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                  <text>10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport,-Pomeroy, 1\J., Monday, June 2;1975

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Bacon's . inferences not correct
Dear Sir:
This is in reference to the letter appearing in the Sunday
Tlmes-8eritinel on June 1st over the name of John C. Bacon,
Pomeroy, Ohio, opposing the ·mental retardation levy.
Why.Mr. Bacon waited almost a month after endorsement of
the levy by the Rotary to write such a letter is obvious. He
apparently wanted it to be published in the paper so late that it
cou)d not be effectively answered.
First - Mr. Bacon stated that the passage of the levy would
encourage construction of a proposed $500,000 school to house
less than 30 pupils, the inference being it would cost the Meigs
County taxpayers this sum and such would be added to the tax
UNFURLS FLAG - Pictured on the left is Forest Wiblen, scoutmaster from a Cabell
duplicate. The facts are that in the November election of 1973
RIDING PEDRO - For persons familiar with Boy's Life magazine, a cartoon
County Boy Scout Troop, and BiD Harless, right, as they unfurl a Betsy Ross flag this past
there was approved by the electors of this county a hond issue
donkeyna~ned Pedro may be recaUed . A facsimile of Pedro was brought to the Camporal
weekend at the Boy Scout Camporal at Krodel Park.
'
of $250,000 for the construction of the school. This school is not
held this past weekend at Krodel Park. On top of Pedro is Darren Matthews of Point
started, no plans have been drawn, and no bids accepted for a
~-----·--Pleasant and Donald Trippl~U~.nd holding Pedro is a cub scout froni Chesapeake.
school. Such c.annot cost the taxpayers of Meigs County more
than Is.authonzed, and that is $250,000. The inference made by
~ . Bacon that it would cost Meigs County taxpayers $500,000
IS not correct.
'
SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (UPI)
Veterans Memorial Hospital Ruth
Thornton ,
second on a sacrifice bunt by move his record to 3-1.
Lela
Secondly - The mental retardation program of this county
Two
undefeated
teams,
SATURDAY
ADMISSIONS
Robinson.
·
Greg Marten, stole third and Southeastern is now 24-12,
now serves more than the "less than 30" as Mr. Bacon stated.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS - Northwest Missouri State and score4 on catcher Stu while Montclair dropped to
In independent base ball - Ronal&lt;! Butcher , Albany ;
It is anticipated that if we have sufficient space and operation
money we would have at least 50 to be served by the program. action Sunday Portland Pearl Scarberry, Mason ; Rosie Curry, Racine; Ethel Florida Southern play today Richter's wild throw on the 25-3. Losing pitcher Paul
New Shasteen, Pomeroy; Robert in the double-elimination stolen base .
Thomas,
Mirabella threw a threeThe special levy is to be voted upon on the date of the moved into first place by a Nellie
Mata~noras.
Rawlings, Middleport; Tony NCAA College Division II
Junior leflhander Greg hitter, striking out eight in
primary on June 3. There is not sufficient monies available to half game by defea ting
SATURDAY DIS- Chapelle, Clifton, W. Va.
baseball World Series after a Renton scattered four hits to the process .
operate the.mental retardation program until January 1, and if Syracuse 2-1. Portland scored
CHARGES
Debbie
SUNDAY DISCHARGES - Sunday plagued by spring
~e were gomg to operate, it was necessary to hire teachers and its two runs on seven hils and
Parso
ns
,
Don
ald
Weaver
,
Alice
Mullins, Maggie rains .
mcur expenses and this we could not do without knowing how committed only two errors.
washed out the ga~ne
Gilmore, Jessie Dodderer,
much money would be available. We could not wail until Syracuse scored its one run
scheduled
for Sunday night
Mary Gould.
November to determine this as we had to know this in· , on six hils, also with two
and shortened another on the
formation at least by the beginning of the school year, lleing mi~ues.
secom)
day of tournament
the first of September . That is why it was submitted at the
Ronnie Bachtel went the
(Calltlimed fnm Jllll I)
Missouri and
play.
Northwest
primary. -'-Manning D. Webster, Pomeroy, Ohio.
distance on the mound for affected by the walkout by
PLEASANT VALLEY
Florida Southern are botp 1-0.
Portland, getting the win anesthesiologists, who were
Discharges Robert
Southeastern Louisiana's
The annual Kyger Creek this summer. The consolation
while Pat Arnold took the later joined by doctors in Gerlach, Leon; Nancy Lee,
Andy
Davis scored the Little League Baseball game is being dropped . Only
loss . To preserve the Port- other fields.
Point Pleasant; William
land win in the seventh inning
The majority of the physi, Mallette, Point Pleasant; game's only run in the fourth Tournament 'will begin on . the first and second place
(Caatlnllld fnm .-se 1)
Randy Blake made a fine cians, who refused to. perform Mrs. Charles Decker, West inning for a 1·0 rain· Monday, July 7, a tour- \ teams will receive team and
The testimony invoived the testimony of witness running catch to stop nonemergency surgery, reshortened win over Montclair nament spokesman an- individual trophies.
Columbia; James Hammack,
Olristopher Thompson who was pummeled by defendant Syracuse from scoring.
stale of New Jersey. Rain
Bivens Services
turned to work today.
Mason ; Mrs. John Farnes, ended the .game after six and nounced today.
RusseU little in the courtroom. Little was cross-examining
being
accepted
COLUMBUS (UPI) _
.
Entries
are
Hitters for the winners
Other states also fell doctor so n, Gallipolis Ferry ;
Thompson about the sale of a possible murder weapon just were Bob Petri with a double unrest:
a half innings. ·Both teams from the Tri-County Area Everett D. Bivens, 74, retired
Torraine Fielder, Gallipolis
before the defendant leaped into the witness box and punched and two RB.Is, Bachtel a
(Meigs-Gallia-Mason) only president and director ·of
- In Doylestown , Pa., a Ferry; Betty Fewell, Win- are now 1·1.
Thompson.
Marietta
of
Ohio,
now
1-1,
again
this year·
Columbia Gas of Ohio, was to
single and a double . For substantial number of
The ju;ors also heard a .rereading of testimony given by Syracuse Jeff Hubbard and members of the Bucks field; Cecil Hall , Point scored three runs in the
Team managers should be buried here today.
Pleasant; Velma Hunter bottom of the seventh ·to
~e onl~ ~!ness to the cyanide-bullet slaying - Foster's top
have
their rosters in by June
Bivens died at University
Jim Hubbard each had two County Medical Society Bonecu tter,
Henderson· eliminate Califotnia·
a1de, Ro~ Blackburn, who survived serious wounds inflicted singles. Both teams played began a slowdown Sunday at
20.
Rosters
to
be
mailed
to:
Hospital
here
Friday
in
wne 197~ .,in~Arent, Blackburn gave a general fine defense throughout the four of six county hospitals Mrs. Eunice Hesson, Point Northridge In the day's Bill Hubbard, in care of Ohio following
Pleasant;
Alva
Reed,
8 lengthy Illness.
descr',ll!l~ of the a~ants which could have fit Little .and contest.
and vowed to continue it until Pomeroy; Eunice Wray, opener, 3-1. Davis' single in Valley Electric Corp., Box 81, He was· associated with the
codefen~t Joseph Remiro . But in cross-examination, Black·
Columbia Gas System and its
Gene Long umpired the • the legislature acts on in· Ashton; Mrs. Franklin the fourth was the only hit of Gallipolis, Ohio, 45631.
burn admitted the persons be described could be black or
the inning. He advanced to
There
will
be
one
change
affiliates
for more than 36
contest. The two teams would surance reforms.
Meadows , dau g hter,
Asian. The a!Ueged SLA members are white.
like to !bank Mr . Long for
- In New York the real lest Southside; Mrs. Dennis Long,
years.
doing a fine job umpiring and came today in a \fOrk daughter, Chester, Ohio;
the independent baseball slowdown by doctors. The Nancy Smith , Letart ;
SAUNAS, CAIJF. -IF SHARON BURGESS had to pay a
league thanks the Steamboat physicians' intention to phase
milk bank to keep her HI-month old daughter alive, it would Inn for its cooperation and out ·all nonemergency Haymond Chapman, New
Haven; Robin McClaskey,
cost $600 a month, far more than she and her husband can
use of the Inn for meetings medical services seemed to Bidwell.
afford. So 100 nursing mothers are voluntarily giving breast
held every two weeks.
have little initial impact on
New Citizens - May 31, a
milk to little Lori, one of three known babies in the United
Portland plays Letart at patient care Sunday, usually son, to Mr. and Mrs. Harold
States with a rare intestinal malfunction that keeps her from
home Sunday at 2 p.m .
a slow day.
Supper, Leon, and a son to
absorbing nutrition from food products.
- In Providence, R.I. , calls Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Hooper,
"I read the papers and listen to the news and I worry what
for a strike grew as Gov. Gallipolis Ferry; June I, a .
TAKEN TO HOLZER
the wo~lfs going to be like," said Mrs. Borges. "But when I
Philip Noel set up a blue daughter to Mr. and Mrs.
The
Pomeroy
E-R
squad
see ~~ women, I_,r e~ th~e's still a lot of good in the
ribbon commission to Johnny Stewart, Point
was
called
to
Pleasant
Ridge
world." ·JJQCt.ors wd Lon ''would have died or had brain
recommend legislative relief.
dam~Without the donated mother's milk, Mrs. Borges at 5:31 p.m. Sunday for Kim Doctors in Rhode Island, Pleasan t, and a daughter to
Follrod who suffered a
Mr. and Mrs. Ochel Rollins,
said ., . ' ~·
possible broken arm in a fall. however, were more upset by Poin t Pleasant.
plans of the stale's largest
cdLUMBUS - NEGOTIATIONS WERE scheduled to She was taken to Holzer
insurer
to switch to a dif.
begin . t~y between the Ohio Civil Service Employes Medical Center.
ferent type of. malpractice
Holzer Medical Center
Asaoctation and the state Department of Corrections on a new
coverage than increasing
(Births)
I
contract covering guards and other employes represented by
DIVORCE GRANTED
rates.
May
30
Mr.
and
Mrs.
OCSEA. ·
In Meigs County Common
· St. Paul Fire and Marine R!chard L. Caldwell, a son,
The Department last ,l,ll.~th announced it had recognized Pleas Court Mary Elizabeth
Insurance Co., representing Bidwell. Mr. and Mrs. Gary
the OCSEA as the only union which was qualified under a new Searles was. granted a
600 Rhode Island physicians, Dillon, daughter, Sandyville ,
state regulation to enter into bargaining negotiations with the divorce irom Charles W.
is switching from an "oc- W. Va. Mr. and Mrs. James
state. The state said in May that departments would negotiate Searles on charges of gross
. currence" form of coverage F. Gilmore, daughter ,
only with IDlions representing at least 30 per cent of the neglect or-duty and extreme
to "claims;nade" policies. Gallipolis. Mr. and Mrs.
department's employes.
· cruelty.
Under the claims-made Larry North, son, Gallipolis.
- -·- -----·~--- . -·
SCHOOL TONIGHT
cards toenaiile themto·work.
policy, doctors are protected Mr. and Mrs . -Herbert
FREE TOP SHAPE TENNIS·T
MASON -A health school at fair booths. Anyone in ,t)le
against malpractice suits Peoples, Jr., son, Wellston.
.tin 1862, Gen. Robert E. Lee
A new classic for the courts or anywhere .
for food handlers wiD be held Mason area wishing !9 OR!ail).
o!!ly . aJllong as they continue Mr . and · Mrs . Bernard
took
command
of
the
ConCut for comfort and freedom of moveat 7:30tonightin the Wahama a health card is welcome. The
to pay premiums. Under the Turley, daughter , Crown
federate
armies
of
eastern
ment, with contrasting trim on the
Band Room. Parents and school will be followed by the I
occurrence plan they a,re City.
North
Carolina
Virginia
and
students should attend in June meeting of the Wahama
protected against suits
V-neck A shrink res istant blend of
May 31 - None.
i1J the American Civil War. dealing with actions taken
order to obtain their health Band Boosters.
June I - Mr. and Mrs.
50% cotton I 50% polyester.
while the policy was in effect. George
Murray,
son,
OR FREE POCKET·T A great shirt for
Pomeroy.
action or Lust relaxing , with a convenient
pocket The Pocket·T is soft. absorbent
INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE
100% cotton, machine washable. in hot
Uni1ed Press International
~:;
or cold water.
w. 1. pet . g . b.

Portland
wins 2-1

Kyger C~eek tourney

Doctors

to begin on July 7th

News •• in Briefs

tl)r

ELBERFELDS IN p·oM EROY

Get Dad into
Top
TENNIS-Tor POCKET-T

FREE!

when you buy atty six ____. . . ./"
· · underwear items!

.

I

THE

$ ""---oo;;;;~

~==
Charles ton
::~

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,...•

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.y

SEE IT NOW!

·;:;

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I

.....:......AJJ. NEW-

Tidewater
Syracuse
Pawtucket
Richmon d
Toled o
Memph is _

27 19 .587

27 21 .563
27 21 .563

1
1

27 23 .540

2

23 24 .489
22 26 .458

4lh
6

20 27 .426

J11z

16 30 .375 10

M~mp h is

ra1n

PLUS. •• AOOMPLETE BEDROOM SUITE
FOR ONLY

Hanes

TONIT·E THRU THURS.
NOT .O PEN

STOP IN TODAY AT

BAKER FURNITURE

THUNDERBOLT AND
LIGHTFOOT

able to get the bugs out of

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

I

- -- ..

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MAll TO: HANES TOP SHAPE OFFER

Enclosed are my store receipts and wrappers fr om six Hanes Underwear Items and 35¢ for

postage and handling. Please send me my choice of either TOP SHAPE Shirt from Hanes:

We can 't stop bugs from
getting into your · fresh

CHECK ONE ONLY;
0 WHITE TENNIS·T with Red . White and Blue Trim

paint,

0 POCKET·T

but

with

our

we can make sure you

neve r get " bugged" by
. getting a different color if
you don't have enough. We
color code every m fxture
on, yo_u r can for exactness.
another

reason

shopping
with
"F RIENDLY ON

for

the

Check Your Choice of Color: 0 Lt. Blue D Dk. Blue 0 Gold 0 White
Size: 0 Small 0 Medium 0 Large 0 X·Large

NAM E ~--~~~-~~~~~~~-~'~~~--~------------~----1\DORE SS

CITY

..:.....~,...:...~·~~~~STATE----------~~--Z IP _ _ _ _ __
LOCATION ~--~~....;.,-~~------­

STORE

l imit 2 per family. O ffer void wher., prohibited .
Please allow up to 4 weeks for delive r y. Offer e,.;plres July 3._ 1S75

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Starring Clint Eastwood
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Show starls at 7:00 p.~ .

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MEIGS THEATRE

*

(COUPON)

---- ~r ------------- - ------------------- ---- ----------------------,

at Charleston , ppd ..

Sunday ! s Games
Syracuse 11 Ri c hmond a
Tidewater 7 Rochester 3
Pawtucke t 7 To l edo 2, 1st , 7
inn .
Pawtucket 2 Toledo 1, 1s t, 7
inn
Char l es ton 4 Memphi s O, 1st
7 inn .
'
C~arleston 3 Memphi-s 2, 2nd,
8 •n n .

,

'

By Katie Crow
The Street Dept. will not
do the work of cemetery
employes and of. the board of
public affairs, Pomeroy
council decided in a long
session Monday nigllt.
The street department for
some linre-ras been doing
work that the board of public
affairs is responsible for
work at the cemetery for
which ce metery employes
are responsible. Council
took a. stand Monday night,
agreeing that each department will be responsible for
its own duties.
Don McKenzie , Street
Supt., said he has only

· -'
,l

.

.

one person working in his
street department from the
communi ty action program,
other than regular employes,
and noted that possibly there
will be no other employes
available.
-The stree t dept. has had to
do so much work other than
on tbe streets it is difficult for ·
them to maintain the streets,
he said.
It was pointed out that
there are 39 miles of streets in
Pomeroy, not including Main
St.
Council discussed at length
street repair being done by
Boone Coleman, contractor;·
abo. work that should be

done lJy the board of public
affairs which the stree t
departmen t empl oyes have
·bee n doing.
The resignation of Jed Will,
employe of the cemetery, was
accepted by council effective
June 15 . Will has been
employed at the cemetery
almost 15 years.
Council discussed at length
an open sewer behind Larry's
Mobile Home Sales- on
Pomeroy's West Main St.
Co.uncil authorized McKenzie
to repair the sewer with the
board of public affairs to bear
the expense.
Council also agreed that a
slip on Hill St. needs piling

but it cannot be done until the
sewer work is completed
behind the trailer sales.
Council in other action
ag reed to advertise for bids
for s tr eeL~avi n g, to be
ope ned on June 16. Council ·
also agreed to advertise for
applications for a meter
person with applications to be
maile_d to village hall. Council
disc ussed the possibility of
obtaining a service contract
for repair of meters.
Councilman Lou Osborne
suggested notifying
representatives of two meter
companies and ask if they
would offer a service contract
(Calltlnued on Jllle I)

•

e

•

ARTICLES TO BE DISPLAYED ON HERITAGE
SUNDAY - Bedford Township folks have submitted
numerous items to be displayed on Heritage Sunday
during the Big Bend Regatta ·June 20, 21 and 22. Shown
with the articles is Leo Story. On the large wooden carpenter's work bench are such items as a water powered
saw miD saw, water powered grist mill burrs, ox cart
wheel, salt barrel, ox yoke, boring tools, planes and
gauges, to name a few.

enttne

at y

Devoted 1'o 1'he Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area
VOL. XXVII NO. 35

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
'

TUESDAY,

3 1975
'

22 girls hoping to be Regatta Queen

PRICE 15'
·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::::::::::::::::::::::·:::::::::::·::::;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:

EXTENDED OUTWOK
Thursday through
Saturday, chance of
showers Thursday and
Friday, clearing Saturday.
Highs will he in the upper
70s and 80s and lows will be
in the 60s.

;Bedford display
a highlight of
Heritage Sunday

help possible in making ·the
project a success.
Fred Morrow, C of C vice
president, presided in the
absence of Ted Reed. Morrow
:::::·:·:·:::.::;.:::::.:::::.::;.;::::.:::.:-:::::::::::.::::;.:::::::.:-:::
commended
the folks
Bedford Township in Meigs arrangements shoul d be
l!J75 BIG BEND REGATTA PROGRAM
engaged in deve loping the
County will be one of several made with Story to saf.!!guard
Friday, June 20
museum , verifying that it has
Meigs townships havin g it.
had an important role in
Noon til 6 p.m., FLEA MARKET.
historical articles on display
Both Mr. and Mrs. Story
making the Regatta a suc·
Noon til II P.M., CARNIVAL RIDES.
at Heritage Sunday ' during are of pioneer Meigs County
cess.
4 P.M., QUEEN'S LUNCHEON.
the Big Bend Regatta.
families .
Mrs. Thomas reported tbal
.
.
Leo Story, a descendant of
fi P.M ., REGATTA PARADE.
Mrs. Story was the
the chamber lost $360 on the
Meigs
County
pioneers
is
daughter of Mr . and Mrs. W.
!l P .M., STAGE ENTERTAINMENT, (Se nior recent excursion, Chaperone,
at
work
already
hard
J. B. Carlton who lived on
Citizens).
but was money ahead due to
the
display.
preparing
Kingsbury Road all their
10 P.M. , FIREWORKS DISPLAY.
the amount made last year.
Operation of the Meigs
Story
invites
all
people
of
lives . Mrs. Story's mother
Mrs. Thomas also reported Community School in the
Saturday, June 21
that ,the chamber office will Rutland Gymnasium this and Bedford Township who wish was Sadie Saunders. Carlton
!l A.M. to 6 P.M., FLEA MARKET.
to display artides to call him whose girlhood home was
be open in the mornings in- next year was reviewed by
10 A.M. to II P.M., CARNIVAL RIDES.
or his wife at 992-2488 or stop farther up Kingsbury Creek.
stead of the afternoon.
the Meigs County Board on
Attending were Mrs. Mental Retardation Monday at their home on Kingsbury The Saunders trace their
Road.
ancestry to the Van Gilders,
Millard VanMeter, Melvin night at the courthouse.
Those offering material who carne from Ireland.
VanMeter, Morrow, Mrs .
The board planned to paint
The Story family traces
I ::10 P.M. to 3 P.M .. WATER SKI SHOW, Thomas, Story, Blakeslee, rooms and to have new locks should arrange for its transportation
to
the
Museum
on
back
through at least three
Wendall Hoover, Ja ck installed at the gymnasium
By United Press International
&lt;Gallipolis Ski Club).
Carsey, John Koebel, Don which will be used on a rental Saturday, June 21 and return generations of Storys in
CHARLESTON, W. VA . - THE APPEAL OF a
. :1::10 P.M., FROG JUMP AT ST{\DIUM.
after 5 p.m. on Sunday, or Bedford Township. A grandMorgantown, W. Va., man, fired from his job as a retail store
!J::!O P.M., FROG BALL (Pomeroy Jr. High Thomas, Bob Jacobs, Beulah basis. The building is owned Monday, June 23 between 10 daughter of the Storys,
Jones, Melissia Kerr, and by the Meigs Local School
clerk for the Kroger Co. because his hair was too long·, was Auditorium).
·
and II :59 a.m. or between 2 Margaret Jean McDonald
Katie Crow. The Regatta District.
turned down Monday by the West Virginia Supreme Court. On
and
4 p.m.
Lash, resides in the old
Sunday,
June
22
program :
a 2-1 decision, with Chief Justice Charles Haden dissenting, the
Plans were made to have
If
the
material
is
valuable,
Saunders homestead on
K::IO A.M. • 11:30 A.M., CHURCH OF YOUR
court rejected the petition filed on behalf of Paul S. Perfater
the buses cleaned up and
Kingsbury .
CHOICE.
and the West Virginia Human Rights Commission.
stored for the summer. Eric
Perfater sought to overturn the July 2, 1974, ruling of the
II ;30 A.M. • 5:30. P.M .. CARNIVAL RIDES,
Chambers, supervisor of the
THE 4TH ANNUAL HERITAGE SUNDAY
BLOOD NEEDED
Kanawha County, W. Va., Circuit Court that held the com- FLOWER SHOW.
Vernon Nease, blood sc hool's workshop program,
Sunday, June 22, 1975, The Meigs County
mission had no authority to act in the case. After working at
II A.M. to 6 P.M., HERITAGE SUNDAY AT program chairman for the volunteered for that project. Museum, Butternut Ave. , Pomeroy, 12 noon to 5
Kroger's store in Morgantown for four and one-half years
Meigs Chapter of the Hopefully, storage for the
THE MEIGS MUSEUM.
p:m.
Perfater was fired Sept. 23, 1971, for failure to follow th~
American Red Cross an- school's buses will be
I
P.M.,
NATIONAL
BATON
TWIRLING
company's male hair grooming policy. It specified that men's
nounced today that the provided at. the county
hair must be neatly trimmed on the sides and back and cannot CONTEST.
EXHIBITS
bloodmobile will be at garage.
cover the shirt collar.
i2:30 P .M. · 6 P.M., POWER BOAT RACES,
The
board
discussed
the
"Weddings
through
the ages," display of
Pomeroy Elementary School
proposed
budget
for
1976
~'LEA MARKET.
Monday, June 16. Residents
wedding clothes, photos, invitations, etc.
ROME - PRESIDENT FORD STOPPED off for talks
I P.M., SKY DIVING .. EXHIBITION .
are urged to support the which will be submitted to the
"Quilt show and quilting demonstration,"
with Italian government leaders and Pope Paul VI today
Meigs
County
ComHelicopter Rides All Three Days, Shelby N.C. program .
enroute home from a week-long European tour. The President
missioners. A 1.6 mill tax display of heritage and new quilts with an actual
and Mrs. Ford flew to Rome from Salzburg, Austria, where
levy to be voted upon today quilting demonstration by the Loyal Women's
Ford met for two days with ·Egypt's President Anwar Sadat
throughout the county would Class of the Church of Christ, Middleport.
. in an effort to develop a new American plan for Middle East
provide funds for the school's
"Gun display," Meigs Muzzle-Loading Club.
peace.
..
.
operation, if it passes. The
"Bedford Township display ," old tools and
Ford had 10 hours of talks and ceremonial affairs
board also discussed the implements, Leo Story model of the Old Bunker
scheduled in Rome before flying on to Washington in the
financial needs for school
Hill Church, Victor Genheimer.
evening. The stopover included meetings with President
operations for the several
Old Meigs County Photos display, folks are
Giovanni Leone and Prime Minister Aldo Moro, leader of the
months of 1975 which will
0
to bring family scrapbooks t'o share.
urged
center.Jeft Italian govermnent, and a one-hour private talk
remain before the tax levy
Hand-hewing demonstration , Fred Tucker·
with the Pope in the Pontiff's Vatican City chambers.
would go into effect, even if it
· is passed.
· man.
THE DOCTORS STRIKE, HALTED BY A TRUCE In
Bills were paid and the
The Pomeroy Library will have a special
California; may shut 25 New York state private hospitals
report due to the state on the display of history and craft books."
within two weeks if the malpractice controversy continues.
local operation will be
MUSIC
California doctors, who had refused to handle any but life.
completed by the .end of the
"Appalachian Heritage Music," Jennifer
or-death surgery cases for a month, returned to work Monday
month, Mrs. Margaret Ella
Sheets,
singing, dulcimer playing, discussion of
on the assmnption the legislature would work out a long-term
Lewis, director of the school
solution to the malpractice problem within the next few
and also a teacher, reported. the heritage of Appalachian songs.
months.
Display of hand-crafted dulcimers, Bill Grues
The next meeting was set for
June 9 at which Ume the
• · MINI-THEATRE
board will discuss the outSlide show presentation continuous all af·
come of today's election and
ternoon.
what plans can 'be made in
Home-made food and beverage for sale.
accordance with that outA car owned by Linda In Meigs County three and
Free admission, but 25 cents donation . apcome.
.,
Wallace, 27, Crown City, was seven tenths miles north of
Attending were Eric preciated.
demolished by fire Monday, Pomeroy . The cyclist
Chambers,
Mrs; Lewis, and
the GalUa-Meigs Post of the tra.velling north, pulled out to
· board members Mrs. Wilma
Stale }Jighway Patrol pass a car driven by Lela
Parker, Mrs. Grace Weber,
Lee, 41 , Pomeroy, · heading
reported today. ·
$72,000
HAPPIE;R
-Village
Officials
are
pleased
with
the
receipt
of
$72,000
in
refund
,
.
Rev. W. H. Perrin, Rick
She was traveling soutb on into oncoming southbound
money
from
the
Environmental
Protection
Agency
on
the
sewage
disposal
system.
From
Crow,
Judge
Manning
SR 218 one mile south of the traffic. The Lee car swerved
the left are Charles'Legar, chairman ·of Pomeroy's board of public affairs; Mrs. Jane We)&gt;ster
and Richard
Hannan·Trace Road at 3:10 to the right and the back
Property damage was Ramsey told officers he was
Chambers.
,
Walton,
clerk,
and
Mayor
Dale
E.
Smith.
'
p.m. when the vehicle back· across the road where it hit a
heavy and two drivers have coming around the curve
fired ·and flame came from car driven by James R. Hill,
been cited to mayor's court near the While. House Cafe
IDlder the right front fender. 19, Albany. The motorcycle
the result of two accidents and swerved his car to avoid
as
Noone was injured. Therown did not stop. There was ·
in Pomeroy, one Monday a collision with an oncoming
City Fire Department, severe damage to the Lee
,night and the _ other this car. There was heavy
responsed.
·vehicle and . moderate
1
~
damage. Ramsey was not
At 10:45 a.m., Martha B. damage to the Hill vehicle.
Pomeroy Village is $72,000 Protection Agency in Chicago sewage disposal plant to prevails in the agency, and morning.
Pomeroy.will r~ive Instead
Aty 12:45 a.m. today on injured. He was charged with
Baird, 28, Gallipolis, mel No citations were issued.
richer, and' an Immediate for a refund on money spent Butternut AVe.
of
the
$144,083,
the
$72,000
and
West
Main St., a car driven driving while intoxicated.
When Pomero~ put In the
another driver at the junction
At4:40 p.m. a car driven by Increase in monthly home by. the town on its sewage
an
addiiional
$26,900,
a
by
Paul
Dill, Pomeroy,
later
sewage system in &lt; 1969,
·
of CRs 4 and 5 as they both Karen Howard, 35, Galllpolls, sewage charges has been disposal system,
total
of
$98,900..
struck
a
parked vehicle
The original cost of the federal funds in the amount Or
tried to go onto a narrow drifted forward striking a car avoided.
LOCAL TEMPS
Applications along with owned by the Weaver
Charles Legar, former project was over one milJ(on 49 pet. were all that could be
bridge at the same Ume. She driven by Edith Martin, 39,
The
temperature In
pulled to the right to avoid a Pt. Pleasant, in the rear ·' Pomeroy mayor now serving dollars·and the town received provided, under regulations. that of Pomeroy were pro- Equipment Co., New HoUand, downtown Pomeroy at 11
colllslon and struck the while they were stopped at as chairman of the town's approximately $500,000 in However, a later law rated because of the fund Pa. Damage was heavy, but a.m. today was 66 degrees
bridge. There were no in· the red light at the junction of hoard of public affairs, an- fed'eral funds at that time. provided that 80 percent shortage. It could develop Dill was uninjured. ' He was IDlder cloudy skies.
· j..-les, no citations, and only U.s. 35 and Route 160.. Mrs.
nounced receipt of the The application to the agency could be provided and hence, later that Pomeroy will cited to court for reckless
sllght da'mage to the Baird Howard was cited for
$72,000. The money is the was for a total of $291,000, but the village could apply for the receive the other ap· operation.
WOMEN MEET
proximate seven percent but
Al9:50 p.m. Monday; 1 car
vehicle.
following too closely. There result of an application filed that amount'- was not ap- additional 39 percent.
The
Catholic
Women's Club
Approved by the agency . officials··cannot assume thai driven by Ernest Ramsey,
An wlldenlilied molorcylisl was light damage to both
ahout lfl'k months ago _ on proved because the agency
the balance will ever · · Columb~cs, · struck a utility wiD meet Thursday at 8 p!m.
was the ca\ISf of a two-car vehicles..
Jan. 24; 1974 - with the considered only the area was $144,083 - or 32.9 pel.
((lll.. 1J!IIII pip I)
pole on East ~aln St. at .the Sacreq Heart ParJeb.
accidttnl at 11:25 a.m. on SR 7
;,4
United states Environmental from Spring Ave. VJd the However, a shortage of funds
The program for the Big
Bend Regatta , June 20, 21 and
22 is firmed up according to
the Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce, the sponsoring
group.
Meeting at the Meigs jnn
for a noon-luncheon meeting
Monday it was reported tbat
programs of the even Is over
the three-day event have
been distributed .
II was .announced there will
be five visiting " queens" in
the parade Friday evening.
Another convertible to transport the queens ln the parade
is needed, said Carolyn

Thomas, secretary.
Mrs. Thomas also reported
that there are 22 contestants
already for Regatta Queen,
four from Meigs High , eight
from Southern and 10 from
Eastern.
Leo Story, Kingsbury,
introduced by C. E. Blakeslee, said residents of Bedford
Township are rounding up
' items for display on Heritage
Sunday during the Regatta.
He displayed several old
pieces from a salt barrel.
Story also displayed a scrap·
book dated 1852. One item
was a tax receipt dated 1838

for $3 .29 paid in taxes on 229
acres of land.
Story said each township is

to have a display at the
Museum during Heritag e
.Sunday and asked for all the

School's
needs
reviewed

~Ne=~,~~M Ju~-:-?:i~ c~:~,"·:.~~ c;~~;~."";~~~

Auto demolished

'

Saturday 's Results

ram

SUirE, 3 TABLES
AND 2 LAMPS

.

: Buy Dad ~ny six Hanes Underwear
Ite ms - T·Shirts, A-S hirts, Briefs or
Boxers - and choose a TOP SHAPE
.~ action shirt for him FREE!

Richmond 8 ·syra cuse 6
~ Rochester 2 Tidewater 0. 1s t ,
7 inn .
· R&lt;?c heste r -t"-Tidewater O, 2nd,
7 IMM .
Pa_wtuck et at Toledo, ppd .,

2 PIECE LIVING ROOM

..,

Rochester

Street, cemetery crews
to perform oWn duties

Winners play iri series at Springfield

HOSPITAL NEWS

Rain

*

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J)amage heavy in two traffic
accidents last night, today

$72,000.sewerage funding received

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2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, June 3,1975

More ethnic ·courses
required. in neW bill

.
By LEE LEONARD
portive institutions as well asUPI Statehouse Reporter
from their families, " Jackson
COLUMBUS (UPI)
said .
Contributions of ethnic and
JackSon mairitBined that
racial minorities will be a children of majority groups
required part of courses in would benefit as touch as
history, geography and those of miriority groups,
goverrunent at Ohio public perhaps more.
schools if legislation ap"The children of a-majority
proved by the Ohio Senate of the population have been
Monday is signed into law by deprived of the knowledge of
Gov. James A. Rhodes.
what has made this country
The bill, approved 19-7, great," he said. "II has been
received only two votes more said that history is written by
than the 17 needed for a the victors or the very r.ich."
majority in the Senate ,
Jackson said the legislation
marked by spotty attendance would allow the state Board
in the week's opening session. of Education, local boards
The measure 'survived and the teachers themselves
more than an hour's worth of to develop flexible programs
attempts to change the House (or incorporating minority
version, which cleared that contributions.
chamber handily last March
He said the purchase of new
11.
textbooks would not he requiAs written, the bill requires red; that the state Board of
schools to make a "balanced Education already has
presentation" of con- materials for use.
tributions of ethnic and racial
Calabrese received support
groupings. It singfes out the from both Republicans and
contributions of "men and Democrats to · insert a
women of African, Mexi?'n, specific reference to Italians,
Sen.
Marigene
Puerto Rican and Amencan but
Valiquette, D-Toledo, said "it
Indian descent."
Sen. Anthony 0 . Calabrese, -'Is not fittiJJg to put our own in
D-Cieveland, failed on an a biU like this."
attempt to specifically inThe chamber also voted 11clude Italians in the bill when 15 against a propoSal by Sen.
Lt.. Gov. Richard F: Celes~ Douglas Applegate, Ddeclined tq break a tie vote m Steubenville, to eliminate all
favor of the proposed amend- specific references to
ment.
minority groups. •
Asaistan~ Majority Leader
Sen. Harry Meshel, OM. Morris Jackson, D- Youngstown said the referCleveland, the legislature's ences were ~de to "specify
top-rankmg black and the those groups which have been
Senate noor .manager of the left out over the years. If you,
bill, sa1d Ohio pupils should generalize too much It
learn of minority con- doesn't mean a thing ,; he
tributions in the context of . said.
'
The ' Senate
also
school lessons · without
depending upon separatist unanimously passed and
teachings.
. returned to the House for
"The childen of minority concurrence in amendments
groups n~d to learn of iheir a bill requiring consent of the
contnbutJons from sup- father before his name can be

Actor O~zie Nelson,
·68, is can~cer victim
HOLLYWOOD (UPI ) Ozzie Nelson, who starred
with his wile· Harriet for 22
years on radio and television
after he gained fame as an
orchestra leader in the big
band era, died at his home
today of cancer.
Nelson, 68, had undergone a
series of tests more than a
year ago, then underwent
surgery eight months ago
when the malignancy was
. discovered. He took a turn for
the worse a month ago and
had been confined to his home
since that time.
His wife, whom he married
while she was a sin"ger in his
band 40 years ago, was with
him when he died. Their two
sons, David and Rick, had
visited him Willy.
Nelson was born March 20,
1907, in Jersey Cjty. By age 13
he. was the nation's youngest
Eagle Scout. He was an ailaround athlete at Rutgers
University, . starring in
footbaU and boxing and was
an honor student.
While in school he
organized a band to play for
local dances. He maintained
his · interest in music while

attending New Jersey Law
School and a few months
after graduation organized
an orchestra. He soon
became a name band and
played most of the important
hotels and ballrooms across
the country.
Nelson was looking for the
right girl to sing with his band
when he met Harriet Hilliard.
They soon branched out from
a toiD"ing band to making
motion pictures. They also
acquired a commercial radio
program in which they
costarred with the late Joe
Penner.
By 1941 they had
established themselves as
radio, movie and orchestra
stars and joined Red
Skelton's coast-t&lt;M:OaSt radio
show. They not only furnished
the music for the show but
became even more popular
personalities in Skelton's
comedy skits.
They branched out with
their own program "The
Adventures of Ozzie and
Harriet" on radio that later
became
a
successful
television program which
also featured their sons.

