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10 The Daily ~mine !, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., M on&lt;~• Y, May 21. 197G

t~:~: ~~:::'~'i~i:J :::p:v::~::d ~-----A;~;-n-~;th~---- ~ HOSPITAL NEWS
1

LA CHINE, Canada, May
21 - American military

au th orities gloomily
evaluated the defeat and
surrender of colonial
contingents at the Cedars
lour days earlier at which a
391).man garrison gave up
the iorlifled post and a
relief column of 115 men
coming lrom Montreal was
ambushed by a British and
Indian Ioree.

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight thru Thursday_
NOT OPEN
Friday thru Tuesday
May 28-June I
THE OTHER SIDE
OFTHEMOUNTAIN
ITechnicolor)
Mar ilyn Ha ss ett . Beau
Bridges, Bel inda J. Montgomery.
1PG)
Show Starts 1 p.m.

No one was injured or cited
in a single car accident
Saturday on Rt. 33, seven
tenths of a mile north of Rt. 7
in Meigs Coun ty.
The Gallia-Meigs Post
State Highway Patrol said
Lawrence E. \Vilco•en , 20,
Rt. 2, Racine, aparently fell
asleep at the wheel losing
control of her car. The
vehicle traveling south ,
overturned onto its top.
SQ UAD CALLED ON
The Pomeroy IlmergeQcy
Squad was called to Veterans
Memorial Hospital at 8:31
p.m. Saturday to transfer
Ann Lambert from there to
O'Bieness Hospital in Athens.
At 10:10 a.m. Sunday the
squad was called to Mulberry
Ave. for Mrs. Ernest_ Gross
who also taken to O'Bleness
H . I 4 03
Su da
osplla . At : p.m. n Y
thesquadwenttocountyroad
25 for G. 'i'. Carleton who
was taken to Camden-Clark
Hospital in Parkersburg .

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

~

THE INN PLACE

TUESDAY NIGHT

SPECIAL

Visit Our Sa lad Bar
Ham
Sweel Potatoes
Vegetable
Hot Rolls
Coffee. Tea , or Mi lk

.
,
II\ IS J. CARR
COOLVILLE - Mrs. Iris J.
. 2 ,.., 01 ·u
46 R
C~~tr
•
•
l. • "'~ VI e,
I Al!re.d Community ) died
Saturday afternoon at St.
Joseph Hospital , Parkers·
burg, following an extended
illness.
Mrs. Carr was born in
Meigs County, the daughter
ol Robert L. and Hilda Smith
White of Rt. I, Long Bottom.
She was a member of the
A_lfre.d United Methodist
Church, Alfred Grange No.
1893, Meigs County Farm
.
Bureau, and served
on the
Meigs County• .Mental
Retardation Board . She
resided in Allred the past 26
years.
In addition to her parents
~he is survived by her
~sband, William L. Carr ;
tivo daughters, Thomas L.
Whl'· RD Lo
Bo
· ,..,
•
ng
ttom;
three
sis ters ,
Donna
Ohlinger, Rt. 3, Pomeroy ;
Lillian Penn, New Vienna,
Ohio, and Carolyn Sue
Woode, Circleville; several
aunts, uncles, nieces, and
nephews.
Funeral services will be
held Tuesday at 1:30 p.m. at
the Alfred United Methodist
Church with the Rev . Dwane
Sydenstricker offi ciatin g.
Burial will be in Memory
Gardens. Friends may call at
the White Funeral Home In
Coolville any lime. The body
will lie in state at the church
one hour prior to services. In
lieu of flowers friends may
contribute to the American
Cancer Society.
ELOISE PUCKETT
LANGSVILLE - Mrs.
Eloise (Betty ) Puckett, 43,
Rt.l, Langsville, died Sunday
at the Holzer Medical Center.
Surviving are her parents,
J . and Merle Bishop Rogers,
Rt . 2, McAr thur ; her
husband, Frank : a daughter,
Mrs\. Bonnie Scott, Rl. I ,
Lang8!'ille; two sons, Sidney
Darrell and Larry Dennis,
both at home; a grand·
daughter ; \ four brothers,
Willis Rogers; Hamden; 0. H.
Russell , Hamden; Theodore
Rogers of Dayton, and Earl
Rogers of Chillicothe.
Fw1cral services will be al
I p.m. Tuesday at the James
N. Blower Funeral Home in
~cArth ur with the Rev. A. B.
~aloy officiating. Burial will
be in Vinton Memorial
Cemetery. Friends may call

· 2.95
Plus Ta x

The Tri-County's Most
Exciting Night Spot

THE MEIGS INN
Phone 992-3629
Pomeroy, Ohio

Invalid transfer
system proposed

Summer quarte..- at

Mbers.b AlmMrza
1 Veterans Memortal Hospital Racine :
Saturday Adm 1ssions Marsha 11 , Ro rill urg; s.
Ann Lambert ' Gallipolis'
Earl
Sh' 1Barton,T Point
1 Pleasaqt;
1t
Saturday Disc harges 1r ey
ur ey, P~ n
1 h , Bert ha Peasant:
1
Howar d ·Rous h ,
The 1976 summer quar ter offered are 9- and 12-month
MAUDEW. YOUNG
Reatha Cone
al ,
Curti"
Mar18
'
Racine
Jeffery
Lemley
will
slllrl
on
June
a
for
day
diploma
courses
In
gener
Della
hn
J
0
RACINE - Maude W.
son,
.
••
:
•
1 ·
II
Boggess
Middleport
Robert
Bright
studenll!
and
June
10
for
office,
secretarial,
and
jun
or
D
W
Young, 85, Racine , died · agner, enz
•
:
'
. accounting. ~ courses are
Sunday morning at Holzer Joyce Allen, Frank Moffatt, Point Pleasant, and Jermifer evening and alternating approved !or veterans who
Medical Center. Born Feb. 20, Michael Van Meter, Ann Clonch, Pomeroy.
~=: ~e~~ Ga!Upolls want to take advantage of .
11!91, she was preceded In Lambert,
. .
Hol!er Medical Center
Gallipolis Bualneu College, their GI benefits.
death by her parenll!, Jalnes
Sun?ay Admlsstons lrth M 2l
1
Locust · 1
Classes are conducted
8
E. and Addie Rhine Wilson, Maudle Wood, Pomeroy;
Mr, (Band ' M~~- ) Nicky ocated at 311
S ., dally, Monday through
and her husband , George Evelyn Hartley, Porne~oy;
Galllpolia, offera a two-year
to I
p.m.
Don Rea ' Pomeroy.
Young.
. ' William
'I · · Weaver , daughter, New associate. degree program In Friday, from 8 a.m.
Mrs. Young is survived by Gloyd, .Dexter' WI ham Haven, W. Vbabe
.; Mr.dand Mrhs. business adrnlniltrallon ~~ aEvvaelnlnlabgleclaauen
. ds aarere halseldo
Lowe Middleport
Step_hen Ki y, aug ter, executive secretarial. ,...,
a sister, Mrs. S. G. Marrs,
'
. ·
Monday through Thursday ·
Sunday
Discharges
Wellston ; Mr. and Mrs . .
Porter, Ohio ; one brother,
to 9 30
An
None
Robert Qualls, daughter,
from 8 p.m.
: p.m.
James A. Wllson, Clear·
PomeNy; Mr. and Mrs .
·
alternating program for shHt .
water, Fla., and several
PLEASANT VALLEY
Steven Raymond , son ,
workers Is offered Monday
nieces and nephews.
DISCHARGES - Addison Pomeroy; Mr . and Mrs .
through Thursday from 9
Mrs. Young was a member Thornton, Letart; Stanley Harley Eblin, daughter,
a.m. to !2:30p.m. or &amp;p.m. to
of the RacinedB~ptist Church Taylor, Jr ., Gallipolis : Pomeroy.
9:30 p.m., depending on shHt
and a retire
eigs County Cheryle Bennett, Letart; Lou
(Birtbs, May2Z)
Word' has been received schedules.
schoolteacher.
Putney, Gallipolis; MeliSS!l
Mr : and Mrs . George that Mr. and Mrs. Robert
The business coUege 18
Funeral services will be Wamsley, New Haven ; Helen Hoffman, daughter, Letart, White and Tom While of near approved by the Ohio state
held Thursday at I a.m. at ,.,_ . Leon Mr Curt'
w. v a.; Mr . an d Mrs. J erry H
Bashan are Ill In Holzer Board of School and College
E InCh I 'th th R
LUSSin ,
;
s.
IS
llal.,.
•w g ape WI
e ev. Milim, GalllpoliB; Mrs.·John Taylor, daughter, lj.odney.
osp · ...ey are paren .. , Registration and maintains a
Don Walker officiating. Burton, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
(Births,May23)
and the latter, a brother, of very active employment
Burial will be in Letart Falls James Kinder, Gallipolis;
Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Hill, Iris Carr of this place. service for graduaies lind
Cemetery. Friends may call Stephen Elliott, New Haven, daughter,McArthur; Mr. and Trouble CO!Jie&amp; more than employers.
at the funeral home after 3 Michael Massey, Patriot; Mrs. Herman
Jones, double In this , family, It
For more Information, call
p.m. on Wednesday.
Lawrence Stephens, New daughter, Jackson; Mr. and seems. Our sympathy goes the school between the hours
Haven ; Phyllis English, Mrs. George Kotalic, son, ruo out to them.
of 8 a.m. through 8 p.m.,
Pomeroy; Adam McClure, Grande; Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Mondy&amp; through Friday. .
ESTHER GROSS
Letart; Rebecca Graham, Pullins , daughter , Mid·
· AGNEW ON ZION
Esther B. Gross, 130 New ' Haven ;
Kenny dleport; Mr. and Mrs. Paul
WASHINGTON (UPI)
INTERVENTION INVITED
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, Chapman, Glenwood; Mrs. Watkins, daughter, Gallipolis Spiro Angew says the
CLEVELAND (UPI) died Sunday afternoon at Roy Daniels, Crown City ; Ferry, w. va .
national media- "the real Mayor Ralph J. Perk has
O'BielleSI Hospital, Athens. Mrs.
Homer
Icard ,
policy.makers and owners" Invited u.s Attorney General
· Mra. GfOIIS was preceded in Gallipolis; Cheryle Oldaker,
- have a far higher per- Edward H. Levi to Intervene
death by her parents, Charles Pliny; Ruby Smith, Point
centage of Jewish people than in the NAACP's · school
W. and Emma Kinner Pleasant; Mrs. Charles
the general popW.tlon.
desegregation suit flied
Brown; her husband, Ernest Gloeckner, Pomeroy; Lori
In an Interview with the against Cleveland
R. Gross, Sr., a son, Ernest Raynolds, Bidwell; Mrs. Roy
SPEAKER NOTED
Sunday Washington Slllr, the
R. Gross, Jr., and one sister, Woomer, Point Pleasant;
Guest speaker at the former vice president said
TIM, NOT TERRI
Mrs. Bertha Matthews.
Mrs. Jack Cummings, Midway Church, Langsville- aboulhalfthepeoplewhoown . An award for achievement
Mrs. Gross was associated Racine; Charles Graham, Dexter Road, at 7:30 p.m. and manage "national im· In chemistry at Meigs High
with Downie-Gross Clothing Sr., Point Pleasant; Mrs. · Saturday will be the Rev. pact media" are Jewish and, School at the awards
Store in Pomeroy for 30 Ja ck Cummings, Racine; Everett Delaney, Gallipolia. with other Influential Jews, aasembly went io Tim Smith
years. She was a member of Charles Graham, Sr., Point The pastor, Clyde Farrell, helped create a "dlsastroua" rather than Terri Smith, the
the
Pomeroy · United Pleasant: Edward Finley, Invites the public.
U. S. Middle East policy.
school reports.
MethodistOrder
Church;
Athens~-----------------------------------·
Chapter
of Eastern
Sll!r, a former member of the
Current Events Club, Athens,
and a former deputy for the
Athens County Sheriff.
She is survived by a son,
Charles F. Gross, The Plains;
one daughter, Mrs. Jane
Miller, Inglewood, Ohio ; two
grandsons , Charles D. Gross,
Greenbay, Wis. : and Robert
E. Miller, Brooksville, Ohio;
two granddaughters, Janet
Ann Miller, Inglewood, and
Martha Ann Gross, Louis·
ville, Ky., two great·
grandchildren, Gretchen and
Adam Gross, Greenbay, and
a brother, Noah T. Brown ,
Trimble.
Funeral services will be
Regular
,held Wednesday at II a.m. at
Ewing Chapel -with the Rev .
1
359.95
Robert Hayden officiating.
Graveside services will be .
Wednesday at 2 p.m. at the
Crooksville Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
Whirlpool automatic washer model
funeral home Monday from 7
to 9and on Tuesday from 2 to
LOA 7600 li loaded with value .••
4and7to9.

GBC starts June 8

at the funeral home at any
time.

Al'fred

.

Social Notes

..

BICENTENNIAL SPIRIT II running hJib In Rutllnd where mldents
Monday afternoon were palntlnc tbe Main St. brtdp In red, wblte and
• blue. Earlier In the day, tbey ~ted tbe Salem Sl ~e In tbe patriotic
, colora. Wtrklng Mmda:r _, Mn. Joan $enrt, cludrman of
,, bicentennial activities in Rutland, and Mr. and Mra. Merle Davia, Mr.

.,,

..

e

,_. '

"

~ VOL

XXVIII NO. 27

and Mrs. Warren Hart, Dick Foley, Marvell . n . Marshall Bruce
Devil and other residents have also been helping. The painting is
e:r:pecled to be completed well before Monday when Rutland will
officially be declared a "Bicentennial Community". The village provided
the pahit for the bridge painting project.

•

at y

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Improved Invalid lranafer
services may be upected
following a meeting Monday
bf William H. Taylor,
executive director of
Southeastern Ohio
Emergency Medical Service
and representatives or
Pomeroy,
Middleport,
Syracuae, Racine volunteer
E-R Squada, and Rutland
SEOEMS with the Me(8s
County Commlaalonera.
The delegation · j)l'(lpD8ed
Implementing
Invalid·
emergency transfer service
In Me(8s County through
SEOEMS.
In a letter to the com-

rniBaioners Taylor staled, "In
the paat several weeks, the
Southeast Ohio Emergency
Medical Services, Inc., and
the Me(8s County Volunteer
_Aasociallon have hl!d several
dlscuaalons regarding the
lmplementatl_on of i:IValld·
emergency transfer service
. In Meigs Counl
''Recof!!lillng the needl or
the cltbena of the county,
SEOEMS and the Aasoclallon
have reached a bulc
agreement whereby this
111rvlce would be provided by
SEOEMS.
"'!be local volunteer unilll

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Thursday l•rouch
S!lturday, fair Tbllflllay
and Friday and a cbuce of
ahowerl Saturday. HJahl
IDOIUJ will be Ia llle 70.
and. lo111 wm be Ia llle
upper 40• to llle low lOa.

en tine
TUESDAY, MAY 25. 1976

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

have agreed to rellclnd their
. previously staled pcliiUona
reqlle8tlng funding In the
amount of that releaaed to
SEOEMS."
The prior commltmtnt pf
the cornml.lslonera to support
SEOEMS was ~.au . '!be
commissioners made no
decision Mondiy but will
study the pi'OpOI!II.
The commlaalonera In other
buslneu accepted the bid
from Dayton Legal Blank
Co., to rebuild, repair and
rebind books.
The commlsslonera also
accepted quotations on rour
blda tor bltumlnoua materlaiJ
for the e1111lneer le pun:ha1e ·
aa required. Submitting bids
were D &amp; P Materials,
Cambridge; Asphalt
J'ofalerlala l Construction,
Marietta: Big Sandy Alphalt
Co., Catletlllbilrg, Ky., and
Ashland Petroleum, Alhland,
Ky. Attending were . Henry
Wells, and' Barnard Gilkey,
Commlaaloners, and Martha
Chambers, clerk.

Prima1ies
today
open
Presidential
home
stretch
..
•

Sea superiority must be maintained
President tells w4r oriented cities
•J.0S ANGELEs (UPI)- President Ford,
c;ampalgnlng bi defe~~~Hrlented wlllltern
dtlea, aaya the United States muat make a
tun commitment to maintaining American
superiority at sea.
, Ford also strl!lllled his SIJRlOrt Monday for
the Bl bOinber, more liblps for a more
powerful Navy and-In a swipe at
Democratic frontrunner Jimmy Cartercmtinued nuclear testing.
· Campaigning in San Diego, home to a
j$'ge Navy !lase,_ Ford aald "We muat
COIIIIIIit ourselw• fli11y to maintaining the
superlor.lty of American sea po'lllell.
.
He called for a NIIV)" capable of bandllng
any lltuatlon "from f1rln&amp; ·a waridnl! lhot
IICI'OIIIi a bow to 1lllllnlns an all-4!11t war.
. "&amp;ldl a naval f..-ce reqUirea a major
ellcrt to buDd new lhipa and requires lhlt
we continue to modernize our existing fleet
and 'ill araenal," Ford told a Ptbain&amp;
11j101180~ed by tbe Cllamber of Conllllft'ce
and ·the ~avy Leape. . ,
,
•

And the President ~tedly welcomed
the addition of most or New York's
previously uncOmmitted delegates to his
column, 111ng1ng b1m ''Very close to 700"
delegates and lncreulng his lead on
challqer &amp;oald Reagan.
But be stresaed befeela no poUtical debt to
VIce President NeiJOn Rockefeller lor any
role Rocllefe11er played In adding Uitt 119
dalegates tO his total, and Rockefeller is not
being reconsidered aa hll nmnlng mate,
"I don't ezpect to repay an,yl!ody,"' Ford
said, aaylng he presumes delegates support
him becauae the'y back, his policies,
·Hoplcotchlng through 10 appearances In
lllx eWes In Southern caJifomla and Nevada Ford repeated bb lbellle that be is an
~mderq on Reagan's home ground "IU
I've lieD a lot o( underdogs win football
games."
'
Be l:iitldlllld Carter's caD for a fiVI! year
morltl&gt;rlum 011 Jluclear explosive testing,
• c:a".....~~~lrr y mllbl•."

Ford got ~ big boost In
delegate
strength In the past
United Press International
President Ford, bolstered three da)'s, winning most of
by a big jump in his delegate the uncommitted delegations
:strength, faced Ronald from New York and
Ill!aganlnslxtoughprlmary
battles
today
whlle ~;;:;lv~~:ga~u\nhl~~a~~:
Democratic ·frontrunner primarieS was uphill.
:Jimmy Carter sought to fight Carter was favored In the
off his new challengers, three border states, and In
Frank Church and Jerry Missouri where he was
llro\1'11,
expected to win 40 of the 54
The six contests in border delegates selected In district
and western states were the caucuses. But Church and
moat ever held in the single Brown ~a1111ed up on 'him In
di!Y, and JI'Ovided crucial the West.
proving grounds for the · Ford and Carter both
President and the former sought to keep their
Georgia governor as the 1976 momentum and move closer
primary .seaaon entered the to their predictions oi a fltst
home stretch.
ballot victory, .
Primaries were Scheduled
But . the Ford campaign
.in Arkansas, Tennessee, could stall again as the scene
Kentucky, Idaho, Nenda and moved tO the West and the
&lt;ngon. 'At stake 11re 179 South - the heart of
Democratic:
and
178 Reagan's "sun belt strategy."
Republlcan delegates - Carter's fast
rolling
m01 t than one-tenth the num· bandwagon was slo,.ed
bar each party_senda to thia somewhat when Olurch aQI!
summer's national Brown • wpn lb•lr : flrll
COOvenUoos.
prealdentlal outings against
By CLAY F. RICHARDS

him In . Nebraska ami Pennsylvania delegations
Maryland respectively.
made II Impossible for the
With a push from their old -ooriservatlve challenger from
mentor, Vice President Ca11fornl• to overtake Ford In
Nelson A. Rockefeller, 119 of the six Jl'lmarles where the
New York's previously delegates are apportioned on
uncommitted delagates lrol!e
for Ford Monday, climaxing
a three day spree that put the
President well ahead of ·
Reagan In the nwnber of
pledged votes.
NEW YORK, May !S The New Yorl!ers joined 88
Dr. Alor Bellf waaaccued
uncommitted delegates from
Of vtoiiiUq llle baD OD
Pennsylvania and an
lnoeulallu&amp; aoldlen lo~
addlllooal net gain of 7S oVI!r
amallpol( aad beld In
Reagan fr0111 caucuaes In
c.tiDemenl. He lllltlla bls
Kansas, V_ermont and
def•e be illoculaled lbe
Alaska.
aoldlen tnly Iller . lllel,r
That gave Ford a lead -of
repealed 'requesll lor lbe
717 to 641 over Reagan In'!he , trelilllenl.
'
number of pledged delegatea, :::::::;:::::;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::·.
with 1,130 needed for the
nomination.
Reagan held lbe delepte
lead throll!lh mOlt of May,
Cloudy tonlaht, IO'WI In
~with hla wlP fl. all !GO ~-.
•"- -·11)'
.,__ m_,ft_._,1•
•~u ~lei ad ·later IliaIIi to the low 70..
11101t ~ liiGie from '""a• Pt • • • " or n1n ., per
ad Nelrllllra. '1118.JDO¥e by
llflllllnl&amp;bt, tO per ·
the huge New York and . cent Wednuday.

Dateline 1776

Weather

.,._

.

,__

aant-....,-

the basis of the popular
statewide vote.
But Reagan was the
favorite In most of the 'six,
although some were rated as
closer than others. Ford was
favored to take Oregon where both he and Reagan
campaigned over the
weekend - and glwn a llhot
at pulling upselllln Kentucky,
Tennessee and Arkansas,
wbere he could be helped by a
crossover from conservative
Democrats.
Nevada and Idaho were
thOught to be Reagan
territory.
Carter, frontrunner for the
Democratic nomination, was
heavily favored to add
Arkansaa, Tennessee and
Kentucky to Iring hla total of
primary victories to 14. He
already has 745 of the 1,1105
delegates needed for the
nomlnaUon,
The ali prlmarl's tbil
week, llld \brte more next
week, were the warm-q:&gt; lor
·~ Tuesday" June 8,
when Clntol'nl•, Ntnr Jeraey
and qhlo elect about one-fifth
the !-'OIIventlon dele(latea on
the last of the primary dates.

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From a Great American Bank

by

llt~ rrni s sion

of THE BETTMI\NN AR (. I-II V[

1846: A n.ew revolution is growing.

No violence _this time. No wars. Just an industrial revolution. Our economy is healthy,.a nd the good things in life are
at our fingertips. We're learning to use our heads instead of
our hands. To develop ideas that make machines that do the
work in our businesses and in our homes. Now, we have a
telegraph. A rotary press. Even a machine that sews everything from clothes to shoes. It's a n invention of Elias Howe,
and we're not too interested in it at first. He takes his idea to
an English corset manufacturer and comes home to find that
his sewi ng machine's reputation got here before him. It's a
very popular item. Popul ar with the people. Elias Howe
, has taught us how to sew. fl

I

(Fo Farmers
Wiatt t ,

Bank

POMEROY, OHIO

$40,000.00 Maximum Insurance For Each Depositor
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

MARCIA HARRISON
Mrs.
Marcia
Irene
Harrison, 60, Rt. I, Mid·
dleporl, died early today at
Pleasant Valley Hospital
following a lingering illness.
She was born ~pt. 24, 1915, in
Vinton Co unty. She was
preceded in death by her
husband, Charles A. Harrison
In 1966.
Surviving are a daughter,
Mrs . Jerry (Charlotte)
Brown , Beech St., Mid·
dleport; a son, Clyde Olen
Harrison, Rt. 1, Middleport:
her parents, Cash and Emma
Van Bibber Zimmerman ,
Main St., Rutland ; two
sisters, Mrs. Alice Northup,
Zanesville, and Mrs. Jack
Margaret Tyler, Detroit,
Mich.; eight grandchildren
and five great-grandchildren.
She had worked as a clerk
for Bahr Clothiers and had
been employed by Meigs
General Hospital.
Funeral services will be
Wednesday at 2:30p.m. at the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral
Home with the Rev. Loyd D.
Grimm officiating. Burial.
will be in the Miles Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
funeral home on Tuesday
from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.

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• Bleach dispenser
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MRS. GRAVES
· Dorcas Elsie Nease
Graves, 48, daughter of
Charles and Ella Crooks
Nease, formerly of Syracuse,
died Thursday at her home In
Wadsworth.
Mrs. Graves was preceded
In death by her parents and
brothers.
She is survived by her
husband, Ernie and children,
Ernie, Elsie, John and
Phillip.
Services were held Sunday
at Wadsworth with burial at
West Rushville. Relatives
from here attending the
funeral were Esther Bukey, .
Long Bottom ; Mr. and Mrs.
Don Weese, Emogene
Holstein , Bob and Eleanor
Wingett, Myrtle McBride and
GIRdys Hayman of S;·... ,.,.,c.

THEODORE
H.
LEREW, - 61' Mr. and
Mn. Wl11Jam D. tebew,
Pomeroy,IJ'Ilduted WI~ a
bachelor of arll deirte
from capital UDlvenlty,
C.lu*blll, at lbe 111111
commebcemelll eaerc'"
beld Suaday, May U, all
p.m. ID the Veleraoa
Memorial Alldltortam.

Regular

Angolan
tension
..
•.~sed by castro

CET
VALUE!

~

'529
auvs
WASHfR AND

DRYE~=t

.

-

Sale Prices On The Entlte Stock of
Whirlpool Washen and Dryen

and Refrigerators
NOW ON SALE AT THE MECHANIC STREET WAREHOUSE

ELBE

IN

Parade planned

NEW YORK - 'l'WO POSTAL WORKERS at Kennedy
~have been accuaed of ateaJq parcels worth ..,.,000 In
iillat Bllthorltlea called the ~est- eiJ!bealement In U. S.
(&lt;:Ultinuell on p~&amp;e U)

Rate-of-gain
weigh-ins will
.
he on Saturday

-

• LUXEMBOURG ( UPI) 'Cuban Premier Fidel Caatro
~YI be II pulling bis trOCipl
Gill ul Angala at a rata of 200 a
,illlek In what could be a
,..._.live
dev·•_-·aI" Jn
on_...,
'AmerlcaD' relations with
Cllba and Angola, secretary
4 State Hanly Xllslnier llid
today.
·• Till
from cutro
r~~~~~ In a letter to Sndilb
Prime M!Jillter Olaf Palme,
,who read ~t of It to
Killlnger during tbelr ta1b
In Stockholll'l lllnlay and
Monday, according to a
lllliGr U. $. offlclal aboard

-=•••

..

tbe KllliD&amp;er 'plane f1y1Dc
from SWeden tolJmwnbnurl.
"In our meellllfl with
I'IIIDe, be rea!! to ua from a
leiter, 11ut did not allow It to
~ ...,...v,
,_.._ -'-•-L
Ill, II"WII
WDICII be
(Palme) llid be wu
authorised to me1111on to

llle.'' Jtlelor fold report.era

bilplane,
mat..,.. aid ~ reidlliblm tbal "C.tro illtanda lo

abolrd

wllbdraw Gr bu bep wl!bthwtna-lhllilnotelelr·at tbe rate of IJO a week from
tbe lllllltary perao!llle) from

Anaola."
·

All 4-H and FF,A IDeDibn
having marat bop Gr latnbl
they plan to enter In the "rate
of &amp;aln" COIIIell for the 1978
Meigs Count, Fair must have
their anlllla1J weilbed on
Saturday, May 19.
Members bavln&amp; hogs
lhou1d bring ·them to Me(8a
Hi8h ' School on Saturday,
May 29 betweeli 10 and 11
a.m. They will be welgbed In
llack or the hiP IChool.
· For those membera having
Iambe, Mr. and Mra. Clajlon
srGNII ~TJON - MlyGr Clarence Andrews, seated, aigned a proclamation Colley, advlaors of the
MondayeveaillldeclarlngFrldayanciSalurday,May 28and 29as Poppy Days in Pomeroy. · _Sbepherda 4-H ClUb, will be
PoppyDIJiilllpCIIa'edbyllrew Websier Post 39ol the American Legion . Standing !sf are, coming to the Individual
h1111ea to weigh the lamb! on
Alula Wiles, Jlllior Mill Poppy;. Grace Pratt, auxiliary president, and Sherr! Marshall,
l'o)&gt;pyprlnceu, The YOUII!llllers will lake parlin Poppy days and the Memorial Day parnde Saturday. They pin· to start
andplaceflowersat U1r m•,nmiH'n· ''~' S•·~·,,ncl Strct'!
·In the Chester area 8 a.m.
111! ,

A parade through Mid·
dleport will kick-off tbe
Rll1road Days Weekend In
Middleport Friday, July 2at 7
p.m.
Entries are needed for the
parade. Area · hllh -achool
banda, fire and reacue units,
group1 and lndlviduala are

Invited. An entry (orm II
being printed here In the·
Dally Sentinel and II alao
available from a number of
local bualneuet~.
For more Information call
during the day and .
99Wl89 a!ler 5:30 p.m.

m•

FESTIVAL PARADE mRY FORM
NAME - - - - - - 1
,- ADDRESS - - - - - -

HO IS

~N

R UNIT .

RETURN

THIS

FORM

TO :

!W.,.~!:WS

EXlJM~EE

~r~

Middleport. Ohio
July t thru 4

)

�2- Til(' Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, May 2!i, 1976

Udall predicts victory ·over Carter·in Ohio
By RI CK VAN SAm
.
he will defeat Jimmy Carter campaign around."
we have a first ballot California, I will beat him we're going to Win here."
Despite Alabama Gov.
CIN CINNATI (UP! )
"Just
write
Ulis
oown,"
the
in Ohio's June 8 primary and
nomination for Carter or an (Carter) in Ohio and between
George
C. Wallace and the
Morris Udall boldly predicts "turn this presidential Ariwna congressman told re- open convention ."
the uncommitted (delegates )
latedeveloplng
C8lldldacles of
porters
in
Cincinnati
Udall aoo used a football and the Udall 's in New
Monday. "Udall is going to analogy whlle campaigning Jersey, we will deny him a Brown and Idaho Sen. Frank
win in Ohio and turn Ulis in Cleveland Monday, calling majority there, " figured Church, Udall declared in
presidential ca mpaign June 8 (primary day in Ohio, Udall. "If that hawens. you Cincinnati the Democratic
aroWJd.
California and New Jersey ) will have an open cooventloo. contest iB only a tw&lt;Hnan
"The Carter movement has ''Super Bowl Tuesday ."
" It all comes down to Ohio race.
"We're down really to two
been slowed down. People are . Udall pointed out his "Stop in just 15 days," Udall told
candidates,"
be said,
now having second thoughts, Carter" drive all!V depends some 250 per!l&gt;ns in front of
saying 'Do we really want to oo how well California Gov. the Cleveland Terminal "Carter, wbo is leading In
hand him a first ballot Edmund Brown, a late- Tower. "You can help me delegates, and Udall, who iB
nomination~ '
starting presidential make history in Ohio. We secOnd .''
By Tom Tiede
terpreted however people
Udall complained Carter
"Just
as
in
the
fourth
KINGSPORT, Tenn.
wish." Fields says most quarter of a football game, Clllltender, fares in his horne can't have an open wasn't taking stands on
state.
convention unless I beat
Almost since Ule time He was Southern Baptists believe
"My scenario is !hat Brown Jimmy Carter in Ohio - and issues and passed out copies
here before, it seems, the that doomsday will come on Ohio Cwith its late ll'imary)
of his "Quick Carter Quiz,"
roads of conservative an individual baslJI for every. probably wlU decide whether will get a big majority in
asking
what Carter's positloo
'
Christianity have been posted one, naturally, but that after
18 on haif-41-dozen Issues.
with notices proclaiming: 10 billion years of cOSIJiic
"I promiBe $100 to any
"He Is Coming Again."
history, only zooo of which
reporter who can get Carter
Now, by gosh and by golly, has been occupied by
to answer even one," said
the true believers are more Christians, the idea of God
Udall. "And If you can get
sure than ever. A millenium setting fire to the earth Is
two or three answers, I'll
is approaching (Ule year phll01iophically remote.
send you on a two-week paid
2000) which for many 18
Yet Carter may demur
vacation to Plains, Ga.
THIS MARKER GIVING recognition to those who . ;
significant. Then there is the from now until, weU, hell By MYRAM BORDERS
(Carter's home town).
have
given their lives for their COIDitry will be dedicated , ;
state of the world, which freezes over, and he will sWI · LASVEGAS,Nev. (UPI )- versions contradict each hired by Monnon officials to
"We're not electing the
at
the
Rutland Community Psrk, Main St., in ceremOIIIes " .
examine the "will" before it president .of a dog lo.od ,at 1 pm: on ~ooday. At the same time, the town of
many feel was prophesied In be thought of by some as a It was just another routine other.
Dununar, a Utah service was brought to Las Vegas but company," added Udall.
Revelations. Finally, there is symbol of wha.t the day at the Clark County
Rutland will be officially recognized as a "Bicentennial "' ,
station
owner, was named in did not have enough time In "But even a dog food
1Jinuny Carter.
revelations .of St. John called Courthouse - five more
Conununity", 'f11e town Is abio planning a parade which, "
Few will come right out the come back of Alpha- "wills" from Howard Hughes the so-called "Mormon will" draw a firm conclusion.
company president should
looks
most promlslug, Mrs. Joan Stewart, chairman, ..,
with il:' That the born-again Omega. For centuries these appeared, along with yet to receive one sixteenth of
know the issues."
reports,
in conjuncUon wiUl a July ttb celebration.
;~
peanut grower Is another sign believers have looked to another claimant saying -he Hughes' estimated $2.5 billion
of the Second Advent. But specific dates, political was with Melvin Dummar estate. The will was found at
Mormon
Church
this sentiment is apparently changes, and even the head- when Dummar picked up the
"'
headquarters
April
rl and
taking root and may spread. lines lor reflections from Hughes in the desert.
FREE CLOTHING
filed here two days later by
Here on the edge of the Bible heaven. One Wllliam Miller
The additional "wills" church officials. Dummar
••
Free
clothing day will be
Belt, some people say that predicted the exact day - arnvmg in the mail
held
at
the
Selvation
Army,
told
reporters
he
picked
a
since God works in October 22, 1844. Despite its Monday- including the first
By CRAIG A. PALMER
this year, said the report by insurance benefits coverujg'.
mysterious ways they would passing without Incident, tape recorded version- man up in the Nevada desert Pomeroy, on Thursday, May
WASHINGTON
(UPI)
trustees Treasury Secretary 32.6 million persons will be
not be surprised if the fonner there have been thousands of brought the known total to 25, in January of 1968, drove him rl, from 10 a.m. unW noon. The Social Security System's William Simon; Health, exhausted beginning in 19'19:
Georgia governor is some of more recent prophets equally including 23 on file here, one to Las Vegas and gave hinn a All area residents are trustees say ta~ increases are Education and Welfare and someliine In lbe 1980B foi::
His doin~ . A Pentecostal assured of the coming end. mailed to a Houston Judge quarter. He said the ·man welcome.
a must if the program Is to Secretary David Mathews; old age and survivor,il,
preacher, for instance, says Even how there is a group In and one sent to The New York identified himself as Howard
stay solvent in the face of and Labor Secretary W.J. insurance unless the ra~,
Hughes
but
he
thought
he
was
Carter comes along in "the Granni8, Ark., thst has fo~ Times.
escalating costs.
are ·Increased, the trustees ,
Usery.
a "bwn" ..
nick of time." He will not montha been confined In a
'"'. •
Most are obvious fakes or
The
system
Is
simply
predicted.
Reserve funds for diBabllity
District Judge Keith Hayes
UNIT CALLED •
comment beyond that, but privatehomewaltingfor "the pranks. Only one, the
paying
out
more
in
benefits
... .,
SYRACUSE
The
grins instructively with the Lamb to come down and take "Mormon will," is the object agreed Monday to conduct a
than
it's
earning
from
payroll
hearing today on Reisen's Syracuse E-R squad was
satisfaction of one with Inner us home."
of formal probate court request to have document called Friday at 11 :30 p.m. taxes and will he in even .~
.
knowledge.
To thi8 way of thinking, 'the proceedings to dispose of
i
...
..
worse
shape
over
the
next
75
The scenario, to uae a millennium Is most im- Hughes' $2.5 billion fortune . e~aminer Leslie King of for Ada Slack, a medical years than was projected last
Bountiful, Utah, make paper patient who was taken to and
secular word, is simple portant.
The
year
A document examiner and comparoons.
admitted at Veterans year, the trustees said
enough. Not lor years has 2000
Monday.
Is
a
nu- a television reporter from
Mrs. King said she first was Memorial Hospital. ·
faith been a political Issue, merological waypost. Salt Lake City planned to ask
By Alma Marshall
In its annual report to ~-·
and in thai time theological Clean, Neat. A wonderful the court today for
Congress, the three cabinet- ~morality has had a rough
member Board of Trustees
date,
as
Revelations permission to co~pare the '
HARTFORD - A lot of things have come to pass mch a.~. 1
time of it. God warned us of suggests, for frogs to appear "Mormon wtll" w1th paper
'
recommended prompt action
those
predicted by the MldcDeport Republican 50 years ago,,"
our wayward lurch, sending
"In strengthen the financing
1n
the
mouths
of the WJclean. from a writing tablet. The
J
~
•ect
The
following
article taken from the Point Pl~sant Register
along such human devils as Make way for Gog and tablet supposedly belonged to
of the old age, survivors and
.
10r
dated
Sept.
26,
1917 when R. P. Bell was editor and general
Adolf Hitler, but we would not Magog. And lithe millennium a man who said he was
.
T Value Stamp books or disability insurance system
.
"'
lis ten or see. Thus today, as wiU be 2000 years since the present when the billionaire . The .Meigs Band Boosters the ~lberfelds blli8 can be over the near tenn by means manager had the headlin!!B :
"A Boon for Hartford," reading as follows :
:·
the
Russian
poet advent of Christ, the wrote it, purportedly while who wtll ?Perate a foodstand turned In .at the ·Sears Store of appropriate increases in
"If half we hear is true there is a big boom on lor Hartford,"
Yvetushenko says it, "the Bicentennial election wlU be crossing the desert in a at the Me1gs County Fair lh!&amp; on East Main Street in lhe tax rates."
price of revolver lubricant 200 years since the advent of Volkswagen bus.
President Ford has W. Va. and adjoining neigbborhooda. A deal was closed there
y~ur needs help to equip tt. Pomero or to Mrs. Wednell
Saturday whereby the Hartford City Coal and Salt works.
rises while that of human life America . II all adds up.
Several versions of the
Thecommtttet:lnchargeof Gr te • YR tland For further proposed a 0.3 per cent boost passes into the banda of foreign capitalists together with lfQO
fali8 ." And so it's nearly
Or does It? Since the good "Dummar story" have sur- securing a~ items needed is
a ~tlo~ or f~r lckup of in the payroll tax paid by .100 acres of coal land. They will al8o take over 20,000 acres of coal
over. Enter Carter, ·in the book
18 not perfectly clear on faced, told by persons who asking Me1gs residents for ~books or blli8pcall Mrs. miiiion workers, matched by lands
under option by J. M. Hensley. 'lbl8 deal was ~ by
nick of time, a man clearly ·this, the skeptics .will have to say !bey were wlth him when donations of Top Value Stamp OOt ~udson 992-3648, Mrs. a 0.3 per cent Increase for
P.
M.
Clifton, formerly In charge of the Pomeroy Salt
qualified t9 prepare us for the wait untO Nov. 5. If J. Carter Hughes was given the ride books or buts lrot;t .F;iberfelds Ra Glaze !m-5 or Mrs. employers, effective next
Association
works at Mlnersvllle. The new company Is said to
end.
2011
then wins with 100 per cent of that spurred the billionaire to to help tn obtammg things Gr Yte
before
June yeilr.
be
capitalized
at 5 ~ dollars.
It is certainly not apparent thevote,lforoneamgolng to leave Dummar a multi· needed In the booth .
The trustees neither
a ' 74 2201
''If
this
all
comes
to pass we look for a street car Une alon~·
that Carter would want to watch my language.
12·
supported nor rejected
million dollar bequest . The
the
West
Virginia
!root,
electric Ugbts, gas, water l'rorlai,'
prepare tJs for anything but a
Ford's specific proposal but
paved
roads
and
all
that
sort
of UJing. ltJooks good to UB acroSS
new beginning. He is a
did advise against dipping
the
river."
The
MldcDeport
Republican,
spread-the-word Jesus
into general tax revenues or
patriot, praying by his own
· increasing the social security
ANOTHER ARTICLE In tbla paper read as follows:
count "some 25 times a day,"
tax earnings base - · the
"The Hartford Coal and Salt Company was aold last week to
and telling the voters of it
amount of income subject to
the Mason County Mining and Chemical Company. ThiB
even oftener than that. 'And
taxes.
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The Metzenbaum, waging a battle policy not to invite hinn cents.
as for the Savior's retUrn, J.
"The long-term picture Is property was formerly owned lor many years by Mr. D. E. .
C. ( ! ) has recently advised Ohio AFL-CIO convention for the Democratic senatorial (Wallace)
to
labor
now
shown, under new Newton and fonnerly by her father, o,W. Meredock. We hope
The dues finance the labor
opens
today
and
with
the
the Bible class in his borne
nomination, appear at the meetings."
.
organization's lobbying, assumptions, as holding out the new company will proJ)IIer and be a boom to the town."
state's
JWJe
8
ll'imary
just
town that "Jesus hasn't told
convention - Stanton at 10:30
"We have nothing In publications, campaigning the prospect of higher future
WFSI' COLUMBIA - Chester Lee Roush, aon of Mr. and
us when he's coming - but two ·weeks away the a.m. and Metzenbaum at 3:30 common with George and educational work in Ohio. costs than had been
gathering
bas
turned
intO
a
Mrs.
John Curtis Roush of West Columl:ia, graduated on •
pm.
we should be ready." Yet he
Wallace," added Sm!Ul.
Smith said rues were last previously projected," · said
political
showcase.
Sunday,
from West Virginia Wesleyan Coll!!ge at Buckbanol!.:
has carefully denied any
Local supporters of
Smith also .said the state increased In 1970, but he commissioner James
Three Democratic Alabama Gov. George C. AFL-CIO would not endorse complained that inflation has Cardwell at a news brieftng.
Jay Rockefellow, past president of the college, was on hand
feeling that he is "chosen by
,.
God to be president," and presidential Clllltenders and Wallace,the only Democratic any of the Democratic forced a cutback in state
Long -range actuarial cost to congratulate the graduates.
Attending
the
graduation
in
addition
to
his
parents
were
Mr.
th011e cl011e to him say they two Democratic Senate presidential candidate not presidential aspirants before AFLCIO services.
estimates indleate that for
doubt he believes in the hopefuls will appear before Invited to the gathering, said the June 8 primary.
Today's convention every year under present and Mrs. Curtis Roush and Carolyn Rou!h; Mrs. Evelyn
I ,800 . · delegates they would Biage ''protest
holocaust or doomsday the
Earlier this month, Carter keynote speaker was to be law, estimated spending will Nicholson, Mr. and Mrs. Mel Clark and Barbara; Kathy ,
the 520,000· marches" between 5pm. and huddled for an hour with I.W. Abel, president of the exceed estimated Income, Crump of Pt. Pleasant.
representing
theory of the Second Coming.
Mrs. &amp;ush Is employed at Peoples Bank In Pt. Pleasant. ·;
Actually, it Is presumed member organization here 9 p.m. today through national AFL-CIO President United Steelworkers of including a ~.3 blllion deficit
Thursday outside the George Meany, but a spokes- America.
that Carter believes that today through Thursday.
'
The parade of presidential downtown Convention man for Meany said later that
Christ's reappearance would
Wednesday's speakers
Muon and Area Personals
mean joy on earth, at least hopefuls begins today wlth Center.
Meany will continue to include William R. Hutton,
MEAT
REMOVED
Rep.
Morri8
Udall,
D-Ariz.
Mrs.
Betty
Cadle,
Mason, and Mrs. Etta Richardson of New
Albert Baldwin, a local adhere to a policy of executive director of the
for the faithful. Dr. W. C.
COLUMBUS,
Ohio
(UP!)On
Thursday,
Sen.
Frank
Haven
both
of
Betty's
Beauty BouUque, and Mrs. Jo Ann
· Wallace organizer, said It neutrality prior to the National Council of Senior
Fields, an officer of the
Big Crosby, 72, here lor the Harbour, Muon, of the Hair Harbour, attended a school on
Church,
D-ldabo,
speaks
at
10
was
"downright
disgusting"
Southern Baptist Convention
nominating conventions.
Citizens, Carol Tucker Memorial Golf Tournament
(Carter's sect preference ), a.m., followed by former for Wallace not to be invited.
Beyond politics, the biggest Fonnan, president of the Pro-Am at nearby Dublin, hair styling at tbe ~llday Inn at South Point, Ohio, recently.
They also were dinner i!Uesls there.
Ohio AFL-CIO secretary- item at the state AFlrCIO Consumer Federation of
says coupling doolllSilay with Georgia Gov. Jimmy Carter
was admitted to Riverside
10:30
am.
at
treasurer
Warren
J.
Smith
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Saunders and famliy of Columbus, Mr:
the Second Advenl Is exmeeting appears · to be America
and several Hospital here late Monday
On
Wednesday,
Rep.
said
It
was
"long«andlng,
and
Mrs. James Uoyd and aons of Nashport, Ohio will a~len&lt;l
tremist. "The Bible .is lull of
whether dues should be hiked state
of Ohio
offi- night to have a piece Of meat
James
V.
Stan
ron,
OOhio,
WJdeclared
national
AFL-CIO
lhe
graduation
of Mrs. Saunders and Mrs. Loyd's niece, Denl!e"
parabolic and rhetorical
from the present 15 cents per cials - Lt. Gov. Richard removed from his throat, the
and
fonner
Sen.
Howard
McDaniel,
from
Point Pleasant High School on Friday.
..
passages which can be inmember per month to 25 Celeste, Senate President Pro h011pital said todsy.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Curtis
McDaniel
will
also
attend
their
·
Tern Oliver Ocaaek, House
granddaughter's
graduation.
They
will
visit
over
the
weekend'
Speaker Vernal Riffe,
at the McDaniel horne In Mam.
•
Attorney General William
Mr. anii Mrs. Harriaon Robinson, Jr., Mike and Kay·;::
·Brown and Treasurer
FAIR MOST PLACES
Theresa Smith spent Sunday afternoon visiting Mrs. Gertie.,
Gertrude Donahey.
Showers • and
thunRobert G. Wick, vice presi- dershowers were scattered Psrsons at Ripley.
Miss Evelyn lockett and Mrs. James Lee of Cllfton, vislteq,
dent of the American Red early today from the Rockies
Cross is a feattred speaker to the northern Atlantic eoast on Stmday wlth Mrs. Mary Davis at Rutland, 0.
Miss Carolyn Roush, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Rollllh
Thursday, the final day of the states. Skies were fair over
Is
employed by WSAZ In HIDitington. Miss Roush attended
By Lawrence!&lt;;. Lamb, M.D. represents .recharging of the graph. This finding may be trocardiograph procedure In convention.
much of the rest of the nation. Huntington Business College.
DEAR DR. LAMB- Would heart in preparation for the associated with minor Db- a series of escalating stepa. H
you explain what an elec- next cycle.
struction of the coronary they are able to make the
trocardiogram tells a doctor
It follows thst lhe heart arteries and is one of the diagn011is on a resting elecabout the heart ? Why are rate .can be cOWl ted inn- things that doctors look for in
they may not
some taken after stress when mediately from a graph of . diagnosing coronary heart trocardiogram
proceed further. On the other
most are done with the this type. Also, the specific disease. Thla type of finding hand, if a person has sympRIO GRANDE. - Rio teacher, legal secretary, organization for educational
patient reclining after a order In which the heart is may be brought out by toms or other clinical
Grande
College-Rio Grande college teacher and ad- ieaderablp, and Phi Kappl Grande. College graduate8:"
resting period? Would not one e~ctted can be determined. In · exercise and thi8 is one evidence that suggests there Community
Hia youngeit son (Jobn)
College today
taken immediately after certain irregular! ties of the · reason for a sll'ess test.
minisll'ator.
Dr.
Harbin
has
Phl,natiol)alscholasUc
honor
preaenUy a aopbiJIIICft at themight be heart disease and announced the speakers for
some athletic activity or heart the bottom part of the
Whenever the heart is none Is found by the resting ita IOOth Baccalaureate and aeryed with the United States society.
College.
·
.,
stress tell a doctor more?
Or. Harbin has been active
heart may be stimulated excessively enlarged or one record then many doctors Commencement of Rio Army and Is a retired reserve
Rev. Luaher received lila:
officer wlth rank of Colonel. In conununlty acUvities as
DEAR READER - An first. The electrocardiogram chamber of It Is enlarged this may elect to go ahead and uae
Grande College and the He has also been asaoclated leader in Kiwanis support of bachelor's degree from Ohllr·
electrocardiogram Is merely then is extremely useful in may also be identified by the an
Unlvenlty, a Th.B froni:
exercise test to help Second Baccalaureate and
graphic representation of the determining the rate, rhythm electrocardiogram.
·
idenU!y the problem better. Commencement of Rio with the North Central ~arning Disabilities in Southern Baptist Semluary:
variations in eleclrical ac- and the type of any
Association of Colleges and schools, aaaiatlng with
There are many other There are advantages to both
Community College Secondary Schools as a programs for the mentally and aM. Dlv. from Northern
tivity of the heart. Since your irregularity that may occur. things which can be seen on the resting and the. exercise Grande
Baptist Seminary of Otlcqo.
on May 30,
coordinator and as a Llason retarded, and as director of
heart beats in a rhythmic
Beyond thiB, If the heart electrocardiograms in- electrocardiogram.
Hia active mlniltry baa
Baccalaureate
speaker
will
Representative .for the The Senior Center of Hays.
fashion there 18 a rhythmic muscle, specifically the eluding infianunation of the
For Information about be Rev. Chrles W. Lusher, American Association of He Ia an elder in the been centered at Tabernacle
repetition of the eleclrlcal ventricles, Is damaged . as heart and even changes types of heart attacks and
Baptist burch, Olllllcolbe,
pattern. The first wave is from a heart attack, It wiU associated wlth the chemical heart pains send 50 cents for Pastor of the Calvary Baptist Colleges for Teacher Presbyterian Church.
and Firat Baptist Cludl,
Church in Rio Grande.
Education.
Rev. Luaher, a native· of PainlvUie. He ~erved as an •
caused by the electrical change the configuration of balance of the body,
The Health ~Iter, number 2The commencement
impulse that passes over the that part of the graph. There
Many defects such as the 10, Heart Attack, Myocardial . speaker will be Dr. Calvin E. He fs the author of Gallla County, has r.on- Army chaplain during Wm-ld
numerous articles appearing necUona· wlth Rio Grande War U, u Ohio Baptlit
top of the heart (atria). The are a vartely of typical changes In configuration InfarcUon, Angina Pectoris. harbin.
1
in
' prolesalonal journals and College. He has been a
next wave, which Is really a patterns which doctors uae to from an old Mart attack can Send a long, stamped, selfDr. Harbin, a native of has published a book entitled "Rellsioua Emphaail Week" Evangelist of eight ~.
complex configura !ion, Is identify heart muscle be seen on the resting elec- addressed envelope for Missouri, is the Dean ·of the
and as Area Mlnlaler ~~
caused by the electrical damage or an Infarct.
trocardiogram . For the mailing. Address your letter Faculty of Education at Fort "Teaching Power". He 18 · speaker. Hia parenta met at Southeastern Ohio before
activity over the heavy
When the heart muscle is detection of coronary artery to me in care of thi8 news- Hays Kansas State College, listed in Contemporary this school and were both crmlng u Pulm' of Calvary,
muscular chambers of the not getting sufficient clr- disease you may gain more paper, P. 0 . Box 1551, Radio Hays, Kansas . His ex- Authors and Who's Who In graduates. Hia wife (Gladys Baptist Olurch In Rio Grande
heart that do the pumping culation even if there is no information by doing an City Station, New York, NY . perience In professional American Education and Ia a Sheets), his slater (Eleanm- · lut m1111tb. The ICJplc of the ,,
member or bnlh Phi Delta Shafer), and his oldest 11011· Baccalaureate sermon Ia
(ventricles). A final wave pain produced it may cause a exercise t.!st. Doctors usually 10019.
education sp;lfl~ neflrly forty Kappa,
an im~rnaLional (Stanley David) are all Rio ''Out.Real FreedorD."
change in the &lt;·haract.!r of the approach
the
elecyear\ as . a ~u1·~1 ochool
1
/.
~·
"
J

