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                  <text>l2- '""'DallySentlnel,Middleport-Pomeroy,O., Wednesday, May 12, 1976

.Coalport

.

•;

(Continued from page 1)
~ pointed out that the group heading the alumni
tianquet for Rutland had not asked for the W&gt;e of the new
urn bullding but rather for use of the elemenlltry
'
·
diqg there. Snowden said he wanted It clearly Wlderstood
r-!tJf Rtiland Almnnl that the gymnasium had not been
tequellled for the alwnni reunion .
Repret~e~~tatives from the Meigs Warriors amateur
"-tball team ked to
t•· p
oy football field and
""'
as
use '"' omer . .
.
facUlties for games and the Middleport fteld tf the Pomeroy
'lllcllltlesare not avallable. It was suggested the group talk to
athletic director Otarles Chancey
' .... blds 0 f Bill Co rt Racin~ at ""2 for a 1962 bus and
· ...e
za •
• """
•t3Q5fora)96Sbus, nolongerused,wereaccepted.
,
Asat . &amp;!pt. Morris reported that the Meigs !.Deal Di~trict
has been apiii'Oved for 'federal $10,000 lunchroom equipment
--am with t•- dlstrt'ct having to provide only 25 percent of
,..v,..
"''
. .
. h f
the $10,000. Morris said the grant will unprove kitc .ens o
lleVeral schools and theneceSIIBil' fWld transfer was made.
Meigs High Principal james Diehl said that the new
""seball field at the ht'•h school site is excellent and the board
.,..
"'' estimates on bl~achers and to
made
plans for securing
possibly develop the track facility at the stte .. Clerk John
Triplett was req11ested to secure-information on actl~n for the
board to take in evaluating the ·superintendent and assistant .
·
Superintendent.
..
It was reported that negotiations between the board of
educatloo and teachers of the district have reached impasse.
'The l,loard employed Dennis Whalen of Cuyahoga Falls to
represent it. on the review panel. The teachers will name a
representative and a third .representallve approved by the
board and teachers wlll be named to serve oli the panel.
.
. Attending the meeting were Supt. Charles · ·Dowler,
Assistant Supt., Morris, boatdmembers, Wendell Hoover, Dr.
Keith Riggs Mrs. Jennifer Sheets, Virgil King, and l'l.ohert
~!Rowden · cl~k-treasurer John Triplett, and Principals Diehl,
Jeffrey Weaver and Bob Morris. ·
. Triplett has been authorized by the board to purchase tax
-~elteredannulliesforpersonnelooanannualbasisonly .
"''

News .• in Briefs

.
(Continued from page I) .
iocal supporters ana reporters at Ute airport for an hour and
then depart.
: CLEVELAND - ANOTHER UNPRODUCTIVE
negotiating session enqed early Tuesday in the lhree-week-&lt;&gt;ld
strike by the United Rubber Workers Union against the "Big
Four" rubber companies.
'The talkil with Firestone Tire and Rubber Co. involved
lfiscussions of "insurance matters," a URW spokesman said.
,flestone has been chosen as the fpcus for .efforts to produt'e
,new three-year contracts with Firestone, Goodyear, B. F.
Goodrich and Uniroyal. Negotiations were set to resume at 10
today.

a.m.

·REEZER
SALE
.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -·- ----'----- 1

Showdown
!
tin ed f

Area Deaths

I,

Eastern bands
plan COncert

Local news, in briefs

u rom page I)
I
.
I
edge 16 to 7. Oturch won the
CL IFFORD HILLER
she Is survived by two
popular vote 66,826 to 65,075
Cllllord L. Hiller, 8-4, Rt. I, dau~hfers . Mrs . Edison ~·~ctE~:~. ~.:h~yl
for Carter and took the Minersville, died Tuesday (Bernie) Baker. ole Mldd· w.o
d 1 gate edge 15 to 8 The morn ing at the residence of dleport;
Mrs.
tau e Charles L. Wills, will be
e e . De
Is · rt
. his son In Talmadge. He was (Beulah 1 Grimm, Naples. , presented In concert at the
23
1
other nme mocra sp
born Dec. 6, 1891, the son of Fla .. and two sons, Lester G.
per cent of the vote ~nd none the late Frank ' nd Leona Johnson, of Parkersburg, end high achooi auditorium at
won delegates.
Bass Hiller. He was also Lynford D. JonnsonHNapl~, 7:30p.m. Thursday.
West Virginia- The vote preceded In death by his wife, Fla.; two brothers,, arry d.
The song flute group
F d 68 921 Reag
Ocey Osborne Hiller, and a Howell , Charles on, an directed by Mrs Maxine
was or
' '
an sister, Edith Hood .
James J. Howell, Pittsburgh;
'
53,101. The 28 Republican
Surv'-lng are a daughter, 1~ grandchildren. aild 1·5 Whitehead will play Yankee
delegates, elec t ed Mrs. Fred (Mary ) Nease, great.grandchlldren .
Doodle, Johnny Has Gone for
separately, Will be officially Minersville, with whom he
Callfng hours at Fogl etson~ a Soldier, Roses, German
'tt d Byrd won had made his home the pest Funeral Home are • 1 er . Dance, and Oats, Peas,
uncomm t e ·
f the 12years; one son, Clifford E. p.m. Thursday.
Be
·
some 90 per cen1
Hiller, Talmadge, eight
ans.
popular vote and all 33 grandchildren. and several
The elementary band ·will
delegates wlll be Wlder his nieces and nephews.
OSIIORNE FARLEY
play 'The Crusaders and Join
tr llh
e lion at
He was a veteran of World
CANAL WINCHESTER - the Parade. The jWlior band
con o1 a e_ conv 1n •
wart.
Osborne (Pappy) Farley, 67, nwnbers wlll be Rudimental
least on the ftrst ba lot.
Funeral services will be Canal Winchester, died
Connecticut - 'The popular held Thursday at 1p.m. at the suddenly Tuesday at MI. Rumpus, Three Beethoven
vote was Carter 35,415; Udall Ewing Chapel. Burial wUI be Carmel East Hqspltal. Mr. Miniatures, and Tie a Yellow
32 •860·• . Jackson . 16 ',962 ·• In
the Friends
Beech may
Grove
Farley, resident,
• former
Meigs
Cemetery.
call County
worked
In Ribbon 'RoWld the Old Oak
WlCOmmttted, 13,674, Ellen aline funeral home anytime. area coal mines 33 years. He Tree.
M~rmack 5,515 and Fred
was a member of Lockbourne
The jazz-rock ensemble
Harrts 178. In ll_te delegate
Freewill Baptist Church. He will play, "How Do, Mister
Carter led 18 races ·
LOTTIE JOHNSON
was precedlld In death by • Magoo, Pink Panther,
race,
m .tied 10'
MASON - ·L0 ttl e Emma gran dson • R·n:,c:r
" byFarley
·
· Morning Has Broken, Mercy,
Udall 16• uncommt
• Johnson, 81, Mason, died
· He Is •urvlv
his wife,
and Jackson four with lhrl!l! Tuesday In' .Pleasant Valley Lola; one son, Lawrence Mercy, Mercy and Totem
Wld~tded:
.
Ho5pllal . She was the Wile of Farley, ·Grove City ; .two - Pole,
.
. Mt880urt- Ford ptcked up ~u~~~~s . G. Johnson who ~arq~~~;· J::;ll•wM,~
Following an Intermission ·
SIX more d~le~ates . in stale
Funeral services will be 0~11~ . Reynoldsburg ; a twin the concert band will play
caucuses, br~g111g his total In ·conducted trom the Christian brother. Murray City' 'The KMB March, The Kings,
the state to mne. Reagan lias Brethren Church at 1:JO p.m. another brother, Alfred i&gt;f • Musicians, Acadia, ·the
Fridayoff.lclatlng.
with the Rev.
James
Middleport
; two Cheshire,
sisters. March from SecOnd Suite
won none.
Lewis
Burial
&gt;viii Gertrude
Searles.
J In F
The -primaries brought follow · fn the Evergreen and Fred• Gilmore, Mid· for Military Band; acomo,
signs of gloom from the Ford Cemetery. The body will be dleporl, and several nieces Love Will Keep. Us Together
camp, confidence from taken to the ehurch one hour and n_~hews,
·~ · and will close the concert
Carter, hope from Udall, before the services.
Funeral services will be. with America Again .
jubilation from Oturch, and
Mrs. Johnson was bok rn Friday at 1' 30 p.m. at Lo,c,\
The public Is InVited.
th
. e usual cautious words October 27, 1894, lri Joe son bourne Freewill Bap s
County, a daughter of the late Church with the Rev . Burl
from Reagan .
Daniel and ' Mary Baler Miller and the Rev . Ross F:ox
Morton, once confident that Howell . She was a member of otllclatlng. Burial will be In
SALES REPORT
the nomination would be the Christian Brethren Union Grove Cemetery.
Ohio
Valley IJvestock Co.
Church of which she served Friends may call at the
sewn up · long before the as treasurer and taught Dwoyne R. Spence Funeral
MayS, 1976
August t'Onvention said he SuAday School for many Home, Canal Winchester
GallipoUa, Ohio
now foresees the possibility of years.
Thursday tram 3 to 5 and 7 to
STOCKER CATTLE a floor fight, depending on the
In addition to her hu•band 9.
STEERS - 25().300 lbs. 32outccme in Michigan next
39.75, 300 to 400 lbs. 40 down,
Tuesday.
400 to 500 lbs. 42 down, 500 to
Reagan, as usual not
600 lbs. 42down, 600 to 700lbs.
making any flamboyant
38 down, 700 lbs. and over
victory statements, thanked
Holzer Meiileal Center
SaWldra WUey.
42.50 down.
the voters and sa id the
(Discharges, May 11)
(Births May 11)
HEIFER CALVES - 250 to
Nebraska results show he
Melissa Bailey, Ronald · Mr. and Mrs . Darrell 300 lbs. 26.50 to 32. 75, 300 to
could win without Democrat- Barry, Pamela Uendenin, Black, daughter, Point 400 lbs. 221o 38, 400 to 500 lbs.
ic help ot the primary polls. Wanda Eads, Mrs. Ronald Pleasant ; Mr. and Mrs . 22 to 33.50, 500 to 600 lbs. 22.50
~~There are no crossovers,"
Evans and son, Terry Foul, David frazier, Jr., son Point to 32, !100 to 700 lbs. 22.50 to
he said "This is a rural and Karen Gilkey, Shirley Pleasant; Mr. and Mrs . 33.50,
700 lbs. ana over 23 to
agricultural state and this is Glasgow, Tina Grimm, RoBia · Gerald
McKee, · son , 32.50.
going to be important in the Hale, Lavada Harvey, Janet. Wellston; Mr . and Mrs.
STOCK COWS &amp; BULlS
fall."
Herron, Beatrice Hooker, Randy WUliams, daughter, (By the Head) - Stock Cows
"It was a political Agnes . Howard, L&lt;lretta Langsville.
165 to 230, Stock Cows and
miracle,'' said Idaho Sen. Johnson, William Lewis,
Calves
ISS to 325, Stock Bulls
Church, "astonished" by the
165
to
410, Baby Calves 60
Fred
Little,
Barbara
Lucas,
Veterau
Memorial
Hospital
Nebraska victory in his first
down
;
(By the Pound ), in
Charles
Maple,
Belva
Miller,
ADMITTED
_
Maynard
Democratic presidential
weight,
Canners &amp; Cutters
Gerald
Mollett,
Theresa
Ellis,
Cheshire;
.
Paul
Mcprimary. But Carter said the
Cows
23
to 29.50, Holstein
Mulli~s.
Vivian
Plummer,
Daniel,
Sr.,
Middleport;
loss had not blWlted his drive
Cows
28
to
33.50, Commercial
Richard
Qualls,
Ruth
William
Barber
Reedsville·
for the nomination.
Bulls
29to36.50
(l,OOOlbs. and
Schoonover,
.
Johnnie
.
H
len
Johnson'
Pomeroy:
Udall said his close second SeYJllours, Cynth1a Siders,
e
•
' over) .
place finish to Carter in Ra Sm'th Th 1m8 Starn
Marcia Karr, Syracuse;
PIGS - 27.50 to 41.50.
Connecticut "shows my ,.., y I 1 sie e
M.::-~ Debbie LaValley, Racine;
VEAL
CALVES - Top 220
venson,
Normal 'Lucas, Cheshire.
strength is building and vuar es
lbs.
to
250
48 to 55, Medium
DISCHARGES _ Mavis
Governor Carter does not Stutes, Loretta Swan,
:m
lbs.
to
300
38.50 to 45, ~
have the broadbased Patricia Walker, Anna Wlles, Weaver, Jacob Scott, Rodney
35down,
Sows
400 lbs. up 39.50
stampede people were
Allen, Oleva Cotterill,
lo
42.
expecting."
Margretta Wise, Waldo Neal,
Clarence Wickline, Josephine
Blevlns,&lt;;oldleLawson,Murl 19) Your less lmporlanl activiti es are likely to dominate
Douglas:
Tonightthru Thursday
most of your ti me today. The
(Continued from pa1e I)
NOT OPEN
more serious niatters will be
ber companies, and that
PLEASANT VAi.LEY
left to lhe last minute.
the highest costs of
DISCHARGES - William AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-F•b. 19)
generating electrici\Y are Roush, II, Hartford; Kelly Seccmd efforts should .work
Fri., Sat ., Sun .
levied on the utility's sales to Hughart, Point Pleasant; wht ) first ones fall today , if
May 14- IS-16
"foreign'' companies - those Mrs. Robert Hesson, Hen- you don 't rush things . Be
" Lucky Lady"
outside
the AEP corporate derson; Mrs. William prepar ed to go a st ep at a time.
Liza
M inell i,
Gene
umbrella.
Daugherty , Gallipolis; PISCES (Fob. 20· March 20)
Hackman, Burt Reynolds .
Ohio Power mines about 30 Daniel Childers, Ripley; Persons not in accord with
PG
per cent of the coal it burns in Charles Lee, Lakin; Charles your ideas today could be very
Show starts at 7 p.m .
its coal-fired generating Humphries, New Haven; hostile 11 you try to change their
minds. Associate with recepfacilities.
Eber Roush, Mason, and Mrs. tive people.
Roger Blankenship,
!laughter, Point Pleasant.
( Con

°

THE MIDDLEPORT
emergency
squad picked up
Maynard Ellis at · Veterans
Memorial Hospital at 7:oll
a.m. Wednesday and
relllrned him to hi t Chllhlre
residence. Later Wednesday
the squad transported Miss
Mary Park of Middleport to
the HMC,
FIVE DEFENDANTS were
fined In the court of Mid·
dleport Mayor F·red Hoffman
Tuesday night. Fined S40 and
coats each on conviction of
disorderly manner were
Michael Bolin , 21, Mid dlepoit; Michael R. Taylor,
21, Middleport, and James E.
Lewis, 19, Mlddleoort. FlnoA
$150 and costs and given
three · days Ia II nn·
tences for OWl were
Emily G. Prl~e. ~2. Shadi.
and Curtis F. Rittle, 39,
Pomeroy. ""'- THE EASTERN Band .
Banquet will be at 6:30 p.m.
Saturday at the high school.
Those attending from the
Tuppers PI1 1ns area
are to
· ·Chester
bring a vegetable;
area people, desserts, and
Rlve.rvlew people, salads .

~:v~; gs~o~% /!"pr~l~e/.

1

PMents and friends of all
b. 1 pupils Grade Five and
ur ·e Welcome. .
THE RUTLAND Baseball
League will meet Thursday
at 5:30 p.m. ot the horne of

Gene Wise, Salem St.

FILING FOR dlnolulfon
marriage In Meigs Cowtty
Common Pltal COurt were
Charles H. Boer. RD Minersville, and Barbara J. Boer.
RD, Racine, Chari" T. Hill,
RU Racine and Dtbble Hill,
sanie address. Filing for
divorce wu Rtta Arnold,
Syracuse, against William
Arnold, Syracuse. Yvonne
Garten wa1 granted a divorce
from Rkherd Edward
Garten and the marrlegoo of
Pamela V. Shuler and
Kenneth E. Shuler and Naomi
R. Price and' Henry P. Price
were dlnolved.
THE RUTLAND Church of

God wlfl notd ope&lt;:lal services

Thursday and Frld.ay with
Marvin Hocna.r as . guest
speaker, at 7: 30 p.m. The
public Is welcome.

Dateline 1776
WILMINGTON, N. C.,
May IZ ~ Gens. Cllnto!l
and Cornwallis were
reported to have led a
delathmenl of 900 meq ·to
raid tbe plantation · of
colonial commander 3en. ·
John. Howe and .to. destroy
.. the buildings at Orton Mill.
The foray netted the
British three horses and
three cows.

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

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

.

,,

• 7 Cu. Ft.
• 9 Cu. Ft..
• 11 Cu. ft.
{."'~·~..H • 1S Cu. ft.
"'"'tt~~~~. 19 Cu. ft.
• 23 'Cu. Ft.
• 28 Cu. Ft

collecHon by

CAMPUS'

This Is an easy packable shirt that's equally at
look for compliments everywhere. Made of 50
percent Dacron IRl eo ' ~0 percent cotfon, It
features a dramatic :. ee ~ print pagoda motif
on a 1"&lt;1" rib. Ready for you In sizes S.M.L.XL.
Style: 7047.

Many, many other styles in men's knit
shirts. Mens and boys department, 1st
Floor. Also big selection tank tops.

Those thing s you have per~
sona1 co ntrol over should be
rew arding lhis co ming year. II
yo u need a ·p a r tne r or
associate, choose from those
whose mettle you 1ve tested .

Elberfelds-In Pomeroy

Someone may try to make
heavy material demands of you

loday. II you don 't tool you
should part with what you have,
speak up!

·Upright

12 Cu. Ft.
16 Cu. Ft.
18 Cu. Ft.
23 Cu. ft.
16 Cu. Ft
22 Cu. Ft
•
•
•
•

*

..

'·'

Issues today. It's best for each

01 you to make some concessions.

GEMINI (May 21-Juno 20)
You'll have a tougher workload

off . .. softly. Deposit it in a long ·
hrrm sovi,gs ClrtiAcatt, here, and you'll be
guaranhted a gain . Rates are highest allowed.

! Bottom And Sides.

. f ~.::t" Have "Fait-Freeze" Coil• Under Every

.95

CANCER (June 21-Julr 20)

A get rich quick schtmt could ltal(t you over o
barrel Anonciolly. The only sure thing is something you
. con bonk onl Put your money where it pays

: Chett Freezers Helve "Fast-Freeze" Coil• On The

Domineering Individuals who
want to manage your life today

Reg.

will meet with a hostile

Reg . $129.95 .

response . You 're In no mood to

be dlctaled to.
LED (Julr 23-Aug. 22) Today

A Home Bank

lually.
VIRGO (Aug. 23·S.pt. 22)

Versatile, depe ndable, with built·i n
blind·hcm stitch, exclusive ly designed
front drop-in bobbin. extra wioo zig·
zag capability, snap-on presser teet,
many other con veniences.

For

friend are likely to clash today.
Count to I0 so you don't say

cabinet extra.

you might teel you're stymied

at every turn, bullf you're persistent success will come even·

Your views and tho ~e of an old

Meigs County
People ·

Carrying case or

something to hurt her.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Even
though II may be Inopportune lo
do so at this time, honor your

obligations. Don't lei an old

RACINE
HOME NATIONAL
BANK
RACIN~

,,

LOWEST PRICE EVER!

you'll be very proud of yourself.

or lose your shirt

: * FrH Of Frost
'
~EXClUSIVE FEATURES GAlORE

:: IXCWSIYI AMANA "CONTACT FREEZING"
... Pr.... hocl Falter •. ; KMpl Food Safer,
&amp;.enter Ancl ·More Plavorful Than Methodl
~~ ~ Other Brandl.

A\IE $30 ·iCUALITY IN A ZIG-ZAG MACHIN: BUILT
SMY
. WITH 17 SEW-EASY FEATURES

today than you anticipated, yet
If you finish what you start

OHIO

debt hang over your head.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) A
close assoclete with whom you
usually gel along rather well
may be dll1fcuit to please IO·
' dl!y: Be pallent end underslan·
ding.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Doc.
21) This Is one of those days

The
Fabric
Shop
McCall's, Kwick-Sew. Simplicity Patterns

when rewards won't be com-

mensurate with ' your efforts.
However, do what's expected

'ot you.
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jon.

partieulara including the
lime fo the Illegal acta, the
State had made the lime
"appnmlmately noon.''
However, at the trial
evldenc:e wu preaeilted by
.p!'(lleCUtiOII wilneael Dllvld
Nolan and State Highway
Patrolman A. F. Caato !hat
the crime 0CC111Ted at appromnately 11:15 a.m.
At this point . defense
counael objected on grounds
the defense could not
adequately ' defend . the
charg!!S brought agalnat Ilia
client u he had prepared to
alibi the defendant for the
lime arowld noon.
The defendant was a
member of United Mine
Workers and the Incident
occurred during a strike at
the Meigs Mine.
· Defense counsel said .he
beHeved the judge ruled a
mistrial because of the
stJr)lrise which the change In
lime conatituted.

,
NEW BLEACHERS have been purchased for the
convenience of spectetors by the Southeastern Ohio
Tractor ' Pullet's Association. On the bleaehers are, 1-f',

,
115 W. Second

Pome~oy

f'

Ph. 992-2284

• A Tradem,ark of THE SINGER COM ANY

APPilCWEO StNOERoE.-.LER
\

'(

!luck Wagner, Bill Cornell and RolUe Hemsley. The Meig~
County Fair Board purchased two sets of bleachers and
the SEOTJ&gt;A two Bel.s, There will be a tractor pull at the
fairgroWlds on May 30, beginning 111 ~oon .

at y """ en tine
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

lliURSDM, MAY 13, 1976

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS'

.

... ... - ....i

use of atomic power.
b~slness~ "the
.actual
"The hour IS too late for negotiation of reductions In
business as usual, fer poUUcs strategic
forces
and
as· usual or for diplomacy as measures effectively halting
usual," Carter said.
the race In strategic weapons
"An Alliance for Survival Is technology.''
needed - transcending
"'There Is one step that can
regloos and Ideologies-if we be taken at ortce," said
are to assure mankind a safe Carter, who was tralntid as a
passage into the 21st nuclear engineer in the Nayy.
century."
"'The United StateS and the
Carter said it was time Soviet Unloo llhould conclude
parties to.the Strategic AnnB · an agreement prohibiting all
Limitation Talks got down to
(Continued on page i~)

Gillipolis to host

OOVIC ~eet May 20
The Gallipolis Area
Chamber of Commerce will
host the May meeting of the
Central Ohio Valley Industrial Cauncll at Oscar's on
Thursday, May 20.
.
Guest speaker will be Brig.
Gen. (ret.) Wayne S. Nichols,
Ohlo
River
Division
Engineer, Columbus.
Agolf outing Is slated for 10
a. m. at the Gallipolis Golf
Uub. Green fees are .S. A
social hour Is scheduled to
beglnat6:30 p.m. at Oscar's.
Dinner is scheduled for 7 p.
m. Tlcketa are ~Reservations are due May
.18 at the GI!IUpoils Area
Chamber of Commerce Of.
flee .

Gen. Nichola Is a !)alive of
lowa. He attended G~lnnell
College · In Iowa for three
years · and later graduated
from the U. S. · Military
Academy, West Point, N. Y.
In 1948 He also holds a
Masters Degree in Civil
Engineering from the
University of DUnols.
Nichols entered the Army
In .Jwte 1946 as a second
lieutenant In the cOI')lll of
engineers and retired in
September, 1975 In the grade
of brigadier general.
His military asslgnmenta
include four overseas tours in
the Far East, three of which
were served as. a Troop Unit
Commander. The last

assignment .he was Com·
mander of the 34th Engineer
Group In Vietnam where he
later served as a Director of
Construction for the · U. S.
Army,
He has served three tours
In water resources asalgn.
menta with the COI'JII of
engineers' civil works
program whleh Includes
dlsbict engineer, lake sur·

r.'iiisbu:~nd e:;~::~

POLE RAMMED - This truck driven by Steve Yonker, 21, l-etart Falls, rammed into
a utility pole 'Thursday morning at Nye Ave. and East Main at approxlmstely 8:46a .m.
Yonker was taken to Veter8111Memorial HOllpitel by the Pomeroy E·R squad and was &amp;till
In the emergency room at 11 a.m. Chief of Police Jed Webater, believed Yonker went to
sleep driving. Webster said telephone aervlce In half the county will !Je disrupted for
sometime as will electric power In Syracuse and Racine.
·

·Bike riders to set .off in morning

engineer, Ohio River
Division.
Rain or shine, the second
He became Chief of the annual "Hlke·Blke" will
Division of Water, Depart- move from the Pomeroy
ment of Natural Resources, Junior High School at 10 a.m.
State of Ohio on Sept. 2, 1975. Saturday with some 200
riders expected to lake part.

Two teachers ask re-instatement and transfer

For Thul'ldor, M•r 13, 1178
ARIES (M•rch 21-Aprll 11)

You and your mate may not
eye~to- eye on important

!New~~ ~j,; Bri;f~

DEARBORN, Mich. - FORD MOTOR CO. Otalrman
Henry Ford n, the most peaaiJnlstlc of automotive executives
last fall, today predicted that 1978 would be the Industry's
second best year -ever with combined car-truck sales topping
13.7 million units. At the firm's armual meeting, Ford said be
· had not been optimist.lcenough In 1975 as sales. were falling to a
af.year low.
"'The American 8C9l!Omy has recovered more strongly
than I anticipated, and auto Industry sales have Improved even
more rapidly than the ecmomy as a whole," Ford said. From a
low estimate of 9.6 million car sales made last fall, Ford now
)redlcts sales of 10.6 mUUon car&amp;, Including Imports, this year.
That puts him In Une with General .M\)Io~ Chalnnan 'Thomas
(Continued on page 12)

home in near-or -faraway places . .. and you can

Birthday

see

of phyllcal harm to a ~ Metgs Mine No. I.
187&amp; Internatiooal truck, the
The defendant
waa
property of Doria Nolan; repre~ented by Frederick
tile Slate venu carl McFall · without ber coneent (Sectioo (Rick) Crow, with Charles
. ~ Nnt Pleuant.
21108.08 of 1the Ohio Reviled Knlcht, aaiatant proeecutor,
Tbe charae agllinlt MeF.U Code). 'l1le Incident occurred representing the Slate.
wu tbel he dld knowingly Feb. 20, 1978, on SR 124 Eut JurOI'I were Albert Hill, Jr.,
cause cr create a 111betanUal
Rocer Deem, Racer Dlllort,
Elilabeth Wllford, Lawrence
·-:~ ~.m;::;:~»..:·:•:-:•;•:·;·;o:•:•:•;o:g:•:•;•.•;;:;:::·;·~·;l!:::···:....::::~~:-:·:-:·:::.·:....::.~~ Balser, Phyllu Hennessy,
Jellrty Harris and Allen DUI.
Declaration of a mistrial
followed obvloua confusloo In
facta of the case over when
By Ualled Preu lllterutloul
the Incident happened.
UDINE, ITALY - HUNDREDS OF EMPTY colflna stood
.In respon,ae to a demand by ,
along the rulna of medieval Gemona today waiting for the defense cot111sel for a bill of
bcxlles of victims mlsaing Since last seek's killer earthquakes.
Vice President Nelson Rockefeller was scheduled to arrive In
the northeaat Itallan province for a four-hour tour of the
stricken Frlull regiort.
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
· Udlne officials said the body rowtlln 24 devasted Alpine
)
lalurday through
foothill towns and villages had reached 900 and 400 persons
Moaday, warm with a
were still mlBslng and many are belleved dead More than
chalice of showers eac•
1,580 persons were Injured and about 100,000 left homeless In
day ot lbe foreeut period.
the May 6 quake and In the scores of after&amp;hocks that have
Hlglut will be In the 70. to.
since rocked Ute regiort.
the low Bi)a and Iowa will be
In
the Iilia. ·
CJNCINNATI - DEPUTY POSTMASTER. General
WiUiam F. Bolger admits a postage stamp price lllke is
"likely" within Ut~ nell year and says posalble lilcreases oi
two or three cents have been dl.sCusaed.
·
'''There's a likelihood of an increase In the'next fiscal year,
which begins In October," Bolger conceded Wednesday. "I
won 'I predict what the exact price 'Is apt to be, but ihere has
been discussion of possible two cent or three cent Increases."
With tbe recent flrst-clau letter postage hike from 10 to 13
cents, flrst-clasa volume had dropped ooe-half of me per cent.
Bolger called flral-claas letters "the financial backbone of ihe
!J. s. Pallial Service."
·
' "I don't know at what price level the public would really
VOL. XXVIII NO. 19
rebel," be said. "I know I always thought I'd quit buying ears
when they reached $2,500, bull baven'l. We need to find out
just what service the public wants and what they're wiUing to
pay. ,

WASHINGTON - SECRETARY OF STATE Henry
Klsalnger is prepared to take the offensive ·In ~ndlng llt
Ronald Reagan's attacks on administration foreign policy and
justifying his )X'Omises to black African rowttrles, according
to his aides.
State Department officialS who worl!ed 011 his prepared
testimorty for an appearance in the Senate ForelCD Relations
Committee today said the emphuls would be on the political
rather than the economic rea101111 for the poUcy enunciated
during Klsalnger's sbtofl&amp;llon tour of cennl and southern
Africa. "It will be an oblique response to Reagan," one aide
said. "Kisalngerwill say thla ls a hardheaded American policy
and not a welfare handout program. It's to serve the Interests
of the United 'Stetes. It also happens to serve the Interests of
most Africans." .
•

Your

TAURUS (April 20·M•y 20)

rllk

Nuclear ban proposed
by candidate Carter

HOSPITAL NEWS

YOU COULD
MAKE
A MILLION

Melp CountY Cotrl Judie

Robert .E. B~ Wednelday
ruled a mlslrlal in the cue r1.

COLUMBUS - INmAL CLAIMS FOR unemployinent
.
.
. benefits Increased by 11.4 percent during the weekending ¥ay'.
8 over the piev!OUB week because of several hundred lack.&lt;Jforders layoffs In the car Industry,
Albert G. Giles, administrator of the Ohio Bureau of
Employment Services, said Wednesday 13,206 workers filed
biitial claims for benefits dullng the week end May 8, in . By BRUcE W. MUNN.
UNITED NATIONS,
comparison to 11,854 the week before. ·
N.Y .(UPI) - Democratic
LA CORUNA, SPAIN- DISASTER CONTROL experts p-esldential hopeful Jimmy
batUed today to keep tousands of tons of crude oU spilled by a Carter today p-oposed a fiveOamlng tanker from washing up oo the picturesque beacbes of year ban on all nuclear test
northwestern Spain. Spanish newspapers quoted experts as explosions- for peaceful or
warning of "an ecological disaster of · unforeseeable other pUI'JlOIM!S.
consequences."
.
.1
In a "non-political" speech
'The 111,221-ton Urqulola exploded Wednesday after II ran to a conference on "Nuclear
aground at the entrance to LaCoruna harbor. It l(illled .a Energy ~nd WQI'ld Order,"
capadty load of 110,000 toni of Persian Gulf crude oll Into the .Carter also called for an
sea and belched black smoke that darkened the sky as far as 80 "Alliance ·for Survival" to
mues awaY, "It looked like a volcano," said one witness.
control the development and

:·MORE TO CHOOSE FROM ••. MEIGS tHEATRE Ohio Power
THAN ANY OTHER BRAND
,.
•

Mistrial declared

By Dale Rolllgeb
the Gallla County Local
process hearings transfers for the 1976-77
Two teachers whose con- Board of Education April 23, due
requested re-Instatement, school term.
traeta were not renewed by Wedneaday night . in formal one-year contracts and
They were Chris Hahne!
and WUllam Ba)lr, members
of the faculty at Kyger Creek
High School. Both were given
notl-:es of non-renewal5 of
their contracts upon the
recommendations of High
School Principal Robert L.
Lanning and County School
Superintendent Comer
Bradbury.
. Tbe board will make a
decision Monday.
. _
Last night's seulon wu
held under guidelines
established through the
board-teacher negotiated
coolract approved In 1974. It
was held to provide a fair and
orderly hearing regarding
· . the non-renewal of their
limited teaching contracta
with the Gallla County Local
Board of Education. Aecording to the negotiated
agreement, a teacher, after
receiving written nollflcatlort
of the board's intention not to
reemploy, shall have the
rtsht to a formal hearing
before the board to offer·
rea80118 against such notice.
The hearing shall be
NEW EQillPMENT- 'These "game-time" donkeys we ohly two of several piece' of - arranged upon written
new equipment Installed last week at the Middleport ElementarY School by the Middleport
request of the teacher within
Pl'A playground Improvement committee headed by Richard Vaughan. the two-year
10 daya, and it shall be held
)roject, ,carried out With $1,000 from the PTA and $800 from the Henry Swift FWld, has
within 10 days of the date of.
' Included new awlnp, new allde, new rocket ship, construction of a small basketball court
the written request.
llllltable for elementarY children, erection of an ueret.se .course with Ures of several sizes
According to the Ohio
and lUes. In addltioo BiltoDI of Umelllone have been placed on the walkway from the north
Revbted Code Sectioo 3319.11
exit of the lchool to the playground, and a board fence will be constructed between .the
teachent who have limited or
playgromd and Beech St. All work has been volunteered. A.88istlng have been Ed Kitchen,
supplemental contracts
left, and Harry Roush, llhown working on the ~~~~De-time donkeys, and Vaughan, Earie
which expire in the current
Wood, Sammy Planls,Manhall McMilllon, Pat Kitchen, and Don Lowery.
year, must be notifii\(1 In

writing no later than AprU 30
if they. are not to be reem-.
ployed. Failure to notify
means a teacher Is
automatically reemployed
for one year.
. There is no spedflc
statutory requirement which
obligates a board of
education to supply reasona
for the noo-renewal of a
limited contract. However,
bollrdsmaygrantnormaldue ·
proceaa,
Due process includes
provision for. reasonable
notice, the right for written
reasona upoo request and the
right to a fair hearing with
cllllll8el.
'The board AprU 23 voted 3-2
not to renew the ccinlracta of
M1aa Hahne!, a flnl year
teacher, and Bahr, a ScienceChemistry · inatructor ,
Reasona given for Bahr's
noo.renewal were:
(1) Bahr's refusal to cbooae
a member of the ad·
mlnlslratlve office staff for
observation of Ilia teaching.
(2) Refusal to sign sick leeve
f01'1111. (3) FaUure to obtain
pennlasloo from the Ga1lia
County Local Board of
Education
to
attend
profeuional meeting. ( 4)
Combined
classes
of
Chemistry and General
Science without approval of
the principal which eau.ed
loea of clock hOUI'B required
by State Department of
Education. (5) Has used
pre para lion period for
teacher auociation bll8inell8.

'There will be seve~al check
pointe along the 25 mile route
and refreshmenta will be
aerved to the riders at these
pointe. 'The Big Bend Cltizellll
Band Radio Club will be
assisting In handling· the
safety for the ride and
Pomeroy, MldcUeport and the
county
sheriff police
department&amp; are cooperating
In providing for the ufety of
the riders.
Rldera and sponsors are
sWI welcome to lake parlin
the event which Ia II(IOIIIOred
by the Melga A&amp;sociation for
Retarded Citizens. Anyf!lle

(6) Lack of supervision
during home romm by permitting some studenta to
supervise themselves In
another room ,
Lack of dlacipUne In the
elaaaroorn was the reason
given for Miss Hahne! 'a non·
renewal.
Prior to Wednesday's due
proceSB hearings, board 'clerk
Naomi Beman read the
following procedurea that the
board had adopted for the
hearings :
Single senior girlS In the
-The president of the
1976
graduating classes of
Gallla County Local School
Eastern,
Southern and Meigs
(Continued on page 12)
High School.a are Invited to
enter the Big Bend Regatta
DEDICATION SET
queen coolest.
RUTLAND - Veteran's
Those Interested • may
Memorial Marker dedication cootecl Tonya Davl.a, 992and the recognition of 3829, 9a.m. to 2p.m.,Monday
Rutl•nd Village 81 a lbrOugh Frtday, or 91G-3001
Bicentennial Comtnunity wiU after 3 p.m. daUy. Girls may
be held Monday, May 31 at aLao fill out the foUowlng
the Rutland Community appHeatlon and send to Mra.
Park.
Dllvia at Route 3, Pomeroy.
The regatta will be held
June 111-20 with the crowning

wiahlng to take part as a
sponaor cr a rider Is asked to
callll92,3232, 742-3089 or 9~
4112.
.
LIONS MEET
The Pomeroy-Middleport
Uons Club at Ita noon IWl·
cheon Wednesday at the
Meiga Inn voted to enter a
noatln the Big Bend Reg~tla
parade wi~ Ralph Grovrr'll!
head the project. Resulta of
the Road Rally were
dlscuued and suggestions
were made for next year. The
Rev. Wllllam Middleswarth,
president, presided.

Senior girls invited ·
to compete fo~ queen

·Dateline 1776

NORFOLK HARBOR,
Va., May IS :... A tory
CODUDI!IIted after having
been ttllllllled a• arefugee .
aboard a Brllllll •hlp for
five moalbt: "Ged ooly
lalow1 wileD we 1haD set
foot apia ou tern flrtna.
lndepeadeace II pubUcally
declued ' throqltoat the
coloulea and aolhlag but
Ioree will settle the
llllhappy dispute."

of the queen and her court to
be on Friday evenlnB
followinBthe regatta parade.
The new queen and flrat
runner-up will be crowned by
Jut year's regatta queen,
Miss Cathy Osborne.
Judges will select the queen ·
and flnt, aecood and third
runnefa-up on the basis of
personality and appearance.
Tbe Birls will select a "Miss
Personality" . Bond a,
lr(tphles, crowns, flowers and
banners will be awarded the
winnen.

NMm ____________________

IDD~ ~--------~-------AGE ____________________.____

~HOOL~-------------------PI!ONE N0.-:::-::--~:---=-~::-----­
'78 Regatta Queen Entry Form

�(

Rose accepts Clemente award

2- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, May ·\3. 1976

Lucasville prisoners testify
walls
about conditions ·behind
.
By J.R. KIMMINS
, LUCASVIlLE, Ohio (UP!)
-.,. Six prison inmates were to
bring their grievances before
an Ohio General Assembly
committee today in the
second and final day of an
investigation into the
administration of the
Southern Ohio Correctional
Facility.
Four of the inmates were
chosen by the prison population, Administrators selected
the others.
The committee hearings
began Wednesday afternoon
following a lawmakers' tour
of · th e Scioto County

srlaon administrators.
the lacillty, saying "II you
"1have no confidence left," send in 100 extra olllcers the
said Mitchell G. Paine, 34, belly wl!l just get latter. The
Wheelersburg, a nine-year head will stay the same ..."
guard
In
the
Ohio
Ohio House Speaker Vernal
correctional system. "When G. Riffe Jr., D-New Boston,
the lrunates get up~lght, the made a surprise appearance
guards lilse \hell' confidence. before the committee and
. "At Luc&amp;Bvllle, the guards blamed Gov . James A.
have turned against each Rhodes' 2 per cent budget
other. They are aU against cutback for many of the
the administration ' And the srison's problems.
inmates- who are usually
"There
have
been
smarter than all of us-are statements made by the
using
this to their executive branch (of state
advantage," added Paine. government ) that they didn't
He
discounted
tile' have enough money," said
suggestlon e~tra guards Rille. "Two times since we
would lncrj!BSe security at · passed the budget the
Controlling Board has
released more money-$2.2
million juat three weeks ago.
"It should be made clear
that the legislature does not
have the responsibility lor
operation of the institution,"
he said. "That responsibillty
rests with the department of

maximum security prison.
Wednesday's testimony at
the Lucasville Town Hall
ended with some sharp
questions directed toward
srtson superintendent Arnold
R Jago .
Rep. Robert W, Jaculski,
D-Garfield Helghtl!, pointedly
asked Jago why no more than
1,400 of the 2,000 Inmates had
jobs.
"We do need additional
work arrangements,"
admitted Jago who led the
lawmakers on their tour
earlier Wednesday.
Qlher testimony came from
. prison guarda and cjeputy

·._ Lawmakers, reporters visit ·
: inside Lucasville prison
~

By J.R. KIMMINS
LUCASVIlLE, Ohio (UP!)
; ~ If Lucasville prison
officials were trying to make
their maximum security
penitentiary look good, they
didn'tdo a good job. Agolden,
over-crowded cage is still a
cage.
Six Ohio legislators, a haH
dozen reporters and several
leg i slative service
commission staff toured the
Southern Ohio Correctional
Facility Wednesday. Here's
what they saw :
- A prison built to hold

Analysis
1,600 inmates trammed with
2,000 convicted felons .
- A third of the inmate
population with absolutely
nothing to do.
- A charred electric chair
wired and ready to go.
- Forty-three men on
Death Row .
- Ahand4ettered sign with
a simple message : "Listen to
rile ''

Lucasville wBB built during
Gov. James A. Rhodes' first
two terms to replace a gothic
cage, the 3,100-inmat.e Ohio
Penitentiary ln Columbus. No
prisoner ever escaped the 30loot walls of the ancient penal
Institution ,
Major problems, however,
have punctuated Lucasville's
lour-year history.
There have been three
major inmate escapes, two
· major guard strikes,
rampant labor bickering to
organize the guards and a
rapid turnover of wardens.
The prison administration
has already undergone one
major investigation. In 1973,
former Gov. John J. Gilligan
sent a citizens' task Ioree to

look at the prison, The task
Ioree's report w'as grim,
"We have operated under a
state of crisis since our
incepllon," said Arnold R.
Jago, superintendent at
Lucasville.
But conditions have
improved over the last three
years, according to Rep.
Robert W. Jasculskl, DGarileld Heights.
"The changes are like night
and day from what I saw
three years ago," said
Jasculski who last toured the
facility in 1973 alter the first
inmate-guard
m a j or
disturbance which reSulted in
the shooting death of one
guard.
Wednesday's escorted tour
progressed smoothly until the
lawmakers found themselves
next to a cell block dayroom
packed with 110 inmates.
Two hand-lettered signs
had been taped to the
reinforced glass wall. "Come
talk to us. They won't let us
talk to you, " read one.
"You'regettlnga snow job, It
isn't normally run this way,"
read the other.
Jaculski and Sen. J ,
Timothy McCormack, DEuclld, were prompted to go
, into the dayroom by the
signs,
The inmates selected one of
their number to testily before
the committee today when
the committee returns to the
prison as part of their
Investigation.
After
the
dayroom
meeting, the tour went to the
prison industries section.
Sixty men were sitting on
benches waiting for lunch.
They said they had been there
all morning. •
"We don't have anything to
do," said Walter Macintosh,

Dr. Ridgway on OU faculty
of
your
Dr. John H. Ridgway, chief recognition
significant contributions to
Hospital, has been appointed Ohio University, the College,
lo a position of clinical and your profession. Your
associate professor o{ family ac II vi ty will add to the
practice at Ohio University dimension of the college
lor the 1975-16 school year. mission and Is greatly apAccording to a letter from preciated.
"In all respects, except lor
Ularles J. Ping, president of
financial commitbnents, you
the university,
"This appointment as an are eligible lor the privileges
adjunct staff member In the accorded a part-lime faculty
~ollege
of Osteopathic member of Oh!o University."
Medicine Is made in
of staff of Ve~rans Memorial

DR. LAMB

.

~

Oeveland, who is ilervlng
time lor his conviction on a
concealed weapons charge.
"It's like this every day.
Those filing cabinets over
there were made last
month.''
Another inmate, Juan
Garcia, Toledo, let his
bitterness spill out. "If you're
going to use the taxpayer's
money, then don't make
animals out of us," he said.
Garcia is serving a lifeterm for murder.
Eventually, the tour ended
with lunch In the staff
cafeteria. Roast beef, peas
and mashed potatoes. The
meal co~ everybody 40 cents.,
, Three ~ron, gates away, the
llllll8tes ate Polish sausage.

EMPLOYMENT UP
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
Center for Business and
Economic Research at Ohio
State University reported
today that employment of
production workers in Ohio
during March was up I per
cent from the March, 1975,
level.

Prison peuonnel officer
. Robert Moore oulllned to the
committee )l'obleffill with organized labors' efforts at
unionizing the 311 Lucasville
gu~rds .

Moore said silt unions are
trying to organize the guards
but none had more than 120
members. He said .union dues
were being deducted from the
bi-monthly paychecks of 255
guards.
·
Richard Polleys, . the
prison's chief budget officer,
told the committee the state
corrections department bad
slashed Lucasville' budget 10
per cent from fiscal 1975 to
fiscal 1976.
He said state officials
called the decrease from $11.0
million to $7.2 million
justified because of the
"stalling situtatiori."
Each ·of the witnesses
appearing before the
committee Wednesday were
BBked to put their complaints
in writing so the committee
could return to Colurnlxls and
try to draft legislative
remedies for the prqblems at
the prison.

Oerk's fees

offered

were $3,223

The Cervical Cancer
Screening Program Is
designed to benefit women
who have never had a PaR ·
test 'and thoae who have not
had or cannot remember
having a Pap test within the
last year, Including women
over the child-bearing age.
Meigs County residents are
fortunate to have such a
detection program offered to
tllem. It Is hoped that all
women not able to see a
personal physician regularly
will take advantage of this
free examination. ,
other clinical services
include pelvic and breast
examinations, checks lor
height, weight, urine, blood
pressure and health history
and Instruction In breast sellexamination. The cllnlc Is
held once a month at
Ve~rans Memorial Hospital.
For more Information, call
the Meigs Co'l"ty Unit of The
American Cabcer Society, or
Jan Judge, Clinic Co·
Ordlnator at 992-$32 during
evening hours.

during April
A iotal of $3,222.50 was
collected In April by the office
of Larry Spencer, Oerk of
Courts. TransacUons lor the
month were as follows:
Certificate's of title, 1144;
Notation of Liens, 323;
Memoradurn copy of titles,
211; Salvage Titles, 4; Applications, Affidavits and
Assignments,
1182;
Penalties, 72, and Certified
copies of titles, 43.
Total title Fees, $2,849.50;
County Share, $2,321.25 and
State Share, $528.25.
Total fees lor 107 auto inspections, $321; County
Share, t26.7Sand State Share,
$294.25,
Also, boat titles, 27;
Notation of liens, 8; Memo
copies, 2; Applications, Affidavits and ~lgnments, 22.
Total Fees, ~; · County
Share,l39.25and State Share,
$12.75.

dress your letter to me in
care ollhls newspaper, P. 0 ,
Box 1551, Radio City Station,
New York, NY 10019.
·
DEAR DR. LAMB - I am
58 years old and have high
blood presaure, I have been
· going to the doctor lor four or
five years but my blood
pressure is always too high. I
am on a no salt, low-fat ,diet,
plus Laalx and lndera). I also
drink aeveral beers a day
plus some liquor. Do you
lhlnk that Ia what ls causing
It? I tee! fine and work every
day except I am awfully
highatrung. I seem to gel mad·
easily. "eaae let me know.
DEAR READER - The
truth Is we do not know the
cause of high blood pressure
in moat caaes. Umiting salt
intake does seem to help
some Individuals. If there is
any evidence of excess fat
underneath your akin around
tile middle portion of your
body, elimination of such fat
deposits often helps lower

~-

THE STAfF OF THE OPERATING room, recovery
room and central supply iu-e -busy providing 24 hour
· coverage lor· surgical emergencies: From the left are

ctndnnaU Rl'ds ' veteran star
P\'te Rose, ln a dramatic
moment of humility and
noaalgia, Wednesday night
accepted the annual Roberto
Oemente Award and recalled
the late Clemente as a
"class" Individual,
"I'm just proud to have my
name mentioned In the same
breath
as
Roberto
Oemente," said Roae. "He
showed me a lot class:"
Baseball Commissioner
Bowie Kuhn personally
sresented the award to Rose
before the Reds' gaine
against the PJttsburgh
Pirates, the team lor which
Clemente played.
Rose became the slxtb
recipient of the ·award,
presented yearly to · the .
p_layer whO "best .exemplllles
the game of baseball on and
off the field ....
The Reds' third baseman
remembered that Oemente
took time to help him when he

Pam Henderson, R.N., Mabel Tracy, L.P.N., Frances
Heweison, R.N.,· and Barbara Jewett, nurses l\lde.