CO-VALEDICTORIANS - Ron Siders, at right facing
right, and Regina Tolbert, shared valedictorian honors at
the 1975 Wahama High School commencement exercises
Sunday night when County School Supt. Charles Withers
handed diplomas lp 125 graduates. Siders stressed that
success "success" in obtaining material t!Jings results
from long, hard work. Miss Tolbert used a'Ralph Waldo
Emerson theme, "Being True to Yourself." A left,
Salutatorian Cindy Workman was the first s~ker on the
theme, how she and other graduating seniors will be
entering a new life and what they may expect to encounter.

placed on the birth certificate
of an out.ofwedloek child.
Meanwhile, the Senate FInance Committee Monday
night heard testimony from
opponents of House-passed
legislation appropriating
$670,000 for a coUege of
osteopathic medicine at Ohio
University in Athens.
L.
Warner,
Marvin
chainnan of the Ohio Board
of Regents, said the shortage
of qualified doctors in Ohio
was created more by an
inability to retain physicians
trained in the state's six
medical schools rather than a
shortage of training facilities.
. CINDY WORKMAN

Major Lea gue Standings '
By United Press Intern ational
National League

Gym classes will be sexually joined now
By CRAIG A. PALMER
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Gym classes in most schools
and colleges in the United
States will have to be
sexually integrated, except
for bodily contact sports, the
administration announced
today.
BEING THEA TED
Mrs . Harry (Veda) Davis,
Spring Ave., Pomeroy, is an
out-patient at University
Hospital in Columbus. During
her treatment which will be
over the next four weeks,
Mrs . Davis will be residing
with her son, Robert Lehew,·
4276 Doney St., WhitehaU,
43213 . .

Under new rules announced "must insure that physical
hy the Department of Health, education classes and acEducation and Welfare, girls tivities which are separate
and boys may be kept in are comparable for members
separate teams for boxing, · of each sex."
wrestling, basketball, footTherules do not, however,
ball, ice hockey and other require that equal amounts of
contact sports.
money be spent on :girls' and
But ihe rules say schools boys' athletic programs,
The new regulations,
released under the signatures
of President Ford and HEW
BELLING SET
An old-fashioned belling secretary Caspar W. Weinand shower will be held berger, also cover sex
school
Sqturday at 7 p.m. at the · education and
Hemlock Grove Grange Hall 1 organizationa. They apply to
honoring Mr. and Mrs. most schools, from kinRonnie Eastman. The public dergarten to graduate level,
which receive federal aid.
is invited.
That includes most schools in
the country.
Major League Results

. Unless Congress rejects the
regulations, schools must
begin July 21 making
preparations to comply w}th
them. But elementary
schools will have a grace
period of one year from July
21 !o adjust schedules and
prepare staffs for the
changes. High schools and
colleges wiD have three years
to comply.
The longer adjustment in
the higher grades is
necessary, HEW said,
"because of the existence of
wide skill differentials attributable .to the traditionaUy
lower levels of training
avaUable to girls in many
schools."

000 000 lOQ- 1 s 1
102 ooo llx- s 10 o

26 20 565
24 19 .SSB

22
24
20
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West

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Los Ange les
San Fr ancisco
San Diego

Atl a n ta

1 ~
2
21 ~·
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29 21 .580
JO 22 .577

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2d 22

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20 33 .377 1011

p .m .

Cinc1nnati (Nor man 2 1) at
Pittsburgh ( Br ett 4-2l. 7:35

II 'sa helluva of a system."

chases, such as deodorant
and mouthwash, but cannot
be given lnlormatlon lbat wiD
help blm save money non
non-discretionary purchases,
such as ~eodorant and "
mouthwash, but cannot be
given lnlormatlon that will
help him save money on non-.
disCretionary purchases such
as drugs which a doctor has
prescribed as essential to his
good health," Engman said.
"You go to the doctor
because you are sick, you
stagger out of the office with
a little slip -of paper covered
with medical hieroglyphics.
You don't feel much like
walking aU over to compare
prices, so you go downstairs
to the pharmacy in the
basement and you buy the
stuff and ask for a glass of
water.
" lben you pay for It, and
you feel sick all over agaill.

0 .,

The proposed rules, which
would not go into effect for
-perhaps another year after
public
comment
and
bearings, would not require
drug stores to advertise their
prices. But they would
abolish laws or regulations
currently in effect in 33 states
which forbid prescription
advertising to one· degree or
another.
Professional pharmaceutical organizations
frequently enforce such
regulations, contending it is
unethical for druggists to post
prices, give them out over the
telephone or run ads in the
media listing what they
charge.
Recent court rulings have
overturned such laws or
regulations in five states.
Engman said the FTC's
investigation found in the Ssn
Francisco area, for example,
a high blood preSsure remedy
available on prescription was
being sold at 28 different
prices ranging from $2.50 to
$11.75.
'

Atlanta (Sadecki 1-0) at St.
Loui s (Reed 4 51, 8:30p .m .
Wednesday's Games
Sa n Francisco at Chicago
Los Ang at Montrea l. nigh t
Houston at New York , night
San Diego al Ph il a, night
Cinci at Pittsburgh, nigh t
A tlanta at St . louis , nigh t

'"