"Q"'Padres snap Dodger string, 2-0
Sport Parade

TOM TIEDE
]. C. and ]. C.,

or the Carter coming

Five more wills show up
in usual courthouse day

SS tax increases certain

~ Mason County
~

News Notes

Boosters ask Stamp books .

EJherield bills

proj

z:

Political hopefuls focus on Labor

DR. LAMB

Showing how the heart beats

Commencement speakers announced~

u:

.

By MILTON Rl(liMAN
UP! Sporta Edltar
NEW YORK (UPI) - Everybody's watching, and
Muhammad All not only knows It, he feels it. He talks a great
~ about all his followers, tbose who supposedly love him, but
~..18 not so insensitive that he isn't. aware there are,alao those
Wlio would' love to see him lose his UUe. He can feel that also,
lite!y more than ever before.
. .
•Never at any time in Munich's Olympia Hall Tuesday·
IQDrlling, or Monday night in the United States, was there
much danger of Ali letting hli$ championship slip away to
British southpaw Richard Dunn, of whom It most accurately
cin be can be said his spirit was wiiUng but his clin was weak.
Jlerbert Thornser, the Gennan referee, stopped the bout
with lesa than a minute left In the fifth round, awarding AU a
teChnical knockout after concluding correcUy Dunn bad
enough following five quick visits to the canvas. Watching this
miiiion dollar classic on tv ,I was left wlth the same Impression
I had three weeks ago when I felt Ali beat underdog Jimmy
Yoimg clearly enough at Landover, Md., but thst the loser
emerged wlth hJa image far more enhanced than the wilmer.
Not that AU too)ted anywhere near as bad against Dunn as he
did against Young, but he certainly didn't look like the same
Muhanunad All who won his tlUe back from George Foreman
in Zaire nearly two years ago or even Uke the same one who
·stopped Joe Frazier in the Phllippines last year.
Always full of promises, All had told everybody he was going
to c&lt;111e out dancing against the 31-year-old Dunn. He didn't.
As a matter of fact, this was one of the few fights where he was
forced to get moving iJr else risk getting hJa feet stepped on by
the perpetually oncbarging challenger. Okay, so let's forget
about the dancing.
~How about all the openings Iiunn provided with that standup,
s~aight-in southpaw style of his? All missed at least a haH
dOzen of them 1111d sometimes looked painfully amateurish
vl!inly trying to cope wlth Dunn's right-band lead. When you
cOOsjder he has been fighUng professionally for 16 years IICIW,
ynu have to wonder when, if ever, Allis going to be able to
li'lidle southpaws. Would you ever believe that after all thi8
time, he still can't hit lefJ.llanded pitching? Not the way he
should, anyway.
More than that, there was no sign whatsoever of the old
liOunce to Ali's legs. He's 34 and he looks It, even though he
libasted about those 10 pounda he took off sinCe his near..
61saster with Young. All dido't come out and say he was happy
)!Jereleree stopped the fight when he did, but he dldn'thave to
~ay it. The weariness showed plainly in hJa features. He didn't
~Y to hide the fact he was tired or that Dunn had hllft him with
Mme of his punces.
.~'He shook me twice," he admitted. "I'm glad I trained for
thH! fight. HI trained the same way I did lor Young, I would
have lost." .
.'!:atety, AU talks more and more about the possibility of
loSing. He Is not talking because he feels any necessity to pump
up any gate this Iinne but only because he knows better than
aqyhody else when his skuts are starting to slip away and It
oc.t;urs to him that possibly is happening to him now.
'Knocking down somebody like Richard Dljnn five times
daesn.'t prove a thing. DuM had been knocked out eight times
~,ore. Jimmy Young was ooe of those who flattened him and
e~~n at his worst, Muhammad Ali could stand there all night,
taKe YoWJg's best punches and hardly even flinch.
'Muhammad All has gone back and he knows it. To give you a
roUgh idea of how far, picture the Ali who scored four
CQJiseCUiive knockouts over Henry Cooper, Brian London, Karl
Mildenberger and Cleveland Wllllams. Only one of them,
Mfldenberger, a. southpaw, managed to get past Ule sixth
round. That was ten years ago. It seems at least a hundred.

By FRED MeMANE
UPI Sporll Writer
Dave Frelsleben has
always had the God-«iven
ialent to become · a star
.pitcher, 8nd now he says he
hlis the ''faith" n~essary to
see his promise fulfUied.
Frelsleben, a shining
rookie two seasons ago who
faded badly last year, made
his first' start Monday night

since being recalled from the
minors last week and pitched
a six-bitter IAl lead the San
Diego Padres to a :1-4 triumph
over Los Angeles which
snapped the Dodgers' slxgsme winning streak.
It was the first shutout for
Frelsleben since July 28 of
last season and It Is a
welcome sign to the Padres'
management who were.

beginning to wonder II the 24year-old right-bander would
ever begin to fulfill the
potential he displayed as a
rookie.
Frelsleben was one of the
lop young pitchers in the
Natlooal ~ague in 1974 when
be posted a 9-14record and an
impressive 3.65 average for a
San Diego club that won only
60 games.

Randy Jones at the time but
whlle Jooes went on to win 20
gsmes last season fm- Sen
Diego, Frelsleben slumped to
(;.14 with an overslxed ERA of
4.2i. His career took another
step backward during spring
training when he was cut
from the squad and optlooed
to Hawaii of the Pacific Coast

Challenger floored 5 times
By ALEX FRERE
UP! Sporll Writer
MUNICH (UPI) :._ In the
course of trying to wipe out a
piece of personal embarrassment three weeks ago,
Muhammad Ali wiped out
Richard Dunn, ·nooring the
British challenger five tllnes .
lor a fifth round tecltnlcal
knockout. But even wltb aU
that, he still wasn't the
Muhammad Ali of old.
He admitted as much after
Herbert Thomser, the
&lt;;ennan referee, stopped tbe
scheduled lkounder out at
2:05 of the filth round:
All's all action, flfth.round
TKO against the European
and British champion
repaired the damage done
thr-ee weeks ago by a
shambling fight wlth Jimmy
Young at Landover, Md. But
It was Ounrl, who attacked Ali
from the opening bell .and got
up off the canvas five times to
bore in once again, who made
the champion battle all the

way.
Ali acknowledged Dunn's
courage and the part he
played in his comeback.
"I figured be would run but
he Is courageous, has got a lot
of heart and took some hard
punches," Ali said. "He
shook me twice and I told
Angelo (Dundee) between
rounds I was glad we took tbiB
fight serlously. lf I was in the
same shape I was in against
Young, Dunn would lie world
champion.
"!.bad to hit him with some
solid rights-a punch we've
just perfected called t~e
acupunch. He could not
expect it. He could not see it.
It comes right off the band."
"He gave me more trouble
than I expected. He hit me
gocxl ·a couple of times and
burtme.He shook me up. I'm

glad I ll"ained for this fight. It
was a struggle"
Dunn threw everything he
knew at All but in the end, his
jaw of glass proved no match
for his heart of iron.
"I am not a master of the
noble art," he said. "I am a
fighter .and that's the way I
fought, atlacldng fr001 the
first bell."
Dundee said All's performances nearly always Iring
out the best in hJa opponents.
And so it was with Dunn, the
sandy haired former

. again.
paratrooper.
This time he was really
But he could not solve Ali's
right cross, the traditional groggy and took a count of
weapon against a southpaw, five before he realized which
and in the fourth round he direction hJa corner was in.
went doWn three times in He got up at eight but went
straight down from another
quick succession. .
As All came out for the right. This time he got up, fell
fifth, . he Indicated to Dunn back against· the ropes and
that thi8 would be his last staggered into the arms of
round.
Thomser, who stopped the
"I took my time and I was fight at 2:05 into the round
waiting fill" the hole," said All despite heated protests !ron\
of his slow fifth-round start. Dunn.
The crowd of 10,000 cheered
But when the right went into
action again, Dunn was do"?J Dunn as be left the ring.

P&amp;S plays 3 doubleheaders
In the Pomeroy ~ Southern

Syracuse.
(P&amp;S) Dlslrlct LltUe .~ague
FlniGame
tMre were three double- • Syracuse - Gunther,
headers played Saturday. Teaford, Cook, and Allen.
Powell's Giants swept a pair Powell's - Stewart, Allen,
from the Syracuse Reds by and M. Boyd.
counts of IU and 26-4. J.
SecondGame
Fields led the winners wlth a
Syracuae - Salser, Cook,
home run in each game. J. Nease, and Cunningham.
Sheets went U In the first Powell's McKinney,
game, whUe T. J ewe ll , R• Flelda, and Jewell.
In games played at
Stewar,t C. Allen, an d J .
Beaner each had three hils.. Pomeroy, the Pomeroy
Gunther had the only hit for Pirates and the Racine Asplit
Syracuse In the first game, a a pair, Pomeroy winning the
'single.
first 11-9 with Racine
Powell's111adeasweepoilt salvaging the second, ls-6.
on the bats of Fields with his
After falling behind tl-1 .1n
homer, ; and Stewart and ·the first game, 'the home
Sheets with triples, Other team scored eight times In
hitters. for the winners were · the third inning to squeak
Smith, McKinney, Sheets, ootr the wln. Winning pitcher
and Jewell with doubles ; was Todd Fife who struck out
Smith , Alien, Beaner, and seven and walked four, whlle
If
Jewell had Singles. Salser collecting a lrlple hlmse .
collected two sinRles for Getting doubles were Justice,
Zirkle, and Murr~y. The
catcher was Randy Murray.
Horton, Dot end Mayberry, t&lt;C Porter &amp;1\d . Beegle of
26
'
stolen Bases
Racine combined to. Issue 17
National League: M~rgan, walks wile fanning three. The
Cln 16; Cedeno, Hou U; catcher was Rees. Wolfe had
Grlfley, Cln 10; Bucknor, LA 9;
lrl 1
Cabell, Hou end Monguol, Mtl two home runs and a p e

l~~OOREBOARDf~fl ~~=~~&amp;r·§: ~d.~;-~

;::••
..
Notlon~"re~!~t:rl~~nes, so trailing 6-1, thethlrdy
e:q~lodiedthlor
American League Standings
St. Louis at Chicago
Molor Looguo Lllders
1·2; Lonborg, Phil 6.0; Fryman, 12 runs in the
to ce e
By united Pross International
Houston at San Francisco
By Unllocl Prell International Mtl 6-2; Hough, LA 5·0: victory. Home run hitters for
Ea~. L. Pel. GB ng~ew York ot Philadelphia,
u!':~a~~g7:~~:-:tsl
~~ma•~,; :,!ker,Ch~1t\"n~"\'; the winners were Beegle,
New York
22 12 .647
· Montreolal Pltlsburgh, ngt
Notlonol Llllut'
Bllll n~ham, Cln, Reuss, Pitt Wolfe, Bostic, and Rees.
Bfltlmore
Boston
l~
Los Angeles ot San Diego, ngt Milner, N: AB R H Pet. ~~:rd, ~~~:'~.~~oRu~~••~·.3~tn Portclrl
I r andbU Cummindo
bl gs had
cleveland
t6
19
.457
61h
23
s1
a
31
.3B3
s.
pea
w
e
u
ea were
Detroit
14 18 .43S 7·
Robinson. Pitt
American League : Slaton, collected by Beegle Wolfe
M.!)waukee
We ,s~ 17 .433 7 By Unltocl
Malar League
Resulll
McBride, ~tL 79 11 2'1 .367 ~~nt6,· ~•• ~~~~~~'p'be~l~
~~~ Purter, Cummins and Boatic:
Pross lntornotlonol
~
w
,,,.
w. L. Pet. GB
Notional Luguo
24 96 14 35 .365 5·2: Tonono, Col S.3;, Polmer. Winning pitcher was eese
Kan City
22 12 .647 1 Houston
OlD 000 0-1 1 1 Rose. Cn 31 155 34 56 .361 Bolt H.
wh I ed II d walked
.Tt'xos
21 14 .600 i h Son Fron
310 010 DO.- 59 1 Torr, NY 32 86 12 30 .349
Eornocl Run Average .
0 ann
an
.
Chicago
17 16 .515 4°h Cosgrove, Pentz (3), Griffin CraWford, St.L
lbosoclon 27 Innings pllchocl) six. HJa catcher WaS Reese.
Minnesota
18 17 .514 4'12 (5), Siebert . c71 and Jut&lt;e;
31 101 14 3S .347 .Nollonal Le•oue: Lavelle, SF For Pomeroy Fife led the
Oakland
.16 23 .410 S'la Dressier, Lavelle (9) end Hill. Radr, so 31 110 15 3S .345 0.92; Metzger, SO 0.96; Forsch,
• trl I hU
California
15 26 .36610Va WP·Drtssler Cl·li.LP·COSi)rove Grlfy,Cn33 135 . 29 ~ .341 Hou 1.54; Zachry, Cln 1.60; hitters with a
pe W e
Monday's Results
(l 3l HR 5 F onclsco Hern Grvy, LA 40 169 21 57 .337 Lonborg, Phil 2.21.
Riggs and Thomas bad a
Boston 3 Detroit O, nut
· ·1 · an r
'
· Olvr, Ptt 31 120 20 39 .325 American League: Garland,
I
h Tb I I
Clev 4 Baltimore 0, ngt
don ( ).
American Leogue
.Belt 1.45 ; Alexander. Bolt 1.91; doub e eac ·
e OS ng
·New York 5 Mllw 2, ngt
Montreal
000 031 GGO- 4 1 0
G. AI R H Pet. Carroll, Chi 2.03; Polo, Bos, pitcher was Riggs as he
;Kan City 14 Tex 11, ngl
Pllbrgh
020100 oot- 2 51 LFir, Dt 27 113 21 ~ .407 Wood , Chi and Lindblad. Oak fanned three and walked two.
·Chicago 5 Calif 3, not
Fryman. Scherman (8) end Crty, Clv 32 118 20 44 .373 2.25.
Foote; Candelario, Tekulve 161. Dent, Chl33 123 13 43 .350
Strikeouts
His catcher was Randy
•c:iakland 12 Mlnn 7, ngt
Tuesdoy's Gomes
Moose c81 and Songulllon. wp. 8rtt, KC 34. 136 22 47 .3ol6 Notional League: Seaver, NY Murray.
(All Times EDTI
Fryman (6.21. LP·Candelarla Bostock, Mlnn
63; N1ekro, Atl and Montefusco,
D DOUBLE
Oelrolt (Bore 2·4) ol Boslon (3.31. HRS·Monlreol. Foil c4),
29. 107 14 37 .346 SF 52; Richerd, Hou 49; Lollch,
THE THIR
•
ll'lont 5·2), 7:30p.m.
Foote·Cll .
Patk, KC 32 1!14 20 35 .337 NY 47.
header saw the Pomeroy
;Cleveland !Dobson J.SI at
Lynn, Bs 26 95 14 32 .337 American League : Ryan, Col
k
·~ke
pair fro
Baltimore (Palmer 5·41, 7;30 New York
000 ooo oot-17 1 Bnds, Cl 32 120 21 40 .333 80; Tonono. Col 73 ; Blylevon, Van ees ..
a
m
p,m.
Philo
. 240 100 DOx-7 9 D Staub, Dt 32 109 16 ~ .330 Mlnn 60; Hunter, NY 46 ; Portland at Pomeroy by the
Milwaukee !Travers 3·2i ot Lollch, Webb (2), Apodaca Randolph, NY
Jenkins, Boo and Gossage, Chi scores of 27-1 and 48-4. The
6
-Kansas
3·1) ot Christenson
end ffodgeo;
Boone.
New
York City
(Ellis(Leonard
4-11,8 p.m.
1 1. Senders (5.\1
181 end
3H2om1116Ru2n1s 38 .328 4~5~
. ~~~~~~~~~~§~~~~~
,..••,(Briles 4·11, 8:35p.m.
LP·lOIIth (2·6l. HR·Phlledel- National League: Kingman,
"Chicago CGossoue 2·31 ot
L
kl 151
· NY and Schmldl, Phil 15;
California CRo55 1·51. 10:30 phlo, uz 1ns
·
Monday, Chi and Cey, LA I;
• 0·4) • I Cfevolond
220 ooo
000 GGOGGO- o
4 91 o·
•p:m.
Mlnnesola (Hug,es
Boltlmoro
000
D Ce&lt;IAmenoer'lcHoanu L7e.ague·. Hendrick,
O~klend (Blue 3·51, 11 :00 p.m.
Eckersley, Thomes (9) and Clev 8; Yoslrzemskl, Bos,
Wtclna1d1y's Gimes
· Ashby: Cuellar, G. JeckiOf'\ (2), Horton, Det, Otis, KC end Ford,
.ealllmore ol Detroit, 2, twl· Miller (71. Grimsley (91 end Mlnn 7. Runs lolled In
ng21evelllfld ot New York, ngl
~~~~~~~~:r ~~·~E~kersley (J.21. 4 National League; Kingman,
Y NIGHT
,Boston at Milwaukee, ngt
NY 35; Schmldf, Phil :lol ;
. kansas City ot'Texos. ngl
Los Angtl
000 ooo oeo- o, 1 Monday,, Chi end Foster, Cln
•Chicago at Collfornlo, nut
son Diogo
tOO 010 oox- 2 5o 30; Perez, Cln and Winfield, SO
Minnesota at Oakland. not
John, Downing
17) and 29.
Ferguson · Frelsleben (l.O) and American League: Rudl. Ook
Natlonol Leogue Stondlnu
•ondall LP.John (2.31
32; Burroughs, Tex 30; Munson,
.
NY 28; Chombll55, NY 27;
II.Y United Preu lnternollonol ., . ·
W.
L.
Pet.
GB
•
Pltllo
24 8 .737
22 16 .579 41h
Pnts.
22 18 .550 51h
New York
~----~---------, .
Amerlc•n
LiiDUI
1
Montreal
15 19 .441 9h Dttrolt
OGG 000 GGO- D20
..The Daily.Sen~nel
ooo 102 Oh-. J so
Chicago
16 21 ,432 10 Boston
Roberta (3-3) lnd Freehan;
s': Louis
16 21 .410 11 Wilt
,
DEVOTED TO THE
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. INTEREST OF
Wtst
MEIGS·MASON A·R~A
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500 0GG OOx- 512
hoc. Ed .
".
Clhcln
23 15 .605 2 Now York
COlborn, .Sidtckl (21, AUIIUS·
ROBERT HOEFLICH
S.n Diego
19 19 .500 6
tine (4) and Porter; Figueroa ·
City Editor
1·
Houston
18 2.4 . ~29 9
Published dolly except •
~tlonla
13 25 .375 11 . (4·31 and Mun1011. LP-Colborn
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_,
Monday•• Results
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Tuesday's Games
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Tlmesmonths,
.senllnel.
(Cilld.,.ll 0·41, 11 :05 p.m.
McRae (2), While (II ; Texo'f.
Wtdltldly's Glmts
Smelley (1) .
'--------~------Atlonta ot Cincinnati

..

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The Padres thought be had

a more promising future than

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THE MEIGS INN

first game saw winning
pitcher Mike Whitlatch give
up only one hit, a single to
Sherry Beegle, whUe striking
out 11 aild walking on!Y two.
Leading hitters for the
winners
were
Roger
Kovalchik who went 5 for 5
and Ronnie Richards who
wsa 4 for four. The Yankees
blasted four home runs, three
lrlples, and seven doubles.
Catcher lor the winners was
Richards. The batteryrnen
for Portland were Wade
Connelly and Dave Bryant.
The second game saw
Roger Kovalchik pitch a nohitter while fanning six and
walking four. Richards was
again the catcher. ThiB time
the Yankees slammed eleven
home runs, four triples, and
again seven doubles .. fl!tett
Millloan led all hltera as he
went live for five (Including
·four home runs) whlle teammate Mille WhliJalcb went alx
for seven. Balterymen for
Portland were pitcher Troy
Ward and Steve Souder.

League.
York 7-1, San Francisco
There, under the guidance topped Houston 6-1 and
of Manager Roy Hartafleld, Monll"eal edged Pittsburgh 4· Frelsleben began to get 2.
himself together. Hartsfield PhUUe11 7, Meta I
worked tl1 speeding up his Greg Luzlnskl hit a two-run
pitching
motion
and homer in the first Inning and
Frelsleben worked on Larry Christenson pined bll
Improving his attitude. The fifth win oo a ~everW!Itter u
result was a new pitcher-one lbe Pblllies defeated the Meta
with botli ablllty and for their 17th victory In their
CIJ!Ifidence.
lsllt 20 games. Mickey lAUch ··
"Roy · Hartsfield got all was belted for six l'lllllln I ~
over me at Hawaii," admits Innings and suffered hll etxth
Freisleben. "He iold me I loss In eight declalona.
wasn't doing as well as I Gllmll 5, Aatroa 1
should. I didn't like going
A pair of rooldea, pitcher
down to the minocs but I Rob Dressier and outfielder
learned a lot down there, Larry Herndoo, apwked the
attitude mostly . I've got faith Giants' triumph over the
in putting my fastball over Astros. Dressler pitched
now.! learned that In Hawaii. eight innings and combined
"I'm working a lot quicker with Gary Lavelle on an
now and getting good r~sults . eight-bitter whlle Hemdoo
I'm going to stay with it . had three hits, Including a
Randy Jones Is a good horner .
eJ~ample of what It can do.
Expos 4, Pli"alel I
You get In the rhythm and the
Tim Foil hit a two·nn
players behind pick it up. My homer and Barry Foote
last start in HawaU was a added a solo blast to power
shutout, too."
lbe Expos over the Pirates,
Padres Manager John Woody Fryman and Fred
McNamara said he could Schennan combined on a
sense the change in five-hitter, with Fryman
Frelsleben's attitude on the picking up hla alxtb win In
mound.
eight decWoos.
"He wasn't, nitpicking like
he used to," said McNamara.
"Tonight he went right after
people. We've had conversations with him for the last
three years, sometimes
louder· than other times.
Tonight he showed what he
has. He should be more
mature now. He's got God- .
given talent,"
T&lt;111my John was the bardluck loser for the Dodgers,
allowing only lour bib in six
innings. The Padres llctlfed in
the first on a run«orlng
single by Doug Rader and
again in the filth on a
sacrifice fly by Wlllie Davia.
In the only other NL action,
Philadelphia whipped New No mallet whal ol~or ••rvlco.O
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�2- Til(' Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, May 2!i, 1976

Udall predicts victory ·over Carter·in Ohio
By RI CK VAN SAm
.
he will defeat Jimmy Carter campaign around."
we have a first ballot California, I will beat him we're going to Win here."
Despite Alabama Gov.
CIN CINNATI (UP! )
"Just
write
Ulis
oown,"
the
in Ohio's June 8 primary and
nomination for Carter or an (Carter) in Ohio and between
George
C. Wallace and the
Morris Udall boldly predicts "turn this presidential Ariwna congressman told re- open convention ."
the uncommitted (delegates )
latedeveloplng
C8lldldacles of
porters
in
Cincinnati
Udall aoo used a football and the Udall 's in New
Monday. "Udall is going to analogy whlle campaigning Jersey, we will deny him a Brown and Idaho Sen. Frank
win in Ohio and turn Ulis in Cleveland Monday, calling majority there, " figured Church, Udall declared in
presidential ca mpaign June 8 (primary day in Ohio, Udall. "If that hawens. you Cincinnati the Democratic
aroWJd.
California and New Jersey ) will have an open cooventloo. contest iB only a tw&lt;Hnan
"The Carter movement has ''Super Bowl Tuesday ."
" It all comes down to Ohio race.
"We're down really to two
been slowed down. People are . Udall pointed out his "Stop in just 15 days," Udall told
candidates,"
be said,
now having second thoughts, Carter" drive all!V depends some 250 per!l&gt;ns in front of
saying 'Do we really want to oo how well California Gov. the Cleveland Terminal "Carter, wbo is leading In
hand him a first ballot Edmund Brown, a late- Tower. "You can help me delegates, and Udall, who iB
nomination~ '
starting presidential make history in Ohio. We secOnd .''
By Tom Tiede
terpreted however people
Udall complained Carter
"Just
as
in
the
fourth
KINGSPORT, Tenn.
wish." Fields says most quarter of a football game, Clllltender, fares in his horne can't have an open wasn't taking stands on
state.
convention unless I beat
Almost since Ule time He was Southern Baptists believe
"My scenario is !hat Brown Jimmy Carter in Ohio - and issues and passed out copies
here before, it seems, the that doomsday will come on Ohio Cwith its late ll'imary)
of his "Quick Carter Quiz,"
roads of conservative an individual baslJI for every. probably wlU decide whether will get a big majority in
asking
what Carter's positloo
'
Christianity have been posted one, naturally, but that after
18 on haif-41-dozen Issues.
with notices proclaiming: 10 billion years of cOSIJiic
"I promiBe $100 to any
"He Is Coming Again."
history, only zooo of which
reporter who can get Carter
Now, by gosh and by golly, has been occupied by
to answer even one," said
the true believers are more Christians, the idea of God
Udall. "And If you can get
sure than ever. A millenium setting fire to the earth Is
two or three answers, I'll
is approaching (Ule year phll01iophically remote.
send you on a two-week paid
2000) which for many 18
Yet Carter may demur
vacation to Plains, Ga.
THIS MARKER GIVING recognition to those who . ;
significant. Then there is the from now until, weU, hell By MYRAM BORDERS
(Carter's home town).
have
given their lives for their COIDitry will be dedicated , ;
state of the world, which freezes over, and he will sWI · LASVEGAS,Nev. (UPI )- versions contradict each hired by Monnon officials to
"We're not electing the
at
the
Rutland Community Psrk, Main St., in ceremOIIIes " .
examine the "will" before it president .of a dog lo.od ,at 1 pm: on ~ooday. At the same time, the town of
many feel was prophesied In be thought of by some as a It was just another routine other.
Dununar, a Utah service was brought to Las Vegas but company," added Udall.
Revelations. Finally, there is symbol of wha.t the day at the Clark County
Rutland will be officially recognized as a "Bicentennial "' ,
station
owner, was named in did not have enough time In "But even a dog food
1Jinuny Carter.
revelations .of St. John called Courthouse - five more
Conununity", 'f11e town Is abio planning a parade which, "
Few will come right out the come back of Alpha- "wills" from Howard Hughes the so-called "Mormon will" draw a firm conclusion.
company president should
looks
most promlslug, Mrs. Joan Stewart, chairman, ..,
with il:' That the born-again Omega. For centuries these appeared, along with yet to receive one sixteenth of
know the issues."
reports,
in conjuncUon wiUl a July ttb celebration.
;~
peanut grower Is another sign believers have looked to another claimant saying -he Hughes' estimated $2.5 billion
of the Second Advent. But specific dates, political was with Melvin Dummar estate. The will was found at
Mormon
Church
this sentiment is apparently changes, and even the head- when Dummar picked up the
"'
headquarters
April
rl and
taking root and may spread. lines lor reflections from Hughes in the desert.
FREE CLOTHING
filed here two days later by
Here on the edge of the Bible heaven. One Wllliam Miller
The additional "wills" church officials. Dummar
••
Free
clothing day will be
Belt, some people say that predicted the exact day - arnvmg in the mail
held
at
the
Selvation
Army,
told
reporters
he
picked
a
since God works in October 22, 1844. Despite its Monday- including the first
By CRAIG A. PALMER
this year, said the report by insurance benefits coverujg'.
mysterious ways they would passing without Incident, tape recorded version- man up in the Nevada desert Pomeroy, on Thursday, May
WASHINGTON
(UPI)
trustees Treasury Secretary 32.6 million persons will be
not be surprised if the fonner there have been thousands of brought the known total to 25, in January of 1968, drove him rl, from 10 a.m. unW noon. The Social Security System's William Simon; Health, exhausted beginning in 19'19:
Georgia governor is some of more recent prophets equally including 23 on file here, one to Las Vegas and gave hinn a All area residents are trustees say ta~ increases are Education and Welfare and someliine In lbe 1980B foi::
His doin~ . A Pentecostal assured of the coming end. mailed to a Houston Judge quarter. He said the ·man welcome.
a must if the program Is to Secretary David Mathews; old age and survivor,il,
preacher, for instance, says Even how there is a group In and one sent to The New York identified himself as Howard
stay solvent in the face of and Labor Secretary W.J. insurance unless the ra~,
Hughes
but
he
thought
he
was
Carter comes along in "the Granni8, Ark., thst has fo~ Times.
escalating costs.
are ·Increased, the trustees ,
Usery.
a "bwn" ..
nick of time." He will not montha been confined In a
'"'. •
Most are obvious fakes or
The
system
Is
simply
predicted.
Reserve funds for diBabllity
District Judge Keith Hayes
UNIT CALLED •
comment beyond that, but privatehomewaltingfor "the pranks. Only one, the
paying
out
more
in
benefits
... .,
SYRACUSE
The
grins instructively with the Lamb to come down and take "Mormon will," is the object agreed Monday to conduct a
than
it's
earning
from
payroll
hearing today on Reisen's Syracuse E-R squad was
satisfaction of one with Inner us home."
of formal probate court request to have document called Friday at 11 :30 p.m. taxes and will he in even .~
.
knowledge.
To thi8 way of thinking, 'the proceedings to dispose of
i
...
..
worse
shape
over
the
next
75
The scenario, to uae a millennium Is most im- Hughes' $2.5 billion fortune . e~aminer Leslie King of for Ada Slack, a medical years than was projected last
Bountiful, Utah, make paper patient who was taken to and
secular word, is simple portant.
The
year
A document examiner and comparoons.
admitted at Veterans year, the trustees said
enough. Not lor years has 2000
Monday.
Is
a
nu- a television reporter from
Mrs. King said she first was Memorial Hospital. ·
faith been a political Issue, merological waypost. Salt Lake City planned to ask
By Alma Marshall
In its annual report to ~-·
and in thai time theological Clean, Neat. A wonderful the court today for
Congress, the three cabinet- ~morality has had a rough
member Board of Trustees
date,
as
Revelations permission to co~pare the '
HARTFORD - A lot of things have come to pass mch a.~. 1
time of it. God warned us of suggests, for frogs to appear "Mormon wtll" w1th paper
'
recommended prompt action
those
predicted by the MldcDeport Republican 50 years ago,,"
our wayward lurch, sending
"In strengthen the financing
1n
the
mouths
of the WJclean. from a writing tablet. The
J
~
•ect
The
following
article taken from the Point Pl~sant Register
along such human devils as Make way for Gog and tablet supposedly belonged to
of the old age, survivors and
.
10r
dated
Sept.
26,
1917 when R. P. Bell was editor and general
Adolf Hitler, but we would not Magog. And lithe millennium a man who said he was
.
T Value Stamp books or disability insurance system
.
"'
lis ten or see. Thus today, as wiU be 2000 years since the present when the billionaire . The .Meigs Band Boosters the ~lberfelds blli8 can be over the near tenn by means manager had the headlin!!B :
"A Boon for Hartford," reading as follows :
:·
the
Russian
poet advent of Christ, the wrote it, purportedly while who wtll ?Perate a foodstand turned In .at the ·Sears Store of appropriate increases in
"If half we hear is true there is a big boom on lor Hartford,"
Yvetushenko says it, "the Bicentennial election wlU be crossing the desert in a at the Me1gs County Fair lh!&amp; on East Main Street in lhe tax rates."
price of revolver lubricant 200 years since the advent of Volkswagen bus.
President Ford has W. Va. and adjoining neigbborhooda. A deal was closed there
y~ur needs help to equip tt. Pomero or to Mrs. Wednell
Saturday whereby the Hartford City Coal and Salt works.
rises while that of human life America . II all adds up.
Several versions of the
Thecommtttet:lnchargeof Gr te • YR tland For further proposed a 0.3 per cent boost passes into the banda of foreign capitalists together with lfQO
fali8 ." And so it's nearly
Or does It? Since the good "Dummar story" have sur- securing a~ items needed is
a ~tlo~ or f~r lckup of in the payroll tax paid by .100 acres of coal land. They will al8o take over 20,000 acres of coal
over. Enter Carter, ·in the book
18 not perfectly clear on faced, told by persons who asking Me1gs residents for ~books or blli8pcall Mrs. miiiion workers, matched by lands
under option by J. M. Hensley. 'lbl8 deal was ~ by
nick of time, a man clearly ·this, the skeptics .will have to say !bey were wlth him when donations of Top Value Stamp OOt ~udson 992-3648, Mrs. a 0.3 per cent Increase for
P.
M.
Clifton, formerly In charge of the Pomeroy Salt
qualified t9 prepare us for the wait untO Nov. 5. If J. Carter Hughes was given the ride books or buts lrot;t .F;iberfelds Ra Glaze !m-5 or Mrs. employers, effective next
Association
works at Mlnersvllle. The new company Is said to
end.
2011
then wins with 100 per cent of that spurred the billionaire to to help tn obtammg things Gr Yte
before
June yeilr.
be
capitalized
at 5 ~ dollars.
It is certainly not apparent thevote,lforoneamgolng to leave Dummar a multi· needed In the booth .
The trustees neither
a ' 74 2201
''If
this
all
comes
to pass we look for a street car Une alon~·
that Carter would want to watch my language.
12·
supported nor rejected
million dollar bequest . The
the
West
Virginia
!root,
electric Ugbts, gas, water l'rorlai,'
prepare tJs for anything but a
Ford's specific proposal but
paved
roads
and
all
that
sort
of UJing. ltJooks good to UB acroSS
new beginning. He is a
did advise against dipping
the
river."
The
MldcDeport
Republican,
spread-the-word Jesus
into general tax revenues or
patriot, praying by his own
· increasing the social security
ANOTHER ARTICLE In tbla paper read as follows:
count "some 25 times a day,"
tax earnings base - · the
"The Hartford Coal and Salt Company was aold last week to
and telling the voters of it
amount of income subject to
the Mason County Mining and Chemical Company. ThiB
even oftener than that. 'And
taxes.
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The Metzenbaum, waging a battle policy not to invite hinn cents.
as for the Savior's retUrn, J.
"The long-term picture Is property was formerly owned lor many years by Mr. D. E. .
C. ( ! ) has recently advised Ohio AFL-CIO convention for the Democratic senatorial (Wallace)
to
labor
now
shown, under new Newton and fonnerly by her father, o,W. Meredock. We hope
The dues finance the labor
opens
today
and
with
the
the Bible class in his borne
nomination, appear at the meetings."
.
organization's lobbying, assumptions, as holding out the new company will proJ)IIer and be a boom to the town."
state's
JWJe
8
ll'imary
just
town that "Jesus hasn't told
convention - Stanton at 10:30
"We have nothing In publications, campaigning the prospect of higher future
WFSI' COLUMBIA - Chester Lee Roush, aon of Mr. and
us when he's coming - but two ·weeks away the a.m. and Metzenbaum at 3:30 common with George and educational work in Ohio. costs than had been
gathering
bas
turned
intO
a
Mrs.
John Curtis Roush of West Columl:ia, graduated on •
pm.
we should be ready." Yet he
Wallace," added Sm!Ul.
Smith said rues were last previously projected," · said
political
showcase.
Sunday,
from West Virginia Wesleyan Coll!!ge at Buckbanol!.:
has carefully denied any
Local supporters of
Smith also .said the state increased In 1970, but he commissioner James
Three Democratic Alabama Gov. George C. AFL-CIO would not endorse complained that inflation has Cardwell at a news brieftng.
Jay Rockefellow, past president of the college, was on hand
feeling that he is "chosen by
,.
God to be president," and presidential Clllltenders and Wallace,the only Democratic any of the Democratic forced a cutback in state
Long -range actuarial cost to congratulate the graduates.
Attending
the
graduation
in
addition
to
his
parents
were
Mr.
th011e cl011e to him say they two Democratic Senate presidential candidate not presidential aspirants before AFLCIO services.
estimates indleate that for
doubt he believes in the hopefuls will appear before Invited to the gathering, said the June 8 primary.
Today's convention every year under present and Mrs. Curtis Roush and Carolyn Rou!h; Mrs. Evelyn
I ,800 . · delegates they would Biage ''protest
holocaust or doomsday the
Earlier this month, Carter keynote speaker was to be law, estimated spending will Nicholson, Mr. and Mrs. Mel Clark and Barbara; Kathy ,
the 520,000· marches" between 5pm. and huddled for an hour with I.W. Abel, president of the exceed estimated Income, Crump of Pt. Pleasant.
representing
theory of the Second Coming.
Mrs. &amp;ush Is employed at Peoples Bank In Pt. Pleasant. ·;
Actually, it Is presumed member organization here 9 p.m. today through national AFL-CIO President United Steelworkers of including a ~.3 blllion deficit
Thursday outside the George Meany, but a spokes- America.
that Carter believes that today through Thursday.
'
The parade of presidential downtown Convention man for Meany said later that
Christ's reappearance would
Wednesday's speakers
Muon and Area Personals
mean joy on earth, at least hopefuls begins today wlth Center.
Meany will continue to include William R. Hutton,
MEAT
REMOVED
Rep.
Morri8
Udall,
D-Ariz.
Mrs.
Betty
Cadle,
Mason, and Mrs. Etta Richardson of New
Albert Baldwin, a local adhere to a policy of executive director of the
for the faithful. Dr. W. C.
COLUMBUS,
Ohio
(UP!)On
Thursday,
Sen.
Frank
Haven
both
of
Betty's
Beauty BouUque, and Mrs. Jo Ann
· Wallace organizer, said It neutrality prior to the National Council of Senior
Fields, an officer of the
Big Crosby, 72, here lor the Harbour, Muon, of the Hair Harbour, attended a school on
Church,
D-ldabo,
speaks
at
10
was
"downright
disgusting"
Southern Baptist Convention
nominating conventions.
Citizens, Carol Tucker Memorial Golf Tournament
(Carter's sect preference ), a.m., followed by former for Wallace not to be invited.
Beyond politics, the biggest Fonnan, president of the Pro-Am at nearby Dublin, hair styling at tbe ~llday Inn at South Point, Ohio, recently.
They also were dinner i!Uesls there.
Ohio AFL-CIO secretary- item at the state AFlrCIO Consumer Federation of
says coupling doolllSilay with Georgia Gov. Jimmy Carter
was admitted to Riverside
10:30
am.
at
treasurer
Warren
J.
Smith
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Saunders and famliy of Columbus, Mr:
the Second Advenl Is exmeeting appears · to be America
and several Hospital here late Monday
On
Wednesday,
Rep.
said
It
was
"long«andlng,
and
Mrs. James Uoyd and aons of Nashport, Ohio will a~len&lt;l
tremist. "The Bible .is lull of
whether dues should be hiked state
of Ohio
offi- night to have a piece Of meat
James
V.
Stan
ron,
OOhio,
WJdeclared
national
AFL-CIO
lhe
graduation
of Mrs. Saunders and Mrs. Loyd's niece, Denl!e"
parabolic and rhetorical
from the present 15 cents per cials - Lt. Gov. Richard removed from his throat, the
and
fonner
Sen.
Howard
McDaniel,
from
Point Pleasant High School on Friday.
..
passages which can be inmember per month to 25 Celeste, Senate President Pro h011pital said todsy.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Curtis
McDaniel
will
also
attend
their
·
Tern Oliver Ocaaek, House
granddaughter's
graduation.
They
will
visit
over
the
weekend'
Speaker Vernal Riffe,
at the McDaniel horne In Mam.
•
Attorney General William
Mr. anii Mrs. Harriaon Robinson, Jr., Mike and Kay·;::
·Brown and Treasurer
FAIR MOST PLACES
Theresa Smith spent Sunday afternoon visiting Mrs. Gertie.,
Gertrude Donahey.
Showers • and
thunRobert G. Wick, vice presi- dershowers were scattered Psrsons at Ripley.
Miss Evelyn lockett and Mrs. James Lee of Cllfton, vislteq,
dent of the American Red early today from the Rockies
Cross is a feattred speaker to the northern Atlantic eoast on Stmday wlth Mrs. Mary Davis at Rutland, 0.
Miss Carolyn Roush, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Rollllh
Thursday, the final day of the states. Skies were fair over
Is
employed by WSAZ In HIDitington. Miss Roush attended
By Lawrence!&lt;;. Lamb, M.D. represents .recharging of the graph. This finding may be trocardiograph procedure In convention.
much of the rest of the nation. Huntington Business College.
DEAR DR. LAMB- Would heart in preparation for the associated with minor Db- a series of escalating stepa. H
you explain what an elec- next cycle.
struction of the coronary they are able to make the
trocardiogram tells a doctor
It follows thst lhe heart arteries and is one of the diagn011is on a resting elecabout the heart ? Why are rate .can be cOWl ted inn- things that doctors look for in
they may not
some taken after stress when mediately from a graph of . diagnosing coronary heart trocardiogram
proceed further. On the other
most are done with the this type. Also, the specific disease. Thla type of finding hand, if a person has sympRIO GRANDE. - Rio teacher, legal secretary, organization for educational
patient reclining after a order In which the heart is may be brought out by toms or other clinical
Grande
College-Rio Grande college teacher and ad- ieaderablp, and Phi Kappl Grande. College graduate8:"
resting period? Would not one e~ctted can be determined. In · exercise and thi8 is one evidence that suggests there Community
Hia youngeit son (Jobn)
College today
taken immediately after certain irregular! ties of the · reason for a sll'ess test.
minisll'ator.
Dr.
Harbin
has
Phl,natiol)alscholasUc
honor
preaenUy a aopbiJIIICft at themight be heart disease and announced the speakers for
some athletic activity or heart the bottom part of the
Whenever the heart is none Is found by the resting ita IOOth Baccalaureate and aeryed with the United States society.
College.
·
.,
stress tell a doctor more?
Or. Harbin has been active
heart may be stimulated excessively enlarged or one record then many doctors Commencement of Rio Army and Is a retired reserve
Rev. Luaher received lila:
officer wlth rank of Colonel. In conununlty acUvities as
DEAR READER - An first. The electrocardiogram chamber of It Is enlarged this may elect to go ahead and uae
Grande College and the He has also been asaoclated leader in Kiwanis support of bachelor's degree from Ohllr·
electrocardiogram Is merely then is extremely useful in may also be identified by the an
Unlvenlty, a Th.B froni:
exercise test to help Second Baccalaureate and
graphic representation of the determining the rate, rhythm electrocardiogram.
·
idenU!y the problem better. Commencement of Rio with the North Central ~arning Disabilities in Southern Baptist Semluary:
variations in eleclrical ac- and the type of any
Association of Colleges and schools, aaaiatlng with
There are many other There are advantages to both
Community College Secondary Schools as a programs for the mentally and aM. Dlv. from Northern
tivity of the heart. Since your irregularity that may occur. things which can be seen on the resting and the. exercise Grande
Baptist Seminary of Otlcqo.
on May 30,
coordinator and as a Llason retarded, and as director of
heart beats in a rhythmic
Beyond thiB, If the heart electrocardiograms in- electrocardiogram.
Hia active mlniltry baa
Baccalaureate
speaker
will
Representative .for the The Senior Center of Hays.
fashion there 18 a rhythmic muscle, specifically the eluding infianunation of the
For Information about be Rev. Chrles W. Lusher, American Association of He Ia an elder in the been centered at Tabernacle
repetition of the eleclrlcal ventricles, Is damaged . as heart and even changes types of heart attacks and
Baptist burch, Olllllcolbe,
pattern. The first wave is from a heart attack, It wiU associated wlth the chemical heart pains send 50 cents for Pastor of the Calvary Baptist Colleges for Teacher Presbyterian Church.
and Firat Baptist Cludl,
Church in Rio Grande.
Education.
Rev. Luaher, a native· of PainlvUie. He ~erved as an •
caused by the electrical change the configuration of balance of the body,
The Health ~Iter, number 2The commencement
impulse that passes over the that part of the graph. There
Many defects such as the 10, Heart Attack, Myocardial . speaker will be Dr. Calvin E. He fs the author of Gallla County, has r.on- Army chaplain during Wm-ld
numerous articles appearing necUona· wlth Rio Grande War U, u Ohio Baptlit
top of the heart (atria). The are a vartely of typical changes In configuration InfarcUon, Angina Pectoris. harbin.
1
in
' prolesalonal journals and College. He has been a
next wave, which Is really a patterns which doctors uae to from an old Mart attack can Send a long, stamped, selfDr. Harbin, a native of has published a book entitled "Rellsioua Emphaail Week" Evangelist of eight ~.
complex configura !ion, Is identify heart muscle be seen on the resting elec- addressed envelope for Missouri, is the Dean ·of the
and as Area Mlnlaler ~~
caused by the electrical damage or an Infarct.
trocardiogram . For the mailing. Address your letter Faculty of Education at Fort "Teaching Power". He 18 · speaker. Hia parenta met at Southeastern Ohio before
activity over the heavy
When the heart muscle is detection of coronary artery to me in care of thi8 news- Hays Kansas State College, listed in Contemporary this school and were both crmlng u Pulm' of Calvary,
muscular chambers of the not getting sufficient clr- disease you may gain more paper, P. 0 . Box 1551, Radio Hays, Kansas . His ex- Authors and Who's Who In graduates. Hia wife (Gladys Baptist Olurch In Rio Grande
heart that do the pumping culation even if there is no information by doing an City Station, New York, NY . perience In professional American Education and Ia a Sheets), his slater (Eleanm- · lut m1111tb. The ICJplc of the ,,
member or bnlh Phi Delta Shafer), and his oldest 11011· Baccalaureate sermon Ia
(ventricles). A final wave pain produced it may cause a exercise t.!st. Doctors usually 10019.
education sp;lfl~ neflrly forty Kappa,
an im~rnaLional (Stanley David) are all Rio ''Out.Real FreedorD."
change in the &lt;·haract.!r of the approach
the
elecyear\ as . a ~u1·~1 ochool
1
/.
~·
"
J

