plains.
A
maternal greatgrandmother is Mrs. Floda
B. Loti, also of Tuppers
Plains.

oily's Poin+"".-"'

LOSE UGLY FAT

..

THE IMPORTANCE OF accessories in achieving the
well-{)ressed look was discussed during the style reveue of
gatments. Here Jean Kennedy, Rutland, adds a widebrimmed hat to compliment her basic dress.

SPRAY COLOGNE

Racine Social Events

Harrisonville
Society News

flonored- Christopher
Michael Carleton was
honored with a party
recently In observance of
his first birthday at the
home of his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Michael Carleton,
Tuppers Plains. Those
attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Lester Hawk, Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Hawk and Julie
and Lisa, Mrs . Faye
Watson and Jimmy,
Tuppers Plains area; Mrs.
Frances Carleton, Mr. and
Mrs. David Sheets and
Mandy, Miss Connie
Grueser, and Jim Carleton,
Pomeroy. Christopher is
tbe grandson of Mrs.
Frances Carleton and the
late
William
Harry
Carleton, Pomeroy, and
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Hawk.

•'

•

RACINE - Southern Jr.
High School presented a
variety show Tuesday at
Southern High School under
direction of Mrs. Lee Lee who
also was piano accompanist.
Debbie Pickens was emcee.
Dance routines were
performed by Cindy Pat~rs on , Pam Spencer, Carla
Teaford, Suzy Scarberry,
Kathy Wolfe, Diana Thoma,
Mary K. Wooks, Jim Powell,
Kelly Taylor, Dave Robinson,
Jeff Thornton, James Smith'
nd Ed Roush. ·
Vocal solos , duets and
ensembles were presented by
Brent Patterson, Nicki Van
Meter, Becky Crow, Debbie
Brown, Amy Fisher, Tammy
Fallent, Pam Spencer, Julie
Powell, ·Julie Nance, Janis
Carnahan, Carol Morris ,
Kathy Adkins, Dennis Wolfe,
Bill .Harris, Mike Melaeau,
Sharon Croush, Kim Dugan,
Meg Amberger, Cindy
Warden, Vickie Cundiff,
Connie Barnett, Carol Gibbs,
1. See if you know any of the people who have signed their
Cheryl Teaford, Dave
names
inside the cover of your book. Try to visualize them, if
Robinson and Peggy Neigler.
Presenting comedy skits you don't.
2. Count how many times your teachers say "the" in three
were Jeff Thornton, Terri
minutes.
Zirkle, Kelly Taylor, Brent
3. Count the dots in the ceilings or the holes in the bulletin
Patterson, Debbie Brown ,
Peggy Neigler, Dennis Wolfe, board.
4. Try to remember all your elementary school teachers'
Pam Spencer, Suzy Scarnames.
berry, Kathy Adkins and
5. Try to recall all the stanzas of the Twelve Days Cit
Richard Furbee.
Christmas.
.
Furni~hing guitar ac6.
Pretend
this
is
Watergate
and decide where you would
companiment were Dennis
hide
the
bugging
apparatus
in
the
room.
Wolfe and Brent Patterson,
7. Clean the dirt from under your fingernails without
and Bob Deeter piayed banjo.
anyone
noticing.
Carol Morris, Janis . Car8.
Try
to name all the states in the Union. (Twenty extra
nahan and Carrie Guiniher
Mickey
Mouse
points if you pame the capitals also.)
played piano solos and Cindy
9. Say the alphabet backwards.
Patterson presen~d a solo
10. Multiply the number of toes you have by your age,
tap dance routine and her
.
divide
by 'k and subtract how many minutes of class are left.
award winning baton routine.
11. Figure out how many more minutes of school till
vacation.
MARKET SET
12. Try to shoot someone in your class with a loaded index
Youth of lhe Bradbury finger. (Only counts if you catch the person's eyes.)
Church of Christ will sponsor
13. Think of 13 ways to fight class boredom. - NOT
a !lea market Saturday from BORED ANY MORE
8 a. m. to 8 p. m. on the
church lawn. The market will N.B.A.M.:
consist of rummage and bake
And if worse comes to worst, you might just listen to your
sale, lemonade stand and a teacher or read the text book. - HELEN
car wash.
NOTE FROM SUE: Now doesn't that sound just like a
mother'
they just put it back down
having read It without paying Rap:
for the paper or magazine. I was playing baseball when the lather of one of the guys
P.B.
on my team stood up and swore a~ the ump. He was kicked out
, DEAR POLLY - It is of the park, but he took his kids out of the game and wouldn't
amazing how other people's let them finish the season. All because of one call!
problems are so often my
This happens a lot. I know most umps don't get paid and
problems. I hope someone some do it because nobody else will. I'd just like to tell these
finds this -solution useful. parents who yell and scream at the caJJs: "If you're not wtlling
When 'color wears off the toe to help, that'syour business; but if you't"e not perfect yourself,
of a shoe and polish is not then keep your big mouth shut!" -A 14-YEAR.OLD WHO
effective as a coverup .use a · KNOWS BETTER
matching color felt-tipped Rap: marker. It is convenient,
l'v~ read. that you shouldn't confess your past ss excovers well and more per- periences to your lusband or boyfriend. For some gir~,
manent than the conventional maybe; but for me, that isn't true.
·
shoe polish. -MRS. J.G.M.
When I first started datfng Pete, I was 16. Alter a while I
DEAR J.G.,M. - I also do , gave in because It was eipected. Then it became only a
this to ·those scratches I In- physical relationship, but when I tried to break up, he'd
variably get on leather heels threaten to tell everyone everything, plu• a lot more: He called
that become scratched while me a whore so often I started believing 1·
'dri-ving the car. -POLLY.
Then I met Jmn and got the courai to break up with Pete.
After John and I got serious (wit..out sex), he noticed
. something bothered me. He finally convinced me to conflile in
him, and I'll never regret it. OtherwiJe, I might have h(ld
hangups about sex that could ruin my marriage.- ENGAGED
TO A WONDERFUL GUY

Busy Bees have meeting

Dr. W. R. Johnston :_

Generation Rap

r--------...
Noveltys, Gifls,

FIOwets, etc.
S
.
h

.

~S-3537
1-------~

Phon•

~l"-"•

l

Pomert'N
•v1
Personal Notes

BATHING
SUITS

Mr. and Mrs. Bob Crow and
daughter ,
Lori ,
New
Philadelphia, were weekend
guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Crow, Syracuse.
Mr. and Mrs. James
Ginther, Middletown, spent
the weekend here with his
mother, Mrs. Oris Ginther.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Gilmore
and daughter, Shannon, Lake
Villa, Ill., are here for a visit
with their parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Gardner Wehrung and
Mr. and Mrs. Elza Gilmore, .
Jr.

PRESENTATION MADE
Bibles were presented
Sunday morning at the
Laurel Cliff Free Mehtodist
Church to the Meigs High
School graduates , Belinda
Fdend, Diane lewis, Penny
Eblin and Danny Russell.

and

TRUNKS
Infant thru
Size 14

FRI.- SAT. ONLY

THE KIDDIE SHOPPE
•

Middleport, Ohio

LEATHER

MAJORETTE

BOOTS

MAJOREllE

by

BOOTS

ACME
In Sizes
6-10
NOW IN STOCK

I

r

••

'

HURRY ON DOWNI

ETWG:

The old saw, "Neve~ confess your past to your present
is becoming as outmoded as bouffant petticoats. The
maleegolsn'taafraglleaaltoncewas, thank goodness : When
a fellow discovers his girl Ia u human aa - well - he is, he
mlgbt even be relieved that he hasn't got an alabaater saint on
his hands.
. .·
And as you say, it always helps to confide in someone you
care about and trust
HELEN AN~ SUE

Smai._,S.
Gift op man•:
IVJ
Chester, Ohio

;:=,:~:~:~8:::~~~~~:::;j:.:INli~il8888881. .

It's Summer
Swim Time!

0-

heritage house
Middleport, Ohio
•

'•

�..

.. r

4 -The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Th~~sday, May 29, 1975

-- '

Fed-up student kills teachers

•

-

Nolan posts fourth win

place ."
Police Chief Doug Burrows
the loth inning lifted St. Louis
By FRED DOWN
Expos. Nolan struck out five single in the sixth. Doug Rau over San Diego, which tied
confirme~ ~1r's. Wright was
UPI Sports Writer
,
and walked two to raise his was the loser, with Andy the score in the eighth with
one of the two teachers
Gary Nolan has "a new record to 4-3 and enable the Messersmith making his first the help ~f two errors.
named in the note, which was
founc\ at the gunman's home, lease on life" and the Cin- Reds to move to within m relief appearance since 1972. Reliever Mike Garman
Pirates 3, Astros 0:
but would not identify the cinnati Reds have fresh hopes games of first-place Los
received credit for the vicKen Brett pitched a nine- tory while Billgreif was the
other teacher. Police would that they can beat the Los Angeles.
Ken Griffey drove in two hitter and Dave Parker hit a loser.
not release the text of the Angeles Dodgers in the
note, but Burrows said it National League's Western runs and Johnny Bench had a two-run homer for •Pitts-- Cubs 5, Braves 4:
which
dealt
key double to lead Cin- burgh,
indica ted he planned to harm Division race.
. Don Kessinger , Pete
Houston
's
Dave
Roberts
his
Although only 27 years old, cinnati's eight-hit atta ck,
the-two teachers and "anyone
LaCock
and pitcher Bill
Major league Standmg s
Nolan is trying to pitch bis which dealt 20-year-old fifth loss against three .vic- Bonham had two hits each for
else
who
got
in
his
way."
Bv Unite(! Pr ess International
Slobodian's sister, Donna, . way back to stardom · after Dennis Blair his sixth loss ·tories. The win was Brett's Chicago, with ()scar Zamora
Nafional L eague
fourth compared to two
East
told a newsman, however, more than two years of against two wins.
picking up the victory in
w. I . pet . g .b.
The New York Mets defeats .
211 19 .5SB.
that in his note Slobodian frustration . He developed a
Chicago
relief.
Atlanta's Carl Morton
Phlllles 8, Giants 6:
P1ttsburgh
22 18 .SSO
sore arm just before' the 1972 defeated the Dodgers, 4-3,'
'
'
vowed
to
"eliminate"
Mrs.
suffered
his fifth loss against
N ew York
20 18 .S2 6
I' '
Rookie Jerry Martin's two2
Wright and science teacher All-Star game and in the last · Pittsburgh heat Houston, 3~.
P h llad e ~phia
22 '2 1 5 12
five wins.
dl9
st , Loui s
5
two seasons pitched a total of Philadelphia topped San run homer and Mike SchD.R.
Bronson.
The
teachers
·~
2J
1
J
24
Montreal
376 7' '
had reprimanded him for 16 in']ings for Cincinnati and Francisco, 8-6, St. Louis won, midt's two-run double were
West
big
blows
for
w. I. pet. g . b. skipping classes, she said.
Indianapolis.
·LUCKY BUCK W~ERS
6-5, in 10 iimings, over San the
Ange l es
29 19 .617
Philadelphia,
which
broke
CLEVELAND (UPI) ...:. Los
Nolan
says
the
turning
Diego and the Chicago Cubs
Bronson was in another
C1 n c innali
77 20 .565
Jl .,
AT
point was when he underwent shaded Atlanta, 5-4, in otlicr open t~e game against San
. The Ohio Lottery Com- San Franc isc o 23 21 .535 4
part
of
the
school
at
the
time
73 13 .500 5
Francisco with a four-run
mission Wedn.esday iden- SanlanDtaiego
surgery last fall which NL games. '
·
22 25 .468 6, ·.· of the shootings and was not
DCOLUMBUS - Effective tified the following persons as M
1
outburst
in the seventh. Steve
H o uston
18 31 .375 11 ;relieved the constant pain
In the :American League, it
injured.
Wcdnc sday' s Result s
June I the ratio for new C-1 $100,000 winners in the lotDonna said her brother caused by a calciwn spur in was Chicago 9 MilwaUkee 3, Carlton received credit for
Chicago s Atl anta 4
ON RT. 7
and C-2 permits will be one tery's Lucky Buck game:
St . Louis 6 San Diego 5, 10 wrote that "he was fed up his right shoulder.
Boston 4 Texas I, New York 6 his third victory with ninthfor each 1,000 population or
"I'm still young and I have .Kansas City 2, Minnesota 5 inning relief help from Tug
- Kathleen A. Kilway, 4800 innings
with life" and intended to
P i ttsburgh J H9vston o, night
portion thereof for each · Dalebridge Rd., Warnesville
Philad elphia B San Fran c isco commit suicide.
to look to the future," he said ' Detroit 2, Cleveland 9 Cali- McGraw . Mike An1ferson also THURS :, FRI., SAT.
6, n 1gh t
taxing district, Director Heights, Ohio.
at
the start of this season. fornia 2, and Oakland 5 homered for the Phillies.
and SUNDAY
Neighbors described Slobo~
Cincinnati 6 Montreal 0, night
Clifford E. Reich of the Ohio
Cardinals 6, Padres 5:
New
York
4
Los
An
geles
3,
~
"I'm not going out on a iimb Baltimore o.
- Joel G. Vassar, 258
10:00
to
6:00
dian,
the
youngest
of
four
Department of Liquor Margaret Pl., Perrysburg,' night
Luis
Melendez'
single
with
Mets
4,
Dodgers
3:
but
I'll
say
I'll
he
in
there
.children, as a "loner" and a
Today's Games
Control has announced.
'
(No gam es sc hedul ed J
Ohio.
Felix Millan singled and the bases filled and two out in
karate expert who didn't pitching this year." ·
Friday ' ~ Games
The Director stated that the
The
6-foot-3,
21
0-pound
eventually
scored on Ed
-Edward J. Dittmore, 2312
hiive-much time for girls.
Los Angeles at Chi cago
change in ratio is a result of a Jacob St., Wheeling, W.Va.
San Diego at N ew Yo r k , night
"We used to call him righthander pitched his best Kranepool's sacrifice fly in
H o u s to n at Philad el phia ,
Liquor Control Commission
- Pedro G. Munoz Jr., 1466 ni gh
'Priest,'"
said a one-time game since 1972 Wednesday the eighth inning to give New
t
amendment to Regulation Schuyler Rd., Toledo.
A tlant a at Pittsburgh , night
classmate. "He always acted nightwhen he turned in a two- York's Jon Matlack his sixth
A NEW
LCc-1-64. The regulation
Cincinn at i at St . Loui s, n ig ht
-Fred Petti, 4365 Prasse San Franc isco at MontreaL in such an aloof, solitary sort hitter to give the Reds a IHJ win against three losses. Los
previously set the ratio at one Rd., South Euclid, Ohio.
n 1a ht
victory over the Montreal Angeles had tied the score at
SUPER-SPECIAL
of way."
permit for each 500
~ on Ron Cey's two-run
population or portion thereof.
VALUE!
A C-1 permit allows the
sale of 3.2 percent beer for
carryout only. C-2 permits
allow: the carryout sale of
high-powered beer, wine and
scored any kind of triumph at back to his work in the coal barrassed.
in the 800 meters. He was
By MIL'l'ON RICHMAN
certain mixed cocktails (up
all in the men's competition mines.
·Later, he presented ~Hall clocked in 1:48.8. Fred Luke
UP! Sports Editor
to 42 proof).
until the final day, WedHall sought to lift his with a special iron ball of Seattle also made it three
PEKING
(UP!)
Any C-1 or C-2 application America's triumphant track nesday, when L Yun-piao, a Chinese opponent atop his costing $300.
·
straight in the javelin with a
· filed on or after May 16, 1975 and field members return 37-year-old coal miner, heat shoulders after they finished
2 oz. size, a $6 50 value
"It's the hest one I've ever throw of 265 feet, 6 inches
.
'
will be subject to the new home tomorrow, praised by AI Hall of Charlton, Mass., in their event, and the crowd, seen, " exclauned
the U.S. · and Dr. Delano Meriwether
ratio, because no permit may their coach for a job well done the hammer throw with a toss realizing what the U.S. team hammer thtower.
NOW
of Arlington, Va., took the 200
be issued until at least 15 days and by the highest ranking of 197 feet, 7 inches.
captain was trying to do,
The Chinese also achieved meters in 21.2 seconds for his
after the application is filed U.S. official in China for
"We are good friends," cheered its appreciation.
two other victories'on the last second conquest.
(as required by Ohio Revised improving the growing explained the affable, 6-footBut
Li
courteously . day of competition, in the
Most impressive U.S. perCode Section '1,303.2
1,
254-pound
Li,
who
now
goes
declined.
He
was
too
emwomen's
long
jump
and
formers
during the two-week
friendship between both
There are now ap- countries.
javelin throw. Otherwise the series were distance runner
proximately 200 "C" class
Americans grabbed 13 of the Dick Buerkle of Rochester
"Our team did an excellent
permit applications pending. job," said Coach Bob Giegen16 final day events.
N.Y., and Fred Newhouse of
Those applica lions which gack. "As . for the Chinese,
Keith Francis ,of f'lew Bed- Baton Rouge, La.
C\\01
Sf'&gt;'l/\.y
cannot be issued before June they were perfect hosts.
ford,
Mass.,
was
the
leader
Buerkle
won
the
I
,500,
5
000
By Mrs. Francis Morris
Jozie of Gallipolis were
CO LO G t t C
I, 1975 will be taken out of Nobody could possibly ask for
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard guests of Mr. and Mrs. Roy with his third win of the series and 10,000 meter events ~d
process.
'
Newhouse came home in
any more than they did for Lawson and Mrs. Haskell Riffle .
·
front
in the 400 three times as
us ."
Compton of Columbus atMelvin Riffle of Columbus
well as being part of three
George Bush, former U.S. ~nded the alwnni banquet spent the weekend with Mr.
,/
winning relay efforts.
ambassador
to
the
United
and
visited
friends
Sunday.
and Mrs. Roy Riffle.
A thought 'for the day: In
Among the women, Francie
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Wagner
Mr . and Mrs . J'ames
his 1961 inaugural address, Nations and now chief U.S.
Larrieu, Los Angeles, won
President John Kennedy Jiason officer in China, was and children oJ Griffom Air Spargur and daughter, Lisa,
How lo bea t the high cost of givi ng
the I ,500 meters event in all
among
the
60,000
who
watForce
Base,
Indiana,
spent
of
Waynesville,
spent
several
,
said, "Let the word go forth
some thin g terrific to Da ds and gradsthree cities and Robin
from this time and place that ched the American athletes the holiday weekend with his days with her sister and
choose a handsome, hefty flut ed bottle
Jeffery Charles King is Campbell, Washington,
make
a
clean
sweep
of
their
. parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ed- family, Mr. and Mrs. David ,home from Children's
the torch has passed to a new
fill
ed with cit rus-crisp Ca noe spray co logne.
good-will series with the ward Wagner and attended Parry.
l09ked good in taking the 400
g~neration of Americans."
Hospital in Columbus where
Mad e by Dana for the guy who makes it
Chinese at Peking Workers' the Alumni.
•
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth he had open heart surgery. meters twice. ,
everywh ere.
Stadium Wednesday and he
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Sayre, Krider of Columbus spent
Visitors
of
Mr
.
and
Mrs(
expressed his personal praise Freddy, Frank and Eric, and Memorial bay weekend with
Charles Ellis were Mr. and
for them, as well as for the Mr. and Mrs. Mark Sharp and Mrs. Grace Krider.
Mrs . Guy Ellis of Marion, Start losing weight today or
Chinese.
Mrs. Edna Balsley of
child~en ·all of Bowerston
Ohio.
They visited at the money back . ly\ONAOEX is a
"I guess my feelings can he were here for Com- Cleves, Ohio visi~d friends .
easy to take .
hospital
with Bess Ellis and tiny tablet and
will help curb
summed up by pride in the mencement and were guests
Mr. and Mrs. Bud Simspon also visited his sister, Mrs. MONAOEX
your desire for excess food .
accomplishments," said of Mr. and Mrs. James of Seymour, Ind., s)lent a few
Eat les.s · wei 'g h less. Contains
no da ngerous drugs and will
Bush. " In addition to a Roush, Mrs. Ethel Johnson days with his mother, Mrs. · Frances King.
Visitors of Mr. and Mrs. not make you nervous. No
fantastic performance by and Mr. and Mrs. Roy Gretta Simpson .
cMercisc . Chang e
Franklin
King were Ali"" strenuous
vour life . .. start today .·
great men and women Dowell .
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hart, Mr.' and Mrs. Lesiie MONAOEX
cost $3 .00 for a 20
athletes, there's a lot more to
Rev. and Mrs. O'Connor of Hayman of Westerville spent
day suppl)'. Large economy
it here as we develop this Urbana visited Mrs. Edna a weekend with Mrs . William Jerrell and children of size IS SS . OO . Also try
AQUATABS : they work gently
Durham, N. C.
relationship.
Pickens and other friends Hayman.
to help you lose water -bloat.
• Also visiting Mrs. Frances AQUATABS - a "water pill"
"The friendship tbey 've Saturday.
.
Mr : Todd Taylor of 'Pt. King and other King families that
works $3.00. Bo1h
heard so much. about in the
Mrs. Dottie Brown of Texas Pleasant spent saturday with
guaranteed and sold by :
were
Mrs.
Leota
Norris,
Mr.
Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy .
past few days really came and Mr. and Mrs. Rock his grandparents, Mr: and
112 E . Main, Pomeroy
and
Mrs.
Jimmy
Norris
and
through. Our people con- Young and Andy and Larry . Mrs. Frank Cleland .
Ou1ton Drug Store
children of Akron.
Middleport
dueled themselves with a Wilcoxen of Columbus were
M ,· Ordt::l ~ t i:led
Friends were sorry to hear
sense of maturity, a genuine here to attend Com- NO WNGER SERIOUS
that Dana Turner is back in
feeling for the other side that mencement exercises.
INDIANAPOLIS (UPI)
can only make our job easier
Race driver Tom Sneva lias Holzer Medical Center.
Visitors of Frances King
in the long run. It was a line
Mr. and Mrs. Max Wolfe of been , removed_ from the
also
were Mr. and Mrs. Jack
group conducting themselves Sandusky spe_nt Memorial serious list at Methodist
King
and children, Mr. and
in the great tradition of our Day weekend with his sis~r. Hospital and is now talking
about getting back into a race . Mrs. William King and
country, and I'll tell you I got Mrs. Helen Simpson.
children and Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Brian Simp- car within a month.
a big kick out ofit.l got a kick
out of seeing them winning son, Lisa and Darin, of Sneva, a former school Edward" King · Jr. and
and I got a kick out of Baltimore spent the holiday principal from . Spokane, children.
Visitors of Mr:· and Mrs.
meeting these guys and girls weekend here 11nd at~nded Wash., sustained first, seco11d
''
William
King and children.
and just reveling in their Commencement exercises. and third degree burns over
were
Mr.
and Mrs. Orville
They were guests of Mrs. 15 per cent of his body when
accomplishments."
From the outset, the Chester Simpson and Mr. and his car crashed during the Marks and children, Walter
Indianapolis 500-mile race King, son of Mrs. Frances
Chinese made it plain that Mrs. Ralph Badgley.
King, of Chauncey.
their three track and field
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Badley Sunday.
meets with the Americans in and Kelli of Columbus spent
Style
Shown
Canton, Shanghai and here Memorial Day with his
In
would be based on "friend- parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Bone
ship first, competition Badgley.
second.''
Mr . and Mrs. William
There would be no medals Bentz and Mr. John Bentz of
awarded, no point score kept, Coshocton spent Sunday here
Here's the thrifty place to
shop for summer items .
and so it was, which in the and attended morning
end proved just as well worship services
First
because the Chinese were Baptist Church and went to
FENCING AND CORNERS
simply outcla~sed in the the cemetery at Plants.
IS in.Kl6 in.Mlfa" Fenct!
87c
20 in.IC18 in.x'l~" Corners, Reg . S1 .17
Special 96c
actual competition.
It Mr. and Mrs. Phlllp Miller
The U.S. team won all three spent a weekend with her
••
~eels_
ea_sily, rolling up 91 parents, Mr. and Mrs. George
. Betty Ohlinger
The Supers c:ope CRS-162 IS e un•que AC/ Battery
PICNIC
supplies
paten t- pendi ng e ~ecl us lve : A condenser mic roportable system tha t comb ines a ste reo cauette
102 E. Main St.
Pomeroy
VIctones m 99 events.
Neigler. Mrs. Neigler
napkins, plates, cups, table
phone built Into ea ch deta chable apeaker to lve
record ing system Wifh an AM/FM Stereo Aadlo In you ma &gt;etmum .separatlon and c larity for your~l ve
clofhs, forks, spoons .
The Chinese, m fact, never returned home from Holzer
on e exciting uni t. Aou n ~ tng out the packag e ere
stereo record1 ngs. The St.Jpersoope CRS· IS2 18
two detacheble speakers that boast a Superacope truly th e most uni que re corder of Ita. kind avall&amp;ble
Medical
Center
Saturday.
.
•
Miss Ruth Ellis and Mr.
Pl ay Bu tt on
Cassette Compartment
Stereo Headphone Jack
Stop/ Eject Button
Howard
Bingman
of
Slsep On/ Off Switch
Right Speaker/ BuHt·ln Condenser
SUMMER
toys
Toy
·
Columbus and Miss Kathryn
Tap e Mode lndrcatora
Microphone Assembly
l.awnmowers, sand pails,
LAWN
FM Antenna
L. eft Spe aker/ Bu il t, in Condenser
Philson and Miss Edith
DECORATIONS .
sand toys, garden sets,
, M 1croph.ono A 8se mblyo
Rad io Tunln l'j Knob
Hayman were Sunday guest,s
Stre lght· lin P DI R~ 3 bo..;k Vo iU!ht' Con trol
DuCk
8.
ducklings, · sprinkling cans.
. FM Stere o Indic ator
AD01TIONAL FE ATURE S
of Mr. and Mrs. Thereon
roos1ers ,
flamingos ,
·
Straight·Li ne Stere o Balance Control
1 A ut omat1c Shut·Off
Johnson .
egrets, wild geese.
AFCSwitch
·
2 . 1-.utomal lc Rec ord Level Co nlru t
Straig ht-Line Pl ay Back Tone Cont rol
3 . Built-In Aecharg 1ng Circuit ry
Mr:and Mrs. David Nease
STOP IN TODAY
Funct ion Sel ecto r
4 . Opt 1Cn91 Ni-C!I d 0 91tery Pa ck
and son, David, of Baltimore
Record Level Battery Streng1h lndtcelor 5. M icro phone Input Jacka
Record Button
U ne Input and Line Output Jaclc.e (for Tape
were weekend guests of his
Rewind Bt.JUon
6. De ckar d Tuner Operation)
mother, Mrs. Carrie Nease.
F••t Forw1rd Button
7 A ccepta Ceramic Phono C1rtn dge
Mr. and Mrs. George
Tassion and family of Cincinnati were weekend guests
of her mother, Mrs. Lillian
2 Miles out on Rt. 141- Right Side of Road
.
Lee.
Mr . and Mrs. William
.
Watch for Sivn
·
'
_MIDDLEPORT, 0..
Ph. 446-7886
McKenzie, Philip,l Jeff and
John Slinger, 17, who stumBRAMPTON, Ont. (UP!)
bled
unaware into .the
- At 16, Michael Slobodian
said he was fed up with life. washroom , was the first
Wednesday he entered the victim. He staggered into the
Centennial Secondary School hallway and collapsed with two rifles concealed in a dead.
Slobodian, firing randomly
guitar case and went directly
at students with two rifles,
to a first..floor washroom·.
He had sworn in a suicide then approached the art room
note to kill two teachers who where he shot and killed
had reprimanded him for Margaret Evelyn Wright, 25,
skipping classes and "anyone one of the teachers on his
who got in his way." He death list.
After wounding another
wasted little time in carrying
student nearby, he com6ut his vow.
mitted suicide with a single
shot in the head.

Before he died, Slobodian
killed two persons cand injured 13 students - nine
seriously.
"The gunman ran along a
hallway, opening classroom
doors and shooting at everything in sight," one student
told reporters. "Panic
erupted throughout the whole.

Classes end in revue

'

C-1, C-2 ratio

is halved
in new ruling

FLEA MARKET

THE CROSS ROADS

Americans advance Chinese-relations

CANOE

$400

Blue, bkzck slacks
are.big collectors

____

POLLY'S PROBLE~
DEAR POLLY - I have a
pair of navy blue acrylic
washable slacks that draw
anything and evey thing like a
magnet and never look clean.
Is there anything I can use
when washing them that
would remov e this static
electricity and would not take _

IN ONE DAY
WE
CUT
· CAN
YOUR
FUEL

IN HALF

INSULATE

NOW!
CALL US TODAY
FOR FREE ESTIMATE
,.

FOREMANand

ABBOTT
Middleport, Ohio
992 -5321

L
E
D
(l

el

tl
'!I
II
D

s
rr
le
1M

A

It
n: ·
fo
PI
1e
r1

·Marguerite's
SHOES ·

CRS-152 AM/F~ Sl~~o C~sS~:Itc RadioRcwrd~r

DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Peeve is with th e way
supermarkets and di scount
stores put the candy and gum
displays so they are at the
side of those waitin g in line to
get to the cash register. The
cashier cannot see and does
not have time . to see the
young children crying for
candy and making scenes as
they try to get the parent to
buy it. The parents usually do
not buy it but just slap the
children around. Stores
should keep the candy and
gum where the children are
not tempted and do not stand
and see it and even handle.
They often handle such things
like .they were nothing and
often end up taking some any
way.
Also my Pet Peeve contin~es on to . thos~ grownups
who are standing in line to
check out and read a paper or
magazine out of a nearby
rack as they wait. When their
turn comes at the resgister

A SPECIAL BUY
~

SUPERSCOPE

at

away the body so they would
become limp? I would appreciate any i~formation . MRS. L.
DEAR MRS. L. - Navy
blue and black seem to be the
worst offenders . Brushing a
dozen limes a day does no
good . I have had me same
trouble with a pair of navy
dacron and polyes~r slacks
and have found the greatest
help is to turn them wrong
side out when washing in the
washer . After any washmg
·add fabri c softener to the last
nnse ·water. They can be
maddening but the above has
practically eliminated the
problem for me. Go!)d luck!
- POLLY.