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7207.t ~ -

PASSENGER RETREADS
2
•

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•

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Plus Recapable Casings.
All SiZes Available

~~~

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FOR

~~

l:ii:NI:KAL IIKI:

••
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SALES

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992-7161

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Middleport, 0.

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COLUMBUS '( UP!)
Wayne Street scored on
Lucasville Valley, 20-7, met Evans' two hits. Street al•o
Russia , 17-4, in finals of the collected a pair of safeties.
Class A Ohio High School
Dave Huesman scattered
Baseball Tournament here seven hits in picking up his
today. Class AAA and AA ninth win without a loss for
semifinals games . Monday Lucasville, which went ahead
were rained out and · 2-0 on single runs In the first
resched ul ed for this al- and second innings.
ternoon.
A third-inning West Salem
In A semis Monday, Lucas- run offset by two more
ville Valley beat West Salem Lucasville tallies in the
Northwestern 4-2 behind seventh frame.
Randy Evans' two runs
In the second game Moobatted in and Russia Wiy, Old Fort took a 5-2 lead
capitalized on seven errors to with five runs in the fourth
defeat Old Fort 7-&lt;l.
inning after Russia scored

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A's' Vida Blue, whoae record
dropped to 9-3. Williams
Castro picked up his first
major league victory with 6 2..
3 innings of relief.

Florida Southern
•
IS 'u pset, 5-0

SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (UPI) .Northwest Missouri 2-1 and
- Unranked Southeastern Ma rietta (Ohio) defeated
Louisiana defeated top- Northwest MissoiD"i &amp;-1.
ranked Florida Southern 5-0
Only four teams remained
Monday night in the third in competition today. In
round of the National tonight 's games, Montclair ·
Collgiate Athletic Association (N.J.) State takes on Florida
Division U World Series.
Southern and Marietta meets
It was the first shutout of Southeastern Louisiana. AU
the 44-game season lor remaining teams have one
Florida Southern.
loss in the double
Southeastern Louisiana's elimination tourney.
Mike Maronge pitched a
The title game will he
two-hitter, striking out six Wednesday night.
and walking two en route to
'
his sixth win against two
losses this season. It was the
first loss of the series for
Florida Southern.
Southea stern Louisiana
single runs in the second and Old Fort
collected 10 hits, including
000 510 0--6 6 7 two each by Andy Davis and
third stanzas.
011 230 X- 7 6 2 Greg Marten.
The winners capitalized on Russia
Sleel.and Plain Toes
a series of Old Fort errors to
Souh teas tern got three
score twice in the bottom of
unearned runs in the third
the fourth inning and three
inning and, with Maronge's
~•It .
times in the fifth. Bob Schultz
pitching, it proved more than
J ~ .' ~
singled in two of the runs in
enough for the victory.
'
'.
the bottom of the fifth.
In Pomeroy Uttle League
In other action Monday,
Mike Schieltz, 10-3, was the action Monday the Yankees Florida Southern defeated
MIDDLEPORT
winning pitcher.
defeated the Pirates in 7
innings hy the score of ll.j).
Lucasville Vlly
The Yanks scored 2 runs in
110 000 2-4 6 4 the first, fourth, fifth, and
seventh. The winners used
West Salem
WHEN YOU SEE ME,
001 000 1- 2 7 I four pitchers, Mike Whitlatch
DON'T THINK OF
starting, followed by Todd
INSURANCE ... BUT
Fife, J. R. Wamsley, and
finally , Harvey Whitlatch
WHEN YOU THINK OF
who picked up the victory.
INSURANCE, SEE MEl
Yankee pitchers combined

SHEBOYGAN

SAYRE HARDWARE
NEW HAVEN

W. VA.
882-2525
"

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Sport Parade
NEW YORK (UP!) - Bob Feller lives in the present, not the
psst, but there a(e tim~s , mostly..when he's by himself, he
aUows himself to daydream a bit. He catches himself wondering how he'd do against the modern day hitters, and in
these private little reveries of his, he always comes out on top.
. Thi s is understandable enough when you've been in the Hall
of Fame almost 15 years the way Bob Feller has, when you've
posted 266lifetime victories the way he also has, and when you
still hold the major league record for onehitters with 12.
Remarkably, Feller went after :his 13tlt-one-hitter this past
Sunday. More remarkable, he got it, and most remarkable of
all, perhaps, is that at 56, the former Cleveland firebaUer is no
kid anymore and you'd hardly expect him to he out there
pitching, but he still can get the baU up there.
He looks younger than 56, possibly because he has taken to
darkening his hair, bringing it back to his original color, he
says, with a product he's promoting, Grecian Formula 16,
Maybe it makes him feel younger as·well because for the first
time in a long time Sunday he put on a uniform in San Antonio.
He pitched three innings of an Old-Timers' game before the
regularly scheduled Lafayette-San Antonio contest and
1 allowed only one hit.
Feller was sitting ar.ound in the press room of the ball psrk,
after he finished, when San Antonio's assistant business
manager walked in with a startling piece of news.
"Ryan has pitched another no.IJitter!" he announced.
The statement had a spe&lt;;jal impact upon Feller because for
many years he shared the major league record for most nohitters with three. Ssndy Koufax broke that record 10 years
ago and now here was Nolan Ryan coming along to pass FeUer
and move up alongside Koufax with his fourth no-hitter in
three years for the California Angels.
What was Feller's first reaction? The same as Koufax'.
"My first thought was that sooner or later Ryan will break
· the record," Feller said. "My second thought was oh, well, I
still got the one-hit record." Feller laughed.
"I'm only kidding, " he said.
Some feel Nolan Ryan may be the fastest pitcher in baseball
history . His fastball was clocked at 100.8 miles per hour last
summer wip1ng out Feller's unofficial record of 98.6 which had
stood nearly three decades.
Feller doesn 'fput complete stoCk in those figures. It's clear
he isn't convinced Ryan throws any harder than he did.
"I wish they had checked the speed of his pitch when the ball
crossed home plate the way they did mine," he said. "On his
test, Ryan threw into a wide open electronic 'fi.eld.' I had to
throw into a much smaller area. Look, I'm not saying who's
faster . Maybe he is. AU I know is he just won his tooth game
Sunday, and he's 28. I won my 1ooth game when I was 22."

, .,

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frames to win

.
In Meigs-Mason
Pony
.
baseball acllon Monday the
Pomeroy A-s defeated the
Mason Pony Leaguers S-2
with the help of A-s catcher
Brian Hamilton's two home
th
"ght f ld
runs over e rl
te
feGncere. SmJ"th
g
went the
distance on t~ moun~ !or
Pomeroy, walking 9, striking
out 16 and allowing only 2
hits. Van Meter and Honiker
pitched for Mason, aU9wing
the eight runs, giving up nine
hits, and only one illtentional
, walk to Hamilton in the
seventh. Each Mason pitcher
struck out three Pomeroy
batters.
In hitting for Pomeroy,
Hamilton led with his two
long blasts and a single, Bob
McClure had two singles, Ron
Snyder a double, and Rick
Johnson, Tim Hood, and Greg
Smith.each a single.
For Mason aU the hitting
was by Kevin Honlker with a
double and a triple.

_'",

:' I

..

~

to strike out 14 Pirates and
allowed them only 3 hits.
For the Pirates, Rod
Carmichael started on the
mound and worked 6 innings
striking out 9 before he was
relieved by Chris Judge who
· worked the final .inning.
y an kee h"tt
1 ers
were
Har
Whit!8 t h· "th
. vey
c WI
a
triple and a double, J . R.
"Wru;nsley a double, and Mike
Whlltlatch a double and
smg e.
For the losers Lyle Moon
had two singles ,;,hile Robbie
Lane reached safely once.
With that victory, the
Yankees are 1-0 and the
Pir 1
o.
a es are 2·

th is

on

the ,

system,

" Your at t ention , p lease A
baby was just bor n in t h e
maternity ward. and t he
1amily does not have in ·
su ran ce cove r age Is th ere
an 1nsurance man in th e
house? Repeat in g , thi s is an
emerge n cy . "Fo rt una t e ly I
was there, and saved the
day . But 1 still say , when you
see me , don ' t think o f in ·
sura n ce, but when you thi nk
of insu r an ce , see m e.

®

•

William D. Childs .•
&gt;V

~'rr~~s
&gt;"IIODLEPDRT, OHIO _,

Mick Childs

•

. '
.• ~r

til '

.

When IOU can't trust rour
wiring anrmore.
Trust" us·for
to fll ·lt.

l-o •

'

·"

.''
' ""

"'

. . ..
J

.. '
~·

...

This Week's Specia 1

"

.. ,,.

"''

VAWI!!
RATED

'"

v '•

USED CARS

·.;.!

'72 CHEV. IMP
HT COUPE
v.e, auto.,
w

P. S., rad io, w -s-

ti res.

WAS 52195

•1995
Karr &amp; Van Zandt

,,

,,

· You'll Like Our Quality
Way of DOing Business.
GMAC FI!\IANCJNG
992-5342
Pomeroy
Open Evenings 'li\6:00
Til 5p.m. Sal .

.STRAWBERRY
SHORTCAKE

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

Adolph's Dairy

'

..;

• &lt;ll)

hlle 1 w
fr1e nd 10 th e

...

Monday night the Rutland Snowden witha triple and
Reds downed the Middleport double, Tim Gore a single,
Indians 5-1 behind the no hit and Taylor 2 singles.
pitching of relief man John
VanMeter. Tim Gore started
on the mound for Rutland, but
after walking the first three
batters he faced, Van Meter
came on. to go the distance,
allowing only one Indian run
to cross the plate while
I
striking out 9 and walking 4.
For the Indians, John
Cremeans started on the
mound and received.the loss.
Cremeans, who worked 3
innings, fanned 4 and issued
four free passes to Rutland ·,
batsmen. Shane Smith canie
Hrs.: 10:00 A.M. Tllll:OO P.M. Sun.- Thur.
on in relief of Cremeans ill the
10:00 A.M. Til12:00 P.M. Fri. &amp; Sat.
, fourth and finished the game,
992-2556
striking out 6 and walking 3.
. W.MAIN
('
Rutian~. hitters were John

.

..

'

Yanks need 7

over Mason

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor

"

.

WORK BOOTS

Ill
I Ill

_,

.. 1

'" '

,

ROLL·AWAY
WINDOW FANS
FANS
Electrically
weverslbl•·
MANY MODELS TO CHOOSE FROM

..

••

.

Now Featuring

'
'
1!
I

'
I
·'

Astros, 2-0, the Montreal over- the Astros. The Mets
Expos won, 5-3, over the Los scored both their runs off
Angeles Dodgers, and Cin- Dave Roberts in the second
citmati at Pittsburgh was inning when Dave Kingman
rained out, in other National tripled home one run and
League games.
scored on a sacrifice fly by
In the American League, it Jerry Grote.
was Chicago 9 Boston 2, and
Expos 5. Dodgers 3:
Milwaukee 8 Oakland 3.
Woody Fryman settled
Phlllles 5, Padres 1:
dow n after allowing Los
Mike Schmidt, batting .181 Angeles two runs In the first
at game time, drove in three inning to win his fifth game
runs with a single and homer against two losses. Fryman
as the Phillies' Steve Carlton helped his own cause with a
raised his record to 5-4. run-scoring double in the
CarltOn pitched a five-hitter, · fourth inning as the Expos
walked four but struck out handed Doug Rau his fifth
seven. Mike Anderson also loss against the same number
homered for the Phils. Dave of wins.
Freisleben suffered his sixth
White Sox 9, Red Sox 2:
loss against three wins for the
Bucky Dent drove in two
Padres.
runs with late-inning singles
Mets 2, Astros 0:
- as the White Sox broke open a
Jon Matlack pitched a four- close game · to ease Stan
hitter for his seventh win and Bahnsen's path to his fourth
first complete game of the victory. Bill Lee suffered his
season in the Mets' victory fifth loss for the Red Sox.

•
wmners

In Uttle . Geague action Jacobs with 3 singles, Todd

•

'

•

Brewers 6•A's 3:
George Scott hit a two-run
homer and Robin Yount hit
two RBI singles in the
Brewers' victory over the

A-s are 8-2

Rutland wins 5·1 on Monday

i

•

•

Lucasville in Class A finals

r-------------------

°

i~:ni':~~ Th~

•

second shutout of the season
and defea ted the Braves.
McGlothen walked two and
struck out four in raising his
record to 5-4.
McGlothen is a key pitcher
for the Cardinals, who are
looking for front-line pitching
strength. He was their staff
leader for almost half the 1974
season and then tailed off to a
1&amp;-12 finish . He was 12-3 at
one point be!ore running into
two four-game losin~ Rlre~ks .
In any event, No. 47 looked
very much like No. 45
Monday night when Ted
Simmons singled home the
only run of the game in the
fourth inning after Ted
Sizemore was safe on a forceout and losing pitcher Carl
Morton walked Reggie Smith.
The Philadelphia. PhiUies
defeated the San Diego
Padres, 5-1, the New York
Me ts beat the Houston

over Tiger team

A thought for the day :
American poet Ralph Waldo
Emerson said, " Beauty
State rarm tnwranct Companies
without grace is the hook
Home Ott_ic.e~"-B-Ioo_m_'_"st_o_"_
· '_1u_oo_1•_ without the bait."

Battery acid stain
stumps homemaker

~:~Is

.-··.

1975

3.

'J

Steve Snowden
1258 Pew~ I St.
Middleport
Ph. 992·7155
Lilce a good nellhbor,
Slate Farm is thel"e.

. BYI'ffi::tYCJidtER

HOME NOW
Freisleben , Greif (6) , Frisella
( 7) and Hundley, Kendall (7) ;
MINERSVILLE - Mrs . Carlton
(-4 -Sl and Boone. WPBy Helen and Sue Bottel
dummies how a size 38 or 42 is
Robert Arnold has been Carlton (A -51. LP- Fries leben
POLLY'S PROBLEM
13-61. HRs- Schmidt 17th I. And ·
going to look? There are
returned to her home, Rt. 1, ers
on ( 3rd ).
DEAR POLLY - Someone plenty of attractive wome"n
Daaclng Cheek \0 Cheek .....
Minersville, from the Holzer
left a battery operated toy on with matronly fi.giD"es who
000 000 ODO- 0 4 0 Sue:
Medical Center, where she Houston
020 000 OOx - 2 6 0
N .Y
I grew up ill the "twist',' generation, where no one danced top of our stereo and the would serve as models. 1
has been confined for the past
Roberts, Granger (8 ) and
battery leaked and left a wonder who they think they
Jutze; Mat lack ( 7. 31 and Grote . close. Now I find I'm reaDy out of place at dances, because half
two weeks.
stain.
Do you know of are fooling. - MARGARET.
LP-- Roberts {3 -6).
the people are doillg those very complicated lead-follow things
anything
I could use to
DEAR POLLY - When
Lo s Ange les 200 000 001 - 3 10 1 that absolutely baffle me.
remove
this
stain withoout making figure-eight yeast
Montreal
201 200 OOx - s 9 2
To
make
it
worse,
I've
started
dating
an
older
guy.
He
and
Rau , Hough (4). Downing {6)
harming the wood? rolls cut the dough with a
anel Yeager ; Fryman (5 -2) and his last girlfriend Winced up a storm. She could follow every
VIOLET.
Foote. LP- Rau (S -5) .
doughnut
cutter, pick up the
move. I's afraid he'll think I'm a washout.
DEAR VIOLET - Doubt- ring and twist. There are no
Atlanta
000 000 000- 0 ; 0
How can a girl learn to be a great cheek-t&lt;H!heek dancer less acid from the battery
AT CONVENTION
St. Louis
000 100 00&gt;&lt;.-:- 1 6 0
- leaked all the way through ends to tuck under.
The Rev. and Mrs. Robert
Morton ,
Hou se
(8 )
and overnight? - AFRAID TO TRY
When taking out a blind; M cGlothen (5-41 and
the finish on the wood so the stitched hem pull the thread
Kuhn, Pomeroy First Baptist Pocoroba
Sim mons . LP- Morton (5 -6).
ATT:
top · may bave to be and wind it on a "'sewing
Church, and the Rev. Walter
!Only
games
scheduled
!
I
know
what
you
mean:
you
and!
grew
up
in
a
generation
refinished. First, you might machine bobbin. In record
Bikacson of . the Racine
American
Leaggue
where
the
only
thing
we
did
"close"
was
forbidden
.
try
mixing powdered pumice time you have untangled
Church were "In Columbus
0
1
and
lemon oil to make a
~~;~~~
ggg
l~
~;
~
~
Suggestiona'i
You
could
lake
a
crash
course
at
a
daitcing
Thursday where Mrs. Kuhn
matching thread to use for
Bahnsen
14·41
and
Downing
;
school,
but
that's
expensive
and
pulls
lime
away
from
your
paste,
apply this with a soft the rehemming.
and the Rev . Mr. Bikacson L ee. Drago (9) and Blackwell .
attended a meeting of the LP--Lee (7-51. HR- Johnson guy. So why not instead, let HIM be your teacher? Most good cloth and rub It In with a
On a piece of material
, dancers enjoy giving lessons - especially to someone they circular motion. Do not let II
make buttonholes of. every
Board of Trustees of the Ohio c5th I.
Milw
001 002 012- 6 9 1 like. - SUE
· slaod. Remove ,with a cloth size that can be made, label
Baptist Convention. Each of Oakland
111 000 ooo-- 3 12 0
dampened with le111on oil and them as to size and then use
the board members was
Sprague. Castro (31 and · Dea H I
dS
then wipe dry with a clean
r
e en an
ue :
presented a personally Porter ; Blue. Todd (9) and
soft cloth. Finally use your this fabric as a guide. You
Tenace.
wPcastro
C
1·01
.
LPDon't
knock
the
"negative
heel"
shoe
until
you
try
it'l•
will have no more trouble
autographed copy of Dr . Blue 19·31. HR -Scott Clthl.
They're the greatest thin[ since walking barefoot ill sand. furniture polishing clolb. - selecting the proper sewing
Joseph I. Chapman's first
I Only games scheduled!
Maybe they doo't look high-style, but they sure do put you on POLLY.
machine attachment to use
book.
top of the world, comfortwjse.
DEAR POLLY _ After when making buttonholes for
However, you must gel used to them : You may have sore washing my stainless steel a garment. - MRS. R. L.
calves for a day or two. - MR. FUGH, SHOE SELLER
sink with a cleanser I polish it
DEAR POLLY - We have
an octagon-shaped commode
to a shine with newspaper. in OlD" livillg room. 11 had so
Dear Shoe Man FU:
Also a great time-saver 'much useless space that I
Since writing that comme cl comme ca column on ''downthat
keeps track of loose bought a 12-inch turntable
at-the-heel" shoes, we must confess we tried them- and we'
dress
snaps -is to siiap them and set it inside the commode
like them. (But we didn't get the $40 models.) - HELEN AND
through
a piece of cheese- thus giving me two shelves to
SUE
cloth. They are always h ld
together and easy to spot in
coasters, decks of cards,
+++
extra ash trays and other
Dear Rap:
your sewing drawer. - such needed items that are
like yourself who have had proper function and avoid out it should be called
There's a very "I'd Uke tu get to knowable" guy who lives
long term constipation or silasm of the colon you do . "softage" 00t Uroughage,H next door to me. He talks to girls I'm with, but not me. But once R~~R POLLY- One of ~";~keploutofslght.poor bowel habits. Iq general, l!eed bulk in the diet.
Not all people do weD on a be s(Ole my Ice cream aandwich afluncli, and he plays tricks my Pet Peeves Is with people
Those foods that look li~e diet that suddenly increases on me I'm not supposed to know about, which I likewise do to who refuse to soil the guest ·
any situation that is
'·
'
associated with spasm, roughage when you eat them the bulk in the diet. It usually him. What a schizophrenic relatiOIIBhlp!
ftrla:ir
·
Daily_
·
cramping, constipation or are often not roughage at all . . takes three or four weeks to
I have a doll at hom~ I caD "Mr. X" (his name), and I stic~
DBVCifEDTOTHE
causes a build up of pressure The most important are on get over the milia! increase In pins In It so he'D feel something and notice me. I also keep an but instead-emerge from the
INTEREn OF
bathroom With the blithe . · .MEIGS-MASON AREA
within the colon is thought to the basis of recent studies is gas formation. Along with the empty pop bottle under my bed because H drank oul of it. ,
.• Exec.
R L. TANNEHILL
'
contribute to the small cereal fiber, found in almost change in diet program you
You can see, I'm really trying. What else do you suggest? remark, "I did not want to : ,CHEST
;·
~
Ed.
SOil your pretty guest towels
. ROBERT HOEFLICH · ·
hernias or diverticula.
all whole cereals except rice would need a good bowel - SORTA SHY BUT NOT M:.UCH
·
t
d
"' City Editor
I
so JUS use a corner of ,· f'ublished
dally oxcepi I
A"lot ·of the symptoms at- and certainly in abundance in training program. I can't
yOID"S." It seems they would • ~alurday by The Oh io. Valley!'
•
tributed to diverticula are all those breakfast '.foods cover all these points here, Dear ssiiNM:
-elshaveto \Publishing Company. 111 ,
reallzethattheto
"
. iCourt St.. Pomeroy , Ohio
Why don't you just walk up and start a conversation?
really from old colon Ia be led as bran or whole but you can get the details on
·..S¥9. Bu1'1ness Office Phone
be
freshened
from
time
to
probllims that actually wheat products. Real whole the diet and bowel training by Could be HE's sorla shy too. - SUE AND HELEN
. 1&gt;'12·2156. Editorial Phone 992.
time whether they are used ~157 .
wheat bread Is another good wri ling to me in care of.,this
p~eceded the diverticula.
+++
or
not and tbat most fas- r,• Second claso pootage paid .
t Pomeroy. Ohio .
·'
source of cereal fiber.
newspaper, P. 0. Box "1551, Rap:
tidlous
hosteaaes
do
·
_Jol!t.l!&gt;nal
advertlo~'li'
'·
I really like thla girl. I think, she does me. We've neither not
The older thinking was to
The cereal fiber softens · Radio City Station , New
want . just
anyrepresentative · Ward ) .
Griffith -Company , Inc
·
give people with colon and retains moistiD"e. By York, NY 10019 and asking one Wiled much before.
one . wiping their ..~nds on
eottlnetll &amp; Gallabher Dlv'
The
JI"Oblem
Ia
I
want
to
klaa
her,
but
how
do
I
know
If-she
p~oblems , "or almost any . re~ining moisture in the food
for Tile llealth Letter on
their OWn personal towels. j
157 Third Ave .. l'(ew York) .
disorder of the digestive . residue adequate bulk IS · Diverticulosis. Send 50 cents . wants to be kissed, and when is the right lime? - I'M IM- have even tried paper towels 1 ' NS~ j, ~~~: j,cn 0 n rare s \ 1
system, a bland diet. The maintained and the soft and a long, self-addressed, PATIENT
and teJTy towels but some . Delivered by' carrier where ,
to ' 1available 75 cents per week' .
people absolutely -fuse
trouble with this is that the residue is not likely to Irritate stamped envelope for cost
ar
By Motor Route whert ,!
Imp:
.
use an Y·bUt mine.
~arrler
service
"~' · '
colon will remove all the the colon as does the hard, andmailing.
available, One
month, su.l
H she likes you - she'll want to be kissed. Hold her hand
water from such bland foods ~ residue of most bland
Another is with those ads !Sy mall In 0~10 and w. va ,,
As a starter for most people
size dresses sh- ffine Year , S22 .00 ; Sl•
and what Is left is a small diets.
,
.
I recommend simply switch- while you're walking her to the door, and If she waits a second for Iaroe
"
vwu
onths, $11 .50 · Throt
after
saying,
"Well,
good-night
...
"
you'D
know
this
is
the
on svelte models never
onths. S7 .00. Elsewhere
hard food residue that leaw;
Some of th~ pioneers in ing to whole wheat bread and
wearing a size larger than 8 1 13.50
26.00; three
year : months,.
Sl• mon1h,'s
.
to constipation and poor studymg the 11nportance of being sure to eat at least one moment. - HELEN
su..
NOTE FROM SUE: And she'll probably wonder what took or iO. llow can anyooe teD 1 Subscription price lncludn
bowel func~~ · To promote cereal fiber in , the diet point bowl of bran cereal a day.,
from·such pictures or window sundav Tlmes.sentlnel .
you so lOf!g !
'
'.
,,

Wes t

In Pomeroy Uttle League
action Monday ni ght the
Giants defeated the Tigers 3-2
in seven innings.
For the Giants, J . Yields
pitched the first 6 innings,
Am erican L eag ue
striking out 16 and walking 3,
.East
w. I. pet. g. b . giving up 1 hit and 2 runs. C.
Boston
24 19 .558
Milwaukee
22 23 489 3 McKinney pitched the
New Yor k
22 24 .478 3'h seventh inning, striking out
Detroi t
20 22 .476 3"' all three batters he face d.
Cleveland
19 25 .432 51h
Baltimore
18 27 .400 '
For the Tigers S. Ohlinger
started and went 6 innings,
striking out 13, issuing 9 free
passes, giving up 3 hits and 2
STATE FARM
runs. In relief, C. Icenhower
pitched the seventh inning
hitting I batter an'd giving up
the game winning hit, a
double, by J. Jewell.
Hitters for the Giants were
J.
Fields and T. Jewell with a
INSURANCE
double
each, R. Smith had a
®
single. For the Tigers, S.
Ohlinger had a single. FOR INSURANCE CALL

iPolly' s Poifl"tAr"

'Softage' needed for healthy colon

..

.June

BY. FRED DOWN

DR. LAMB

,, By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
' DEAR DR. LAMB - My
doctor says that I have
diverticulosis. X rays have
been taken. I understand no
bulky or seed foods should he
ea,ten. However, lately I have
read the opposite is most
beneficial, foods like coarse
bran, whole tomatoes illstead
of juice, etc. I would ap.
preciate hearing from you on
this matter.
I have had constipation
problems since I was a small
· child, also a great deal of gas.
DEAR READER - There
is g,olng IQ be a lot of confusion about diet and
diverticulosis for some time.
The dlverlicular are small
pockets of lhe colon. They are
really small hernias of the
illner lining of the colon
through the muacular wall of
the colon.
These small pockets are
mor\ apt to form, ill people

Tuesday,

UPJ Sports Writer
w. t. pet . g.b.
Oak,l and
29 19 .60 4
The Atlanta Braves can be
29 ·20 .592
• -,
Ka nsas£1 ty
if
they're
Minnesota
23 20 .535 J • 1 exc used
Texas
23 24 .d89 51
questioning
the
news
that
Bob
Ca liforn ia . 23 26 .469 61 ,
Ch icago
12 25 46B 6• 1 Gibson ' has- been dropped
•
Monday 's Results
from the St. Louis Cardinals'
Chicago 9 Bos ton 2
starting rotation.
Milwaukee 6 Oakl and J
(Only games scheduled)
They thought they saw
Today' s Pr obabl e' Pitchers
Gibson
out there firing
( All Time s EOTI
Chi cago { Allen 0-0) a.l Boston Monday night when the
(Cleveland J .J) , 7:30p .m .
Ca rdinals beat them, 1-0.
Te xas ( Hargan d·2l at Bal
t imore &lt;Tor rez 5-3), 7 . 30 p . m .
With good reason, too.
M ilwaukee (S laton 3-6) af
Lynn McGlothen is a u;.
Oakland (Perr y 1-n . 11 :00p m .
Detroit {Col eman 3-7 ) at yea rol d righthander from
Cali for nia !Tanan a '2 3), 10 :30
Monroe, La., who is just
p m. ,
New York &lt;Dobson 4-5) at about the same size as Gibson
Mmnesota &lt;Gol t z 4 4). 9 . 00 p.m .
Kansas City ( Bril es .t .JJ at and has many of his manCleveland (Ra ich 1-0) , 7 30 nerisms, including the fact
p.m .
that he wastes no time betWednesday's Games
Chicago at Boston
ween his pitches and wants to
Texas at Balt im or e, nig ht
get
the game over with as fast
Mil wa ukee at Oa klan d , nig ht
Detr oit at Ca liforni a, n igh t
as possible.
New Yor k at Minnesota , nigh t
It took McGlothen an hour
Ka n C1 t y at Clevelan d, night
and 40 minutes to do the job
Monday. night when he pitGiants are 3-2
ched a four-hitter for his

p.m

•

Generation Rap

20 .524
23 51 1
25 .44tl
2$ .390

Hou ston
Monday's Resul1 s
Ci~c1 at Ptt sbgh, ppd ., r ain
Phtladelphia 5 San Diego 1
New Yo rK 2 Houston o
Mon treal 5 Lo s Angel es 3
St Louis 1 Atlanta o
(On ly games scheduled)
Today 's Prob&lt;tble Pitchers
(All Times EDT I
San Francis co (Hali ck i J . l) at
Ch1cago ( Burr is 6-4&gt;. 2 30 p .m .
Los Angeles (Sutton 9 31 at
Montrea l (Renko Q.J), 8:05 p .m
Houston I Forsch 2-2) at New
York ( Hall o.o or Parker 1 2l,
8 :05p .m .
San Diego I Spillner 2.Sl at
Phi ladelph ia (l onborg 3-31, 7 : 35

REGINA TOLBERT

DON SIDERS

By United Press International
National League
Cinci at Pttsbgh , ppd ., rain

San Diego
Phil a

w I. pet. g.b.

Pitt sburgh
Ne~ York
Philadelphia
St Lou is
Montreal

celebrations were Betty
Lehew, Mr. and Mrs. Graf,
Minerva Williams, Columbus; Hugh Bniestle, Parkersburg, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Vernon Grinstead, Mr. and
Mrs. Earl Fields, Hartford,
W.Va.;Mr.andMrs. William
Utzinger, James Utzinger,
Westerville, and George
Johnson, Pomeroy.

the best buy for the $6.7
billion they spend each year
for prescriptions. "II Is a
curious set of values which
says lbal the consmner may
be given fall Information
about discretionary pur-

East

Ch.•cago

..

same prescription drug can
vary by as much as 200 per
cent in the same town.
as a result, he said, the
nation's consumers probably
are being cheated because
. they do not know where to get

M"ddl
1 epor t-p omeroy,

I

FTC proposes prescriptions prices
be advertised as are foo&gt;
d, clothing
WASHINGTON (UPI) - In forbid drug stores from
a move that could save advertising the prices of
consumers millions of doUars prescription drugs.
a year, the Federal Trade
FTC Cllainnan Lewis A.
Commission Monday Engman said a year-long
proposed rules to abolish investigation by his agency
laws under which most states showed that prices for the

The Dally Sentm·el,

Dodgers -lose 573, Reds· in first

Birthday observed .
The birthdays of Earl
Fields and Vernon Grinstead,
Hartford, W. Va., and
William Utzinger, Westervilie, were observed with a
dinner party Ssturday night
at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Litzinger , Westerville .
Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Glen
Graf, Columbus, entertained
with a brunch.
Attending the birthday

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2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, June 3,1975

More ethnic ·courses
required. in neW bill

.
By LEE LEONARD
portive institutions as well asUPI Statehouse Reporter
from their families, " Jackson
COLUMBUS (UPI)
said .
Contributions of ethnic and
JackSon mairitBined that
racial minorities will be a children of majority groups
required part of courses in would benefit as touch as
history, geography and those of miriority groups,
goverrunent at Ohio public perhaps more.
schools if legislation ap"The children of a-majority
proved by the Ohio Senate of the population have been
Monday is signed into law by deprived of the knowledge of
Gov. James A. Rhodes.
what has made this country
The bill, approved 19-7, great," he said. "II has been
received only two votes more said that history is written by
than the 17 needed for a the victors or the very r.ich."
majority in the Senate ,
Jackson said the legislation
marked by spotty attendance would allow the state Board
in the week's opening session. of Education, local boards
The measure 'survived and the teachers themselves
more than an hour's worth of to develop flexible programs
attempts to change the House (or incorporating minority
version, which cleared that contributions.
chamber handily last March
He said the purchase of new
11.
textbooks would not he requiAs written, the bill requires red; that the state Board of
schools to make a "balanced Education already has
presentation" of con- materials for use.
tributions of ethnic and racial
Calabrese received support
groupings. It singfes out the from both Republicans and
contributions of "men and Democrats to · insert a
women of African, Mexi?'n, specific reference to Italians,
Sen.
Marigene
Puerto Rican and Amencan but
Valiquette, D-Toledo, said "it
Indian descent."
Sen. Anthony 0 . Calabrese, -'Is not fittiJJg to put our own in
D-Cieveland, failed on an a biU like this."
attempt to specifically inThe chamber also voted 11clude Italians in the bill when 15 against a propoSal by Sen.
Lt.. Gov. Richard F: Celes~ Douglas Applegate, Ddeclined tq break a tie vote m Steubenville, to eliminate all
favor of the proposed amend- specific references to
ment.
minority groups. •
Asaistan~ Majority Leader
Sen. Harry Meshel, OM. Morris Jackson, D- Youngstown said the referCleveland, the legislature's ences were ~de to "specify
top-rankmg black and the those groups which have been
Senate noor .manager of the left out over the years. If you,
bill, sa1d Ohio pupils should generalize too much It
learn of minority con- doesn't mean a thing ,; he
tributions in the context of . said.
'
The ' Senate
also
school lessons · without
depending upon separatist unanimously passed and
teachings.
. returned to the House for
"The childen of minority concurrence in amendments
groups n~d to learn of iheir a bill requiring consent of the
contnbutJons from sup- father before his name can be

Actor O~zie Nelson,
·68, is can~cer victim
HOLLYWOOD (UPI ) Ozzie Nelson, who starred
with his wile· Harriet for 22
years on radio and television
after he gained fame as an
orchestra leader in the big
band era, died at his home
today of cancer.
Nelson, 68, had undergone a
series of tests more than a
year ago, then underwent
surgery eight months ago
when the malignancy was
. discovered. He took a turn for
the worse a month ago and
had been confined to his home
since that time.
His wife, whom he married
while she was a sin"ger in his
band 40 years ago, was with
him when he died. Their two
sons, David and Rick, had
visited him Willy.
Nelson was born March 20,
1907, in Jersey Cjty. By age 13
he. was the nation's youngest
Eagle Scout. He was an ailaround athlete at Rutgers
University, . starring in
footbaU and boxing and was
an honor student.
While in school he
organized a band to play for
local dances. He maintained
his · interest in music while

attending New Jersey Law
School and a few months
after graduation organized
an orchestra. He soon
became a name band and
played most of the important
hotels and ballrooms across
the country.
Nelson was looking for the
right girl to sing with his band
when he met Harriet Hilliard.
They soon branched out from
a toiD"ing band to making
motion pictures. They also
acquired a commercial radio
program in which they
costarred with the late Joe
Penner.
By 1941 they had
established themselves as
radio, movie and orchestra
stars and joined Red
Skelton's coast-t&lt;M:OaSt radio
show. They not only furnished
the music for the show but
became even more popular
personalities in Skelton's
comedy skits.
They branched out with
their own program "The
Adventures of Ozzie and
Harriet" on radio that later
became
a
successful
television program which
also featured their sons.

CO-VALEDICTORIANS - Ron Siders, at right facing
right, and Regina Tolbert, shared valedictorian honors at
the 1975 Wahama High School commencement exercises
Sunday night when County School Supt. Charles Withers
handed diplomas lp 125 graduates. Siders stressed that
success "success" in obtaining material t!Jings results
from long, hard work. Miss Tolbert used a'Ralph Waldo
Emerson theme, "Being True to Yourself." A left,
Salutatorian Cindy Workman was the first s~ker on the
theme, how she and other graduating seniors will be
entering a new life and what they may expect to encounter.

placed on the birth certificate
of an out.ofwedloek child.
Meanwhile, the Senate FInance Committee Monday
night heard testimony from
opponents of House-passed
legislation appropriating
$670,000 for a coUege of
osteopathic medicine at Ohio
University in Athens.
L.
Warner,
Marvin
chainnan of the Ohio Board
of Regents, said the shortage
of qualified doctors in Ohio
was created more by an
inability to retain physicians
trained in the state's six
medical schools rather than a
shortage of training facilities.
. CINDY WORKMAN

Major Lea gue Standings '
By United Press Intern ational
National League

Gym classes will be sexually joined now
By CRAIG A. PALMER
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Gym classes in most schools
and colleges in the United
States will have to be
sexually integrated, except
for bodily contact sports, the
administration announced
today.
BEING THEA TED
Mrs . Harry (Veda) Davis,
Spring Ave., Pomeroy, is an
out-patient at University
Hospital in Columbus. During
her treatment which will be
over the next four weeks,
Mrs . Davis will be residing
with her son, Robert Lehew,·
4276 Doney St., WhitehaU,
43213 . .

Under new rules announced "must insure that physical
hy the Department of Health, education classes and acEducation and Welfare, girls tivities which are separate
and boys may be kept in are comparable for members
separate teams for boxing, · of each sex."
wrestling, basketball, footTherules do not, however,
ball, ice hockey and other require that equal amounts of
contact sports.
money be spent on :girls' and
But ihe rules say schools boys' athletic programs,
The new regulations,
released under the signatures
of President Ford and HEW
BELLING SET
An old-fashioned belling secretary Caspar W. Weinand shower will be held berger, also cover sex
school
Sqturday at 7 p.m. at the · education and
Hemlock Grove Grange Hall 1 organizationa. They apply to
honoring Mr. and Mrs. most schools, from kinRonnie Eastman. The public dergarten to graduate level,
which receive federal aid.
is invited.
That includes most schools in
the country.
Major League Results

. Unless Congress rejects the
regulations, schools must
begin July 21 making
preparations to comply w}th
them. But elementary
schools will have a grace
period of one year from July
21 !o adjust schedules and
prepare staffs for the
changes. High schools and
colleges wiD have three years
to comply.
The longer adjustment in
the higher grades is
necessary, HEW said,
"because of the existence of
wide skill differentials attributable .to the traditionaUy
lower levels of training
avaUable to girls in many
schools."

000 000 lOQ- 1 s 1
102 ooo llx- s 10 o

26 20 565
24 19 .SSB

22
24
20
16
West

. .
C mc1nnali •
Los Ange les
San Fr ancisco
San Diego

Atl a n ta

1 ~
2
21 ~·
51 1
71 1

w. I. pet. g.b.

29 21 .580
JO 22 .577

.522

3

25 25 .500

2d 22

d

23 28 .451

61'1
20 33 .377 1011

p .m .

Cinc1nnati (Nor man 2 1) at
Pittsburgh ( Br ett 4-2l. 7:35

II 'sa helluva of a system."

chases, such as deodorant
and mouthwash, but cannot
be given lnlormatlon lbat wiD
help blm save money non
non-discretionary purchases,
such as ~eodorant and "
mouthwash, but cannot be
given lnlormatlon that will
help him save money on non-.
disCretionary purchases such
as drugs which a doctor has
prescribed as essential to his
good health," Engman said.
"You go to the doctor
because you are sick, you
stagger out of the office with
a little slip -of paper covered
with medical hieroglyphics.
You don't feel much like
walking aU over to compare
prices, so you go downstairs
to the pharmacy in the
basement and you buy the
stuff and ask for a glass of
water.
" lben you pay for It, and
you feel sick all over agaill.

0 .,

The proposed rules, which
would not go into effect for
-perhaps another year after
public
comment
and
bearings, would not require
drug stores to advertise their
prices. But they would
abolish laws or regulations
currently in effect in 33 states
which forbid prescription
advertising to one· degree or
another.
Professional pharmaceutical organizations
frequently enforce such
regulations, contending it is
unethical for druggists to post
prices, give them out over the
telephone or run ads in the
media listing what they
charge.
Recent court rulings have
overturned such laws or
regulations in five states.
Engman said the FTC's
investigation found in the Ssn
Francisco area, for example,
a high blood preSsure remedy
available on prescription was
being sold at 28 different
prices ranging from $2.50 to
$11.75.
'

Atlanta (Sadecki 1-0) at St.
Loui s (Reed 4 51, 8:30p .m .
Wednesday's Games
Sa n Francisco at Chicago
Los Ang at Montrea l. nigh t
Houston at New York , night
San Diego al Ph il a, night
Cinci at Pittsburgh, nigh t
A tlanta at St . louis , nigh t

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COLUMBUS '( UP!)
Wayne Street scored on
Lucasville Valley, 20-7, met Evans' two hits. Street al•o
Russia , 17-4, in finals of the collected a pair of safeties.
Class A Ohio High School
Dave Huesman scattered
Baseball Tournament here seven hits in picking up his
today. Class AAA and AA ninth win without a loss for
semifinals games . Monday Lucasville, which went ahead
were rained out and · 2-0 on single runs In the first
resched ul ed for this al- and second innings.
ternoon.
A third-inning West Salem
In A semis Monday, Lucas- run offset by two more
ville Valley beat West Salem Lucasville tallies in the
Northwestern 4-2 behind seventh frame.
Randy Evans' two runs
In the second game Moobatted in and Russia Wiy, Old Fort took a 5-2 lead
capitalized on seven errors to with five runs in the fourth
defeat Old Fort 7-&lt;l.
inning after Russia scored

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A's' Vida Blue, whoae record
dropped to 9-3. Williams
Castro picked up his first
major league victory with 6 2..
3 innings of relief.

Florida Southern
•
IS 'u pset, 5-0

SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (UPI) .Northwest Missouri 2-1 and
- Unranked Southeastern Ma rietta (Ohio) defeated
Louisiana defeated top- Northwest MissoiD"i &amp;-1.
ranked Florida Southern 5-0
Only four teams remained
Monday night in the third in competition today. In
round of the National tonight 's games, Montclair ·
Collgiate Athletic Association (N.J.) State takes on Florida
Division U World Series.
Southern and Marietta meets
It was the first shutout of Southeastern Louisiana. AU
the 44-game season lor remaining teams have one
Florida Southern.
loss in the double
Southeastern Louisiana's elimination tourney.
Mike Maronge pitched a
The title game will he
two-hitter, striking out six Wednesday night.
and walking two en route to
'
his sixth win against two
losses this season. It was the
first loss of the series for
Florida Southern.
Southea stern Louisiana
single runs in the second and Old Fort
collected 10 hits, including
000 510 0--6 6 7 two each by Andy Davis and
third stanzas.
011 230 X- 7 6 2 Greg Marten.
The winners capitalized on Russia
Sleel.and Plain Toes
a series of Old Fort errors to
Souh teas tern got three
score twice in the bottom of
unearned runs in the third
the fourth inning and three
inning and, with Maronge's
~•It .
times in the fifth. Bob Schultz
pitching, it proved more than
J ~ .' ~
singled in two of the runs in
enough for the victory.
'
'.
the bottom of the fifth.
In Pomeroy Uttle League
In other action Monday,
Mike Schieltz, 10-3, was the action Monday the Yankees Florida Southern defeated
MIDDLEPORT
winning pitcher.
defeated the Pirates in 7
innings hy the score of ll.j).
Lucasville Vlly
The Yanks scored 2 runs in
110 000 2-4 6 4 the first, fourth, fifth, and
seventh. The winners used
West Salem
WHEN YOU SEE ME,
001 000 1- 2 7 I four pitchers, Mike Whitlatch
DON'T THINK OF
starting, followed by Todd
INSURANCE ... BUT
Fife, J. R. Wamsley, and
finally , Harvey Whitlatch
WHEN YOU THINK OF
who picked up the victory.
INSURANCE, SEE MEl
Yankee pitchers combined

SHEBOYGAN

SAYRE HARDWARE
NEW HAVEN

W. VA.
882-2525
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Sport Parade
NEW YORK (UP!) - Bob Feller lives in the present, not the
psst, but there a(e tim~s , mostly..when he's by himself, he
aUows himself to daydream a bit. He catches himself wondering how he'd do against the modern day hitters, and in
these private little reveries of his, he always comes out on top.
. Thi s is understandable enough when you've been in the Hall
of Fame almost 15 years the way Bob Feller has, when you've
posted 266lifetime victories the way he also has, and when you
still hold the major league record for onehitters with 12.
Remarkably, Feller went after :his 13tlt-one-hitter this past
Sunday. More remarkable, he got it, and most remarkable of
all, perhaps, is that at 56, the former Cleveland firebaUer is no
kid anymore and you'd hardly expect him to he out there
pitching, but he still can get the baU up there.
He looks younger than 56, possibly because he has taken to
darkening his hair, bringing it back to his original color, he
says, with a product he's promoting, Grecian Formula 16,
Maybe it makes him feel younger as·well because for the first
time in a long time Sunday he put on a uniform in San Antonio.
He pitched three innings of an Old-Timers' game before the
regularly scheduled Lafayette-San Antonio contest and
1 allowed only one hit.
Feller was sitting ar.ound in the press room of the ball psrk,
after he finished, when San Antonio's assistant business
manager walked in with a startling piece of news.
"Ryan has pitched another no.IJitter!" he announced.
The statement had a spe&lt;;jal impact upon Feller because for
many years he shared the major league record for most nohitters with three. Ssndy Koufax broke that record 10 years
ago and now here was Nolan Ryan coming along to pass FeUer
and move up alongside Koufax with his fourth no-hitter in
three years for the California Angels.
What was Feller's first reaction? The same as Koufax'.
"My first thought was that sooner or later Ryan will break
· the record," Feller said. "My second thought was oh, well, I
still got the one-hit record." Feller laughed.
"I'm only kidding, " he said.
Some feel Nolan Ryan may be the fastest pitcher in baseball
history . His fastball was clocked at 100.8 miles per hour last
summer wip1ng out Feller's unofficial record of 98.6 which had
stood nearly three decades.
Feller doesn 'fput complete stoCk in those figures. It's clear
he isn't convinced Ryan throws any harder than he did.
"I wish they had checked the speed of his pitch when the ball
crossed home plate the way they did mine," he said. "On his
test, Ryan threw into a wide open electronic 'fi.eld.' I had to
throw into a much smaller area. Look, I'm not saying who's
faster . Maybe he is. AU I know is he just won his tooth game
Sunday, and he's 28. I won my 1ooth game when I was 22."

, .,

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frames to win

.
In Meigs-Mason
Pony
.
baseball acllon Monday the
Pomeroy A-s defeated the
Mason Pony Leaguers S-2
with the help of A-s catcher
Brian Hamilton's two home
th
"ght f ld
runs over e rl
te
feGncere. SmJ"th
g
went the
distance on t~ moun~ !or
Pomeroy, walking 9, striking
out 16 and allowing only 2
hits. Van Meter and Honiker
pitched for Mason, aU9wing
the eight runs, giving up nine
hits, and only one illtentional
, walk to Hamilton in the
seventh. Each Mason pitcher
struck out three Pomeroy
batters.
In hitting for Pomeroy,
Hamilton led with his two
long blasts and a single, Bob
McClure had two singles, Ron
Snyder a double, and Rick
Johnson, Tim Hood, and Greg
Smith.each a single.
For Mason aU the hitting
was by Kevin Honlker with a
double and a triple.

_'",

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to strike out 14 Pirates and
allowed them only 3 hits.
For the Pirates, Rod
Carmichael started on the
mound and worked 6 innings
striking out 9 before he was
relieved by Chris Judge who
· worked the final .inning.
y an kee h"tt
1 ers
were
Har
Whit!8 t h· "th
. vey
c WI
a
triple and a double, J . R.
"Wru;nsley a double, and Mike
Whlltlatch a double and
smg e.
For the losers Lyle Moon
had two singles ,;,hile Robbie
Lane reached safely once.
With that victory, the
Yankees are 1-0 and the
Pir 1
o.
a es are 2·

th is

on

the ,

system,

" Your at t ention , p lease A
baby was just bor n in t h e
maternity ward. and t he
1amily does not have in ·
su ran ce cove r age Is th ere
an 1nsurance man in th e
house? Repeat in g , thi s is an
emerge n cy . "Fo rt una t e ly I
was there, and saved the
day . But 1 still say , when you
see me , don ' t think o f in ·
sura n ce, but when you thi nk
of insu r an ce , see m e.

®

•

William D. Childs .•
&gt;V

~'rr~~s
&gt;"IIODLEPDRT, OHIO _,

Mick Childs

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When IOU can't trust rour
wiring anrmore.
Trust" us·for
to fll ·lt.

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hlle 1 w
fr1e nd 10 th e

...

Monday night the Rutland Snowden witha triple and
Reds downed the Middleport double, Tim Gore a single,
Indians 5-1 behind the no hit and Taylor 2 singles.
pitching of relief man John
VanMeter. Tim Gore started
on the mound for Rutland, but
after walking the first three
batters he faced, Van Meter
came on. to go the distance,
allowing only one Indian run
to cross the plate while
I
striking out 9 and walking 4.
For the Indians, John
Cremeans started on the
mound and received.the loss.
Cremeans, who worked 3
innings, fanned 4 and issued
four free passes to Rutland ·,
batsmen. Shane Smith canie
Hrs.: 10:00 A.M. Tllll:OO P.M. Sun.- Thur.
on in relief of Cremeans ill the
10:00 A.M. Til12:00 P.M. Fri. &amp; Sat.
, fourth and finished the game,
992-2556
striking out 6 and walking 3.
. W.MAIN
('
Rutian~. hitters were John

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Yanks need 7

over Mason

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor

"

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WORK BOOTS

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WINDOW FANS
FANS
Electrically
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Astros, 2-0, the Montreal over- the Astros. The Mets
Expos won, 5-3, over the Los scored both their runs off
Angeles Dodgers, and Cin- Dave Roberts in the second
citmati at Pittsburgh was inning when Dave Kingman
rained out, in other National tripled home one run and
League games.
scored on a sacrifice fly by
In the American League, it Jerry Grote.
was Chicago 9 Boston 2, and
Expos 5. Dodgers 3:
Milwaukee 8 Oakland 3.
Woody Fryman settled
Phlllles 5, Padres 1:
dow n after allowing Los
Mike Schmidt, batting .181 Angeles two runs In the first
at game time, drove in three inning to win his fifth game
runs with a single and homer against two losses. Fryman
as the Phillies' Steve Carlton helped his own cause with a
raised his record to 5-4. run-scoring double in the
CarltOn pitched a five-hitter, · fourth inning as the Expos
walked four but struck out handed Doug Rau his fifth
seven. Mike Anderson also loss against the same number
homered for the Phils. Dave of wins.
Freisleben suffered his sixth
White Sox 9, Red Sox 2:
loss against three wins for the
Bucky Dent drove in two
Padres.
runs with late-inning singles
Mets 2, Astros 0:
- as the White Sox broke open a
Jon Matlack pitched a four- close game · to ease Stan
hitter for his seventh win and Bahnsen's path to his fourth
first complete game of the victory. Bill Lee suffered his
season in the Mets' victory fifth loss for the Red Sox.

•
wmners

In Uttle . Geague action Jacobs with 3 singles, Todd

•

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Brewers 6•A's 3:
George Scott hit a two-run
homer and Robin Yount hit
two RBI singles in the
Brewers' victory over the

A-s are 8-2

Rutland wins 5·1 on Monday

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Lucasville in Class A finals

r-------------------

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i~:ni':~~ Th~

•

second shutout of the season
and defea ted the Braves.
McGlothen walked two and
struck out four in raising his
record to 5-4.
McGlothen is a key pitcher
for the Cardinals, who are
looking for front-line pitching
strength. He was their staff
leader for almost half the 1974
season and then tailed off to a
1&amp;-12 finish . He was 12-3 at
one point be!ore running into
two four-game losin~ Rlre~ks .
In any event, No. 47 looked
very much like No. 45
Monday night when Ted
Simmons singled home the
only run of the game in the
fourth inning after Ted
Sizemore was safe on a forceout and losing pitcher Carl
Morton walked Reggie Smith.
The Philadelphia. PhiUies
defeated the San Diego
Padres, 5-1, the New York
Me ts beat the Houston

over Tiger team

A thought for the day :
American poet Ralph Waldo
Emerson said, " Beauty
State rarm tnwranct Companies
without grace is the hook
Home Ott_ic.e~"-B-Ioo_m_'_"st_o_"_
· '_1u_oo_1•_ without the bait."

Battery acid stain
stumps homemaker

~:~Is

.-··.

1975

3.

'J

Steve Snowden
1258 Pew~ I St.
Middleport
Ph. 992·7155
Lilce a good nellhbor,
Slate Farm is thel"e.

. BYI'ffi::tYCJidtER

HOME NOW
Freisleben , Greif (6) , Frisella
( 7) and Hundley, Kendall (7) ;
MINERSVILLE - Mrs . Carlton
(-4 -Sl and Boone. WPBy Helen and Sue Bottel
dummies how a size 38 or 42 is
Robert Arnold has been Carlton (A -51. LP- Fries leben
POLLY'S PROBLEM
13-61. HRs- Schmidt 17th I. And ·
going to look? There are
returned to her home, Rt. 1, ers
on ( 3rd ).
DEAR POLLY - Someone plenty of attractive wome"n
Daaclng Cheek \0 Cheek .....
Minersville, from the Holzer
left a battery operated toy on with matronly fi.giD"es who
000 000 ODO- 0 4 0 Sue:
Medical Center, where she Houston
020 000 OOx - 2 6 0
N .Y
I grew up ill the "twist',' generation, where no one danced top of our stereo and the would serve as models. 1
has been confined for the past
Roberts, Granger (8 ) and
battery leaked and left a wonder who they think they
Jutze; Mat lack ( 7. 31 and Grote . close. Now I find I'm reaDy out of place at dances, because half
two weeks.
stain.
Do you know of are fooling. - MARGARET.
LP-- Roberts {3 -6).
the people are doillg those very complicated lead-follow things
anything
I could use to
DEAR POLLY - When
Lo s Ange les 200 000 001 - 3 10 1 that absolutely baffle me.
remove
this
stain withoout making figure-eight yeast
Montreal
201 200 OOx - s 9 2
To
make
it
worse,
I've
started
dating
an
older
guy.
He
and
Rau , Hough (4). Downing {6)
harming the wood? rolls cut the dough with a
anel Yeager ; Fryman (5 -2) and his last girlfriend Winced up a storm. She could follow every
VIOLET.
Foote. LP- Rau (S -5) .
doughnut
cutter, pick up the
move. I's afraid he'll think I'm a washout.
DEAR VIOLET - Doubt- ring and twist. There are no
Atlanta
000 000 000- 0 ; 0
How can a girl learn to be a great cheek-t&lt;H!heek dancer less acid from the battery
AT CONVENTION
St. Louis
000 100 00&gt;&lt;.-:- 1 6 0
- leaked all the way through ends to tuck under.
The Rev. and Mrs. Robert
Morton ,
Hou se
(8 )
and overnight? - AFRAID TO TRY
When taking out a blind; M cGlothen (5-41 and
the finish on the wood so the stitched hem pull the thread
Kuhn, Pomeroy First Baptist Pocoroba
Sim mons . LP- Morton (5 -6).
ATT:
top · may bave to be and wind it on a "'sewing
Church, and the Rev. Walter
!Only
games
scheduled
!
I
know
what
you
mean:
you
and!
grew
up
in
a
generation
refinished. First, you might machine bobbin. In record
Bikacson of . the Racine
American
Leaggue
where
the
only
thing
we
did
"close"
was
forbidden
.
try
mixing powdered pumice time you have untangled
Church were "In Columbus
0
1
and
lemon oil to make a
~~;~~~
ggg
l~
~;
~
~
Suggestiona'i
You
could
lake
a
crash
course
at
a
daitcing
Thursday where Mrs. Kuhn
matching thread to use for
Bahnsen
14·41
and
Downing
;
school,
but
that's
expensive
and
pulls
lime
away
from
your
paste,
apply this with a soft the rehemming.
and the Rev . Mr. Bikacson L ee. Drago (9) and Blackwell .
attended a meeting of the LP--Lee (7-51. HR- Johnson guy. So why not instead, let HIM be your teacher? Most good cloth and rub It In with a
On a piece of material
, dancers enjoy giving lessons - especially to someone they circular motion. Do not let II
make buttonholes of. every
Board of Trustees of the Ohio c5th I.
Milw
001 002 012- 6 9 1 like. - SUE
· slaod. Remove ,with a cloth size that can be made, label
Baptist Convention. Each of Oakland
111 000 ooo-- 3 12 0
dampened with le111on oil and them as to size and then use
the board members was
Sprague. Castro (31 and · Dea H I
dS
then wipe dry with a clean
r
e en an
ue :
presented a personally Porter ; Blue. Todd (9) and
soft cloth. Finally use your this fabric as a guide. You
Tenace.
wPcastro
C
1·01
.
LPDon't
knock
the
"negative
heel"
shoe
until
you
try
it'l•
will have no more trouble
autographed copy of Dr . Blue 19·31. HR -Scott Clthl.
They're the greatest thin[ since walking barefoot ill sand. furniture polishing clolb. - selecting the proper sewing
Joseph I. Chapman's first
I Only games scheduled!
Maybe they doo't look high-style, but they sure do put you on POLLY.
machine attachment to use
book.
top of the world, comfortwjse.
DEAR POLLY _ After when making buttonholes for
However, you must gel used to them : You may have sore washing my stainless steel a garment. - MRS. R. L.
calves for a day or two. - MR. FUGH, SHOE SELLER
sink with a cleanser I polish it
DEAR POLLY - We have
an octagon-shaped commode
to a shine with newspaper. in OlD" livillg room. 11 had so
Dear Shoe Man FU:
Also a great time-saver 'much useless space that I
Since writing that comme cl comme ca column on ''downthat
keeps track of loose bought a 12-inch turntable
at-the-heel" shoes, we must confess we tried them- and we'
dress
snaps -is to siiap them and set it inside the commode
like them. (But we didn't get the $40 models.) - HELEN AND
through
a piece of cheese- thus giving me two shelves to
SUE
cloth. They are always h ld
together and easy to spot in
coasters, decks of cards,
+++
extra ash trays and other
Dear Rap:
your sewing drawer. - such needed items that are
like yourself who have had proper function and avoid out it should be called
There's a very "I'd Uke tu get to knowable" guy who lives
long term constipation or silasm of the colon you do . "softage" 00t Uroughage,H next door to me. He talks to girls I'm with, but not me. But once R~~R POLLY- One of ~";~keploutofslght.poor bowel habits. Iq general, l!eed bulk in the diet.
Not all people do weD on a be s(Ole my Ice cream aandwich afluncli, and he plays tricks my Pet Peeves Is with people
Those foods that look li~e diet that suddenly increases on me I'm not supposed to know about, which I likewise do to who refuse to soil the guest ·
any situation that is
'·
'
associated with spasm, roughage when you eat them the bulk in the diet. It usually him. What a schizophrenic relatiOIIBhlp!
ftrla:ir
·
Daily_
·
cramping, constipation or are often not roughage at all . . takes three or four weeks to
I have a doll at hom~ I caD "Mr. X" (his name), and I stic~
DBVCifEDTOTHE
causes a build up of pressure The most important are on get over the milia! increase In pins In It so he'D feel something and notice me. I also keep an but instead-emerge from the
INTEREn OF
bathroom With the blithe . · .MEIGS-MASON AREA
within the colon is thought to the basis of recent studies is gas formation. Along with the empty pop bottle under my bed because H drank oul of it. ,
.• Exec.
R L. TANNEHILL
'
contribute to the small cereal fiber, found in almost change in diet program you
You can see, I'm really trying. What else do you suggest? remark, "I did not want to : ,CHEST
;·
~
Ed.
SOil your pretty guest towels
. ROBERT HOEFLICH · ·
hernias or diverticula.
all whole cereals except rice would need a good bowel - SORTA SHY BUT NOT M:.UCH
·
t
d
"' City Editor
I
so JUS use a corner of ,· f'ublished
dally oxcepi I
A"lot ·of the symptoms at- and certainly in abundance in training program. I can't
yOID"S." It seems they would • ~alurday by The Oh io. Valley!'
•
tributed to diverticula are all those breakfast '.foods cover all these points here, Dear ssiiNM:
-elshaveto \Publishing Company. 111 ,
reallzethattheto
"
. iCourt St.. Pomeroy , Ohio
Why don't you just walk up and start a conversation?
really from old colon Ia be led as bran or whole but you can get the details on
·..S¥9. Bu1'1ness Office Phone
be
freshened
from
time
to
probllims that actually wheat products. Real whole the diet and bowel training by Could be HE's sorla shy too. - SUE AND HELEN
. 1&gt;'12·2156. Editorial Phone 992.
time whether they are used ~157 .
wheat bread Is another good wri ling to me in care of.,this
p~eceded the diverticula.
+++
or
not and tbat most fas- r,• Second claso pootage paid .
t Pomeroy. Ohio .
·'
source of cereal fiber.
newspaper, P. 0. Box "1551, Rap:
tidlous
hosteaaes
do
·
_Jol!t.l!&gt;nal
advertlo~'li'
'·
I really like thla girl. I think, she does me. We've neither not
The older thinking was to
The cereal fiber softens · Radio City Station , New
want . just
anyrepresentative · Ward ) .
Griffith -Company , Inc
·
give people with colon and retains moistiD"e. By York, NY 10019 and asking one Wiled much before.
one . wiping their ..~nds on
eottlnetll &amp; Gallabher Dlv'
The
JI"Oblem
Ia
I
want
to
klaa
her,
but
how
do
I
know
If-she
p~oblems , "or almost any . re~ining moisture in the food
for Tile llealth Letter on
their OWn personal towels. j
157 Third Ave .. l'(ew York) .
disorder of the digestive . residue adequate bulk IS · Diverticulosis. Send 50 cents . wants to be kissed, and when is the right lime? - I'M IM- have even tried paper towels 1 ' NS~ j, ~~~: j,cn 0 n rare s \ 1
system, a bland diet. The maintained and the soft and a long, self-addressed, PATIENT
and teJTy towels but some . Delivered by' carrier where ,
to ' 1available 75 cents per week' .
people absolutely -fuse
trouble with this is that the residue is not likely to Irritate stamped envelope for cost
ar
By Motor Route whert ,!
Imp:
.
use an Y·bUt mine.
~arrler
service
"~' · '
colon will remove all the the colon as does the hard, andmailing.
available, One
month, su.l
H she likes you - she'll want to be kissed. Hold her hand
water from such bland foods ~ residue of most bland
Another is with those ads !Sy mall In 0~10 and w. va ,,
As a starter for most people
size dresses sh- ffine Year , S22 .00 ; Sl•
and what Is left is a small diets.
,
.
I recommend simply switch- while you're walking her to the door, and If she waits a second for Iaroe
"
vwu
onths, $11 .50 · Throt
after
saying,
"Well,
good-night
...
"
you'D
know
this
is
the
on svelte models never
onths. S7 .00. Elsewhere
hard food residue that leaw;
Some of th~ pioneers in ing to whole wheat bread and
wearing a size larger than 8 1 13.50
26.00; three
year : months,.
Sl• mon1h,'s
.
to constipation and poor studymg the 11nportance of being sure to eat at least one moment. - HELEN
su..
NOTE FROM SUE: And she'll probably wonder what took or iO. llow can anyooe teD 1 Subscription price lncludn
bowel func~~ · To promote cereal fiber in , the diet point bowl of bran cereal a day.,
from·such pictures or window sundav Tlmes.sentlnel .
you so lOf!g !
'
'.
,,

Wes t

In Pomeroy Uttle League
action Monday ni ght the
Giants defeated the Tigers 3-2
in seven innings.
For the Giants, J . Yields
pitched the first 6 innings,
Am erican L eag ue
striking out 16 and walking 3,
.East
w. I. pet. g. b . giving up 1 hit and 2 runs. C.
Boston
24 19 .558
Milwaukee
22 23 489 3 McKinney pitched the
New Yor k
22 24 .478 3'h seventh inning, striking out
Detroi t
20 22 .476 3"' all three batters he face d.
Cleveland
19 25 .432 51h
Baltimore
18 27 .400 '
For the Tigers S. Ohlinger
started and went 6 innings,
striking out 13, issuing 9 free
passes, giving up 3 hits and 2
STATE FARM
runs. In relief, C. Icenhower
pitched the seventh inning
hitting I batter an'd giving up
the game winning hit, a
double, by J. Jewell.
Hitters for the Giants were
J.
Fields and T. Jewell with a
INSURANCE
double
each, R. Smith had a
®
single. For the Tigers, S.
Ohlinger had a single. FOR INSURANCE CALL

iPolly' s Poifl"tAr"

'Softage' needed for healthy colon

..

.June

BY. FRED DOWN

DR. LAMB

,, By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
' DEAR DR. LAMB - My
doctor says that I have
diverticulosis. X rays have
been taken. I understand no
bulky or seed foods should he
ea,ten. However, lately I have
read the opposite is most
beneficial, foods like coarse
bran, whole tomatoes illstead
of juice, etc. I would ap.
preciate hearing from you on
this matter.
I have had constipation
problems since I was a small
· child, also a great deal of gas.
DEAR READER - There
is g,olng IQ be a lot of confusion about diet and
diverticulosis for some time.
The dlverlicular are small
pockets of lhe colon. They are
really small hernias of the
illner lining of the colon
through the muacular wall of
the colon.
These small pockets are
mor\ apt to form, ill people

Tuesday,

UPJ Sports Writer
w. t. pet . g.b.
Oak,l and
29 19 .60 4
The Atlanta Braves can be
29 ·20 .592
• -,
Ka nsas£1 ty
if
they're
Minnesota
23 20 .535 J • 1 exc used
Texas
23 24 .d89 51
questioning
the
news
that
Bob
Ca liforn ia . 23 26 .469 61 ,
Ch icago
12 25 46B 6• 1 Gibson ' has- been dropped
•
Monday 's Results
from the St. Louis Cardinals'
Chicago 9 Bos ton 2
starting rotation.
Milwaukee 6 Oakl and J
(Only games scheduled)
They thought they saw
Today' s Pr obabl e' Pitchers
Gibson
out there firing
( All Time s EOTI
Chi cago { Allen 0-0) a.l Boston Monday night when the
(Cleveland J .J) , 7:30p .m .
Ca rdinals beat them, 1-0.
Te xas ( Hargan d·2l at Bal
t imore &lt;Tor rez 5-3), 7 . 30 p . m .
With good reason, too.
M ilwaukee (S laton 3-6) af
Lynn McGlothen is a u;.
Oakland (Perr y 1-n . 11 :00p m .
Detroit {Col eman 3-7 ) at yea rol d righthander from
Cali for nia !Tanan a '2 3), 10 :30
Monroe, La., who is just
p m. ,
New York &lt;Dobson 4-5) at about the same size as Gibson
Mmnesota &lt;Gol t z 4 4). 9 . 00 p.m .
Kansas City ( Bril es .t .JJ at and has many of his manCleveland (Ra ich 1-0) , 7 30 nerisms, including the fact
p.m .
that he wastes no time betWednesday's Games
Chicago at Boston
ween his pitches and wants to
Texas at Balt im or e, nig ht
get
the game over with as fast
Mil wa ukee at Oa klan d , nig ht
Detr oit at Ca liforni a, n igh t
as possible.
New Yor k at Minnesota , nigh t
It took McGlothen an hour
Ka n C1 t y at Clevelan d, night
and 40 minutes to do the job
Monday. night when he pitGiants are 3-2
ched a four-hitter for his

p.m

•

Generation Rap

20 .524
23 51 1
25 .44tl
2$ .390

Hou ston
Monday's Resul1 s
Ci~c1 at Ptt sbgh, ppd ., r ain
Phtladelphia 5 San Diego 1
New Yo rK 2 Houston o
Mon treal 5 Lo s Angel es 3
St Louis 1 Atlanta o
(On ly games scheduled)
Today 's Prob&lt;tble Pitchers
(All Times EDT I
San Francis co (Hali ck i J . l) at
Ch1cago ( Burr is 6-4&gt;. 2 30 p .m .
Los Angeles (Sutton 9 31 at
Montrea l (Renko Q.J), 8:05 p .m
Houston I Forsch 2-2) at New
York ( Hall o.o or Parker 1 2l,
8 :05p .m .
San Diego I Spillner 2.Sl at
Phi ladelph ia (l onborg 3-31, 7 : 35

REGINA TOLBERT

DON SIDERS

By United Press International
National League
Cinci at Pttsbgh , ppd ., rain

San Diego
Phil a

w I. pet. g.b.

Pitt sburgh
Ne~ York
Philadelphia
St Lou is
Montreal

celebrations were Betty
Lehew, Mr. and Mrs. Graf,
Minerva Williams, Columbus; Hugh Bniestle, Parkersburg, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Vernon Grinstead, Mr. and
Mrs. Earl Fields, Hartford,
W.Va.;Mr.andMrs. William
Utzinger, James Utzinger,
Westerville, and George
Johnson, Pomeroy.

the best buy for the $6.7
billion they spend each year
for prescriptions. "II Is a
curious set of values which
says lbal the consmner may
be given fall Information
about discretionary pur-

East

Ch.•cago

..

same prescription drug can
vary by as much as 200 per
cent in the same town.
as a result, he said, the
nation's consumers probably
are being cheated because
. they do not know where to get

M"ddl
1 epor t-p omeroy,

I

FTC proposes prescriptions prices
be advertised as are foo&gt;
d, clothing
WASHINGTON (UPI) - In forbid drug stores from
a move that could save advertising the prices of
consumers millions of doUars prescription drugs.
a year, the Federal Trade
FTC Cllainnan Lewis A.
Commission Monday Engman said a year-long
proposed rules to abolish investigation by his agency
laws under which most states showed that prices for the

The Dally Sentm·el,

Dodgers -lose 573, Reds· in first

Birthday observed .
The birthdays of Earl
Fields and Vernon Grinstead,
Hartford, W. Va., and
William Utzinger, Westervilie, were observed with a
dinner party Ssturday night
at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Litzinger , Westerville .
Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Glen
Graf, Columbus, entertained
with a brunch.
Attending the birthday

,.

3 -

Vall~y

h i

t

!

.

..

~

When yoLo ~on 't trust things to go right. trust us for r;.;;;~;J7i;Ai~
the money to help make them right. When you ,
need it. With no hossles. People trust their
sovings with Cily Loan. So you know we have to
be solid people to-- do business with. City Loan
&amp; Sovings. What makes us a different kind of
compony makes us ,a beffer ~ind of loan COf)lpany.

~m~roy, Ohio

125 E. Main St.
992-2171
f.,

.

,.
!

,,.

'.

I• J

'

�I ·I

~-The Daily Sentlin~11, !Vliddlep&lt;l~~~rr•ero~ , U -, ·tuesaay,

BPW holds

tcer installation

roses were Miss Freddie e~ch one with a praying han'd
Houdashell, president; Mrs. charm and a certificate of
th e
Mary Martin, vice president; members hip from
Mrs. Ann Bailey, secretary , Federation. Mrs. Vale was
a nd Mrs . Eloise Wilson, assisted by Mrs. Werner,
Mrs. Edith Forest arid Mrs.
treasurer. .
she
also
Mrs. Nellie Vale had a Wilson.
recognition service for the acknowledged recipients of
new members , presenting the sunburst 'pin which is
awarded
to
members
new
sponsori ng three
.~R,~::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::;:;:;:;:::::::;.::::::::;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::~:i:;.~~:~i8:::::::~::::::::::::::::::8
members.
They
included
»
~
Mrs. Vale, Mrs. Janet Korn,
Mrs. Wilson, Mrs. Mary
Bacon and Mrs . Mary
Insiallation of the 1975-76
officers by Mrs . Alwilda
Werner, past. president. was
conducted at a recen t
meeting of the Middleport
Btisiness and Professional
Women' s Club at the
Columbia Gas Co. office.
Installed .a nd prese nted

I Girl Scout I)jary I
~

NANCY HILL

•

Birthdays
celebrated
RACINE - Mercy Dawn
Hill, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Dennie E. Hill, Racine,
celebrated her first birthday
May 23.
Attending a party given in
her honor were her sister,
Sonja, her brother, Steve,
Mrs. Lillian Duffy, Syracuse,
a great-grandmother; Mrs .
Inez Hill, Racine, grandmother ; Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Bowers, Tam, Pam, Joey and
Brian, Reedsville ; Mrs.
Grace Huffman, Beth and
Greg, Mr. and Mrs. Don Hill,
Heather and Crissia, Mr. and
Mrs. Morris Wolfe and Jeff,
Mrs . Shirley Dugan, Richard
and Kevin, Mrs. Joe Proffitt
and Jaye, Mrs. Ret.a Hill,
Teresa, Mandy 'and Eric.
Others presenting gifts to
Marcy were Mr, and Mrs.
David Huddleston, Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Hunt and Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Hill.

Graduate
honored

MIDDLEPORT TROOP 39
Members of the Middleport Junior Troop 39 met at the
home of Mrs. Sibley Slack recently to. give a party honoring
Mrs. Ruth Spencer, assistant leader, and her lour month old
son. Gifts were presented to the baby by the scouts.
Cake, ice cream and punch were served to the troop
members, Mrs. Spencer and Leslie, Mrs. Judy Crooks and
Eddie, and Mrs. Roscoe Wise by Mrs. Slack and her daughter,
Vicky.
A meeting of the troop will be held June at which time
there will be a court of awards and a flyup ceremony for the
Brownies joining the troop.
POMEROY BROWNIE TROOP 76
Mrs. Gertrude Casto, Brownie leader who is advancing to
leader of the Pomeroy junior troop, was honored at the Friday
night picnic of the Brownies at Camp Kiashuta.
A white chrysanthemum was presented to Mrs. Casto.
Mrs. Art Eblin provided a decorated cake marked with the
Brownie emblem and inscribed "The Best Brownie Leader."
At the picnic were Carolyn Casto, Tammy Michael,
Michele Micllael, Tinuny Michael, Lisa Baxter, Trina Reeves,
Jaye Roberts, Cathy DeLong, Susan Jones, Tommy Werry,
Susie Thoma, Mrs. CastO,Mrs. Patty Michael, Mrs. Carolyn
Reeves, Mrs. Sue DeLong, Mrs. Judy Werry and Mrs. Pat
Thoma .

MRS. Thoma, service unit director, reports that all
Brownie troop.; - Pomeroy, Middleport, Syracuse, Salisbury
and Rutland - marched in the Memorial Day parade, along
with the Rutland Junior Troop. The Christian flag was carried
by the Rutland juniors as a reminder of the scouts' dedication
to God and their opposition "to Madelyn Murray O'Hare's
most recent action to ban religious broadcasts.

A program on the Christian
Children's Home in Wooster
highlighted the May meeting
of the Christian Women 's
Fellowship ~t the Bradford
Church of Christ. .
·
Mrs. Walt Wynd showed
slides on the Children's Home
and told of the activities there
and the needs of the hOme.
Mrs . Eleanor Hoover
presided at the business
meeting when by-laws were
adopted. Mrs. Merle Johnson
distributed letters to be sent
to the Federal Communications Commission in
protest of Madelyn Murry
O'Hare's latest move to have
religious programs removed
Mrs. John Sebo, Mrs. Edith
Dye, Mr. and Mrs. James
Hall , Mr. and Mrs. David
Goodwin and Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Elberfeld.'

MEIGS JR. HIGH saiOOL
· Middleport, Ohio

.P£NTEOOSTAI. SINGING
. and

THE JOYFUL SOUNDS
of Kingsport, Tennessee

Rev. W'llan Knittel
/

Rev. Terrence LaWrence
Director
.

•

·

We SHOW &amp; TELL

830 E. Main
Pomeroy, Ohio

COME "AND SEE

!-People receive the baptism of the
Holy Ghost.
Acts 2:1-4, Acts 10:44-46, Acts 19:1-6.
2. Water baptism, like the early Ch~rch
baptized, "IN JESUS NAME"!
Acts 2:38-ln obedience to Math . 28: 19.
Father, Son , and Holy Ghost are
title s. His name is JESUS! Acts 4: t2,
Acts 8:16, Acts 10:47-48, Acts 19 : 1-6.
3-Healing and deliverance through tile
power in the name of JESUS! Acts
3: 1-8.
4- People see the rapture of the Ch~rch
as a prophetic event of OUR time.
Come and hear,

We Accept Jo'ederal.Fuod SbHnps
PHONE: 992-3480
1'o

Graded
USDA
Choice
CHUCK

REEDSVILLE - The
fourth birthday anniversary
of Bret Allen Rood was
celebrated with a party at the
home of his grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs . Dawain Durst.
Homemade ice cream and
cake were served to Mrs.
Charlotte Rood and Bill
Wifanback, Coraopolis, Pa.;
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Durst1
Jeff and Bryan, Mr. and Mrs.
Virgil Holsinger. Letitia and
Aleshia, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Durst, Debbie, Dennis, Dee
Dee and David, Mr. and Mrs,
Dawain Durst and Brei. .
The honoree received gifts
and games were played.

NECESSARY

The couple will reside in
Morristown.

...

Give Dad
aUndeStarthe All-America Ring

·THE STORY BEHIND
FINE FURNITURE
AND APPLIANCES

~

Linde Stars- they're worn by Hollywood and
. TV celebrities. They're awarded to the All-America
football team. They:r§ "a handsome way to say
Happy Father's Dav. ·

BAKER FURNITURE

Goessler's Jewelry Store
Court St.

I ALWAYS

OF LAWS

HOW'
Cl.EAI'I

MUST

WE MAI(E

THe AIRRARIF'IEO?

DON'T
WE
ALL
BREATI-I.E
OUT
IMPURE
AIR

.
?

Pomeroy

THf.

RE.GULAToRS

MlJST
THIN~

WE
DON'T
GIVE A.
HANG
WHAT
IT ALL.

l WONDER

CAN'T
WE

THEY

MY

BUDGET

CoSTS

IF- THE

'GUYS tl'i

n..e

GET

SHOULD
SEE

CLEAN
MY
CAPITOl
Alii!
OVEN
~NOW
WITiiOUT
How we
5PEMOING
FEE.L
. BILLIONS POLI.UTtON AeouT
?
?
illE5E