"Q"'Padres snap Dodger string, 2-0
Sport Parade

TOM TIEDE
]. C. and ]. C.,

or the Carter coming

Five more wills show up
in usual courthouse day

SS tax increases certain

~ Mason County
~

News Notes

Boosters ask Stamp books .

EJherield bills

proj

z:

Political hopefuls focus on Labor

DR. LAMB

Showing how the heart beats

Commencement speakers announced~

u:

.

By MILTON Rl(liMAN
UP! Sporta Edltar
NEW YORK (UPI) - Everybody's watching, and
Muhammad All not only knows It, he feels it. He talks a great
~ about all his followers, tbose who supposedly love him, but
~..18 not so insensitive that he isn't. aware there are,alao those
Wlio would' love to see him lose his UUe. He can feel that also,
lite!y more than ever before.
. .
•Never at any time in Munich's Olympia Hall Tuesday·
IQDrlling, or Monday night in the United States, was there
much danger of Ali letting hli$ championship slip away to
British southpaw Richard Dunn, of whom It most accurately
cin be can be said his spirit was wiiUng but his clin was weak.
Jlerbert Thornser, the Gennan referee, stopped the bout
with lesa than a minute left In the fifth round, awarding AU a
teChnical knockout after concluding correcUy Dunn bad
enough following five quick visits to the canvas. Watching this
miiiion dollar classic on tv ,I was left wlth the same Impression
I had three weeks ago when I felt Ali beat underdog Jimmy
Yoimg clearly enough at Landover, Md., but thst the loser
emerged wlth hJa image far more enhanced than the wilmer.
Not that AU too)ted anywhere near as bad against Dunn as he
did against Young, but he certainly didn't look like the same
Muhanunad All who won his tlUe back from George Foreman
in Zaire nearly two years ago or even Uke the same one who
·stopped Joe Frazier in the Phllippines last year.
Always full of promises, All had told everybody he was going
to c&lt;111e out dancing against the 31-year-old Dunn. He didn't.
As a matter of fact, this was one of the few fights where he was
forced to get moving iJr else risk getting hJa feet stepped on by
the perpetually oncbarging challenger. Okay, so let's forget
about the dancing.
~How about all the openings Iiunn provided with that standup,
s~aight-in southpaw style of his? All missed at least a haH
dOzen of them 1111d sometimes looked painfully amateurish
vl!inly trying to cope wlth Dunn's right-band lead. When you
cOOsjder he has been fighUng professionally for 16 years IICIW,
ynu have to wonder when, if ever, Allis going to be able to
li'lidle southpaws. Would you ever believe that after all thi8
time, he still can't hit lefJ.llanded pitching? Not the way he
should, anyway.
More than that, there was no sign whatsoever of the old
liOunce to Ali's legs. He's 34 and he looks It, even though he
libasted about those 10 pounda he took off sinCe his near..
61saster with Young. All dido't come out and say he was happy
)!Jereleree stopped the fight when he did, but he dldn'thave to
~ay it. The weariness showed plainly in hJa features. He didn't
~Y to hide the fact he was tired or that Dunn had hllft him with
Mme of his punces.
.~'He shook me twice," he admitted. "I'm glad I trained for
thH! fight. HI trained the same way I did lor Young, I would
have lost." .
.'!:atety, AU talks more and more about the possibility of
loSing. He Is not talking because he feels any necessity to pump
up any gate this Iinne but only because he knows better than
aqyhody else when his skuts are starting to slip away and It
oc.t;urs to him that possibly is happening to him now.
'Knocking down somebody like Richard Dljnn five times
daesn.'t prove a thing. DuM had been knocked out eight times
~,ore. Jimmy Young was ooe of those who flattened him and
e~~n at his worst, Muhammad Ali could stand there all night,
taKe YoWJg's best punches and hardly even flinch.
'Muhammad All has gone back and he knows it. To give you a
roUgh idea of how far, picture the Ali who scored four
CQJiseCUiive knockouts over Henry Cooper, Brian London, Karl
Mildenberger and Cleveland Wllllams. Only one of them,
Mfldenberger, a. southpaw, managed to get past Ule sixth
round. That was ten years ago. It seems at least a hundred.

By FRED MeMANE
UPI Sporll Writer
Dave Frelsleben has
always had the God-«iven
ialent to become · a star
.pitcher, 8nd now he says he
hlis the ''faith" n~essary to
see his promise fulfUied.
Frelsleben, a shining
rookie two seasons ago who
faded badly last year, made
his first' start Monday night

since being recalled from the
minors last week and pitched
a six-bitter IAl lead the San
Diego Padres to a :1-4 triumph
over Los Angeles which
snapped the Dodgers' slxgsme winning streak.
It was the first shutout for
Frelsleben since July 28 of
last season and It Is a
welcome sign to the Padres'
management who were.

beginning to wonder II the 24year-old right-bander would
ever begin to fulfill the
potential he displayed as a
rookie.
Frelsleben was one of the
lop young pitchers in the
Natlooal ~ague in 1974 when
be posted a 9-14record and an
impressive 3.65 average for a
San Diego club that won only
60 games.

Randy Jones at the time but
whlle Jooes went on to win 20
gsmes last season fm- Sen
Diego, Frelsleben slumped to
(;.14 with an overslxed ERA of
4.2i. His career took another
step backward during spring
training when he was cut
from the squad and optlooed
to Hawaii of the Pacific Coast

Challenger floored 5 times
By ALEX FRERE
UP! Sporll Writer
MUNICH (UPI) :._ In the
course of trying to wipe out a
piece of personal embarrassment three weeks ago,
Muhammad Ali wiped out
Richard Dunn, ·nooring the
British challenger five tllnes .
lor a fifth round tecltnlcal
knockout. But even wltb aU
that, he still wasn't the
Muhammad Ali of old.
He admitted as much after
Herbert Thomser, the
&lt;;ennan referee, stopped tbe
scheduled lkounder out at
2:05 of the filth round:
All's all action, flfth.round
TKO against the European
and British champion
repaired the damage done
thr-ee weeks ago by a
shambling fight wlth Jimmy
Young at Landover, Md. But
It was Ounrl, who attacked Ali
from the opening bell .and got
up off the canvas five times to
bore in once again, who made
the champion battle all the

way.
Ali acknowledged Dunn's
courage and the part he
played in his comeback.
"I figured be would run but
he Is courageous, has got a lot
of heart and took some hard
punches," Ali said. "He
shook me twice and I told
Angelo (Dundee) between
rounds I was glad we took tbiB
fight serlously. lf I was in the
same shape I was in against
Young, Dunn would lie world
champion.
"!.bad to hit him with some
solid rights-a punch we've
just perfected called t~e
acupunch. He could not
expect it. He could not see it.
It comes right off the band."
"He gave me more trouble
than I expected. He hit me
gocxl ·a couple of times and
burtme.He shook me up. I'm

glad I ll"ained for this fight. It
was a struggle"
Dunn threw everything he
knew at All but in the end, his
jaw of glass proved no match
for his heart of iron.
"I am not a master of the
noble art," he said. "I am a
fighter .and that's the way I
fought, atlacldng fr001 the
first bell."
Dundee said All's performances nearly always Iring
out the best in hJa opponents.
And so it was with Dunn, the
sandy haired former

. again.
paratrooper.
This time he was really
But he could not solve Ali's
right cross, the traditional groggy and took a count of
weapon against a southpaw, five before he realized which
and in the fourth round he direction hJa corner was in.
went doWn three times in He got up at eight but went
straight down from another
quick succession. .
As All came out for the right. This time he got up, fell
fifth, . he Indicated to Dunn back against· the ropes and
that thi8 would be his last staggered into the arms of
round.
Thomser, who stopped the
"I took my time and I was fight at 2:05 into the round
waiting fill" the hole," said All despite heated protests !ron\
of his slow fifth-round start. Dunn.
The crowd of 10,000 cheered
But when the right went into
action again, Dunn was do"?J Dunn as be left the ring.

P&amp;S plays 3 doubleheaders
In the Pomeroy ~ Southern

Syracuse.
(P&amp;S) Dlslrlct LltUe .~ague
FlniGame
tMre were three double- • Syracuse - Gunther,
headers played Saturday. Teaford, Cook, and Allen.
Powell's Giants swept a pair Powell's - Stewart, Allen,
from the Syracuse Reds by and M. Boyd.
counts of IU and 26-4. J.
SecondGame
Fields led the winners wlth a
Syracuae - Salser, Cook,
home run in each game. J. Nease, and Cunningham.
Sheets went U In the first Powell's McKinney,
game, whUe T. J ewe ll , R• Flelda, and Jewell.
In games played at
Stewar,t C. Allen, an d J .
Beaner each had three hils.. Pomeroy, the Pomeroy
Gunther had the only hit for Pirates and the Racine Asplit
Syracuse In the first game, a a pair, Pomeroy winning the
'single.
first 11-9 with Racine
Powell's111adeasweepoilt salvaging the second, ls-6.
on the bats of Fields with his
After falling behind tl-1 .1n
homer, ; and Stewart and ·the first game, 'the home
Sheets with triples, Other team scored eight times In
hitters. for the winners were · the third inning to squeak
Smith, McKinney, Sheets, ootr the wln. Winning pitcher
and Jewell with doubles ; was Todd Fife who struck out
Smith , Alien, Beaner, and seven and walked four, whlle
If
Jewell had Singles. Salser collecting a lrlple hlmse .
collected two sinRles for Getting doubles were Justice,
Zirkle, and Murr~y. The
catcher was Randy Murray.
Horton, Dot end Mayberry, t&lt;C Porter &amp;1\d . Beegle of
26
'
stolen Bases
Racine combined to. Issue 17
National League: M~rgan, walks wile fanning three. The
Cln 16; Cedeno, Hou U; catcher was Rees. Wolfe had
Grlfley, Cln 10; Bucknor, LA 9;
lrl 1
Cabell, Hou end Monguol, Mtl two home runs and a p e

l~~OOREBOARDf~fl ~~=~~&amp;r·§: ~d.~;-~

;::••
..
Notlon~"re~!~t:rl~~nes, so trailing 6-1, thethlrdy
e:q~lodiedthlor
American League Standings
St. Louis at Chicago
Molor Looguo Lllders
1·2; Lonborg, Phil 6.0; Fryman, 12 runs in the
to ce e
By united Pross International
Houston at San Francisco
By Unllocl Prell International Mtl 6-2; Hough, LA 5·0: victory. Home run hitters for
Ea~. L. Pel. GB ng~ew York ot Philadelphia,
u!':~a~~g7:~~:-:tsl
~~ma•~,; :,!ker,Ch~1t\"n~"\'; the winners were Beegle,
New York
22 12 .647
· Montreolal Pltlsburgh, ngt
Notlonol Llllut'
Bllll n~ham, Cln, Reuss, Pitt Wolfe, Bostic, and Rees.
Bfltlmore
Boston
l~
Los Angeles ot San Diego, ngt Milner, N: AB R H Pet. ~~:rd, ~~~:'~.~~oRu~~••~·.3~tn Portclrl
I r andbU Cummindo
bl gs had
cleveland
t6
19
.457
61h
23
s1
a
31
.3B3
s.
pea
w
e
u
ea were
Detroit
14 18 .43S 7·
Robinson. Pitt
American League : Slaton, collected by Beegle Wolfe
M.!)waukee
We ,s~ 17 .433 7 By Unltocl
Malar League
Resulll
McBride, ~tL 79 11 2'1 .367 ~~nt6,· ~•• ~~~~~~'p'be~l~
~~~ Purter, Cummins and Boatic:
Pross lntornotlonol
~
w
,,,.
w. L. Pet. GB
Notional Luguo
24 96 14 35 .365 5·2: Tonono, Col S.3;, Polmer. Winning pitcher was eese
Kan City
22 12 .647 1 Houston
OlD 000 0-1 1 1 Rose. Cn 31 155 34 56 .361 Bolt H.
wh I ed II d walked
.Tt'xos
21 14 .600 i h Son Fron
310 010 DO.- 59 1 Torr, NY 32 86 12 30 .349
Eornocl Run Average .
0 ann
an
.
Chicago
17 16 .515 4°h Cosgrove, Pentz (3), Griffin CraWford, St.L
lbosoclon 27 Innings pllchocl) six. HJa catcher WaS Reese.
Minnesota
18 17 .514 4'12 (5), Siebert . c71 and Jut&lt;e;
31 101 14 3S .347 .Nollonal Le•oue: Lavelle, SF For Pomeroy Fife led the
Oakland
.16 23 .410 S'la Dressier, Lavelle (9) end Hill. Radr, so 31 110 15 3S .345 0.92; Metzger, SO 0.96; Forsch,
• trl I hU
California
15 26 .36610Va WP·Drtssler Cl·li.LP·COSi)rove Grlfy,Cn33 135 . 29 ~ .341 Hou 1.54; Zachry, Cln 1.60; hitters with a
pe W e
Monday's Results
(l 3l HR 5 F onclsco Hern Grvy, LA 40 169 21 57 .337 Lonborg, Phil 2.21.
Riggs and Thomas bad a
Boston 3 Detroit O, nut
· ·1 · an r
'
· Olvr, Ptt 31 120 20 39 .325 American League: Garland,
I
h Tb I I
Clev 4 Baltimore 0, ngt
don ( ).
American Leogue
.Belt 1.45 ; Alexander. Bolt 1.91; doub e eac ·
e OS ng
·New York 5 Mllw 2, ngt
Montreal
000 031 GGO- 4 1 0
G. AI R H Pet. Carroll, Chi 2.03; Polo, Bos, pitcher was Riggs as he
;Kan City 14 Tex 11, ngl
Pllbrgh
020100 oot- 2 51 LFir, Dt 27 113 21 ~ .407 Wood , Chi and Lindblad. Oak fanned three and walked two.
·Chicago 5 Calif 3, not
Fryman. Scherman (8) end Crty, Clv 32 118 20 44 .373 2.25.
Foote; Candelario, Tekulve 161. Dent, Chl33 123 13 43 .350
Strikeouts
His catcher was Randy
•c:iakland 12 Mlnn 7, ngt
Tuesdoy's Gomes
Moose c81 and Songulllon. wp. 8rtt, KC 34. 136 22 47 .3ol6 Notional League: Seaver, NY Murray.
(All Times EDTI
Fryman (6.21. LP·Candelarla Bostock, Mlnn
63; N1ekro, Atl and Montefusco,
D DOUBLE
Oelrolt (Bore 2·4) ol Boslon (3.31. HRS·Monlreol. Foil c4),
29. 107 14 37 .346 SF 52; Richerd, Hou 49; Lollch,
THE THIR
•
ll'lont 5·2), 7:30p.m.
Foote·Cll .
Patk, KC 32 1!14 20 35 .337 NY 47.
header saw the Pomeroy
;Cleveland !Dobson J.SI at
Lynn, Bs 26 95 14 32 .337 American League : Ryan, Col
k
·~ke
pair fro
Baltimore (Palmer 5·41, 7;30 New York
000 ooo oot-17 1 Bnds, Cl 32 120 21 40 .333 80; Tonono. Col 73 ; Blylevon, Van ees ..
a
m
p,m.
Philo
. 240 100 DOx-7 9 D Staub, Dt 32 109 16 ~ .330 Mlnn 60; Hunter, NY 46 ; Portland at Pomeroy by the
Milwaukee !Travers 3·2i ot Lollch, Webb (2), Apodaca Randolph, NY
Jenkins, Boo and Gossage, Chi scores of 27-1 and 48-4. The
6
-Kansas
3·1) ot Christenson
end ffodgeo;
Boone.
New
York City
(Ellis(Leonard
4-11,8 p.m.
1 1. Senders (5.\1
181 end
3H2om1116Ru2n1s 38 .328 4~5~
. ~~~~~~~~~~§~~~~~
,..••,(Briles 4·11, 8:35p.m.
LP·lOIIth (2·6l. HR·Phlledel- National League: Kingman,
"Chicago CGossoue 2·31 ot
L
kl 151
· NY and Schmldl, Phil 15;
California CRo55 1·51. 10:30 phlo, uz 1ns
·
Monday, Chi and Cey, LA I;
• 0·4) • I Cfevolond
220 ooo
000 GGOGGO- o
4 91 o·
•p:m.
Mlnnesola (Hug,es
Boltlmoro
000
D Ce&lt;IAmenoer'lcHoanu L7e.ague·. Hendrick,
O~klend (Blue 3·51, 11 :00 p.m.
Eckersley, Thomes (9) and Clev 8; Yoslrzemskl, Bos,
Wtclna1d1y's Gimes
· Ashby: Cuellar, G. JeckiOf'\ (2), Horton, Det, Otis, KC end Ford,
.ealllmore ol Detroit, 2, twl· Miller (71. Grimsley (91 end Mlnn 7. Runs lolled In
ng21evelllfld ot New York, ngl
~~~~~~~~:r ~~·~E~kersley (J.21. 4 National League; Kingman,
Y NIGHT
,Boston at Milwaukee, ngt
NY 35; Schmldf, Phil :lol ;
. kansas City ot'Texos. ngl
Los Angtl
000 ooo oeo- o, 1 Monday,, Chi end Foster, Cln
•Chicago at Collfornlo, nut
son Diogo
tOO 010 oox- 2 5o 30; Perez, Cln and Winfield, SO
Minnesota at Oakland. not
John, Downing
17) and 29.
Ferguson · Frelsleben (l.O) and American League: Rudl. Ook
Natlonol Leogue Stondlnu
•ondall LP.John (2.31
32; Burroughs, Tex 30; Munson,
.
NY 28; Chombll55, NY 27;
II.Y United Preu lnternollonol ., . ·
W.
L.
Pet.
GB
•
Pltllo
24 8 .737
22 16 .579 41h
Pnts.
22 18 .550 51h
New York
~----~---------, .
Amerlc•n
LiiDUI
1
Montreal
15 19 .441 9h Dttrolt
OGG 000 GGO- D20
..The Daily.Sen~nel
ooo 102 Oh-. J so
Chicago
16 21 ,432 10 Boston
Roberta (3-3) lnd Freehan;
s': Louis
16 21 .410 11 Wilt
,
DEVOTED TO THE
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. INTEREST OF
Wtst
MEIGS·MASON A·R~A
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26 I&lt; .650
500 0GG OOx- 512
hoc. Ed .
".
Clhcln
23 15 .605 2 Now York
COlborn, .Sidtckl (21, AUIIUS·
ROBERT HOEFLICH
S.n Diego
19 19 .500 6
tine (4) and Porter; Figueroa ·
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1·
Houston
18 2.4 . ~29 9
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~tlonla
13 25 .375 11 . (4·31 and Mun1011. LP-Colborn
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Monday•• Results
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Tuesday's Games
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014100 015-11167 w. vo .. Oflt Year, $22.00 :
LOSI\ngolts (RIU 4-21 If San
Bird, Mlngorl (3), Hall Ill. Six motlfhs, Sl\.50; Three.
Phone 992-3629
Guro (9). Pattin (9) and· months, $7 .00. elsewhere . 1
Diego
Stinson; Borr. Perzonowskl Ill , &gt;26.00 year; Six II!Dnths
Pomeroy, Olllo
·:rJonll B·21. 10:00 p.m.
fiouston (Richard HI 11 san
Mlngorl (51
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(1.3). $13.50
Subscrlpllon
price lncludts
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THE MEIGS INN

first game saw winning
pitcher Mike Whitlatch give
up only one hit, a single to
Sherry Beegle, whUe striking
out 11 aild walking on!Y two.
Leading hitters for the
winners
were
Roger
Kovalchik who went 5 for 5
and Ronnie Richards who
wsa 4 for four. The Yankees
blasted four home runs, three
lrlples, and seven doubles.
Catcher lor the winners was
Richards. The batteryrnen
for Portland were Wade
Connelly and Dave Bryant.
The second game saw
Roger Kovalchik pitch a nohitter while fanning six and
walking four. Richards was
again the catcher. ThiB time
the Yankees slammed eleven
home runs, four triples, and
again seven doubles .. fl!tett
Millloan led all hltera as he
went live for five (Including
·four home runs) whlle teammate Mille WhliJalcb went alx
for seven. Balterymen for
Portland were pitcher Troy
Ward and Steve Souder.

League.
York 7-1, San Francisco
There, under the guidance topped Houston 6-1 and
of Manager Roy Hartafleld, Monll"eal edged Pittsburgh 4· Frelsleben began to get 2.
himself together. Hartsfield PhUUe11 7, Meta I
worked tl1 speeding up his Greg Luzlnskl hit a two-run
pitching
motion
and homer in the first Inning and
Frelsleben worked on Larry Christenson pined bll
Improving his attitude. The fifth win oo a ~everW!Itter u
result was a new pitcher-one lbe Pblllies defeated the Meta
with botli ablllty and for their 17th victory In their
CIJ!Ifidence.
lsllt 20 games. Mickey lAUch ··
"Roy · Hartsfield got all was belted for six l'lllllln I ~
over me at Hawaii," admits Innings and suffered hll etxth
Freisleben. "He iold me I loss In eight declalona.
wasn't doing as well as I Gllmll 5, Aatroa 1
should. I didn't like going
A pair of rooldea, pitcher
down to the minocs but I Rob Dressier and outfielder
learned a lot down there, Larry Herndoo, apwked the
attitude mostly . I've got faith Giants' triumph over the
in putting my fastball over Astros. Dressler pitched
now.! learned that In Hawaii. eight innings and combined
"I'm working a lot quicker with Gary Lavelle on an
now and getting good r~sults . eight-bitter whlle Hemdoo
I'm going to stay with it . had three hits, Including a
Randy Jones Is a good horner .
eJ~ample of what It can do.
Expos 4, Pli"alel I
You get In the rhythm and the
Tim Foil hit a two·nn
players behind pick it up. My homer and Barry Foote
last start in HawaU was a added a solo blast to power
shutout, too."
lbe Expos over the Pirates,
Padres Manager John Woody Fryman and Fred
McNamara said he could Schennan combined on a
sense the change in five-hitter, with Fryman
Frelsleben's attitude on the picking up hla alxtb win In
mound.
eight decWoos.
"He wasn't, nitpicking like
he used to," said McNamara.
"Tonight he went right after
people. We've had conversations with him for the last
three years, sometimes
louder· than other times.
Tonight he showed what he
has. He should be more
mature now. He's got God- .
given talent,"
T&lt;111my John was the bardluck loser for the Dodgers,
allowing only lour bib in six
innings. The Padres llctlfed in
the first on a run«orlng
single by Doug Rader and
again in the filth on a
sacrifice fly by Wlllie Davia.
In the only other NL action,
Philadelphia whipped New No mallet whal ol~or ••rvlco.O
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�4- The l,)aily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, May 25, 1976

Spring concert given
RACINE - The Southern
Local Instrumental Music
Dept. under direction of Joy
Norris presented a spring
concert r-nUy at lbe high
IIChOOI.
Bicentennial tunes were
presented by the elementary
bands which Include&lt;!
''America ' ', ''Marine's
"March ,'' ' 'Army Song",
"You're A.Grand Old Flag,"

finnary" and two stage band
tunes entitled "How's That"
by Sergurson and "Watermelon Rock" by Ficco.
Elementary , members and
the !nslrumenls i hey played
respecti vely were, Melinda
Salmons, Kim Follrod, Lori
Warden, Linda 0' Brien and
Cindy Allen, flutes ; Tammy
Meadows, Cindy Evans, Rene
S~ith , Denise Riffl e, Eugene
Jeffers and Ann Rose ,
clarine ts; Sherry Beegle,

Della Johnson, . Jell Lynch,
Armintha Holter. clarlnel$;

Cri s ta

Beegle ,

Mark

Simpson. also saxophone s;
Br ian Johnson , RIchard
Furbee.

Carl

Morr is,

trombones ; Cindy Warden,
Becky Rhodes , Melissa
Yonker, Mary Beth Obltz.
Oonna Rice. Becky Koehler.
Pau la Wolle , Sonja Hill ,
Donna Hubbard, Wilma
&lt;;ook, trumpets.
High school band members
and Instruments played were
"American Patrol", "The Dada Evans, Tonja Salser, Bobbi Chapman: Lois Bailey.
BatUe Hymn of the Republic" Jim Clel and, Tony.Wolfe, and Penny Smith, Lisa Warner,
and "Stars and Stripes David Cundllf, saxophones; flutes ; Molly Fisher, Carol
Tracy Riffle, Alicia Evans, Morris ,
Anna
Frank,
Forever".
Zane Beegle , Mic hel le clarinets ; Barb Theiss, bass
The junior high band Johnson , Randy Tucker , clarinet ; Corena Rhodes, a lso
presented "The Court of Tommy Cumm ins . Mi ssy saxophone ; Kim Taylor,
Cumm ins, and Scott Ranson , French horn ; Hei di Ashley ,
Henry VIII " bY Cacauas and drums;
David Salmons , Clair Jaye Ord, Becky Crow ,
"I Honestly Love You" Morris. Edward Coffman, trum pets ; Becky Harris ,
arranged by Lowden.
Lind a Proffitt . Beth Ann Brice Hart, Lori Guinther,
The high school numbers Hart, Kathy Baker, Todd trombones ; Marie Pickens,
Included Forsblad's " An· Cund iff, Bruce Johnson , Kllfy Ailsa Harr is, baritones,
Bre nda Lawrence, Suzy
danie Presto", " Bugler's . ~~~~ 1 s"nd Elaine Smith, Scarberry
.. percussion.
Holiday" by Anderson .
Junior high members and
The stage band members
Trumpeters were Heidi instrument played were Amy and instruments played were
Ashi J
0 d d Be k
Fi sher, Amy Souder, Tina Corena Rhodes, Penny
ey, aye r an
c Y Gibbs. Ma ry Beth Slav in, Sm ith , alto sa Ke phones :
Crow . "Little Suite" by flutes; Ca rrie Guinther. Meg Moll y Fisher, Loi s Bailey,
Bartock, "St . James In· Amberger , Ca rol Gibbs , tenor saxophones ; Hei d i

CLUB PROJECTS
. WILKF11VILLE - The
lblrd auual lee cnam
social will bt held here by
lbe Irish Leprecbauaa
club Salurday, May ~~. 18
a.m. lo %p.m. The club tbe
same day bas 111 lbJrd
annual clir waah for $!.50
per car one mlle west of
Danville. Sips will be
pooled.

.-u

Ashley , Jaye Ord,

Bec~y

Crow, Kim Taylor, trumpet s; •

Becky Harris, Lori
Brice

Hart,

G~lnther,

trombones ;

Marte Pickens, Ailsa Harris,
baritones ; Carol Norris.

Piano; Mr s. Norris, bass

bultar; Brenda Lawrence,
Suzy Scarberry, Barb Theiss.
Bobbl Chapma n, Anna
Frank. percussion .
ALREADY LATE
Howard E. Frank, Meigs
County Auditor said on May
2!i (today) May 24111 was the
last day to ·buy a cigarette
license for the 1976-77 year .
Any person who sells
cigarettes and does not have
a license should obtain one in
!he Auditor's ·office. These
licenses cost $25 a year.

New bids asked on school job
Due to a lack of bidders the
Gallia County Local Board of
Education Monday night was
forced to readverll.se for bids
on the repair of the Hannan
'l'l'ace High School shop area
damaged by a fire April 12.
Only one letter addressed
to the school matter was
received last night and It
declined the work, II came
from King Contracting of
Jackaon.Newblds-11 any-'
will be opened J1,111e 14 during
lhe board's regular meeting.
Architect George Waller of
Dayton was authorized to
contact additional construcUon finns to see if they
would bid. Walter also
distributed a brochure
prepared by his finn for l1l!e
In promotion of the board's
bond lasues sought for construction of new buildings. He
outlined ways to promote the
Issues and agreed to meet
with the administration and
members of the Gallla

County COmmittee for Better
Education .
Driver's education in·
slruclors employed for the
summer were Arthur Nibert,
North Gallia; Bob A8hley,
Southwestern and James
Sprague, Kyger Creelt A
teacher for Hannan Trace
will be hired later.
Tom Weaver, a teacher at
Kyger Creek, was hired 119
pool manager for the . KC
swimming pool. He wll1 be
paid $100 per week.
Lifeguards employed at tbe
.rate of f,!.20 per hour were
Mike
Curnutte,
Sara
Drummond and Suzie
Saunders. The pool wll1 open
Memorial Day, May 31.
Pool rates were set as
follows :
Family season ticket, $18
plus $2 per child; adult
season rate, $14; children
season rate, $10; individual
rates $1 per day for adults
and 50 cents per day for

Tiger ace extends hitting streak to 26 games in·row
By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Writer
Ron Le~'lore, who owns the
American League's longest
hitting streak since the year
before he was born , says the
secret Is hitting strikes.
"I don't feel the least bit of
pressure," said the Detroit
Tigers' 23-year old outfielder
after hitting in his 26th
consecutive game Monday
. night when the Tigers lost to
the Boston Red Sox ~. "I

Syracuse
record is
spotless
In Independent baseball
action Sunday Syracuse
picked up its 1third win
against no defeated by
downing Rock Springs, 12-11.
After having trailed the
entire contest, the hosts
plated six runs in the bottomof the seventh and one in the
eighth to hold on for the
victory.
Sr.racuse's Bob Cunning.
ham, trying for his third
straight win, was tagged for
eight runs on seven hits in one
and two-thirds innings. Jim
Hubbard came on in relief
and picked up the win, giving
up 3 runs on seven hits while
fanning seven.
The big blows for the
winners were bases-loaded
doubles by Jim Wright and
Mike Stewart in the seventh.
The actual winning run came
in on a sacrifice fly by Mick
Ash In lbe eighth. George
Glaze collected three hils for
the winners, while Mike
Stewart and John Arnott had
two apiece.
Belcher and Gilland
teamed up for Rock Springs
to walk eight and strike out
six. Ed Young, Lou
McKinney, Belcher, and Stan
Moon had two hits each. Rock
Springs is now 0-3 on the year.
Syracuse plays at Tuppers
Plains next Sunday.
RS
260 101 010-11 12 2
s
111 020 61x-12 11 5

don't put any pressw-e on
myself."
Rick Wise allowed only two
hits- a sing le by Alex
Johnson in the first inning
and LeFlore's single in the
third- walked one and struck
out three.
Le Flore
seeme d
Wlimpressed when advised
that his 26-game hitting
streak is !he longest in the
American League since Dom
DiMaggio of the Red Sox hit
in 27 straight games in 1951.
" I'm
rea lly
not
concentrating on the streak ,"
said LeFlore, . who jum.ped
from Class A ball to the
Tigers in less than two years
alter signing when paroled
from Southern ·Michigan
prison and batted .258 in his
rookie 1 97~ season . "I 'm
gelling good pitches to h.it but
that's because I'm not
swinging at bad ones. I try

not to swing at bad balls.
" That way you make
contact and anything can
happen. If I get a ht, great; If
I don't, well, I tried.
"I get asked the same
questions all the lime but I
guess you have to expect that
when you have a good hitting
strea.k . l'll probably be asked
the same questions when it
ends , too. But that doesn't
mean I go Into a game
expecting it to end."
Fred Lynn singled in the
first run of the game in the
fourth inning and the Red Sox
added two more in the sixth
on a l worun single by Fisk
after a single by Rick Miller
and a double by Dwight
Evans. The victory raised
Wise's record to 2·3.
Dennis Eckersley and Stan
Thomas rombined on a onehitter as Cleveland beat Ballimore 4~, Kansas City out-

slugged Texas 14-11, New
York heat Milwaukee ii-2,
Chicago topped California 5-3
and
Oakland
downed
Minnesota 12-7 in other AL
games.
Indians t, Orioles 0
Eckersley yielded a leadoff
single to AI Bumbry in the
first and that was the Orioles'
only hit. Manager Frank
· Robinson removed Eckersley
for Thomas after Eckersley
walked the first batter in the
ninth. Thomas walked the
first man he faced and then
struck out the side. Eckersley
said after lbe game lbal his
shoulder stiffened in the sixth
and Robinson conceded he
might have let him go on if he
had been working on a nohiller.
Royals lt, Rangers 11
Home runs by George
Brett, Hal McRile and Frank
White in the first inning

Foyt has no regrets
INDIANAPOUS (UP!) A.J . Foyt, criticized from
some corners for letting
Janel Guthrie practice in Ills
backup race car without
intending to let her qualify in
it, says he .has no regrets
about his decisiqn,
"I just wanted to see how
fast she could drive a good
car," Foyt said Monday. "I
know now thai she is a
competent driver."
He also indica led his push
to become the first four-time
winner at Indianapolis also
played heavily in the decision
to deny the first woman
nominated to race in the
Memorial Day holiday
classic her oply remaining
chance to qualify .
. Foyt said he paid what little
bill there was for Guthrie
running the car for nearly a
dozen laps aroWld the 2'h·
mile track Sunday.
"There was little wear and
tear on the engine," be said.
The engine was one which he
designs and builds in his
Texa~ shops.
But he said that "the tires
were free and the fuel was .
free," a reference lp the fact

the alcohol-based fuel and
racing tires were provided in
exc hange for letting the
companies use Foyl's
endorsements.
Foyl said that by letting
Gu lhrie borrow his ca r,
which had been clocked at
nearly 191 miles per hour, he
provided the answer to the
doubts many persons had
about her ability as a driver.
He said she did about as
well as most veteran drivers
for the lime she had t1w carless than a dozen laps. He
said Guthrie proved she can
drive a good car fast enough
to make the race and that the
problem she had getting her
assigned car up to qualifying
speed was in the car, not her
ability.
Foyl also discounted any
rumors that he was offered
money just to let Guthrie
drive the car and large swns
if he would let her qualify .
"The only way for her to
have qualified the car was for
somecne to have bought it,"
he said. But he said he never
would have offered the car
for sale.

