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.

~

12-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, June 14,1979
business meetings Saturday and
again Sunday, with dinners both
evenings. The ceremonial
signingwill wind up the sessions MonContinued from Page 1
positions of the two parties," Vance day .
In a development that ~mild affect
said.
There will be talk about extending treaty ratification, the Pentagon anmost-favored-nation trading status to nounced Wednesday the retirement of
the Soviet Union + but no fonnal Anny Lt. Gen. Edward L. Rowny, the
agreement since Congress first would Joint Chiefs of Staff's representative
have to be convinced that Jews and on the SALT II negotiating team for
·
other minorities are allowed to the last six years.
Pentagon
sources
who
aslied
not to
emigrate freely from the Communist
be named said Rowny, 62, has "constate.
Jewis)) emigration now is at annual sistently had reservations about the
way the treaty was being drawn." He
rate of abJut 60,000.
Carter will also try to make head- is certain to be questioned by Senate
way on the Soviet treatment of corrunittees considering the treaty
dissidents, presumably including the and could hurt its chances for
ratification if he opposes it.
jailed Anatoly Shcharansky.
Meanwhile, White House press
There have been reports a number
of dissidents might be freed to secretary Jody Powell described as
celebrate the sununit and to coax "grossly misleading " a statementby
reluctant senators to cast their votes Sen. Henry M. Jackson, D-Wash., that
seven years of detente with the Soviet
for ratification of the SALT II treaty.
Carter also will appeal to Brezlmev Union was leading to a decade of apfor cooperation in promoting peaceful peasement.
"There was a misleading reference
settlements in the Middle East and in
to the fact that we couldn't build a
southern Africa.
Specifically, the United States wan- heavy missile," Powell said Wedts the Soviets to mute their attacks on nesday at the daily White House news
the Israeli-Egyptian peace treaty and briefin'g. While that is technically
to avoid blocking a peacekeeping role correct, Powell said Jackson knew
that "there has been no consideration
for the United Nations.
or
request from our military people
Also, Carter probably will urge
Brezhnev 1o prod Joshua Nkomo and for us to build a heavy missile."
·Robert Mugabe, heads of the
Patriotic Front · guerrillas, into
negotiations with leaders of Zimbabwe Rhodesia .
Continued from Page I
The summit was shifted to Vienna
from Washington to ease travel bur- in the case of Ohio Bell.
However, Tom Cotton, Ohio Bell
dens on Bre:zlmev, who will firs t meet
Carter Friday evening when they pay spokesman who sat in on the hearing,
a courtesy call on Austrian President said Meshel had missed an important
point.
Rudolf Kirchschiaeger.
._
"Residential rates never have paid
Carter and Brezhnev hold two
the cost of residential service," he
said, adding that the average base
rate for a residential customer now is
about $10 a month. The cost of
providing service is about $20. ,
Cotton said that if the company is
forced to charge actual costs only for
business service,
residential
customers would have to pick up the
slack. ·"The rates would double," he
said.
,
Measured rates for residential
customers have been optional for
Ohio Bell customers since 1976, and
for business since the 1930s.
Meshel said he didn't object to
Get profess ion a l
measured rates being optional on the
results at a
part of the customer, who he confra c tion of th e cost.
ceded can save on his monthly base
rate under that plan "if he only needs
1\
to make a handful of calls. "
.
Hearings
are
expected
to
continue
1
next week. Cotton said Ohio Bell officials will testify at their first opAmerica's No . 1
uL i
Hom e Carpet
,. h
portunity.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Carter heads

Measiired

WHY
.PAY
MORE ·
FOR
CARPET

tLEANING ;
Rent

.

IIISEillJIC (

Cleaning

System

E]'
),
..,. ..

DANCE TICKETS AVAILABLE
Five tickets are still available to the
last dance of the season sponsored by
$}00
1 the Raoyal Oak Ballroom Dance
·· PER HOU~ 1 Club.
(4·HourM inimum ) I
Featured will be Buddy Young and
Orchestra of Columbus and will be
held at Royal Oak Park Friday, June
16, from 9 p.m. to I a.m. For tickets
call Gerald Powell at 992-2622.
~~

'f

.--------------·
I
I
I

RENT
FOR
ONLY

L-------------J
STAR SUPPLY CO.

VOL. XXVIII N0. 44
Father's Day is this Sunday. You'll find many excellent gift ideas .a t Elberfelds.
Radios, T. V.'s, cameras, clothing, luggage, records and many, many more plus
Father's Day Hallmark Cards and gift wrapping.

MUSIC DEPARTMfNT

TAPE SALE
Special savings on S-track and cassette tapes.
Country, popular, easy listening, rock and
religious.

Jog shorts, tennis shorts,
camper shorts and dress
styles. Sizes 30 to 46 waist.

REG. •3.79 ...•.....

MEN'S ss.95 SHORTS....... .S7.59
MEN'S s9.95 SHORTS ........s3.49
MEN'S $10.95 SHORTS- -: ... S9.29
MEN'S sn.95 SHORTS.... -~10.191

POCKET KNlVES

FANNY fARMER CANDY

LUNCH BUCKETS
CALCUlATORS

ICE CREAM FREEZERS

SALE! MEN'S SHIRTS
KNIT SHIRTS
DRESS SHIRTS
SPORT SHIRTS

sizes, excellent selection, the
ideal Father's Day gift.

()~ _'.- 'j . ~
1

ROLF'S

BILLFOLDS

,; VJr. MEN'S s5.95 SHIRTS ............. ..S4.93

\~

\'
l ~'h.'.(,f
/~;X:.
·' ·
s ~ ~ :.,.. .
\, [ __.

GIVE DAD A

SA LEI

CHAIR

Men's Dress Socks

trHolds, attaches, credit card
holders, initial ·' key rings,
travel bags. Boxed, ready to
give.

FROM StQOO

Big shipment just In time for
Father's Day buying. One size fits
all sizes 10 thru 13. Big selection of
solid colors.

REG. '1.25 BULKY KNIT ORLON .••. 99'
REG. 11.00 BANLON PANELS ........ 88'

SAVE 20%

HANES
FATHER'S DAY
SPECIAL

SPECIAL FATHER'S
DAY SALE

*1.00 REFUND

·New

SPECIAL FATHER'S
DAY SALE

SUMMER FURNITURE

WEMBLEY TIES
ready
hand .

By mail when you buy any 3 Hanes
Men's white lightweight all cotton
underwear or Hanes boxers.

ties
tied

just

At

Mechanic
Street
Lloyd, Telescope,
John Hancock brands. Choose
from chairs, rockers, loungers
and tables.

received,

and

SALE $5. 19
Men's S7. 50 wembley Ties
SALE $5.99
FREE GIFT BOX

SALE PRICES

SA I.E I

SPECIAL SALEI

MEN'S
TIMEX WATCHES

MEN'S s1S.95
WRANGLER
JEANS

Battery operated styles, self·
winders, digitals, calendar wat·
ches, good selection.

Sizes 29 lo 42 waist, lengths 30
to 36. Basic denim jeans In
boor flare or srralght leg
styles. Pre-washed, No Fault
blue denims.

SAVE 20%

$12.66

OTHER GIR SUGGESTIONS FROM
MEN'S DEPARTMENT • 1ST FLOOR
White Handkerchiefs
Suspenders
Work Uniforms
Sport Coats
Work Gloves
Swim Trunks
Chambray Work Shirts
Straw Hats
Bandana Handkerchiefs
Cigarette Lighters

§Jc)fl€
~
~\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\
Open your Savings
Account here.

Coveralls
Sweat Shirts
Work Socks
Dress Suits
Fashion Jeans
Bib Overalls
Summer Caps
sweat Pants
Alarm Clocks

SALE PRICES
FOR FATHER'S DAY

MEN'S
PAJAMAS
c

Sizes A, B.
and D. Solid colors and pat·
terns, choose shorties styles with short
sleeve top and knee length bottom or
regular style. Van Heusen pajamas includ ·
ed .

Meigs County

MEN'S '6.95 PAJAMAS ................. .. .15.59
MEN'S 18_95 PAJAMAS ..... .............. 17.19
MEN'S '12.50 PAJAMAS ................. '9.99
MEN'S '15.00 PAJAMAS ... ...... ....... '11.99

People

RACINE .
HOME

FDki
--

. ...... d

·· ~ · · · ~ ..

NAT! ~Jit
0

BANK'

our

Warehou~,

four · ln·

Men's $6. 50 Wembley Ties

Just in time for Father's
Day . New styles, new
colors, new widths. Ask
for free gift box.

FATHER'S DAY SALEI

MEN'S DRESS SLACKS .
Sizes 29 to 50 waist, choose your correct
length. Solid colors and patterns, entire
~tock on sale.

I

..

MEN'S $11.95 SLACKS .......... sg,go
MEN'S $14.95 SLACKS ......... $12.40
MEN'S s17.95 SlACKS .........$14.90
MEN'S s19.95 SlACKS ......... $16.50
FATHER'S DAY GIFT IDEAS

MUSIC DEPARTMENT • 2ND FLOOR
TABLE RADIOS
GUITARS
CAR FM CONVERTERS
STEREO COMPONENT SYSTEMS

SCANNERS
CAR RADIOS
TIMEX MINI AlARMS
CAR STEREO SPEAKllS

PORTABLE RADIOS
HARMONICAS

CB ANTENNAS
CLOCK RADIOS

STEREO HEADPHONES

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Raciner Ohio

I

.

A Kentucky man became Mason
County's fifth highway fatality of the
year Thursday when his car crashed
head-()n into a tractor trailer on U.S.
35, near. Beech Hill, at ll :50 a.m.
John F. Dusing, 28, Villa Hills,
Ky., suffered fatal injuries in the
collision and was pronounced dead
on arrival at Pleasant Valley
Hospital where he was taken by the
Point Pleasant Rescue Squad.
State Police Cpl. J.L. Fitzwater
said witnesses reported Dusing's car
was traveling north when it crossed
the center line and struck a semi-rig
being. operated by Nelyon Gene

I

Big selection of fabrics and colors, recliners, rockers, wall -a ways, rocker -recliners, occasional chairs by Kroehler and
Berkline. ·
·

OPEN SATURDAY 9-.30 A.M TO 5 PM

.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

are valid, the matter will be put
before voters in the fall. · The permissive auto license tax issue approved several times by earlier council has been defeated in prior referendwn actions.
During last night's meeting, Mayor
Fred Hoffman also announced the
resignations of two employes. They
are Don Roach who has resigned from
the police department and Mrs. Leora
· Sigman who has served as secretary
in the mayor's office for the past 14
years. Mrs. Sigman's resignation is
effective July · 15 and Roach's
resignation is effective as of the last
of May. Rooch indicated that he
might be available for extra work at
times

Kentucky man Mason
Coun.ty's . 5th fatality .

MEN'S
' $8
s •95 SHIRTS..............$s7•43
MEN,S s12.95 SHIRTS ........... $10.73
MENS 14.95 SHIRTS ............ 12.43
ENTIRE STOCK INCWDED

1

ELECTRIC FANS

Good .selection of styles,
leathers and ·colors. BHolds,

By ROBERT HOEFUCH
Middleport Village officials will apparently be faced with a voter
referendum action as the result of
their recent passage of a $5 permissive auto license tax in the community.
Clerk-treasurer Gene Grate reported to village council, which met
Thursday night, that petitions have
been received from a citizens committee requesting that the issue be
put to a vote of the peOple. The
petitions.are signed by 159 residents
of Middleport who ask that the matter
be brought to a vote of the people.
Grate says he has 10 days to file the
petitions with the Meigs County
Board of Elections and if the petitions

REG. '11.79 .............................. SALE '9.45
REG. '15.79 ....................... ,..... SALE '12.65

BINOCUlARS
WEED EATERS
THERMOS JUGS

FOR MEN

SALE '2.95

REG. '8.79 ............................. ... SALE '7.05

POlAROID CAMERAS
KODAK CAMERAS
BEVERAGE COOLERS

FlASHLIGHTS

o • o o • • • • • o • • • • • • •••• •••

REG. '5.79 ................................ SALE '4 •• 5

GIFT .SUGGESTIONS FROM
1ST FLOOR

en tine
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

FRIDAY, JU NE 15, 1979

Council faced
with referendum

•· -..·;.

MEN'S SUMMER
SHORTS

at

Middleport voters want say

OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8 PM

MEN'S
BELTS

~\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\~

e

•

SALE PRICES

•

\

Today
.. . in the world

Orip Carter visits
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) President Carter's son Chip visits
central Ohio today and Saturday
to campaign for a Gi&gt;lumbus
mayoral candidate and participate in local festivities in
Zanesville.
The younger Carter, a staff
member of the Carter-Mondale
presidential campaign committee, will attend campaign
gatherings for Columbus'
Democratic mayoral candidate
William Boyland this afternoon.
He will speak at a Muskingum
County Democratic Party
banquet in Zanesville tonight and
be a guest Saturday · on the
reviewing stamr of the Zane's
Trace Commemoration, a citywide festival featuring a parade,
arts and crafts, an antique auto
show and other activities.

Electric Co.
answers
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co. has been ordered to
answer 143 questiolis on company
' financing and operations within
the next 10days.
The Public Utilitie. Commission of Ohio said the answers
are needed to evaluate the electric company's applications for a
$126 million customer rate hike.
The questions were forwarded
to C and SOE last month by the
state Consumers' Coun sel,
William Spratley.
The utility had objected to the
questions, saying Spratley's
requests were burdensome and
overly broad.

Adkins, 29, Sias, W.Va.
Both the car and the cab of the
semi, owned by G.L. Slone, Inc.,
Hamlin, were demolished. Th e
·driver of the tractor-trailer was
unin jured.
Mason County Deputy Sheriff J .E.
Perry investigated an accident on
Millstone Road at 1:05 a.m. this
morning which occurred when a
pickup truck driven by ·Earl Ray
Stover, 64, Gallipolis Ferry, struck a
parked truck owned by Chester
Simpkins, Gallipolis Ferry.
After striking the truck, Stover
ran off the road into a creek bed.
Stover was cited for driving
without an operator's license.
Damage was estimated at $850 to
Stover's truck and $700 to the
Simpkins truck.
'

":

Council approved the report of
Mayor Hoffman for the month of
May. The report showed $3409.75 in
fines and fees and $911 in merchant
police collections for a total of
$3507.75.
Mayor Hoffman reported that the
village bas $9108 in the street resurfacing fund and asked the street committee composed of Dewey Horton,
Allen Lee King and Marvin Kelly to
study how the funds can be spent to
the best ·advantage and to make
·recommendations at the next
meeting. Mayor Hoffman asked the
group to look especially at Riverview
Drive in lower Middleport. The
mayor also reported that a new contract has been received from the
county on lodging prisoners in the
county jail. The contract provides a
charge of $14 for the first day and $10
a day thereafter. The mayor reported
that he has given the contract to
Solicitor Bernard Fultz lor review
since there are a number of
provisions involved.
The mayor reported also that many
(Continued on page 10)

EMEkG!:., {,.
TOWING

~

FOR rROG5
·ONlY

FROGS ONLY - During Regatta weekend Jack
Codner, owner of Codner's Texaco, Syracuse, will be
offering towing service for "frogs" only. Jack displays
a sign in regard to the service which will be posted in a

SEORC wants completion
of Appalachia Highway
The Southeasatern Ohio
Regional Council by action of its
Highway Users ' Committee bas
recommended that the ' Ohio
Legislature enact legislation
which will provide the necessary
funds for continued new highway ·
construction and maintenallc.~ of
the existing systems, Robert L.
'

(Bob) Evans announced. Evans,
president of SEORC, said the
recommendation has been mailed
to legislative leaders in the form of
a resolution which· was unanimously approved by members of the
committee.
.
.G. _ ~efll!er_ ~ush, chairma.n of the
highway committee, said that

Delay of Gallipolis Dam pro-iect
.J
costing taxpayers dearly--Glenn
WAslllNGTON - Senator .John years ago, on July 25, 1975, Glenn told
Glenn ([).Ohio) has told a Senate sub- a Public Works subcorrunittee that
comittee that Administration delays the project's Qriginal $159 million cost
in proceeding with the Ohio River has escalated more than 10 per cent a
lock and dam modifications have cost year.
the taxpayers considerable money.
"This has added tens of millions to
Noting that the chief of the Army the final costs of the project " Glenn
'
Corps of Engineers recommended a said.
go-ahead on the project almost four
Criticizing a long string of studies
that have been ordered for the project, Glenn told his colleagues:
"The escalating costs for projects
we all know will eventually be built
should be laid at the appropriate
doorstep. I think the case has been
:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;

CLEVELAND (AP)- Numbers
drawn in the Ohio lottery Thursday:
Blue 366; white 34; gold B•
winathon 37955. .
'

SANDI .
HAMll.TON

PAIGE

SMml

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Sunday through Tuesday - A
c hance of showers or
thunderstonns Sunday, becoming
partly cloudy Monday and Tuesday. Higba in the low to mid 80s.
Lows in the 60s Sunday and low to
mid 50s Monday and Tuesday.

f&gt;
BRENDA
FOSTER

\
JULIE
GmBS

made for putting a halt to these incredibly expensive 'te&lt;1tudies •."
The Senator urged that if the Public
Works Corrunittee decides to expand
the 'Administration 's original bill it
add Gallipolis as a priority construction item.

completion of the Appalachia
Highway and other highway projects which ha.ve been shelved are
of the utmost importance to the
economy of southeastern Ohio. He
added that the .Appalachia project
had been the f~rst pno~ty of the
corruruttt:esmceltsmcepllon.
According to Bush, a poll taken
of the SEORC membership in-

delays in new highway construetion, including comletion of the
Ohio Appalachia Highay as promised and scheduled by 1·the state
administration,
WHEREAS, timely completion
of the Ohio Appalachia Highway as
scheduled is of paramount .luiportance to the southeastern Ohio
region and has been the first

tion of the Appalachian Highway,
US Route 35 from Gallipolis to
Chillicothe including the Jackson
by-pass; construction of Route 33
from Darwin to Athens; 423 bypass at Portsmouth ; and the
.Nelsonville by-pass on US Route
33 ; andinthatorder.
The resolution stated that :
. WHEREAS, Ohio is faced with a
critical lack of funds to meet
escalating highway maintenance
and repair costs which threaten

regional highway construction
projects listed as top priority in a
recent poll of 200 southeastern
Ohio members are . jeopardized by
state highway under-funding,
· WHEREAS, Ohio 's _7-cent
gasoline excise tax has not been increased to meet escalating c011ts
over the past 20 years, and
WHEREAS, there are several
bills before the Ohio Legislature to
(Continued on page 10)

~c~:t~k~e ~w:~ep:~~~~~ ~~~~:~f~=:on°:lv~a~:::.ttee
WHEREAS, nearly all other

14 vie for Regatta crown
Fourteen Meigs County girls are
competing for the title of Big Bend
Regatta Queen and will begin a round
of social and contest activities in a
few days .
Opening festivities for the group
will be a picnic Monday at the home of
Miss Cathy Blaettnar, Pomeroy,
reigning queen hosted by her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. John William Blaettnar.
On Tuesday the contestants will get
together to construct their own floa I
for the regatta parades. Wednesday
everung wtD be the judging by a panel
of three out of county judges who are

TAMMY
MILLER

SMITH

members of the Ohio Festival
Association. Judging will be at the
Riverboat Room of The Athens County Savings and Loan, Meigs Branch.
On Thursday, the queens will take
part in the ftrst parade and on Friday
will visit the midway along with some
25 queens of visiting festivals who will
be coming for Regatta Weekend.
The new queen and her court wiD be
named Saturday on the upper parking
lot In ceremonies to be presided over
by Bill Quickel, general chairman of
this year's regatta. The queen and first, second and third runners-up and
Miss Congeniality will receive
flowers, gills from the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce, and trophies.
Bonds will be presented the four top
winners.
Following ceremonies, at which
time each of the visiting queens will
speak, a luncheon will be held for the
entire group on the P. A. Denny.
The queen contestants as announced by Mrs. Tanya Davis, queen
chairman, are pictured.
Sandi Hamilton, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Hamilton, Minersville ; Paige Smith, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Thomas Smith, Pomeroy;
Brenda Foster, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Brown, Pomeroy; Julie
Gibbs, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gary
Gibbs, Route .2. Racine ; Tammy

Amtrak derails
LANCASTER, Pa. ( AP)- Nhie
passengers were !J!ken to nearby
hospitals aflet four cars of Am·
trak 's National Umited bound for
St. Louis derailed here, police
said.
Five of the injured were
treated and released ; four were
admlited.
·
The derailed cars remained
upright after jumping the track
Wednesday night on an old stone
railroad bridge 80 feet above the
Conestoga River, autboritles
said.

•
-

'

DENISE
QUAI..IS

~ ~tJ,
CARRIE
BEARHS

window at the station. Codner offers towing services to
residents throughout Meigs County but next weekend,
June 21 through 24, "frogs" will have top priority.

'
ARMINTHA
HOLTER

ANGEL
BLAKE

SARA
DIDDLE

I

SONYA
HILL

Krl'CHEN
I;

Miller, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Wlllard Miller, Pomeroy; Tammy
Smith, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dan
Smith, Route I, Racine; Denise
Qualls, daughter of Mrs. Mary QuaDs,
Pomeroy; Carla Bearba, daughter of
Mrs. Florence Bearhs, Middleport;
Armintha Holter, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Holter, Racine ; Angel
Blake, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Eldon Blake, Jr., Reedsville ; Sara
Diddle, daughter of Mrs. Betty
Pooler, Middleport ; Sonya Hill,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Hill,
Racine; Julie Kitchen, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Kitchen, Sr.,
Middleport ; VIcki Blankenship,
daughter of Mr. and Jllrs. Robert
Good, Middleport.