From A Famous Maker

BLU~
'

DENIM

Fi1st Quality
'

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JEANS

GRIPPER
FRONT

~

•
l

•

FOR AI!

.. YOUR BUILDING
NEEDS

Graduation Gifts &amp; Cards'

~- VALLEY
LUMBER &amp;SUPPLY CO.

TOM'S STEREO CENTER

t

"·

FLARE
BOnoMS

!I

..! II

Ii
' ! t1

·
~.
, .. •- r ··

I ,.

I. I

l)

SIZES •

$599

S-15 ·

ALSO
SL-IGHTLY IRREGULAR
JUNIOR JEANS

Assorted Colors

'·

Sizes 5-15

REG. Sl2.00

SALE

'7"

MIDDLEPORT
DEPARTMENT STORE
Middleport, Ohio

accessories and their role in
. By Charlene Hoenich
Learning to look bet~r for achieving the well-{)ressed
less is what. sewing classes look.
She said that accessories
are all about."
Two such classes - mostly personalize clothing, add
beginners - taught by Mrs. variety to the wardrobe, and
Martha Guilkey, Meigs give point and distinction to
County Extension Agent, the basic dress or suit.
"graduated" last week via an Suggestions for choosing
informal style revue and a becoming and appropriate
rap session on accessories. accessories and for · com;
The ~rments, most of bining them . to compliment
which featured simplicity of the costwne were given by
design, were made during the the extension agent, who also
10 weekly lessons which took cautioned that figure,
the beginners from fabric and coloring, personality and the
pattern selection through occasion must be selection
guides.
al~rations for fit, cutting and
Modeling their garments
marking the material, single
unit construction, and finally were Janet Venoy, Eileen
getting it all together with the Bowers, Eleanor Leonard,
fastenings and finishing Angie Sisson, Mary Buck,
Pomeroy area; Evelyn
touches.
As each of the women Lucke, Syracuse; Jean
modeled her garment, there Kennedy, Rutland; Debbie
was a general discussion on Sanders, Nina Sanders,
fit and style along with some Reedsville; Aretta Brickels,
personal 'comments on un- Mildred Wolfe and Connie
fortunate sewing experiences Dodson, Middleport; and
to be avoided on the next Helen Wolfe, Long Bottom.
Others in the classes were
project.
Miss Guilkey using an Judy Humphrey, Gene&gt;:ieve
assortment of purses, gloves, Burdette, Helen Franks,
hats, scarves, collars and Naomi Ohlinger and Alice
cuffs, pelts, jewelry and Freeman, all Pomeroy area.
flowers gave tips on the ri~ht

,, . L.-.,--~-..;,;..~....:.--.....;.;....___'""":••;-1
l

Social..
Calendar

THURSDAY
. XI GAMMA Mu Sorority
p1cmc, Fort Meigs, 6:30p.m.
Hosted by losing attendants. '.
Cui lure report by Iris Payne ~
and Susan Baer.
·,
SCHOOL'S OUT party .'·
sponsored by ' women's ;'
Auxiliary at firehouse In
Reedsville 7 p.m.; 25 cents ·
admission.
MIDDLEPORT CHILD
Conservation League, annual
dinner meeting at Seddons onthe Mall, Parkersburg.1
Members are to meet at thti.
Upper Parking Lot in'
Pomeroy at 6:30 p. m.
FRIDAY
REV . CHARLES Norris:
and Pathfinder Quartet;,
Ironton, will be an Antiquity.'
Baptist Church at 7:30p. m.;
Friday under sponsorship or:,
Men's Fellowship of church •.
Public invited.
'
RECORD I!OP, 7 to 11 p. m.;
at Rock Springs Grange Hall; ~
refreshments to be sold and)
· games played. Dress of the~
1950's.
SATURDAY
,
Fl~H FRY, 10 a.m. to 4 p. i.
m. at Pomeroy Fire Stationsponsored by Pomeroy;
Volunteer Fire Dept. Fish,':
french fries and cole slaw willi
CONNIE DODSON, A BEGINNER, models a dress
be served. Those wishing;
she made in the Meigs County Extension Service classes
delivery
in Pomeroy may call,~
«
this spring.
992-2663.
the June meeting. A dessert
Cravats for the Po~eroy course was served to those
GOSPEL SING, 8 p. m. at•
Emergency Squad w1ll be
Guysville Community_'
named
and
Mrs.
Mildred
made by the Sew-Ri~ Sewing
Church, SR 329just off US 50, '
Club, it was voted at a recent Wells, Mrs. Martha Hoffman,
12 miles east of Athens, '
meeting of the club members Mrs. Lucy White, Mrs. Flo
Mrs.
Kathryn
Wise,
Mrs.
Homeward · Bound ' Trio i
Mrs. Wilma Parmalee
at the home of Mrs. Barbara Strickland, Mrs. Nettie
Elizabe
th
Gardner
and
Mrs.
Huntington,
will be lea lured~'
Boyer,
Mrs.
Pandora
Collins,
hosted a meeting of the Busy
Mullen.
Alice
Freeland
were
noted
.
Public
invited.
Mrs. Ann Browning had Mrs. Lenora McKnight and Bee Class of the Middleport
First Baptist Church Thurs- Mrs. Roina Hawkins
charge of the meeting with Mrs. Shirley Baity.
presen~d the program using
day night at her home.
OPEN HOUSE
Mrs . Betty Wehrung and Mrs.
thoughts and poems from a
Mrs.
Leora
Sigman
Evelyn Gilmore giving the
VISIT MOTHER
welcomed the members to birthday book and closing
'
secretary and treasurer's
SYRACUSE - Mr. and the meeting and devotions with a poem prayer "To
report.
Mrs. William Bartels ,
Begin the Day With".
Mrs. Carolyn McDaniel Stevensville, Mich., were were given by Mrs. Par- Hostesses were Mrs . Parreceived a birthday gift from weekend visitors of his malee who gave readings, malee, Mrs.' Eloise Wilson,
Inv ites the public to attend
her secret sister. Mrs. mother, Mrs. Emmett "The Perfect Church," " All 1 Mrs. Souders and Mrs. Goldie an open house af the
Work for I'll Leave Beliind."
ANIMAL CARE CENTER
Gilmore will be hostess for Bartels.
and "Count Your Blessings". Roush. Mrs. Elizabeth Slain
and
1.,
BOARDING KENNEL
Members sang " God So took pictw·es of the class.
Loved the WQrld" and signed Others at the meeting were on Sunday, June I, 1975
I : 00 ·5 ' 00 p . m.
cards for Mrs. Ferne Mrs. Eva Hartley, Mrs. Edith from
Located
'I• mile from the ,:
Bradbury, Mrs. Rose Mary Sa uer, Mrs. Freda Edwards,
Shadle and new Silver !
' ·
Lyons and Mrs . EJecta Mrs. Iva Turner, Mrs. Nelle
Bridges on U. S. Rt . 35 In '
By Helen and Sue Bottel
Souders. A sympathy card Werner, Mrs: Ethel Hughes,
Henderson, W. Va .
/·
Mrs.
Pearl
Hoffman
,
Mrs.
was sent to Mrs. Dana
Hamm , whose brother Beulah Whi ~ , Mrs. Frances
Refreshments witl
Bearh s , Miss Ka thryn
Cure for School Boredom?
recently died.
be served .
A bakeless bake sale was Werner and Mrs. Isabelle
Rap:
held and the birthdays of Winebrenner.
As a student I know what it is to he bored. So here's a Mrs , Lucinda Daines, Mrs.
column that appeared in our school paper:
.Maude Betz , Mrs . Cora
WHAT 1'0 DO iF YOUrRE BORED IN CLASS?
Pullins, Mrs. Ruth Johnson ,

Young people !i ' ' '5;:;:;==';/:b'='·~~'='='::'k:'''';;;~:;;,,, , , , , Jij
gtve pro6aram

BY POLLY CRA~ER

Summer
Fun Time

E
l

Tuppers
Plains.
A
maternal greatgrandmother is Mrs. Floda
B. Loti, also of Tuppers
Plains.

oily's Poin+"".-"'

LOSE UGLY FAT

..

THE IMPORTANCE OF accessories in achieving the
well-{)ressed look was discussed during the style reveue of
gatments. Here Jean Kennedy, Rutland, adds a widebrimmed hat to compliment her basic dress.

SPRAY COLOGNE

Racine Social Events

Harrisonville
Society News

flonored- Christopher
Michael Carleton was
honored with a party
recently In observance of
his first birthday at the
home of his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Michael Carleton,
Tuppers Plains. Those
attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Lester Hawk, Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Hawk and Julie
and Lisa, Mrs . Faye
Watson and Jimmy,
Tuppers Plains area; Mrs.
Frances Carleton, Mr. and
Mrs. David Sheets and
Mandy, Miss Connie
Grueser, and Jim Carleton,
Pomeroy. Christopher is
tbe grandson of Mrs.
Frances Carleton and the
late
William
Harry
Carleton, Pomeroy, and
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Hawk.

•'

•

RACINE - Southern Jr.
High School presented a
variety show Tuesday at
Southern High School under
direction of Mrs. Lee Lee who
also was piano accompanist.
Debbie Pickens was emcee.
Dance routines were
performed by Cindy Pat~rs on , Pam Spencer, Carla
Teaford, Suzy Scarberry,
Kathy Wolfe, Diana Thoma,
Mary K. Wooks, Jim Powell,
Kelly Taylor, Dave Robinson,
Jeff Thornton, James Smith'
nd Ed Roush. ·
Vocal solos , duets and
ensembles were presented by
Brent Patterson, Nicki Van
Meter, Becky Crow, Debbie
Brown, Amy Fisher, Tammy
Fallent, Pam Spencer, Julie
Powell, ·Julie Nance, Janis
Carnahan, Carol Morris ,
Kathy Adkins, Dennis Wolfe,
Bill .Harris, Mike Melaeau,
Sharon Croush, Kim Dugan,
Meg Amberger, Cindy
Warden, Vickie Cundiff,
Connie Barnett, Carol Gibbs,
1. See if you know any of the people who have signed their
Cheryl Teaford, Dave
names
inside the cover of your book. Try to visualize them, if
Robinson and Peggy Neigler.
Presenting comedy skits you don't.
2. Count how many times your teachers say "the" in three
were Jeff Thornton, Terri
minutes.
Zirkle, Kelly Taylor, Brent
3. Count the dots in the ceilings or the holes in the bulletin
Patterson, Debbie Brown ,
Peggy Neigler, Dennis Wolfe, board.
4. Try to remember all your elementary school teachers'
Pam Spencer, Suzy Scarnames.
berry, Kathy Adkins and
5. Try to recall all the stanzas of the Twelve Days Cit
Richard Furbee.
Christmas.
.
Furni~hing guitar ac6.
Pretend
this
is
Watergate
and decide where you would
companiment were Dennis
hide
the
bugging
apparatus
in
the
room.
Wolfe and Brent Patterson,
7. Clean the dirt from under your fingernails without
and Bob Deeter piayed banjo.
anyone
noticing.
Carol Morris, Janis . Car8.
Try
to name all the states in the Union. (Twenty extra
nahan and Carrie Guiniher
Mickey
Mouse
points if you pame the capitals also.)
played piano solos and Cindy
9. Say the alphabet backwards.
Patterson presen~d a solo
10. Multiply the number of toes you have by your age,
tap dance routine and her
.
divide
by 'k and subtract how many minutes of class are left.
award winning baton routine.
11. Figure out how many more minutes of school till
vacation.
MARKET SET
12. Try to shoot someone in your class with a loaded index
Youth of lhe Bradbury finger. (Only counts if you catch the person's eyes.)
Church of Christ will sponsor
13. Think of 13 ways to fight class boredom. - NOT
a !lea market Saturday from BORED ANY MORE
8 a. m. to 8 p. m. on the
church lawn. The market will N.B.A.M.:
consist of rummage and bake
And if worse comes to worst, you might just listen to your
sale, lemonade stand and a teacher or read the text book. - HELEN
car wash.
NOTE FROM SUE: Now doesn't that sound just like a
mother'
they just put it back down
having read It without paying Rap:
for the paper or magazine. I was playing baseball when the lather of one of the guys
P.B.
on my team stood up and swore a~ the ump. He was kicked out
, DEAR POLLY - It is of the park, but he took his kids out of the game and wouldn't
amazing how other people's let them finish the season. All because of one call!
problems are so often my
This happens a lot. I know most umps don't get paid and
problems. I hope someone some do it because nobody else will. I'd just like to tell these
finds this -solution useful. parents who yell and scream at the caJJs: "If you're not wtlling
When 'color wears off the toe to help, that'syour business; but if you't"e not perfect yourself,
of a shoe and polish is not then keep your big mouth shut!" -A 14-YEAR.OLD WHO
effective as a coverup .use a · KNOWS BETTER
matching color felt-tipped Rap: marker. It is convenient,
l'v~ read. that you shouldn't confess your past ss excovers well and more per- periences to your lusband or boyfriend. For some gir~,
manent than the conventional maybe; but for me, that isn't true.
·
shoe polish. -MRS. J.G.M.
When I first started datfng Pete, I was 16. Alter a while I
DEAR J.G.,M. - I also do , gave in because It was eipected. Then it became only a
this to ·those scratches I In- physical relationship, but when I tried to break up, he'd
variably get on leather heels threaten to tell everyone everything, plu• a lot more: He called
that become scratched while me a whore so often I started believing 1·
'dri-ving the car. -POLLY.
Then I met Jmn and got the courai to break up with Pete.
After John and I got serious (wit..out sex), he noticed
. something bothered me. He finally convinced me to conflile in
him, and I'll never regret it. OtherwiJe, I might have h(ld
hangups about sex that could ruin my marriage.- ENGAGED
TO A WONDERFUL GUY

Busy Bees have meeting

Dr. W. R. Johnston :_

Generation Rap

r--------...
Noveltys, Gifls,

FIOwets, etc.
S
.
h

.

~S-3537
1-------~

Phon•

~l"-"•

l

Pomert'N
•v1
Personal Notes

BATHING
SUITS

Mr. and Mrs. Bob Crow and
daughter ,
Lori ,
New
Philadelphia, were weekend
guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Crow, Syracuse.
Mr. and Mrs. James
Ginther, Middletown, spent
the weekend here with his
mother, Mrs. Oris Ginther.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Gilmore
and daughter, Shannon, Lake
Villa, Ill., are here for a visit
with their parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Gardner Wehrung and
Mr. and Mrs. Elza Gilmore, .
Jr.

PRESENTATION MADE
Bibles were presented
Sunday morning at the
Laurel Cliff Free Mehtodist
Church to the Meigs High
School graduates , Belinda
Fdend, Diane lewis, Penny
Eblin and Danny Russell.

and

TRUNKS
Infant thru
Size 14

FRI.- SAT. ONLY

THE KIDDIE SHOPPE
•

Middleport, Ohio

LEATHER

MAJORETTE

BOOTS

MAJOREllE

by

BOOTS

ACME
In Sizes
6-10
NOW IN STOCK

I

r

••

'

HURRY ON DOWNI

ETWG:

The old saw, "Neve~ confess your past to your present
is becoming as outmoded as bouffant petticoats. The
maleegolsn'taafraglleaaltoncewas, thank goodness : When
a fellow discovers his girl Ia u human aa - well - he is, he
mlgbt even be relieved that he hasn't got an alabaater saint on
his hands.
. .·
And as you say, it always helps to confide in someone you
care about and trust
HELEN AN~ SUE

Smai._,S.
Gift op man•:
IVJ
Chester, Ohio

;:=,:~:~:~8:::~~~~~:::;j:.:INli~il8888881. .

It's Summer
Swim Time!

0-

heritage house
Middleport, Ohio
•

'•

�'·

1tfl~rut\1i)11 ~...:.lkJ,:;t:....J=

6-The Daily Sentine!, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., ThW'sday,'May

read announcing the candidacy of Mrs. Arnold
Richards for Eighth District
president.
.

Record hop

'

is planned
Plans for a record hop May
30 at the Rock Springs
Grange 7 p. m. to 11 p. m.
were made during a recent
meeting of the Rock Springs
Lady Bugs 4-H Club in the
basement of the Rock Springs
United Methodist Church.
Tracey Jeffers presided
with Carla Whaley giving the
secretary 's report and
Christy Evans the treasurer's
report. Admission to the
dance was se t at 25 cent.s a
person . Refreshment.&lt;; of hot
.dogs, pop and chips will be
sold. Games will be conducted and the public is invited. Next meeting of the
club will be Friday morning
at the church.

Shower held
A layette shower honoring
Mrs .
Gary
(Connie)
Scholderer was held recently
at the home of Mrs. Celesta
Bush with Mrs. Nancy
' Manley and . Mrs. Sharon
Wright as co-hostesses.
Games were played with
prizes going to Mrs. Patty
Johnson, Mrs. Grace Darst,
Mrs . Barbara Warden, Mrs.
Roberta Acree, Mrs. Agnes
Henderson, Mrs. Lorena Au!t
and Mrs. Juanita Owens.
Pink, blue and yellow
streamers around a cradle
were lea lured" in the
decorations. Cake decorated
with pink and biue booties,

Pomen!J ·
Fri._May

30

6and8 P.M.

-

punch, coffee. chips, mint.&lt;;
and Duts were served.
Attending the shower
besides those named were
Mrs. Carl Moodispaugh, Mrs.
Grace Rusche! , Tracy
Scholderer, Carol Ault,
Crystal and Tracy Manley,
Greg, Nick and Jason Bush.
· Others presenting gifts to
Mrs. Scholderer were Ann
Davis, Chuck Wright, Mrs.
J oa n Hoffman, Mrs. Sue
Sigman, Kay Logan and Mrs.
Phillip .Mowery.

·Clarence ·L. Lacey die~

Rev. Hawks will
give Rio sermon

Leader named
RACINE - Mrs. Herschel
Norris was elected president
of the American Le gion
'
.Auxiliary, RaCine Post 602, at
a meeting Tuesday night at
the hall.
Other officers elected were
Mrs. David Yost, first vice
president; Mrs. John Young,
second vice president; Mrs.
Virgil Roush, secretary ; Mrs.
Robert G.. Beegle, treasurer ;
Mrs . Marvin Robert s,
chaplain, and Mrs. Dean
Brinker, sergeant at arms.
Installation will take place
at the June meeting . Mrs.
Myrtle' Walker presided at
, . .the meeting while plans were
made to go to Lancaster June
5 for the District 8 summer
convention . Also announced
was the Jun e 12 party at the
Athens Mental Health Center.
A memorial service for
three deceas ed members,
Mrs. Guy Neigler, Mrs. Emil
Eynon and Mrs. Mattie Yost,
was held.
·Mrs. Dean Brinker thanked
the junior and se ni or
members. who assisted with
the poppy sale. A letter was

.

.

.

'

RIO GRANDE - Dr .
Alphus R. Christensen,
president of Rio Grade
College and Rio Grande
Community College today .
announced that the sermon
for this year's BaccalaW'eate
service will be delivered by
the Reverend Paul W.
Hawks, senior pastor .of the
Grace United Methodist
Church In Gallipolis.
This will be the ninety-ninth
anniversary Baccalaureate
for Rio (&gt;rande College, and
the first anniversary Baccalaureate for Rio Grande
Conununity College. More
than 130 graduates and their
families and friends are
expected to attend the
ceremonies.
Rev. Hawks is a na live of
. REV. PAULHAWKS
Hastings, Michigan, but
spent most of his younger
years In Detroit, Michigan. Joyce, is a Rio Grande
He is a veteran, having College graduate, and his
served in the U. S. Navy, the oldest son, Paul II, is
U. S. Marine Corps, and as a presently attending Rio
chaplain in the U. S. Air Grande College .. Mark is a
Force.
sophomore
at
Gallia
Academy High School in
He is a 1960 graduate of Gallipolis, and the youngest,
Asbury College, and has a Kimberly Joy, is in the
Master of Divinity degree in seventh grade in Gallipolis.
Theology from the Methodist
In addition to his pastoral
SIX AERIAL ACTS will be featured with the Lewis
Theology School of Ohio at duties, Rev. Hawks is active
Brothers Circus presented in Pomeroy at 6 and 8 p. m.
Delaware. Before coming to in local civic affairs. He is a
Friday under sponsorship of the Pomeroy Fire DepartGrace United Methodist member of the Gallipolis
ment. The circus tent will be set up on the village-o~ed
Church in Gallipolis, he Rotary Club, serves on the
lot between Mechanic St. and Butternut Ave.
served churches in Kentucky, Holzer Medical Center Home
Detroit, and Toledo.
Health Advisory Board,
He has traveled extensively serves on the Planned
board, · is
throughout the world, and Parenthood
annually makes a visit to President of the Board of
Grace Children's Hospital In Camp Asbury in Rio Grande,
The open chW'ch wedding and Mrs . Erlene Stone,
Port-au-Prince, Haiti.
and was chairman of the 1975
of Miss Penny Marie Eblin, Aurora, Ind., will be at 6 .p.
Rev. Hawks is married and Red Cross Fund Drive in
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. m. Friday at the Laurel Cliff
has three children . His wife, March of this .year.
Lawrence Eblin, Middleport, Free Methodist Church.
Paid · Pol. Adv . by The Citizens Committee
to Michael Eugene Stone, son
Rev . Floyd Shook will ofF.or 1,\entally Retarded
of Eugene Stone, Middleport, fi ciate a t th e ceremony
n
foll owing a program of
COLUMBUS - More than an ·'off-System Seminar' ' to
nuptial music by William
establish guide lines for the
Hall, Rutland, beginning at 200 officials representing
township, village, municipal, '· use of rural road and bridge
5:30 p. m.
county, state, and federal funds appropriated under the
Mrs. Patty Philli-ps,
levels of transportation are Federal-Aid Highway
Pomeroy, will be matron of
meeting in Columbus today in Amendment.&lt;; of 1974.
Mrs. Thelma Wiley, Mrs.·
hono r and Mrs . Cathy
The seminar will cover the
Clyda Allensworth and Mrs.
Weaver, Syracuse, and Mrs.
off-system
program, a oneGertrude Miller. Mrs. Ruth
Rose Rundell, Syracuse, will
time money allocation which
Blosser and Lyda Ballenger be attendan t.&lt;; .
will be matched on a 70
were reported ill. Members
Tom Bush, Newport News,
percent Federal - 30 percent
sang " In the Garden". Mrs .
Va ., will serve as best man
local basis.
Cathryn Erwin presided.
.
11
Refreshment.&lt;; were served for the groom and ushers will
be Gary Stone, Middleport,
'..)'
by Mrs. Martha haggerty, '
ALFRED _ The Alfred
Mrs. Swift and Mrs. and Roger Weaver, Syracuse.
Flower
g1rl
w1ll
be
Tabitha
UMW
t M· 20 at the home
McKinley.
Phillips, daughter of Mr. and
H
ml
e
~~od
ith an
·
Ph"ll'
o1 een
.1
e, w
Mrs. V.
1
•rgl
.
Ips, attendance of 10 members
Pomeroy, and the rmg bearer
d
· ·to
'
.
an one VlSl r.
w1ll be Bryan Weaver, son of
The meeting, in charge of
Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd Wright
Mr. and Mr_s. Roger Weaver. Nellie Parker president,
entertained
with a cookout at
A receptwn honormg the
.
'
1
.
b
h
ld
.
th
opened
w1th
prayer
by
lso
a
their camp site on the Ohio
1
11
Bernard Niehm and family, coupe
WI .· e e 111 • e Taylor~ followed by the
River
for the young adults of
Mrs. Sue Tabor, Miss Julie church soc1~l ro.om followmg hymn , "What A Friend".
MEN'S
the
Laurel Cliff Free
T
· k d. h t
Niehm, Mrs. George Nibert tomorrow mght s ceremony.
1 th rees1c
an s u- · Methodist Church following
wenyand son, Byron Nibert.
in calls were reported.
WOMEN'S
the Campmeeting Singers
The society went on recotd pr og ram at the church
CHILDREN'S
as supporting the levy for Friday .
'c.'':::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::;:;:;-;::::~~'''**' Meigs Re larded School.
In the group were Tammy
Emma Finch gave the and Jason Wright, Diane
namesofMr.andMrs.Asay, .Lewis, Jack and Jane Jacobs,
CLUB TO MEET
missionaries .in educational Ernie and Brenda Haggy,
The Middleport Garden
work
in
Montevideo, Ronnie Martin, Susan FleshClub will meet at 7:30 p. m.
Monday night in the Mid- !!l'
Uruquay, to be supported. A man, Clifford and Mildred
::::
birthday card was signed for Jacobs and Rev. and Mrs.
dleport Fireman's Lounge. •.·.-~·:
them.
The meeting will be a "no
Floyd Shook .
•
host, brown bag party". Roll
Genevieve Guthrie acSUNDAY
call will be on the topic
HAM or chicken dinner, cepted the prayer calendar
" Everything is Coming Up noon untll 2:30 p.m., spon- for next month.
.Nellie Parker led the
Roses" and Mrs . Mal- sored by men of Sacred Heart
"Being Single" with
program
Catholic Church in church
colm Roller will talk on the basement; admission $3 for' song, reading and interesting
home garden of roses . There adults, $1.50 for children, discussion.
will be demonstrations on advanced ticket sales only.
The next meeting will be at
modern design by Mrs. Call Rev. Fr. Welton at 992- the home of Nellie Parker
Mi chael Fry and Mrs. 2825, Paul Simon at 992-2571, with Osie Follrod, program
leader, June 17, at 8 p.m.
William Morris. Reports will or Paul Casci at 992-3171.
be given on the bicentennial
Refreshments-were served
beautification of Main St. in
MARY SHRINE 37, Order to those mentioned and Clara
FRIDAY AND
Middleport.
of the White Shrine of Follrod, Nina Robinson , June
Jerusalem, 2 p.m., rehearsal Stearns, Theima Henderson
SATURDAY ONLY
for cerem'onial at the• and .Mary Carr.

Trinity Sunday, May 25, the
rite of confirmation was held
at St. Paul Lutheran ChW'ch
in Pomeroy. Tim Thoren, son
of Mr . and Mrs. Joseph
( Pe te) Thoren , Rt. 1,
Minersville, was confirmed
into the Lutheran Church at
the II a. m. worship service.
At the same service, the
foll owing adults
were
received by letters of transfer
into St. Paul's congregation :
Mr. and Mrs. David Seaman
and family , Dr. and Mrs.

2 Days Only-Fri. and Sat.

$

OFF

6 DAYS
A WEEK

~

' MO.N. thru SAT.

hang ups are pendants
If you're hung-up on something or someone special,
show It! There's a hang up pendant for sports buffs,
music fans, and lovers. Twelve in all to choose from.
Gold filled or sterling silver chain.

~~-

Goessler's Jewelry ·Store
t

Pomeroy Masonic Temple.

GOING TO CAMP
RUTLAND - Members of
the Rutland Cub Scout Pack
240 and Boy Scout Troop 240
will be attending the Camporall at Krodel Park in Point
Pleasant Friday thcough
Sunday.

Chapman's Shoes

K C group

D&amp;D MEAT

MASON FURNitURE
tferman Grate

Mason, W_. Va.

'

Cool--

has trip

Mr. and Mrs. Harold Sauer ·
accompanied members of the
Kyger Creek Chapter of tlie
National Honor Society and
830 E. Main
guests on oa weekend camping
Pom.eroy, Ohio
trip to Camp Francis AsbW'y.
Mrs. Sauer is advisor for the
chapter.
"!I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ On the outing were ·Marie
F
Grose, Debbie Baird, Cynthia
Clark, Liz Hood, Sue Hughes,
Mark Waller, and Shelia
Tucke,r, members; and Dian
Tucker, Edicress Cremeans,
Joe Stidham, Cindy Hurley,
Yvonne Massie and Richard
Rumley , guests . National
HoMr Soc'i~ty member
Buy it now or use our
unable to attend was Terry
, Convenient
Lay-Away
Lucas.
Plan!

173-5592

Court Sl., Pomeroy

Store, .s1o and up

Pomeroy ·

. Knit .
'

rL

~.

Rio seminar
June 16 to 20

·$

~

Services for
older folks
is assured

For The
Mentally Retarded

•

'

NOW 1.99 to 4.66

..

;

'

New York ·Clothing
House
..
,.
.

'

Paid Pol. Adv. 'by The. Citizens Committee
FOr Mentally Retarded
,

.,

Y~rttud•y••

'

I

Jumble, CAPON

THICK DEAFEN PASTRY

Antwf!r: He had it to 108e weight-A FAT CHANCE!