Variety ··
of work
There are
134
employes at Veterans
Hospital
Memorial
whicll is currently
marking
hospital
week . Many skills
and duties must be
performed to carry
out
the
many
functions performed
at the institution. The
accompanying photos
by . Bob H(Jeflich
suggest the variety of ,
duties.

blood pressure.
Alcoholic beverages In
the11!881ves do not cause high
blood pressure. However, to
the extent that they con·
tribute to obesity or excess
body fat, they then become
part of the problem.
Every person who has high
blood pressure should have a
complete medical
examination, including study
of tile lunctlon"of tile kidneys
to ascertain Insofar as
possible the cauaes of high
blood pressure; Then
treabnent usually conaistS of
using various medicine&amp; that
help to lower the pressure by
relulng the amall arteries In
the body. The amount of these
medicines, If any, that a
person needs often depends
on how successful they are ln
eliminating excesa body fat.
Becauae you note that you
arl' highstrung, I would
recommend eliminating all
stimulants.
Specifically
coffee, tea and cola drinks.

wa• lryln~ lu establish
hinll!t'll in the major leagues.
"Roberto always took time
to talk to young players,"
Rose said. "He helped me
when 1.waa just lreaklng ln.
I'd be In a alump and even
thoUgh I played lor another
team he'd malre an effort to
try to help me out of it."
But Rose dim'! recall aemente getting In many
alumps.
"I consider Roberto the
best bitter I've every played
agalnat," said Rolle, 35, who
has seen a lot of good batters
In his 14-year major league
career. "In a way, I've tried
to be the same type of hitter
he was. We · both hit to all
three fields, and neither of us
hit tor hOme runs.
"BaaebaliiOit a great asset
when Roberto was killed,"
-concl~ded an obviously humbled Rose as he accepted the
trophy from Kuhn.
Kuhn figured there could be
no better recipient lor the
award than ·Roije, known lis

hHlll-ball'• .. Mr. Hustle."
"l"'te plays the game with
style and da.th and be creates
wonderful excitement on the
field," said Kuhn. "He's a
guy who knows how to
reprf!Se!lt baseball both on
and olf the field to the public.
"For me, he Is the apex of
)I'Oiesai01)81lsm. His hustle
and all out effort serve as an
ex81!1ple lor all of us. Hls
enthusiasm Is obviOus off the
'field, as evidenced by his
willlngmiu to participate ip
any number of activities
whlcb
benefit
his
conununity."
Rose, a native Clnclnnatian, visits hlii!Pitala, has a
continuing interest In the
Special Olympics
for
handicapped youngsters, has
been
honorary
state
chalnnan lot the Amel'ican
SocietY and honorary
chairman for Multiple
Sclerosis In Cincinnati.
"Pete has recognized the
need to do what he can to
make Clncinnali a better

plac-e to live," said Reds'
President Bob Howsam. "He
has been very active ln the
community, especially In
working with children."
Other winners of the aemente award, previously
called the Cornmlssloner's
Award but renamed alter
Clemente was killed In 1972,
were 'WIWe Mays in 1971,
Brooks Robin!Kin In 1972, AI
Kallne In 1973, Willie Stargell
ln 1974 and Lou Brock In 1975.
Rolle was selected from a
group of 48 players - two
from each team - who were
nominated by a screening
committee on the basis of
playing
ability,
sportsmanship, character 1
community Involvement;
hun.anltarlanlsm and
contribution to his team and
to baseball.
Others receiving serious
consideration from the nineman selection committee of
baseball executives and
\lledla re)l'esentatives were
Rose's teammate Johnny

Bench,. Baltimore's Jim
Palmer, Philadelphia's Tony
Taylor and Atlanta's Phil
Nlekro.
Rose, a three~irne National
League batting champion and
the league's Moat Valuable
Player 'In 1973, owns a .310
lifetime battlnH average.
Even though he Ia the oldest
player on the Reds' squad,
Rose Is olf to his best start
· ever this year, hitting over
.400 to lead tile league l,n
batting.

llltlo
(UP II - Otlerbela Colle&amp;&lt;

llAI/l'IMUHt; I Ul'l I The
six-horae field lor thla
Saltl'day's IO!at running of
the Preakneas Stakea to
deflnl~ly breaking d~n Into
a "Big Two" and "Uttle
Four".
Kentucky Derby winner
Bold Forbes and runnerup
Honest Pleasure - the "Big
Two" of tile 3-year~d set .:..
are e1pected to again battle
for the supremacy In the I
and three-sixteenths mil e
event. But Bold Forbes'
trainer, Laz Barrara, thinks
the other half of hls evenmoney entry, Life's Hope,

will be looklaa for a aew
athletle dlnelor Iller StpL
I, 1o replltce Ute mlplq
Robert "Moe" A&amp;Jer.
"It Wll I toqb tleellloll

beeauae I've bet• al ~
lerbela a Ioaa Ume," aatd
A&amp;ler Wedaead.oy. He aald
be wu alepplaa dowa lo
" devote more time lo my
aportlaa &amp;ooda bualaen
aad have more free time to

mynU."

alau coold win.
"IJie'a Hope," the Dllnala
Derby WlniHlr, would have 1
chance If tho two leaderl
knock the1111elvea out," he
said Wednesday after both
halves ol his entry galloped
1\l-mtle on the .Plmllco
racing strip: "The race will
depend on the pace. Bold
Forbes won't stop runnln&amp;
when he geta the lead."

honored
·CLEVELAND (UPI) _ 1!:

curtis St range, the top
amateur In last month's
d Doyt L. · Masters, have accepted
M "M , Hoi
· ose
e an
· invitations to compete ln the
Perry, two of Ohio's all~lme llrsi Memorial Golf Tourleading college coaches, are nament
among
live Ohioans whO haw
·
OAK~D (UPJ ) - Before
been
named
to
the
National
the filth game of the NBA's
cancer
Westerp Conference finals, Association of Collegiate
Cllfl Ray said tile Golden Director ·of Athletics Hall of
State Warriors weren't Fame.
Hole and Perry, along with
playing smart defense.
George
E. Utile of Ohio
· So, Wednesday night, he
Wesleyan
and William M.
did something about it. The
Bell
and
W.H.H. "Tippy"
filth-year center from Dye, both former
Ohio State
Oklahoma had his best of- athletes, round out the
fensive night In the playoffs, Buckeye State aggregation
hitting 7 of 81rom the floor, who will be among 15
but he also picked off 16 Inducted into the Hall June 21
rebounds and held Phoenix's at Hollywood, Fla .
Rookie of the Year Alvan
Michael Cleary, executive
The' viSiting Jackson
Ironton's first baseman · drive that looked like a sure Meigs had live hitters, each Adams to 12 points ln addltiop director of the association,
Ironment. regained a lie for GrUiltll was a key to the win hit, but then Elliot made a with a slpgle : Marshall, to making live steals;
OU Athletic director Blll
fi rst place In the SEOAL and as he kneicked In three runs diving catch and threw to Hamilton, Davenport, '· "Let'slaceit,"Raysaidof Rohr, president of the
avenged an earlier upset by witlla double and a home nm, first to catch Hamilton off in Howard and Bachner. The the ll1-9ti victory which gave assocla.tlon,
and
the
downing the host Meigs the first round-tripper hit ln a double play. ,Davenoorl Marauders
travel ·to Golden State a 3-2 advantage University of Illinois CecU
Marauders 7-1 Wednesday. lhe new Melga ball park. He then got a single, stole Galllpolis to play In the AA in the best-of-seven series. Coleman, chairman of the
Ironton and Jackson are helped his team get all the ilecond, and scored on a base Sectional Final tonight, and "Defense makes us good and Honors
and
Award
Our biggest burger wi th clloosB 'n
,
now tied for first, arid each · runs they needed in the firs( knock by Howard. Elliot just then they ·entertaln Wellston we didn't play good defense . Committee announced the
trknmlngs en a sesAme seed bun , .. ,
team baa· one game to play Inning when, after a walk and may have saved the game for on Friday to round out thelt baali:elball Sunday." He noted appolniments Wednesday.
league schedule.
that In Sunday's 133-129
Friday. Meigs has beaten an error, he unloaded with his his team.
Hole, who retired In 1965
both this year, but the two-run double. Two outs
Jackson Iced the game witll Jackson
300 112 G--7 8 1 double overtime loss to the alter 5Q years as player and
"Big Fun"
000 lOOG--1 5 4 Phoenix Suns, the keys were coach at the College of
Marauders are entrenched In later he scored on a double by single runs ln the fourth and MeTifs
Big She!: •·og !l'lo5. lnrou oo h
Sl09
fifth frames, arid two In the Shield~. and Haller· failure to block out on the Wooster, posted a 412-181
a tie for sixth place with a 4-9 Meadows.
drink ll. turnovm
record, and Is 8-11 overall.
Shields allowed Meigs' only sixth. The one In the filth Davenport (LP), Smith (5) dfensiveboardsandinablllty mark ln. 32 seasons as Scot
"UHie Fun" Funmeal®
. The story Wednesday night run in , the fourth. It could came on GrUIIIh's solo shot and Mankin.
to effectively clog up the basketball coach. His teams
was a neat pitching per- have been a much bigger overtlleleltlleldlence.other
middle against .the Suns' posted back:to-back unbeaten
formance by the Ironmen's Inning had It not been for a hitters lor the visitors were
penetrating guards.
seasons ln 1929 and 1940. He
·Shields. He went the route great play · by second· Meadows with a single atid a
was Wooster AD lor 19 years.
and allowed only live hits (all b&amp;Beman Elliot. Hamilton led double, Harless with two
.
In · 10 years as Bowling
singles) while striking out off with a single. Soulsby singles, and Elliot and Clark,
Green football coach; Perry
low- and laaulng only one free followed with a smaahlnk line each a single.
·
posted a 77-1~ record, the
pass. Meigs pitchers gave up
top mark In the nation when
eight base knocks while
he retired from coaching to
striking out two and walidng
become athletic director in
FOHRbeTWORTH, Tex. (UP!) 1964.
three.
Little was a stand·out
The Meigs County Senior -'- u rt Gteen Is ·back in
Host Logan erased a 7-3 10 l!lts. He fanned lour and
action
this
week
after
a
lew
football
and track atlllete at
Galllpolia lead In the filth walked three. Bradd Tucker Babe Ruth team will start days off and the 1976 tour's Ohio Wesleyan and served
inning with big runs, then was ihe blg gun lor Logan tlleir third season May 22 In leading money winner Is coaching stints at Cincinnati
held on to defeat the Blue with three hils In three trips, the Tri-County League.
The league this year is about as likely a choice to win and Miami universities, He
~ 10.7 ln a makeup Including a double;
tile $2110,000 Colonial National served as assistant athletic
cont.est at Hllltop Stadium 'Scott Gasser, another lJfS made up of six teams, Invitation as anybody.
· director and later head
Wednesday evening.
~hcmore, had two hits In · Ravenswood and Ripley, both · The Colonial, which opens football coach at Michigan
The victory left the three trips. BIU Hubbard had from Jackson County, W. today over- one of the top and athletic director at both
Chieftains with a 10.9 season two hils lor the winners. Va.; American Legion Post courses tile pros see each Wisconsin and Rutgers.
record:
Inside
the Harold Peppers and Gasser 140 and Mason County, both year, also marks tile return of
Bell, an All-American at
d Mason County, W. Va.; Gary Player, wlio has had a Ohio
·
Deal
.
Southeas~rn Ohio League, each had a two-base hit.
State, served as head
Golden llsh 1111e1 SAn dwlc11 &amp; crisp
Logan upped Its mark to 7-'.
John Lanning started for Gallla County, ani\ tile Meigs lesa than super year In the football coach and athletic
salad(orlarge lrlas) ,.,, , . , ... . , , ,
GAHS dropped to 8-14 on the Logan. He was relieved by County team.
United
States
and
has
not
director
at
ClaliiR
University
The Meigs team this year Is
aea1oo and 4-9 Inside the Randy Johnson In the filth,
played in this country since before moving to Florida
conference.
Johnson was credited with being coached by Charles lhe Masters.
A&amp;M to take up similar
Today, tile Blue Devils will the vlcbJry. Bill Heft pitched Marshall, Jerry Davenport
Heavy rains struck the duties. He also served as AD
host Meigs at 4 o'clock on the seventh inning lor Logan. and Dave Dotson. Anyone area, Wednesday night but at North carolina A&amp;T and .
Memorial Field In the Class
Terry Wall paced the Blue who wishes to play, be at the clearing akles were forecast most recently at Fayetteville
Hamburger, regular frie s 8
AA Southern Sectional Devlls witll two hils In three Middleport Park at S p. m. lor today'a ope~ round.
State. He retired In 1970.
regular soltdrlnk ....... , , , .. , , , , .'.
championship conleal
trips with three runs batted Saturday, May 15. All boys
A limited field of 102
Dye won nine letters in his
;Friday, Galllpolls wiD host in. Swain, Mark Dobson, Jim back from last year bring players will encounter the collegiate athletic career at
netghb(jjr,~ Waverly ln the final con- Harris and Dallas Love also tlleir I.D. Card or birth 7,200-yard, par-70 Colonial Ohio State and waa named
lerence game of the cam- hit safely for the Blud&gt;e.vlls. certificate.
Country Club course. which head basketball coach at his
The Meigs ,schedule (all winds tllrougb pecan and oak alma mater In 1943.
palgn. Logan travels to
UJiescore:
Jackson Friday.
GAHS
2001400-7 ~ doubleheaders):
trees near the banks of the Following the 1951 season, he
May 22, Ravenswood, Trinity River.
Gary Swain, junior Blue LOgan
OIS 031 x-10.1~
Your cttolce ol hugl:! lncs ll. B i ~ Siler:
moved to the head coaching
Devil hurler, was tile victim
Batteries: GARS - Swain away, 1 and 3 p.m.
Double
Cheeseburger or Skipper's Treot ~'
position at the University of
May 23, Gallla County,
of seven unearned runs . (LP) &amp; Harris. Logan For help with all your
Washington. He later served
2-4 p. m,
family insurance needs, Wednesday. ~aln went the Lanning, Johnson, 5th (WP), away,
as athletic director at
May29,Ripley,away,l-3p,
distance, giving up 10runs on Hell, (7) &amp; Tucker.
Wichita, Nebraska and
see:
m.
CINCINNATI (UP!)- The Northwestern before retiring
May 30, Mason County, Clnclnnali Bengals reached ln 1975.
BILL FLETr.HER
heme, 1-3 p. m.
contract agreement with Ne·
June 5, Post 140, home, 1-3 braska's Tot;~y Davis, who
1258
2~25 JACKSON AVE.,
p.m.
was second only to Archie
Powell St.
DUBLIN,
Ohio
(UPI)
June
6,
Rllvelll!wood,
home,
Middleport
Griffin In running backs
PT. PLEASANT, W. VA.
1-3 p.m.
PH. 992-7155
selected by the Bengals ln Slxty-elx players including
June 12, Gallla County, last month's NFL collegiate defending U.S. Amateur
'""
champion Fred Ridley and
home, 5-7 p. m.
draft.
June 13, Ripley, home, 1-3
Coach Jim Sprague;s Gallla with an a, record.
The 8-2, 212-pound native of
r.m.
Kyger
Creek
Bobcats
won
KC
closes
Its
regular
Techumseh,,
Neb., who led
HAll IAIM
S1111 Form
their 12th game of the aeason season Friday against South. · June 19, Mason County, the Cornhuskera in offense
Insurance Companies Wednesday, . 10-4 over ern. The Bobcata took a 2-1 away, 1-3 p. m.
the past three years, was
Home DllicH:
June 20, Poat 140, away, &amp;-8 eincinnatl '8 fourth-round
Symmes Valley. Inside the lead in'the bottom of the,first
.!::::'":'":":":::'~~.::_BIDDf'I:• ·M~,. Illinois fWAC, the Bobcats are ln and were never headed.
p.m.
pick.
·second place behind North
Pacing KC were Bill
Metzner and Ralph Baylor
witll twJ hits each. Von
Taylor and winning pitcher,
Ron Fraley had a double
apiece.
Fraley, In going the
distance,
fanned nine and
Knit Hitsl
walked six. Ralph Ingles, the ·
IDling hurler, and his relief,
Galloway, and Chri,tlan
walked nine and struckout
six.
Mochine-Wash
Gelling hila l~r the VIkings
were Galloway, Leffingwell
and Carpenter.
Uneacore:
Pull - on leisure
S.
Valley 100 201 G-- 4 3 4
3 GALS
shirts With crew
SPECIAL
K.
Creek
203
032
x-10
8
I
or tab necks : Sol ·
Ingles (L) Galloway (4)
fROM PARKERSBURG
ids; stripes.
Claistlan (5) and Payne.
Fraley (W~nd Metzner.

Warriors up
1 over Suns

Jackson reverses fortune, wins 7~1

r

Super Shef®

69C

I;&gt;IET IS IMPORTANT to the patient at Veterans Memorial Hospital. Here Mrs. Lynn
Murray, R.D., consulting dietitian at the hospital advises dietary personnel on proper
procedures.

79c

Babe .Ruth

team opens
Logan 10·7 over GARS May 22nd

Green is back
on goHtour

Big Shef®
Meal Deal

Screening

Lose fat, not water

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
Those water pUla don't
DEAR DR. LAMB- I am a ellmlnate fat. They help to
84 year-old woman, 5 feet 4 flush out the water· that acand weigh 125 pounds. In the -l cumulates as the fat Is used.
last year I lost 3S pounds as That means taking water
my doctor wanted, I feel pills won't prevent you from
wonderful. Now what I want putting your fat back on.
to know Is can I take one There are only two things
water pill every day or every that will help you prevent
other day for there is no end regaining your fat; mainto my worrying about putting talning a suitable level of
the weight back on that I have physical activity to uae all of
already lost? Please tell me the calories you eat and
what to do. .. .
restricting your calories In a
DEAR READER - The well-balanced diet,
weight you have lost was not
Remember, the amo\Dlt of
water, It was lat. There fat you accumulate isllke the
aeems to be a widespread balance in your ~king
lack of understanding that account. H you take In more
what doctors usually want calories- than you spend the
you to lose is fat not Jlll!t balance is going to Increase
pounds on the scales. Pounds and that balance Is your fat
can be anything from an ' deposit, Those who want
over-distended digestive more Information on obesity
tract to an accumulation of can send 50 cents for The
water. Your body Is normally Health Leiter, nwnber U,
hall water and dehydrating Obesity, General Principles
yourself to get a favorable of Prevention . Send a long,
reading on the scales Is stamped, . self-addressed
lise less.
1
envelope fo~ maUing. Ad~

correctio~. u

By Kit'... \ ''AN SANT
CINt1NNATI t UPI \ --

l'reakness now hit 2, small 4

A(;t.~:lt ljUITII
W~'.HTF.KVIIJ.t:,

SkipP._er's Treat®

99e

"Spirit of '76"

JAN JUDGE, VETERA,NS Memorial Hospital
employe, is coordinator of a cervical cancer screening
program carried out at the hospital. ' ·

MRS. JAYNE GRAHAM, chief laboratory technician,
examines a perhpheral blood smear under a microscope
to determine abnormalties,

•

'

~

&gt;

•
•

71&amp;

Like a
good
State Farm
is there.---

e

O'Savings

,

gge

Bobcats top Vikings

for 12th diamond win

•

•

SECOND GRADERS AT THE Chester Elementary
Schooitaught by Miss Melanie Beegle are learning that
firemen are among their friends, The second graders
have been collecting bottle cap~ from soft drinks
distrilxlted by the R. C. Bottling Co. and turned in the caps
lor redemption. Here the group presents Ross Cleland,
Diester lire department chief, with a check received from
the cap~ . Oass members are Ryan · Bearbl, LeAna

Brogan, Pete Darling, Kim Dent, David Edwards, Terry
Foster, Dawna Grueser, Jodie Harris, Andy Hawk, Philip
Holsinger, Randy Holsinger, Betty Jo Hunt, Lee Keney,
Pam Lawrence, Donnie Mamn, David McLaughlin, Eric
Miller, Ryan Oliver, George Parker, Isabel Philips, Angie
Pooler, Deanna Rockhold, Mike Sirn, Terrie Starcher,
Jimmy Wilson, Valerie Woods, aod Tracy Taylor.

..

''
,,'
,,
&lt;

...

Tht

Dai~

"'..•
•
.'
..•

Sentinel

~

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS·MASDN AREA
CHESTER L, TANNEHILL
Exec. Ed.
AOBEIIT HOEFLICH
CltJ Editor
Publishe Clail~ exce"t

.~

S~turda~

Valley

~any ,

by T e Oh o
ubllshlng Com .
111 Court St .,

~·

'
.....•

omerov
Ohio 45769.
BuSiness 6tflce Phone 992 2156. Editor ial Phone 992 2157 '

'

. Second class gostaoe

paid ol Pomeroy,

.•
..••
.

Motor

~

Route

~·

where curter iervtce npl
·available, One month,

SJ.25. By mall In Ohio and
W, vo , One Year, $22 .00;

,Six months , $11.50 ; Three
rnonths , S7 .00 . Elsewhere
~26 . 00 year ; $1x months
\13 .50 ; three m'onths. S7 .50,
:iubscripllon prl t e Includes
Sunday Tlmes .sentlne l.

'

GOING TO WASHINGTON -These members of the safety pat,rol of the Tuppin Plains
Elementary School - all sixth graders - will be making a trip to Washington, D. c., as a
reward for their services to the scllooL The group will leave June 4. Front, 1to 4 are Leba
Kay Sampson, Denise Gaddis, Patti Edwards, Sarah Goebel, Wendy Elkins Csssle Sheets·
ba~k row, Charles Eugene 'Reniley, Mike Baker, Joe Sayre, Rob Smith, ~It Skinner and
Tommy Scyoc. Not pictured is Ke~ Brooks.
v

special

SPORT
SHIRTS

At Thelnn

sol•'

"TIGRESS"

OPEN

FRIDAY
TIL 8

~

Delivered b~ curter where
available 5 cents ptr
By

Look Cool &amp; Casual

"'"'

hlo .

Nat iona·l
advertising
representative Ward .
·Gtlfftth comnany , Inc .,
Bottlnelll &amp; Ga I~ her Otv. ,
757 Third Ave .. ew York ,
N.Y. 10017 .
~ubscrlptlon
rates :

week .

A

New York Clothint-House
KERM'S KORNER
POMEROY, OHIO

TONIGHT
SEOAL BASEBALL
TEAM
W L R
1ron ton
I 0 3 120
Jackson
10 3 112
Athans
B s u
Logon
1 6 u
Waverly
6 7 59
M't lgs
A 9 68
&lt;;alllpolls
4 9 73
WtiiiiOn
3 10 58
TOTALS
52 52 661
Wttlntsdly's results:
Jackson 7 Meigs 1
L0111n 10 Gallipolis 7
Frldly's g1m11:
Ironton at Athens
Waverly ol Gallipolis

OR
'65

.8:30 TIL 12:30

Black Asphaltum
5
Black ·Asbestos ~~

1(1

. ''

so

78
97
18
73
99

The MEIGS INN .

118
661 .

Ph. 992-3629

POMEROY

11

'

-I

'·

••,

EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE"

'

Ebersbach Hardware

••

PH. 992·2811

..

MAIN ST.

Logan at Jackson
Wellston at Mfigs

.

.i

POMEROY
,.,

\

'

~ -

,,

'

�(

Rose accepts Clemente award

2- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, May ·\3. 1976

Lucasville prisoners testify
walls
about conditions ·behind
.
By J.R. KIMMINS
, LUCASVIlLE, Ohio (UP!)
-.,. Six prison inmates were to
bring their grievances before
an Ohio General Assembly
committee today in the
second and final day of an
investigation into the
administration of the
Southern Ohio Correctional
Facility.
Four of the inmates were
chosen by the prison population, Administrators selected
the others.
The committee hearings
began Wednesday afternoon
following a lawmakers' tour
of · th e Scioto County

srlaon administrators.
the lacillty, saying "II you
"1have no confidence left," send in 100 extra olllcers the
said Mitchell G. Paine, 34, belly wl!l just get latter. The
Wheelersburg, a nine-year head will stay the same ..."
guard
In
the
Ohio
Ohio House Speaker Vernal
correctional system. "When G. Riffe Jr., D-New Boston,
the lrunates get up~lght, the made a surprise appearance
guards lilse \hell' confidence. before the committee and
. "At Luc&amp;Bvllle, the guards blamed Gov . James A.
have turned against each Rhodes' 2 per cent budget
other. They are aU against cutback for many of the
the administration ' And the srison's problems.
inmates- who are usually
"There
have
been
smarter than all of us-are statements made by the
using
this to their executive branch (of state
advantage," added Paine. government ) that they didn't
He
discounted
tile' have enough money," said
suggestlon e~tra guards Rille. "Two times since we
would lncrj!BSe security at · passed the budget the
Controlling Board has
released more money-$2.2
million juat three weeks ago.
"It should be made clear
that the legislature does not
have the responsibility lor
operation of the institution,"
he said. "That responsibillty
rests with the department of

maximum security prison.
Wednesday's testimony at
the Lucasville Town Hall
ended with some sharp
questions directed toward
srtson superintendent Arnold
R Jago .
Rep. Robert W, Jaculski,
D-Garfield Helghtl!, pointedly
asked Jago why no more than
1,400 of the 2,000 Inmates had
jobs.
"We do need additional
work arrangements,"
admitted Jago who led the
lawmakers on their tour
earlier Wednesday.
Qlher testimony came from
. prison guarda and cjeputy

·._ Lawmakers, reporters visit ·
: inside Lucasville prison
~

By J.R. KIMMINS
LUCASVIlLE, Ohio (UP!)
; ~ If Lucasville prison
officials were trying to make
their maximum security
penitentiary look good, they
didn'tdo a good job. Agolden,
over-crowded cage is still a
cage.
Six Ohio legislators, a haH
dozen reporters and several
leg i slative service
commission staff toured the
Southern Ohio Correctional
Facility Wednesday. Here's
what they saw :
- A prison built to hold

Analysis
1,600 inmates trammed with
2,000 convicted felons .
- A third of the inmate
population with absolutely
nothing to do.
- A charred electric chair
wired and ready to go.
- Forty-three men on
Death Row .
- Ahand4ettered sign with
a simple message : "Listen to
rile ''

Lucasville wBB built during
Gov. James A. Rhodes' first
two terms to replace a gothic
cage, the 3,100-inmat.e Ohio
Penitentiary ln Columbus. No
prisoner ever escaped the 30loot walls of the ancient penal
Institution ,
Major problems, however,
have punctuated Lucasville's
lour-year history.
There have been three
major inmate escapes, two
· major guard strikes,
rampant labor bickering to
organize the guards and a
rapid turnover of wardens.
The prison administration
has already undergone one
major investigation. In 1973,
former Gov. John J. Gilligan
sent a citizens' task Ioree to

look at the prison, The task
Ioree's report w'as grim,
"We have operated under a
state of crisis since our
incepllon," said Arnold R.
Jago, superintendent at
Lucasville.
But conditions have
improved over the last three
years, according to Rep.
Robert W. Jasculskl, DGarileld Heights.
"The changes are like night
and day from what I saw
three years ago," said
Jasculski who last toured the
facility in 1973 alter the first
inmate-guard
m a j or
disturbance which reSulted in
the shooting death of one
guard.
Wednesday's escorted tour
progressed smoothly until the
lawmakers found themselves
next to a cell block dayroom
packed with 110 inmates.
Two hand-lettered signs
had been taped to the
reinforced glass wall. "Come
talk to us. They won't let us
talk to you, " read one.
"You'regettlnga snow job, It
isn't normally run this way,"
read the other.
Jaculski and Sen. J ,
Timothy McCormack, DEuclld, were prompted to go
, into the dayroom by the
signs,
The inmates selected one of
their number to testily before
the committee today when
the committee returns to the
prison as part of their
Investigation.
After
the
dayroom
meeting, the tour went to the
prison industries section.
Sixty men were sitting on
benches waiting for lunch.
They said they had been there
all morning. •
"We don't have anything to
do," said Walter Macintosh,

Dr. Ridgway on OU faculty
of
your
Dr. John H. Ridgway, chief recognition
significant contributions to
Hospital, has been appointed Ohio University, the College,
lo a position of clinical and your profession. Your
associate professor o{ family ac II vi ty will add to the
practice at Ohio University dimension of the college
lor the 1975-16 school year. mission and Is greatly apAccording to a letter from preciated.
"In all respects, except lor
Ularles J. Ping, president of
financial commitbnents, you
the university,
"This appointment as an are eligible lor the privileges
adjunct staff member In the accorded a part-lime faculty
~ollege
of Osteopathic member of Oh!o University."
Medicine Is made in
of staff of Ve~rans Memorial

DR. LAMB

.

~

Oeveland, who is ilervlng
time lor his conviction on a
concealed weapons charge.
"It's like this every day.
Those filing cabinets over
there were made last
month.''
Another inmate, Juan
Garcia, Toledo, let his
bitterness spill out. "If you're
going to use the taxpayer's
money, then don't make
animals out of us," he said.
Garcia is serving a lifeterm for murder.
Eventually, the tour ended
with lunch In the staff
cafeteria. Roast beef, peas
and mashed potatoes. The
meal co~ everybody 40 cents.,
, Three ~ron, gates away, the
llllll8tes ate Polish sausage.

EMPLOYMENT UP
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
Center for Business and
Economic Research at Ohio
State University reported
today that employment of
production workers in Ohio
during March was up I per
cent from the March, 1975,
level.

Prison peuonnel officer
. Robert Moore oulllned to the
committee )l'obleffill with organized labors' efforts at
unionizing the 311 Lucasville
gu~rds .

Moore said silt unions are
trying to organize the guards
but none had more than 120
members. He said .union dues
were being deducted from the
bi-monthly paychecks of 255
guards.
·
Richard Polleys, . the
prison's chief budget officer,
told the committee the state
corrections department bad
slashed Lucasville' budget 10
per cent from fiscal 1975 to
fiscal 1976.
He said state officials
called the decrease from $11.0
million to $7.2 million
justified because of the
"stalling situtatiori."
Each ·of the witnesses
appearing before the
committee Wednesday were
BBked to put their complaints
in writing so the committee
could return to Colurnlxls and
try to draft legislative
remedies for the prqblems at
the prison.

Oerk's fees

offered

were $3,223

The Cervical Cancer
Screening Program Is
designed to benefit women
who have never had a PaR ·
test 'and thoae who have not
had or cannot remember
having a Pap test within the
last year, Including women
over the child-bearing age.
Meigs County residents are
fortunate to have such a
detection program offered to
tllem. It Is hoped that all
women not able to see a
personal physician regularly
will take advantage of this
free examination. ,
other clinical services
include pelvic and breast
examinations, checks lor
height, weight, urine, blood
pressure and health history
and Instruction In breast sellexamination. The cllnlc Is
held once a month at
Ve~rans Memorial Hospital.
For more Information, call
the Meigs Co'l"ty Unit of The
American Cabcer Society, or
Jan Judge, Clinic Co·
Ordlnator at 992-$32 during
evening hours.

during April
A iotal of $3,222.50 was
collected In April by the office
of Larry Spencer, Oerk of
Courts. TransacUons lor the
month were as follows:
Certificate's of title, 1144;
Notation of Liens, 323;
Memoradurn copy of titles,
211; Salvage Titles, 4; Applications, Affidavits and
Assignments,
1182;
Penalties, 72, and Certified
copies of titles, 43.
Total title Fees, $2,849.50;
County Share, $2,321.25 and
State Share, $528.25.
Total fees lor 107 auto inspections, $321; County
Share, t26.7Sand State Share,
$294.25,
Also, boat titles, 27;
Notation of liens, 8; Memo
copies, 2; Applications, Affidavits and ~lgnments, 22.
Total Fees, ~; · County
Share,l39.25and State Share,
$12.75.

dress your letter to me in
care ollhls newspaper, P. 0 ,
Box 1551, Radio City Station,
New York, NY 10019.
·
DEAR DR. LAMB - I am
58 years old and have high
blood presaure, I have been
· going to the doctor lor four or
five years but my blood
pressure is always too high. I
am on a no salt, low-fat ,diet,
plus Laalx and lndera). I also
drink aeveral beers a day
plus some liquor. Do you
lhlnk that Ia what ls causing
It? I tee! fine and work every
day except I am awfully
highatrung. I seem to gel mad·
easily. "eaae let me know.
DEAR READER - The
truth Is we do not know the
cause of high blood pressure
in moat caaes. Umiting salt
intake does seem to help
some Individuals. If there is
any evidence of excess fat
underneath your akin around
tile middle portion of your
body, elimination of such fat
deposits often helps lower

~-

THE STAfF OF THE OPERATING room, recovery
room and central supply iu-e -busy providing 24 hour
· coverage lor· surgical emergencies: From the left are

ctndnnaU Rl'ds ' veteran star
P\'te Rose, ln a dramatic
moment of humility and
noaalgia, Wednesday night
accepted the annual Roberto
Oemente Award and recalled
the late Clemente as a
"class" Individual,
"I'm just proud to have my
name mentioned In the same
breath
as
Roberto
Oemente," said Roae. "He
showed me a lot class:"
Baseball Commissioner
Bowie Kuhn personally
sresented the award to Rose
before the Reds' gaine
against the PJttsburgh
Pirates, the team lor which
Clemente played.
Rose became the slxtb
recipient of the ·award,
presented yearly to · the .
p_layer whO "best .exemplllles
the game of baseball on and
off the field ....
The Reds' third baseman
remembered that Oemente
took time to help him when he

Pam Henderson, R.N., Mabel Tracy, L.P.N., Frances
Heweison, R.N.,· and Barbara Jewett, nurses l\lde.

Variety ··
of work
There are
134
employes at Veterans
Hospital
Memorial
whicll is currently
marking
hospital
week . Many skills
and duties must be
performed to carry
out
the
many
functions performed
at the institution. The
accompanying photos
by . Bob H(Jeflich
suggest the variety of ,
duties.

blood pressure.
Alcoholic beverages In
the11!881ves do not cause high
blood pressure. However, to
the extent that they con·
tribute to obesity or excess
body fat, they then become
part of the problem.
Every person who has high
blood pressure should have a
complete medical
examination, including study
of tile lunctlon"of tile kidneys
to ascertain Insofar as
possible the cauaes of high
blood pressure; Then
treabnent usually conaistS of
using various medicine&amp; that
help to lower the pressure by
relulng the amall arteries In
the body. The amount of these
medicines, If any, that a
person needs often depends
on how successful they are ln
eliminating excesa body fat.
Becauae you note that you
arl' highstrung, I would
recommend eliminating all
stimulants.
Specifically
coffee, tea and cola drinks.

wa• lryln~ lu establish
hinll!t'll in the major leagues.
"Roberto always took time
to talk to young players,"
Rose said. "He helped me
when 1.waa just lreaklng ln.
I'd be In a alump and even
thoUgh I played lor another
team he'd malre an effort to
try to help me out of it."
But Rose dim'! recall aemente getting In many
alumps.
"I consider Roberto the
best bitter I've every played
agalnat," said Rolle, 35, who
has seen a lot of good batters
In his 14-year major league
career. "In a way, I've tried
to be the same type of hitter
he was. We · both hit to all
three fields, and neither of us
hit tor hOme runs.
"BaaebaliiOit a great asset
when Roberto was killed,"
-concl~ded an obviously humbled Rose as he accepted the
trophy from Kuhn.
Kuhn figured there could be
no better recipient lor the
award than ·Roije, known lis

hHlll-ball'• .. Mr. Hustle."
"l"'te plays the game with
style and da.th and be creates
wonderful excitement on the
field," said Kuhn. "He's a
guy who knows how to
reprf!Se!lt baseball both on
and olf the field to the public.
"For me, he Is the apex of
)I'Oiesai01)81lsm. His hustle
and all out effort serve as an
ex81!1ple lor all of us. Hls
enthusiasm Is obviOus off the
'field, as evidenced by his
willlngmiu to participate ip
any number of activities
whlcb
benefit
his
conununity."
Rose, a native Clnclnnatian, visits hlii!Pitala, has a
continuing interest In the
Special Olympics
for
handicapped youngsters, has
been
honorary
state
chalnnan lot the Amel'ican
SocietY and honorary
chairman for Multiple
Sclerosis In Cincinnati.
"Pete has recognized the
need to do what he can to
make Clncinnali a better

plac-e to live," said Reds'
President Bob Howsam. "He
has been very active ln the
community, especially In
working with children."
Other winners of the aemente award, previously
called the Cornmlssloner's
Award but renamed alter
Clemente was killed In 1972,
were 'WIWe Mays in 1971,
Brooks Robin!Kin In 1972, AI
Kallne In 1973, Willie Stargell
ln 1974 and Lou Brock In 1975.
Rolle was selected from a
group of 48 players - two
from each team - who were
nominated by a screening
committee on the basis of
playing
ability,
sportsmanship, character 1
community Involvement;
hun.anltarlanlsm and
contribution to his team and
to baseball.
Others receiving serious
consideration from the nineman selection committee of
baseball executives and
\lledla re)l'esentatives were
Rose's teammate Johnny

Bench,. Baltimore's Jim
Palmer, Philadelphia's Tony
Taylor and Atlanta's Phil
Nlekro.
Rose, a three~irne National
League batting champion and
the league's Moat Valuable
Player 'In 1973, owns a .310
lifetime battlnH average.
Even though he Ia the oldest
player on the Reds' squad,
Rose Is olf to his best start
· ever this year, hitting over
.400 to lead tile league l,n
batting.

llltlo
(UP II - Otlerbela Colle&amp;&lt;

llAI/l'IMUHt; I Ul'l I The
six-horae field lor thla
Saltl'day's IO!at running of
the Preakneas Stakea to
deflnl~ly breaking d~n Into
a "Big Two" and "Uttle
Four".
Kentucky Derby winner
Bold Forbes and runnerup
Honest Pleasure - the "Big
Two" of tile 3-year~d set .:..
are e1pected to again battle
for the supremacy In the I
and three-sixteenths mil e
event. But Bold Forbes'
trainer, Laz Barrara, thinks
the other half of hls evenmoney entry, Life's Hope,

will be looklaa for a aew
athletle dlnelor Iller StpL
I, 1o replltce Ute mlplq
Robert "Moe" A&amp;Jer.
"It Wll I toqb tleellloll

beeauae I've bet• al ~
lerbela a Ioaa Ume," aatd
A&amp;ler Wedaead.oy. He aald
be wu alepplaa dowa lo
" devote more time lo my
aportlaa &amp;ooda bualaen
aad have more free time to

mynU."

alau coold win.
"IJie'a Hope," the Dllnala
Derby WlniHlr, would have 1
chance If tho two leaderl
knock the1111elvea out," he
said Wednesday after both
halves ol his entry galloped
1\l-mtle on the .Plmllco
racing strip: "The race will
depend on the pace. Bold
Forbes won't stop runnln&amp;
when he geta the lead."

honored
·CLEVELAND (UPI) _ 1!:

curtis St range, the top
amateur In last month's
d Doyt L. · Masters, have accepted
M "M , Hoi
· ose
e an
· invitations to compete ln the
Perry, two of Ohio's all~lme llrsi Memorial Golf Tourleading college coaches, are nament
among
live Ohioans whO haw
·
OAK~D (UPJ ) - Before
been
named
to
the
National
the filth game of the NBA's
cancer
Westerp Conference finals, Association of Collegiate
Cllfl Ray said tile Golden Director ·of Athletics Hall of
State Warriors weren't Fame.
Hole and Perry, along with
playing smart defense.
George
E. Utile of Ohio
· So, Wednesday night, he
Wesleyan
and William M.
did something about it. The
Bell
and
W.H.H. "Tippy"
filth-year center from Dye, both former
Ohio State
Oklahoma had his best of- athletes, round out the
fensive night In the playoffs, Buckeye State aggregation
hitting 7 of 81rom the floor, who will be among 15
but he also picked off 16 Inducted into the Hall June 21
rebounds and held Phoenix's at Hollywood, Fla .
Rookie of the Year Alvan
Michael Cleary, executive
The' viSiting Jackson
Ironton's first baseman · drive that looked like a sure Meigs had live hitters, each Adams to 12 points ln addltiop director of the association,
Ironment. regained a lie for GrUiltll was a key to the win hit, but then Elliot made a with a slpgle : Marshall, to making live steals;
OU Athletic director Blll
fi rst place In the SEOAL and as he kneicked In three runs diving catch and threw to Hamilton, Davenport, '· "Let'slaceit,"Raysaidof Rohr, president of the
avenged an earlier upset by witlla double and a home nm, first to catch Hamilton off in Howard and Bachner. The the ll1-9ti victory which gave assocla.tlon,
and
the
downing the host Meigs the first round-tripper hit ln a double play. ,Davenoorl Marauders
travel ·to Golden State a 3-2 advantage University of Illinois CecU
Marauders 7-1 Wednesday. lhe new Melga ball park. He then got a single, stole Galllpolis to play In the AA in the best-of-seven series. Coleman, chairman of the
Ironton and Jackson are helped his team get all the ilecond, and scored on a base Sectional Final tonight, and "Defense makes us good and Honors
and
Award
Our biggest burger wi th clloosB 'n
,
now tied for first, arid each · runs they needed in the firs( knock by Howard. Elliot just then they ·entertaln Wellston we didn't play good defense . Committee announced the
trknmlngs en a sesAme seed bun , .. ,
team baa· one game to play Inning when, after a walk and may have saved the game for on Friday to round out thelt baali:elball Sunday." He noted appolniments Wednesday.
league schedule.
that In Sunday's 133-129
Friday. Meigs has beaten an error, he unloaded with his his team.
Hole, who retired In 1965
both this year, but the two-run double. Two outs
Jackson Iced the game witll Jackson
300 112 G--7 8 1 double overtime loss to the alter 5Q years as player and
"Big Fun"
000 lOOG--1 5 4 Phoenix Suns, the keys were coach at the College of
Marauders are entrenched In later he scored on a double by single runs ln the fourth and MeTifs
Big She!: •·og !l'lo5. lnrou oo h
Sl09
fifth frames, arid two In the Shield~. and Haller· failure to block out on the Wooster, posted a 412-181
a tie for sixth place with a 4-9 Meadows.
drink ll. turnovm
record, and Is 8-11 overall.
Shields allowed Meigs' only sixth. The one In the filth Davenport (LP), Smith (5) dfensiveboardsandinablllty mark ln. 32 seasons as Scot
"UHie Fun" Funmeal®
. The story Wednesday night run in , the fourth. It could came on GrUIIIh's solo shot and Mankin.
to effectively clog up the basketball coach. His teams
was a neat pitching per- have been a much bigger overtlleleltlleldlence.other
middle against .the Suns' posted back:to-back unbeaten
formance by the Ironmen's Inning had It not been for a hitters lor the visitors were
penetrating guards.
seasons ln 1929 and 1940. He
·Shields. He went the route great play · by second· Meadows with a single atid a
was Wooster AD lor 19 years.
and allowed only live hits (all b&amp;Beman Elliot. Hamilton led double, Harless with two
.
In · 10 years as Bowling
singles) while striking out off with a single. Soulsby singles, and Elliot and Clark,
Green football coach; Perry
low- and laaulng only one free followed with a smaahlnk line each a single.
·
posted a 77-1~ record, the
pass. Meigs pitchers gave up
top mark In the nation when
eight base knocks while
he retired from coaching to
striking out two and walidng
become athletic director in
FOHRbeTWORTH, Tex. (UP!) 1964.
three.
Little was a stand·out
The Meigs County Senior -'- u rt Gteen Is ·back in
Host Logan erased a 7-3 10 l!lts. He fanned lour and
action
this
week
after
a
lew
football
and track atlllete at
Galllpolia lead In the filth walked three. Bradd Tucker Babe Ruth team will start days off and the 1976 tour's Ohio Wesleyan and served
inning with big runs, then was ihe blg gun lor Logan tlleir third season May 22 In leading money winner Is coaching stints at Cincinnati
held on to defeat the Blue with three hils In three trips, the Tri-County League.
The league this year is about as likely a choice to win and Miami universities, He
~ 10.7 ln a makeup Including a double;
tile $2110,000 Colonial National served as assistant athletic
cont.est at Hllltop Stadium 'Scott Gasser, another lJfS made up of six teams, Invitation as anybody.
· director and later head
Wednesday evening.
~hcmore, had two hits In · Ravenswood and Ripley, both · The Colonial, which opens football coach at Michigan
The victory left the three trips. BIU Hubbard had from Jackson County, W. today over- one of the top and athletic director at both
Chieftains with a 10.9 season two hils lor the winners. Va.; American Legion Post courses tile pros see each Wisconsin and Rutgers.
record:
Inside
the Harold Peppers and Gasser 140 and Mason County, both year, also marks tile return of
Bell, an All-American at
d Mason County, W. Va.; Gary Player, wlio has had a Ohio
·
Deal
.
Southeas~rn Ohio League, each had a two-base hit.
State, served as head
Golden llsh 1111e1 SAn dwlc11 &amp; crisp
Logan upped Its mark to 7-'.
John Lanning started for Gallla County, ani\ tile Meigs lesa than super year In the football coach and athletic
salad(orlarge lrlas) ,.,, , . , ... . , , ,
GAHS dropped to 8-14 on the Logan. He was relieved by County team.
United
States
and
has
not
director
at
ClaliiR
University
The Meigs team this year Is
aea1oo and 4-9 Inside the Randy Johnson In the filth,
played in this country since before moving to Florida
conference.
Johnson was credited with being coached by Charles lhe Masters.
A&amp;M to take up similar
Today, tile Blue Devils will the vlcbJry. Bill Heft pitched Marshall, Jerry Davenport
Heavy rains struck the duties. He also served as AD
host Meigs at 4 o'clock on the seventh inning lor Logan. and Dave Dotson. Anyone area, Wednesday night but at North carolina A&amp;T and .
Memorial Field In the Class
Terry Wall paced the Blue who wishes to play, be at the clearing akles were forecast most recently at Fayetteville
Hamburger, regular frie s 8
AA Southern Sectional Devlls witll two hils In three Middleport Park at S p. m. lor today'a ope~ round.
State. He retired In 1970.
regular soltdrlnk ....... , , , .. , , , , .'.
championship conleal
trips with three runs batted Saturday, May 15. All boys
A limited field of 102
Dye won nine letters in his
;Friday, Galllpolls wiD host in. Swain, Mark Dobson, Jim back from last year bring players will encounter the collegiate athletic career at
netghb(jjr,~ Waverly ln the final con- Harris and Dallas Love also tlleir I.D. Card or birth 7,200-yard, par-70 Colonial Ohio State and waa named
lerence game of the cam- hit safely for the Blud&gt;e.vlls. certificate.
Country Club course. which head basketball coach at his
The Meigs ,schedule (all winds tllrougb pecan and oak alma mater In 1943.
palgn. Logan travels to
UJiescore:
Jackson Friday.
GAHS
2001400-7 ~ doubleheaders):
trees near the banks of the Following the 1951 season, he
May 22, Ravenswood, Trinity River.
Gary Swain, junior Blue LOgan
OIS 031 x-10.1~
Your cttolce ol hugl:! lncs ll. B i ~ Siler:
moved to the head coaching
Devil hurler, was tile victim
Batteries: GARS - Swain away, 1 and 3 p.m.
Double
Cheeseburger or Skipper's Treot ~'
position at the University of
May 23, Gallla County,
of seven unearned runs . (LP) &amp; Harris. Logan For help with all your
Washington. He later served
2-4 p. m,
family insurance needs, Wednesday. ~aln went the Lanning, Johnson, 5th (WP), away,
as athletic director at
May29,Ripley,away,l-3p,
distance, giving up 10runs on Hell, (7) &amp; Tucker.
Wichita, Nebraska and
see:
m.
CINCINNATI (UP!)- The Northwestern before retiring
May 30, Mason County, Clnclnnali Bengals reached ln 1975.
BILL FLETr.HER
heme, 1-3 p. m.
contract agreement with Ne·
June 5, Post 140, home, 1-3 braska's Tot;~y Davis, who
1258
2~25 JACKSON AVE.,
p.m.
was second only to Archie
Powell St.
DUBLIN,
Ohio
(UPI)
June
6,
Rllvelll!wood,
home,
Middleport
Griffin In running backs
PT. PLEASANT, W. VA.
1-3 p.m.
PH. 992-7155
selected by the Bengals ln Slxty-elx players including
June 12, Gallla County, last month's NFL collegiate defending U.S. Amateur
'""
champion Fred Ridley and
home, 5-7 p. m.
draft.
June 13, Ripley, home, 1-3
Coach Jim Sprague;s Gallla with an a, record.
The 8-2, 212-pound native of
r.m.
Kyger
Creek
Bobcats
won
KC
closes
Its
regular
Techumseh,,
Neb., who led
HAll IAIM
S1111 Form
their 12th game of the aeason season Friday against South. · June 19, Mason County, the Cornhuskera in offense
Insurance Companies Wednesday, . 10-4 over ern. The Bobcata took a 2-1 away, 1-3 p. m.
the past three years, was
Home DllicH:
June 20, Poat 140, away, &amp;-8 eincinnatl '8 fourth-round
Symmes Valley. Inside the lead in'the bottom of the,first
.!::::'":'":":":::'~~.::_BIDDf'I:• ·M~,. Illinois fWAC, the Bobcats are ln and were never headed.
p.m.
pick.
·second place behind North
Pacing KC were Bill
Metzner and Ralph Baylor
witll twJ hits each. Von
Taylor and winning pitcher,
Ron Fraley had a double
apiece.
Fraley, In going the
distance,
fanned nine and
Knit Hitsl
walked six. Ralph Ingles, the ·
IDling hurler, and his relief,
Galloway, and Chri,tlan
walked nine and struckout
six.
Mochine-Wash
Gelling hila l~r the VIkings
were Galloway, Leffingwell
and Carpenter.
Uneacore:
Pull - on leisure
S.
Valley 100 201 G-- 4 3 4
3 GALS
shirts With crew
SPECIAL
K.
Creek
203
032
x-10
8
I
or tab necks : Sol ·
Ingles (L) Galloway (4)
fROM PARKERSBURG
ids; stripes.
Claistlan (5) and Payne.
Fraley (W~nd Metzner.

Warriors up
1 over Suns

Jackson reverses fortune, wins 7~1

r

Super Shef®

69C

I;&gt;IET IS IMPORTANT to the patient at Veterans Memorial Hospital. Here Mrs. Lynn
Murray, R.D., consulting dietitian at the hospital advises dietary personnel on proper
procedures.

79c

Babe .Ruth

team opens
Logan 10·7 over GARS May 22nd

Green is back
on goHtour

Big Shef®
Meal Deal

Screening

Lose fat, not water

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
Those water pUla don't
DEAR DR. LAMB- I am a ellmlnate fat. They help to
84 year-old woman, 5 feet 4 flush out the water· that acand weigh 125 pounds. In the -l cumulates as the fat Is used.
last year I lost 3S pounds as That means taking water
my doctor wanted, I feel pills won't prevent you from
wonderful. Now what I want putting your fat back on.
to know Is can I take one There are only two things
water pill every day or every that will help you prevent
other day for there is no end regaining your fat; mainto my worrying about putting talning a suitable level of
the weight back on that I have physical activity to uae all of
already lost? Please tell me the calories you eat and
what to do. .. .
restricting your calories In a
DEAR READER - The well-balanced diet,
weight you have lost was not
Remember, the amo\Dlt of
water, It was lat. There fat you accumulate isllke the
aeems to be a widespread balance in your ~king
lack of understanding that account. H you take In more
what doctors usually want calories- than you spend the
you to lose is fat not Jlll!t balance is going to Increase
pounds on the scales. Pounds and that balance Is your fat
can be anything from an ' deposit, Those who want
over-distended digestive more Information on obesity
tract to an accumulation of can send 50 cents for The
water. Your body Is normally Health Leiter, nwnber U,
hall water and dehydrating Obesity, General Principles
yourself to get a favorable of Prevention . Send a long,
reading on the scales Is stamped, . self-addressed
lise less.
1
envelope fo~ maUing. Ad~

correctio~. u

By Kit'... \ ''AN SANT
CINt1NNATI t UPI \ --

l'reakness now hit 2, small 4

A(;t.~:lt ljUITII
W~'.HTF.KVIIJ.t:,

SkipP._er's Treat®

99e

"Spirit of '76"

JAN JUDGE, VETERA,NS Memorial Hospital
employe, is coordinator of a cervical cancer screening
program carried out at the hospital. ' ·

MRS. JAYNE GRAHAM, chief laboratory technician,
examines a perhpheral blood smear under a microscope
to determine abnormalties,

•

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&gt;

•
•

71&amp;

Like a
good
State Farm
is there.---

e

O'Savings

,

gge

Bobcats top Vikings

for 12th diamond win

•

•

SECOND GRADERS AT THE Chester Elementary
Schooitaught by Miss Melanie Beegle are learning that
firemen are among their friends, The second graders
have been collecting bottle cap~ from soft drinks
distrilxlted by the R. C. Bottling Co. and turned in the caps
lor redemption. Here the group presents Ross Cleland,
Diester lire department chief, with a check received from
the cap~ . Oass members are Ryan · Bearbl, LeAna

Brogan, Pete Darling, Kim Dent, David Edwards, Terry
Foster, Dawna Grueser, Jodie Harris, Andy Hawk, Philip
Holsinger, Randy Holsinger, Betty Jo Hunt, Lee Keney,
Pam Lawrence, Donnie Mamn, David McLaughlin, Eric
Miller, Ryan Oliver, George Parker, Isabel Philips, Angie
Pooler, Deanna Rockhold, Mike Sirn, Terrie Starcher,
Jimmy Wilson, Valerie Woods, aod Tracy Taylor.

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,,
&lt;

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Tht

Dai~

"'..•
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Sentinel

~

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS·MASDN AREA
CHESTER L, TANNEHILL
Exec. Ed.
AOBEIIT HOEFLICH
CltJ Editor
Publishe Clail~ exce"t

.~

S~turda~

Valley

~any ,

by T e Oh o
ubllshlng Com .
111 Court St .,

~·

'
.....•

omerov
Ohio 45769.
BuSiness 6tflce Phone 992 2156. Editor ial Phone 992 2157 '

'

. Second class gostaoe

paid ol Pomeroy,

.•
..••
.

Motor

~

Route

~·

where curter iervtce npl
·available, One month,

SJ.25. By mall In Ohio and
W, vo , One Year, $22 .00;

,Six months , $11.50 ; Three
rnonths , S7 .00 . Elsewhere
~26 . 00 year ; $1x months
\13 .50 ; three m'onths. S7 .50,
:iubscripllon prl t e Includes
Sunday Tlmes .sentlne l.

'

GOING TO WASHINGTON -These members of the safety pat,rol of the Tuppin Plains
Elementary School - all sixth graders - will be making a trip to Washington, D. c., as a
reward for their services to the scllooL The group will leave June 4. Front, 1to 4 are Leba
Kay Sampson, Denise Gaddis, Patti Edwards, Sarah Goebel, Wendy Elkins Csssle Sheets·
ba~k row, Charles Eugene 'Reniley, Mike Baker, Joe Sayre, Rob Smith, ~It Skinner and
Tommy Scyoc. Not pictured is Ke~ Brooks.
v

special

SPORT
SHIRTS

At Thelnn

sol•'

"TIGRESS"

OPEN

FRIDAY
TIL 8

~

Delivered b~ curter where
available 5 cents ptr
By

Look Cool &amp; Casual

"'"'

hlo .

Nat iona·l
advertising
representative Ward .
·Gtlfftth comnany , Inc .,
Bottlnelll &amp; Ga I~ her Otv. ,
757 Third Ave .. ew York ,
N.Y. 10017 .
~ubscrlptlon
rates :

week .

A

New York Clothint-House
KERM'S KORNER
POMEROY, OHIO

TONIGHT
SEOAL BASEBALL
TEAM
W L R
1ron ton
I 0 3 120
Jackson
10 3 112
Athans
B s u
Logon
1 6 u
Waverly
6 7 59
M't lgs
A 9 68
&lt;;alllpolls
4 9 73
WtiiiiOn
3 10 58
TOTALS
52 52 661
Wttlntsdly's results:
Jackson 7 Meigs 1
L0111n 10 Gallipolis 7
Frldly's g1m11:
Ironton at Athens
Waverly ol Gallipolis

OR
'65

.8:30 TIL 12:30

Black Asphaltum
5
Black ·Asbestos ~~

1(1

. ''

so

78
97
18
73
99

The MEIGS INN .

118
661 .

Ph. 992-3629

POMEROY

11

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-I

'·

••,

EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE"

'

Ebersbach Hardware

••

PH. 992·2811

..

MAIN ST.

Logan at Jackson
Wellston at Mfigs

.