~~~~~!~

But how clean, and at what cost?
We all want clean air and water.
But cleaning them up requires
more than just legislation. lt
requires spending a lot of money.

It's a good bet no one ever bothered to tell you what cleaning up
the air wi II cost you.

Social
Calendar

?'

·
89~
ARM ROAST•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
ENGLISH ROASt ..
e
SWISS STEAK•••••••••••••••••••••••••• 99
BEEF SHORT RIBs••••••••••••••••••89
SUPERIORS

·usDA CHOICE

•

And you and we, as consumers,
have to pay for it. Fact is, we're
both paying for it right now-today
-in nearly every product we buy.
When a chemical company, steel
mill or auto maker has to invest in
pollutio n control equipment it becomes a part of their cost of doing
business, and increases the price
of their products.

If we, at just our newes\ plant
were to install scrubbers to
meet clean air standards it
would cost $260,000,000. Plus
.$91 ,000,000 a year ... year after
year . .. to operate them.

"

The same is true of our product,
electricity.
The cost of installation. and opera· tion , of equipment for pollution ·
control becomes part of your cost
of' electricity. That's why we're
eternally questioning the need, the
method and degree of pollution
controls.

USDII CHOICE

And that's just one plant.
Encouraged by EPA, electric
utilities have installed or com•
milled to install101 scn..:::.::.,rs.
What will the cost be?
frlold onto your .b ankbook .. . 3Y2
billion. Plus $1 ,125,000,000 a

··················~

.

This message
not published at customers' expense. Paid for. by company stockholders,
.

lb

SUPERIORS USDA Cf!OICE
· SHOULDER ROUND ·

•

•

•

•

USDA CHOICE
FINE 'FOR SOUP

.

USDA Choice Beef

·

.

lb.

•

•

11

..,

Chewing Tobacco
U. S. GRADE ASMAll SIZE

All Brands ·

EGGS

3

$1 00

doz.

·gallon

tax

c

Regular 79'

$}19

BAN-ANAS

plus

New Cereal

2% MILK

LOW PRICE SPECIALI

Golden Ripe

Purina "Freakies"

BROUGHTON'S LOW FAT

plastic

carton

60

Ground Beef.................. J~:.. 79'
Ground Chuck ................'l:. 99'
Ground Round ...............W...

box

NESCAFE

LOW PRICE SPECIAL/

DR. PEPPER
16

8

OL

bottles

99~

PAK

Thurs. Only

Bonus Pack

RC
16 oz. bots.

:8 $}19

1

bld you dream you
~j. 1(4!lt'tl~e bird when you ·
ski&lt;lded into that big
oak tree the other
night? .
. Fearnot.Justwing

Friday Only

Armour's Treet
'BANQUET

2 lb.

Chicken

boK

6noown'totheex~r~

· · ·

yourindeHM~ent iruluranee

..
...

We're free t.oplaoe
: Y,()urins\mmoewith .
t

... , '

f~ablecomparues.
'

'

••
••
' '•
.
••

1

.

: And we're free to
choose the beat poli~
for you,

W~ole ·Fried

NICKERSON'S

Pll.

m.,,,._•..,..,

ONION RINGS
...

. NORTH STAR

'

I.

\,

79~
69~

5-lb.
bag

89~

-

SCOT LAD FRENDf FRIED

POTATOES .

$1.99

Hb.
bag

"'

•'

'"•"

pkg.

MOORE'S
'.

Reuter-Brogani
INSURANCE

"

l~b.

OCEAN PERCH

TWIN P9PS
•.

,

PAK

l·•••vnhe,veralatrong .

Qne problem. Unless the Clean Air
· Act is amended we don't have the
flexibility to use' the less expensive
method. If you want the savings,
why not write your congressman.
,
_,
He wants to know how you feel.

'

g,

If you have difficulty measuring
that amount think of it this way:
if the first 3Y2 billion were in one
dollar bills, it would make a line
long enough to encircle the entire
earth over 13 times. ·

That would be a terrible waste of
your money when there is a
proven, more effective, less e.xpensive way to maintain the clean
air standards.

·

lb . 99~

~

)

In terms of your bill you~d face this
:potential: some experts estlm~te
scrubbers would increase the cost
of electricity as much as 30% .

•

•

99

year ... year after year ...
to ope rate therri!

Ohio Power Company
.'

•

lb.

,

SUPERIO~S

SERVICES START
GRAHAM STATION ~ A
series of non • denomina tiona!
gospel services . are being
held at the Homemakers Club
House at Graham Cemetery,
Graljam Station, W. Va., at
7:30p.m. Tuesday, Thursday,
Friday and Sunday evening.
L. SIUlbred and R. Stipp are
conducting the services. The
public is welcome. ·

'

Let 's consider what it would cost to
perform only one
. function: remov.ing sulfur dioxide the way the
Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA) suggests electric utilities
do i_
t.

.Billions!

sge

lb.

TUESDAY
BEAN Dinner beginning at
Ua.m. at Mason Fire Station
sponsored
by
ladies
auxiliary. Cornbread will
also be included in I!lenu. " "
TENT meeting now in
progress through June 15 at
crossroads SR 124 and Bradbury Road. Fred Shockley
and Amos Tillis, evangelists.
Music anll special singing.
Public invited,
POMEROY Chapter 186,
Order of the Eastern Star,
7:4li p.m. at the Masonic
Temple.
STATED meeting , Middleport Masonic Lodge 363,
7:30 p.m. at temple. All
Master Masons invited.
WEDNESDAY
REGULAR meeting,
Pomeroy Lodge 164, 7:30p.m.
· All Master Masons invited.
MIDDLEPORT Firemen's
Auxiliary, 7:30 P&lt;'• m. Wednesday at the firehbuse. Mrs.
Patty Kloes and Mrs.
Kathryn Metzger hostesses.

PINK, '60.00 up
BLUE, '87.50 up

Middleport, Ohici

STEAK

;;;;_._,_.:&amp;::::::=:::::::::::::::::::::--:=::~:--&amp;~~~:~~8!».'

•••

'

8 R A N .D

MARKET • Open ·oaily 9·to 10 • Sun~ .10 to 10 ,

THURSSDAY
EVANGELINE Chapter,
O.E.S., 7:30p. m. Thursday,
Middleport Masonic Temole.
SA'itJRDAY ' . '.
HYMN SING, Mount
Moriah Church of God, 7 p.m.
Featured groups will be The
Edenairs, Layne Bluegrass
Singers,
and ·
the
Evangel'aiers Bluegrass
Singers. The public.is invited.

6 DAYS
A WEEK

D&amp;D MEAT

U. S. Government Inspected

•

co~TS

·.. ·
.0PEN.
MON. thru SAT.

USDA GRADED DIOICE

' ofRev. John F. Stilts
ficiated at the May 23 double
ring ceremony uniting Mrs.
Jerry Smith, Morristown,
and Don A. Jett, formerly of
Pomeroy, in marriage.
The wedding took place at
7:30 p.m. at the United
Methodist
Church
at
Belmont. Attendants were
Mr. and Mrs. William Cusick,
who hosted a dinner party
following the ceremony.
Mrs. Jett attended Bowling
Green University and is
factory teacher· for Cusick
Products, Ind. Jett is employed by Goodman Builders,
St. Clairsville .

At Baker's

SPENDING THOUG.HT
ALL \T
ri-lE MONEY
WOULO
IF THEY
CAN P~OVE TAKE IS
ITS TOTAl..l..Y A COUPLE

from radio and television.
Announced were the June !8 revivals at the Dexter
Church of Christ with Chuck
Russell as evangelist; at the
Pomeroy Church of Christ
with Ron Moyer as
evangelist. Also announced
were evangelistic services at
the Bradbqry Church of
Christ June 8-13,-with the
Operation Evangelize Team.
June 8 will be the youth
rally at Fort Meigs with the
"Sonshlne" group to have the
program. There will be a
softball game at that time.
Group singing of ' 'When We
All Get to Heaven" opened
the meeting with Mrs . Polly
Smith having the prayer.
Mrs . Ann Lambert and Mrs.
Linda Rilfle had devotions
using a quiz on the women of
the Bible. The meeting closed
with " Rescue the Perishing"
and prayer by Mrs . Hoover . .
Refreshments were served.

SONS
OF
GOD
JUBILEE
JUNE 2-6 • 7:30 PM

Religious Education

at the meeting.
The traveling prize was
won by Mrs. Werner with

+·-·
'

June a,J915

Couple wed
on May 23

Mrs. Vale winning the attendance prize.
Refreshments were serv~
by a committee headed by '
Mary Jane Scaggs' with Mrs.
Falre Kennedy, Mrs. Joan
Vaughan, Mrs. LOuise Davia
and Miss Erna Jesse as
hostesses for the social hour.

Fellowship ·has meeting

" Lt. Col. and Mts. James M. of her grandson, David
Roller and son, John, Cooper, son of Mr. and Mrs.
returned to their home at Henry Cooper.
·
Andrews Air Force Base in
A family picnic was held
Maryland Saturday morning Thursday evening at the
after spending 'several days home of Mr. and Mrs. Kenhere with his mother, Mrs. neth Cale for the Roller
Dorothy Roller and other family. Attending besides the
relatives. Mrs . Roller's James Roller faiiJilY and
lllOther, Mrs. Eva Hartley, Mrs. Dorothy Roller were
accompanied them home and , Mr. and Mrs. Richard Roller,
from there will go to Chester, Laurie and Brad, Belpre, and
Pa., to attend the graduation Mr. and Mrs. Richard Gress.

,

Bret Rood
ts fiet ed

:I: DON'T
MlNO

Lemley-Frizzle vows read

Rollers end areavisits

· Speaker

j~

committee chairwomen, and
Miss Houdashelt called at\i!ntion to the picture in the
Ohio Business Women of Mrs.
Werner and Mrs. Martin with
State Highway Department
workers pertaining to the
defensive driving course.
Bicentennial key chains
and necklaces are for.sale by
the club and were distributed

In an afternoon ceremony
·Thursday evening an old
Tuesday, May 27, Franklin . fashioned belling honored the
Lemley and Nellie Frizzle newlyweds. Attending were
exchanged wedding vows.
Ross Scarberry, Mildred and
Rev. Donald D. Combs, Suzy, Charles Scarberry,
pastor of the Moun t Moriah Etta Mae Parsons, Kenny
Church of God, officiated at and Tonya, Robert Scar'
the wedding which took place berry, Cathy and Gina, Glenn
at the Ross Scarberry home Tucker', Anna Lee, Rod, Ross,
beneath a rose trellis on the Randy and Allen, Melvin
fron t lawn.
Forrester, Tom and Shirley
Mildred Scarberry served Wolfe, James Kiser, Mary,
as the bride's attendant, with Ray, Connie and Patty, Jim
Ross Scarberry as the hest " MeHaffey and Anne, Minni~
man. The bride was given in Given , Mrs. Foreman, and
marriage by Glenn Tucker. Mr. and Mrs. Hayes McMurray.

•

Mr. and Mrs . " Ken
McLaughlin entertained
Tuesday night following
commencement exercises at
'Meigs High School with an
open house honoring their
daughter, Deborah, a
graduate.
Guests were Mrs. Doris
HoteUing, Alvada, Deborah:s
grandmother; Mrs. Norma
Wedge and Susie, Fostoria ;
Mrs. Bonnie Tyson and Mark,
Alvada, Mrs. Bill Howell,
Scott and Robbie, Rittman ;
Mr . and Mrs . John Arnott,
Becky and K. C., Syracuse ;
Dr. and Mrs. Roger Daniels,
Mr. and Mrs . Don Thomas.
Becky, Greg and Dan,I· Mr.
and Mrs. Dick Rosenbaum,
Tom Lowery, Sandy Curt~
Judy Owen, Vicky Vaughan,
all local; Heather Hamlin,
Mark Williams', Duane· Ward,
and Emily Schutt, Athens ;
and the honored guest's
brothers, Alan of Hocking
Technical College, Duane and
Kevin.
She also received gifts from
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Hotelling,
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Barkman,
Mr. and Mrs . Bruce
McLaughlin, Mr. and Mrs.
Melvin Hotelling, Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Brumiield, Mrs.
Norma Goodwin, Mr . and
Mrs. George Kalatta, Mr. and

By Charlene Hoeflich

Kunzelman.
The bicentennial meeting
Saturday io Columbus at the
Roadway Inn was announced
along with BPW tours to
Munich and Holland. Also
read was a communication
about the national convention
to be held a t Las .
V
Jul 25
27 A
eglas,
tsy
•
g've
nua repor were 1 . n bny

..

. '

' I

6 pak

size

39~

-

12 ounce ·
can

~·

Corn Beef Hash
Armour's

15'-4 oz.
_can

59e

.~

Vienna Sausage··

~·100

DIET RITE
FLAVORS .

4:

$}00 .-

·'

" Plus Dep.

All Week Price

•

•
'

DAD'S

ROOT BEER.
16 oz. bottles

·8

PAK

'

I •

."' .
'

�I ·I

~-The Daily Sentlin~11, !Vliddlep&lt;l~~~rr•ero~ , U -, ·tuesaay,

BPW holds

tcer installation

roses were Miss Freddie e~ch one with a praying han'd
Houdashell, president; Mrs. charm and a certificate of
th e
Mary Martin, vice president; members hip from
Mrs. Ann Bailey, secretary , Federation. Mrs. Vale was
a nd Mrs . Eloise Wilson, assisted by Mrs. Werner,
Mrs. Edith Forest arid Mrs.
treasurer. .
she
also
Mrs. Nellie Vale had a Wilson.
recognition service for the acknowledged recipients of
new members , presenting the sunburst 'pin which is
awarded
to
members
new
sponsori ng three
.~R,~::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::;:;:;:;:::::::;.::::::::;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::~:i:;.~~:~i8:::::::~::::::::::::::::::8
members.
They
included
»
~
Mrs. Vale, Mrs. Janet Korn,
Mrs. Wilson, Mrs. Mary
Bacon and Mrs . Mary
Insiallation of the 1975-76
officers by Mrs . Alwilda
Werner, past. president. was
conducted at a recen t
meeting of the Middleport
Btisiness and Professional
Women' s Club at the
Columbia Gas Co. office.
Installed .a nd prese nted

I Girl Scout I)jary I
~

NANCY HILL

•

Birthdays
celebrated
RACINE - Mercy Dawn
Hill, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Dennie E. Hill, Racine,
celebrated her first birthday
May 23.
Attending a party given in
her honor were her sister,
Sonja, her brother, Steve,
Mrs. Lillian Duffy, Syracuse,
a great-grandmother; Mrs .
Inez Hill, Racine, grandmother ; Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Bowers, Tam, Pam, Joey and
Brian, Reedsville ; Mrs.
Grace Huffman, Beth and
Greg, Mr. and Mrs. Don Hill,
Heather and Crissia, Mr. and
Mrs. Morris Wolfe and Jeff,
Mrs . Shirley Dugan, Richard
and Kevin, Mrs. Joe Proffitt
and Jaye, Mrs. Ret.a Hill,
Teresa, Mandy 'and Eric.
Others presenting gifts to
Marcy were Mr, and Mrs.
David Huddleston, Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Hunt and Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Hill.

Graduate
honored

MIDDLEPORT TROOP 39
Members of the Middleport Junior Troop 39 met at the
home of Mrs. Sibley Slack recently to. give a party honoring
Mrs. Ruth Spencer, assistant leader, and her lour month old
son. Gifts were presented to the baby by the scouts.
Cake, ice cream and punch were served to the troop
members, Mrs. Spencer and Leslie, Mrs. Judy Crooks and
Eddie, and Mrs. Roscoe Wise by Mrs. Slack and her daughter,
Vicky.
A meeting of the troop will be held June at which time
there will be a court of awards and a flyup ceremony for the
Brownies joining the troop.
POMEROY BROWNIE TROOP 76
Mrs. Gertrude Casto, Brownie leader who is advancing to
leader of the Pomeroy junior troop, was honored at the Friday
night picnic of the Brownies at Camp Kiashuta.
A white chrysanthemum was presented to Mrs. Casto.
Mrs. Art Eblin provided a decorated cake marked with the
Brownie emblem and inscribed "The Best Brownie Leader."
At the picnic were Carolyn Casto, Tammy Michael,
Michele Micllael, Tinuny Michael, Lisa Baxter, Trina Reeves,
Jaye Roberts, Cathy DeLong, Susan Jones, Tommy Werry,
Susie Thoma, Mrs. CastO,Mrs. Patty Michael, Mrs. Carolyn
Reeves, Mrs. Sue DeLong, Mrs. Judy Werry and Mrs. Pat
Thoma .

MRS. Thoma, service unit director, reports that all
Brownie troop.; - Pomeroy, Middleport, Syracuse, Salisbury
and Rutland - marched in the Memorial Day parade, along
with the Rutland Junior Troop. The Christian flag was carried
by the Rutland juniors as a reminder of the scouts' dedication
to God and their opposition "to Madelyn Murray O'Hare's
most recent action to ban religious broadcasts.

A program on the Christian
Children's Home in Wooster
highlighted the May meeting
of the Christian Women 's
Fellowship ~t the Bradford
Church of Christ. .
·
Mrs. Walt Wynd showed
slides on the Children's Home
and told of the activities there
and the needs of the hOme.
Mrs . Eleanor Hoover
presided at the business
meeting when by-laws were
adopted. Mrs. Merle Johnson
distributed letters to be sent
to the Federal Communications Commission in
protest of Madelyn Murry
O'Hare's latest move to have
religious programs removed
Mrs. John Sebo, Mrs. Edith
Dye, Mr. and Mrs. James
Hall , Mr. and Mrs. David
Goodwin and Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Elberfeld.'

MEIGS JR. HIGH saiOOL
· Middleport, Ohio

.P£NTEOOSTAI. SINGING
. and

THE JOYFUL SOUNDS
of Kingsport, Tennessee

Rev. W'llan Knittel
/

Rev. Terrence LaWrence
Director
.

•

·

We SHOW &amp; TELL

830 E. Main
Pomeroy, Ohio

COME "AND SEE

!-People receive the baptism of the
Holy Ghost.
Acts 2:1-4, Acts 10:44-46, Acts 19:1-6.
2. Water baptism, like the early Ch~rch
baptized, "IN JESUS NAME"!
Acts 2:38-ln obedience to Math . 28: 19.
Father, Son , and Holy Ghost are
title s. His name is JESUS! Acts 4: t2,
Acts 8:16, Acts 10:47-48, Acts 19 : 1-6.
3-Healing and deliverance through tile
power in the name of JESUS! Acts
3: 1-8.
4- People see the rapture of the Ch~rch
as a prophetic event of OUR time.
Come and hear,

We Accept Jo'ederal.Fuod SbHnps
PHONE: 992-3480
1'o

Graded
USDA
Choice
CHUCK

REEDSVILLE - The
fourth birthday anniversary
of Bret Allen Rood was
celebrated with a party at the
home of his grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs . Dawain Durst.
Homemade ice cream and
cake were served to Mrs.
Charlotte Rood and Bill
Wifanback, Coraopolis, Pa.;
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Durst1
Jeff and Bryan, Mr. and Mrs.
Virgil Holsinger. Letitia and
Aleshia, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Durst, Debbie, Dennis, Dee
Dee and David, Mr. and Mrs,
Dawain Durst and Brei. .
The honoree received gifts
and games were played.

NECESSARY

The couple will reside in
Morristown.

...

Give Dad
aUndeStarthe All-America Ring

·THE STORY BEHIND
FINE FURNITURE
AND APPLIANCES

~

Linde Stars- they're worn by Hollywood and
. TV celebrities. They're awarded to the All-America
football team. They:r§ "a handsome way to say
Happy Father's Dav. ·

BAKER FURNITURE

Goessler's Jewelry Store
Court St.

I ALWAYS

OF LAWS

HOW'
Cl.EAI'I

MUST

WE MAI(E

THe AIRRARIF'IEO?

DON'T
WE
ALL
BREATI-I.E
OUT
IMPURE
AIR

.
?

Pomeroy

THf.