SUN TAN .
PRODUCTS
by
Sea &amp; Ski

-··

The Rev. Mr. and Mrs. C. Egypt where the children of
Y. Boyd, interim pastor of.tl)e . Isra el were enslaved..prior to
First Baptist Church of their deliverence by Moses.
Middleport, have returned The slides treat six countries,
from a 15-day lOW' of the one of which is Cyprus.
Bible lands and will be
Mr. Boyd has been asked to
showing pictures they have lead another tour of Bible
taken starting this Sunday at lands next year, pro~ably in
7:30p.m.
mid-June. Persons interested
They brought back ap- in going may contact him at
proximately 400·slides so that the First Baptist Church of
local resident.&lt;; can see what ·1\tiddleport, Sixth and
the places of the Bible are Palmer Sts . or call h1m at 992like today. These Sunday 7198.
night showings will be open to
the public with all in terested
persons invited.
The pic tures will show the
prison in Rome where St.
Paul is said to have been
COLUMBUS - Glenna M.
incarcerated prior to his Sprague, se nior music major
execution; interesting ruins from Middleport, rec en tly
of Corinth, Tyre, Jericho, ~ng received a special senior
Meggido (Solomon's chariot award at the year~nding
city); the Sea of Galilee, the Honors Co nvocation at
River Jordan and the Dead Capital University .
Sea ; the home town of Mary
Miss Sprague was one of
and Martha , whose brother tw o senior women to receive
Christ raised from the dead; the Phi Beta Prize for outthe excavation of the caves standing scholars hip among
where the Dead Sea Scrolls , Phi Beta Sorority seniors.
were
found;
Sidon; Martha E . Sheen of
Caesarea ; the Damascus Homeworth was the other Phi
Road; Jaffa , where Peter had Beta woman honored. A 1971
his
house-top
VISIOn ; gra dua te of Meigs Hig h
Jerusalem, Bet hlehem ; School, Glenna will be among
Nazareth , ruins of the those . graduating in Cap's
gigantic pagan temples at Class of '75 dW'ing comBaalbeck, and other sites in mencement exercises June I.
the Holy Land.
She is the daughter of Mr . and
He will also show pictures Mrs. W. R. Sprague, 780 High
of the pyramids and peopl~ in St.

Scholarship
is recognized

Coppertone
Aztec
Citritan

Sudden Tan

PERFUME BY
HELENA RUBENSTEIN .
Fizzing 4 oz .
Fragrance Foam

Reg.
SS.50

$400

HEAVEN SCENT
Reg. $5.50

COURANT
Reg. $4.25

'325

Wide selection of name brand
perfumes,
and
summ .e rtime
products.

~----DUTTIJIN~s----1
~ PRESCRIPTION DRUG STORE

l

I

MIDDLEPORT
I
~~~-~---~--~~~--~

- -- -

... n-7
was·u..~,..
Bressler was there.
Brings\Ou
the World,
of
Fashion
•

.-

m

Uniforms

ASK TOWED
Franklin E. Lemley, 36, Rt.
2, Racine, and Nellie Frizzle,
79 Portland; George' Thomas
Luster, Jr., 23, Middleport,
and Dale Dee Dillon, 17, Rt. I,
Reedsville ; Carl Richard
Davidson, 18, Middleport,
and Carolyn Sue ·Nicholson,
23, Rt. 2, McArthur.

OFF

REG•
PRICE

.

0

San 20 perceat 011 · Latl•' ftM 91&amp;11ty
pcilyeilla' ualfonu ad 111111111'111 pantaulti
Ud amodllop1. In colon, wblte, blue, ad
yellow; In J111lor, W • 'M ball .. . .

WIDE
SELECTION
OF STYLES

.

Boys casual knit shirts.
Regular $2.98 to U.98

.

"r xxxxr

di=.:SIIPD==-=-:::::::..:•=:....___JI

___:_:
Prill.:::.·

of 15-day Bible Land scenes

COLUMBUS - The Ohio
Commission on Aging has
awarded $100,000 in federal
funds to uie Buckeye HillsHocking Valley Regional
Development
District,
Marietta, to provide social
services for older people in an
eight-county
area
of
southeasiern Ohio .
,
The area office on aging'
serves the elderly in Athens,
Hocking, Meigs, Monroe,
Morgan, Noble, Perry and
Washington counties.
C.
Crowley,
David
executive director .of the
Commission said the commission receives funds under
Title III of the federal Older
Americans Act and allocates
them to the state's f4 area
agencies on aging. Programs
supported
include
in-.
formation and referral,
trarisporatlon, outreach arid
senior centers.

'

'

Now ammce the eirded letten

"\j to form tht IUrpriH IIIIIWtr, U

Slide showings begin Sunday

Group which is affiliated with
the National Alliance of
Businessmen.
Faculty members participating in the seminar
include : Krishna Kool,
assistant professor · of
economics, who will discuss
"Comparative Economic
Systems ;" . Bob Pfeifer,
assistant professor of
political science, who will
di sc uss ~~Government­
Business Rela lions;" Dr . ·
John Reynolds, director of
Business Administration,
who will discuss "The
American Business System; ''
Ed Sofranko , assistant
professor of psychology, who
will discuss "The Psychology
of Human Needs;" and Dr.
Sam S. Smith, assistant dean
for social and administrative
sciences, who will discuss
"Business in Politics."
For niore information
concerning the Rio Grande
College-Rio Grande Community College Free Enterprise System in America
Seminar, contact Dr. Smith
at Rio Grande College.
Telephone 245-5353.

casual knit shirts.
Regular $3.98 to $11.98

(Dress shirts and regular sport
shirts not included.)

r

park In Mason conducted by American Legion Post 140 in
which the flag was raised at the flag pole and a three
volley salute carried out by the Legion.

MASON CITY'S MEMORIAL DAY SERVICE - A
simple ceremony took place Monday morning at the town

Their Door!

NOW 2.65 to 7.99

"\j

AFI:OUNI7 HILL'S OF 6AND.

· L:==~===~~-d~==~===~~·:u:rr~eohdbythea~ec.rtoo~

RIO GRANDE - The Rio
Grande College-Rio Grande
Community College Free
Enterprise
System in
America Seminar sponsored
by the Rio Grande College
Cluster Group, scheduled for
iiiiliJ June 16 through June 20 on
the Rio Grande campus has
...; been planned and coor~ dinated and invitations have
~ gone out to high schools in
By Clarence
Gallia, Meigs, Jackson and
Vinton counties in Ohio and
Miller
· Poin t Pleasant, West Virginia
·,
for participants.
Once again Congress is level. Unfortunately , the
Some of the areas of indelaying action on for- greatest tax will fall on the
terest covered in the seminar
mulating a comprehensive private use of gasoline which
will be "The Economic Needs
energy program to end the amoun (,&lt;; to only 12 percent of
of
Man, "
"Economic
nation' s dependence on total U. S. energy consumpSystems," "Under-developed
foreign sources . Prior to the tion. Because one-third of this
''Authoritarian
Systems,"
Memorial Day recess the gasoline is used for comSystems, " "What Happens to
Rules Committee postponed muting . between work and
Profit ?", " The American
consideration of the Energy home, this bill would create
System (Mixed Economy )",
Conservation and Conversion what am ounts to a " job tax."
and "Prospects and PotenAct - a bill which in itself is
After six months of tials."
totally unacceptable as an haggling
over
a
These and other topics will
energy program but which congressional program and
be discussed thoroughly
could, through amendments, criticizing the President 's
durin g the seminar by
be the basis for the com- programs, this inadequate
members of the Rio Grande
prehensive program that is alternative is the best that the College-Rio Grande Comneeded.
Democratic majority could mll!lity College faculty along
The U. S. has an energy produce . It is deficient in two with members of the Rio
1 ~roblem that will not cure key areas: it is doubtful that
l 1tself, although with it will decrease energy Grande College Cluster
1 favorable weather and the
consumption or even cont sagging economy we haven 't strain rising demand .
: felt the pinch in recent Second, the bill fails to
! months. But, unless the s~imulate domestic oil
•f United States drastically production. Without an in·
• changes its energy policies, crease in oil .production here
'' we must expect that imported at home, the import quotas
r oil will comprise an ever will mean depletion of
- Named to
t greater portion of OW' total oil remaining U. S. resources. thePORTLAND
honor roll at Portland
:· consumption, that imported Once supplies fell below Elementary were 27 pupils
' oil prices will continue rising demand levels, it would lead for the last six weeks period.
·(they have already gone from to long gasoline lines, fuel Names in capital letters
for
homes, received all A.
' $7 billion in 1972 "to near $29 shortages
billion in 1975) and that U.S. business and industry, high
First grade - Charlie
rationing
and Boso, Tammi Proffitt and
energy demands will keep on prices,
growing, while domestic oil allocations. The President's Missy Sprouse; Second
production declines.
program includes a windfall Grade- Ray Lawrence, Kim
The Energy Conservation profits tax that would tW'n Sprouse, Kevin Teaford and
. and Conversion Act does not excess profits back into Bruce Wolfe; Third grade provide the lOng-terril energy exploration and development CHRISTLE LAWRENCE,
strategy that is needed. It of new oil reserves and thus DANNY WEDDLE, Vicky
singles out gasoline, a promote increased domestic . Barber, Wade Connoley;
product which comprises production.
Fourth grade - CINDY
The energy policy favored EVANS, BRUCE JOHNSON,
only 40 percent of each barrel
of oil after refining, for a stiff by the majority of the DEBORAH. OCTEAU,
tax. The present tax on Congress seems to be "no TAMMY MEADOWS, Paul
gasoline would be increased po_licy" - as evidenced by OW's, Danelle Weddle; Fifth
by 3 cents per gallon starting the continual postponement grade - KELLY PICKENS,
in 1976. Then, following the of the hard decisions that are SHERRY BEEGLE, Krista
1976 elections, the tax would necessary. What is needed Johnson, Alicia Evans;
jump to as much as 23 cents a. immediately is an energhy Sixth grade - BONNIE
gallon if gasoline con- policy which encourages BOSO;
JANET
MIDsumption exceeds 1973 levels, conservation of all fuels , DLESWART , DANNY
· by more than three percent. spreads the bW'den of con- TALBOTT, Armintha Holter,
In addition, excise taxes will . servation equitably among Joe Johnson , Charlotte
be placed on the business use all users, and which Pickens.
of oil and natrlral. gas, quotas stimulates development of
will be imposed on foreign oil, domestic resoW'ces so that
and fuel efficiency taxes will the United States can look
be placed on cars with fuel • forward to eventual selfeconomy below· a specified sufficiency.
JN .GERMANY
RACINE - Army Private
Paul J. Grady, son of Ronald
C. Grady, is assigned as an .
armor crewman in the 3rd
Infantry Division on duty in
Scheinfurt, Germany.

Don't·Close

Sports
'
Men's

NU17E~ WANr::&gt;E~Ne&gt;

t
I I I
UNPOCE

27 on honors
list in last
6-week period

Any Shoe In The

Main St.

I I

have no trouble surviving a
primary fight to take on
Pinkney again.
"I want · to be a mayor
elected by all the people, not
just one segment," Pinkney
said. "I will endeavor to get
the largest percentage of the
white vote possible and have
set 30 as a goal:"
The school board president
cited substantial increases in
the crime rate ;md high
unemployment during Perk's
tenure in making his announcement.

Washington
Report

R oad ' h 'dge semmar
•
today

eOPENe

I "

CLEVELAND (UPI) Cleveland · School Board
President Arnold Pinkney
accused Mayor Ralph J. Perk
of misspending millions in
federal funds Wednesday and
then announced he will run
for mayor.
Pinkney, who was defeated
by Perk in 1971 when he tried
to succeed Carl B. Stokes to
give the city a second black
mayor, said he expects
substantial support from
white Democrats. Perk, a
Republican, is expected to

Levy .

'I
t SQCia
CaIen dar

ESE MIXE17-UP

ITOMSEDI

Perk challenged

For The
Mentally·Retarded

Wrights host
young adults

I

(A.wen tomorrvw)

Them Down!

UM W has
Mar
·meet

I
I 01

I DALGE

'

Key's life reviewed
Highlights "of the life of
Francis Scott Key were given
by Mrs. Lena McKinley at the
Tuesday night meeting of the
Loyal Bereans Class of the
Middleport Church of Christ.
Mrs. McKinley also gave
devotions using a prayer and
Pslam 19. A poem, "How to
Find Peace of Mind" was
read by Mrs. Regina Swift.
Hostesses for June will be

'"-

'.

Answer- A levy of .75 of a mill expired on
January I, 1!175. This new levy is, iii part,
simply a renewal of that expired levy. The
additiona I a mount is required because of increased o"perating cost because we will no
longer be furnished space, heat, light, janitor
services and school lunches, by the
Meigs , School Bo;nd, free of cost.

Doni Let

Vows to be exchanged

.

ont letter to ·each square~ to
form four ordinary words.

A question and answer in order to ac-quaint
the public for the need in supporting the 1.6 mill
tax levy to1 be voted upon June 3, to provide
operating tunds for the Meigs Community ·
School which serves the retarded -of the county:
Question- Why is this 1.6 mill levy needed
for the retarded program?

.

Funeral services will t
Clarence L. Lacey, 67, of
held
Friday at the Lazes
Ashland, Ky ., formerly of ·
Pomeroy, died Tuesday at Funeral Home, Ashland, 1
King's Daughters Hospital, 10:30 a. ·m. ' with the Re1
Ashland, Ky., following a Eddie Do]lar officiatln!
Burial will follow at th
short illness.
Golden
Oaks Memorls
Born March 13, 1908, in
Marietta, Ohio, he was the Gardens, Ashland. Fri~nd
son of the late William and may call at the funeral hom
Thursday from 6 until 9 p. m
Addie Gosset Larey.
Surviving are two sons,
Larry C., Daytori, Ohio, and
WTI'ERY CONTEST ANTI
William D., Marietta, Ohio;
CLEVELA.ND (UPI)
three daughters, Miss Sally
The participants In tonight
Lacey, Cascade, Colo., Mrs. · Ohio Lottery Commlsslo
Cathy Harman, Ashland, and drawing here:
Mrs. Ruth Keairns, Ashland.
- Alex P. Koster, 2059 BaJ
terly, Lakewood, Ohio.
VBSSLATED
- J. Robert Quinn, 81
Daily Va cation Bible , Findlay, Apt. 604, Port:
School at the Bradbury mouth, Ohio.
ChW'ch of Christ will be held -. - Virgil L. Belcher, 170
June 2-6 from 9 a.m. to 11:30 17th Street, Parkersburg
a. m, For those who need West Virginia.
transportation contact may
- Betty Scheffel, 4324 Nor
be made by telephoning 992- mandy ·Ave., Cincinnati
7369 or 992-5187.
Ohio.

Confirmation solemnized

- ..

~ \!lJ. . ~~® Mil-,..·
Unocramble theoel"our Jumbleo,

Recular ..... to ...,..

Cliarlllce: 10 ptn:el OFF.

S..e IIDW I( Sllller'1.

i
I

'''
j

for
ALL THE FAMILY

I

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'I .

•

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''

ePOMEROY .

THE SHOE BOX

j

••

.MIDDLEPORT

l

-l

•••

ePT. PLEASANT

Middleport, Ohio

l
I

·

Kerm's Korner ,

j

Pomeroy

.,.

.

I

...

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•'

�'·

1tfl~rut\1i)11 ~...:.lkJ,:;t:....J=

6-The Daily Sentine!, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., ThW'sday,'May

read announcing the candidacy of Mrs. Arnold
Richards for Eighth District
president.
.

Record hop

'

is planned
Plans for a record hop May
30 at the Rock Springs
Grange 7 p. m. to 11 p. m.
were made during a recent
meeting of the Rock Springs
Lady Bugs 4-H Club in the
basement of the Rock Springs
United Methodist Church.
Tracey Jeffers presided
with Carla Whaley giving the
secretary 's report and
Christy Evans the treasurer's
report. Admission to the
dance was se t at 25 cent.s a
person . Refreshment.&lt;; of hot
.dogs, pop and chips will be
sold. Games will be conducted and the public is invited. Next meeting of the
club will be Friday morning
at the church.

Shower held
A layette shower honoring
Mrs .
Gary
(Connie)
Scholderer was held recently
at the home of Mrs. Celesta
Bush with Mrs. Nancy
' Manley and . Mrs. Sharon
Wright as co-hostesses.
Games were played with
prizes going to Mrs. Patty
Johnson, Mrs. Grace Darst,
Mrs . Barbara Warden, Mrs.
Roberta Acree, Mrs. Agnes
Henderson, Mrs. Lorena Au!t
and Mrs. Juanita Owens.
Pink, blue and yellow
streamers around a cradle
were lea lured" in the
decorations. Cake decorated
with pink and biue booties,

Pomen!J ·
Fri._May

30

6and8 P.M.

-

punch, coffee. chips, mint.&lt;;
and Duts were served.
Attending the shower
besides those named were
Mrs. Carl Moodispaugh, Mrs.
Grace Rusche! , Tracy
Scholderer, Carol Ault,
Crystal and Tracy Manley,
Greg, Nick and Jason Bush.
· Others presenting gifts to
Mrs. Scholderer were Ann
Davis, Chuck Wright, Mrs.
J oa n Hoffman, Mrs. Sue
Sigman, Kay Logan and Mrs.
Phillip .Mowery.

·Clarence ·L. Lacey die~

Rev. Hawks will
give Rio sermon

Leader named
RACINE - Mrs. Herschel
Norris was elected president
of the American Le gion
'
.Auxiliary, RaCine Post 602, at
a meeting Tuesday night at
the hall.
Other officers elected were
Mrs. David Yost, first vice
president; Mrs. John Young,
second vice president; Mrs.
Virgil Roush, secretary ; Mrs.
Robert G.. Beegle, treasurer ;
Mrs . Marvin Robert s,
chaplain, and Mrs. Dean
Brinker, sergeant at arms.
Installation will take place
at the June meeting . Mrs.
Myrtle' Walker presided at
, . .the meeting while plans were
made to go to Lancaster June
5 for the District 8 summer
convention . Also announced
was the Jun e 12 party at the
Athens Mental Health Center.
A memorial service for
three deceas ed members,
Mrs. Guy Neigler, Mrs. Emil
Eynon and Mrs. Mattie Yost,
was held.
·Mrs. Dean Brinker thanked
the junior and se ni or
members. who assisted with
the poppy sale. A letter was

.

.

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'

RIO GRANDE - Dr .
Alphus R. Christensen,
president of Rio Grade
College and Rio Grande
Community College today .
announced that the sermon
for this year's BaccalaW'eate
service will be delivered by
the Reverend Paul W.
Hawks, senior pastor .of the
Grace United Methodist
Church In Gallipolis.
This will be the ninety-ninth
anniversary Baccalaureate
for Rio (&gt;rande College, and
the first anniversary Baccalaureate for Rio Grande
Conununity College. More
than 130 graduates and their
families and friends are
expected to attend the
ceremonies.
Rev. Hawks is a na live of
. REV. PAULHAWKS
Hastings, Michigan, but
spent most of his younger
years In Detroit, Michigan. Joyce, is a Rio Grande
He is a veteran, having College graduate, and his
served in the U. S. Navy, the oldest son, Paul II, is
U. S. Marine Corps, and as a presently attending Rio
chaplain in the U. S. Air Grande College .. Mark is a
Force.
sophomore
at
Gallia
Academy High School in
He is a 1960 graduate of Gallipolis, and the youngest,
Asbury College, and has a Kimberly Joy, is in the
Master of Divinity degree in seventh grade in Gallipolis.
Theology from the Methodist
In addition to his pastoral
SIX AERIAL ACTS will be featured with the Lewis
Theology School of Ohio at duties, Rev. Hawks is active
Brothers Circus presented in Pomeroy at 6 and 8 p. m.
Delaware. Before coming to in local civic affairs. He is a
Friday under sponsorship of the Pomeroy Fire DepartGrace United Methodist member of the Gallipolis
ment. The circus tent will be set up on the village-o~ed
Church in Gallipolis, he Rotary Club, serves on the
lot between Mechanic St. and Butternut Ave.
served churches in Kentucky, Holzer Medical Center Home
Detroit, and Toledo.
Health Advisory Board,
He has traveled extensively serves on the Planned
board, · is
throughout the world, and Parenthood
annually makes a visit to President of the Board of
Grace Children's Hospital In Camp Asbury in Rio Grande,
The open chW'ch wedding and Mrs . Erlene Stone,
Port-au-Prince, Haiti.
and was chairman of the 1975
of Miss Penny Marie Eblin, Aurora, Ind., will be at 6 .p.
Rev. Hawks is married and Red Cross Fund Drive in
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. m. Friday at the Laurel Cliff
has three children . His wife, March of this .year.
Lawrence Eblin, Middleport, Free Methodist Church.
Paid · Pol. Adv . by The Citizens Committee
to Michael Eugene Stone, son
Rev . Floyd Shook will ofF.or 1,\entally Retarded
of Eugene Stone, Middleport, fi ciate a t th e ceremony
n
foll owing a program of
COLUMBUS - More than an ·'off-System Seminar' ' to
nuptial music by William
establish guide lines for the
Hall, Rutland, beginning at 200 officials representing
township, village, municipal, '· use of rural road and bridge
5:30 p. m.
county, state, and federal funds appropriated under the
Mrs. Patty Philli-ps,
levels of transportation are Federal-Aid Highway
Pomeroy, will be matron of
meeting in Columbus today in Amendment.&lt;; of 1974.
Mrs. Thelma Wiley, Mrs.·
hono r and Mrs . Cathy
The seminar will cover the
Clyda Allensworth and Mrs.
Weaver, Syracuse, and Mrs.
off-system
program, a oneGertrude Miller. Mrs. Ruth
Rose Rundell, Syracuse, will
time money allocation which
Blosser and Lyda Ballenger be attendan t.&lt;; .
will be matched on a 70
were reported ill. Members
Tom Bush, Newport News,
percent Federal - 30 percent
sang " In the Garden". Mrs .
Va ., will serve as best man
local basis.
Cathryn Erwin presided.
.
11
Refreshment.&lt;; were served for the groom and ushers will
be Gary Stone, Middleport,
'..)'
by Mrs. Martha haggerty, '
ALFRED _ The Alfred
Mrs. Swift and Mrs. and Roger Weaver, Syracuse.
Flower
g1rl
w1ll
be
Tabitha
UMW
t M· 20 at the home
McKinley.
Phillips, daughter of Mr. and
H
ml
e
~~od
ith an
·
Ph"ll'
o1 een
.1
e, w
Mrs. V.
1
•rgl
.
Ips, attendance of 10 members
Pomeroy, and the rmg bearer
d
· ·to
'
.
an one VlSl r.
w1ll be Bryan Weaver, son of
The meeting, in charge of
Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd Wright
Mr. and Mr_s. Roger Weaver. Nellie Parker president,
entertained
with a cookout at
A receptwn honormg the
.
'
1
.
b
h
ld
.
th
opened
w1th
prayer
by
lso
a
their camp site on the Ohio
1
11
Bernard Niehm and family, coupe
WI .· e e 111 • e Taylor~ followed by the
River
for the young adults of
Mrs. Sue Tabor, Miss Julie church soc1~l ro.om followmg hymn , "What A Friend".
MEN'S
the
Laurel Cliff Free
T
· k d. h t
Niehm, Mrs. George Nibert tomorrow mght s ceremony.
1 th rees1c
an s u- · Methodist Church following
wenyand son, Byron Nibert.
in calls were reported.
WOMEN'S
the Campmeeting Singers
The society went on recotd pr og ram at the church
CHILDREN'S
as supporting the levy for Friday .
'c.'':::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::;:;:;-;::::~~'''**' Meigs Re larded School.
In the group were Tammy
Emma Finch gave the and Jason Wright, Diane
namesofMr.andMrs.Asay, .Lewis, Jack and Jane Jacobs,
CLUB TO MEET
missionaries .in educational Ernie and Brenda Haggy,
The Middleport Garden
work
in
Montevideo, Ronnie Martin, Susan FleshClub will meet at 7:30 p. m.
Monday night in the Mid- !!l'
Uruquay, to be supported. A man, Clifford and Mildred
::::
birthday card was signed for Jacobs and Rev. and Mrs.
dleport Fireman's Lounge. •.·.-~·:
them.
The meeting will be a "no
Floyd Shook .
•
host, brown bag party". Roll
Genevieve Guthrie acSUNDAY
call will be on the topic
HAM or chicken dinner, cepted the prayer calendar
" Everything is Coming Up noon untll 2:30 p.m., spon- for next month.
.Nellie Parker led the
Roses" and Mrs . Mal- sored by men of Sacred Heart
"Being Single" with
program
Catholic Church in church
colm Roller will talk on the basement; admission $3 for' song, reading and interesting
home garden of roses . There adults, $1.50 for children, discussion.
will be demonstrations on advanced ticket sales only.
The next meeting will be at
modern design by Mrs. Call Rev. Fr. Welton at 992- the home of Nellie Parker
Mi chael Fry and Mrs. 2825, Paul Simon at 992-2571, with Osie Follrod, program
leader, June 17, at 8 p.m.
William Morris. Reports will or Paul Casci at 992-3171.
be given on the bicentennial
Refreshments-were served
beautification of Main St. in
MARY SHRINE 37, Order to those mentioned and Clara
FRIDAY AND
Middleport.
of the White Shrine of Follrod, Nina Robinson , June
Jerusalem, 2 p.m., rehearsal Stearns, Theima Henderson
SATURDAY ONLY
for cerem'onial at the• and .Mary Carr.

Trinity Sunday, May 25, the
rite of confirmation was held
at St. Paul Lutheran ChW'ch
in Pomeroy. Tim Thoren, son
of Mr . and Mrs. Joseph
( Pe te) Thoren , Rt. 1,
Minersville, was confirmed
into the Lutheran Church at
the II a. m. worship service.
At the same service, the
foll owing adults
were
received by letters of transfer
into St. Paul's congregation :
Mr. and Mrs. David Seaman
and family , Dr. and Mrs.

2 Days Only-Fri. and Sat.

$

OFF

6 DAYS
A WEEK

~

' MO.N. thru SAT.

hang ups are pendants
If you're hung-up on something or someone special,
show It! There's a hang up pendant for sports buffs,
music fans, and lovers. Twelve in all to choose from.
Gold filled or sterling silver chain.

~~-

Goessler's Jewelry ·Store
t

Pomeroy Masonic Temple.

GOING TO CAMP
RUTLAND - Members of
the Rutland Cub Scout Pack
240 and Boy Scout Troop 240
will be attending the Camporall at Krodel Park in Point
Pleasant Friday thcough
Sunday.

Chapman's Shoes

K C group

D&amp;D MEAT

MASON FURNitURE
tferman Grate

Mason, W_. Va.

'

Cool--

has trip

Mr. and Mrs. Harold Sauer ·
accompanied members of the
Kyger Creek Chapter of tlie
National Honor Society and
830 E. Main
guests on oa weekend camping
Pom.eroy, Ohio
trip to Camp Francis AsbW'y.
Mrs. Sauer is advisor for the
chapter.
"!I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ On the outing were ·Marie
F
Grose, Debbie Baird, Cynthia
Clark, Liz Hood, Sue Hughes,
Mark Waller, and Shelia
Tucke,r, members; and Dian
Tucker, Edicress Cremeans,
Joe Stidham, Cindy Hurley,
Yvonne Massie and Richard
Rumley , guests . National
HoMr Soc'i~ty member
Buy it now or use our
unable to attend was Terry
, Convenient
Lay-Away
Lucas.
Plan!

173-5592

Court Sl., Pomeroy

Store, .s1o and up

Pomeroy ·

. Knit .
'

rL

~.

Rio seminar
June 16 to 20

·$

~

Services for
older folks
is assured

For The
Mentally Retarded

•

'

NOW 1.99 to 4.66

..

;

'

New York ·Clothing
House
..
,.
.

'

Paid Pol. Adv. 'by The. Citizens Committee
FOr Mentally Retarded
,

.,

Y~rttud•y••

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I

Jumble, CAPON

THICK DEAFEN PASTRY

Antwf!r: He had it to 108e weight-A FAT CHANCE!

SUN TAN .
PRODUCTS
by
Sea &amp; Ski

-··

The Rev. Mr. and Mrs. C. Egypt where the children of
Y. Boyd, interim pastor of.tl)e . Isra el were enslaved..prior to
First Baptist Church of their deliverence by Moses.
Middleport, have returned The slides treat six countries,
from a 15-day lOW' of the one of which is Cyprus.
Bible lands and will be
Mr. Boyd has been asked to
showing pictures they have lead another tour of Bible
taken starting this Sunday at lands next year, pro~ably in
7:30p.m.
mid-June. Persons interested
They brought back ap- in going may contact him at
proximately 400·slides so that the First Baptist Church of
local resident.&lt;; can see what ·1\tiddleport, Sixth and
the places of the Bible are Palmer Sts . or call h1m at 992like today. These Sunday 7198.
night showings will be open to
the public with all in terested
persons invited.
The pic tures will show the
prison in Rome where St.
Paul is said to have been
COLUMBUS - Glenna M.
incarcerated prior to his Sprague, se nior music major
execution; interesting ruins from Middleport, rec en tly
of Corinth, Tyre, Jericho, ~ng received a special senior
Meggido (Solomon's chariot award at the year~nding
city); the Sea of Galilee, the Honors Co nvocation at
River Jordan and the Dead Capital University .
Sea ; the home town of Mary
Miss Sprague was one of
and Martha , whose brother tw o senior women to receive
Christ raised from the dead; the Phi Beta Prize for outthe excavation of the caves standing scholars hip among
where the Dead Sea Scrolls , Phi Beta Sorority seniors.
were
found;
Sidon; Martha E . Sheen of
Caesarea ; the Damascus Homeworth was the other Phi
Road; Jaffa , where Peter had Beta woman honored. A 1971
his
house-top
VISIOn ; gra dua te of Meigs Hig h
Jerusalem, Bet hlehem ; School, Glenna will be among
Nazareth , ruins of the those . graduating in Cap's
gigantic pagan temples at Class of '75 dW'ing comBaalbeck, and other sites in mencement exercises June I.
the Holy Land.
She is the daughter of Mr . and
He will also show pictures Mrs. W. R. Sprague, 780 High
of the pyramids and peopl~ in St.

Scholarship
is recognized

Coppertone
Aztec
Citritan

Sudden Tan

PERFUME BY
HELENA RUBENSTEIN .
Fizzing 4 oz .
Fragrance Foam

Reg.
SS.50

$400

HEAVEN SCENT
Reg. $5.50

COURANT
Reg. $4.25

'325

Wide selection of name brand
perfumes,
and
summ .e rtime
products.

~----DUTTIJIN~s----1
~ PRESCRIPTION DRUG STORE

l

I

MIDDLEPORT
I
~~~-~---~--~~~--~

- -- -

... n-7
was·u..~,..
Bressler was there.
Brings\Ou
the World,
of
Fashion
•

.-

m

Uniforms

ASK TOWED
Franklin E. Lemley, 36, Rt.
2, Racine, and Nellie Frizzle,
79 Portland; George' Thomas
Luster, Jr., 23, Middleport,
and Dale Dee Dillon, 17, Rt. I,
Reedsville ; Carl Richard
Davidson, 18, Middleport,
and Carolyn Sue ·Nicholson,
23, Rt. 2, McArthur.