Grand Croaker
investigates
'Gazebo" charge
William (Blll ) Young, Grand
Croaker of the Ohio Society of the
Promotion of the Bull Frog, said
today that he plans a complete investigation on the charges made by
Kyle allen against Dale M.Dutton.
Allen charged that Dutton Is really
El Gazebo, Spanish Matador, who
caused a bull to disappear in a ring in
Spain. Later, Allen contented, the bull
appeared in Hamburg, Germany.
Allen is fearful that El Gazebo will
cause him to disappear or the frogs to
disappear in order to win the frog derby.
Young commented that he plans to
call this matter before the Frog
Racing committee, Dale Warner,
William B. Downie, Paul Gerard,
TIJereon Johnson, and James Clatworthy.
The decision of the Frog Racine
commlttee .will be final unleas the
case Is appealed to another court.
Dutton denies that he Is El Gazebo,
that he has never been a bllll fighter
nor Is he a magician.

�'
~3-The Daiiy Sentinel, Midd.l~port-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, JWle 15, 1979
2-The naily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday , June 15, 1979
NOTI 'C E TO
BIDDER S

Ut' Ot)l tl olll' Cl . tl 11 L' Ol! o(v O l
l ht.' Tr c &lt;l &lt;,u rt •r M oddi(PO• 1

local SChOO l D 1Sir Cl Of
M i dd leport. OhiO ill l hC'

Oh•O
•\ ((' r lo hc d i:t1N ~ D&lt;iYcl lllt.'
to Il l ~'
l rf'd '&gt;l/r pr o t th ~'
,lOOX'' oo.1ra or ''tiu(,1 t ton
C\f a s,l tos t a c tory btd t&gt;on d
~· ~~'cu t Nt ~.y t he ll •ddcr ilnd
II H' su r e ty co•n o&lt;lliv . in an
amount count
to
t •vc
/Jf'r lt' llt (5 Pl' f ((' l11 ' Of lhC
b1d &lt;;!lc)ll DC SU bn 11q l'd w i th

Treas u rer 's o tf cc un t d

CC\C il 0H1

12 DO N oon on Ju n(' )0, 1979

Sil •d bo ar d o f ed uc ill to n
reserves lt1c riqht to Wil iVl'
11lf orma l i t 1CS. to &lt;i cc ept o r
rc ,cc t iln y and all or PcHI S
o t dny t'lnd an b rds
No , b id!&gt; may be w 1th
drawn tor at l cast th .rtv
(JQI
davs
alter
th e
sche duled closrng t i mt' tor
rc c('• P' of b •ds

PURCHA SE OF
SJ)( SC HO OL BUSES

FOR
MEIGS LOCA L BOARD

OF EDUCATION
Sc~led

propo sa ls w d l bv

received by

tt1f•

Ed uc.lt ion

ot

OnMd o t

tn£'

Mc1qS

and at !hat tnnl' open£'n by
the
Trea surN o t S&lt;11 0
bOard, t abutaled , and a

reporl the reat m ad e to sa 1d
Boa rd at i t s next r (' Qular
meeting as p rov d ed by l rtw
tor six ( 6 ) 65 pa ss enqcr

school buses . a cc or cHnq ro
specificat i on s o t sa 1o board

oi educat io n

Separate
and
1n
dependent bids w i ll be
recf.&gt;ived wilt1 r espet;:t to l h t•
c hassis and body typ e and
w il l

s tar e thaT

assembled

th C' bus wh e n

j'lnd

pr 1or

to

Board o f E duc.l l ton
M c,qs Loca 1
Scho ol D is lr tc l
Ja n e Wa q ner ,
frca su r e r
·
SOUITl lh1rd Avenu.t'
Middleport. Ohio 45760

del i very comply w i th ,111'
school
d is tr .c t
( 6 1 8 , 15. n . 29 . 4l c
specif i col ions , all ~a f e t y
regulations ana cu rr e n t
Ohio M in 1mum Standards
t or
Scho ol
Bus
Con
PUBL IC MEE TIN G
s truct ion of the Depart
A
" Prooosed
Use
ment o f Educat ion adopted
Hear 1ng " will be hel d at the
by and w i th the consenT of
Counc j l Chambers o f the
the Director of H ig hway
V i llaqe o f M i ddleport on
Safety pursuant To Section
June ?.S . 1979 at 7 : 30 P .M .
4511.76 of th e Oh io R evised
tor the I?Urpose of givi n g
Code and all other per
lhC pubt rc the opportuni t y
t i nent prev i si on ot l aw .
to ma ke or al or w r i tt en
Specif i cat io ns and 1n
r.uggcstions
r ega rd ing
s truc ti ons to b idders ·may /~ssi bl e uses of Revenue

IN l HE
C.OMMO N PLEA S
COURl OF
MEIGS COU N TY,
OHIO
LEONARD L. LENTZ ,
P l ai ntiff .

..,11 d f"11l(l
I UIHI S 111 1h('
~11110unt o f S 1-l 6S8 00 t or t hr
f- lc;t d l Y e,H o t 1980
GC' n c G rat{' ,
C. I C' rk. Tr cc1Su rcr
( t'i I

I"

~·s.

II C

NELLIE ROBE¥
De t cndarH s.

-

J

ET Al ,

N o . t&amp;, 870
BY
PUBLICATION To V inl• c Hopk in S. ad
d r~' S'&gt; unkn o wn , 11 l ivi no .
oHH1
if
dCCCitSe d
lh L'
u nknown her r s, dCvtsees.
ICQ.11C"C S.
.Jdm in rs trCII Or S,
r;o.; ~·{.u t o r s and
&lt;I '&gt;Si qn s ·o t
Vint.e Hopk irl~. &lt;' dclr(ISSCS
un k-nown ,
and
N ellie
Robey , a ddress unkn own .
if Jivinq, and '' dcceascct
th e,
unknown
he i r s ,
d ev i sees , lcgC~tees. ad
nli n ist r ators , execu t ors
and as~ i qns o f
N ellre
Robe y ,
addres ses
unknown :
You are her eby not if ied
that a Compla i nt has be en
f iled in the Common P l eas
Court of 'Me i gs Co unty ,
OhiO . Case No . 16 .87 0 .
Qemanding partit ion o f t h,e
follow ing desc r ibed rea l
est;lte , t o wit :
Parcel
No,
1:
T he
fo llowi ng
real
estate
situate i n One Hundred
Acre Lot N o . Thr ee Hun
d red a n d
Five i n said
County o f Meigs de sc r ibed
as fol lows : Beginning at
tile No r thwe st corner o f Lo t
No . On e Hund r ed an.d

LEGA L NOTIC E
M&lt;'lrv•n P
C r crncC~ns .
wllOSl' tast k.nown place of
rl ~.r d ~ n ct&gt; rs; co Leonard
Creme an s R t ·1 . Coolv i ll e,
Ohio . •s hr&gt;r "bv notif i ed
l h r~l on
tn l' r tr&lt;i f day o f
Ju ll (' . 19 79 . Oap tH1(' G .
Cr emeans . pta •t1t r!f , t i led
he r com pla i nt aga ins t him
a s d e fendan t in the Cour t of
Com mon
P le as . Meigs
Cou nty , Ohio . Case No
17. 199 , oemanding
tor
div o r ce from th e sa i d
Marvm P Cremeans on th e
ground o f gross neglect o f .
di.JIY and ex tre me cruelty ;
plai nt i ff a lso demands for
c us,tody of the minor chii CI
&lt;tnct o th er pr o p er tel ief ,
1 his nor i ce will r un once
a week f or six consecutive
weeks . th e la st publication
being on the 13th da y o f
July , 1979 The de f enda nt
w ill have 18 c:Jav s tr om the
day o f last publication in
Which to answer
said
compla i nf .
Daphn e G Cremea ns
P lain t iff
Patr i ck H . O' Br ien
Atto rn ey f o r Plaint i ff

~ NO TICE

( 6 ) 8, 15 , 22 . 29 . (7) 6. 13, 61c

111E OAJLY SENTINEL

tUSPS H$.960)

guaranteed
used car

DEVOTED TO mE
INTERE.\'TOF

MEIGS-IIIA$0N AREA
ROBERT HOEFLICH
•

PubU1hed dally es:eept S.tunbly by The Oblo
V.lley Publlsll.lq Company. MultlmN!a, lllic.,
Ul Court Sl., Pomeroy, Ohio 457111. 8\lalnesa:
Offltt Pbont 99Z· ZISI. Edltortal Phone

m.-zm.

~read clan

CHECK AND COMPARE

1976 PONTIAC TRANS AM .••••••••• ~ •••• $4895
Air, auto., P.S.. P .B., AM·FM, factory tape, c ruise, tilt wh ee l. ralley
wheels.
'

1978 ASPEN CUSTOM 2 DR••••••••••••• $3995
2 D r .,

City Edllor

postage paid at Pomeroy, Obltt.

National•d Jl'!rti!llng rtrrtRDtaiJvl!, Landon
Auodatet, 3101 EueHd Ave., Clevelaod, Ohio
44115 .

Subscriptloa !'lite&amp;: Delivered by carrier
when: avallabll'! te ceDts per week. By Motor
Route wbere carrier servltt oot av.Uable, Ooe
mooth, SUO. By matllo Oldo aDd W. Va., One
Year, $%7.51i SlJ: mo11tb1, $14.50; Tbree montbs, $1.SD; E11ewbere $3Z.Ot year ; Sl&amp; months
$17.10; Tbrtt monthll, $8.00. Subserl plJoo price
!Deludes S.Dday Ttmes--Sentiatl.

! '·I' r.,.n filii• t'l ! lf..'rton &amp;
1 •••
A dcJ • I•on
to
fl tl •t l o,: r o y 0n the So t.." h lrnc:
&lt;'! ~ai d One Hundr ed Acr r
Lot No 305 , rhe ncc Nort lr ·•
J '
tiC'Cl
wc..-. t Ninety Eiq ht
t e() l , IQ r.• u,, $1 r ce t , .ftl('nffo
a tonq &lt;;,\ of! 1-: un 51r' N' I clow n
f hc n1n t o,., pni n t N o r'lh .11
d"q w. .· ~t l rom . th e N or
ltH·, , •, I co rner o f sai d Lo t
N u 1 l A tt~nu• South 4i,
dr:&gt;-q E,'l S I IO said N Orlh('OSI
corr1cr o t No 1111 at the
So uth ti n e o l sa •d 100 Acre
l o t :10s, t hcncc atonq sa i d
S'l utll t i n e to th e Plil ce ot
beq rnn i nq , bei n ll th e West
end of Lot N o One H undred
and Sn( rn sa•d Horton &amp;
D abney ' s . Addition
to
P ome r oy
Pare et
No
2
The
f o llowinq
re r~l
es lillt'
&lt;;i t ua red i n t he V ill ag e o f
P omeroy . County o t Mergs
and Slat e o f Qh ro : Betng In
100 Acre Lot No . 306 in C .
W
D u bncv's Addition t o
the Village of Pomeroy.
and
n'1 o r e particu l a rly
descr ibed as follow s . Being
Lot 118 in c . W . D ab n ey's
Add.tion to the Village of
P ome roy ,
excepting
therefrom tile f ollowing
parce l. The fo l lowing r ea l
estate Situated in th e
Village
of
Pomeroy, ·
Coun ty of Meigs and Sta t e
Of Ohio . Bei ng in 100 Acre
Lot N o . J06 in C. W Dab
ney 's Add i tion
t.o
the
Village of Pomer oy . and
more
particularly
described
as
follow s :
B egi n ning at the southwest
co rner o f Lo t No . liB ;
t hen ce North d1 1 degr ees
west 156 t eet t o a Hmce ;
thence East 97 teet t o the
eas t l ine o f sa id L ot liB ;
thence So uth on the E ast
l ine o f sai d Lot N o . 11 9 to
Fry Street : the n ce Wes t to
the place of beg i nnin g.
R et e rence Deed : Vo l.
271, ' Pag e
361,
D eed
R ecords Meigs County ,
Ohi o .
You are not i f ie d tha t you
are r e qui r ed to answer the
Comp la i n t within twen t y
eigh t days atter the tas t
pu b lica t ion .
The
last
publication will be made on
the 20day day of Ju l y , 1979 .

u .. r••.

LA'RRY E SPE N CER .
CLER K OF COURTS

161

ME IGS COU NT Y , O HI O
8, 15. 22. 29 Ill 6, 13, 20,

71(

Slant 6, auto .. P .S., P .B. , 1h vi nyl .roof, AM ·FM, r all ey wheels .

RIVER DOWNS
CINCINNATI {APJ - Buttered
Toast. carrying 119 pounds, was the
favori te today in the $3,700 featured
eighth race at River Downs.
1\ing Oasis won the $4,000 featured
race , by . five length s Thursday and

GIFTS
FOR
DAD...
ot

Tfl~

t -~~
~ ~~
~ ~

;,:,
. ~~

w ·.

_ \~"; '
t~l~

A FINE SELECTION
OF FATHER'S DAY
GIFTS, CARDS, PEN

&amp; PENCIL SETS; ETC. ••

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE
99 MILL ST.

. nventoru .
Clean-up Sale
clearance
priced
while ~~iii
they
last

V·8, aut., P.S., P .B., air.

V·S, auto., P . S., P . B., vin yl roof.

5

1975 DATSON B-210 2 DR............... 1695
1974 MUSTANG HATCHBACK ••••••••••••• $1995
1974
FORD 4 DR. WAGON ••••••••••• ···• $1495
auto.,
Atr ,

P . S., P. B .

1974 IMPALA 2 DR ••••••••••••••••••••••• $895
1973 BUICK CENTURY······ ····u• ·· ··· s1395

SINGER MEMORY MACHINE
MODEL 2001

ALL MODELS DISCOUNTED
WHILE THEY LAST

•150 00 OFF

FABRIC SHOP
115 W. 2ND

BAUM TRUE VALUE
0.

285·3301
Chester, 0.

By ALEX SACHARE

STOP IN FOR

1975 FORD GRAND TORINO 2 DR•••••••• $1995
1974 CHEVY CHEVEu.E 2 DR••••••••••••• ~1695

Expos nip Braves, 4-3

returned $5.40, $2.80 and $2.80. Quips
and Quotes paid $3.60 and $3.40 to
place, and Barbary Boy returned $4.20
to show.
Brave pocket arid Flighty Fan, the
5-3 daily double com bination;
returned ~9.20.
A crowd of 3,679 wagered $395,299.

j&amp; lWHEEL HORSE

RACINE PONY LEAGUE TEAM - Left-right,
.Steve Fisher, Allen Pape, John Porter, Kent Wolfe, Jay

79th U. S. Open to be
remembered as'Year of Tree'
By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - They'~e
calling the 79th United States Open
Championship the Year of the Tree.
And it's an apropos titl~.
A 25-foot spruce was awaiting Lon
Hinkle and his Short Cut Gang today
beside the eighth tee at Inverness
Club.
Embarrassed officials of th e
governing U.S . Golf Association hope
the tree, put in place Thursday night,
Will eliminate playing down the
adjoining 17th fairway to negotiate an
easypar-orevenbirdie-atthe528yard, par-5 dogleg hole .
"! was real tempted not to tell
anybody about it. We hit to the same
landing area thatpeople from 17 do ,"
said Hinkle, who hit a !-iron to the
fairway, a 2-iron to the eighth green
and 2-i&gt;utted from 70 feet for his bird.
The strategy helped him to a 1-

COLO\l ·
n

f'h,·ult

•

t

Friday thru
Thursday, June 21st

THE CHAMP
CARTOON

..:2ilawn &amp; garden tractors

4 Or ., V-8, a uto., P .S., P . B, air.

1967 CADILLAC •••••e4e~r•.J~af:~·. • • • • • • • • • • $395
1959 FORD 4 DR.··················.· ···· 5195
197
4 FORD BRONCO ••••••••••••·•••••••• $2895
V:B, std ., 4 wheel
(,
V-8,3spd .. &gt;;,Ton . $595
1964 FORD•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
dr i v e.

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See Roger Riebel
985-3345 or 66 7-3463

St. Rt. 7

1 mile north
Tuppf;!rs Plains, Ohio

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THE TOP SHE
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AT BURGER

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1978 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX.~ •••••••••• $5495
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1976 MERCURY MONARCH .••••••••••••• $2995
P .S., P . B ., air, 6 c yl.

6

.1976 DODGE DART. ••••••••• •.c:~·:."!:~: ;~ .s2195
Std. trans .. 2 dr ., 6cyl.
$1695
1975 MAVERICK ••••••••••••••••••••••••
4cy t.,2dr.. auto .. black .
$1695
1974 MUSTANG •••••••••••••••••••••••••
1975.FIAT ••••••• ;:d~:~f:~~::p.9~ ••••••••••• sl095
Auto., P.S., P.li., air .
$
1974 MONTEGO •••••••••••••••••••••••••
1095
1974 CHEVY MONTE CARLO.~~~~=~~ ••••• s1895
1974 COMET 6 CYL 2 DR HT••~~d~ ••••••• 51495
1972 FORD •e.~ ••~~r~~.a~:o~................ s495

when you purchase
a TOP Shef sandwichthe burger with
the bacon
at the regular price. ,
Tested and approved by Peter Bloeme,
World Frisbee Champion.\
·

Rees, Robert Brown, Jeff Sopher, Terry Patterson,
Seott Frederick, Trevor Cardone and Hilton Wolfe, Jr.,
coach.

Friday &amp; Saturday

SPEED TRAP
.AND

THE STING OF THE
WEST
Sunday-Monday
&amp; Tuesday

UP1ti SMOKE
AND

PRETTY BABY

Scaled down
performance

KEIOO
• New
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Cylinder with
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• New So lid Slate
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Rectifier For Constant

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prep
Don't let the good
times pus you by!

J&amp;R
SPORTS
.SHOP

Wlder-par 10; good for a share of the
first-round lead with 1975 Open
champion Lou Graham, Tom Purtzer,
Andy Bean and Keith Fergus .
At least six players - Jerry Heard,
Dave Eichelberger, John Schroeder,
Chi Chi Rodriguez, Jim Simons and
Hinkle - played the eighth hole via
the shortcut, which cut about 50 yards
from the length of the hole. Heard and
Schroeder also birdied it. The others
parred it.
" I didn 't now about that . Why didn't
somebody tell me?" said a surprised
Graham afterward .
James R. Hand, chairman of the
USGA's champions hip committee,
·said: "I was amazed the opening was
possible. I hadn't seen it."
"The situation created a danger to
the players, the spectators and a
delay in play," Hand said.
The tree
incident nearly
overshadowed one of the great Open
comebacks by •Tom Purtzer.

Purtzer, 27, whose only victory
came in the 1977 lAls Angeles Open,
was 5'0ver-par. after five holes
Thursday. Hewentdoublebogey, then
triple bogey.
He had hit shots bare-footed from a
creek, left-handed from under a bush
and from atop a pine cone. He took a
fat 39 on the front side.
And this was the world's most
prestigious golf tournament ; the
second of four major championships
this year for the men.
Then, in a startliilg turnaroWld he
,couldn't explain himself, Purtzer
lashed back at proud, old InverneS.s,
the site of its fourth Open in 59 years.
Purtzer birdied four straight holes,
five of the last six for a 31 on the
. backside and a share of the lead.
Purtzer surveyed his eight-birdie
round, paused and said, "Normally,
I'm not a birdie machine. I was just
trying to shoot 73-74. I'm fortunate to
be back in the hunt."