RE.GULAToRS

MlJST
THIN~

WE
DON'T
GIVE A.
HANG
WHAT
IT ALL.

l WONDER

CAN'T
WE

THEY

MY

BUDGET

CoSTS

IF- THE

'GUYS tl'i

n..e

GET

SHOULD
SEE

CLEAN
MY
CAPITOl
Alii!
OVEN
~NOW
WITiiOUT
How we
5PEMOING
FEE.L
. BILLIONS POLI.UTtON AeouT
?
?
illE5E

~~~~~!~

But how clean, and at what cost?
We all want clean air and water.
But cleaning them up requires
more than just legislation. lt
requires spending a lot of money.

It's a good bet no one ever bothered to tell you what cleaning up
the air wi II cost you.

Social
Calendar

?'

·
89~
ARM ROAST•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
ENGLISH ROASt ..
e
SWISS STEAK•••••••••••••••••••••••••• 99
BEEF SHORT RIBs••••••••••••••••••89
SUPERIORS

·usDA CHOICE

•

And you and we, as consumers,
have to pay for it. Fact is, we're
both paying for it right now-today
-in nearly every product we buy.
When a chemical company, steel
mill or auto maker has to invest in
pollutio n control equipment it becomes a part of their cost of doing
business, and increases the price
of their products.

If we, at just our newes\ plant
were to install scrubbers to
meet clean air standards it
would cost $260,000,000. Plus
.$91 ,000,000 a year ... year after
year . .. to operate them.

"

The same is true of our product,
electricity.
The cost of installation. and opera· tion , of equipment for pollution ·
control becomes part of your cost
of' electricity. That's why we're
eternally questioning the need, the
method and degree of pollution
controls.

USDII CHOICE

And that's just one plant.
Encouraged by EPA, electric
utilities have installed or com•
milled to install101 scn..:::.::.,rs.
What will the cost be?
frlold onto your .b ankbook .. . 3Y2
billion. Plus $1 ,125,000,000 a

··················~

.

This message
not published at customers' expense. Paid for. by company stockholders,
.

lb

SUPERIORS USDA Cf!OICE
· SHOULDER ROUND ·

•

•

•

•

USDA CHOICE
FINE 'FOR SOUP

.

USDA Choice Beef

·

.

lb.

•

•

11

..,

Chewing Tobacco
U. S. GRADE ASMAll SIZE

All Brands ·

EGGS

3

$1 00

doz.

·gallon

tax

c

Regular 79'

$}19

BAN-ANAS

plus

New Cereal

2% MILK

LOW PRICE SPECIALI

Golden Ripe

Purina "Freakies"

BROUGHTON'S LOW FAT

plastic

carton

60

Ground Beef.................. J~:.. 79'
Ground Chuck ................'l:. 99'
Ground Round ...............W...

box

NESCAFE

LOW PRICE SPECIAL/

DR. PEPPER
16

8

OL

bottles

99~

PAK

Thurs. Only

Bonus Pack

RC
16 oz. bots.

:8 $}19

1

bld you dream you
~j. 1(4!lt'tl~e bird when you ·
ski&lt;lded into that big
oak tree the other
night? .
. Fearnot.Justwing

Friday Only

Armour's Treet
'BANQUET

2 lb.

Chicken

boK

6noown'totheex~r~

· · ·

yourindeHM~ent iruluranee

..
...

We're free t.oplaoe
: Y,()urins\mmoewith .
t

... , '

f~ablecomparues.
'

'

••
••
' '•
.
••

1

.

: And we're free to
choose the beat poli~
for you,

W~ole ·Fried

NICKERSON'S

Pll.

m.,,,._•..,..,

ONION RINGS
...

. NORTH STAR

'

I.

\,

79~
69~

5-lb.
bag

89~

-

SCOT LAD FRENDf FRIED

POTATOES .

$1.99

Hb.
bag

"'

•'

'"•"

pkg.

MOORE'S
'.

Reuter-Brogani
INSURANCE

"

l~b.

OCEAN PERCH

TWIN P9PS
•.

,

PAK

l·•••vnhe,veralatrong .

Qne problem. Unless the Clean Air
· Act is amended we don't have the
flexibility to use' the less expensive
method. If you want the savings,
why not write your congressman.
,
_,
He wants to know how you feel.

'

g,

If you have difficulty measuring
that amount think of it this way:
if the first 3Y2 billion were in one
dollar bills, it would make a line
long enough to encircle the entire
earth over 13 times. ·

That would be a terrible waste of
your money when there is a
proven, more effective, less e.xpensive way to maintain the clean
air standards.

·

lb . 99~

~

)

In terms of your bill you~d face this
:potential: some experts estlm~te
scrubbers would increase the cost
of electricity as much as 30% .

•

•

99

year ... year after year ...
to ope rate therri!

Ohio Power Company
.'

•

lb.

,

SUPERIO~S

SERVICES START
GRAHAM STATION ~ A
series of non • denomina tiona!
gospel services . are being
held at the Homemakers Club
House at Graham Cemetery,
Graljam Station, W. Va., at
7:30p.m. Tuesday, Thursday,
Friday and Sunday evening.
L. SIUlbred and R. Stipp are
conducting the services. The
public is welcome. ·

'

Let 's consider what it would cost to
perform only one
. function: remov.ing sulfur dioxide the way the
Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA) suggests electric utilities
do i_
t.

.Billions!

sge

lb.

TUESDAY
BEAN Dinner beginning at
Ua.m. at Mason Fire Station
sponsored
by
ladies
auxiliary. Cornbread will
also be included in I!lenu. " "
TENT meeting now in
progress through June 15 at
crossroads SR 124 and Bradbury Road. Fred Shockley
and Amos Tillis, evangelists.
Music anll special singing.
Public invited,
POMEROY Chapter 186,
Order of the Eastern Star,
7:4li p.m. at the Masonic
Temple.
STATED meeting , Middleport Masonic Lodge 363,
7:30 p.m. at temple. All
Master Masons invited.
WEDNESDAY
REGULAR meeting,
Pomeroy Lodge 164, 7:30p.m.
· All Master Masons invited.
MIDDLEPORT Firemen's
Auxiliary, 7:30 P&lt;'• m. Wednesday at the firehbuse. Mrs.
Patty Kloes and Mrs.
Kathryn Metzger hostesses.

PINK, '60.00 up
BLUE, '87.50 up

Middleport, Ohici

STEAK

;;;;_._,_.:&amp;::::::=:::::::::::::::::::::--:=::~:--&amp;~~~:~~8!».'

•••

'

8 R A N .D

MARKET • Open ·oaily 9·to 10 • Sun~ .10 to 10 ,

THURSSDAY
EVANGELINE Chapter,
O.E.S., 7:30p. m. Thursday,
Middleport Masonic Temole.
SA'itJRDAY ' . '.
HYMN SING, Mount
Moriah Church of God, 7 p.m.
Featured groups will be The
Edenairs, Layne Bluegrass
Singers,
and ·
the
Evangel'aiers Bluegrass
Singers. The public.is invited.

6 DAYS
A WEEK

D&amp;D MEAT

U. S. Government Inspected

•

co~TS

·.. ·
.0PEN.
MON. thru SAT.

USDA GRADED DIOICE

' ofRev. John F. Stilts
ficiated at the May 23 double
ring ceremony uniting Mrs.
Jerry Smith, Morristown,
and Don A. Jett, formerly of
Pomeroy, in marriage.
The wedding took place at
7:30 p.m. at the United
Methodist
Church
at
Belmont. Attendants were
Mr. and Mrs. William Cusick,
who hosted a dinner party
following the ceremony.
Mrs. Jett attended Bowling
Green University and is
factory teacher· for Cusick
Products, Ind. Jett is employed by Goodman Builders,
St. Clairsville .

At Baker's

SPENDING THOUG.HT
ALL \T
ri-lE MONEY
WOULO
IF THEY
CAN P~OVE TAKE IS
ITS TOTAl..l..Y A COUPLE

from radio and television.
Announced were the June !8 revivals at the Dexter
Church of Christ with Chuck
Russell as evangelist; at the
Pomeroy Church of Christ
with Ron Moyer as
evangelist. Also announced
were evangelistic services at
the Bradbqry Church of
Christ June 8-13,-with the
Operation Evangelize Team.
June 8 will be the youth
rally at Fort Meigs with the
"Sonshlne" group to have the
program. There will be a
softball game at that time.
Group singing of ' 'When We
All Get to Heaven" opened
the meeting with Mrs . Polly
Smith having the prayer.
Mrs . Ann Lambert and Mrs.
Linda Rilfle had devotions
using a quiz on the women of
the Bible. The meeting closed
with " Rescue the Perishing"
and prayer by Mrs . Hoover . .
Refreshments were served.

SONS
OF
GOD
JUBILEE
JUNE 2-6 • 7:30 PM

Religious Education

at the meeting.
The traveling prize was
won by Mrs. Werner with

+·-·
'

June a,J915

Couple wed
on May 23

Mrs. Vale winning the attendance prize.
Refreshments were serv~
by a committee headed by '
Mary Jane Scaggs' with Mrs.
Falre Kennedy, Mrs. Joan
Vaughan, Mrs. LOuise Davia
and Miss Erna Jesse as
hostesses for the social hour.

Fellowship ·has meeting

" Lt. Col. and Mts. James M. of her grandson, David
Roller and son, John, Cooper, son of Mr. and Mrs.
returned to their home at Henry Cooper.
·
Andrews Air Force Base in
A family picnic was held
Maryland Saturday morning Thursday evening at the
after spending 'several days home of Mr. and Mrs. Kenhere with his mother, Mrs. neth Cale for the Roller
Dorothy Roller and other family. Attending besides the
relatives. Mrs . Roller's James Roller faiiJilY and
lllOther, Mrs. Eva Hartley, Mrs. Dorothy Roller were
accompanied them home and , Mr. and Mrs. Richard Roller,
from there will go to Chester, Laurie and Brad, Belpre, and
Pa., to attend the graduation Mr. and Mrs. Richard Gress.

,

Bret Rood
ts fiet ed

:I: DON'T
MlNO

Lemley-Frizzle vows read

Rollers end areavisits

· Speaker

j~

committee chairwomen, and
Miss Houdashelt called at\i!ntion to the picture in the
Ohio Business Women of Mrs.
Werner and Mrs. Martin with
State Highway Department
workers pertaining to the
defensive driving course.
Bicentennial key chains
and necklaces are for.sale by
the club and were distributed

In an afternoon ceremony
·Thursday evening an old
Tuesday, May 27, Franklin . fashioned belling honored the
Lemley and Nellie Frizzle newlyweds. Attending were
exchanged wedding vows.
Ross Scarberry, Mildred and
Rev. Donald D. Combs, Suzy, Charles Scarberry,
pastor of the Moun t Moriah Etta Mae Parsons, Kenny
Church of God, officiated at and Tonya, Robert Scar'
the wedding which took place berry, Cathy and Gina, Glenn
at the Ross Scarberry home Tucker', Anna Lee, Rod, Ross,
beneath a rose trellis on the Randy and Allen, Melvin
fron t lawn.
Forrester, Tom and Shirley
Mildred Scarberry served Wolfe, James Kiser, Mary,
as the bride's attendant, with Ray, Connie and Patty, Jim
Ross Scarberry as the hest " MeHaffey and Anne, Minni~
man. The bride was given in Given , Mrs. Foreman, and
marriage by Glenn Tucker. Mr. and Mrs. Hayes McMurray.

•

Mr. and Mrs . " Ken
McLaughlin entertained
Tuesday night following
commencement exercises at
'Meigs High School with an
open house honoring their
daughter, Deborah, a
graduate.
Guests were Mrs. Doris
HoteUing, Alvada, Deborah:s
grandmother; Mrs. Norma
Wedge and Susie, Fostoria ;
Mrs. Bonnie Tyson and Mark,
Alvada, Mrs. Bill Howell,
Scott and Robbie, Rittman ;
Mr . and Mrs . John Arnott,
Becky and K. C., Syracuse ;
Dr. and Mrs. Roger Daniels,
Mr. and Mrs . Don Thomas.
Becky, Greg and Dan,I· Mr.
and Mrs. Dick Rosenbaum,
Tom Lowery, Sandy Curt~
Judy Owen, Vicky Vaughan,
all local; Heather Hamlin,
Mark Williams', Duane· Ward,
and Emily Schutt, Athens ;
and the honored guest's
brothers, Alan of Hocking
Technical College, Duane and
Kevin.
She also received gifts from
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Hotelling,
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Barkman,
Mr. and Mrs . Bruce
McLaughlin, Mr. and Mrs.
Melvin Hotelling, Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Brumiield, Mrs.
Norma Goodwin, Mr . and
Mrs. George Kalatta, Mr. and

By Charlene Hoeflich

Kunzelman.
The bicentennial meeting
Saturday io Columbus at the
Roadway Inn was announced
along with BPW tours to
Munich and Holland. Also
read was a communication
about the national convention
to be held a t Las .
V
Jul 25
27 A
eglas,
tsy
•
g've
nua repor were 1 . n bny

..

. '

' I

6 pak

size

39~

-

12 ounce ·
can

~·

Corn Beef Hash
Armour's

15'-4 oz.
_can

59e

.~

Vienna Sausage··

~·100

DIET RITE
FLAVORS .

4:

$}00 .-

·'

" Plus Dep.

All Week Price

•

•
'

DAD'S

ROOT BEER.
16 oz. bottles

·8

PAK

'

I •

."' .
'

�~'t!11~~®1.4.t ..,_"d .-J , _
square~

Ji'or Fast Results ·Use Sentinel iClassifieds
2 Sic; ~omeroy 11
_ _ Business Services

to

form four ordinary y.·ords

I MERRY r
I 1-

rn ..
,

WH~'T

HAPPIONED
WHEN HE APPEAI&lt;:El7
EJEFO~ A SEA
OF FACES?'

HERTHS

Now arranre the circled leltera
to form tho aurprl .. answer, u
ourreated by tho above cartoon.

[ ,.,., ___ I HIS t I I XJ [XX I)
( Aatwcn~

tomorrow)

Jun•blr.. THINK CHICK APPEAR GLUTEN

Yc:t14"rday't

I

An•"'rr: H( ·~ · unprm mg"- nhe11 1/ wmt· ~ lrHhrlw q
~ l rrm g{ gtr/1'1.- 'PICKING UP"

Wanted To Buy

Wanted To Buy

WA NTED old u pr rg ht p1anos,
any condtt 1on
Pay .ng SlO

OL D fu r niture, 1ce bo xes
brass beds, or comp l ete
h ousehold s
Wr1te M
D
Mtl l er. Rt 4 , Pom e r oy

each F1 r st floor only Wrtte
and g rve dJrectrons to Wtften
P rano Co
Box 188, SardiS ,
Oh 10 43946

OhiO Ca ll 992 7760

10 7 74

5 28 6tp

Help Wanted
WAITR

ES~ .

Crow s St ea k House

SELL yo ur mobile home for
cas h 15 homes wanted, 1958
thru 1972 mode ls
Phone
(6 14) 446 1425 , Gall •pol ,s
3 9 7Btl

S 30 IDle
wtlh
R EAUT ! C I A N
manager's

Phone

l1cense

-------------!-'hone

992 2BCjl0 or 992 5602

5 29 btc

\971 SKYLI N E 12lC.60

.----------.,

992 5872

6 l 7tp

NEWSPAPER

10 x 55 FURN I SH ED mob tl e
hom e new red carpetrng .
new washer an d a1r co n
d 1t1o ner $3,500 Phon e 992
7 1)9

CARRIER
WANTED

5 30 6tc

IN

For Rent

MASON

1. BEDRM mobil e home, 308
Page St , m Mtddleport S75
depos•t r eQutred
• 5 11 tfc

CONTACT

THE DAILY SENTINEL
992-2156

2 BED RM mo bile h ome '"
Rac.ne area
A C Phone

992 5858

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION

6 J

ttc

"7 R M S 2 b aths . 2 m de s from

Columbu s, Ohto
May 16 , 1975
Contract Sales L egal Copy

Harr~sonvot l l e, s hown b y
appo tn tm ent only Call (5 13)
83911 126
6 3 61c

No 75·289
UN IT PRICE CONTRACT

FOLD DOWN tent cemper
sleep s etght, self contamed
$400 ~hone 992 7378

-

1

PUBLIC NOTICE
To A lfr ed E Wa rd . address
unknown , whose last known
add r ess was Route L Onent,
Oh10
In th e Common Plea s Court
Of Metgs Co un ty,
Oh10 ,
Pomeroy , Oh1o, Case No
15 , 809 ,
Paultne
Ward.
Plainhff. vs Alfre d E Ward ,
Defendant. a complamt for
d1vorce and other relief has
been ftled aga1nst you You
are requ .red to an swer t h e
Comp la tnt W1th 1n twenty etght
days after the last publlca t1 on
Larry Spencer,
Clerk of Courts ,
Me1gs County , Ohto
By N el lleM Brown
Ch tef Deput y

5 22 tic
99 2

5 25 12tc
FUR N apt 5 rooms and bath.
n1c e large yard . bath and 1 1,
390
Sou t h
Sec ond
St ,
M tddleport a dult s only
Phone 992 5262 ev-enmgs
s 21 tfc
COUNTRY Mobtle Home
Park , Rt 33, ten mtles north
of Pomeroy Large lots With
conc ret e pattos , s •d ewa lks,
ru n n e r s and off s treet
park •ng Phone 992 7479

-- - -,T RAILER space
M &gt;ddl eport

123 1 tic
fo-r ren t--.n

Call

992 2625
4 27 tfc

J

BEDRM
t ra1ler
Wtth
utlllf tes pa td , partly fur
n1Shed m trail er park on Rt
33, n ear Bu rltngham Phone

(51 20. 27 (6 } J, 10, 17 , 24, 6tc

99 2 77S t

6 I tic

NOT ICE OF
APPOINTMENT

3 RM NIC ELY FURNISHED
AP T , AIR CONDITIONED,
Estate of
REASO N!l&lt;B LE CAN BE
D eceas ed
SE EN BY APPOINTMENT ,
Not rce 1S her eby g tven that
CALL 992 2053 LOCATED
O annv S Z 1rk1e Qf Pomeroy
AT 5116 SOUTH FOURTH,
Ohto has been duly appomted
MIDDLEPORT
Admtnt s lrator of th e Estate of
6 1 3tc
Case No. 21522
JEAN ZIRkLE

•

Jean Z ~r k l e, d ece a se d , l ate of
Me1gs County OhtO
Cre drtors are requtred to
file the~r c la1ms w tth satd
t1duc•ary Wtthtn four months
D ated th1s 14th day of May

1975

apt
a•r condttloned ,
rea l n1ce 116' 1 E Mam ,
Phone 99 2 2846

6 1 3tc
4

Mannmg D We bster
Judge
Court of Common Ple.,s
Prob ate Dtvtsto n

15 1 20 . 27 (6) 3, Jtc

LEGAL NOTICE
Dorothy Ann Garnes, whose
last known pl ace of r es tdence
ts Columbus, Oh10 and whose
exact address IS unknown , ts
h ereb y notifted thet on tHe 4th
day of Octob er, 1974, Paul E
Garnes , bemg platn t1ff filed
hiS complai nt agamst her as
d efendan t 1n the Court of
Common
P l eas,
Metg s

County , Ohio , Case No 15,669,
pra ying for divorce from sa1d
Oorothy Ann Garnes on the
grounds of gtoss neglect of
duty an d extreme c ruelty ,
sa1d cause wtll be for heanng

2 da y of Juty,

197~

Paut E. Garnts, Pl••ntlff

J . 8 O' Broen, Allorney

C5 &gt; 13

4 RM

~o .

for Platnhff.

27 , (6&gt; 3, 10, t7, 6tc

RM

FU RN

a partment

Phone 992 3658
6 1 ttc
_________ ...__ -------

Phon e 992 7222

5 28 6tp

BEIIGLE

5 28 tt c
KENMORE washer , heavy
duty , used 3 months , ex
ce ll ent 1 condtfton, 5150

Joe ' s Sports and CB's at 10
p et above cost and Sh •P
p~n g
:108 Page St , M td
dleport

S 28 10t c

S 18 30t c

Phone 992 2759

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

whtte t rp on fail If seen
1Pieasc p hone 98~ .t127

s 28 61 p

l ots , rural wa t er
ava il a bl e H a rd road , 3
m tl es fr om by pas s on
Leadmg Creek Road Phone
7·12 3 108
5 9 30t c

wtth 1 car garage, car p eted
FHA or bank fman c m g
Phon e 7.12 36 15 or see M tlo
H u t c hmson , R utla nd
5 8 lf c

HOUSE

FOR

SA LE .

Mulberr y Ave, Pomero y 4
bedrm , 11 ba th l arge lot
basement garage To see ,
ca ll 446 2596
6 3 6tc

SEVE N ROOM S AN D BATH
HOME I N Pom eroy on
Butt ernut Ave, N tce ktt
c hen , new roof
JUS t
m
stalled . pn ced at $18 000
Seen by appo1ntment Ca ll

---

and

YARD Sale , J une 4, 5, and 6
Wednesday. Thursday and
Frtday from 10 fill 4 30 at
the Don Hanntng residence
Bradbury Road Lots of ntee
children 's clothing, 10 gallon
aquanum with aiL f ixtu r es ,
and other 1tems
6 3 Jtc
-- - - -------------

Yard

6 3 12tp
--~--

:l BEDROOM hou se

wall to
wall carpe t1 ng larg e k tt
c hen and bath uftl tty room ,
1 -l
wash
room .
acr e.
aluminum Stdtng , s tor m
w1nd ow s, storag e bulldtn g
Phone
742 4601
Wtll
sac ri f 1ce for qu1c k sale
5 25 tfc

NEED A n ew home bu111 on
vour lo f? Contact Mtlo B
Hutchison , Rutland Oh 10

Phone 742 3615

G U ARAN T EED
Ph

per ca rton (500 1 22 I r h p

S2 10 per lpop Get th em
wh1 l e they la st Store hours
ette.ct1ve May 19 M onday
Thursday 9 a m to 6 p m ,
F r.day and Saturday 9 a m

6 3 3tc

to 9 p m VILLAGE GUN
SHOPPE , 266 Mil l St ,

3 FAMILY Yard Sole, June 2,

tuesday , and Wednesday
10 a m fill 4 p m at 76)
Sycamore St, Middleport
old f urniture Items
'
1

6 1 3tc

---

- -- - -YARD Sale, an-S-;;;;;hJrd
Avenue , Middleport , June 2
3, and -4
'

Middleport

,

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

l18 3Dtc

-- --~--

1956 GMC 11 7 ton tru c k ( 300
gal lon tank , d1sk , and
cult1vator Call 742 39:49

6 I 6tp

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

197J YAMAHA 250 MX , S550
Phone 992 2452 or 992 5396
6 1 3tc

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

BEDD IN G, - plants,

pott~d

pla nls, geran•ums, azalea s.
petun1as , por c h bo xes,
hang1ng baskets Cleland 's
Greenhous e,
Geraldine
Cleland , Ra c me . Oh1o 45771
5 18 tiC

WINCHESTER model 12 lull
c hoke 12 gauge, n•ckel Stee l
veot1lated rib , good con ·
dllton , S350 Conta c t Marvi n
Keebaugh days , 992 53 42

53012tp ,

NEW LISTING - 2 bedrooms,
bath, dining, 3 porches, lev el
lot near school and stores
Only $7 ,500.
'
NEW LISTING - Building lot
with water lap and septic lank
In the country near school
$2,500
NEW LISTING
Three
rentals One 9 room house with
bath , FA furnace, a 4 room
garage apartment w1th bath,
and a 2 room wtlh some work.
Ctly water $16,000 00
MOBILE HOME - 3 bedroom
Skyline. bath , n 1ce kitchen
with cook , bake umls, and
relr tgerator . Nat gas f ~ r­

ROGER-·5 ~d;n;i;-e-o-;Ums~
Silver sparkle. 14x20 base, '2
shell mount tom toms . t
floor tom , 4 cvmbals W1lh
stand Also , snare drum5
Wtfh stand and stool Phone
949 5192

4 YR . OLO 3 bedroom h~use ,
uttlltv room , large kttchen ,
l1 v!ng ro.om , bathroom
A ppo in tm ent only , 99 2 7631

6 1 3tc

6 1 ff.£

f

428 1308

6 I 6tc

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

4 17 1 mo .

HElL

BUT, MY DE.AJ'l U N C ~JO PLATO! YOU
FOR&lt;SIOT THAT IM RfCH 1 TOO! IF
YOU HAVE BILLIONS .. AT LI'AST'
I ~AVE MILLIONS!

! Eto.IJOY LIFE .. I HAVE LOADS OF'

MEN PURSUE ME!.. NOT, MIND
YO U, THAT l
C0 ~ 5 1DER THEM
. AI.L THAT
IMPORTA'IT!

FUI&lt;J ~

Wolfe &amp;Ward

Garage

Atr cond1t1ontng, plum btng, heattng , rooftng ,
spouttng, general sheet
metal work .

PHONE 992-2823
Condor St

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

FREE ESTIMATES
PH. 949-5184
54 1 mo.

FOR
FREE
----.-- - - ESTIMATES

Monday thru Saturday
• We will ptck up &amp; dellverv
Speetal low prices on all
mechan1cal work .

s.J -1mo .

NJD IJ~tJC.'{ CALL.t:;D OFF

ii.OUI..D 'IOU MARR'l
9:lMOOf.IE: \.llOO WAS

)OIJR 'NeDDitJb ~

lJ~F/&gt;.ITf{FUL.. ~

1

andO.ratH

" souno LITilE rue,

---

QUI'TE COMFCmTABLE!
ANO PLfttT'f fA ST

YOUR ._, I'I(UP WITH

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-GONE

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

55-1 mo.

WEU. 1tjl5 15fot'T

I 992-255o I
m

FREE ESTIMATES

N h&lt;! AV

Blown
Insulation Services
Blown mto Walls &amp; A«ics
STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIOING-SOFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

992-3092

..---

LI'ITLE ORPHAN 'ANNIE

Sf

WI, 0

If so, Call us Now for
a Free Estimate.

QUITE iJ. PALATIAL AS

TILE mCKT, BUT IT!$

E!iOUGtt TO 6El US
TI1BU-

WHY TO THE

PI.ACE'WE'R t:G~ t4G

AJoltiiE - l11EPLACE

I WAS HEADED FOR
BEFORE I HfAR D oF

"S"ORTY" 5MtTH-

TRACE!

wq:HOUT

PITCHfRESQUE

HEY! LOOK

I PRIHTS

~ SEE 7
1ltfSE HE ~E

PrTCHfRS OH POsTCARDS
~HD STICKS 'b\ Itt l H'

OUT!
WHEW! THAT
BlU ND£R!H LUBBER

ORuG STORE WINDER - Sff?
TOURISTS GOfS fOR 'EM•GlJA\NT " TltEY CAllS 'EM·

"'EARL'( RAN \,1:,

oow•-

5 30 1 mo

EXPERIENCED

Syracuse, Ohio
Ph . 992-3993
4 10 l mo

Merle Norman
Cosmetics

Roger Hysell's
Garage

lOLA'S
BEAUTY SALON

and

From the largest Truck or
Bulldo2er Rad i ator to the
smallest Heater Core

Ph 992-2174

992 3525 or 992 5232
2 11 tic

D&amp; L r ' f REE Trtmmtn g l"O N EED your no use or roof
yea r s ex p er tence In su r ed
pa1 n te d ? Phone 992 59 95 or
fr ee es t 1ma t es Call 992 3057
992 7676
Coolv tlle Pho ne { l ) 667
6 t 6tp
304 1
4 30 ttc W I LL D O St d ew alk s, patiOS,
roofmg . p ar n t1 ng , 1nt and
CARPET Insta ll ati on
$1 25
ext , ce tl1n gs, spouttng ,
per ya rd
Call Rtchard
s 1ding , alum1num . ha rd
west Phone 843 2667
board Call 742 4620 , storm
s 4 26tc
wmdow s and pane11ng

READY MIX CO NCRETE
d e l1ver ed rtght to
prot ect F asf and easy
est tmat es Phone 992
Goeg l em Ready M1 x
Midd l eport Oh io

6 30 tfc

WILL tnm or cut tr ees and
s hrubbery .
c l ea r
out
ba se m ent s, a tt1 cs. etc
Phone 949 322 1 or 742 4441

5 18 26tc

MACHINE.

... ct-' liC TA NK S CLEA N E D
Reasonab le RATE S Phon e
446 47 82 Gall tpoll s John
Russell , owner
4 9 tfc

----- ------

'E'LWOOD BOWE.RS R EPAIR '
- Sweepers toa sters .rons ,
a ll small ap plian ces Law n
mower, ne)(t to Stat e H1gh
way Ga ra ge on Route 7
P hone 985 3825
4 16 ftc

- - ----- ------SE PTI C T ANKS c le aned

-

Modern Sanitation
or 992 7349

~

Wan ted to own and operate
candy &amp; confect •on vendtng
route
Pomeroy .
M1dd lepor t and surroun dtng
area
Plea s ant
bus1ness H1gh profit •terns .
Can start part t1me Age or
exper ience not l mportan.'Requ~res car and $1395 to
S4795 cash mvestment For
de tails w r ite and include
your phon e numb er

Department BVU

3938 Meadowbrook Rd.
Mmneapolls, MN 55426

99 2 3954

FATHER
~seD

' US-

9 18 tfc

Ba ckh o e, d ltche r , water
lin es , foot ers dra.ns roads
and bru sh clean 1ng No job
too small, no weather too
bad
Phone Charl es R

(2

-,-------------p R I CE
COn-strU c tton----co

WINNIE

Roofmg spoutmg . Gemm1
tdt'" r eplace m en t. win
dows comp lete r emodeling,

Ph one 742 6273 o r (304) 773
5684 &lt;
5 9 26tp

-Real Eltl~'f;J,-sa~-.7-r~ _,..and bath,
car~e t • ng , A I condlt 1on
Pnced for qutck sale Phon e

or

Buy it now
Convenient
Plan I

use our
Lay- Away

®MYCOMPAAY !SON THE VERGE
OF l3ANK1'1~PltY1 GREGORY. A
NEW COIIIPETIIDR IN TOWN
15 FORCING U5 OUT
-&lt;t'tt'
OF BUSINESS&gt;.

n:Y?

WE!r._L,JT WI'S EVER.
WINNI
OOtNIVAL OF nlE Fl
ST. I.
UNDERSTAND ATHENA
FA511 IONt; 15 A FIRSTRATE OUTFIT.

'

992 7244

6 I Jt c

MASON FURNITURE

773-5592

Herman Grate

Mason,
0

W. Va.
-

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

TAKE'WMPO RADIO
are in great need
of properties to sell.
Strike while the iron
is hot Sell Today
while we have Cash
Buyers. All Cash for
Your P~operty.

WHERE EVER YOU GO
THIS WEEKEND
and
LISTEN TO YOUR rAVORITE· HITS

vI'M PlANNIN'
A BODACIOUS

FISH FRV
FER SUNDAY
AfTERNOON.
LOWEEZY

GOODY!!
CAN I DO

ENN"'THIN6
TO HELP
OOT,

Ij

·,•

·,
'•'
••

Grap~

I

For m ost-productive results,
tempo ranly set astde work
that s too tim e-co nsuming
Tackle chores you can knock

Bemtce Bede O~ol
For Wednesday, June 4, 1975
ARIES (March 21·Aprll19) Be
pers1stent tod ay on tss ues 1mportant to YOU II may app ear
you wo n t succeed but yo u wtl l
1f yo u hang tn there

••

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)

I

I

I

'

~

Off qU ICkly
~

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23· Doc.
21) Th1s should be a
pleasurab le day , bul there's a
ltttle warn •ng about how much
you should pay for your fun

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Don 1 JUdge ot hers 1n advance

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Don 1 make dectslons on

ol the tr ac t1 ons tod ay Yo u
co uld be domg them an tn JUSt lce G1ve them the benefit

your own today on a maJor
dom esttc matter your mate

oC1he doubt

deciding

s ho u ld

a hand In

have

Be frank .

a b1t
PISCES (lab. 20-March 20)
Yo ur matenal pros pects are
prom1s1ng tod ay •f you're prudent 1n your dealings Conduct
your alfa1 rs along practi cal
tmes

MYour
WBirthday
June 4, 1975

fa1 th m yo ur Judgment Try not
to be overly Influenced by one

7

You w1!1 bec ome tn11olv-ed tn a
bold enterprtse th1s year w1th
rather la rge stakes You II be 1n
cl ose assoc1atton wtth pe rsons
who hav e tnflu ence over
orgamzat•ans and g rou ps

"

!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I

WIN AT BRIDGE
Lancelot attacks hand boldly,,
wanlea to takelt some lime Oi
3 other and this JUSt m1ght be his
only chance.
T
The queen held and the se- .
cond dragon had bit the dust "
He led the Jack of spades, ' '
WEST
EAST
covered with the ace , ruffed a
.ro10872
.roK 53
spade m dummy and led a "
¥K
¥JI05
trump
~
tKQ9 64
t8 73
It was equally s1mple for • A 10 2
• Q 96 5
Lancelot to go nght up w1th h1s .:,
ace He wanted' to be able to o
SOUTH (D)
ruff hts last spade in dummy ·:
• A964
and a closmg finesse nught , ~
¥AQ8642
make that impossible
•"
tA
The
ace
dropped
the
kmg,
but
•J 8
that was lrostmg on the cake II
Both vulnerable
JUSt gave Lancelot an overtrick .
NORTH
.roQJ
• 973
tJ 10 52
.ro K 7 4 3

West

North

East

Pass
Pass

2¥
Pass

Pass

South
1¥

LONGFELLOW

Pass

••

'

The bidding has been .

3

Openmg lead - K t

South
West Norlll EaSI
L--------...J
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
1•
,,
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc Smgle letters. By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Pass 3 -'
Pass
?
~
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
Lancelot the peerless looked You South hold ·
'
hmts. Each day the code letters are different
over dummy with d1staste. • K Q98
A • A 4 • A 9 8 7 6 ;,
'
Dmadan, the worst player at What do you do now•
·' '
CRYPTOQUOTES
the square table , raised A - Bid four aoll'ump. v,u piau
Lancelot every time he could . to b1d six clubs if your partnoo::~
ABOP
C I P N But the peerless one WIShed shows no aces at all.
'J I P R
VBZZBJV
·
that Dmadan had just a wee b1t
·c'
TODAY'S QUESTION
VTYPV,
XQC more.
RBC
VYRSUP
ABOP
Then Lancelot went alter the Your partner replies ftv e .
X K C C K U Y B R V . - V I K L P V· hand like he would go after a diamonds to show one ace What do
YH
dragon or g1ant He led a c~ you do now'
toward dummy and went u~
Answer Temorrow
' '
TPKZP
w1th the kmg after West played
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: OUR SWEETEST SONGS ARE low The king held and the !1rst Send Sl .. for ~COSY .f:fOOERN
THOSE WHICH TELL OF A SADDEST THOUGHT.
dragon had been taken care of bool&lt; 10: Win at Br,., (c/o tflla
Next came the queen of newspaper), P 0 Box 4811. Radio -~
SHELLEY
spades finesse . Lancelot CityStatlon, NewYorf&lt;.N.Y. 10018. •~
(© 197!» Kin1 Features Synd{cue, Inc.)

5.

..'"

I

I.OVE • TloiiV'I(...

WE'RE FOUR·ALL IN

PARSON? 1' ··''''''x

THE

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

Flfl5T

SET'!

., '

CALl ·992-2259
-~

'~

Today she ts n'L

Buyers See Us For Your
Needs 10 Real Estate.

-·--

''

wds,)

''

., -----..---

\
0

•

Astro-

.

House

••

who always th1 nk s she s ng ht

LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23) Have

Is

'0 KNON EVERYTHIN~
ltlAT"o GOING ON !

'•
•
•

though tt may stmg the liStener

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR

IIHY, ER1YES. I ... ER. ...
MKE IT MY BUSINE&amp;5o

..•

1 .oo-Tomorrow 3,4,13.

what you think

38 W1th SOIDld
Judgment

Hat11 eld , Rt 1, Ru tl and ,
Ohio Phon e 14 2 6092
S 2 S2tp

•

You have a tendency today to
Skirt ISsues wtthout truly say1ng

Ancient
times
28 Eternity
29 Dolly a
camera
Famed
hngutst,
Marto 33 Babyloman
de1ty
34 - · de
France
35 Tea variety

)blJR

.·

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fob. 18)

,.!::~AB~N::!E;:!R!...~,.----'I""'--...;.,~-r---.::-,-::-:-:-:-:-:-:::-"":"':'~:-:-:"--:--,:;--::-:"":'-~~27

B-BUI

0

10 00-Petrocelll 3,4,15, Barella 13 ; Billy Graham
Crusade 6. Dan Augsusl B; Burt Bacharach 10;
Family At War 33
10 30-News 20
11 :00-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15, ABC News 33
11. 30-Johnny Carson 3,4,15, Wtde World Special 13;
FBI6, Movie "They Ran for Their Lives" 8, Movie
"A Song Is Born" 10; Janak1 33
12 30-Wide World Special 6

urut
18 - VIVant
19 Endmg for
vulcan
20 Corleone's
tttle
21 Indonesian
!!)!!!l!!;;;o;;.., ts land
22 Run along
24 Equal
25 Paper
quantity
..., 26 Russian
commune

RESPONSIBLE
PERSON

6 1 3tc

5 13 26tc

Just
hold the wheel,
Eve, while 1
adJust the
steam'

your
Free
3284,
Co ,

'

Young &amp; the Restles-s io~- Not For Women Only 15;
zoom 33.
30-Days of Our Lives 3,4, 15; Let' s Make a Deal6, 13;
As the World Turns 8,10; Mulligan Stew 33.
2 00-$10,000 Pyram id 6, l3 ~.Guldlng Light 8, 10; The
Way II Was 33.
.
2·»-- Doctors 3,4,15, Big Shwowdown 6,13; Edge of
Night 8,1 0; Saga of Western Man 33
3.00-Anolher World 3,4, 15; General Hospital 6, 13;
Price IS Right 8,10, RFD 20
3 30-{)ne Life to Live 13, Lucy Show 6; Match Game
8,10, The Way II Was 20 , Eica 33
3 45--' Theonle 33
4 00-Mr . Cartoon 3, I Dream of Jeannie 4, Somerset
15. G1lltgan '~ ls 6; Tatlleta le sB; Sesame St. 20,33,
Movt e " Do You Know This Voice" 10, Mike
Douglas 13.
4 3D-Bewitched 3. Merv Griffin 4, Mod Squad 6.
Mickey Mouse Club 8, Bonanza 15
s 00-F Bl 3, Andy Grlfttlh B. Mtsler Rogers' Neigh
'
borhood 20,33; Ironside 13