OFF

REG•
PRICE

.

0

San 20 perceat 011 · Latl•' ftM 91&amp;11ty
pcilyeilla' ualfonu ad 111111111'111 pantaulti
Ud amodllop1. In colon, wblte, blue, ad
yellow; In J111lor, W • 'M ball .. . .

WIDE
SELECTION
OF STYLES

.

Boys casual knit shirts.
Regular $2.98 to U.98

.

"r xxxxr

di=.:SIIPD==-=-:::::::..:•=:....___JI

___:_:
Prill.:::.·

of 15-day Bible Land scenes

COLUMBUS - The Ohio
Commission on Aging has
awarded $100,000 in federal
funds to uie Buckeye HillsHocking Valley Regional
Development
District,
Marietta, to provide social
services for older people in an
eight-county
area
of
southeasiern Ohio .
,
The area office on aging'
serves the elderly in Athens,
Hocking, Meigs, Monroe,
Morgan, Noble, Perry and
Washington counties.
C.
Crowley,
David
executive director .of the
Commission said the commission receives funds under
Title III of the federal Older
Americans Act and allocates
them to the state's f4 area
agencies on aging. Programs
supported
include
in-.
formation and referral,
trarisporatlon, outreach arid
senior centers.

'

'

Now ammce the eirded letten

"\j to form tht IUrpriH IIIIIWtr, U

Slide showings begin Sunday

Group which is affiliated with
the National Alliance of
Businessmen.
Faculty members participating in the seminar
include : Krishna Kool,
assistant professor · of
economics, who will discuss
"Comparative Economic
Systems ;" . Bob Pfeifer,
assistant professor of
political science, who will
di sc uss ~~Government­
Business Rela lions;" Dr . ·
John Reynolds, director of
Business Administration,
who will discuss "The
American Business System; ''
Ed Sofranko , assistant
professor of psychology, who
will discuss "The Psychology
of Human Needs;" and Dr.
Sam S. Smith, assistant dean
for social and administrative
sciences, who will discuss
"Business in Politics."
For niore information
concerning the Rio Grande
College-Rio Grande Community College Free Enterprise System in America
Seminar, contact Dr. Smith
at Rio Grande College.
Telephone 245-5353.

casual knit shirts.
Regular $3.98 to $11.98

(Dress shirts and regular sport
shirts not included.)

r

park In Mason conducted by American Legion Post 140 in
which the flag was raised at the flag pole and a three
volley salute carried out by the Legion.

MASON CITY'S MEMORIAL DAY SERVICE - A
simple ceremony took place Monday morning at the town

Their Door!

NOW 2.65 to 7.99

"\j

AFI:OUNI7 HILL'S OF 6AND.

· L:==~===~~-d~==~===~~·:u:rr~eohdbythea~ec.rtoo~

RIO GRANDE - The Rio
Grande College-Rio Grande
Community College Free
Enterprise
System in
America Seminar sponsored
by the Rio Grande College
Cluster Group, scheduled for
iiiiliJ June 16 through June 20 on
the Rio Grande campus has
...; been planned and coor~ dinated and invitations have
~ gone out to high schools in
By Clarence
Gallia, Meigs, Jackson and
Vinton counties in Ohio and
Miller
· Poin t Pleasant, West Virginia
·,
for participants.
Once again Congress is level. Unfortunately , the
Some of the areas of indelaying action on for- greatest tax will fall on the
terest covered in the seminar
mulating a comprehensive private use of gasoline which
will be "The Economic Needs
energy program to end the amoun (,&lt;; to only 12 percent of
of
Man, "
"Economic
nation' s dependence on total U. S. energy consumpSystems," "Under-developed
foreign sources . Prior to the tion. Because one-third of this
''Authoritarian
Systems,"
Memorial Day recess the gasoline is used for comSystems, " "What Happens to
Rules Committee postponed muting . between work and
Profit ?", " The American
consideration of the Energy home, this bill would create
System (Mixed Economy )",
Conservation and Conversion what am ounts to a " job tax."
and "Prospects and PotenAct - a bill which in itself is
After six months of tials."
totally unacceptable as an haggling
over
a
These and other topics will
energy program but which congressional program and
be discussed thoroughly
could, through amendments, criticizing the President 's
durin g the seminar by
be the basis for the com- programs, this inadequate
members of the Rio Grande
prehensive program that is alternative is the best that the College-Rio Grande Comneeded.
Democratic majority could mll!lity College faculty along
The U. S. has an energy produce . It is deficient in two with members of the Rio
1 ~roblem that will not cure key areas: it is doubtful that
l 1tself, although with it will decrease energy Grande College Cluster
1 favorable weather and the
consumption or even cont sagging economy we haven 't strain rising demand .
: felt the pinch in recent Second, the bill fails to
! months. But, unless the s~imulate domestic oil
•f United States drastically production. Without an in·
• changes its energy policies, crease in oil .production here
'' we must expect that imported at home, the import quotas
r oil will comprise an ever will mean depletion of
- Named to
t greater portion of OW' total oil remaining U. S. resources. thePORTLAND
honor roll at Portland
:· consumption, that imported Once supplies fell below Elementary were 27 pupils
' oil prices will continue rising demand levels, it would lead for the last six weeks period.
·(they have already gone from to long gasoline lines, fuel Names in capital letters
for
homes, received all A.
' $7 billion in 1972 "to near $29 shortages
billion in 1975) and that U.S. business and industry, high
First grade - Charlie
rationing
and Boso, Tammi Proffitt and
energy demands will keep on prices,
growing, while domestic oil allocations. The President's Missy Sprouse; Second
production declines.
program includes a windfall Grade- Ray Lawrence, Kim
The Energy Conservation profits tax that would tW'n Sprouse, Kevin Teaford and
. and Conversion Act does not excess profits back into Bruce Wolfe; Third grade provide the lOng-terril energy exploration and development CHRISTLE LAWRENCE,
strategy that is needed. It of new oil reserves and thus DANNY WEDDLE, Vicky
singles out gasoline, a promote increased domestic . Barber, Wade Connoley;
product which comprises production.
Fourth grade - CINDY
The energy policy favored EVANS, BRUCE JOHNSON,
only 40 percent of each barrel
of oil after refining, for a stiff by the majority of the DEBORAH. OCTEAU,
tax. The present tax on Congress seems to be "no TAMMY MEADOWS, Paul
gasoline would be increased po_licy" - as evidenced by OW's, Danelle Weddle; Fifth
by 3 cents per gallon starting the continual postponement grade - KELLY PICKENS,
in 1976. Then, following the of the hard decisions that are SHERRY BEEGLE, Krista
1976 elections, the tax would necessary. What is needed Johnson, Alicia Evans;
jump to as much as 23 cents a. immediately is an energhy Sixth grade - BONNIE
gallon if gasoline con- policy which encourages BOSO;
JANET
MIDsumption exceeds 1973 levels, conservation of all fuels , DLESWART , DANNY
· by more than three percent. spreads the bW'den of con- TALBOTT, Armintha Holter,
In addition, excise taxes will . servation equitably among Joe Johnson , Charlotte
be placed on the business use all users, and which Pickens.
of oil and natrlral. gas, quotas stimulates development of
will be imposed on foreign oil, domestic resoW'ces so that
and fuel efficiency taxes will the United States can look
be placed on cars with fuel • forward to eventual selfeconomy below· a specified sufficiency.
JN .GERMANY
RACINE - Army Private
Paul J. Grady, son of Ronald
C. Grady, is assigned as an .
armor crewman in the 3rd
Infantry Division on duty in
Scheinfurt, Germany.

Don't·Close

Sports
'
Men's

NU17E~ WANr::&gt;E~Ne&gt;

t
I I I
UNPOCE

27 on honors
list in last
6-week period

Any Shoe In The

Main St.

I I

have no trouble surviving a
primary fight to take on
Pinkney again.
"I want · to be a mayor
elected by all the people, not
just one segment," Pinkney
said. "I will endeavor to get
the largest percentage of the
white vote possible and have
set 30 as a goal:"
The school board president
cited substantial increases in
the crime rate ;md high
unemployment during Perk's
tenure in making his announcement.

Washington
Report

R oad ' h 'dge semmar
•
today

eOPENe

I "

CLEVELAND (UPI) Cleveland · School Board
President Arnold Pinkney
accused Mayor Ralph J. Perk
of misspending millions in
federal funds Wednesday and
then announced he will run
for mayor.
Pinkney, who was defeated
by Perk in 1971 when he tried
to succeed Carl B. Stokes to
give the city a second black
mayor, said he expects
substantial support from
white Democrats. Perk, a
Republican, is expected to

Levy .

'I
t SQCia
CaIen dar

ESE MIXE17-UP

ITOMSEDI

Perk challenged

For The
Mentally·Retarded

Wrights host
young adults

I

(A.wen tomorrvw)

Them Down!

UM W has
Mar
·meet

I
I 01

I DALGE

'

Key's life reviewed
Highlights "of the life of
Francis Scott Key were given
by Mrs. Lena McKinley at the
Tuesday night meeting of the
Loyal Bereans Class of the
Middleport Church of Christ.
Mrs. McKinley also gave
devotions using a prayer and
Pslam 19. A poem, "How to
Find Peace of Mind" was
read by Mrs. Regina Swift.
Hostesses for June will be

'"-

'.

Answer- A levy of .75 of a mill expired on
January I, 1!175. This new levy is, iii part,
simply a renewal of that expired levy. The
additiona I a mount is required because of increased o"perating cost because we will no
longer be furnished space, heat, light, janitor
services and school lunches, by the
Meigs , School Bo;nd, free of cost.

Doni Let

Vows to be exchanged

.

ont letter to ·each square~ to
form four ordinary words.

A question and answer in order to ac-quaint
the public for the need in supporting the 1.6 mill
tax levy to1 be voted upon June 3, to provide
operating tunds for the Meigs Community ·
School which serves the retarded -of the county:
Question- Why is this 1.6 mill levy needed
for the retarded program?

.

Funeral services will t
Clarence L. Lacey, 67, of
held
Friday at the Lazes
Ashland, Ky ., formerly of ·
Pomeroy, died Tuesday at Funeral Home, Ashland, 1
King's Daughters Hospital, 10:30 a. ·m. ' with the Re1
Ashland, Ky., following a Eddie Do]lar officiatln!
Burial will follow at th
short illness.
Golden
Oaks Memorls
Born March 13, 1908, in
Marietta, Ohio, he was the Gardens, Ashland. Fri~nd
son of the late William and may call at the funeral hom
Thursday from 6 until 9 p. m
Addie Gosset Larey.
Surviving are two sons,
Larry C., Daytori, Ohio, and
WTI'ERY CONTEST ANTI
William D., Marietta, Ohio;
CLEVELA.ND (UPI)
three daughters, Miss Sally
The participants In tonight
Lacey, Cascade, Colo., Mrs. · Ohio Lottery Commlsslo
Cathy Harman, Ashland, and drawing here:
Mrs. Ruth Keairns, Ashland.
- Alex P. Koster, 2059 BaJ
terly, Lakewood, Ohio.
VBSSLATED
- J. Robert Quinn, 81
Daily Va cation Bible , Findlay, Apt. 604, Port:
School at the Bradbury mouth, Ohio.
ChW'ch of Christ will be held -. - Virgil L. Belcher, 170
June 2-6 from 9 a.m. to 11:30 17th Street, Parkersburg
a. m, For those who need West Virginia.
transportation contact may
- Betty Scheffel, 4324 Nor
be made by telephoning 992- mandy ·Ave., Cincinnati
7369 or 992-5187.
Ohio.

Confirmation solemnized

- ..

~ \!lJ. . ~~® Mil-,..·
Unocramble theoel"our Jumbleo,

Recular ..... to ...,..

Cliarlllce: 10 ptn:el OFF.

S..e IIDW I( Sllller'1.

i
I

'''
j

for
ALL THE FAMILY

I

I

'I .

•

'

''

ePOMEROY .

THE SHOE BOX

j

••

.MIDDLEPORT

l

-l

•••

ePT. PLEASANT

Middleport, Ohio

l
I

·

Kerm's Korner ,

j

Pomeroy

.,.

.

I

...

•
•'

�8- The Daily Sentlne!, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thw-sday, Ma'y 29, 1975

fsj)i1~~::G;;~:if~;~~~ 1~~;~r1~g~~::~~~·~~~

AMOUNT OF s 300 000 BY
THE
V ILLAGE
OF

our wonder ful netqhbors
frtends , a nd r el&lt;ll tves tor

!m,!Elro~~H~g~~: ~~N~ ~~t'~g~~~~~~~~~~:r~ "~i~:

THE PURPO SE OF MA KIN G
IMPROVEMENT S TO TH E
WATE RW ORKS SYS TEM OF
THE
VILLAGE ,
AN D
D E c L A R 1N G
A
EMERGEN CY
N
WHEREAS , th e Coun cil of
the VI llag e of Po ~eroy , Ohm
ha s requested the Vtllage
Clerk , as f tscat off tcer to
certtfy
th e
ma &gt;um u m
ma turtty of the bon d s here m
refe rred to and the not es
herein author•zect . and such
f tscal otf tcer ha s est tmated
the ltfe of the tmproveme n t as
at leilst ftv e years and cer
f tfted th e maxtm um mat ur 1ty
of the bonds as forty years
and of the notes to be tssued '"
antlco.•patton th er eof as f tv e
yea'rs , tf so ld
pub l tcly
otherwt se on e ( 1) year l and
WHEREA S.
o u tstan dtn g

notes are about to mature

NOW , THERE F ORE , BE IT

ORDAINED by the Coun ctl of
the Vtllage of Pom er oy , Met gs

County , OhtO

SECTION 1
lha t tf tS
hereby dec lared necessary m
order to pr esene the public
peace , health . safety , comfort
and we lfare of th e tnhab tta nts

consol mg wori:ts Also the
Pontcroy Emergency for
' 11 0 " prompt servoce
fl.~rs Rtc h ard Tho m as
Sts te r and Mary Jo nf's
'"ccc ot Mr r rcd Do n• c ls
5 79 II IJ

I WOULD ltke to thffnk ever y
body who at tend ed my s tork
s how e r , May l l and a ll who
sen t th e many n1ce qlf ts to
nte
Mr
and Mr s
Gary
~ cho ld e r c r

'i

2Q

IIc

In Memoty
IN LOVI NG memory of Mrs
Mabel Se ll ers who passed
away May 29 1973
The Famtly
5 29 ltc

For F a~t Results Use 1Sentine_l Classifieds'
B
.
.
s
.
2

®

-

Employment Wanted

c

1969 CHEVY NOVA 4 DR.

$1095

6 cy l , automatrc tra ns, clean rn tenor, good t rres,

rad 1o

1968 CAMARO CPE .
$1295
6 cy l , std tra ns, radro, good tr res green lm1 s h , blk ,
vtny l bucket seats

~~~~~~~~2 2/J~Orlrig ,

LOV IN G mE"mory of Mrs
Mabel Se ll ers who passed
r!Wcly May 29 1973
Ther a m tl y
5 29 1t c

" At Cautton Light"
R1 7 1 Tuppers Platns , 0

·Real Estate for Sale

"B ARGA IN S a re our
mtddl e na me" 1n c le an ,
used
furnlfure .
GUARA NTEEO
ap
p lr ances &amp; ne~ t!.J rn..'.!.!!r~
Ope n 9 S We d through Sun .
Ph 667 3858
5 15 1 mo

NEED A new hom e burll on
your loP Con tact Mti O B
HutCh iSOn Rut la nd , OhtO
Phone 742 36 15
5 8 tfC

1

Notice

of th e vtllage , to tss ue bonds. ELDERLY lady would l1ke to
of th e Vtl lage of Pomeroy
be taken ca re of m prr vate
home or wol' ld ltke som eone
Ohto , tn the prmctpal s um of
$300 ,000, for the purpose of
Ia ltve tn her home Phone
maktng tmprovem e nts to th e ' 9Q2 73:10
5 29 3tc
waterwork s sy5tem a t th e
20"-3112 H P
v tll age
STA!J LE S AN D
SECT IO N 2 That sa td bonds CO L ES
shall be dated appro,omately
R IDIN G ACAD EMY Now
Ope n dally from 10 a m ttl! 8
Apr tl 1 19 76, s ha ll bear tn
22 "-Jl/2 H P
p m Phone 667 3 10 5 Tup
terest at the rate ortg.nally
esttmated of approxtmately
pers P la tn S Oh to
SelfPropelled
5 29 .lf c
St)( per cen t 16 percent l pe r
annum and s ha ll mature m
suostanttalty equa l annu a l CAS H patd fo r a\ 1 makes and
mod els of mobtle homes
InStallm ents over a per.od of
Phone area code 614 42J
twent y f20J years a ft er the tr
POMEROY LANDMARK
ISSua nce
95 31
9'.
~Jack W. Carsey, Mgr
4 13 lfc
Sect 1on 3 Tha t '' •s hereby
6:id!l Phone 992 21Rl
determ med that notes .n the
pnn ctpa l amount of $300 ,000 JUNK , autos, co m plete a nd
deltvered to our vard We
Shall be •ssued m anttc• palro n
p1ck up aut o bodtes and buy
of the tss uan ce of sard bonds
a ll ktnds of scra p metals and
Satd notes sha ll be dated May
•ron R tde r 's Salvage , St
15 19 75 , s hall bear mte rest at
Rt 124 Rt 4 Pomeroy , BOY •.cou t m eda l lo st Monday
th e rate of srx per cent (6 per
on parad e rout e If found
cent) per annum , payable at
OhtO Ca ll 992 5468
p le as e
ca ll
742 J78 1
10 17 tfc
mat ur.t y maturmg on Aprt l 1
R ew ard
1976 Sa td notes may be so ld as ------- -- ---~ - 5 29 67tc
here inafter prov tded •n su ch QU ICK,5"'k1 NT by ma tt from
c am era ready co p y One
d e n om •nations as may be
page $5 55 •f trs t 100, 51 15 BE AG LE brown , black and
r eques ted by the purc hase rs
whlf,e l tp on ta tl If see n ,
SECTIO N 4 Tha t sa rd note s
each addtt 1onal 100 Send
please ph on e 985 4227
Shall be exec uted by the
co p y, c heck to LET
5 28 6t p
Mayor and Vil lag e Clerk and
TERS HOP PLU S, 72 W
shal l bear the seal of the
Unto n Ath ens , Oh to Atso,
corpo ra fton They sha ll be
10b prmttng
destg ned ' Waterwor ks lm
A 29 38t p
provement Notes " and s hall
TOT AL e lect r rc 3 bedroom
be payable at The Central FOR yo ur "0 11 of Mtnk'
home butll m k1tchen full
Tr ust Company , Cmctnnat t,
Cosmettcs - P hone
base ment and large lot
Ohto The y shall ex press upon
BROWN 'S 992 5113
Ph,pn e 992 3380
th e 1r fa ce the purpose for
1 7 tfc
5 22 6tc
wht c h they are ISSued and that
thev are 1ssued tn pur su ance NOW setJrng F ull er Br ush
of this or dmance
Prod ucts phon e 992 3410
SECTION 5 That sa1d no tes
1 24 tfC
1\.KC Ap rt CO I Po odle puppi eS
shall be ftrst offered to the
-= ~-=- -----Call 9.19 20 14 af1er 5 p m
off iCer or off tcer s m charge of
5 29 3tc
the bond ret trement fund of
th e Vtllage and any notes not ONE row corn p tcke r , Frank
taken by s uch offtcer shall be
Dodder er
Box
162 , 1 YR OL D fema le Regtstered ,
sold at pr iva te sale to We tl
black a nd t an coon hound ,
Ohto
Coolvil
le,
Roth &amp; ln(lpg Inc , Ctncm na h,
$125 Also 3 month old ,
5
28
Jtp
Ohro tn accordance wtth rts
Fe m a le Reg Walker S50
Offe r to purc hase same wh• ch WANTED old up rtght ptan os,
Phon e 99 2 7222
tS he r e by acce pted , at not less
5 28 6tp
any
condtt
1on
Pay
mg
S10
than par and accrued tnlerest
each Ft r st floor onl y Wnte
and the proceeds from s uc h
good
German
and gtve dtr ectr ons to Wt tl en E XTRA
sal e exce pt any prem tum and
Sh e ph erd p ups wormed ,
Prano
Co
,
Bo
x
188
Sa
rdr
s,
the accrued rnterest thereo n
cham pron blood lm es Phone
Oh to 43946
Shall be P~•d tnto the proper
446 0373
5
28
6tp
tund and used for the purpose
5 28 Jtc
aforesa td and for no other
HAL
L
S
SALVAG
E
,
OLD
RT
purpose
33, P OM EROY , OHIO
SE CTt o'N 6 That satd notes
Sc r ap bod tes w tt h fr a m e and
shal l be the ful l gene r al
r ea r ends up to $16 Scrap
Obltgatiftn 'bf the v1llage, and
No 2 long , S1 10 hundred , 8 x 38 MOB IL E home 2
the full fa•th , credtt and
bedroom John Sheet s, J
Sc rap No 1 long . $1 25 hund
rev enue of satd v• llage are
m ties south of M1ddleport on
re d Moto r s un c leaned and
hereby pledge d for the prompt
Rt 7
'
tran smtss ton s $1 20 hund
payment of the same The par
5 25 6fc
red
value to be rece tved fr om the
5 20 tfc
sale of bonds anttctpated by
- - - - - - -- sELL yo ur mobtte ho me fo r
Satd notes , and any excess
Old
uprtght
cash 15 homes wanted , 1958
fund res ultmg from the WANTED
p anos ,
any
c ond tt1on
lhru 1972 mode ls Phon e
issu a nce of sa1d notes , shall to
(6 14) 446 14 25, Gallipolis
Paym g $10 each F trs l floor
the ex tent necessary , be used
only
Wr tt e
a nd g1ve
3 9 78tf
only for the... retire men t of sa1d
d1rec tton s to Wt tl en P1a no
notes at maturity , together
Co Box 188 Sa rd tS, Oh 10
Wtfh mter est the reon , and are
43946
her e by pl edge d fo r s uc h
5 22 6tp
purpose
SECTION 7 Tha t durtng
BABY S IT TER I or 2 days per
fur nit ur e , rce boxes,
the vear or years wh tie s uc h OLD
week Phone 992 385 3 afte r 5
bra
ss
beds
,
or
comp
le
te
notes run the re sha ll be lev ted . ho use hold s Wrtte M
P m
o
on all of the ta xable property
5 22 6tp
M1 ller , Rt 4, Pom e roy ,
tn the Vil lage of Pomeroy , m
992
7760
Ohto
Call
addllron to all other taxes a
10 7 74
PREfER 4 boys to set s ta kes.
d.rect ta x annuall v, not less
Satu rd ay S2 p er ho ur
than that whtch wou ld have
P hon e 949 41 21
Dallas
been lev ted tf bonds ha.d been
Cle land ,
INVITATION TO BID
issued wrthout pr ror tssuance
5 29 2tc
Sea led brds Will be rece1ved
of such notes Sa1 d ta x sh all be
un t tl 12 noo n , J un e 5, 1975 at
and IS he r eby ordered com
the off te e of the Cle rk of the BEAU TICI AN
W I I h
put e d, ··~t,erttfted , lev ted and
m a n age r 's lrce nse Phone
extende:cf upon
the ta x Vtllage of Syracuse Oh 10, for
· 992 2890 or 992 560 2
duplicate and collec ted by the 300 tons, more or less, of state
5 29 6tc
sa me offtcers m the sa me s pectfteatton 40A asphalt1c hot
manner and at the same ttm e mIX tn place at tocat 1on s to be
that taxes for general pur destgnat ed Btds are to be on
poses for each of sa td years the prt ce per ton cost The
are cert tfted , extended and Vtlfag e r eserv es the r tght to
(OIIe t ted Satd tax shall be r e tect a ny or all brds
3 FA MILY ca r po rt s at e,
pla ced
befo r e
and
rn
Thu r sdav and F r tday , May
Kathry n H Crow
pref er ence to all other ttem s
29 and 30, 10
6 Btkes,
CLERK
and for 'lhe full amount
cl ot ht ng , and ~ther 1t e m s
ther eof The funds d ertved
Th rrd hO IJSe below Eastern
fro m sai d tax levy hereby 151 22 29 2tc
H1gh School
requ tred s hall be placed tn a
5 18 Jtp
separ ate and dt s tm c t fund ,
and . together w 1th mterest
The Almaoac
YARD Sal e
F rtda y a nd
col lec ted on the sa me , shall be
Sat
urd
ay
tf
no
ram on lot
irrevocably pl"edged for the By
United
Press
In·
bes
td
e
of
D&amp;J
's
Hous e of
payment of the prtn c1pat and teroatlonal
Fabr tcs
1 mtle below
Interest of sa1d notes or th e
M tddl e port on Rt 7 Old
bOnds tn antlctpat to n of whteh
Today is Thursday, May 29,
bottles and di Shes, collec
they are tssued , when and as the !49th day of 1975 with 216
tor s s tam ps and ptetur es,
the sam e falls du e, provtded ,
good clothmg tor adult and
however that to the extent to follow ,
ch ildren some polyest e r
that surplus wa te rwork s
The moon 1S approaching
oth e r
1tems
too
a nd
revenue s are approprtated
nume rous to ment1o n
and applied to the payment of its last quarter.
5 29 lt c
the no tes , sa 1d ta~ need not be
The morning stars are
lev ted
5 FAMILY Ya rd Sal e Wt ll be
SEC T ION 8 Th ts Counctl , Mars and Jupiter.
he ld F rtday and Saturday
tor and on behalf of the Vtllage
The evening stars are MerMay 30 and 31 fro m 9 am
of Pom eroy , Oh1o , hereby
ttll dar k at 75 Elm St 1n
covenants that 1t wrtl r estr 1ct cury, Venus and Saturn.
Mtddl e por t Phon e 992 5867
the use.a t:ithe proceedS of fh"e
Those born on thiS date are
5 29 2tc
no tes nereby a ut hortzed In
such i'han'ner and to such under the sign of Gemini.
exte nt tf an y, as may be
.
necessarv after taktng 1nto
accou n t
r easone ble
ex
pectat tons at the ttme the debt
'2 BEDRM mobtl e home , JOB
Is Incurred so th~t they wtll
Page St , •n Mtddleport S75
not constt t ute "a rb1 t rage
depo s tt reQ urred
bands " under Sectton 103 (d ) of
S·11tfc
the In ternal Revenue Code
lnd the regulations prescnbed
3 /l. Nb 4 ROOM fur nts hed anci
thereunder The Vttlage Clerk
un furn tshed
apartments
IN
ot any other offtcer havt ng
Phone 992 5434
respons1btltty w tfh respect to
4 12 tfc
the tss uance of said notes ts
.
- - - - - -- - ·-- IUthortzed and d trec ted to
PRIV AT E meet1ng room for
give llf"' ~ appropr1ate cer
any orga n 1zatton phone "i92
CONTACT
tlftcate on beha lf of the
3975
I
village , on ~the date of deltvery
3 ll lf c
of satd notes for mclusion tn
the tra nsc r 1pt of proceeding.s ,
/l. PT l1 ke new, 3 ro oms, w d h
992-2156
settlng forth t he facts ,
large bath, tabletop ran ge,
tstrmates and circumstances
large c loset East Mem $ 1 ,
end reasonable e:.cpectat•ons
Pom e ro y See to apprec tate
perta1n1ng to the use of the
Phone Galltpolts dur tng day
proceeds thereof and the of Po meroy tn th a t sa td notes
146 9699 , evenrngs 446 9 539
provis ton s of satd Section must be au thO rtzed to r et re
4 10 lfc
1
and
regulatron s outstanding notes and there by
IOJ(d}
thereunder
p~eserve the cre dtt of the
FURNISHEO
apartment ,
SECTION 9 •Tha t the Ytllage
and therefore It shall
adults only In Middleport
Viillege Clerk is hereby take
effect
upon
tfS
adoption
Phone 992 3874
directed to forward a certified
Adopt od May 5, 1975
J 15 tfc
copy .of this ordinan ce to the
County Auditor .
Dale E Sm rt h ' TRAILER spa~.~ . t mile fro m
SECTION 10.
That thiS
Mavor
Pomeroy Phone 992 5858
ord inance tS hereby decla red
5 2 tfc
to be tan emergency measure Attest
- - - ----------ne(es$ary for the preservat ton Jan e Walton
of the public peace . health ,
,TRAILER space tor r en t '"
M tddleport
Ca ll 992 2625
••fetv. comfort and we lfare of Clerk ot Counttl
.t 27 tfc
the tnhabitants of the VIllage 151 22 29, 2tc

TURF TRIM
MOWER
'72.9QCKDJ

'104.95CKD1

Lost

For Rent or Sale

Pets For Sale

Wanted To Buy

Moble Homes -For Sale

For Rent
I

Uf.!N ISHE D 2 rm and bath
a pt ftrs1 flo or Mtddlepor l
Phon e 992 387 1
5 29 Jtp

TR A ILER space, ChOI Ce
loca tiOn
Na t ur a l
ga s
availab le P hon e 992 2685
after S p m
5 29 3tp
O NE Duplex apt m Mtd
dle port 1 house tn Pomeroy
Call (3041 882 2050, col lec t
5 22 li e
TWO bedroom ho use and
garage 325 Spr1 ng Ave
Re ferences Phone 992 7660
5 22 tfc

Yard Sale

For Rent

CARRIER
WANTED
MASON

THE DAILY SENTINEL

..

7'1 ACRE S land

and loc us t
posts Also 1965 F ord LTO
Phone 742 3656
5 23 52 tp

lOLA'S
BEAUTY SALON

5 RM HOU SE , bath , two
be drms
basemen t , ga s
h ea t Ru tlan d St , Mtd
dlepor t Phone 992 7091
5 28 6tc

John St •• Next To
Grade School

992-2549 Syracuse, 0.

15 ACRE good land Close to ·Moun t Unto n Ch ur ch Own e r
5 B 1 mo .
wt ll ha ndle on la nd contr act. '- - - - - - - - - - - - '
$1 000 down $50 per mo nth a t
6 pet •nl e res t Wrtt e or ca ll
John R Stout Rt J, Alban y,
Oh10 Phone 698 53 13
5 28 7tc

FOR FREE
ESTIMATES

SERV ICE s tat10n and gar ag e,
tn Rutland Will fma nce or
lease Phon e 742 5052
5 14 26tc

KENMOR E washer , heavy
dut y, use d 3 mont hs, ex
ce ll e nt condttton, 5150
Phon e 985 4175
5 18 6tp
STRAWBERRIES , 65c qt
Place orders now b y
phontng 985 3897
s 28 4tc
STRAWB ERRI ES by th e bo x
or c rate Ge ratdm e Cle land ,
phon e 949 4121
5 28 tic
TH E MOST deltcro us tomato
yo u ever tas ted • HOLMES'S
ME X IC A N, G tant p tn k
Meaty , s uba c•d plants B
Ou1senberry Phon e 992
2954 Sy r acuse, Oh 10 45779
5 28 4t p
- - - -- -- - - - - - - - 19 73 350 HOND A, 4 cyl Phon e
992 2063
S 28 Jtc

B EDDING pl ants, po tt e d
plan ts, ge ra niUm s, azaleas,
pel unra s, porch bo xes,
ha ngmg baskets, Cle land s
Gera ld tn e
Gr ee nhouse ,
Cleland , Racme, Ohto 45771
5 18 ti c

On alummum replacement
w1ndow s, s td•ng , storm
doors and wmdows , ra tl mg ,
phone
Charles
Ltsle ,
Syracuse, Oh1o
Carl
Jacob , Sales Represen ·
tat1ve

MEX ICA N t oma t o pl an ts
organ1c g rown , very s weet
and dehctous P ho ne 992
2646
5 25 3tc
1974 CB 360 HOND A mo to·r
cyc le less than a yea r old
P hone 949 59n after 5 p m
5 25 3tp
-,. - - - -

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

FE RG USON 30 tr actor , ltk e
the da y It was new Phon e
949 595 3
5 27 Stc
- -~ - - - ------ -GRAVE LY wtth stck le ba r ,
S225 Phone 7&lt;~ 2 3063
5 29 Jtc
_ ..... _
O N E black &lt;8" pony and 1 ·
bla ck Te nn Walker Ph one
992 3630
s 29 61c
CB 's An ten nas, t rS hmg ba1t ,
f•sh tn g s upplies , guns and
ammo lnd1an Joe's Sports
and CB 's JOB Page St ,
Mrddl eport
S ts JOtc

L

I

NEIGLER
Building Supp~
Racine. Ohio
We Build the Best and
Repair the Rest ,
-Cabinets InstalledCall Before 7 30 A M
Or Alt~r6:00 P.M.
949-360.
5-7 I mo.

GENERAL Repatr , Clean up
and
haul ing ,
cu tl tng,
we ldrng
ca r pen tr y,
p lu mbtng, e lec m asonry
and general r e mod el tng
Cal l Sktl Pool 992 5126
5 13 26tc

C:ORPSE?

WRISTS TAPED BEHIND
HER-AND CiUARDED BY
A FEROCIOUS DOCi!

Nathan B1ggs
Rad1ator Spectafist

Ph 992 -2174

CAPTAIN EASY
'~~ TE L~ MY 5T0r&lt;:Y TO
~ LAWYE:R· AFTER I
~EI' MY AUNT eTHEl:

PomeroY

BUDDY~

Blown
Insulation Services
Blown mto W•lls &amp; AHtcs'
STORM
WINDOWS&amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING-SOFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

Wolfe &amp;Ward
Garage
PHONE 992-2823
Col"ldor St
Pomeroy, 0
OPEN 9 am to6 p m
Monday thru Saturday
• W e wtll p1ck up &amp; de liv e ry
Specoal low pnces on all
mechani ca l ;,.vork
1 - - ------'5:..,:.1_;1_;m_;o.:..__J

LARRY LAVENDER.
Syracuse, OhiO
Ph , ••• 3993
· 4 10·1 mD_:_

BOR~ LOSER

FOF-STAR'11;RS,' MR '/EfaEF~STE'R, 'OJ
p.J&lt;,t; fOSS!:'SS'W 0 1= N-J E' ~II&lt;E,W;L'/
c:GMI ~/&gt;,N\ f'ERSOt-.IAL.IT'/

0. J. LAUDERMILT
ROOFING

Bissel Bn•bws
CoitdluctDI Co.

Pleasant Ridge

Chester, Ohio

Reasonable Rates

Phone 992-7665

&gt; 1 mo

410 -1 mo

..

HElL
Atr condtttonrng , plum btng, heating , roof 1 ng
spouttng , general sheef
m e tal work .
Free Estimates
Phone 949- 59~ 1
Emergency 949::2211
or 992-5700

and

/

Phone 992-5682 or
992 -71 21
5-14 1 n1o
WIL L trtm or cut trees and
s hrubb e ry ,
c lea r
out
basements , a tttcs , e tc
Phon e 949 322 1 or 742 A4 41
5 18 26tc

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE--THE SHUSH FUND

.

..

AWMINUM &amp;
VINYL SIDING
FREE ESTIMATES
PH. 949-5184

.

_

4 2 75

Roger Hysell's
Garage

I

GLEN R.
Bissell

Racine Plumbing
&amp;Heating

,5. • · ) mQ

EXCAVAT IN G, dozer load e r
a nd back h oe work septrc
tanks
tnstal led , dump
trucks a nd Ia boy s fo r h tre,
Wtll haul ftll dtrt. top SOt\
ltmes to ne and g ravel , Call
Bob or Roger Jeff e rs day
phone 992 7089 , n1g ht phone
992 3525 or q92 5232
2 11 tfc
-------- - ,
,..,:::::1-'l i C tA NKS CL EA NI:D
Reasona ble RATE S Phone
446 4782 Ga lit PO itS JOhn
Russell owner
4 9 tfc
E LWOOO BOWERS REPAIR
Sweepe rs toas ter s, rrons,
all sma ll appl ta nces La wn
mower ne:.c t to Sta te H1gh
way Garage on Ro ut e 7
Phone 985 3825
4 16 1fc

NAW, I JUST

HOW LONG

T 'GET OUT OF TI-ltS
MONKEoY SUIT BEFORE WE LEFT,

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

I Trustworthy
2 Exclude
3 Ear part

pamed

5 Work
10 Love, 1ri

GASOUNE ALLEY

Oh,dear!

Well , that's
encouraqnq!

r.-w_a_s_n-:,t;--s-u-re-:-:rt---:-""""'"
I!

TampiCO
11 Convict's
hope
12 "- a nd
Molly "
( 2 wds. )
14 Surnrrler
(Fr )
15 Grassland
16 Tout's
offering
17 Woe IS me!
21 Crux 24 Spamsh
lady
25 Old radio's

11
13
16

CAPRICORN (Oec. d .....
19) There w1il be two avenues
at gam opened to you laday
One wtll come from a least·
e~~:pec ted
most~S urprletng
source

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Your sphere of mfluence today
!S muc h greater than you know
You re co mrng through loud
and c lear to people you're not
even awa re of

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20·Fell. " '
You wtll be the rec1p~ ol
some good news loday. SNre
tt w1t h a fnend who wtll aiM find
tl hel pf ul

LEO (Julr 23-Aug. 22) You'll
be enterr ng tnto an arrange-

me nt based on a·very 1dea trst1c
premrse The end result looks
very promrsrng fo r all

Yesterday's Answer

20 WISe man 31 Agile
21 " Planet of 32 Cotton fabriC
the - "
33 Opposed to VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept, 22) The
rate of yo ur return w1H be bas34 Elysium
Introductory 22 Tiber
e d on the quality of your work
35 - dog
Contrn umg to do your best
Cho1ce •
tributary
36 " All About pays off m prest1ge and dollars
Measured
23 Gyrate
"
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) 11
Bedeck
26 " Aren't
37 Tmy b1rd
you r Instincts tell you to take a
Lummox
You Glad 38 Perched

17
18
19 - Moffo

-

u.e..

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.
21) 1n1orma110n Will lllter down
to you today through a -Y
mystenous cha nnel Heed 11,
tho ugh you may be dubtoua. It
could prove very valuabte

TAURUS (April 20·MIJ 20)
You II do well compe11t1vely
now 1t you reserve somethmg
fo r that extra push You may
not have to use tt. but It'll be
there tf needed

CANCER (June 21·Julr 22)
Have deftnrte goals 1n mrnd .today tn commercial dealtngs
You have a strong hand tf you
know exactly what you want

4 Sphere
5 Tibetan
monk
6 J eanne d ' 7 Mars h
s V1va
toreador'
9 Caddoan
Indian

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Neo• . ,
You re extra-protective of peo.
pie under you r charge Those
you ve cared for and helped
won't forget your klndneu.

PISCES (Feb, 20-M. . . . . .
One who could wrll grant you a
needed 1avor tf you're 1101 too
t1m1d to ask He'd volunteer,
but he s not aware of your
sttuatmn

~Yo.ur
\j).'Birthday
May 30, 197S

You wrll gam a very valuable
a lly thiS year who w1ll be belh
IdealiStiC and loyal ThrOIIgll
th ts prest1grous person·a con·
!acts , doors w1ll be opened.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE AIIN t

AT 8 RIDGE

39
You,...•"~
r,-Bo-T,y~...,WIN

- ·"-'s
,Z1
28

They'll Do It Every Time

I"U_L..._AB_N_E_•

JAA~

~r ... r;. ~

~wx;r

5EW IN G
M A CHINE ,
Repa rrs serv tce , a ll makes
992 22!!.-1 The F abrtc Shop ,
Pome roy Author rzed Stng er
Sa t es an d Se rvt ce We
s h a r p en 5 c•s s or s
3 19 tic

A

AN
,
~f.t.lfG
QUIRK~· "
'-1!11iil!;T,_-....,;n~~r

IT COULD BLON UP 'THE: THERE'S NOBODY
ENTIRE PLANET IF II LIKE THATAFDLJND
FELL INTDTHt:::HANDS
OF s::::w\~C:.HIIl.DISt:!

- I Kt-DW I CAN
TRUST TH~ NUC.L5AR
RE7ACfOR TO YOU, HIGH
LUMP!!- _YOU ARE NOT

""""' 'Yc ,_,

DtCOOING

rr-

PSYCHonATU
~r-1'"11 n

:;;.:; .-

r1:;=~~~~~~~~~~!:::~~~~~~~~~

SIJT' A 8W.D -