Meigs summer results
By Greg Baney
on the year as they picked up two wtns
Host Eastern romped to a 12-7 win recently. Last Saturday they took the
over Mason in Pony League action visiting Pomeroy Tigers 9-3 in an
earlier this week. Robbie Smith .got eight-inning aifair, and then last night
the win with relief help from Larkins they rolled over visiting Powell's
and Richie. Smith l!iso led the Giants, 8-2.
Eastern hitters with three singles and · In the Tiger. contest, Tony Welch
a double. Brian Well, Charlie Ritchie, · and Danny Thonuis shared the moWld
Deron Jewett , and Mark Holter l!lso for the Indians, fanning ten and
had a hit each for the winners.
walking eleven. Welch tripled in the
Lyons took the loss, and Lavender bottom of the eighth to bring in the
and VanMeter finished up on the winning nm. Scot Gheen was the big
mound. Spradling had a double and stick for the winners, soeking a triple
single for Mason while Bradley, and homer. Steve Crow got a double,
Zuspan, VanMeter, Lyons and Basa and single hitters were Eric Johnson, ·
each had one hit.
Danny .Thomas, and Allen TerryM
1m 005 0- 7 6
Parker lAlng and Chris Shank pilE
046 101 x-12 8 ched for the Tigers, strlklng out
eleven and walking thirteen. Shank
In a make-up Pee Wee game, the .bad a homer in the losing cause, and
host Rutland Angels took a 5-4 Jack Welker hacJ a double. Getting
decision from the Pizza Shack. Scott singlea were Jerry Smith, oleff Holtz,
Williams got the win, striking out nine Welker and Todd Hysell.
000 600 02~ 8
batters and walking six. Artie Hunnel T
120 300 03-9 11
took the loss, fanning nine and I
walking seven.
Thomas got the win in the Powell's
Williams led the winners at the
plate with a double and single. Denny contest, fanning nine and walking
Welsh had one double. For Pizza three. Gheen socked two homers and
Shack, Scott Powell had two singles a double to lead the hitting, and
Thomas bad a ,double and single.
and Don Dorst had a triple.
Crow had two doubles while Johnson,
Scott Hanning and Ed Kitchen pit- and James l!:eesee had a single each.
BobbY. Foster took the loss for P
ched a one-hitter as the Middleport
Cubs blasted the host Middleport owell's, fanning two and walking just
Mustangs 1~ In another Pee Wee one. Bryan Kom had a double and
contest. Matt Baker got the only single to lead the Giants at the plate.
Rodney Roush, Sean Doidge, and Bret
Mustang hit, a single.
Hanning and Kitchen gave up just Korn each had a single.
010 001-2 7 1
four walks while striking out seven. G
I
204 02x~ 10 2
They hi tone Mustang batter.
Lester Stewart and Baker shal-ed
the mound chores for the hosts, fanLATONIA'RESULTS
ning eight and walking thirteen. ·
FLORENCE, Ky . (AP)- Caroway
Greg Rage\- was the big attack for Prince paced the mile in 2: :02 3-0
the Cubs as he banged out a double ThW"sday night to win the $1 ,000
and two singles. Getting a single each featured eighth race at La!!&gt;nla,
for
the
winners paying $4.20, $3.20 and £2.20.
was Mickey Davis, Todd Hood and
Boozer Byrd placed, returning $3.80
Kitchen.
and $2.80, and Ragged Prize, third,
The Cubs are now 2-4 on the year paid $2.80.
while the Mustangs·are 3-2.
C
205 33-13 6 I
M
00000-012

In girls action, the New Haven
Braves · downed Dale C. Warner Insurance, 12-10. No stats were
available for the winners , only that
their pitcher fanned eight and walked

three.
For the losers; Tilmmy Wright, Jenny Couch, and Heather CulllUDS each
bad a homer. Cull urns also banged out
three singles while Couch had a
double.
Couch took the loss as she fanned
five
and
w
alkedone.
206 22-12
B
311 41-10
I
The Middleport !ndians are now .9-G

1rademan300,P.S.,P. B., air. $229
1974 OODGE VAN··········~·············
5
F·250, auto., P.S., P.B.
$1995.
1974 FORD PICKUP.•••••••••••••••••••••

AP Sports 'writer
When things are .going well , it
doesn't matter what they throw at
you .
-..
Gene Garber tried to jam
Montreal's Tony Perez with a fast ball
in the eighth inning, and the veteran
first baseman hit it for a run-&lt;JCoring
single. So when Gary Carter stepped
to the plate, Garber decided to try and
slip a changeup post him.
It didn't work . Carter slammed a
boomirig double to left, driving in two
runs and giving the Expos a . 4-3
victory over the Braves.
The victory raised Montreal's home
record to 20-3 and extended its lead
over second-place St. Louis to one
game in the National League East.
In other games, the Chicago Cubs
beat the San Francisco Giants ~ and
the San Diego Padres edged the

Pittsburgh Pirates 2-1 in 14 innin gs.
The Ex pos trailed 3-1 before Rodney
Seott led off the eighth with a single,
moved to third on Andre Dawson 's
double off the left-field wall and
scored on the single by Perez.
'
''Perez has been driving in runs Hke

that for 14 years," said Expiis
Manager Dic.k Williams. "Garber
tried to jam him with the pitch and
Tony just fought it off."
Garber, who had entered the game
in relief of starter Buddy Solomon
after two runners reached base in the
eig hth , then gave up the two-run
double to ·Carter.
''He took a little off his fast ball and
kept the.balldown a bit," said Carter .
"You just have to stay with him
because he gives you so much arms
and legs and motion. He can
intimid ate you when he comes
sidearm.' '

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
Oakland at Toronto. In )
Seattle at Cleveland , {n)
Boston at Chicago. lnl

. Base)!all AI A Glance
By The Associated Press
AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
W. L. Pet. GB
39 22 .639
Baltimore
Basion
37 22 .627 1
34 29 .540 6
Milwaukee
New York

33 29 .532

Detroit

Cleveland
Toronto
California
Minnesota

WEST

~..New

Sundav's Games
Califofnia at Detroit
Oakland at Toron t o
~,e attle at Cleve land
Boston at Chicago
Baltimore a t Minn esota
Kans as City at M il waukee
New York at Texas, (n)

hi!?

29 27 .518 ) If,
30 30 .500 8•;,
18 46 .281 22'h
J8 26 .594

32 27 .5.:12

Kansas City

' 33 29
Texas
32 29
Chicago
29 31
Seattle
26 38
Oakland
19 44
Thursday's Games

.532
.525
.483
.400
.302

2

18'h

California 10, Toronto 2

St. Lou is

Pittsburgh

28 28 .500

Philadelph ia

Chicago
New York

Only games scheduled

Los Angeles

Friday's Games

.
Saturday's Games
Cal ifornia a1 Detro it
Baltim ore at Minnesota
Kansas City at Milwaukee

being called for ratification of contract 7:30 Fri.,
June 15th.

37 27 .578
34 27 .557 Ph

San Diego

30 35 .462 71f"J

6112

30 34 .469 7

22 39 .361 13'1&gt;

Thursday's Games

Montrea l 4,- Atlanta 3

San Diego'2 , Pittsburgh 1. 14 innings
Chicago 8, San Francisco 6
0\ly games sc hed u led

Friday's Games

Houston (Andujar 5-4) at rV\ontreal

!Sanderson 4·4) , {n)
Atlanta IP . Ni ekro ) .9) at
(Swan 6.4) , {n I
Cincinnati I Seaver
Philadelphia IChr.istenson
Chicago {Reuschel 5·51 at

Ne w York
3-51. at
1·31. In)
San Diego

(Rasmus sen 3-6L (n)

Pillsbvrgh I Bly leven 2·21 al Los
Angeles !·Sutton 6-61. In)
St . LoUis (Vuc 1&lt;ovich 6·3) at San
F ra ncisco (Nastu 2·d), {n)

Tigers, Reds r--------------.,
1
MEIGS
l
same··Houk II EQUIPMENT co. II
1 Pomeroy, 0. Ph . 992-2176 I
DAYTON , Ohio (AP) - Sparky
Hours: 8-S Mon.-Fri.
I
Anderson will be going to a Detroit
B-12 Sat.

DOUG'S MARINE
SALES &amp; SERVICE

1

992·5652

1

Tigers organization which Is similar I
Closed Sunday
I
in some ways to the club he left ln I International
New tdea 1
Cincinnati, according to former 1 Harvester
Equipment 1
Tigers Manager Ralph Houk.
------~-----"They believe in building a club,"
said Houk, who was here recently for
a golf tournament. " They don't
believe in the free agent market. I
think it's bad foc baseball ·.... It hurts
the clubs that can't go out and pay the
big money for the players they need."
Houk, who retired as Detroit
manager at the end of last baseball
season, said it was "kind of a
surprise" to hear of Anderson's
appointment.
"I'm sorry Les (Moss) had to finish
up like this, but I feel the Tigers hired
a fine manager in Sparky," Houk
said.
Anderson, who was fired by the
Reds after last season, will be coming
into a "solid organization," according
to Houk, who managed the Tigers for
£ive years. "There's no finer
organization aroWld.
"Jim Campbell Is a great president
and the owner, Mr. (John) · Fetzer,
really supports the club," Houk, who
also Is a former manager of the New
York Yankees, said.

---·

1400

.WEED &amp; GRASS
TRIMMER

Gas .powered
lightweight
for home
yard&amp;
garden
grooming

• Easy- · "
to-use

2 GALLON
DOUBLE WHITE
EXTERIOR OR LATEX

• Fast starting
4ccengln~

Automatic
line feed
• Optional brush
blade

HOUSE PAINT
Sugar Run Mills
992-2115

!'OMEROY, OHIO

d~~ 0 . ~o'""--..

SPECIAL

MUtB£RRY AVf.

for

27 29 .482
23 33 .411

30 33 .476

Atlanta

meeting

Jlh

San Francisco

•1395
.
·
2 GAL
1503 Eastern Ave. in Gallipolis
Jackson Squa-re in Jackson
688 W. Main St. in Pomeroy

32 28 533

WEST

Houston
Cincinnati

Qakland (Johnson 2·81 at Toronto
(Underwood 0-91 {n)
Seattle {Jones 161 at Cleveland'
(Walls 8·4, In)
California !Barr 3·11 at Detro it
!Rozema 3·3 L· Inl
Kansas City ISpilttorff 8·~1 at
Milwaukee !Ca ldwell 6·51. In)
Boston (Torrez 6·31 at Chicago
{Barrios 6·31. In I
Baltimore I D. Martinez 9·2) at
Minnesota !Hartzel l 3·41. lnl
New York {Figueroa 3·51 at Texas
(Matlack J .J), lnl

$Jij1cial

Carp~nters Local 1159 Is

W. l. Pet. GB
33 22 .600
32 23 .582 1

Montreal

Cleveland 2, Oakland 1
Seattle 3, Detroit 2
Minnesota 4, New York 2
Milwaukee 6 , Texas ·2

NOTICE

NATIONIIL LEAGUE
EAST

31h

4
41h
7

York at Texas, (n)

But not when things are"going well
and you're in first place.
The Braves had taken a 3-1 lead in
th e seventh on a double by Solomon, a
thro-ring error by EKpos starter Bill
Lee and a run.scoring single by Bob
Horner .
Lee was lifted for a pinch-hitter in
the seventh inning and reliever Elias
Sosa, 3-3, held the Braves hitless over
the final two innings.
Cubs 8, Giants &amp;
Mick Kelleher's two-run single with
two out in the ninth inning produced
th e winning runs for the Cubs . The hit
followed a wild pitch by Giants
reliever Gary Lavelle that allowed
Jerry Martin and Bobby Murcer to
advance into scoring position.
The Giants ' Willie McCovey hit the
513th home run of his major league
career in the third inning. That homer
gave McCo vey ninth place on
baseball's all-time home run list,
pulling him out of il tie with Ernie
Banks and Eddie Matthews.
Padres 2, Pirates 1
Tim Foli booted Ozzie Smith's
grounder with two out in the 14th,
paving the way for the Padres to score
their winning run against Pittsburgh.
After Dave Winfield walked, pineh
hitter Barry Evans singled on a 3-2
pitch to drive in Smith.
Winfield had singled home a run in
the sixth inning, his 55th RBI of the
season - tops in the National League.

POMEROY

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO .
.
·.

--

--

992-2094
"F~qnt End All'gnments''

-

Pomeroy,O.

·'-==------------..
606 E. Main

•

�5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, June 15, 1 9'i~

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Friday , June 15, 1979

Racif!e Elementary blue ribbon art winners

B&amp;PW cele:brates 33rd anniVersary recently
The Middleport Business and Professional Women 's Club which recently celebrated its 33rd anniversary a re
joining in the observance of the 60th
anniversary of the National Federation of Professional Women 's Club

Inc.

·

The Middleport Club was organized

in 1946 by the Ga!Ujlolis Club and is affilitated with the National Federation
which has headquarters in
Washington D. C. and the .Ohio
Federation with headquarters in Worthington. The late Mrs. Sylvia Bw-- ·
ford was the fi,rst president of the
Middleport Club. Other presidents
have been Mrs. Essie Russell, Mrs.
Pearl Reynolds, Miss Nina Russell,
the late Thelma Pratt, Mrs. Rose
Reynolds, Mrs. Freddie Houdashelt,

HOW'S YOUR ·
HOSPITALIZATION?

Mrs. Martha Belle Fry. the late Nellie
Vale, Mrs. Betty ~ckeps, Mrs. Jean
L. Moore, Mrs. Grace Pratt, Mrs.
Phillis Baker, ~rs . Betty Conkle, and
Mrs. Frances Louise Davis who is
currently serving her second tenn.
.Five charter members of the local
club are Mrs. Pearl Reynolds , Mrs.
Edith Forrest, Mrs. Essie Russell,
Mrs. Rose Reynolds, and Miss. Freddie Houdashelt. The club colors are
green and gold and the June meeting
will be held Monday night at 7:3C in
the Columbia Gas Co. office .
At a two day conference in Nework
City in 1918, plans were made for the
national organiztion which now has a
membership of 165,001 The objectives were to unite various already
established groups in order that they
might come to have a better
understanding the needs and concli-

tio"" of self-&lt;;upporting women in dlf- all efforts to obtain better conditions
ferent sections of the country, to focus through the facilities of training, and
and direct ,' in a cooperative manner, to gather and deseminate infonnation

VISIT HERE

Cmdr. and Mrs. Gene Crooks and
son.s, John and Mark, of the Naval
Academy in Anapolis, Md. have been
here visiting his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Walter·Crooks.
Sunday Mr. and MrS. Crooks entertained with a family gathering. Their
guests were the Gene Crooks family,
Mrs. Dan Thomas, Danny and Kathy,
Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Crooks, Pam,
Cindy, and Eddie, Middleport; Mrs.
H. E. Fruth and Miss Ka,thryn Fruth,
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Fruth and son,
John, and Henrietta and Lewis Rossi,
Point Pleasant.

'LAS S

or
'll

cAu..MutuiJI c-\
~milhil~

. PERFECf ATTENDANCE - Mrs. Mary Rose, Middleport
kindergarten teacher, presented Jason Fife a perfect attendance and
non-tardy certificate for the l!r78--79 school year. Jason, an afternoon
kindergarten student, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Craig Fife, S. Third.
Ave., Middleport. He was the only child in the afternoon class to receive
--- the certificate.

PN,W 1J1t1 c0111 cH•r•-·.
Gregg Gibbs
992-3443

relative to vocational opportunities.
From the beginning in 1919, the
focus was clear -equality for all
women. A handful of women
pioneered the efforts to eStablish an
organization which would be sel(-

Birthda
GARAGES
1 CAR

'2495
Reinforced Slab
Included

CALL FOR
FREE ESTIMATES .

992-2772

IS THis PICTURE YOURS? Tbls

picture and several othen were
found Thursday nlgbl on Mill Street
In Middleport wben they ..were lost
from a pickup truck. They may be
claimed a) the DaDy Senlluel Office
on Conrt St. In Pomeroy during
regular business hours.

Me mad my

't It

, ....

't·· j ! ',t~:
~

SAVE YOUR R.C., NEHI, UPPER 10, DIET RITE &amp;
DAD'S ROOT BEER BOnLE CAPS FOR CHARITY

R. C. BOTTLING CO.

Middleport, Ohio

· Mi II Street
992-3542 or 992-3344

t \

Tammy Holter

Tammy' Holter, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Ronald Holter, Route 1,
Racine, recently celebrated her ninth
birthday with two parties.
On the eve of her birthday, ice
cream and a ''van" .cake decorated
by her aunt, SMron Card, were served to Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Holter
and Kevin, ~- and Mrs. James
Werry, Jimmy; Randy, and Ricky, ·
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Card, Aaron, John
and Tracy, Mrs. Randy Reiber,
Rachael and Robert, Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Holter and Jamey, and Debbie
and Ryan Holter.
On Friday, a party was held with
several classmates attending. Games
were played with prizes going to
Paula Justice, Annett Cardone and
Patrice Circle. Dion Jones won the
door prize.
Besides those named others attending were Angie Bostick, Tina Sloter,
Shannon Riffle, David McMillan, and
Debbie and Ryan Holter. Clown cupcakes, ice cream and Kool-Aid were
served and favors were given to the
children.

__,_
~

-r

,.. ....

'

~

~-......-

'

'

'
I
I

FIRST GRADE BLUE RIBBON winners of the art exhibit held at
Racine Elementary were, front row,l-r, Jamie Cununins, Jimmie Carpenter, Joey Rice and Shannon Williams ; back, Melanie Lyons, Brenda
,Zirkle, Aimee Wolfe, Amy Harrison, Candi Smith and Kathy Illle.

SECOND GRADE blue ribbon wiMers of the art exhibit held at
Racine Elementary were, front row, 1-r, Melanie VanMeter, Joyce Barne~, Sheryl Jolmson, AUce Parson.s; back, Charlie Wood, Lee Spaun,
Shannon Stobart, Shawn Diddle and Dan Gheen.

THIRD GRADE blue ribbon winners of the art exhibit held at Racine
Elementary were, front, 1-4, Deon Jones, Jeff Evan.s, Jon Tuttle, Scott
B1ckers a~d Don Riffle; back, Tina Sloter, Toni Andrews, Sara Rose
Patrece C1rcle.
'

,-----------------------------~-1

I N.
I
1

I

Matthew Craddock

supporting, nonsectarian, and nonpartisan. It would .be restricted to a
token number of business women of
the nation, but would speak for all
working women.
Sixty years later the organization's
support is on-going to make the
business and professional world better for women. The organization sees
the worth of women reflected in their
OW)! dignity.

w. COMPTONI O.D.
OPTOMETRIST

I
I
RETURNS FROM
SUMMER CAMP
SP-6 Nonnan L: Deem of Syracuse,
has just returned from iwo weeks
swmner camp at Fort Pickett, Va. He
is assigned to the 3664th Maintenance
Co,, Anny National Guard unit of
Point Pleasant, as a full-time
machinist technician.
While at Fort Pickett, SP..'l Deem
was chosen to exhibit and
demonstrate tasks which are involVed
in machine shop operation for Gov.
Jay Rockefeller.

OFFICE HOURS: 9:30 to 12, 2 to 5 (CLOSE AT NOON ' I
ON THURS.)- EAST CQURT ST., POMEROY. .

I

~---------------------------~~--·

The fourth birthday of Matthew
Craddock was observed recently with
a party at the home of his grandparents, Ed and Eloise Stiles' in Middleport. The p:jrty was held while his
mother, Nina, was home for a visit
from lhe hospital at Warren.
Joining Matthew for ice cream, a
train replica cake, pop and mints .
were his mother, grandparents, an
aunt, Barbara Fry, and Ruth and Sue
fry, Pomeroy. Gifts were presented
to Matthew.
Others sending gifts and cards were
Roger Stiles, Columbus; Jim ·Fry,
Pomeroy; Carl and Kay Platter, Middleport; Tom, Earlline and Jo Anna
Scarberry, New Haven, and his greatgreat-aunt, Beulah Latham·and family of Warren.

Diamonds ...
the gift
that lasts
forever!
You '11 find his
difl11lond ring here In
our exclusive new
collectlon of boldly
handsome ring
designs crafted In
hJghJy polished or
Interestingly textured
14 Karat gold.
.

••
I .

REMEMBER

•

DAD
JUNE 17, 197~

i

'•t
. I
•••

•BULOVA, CARAVELL &amp;
TIMEX WATCHES

••
,'

FOURTH GRADE blue ribbon winners of the art exhibit held at
; Racine Elementary were, front row, Lisa Pape, Marty Maynard, Anila
' Smith, Legina Hart; back, Harold Rose, Juanita Frederick, Rachel
' Reeber, Debbie Murphy, Robie DeLong.

•CHAINS
•KEY CHAINS
•IDENT. BRACELETS
•MASONIC RINGS

~09'
'Q'Jetlelen .

t
;
&lt;

••
•
.,

• 21&lt; E. MAIN- POMEROY

PARK RESERVED
UNTIL 5 P.M.

I

'I

SATURDAY-JUNE 16th

~

~

, FOR

P'!""-------..

SUMMER OUTING"
LARGE INDUSfRIAL CONCERN
.

11

For all your home entertajnment
and appliance needs .

DOXOL SERVICE

OPEN TO PUBLIC AFTER 5 PM

RIDENOUirS

CAMDEN PARK

TV &amp; APPLIANCE

US 60 WEST-HUNTINGTON

GAS SERVICE

EVERY MONDAY EXCEPT HOLIDAYS

Racine, o.

Chester, 0 .

,,

SIXTH GRADE winners, flrsl and
second place In the recent art eJdllbll
beld al Racine Elementary - were,
front, 1-r, Lori Simpson, llillle Rice,
Debbie Holler, Alan Crisp; back,
Sandra Harden, San!lra Deem, Lois
Ible, David Powell, Melody West,
Kevin Dugan and James Leonard.
There were 88 stu.denlll at Racine
Elementary that wnn lint and
second plltce In " re-..ut art eJdllblt
beld 111 the school sponsored by the
Racine PI'O. Teachers In charge of
lbe exhibit were Mnt. Donna Norill
and Mrs . Donna Sayre.

PowER

JEERCHERO

Three rugged wagOns
that areas
individual
.
as you
are.

'1600
Mondays June 11 -26

KAY'S BEAUTY

SALON

1" N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, 0.
Call 992-2725

FIFTH GRADE BJ,UE ribbon winners in the recent art exhibit held
at Racine Elementary were, front row, l·r, Lori Adams, Kerri Beegle,
· Jay Bostick, Alana Lyons; back, Kelly Rizer, Tonya Cwmnin.s, Kenda
Rizer and Carol Cross.