"l wasn't about to turn over
the car to her because it
would have hurt my chances.
We would have to split up our
crew and work on both cars:"
Foyt will start from the
middle spot in the second
row.
Guthrie's quickest lap was
faster Ulan 1110 miles per hour
but she said she could have
run several miles faster with
a little more lime to adjust to
the car.

started the Royals on their Washington -In the inning
way against the Rangers, but also benefitted from three
who made seven errors walks, two errors and three
accounting for
seven · wild pitches by Steve
Wlearned runs. Brett hlt a Luebber to erase a ii-I lead.
tworun homer and McRae Jim Todd earned the victory
and White each hit a solo while Bill Campbell was the
homer, The Rangers rallied loser.
for five rWls in the ninth. but
they weren•t enough to
prevent the Royals from
taking a I %.game lead over
Texas In the West.

children. Private party rate
was set at ~.
The lal~r !'ilea were In·.
creaaed over last year to
Increase the pay for
lifeguards and the pool
manager to meet the
. minimum wage. II was
reported the pool ended up
$1,200 In the red last year.
Also employed during
Monday's !lpeclal meeting
was Sue Hughes , Rl. I,
Galllpolls, as a secretary
under Tille I to federal
program Co-ordinator Frank
Cremeans.
Following a presentation
by Rotis Hamrick Of Security
and Safety Services, the
board approved the placing of
alarm systems In the Kyger
Creek and Hannan Trace
High School buildings and
Hannan Trace Elementary
School. Similar systems are
already In operation· at North
Gall!a and Southwestern
High Schools and Centerville '
Elementary.
In other matters, the board
voted to advertise for bids on
a new boiler for Vinton
School, approved repair of
the furnace and Installation
of new pumps and a new
storage tank at Southwestern
High School.
- Voted to advertise for
bids on a itew tractor and
mower at Hannan Trace.
- Approved the 1976-77
school calendar.

- Approved $6 per popll to
the county board of
education.
- Agreed to pay Jeanie
Waller $273 for transporting
her daughter, Sllarron
Waller.
. - Granted Fred FeUure,
CIIStodian at Hannan Trace
Elementary a year's leave of
abaence.
-Set June 14 for a hearlntl
date for Earl Bennett,
CIIStodlan at Vinton whose
contract was not renewed.
- Discussed a diiiCipiJne
problem with three parenls,

Holzer Medical Cooler
(Dllcharges, MayU)
Grella Allen, Mrs, Charles
Bays and son, James Cain,
Amanda Clonch, Christopher
Deck, Mrs. Harley Eblin and
daughter, .Grace · Ellis,
Kathryn Grose, Olba Jeffers,
Wilma Kibbey, Kralg
Lemley, Loretta Martin ,
Myrtle McCumber, Ph!llp
McGuffin, Don Murphy, Eric
Porter, Patricia Sheets, Su
01ing Singer, Oma Snyder,
Arthur
Strauss, John
Thompson, Mrs. Nicky
Weaver and daughter, Earl
Winter.
(Births, May 24)
Mr. and Mrs , jack
Lookado, son, Vinton; Mr.
and Mrs. James Williams,
son, Gallipolis.

Yaokees 5, Brewers 2
Oscar Gamble capped a
fiverun first inning with a
three-run homer and Ed
Figueroa pitched a sevenhitter for his fourlb victory
for the Yankees. Chris
Chambliss and Graig Nettles
hit run-6COring singl~s before
Gamble's homer. Jim
Colborn suffered his fifth loss
against two victories.

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The A's snapped their
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a seven-run rally In lbe fiflll
inning. The A's had only three
hits- ne a tie-breaking tworun double by Claudell

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Dum's i1roceiJ

Reed's GroteiJ

Welkefs Ashland

Portland, Ohio

Reedsville, Ohio

Pomeroy, Ohio

Mason, W.Va.

19~

100 EXTRA

Langsville, Ohio

•

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JUICY

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W'IIII Purchase of 2 lb.
.Banqlill Chicken

TOP VALUE STAMPS
With purch.- of 25 lb.
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purchase of
Fa
Pack Onions

I

u,,$139 ~
.•' .

lb.

100 EXTRA

TOP VALUE ITAMPI

Willi pua. of 3 lis.
cr mn an.c. 11011t

100 EXTRA

SO·EXTRA
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TOP VALUI STAMPS

Willi ..... of '5.00
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MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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•

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With purchase of 3 lb.
Ground Beef

--------------------~I

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••

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SHORT RIBS
. CUBED
OF BEEF 10. 89~ STEAK
lb. '149
French City 5~119
WIENERS ~~::· .
RC COLA
16 oz. bottles
2
T~ee tr!·

100 EXTRA

TOP VALUE STAMPS
W'Jih purchase of 2
Heads Llltuce

ROUND STEAK

STOKELY'S

SEA MIST

::
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· •.
"'·
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White Sox 5, Angels 3
Brian Downing's three..-un
double with two out in the
eighth inning lifted the White
Sox to their eighth straight
win. Downing, who a !so
knocked in a run in the fourth,
dellvered lbe big blow · after
singles by Bucky Dent and ,
Lamar Johnson and a walk.
Pete Vuckovich went the
dislanC!! for the victory while
Jim Brewer was the loser.

14

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PHEBE'S STORE
May 25·29 •
kight Reserved to ~imlt Quantities
We Gl1dty Accept Fed. Food Stamps
...,~··-..
Monday thru Friday
9:00to7:00
9to9

BIG .JIM'$ PLAZA, MIDDLEPORT

•

•

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Willi purct..e of 4

G*. of Pllnl

L.
I

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'179 '

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BOLOGNA

I
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ofWIIP_.
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�4- The l,)aily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, May 25, 1976

Spring concert given
RACINE - The Southern
Local Instrumental Music
Dept. under direction of Joy
Norris presented a spring
concert r-nUy at lbe high
IIChOOI.
Bicentennial tunes were
presented by the elementary
bands which Include&lt;!
''America ' ', ''Marine's
"March ,'' ' 'Army Song",
"You're A.Grand Old Flag,"

finnary" and two stage band
tunes entitled "How's That"
by Sergurson and "Watermelon Rock" by Ficco.
Elementary , members and
the !nslrumenls i hey played
respecti vely were, Melinda
Salmons, Kim Follrod, Lori
Warden, Linda 0' Brien and
Cindy Allen, flutes ; Tammy
Meadows, Cindy Evans, Rene
S~ith , Denise Riffl e, Eugene
Jeffers and Ann Rose ,
clarine ts; Sherry Beegle,

Della Johnson, . Jell Lynch,
Armintha Holter. clarlnel$;

Cri s ta

Beegle ,

Mark

Simpson. also saxophone s;
Br ian Johnson , RIchard
Furbee.

Carl

Morr is,

trombones ; Cindy Warden,
Becky Rhodes , Melissa
Yonker, Mary Beth Obltz.
Oonna Rice. Becky Koehler.
Pau la Wolle , Sonja Hill ,
Donna Hubbard, Wilma
&lt;;ook, trumpets.
High school band members
and Instruments played were
"American Patrol", "The Dada Evans, Tonja Salser, Bobbi Chapman: Lois Bailey.
BatUe Hymn of the Republic" Jim Clel and, Tony.Wolfe, and Penny Smith, Lisa Warner,
and "Stars and Stripes David Cundllf, saxophones; flutes ; Molly Fisher, Carol
Tracy Riffle, Alicia Evans, Morris ,
Anna
Frank,
Forever".
Zane Beegle , Mic hel le clarinets ; Barb Theiss, bass
The junior high band Johnson , Randy Tucker , clarinet ; Corena Rhodes, a lso
presented "The Court of Tommy Cumm ins . Mi ssy saxophone ; Kim Taylor,
Cumm ins, and Scott Ranson , French horn ; Hei di Ashley ,
Henry VIII " bY Cacauas and drums;
David Salmons , Clair Jaye Ord, Becky Crow ,
"I Honestly Love You" Morris. Edward Coffman, trum pets ; Becky Harris ,
arranged by Lowden.
Lind a Proffitt . Beth Ann Brice Hart, Lori Guinther,
The high school numbers Hart, Kathy Baker, Todd trombones ; Marie Pickens,
Included Forsblad's " An· Cund iff, Bruce Johnson , Kllfy Ailsa Harr is, baritones,
Bre nda Lawrence, Suzy
danie Presto", " Bugler's . ~~~~ 1 s"nd Elaine Smith, Scarberry
.. percussion.
Holiday" by Anderson .
Junior high members and
The stage band members
Trumpeters were Heidi instrument played were Amy and instruments played were
Ashi J
0 d d Be k
Fi sher, Amy Souder, Tina Corena Rhodes, Penny
ey, aye r an
c Y Gibbs. Ma ry Beth Slav in, Sm ith , alto sa Ke phones :
Crow . "Little Suite" by flutes; Ca rrie Guinther. Meg Moll y Fisher, Loi s Bailey,
Bartock, "St . James In· Amberger , Ca rol Gibbs , tenor saxophones ; Hei d i

CLUB PROJECTS
. WILKF11VILLE - The
lblrd auual lee cnam
social will bt held here by
lbe Irish Leprecbauaa
club Salurday, May ~~. 18
a.m. lo %p.m. The club tbe
same day bas 111 lbJrd
annual clir waah for $!.50
per car one mlle west of
Danville. Sips will be
pooled.

.-u

Ashley , Jaye Ord,

Bec~y

Crow, Kim Taylor, trumpet s; •

Becky Harris, Lori
Brice

Hart,

G~lnther,

trombones ;

Marte Pickens, Ailsa Harris,
baritones ; Carol Norris.

Piano; Mr s. Norris, bass

bultar; Brenda Lawrence,
Suzy Scarberry, Barb Theiss.
Bobbl Chapma n, Anna
Frank. percussion .
ALREADY LATE
Howard E. Frank, Meigs
County Auditor said on May
2!i (today) May 24111 was the
last day to ·buy a cigarette
license for the 1976-77 year .
Any person who sells
cigarettes and does not have
a license should obtain one in
!he Auditor's ·office. These
licenses cost $25 a year.

New bids asked on school job
Due to a lack of bidders the
Gallia County Local Board of
Education Monday night was
forced to readverll.se for bids
on the repair of the Hannan
'l'l'ace High School shop area
damaged by a fire April 12.
Only one letter addressed
to the school matter was
received last night and It
declined the work, II came
from King Contracting of
Jackaon.Newblds-11 any-'
will be opened J1,111e 14 during
lhe board's regular meeting.
Architect George Waller of
Dayton was authorized to
contact additional construcUon finns to see if they
would bid. Walter also
distributed a brochure
prepared by his finn for l1l!e
In promotion of the board's
bond lasues sought for construction of new buildings. He
outlined ways to promote the
Issues and agreed to meet
with the administration and
members of the Gallla

County COmmittee for Better
Education .
Driver's education in·
slruclors employed for the
summer were Arthur Nibert,
North Gallia; Bob A8hley,
Southwestern and James
Sprague, Kyger Creelt A
teacher for Hannan Trace
will be hired later.
Tom Weaver, a teacher at
Kyger Creek, was hired 119
pool manager for the . KC
swimming pool. He wll1 be
paid $100 per week.
Lifeguards employed at tbe
.rate of f,!.20 per hour were
Mike
Curnutte,
Sara
Drummond and Suzie
Saunders. The pool wll1 open
Memorial Day, May 31.
Pool rates were set as
follows :
Family season ticket, $18
plus $2 per child; adult
season rate, $14; children
season rate, $10; individual
rates $1 per day for adults
and 50 cents per day for

Tiger ace extends hitting streak to 26 games in·row
By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Writer
Ron Le~'lore, who owns the
American League's longest
hitting streak since the year
before he was born , says the
secret Is hitting strikes.
"I don't feel the least bit of
pressure," said the Detroit
Tigers' 23-year old outfielder
after hitting in his 26th
consecutive game Monday
. night when the Tigers lost to
the Boston Red Sox ~. "I

Syracuse
record is
spotless
In Independent baseball
action Sunday Syracuse
picked up its 1third win
against no defeated by
downing Rock Springs, 12-11.
After having trailed the
entire contest, the hosts
plated six runs in the bottomof the seventh and one in the
eighth to hold on for the
victory.
Sr.racuse's Bob Cunning.
ham, trying for his third
straight win, was tagged for
eight runs on seven hits in one
and two-thirds innings. Jim
Hubbard came on in relief
and picked up the win, giving
up 3 runs on seven hits while
fanning seven.
The big blows for the
winners were bases-loaded
doubles by Jim Wright and
Mike Stewart in the seventh.
The actual winning run came
in on a sacrifice fly by Mick
Ash In lbe eighth. George
Glaze collected three hils for
the winners, while Mike
Stewart and John Arnott had
two apiece.
Belcher and Gilland
teamed up for Rock Springs
to walk eight and strike out
six. Ed Young, Lou
McKinney, Belcher, and Stan
Moon had two hits each. Rock
Springs is now 0-3 on the year.
Syracuse plays at Tuppers
Plains next Sunday.
RS
260 101 010-11 12 2
s
111 020 61x-12 11 5

don't put any pressw-e on
myself."
Rick Wise allowed only two
hits- a sing le by Alex
Johnson in the first inning
and LeFlore's single in the
third- walked one and struck
out three.
Le Flore
seeme d
Wlimpressed when advised
that his 26-game hitting
streak is !he longest in the
American League since Dom
DiMaggio of the Red Sox hit
in 27 straight games in 1951.
" I'm
rea lly
not
concentrating on the streak ,"
said LeFlore, . who jum.ped
from Class A ball to the
Tigers in less than two years
alter signing when paroled
from Southern ·Michigan
prison and batted .258 in his
rookie 1 97~ season . "I 'm
gelling good pitches to h.it but
that's because I'm not
swinging at bad ones. I try

not to swing at bad balls.
" That way you make
contact and anything can
happen. If I get a ht, great; If
I don't, well, I tried.
"I get asked the same
questions all the lime but I
guess you have to expect that
when you have a good hitting
strea.k . l'll probably be asked
the same questions when it
ends , too. But that doesn't
mean I go Into a game
expecting it to end."
Fred Lynn singled in the
first run of the game in the
fourth inning and the Red Sox
added two more in the sixth
on a l worun single by Fisk
after a single by Rick Miller
and a double by Dwight
Evans. The victory raised
Wise's record to 2·3.
Dennis Eckersley and Stan
Thomas rombined on a onehitter as Cleveland beat Ballimore 4~, Kansas City out-

slugged Texas 14-11, New
York heat Milwaukee ii-2,
Chicago topped California 5-3
and
Oakland
downed
Minnesota 12-7 in other AL
games.
Indians t, Orioles 0
Eckersley yielded a leadoff
single to AI Bumbry in the
first and that was the Orioles'
only hit. Manager Frank
· Robinson removed Eckersley
for Thomas after Eckersley
walked the first batter in the
ninth. Thomas walked the
first man he faced and then
struck out the side. Eckersley
said after lbe game lbal his
shoulder stiffened in the sixth
and Robinson conceded he
might have let him go on if he
had been working on a nohiller.
Royals lt, Rangers 11
Home runs by George
Brett, Hal McRile and Frank
White in the first inning

Foyt has no regrets
INDIANAPOUS (UP!) A.J . Foyt, criticized from
some corners for letting
Janel Guthrie practice in Ills
backup race car without
intending to let her qualify in
it, says he .has no regrets
about his decisiqn,
"I just wanted to see how
fast she could drive a good
car," Foyt said Monday. "I
know now thai she is a
competent driver."
He also indica led his push
to become the first four-time
winner at Indianapolis also
played heavily in the decision
to deny the first woman
nominated to race in the
Memorial Day holiday
classic her oply remaining
chance to qualify .
. Foyt said he paid what little
bill there was for Guthrie
running the car for nearly a
dozen laps aroWld the 2'h·
mile track Sunday.
"There was little wear and
tear on the engine," be said.
The engine was one which he
designs and builds in his
Texa~ shops.
But he said that "the tires
were free and the fuel was .
free," a reference lp the fact

the alcohol-based fuel and
racing tires were provided in
exc hange for letting the
companies use Foyl's
endorsements.
Foyl said that by letting
Gu lhrie borrow his ca r,
which had been clocked at
nearly 191 miles per hour, he
provided the answer to the
doubts many persons had
about her ability as a driver.
He said she did about as
well as most veteran drivers
for the lime she had t1w carless than a dozen laps. He
said Guthrie proved she can
drive a good car fast enough
to make the race and that the
problem she had getting her
assigned car up to qualifying
speed was in the car, not her
ability.
Foyl also discounted any
rumors that he was offered
money just to let Guthrie
drive the car and large swns
if he would let her qualify .
"The only way for her to
have qualified the car was for
somecne to have bought it,"
he said. But he said he never
would have offered the car
for sale.

"l wasn't about to turn over
the car to her because it
would have hurt my chances.
We would have to split up our
crew and work on both cars:"
Foyt will start from the
middle spot in the second
row.
Guthrie's quickest lap was
faster Ulan 1110 miles per hour
but she said she could have
run several miles faster with
a little more lime to adjust to
the car.

started the Royals on their Washington -In the inning
way against the Rangers, but also benefitted from three
who made seven errors walks, two errors and three
accounting for
seven · wild pitches by Steve
Wlearned runs. Brett hlt a Luebber to erase a ii-I lead.
tworun homer and McRae Jim Todd earned the victory
and White each hit a solo while Bill Campbell was the
homer, The Rangers rallied loser.
for five rWls in the ninth. but
they weren•t enough to
prevent the Royals from
taking a I %.game lead over
Texas In the West.

children. Private party rate
was set at ~.
The lal~r !'ilea were In·.
creaaed over last year to
Increase the pay for
lifeguards and the pool
manager to meet the
. minimum wage. II was
reported the pool ended up
$1,200 In the red last year.
Also employed during
Monday's !lpeclal meeting
was Sue Hughes , Rl. I,
Galllpolls, as a secretary
under Tille I to federal
program Co-ordinator Frank
Cremeans.
Following a presentation
by Rotis Hamrick Of Security
and Safety Services, the
board approved the placing of
alarm systems In the Kyger
Creek and Hannan Trace
High School buildings and
Hannan Trace Elementary
School. Similar systems are
already In operation· at North
Gall!a and Southwestern
High Schools and Centerville '
Elementary.
In other matters, the board
voted to advertise for bids on
a new boiler for Vinton
School, approved repair of
the furnace and Installation
of new pumps and a new
storage tank at Southwestern
High School.
- Voted to advertise for
bids on a itew tractor and
mower at Hannan Trace.
- Approved the 1976-77
school calendar.

- Approved $6 per popll to
the county board of
education.
- Agreed to pay Jeanie
Waller $273 for transporting
her daughter, Sllarron
Waller.
. - Granted Fred FeUure,
CIIStodian at Hannan Trace
Elementary a year's leave of
abaence.
-Set June 14 for a hearlntl
date for Earl Bennett,
CIIStodlan at Vinton whose
contract was not renewed.
- Discussed a diiiCipiJne
problem with three parenls,

Holzer Medical Cooler
(Dllcharges, MayU)
Grella Allen, Mrs, Charles
Bays and son, James Cain,
Amanda Clonch, Christopher
Deck, Mrs. Harley Eblin and
daughter, .Grace · Ellis,
Kathryn Grose, Olba Jeffers,
Wilma Kibbey, Kralg
Lemley, Loretta Martin ,
Myrtle McCumber, Ph!llp
McGuffin, Don Murphy, Eric
Porter, Patricia Sheets, Su
01ing Singer, Oma Snyder,
Arthur
Strauss, John
Thompson, Mrs. Nicky
Weaver and daughter, Earl
Winter.
(Births, May 24)
Mr. and Mrs , jack
Lookado, son, Vinton; Mr.
and Mrs. James Williams,
son, Gallipolis.

Yaokees 5, Brewers 2
Oscar Gamble capped a
fiverun first inning with a
three-run homer and Ed
Figueroa pitched a sevenhitter for his fourlb victory
for the Yankees. Chris
Chambliss and Graig Nettles
hit run-6COring singl~s before
Gamble's homer. Jim
Colborn suffered his fifth loss
against two victories.

ONIONS

3

lb.

59~

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LEMONS
ea. l(r

CARROTS
lb.

15 ~

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A's IZ, TwlDs 7
The A's snapped their
eightgame losing streak with
a seven-run rally In lbe fiflll
inning. The A's had only three
hits- ne a tie-breaking tworun double by Claudell

Mon., Tues .• Wed. &amp; Sat.-8:30til5:00
THURSDAY tiL 12 NOON

kiiHIId Rcllil .. , ..
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Mason, West Virginia

Pomeroy, Ohio

MASON FURNITURE
Herman Grate

Bertha's Texam

French's Sunoco

Root's Garage

U ngsv ilie, Ohio

Middleport, Ohio

Coolville. Ohio

Barr's Pshland

. Miller BrothelS
Grocery

Turner's Sohio

ReedsvWe, Ohio

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

CATSUP............ , ............... )~~~~:.49~
Salad Dressing for Holiday
MIRACLE WHIP. .................'.~~.. .. 89
KEEBLER C.C. BIGGS . .
oz.
~
CHOC. CHIP COOKIES ..... ~.~~:.. 69
STOKELY'S
, 46oz .
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ARMOUR ~UNCHEON MEAT
oz. g·g~
TREET......................... ~ ......... ~~~... .
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GROCERY, HARDWARE AND
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PARTS PLUS Service Dealers

773-5592

Memorial Day, or any day . .. when y~JU shop with us you re·
celve the extra bonus of Top Value Stamps, our way of saying
"thank you " for your patronage. We want you to be our cus·
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we can to give you outstanding service, and quality products
at very competitive prices -I n other words, real value. When
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reason to shop with us ... real value and Top· Value Stamps
for free gifts.

.

Rutland, Ohio

Dum's i1roceiJ

Reed's GroteiJ

Welkefs Ashland

Portland, Ohio

Reedsville, Ohio

Pomeroy, Ohio

Mason, W.Va.

19~

100 EXTRA

Langsville, Ohio

•

TE.NDER
JUICY

TOP VALUE STAMPS
W'IIII Purchase of 2 lb.
.Banqlill Chicken

TOP VALUE STAMPS
With purch.- of 25 lb.
Sunslline Dog..Food

50 EXTRA

50 EXTRA

TOP VALUE STAMPS
purchase of
Fa
Pack Onions

I

u,,$139 ~
.•' .

lb.

100 EXTRA

TOP VALUE ITAMPI

Willi pua. of 3 lis.
cr mn an.c. 11011t

100 EXTRA

SO·EXTRA
TOP VALUE STAMII"I
W'dh purchase of
10 lb. Chan:oal

TOP VALUI STAMPS

Willi ..... of '5.00
• Men Altllcill FIDwn

COR. PEARL &amp; LOCUST

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

••
•

RIB
STEAK

100 EXT.A

TOP VALUJ STAMPS
With purchase of 3 lb.
Ground Beef

--------------------~I

••
••

US,DA
CHOICE

SHORT RIBS
. CUBED
OF BEEF 10. 89~ STEAK
lb. '149
French City 5~119
WIENERS ~~::· .
RC COLA
16 oz. bottles
2
T~ee tr!·

100 EXTRA

TOP VALUE STAMPS
W'Jih purchase of 2
Heads Llltuce

ROUND STEAK

STOKELY'S

SEA MIST

::
:.
· •.
"'·
:,:.
·• ·

·~

White Sox 5, Angels 3
Brian Downing's three..-un
double with two out in the
eighth inning lifted the White
Sox to their eighth straight
win. Downing, who a !so
knocked in a run in the fourth,
dellvered lbe big blow · after
singles by Bucky Dent and ,
Lamar Johnson and a walk.
Pete Vuckovich went the
dislanC!! for the victory while
Jim Brewer was the loser.

14

(

,., ·

"

STOCK UP FOR THE HOLIDAY

Golden

':
...

r--~-------------·-...·

USDA
CHOICE

New Yellow

•
':
•
:
-:

~

BEEF for HOLIDAY FIXIN'S

PHEBE'S STORE
May 25·29 •
kight Reserved to ~imlt Quantities
We Gl1dty Accept Fed. Food Stamps
...,~··-..
Monday thru Friday
9:00to7:00
9to9

BIG .JIM'$ PLAZA, MIDDLEPORT

•

•

500 EXTRA

TOP VALUE ITA
Willi purct..e of 4

G*. of Pllnl

L.
I

•

I
I
I

'179 '

I

I

I
I
I
I
I

'

BOLOGNA

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

-~~~----·-------------~
'

Open Memorial,Day 9-4

ofWIIP_.
'

L ------ -----~------•·•

•'

•

SOo EXTRA

TOP VALUIIUI,M''I
W'Ith puldlase of 10

•

'I'

�I - The DillY Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, May 25, 1976

RADIO SHACK

. OPERATED BY .

CHECKER,CAN

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REALISTIC 23 CHANNEL

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�I - The DillY Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, May 25, 1976

RADIO SHACK

. OPERATED BY .

CHECKER,CAN

BIG JIM'S

POP
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COLA, ORANGE, GRAPE
ROOT lEER
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�3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Tuesday , May 25, 1$76

-Auxiliary plans
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S
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9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, May 25, 1976

Too Mlny Women In HlJ Home

The women 's auxiliary of
Veterans Memorial Hospital
voted to purchase a chest
freezer for the ho1pltal I
cafeteria at a reCf!nt meeting.
Mrs. Janice Daniels
presided and reported on the
aelecUon of Patricia Windon
. ,. •
...

New officel'll were elected to the Conkle home at

as recipient of the scholaralllp. A report was given on
the yll'd and bake sale and
the Auslllary extended a vole
of thanb for dona tiona and
help with that money-ralalng
project. Mrs. Jestle Molden
had prayer. Refreshments
carried out the patriotic
theme .
Attending were Mrs. Nellie
89rgan, Mr!l, Eliza Powell,
Mra. Velala Roush, Mrs.
Louile McElhinny, Mrs.
Mildred Withee, Mrs.
Molden, Mrs. Eva Rartley,
Mra. Charlotte Wright, Mrs.
Jeasle White, Mrs. Alma
Newton

and commltteil appointed I Cheshire.
the Thursday afternoon Refreshments were served
needs companionship.
meeting of the Rock Springs to those named and Mrs.
Last week No. I moved baclt In, but No. 2 won'tleave. I am
Better IIWth Club at the Vena Whaley, Mrs. Sandy
getting too much companlonahlp, especially since they hate
home &lt;t Mrs. Helen Black- Folmer, Mrs. Lllulae Radford
each other and take It out on me. I mean they COMPETE. I
ski!.
and two guesta, Mrs. Peggy
never knowwhether I'll come home to two home-cooked super.
Elected were Mrs. Judy Harris and Tara Humphreys.
dinners, or a major batUe. (It's good they can 't hurt the
"SOFTWOODCUTI'INGTOINCREASEPLANTS"
Humphreys, president; Mrs.
furniture that goes with this dwnp.)
BYMR8. aDU8DIEHL,
Lenora Leifheit, vice
Suggestions? - CAN'T OUST 'EM
RIJ'It.ANDGARDENCWB
president; Mrs. Barbara
Propagatkll of plants from !(lft wood cuUings .Is not Goegleln, secretary, and
C.O.U.:
difficult. It Is lin easy and inexpensive way of Increasing plants Mrs. Phyllis Skinner,
Where's your courage? Give 'em both eviction notices, and
stieh as carnations, chrysanthemuma, geranlUJliS, coleus, as treasurer.
keep them out by changing the lock.-HELEN
well as favorite deciduous 1111nlbs, evergreens. and trees.
Mris.lo/Ethel Grueaer was·
+++
Soft wood cuttings can be taken as early as the mldcDe of appointed chaplain, Mrs.
H you're too chicken for this, maybe you should flnd
May or can be taken ln June, July or August. A simple test of Jackie Zirkle, publicity
another furnished apartment and let the girls fight It out wood suitable for propagation Is to lreak a stem and If It chalnnab, and Mrs. Beuna
TUFBDAY
alone . ..: SUE
lrealls
clean, then wood Is at the rlgbt stage of growth for Grueser and Mrs. Louise
PAST MATRONS,
rooting.
Stems three or four inches ln length are easy to
+++
Pomeroy Chapter OES,
Radford to the committee to
Dear Helen and Sue :
handle.
Tuesday, :30 p.m. at home of
remember
the sick for the
Is It true that if a guy always dances so the girl must go Thelma Dill, Syracuae.
Place them in water to prevent Ioas of moisture and until next three montha.
Mrs.
Elizabeth
Herald,
Mrs.
backwards while he charges across the floor , then he's bossy
AMEit[CAN LEGION Ruth Morrta, Mrs. Carrie you are ready to put into rOoting medium. To prepare the. Mrs. B'etty Conkle opened
and a typical M.C.P. (Male Chauvinist Pig)? - LOOKING Auxiliary,
Racine Post 602, Kennedy, Mrs. Nettie Hayes, cutting for rooting, cut the steam on the alent and avoid tearing the meeting with the Lord's
FOR CLUES
7:30p.m. Tuesday at the ball. Mrs. Daniela, Mrs. llllldred the tissue. Remove at lfl!st moll! of the leaves and the buds or Prayer an~ the pledge to the
flowers. Dip the base of the cutting in footing powder such as
SIDEWALK SALE at the Fry, Mrs. Clara Burris, Mrs. Rootone.
flag. Devotions were given by
Dear LFC.:
Ethel
Hatfield·,
Mrs
.
Senior
Citizens
Center
More likely it means the guy Is so new at cheek-t&lt;K:heek
Rooting materials are vermiculite, poWte, equal parts of Mrs. Loulae Folmer who used
·TUesday,
May
25,
9:30
Emogene
~
and
Mrs.
Psalm 61 and a meditation
that he can only do "the straight forward charge." - HELEN
Sllnd and peat moss. Keep the rooting medium moist Set the from
a.m,
to
3:30
p.m.
Good
Frieda
Mossman.
Mrs.
·the Upper Room en·
AND SUE
cutUng In the lllade out of the hot sunshine. For those cuttings
Carrie
selection
of used clothing.
Neutzllng
was
a
guest.
tiUed
''Freedom
from Letting
which will root late in the fall; set In ~ cold frame and then
+++
Go."
Dear Rap :
PAST MATRONS of
plant out!!ide In the spring after all danger offrost Is gone.
Program was presented by
Pomeroy Chapter, OES, will
This Is ablolutely true .
Mrs.
Teresa Abbott and InMy sister Is 15 and goes with a guy who Is almost 20. Our meet at 7:30 Tuesday at the
cluded
"Mllk" by Mrs.
home
of
Mrs.
Thelma
DW.
mother lets them go to bed together, upstairs ln her. bedroom.
Frances Goeglein ;
Not only lets but encourages them !
MEIGS-MASON County
"Imagination Can Cause
Then my sister and mother talk about all that happened. Pony League meeting at
' Symptoms" by Mrs. Lllulse
Pomeroy Village Hall, 7:30
I'm no prude, but don't you think this is too much?
Folmer; "Bread of Life" by
The guy won't even visit here unless Mom picks him up In p.m. Tuesday to complete
Mrs. Ethel
Grueser ;
her car and takes him home. She seems to live her Ufe through plans for upcoming season.
"Prescription for . What ·Ails
her daughter. H I say anything , I'm told to mind my own All managers urged . to be
The bicentennial cantata,
You" by Mrs . Frances
present.
business.
,
"ILoveAmerica"byJohn
W.
Folmer, and a jaoke by Mrs.
Am !sick, or Is my mother? - 17-YEAR-OLDSISTER
WEDNFBDAY
Lottie teonard, The contest
WOMEN'S REPUBUCAN Peterson and Don Wyrtzen
will
be
presented
by
the
was
conducted by Mrs . . ·
POLLY'S PROBLEM
rii8Jay rolla of pMper were
Dear 17:
Club, Sp.m. at the Meigs Inn,
Middleport
Church
of
Christ
Skinner
with Mrs. Cqnkle and
DEAR POLLY - How Is needed for the room or how
Your mother Is the sickle, and her actions are enOIISh to Wednesdav.
'
choir joined by some par· ooe supposed to clean white much paint and what kind, Mrs. Wllmetta Leifheit
make anyone sick! While her home lsn 'I exactly a "house" yet, holi':~regs~~:e:g llclpanla from other Meigs
fabric lamp shades? - etc. Such facts are easUy wlnnlng the prizes.
I'd say she's SCSI'cely better than a madam who scouts
Mrs. Conkle will host the
customers for her teenage "prize." _ HELEN
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. at the County Churches of Christ. LUCY.
forgotten before they are
First performance will be
+++
K of P Hall. All members
DEAR LUCY - Never try needed again, and It Ia good to June meeting with Mrs.
17 :
on Friday, June 11818 p.mj ln to 1']101 clean a fabric lamp have them right at hand.
Blackston to have the
Maybe "Ma" thlnks she Is ''facing facts" - the girl will urged to attend.
I have an upright freezer program and Mrs. Abl)ott the
sneak out to her boyfriend's bed if he isn't allowed into hers at . MEIGS
C 0 UN T Y the Meigs Junior 111gb School lhade. They can be washed
home - but I say this Is ' 'pe'ew" (as In "It stinks!" ) morality. Ijepublican Women's Club, 8 auditorium in Middleport as a (If lbe material Is washable) with five shelves. I keep a list coo test. Members are to meet
- SUE
p.m. Wednesday at Meigs feature of the Big Bend but flnt elleek to be sure the of what Is on each shelf. Each at the church at 12:30 to drive
+++
Inn. All women Invited to Regatta. Second per- seiUDI. IDII trimmings are package of meat has the
FOR YOURCOPYof"Whatlsa Crush?" "What !sa First attend and join club for 1978. formance will be on July 4 at sewed and not glued as they name, the weight and the
WEEKEND GUESTS
Love?" "What is Getting to KnQw YourseH?" send a stamped, Social hour following 7:30p.m. at the Middleport will loosen, II glued. Should dale put ln. When I want to
Dr.
and Mrs. E. A. Tracy,
lllurch of Christ. ,
seH;~ddressed envelope to Helen and Sue Bolte], care of this meeting.
Olie want to proceed any way, get· some thing out of the Columbus, were weekend
Directed .by Mrs. Debbie
We're offering t~ l s w'atch
newspaper.
AMERICAN LEGION Gerlach, members of the 30 new trim eould he sewed oa freezer, I just look at my list guests Of his mother, Mrs.
top
8ad
bottom
after
lbade
I•
to
see
which
ahelf
It
Ia
on.
I
two way s. It' s an e)(ceiJe nt
_
Nellie
Tracy
In
Pomeroy.
Auxiliary, 7:30 p.m. Wed· voice choir wlll .be attired in cleaa. Some fabrics are also lake out the one that has
value. Precision jeweled.
nesday at the hall of Feeney- bicentennial costumes.
Classic in sly/e. Wi t~ ·
app!Jed
to
a
paper
bacll so been there the longest, and
Bennett . Posi 128. Dinner
textured gqldtone case ,
beware ol tho1e - they will ills than crossed off the list.
with the legionnaires at 8:30
sweep second , full numeral
not take to a bath. Olecll the AI I add more, the Jn.
preceding the meeting. New
MEETING SET
dial and unbreakable
wire frame. UIt II not painted , formation Is put on the tist
officers will be elected.
mainspring . Water and
Ia preparation for the
there II a cbaace ol rut that Is kept tacked behind the
shock resislant. Bulova
Middleport Alumni sllliDIDitheahade. Uwasblng refrigerator.- LOUISE.
POMEROY - Middleport
guaranteed.
And very
Anoclllllon banquet and Ia to pneeed, the drying must
Lions Club, Wednesday noon
You wm receive a dollar Is
modestly
priced.
·
danee on Saturday nllht.
at the Melp Inn.
be
doae
u
fut
u
JIOBIIble.
Polly
uoe1
.;rour
favorite
the decoratiag eemmlttee
OHIO VALLEY Com.
U It 'I!JCIDI lea1lble to take homemalllag · Idea, Pet
RIO GRANDE - Rio Distinguished Alumnus mandry 24, Knlghta Templar,
wW meet at Meigs Juntor the risk of wasbiag, be 1111re Peeve, PoDy'a l'nlblem or
Grande College • Rio Grande Award; Dick Hyland and stated conclave, 7:30 p. m.
HJcb School at 7 p.m. tile lalllldry container II deep 10lutlon to a prv]!lem. Write
JEWELRY STORE
Community College will hold Mrs. Eugenia Gardner, who Pomeroy Masonic Temple
Friday.
eaougb 10 the entire l.hade PoUy ill care of tbls newttIts alwnnl banquet Saturday, will both receive The Rio Wednesday. All Sir Knlghta .
Vol!l!lteer help II needed.
·Court St., Pl&gt;meroy
caa be Immersed at one lime. paper.
·
May 29, at 8:30 p.m. in the Grande · College Alumni and officerS urged to attend.
Middleport, 0.
Tbaoe . wbo desire to rm tab !l'ith thlcll suds of
College Clnlng Hall.
Award; Mr. Harry Fritz and
reserve a table at the daace l~ewarm water IDII a mild
Glirden Cluil,
The Cla118e8 of 1926, 1936, Dr. ROland Well, who will 8 WILDWOOD
are
to have eard tablet
p. m. Wednesday at the
detergent or •oap. Hold shade
1951 and 1978 will be honored. both receive the Atwood home of Mrs. Evelyn Hollon
there at the time. All tablea by top wire 111d dip up pd
The speaker for the Class of Achievement Award ; Art with Mrs . Mae Holler,
are to be marked with the down, being sun! the shade 11
1926 will be Charles Lanham, who will receive B.!SisUng hostess.
- e of the penen m•lllng completely
covered dlll1ag
MOIISIII8II, and the speaker The Rio Grande College
lbe reeervatloa. The daace escb dip. A rub or two with a
THURSDAY
for the Class of 1978 will be Faculty atatton, and Dr.
wW bello at 9 p.m. IDII Is 10ft bnub illlould aot hurt It,
POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
Brian Hedden.
Joseph Bitonte, who will Royal Arch Masons, special
opea te the pubUc. Zepller II this
aeeded, Rlue • ·
AIJo to be honored at the receive the Alumni Cer- convocation, to confer the
Blue will provide the couple ol limes, the 181De
banquet are Dr. Emauel En!, tificate of Apprecl,tion.
mule.
royal arch degree, Thursday,
way, In clear lukewarm
who will receive The
7:30 p. m. Masonic Temple.
Water. Pal with a bath towel
SHRINETTES, 7:30 p.m.
to femove u much a:eeaa
Thursday, Columbus and
moiahlre 11 )IOIIIhle. Dry u
Southern Ohio Electric Co.
· qalcldy as you can ID a dwly ·
FREE CLOTHING Day
· windy s1101o pu~ a •Iring
lllroup the wire at the top
Members of Syracuse Cub Mrs. Irene DIU, Gary Foley, Thursday at Salvation Army,
and then tytai to tle clothesScout Pack 242 and their Erich Philson, Mr. and Mrs. 10 a.m. unW noon.
Decorating Of the Pomeroy line. A clip clotheapin at eacb
CONCERT BY Melga High
families
were guests John Philson and Sarah,
Elementary
School aide wW keep the shade frvm
Jazz
Band,
7:30
p.m.
ThurlSaturday night at the home of Corey McPhail, Mr. and Mrs.
auditorium
will
begin
Thurs- 1Upplug ap IDII down the Uae.
day,
Meigs
Junior
High
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Thoren for Hugh McPhail, Scott and
Auditorium,
Middleport;
23
day
night
at
7:30
and
~ ­ The 1hade'1 look may not be
a cookout and pack meeting. Heather, Mr. and Mrs. Pete
Uia
Milch,
president,
&amp;aka too eaeOIU'agina wbne wet but
players
doing
a
wide
range
of
I
The pack meeting opened Thoren, Julie and Eric.
for
assistance
from
Pomeroy
popular
music.
Adlnl.alon
,1,
uuaUy drying Improves ill
with the living circle. Awards
proceeds to a new public aliDIIni.
were presented to Gary
appearance. - POLLY.
Also on Thursday the
address system fund.
Foley, Erich Philson, Lee DW
committee
to select' the
REVIVAL
AT
Carleton
and Corey McPahll, all arrow
DEAR POLLY - I wort ID
acbolarahip
'lrinJier
will meet. a pizza place and my Pit
Church,
Kingsbury
Road,
pointa. Plana were discussed
May 26 through June 8, On Friday evening, the Peeve Ia with those people
for summer activities.
services
7:30 each evening. decorating will be completing who callln orders and do not
Games were played.
Rev.
John
Lanier, evangelll!l. beginning at 8 p.m. '11le even kn'ow what they want
Attending were Jack
Mrs.
Pandora
Collins
Sunday,
May
30, all day banquet will be served We wa1le a lot of time when
Justis, Mi8s Glenna Rummel,
Penriy Landers, Greg Set- hosted the Wednesday night . services with basket lunch at Saturday night at 8 p.m. The we should be busy with those
terfield, Mrs. Yolan Set- meeting of the Sew-Rile· n0011 and afternoon service at dance with mullc by "The who do know. Please make up
2:30 p.m. with music by Sound Investment" will begin your mlnd before ordering
terfield, David Duffy, Mrs. Sewing Club.
The
secretary's
report
was
Golpel
Tones. Special singing at 9 p.m. The dance Ia opeil to anytbng over the phooe. Jeanette Duffy and Eddie,
given
by
Mrs.
Evelyn
each
night
of services. Garry the public and tickets are $2 LORI.
Todd Adams, Mr. and Mrs.
Gilmore
and
following
a
brief
King,
pastor,
Invites the at the door. ·
Jim Adams and Kim, Darin
DEAR POLLY - Spring
business
meeting,
a
white
public.
Roush, David Ebersbach,
cleaning time Ia here and 1
MIDDLEPORT CUB Scout
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Eben- elephant sale was held. Mrs.
LUNCHEON PLANNED
would like to share an Idea
Ann
Browning
wiD
be
hostess
Pack
~. regular monthly
bach and Chris, Lee DW,
A luncheoo for the Put with the rest of the working
for the 11e11 meeting at the meeting, 7 p.m. Thuraday at Matrons Club of EvangeUne crew. AI you prepare to
club house. Games were Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
paper or paint a room, you
Cha ter 172
played with prizes going to American Legion Home.
p
•OES, will be held have to remove the electric
ATrEND EXERCISE'S
MEIGSCOUNTY.Women's all p.m. Friday at the home switch plate. Before you putlt
Mrs. Sadie Thuener, Mrs . Lucy White, Mrs.
Shirley
Baity,
Mrs.
Gilmore
Fellowship
meeting, 7:30 of Mrs. Marion French with
Syracuse, Mrs. Alma
Mrs . Walter Hayes as back, sUck lnside a paper
• Joh!lllon, Springfield, Mr. and and Mrs. Ann Browning. Mrs. p.m. Thursday at Hemlock assisting hostess.
with information as to how
Mnl. Harry Davis, and Mr. Martha Hoffman won the Grove Cluiatian Church with
Mrs. Sybli Love, program
111d Mrs. Wllllam Lehew and door prize.
Refreshmenta
were
served
leader.
·sons, John and Billy,
FRIDAY
Pomeroy, attended Capital to those named and Mrs.
J.UNCHEON FOR Past
When you need money for your kid's bmces, ot· any good reason
Unlveralty commencement Betty Wehrung, Mrs. Nettle
"The Insurance Store"
Mrs .
Lenora Matrons Club, Middleport
ezerclses In Columbus Boyer,
talk to us. We handle Personal Loans quickly, easily and with '
Complete
Mrs.
Flo Chapter 172, OES, l p.m.
Sunday when the Lehewa' McKnight,
Insurance
Service
consideration.
You can borrow with trust where people save with
Strickland, Mrs. Joan Hoff- Friday at the home of Mrs.
son, Ted, graduated.
trust.
City
Loan
&amp; Savings.
man and Mrs . Barbara Marion French with Mnl.
Mullen.
Walter Hayes 1188iating.