~~~~~~~~~~~~3~~~~_:~~~~~

FRO'A HIS
FRNJ .. fHA'f'6

HERE, YOU

DIFFO.'

Bi~1 ~N 1-:B7~~~BE
AGAIN . ON Tl-I EGUT
LEVEL1 I M EAN
/Ill~~

WATCH WOMEN
5HOP 1 LEARN
WHAT1HEY
LI KE ..

TAKE WM PO RADIO
WHERE EVER YOU GO
THIS WEEKEND
and
LISTEN TO YOUR FAVORITE HITS

WHAT DO "'E

THINK OF MV l'WO
NEW TABLECLOTHS ,

31

AND HEARING Tl-IO&amp;E

i~=:

:_

b-I-I-I-I-+Guinea ~I-t-t-

32 New
town
35 Famous

radio
children's
program
(2 wds.)
fO Birds' home
U Price

29
Gawame followed wKII the

WEST

EAST

• A QJ 9 8

• 10 7 5 4

¥643
+J5

¥5
+Q87

"'JIO a

"'K 9 7 3 2

SOUTH !D)

• K3
¥AQJ9B
+A 9 4
"'A65

1-=-+--+-1--+--+West

North

East

I.
Pass

3¥
Pass

3.
Pass

(2

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

0\SH RE:GIBTERS ICIN::i
UP SALE&amp; DOESN'T ......- ..._

how

lo work

it:

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

HURT EITHE:R. !

'

seven
Lancelot turned to Mtw•ed
and said, " Here ' s •..tiler
friendly trick for you "'l1lell he
played h1s mne spot . . . Mordred made another tridt whll a
jack
"Gadzooks, " said Mut•a1.1
"Methinks 1 hke yot1 Wier
when you act as an e__,., "Tis
best I take my ace of sptllilllere
11 IS lulled to sleep by Ill)' loft

words''

Both vulnerable

:!~:Vicarithz--H+-+­

•

·

So Mordred played bla lee or

South

1¥
4¥

spades and held Lanet!18t to a
c ontract that would
lll!en
beaten 1f Gawame
been able to gam the

Openmg lead - J "'

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O"s, ete Slncle !etten, By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
Lancelot, the peerless knight
hints. Each day the code letters are dltrerent.
and bridge player, looked over
at wily Mordred sitting West
CltYPTOQUOTES
and remarked, "I am gomg to
treat you hke a friend for th1s
AVMMFIE
UIEMC
AVIE
SJELW hand. "
Then Lancelot played the four
NMRWBC,
VLDSMV
DSLW
AVIE of clubs from dummy
Gawaine , Sitting East, had to
LWF
• RWCDRDJDRIWC.- ~lay a low club and Mordred's
GLZC
Jack was allowed to hold the
trick. He led a second club.
UGLVMWUM
FLVVIZ
Lancelot
won With h1s ace and
.,.....- - - - - - - - - - ' -.....-------------,c--- Yesterday's Cryptoquote: A MAN SHOULD KNOW HIS OWN drew trumps
with three leads,
MEASURE AND KEEP IT IN VIEW IN AU. AFFAIRS, beiDf careful to win the third
GREAT OR SMAIL. - JUVENAIJS
one m dummy. ·Then he played
&lt;C t9n Kino Feat.,.. Syndicate, Jnc.l
the deuce of diamonds

The b1ddmg
West

North

bas beell: 2t
East

.._

••
Pass
I +
Pass
I•
Pas~ 3 •
Pass
1
You, South, hold
• K Q 9 8 5 ¥ A A f • '"I 71
Whatdoyoudonow?
•
A- Bid lhreu,.dH. ft611- . . .
live spades aad hy ltl 1 ,
•
least five dubs.
'
TODAY' S QUESIIUN
Your partner contmu• .. """'
clubs What do you do _ ,
Answer Tom...-

q
'

+

.
,

;
'

•

ELVINEY?
PITCH IT
IN iHERE,

WMPO A.M., 6:00 til 8:30

CHARLIE
~!

WMPO F.M. 6:00 til Midnight
•

r•

I

Lancelot drips with kindnlll
NORTH
• 62
¥ K 10 7 2
tKI0632
""Q 4

..

'

BE DROOM
of ground
fue l 0 11 furnace, a c ,
br eezeway end large garage
•n the country bu1 close to
tow n On hardtop road , 2
tre•ter se tup s tncluded Call
992 7649 after d p m or 992
25 19 anv ttme fo r a p
pomtm ent
4 30 26tc

--1--1--1--1--1--l

30 Wine cask

:

€.1~

Real Estate for Sale

Family"
(2 wds.)
City or
canal
Mam
artenes

R--~:-:-~'"':"'":'-::":-:-:"""'V-::"::":::"""'-~-...---------.:'r-------'"'!:""., 29 Grit

r-:-:----"1

PS)'OiiC.

J

DOWN

1 Unaccom

I

GU NS AND AMMO - Our
summe r stock •s now
ar rrvm g R1fles , s hotgu ns,
ptstols , r e loa d•ng equrp
scop es, ammunittons , 22
MAG h p $3 pe r box , $27 50 BUY
IT
TODAY
AS
pe r carton (500 1 22 l r h p
SOMEONE
S2 10 per loop Get them TOMORROW
wh1l e '"'"'Y last Store hour s WILL. CALL 992-3325.
etfectrve Mav 19 Monday
Thursdav 9 a m to 6 p m ,
f rtday and Saturday 9 am
to 9 p m VILLAGE GUN
SHOP PE, 26 6 M•lt St ,
Mtdd le por t
5 18 JOtc

For FrldiJ, MoJ 30, 1975
ARIES (Mwch 21-April 18)
The way you II cope wrth a mator rssue today will be fortunate
for you Follow your hunches
You II s ucceed desp1te others'
doubts

~

!HAT'S ALL!

FUNNY BUSINESS

-- - --- -- ____ _l_~.:''P

THIS IS IT - Over 4 acres
Walk to school and room for a
pony L1ke new 1nsrde home DOZ ER work , land c lc artng
with ce ntral atr and heat Nr ce
by the acr e hourly or
fru it room , shower and was h
F arm pond s ,
c ontr ac t
ro ad s etc Large dozer and
room for the work1ng man
operator wrlh over 20 years
Double garage, barn room and
expe rtence P u tl tns Ex
cave lor p1cn1ckmg Want IUS!
ca vattng Pomeroy , OhtO
Phone 992 2478
$23,500.00
12 19 tic
ONE ACRE - Nearly leve l
wtth extra nrce 2 bedroom D &amp; 0 TREE Trrmmmg , LO
mobile home Uld1ty bu1ldmg,
vears ex per 1ence Insured
fr eees ttmat es Call992 3057,
concrete floor , patro, rural
Coo lv tlle Phone (I ) 667
water
In
t he
countr y
3041
$10,000.00 , •
4 30 tf c
LOOK AT THIS - Large and
muc h cheaper than a new E X CA VAliNI..l' , vozer ,
Bac kho e dtl c her, wa t er
house. Hot water heat, full
l •nes, footers dra tn s , roads
basement ,
4 bedrooms,
clnd brush cleaning No 10b
family and dtnmg room, 2
too s mall, no weather too
bad
Phone Charles R
baths, 2 pqrches A real n1ce
Hatfte ld, Rt 1, Rut land ,
older home. Only $10,000 00
Ohto Phone 742 6092
MODERN 3 bedrooms
5 2 52tp
large bath, l1v 1ng 18x30, 7
enormous closets, 2 concrete
porches, dry basemen1, gas
tC K ho use on Sec ond St ,
F A fur nace, ,garage with BRPomeroy
, downtown
shop, and lha acres of land
Su1 table for l1vmg quart ers
$23,500,
up sta1rs , sma ll bustn ess
dow n , Offr ce or home Wtf htn
NEW LISTING 5 room
walk 10g d t~tanc e of all
house, 2 bedrooms , bath,
s tores Ca ll 99 3489
small bAsement , all utll rti es,
s 29 Jtc
front porch on good street 1n
Middleport. Only 56,000 00

6 oo-Sunme Semmar 4, Summer Semester 10.
6 25-Farm Report 13.
6 3()-Five Minutes to L1ve By 4; News 6; Bible Answers a, Public Art airs 10, Blue Ridge Quartet 13.
6 35-Columbus Today 4
6 45-Mornlng Report 3; Farmllme 10.
7 0{}-Today 3,4, 15; AM America 6, 13; CBS News 8, 10.
a oo-.-Lassle ~ . Capt Kangaroo 8, Schoolies 10,
Sesa me St 33
B 3()-Big Valley 6, Popeye 10.
8· 55- Chuck White Reports 10
9·QO-A M 3, Phil Donahue 4, 15; Lucy Show a; Capt
Kangaroo 10, Mornmg with D J 13, Walsh's
Animals 33
9 31}--Not For Women Only 3; Dinah 6; Galloping
Gourmet 8, New Zoo Revue 13, Blue Grass Music
33
IO ·QO-Celebrity Sweepstakes 3,4, 15; Joker's Wild B, 10;
Dinah 13, You Owe It to Yourself 33
10 3()-Wheel or Fortune 3,4, 15; Gambit 8, 10; Mulligan
Stew 33
11 OG-H1gh Rollers 3,4,15, One Life to Live 6, Now You
See It 8, 10; June Wayne 33.
11·3()-Hollywood Squares 3,6,15, Blankely Blanks 13,
News 4, Love of Life 8,10, Mele Hawall33
11 :55-Graham Kerr 8; Dan I mel's World 10
12 ·0G-Jackpoi 3, 15, Password 6, 13; Bob Braun's 50 50
Club 4, News 8,10; MISter Rogers 33

FREE ESTIMATES

Home Building
Room Additions
and O.r~a

CAR PET ln s tallatton , S1 25
pe r yard Call R 1chard
west Phon e 843 2667
5 d 26tc
Rooft ng , Spouttng , Ge m tn t
hit tn r eplace ment. Wtn
do ws, compl ete r emodelmg
Phon e 742 6273 or (J04) 77 3
5684

6 3()-NBC News 3J, 15, ABC News 1,3, Bewitched 6;
CBS News a, 10, Zoom 20k33
7 ·QO-Truth or Cons 3; Probe · 4, Bowling for Dollars
6; WCHS-TV Report 8; Aviation Weather 20,33;
News 10; Jimmy Dean 13; Phil Donahue 15.
7 :3()-Porter Wagoner 3; Pop Goes the Country 4, New
Candid Camera 6, Black Perspective on the news
20,33; TreasureHunt10, ToTelltheTrulh13.
8.QO-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4, 15; Night Stalker 6, 13 , We'll
Gel By 8, 10; Washington Week In Review 20,33
8 3()-Baseball 3,4; Chico &amp; the Man 15, ; We' ll Get By
8,10; Wall Streek Week 20,33.
9 :QO-Hol L Baltimore 6,13; Rockford Flies 15; Movie
"Dracula" 8, 10, Masterpiece Theatre 20; Con·
sumer Survival Kit 33 .
9 3G--Odd Couple 6, 13; Assignment America 33
10:QO-ABC News Closeup 6,13 , Pol lee Woman t5;
News 20; Paul Nuchlms 33
11 ·oo-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15.
11 :30--Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Wide World Special 13;
Sammy &amp; Company 6, Movie "C' mon, let's Live 1
Lillie" 8; Movie "Theatre of Death" 10, Janak! 33.
1 QO-Midnlgh1 Spec ial 3,4,15; Wide World Special 6;
Movie "The Colossus of New York" 10.
2· 3()-Siar Trek 4
3 :30--Movle "The Brass Bottle" 4
5, 30--Movle "Amazons of R orne" 4,
chance on a proposition. do I .
Pass up lhe deal 1f you don't
hear that small tnner ~oice.

FRIDAY, MAY 30,1975

SEPT IC TA NK S c le aned
Mode rn Santtatton 99 2 3954
or 992 7349
9 18 tf c

f. R·i"tE--ciin~-;:-u-c;;-.;;,--co

a:

Pomeroy, Ohio

Ph. 915-4102

Automobile
Transmission
Repair

I

COU lD CARE
LE 55 ~

FREE ESTIMATES

Grand Opening

5

WE'RE DE W CK,Y PARI'NT5 OF
Di:O WONDER· WOII&lt;IN' YOUTH,
MIZ VA N PE W ,OR MAY L CA~ L
YO U5E ETHELfoOITA ~

TELL IT TO
THE MARINE5,

..

~-----

12 · 30-Biank Check 3, 15; Spm &gt;econd 6, 13; Search for
Tom arrow 8, 10; Elet . Co. 33 ,
12 55-NBC Nel'(s 3, 15.
I GO-News 3, All My Children 6,13, Phil Donahue 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10, Not For Women Only 15;
Zoom 33
I ·30--Days of Our Lives 3,4,15; Let' s Make a Deal 6, 13;
As the World Turns 8, 10; Mulligan Stew 33 .
2 Q0-$10,000 Pyramid 6, 13, Guiding Light 8, 10;
Woman 33
2 3()-Doctors 3,4, 15, Big Showdown 6,13, Edge of
Nigh! 8,10, In Performance at Wolf Tra p 33
3 ·QO-Another World 3,4,15; General Hospital 6,13;
Price Is Right 8,10; Interface 20.
3:30-Qne Life to live 13, Lucy Show 6; Match Game
a, 10, The Bolero 20, Magic of Oli Painting 33.
4 ·QO-Mr Cartoon 3, I Dream of Jeannie 4, Somerset
15; Gilligan' s Is 6; Tattletales 8, Sesame St. 20,33;
Movie " looking lor Love" 10; Mike Douglas 13.
4 :3()-Bewltched 3; Merv Griffin 4; Mod Squad 6;
Mickey Mouse Club
Bonanza 15.
5 OG-F Bl 3; Andy Griffith 8; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Ironside 13.
5·3()-News 6, Beverly Hillbillies 8, Hodgepodge Lodge
20; Gel Smart 15; Elec Co 33
6 :QO-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Elec Co 20;
Campus Sounds 33 ,

THURSDAY, MAY 29, 1975

3 0()-A nother World 3,4,15, General Hospital 6,13,
Price 1s Right a,10, Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20; Play
Chess 33.
3 30-Qne Ltfe to live 13, Lucy Show 6, Match Game
8, 10; Feeltng Good 10; Changing Rhythm 33
4 0()-Mr Cartoon 3, I Dream of Jeannie 4; Somerset;
Gt lllga n' s Is . 6; Tattletales 8; Sesame Sl 20,33;
Movie "Hell on Frisco Bay" 10, Mike Douglas 13
4 J()-Bew1tc he d 3, Merv GriUin 4, Mod Squad 6,
Mickey Mouse Club 8, Bonanza 15.
5 OG-F BI 3; Andy Gr~lftth a , Mister Rogers' Neigh
borhood 20,33, I ronslde 13
.
5 3()-Ne ws 6, Beverly H lllblllles 8 Hodgepodge lodge
20, Get Smar t 15, Elec . Co 33.
6 O&lt;l-/'lews 3,4,8, 10,13,15, ABC News 6; Elec. Co 20,
One or a Kmd 33 ,
6 3()-N BC News 3,4, 15, ABC News 13, Bewitched 6;
CBS New s 8, 10; Zoom 20,33
7 0()-Truth or Cons 3, American life Syle 4, Bowling
lor Dollar s 6; What's My Line a, News 10; Let's
Make a Dea l 13, J1mmy Dean 15; Lock , Stock &amp;
Barrel 20, , Nova 33.
7 3()-Hollywood Squares 3, Hollywood Squares 4,
Ohio Lot ary 6; New Price Is Right 8, Consumer
Survival K1t 20; Wild Kmgdom 10, To Tell the Truth
13, Ame ri can Ouldoorsman 15
a 0()-S unshine 3,4, 15, Barne y Miller 6, 13; The Waltons
8,10, Btll Moyers Journal 20; Evening at Sym phony 33
8:3()- Bob Crane 3,4,15, Karen 6,13
9 OG-Mov1e 3,15, Stree ts or San Fanclsco 6,13, Movie
" The War Wagon" 4; Bighorn 8; In Performance
20,33; Mov1e "Fa te Is the Hunter" 10
10 .0()-H arr y 0 6, 13; Phil Donahue 8; News 20, Woman
33
10 3()-Horace Marshall 33
11 0()-N e ws 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15,
11 3()-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15, Wide World Special 13;
FBI 6; Movie " The Great While Hope" 8; Movie
" About Mrs. Leslie" 10; Janak I 33
12 3()-Wide World Spec1al 6; Tomorrow 3,4, News 13

992-3092

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

.._"'1"""' _ _ ~-·--··::·----...,.._ ........... ~..... _.._.._.. ......_ ....

Television
log
for
easy
viewing
-

1,

Saii!S &amp; Service

READY MIX CONlK~It
del 1ve r e d rtght to your
pro te c t r ~stand easy F ree
es tt mates Phon e 992 3284,
Goeg lem Ready Mtx Co ,
M1ddlepor t Ohto
6 30 lfc

HOW TO SELL YOUR
PROPE R TY &gt; LIST IT
WITH CLELAND'S
992-2259

lI

I

~

i-

A

F rom the la rges t Truck or
Bu lldozer Radiator to the
s malles t Hea te r Core

' In SyraCU!&gt;l!&lt;
Now open for season Now
available- mos t var1et1es
o t vegetab le pla n t s &amp;
flow e rs plus potted flow e r ~..:
OUR SPECIALTY over
2.000 hangtng baskets of
Petunias, Ivy , Gera ntums ,
Vtpes, and Begon1as
..
TOP QUALITY AT
LOWEST PRICES
992 5776
4 17 1 mo

--- -------

ORDER any CB fr om lndta n
Jo e's Sports and ce sa t 10
pe t above cos t and shrp
ptng JOB Pag e St , Mtd
dleport
5 18 30tc

SMA~

dlafO
Service

V. V. JOHNSON
AND SON, INC.

0.