Three boys to be sent to camp

•MANY OTHER ITEMS

Friday
The partridge is one of the most
common game birds in Palestine.
Large convoys are · seen in the
autumn.
" ... for the king of Israel is come out
to seek a flea, as when one doth hunt a
Jlllrtridge in the mountains." -1 Sam.
26::ro.

s20.00 PERMANENT

KINO

sets a fast pace

on tough jobs

EAST LETART-Plans for sending
three boys from the church to camp
this swruner were made when the
United Methodist Women of the East
Letart Church met at the home of
Mrs. Belva Fisher .
Mrs. Lucy Donahue presided at the
meeting with Ml'!l.• Mabel Shield$ giving the opening prayer. Mrs. Marlene
Fisher had the secretary's report,
and Mrs. Hazel Fox, the treasurer's
report . Several birthdays were
observed, and Mrs. Eileen Roush
resd "Tomatoes in Ohio" from the
Response magazine. Next meellng
will be JUly 3 with Mollie Fisher to be
program leader.
''Thanks Be to God" ;was the program topic for the thank offering service conducted by Mrs. Focie
Hayman. Purpose of the pr~gram
was to acknowledge God's blessing
with thanksgiving and to share and
dedicate a portion for use around the
world as a symbol of thanksgiving. It
also called for members to commlt

Today 's birthdays : Outfielder
Dusty ~ker of the Los Angeles
Dodgers is 30. Former baseball star
Billy Williams is 41. Democratic
Representative Morris Udall of
Arizona is 57.

FATHER'S DAY
"BUT AS FOR ME AND MY HOUSE,

WE WILL SERVE THE LORD."

UNITED PENTECOSTAL CHURCH

themselves to everyday living in
thanksgiving even in times of suffering.

Sally Gloeckner had scripture from
Psalma. Mrs. Ha2el Fox had prayer,
and the 'group sang "Take My Ufe

and Let It Be" In unison. Mrs.
Hayman had the closing prayer and
Mrs. Fisher and Mrs. Fox served
refreslunents to those named and
Mrs. Barbara Dugan and Dixie, Mrs.
June Harris, Mrs. June Wickersham,
Mrs. Clara Adams, Mrs. Eileen Buck,
Mrs. Doris Adams, Mrs. Margaret
Gloeckner, Mrs. Ada Rowe, Mrs.
Arlene Rowe and daughter, Mrs.
Mary Stover and daughter, Mrs. Julie
Norris, Kathryn Philson, Carrie
Gloeckner, Bucky and Carol Fisher.

REVIVAL!

VICTORY BAPTIST CHURCH
7:00 p.m. NIGHTLY
WITH EVANGELIST
R. BRUCE D. CUMMONS

Regatta contestant
activities named· .
The Regatta queen contestanl.9 will
have a picnic Monday at 6::ro p.m. at
the home of reigning queen, Cathy
Blaettnar.
Tbe contestants are asked to wear
casual wear. Mrs. Marjorie
Keebaugh, a former model, will be
present to teach the contestants proper walking and silting. A gift will be
presented to each contestant. Monday
Miss Blaettnar and Tonya Davis, cochairmen for the Regatta queen con·
test, will be talking about Regatts on
noon progr8IIUI of both Channel13 and
Channel3.
Judging of the contestants will lake
place on Wednesday evening at 7 p.m.
A 5:30 dinner will precede the judging.

BAPTIST TEMPLE)

BAPTIST COLLEGE)
EVANGELIST - AUTHOR - RADIO PREACHER

JUNE 17th THRU 21st (p.m.)
VICTORY BAPTIST CHURCH
MIDDLE~ORT - POMEROY BV~ASS

AT ROUTE 124 INTERSECTION
REV .JAMES KEESEE,PASTOR
YOU ARE INVITED .... .
NURSERY PROVIDED NIGHTLy

Middleport .

S. 3rd Ave.
William Knittel, Pastor
1. All fathers are oursDecial guest this Sunday.

2. A gill wit! be given to the fathers that are present in the service •
3. A gill will be given to the oldest father present and also be given
recognition~

4. A gill will be given to the youngest lather and also be given

recognition.

·

5. A gill will be given to the father th•t hao the most family attendance.

Jeep Cherokee "S" 4-dr.

THE

FROG BALL
FREE
SUNDAE
UUNE 17th

Patrick Keith Polk, son of Cathy
Ann Guthrie Polk, Clinton, Miss.,
recently celebrated his fourth birthday. He is the_grandson of Mr. and
Mrs. John S. Guthrie and the great·
grandson of Mr. and Mrs. Forest M.
Guthrie, 33 Townsend P~ace, Athens.
Forest M. Guthrie was born and
reared in Orange Township, Meigs
County. Mrs. Beckie Moler, Meigs
County deputy sheriff, is a great-aunt
to · Patrick, and there are other
relatives residing in Meigs County.

•

.ADOLPH•s ._ DAIRY VALLEY'

Big acreage ... heavy loads ...
rough going - Power. K.in~ car·

Patrick Polk

' T lio u ~ h l fo r today : The mere
HIJ~cn n· of \\'al· Is not,pe·a cc. The Itlcrc
: • IJ." ~ II('(' f•f t'f'&lt;'PSSion is not ~ rowth -·
! 'q •..qd"fli .J ol-t11 K&lt;'n ncd_
,.. l!l l7~ : ~ 1fl 1:

rles through without m 1Ssmg a

·Jeep Cherokee "S" l·dr.
ALL MODELS NOW
IN STOCK
We have received our entire allocation
for the rest of this model year , Limited
number of '79 Cherokees left fo choose
from . See one of our courteous.
salesman today and ask about one of
our fabulous deals on these Cherokees.
ONLY 7 IN Sl'OCK NOW

Jeep Cherokee Chief

Jeep, n Chei'Qkee

Jeep wrote the book on 4-wheel drive!
446-9800

machine, not a toy! Aut~motive
clutch, transmission, d•fferen ·
tlal, Jlh " axles. for example .

Gallipolis, 0.

JUNE 23·

c

10' til 2
FEATURING

REEDS COUNTRY
Reedsvllie, o.

$10 COUPLE
'

.:

378-6125

E

10 TIL 2

.

STORE

RIVERSIDE AMC .&amp; JEEP
195 Upper River Road

beat. The reason? 12, 14 and 18 hp
engines applied throu·• ., Po~er
King's all ·gear . drive d c! llv~r
almost 100% power to the •
drive whet:s. Tha t' s why you
move rigt"t atong with a 60"
mower, loaJ f ast with a 1/ 3 ton
bucket,'bulldoze,·clear a 48" path
of snow in a hurry .
American-built Power King is a

SATURDAY,

THE MEIGS INN

$7SINGLE

Sponsored by the Poflleroy fjre Department

I
N
N
p
L
A

126 MAIN

992-3629

..

POMEROY, 0.

�CHlJRCH
NEWS
TRINITY CHURCH , Rev

pastor

W

H

Pernn ,

Sunday school supt
Ct-lurch Sct'lool 9 15 o m , worsh1p ser·
..,Ice, 10 30 a m Cho1r ,[&amp;hear sal Tuesday
· 7·JO p m under d.re&lt;tton of All ee Nease
POMEROY CHURCH Of THE NAZARENE
Corner Un1on and Mulberry Rev Clyde V
~enderson pastor Sunday school 9 30

These Messages Of Our Religious Heritage
Are Sponsored Each Week By The Follow_ing;

J'M GOING TO SM IT~'S
TRACY SAYS, '•AN D GET
THE BOTTOM OF THI

Bob Buck

o m , Glen McCl ung supl

mornmg wor-

ship, 10·30 a m evemng servtce 7 30
m•d -w"k serv1ce. Wednesday , 7 30 p m
c;RACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH -

MEIGS
CENTER, INC.

K&amp;C JEWELERS
...,j·~-""' · ·11'2 E Mam Street
992 3785 , Pomeroy

Pomeroy

D~rector

POMEROY CLUSTER
Rev . Robert McGee
Rev . James Corb1tt
POMEROY , Sunday School 91.5 a.m
Worsh1p serv1ce 10:30 o.m Choir rehearsal, Wednesday , 7 p.m . Rev. Robert
McGee, pastor .
E~'~ERPRISE, Warship 9 a.m. Church
Schrol lO a m.
ROCK SPRINGS, Church School 10 o m .
Warshop 10a.m. UMVf6.30p.m
FLATWOODS, Church School 10 a.m.
Worship 11 o m .

of Your Choice
This Sunday

Middleport, OhiO

RACINE
PLANING
MILl
MillWork.

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
We F'iilboctors'

Prescnpt 1on$
992 2955

Pomeroy

YOlii'S

Is TilE 11alld

Cabinet Making
Syracuse 992· 3978

'

that lights your child's face

VIC&amp;

7

Altend The Church

Keepsake

Ph 992-'J:IOI

day of eoch month and sermon . Church
school and nursery core provtded Coffee
hour m pansh house follow ing the ser
POMEROY CHURCH Of CHRIST . 212 W
Mom St John M cArthur , pa$tOr B1ble
school 9 30 a m , mormng wor$hip 10 JO
a m Youth meettn~$ . 6 30 p m even1ng
worsh1p , 7 30 Wednesday mght prayer
murmg and B1ble study 7 30 p m
THE SALVATION ARMY , 115 Butternut
Ave . Pomeroy En.,oy end Mrs Roy Wmmg otf1cen m charga Sunday-holmen
meet1ng , 10 am , Sunday School , 10 30
o m Sunday school laader, YPSM , Elo1se
Adams . 7 30 p.m , soi'Jat1on me•tmg,
venous speakers and mus1c spec1als
Thursday- 10 am to 2 p m.ladies Home
league, all women 1nv1ted 7 30 p m.
prayer meet1ng and 81ble study , Bob
leader
Rev
Noel Hermon,
Estep
teacher
BURLINGTON SOUTHERN BAPTIST
CHArEL . Route 1, Shade- Pastor Bobby
Elk1ns. Sunday school , 5 p.m .. Sunday
wor$hip , 5 •5 p.m., Wednesday prayer
service. 7 30 p m
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH OF
CHRIST, 200 W Mom St
Jerry Paul.
minister, phone 992·7666 Conservative.
non·mstrumental. Sunday worship . 10
am , 81ble study, 11 am , worsh1p, 6
p m Wednesday B1ble study 7 p m
,
OLD DEXTE~ BIBLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Re\1 Ra lph Sm1th pastor Sunday school :
9 30
a m , Mrs
Worley Franc1s,
supenntendent Preodung serv1ces f1rlf &amp;
th1rd Sundays follow1ng Sundoy School .
GRAHAM
UNITED
METHODIST
Preaching 9 30om . hrst and second Sun~
days of each month, third and fourth Sun·
days each month, worsh1p serv1ce at 7 ·30
p.m. Wednesday even1ngs at 7 :30 Prayer
and Bible Sludy,
SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST , Mulberry
H~tghts Rood , Pomeroy Pastor, A lbert
01ttes; Sabbath School Superintendent
Rita White. Sabbath School, SaturdaY
afternoon at 2.00, with Worship Ser"tJ ice
following ot 3 15
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCK-Stster Harnett Warner , Supt. Sunday
School 9.30 a m .. morn1ng worsh1p , 10·45
a.m.
THE HILAND CHAPEL. George Casto,
pastor Sunday School , 9 30 a m , evening
worship, 7 30 Thursday evenmg prayer
ser\IICe, 7 ·30 p m
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST, Dov1d Mann,
mmtSter. W1lhom Watson , Sunday school
supt Sunday school , 9 30 a m. mornmg
worshtp 10 30 a.m.
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, 2B2 Mulberry
Ave, Pomeroy, Paul S1lver, Pastor,
Woodrow T. Zwiling, Sunday school
supeflntendent. Sunday schoo l, 9 30om .,
morning wor~hip 10::10, even1ng worship,
7·00 p.m . M1dweek prayer serv1ce, 7·00
p m.
•
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CENTER , Dexter
Rd . longsv1lle, Oh1o, Rev Clyde Ferrel l
Pastor. Sunday School 11 a m. Satu rda~
preaching sen11Ce$ 7 30 p.m . Wednesday
evenmg Bible study at 7.30 p.m .
fAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH , Bailey
Run Rood , R11'1J. Emmett Rowson, pastor '
Handley Dunn. supL Sunday school, 10
a m Sunday evening serv1ce 7 30 Bible
teachmg , 7 30 p m Thursday.
DYESVILLE COMMUNITY CHURCH
Roger C Turner pastor Sunday school:
9::Jo a m , Suodoy morntng worship,
10 30, ~undoy even1ngserv1ce, 7.30
MICCLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION, lawrence Manley,
pastor, Mrs Russell Young, Sunday
School Supt . Sunday School 9 30 a m .
Evemng wonh1p , 7 30, Wednesday prayer
meeting, 7·30 p m .
MT
MORIAH CHURCH OF COD,
Rocme- Rev W. H. Lykins , pastor . Morn·
ing worship , 9'; 45 am , Sunday school
10.•5 a.m ., evenmg worship , 7 Tuesday :
7.30 p.m, ladies prayer meehng
Wednesday , 7 30 p m. YPE.
'
MIDJ)LEPORT FIRST BAPTIST Carner
Sixth and Palmer, the Rev . Mark McClung
Sunday school. 9.15 a.m., Don Wilson'
superintendent lacy Barton. ant. supt ·
Morning Worshtp , 10. 15 a .m. 8tble study.
10 30 a.m. at church . Youth meatmg , 7·30
p m Wednesday Wednesday night Bible
study and pray11r ser\l lce 7 30 p m
CHURCH OF CHRIST, Middleport, 5th
and Main, Bob Mtlton, minister M1ka
Gerlach, supartntendent Terry Yankey ,
youth mm1ster B1ble !chool, 9 30 o.m ,
mornmg worship , 10:30 a .m.; evamng
worship , 7·30, prayer service, 7 p.m .
Wednesday
MIDDLEPORT
CHURCH
Of
THE
NAZARENE, Rev Jtm Broome, pastor; Bill
Sunday
White, Sunday school supt
school. 9:30a.m., morning worshtp, 10:30
am. , Sunday evangeliStic meeting 7·00
p m. Prayer meeting, Wednesday , p:m .
UNITED PRESBYTERIAN MINISTRY OF
MEIGS COUNTY , Dw1ght l . Zovltr:, dire&lt;:·
lor
HARRISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN . Rev ,
Ernest Stncklin. pastor. Sunday church
school. 9 30om. Mrs . Hamer lee. supt ..
morning worshtp, 10 30.
MIDDLEPORT. Sunday school. 9.30 a.m ..
R1chord Vaughan supt. Morning wonhlp ,
10.30.
SYRACUSE Morning worship 9 a m :
Sunday school. 10 am Mrs. Sampson
Hall , supt
RUTLAND CHURCH OF COO , Rov Bob·
by Porter pastor Sunday school, 10 o.m .
Sunday warship , II a m , Sunday evenmg
service, 7 p m . Wednesday Famtly Jrai·
ing Hour, 7 p m Wednes~y worsh1p ser·
VICe , 7·30p m
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH , Near
long Bottom, Edsel Hart , pastor. Sunday
school, 10 a m., Church, 7·30 p.m ., prayer
meeting, 7:30p.m. Thursday .
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL , Third
Ave ., the Rev . William Knittel , pastor .
Ronald Dugan, Sunday School Supt.
Classes for all ages, evening service
7.30, 81ble s1udy, Wednesday 1 7 30 p,m :
youth services, Friday, 7 30 p m .
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST, Corner
Ash and Plum , Noel Herrman, p;~stor .
Saturday even., g $ervice, 7.30 p.m .. Sun·
day School 10·30 a.m .
MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISH
METHODIST CHURCH
Robert T Bumgarner,

ELliS &amp; SONS

....

John F Futtz, Mgr

316 E

Mom St . Pomeroy The Rev Robert B
Groves , rector Sunday serv•ces , (summer
schedule beg1nnmg Jllne 3) at 10 a m Ser
viCe wtll a l ternate between tne Holy
Euchanst and mornmg prayer , effect ive
June 3 Holy Commun,on every o1her Sun

'

IIi

Nahonwidelns Co.
of COlumbus, 0
804W. Mam
992·2311 Pomeroy

Pt'l f49·f130

UTI'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-MIRAGE

RACINE
FOOD MARKET

riTflll"~~--~

POOR "Po:\~' ~F.AL LY" B llf\lfS IHAr
BIRD IS TH BIG SHOT IN l'HERf ,,

JACK SAC!( 1 Tl-i JANITOR

HERE " WHAT A GU'( ..
fli ERE HE COMES !'lOW'' •
All DRESSED UP ·

•.. A.N ' A MOOVIA.N
EMISSARY S&gt;IOULD
60 wrTH 'EM TO

WHAT$ T 'KEEI"

"THOSE "1".10 FROM
POLIP\JG "'fHAT IH INEi
~&lt;OHT BACK HEI&gt;E,
o~e

C&gt;~E 1 ,:!,NO JACK, HE t3'UEVE5 11,
TOO • WM~T f.\ LJilEP.MER ~

~5TASLI5H D IPi. O~

.,ev WAKE

MATIC RELATIONS

W11'1-l "04 ' HEAD
0~ THEIR

UP~

GOVE12NMENT 1

Eat In or
Carry Out

Monday
Luke

126 E

~In

6 39-49

1'11 esdtoy
L11ke
12. / 3-40

pomeroy

VIRGIL B.
TEAFORD SR.

We£lu e.,dlly
L11ke

216 S

992-3325

15 11 -32

Tit Ill Milly
L11ke
/8 15-30

Flicltoy

second

Pomeroy

The door at the end

of the hall!

Jl!i•l;I•IJ
Don ThompSOn Ford, Inc.

fohn

461 :.. 1 hlrd, Middleport
992-2196

4 27-42
'i ti furda y

j ohn
6.47-7 1

AND I LEFT A
.5TANDIN&lt;7 ORDERG

I"PR FRESH FLOWER&amp;
10 BE DELIVERED

THE DAILY

SENTINEL

Professtoni l Serv1ce ,
Aerta l Schools·
WeddingS
Chester 98S.41ss

Midd leport·
Pomeroy, 0.

EV'EKY PAY...

MARK VSTORE
Middleport
448

UNTIL FURTHER
NOTICE/

ot Your Choice
This Sunday

Locust

992·3093

Middleport

Auend The Church
om Sunday even1ng serv1ce, 7.
RUTLAND COMMUNITY CHURCH Amos
Tllhs , pastor, Donny T1llis, Sunday School
Supt. Sunday School , 9 30 a.m., worship
service, II a m • Sundoy even1ng servtce.
7 P m. Prayer meet mg. Wednesday , 7
P m WMPO Rod1o broadcast, Sunday
mormng 7 45
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
Rev l loyd 0 Gnmm Jr , pos.tor SundaY
school, 9 30 om . worsh1p serv1ce, 10·30
am B.r oodcost live O\ler WMPO· young
peoples serviCe. 7 p m Evangelistic s&amp;r·
VICe 7 30 P m Wednesday serv1ce, 7·30
Pm
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, Corner
of Second and Anderson , Mason. Pastor
Fronk Lowther Sunday school, 9.45 a.m ;
worship se rv iCe, 11 o .m and 7 30 p.m .
W~ekiy B1ble Study, Wednesday , 7.30

Bible Study, Tuesday ,

p MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, Mi ller St'

REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
CHRIST OF LA TIER OAV SAINTS Portland
Racine Rood. Wi11 1om Roush' pastor
Phyllis Stobort, Sunday School Supt Sun·
day School, 9 30 a m .. Morning worship
10.30 a m., Sunday evening service 7 p m'
Wednesday evening prayer services 7 30
p.m .
'
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST , Rev Earl Shuler
pastor. Worsh tp servic&amp; 9 30 0 m Sunda
school. 10 30 a .m. Bible Study and proye~
servtce Thursday 7 30 p m
CARLETON CHURCH Kong•bury Rood
Gory King , pastor S~ndoy school 9 :JO
a .m ., Rolph Carl . supermtendent; e;enmg
worsh1p , 7·30 p m Prayer meeting
Wednesdoy . 7 30 p.m
'
LONG BOTTOM CHR ISTIAN, Gear e F.
Ptckens, pastor Wallace [;)ame~ood,
Supt. Bib le School, 9
am. PreOchin
serv1ce, lO 45 0 , ,., , f irst and third Sung
days; 7 p.m. second and fourth Sundays
Bible study, 8 p.m. Tuesdays .
·
HYSEll RUN FREE METHODIST CHURCH
Rev .
Herbert
Aillng '
pastor. Raymond Keesee , Sunday Schoo'!
Superintendent. Mormng serviCe 10 30
a. m ., Sunday evenmg and Thursdo~ even·
mg serv 1ces of7 30 p.m.
FREEOOM GOSPEl MISSION 01 Bold
Knob Rev. lawrence Gluesencamp, Sr .
pastor, Roger Wi ll ford Sr Sundoy school
supl Sundo•, school o
~0 "
.
7 .., a , even1ng war
sh1p , 7 :lOp m . Prayer meet 1ng Wedn es
day 7 30 p m Youth meeting' SuRdoy
5 30 p .m. With Don and Martha Meadows
1n charge
WHITE'S CHAPEl , Coolvllle RO Rev Roy
Deeter pastor. Sunday school 9.30 ~ m
worship service. 10 30 0 m Btble §tudy
and prayer service. Wednesday 7 30 p n'l
RUTLAND CHIJRCH OF CHR,IST l
, arry
Coleman , po!tor Herb El l1ott Sundoy
school supt Sunday schoo l 9 30 0 m
mornlhg worship and comum('ln 10 30