5 30-News 6, Bever ly Hillbillies 8, Hodgepodge Lodge
20; Gel Smart 15;
Elec Co. 33
6 00-News 3,4,8,10, 13,115, ABC News 6; Electric Co.
20. New Mus tc in Brass 33.
6 3D-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13, Bewitched 6;
CBS News 8, 10, Zoom 20,33
7 00-Truth or Cons 3,4; Bowling for Dollars 6; What's
My Lme 8; News 10, Country MuSic Jubilee 13;
b11iy Graham Crusade 15; Feeling Good 20; You
Owe II To Yourself 33.
7 3D-Police Surgeon 3; Name That Tune 4; Let's
Make a De al 6: Wilburn Brothers 8; Book Beat 20;
The Judge10, To Tell the Truth 13, Episode Action
33
8 oo-LIItle House on the Prairie 3,4, 15,; That's My
Mama 6, Billy Graham Crusade 8; Feeling Good
33; Tony Orlando &amp; Dawn 10, Salute to Pike County
13, Stalin 20
8 :ID-Movte "Betraya l" 13. Movie " The Over-the Hill
Gang" 6; Vtolln 33
9 00-Lucas Tanner 3,4, 15, Cannon 8, 10; Masterpiece
Theatre 33

ACROSS
39 Exerctse
l Platform
mstruction
5 Italian c1fy 40 Str1ctly
10 " Das
-:- nous
Rhemgold" 41 Debauch
role
ll Valuable fur
12 Rest
sat1sf1ed
(2 wds .)
LLJt.::.~ifl.~i:ii:::~::L-li4 Greek letter
15 N1genan
tr1besman
16 Horray!
17 Electncal

PomeroY

5-14 1 me

TUESDAY, JUNE 3,1975

by THOMAS JOSEPH

EX(AVA TIN G. dozer , loader
and ba ckhoe work septiC
tanks
•n s t arted ,
dump
tru cks and Ia boys for h1re, 1
w il l haul ftll dtrf , top so d ,
l1m estone and gra vel . Call
Bob or Roger Jeffers , day
phone 99 2 7089 , n tght phone

Phone 992 ·5682 or
992-1121

m ~.

... BUT r DON'T
THINK SO.'

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

Automobile
Transmission
Repair

John St., Next To
Grade School
992-2549 Syracuse, 0.

ALLEY OOP

Nathan Biggs
Radtator Spec1ahst

.

0

6 00-Sunrise Seminar 4, Summer Semester 10.
6 2!&gt;-Farm Report 13
6:30-Flve Minutes to Ltve By 4, News 6, Bible An
swers 8, School Scene 10; The Story 13.
6·Js-Columbus Today 4.
6·4!&gt;-Mornlng Report 3; Farmtlme 10
7 oo-Today 3,4, 15; A.M. America 13,6; CBS News B,10.
B:OO-Lassle 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8; Schoolles 10;
Sesame St 33,
8 30-Btg Valley 6; Popeye 10.
8:5!&gt;-Chuck White Reports 10
9 00-A M 3; Phil Donahue 4, 15; Lucy Show B. Mer
ning with D. J. 13; Walsh's Animals 33
9 30-Not For Women Only 3, Dinah 6, Galloping
Gourmet 8; New Zoo Revue 13, Changing Rhythms
33.
10.00-Celebrity Sweepstakes 3,4,15; Joker' s Wild B. 10,
Dtnah 13 . You Owe II to Yourself 33.
10 .30-Wheel of Fortune 3,4, 15, GambitS , 10; Mulltgan
Stew 33
11 00-High Rollers 3,4, 15; One Life to Llve6 , Now You
See 118,10, One of a Ktnd 33
11 30-Hollywood Squares 3,6 ,15; Blankely Blanks 13,
News 4; Lo~e of Life 8, 10, The Bolero 33
11 .5!&gt;-Grahham Kerr 8, Dan Imel's World 10
12·00-Jackpot 3, 15. Password 6, 13; Bob Br aun 's 50 50
Club 4; News 8, 10, Mister Rogers 33
12 30-Biank Check 3, 15: Split Second 6,13; Search for
Tomorrow 8, 10 . Elec Co 33.
12.55--'NBC News 3,15
1 oo-News 3; All My Chtldren 6,13, Phil Donahue 8,

LARRY LAVENDER

Also Repai rs On All
R 1d 1ng Tractors
498 Locust St
Middleport, Oh1o
s 9 1 mo

_._.._.._..~_......,..,__.._.._.._.._._._.._,..;..~w~·..
.,.~•..;w,;.;,~......~.

WEDNESDAY,JUNE4, 1975

Does
your
home
require any of these
services?

Home Buildlnt
Room AddltloM

Sales &amp; Service

R e pa ~rs servrce, all makes
992 228d T he Fa brt c Shop ,
Pomeroy Au thor~ zeo Smge r
We
Sales and Se r v ~e e
Sharpe n SCISSOr S
3 29 tf c

I IX&gt;I' T !!fl..IEVE: IT~ 'IOU

Ph. 915-4102

WILKINSON
SMALL

S EW IN G

BORN LOSER

Ches..r,Ohlo

V. V. JOHNSON
AND SON, INC.

GENERAL Kepa1r, Cl ean up
and
haU l in g,
cu tt1n g
we ld1 ng
carpentry
plum btng, el ec masonry
a nd general remodeling
Call Sk d Pool 992 5126

Pomeroy . 0.

OPEN 9 a .m . to6 p.m .

Blml BnAhws
Constlucb Co.

On alummum replacement
Windows , s1d1ng , storm
doors and Windows. ra:hng,
phone
Charles
Lisle,
Syracuse ,
Oh10.
Carl
Jacob, Sales Represen tative

58 l

Grand OpeninK

Racine Plumbing
&amp;Heating

AWMINUM &amp;
VINYL SIDING

We

mi les fro m Forked Run
Lake 1 1 mile from Long
Bottom , Ohio Ph one 004)

Call Before 7:30 A.M.
Or Afler6: DO P.M.
949-3604
5-7-1 me

•

~92 - 5776

GLEN R.
Bissell

HELP • HElP HELP
16 ACRE S - MO IQS County , 3

Racine, Ohio
We Build the Best and
Repair the Rest.
-Cabonets lnsta lied--

....

3 3o-Dne Life to Live 13, Lucy Show 6; Match Game
8,10. The Romagnolt s! Tabl e 20; Changing Rhyth
ms 33 .
4 00-Mr Cartoon 3, I Dream of Jeannie 4; Somerset
15; (&gt; tlllgan's Is 6. Tattletales 8; Sesame Sl 20,33;
Movie " Hall Angel" 10, Mtke Douglas 13
4 30-Bewltched 3; Merv Grllfln 4, Mod Squad 6,
Mickey Mouse Club 8. Bonanza 15
5 00-FBI 3; Andy Gr~fflth 8, MISter Rogers' Netgh borhood 20,33 ; lronside- 13
5 30-News 6, Beverly Hillbilli es 8, Get Smart 15,
Villa Alegre 33
6 00-News 3,4,8 ,10, 13,15, ABC News 6, Elec Co 20,
Cat ch 33 33
6 30-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13, Bew1 tched 6,
CBS News 8, 10, Zoom 20,33
7 00-Truth or Cons 3,4; Blue Ridge Quartet 4;
Bowltnq lor Dollars 6, What's My Line 8,, News 10,
Name That Tune 13; Billy Graham Crusade IS;
Antiques 20. Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33
7 30-Baseball 3,4, Buck Owens 8; New Price IS R1ght
10. To Tell the Truth 13, RFO 20. Car Care 33.
. B·OO-Happy Days6,13, Adam 1215, Good times s-;JO,'
The Way II Was 33, The Bolero 20
8:30-Movie " The Hatllelds and the McCoys" 6, 13;
Movie " Where Have All the People Gone?" 15,
Mash 8,10; , End ofthe Ho Chi Minh Trail20; Nova
33.
9 00-Billy Graham Crusade 8, Hawait Ftve 0 10
9 30-Saga of Western Man 33
10 00-Police Story 3, 15, Mar cus Welby, MD 13, To
Be Announced 4, Btlly Graham Crusade 6; Bar
naby Jones B. 10, News 20
10 30-Redscene '75, Monty Python's Flying Circus 33
11 ·00-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15, ABC News 33

.

town on large lot. $9.500.
GARDEN SPACE - 5 rooms,
bath, nat gas, ctly water,
paneltng, . uflllty bu1lding and
large level lot Only $7,500
FOR BEST RESULTS IN
BUYING OR SELLING CALL
A REALTOR AT 992-3325.

ROOM-ta~ROOM

TOP QUALITY AT
LOWEST PRICES

5 15 1 mo

nace , and rural water near

PORTA-COOL"'

I

667 3858

i;;"x- c AVA-T t-i'I'G -. - Dozer ,

Our

2.000 hanging baskets of
Petun ias, Ivy , Geraniums ,
Vines, and Began •as
.

ap

5 IB 30tc
stock
is now
arr~vtng
R1fles . sho tguns,
PIStols, reloadin g eq u i p
22
scopes , I am m un 1t 1ons(
MAG h p $3 per box , S27 so

OUR SPECIALTY over

plta n ces &amp; new furnttur ~ .
Op en 'i 5 wed through sun .

12 19 tic

s um mer

In Syracuse
Now op en for season No w
ava tiB ble - most vartet1es
of vegetable plants &amp;
flow ers plus potted fl owers

" BARGA I N S are
our
m 1ddl e na m e" 1n cl ea n ,
use d
f ur n1tur e.

t
' 1 ,_,

NEIGLER
Building Supp~

Greenhouse

" At Caution L1ght "
Rt 7, Tupper s Plams , 0

page St ,

5 B tfc

Hubba~d's

KUHL'S
BARGAIN CENTER

DOZER work . land cleann g
by th e acre, hourly or
c ontract
F arm
po nd s,
road s, etc L ar ge do ze r and
oper at or w tth over 20 years
ex p e r te n ce
P ul l1n s Ex
cavattng , Pom eroy, Oh1o
Phone 992 V17B

GUNS AND AMMO -

Tuesday thru Fnday Union
Avenue Watch for signs

- - - - --6 l 3tp
YARD
Sa ;;;-·- Mo;;doy,

JOB

Mtddleport

Sale,

3, and 4 , 1675 L •l'lcoln
He1ghts, Large se l ection of
ttems

CB's

·- - - - - - ;

17 4

CB's Antennas, ftshing bait ,
fts ht ng supp li es, guns and
ammo l nd1an Joe's Spor ts

Yard Sale

FAMILY

l. LARGE

992 2020
Phone 985 4175
- -- - ---- - - - - - s 28 6tp ---

CARPENTi:_R .work :.. ce·, lmg ~
panelmg, floo rrng
etc

S

7 B EDROOM h ouse tn R ac m e
total elec tr tc wa"~l to wa ll
car pet hvtn g room ut tl1t y
room . 1 ac r e Phone 9.19
1998
5 30 6tc

6 1 Jtp TWO NE W 3 b ed room hom es

3965

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

3938

brown, bla ck and

98S

5 1 tic ORDER any CB !rom lnd1an

Yamahe' scsoo dirt bikes
~r. ced to sell Phone 985

I 29 6tc

Call

STRAWBERRIE S by the bo x
or crate Gerald me Cleland ,
phone 949 4121
5 30 6tc - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -5-28 tfc
REMODEL IN G, Plumb1ng , ONE blac k 48 · pony and 1
black Tenn Walker Phone
heat 1ng and all types of
992 3630
genera l
repatr
Work
5 29 6tc
guaranteed 20 years ex
pertence
Phone 992 2409

'
, 5 30 6tc
1971 SUZUKI TM ; 00 on di 973
BOY ' cour medal lost Monday
on parade route If fo un d
please
cal/ . 742 3781.
Reward
·

S35

re

STEREO
Mod &amp;rn Walnut
stereo a m fm radto com
b1nation , 4 speed chan ger . 4
speakers, sep ara te con t rol s
Balance $104 :19 Use our
budg et terms Phon e 992

after 7 P m 985 39 13

Lost

Fr.g1da 1r e

tiNE 5 y r old and one 4 year
old wtt h S month "Old ca lf,
both Holstein
Hereford
COWS Phone 742 6723
6 1 6tc

-Fo;- ~i; -- -~- ~r·-

Pets For Sale

FT

3974

6 1 Jtc

1 Y-R OLD female Registe red ,
bla ck an d tan co on hound
~ 1 25 Also 3 month old :
Female Reg Wa lker , S50

CU

tr1g erator

;;oW-Sellu~~-=- ;-ulter- B~sh-

Employnient Wanted

6 I Jtc
- - - ----- - -----

MODERN sty l e player p 1an o
w.th SO ro ll s, Verv good
shape Prtce S900 Also , 1957
F ord Ranchero truck . S300
Phone 74 2 635 2
6 1 31c

QUICK;i!Nf

TRAILER apts Phone
5248 or 992 3436

-

For Sale

Sealed propo sal s w ill be 2 BEDROOM mobil e hom e,
r ece l'v ed at the ott1 ce of the
1
ac
m11e
out
of
9531
D1rector of t h e Ohro Depart
t"larr1Sonv-ill e on Co Roa d 3
men t
of
Tra nsp ort at•on ,
4 13 tfc
6 3 6tc
Columbus Oh10 until 10 00
A M
Ohto St an da rd Ttme
TWO bedr m furn •shed mobil e Jl!JNK autos , complete and
Tues da y, J un e 10 1975, for
de li vered to our yard We
home Depos1t re qu 1red
Improveme nts tn
PICk up auto bodtes and buy
Phon e 992 3429
Me1gs and V1nfo n Count .es
all ktnds of scrap metals and
6 3 6tp
Ohto , on v ar•ous sect tons of
tron Rtder ' s Sa l vage, St
M EG VIN Sta te Route 689
R t 124, R:t 4, Pomeroy,
TR A IL ER space . I mtle from
by resurfac•ng wtth asp halt
Oh•o Catt 992 5468
Pomeroy
Phon e 992 SB58
co n cr e te
10 17 ttc
5 2 tfc
Pave ment Wtd th - 18 feet
by- ma~~t;;~Protect and wo rk L ength FURNISHED
apartmen t,
c amera ready copy One
39,0 19 2 f eet or 7 39 miles
adu l ts only 1n Mtddleport
page S5 55 •f~rst 100 $1 IS
" The da te set for compl etiOn
Phon e 992 3814
of th1s work shall be as set
eact'l add1t1onal 100 Send
3 25 tic
copy
c heck
to
LET
forth'" t he b•ddtng proposal "
TER SHOP PLUS . 72 W
Ea c h b•dd er
shal l
be
Union, Athens, Oh10 Also ,
reQutred to file W1t h ht s b1d a 3 AND 4 ROOM fur n1 shed and
un fu rn• she d
apa rtments
iob pnntmg
ce rttf1 ed check or cashter·s
1
Ph one 992 5434
check for an am oun t eQual to
4 29 3Btp
4 12 He
f1 ve per cent of hn. b1d , b ut 1n
no even t more tha n f 1fty
FOR your " Oil of -:--Mtnk ''
thousan d dollars or a bon d for PRIVATE meet.ng room for
Cosmetics
Phone
any organ•zat .on phone 992
t en per c ent of hts btd. payable
BROWN 'S 992 5113
3975
to the D tr ector
1 7 tfc
3 11 tfc
B1dde r s must apply , on the
proper forms . for qua ltftc at lon
at I east ten days pnor to th e A PT ltke new , 3 rooms , w 1th
Products, phone 992 3410
dat e set for opentng b 1ds '" --'l arg e bath , tab l etop range ,
large
c
loset
Eas
t
Mat
n
St
,
I 24 ttc
accord ance w1th Ch apter 5525
Pomeroy See to appreCiate
Oh10 Rev 1se d Co d e
Phone Gallipolis durmg day ''F1'1'fi,tamJ1111f'1!!1'1-:-ifvou •rr
Plan!:&gt; and spect ft catt ons are
cut t1 Phone 742 5113
tct6 9699 eve n 1ngs 446 9539
on ft l e tn the Department of
4 10 tic - - --- -- -------~t 'ltp
Transportal10n and the off 1ce
of
the
Olstr•ct
Deputy
ONE Dupl ex apt
1n Mtd
D1 r ec to r
dl eport 1 hou se 1n Pomeroy
The D •rector reserves the
Call 130• I 882 2050 collect
nght to re 1ect any and all b1d s
s 22 tic BABYSITT ING in my home
With small c htldr en , ex
R ICH AR D D JACKSON
pertenced
Mrs
G l enn
DIRECTOR TWO b e dr oom · hous e and
Sm1th , Rock Sprmg s Road
gar age. 325 Sp r.ng Ave
Rev81773
Phone 992 3613
Re f eren ces Ph on e 992 7660

151 27. 161 3, 2tc

Co.

THE househo ld goods and
eff ec ts of the Estate of Orb a
.
E Stout . Deceased . w111 be
so ld at pub/1c auc t 1on at her
res1dence 1n Harrt son vi ll e.
1970 CHEVELLE MALIBU CPE
$1695
Oh10 com m en c1ng at 10 30
307 VB. power steering, good G70 w1de oval t ires,
am on r r.day Jun e 13
rad1o, stlver grey ftm sh , automatic tr ans, mtertor
197S Sale ttems 1nclud e
spotless
•
lr:tmp s stand , t a ble , ch a tr s.
Zentlh Televts•on. S1d e
boar d , c ou ch
J metal
1969 CHEVY NOVA4 OR .
$1095
c ha ~rs
p1ano and stool , 3
6 cyl , automaf1c t ra n s, c l ean mter1or good hres,
wooden cha i rs J p1 ece hvinQ
rad1o
room su1te . delu xe platform
r ocker, desk mtrror 3 ptece
be dr m su.te , dresser , c hatr
1971 MATADOR
$1595
c loth es press , ham p er,
4 door, loca l car, a ir cond1hone d, full equipmen t
meta l sto ol ch1na c lose t
table . buffet
gas ra nge ,
r e fr t gerator . m et al ca rt ,
po ts
pans an d di Shes.
. May t ag
washer , Un tco
fr eezer . 3 P •ece be drm
su1 t e. wooden bed. dresser 4
wooden c ha1r s, ct'les t of
dr a we r s, cl oth es press h\Jb
caps
WICker
ham per ,
magazme r ack la w n cha tr ,
Warm Mornm g st ove. gas
st ove , frutt tars wash tub. 1964CHEVELLE Super Sport, 197J OLDS De lta 88 , d d r
ere
good cond1t1on Phone 949
har d top w1t h a c , low
Terms of Sal e Cash In
5182
m• l eage , pr rced reasona ble
the event of r a1 n th e sa l e
6 3 ltp
Phon e Lo u Os borne , 992
may be postponed Theron
2 178
1
Johnson
ExeCutor o f the 1967 FORD P tck up
1
to n
6 3 3t c
Last W il t an d Testamenl of
tru c k. , good conOtiiOn Phone
Orba E Stout. Deceased
Don Be ll 247 2022
Car nahan Auc t1on Serv 1ce,
6 3 3tc
Aucttoneer
6 3 ttc
S RM HOUSE bath , two
bedrms
b asement, ga s
THE HOU SE HOLD goods and
R utland St , M td
h eat
effec;ts of the Estate of V W dune bugg y engm e
dl epo rt Phon e 992 7091
W!lnam E rnest Se llards .
5 28 6tc
com pl ete l y r e but!t $200
Deceased , Wi ll be sold at
A lso encyc loped•a Phone
public
auct 1o n
at
htS
rs ACRE good lana c lo se to
985 41 tB
res•den ce on D epot Stree t,
Mount U n to n Churc h Owner
6
3
3tc
Rollan d , Oh1o commencmg
will handl e on land con tr act
at I 00 p m on F r.day June ONE Holstem Cow to fr eshen
$1,000 down .$50 p er month at
6, 1975 Sa le rt ems •nclud e
6 pet mt er est wr.te or ca ll
last of month , $300 One 250
ro c ker , rad10. sw tvel rocker ,
John R Stou t. Rt 3, A l bany .
ga l l on Bulk tank , 2 unt l
Zentth Televls 1on, foo t stooL
Oh to Phone 698 53 13
Delav al m ilker s Phone 985
over stuffed cha1r , h1deabed
3891
5 28 7tc
safe
couch , table . stoo l.
6
3
3tp
lamp . de hum tdtf1er , stand,
SER V I CE stat1 on and garage
end table 3 p1e ce bedroo m DOES your l•ving room su1 te
•n R utl and Wil l fman ce or
SU1te ntght stand , dresser
l ease Pho ne 742 5052
need new cush ion s? We will
cha tr, 4 p1ece and 4 cha 1rs .
5 14 26tc
ref1ll yo ur old cus h1o n~ w 1th
Admtral
Refrigerator ,
new foam cut to s 1ze
metal cabmet pots , pans
Ave r age s1ze su11e, $12 95
and d1shes . 2 chatrs , storage
Jack 's
Furniture
&amp; H O U SE for sale loca t ed on
she lf rototdler , bed springs ,
Vme Str ee t 1n Recme Two
Uphol stery Suppt 1es. 236 E
school desk 2 kerose ne
sto ry f rame three bedro om
Ma 1n ,
Pomer oy,
Oh 10
heaters , whe eL gut te rs and
r ecently r emo d eled kllche n
Phone 992 3903
spoutmg, and mt sce llan eou s
garage ftr eptace 75 ac r e
6 3 7tc
hand tools , and a 196 4
Ca ll 949 51 14 an y t1me for
~am bier
Ter ms of Sale
app omtment
SP EC I A L sa le on closeout
Cash In the event of r am the
5 23 8tc
up hol stery fabn cs 20 pe t
sate may be postpon ed
of! reg
pr1 ce
Nyl ons
Edgar
Se llard s,
Ad
h ercu lons . ve l vet , r ayo n s, 1 72 ACRES l and and locus t
m1n1str ator of the Estate of
posts A lso 196 5 Fo rd L TO
cottons Jac k's Furnttur e.
Wdl1am Ernest Sel lards ,
Phone 7~2 3656
236 E Matn , Pomer oy Oh •o
necesaed
Carnahan
5 23 52tp
Phone 992 3903
Auct1on
Se r vtce ,
A uc
6
3
7tc
t1o neer::
5 RM HOU SE and bath larg e
att1c r oom g ara ge, 2 lots
6 3 lt c A P AC HE Camp er, sl eep s 8,
qood
locatton m Rac1ne
smk , stove and refrtg erat or,
$7 500 Ph on e 949.461 3 If no
CASH paid for all makes an d
S800 Phon e 742 6464
answe r ca ll 992 2617
models of mobile homes
6 J 6t c
5 30 6tc
Phone area code 614 423

r-

Real Estate For Sale

Mobile Homes For Sale

app l y 1n p erson ,

OF
I
QUALITY M~tor

~--------·---·-----·-

Televisi?n log for easy vie~g r

\

FREE HER MOLTTH
WHILE I CUT THESE
Wl2tST TAPES.

Notice

LEE'S Car Wa sh on Rt I :J t il l
the crossroads S3 •ns ld c and
ou t Wax lOb s, S I S Phone
992 3 180 r r.ee · p tck up and
dcltvery serv-1ce
6 3 12tc

WARROH

DICK TRACY

'

UnKramblotho.. foor Jumblos,

one letter to each

r-· . . . .

7- The Dally Sentine l, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Tuesday, June 3, 1975

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, June 3, 1975

'

'

�~'t!11~~®1.4.t ..,_"d .-J , _
square~

Ji'or Fast Results ·Use Sentinel iClassifieds
2 Sic; ~omeroy 11
_ _ Business Services

to

form four ordinary y.·ords

I MERRY r
I 1-

rn ..
,

WH~'T

HAPPIONED
WHEN HE APPEAI&lt;:El7
EJEFO~ A SEA
OF FACES?'

HERTHS

Now arranre the circled leltera
to form tho aurprl .. answer, u
ourreated by tho above cartoon.

[ ,.,., ___ I HIS t I I XJ [XX I)
( Aatwcn~

tomorrow)

Jun•blr.. THINK CHICK APPEAR GLUTEN

Yc:t14"rday't

I

An•"'rr: H( ·~ · unprm mg"- nhe11 1/ wmt· ~ lrHhrlw q
~ l rrm g{ gtr/1'1.- 'PICKING UP"

Wanted To Buy

Wanted To Buy

WA NTED old u pr rg ht p1anos,
any condtt 1on
Pay .ng SlO

OL D fu r niture, 1ce bo xes
brass beds, or comp l ete
h ousehold s
Wr1te M
D
Mtl l er. Rt 4 , Pom e r oy

each F1 r st floor only Wrtte
and g rve dJrectrons to Wtften
P rano Co
Box 188, SardiS ,
Oh 10 43946

OhiO Ca ll 992 7760

10 7 74

5 28 6tp

Help Wanted
WAITR

ES~ .

Crow s St ea k House

SELL yo ur mobile home for
cas h 15 homes wanted, 1958
thru 1972 mode ls
Phone
(6 14) 446 1425 , Gall •pol ,s
3 9 7Btl

S 30 IDle
wtlh
R EAUT ! C I A N
manager's

Phone

l1cense

-------------!-'hone

992 2BCjl0 or 992 5602

5 29 btc

\971 SKYLI N E 12lC.60

.----------.,

992 5872

6 l 7tp

NEWSPAPER

10 x 55 FURN I SH ED mob tl e
hom e new red carpetrng .
new washer an d a1r co n
d 1t1o ner $3,500 Phon e 992
7 1)9

CARRIER
WANTED

5 30 6tc

IN

For Rent

MASON

1. BEDRM mobil e home, 308
Page St , m Mtddleport S75
depos•t r eQutred
• 5 11 tfc

CONTACT

THE DAILY SENTINEL
992-2156

2 BED RM mo bile h ome '"
Rac.ne area
A C Phone

992 5858

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION

6 J

ttc

"7 R M S 2 b aths . 2 m de s from

Columbu s, Ohto
May 16 , 1975
Contract Sales L egal Copy

Harr~sonvot l l e, s hown b y
appo tn tm ent only Call (5 13)
83911 126
6 3 61c

No 75·289
UN IT PRICE CONTRACT

FOLD DOWN tent cemper
sleep s etght, self contamed
$400 ~hone 992 7378

-

1

PUBLIC NOTICE
To A lfr ed E Wa rd . address
unknown , whose last known
add r ess was Route L Onent,
Oh10
In th e Common Plea s Court
Of Metgs Co un ty,
Oh10 ,
Pomeroy , Oh1o, Case No
15 , 809 ,
Paultne
Ward.
Plainhff. vs Alfre d E Ward ,
Defendant. a complamt for
d1vorce and other relief has
been ftled aga1nst you You
are requ .red to an swer t h e
Comp la tnt W1th 1n twenty etght
days after the last publlca t1 on
Larry Spencer,
Clerk of Courts ,
Me1gs County , Ohto
By N el lleM Brown
Ch tef Deput y

5 22 tic
99 2

5 25 12tc
FUR N apt 5 rooms and bath.
n1c e large yard . bath and 1 1,
390
Sou t h
Sec ond
St ,
M tddleport a dult s only
Phone 992 5262 ev-enmgs
s 21 tfc
COUNTRY Mobtle Home
Park , Rt 33, ten mtles north
of Pomeroy Large lots With
conc ret e pattos , s •d ewa lks,
ru n n e r s and off s treet
park •ng Phone 992 7479

-- - -,T RAILER space
M &gt;ddl eport

123 1 tic
fo-r ren t--.n

Call

992 2625
4 27 tfc

J

BEDRM
t ra1ler
Wtth
utlllf tes pa td , partly fur
n1Shed m trail er park on Rt
33, n ear Bu rltngham Phone

(51 20. 27 (6 } J, 10, 17 , 24, 6tc

99 2 77S t

6 I tic

NOT ICE OF
APPOINTMENT

3 RM NIC ELY FURNISHED
AP T , AIR CONDITIONED,
Estate of
REASO N!l&lt;B LE CAN BE
D eceas ed
SE EN BY APPOINTMENT ,
Not rce 1S her eby g tven that
CALL 992 2053 LOCATED
O annv S Z 1rk1e Qf Pomeroy
AT 5116 SOUTH FOURTH,
Ohto has been duly appomted
MIDDLEPORT
Admtnt s lrator of th e Estate of
6 1 3tc
Case No. 21522
JEAN ZIRkLE

•

Jean Z ~r k l e, d ece a se d , l ate of
Me1gs County OhtO
Cre drtors are requtred to
file the~r c la1ms w tth satd
t1duc•ary Wtthtn four months
D ated th1s 14th day of May

1975

apt
a•r condttloned ,
rea l n1ce 116' 1 E Mam ,
Phone 99 2 2846

6 1 3tc
4

Mannmg D We bster
Judge
Court of Common Ple.,s
Prob ate Dtvtsto n

15 1 20 . 27 (6) 3, Jtc

LEGAL NOTICE
Dorothy Ann Garnes, whose
last known pl ace of r es tdence
ts Columbus, Oh10 and whose
exact address IS unknown , ts
h ereb y notifted thet on tHe 4th
day of Octob er, 1974, Paul E
Garnes , bemg platn t1ff filed
hiS complai nt agamst her as
d efendan t 1n the Court of
Common
P l eas,
Metg s

County , Ohio , Case No 15,669,
pra ying for divorce from sa1d
Oorothy Ann Garnes on the
grounds of gtoss neglect of
duty an d extreme c ruelty ,
sa1d cause wtll be for heanng

2 da y of Juty,

197~

Paut E. Garnts, Pl••ntlff

J . 8 O' Broen, Allorney

C5 &gt; 13

4 RM

~o .

for Platnhff.

27 , (6&gt; 3, 10, t7, 6tc

RM

FU RN

a partment

Phone 992 3658
6 1 ttc
_________ ...__ -------

Phon e 992 7222

5 28 6tp

BEIIGLE

5 28 tt c
KENMORE washer , heavy
duty , used 3 months , ex
ce ll ent 1 condtfton, 5150

Joe ' s Sports and CB's at 10
p et above cost and Sh •P
p~n g
:108 Page St , M td
dleport

S 28 10t c

S 18 30t c

Phone 992 2759

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

whtte t rp on fail If seen
1Pieasc p hone 98~ .t127

s 28 61 p

l ots , rural wa t er
ava il a bl e H a rd road , 3
m tl es fr om by pas s on
Leadmg Creek Road Phone
7·12 3 108
5 9 30t c

wtth 1 car garage, car p eted
FHA or bank fman c m g
Phon e 7.12 36 15 or see M tlo
H u t c hmson , R utla nd
5 8 lf c

HOUSE

FOR

SA LE .

Mulberr y Ave, Pomero y 4
bedrm , 11 ba th l arge lot
basement garage To see ,
ca ll 446 2596
6 3 6tc

SEVE N ROOM S AN D BATH
HOME I N Pom eroy on
Butt ernut Ave, N tce ktt
c hen , new roof
JUS t
m
stalled . pn ced at $18 000
Seen by appo1ntment Ca ll

---

and

YARD Sale , J une 4, 5, and 6
Wednesday. Thursday and
Frtday from 10 fill 4 30 at
the Don Hanntng residence
Bradbury Road Lots of ntee
children 's clothing, 10 gallon
aquanum with aiL f ixtu r es ,
and other 1tems
6 3 Jtc
-- - - -------------

Yard

6 3 12tp
--~--

:l BEDROOM hou se

wall to
wall carpe t1 ng larg e k tt
c hen and bath uftl tty room ,
1 -l
wash
room .
acr e.
aluminum Stdtng , s tor m
w1nd ow s, storag e bulldtn g
Phone
742 4601
Wtll
sac ri f 1ce for qu1c k sale
5 25 tfc

NEED A n ew home bu111 on
vour lo f? Contact Mtlo B
Hutchison , Rutland Oh 10

Phone 742 3615

G U ARAN T EED
Ph

per ca rton (500 1 22 I r h p

S2 10 per lpop Get th em
wh1 l e they la st Store hours
ette.ct1ve May 19 M onday
Thursday 9 a m to 6 p m ,
F r.day and Saturday 9 a m

6 3 3tc

to 9 p m VILLAGE GUN
SHOPPE , 266 Mil l St ,

3 FAMILY Yard Sole, June 2,

tuesday , and Wednesday
10 a m fill 4 p m at 76)
Sycamore St, Middleport
old f urniture Items
'
1

6 1 3tc

---

- -- - -YARD Sale, an-S-;;;;;hJrd
Avenue , Middleport , June 2
3, and -4
'

Middleport

,

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

l18 3Dtc

-- --~--

1956 GMC 11 7 ton tru c k ( 300
gal lon tank , d1sk , and
cult1vator Call 742 39:49

6 I 6tp

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

197J YAMAHA 250 MX , S550
Phone 992 2452 or 992 5396
6 1 3tc

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

BEDD IN G, - plants,

pott~d

pla nls, geran•ums, azalea s.
petun1as , por c h bo xes,
hang1ng baskets Cleland 's
Greenhous e,
Geraldine
Cleland , Ra c me . Oh1o 45771
5 18 tiC

WINCHESTER model 12 lull
c hoke 12 gauge, n•ckel Stee l
veot1lated rib , good con ·
dllton , S350 Conta c t Marvi n
Keebaugh days , 992 53 42

53012tp ,

NEW LISTING - 2 bedrooms,
bath, dining, 3 porches, lev el
lot near school and stores
Only $7 ,500.
'
NEW LISTING - Building lot
with water lap and septic lank
In the country near school
$2,500
NEW LISTING
Three
rentals One 9 room house with
bath , FA furnace, a 4 room
garage apartment w1th bath,
and a 2 room wtlh some work.
Ctly water $16,000 00
MOBILE HOME - 3 bedroom
Skyline. bath , n 1ce kitchen
with cook , bake umls, and
relr tgerator . Nat gas f ~ r­

ROGER-·5 ~d;n;i;-e-o-;Ums~
Silver sparkle. 14x20 base, '2
shell mount tom toms . t
floor tom , 4 cvmbals W1lh
stand Also , snare drum5
Wtfh stand and stool Phone
949 5192

4 YR . OLO 3 bedroom h~use ,
uttlltv room , large kttchen ,
l1 v!ng ro.om , bathroom
A ppo in tm ent only , 99 2 7631

6 1 3tc

6 1 ff.£

f

428 1308

6 I 6tc

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

4 17 1 mo .

HElL

BUT, MY DE.AJ'l U N C ~JO PLATO! YOU
FOR&lt;SIOT THAT IM RfCH 1 TOO! IF
YOU HAVE BILLIONS .. AT LI'AST'
I ~AVE MILLIONS!

! Eto.IJOY LIFE .. I HAVE LOADS OF'

MEN PURSUE ME!.. NOT, MIND
YO U, THAT l
C0 ~ 5 1DER THEM
. AI.L THAT
IMPORTA'IT!

FUI&lt;J ~

Wolfe &amp;Ward

Garage

Atr cond1t1ontng, plum btng, heattng , rooftng ,
spouttng, general sheet
metal work .

PHONE 992-2823
Condor St

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

FREE ESTIMATES
PH. 949-5184
54 1 mo.

FOR
FREE
----.-- - - ESTIMATES

Monday thru Saturday
• We will ptck up &amp; dellverv
Speetal low prices on all
mechan1cal work .

s.J -1mo .

NJD IJ~tJC.'{ CALL.t:;D OFF

ii.OUI..D 'IOU MARR'l
9:lMOOf.IE: \.llOO WAS

)OIJR 'NeDDitJb ~

lJ~F/&gt;.ITf{FUL.. ~

1

andO.ratH

" souno LITilE rue,

---

QUI'TE COMFCmTABLE!
ANO PLfttT'f fA ST

YOUR ._, I'I(UP WITH

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-GONE

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

55-1 mo.

WEU. 1tjl5 15fot'T

I 992-255o I
m

FREE ESTIMATES

N h&lt;! AV

Blown
Insulation Services
Blown mto Walls &amp; A«ics
STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIOING-SOFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

992-3092

..---

LI'ITLE ORPHAN 'ANNIE

Sf

WI, 0

If so, Call us Now for
a Free Estimate.

QUITE iJ. PALATIAL AS

TILE mCKT, BUT IT!$

E!iOUGtt TO 6El US
TI1BU-

WHY TO THE

PI.ACE'WE'R t:G~ t4G

AJoltiiE - l11EPLACE

I WAS HEADED FOR
BEFORE I HfAR D oF

"S"ORTY" 5MtTH-

TRACE!

wq:HOUT

PITCHfRESQUE

HEY! LOOK

I PRIHTS

~ SEE 7
1ltfSE HE ~E

PrTCHfRS OH POsTCARDS
~HD STICKS 'b\ Itt l H'

OUT!
WHEW! THAT
BlU ND£R!H LUBBER

ORuG STORE WINDER - Sff?
TOURISTS GOfS fOR 'EM•GlJA\NT " TltEY CAllS 'EM·

"'EARL'( RAN \,1:,

oow•-

5 30 1 mo

EXPERIENCED

Syracuse, Ohio
Ph . 992-3993
4 10 l mo

Merle Norman
Cosmetics

Roger Hysell's
Garage

lOLA'S
BEAUTY SALON

and

From the largest Truck or
Bulldo2er Rad i ator to the
smallest Heater Core

Ph 992-2174

992 3525 or 992 5232
2 11 tic

D&amp; L r ' f REE Trtmmtn g l"O N EED your no use or roof
yea r s ex p er tence In su r ed
pa1 n te d ? Phone 992 59 95 or
fr ee es t 1ma t es Call 992 3057
992 7676
Coolv tlle Pho ne { l ) 667
6 t 6tp
304 1
4 30 ttc W I LL D O St d ew alk s, patiOS,
roofmg . p ar n t1 ng , 1nt and
CARPET Insta ll ati on
$1 25
ext , ce tl1n gs, spouttng ,
per ya rd
Call Rtchard
s 1ding , alum1num . ha rd
west Phone 843 2667
board Call 742 4620 , storm
s 4 26tc
wmdow s and pane11ng

READY MIX CO NCRETE
d e l1ver ed rtght to
prot ect F asf and easy
est tmat es Phone 992
Goeg l em Ready M1 x
Midd l eport Oh io

6 30 tfc

WILL tnm or cut tr ees and
s hrubbery .
c l ea r
out
ba se m ent s, a tt1 cs. etc
Phone 949 322 1 or 742 4441

5 18 26tc

MACHINE.

... ct-' liC TA NK S CLEA N E D
Reasonab le RATE S Phon e
446 47 82 Gall tpoll s John
Russell , owner
4 9 tfc

----- ------

'E'LWOOD BOWE.RS R EPAIR '
- Sweepers toa sters .rons ,
a ll small ap plian ces Law n
mower, ne)(t to Stat e H1gh
way Ga ra ge on Route 7
P hone 985 3825
4 16 ftc

- - ----- ------SE PTI C T ANKS c le aned

-

Modern Sanitation
or 992 7349

~

Wan ted to own and operate
candy &amp; confect •on vendtng
route
Pomeroy .
M1dd lepor t and surroun dtng
area
Plea s ant
bus1ness H1gh profit •terns .
Can start part t1me Age or
exper ience not l mportan.'Requ~res car and $1395 to
S4795 cash mvestment For
de tails w r ite and include
your phon e numb er

Department BVU

3938 Meadowbrook Rd.
Mmneapolls, MN 55426

99 2 3954

FATHER
~seD

' US-

9 18 tfc

Ba ckh o e, d ltche r , water
lin es , foot ers dra.ns roads
and bru sh clean 1ng No job
too small, no weather too
bad
Phone Charl es R

(2

-,-------------p R I CE
COn-strU c tton----co

WINNIE

Roofmg spoutmg . Gemm1
tdt'" r eplace m en t. win
dows comp lete r emodeling,

Ph one 742 6273 o r (304) 773
5684 &lt;
5 9 26tp

-Real Eltl~'f;J,-sa~-.7-r~ _,..and bath,
car~e t • ng , A I condlt 1on
Pnced for qutck sale Phon e

or

Buy it now
Convenient
Plan I

use our
Lay- Away

®MYCOMPAAY !SON THE VERGE
OF l3ANK1'1~PltY1 GREGORY. A
NEW COIIIPETIIDR IN TOWN
15 FORCING U5 OUT
-&lt;t'tt'
OF BUSINESS&gt;.

n:Y?

WE!r._L,JT WI'S EVER.
WINNI
OOtNIVAL OF nlE Fl
ST. I.
UNDERSTAND ATHENA
FA511 IONt; 15 A FIRSTRATE OUTFIT.

'

992 7244

6 I Jt c

MASON FURNITURE

773-5592

Herman Grate

Mason,
0

W. Va.
-

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

TAKE'WMPO RADIO
are in great need
of properties to sell.
Strike while the iron
is hot Sell Today
while we have Cash
Buyers. All Cash for
Your P~operty.

WHERE EVER YOU GO
THIS WEEKEND
and
LISTEN TO YOUR rAVORITE· HITS

vI'M PlANNIN'
A BODACIOUS

FISH FRV
FER SUNDAY
AfTERNOON.
LOWEEZY

GOODY!!
CAN I DO

ENN"'THIN6
TO HELP
OOT,

Ij

·,•

·,
'•'
••

Grap~

I

For m ost-productive results,
tempo ranly set astde work
that s too tim e-co nsuming
Tackle chores you can knock

Bemtce Bede O~ol
For Wednesday, June 4, 1975
ARIES (March 21·Aprll19) Be
pers1stent tod ay on tss ues 1mportant to YOU II may app ear
you wo n t succeed but yo u wtl l
1f yo u hang tn there

••

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)

I

I

I

'

~

Off qU ICkly
~

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23· Doc.
21) Th1s should be a
pleasurab le day , bul there's a
ltttle warn •ng about how much
you should pay for your fun

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Don 1 JUdge ot hers 1n advance

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Don 1 make dectslons on

ol the tr ac t1 ons tod ay Yo u
co uld be domg them an tn JUSt lce G1ve them the benefit