Social
·Calendar

employment of congressional
WASHINGTON (UPI) - workers, was too close to the
While House colleagues problem to look into it
debate what to do , the Justice properly.
Hays is chairman of the
Department is investigating
allegations by a blonde clerk parent House Administration
that llle was put on the Committee and has denied a
congressional payroll to claim by Elizabeth Ray that
provide sexual favors to Rep. her $H,OOO a year job
consisted solely of having
Wayne Hays, i).()hlo.
Rep. Frank Thompson, !).. occasional dinner - and sex
.
N.J., decided Mond~y his . - with him.
Thompson
said
there
were
accounts subcommiUee,
too
many
conflicts
of
Interest
which has jurisdiction over

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

GRANDGifiS

Cantata
slated

Polly's Pointer~
Not alllampshades
can be laundered

Rio alumni banquet

20% OFF
TO All
GRADS
heritage house

to be held Saturday

GOESSLER'S

a.

Decorating
set to start

out at
Loan.

FfRSTCIULDBORN

'
BAKE SALE,
Friday,
beginning at 9 a.m. by Lewis
Manley American Legion
Auxiliary 263 at Krogers.
DINNEJt, DANCE SET
CHESHIRE
The
Cheshlre-Kyger Creek
Alumni banquet and dance
will be held at 7 p.m.
saturday at the Kyger Creek
High School. For reservations, call 448-3963 or 387·
7605.
I

aTYLOAN

......... 1. . . .
214 E. Main

"QUALITY 1ncl
SERVICE"

&amp;.SAVINGS
ESr 1912

POMEROY

Sour~es said the Justice
Department inquiry is being
conducted by its newly
formed Public Integrity
Section, set up by Attorney
General Edward Levi within
the Criminal Division to deal
with corruption of public
officials.
The actual investigative
legwork was assigned to the
FBI, sources said. . It was
unclear what federal laws, if

but said her own doctor did
not so describe her.
Thompson, after mee~
with advisors Monday, sa1d
he had "an obvious conmct of
Interest."
He ran against Hays for ·
co mmittee coalrman last
year, and if his subcommittee
Investigated and affected
Hays' position then he, as
senior Democrat, .would
asswne the chairmanship.
"My recent challenge of

For Holiday
Times!
.

.

'

BRAND

·

Sun. 10 to 10_

)$.. ~ 1:).

'

***********************************************************************

HAMeSALADe Made
M M
Y Y

J:J.

RE~~·~~;;

c

pkg.
on~

I

for

\

Beef
Fresh &amp; Lean

lb.

USDA

•

T~

Fresh_&amp;

. 24 oz.

~~.~·.....

~~.t........ .

·~

¥~

24 oz.

'i

**jf
.!+-~ ·

GR~ AMEDIUM doz. 59~

***'EGGS.......... .. . .

Pomeroy, Olio

7 . ..
~

89~ :i
COTTAGE CHEESE ......~:.t.:.. ... .
1i

BROUGHTON'S

*

~lf .

••

~

lb.

..

'1.49

·~

All Week Longl

· RC COLA

.'09 .

16 oz.
bois.

8pak
1\11 Weel&lt; Lonq

00

Stocl&lt; Up For Holiday

COCA.COLA
16 oz. Bats.

IPAK

Golden Ripe

99~

DIET RITE

BANANAS
• ....~!!

.....

SPECIAL

79c

5 1!1

-

BUCKET STEAK .."..-

USDA
Choicl Beef

lb

.

31bs.'1

...••
•

'"

TOMATOES

••oUGKTON'S

\

"

MINUTE STEAK

.,09
.
Lean
)f.:

·Fresh Florida

HOMO MILK. .............;..~~~~~....

***************
PURE BEEF - NO WASTE

NO WASTE

PRODUCE

•

g~

..

lb.

n

USDA Beef

~gal.

tf2 Gal.

89~

Superiors Better

..
..
...

ICE CREAM

. "'*it
I*COTTAGE CHEESE....... 89~
. . \
~
~~~~~ $p9 ~
* 2% MILK ....................
.f.
Bft~UyHTON'S

pkg.

990

SCOT lAD

*****·~~
*
~*
;"J"~~
!!
' ~~

**

WIENERS

,,
••

***••·.lf

CASHMERE,
4.bar
BOUQUET pkg.

~.

69~

12 oz.

· GROUND ROUND

, lJt .

jumbo
roll

'

89~

GROUND CHUCK

.

VALLEY B-ELL

Superio!S ALL BEEF

Ground From USDA Beef, Fresh &amp;Lean

"?.-

SUNSHINE
DOG FOOD

lb .

POLISH SAUSAGE

\

. DILLS

Pkg .

BOLOGNA

c

lb.

M

TOWELS

WHOLE

tGROUND BEE
t~ .,51bs.ormore lb. 69~

loaves

Festa Hamburger

Hi ·Dri Paper

WIENERS

PICNIC HAMS

t
t

FAVORITE
BREAD

59~

12 01.

Superiors All Meat

*
*

only

99~

Superiors All Meat

1::.:~~~....;..~-:.~

EGG NOODLES

lb.

'

We Accept-.F~derafFood Stamps ;
.
.
PHONE 992-3480
.·~
.
Cornet Mill and Second Sts. we reserve the right to limit quantities. MIDDLEPORT, 0.
HOME MADE

I

Priced Low, Tool

••

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily 9 to

125 E. Main Street 992-2171
LAAU\1 tu $15.000 th ro UJ;h ThP Ci ty Loon q,mpany.

My, might apply.
Ms. Ray said Hays put her
on the payroll of the
subcommittee on oversight in
November at $14,000 a year
but that she did no work and
claimed none was expected of
her except to entertain Hays
on 11n average of ooce a week.
Hays " categorica lly
denied" her claim and said
she was a ''mental patient."
Ms Ray acknowledged she
had consulted a psychiatrist

YORBA LINDA, Calif.
Mr. Hays' chairmanship and
the attendant news reports of IUP! ) - Ray Carrasco rl
personal animosity between Irvine, Calif., shot a 611-7:1-us would raise questions of H2,even par, Monday to pace
basic fairness," Thompson South·ern Ca,llfornla
qualifying here for 13 spots In
sai4.
.
"Such an Inquiry must, of next mont h's sectional
course, be hnpartial, but Its qualifying session for the U.S.
Impartiality must
be Open.
In the second Southern
apparent to all," said
CaUfornla qualifying session
Thompson.
"Accordingly, It Is my at Vandenberg AtJ: 1 Force
decision not to assert Base ~t Lompoc, Calli .1 ¥Ike
jurisdiction over this MUier an.d Mac Hunter Jr.,
both of Los Angeles, each
matter," he said.
shot
7~76-151, seven over
Hays accused Thompson
par,
In the wind to lead
Monday of "taking another
rwi at me because he thinks another group o! 13 players
I'm down . I'm not surprised Into the sec\lonal qualifying
June 8.
that he sw-faced."

Open Memorial Day

Mrs. Collins
hosts meeting

RUTLAND - Mr. ind Mrs.
Daniel Enright, llibon, the
VISITS HYSELLS
former Andrew Dewhurst of
MINERSVILLE - Dr.
Rutland are announcing the Christa Bauech of Stuttgardt,
birth &lt;t their first child, a Germany, was the guest of
seven pound, all ounce aon, Mr. and Mrs. Victor Hysell
Bryan Daniel, May I . here Sunday. Dr. Bausch Ia In
Maternal grandparents are the anthropology department
Mr. and Mrs. Harold . at Ohlo University. She came
Dewhurst and a great- to attend the graduation of
grandmother l.a Mrs. 0 . 0. Koste Hysell from Southern
Patterpon, all of Rqpand.
High School. 1

·

son.

~AB§j

frorn

Scouts enjoy cookout

for him to head an Inquiry
Into her charges, and that if
his subcommittee decided oo
its own to proceed he would
step aside as chairman.
" In fairness to Mr. Hays,
however, and out of respect
for the Integrity and
reputation of the House, I feel
the Ho use Committee on
Standards of Official Conduct
(Eth ics) · would be the
appropriate forum for this
Invest igation," said Thomp-

By GENE BERNHARDT

.

My ol' lady moved out and two weeks later another.girl
moved into my apartment because I'm the kind of guy who

.

House has hot potato in who will probe Liz Ray charge

f

By Helen and Sue Hottel

.

16

oz. Bats.

IPA~

00

·'t 4 'f~ I

99°

f r1U11 !

..... '

".
.

l,:r.".
... ..
~

!'~ ' .
"./.;n,
,'·· ..
• ,. ~ '1 - ..
. . . ... ..
r,. "'~r ~
·. :
~~~--....-.------.., .,.:c•
....

-

'

.

MORTON COUNTRY TABLE

DINNERS
each 69$
SCOT LAD

French Fries
5 lb. bag 99~ \

BOOTH'S .

24

oz. $J39..

FISH STICKS ....................~~~: ...,

.i~,:·.
' · ' ,· '

.·. ~, :

79'.
ONION RING·S............ ;.!···~-~~.t·:· ·, .
5 $1 '·- .
LEMONADE................... can~
59$
ORANGE JUICE ................~~.~ ... ~.
MooR .

16 01.

SCOT LAD

6

01.

··~..:

'

11" 1'

SCOT LAD

,

16 oz.

~·

--~

�3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Tuesday , May 25, 1$76

-Auxiliary plans
~ fi
puti
h
S
~ reezer
'C a e

r~W$.~G;~;;;r~~~ii;;:=:=::::~,,, ,~~~
~

~~
~;:
Rap :

9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, May 25, 1976

Too Mlny Women In HlJ Home

The women 's auxiliary of
Veterans Memorial Hospital
voted to purchase a chest
freezer for the ho1pltal I
cafeteria at a reCf!nt meeting.
Mrs. Janice Daniels
presided and reported on the
aelecUon of Patricia Windon
. ,. •
...

New officel'll were elected to the Conkle home at

as recipient of the scholaralllp. A report was given on
the yll'd and bake sale and
the Auslllary extended a vole
of thanb for dona tiona and
help with that money-ralalng
project. Mrs. Jestle Molden
had prayer. Refreshments
carried out the patriotic
theme .
Attending were Mrs. Nellie
89rgan, Mr!l, Eliza Powell,
Mra. Velala Roush, Mrs.
Louile McElhinny, Mrs.
Mildred Withee, Mrs.
Molden, Mrs. Eva Rartley,
Mra. Charlotte Wright, Mrs.
Jeasle White, Mrs. Alma
Newton

and commltteil appointed I Cheshire.
the Thursday afternoon Refreshments were served
needs companionship.
meeting of the Rock Springs to those named and Mrs.
Last week No. I moved baclt In, but No. 2 won'tleave. I am
Better IIWth Club at the Vena Whaley, Mrs. Sandy
getting too much companlonahlp, especially since they hate
home &lt;t Mrs. Helen Black- Folmer, Mrs. Lllulae Radford
each other and take It out on me. I mean they COMPETE. I
ski!.
and two guesta, Mrs. Peggy
never knowwhether I'll come home to two home-cooked super.
Elected were Mrs. Judy Harris and Tara Humphreys.
dinners, or a major batUe. (It's good they can 't hurt the
"SOFTWOODCUTI'INGTOINCREASEPLANTS"
Humphreys, president; Mrs.
furniture that goes with this dwnp.)
BYMR8. aDU8DIEHL,
Lenora Leifheit, vice
Suggestions? - CAN'T OUST 'EM
RIJ'It.ANDGARDENCWB
president; Mrs. Barbara
Propagatkll of plants from !(lft wood cuUings .Is not Goegleln, secretary, and
C.O.U.:
difficult. It Is lin easy and inexpensive way of Increasing plants Mrs. Phyllis Skinner,
Where's your courage? Give 'em both eviction notices, and
stieh as carnations, chrysanthemuma, geranlUJliS, coleus, as treasurer.
keep them out by changing the lock.-HELEN
well as favorite deciduous 1111nlbs, evergreens. and trees.
Mris.lo/Ethel Grueaer was·
+++
Soft wood cuttings can be taken as early as the mldcDe of appointed chaplain, Mrs.
H you're too chicken for this, maybe you should flnd
May or can be taken ln June, July or August. A simple test of Jackie Zirkle, publicity
another furnished apartment and let the girls fight It out wood suitable for propagation Is to lreak a stem and If It chalnnab, and Mrs. Beuna
TUFBDAY
alone . ..: SUE
lrealls
clean, then wood Is at the rlgbt stage of growth for Grueser and Mrs. Louise
PAST MATRONS,
rooting.
Stems three or four inches ln length are easy to
+++
Pomeroy Chapter OES,
Radford to the committee to
Dear Helen and Sue :
handle.
Tuesday, :30 p.m. at home of
remember
the sick for the
Is It true that if a guy always dances so the girl must go Thelma Dill, Syracuae.
Place them in water to prevent Ioas of moisture and until next three montha.
Mrs.
Elizabeth
Herald,
Mrs.
backwards while he charges across the floor , then he's bossy
AMEit[CAN LEGION Ruth Morrta, Mrs. Carrie you are ready to put into rOoting medium. To prepare the. Mrs. B'etty Conkle opened
and a typical M.C.P. (Male Chauvinist Pig)? - LOOKING Auxiliary,
Racine Post 602, Kennedy, Mrs. Nettie Hayes, cutting for rooting, cut the steam on the alent and avoid tearing the meeting with the Lord's
FOR CLUES
7:30p.m. Tuesday at the ball. Mrs. Daniela, Mrs. llllldred the tissue. Remove at lfl!st moll! of the leaves and the buds or Prayer an~ the pledge to the
flowers. Dip the base of the cutting in footing powder such as
SIDEWALK SALE at the Fry, Mrs. Clara Burris, Mrs. Rootone.
flag. Devotions were given by
Dear LFC.:
Ethel
Hatfield·,
Mrs
.
Senior
Citizens
Center
More likely it means the guy Is so new at cheek-t&lt;K:heek
Rooting materials are vermiculite, poWte, equal parts of Mrs. Loulae Folmer who used
·TUesday,
May
25,
9:30
Emogene
~
and
Mrs.
Psalm 61 and a meditation
that he can only do "the straight forward charge." - HELEN
Sllnd and peat moss. Keep the rooting medium moist Set the from
a.m,
to
3:30
p.m.
Good
Frieda
Mossman.
Mrs.
·the Upper Room en·
AND SUE
cutUng In the lllade out of the hot sunshine. For those cuttings
Carrie
selection
of used clothing.
Neutzllng
was
a
guest.
tiUed
''Freedom
from Letting
which will root late in the fall; set In ~ cold frame and then
+++
Go."
Dear Rap :
PAST MATRONS of
plant out!!ide In the spring after all danger offrost Is gone.
Program was presented by
Pomeroy Chapter, OES, will
This Is ablolutely true .
Mrs.
Teresa Abbott and InMy sister Is 15 and goes with a guy who Is almost 20. Our meet at 7:30 Tuesday at the
cluded
"Mllk" by Mrs.
home
of
Mrs.
Thelma
DW.
mother lets them go to bed together, upstairs ln her. bedroom.
Frances Goeglein ;
Not only lets but encourages them !
MEIGS-MASON County
"Imagination Can Cause
Then my sister and mother talk about all that happened. Pony League meeting at
' Symptoms" by Mrs. Lllulse
Pomeroy Village Hall, 7:30
I'm no prude, but don't you think this is too much?
Folmer; "Bread of Life" by
The guy won't even visit here unless Mom picks him up In p.m. Tuesday to complete
Mrs. Ethel
Grueser ;
her car and takes him home. She seems to live her Ufe through plans for upcoming season.
"Prescription for . What ·Ails
her daughter. H I say anything , I'm told to mind my own All managers urged . to be
The bicentennial cantata,
You" by Mrs . Frances
present.
business.
,
"ILoveAmerica"byJohn
W.
Folmer, and a jaoke by Mrs.
Am !sick, or Is my mother? - 17-YEAR-OLDSISTER
WEDNFBDAY
Lottie teonard, The contest
WOMEN'S REPUBUCAN Peterson and Don Wyrtzen
will
be
presented
by
the
was
conducted by Mrs . . ·
POLLY'S PROBLEM
rii8Jay rolla of pMper were
Dear 17:
Club, Sp.m. at the Meigs Inn,
Middleport
Church
of
Christ
Skinner
with Mrs. Cqnkle and
DEAR POLLY - How Is needed for the room or how
Your mother Is the sickle, and her actions are enOIISh to Wednesdav.
'
choir joined by some par· ooe supposed to clean white much paint and what kind, Mrs. Wllmetta Leifheit
make anyone sick! While her home lsn 'I exactly a "house" yet, holi':~regs~~:e:g llclpanla from other Meigs
fabric lamp shades? - etc. Such facts are easUy wlnnlng the prizes.
I'd say she's SCSI'cely better than a madam who scouts
Mrs. Conkle will host the
customers for her teenage "prize." _ HELEN
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. at the County Churches of Christ. LUCY.
forgotten before they are
First performance will be
+++
K of P Hall. All members
DEAR LUCY - Never try needed again, and It Ia good to June meeting with Mrs.
17 :
on Friday, June 11818 p.mj ln to 1']101 clean a fabric lamp have them right at hand.
Blackston to have the
Maybe "Ma" thlnks she Is ''facing facts" - the girl will urged to attend.
I have an upright freezer program and Mrs. Abl)ott the
sneak out to her boyfriend's bed if he isn't allowed into hers at . MEIGS
C 0 UN T Y the Meigs Junior 111gb School lhade. They can be washed
home - but I say this Is ' 'pe'ew" (as In "It stinks!" ) morality. Ijepublican Women's Club, 8 auditorium in Middleport as a (If lbe material Is washable) with five shelves. I keep a list coo test. Members are to meet
- SUE
p.m. Wednesday at Meigs feature of the Big Bend but flnt elleek to be sure the of what Is on each shelf. Each at the church at 12:30 to drive
+++
Inn. All women Invited to Regatta. Second per- seiUDI. IDII trimmings are package of meat has the
FOR YOURCOPYof"Whatlsa Crush?" "What !sa First attend and join club for 1978. formance will be on July 4 at sewed and not glued as they name, the weight and the
WEEKEND GUESTS
Love?" "What is Getting to KnQw YourseH?" send a stamped, Social hour following 7:30p.m. at the Middleport will loosen, II glued. Should dale put ln. When I want to
Dr.
and Mrs. E. A. Tracy,
lllurch of Christ. ,
seH;~ddressed envelope to Helen and Sue Bolte], care of this meeting.
Olie want to proceed any way, get· some thing out of the Columbus, were weekend
Directed .by Mrs. Debbie
We're offering t~ l s w'atch
newspaper.
AMERICAN LEGION Gerlach, members of the 30 new trim eould he sewed oa freezer, I just look at my list guests Of his mother, Mrs.
top
8ad
bottom
after
lbade
I•
to
see
which
ahelf
It
Ia
on.
I
two way s. It' s an e)(ceiJe nt
_
Nellie
Tracy
In
Pomeroy.
Auxiliary, 7:30 p.m. Wed· voice choir wlll .be attired in cleaa. Some fabrics are also lake out the one that has
value. Precision jeweled.
nesday at the hall of Feeney- bicentennial costumes.
Classic in sly/e. Wi t~ ·
app!Jed
to
a
paper
bacll so been there the longest, and
Bennett . Posi 128. Dinner
textured gqldtone case ,
beware ol tho1e - they will ills than crossed off the list.
with the legionnaires at 8:30
sweep second , full numeral
not take to a bath. Olecll the AI I add more, the Jn.
preceding the meeting. New
MEETING SET
dial and unbreakable
wire frame. UIt II not painted , formation Is put on the tist
officers will be elected.
mainspring . Water and
Ia preparation for the
there II a cbaace ol rut that Is kept tacked behind the
shock resislant. Bulova
Middleport Alumni sllliDIDitheahade. Uwasblng refrigerator.- LOUISE.
POMEROY - Middleport
guaranteed.
And very
Anoclllllon banquet and Ia to pneeed, the drying must
Lions Club, Wednesday noon
You wm receive a dollar Is
modestly
priced.
·
danee on Saturday nllht.
at the Melp Inn.
be
doae
u
fut
u
JIOBIIble.
Polly
uoe1
.;rour
favorite
the decoratiag eemmlttee
OHIO VALLEY Com.
U It 'I!JCIDI lea1lble to take homemalllag · Idea, Pet
RIO GRANDE - Rio Distinguished Alumnus mandry 24, Knlghta Templar,
wW meet at Meigs Juntor the risk of wasbiag, be 1111re Peeve, PoDy'a l'nlblem or
Grande College • Rio Grande Award; Dick Hyland and stated conclave, 7:30 p. m.
HJcb School at 7 p.m. tile lalllldry container II deep 10lutlon to a prv]!lem. Write
JEWELRY STORE
Community College will hold Mrs. Eugenia Gardner, who Pomeroy Masonic Temple
Friday.
eaougb 10 the entire l.hade PoUy ill care of tbls newttIts alwnnl banquet Saturday, will both receive The Rio Wednesday. All Sir Knlghta .
Vol!l!lteer help II needed.
·Court St., Pl&gt;meroy
caa be Immersed at one lime. paper.
·
May 29, at 8:30 p.m. in the Grande · College Alumni and officerS urged to attend.
Middleport, 0.
Tbaoe . wbo desire to rm tab !l'ith thlcll suds of
College Clnlng Hall.
Award; Mr. Harry Fritz and
reserve a table at the daace l~ewarm water IDII a mild
Glirden Cluil,
The Cla118e8 of 1926, 1936, Dr. ROland Well, who will 8 WILDWOOD
are
to have eard tablet
p. m. Wednesday at the
detergent or •oap. Hold shade
1951 and 1978 will be honored. both receive the Atwood home of Mrs. Evelyn Hollon
there at the time. All tablea by top wire 111d dip up pd
The speaker for the Class of Achievement Award ; Art with Mrs . Mae Holler,
are to be marked with the down, being sun! the shade 11
1926 will be Charles Lanham, who will receive B.!SisUng hostess.
- e of the penen m•lllng completely
covered dlll1ag
MOIISIII8II, and the speaker The Rio Grande College
lbe reeervatloa. The daace escb dip. A rub or two with a
THURSDAY
for the Class of 1978 will be Faculty atatton, and Dr.
wW bello at 9 p.m. IDII Is 10ft bnub illlould aot hurt It,
POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
Brian Hedden.
Joseph Bitonte, who will Royal Arch Masons, special
opea te the pubUc. Zepller II this
aeeded, Rlue • ·
AIJo to be honored at the receive the Alumni Cer- convocation, to confer the
Blue will provide the couple ol limes, the 181De
banquet are Dr. Emauel En!, tificate of Apprecl,tion.
mule.
royal arch degree, Thursday,
way, In clear lukewarm
who will receive The
7:30 p. m. Masonic Temple.
Water. Pal with a bath towel
SHRINETTES, 7:30 p.m.
to femove u much a:eeaa
Thursday, Columbus and
moiahlre 11 )IOIIIhle. Dry u
Southern Ohio Electric Co.
· qalcldy as you can ID a dwly ·
FREE CLOTHING Day
· windy s1101o pu~ a •Iring
lllroup the wire at the top
Members of Syracuse Cub Mrs. Irene DIU, Gary Foley, Thursday at Salvation Army,
and then tytai to tle clothesScout Pack 242 and their Erich Philson, Mr. and Mrs. 10 a.m. unW noon.
Decorating Of the Pomeroy line. A clip clotheapin at eacb
CONCERT BY Melga High
families
were guests John Philson and Sarah,
Elementary
School aide wW keep the shade frvm
Jazz
Band,
7:30
p.m.
ThurlSaturday night at the home of Corey McPhail, Mr. and Mrs.
auditorium
will
begin
Thurs- 1Upplug ap IDII down the Uae.
day,
Meigs
Junior
High
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Thoren for Hugh McPhail, Scott and
Auditorium,
Middleport;
23
day
night
at
7:30
and
~ ­ The 1hade'1 look may not be
a cookout and pack meeting. Heather, Mr. and Mrs. Pete
Uia
Milch,
president,
&amp;aka too eaeOIU'agina wbne wet but
players
doing
a
wide
range
of
I
The pack meeting opened Thoren, Julie and Eric.
for
assistance
from
Pomeroy
popular
music.
Adlnl.alon
,1,
uuaUy drying Improves ill
with the living circle. Awards
proceeds to a new public aliDIIni.
were presented to Gary
appearance. - POLLY.
Also on Thursday the
address system fund.
Foley, Erich Philson, Lee DW
committee
to select' the
REVIVAL
AT
Carleton
and Corey McPahll, all arrow
DEAR POLLY - I wort ID
acbolarahip
'lrinJier
will meet. a pizza place and my Pit
Church,
Kingsbury
Road,
pointa. Plana were discussed
May 26 through June 8, On Friday evening, the Peeve Ia with those people
for summer activities.
services
7:30 each evening. decorating will be completing who callln orders and do not
Games were played.
Rev.
John
Lanier, evangelll!l. beginning at 8 p.m. '11le even kn'ow what they want
Attending were Jack
Mrs.
Pandora
Collins
Sunday,
May
30, all day banquet will be served We wa1le a lot of time when
Justis, Mi8s Glenna Rummel,
Penriy Landers, Greg Set- hosted the Wednesday night . services with basket lunch at Saturday night at 8 p.m. The we should be busy with those
terfield, Mrs. Yolan Set- meeting of the Sew-Rile· n0011 and afternoon service at dance with mullc by "The who do know. Please make up
2:30 p.m. with music by Sound Investment" will begin your mlnd before ordering
terfield, David Duffy, Mrs. Sewing Club.
The
secretary's
report
was
Golpel
Tones. Special singing at 9 p.m. The dance Ia opeil to anytbng over the phooe. Jeanette Duffy and Eddie,
given
by
Mrs.
Evelyn
each
night
of services. Garry the public and tickets are $2 LORI.
Todd Adams, Mr. and Mrs.
Gilmore
and
following
a
brief
King,
pastor,
Invites the at the door. ·
Jim Adams and Kim, Darin
DEAR POLLY - Spring
business
meeting,
a
white
public.
Roush, David Ebersbach,
cleaning time Ia here and 1
MIDDLEPORT CUB Scout
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Eben- elephant sale was held. Mrs.
LUNCHEON PLANNED
would like to share an Idea
Ann
Browning
wiD
be
hostess
Pack
~. regular monthly
bach and Chris, Lee DW,
A luncheoo for the Put with the rest of the working
for the 11e11 meeting at the meeting, 7 p.m. Thuraday at Matrons Club of EvangeUne crew. AI you prepare to
club house. Games were Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
paper or paint a room, you
Cha ter 172
played with prizes going to American Legion Home.
p
•OES, will be held have to remove the electric
ATrEND EXERCISE'S
MEIGSCOUNTY.Women's all p.m. Friday at the home switch plate. Before you putlt
Mrs. Sadie Thuener, Mrs . Lucy White, Mrs.
Shirley
Baity,
Mrs.
Gilmore
Fellowship
meeting, 7:30 of Mrs. Marion French with
Syracuse, Mrs. Alma
Mrs . Walter Hayes as back, sUck lnside a paper
• Joh!lllon, Springfield, Mr. and and Mrs. Ann Browning. Mrs. p.m. Thursday at Hemlock assisting hostess.
with information as to how
Mnl. Harry Davis, and Mr. Martha Hoffman won the Grove Cluiatian Church with
Mrs. Sybli Love, program
111d Mrs. Wllllam Lehew and door prize.
Refreshmenta
were
served
leader.
·sons, John and Billy,
FRIDAY
Pomeroy, attended Capital to those named and Mrs.
J.UNCHEON FOR Past
When you need money for your kid's bmces, ot· any good reason
Unlveralty commencement Betty Wehrung, Mrs. Nettle
"The Insurance Store"
Mrs .
Lenora Matrons Club, Middleport
ezerclses In Columbus Boyer,
talk to us. We handle Personal Loans quickly, easily and with '
Complete
Mrs.
Flo Chapter 172, OES, l p.m.
Sunday when the Lehewa' McKnight,
Insurance
Service
consideration.
You can borrow with trust where people save with
Strickland, Mrs. Joan Hoff- Friday at the home of Mrs.
son, Ted, graduated.
trust.
City
Loan
&amp; Savings.
man and Mrs . Barbara Marion French with Mnl.
Mullen.
Walter Hayes 1188iating.

Social
·Calendar

employment of congressional
WASHINGTON (UPI) - workers, was too close to the
While House colleagues problem to look into it
debate what to do , the Justice properly.
Hays is chairman of the
Department is investigating
allegations by a blonde clerk parent House Administration
that llle was put on the Committee and has denied a
congressional payroll to claim by Elizabeth Ray that
provide sexual favors to Rep. her $H,OOO a year job
consisted solely of having
Wayne Hays, i).()hlo.
Rep. Frank Thompson, !).. occasional dinner - and sex
.
N.J., decided Mond~y his . - with him.
Thompson
said
there
were
accounts subcommiUee,
too
many
conflicts
of
Interest
which has jurisdiction over

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

GRANDGifiS

Cantata
slated

Polly's Pointer~
Not alllampshades
can be laundered

Rio alumni banquet

20% OFF
TO All
GRADS
heritage house

to be held Saturday

GOESSLER'S

a.

Decorating
set to start

out at
Loan.

FfRSTCIULDBORN

'
BAKE SALE,
Friday,
beginning at 9 a.m. by Lewis
Manley American Legion
Auxiliary 263 at Krogers.
DINNEJt, DANCE SET
CHESHIRE
The
Cheshlre-Kyger Creek
Alumni banquet and dance
will be held at 7 p.m.
saturday at the Kyger Creek
High School. For reservations, call 448-3963 or 387·
7605.
I

aTYLOAN

......... 1. . . .
214 E. Main

"QUALITY 1ncl
SERVICE"

&amp;.SAVINGS
ESr 1912

POMEROY

Sour~es said the Justice
Department inquiry is being
conducted by its newly
formed Public Integrity
Section, set up by Attorney
General Edward Levi within
the Criminal Division to deal
with corruption of public
officials.
The actual investigative
legwork was assigned to the
FBI, sources said. . It was
unclear what federal laws, if

but said her own doctor did
not so describe her.
Thompson, after mee~
with advisors Monday, sa1d
he had "an obvious conmct of
Interest."
He ran against Hays for ·
co mmittee coalrman last
year, and if his subcommittee
Investigated and affected
Hays' position then he, as
senior Democrat, .would
asswne the chairmanship.
"My recent challenge of

For Holiday
Times!
.

.

'

BRAND

·

Sun. 10 to 10_

)$.. ~ 1:).

'

***********************************************************************

HAMeSALADe Made
M M
Y Y

J:J.

RE~~·~~;;

c

pkg.
on~

I

for

\

Beef
Fresh &amp; Lean

lb.

USDA

•

T~

Fresh_&amp;

. 24 oz.

~~.~·.....

~~.t........ .

·~

¥~

24 oz.

'i

**jf
.!+-~ ·

GR~ AMEDIUM doz. 59~

***'EGGS.......... .. . .

Pomeroy, Olio

7 . ..
~

89~ :i
COTTAGE CHEESE ......~:.t.:.. ... .
1i

BROUGHTON'S

*

~lf .

••

~

lb.

..

'1.49

·~

All Week Longl

· RC COLA

.'09 .

16 oz.
bois.

8pak
1\11 Weel&lt; Lonq

00

Stocl&lt; Up For Holiday

COCA.COLA
16 oz. Bats.

IPAK

Golden Ripe

99~

DIET RITE

BANANAS
• ....~!!

.....

SPECIAL

79c

5 1!1

-

BUCKET STEAK .."..-

USDA
Choicl Beef

lb

.

31bs.'1

...••
•

'"

TOMATOES

••oUGKTON'S

\

"

MINUTE STEAK

.,09
.
Lean
)f.:

·Fresh Florida

HOMO MILK. .............;..~~~~~....

***************
PURE BEEF - NO WASTE

NO WASTE

PRODUCE

•

g~

..

lb.

n

USDA Beef

~gal.

tf2 Gal.

89~

Superiors Better

..
..
...

ICE CREAM

. "'*it
I*COTTAGE CHEESE....... 89~
. . \
~
~~~~~ $p9 ~
* 2% MILK ....................
.f.
Bft~UyHTON'S

pkg.

990

SCOT lAD

*****·~~
*
~*
;"J"~~
!!
' ~~

**

WIENERS

,,
••

***••·.lf

CASHMERE,
4.bar
BOUQUET pkg.

~.

69~

12 oz.

· GROUND ROUND

, lJt .

jumbo
roll

'

89~

GROUND CHUCK

.

VALLEY B-ELL

Superio!S ALL BEEF

Ground From USDA Beef, Fresh &amp;Lean

"?.-

SUNSHINE
DOG FOOD

lb .

POLISH SAUSAGE

\

. DILLS

Pkg .

BOLOGNA

c

lb.

M

TOWELS

WHOLE

tGROUND BEE
t~ .,51bs.ormore lb. 69~

loaves

Festa Hamburger

Hi ·Dri Paper

WIENERS

PICNIC HAMS

t
t

FAVORITE
BREAD

59~

12 01.

Superiors All Meat

*
*

only

99~

Superiors All Meat

1::.:~~~....;..~-:.~

EGG NOODLES

lb.

'

We Accept-.F~derafFood Stamps ;
.
.
PHONE 992-3480
.·~
.
Cornet Mill and Second Sts. we reserve the right to limit quantities. MIDDLEPORT, 0.
HOME MADE

I

Priced Low, Tool

••

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily 9 to

125 E. Main Street 992-2171
LAAU\1 tu $15.000 th ro UJ;h ThP Ci ty Loon q,mpany.

My, might apply.
Ms. Ray said Hays put her
on the payroll of the
subcommittee on oversight in
November at $14,000 a year
but that she did no work and
claimed none was expected of
her except to entertain Hays
on 11n average of ooce a week.
Hays " categorica lly
denied" her claim and said
she was a ''mental patient."
Ms Ray acknowledged she
had consulted a psychiatrist

YORBA LINDA, Calif.
Mr. Hays' chairmanship and
the attendant news reports of IUP! ) - Ray Carrasco rl
personal animosity between Irvine, Calif., shot a 611-7:1-us would raise questions of H2,even par, Monday to pace
basic fairness," Thompson South·ern Ca,llfornla
qualifying here for 13 spots In
sai4.
.
"Such an Inquiry must, of next mont h's sectional
course, be hnpartial, but Its qualifying session for the U.S.
Impartiality must
be Open.
In the second Southern
apparent to all," said
CaUfornla qualifying session
Thompson.
"Accordingly, It Is my at Vandenberg AtJ: 1 Force
decision not to assert Base ~t Lompoc, Calli .1 ¥Ike
jurisdiction over this MUier an.d Mac Hunter Jr.,
both of Los Angeles, each
matter," he said.
shot
7~76-151, seven over
Hays accused Thompson
par,
In the wind to lead
Monday of "taking another
rwi at me because he thinks another group o! 13 players
I'm down . I'm not surprised Into the sec\lonal qualifying
June 8.
that he sw-faced."

Open Memorial Day

Mrs. Collins
hosts meeting

RUTLAND - Mr. ind Mrs.
Daniel Enright, llibon, the
VISITS HYSELLS
former Andrew Dewhurst of
MINERSVILLE - Dr.
Rutland are announcing the Christa Bauech of Stuttgardt,
birth &lt;t their first child, a Germany, was the guest of
seven pound, all ounce aon, Mr. and Mrs. Victor Hysell
Bryan Daniel, May I . here Sunday. Dr. Bausch Ia In
Maternal grandparents are the anthropology department
Mr. and Mrs. Harold . at Ohlo University. She came
Dewhurst and a great- to attend the graduation of
grandmother l.a Mrs. 0 . 0. Koste Hysell from Southern
Patterpon, all of Rqpand.
High School. 1

·

son.

~AB§j

frorn

Scouts enjoy cookout

for him to head an Inquiry
Into her charges, and that if
his subcommittee decided oo
its own to proceed he would
step aside as chairman.
" In fairness to Mr. Hays,
however, and out of respect
for the Integrity and
reputation of the House, I feel
the Ho use Committee on
Standards of Official Conduct
(Eth ics) · would be the
appropriate forum for this
Invest igation," said Thomp-

By GENE BERNHARDT

.

My ol' lady moved out and two weeks later another.girl
moved into my apartment because I'm the kind of guy who

.

House has hot potato in who will probe Liz Ray charge

f

By Helen and Sue Hottel

.

16

oz. Bats.

IPA~

00

·'t 4 'f~ I

99°

f r1U11 !

..... '

".
.

l,:r.".
... ..
~

!'~ ' .
"./.;n,
,'·· ..
• ,. ~ '1 - ..
. . . ... ..
r,. "'~r ~
·. :
~~~--....-.------.., .,.:c•
....

-

'

.

MORTON COUNTRY TABLE

DINNERS
each 69$
SCOT LAD

French Fries
5 lb. bag 99~ \

BOOTH'S .

24

oz. $J39..

FISH STICKS ....................~~~: ...,

.i~,:·.
' · ' ,· '

.·. ~, :

79'.
ONION RING·S............ ;.!···~-~~.t·:· ·, .
5 $1 '·- .
LEMONADE................... can~
59$
ORANGE JUICE ................~~.~ ... ~.
MooR .

16 01.

SCOT LAD

6

01.

··~..:

'

11" 1'

SCOT LAD

,

16 oz.

~·

--~

�v

·---·~ ·

_... -

.Television log for easy viewing

,. _,:::::~:~·-:·:,~:7~;:'·For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds

OF BONOS
Sealed proposals will be
re n ived by the unders igned .
the Vi llage Clerk. Of the Village
of Pomeroy . Meigs Coun ty,
Ohio , at the otr i ce of the
V illag e Cle rk. in the Munic ipa l
Build in g , Pome roy ; Ohio
45769 , until 1 ~ : 00 o' clock noon ,
at th e then prevailing stan
dard l ime In Oh io. on )un~ 21 ,
1976, at which t ime and place
the bids w i ll be publicly
opened and read , for the
pur chase et Waterwork .s
Bonds or said village , In the
princ ipal amount of SH 5. 000,
dated July \, 1916, numbered
from 1 to 95, inclusi"Ve, of the
denom 'i natlon of S5.000 ei'!lch,
·and bearing interest i;!)t the
rate of six lind one.half per
ce n t (6 1 1 pefcentl per annum ,
payable De cember I , 19 ?.6, and
semi .annuaily thereafter on
the first day of June and the
first day of Oec e'mber . Anyone
desiring to do so may present
a b id or bids for said bonds
based upon the ir beal"ing a
di ff erent rat e of interest from
that hereinabove specified,
provided that where a tr a ~ .
tiona l ln re rest rate Is bid , such
fraction sha ll be one .elghth of
one per centum or a mult ip le
the r eof . Sa ld bonds mature on
Dec~mber 1 of each of the
following
years
in
the
following amounts : $20 ,000
from 1977 to 1981 , incluSi\le ;
and $25,000 from 1982 to 1996,
in( lusive .
Unl ess pa i d from other
sour ces, prin cipal of and in ·
te r es! on said bonds are
payable fr em lim ited taxes at
Th·e Fi rst Nationlll Ba nk of

Dolley Jr .. who poued away
Mo~ 25 , 1965.
Always in our thoughts ,
Forever in our hearts .
Mother, Bertha Ooiley , Sister,

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES

II'

s PM Day Before
Publicat ion .
Monday Dead li ne 9

Eve 1yn McMi '" ·
IN MEMORY of Larry M. Spencer
who paned away 2 years ogo
25 1974 Sad! 111 ed b
May ·
·
Ym
Y
wlfeondchildren.

Cance l l ation
Corre c tion s w il l be ac
c; epted vnt l l 9 a .m . for
Day of Publl c ation .

QUAI.IlY Motor Co.

REGULATIONS

Th e Publisher r eserves
the r ighl to edit or reject
any ads deemed ob
ieclional. The publisher
wi ll not be respons tble tor
more than one incorrect
inserti on ,

LOST: Lorge tan dog , port Collie,

last seen WedneadCJy on Union
Ave., reword . Call992-23n.

1972 AMC HORNET
$1Hl
Sport,about Wagon , 6 cyl., automatic trans .. r•dlo.
good tires, while finish . good economy.

RATES

in~erlion

ling, haul ing, treework, and·

mowing, Phone 992-7-409.
WILL care for etderly person In my

homo. Phone 1 (6141 985-38-49
ot992-~10.

Wll~

do pointing , ln1ide or out.

M inimum Charg e SI .OO
14 cents per word thr ee
consecut ive
insertions .
16 ce n ts per word six
consecu tive
Insertion s.
'lS Per Cent Dis count on
paid ads and ads paid
within 10 davs .

rates , free eatlmatea. All work

guaranteed. Phone

992 -~

742-3081.

or

WILL do boby1 lttlng in your home.
Con start anytime after May 'lJ ,

Call949-2824 .

FLOORING, ceiling , paneling and
corpentry. Phone992·2759.

-=:'::::::::=:=:=::':::=:=::':::=--

Jf~ee esii~afes

BLIND ADS

Additional 25c Charg e
per Adve rtis emenl.

OFFICE HOURS

Daily , 8 . 30 a .m . to 11 : 00
Noon Sa turd ay .
Phone today 99 2 2156

992-7676.

WATERWORKS

BY ORDER OF THE
,· COUNCIL OF THE 'VILLAGE
" OF POME.ROY, OHIO
,\

Jane Walton ,
Village Clerk
Village of
Pomeroy .O hlo

,Ill II , ,18, 25, 31c

"

•

•

I

INMATE ESCAPES
MARION,Ohlo (UPIJ- An
i(i-nate who walked away
from -the Marion Correctional
Facility farm Monday'' was
reported stU! at large early
today.
Officials B,ald Billy Joe
C&lt;!lburn, a native of kenton,
in Marlon for grand theft,
simply walked off the prison

farm.
They described him as ~.
I931Jo111ds, wit¥ black hair, a
mll!llache and a tattoo on his
left ann.

CAROL DAY, {518) 489-8395 or
WRITE FRIENDLY HOME PAR·
TIES, 20 RAILROAD AVE.,
ALBANY, N.Y. 12205 .

SOMEONE nuded to cut gross.

ph. m-2021 .