BEO DIN G PLANT S potted
plants . gera n•ums, azaleas ,
pet un 1as , porch bo xes,
hangtng ba skets Cleland 's
Greenhouse ,
Gera ld1ne
Cleland , Racm e, Ohto
5 15 tic

--- ---

~

Hubbard's
Greenhouse

3 ACRES CLOSE IN story fram e home, 2 or 3
bedrooms , bath, part
ba se m ent, o w n water
sys1em . FA furna ce, w rth
barn $10,900
POMEROY - H1gh on a
hr ll - ve ry prtvate Jl/ 2
a~res, 2 ntce BR , bath ,
ut1ilty R , N gas heat, a1r
co nd , porche s, garage ,
$13,000
A
CHARMING
NEW
HOME - Just 5 rn 1les out
NICe k1 tchen w Ref &amp;
Rang e , 2 BR , bath lull
basement , carpeted re'R , carport, W storage, 1
acre $22,700
MOBILE HOME - 1973
14X70 fu rnished al so ha s
d1s h washer 3 BR , 11h
baths, ax10 awnmg, s a,900
Ca n possrbiy f1nance $8,100
ROUTE 681 - 135 ac res at
1u s t $123
pe r
acre,
m1n e ra ls,
close
to
recreatton

WILKINSON

XPE~I~N"'ED

608 E.
POMEROY,

S TEREO Mode rn Walnut
stereo am fm r ad 1o com
b1nat ton , 4 speed changer , 4
s peakers separa t e controls
Balance ! 10 4 39 Use ou r
bu dg et te rm s Phon e 992
3965
s 28 tfc

~-

Help Wanted

Merle Norman
Cosmetics

MAIN

For Sale

~

-.JOB- NO WAY:

&amp;ERTA VAN PEW~

TWO NEW 3 bedr oo m homes
wlfh 1 ca r ga r age, ca rpet ed , ·
TR AILER apis Phone 992
F HA or bank ftnanet ng
52 16 or 992 3436
P ho ne 742 36 15 or see Mt lo
52512tc
Hutchmson , Rutl and
58 tfc
r UR N apt 5 room s and ba t h
ntce large ya rd , bath and 1 . l. LARG E lot s rural wa ter
av a il ab l e Hard road 3
wo Sou t h Sec ond St ,
m d es from b y pa ss on
M tdd lepor t adults only
Lea dmg Cre ek Road Phon e
Phone 992 526 2 even rngs
7~2 3108
5 21 lf c
5 9 JOt c
5 RM APT fur nts hed , on e
c hild per mt lted 3 r m apt 3 Bt: U ~LIVM ho use wa ll to
f urnts h ed ultl thes pat d
wall car pe trng la rge k1t
John Sheets 3 mtles south of
chen and bat h utdt!y room
M1ddl epor t on Rt 7
was h r oom
•1 acre
S 25 6tc
a lum tn u m stdt n g s torm
w mdows , storage butldmg
Phone
742 4601
W ill
COUNTRY Mo bil e Hom e
sac rtf tce fo r qurck sa le
Pa r k Rt J3, ten mtl es no rth
5 25 tfc
of Pomeroy Large lots wt th
concre te pattos Sid e wa lks
runne r s and o ff s tre e t
parktng Phon e 99 2 7479
12 31 ttc
SMALL fur nt s hed , 2 bedr oom
ho use at Roc k Sprtn gs No
c hildr en or pets Phone 992
2789
5 28 6t c

KUHl'S

BARGAIN CENTER

etc
5 28 IOt:c
- - - -- ----·---- --

HOU SE for sa le located on
Vt ne Stree t rn Ractne Two
sto ry fr ame three bedroom
rece ntl y r emod e led kttch en
garage , ftr eplace 75 ac re
Ca ll 949 51 14 any ftm e for
a pp otn lm e nt
5 ?3 8tc

IN

NEWSPAPER

'

CAR PENTER wo rk - cctltng ,
1970 CHEVHLE MALIBU CPE.
$1695
307 V 8, power steerrng , good G70 wtde oval trres,
rad1o, s li ver grey fm1 sh, a utomat1c trans, m ter ror
spotl ess

BUT THIS IS NO
GAS THEFT

VKIIIINARY

USiness ervices

SIGNS Pomeroy R~~~~gEL~~dG a ll p~~~.~·n~l
Of
ge n era l
re p a1r
Work
M
f
gua ra n teed 20 years ex
0 Or 0 e peroence Phon e 9925 2409
QUALITY
1 tfc

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

9 - T he Da1lv Sentmel , l&gt;!iddleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thw-sd,1y, May 29, 1975
DIC:K TRAI'Y

1

'~

LET'S 6ET RIO Of iHESE
ONE, TWO, THREE!

6U'(S

'
•

�8- The Daily Sentlne!, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thw-sday, Ma'y 29, 1975

fsj)i1~~::G;;~:if~;~~~ 1~~;~r1~g~~::~~~·~~~

AMOUNT OF s 300 000 BY
THE
V ILLAGE
OF

our wonder ful netqhbors
frtends , a nd r el&lt;ll tves tor

!m,!Elro~~H~g~~: ~~N~ ~~t'~g~~~~~~~~~~:r~ "~i~:

THE PURPO SE OF MA KIN G
IMPROVEMENT S TO TH E
WATE RW ORKS SYS TEM OF
THE
VILLAGE ,
AN D
D E c L A R 1N G
A
EMERGEN CY
N
WHEREAS , th e Coun cil of
the VI llag e of Po ~eroy , Ohm
ha s requested the Vtllage
Clerk , as f tscat off tcer to
certtfy
th e
ma &gt;um u m
ma turtty of the bon d s here m
refe rred to and the not es
herein author•zect . and such
f tscal otf tcer ha s est tmated
the ltfe of the tmproveme n t as
at leilst ftv e years and cer
f tfted th e maxtm um mat ur 1ty
of the bonds as forty years
and of the notes to be tssued '"
antlco.•patton th er eof as f tv e
yea'rs , tf so ld
pub l tcly
otherwt se on e ( 1) year l and
WHEREA S.
o u tstan dtn g

notes are about to mature

NOW , THERE F ORE , BE IT

ORDAINED by the Coun ctl of
the Vtllage of Pom er oy , Met gs

County , OhtO

SECTION 1
lha t tf tS
hereby dec lared necessary m
order to pr esene the public
peace , health . safety , comfort
and we lfare of th e tnhab tta nts

consol mg wori:ts Also the
Pontcroy Emergency for
' 11 0 " prompt servoce
fl.~rs Rtc h ard Tho m as
Sts te r and Mary Jo nf's
'"ccc ot Mr r rcd Do n• c ls
5 79 II IJ

I WOULD ltke to thffnk ever y
body who at tend ed my s tork
s how e r , May l l and a ll who
sen t th e many n1ce qlf ts to
nte
Mr
and Mr s
Gary
~ cho ld e r c r

'i

2Q

IIc

In Memoty
IN LOVI NG memory of Mrs
Mabel Se ll ers who passed
away May 29 1973
The Famtly
5 29 ltc

For F a~t Results Use 1Sentine_l Classifieds'
B
.
.
s
.
2

®

-

Employment Wanted

c

1969 CHEVY NOVA 4 DR.

$1095

6 cy l , automatrc tra ns, clean rn tenor, good t rres,

rad 1o

1968 CAMARO CPE .
$1295
6 cy l , std tra ns, radro, good tr res green lm1 s h , blk ,
vtny l bucket seats

~~~~~~~~2 2/J~Orlrig ,

LOV IN G mE"mory of Mrs
Mabel Se ll ers who passed
r!Wcly May 29 1973
Ther a m tl y
5 29 1t c

" At Cautton Light"
R1 7 1 Tuppers Platns , 0

·Real Estate for Sale

"B ARGA IN S a re our
mtddl e na me" 1n c le an ,
used
furnlfure .
GUARA NTEEO
ap
p lr ances &amp; ne~ t!.J rn..'.!.!!r~
Ope n 9 S We d through Sun .
Ph 667 3858
5 15 1 mo

NEED A new hom e burll on
your loP Con tact Mti O B
HutCh iSOn Rut la nd , OhtO
Phone 742 36 15
5 8 tfC

1

Notice

of th e vtllage , to tss ue bonds. ELDERLY lady would l1ke to
of th e Vtl lage of Pomeroy
be taken ca re of m prr vate
home or wol' ld ltke som eone
Ohto , tn the prmctpal s um of
$300 ,000, for the purpose of
Ia ltve tn her home Phone
maktng tmprovem e nts to th e ' 9Q2 73:10
5 29 3tc
waterwork s sy5tem a t th e
20"-3112 H P
v tll age
STA!J LE S AN D
SECT IO N 2 That sa td bonds CO L ES
shall be dated appro,omately
R IDIN G ACAD EMY Now
Ope n dally from 10 a m ttl! 8
Apr tl 1 19 76, s ha ll bear tn
22 "-Jl/2 H P
p m Phone 667 3 10 5 Tup
terest at the rate ortg.nally
esttmated of approxtmately
pers P la tn S Oh to
SelfPropelled
5 29 .lf c
St)( per cen t 16 percent l pe r
annum and s ha ll mature m
suostanttalty equa l annu a l CAS H patd fo r a\ 1 makes and
mod els of mobtle homes
InStallm ents over a per.od of
Phone area code 614 42J
twent y f20J years a ft er the tr
POMEROY LANDMARK
ISSua nce
95 31
9'.
~Jack W. Carsey, Mgr
4 13 lfc
Sect 1on 3 Tha t '' •s hereby
6:id!l Phone 992 21Rl
determ med that notes .n the
pnn ctpa l amount of $300 ,000 JUNK , autos, co m plete a nd
deltvered to our vard We
Shall be •ssued m anttc• palro n
p1ck up aut o bodtes and buy
of the tss uan ce of sard bonds
a ll ktnds of scra p metals and
Satd notes sha ll be dated May
•ron R tde r 's Salvage , St
15 19 75 , s hall bear mte rest at
Rt 124 Rt 4 Pomeroy , BOY •.cou t m eda l lo st Monday
th e rate of srx per cent (6 per
on parad e rout e If found
cent) per annum , payable at
OhtO Ca ll 992 5468
p le as e
ca ll
742 J78 1
10 17 tfc
mat ur.t y maturmg on Aprt l 1
R ew ard
1976 Sa td notes may be so ld as ------- -- ---~ - 5 29 67tc
here inafter prov tded •n su ch QU ICK,5"'k1 NT by ma tt from
c am era ready co p y One
d e n om •nations as may be
page $5 55 •f trs t 100, 51 15 BE AG LE brown , black and
r eques ted by the purc hase rs
whlf,e l tp on ta tl If see n ,
SECTIO N 4 Tha t sa rd note s
each addtt 1onal 100 Send
please ph on e 985 4227
Shall be exec uted by the
co p y, c heck to LET
5 28 6t p
Mayor and Vil lag e Clerk and
TERS HOP PLU S, 72 W
shal l bear the seal of the
Unto n Ath ens , Oh to Atso,
corpo ra fton They sha ll be
10b prmttng
destg ned ' Waterwor ks lm
A 29 38t p
provement Notes " and s hall
TOT AL e lect r rc 3 bedroom
be payable at The Central FOR yo ur "0 11 of Mtnk'
home butll m k1tchen full
Tr ust Company , Cmctnnat t,
Cosmettcs - P hone
base ment and large lot
Ohto The y shall ex press upon
BROWN 'S 992 5113
Ph,pn e 992 3380
th e 1r fa ce the purpose for
1 7 tfc
5 22 6tc
wht c h they are ISSued and that
thev are 1ssued tn pur su ance NOW setJrng F ull er Br ush
of this or dmance
Prod ucts phon e 992 3410
SECTION 5 That sa1d no tes
1 24 tfC
1\.KC Ap rt CO I Po odle puppi eS
shall be ftrst offered to the
-= ~-=- -----Call 9.19 20 14 af1er 5 p m
off iCer or off tcer s m charge of
5 29 3tc
the bond ret trement fund of
th e Vtllage and any notes not ONE row corn p tcke r , Frank
taken by s uch offtcer shall be
Dodder er
Box
162 , 1 YR OL D fema le Regtstered ,
sold at pr iva te sale to We tl
black a nd t an coon hound ,
Ohto
Coolvil
le,
Roth &amp; ln(lpg Inc , Ctncm na h,
$125 Also 3 month old ,
5
28
Jtp
Ohro tn accordance wtth rts
Fe m a le Reg Walker S50
Offe r to purc hase same wh• ch WANTED old up rtght ptan os,
Phon e 99 2 7222
tS he r e by acce pted , at not less
5 28 6tp
any
condtt
1on
Pay
mg
S10
than par and accrued tnlerest
each Ft r st floor onl y Wnte
and the proceeds from s uc h
good
German
and gtve dtr ectr ons to Wt tl en E XTRA
sal e exce pt any prem tum and
Sh e ph erd p ups wormed ,
Prano
Co
,
Bo
x
188
Sa
rdr
s,
the accrued rnterest thereo n
cham pron blood lm es Phone
Oh to 43946
Shall be P~•d tnto the proper
446 0373
5
28
6tp
tund and used for the purpose
5 28 Jtc
aforesa td and for no other
HAL
L
S
SALVAG
E
,
OLD
RT
purpose
33, P OM EROY , OHIO
SE CTt o'N 6 That satd notes
Sc r ap bod tes w tt h fr a m e and
shal l be the ful l gene r al
r ea r ends up to $16 Scrap
Obltgatiftn 'bf the v1llage, and
No 2 long , S1 10 hundred , 8 x 38 MOB IL E home 2
the full fa•th , credtt and
bedroom John Sheet s, J
Sc rap No 1 long . $1 25 hund
rev enue of satd v• llage are
m ties south of M1ddleport on
re d Moto r s un c leaned and
hereby pledge d for the prompt
Rt 7
'
tran smtss ton s $1 20 hund
payment of the same The par
5 25 6fc
red
value to be rece tved fr om the
5 20 tfc
sale of bonds anttctpated by
- - - - - - -- sELL yo ur mobtte ho me fo r
Satd notes , and any excess
Old
uprtght
cash 15 homes wanted , 1958
fund res ultmg from the WANTED
p anos ,
any
c ond tt1on
lhru 1972 mode ls Phon e
issu a nce of sa1d notes , shall to
(6 14) 446 14 25, Gallipolis
Paym g $10 each F trs l floor
the ex tent necessary , be used
only
Wr tt e
a nd g1ve
3 9 78tf
only for the... retire men t of sa1d
d1rec tton s to Wt tl en P1a no
notes at maturity , together
Co Box 188 Sa rd tS, Oh 10
Wtfh mter est the reon , and are
43946
her e by pl edge d fo r s uc h
5 22 6tp
purpose
SECTION 7 Tha t durtng
BABY S IT TER I or 2 days per
fur nit ur e , rce boxes,
the vear or years wh tie s uc h OLD
week Phone 992 385 3 afte r 5
bra
ss
beds
,
or
comp
le
te
notes run the re sha ll be lev ted . ho use hold s Wrtte M
P m
o
on all of the ta xable property
5 22 6tp
M1 ller , Rt 4, Pom e roy ,
tn the Vil lage of Pomeroy , m
992
7760
Ohto
Call
addllron to all other taxes a
10 7 74
PREfER 4 boys to set s ta kes.
d.rect ta x annuall v, not less
Satu rd ay S2 p er ho ur
than that whtch wou ld have
P hon e 949 41 21
Dallas
been lev ted tf bonds ha.d been
Cle land ,
INVITATION TO BID
issued wrthout pr ror tssuance
5 29 2tc
Sea led brds Will be rece1ved
of such notes Sa1 d ta x sh all be
un t tl 12 noo n , J un e 5, 1975 at
and IS he r eby ordered com
the off te e of the Cle rk of the BEAU TICI AN
W I I h
put e d, ··~t,erttfted , lev ted and
m a n age r 's lrce nse Phone
extende:cf upon
the ta x Vtllage of Syracuse Oh 10, for
· 992 2890 or 992 560 2
duplicate and collec ted by the 300 tons, more or less, of state
5 29 6tc
sa me offtcers m the sa me s pectfteatton 40A asphalt1c hot
manner and at the same ttm e mIX tn place at tocat 1on s to be
that taxes for general pur destgnat ed Btds are to be on
poses for each of sa td years the prt ce per ton cost The
are cert tfted , extended and Vtlfag e r eserv es the r tght to
(OIIe t ted Satd tax shall be r e tect a ny or all brds
3 FA MILY ca r po rt s at e,
pla ced
befo r e
and
rn
Thu r sdav and F r tday , May
Kathry n H Crow
pref er ence to all other ttem s
29 and 30, 10
6 Btkes,
CLERK
and for 'lhe full amount
cl ot ht ng , and ~ther 1t e m s
ther eof The funds d ertved
Th rrd hO IJSe below Eastern
fro m sai d tax levy hereby 151 22 29 2tc
H1gh School
requ tred s hall be placed tn a
5 18 Jtp
separ ate and dt s tm c t fund ,
and . together w 1th mterest
The Almaoac
YARD Sal e
F rtda y a nd
col lec ted on the sa me , shall be
Sat
urd
ay
tf
no
ram on lot
irrevocably pl"edged for the By
United
Press
In·
bes
td
e
of
D&amp;J
's
Hous e of
payment of the prtn c1pat and teroatlonal
Fabr tcs
1 mtle below
Interest of sa1d notes or th e
M tddl e port on Rt 7 Old
bOnds tn antlctpat to n of whteh
Today is Thursday, May 29,
bottles and di Shes, collec
they are tssued , when and as the !49th day of 1975 with 216
tor s s tam ps and ptetur es,
the sam e falls du e, provtded ,
good clothmg tor adult and
however that to the extent to follow ,
ch ildren some polyest e r
that surplus wa te rwork s
The moon 1S approaching
oth e r
1tems
too
a nd
revenue s are approprtated
nume rous to ment1o n
and applied to the payment of its last quarter.
5 29 lt c
the no tes , sa 1d ta~ need not be
The morning stars are
lev ted
5 FAMILY Ya rd Sal e Wt ll be
SEC T ION 8 Th ts Counctl , Mars and Jupiter.
he ld F rtday and Saturday
tor and on behalf of the Vtllage
The evening stars are MerMay 30 and 31 fro m 9 am
of Pom eroy , Oh1o , hereby
ttll dar k at 75 Elm St 1n
covenants that 1t wrtl r estr 1ct cury, Venus and Saturn.
Mtddl e por t Phon e 992 5867
the use.a t:ithe proceedS of fh"e
Those born on thiS date are
5 29 2tc
no tes nereby a ut hortzed In
such i'han'ner and to such under the sign of Gemini.
exte nt tf an y, as may be
.
necessarv after taktng 1nto
accou n t
r easone ble
ex
pectat tons at the ttme the debt
'2 BEDRM mobtl e home , JOB
Is Incurred so th~t they wtll
Page St , •n Mtddleport S75
not constt t ute "a rb1 t rage
depo s tt reQ urred
bands " under Sectton 103 (d ) of
S·11tfc
the In ternal Revenue Code
lnd the regulations prescnbed
3 /l. Nb 4 ROOM fur nts hed anci
thereunder The Vttlage Clerk
un furn tshed
apartments
IN
ot any other offtcer havt ng
Phone 992 5434
respons1btltty w tfh respect to
4 12 tfc
the tss uance of said notes ts
.
- - - - - -- - ·-- IUthortzed and d trec ted to
PRIV AT E meet1ng room for
give llf"' ~ appropr1ate cer
any orga n 1zatton phone "i92
CONTACT
tlftcate on beha lf of the
3975
I
village , on ~the date of deltvery
3 ll lf c
of satd notes for mclusion tn
the tra nsc r 1pt of proceeding.s ,
/l. PT l1 ke new, 3 ro oms, w d h
992-2156
settlng forth t he facts ,
large bath, tabletop ran ge,
tstrmates and circumstances
large c loset East Mem $ 1 ,
end reasonable e:.cpectat•ons
Pom e ro y See to apprec tate
perta1n1ng to the use of the
Phone Galltpolts dur tng day
proceeds thereof and the of Po meroy tn th a t sa td notes
146 9699 , evenrngs 446 9 539
provis ton s of satd Section must be au thO rtzed to r et re
4 10 lfc
1
and
regulatron s outstanding notes and there by
IOJ(d}
thereunder
p~eserve the cre dtt of the
FURNISHEO
apartment ,
SECTION 9 •Tha t the Ytllage
and therefore It shall
adults only In Middleport
Viillege Clerk is hereby take
effect
upon
tfS
adoption
Phone 992 3874
directed to forward a certified
Adopt od May 5, 1975
J 15 tfc
copy .of this ordinan ce to the
County Auditor .
Dale E Sm rt h ' TRAILER spa~.~ . t mile fro m
SECTION 10.
That thiS
Mavor
Pomeroy Phone 992 5858
ord inance tS hereby decla red
5 2 tfc
to be tan emergency measure Attest
- - - ----------ne(es$ary for the preservat ton Jan e Walton
of the public peace . health ,
,TRAILER space tor r en t '"
M tddleport
Ca ll 992 2625
••fetv. comfort and we lfare of Clerk ot Counttl
.t 27 tfc
the tnhabitants of the VIllage 151 22 29, 2tc

TURF TRIM
MOWER
'72.9QCKDJ

'104.95CKD1

Lost

For Rent or Sale

Pets For Sale

Wanted To Buy

Moble Homes -For Sale

For Rent
I

Uf.!N ISHE D 2 rm and bath
a pt ftrs1 flo or Mtddlepor l
Phon e 992 387 1
5 29 Jtp

TR A ILER space, ChOI Ce
loca tiOn
Na t ur a l
ga s
availab le P hon e 992 2685
after S p m
5 29 3tp
O NE Duplex apt m Mtd
dle port 1 house tn Pomeroy
Call (3041 882 2050, col lec t
5 22 li e
TWO bedroom ho use and
garage 325 Spr1 ng Ave
Re ferences Phone 992 7660
5 22 tfc

Yard Sale

For Rent

CARRIER
WANTED
MASON

THE DAILY SENTINEL

..

7'1 ACRE S land

and loc us t
posts Also 1965 F ord LTO
Phone 742 3656
5 23 52 tp

lOLA'S
BEAUTY SALON

5 RM HOU SE , bath , two
be drms
basemen t , ga s
h ea t Ru tlan d St , Mtd
dlepor t Phone 992 7091
5 28 6tc

John St •• Next To
Grade School

992-2549 Syracuse, 0.

15 ACRE good land Close to ·Moun t Unto n Ch ur ch Own e r
5 B 1 mo .
wt ll ha ndle on la nd contr act. '- - - - - - - - - - - - '
$1 000 down $50 per mo nth a t
6 pet •nl e res t Wrtt e or ca ll
John R Stout Rt J, Alban y,
Oh10 Phone 698 53 13
5 28 7tc

FOR FREE
ESTIMATES

SERV ICE s tat10n and gar ag e,
tn Rutland Will fma nce or
lease Phon e 742 5052
5 14 26tc

KENMOR E washer , heavy
dut y, use d 3 mont hs, ex
ce ll e nt condttton, 5150
Phon e 985 4175
5 18 6tp
STRAWBERRIES , 65c qt
Place orders now b y
phontng 985 3897
s 28 4tc
STRAWB ERRI ES by th e bo x
or c rate Ge ratdm e Cle land ,
phon e 949 4121
5 28 tic
TH E MOST deltcro us tomato
yo u ever tas ted • HOLMES'S
ME X IC A N, G tant p tn k
Meaty , s uba c•d plants B
Ou1senberry Phon e 992
2954 Sy r acuse, Oh 10 45779
5 28 4t p
- - - -- -- - - - - - - - 19 73 350 HOND A, 4 cyl Phon e
992 2063
S 28 Jtc

B EDDING pl ants, po tt e d
plan ts, ge ra niUm s, azaleas,
pel unra s, porch bo xes,
ha ngmg baskets, Cle land s
Gera ld tn e
Gr ee nhouse ,
Cleland , Racme, Ohto 45771
5 18 ti c

On alummum replacement
w1ndow s, s td•ng , storm
doors and wmdows , ra tl mg ,
phone
Charles
Ltsle ,
Syracuse, Oh1o
Carl
Jacob , Sales Represen ·
tat1ve

MEX ICA N t oma t o pl an ts
organ1c g rown , very s weet
and dehctous P ho ne 992
2646
5 25 3tc
1974 CB 360 HOND A mo to·r
cyc le less than a yea r old
P hone 949 59n after 5 p m
5 25 3tp
-,. - - - -

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

FE RG USON 30 tr actor , ltk e
the da y It was new Phon e
949 595 3
5 27 Stc
- -~ - - - ------ -GRAVE LY wtth stck le ba r ,
S225 Phone 7&lt;~ 2 3063
5 29 Jtc
_ ..... _
O N E black &lt;8" pony and 1 ·
bla ck Te nn Walker Ph one
992 3630
s 29 61c
CB 's An ten nas, t rS hmg ba1t ,
f•sh tn g s upplies , guns and
ammo lnd1an Joe's Sports
and CB 's JOB Page St ,
Mrddl eport
S ts JOtc

L

I

NEIGLER
Building Supp~
Racine. Ohio
We Build the Best and
Repair the Rest ,
-Cabinets InstalledCall Before 7 30 A M
Or Alt~r6:00 P.M.
949-360.
5-7 I mo.

GENERAL Repatr , Clean up
and
haul ing ,
cu tl tng,
we ldrng
ca r pen tr y,
p lu mbtng, e lec m asonry
and general r e mod el tng
Cal l Sktl Pool 992 5126
5 13 26tc

C:ORPSE?

WRISTS TAPED BEHIND
HER-AND CiUARDED BY
A FEROCIOUS DOCi!

Nathan B1ggs
Rad1ator Spectafist

Ph 992 -2174

CAPTAIN EASY
'~~ TE L~ MY 5T0r&lt;:Y TO
~ LAWYE:R· AFTER I
~EI' MY AUNT eTHEl:

PomeroY

BUDDY~

Blown
Insulation Services
Blown mto W•lls &amp; AHtcs'
STORM
WINDOWS&amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING-SOFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

Wolfe &amp;Ward
Garage
PHONE 992-2823
Col"ldor St
Pomeroy, 0
OPEN 9 am to6 p m
Monday thru Saturday
• W e wtll p1ck up &amp; de liv e ry
Specoal low pnces on all
mechani ca l ;,.vork
1 - - ------'5:..,:.1_;1_;m_;o.:..__J

LARRY LAVENDER.
Syracuse, OhiO
Ph , ••• 3993
· 4 10·1 mD_:_

BOR~ LOSER

FOF-STAR'11;RS,' MR '/EfaEF~STE'R, 'OJ
p.J&lt;,t; fOSS!:'SS'W 0 1= N-J E' ~II&lt;E,W;L'/
c:GMI ~/&gt;,N\ f'ERSOt-.IAL.IT'/

0. J. LAUDERMILT
ROOFING

Bissel Bn•bws
CoitdluctDI Co.

Pleasant Ridge

Chester, Ohio

Reasonable Rates

Phone 992-7665

&gt; 1 mo

410 -1 mo

..

HElL
Atr condtttonrng , plum btng, heating , roof 1 ng
spouttng , general sheef
m e tal work .
Free Estimates
Phone 949- 59~ 1
Emergency 949::2211
or 992-5700

and

/

Phone 992-5682 or
992 -71 21
5-14 1 n1o
WIL L trtm or cut trees and
s hrubb e ry ,
c lea r
out
basements , a tttcs , e tc
Phon e 949 322 1 or 742 A4 41
5 18 26tc

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE--THE SHUSH FUND

.

..

AWMINUM &amp;
VINYL SIDING
FREE ESTIMATES
PH. 949-5184

.

_

4 2 75

Roger Hysell's
Garage

I

GLEN R.
Bissell

Racine Plumbing
&amp;Heating

,5. • · ) mQ

EXCAVAT IN G, dozer load e r
a nd back h oe work septrc
tanks
tnstal led , dump
trucks a nd Ia boy s fo r h tre,
Wtll haul ftll dtrt. top SOt\
ltmes to ne and g ravel , Call
Bob or Roger Jeff e rs day
phone 992 7089 , n1g ht phone
992 3525 or q92 5232
2 11 tfc
-------- - ,
,..,:::::1-'l i C tA NKS CL EA NI:D
Reasona ble RATE S Phone
446 4782 Ga lit PO itS JOhn
Russell owner
4 9 tfc
E LWOOO BOWERS REPAIR
Sweepe rs toas ter s, rrons,
all sma ll appl ta nces La wn
mower ne:.c t to Sta te H1gh
way Garage on Ro ut e 7
Phone 985 3825
4 16 1fc

NAW, I JUST

HOW LONG

T 'GET OUT OF TI-ltS
MONKEoY SUIT BEFORE WE LEFT,

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

I Trustworthy
2 Exclude
3 Ear part

pamed

5 Work
10 Love, 1ri

GASOUNE ALLEY

Oh,dear!

Well , that's
encouraqnq!

r.-w_a_s_n-:,t;--s-u-re-:-:rt---:-""""'"
I!

TampiCO
11 Convict's
hope
12 "- a nd
Molly "
( 2 wds. )
14 Surnrrler
(Fr )
15 Grassland
16 Tout's
offering
17 Woe IS me!
21 Crux 24 Spamsh
lady
25 Old radio's

11
13
16

CAPRICORN (Oec. d .....
19) There w1il be two avenues
at gam opened to you laday
One wtll come from a least·
e~~:pec ted
most~S urprletng
source

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Your sphere of mfluence today
!S muc h greater than you know
You re co mrng through loud
and c lear to people you're not
even awa re of

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20·Fell. " '
You wtll be the rec1p~ ol
some good news loday. SNre
tt w1t h a fnend who wtll aiM find
tl hel pf ul

LEO (Julr 23-Aug. 22) You'll
be enterr ng tnto an arrange-

me nt based on a·very 1dea trst1c
premrse The end result looks
very promrsrng fo r all

Yesterday's Answer

20 WISe man 31 Agile
21 " Planet of 32 Cotton fabriC
the - "
33 Opposed to VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept, 22) The
rate of yo ur return w1H be bas34 Elysium
Introductory 22 Tiber
e d on the quality of your work
35 - dog
Contrn umg to do your best
Cho1ce •
tributary
36 " All About pays off m prest1ge and dollars
Measured
23 Gyrate
"
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) 11
Bedeck
26 " Aren't
37 Tmy b1rd
you r Instincts tell you to take a
Lummox
You Glad 38 Perched

17
18
19 - Moffo

-

u.e..

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.
21) 1n1orma110n Will lllter down
to you today through a -Y
mystenous cha nnel Heed 11,
tho ugh you may be dubtoua. It
could prove very valuabte

TAURUS (April 20·MIJ 20)
You II do well compe11t1vely
now 1t you reserve somethmg
fo r that extra push You may
not have to use tt. but It'll be
there tf needed

CANCER (June 21·Julr 22)
Have deftnrte goals 1n mrnd .today tn commercial dealtngs
You have a strong hand tf you
know exactly what you want

4 Sphere
5 Tibetan
monk
6 J eanne d ' 7 Mars h
s V1va
toreador'
9 Caddoan
Indian

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Neo• . ,
You re extra-protective of peo.
pie under you r charge Those
you ve cared for and helped
won't forget your klndneu.

PISCES (Feb, 20-M. . . . . .
One who could wrll grant you a
needed 1avor tf you're 1101 too
t1m1d to ask He'd volunteer,
but he s not aware of your
sttuatmn

~Yo.ur
\j).'Birthday
May 30, 197S

You wrll gam a very valuable
a lly thiS year who w1ll be belh
IdealiStiC and loyal ThrOIIgll
th ts prest1grous person·a con·
!acts , doors w1ll be opened.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE AIIN t

AT 8 RIDGE

39
You,...•"~
r,-Bo-T,y~...,WIN

- ·"-'s
,Z1
28

They'll Do It Every Time

I"U_L..._AB_N_E_•

JAA~

~r ... r;. ~

~wx;r

5EW IN G
M A CHINE ,
Repa rrs serv tce , a ll makes
992 22!!.-1 The F abrtc Shop ,
Pome roy Author rzed Stng er
Sa t es an d Se rvt ce We
s h a r p en 5 c•s s or s
3 19 tic

A

AN
,
~f.t.lfG
QUIRK~· "
'-1!11iil!;T,_-....,;n~~r

IT COULD BLON UP 'THE: THERE'S NOBODY
ENTIRE PLANET IF II LIKE THATAFDLJND
FELL INTDTHt:::HANDS
OF s::::w\~C:.HIIl.DISt:!

- I Kt-DW I CAN
TRUST TH~ NUC.L5AR
RE7ACfOR TO YOU, HIGH
LUMP!!- _YOU ARE NOT

""""' 'Yc ,_,

DtCOOING

rr-

PSYCHonATU
~r-1'"11 n

:;;.:; .-

r1:;=~~~~~~~~~~!:::~~~~~~~~~

SIJT' A 8W.D -

~~~~~~~~~~~~3~~~~_:~~~~~

FRO'A HIS
FRNJ .. fHA'f'6

HERE, YOU

DIFFO.'