.i

POMEROY
,.,

\

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�~- n... Dallv Sentlneh Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, May 13, 1976

aeventb lnnink and BUI
Plummer In tbe lllntb
IICCGUIIIed for tile Rq• Cit'-

Rooker keeps 'em loose, uncertain
Mo\or ltltut Standings

ly Un ted ·Press International
Ne11onal League
En!
W•. L•. Pet. GB

M1lor Ltatue Leaders

By Unl td Preu lntern•tlon11
Leedlng 81H1n

( blstd on SO 11 botsl
Natlon11 Lugue
16 8 .667
·
G.. AB. R.. H. Pet.
19 II .633
Rose, Cln
21 114 28 47 .m
16 10 ,6l!i 1
22 61 11 14 .393
lJ . 16 ..ua s•h Torre, NV
Russell, LA 20 66 9 15 .379
Sf . Louis
12 17 .Al-4 6'12
Me Bride, SI.L 24 96 14 3S .36S
.Montreal
10 16 .385 7
CraWird, St.L 24 71 9 17 .346
West
19 70 11 14 .343
W.. L.. Pet. Gil Oliver, Pit
Grote, NY
24 82 8 21 .w
Los Angeles 18 11 .611
Griffey, Cln 24 100 22 3~ .3•o
Cincinnati
16 11 .593 1 Monday,
28 121 31 Al .339
Houston
IS IS .soo 3'h Ma~lock. Ctll
Chi 28 112 17 38 .339
san Diego
14 l-4 .500 3 1/:~
American L.. gue
Atlanta
9 19 .311 8'h
G. AB R H Pet.
San Francisco 9 19 .321 B'h
Lynn, Bos
18 67 11 17 .403
. Wtdnllday's Reit~lts
Bo~tock . Min 21 73 10 11 .384
LOS Angeles 6 St . LOUIS 3
C•rty, Cle 24 88 16 33 .37S
Chicago 1 san Fran o, 11 Inns
Bretl , KC
22 88 14. 33 .375
New York 6 Aflanta 3
~•Flore , Det 16 67 16 lS .373
San Dleoo • Philadelphia o
Chambl_,, NY 23 100 14 36 .360
Pittsburgh 6 Cinci nnati 3
Bonds, Col 20 73 14 16 .3S6
Montreal 7 Houston 2
Patek, KC
21 64 11 12 .34&lt;
Todey's Piobebht Pitchers
Staub, Der 21 73 10 15 .3&lt;2
(All Tlmn EDTI
Philadelphia
New York
Pittsburgh
Chicago

San Francisco {Montefusco 4-

Ma tor Ltague Results
By Unlfed PreJI International
Natlon11 Ltatut

Los Angeles 111 000 03o- 6 10 0
st. Louis
010 010 ooo- 3 11
RhOdon, Wal l lSI. Morsboli
(1)
and
Yeager ;
Fortch,
R~smu ssen m. Hrobosky (81

and Simmons, Rudolph (4). WP
- Marshal l (). 1J . LP- Rasmuss.
en (3-·0 . HR - Los Angeles ,

Ferouson (4J.

(.If innings)

San Fran 000 000 000 Oil- 0 4 0
Chicago 000 000 000 01- I 10 0
Barr, Lavelle (8 ), Molfltl (11)

CINCINNATI (UPI)- Jim
Rooker doesn't throw a
screwball, but there have
been more than a few Urnes
when he has acted like one.
Like what7
"Like roller skating to the
ballpark, into an airport, or
occasionally a bar," asid
Rooker Wednesday night
after he pltc)led and batied
the Pittsburgh Pirates to a 8-3
victory over the Reds.

, H you've already guessed
that Rooker's a ieft.hander,
you're right.
·
"I'm not !Iakey, I Just like
to keep everydne on their toes
so I'm liable to do anything at
any time," asld Rooker, who
contributed a run"P"oduclng
double and a bunt sinflle
toward tha Pirates' IU!It
attack as they toppled the
Reds from first place In the

Kingman gets Nos. 13, 14

and Hill ; R. Reuschel , Garman
( 11) and Swisher . WP- Garman

(2 -21. ~P -Mollltl (1 .1) .
New York 010 3)0 lOll- 6 10 I
Atlon ra
000 000 OOJ.- 3 9 2 ···

Koosman , Lockwood (~l and
Hodges ; Mes!lersml1h, Oa t Can .
ton (6), Torrealba (8) ane1
Cor r ell . · WP- Koo1man &lt;•-1J.
Horton , Det 21 78 15 26 .333 LP- Messer!lmith (0-4). HRsNew Yoik, Kintt~man 2 (13, 111);
Home Runs
. Nltlonal Leauu' : !&lt;Ingman , Atlanta, Wynn 131.
NY 14 ; Schmidt, Phil 13 ; Cey ,
LA 8; Monday, Chi 7; Cedeno, S•n Diego 01'1 000 Ollf- 4 11 0
Ph)adelphl• · 000 000
0 60
Hou an~ Matthews, SF 6. ·
Jon~
(6·2) ond Kendall ;
Amerlc1n League: . Horton ,
Det 6; Bonds, Ca l , Hen·drick, Kaat , Reed (6), McGraw (81
Cle't', Otis, KC, Bando, Oak, and Boone, Blllckwel l (8) . LPKaat (2 -l ) .
Burroughs ll('ld Grieve, Tex 5.
Runs Bitted In
Nl tional League : KJngma n," Plllsburgh
000 0.40 101 - 6 l:l 2
· NY ~J ; Monday , Ch i and Cincinnat i
000 100 101 - J 8 1
Schmidt, Phil 26 ; Griffey , Cln
Rooker. (.4.1) and Sangul llfn ;
24 ; Cey, LA 23.
•
G ull ett. Norman (6), BorbOn
American Leatue: Ru d l, Oak (8) ·and Pl ummer . LP- Gullett
28; Horton, Det 22.; ChambiiS$, (2-2) . HRs- Cincinnall , ConcepN)'' 20 ; Munson , NY 19 ; Bllndo, cion (3), Plummer (II.
·
Oak and Burroug hs, Tex 17.
·
Stolen Bases
Montreal
000 100 0.42- 7 9 4
National Lta9ue : . Morgan, Houston
000 001 01o- 2 51
Cln 12 ; Cedeno,
Hou 10;
Fryman , Murray (8) and
Griffey, Cin 9; Cabell , Hou and Foo te; Richard , Hardy (8) and
Buckner , LA 7.
Johnson . WP - Fryman (4· 2) .
American League: . Rivers. LP- Richard (5 -2) . HR- Mon NY and North, Oak 13 ; Carew, trea t, -Parrish (1) .
N1inn and Randolph , NY 10;
Bonds and Remy , CaL LeFlore,
American League
Det, Patek , KC ~tnd Baylor, (12 Innings)
Oak 9.
Bstn
100 I ll 000 002- 6 10 I
Pllchlng
Cleve
0011000 000 ~ 4 13 3
Most Victories
Wise , Cleveland, House ( 11)
National League: Jones, SO and Fisk ; Brown , Hood (7).
6-2; Richard, Hou 5.2; Lonborg, LaRoche (81. Bu sker (12) and
F'hll &lt;~ - 0 ; Rau, LA , Koosm an Ashby. WP- HQIJSe 1-11 . LPand Se11ve r , NY, Rooker , Pitt LaRoche 10-ll.
and Montefusco, SF 4-1; Fry-man , Mtt and Reuss , Pitt 4-2;
Detroit
1011 ooo 5011- 6 7 4
Dierker, Hou and Sulton , LA 4- New
York
.400 300 OOx - 7 10 I

National League·West.
Rooker's victory was hla
fourth In five declaims, but lt
was his first over the Redll
since he came to the Pirates
In a deal with the Kan!a.s City
lloyals during the winter of
1972.
"You bet I was happy when
I joined the Pirates,"
esclalmed Rooker. "It wu
like walking down the street.

two 1'111l1.

and ftiidtng money."

That 'a bec:auae when
Rooker was at Kanlaa aty he
. didn't have the ~ of a
power laden lineup led by a
guy Uke Pirate slugger WUUe
St.argell,
A stargell double, coming
on a sinking liner which
rlwed the lacing of Red
center-(lelder George
Foster's glove, scored AI
Oliver and Rennie Stennett
and capped a four-nm fifth

=

ri::~tG~~~edwi~e~

second loss in four declalons.
By FRED DOWN
"I'd of caught the baU lftbe
I)PI Sports Writer
lacing hadn't broken," said a
No one in the National sad-eyed · Foster as he
League Is likely to make the fingered his battered, twoclassic ml$lke about Dave year-old glove after the

Today's

at Chicago (Burris H I. 2:30
(Only game scheduled !

p.m.

Sport Parade

·

RICHMAN

Fourth Hughes will shows up

•

'

s

) lAS VEGAS, Nev ..(I.JPI) : Howard Hughes "wills" are
· ~ ralnjq o1i the Clark County
•Courthouse, the
total
: lltandlng at four today, with a
; repwt fmn Chicago raising
;susplclona about even the
: llkellest of the lot.
• The ~latest entries : Two
!supposi!d illegitimate sona of
tthe ·dead
billionaire,
; includl!!8 a . fugitive from
1fraud charges who once
:claimed
he
could
;CIIIllll\uiicate with Hughes
~ through ,• a radio surgically
: lmplan~ In his mouth.
1 The first purported will :which has the fewest obvious
:11awa and lhe most support
:from . han&lt;lwriting . analysts
•and some Hughes ~tes
l- was called a fake In
:Chicago Wednesday · by
:William ~· Jones, president
iof Heir Finders Inc., of
~ashvill~, Tenn., who said he
,was hired by .two Hughas
:crelouslns . to trace other
: atives.
:

TIR
E78x14
4 PLY
Polyester
Wll.itewall

TIRES

Kingman that Hall of Farner ··

1arge

GENERAL nRE

An anonymous telephone documents, which name
caller told him five persollS many heirs, It quotes Hughes
forged the will as a "gag," as leavll\g ''my entire estate
climaxing a weekend of to my son, Richard Robard
drinking and drug taking In Hughes, aka Joseph Michael
La~ Vegas, Jones told a news Brown."
conference.
Hughes, 30, Is wanted in
He asld the self-described Bernalillo, N.M. on fraud
forger called him Monday charges for allegedly
from Salt Lake aty - where swindling a couple, who
the first will was found on a loaned him $15,000 O(l the
desk In Mormon church strength of his claim to be the ·
beadqusrters - saying the son of Howard Hughes.
perpetrators would publicly
In
an
unsuccessful
admit the hoax If they were paternity suit in Albuquerque
guaranteed lnununity from earlier this year In which he
prosecution.
asked to be declared the
The third version, a billionaire's son, Hughes
typewritten one-page testified he received coded
document, was delivered to messages from his father
the county courthouse
Wedne'Sday by Grover ·
Walker, identifying himself
as an aide to Hughes for .five
years, serving as liaison to an
illegitimate son. He said
Hughes personally gave him
BARTOW, Fla. (UP!) the will at an Albuquerque, · Wearing the traditional cap
. N.M.alrporijustlastDecem- · ani) gown and carrying a
ber..
.
. thbrleeofcldeasest anmadnalnteddtheyUbearnited'
Unlike
the
oth er
States picked up an honorary
high . school
diploma
Wednesday.
Charlie Smith, 133, and
recognized by the Social
Security Administration as
the oldest human In the
United States, also received a
gold watch from Polk County
School Board Chairman
Homer K. Adair and

,SM£$

o.

GET

20%

congratulatory telegrams
from Presid.ent Ford, Sen.
Lawton Chiles, D-Fia., and
Rep. James Haley, D-Fla.
The teddy bear was a. gift
from a newanian two weeks
ago, and Smith reportedly
has carried It with him ever
since. The .contents of the
briefcase were unknown.
Smith clalriis to have been
born In Liberia, Africa, In
1M2, where he was captured
and brought to the United
States for asle on the slave
market at the age of 12.

DISCOUNT
.g~t

a big 20 Pet.

1Discount now at Chapman's. Select

your spring and summer footwear
riow.

Chapman's Shoes

.g;;:;

FRIDAJ UNnL 8 PM

_'!1ain St., Pc&gt;meroy

i

MASON FURNITURE

We Have An
Excellent Selection
Of ladies

SPRING.&amp;
SUMMER DRESSES

1841:1 FATI

Miss Sizes
8to20
Half Sizes
12112 to 24112

Adult basic-ed
at Eastern 3
times weekly

BY CA'TA.LINA
-&amp;

'

JANTZEN.

ome

\,

~eae'lb\8-

RE-OPEN 11 PM FRIDAY

ratU&amp;"' • ~~~'~

Blue &amp;Grey Restaurant

;

:I

BAHR
. . CLOTHIERS
.

N. 2nd AVE.

MIDDLEPORT 0.

EUSBERG REMEMBERS
NEW YORK (UPI) Daniel Ellsberg asys the men
who later took part In the

.'

-_conn1e
- ·- -.
"\

LAWN
DECORATIONS

.

Dynamic singing group coming

...,._"""'....,,.._'1 ·

~~~~-90#_ _..,._ _ _ _ _

PICKENS HARDWARE

....,. ,.. ,.

THE SINGERS - Back, Steve McCoy and Ralph
Weekley; front, Don "Sunny" Sillaman and Don Full.

"Everlasting Love", a dynamic -gospel singing group from
Reno, Ohio will ,appear at the Enterprise Umted Methodist
Church Sunday, May 16 at 9 a.m. for the 'morning worship
service and at 1:30p.m. for a hymn sing.
The afternoon program will be In two parts, the second
(e~turing Bill Gaither's producUon of "Alleluiah".
"Everlastipg Love" Is a gosjlel group that blends the best
of contemporary anq traditional gospel music into a program
designed to infonn non-Christians of o better way to live life
through the grace of ,!esus Olrist to Iring a spiritual uplift to
Christians in need of e.ncouragement, spiritual renewal or
rededication.
The group iS composed of Steve McCoy, tenor and ·pianist;
Ralph Weekley, bass guitarist; Don Full, singing baritone and
.arranger, and Don ''Sunny" Slllaman, who sings lead and
emcees for the group.
Rev. William Sydenatrlcker, pastor of the Enlei"JX"ise
Church, extends a friendly Invitation to everyone in the
commWlity to attend this special appearance of the group.

·AGOOD SELECTION
OF SWIM ·WEAR

WENDELL'S

....• ,.

P---------------~
THE "BONITO"

l.,lftetV belwllful . u..
hlootl or out Yt'tW!e ttv·

by MISS AMERICA

rJnlpM:Ic.

'f

Ducks &amp; ducklings, bird
baths, flamingos
phea sants &amp; chipmunks:

139
Flowering Bulbs ""'
For Spring Planting
Metal &amp; Plastic Porch Boxes
Special Group !Val. 'to 39cl

ARTIFICIAL

FLOW~RS

8 96C
For

Artificial Wreaths &amp; Sprays For Memori•l Day
Make.Pomeroy Your Shopping Center

BEN,FRANKLIN
PHONE .

m · 14"

·

Flexible Woven Sandal- The kind of gentle
ease that keeps them flexi ng with you - not
snapping at your heels.

200·202 Eul Main St.
POMEROY, OHIO

Use Ou r"~onvenienl l.Jiy.Away Plan
Open Friday Night Till- Sol. TiiS

THE SHOE BOX.
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

,

of Parkersburg
Expos 7 Astros Z:

Gary Carter's two-run
single and Larry Parrish's
two-run homer enabled the
Expos to score four runs In
the eighth Inning -and
provided Woodle Fryman
With his fourth triumph. J.R.
Richard went 7 2-&gt;1 Innings for
the Astros and was the loser.
Cubs I, Glanta 0:
Rick Reuschel and Mike
Garman combined In a four·
hitter as the .Cubs eXtended
their string of shutout Innings.
to 24. Steve Swisher singled In,
the only run of the game olf ·
Randy Moffitt. The Giants
haven't scored In their last 33
innings and have lost eight of
their last nine games.

· SHINY BLACK

·- POMEROY-

OR

lODA~

FRIDAY, SATU~DAY

With Wurlltzer &amp; Conn Organs ·
Special Prices For This Sale

Free!

AVE.

Wear,

Dresses

TlllRD GRADE - Cowboys taking part In the Western Jamboree to be held tonight at
7:30p.m. at llarrlsonville Elementary are, front, 1-r, VIcki Peavley, Christina Haning
Valerie Pauley, Brian Willis, Olrls Workman, Retha Yost Lorena Donohue· second row'
Jimmy Eblin, Tanuny Phillips, Kristen He'-ter, Detro Boring, Katrina Donohue, Ri~
Williamson.

Association activities reviewed
A series of Important were alllo drawn up .
reports on assoCiation ac- Officers for the ~omlng
Make 'Em
Uvlties were given when the year were elected as follows,
Meigs County Ministerial Rev. William Mlddieswarth,
Cute For
Association met at th~ president ; Rev. Harold
Pomeroy Untied · Methodist Deeth, Vice President and
Summer
Church Tuesday with .. h!lllt Rev. Robert Bumgarner,
pastor, Rev. Robert Hayden, Secretary-Treasurer.
opening with prayer. itev.
Rev . Mlddleswarth ap·
•SUNSUITS William Mlddleswarth, pOln~ Rev. Dwight Zavltz to
President presided. Reported schedule morning meditation
•SHORTS
were :
speakers and Rev. Floyd
- Rev . Mlddleswarth and · Shook to the Holzer volunteer
Rev. Robert Bumgarner on chaplaincy board.
•TANK TOPS
the Rio Grande Preacher's
Rev. Middleswarth Is to.
•HALTER TOPS
Conference held in April and contact the county fair board
Rev. Dwight Zavltz that the to find out If it wants the
•SWIM WEAR
annual appreciation dinner association to conduct
for all pastors serving as worship services opening
volunteer chaplains at Holzer night at the county fair. ·
Hospital will he held May 25.
The Annual Family Picnic
- Rev. Middleswarth on the will be held at the Middleport
tax levy for mental health Marina, June 4 .at 8 p.m.
which wll.l be voted on June 8. weather permitting. In case
He encouraged all ministers of rain the picnic will be heW
to support the levy.
at the Middleport First
-Rev. Howard Shiveley on Baptist Church. Officers of
activities of the Meigs County &lt;he new year will be Installed
CoWlcll on Alcohol ProbleiiUI at the picnic.
(C.O.A.P. Inc.)' that the
Attending were Revs.
members of C.O.A.P. Inc. William
Middleswarth ,
participated In a drug and Harold Deeth, Howard
Alcohol Abuse Seminar at Shiveley, Robert Persons,
EastenJ High School May Robert Bumgarner, Dwight
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
lOth and that C.O.A.P. Inc. Zavitz,RobertHayden, Flo;,cd
992-3586.
would also be conducting free ' Sh04)k, Uoyd Grlmn Jr. l .,___....,.__..;..-....::..::.:::.....,..;:~o~'""',.;..,..J
adult workshops on Alcohol ·
~
and Drug Abuse at the
Episcopal Parish House In
Pomeroy at 7 p.m. on May
17th, 24th, 31st, and June 7th.
The associaUon agreed to
hold Sunday Morning Worship Services at Royal Oak
Park . again this year
beginning May 30th. The
services will be held at the
shelter hOU8e In the picnic
area Instead of the location
beside the lake. Ministers
were scheduled for these
services and the schedule Is
to be posted at the check·ln ,
point at the park.
The schedule for morning
meditations and the Veterans Memorial Hospital
chaplaincy for the summer

M_
IDDLEPORT DEPT. STORE

SALE

SPRING • SUMMER
SPORTSWEAR
CO-ORDINATES
BlAZERS
SHIRlS

PANTS
SKIRTS

TIME CHANGED
Due to Meigs High School.
graduation, the time of the
American Legion Auxiliary,
Drew Webster Post 39,
meeting has been changed to
Tuesday at 7:30p.m. at the
· hall. At 7 p.m. that evening,
the bicentennial committee .
meeting will be held.
Your "Extra Touc~"
Florist Since 1957

FRANCIS
A.ORIST
PH. 992-2644
3S2 E. Ma'Jn, Pomeroy
Your FTD Florist

ALL REDUCED

1A TO lh OFF

lOPS 3 PC. PANT SUITS
REG. '27.95-- •11•
REG~ '19.95
'1444

2 PC. PANT SUITS

'9•
2 PC. JR. PANT SUITS
ltEG. $19.95 . SAI.E-'1444
REG. $12.95

SALE

·T ·Shirt&amp;
FOR THE MEN

'SAVE ON
HANES UNDERWEAR
SALE

T.sttiRlS-- 3 FOR '4.29
BRIEFS
3 FUR $3.99

From

FOR SUMMER
MEN'S DENIM CUlOFFS - SIZES 28-38

SHORT SLEEVE SHIRTS WITH LEISURE COWR
POLYESTtR-tOTTON KNIT RUGBY SHIRTS
NAVY AND GREEN POLY PANTS
SIZES 29-42

. BARGAIN PltaD AT •6.95

heritage house
' N.

..JUJruren's

ANOTHER
GOOD BUY

ONLY

Shape I heels lay the roundwork for soft,
uppers to top off the look.
- a
mood that's strict[y today·- and the pot of gold
at the end of your fashion rainbow . S19.

Antenna With Purcha•e of Organ

T·Shirts,

HOOVER CLEANER

WHITE

Get A Free Midi~md CB and

Watergate burglary were
ordered to "incapacitate me
totally," apparenUy because
of his action to leak the
Pentagon papers;
Ellsberg said In an
interview with UPI's Audio
Department Wednesday the
order came from the White
House and that he was to be
attacked May 3, 1972 during
an anti-Vietnam War
demonstration in Washington. 'lbe Incident never took
place and "I~m happy that
they cblckened
out,"
Ellsberg said,
"I never had any doubt that
it was their intention that you
· should be killed," Ellsbers
said he was later told by an
unidentified special
prosecutor who investigated
Watergate-related illegaUties.

Suitable For:

BAKER'S ·
BUDGET SHOP

"MUSIC CABOOSE"
Will Be At The Municipal Parlling lot

POLYESTER &amp;
COIION KNIT

over a tiny radio the senior
Hughes had imbedded in the
roof of his mouth.
He worked the radlo with
his tongue, he asld.
The fourth version arrived
in the mail with a note signed
"Howard Hughes Jr." Like
two of the others It wu
handwritten, unwitnessed,
marred by spelling errors
and of wtknown origin.
· It listed 11 individuals to
receive $1 f!lilllon requests -but not the purported son.
"I do not want to claim any
of the lnharltance," the note
said. "! am very poor and
that's the way my father
wanted me to be."

Oldest man is honored

'76 GRADS

of 1976

SALE

.

~ BY MYRAM BORDERS

~lo Mendoza doubled to
Rilgers Horilsby ' made In left center With one oui In the
judgment of Roger Marla
Frld•y's Games
ooobl!ck
In the spring of 196~.
fifth to touch off a five-run
San Diego at ChicaGo
. s23-EACH
Mon treal at Atlanta, night
"He's ·just a .2l!9 hitter/' Pirate splUrge.
.
..
New Yorl\ at Cincinnati , nlg.h t
Hornsby snorted when asked
Rooker followed Mendoza''
Los Angeles at Pittsburgh,
By MILTON RICHMAN
to comment 011 the fact that double with a double to right·
night
MOUNTED MD
UPI Sports Edltqr
Philadelphia at Houston, night
Marls
had
broken
Bllbe
center
to
give
the
Pirates
San Francisco at St . Louis,
nigh t
M"TQ~
al .
Ruth's singleofle880n homer their first nm of the inning.
~CED
. . J.L
'l'l
..
record by hitting 61 during
Stennett singled to score
American LeagUe
~;ast
(EDITO~'S NOTE i Milton Rlcbman Ia on a swiiii ihrough the 1961 season. "He couldn't !looker and one out later AI
w.. L. . Pet. GB
Ohio,
Pennsylvania and West VlrglnJa. Today he vlll18 tbe carry my bat," added Oliver walked and Stargell
16
7
.696
Ntw York
ld
Homsby , who had a .358 .followed
his glove.
lw&lt;H'1111
10 9 .526 .4
Milwaukee
wor cbalilp1on marble shooter.)
double off with
Foster's
11 10 .524 .4
Detroit
ByMILTONRICHMAN
lifetime
batting
average
11 13 .458 5'h
Cleveland
UPI Sports Editor
compared to Marls ' .269
Joe Morgan singled, stole
_
11 13 .458 S'h
Balt imore
7 15 .318 8'1'
Boston
NAOMA,
W.Va.
(UPI)His
buddies
calll7-year-old
Ray
mark
during
the
1961
season.
Clf~culndt
onantwodcominfieplldetoedutstheas
992-7161
West
Jarrell
"Golden
Thumb."
Kingman
ls
hitting
only
.262
'N .. L.. Pet.
GB
Middleport,
17 1 .708
They have him pegged perfectly because when It comes to but Is iruipirlng awe In the the Redll took a 1~ lead In the
TexliS
Kanus City
~3
Y .59·1 3
shooting
marbles nobody can touch him.
New York Mets' rlvalll ~th fourth inning. Home runs by
14 1J .519 4'h
Oakland
"He's the best," says his coach, Walter Lease of Pittsburgh. his enormous batting power. .Dave Conceocion · In the
Mlnnesotll
11 12 .478 S'h
Chicago
8 12 .&lt;00 7
"He's the best in the world today. What does it take to be the He has hit 14 homers and ~~. ...,....,.,...._..._._. . . . . .1541Mii41!1"•
Calltornla
10 1~ .345 9'h
best? Competitive spirit. It's all in the heart. When you're knocked in 33 runs so far thls
.~wtdneselay 's ResUlis
Bo!lton 6 .Cleve .4 , 12 Inns
shooting at a half-Inch glassle with a three-quarter agate and season,
giving . the
New York' 7 Oetrolf 6
there's worW championship at stake, this takes a tremendous traditionally weak-hitting
Baltimore 8 Milwaukee 6
Kamas City 17 Minnesota s
amount of concentration. It's easy to freeze up. I've seen a Mets what they rieed most.,-&lt;~
Texas 1 Callfornla o
number who have. Never with Ray, though. "
potential game-breaking bat
{OiliY Oames scheduled )
YoWlg
Jarrell
admits
ha
gets
nervous
occasionally·
shooting
in
their lineup. ·
Todly's Pro bible Pitchers
·
.
• ,
•
.
·
Mon., Tues., Wed.~ Sat ........a:30tiJ 5:00
( All Times EDT)
3
.
Bare,
Laxton
111
and
wock·
.
marbles
but
11 s obvious he knows how to handle t.he pressure.
Kingman
smashed his 13th
Baltimore O'almer 4-3) at · · American League: E llis, NY
THURSDAY TIL12NOOftf
Ellis; Lyle (71 and
"When I have to, !'lido all right with II. Atleast in marbles," and 14th homers, added a
Milwaukee (Tr•vers 2-IL 2:30 4-0; Slaton, Mil and Campbell. enfU!Si
p .m .
M lnn 4-1; WO;od , Chi and ~~;.' 0 ?2 ;'i'P"H~i!:~!~ 1
he adds quickly. "Not everything else, though."
double and a single and drove 1
Boston CTiant 3-2) at Cleve· Torre z, Ollk 4-3; Palmer, Ball Nettles 131. Pin lelia 121 .
If you didn 't know who he was, soft,spoken, quick-moving in three runs Wednesday
land !Eckersley l-21. 7:30 p.m. 4-&lt;.
Detroit (Ruhle 2-0) at New
Earned Run Average
Botti more 020 006 ooo- 8 IS 1 Ray Jarrell probably would strike you as one of the night In a 8-3 victory over the
York (Ellis J,OJ. 8 p.m .
(based on II Innings pitched)
Milwaukee lAO ooo ooo- 6 1 o neighborhOQg kids with that black and orange baseball cap of Atlanta Braves. He now leads
Chicago {Joh n son 1-J l at
National League : . Metzger ,
~1
Kansas City { Leonard 1-1), 8:35 SO OJ)() ; LS\Ielle, SF 0.30 ; · Holtzm•n. Alexander 1(2l and his, the pea green tee41irt he's about to wear out and those Mike Schmidt of Pblladelphla
0
p.m .
Zachry, Cin 1.55; Murray·, Mil ~~~~~~' ~~~~~~d ~~r~!~ , ";..~_1: blue jeans lind sneakers he favors.
by one In the NL's home-run
Texas (Umbarger J -ll a t · and Hrebosky , St .L 1.71 .
·
He's no ordinary neighborhood kid, however. Far from II. race.
CalifOrnia {Tanana 2-3), 10 :30
American League : Garland, Alexander 11-li , LP- Augusllne
-ll. HRs- Baltl more. Jackson He's the world champion shooter.
Jerry Koosman allowed
p .m .
Bait 1. 23 ; LllRoche, Cle\1 1.42; lO
773-5592 . Herman Grate
Muon,W. Va.
(Only games scheduled)
Buromeier , M lnn l .SO; Kern , 111, M•v 1~1.
He
won
the
national
championship
at
Wildwood,
N.J.,
in
1972
nine
hits and aU three AUanta
Frl(lay's Games
Clev 1.96; Alexander, Ball 2. 00. Minnesota
0011130001- s 6 1
Milwaukee at Boston . night
Strikeouts
Kansas City 743 002 IOx- 17 22 4 and setfour other national records in the past six years. One of runs In 8 2-&gt;1 Innings before
Baltimore ot New York, night
National league : Sea\ler. NY
fastballing reliever Skip
Decker, Albury Il l, Pazlk 161 them was a 29-game winning streak in 1971.
46 ; Montefusco, SF 38; N/ekro. and Roof ; Busby, Pattin (SI.
Cleveland at Detroit. nlohf
A
few
weeks
ago,
he
proved
he
is
No.
~
in
the
w
rld
by
Lockwood came on to get the
0
Chicago at Kansas City, nloh t
At I 37 ; Richard, HGu an d Ro
Hall 181 , Mlngorl (91 and leading a six'illember U.S. team to victory over Britain's
Minnesota at California, night
final
out after Jim Wynn hit o
Stinson. WP- Pattln 11 -41. LPTexas at Oaklllnd, night
Oecker (2-3) .
celebrated "Tocan Terribles" for the world championship In three-no pinclHllt homer. It
N BA Plavolf Standings
. 0011 000 oio- I 8 I Sussex, England . The Terribles' team members averaged S3 was Koosman's fourth win
By U~lted Press International Texas
California
000 000 ooo- 0 9 2 years old al\d had been world champs for 19 consecutive years against one loss whUe Andy
Eastern Conference Finals
Singer (3 -0 l and Sundb erg ; before Jarrell finished them off by shooting out the final 50 Messersmith, the Braves'
Best of Seven
Kirkwt~od_ ,
Brewer (81 and
. Boston luds Cleveland 2-1
Nobody really want s to be
million -dollar pitcher,
E tchebarren : Herrmann (8). marbles straight,
May
6-Boston
11
1
Cle\le
99
fat-and some people need
LP- Ki r kwood (0-3L
"This
is
the
same
thing
as
pitching
a
no-bit,
nMun
game,"
suffered
his fourth setback
May
9-Boston
9~ Cle\le 89
help. Here's a si mple way to
May 11 -Cieve 83 Boston 78
says
Lease.
without
a
victory.
lase weight. MONAD EX helps
(Only
games
sc
hedul
ed)
May 14-at Cleveland
curb your appetite." You eat
R&lt;ly
Jarrell,
the
kid
with
the
golden
thumb,
is
a
modern
day
"I'm
totally
relaxed now
May 16-at qoston
len - you weigh less! Start
X·May
18·&amp;1
Cleveland
Billy
The
Kid.
because
I'm
playing
every
your Monadex reducing plan
x .May 21 -aT Boston
tadily - you ' ve a new way ot
Everybody comes looking to shoot him down , but nobody day," asid Kingman.
western conference Finals
SEE US••• .
life ahead. It you don ' t lose
Best of Seven
can. He takes on all comers, young and old alike.
·.
Los Angeles defeated St.
that ugly fat - we'll ref und
Golden
51
leads
Phoenii
3-2
your money - no questions
With White Oak Mountain standing on guard on one side and . Louis, &lt;hl, San Diego beat
May 2-Gidn St 128 F'hoen lx 103
1sked. Also try AQUA TABS Coal River running along the other, you'd Imagine this Pblladelphia, W, Pittsburgh
Utile
May
5-Phoenhc
108
Gldn
St
10
1
I water pill that works gently
M•y 7-Gidn St 99 Phoen ix 91
small, outoQf-the-way mining commWllty would be the ideal topped Cincinnati, 6-~,
to help you los e water bloa t.
M•y 9-Phnx 133 Gldn st 119, lot
Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy,
place for a boy to hide if he wanted to, but it isn't.
Montreal downed Houston, 7·
112 E. Ma i n, Pomeroy &amp; _M•Y 12,,Gidn St 111 Phoen IX 9S
May 1.4 -al Phoeni x
Somehow, aU those who come looking for young Jarrell 2, and Chicago won , 1~, In 11
Dutton D.rug Store, Mie! ·
x-May 16-at Golden St, aft .
dlepott. Mail Or ders Filled.
always manage w find him and when they do It only means he innings, over San Francisco
x-lf necessary
The warm days of spring bas to knuckle down and back up his world reputation again. In the other JI!L games.
"Whim he was six years old, two boys made a special trip Dodgers 8, Cards 3:
signal an end to the school
year. Students give up their from Beckley, which is 30miles from here," recalls his grand- Ron Cey's tie-breaking
books until the fall for the mother, Sylvia Jarrell. "They had heard Ray was a good double was the big blow of a ,
NEW HOURS
marble shooter. They wanted to play him. My son, who is three-run eighth Inning,
play'ilays of swnmer.
Most adults cannot do this. Ray's Wlcle, warned the boys not to play Ray because he plays which enabled the Dodgers to
Friday &amp; Saturday Only
fettfti1el •
Oftentimes, an adult who left for keeps. 'So do we,"' said the boys. "They came down here score their 15th victory in
Open Friday 7: 30a .m . to 7 p.m.
school years .ago never with their pockets stuffed with marbles. Ahalf hour later, their their last 17 games. Mike
Marshall pitched the last
returned, because of work pockets were empty and Ray had all tha marbles."
His grandparents raised Ray Jarrell and did a splendid job three innings and earned
and other responsibilities.
credit for his third win whUe
Many adults today are of bringing him up.
Carl Jarrell, 63, his grandfather, runs the local filling station Harry RasmUBilell , victim of
hampered by a lack of a
*BREAKFAST
diploma, or even by a lack of and used to shoot marbles himself. He taught Ray how, as well the Dodgers' winning rally,
was the loser . Bill Buckner
the basic skills so necessary as his own three sons.
SPECIAL
Grandma Jarrell, who makes delightful chocolate cream had three hits and Cey, Bill
in an ever changing world.
This does not have to be; candies, asys her marbiHhooting grandson played with Russell and Dusty Baker two
each In Los Angeles' lo.hlt
Adult Basic Education will marbles as a child the way other little kids play with toys.
TIL 6 PM SUNDAY
"As
long
as
I
can
remember,
he
always
played
with
them,"
attack,
enable a student to work
she
asys.
"We'd
always
trip
and
fall
over
them
.
1
even
Padres t, J,&gt;biUiell 0:
.
towards his own g011l, at no
remember
spanking
him,
but
he
would
always
came
back
.
t
o
Randy
Jclnes
pitched
a
six·
cost!
A.B.E. is a program for his marbles. He counted them once. He has a 2().gallon trash hitter arid became the
adults over the age of 16 who can in the basement full of them. When he was small, majors ' first six-game
Main&amp; Court
Pomeroy
are not currenUy enrolled in everybody wanted to play him, but after he cleaned them aU winner this season as well as
the first to jtich a complete
school. A.B.E. works along out nobody wants to play him anymore."
Marble
shooters
have
their
own
language.
A
snooger
is
a
game against the Phillles.
with the local school systeiiUI
to offer programs of the "3 close miss; dubs is hitting two or more marbles out of the ring Jones struck out two and
R's" and more advanced on a single shot and fudging is putting a hand over the rlngllne , walked four behind an 11-blt
SUPER SPRING SALE
attack which Included three
studies. Aperson can learn to which is forbidden in tournament play,
Sti II in Progress
Under the official rules of international marbles competi- hits each by Merv
read
or
write,
improve
In
Specials Throughout the Store
MASON, W. VA.
Math and English, study tiofi, the object of the game is to knock one or more marbles off Jlettenmuhd and Tlto
a
cement
slab
by
hitting
them
with
a
"lolly,"
or
sphare
of
Fuentes.
Jim
Kaat
was
the
History of Science and even
work for a diploma. The ceramic material having a diameter of .not .more than 19 lo:ier.
G.E.D. diploma Is recogillzed millimeters.
In addition to Jarrell, the other U.S. team members were
as the same ·as a regular
Larry
Kokos, 16; Jerry Magers, 16; Ray Morsano, 19; Rick
diploma.
Unser,
15; and Susan Regan, 15, the only girl competitor. AU
Adult Basic Education
are
from
the Lawrenceville, Pa., area.
programs are offered in
Orl\ll'l'ltf1ul 'Nfougl'l! Iron tlvfe
When
the
champiooshlp was nailed down, all six U.S. team
III'ICe ot high imoact .pllllic.
Meigs CoWlty at Eastern
LooiHIQht connector•.
members
were
offered champagne. Ray Jarrell bad never
High School on Monday,
tasted
It
before.
He
took a sip, and promptly spitltout.
Tuesday, and Thursday, 6
Jarrell thinks next year probably will be his last one, at least
p.m.-9 p.m.
as far as marble competition Is concerned.
"I'm getting up there in age," he asys. ','I'll be t3 next year."
1)

'

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

.COATS AND CLARK'S WINTUK YARN
4 OZ. SKEIN REG. '1.49 SALE '1M

MIDDLEPORT DEPARTMENT STORE
OPEN FRIDAY AND SATURDAY TIL 8

�~- n... Dallv Sentlneh Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, May 13, 1976

aeventb lnnink and BUI
Plummer In tbe lllntb
IICCGUIIIed for tile Rq• Cit'-

Rooker keeps 'em loose, uncertain
Mo\or ltltut Standings

ly Un ted ·Press International
Ne11onal League
En!
W•. L•. Pet. GB

M1lor Ltatue Leaders

By Unl td Preu lntern•tlon11
Leedlng 81H1n

( blstd on SO 11 botsl
Natlon11 Lugue
16 8 .667
·
G.. AB. R.. H. Pet.
19 II .633
Rose, Cln
21 114 28 47 .m
16 10 ,6l!i 1
22 61 11 14 .393
lJ . 16 ..ua s•h Torre, NV
Russell, LA 20 66 9 15 .379
Sf . Louis
12 17 .Al-4 6'12
Me Bride, SI.L 24 96 14 3S .36S
.Montreal
10 16 .385 7
CraWird, St.L 24 71 9 17 .346
West
19 70 11 14 .343
W.. L.. Pet. Gil Oliver, Pit
Grote, NY
24 82 8 21 .w
Los Angeles 18 11 .611
Griffey, Cln 24 100 22 3~ .3•o
Cincinnati
16 11 .593 1 Monday,
28 121 31 Al .339
Houston
IS IS .soo 3'h Ma~lock. Ctll
Chi 28 112 17 38 .339
san Diego
14 l-4 .500 3 1/:~
American L.. gue
Atlanta
9 19 .311 8'h
G. AB R H Pet.
San Francisco 9 19 .321 B'h
Lynn, Bos
18 67 11 17 .403
. Wtdnllday's Reit~lts
Bo~tock . Min 21 73 10 11 .384
LOS Angeles 6 St . LOUIS 3
C•rty, Cle 24 88 16 33 .37S
Chicago 1 san Fran o, 11 Inns
Bretl , KC
22 88 14. 33 .375
New York 6 Aflanta 3
~•Flore , Det 16 67 16 lS .373
San Dleoo • Philadelphia o
Chambl_,, NY 23 100 14 36 .360
Pittsburgh 6 Cinci nnati 3
Bonds, Col 20 73 14 16 .3S6
Montreal 7 Houston 2
Patek, KC
21 64 11 12 .34&lt;
Todey's Piobebht Pitchers
Staub, Der 21 73 10 15 .3&lt;2
(All Tlmn EDTI
Philadelphia
New York
Pittsburgh
Chicago

San Francisco {Montefusco 4-

Ma tor Ltague Results
By Unlfed PreJI International
Natlon11 Ltatut

Los Angeles 111 000 03o- 6 10 0
st. Louis
010 010 ooo- 3 11
RhOdon, Wal l lSI. Morsboli
(1)
and
Yeager ;
Fortch,
R~smu ssen m. Hrobosky (81

and Simmons, Rudolph (4). WP
- Marshal l (). 1J . LP- Rasmuss.
en (3-·0 . HR - Los Angeles ,

Ferouson (4J.

(.If innings)

San Fran 000 000 000 Oil- 0 4 0
Chicago 000 000 000 01- I 10 0
Barr, Lavelle (8 ), Molfltl (11)

CINCINNATI (UPI)- Jim
Rooker doesn't throw a
screwball, but there have
been more than a few Urnes
when he has acted like one.
Like what7
"Like roller skating to the
ballpark, into an airport, or
occasionally a bar," asid
Rooker Wednesday night
after he pltc)led and batied
the Pittsburgh Pirates to a 8-3
victory over the Reds.

, H you've already guessed
that Rooker's a ieft.hander,
you're right.
·
"I'm not !Iakey, I Just like
to keep everydne on their toes
so I'm liable to do anything at
any time," asld Rooker, who
contributed a run"P"oduclng
double and a bunt sinflle
toward tha Pirates' IU!It
attack as they toppled the
Reds from first place In the

Kingman gets Nos. 13, 14

and Hill ; R. Reuschel , Garman
( 11) and Swisher . WP- Garman

(2 -21. ~P -Mollltl (1 .1) .
New York 010 3)0 lOll- 6 10 I
Atlon ra
000 000 OOJ.- 3 9 2 ···

Koosman , Lockwood (~l and
Hodges ; Mes!lersml1h, Oa t Can .
ton (6), Torrealba (8) ane1
Cor r ell . · WP- Koo1man &lt;•-1J.
Horton , Det 21 78 15 26 .333 LP- Messer!lmith (0-4). HRsNew Yoik, Kintt~man 2 (13, 111);
Home Runs
. Nltlonal Leauu' : !&lt;Ingman , Atlanta, Wynn 131.
NY 14 ; Schmidt, Phil 13 ; Cey ,
LA 8; Monday, Chi 7; Cedeno, S•n Diego 01'1 000 Ollf- 4 11 0
Ph)adelphl• · 000 000
0 60
Hou an~ Matthews, SF 6. ·
Jon~
(6·2) ond Kendall ;
Amerlc1n League: . Horton ,
Det 6; Bonds, Ca l , Hen·drick, Kaat , Reed (6), McGraw (81
Cle't', Otis, KC, Bando, Oak, and Boone, Blllckwel l (8) . LPKaat (2 -l ) .
Burroughs ll('ld Grieve, Tex 5.
Runs Bitted In
Nl tional League : KJngma n," Plllsburgh
000 0.40 101 - 6 l:l 2
· NY ~J ; Monday , Ch i and Cincinnat i
000 100 101 - J 8 1
Schmidt, Phil 26 ; Griffey , Cln
Rooker. (.4.1) and Sangul llfn ;
24 ; Cey, LA 23.
•
G ull ett. Norman (6), BorbOn
American Leatue: Ru d l, Oak (8) ·and Pl ummer . LP- Gullett
28; Horton, Det 22.; ChambiiS$, (2-2) . HRs- Cincinnall , ConcepN)'' 20 ; Munson , NY 19 ; Bllndo, cion (3), Plummer (II.
·
Oak and Burroug hs, Tex 17.
·
Stolen Bases
Montreal
000 100 0.42- 7 9 4
National Lta9ue : . Morgan, Houston
000 001 01o- 2 51
Cln 12 ; Cedeno,
Hou 10;
Fryman , Murray (8) and
Griffey, Cin 9; Cabell , Hou and Foo te; Richard , Hardy (8) and
Buckner , LA 7.
Johnson . WP - Fryman (4· 2) .
American League: . Rivers. LP- Richard (5 -2) . HR- Mon NY and North, Oak 13 ; Carew, trea t, -Parrish (1) .
N1inn and Randolph , NY 10;
Bonds and Remy , CaL LeFlore,
American League
Det, Patek , KC ~tnd Baylor, (12 Innings)
Oak 9.
Bstn
100 I ll 000 002- 6 10 I
Pllchlng
Cleve
0011000 000 ~ 4 13 3
Most Victories
Wise , Cleveland, House ( 11)
National League: Jones, SO and Fisk ; Brown , Hood (7).
6-2; Richard, Hou 5.2; Lonborg, LaRoche (81. Bu sker (12) and
F'hll &lt;~ - 0 ; Rau, LA , Koosm an Ashby. WP- HQIJSe 1-11 . LPand Se11ve r , NY, Rooker , Pitt LaRoche 10-ll.
and Montefusco, SF 4-1; Fry-man , Mtt and Reuss , Pitt 4-2;
Detroit
1011 ooo 5011- 6 7 4
Dierker, Hou and Sulton , LA 4- New
York
.400 300 OOx - 7 10 I

National League·West.
Rooker's victory was hla
fourth In five declaims, but lt
was his first over the Redll
since he came to the Pirates
In a deal with the Kan!a.s City
lloyals during the winter of
1972.
"You bet I was happy when
I joined the Pirates,"
esclalmed Rooker. "It wu
like walking down the street.

two 1'111l1.

and ftiidtng money."

That 'a bec:auae when
Rooker was at Kanlaa aty he
. didn't have the ~ of a
power laden lineup led by a
guy Uke Pirate slugger WUUe
St.argell,
A stargell double, coming
on a sinking liner which
rlwed the lacing of Red
center-(lelder George
Foster's glove, scored AI
Oliver and Rennie Stennett
and capped a four-nm fifth

=

ri::~tG~~~edwi~e~

second loss in four declalons.
By FRED DOWN
"I'd of caught the baU lftbe
I)PI Sports Writer
lacing hadn't broken," said a
No one in the National sad-eyed · Foster as he
League Is likely to make the fingered his battered, twoclassic ml$lke about Dave year-old glove after the

Today's

at Chicago (Burris H I. 2:30
(Only game scheduled !

p.m.

Sport Parade

·

RICHMAN

Fourth Hughes will shows up

•

'

s

) lAS VEGAS, Nev ..(I.JPI) : Howard Hughes "wills" are
· ~ ralnjq o1i the Clark County
•Courthouse, the
total
: lltandlng at four today, with a
; repwt fmn Chicago raising
;susplclona about even the
: llkellest of the lot.
• The ~latest entries : Two
!supposi!d illegitimate sona of
tthe ·dead
billionaire,
; includl!!8 a . fugitive from
1fraud charges who once
:claimed
he
could
;CIIIllll\uiicate with Hughes
~ through ,• a radio surgically
: lmplan~ In his mouth.
1 The first purported will :which has the fewest obvious
:11awa and lhe most support
:from . han&lt;lwriting . analysts
•and some Hughes ~tes
l- was called a fake In
:Chicago Wednesday · by
:William ~· Jones, president
iof Heir Finders Inc., of
~ashvill~, Tenn., who said he
,was hired by .two Hughas
:crelouslns . to trace other
: atives.
:

TIR
E78x14
4 PLY
Polyester
Wll.itewall

TIRES

Kingman that Hall of Farner ··

1arge

GENERAL nRE

An anonymous telephone documents, which name
caller told him five persollS many heirs, It quotes Hughes
forged the will as a "gag," as leavll\g ''my entire estate
climaxing a weekend of to my son, Richard Robard
drinking and drug taking In Hughes, aka Joseph Michael
La~ Vegas, Jones told a news Brown."
conference.
Hughes, 30, Is wanted in
He asld the self-described Bernalillo, N.M. on fraud
forger called him Monday charges for allegedly
from Salt Lake aty - where swindling a couple, who
the first will was found on a loaned him $15,000 O(l the
desk In Mormon church strength of his claim to be the ·
beadqusrters - saying the son of Howard Hughes.
perpetrators would publicly
In
an
unsuccessful
admit the hoax If they were paternity suit in Albuquerque
guaranteed lnununity from earlier this year In which he
prosecution.
asked to be declared the
The third version, a billionaire's son, Hughes
typewritten one-page testified he received coded
document, was delivered to messages from his father
the county courthouse
Wedne'Sday by Grover ·
Walker, identifying himself
as an aide to Hughes for .five
years, serving as liaison to an
illegitimate son. He said
Hughes personally gave him
BARTOW, Fla. (UP!) the will at an Albuquerque, · Wearing the traditional cap
. N.M.alrporijustlastDecem- · ani) gown and carrying a
ber..
.
. thbrleeofcldeasest anmadnalnteddtheyUbearnited'
Unlike
the
oth er
States picked up an honorary
high . school
diploma
Wednesday.
Charlie Smith, 133, and
recognized by the Social
Security Administration as
the oldest human In the
United States, also received a
gold watch from Polk County
School Board Chairman
Homer K. Adair and

,SM£$

o.

GET

20%

congratulatory telegrams
from Presid.ent Ford, Sen.
Lawton Chiles, D-Fia., and
Rep. James Haley, D-Fla.
The teddy bear was a. gift
from a newanian two weeks
ago, and Smith reportedly
has carried It with him ever
since. The .contents of the
briefcase were unknown.
Smith clalriis to have been
born In Liberia, Africa, In
1M2, where he was captured
and brought to the United
States for asle on the slave
market at the age of 12.

DISCOUNT
.g~t

a big 20 Pet.

1Discount now at Chapman's. Select

your spring and summer footwear
riow.

Chapman's Shoes

.g;;:;

FRIDAJ UNnL 8 PM

_'!1ain St., Pc&gt;meroy

i

MASON FURNITURE

We Have An
Excellent Selection
Of ladies

SPRING.&amp;
SUMMER DRESSES

1841:1 FATI

Miss Sizes
8to20
Half Sizes
12112 to 24112

Adult basic-ed
at Eastern 3
times weekly

BY CA'TA.LINA
-&amp;

'

JANTZEN.

ome

\,

~eae'lb\8-

RE-OPEN 11 PM FRIDAY

ratU&amp;"' • ~~~'~

Blue &amp;Grey Restaurant

;

:I

BAHR
. . CLOTHIERS
.

N. 2nd AVE.

MIDDLEPORT 0.

EUSBERG REMEMBERS
NEW YORK (UPI) Daniel Ellsberg asys the men
who later took part In the

.'

-_conn1e
- ·- -.
"\

LAWN
DECORATIONS

.

Dynamic singing group coming

...,._"""'....,,.._'1 ·

~~~~-90#_ _..,._ _ _ _ _

PICKENS HARDWARE

....,. ,.. ,.

THE SINGERS - Back, Steve McCoy and Ralph
Weekley; front, Don "Sunny" Sillaman and Don Full.

"Everlasting Love", a dynamic -gospel singing group from
Reno, Ohio will ,appear at the Enterprise Umted Methodist
Church Sunday, May 16 at 9 a.m. for the 'morning worship
service and at 1:30p.m. for a hymn sing.
The afternoon program will be In two parts, the second
(e~turing Bill Gaither's producUon of "Alleluiah".
"Everlastipg Love" Is a gosjlel group that blends the best
of contemporary anq traditional gospel music into a program
designed to infonn non-Christians of o better way to live life
through the grace of ,!esus Olrist to Iring a spiritual uplift to
Christians in need of e.ncouragement, spiritual renewal or
rededication.
The group iS composed of Steve McCoy, tenor and ·pianist;
Ralph Weekley, bass guitarist; Don Full, singing baritone and
.arranger, and Don ''Sunny" Slllaman, who sings lead and
emcees for the group.
Rev. William Sydenatrlcker, pastor of the Enlei"JX"ise
Church, extends a friendly Invitation to everyone in the
commWlity to attend this special appearance of the group.

·AGOOD SELECTION
OF SWIM ·WEAR

WENDELL'S

....• ,.

P---------------~
THE "BONITO"

l.,lftetV belwllful . u..
hlootl or out Yt'tW!e ttv·

by MISS AMERICA

rJnlpM:Ic.

'f

Ducks &amp; ducklings, bird
baths, flamingos
phea sants &amp; chipmunks:

139
Flowering Bulbs ""'
For Spring Planting
Metal &amp; Plastic Porch Boxes
Special Group !Val. 'to 39cl

ARTIFICIAL

FLOW~RS

8 96C
For

Artificial Wreaths &amp; Sprays For Memori•l Day
Make.Pomeroy Your Shopping Center

BEN,FRANKLIN
PHONE .

m · 14"

·

Flexible Woven Sandal- The kind of gentle
ease that keeps them flexi ng with you - not
snapping at your heels.

200·202 Eul Main St.
POMEROY, OHIO

Use Ou r"~onvenienl l.Jiy.Away Plan
Open Friday Night Till- Sol. TiiS

THE SHOE BOX.
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

,

of Parkersburg
Expos 7 Astros Z:

Gary Carter's two-run
single and Larry Parrish's
two-run homer enabled the
Expos to score four runs In
the eighth Inning -and
provided Woodle Fryman
With his fourth triumph. J.R.
Richard went 7 2-&gt;1 Innings for
the Astros and was the loser.
Cubs I, Glanta 0:
Rick Reuschel and Mike
Garman combined In a four·
hitter as the .Cubs eXtended
their string of shutout Innings.
to 24. Steve Swisher singled In,
the only run of the game olf ·
Randy Moffitt. The Giants
haven't scored In their last 33
innings and have lost eight of
their last nine games.