SALESMAN wanted for establish·

NOTICE ON FILING
OF INVENTORY
AND APPRAISEMENT
Ttle State of Ohio, Meig$

busln~u In Pomeroy,

good

starting salary . must hove good
penonallty to meet the public
and will train. Send resume to
P. 0 . Bo~~: ~ . PomeroY. Oh io

45769
County, Court of Common
Pleas, Probate DIIII$IOn.
To the Exe cutor of the HOUSEKEEPER wanled, phone
m -5941.
estate, to such of the following
as are residents ot tt\e State of
the surviving
Ohio , Vil : spouse, the nex t of kin , the
benefic iaries under the will :
end to the attorney or at .
torneys represent ing any of
the aforementioned persons : IF YOU have a service to offer ,
James R . Eads, Deceased ;
want to buy or sell something ,
Langsville, Ohio , Rutland
ore looking for work . . . or
Township , No . 21 758.
whatever . , . you'll get results
You are t1ereby notified that
foster with o Sentinel Wont Ad .
the Inventory
and
Ap .
Callm-2156.
prel sement of the estat e ot the
eforementloned ,
deceased, GARAGE Sole, Astra Plain C.B.
late of said County , was tiled
·Antenna , teveral holequln
In this Court . Said lnventor v
romance paperback books ,
and Appraisement w i ll be for
clothing ·of all different sizes
hear ing betore this Court on
the 4th day of June, 1976. at
starting Monday 2~th through
10:00 o'clock A.M.
FrkJoy 28. Located at the north
Any J)erson desi ri ng to file
end of Tuppers Plains. 'Follow
except ions thereto must file
signs.
them at least f i ve days prior to
the date set for hear ing .
GIGANTIC Yard Sale, Friday and
Given un~er my hend and
Salurday, March 28, 29. 4114
seat of said Court , this 21st day
Main
St ., Middleport . Baby ,
or May 1976
children's laths, women 's.
men's cloth ing, 197.4 Chrysler
Menning D . Webst er
station wagon, fully equipped;
Judge
By Ann B. Wa1Son
Deputy Clerk
( Sl 25 ( 61 1, 2tc

T0 ed0 ace
1

1972 G.M.C. truck, now polnl
ob, bath low mileage. Chain

link fence , 22,. tt. 2 gates.

YARD Sale, Tuesday , May 25
lhrough Friday , May 28th . Off
143 on Wolfe Pen Road. Russell
residence, 9 a.m. till4 p.m.

GARAGE

Solo ,

last

signs with

Oeveland
CLEVELAND ( UPI) The Cleveland Browns signed
quarterbacks Gene Swick of
Toledo and Craig Nagel of
Purdue Monday.
The nation's total offense
leader, Swick was selected in
the fourth ro111d of the 1976
player draft by the Browns.
He totaled 2, 706 yards last
season, 2,487 of It passing.
Swick eoinpleted 190 of 308
passes for a 61.7 per cent
average and 15 touchdowns.
He also scored eight
tnuchdowns running .
Nagel was impressive with
the Boilermakers as a
sophomore but saw little
action his final two seasons.
Swick and Nasel wUI try
out
with
six
other
quarterbacks in training
camp this s~~nmer, There
will be starter Mike Phipps,
backup 'l'en Brian Sipe and
Will Cureton and three other
free •gents,

doy

clearance, all items reduced .

Wed• .. 9:00 rill 3:00, Old 33,
Enterprise, Rose Hill .

FOUR Family Yard Sale;

BONDS.''

0

1968 Mercury, good running con.

ed

~uollc

Hills, Syracuse, Ohio. Thurtdoy

and Friday 10:00 1111 4:00, cur·
tolna , bedtprads, all lites,
children's Qnd adults clothing ,
misc. Items, all clean QOod
quality Items. Watch for signs.
tf rain , will be neKf Thurtday

and Friday.
YARD Sale, Tuooday and Wed•.
Furniture, clothing, . dishes,
misc. St. Rt. 143one-fourtl'lmile

ficm ~1. 7, look farslgn .
YA~D ~lo , Wed .. May 26 from 8
a.m. till dark at Oovld
Spencer's r11idence at the cor·
ner of Broadway and Main,
Racine, Ohio.

AKC Registered Collie Slud Service,

Stordutt

King .

Phone

(6")985-ma.
AKC Chow Chow puppies, make
good guard dogo, poll, or •how
dog•. Full podlgrHo. Phone
' (304) 675-S029.
.
AKC Roglotored Irish Soller pupploo, S60, Phone (614) 6988233 or 698-2279.
PUREBRED O.rman Shophord
female pups. Call 992-7379
ofter-4 p.m.

TO GIVE away 4 PUpPIII, pari
Boogie. Phone 949-2079.
SILVER female m(ltloluro poodle.

-

· Also , male German Shepherd.

Callm-3901.

·-· .. ···---··

··· ·- ~

1976 JEEP

1951 Ch.vrolat Pickup . Pt\one

gutters

u.t ...
.

cars.

DON SMITH
AMC JEEP

Medical Oxygen
and Supplies

~~~ ~th

Ave,
523 -9~07
Huntington, W.Va.

·

SWIMMING
POOLS

"GRAPEFRUIT PILL" with Diadox
plan more convenient than
grapefruits. Eat ·satisfving
meals and lose weight. Nelson

D_rug .
·
LOSE weight safe, ·fast , easy with
the Oiqdox pkm- Reduce fluids
with Fluldex. Nel&amp;on' Drug.

1968 300 Ford2 Dr, Grand Torino,

In

OSTER heavy duty animal clip·
poro, used ve&lt;y little, $35, Call

Phone m -3874.
Goegleln , phone 9'12-7625,
3 AND 4 RM. furnl1hed and un- ~1:::';
97 5'-7'Hc-on"d-:'o-'-::750
::"-'m-'-od
":-,ol:",::;S:-:17:::00:::-;
furnished apls. Phone m. 1972 Ford F250 truck, $1800.

Phone992·7757after~p.m.
_U..:N::.IC:=O:.::,F::.
re:.:e..:
zo::.r,::23
~c:.:u::.,11-".
.;. f;o::.
: r ,-a-,le

COUNTRY Mobile Home Park , Rt.
33, te;n miles north of Pomeroy.
or trade , $100. Phone 992-7086
Lar91 lots wlfh concret pallo1,
f
2 XI
aidewalks, runners ond off ::::":=
'•:.cr~:.:..r:.P·cm
;c:._,-_ __
street parking. Phone992-7479. PICKING up plano In your oreo,
looking for responsible party to
2 b.drm. trailer, real nice. Phone
take over payments. Call or
992-3324.
write credit manager, collect,
Phone (614) 772·5669, 260 E.
ONE bedroom apartments at
VILLAGE MANO~ In Middleport Main St ., Chillicothe, Ohio
45601.
for $104 monthly plus elec. or
$)30 Including electric. LOWER 1975 Ford Gran Torino Elite, 2 dr.

RATES FOR SENOR CITIZENS,

Convenient to shopping on
Third and MiiiStreets in Mid-

Installed

304-415-0386

614-423-6474
Aluminum-Vinyl-Steel
·Continuous Guner
Repflcerntllt
Windowund Doors
Frtt Estlmot"
We rocom mend oncl
Sell Qulff.ty S-9-76

h.l., V-B engine, oiHI rodlol

f'
b
f
•ret, a·c. p.s., p. ·· om· m
ster&amp;e with tape
ond
other extras. Cal 992·7055.

by
Licensed Installer
24 Hour Pbone service

10:00-0ean M•rtfn 3,4,15; Rookies 6,13; Switch 8,10;
News 20.
10:JO-Bfack Perspective On The News 20.
11 :00-News 3,4,6.8,10,13.15; ABC New&amp; 33.
11 :3&lt;&gt;-Presldentlaf Primaries 3,4,6.8,13,15; Movie
" Fall Safe" 10; Janakl 33.
12 :00-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Mystery of the Week
4,6, 13; Movie ''Silent Night, Blo.ody Night" 8.
1:3l)-Tomorrow 3, .4; News 13.

BORN LOSER
~e

1l·US, N\11 PD{ ~
IT"? A?AV I~
60~D

Shepard Contractors

Klfo'

IT \LJIU.. ~ t,OiiR~ I'Jil'(XIR
21..-r BIR'TH~, IF !./OJ
PR0/;\1'7~ 1m 10 ~!&lt;X

-j:.

~llJIMIDY;::t.;:::t -.J

Phone 742-2409
Box 28A
Rutland, 011.
4-26-1 mo.

UIIICtambletheoer-Jumbleo,
one letter to each oquon, to
form four ordinary wordo.

EXPERIENCED

cont1ct1ng
owner.

R.

Codner,

.:::s..
.
.
SMITH NELSON

--

. tiTTLE

t--Fl

MOTORS, INC.
n. !112-2174
,_

FREE KJ!lw~ATES
Insulation Services

Slnict
fill Conlullltion

Ann's Bridal and
AnniversaiJ Servi~

F i~a nc.!.~~~ .v_ai Ia ble
Blown into Walls &amp; Attics

STORM
WINDOI'l(S &amp; DOORS ,
REPlACEMENT
WINDOWS
AlUMINUM
SIDING-SOFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

Y........y'•

ALLEYOOP

I'Ll "mY A LITTI.f
I!VA61VE ACTION ,

LARRY
LAVENDER
Syracuse, Ohio
~~-

HANG ON!

Ph . ttl-3993

by

·4· 10-1 mo .

10 acres with new home, built to BRADFORD,

your opoclflcollano, Fort Mollo
1'A

acre

lot1

Au1Uoneer.

Com·

plate Service. Phone 949-2487

or 9.-!9-2000. Racine, Ohlg, Crltt

available, Route!.(!, Klngob&lt;iry _ B
_r.:c
adf_o_;
rd:...'- - - - -- Rood. Contact CUne'1 Construe·

Aluminum Siding,
Roafing, Gutters,

Phone 992-7790,
3 bedrm. houoo In Middleport
near park. Swimming pool and
stores. Phone 992-7667 or 992·

river
DOWN

Pairtilg 111d ,Repair

1 Gh111Uy
wear
! German city
3 Imaginary

(hdlt.)

TROMM CONSt

«Dlltaff rabbit
5 Hil1ll

rJ.

Shrojllhlre,

Ens·

'=="""',___

I Traitor
7 Zest for
Uving
(2 wda.)
a An·anged In
a aeries

667-3!119.

model. total oloc .. 3 bedrm .. 2 NEW homo far solo, 3 bodnnt.,
full baths, kitchen, don, living
aewlng room, 2 ctramlc baths,
toaster~, Irons, all
dleport. Brand new high qualiroam and aarch, $16.000.
personalized kitchen b&lt;iilt for
lawn mower,
ty apartments . See the
S.UOO.
Phone
(
'li90, Kenneth
the homemaker. Plenty of
next
fo
Highway
Garage
manager at Riverside Apart - -=':-::-:---:--:c--:---,-:-::--:::c:Adkins,
garden space on thl1 one, acre
an Rauto 7. Phone (61A) 985ments or call 992·3273. Fur· SEARS alec. fireplace, 110 or 220,
lot. Approx, 2 ono·fourth mlloo
382S.
Rlshed
apartments
olto
$75. Phone Howard llrchfieid, 4 ROOMS, lotolly furnished an
from
Rt.
•
7
an
S.R.
124.
Toward
available.
742-2176,
Lincoln Hgts., eJ&gt;Ccellent shape,
REMOOELING, Plumbing healing
Ru~and on south oldo of rood,
'ust needs point. large kitchen,
and off lypoo of gonorol ropolr.
recently
Watch
for
sign,
AL
TROMM,
One bedrm. and 2 bedrm. fur- GRAVELY trotter
arga basement, $10,900.
Work guarontHd 20 year• eJC·
nished apartments. Phone
overhauled with 30 inch rotary
BUILDER,
Rutland,
Phone
742·
Phono992-7648,
porlenco. Phano 992-2409.
9'12-3129 or 992-5434.
mower and slky. Alii a Chalmers
23:28.
t omblne 60 seriet ·with sacker ~ bedrm. electric ranch , one%
D&amp;D
TIU!E Trimming, 20 yOGn ex·
TWO trallert for rent , one two
3 or ~ bedrm. home on I acre
both, garage , patio, new lot on
but no ben, In fair condition:
perlenc•. ln1ured free
bedrm., other 3 bedrm . Located
ground, 1 milotoulh of Chester
Rt, 7. Law thirties. Phone 1
Calf 1614) 378-~1 or conlact
oollmatoo. Call 992-23114 or
on or n1t0r Kingsbury Road. I or
ort Rt. 7. Fomlfy and living
(614)
667-3956.
Horo
d
Booton
,
Roule
1.
(614) 698-7257 Albany.
2 children , Phone 742·3122.
room,
dining
room,
bollt-ln
kil·
Roedavlllo, Ohio 45772.
6 spacious rooms, remodeled,
chon, all carpeted, full olD SEWING MACHINE ~opoln, ,.,.
TRAILER space for rent in Midnice yord , Phano992-7394.
LOSE -lght w!lh Now Shape
bo11monl and garage, clly
vlco, all makoo, 992·2284. The
dloporl. Phanem-~~Table11 and Hydrex Water Pilla
water, ,natural gas. S..n by
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
TRAILER •pace, Co . ~d . 17, 8 miles
at Dutton Drug, M iddleport,
OpPI. Call (614) 985·38-42.
Authorized Singer Saloo and
and Nelson Drug.
from mine. Phone 742-2577.
Service. We sharpen Sclators.
1.72 Acroo. Phone742·2359.
DAIRY or beef farm, Iorge barn N. H. Grinder mixer, N.H. f04 hoy
EXCAVATING, dozor, looclor and
with stanchions, milk house,
conditioner. Phone Virgil Win·
backhoe work; dump trucko
don , (614)985-38-46.
400 gallon bulk tonk , water
and
lo-bayo far hire: will haul
Virgil B. Sr., Reittar
well , 60 acres of pasture with
fill
dirt,
lop soil, lim11fono and
lypowrlter, $10.00: now 110 Mechanic Pomeroy, 0.
ponds, Call collect (614) 685- ANTIQUE
gravof. Coil Bab or ~ogor Jof.
cro11bow $25.00; metal typing
Phone 992-3325 . ·
~7 after 6 p.m.
fen, day phone 992·70B9,
dotk, $10.00: pal belly slave
nlghl p/tone m-3525 or m.
$65.00: Brlllony Spaniol AKC OVER 3 ACRES - l .C.
5232.
female , 2 yeari , $45 .00. Phone
water, 2 septic tanks and
9'12·7805.
SEPTIC TANKS cleaned. Modern
utility building. Sp•ce for 2
VEGETABLE planla of all kind1, 10 =~::::':
EG I:ST:CE:':R
C 'EO
O:::--,A:-n-g-u•--;-h-ard
--:-.-:P:;-h-on-e trailers. $11500.00.
Sanllollan. 992-3954 or 992different varletin of tomatoes ,
5'168.
OLD CHARMER - 6
Including non -acid while 9'12-2789.
Will do roofing, construction,
tomato. Very large selection of 1974 model Sea Star Ba11 boot
rooms, modern I•;, baths,
TUPPERS PLAINS plumbing Oad hooting. No job
bedding plonu . Al so with trc~ller, 75 h.p . Johnson mod. kit. with cook and
About 5 yrs. old. 3 Brs,,
too
large or tOQ 1mall. Phone
Geraniums ond other potted
motor and occMsoriet. Phone
bake units, 3 bedrooms
ceramic bath, utility rm.,
742-2348.
plants. Hanging baskets.
949-2545 ,
with closets, steam heal,
carpeted, carport, large
Cleland Fcrma ond GreenEXCAVAnNG, dozer, backhoe
full basement, 2 porches.
garden, metal storage
house. Geraldine Cleland; 1010 John Deere Dozer, phone
and dllchor, Chcnioo R. Hatand nice view of the Ohio
949·2463.
bldg. $16.900.
Rcx:lne.
field, Bock Hoo Service,
River
.
$29,500.
POMEROY - Ranch type,
Rutland, Ohio. Phone 742-2008.
MODERN walnut console, AM-FM 1967 International pkkup truck
IMMACULATE
3
4 Brs., 2 baths, utility rm.,
with cattle rocks. Phone 742·
radio , ~ speed cnanger.
GREG'S C8 SALES, located at Er·
bedrooms with nice closets,
2746or742-2465.
basement w-rec. rm., farge
Balance $103.40 or terms . Cell
win's Gulf Service, Mid·
enclosed porch. Gar•ge.
992-3965.
USED washer and dryer, good shiny oak floors, utility,
dloport, Ohio, Phone m.
Not very Qld, $30,000.
2438,
COAL, llmo•fone and all typos ol condition, $125. Phone m - front porch and farge
PRICED
TO SELL - 2
.::
584
=
3:...
garden
space
with
young
soh clnd rock salt for Ice end EXCAVATING,
BACKHOES AND
' fruit trees. Only $19,500.
story home, 3 farge brs.,
snow removal . b:celslor Scllt
DOZER,
lARGE
AND SMALL.
RIVER LIVING- · Enloy
1'12 baths, dining rm.; full
Works , East Main St., Pomeroy,
,SEPTIC TANKS INSTALLED. IIILL
the
summer
boating,
Ohla. Phone 992-:1891,
basement, garage. This
TURF TRIM
PULLINS, PHONE 992-2478 DAY
swimming &amp; fishing on the
home Is In excellent
OIINIGHT,
'
PUSH MOWERS
BEAN POSTS. Caii247-JOn.
Ohio R. Good level lot,
condition, Overlooks the
DOZER
work:
110.00
per
ltour
30",3 HP, Bi.S Enu_:
MAKE spring clean ing profitable,
$4,000.
river. SIS.SOO.
.
with
8
II,
blodo,
For
limber
or
turn unwonted Items Into cosh.
BEAUTIFUL - New 3
$89.95
RUTLANDAREA-1 floor
monoy, Phonom-2595.
Ad~Jettlse in the Want Ads .
bedrooms, nice kit. and
plan, 3 Brs .. nice equipped
lOCUST potts, round or split.
TURF TILL
dining . Full baserT!enf,
kitchen, own water system,
Phone 949-277~ .
carport. utility , and 2
full b•sement, farge
TILLERS
acres.
$32,500.
STEREO-radio, modern doolgn,
garage,
c•rport. ~w steel
1968 Skyline trailer, 12x60, and
31;, H.P:: B&amp;S Eng.
om-fm I'Cldio, 8 trock tape com·
WHAT A BUY - A 4
siding, about 3 acre&amp;.
lond. 3 bodrm . very good condl·
$163.95
binollon . Balance $101.20 or
bedroomer with closets,
$28,000.
lion, N,OOO, Phone 992·5491
t•l"ml, Coli992·3965.
hot water heat, large
or992-5972.
MIDDLEPORT- ' story
dining and living, Only
ONE Hereford cow with call (half POMEROY LANDMARK
frame, 5 Brs. , 1'1&gt; baths,
1975 All alum, conot. 19 fl. mini·
$16,500.
Murray·Grey) one polled
utility rm., dining rm.,
... _Jack W, ~rsey.Mtr.
home, 112,500. Excoll. Phone
~ereford heifer to freshen in
LOVELY - 2 bedrooms,
(61A) 843-2621,
small basement, 2 farge
rlil Phone 99Z-2111
September. Phone (614) 9115·
bath, equipPed kit.. new
enc, porches, garage &amp;
.C2&lt;48 In evenings or on .
front porch. St. drs. &amp;
carport. S12.000,
wHkends.
windows . B•sement, farge
POMEROY - BRICK 120 Loculi pooh. Phone 742·2359.
lot. $13.500.
Live In the nice :r Br.
1S7 ACRES - 4 .Brs., bath,
Apartment and rent the 2
MODE~N Walnut Consolo, am-fm 3 bedrm. homo In Rustle Hills,
2
ponds,
fences,
lfmbar,
60
furnished
apartments for
radio , 4 s~ed changer.
Syracuse .
Will
consider
Jolanco $102.30 or terms. Call
income.
Located
.In
roosonably priced mobile homo acres of tractor land.
9'12-3965.
'
$60,000.
excellent neighborhood In
on trade. Phone 992-7523.
BUILDING LOTS - or
llood condition. 122,1100.
GRAVELY tractor 7.6 h.p, 32 ln.
acreage
. Call 992-3325.
qoocS UHCI homH 1" bllng
mower. recently overhoul.d.
BUY NOW AS IT WILL BE
taken up rlpjdfy.
Fino canditlqn, $425.00. Call
HIGHER LATER.
9'12·7205.
992-2259 or ft2~2UI

THOMAS JOSEPH
31 Salt tree

ttBelalan

ROOMY 7 yr. old ano story wood
3578.
frame, two bedrm. home
located betwHn Caafvlllo and Rutlond
742-2321
19 ONE·HALF acres farm, well
Tuppon Plains. One aero lot,
All Work Guarlnleed
suited for beef cattle, has lor;e
two car gorogo, clly walor, goa
Fru Estimates
barn, pond and fruit trMs. The
heat,
hardwood
floors,
5·5·1 mo.
farm,houae It 2 1tory, 7 rms.,
carpeted living room, nice
_;:..:...:..:.:.::::,..J
and bath, $16.000. Also 24 x 60
view, $21.1100. Phone (61 A)
Elcona double wide trailer, on
one-half ocrelot, Troller Is IW.t

IAanrera ODOrt•
YolitcallfiiiMC fA Ulle, ••• thllll
n,.,u., fori-FA!! II'I!!CH

31 Shelf

The Complete .
Remodeling Service
For Your _l:lolri~ -

lion, Route 143, Jerry Cline.

~-·-·1
J.,....., EJECT POKER BEHAlF IHAKIN
.

t'INM~eu( ·

----

·~:-:l: - ·- ~.:::·.::-:.-

Area . Also~

c

U'ITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

OPEN
D•v• •nd evenings ••cept
Tues. 1nd Wtcl. _ or by

Noble Summit Rd.,
Middleport
PHONE m-5724
5-3·1 mo.

Pageville , Ohio. .

Middleport, NIGHTCRAWLERS, Mark and Mike

5434.

Sol" &amp; S.rvict
2013 loth Ave.
Parkersburg, w. Va .

AndAnnitlnlry

D. BUI't1GARDNER

one metallic red motorcycle
helmet. Sea Conny Burbridge,

A&amp; YOURS!

open ~ p.m. cfiiiVcto••d all day Mondays

s.tic Systems

Complete Bridll

Above and below ground ·
pool kits fur the do-ll·
yourself man,
All pool supplies available~
too.

blue with black 1lrlpos; 30·30
gauge rifle wlfh power scope;

...IT WOLI~P fNPiiEP &amp;to A
MIRACLE IF H~ •u,lt7TAWT
FACJ;'LI~T FORMLII.A" COULD
fMPICOrE ON.SIICH 81!AIJTY

Donelll's PlzzC!I
lddle~rt, Ohio

Siding eent..

$60Q.

Registered Irish Setter, male,
$100. Conloct ~Ita Rou1h, 1mile
outRt. 143, offRt. 7.

FU~NISHEO , 2 bedrm. oporlmenl , :-::'L::Oo":
nd:::o::,C
: :I::
•Y':'·::I6:;l..:
•)c:9..:85
:::·..:4::
222::;:..c::cdult s only ,

Coli Ulll141·2112
or 941-2211
3-28-1 mo .

SALES&amp; RE _NTAL
Travel Traflen

17 Cole Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Telephone (61~1 HZ-3768
We Deliver
4-25-1 mo.

Phone 742-2217 .

downspouh,

Graduate.
Let DON Elli'S riloke the ·
pfzz. for your alter
gradu1tlon party . Call us at
992-6167 and we will moke
YOIW party something fu
remember. Chock our
e!.':!l rate&amp;.

RAINBOW RIDGE
( Buhon Arool
LONG BOTTOM

lWIN CITY
MACHINE SHOP

1969 Dod9e Dart, 1972 Suzuki trail

&amp;

CODNER'S CAMPERS

ARE AVAILABLE
AT

TWO hlghback swivel von l~:~ufl,
out of 1975 Von . Block, $75.

bike. Phone 992-75S9.
TROUTWOOD Camper,

on· U~•:

__

.

old !

Congratulation;

. ..,.

Mike Young, Manager
Sales and Installation
· Rt. !, Pomeroy, Ohio4576!
.· Pbone da.v'_or night · . ,
. LU;Lmo .' , I
.......,614-992-2206
~
-~ -- --~ 311.::. ·... ~ I

bring us on jeep or AMC

or

fur~ICII, Wlftr lltlttrs,
water softntrs, lnsttlltd &amp;
rtptlrtd, Stw •••·

save.

550.00 cash in hand if we
can not beat any deal you

reol.

b1rn, shingles, build up,

"ellng and installation.'
. We' ll bring samples to yout !
. :homo with no obligation
·see haw you can realll .

6·30 a.m . to 5: 00 p.m

new

palntlnt, tltctriCII work,

.SLOAN'$
CARPOING

p.m.

(5) 11 , 18 , 25 (6) 1, 4tc

. . w...,
' 1 - - -·" - ·~ -

dillon. Phone (614) 985-3565.
NOTICES
---------..---------- - ATTN : II
...
1972
one-hall ton pickup, good
AlL IIOUSEWIVES
NOTICE OF ELEC'MON
condition.
Phone (614) 378·
All Yard Sal es , Rumrilage ,
ON !SSUE OF
~9.
Porch end Basement Porch
BONDS FOR
end Basement Sa les , etc .
SOUTHERN LOCAL
1971 Plymouth Fury ill, p.s., foe.
must be paid in advance .
SCHOOL DISTR t.CT
air. See at 131 Ebeneset St. ,
,Get your In In early by
Not ice Is hereby gi"Ven thet
Pomeroy, Ohio offer 5
by
our
office
at
stopping
in pursuance of r esolut ions ol
.
The
Dally
Sentinel,
111
the boa rd of t? ducallon of the
VA~D Sale, Wed• .. Thursday, and
Court St. or wr i ting Bo x
South ern
Local
Sc h ool
Friday at
Betty
Moore
729,
Pomeroy
,
Ohio
45769
Distri ct ,' adopted on the 18th
residence , At . 7 by·pou,
with
vour
remi
ttance
.
day ot February, 1976, and the
Howell Hill Rd . above the bar·
9th day of March , 1976, there
rels .
w ill be subm i tted toe vo te of
the elec tor s of sai d sc hool
1967 Fo--rd-;-:::
G-,
ol:-o-xi:-e-:5::-.-:
00 2-,d-r."'h-.o--:rd·
di strict at a special elec tion to
top , v.e, standard·. Phone
be held there in on J.une B. 1976,
992-2092.
at !he regular pla ces of votin g
ther ein , the question of issuing
bonds of . said board of RACINE Fire Deportment will
education in the amount of
na~e o gun shoot Saturday at
fQur hundred twenty thou sand
6:30p.m. at their new bullding
de lia rs ($.420,000) fo r t he
OLD furniture, Ice boxes, bross
off Bashan Road .
purpose of c onst ruc't ing ,
beds, old wall telephones and
furni shin g and equipp ing For Memorial Day, beautiful
parts , or complete household~.
additional school fa cili ties at
selection flowers , baskets,
Wrlle M. D. Miller , ~t . 2,
th e h igh sc hool site and
spray$, loose flowers , vases.
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call m-7760.
purchasing bleachers for th e
Foye'• Gill Shop, North 2nd 51 ..
high sthool gymnasium .
Middleport. Open daily 9 a.m. TIMBER. top price for standing
Th e maximum number of
llmbor. Call (6") 446-8570.
1116 p.m.
years during which said bond s
are to run is twenty years .
CHICKEN B.B.Q. Ra cine Fire CASH paid for all moke• ond
The estimated average
models of mobile homes .
Dept., Sunday, Moy 30, 12
lldd itlona l ta x rate out si de of
Phone area code 61.4·423-9531 .
noon.
th e ten m il l limita tion as
c ertified by the Co~nty
$$Cosh$$$ for junked auto . Frye's
Aud itor is 3.32 m ! lls tor each
Truck Auto Ports , Rutland,
one dollar of valuation , whi ch
Phone 742-2081 .
clmo unts to 33 .2 ce nts for each
one hundred dollars· of
DEALERS In junk can , scrap iron,
valuation .
metalt. Phone 992-5468.
The polls tor sai d election DO YOU HAVE PA~TY PLAN EX ·
w ill be open at 6 :30a .m ., and
PERIENCE? FRIENDLY TOY
rema in open until 7: 30p .m . of
PA~TIES HAS OPENINGS FO~
sai d dey .
MANAGE~S IN OU~ A~EA .
By order of the Board of
RECRUITING
IS EASY BECAUSE FU~NISHEO apt., couple only, all
Elections of Meigs County,
OEMS HAVE NO CASH INVEST·
utilities paid . $130 per month .
Oh io.
MENT, NO COLLECTING OR =:-':P:':h"':
Ern es t A . Wlngell ,
on:Co'::m
::=-.,::39:.:7..:57o::.r::.
992
:.:.:·2:;5::.
71:.:._
DELIVERINGS: CALL COLLECT
Cha irman
· Dorothy M . Johnston ,
Director
Deted - May 10, 1976

Nttd

repaired? "oult, roof,

7'2-Ull

bumper, stalnles9 ext. m irrors, dark blue finish . Less
than 3,8()(1 miles &amp; truly like new.

;in~~~?'~e;~~c1i1~~at~OrO~i~ : 1Jj1~~=3~=~=~=~~

change, col lection or service
ch arges .
These bon ds are issued for
the p.u rpose of m akl nQ im ·
provements to t he waterwOrks
System of the vii lag~. und er
au thority of the general .l aw s
of th e State of Ohio , par .
ticularty the Uniform Bond
Law of the Ohio Revised Cede ,
pursuant to an o rd inance
passed by the counc il of said
~Jill age on Ma y 3, 1976.
These bonds will be seid to
the bidder offering to pur ·
chase the bon d~ at the lowes t
ne t in t e re~t cost to the Villag e,
such c ost t.o be determined by
deducting the total amount ot
any premium off ere d trom th e
agg regat e amount of in teres t
payable upon Btl the bonds
from Jul y I, 1976, until their
re spective dates of maturity .
No bid for less than par plus
accr ued In terest will be en
ter talne~ and the ri ght is
reserved to r elect any and ali
bids .
·
Each bi d must be ac '
com pan ied by cash , a bank
cas hier's or offi cia l 's check or
a ce rt ified ch eck , or any
combination th.ereof, not
drllwn upon er certi fi ed by the
bidder. payable to Si:Jid
village , equal to at least one
per ce nt ( 1 per ce nt) of th e
amount of th e bond issue , upon ·
ce ndltlon tl'la t if the bid is
acc ep ted , th e fi scal offic;er of
said vi llag e will deliver the
bonds with in thir ty (30) days
of the de le of .the awar~ to the
successful bidder . w1lh the
usual delivery papers , no
arbitrage ce rtif icate and a
com plete , certi fied transcript
of the proce edings , sh owing
the bonds to ha&gt;.J e been l eg ally
Issued , and ttl e bidder will
receive and pay · for such
bond~ as may be i ssued as
above se t forth , said cash ,
check or combinat ion th ereof
to be r e lllined by sai d vi llag es
as
full
and
comp l et e
llqu l dat~d
damage s and
cashed only if sa id condition is
not fulfilled : or said cash or
cl'leck or combination thereof
to be re turned promptly at the
r equest of the successful
bidd er If the bonds and fran .
script are not delivered within
the time specified here in.
Tl'le bonds w ill be delivered
tor payment within the St ate
of Ohio to the purchaser or to a
bank d esig nated by the pu r ·
chaser at the expense of sai d
'.li!lege . The expense of such·
deli"Very will not be considered
In de t ermining the high es t
bidder . Delivery at any Other
place shall be at the request
- and expense of the pu rc haser .
Pa yme nt shall be mad e In
imm ed iate or Federal funds
en the dal e of d elivery .
•u It is antlc l pt~ted that CUSlP
.,, ident if ication numbers will be
· · printed on these bonds . but
•ne ither the fa i lure to pri nf
h,such number on any bond nor
... ,anv error with respect there to
- shall c ons t itut e cause tor a
»• failure or refusal by th e
v purch aser thereof to acce pt
,. de livtry of and pay for sa id
•· bonds in acc ordance with tt1e
.. term s of t he purc hllse con .
,i.trac t. All· elC pen ses In r elation
to 1he pr inting of CUSIP
number s on said bonds Shall
1 be paid for by ·sa id v illag e,
11provided , however , that the
, CUSIP Servi ce Bureau charg e
•· tor th e assignment of seld
shell
be
th e
·'numbers
y .reapons l bll lty or end shall be
.. pa id for by the purchaser .
•· No con ditional b ids w ill be
" · r ecei~Je d .
The approv i ng
b op in lon ot Pe ck, Sl'laffer &amp;
· Williams , Cincinnati, Ohio ,
w111 be furni shed to the sue .
cessful !Jidder at his expense
~:as a 1erm of sale . The v illage
.!wil l pay fer the prlnJJI!g of the
bonds . which shall have
. ~: pr i nted thereon the tel(t ol the
:. lega l approving op inion .
... The bids will be coru ldered
and ac ted upon at a meeting of
.-.r the coun cil of sai d v illage on
'6 June 21. 1976.
to
Bids should be sealed and
endorsed :
" 810
FOR

Roclno. Ohio

R&amp;JIIIIIH,COINS
CIWt

197S CHEVROLET
$S495
4 wh. drive, '-' ton , 8' Fleetslde, Fri. wheel locks, 4
speed trans .. P. steering, H. duty llres, rear step

\2 00
for
so
word
minimum .
Each add i tiona l word l

cents .

Raci• Plumbing
&amp;Heating

..,, Sell " fl'ldl

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

Cal l Steve Walbu rn, 992-2087 or

Mike Magnotta, 9'12-3727.
EXPE~IENCEO painton, flt&gt;ible

1971 FORD STA. WAGON
$1495
V-8, automatic, P. steering , good !Ires, clean Interior.

For Want A d Sen ice
S ce nts per word one

WILL DO odd jobs. roofing, pain-

COINS
CURRENCY
SUPPLIES
METAl,
DETECTORS .

-~EDNI!S'DAY,MAV26,

5:00-Bonanza 3; P•rtrldge Family 8; Mission : Impossible 15.
.
5:30-Adam-124, 13; NewS6; Family Affair 8; Eltctrlc
Company 20,33.
,
6:00-News 3.4.8. 10,13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6:JO-NBC News3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 4;
CBS News 8,10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Lllflas,
Yoga an~ You 33.
7:00-Truth or Consequences 3; V•uctevffft 4; Bowling
For Dollars 6; Country Place 8; News 10; N1me
That Tune 13; Family Afl•lr 15; Understanding
Africa 20; Wild, Wild World of Animals 33.
7:JO-Hollywood Squares 3; let's Deaf With It 6;
Match Game PM 8; Evening Edition with Martin
Agronsky 20; Price Is Right 10f To Tell The Truth
13; Hf9h School T.V. Honor Society 15; Flmlly
Theatre 33. ·
8:00-Fabufous Funnies 3,4,15; Happy Days 6,13; Bugs
Bunny-Road Runner 8,10; Burglar-Proofing 20; W.
Va. Track Meet 33.
8:JO-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13; Good Times 8,10;
Consumir Survival Kit 20,33.
9:oo-Pollce Woman 3,4, 15; S. W. A. T. 13; Commanders 6; M-A-S-H 8, 10; Mus It In America 20;
Opera Theater 33.
9:»--ne D•y At A Time 8,1 0.

Business Services

2 SIGNS Pomeroy
OF .
,

a.m .

TUESDAY, #My 25, 1976

r'av•r

tm

6:00-Summer Semnter 10.
6 : 1~FII'm Report 13.
6:2t-The Story 13,
6:lt-Columbua Todey 41 Ntw161 Summer Stmt111r
I; Farmtlme 10.
6:~nca of P"...,tlon 10.

6 :45-Morntno Rtport 3.
6 :50-Good Morning, Wnf Vlrgfnfl 13, .
.
6:5S-Oluck White RllpOrfs 10; Good Morning. Trl
State 13.
7:00-Todey 3,4,15; Good Morning, Amartc1 t.131 Cas·
News I; Bugs Bu.nny &amp; Friends 10.
7:.._Scfloolln 10.
1:00-LIIIfl 6; Capt, Kangaroo 1,101 Sllmt St. 33.
I :.._Big Valley 6.
9:00-NofForWbmtn0nly31 Phil OonlhutA.151 Lucy
Show I ; Mlkl 0ougiU10; Morning with D.J . 13.
9:30-A.M. 3; One Life to Llv. 6; TlftfetliH I I Mlkt
Douglas 13.
10:0t-CeltbrftY Swttp~tlkll3.4, 15; Edge of Nlghf 6;
Price Is Rtght 1,10.
10:....High Rollers 3,4,15; Olneh 6.
11 :0o-Whttt of Fortune 3,15; WHkdly AI !Mmblf
1,101 Ftrmer'a D1UQhltr 13.
11 :»-Hollywood Squarn 3.4.151 Hippy 01y11~1 ~ow
of Life 1,10; Sellme St. 20,33.
11 :55-Tikl Klf'r I ; Dan lmtf'l World 10.
12 :ClO--MID'lfv
12:1»-Megnlflcenf Morblt Mlc:hlne3,15; Ltt'a Mike 1
Deal 13; Bob Brtun 41 Ntw1 6,1,10.
12:JO-Takt My Advice 3,151 All My Ch!ldrtn 6,131
SHrch lor Tomorrow. 1,10.
12:4J-.Efec. Co. 33• .
12 : 5~NBC News 3,15,
1:00-Nows 3; Ryan' a Hope 6,131 Phli OonWiut II
Young &amp; the Rntlna 101 Not For Women Only 15.
1:»-DIYI of Our Lfws 3.4,51 Rhyme I R_, 6,131
As the World Turns 1,10.
2:00-UG,OOO Pyramid 6,13.
2:.._Doetorl 3.4,151 BrHk the Bank 6,131 Guiding
Light 1,10.
.
3:00-Anothtr World 3,4,151 General Hlilplt1f 6,131 AI
In Thl Family 1,101 Kup's Show 20.
3:»--ntLifetoLivt13; MlckeyMouNCiub61 #Mtch
Gamel,lO.
4:1»--Mfaltr Cortoon 3; #Mrv Griffin 41 So.-..1 151
Btwltchecl6; Mickey Moult Club II Miller Rogen
20,33; Movie " limo Running Out" 101 OINih 13.
4:.._Btwitchecl3; Mod Sq~~ad 6; Be-ly Hillbflflll II
Sewmt St. 20.33; Flintstone• 15.
5:00-Bonlllza 3; Parfridgt Family I I Million: Impossible 15.
5:3t-Adlm-12 4; Newa 61 Family Affair 11 Efac, Co.
20,33; Adlm-12 13.
6:00-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC NIIWI61 Zoom 20,33.
6:....NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News T31 Andy Grlllilh 61
CBS News 1,10; Hodgepod(le Lodge 201 VIlla Altgrl
33.
7:00-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Tr~lh 41 Bowilnglor
Dollara 6; Pop Gon lhl Country 11 Nowa 101 Wild
Kingdom 13; Arta #Myor'a Report 151 Book 11M!
20; Know Your Sc;ltool :13.
7:.._Lut of thl Wild 31 Name That Tune•1 Mitch
Game PM 61 12,5,000 Pyr1mfd I; Evening Edltlan
wlfh Martin Agronlky 20; Thl Juclge101 To Tell the
Truth 131 Book Beat 33.
8:00-Lfftlt HOUII onthe Prtlrfe 3,4,151 Blonfc Wom111
6,13; Pilot I, iO:.Tribal Eye 331 Mllrk of JIZZ 20.
8:3t-Lowtll Thomas Remtmt..r• 20.
· ·'· ,
9:00-Senford &amp; Son 3,.1.151 Boretta 6,131 C1nnGil 11
Theatar In Amerlcl 33; Movft "Thl Ntkld Run·
nor" 101 Olympfld 20.
I: .... Fay 3,4,15,
10:00-Hawk 3,4,151 Straky &amp; Hutch 6,13; News 20.
10:3t-Afmenoc 20.
11 :00-Ntws 3,4,6,1,10,1~,151 ABC News 33.
11 :JO-Jolfnny Carson 3,41,5; Movie "Pl1~m1tt1" 6,131
Movie "Female Arlllllf'y" 11 Movie 'Good Neigh. bor Sam" 101 Jonakl U .
1:00-Tomorrow 3.41 Ntw113.
Cllannel Flve
9:00-71111-Club (c)
?:~ayllme (c)
1:&lt;»-Music Connection (c)
8:»-Movie: To be announcld
10:00-700 Club (c)

It Repair

t Allrl1

11 Recumbent II Cain caD
U A Kennedy II 'l)pe ol

11 Cclldultll
lhnld
lt Scoops out, II Join
u water
II Soccer
II Football
great
Jl888
II FaD beblnd
zs DeUcloua II Found In
moUUik
a rk*

WIN ~ AT

BRIDGE

Three rules for short club
NORTil
.64
• 8!
tA K8
.KQ107U
WEST
EAST
.QJU
~~++-il•i032
•QJ 1061
•K ~7
f-.f--1---4-i I • 10 1 s
•H12

l

.u

.98

soum &lt;Dl
• A KB 7
• A 32

TEAFORD

IQ6!

•J 12

Both •; ulnerable

Pan It
Pass 3 •
Pan 5·•
Pass
Openln11ead -'

.

Pass
Pan
Pan

Q•

1ul1J, but you lbould not 10 u
f1r •• 10me do and ~flllt to
open lour-card majon at all.
South has 4-1-H dislrllllltlon
and deflnlllly lhould opelclub, not one tplde, K1 pa

to pau II partner rat• to two

clul11 or one notrump; r1l11 1
spade ret(IOIIM and bld 0111!
tpade If Pll1l1lt' ieopoc... wllll
a retl suit.
The blddln1 In the box
lllowa how North and South
can reaeh the proper contract
of five clubs 1fter a cllib OJ*tInr. After 1 tplde CIPIIIIIII
they will al1001t 11111'111 lull In
three notrump which 1CJe1
down when Wnt O)ltllll 1
heart.

~h~
A Tenneuee reader lib,
"What club lhould I plaJ frem
QIOU I? The contract lillhrte
nolrump. My partner opelil
the deuce of clubll. The k.ln&amp;
and one appear In dlimmJ and
the kln111 played."
The IDIWtr bere II that )'01
play the 10 11 1n tiiCCNrllilll
card. 'lllla II the hipelt card
you can 11p1".

One letter simply •lands lor another, In this sample A Ia By Olwald" Jallles Jacoby
uaed lor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Sln11e !ellen, Let's take another look at
apostrophes, lhe length and formation of the words are all the short cl'ub as uaed by ex·
hints. Eocb day the code irlters are dU!erent.
peru . There . are three
"nevers" here:
CllYPTOQUOTES
1. You never open a twocard
club suit.
M
FNDPT
NEUPE
0 NCI U
A M R P 2. You never open a three(Do you have 1 qu11lloll
card club suit when you have a lor the uperta? Write "Aat
YMR P U
Q A P . VEN US K M I
YN D
Q A P five-card suit aomewhere the Jacobya" care ol Ill/;
else .
newapapar. The Jacobyt 111111
QENCXIP
NL
GNFSDK
A N F P. 3. You never open a three- · an1wer Individual queatlotll
card club suit when your hand II ttampad, ""-adllrllaetl
XMP E
111eeta all requlremeniJ for an envelope• ere enclolld. Tile
M E QAC E
Yesterday's Cryploquote: A PWLOSOPHER CAN ALWAYS openlnR bid In notrump.
m011 lntarHIIIIQ queetlone
SEE BOTH SIDES OF A QUESTION, BUT NO ANSWER. The corollary to the uae of wit/ be ueed In thle column
SOURCE UNKNOWN
the short club Is t~at you tend and wit/ recti~ copiN ol

TATER'S JEST LIKE
A DADBURI\/
ALARM
CLOCK --

HE GITS

WOUND UP
II\/ TH I

DAI/TIME --

,

(lC) llt76 Kina Fe•turft Srndleatt, laC!.)

not to open four~'arcf major

JACOBY MOOERN,J

�v

·---·~ ·

_... -

.Television log for easy viewing

,. _,:::::~:~·-:·:,~:7~;:'·For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds

OF BONOS
Sealed proposals will be
re n ived by the unders igned .
the Vi llage Clerk. Of the Village
of Pomeroy . Meigs Coun ty,
Ohio , at the otr i ce of the
V illag e Cle rk. in the Munic ipa l
Build in g , Pome roy ; Ohio
45769 , until 1 ~ : 00 o' clock noon ,
at th e then prevailing stan
dard l ime In Oh io. on )un~ 21 ,
1976, at which t ime and place
the bids w i ll be publicly
opened and read , for the
pur chase et Waterwork .s
Bonds or said village , In the
princ ipal amount of SH 5. 000,
dated July \, 1916, numbered
from 1 to 95, inclusi"Ve, of the
denom 'i natlon of S5.000 ei'!lch,
·and bearing interest i;!)t the
rate of six lind one.half per
ce n t (6 1 1 pefcentl per annum ,
payable De cember I , 19 ?.6, and
semi .annuaily thereafter on
the first day of June and the
first day of Oec e'mber . Anyone
desiring to do so may present
a b id or bids for said bonds
based upon the ir beal"ing a
di ff erent rat e of interest from
that hereinabove specified,
provided that where a tr a ~ .
tiona l ln re rest rate Is bid , such
fraction sha ll be one .elghth of
one per centum or a mult ip le
the r eof . Sa ld bonds mature on
Dec~mber 1 of each of the
following
years
in
the
following amounts : $20 ,000
from 1977 to 1981 , incluSi\le ;
and $25,000 from 1982 to 1996,
in( lusive .
Unl ess pa i d from other
sour ces, prin cipal of and in ·
te r es! on said bonds are
payable fr em lim ited taxes at
Th·e Fi rst Nationlll Ba nk of

Dolley Jr .. who poued away
Mo~ 25 , 1965.
Always in our thoughts ,
Forever in our hearts .
Mother, Bertha Ooiley , Sister,

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES

II'

s PM Day Before
Publicat ion .
Monday Dead li ne 9

Eve 1yn McMi '" ·
IN MEMORY of Larry M. Spencer
who paned away 2 years ogo
25 1974 Sad! 111 ed b
May ·
·
Ym
Y
wlfeondchildren.

Cance l l ation
Corre c tion s w il l be ac
c; epted vnt l l 9 a .m . for
Day of Publl c ation .

QUAI.IlY Motor Co.

REGULATIONS

Th e Publisher r eserves
the r ighl to edit or reject
any ads deemed ob
ieclional. The publisher
wi ll not be respons tble tor
more than one incorrect
inserti on ,

LOST: Lorge tan dog , port Collie,

last seen WedneadCJy on Union
Ave., reword . Call992-23n.

1972 AMC HORNET
$1Hl
Sport,about Wagon , 6 cyl., automatic trans .. r•dlo.
good tires, while finish . good economy.

RATES

in~erlion

ling, haul ing, treework, and·

mowing, Phone 992-7-409.
WILL care for etderly person In my

homo. Phone 1 (6141 985-38-49
ot992-~10.

Wll~

do pointing , ln1ide or out.

M inimum Charg e SI .OO
14 cents per word thr ee
consecut ive
insertions .
16 ce n ts per word six
consecu tive
Insertion s.
'lS Per Cent Dis count on
paid ads and ads paid
within 10 davs .

rates , free eatlmatea. All work

guaranteed. Phone

992 -~

742-3081.

or

WILL do boby1 lttlng in your home.
Con start anytime after May 'lJ ,

Call949-2824 .

FLOORING, ceiling , paneling and
corpentry. Phone992·2759.

-=:'::::::::=:=:=::':::=:=::':::=--

Jf~ee esii~afes

BLIND ADS

Additional 25c Charg e
per Adve rtis emenl.

OFFICE HOURS

Daily , 8 . 30 a .m . to 11 : 00
Noon Sa turd ay .
Phone today 99 2 2156

992-7676.

WATERWORKS

BY ORDER OF THE
,· COUNCIL OF THE 'VILLAGE
" OF POME.ROY, OHIO
,\

Jane Walton ,
Village Clerk
Village of
Pomeroy .O hlo

,Ill II , ,18, 25, 31c

"

•

•

I

INMATE ESCAPES
MARION,Ohlo (UPIJ- An
i(i-nate who walked away
from -the Marion Correctional
Facility farm Monday'' was
reported stU! at large early
today.
Officials B,ald Billy Joe
C&lt;!lburn, a native of kenton,
in Marlon for grand theft,
simply walked off the prison

farm.
They described him as ~.
I931Jo111ds, wit¥ black hair, a
mll!llache and a tattoo on his
left ann.

CAROL DAY, {518) 489-8395 or
WRITE FRIENDLY HOME PAR·
TIES, 20 RAILROAD AVE.,
ALBANY, N.Y. 12205 .

SOMEONE nuded to cut gross.

ph. m-2021 .

SALESMAN wanted for establish·

NOTICE ON FILING
OF INVENTORY
AND APPRAISEMENT
Ttle State of Ohio, Meig$

busln~u In Pomeroy,

good

starting salary . must hove good
penonallty to meet the public
and will train. Send resume to
P. 0 . Bo~~: ~ . PomeroY. Oh io

45769
County, Court of Common
Pleas, Probate DIIII$IOn.
To the Exe cutor of the HOUSEKEEPER wanled, phone
m -5941.
estate, to such of the following
as are residents ot tt\e State of
the surviving
Ohio , Vil : spouse, the nex t of kin , the
benefic iaries under the will :
end to the attorney or at .
torneys represent ing any of
the aforementioned persons : IF YOU have a service to offer ,
James R . Eads, Deceased ;
want to buy or sell something ,
Langsville, Ohio , Rutland
ore looking for work . . . or
Township , No . 21 758.
whatever . , . you'll get results
You are t1ereby notified that
foster with o Sentinel Wont Ad .
the Inventory
and
Ap .
Callm-2156.
prel sement of the estat e ot the
eforementloned ,
deceased, GARAGE Sole, Astra Plain C.B.
late of said County , was tiled
·Antenna , teveral holequln
In this Court . Said lnventor v
romance paperback books ,
and Appraisement w i ll be for
clothing ·of all different sizes
hear ing betore this Court on
the 4th day of June, 1976. at
starting Monday 2~th through
10:00 o'clock A.M.
FrkJoy 28. Located at the north
Any J)erson desi ri ng to file
end of Tuppers Plains. 'Follow
except ions thereto must file
signs.
them at least f i ve days prior to
the date set for hear ing .
GIGANTIC Yard Sale, Friday and
Given un~er my hend and
Salurday, March 28, 29. 4114
seat of said Court , this 21st day
Main
St ., Middleport . Baby ,
or May 1976
children's laths, women 's.
men's cloth ing, 197.4 Chrysler
Menning D . Webst er
station wagon, fully equipped;
Judge
By Ann B. Wa1Son
Deputy Clerk
( Sl 25 ( 61 1, 2tc

T0 ed0 ace
1

1972 G.M.C. truck, now polnl
ob, bath low mileage. Chain

link fence , 22,. tt. 2 gates.

YARD Sale, Tuesday , May 25
lhrough Friday , May 28th . Off
143 on Wolfe Pen Road. Russell
residence, 9 a.m. till4 p.m.

GARAGE

Solo ,

last

signs with

Oeveland
CLEVELAND ( UPI) The Cleveland Browns signed
quarterbacks Gene Swick of
Toledo and Craig Nagel of
Purdue Monday.
The nation's total offense
leader, Swick was selected in
the fourth ro111d of the 1976
player draft by the Browns.
He totaled 2, 706 yards last
season, 2,487 of It passing.
Swick eoinpleted 190 of 308
passes for a 61.7 per cent
average and 15 touchdowns.
He also scored eight
tnuchdowns running .
Nagel was impressive with
the Boilermakers as a
sophomore but saw little
action his final two seasons.
Swick and Nasel wUI try
out
with
six
other
quarterbacks in training
camp this s~~nmer, There
will be starter Mike Phipps,
backup 'l'en Brian Sipe and
Will Cureton and three other
free •gents,

doy

clearance, all items reduced .

Wed• .. 9:00 rill 3:00, Old 33,
Enterprise, Rose Hill .

FOUR Family Yard Sale;

BONDS.''

0

1968 Mercury, good running con.

ed

~uollc

Hills, Syracuse, Ohio. Thurtdoy

and Friday 10:00 1111 4:00, cur·
tolna , bedtprads, all lites,
children's Qnd adults clothing ,
misc. Items, all clean QOod
quality Items. Watch for signs.
tf rain , will be neKf Thurtday

and Friday.
YARD Sale, Tuooday and Wed•.
Furniture, clothing, . dishes,
misc. St. Rt. 143one-fourtl'lmile

ficm ~1. 7, look farslgn .
YA~D ~lo , Wed .. May 26 from 8
a.m. till dark at Oovld
Spencer's r11idence at the cor·
ner of Broadway and Main,
Racine, Ohio.

AKC Registered Collie Slud Service,

Stordutt

King .

Phone

(6")985-ma.
AKC Chow Chow puppies, make
good guard dogo, poll, or •how
dog•. Full podlgrHo. Phone
' (304) 675-S029.
.
AKC Roglotored Irish Soller pupploo, S60, Phone (614) 6988233 or 698-2279.
PUREBRED O.rman Shophord
female pups. Call 992-7379
ofter-4 p.m.

TO GIVE away 4 PUpPIII, pari
Boogie. Phone 949-2079.
SILVER female m(ltloluro poodle.

-

· Also , male German Shepherd.

Callm-3901.

·-· .. ···---··

··· ·- ~

1976 JEEP

1951 Ch.vrolat Pickup . Pt\one

gutters

u.t ...
.

cars.

DON SMITH
AMC JEEP

Medical Oxygen
and Supplies