Mason, W Va Aurke M 1ck, pastor Sun·
day Bible Study 10 a .m ., Worship 11 a .m.
and 7 P m B1ble Study Wednesday 7 p .m ,
Vocal mu sic
MASON ASSEMBlY OF GOD, Ouddmg
lone, Mason, W v,,, Chester Tennant,
CPahsltdor , Sunday School 9 45 a .m ,
1. ren s . Church 6 o45 p.m Young Pea·
P.le s Servtce 6..45 p ~ · EvangelistiC Ser·
VIce 1.30 P m. Women s MISSIOnary Coun·
Ci l lO am . first and th1rd Tuesdays, Pray 11 r
and B1ble Study , Wedne$day 7 30 p.m .
HARTFORD CHURCH Of CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION, The Rev Will iam
Campbell pastor Sunday School , 9 30
am • James Hughes 1 supt , evening ser vtce 7 30 p.m Wednesday evening
prayer meeting 7 30 p m Youth prayer
serv1ce each Tu&amp;§doy
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH , letart , W
Va • Rl
1 Rev Charles Horgrov&amp;s ,
pastor Worship !ervlces, 9·30 am. Sun·
day !chool, 11 am ., ovenmg worsh 1p ,
7·30 P m Tuesday co ttage prayer meetmg
ond8iblestudy , 930am Worshipser·
VICe , Wednesday, 7 30 p. m.
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH, now located
0
Pomeroy P1ke , County Rood 25 , near
F otwoods . Rev. Blackwood, pastor. SerVICes o~ Sunday at 10 30 a .m. and 7 :30
P m with Su11day school, 9 30 am. Bib le
study, Wednesday, 7 30 p .m
INDEPENDENT
HOLINESS
CHURCH • INC ·
p
I S
d
ear
t • M1 dleport Rev . O' Dell
Mhnley , poster, Sonny Hudson , ..Sunday
sc ool supt Sunday school , 9.30 a .m ,
evenmg wors hip , 7 JO p.m . Prayer and
praise serv1ce , Wed nes day , 7 30 p m.
RUTLAND APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF,
J~SUS CHRIST, Elder Jomes M1ller Bible
' udy Wednesday, 7 30 p m .. Sunday
School , 10om Sunday n1ght serv1ce 7 30
p m
· ·M
PO EROY WESlEYAN HOLINESS _
Hor r;,lson v ll le Rood , Dewey Kmg pas lor,

;~:ro~;~,;_,,I0. 30 a .m

9

•s

j

Edison Weaver, assistant Henry Eblin
Jr Sunday school supt Sundoy schoo l'
9 30 a m., morning worshtp, 11 am Sun~
doy evening serv1ce. 7 30
prayer
meetmg, Thur!iday , 7 ·30 p m
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD Not PentecQst~l , Rev . George Oiler,
pastor Worsh tp service Sunday, 9.45
a.m ., Sunday school, II a. m. , worship
servi~e, 7 30 p m.
Thursday prayer
meehn.g, 7:30p .m
MT. HERMON United Brethren Church.
Sunday School 9:30 a m. Worship service
10 o45 a.m . Preaching services every Sun·
day alternating With c.' E. Wednesday
prayer meeting 7.30 p m. Rev. James
leach, pastor. David Holter, loy leader .
JEHOVAH 'S WITNESSES, 1 mole east of
Rutland, tunction of Route 124 and Noble
Summit Road (T· 174). Sunday Bible lee·
lure , 9.30 a .. , Watchtower study , 10·30
a.m., Tuesdoy Bil&gt;le st udy 7 and 8· 15
p.m. Thursday theocratic school, 7·30
p m , service meeting, 8·30 p m
RUTLAND FREEWill BAPTIST Church Leland Holey , pastor Sunday school 10
a m ·. evening servtce, 7.30 p m Pr~yer
meetmg, Wednesday , 7·30 p m
CHURCH OF GOO of Prophecy located
on the 0 J Wh1te Road off h1ghwoy 160.
Sunday School 10 a m. Supermtendent
John Loveday F1rst Wednesday n1ght of
month CPMA Stl!rvices, second Wednes·
day WMB meet1ng, thtrd through fifth
youth service. George Croyle, pastor.
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL - 570 c;ranl St.,
M1ddleport ; Rev. Don Blake, pastor . Sun
day school, 9 30 a .m. ; mornmg worship
10 30 a.m., evening worsh•p, 7 p.m .:
Wednesday evening Bible study and
prayer meeting, 1 p.m. Affiliated with
Southern Baptist Convention .
BRADfORD CHURCH OF CHRISTEugene Underwood , pastor, Harry Hen·
dricks, superintendent . Sunday school
9 30 a m .. morning worship, 10.30 a.m .:
evemng worship, 7
Wednesday Bible
study 1 7 p.m .
JUBILEE CH~ISTIAN CENTER - George's
Creek Rood . Rev . C. J Lemley, pastor;
John Fellure superintendent Church
school 9 30 a.m.. mormng worship
10 30. evening serv1ce. 7 p m Youth
meeting Sunday , 6 p m Btble study in
depth Wednesday , 7 p. m Classes for a ll
ages Nursery provlde(i for worship ser·
vice
ST PAUl lUTHERAN CHURCH. Corner
of Sycamore and Second Sts , Pomeroy.
The Rav. W1lhom M tddleswarth, Pastor.
Sunday School at 9 ·•5 a.m and Church
Services 11 a m.
SACRED HEART. Rov father Paul C.
Welton, paStor. Phone 992-282.5 . Saturday
evening Mass, 7·30, Sunday Mass, 8 and
10 a. m oi (onfession, Saturday, 1·7 30

P.m.

Friday and Saturday TV Log

11ERE COMES WOOD5TOCK

by •THOMAS

JOSEPH
ACROSS
38 Posotian
I Winglike
at the plate
5 Wave top
:It Caligula's
10 Foght
highway
the odds
10 Chemical salt
11 Call for help II Repudiate
13 White HoUBe DOWN
Offoce
I Type of brick
II One of lhe
ZVichy premier
Cesars
3 "Sheik of - "
15 Politicians, I Depend (on) 16 Daoly Planet
reporter
at election
5 Holy name
20
Floating
zoo
time
8 Hens' den
17 Dlstrlct
7 O'Neoll trees 21 Perfonned
of England 8 Resode, Is a 22 Lou Brock's
deeds
18 Superlative
domesllc
Zl Referendwn
ending
9 Ouldoor
19 Sen
livmg area Zl Fine
sweaters
Moynihan 12 List
211 Hill builder.,.....,.,_,,....,..ZI Las Vegas
•telllll
22 Shrewd
25 underground

13ACK FROM THE
FARMEF('5 MARKET

Viewpoint 8, Movi e "Honeymoon
with a Stranger " 10, Trl Stllte
13. Forsyte Saga JJ
2 15- Basebaii3.1S , 2 3G-U S Open
6, 11 Movie "Seven Days from
Sundown" 17
3 DO-Last of the Wild 8, Upst.!lrs,
DownstairS 33; J Jo-Gunsmoke
8
4 oo-Nashvll le On The Road 10,
Suga r in the Gourd 33
4 JO-Sports Spectacular e. Pop
25 Flame lover
Goes The Country 10. Amerlcen
27 Beauty
Angler Club 17 Catch·33 33.
Z9 "Peyton-" r---r--------,
5 oo-Voyage to the Bottom of the
Sea 3. Dotty 10: Abbott &amp;
30 Retinue
~OU
Costello 15; Wrestling 17 ; Once
31 Gennan city
RAD/5~?
Upon A Classic 20, Turnabout 33
3Z Mournful
'
5 30-Porter Wagoner 10, Little
Rascal s 15 , Lets Grow A Garden
l4 Blue serge's
JJ .
bane
6 oo-News 3,10. God Has The
35 Latin poet
Answer IS; Crockett '&amp; Victory
Garden 20, Food Preserving 33
6 JG-NBC News 3, 15. News 6, CBS
News 8,10 · Newsmaker ' 79 13.
Ohio Journal 20. Another Voice
SATURDAY, JUNE 16,1919
JJ
6:oo-Summer Semester 10. 6 05-7, oo-Abbott &amp; Costello 3, Lawrence
Wor ld at Large 17 , 6 1~Human
Welk 13,15. Hee Haw 6,8; Bugs
Dimension 11 · 6 ~Sa1urday
Bunny 10; Baseball 11 . Forsyte
worker
Report 3; TV Classroom 8, U S
\ Saga 20, Sneak Previews 33
Farm
Report
10;
Kentudy
%6 Combat
7· ~We Think You Should Know 3.
Afield 13.
vehicle
Please Stand. By 10. Makem &amp;
6·.to-News 11, 7 00--Uncle Wa ldo
Clancy 33
27 Israeli
~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD O&amp;IIE
3. Matten of Life 6· Porky Pig &amp;
8 oo-Chlps 3,15, Bad News Bears
~ ~ ~~~~~
byHenriAmoktanciBotiLH
airport
Friends 8; Public Policy Forum5
8,10; Meeting of Minds 20 ; Once
S1amese
10; Animals Animals 13 . Three
Unscramble these four Jumbles.
Upon A Classic 33
STooges 17
twin
one leHer to each square. to fOJm
8: 3G-Mowgll's Brothers 8.10; 9 ·01&gt;7:JO---CIIffwood
Ave
Kids
3.
Dusty'
s
lour ordtnary words
BJ &amp; the Bear 3, 15. Love Boat
Z9 Set down
Treehouse 6, B igfoot &amp; Wlidboy
6, 13, Movie " The Last of the
30 Matching
13
Good Guys" 8, 10 . UpstaJrs,
pieces
8 oo-Atvin &amp; the Ch ipmunKs 3,15,
Downstair s 20; Englishman!
33 Ibsen
Fangf8ce 6,13 . Popeye 8,10,
Cas.tle 33.
Cliffwood AVe . Kids 17
classic
9 30-Studlo 17 at Krau 17
8 Jo-F antastic Four 3, 15, Par·
38 Vaquero's 1.,~-+-1f--+-l--lP oo-Supertraln 3,15; Fanfasy Is
frl~ge Family 17
6, 13; Juke-Bo)l 17; Great P~r
rope
9 oo-Godzll ta 3.15, Bugs Bunny·
formances 20; Black Man' s Lal'ld
37 Passport
Road Runner 8.10, Star Trek 17.
33.
10 oo- Superfriends 6, 13, Movie
check
10· 3G-Pro Soccer 17 , 11 oo-New!
" The House on 92nd St" 17.
3,6,8, 10, 13, 15 ; David Sunklnd 33
DAILY CRYPTOCilJOTt: - Bore's how lo work it ·
10 30--Daffy Duck 3, 15 , Tarum· •· 11.Jo-S.aturday Night Live 3, 15;
Super 1 8; Movie " A Day At the
A X Y n I. 8 !\ A X R
1979 Mother Daughter Beauty
Races " 10
h L 0 S G F •: 1. I . 0 W
Pageant 6; Movie " And Then
11 ~Fred &amp; Barney 3, \S , 11 3o-There Were None' ' 8, Movie
One leiter s1mply :;l ands for another In th 1s sample A ts
Jetsons 3, 15. G1gglesnort Hotel
" Walk , Don 't Run " 10; Movie
used for th e three L 's, Y f or th e two O's, etc Smgle lett ers,
6. Action News for Kids 13.
" House of Horrors" 13. 12 30apostrophes, th~ l englh and rormat1 on of th e wor ds are: ail
12 oo-Buford 3. 15; Pink Panther
0oh Kirshner 's Rock Concert 17
htn ts Each day the code ,f'ltcrs nrc d1ffrrcnt
13 , Aware 6. Sapce Academy 8,
1 ()().-.Movie " Rage" 3 Mo\lle " My
Now arrarlge the ~rclttd letters to
Mov ie " The Secret Weys" 17
Blood Runs Cold" 13
form the surprise answer, 11 sug·
{'R VPTOQUOTES
12 Jo-Fabulous Funnle5 3, Tony
1 oo-Baseball 17; 2 30-News 3.
gestttd by the ab&lt;we cartoon
Brown '!i Journal 6, Fat Albert
ABC News 13; 3 OG-Movie " A
VOH
MLS
I.E
YV
RLEILUWLFT
8. 10 1 Little
Ras cals
15 ;
Kiss In the Dark" 3
(IKLWRHTF)
GVH
MIYLJLYN,
Crockett 's Victory Garden 33
Print answer here ·
"'Jo- 12 O'Clock High 17, s ooMovie " Affectionately Yours " ;~
GVH BVHP, GVH AVVR;
FVY GVH
(Answers tomorrow) 1 oo-women's Tennis 3. Point of
_.Y iew6 ·....Ark 118. 10 , Wrestling 15,
L ~ S ,I D L W L Y N ,
F VY
G VH
11 M ESUN CAY, JUNE 11,1979
Jumbles RAINY TARRY PAN TRY LAGOON
Body S~op JJ
S 30-AG·USA 17 , 6 oo-Americen
F.LJLYN,
FVY
GVH
VDTRLTFIT Yesterd(Jy s Answer A change 1n one's life brought by
1, 30--Miniature Golf 6 , Bob Jones 8;
Problems &amp; Cha llenges 10 ,
marnage-"AL TAR AltON '
Film Festival 10; Mario &amp; the
- SMHLM
SVFVTEEVHL
Between the Lines 17.
Magi
c
Movie
Machine
13.
Yeslerday's Cryp1oquote; YOU CAN'T HOLD A MAN DOWN
6 Jo-Chrl5topher Closeup 3, For
Jumbtt look No t2,conttlni11Q 11opuut ... 11 ntlllblt lor IU&amp;potlptt4
French Chef 33.
WITIIOUT STAYING DOWN WITII HIM.-BOOKER T.
lromJumblt,clothltnew•pa,.r,Bo•34,Norwood,N J 07MIIncl•wour
You Black Woman 8, Treehouse
2.00 - Baseball Warm Up 3 1S ;
ntmt, tddltt•, a:lp codlo tnd mtkt chec\1 payallltto tMwaptpl •••••
WASHINGTON
~1 ,,,. Klt:l9 F"turn S~nc:llctlt , Inc
'

Your Choice This Sunday

lETARTFALLSUNITEDBRETHRENf?../
Freeland Norris, postor, Floyd Norns ·
supt . Sunday schOol. 9 30 a .m. mornin
sermon, 10.30 a.m . Prayer servlceg
Wednesday. 7.30 p m .
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
Rev Herbert Grate pastor Worst·up ser:
vice, 11 a m and 7 30 p m Sunda
School. 9 30 a m Charles B•ssell su
Prayer meetmg Wednesday 7 . 30 '
p .
LAUREL CLIFF FREE ' MET~O"'oiST
CHURCH, Rev Floyd F. Shook, pastor ·
lloyd Wright, Sunday School Supt , Morn:
mg Worshlp 9 30 a.m., Sunday School
10:20 am., Wednesday Prayer and Bib le
Study 7 30 p m.; Sunday e\lenlng worship
7:30p.m , Choir Practice Thursdo 7 m
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST y(h:~lea
Russell, Sr. mirlister Rick M~comber
supt. Sunday school , 30 o.m , worshiP

t

lLu.~t~ ~a"

P m.
VICTORY BAPTIST -:- On the Route 7
bypass James E Keesee, pastor. Sunday
school, 10 o m , mormng worsh 1p, 11
a m , evemng serv1ce, 7.
TRINITY Chns tion Assemb ly. Coolville
G1lbert Spencer, !)OSter. Sunday
school, 9 30 a.m.;, mormng worship , 11
om. Sunday even1ng service, 7.30 p.m ..
mtdweek prayer service Wednesdov 7 30
p m.
1 •
•
MOUNT Olive Community Church ,
lawrence Bush, pastor, Bettie Pigott , Sun~oy school.supt. Sunday School and morn·
tng :-vorsh1p, 9.30 a.m. Sunday even 1ng
servtch, 7 p m., Youth meitting and B1ble
study, Wednesday. 7 p. m.
·
FAITH BAPTIST Church, Mason, meet at
United Steel Workers Union Holt , Railroad
Street Mason. Pastor, Rev Jay Mitchell.
Morning worship 9 _.3 a m , Sunday
Prayer meeting
School 10:30 a m
Wednesday , 7 30 p m.
FORE~T RUN BAPTIST Rov. Ny le
Borden , pastor . Cornelius Bunch
superintendent Sunday school 9 30 a m :
second ond fourth Sundays w~rship ~.r:
vice ot 20:)() p m
MT MORIAH BAPTIST - Fourth and
Ma1rf"St , Mtddleport Rev. Colvin Mtnnis
pastor Mrs . Elvm Bumgardner, tupt. Sun:
day school, 9 30 o .m ; worship service
10·45o .m .
'
NORTH BETHEL
United Methodllt
Church, Rev . Charles Domigon, pastor .
Sunday School, 9·30 am., Worship Ser·
vice, 10.45 am. , Sunday Bible Study, 7.00
p.m ; Wednesday prayer meeting, 7:30
p .m .
HOUSE OF PRAYER AND PRAISE, Liberty
Ave , post Burger Chef, Pomeroy . Eugene
Anspah , pastor. Sunday school, 10 am ,
morn1ng worship, 11 a.m . Evening worshp, Sunday, Tuesday and Friday , 7·30
p.m.
BURLINGHAM SOUTHERN BAPTIST
CHURCH, Route 1. Shade. Pastor Don
Block Affiliated wl1h Southern Baptist
Convention. Sunday school. I 30 p m
Sund?y ":"orship, 2·30 p m Thursdo·y
evenmg Btble study, 7 p m
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY
Racine
Route 124, Wtll lom Hoback , ~stor . Sun:
d~y school , 10 a r ; Sunday evening ser·
v~ce . 6:30 p.m Wednesday "ning ser
VIC&amp; , 7.
CARPENTER BAPTIST, Rev. Freeland
Norris , pastor Don Cheadle, Supt. Sun
day School, 9·30 a m Morning Worship
10·30 a m Prover Service, alternate Sun:
days
OUR LORD FELLOWSHIP _ Pastor Dar·
rei (Chuck) McPherson . Meeting at the old
Baptist Church at Pogevllle . Sunday morn·
lng, 10 o m. Evenmg seNicea Sunday
'
Wednesday and Saturday, 7 p . '

SOLD '1'0UR
WOW!
Tl-lAT'5 6REAT!

1:-::-+-1- +--

FRIDAY, JUNE 15 , llh
10 3o-Hollywoo(t Squares 3, Ten
Who Dared 17, Consumer Sur
vlva l Kit 20, Originals Wr iters
1n America 33
11 00- News 3,8 , 10, 13, lS , Two
Ronnies 20, Lowe ll Thomas
Remembers 33.
11 3o-Johnny Carson 3,15, U S.
Open Hlghllgh1s 6, 13, Bonkers 8,
ABC News 33; Movie "Man wlth
the Synthetic Brain" 10, Movie
" Room Service" 17
12 oo-Baretta 6,13. Juke.Box 8.
Monty Python ' s Flying Circus 33
12 3~Movle " An Eye for an Eye"
.8 , 1 QO-Midnlght Special 3, 15 ;
Movie " Creature with the Blue
Hand" 10
IG-Irons lde 13 , 1 15-Baseball
17. 2 10--News 13 , 2·30-News 3
3 oo--Movle " Mfldred Pierce " 3;
3 45-News 17 ; 4 05-12 O'Clock
High 17 . s oo - Movle " The
Public Enemy" J

llltllNl ID'il

za

"

1 I I

"K I IX ]".

I

.·

Club 10, Agriculture Food for
Thought 13
7 oo- This Is The Life 3; Eddie
Saunders 6; Urban League 10,
Newsmaker ' 79 13. Jimmy
Swaggart 17
7 3&lt;f- TV C~opel 3, Show My People
6, Jerry Falwell 8, 10, Th~ Bible
Answers 13, Jimmy Swaggart
15, Christ for the World 17
8 00- Mormon Choir 3, Grace
Cathedral 6; Three Stooges &amp;
Friends 17 , Sesame St. 20,33.
8 JO-Oral Roberh 3; Celebration of
Praise 6, Day of Discovery 8;
Jemes Robison Presents 10.
Lower Lighthouse 13; Open Bible
IS
9 ~ospel Singing Jubilee 3. Rex
Humbard 6; Rev . L eonard
Repass a, Oral Roberts 10, Rev
Jim Fr anklin 13; Ernest Angley
1S1 Lost """n Space 11; Mister
Rogers 20,33.
9 Jo-Chrlstlan Center 8; Elec. Co.
JJ, It Is Written 10; Morris
Cerullo School of Ministry 13,
sesame St , 20
10 oo--Human Dimension 3; Kids
are People Too 6 , Robert
Schuller 8; Movie "Life with
Father" 10, Jimmy Sweggart
13, Gospel Singing Jubilee IS ,
Hazel 17, Studio See 33
10 .30-Rex Humbard 3; Zoom 20,
Gospel Outreach 13; Movie " The
Desert Fox" 17, Big Blue Marble
JJ
11 .00- Ernest Angley 8; Rex
Humbard 15, Rev . Henry Mahan
13, Que Pa5a, U . S.A 20,33
11 30-Tony Brown's Journal l ;
Anlm.ats Animals Animals 6,
Rev R A West lJ , E lee. Co. 20,
Once Upon A Classic 33
12 oo-At Issue 3; Convers.ation
With Cr . Philip A Potter 15 ,
lnues &amp; Answers 6, 13, Nova 20.
12 30- Meet the
Press 3, 15;
Amer ica's Black Forum 6; The
Issue 10; Evangelistic Outreach
13, Movie " Beware my Lovely"
17
1 oo-Redscene '79 3; Communique
6, Movie "Divorce His" B, Face
the Nation 10, Wild Kingdom 13,
PTL Club 151 Advocates 20
1 3D-Baseball 3, Women' s Tennis
6, Movie " Random Harvvst" 10;
This Di5cophonlc Scene 13 ;
· Another Voice 33 .
2 DO- Great Performances 33,
Thresholds of Opportunity 13;
Baseball 17; Turnabout 20.
2 30 - U S Open 6. 13 ; Movie
" Divor ce Hers" 8; Hocking
ValleY Bluegrass 20.
3 oo-The Four Freshmen in Con·
cert 33, This Is The Life 15; Race
fo r the Yellow Jersey 20.