· SHINY BLACK

·- POMEROY-

OR

lODA~

FRIDAY, SATU~DAY

With Wurlltzer &amp; Conn Organs ·
Special Prices For This Sale

Free!

AVE.

Wear,

Dresses

TlllRD GRADE - Cowboys taking part In the Western Jamboree to be held tonight at
7:30p.m. at llarrlsonville Elementary are, front, 1-r, VIcki Peavley, Christina Haning
Valerie Pauley, Brian Willis, Olrls Workman, Retha Yost Lorena Donohue· second row'
Jimmy Eblin, Tanuny Phillips, Kristen He'-ter, Detro Boring, Katrina Donohue, Ri~
Williamson.

Association activities reviewed
A series of Important were alllo drawn up .
reports on assoCiation ac- Officers for the ~omlng
Make 'Em
Uvlties were given when the year were elected as follows,
Meigs County Ministerial Rev. William Mlddieswarth,
Cute For
Association met at th~ president ; Rev. Harold
Pomeroy Untied · Methodist Deeth, Vice President and
Summer
Church Tuesday with .. h!lllt Rev. Robert Bumgarner,
pastor, Rev. Robert Hayden, Secretary-Treasurer.
opening with prayer. itev.
Rev . Mlddleswarth ap·
•SUNSUITS William Mlddleswarth, pOln~ Rev. Dwight Zavltz to
President presided. Reported schedule morning meditation
•SHORTS
were :
speakers and Rev. Floyd
- Rev . Mlddleswarth and · Shook to the Holzer volunteer
Rev. Robert Bumgarner on chaplaincy board.
•TANK TOPS
the Rio Grande Preacher's
Rev. Middleswarth Is to.
•HALTER TOPS
Conference held in April and contact the county fair board
Rev. Dwight Zavltz that the to find out If it wants the
•SWIM WEAR
annual appreciation dinner association to conduct
for all pastors serving as worship services opening
volunteer chaplains at Holzer night at the county fair. ·
Hospital will he held May 25.
The Annual Family Picnic
- Rev. Middleswarth on the will be held at the Middleport
tax levy for mental health Marina, June 4 .at 8 p.m.
which wll.l be voted on June 8. weather permitting. In case
He encouraged all ministers of rain the picnic will be heW
to support the levy.
at the Middleport First
-Rev. Howard Shiveley on Baptist Church. Officers of
activities of the Meigs County &lt;he new year will be Installed
CoWlcll on Alcohol ProbleiiUI at the picnic.
(C.O.A.P. Inc.)' that the
Attending were Revs.
members of C.O.A.P. Inc. William
Middleswarth ,
participated In a drug and Harold Deeth, Howard
Alcohol Abuse Seminar at Shiveley, Robert Persons,
EastenJ High School May Robert Bumgarner, Dwight
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
lOth and that C.O.A.P. Inc. Zavitz,RobertHayden, Flo;,cd
992-3586.
would also be conducting free ' Sh04)k, Uoyd Grlmn Jr. l .,___....,.__..;..-....::..::.:::.....,..;:~o~'""',.;..,..J
adult workshops on Alcohol ·
~
and Drug Abuse at the
Episcopal Parish House In
Pomeroy at 7 p.m. on May
17th, 24th, 31st, and June 7th.
The associaUon agreed to
hold Sunday Morning Worship Services at Royal Oak
Park . again this year
beginning May 30th. The
services will be held at the
shelter hOU8e In the picnic
area Instead of the location
beside the lake. Ministers
were scheduled for these
services and the schedule Is
to be posted at the check·ln ,
point at the park.
The schedule for morning
meditations and the Veterans Memorial Hospital
chaplaincy for the summer

M_
IDDLEPORT DEPT. STORE

SALE

SPRING • SUMMER
SPORTSWEAR
CO-ORDINATES
BlAZERS
SHIRlS

PANTS
SKIRTS

TIME CHANGED
Due to Meigs High School.
graduation, the time of the
American Legion Auxiliary,
Drew Webster Post 39,
meeting has been changed to
Tuesday at 7:30p.m. at the
· hall. At 7 p.m. that evening,
the bicentennial committee .
meeting will be held.
Your "Extra Touc~"
Florist Since 1957

FRANCIS
A.ORIST
PH. 992-2644
3S2 E. Ma'Jn, Pomeroy
Your FTD Florist

ALL REDUCED

1A TO lh OFF

lOPS 3 PC. PANT SUITS
REG. '27.95-- •11•
REG~ '19.95
'1444

2 PC. PANT SUITS

'9•
2 PC. JR. PANT SUITS
ltEG. $19.95 . SAI.E-'1444
REG. $12.95

SALE

·T ·Shirt&amp;
FOR THE MEN

'SAVE ON
HANES UNDERWEAR
SALE

T.sttiRlS-- 3 FOR '4.29
BRIEFS
3 FUR $3.99

From

FOR SUMMER
MEN'S DENIM CUlOFFS - SIZES 28-38

SHORT SLEEVE SHIRTS WITH LEISURE COWR
POLYESTtR-tOTTON KNIT RUGBY SHIRTS
NAVY AND GREEN POLY PANTS
SIZES 29-42

. BARGAIN PltaD AT •6.95

heritage house
' N.

..JUJruren's

ANOTHER
GOOD BUY

ONLY

Shape I heels lay the roundwork for soft,
uppers to top off the look.
- a
mood that's strict[y today·- and the pot of gold
at the end of your fashion rainbow . S19.

Antenna With Purcha•e of Organ

T·Shirts,

HOOVER CLEANER

WHITE

Get A Free Midi~md CB and

Watergate burglary were
ordered to "incapacitate me
totally," apparenUy because
of his action to leak the
Pentagon papers;
Ellsberg said In an
interview with UPI's Audio
Department Wednesday the
order came from the White
House and that he was to be
attacked May 3, 1972 during
an anti-Vietnam War
demonstration in Washington. 'lbe Incident never took
place and "I~m happy that
they cblckened
out,"
Ellsberg said,
"I never had any doubt that
it was their intention that you
· should be killed," Ellsbers
said he was later told by an
unidentified special
prosecutor who investigated
Watergate-related illegaUties.

Suitable For:

BAKER'S ·
BUDGET SHOP

"MUSIC CABOOSE"
Will Be At The Municipal Parlling lot

POLYESTER &amp;
COIION KNIT

over a tiny radio the senior
Hughes had imbedded in the
roof of his mouth.
He worked the radlo with
his tongue, he asld.
The fourth version arrived
in the mail with a note signed
"Howard Hughes Jr." Like
two of the others It wu
handwritten, unwitnessed,
marred by spelling errors
and of wtknown origin.
· It listed 11 individuals to
receive $1 f!lilllon requests -but not the purported son.
"I do not want to claim any
of the lnharltance," the note
said. "! am very poor and
that's the way my father
wanted me to be."

Oldest man is honored

'76 GRADS

of 1976

SALE

.

~ BY MYRAM BORDERS

~lo Mendoza doubled to
Rilgers Horilsby ' made In left center With one oui In the
judgment of Roger Marla
Frld•y's Games
ooobl!ck
In the spring of 196~.
fifth to touch off a five-run
San Diego at ChicaGo
. s23-EACH
Mon treal at Atlanta, night
"He's ·just a .2l!9 hitter/' Pirate splUrge.
.
..
New Yorl\ at Cincinnati , nlg.h t
Hornsby snorted when asked
Rooker followed Mendoza''
Los Angeles at Pittsburgh,
By MILTON RICHMAN
to comment 011 the fact that double with a double to right·
night
MOUNTED MD
UPI Sports Edltqr
Philadelphia at Houston, night
Marls
had
broken
Bllbe
center
to
give
the
Pirates
San Francisco at St . Louis,
nigh t
M"TQ~
al .
Ruth's singleofle880n homer their first nm of the inning.
~CED
. . J.L
'l'l
..
record by hitting 61 during
Stennett singled to score
American LeagUe
~;ast
(EDITO~'S NOTE i Milton Rlcbman Ia on a swiiii ihrough the 1961 season. "He couldn't !looker and one out later AI
w.. L. . Pet. GB
Ohio,
Pennsylvania and West VlrglnJa. Today he vlll18 tbe carry my bat," added Oliver walked and Stargell
16
7
.696
Ntw York
ld
Homsby , who had a .358 .followed
his glove.
lw&lt;H'1111
10 9 .526 .4
Milwaukee
wor cbalilp1on marble shooter.)
double off with
Foster's
11 10 .524 .4
Detroit
ByMILTONRICHMAN
lifetime
batting
average
11 13 .458 5'h
Cleveland
UPI Sports Editor
compared to Marls ' .269
Joe Morgan singled, stole
_
11 13 .458 S'h
Balt imore
7 15 .318 8'1'
Boston
NAOMA,
W.Va.
(UPI)His
buddies
calll7-year-old
Ray
mark
during
the
1961
season.
Clf~culndt
onantwodcominfieplldetoedutstheas
992-7161
West
Jarrell
"Golden
Thumb."
Kingman
ls
hitting
only
.262
'N .. L.. Pet.
GB
Middleport,
17 1 .708
They have him pegged perfectly because when It comes to but Is iruipirlng awe In the the Redll took a 1~ lead In the
TexliS
Kanus City
~3
Y .59·1 3
shooting
marbles nobody can touch him.
New York Mets' rlvalll ~th fourth inning. Home runs by
14 1J .519 4'h
Oakland
"He's the best," says his coach, Walter Lease of Pittsburgh. his enormous batting power. .Dave Conceocion · In the
Mlnnesotll
11 12 .478 S'h
Chicago
8 12 .&lt;00 7
"He's the best in the world today. What does it take to be the He has hit 14 homers and ~~. ...,....,.,...._..._._. . . . . .1541Mii41!1"•
Calltornla
10 1~ .345 9'h
best? Competitive spirit. It's all in the heart. When you're knocked in 33 runs so far thls
.~wtdneselay 's ResUlis
Bo!lton 6 .Cleve .4 , 12 Inns
shooting at a half-Inch glassle with a three-quarter agate and season,
giving . the
New York' 7 Oetrolf 6
there's worW championship at stake, this takes a tremendous traditionally weak-hitting
Baltimore 8 Milwaukee 6
Kamas City 17 Minnesota s
amount of concentration. It's easy to freeze up. I've seen a Mets what they rieed most.,-&lt;~
Texas 1 Callfornla o
number who have. Never with Ray, though. "
potential game-breaking bat
{OiliY Oames scheduled )
YoWlg
Jarrell
admits
ha
gets
nervous
occasionally·
shooting
in
their lineup. ·
Todly's Pro bible Pitchers
·
.
• ,
•
.
·
Mon., Tues., Wed.~ Sat ........a:30tiJ 5:00
( All Times EDT)
3
.
Bare,
Laxton
111
and
wock·
.
marbles
but
11 s obvious he knows how to handle t.he pressure.
Kingman
smashed his 13th
Baltimore O'almer 4-3) at · · American League: E llis, NY
THURSDAY TIL12NOOftf
Ellis; Lyle (71 and
"When I have to, !'lido all right with II. Atleast in marbles," and 14th homers, added a
Milwaukee (Tr•vers 2-IL 2:30 4-0; Slaton, Mil and Campbell. enfU!Si
p .m .
M lnn 4-1; WO;od , Chi and ~~;.' 0 ?2 ;'i'P"H~i!:~!~ 1
he adds quickly. "Not everything else, though."
double and a single and drove 1
Boston CTiant 3-2) at Cleve· Torre z, Ollk 4-3; Palmer, Ball Nettles 131. Pin lelia 121 .
If you didn 't know who he was, soft,spoken, quick-moving in three runs Wednesday
land !Eckersley l-21. 7:30 p.m. 4-&lt;.
Detroit (Ruhle 2-0) at New
Earned Run Average
Botti more 020 006 ooo- 8 IS 1 Ray Jarrell probably would strike you as one of the night In a 8-3 victory over the
York (Ellis J,OJ. 8 p.m .
(based on II Innings pitched)
Milwaukee lAO ooo ooo- 6 1 o neighborhOQg kids with that black and orange baseball cap of Atlanta Braves. He now leads
Chicago {Joh n son 1-J l at
National League : . Metzger ,
~1
Kansas City { Leonard 1-1), 8:35 SO OJ)() ; LS\Ielle, SF 0.30 ; · Holtzm•n. Alexander 1(2l and his, the pea green tee41irt he's about to wear out and those Mike Schmidt of Pblladelphla
0
p.m .
Zachry, Cin 1.55; Murray·, Mil ~~~~~~' ~~~~~~d ~~r~!~ , ";..~_1: blue jeans lind sneakers he favors.
by one In the NL's home-run
Texas (Umbarger J -ll a t · and Hrebosky , St .L 1.71 .
·
He's no ordinary neighborhood kid, however. Far from II. race.
CalifOrnia {Tanana 2-3), 10 :30
American League : Garland, Alexander 11-li , LP- Augusllne
-ll. HRs- Baltl more. Jackson He's the world champion shooter.
Jerry Koosman allowed
p .m .
Bait 1. 23 ; LllRoche, Cle\1 1.42; lO
773-5592 . Herman Grate
Muon,W. Va.
(Only games scheduled)
Buromeier , M lnn l .SO; Kern , 111, M•v 1~1.
He
won
the
national
championship
at
Wildwood,
N.J.,
in
1972
nine
hits and aU three AUanta
Frl(lay's Games
Clev 1.96; Alexander, Ball 2. 00. Minnesota
0011130001- s 6 1
Milwaukee at Boston . night
Strikeouts
Kansas City 743 002 IOx- 17 22 4 and setfour other national records in the past six years. One of runs In 8 2-&gt;1 Innings before
Baltimore ot New York, night
National league : Sea\ler. NY
fastballing reliever Skip
Decker, Albury Il l, Pazlk 161 them was a 29-game winning streak in 1971.
46 ; Montefusco, SF 38; N/ekro. and Roof ; Busby, Pattin (SI.
Cleveland at Detroit. nlohf
A
few
weeks
ago,
he
proved
he
is
No.
~
in
the
w
rld
by
Lockwood came on to get the
0
Chicago at Kansas City, nloh t
At I 37 ; Richard, HGu an d Ro
Hall 181 , Mlngorl (91 and leading a six'illember U.S. team to victory over Britain's
Minnesota at California, night
final
out after Jim Wynn hit o
Stinson. WP- Pattln 11 -41. LPTexas at Oaklllnd, night
Oecker (2-3) .
celebrated "Tocan Terribles" for the world championship In three-no pinclHllt homer. It
N BA Plavolf Standings
. 0011 000 oio- I 8 I Sussex, England . The Terribles' team members averaged S3 was Koosman's fourth win
By U~lted Press International Texas
California
000 000 ooo- 0 9 2 years old al\d had been world champs for 19 consecutive years against one loss whUe Andy
Eastern Conference Finals
Singer (3 -0 l and Sundb erg ; before Jarrell finished them off by shooting out the final 50 Messersmith, the Braves'
Best of Seven
Kirkwt~od_ ,
Brewer (81 and
. Boston luds Cleveland 2-1
Nobody really want s to be
million -dollar pitcher,
E tchebarren : Herrmann (8). marbles straight,
May
6-Boston
11
1
Cle\le
99
fat-and some people need
LP- Ki r kwood (0-3L
"This
is
the
same
thing
as
pitching
a
no-bit,
nMun
game,"
suffered
his fourth setback
May
9-Boston
9~ Cle\le 89
help. Here's a si mple way to
May 11 -Cieve 83 Boston 78
says
Lease.
without
a
victory.
lase weight. MONAD EX helps
(Only
games
sc
hedul
ed)
May 14-at Cleveland
curb your appetite." You eat
R&lt;ly
Jarrell,
the
kid
with
the
golden
thumb,
is
a
modern
day
"I'm
totally
relaxed now
May 16-at qoston
len - you weigh less! Start
X·May
18·&amp;1
Cleveland
Billy
The
Kid.
because
I'm
playing
every
your Monadex reducing plan
x .May 21 -aT Boston
tadily - you ' ve a new way ot
Everybody comes looking to shoot him down , but nobody day," asid Kingman.
western conference Finals
SEE US••• .
life ahead. It you don ' t lose
Best of Seven
can. He takes on all comers, young and old alike.
·.
Los Angeles defeated St.
that ugly fat - we'll ref und
Golden
51
leads
Phoenii
3-2
your money - no questions
With White Oak Mountain standing on guard on one side and . Louis, &lt;hl, San Diego beat
May 2-Gidn St 128 F'hoen lx 103
1sked. Also try AQUA TABS Coal River running along the other, you'd Imagine this Pblladelphia, W, Pittsburgh
Utile
May
5-Phoenhc
108
Gldn
St
10
1
I water pill that works gently
M•y 7-Gidn St 99 Phoen ix 91
small, outoQf-the-way mining commWllty would be the ideal topped Cincinnati, 6-~,
to help you los e water bloa t.
M•y 9-Phnx 133 Gldn st 119, lot
Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy,
place for a boy to hide if he wanted to, but it isn't.
Montreal downed Houston, 7·
112 E. Ma i n, Pomeroy &amp; _M•Y 12,,Gidn St 111 Phoen IX 9S
May 1.4 -al Phoeni x
Somehow, aU those who come looking for young Jarrell 2, and Chicago won , 1~, In 11
Dutton D.rug Store, Mie! ·
x-May 16-at Golden St, aft .
dlepott. Mail Or ders Filled.
always manage w find him and when they do It only means he innings, over San Francisco
x-lf necessary
The warm days of spring bas to knuckle down and back up his world reputation again. In the other JI!L games.
"Whim he was six years old, two boys made a special trip Dodgers 8, Cards 3:
signal an end to the school
year. Students give up their from Beckley, which is 30miles from here," recalls his grand- Ron Cey's tie-breaking
books until the fall for the mother, Sylvia Jarrell. "They had heard Ray was a good double was the big blow of a ,
NEW HOURS
marble shooter. They wanted to play him. My son, who is three-run eighth Inning,
play'ilays of swnmer.
Most adults cannot do this. Ray's Wlcle, warned the boys not to play Ray because he plays which enabled the Dodgers to
Friday &amp; Saturday Only
fettfti1el •
Oftentimes, an adult who left for keeps. 'So do we,"' said the boys. "They came down here score their 15th victory in
Open Friday 7: 30a .m . to 7 p.m.
school years .ago never with their pockets stuffed with marbles. Ahalf hour later, their their last 17 games. Mike
Marshall pitched the last
returned, because of work pockets were empty and Ray had all tha marbles."
His grandparents raised Ray Jarrell and did a splendid job three innings and earned
and other responsibilities.
credit for his third win whUe
Many adults today are of bringing him up.
Carl Jarrell, 63, his grandfather, runs the local filling station Harry RasmUBilell , victim of
hampered by a lack of a
*BREAKFAST
diploma, or even by a lack of and used to shoot marbles himself. He taught Ray how, as well the Dodgers' winning rally,
was the loser . Bill Buckner
the basic skills so necessary as his own three sons.
SPECIAL
Grandma Jarrell, who makes delightful chocolate cream had three hits and Cey, Bill
in an ever changing world.
This does not have to be; candies, asys her marbiHhooting grandson played with Russell and Dusty Baker two
each In Los Angeles' lo.hlt
Adult Basic Education will marbles as a child the way other little kids play with toys.
TIL 6 PM SUNDAY
"As
long
as
I
can
remember,
he
always
played
with
them,"
attack,
enable a student to work
she
asys.
"We'd
always
trip
and
fall
over
them
.
1
even
Padres t, J,&gt;biUiell 0:
.
towards his own g011l, at no
remember
spanking
him,
but
he
would
always
came
back
.
t
o
Randy
Jclnes
pitched
a
six·
cost!
A.B.E. is a program for his marbles. He counted them once. He has a 2().gallon trash hitter arid became the
adults over the age of 16 who can in the basement full of them. When he was small, majors ' first six-game
Main&amp; Court
Pomeroy
are not currenUy enrolled in everybody wanted to play him, but after he cleaned them aU winner this season as well as
the first to jtich a complete
school. A.B.E. works along out nobody wants to play him anymore."
Marble
shooters
have
their
own
language.
A
snooger
is
a
game against the Phillles.
with the local school systeiiUI
to offer programs of the "3 close miss; dubs is hitting two or more marbles out of the ring Jones struck out two and
R's" and more advanced on a single shot and fudging is putting a hand over the rlngllne , walked four behind an 11-blt
SUPER SPRING SALE
attack which Included three
studies. Aperson can learn to which is forbidden in tournament play,
Sti II in Progress
Under the official rules of international marbles competi- hits each by Merv
read
or
write,
improve
In
Specials Throughout the Store
MASON, W. VA.
Math and English, study tiofi, the object of the game is to knock one or more marbles off Jlettenmuhd and Tlto
a
cement
slab
by
hitting
them
with
a
"lolly,"
or
sphare
of
Fuentes.
Jim
Kaat
was
the
History of Science and even
work for a diploma. The ceramic material having a diameter of .not .more than 19 lo:ier.
G.E.D. diploma Is recogillzed millimeters.
In addition to Jarrell, the other U.S. team members were
as the same ·as a regular
Larry
Kokos, 16; Jerry Magers, 16; Ray Morsano, 19; Rick
diploma.
Unser,
15; and Susan Regan, 15, the only girl competitor. AU
Adult Basic Education
are
from
the Lawrenceville, Pa., area.
programs are offered in
Orl\ll'l'ltf1ul 'Nfougl'l! Iron tlvfe
When
the
champiooshlp was nailed down, all six U.S. team
III'ICe ot high imoact .pllllic.
Meigs CoWlty at Eastern
LooiHIQht connector•.
members
were
offered champagne. Ray Jarrell bad never
High School on Monday,
tasted
It
before.
He
took a sip, and promptly spitltout.
Tuesday, and Thursday, 6
Jarrell thinks next year probably will be his last one, at least
p.m.-9 p.m.
as far as marble competition Is concerned.
"I'm getting up there in age," he asys. ','I'll be t3 next year."
1)

'

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

.COATS AND CLARK'S WINTUK YARN
4 OZ. SKEIN REG. '1.49 SALE '1M

MIDDLEPORT DEPARTMENT STORE
OPEN FRIDAY AND SATURDAY TIL 8

�.·
6 _ The Daily Sentinei,Middleport·Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Ma~ 13, 1976

, ....,

w" . .

" .., . ., ~..

·=ow ;:;;

•·

7- The O.Uy Sentinel. Mlddleport·J'«!l.eroy, 0., Thursday, May 13,19'16

Nancy Collins elected presidentjl.,.,.~a;;;;tio~.e:R:;;·w&gt;z,,l OES finalizes

Red Cross drive set Saturday

p
t
•
pia
tns ec ton . ns

t

small shade trees,, fruit lrel!ll
By Helen and Sue Bottel
~
!i"d shrubs, and to remember i::
~ •
mplanting gladioli to get the
.
AreBabletSuperfliJCJIIIToday7
bulbs six to seven Inches READERS ALL:
deep.
Recently we published a letter fr&lt;m "NONPARENT," a
·
Organic gardening was the young man who lnsiBted children aren't worth the bother and
HARRISONVIU.E _Final
topic of the ecology me.sa~e he and lils fiance plan NO repopulation program. He predicted plana for lnapectton to be held King, Paul Pauley, Larry
by Mrs. Thoma who told close to half of our presently childless readers wbould qree at 7:30 tonight were made at Wells. Other vlall«s were
about the Swedish people's with him.
the Wedneaday nlchlmeetlftc Grace Colwell, Catherine
rejuvenation of a lake by
Sue replied, "I'D bet you're wrong by at least 40per cent," ol Harrlaonvllle Chapter 256, CO!weU, Catherine Shenefield
and Unda Vaughan, aD of
PIIIJlplng the waste from the and asked for a vote.
.
Order of the Eutern Star.
bottom and using it as ferIn thl.s Instance, Sue was wrong. Our correapondenta were
Mr. and Mra. Stanley Wllkesvllle; .Chlorua Gaul,
lilizer. She spoke of the evenlydistriooted, for and against future parenthood_ but we Kaldor, worthy matron and Pomeroy; Lola Ann Walker,
possibility of doing the same must admit, "Nonparent's" letter was weD loaded to bring out worthy patron, reminded Lucasville Chapter;
for Lake Erie and other lakes voters who agreed with him.
members to take cOOides, Genevieve Morgan, Thea
and rivers which are filling
However, our nexi question (aimed exclusively at sandwichea and jeUo salads. Chapter, Glouster, and
Mae
Roush,
up with waste'.. Mrs. Thoma parents), "If you had It to do over again, would you 11!111 have The dinner l!lll be aerved al Minnie
lllso told of a farmer who children?" trough! a totaUy different response. Over 91 per 5:45p.m. Arrangements were University Chapter,
finds that the waste from a cent answered resoundingly, "Yes, yes,:YES!"
. · made to give the worthy Columbus. Betty lllld Doug
grain dryer on his farm l.s
In TIDS Instance, Sue's estimate was cliMet' than mine. grand patron, Dr. Howard I. Blahop as the asaoclate
excellent mulch and fertilizer She predicled very few parenl.s would opt for ''no kids" the Sln!Jiand Mrs. Loetta Hayes, matron and UBOclate patron
for the garden. She said he second time around, while I figured perhaps !5 per cent might deputy grand matron, gifts at ol Harrisonville- Chapter.
A card of thankl was read
mixes the material with ·feel dl.sillusloned or short-dlanged.
Inspection.
sawdust.
In today's and lhl.s week-end's column we're !l'lntlng
Initiatory work was from the Douglu Blahop
She also lnld of the ex- samplesofourheavy"Bables : YesorNo?"rnail.Re.tldoo :
exemplified for two can- famlly.lnvltatlons were read
perience of a Kentucky forest
+++
dictates and white Bibles were from the chapters of
ranger who cleared three DEAR RAP:
presented by Charles King Wllkesvllle, Amesville,
•
acres of land on a hill, spent
I find it very hard to believe people wbo have children andglflaofjewelrybyHarold Marietta, Beverly and New
Marshfield.·
Also
l'el!d
were
the summer burning the would write and say they regret being parents, but 1 Rice to the candldatea. It was
stumps and debris, and then understand that a GaUup poll indicated 10 per cent were In this noted that the furniture bas· conununlcatlons from Grand
mixed the materials with category, while another advice colwnnl.st's mall (NOT been
refinished
and Chapter and from Galle Dew,
sawdust to come up with an Generatloq Rap's) was some 70 per cent anti-cl!Udren. This is uphotatered in blue velvet by president of District 2.
Sandwiches, pie, potato
organic• fertilizer which totally unreal, and either she loaded the questloo for ,"No" Harold Rice.
chips,
~offee and tea were
produced bumper crops.
votes, or she has weird readers.
Guests Introduced were
served
by Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Terrell and her
Our three children have given us much happiness. A little Mrs. Barbara ROUsh, worthy
Harold
Rice,
Mr. and Mrs.
daughter, Mrs . Martha pain too, but how dull O\lf Uvea might have been without tbem! matron of Racine Chapter;
LaiTy
Wells,
Mrs. Donna
\
Stuble, served refreshments. We 're a sharing family, and our kids Increased our ability to Sherry Might, wortby matron
Others attending were Dollie love each other. - HAPPY PARENTS, HAPPY MATES
of Wllkesvllle Chapter, Morris and Mrs. Audra WeD.
Hayes, Ruth .Moore and DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
lllsbict24,andJamesRoush,
POLLY'S PROBLEM
___A"lc_oolt_o...,ffine l.'ir1tn ~caP" "
see. Why don't they mark Torruny Miller.
·
I
admire
those
wbo
do
not
want
children
and
do
not
have
Racine,
worthy patron. Also
twQJ 10 11!i.. tspnngshades ,..
DEAR POLLY - Garbage them on top ? - Y.J.F.
by Haggar's S27.so Com fan ~
them - for their insight. They know themaelves; they are not Introduced were pasI
disposals did away with
The annual
DEAR POLLY - Tell Fran
Plw top. Andit'sdesigned !
selfl.sh, oot wl.se.
matrons, Bernice Hoffman,
smelly garbage calls, but I have made several hooked
to mlx and match Yt.ith a
reunion and
I am also grateful to them, for they aDow us NOT to feel Amber Warner, Lol.s Pauley,
what can one do with a smelly rugs and have found the best
variety of Haggar slacks.
:
guilty
In
ll'Oduclng
more
than
our
aUotted
quota
of
what
is
also
a
grand
page,
Grace
garbage disposal ? I keep all material to back them with is
banquet of
Featunxl S20Comfon
It? - 1.07 kids per couple. We have two, we'd like to have at Wilson, Connie Smith,
easy to reach surfa ces burlap. I like to turn the
Plus slacks ar&lt; a gingham
· Rutland
least
one more baby. We're not afraid of the future or resentful Marjorie
Rice,
Ruth
scrubbed clean but is there edges of mine under and slip
chockandhaveanExpand. ,
over "lost freedom." we're having a baD! - LOVERS AND Erlewlne, Bernice Wlnn,
anything that will get it really stitch them and THEN put on
O·Miltic'~ waist band thi t
High School
PARENTS
Pearl Canady, Avanell
stretchesto k~ you
;
clean. I am holding my nose a coat of a latex base seaming
Will
be
held
at
Rutland
GQmfortable.
:
DEAR
HBLEN
AND
SUE
:
GeOrge,
lllld
Pauline
Atkins,
as I walt for a solution. - adhesive that I bought at a
Elementary, Sat., May 22,
Both are machine wa.h. •
My daughter, 25, had every good thing - private schools, and past patrons, Norman
MARILYN.
carpet store. A quart cost
at
6:30 p.m. Round and
able in a texturizedweaveof :
must~ lessons, orthodontia, trips around the world, parents Will, Harold Rice, Charles· square
EAR MARILYN - A about five dollars but this
dancing from 10
who studied Spack and Gesell.
·
I00% Dacron• polyester.
garbage disposal repair proects the rug, seals all
p.m. till 1 a.m. Music by
She
is
a
lemon!
Selfl.sh,
foul-mouthed,
foul-tempered,
a
Slacks, $20
the Slringdusters. Final
service 'very kJndly gave' me those stitches and would help
total pain In the neck. Please advl.se people not to have kids.
date for reservations must
the following remedy lor your preven t skidding If put on a
Top, $27.50
What a waste of love ! - M.E.P.
be in by May 15th to the
problem. Put plug In the bare floor . - MARION.
RAP :
Rutland
Alumni
••••
drain; completely fill wllh hot
Association , Box 64
DEAR POLLY - After,
.
As the father of three, aged 16 to 22, I can say children are
A thought for the day:
water to which you add one- searching un successfully
Rutland,
Ohio
45775. Money
the most precious and !l'iceless assets of life - If you are true, American poet Rai(Xl Waldo
fourth to one-half cup am· through a maze of cookbooks
must
accompany
loyal
and honest parents.
Emerson said, "Nature and
reservation, reserv~tions .
monla and enough dish· trying ·to find the recipe for
My wife and I both worked while ral.slng the kids. We're books belong to tbe eyes that $5.00, Each alumni may
washing detergent to make a something we had reaDy
bring • ]uest.
professionally
employed (both have lll11,91er's degrees) In see them.''
good suds. Remove plug, turn enjoyed, l discovered a way
MIDOLEPORT
rewarding occupations&lt;But the children, although sometimes
unit and the water faucet on to keep track of favorite
Uring, were always very much Included and wanted.
and let It run. This should recipes. I now put the naJile of
One suggestion : spe'nd a few years as a COilple before you
dissolve any lingering grease a favorite on a recipe file
A REVIVAL will start al have babies. You'll appreciate them more and do a bettar job
or food particles that must be card along with the name of
raising them if you're nearer 30 lhap 20 when you start your
the Church of God on
causing the odor, as the trap the cookbook it is in and the
family.
- JOE
Dudding Lane In Mason
under the sink Is to prevent page number. It is now so
DEAR
HELEN
ANti' SUE :
Sunday with the Rev .
sewer gas from coming back. simple to find a cookbook
We
couldn't
wait to take a childless vacation - our first
- POLLY.
recipe for a repeat per· Harold Ganoe of Romney since the kids started coming. But three days Into It, we looked
as eva ng elist. Services
formance . - JANET C.
begin at 7:30 each evening. al each other and said In unison, "Let's go home to our
DEAR POLLY - When
DEAR POLLY - While
family!" - HAPPY WITH THE UTTLE MONSTERS
Rev. Chester Tennant and
anyone, a child or grownup, visi ling our children In Las
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
the congregation Invite the
has a blister on the foot , Vegas I noticed how shiny
I have two teenagers and am very proud of them. But I'ci
public.
everything seems to irritate their dishes and glassware
decide
NOT to have children if I had It to do over again. The
it. We put a corn pad with a were. I learned they use a
burdens and responsibilities are just too great. Decisions are
hole In the center over the dishwashing product with
overwhelming, as are expenses. We would have heen a happier
blister. This helps the pain ammonia in it but that I am
couple had we remained childless. - LOVES THEM, BUT
and heals at the same time. - not able to buy here In Ohio.
NOT
AGAIN
VIOLA.
.
Now I aijd one or two drops of
DEAR POLLY - My Pet ammonia to my dl.shwashlng
Peeve Is with the marking of detergent when I do the
food item~ in stores. Why do dishes, rinse in very hot
they always put the sticker water and am amazed at how
price 9n ·top of the recipes on they shine. - MRS. T. K.
Sherry King, daughter of sive player in basketbaU at
the packages or over the
Vou wlll receive a doUar If
Mr. and Mrs. William King, the college. She was also
listed ingredients, when so Polly uses your favorite
The
Southern
Ohio Middleport, Route I, and a recognized for being the
many people are on special hom emaking Idea, Pet
senior at Malone College, highest rebounder and the
diel.s and must look at the Peeve, Polly's Problem or Regional Council of Parents Canton, was awarded two highest scorer on the team for
lngredlenl.s. You remove the · solution to a problem. Write Without Partners will hold an trophies and an engraved the year. The . engraved
sticker and off comes the PoUy In care of this news- "Ex panding Horizon s " plaque at an all-sports plaque was a senior award to
WONDER FLOW FlAT
program Friday, Saturday
•
paper with what you need to paper.
Ml.ss
King,
who
also
received
banquet
at
the
college
.and Sunday at the Holiday
engraved medals from other
PRIMARY USES: This paint is for use on exterior surfaces such
Inn in Chillicothe. Purpose of Tuesday night.
members
of the team.
Miss
King
received
the
the program is to train
wood siding, trim, shakes, wood shingles, weathered asbe
Mr. and Mrs. King were In
leaders and assist struggling trophy for the most valuable
shingles, unglazed brick, stucco, cement and cinder block. FINISI11ill
player of the year along with Canton for the banquet.
chapters.
a
trophy
fnr
the
best
defenAll single parents, mem·
Flat. COVERAGE: Approximately 400 sq. ft. per gallon on smoott-.
bers and non-members, are
~•.,.:...... surfaces. TINTING: Hundreds of additional colt;&gt;rs may be obta
For the
invited. Those· Interested In
by tinting Wonder Flow Acrylic Tint Bases .with Trend ition Ho11s4
going as a group should meet ATTEND GRADUATION
at Spring Valley Shopping Mrs . Eva Dessauer,
Tire Prices
Colorants. _DO NOT tint with Color-in-Oil. Standard colors may
Center on Rt. 35 at 7 p.m. Pomeroy, and Mrs. Joan
inter-mixed or let-down with 20 Chateau White.' APPLICATION
Friday. Reservations are to While , Middleport, spent
In the Area
be made directly with the Saturday in Montgomery, W.
Brush, roller or spray. THINNING: Requires no thinning for
Holiday Inn at 1250 Bridge Va., where they attended the
It's
applications. If thinning is necessary, use only clean water.
St., Chillicothe, Ohio.
grad uation of Michael
·· ·
ROD &amp; REEL
Hendricks from
West
Virginia Technical School.
REG. PRICE
Michael Is the grandson of
Mrs , Dessauer and the
•8.95 GALLON
RECOVERING
nephew of Mrs. White.
773-5881
Mason,W. Va.
&amp; Reel Combination , a supe r
William Snouffer
Pome(oy, Is a surglcai
I on a perfectly balanced 5- foot rod.
patient
at
Riverside
Methodist Hospital in
DON'T GO NEAR THE WATER
Columbus. He is recovering
. . . without a John son reel!
GAllON
from the removal of a ruptured disc and Is in
satisfactnry condition. His
room number is 6007 for those
who wish to send cards.
Mrs. Nancy collins was
elected president of the
WindingTraUGardenCiubat
meeting Thursday night at
~e home of Mrs. Wilma
Terrell
Othe~ officers named for
the 19711-77 year were Mrs.
Susie Miller vice president·
Mrs. Cora ' Beegle, second
vice· president; Mrs. Alice
Th ompson , treasurer, and
Mrs . Pat Thoma, secretary.
A report on the recent
regional meeting at the
Athens Methodist Church was
given by Mrs. Thompson and
Mrs. Beegle. Mrs. Addalou
·Lewis displayed several wild
flower books and Mrs .
Thompson showed sheets
from the Washingtnn Post on
wild flowers. Preceding the
meeting the members lnok a
nature tour on Long Hollow
and Bunker Hill.
May baskets were the

arrangemenl.o! for the month
and winning ribbons were
Mrs. Terrell, blue; Mrs.
Thompson, red, and Mrs.
Thoma, white. Iris were
displayed with ribbons being
. awarded to Mrs. Thompson,
blue, for white and salmon
colored Iris, and red ribbons
for yellow and purple Iris.
Mrs. Addalou Lewl.s received
a blue ribbon for her white
iris.
To open the meeting Mrs.
Terrell read a poem, "A
Child 's Faith" and gave
prayer. The garden caleodar
for May was given by Mrs.
Thompson who suggested
that the vegetable garden be
planted as soon as the soli Is
ready, that annulll flower
seed by planted, that rose
bushes be dusted, and that old
mums be divided and reset,
and new ones put out. She
also said it was time to plant

Polly's Pointers
Ammonia sweetens
garbage disposal

.
BAHR CLOTHIERS...~
...

Program
pfanned

Sherry King awarded

A drive to replenilh the
diluter fund ,of the Meigs
County Chapter of the
An\erican Red CI'Q!a will be
held thla Saturday, Mrs.
Rhonda Dalley, disaster
chairman and fund drive
coordinator, announced
today.

~-

Dalley reports that_
the disaster fund was
depleted to 8111st the Rutland .
fluh Oood vlcttma Jut year.
At that Ume nearly M,OOO was
used to replace necessities
loet In the high water.
'l1le drive Saturday will be
county-wide and conducted

Mother-daughter
banquet planned
.

Mother-da1111hter banquet
Mrs. Mary Hanim led In the
plans were completeQ at the Bible study on "The Com. recent meeting of the plete Christian". In the abAmerican Lutheran Church sence of the prealdent, Mrs.
Women of St. Paul and St. Lois Cleland presided. Mrs.
John Lutheran Churches at Rachael Downie closed the
the Pomeroy Church.
meeting with a meditaUon
The covered dish dinner and prayer. Linda Hamm
will be held at 6 p.tn. Monday served refreshments. Others
In the fellowship haD.- Plans attending were Mrs. Elva
were also made. for a coffee Cottr111, Mrs. Virginia
hour honoring ne\V people of Thorne, Mrs. Betty Young,
the church to be . held on Mrs. Veda Davl.s and Mrs.
Sunday, May 23 at the Barbara Fry. ·
·church.

Pound shower fetes
new pastor and wife

Blown Into Your Walls

''free Estimates"

FOREMAN AND

:=====·:;;·:::·=======~

PAINTS

WE SUPPLY

-

· - ~-• ~-

BEND

nRE CENTER

·.

$6.25

SALE PRICE

LEGAL NOT ICE

~l

The Public Utilities Com·
mission of Ohio has set for
public heari ng Case No.
76-163-EL-FAC, to review
the operation of the fu el
adjustment clause and 1he
fuel procurement prac·
tices and policies of the
Columbus &amp; Southern
Oh io Eleclric Company,
on May 17, 1976, at 9:30
A.M. at the offices of !he
Commission, 111 North
High Street, Columbus,
Ohio . All interested per-

J

WE
AI! AU
NEW &amp;
REfll1
HRS.

8:30 Ill 8:00
DAILY

sons will be given an op.

Star Supply Co.
949-2525

Racine, 0.

portunity to De heard.
Further information may
pe obtained by contacti ng
th e Commi ssion.
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMM ISSION OF OHIO
by Randall G. Applegate,
Secre1ary

GLOSS LATEX HOUSE PAINT

WE PRICE

REG. PRICE '11A5

SUNDAY

GALLON

MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

s.

Opening Ranks
·,

POMEROY - The Carpenters Local Union 650 of Pomeroy ii accepllng
appllcollons for apprentice carpenters in a new class to start next September.
Henry C. Peery, business representative, said appllunts living north of Rt. 35 In
GoUla ond Meigs counties and Lawrence couniy east of Route 7i5 are illglbletoapply
r0f1ordlessof race, religion, color, creed or natlona Iorigin.

GALLON

Appitcaltons will be accepted 11211 E. Ma~n 51., I'Omeroy, unoo 4576P, during the
month of May. Office hoururelto 10 a.m. Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thurs.
Clay only.

•7••

SAU PIIQ

VAu.EY• LUMBER
&amp;SUPPLY CO.
t911H9 ·

Avn .

' 01110,

I

Carpen~ers

REG. PRICE
'9.25 GAI.LOff

Number 101-1 analyzed super one coat white house paint
non chalking, oil base.
'
One coat g!ves two coat appearance and protectipn.
Saves you t1me and money. Heavy-bodied, high titanium.
Pure linseed oil formula provides excellent protection.
(May Be Tinted)

CLOSED

Is a former
Friday.
National
Grange
'111Smith
the Uma
News· employe
and: the dress
contest
to be held.
Dayton Dally News.
SPECIAL SERVICES at
Rutland Church of God
The Alamana~
,,Thursday and Friday 7:30
United Press International •: p.m. ·_Marilin Hoschar, guest
Today is Thursday, May 13, speaker. Everyone welcome.
the !34th day of 1976 with 232
ANNU_AL Trinity' Ch · h
to follow,
,
urc
'The moon Is full.
mother-daughter reception
The morning stars are Friday, 7:30 p.m. at the
Venus and Jupiter.
church.
.
The evening stara are MerSQUARE Dance Friday
cury, Mars and Saturn.
from 8 to ll p.m. sponsored
Those born on thl.s date are by Harrisonvllle Semor
under the sign of Taurus.
Cil!zens. Music by the
British composer Sir Stnngdusters. Adults $1,
Arthur Sullivan (of Gilbert children under 12 free .
and Sulllvan) was born May Refreshments.
13, 1842.
YARD SALE bake sale by
On this day In hl.story:
Women's Auxiliary, Veterans .
In '1607, English cOlonists Memorial Hospital, In E.M.S.
landed near the James River bullding rear of hospital, 9:30
In Virginia to estabUsh their a.m. to 4 p.m. Friday and
first permanent residence In Saturday.
the New World. It was called
SATURDAY
Jamestown.
BAKE SALE Saturday,
In 1848, the United Slates beginning 9 a.m. at Rutland
declared war on Melllco.
Department Store by RuUand
In 1956, 73 Indonesians Baseball League. AD parenl.s
were drowned In a pleasure of players asked to donate
craft sinking in the Java Sea. baked goods. Also boys
· In 1975, the Unjted States reporting for tag day
regained possession of the Saturday are to bring own
"Mayaguez" In the Gulf of container for collections.
.Slam after American planes FISH FRY beginning at 11
had
destroyed
three a.m. Saturday at Middleport
Cambodl~n gu~boats that F 1 r e De p a r t m e n t
bad partlCipatedm capture of headquarters; . sandwiches
the _cargo vessel.
and dinners; bake sale also at
same time by the depart-

Mra. Dale Walburn and
daUIIhter, Jill, Middleport,
Ulilted by Mrs. Glaclya Rife,
entertained recently wltb a
ahower boncxiiJg Mia Janelle
Kuhn, brlcte.Uct of Jack
Kaylor, Letart, W. Va.
Helping with arrangementt,
for the shower was Mrs.
William
Lambert
of
Pomeroy.
The Walburn h&lt;me was
decorated with yellow
wedding bells and _ fr~sh
nowers. Mrs. Gladys Rife
conducted a game with the
priJe going to Mrs. Margaret
Bailey. Allee Hwnphreys also
won a prize, as did Mrs. Eva
walker honored for being the
mother ·with tbe moat
children in celebraUon of
Mother's Day.
Miss Kuhn was UBlsted in
opening her gUts by Jill
Walburn, Debbl Bailey and
Lola Walker. Refreshments
II wedding beD sandwiches,
Bilad, punch, nuta alid mlnta
were served. Sachet favors
were given to the guesta. ·
On the guest lilt besldl!ll
th~ named were Mrs. Elroy
Kaylor, mother of. the
prospective bridegroom;
Mrs. Bea Kuhn, mother of the
bride-elect, Mrs . Robin
Wolfe, sl.ster of the honoree,
and Shawna Wolfe, her niece,
Marie C. Roush, Rhonda
Wold, Janet Dudley, Bernice
Dudley, Agnes Edwards,
Julia Willoughby, Allee
Uevlng, Inez Roush, Caddie
Wickham, Tina Nleri, Shelly
Wood; Harriet Sterrett,
Bernice Carpenter, Amy
Humphreys, Mrs. Ellen
Forbes, Mrs. Vera Pickens,
Mrs. Karla Ingels, Mrs.
J~ph Cook, Mrs. Lee Reed
and Lynn and Mrs. Olive
Michael.
RUMMAGE SALE
Junior American Legion
AIIDliary of Feeney-Bennett
Post 128 will hold a rqmmage
sale at the hall on 'l'lluraday,
Friday and Saturday of next
week. Re~ldenta with items to
conbibute to' the sale are .
asked to contact either Mrs.
Albert •Roush or Mrs. Roy
Hendricks. The sale wilL
begin each day at 9:30 a.m.

gardeners enjoy trip
Turner provided a lllble
arran1ement of aprln1'
nowera. Each one atlendlnl
wu given a gift and the
grandmotben and ,treatgrandmotben were Introduced. Mrs. Ml&amp;lcko pve
a reading 1bout Arbor Day
and elqllalned the cauUon '
be used ln planllnC lreee too
CEREMONIAL HEW
near a street or under powar
~rs . Jean Moore, Mrs. lines.
Mary HUI!hes, Mrs. Gertrude
Program by the Good Luck
Mitchell, Mrs. Cora Beellle, me.mbers Included 'tbe
Mrs. Narie Hawkins and Johnnie Appleseetl g~ce, roll
Miss Shirley Beegle, local, call with the name of an
and Mrs. Lora Byera of annual newer, and several
Gallipolis, attended the readings such as "The
spring ceremonial of Thea Garden Path", "Sprlnfl",
Court No. 5 Ladles Oriental "God's Greatest Handwork",
Shrine of Nt:l'tb America, "The Wladom of My Mother".
Saturday In the Rhodes
The host club aerved ple,Center at the Ohio State sa ndwlches, potato chips ,
Potted . begonias were Fairgrounds.
colfee and tea.
preaented to each mother at
Sabbath School at the
Pomeroy Seventh-day Ad·
venllst Church Saturday,
May 8.
The oldest mother present,
THE SHOE WITH THE BEAUTIFUL FIT
Mrs. Effie !llack, was
awarded a large pot of a
mixed variety of' flowers, as
was the youngest, Mrs.
Louise Staata. Presentations
were made by tile Sabbath
School Supt. Rita White
asslsted by her huaband,
Joseph.
RUTLAND - Rutland
Garden Club members were
In Athens Tuesday ft:l' a
therapy program with the
Good Luck Garden Club at
the Athens Mental Health
Center.
~
Mrs. Victor Nelson wu
chairman for the therapy
program and was ac.
c001panled by Mrs. Charles
Foley, Mrs. Carl Denl.son,
Mrs, Harry Wllllamaon, MlaB
Ruby Diehl and Mrs. Harvey
Erlewlne_. Thirty-four .
members of tho! Good Luck

Club attended a10118 with
Mrs. Betty MlJicko, advlaor,
and a member of the
Richland Garden Club.
The Rutland Club provided
petunias which wlll be
plan ted in the greenhouse al
the Center . Mrs . Ralph

Mothers given
potted begonias

NATURALIZERe
Navy

Black

White

S'l'UDENT ARRESTED

COLUMBUS (UP!)
Robert Brian Canter, 19, a
student at Antioch College In
Yellow Springs, was to
appear
before
U.S.
Magl.strate Mark R. Abel
today on a charge of
Interstate transportation of
stolen property.
Canter was arrested In
Yellow Springs Wednesday
by the FBI In connection witb
the theft of a Picasso
painting, "Abstraction 1916",
stolen from the Columbus
Gallery of Fine Arts Dec. 13.
The painting was recovered
last week In San Francl.sco.
Canter was held In the
Franklin County jail after his
arrest. Local pollee were
expected to file theft charges
against him, the FBI said.

OPEN

FRIDAY

nL a

Marguerite's ·Shoes
102 E. Main

Betty Ohlinger
Pomeroy

SPRING
SEI.LINO SPREE
\

. Pinto is America's best selling compact car and th e Pinlo Pony MPG model gets
38 miles to lhe gallon on the highway and 25 in town.·

111imt's_al!:X\!l~

..

DER&amp;L

VILLAGE PHARMACY
NEW HAVEN, W.VA.

$745

ntURSDh
MEIGS COUNTY Hwn(llle
Society, 7:30 p.m. Thursday
at the Middleport village haD.
Public invited.
MOTHER - DAUGHTER
banquet at the Middleport
First United Presbyterian
Owrch, 6:30 p.m.· Members
to take a covered dl.sh, meat
and beverage. Dessert will
be ftrnl.shed.
ROCK Springs Grange, 8
p.m. Thursday. Stale baking
contest to be he)d. Colwnbla
Grange to vl.slt.
· PRECEPI'OR Beta Beta
Sorority Thursday, 7:45p.m.
.at the home of Eleanor
Thomas. Lucille Wllllamson,
co-hostess.
HARRISONVILLE
Chapter, O.E.S., grand lnspecUon, Thursday, 7:30p.m.
Inspecting officer will be
worthy patron, Dr. Howard I.
Shull. Dinner will be served
at 5:45.
·
BRADBURY PTA, 7:30
p.m. Thursday. Installation
of officers.
EASTERN LOCAL School
District bands In concert,
7:30 p. m. Thursday at hlgh
school auditorium.

INSULATION

WONDER GLOW

E1inln""]ifi.%i~WI
• •• EXCEPT THE FISH

Operetta
i's enjoye¢

Calendar

Mrs. Floyd Weber, R. D.
Long Bottom, joined Mr. and
Mrs. Wllllam Strauss, John
Strauss, Mrs. Irene Strauss
and C. H. Ingraham at
Barlow Friday evening and
attended the patriotic
operetta, " Revolutionary
Ideas", given by the seventb
and elchth grade chorus of
11le Barlow-Vincent School in
the Warren High School
auditorium.
Mrs. Patricia Yeago was
RUTLAND BASEBALL
direct« of the presentaUon. League Thursday 5:30p.m. at
A pound shower was held coffee and punch were ser· Mahala Strauss, grand· home of Gene Wl.se, Salem
Monday night at the Brad- ved. Attencjing were Mt. and dalll!hter of the Webera and St., Rutland.
MEIGS COUNTY Chapter
bury Church of &lt;luist for Mrs. Walter Bunce, Mr. and Lena Phalln, daughter of Mr.
and
Mrs.
Terry
Phalln,
of
American Red Cross
Kim Cole, new pastor, and his Mrs. Richard WUI, Mr. and .
former
residents
of
Pomeroy,
Thursday
7 p.m. in cafeteria
wife, Darlene. The Martha . Mrs. Dale Barnhart, Allee
were.
members
of
the
east.
at
Veterans
Memorial
Class hosted the shower. The Johnston, Mr. and , Mrs.
Mrs.
Weber
was
an
overnight
Hospital.
mlnl.ster was also presented Robert King, Mr. and Mrs.
MEIGS COUNTY Pioneer
with a money tree from the Wllllam Bailey, Rodney and guest at tbe Strauss home
near
Barlow.
and
Historical Society
Rita,
Michael
MIDer,
ArOne
h
churc.
meeting
for those Interested
Soli King gave devotions Davis, Mr. and Mrs. William
in planning for Heritage
and refreshments of pie, King and Kevl!i.
DIRECTOR NAMED
Sunday at the musewn, 7:30
COLUMBUS (UP!)
p.m. Thursday. The museum
Perry L. Smith, of Weston, will be open only by appolntW.Va., a former Ohio ment unUI Heritage Sunday,
Stateliouse CXlrrespondent, June 20.
has
been
named
MISSIONARY SOCIETY,
communications director by First Baptist Church,
the Ohio Citizens for Reagan. Pomeroy, with Glenna
Smith, 45, a former ll'ess · Rummel to present the
secretary for William B. program on India; 7:30 p.tn .
Saxbe, was a pollUcal writer · Thursday.
for the Associated Press IIi
FRIDAY
Columbus from 1969-75. More
MARY SHRINE 37, Order
recently he was asalgned to of the White Shrine of
AP's Charleston, W.Va., Jerusalem, Friday, 8 p.m.
bureau, from which he 1 Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
resigned to start his owrf· ' PoUuck refreshments.
M_!l,dleport, Ohio
public relations consulting
POMONY GRANGE, Rock
firm.
Springs
grange haD, 8 p.m.
Ph 992 532 1

BOd

LITEI

bouae-to-h0111e. ·volunteen
wllllilao be on atrtet CO!'Il4!n
In Pomeroy and Middleport
accepting donations. The
fund drive will begin ate a.m.
and conclude at 5 p.m. All
volunteers collecllnC funds
will have tap to give to th1111e
who contribute.
Helping wltb the fund drive
will be cub scouts, boy scouts,
Brownies and girl scouts,
their leaders and parents.
Mrs. Dalley aska for
generous contrlbu,tlons so
that the Red Cross will have
funds to distribute In time of
dla!lster wherever It may
occur In the county.