your own today on a maJor
dom esttc matter your mate

oC1he doubt

deciding

s ho u ld

a hand In

have

Be frank .

a b1t
PISCES (lab. 20-March 20)
Yo ur matenal pros pects are
prom1s1ng tod ay •f you're prudent 1n your dealings Conduct
your alfa1 rs along practi cal
tmes

MYour
WBirthday
June 4, 1975

fa1 th m yo ur Judgment Try not
to be overly Influenced by one

7

You w1!1 bec ome tn11olv-ed tn a
bold enterprtse th1s year w1th
rather la rge stakes You II be 1n
cl ose assoc1atton wtth pe rsons
who hav e tnflu ence over
orgamzat•ans and g rou ps

"

!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I

WIN AT BRIDGE
Lancelot attacks hand boldly,,
wanlea to takelt some lime Oi
3 other and this JUSt m1ght be his
only chance.
T
The queen held and the se- .
cond dragon had bit the dust "
He led the Jack of spades, ' '
WEST
EAST
covered with the ace , ruffed a
.ro10872
.roK 53
spade m dummy and led a "
¥K
¥JI05
trump
~
tKQ9 64
t8 73
It was equally s1mple for • A 10 2
• Q 96 5
Lancelot to go nght up w1th h1s .:,
ace He wanted' to be able to o
SOUTH (D)
ruff hts last spade in dummy ·:
• A964
and a closmg finesse nught , ~
¥AQ8642
make that impossible
•"
tA
The
ace
dropped
the
kmg,
but
•J 8
that was lrostmg on the cake II
Both vulnerable
JUSt gave Lancelot an overtrick .
NORTH
.roQJ
• 973
tJ 10 52
.ro K 7 4 3

West

North

East

Pass
Pass

2¥
Pass

Pass

South
1¥

LONGFELLOW

Pass

••

'

The bidding has been .

3

Openmg lead - K t

South
West Norlll EaSI
L--------...J
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
1•
,,
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc Smgle letters. By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Pass 3 -'
Pass
?
~
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
Lancelot the peerless looked You South hold ·
'
hmts. Each day the code letters are different
over dummy with d1staste. • K Q98
A • A 4 • A 9 8 7 6 ;,
'
Dmadan, the worst player at What do you do now•
·' '
CRYPTOQUOTES
the square table , raised A - Bid four aoll'ump. v,u piau
Lancelot every time he could . to b1d six clubs if your partnoo::~
ABOP
C I P N But the peerless one WIShed shows no aces at all.
'J I P R
VBZZBJV
·
that Dmadan had just a wee b1t
·c'
TODAY'S QUESTION
VTYPV,
XQC more.
RBC
VYRSUP
ABOP
Then Lancelot went alter the Your partner replies ftv e .
X K C C K U Y B R V . - V I K L P V· hand like he would go after a diamonds to show one ace What do
YH
dragon or g1ant He led a c~ you do now'
toward dummy and went u~
Answer Temorrow
' '
TPKZP
w1th the kmg after West played
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: OUR SWEETEST SONGS ARE low The king held and the !1rst Send Sl .. for ~COSY .f:fOOERN
THOSE WHICH TELL OF A SADDEST THOUGHT.
dragon had been taken care of bool&lt; 10: Win at Br,., (c/o tflla
Next came the queen of newspaper), P 0 Box 4811. Radio -~
SHELLEY
spades finesse . Lancelot CityStatlon, NewYorf&lt;.N.Y. 10018. •~
(© 197!» Kin1 Features Synd{cue, Inc.)

5.

..'"

I

I.OVE • TloiiV'I(...

WE'RE FOUR·ALL IN

PARSON? 1' ··''''''x

THE

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

Flfl5T

SET'!

., '

CALl ·992-2259
-~

'~

Today she ts n'L

Buyers See Us For Your
Needs 10 Real Estate.

-·--

''

wds,)

''

., -----..---

\
0

•

Astro-

.

House

••

who always th1 nk s she s ng ht

LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23) Have

Is

'0 KNON EVERYTHIN~
ltlAT"o GOING ON !

'•
•
•

though tt may stmg the liStener

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR

IIHY, ER1YES. I ... ER. ...
MKE IT MY BUSINE&amp;5o

..•

1 .oo-Tomorrow 3,4,13.

what you think

38 W1th SOIDld
Judgment

Hat11 eld , Rt 1, Ru tl and ,
Ohio Phon e 14 2 6092
S 2 S2tp

•

You have a tendency today to
Skirt ISsues wtthout truly say1ng

Ancient
times
28 Eternity
29 Dolly a
camera
Famed
hngutst,
Marto 33 Babyloman
de1ty
34 - · de
France
35 Tea variety

)blJR

.·

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fob. 18)

,.!::~AB~N::!E;:!R!...~,.----'I""'--...;.,~-r---.::-,-::-:-:-:-:-:-:::-"":"':'~:-:-:"--:--,:;--::-:"":'-~~27

B-BUI

0

10 00-Petrocelll 3,4,15, Barella 13 ; Billy Graham
Crusade 6. Dan Augsusl B; Burt Bacharach 10;
Family At War 33
10 30-News 20
11 :00-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15, ABC News 33
11. 30-Johnny Carson 3,4,15, Wtde World Special 13;
FBI6, Movie "They Ran for Their Lives" 8, Movie
"A Song Is Born" 10; Janak1 33
12 30-Wide World Special 6

urut
18 - VIVant
19 Endmg for
vulcan
20 Corleone's
tttle
21 Indonesian
!!)!!!l!!;;;o;;.., ts land
22 Run along
24 Equal
25 Paper
quantity
..., 26 Russian
commune

RESPONSIBLE
PERSON

6 1 3tc

5 13 26tc

Just
hold the wheel,
Eve, while 1
adJust the
steam'

your
Free
3284,
Co ,

'

Young &amp; the Restles-s io~- Not For Women Only 15;
zoom 33.
30-Days of Our Lives 3,4, 15; Let' s Make a Deal6, 13;
As the World Turns 8,10; Mulligan Stew 33.
2 00-$10,000 Pyram id 6, l3 ~.Guldlng Light 8, 10; The
Way II Was 33.
.
2·»-- Doctors 3,4,15, Big Shwowdown 6,13; Edge of
Night 8,1 0; Saga of Western Man 33
3.00-Anolher World 3,4, 15; General Hospital 6, 13;
Price IS Right 8,10, RFD 20
3 30-{)ne Life to Live 13, Lucy Show 6; Match Game
8,10, The Way II Was 20 , Eica 33
3 45--' Theonle 33
4 00-Mr . Cartoon 3, I Dream of Jeannie 4, Somerset
15. G1lltgan '~ ls 6; Tatlleta le sB; Sesame St. 20,33,
Movt e " Do You Know This Voice" 10, Mike
Douglas 13.
4 3D-Bewitched 3. Merv Griffin 4, Mod Squad 6.
Mickey Mouse Club 8, Bonanza 15
s 00-F Bl 3, Andy Grlfttlh B. Mtsler Rogers' Neigh
'
borhood 20,33; Ironside 13
5 30-News 6, Bever ly Hillbillies 8, Hodgepodge Lodge
20; Gel Smart 15;
Elec Co. 33
6 00-News 3,4,8,10, 13,115, ABC News 6; Electric Co.
20. New Mus tc in Brass 33.
6 3D-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13, Bewitched 6;
CBS News 8, 10, Zoom 20,33
7 00-Truth or Cons 3,4; Bowling for Dollars 6; What's
My Lme 8; News 10, Country MuSic Jubilee 13;
b11iy Graham Crusade 15; Feeling Good 20; You
Owe II To Yourself 33.
7 3D-Police Surgeon 3; Name That Tune 4; Let's
Make a De al 6: Wilburn Brothers 8; Book Beat 20;
The Judge10, To Tell the Truth 13, Episode Action
33
8 oo-LIItle House on the Prairie 3,4, 15,; That's My
Mama 6, Billy Graham Crusade 8; Feeling Good
33; Tony Orlando &amp; Dawn 10, Salute to Pike County
13, Stalin 20
8 :ID-Movte "Betraya l" 13. Movie " The Over-the Hill
Gang" 6; Vtolln 33
9 00-Lucas Tanner 3,4, 15, Cannon 8, 10; Masterpiece
Theatre 33

ACROSS
39 Exerctse
l Platform
mstruction
5 Italian c1fy 40 Str1ctly
10 " Das
-:- nous
Rhemgold" 41 Debauch
role
ll Valuable fur
12 Rest
sat1sf1ed
(2 wds .)
LLJt.::.~ifl.~i:ii:::~::L-li4 Greek letter
15 N1genan
tr1besman
16 Horray!
17 Electncal

PomeroY

5-14 1 me

TUESDAY, JUNE 3,1975

by THOMAS JOSEPH

EX(AVA TIN G. dozer , loader
and ba ckhoe work septiC
tanks
•n s t arted ,
dump
tru cks and Ia boys for h1re, 1
w il l haul ftll dtrf , top so d ,
l1m estone and gra vel . Call
Bob or Roger Jeffers , day
phone 99 2 7089 , n tght phone

Phone 992 ·5682 or
992-1121

m ~.

... BUT r DON'T
THINK SO.'

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

Automobile
Transmission
Repair

John St., Next To
Grade School
992-2549 Syracuse, 0.

ALLEY OOP

Nathan Biggs
Radtator Spec1ahst

.

0

6 00-Sunrise Seminar 4, Summer Semester 10.
6 2!&gt;-Farm Report 13
6:30-Flve Minutes to Ltve By 4, News 6, Bible An
swers 8, School Scene 10; The Story 13.
6·Js-Columbus Today 4.
6·4!&gt;-Mornlng Report 3; Farmtlme 10
7 oo-Today 3,4, 15; A.M. America 13,6; CBS News B,10.
B:OO-Lassle 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8; Schoolles 10;
Sesame St 33,
8 30-Btg Valley 6; Popeye 10.
8:5!&gt;-Chuck White Reports 10
9 00-A M 3; Phil Donahue 4, 15; Lucy Show B. Mer
ning with D. J. 13; Walsh's Animals 33
9 30-Not For Women Only 3, Dinah 6, Galloping
Gourmet 8; New Zoo Revue 13, Changing Rhythms
33.
10.00-Celebrity Sweepstakes 3,4,15; Joker' s Wild B. 10,
Dtnah 13 . You Owe II to Yourself 33.
10 .30-Wheel of Fortune 3,4, 15, GambitS , 10; Mulltgan
Stew 33
11 00-High Rollers 3,4, 15; One Life to Llve6 , Now You
See 118,10, One of a Ktnd 33
11 30-Hollywood Squares 3,6 ,15; Blankely Blanks 13,
News 4; Lo~e of Life 8, 10, The Bolero 33
11 .5!&gt;-Grahham Kerr 8, Dan Imel's World 10
12·00-Jackpot 3, 15. Password 6, 13; Bob Br aun 's 50 50
Club 4; News 8, 10, Mister Rogers 33
12 30-Biank Check 3, 15: Split Second 6,13; Search for
Tomorrow 8, 10 . Elec Co 33.
12.55--'NBC News 3,15
1 oo-News 3; All My Chtldren 6,13, Phil Donahue 8,

LARRY LAVENDER

Also Repai rs On All
R 1d 1ng Tractors
498 Locust St
Middleport, Oh1o
s 9 1 mo

_._.._.._..~_......,..,__.._.._.._.._._._.._,..;..~w~·..
.,.~•..;w,;.;,~......~.

WEDNESDAY,JUNE4, 1975

Does
your
home
require any of these
services?

Home Buildlnt
Room AddltloM

Sales &amp; Service

R e pa ~rs servrce, all makes
992 228d T he Fa brt c Shop ,
Pomeroy Au thor~ zeo Smge r
We
Sales and Se r v ~e e
Sharpe n SCISSOr S
3 29 tf c

I IX&gt;I' T !!fl..IEVE: IT~ 'IOU

Ph. 915-4102

WILKINSON
SMALL

S EW IN G

BORN LOSER

Ches..r,Ohlo

V. V. JOHNSON
AND SON, INC.

GENERAL Kepa1r, Cl ean up
and
haU l in g,
cu tt1n g
we ld1 ng
carpentry
plum btng, el ec masonry
a nd general remodeling
Call Sk d Pool 992 5126

Pomeroy . 0.

OPEN 9 a .m . to6 p.m .

Blml BnAhws
Constlucb Co.

On alummum replacement
Windows , s1d1ng , storm
doors and Windows. ra:hng,
phone
Charles
Lisle,
Syracuse ,
Oh10.
Carl
Jacob, Sales Represen tative

58 l

Grand OpeninK

Racine Plumbing
&amp;Heating

AWMINUM &amp;
VINYL SIDING

We

mi les fro m Forked Run
Lake 1 1 mile from Long
Bottom , Ohio Ph one 004)

Call Before 7:30 A.M.
Or Afler6: DO P.M.
949-3604
5-7-1 me

•

~92 - 5776

GLEN R.
Bissell

HELP • HElP HELP
16 ACRE S - MO IQS County , 3

Racine, Ohio
We Build the Best and
Repair the Rest.
-Cabonets lnsta lied--

....

3 3o-Dne Life to Live 13, Lucy Show 6; Match Game
8,10. The Romagnolt s! Tabl e 20; Changing Rhyth
ms 33 .
4 00-Mr Cartoon 3, I Dream of Jeannie 4; Somerset
15; (&gt; tlllgan's Is 6. Tattletales 8; Sesame Sl 20,33;
Movie " Hall Angel" 10, Mtke Douglas 13
4 30-Bewltched 3; Merv Grllfln 4, Mod Squad 6,
Mickey Mouse Club 8. Bonanza 15
5 00-FBI 3; Andy Gr~fflth 8, MISter Rogers' Netgh borhood 20,33 ; lronside- 13
5 30-News 6, Beverly Hillbilli es 8, Get Smart 15,
Villa Alegre 33
6 00-News 3,4,8 ,10, 13,15, ABC News 6, Elec Co 20,
Cat ch 33 33
6 30-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13, Bew1 tched 6,
CBS News 8, 10, Zoom 20,33
7 00-Truth or Cons 3,4; Blue Ridge Quartet 4;
Bowltnq lor Dollars 6, What's My Line 8,, News 10,
Name That Tune 13; Billy Graham Crusade IS;
Antiques 20. Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33
7 30-Baseball 3,4, Buck Owens 8; New Price IS R1ght
10. To Tell the Truth 13, RFO 20. Car Care 33.
. B·OO-Happy Days6,13, Adam 1215, Good times s-;JO,'
The Way II Was 33, The Bolero 20
8:30-Movie " The Hatllelds and the McCoys" 6, 13;
Movie " Where Have All the People Gone?" 15,
Mash 8,10; , End ofthe Ho Chi Minh Trail20; Nova
33.
9 00-Billy Graham Crusade 8, Hawait Ftve 0 10
9 30-Saga of Western Man 33
10 00-Police Story 3, 15, Mar cus Welby, MD 13, To
Be Announced 4, Btlly Graham Crusade 6; Bar
naby Jones B. 10, News 20
10 30-Redscene '75, Monty Python's Flying Circus 33
11 ·00-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15, ABC News 33

.

town on large lot. $9.500.
GARDEN SPACE - 5 rooms,
bath, nat gas, ctly water,
paneltng, . uflllty bu1lding and
large level lot Only $7,500
FOR BEST RESULTS IN
BUYING OR SELLING CALL
A REALTOR AT 992-3325.

ROOM-ta~ROOM

TOP QUALITY AT
LOWEST PRICES

5 15 1 mo

nace , and rural water near

PORTA-COOL"'

I

667 3858

i;;"x- c AVA-T t-i'I'G -. - Dozer ,

Our

2.000 hanging baskets of
Petun ias, Ivy , Geraniums ,
Vines, and Began •as
.

ap

5 IB 30tc
stock
is now
arr~vtng
R1fles . sho tguns,
PIStols, reloadin g eq u i p
22
scopes , I am m un 1t 1ons(
MAG h p $3 per box , S27 so

OUR SPECIALTY over

plta n ces &amp; new furnttur ~ .
Op en 'i 5 wed through sun .

12 19 tic

s um mer

In Syracuse
Now op en for season No w
ava tiB ble - most vartet1es
of vegetable plants &amp;
flow ers plus potted fl owers

" BARGA I N S are
our
m 1ddl e na m e" 1n cl ea n ,
use d
f ur n1tur e.

t
' 1 ,_,

NEIGLER
Building Supp~

Greenhouse

" At Caution L1ght "
Rt 7, Tupper s Plams , 0

page St ,

5 B tfc

Hubba~d's

KUHL'S
BARGAIN CENTER

DOZER work . land cleann g
by th e acre, hourly or
c ontract
F arm
po nd s,
road s, etc L ar ge do ze r and
oper at or w tth over 20 years
ex p e r te n ce
P ul l1n s Ex
cavattng , Pom eroy, Oh1o
Phone 992 V17B

GUNS AND AMMO -

Tuesday thru Fnday Union
Avenue Watch for signs

- - - - --6 l 3tp
YARD
Sa ;;;-·- Mo;;doy,

JOB

Mtddleport

Sale,

3, and 4 , 1675 L •l'lcoln
He1ghts, Large se l ection of
ttems

CB's

·- - - - - - ;

17 4

CB's Antennas, ftshing bait ,
fts ht ng supp li es, guns and
ammo l nd1an Joe's Spor ts

Yard Sale

FAMILY

l. LARGE

992 2020
Phone 985 4175
- -- - ---- - - - - - s 28 6tp ---

CARPENTi:_R .work :.. ce·, lmg ~
panelmg, floo rrng
etc

S

7 B EDROOM h ouse tn R ac m e
total elec tr tc wa"~l to wa ll
car pet hvtn g room ut tl1t y
room . 1 ac r e Phone 9.19
1998
5 30 6tc

6 1 Jtp TWO NE W 3 b ed room hom es

3965

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

3938

brown, bla ck and

98S

5 1 tic ORDER any CB !rom lnd1an

Yamahe' scsoo dirt bikes
~r. ced to sell Phone 985

I 29 6tc

Call

STRAWBERRIE S by the bo x
or crate Gerald me Cleland ,
phone 949 4121
5 30 6tc - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -5-28 tfc
REMODEL IN G, Plumb1ng , ONE blac k 48 · pony and 1
black Tenn Walker Phone
heat 1ng and all types of
992 3630
genera l
repatr
Work
5 29 6tc
guaranteed 20 years ex
pertence
Phone 992 2409

'
, 5 30 6tc
1971 SUZUKI TM ; 00 on di 973
BOY ' cour medal lost Monday
on parade route If fo un d
please
cal/ . 742 3781.
Reward
·

S35

re

STEREO
Mod &amp;rn Walnut
stereo a m fm radto com
b1nation , 4 speed chan ger . 4
speakers, sep ara te con t rol s
Balance $104 :19 Use our
budg et terms Phon e 992

after 7 P m 985 39 13

Lost

Fr.g1da 1r e

tiNE 5 y r old and one 4 year
old wtt h S month "Old ca lf,
both Holstein
Hereford
COWS Phone 742 6723
6 1 6tc

-Fo;- ~i; -- -~- ~r·-

Pets For Sale

FT

3974

6 1 Jtc

1 Y-R OLD female Registe red ,
bla ck an d tan co on hound
~ 1 25 Also 3 month old :
Female Reg Wa lker , S50

CU

tr1g erator

;;oW-Sellu~~-=- ;-ulter- B~sh-

Employnient Wanted

6 I Jtc
- - - ----- - -----

MODERN sty l e player p 1an o
w.th SO ro ll s, Verv good
shape Prtce S900 Also , 1957
F ord Ranchero truck . S300
Phone 74 2 635 2
6 1 31c

QUICK;i!Nf

TRAILER apts Phone
5248 or 992 3436

-

For Sale

Sealed propo sal s w ill be 2 BEDROOM mobil e hom e,
r ece l'v ed at the ott1 ce of the
1
ac
m11e
out
of
9531
D1rector of t h e Ohro Depart
t"larr1Sonv-ill e on Co Roa d 3
men t
of
Tra nsp ort at•on ,
4 13 tfc
6 3 6tc
Columbus Oh10 until 10 00
A M
Ohto St an da rd Ttme
TWO bedr m furn •shed mobil e Jl!JNK autos , complete and
Tues da y, J un e 10 1975, for
de li vered to our yard We
home Depos1t re qu 1red
Improveme nts tn
PICk up auto bodtes and buy
Phon e 992 3429
Me1gs and V1nfo n Count .es
all ktnds of scrap metals and
6 3 6tp
Ohto , on v ar•ous sect tons of
tron Rtder ' s Sa l vage, St
M EG VIN Sta te Route 689
R t 124, R:t 4, Pomeroy,
TR A IL ER space . I mtle from
by resurfac•ng wtth asp halt
Oh•o Catt 992 5468
Pomeroy
Phon e 992 SB58
co n cr e te
10 17 ttc
5 2 tfc
Pave ment Wtd th - 18 feet
by- ma~~t;;~Protect and wo rk L ength FURNISHED
apartmen t,
c amera ready copy One
39,0 19 2 f eet or 7 39 miles
adu l ts only 1n Mtddleport
page S5 55 •f~rst 100 $1 IS
" The da te set for compl etiOn
Phon e 992 3814
of th1s work shall be as set
eact'l add1t1onal 100 Send
3 25 tic
copy
c heck
to
LET
forth'" t he b•ddtng proposal "
TER SHOP PLUS . 72 W
Ea c h b•dd er
shal l
be
Union, Athens, Oh10 Also ,
reQutred to file W1t h ht s b1d a 3 AND 4 ROOM fur n1 shed and
un fu rn• she d
apa rtments
iob pnntmg
ce rttf1 ed check or cashter·s
1
Ph one 992 5434
check for an am oun t eQual to
4 29 3Btp
4 12 He
f1 ve per cent of hn. b1d , b ut 1n
no even t more tha n f 1fty
FOR your " Oil of -:--Mtnk ''
thousan d dollars or a bon d for PRIVATE meet.ng room for
Cosmetics
Phone
any organ•zat .on phone 992
t en per c ent of hts btd. payable
BROWN 'S 992 5113
3975
to the D tr ector
1 7 tfc
3 11 tfc
B1dde r s must apply , on the
proper forms . for qua ltftc at lon
at I east ten days pnor to th e A PT ltke new , 3 rooms , w 1th
Products, phone 992 3410
dat e set for opentng b 1ds '" --'l arg e bath , tab l etop range ,
large
c
loset
Eas
t
Mat
n
St
,
I 24 ttc
accord ance w1th Ch apter 5525
Pomeroy See to appreCiate
Oh10 Rev 1se d Co d e
Phone Gallipolis durmg day ''F1'1'fi,tamJ1111f'1!!1'1-:-ifvou •rr
Plan!:&gt; and spect ft catt ons are
cut t1 Phone 742 5113
tct6 9699 eve n 1ngs 446 9539
on ft l e tn the Department of
4 10 tic - - --- -- -------~t 'ltp
Transportal10n and the off 1ce
of
the
Olstr•ct
Deputy
ONE Dupl ex apt
1n Mtd
D1 r ec to r
dl eport 1 hou se 1n Pomeroy
The D •rector reserves the
Call 130• I 882 2050 collect
nght to re 1ect any and all b1d s
s 22 tic BABYSITT ING in my home
With small c htldr en , ex
R ICH AR D D JACKSON
pertenced
Mrs
G l enn
DIRECTOR TWO b e dr oom · hous e and
Sm1th , Rock Sprmg s Road
gar age. 325 Sp r.ng Ave
Rev81773
Phone 992 3613
Re f eren ces Ph on e 992 7660

151 27. 161 3, 2tc

Co.

THE househo ld goods and
eff ec ts of the Estate of Orb a
.
E Stout . Deceased . w111 be
so ld at pub/1c auc t 1on at her
res1dence 1n Harrt son vi ll e.
1970 CHEVELLE MALIBU CPE
$1695
Oh10 com m en c1ng at 10 30
307 VB. power steering, good G70 w1de oval t ires,
am on r r.day Jun e 13
rad1o, stlver grey ftm sh , automatic tr ans, mtertor
197S Sale ttems 1nclud e
spotless
•
lr:tmp s stand , t a ble , ch a tr s.
Zentlh Televts•on. S1d e
boar d , c ou ch
J metal
1969 CHEVY NOVA4 OR .
$1095
c ha ~rs
p1ano and stool , 3
6 cyl , automaf1c t ra n s, c l ean mter1or good hres,
wooden cha i rs J p1 ece hvinQ
rad1o
room su1te . delu xe platform
r ocker, desk mtrror 3 ptece
be dr m su.te , dresser , c hatr
1971 MATADOR
$1595
c loth es press , ham p er,
4 door, loca l car, a ir cond1hone d, full equipmen t
meta l sto ol ch1na c lose t
table . buffet
gas ra nge ,
r e fr t gerator . m et al ca rt ,
po ts
pans an d di Shes.
. May t ag
washer , Un tco
fr eezer . 3 P •ece be drm
su1 t e. wooden bed. dresser 4
wooden c ha1r s, ct'les t of
dr a we r s, cl oth es press h\Jb
caps
WICker
ham per ,
magazme r ack la w n cha tr ,
Warm Mornm g st ove. gas
st ove , frutt tars wash tub. 1964CHEVELLE Super Sport, 197J OLDS De lta 88 , d d r
ere
good cond1t1on Phone 949
har d top w1t h a c , low
Terms of Sal e Cash In
5182
m• l eage , pr rced reasona ble
the event of r a1 n th e sa l e
6 3 ltp
Phon e Lo u Os borne , 992
may be postponed Theron
2 178
1
Johnson
ExeCutor o f the 1967 FORD P tck up
1
to n
6 3 3t c
Last W il t an d Testamenl of
tru c k. , good conOtiiOn Phone
Orba E Stout. Deceased
Don Be ll 247 2022
Car nahan Auc t1on Serv 1ce,
6 3 3tc
Aucttoneer
6 3 ttc
S RM HOUSE bath , two
bedrms
b asement, ga s
THE HOU SE HOLD goods and
R utland St , M td
h eat
effec;ts of the Estate of V W dune bugg y engm e
dl epo rt Phon e 992 7091
W!lnam E rnest Se llards .
5 28 6tc
com pl ete l y r e but!t $200
Deceased , Wi ll be sold at
A lso encyc loped•a Phone
public
auct 1o n
at
htS
rs ACRE good lana c lo se to
985 41 tB
res•den ce on D epot Stree t,
Mount U n to n Churc h Owner
6
3
3tc
Rollan d , Oh1o commencmg
will handl e on land con tr act
at I 00 p m on F r.day June ONE Holstem Cow to fr eshen
$1,000 down .$50 p er month at
6, 1975 Sa le rt ems •nclud e
6 pet mt er est wr.te or ca ll
last of month , $300 One 250
ro c ker , rad10. sw tvel rocker ,
John R Stou t. Rt 3, A l bany .
ga l l on Bulk tank , 2 unt l
Zentth Televls 1on, foo t stooL
Oh to Phone 698 53 13
Delav al m ilker s Phone 985
over stuffed cha1r , h1deabed
3891
5 28 7tc
safe
couch , table . stoo l.
6
3
3tp
lamp . de hum tdtf1er , stand,
SER V I CE stat1 on and garage
end table 3 p1e ce bedroo m DOES your l•ving room su1 te
•n R utl and Wil l fman ce or
SU1te ntght stand , dresser
l ease Pho ne 742 5052
need new cush ion s? We will
cha tr, 4 p1ece and 4 cha 1rs .
5 14 26tc
ref1ll yo ur old cus h1o n~ w 1th
Admtral
Refrigerator ,
new foam cut to s 1ze
metal cabmet pots , pans
Ave r age s1ze su11e, $12 95
and d1shes . 2 chatrs , storage
Jack 's
Furniture
&amp; H O U SE for sale loca t ed on
she lf rototdler , bed springs ,
Vme Str ee t 1n Recme Two
Uphol stery Suppt 1es. 236 E
school desk 2 kerose ne
sto ry f rame three bedro om
Ma 1n ,
Pomer oy,
Oh 10
heaters , whe eL gut te rs and
r ecently r emo d eled kllche n
Phone 992 3903
spoutmg, and mt sce llan eou s
garage ftr eptace 75 ac r e
6 3 7tc
hand tools , and a 196 4
Ca ll 949 51 14 an y t1me for
~am bier
Ter ms of Sale
app omtment
SP EC I A L sa le on closeout
Cash In the event of r am the
5 23 8tc
up hol stery fabn cs 20 pe t
sate may be postpon ed
of! reg
pr1 ce
Nyl ons
Edgar
Se llard s,
Ad
h ercu lons . ve l vet , r ayo n s, 1 72 ACRES l and and locus t
m1n1str ator of the Estate of
posts A lso 196 5 Fo rd L TO
cottons Jac k's Furnttur e.
Wdl1am Ernest Sel lards ,
Phone 7~2 3656
236 E Matn , Pomer oy Oh •o
necesaed
Carnahan
5 23 52tp
Phone 992 3903
Auct1on
Se r vtce ,
A uc
6
3
7tc
t1o neer::
5 RM HOU SE and bath larg e
att1c r oom g ara ge, 2 lots
6 3 lt c A P AC HE Camp er, sl eep s 8,
qood
locatton m Rac1ne
smk , stove and refrtg erat or,
$7 500 Ph on e 949.461 3 If no
CASH paid for all makes an d
S800 Phon e 742 6464
answe r ca ll 992 2617
models of mobile homes
6 J 6t c
5 30 6tc
Phone area code 614 423

r-

Real Estate For Sale

Mobile Homes For Sale

app l y 1n p erson ,

OF
I
QUALITY M~tor

~--------·---·-----·-

Televisi?n log for easy vie~g r

\

FREE HER MOLTTH
WHILE I CUT THESE
Wl2tST TAPES.

Notice

LEE'S Car Wa sh on Rt I :J t il l
the crossroads S3 •ns ld c and
ou t Wax lOb s, S I S Phone
992 3 180 r r.ee · p tck up and
dcltvery serv-1ce
6 3 12tc

WARROH

DICK TRACY

'

UnKramblotho.. foor Jumblos,

one letter to each

r-· . . . .

7- The Dally Sentine l, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Tuesday, June 3, 1975

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, June 3, 1975

'

'

�•··

•

' .
· 8-lhe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, O.,.Tuesday, June 3, 19765

\

· score
. d h· y Jwnor
• • gn• ·1e,- REEDSVILLE
EARNS4.0MARK •
PI· en.ty nms
_ william

. Results of the Jr. Girls
Softball contests played last
night show Forest Run
21-9,
defeated
Letart
Pomeroy blanked Racine 310, the Panthereltes slipped by
Mason· 17-14 , Syracuse
downed Rutland 21-5, and
New Haven blew past Meigs
Inn 36-2.
In the Pomer oy- Ra ci ne
contest, A. Riggs pitched a
· n().hitter giving up 5 walks.
Getting hits from .Pomeroy
were S. Mitch with 2 home
runs and a single, K. Seth a
triple and a single, and s.
Wright, N. Smith , v. Swisher,
A. Fitch a single each. other
hitters were S. Miller with a
single and a double, J . Sisson
a single and a triple, Jamie
Sisson a double, and A. Riggs

a single and double.
Following is the Jr. Girls
softball schedule. for tonight
and Wednesday games.
June 3 - 6:15, Fores t Run
vs.
Hits-N-Misses
at
Syracuse; 6: 15 M and R vs.·
New Haven at New Haven:
June 4 -6 :15, syracuse at
New Haven; 6:15, Rutland at
Mason ; 7:1 5, Leta?
! at
Racine; 6:15, Forest R vs.
Pomeroy at Minersvil e and
7: 15, Middleport . vs. 'pantherettes at Minersville.
· June 5-6: 15, M and R vs.
Forest Run . at Minersville;
6:15, Hi ls-N-Misses · vs. New
Hav_en at New Haven.

1

D. Durs t, Route I, Reedsville,
has completed lh e third
semester at the Parkersburg
Community College with a 4.0
average in the Fire Science
and Safety Techn ology
course. He has two more
sessions to complell! for his ·
certifi cate.
SING SCHEDULED
A hymn sing will be held at
the Mount Moriah Church of
God. on Saturday at 7 p.m.
Featured groups will be The
Edenairs, Layne Bluegrass
Singers,
and
The
Evangel'aiers Bluegrass
Ki ngers. The public is invited.

· ·.

&gt; •

Street
(Cantlnued from piCe 1)
for repair of meters wi thout a
clause that council would
l1ave to purchase new meters
to obtain the service. Other
council members agreed.
John Manley, councilman,
·asked if council were willing
to send Pete Simpson to
dispatcher
sc hool
at
Nelsonville at a total cost to
the village of $15 for one week
beginning June 15. Council
·ag reed.
Manley said Dave Jeffers,
police offi cer, had asked that
he be promoted to sergean t.
The request was tabled due to
lack of funds as . th e
promotion, according to the

-- - "i.eu;rs-o~;inl~-;.;;,:,el.;med:-TIIey sbdbe--~

ordina nce, would call for a
· raise in sala ry.
Council hired Charles
Hudson, Pomeroy, to work at
the ccme U!ry.
Councilman Phil Globokat
asked about issuing building
permits. Pe rmits will be
needed by any Pomer oy
residen t wh o is building a
new structure or adding on.
Permits for such building will
be effec tive by Jul y I. Those
wishin g to obtai n a permit
may con tact members of the
building commi ttee who are
Ralph Werry, Osborne and
Globokar.
Council transferred $5,000
from the parking meter fund
to the Stree t Dept. fund.
An application for meter
patrolman was read from
Ed ward Hayes, Pomeroy; for
t~ e
police depa r tment,
Russell Eshelman , Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, and Richard -Lee
Kre itzburg, Parma, Ohi o,
and for jani tor , Lewi s
Williams, Rt. 3 Pomeroy. .
Council will decide ,by the
next mee ting whether it will
advertise for bids for a new
cruise r. Also, permission was
give n to th e Muscular
Dys tr ophy prog ra m to
canvass house to house on ·
Sunday, Jul y 13.
Attending were Mayor Dale
Smi th, Werry, Osborn e,
William Snouffer, Globokar,
a nd Manley, councilmen;
Jane Walton, clerk ; Phyllis
He nn essy , ·· tr eas ur e r ;
McKenzie , s treet sup erintendent; Jed Webster, police
chief; Henry Werry, policema n, and . Edith Sisso n,.
Pomeroy dispatc her.

HOSPITAL
NEWS
Veterans Memorial Hospital
(Births)
Admitted - Marg ar et
Do nahu e, Portland ; Irene
Cross , Middle port ; Edgar
Kindell, Poll)er oy; Alice
Rairden, Long'Bottom; Mary
Lawhorn, Mason.
·
Discha rged Man dy
Hubba rd , Richard Duckworth, Barbara Brown ,
. Gregory Circle, Carl Alley,
Charles
Klein,
Be tty
Williams.
Holzer Medical Center
1Discharged; Uune·2)
Donald Berr y, Deborah
Bordman , Julianne Buck,
Wi)liarn Cooper, Billy Sue
Dailey, Clocla Dray, Judith
Hammond, Edwin Hixson,
J ames Jividen, Evelyn
Johnson , Julia Kirtley, Doris
Kiser, Joseph Lish, James
McFadden, Hazel Nanper,
James Nichols, Mrs. Robert
Daniel Rogers and daughter,
Pearley Sayre, Lola Siders,
June Taylor, Edna Trace,
Mrs. Bernard Turley and ·
daughter, Henry Willis.

Mr. and Mrs. David Clagg,
a daughter, Gallipolis;· Mr.
and Mrs. Jerry Ramsey, a
da\lghter, Galtipolis ; Mr. and
Mrs . Arthur Robins on, a
daughter, Well.!iton.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
DISCHARGES - Mrs. Carl
Dove, Apple Grove; Mrs.
Jerry Hooper .and son,
Ga llipolis Ferry; Mrs .
Ronald
Stevens
and
daughter, Apple Grove;
Bobb y Tucker, Gri mms
Landing.
ASK TOWED
.
Kenneth D. See, 20, Mtddleport, and Cherne Lynn
Fry, 16• Pomeroy.

LegisbJtion for
pay hike is

I

. i)~..I..Y:..~
••• ~.. uuu;c,:

The bank for
all reasons .•.

...

COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
Ohio Civil Service Employe~
Association today announced
that legislation had been
introduced In the Ohio
General · Assembly to give
more than 80,000 state employes a delayed pay ralse fl.
about '130 '!Piece, totaling
more than $10 million.
The employes were denled
the hike which was· first
enacted in 1972 but canceUed
by Congress when It passed
. wage price controls.
The congressional action
was upheld last month by the
U.S. Supreme Court.
The legislation calling for
the new raises would make
them effective not later than
60 days after the eHectlve
date of the bill's passage and
signing by the governor.

ISit,

PLAN TRIP
Mrs. Caddie Wickha.m,
Mrs. Robert Kuhn, apd Mrs.
J. Edward Foster of the
Pome r oy First Baptist
Church will attend the
Women's Conference a t
Capit a l University ,
Columbus, on Monday ,
. Tuesday and Wednesday of
next week .

"THE FRIENDLY BANK"

lilbens ~aHonal
-A.,&amp;INClNII'lATI

MIDDLEPORT
-'"""-·· OHIO

MIDDLEPORTI OHIO
Member Federal Deposij Insurance COrporation
DEPOSITS INSURED TO •40,000

CALL ANSWERED
RACINE - The Racine
Emergency Squad answered
a call to Portland at I :43 a.m.
Monday for Margaret
Donahue, a medical patient,
who · was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

Sewerage
(Continued frcJm page 1)
materialize, Legar said.
The former mayor is
recommending to Mayor
Dale E. Smith and members
of village council that the
$72,000 be applied to sewage
bonds which were issued for
the construction · or the
sewage system. Some $60,1100
plus interest can be paid off
this year and the balance
from the $72,000 plus the
$26,9110 can be invested on ·
inll!rest, Legar pointed out.
The receipt of the refund
money keeps the board of
public affairs from having to
increase sewage rates in the
community, Legar pointed
out,. The payoff will also
reduce bonded indebtedness
in Pomeroy . The community
at present is indebted as
deeply as law permits.

at y
VOL. XXVII NO. 36

hr..... '""... . . . ..........•····'·'··''"·' ".- "... . . . .
ll'ews . • •in Brief~
....~..·-j~·t

.EL·BERFELDS ·IN POMEROY

,

...,~

MIDDLEPORT, ()1:110
SALE STARTS WED., JUNE 4

BEN FRANKLIIN
e,,, ,,,

$11,, ,,

1111111 SltJII ,,
Mltlf AJIIIIIIIII
llflllnll
7-0z. JOIINSON'S ~
WY SHAMPOO

;;t iJ.
"'•"'''·1 ~~
S upe r

'"

8-0z. EYmNIOHT
CONDITIONERe

'

:.:( t ---:: .·

. Pk§. of Sl

.,., .. . c•..c c.

.

86~

68~
"f"

..

~

""""

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~.

(

,...

MAIIICUBES•

2-% pound fresh'•
ground
beef
patties garnished
the way you ask
for it. (Cheese 1Oc
extra.)

8t!

Make the Hospital
Room Bloom.

~UQUETS
From $7'!iJ
20 Pet: Off

Cash 'n Carry

WHILE
"QUANTITIES ,..... .--

'99!

LAST.

(OUR BEEF IS GROUND FRESH DAILY)

WHILE
.
.
. .....
.QUANnnES
LAST.
,.

RALL'S BENeiFRANKLII)I·.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

~