�9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, June IS, 1979
6- Tht• llu i ly St•ntnwl ' Midcllt'p&lt;ll'\ -l'illlll'l'il)'' 0 . ' r 'r iday' ,) IIIII! 15' 1979

Commentary

,
or
·
tre
s
£
View from·the
S
By Don Graff
It 's not easy at times be i n~ a world
power .
Allies get restl ess and may grow so
bold as to resist being knocked back
into line. The military cost is immense, not only straining the budget
but providing a political issue for
dissidents who think civilian interests
are being shortchanged. Uncomtnitted countries. interested primari ly in wt they can get out of you, Ire- -

T!\ctay in History
lh Tht• Assodatrd Prt•ss

Tixta)· is Friday. J une 15. the 1G6tli
d.r1~·

uf 1!179. There an:- 199 day s lcfl in
lhl' .vear .
Toda(s highlight in history :
On this datr in 1215. at Runnymede .
E n~ l a nd . King John signed.he Ma gna
Carta . gra nting · his barons rnorc
libert y a nd laying a founda tion for
de mocra tic ~overnment .
On this date :
In 1752 . Be nja min Fra nkl in
demons tra ted tile rela ti ons hip
between lightning a nd electricity
when he launched a kite during a
storm a t Philadelphia .
. In 1775, Geo rge Washi ng ton
accepted command of the Continental
Army in the American Revolution:
In 1836. Arka nsas became the 25th
state .
In 1904 , more than 1,000 people died
in a fire aboard the steamboat
General Slocum in the East River off
New York's Ma nhattan Island.
In 1940, the Gennans outflanked the
Maginot Line in France during World
War II.
In 1977, the first election's were held
tn Spain in 41 years to' elect the first
democ ratic parliament sin ce the
beginning of the F ranco era.
Ten yea rs ago: Former Premier
Georges Pompidou won a presidential
election in France to succeed Charles
·de Ga ulle.
Five years ago : President Richard
Nixon visited Saudi Arabia on a ·
Middle East tour a nd promised more
arms aid:

One year ago : King Hussein ol
J ordan marri ed a 26-year-old
American, Elizabeth Halaby, in a
brief Moslem ce remony and
proclaimed her Queen.

FOR

quently play you for a chum p.
'
That could be today 's world as seen
from Washington, but it also may
very well describe the view from
Moscow .
For all tha t it appears to be a
menacing colossus to the nonCommunist world , things are not going so well for the Soviet Union these
days. It is tra iling badly in the
economic race with theWest. Growth.
a vigorous 11'9 percent· annlly a dede
back, has flattened o,ff at about 3 percent. J apan has surged ahead into the
position of the world's second
economic power , measured on gross
national product.
Afte r 30 postwar years of Soviet
domina tion, Eastern Euroi&gt;e is still
not to be relied upon. Poland, some
observers are beginning to think, has
the makings of another Czechoslokia
of the 1968 "spring." The Warsaw
Pact allies may l)e less a military
asset than a potential encwnbrance.

'

On every Soviet border , in fact, the
ramparts · must be watched , To the
west, there is a n economically thriving Europe with a military capa bility
that, if infe rior to Soviet forces, must
still be taken into account in strategic
planning.
The defedion of Western supporters in the Mideast has not
necessarily meant gains for the
Soviets. Iraq is edging away from .
long-time dependence on Moscow and
the religious revolution in Iran could
t have an explosive echo in the Soviet
Union, with its nwnerous and
politi cally subordinated Moslem
peoples.
In Afghanistan, the Marxist coup
that brought the country into the
Soviet camp has turned into a civil

You Can't Find Better.
Why Settle For Less

·

• Check cooling system • Change
oil eCheck all exterior lights
• Check fluid levels el nspect
exhaust system • Lubricate
chassis • Check air and fuel
filters • Check washers and
wipers eCheck battery ca
Regular S49 ,9S
June Special
SAVE $10.00

WE'RE OPEN :
Mon -Fri. 8:00am-5 : 00pm
WE HONOR :
BankAmericard, Master Charge

and Ohltuary : 6 cent3. ,per word ,
~ . 00 minimwn. Cash in l:ld-

vence.

•,;.MobUe H()Jne sal es and YarC

sales are a c~ted only with
cash with order. 25 cent charge
fOr ads carrying Box Number In
~ re of 1be Sentinel.

COME
IN TODAY!

,:The Publisher reserves the
right to edit or reject any ads
deemed obj ecti ona l. The
P\Jblisher will not J;Ml responsible
more than one incorrect in.!ertlon.

f"'

N9TICE

SPECIAL ON ALL
STEEL BELTED TIRES
Check Our Price Before
You Buy Any Place

WANT-AD
DVERTISING ·
DEADLINES

SMITH-NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Monday

Noon on Saturda y

500 E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY, OHIO
PH. 992-2174

the day before publiration

Sunday

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT

1 owner, 4cy l., auto., radio . Only

1975 FORD MUSTANG II ................ s2795.
Local. 4cyl. , auto., radio, good mileage.
. · WAGON ··········••eeee•
WasS1595-NOW s1295
1974 CHEVELLE
Spirit of Ameri ca m;odel, loaded with goodies &amp; a nice car to own, v ·8,

1978 CAD. DEVILLE
Cpe. Clean
Low m i Ieage.

WAS~

VISIT OUR LOT, CHECK OUR

1972 CADIUAC

ONLY

"Your Chevy Dealer"

CRUISER WAGON

Open Evenings Til 8:00p.m.

s3595

NOW

1977 BUICK LESABRE
2 DR
/

There to be together forever

f.)l rnaro.

WAS~
, • 1.

NOW

1978
OLDSMOBILE
Royale Sedan, p . seat, am 1m &amp; tape, auto ., p.s ., p .b .,
350 V-8, low mileage .

"

NOW

NOW

WAS~

:.

9'12-S207. Reword .
I
lemole poodle.

~

I

'

-.

,,,.
·,

FORD CLUB VAN

lfz TONS
%TONS
AND BRONCOS
See Rocky Hupp, Darrell Dodrill or Pai Hill,
. Gtmeral Manager, fOr a good deal on a new
u1 used veh ide.

COME
ON IN
AND CHECK
OUT OUR
BIG SELECTION
OF 4-WHEELERS

PAT HILL FORD

Auto .,
C. B.

p.b .,

p.s., radio ,

$5495

NOW

1973
CUTI.AS SUPREME
SEDAN

r.;'·

1973 OLDS TORONADO

$1295

•

' '!.1

'

'

·"

Regency Sed.
Demo. Loaded
Sticker Prite
.$llrUr

,·'

GMAC · FJN~NCING

til6.
BACKYARD SALE, 277 Mo;n
St :. M iddleport, Ohio. Starting
June 18. 9 til 3 All good clean
Merchandise, Rain cancel s.

TWO FAMILY· yard sale , Se-

BIG YARD SALE . Friday , Saturday and Sunday June 1517 Blue and White house on
Ro,ilroacl St. Middleport. Rain
or shine. Phone 993·6047 or
992-7oi94 , FolloW fellow signs.

GIGANTIC YARD SALE, 6 mUes
east of Chester, Rt. 2oi8, Fridoy
15, 6 PM thru Soturdoy , fu rnlture, glauwore, appliances,
large auortment .

Pete Burris, Marvin Keebaugh or George Harris

"lou 'II Ul.-t&gt; . Our Qui! lit~· JFil_r Of Doing. Business"

and children clothing. Dryer.
chino. lawn mower, and lots
of misc. items, Co. ftd 5 Bradbury Rd. , First Mobile Home
on right , Friday and sturday 9

15-16-17.

See One of the Courteous Salesmen

KARR &amp;. VAN ZANDT

BIG YARD SALE Friday and
Saturday. June 15 and 16 9 lil4
at Roger Roush residence at
Racine, Ohio Bucktown Rood
Lots of. nice items , Aoin
cancels.

cond St. ocron from Hubbard
Greenhouse in Syracuse, June

$9600

OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 6:00 EXCEPT THURSDAY &amp; SATURDAY 5:00
Middleport, Ohio

"t:

1979 OLDS 98

NOW

Somlithing for everyone. First
house on left after you cross
railroad track at Cheshire at
the Mary .layne residence .
June13, 1.4, 15. 16.

3 FAMILY YARD SALE, adults

WAS~

NOW

in the Forked

Yard Sale
LOTS· OF NEW CLOTHING.

WAS 1~

NOW

1972

Auto Sales
PLYMOUTH OUSTER .

Very goad condition. Good
gas mileage . $1250. 992-2378

or 9'12-3325.
1974 VEGA HATCHBACK, call
303-675-1SOl or 305-675-2488
or 304-675-1553.
1962 GALA)(IE 500 original ,
ex cellent shop.e , 667-3333
after 5.

1976 DODGE ASPEN STAT ION
WAGON .

good

condition.

.

''

GARAG6SALEJunel6 , roinor
shine. From 9 til9 on State Rt .
5$.4 n'eor Cheshire and Porter.

2FAMtLY YARD SALE . June 16

and 16, 9 tll 5, on Union Tarroc8right off Union Ave. Baby
and. toddler clothes, several
sizes children clothes, Qdvh
clothes r 2 strollers, baby both
tub, m·lsc. Coll992-2803.

t '

9'12-2082 or 742·2328 .

ROSE BUSHES
AND

1

THREE BEDR OOM house,.lorge
li ving ro am and kitchen , wallto-wall carpe ting. I •;, ocres ,
immediate pos session. Priced
at $32,000. Intersection of Rt.
7 and 143. 992-3183.
MODERN 3 Bedroom house,
toto! alec. Home situat ed on
large lot it1 Hutchisons SubOivison , 742-2047 .
26.76 WOODED ACR-ES with a
'2 story , 12 room house. on e
small born and Iorge out
building, property touches
Forked Run Stole Pork, hos
e)(cellentlake site, all mineral
rights included . located on
pa ved Rd . 2 miles from Tuppers Plains, Cell 667-3932
price $16,900 and willing to
ta lk about pri ce.
HOTEL AND BAR for sal e or
lease, located in Middleport.
Ohio , on
Ohi o
Ri~er .
Pr_icedreosonable . Highl y
potent ional business property

882-2462.

SHRUBS
POMEROY LANDMARK

~

Jack W. Carsey
Mgr.
- . . Phone 992-2181

HOUSE in · country, S room s
and both with double garage,
drilled w~ll . carpeted, 5 acres
with fenced in posture. onehalf mile from Racine Dam on
country rood . 247· 3862 or contact Dennis Manuel.

GiveAway

ousmg ·

--4

Headquarters

~~!~~!{8
'I
I

997-JJ7S '

216 E. Second StrHt

MILLFIELO - 8 yr . old
2 bed room hom e, bath,
ce ntra l hea t , and full

base ment. Lot 160xl60.
$14,000 .
COUNTRY - On St. Rl,
wit h a 7 r oom fram e
house . Has hot &amp; cold
wat er , 2 ca r ga r age,
ba r11, n ice garden spot
and 3 a cr es. $17,000 .

NEW LISTING - Rt. 33
out of t own is thi s 2
bed room hom e, bath,
l arge dining) furna ce •.
full ba se m ent , and n ice

levell ol. $23 ,000.
BUSINESS - Wan t to

go into self employment
and be independent for

. only $23,500.
RACINE - A3 bedroom

older hom e with nice
woodwork but needs a
litt le fixing . Just look. at
th e price of only $1 2,000.

5 RENTALS -

Four 2

bedroom apts. up and a
business of si x r oom s
down . Good investment
for you at $.44,500 .

IllATIVE

STONE

Remarkably ni ce inside
with natural gas fur nace, c ity wate r and
sewer . 2lf:t acres with
lots of trees and lonely,

$27,SOO.
LEAVE YOUR SELLING PROBLEMS WITH
US. TRY DtALtNG A
D•E•A•L FOR BEST
RESULTS .

Housing
_Headquarters

HOBSTETTER REALTY

FIVE KITTENS, 6 to 7 weeks
old . .o4 calico. 1 tiger . 992-7680.
H_umone Society.
SPECIAL
pupp ies
of
o
registered English Springer
Span!el mother. oil the
ies look like her. We wil not
et them go unless as'sured of
on e)fcellent home , 843•2234 .

fup·

1976 LINCOLN, exce ll ent con·
dition . Will sacrifice $5200.

KITIENS 3 block, one male 2
female , 6 wks old , long
haired multi color gray mole 8
· wks. old also gray with wh ite
morki.ngs mole 8 wks. old.
state truck, no ruSt , also 1976 Humane Society 992· 7680.
TOYOTA needs body work
MIXED breeds female pups,
992-3397 or 8-43-2626.
one boxer type male 4 months
old,
one colli e type female 4
1967 HALF TON DODGE PICK- months
old. Humane Society
UP.- 6 miles east of Chester,

992-2502.
1970 CHEVEllE 4sp. $300.00.
992-6057.
1973 FORD RANCHERO , out of

Ohio, Rt. 248. Phone 985-3353.

Mobile Homes Sale's

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork ,
Route 33, north of Pomeroy .
large lots . Call 992· 7479.

1974 14 x 70 mobile home.
Good condition .
$7800 .

992-5434 ,

or

9'12-6022.

9'12-58S8.
t96SGENERAL60xl2, 2bed•.
1970 Sylva , 60xl2 , 2 bedr.
1970 Costle, 60x 12, 2 bedr.
197&lt;4 Mark line, 50K12, 2 bedr.
1969Voliant, 12x60, 2 bedr.
1967 National , 12x50 , 2 bedr.

B'S MOBILE HOME SALES, PT.
PLEASANT,- WV. 304-675-442-4;
1970 CHAMPION t2x60 2
bedroom .
Appliances ,
bui lding . Situated on a nice
rented lot. Phone 992·7235
oher5 p.m.

992-5738.
HOME FOR RENT , Pomeroy,
Ohio, $125.00 per month plus
utilities. Please coli 992-3458
after 6 PM weekdays , anytime
on weekends.
4 ROOM FURNISHED
rent, 992-3860.

APT. lor

For Sale
TRUCKS, 2 ton 1973 and 1'11
ton 1970. Both with 12 ft.
bo)(es. Phone 992-6206 or

992-6173.
1940 CASE TRACTOR . Good
condition. $600. 992 -3183.

GOOD

USED TELEIIISIONS.

color and block and white,
HARRISON T.V., 276 Sycamore
St ., M iddleport . 992-2522.
WUR LITZER PIANO. very good
condition, $650.00, 992-7537,
also o pair of end tables,

$2S .OO.
SANDAl SALE, women' s and
girls' $8 .88 to $7 .89. Men's and
Boys sport shoes, beige,

$12 .9'1 ond $14.9'1 . BAILEYS
STORE, Middleport .
CUCUMBtR AND MELON
PLANTS. Cleland Greenhouse,
Racine, Ohio . ·
·

1978 * R.M. 125 SUZUKI d;rl

bike,

excellent

condition,

949-2410.
SQUARE BAlES HAY in field
2oi7 -3638, Aaron Wolfe, letart
Fulls . Ohio.
RUTLAND HARDWARE . 2
doors down from Post Office,
7-42· 2255. PAINT SALE, Martin
Senour, Divi sion of Sherman
and Williom.s. 2 gal. flat white
exterior
pa in1
$13 .95 .
Stainless steel double bow l
sink and . washer less facet
$60 .00 . B , ft. di splay
refrigerator case w ith single
phose compressor$350.00.
.t BEDROOM HOME, large liv·
· ing · and dining, an three
quarter acre. Utility building
in Rutland 7oi2•754.

·-

~---'-- ------

NEW LISTING -

..

PnMFROY . 0 .

NEW LISTING -

Ex-

cellent locat ion in Mid·
dleport, 1112 story , J
bdrms., fam ily room ,
fen c ed
level
yard ,
garage &amp; storage. Home
.fully carpeted &amp;

remodeled . PRICEO
FOR QUICK SALE,
$25,000.00.
NEW LISTING
Pomeroy Elementary
School distr ict, very

nice

3 bdrm . home,

bath , dining room , base ment area, garden, ni ce

lot. TRY AND TOP
THIS . $24,000.00 .
NEW LISTING - 4
acres in town, garden
spa ce, fruit trees , good 3
bdrm . home, basement
w -garage,
enclosed
porch, dining roQm .

HARD TO FIND.
$25,000.00 .
..
NEWER RANCH - 5
Pis . Excellent condi ·.
tion, centra l air &amp; heat,

large level lol, fully

equipped

kit c hen .

MANY
OTHER
FEATURES. $29,100,00.
NEW LISTING. MAJOR
INVESTMENT PRO·
PERTY IN MEIGS CO .,
POTENTIAL
FOR
&amp;
. COMMERCIAL
RECREATIONAL
USES . CALL FOR
OETAILS.
SHOULD BE SOLO 70 acres, farm , r anc h
type house , barn &amp; oth er

bldgs . Near Long Bottom. SJJ,SOO.OO.
WE ARE A FULL TIME
R E A"L
E STATE
ORGANIZATION .
"FOR BEST RESULTS
LIST WITH US ."
Reliltors
Henry E. Cleland Sr.
Henry E-. Clela.1d Jr.
992 · 72~9
992·6191

A ttu~n s

797 · 11·45 or 197 ·17Sl

RadiatQr~
Servlc:&amp; ~
l it rgf!sl

Truck

or

Cellutoslc (wood flberJ

Nathan Bin s

Thermal insu.tatlon

I

Save 30 pet. to 50 pet.

Smith Nelson
MotOIS, Inc.
Ph. 992·2174

on heating cost
Experience and

ed to sell at $40,000.00.
JUST LISTED - We have an .extremely n;ce home
in the $95,000.00' price ran'g e. You must see this one
to apprec iate its beauty .
OANVt LLE - 4 bedroom home with famHy room
bath and kitchen. Situated on 1;" of an acre with
smoke house , cellar and 2 other good building s .

Needs some work but well worth $18,000.00.
FARMS - We have 2 in the Rac;ne area. ta ll HHton

Wolfe for more Info. on these.
We have other listings to t:hoose from . Give us a
call. We need more listings! I!

Chetyt Lemley, Assoc . Phone 742·2003

Hilton Wolfe, Assoc . Phone 949·2519
GeorgeS . Hobstetter, Jr. Broker 992·5739

Pomeroy

Residential and com mercial.
Call
for
estimate. 24 Hour Ser~
vice Any day , anytime.
Poriabl·e toilet rental .

living &amp; fami l y room . A huge heat-o lator f i replace
in center is really att r active . 3 bedrooms and l 1f2
bath s &amp; ut ility room . City water &amp; 2 w ells. Singel car
garage by house and large bank ce lla r. Al so 5 stall
garage with w orkshop upst a ir s. App rox . I V, acre
land . More land available . Close to Pomeroy &amp; Mid dleport. Owner may tak e mobile home or other as
part down paym ent. Ask.iny $42, 500 .

IMMEDIATE

POSSESSION , -

Real

nice, 3

bedroom home, w ith larg e living room and family
room , all nicely carpeted , larg e ea t ·ln kitchen
equipped with dishwasher, d isposal , and stove, 2
full baths, 1h basement and garag e, ni ce g arden o n 1
plu s acres of land in Racine. Priced at $45, 000 .

$25,900 - Total pr;vacy is lh e key here on 2 plus
acres , the living rm . has bri ck fireplace , step -down
family room, eqUipped kit chen, full bath , laundry
area, and two bed r ooms c9 mpl ete downstairs. the
· unf i nls~ e d upstairs makes expansion possi bl e.

as

ACRES - With plenty of good pasture land and

som e farming ground . Good barn with drilled well.
Garage and other buildings, f arm house . Needs
som e r epair. Mineral rights too. Good loca tion
about 5 minutes f ro m Pomer oy off R t. 33. Pri ced for
qui ck sale . $ ~ 7 , 000 .

Phone 985·3806
Jack G;nther 9B5·3806

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

1 Mi les Eas t o! Wilk es vill e

LOTS -

furnace . A v ery attractive sm all ho m e and 1 a cr e

QUALITY
DRAFTING
SERVICES

GOO SE

Real Estate Loans

IRELAND
MORTGAGE
CO.
77 E: State, Athens
592-3051

.4 -23-1 m o .

Roger Hysell

Vinyl and Aluminum

Garage

Siding

3 ~ mile off Rt. 7 by ·pass
on St. Rt. 124 toward
Rutland.