:Miss
Kuhn
Social
entertained

The Joint Apprenticeship Committee' will select qualified applicants In conformity
with slandordsapproved by lhe U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Apprenticeship
and Training as of 1970. ,
The selection of an apprentice is based on the following qualifications.
Sllail not bt less than 17 ••••s oflqe, Age limit. all persons over 11 years.
Sllall hove 1 pronounced optlludtond Interest In this Crall.
Must have 1 high school edvcallon or Its oqulvolent, which shall Include olltast 2
units of mothemalks.
Must be physically copable of performing the work of tho lndustryond tha
Commlttoo may require the Apprentlctlo provide proof of such.
Shall provide proof of their age ar\d educollon.
Must make oppllcollon for apprenticeship to the Committee on a Form supplied by
the Commlttoo and satlsfoclorlly pass optltuda tests suppHtd for Carpenltrs
Apprentices at Bureou of Employment Centers.
May be given consldaralion for previous Military Service.
Personal Interview by Joint ApprentlctshiP Committee will be set up for those who
stnd In complete required information, providing there Is a need for Apprentice In
Applicants localle.

..

EASTERN Band Banquet,
Saturday, 6:30 p. m. at high
school. Tuppers Plains area
residents take vegetables;
Chester., _desserta, and
Riverview, salad. Ham,
sloppy jOI!IJ and beverage to
be provided. Parents and
friends of aU band studlints
from grade five up are
welcome.
ALL 'YOtinCWi8ii!Dg tO
play on ~ Melga County
Senior Babe Ruth team meet
at Mlddlepcrt Park Saturday
at 5 p. m. All boys back from
last year bring ID card or
bittb cerUflcate.
MEIGS COUNTY Relired
Teachers Association,
Saturday, Middleport
Firemen's lounge, potluck
dinner at 12 noon. Paul Caacl
will be the speaker. All
retired teachers, their
husbands or wives Invited.
Each l.s asked to bring a
· hlllorlcal fact about Melcs
County.
SUNDAY
COUNTY-WIDE prayer
meeting, 2 p,m. SUnday at
Bald Knob Gospel Mission ·
with Glen Bissell, class
leader.

Maverick is America's favorite family size car with more
!rouble free miles than any other car on th e road today.

Muatang 11 ••• Boredom 0 . . . America's fQvorlte
sporty car takes the dull out of driving.

America's Favorites Are At Small Car Headquarters

W©M~

CP@[fJID [Q)[gm[1[§~

See·Him Today.

•According lo EPA e1!1matet; -..our mlluge mar w11rr .

�.·
6 _ The Daily Sentinei,Middleport·Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Ma~ 13, 1976

, ....,

w" . .

" .., . ., ~..

·=ow ;:;;

•·

7- The O.Uy Sentinel. Mlddleport·J'«!l.eroy, 0., Thursday, May 13,19'16

Nancy Collins elected presidentjl.,.,.~a;;;;tio~.e:R:;;·w&gt;z,,l OES finalizes

Red Cross drive set Saturday

p
t
•
pia
tns ec ton . ns

t

small shade trees,, fruit lrel!ll
By Helen and Sue Bottel
~
!i"d shrubs, and to remember i::
~ •
mplanting gladioli to get the
.
AreBabletSuperfliJCJIIIToday7
bulbs six to seven Inches READERS ALL:
deep.
Recently we published a letter fr&lt;m "NONPARENT," a
·
Organic gardening was the young man who lnsiBted children aren't worth the bother and
HARRISONVIU.E _Final
topic of the ecology me.sa~e he and lils fiance plan NO repopulation program. He predicted plana for lnapectton to be held King, Paul Pauley, Larry
by Mrs. Thoma who told close to half of our presently childless readers wbould qree at 7:30 tonight were made at Wells. Other vlall«s were
about the Swedish people's with him.
the Wedneaday nlchlmeetlftc Grace Colwell, Catherine
rejuvenation of a lake by
Sue replied, "I'D bet you're wrong by at least 40per cent," ol Harrlaonvllle Chapter 256, CO!weU, Catherine Shenefield
and Unda Vaughan, aD of
PIIIJlplng the waste from the and asked for a vote.
.
Order of the Eutern Star.
bottom and using it as ferIn thl.s Instance, Sue was wrong. Our correapondenta were
Mr. and Mra. Stanley Wllkesvllle; .Chlorua Gaul,
lilizer. She spoke of the evenlydistriooted, for and against future parenthood_ but we Kaldor, worthy matron and Pomeroy; Lola Ann Walker,
possibility of doing the same must admit, "Nonparent's" letter was weD loaded to bring out worthy patron, reminded Lucasville Chapter;
for Lake Erie and other lakes voters who agreed with him.
members to take cOOides, Genevieve Morgan, Thea
and rivers which are filling
However, our nexi question (aimed exclusively at sandwichea and jeUo salads. Chapter, Glouster, and
Mae
Roush,
up with waste'.. Mrs. Thoma parents), "If you had It to do over again, would you 11!111 have The dinner l!lll be aerved al Minnie
lllso told of a farmer who children?" trough! a totaUy different response. Over 91 per 5:45p.m. Arrangements were University Chapter,
finds that the waste from a cent answered resoundingly, "Yes, yes,:YES!"
. · made to give the worthy Columbus. Betty lllld Doug
grain dryer on his farm l.s
In TIDS Instance, Sue's estimate was cliMet' than mine. grand patron, Dr. Howard I. Blahop as the asaoclate
excellent mulch and fertilizer She predicled very few parenl.s would opt for ''no kids" the Sln!Jiand Mrs. Loetta Hayes, matron and UBOclate patron
for the garden. She said he second time around, while I figured perhaps !5 per cent might deputy grand matron, gifts at ol Harrisonville- Chapter.
A card of thankl was read
mixes the material with ·feel dl.sillusloned or short-dlanged.
Inspection.
sawdust.
In today's and lhl.s week-end's column we're !l'lntlng
Initiatory work was from the Douglu Blahop
She also lnld of the ex- samplesofourheavy"Bables : YesorNo?"rnail.Re.tldoo :
exemplified for two can- famlly.lnvltatlons were read
perience of a Kentucky forest
+++
dictates and white Bibles were from the chapters of
ranger who cleared three DEAR RAP:
presented by Charles King Wllkesvllle, Amesville,
•
acres of land on a hill, spent
I find it very hard to believe people wbo have children andglflaofjewelrybyHarold Marietta, Beverly and New
Marshfield.·
Also
l'el!d
were
the summer burning the would write and say they regret being parents, but 1 Rice to the candldatea. It was
stumps and debris, and then understand that a GaUup poll indicated 10 per cent were In this noted that the furniture bas· conununlcatlons from Grand
mixed the materials with category, while another advice colwnnl.st's mall (NOT been
refinished
and Chapter and from Galle Dew,
sawdust to come up with an Generatloq Rap's) was some 70 per cent anti-cl!Udren. This is uphotatered in blue velvet by president of District 2.
Sandwiches, pie, potato
organic• fertilizer which totally unreal, and either she loaded the questloo for ,"No" Harold Rice.
chips,
~offee and tea were
produced bumper crops.
votes, or she has weird readers.
Guests Introduced were
served
by Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Terrell and her
Our three children have given us much happiness. A little Mrs. Barbara ROUsh, worthy
Harold
Rice,
Mr. and Mrs.
daughter, Mrs . Martha pain too, but how dull O\lf Uvea might have been without tbem! matron of Racine Chapter;
LaiTy
Wells,
Mrs. Donna
\
Stuble, served refreshments. We 're a sharing family, and our kids Increased our ability to Sherry Might, wortby matron
Others attending were Dollie love each other. - HAPPY PARENTS, HAPPY MATES
of Wllkesvllle Chapter, Morris and Mrs. Audra WeD.
Hayes, Ruth .Moore and DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
lllsbict24,andJamesRoush,
POLLY'S PROBLEM
___A"lc_oolt_o...,ffine l.'ir1tn ~caP" "
see. Why don't they mark Torruny Miller.
·
I
admire
those
wbo
do
not
want
children
and
do
not
have
Racine,
worthy patron. Also
twQJ 10 11!i.. tspnngshades ,..
DEAR POLLY - Garbage them on top ? - Y.J.F.
by Haggar's S27.so Com fan ~
them - for their insight. They know themaelves; they are not Introduced were pasI
disposals did away with
The annual
DEAR POLLY - Tell Fran
Plw top. Andit'sdesigned !
selfl.sh, oot wl.se.
matrons, Bernice Hoffman,
smelly garbage calls, but I have made several hooked
to mlx and match Yt.ith a
reunion and
I am also grateful to them, for they aDow us NOT to feel Amber Warner, Lol.s Pauley,
what can one do with a smelly rugs and have found the best
variety of Haggar slacks.
:
guilty
In
ll'Oduclng
more
than
our
aUotted
quota
of
what
is
also
a
grand
page,
Grace
garbage disposal ? I keep all material to back them with is
banquet of
Featunxl S20Comfon
It? - 1.07 kids per couple. We have two, we'd like to have at Wilson, Connie Smith,
easy to reach surfa ces burlap. I like to turn the
Plus slacks ar&lt; a gingham
· Rutland
least
one more baby. We're not afraid of the future or resentful Marjorie
Rice,
Ruth
scrubbed clean but is there edges of mine under and slip
chockandhaveanExpand. ,
over "lost freedom." we're having a baD! - LOVERS AND Erlewlne, Bernice Wlnn,
anything that will get it really stitch them and THEN put on
O·Miltic'~ waist band thi t
High School
PARENTS
Pearl Canady, Avanell
stretchesto k~ you
;
clean. I am holding my nose a coat of a latex base seaming
Will
be
held
at
Rutland
GQmfortable.
:
DEAR
HBLEN
AND
SUE
:
GeOrge,
lllld
Pauline
Atkins,
as I walt for a solution. - adhesive that I bought at a
Elementary, Sat., May 22,
Both are machine wa.h. •
My daughter, 25, had every good thing - private schools, and past patrons, Norman
MARILYN.
carpet store. A quart cost
at
6:30 p.m. Round and
able in a texturizedweaveof :
must~ lessons, orthodontia, trips around the world, parents Will, Harold Rice, Charles· square
EAR MARILYN - A about five dollars but this
dancing from 10
who studied Spack and Gesell.
·
I00% Dacron• polyester.
garbage disposal repair proects the rug, seals all
p.m. till 1 a.m. Music by
She
is
a
lemon!
Selfl.sh,
foul-mouthed,
foul-tempered,
a
Slacks, $20
the Slringdusters. Final
service 'very kJndly gave' me those stitches and would help
total pain In the neck. Please advl.se people not to have kids.
date for reservations must
the following remedy lor your preven t skidding If put on a
Top, $27.50
What a waste of love ! - M.E.P.
be in by May 15th to the
problem. Put plug In the bare floor . - MARION.
RAP :
Rutland
Alumni
••••
drain; completely fill wllh hot
Association , Box 64
DEAR POLLY - After,
.
As the father of three, aged 16 to 22, I can say children are
A thought for the day:
water to which you add one- searching un successfully
Rutland,
Ohio
45775. Money
the most precious and !l'iceless assets of life - If you are true, American poet Rai(Xl Waldo
fourth to one-half cup am· through a maze of cookbooks
must
accompany
loyal
and honest parents.
Emerson said, "Nature and
reservation, reserv~tions .
monla and enough dish· trying ·to find the recipe for
My wife and I both worked while ral.slng the kids. We're books belong to tbe eyes that $5.00, Each alumni may
washing detergent to make a something we had reaDy
bring • ]uest.
professionally
employed (both have lll11,91er's degrees) In see them.''
good suds. Remove plug, turn enjoyed, l discovered a way
MIDOLEPORT
rewarding occupations&lt;But the children, although sometimes
unit and the water faucet on to keep track of favorite
Uring, were always very much Included and wanted.
and let It run. This should recipes. I now put the naJile of
One suggestion : spe'nd a few years as a COilple before you
dissolve any lingering grease a favorite on a recipe file
A REVIVAL will start al have babies. You'll appreciate them more and do a bettar job
or food particles that must be card along with the name of
raising them if you're nearer 30 lhap 20 when you start your
the Church of God on
causing the odor, as the trap the cookbook it is in and the
family.
- JOE
Dudding Lane In Mason
under the sink Is to prevent page number. It is now so
DEAR
HELEN
ANti' SUE :
Sunday with the Rev .
sewer gas from coming back. simple to find a cookbook
We
couldn't
wait to take a childless vacation - our first
- POLLY.
recipe for a repeat per· Harold Ganoe of Romney since the kids started coming. But three days Into It, we looked
as eva ng elist. Services
formance . - JANET C.
begin at 7:30 each evening. al each other and said In unison, "Let's go home to our
DEAR POLLY - When
DEAR POLLY - While
family!" - HAPPY WITH THE UTTLE MONSTERS
Rev. Chester Tennant and
anyone, a child or grownup, visi ling our children In Las
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
the congregation Invite the
has a blister on the foot , Vegas I noticed how shiny
I have two teenagers and am very proud of them. But I'ci
public.
everything seems to irritate their dishes and glassware
decide
NOT to have children if I had It to do over again. The
it. We put a corn pad with a were. I learned they use a
burdens and responsibilities are just too great. Decisions are
hole In the center over the dishwashing product with
overwhelming, as are expenses. We would have heen a happier
blister. This helps the pain ammonia in it but that I am
couple had we remained childless. - LOVES THEM, BUT
and heals at the same time. - not able to buy here In Ohio.
NOT
AGAIN
VIOLA.
.
Now I aijd one or two drops of
DEAR POLLY - My Pet ammonia to my dl.shwashlng
Peeve Is with the marking of detergent when I do the
food item~ in stores. Why do dishes, rinse in very hot
they always put the sticker water and am amazed at how
price 9n ·top of the recipes on they shine. - MRS. T. K.
Sherry King, daughter of sive player in basketbaU at
the packages or over the
Vou wlll receive a doUar If
Mr. and Mrs. William King, the college. She was also
listed ingredients, when so Polly uses your favorite
The
Southern
Ohio Middleport, Route I, and a recognized for being the
many people are on special hom emaking Idea, Pet
senior at Malone College, highest rebounder and the
diel.s and must look at the Peeve, Polly's Problem or Regional Council of Parents Canton, was awarded two highest scorer on the team for
lngredlenl.s. You remove the · solution to a problem. Write Without Partners will hold an trophies and an engraved the year. The . engraved
sticker and off comes the PoUy In care of this news- "Ex panding Horizon s " plaque at an all-sports plaque was a senior award to
WONDER FLOW FlAT
program Friday, Saturday
•
paper with what you need to paper.
Ml.ss
King,
who
also
received
banquet
at
the
college
.and Sunday at the Holiday
engraved medals from other
PRIMARY USES: This paint is for use on exterior surfaces such
Inn in Chillicothe. Purpose of Tuesday night.
members
of the team.
Miss
King
received
the
the program is to train
wood siding, trim, shakes, wood shingles, weathered asbe
Mr. and Mrs. King were In
leaders and assist struggling trophy for the most valuable
shingles, unglazed brick, stucco, cement and cinder block. FINISI11ill
player of the year along with Canton for the banquet.
chapters.
a
trophy
fnr
the
best
defenAll single parents, mem·
Flat. COVERAGE: Approximately 400 sq. ft. per gallon on smoott-.
bers and non-members, are
~•.,.:...... surfaces. TINTING: Hundreds of additional colt;&gt;rs may be obta
For the
invited. Those· Interested In
by tinting Wonder Flow Acrylic Tint Bases .with Trend ition Ho11s4
going as a group should meet ATTEND GRADUATION
at Spring Valley Shopping Mrs . Eva Dessauer,
Tire Prices
Colorants. _DO NOT tint with Color-in-Oil. Standard colors may
Center on Rt. 35 at 7 p.m. Pomeroy, and Mrs. Joan
inter-mixed or let-down with 20 Chateau White.' APPLICATION
Friday. Reservations are to While , Middleport, spent
In the Area
be made directly with the Saturday in Montgomery, W.
Brush, roller or spray. THINNING: Requires no thinning for
Holiday Inn at 1250 Bridge Va., where they attended the
It's
applications. If thinning is necessary, use only clean water.
St., Chillicothe, Ohio.
grad uation of Michael
·· ·
ROD &amp; REEL
Hendricks from
West
Virginia Technical School.
REG. PRICE
Michael Is the grandson of
Mrs , Dessauer and the
•8.95 GALLON
RECOVERING
nephew of Mrs. White.
773-5881
Mason,W. Va.
&amp; Reel Combination , a supe r
William Snouffer
Pome(oy, Is a surglcai
I on a perfectly balanced 5- foot rod.
patient
at
Riverside
Methodist Hospital in
DON'T GO NEAR THE WATER
Columbus. He is recovering
. . . without a John son reel!
GAllON
from the removal of a ruptured disc and Is in
satisfactnry condition. His
room number is 6007 for those
who wish to send cards.
Mrs. Nancy collins was
elected president of the
WindingTraUGardenCiubat
meeting Thursday night at
~e home of Mrs. Wilma
Terrell
Othe~ officers named for
the 19711-77 year were Mrs.
Susie Miller vice president·
Mrs. Cora ' Beegle, second
vice· president; Mrs. Alice
Th ompson , treasurer, and
Mrs . Pat Thoma, secretary.
A report on the recent
regional meeting at the
Athens Methodist Church was
given by Mrs. Thompson and
Mrs. Beegle. Mrs. Addalou
·Lewis displayed several wild
flower books and Mrs .
Thompson showed sheets
from the Washingtnn Post on
wild flowers. Preceding the
meeting the members lnok a
nature tour on Long Hollow
and Bunker Hill.
May baskets were the

arrangemenl.o! for the month
and winning ribbons were
Mrs. Terrell, blue; Mrs.
Thompson, red, and Mrs.
Thoma, white. Iris were
displayed with ribbons being
. awarded to Mrs. Thompson,
blue, for white and salmon
colored Iris, and red ribbons
for yellow and purple Iris.
Mrs. Addalou Lewl.s received
a blue ribbon for her white
iris.
To open the meeting Mrs.
Terrell read a poem, "A
Child 's Faith" and gave
prayer. The garden caleodar
for May was given by Mrs.
Thompson who suggested
that the vegetable garden be
planted as soon as the soli Is
ready, that annulll flower
seed by planted, that rose
bushes be dusted, and that old
mums be divided and reset,
and new ones put out. She
also said it was time to plant

Polly's Pointers
Ammonia sweetens
garbage disposal

.
BAHR CLOTHIERS...~
...

Program
pfanned

Sherry King awarded

A drive to replenilh the
diluter fund ,of the Meigs
County Chapter of the
An\erican Red CI'Q!a will be
held thla Saturday, Mrs.
Rhonda Dalley, disaster
chairman and fund drive
coordinator, announced
today.

~-

Dalley reports that_
the disaster fund was
depleted to 8111st the Rutland .
fluh Oood vlcttma Jut year.
At that Ume nearly M,OOO was
used to replace necessities
loet In the high water.
'l1le drive Saturday will be
county-wide and conducted

Mother-daughter
banquet planned
.

Mother-da1111hter banquet
Mrs. Mary Hanim led In the
plans were completeQ at the Bible study on "The Com. recent meeting of the plete Christian". In the abAmerican Lutheran Church sence of the prealdent, Mrs.
Women of St. Paul and St. Lois Cleland presided. Mrs.
John Lutheran Churches at Rachael Downie closed the
the Pomeroy Church.
meeting with a meditaUon
The covered dish dinner and prayer. Linda Hamm
will be held at 6 p.tn. Monday served refreshments. Others
In the fellowship haD.- Plans attending were Mrs. Elva
were also made. for a coffee Cottr111, Mrs. Virginia
hour honoring ne\V people of Thorne, Mrs. Betty Young,
the church to be . held on Mrs. Veda Davl.s and Mrs.
Sunday, May 23 at the Barbara Fry. ·
·church.

Pound shower fetes
new pastor and wife

Blown Into Your Walls

''free Estimates"

FOREMAN AND

:=====·:;;·:::·=======~

PAINTS

WE SUPPLY

-

· - ~-• ~-

BEND

nRE CENTER

·.

$6.25

SALE PRICE

LEGAL NOT ICE

~l

The Public Utilities Com·
mission of Ohio has set for
public heari ng Case No.
76-163-EL-FAC, to review
the operation of the fu el
adjustment clause and 1he
fuel procurement prac·
tices and policies of the
Columbus &amp; Southern
Oh io Eleclric Company,
on May 17, 1976, at 9:30
A.M. at the offices of !he
Commission, 111 North
High Street, Columbus,
Ohio . All interested per-

J

WE
AI! AU
NEW &amp;
REfll1
HRS.

8:30 Ill 8:00
DAILY

sons will be given an op.

Star Supply Co.
949-2525

Racine, 0.

portunity to De heard.
Further information may
pe obtained by contacti ng
th e Commi ssion.
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMM ISSION OF OHIO
by Randall G. Applegate,
Secre1ary

GLOSS LATEX HOUSE PAINT

WE PRICE

REG. PRICE '11A5

SUNDAY

GALLON

MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

s.

Opening Ranks
·,

POMEROY - The Carpenters Local Union 650 of Pomeroy ii accepllng
appllcollons for apprentice carpenters in a new class to start next September.
Henry C. Peery, business representative, said appllunts living north of Rt. 35 In
GoUla ond Meigs counties and Lawrence couniy east of Route 7i5 are illglbletoapply
r0f1ordlessof race, religion, color, creed or natlona Iorigin.

GALLON

Appitcaltons will be accepted 11211 E. Ma~n 51., I'Omeroy, unoo 4576P, during the
month of May. Office hoururelto 10 a.m. Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thurs.
Clay only.

•7••

SAU PIIQ

VAu.EY• LUMBER
&amp;SUPPLY CO.
t911H9 ·

Avn .

' 01110,

I

Carpen~ers

REG. PRICE
'9.25 GAI.LOff

Number 101-1 analyzed super one coat white house paint
non chalking, oil base.
'
One coat g!ves two coat appearance and protectipn.
Saves you t1me and money. Heavy-bodied, high titanium.
Pure linseed oil formula provides excellent protection.
(May Be Tinted)

CLOSED

Is a former
Friday.
National
Grange
'111Smith
the Uma
News· employe
and: the dress
contest
to be held.
Dayton Dally News.
SPECIAL SERVICES at
Rutland Church of God
The Alamana~
,,Thursday and Friday 7:30
United Press International •: p.m. ·_Marilin Hoschar, guest
Today is Thursday, May 13, speaker. Everyone welcome.
the !34th day of 1976 with 232
ANNU_AL Trinity' Ch · h
to follow,
,
urc
'The moon Is full.
mother-daughter reception
The morning stars are Friday, 7:30 p.m. at the
Venus and Jupiter.
church.
.
The evening stara are MerSQUARE Dance Friday
cury, Mars and Saturn.
from 8 to ll p.m. sponsored
Those born on thl.s date are by Harrisonvllle Semor
under the sign of Taurus.
Cil!zens. Music by the
British composer Sir Stnngdusters. Adults $1,
Arthur Sullivan (of Gilbert children under 12 free .
and Sulllvan) was born May Refreshments.
13, 1842.
YARD SALE bake sale by
On this day In hl.story:
Women's Auxiliary, Veterans .
In '1607, English cOlonists Memorial Hospital, In E.M.S.
landed near the James River bullding rear of hospital, 9:30
In Virginia to estabUsh their a.m. to 4 p.m. Friday and
first permanent residence In Saturday.
the New World. It was called
SATURDAY
Jamestown.
BAKE SALE Saturday,
In 1848, the United Slates beginning 9 a.m. at Rutland
declared war on Melllco.
Department Store by RuUand
In 1956, 73 Indonesians Baseball League. AD parenl.s
were drowned In a pleasure of players asked to donate
craft sinking in the Java Sea. baked goods. Also boys
· In 1975, the Unjted States reporting for tag day
regained possession of the Saturday are to bring own
"Mayaguez" In the Gulf of container for collections.
.Slam after American planes FISH FRY beginning at 11
had
destroyed
three a.m. Saturday at Middleport
Cambodl~n gu~boats that F 1 r e De p a r t m e n t
bad partlCipatedm capture of headquarters; . sandwiches
the _cargo vessel.
and dinners; bake sale also at
same time by the depart-

Mra. Dale Walburn and
daUIIhter, Jill, Middleport,
Ulilted by Mrs. Glaclya Rife,
entertained recently wltb a
ahower boncxiiJg Mia Janelle
Kuhn, brlcte.Uct of Jack
Kaylor, Letart, W. Va.
Helping with arrangementt,
for the shower was Mrs.
William
Lambert
of
Pomeroy.
The Walburn h&lt;me was
decorated with yellow
wedding bells and _ fr~sh
nowers. Mrs. Gladys Rife
conducted a game with the
priJe going to Mrs. Margaret
Bailey. Allee Hwnphreys also
won a prize, as did Mrs. Eva
walker honored for being the
mother ·with tbe moat
children in celebraUon of
Mother's Day.
Miss Kuhn was UBlsted in
opening her gUts by Jill
Walburn, Debbl Bailey and
Lola Walker. Refreshments
II wedding beD sandwiches,
Bilad, punch, nuta alid mlnta
were served. Sachet favors
were given to the guesta. ·
On the guest lilt besldl!ll
th~ named were Mrs. Elroy
Kaylor, mother of. the
prospective bridegroom;
Mrs. Bea Kuhn, mother of the
bride-elect, Mrs . Robin
Wolfe, sl.ster of the honoree,
and Shawna Wolfe, her niece,
Marie C. Roush, Rhonda
Wold, Janet Dudley, Bernice
Dudley, Agnes Edwards,
Julia Willoughby, Allee
Uevlng, Inez Roush, Caddie
Wickham, Tina Nleri, Shelly
Wood; Harriet Sterrett,
Bernice Carpenter, Amy
Humphreys, Mrs. Ellen
Forbes, Mrs. Vera Pickens,
Mrs. Karla Ingels, Mrs.
J~ph Cook, Mrs. Lee Reed
and Lynn and Mrs. Olive
Michael.
RUMMAGE SALE
Junior American Legion
AIIDliary of Feeney-Bennett
Post 128 will hold a rqmmage
sale at the hall on 'l'lluraday,
Friday and Saturday of next
week. Re~ldenta with items to
conbibute to' the sale are .
asked to contact either Mrs.
Albert •Roush or Mrs. Roy
Hendricks. The sale wilL
begin each day at 9:30 a.m.

gardeners enjoy trip
Turner provided a lllble
arran1ement of aprln1'
nowera. Each one atlendlnl
wu given a gift and the
grandmotben and ,treatgrandmotben were Introduced. Mrs. Ml&amp;lcko pve
a reading 1bout Arbor Day
and elqllalned the cauUon '
be used ln planllnC lreee too
CEREMONIAL HEW
near a street or under powar
~rs . Jean Moore, Mrs. lines.
Mary HUI!hes, Mrs. Gertrude
Program by the Good Luck
Mitchell, Mrs. Cora Beellle, me.mbers Included 'tbe
Mrs. Narie Hawkins and Johnnie Appleseetl g~ce, roll
Miss Shirley Beegle, local, call with the name of an
and Mrs. Lora Byera of annual newer, and several
Gallipolis, attended the readings such as "The
spring ceremonial of Thea Garden Path", "Sprlnfl",
Court No. 5 Ladles Oriental "God's Greatest Handwork",
Shrine of Nt:l'tb America, "The Wladom of My Mother".
Saturday In the Rhodes
The host club aerved ple,Center at the Ohio State sa ndwlches, potato chips ,
Potted . begonias were Fairgrounds.
colfee and tea.
preaented to each mother at
Sabbath School at the
Pomeroy Seventh-day Ad·
venllst Church Saturday,
May 8.
The oldest mother present,
THE SHOE WITH THE BEAUTIFUL FIT
Mrs. Effie !llack, was
awarded a large pot of a
mixed variety of' flowers, as
was the youngest, Mrs.
Louise Staata. Presentations
were made by tile Sabbath
School Supt. Rita White
asslsted by her huaband,
Joseph.
RUTLAND - Rutland
Garden Club members were
In Athens Tuesday ft:l' a
therapy program with the
Good Luck Garden Club at
the Athens Mental Health
Center.
~
Mrs. Victor Nelson wu
chairman for the therapy
program and was ac.
c001panled by Mrs. Charles
Foley, Mrs. Carl Denl.son,
Mrs, Harry Wllllamaon, MlaB
Ruby Diehl and Mrs. Harvey
Erlewlne_. Thirty-four .
members of tho! Good Luck

Club attended a10118 with
Mrs. Betty MlJicko, advlaor,
and a member of the
Richland Garden Club.
The Rutland Club provided
petunias which wlll be
plan ted in the greenhouse al
the Center . Mrs . Ralph

Mothers given
potted begonias

NATURALIZERe
Navy

Black

White

S'l'UDENT ARRESTED

COLUMBUS (UP!)
Robert Brian Canter, 19, a
student at Antioch College In
Yellow Springs, was to
appear
before
U.S.
Magl.strate Mark R. Abel
today on a charge of
Interstate transportation of
stolen property.
Canter was arrested In
Yellow Springs Wednesday
by the FBI In connection witb
the theft of a Picasso
painting, "Abstraction 1916",
stolen from the Columbus
Gallery of Fine Arts Dec. 13.
The painting was recovered
last week In San Francl.sco.
Canter was held In the
Franklin County jail after his
arrest. Local pollee were
expected to file theft charges
against him, the FBI said.

OPEN

FRIDAY

nL a

Marguerite's ·Shoes
102 E. Main

Betty Ohlinger
Pomeroy

SPRING
SEI.LINO SPREE
\

. Pinto is America's best selling compact car and th e Pinlo Pony MPG model gets
38 miles to lhe gallon on the highway and 25 in town.·

111imt's_al!:X\!l~

..

DER&amp;L

VILLAGE PHARMACY
NEW HAVEN, W.VA.

$745

ntURSDh
MEIGS COUNTY Hwn(llle
Society, 7:30 p.m. Thursday
at the Middleport village haD.
Public invited.
MOTHER - DAUGHTER
banquet at the Middleport
First United Presbyterian
Owrch, 6:30 p.m.· Members
to take a covered dl.sh, meat
and beverage. Dessert will
be ftrnl.shed.
ROCK Springs Grange, 8
p.m. Thursday. Stale baking
contest to be he)d. Colwnbla
Grange to vl.slt.
· PRECEPI'OR Beta Beta
Sorority Thursday, 7:45p.m.
.at the home of Eleanor
Thomas. Lucille Wllllamson,
co-hostess.
HARRISONVILLE
Chapter, O.E.S., grand lnspecUon, Thursday, 7:30p.m.
Inspecting officer will be
worthy patron, Dr. Howard I.
Shull. Dinner will be served
at 5:45.
·
BRADBURY PTA, 7:30
p.m. Thursday. Installation
of officers.
EASTERN LOCAL School
District bands In concert,
7:30 p. m. Thursday at hlgh
school auditorium.

INSULATION

WONDER GLOW

E1inln""]ifi.%i~WI
• •• EXCEPT THE FISH

Operetta
i's enjoye¢

Calendar

Mrs. Floyd Weber, R. D.
Long Bottom, joined Mr. and
Mrs. Wllllam Strauss, John
Strauss, Mrs. Irene Strauss
and C. H. Ingraham at
Barlow Friday evening and
attended the patriotic
operetta, " Revolutionary
Ideas", given by the seventb
and elchth grade chorus of
11le Barlow-Vincent School in
the Warren High School
auditorium.
Mrs. Patricia Yeago was
RUTLAND BASEBALL
direct« of the presentaUon. League Thursday 5:30p.m. at
A pound shower was held coffee and punch were ser· Mahala Strauss, grand· home of Gene Wl.se, Salem
Monday night at the Brad- ved. Attencjing were Mt. and dalll!hter of the Webera and St., Rutland.
MEIGS COUNTY Chapter
bury Church of &lt;luist for Mrs. Walter Bunce, Mr. and Lena Phalln, daughter of Mr.
and
Mrs.
Terry
Phalln,
of
American Red Cross
Kim Cole, new pastor, and his Mrs. Richard WUI, Mr. and .
former
residents
of
Pomeroy,
Thursday
7 p.m. in cafeteria
wife, Darlene. The Martha . Mrs. Dale Barnhart, Allee
were.
members
of
the
east.
at
Veterans
Memorial
Class hosted the shower. The Johnston, Mr. and , Mrs.
Mrs.
Weber
was
an
overnight
Hospital.
mlnl.ster was also presented Robert King, Mr. and Mrs.
MEIGS COUNTY Pioneer
with a money tree from the Wllllam Bailey, Rodney and guest at tbe Strauss home
near
Barlow.
and
Historical Society
Rita,
Michael
MIDer,
ArOne
h
churc.
meeting
for those Interested
Soli King gave devotions Davis, Mr. and Mrs. William
in planning for Heritage
and refreshments of pie, King and Kevl!i.
DIRECTOR NAMED
Sunday at the musewn, 7:30
COLUMBUS (UP!)
p.m. Thursday. The museum
Perry L. Smith, of Weston, will be open only by appolntW.Va., a former Ohio ment unUI Heritage Sunday,
Stateliouse CXlrrespondent, June 20.
has
been
named
MISSIONARY SOCIETY,
communications director by First Baptist Church,
the Ohio Citizens for Reagan. Pomeroy, with Glenna
Smith, 45, a former ll'ess · Rummel to present the
secretary for William B. program on India; 7:30 p.tn .
Saxbe, was a pollUcal writer · Thursday.
for the Associated Press IIi
FRIDAY
Columbus from 1969-75. More
MARY SHRINE 37, Order
recently he was asalgned to of the White Shrine of
AP's Charleston, W.Va., Jerusalem, Friday, 8 p.m.
bureau, from which he 1 Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
resigned to start his owrf· ' PoUuck refreshments.
M_!l,dleport, Ohio
public relations consulting
POMONY GRANGE, Rock
firm.
Springs
grange haD, 8 p.m.
Ph 992 532 1

BOd

LITEI

bouae-to-h0111e. ·volunteen
wllllilao be on atrtet CO!'Il4!n
In Pomeroy and Middleport
accepting donations. The
fund drive will begin ate a.m.
and conclude at 5 p.m. All
volunteers collecllnC funds
will have tap to give to th1111e
who contribute.
Helping wltb the fund drive
will be cub scouts, boy scouts,
Brownies and girl scouts,
their leaders and parents.
Mrs. Dalley aska for
generous contrlbu,tlons so
that the Red Cross will have
funds to distribute In time of
dla!lster wherever It may
occur In the county.

:Miss
Kuhn
Social
entertained

The Joint Apprenticeship Committee' will select qualified applicants In conformity
with slandordsapproved by lhe U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Apprenticeship
and Training as of 1970. ,
The selection of an apprentice is based on the following qualifications.
Sllail not bt less than 17 ••••s oflqe, Age limit. all persons over 11 years.
Sllall hove 1 pronounced optlludtond Interest In this Crall.
Must have 1 high school edvcallon or Its oqulvolent, which shall Include olltast 2
units of mothemalks.
Must be physically copable of performing the work of tho lndustryond tha
Commlttoo may require the Apprentlctlo provide proof of such.
Shall provide proof of their age ar\d educollon.
Must make oppllcollon for apprenticeship to the Committee on a Form supplied by
the Commlttoo and satlsfoclorlly pass optltuda tests suppHtd for Carpenltrs
Apprentices at Bureou of Employment Centers.
May be given consldaralion for previous Military Service.
Personal Interview by Joint ApprentlctshiP Committee will be set up for those who
stnd In complete required information, providing there Is a need for Apprentice In
Applicants localle.

..

EASTERN Band Banquet,
Saturday, 6:30 p. m. at high
school. Tuppers Plains area
residents take vegetables;
Chester., _desserta, and
Riverview, salad. Ham,
sloppy jOI!IJ and beverage to
be provided. Parents and
friends of aU band studlints
from grade five up are
welcome.
ALL 'YOtinCWi8ii!Dg tO
play on ~ Melga County
Senior Babe Ruth team meet
at Mlddlepcrt Park Saturday
at 5 p. m. All boys back from
last year bring ID card or
bittb cerUflcate.
MEIGS COUNTY Relired
Teachers Association,
Saturday, Middleport
Firemen's lounge, potluck
dinner at 12 noon. Paul Caacl
will be the speaker. All
retired teachers, their
husbands or wives Invited.
Each l.s asked to bring a
· hlllorlcal fact about Melcs
County.
SUNDAY
COUNTY-WIDE prayer
meeting, 2 p,m. SUnday at
Bald Knob Gospel Mission ·
with Glen Bissell, class
leader.

Maverick is America's favorite family size car with more
!rouble free miles than any other car on th e road today.

Muatang 11 ••• Boredom 0 . . . America's fQvorlte
sporty car takes the dull out of driving.

America's Favorites Are At Small Car Headquarters

W©M~

CP@[fJID [Q)[gm[1[§~

See·Him Today.

•According lo EPA e1!1matet; -..our mlluge mar w11rr .

�.1- The Daily Sentinel, MidcDeport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, M!J J~
COUNTY : MEIGS
PUBLIC NOTICE
Tho fOllOwing documtnts
were rt&lt;llvld or prepared by
TP'It

Ohio

Environmental

1'176

t- Tile Dilly Smtlnei,Middleport-Poo!eroy, 0., Thunday, May 13, 1976

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION

Ford woos Democrat crossovers in Michigan

NOTICE Is hereby gl'ien

lt'rottctlon Agency ~urtno the that

in

pur•uance of

a

,rtvlous
week .
Anyone R:esOIIJtiOn of the CounCil of
fVgritved or adversely at. the Vlllaoe or M iddleport,
tected by .ls,uance or renewal Ohio, passed on
daY of

the_.,,

By LEWJ8 LORD
VliiUtd rr.. btenatltul
Pre1lclent Ford, · who

•• any permlt(s). llcense(s). March , 1976, there will be
er vlrllnce(s l may reQuest an su bm itted to a vote of the
•dludlcatlon heerlng by People of said VIllage at a

written reQuest pursuant to
Ol'tlo Revised Code Section
J7•l.07 within thirty UOI doys
ef the directors proposed
action to Issue or deny such
.rocuments, that statute does
fiOt provide ror hearlns
requests ro The OEPA on
eppllcatlons , revocatlont ,
tnodltlcat l ons . compla ints ,
Ytrlfled complaints, cer .
tlflcatlons, h~ases , arden, or
llnal actions .
•
With in 30 days of publlcotlon
•• this riotlce •ny person may
llso : (11 submit written
com menta relating to actions ,
Jropostd actions, complaints,
wr verified complaints; (21
tequnt a public meeting
regarding proposed actions ;
lnd-or (3) request notice of
further .
actions
on
proceedings .
Requests for he.,lnos on
~Ina I actions to luue, Cleny .
tnodlty , revoke or ren@w
••rm Its , llcensn or varlancts
that ue not preceded by
Jropoaed act ions and so
tdentlfled In this notice shou ld
•• sent to The Environmental
loord of Review , Sulte30l, 395
E11t Broad Street, Columbus,
Ohio 43216 .
All other requests for a!;t lildl&lt;tllon hearings , ond other
communications concerning
'Ubll&lt;
hearings ,
publ ic
meetings,
adjudication
1ttarlngs, complal!"'tS of any
\lnd , end regulations should
~~ addressed , to The Legal
ltecords Section , Ohio EPA,
II' . 0 . Box 1049, Columbus,
Ohio, 43216, (61&lt;1 466-6037 .
Unless otherwlle stated In
tt1rtlculu notices , all other
communications,
Includ ing
comments on pro~oud ac ·
tlons and reQuests for public
tneetl,gs, snould be addressed
tither to The New Source , Air,
lr NPDES Permit Records
ttctlon, whichever Is ap •roprlate, at The Ohio EPA,
"· 0 . Box 1049 , Columbus,
OhiO 43216.
App.llcatlon for Air Permit
fo operate
cRP
Col. Gas Trans
lebanon Comprenor Sta .
RD 1
Portland, Ohio
Application
No {sl
t65300002&lt; 8002
. Appli cation r&amp;newal for air
)lermlt to OJ:Ifrate
Bradbury
Elementary
I&lt; hoot
Bradbury Rd .
Mtddterort, Ohio
Appt cotton
No (sl
t6$3000036 8002
C&amp;ntral Building
1 FoUrth Ave .
Mtddterort. Oh io
Appl cation
NO ( SI
16$300003$ 8001
Columbia Gu Transmiss ion
Corp ., Me-Igs Compressor
Itolton
Ploy, Ohio
A
lcotl.on
Nolsl
22 aoo1
Kel y Manufecturlng co.
938 . Logon St.
Mtddlerort, Ohto
App( cotton
N o (s I
t6ll00000$ ROOl ROO!
Meigs Co. Farm BurNIU
Cooperation Assoc .
$'0 E. Moln St .
Pomeroy , Ohio
A p pI I cat Ion
No (sl
f6S30000•$ POOl
Meigs High School
Pomeroy , Ohio
· Application
No(sl
1653000031 BOOl
Meigs Junior High School
S. Third St .
Mlddterort, Ohto
Appl cation
No(sl
11653000034 8001
Middleport
Elementary
School
Pearl st.
Mtddlerort, Ohio
Appt cation
No(sl
t6S3000037 8001
Rutland Elementllr'JI School
College Ave .
Rutland, Ohio
Application
No(sl
1653000031 8001
Rutland Gymnasium
St. ~t . 12~
Rutland, Ohio
Appllcotton
No(sl
16530000'4 8001
Salisbury
E lemenf!lry
School
Pomtror , Ohio
Appl &lt;IliOn
N 0 ( Sl
J6l3000029 8001
Sugar Run Flour Mills
180 Mulberrv Ave .
Pomeroy , Ohio
Application
No(sl
1653000001 POOl
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Inc
Pomeroy, Ohio
Appllcotlon
No!sl
1653000002 NOOl
Approval of plans and
lpeclllcotlons
Flomeroy,
Ohio
Congregation of Jeho~ah
Wltneues Inc .
, Rutland Twp ,, Ohio
Septic tank , pumps &amp;
leaching field for Church
Meeting Holt .

em

151 13, ltc

'

Special ELECTION to be held
In the VIllage or M iddleport.
Ohio, .ot the regular places of
voting therein, on T4esday ,
the 8th dar of June , 1976, the '
question o levying, In excess
oi the ten mill limitation , for
the benefit of Middlepor t
VIllage for the purpose of
Recrea tion purposes .
Said tax being : an additional
tax of one half mill to run for 5
years .

bWDed CI'OIIOYel' Democrflta
for

AND SELECTED REGULAR, NEW AND SPECIAL PURCHASE ITEMS AVAILABLE ONLY AT THE SHACK®

at a rate not uceedlng one
half mill for eacn one dollar of
valuation ." which amounts to
live cents for each one hun dr~td dollars of valuation. for
live v-eers .
The Polls for said Election
will be open at 6 : 3() o'clock
A .M . and remain open until
7: 30 o'clock P.M . of said day.
By order ot the Board of
elections , of Meigs County,
Ohio .

OFF

SAVE 2.% TO 81% ON FAMOUS MADE·BY-UI ARCHER' ANTENNAS, NOT BRANO 'X

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8-TRACK PLAYER
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Dorothy M . Johnston
Director

Doted Moy 10 , 1976
Ill 13, 20, 27 161 3, 41&lt;

at a rate not exceeding 0.2 mill
for each one dollar of
valuation, which amounts to
two cents for each one hun .
dred dollars of valuation , for
ten years .
The Polls tor sai d Election
will be open at 6 : 30 o'clock
A .M . and r&amp;maln open until
7:30 O'ClOCk P .M. Of said day .
By order of the Board ot
Elections, of Meigs County,
'Ohio .

Reg .

69.95

151 13 , 20, 27 (61 3, 41&lt;
NOTICEOFOIL&amp;
GAS LEASE FOR FE ITU A E
To ; Atllntlc International 011
Corp.
Summit Chase, 1000 Urlln
Ave.
.
Columbua, Ohio

A pocket-size
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I"'"''

It 1 rete not exceeding 1.0
ty'lllls for each one dollar of
••luatlon , which amounts to
ten cents for each one hundred
follars of valuation, for five
Ytars.
The Polls for sold Eleotton
~Ill be open ot 6:30 o'clock
A.M . ~nd remain open until
1:30 0 &lt;lOCk P .M. Of SOld day .
By order of tht Board of
llt&lt;ttons, Of Meigs County,
OhiO.
Ernest A. wtngett
Chairman
Doromy M. Johnston
Director
botld Moy 10, 1976

)1&lt;

ZI ·!M:Z
Reg. 34.95

2495

18 INCH

1021NCH
BUMPIR

42 INCH
NO.HOU
TRUNK

MOUNT

44-INCH

NO-HOU

21 -927

TRUNK

21·101

MOUNT
21 ·101
R81;1 . 21 .95

Reg. t7.9S

1295

••

1195

WITH TPIC ·Z4C

795

.$AVE40%

SCIENCE FAIR ®
1 00-IN-1 ELECTRONIC
PROJECTS KIT

can win In Mlcblgan an~r
callfornla Gov. Jerry Brown
can take Maryland,

•
'

Ford, campaigning In
Detroit Wedneaday, fllllred for
IIIJIIIIOI'I fl'()lll every voter

WITH

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595
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MASTER
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CENTER
Reg. 29.9S

PATROLMAN ®
AUTOMATIC
VARIABLE tiMER

BICENTENNIAL
TWO-RECORD
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SET

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'

Ernest A . Wingett
Chairman
Dorothy M . Johnston
Director

. and you can

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PRICES MAY VARY AT INDIVIDUAL STORES

151 13, 20, 27 (6.1 3,

•tc

(l) 13, 20, 27 (61 3, 4tc

'

'

NOTICE OF
AI'I'OINTMENT
CIH No.211G4
••tile of Arlftor Lyncft
DtCtllfll.
Notlu 11 hereby given lhll
• J1m11 E . Simpson Of 26.4 s.
~ Seco~d, Middleport, Me las
County, Ohio, hll bnn duly
• appalntld Admfnlstrttor of
lht' l!llolt of Arthur Lynch,
dtcHitd, lilt of Stllsbury
Township, Melgo County,
Ohio.
Cttdltors ore reoyired fo file
lhtlr clolml with uld
fiduciary within thrtt months.
Datn this loth doy of M1y

' 1976.
"\

Dated Mov to , 1976
,~ ...

CARESS

MRS.
BUTTERWORTH'
24

BATH
SIZE
Nelson's
, 3Bc ea:

oz.

Nelson's
Reg. 51.29

20 oz.

25 Ct.

Nelson's
Reg. 74c

Nelson's
Reg. 72

WIRE FENCE

us

TAP &amp; HIT DIGITAL WATCHES
GAME

~LSON'S

Just T'p
the Peddle
and t)le
Ball Flies
Into the Air,

R'EG. $1.59
· 24 Ct.

$
REVLON
FLEX SHAMPOO
16 oz.

NELSON'S
REG. $39.95

$2995

MOTORCYCLE HELMET.'
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NORMAL to DRY

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• lmptcf•1bsorbing poly/nylon
lnnlf lin1r ·
• Confor,. with Dept. of Trus,

&amp;

OIL
FORMULAS

111nd~rds

NELSON'S REG.
$2.15

•

A~torted

ELSON'S ••I•"
REG. $15.99

1oUd 1nd glitter

77

•

BRECK SHAMPOO
7
NORMAL
OILY
DRY FORMULAS
N-ELSON'S
REG. $1.39

as~
'PEPJO.BISMOL

'

, Menning D. Webster,
Judgt
Court of Common Pltu,
·
Probate Dlvl&amp;lon ·
'
Metg&amp; county, Ohio
(5) 13, 20, 27, 31C
.

f'

PEPSODENT
TOOTHPASTE_,_.". . .

7

8 OZ.·

NELSON'S
REG, $1.06

as~

NELSON'S
REG, $1.17

Rogers Morton, Ford'•
campaign manager, said the
President likely will be nominated on the first ballot if he'
wins ln Michigan. "But If we
lose
Michigan,
we 'll
deflnitely be on the Door of
the convention," Morton said.
Reagan, who had been
saying for a week that a firstballot . nomlnallon was
possible, told reporters In
Kansas C)ty ''there's a very
great probablllty of a firstballot vlctory ."

Baot.in8
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Reagan added, however,
that he was ''proud and
happy" Dtmlocrats had voted
for him In other primaries.
"I'm going wkeep on asking
them to vole me, Including
next November," he said.

tertained with a c.hlcken
Nl'becue at Roush's Landing
at·Racine Stmday lll honor of
Mrs. Joyce Manuel ~d her
hlllband Olarles Pylell who
wen celelnlinl their bir·
lhdayt~. Altendlnl were Mr.
and Mrl. Olarles Pyles and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Don
Jflnuel, Donnlta, Robin and
Wy1llt Boalh.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Roll.lh, Sharon, Cindy, David
aild Edward, Mr, and Mrs.
Ronald RUAell, Mindy and
Mike, Mr. and Mrs. Isaac
Lewla, Mike Rhodes were
Mother's Day guests of illr.
and Mrs. Dana l.ewla at
Cllton, W. Va.
Mn, Joyce Mllnoel, and
,. son Wyatt South were
sbopplng In Gallipolis
Salll"day. Donnlla llld Roblll
viiiled Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Hlrt at Racine willie they
: wen shopping,
·
· Mn, Agnes (Durst) ParlOllS of Florida, Mrs. Cl!ester
Durst, Niles, 0. visited
graves of loved ones at Letart
falll Cemetery Satlll'day and
called on relatlvea.
Mr .llld Mrs. Dean Sayre of
Middletown, Pa. arrived
Monday for a week vlalt with
Mr. aud Mrs. Herbert Sayre.
Mr. and Mrs. David Sayre
took Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Sayre out for dinner at
Plrtenburg In bonll' of Mrs.
Sayre on Mother's Day
&amp;nday. They at.o villled Mr.
Sayre's niece Mr. and Mrs.
Weldon Kinney at Brohard,
w. Va.
Mother's Day gueata of Mr.
and Mrs. Ow-les LaWIOII
were Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Plnona 111d 110111, Mr. ·and
Mrs. Riel! Morris and
daqbter, Mr, 111d Mra,
Edwanl LaWIOII 8lld baby,
Mr. 111d Mrs. IW"old LaWIOII
and IIOIIofLetart, W. Va,, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert LaWIIOD and
, family, and Wilda LaWIOII.

,. WORKER I:Jil ED
AMHERST, N.Y. (UPI)Edmund White, 33, of
• VernUies, N.Y., died
Wem-lay In a COIIIIructlon
accidental a sewer project In
IIlia Buffalo Bllburb .
• Pollee sald While, an employe . of
Firelands
Co.,
of
Construction
' Mansfield, Oblo, feU or was
llnocbd over by a crane and
plunged lnto Ellloott Q'eek,
Hll bOdy was recoYered a
llbort lime later by Ambent
firemen,

.1

'

away.'.'

Democrat George Wallace
expressed frustration so
many of his backers had
abandoned him for Reagan.
"I don't llke it," the
Alabama governor told
reporters ln Lansing, Mich.
"But what can I do about lt?"
He told his Michigan

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that rouldn't be rationalized

By Mn. Herbert Rolllh
:Mr, 111d Mrs, Don Manuel
met their 11011 P.F.c. Wyatt
South at CoiiDDbUI Airport
&amp;nday who Is on leave from
Klrcht!oena, Germany for a
monlll.
· Mrs. · Olarles Pylell en-

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"Nebraska, on the ~ of
the last two presidential elections, is the most Republican
state ui the Unlon and no
crossover was allowed,"
Reagan said. "After aU the
rationallzatlon others have
done about the vlctorles
we've had so far, Ibis was one

News Notes

.iJ

REALISTIC
REPLACEMENT
CB DYNAMIC MIKE

Reg .