Bi~1 ~N 1-:B7~~~BE
AGAIN . ON Tl-I EGUT
LEVEL1 I M EAN
/Ill~~

WATCH WOMEN
5HOP 1 LEARN
WHAT1HEY
LI KE ..

TAKE WM PO RADIO
WHERE EVER YOU GO
THIS WEEKEND
and
LISTEN TO YOUR FAVORITE HITS

WHAT DO "'E

THINK OF MV l'WO
NEW TABLECLOTHS ,

31

AND HEARING Tl-IO&amp;E

i~=:

:_

b-I-I-I-I-+Guinea ~I-t-t-

32 New
town
35 Famous

radio
children's
program
(2 wds.)
fO Birds' home
U Price

29
Gawame followed wKII the

WEST

EAST

• A QJ 9 8

• 10 7 5 4

¥643
+J5

¥5
+Q87

"'JIO a

"'K 9 7 3 2

SOUTH !D)

• K3
¥AQJ9B
+A 9 4
"'A65

1-=-+--+-1--+--+West

North

East

I.
Pass

3¥
Pass

3.
Pass

(2

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

0\SH RE:GIBTERS ICIN::i
UP SALE&amp; DOESN'T ......- ..._

how

lo work

it:

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

HURT EITHE:R. !

'

seven
Lancelot turned to Mtw•ed
and said, " Here ' s •..tiler
friendly trick for you "'l1lell he
played h1s mne spot . . . Mordred made another tridt whll a
jack
"Gadzooks, " said Mut•a1.1
"Methinks 1 hke yot1 Wier
when you act as an e__,., "Tis
best I take my ace of sptllilllere
11 IS lulled to sleep by Ill)' loft

words''

Both vulnerable

:!~:Vicarithz--H+-+­

•

·

So Mordred played bla lee or

South

1¥
4¥

spades and held Lanet!18t to a
c ontract that would
lll!en
beaten 1f Gawame
been able to gam the

Openmg lead - J "'

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O"s, ete Slncle !etten, By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
Lancelot, the peerless knight
hints. Each day the code letters are dltrerent.
and bridge player, looked over
at wily Mordred sitting West
CltYPTOQUOTES
and remarked, "I am gomg to
treat you hke a friend for th1s
AVMMFIE
UIEMC
AVIE
SJELW hand. "
Then Lancelot played the four
NMRWBC,
VLDSMV
DSLW
AVIE of clubs from dummy
Gawaine , Sitting East, had to
LWF
• RWCDRDJDRIWC.- ~lay a low club and Mordred's
GLZC
Jack was allowed to hold the
trick. He led a second club.
UGLVMWUM
FLVVIZ
Lancelot
won With h1s ace and
.,.....- - - - - - - - - - ' -.....-------------,c--- Yesterday's Cryptoquote: A MAN SHOULD KNOW HIS OWN drew trumps
with three leads,
MEASURE AND KEEP IT IN VIEW IN AU. AFFAIRS, beiDf careful to win the third
GREAT OR SMAIL. - JUVENAIJS
one m dummy. ·Then he played
&lt;C t9n Kino Feat.,.. Syndicate, Jnc.l
the deuce of diamonds

The b1ddmg
West

North

bas beell: 2t
East

.._

••
Pass
I +
Pass
I•
Pas~ 3 •
Pass
1
You, South, hold
• K Q 9 8 5 ¥ A A f • '"I 71
Whatdoyoudonow?
•
A- Bid lhreu,.dH. ft611- . . .
live spades aad hy ltl 1 ,
•
least five dubs.
'
TODAY' S QUESIIUN
Your partner contmu• .. """'
clubs What do you do _ ,
Answer Tom...-

q
'

+

.
,

;
'

•

ELVINEY?
PITCH IT
IN iHERE,

WMPO A.M., 6:00 til 8:30

CHARLIE
~!

WMPO F.M. 6:00 til Midnight
•

r•

I

Lancelot drips with kindnlll
NORTH
• 62
¥ K 10 7 2
tKI0632
""Q 4

..

'

BE DROOM
of ground
fue l 0 11 furnace, a c ,
br eezeway end large garage
•n the country bu1 close to
tow n On hardtop road , 2
tre•ter se tup s tncluded Call
992 7649 after d p m or 992
25 19 anv ttme fo r a p
pomtm ent
4 30 26tc

--1--1--1--1--1--l

30 Wine cask

:

€.1~

Real Estate for Sale

Family"
(2 wds.)
City or
canal
Mam
artenes

R--~:-:-~'"':"'":'-::":-:-:"""'V-::"::":::"""'-~-...---------.:'r-------'"'!:""., 29 Grit

r-:-:----"1

PS)'OiiC.

J

DOWN

1 Unaccom

I

GU NS AND AMMO - Our
summe r stock •s now
ar rrvm g R1fles , s hotgu ns,
ptstols , r e loa d•ng equrp
scop es, ammunittons , 22
MAG h p $3 pe r box , $27 50 BUY
IT
TODAY
AS
pe r carton (500 1 22 l r h p
SOMEONE
S2 10 per loop Get them TOMORROW
wh1l e '"'"'Y last Store hour s WILL. CALL 992-3325.
etfectrve Mav 19 Monday
Thursdav 9 a m to 6 p m ,
f rtday and Saturday 9 am
to 9 p m VILLAGE GUN
SHOP PE, 26 6 M•lt St ,
Mtdd le por t
5 18 JOtc

For FrldiJ, MoJ 30, 1975
ARIES (Mwch 21-April 18)
The way you II cope wrth a mator rssue today will be fortunate
for you Follow your hunches
You II s ucceed desp1te others'
doubts

~

!HAT'S ALL!

FUNNY BUSINESS

-- - --- -- ____ _l_~.:''P

THIS IS IT - Over 4 acres
Walk to school and room for a
pony L1ke new 1nsrde home DOZ ER work , land c lc artng
with ce ntral atr and heat Nr ce
by the acr e hourly or
fru it room , shower and was h
F arm pond s ,
c ontr ac t
ro ad s etc Large dozer and
room for the work1ng man
operator wrlh over 20 years
Double garage, barn room and
expe rtence P u tl tns Ex
cave lor p1cn1ckmg Want IUS!
ca vattng Pomeroy , OhtO
Phone 992 2478
$23,500.00
12 19 tic
ONE ACRE - Nearly leve l
wtth extra nrce 2 bedroom D &amp; 0 TREE Trrmmmg , LO
mobile home Uld1ty bu1ldmg,
vears ex per 1ence Insured
fr eees ttmat es Call992 3057,
concrete floor , patro, rural
Coo lv tlle Phone (I ) 667
water
In
t he
countr y
3041
$10,000.00 , •
4 30 tf c
LOOK AT THIS - Large and
muc h cheaper than a new E X CA VAliNI..l' , vozer ,
Bac kho e dtl c her, wa t er
house. Hot water heat, full
l •nes, footers dra tn s , roads
basement ,
4 bedrooms,
clnd brush cleaning No 10b
family and dtnmg room, 2
too s mall, no weather too
bad
Phone Charles R
baths, 2 pqrches A real n1ce
Hatfte ld, Rt 1, Rut land ,
older home. Only $10,000 00
Ohto Phone 742 6092
MODERN 3 bedrooms
5 2 52tp
large bath, l1v 1ng 18x30, 7
enormous closets, 2 concrete
porches, dry basemen1, gas
tC K ho use on Sec ond St ,
F A fur nace, ,garage with BRPomeroy
, downtown
shop, and lha acres of land
Su1 table for l1vmg quart ers
$23,500,
up sta1rs , sma ll bustn ess
dow n , Offr ce or home Wtf htn
NEW LISTING 5 room
walk 10g d t~tanc e of all
house, 2 bedrooms , bath,
s tores Ca ll 99 3489
small bAsement , all utll rti es,
s 29 Jtc
front porch on good street 1n
Middleport. Only 56,000 00

6 oo-Sunme Semmar 4, Summer Semester 10.
6 25-Farm Report 13.
6 3()-Five Minutes to L1ve By 4; News 6; Bible Answers a, Public Art airs 10, Blue Ridge Quartet 13.
6 35-Columbus Today 4
6 45-Mornlng Report 3; Farmllme 10.
7 0{}-Today 3,4, 15; AM America 6, 13; CBS News 8, 10.
a oo-.-Lassle ~ . Capt Kangaroo 8, Schoolies 10,
Sesa me St 33
B 3()-Big Valley 6, Popeye 10.
8· 55- Chuck White Reports 10
9·QO-A M 3, Phil Donahue 4, 15; Lucy Show a; Capt
Kangaroo 10, Mornmg with D J 13, Walsh's
Animals 33
9 31}--Not For Women Only 3; Dinah 6; Galloping
Gourmet 8, New Zoo Revue 13, Blue Grass Music
33
IO ·QO-Celebrity Sweepstakes 3,4, 15; Joker's Wild B, 10;
Dinah 13, You Owe It to Yourself 33
10 3()-Wheel or Fortune 3,4, 15; Gambit 8, 10; Mulligan
Stew 33
11 OG-H1gh Rollers 3,4,15, One Life to Live 6, Now You
See It 8, 10; June Wayne 33.
11·3()-Hollywood Squares 3,6,15, Blankely Blanks 13,
News 4, Love of Life 8,10, Mele Hawall33
11 :55-Graham Kerr 8; Dan I mel's World 10
12 ·0G-Jackpoi 3, 15, Password 6, 13; Bob Braun's 50 50
Club 4, News 8,10; MISter Rogers 33

FREE ESTIMATES

Home Building
Room Additions
and O.r~a

CAR PET ln s tallatton , S1 25
pe r yard Call R 1chard
west Phon e 843 2667
5 d 26tc
Rooft ng , Spouttng , Ge m tn t
hit tn r eplace ment. Wtn
do ws, compl ete r emodelmg
Phon e 742 6273 or (J04) 77 3
5684

6 3()-NBC News 3J, 15, ABC News 1,3, Bewitched 6;
CBS News a, 10, Zoom 20k33
7 ·QO-Truth or Cons 3; Probe · 4, Bowling for Dollars
6; WCHS-TV Report 8; Aviation Weather 20,33;
News 10; Jimmy Dean 13; Phil Donahue 15.
7 :3()-Porter Wagoner 3; Pop Goes the Country 4, New
Candid Camera 6, Black Perspective on the news
20,33; TreasureHunt10, ToTelltheTrulh13.
8.QO-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4, 15; Night Stalker 6, 13 , We'll
Gel By 8, 10; Washington Week In Review 20,33
8 3()-Baseball 3,4; Chico &amp; the Man 15, ; We' ll Get By
8,10; Wall Streek Week 20,33.
9 :QO-Hol L Baltimore 6,13; Rockford Flies 15; Movie
"Dracula" 8, 10, Masterpiece Theatre 20; Con·
sumer Survival Kit 33 .
9 3G--Odd Couple 6, 13; Assignment America 33
10:QO-ABC News Closeup 6,13 , Pol lee Woman t5;
News 20; Paul Nuchlms 33
11 ·oo-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15.
11 :30--Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Wide World Special 13;
Sammy &amp; Company 6, Movie "C' mon, let's Live 1
Lillie" 8; Movie "Theatre of Death" 10, Janak! 33.
1 QO-Midnlgh1 Spec ial 3,4,15; Wide World Special 6;
Movie "The Colossus of New York" 10.
2· 3()-Siar Trek 4
3 :30--Movle "The Brass Bottle" 4
5, 30--Movle "Amazons of R orne" 4,
chance on a proposition. do I .
Pass up lhe deal 1f you don't
hear that small tnner ~oice.

FRIDAY, MAY 30,1975

SEPT IC TA NK S c le aned
Mode rn Santtatton 99 2 3954
or 992 7349
9 18 tf c

f. R·i"tE--ciin~-;:-u-c;;-.;;,--co

a:

Pomeroy, Ohio

Ph. 915-4102

Automobile
Transmission
Repair

I

COU lD CARE
LE 55 ~

FREE ESTIMATES

Grand Opening

5

WE'RE DE W CK,Y PARI'NT5 OF
Di:O WONDER· WOII&lt;IN' YOUTH,
MIZ VA N PE W ,OR MAY L CA~ L
YO U5E ETHELfoOITA ~

TELL IT TO
THE MARINE5,

..

~-----

12 · 30-Biank Check 3, 15; Spm &gt;econd 6, 13; Search for
Tom arrow 8, 10; Elet . Co. 33 ,
12 55-NBC Nel'(s 3, 15.
I GO-News 3, All My Children 6,13, Phil Donahue 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10, Not For Women Only 15;
Zoom 33
I ·30--Days of Our Lives 3,4,15; Let' s Make a Deal 6, 13;
As the World Turns 8, 10; Mulligan Stew 33 .
2 Q0-$10,000 Pyramid 6, 13, Guiding Light 8, 10;
Woman 33
2 3()-Doctors 3,4, 15, Big Showdown 6,13, Edge of
Nigh! 8,10, In Performance at Wolf Tra p 33
3 ·QO-Another World 3,4,15; General Hospital 6,13;
Price Is Right 8,10; Interface 20.
3:30-Qne Life to live 13, Lucy Show 6; Match Game
a, 10, The Bolero 20, Magic of Oli Painting 33.
4 ·QO-Mr Cartoon 3, I Dream of Jeannie 4, Somerset
15; Gilligan' s Is 6; Tattletales 8, Sesame St. 20,33;
Movie " looking lor Love" 10; Mike Douglas 13.
4 :3()-Bewltched 3; Merv Griffin 4; Mod Squad 6;
Mickey Mouse Club
Bonanza 15.
5 OG-F Bl 3; Andy Griffith 8; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Ironside 13.
5·3()-News 6, Beverly Hillbillies 8, Hodgepodge Lodge
20; Gel Smart 15; Elec Co 33
6 :QO-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Elec Co 20;
Campus Sounds 33 ,

THURSDAY, MAY 29, 1975

3 0()-A nother World 3,4,15, General Hospital 6,13,
Price 1s Right a,10, Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20; Play
Chess 33.
3 30-Qne Ltfe to live 13, Lucy Show 6, Match Game
8, 10; Feeltng Good 10; Changing Rhythm 33
4 0()-Mr Cartoon 3, I Dream of Jeannie 4; Somerset;
Gt lllga n' s Is . 6; Tattletales 8; Sesame Sl 20,33;
Movie "Hell on Frisco Bay" 10, Mike Douglas 13
4 J()-Bew1tc he d 3, Merv GriUin 4, Mod Squad 6,
Mickey Mouse Club 8, Bonanza 15.
5 OG-F BI 3; Andy Gr~lftth a , Mister Rogers' Neigh
borhood 20,33, I ronslde 13
.
5 3()-Ne ws 6, Beverly H lllblllles 8 Hodgepodge lodge
20, Get Smar t 15, Elec . Co 33.
6 O&lt;l-/'lews 3,4,8, 10,13,15, ABC News 6; Elec. Co 20,
One or a Kmd 33 ,
6 3()-N BC News 3,4, 15, ABC News 13, Bewitched 6;
CBS New s 8, 10; Zoom 20,33
7 0()-Truth or Cons 3, American life Syle 4, Bowling
lor Dollar s 6; What's My Line a, News 10; Let's
Make a Dea l 13, J1mmy Dean 15; Lock , Stock &amp;
Barrel 20, , Nova 33.
7 3()-Hollywood Squares 3, Hollywood Squares 4,
Ohio Lot ary 6; New Price Is Right 8, Consumer
Survival K1t 20; Wild Kmgdom 10, To Tell the Truth
13, Ame ri can Ouldoorsman 15
a 0()-S unshine 3,4, 15, Barne y Miller 6, 13; The Waltons
8,10, Btll Moyers Journal 20; Evening at Sym phony 33
8:3()- Bob Crane 3,4,15, Karen 6,13
9 OG-Mov1e 3,15, Stree ts or San Fanclsco 6,13, Movie
" The War Wagon" 4; Bighorn 8; In Performance
20,33; Mov1e "Fa te Is the Hunter" 10
10 .0()-H arr y 0 6, 13; Phil Donahue 8; News 20, Woman
33
10 3()-Horace Marshall 33
11 0()-N e ws 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15,
11 3()-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15, Wide World Special 13;
FBI 6; Movie " The Great While Hope" 8; Movie
" About Mrs. Leslie" 10; Janak I 33
12 3()-Wide World Spec1al 6; Tomorrow 3,4, News 13

992-3092

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

.._"'1"""' _ _ ~-·--··::·----...,.._ ........... ~..... _.._.._.. ......_ ....

Television
log
for
easy
viewing
-

1,

Saii!S &amp; Service

READY MIX CONlK~It
del 1ve r e d rtght to your
pro te c t r ~stand easy F ree
es tt mates Phon e 992 3284,
Goeg lem Ready Mtx Co ,
M1ddlepor t Ohto
6 30 lfc

HOW TO SELL YOUR
PROPE R TY &gt; LIST IT
WITH CLELAND'S
992-2259

lI

I

~

i-

A

F rom the la rges t Truck or
Bu lldozer Radiator to the
s malles t Hea te r Core

' In SyraCU!&gt;l!&lt;
Now open for season Now
available- mos t var1et1es
o t vegetab le pla n t s &amp;
flow e rs plus potted flow e r ~..:
OUR SPECIALTY over
2.000 hangtng baskets of
Petunias, Ivy , Gera ntums ,
Vtpes, and Begon1as
..
TOP QUALITY AT
LOWEST PRICES
992 5776
4 17 1 mo

--- -------

ORDER any CB fr om lndta n
Jo e's Sports and ce sa t 10
pe t above cos t and shrp
ptng JOB Pag e St , Mtd
dleport
5 18 30tc

SMA~

dlafO
Service

V. V. JOHNSON
AND SON, INC.

0.

BEO DIN G PLANT S potted
plants . gera n•ums, azaleas ,
pet un 1as , porch bo xes,
hangtng ba skets Cleland 's
Greenhouse ,
Gera ld1ne
Cleland , Racm e, Ohto
5 15 tic

--- ---

~

Hubbard's
Greenhouse

3 ACRES CLOSE IN story fram e home, 2 or 3
bedrooms , bath, part
ba se m ent, o w n water
sys1em . FA furna ce, w rth
barn $10,900
POMEROY - H1gh on a
hr ll - ve ry prtvate Jl/ 2
a~res, 2 ntce BR , bath ,
ut1ilty R , N gas heat, a1r
co nd , porche s, garage ,
$13,000
A
CHARMING
NEW
HOME - Just 5 rn 1les out
NICe k1 tchen w Ref &amp;
Rang e , 2 BR , bath lull
basement , carpeted re'R , carport, W storage, 1
acre $22,700
MOBILE HOME - 1973
14X70 fu rnished al so ha s
d1s h washer 3 BR , 11h
baths, ax10 awnmg, s a,900
Ca n possrbiy f1nance $8,100
ROUTE 681 - 135 ac res at
1u s t $123
pe r
acre,
m1n e ra ls,
close
to
recreatton

WILKINSON

XPE~I~N"'ED

608 E.
POMEROY,

S TEREO Mode rn Walnut
stereo am fm r ad 1o com
b1nat ton , 4 speed changer , 4
s peakers separa t e controls
Balance ! 10 4 39 Use ou r
bu dg et te rm s Phon e 992
3965
s 28 tfc

~-

Help Wanted

Merle Norman
Cosmetics

MAIN

For Sale

~

-.JOB- NO WAY:

&amp;ERTA VAN PEW~

TWO NEW 3 bedr oo m homes
wlfh 1 ca r ga r age, ca rpet ed , ·
TR AILER apis Phone 992
F HA or bank ftnanet ng
52 16 or 992 3436
P ho ne 742 36 15 or see Mt lo
52512tc
Hutchmson , Rutl and
58 tfc
r UR N apt 5 room s and ba t h
ntce large ya rd , bath and 1 . l. LARG E lot s rural wa ter
av a il ab l e Hard road 3
wo Sou t h Sec ond St ,
m d es from b y pa ss on
M tdd lepor t adults only
Lea dmg Cre ek Road Phon e
Phone 992 526 2 even rngs
7~2 3108
5 21 lf c
5 9 JOt c
5 RM APT fur nts hed , on e
c hild per mt lted 3 r m apt 3 Bt: U ~LIVM ho use wa ll to
f urnts h ed ultl thes pat d
wall car pe trng la rge k1t
John Sheets 3 mtles south of
chen and bat h utdt!y room
M1ddl epor t on Rt 7
was h r oom
•1 acre
S 25 6tc
a lum tn u m stdt n g s torm
w mdows , storage butldmg
Phone
742 4601
W ill
COUNTRY Mo bil e Hom e
sac rtf tce fo r qurck sa le
Pa r k Rt J3, ten mtl es no rth
5 25 tfc
of Pomeroy Large lots wt th
concre te pattos Sid e wa lks
runne r s and o ff s tre e t
parktng Phon e 99 2 7479
12 31 ttc
SMALL fur nt s hed , 2 bedr oom
ho use at Roc k Sprtn gs No
c hildr en or pets Phone 992
2789
5 28 6t c

KUHl'S

BARGAIN CENTER

etc
5 28 IOt:c
- - - -- ----·---- --

HOU SE for sa le located on
Vt ne Stree t rn Ractne Two
sto ry fr ame three bedroom
rece ntl y r emod e led kttch en
garage , ftr eplace 75 ac re
Ca ll 949 51 14 any ftm e for
a pp otn lm e nt
5 ?3 8tc

IN

NEWSPAPER

'

CAR PENTER wo rk - cctltng ,
1970 CHEVHLE MALIBU CPE.
$1695
307 V 8, power steerrng , good G70 wtde oval trres,
rad1o, s li ver grey fm1 sh, a utomat1c trans, m ter ror
spotl ess

BUT THIS IS NO
GAS THEFT

VKIIIINARY

USiness ervices

SIGNS Pomeroy R~~~~gEL~~dG a ll p~~~.~·n~l
Of
ge n era l
re p a1r
Work
M
f
gua ra n teed 20 years ex
0 Or 0 e peroence Phon e 9925 2409
QUALITY
1 tfc

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

9 - T he Da1lv Sentmel , l&gt;!iddleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thw-sd,1y, May 29, 1975
DIC:K TRAI'Y

1

'~

LET'S 6ET RIO Of iHESE
ONE, TWO, THREE!

6U'(S

'
•

�, ,10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thw-sday, May 29, 197"5
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::;:::::::::::;:;:;:::::;:::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:·

'

Oil extraction
p_lant planned·
RIFLE, Colo, (UPI) Seventeen private industry
firms Wednesday announced
plans for construction of a $76
million oil shale extraction
plant, the basis for full-&lt;&gt;cale
development of ·western
. Colorado's shale resources.
Harry Pforzheimer, vice
Jresident of Standard Oil of
Ohio and director of the
· JX'Oject, said the plant would
be built on the Anvil ' Point
U.S. Navy oil reserve slte five
miles west of Rifle. Construction on the commercialsize experimental plant was
sch~uled to begin about the
last of July with completion
slated for late 1976.
"This plant will accelerate
development of the oil shale
industry and serve as a firm
foundation for a full-&lt;&gt;cale oil
shale industry in western
Colorado," he said. " It will
also improve oil shale's
ability to make an important
contribution toward
alleviating the national
ener~y_ shortage in the

MEIGS THEATRE
TONIGHT
NOT OPEN
Fri ., Sal .• Sun .
. Walt Disney's
THE ISLAND AT THE
TOPOFTHEWORLD
(Technicolor)

(

future."

Pforzheimer said all 17
companies participating in
the Paraho Oil Shale
Demonstration Project had
pledged to cooperate in the
new ventw-e, an offshoot of a
$7.5 million oil-from-&lt;!hale
retort experiment which he
called "a complete success."
The .demonstration retort
project at Anvil Point began
Bept. I, 1973, and since that
time 12;500 tons of shale have
been mined daily for use in
the test.
He said plans for the plant
included the mining of 11,500
tons of oil shale per day to
produce a maximum of 7,300
barrels of oil and 6 million
BTUs of natural gas daily.
The plant will be operated for
21h years experimentally,
with all oil produced
belonging to the Navy.
Following the experimentation period, the entite plant
wuuld revert to federal
goverrunent ownership,
Pforzheimer said plans for
the plant were announced
folloWing testing of 10,000
barrels of oil produced by the
Paraho retort process. The
tests included exclusive use
of shale oil to fuel the SS
Edward B. Greene, a 647-foot
cargo ship which hauls iron
ore on the Great Lakes.

Starring Da v id Hartman

Also
Watt Disney's
WINNIE, THE POOH
AND TIGGER TOO
!Technicolor)
Rated " G"
Show starts at 7:00p.m .

f-~o:;~;;t:-1

'I
I

LOW PRICES. I

D&amp;J

II House of Fabrics
10 Days of Specials

STARTING
FRIDAY
Polyester Double Knit
RegularSL98
NOW$1 .79 Yard
Polyester Double Knit
Patchwork Design
1
RegularS3.98
·
NOW S3.49 Yard
I Compare lhis at S4.98 and
ps.9a
Polyesler &amp; Colton Plains

j

I
I·and prints for T-shirts, all I
1. ribbing, 60"

1

wide.

1 · s1.39 yd.
I 1 mile south

of

I
I

L~tt~=~c:.!'~J

'·--·.

Help Themselves!

Vote .. Yes"
for The
Mentally Retarded

End-Of-The-Month Sale

.,•
"

..

Paid Pol. Adv. by The Citizens Committee
For Mentally Retarded

'--------...,

Professional Engineers, a
charter member of the Board
of Construction Employers
Association, and the Wesley
Methodist Church. Both
Legion and Masonic rites
were conducted. '
Funera'l services wer e
conducted at 2 p. m. Sunday
at the Hastings Funeral
Home in Morgantown, W. Va.
Burial was in the Lawnwood
Cemetery there.