~~~ ~th

Ave,
523 -9~07
Huntington, W.Va.

·

SWIMMING
POOLS

"GRAPEFRUIT PILL" with Diadox
plan more convenient than
grapefruits. Eat ·satisfving
meals and lose weight. Nelson

D_rug .
·
LOSE weight safe, ·fast , easy with
the Oiqdox pkm- Reduce fluids
with Fluldex. Nel&amp;on' Drug.

1968 300 Ford2 Dr, Grand Torino,

In

OSTER heavy duty animal clip·
poro, used ve&lt;y little, $35, Call

Phone m -3874.
Goegleln , phone 9'12-7625,
3 AND 4 RM. furnl1hed and un- ~1:::';
97 5'-7'Hc-on"d-:'o-'-::750
::"-'m-'-od
":-,ol:",::;S:-:17:::00:::-;
furnished apls. Phone m. 1972 Ford F250 truck, $1800.

Phone992·7757after~p.m.
_U..:N::.IC:=O:.::,F::.
re:.:e..:
zo::.r,::23
~c:.:u::.,11-".
.;. f;o::.
: r ,-a-,le

COUNTRY Mobile Home Park , Rt.
33, te;n miles north of Pomeroy.
or trade , $100. Phone 992-7086
Lar91 lots wlfh concret pallo1,
f
2 XI
aidewalks, runners ond off ::::":=
'•:.cr~:.:..r:.P·cm
;c:._,-_ __
street parking. Phone992-7479. PICKING up plano In your oreo,
looking for responsible party to
2 b.drm. trailer, real nice. Phone
take over payments. Call or
992-3324.
write credit manager, collect,
Phone (614) 772·5669, 260 E.
ONE bedroom apartments at
VILLAGE MANO~ In Middleport Main St ., Chillicothe, Ohio
45601.
for $104 monthly plus elec. or
$)30 Including electric. LOWER 1975 Ford Gran Torino Elite, 2 dr.

RATES FOR SENOR CITIZENS,

Convenient to shopping on
Third and MiiiStreets in Mid-

Installed

304-415-0386

614-423-6474
Aluminum-Vinyl-Steel
·Continuous Guner
Repflcerntllt
Windowund Doors
Frtt Estlmot"
We rocom mend oncl
Sell Qulff.ty S-9-76

h.l., V-B engine, oiHI rodlol

f'
b
f
•ret, a·c. p.s., p. ·· om· m
ster&amp;e with tape
ond
other extras. Cal 992·7055.

by
Licensed Installer
24 Hour Pbone service

10:00-0ean M•rtfn 3,4,15; Rookies 6,13; Switch 8,10;
News 20.
10:JO-Bfack Perspective On The News 20.
11 :00-News 3,4,6.8,10,13.15; ABC New&amp; 33.
11 :3&lt;&gt;-Presldentlaf Primaries 3,4,6.8,13,15; Movie
" Fall Safe" 10; Janakl 33.
12 :00-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Mystery of the Week
4,6, 13; Movie ''Silent Night, Blo.ody Night" 8.
1:3l)-Tomorrow 3, .4; News 13.

BORN LOSER
~e

1l·US, N\11 PD{ ~
IT"? A?AV I~
60~D

Shepard Contractors

Klfo'

IT \LJIU.. ~ t,OiiR~ I'Jil'(XIR
21..-r BIR'TH~, IF !./OJ
PR0/;\1'7~ 1m 10 ~!&lt;X

-j:.

~llJIMIDY;::t.;:::t -.J

Phone 742-2409
Box 28A
Rutland, 011.
4-26-1 mo.

UIIICtambletheoer-Jumbleo,
one letter to each oquon, to
form four ordinary wordo.

EXPERIENCED

cont1ct1ng
owner.

R.

Codner,

.:::s..
.
.
SMITH NELSON

--

. tiTTLE

t--Fl

MOTORS, INC.
n. !112-2174
,_

FREE KJ!lw~ATES
Insulation Services

Slnict
fill Conlullltion

Ann's Bridal and
AnniversaiJ Servi~

F i~a nc.!.~~~ .v_ai Ia ble
Blown into Walls &amp; Attics

STORM
WINDOI'l(S &amp; DOORS ,
REPlACEMENT
WINDOWS
AlUMINUM
SIDING-SOFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

Y........y'•

ALLEYOOP

I'Ll "mY A LITTI.f
I!VA61VE ACTION ,

LARRY
LAVENDER
Syracuse, Ohio
~~-

HANG ON!

Ph . ttl-3993

by

·4· 10-1 mo .

10 acres with new home, built to BRADFORD,

your opoclflcollano, Fort Mollo
1'A

acre

lot1

Au1Uoneer.

Com·

plate Service. Phone 949-2487

or 9.-!9-2000. Racine, Ohlg, Crltt

available, Route!.(!, Klngob&lt;iry _ B
_r.:c
adf_o_;
rd:...'- - - - -- Rood. Contact CUne'1 Construe·

Aluminum Siding,
Roafing, Gutters,

Phone 992-7790,
3 bedrm. houoo In Middleport
near park. Swimming pool and
stores. Phone 992-7667 or 992·

river
DOWN

Pairtilg 111d ,Repair

1 Gh111Uy
wear
! German city
3 Imaginary

(hdlt.)

TROMM CONSt

«Dlltaff rabbit
5 Hil1ll

rJ.

Shrojllhlre,

Ens·

'=="""',___

I Traitor
7 Zest for
Uving
(2 wda.)
a An·anged In
a aeries

667-3!119.

model. total oloc .. 3 bedrm .. 2 NEW homo far solo, 3 bodnnt.,
full baths, kitchen, don, living
aewlng room, 2 ctramlc baths,
toaster~, Irons, all
dleport. Brand new high qualiroam and aarch, $16.000.
personalized kitchen b&lt;iilt for
lawn mower,
ty apartments . See the
S.UOO.
Phone
(
'li90, Kenneth
the homemaker. Plenty of
next
fo
Highway
Garage
manager at Riverside Apart - -=':-::-:---:--:c--:---,-:-::--:::c:Adkins,
garden space on thl1 one, acre
an Rauto 7. Phone (61A) 985ments or call 992·3273. Fur· SEARS alec. fireplace, 110 or 220,
lot. Approx, 2 ono·fourth mlloo
382S.
Rlshed
apartments
olto
$75. Phone Howard llrchfieid, 4 ROOMS, lotolly furnished an
from
Rt.
•
7
an
S.R.
124.
Toward
available.
742-2176,
Lincoln Hgts., eJ&gt;Ccellent shape,
REMOOELING, Plumbing healing
Ru~and on south oldo of rood,
'ust needs point. large kitchen,
and off lypoo of gonorol ropolr.
recently
Watch
for
sign,
AL
TROMM,
One bedrm. and 2 bedrm. fur- GRAVELY trotter
arga basement, $10,900.
Work guarontHd 20 year• eJC·
nished apartments. Phone
overhauled with 30 inch rotary
BUILDER,
Rutland,
Phone
742·
Phono992-7648,
porlenco. Phano 992-2409.
9'12-3129 or 992-5434.
mower and slky. Alii a Chalmers
23:28.
t omblne 60 seriet ·with sacker ~ bedrm. electric ranch , one%
D&amp;D
TIU!E Trimming, 20 yOGn ex·
TWO trallert for rent , one two
3 or ~ bedrm. home on I acre
both, garage , patio, new lot on
but no ben, In fair condition:
perlenc•. ln1ured free
bedrm., other 3 bedrm . Located
ground, 1 milotoulh of Chester
Rt, 7. Law thirties. Phone 1
Calf 1614) 378-~1 or conlact
oollmatoo. Call 992-23114 or
on or n1t0r Kingsbury Road. I or
ort Rt. 7. Fomlfy and living
(614)
667-3956.
Horo
d
Booton
,
Roule
1.
(614) 698-7257 Albany.
2 children , Phone 742·3122.
room,
dining
room,
bollt-ln
kil·
Roedavlllo, Ohio 45772.
6 spacious rooms, remodeled,
chon, all carpeted, full olD SEWING MACHINE ~opoln, ,.,.
TRAILER space for rent in Midnice yord , Phano992-7394.
LOSE -lght w!lh Now Shape
bo11monl and garage, clly
vlco, all makoo, 992·2284. The
dloporl. Phanem-~~Table11 and Hydrex Water Pilla
water, ,natural gas. S..n by
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
TRAILER •pace, Co . ~d . 17, 8 miles
at Dutton Drug, M iddleport,
OpPI. Call (614) 985·38-42.
Authorized Singer Saloo and
and Nelson Drug.
from mine. Phone 742-2577.
Service. We sharpen Sclators.
1.72 Acroo. Phone742·2359.
DAIRY or beef farm, Iorge barn N. H. Grinder mixer, N.H. f04 hoy
EXCAVATING, dozor, looclor and
with stanchions, milk house,
conditioner. Phone Virgil Win·
backhoe work; dump trucko
don , (614)985-38-46.
400 gallon bulk tonk , water
and
lo-bayo far hire: will haul
Virgil B. Sr., Reittar
well , 60 acres of pasture with
fill
dirt,
lop soil, lim11fono and
lypowrlter, $10.00: now 110 Mechanic Pomeroy, 0.
ponds, Call collect (614) 685- ANTIQUE
gravof. Coil Bab or ~ogor Jof.
cro11bow $25.00; metal typing
Phone 992-3325 . ·
~7 after 6 p.m.
fen, day phone 992·70B9,
dotk, $10.00: pal belly slave
nlghl p/tone m-3525 or m.
$65.00: Brlllony Spaniol AKC OVER 3 ACRES - l .C.
5232.
female , 2 yeari , $45 .00. Phone
water, 2 septic tanks and
9'12·7805.
SEPTIC TANKS cleaned. Modern
utility building. Sp•ce for 2
VEGETABLE planla of all kind1, 10 =~::::':
EG I:ST:CE:':R
C 'EO
O:::--,A:-n-g-u•--;-h-ard
--:-.-:P:;-h-on-e trailers. $11500.00.
Sanllollan. 992-3954 or 992different varletin of tomatoes ,
5'168.
OLD CHARMER - 6
Including non -acid while 9'12-2789.
Will do roofing, construction,
tomato. Very large selection of 1974 model Sea Star Ba11 boot
rooms, modern I•;, baths,
TUPPERS PLAINS plumbing Oad hooting. No job
bedding plonu . Al so with trc~ller, 75 h.p . Johnson mod. kit. with cook and
About 5 yrs. old. 3 Brs,,
too
large or tOQ 1mall. Phone
Geraniums ond other potted
motor and occMsoriet. Phone
bake units, 3 bedrooms
ceramic bath, utility rm.,
742-2348.
plants. Hanging baskets.
949-2545 ,
with closets, steam heal,
carpeted, carport, large
Cleland Fcrma ond GreenEXCAVAnNG, dozer, backhoe
full basement, 2 porches.
garden, metal storage
house. Geraldine Cleland; 1010 John Deere Dozer, phone
and dllchor, Chcnioo R. Hatand nice view of the Ohio
949·2463.
bldg. $16.900.
Rcx:lne.
field, Bock Hoo Service,
River
.
$29,500.
POMEROY - Ranch type,
Rutland, Ohio. Phone 742-2008.
MODERN walnut console, AM-FM 1967 International pkkup truck
IMMACULATE
3
4 Brs., 2 baths, utility rm.,
with cattle rocks. Phone 742·
radio , ~ speed cnanger.
GREG'S C8 SALES, located at Er·
bedrooms with nice closets,
2746or742-2465.
basement w-rec. rm., farge
Balance $103.40 or terms . Cell
win's Gulf Service, Mid·
enclosed porch. Gar•ge.
992-3965.
USED washer and dryer, good shiny oak floors, utility,
dloport, Ohio, Phone m.
Not very Qld, $30,000.
2438,
COAL, llmo•fone and all typos ol condition, $125. Phone m - front porch and farge
PRICED
TO SELL - 2
.::
584
=
3:...
garden
space
with
young
soh clnd rock salt for Ice end EXCAVATING,
BACKHOES AND
' fruit trees. Only $19,500.
story home, 3 farge brs.,
snow removal . b:celslor Scllt
DOZER,
lARGE
AND SMALL.
RIVER LIVING- · Enloy
1'12 baths, dining rm.; full
Works , East Main St., Pomeroy,
,SEPTIC TANKS INSTALLED. IIILL
the
summer
boating,
Ohla. Phone 992-:1891,
basement, garage. This
TURF TRIM
PULLINS, PHONE 992-2478 DAY
swimming &amp; fishing on the
home Is In excellent
OIINIGHT,
'
PUSH MOWERS
BEAN POSTS. Caii247-JOn.
Ohio R. Good level lot,
condition, Overlooks the
DOZER
work:
110.00
per
ltour
30",3 HP, Bi.S Enu_:
MAKE spring clean ing profitable,
$4,000.
river. SIS.SOO.
.
with
8
II,
blodo,
For
limber
or
turn unwonted Items Into cosh.
BEAUTIFUL - New 3
$89.95
RUTLANDAREA-1 floor
monoy, Phonom-2595.
Ad~Jettlse in the Want Ads .
bedrooms, nice kit. and
plan, 3 Brs .. nice equipped
lOCUST potts, round or split.
TURF TILL
dining . Full baserT!enf,
kitchen, own water system,
Phone 949-277~ .
carport. utility , and 2
full b•sement, farge
TILLERS
acres.
$32,500.
STEREO-radio, modern doolgn,
garage,
c•rport. ~w steel
1968 Skyline trailer, 12x60, and
31;, H.P:: B&amp;S Eng.
om-fm I'Cldio, 8 trock tape com·
WHAT A BUY - A 4
siding, about 3 acre&amp;.
lond. 3 bodrm . very good condl·
$163.95
binollon . Balance $101.20 or
bedroomer with closets,
$28,000.
lion, N,OOO, Phone 992·5491
t•l"ml, Coli992·3965.
hot water heat, large
or992-5972.
MIDDLEPORT- ' story
dining and living, Only
ONE Hereford cow with call (half POMEROY LANDMARK
frame, 5 Brs. , 1'1&gt; baths,
1975 All alum, conot. 19 fl. mini·
$16,500.
Murray·Grey) one polled
utility rm., dining rm.,
... _Jack W, ~rsey.Mtr.
home, 112,500. Excoll. Phone
~ereford heifer to freshen in
LOVELY - 2 bedrooms,
(61A) 843-2621,
small basement, 2 farge
rlil Phone 99Z-2111
September. Phone (614) 9115·
bath, equipPed kit.. new
enc, porches, garage &amp;
.C2&lt;48 In evenings or on .
front porch. St. drs. &amp;
carport. S12.000,
wHkends.
windows . B•sement, farge
POMEROY - BRICK 120 Loculi pooh. Phone 742·2359.
lot. $13.500.
Live In the nice :r Br.
1S7 ACRES - 4 .Brs., bath,
Apartment and rent the 2
MODE~N Walnut Consolo, am-fm 3 bedrm. homo In Rustle Hills,
2
ponds,
fences,
lfmbar,
60
furnished
apartments for
radio , 4 s~ed changer.
Syracuse .
Will
consider
Jolanco $102.30 or terms. Call
income.
Located
.In
roosonably priced mobile homo acres of tractor land.
9'12-3965.
'
$60,000.
excellent neighborhood In
on trade. Phone 992-7523.
BUILDING LOTS - or
llood condition. 122,1100.
GRAVELY tractor 7.6 h.p, 32 ln.
acreage
. Call 992-3325.
qoocS UHCI homH 1" bllng
mower. recently overhoul.d.
BUY NOW AS IT WILL BE
taken up rlpjdfy.
Fino canditlqn, $425.00. Call
HIGHER LATER.
9'12·7205.
992-2259 or ft2~2UI

THOMAS JOSEPH
31 Salt tree

ttBelalan

ROOMY 7 yr. old ano story wood
3578.
frame, two bedrm. home
located betwHn Caafvlllo and Rutlond
742-2321
19 ONE·HALF acres farm, well
Tuppon Plains. One aero lot,
All Work Guarlnleed
suited for beef cattle, has lor;e
two car gorogo, clly walor, goa
Fru Estimates
barn, pond and fruit trMs. The
heat,
hardwood
floors,
5·5·1 mo.
farm,houae It 2 1tory, 7 rms.,
carpeted living room, nice
_;:..:...:..:.:.::::,..J
and bath, $16.000. Also 24 x 60
view, $21.1100. Phone (61 A)
Elcona double wide trailer, on
one-half ocrelot, Troller Is IW.t

IAanrera ODOrt•
YolitcallfiiiMC fA Ulle, ••• thllll
n,.,u., fori-FA!! II'I!!CH

31 Shelf

The Complete .
Remodeling Service
For Your _l:lolri~ -

lion, Route 143, Jerry Cline.

~-·-·1
J.,....., EJECT POKER BEHAlF IHAKIN
.

t'INM~eu( ·

----

·~:-:l: - ·- ~.:::·.::-:.-

Area . Also~

c

U'ITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

OPEN
D•v• •nd evenings ••cept
Tues. 1nd Wtcl. _ or by

Noble Summit Rd.,
Middleport
PHONE m-5724
5-3·1 mo.

Pageville , Ohio. .

Middleport, NIGHTCRAWLERS, Mark and Mike

5434.

Sol" &amp; S.rvict
2013 loth Ave.
Parkersburg, w. Va .

AndAnnitlnlry

D. BUI't1GARDNER

one metallic red motorcycle
helmet. Sea Conny Burbridge,

A&amp; YOURS!

open ~ p.m. cfiiiVcto••d all day Mondays

s.tic Systems

Complete Bridll

Above and below ground ·
pool kits fur the do-ll·
yourself man,
All pool supplies available~
too.

blue with black 1lrlpos; 30·30
gauge rifle wlfh power scope;

...IT WOLI~P fNPiiEP &amp;to A
MIRACLE IF H~ •u,lt7TAWT
FACJ;'LI~T FORMLII.A" COULD
fMPICOrE ON.SIICH 81!AIJTY

Donelll's PlzzC!I
lddle~rt, Ohio

Siding eent..

$60Q.

Registered Irish Setter, male,
$100. Conloct ~Ita Rou1h, 1mile
outRt. 143, offRt. 7.

FU~NISHEO , 2 bedrm. oporlmenl , :-::'L::Oo":
nd:::o::,C
: :I::
•Y':'·::I6:;l..:
•)c:9..:85
:::·..:4::
222::;:..c::cdult s only ,

Coli Ulll141·2112
or 941-2211
3-28-1 mo .

SALES&amp; RE _NTAL
Travel Traflen

17 Cole Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Telephone (61~1 HZ-3768
We Deliver
4-25-1 mo.

Phone 742-2217 .

downspouh,

Graduate.
Let DON Elli'S riloke the ·
pfzz. for your alter
gradu1tlon party . Call us at
992-6167 and we will moke
YOIW party something fu
remember. Chock our
e!.':!l rate&amp;.

RAINBOW RIDGE
( Buhon Arool
LONG BOTTOM

lWIN CITY
MACHINE SHOP

1969 Dod9e Dart, 1972 Suzuki trail

&amp;

CODNER'S CAMPERS

ARE AVAILABLE
AT

TWO hlghback swivel von l~:~ufl,
out of 1975 Von . Block, $75.

bike. Phone 992-75S9.
TROUTWOOD Camper,

on· U~•:

__

.

old !

Congratulation;

. ..,.

Mike Young, Manager
Sales and Installation
· Rt. !, Pomeroy, Ohio4576!
.· Pbone da.v'_or night · . ,
. LU;Lmo .' , I
.......,614-992-2206
~
-~ -- --~ 311.::. ·... ~ I

bring us on jeep or AMC

or

fur~ICII, Wlftr lltlttrs,
water softntrs, lnsttlltd &amp;
rtptlrtd, Stw •••·

save.

550.00 cash in hand if we
can not beat any deal you

reol.

b1rn, shingles, build up,

"ellng and installation.'
. We' ll bring samples to yout !
. :homo with no obligation
·see haw you can realll .

6·30 a.m . to 5: 00 p.m

new

palntlnt, tltctriCII work,

.SLOAN'$
CARPOING

p.m.

(5) 11 , 18 , 25 (6) 1, 4tc

. . w...,
' 1 - - -·" - ·~ -

dillon. Phone (614) 985-3565.
NOTICES
---------..---------- - ATTN : II
...
1972
one-hall ton pickup, good
AlL IIOUSEWIVES
NOTICE OF ELEC'MON
condition.
Phone (614) 378·
All Yard Sal es , Rumrilage ,
ON !SSUE OF
~9.
Porch end Basement Porch
BONDS FOR
end Basement Sa les , etc .
SOUTHERN LOCAL
1971 Plymouth Fury ill, p.s., foe.
must be paid in advance .
SCHOOL DISTR t.CT
air. See at 131 Ebeneset St. ,
,Get your In In early by
Not ice Is hereby gi"Ven thet
Pomeroy, Ohio offer 5
by
our
office
at
stopping
in pursuance of r esolut ions ol
.
The
Dally
Sentinel,
111
the boa rd of t? ducallon of the
VA~D Sale, Wed• .. Thursday, and
Court St. or wr i ting Bo x
South ern
Local
Sc h ool
Friday at
Betty
Moore
729,
Pomeroy
,
Ohio
45769
Distri ct ,' adopted on the 18th
residence , At . 7 by·pou,
with
vour
remi
ttance
.
day ot February, 1976, and the
Howell Hill Rd . above the bar·
9th day of March , 1976, there
rels .
w ill be subm i tted toe vo te of
the elec tor s of sai d sc hool
1967 Fo--rd-;-:::
G-,
ol:-o-xi:-e-:5::-.-:
00 2-,d-r."'h-.o--:rd·
di strict at a special elec tion to
top , v.e, standard·. Phone
be held there in on J.une B. 1976,
992-2092.
at !he regular pla ces of votin g
ther ein , the question of issuing
bonds of . said board of RACINE Fire Deportment will
education in the amount of
na~e o gun shoot Saturday at
fQur hundred twenty thou sand
6:30p.m. at their new bullding
de lia rs ($.420,000) fo r t he
OLD furniture, Ice boxes, bross
off Bashan Road .
purpose of c onst ruc't ing ,
beds, old wall telephones and
furni shin g and equipp ing For Memorial Day, beautiful
parts , or complete household~.
additional school fa cili ties at
selection flowers , baskets,
Wrlle M. D. Miller , ~t . 2,
th e h igh sc hool site and
spray$, loose flowers , vases.
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call m-7760.
purchasing bleachers for th e
Foye'• Gill Shop, North 2nd 51 ..
high sthool gymnasium .
Middleport. Open daily 9 a.m. TIMBER. top price for standing
Th e maximum number of
llmbor. Call (6") 446-8570.
1116 p.m.
years during which said bond s
are to run is twenty years .
CHICKEN B.B.Q. Ra cine Fire CASH paid for all moke• ond
The estimated average
models of mobile homes .
Dept., Sunday, Moy 30, 12
lldd itlona l ta x rate out si de of
Phone area code 61.4·423-9531 .
noon.
th e ten m il l limita tion as
c ertified by the Co~nty
$$Cosh$$$ for junked auto . Frye's
Aud itor is 3.32 m ! lls tor each
Truck Auto Ports , Rutland,
one dollar of valuation , whi ch
Phone 742-2081 .
clmo unts to 33 .2 ce nts for each
one hundred dollars· of
DEALERS In junk can , scrap iron,
valuation .
metalt. Phone 992-5468.
The polls tor sai d election DO YOU HAVE PA~TY PLAN EX ·
w ill be open at 6 :30a .m ., and
PERIENCE? FRIENDLY TOY
rema in open until 7: 30p .m . of
PA~TIES HAS OPENINGS FO~
sai d dey .
MANAGE~S IN OU~ A~EA .
By order of the Board of
RECRUITING
IS EASY BECAUSE FU~NISHEO apt., couple only, all
Elections of Meigs County,
OEMS HAVE NO CASH INVEST·
utilities paid . $130 per month .
Oh io.
MENT, NO COLLECTING OR =:-':P:':h"':
Ern es t A . Wlngell ,
on:Co'::m
::=-.,::39:.:7..:57o::.r::.
992
:.:.:·2:;5::.
71:.:._
DELIVERINGS: CALL COLLECT
Cha irman
· Dorothy M . Johnston ,
Director
Deted - May 10, 1976

Nttd

repaired? "oult, roof,

7'2-Ull

bumper, stalnles9 ext. m irrors, dark blue finish . Less
than 3,8()(1 miles &amp; truly like new.

;in~~~?'~e;~~c1i1~~at~OrO~i~ : 1Jj1~~=3~=~=~=~~

change, col lection or service
ch arges .
These bon ds are issued for
the p.u rpose of m akl nQ im ·
provements to t he waterwOrks
System of the vii lag~. und er
au thority of the general .l aw s
of th e State of Ohio , par .
ticularty the Uniform Bond
Law of the Ohio Revised Cede ,
pursuant to an o rd inance
passed by the counc il of said
~Jill age on Ma y 3, 1976.
These bonds will be seid to
the bidder offering to pur ·
chase the bon d~ at the lowes t
ne t in t e re~t cost to the Villag e,
such c ost t.o be determined by
deducting the total amount ot
any premium off ere d trom th e
agg regat e amount of in teres t
payable upon Btl the bonds
from Jul y I, 1976, until their
re spective dates of maturity .
No bid for less than par plus
accr ued In terest will be en
ter talne~ and the ri ght is
reserved to r elect any and ali
bids .
·
Each bi d must be ac '
com pan ied by cash , a bank
cas hier's or offi cia l 's check or
a ce rt ified ch eck , or any
combination th.ereof, not
drllwn upon er certi fi ed by the
bidder. payable to Si:Jid
village , equal to at least one
per ce nt ( 1 per ce nt) of th e
amount of th e bond issue , upon ·
ce ndltlon tl'la t if the bid is
acc ep ted , th e fi scal offic;er of
said vi llag e will deliver the
bonds with in thir ty (30) days
of the de le of .the awar~ to the
successful bidder . w1lh the
usual delivery papers , no
arbitrage ce rtif icate and a
com plete , certi fied transcript
of the proce edings , sh owing
the bonds to ha&gt;.J e been l eg ally
Issued , and ttl e bidder will
receive and pay · for such
bond~ as may be i ssued as
above se t forth , said cash ,
check or combinat ion th ereof
to be r e lllined by sai d vi llag es
as
full
and
comp l et e
llqu l dat~d
damage s and
cashed only if sa id condition is
not fulfilled : or said cash or
cl'leck or combination thereof
to be re turned promptly at the
r equest of the successful
bidd er If the bonds and fran .
script are not delivered within
the time specified here in.
Tl'le bonds w ill be delivered
tor payment within the St ate
of Ohio to the purchaser or to a
bank d esig nated by the pu r ·
chaser at the expense of sai d
'.li!lege . The expense of such·
deli"Very will not be considered
In de t ermining the high es t
bidder . Delivery at any Other
place shall be at the request
- and expense of the pu rc haser .
Pa yme nt shall be mad e In
imm ed iate or Federal funds
en the dal e of d elivery .
•u It is antlc l pt~ted that CUSlP
.,, ident if ication numbers will be
· · printed on these bonds . but
•ne ither the fa i lure to pri nf
h,such number on any bond nor
... ,anv error with respect there to
- shall c ons t itut e cause tor a
»• failure or refusal by th e
v purch aser thereof to acce pt
,. de livtry of and pay for sa id
•· bonds in acc ordance with tt1e
.. term s of t he purc hllse con .
,i.trac t. All· elC pen ses In r elation
to 1he pr inting of CUSIP
number s on said bonds Shall
1 be paid for by ·sa id v illag e,
11provided , however , that the
, CUSIP Servi ce Bureau charg e
•· tor th e assignment of seld
shell
be
th e
·'numbers
y .reapons l bll lty or end shall be
.. pa id for by the purchaser .
•· No con ditional b ids w ill be
" · r ecei~Je d .
The approv i ng
b op in lon ot Pe ck, Sl'laffer &amp;
· Williams , Cincinnati, Ohio ,
w111 be furni shed to the sue .
cessful !Jidder at his expense
~:as a 1erm of sale . The v illage
.!wil l pay fer the prlnJJI!g of the
bonds . which shall have
. ~: pr i nted thereon the tel(t ol the
:. lega l approving op inion .
... The bids will be coru ldered
and ac ted upon at a meeting of
.-.r the coun cil of sai d v illage on
'6 June 21. 1976.
to
Bids should be sealed and
endorsed :
" 810
FOR

Roclno. Ohio

R&amp;JIIIIIH,COINS
CIWt

197S CHEVROLET
$S495
4 wh. drive, '-' ton , 8' Fleetslde, Fri. wheel locks, 4
speed trans .. P. steering, H. duty llres, rear step

\2 00
for
so
word
minimum .
Each add i tiona l word l

cents .

Raci• Plumbing
&amp;Heating

..,, Sell " fl'ldl

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

Cal l Steve Walbu rn, 992-2087 or

Mike Magnotta, 9'12-3727.
EXPE~IENCEO painton, flt&gt;ible

1971 FORD STA. WAGON
$1495
V-8, automatic, P. steering , good !Ires, clean Interior.

For Want A d Sen ice
S ce nts per word one

WILL DO odd jobs. roofing, pain-

COINS
CURRENCY
SUPPLIES
METAl,
DETECTORS .

-~EDNI!S'DAY,MAV26,

5:00-Bonanza 3; P•rtrldge Family 8; Mission : Impossible 15.
.
5:30-Adam-124, 13; NewS6; Family Affair 8; Eltctrlc
Company 20,33.
,
6:00-News 3.4.8. 10,13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6:JO-NBC News3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 4;
CBS News 8,10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Lllflas,
Yoga an~ You 33.
7:00-Truth or Consequences 3; V•uctevffft 4; Bowling
For Dollars 6; Country Place 8; News 10; N1me
That Tune 13; Family Afl•lr 15; Understanding
Africa 20; Wild, Wild World of Animals 33.
7:JO-Hollywood Squares 3; let's Deaf With It 6;
Match Game PM 8; Evening Edition with Martin
Agronsky 20; Price Is Right 10f To Tell The Truth
13; Hf9h School T.V. Honor Society 15; Flmlly
Theatre 33. ·
8:00-Fabufous Funnies 3,4,15; Happy Days 6,13; Bugs
Bunny-Road Runner 8,10; Burglar-Proofing 20; W.
Va. Track Meet 33.
8:JO-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13; Good Times 8,10;
Consumir Survival Kit 20,33.
9:oo-Pollce Woman 3,4, 15; S. W. A. T. 13; Commanders 6; M-A-S-H 8, 10; Mus It In America 20;
Opera Theater 33.
9:»--ne D•y At A Time 8,1 0.

Business Services

2 SIGNS Pomeroy
OF .
,

a.m .

TUESDAY, #My 25, 1976

r'av•r

tm

6:00-Summer Semnter 10.
6 : 1~FII'm Report 13.
6:2t-The Story 13,
6:lt-Columbua Todey 41 Ntw161 Summer Stmt111r
I; Farmtlme 10.
6:~nca of P"...,tlon 10.

6 :45-Morntno Rtport 3.
6 :50-Good Morning, Wnf Vlrgfnfl 13, .
.
6:5S-Oluck White RllpOrfs 10; Good Morning. Trl
State 13.
7:00-Todey 3,4,15; Good Morning, Amartc1 t.131 Cas·
News I; Bugs Bu.nny &amp; Friends 10.
7:.._Scfloolln 10.
1:00-LIIIfl 6; Capt, Kangaroo 1,101 Sllmt St. 33.
I :.._Big Valley 6.
9:00-NofForWbmtn0nly31 Phil OonlhutA.151 Lucy
Show I ; Mlkl 0ougiU10; Morning with D.J . 13.
9:30-A.M. 3; One Life to Llv. 6; TlftfetliH I I Mlkt
Douglas 13.
10:0t-CeltbrftY Swttp~tlkll3.4, 15; Edge of Nlghf 6;
Price Is Rtght 1,10.
10:....High Rollers 3,4,15; Olneh 6.
11 :0o-Whttt of Fortune 3,15; WHkdly AI !Mmblf
1,101 Ftrmer'a D1UQhltr 13.
11 :»-Hollywood Squarn 3.4.151 Hippy 01y11~1 ~ow
of Life 1,10; Sellme St. 20,33.
11 :55-Tikl Klf'r I ; Dan lmtf'l World 10.
12 :ClO--MID'lfv
12:1»-Megnlflcenf Morblt Mlc:hlne3,15; Ltt'a Mike 1
Deal 13; Bob Brtun 41 Ntw1 6,1,10.
12:JO-Takt My Advice 3,151 All My Ch!ldrtn 6,131
SHrch lor Tomorrow. 1,10.
12:4J-.Efec. Co. 33• .
12 : 5~NBC News 3,15,
1:00-Nows 3; Ryan' a Hope 6,131 Phli OonWiut II
Young &amp; the Rntlna 101 Not For Women Only 15.
1:»-DIYI of Our Lfws 3.4,51 Rhyme I R_, 6,131
As the World Turns 1,10.
2:00-UG,OOO Pyramid 6,13.
2:.._Doetorl 3.4,151 BrHk the Bank 6,131 Guiding
Light 1,10.
.
3:00-Anothtr World 3,4,151 General Hlilplt1f 6,131 AI
In Thl Family 1,101 Kup's Show 20.
3:»--ntLifetoLivt13; MlckeyMouNCiub61 #Mtch
Gamel,lO.
4:1»--Mfaltr Cortoon 3; #Mrv Griffin 41 So.-..1 151
Btwltchecl6; Mickey Moult Club II Miller Rogen
20,33; Movie " limo Running Out" 101 OINih 13.
4:.._Btwitchecl3; Mod Sq~~ad 6; Be-ly Hillbflflll II
Sewmt St. 20.33; Flintstone• 15.
5:00-Bonlllza 3; Parfridgt Family I I Million: Impossible 15.
5:3t-Adlm-12 4; Newa 61 Family Affair 11 Efac, Co.
20,33; Adlm-12 13.
6:00-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC NIIWI61 Zoom 20,33.
6:....NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News T31 Andy Grlllilh 61
CBS News 1,10; Hodgepod(le Lodge 201 VIlla Altgrl
33.
7:00-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Tr~lh 41 Bowilnglor
Dollara 6; Pop Gon lhl Country 11 Nowa 101 Wild
Kingdom 13; Arta #Myor'a Report 151 Book 11M!
20; Know Your Sc;ltool :13.
7:.._Lut of thl Wild 31 Name That Tune•1 Mitch
Game PM 61 12,5,000 Pyr1mfd I; Evening Edltlan
wlfh Martin Agronlky 20; Thl Juclge101 To Tell the
Truth 131 Book Beat 33.
8:00-Lfftlt HOUII onthe Prtlrfe 3,4,151 Blonfc Wom111
6,13; Pilot I, iO:.Tribal Eye 331 Mllrk of JIZZ 20.
8:3t-Lowtll Thomas Remtmt..r• 20.
· ·'· ,
9:00-Senford &amp; Son 3,.1.151 Boretta 6,131 C1nnGil 11
Theatar In Amerlcl 33; Movft "Thl Ntkld Run·
nor" 101 Olympfld 20.
I: .... Fay 3,4,15,
10:00-Hawk 3,4,151 Straky &amp; Hutch 6,13; News 20.
10:3t-Afmenoc 20.
11 :00-Ntws 3,4,6,1,10,1~,151 ABC News 33.
11 :JO-Jolfnny Carson 3,41,5; Movie "Pl1~m1tt1" 6,131
Movie "Female Arlllllf'y" 11 Movie 'Good Neigh. bor Sam" 101 Jonakl U .
1:00-Tomorrow 3.41 Ntw113.
Cllannel Flve
9:00-71111-Club (c)
?:~ayllme (c)
1:&lt;»-Music Connection (c)
8:»-Movie: To be announcld
10:00-700 Club (c)

It Repair

t Allrl1

11 Recumbent II Cain caD
U A Kennedy II 'l)pe ol

11 Cclldultll
lhnld
lt Scoops out, II Join
u water
II Soccer
II Football
great
Jl888
II FaD beblnd
zs DeUcloua II Found In
moUUik
a rk*

WIN ~ AT

BRIDGE

Three rules for short club
NORTil
.64
• 8!
tA K8
.KQ107U
WEST
EAST
.QJU
~~++-il•i032
•QJ 1061
•K ~7
f-.f--1---4-i I • 10 1 s
•H12

l

.u

.98

soum &lt;Dl
• A KB 7
• A 32

TEAFORD

IQ6!