"who can feel confidence In
Wblil we've done ... whether
they · call
themselves
Republlcana, Independents,
II' Democrats."
Reagan, who ls stwnping
Michigan today, said his
Nebraska victory can't be
credited to the Democrats.

beh,nd" in Michigan but
"closing the gap." He
predicted next Tuesday will
be looked back on as "the day
the Carter bandwagon began
to draw w a halt. "
Olurch, having beat Carter
In his flrst primary effort,
headed west Ill campaign for
the May 25 Oregon primary.
The Idaho senator sald he
stands "an excellent chance
of winning the primaries ln
the Northwest, where some of
the polls shol\' me leadlne."

Fairview

I

Reg : 29.95

17~!

Mcms Udall

Tuetldly - If

21 ..10M

495

Ii. . . .,

101111 In Tens and
lndllna, ilappealq for their
help lll til llbowdown with
Ronald Reagan In the
Michigan GOP primary nelt
week.
.
Reagan aaid Nebraska,
where crossovers weren 'I
allowed, P'O'Ied he didn't
need the ~18 but he
welcumet~ then anyway now and lll Nov!IDber. And
George Wallace, whose
backers · were the ones
CI'OIIIng o-rer In Teut and
lndl8na, uid he wlahes they
, would atay In their own party
and vote for blm.
Sen. Frank Church's ·
victory In Nebraska baa
stirred talll of Democratic
front-runner Jbnmy carter's
blndwag111 being slowed ne1t

MOUNT

Reg . 14.$15

WITH TIC -24(:

COLLECTOR'S

at a rate not exceeding · 3.0
mills for each one dollar of
valuation, which amounts to
Thirty Cents for each one
hundred dollars of valuation,
for Five rears
The Pots 10; sold Election
wilt be open ot 6:30 o'clock
• A.M . and remain open until
7:30 O'C lOCk P .M. Of sai d day
By order of the Board of
Elections , of Me igs County,
0hlo .

102
BODY

I

Elsie I . Dodderer
Lessor

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
NOTICE Is hereby given
that In pursuance of a
Resolution of the Council of
the VIllage of Middleport,
Ohio, passed on the •th day of
March , 1976, there will be
submitted to a vote of the
people of said Village at a
SpeCial ELECTION to be held
in the VIllage of Middleport,
Oh io, et the regular placu or
voting ttlereln , on Tuesday.
the 81tl dar of June, 19'16, the
Question o levying, In excess
of t~e ten mill limitation . for
the benefit of Middleport
VIllage fOr the purpose of
Current Expenses .
Said tax being : an ad.
dltlonal tax of J mills to run for.
five years.
,.

CLAMr

MOUNT

RtHJ 22 .9)

21 ·92&amp;
23 !IS

GUTTER

,

Gentlemen :
You are hereby notified tnat
the undersigned
lessors
hereby erect to declare a
forfeiture ot the following ol!
and gas lease between you as
Lessee and the undersigned as
lessors :
Leese dated the 18th day of
ApriL 1972, between Frank E .
Dodderer and Elsie I. Dod derer. his wife, n Lessors and
Atlantic ltllernatlonal Oil
Corp ., as Lessee, covering 138
acres, more or less, situate In
Olive
Township,
Me igs
County, Ohio, and being
bounded on the North by Mike
Farrell and Roy Deem, on the
East by Cubbison and w. A.
Rice. on the South by Paul
Brooks , and on the West by
Hobart Dodderer, s~ ld lease
belrHI of record In the office of
the Clerk of the County
Recorder In Meigs County,
Oh to, In Leue Book. 58, at
Poge 233 .
The above lease Is hereby
declared forfeited by the
undersigned Lessors because
of the non -payment of delay
rental as re~:~ulred by the
terms of said lease .
II Is the Intention of the
undersigned Lessor to file and
record an avvldavlt of for feiture for the above lease
wlfh the county Recorder of
Meigs County, Ohio , as
provided by lew .

(ll 13,

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Signed Frank E. Dodderer ,
Lessor

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
NOTICE 11 hereby given
that In pursuan~ce ot a
lhsolutlon of the Council of
fh• VIllage of Middleport.
Ohio, passed on the 4th day of
Marth , 1976, there will be
tubm ltted to a vote of the
of sold VIllage ot •
pee lot ELECTION to be held
1ft the Vllloge of Middleport.
Ohio, at the regular places of
•otlng therein , on Tuesday,
lito lth day of June, 1976, the
~estlon of levying, In excess
II the ton mill limitation, for
lhe benefit of Middleport
Vllloge tor the purpose of
~rovtdtng matntenonco, fire
lpperatus,
appliances ,
llulldlngs or sites therefor,
sources of water supply and
material I therefor .
Said tax being : · an ad·
~ltlonal tax of one mill to run
for five years .

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44~~
f, · ,, ::&gt;

Ernest A . Wingett
Cha irman
Dorothy M . Johns ton
Director
Dated Ma-y 10 , 1976

01\! ANY CB ANTENNA
'
SHOWN WITH PURCHASE '
. OF T~C-24C RAOIO BELOW
NOW THRU 5/22/76

·

Ernest A. Wlnge:tt
Chairman

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE
TEN MiLL LIMITATION ·
NOTICE Is hereby g lven
that In pursuen ce ot a
Resolution of the Board of
County Commissioners of the
County of Meigs , Pom eroy ,
Ohio, passed bn the 1st day of
March, 1976, there will be
submitted to a vote of the
people of said county at a
Special ELECTION to be tleld
In the County of Meigs , Otllo,
at ttle regular pieces of voflng
therein, on Tuesday ,. the 8th
day of June . 1976, the question
of levying , In ~xcess ot the len
m ill lim II a lion, for the benefit
of Meigs Co\lnty for the
purpose of providing Meigs
County's share for the benefit
of the Gallla . Meigs . Jackson
~ommunlty Mental Health
Board, for the purpose of
prov i ding the necessary
requirements of the . Com ·
muntty
Mental
Health
Program establiShed pur suant to cnepter J40 of the
Ohio Revised Code .
Said tax being : an ad ditional tax of 0.2 mill to run
tor ten years .

supporters he remalns a
"viablecandldate" and needs
their rotes for himself.
Brown, returning fO( hls
third Maryland campaign
swing In two weeks, said : "II
has been my hWICh that the
lead of Mr. &lt;;arter ls very thin
and he has not struck a chord
ln the American people and
touched very deeply the
minds and hearts of
Democrats across the
country."
Udall said he was "clearly

HALEY'S M.O.

oz.

95~

16

oz.

REGULAR
.. OR .
FLAVORED

Sp&amp;i9
4 oz. Uquld

�.1- The Daily Sentinel, MidcDeport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, M!J J~
COUNTY : MEIGS
PUBLIC NOTICE
Tho fOllOwing documtnts
were rt&lt;llvld or prepared by
TP'It

Ohio

Environmental

1'176

t- Tile Dilly Smtlnei,Middleport-Poo!eroy, 0., Thunday, May 13, 1976

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION

Ford woos Democrat crossovers in Michigan

NOTICE Is hereby gl'ien

lt'rottctlon Agency ~urtno the that

in

pur•uance of

a

,rtvlous
week .
Anyone R:esOIIJtiOn of the CounCil of
fVgritved or adversely at. the Vlllaoe or M iddleport,
tected by .ls,uance or renewal Ohio, passed on
daY of

the_.,,

By LEWJ8 LORD
VliiUtd rr.. btenatltul
Pre1lclent Ford, · who

•• any permlt(s). llcense(s). March , 1976, there will be
er vlrllnce(s l may reQuest an su bm itted to a vote of the
•dludlcatlon heerlng by People of said VIllage at a

written reQuest pursuant to
Ol'tlo Revised Code Section
J7•l.07 within thirty UOI doys
ef the directors proposed
action to Issue or deny such
.rocuments, that statute does
fiOt provide ror hearlns
requests ro The OEPA on
eppllcatlons , revocatlont ,
tnodltlcat l ons . compla ints ,
Ytrlfled complaints, cer .
tlflcatlons, h~ases , arden, or
llnal actions .
•
With in 30 days of publlcotlon
•• this riotlce •ny person may
llso : (11 submit written
com menta relating to actions ,
Jropostd actions, complaints,
wr verified complaints; (21
tequnt a public meeting
regarding proposed actions ;
lnd-or (3) request notice of
further .
actions
on
proceedings .
Requests for he.,lnos on
~Ina I actions to luue, Cleny .
tnodlty , revoke or ren@w
••rm Its , llcensn or varlancts
that ue not preceded by
Jropoaed act ions and so
tdentlfled In this notice shou ld
•• sent to The Environmental
loord of Review , Sulte30l, 395
E11t Broad Street, Columbus,
Ohio 43216 .
All other requests for a!;t lildl&lt;tllon hearings , ond other
communications concerning
'Ubll&lt;
hearings ,
publ ic
meetings,
adjudication
1ttarlngs, complal!"'tS of any
\lnd , end regulations should
~~ addressed , to The Legal
ltecords Section , Ohio EPA,
II' . 0 . Box 1049, Columbus,
Ohio, 43216, (61&lt;1 466-6037 .
Unless otherwlle stated In
tt1rtlculu notices , all other
communications,
Includ ing
comments on pro~oud ac ·
tlons and reQuests for public
tneetl,gs, snould be addressed
tither to The New Source , Air,
lr NPDES Permit Records
ttctlon, whichever Is ap •roprlate, at The Ohio EPA,
"· 0 . Box 1049 , Columbus,
OhiO 43216.
App.llcatlon for Air Permit
fo operate
cRP
Col. Gas Trans
lebanon Comprenor Sta .
RD 1
Portland, Ohio
Application
No {sl
t65300002&lt; 8002
. Appli cation r&amp;newal for air
)lermlt to OJ:Ifrate
Bradbury
Elementary
I&lt; hoot
Bradbury Rd .
Mtddterort, Ohio
Appt cotton
No (sl
t6$3000036 8002
C&amp;ntral Building
1 FoUrth Ave .
Mtddterort. Oh io
Appl cation
NO ( SI
16$300003$ 8001
Columbia Gu Transmiss ion
Corp ., Me-Igs Compressor
Itolton
Ploy, Ohio
A
lcotl.on
Nolsl
22 aoo1
Kel y Manufecturlng co.
938 . Logon St.
Mtddlerort, Ohto
App( cotton
N o (s I
t6ll00000$ ROOl ROO!
Meigs Co. Farm BurNIU
Cooperation Assoc .
$'0 E. Moln St .
Pomeroy , Ohio
A p pI I cat Ion
No (sl
f6S30000•$ POOl
Meigs High School
Pomeroy , Ohio
· Application
No(sl
1653000031 BOOl
Meigs Junior High School
S. Third St .
Mlddterort, Ohto
Appl cation
No(sl
11653000034 8001
Middleport
Elementary
School
Pearl st.
Mtddlerort, Ohio
Appt cation
No(sl
t6S3000037 8001
Rutland Elementllr'JI School
College Ave .
Rutland, Ohio
Application
No(sl
1653000031 8001
Rutland Gymnasium
St. ~t . 12~
Rutland, Ohio
Appllcotton
No(sl
16530000'4 8001
Salisbury
E lemenf!lry
School
Pomtror , Ohio
Appl &lt;IliOn
N 0 ( Sl
J6l3000029 8001
Sugar Run Flour Mills
180 Mulberrv Ave .
Pomeroy , Ohio
Application
No(sl
1653000001 POOl
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Inc
Pomeroy, Ohio
Appllcotlon
No!sl
1653000002 NOOl
Approval of plans and
lpeclllcotlons
Flomeroy,
Ohio
Congregation of Jeho~ah
Wltneues Inc .
, Rutland Twp ,, Ohio
Septic tank , pumps &amp;
leaching field for Church
Meeting Holt .

em

151 13, ltc

'

Special ELECTION to be held
In the VIllage or M iddleport.
Ohio, .ot the regular places of
voting therein, on T4esday ,
the 8th dar of June , 1976, the '
question o levying, In excess
oi the ten mill limitation , for
the benefit of Middlepor t
VIllage for the purpose of
Recrea tion purposes .
Said tax being : an additional
tax of one half mill to run for 5
years .

bWDed CI'OIIOYel' Democrflta
for

AND SELECTED REGULAR, NEW AND SPECIAL PURCHASE ITEMS AVAILABLE ONLY AT THE SHACK®

at a rate not uceedlng one
half mill for eacn one dollar of
valuation ." which amounts to
live cents for each one hun dr~td dollars of valuation. for
live v-eers .
The Polls for said Election
will be open at 6 : 3() o'clock
A .M . and remain open until
7: 30 o'clock P.M . of said day.
By order ot the Board of
elections , of Meigs County,
Ohio .

OFF

SAVE 2.% TO 81% ON FAMOUS MADE·BY-UI ARCHER' ANTENNAS, NOT BRANO 'X

'

REALISTIC ®CAR
8-TRACK PLAYER
WITH QUATRAVOX®

Dorothy M . Johnston
Director

Doted Moy 10 , 1976
Ill 13, 20, 27 161 3, 41&lt;

at a rate not exceeding 0.2 mill
for each one dollar of
valuation, which amounts to
two cents for each one hun .
dred dollars of valuation , for
ten years .
The Polls tor sai d Election
will be open at 6 : 30 o'clock
A .M . and r&amp;maln open until
7:30 O'ClOCk P .M. Of said day .
By order of the Board ot
Elections, of Meigs County,
'Ohio .

Reg .

69.95

151 13 , 20, 27 (61 3, 41&lt;
NOTICEOFOIL&amp;
GAS LEASE FOR FE ITU A E
To ; Atllntlc International 011
Corp.
Summit Chase, 1000 Urlln
Ave.
.
Columbua, Ohio

A pocket-size
calculator that's
just perfect for
everyday math
solving' Percent key, floating decimal,
bright 8-digit display Includes battery.

I"'"''

It 1 rete not exceeding 1.0
ty'lllls for each one dollar of
••luatlon , which amounts to
ten cents for each one hundred
follars of valuation, for five
Ytars.
The Polls for sold Eleotton
~Ill be open ot 6:30 o'clock
A.M . ~nd remain open until
1:30 0 &lt;lOCk P .M. Of SOld day .
By order of tht Board of
llt&lt;ttons, Of Meigs County,
OhiO.
Ernest A. wtngett
Chairman
Doromy M. Johnston
Director
botld Moy 10, 1976

)1&lt;

ZI ·!M:Z
Reg. 34.95

2495

18 INCH

1021NCH
BUMPIR

42 INCH
NO.HOU
TRUNK

MOUNT

44-INCH

NO-HOU

21 -927

TRUNK

21·101

MOUNT
21 ·101
R81;1 . 21 .95

Reg. t7.9S

1295

••

1195

WITH TPIC ·Z4C

795

.$AVE40%

SCIENCE FAIR ®
1 00-IN-1 ELECTRONIC
PROJECTS KIT

can win In Mlcblgan an~r
callfornla Gov. Jerry Brown
can take Maryland,

•
'

Ford, campaigning In
Detroit Wedneaday, fllllred for
IIIJIIIIOI'I fl'()lll every voter

WITH

it'

,.

.
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ISTIC'S
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7.95

595
270-t 532

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3.99

95 PER
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99~
276-1754

MASTER
ALARM CONTIIIOI
CENTER
Reg. 29.9S

PATROLMAN ®
AUTOMATIC
VARIABLE tiMER

BICENTENNIAL
TWO-RECORD
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SET

SAVE UP TO 18%
'

Ernest A . Wingett
Chairman
Dorothy M . Johnston
Director

. and you can

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PRICES MAY VARY AT INDIVIDUAL STORES

151 13, 20, 27 (6.1 3,

•tc

(l) 13, 20, 27 (61 3, 4tc

'

'

NOTICE OF
AI'I'OINTMENT
CIH No.211G4
••tile of Arlftor Lyncft
DtCtllfll.
Notlu 11 hereby given lhll
• J1m11 E . Simpson Of 26.4 s.
~ Seco~d, Middleport, Me las
County, Ohio, hll bnn duly
• appalntld Admfnlstrttor of
lht' l!llolt of Arthur Lynch,
dtcHitd, lilt of Stllsbury
Township, Melgo County,
Ohio.
Cttdltors ore reoyired fo file
lhtlr clolml with uld
fiduciary within thrtt months.
Datn this loth doy of M1y

' 1976.
"\

Dated Mov to , 1976
,~ ...

CARESS

MRS.
BUTTERWORTH'
24

BATH
SIZE
Nelson's
, 3Bc ea:

oz.

Nelson's
Reg. 51.29

20 oz.

25 Ct.

Nelson's
Reg. 74c

Nelson's
Reg. 72

WIRE FENCE

us

TAP &amp; HIT DIGITAL WATCHES
GAME

~LSON'S

Just T'p
the Peddle
and t)le
Ball Flies
Into the Air,

R'EG. $1.59
· 24 Ct.

$
REVLON
FLEX SHAMPOO
16 oz.

NELSON'S
REG. $39.95

$2995

MOTORCYCLE HELMET.'
The All-Family

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NORMAL to DRY

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coiiiii'SAfETY HELMET
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• R.,.se•~. r~li•blt polyctrbon•te
• lmptcf•1bsorbing poly/nylon
lnnlf lin1r ·
• Confor,. with Dept. of Trus,

&amp;

OIL
FORMULAS

111nd~rds

NELSON'S REG.
$2.15

•

A~torted

ELSON'S ••I•"
REG. $15.99

1oUd 1nd glitter

77

•

BRECK SHAMPOO
7
NORMAL
OILY
DRY FORMULAS
N-ELSON'S
REG. $1.39

as~
'PEPJO.BISMOL

'

, Menning D. Webster,
Judgt
Court of Common Pltu,
·
Probate Dlvl&amp;lon ·
'
Metg&amp; county, Ohio
(5) 13, 20, 27, 31C
.

f'

PEPSODENT
TOOTHPASTE_,_.". . .

7

8 OZ.·

NELSON'S
REG, $1.06

as~

NELSON'S
REG, $1.17

Rogers Morton, Ford'•
campaign manager, said the
President likely will be nominated on the first ballot if he'
wins ln Michigan. "But If we
lose
Michigan,
we 'll
deflnitely be on the Door of
the convention," Morton said.
Reagan, who had been
saying for a week that a firstballot . nomlnallon was
possible, told reporters In
Kansas C)ty ''there's a very
great probablllty of a firstballot vlctory ."

Baot.in8
ADttaeptlo

SOAP

SYRUP

ROQ.
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Reagan added, however,
that he was ''proud and
happy" Dtmlocrats had voted
for him In other primaries.
"I'm going wkeep on asking
them to vole me, Including
next November," he said.

tertained with a c.hlcken
Nl'becue at Roush's Landing
at·Racine Stmday lll honor of
Mrs. Joyce Manuel ~d her
hlllband Olarles Pylell who
wen celelnlinl their bir·
lhdayt~. Altendlnl were Mr.
and Mrl. Olarles Pyles and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Don
Jflnuel, Donnlta, Robin and
Wy1llt Boalh.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Roll.lh, Sharon, Cindy, David
aild Edward, Mr, and Mrs.
Ronald RUAell, Mindy and
Mike, Mr. and Mrs. Isaac
Lewla, Mike Rhodes were
Mother's Day guests of illr.
and Mrs. Dana l.ewla at
Cllton, W. Va.
Mn, Joyce Mllnoel, and
,. son Wyatt South were
sbopplng In Gallipolis
Salll"day. Donnlla llld Roblll
viiiled Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Hlrt at Racine willie they
: wen shopping,
·
· Mn, Agnes (Durst) ParlOllS of Florida, Mrs. Cl!ester
Durst, Niles, 0. visited
graves of loved ones at Letart
falll Cemetery Satlll'day and
called on relatlvea.
Mr .llld Mrs. Dean Sayre of
Middletown, Pa. arrived
Monday for a week vlalt with
Mr. aud Mrs. Herbert Sayre.
Mr. and Mrs. David Sayre
took Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Sayre out for dinner at
Plrtenburg In bonll' of Mrs.
Sayre on Mother's Day
&amp;nday. They at.o villled Mr.
Sayre's niece Mr. and Mrs.
Weldon Kinney at Brohard,
w. Va.
Mother's Day gueata of Mr.
and Mrs. Ow-les LaWIOII
were Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Plnona 111d 110111, Mr. ·and
Mrs. Riel! Morris and
daqbter, Mr, 111d Mra,
Edwanl LaWIOII 8lld baby,
Mr. 111d Mrs. IW"old LaWIOII
and IIOIIofLetart, W. Va,, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert LaWIIOD and
, family, and Wilda LaWIOII.

,. WORKER I:Jil ED
AMHERST, N.Y. (UPI)Edmund White, 33, of
• VernUies, N.Y., died
Wem-lay In a COIIIIructlon
accidental a sewer project In
IIlia Buffalo Bllburb .
• Pollee sald While, an employe . of
Firelands
Co.,
of
Construction
' Mansfield, Oblo, feU or was
llnocbd over by a crane and
plunged lnto Ellloott Q'eek,
Hll bOdy was recoYered a
llbort lime later by Ambent
firemen,

.1

'

away.'.'

Democrat George Wallace
expressed frustration so
many of his backers had
abandoned him for Reagan.
"I don't llke it," the
Alabama governor told
reporters ln Lansing, Mich.
"But what can I do about lt?"
He told his Michigan

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that rouldn't be rationalized

By Mn. Herbert Rolllh
:Mr, 111d Mrs, Don Manuel
met their 11011 P.F.c. Wyatt
South at CoiiDDbUI Airport
&amp;nday who Is on leave from
Klrcht!oena, Germany for a
monlll.
· Mrs. · Olarles Pylell en-

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"Nebraska, on the ~ of
the last two presidential elections, is the most Republican
state ui the Unlon and no
crossover was allowed,"
Reagan said. "After aU the
rationallzatlon others have
done about the vlctorles
we've had so far, Ibis was one

News Notes

.iJ

REALISTIC
REPLACEMENT
CB DYNAMIC MIKE

Reg .

"who can feel confidence In
Wblil we've done ... whether
they · call
themselves
Republlcana, Independents,
II' Democrats."
Reagan, who ls stwnping
Michigan today, said his
Nebraska victory can't be
credited to the Democrats.

beh,nd" in Michigan but
"closing the gap." He
predicted next Tuesday will
be looked back on as "the day
the Carter bandwagon began
to draw w a halt. "
Olurch, having beat Carter
In his flrst primary effort,
headed west Ill campaign for
the May 25 Oregon primary.
The Idaho senator sald he
stands "an excellent chance
of winning the primaries ln
the Northwest, where some of
the polls shol\' me leadlne."

Fairview

I

Reg : 29.95

17~!

Mcms Udall

Tuetldly - If

21 ..10M

495

Ii. . . .,

101111 In Tens and
lndllna, ilappealq for their
help lll til llbowdown with
Ronald Reagan In the
Michigan GOP primary nelt
week.
.
Reagan aaid Nebraska,
where crossovers weren 'I
allowed, P'O'Ied he didn't
need the ~18 but he
welcumet~ then anyway now and lll Nov!IDber. And
George Wallace, whose
backers · were the ones
CI'OIIIng o-rer In Teut and
lndl8na, uid he wlahes they
, would atay In their own party
and vote for blm.
Sen. Frank Church's ·
victory In Nebraska baa
stirred talll of Democratic
front-runner Jbnmy carter's
blndwag111 being slowed ne1t

MOUNT

Reg . 14.$15

WITH TIC -24(:

COLLECTOR'S

at a rate not exceeding · 3.0
mills for each one dollar of
valuation, which amounts to
Thirty Cents for each one
hundred dollars of valuation,
for Five rears
The Pots 10; sold Election
wilt be open ot 6:30 o'clock
• A.M . and remain open until
7:30 O'C lOCk P .M. Of sai d day
By order of the Board of
Elections , of Me igs County,
0hlo .

102
BODY

I

Elsie I . Dodderer
Lessor

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
NOTICE Is hereby given
that In pursuance of a
Resolution of the Council of
the VIllage of Middleport,
Ohio, passed on the •th day of
March , 1976, there will be
submitted to a vote of the
people of said Village at a
SpeCial ELECTION to be held
in the VIllage of Middleport,
Oh io, et the regular placu or
voting ttlereln , on Tuesday.
the 81tl dar of June, 19'16, the
Question o levying, In excess
of t~e ten mill limitation . for
the benefit of Middleport
VIllage fOr the purpose of
Current Expenses .
Said tax being : an ad.
dltlonal tax of J mills to run for.
five years.
,.

CLAMr

MOUNT

RtHJ 22 .9)

21 ·92&amp;
23 !IS

GUTTER

,

Gentlemen :
You are hereby notified tnat
the undersigned
lessors
hereby erect to declare a
forfeiture ot the following ol!
and gas lease between you as
Lessee and the undersigned as
lessors :
Leese dated the 18th day of
ApriL 1972, between Frank E .
Dodderer and Elsie I. Dod derer. his wife, n Lessors and
Atlantic ltllernatlonal Oil
Corp ., as Lessee, covering 138
acres, more or less, situate In
Olive
Township,
Me igs
County, Ohio, and being
bounded on the North by Mike
Farrell and Roy Deem, on the
East by Cubbison and w. A.
Rice. on the South by Paul
Brooks , and on the West by
Hobart Dodderer, s~ ld lease
belrHI of record In the office of
the Clerk of the County
Recorder In Meigs County,
Oh to, In Leue Book. 58, at
Poge 233 .
The above lease Is hereby
declared forfeited by the
undersigned Lessors because
of the non -payment of delay
rental as re~:~ulred by the
terms of said lease .
II Is the Intention of the
undersigned Lessor to file and
record an avvldavlt of for feiture for the above lease
wlfh the county Recorder of
Meigs County, Ohio , as
provided by lew .

(ll 13,

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Signed Frank E. Dodderer ,
Lessor

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
NOTICE 11 hereby given
that In pursuan~ce ot a
lhsolutlon of the Council of
fh• VIllage of Middleport.
Ohio, passed on the 4th day of
Marth , 1976, there will be
tubm ltted to a vote of the
of sold VIllage ot •
pee lot ELECTION to be held
1ft the Vllloge of Middleport.
Ohio, at the regular places of
•otlng therein , on Tuesday,
lito lth day of June, 1976, the
~estlon of levying, In excess
II the ton mill limitation, for
lhe benefit of Middleport
Vllloge tor the purpose of
~rovtdtng matntenonco, fire
lpperatus,
appliances ,
llulldlngs or sites therefor,
sources of water supply and
material I therefor .
Said tax being : · an ad·
~ltlonal tax of one mill to run
for five years .

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44~~
f, · ,, ::&gt;

Ernest A . Wingett
Cha irman
Dorothy M . Johns ton
Director
Dated Ma-y 10 , 1976

01\! ANY CB ANTENNA
'
SHOWN WITH PURCHASE '
. OF T~C-24C RAOIO BELOW
NOW THRU 5/22/76

·

Ernest A. Wlnge:tt
Chairman

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE
TEN MiLL LIMITATION ·
NOTICE Is hereby g lven
that In pursuen ce ot a
Resolution of the Board of
County Commissioners of the
County of Meigs , Pom eroy ,
Ohio, passed bn the 1st day of
March, 1976, there will be
submitted to a vote of the
people of said county at a
Special ELECTION to be tleld
In the County of Meigs , Otllo,
at ttle regular pieces of voflng
therein, on Tuesday ,. the 8th
day of June . 1976, the question
of levying , In ~xcess ot the len
m ill lim II a lion, for the benefit
of Meigs Co\lnty for the
purpose of providing Meigs
County's share for the benefit
of the Gallla . Meigs . Jackson
~ommunlty Mental Health
Board, for the purpose of
prov i ding the necessary
requirements of the . Com ·
muntty
Mental
Health
Program establiShed pur suant to cnepter J40 of the
Ohio Revised Code .
Said tax being : an ad ditional tax of 0.2 mill to run
tor ten years .

supporters he remalns a
"viablecandldate" and needs
their rotes for himself.
Brown, returning fO( hls
third Maryland campaign
swing In two weeks, said : "II
has been my hWICh that the
lead of Mr. &lt;;arter ls very thin
and he has not struck a chord
ln the American people and
touched very deeply the
minds and hearts of
Democrats across the
country."
Udall said he was "clearly

HALEY'S M.O.

oz.

95~

16

oz.

REGULAR
.. OR .
FLAVORED

Sp&amp;i9
4 oz. Uquld

�10 - The Dally Sentmel, Middleoort-Pomeroy, 0 , Thursday, May 13, 1976

0 t.OMiiMIFJ

WANT ADS

5

INFORMATION
DEADLINES
PM
Day
Before

~~~~~~~~"

am .

Deadline

9

C ancel l at,on

Correcttons will be ac

ce pted until 9 am for
Dev of Publ tcalion
REGULATIONS
The Publisher reserv es
the r ight to edtt or retect
any ads deemed ob
jec llona t The publ tsh er
Wtll not be r esponstble for

more than one mcorre ct
lnsertton

RATES

For Want Ad Servtce
5 cents per word on e

tmertlon
'
Mm lmum CtiargeSI 00

14 cents pe r word three
consecuttve
mserttons
26 cents per word stx
consecut •ve
mserttons
25 Per Cen I 0 tscoun I on

paid ads and ads
w lthm 10 days

pa td

CARD OF THAN~S
&amp; OBITUARY
$2 co
for
SO
word

minimum
Each addtllonlll word 3

cents

BLIND ADS
A ddlt •onal

2Sc Charge

per Adven.semen t

OFFICE HOURS

11 30 a m to S 00 p m
Da tly 8 JO a m to 12 00
Noon Sa t urday
Phone today 992 2156

IN MEMORY of our mother Mrs
James Horalton, Sr who post
ed away B years ago on May

For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds

13

Our hearts std l ache wtth
sadness
Sec:rel t~:~o r s st ill flow,
What tf meant to lose you ,
No one wt!l ever know
When days ore dark and dreary
And everythtng goes wrong ,
Wa seem to haor you whtsper
'Cheer up and Carry on '
Each time we see your pte lura
We seem fQ sm tle and soy
Don t cry, I'm on ly sleepmg
We w1ll meet ogo1n soma day
The Chtldren

l!§~~~=~~~§i~i;i:~
RACINE Fire Department w1ll
hove a gun shoot Saturday of
6 30 p m at their new bu lldt ng
off Bosha n Road
For Memorial Day, beauftful
selection flowe rs
bo!.kets
sprays, loose flowers, "V OSet
Faye s Gift Shop North 2nd St 1
M1ddlepo rt OPf!n datly 9 a m

-~~~!-~---------- ----

WANTED

Rtde

to

OF

QUAUTY Motor Co.
Will DO odd 1obs roolmg po1n·
tmg , hau lmg treework , and
_ ~~~~~ g !h~n!_992_:7.4~--­
WILL core for elderly person !n my

ATTN.!!

ALL tiOUSEWIVES

All Yard Sales Rumm age.:
Porch an d Base ment Po r c h
and Bnement Sa tes, e tc
mu s t be pa 1d In advllnce .
Get your In In ear ly by
stopping by our office at
Th e Da lly Sentinel
111
Court 51 or writ ing Bo x
129, Pome ro y , Ohio A5769
W1fh your r em lttan ce

Qated May 10,
(S)

1 ~7 6

13, 20, 27 16)

3, 41c

Astro-

GmpM

• Bernice Bede Oool
· For Frldoy, Moy 14, 1976
ARIES (Merch 21-Aprll 1i)
Take time to tal k thtngs out
with someone In a sltu atton
that affects both or you You'll
a chieve a meeting o l the

minds
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) II
an adjustment Is due you on a
tra nsaction bring 11 to the
attent ion of the pe rson you
deal w1th If he's reputable he'll
make 11 right

GEMINI (Moy 21 -Junt 20) Feel
f ree to alter your course 11 you

ttnd a better wav to accomplish

Will do pcMtmg
Call Steve Walburn 992·2007 or
- ~~.!~.:'~n~..!.'~ :..~~·~:3.:. ___ _
WILL do bobys11tmg in my home 5
days par week Phone 9_.9

"AS IS
SPECIALS"
1971 Ford Bronco
302 V8, sld. trans

'695 .
1968 Chevrolet
Capnce, V-B, automat1c ,

P.s ,

atr

'495

'125
1963 Ram bier
"6" d doo r

models of mobtle homes
Phone area code 614·423 9531
s$(~hs$$To~~u-;;k;d-o~lo- F;;; s
Truck Auto Pa rts Ru tland
Phone 7A2 __.2081

__ ___________ _

Co11247-2201

PERIENCE?

FRIENDLY

NAZI Germa n Flogs daggers
umforms medals , eTc High
pnce potd Phone 992·2592

-~f~~~~~

Don t let little m istakes bug you
to d ay You re an effec tive
worker Any minor prob lems
can eastly be rectllled

LEO (July 21-Aug. 22) A lrlend
may ta lk too loosely tod a y
Others may ch tde him for t) IS
naivete You ca n do h1m a serv•ce by being on hand to he lp
htm untangle hi s tongue

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Stpl. 22) You
may 1n1ttally try to do things today to seek pubhc app roval
Later. however ,yo u II realize
there's more benefit m qu1et
act1vity

LIBRA (Sop!. 23·0cl. 23) The
adv1ce of a well -meantng fnend
sh o uld no t de te r yo u fro m
loll owmg your lr'[Stln cts tn a
matter you re betler eq U1 pped
to evaluate

SCORPIO (Ocl. 23-Nov. 22)
When buying or selltng today,
}'o u'll have the better busmess
acume n Don t let anyone oust
you from the dnver 1s seal
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Mlslnlormallon malign ing a
person you're fond ol w111 be
bandied about tod ay You can
set the record s tratght wllhout
offendi ng a nyone

19) Do no t depend on
prom1ses made to you today
There 1s rea lly very httle yo u
can t accom plish by yov rself
gtven the mcl1natlon

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 1i)

IF YOU hove a serv1ce to offer
wont to buy or se ll sbmethtng ,
a re lookmg for work
or
what ever
you II pet results
laster wt th a Sen lm e Wont Ad

Co ll992-2156

POM£RQf
MOlOR CO.
Your Chevy Dealer
Pomeroy, Ohio

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

---------YARD SALE, New lt ma Rd Weds

through Sotu rdov 9 a m tdl 5

-~~--------

YARD SALE Thursd~.f;,dF-;:jd;y­
May 13th and 14th across from
Bob s Mark et Mo so11 9 a m !ill

5p

m

--------~-

--------

GARAGE Sale Rt 338 11A m1l e
above Apple Grove Oh1 o
Weds thr ou gh Saturday Fu r
n1ture
floo r CO\IQrt ngs
3
baseboard heater gos water
heater , dtshes clothes sewing
mochme , mtsc 1te ms Charles
-~~~~~e.!!~~e~~e___ _ __
YARD SALE Thursday and Fndoy
9 00 hi I 5 00 End o f second St
watch for s1gns 10 Syracuse
Toys , clo thes , house hold tlems
Call 992·3905 lor more mformo·

Inde pe nd en t this com ing year,
mu ch of what you can d o
depends u.pon o th ers Be alert
for opporlun lttes that occur In a
uniq ue way

2-F;~~-y;d -s~ ~- ~ot';d~~
Laure l Cltff Rood neo f church
Thursday 9 til l 4 00 and FndaV
q o m till dark Adults and
marked
chtldren s clothmg
HooiJe r
portable
down
sweeper, new set of lamps 7 S
Sco tt boot motor m1sc 1tems

P0RCHSAL~-1 ri9- v~;-slr~;tM•dd leport Fnd oy Saturday
and Sunday, May 14 15 ond 16
10 a m ttl! 2 p m R8Cisonoble
pnces, rom or shme

Ru th Taylor reSidence Ftrst
lrotler on Sumner Road off Rl 7
north of Chester

------------- --...,---AKC Registered Collie Stud Ser
viCe Stardus t Kmg Phone

(6 14) 985 4248

4- -a~~~--;~7ot;; -p-;;~dles
mother AKC RegiStered Phone
Vtv1an M1tchem or Harry
Garnes, Sr 992 753-4

MAu--w~d-P~odl; -~~p~~
$SO 00 Phone 9'12 7185

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

~!iEDililli~~iiii!
WANTED TO RENT small house or
trmler preferably m the coun try
and near Pomeroy Either fur·
nished or not Phone 949 2480

-~j~l~!_&lt;l!~~~~---------

car5.

DON SMITH
AMC JEEP
441 4th Ave.
S2J.9407
Hunllngton, W.Va .

ca lves on side Col/949·2560

1~

mgs of the late Edward
Hoef1 1ch for sale automottc
wa sher, $35, studto couch $35
ont1que dresser , rocker, $15,
set block lamps, $15 cuckoo
clock SIS platform rocker ,

Ford Pick up Phone 742·
2"'r0
~- .....&amp;-.
1963 V';N w1 th 1967 motor, 4 new
ltres 'hew battery good cond t·
lion Make good work cor
Phone 742·2014
- - -- - - - - - - - - - - -

1976--ch-;;~~~ - ~~~;;.~~

$25 ,

-;

colfoe

loble, $15

steps tools tables throw rugs ,
hnens , dtshes , pans and other
orlt cl es Coil 992 5374 after 5

wheel d~ tve truck Plione 949·

'

pm

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

1975 Datsun , $2700 00 Call 992 ~-3453 or 992·3361
FOUR 13 mch Supenor Mags and 2
- - - - - - - - - - - -- ----w1de ova l !ires for Vega , $125
Phone 992 3402
------- --~-------- --

1975 22 FT C I d 1
I
avo co e ro"Ve
lrm ler slee ps 6 Fully self·
con tamed hk e new , only used
3 ttmes Phone 614 985·3356
ofter6 30 pm

---- ----

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

USED Ferguson corn planter, J
pomt hookup , also Case gram
dnll $50 each Paul Karr 1
mile north of Che t
oh10
Phon&amp; (614 ) 985 3 ~ er,
'
- -- 'i--- ---~-------­
BABY a~ lu xe cor seat $15 Phone

247·2167

1975 22 fl Co lvocode trave l -- -----..----L- ___ ____ _
trader , sleeps 6, fully self 1963 Jeep V 8, three fourth ton
contomed l1ke new on ly used
pt c ~up
truck
1974 90
3 limes Phone (614 ) 985 3356 Kowosokt , on ly 500 mtles , A I
afte r 6 30 p m
shape ltke new Phone 992

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

1q741 24ft motor home ltke new,
3 otr cond1t1oners , 5,000 watt
generator hot water, both,
am.fm stereo rad1o and lope
ployer TV CB rod10 roll out
owntng and much more. Ready
to go Mu st see to opprec1ole
Phone (614 ) 949 2770 for op

39'12

------------------ Potato tomato pla nts Adams
Form Phone 247 2693
rOMATQPTa~b-Pho~;247~852Andrew Cross
'
-- -----------------1974 Hondo Cl 200 3500 miles ,
luggage corner, 2 helmets

_E_~~t~!~-~~~~~!.!.~~-::_ _ _ -~~~~~n~_!!~~~~------

Eiifale~elf~F-~~
~~~~==~== =====~===FOR SALE or trade tired of htgh
a lec bills I hove a qutck meal
range tha t uses wood coo l or
bottle gos 1n good condttton
• Phone 949 2770

·-------------------3 AND 4 RM furn ished and un
furniShed opts
5434

Phone

m.

COUNTRYMob1lo Home Pork Rl
33, ten m1les north o f Pomeroy.
Lorge lot s w•th concret pahos
stdewolks ru nners ond off
street porktng Phone 992 7479
3- ROOMf;r;; hed-~f -~filrtr-;;

po1d

356 N Fourlh , Mid

-~!~~~----~-~------2 bedrm trai le r, rea l niCe . Phone
9'12-3324
ONE

bedroom apartments of

VILLAGE MANOR on M1ddlepor1

VEGET A8LE plonls ol oil k~nds 10

9'12 3965
c-oAL-~;;;fone ~;;-d;;jlt;pes ~~

sa lt and rock salt for ice and
snow remo"Vol b: celstor Solt
Works East Motn St , Pomeroy ,
Ohto. Phone 992·3891
COAL, hmestone and caic1um
chlonde and calctum bnne for
dust control and all types of
salt ExcelSior Salt Wo rks East
Motn Street, Pomeroy Ohio,
1953 Ford Jub1lee tractor (ex.
ce llent), $1 ,650, Ford 9N trac·
tor overhauled. $1 000 New 5
ft 3 pt rotary mower (stump
umper) , $385, Four used n d1ng
jown
mowers , 7 and 8 h p $200
to $230 Luckett Form Equip·
ment , West Woshmgton St ,

Albony . Phone (614) 698·3002
or 698 7881.
8EA;::;"PosiS-c .ii2;7- i7i___ _

MAKE-sp;;~g-d;o~;;,gp~f.lab!;~
turn .,wonted tlems 1nto cosh
Adverhse 1n the Wont Ads

LOCUSr-P~rl;:--~~;;d--;,;~p~,Phone949-2774
sTEREO~;~; -~-;,d;;;; -d;s~9~-

om fm rod1o a track tape combination Balance $101 20 or

lerms Coll992 3965

FlsHINGb~t: sOhp-e:.;~d;
motor trot!er Phone 992·61 S4

ONE-He-;;,;;d~o;~~~h~t71f(h-;lf
Mu rroy·Grey) one polled
hereford hetfer to freshen tn
Sep tember Phone (614} 985·
41A8 m evenmgs or on
weekends

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

LOse

992-59011

992·3129 or 992 5434

$89 .95
TURF TILL
TILLERS
3'12 H. P., B&amp;S Eng .

$163.95
POMEROY LANOMARK
'I'._ Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
ilirl Phone 992-2181

L..---------~

diffe rent vanet1es of tomatoes ,
tncludmg non oc1d whtte ii'~;.;;;~E&lt;="~
tomato Very Io rge selection of
boddtng
plants
Also
Geron1ums and other potted APPRO X 10 acres m country w1th
plants
Hongtng baskets.
beaut iful building site on Co.
Cleland Forms and Green·
Rd 32 on Chester water dt!f
Gero ldme Cleland,
hou5e
Blacktop rood owner wdl help
Roctne
ftnance to responstble party
MODERN-w-;.Tn~f~o~~~;AM~fM Phone 949·2nO for appotnt.
ment. W1ll take trades
rodto , 4 speed changer
Balance $103 40 or terms Coli 3 bedrm home In Rusttc H1lls ,