•
•
'•
•

•

•
, I
·I

You 'II find a great selection offine
fornt1ure, floor coverings and

NEWS

appliances at the lowest possible
prices. Free delivery, convenient·
terms, service when you need ii.
Serving you has been our business
stnce 1952,

.

Baker Furniture

•

Middkport, Ohio

'

---

WOMENS SLEEPWEAR

1
·
·

.

GARDEN SEEDs ·
Regular 25c to 50c packets
Flower and Vegetable
Seeds.
SaLe

lQ Packets Sl,()()

FAMOUS MAKE

MENS TIES
Ready tied ties and popular four-in-hand tie~ .
Solid colors, white and neat Piltterns. Today s
popular widths.

Sale Prices
I

sse pair

End-of-the-Month Sale

End-of-the Month Sale .

Sizes 29 to 42 waist. includes all of our fashion
jeans, Wrangler, Leggs and Lee. Solid colors.
checks, stripes, the rags look. Brushed
denims, 100 pel . cottons, cotton and polyester
blends . An excellent selection .

Sale Prices

Save Over 50%

VENNARIRECEIVES GIFT - Jim Vennari, right, received a gold pocket watch from
the staff at Rutland Elementary Thursday upon his retirement. The watch is engraved with
his initials and with the. words, "RuUand coach and principal 1947-1975". Making the
presentation was Eric Hart, sixth grade teacher.

End-of-the-Month Sale

Sale lf2 Price
Small group of women's coordinate sportswear for final clearance .

GLIDDEN PAINT
Save this weekend on famous quality Glidden
Paints for the interior and exterior of your home.

·save 20%
On' Sale at the Mechanic Street Ware!louse

End-of-the-Month Sale

WHIRLPOOL REFRIG'ERATORS

End-of-the-Month Sale

Save SSO on Any Whirlpool

Health and Beaut; ~ids

Refrigerator in Stock

One table of shaving supplies, toothpaste,
aspirin, cologne, hair spray . Many more.

End-of-the-Month Sale

Jim Vennari:

a

h Price

1

By Jo Ellen Diehl
RUTLAND - As "The .
Music Man" was to River
City with music, so was Jim
Vennari to Ratland with football.
Vennari , the legendary
coach who transformed a
team in rags to consistent
champions retired this week
after 26 years of coaching,
teaching, and school administrative work in Rutland.
A native of Lumberport, W.
Va., and a 1936 graduate of

Salem ·College, Vennari in
1947 began looking for
coaching jobs in Ohio where
the pay was better 'than his
cu~rent job in West Virginia .
A friend told him there an
opening in Rutland, Ohio, and
so in the swnmer months,
Vennari came to. the area to
inveiftigate. Asking in
Pomeroy how ~ to get to
Rutland, he was told that the
bus across the street went to
his destination for a fare of 10
cents. He hopped in and
~==*::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::;.:::.~=:·:·:=:·:·:=:·:::·:·8::·:::·:·:::·:·:::~·~::::::::::::::~~!::::::~~!:' , 0 0r

stared at the town when the
bus let him out.
C. 0 . Chapman, superintendent of the county school
system, met him and assw-ed
him that what he saw was
indeed the entire town , but
they still needed a good
coach. But first , Vennari
wishes to look over the field
and equipment.
"There were people all
over the field, bulldozing and
putting up poles," Vennari
reminisced. "I commented
that it must be costing a lot to
do, but Mr. Chapman Said the
work was done for free; it
was all voluntary." That
turned out to be a plus for the
town, but the equipment was
·
By United Press International
OMAHA, NEB. -A FEDERAL JUDGE, SAYING he was a negative factor.
Vennari soon found that the
acting with American consumers in mind, has struck down the
jerseys
and pads he thought
U.S. Department of Agriculture's proposed new llationwide
meat grading standards. U. S. District Court Judge Roberf were for practiCe were the
Denney said Thursday he "put a lot of weight" on con- real things. With 12 or 13
siderations for consumers before deciding to permanently bar ragged uniforms as the only
equipment, he was expected
implementation of the proposed new USDA rules.
"
Denney reviewed 2,000 pages of testimony ~~ 5,~ to lead a team .
exhibits before making pennanent a temporary mJuncllon
Chiipman explained that
issued April 11 against the USDA and Agriculture Secretary football had been abolished at
Earl Butz to prevent implementation of the new grading Rutland during the war
years, but that now they
standards.
wan ted to expand and grow.
WASIDNGTON - UNEMPLOYMENT BENEFITS for The townspeople especially
50 000 laid~ff workers will expire at the end of June, Labor were anxious to get a good
'
football program going.
(CGnllnued 0!1 Jlllle 10)
0

End-of-the-Mollth Sale

Whirlpool Air Conditioners
Big selection of models from 5000 to 22,000
BTU.

BEDSP-READS
No iron, 100 poet. cottc;m. Several patterns and
colors. Twin and full sizes.

Save 20%
On . Sale at t"e Mechanic Street Warehouse

Sale •6"

End-of-the-Month Sale

RUBBERBACK CARPET

Home Furnishings Annex

End-of-the-Month Sale

Big selection of patterns in 6x9 and 7x10 cut
sizes . Ideal for bathrooms.

Sale! MENS SHIRTS
A special sale - Includes our entire stock of
men's shirts.
The Cut and Sewn shirts in solid colors, palterns. all permanent press. Sport Shirt sizes
Small (14-14112 ). Medium (15'15V2l. Large (1616112) and Extra Large (17-17112), and Dress
Shirts in Sizes 14!/2 to 171!2 neck.
Plus knit shirts in tank tops, crew neck shirts,
numbers shirts. fashion knits. sizes small,
me:lium, large, extra large and extra; extra
large.

Sale Prices

Sale ·•2900

InCludes boys knit shirts and also boys dress
.and sport shirts sizes 6 to 20 . Solid Colors,
stripes, oatterned shirts.

Sale Prices

fNews . . .in B~ief~

PRICE 15'

'

Save s100.00 on a Grandfather Clock
Reg. $430.00 Bordeaux Cherry with West- ·
minster Chimes

. _ .

. Reg. $500.00 Bordeaux Cherry ,or Maple with .
Westminster Chimes

Sale '400.00
Reg. $645.00 Maple with Triple Chime.
Westminster Whittington and Winchester
also with moving moon c:llal.

· Sale •545.00
AlsOii large assortment of wall clocks at sale
prices.
·
·

Free Customer Parking On Second Street and

Martinka cited figures
which indicate the dramatic
increase in the. cost of coal
dw-ing 1974. 'He said that
Federal Power Commission
reports indicate that the
average delivered GOst of all
coal to electric utilities in the
United States went up by 75.3
pet. in 1974 over 1973.
In the nation's East-NorthCentral Region, which includes Ohio, the average
delivered cost of coal to

utilities was 67.7 pet. higher
than it was during .the
previous year, according to
Martinka.
By way of compari&amp;on, he
pointed out that the 1974 coal
cost figure for Ohio Power's
principal mining subsidiary
- Central Ohio Coill Co., a
large
surface mmmg
operation in Southeastern
Ohio - rose only 37.6 pet.
over the figure for 1973.

Jaycees review
play project
The proposed Pomeroy
Public Playground was the
major topic of the Meigs
Jaycees at its regular bimonthly meeting recently at
Pomeroy Village Hall.
The initial plans for the
playground call
for two
tennis courts, picnic tables, a
kiddie playground and · a
miniature golf course. Advice
from the public will be appreciated. Donations for the
development
of
the
playground can be sent to
Meigs Jaycees, P.O. Box 603,

F1RST PLACE WINNER - Suzan Thoma, eight year
old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Thoma, was first place
winner in the Rio Grande College Theater art'contest for
the "Two By Two" production in the chimpanzee (six to
nine year olds) category. Art work was received in three
categories from the three county area of Gallia, Jackson
and Meigs on some aspect of the Biblical story of Noah .
All of the art work was displayed in the lobby at the
theater . Ed Roark, director, presented a book on Noah's
Ark to Suzan at the Saturday night production when she
and her parents were guests.

Pomeroy.
It was announced that the
annual Jaycee sponsored
Frog Ball will be held during
th e Big Bend Regatta
Satw-day, June 21·, from 9:30
until 1:30 a.m. with "Temperance " providing the
music . Tickets will be $3
single and $5 per couple.
Public opinion is needed on .
the recreational facilities,
and a survey appears below.

The enthusiasm and inSee survey form on
terest of the community
page 10 .
overcame Vennari's doubts.
He accepted the job.
At a town meeting (just like ;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:::;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·
PLEAJ:iS GUILTY
River City) the people of the
BUFFALO, N.Y. (UPI)
town got to meet Vennari and
- Anne Hearst, 19-year·old
realized there was a great
sister of missing heiress
deal to be done. Heading the
Patricia Hearst, pleaded
agenda was new· uniforms.
guilty In . U. S. District
Sponsoring roller skating,
Court
today to possession '
bake sales, and the like, the
of amphetamines.
townspeople raised some $800
The charge can carry a
Ronald L. Springer, former
to contribute to the fund, and
one-year
prison
term
or
a
Pomeroy manager for Ohio
. Vennari made special deals
$5,000 fine, but Judge John Power, will retire June 1 as
with sporting goods stores so
T. Curtin, under a the company's Lima Division
thaI they could pay as they
provision In the code, manager.
earned it. Soon they made a
allowed
Miss Hearst to go
Springer joined the comstandard Rutland " Red
free on probation. Under pany in 1936 as a clerk at
Devil" uniform with red
the code, If there Is no Crooksville, · served as chief
jerseys and pants with black
violation of the probation clerk at Ironton from 1941-56
arm stripes. That way the
after four months, the and · became Pomeroy
worn uniforms could be used
charge would be dropped. .manager in 1956. He moved to
by the reserve squad with a
Curtin placed her under Mount Vernon in 1959, to
few needed ones bought each
the supervision of the U: S. Findlay in 1962 and was
year for the varsity.
Probation Office where she promoted to Lima Division
"We lost one or two games
resides.
manager in 1971.
out of eight the first year, and
He was president of the
the nexl year we won the
Pomeroy' Chamber of
championship,'' says Vennari
GIVING EXAMS
modestly., An overnight
The Ohio State Highway Commerce on two occasions.
Cinderella team, the Red patrol will be giVIng He and his wife, Lavina,
Devils continued as a power examinations for motorcycle reside at 228 Barnsbury Dr.,
house to win nine cham- licenses at the state Highway Lima. Their two sons, Gary
pionships,
two
co- Garage on SR 7 near Chester and Robert, live in Houston,
. championships ·and two Monday, June 2 from I to 4 . Texas and Kansas City, Mo.,
respectively.
p.m.
(ConlimMd on Pile 10)

Former power

firm manager
is retiring ·

Quota at clinic
Sixty-two Meigs Coun ty
Women - two over the quota
set for each session ~ were
examined during the free
cancer clinic Thursday at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Yesterday was the second
free clinic conducted here. It
was learned that the clinic,
however, has beert funded for
the next fiscal year and will
be held the fourth Thursday
of each month through June,
1976. The clinic is sponsored
by the Meigs County Health
Department, The Ohio
Department of Health and the
Meigs Unlf of the American
Cancer Society.
All women are invited to

ACTION IN CHESTER
A simulated emergency
exercise will be conducted
Sunday In Chester Township
by the Big Bend Citizens
Band Radio Club. Participating in the exercise will
be the Southeast Ohio
Emersency Medical Service.
Area tesidenls are asked to
disregard any activity or
radio transmission during the
exercise period, 10 a.m. to 6
p.m.

I

take acjvantage of the free
cl,inic regardless of income
status. The June clinic is
illmost full, with only three
appoin tments open and
registrations are being taken
for the July clinic. Women
wishin g to get an appointment should call Mrs.
Wilma Reece, coordinator,
992-7684, between 9 a.m. and 4
p.m. Monday thro ugh Friday,
or the Meigs Unit Cancer
office from noon to 4 p.m.
Tuesday or Thursday.
Mrs. Reece credited the
Retired Se nior Volunteer
Program with much of the
success of Thursday's clinic.
Some eight _senior citizens
worked in various' stages of
processing for the clinic, Mrs.
Reece said.
BOND FORFEITED
Stanley Bryant, Detroit,
forfeited a $250 bond in the
court of Mayor Dale E. Smith
Thw-sday night posted on a
charge of driving while in-·\
toxicated. Fined $100 and
costs and given a three day
jail sentence on' the same
charge in the Pomeroy's
Mayor's Court was Stuart
Pullins, Pomeroy.

I

Planning group will ask five Meigs towns for

End-of-the.Month Sale

End-of·the~Month Sale

BOYS SHIRTS .

FRIDAY, MAY 30'-1975

.i

On Sale at the Mechanic Street Warehouse

Sale '330.00

Ohio Power Co. customers
saved approximately $23
million in coal costs in 1974
because the coml&gt;any supplied about one-third of its
coal requirements from its
own sources.
This statement was made
by Pa)l) D. Martinka, senior
vice president-fuel supply of
the American Electric Power
Service Corporation in
testimony delivered Thursday before the Ohio
Legislature's Joint Select
Committee on Energy. Ohio
Power is one of seven
operating companies in the
AEP System.
He stated that coal
received from inside sources
last year was, on the average,
approximately $3.65 per ton
lower in cost than coal obtained from outside sow-ces.
" Aside from the cost
consid-erations," he said,
"inside sources assure that
· an adequate supply fo coal is
received to keep the power
fl owing to meet our
customers' requirements."

legend retires

r

While They Last

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Mining own coal saves

FASHION JEANS

Special group for this sale . From our regular
stock .

COORDINATE SPORTSWEAR

VOL. XXVII NO. 33

Men's and Young Men's

COSTUME JEWELRY·

End-of-the-Month Sale

enttne

. Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area

-

Sale 1/z Price

End-of-the-Month Sale

promise that ·the United
States will not withdraw any
of the 310,000 troops it
maintains in Europe unless it
can negotiate mutual withdrawals with the Communist
Warsaw Pact. He said
America will carry out its
treaty commi tment to defend
any NATO member that
comes under armed attack.

•

at y

Mens s1.00 Dress Socks
One size fits all sizes 10 through 1i Choose
bulky knit orlons or thl! popular banlon P!!nel
rib knit. Big selection of colors.

Sale h Price

'' unqualified participation" opening NATO session, grapfrom the other allies as well. pling with such problems as
The concluding summit the Greek-Turkish rift over
meetings were scheduled to Cyprus, the leftward drift of
run more than five hours in the new revolu tionary
two segments, with a one govevrtment in Portugal and,
hour break for a luncheon above all, the credibility of U.
amon g NATO summit · S. commitments after the loss
of Indochina .
leaders in between.
He gave NATO leaders
, Ford spent Thursday in
bilateral meetings and. an what they wanted to hear ~ a

•

End-of-the-Month Sale

Preteen. 4 to 6. and 7 to 14. Spring sportswear
selected from our regular stock.

1

CHARLESTON, W, Va . will be presented to Gov.
(UPI) - Potential sites in Arcll Moore next month.
five West Virginia counties
Coal-Con is expected to
for the proposed Coal-Con •decide next January where
plant were presented for the the $237 million coal
first time publicly Thursday hydrocarbonization research
during the concluding session facility will be located.
of the two-day West Virginia
West Virginia and neighIndustrial
Development boring coal-producing states
Institute conference.
of Ohio and Pennsylvania are
Representatives of three among those competing for
county planning groups made the facility .
formal presentations. Groups
These sites, all about 1,000
from the other two counties acres in size, were explained
did not make specific reports. at the development con·
The packages, already dis- ference :
cussed last week and again
-Jackson County, along ·
Monday before the state th.e Ohio river near the Kaiser
Commerce Department and Aluminum plant at ltavenstwo consulting firms hired to wood.
help the state's effort tO' gain
- Wood County, north of
the Coal-Con plant location,
(Continued on Jlllle 10)

con~

BRUSSELS (UP!)
a 7().minute breaKfast
speech, Foid promised U. S.
President Ford completed his ference with Britain's Prime military forces would remain
on station in NATO despite
NATO summit visit today ·Minister Harold Wilson.
effo.rts
in
with a last attempt to breathe
Then he attended the final occasional
fire into the alliance through ro.lnd ol closed-door summit Congress to start hrin ging
his message that America consultations at NATO head- them home.
"remains true" - and ex- quarters, where Thw-sday he
" The United States of
pectseveryNATOally to be a delivered his renewed pledge America unconditionally and
full ally.
of U. S. fidelity to the unequivocally remains true"
to its NATO commi tments,
faltering alliance.
Ford began the day with
Ford
sa id, and urges
In the Thursday keynote

'

Knit Tops, Blouses and Shirts selected from
stock . Misses. Juniors and Women 's Sizes.

'

End-of-Month Sale

End-of-the-Month Sale

End-of-the-Month Sale

WOMENS TOPS

ASK TOWED
St., Pomeroy , Ohio
Randy BliSs Ebersbach, 16, 'Court
45769 . BuSiness Office Phone
Minersville and Janice 99 2-2156 . Editorial Phone 992 .
.
Earline Imboden, 16, Miners- 2157
· Second class postage paid
.
·
ville; Michael Eugene Stone, ilt Pomeroy , Ohio .
Nat i onal
.advertisinl" ·
23, La!Vrencebw-g, Ind., and
representa tive waro ~
Penny Marie Eblin, 17, Griffith Company , inc
Bottinelli &amp; Ga llagher Oiv ' '
Middleport; William Thomas 757
Th i rd Ave ., New York;
.Y .' 10017.
Fink, 37, Middleport, and N Subs
c ripfl u n rates-:
Beatrice Carmollee Fink, 36, Deliver ed by carrier where
available 75 cents per week;
Middleport.
By Motor Route whert i

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Sale s1.29 pair ·

GIRLS SPORTSWEAR

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS - Richard
Duckworth , Syracuse;
Margaret Gans, Pomeroy ;
Karen Hemsley, Syracuse ;
Forrest Marlow, Middleport;
John Stiners , Middleport ;
Donald Lovett, Middleport ;
Carl Allev. Racine.
DISCHARGES - Marion
Rizer, Trina Klein. Deborah
Blake, Diana Phillips,
Raleigh Sayre, Lillian Gress,
Cloyd Brookover.

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Sale Prices

End-of-the-Mohth Sale

HOSPITAL

... - .

Reg . $1.1 5 rib control lop in
sandal toot or reinfor ced

Sale 1h Price

1

Spring Time

WOMENS DRESSES

WOMENS
PANTYHOSE
'

Special group selected from our regular stock .
Several famous makers.

and goes into effect Oct. 28.
Under the regulations, he
said, small retailers will be
forced to go to a bank credit
Pleasant Valley Hospital
card system, to "retain a
DISCHARGES - Mrs.
Philadelphia lawyer" or to Charles Roberts, Point
run the risk their own credit Pleasant; Robert Scherer,
systems will result in costly Point Pleasant; Mrs. F~rest
lawsuits.
Jones and son, Gall polis
o047r a zzczcu vhsa
Ferry; Kimberley Pi ens,
credit 5-28
Point Pleasant ; Mrs. Ola
tst add credit, washington Thompson, Clifton; Bessie
xxx costly lawsuits.
. Rollins, Leon; Annabelle
".,.1 may be forced into Gunio, Point Pleasant, and
dropping my credit opera- Henry Oliver, Jackson.
lions," said Gould, who operates six stores in New E-R squad b~s~_
Hampshire. '-'Business is not
The
Middleport
good and I cannot afford the Emergency Squad was kept
cost and risk of assuming this busy Wednesday afternoon
regulatory burden rnyseli. and evening answering three
Let · someone else have the
calls. At 4:42p.m. the squad
headaches."
took Duane Stanley, 54,
If many small merchants
Harrisonville, to Holzer
are forced to dicontinue·their Medical Center. He had fallen
own credit plans, he said, the
off the roof of his home.
consumers will be forced to According to hospital ofapply for credit "via the ficials he is in satisfactory
impersonal mail process in·condition with a fractured
stead of establishing their vertebra .
credit business with their
At 7:25 p.m. Forrest W.
home town independent
Marlow,
Laurel St. , was
merchant." .
taken
to
Veterans
Memorial
Most creditors generally
Hospital
where
he
was adcomplained the regulations
would cost too much money. mitted for gas inhalation, and
Sears Roebuck, for example, at 9:10 p.m. the squad took
estimated the cost at more Don Lovett to Veterans
than $166 million, which it Memorial Hospital from the
Ohio Hotel where he had
said would be passed along to
fallen
out of .a window. He
the consumer in higher prices
was
admitted
.
and more inflation.
The creditors specifically
The Dai~ Sentinel
criticized a reguiation
I
DEVOTED TO THE
" requiring all new or existing
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
credit accounts used by a
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL
husband and a wife be
Exec . Ed_.
ROBERT HOEFLICH
recorded in both names.
City Editor

H O U SE
FOR
Sal e,
174
Mulberry Ave ,, Pomeroy ; A .
bdr . • 1' 1 b ., large lo t,
basement , garage . Open
Sat urday , May 31, 5·7 p .m .
To see other tim es', call 1446 .2596.
S-29 -ltc

End-of-Month Sale

toe.

Roland Corson died on May 22

carrier
, se rvice
no)
!a va i lable. One month. 53 .25.
18y mail in Oh io and W. Va .•
One Year , $22 . 00 ;
Six
.months ,
S11.50;
Three
'mohths. $7 .00. Elsewhere
J$26 . 00 year ; Six months
sp.50; three months , S7 .5B.
1
includes
1 Subscription· price
· !S unday T i m es -Sentinel.

End-of-the-Month Sale

Our entire stock of dresses and pant suits is
included. Misses, Juniors and Half Sizes.

. Pub I ished daily except ·
. Saturday by The Ohio Valley .
Publishing Company , 111 '

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Sites proposed

OPEN BOTH FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 9:30 TO 8 PM

~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::; : ;:::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::: ::::;:;:;:;:; : ::::;:; :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:; :;: ;:;:;:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:: ·

WASHINGTON (UPI)- A
spokesman for the nation's
retailers charged today the
government's
new
regulations to ban credit
discrimination against
women are too costly, go
beyond the intend of Congress
and will force most small
merchants to abandon their
own credit plans.
Dexter Gould of the American Retail Federation ecboed
the complaints that most
retailers, bankers and
creditors -both small and
large - have expressed
during Federal Reserve
Board
hearings
on
regulations prohibiting credit
discrimina lion on the basis of
Sf.t or marital status.
He said in a prepared
statement the Fed's "impractical, vague and overly
broad" regulations go far
beyond the law, which was
passed by Congress last year

Help Them

•

CLEVELA.ND (UPI ) - The success of the first ever
full--scale test of commercial shale oil was announced
Wednesday by Cleveland-Cliffs Iron Co.
Cleveland-Cliffs tested shale oil heavy fuel to run its
Great Lakes freifjhter Edward B. Greene for six days.
According to the company, the shale oil surpass~
preliminary technical expectations for envirorunental and
fuel consumption performance. The test, coordinated by
the U.S. Navy's offices of the Maritime Administration,
was the first in a series of tests to be conducted by the
armed forces and industry.
The heavy fuel is one of seven grades made from shale
oil at the Paraho Oil Shale Development Project near
Rifle, Colo.
Robert E. Munholland of Babcock &amp; Wilcox, makers of
the Greene's boilers, said stack haze level dw-ing the test
was "far below anything ever experienced with other
hydrocarbon fuels."

Retailers oppose
equal sex credit

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ELBERFELDS IN ·POMEROY

Shale oil tests good

Mr. and Mrs . Hugh
McPhail and children, Corey,
Scott and Heather, have
returned from Morgantown,
W. Va., where they were
called by the death of Mrs.
McPhail's father, Roland
F. Corson, 69, on Thursday ,
May 22, at home following a
long illness.
He is survived by his wife,
Evelyn ; a son, George,
Denver ; and a daughter,
Mrs. McPhail (Martha ). Also
surviving are four grandchildren and a brother ,
Wilbur, Williamsport, Pa .
He was a member of the
American Legion, a 32nd
degree Mason, the White
Shrine of Jerusalem, the
West Virginia Society for

•

FuJniture Department, 3rd l'loor

the Mechanic Street Warehouse

'ELBERFELDS IN.POMEROY
·\

By Bob Hoefllcb
,
The Meigs County Regional Planning Commission Thursday
voted to ask all five Meigs County Villages and the county
commissioners for funds to finance the commission's program
for next year.
Discussion during the meeting, presided over by chainnan
Thereon Johnson, vice-president of The Farmers Bank and
Savings Co. brou11ht out · that under. · the commission
regulations, each village is to furnish 20 cents per capita and
the county 20 cents per capita for ·residents outside of the. five
villages to provide operating funds for the commission. Letters
will be sent silon to the five village councils and to the county
commissioners asking for the per capita payments. The .
discussion also brought out that the county, through the county
commissioners, has paid the way for the commission
operations to date.
•
Meeting with the commission yesterday was James
Jennings ~d son, Columbus, who are with the housing consultIng finn which has been employed by the commission to study
housing needs and steps which can be taken to imJX'OYe
.housing.,
Jemlngs stated that he fayors private enterprise in
liousing. He ilaid that already he has had Indications that the
DQIII1ty 11 vitally Interested in housing and that the leadership
of the county II working in a direction toward more and better

this Is sometimes discouraging when the end result is not
kn0

'

~dison

·

Baker, secretary of the commission, again
described the need for a nursing borne facility in Meigs County
andindlcatedthathehopestheJenningsflrmwillnotoverlook
this need. Not only would such a facility be a service for
residents who need it, but it would make for a better situation
for residents who have someone confined to a nursing home. A
nursing home alsO would be a bit of an economic shot in the
arm, Baker stated.
·
David Rosser, an Athens Architect, said that he has been
working a year and a half in an attempt to get a nursing home
located in Meigs County but has failed.
Mrs. Eleanor Thomas, executive dire«;tor of the Meigs
County Council on Aging, ·outlined the steps taken by her
JX'Ogram to secure a grant for a Senior Citizens Center. The
application for the grant also had to include information on
housing needs, Mrs. Thomas conunented.
Builder J,i'red Goeglein commented that he had not seen
any great demand for housing in Meigs County at this point. He
said that he had bullt some 15 homes but in the past year had
sold only eight slich hollies. Goegleln ~ented that there
does not appear to be the demand that prior surveys have
. indi.ca ted .
./
A conunittee was appointed to work with JeJUllngs on his
ho\ising survey. Named to the group were Mrs. Thomas,
housing.
.
He stated further .that, on the local level, financing is a Goeglein, and Ferman M,oore. Moore has bel!n active in the
"papi!rj.lungle." He lndicated.therllo.if a lot of effort ahead 1111\ past wi~ a church group including ministers and lay ~pie on

•
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2~c

per head

housing needs.
setting up three low cost housing projects in Middleport, the
· · The i&gt;rogram of the groilp stopped when a moratorium on third just now being completed at the corner of Mill and Third
· funds was declared. Discussion brought out that the govern- Sts. WllliamChildsservedasdirectoroftheauthorlty.
ment Hoes frown on non-profit groups in housing and many
Re'A. Robert Bumgardner and David Hollingsworth
times non-profit groupsareunsuecessful -because there is no reported on their attendance of a church conference on
place to pin the responsibility if the project is not successful. · housing in Washington, D. C. They indicated that
And, in non-profit groups, many times there is a lack of ex- there are adequate laws on the b~ks governing housing but
pertise.
stated tha' the conference official indicated the administration
Meigs County Engineer Wesley Buehl reported that the in Wallhington is not carrying out these legal provisions as set
Meigs Couinty Commissioners have apJropriated $20,000 in up by Congress. It was indicated also at the conference that
Federnl Revenue Sharing money for a tax map project. Farmers Home Administration is the route to go by groups
specifications will have to be drawn up to be used for ad- securing housing in rural areas rather than through the HUD
verllsing the project for bid, he said. It was agreed to ask the program, the two men said.
,
commissioners for an additional $7,500 with which to e·mploy a
The commission. endorsed the application of the Galliaperson to review JX'Operty deeds in conjunction · with the ·Meigs Community Action Agency for Title Ill funds totaling
project: ·
· ·
.
$2,850 to be used through the Outreach Program in helping
Mrs. Noama Brinker was introduced by C. E. Blakeslee, Senior Citizens with medical and pharmaceutical bills which
executive director of the commission. Blakeslee said that the they are unable to pay.
conunissioners have empowered Mrs. Brinker to work as
The commission went on record as having no objections to
administrator · for the planning commission. Mrs. Brinker the micro-wave transmission prugram being instituted in
SP,Oke on building permits and subdlvisiQil regulations and it sev.eral counties or the plans of Wilkesville to secure a planwas agreed that slie and Blakeslee w!ll work on newspaper ning grant for the study of sewage dis]lOSiil problems.
articles to Inform the public of requirements and procedures
Attending were Joe Barsotti, Mrs. Brinker, Fred Goeglein,
in these matters.
'
H.
E.
Shields, Bridget Toban, Mrs: Thomas, Thereon Johnson,
.
Baker spoke on the Meigs Metropolitan Housing Authority. Mrs. Hazel McKelvey, Ferman Moore, David'Reeser, James
This was formed sev~ral years ago and the te~ of office of Jennings and son, Wesle_Y Buehl, Edison Baker, Rev. Robert
a_ll members ~ve expired but could be reactivated .at any Bumgardner, David Hollingswortrh, Carl Barnhill, C. E.
, time, l}aker sa1d. Work by the a~thonty w~ beneflcl81 m · ~lakeslee and E. F,r?Robinson.
~
111

•

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jl

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I,

•

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