~~~DAYS 9-5,

FRI: TIL 8:00 P.M.

LANCASTER, 010 - A 3.8 MILL LEVY for operation of
tbe Falrfleid Joint VocaliQgal School was defeated Tuesday for
the third time. The vote was 7,753 against and 6,950 for the
bond issue.
The defeat means students in the district will be bused to
nearby coUI)tieS for vocational training next fall, 11,ccording to
state law. The Fairfield district is one of only 7 per cent of all
districta in the state that have not passed ot)erating levies to
finance vocational schools, sources said.

;•

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.

. ................................
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;.

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·....

BY KATIE CROW
Nine motions which would
reduce Meigs County's voting
precincts from the present 40
to 30 deadlocked in a tie vote
when the Meigs County Board
of Elections met Tuesday
night following the primary
election.
Voting in favor of the
consolidation of the precincts
to reduce the overall total
were Democrat board
member&amp;, E. A. Wingett and
William Coza rt. Voting
against the motions 1were
Leslie F. Fultz and James
. Quivey, the two Republican
board members.

nominee to run for his

fi r~t

his bid for the nomination
receiving 233 votes and he has
no opposition fo r reelection to
his post in the fa U. Helen
Shuler received 204 votes for
the Middle port Board of
Public Affairs and Freddie
Houdashelt rece ived 245
votes for a seat on the board
with two seats to be filled this
year.

Legislators told doctors need help
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The president of the Ohio State
Medical Association warned Tuesday he could not guarantee
continued medical services for the state's citizens unless the
General Assembly passes a bill providing adequate medical
malpractice insurance for Ohio physicians ..
Dr. Maurice F. Lieber, . testi[ying as a proponent of

•

enttne

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 4, 1975

PRICE 15'

The minutes of the !)'lee ling number of motions to conreflectin g the problem and solidate some or the precincts
showing the tie vote will be · but all died for lack of a
sent to Secretary of State Ted second.
However, at last night 's
W. Brown. Wingett contended
that the Secretary of Stale is meetin g, Wingett 's motions
the fifth rtJember of the board received a se cond fr om
and will cast the deciding Board Chairman Cozart who
vote. Fultz said t hat in his stepped down as presiding
opinion the Secretary of State offi cer temporarily in order
will consider it ~ local to second the motions.
In presenting the motions,
problem and return it to the
Wingett said that the board
board.
Introducing the motions for had been given a strong
consideration by the board mandate by vot1!rs of Meigs
was Wingett who fir st County dur ing Tuesday's
proposed the consolidation on election by the strong defeat
March 4 this year . At that of the Meigs Comm.un ity
time, Wingett made a School operating levy.

·Now she's Doctor Fry·

Rose Marie Hackett Fry
received ·· her doctor~te in
osteopathic medicine from
the Kirksville College of
Osteopathic
Medicine, KirksBEIRUT - WARRING POIJTICAL FACfiONS traded
viUe,
Mo
.
Monday
.
bullets, rockets and mortar fire in Beirut's suburbs today,
of
Mr.
and Mrs.
Daughter
crumbling the shaky cease-fire that had temporarily restored
calm after weeks of violence. No casualties were reported in George Hackett, ·J r., Midthe fighting, centered around suburban Chiah and Ein Rum- _dleport, Dr . Fry will . begin
maneh, the areas most affected by two weeks of fighting be- her internship inimediately
tween Palestinian guerrillas and right-wing .militiamen that . at Grandview Hospital in
Dayton.
·
has left 128dead and more thl!n 300 injured.
Saturday
night
a banquet
An early morning bulletin from the joint LebanesePalestinian security office said firing that broke out overnight was held in honor of the 102
raged on in both areas. The radio said armed persons also set graduates and at that time
up barricades l!long the ,nearby Furn el-chebak road. Police Dr. ;Fry was recognized for
forces were dispatched to reopen the road and calm the placing first in the 1974-75
situation. The outbreak followed a rash of political kidnaplngs medical writing contest of ,the
Osteopathi c
Tuesday' and the cutting of roads leading to the capital's American
Association
.
Her
paper on
suburlll.
·
·
"Gastroschisis With Bowel
WASHINGTON - UNIVERSITY OF DAYTON philosophy Nonrotation : Rt:pair of a
professor Richard R. Baker has pronounced 8,676 words in the Case" is currently under
past 14yearsforthe boys and girls who came to Washington in consideration for publication '
search of the national spelling championship. He will have to in a medical journal. Dr. Fry
serve up another 500 to 600 words today·and Thursday to select received a $200 check in
of
the
champion from the 79 finalists in the 48th National Spelling recognition
achievement fr om the
Bee.
The annual event, sponsored by Scripps-Howard American
Osteopathic
Association.
t~ewspapers and 61 other papers, offers a $1,000 prize to the
Recognition was also given
winner. Contestants -grade-school students up to 15 years old
- reprelient the survivors of an estimated 7.5 mill,ion children Dr. Fry for another paper
who participated in local. spelling bees around the country .
.Last year's winner, Julie Ann Junkin, representing the Bir'tningham Post-Herald, captured the Iitle by correctly spelling
the word "hydrophyte" -a type of aquatic plant.
·· The flnallsta, 47 girls and 32 boys, include nine spellers who
appeared in previous champio11ship rounds, seven from the
1974 bee and two from 1973.
TEL AVN - ISRAEL TODAY COMPLETED its
unilateral troop puUback from the Sinai front a day ahead of
schedule with a pledge to refrain·from military action if Egypt
stops Israel-bound ships In tile Suez Canal. Prime Minister
Yltzbak Rabin offered to pull out of the Sinai Peninsula
altogether if token Israeli forces were allowed to remain for a
period of from 20 to 50 years.
·
Defense Minister Shimon Peres said tbe th~ut of 3,500
troops, 15tanks, and 36cannonsendedat I a.m. EDT, less than
• 24 hours after It began and a foil day ahead of the original
schedule. The withdrawals included aU Israel's front-line
122nun eanilol18 and half Its forward tanks and infantry.
"It's a rililltary action of political character, done with the
right liming and In a suitable framework in order to contribute
· to tbe general atmosphere in the area," Peres said.
DAWSONVIlLE, GA. - A WORLD WAR II B25 bomber,
loaded witb apprOldmately one ton of marijuana and with Its .
bomb bay doon open, craahed In rugged North Georgia terrain
'fue8day and killed 1111 two passengers - the second such accident In the South within a week. Last Thursday, a World War
U-vlnlllge Lockheed Lodestar, carrying 8f0Wid1,~ pounds of
marijuana, crashed near Rockwood, Tenn. Ita two occupants
allo were ldlled.
· Robert McO'acken, Georgia Bureau of 1Investlgation
tii!Dicr agent, 118ld aome 40 bags of marijuana, each weigh~ 50
poWids, were fCitlered In the wreckage of tbe B25. He
.umated tbe ajreet value of the marijuana at f50(1,000. "They
.bust have been dropping that stuff off like a newspaper boy
delivering papers," said McCracken.
Rescue workers recovered two bodies, two badly burned to
&lt;

'

..... .

By United Press International
, &lt;;OLUMBUS - MAYOR TOM MOODY and city councilman John Rosemond won the city's mayoral nomination
over four other candidates in a nonpartisan primary election .
Tuesday.
Rosemond, a Democrat, is believed to be the only black in
city history to win a mayoral nomination. He will face Moody,
a Republican, in the November election. Moody finished far
ahead Qf the field with 31,495 vot~ and Rosemond was second
with 19,275. The four other candidates were all Democrats.
Rosemond, 57, is a family physician and has served on council
for five years.

••

. ' ..

village coun cil Tuesday. Carl
Horky and William WHitcrs,

term as mayor of Middleport.
He was president of council
and became mayor of Middleport several months ago
upon the death of Mayor John
Ze rkle. Hoffm an bad no
opposition Tuesday but will
be opposed in the fall by
Democrat Sammie Plants.
Clerk - treasurer Gene
Grate, R., was unopposed in

legislation before the House Insurance Coriunittee, said that
recent -estima tes of the cost of professional liability coverage
are as high as a billion dollars or more compared with approximately $3 million five years ago.
Lieber said provisions of the bill establishing a joint underwriting authority will "provide a temporary market place
until necessa ry legal reforms can bring about a stabilization
for medical professiona l liability insurance."
The measure also would require handling of all malpractice
claims by the Ohio Court of Claims and sets a $200,000 ceiling
on general damages awarded in cases other than dea th.
Lieber said those legal reforms and other changes in the
court system should provide stabilization of the market place
for the insurance ..
The OSMA president said medical reforms outlined in the
bill would in certain areas replace "archaic verbiage under
which the state Medic1l!.. J:l.oard now operates and which ties
(Conllnued on ~~~&amp;e :Ill)

submitted to the American
College of Osteopathic
pediatricians which finished ·
in a tie for first place.
The doctorate se rvice
was held on Sunday night and
the convocation where
degrees were presented on
Monday at 10 a.m.
Dr . Fry, married to Marvin
Fry, who has been associated
with O'Bieness Hospital in
Athens a s an inhalation
therapist, is a graduate of
Middleport High School and
Ohio State University where
she was a member of Chimes
and Mortar Board. She has
spent the past four years at
Kirksville College.
Following her graduation ,
Dr. Fry was honored by her
family with a luricheon at the
Bonfuoy. Inn in KirksviUe.
Traveling to Missouri for
the weekend of activities ·
were her husband, Marvin,
her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
George Hackett, Jr., her
grandparents, Mrs. George
Hackett, Sr., and Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Smart, Kent Kloes ,

He said the defeat indicated
tha t voters are interested in
savin g money and he
projected that. consolidation
or precincts will save threetenths or the costs involved in
future elections.
He said that the state
reg ula tions requi re th at
precincts vo)e from 250 to 400
votes and that only four of the
40 precincts are doing that.
For example, in Pomeroy
Village, six precincts were
es tablished
when
the
population of the town was
far greater than it is now.
He contended also that
precincts were set up in days
when tran spor tation was
more limited and that today,
wi th
families
havi ng
automobiles, the voter can
easily travel a little further to
vote .
Winge tt said that he had
bee n appr oached by a
number of people - both pro

and con - since his proposal
in March, but he felt the
co nsensus is that the
prec incts should be reduced.
Quivey said that he had
contacted a number of people
about the proposal and that
he had been told that people
wan t the precincts to stay as
they are. He said he would
oppose any consolidatio n
until people indicate to him
that they want such consolidation.
Fultz said that he would not
vote to change any precinct in
Meigs County under any
(Continued on ~~~&amp;e :Ill)
MEET THURSDAY
The Gall o. Meigs Co mmunity Action Agency Board
will hold its monthly meeting
on Thursday, June 5 at 8 p.m .
in the Cheshire Community
Center. All board members
are urged to attend.

Retarded levy
is heavy loser

ROSE MARIE FRY
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Hackett
and Dr. and Mrs . Ray
Pickens, Middleport ; Mrs.
George Hackett III and B. J.,
Akron; Mr. arid Mrs. John
Goodwin , Columbus ; and Mr.
and Mrs . Wesley Fry, Denver, Colo.

.Despite the endorsement of many organizations and an
intensive speaking campaign by its supporters, a 1.6 mill tax
levy for operation of the Meigs Communlfy School went down
to .defeat almost two-to~ne Tuesday.
,
Outside of Pomeroy and Middleport, the tax measure was
the only question asked voters. As a result, the vote in the
county was extremely tight, with only 3,218 voters going to the
pOlls.
There were 2,109 votes against the levy and 1,091 for it.
Proceeds from the levy would have been used to operate
the Community School which is for the retarded of the county.
An eartier _levy of 2.75 mills for operating funds was badly
defeated last fall. Still earlier, however, voters approved a
bond issue for the construction of a half-miltion dollar building
for the school.

(Oliff• ad • Pill.)

,,

The Meigs County Museum
will present its fourth annual
"Heritage Sunday" June 22
from 12 noon to 5 p.m., a
highlight of Regatta Weekend
in Pomeroy and Middleport.
There will he exhibits and
demonstrations throughout
the afternoon.
In honor of the many June
weddings in the Big S.,nd
area, ll)e musewri staff' is
organizing an exhibit called,
"Weddings through the
Ages." Meigs Countians are
asked to loan old wedding
clothes, photos, invitations,
wedding certificates, or old
valentines. These items can .
he brought to the museum on
Bu\ternut Ave. on Friday and
Saturday, June 20 and 21
from 10 a.m.-3 p.m ., or call
the museum director,
. Elizabeth Hilferty, 992-5415,
or assistant director, Becky
Glaze, 992-5664. Anyone who
could loan a dress-form to
help displa~ the wedding
clothes is alsq asked to do so:
'

A quilt show and quilling Story, at 992-2488.
demonstration by the· Loyal
There will be a special
Women's Class of the Church display of old photos of Meigs
of Christ in Middleport, will County places and people.
also be a focal point of Anyone who has a scrapbook
Heritage Sunday.•The loan of they can share should bring it
Meigs County heritage quills on Heritag e Sunday or
samplers would also be ap- contact the museum director .
preciated.
Fred Tuckerman of Wolf
The Meigs Muzzle-loading Pen ( Rt. · 4 Pomeroy ) will
Club will have a gun display · demonstrate the hand:hewing
and demonstration of guns of log~ .
under construction.
The Pomeroy Library will
The Bedford Township bave a special display of
display will be an impOrtant heritage and crafts books
part of the day's activities. from the library ·collection.
Leo Story has prepared an
"Appalachian Heritage
impreS$ive exhibit of old Music" will be discussed and
hand tools and implements, · sung. by Jennifer Sheets,
some of which will ;be accompanying herself on the
demonstrated.
dulcimer. Bill . Grueser will
VIctor Genheimer will be display the dulcimers which
pn hand .to talk to visitors he makes by hand.
about his beautiful model of
There will be a continuous
the old Bunker Hill Church, a slide-show presentation in the .·
landmark · In
Bedford Meigs Museum Mil\i-Theatre.
Township. Anyone who has Homemade
food
and
items or photos of pasr times, beverage will be for sale.
places, and people of Bedford Admission is free, but a 25
Township which can be cents donation will be apdisplayed should contact preciat!!d.

STEVE WALBURN
Meigs Local High School
senior Steve E. Walburn
.has been awarded an
A cad e m i c H o nor
Scholarship by Marietta
College for 197 ~76 . He was
one of a select group of
student s in the nation
chosen to receive the
scholarship, based on the
student's academic performance in high school
and results of standardized
testing. Walburn resides at
560 S. Third St., Middleport, the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Dale Walburn. He was
an honorarien of this
spring's graduating class
of Meigs High School.

Gallia firm
is awarded
scraper hid

Weddings through the ages
new Heritage day feature

FOAM CUPS

Plft. of J Monico

1f4 pound fresh
· ground beef patty
garnished the way
you ask for it.
(Cheese l Oc extra .)

n

vr

a

PUBLIC NOTICE

2·0•.
Tuba

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

v.N.Y.•.o..:.:-:-:·:·:o."':~·v·:.o:·:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·~:·~·:o;·:·•·•·~·•:.:.:.:...-!!:.:·

•3.95

· COPPERTONE,
SUNTAN LOTION

nominees for two seats on

incumbents, won easily over
the third candidate, Lo well
Price. Horky, serving now
thro ugh ap poi ntme nt ,
re~e i ve d 219 votes an d
Walters 229, Price had 95. The
nominees are unopposed in
the fall.
· Fred Hoffma n, R., received
219 votes for his bid as the

Precinct reduction stalls on 2-2 tie

SH-IRTS

Dttalllflower;
DUSTINC POWDER

is no Democratic candidate in
the fall. She received 331
votes. E. F. Rol:tinson, R.,
incumbent on the board or
public affairs, received 347
votes to be returned to that
post.
Middleport
Republicans
had only a three man race for

Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area

' Men's Short Sleeve
BLUE CHAMBRAY

TAMPA!(· 40's
TAMPONS

serv mg on council but did not
run for a co'uncil seat. ·
Re publiCa ns
Pomeroy
nominated John H. Manley,
currently serving on council
by appointmen t, and a
newcomer, Charles Bartels to
poli tics as their candidates
for council. Manley received
221 votes and Bartels, 284.
There wer e no other
Republican candidates for
the two posts.
In the fall election, Dr.
Harold Brown , DD, a
Democrat, will compete for
one of the seats. He is the only
Deocrat candidate.
Jane Walton was unopposed in her bid for the
Re publi can nomination as
clerk of Pomeroy Village, a
post she now holds, and there

•

I

I
II

Park FREE

CLARENCE ANDREWS

II ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

RALL'S

When You

..

1

!

Weather

Clarence A. Andr ews,
Ebenezer St., a retired
railroader, came through
with a better than two-to-one
· vote over his opponent ,
Pomeroy Mayor Dale. E.
Smith, to win the Republi can
nomination for the mayor 's
post in Tuesday's primary
election.
Andrews, wh o had 'served
temporarily on council a
number of years ago, was
given 297 votes in yesterday's
primary in which an extremely li ght vo te was
recorded. Smith received 141
votes.
As the nominee of the
Republican party, Andrews
will be opposed in the fall by
Democrat candidate, William
Snouffer, who currently is

r--------

I
I

Convenient one-stop
full-service banking

GOP likes Andrews over Sritith

introduced

less dum 300words long (or be subjed to redltdba b)' 1
DRIVER CITED
DIVORCES GRANTED
tbe editor) and must be signed wltb the llpee's »- I
RACINE - The Meigs
Lizzie . Davidson from Ben
coun ty Sheriff's ·Dept. indress. Names may be wllbheld upoa pabllaU.. I
Davidson, Rita Jean H0 gl)es
However, on request, names will be dlleloled. LeUm ' I
ves tigated a two-car accident
TONITE THRU THURS.
fr om Joseph M. Hughes,
at 10:45 a. m. Monday on
should be ln. good taste, addressing luaee, DOt perNOT OPEN
Walter Voss from Margaret
soaalltles.
1
Third St. here .in which an
Voss, Oley Herdman, Jr.,
auto driven by John Eynon ,
I
from Pamel• llerdman .
Fri ., Sat., Sunda y
43, Rt. I, Racine, traveling
I
THUNDERBOLT AND
east, struck an auto driven by
I
LIGHTFOOT
I
Wal ter Cleland, 63, ·Racine.
( Tec hnicolorl
I
Eyn on failed to yield right of
Star ri ng Cl int East wood
I
way, officers said, and cited
&amp; Jeff Bri dg es
I
him for dr ivi ng under
Show starts at 7: 00p.m.
Dea r Editor :
suspension.
Recently I had the unhappy experience of hearing a senior
citizen urging all other senior citizens not to vote for the levy
supporting Meigs Community School. She said it would raise
their property tax. This is true, $1.60 on the $1,000 a year.
I'm sure we could give up some little extra to pay this tax.
Senior Citizens, under the Homestead Act, are entitled to a tax
exemption that cuts their real estate taxes by several dollars.
They have the Senior Citizen Center, where they can go daily
for activities, companionship and fre e lunches. They bowl,
take boat rides, attend the State 'Fair, all at special Senior
Citizen rates. Who do they think picks up the remainder of this
Permanent press, long tails, two
SALE PLANNED
expense? A lot, I'm sure, comes from the tax dollar. Who do
pockets, 50 per cent polyester, 50 per
Women of the Apple Grove
they think paid taxes for their children and grandchildren to
cent
cotton. Sizes small (14-14'12),
attend public school ? The parents and grandparents of the United Methodist Church
medium {15-15 112) , large {16-16'12) and
mentally retarded children. If our forefathers had this at- will
hold
a
rumextra l11rge (17-17'12).
titude, we wouldn't have our present public sc~ool system mage sale from 9 a.m. lA)
today.
4 p.m. Wednesday, Thursday
The children are taught many things that will help some to and Friday at the Letart
lead a normal or near normal adult tile. Others will learn a Community Building.
self-supporting trade, thus easing the burden on overcrowded
Also a new shipment of men's Lee blue
institutions and welfare rolls. Some may just learn to care for
denim bib overalls and youth size bid
themselves, which otherwise they couldn't.
overalls. Si zes 8 to 16.
some S().CaUed Christians that pretend to believe in the
doudy tonight, lows in the 1
Bible apparently overlooked the verse where Jesus said, upper 50s. Fair , warmer 1
"Suffer ye little children come unto me."
I'm sure Jesus Wedn esday, highs in the
loved all children, not just mentally strong ones. People have
Whatever your banking needs, you'll l ind us
come a long way from the hiding of the retarded to educating lower80s.
of ·
precipi !a tiThe
on probability
20 per ce nt
ready and able to serve you . Passbook and
and training them. Th~y are put here for a special reason. It's today, 10 per cent tonight, 20
Certificate ~~vings, Loans of all types, Sale
our jobtofindoutwhy.
per cent Wednesday .
r._.._.._..._._...-....,...._._..._. _ _ _ _ _.._, _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Deposit Boxes, Checking Accounts, Cashier's
If everyone could just know a child before and after atChecks, IWJney Orders - whatever you want
tending a school, I'm sure they would vote yes Tuesday.
in banking you'll find it at our bank!
Please, yote for the operating levy and show the world that
the " Adults" of Meigs County aren't behind times; that we
WALK-UP TELLER WINDOW AND
really
do, love our neighbor as ourselves. - Concerned, Mrs.
AUTO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
Richard Gilmore, Mulberry Hts., Pomeroy, Ohio.
FRI. EVENINGSS To 7 P.M.

MEIGS THEATRE

•

,.

JENNIFER AND HER DULCIMER - Jennifer .
Lohse Sheets will accompany herself on l!le dulcimer in
presenting a part of the "Appalachian Heritage Music"
program on Heritage Sunday at the Meigs Museum in
Pomeroy on June 22.
·

,,

The bid to sell a scraper to
the Meigs County Highway
Department by the Southeast
Equipment Co., Gallipolis
was accepted by the Meigs
Coun ty Commissio ner s
Tuesday morning.
The bid is for a new
WABCO Sweeper in the
amount of $49,995 . It had been
"opened" last week but the
award was delayed pending
further study.
Tuesday morn ing th e
commissioners opened a bid
from the same company for a
used caterpillar for use at the
county' s sanitary landfill .
With a trade,in of a caterpillar D-9 and a Case W-24
there would be no money
difference. With only the
Case W~24 trade-in, the · bid
cost was $15,000.
The commissioners, In
other business, accepted tbe
· resignation of Harold Olase
as Civil Defense Omcer
effective May 29 and granted
permission to Larry Spencer,
Oerk of Courts, to attend a
convention JWte 11, 12 and 13
at Bryan, Ohio .
Attending were Henry
Wells, Warden OUrs, Bernard
Gilkey, COIIlllllui~rs, arid
Martha Chambers, fl)erk.

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