Convenient to shopptng o n
Th1rd and Mtll Streets m Mtd
dleport Brand new high quail·
ty aportmen h
See the TRUCKLOAD used wmdow otr
manager at RiverSide Apart·
con d i11oners , for s ole
menls or call 992 3273 Fur· ' Guo ron teed $50 and up Phone
nuhed
apartments
aha
(6 14) ~93 3595Aihens
-- --------* ---ovatlobie
120 locuU posts Phone 7-42·2359
ONE- S;d;;--;o-b~;-h~;; -f o;
-we;9hi ~·~~h- N;.;- 5-h-;,p;
ren1 adul ts only Phone 992·
Tablets and Hydrex Water Pill s
- ~~~.!.':':n~n_y_!._ -- -~
at Dutton Drug M1ddleport
4 Rooms ond both furntshed Cah
and Nelson Drug
One bed ;; ~ ~nd- 2 bedrm ~ fur
ntShed apartment s
Phone

TURF TRIM
PUSH MOWERS
30",3 HP, B&amp;S Eng

FOR SALE or trade trotler type 8
whee l commeretol tandem fer
tdt zer spreader Good condt
lion Phone 949 2770

-~h!~~~!~~----------

RATES FOR SENOR CITIZENS.
150 oo cash m hand If we
con not beat any deal you
bring us on jeep or AMC

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

. 19!_~~~~!!~_6_£_~------- THE -t~llo~-;-~-p;;;o~;~- b;!~~

vARO S;l;~~tu~da~ ~~dSu~d~-

for $104 monthly plus alec or
$130 includ.ng e!ectnc LOWER

1976 JEEP

1963 Dodge paneled truck Call
992·7332 ofte r6p m

j 10 n

adults on ly m Mtddleport.
Phone 992 387-4

Moy 14, 1178
Allhough you may leel hig hly

Blown mto Walls &amp; Attic1

STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
AE PLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING·SOFFITT
GUTTERS·AWNINGS

'

17 Cole Street
Pomeroy, Ohoo 45769
Telephone (614) 992-3766
We Deliver
.
4 25 1 mo.

CAPI' AIN EASY
PON:T TI!L.L MIO

e&gt;L.AZJ;~:

'

YOU' Ve LI!T THAT CROOK,
I:!JH, CON VOU OUT OF
A~OTHSR SO GRANP!

Ph. 992 3993
4

THE!

SCOU~PREL
THReATE~EP

TO IIAIZI!
ALL..!

LARRY
LAVENDER
Syracuse, Ohio

A I!A!5H 01' PUJIUCITY
A&amp;OUT TH~ WAY He'~
VICTIMI%1!0 ME- COULD
DO UNTOLI&gt; DAMAel!
TO OUit CORPORATe
IMAGE!

10·1 mo

Above and below ground
pool k1ts for the do-it.

OONSTRUCilON

D. BUMGARDNER
Noble Summ11 Rd.,
Middleport
PHONE 992-S724
53 1 mo.

3 on;:h~lf h p -;~k;,~ij;;.~~;,d;~
playpen , mower, chest of
drawers g.rl s b1cyde Call
74? ? 1" 7~

Complete Bridal
And Anniversary
Service
Free Consultation

We build new and remodel
the old All tv pes ol
bulldJng and remodelln;
'rom the foundation up.

AnniversaiY SeiVices

Additions, carpeting,
painting, siding, roofing ,
paneling , paper hanging ,

Phon e Anna Blackwood
985·380S
Bron Thomas
992-2726
4-30·1 mo. 1•

etc ..

Ph . 949·2013 or843·2U7
• · 13· 1 mo .

Aluminum Siding,
Roofing, GutteiS,
Painting and Repair
Fro m the largest Tru ck or
Bulldozer Radtator to the
j sma l/ es t Hea t er Co r e
Nathan Biggs
Radtator Spectahst

SMITH NELSOti
MOTORS, INC.
Ph. 992-2114

Racine Plumbing
&amp;Heating
Racine , Ohio
Need new roof or old
repaired? House, roof,
barn, shingles, build up,
paint•ng, electrical work.
gutters &amp; downspouts,
turnaces, water heaters,
water softners, installed &amp;
repaired , Sewage
Call us at 1149-1182
or 949· 2203
3 28 1 mo .

AI. TROMM CONST.
Free Estimates

2988

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

NEW home for sale, 3 bedrms ,
sewmg room 2 ceromte baths
persona lmxl kitchen built lor
the homemaker, Plenty of
garden space on th1s one acre
lot . Approx 2 one·fourlh m1les
from Rt 7 on S R 124 Toward
Rutland on south s1de of rood.
Watch for Stgn AL TROMM

Rutland, Ohio
742·2331
Roger Wamsley

YOU WAN'T TO BE A
'I&gt;A'fRioT~~ THfRE'~
LOlli OF CRillY GiNS
WITH CIIAZ.Y ID~AS-·
WE JOST WANT TO
Elf PRACTICAL GUVS·

\
\

56 1 mo ''
~------~~~~~ ,

5·S· l mo

Congratulations
Graduates

' SLOAN'S
CAIJPOING

Lei DON ELLI'S make the
for your alter
graduation party . Call us al
992 6167 and we w111 make
your parly something lo
remember
Check our
party rates.
ptua

.

'

oppl Coli (614 )985-3842.
M"ooE'RN House-;~lh'iliS;q-;•~

plus fimshed basement and lot ,
3 &amp; two thtrds acres For ap·

iee how you can reall)

Open 4 p.m. da1ly
Closed all day Mondays

Mike Young, Mallager
Sales and Installation
1 • Rl. 3, Pomeroy,Ohio 45761
, Phon~ay or noght
614-992-ll
·w 1 mo'

j

.

l

Small

Eng.

. ~;t!!f ~~ 't;j chain

l t1" ;l=----~ \"'""
.

Continuous Gutter

Replacement
Windowsa nd Doors
Free Estimates
We recommend and

Sell Qualolv
.:.. 597 6

7~~~f)"''tj
;.........

r-firJ;:,~ ~ 'i

-·

Sawo-

LIWR

~w,~;;:.:
.~·
Riding
Tractors.

..

NEW t Lawn Boy moWiri:
Pioneer
chain
saws,
Bolen's Mowers, Merry
Tillers, MTD Mowers

•'

49e Locus! St.

Middleport, Oh1o

Uriah!

992·3092

·---

EXCAVATING --d-;;;;;;::--bockhoo ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -

Sweepers toasters , trans, all
small appliances. lawn mower ,
next to State Highway Garage

2-;,;:t;;IJ~z;;s-o~-B~~h~;R;;,-

houses and roofs. Phone 992·
5684 or 992·337-t

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

Work guaranteed 20 years ex·
-~~!!~~ · Phone !12·2~~-­

ac re s

Very

private

$8 300 00
HENRY E. CLELAND,
BROKER
992 -2259 or 992- 2~68

MIDDLEPORT
12
rooms, S Brs., 2 balhs, gas
F.A. furnace, large modern
kitchen &amp; 2 lots S2S,OOO
POMEROY - 4 acres .
Renovaled, 2 BR home,
central air &amp;

heat,

1112

baths, $31,000.
CHESHIRE - Modern 3
Brs • llf2 balhs, charming
lull
kitchen ,
patio,
basemen!. dbl garage and
3 lots. 546,500. This week
RT. 33 - Air. land and
happiness 70 acres. All
mineral &gt; 516,500.
FOR INFORMATION ON
SELLING, BUYING AND
RESULTS CALL "2·332l.

1-B&lt;GI Go, "/DO!BUT lffl RGALLY
-d--..,.,_,,

·ruwcr IV l&amp;:u...
HIM--··

\

'.

e&lt;AatY!r- 'XX11.16e:MY GPIIDRIALAC.C:.I~ NT.,.,

weapon
30 Lariat
31 Etcn
boy's
mother

wildfire

31 Debu.uy's

%5 Solicitude
Z7 Suggestive
of equines

3'1 Place to
recuperate

"La -"

WIN AT BRIDGE
Knotty puzzle brings in four

1"'1'7Vlvl~

, ••

NORTH

zs Pitcher's
(2 wds.)
32 Work unit

• 10 B 3
4A Q5

33 Three, in
Milan
34 Cartoonist,
Gardner-

38 Football's

13

• 762
• Q 6 ~3

atrucuon

35 One ol
D'Artagnan's pals
3'1 Shoo!
ILL'L.I.-4J...~r::=f:~ 38 Fishing net

WEST
4 A Q 10 9 3
"10 9 8

tJ6
4K93

EAST
4H
lr7
•Q 9742
.JI0784

SOUTH IDI

"'K 8 4
1rAKJ42
• A K5

ln-+--t--t--t--t--

•a z

Bolh vulnerable

Rlrlelle

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's

ho~ to work il:

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

HOW

6

11 Lealie

29 Wasp's

(var.)
2% Yorkshire
river
23 Press
statement
%4 Spread like

6 00-Publlc Affairs 10.
6·15-Farm Report 13
6:20-Biue Ridge Quarltl 13.
6 30-Columbus Today 4, News 6, Bible Answers 8;
Farmtlme 10.
6:40-&lt;lunce of Prevention 10.
6·45-Mornlng Report 3
6 ~huck While Reporls lO, Good Morning, Trl Slate
13.
7:?
7 00-Tocloy 3,4, 15, Good Morning, Amerlca6,13; CBS
News 8. Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10
1.3G-Schoolles 10
•
8·00-Lanle 6; Capt Kangaroo 8, 10, Sesame Sl. 3J.
8 3G-Big Valley 6
9:00-Not for Women Only J; Phil Donahue 4.15; Lucy
Show 8; Mike Douglas 10; Morning with D.J . 13.
9·3G-A M 3; One Life to Ll•e 6; Tattletales 8; Mike
Douglas 13
lO ·oo-Celebrlty Sweepslakes 3,4, IS;; Edge of Nlghl6,
!I rice Is Right 8,10
10 ·30-High Rollers J,4,1S, Dinah 6
11 :OQ-Wheel of Fortune 3.15; Weekday 4; Gambll
8,10; Farmer's Doughier 13
ll ·3G-Hollywood Square• 3,4, 15; Happy Dys 13. Love
of Life 8,10; Sesame St 20,33
11:55-Take Kerr I, Dan Imel's World 10.
12 :oo-Magnlflcenl Marble Machine 3, IS; Lei's Make •
Deal 13; Bob Braun 4; News 6,8,10
12 3G-Take My Ad• Ice 3,15, All My Children 6, 13,
Search for Tomorrow 8,10.
12 :45-Eiec Co. 33.
12 55-NBC News 3, 15.
1 00-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6.13, Phil Donahue 8,
Young 11. lhe Resltess 10, Nol For Women Only 15.
1:3G-Days otO\Jr Lives 3,4,15; Rhyme 11. Reason 6, 13,
As The Woprld Turns 8,10
2:00-$20,000 Pyramid 6,13.
2·30-Doctors J,4,1S; Break lhe Bank 6,13; Guiding
Light 8,10.
3.0Q-Another World 3,4,15, General Hospital 6,13, All
In The Family 8,10; Crockett's Victory Garden 20.
3 : 3~ne Llfelo Live 13; Mickey Mouse Club 6; Malch
GFame 8,10; Book Beat 20.
4.00-Mister Corloon 3; Merv Griffin 4, Somerset lS 1
Bewitched 6; Mickey Mouse Club 8; Mister R09ers
20,33; Movie "Arizona Bushwhackers" 10; Dinah
13
'
4.3G-Bewltched 3, Mod Squad 6, Beverly Hillbillies B,
Sesame St 20,33; Fllntslones 15
5:oo-Bonanza 3; Parlrldge Family 8; Mission : lm
possible 15
5:3G-Adam-12 4,13 ; News 6. Family Affair 8; Elec.
Co 20,33
6·oo-News 3,4,8,10,13,15, ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6 3G-NBC News3,4,15; ABC News13 ; AndyGrlftlth 61
CBS News 8,10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20,
Carraseolendas 33.
7·00-TruthorCons 3; ToTelltheTruth4; Bowling for
Dollars 6; Aviation Wealher 33; News 10; Don
Adams Screen Test 13; Family Affair 15; Ohio
Journal 20
7 3G-Porter Wagoner 3, Treasure Hunt 4; Candid
Camera 6, Evening Edlllon with Martin Agronsky
20; S2S,OOO Pyramid 10, To Tell the Truth 13; Pop
Goes the Country 15; Black Perspecllve onthe
News 33
8 00-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4, lS, Movie "Brian's Song"
6,13;; Pllol "Slate Fair" 8,10; Washington Week In
Review 20,33.
8 3G-The Pracllce 3,4,15, Wall Streel Week 20,33
9:0Q-Rockford Flies 3.4.15; NBA Play-Off 8,10; Firing
Line 20; Masterpiece Theatre 33.
9 30-Movle "Return to Earth" 6,13
10 oo-Pollce Story 3,4,15; News 20; Paul Nuchlms 33.
I0 ·3Q-Avlallon Weather 20.
11 00-News 3,4,6, 13, 15; ABC News 33;.
11 15-News 8,10.
11 3G-Johnny Couon 3,4,1S; Rookies 6,13; Janak! 33.
11 4&gt;-Movle "Girl Happy" 81 Movie "Murder Mansion" 10.
12 4Q-Don Kirshner's Rock Concert 6, lrooslde 13
1 00-Midnlght Special 3,4,1S
I 1&gt;-Mo•le "Atlack of lhe SO·Foot Woman" 10.
1' 40-Nws 13.
2 30-News 3.
3:00-Movle "The Counterfeit Killer" 3.
4 15-Movle "Monkey Business" 3.
s 45-Salnt 3.
6 45-Green Acres 3 .

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

MUCH
FER TH'
THROW
RUG,
SILAS?

Tune In At 10:15 AM
on W.M.P.0.

dough
7 Spanish
cheer
8 Essential
portion
(3 wds.)
9 Glut
10 Tackler

19 Israel

trurtrument
211 Cut of

DAVE O'NED.J..
REV. TOBY EYERS
Discussing Mason County
Sr. Citizens Home

essayist
8 Uke

Yealerday's Aaawer

~Marx

-------------------- -------------------•
•'
Friday's Guests Are

CHARLES DAMRON

in
umisiana
13 Latvian
capital
14 Come out
15 Actress
Bartok
16 Dem.'s
opponent
17 Weight for
wool
18 In a high-strung way
ZO Greek
nickname
Zl Break bread
Z2 Angel
(Fr.)
Z3 Automaton
%5 Halloween

I French
headgear
2 Swanning
3 Impedimenta
(3 wds.) ,
4 Anecdotal
collection
5 EngUsli

drink

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

$8500

An.wen Mat .ou IIIOUidn't t11:ped ~ nnd on
Pogo OM-AN "INSIDE" STORY

Z&amp; Author,
-Hunter

-------------------$200

I

II Enthusiasm

on Roulo 7 Phone (614) 985·
W~~~;-;~~U7.~; and~~b~ 3825.
po1nlmenl (614) 949-2748
bery Phone 949·2545 or 742
,-72/i~;;"Pt;;-n-;742-2359 ___ _
3167.
REMODEliNG , Plumbing heatmg
and all tvpes of general repair .
101 ONE ·HALF acres , no Wtll-00-r-;r;;;--p;;~t;nQ~
minerals, Sutton Twp
ocre Phone 9•9·2630

J-•1•" SUEDE YEARN INDICT SALOON

12 Uruversity

WILL do roofmg . con struct iOn, BRADFORD, Aust1oneer Com·
plate Ser'41Ce. Phone 949 2487
plumbmg and heating No JOb
or 94q·2000. Rocme , Ohio, Cntt
lao Iorge or too small Phone
742-2348
Bradford
and ditcher Charles R Hal
field , Bock Hoe Serv1ce,
Rutland , Oh1o Phone 742·2008

.,...

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
10 Part of AEC
I Rum cake U Winglike
5 Gradients
DOWN

WILKINSON'S

-~ Aepolr

IO. .rNW)

~w4

'

· r-7.7:-::T-'7:::::-:~:7:---;...-~
Complete

rJ I

ALLEY OOP

'

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

llmlled ) 2 BR , bath, air
cond , own &amp;clly water 11;,

F'P.Y OFF-

~ave.

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

e 1ther case your needs are

STUC1(- BETTeR

Ye~&amp;erd•y'•

-------------------TEAFORD .

basemen!, storage bldgs
J UST ASKING $15,000.
A HONEY FOR THE
MONEY - 135 acres at 1usl
5123.00 per acre . Mosl
minera ls Some t1mber
Ideal tor sportsman CALL
TODAY
STARTING OUT? OR
SLOWING DOWN? - (In

WARIIUC1&lt;5- '!OU'Rt

I

TREE Tnmmmg, 20 years tk·
GREG'S CB SALES locoled ol Er· D&amp;O
penan ce
Ins ured free
Coll949-2830
wm
's
Gulf
Sarvtce,
Mtd
·
Syra cuse
Wtll
consider
es ttmates Cdll 992 2384 or
m
.
dleport
,
Ohto
Phone
reasonab ly pnced mob1le home 101v;~~r-;;-n~-;.-;;;;~;;:-~~
(614) 698·72S7 Albony
2438
an trade Phone 992·7523.
Townshtp, $200 acre Phone
·------------------SEWING
MACHINE:.R
: e'"-p'-0-:lrs- .- ,-e-r'·
949·2630
EXCAVATING, BACKHOES AND vice, oil makes , 992·2284. The
LAND near Me1gs Mtne No ' ,
DOZER , LARGE AND SMALL , Fabnc Shop , Pomeroy . ~
land contract avat lable Also,
SEPTIC TANKS IN STALLED BILL
Authortzed Smger Soles and 1
-~~~£~~~~~~~~~~~~~-PULLINS . PHONE 9'12-2478, DAY
Ser"V
tca We sharpen Sc1ssors.
2 bedrm home , spactous rooms ,
OR NIGHT
Vtrgol B. Sr., Realtor
ExcAv..\iiN"i;:-c~;,-;;,-1 oode-;:-;;nd
-~~~~~~!hon!~!~---110 Mechantc Pomeroy, 0.
backhoe work, dump trucks
7 rooms , bath , par tly carpeted
w1th ne'ft' furnace ond hot
and lo boys for hire . will haul r
Phone "2·3325
•
ftll dirt, top sotl, ltmestone and 1
water large lot L1ncoln Htll
POMEROY - 3 Brs , 1'12 LOVELY 2 story older home In t gro\lel Ca ll Bob or Roger Jef.
Phone 992 2071.
baths , hot water heat,
fers day phone 992·7089
Racine II x2&lt;4 II'Jing rm ,, dining
garage and high location.
room, new butlt·in kitchen with , night phone m 3525 or 992·
S232.
RT. 124 WEST - New
cherry cabinets, den , bedrm
home, 3 Brs , 2 tile baths,
and one half both down w ith
oak hardwood floors , 3 bedr
ulllily, carport, and I level
ms New full both , uhl1ty room
acre. 530,000
upsta~rs , full basement, Iorge
RACINE - 3 Brs , bath,
fron t and reor porches , uno!·
modern kllchen, natura l
tached garage
2 storage
gas F A furnace, and level
b01ldtngs , all set upon Iorge lot
lot 512.900
w1th odd ttionol lot available CARPENTER will do siding, roolMINERSVILLE - 3 Brs ,
Must socnf1ca fo r $21 ,000. Coli
ing , remodeltng, room addi·
A CABIN OF YOUR OW~
949·2883
bath , Pom . waler, gas F.A
tlons
Also garages. Free
- Forked Run Lake, 3
furna ce, and smal l garden . ROCiMv-7~--;id;;;;;;r;~~d
Estimates. Ca11992-2659.
rooms , 2 porches and a
$15,000.
frame , twg_ bedrm
home --------------~----path . No utilities Needs
MIDDLEPORT - 7 rms , 2
located between Coolville and
some repair. $2,800 00
baths, nal. gas heat, and
Tuppers Plains. One acre lot,
PRIVATE - 1'12 Hilly
two cor garage Clly water , gos
large lol In good locallon .
acres (greal for baby
hardwood
floors , BASHAN slore building, o good
hea t ,
$27,500 or offer
business opportunity for SO·
carpeted
f1vmg
roam
, nice
!arm) Close to Meigs HI 5
POMEROY - 3 Brs. , bath ,
meone
Will toke trades
:
vlow
$21
.000
Phone
(614)
BR , bath, own water vJ.
gas heating, large family
owner will help finance if need: .fill
667-3519.
softener N G. hoi watkr
ed. Phone 949-2no
•
room and exira lot. Only
heat. storms a ll over, small

tEMBLUFI

FOR SMART GINS
liKE US- &lt;oME oH&lt;

(bwen

3 or 4 bedrm. home on 1 acre
ground, 1 mtle south of Chester
on Rt 7 Famllv and ltvmg
room dmmg room, butlt In k1 t·
chen , all carpeted, full s1ze
basement ond garage, c1ty
water, natural gas Seen bv

SIII!E-THIS C'OUH~S

O.K.·· EASY PICIQII

Free estimates on car. '
&gt;eling and installation '
Ne'll brmg samples to you1
10me with no obligatio"

Donelll's Pizza
Middleport, Ohio

BUILDER Rullond. Phone 742·
2328

I [ JII

R&amp;J COINS

Rulland
742-2328
All Work Guaranteed

Sales &amp;Ser•ice
2013 loth A•e.
Parkersburg, W. Va .
304-46S-0386
614-423-6474
Alum mum. Vmyl. Steel

• Unaenmble these four Jumbles,
one letler to each square, to
form four ordinar1 words.

Buy, Sell or Trade

Siding Center
HOUSE 3 bedroom home, 59
acres , 1 mtle from Rutland on
New Ltmo Rood , phone 742·

JJ~MID~®u..J=:~.-Jc

COINS
CURRENCY
SUPPLIES
METAL
DETECTORS

The Complete
Remodeling Service
For Your Home

PomeroY ,

FRIDAY, MAY 14,1976

11 3D-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15, Mannix 6,13; Movie " tee
Station Zebra" 8; Mo-le "The Time Machine" 10;
Janakl 33

Ann's Bridal and

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

------- - ~

Quality ts a trait that IS not to be
compromised Ouan tlty 1s
neve r a substitute Reca ll th is
when we1ghmg decisi ons to -

Birthday

'

f- '!'l_nc! ni.A vall•ble

lWIN CITY
MACHINE SHOP

D&amp;D

1973 Dodge Po laro ..f dr hardt op,
a c , power, $1390 Phone 8-43
2095

2132

YARD Sa le Thursda y May 13
through Sunday Moy 16 From
10 a m 1111 5 p m Sal.em St ,
Rutland Across fr om the Penn·
zotl Stat ton

FliRNiSHEo~2 b;dr;-;P~;t;-;-,:

Your

S737 .

Club

PISCES (Ftb. 20·Morch 20)

" 88" 'Cpe , V 6, automaf1c,

- WEEKEND
SPECIAL5-

YARD and Bake Sale May 14 on.
ly F.re house tn Ches ler star .
ling ol 9 00 om Young W1 ves

FURNISHED opt., couple only, oil
utilities pa1d $130 per month
Phone 992.3975 or 992 2571

day

m

•• p1ckup 4 wheel dri ve Phone

It may appear that a fri end IS
no t recep tive to yo ur a p proaches today Don t le!Jt faze
you - that person has othe r
pressmg problems

1965 Olds

'249

-~-- ~- ----

1971 Dodge Charger 318 two TANK cleaning so le Mqk tng
door vtnyl top, aulomo ttc , foe
room for new siQck Prtces cut
lory ai r power brakes, maQ
drasti c a l ly
Tuesda'y ,
wh .. ls $1 ,725 Phone (304) Wedn••doy and Soturdov. 2·5
675 2651
p m. Thursday, Fndoy 2.7 p m
Al so terrcrlums Hunt 's Pet
1970 CheiJelle SS 396, ..f speed, ex
Shop 2 \11 mt les n e of Ches I ar
cellent cond1t1on loh of ex
on 248
tros Ca ll after 5 p m

~975 Fo rd - ~h~;:J;;;,h-f~~ 2- one·holf Hereford cows wtth

TOY

CANCER (Juno 21 -July 22)

· lJJOwn
Insulation Servicl!s

ARE AVAILABLE
AT

SWIMMING
POOLS
All pool supplies available,
too.

CA SH-;a~d f;;r- ~11 -mak;;-;,;;d

'149
PS

•·26-1 mo.

yourself man .

TIMBER t~p ·;nee -h,;-~j~~dl~g
t1mber Coll(614)4468570

LOST- t.shmg tack le box loco·
lion Tonner s Run , reword

a ufomat tc , P S

4 door, 6 cy l

Phone 742-2409
Box 28A
Rutland, 011.

24 Hour Phone Servtce

••

FREE ESTIMAT.ES

Medica I Oxygen
and Supplies

5·00-Bonanza 3; Partridge Family B. Mission : Impossible IS
S JG-Adam-12 4; News 6; Family Altair 8, Elec. Co.
20,33; Adam-12 13.
6·00-News 3,4.8,1 0,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33
6 30-NBC News 3,4, IS; ABC News 13, Andy Grlffllh 6,
CBS News 8, 10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20 ; Lilias Yoga
&amp; You 33.
7·00-Trulh or Cons 3: To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling tor
Dollars 6 ; Lawrence Welk 8, News 10; Let's Make
a Dea l 13; Jack Van lmpe Crusade IS. Anyone for
Tennyson? 20; F~mlly at War 33.
7 3G-Hollywood Squares 3,4, Ohio Stale Lottery 6,
Evening Edltlon with Marlin Agronsky 20; Wild
Kingdom 10; To Tell the Truth 13.
8 00-Mac Davis 3,4, IS; Welcome Back, Koller 6, 13,
_ Wallons 8,10, DPera Theater 20: Mark of Jazz lJ.
8 ·3G-Barney Miller 6,13, Lowell Thomas Remembers
Arts Quartet 20.
9.00-Movle " The Quest" 3,4,15; Streels ol San Fan
cisco 6,13; Pilot 'Land of Hope" 8, Olympiad 33 ,
Mo-le " Bonnie &amp; Clyde" 10: Together. The Fine
arts Quarlet 20
9.3G-Rock Sonata for Plano and Amplified Cello 20
10 .00-Harry 0 6, 13; Barnaby Jones 8, Bill Moyers'
Journal 33; News 20.
11 00-News 3,4,6,8,10,13, 1S; a bc News 33 ..

2322

furntlure ice boxes bra n
beds , old WCJII telephones and
ports , or complete 11ousehofds
Wnte M 0 Mdler Rt 2,
Pomeroy Ohio Coll992 7760

2407

1970 Ford

1965 Ford

1973 FORD TORINO
$1995
4 door . va aulomallc, rad io, good rad1al tires. blue
llnlsh, clean interior

OLD

AUCTI ON, Mason Auction House
Mason W Vo Fndoy Moy 1A
o t 7 30 p m Co nsignments
Phone 1 3CJ4 ·B82
welcome

Falrlane Cpe, 302 V a.

•399

- Shepard ContradoiS

~~tii~ii~~~~-

ANTlQUE Auction Mason Au chon
House Ma son W Vo So tur·
day May 22 11 om Con
stgnments welcome
Phone

CAPRICORN (Dtc. 22·Jon .

See &amp; Save

------mstde and out

~-------

1972 AMC HORNET
SI99S
Sport aboul Wagon, 6 cy l automatic lrans , rad io, good
tires, while fm lsh , good economy . ,

Phone 992 7048

In the County of Me igs, Ohio ,
PARTIES HAS OPENINGS FOR
at lhe regular plllces of vot ing
MANAGERS IN OUR AREA .
there in, on Tu es day the 8th
RKRUITING IS EASY BECAUSE
day of June , 1976, th e ques t ion
OEMS HAVE NO CASH INVESTof levying , In e xc ess of the te n
MENT NO COlLECTING OR
m llllim llatl on , for the b enef tt
DELIVERINGS CAll COLLECT
of Meigs County for th e
CAROL DAY, (51 8) 489-8395 or
purpo se
of
conti nu ed
WRITE FRIEND! Y HOME PAR·
opera tion of th e So utheaste rn
Oh io Emergen c y Medical
TIES 20 RAilROAD AVE ,
Service for th e purpos e of
ALBANY, N Y I220S
em ergen cy medi cal ca re and ---~-------------~GRIL L Cook ond wo1 tren wonted
hospital tran s fer servtce
an ad
Said ta x be 1ng
Apply m person, Crows Steak
dltlona l ta x of 0 2 m ill to run
-~~u~!:!~~~!.'~!'_-----for five yea rs
REliABLE babystlter For more m
of a rote not exceedmg o 2 mi ll
forma t1on call 992 266 1 or
for ea ch one do llar of
9'12-2353
va lu ation , whi c h amounts to
two cents for each one hun SOMEONE to lay opprOI(Imotely
2,00CJ bnck a l reasonab le rote
dred dollar s of va lu at ton for
five years
Phone992 7749
The flo/I s fo r said E lec t ion
will be open at 6 JO o'clock
AM and remain open until
7 lO o c lock P M of said day
By ord er of the Board of
E lections, of Me igs County ,
OhiO
your pu rpose today , even It 1t
Ern est A Wing ett d1fler s !rom you r orig inal plan
Chairman
Doro thy M Jo hn s ton
D1rector

vinyl Interior

RELIABLE babysitter For more in·
tormot1on call 992·2661 or

__

by
Licensed Installer

equ tpnient incl udes factory air, dark green, green

Columbus

LOST Thunt111y tn Racine female
Bolmese cot long haired betge
NOTICE OF ELECTION
wtth dark gray sea l p01 nt mark·
ON TAX LEVY IN
mgs
o range col or wtlh
EXCESS OF THE
rhmet lone Webb A1r Force
TEN MILL LIMITATION
Bo se, voc c lnalton tog
NOTICE Is her eby g ive n
Children s pet Reword Phone
t ha t In pur s uan ce of a
Resolution of the Board of
949 2375 or 949 2863
County Commtsstoners of the
County of Meigs, Pome ro y,
Ohio passe d on the 8th day or
March , 1976, ther e wt ll be
submitted to a vote of th e
peop le of sa id Count y at a DO YOU HAVE PARTY PLAN EX ·

Spec ia l ELECTION lobe held

S289S
Capri ce Estate Wagon, 1 owner, low mi leag e, lull

home Phone 1 (614) 98S 31149

9'12 23S3

Installed

1973 CHEVROLET

orm 3&lt;410

_.,.

~ s,stems

'

12·40-Maglclan 6,13
1·00-Tomorrow 3.4.
1-SO-Neiii(S 13
Channtl FIYI
9:00-7()9 Club (C)
7 00-Muslc Connecllon (c)
7· 30-Modern Sporls I c l
8:30-Rex Humbard (c)
9 30-TestlmonyTimo (C)
10.00-700-Ciub (c)

THURSDAY, MAY 13, 1976

Business Services

2 SIGNS Pomeroy

I 304 882 2407

NOTICES

Television log for easy viewing

Wtsl

Norlh Ea1t

South

llr
I•
2•
Pass 4•
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is Pass Pa ss Pass
used for the three L's, X for the lwo O's, etc Single lelten, Opening lead - 10 •
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all ~---------l
hmts Each day lhe code letters ere dilrerent
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
CRYPI'OQUOTE
Here is a Kelsey hand where
P N 1 F T E I U bndge logic and a little bit of
ASATZJFBZ
PD
luck bring home a contract
Q
J
•
that most players would miss
D
F I
FlHZ
BPGGATAIU
West opens the 10 of hearts.
You
win and play two more
CAOUD
XPHH
TFNATD
rounds of trumps . West
,
follows with the nine and eight
Yesterdays Cryptoquote: BETTER A DISH OF ILLUSION wh1le East sheds a club and a
ANDAHEARTYAPPETITEFORUFE,THANAFEASTOF diamond . You take a
REAUTY AND INDIGESTION THEREWITH. - HARRY A. successful club finesse (the
OVERSTREET
little bit of luck),, cash dumco 1976 Kino ....,..., Syndieato. Inc I
my's ace of clubs and ruff a

I THOUGH! '(OU HAD

FLOATED OUT TO SEA ...

club. West follows to all three
clubs and produces the six and
jack of diamonds when you
cash your ace and king of that
suit
At this point in lime you
have a cmch play for your contract provid~ that West has
at least flve spades to the ace
lor his vulnerable overcalL
Just play your king of
spades West takes his ace II
he continues with the queen of
spades he will collect three
spades and then slve you a
ruff and d1scard . If he leada a
low spade to his partner's ·
ja~k. East will cash a diamond and•g1•e you that need·
ed ruff and discard .

~m~
Here Is another question
about honors In rubber bridge.
Some people insist that they
must be claimed before the
first Irick is played to.
The answer 1a that It Is un· 1
necessary for declarer to
cla1m them until the hand is
over and both improper and
unnecessary for a defender to
claim them early
(For a copy of JACOBY ,
MODERN, send $1 to: "Win
at Bridge, " c/o fh/a
newspaper, P 0 Box 489,
Radio City Station, New York,
N. Y 10019)

•

�10 - The Dally Sentmel, Middleoort-Pomeroy, 0 , Thursday, May 13, 1976

0 t.OMiiMIFJ

WANT ADS

5

INFORMATION
DEADLINES
PM
Day
Before

~~~~~~~~"

am .

Deadline

9

C ancel l at,on

Correcttons will be ac

ce pted until 9 am for
Dev of Publ tcalion
REGULATIONS
The Publisher reserv es
the r ight to edtt or retect
any ads deemed ob
jec llona t The publ tsh er
Wtll not be r esponstble for

more than one mcorre ct
lnsertton

RATES

For Want Ad Servtce
5 cents per word on e

tmertlon
'
Mm lmum CtiargeSI 00

14 cents pe r word three
consecuttve
mserttons
26 cents per word stx
consecut •ve
mserttons
25 Per Cen I 0 tscoun I on

paid ads and ads
w lthm 10 days

pa td

CARD OF THAN~S
&amp; OBITUARY
$2 co
for
SO
word

minimum
Each addtllonlll word 3

cents

BLIND ADS
A ddlt •onal

2Sc Charge

per Adven.semen t

OFFICE HOURS

11 30 a m to S 00 p m
Da tly 8 JO a m to 12 00
Noon Sa t urday
Phone today 992 2156

IN MEMORY of our mother Mrs
James Horalton, Sr who post
ed away B years ago on May

For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds

13

Our hearts std l ache wtth
sadness
Sec:rel t~:~o r s st ill flow,
What tf meant to lose you ,
No one wt!l ever know
When days ore dark and dreary
And everythtng goes wrong ,
Wa seem to haor you whtsper
'Cheer up and Carry on '
Each time we see your pte lura
We seem fQ sm tle and soy
Don t cry, I'm on ly sleepmg
We w1ll meet ogo1n soma day
The Chtldren

l!§~~~=~~~§i~i;i:~
RACINE Fire Department w1ll
hove a gun shoot Saturday of
6 30 p m at their new bu lldt ng
off Bosha n Road
For Memorial Day, beauftful
selection flowe rs
bo!.kets
sprays, loose flowers, "V OSet
Faye s Gift Shop North 2nd St 1
M1ddlepo rt OPf!n datly 9 a m

-~~~!-~---------- ----

WANTED

Rtde

to

OF

QUAUTY Motor Co.
Will DO odd 1obs roolmg po1n·
tmg , hau lmg treework , and
_ ~~~~~ g !h~n!_992_:7.4~--­
WILL core for elderly person !n my

ATTN.!!

ALL tiOUSEWIVES

All Yard Sales Rumm age.:
Porch an d Base ment Po r c h
and Bnement Sa tes, e tc
mu s t be pa 1d In advllnce .
Get your In In ear ly by
stopping by our office at
Th e Da lly Sentinel
111
Court 51 or writ ing Bo x
129, Pome ro y , Ohio A5769
W1fh your r em lttan ce

Qated May 10,
(S)

1 ~7 6

13, 20, 27 16)

3, 41c

Astro-

GmpM

• Bernice Bede Oool
· For Frldoy, Moy 14, 1976
ARIES (Merch 21-Aprll 1i)
Take time to tal k thtngs out
with someone In a sltu atton
that affects both or you You'll
a chieve a meeting o l the

minds
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) II
an adjustment Is due you on a
tra nsaction bring 11 to the
attent ion of the pe rson you
deal w1th If he's reputable he'll
make 11 right

GEMINI (Moy 21 -Junt 20) Feel
f ree to alter your course 11 you

ttnd a better wav to accomplish

Will do pcMtmg
Call Steve Walburn 992·2007 or
- ~~.!~.:'~n~..!.'~ :..~~·~:3.:. ___ _
WILL do bobys11tmg in my home 5
days par week Phone 9_.9

"AS IS
SPECIALS"
1971 Ford Bronco
302 V8, sld. trans

'695 .
1968 Chevrolet
Capnce, V-B, automat1c ,

P.s ,

atr

'495

'125
1963 Ram bier
"6" d doo r

models of mobtle homes
Phone area code 614·423 9531
s$(~hs$$To~~u-;;k;d-o~lo- F;;; s
Truck Auto Pa rts Ru tland
Phone 7A2 __.2081

__ ___________ _

Co11247-2201

PERIENCE?

FRIENDLY

NAZI Germa n Flogs daggers
umforms medals , eTc High
pnce potd Phone 992·2592

-~f~~~~~

Don t let little m istakes bug you
to d ay You re an effec tive
worker Any minor prob lems
can eastly be rectllled

LEO (July 21-Aug. 22) A lrlend
may ta lk too loosely tod a y
Others may ch tde him for t) IS
naivete You ca n do h1m a serv•ce by being on hand to he lp
htm untangle hi s tongue

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Stpl. 22) You
may 1n1ttally try to do things today to seek pubhc app roval
Later. however ,yo u II realize
there's more benefit m qu1et
act1vity

LIBRA (Sop!. 23·0cl. 23) The
adv1ce of a well -meantng fnend
sh o uld no t de te r yo u fro m
loll owmg your lr'[Stln cts tn a
matter you re betler eq U1 pped
to evaluate

SCORPIO (Ocl. 23-Nov. 22)
When buying or selltng today,
}'o u'll have the better busmess
acume n Don t let anyone oust
you from the dnver 1s seal
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Mlslnlormallon malign ing a
person you're fond ol w111 be
bandied about tod ay You can
set the record s tratght wllhout
offendi ng a nyone

19) Do no t depend on
prom1ses made to you today
There 1s rea lly very httle yo u
can t accom plish by yov rself
gtven the mcl1natlon

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 1i)

IF YOU hove a serv1ce to offer
wont to buy or se ll sbmethtng ,
a re lookmg for work
or
what ever
you II pet results
laster wt th a Sen lm e Wont Ad

Co ll992-2156

POM£RQf
MOlOR CO.
Your Chevy Dealer
Pomeroy, Ohio

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

---------YARD SALE, New lt ma Rd Weds

through Sotu rdov 9 a m tdl 5

-~~--------

YARD SALE Thursd~.f;,dF-;:jd;y­
May 13th and 14th across from
Bob s Mark et Mo so11 9 a m !ill

5p

m

--------~-

--------

GARAGE Sale Rt 338 11A m1l e
above Apple Grove Oh1 o
Weds thr ou gh Saturday Fu r
n1ture
floo r CO\IQrt ngs
3
baseboard heater gos water
heater , dtshes clothes sewing
mochme , mtsc 1te ms Charles
-~~~~~e.!!~~e~~e___ _ __
YARD SALE Thursday and Fndoy
9 00 hi I 5 00 End o f second St
watch for s1gns 10 Syracuse
Toys , clo thes , house hold tlems
Call 992·3905 lor more mformo·

Inde pe nd en t this com ing year,
mu ch of what you can d o
depends u.pon o th ers Be alert
for opporlun lttes that occur In a
uniq ue way

2-F;~~-y;d -s~ ~- ~ot';d~~
Laure l Cltff Rood neo f church
Thursday 9 til l 4 00 and FndaV
q o m till dark Adults and
marked
chtldren s clothmg
HooiJe r
portable
down
sweeper, new set of lamps 7 S
Sco tt boot motor m1sc 1tems

P0RCHSAL~-1 ri9- v~;-slr~;tM•dd leport Fnd oy Saturday
and Sunday, May 14 15 ond 16
10 a m ttl! 2 p m R8Cisonoble
pnces, rom or shme

Ru th Taylor reSidence Ftrst
lrotler on Sumner Road off Rl 7
north of Chester

------------- --...,---AKC Registered Collie Stud Ser
viCe Stardus t Kmg Phone

(6 14) 985 4248

4- -a~~~--;~7ot;; -p-;;~dles
mother AKC RegiStered Phone
Vtv1an M1tchem or Harry
Garnes, Sr 992 753-4

MAu--w~d-P~odl; -~~p~~
$SO 00 Phone 9'12 7185

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

~!iEDililli~~iiii!
WANTED TO RENT small house or
trmler preferably m the coun try
and near Pomeroy Either fur·
nished or not Phone 949 2480

-~j~l~!_&lt;l!~~~~---------

car5.

DON SMITH
AMC JEEP
441 4th Ave.
S2J.9407
Hunllngton, W.Va .

ca lves on side Col/949·2560

1~

mgs of the late Edward
Hoef1 1ch for sale automottc
wa sher, $35, studto couch $35
ont1que dresser , rocker, $15,
set block lamps, $15 cuckoo
clock SIS platform rocker ,

Ford Pick up Phone 742·
2"'r0
~- .....&amp;-.
1963 V';N w1 th 1967 motor, 4 new
ltres 'hew battery good cond t·
lion Make good work cor
Phone 742·2014
- - -- - - - - - - - - - - -

1976--ch-;;~~~ - ~~~;;.~~

$25 ,

-;

colfoe

loble, $15

steps tools tables throw rugs ,
hnens , dtshes , pans and other
orlt cl es Coil 992 5374 after 5

wheel d~ tve truck Plione 949·

'

pm

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

1975 Datsun , $2700 00 Call 992 ~-3453 or 992·3361
FOUR 13 mch Supenor Mags and 2
- - - - - - - - - - - -- ----w1de ova l !ires for Vega , $125
Phone 992 3402
------- --~-------- --

1975 22 FT C I d 1
I
avo co e ro"Ve
lrm ler slee ps 6 Fully self·
con tamed hk e new , only used
3 ttmes Phone 614 985·3356
ofter6 30 pm

---- ----

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

USED Ferguson corn planter, J
pomt hookup , also Case gram
dnll $50 each Paul Karr 1
mile north of Che t
oh10
Phon&amp; (614 ) 985 3 ~ er,
'
- -- 'i--- ---~-------­
BABY a~ lu xe cor seat $15 Phone

247·2167

1975 22 fl Co lvocode trave l -- -----..----L- ___ ____ _
trader , sleeps 6, fully self 1963 Jeep V 8, three fourth ton
contomed l1ke new on ly used
pt c ~up
truck
1974 90
3 limes Phone (614 ) 985 3356 Kowosokt , on ly 500 mtles , A I
afte r 6 30 p m
shape ltke new Phone 992

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

1q741 24ft motor home ltke new,
3 otr cond1t1oners , 5,000 watt
generator hot water, both,
am.fm stereo rad1o and lope
ployer TV CB rod10 roll out
owntng and much more. Ready
to go Mu st see to opprec1ole
Phone (614 ) 949 2770 for op

39'12

------------------ Potato tomato pla nts Adams
Form Phone 247 2693
rOMATQPTa~b-Pho~;247~852Andrew Cross
'
-- -----------------1974 Hondo Cl 200 3500 miles ,
luggage corner, 2 helmets

_E_~~t~!~-~~~~~!.!.~~-::_ _ _ -~~~~~n~_!!~~~~------

Eiifale~elf~F-~~
~~~~==~== =====~===FOR SALE or trade tired of htgh
a lec bills I hove a qutck meal
range tha t uses wood coo l or
bottle gos 1n good condttton
• Phone 949 2770

·-------------------3 AND 4 RM furn ished and un
furniShed opts
5434

Phone

m.

COUNTRYMob1lo Home Pork Rl
33, ten m1les north o f Pomeroy.
Lorge lot s w•th concret pahos
stdewolks ru nners ond off
street porktng Phone 992 7479
3- ROOMf;r;; hed-~f -~filrtr-;;

po1d

356 N Fourlh , Mid

-~!~~~----~-~------2 bedrm trai le r, rea l niCe . Phone
9'12-3324
ONE

bedroom apartments of

VILLAGE MANOR on M1ddlepor1

VEGET A8LE plonls ol oil k~nds 10

9'12 3965
c-oAL-~;;;fone ~;;-d;;jlt;pes ~~

sa lt and rock salt for ice and
snow remo"Vol b: celstor Solt
Works East Motn St , Pomeroy ,
Ohto. Phone 992·3891
COAL, hmestone and caic1um
chlonde and calctum bnne for
dust control and all types of
salt ExcelSior Salt Wo rks East
Motn Street, Pomeroy Ohio,
1953 Ford Jub1lee tractor (ex.
ce llent), $1 ,650, Ford 9N trac·
tor overhauled. $1 000 New 5
ft 3 pt rotary mower (stump
umper) , $385, Four used n d1ng
jown
mowers , 7 and 8 h p $200
to $230 Luckett Form Equip·
ment , West Woshmgton St ,

Albony . Phone (614) 698·3002
or 698 7881.
8EA;::;"PosiS-c .ii2;7- i7i___ _

MAKE-sp;;~g-d;o~;;,gp~f.lab!;~
turn .,wonted tlems 1nto cosh
Adverhse 1n the Wont Ads

LOCUSr-P~rl;:--~~;;d--;,;~p~,Phone949-2774
sTEREO~;~; -~-;,d;;;; -d;s~9~-

om fm rod1o a track tape combination Balance $101 20 or

lerms Coll992 3965

FlsHINGb~t: sOhp-e:.;~d;
motor trot!er Phone 992·61 S4

ONE-He-;;,;;d~o;~~~h~t71f(h-;lf
Mu rroy·Grey) one polled
hereford hetfer to freshen tn
Sep tember Phone (614} 985·
41A8 m evenmgs or on
weekends

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

LOse

992-59011

992·3129 or 992 5434

$89 .95
TURF TILL
TILLERS
3'12 H. P., B&amp;S Eng .

$163.95
POMEROY LANOMARK
'I'._ Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
ilirl Phone 992-2181

L..---------~

diffe rent vanet1es of tomatoes ,
tncludmg non oc1d whtte ii'~;.;;;~E&lt;="~
tomato Very Io rge selection of
boddtng
plants
Also
Geron1ums and other potted APPRO X 10 acres m country w1th
plants
Hongtng baskets.
beaut iful building site on Co.
Cleland Forms and Green·
Rd 32 on Chester water dt!f
Gero ldme Cleland,
hou5e
Blacktop rood owner wdl help
Roctne
ftnance to responstble party
MODERN-w-;.Tn~f~o~~~;AM~fM Phone 949·2nO for appotnt.
ment. W1ll take trades
rodto , 4 speed changer
Balance $103 40 or terms Coli 3 bedrm home In Rusttc H1lls ,

Convenient to shopptng o n
Th1rd and Mtll Streets m Mtd
dleport Brand new high quail·
ty aportmen h
See the TRUCKLOAD used wmdow otr
manager at RiverSide Apart·
con d i11oners , for s ole
menls or call 992 3273 Fur· ' Guo ron teed $50 and up Phone
nuhed
apartments
aha
(6 14) ~93 3595Aihens
-- --------* ---ovatlobie
120 locuU posts Phone 7-42·2359
ONE- S;d;;--;o-b~;-h~;; -f o;
-we;9hi ~·~~h- N;.;- 5-h-;,p;
ren1 adul ts only Phone 992·
Tablets and Hydrex Water Pill s
- ~~~.!.':':n~n_y_!._ -- -~
at Dutton Drug M1ddleport
4 Rooms ond both furntshed Cah
and Nelson Drug
One bed ;; ~ ~nd- 2 bedrm ~ fur
ntShed apartment s
Phone

TURF TRIM
PUSH MOWERS
30",3 HP, B&amp;S Eng

FOR SALE or trade trotler type 8
whee l commeretol tandem fer
tdt zer spreader Good condt
lion Phone 949 2770

-~h!~~~!~~----------

RATES FOR SENOR CITIZENS.
150 oo cash m hand If we
con not beat any deal you
bring us on jeep or AMC

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

. 19!_~~~~!!~_6_£_~------- THE -t~llo~-;-~-p;;;o~;~- b;!~~

vARO S;l;~~tu~da~ ~~dSu~d~-

for $104 monthly plus alec or
$130 includ.ng e!ectnc LOWER

1976 JEEP

1963 Dodge paneled truck Call
992·7332 ofte r6p m

j 10 n

adults on ly m Mtddleport.
Phone 992 387-4

Moy 14, 1178
Allhough you may leel hig hly

Blown mto Walls &amp; Attic1

STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
AE PLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING·SOFFITT
GUTTERS·AWNINGS

'

17 Cole Street
Pomeroy, Ohoo 45769
Telephone (614) 992-3766
We Deliver
.
4 25 1 mo.

CAPI' AIN EASY
PON:T TI!L.L MIO

e&gt;L.AZJ;~:

'

YOU' Ve LI!T THAT CROOK,
I:!JH, CON VOU OUT OF
A~OTHSR SO GRANP!

Ph. 992 3993
4

THE!

SCOU~PREL
THReATE~EP

TO IIAIZI!
ALL..!

LARRY
LAVENDER
Syracuse, Ohio

A I!A!5H 01' PUJIUCITY
A&amp;OUT TH~ WAY He'~
VICTIMI%1!0 ME- COULD
DO UNTOLI&gt; DAMAel!
TO OUit CORPORATe
IMAGE!

10·1 mo

Above and below ground
pool k1ts for the do-it.

OONSTRUCilON

D. BUMGARDNER
Noble Summ11 Rd.,
Middleport
PHONE 992-S724
53 1 mo.

3 on;:h~lf h p -;~k;,~ij;;.~~;,d;~
playpen , mower, chest of
drawers g.rl s b1cyde Call
74? ? 1" 7~

Complete Bridal
And Anniversary
Service
Free Consultation

We build new and remodel
the old All tv pes ol
bulldJng and remodelln;
'rom the foundation up.

AnniversaiY SeiVices

Additions, carpeting,
painting, siding, roofing ,
paneling , paper hanging ,

Phon e Anna Blackwood
985·380S
Bron Thomas
992-2726
4-30·1 mo. 1•

etc ..

Ph . 949·2013 or843·2U7
• · 13· 1 mo .

Aluminum Siding,
Roofing, GutteiS,
Painting and Repair
Fro m the largest Tru ck or
Bulldozer Radtator to the
j sma l/ es t Hea t er Co r e
Nathan Biggs
Radtator Spectahst

SMITH NELSOti
MOTORS, INC.
Ph. 992-2114

Racine Plumbing
&amp;Heating
Racine , Ohio
Need new roof or old
repaired? House, roof,
barn, shingles, build up,
paint•ng, electrical work.
gutters &amp; downspouts,
turnaces, water heaters,
water softners, installed &amp;
repaired , Sewage
Call us at 1149-1182
or 949· 2203
3 28 1 mo .

AI. TROMM CONST.
Free Estimates

2988

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

NEW home for sale, 3 bedrms ,
sewmg room 2 ceromte baths
persona lmxl kitchen built lor
the homemaker, Plenty of
garden space on th1s one acre
lot . Approx 2 one·fourlh m1les
from Rt 7 on S R 124 Toward
Rutland on south s1de of rood.
Watch for Stgn AL TROMM

Rutland, Ohio
742·2331
Roger Wamsley

YOU WAN'T TO BE A
'I&gt;A'fRioT~~ THfRE'~
LOlli OF CRillY GiNS
WITH CIIAZ.Y ID~AS-·
WE JOST WANT TO
Elf PRACTICAL GUVS·

\
\

56 1 mo ''
~------~~~~~ ,

5·S· l mo

Congratulations
Graduates

' SLOAN'S
CAIJPOING

Lei DON ELLI'S make the
for your alter
graduation party . Call us al
992 6167 and we w111 make
your parly something lo
remember
Check our
party rates.
ptua

.

'

oppl Coli (614 )985-3842.
M"ooE'RN House-;~lh'iliS;q-;•~

plus fimshed basement and lot ,
3 &amp; two thtrds acres For ap·

iee how you can reall)

Open 4 p.m. da1ly
Closed all day Mondays

Mike Young, Mallager
Sales and Installation
1 • Rl. 3, Pomeroy,Ohio 45761
, Phon~ay or noght
614-992-ll
·w 1 mo'

j

.

l

Small

Eng.

. ~;t!!f ~~ 't;j chain

l t1" ;l=----~ \"'""
.

Continuous Gutter

Replacement
Windowsa nd Doors
Free Estimates
We recommend and

Sell Qualolv
.:.. 597 6

7~~~f)"''tj
;.........

r-firJ;:,~ ~ 'i

-·

Sawo-

LIWR

~w,~;;:.:
.~·
Riding
Tractors.

..

NEW t Lawn Boy moWiri:
Pioneer
chain
saws,
Bolen's Mowers, Merry
Tillers, MTD Mowers

•'

49e Locus! St.

Middleport, Oh1o

Uriah!

992·3092

·---

EXCAVATING --d-;;;;;;::--bockhoo ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -

Sweepers toasters , trans, all
small appliances. lawn mower ,
next to State Highway Garage

2-;,;:t;;IJ~z;;s-o~-B~~h~;R;;,-

houses and roofs. Phone 992·
5684 or 992·337-t

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

Work guaranteed 20 years ex·
-~~!!~~ · Phone !12·2~~-­

ac re s

Very

private

$8 300 00
HENRY E. CLELAND,
BROKER
992 -2259 or 992- 2~68

MIDDLEPORT
12
rooms, S Brs., 2 balhs, gas
F.A. furnace, large modern
kitchen &amp; 2 lots S2S,OOO
POMEROY - 4 acres .
Renovaled, 2 BR home,
central air &amp;

heat,

1112

baths, $31,000.
CHESHIRE - Modern 3
Brs • llf2 balhs, charming
lull
kitchen ,
patio,
basemen!. dbl garage and
3 lots. 546,500. This week
RT. 33 - Air. land and
happiness 70 acres. All
mineral &gt; 516,500.
FOR INFORMATION ON
SELLING, BUYING AND
RESULTS CALL "2·332l.

1-B&lt;GI Go, "/DO!BUT lffl RGALLY
-d--..,.,_,,

·ruwcr IV l&amp;:u...
HIM--··

\

'.

e&lt;AatY!r- 'XX11.16e:MY GPIIDRIALAC.C:.I~ NT.,.,

weapon
30 Lariat
31 Etcn
boy's
mother

wildfire

31 Debu.uy's

%5 Solicitude
Z7 Suggestive
of equines

3'1 Place to
recuperate

"La -"

WIN AT BRIDGE
Knotty puzzle brings in four

1"'1'7Vlvl~

, ••

NORTH

zs Pitcher's
(2 wds.)
32 Work unit

• 10 B 3
4A Q5

33 Three, in
Milan
34 Cartoonist,
Gardner-

38 Football's

13

• 762
• Q 6 ~3

atrucuon

35 One ol
D'Artagnan's pals
3'1 Shoo!
ILL'L.I.-4J...~r::=f:~ 38 Fishing net

WEST
4 A Q 10 9 3
"10 9 8

tJ6
4K93

EAST
4H
lr7
•Q 9742
.JI0784

SOUTH IDI

"'K 8 4
1rAKJ42
• A K5

ln-+--t--t--t--t--

•a z

Bolh vulnerable

Rlrlelle

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's

ho~ to work il:

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

HOW

6

11 Lealie

29 Wasp's

(var.)
2% Yorkshire
river
23 Press
statement
%4 Spread like

6 00-Publlc Affairs 10.
6·15-Farm Report 13
6:20-Biue Ridge Quarltl 13.
6 30-Columbus Today 4, News 6, Bible Answers 8;
Farmtlme 10.
6:40-&lt;lunce of Prevention 10.
6·45-Mornlng Report 3
6 ~huck While Reporls lO, Good Morning, Trl Slate
13.
7:?
7 00-Tocloy 3,4, 15, Good Morning, Amerlca6,13; CBS
News 8. Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10
1.3G-Schoolles 10
•
8·00-Lanle 6; Capt Kangaroo 8, 10, Sesame Sl. 3J.
8 3G-Big Valley 6
9:00-Not for Women Only J; Phil Donahue 4.15; Lucy
Show 8; Mike Douglas 10; Morning with D.J . 13.
9·3G-A M 3; One Life to Ll•e 6; Tattletales 8; Mike
Douglas 13
lO ·oo-Celebrlty Sweepslakes 3,4, IS;; Edge of Nlghl6,
!I rice Is Right 8,10
10 ·30-High Rollers J,4,1S, Dinah 6
11 :OQ-Wheel of Fortune 3.15; Weekday 4; Gambll
8,10; Farmer's Doughier 13
ll ·3G-Hollywood Square• 3,4, 15; Happy Dys 13. Love
of Life 8,10; Sesame St 20,33
11:55-Take Kerr I, Dan Imel's World 10.
12 :oo-Magnlflcenl Marble Machine 3, IS; Lei's Make •
Deal 13; Bob Braun 4; News 6,8,10
12 3G-Take My Ad• Ice 3,15, All My Children 6, 13,
Search for Tomorrow 8,10.
12 :45-Eiec Co. 33.
12 55-NBC News 3, 15.
1 00-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6.13, Phil Donahue 8,
Young 11. lhe Resltess 10, Nol For Women Only 15.
1:3G-Days otO\Jr Lives 3,4,15; Rhyme 11. Reason 6, 13,
As The Woprld Turns 8,10
2:00-$20,000 Pyramid 6,13.
2·30-Doctors J,4,1S; Break lhe Bank 6,13; Guiding
Light 8,10.
3.0Q-Another World 3,4,15, General Hospital 6,13, All
In The Family 8,10; Crockett's Victory Garden 20.
3 : 3~ne Llfelo Live 13; Mickey Mouse Club 6; Malch
GFame 8,10; Book Beat 20.
4.00-Mister Corloon 3; Merv Griffin 4, Somerset lS 1
Bewitched 6; Mickey Mouse Club 8; Mister R09ers
20,33; Movie "Arizona Bushwhackers" 10; Dinah
13
'
4.3G-Bewltched 3, Mod Squad 6, Beverly Hillbillies B,
Sesame St 20,33; Fllntslones 15
5:oo-Bonanza 3; Parlrldge Family 8; Mission : lm
possible 15
5:3G-Adam-12 4,13 ; News 6. Family Affair 8; Elec.
Co 20,33
6·oo-News 3,4,8,10,13,15, ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6 3G-NBC News3,4,15; ABC News13 ; AndyGrlftlth 61
CBS News 8,10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20,
Carraseolendas 33.
7·00-TruthorCons 3; ToTelltheTruth4; Bowling for
Dollars 6; Aviation Wealher 33; News 10; Don
Adams Screen Test 13; Family Affair 15; Ohio
Journal 20
7 3G-Porter Wagoner 3, Treasure Hunt 4; Candid
Camera 6, Evening Edlllon with Martin Agronsky
20; S2S,OOO Pyramid 10, To Tell the Truth 13; Pop
Goes the Country 15; Black Perspecllve onthe
News 33
8 00-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4, lS, Movie "Brian's Song"
6,13;; Pllol "Slate Fair" 8,10; Washington Week In
Review 20,33.
8 3G-The Pracllce 3,4,15, Wall Streel Week 20,33
9:0Q-Rockford Flies 3.4.15; NBA Play-Off 8,10; Firing
Line 20; Masterpiece Theatre 33.
9 30-Movle "Return to Earth" 6,13
10 oo-Pollce Story 3,4,15; News 20; Paul Nuchlms 33.
I0 ·3Q-Avlallon Weather 20.
11 00-News 3,4,6, 13, 15; ABC News 33;.
11 15-News 8,10.
11 3G-Johnny Couon 3,4,1S; Rookies 6,13; Janak! 33.
11 4&gt;-Movle "Girl Happy" 81 Movie "Murder Mansion" 10.
12 4Q-Don Kirshner's Rock Concert 6, lrooslde 13
1 00-Midnlght Special 3,4,1S
I 1&gt;-Mo•le "Atlack of lhe SO·Foot Woman" 10.
1' 40-Nws 13.
2 30-News 3.
3:00-Movle "The Counterfeit Killer" 3.
4 15-Movle "Monkey Business" 3.
s 45-Salnt 3.
6 45-Green Acres 3 .

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

MUCH
FER TH'
THROW
RUG,
SILAS?

Tune In At 10:15 AM
on W.M.P.0.

dough
7 Spanish
cheer
8 Essential
portion
(3 wds.)
9 Glut
10 Tackler

19 Israel

trurtrument
211 Cut of

DAVE O'NED.J..
REV. TOBY EYERS
Discussing Mason County
Sr. Citizens Home

essayist
8 Uke

Yealerday's Aaawer

~Marx

-------------------- -------------------•
•'
Friday's Guests Are

CHARLES DAMRON

in
umisiana
13 Latvian
capital
14 Come out
15 Actress
Bartok
16 Dem.'s
opponent
17 Weight for
wool
18 In a high-strung way
ZO Greek
nickname
Zl Break bread
Z2 Angel
(Fr.)
Z3 Automaton
%5 Halloween

I French
headgear
2 Swanning
3 Impedimenta
(3 wds.) ,
4 Anecdotal
collection
5 EngUsli

drink

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

$8500

An.wen Mat .ou IIIOUidn't t11:ped ~ nnd on
Pogo OM-AN "INSIDE" STORY

Z&amp; Author,
-Hunter

-------------------$200

I

II Enthusiasm

on Roulo 7 Phone (614) 985·
W~~~;-;~~U7.~; and~~b~ 3825.
po1nlmenl (614) 949-2748
bery Phone 949·2545 or 742
,-72/i~;;"Pt;;-n-;742-2359 ___ _
3167.
REMODEliNG , Plumbing heatmg
and all tvpes of general repair .
101 ONE ·HALF acres , no Wtll-00-r-;r;;;--p;;~t;nQ~
minerals, Sutton Twp
ocre Phone 9•9·2630

J-•1•" SUEDE YEARN INDICT SALOON

12 Uruversity

WILL do roofmg . con struct iOn, BRADFORD, Aust1oneer Com·
plate Ser'41Ce. Phone 949 2487
plumbmg and heating No JOb
or 94q·2000. Rocme , Ohio, Cntt
lao Iorge or too small Phone
742-2348
Bradford
and ditcher Charles R Hal
field , Bock Hoe Serv1ce,
Rutland , Oh1o Phone 742·2008

.,...

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
10 Part of AEC
I Rum cake U Winglike
5 Gradients
DOWN

WILKINSON'S

-~ Aepolr

IO. .rNW)

~w4

'

· r-7.7:-::T-'7:::::-:~:7:---;...-~
Complete

rJ I

ALLEY OOP

'

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

llmlled ) 2 BR , bath, air
cond , own &amp;clly water 11;,

F'P.Y OFF-

~ave.