•J 12

Both •; ulnerable

Pan It
Pass 3 •
Pan 5·•
Pass
Openln11ead -'

.

Pass
Pan
Pan

Q•

1ul1J, but you lbould not 10 u
f1r •• 10me do and ~flllt to
open lour-card majon at all.
South has 4-1-H dislrllllltlon
and deflnlllly lhould opelclub, not one tplde, K1 pa

to pau II partner rat• to two

clul11 or one notrump; r1l11 1
spade ret(IOIIM and bld 0111!
tpade If Pll1l1lt' ieopoc... wllll
a retl suit.
The blddln1 In the box
lllowa how North and South
can reaeh the proper contract
of five clubs 1fter a cllib OJ*tInr. After 1 tplde CIPIIIIIII
they will al1001t 11111'111 lull In
three notrump which 1CJe1
down when Wnt O)ltllll 1
heart.

~h~
A Tenneuee reader lib,
"What club lhould I plaJ frem
QIOU I? The contract lillhrte
nolrump. My partner opelil
the deuce of clubll. The k.ln&amp;
and one appear In dlimmJ and
the kln111 played."
The IDIWtr bere II that )'01
play the 10 11 1n tiiCCNrllilll
card. 'lllla II the hipelt card
you can 11p1".

One letter simply •lands lor another, In this sample A Ia By Olwald" Jallles Jacoby
uaed lor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Sln11e !ellen, Let's take another look at
apostrophes, lhe length and formation of the words are all the short cl'ub as uaed by ex·
hints. Eocb day the code irlters are dU!erent.
peru . There . are three
"nevers" here:
CllYPTOQUOTES
1. You never open a twocard
club suit.
M
FNDPT
NEUPE
0 NCI U
A M R P 2. You never open a three(Do you have 1 qu11lloll
card club suit when you have a lor the uperta? Write "Aat
YMR P U
Q A P . VEN US K M I
YN D
Q A P five-card suit aomewhere the Jacobya" care ol Ill/;
else .
newapapar. The Jacobyt 111111
QENCXIP
NL
GNFSDK
A N F P. 3. You never open a three- · an1wer Individual queatlotll
card club suit when your hand II ttampad, ""-adllrllaetl
XMP E
111eeta all requlremeniJ for an envelope• ere enclolld. Tile
M E QAC E
Yesterday's Cryploquote: A PWLOSOPHER CAN ALWAYS openlnR bid In notrump.
m011 lntarHIIIIQ queetlone
SEE BOTH SIDES OF A QUESTION, BUT NO ANSWER. The corollary to the uae of wit/ be ueed In thle column
SOURCE UNKNOWN
the short club Is t~at you tend and wit/ recti~ copiN ol

TATER'S JEST LIKE
A DADBURI\/
ALARM
CLOCK --

HE GITS

WOUND UP
II\/ TH I

DAI/TIME --

,

(lC) llt76 Kina Fe•turft Srndleatt, laC!.)

not to open four~'arcf major

JACOBY MOOERN,J

�..
12- The Dally Sentinel, Middlepart-Pomeroy, 0 .. 'l'ue.day May 2!i, 1976

Page St.

One new face in cast of Senate drama

(Continued frCIIJI page 1l
1t
learned that the project will
EDITOR'S NOTE: Tbla 1.1 Glenn Jr., D-Ohlo, in 1974.
Stanton
muat
win
' not be carried out. However, thesecoadof etpt lrtlclea by Slanton, wbo attracted rr Cuyahoga County by an
they agreed 4-1 wit!) Coun- UP! State!wliBe lleporlen per cent of the vote the last ememely wide margin to
cilman James Brewer voting Lee Leonard and J. R. time be ran for Cmgress Win tbe naminatlon - a
no ~ hold the properties for Klmmln oa tbe varloua ftom his suburban aeveland victory many political
the lime being.
candidates ud lsllllel faclag dil!trlct, Is in hls lirl!t try for observers think Ia a lhanldeu
COUNCIL APPROVED a the voten at the J111e I Oblo statewide office.
job c'onslderlng Taft's strong
request from the Middleport Jrlmary. 1bls article deala
Nolan operates a Cuyahoga ~pc:rt In all corners of the
Planning Commission Wllh tbe coatea&amp; for lbe U.S. ColUlty nursing h001e. Kay, state.
allowing John Krawsczyn to Senate aomlnatioa.
who was allowed on the
"From all the resulta we
construct a garage on
Democratic ballot by a U.S. have seen, we llbould be able
property he has purchased on
By J, R· Klmmlas
Di.strlct County ruling, Is an to carry Cuyahoga County
Broadway St. The garage will
COLUMBUS (UP!) - This attorney. Both candidates two-tO-one," Aid Paul Nace,
5erve as a repair area for year's Democratic U.S. have run for various offices StantOn's Col11111bul-baaed
automobiles replacing a · Senate primary has the before. They have never won. campaign manager. "WewUJ
present facllity nearby.
charm of a remade movie
Taft, of Cincinnati and lbe get a fairly declalve margin
The street lB residential, with three established stars grandson the late President in tht rea of northeast Ohio.
according to the zoning and one new face.
WU!Iam Howard Taft, has
"When we atarted, we bad
regulations, but the garage
The veterans are Richard made only a few token a l'1lCOfll1ltlon factor of 40 per
now being operated was In B. Kay, James D. Nolan and campaign visits to Ohio. He cent, but that waa basically In
the location before zol)ing former Sen. Howard M. Met- will not gear up his Clllllpllign northeast Ohio," continued
became effective, and the ' zenbaum. The new face Is Illtil mick1111111er.
Nace. "We hope to break
. new garage will be an im- Rep. James V. Blanton. All
Metzenbaum•s appetite for even In the reat of the state."
provement to tile operation, are from Cleveland.
"I tblnk we will win
the job was whetted In 1975
At least the Democrats when be was named by Gov. Cuyahoga Co111ty, but I think
officials Bald.
Mayor Hoffman announced have a contest. Republlcan John J. Gilligan to serve the It'D be ll&amp;bt," reapouded
that Jeffrey Burt and Harry Sen . Robert Taft Jr, Is remaining ·year of the unex- T h om a·s
C h em a ,
Buingarner of the Buckeye WJOpposed for the n&lt;lllinatlon pired term of Republican Metzenbaum 's chief
Hills-Hocking Valley to run for a second term.
Sen. WUiiam B. Saxbe.
str~lat In Qevellnd. "We
This Is the tl!ird time
Regional Planning ComIn the 1970 ~ocratic will spend about half Oll' Ume
mission, Marietta, will meet around the track for (rlmary, Metzenbamn began in Cuyahoga County from
with council at the first Metzenbaum; who woo tbe the campaign as an unrecog- now till the election."
meeting In June todlscussthe Democratic primary but lol!t nized lawyer but worked hard
Olema estimates that t4
updating of the town's to Taft In 1970, and lol!t tbe to identify himself and edged per cent of all Democratic
comprehensive planning !l'imary to Sen. John H. Glenn In the voting.
voters are in northtllllll Ohio,
program.
He won only 13 co111ties,
It was agreed that Clerkbut they were the large urban ·
Treasurer Gene Grate will
vote centers. He carried
acknowledge lnvltallons sent
Cuyahoga County by 311,1100
by Rutland Village for
votes, three times his
Middleport to take part In an
statewide margin over Glenn.
WASHINGTON (UP!) observance Monday when the
This year, Cuyahoga Sen. Robert Ta!t Jr., R-Oblo,
town will become a bicenCoantY again will be a key to said today the United States
tennial community and In a
the Democratic Jrlmary, but and Its NATO aWe4 are
parade which will be held as a The cars of two Meigs the shoe lB on the otber foot. wBiitlng "lillona of dollars In
part of ·Rutland's July 4th County cub scouts won honors Metzenbaum is recognized peacetime and rllk logistical
celebration.
In the tri-state Pinewood throughout tbe state, and chaos in war" due to the lack
Councilman Carl ·Horky Derby held Sunday In HLUl· Stanton lB not.
of weipona standardization.
reported that a resident BBW Ungton.
Metzenbaum's campaign
"Standardization of equip•• •
plotters will be quite happy to
two rats on an uptown MidAlthough
he
was
unable
to
Our bank will be clo8ed Memorial
dleport street and Mayor attend the car made by John break even In Cuyahoga
Day in honor of the men and women
Hoffman agreed to look Into li Bacon Ill, a member of County. They are confident
ra t control program. Middleport Cub Seout Pack their candidate's well-known
of our armed forces who have served
Councilman Allen Lee King 245, won third place among name and face will pill In the
our great country and the cause of
was advised that a request the nine-year-old contestants, votes downstate, as wen aa
fr:eedom throu~~thoutthe world.
for the opera lion of a con- and the car of Bill HoweU, a the other urban precincts.
cession stand at the com- member of Pomeroy Pack
Stanton figures to win big in
AUTO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
Bob Evans Fanns will open
munity park by Uttle League 249, won third place in the the state's largest county and
FRI. EVENINGS STo 7 P. M.
a
new
Bob Ev&amp;llll Restaurant
representatives would have eight-year-old field.
sp)lt the rest of the state with
adjacent
to the Midway Mall
to be taken up by the
Winning a 10-tipeed bicycle Metzenbaum. His major
in
Elyria
June I. Bob Evana
"THE FRIENDLY BANK "
recreation commlsslon.
was Melvin Van Meter, son of (roliem, however, lB getting
will
attend
the Grand
Prayer by the Rev. Dwight Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Van hllnself known outside bls
Opening
Day
event
to perZavltz preceded the meeting Melar and a member of congressional d!Srlct.
sonally
greet
first-day
attended by Mayor Hoffman, Middleport Pack 245. The
Kay and Nolan could · be
Clerk-Treasurer Grate, and names of boys who had sold spoilers in CUyahoga County, customen.
This lathe third Bob ·Evans
Councilman King, Brewer, 10 tickets or more to the but their effect on the
Restaurant
In the greater
....C.CINCIHNATI
Horky, Marvin Kelly and Derby were entered In the !l'imary · balloting anywhere
Cleveland
area,
and two
George Mei!Jhart.
drawing for the blcyc)e with else probably will be
MIDDLEPORT
other. Wilts are planned In the
Van Meter winning.
negligible.
AFULL ·
-....n.. IJ HIO
inunedlate future In that
UNIT
CALLED
Members
of
the
Middleport
SERVICE
There are currently 21
area.
The Pomeroy Emergency Pack attending were Allen
flANK
restawants
In operation in
MfDDLFI'ORT, QHIO
Squad answered a call to Spaulding, Fred George,
Ohio,
Kentucky
and Indiana;
-......
County Road 26 at 4:53 p.m. Brian George, Jeffrey . 'l'be MeigB County Sberiff's
M.,......r Fede.-.1 Deti&lt;JIIt laa11111n&lt;e Cci'DOI'IItlon
Monday for Doria Miller who
another
six
are
acbeduled to
Harrison, Billy Weaver, Department Investigated a
DEPOSITS INSURED TO 140,000 .
was talten to veterans Richard Poulin, Charles two car accident MOIIday at be open by thlB fall including
Davis and Melvin Van Meter. 7:25 p.m. In Lebanon live ln Ohio plua the CCIIJI·
Memorial Hospital.
They were accompanied by Township. There were no Pany's first In West Virginia,
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Poulin personal Injuries reported. .to be located In SQuth
REFRIGERATORS, RANGES,
Virgll E. Westfall, 31, Rt. 1, Charleston.
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
Blll Davis and grand- Long Bottom, was traveling
MICROWAVE OVENS, FREEZERS,
daughter, Angela and Esther east on Township Road 149
and Charles A. Baker, 59,
Barker.
Chesapeake, was traveling
DISHWASHERS, TV's &amp; STEREO SETS.
west when they eolllded In a
SURVIVORS NOTED
curve. There was . minor
HOOPA, Calif. (UPI) - A
SALE PRICES PLUS
SUI'\'lvors of Mrs. Iris J. damage. No citations were 23-year
old blonde aougbt as a
Carr, 46, Route 2, Coolville,
Issued.
supposed
captive of the
include her parents, Robert
ROCKWELL-CORDLESS DRIU OR
legendary
"Big Foot" turned
L. ·and Hilda Smith White,
up frazzled and screaming at
Route 1, Long Bottom: ber
VARIABLE SPEED JIG SAW,
a resort Monday night.
Velel'lllll
Memorill
Hollphal
husband, Wllltam L. Carr;
A spokesman of the
ADMITTED- Paul Oark,
two daughters, Vlcld and
WITH THE PURCHASE OF ANY
Jflgnholdt County llberlff's
MiddlepOrt;
Harold
George
Panni, both at home; a
office in Eureka said kle
brother, Thomas L. White, Justice, Middleport; Golda Darvell of Redding appeared
Smith,
Reedsvllle:
Betty
MAJOR APPLIANCE.
Long Bottom, and three
to have suffered from
staters, Mn. Donna Ohlinger, Brown, Pomeroy; Mary exposure. She waa found at
Route 3, Pomeroy; Mrs. Layne, Cheshire; Brenda Bluff Creek Resort, several
Ullian Pann, New Vienna, Templeton, Pomeroy; mnes aouth of where me waa
Ohio, and Mrs. Carolyn Sue Venldla Knight, Pomeroy; reportedly ·carried off
Woode, Circleville. Funeral Oma B. Smith, Syracuse; Saturday by what was
5ervlces were held thlB af. Doris Mlller, Racine; .described aa a huge hairy
Virginia Riffle, Racine:
'1,:~~11 ternoon at the Alfred United
Richard
L. Van Houten, beast.
~~ oLl
Methodlst Church.
"We got a . report of !I
Rutland.
wm~an
acreamlng at the
DISCHARGED - David
__,..,. Super Browning Grill
. HURT IN WRECK
Roach, Edgar Kindell, 11110rt," the spokesman said.
.. _ l~ Admiral's exclusive bro•wnir•l T h e M I d d I e p o r t William Wells, Vivian ''Our units ... foWJd her and
called an ambulance. She's
(!rill with removable seoving
Emergency Squad answered Johnson, Rolla Spaun.
been through quite a lot."
handles browns up to 6 half a call to Mill St. at 8:22a.m.
Authorities who had organpound hamburgi• or 4
Tuesd
he Marj0rle Wllt
ASltTOWED
sized steaks the way
ay w re
Ized
a wideapread ground
you li ke'em.
suffered a baclt. Injury In a
Marriage licenses were search Monday by 150
two-car accident. She was lssued to Robert Ester Smith,
taken to Veterans Memorial 30, Langavtlle, and Beverly deputies, Foreat Service
Auto Defrost Cycle
emp!oyea and voluateers
Hospital.
A dinner or a snack defrostSue Spence, 23, Langsville;
ed and ready to serve In a'
Walter Gregory France,- 19,
Admiral's Super Magic Wand
matter of minutes.
Rutland,and Rita Mae Birch- ·
Beam Stirrer
field, 17, Rutland; Charles .
• ...,"!!!!!"'!!!"'!!!!!!!1!1 Automatic Cooking
Edward s.ttz, 25, Praetor, W.
Minimizes hot or cold spots for more
Signal Light
Va:,
and Nancy Joe Mayer,
even cooking and requires less turn i .
Automatically lights when
Pomeroy.
or slirring food .. Now Admira l Microoven is cooking, and shuts
Tonightthru Ttiursdoy
wave Ovens have it!
off at the end of the
NOT OPEN

Cubs' cars in'

at Huntington

LEST WE FORGET

Evans opening

new restaurant

t.iibens
,atioi\DI
...

Autos collide

1..---------------~

on the all new Admiral
Micro'wave Ovens

cooking cycle.

Frkloy thru Tuesday

Automatic ~recision
Timer Control

May 21-June 1

THE OTHER SIDE
OF THE MOUNTAIN

For accuracy in cooking
just follow the recipe and
set the Automatic Tlmer

(Technicolar)
Marilyn Hassett, Beau
Bridges, Belinda J . Monlgomery.
(PG)
Shaw Starts 7 p.,.

Control to the specified
t1me.

For over forty years, Admiral products have enjoyed an
enviable reputation of quality, styling and value. Today
thai tradition can be clearly seen in sparkling' new
Admiral appliances. each skillfully crafted to provide a
new standard of efficiency and convenience.
·

BAKER FURNITURE

Ml DOLE PORT, 0.

. I

died on Monday
· James D. Ables, . 82,
Logan, died Monday at
Hocking Valley HOIIpllal In
Logan. Mr. Ables, aon of the
late Dana P. and NeWe
Capehart also was preceded
In death by a slater, Mn.
Rollin Dill, and a brother,
Dana Ablea, Jr.
Surviving are two lliaten,
MrJ, Edit!! Gilkey and Mrs.
Thomas Scott, both of
GaWpoUs; a brolber, Jack R.
Ables, Letart Falla, and
aeveral nieces and nephews.
Funeral services wiU .be
~ld aU P-Dl- Thursday at .tile
Ewing Funeral Home with
burial to be In the Letart
Falls Cemetery. Friends may
call at lhe funeral b001e after
7 thla evening.

ment amoog the NATO aWes
Is both one of our most
lmpartant objectives and one
of our most frustrating
·II'Oliems," said Taft in a
floor speech aupporting the
Defellie Authorization Bill.
"While the NATO partners
waste bUJions of dollars in
peacetime and rlak logistical
chaos In war, the Warsaw
Pact has fully coordinated
research and development,
procurement and logtcstlcal
plans," he ald.
The Defense Authorization
bill contains a Taft
amendment which states tlull
any new NATO weapons
systems !llould be baaed on a
COIIllllon NATO definition of
the system's mllllions,
balanced with a COIIIIIIm
definition of the threat the
sytems might be r-aulred to
COlUlter,
.
In the same address, Taft
reiterated his call for a
complete recrdering of the
nallon's defen!Je forces with
shipbuilding aa the "lilncJe
most critical part" of any
!I'Opoaed realignment.
"What tbe Congress does
this year to terms of
llblpbullding will materlallJy
Influence tbe shape of our
Navy for the nell 30 years,"
said Taft.
"R will determine whether

TAKEN TO VMII

The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad was called to the
county recorder's office at
9:27 a.m. Tuesday for Mrs.
Wanda Swartz who became
Ul. She'was taken to Veterans
Memorial H~~~pllal by the
squad.

I

-~******************************
:
DELICtOJJS STRAWBERRY SHORT CAKE
: lWIST ICE CREAM SU~DAES,$l)DAS, MALTS,
FLOATS, SOFT DRINK, SANDWICHES , ·

i

i
I Adolph's Dairy Valley !i
: .

~~

Seniors advised to seek success
"The world Is before you.

You will make your future.
Don 't•sit and wait for success
to · come to YO\!. Make it
tlappen, and the sky's the
Umlt."
These were the closing
comments of Wallace T.
Blake, vice president of the
Flist Federal Savings and
Loan cO., and a member of
tile OhioBQllrd of Education
when he addreMed the m
graduates of Meigs High
School at the eighth annual
commencement Tuesday

night.
Friends and relatives
crowded into Larry R.
~orrison Auditorium to
attend the commencement
with the senior class, wearing
maroon and gold robes, the
scltool colors, entering to the
processional " Pomp and
Circumstance."
The band, . directed by
Dwight Goins, presented the
National Anthem when the
large audience joined the
seniors in singing. and
presented a special number

as well as the recessional.
The Invocation and
~nediction were by the Rev.
Pater M. Granda!, paator of
the Middleport First Baptist
O.urch, and Charles Dowler,
superintendent of the district,
distributed diplomas after
the claas .was prsented by
Principal James A. Diehl, Jr.
Blake, introduced by
Michael Magnotta, class
president, Sj)oke highly of
today's young peq~le . The
speaker said he has litUe
patience With people who

Moore to receive
special training
SAN ANTONIO - The son
of a Gallipolis couple has
been selected to receive
specialized training after
e«nppettng Air Force basic
training at Lackland AFB,
Tei.
Airman Harold L. Mou-e,
Jr., whose mother and
stepfather are ·Mr. and Mn.
Charles J. Shepard of
GalUpolls, now goes to
Sheppard AFB, Tell., to attend the Air Training Command's accounting and
finance .apecJattsl course. ·
.The airman Is a 1974
graduate of Big Walnut High
Scboolln Sunbury, Ohio. HlB
wife, Airman Stephanie E.
Mocre, Ia the daughter of
Mra. Agnes w. Keith of 130'1
Dewson Lane, Wilmington, ·
Del. . .
L....._

rcf11sed cominent on the
woman's account of her
disappearance.
They said she would be
examined at Hoopa Medical
Center, then taken to a
Eureka
hospital
and
CJ!eslloned more extensively
later.
Apollee spokesman said an
BBIOC!ite of MJas Danell,
Terry Gaston, said he saw

" 'Big Foot' hover over
Sherle Dlnellllke a big bat,
and then pick her up and tl!ey
disappeared up the canyoo

.

G8stm said tile creature
was abouj eight feet tall and
weighed up Ill 500 pounds.
Miss Darvell, Gaston and two
friends, were searching for
evidence of "Big Foot" when
llbe dlaappeared.

News •• in Briefs
(Contlliued fran page ll
Postal Service bis(ory. Amltani iJ. S. Attorney Gavin SCotti
said the two were m.rl!lidMonday ln conneCtion with the Sept.
22theftofadlllen parcels of money being shipped to American
banks from abroad.
.
Tbe two were Identified aa David Walller, 48, a foreman In
the fel!liiry aectlon of the airport poat office, and postal clerk ·
Helen Helton, 47, both of New York. They allegedly went .on a
$150,1100 spendlng spree over four months under the
surveillance of postallnllpedors who had been alerted by an
lof«mant. 'lbe rest of the money, authorities lllid, was still
missing Mcinday. .

ALL AT

·~t'~

: Hrs. : lO:OOA.M._Tilll:OOP.M.Sun.-Thurs.
•
!O:OOA.M. Ttl12:00 P.M. F.ri.&amp; Sat.
•
992-2556
ll- W. MAIN
PaMEROY, 0.

*
*
•

t****************************.:

'

MAY·FURNITURE SALE

NOW -IN PROGRESS
Shop the Third Floor Furniture Department for Special
Savings.
·

•KROEHLER SOFAS AND LOVESEATS
eBERKLINE ' ROCK-0-LOUNGERS
eKROEHLER CHAmS
eSERTA AVANTI MATTRESSES
AND BOX SPRINGS
eFOUR PIECE BEDROOM SUITES
•FIREPLACE EQUIPMENT
· •PICTURES ·
Frel! Customer Parking on Second Street at the Mechanic Street
Warehouse.

berfelds In Pome

criticize young people of
today, who, he stated, "wW
lake care of the &lt;OLUltry."
However, he urged them to
"keep on preparing" for th~
future as they have In the
past and stressed that they
must understand the world
today In order to cope with Its
problems.
Stating that problems
should be a cause to think, not
to worry, Blake said Ideas
and ways of doing things

becocne obsolete faster today
than in any other time in
history. He pointed to
changes that h\lve come In a
variety of socio-economic
actlvllles. One survey
showed, for example, that 85
percent of the working Ioree
today Ia involved In jObs that
did not exist SO years ago.
The speaker stressed the
Importance of vocational
training In today 's high

'•

Rhodes supports veto
.,- COLUMBUS(UPI) -Gov.
jianes A. Rhodes, claiming It
WOuld ''cost, rather than BBVe
!noney for the consumer,"
has vetoed legiSlation which
would
have
required
supermarkets using computer pricing codes to stamp
p[ices in readable numbers
on most of their products.
The governor, in making
his veto Tuesday, said the

'
we begin to move toward tbe
new··cmeepts and new ship
designs we must have If we
are to meet the Soviet naval
challenge, or whether we
retain a Oeet ~cture that
was developed 35years ago to
meet the challenge offered by
Imperial Japan,'' said Taft.

berfelds ·In Pom

MEIGS TIIATRE

ADMIRAL

James D. Ables

Big Foot's captive is frazzled up

FREE

YOU'LL BE GlAD YOU CHOSE AN

been uld so far Is Stan1m 'a
sta~nt.two weeks aao that
Metzenbaum was
"deliberately avoldlng" a
debate.

proposal would have required
the state to spend an additional $487,1100 a year for 20
Inspectors to enforce the
provll!lons - a cost he said
"cannot be justified" because
of a tight state budget.
'
Majority Democrats In the
General Assembly will get a
chance dw-ing a three-day
session next month to override the governor 's veto of the

bill, backed by the Ohio AFLCIO but fought by supermarket chains.
But their task may be
difficult. The measure at·
tracted only 51 votes in the
House and the bare majority
of 17 in the Senate when it
finally passed last month .
Sixty votes are required to
override a veto in the House
and 20 in the Senate.

Taft cites huge waste in military

winning circle

Admiral's Super _Energy Saver!
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Save 50 to 75 Pet. of the eleclrlclly you now
Admiral's Microwave Ove n• will cook a use
in cookin g!. No pre-heating - no
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enjoyment.
·
with room to •pare.

covered by what be calla tbe
"Qeveland media mariet."
'Ibelle demographic r~l
are wby the bulk of
).fetrenbiWJ's balf-mUlion
dolla- media baclelt li being
spent
In • Cleveland
newapapers, radio and televi·
Ilion omlttla.
While
Stanton
has
trumpeted his record BB a
congr-.nan md tried to find
a forum to debate bil main
opponent, Metzenbamn hBB
campaigned agalnat "big
on," f!!ICl!latlng uiWty prices
and a federal bureaucracy
whlcb he says Is not
reaporudve to mollt citiZens.
Stanton has said much tbe
same thing, but added
lrequ~nt
appeala for
CODgreulonal passage of an
unencumbered federal
revenue llharlng act.
It haa been a lackluster
campaign; 1bere Ia no Vietnam, Kent State or
Watergate to campaign for or
agalnBt. There baa been no
tuunecalltng,. dlrHIInglng;
secret leaks of poll results or
enormous, unexplained campaign contributions.
The meanest thing that has

e

Pomeroy-l\1iddleport, Ohio
Wednesday, l\1ay 26, 1976

::;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::: :::::::::::=:!::::::::::::::::::::::::::;1,

CHESTER HAS PLANS
CHESTER ~ Plans have
been announced for the observance of Memorial Day in
Chester. A barbecued
chicken and spare ribs dinner
will begin at 11:30 a.m. on
Monday and there will be a
parade at 1:30p.m.; a garden
tractor pull at 2 p.m. and a
UtUe league baseball game at
4 p.m. Donations or pies and
cakes will be appreciated by
the Chester Volunteer Fire
Department which Is sponsoring the event.

LOTTERY APPROVED
CLEVELAND (UPI) The Oblo Lottery Commlulon . unaalmously
approved a uew "laaiiiDt"
lottery game Tueaday. ·
1be t1 tlcketa are due to
go oo sale beglludDg Juae
15. Buyen will lu!ve lbe
cllaace to wlo prizes
ranging from fZ to UO,OOIJ
or to win $15,1100 to
million lo a jackpot
drawing.

'l

•

at y

schools which at one ·time
trained students 10 enter
college but lor no other
future.
make urged the seniors
"never to stop learning" as
he pointed out how recent
developments In .communlcitlona, travel and
education have brought
countrlea auch ·as Africa from
practically the stOne age to
clvUizatlon.
The speaker remarked that
far too many people today
lack faith In the future of the
United States due to the "age
of criticism" In which we
Uve. He pointed out that whlle
the world has no boundaries,
as far as travel is concerned,
the beginning Is just taking
place ln social reform.
1n clOsing, the speaker
found today's high standard
of living In the United States
of special merjt and advised
seniors to oppose those who
would destroy America from
within or abroad.
"Be thankful you were born
In America, the land of opportlUlity," he concluded.

I )
I)

•

MRS. SMITH RETIRES - Mrs. Maggie Smith,
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, was honored upon her
retirement after 3$ years service at the Jacobs Ben
Frank Store, Pomeroy Tuesday afternoon. Presented a
gilt from ·ro-workers on the occasion, Mrs. Smith is
pictured with store owner, Robert Jacobs. Mrs. Smith has
five children, Dole, of Zanesville; George, In Florida;
Don, of California: Sylvia Carman, Route 2, Pomeroy,
and Guy R. Smith of Lancaater.

en tine

Firtcl'n Ceuh
Vol. zg, No. 28

Miners close down independent coal .suppliers
Coal dumped at entrances to Gavin
upon demand of200men in caravan

Ford in
upset of
Reagan

\

.

.ily CLAY

F. RICHARDS

Utdted Preas Interaatlonal

l ~''·~:~t~~~J~~n~F~or~ivm=·
and
Tuesday and
Won Oregon as expected to

split six !l'lmaries with his
GOP rival. Democrat Jlnnny
Carter romped through tbe
border stales but was stopped
cold In the West.
... Reagan
scored
in
Arkansas, Idaho and Nevada
to keep his conservative
challenge alive into the vital
June 8. Caljfornia primary.
He picked up 24 delegates on
Ford but still trails, 794 to 640,
with. 1,130 needed to
nominate.
On the day of the most
presidential Jrlmaries in U.S.
history, Carter won easily In
Arkansas, Kentucky and
Tennessee. Frank Church
drubbed him in Oregon and
Idaho, and California Gov.
· E~mund G. Brown Jr.
stopped him in Nevada.
"The convention will be
wide open, not open and shut

...

.
PLANT ENTRANCE BLOCKED - Two truckers
were forced to dump their loads Tuesday at the entrance

(for Carter)," said a jubilant
Church of his two victories.
But Carter harvested 136
more Democratic delegates
in · the all-Important body
count leading . to . the July
Democratic convention. HlB
best single delegate day gave
him a total of 881, with 1,500

needed to nominate.
"If after June 8 \ lhe last of
the !l'lmaries), we have 1,200
to 1,300 delegates," said tbe
former Georgia governor
today, "then we have a month
to
convince
other
uncommitted delegates
before the &lt;anvention." He

to the coal yarda of tite James M. GavlnPiant at C2Jeshlre.
Coal was also dumped on the other entrance to the plant
off Rt. 554.
ssld he had talked 10 Chicago
Mayor Richard Daley
"several times" about
Illinois' big uncommitted .
delegation.
Ford, whose campaign was
stalled dead by Reagan In the
early days of May, bas now
added more than 300

·::::::::.:::::::::::::::~t.::::;:;;;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::;:::::!:::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::~

delegates to his total since
Saturday - when large
uncommitted blocs In
Pannyalvania and New Yark
started moving to hls column,
"If I'm smiling, !can't help
It," the President said
Tuesday night after bearing
the reaulta of his Kentucky
upset.
.

LONDON- SECRETARY OF STATE HENRY Kissinger
lllid today the time waa,near for a new attempt at an overall
Arab-Israeli settlement and he lB planning the necessary
diplomatic action.
,
"The time is approaching when new impetus must be
li(ven to movement towards an overall peace," Klsslnger said
iiJ ·a speech written for today Central Treaty Organization
Councll of ministers meeting.

...
certazn to come soon

By ARNOLD Sj\WJBLAK

United Preu lntemational
The
preslde·n tla I
nomination contesta in both
major parties this year
begins to look like the classic
movie scene of the car and
the train racing · for the
railroad crossing. Some
sensational colllslons appear

lnunlnent.

The most likely time and
places of the crashes Is June 8
In New Jersey, Ohio and
California. On that Tuesday,
the 1976 primary season will
end with 540 Democratic and
TEL AVIV, ISRAEL - ISRAEU AUTHORITIES said 331 Republican delegates at
today the long)Jatred, shabbily dressed man whose suitcase stake
In the three states.
exploded al Ben Gurlon airport wsa traveling Wlder a forged
There
also are three small
OUtch passport. The man and a woman security guard were
!I'
!maries
next Tuesday, but
tdned In the blast. An Israeli newspaper said there were
the 56 Democratic and 59
"persistent rumors" the man was International guerrilla Republican delegates on the
leader lllch Ramirez Sanchez, nicknamed "Carlos" or the block In Rhode Island, South
Jackal.
Dakota and Montana
Official sources declined comment on the report in the left- represent
only a teaser for
wing newspaper Al-Hamlahmar. Authorities said queries to
the
coming
attraction.
Interpol and Dutch pollee establfshed that tbe passport found
Even the June Bdate Is not
on tbe dead man was forged. Airport authorlUes said tbe man, finn for the resolution of
arriving on a flight from Vienna, triggered the powerful what has become a
. explostion when he was asked to open a booby-trapped suitcase melodrama of numbers in
by airport security guards.
both parties.
If President Ford, the
n CINCINNATI - DELEGATES AT THE OHIO AFirCIO
Republican
leader, and
ionvention have approved a resolution supporting the busing
Jimmy
Carter,
the
Of school children "when it will improve th~ educational Democratic frontrpimer,
qpporlunlties of the children." Several of the 1,500 delegates
spoke out against the resolution, b~t it was adopted on a voice cannot pull close enough 10
the magic numbers needed ·
(Continued on page 12)
fpr their party nominations in

••

the las! primaries and
remaining state conventlona,
the suipense could continue
lUltilthe Democratic national
convention in July and the
GOP cooclave In August.
Ford now leada Ronald
Reagan by 158 votes and
lacks only 334 for the 1,130
needed 10 nominate. There
are 390 GOP delegates
available In the last six
!l'lmarles, but 167 of them
are in Reagan's California.
· There also are 129 aJr:eady
selected
uncommitted
delegates up lor graba, and
the battle for them could be
the scene of the Republican
donnybrook If Ford and
Reagan come close 1to
splitting the remaining
!l'lmarles.
The Democratic landscape
lB not so simple. Carter has
1100 delegates, 625 short of the
1,505
required
for
nomination. Even If he could
sweep tbe final six primaries,
Carter still would be 29 short.
There also are
381
uncommltteds on the
Democratic list and - as ·
with the GOP - they could be
pivotal.
But there also are a
number of other potential
suurces for . Carter or his
opponents lo seek hel~L

No Democrat behind
Carter has more than 29'1
votes, but the entire field
Including the unconunltted
adda up to 1,343. That meana
there Ia the potential for a
succeuful antiCarter
eoillltlon, but trying to get the
dozen men. and · women
holding delegates to Rive up
and unite behind a Bingle
candidate might Involve
more conflict than any final
confrontation with the
frontrunner.
Tuesday's primaries did
not really help clear the air.
They ·showed, agaln, that
both Ford and Carter can be
beaten, and they brought both
of the leaders cloaer to
victory. The train and the car
simply moved closer to tbe
crossing.
NEW YORK, May M Hamilton,
captain of a New York
artillery compny, uked
the· provlaclal congress
that his men be lfvea tbe
aame pay aa guoaen Ia tbe
regular army. He also
reqaetted they be provided
"summer frockl" to be
worn' oa fatigue duty to
spare their uniforms.
Alt~IDder

became engaged in some
"bad mouthing" converBatlons.
The caravan moved ~aston
Rt. 124 to Rt. 7 and
the Gavin Plant where
two coal haulers were
forced to dump their coal so
as to block the gates to the
hauling entrance to the plant
111 'Rout~ 7,
Coal was also dumped
closing the plant's entrance
off Rl. 554. The convoy
continued on to Addl.son
closing down Thelma Coal
Company , then went to
Kanauga .where U1e StewartZinn Coal operation was
closed. It was reported that a
trucker was physically
assaulted at ·Stewart-Zinn,
but as of this morning no
charge had been flied.
The Gallla County sheriff's
department did not deny or
confirm the report.
The caravan then retw-ned
10 the Cheshire area where
the C.A.B. Coal Company was
closed. At C.A.B., a trucker
was forced to dump his load
on the company's weight
scales.

The JayMar Coal Com-pany located on the Gallla'
Meigs County line also closed
Ita ope~atlons.
During the three hour
episode, eight Ohio State
Highway Patrolmen were
Involved In traffic control. An
OSP plane also flew overhead
to r~port ~lghway problems.
The caravan disbanded at
2iUp.m.
It was assumed today that
. the Independent .closures
centered around the work
stoppage at Meigs Mine No. 1
which has alsp Rhut down
operations of Meigs No . 2 and
3.

Last week a miner was
fired at Meigs No. I for What
a company spokesman
reported was his refusal to
obey an order of his foreman.
The employe, through union
proced~res ,.
filed
a
grievance. The arbitrator's
decision upheld the foreman .
Meanwhile, uno fflclal
sources reported today the
miners from each mine were
scheduled to meet to discuss
the situation.

Hays admits mistake
By GENE BERNHAROO'

fNews • • .in Briefsl Political collisions
BY UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
PITI'SBURGH - TilE COLUMBIA GAS SYSTEM and
Koppers Co. announced Tuesday it had submitted a joint
!I'Oposal for a $55 million coal gasification demonstration plant
at Mingo Junction, Ohio, to the Energy h .search and Development Administration.
.
The announcement was made at a joint news conference
here by the two firma which said tbe proposal would be known
as the INgas Project and waa In response to the ERDA's
request for a proposal for a small scale fuel gas demonstratlpn
plant.

Non-union coal operators In
Ga!Ua and Meigs Counties
were closed down Tuesday
afternoon by approidmately
200 angry coal miners who
are striking three Meigs
Mines. The closed mines,
owned by the Southern· Ohio
Coil Company, lurnlsh fuel
(« the Jillllea 1\-1. Gavl!l Plant
at Cheahlre.
Accoriling to Lt. · Ernest
·Wigglesworth, commander of
the Gallla-Melgs Post State
Highway Patrol, the men
traveled from Wilkesville to
Kanauga In a convoy of approximately 100 vehicles
including cars, trucks and
motorcycles.
It was reported, the convoy
formed at Wilkesville
following a seven-minute
meeting. According to 'Lt.
Wigglesworth, the union
leaders tried to keep the
participants under control
and for the moat part were
successful .
It was rl!pDrted that several
vehicles had CB radios and
that the miners and coal
haulers, who also had CB
radios on. their trucks ,-

· $U,OOO.ayear job. He branded
WASHINGTON (UPI) - In the charges as "Ues."
a dramatic speech on the
And 28 House members
House Door, Rep. Wayne filed a stmllar request with
Hays has admiUed having a · the ethics panel, claiming
personal "relationship" with "we are not In any way
Elizabeth Ray, but lnslsted Jl'ejudglng the validity or
she was not put on tbe accuracy" of the Ray
coogresslonal payroll just to charges but " If they are true,
serve as hla miBtress.
·there .would appear to have
The
powerful been violatioos of the code of
Administration Committee official conduct."
chalnnan said be previously
The group also sent a copy
had denied having sexual of tbe request with a letter to
relatl0118 witll MJaa Ray ln Speaker Carl Albert and
order to rrotect his six-week- House Democratic leader
old marriage. He hoped Thomas O'Neill, asking their
coming forward with the support of the request.
facts now would pave tbe way
Rep . John Flynt, 0-Ga.;
for a House Ethics chairman of the ethics panel,
Committee finding that he dld was out of the city and
not violate any House rules. unavailable.
The 85-year-old Ohio
The
panel
could
Democrat got unanimous recommend expulsion of
COIIIellt to Interrupt debate.on Hays from the House,. or
a housing bill Tuesday to II'Opoae stripping him .of his
make his surprlse confession chairmanship, call lor a
about tile sex scandal before simple censure or find him
a hushed crowd of more than Innocent.
300 of his colleagues.
Hays said In a speech at the
· "!hope that when the time start of a House session
comes to leave thls House Tuesday that an FBI
which I love, Wayne Hays investigation
of
the
may be remembered as allegations WBB prompted by
mean,
arrogant, . his criticism earlier thla year
cantankerous and tough, but I of the Justice Department for
hope Wayne Hays will never not prosecuting Republicans
be thought of as dishonest," as well as Democrats
he told them.
accused of campaign law
Later, be declared to repor- violations. ·
ters: "If I could have one
Hays returned to the Door
wlsh, I'd like 10 Uve the last at mldafternoon for the
two and a half years of my surprise confession, claiming
life over."
"'I have erred. " .
Haysaskedtheethlcspanel
Before his second marriage
Tuesday to Investigate Miss six weeks ago , Hays said,
Ray's allegations that she "and for an extended period
performed no work other 11! time, 1 did have a
than entertain him in her relaliQnship with Elizabeth

,.

Ray. I was legally separated
and single. It was voluntary
on her part and on mine."
Hays said that after be
proposed to Patricia Peak,
his Ohio home office
secretary of eight years, be
told Miss
Ray
the
relationship was ended and
that she "became hysterical,
threatened suicide as she had
done in the past.
"She also threatened
blackmail and to destroy my
engagement."
Miss Ray said In an
Interview In the Washington
. Post the relationship
continued after Hays'
marriage.
Hays repeated hla denial
that he put Mlss Ray on hla
committee staff to be hls
mistress. He told the House,
"I stand here before you
today, with 'my conscience
now clear."

Youth removed
to Lancaster
Carl Hysell, Meigs ColUlty
Probation and Juvenile Of.
ficer, reported that he transported a 17 year old youth 10
the Fairfield llchool for Boys
Monday.
The youth, involved In an
incident in Middleport on
Saturday, May 15, was
charged by the Middleport
Police with resisting arrest
and disorderly conduct which
was in viblatlon or tern\s of
his probation. He will be
away approximately five
months.

·''

;

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