BISSELl
SIDING CO.

Auto&amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992 -5682
4-30-tfc

CiiiiiS.

Business Services
AUTOMOBI LE INSURAN CE
been cancelled? lost your
license?
Phone
operators
E·C ElECTRICAl Contractor
serving Ohio Volley reg ion.
Si x days a week , 2.. hou rs service. Emergency call s. Coli

systems ,
Rt . 1&lt;43.

LEARN GO LF cOrrectly this
summer. Bag l nn ~ r' s and od·
John
Teaford .
vonced .

614 -985-3961.
HANDYMAN WORK ··mowing
lawns, point ing houses, roofs
and building sidewalk s, etc.

Coll614-667-3263.

6-6·1 mo .

Sweepers . toos1en . irons, all
small appliances. Lawn moer,
next to State Highway Garage
on Route 7, 985·3825.

SALES

AND

SERVICE

742-2455.

on

and V
Morris .

ADD ONS and remodel ing,
gutter work . down spouts.
some concreta work , walks
and
driveway s
(free
estimate) V.C. Young. Ill ,
Ra cine, OH. 9.49 ~ 27.C8 .

CUSTOM

WOOD

NEIGLER CONSTRUCTION for
new houses ond repolr work .
Coil Guy Neig ler 9.49-2508,
Ra cine, Oh io.

SHP AT ...

RUTlAND FURNITURE
WE OFFER YOU ...
1. Two full floors ol all new
furniture .

2. Nice selections ol used fur ·

3. A larue buUdlng full of

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -

. SEWING MACHINE Repolro , .
service, all makes . 992-2284 .
The Fabric Shop. Pamerov .
Authorized Singer Soles and
Service. We sharpen Scl11ors .
E&gt;&lt;CAVATING , dozer, loader
and backhoe work; dump
trucks and lo·bovs for hire ,
will houl fill dirt, top soil,
limestone and grovel. Call Bob
or Roger Jeffers1 day phone
992 -7089.
ni ght
phone

9'12-3525 or 992-5232.
EXCAVATING . dozer ,
backhoe and ditcher, Charles
R. Hatf ield . Black Hoe Service,
Rutland, Ohio. Pone 7 ~2 - 2008 .

PULLINS EXCAVATING . Com-

plete Service .· Phone 992-2478 .

WORK .

Anyth ing mode of wood . The
Wood
Shed ,
Broodwov .
Ra ci ne, Ohi o.

SAVE ON
CARPETING

DRIVE &amp; LITTLE
&amp;.
SAVE A LOT
A GOOD SELECTION
OF END &amp; ROLL
BALANCES.

All CARPET
NOW ON
SALE
FROM

SJ95sq . yd .

24 Ralls of Corpet In
Stock &amp; lOO's of Samples
to Choose From .
BUY NOW &amp; SAVE

•

CALL JIMMY OEEM, ASSOCIATE 949 -23.18
OR NANCY JASPERS, ASSOCIATE
949·2654 or 949·2591

CALL
992-2772

CODNER'S CAMPERS on Ra;n.

Howard Rotovoton
chisel plows . leo

beautitu! carpet.

AWMINUM
&amp; VINYL SIDING
BY
J&amp;L INSULATION

BRADFORD, Auctioneer. Com·
plete Service. Phone 9.49-2487
or 9oi9-2000. Rocine. Ohio.
Crilf Bradford .

Phone 698-32'10.

Coll992-5858 .

New, repair,
gutters and
down spouts.
Window cleaning
Gutter. cl~aning
Free Estimales
949-2862-949-2160
4-5-ttc

IN STOCK for Immediate
delivery: variou s sizes of pool
kits. Do-lt- yourse lf or let us
install tor you . D. Bumgardner
Soles , Inc. 992-572.. .

LEO MORRIS Trucking. Will do
lime and fertili zer haul ing and
spreading. Al so limes tone and
grovel hauling. 7C2 · 2~55 .

services Offered

H. L Writesel
Roofing

Business Services

VERY GENTLE Quarter Horse.
Western parade sadd le .

WATER AND misc. haul ing .

367-7101 .

614 ·9f2•Jllt. ·
6-3-1 mo ,

Business Services

614-B-43-3oll '

Phone t (614) 698-7331 or
742 -2593.

PAINTING AND sandb lasting .
Free estimates. Caii9A9·2686

N t~ w s om e,

6·14-2 mo.

bow Ridge with top of the
line---Barth- Swiss Colony Joyce - Motor Home• to Top·
per s. accessories and friendly
service. For directions coli

882-2'152 or 882-3454.
HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex-

NOW HAULING lim estone in
M iddleport-Poem roy area .
can fo r free estimate .

Ann

Free Estimate

can lor a Free Siding
Estimate, 949-2801 or
949·2860. No Sunday

person th i s 4 bedroom full y ca r pet ed house, la rg e
living room w i th heat ·olator f ir epl ace and kitchen
equipped with dishwasher , stove &amp; r efr ig. Loc . on 5
acres of land . Immedia te possession. P r ice reduced

WANT TO SELL? - GIVE US A CALL

STO C I&lt;

Purchase
and
Refinance
30 Year Terms
A- No money down
(eligible veterans)
FHA- AS low as 3%
down (non -veterans)

OWNER SAYS SELL and may f;nance to o.ua l;f led

SO ACRES - Free gas, with a 3 bedroom , Ph story
house,_full b aement . Larg e beau ti f ul pond stock ed
with fish, sec luded area . Priced only $42, 500.

Tu•s . Morning llO : JOl and
Eveninos at 7: JO-Middlepert;
Huth United Methodllt Church
Thun. Mornint 110: 30 ) · and
Even!nvs 11 7 : 30-Pt . Pluunt ,
w. V• . Krodel Parll Club House.

4 5 1m o

nlture.

SYRACUSE Real n ice 2 be droom house , all
carpeted , ni ce c abi net s, uti li ty r oom , nat . gas .hea t ,
21ots. Pr iced f or $2).500.

WANTED
Overweight People
SlinderelliJ _
Diet Classes ·
Mon . E'leniniJS ·Muon, w. va .,
7: l0 St. Josep" C•thotlc Church;

NOW.AV,O.ILABLE.

Chester, 0 .
5·6·1 mo. pd . .

land . Pr;ced f ~ r qu; ck sa le for $1 7.SOO.

to S39.000.

5·20·1 mo.-pd .

For turtner intormation nil Jo
SUPER

TRAilER

1 A c r e and up·near Pom ero y .

JUST LISTED - Ill ice remodeled 2 bedroom home
on blacktop road. Moslly carpeted. F.A. nat. gas

Free estimates

614 ·669-42"5 E venings

SAVE ON THIS MIDOLEPORT HOUSE - Good 4
bed r oom hou se at a low pri ce. P len ty of c lose t space
and k itchen cabin ets , low heat bi lls. P rice d for ex ·
'tra quick sal e . $27,000.

•NEW HOMES
• ROOM ADDITIONS
•ROOFING
•VINYLSIOtNG
•GUTTER &amp; SOFFIT
Phone 992-6323

TRAilER SAlES
17 3'0 Mont;ome r' lld .
langsville, Oh io

cavati ng, septi c
dozer , backhoe .

BOB'S GENERAL
CONTRACTING

MONTGOMERY

9'12 - 21~3 .

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

997-5547
4·25 ·1 mo.· Pd.

fully Insured
Free Est.
can 992-2772
5-17-1 mo .

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

Box 3

Rt. 3
P om er oy, Ohio

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

smallest Heat er c,n e.
Radia tor

CONTRACTOR

J&amp;L

EXPERIENCED

RUIIItOr

WORK, GENERAL

423 1 mo . ( Pd .)

"'""

Fro~ . the

BLOCK &amp; BRICK

•New Home
•Add ons
• Remoldings
• Free estimates
992 -6011

Art&gt;il

Bulldoz er

N. L QJnstruction

C. R. MASH
VINYl &amp; AWM.
SIDING

All type'&gt; routing, q u n e r s and
d DWfU POUtS. All typeS home
m i\ inlenan ct . new a nd re pa ir .
Storm doors a nd w iru:l ows. All
work g l! o. r ~ nt e e d , 10 yean U ·
pP riCrt ( (' Fr1·(' Ci l i m a t n . Ca ll
Tom Hi! skin s ~49· , 160 .

In Pomeroy .

home with living room, bath, laundry room and
modern kitchen. E xcellent v iew Of river and
beautiful flower gardens with some fruit tree s. Pri c·

NEW LISTING - Beautilul older completely
remodeled home . 11ewly carpeted wllh e•tra large
608E ........._
MAIN

Ohio Valley Roofing
and
Home Maintenance

992-3100 6·6·1 mo.

WE HVE CONVENTIONAL FINANCING FOR MOST OF OUR HOMES FOR
AS LOW ASS% DOWN.

EFFICIENCY APT. sujitable for
·one. Utilities poid . Call

L---------------------------------

MIDDLEPORT

For Sale or Trade
GAS DRYER FOR ELEC. DRYER
Call9'12-5044 or 992-3792 .

TWO BEDROOM Hou5e , newly
remodeled
kit chen .
In
Pomeroy . Coll992-2288 after 6
P:m.
12x60 2 bedroom mobile home
in Racine area. 992-5858.

Business Services.

187 ASH ST,

9'12· 7853 or 9'12-7680 .

For Rent

·_I

Civil
Mechanical
Archetectural
Layouts

r.

$240Q. 9'12-6168 after 6 p.m.

TWO BEDROOM furnished opt.

Fcmel
Germcn
Shtiph•rrd, light ton Ieee and
on bock end toil.
collar from home on
Run Rood, below
Mlclleporl , mislng -4 weeks. If
Gerald Mathews,

·ON ALL

ding . Cal l367-0292 .

SlEEPING ROOM for working
man only . Reasonable renl.

$7295
1--------+--------+----------1·
1977
NOW

20%
DISCOUNT

RISING STAR Kennel. Boar·

TWO BEDROOM trailer. Adults

2,500 miles

WAS~

992-2432.

HOOF HOllOW, English and
Western .
Saddles
and
harness . Horses and ponies .
Ruth Reeves. 614-698 -3290.
Barding" &amp; Riding lessons and
Horse Care products.

ONE BEDROOM opts. Contact
Village Manor, 99'2-7787 .

I-s3595

ches with steel well heavy
vinyl lining, plus plastic cover
$25 .00
good
condi tion ,

Pets for Sale

only . 992-3324.

1979 FORD LTD
. • SEDAN

1977 FORD. LTD II
SED.

BUYING JUNK cars and
bodies. Also scrap iron and
metals. Rider's salvage, SR
124, Pomeroy. 992-5468.

992-3129,
992-5914.

''•

wHh

automatic damper 992·394&lt;4 .

992-31:2'1, o• 992-5914.

' ; I

1976 OLDS CUTLASS
SEDAN
WAS

BALED HAY for sole to pick up
after the baler in the field

SWIMMING POOL 8Ft . x20 In-

992-S.34.

NOW

New Paint

985-4339.

phonograPh records . Call
992-6370 or Contact Martin
Furniture.

. FURNISHED APT . su itable for 3
or 4 construction workers .
After 5pm · call 992-S...:M,

WAS~

1975 OLDS 98 SEDAN

BASS BOAT 20 H.P. Mere. Elec.
Start, stick steering trolling
motor, Trailer, ful lv equipped

98S-3555.
COAL
FURNACE

REA! ESTATE : 1 acre lot in Rig·
gscrest Manor, between Tuppers Pl ains and Chester.
Phone 985-39 29 and 985 -4129.

TW O STORY 3 bedroom house.
3 lots. Now 's vour cha nce if
you need a house. $1 2,000.
Owner wi ll ing to talk .

15 fl. LOW E LINE ALUMINUM

WANT TO buy' old 45 and 78

3 AND 4 RM furnished and unfurnished
opts.
Phone

·'.

1976 OLDS ROYALE ·
SEDAN

WAS~

WAS !.399J

prepc~re, "

1973 .CAD.
DEVILLE CPE.

1974 CAD. DEVILLE
SED.

Pomeroy

992 -2126

N. Second Ave.
Middleport, 0.

He said in his ward, " I go to

s1395

1976 CUTlASS

l1r.
~NERAL

obode,

NOW

DEVILLE SEDAN

F . E .T., mounting,
- and balance included .

'

WAS.!2-295-"

NOW

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

Your loving touch, your smile,
your footsteps and your vacant choir,
Memories like these time can·
not erose,
But
more precious
year.
would see our Saviour' s
peace,
his gracious words,
'W•• allllon,g so much to hear,
you may enter in.
ready we must.
ones , Get ready . in cos9
ore not,
J~sus , is surelv coming
soon ,
To take his own to his future

. ,,

SALE

1974 CHEV. IMPALA CPE. ····••ou•••••• s1995

WE WANT YOUR BUSINESS

good-bye .

'

2 Seat, V -8, automatic, P.S., runs &amp; drives nice, needs some metal
w.ork •

DISCOUNT ·PRICES

..'

~ft,DELUXE

1975 PINTO STA. WAGON •••••• , •••••••• s2295

NEW CAR &amp; TRUCK

Time Is swiftly passing by,
June 15th makes thirteen
todoy 1
God called you from this
world to stay ,
Without a moment to soy,

w. Carsey

Mgr.
Phone 992·7181

9'12-2689 .

t5, 1966:

SUPER

Runs &amp; drives eKtra good, good tires, very nice interior &amp; no rust. V-8,
auto., P.S ., P .B., clean t his car up &amp; sa ve a bundl e. Just in .

automatic, P.S.• P B., radio, dark btue, wh. vinyl top .

IN LOVING MEMORY of Oris
Gaul who passed away June

'·

1973 FORD 4 DR. GALAXIE 500 •••••••••• s939

SALE PRICES

- ·

3 Vt acres in Pomeroy . SEcluded wood ed a reo on top o f hil l.
O ver looks rive r. Wa ter elect ri c civailable . s 7 C~oo .

M ODERN THREE bedroom
ho u se,
full
basement ,
f ireplace. fully carpeted , central oi r, encl Osed sun porch,
located on 6 1/ , acres on CR 28,
oppro)f . 3 miles fr o m Ra cine. U
· interes ted contact" Lorry Wo lle
949-2836 week ends ond aft er
5 even ings .

Headquarters for
Hotpoint and
General Electric
Appliances

Jack

Real Estate for Sale

REAL ESTATE l oon s. Purchase
and refinance. 30 ye ar term s.
VA . No money down (elig ibl e
veterans). FHA · As low a s 3
per ce nt down (non-11ete-ron s).
Ireland Mort gage Co .. 77 E.
State . Athens. 614-591-3051.

P.OMEROY
LANDMARK

CHIP WOOD. Poles ma x .
diameter 10" on largest end .
$12 per ton. Bundled slab. $10
per ton . Deli vered to Ohio
Pollet Co. . Rt. 2, Pom eroy .

Real Estate for Sale

9'12-3886.

992-3891'

Wanted to Buy

OLD COINS, pocket watches,
class rings , wedding bonds ,
diamonds . Gold or silver. Col i
Roar Wamsley, 742-2331 .

sand ,

grovel , ca lci um chlor ide . fer·
til izer, dog foo d, and oil types
of salt . Ex ceb ior Salt Works,
Inc .. E. Main SL . Pomeroy,

IMMEDIATE OPENING lor In -

OlD FURNITURE , ice boxes .
brass beds , iron bed s. desks .
etc.. complete households .
Write M .D. Miller, Rt. 4 ,
Pomeroy or coll992-7760.

For Sale
LIMESTPNE,

CO AL .

suran ce
ag e nt .
la r ge
es tabli shed ag en cy. Full
hospitali zation, di5ability and
retirement . Paid by componv
poy oppr ox. $200.00 per
week. 446·2273.

4P.M.

In Memory

work. Priced below market .

l aborator y Technician, 3-11
shi ft . Elo:perienced MLT (A SCP)
or equivalent. E)(cellent sala ry
and fri nge benefits . Shift diff&amp;rentoil. Contact: Per sonn el
Off ice ,
Plea sant Vall ey
Hospital , Voll ey Drive , Poi nt
Pleosont , WV. 25550. Phone
304- 675-4340. An Equcil Op·
portuni tv Employer .

thru Friday

Friday afternoon

V -8, 3 speed, std . trans., good tires, jost like for someone to do his own

Help wanted
IMM EDIATE
OPENIN G.

Tuesday

-tP.M.

1974 CAMARO CPE..................... s1695

4 ply polyester
white
sidewall, load range B,
tubeless.

•

Olarge
U.S
1.90
2.2!i
3.75

Each word over t he minimum
15 words is 4 cents per word pe r
day. Ads running other than const'Cutive d~tys "''ill be charged at
the I day rate.

PRE-VACATION CHECK UP

Real solid &amp; verV clean. interior, green finish , blk . vinyl roof, V-8,
automatic, P .S., P.B .• radio, clean &amp; priced to go .
·

UNIROYAL

992-2186

Cash
1.00
1.50
I.M
3.00

1day
2day1
3day.!l
6da y.!I

'
•In memory,
Card of Thanks

1971 CHEV. MONTE CARLO .••••••••••••• s1295

Locall owner &amp; les than 11 ,000 miles, V-6, auto., P .S., w ·w tires, radio ,
luggage rack, medium blue, with spotless interior. want a showroom
car, at a savings?

TIRE SALES

15 Wortb or Under

Local owner. sharp interior, good red fin ish , gOOd tires, 6 cyl ..

1978 MONZA STA. WAGON ............... s3995

c

WANT AD
CHARGES &gt;

alJtomati c, radio. Truly a nice car &amp; good e~ onomy .

.VANS
PICKUPS
CARS

.....

Your Best ~uys Are F Qund in the Sentinel Classifieds

-

1971 FORD MAVERICK 2 DR •••••••••••• s1095

L78-15

5;

line.

•

TIGER
PAW

u
..,

·lla tlter tha n drawing assista nce from
them in the event of East-West
hostilities, the Soviets might well
have to deploy forces to hold them in

wctr in which So.viet advisers a re · be inevitable. The Soviets would enter ween itseU and the folks in the
assass ina tion targets.
hesitatingly. But with their propensi- Kremlin.
.
The fact is that other than a few
And then there is China, already a' ty for overkill , for development of
fonnida ble ideological foe and poten- multiple and to some extent redun- isolated exceptions such Cuba, the
tia l!y a military on·e. Sino-soviet dif- dant strategic systems, the cost could world does not see the Soviet Unitlli of
the 1970s as a desirable model. It is
ferences are not likely to be reso) ved be ruinous.
wttil the dis puted border issue is. . Farther afi eld, there have been 11Bed as much as it attempts to use
Tha t will not be possi bl'e tilttil a nd some political gains, principally in other nations. Thousands of Third
unless the Soviets give some gl"\)und. Africa. But these are spotty~and very World students brought to Moscow to
And that could crea te·even more pro- likely tns itory . Egypt set a study at Lwnwnba University return
blems; inviting press ure for revision troublesome example by throwing out home not to spread the good word
of other borde rs with other neighbors. the SOviets and getting away with it. about the Soviet system, but to bad
Rela tions with the United Slates are There is a good reason to believe that mouth it.
at a delicate stage. Should the eK- other clients would do the same
As its situation is seen from the
ha us tiv e l y n eg otiated SALT should circwnstances be favorable . Kremlin these days, the Soviet .Union
agreements a bort for any reason; an Iraq is not alone, once depenble may appear less a world power on the
arms race with renewed vigor would Guinea is putting more distance bet- march than a fortress beleaguered.

See the Grate Family at

742·2211
TALK TO
wendell or Herb Grote
ar Gene Smith
Colt

.RUll.AND
FURNITURE
"742-221 t

Rutland

�.

10- The Daily Sentinel. Middiep&lt;H1 -f'omcr''l'. 0 .. Friday, June 15, 1979

r

SEORC. • •
1Continued from pa ge 1 1
increase gasoline taxl's and/or

lieense fees ,
Therefore, be it RESOLVED :
The Highway Users Comnuttec
of the Southeastern Ohio Hegional
Council endorses the need fo1· additional state revenues for Jughway
maintenance. as well as new con~truction, and urges the cooperation or the majority and minmity
leadership of the House and the
Senati! in resolving a limited tax ~
either a nat cents per gallon or a
: · sal~ tax on the wholesale price up
to a maximum fi.)(ed amount adequate to assure contimting new
'., hllJhway construction· during tlle
· '\ -~. ~ next biennium as already schedull;i . ; ~d by the sUi te administration.