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

e 1ther case your needs are

STUC1(- BETTeR

Ye~&amp;erd•y'•

-------------------TEAFORD .

basemen!, storage bldgs
J UST ASKING $15,000.
A HONEY FOR THE
MONEY - 135 acres at 1usl
5123.00 per acre . Mosl
minera ls Some t1mber
Ideal tor sportsman CALL
TODAY
STARTING OUT? OR
SLOWING DOWN? - (In

WARIIUC1&lt;5- '!OU'Rt

I

TREE Tnmmmg, 20 years tk·
GREG'S CB SALES locoled ol Er· D&amp;O
penan ce
Ins ured free
Coll949-2830
wm
's
Gulf
Sarvtce,
Mtd
·
Syra cuse
Wtll
consider
es ttmates Cdll 992 2384 or
m
.
dleport
,
Ohto
Phone
reasonab ly pnced mob1le home 101v;~~r-;;-n~-;.-;;;;~;;:-~~
(614) 698·72S7 Albony
2438
an trade Phone 992·7523.
Townshtp, $200 acre Phone
·------------------SEWING
MACHINE:.R
: e'"-p'-0-:lrs- .- ,-e-r'·
949·2630
EXCAVATING, BACKHOES AND vice, oil makes , 992·2284. The
LAND near Me1gs Mtne No ' ,
DOZER , LARGE AND SMALL , Fabnc Shop , Pomeroy . ~
land contract avat lable Also,
SEPTIC TANKS IN STALLED BILL
Authortzed Smger Soles and 1
-~~~£~~~~~~~~~~~~~-PULLINS . PHONE 9'12-2478, DAY
Ser"V
tca We sharpen Sc1ssors.
2 bedrm home , spactous rooms ,
OR NIGHT
Vtrgol B. Sr., Realtor
ExcAv..\iiN"i;:-c~;,-;;,-1 oode-;:-;;nd
-~~~~~~!hon!~!~---110 Mechantc Pomeroy, 0.
backhoe work, dump trucks
7 rooms , bath , par tly carpeted
w1th ne'ft' furnace ond hot
and lo boys for hire . will haul r
Phone "2·3325
•
ftll dirt, top sotl, ltmestone and 1
water large lot L1ncoln Htll
POMEROY - 3 Brs , 1'12 LOVELY 2 story older home In t gro\lel Ca ll Bob or Roger Jef.
Phone 992 2071.
baths , hot water heat,
fers day phone 992·7089
Racine II x2&lt;4 II'Jing rm ,, dining
garage and high location.
room, new butlt·in kitchen with , night phone m 3525 or 992·
S232.
RT. 124 WEST - New
cherry cabinets, den , bedrm
home, 3 Brs , 2 tile baths,
and one half both down w ith
oak hardwood floors , 3 bedr
ulllily, carport, and I level
ms New full both , uhl1ty room
acre. 530,000
upsta~rs , full basement, Iorge
RACINE - 3 Brs , bath,
fron t and reor porches , uno!·
modern kllchen, natura l
tached garage
2 storage
gas F A furnace, and level
b01ldtngs , all set upon Iorge lot
lot 512.900
w1th odd ttionol lot available CARPENTER will do siding, roolMINERSVILLE - 3 Brs ,
Must socnf1ca fo r $21 ,000. Coli
ing , remodeltng, room addi·
A CABIN OF YOUR OW~
949·2883
bath , Pom . waler, gas F.A
tlons
Also garages. Free
- Forked Run Lake, 3
furna ce, and smal l garden . ROCiMv-7~--;id;;;;;;r;~~d
Estimates. Ca11992-2659.
rooms , 2 porches and a
$15,000.
frame , twg_ bedrm
home --------------~----path . No utilities Needs
MIDDLEPORT - 7 rms , 2
located between Coolville and
some repair. $2,800 00
baths, nal. gas heat, and
Tuppers Plains. One acre lot,
PRIVATE - 1'12 Hilly
two cor garage Clly water , gos
large lol In good locallon .
acres (greal for baby
hardwood
floors , BASHAN slore building, o good
hea t ,
$27,500 or offer
business opportunity for SO·
carpeted
f1vmg
roam
, nice
!arm) Close to Meigs HI 5
POMEROY - 3 Brs. , bath ,
meone
Will toke trades
:
vlow
$21
.000
Phone
(614)
BR , bath, own water vJ.
gas heating, large family
owner will help finance if need: .fill
667-3519.
softener N G. hoi watkr
ed. Phone 949-2no
•
room and exira lot. Only
heat. storms a ll over, small

tEMBLUFI

FOR SMART GINS
liKE US- &lt;oME oH&lt;

(bwen

3 or 4 bedrm. home on 1 acre
ground, 1 mtle south of Chester
on Rt 7 Famllv and ltvmg
room dmmg room, butlt In k1 t·
chen , all carpeted, full s1ze
basement ond garage, c1ty
water, natural gas Seen bv

SIII!E-THIS C'OUH~S

O.K.·· EASY PICIQII

Free estimates on car. '
&gt;eling and installation '
Ne'll brmg samples to you1
10me with no obligatio"

Donelll's Pizza
Middleport, Ohio

BUILDER Rullond. Phone 742·
2328

I [ JII

R&amp;J COINS

Rulland
742-2328
All Work Guaranteed

Sales &amp;Ser•ice
2013 loth A•e.
Parkersburg, W. Va .
304-46S-0386
614-423-6474
Alum mum. Vmyl. Steel

• Unaenmble these four Jumbles,
one letler to each square, to
form four ordinar1 words.

Buy, Sell or Trade

Siding Center
HOUSE 3 bedroom home, 59
acres , 1 mtle from Rutland on
New Ltmo Rood , phone 742·

JJ~MID~®u..J=:~.-Jc

COINS
CURRENCY
SUPPLIES
METAL
DETECTORS

The Complete
Remodeling Service
For Your Home

PomeroY ,

FRIDAY, MAY 14,1976

11 3D-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15, Mannix 6,13; Movie " tee
Station Zebra" 8; Mo-le "The Time Machine" 10;
Janakl 33

Ann's Bridal and

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

------- - ~

Quality ts a trait that IS not to be
compromised Ouan tlty 1s
neve r a substitute Reca ll th is
when we1ghmg decisi ons to -

Birthday

'

f- '!'l_nc! ni.A vall•ble

lWIN CITY
MACHINE SHOP

D&amp;D

1973 Dodge Po laro ..f dr hardt op,
a c , power, $1390 Phone 8-43
2095

2132

YARD Sa le Thursda y May 13
through Sunday Moy 16 From
10 a m 1111 5 p m Sal.em St ,
Rutland Across fr om the Penn·
zotl Stat ton

FliRNiSHEo~2 b;dr;-;P~;t;-;-,:

Your

S737 .

Club

PISCES (Ftb. 20·Morch 20)

" 88" 'Cpe , V 6, automaf1c,

- WEEKEND
SPECIAL5-

YARD and Bake Sale May 14 on.
ly F.re house tn Ches ler star .
ling ol 9 00 om Young W1 ves

FURNISHED opt., couple only, oil
utilities pa1d $130 per month
Phone 992.3975 or 992 2571

day

m

•• p1ckup 4 wheel dri ve Phone

It may appear that a fri end IS
no t recep tive to yo ur a p proaches today Don t le!Jt faze
you - that person has othe r
pressmg problems

1965 Olds

'249

-~-- ~- ----

1971 Dodge Charger 318 two TANK cleaning so le Mqk tng
door vtnyl top, aulomo ttc , foe
room for new siQck Prtces cut
lory ai r power brakes, maQ
drasti c a l ly
Tuesda'y ,
wh .. ls $1 ,725 Phone (304) Wedn••doy and Soturdov. 2·5
675 2651
p m. Thursday, Fndoy 2.7 p m
Al so terrcrlums Hunt 's Pet
1970 CheiJelle SS 396, ..f speed, ex
Shop 2 \11 mt les n e of Ches I ar
cellent cond1t1on loh of ex
on 248
tros Ca ll after 5 p m

~975 Fo rd - ~h~;:J;;;,h-f~~ 2- one·holf Hereford cows wtth

TOY

CANCER (Juno 21 -July 22)

· lJJOwn
Insulation Servicl!s

ARE AVAILABLE
AT

SWIMMING
POOLS
All pool supplies available,
too.

CA SH-;a~d f;;r- ~11 -mak;;-;,;;d

'149
PS

•·26-1 mo.

yourself man .

TIMBER t~p ·;nee -h,;-~j~~dl~g
t1mber Coll(614)4468570

LOST- t.shmg tack le box loco·
lion Tonner s Run , reword

a ufomat tc , P S

4 door, 6 cy l

Phone 742-2409
Box 28A
Rutland, 011.

24 Hour Phone Servtce

••

FREE ESTIMAT.ES

Medica I Oxygen
and Supplies

5·00-Bonanza 3; Partridge Family B. Mission : Impossible IS
S JG-Adam-12 4; News 6; Family Altair 8, Elec. Co.
20,33; Adam-12 13.
6·00-News 3,4.8,1 0,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33
6 30-NBC News 3,4, IS; ABC News 13, Andy Grlffllh 6,
CBS News 8, 10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20 ; Lilias Yoga
&amp; You 33.
7·00-Trulh or Cons 3: To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling tor
Dollars 6 ; Lawrence Welk 8, News 10; Let's Make
a Dea l 13; Jack Van lmpe Crusade IS. Anyone for
Tennyson? 20; F~mlly at War 33.
7 3G-Hollywood Squares 3,4, Ohio Stale Lottery 6,
Evening Edltlon with Marlin Agronsky 20; Wild
Kingdom 10; To Tell the Truth 13.
8 00-Mac Davis 3,4, IS; Welcome Back, Koller 6, 13,
_ Wallons 8,10, DPera Theater 20: Mark of Jazz lJ.
8 ·3G-Barney Miller 6,13, Lowell Thomas Remembers
Arts Quartet 20.
9.00-Movle " The Quest" 3,4,15; Streels ol San Fan
cisco 6,13; Pilot 'Land of Hope" 8, Olympiad 33 ,
Mo-le " Bonnie &amp; Clyde" 10: Together. The Fine
arts Quarlet 20
9.3G-Rock Sonata for Plano and Amplified Cello 20
10 .00-Harry 0 6, 13; Barnaby Jones 8, Bill Moyers'
Journal 33; News 20.
11 00-News 3,4,6,8,10,13, 1S; a bc News 33 ..

2322

furntlure ice boxes bra n
beds , old WCJII telephones and
ports , or complete 11ousehofds
Wnte M 0 Mdler Rt 2,
Pomeroy Ohio Coll992 7760

2407

1970 Ford

1965 Ford

1973 FORD TORINO
$1995
4 door . va aulomallc, rad io, good rad1al tires. blue
llnlsh, clean interior

OLD

AUCTI ON, Mason Auction House
Mason W Vo Fndoy Moy 1A
o t 7 30 p m Co nsignments
Phone 1 3CJ4 ·B82
welcome

Falrlane Cpe, 302 V a.

•399

- Shepard ContradoiS

~~tii~ii~~~~-

ANTlQUE Auction Mason Au chon
House Ma son W Vo So tur·
day May 22 11 om Con
stgnments welcome
Phone

CAPRICORN (Dtc. 22·Jon .

See &amp; Save

------mstde and out

~-------

1972 AMC HORNET
SI99S
Sport aboul Wagon, 6 cy l automatic lrans , rad io, good
tires, while fm lsh , good economy . ,

Phone 992 7048

In the County of Me igs, Ohio ,
PARTIES HAS OPENINGS FOR
at lhe regular plllces of vot ing
MANAGERS IN OUR AREA .
there in, on Tu es day the 8th
RKRUITING IS EASY BECAUSE
day of June , 1976, th e ques t ion
OEMS HAVE NO CASH INVESTof levying , In e xc ess of the te n
MENT NO COlLECTING OR
m llllim llatl on , for the b enef tt
DELIVERINGS CAll COLLECT
of Meigs County for th e
CAROL DAY, (51 8) 489-8395 or
purpo se
of
conti nu ed
WRITE FRIEND! Y HOME PAR·
opera tion of th e So utheaste rn
Oh io Emergen c y Medical
TIES 20 RAilROAD AVE ,
Service for th e purpos e of
ALBANY, N Y I220S
em ergen cy medi cal ca re and ---~-------------~GRIL L Cook ond wo1 tren wonted
hospital tran s fer servtce
an ad
Said ta x be 1ng
Apply m person, Crows Steak
dltlona l ta x of 0 2 m ill to run
-~~u~!:!~~~!.'~!'_-----for five yea rs
REliABLE babystlter For more m
of a rote not exceedmg o 2 mi ll
forma t1on call 992 266 1 or
for ea ch one do llar of
9'12-2353
va lu ation , whi c h amounts to
two cents for each one hun SOMEONE to lay opprOI(Imotely
2,00CJ bnck a l reasonab le rote
dred dollar s of va lu at ton for
five years
Phone992 7749
The flo/I s fo r said E lec t ion
will be open at 6 JO o'clock
AM and remain open until
7 lO o c lock P M of said day
By ord er of the Board of
E lections, of Me igs County ,
OhiO
your pu rpose today , even It 1t
Ern est A Wing ett d1fler s !rom you r orig inal plan
Chairman
Doro thy M Jo hn s ton
D1rector

vinyl Interior

RELIABLE babysitter For more in·
tormot1on call 992·2661 or

__

by
Licensed Installer

equ tpnient incl udes factory air, dark green, green

Columbus

LOST Thunt111y tn Racine female
Bolmese cot long haired betge
NOTICE OF ELECTION
wtth dark gray sea l p01 nt mark·
ON TAX LEVY IN
mgs
o range col or wtlh
EXCESS OF THE
rhmet lone Webb A1r Force
TEN MILL LIMITATION
Bo se, voc c lnalton tog
NOTICE Is her eby g ive n
Children s pet Reword Phone
t ha t In pur s uan ce of a
Resolution of the Board of
949 2375 or 949 2863
County Commtsstoners of the
County of Meigs, Pome ro y,
Ohio passe d on the 8th day or
March , 1976, ther e wt ll be
submitted to a vote of th e
peop le of sa id Count y at a DO YOU HAVE PARTY PLAN EX ·

Spec ia l ELECTION lobe held

S289S
Capri ce Estate Wagon, 1 owner, low mi leag e, lull

home Phone 1 (614) 98S 31149

9'12 23S3

Installed

1973 CHEVROLET

orm 3&lt;410

_.,.

~ s,stems

'

12·40-Maglclan 6,13
1·00-Tomorrow 3.4.
1-SO-Neiii(S 13
Channtl FIYI
9:00-7()9 Club (C)
7 00-Muslc Connecllon (c)
7· 30-Modern Sporls I c l
8:30-Rex Humbard (c)
9 30-TestlmonyTimo (C)
10.00-700-Ciub (c)

THURSDAY, MAY 13, 1976

Business Services

2 SIGNS Pomeroy

I 304 882 2407

NOTICES

Television log for easy viewing

Wtsl

Norlh Ea1t

South

llr
I•
2•
Pass 4•
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is Pass Pa ss Pass
used for the three L's, X for the lwo O's, etc Single lelten, Opening lead - 10 •
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all ~---------l
hmts Each day lhe code letters ere dilrerent
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
CRYPI'OQUOTE
Here is a Kelsey hand where
P N 1 F T E I U bndge logic and a little bit of
ASATZJFBZ
PD
luck bring home a contract
Q
J
•
that most players would miss
D
F I
FlHZ
BPGGATAIU
West opens the 10 of hearts.
You
win and play two more
CAOUD
XPHH
TFNATD
rounds of trumps . West
,
follows with the nine and eight
Yesterdays Cryptoquote: BETTER A DISH OF ILLUSION wh1le East sheds a club and a
ANDAHEARTYAPPETITEFORUFE,THANAFEASTOF diamond . You take a
REAUTY AND INDIGESTION THEREWITH. - HARRY A. successful club finesse (the
OVERSTREET
little bit of luck),, cash dumco 1976 Kino ....,..., Syndieato. Inc I
my's ace of clubs and ruff a

I THOUGH! '(OU HAD

FLOATED OUT TO SEA ...

club. West follows to all three
clubs and produces the six and
jack of diamonds when you
cash your ace and king of that
suit
At this point in lime you
have a cmch play for your contract provid~ that West has
at least flve spades to the ace
lor his vulnerable overcalL
Just play your king of
spades West takes his ace II
he continues with the queen of
spades he will collect three
spades and then slve you a
ruff and d1scard . If he leada a
low spade to his partner's ·
ja~k. East will cash a diamond and•g1•e you that need·
ed ruff and discard .

~m~
Here Is another question
about honors In rubber bridge.
Some people insist that they
must be claimed before the
first Irick is played to.
The answer 1a that It Is un· 1
necessary for declarer to
cla1m them until the hand is
over and both improper and
unnecessary for a defender to
claim them early
(For a copy of JACOBY ,
MODERN, send $1 to: "Win
at Bridge, " c/o fh/a
newspaper, P 0 Box 489,
Radio City Station, New York,
N. Y 10019)

•

�12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, May 13, 1976

News•. in Briefs

Teachers 1

(Continued !rom page I )
A. Murphy, the most optimistic of industry executives, who in
recent mouths has upped his predictions three times lrQm a
JOl.,.million car year to 10.8 million sales.

. Fire loss set
at $30,000. in
rural home

For Her
Big Day!

The one story frame home
of Mrs. Don Sheets and its

conU,nts were destroyed by
fire Wednesday night.
George Collins, reporting
for •the Orange Twp. and
ChesU,r Fire Dept., said the
alarm was received at 9:55
p.m. The home is located on
Silver Ridge in Orange Twp.
Damages have been
estimated to exceed $30,000.
The home was engulfed in
!lames by the time firemen
arrived. Cause of the fire is
undeU,rinined. The fire was
discovered by Mrs. Sheets'
father-in-law, Ezra Sheets.
There was no one home at the
time.

A prec ision -jeweled.
Bul ova -bred wa tch by
Car a vel le .
Shock
r e sislan i a nd aht i·
m agn eli c.

Weather

Showers and occasional
th und ers how ers likel y
tonight and Friday. Warmer
tonight, lows in upper 50s.
Highs Friday in the mid 70s.
Probabill ty of rain is 20 per
cent today, 60 per cent tonight
and 70 per cent Friday.
. LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature in downtown
Pomeroy Thursday at U a.m.
was 71 degrees under sunny
skies.
HILOTEMPS
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
highest temperature reported
Wednesday to the National
Weather Service, excluding
Alaska and Hawaii, was 1011
degrees at Gila Bend, Ariz.
Today's low was 20 degrees at
Philipsburg, Pa.

GOESSLER

Jewelry Store
Court, St.,

Rexa/{

SUPER PL
Mu lti-Vitamins with Minerals
11 VITAM INS AND 8 MINERALS
Helps prevent vitamin deficiencies!

l Area Deaths !

(Continued from page 1 i ARTHUR E. KOENIG
. Nazarene.
.
Board shall preside at said
REEDSVILLt: - Arthur
Funeral services will be
hearing and be the sole judge Elwood Koenig, 53, Rt. 1, held at 2p. m. Saturday atthe
of , the .relevancy of the Reedsville, died Tuesday Ewl"l! Funeral Home . with
evening at Pleasant Valley the Rev. Clyde Henderson
lelttlmony that Is presented. Hospital. Surviving are his officiating. Burial will be In
- The teacher shall be wife, Ruth Snider .Koenig ; the KoenIg . Mas sa r
allowed to call witnesses to two sons, Larry Elwood Cemetery. Friends may call
U,stify on his or her behalf. Koenig, Union Furnace, and at tile funeral home alter 4 p.
- The questions dire
.
cted to Arthur Dale of Logan; t'wo m. today.
daughters, Delores Goojle,
witnesses called on behalf of Rulfand, and Sharon Sharp of
the teacher shall be Reedsville ; his mother ,
MARY C. HOFFMAN
questioned by one-Individual; · Dorothy Smelley ; a sister,
Mrs. M4ry C. Hoffman, 85,
Zelda Weber, both of Long Chester, died Wedne~ay at
the respective U,acher 1)18y Bottom, and 22 grand. St.
Joseph Hospital In
choose to perform this func- children.
Parkersburg .
lion himself or herself.
Mr. Koenig was a member
She was born M4y 4, 1891,
- All questions or com. of the Pomeroy Church of the the daughter of the late
Franklin and Katherine
munlcatlons '· by the Gallia
Smith Thayer. Besides her
County Local Board of him. That list, according to parents
she was preceded In
Education wl th witnesses Bahr, contained the names of death by her husband, John.
called on behalf of the Assistant School Suepl\ln- Mrs . Hoffman was af·
Ita ted with the Chester
U,acher shall be through the tendenta David C. Campbell, IIUnited
Methodist Church.
president of the said Board, Dennis Murdock, and Frank She was a member of the
Cremeans; Mrs. Adelaide Laurel Cliff Health Club.
J . E. Cremeans.
- The U,stlm'ony presented Sanders , elementary Surviving are a grand·
Marjori e Goett of
shall he limited to those facts supervisor, and Mrs. Eugenia daughter,
Pomeroy ; a brother, Harold
Garrtner,
EMR
supervisor.
relevant to the staled reasons
Thayer, Hebron, Ill ., and
Bahr said there was no several nieces and nephews.
for the non-renewal of the
respective tea~her's limited reflection on those people, but Funeral services will be at
they were not, in his oplnlon , 1 p. m. Friday at the Ewing
contract.
Funeral Home with the Rev.
qualified
to evaluate him.
- The hearing shall begin
Floyd Shook officiating .
He said .he had talked to Burial will be In the Chester
at 8:00 o'clock p. m., May 12,
and shall continue untilll :00 Mi-. Lanning regarding the Cemetery. Friends may call
o'clock p m. on the same appointment of a third at the funeral home anytime.
date. If there Is a further evaluator and that Lanning
MILDRED lOLA MITCH
U,stlmony to be presented by had suggested one of the men
either teacher, the hearing who had evaluated the Mrs. Mildred Iota Milch,
shall be ' recessed at 11:00 school's Science Department 57, of Pomeroy, retired
Elberfeld's Department
o'clock p. rn . and shall he during the recent North Store
emr.loye, died Wed·
reopened at 8:00 o'clock p.m. Central Evaluation. Mr. Bahr nesday n ght at Veterans
on Thursday, May 13. The . said he 'decline.d that Memorial Hospital.
She was born March 16,
time set forth herein may be suggestion.
Bahr,
on
documented
1909,
the daughter of the late
modified or changed by
John and Callie Ryther
mutual agreement of the reason 2, failure to sign sick campbell. She was also
leave forms, said he had not preceded In death by her
partiea.
refused
and had signed all husband, Carl, and a sister,
- Within five (5) days from
Campbell.
.
the completion of the necessary forms gIven him · Bernice
Mrs. Milch attended the
hearings in question, the However, he said there was Enterprise United Methodist
Board shall give written one discrepancy filed with the Church where she was a.
notice to the respective board clerk's office by Mr. member of the Willing
Workers Class and the Ladles
teachers along with t.he I,anning.
Ald. She was active with the
reasons on which their
On Item three, failure to Ladles Auxiliary of Veterans
decision ls based. Copies of obtain board permission for Memorial Hospital and In the
said decision shall be sent to professional leave , Bahr Senior Citizens program .
A 1927 graduate of ·
the teacher, the superin· stated he had been ca lied on Pomeroy
High School , Mrs.
U,ndent and the Gallia Coooty at least twice to participaU, in Milch had been employed at
Local Teacher's Association. important matters pertaining the Elberfeld Store prior to
During the one hour, 40 to the school system, and took her retirement.
Surviving are a daughter,
minute session, the two the leave, for which he was Mrs.
Lena Nesselroad, and a
teachers , their represen· . paid. One time, the case son, Gene Mitch, both of .
tative, Terry Lee, Field docurnenU,d, he said he went Pomeroy; two grandsons,
Service Coordinator from the with the Better Education Mark Mitch and Mike
Nesse lroad; a grand·
Ohio Education Assn.; board CommltU,. to. Columbus for a daughter,
Sherry Mitch;
president J . E. (Dick) meeting w1th the State three sisters, Mrs. Ruby Erb
Cremeens, members of the Department of Education but and Mrs. Frieda Casto, bolll
board and witnesses called by that he had notified his · of Pomeroy, and Mrs. Martha
Roush of Cotumb~s . .
the instructors were tlie only Principal before he left.
Funeral services will be
individuals permitred to
Bahr said the~e was a held at 3:30p.m. Saturday at
scheduling conflict which the , Ewing Funeral Home
speak.
Miss
Hahne!
was caused the combining of with the Rev.. William Alrson
lh~ Rev. George Oller
questioned by Lee regarding Chemistry and Science and
offlclat ong. Burial will be In
her teaching assignment in classes . He called three . Rock Springs Cemetery .
the school's jooior high EMR teachers, Deryl Well, Mrs. Friends may call at the
program . She admitted Wllleen Edwards and Uoyd funeral home after 7 this
having discipline problems in Danner to the stand to sub· evening.
the cla5sroom, but claimed stanUate hls testimony.
she was not given any help · He admitted to have used
from Principal Lanning. She his prepliration period for
THE POMEROY 'E·R unit
asked the board for re- association business , and . answered a call to Brick St. at
instatement and transfer to admitted to dividing his home 10:52 a.m. Wednesday for
room, permitting some Dordy Call, who was having
another building.
breathing . She was
Bahr presenU,d his case students to supervise difficulty
taken
to
VMH
where she was
himself. He distributed themxelves in another room. admitted.
copies of his personal He said due to the ovetDEADLINE for the purdocumentations relevant to cowded conditions of his
room that was necessary. chase of tickets for the annual
his action.
Racine Alumni Banquet is
He opened his remarks on Bahr also noted that direcUy May 24. Tickets may be
point I with the staU,ment they were not supervised but purchased at Cross and Sons
Store and the Racine Food
that he did not know why he indlrecUy they were.
He asked the board to study Market. Alumn i also can send
was the only te~cher offered
money for the banquet ($3.50
a third evaluator. He said he his case and to re-instaU, and each) and a stamped, self;
did not refuse to bring in a put him on the transfer list. addressed envelope to Mrs.
third evaluator, but that he Bahr said some things needed Raymond Pierce, Route 2,
Box 44, Racine. The dance
declined the list submitted to adjusting and that his ad· follow
the banquet Is open
justmenta were made in the to the ing
public and music will
best lnU,rest of the students. be by "The Durations" of
OEA Representative Lee Lancaster. The banquet
said "We are not asking you . ticket does not Include the
to Ignore a principal's dance.
TONIGHT
NOT OPEN
recommendation, but to turn
THE MIDDLEPORT E·R
the responsibill ty over to the unit was called to the Mid·
superinU,ndent to re-assign dleport Junior High School at
Fri .. Sa t., Sun.
a.m. Thursday for
Mr. Bahr, give him a one- 9:30
Ma y 14·15-16
Debbie Smith, who had '
year contract, re-consider suffered a possible fractured
" LUCKY LADY "
(Technicolorl
this matter, and give him knee In a fall on the play field
near the Central Building.
Li za
Minell i,
Gene another opportunity.
She
was taken to VMH ,
Hackman, Burt Reynolds
The board ha.s scheduled a
PG.
.
work se511ion for 10 p. m. this
THE LETART Falls PTO
evening to discuss -the will . meet at 7:30 p.m .
Monday at the school.
matU,r.
Speakers will be Bob Sayre,
vice president of the Southern
Local School Board, and
Jennings Beegle, Junior high
school principal. All slxlh
graders lire asked to altll!1d
the meeting as they will be
honored.

Carter claims· half of total
delegates needed for victory

when you buy the 288·
tablet size!

72 TABLETS FREE
when you buy the 144·
tablet size!

36 TABLETS FREE
when you buy the 72·
tablet size!

HOSPITAL NEWS
Holzer Medical Center
Jackson; Mr. and Mrs.
(Dlacharges, May lZ)
Gregory Davis, daughter,
Ronald Ashworth III, Bert · Jackson; Mr . and Mrs.
Barney, Jooetta Beegle, Earl Rodney Boggs, daughter ,
Borden, Rosetta Burns, Mary Oak Hill.
Burton, Thelma Case, Harry
Clark, Ernest Davis, Hobart Veteraas Memorial Hoapltal
Dewees, Bryan Goody,
ADMITTED- Brenda Sue
Gladys
Hill,
Louella Fry, Pomeroy; Samuel
Holcomb, Mrs . Franklin Williams, Shade; James
Jones and daughU,r, Ethel Tyree, Syracuse; Jennie
Koehler , Atnhony Loftus, Wllliamson, Rutland; Dordy
Verjean MatU,son, Richard Call, Pomeroy; Mlllard Ball,
Meadows, Sr., Teresa Long Qottom; Lelltia
Mercer, Terry Michael, Rosa Holman, Syracuse ; Cheryl
Minnis, Kathleen Moody, Sayre, !Miand.
Jas~ Oliver, Teddy PatDISCHARGES - Paul
ters!'n, Carolyn PitU,nger, McDaniel, Tanya Cundiff,
Mrs.' Ron Powell ·and
Maynard Ellis, Mary Peak,
daughter, James Prater, Eliza
Hayman, Clarice
John Reaper, Donald Rees, Carson, Debbie LaValley.
Ora Reynolds , Catherine
Riffle, Franklin Rizer, Dolly
Robertson, Edna Rodgers,
PLEASANT VALLEY .
Randy Saylor, Charles Shaw, DISCHARGES - Frances .
Isaac Shupe, Shannon Reynolds, Mason ; Mrs .
Spangler, Josephine Taylor, Frank ' Capehart, Point
Jay Thaxton, Jarrod Van- Pleasant; Ida Shiflet,
Inwagen, Carolyn Williams, Galllpolls Ferry; Doyle
Christine Williams, Terry Keefer, Point Pleasant;
Woodruff, Dorothy Yerian. Samuel Brannon, Point
(Births, May 12)
Pleasant; Wllliam Dye, New
Mr. and Mrs . Gary Haven; Debbie McGuire,
Freeman, daug)ltl!r, Miners- Northup; Mrs. James Lilly,
ville; Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Sr., Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Harris, son, Patriot; Mr. and James Lee, Henderson ; Ruby
Mrs. Larry McKenzie, son, Smith, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
~··

, ;. 1

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71

1 PIECE FISH &amp;CHIPS .. .... .... ...................1.05
2 PIECES FISH &amp; CHIPS ........................... 1.75
6 PIECES FISH &amp; CHIPS ............ ,....... ..... •.4.90
10 PIECES BUCKET OF FISH .. .. .................. 6.95
10 PIECES FISH &amp;CHIPS ....................... ·.. 8.50
1 ORDER CHIPS............. ... .. .................. .35
Present this advertisement and get 25 percent off the above prices
th r u May 22 on drive-in and carryout orders only.
This Fish is White Fish from the Clean Waters of Iceland.

·s
-=:::::{ o]::::&gt;

~~ a-te M AMtt .CJ./.U ~ r-1~·

The Meigs County Sheriff's
Dept. Investigated a 'single
car accident Wednesday at
11 : 2ll In Columbia Township,
on TR 13. Athens County
Sheriff's deputies were In
pursuit of a car driven by
Wetzel L. Pi1tltlps. Rt. 4,
Pomeroy which went off a
bridge Into a creek . Phillips
was laken Into custody by the
Athens eounty Sheriff's Dept.
A MARRIAGE Hcense was
Issued to Kerlnelh' Yale
Erickson, 57, Rl. 3, Atbanv
and Mary C. Lovell, 41 , Rt.
3, Albany.
.
LOST
WHITE , Brown , black, smell
Beagle Clog In Monkey Run
area . She · Is 10 years old,
very gun sl'ly . No hunting
ctog . She Is our pet. She has a

collar on with ldnetlflcatlon

o.n lt. Person finds her ,

pleese call us. Gooct reward .
Answers to the name of
Tr ixie. Phon e Leonard Van
Meter , 992 5566 .

Bruce Hoffman, daughter,
Pomeroy.
Birth, May 12, a son to Mr.
and Mrs. Barry Helll'y.
,

primary. "So we're now of Georgia "wasn't anr too
approaching, I'd say, 775 great." AFL-CIO off1clals
delegates - which is over the said Carter is seeking
halfway mark to . the "frlendahlp and advice."
RepubUcan Ronald Reagan
nomination."
The latest UPI tally - not campaigned in Detroit today
counting the Missouri in hopes of handing President
development - shows 596 Ford a home..state defeat.
delegates to the July national Ford plans a whistlestop tour
c'Onvention pledged and two of six Michigan communities
more leaning to the former this
weekend
after
Georgia governor.
campaigning today in
Carter scheduled a meeting Teimessee and l{entucky.
Reagan said he won't
in Washin~ today with
AFL-CIO
!dent George suggest that Ford quit
Meany, who three mooths rwming if he loses Micbl~n .
ago was saying he WJderstood "He annoyed me so much
Carter's record as Rovernor when be suggested earlier
this year I withdraw that I
wouldn't do the same to
him," Reagan said.
Ford was applauded at a
national convention of small
businessmen in ~ Washington
when he proposed a
" declaration
9f

Ford, Reagan
lose to Carter

Nuclear
(Continued from page 1)
nuclear explosions for a ·
period of five years, whether
they be weapons tests or SO·
called 'peaceful' nuclear
explosions."
He said the United States
should transfer an almost·
completed nuclear
reprocessing plant at
Barnwell,
S.C.,
to
international control in the
lilterest of maintaining a safe
world nuclear program.
"Is it really necessary to
the welfare of our countries to
become dependent upon . a
nuclear energy economy?"
he asked.
The former Georgia
governor suggested the ·
United Nations convene a
World Energy Conference
and consider creation of a
world agency to eXJ&gt;lore nonnuclear sources of energy.

WASHINGTON (UPI) Democrat Jimmy Carter
holds a substantial lead in
nationwide popularity over
both President Ford and GOP
hopeful Ronald Reagan, the
Washington Post reported in
a survey released today.
The survey also indicated
Ford, at this point, would be
only a slightly more
fonnidable GOP contender
than Reagan in the general
election if Ford is nominated
at the party's convention in
Kansas City.
It also showed rank-and-file
Democrats solidly prefer
Carter to lfubert Humphrey
, as the party's presidential
candidate, the newspaper
said.
. The Post said its
nationwide telephone survey
consisted of Interviews with

'

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

1,521 persons, of whom 1,117
were registered voters. It
said the analysis of candidate
·preference was based only on
the talks with registered
voters.
The survey showed 48 per
cent of those surveyed would
'favor Carter and 34 per cent
would support Ford in a .
November election battle be·
tween the two men.
Seventeen per cent were
undecided in such a race.
In a Carter-Reagan battle,
the survey showed that ihe
former Georgia governor was
favored by 50 per cent of the
voters interviewed compared
. to 32 per cent for Reagan,
with 19 per cent undecided.
The figures do not add up to
lOOper cent because they are
rounded off, the Post said.

independence" to free small
business from Washington
regulations, saying, "it's
time the government minded
its own business lor a while
and let you run yours."
·Hours later, in another
Wl!flhington ad~, Ford
said there exists :•a sort of an
anti-Washington
feeling,
but
a
lot
of
lt
is WJfair, not
justl·
fled." Ford said more
needs to be said about what is
done well .in Washington .
Rep . Morris
Udall ,
spea~ing
outside
an
abandoned auto equipment
plant in Monroe , Mich.,
boasted of a new poll showing
Carter's support in Michigan
is "soft" and his backers can
"be wooed away."
"We're closing the gap,"
Ud;lll said. "We're going to
turn this around. "

VOL. XXVIII NO. 20

I•

LUGGAGE SALE

SAVE 20%
NOW ON LUGGAGE FOR
GRADUATION GIFTS OR
SUMMER VACATIONS
Mens and Womens
styles. Entire stock
included.

JEANS SALE
Our entire stock of misses and
juniors jeans is .included. Regular
denim and the popular pre-washed
denim in basic and fashion styles.

SALE
PRICES
''

SALE PRICES

MEN'S BLUE JEANS..
Includes all of our mens blue jeans.
Regular 14 ounce flare leg Wranglers
and Lee Boot Cut straight leg. Wrangler and
Lee 14 ounce denim, Lee -stretch denims.
100UNCE PATCH POCKET JEANS IN
Wrangler and Mr Leggs Brands, zipper and
button fly style .
Plus all of our mens and young mens
pre-washed blue denim jeans. Big variety of
·
styles. Sizes 27 to 48 waist.

SALE PRICES
Also special sale prices on mens jean
jackets. Sizes 36 to 46.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
;'

WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT FORD PRAISED
Commerce Secretary Elliot L. Richardson Thursday, but
called him secretary of defense.
"I commend you to the wisdom and experience and the
fine job Elliot Richardson has done," Ford said, as the former
defense secretary stood beside him at the annual meeting of
the American Retail Federatin. "!think he's a great Cabinet
member. He's certainly an outstanding secretary of defense,"
the President said.

FLOWERING ASH TREE - In the back yard of the home of Mr. and r.lrs. James
Tealord, Syracuse, is a beutlful flowering Ash tree. Mrs. Teaford (Jane) stands beside the
tree that gives a fragrance similar to honeysuckle. Mrs. Teaford's yard is full of beautiful
flowers.

a1

e

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

entine
FRIDAY, MAY 14, 1976

Prison li

SHOP SATURDAY 9:30 TO 5 PM
BY UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
UDINE,lTALY ~ HI!lAVY OOWN!'OURS SLOWED reUef
efforts in northeast Italy today, threatening to touch off landslides and force homeless refugees to abandon their tent ~!ties.
Local officials said the death toll from last week's earthquake
had climbed to 903 before cllilly wind and rain storms halted
digging Thursday night. They ssld 1,742 were injured and
nearly 500 persons were still missing. Damage was estimated
at $1.5 billion,
Vice President Nelson Rockefeller, tears streaming down
his face, visited earthquake survivors in a tent city Thursday
and assured them the American people would help them build
anew. "We feel your loss as our own, as a tragedy in the
family," Rockefeller sald.
The vice president and his wife Happy paid a 31'.!-hour visit
to the stricken region on instruction from President Ford on
their way to u .S. Bicentennial celebrations in West Germany.

Udall said the plant was
replaced by a one in Georgia,
because of the right::to-work
law in carter's home state.
California Gov. Jerry
Brown , armed with a
Baltimore ~ poll showing
him virtually even with
Carter in next Tuesday's
Maryland prima ry,
announced his candidacy as a
write-in for the May 25
Oregon primary.
Carter , told reporters
Thursday he declined an
invitation six months ago to
have lunch with the Soviet
ambassador, and said be had
been "approached" by
representatives to several
other governments as well.
"I have no desire to have
any foreign country express
opposition 'or sympathy
toward my candidacy," said
Carter.

•

OPEN FRIDAY 9:30 TO 8 PM

MEIGS THEATRE

LEAGUE TO MEET
Pomeroy Youth Baseball
League will meet Sunday,
M4y 16, of 7 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Legion Hall . All
managers are urged to at·
tend. Final league rules,
referee requirements and
other matters on the playing
fields will be discussed.
Money from candy sales are
to be turned In atthe meeting.

By LEWIS LORD
United Press Intemallonal
Jimmy Carter claims to
have reached the halfWay
mark in his bid for the 1,505
delegates needed to. make
him . the
Democrati~
president!~ nominee.
Sen. Thomas Eagleton ;~~~d
other Misaouri · Democratic
leaders - who had pledged to
keep the state's delegation
ooconunltted - announced
Thursday they
were
endorsing Carter.
"That adds about 50 to 60
delegates to my total," said
Carter, campaigning for
Tuesday's · Michigan

THESE NEW OFFICERS of Xi Gamma Mu Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority were
lnstalleq Tuesday night at the home of Carol McCullough. From the left are Susie Baer,
president ; Sara.h Bechtle, vi~e presidept; Kay Adkins, recording secretary; Iris Payne,
corresponding secretary, and Lynn Shuler, treasurer.

Local news.

144 TABLETS FREE

(\

- .- - - - -- - - -- - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - 1

JENNIFER SHEETS with her banjo, dulcimer and
autohpart, all in picture, will help present a program on
the history of church music at the Middleport Church of
Christ Sunday evening. Narration will be by Mike Gerlach
and George Glaze, pastor of the church.

Religious History in songs
to be church program feature

Jennifer Sheets will present
songs from America's
religious history SWJday at
the Middleport Church of
Christ at 7:30 p.m.
·
, : BAY ST. LOUIS, MISS.- AUTHORITIES PUT the torch
·A part of the theme,
U'hursday to an estimated $6 million worth of marijuana "Religion in America," will
originally destined for distribution in the Midwest.
Federal drug officials and local law enforcement officers Include a chronological
poured 200·gallons of diesel fuel on the marijuana, which was arrangement of soogs that
sacked in burlap bags, and then ignired the bonfire near the came to the colonies with the
isolated Mississippi Gulf Coast site where the 1~on shipment churches through the great
was seized and six per&amp;&gt;ns, including an Ohioan, were revivals of the 111001 and into
arrested following a shootout Wednesday. "I guess we had a lot the present century. She will
play the dulcimer, banjo, and
of potheads out there just smelllng of the smoke," a Hancock autoharp,
County sheriff's spokesman said.
"ReUgioo in America" is
the
second of three BicenWASHINGTON - THE HOUSE HAS PASSED a $2.5
tennial
programs presented
billion public works bill which supporters said would create ·
by
the
Church
of Christ.
125,000 jobs in the construction industry and the same amount
The · first dealt with the
indirectly in related industries. The vote of 339 to 57 Thursday 1
wa8 well over the two-thirds the House would need to override
if President Ford vetoes the 'blll.
The bill is a trinuned version of a $6 blllion measure Ford
vetoed Feb. 13. The House voted to override that veto, but the
Senate fell three votes short of overriding. The Senate since
The -Meigs Association
has a new $5 billion version. It includes, in addition to a pubUc
works program similar to that of the House, $1.4 billion for for Retarded Citizens, Inc.,
budget aid to state and local governments and $1.4 in water meeting recently at the Meigs
County Commooity Health
pollution control funds which benefit 33 states.
Center completed plans for
WASHINGTON - A HOUSE, ,APPROPRIATIONS
subcommittee, which .usually cuts b'l!lions of dollars from
defense budgets, approved a $105.9 billion defense spending
bill Thursday - only $800 million below President Ford's
Harold Schritter, South
request.
Point,
cand~date
for
''On balance, this blll means we will remain superior to the representative m the 92nd
Soviet Union," said subconunlttee chairman George Mahon, Ohio House dlsttlct, charged
O.Tex. "This is not the year to rock the boat, This Is not the today hls opponent i,n the
year to make sharp cuts or heavy increases in defense." The Republi~an primary, Merrll
measure is to be considered by the full Appropriations Triplett of Ironton, . ap.
Conunlttee actioo on June 5 before going to the House floor on parently has engaged in
~ooe 17.
polltlcal "hanky panky."
Schrltter, attending a
CLEVELAND - SEN. FRANK CHURCH, \)-Idaho, meeting of the Meigs County
arrived in Cleveland late Thursday night to laooch what he Republican executive
acknowledged to be a "boot'Slrap" campaign in Ohio whl~h he ConunltU,. . Friday .night In
. called a crucial state in the presidential primary race. "This Is Pomeroy, said the c_ommitU,e
our first viSit to Ohio and from here we bulld," Chur~h sald. was informed by 1ts chair·
"Of course at this point it's a bootstrap operation."
man, Leslie Fultz, that the
Church, 51, generally ~onceded to be a liberal, said he stlll Lawrence County executive
considers the nomination to be wide open. He scored a stunning com~lttee, had endorsed
upset victory over front runner Jimmy Carrer in the Nebraska Scbntt er s opponent ,
presidential primary earlier in this week, winning by less than Triplett.
2,000 votes but picking up 15 delegates to Carter's eight. Asked
Whereupon, the Me igs
(ConUnued on page 2)
. County committee also en·

glory oCAmerlca, featuring
George Hall's singing. The
third, to be prsented Jooe 23,
will cenU,r on the Middleport
community and
coogregation, Including "top
10 favoriU,s."
Mike Gerlach, history
teacher at Meigs High S,chool,
will discuss the theme Ibis
Sunday evening of Religion in
America from 1620 ootil1800,
and how it influenced much of
the American way of life.
George Glaze, minisU,r of the
Church of Christ, will speak
on Religion since 1800, with
emphasis on the restoration
movement of which the
Church of Christ is a part.

By J.R. KIMMINS
LUCASVILLE, Ohio ( UPI )
- Eight Lucasville prison
irunates Thursday unfolded a
grim tale of a sardine~ike
existence, complete with
. drugs, prostitution, extortion
and terror before a special
legislative committee
hearing.
"Even if 3 per cent of what
we heard from those imnates
was true, it's stlll worth a full
investigation," said: Sen. J.
Timothy McCormack, D·
Euclid, one of six lawmakers
appointed . by legislative
leaders to look into operation
of the facility.
"We have been shocked by
a number of things we've
seen and heard," added
McCormack. "This issue will
not die in the legislature."
Scioto County residents at
Thursday's final bearing
' hoped something would come
from the two days of
investigations, 'including ten
hours the lawmakers spent
Inside prison walls , !Biking
with some of the 2,000
inmates.
"I have an attache case full
of broken promises," said
otto Klein, one of ·a dozen
Lucasville residents who
testified.
Inmate testimony was
heard Thursday morning. A
prison guard captain was
asked to leave the hearing so
the inmates could testify
without fear of retribution
from prison administrators.
The inmates, however,
lillowed four reporters .to
stay.
"For God's sake, don't put
no,rnore degenerate b!nlates
or guards in here unless you
want blood," said Andrew
Jenkins, who is serving a life
term for murder. "And don't
forget that there are plenty of
guys here who Uke what's
going ' on ."
Joseph L. Burnett, Who
faces a 4~year sentence for
rape, told the committee of

widespread guard payoffs by
irunates to gain favorable
work assignments or cells.
"Some (inmates) make be·
tween $1,000 and $2,000 a
month on drugs," said
Burnett . Burnett left the
committee speechless with a
description of an alleged
payoff from a guard to an
inmate in a murder
conspiracy.
Burnett said two irunates
were put alone in a secluded
cellblock. One inmate was
provided wlth a knife, he
explained, to kill the second .
inmate who he said was a
longtime "trouble-maker" at
the prison.
· "I've seen a drug store here
Inside the prison, and the

The EasU,rn Local' School
Dlslrlci Board of :Education
approved a list of 64 seniors
for graduation on May 23 at a
regular board meeting
Thursday night.
'
Of the 64 to graduate eight
completed their work in
January. Baccalaureate will
be held on the afternoon of.
May 23 with commencement
that evening.
The board passed a
resolution of Intent to join the
SoutheasU,m Ohio Education
Regional Education Service
Agency and dl.scussed with a
parent discipline exercised
by a U,acher of the district
against his child.
The board approved the
attendance of Mrs. Eloise
Boston and Mrs. Janie
Headley to a clerk-treasurer
cUnic Jooe 3 in NelaonvUle.
The resignation of Ross
Cleland as custodian of the
ChesU,r Elementary School
was accepted; the board Is
accepting applications for the
post. It was agreed to sell
four old buses and ad·

.

the Hike Bike Saturday
starting at 10 a.m. at the
Pomeroy Junior High.
Nora Eason, in charge of
registration and check points,

reported that all points are
manned, and the stopping
points will have the following
workers.
Registration and check·

Endorsement brings charge

•

dorsed Tripl~t. who was not
present, though Schritter
was.
Schrltter has provided area
news media the following
alleged copy of a letter dated
May . 8, from Carlton
Davidson chairman of the
Lawrenc~ Cooo ty Republican
Central and Executive
Committee. It follows :
Dear Harold :
.
"ln.answer to your question
concerning the endorsement
of candidates, the Lawrence.
c 0 u n t y Rep u b 1i c a n
Executive Committee early
this year vo ted over·
whelmingly not to make
endorsements in the primary
election.

•

"Open primaries has been
the policy of the Repbullcan
party during my tenure as
chairman ."
Schritter
told
this
newspaper:
"The Meigs Coooty com·
mlttee was permitted to
believe there was a letrer
stating the Lawrence' County
committee had endorsed
Triplett, although I did not
see it.
"I believe in an open policy.
When I'm elected to the
House everybody will know
where I stand and how I
voted. There's no place anymore - for political
hanky panky in the
,
Republican party."

bared
prices are hfgher 'i!Uinon the
outside," sal&lt;! Burnett. "If
the addicts can't get drugs
from the himates, they wlll go
to the guards."
Each of the inmate
witnesses complained about
overcrowding, poor food and
medical services and the lack
of training given the 311
guards at the prison.
The final inmate witness,
Denver G. Sturgill, has spent
10 of the last 12 months in
solitary confinement. Sturgill
was one of three men to
escape the prii¥Jn )a•t year, A
court U.ter ruled Sturgill was
justlfled In his . escape
attempt. .
Rep. Robert W, Jaskulakl,
!Ularfleld
He l g h t s ,

chairman of the committee,
said the two days of
testimony
was
"eye
opening." He promlaed
prison guarda, lrunares and
townspeople that
the
legislature would try to "find
answers" to the problemx
within the ~2 mUlioo prison,
which opened ln September .
1972.
The prison was built to hold
1,600
Inmates.
The
overcrowding has resulted in
two Inmates assigned to one
tlkquare-foot eel! In many
areaa. Labor problema with
guards have re~~ulted In two
major strllles.
Other prison conditions
prompted a hiDiger strike by
inmates earlier thl• month.

EHS will graduate 64

Check points manned, .ready
.

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

point 5, Mary Skinner, Rhea
J:tousn, Maxine Goeglein,
KaU, Jarrell, Jessie Might,
Jan Gudge, Shirley Scragg.
STOP I ·- Co. Rd. 3, Jean
Wood, · Norman Wood, Ann
Spires, June Murphy.
STOP 2- Paullne Tillis,
PhylUs Skinner, Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Grueser, Rachael
Downie, Rev. Middleswart.
STOP 3 - Co, Rd. 19
(Peace Fork Rd .), Lots
Wyant, Tim Wyant, Ronnie
Wood, Vicky Debord.
STOP 4 - Flatwoods
Church, Robert Eason, Nora
Eason, Norman Wood, Jean
WO&lt;itl.

vertlslng for bids on the
vehicles wlll be placed.
Discipline problems ori
school buses were reviewed.

It was agreed to have

guidelines approved before
the next" ~hool year. A
representative of the Chester
PTA discussed probleins at
the Chester Schoo\ bllildlng.
A supplemental agreement
was approved with the
Eastern Local Teachers
Assn. including in-service
training, leave provisions,
supplemental contracts,
length of school day and year,
and
a salary base of $11,100 for
'.'OINT PLEASANT - The
beginning
teachers.
r'•. Pleasant High !lchool
Three
elemenlary
school
Black Knight Band will
principals'
cont;acts
for
one
present Its special blcen·
year
each
were
given
to
Mrs.
U,nnl81 edition of the Black
Knight Revue, "I Hear Grace Weber, Riverview;
America Singing," Friday, Mrs. Beatrice Douglas,
JUly 2, at 7 p.m. at the Mid· Tuppers l?lains, and Duane
dleport Community Park as a Wolfe, Chester.
The board adopted the
part of the Rallroad Days
school
calendar for next year
observance .
as
approved
by the coooty
The show, nearly two hours
board
of
education.
Under it,
long ls a musical salute to the
~lasses wlll start Aug. 31 and
United States' first 200 years·
directed by Pt. Pleasant the final day of school in 1977
Band Director Gerald will be May 27.
Stewart. The program will be
moved Indoors in the event of
rain.

Show planned
by band for
Railroad Days ·

~ :: ::::: : ::: ::::::::::: : :::::::::::::::: : ::: ::: ::::':::; :;::::: :::::::::: :: :.

HE ASKED FOR IT
SAN DIEGO (UPI) Robert Van Bergen
complained to a credit card
firm that blo new card mil'
opelled bls name u Va~
bergen. There should be a
space between Van and
Bergen, be sald, returning
It and aaklng for a
corrected card.
Sure enough, he got ooe.
Iaaued to Robert Va~
space BerJen.
:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·::::::::::::

Weather
Showers today, tonight and
Saturday. Warm today and
Saturday, highs In the mid 70s
to the low !h. Lows tonight in
the low to mid 80s .
Probability of rain 80 percent
today, tonight and Saturday.

Alva Swick will assist at the
various stops.
Apprecialioll was ex·
pressed for the community
support and special ap·
predation to the . following
persons and organizations
whose contributions ~r,e
listed. Barbara VanMeter,
NOW YOU KNOW
nursing services: Holsum
The runk of an elephant can
(Continued on page 2)
hold slx quarts Of water .

Udall's HQ
in business

ATHENS - The 10th
Congresslohal District Udall
Headquarters opened
Wednesday in the Security
Building here with two
statewide delegates, three
district delegates, one
district alternate, and a
number of volunU,.rs and
supporters on hand.
Bill Lavelle, lormer slate
Democratic Party chalnnan
and statewide Udall delegate,
told
a
headquarters
audience: "With sl1 can·
dldates on the ballot in the
10th District, we have a
chance to take the race,"
Other delegalelt attending
were Alicia Brown of Jackson
County, Joe Burke of Allleris
County, Arthur Fordham' of
Washington County, and
Elaine Rouse of Gallla
County. Brown and Fordham
are running as dlatrlct
delegates, Rouse is a district
alternate, and Burke ls
running ln the statewide
cooU,st.

v

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