·-

1
0
Two
of
marriage have been filed in Meigs ·
ED !Til F DAVIS
dleport; Clyde Haines, West ColumSheriff Proffitt issues waming to
1Continued from page 1)
Edit.h F. Davis, !J2, died this mor- · bia, W. Va., and 9inl Greer, Long
operators of so-ealled dirt bikes. fa vorable comments had been County Common Pleas Court.
F1hng . for dissolutions were _An- ning at the residence of her niece, Bottom.
"Dirt l)ikes arc not to be ridden on the received from residents on the conDl.scharged--D~bora
Butcher,
roads or highways! Motorcycles that dition of of the three cemeteries of the thony E.Cardillo, Rt. 1, Langsv1lle, Marie U,ifheit, Union Ave., Pomeroy.
and
Lor1
Ann
Cordillo,
Rodney;
Mrs.
Davis
was
the
daughter
of
the
DaVId
Wolfe,
PnCle
Tackett
and Myroperate. on roads and highways must town for Memorial Day. Tht mayor
Juanlta
Wells
,
Rt.
I,
Long
Bottom
and
late
Christian
and
Frances
Eblin
tie
Warner.
have license plates and the operators reminded councilmen that the 1980
must have the motorcycle en- budget figures are due next week and Stanley Gordon Wells,sameaddress. Sclmeider. She was also preceded in
Faye E. Reed was granted a w'vor- death by her hilsband, Jolm R.Davis.
dOl sment."
pointed out that he does not feel ofPICK UP GRADES
ce
from Theodore W. Reed . ·
She was a member of the Pomeroy
Latest complaints received by the ficials can ask employes to work for
Meigs
Junior
High School students
dep;utment comes from Tuppers the same wages in 1980 as th~y have
Church of Christ. She is survived by
who
did
not
lalce
self-addressed,
one nephew and eight ni4l(!es.
Plains and Bailey Run area . Sheriff worked for in 1979 due to the high rate
AUXU.IAR WILL MEET
stamped
envelopes
for
grade cards to
advises that operators caught by of inOation.
The ladies auxiliary of the Bashan Funeral services will be held Sun· school may pick up their grade cards
deputies will be cited!
Mayor Hoffman also pointed •out Volunteer Fire Department will meet day at I p.m. at Ewing Chapel. Burial
the principal's office at the school
that officials are to designate the Monday, June 18, at 8 p.m. All mem- will be in Beech Grove Cemetery. in
Monday
through Friday, between 8
Friend may call at the' funeral home
expenditure of federal revenue bers are urged at attend.
a
..
and
2
p.m.
at anytime.
sharing funds at the next meeting and
Sunny Friday, highs in the mid 80s asked them to have opinions ready.
to low 90s. Clear Friday night, lows in He reported also that the pool
the 60s. Sunday Saturday, highs in the operations are going well.
mid 80s to low 90s.
Council voted to make application
for a grant through the Bureau of OutI
I
door Recreation for lights at one of
I
I A11~n ol opi.UO&gt;a u~ " "lr"m•d Th.o! •h .. uhl 0.. '""
1
I 111111J00
1ur IUOjrn 1&lt;1 rl'1111r t1no bJ lhr rdi!D r • 1
the ball diamonds at the community
I lndmlulbo&lt;l-nod"ll~lh~•l''""'addr~" \M m.. ml~ 1
I !:If "'llhnrld upon ~ublk1Uun Hu• .. n . 1111 r "''IIUI. 1
park. According to estimates
I um ... •Ill bo dudu• O!d L&lt;"CIH&lt; •huulrl h. In jt&lt;.-d 111•1•. 1
provided by the Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co., lighting of
one field would eost about $21,000 and
3 MILES E.ST OF POMEROY ON SR 124
UUWl)
:
lighting the entire park would cost
I
·
I
June 11,1979 about $75,000. The grant would be a 50
IN UPPER END OF SYRACUSE
Racine , Ohio percent grant with the village to
This is an open letter to all the provide the other half of costs in in·
parents that had children in ·Mr. stalling lighting. Mayor Hoffman said
Malesiak 's seventh grade General. that he felt resources would be
Music class at Southern Jr. High available locally if the grant is apsc hool. I ask each of you to check your proved, perhaps, through donations.
Councilman Allen U,e King made
son's or daughter's report card to see
if your child was given an F as a final strong protests against the operation
:10URS: MONDAY THRU THURSDAY, 9 AM - 6 PM: FRI. &amp; SAl 9 AM - 8 PM
grade in the class. To those of you of motorcycles in lower Middleport at .,
whose children were given an F I ask early morning hours, King charged
that you please call me at the number that operators of these machines are
operating them without judgement
listed below to discuss this situation.
and
are creating disturbances. The
Please call 247-3373. - Sincerely,
police
will check the area more
Evelyn Manuel.
frequently and offenders will be ·
arrested. King also also asked that
the auxiliary police force be reac·
. tivated to provide backup for the
I
.........,.
police. A discussion was held on the
matter but no concrete action taken.
Attending the.meeting were Mayor
Hoffman, Grate, Chief of Police J. J.
Cremeans, and Councilmen William
Walters, Carl Horky, Charles Mullen
and King.

~o dirt hikt:'s on roads

Council
.

Bible School wil l be held June 18
through June 22 at the House of
·Prayer and Praise, Liberty Ave.,
Pomeroy with classes from 10 to 12
each morning. Children of the community are invited.

FIREMEN MEET JUNE 18
· The Syracuse Fire Orpartment and
Emergency Squad members will
meetMonday,June I&amp;, at i:30p.ni. at
the Syracuse Municipal Bulldll!g., All
members and persons who are interested are urged to attend.

TRY OUR
KFC

~--Are-al)eaths-1

... .

'•

A~~~~a~f ~f~.:~·.ta Mid·

'

Where It Is instue

Father's Day every

THE TACKLE BOX

&amp;··

i ~'""';;;;;:
: •,•?Jtt.

l

Classified.ads ..... .. . .... . ................ D-2-7
Farm ....... ......... , ........ . .. ·.. . ...•. C-6-7

thy at HMC _. ••

I..ocal .................................... A-2·7
State and National .. ·, , .. .. ~ ............... D-1
'1'\" log • . • . . • . . . . . . . • . • • • • • • • . • • . • . • • . • • . • D-2
Sports .•.
C-1-5

(Page B-1)

0

•••

0

•

0

•

••• ••

VOL 13 NO. 20

GALLIPOLIS-POINT PLEASANT

It's
Delicious

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT
POMEROY, 0.

• High
eff iciency
thanks to foam insula tion
e12.27
cu.
ft.
refrigerator.
4.75 cu. ft . freezer sec tion

GIBSON
19.1 cu. ft. !restless

side-by-side

~6~~·

$599

• Lots of handy top -tobottom door space
el2 . 72
cu.
ft .
refr igerator.
6.37 cu. ft . freezer sec ·
tion
•

I

GIBSON
12.3 cu . ft. frosttess

refrigerator
Reg.
54!\9

$399

e10 . 24
cu.
ref ri ger ator

f I.

! Magn e t ic
gasket
seals in cold ; tw in
crispers
;

.

Water Resources." Table tennis and
Dyer also
"Ohio
frisbee
wereshowed
enjoyedslides
by the on
members
for recreation. Refreshments were
served by the McGuires. The next
meeting will be JWle 29, 7 p.m. at the
Bill Holcomb residence.
The Better Livestock Dairy 4-H
Club met June 5 at the Dean Colwell
residence with eight members and
two advisors in attendance. Club
members discussed projects and
judged some cattle. Refreshments
were served by Mrs. Colwell. The
next meeting will be June 19 at the Ed
Holter residence. - . Kathy Parker,
Reporter.
The Five Point Bucks 4-H Club met
on June 6 at the Elmer Young residen·
ce with eight members and two advisors in attendance. The club members discussed raffle tickets and
safety in the home. Danny U,onard
gave a demonstration on safety.- Ball
Tag was enjoyed by the members .for
recreation. Refreshments were ser·
ved by Mrs. Young. The next meeting
will be June 20 at 11:3U a.m. at Royal
Oak Park. -Elmer Young, Reporter,
The Eastern Meigs 4-H Club met
June 7 at the Connolly residence with
21 members and one advisor in at·
tendance. The club members
discussed 4-H camp, raffle tickets,
and projects. Refreshments were served by Velvet Elkins and Amy Connolly. The next meeting will be June
16 at the Elberfeld Farm. - Lisa
Collins, Reporter. The Tuppers Plains 4-H Girls met
June 6 at the Alice and Amy Ritchie
residence with eight members and
one advisor in attendance. Club mem·
bers worked on macrame and candle
holders for their Creative Arts
project. The club members enjoyed
kick ball and spud for recreation.
Refreshments were served by .Delani
Baker and Lori Burke. The next
meeting will be June 13 at the Ritchie
residence. -Lisa Burke, Reporter.

Holzer Medical Center
Discharges, Jane 14
Dorothy Anders, Harold Bowman
· Marilyn Brady, Marie BrUmfield'
Mrs. George Buckley and son'
Everett Callicoat, Mabel Collins;
Tony Elldns, Patricia Fraley, Wallis
Gilkey, Allison· Hall, Carl Hall, Ryan
Harper, Meredith Holzapfel, Mrs.
Timothy Howard and son, Bruce
Jackson, Anita Jarvis, Mrs. Krislma
Kool and daughter, Vonida Landers,
Richard Maier, Mary Mantz, Blanche
Pauley, Dorothy Pierce, Christy
Rees, Jeffrey Siders, Freida Spires,
Earl Spurlock, Steven Stout, Jr., Reta
Thomas, Eddie Van Meter II, Robert
Varian, James Varner, Edna
Whaland, Beverly White, Florence
Workman, Patricia Young.
·
. Births, June 14
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Smith, son,
Beaver. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
""~omas , daughter, AddisQn.

·

.

$15.95 Basic Jeans on Sale for $12.66- All sizes. Famous Wrangler pre·washed No Fault blue denim .

SAVINGS TOO ON
Men's Dress Socks- Men 's Pajamas- Shorts- Weinbley Ties- Chairs - Summer Furniture ..

HEADQUARTERS FOR HALLMA!lK CARDS AND GIFT WR4P

Ei.BERFELDS IN POMEROY

~r.===========;;;;:====================~
Invest in a 26-Week Money Market
Certificate of Deposit for high-yield
and short-term earning potential

This week's Money Market
Certificate

rate is:

I

••

tntint
MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY

PRICE 35 CENTS
.

n

treaty, including . ways to guard
against cheating.
The principal item of agreement
was . mutual recognition that one
nuclear mishap could set off a
worldwide catastrophe. They will
translate this concept into reality
Monday when they sign SALT II, a
treaty to limit strategic nuclear
weapons through 1985.
They will hold five rounds of talks in
all over three days, and may wind up
with a commitment to hold closer
consultations In the future. These wlll
not all be at the summit level, but
could involve periodic conferences
over military and political tensions.
The United States and the Soviet
Union hsve been eyeing each other's
defense spending warily for many
years. This distrust was renected in
-the opening statement of Carter and
Brezhnev Saturday.
ln effect, each accused the other of

American relations."

Ore$$ Slacks-solid colors and neat patterns. Wasit sizes 29 to(48, all lengths

MEN'S WRANGLER JEANS

•••••••

VIENNA , Austria ( AP)
President Carter and Leonid I.
Brezhnev, the Soviet leader, opened
their summit talks Saturday in
connie! over ..regional trouble spots
and defense spending but with a
mutual commitment to world peace.
"God will not forgive us if we fail,"
Brezhnev was quoted as telling Carter
in an abbreviated first round at the
U.S. Embassy.
Despite their differences, American
officials described the session as
harmonious. Soviet officials were not
. available for corrunent, but the Soviet
news agency· Tass said the two sides
"emphasized the significance of the
positive developments of Soviet-

MEN'S DRESS SLACKS
·

I

Summit underscores
U .S.-Soviet stand

All of our men's shirts greatly reduced- Westerns - Knit Shirts . Sport Shirts - Tank Tops. A big
selection of styles and colors. All sizes.

2o% ~"Men's

•

.

MEN'S SHIRTS

Perfect.gift for your Dad this Sunday.

0

SUNDAY, JUNE 17, 1979

SALE PRICES FATHER'S DAY GIFTS
OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8 P.M.

Save

••••

tmts

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

The Hillbillies '4-H Club met June 4
at the Mark McGuire residence with
nine members and two advisors in attendance . The club members
discussed roller skating on June 26, 4·
H IrOjects, and Community Club
Awards. Demonstrations were given
by Dawn Bing on Tractor Safety and
Vine Crops; Becky Rife on Flower
Gardening and Mini Meals; Deim
Colwell on Arc Welding; Bill Dyer on
Exploring the Outdoors; Carla Rife
on Quick Meals; Mark McGuire on
Rockets; Carla Rife on Ducks and
Clothes for School; and Patty Dyer on
Water and YOJI and Stre;uns. Patty

0

(Page C-1)

•

Tackle and, Marine Supplies
Bass· Pro Shop
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Meigs 4-H news

named All-Ameri'can •.•

Lifestyle ••••••••.•.••. ••.••.•.. ·.......... B-1-8

Fi~hing

BAR-B-QUE
CHICKEN

Margie Hammond

Area deaths • ~ ................ . ........ ·••••. A-7

·OPENING SATURDAY, JUNE 16TH
..

r------------.-------------.-,

.' • .'•

~

Weather

~urdt iORJ

VBS AT HOUSE OF PRAYER

D~~~~~N~~~:on

~

WOIU( OF ART Nonnally frogs are hopping
for the people during.Regatta Week. Now people will be
hopping fir this frog cake. 'l'his sculpture of a f~.
made of cake and decorated with the appropriate color
of icing, was created and made by Mrs. Nancy Rb'ush
of Tuppers Plains, The cake contains 32 mlx~s. eight
and one-half dozen eggs, one-half gallon of oil, 38 poW!-

dB of sugar and 10 pounds of shortening. The frog cake
Is 36 inches tall and weighs 125 pounds. The .cake will
serve approximately 470 persons. The cake wiiS pur·
cl!ilsed by Crow's Family Restaurant and will be on

display in the restaurant beginning Thunday, June :M
Customers will receive a free slice of cake until ~
~upply Is exhausted. (Kate Crow picture).

Money-bill. set for .solons
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio's
lawmakers will try to put the finishing
touches this week on a major
appropriations bill designed to run the
state for two years beginning July 1.
· However, possible stumbllng blocks
. are in their path, especially a
disagreement between the Senate and
House over how to allocate a record
$3.5 billion to fund primary and
secondary education.
Last week's long-awaited Ohio
Supreme COurt decision upholding the
present equal yield distribution
formula, was well received. But
legislative leaders said it did little to
end current funding problems.
These include recurring arguments
between the Senate and House over
how to allocate about $784 million in
new state aid for the schoo.ls.The Senate Finance Commit\ee
sought to put a squeeze on the House
Friday when It put the $3.5 billion into

line item amounts in the Hous~assed
budget bill. They are pegged to a
school money allocation bill already
passed by the upper chamber, and
seek to limit changes which coUld be
made by the House.
The Senate votes on the $16.3 billion
budget biil Tuesday. If it is approved,
it will return to the House for
consideration of amendments .. The
House is certain to reject them,
clearing the way for a six-member
conference committee of the two
houses to work out a compromise.
House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe Jr.,
0-New BostOn, withheld comment on
the maneuver. He has been at odds
with Senate President Oliver Ocasek,
D-Akron, over how the new aid should
be distributed.
Under the . Senate-approved
allocation bill, now in the House
Finance Committee, it would be given
out under a modified equal yield

formula for expansions in vocational,
special, and ·other education
programs.
Riffe, at least until the court
decision, was leaning toward a
proposal by Republican Gov. James
A. Rhodes, to put most of the funds
into salary increases for teachers and
school personnel.
Before the decision, the speaker had
been leaning toward a proposal to
channel the money Into two $800-ayear raises for all teachers and $400
yearly pay boosts for each school
employee.
However •.the court, in upholding the
equal yield plan, said the Legislature
is on the proper course in trying to
assist school districts on the basis of
need. This means local control of
finances and salaries.
This doesn't mean the state could
not 'provide lwnp sums within tbe
(CooUnued onPageA-2)

The sessions were behind closed
doors, but U.S. officials briefed
reporters on what took place.
In the first round, in the morning,
Carter and Brezhnev outlined
positions of the two superpowers on
international issues. They held a
second round of talks in the afternoon ,
concentrating on details of the SALT

Work will-start
.
soon on proJect.

Proper title of
union is listed

.

.

GAWPOIJS - In Frt._day's news
story on the strite at Sclittan-DWon
Co., Galllpolia, the ~bune wu In
error on the proper tltlt of the union
local. It Is Local 3471', Bakers, Con·
fecUoners, and Tobacco Workers In·
ternational Unon . (BCI'WIU), not
local643, as previously reported.
Also Mr
Ioca I
'
s. Ali
ce dldKuhn
PJ:esident,
said
she
not' mean
"They're aU mixed up" 1n reference
toaquoteonthepicketllne.
Mrs. Kuhn meant to say the persons
chosen for picket duty is varied, with
day and night shift persons walking
together.
"The strike Is organized," she said.
'"l'hey'reallwillingtowalk."

1RUSTEES TO MEET
GALIJPOLIS- The Walnut Township Trustees will hold their annual
budget meeting and federal revenue

sliaring healing on Monday, July 2,
beginning at 7:30p.m. In the Walnut
Twp. vo~lng precinct building.

understating how much is being spent
on its military forces. BrerJmev was
understood to be especially concerned
about a NATO buildup.
Tass said the Kremlin 'Cllief told
Carter, "All sort of talk !!bout 'Soviet
military menance,' any' (lttenipts to
ascribe to Us bellicose intentlo118 'are
allegations playing into the hands of
those who would like to sow discord
and even to cause a clash between the
USSR and the USA."
The statements, called •:tours of the
horizon" in diplomatic parlance,
reOected divergent appraisals of the
Middle East and Africa, The United
States wants the Russians to back the
Egyptian-Israeli peace treaty and to
stop arming Rhodesian· guerrillas.
The Soviets view those conflicts
differently,
But as they strode toward the wood·
'paneled U.S. Embassy conference
room, the two leaders underliCOred a
need for superpower cooperation. ·

.

.

GALUPOIJS _ Wort will .....rt
·~ ori a taOO,OOO mu!U.plll'Jl08l! room
at the rear of the Gallla Coullty Senior ·
Citizens Center, according to, announcement of William A. Jenkins,
vice.presldel)t of the District 7 Area
Agency counciL
_
Jenkins, former president of the
""'"
Gallla Co~mty CouncII on the ""uog,
Inc., told the local council, 17 attending the monthly meeting, that the
county commissioners and the contractors Inspected the site last Tues·
day·
General contractors are Flck and
Karr, Middleport, $165,665. Bailey
Plwnbing and Heating of Beaver,
Ohio, bid $20,950 on combined plwnb-.
jng, heating, ventilating, and air con-

Weather

Partly cloudy today. High in the low
to mid 80s. Chance of rain is 20 percenttoday.

=nlnli..~
'II

ElleCrfc, .
City, gat lhe Clliltrlct b.._

m 111 bid of ••·•· n. 1 ,
bJoc:t buiJdlJw with

wtii be IJOxiJO, I

brtck.
Vice.prealdent Ethel Robfhlon
presided In the at.nce of Prelldent
Forrest Borden. Borden'• brother,
Nelsoo, Is here from CallfCII'llll, .00
the president Is spending hil time
with hil brother,
Mrs. Roblnaon reported on the
center's advisory council,lllllouncing

a spaghetti supper or Sloppy Joe aupper 5-7 p. m. ~une ~ to·make money
for the center's treuw'J.

•vic&amp;

Jenkins enumqted
"In
this building," the tta- CIGGI•I++Id
In the center: GI'MI Tb.niJ '-four;

Title IX two; CETA two; RSVP 30;
day care two or tbree; Tille XX two
homemakers, one driver, one
outreach, one IICI'et.cy • c:oordlnalor iTitle VII nutrition '(JIIil NIday had reported 16S? meall Mmd In
(Contimaed P..;e A.a)

on

%
Available June 14th through June 20th

minimum deposit. of
$10,000 is required to open
your 26 -Week Money
Market Certificate which ·
wi II earn the above rate
through maturity.

A

pomeroy
1upper:~~~~~ c:~~na
pomeroy

the bank of
the century
.
established 1872

FDIC

Federal . regulations prohibit the compounding of
interest during the term of
the · account, and also re·
quire . a substantial interest pen a Ity for early
withdrawal.

MEMBER FDIC·

·,

HOME f\ESTROYED - Fire gutted the borne of
Ed England, Georges Creek Rd., late Saturday mor•
nlng,. The Galllpolis City Fi~ Department was called

to the scene Ill approxlinately 11 :·30 a.m. An estim8te
rA loss )WI yet to be establlabed.

"OUKGANG"GIRLDIES
HbLLYWOOD (API -Darla Hood,
.·
1
the dark.eyed, curly-haired female
GALLIPOLIS - Free im- ·department reporis all childen up to member of the "Our Gq" ldd
munizaUona will be given by the the age of 19 must be immunized comedy troupe of the 111:108, )WI died
Gallla · County Health Department against DPT (diphtheria-whooping · at the age of 48 in a Canot!a Park
every Tuesday and Frtday from 8- · cough-tetanus), polio, rubeola hospital. The cause of Miss ·Hood's
a.m. to noon and 1 to 3:30p.m. at the (measles), and rubella (three-day death Wednesday was unlulown and
health department offices · in the measles) before entering school. an autopsy was scheduled, Peter
Typhoid, smallpox and tetanu8 shot.; Moran, a spokesman for .Pierce
basementofthecountycourthouse.
Dr. Gerald J. Vall!!!~ of the health are given by doctor's prescription.
Brothers Mortuary, said 'fhui'Sday.

Free immunizations off ered b Y county

ENJOYING THE SHADE IN CITY PARK on a hot
Saturday before Father's Day are (left to right) Henry

Bright, -Gallipolis, and hil granddauciJter, Stephlnle
Dawn Cash, Owen Walters, Liddy Hollow, and J11111111
Boster, Gallipolil.
\(

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