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Platform

League

IContinued from page I )
uf $600,000 !rom the Fulton
National - Bank and Sl75,000
from the C&amp;S Hank , both in
Atlanta.
He listed debl! of $1.8
million. offset by $600,000 in
money owed him by
telephon e companies for
deposits and by reporters and
Secret Service agents fOI'
trav"l on his campaign plane.
Murris Udall spent $J.7
million in his unsuccessful
Democratic campaign and is
$450,000 in debt. His debts
include personal loans
tota ling $55,000 and an
· American R~press bill of
$112,526.

Stiffer gas
(Continued !rom page I)
induslri&lt;l l boiler loads.
- 65 per cent for "II
iwlustri&lt;tl loads which cou ld
usc em alternate fuel.

- 10 per cent for "II
industriallo"ds which cannot
usl! an alterru.1te fuel.
·- 40 per cent for all other

commercial customers.

·M.EIGS THEATRE
Toniqhf thru Thursday
June 17 thru June 24
NOT OPEN

Fri.- Sit.- Sul1 .
June 25.26-27

Wa If Disney's
BLACKB EA RO'SGHOST
Dean Jones, Peter Ustinov,
Sus(1 nne Pleshette , Elsa
Lcmchcste r . Joby Baker ,

Elliott Reid.
IGl
Shcaw Starts 7p.m .

(Continued from page I)
l!ceslabhslnllcnt of a golf
tournament ; Monday night
football lor reserve t...:uns
instead ol Saturday ; i ca~ue
dues; report on girls sport•
and a constituti on chan~e .

Carl Stalder
died Wednesday

Carl Edward St~lder, 74,
form erly of Pomeroy, died
Wednesday morning .a t his
home in Chillicothe. He wa s
born Jt~y .2J, 1901 at J.angsville, a son of the late Ralph
In other ~Hiller s Wed
ncsday, Shamp a s ~ed and and Addie Brown Stalder.
On March 25, 1968 he
received permission to repor t
the requiremen ts of H.B. 421 married Cordell M. Claytor
!Suspension .Expulslon) ' to who sw·vives, as does a stepthe groop.
Wayne
Jackson was recognized as daughter , Mrs .
Riehle,
Chillicothe
;
a
step·
baseball champions and the
secretary was Instructed to lifln. Russell Claytor, Dayton;
send SIS lo the school on six step-grandchildren, and a
purchase of a trophy .
Gallia Academy High sister, Mrs. Levenna EbersSc hool was recognized as the bach.
leag ue lrack champion and
Mr. Stalder was a veteran
the secretary was Instructed of World War II having
to send S15 on purc hase of a
served in the U. S. Army. He
trophy .
Joe Michael. Wellston, sa id was a member of Post 63
Wellston will drop golf and Ameri c an Legion,
wrestling for the 1976 -77
Chillicothe.
season.
Funeral services will be at
The Athens golf coach
di scussed the possibil ity of 10 a.m. Friday at the Ware
re-es tablishi ng lhe league Funeral Home in Chillicothe
golf tournament ; to be with C. D. Read olficiatlng.
discussed further In August .
Bill Waddell IAfhensl was Graveside services will be
appointed to make up the 1977 held at Beech Grove
baseball schedule using the Cemetery in Pomeroy at
present setuf. and cus tomary 12:45 p.m. Friday. Friends
rotation sys em .
Waverly was given per· may call at the funeral home
mission to start spring from 5 to 8 this evening.
athlelic contests one hour
la ter
where
necessar y
because of its la te dismissal

time.

'

The

trea surer's

report

showed a baf ance on hand of
1234.52. A complete report
will be made In August.
Bill Waddell, Athens, urged
the group to avoid scheduling
league baseball games and
track meets on the same day .
The. group agreed .

President Dav is had each

person present introdu ce
themsel ves and state what

school lhey represented.
The following attended :
James N. M. Davis and Ed
Stewart, Gallla Academy

NOTICE
IN COOPERATION WITH
VILLAGE POLICE

High Sc hool ; Bob McCofferty
and Bob Shamp, Athens High
School ; Chuck Eichelberger,
Logan ; Bitt Waddell, Athens:
Jack Coy an and Bob Bevins,
Jackson High School ; Jim
Diehl, Meigs; Mike Burcham
and Curt Boggs, Iron ion :
John Martin, Waverly ; W. E.
Lockhart, Joe Michael and
Nancy Kibler, Wellston : Tom
Meffers. Athens Messenger
and Mike Dunn, Athens.
A survey of school gate
prices for 1976·77 revealed the
following !basketball and
football In that order! :
Gallia Academy High
School . Sl ·lf .50, SJ.$1.50.
Wellston, $\..$1.50, S\.$1.50.
Meigs, S\.$1 .50, SJ.S\.50.
Logan, Sf·$2, Sl·$2.
Jackson, SI ·SI.SO, SI ·Sl.50.
Ironton, 11.50, St.SO .
Athens, Sl·$1.50, SI ·II.SO.
Waverly, S\.$1.50, Sl ·$1.50.
NOTE : Ironton pre.game
sales student 75 cents. All
tickets at gate Sl.lO.

AND
THE REGAn A COMMinEE

Meigs people

AND IN THE iNTEREST TO

bought cars,

SAFETY OF PEDESTRIANS

less food etc.

WE WILL NOT BE OPEN'
")

FRIDAY NIGHT, JUNE 18th
FOR OUR USUAL
5 TO 7 HOURS.

CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Motor vehi~le sales tax
receipts in Meigs County for
the month of May, 1976, increased nearly 100 percent
compared to May, 1975,
according to the monthly
report of Mrs . Gertrude
Donahey. stale treasurer.
Motor vehicle sales tax in
the county for May, 1976,
totaled $46,134.57 compared
to $23,119.95 for May, 1975, an
increase of 99.54 percent.
·However, retail sales tax
receipts were down about 9.38
. percent in May ol this year
compared to May, 1975. The
receipts for this May
amounted to $53,671.12
compared to receipts of
$5.559.72 for May, 1975.

HOSPITAL NEWS
Vcl.rans Mcmorlallluspltal
Holzer Medical Center
ADMISSIONS - Mark
IDischarges, June 161
Markham, Pomeroy ; Aida
John
Barry ,
David
Doerler, Middleport; Nellie Bierhup, Ca rl Bishop ,
Hanson, Middleport; ftichard William Bradley, Randy
Shuler, Pomeroy ; Karen Sue · Cain , Thomas Cameron, Jodi
Cremeans, Little Hocking ; · Clar k. Rufus Cook, Mrs .
Hosner Roush, New Haven ; Victor Counts and daughter,
Ethel Saylor, Athens.
Terri Cox, Greta Di Cenzo,
DISCHARGES - Alice Sanford Edmonds, Mrs .
DOdson, Joseph Reiser, Franklin Gay and son,
William Frederick, James Charles
Hill,
Wanda
Sears, Myrtle Thomas, Sheila Hollingshead, Mary Kuntz,
Erlewine.
Richard I.e Grande, Charles
Maple, Nita Milliken, Mrs.
Everett Mont~omerv anrl
FIVE YEAR LIMIT
daughter, Mary Roush,
WASIIINGTON UPI - The Thomas &amp;ally: :sandra &amp;ott,
Justice Department is Lucy Williams, Retha Wilson .
preparing legislation lo place
( Births, June 16)
live-year limiis on busing to
Mr. and Mrs. Roger King,
desegregate s.chools. AI· daughter, Jackson ; Mr. and
torney Gimerai Edward Levi Mrs. Carl Trippett, Jr., son,
told a news conferen ce Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va.; Mr.
Wednesdy that five years of and Mrs. Harold Crabtree,
busing should "put the son, Jackson ; Mr. and Mrs.
community in a position Will Darnbrough, daughter ,
where normal patterns would Gallipolis; Mr . and Mrs .
take over."
William Glass, daughter,
Jackson; Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Laudermilt, son,
FEWER CLAIMS
Racine.
COLUMBUS UP! - The
Ohio Bureau of Employment
Services reported today a
three·tenths ol one. per cent
decline in the number of
DOWN, POSTERS
jobless Ohioans filing· initial
All
posters
claims lor unemployment displayedpolitical
in Middleport must
benefits lor the week ending be removed or be subject to
June 12, 12,365 filing claims ·court line, by order of Mid·
last week compared to the dleport Mayor Fred Hoff.
previous week's total of man.
12.397.

Berry's World

Mrs. Mallory
of Racine dies

(Continued fnxn pag~ I)
We are still reviewing the situation carefully but ab!lolutely no
RACINE - Mrs. Charles decision bas been made." J
i Mayme ) Mallory, 70,
The world service ol the British Broadcasting Corporation
Racine , died Wednesday began broadcasting hourly appeals from London this morning ,
night at Veterans Memorial asking all BritiSh and Co!'lffionwealth citizens to "report to the .•
Hospital.
embassy imnieiliately."
,.
She was preceded in death
An embassy source said tbe British were arranging an
by her parents, David and evacuation of embassy personnel and nationals to Damaseua
Amanda Batey Cross; her by car convoy Friday. However, he said the move had been
husband, Charles Lee ''planned a long lime in advance" and had nothm~ to do witb
Mallory, and a son, Bobby. Meloy's death. The French embassy sent out a surular convoy ·
Surviving are two sons, Tuesday .
.
~
Charles, Riverdale, Ga .;
In Washington, President Ford said he had "or~red !'II the :
Lynn, Racine; a daughter, appropriate rtsources of tbe United States t.. to Identify the
Mrs. David (Linda) Hill, persons or group responsible for Ibis vicious act. Those '
Racine; three brothers, Ben responsible lor tllese brutal assassinations must be brought to;
Cross, Glouster; Carl Cross, justice."
·
.·
•
East Pompano Beach, Fla.,
But in Lebanon - a country without police, without courts
and W. B. Cross, Racine; a and with only guns as law - Meloy, Waring and Moghrabi
sister, Catherine Ferris, were only three more victims among the thousands.
·....
Charleston, W. Va .; six
"In our civil war ,more than 30;000people bavedied, many of·
grandchildren, four great· them in the same way as the ambassador," one Leban~;
grandchildren and several official said. "Nobody has ever been caught. Nobody ever wiU
nieces and nephews.
be. There is no one 10 catch them."
•
'
Funeral services will be at
.t
10 a.m. Saturday at the
i
..
,
Ewing Funeral Home with
•
the Rev. Howard Shiveley
food booth being prepared foi' :
BOOSTERS TO MEET
officiating. Burial will be in
The Meigs Local Band the Meigs County Fair lli
the Letart Falls Cemeh!ry. Boosters will meet at 6 this August. A second work;
Friends may call at the
session will be held at the
funeral home after 7 this evening at tbe Rock Springs grounds at 9 a.m., Saturday.
Fairgrounds to work on a
evening.

FATHER'S DAY SALE!

We are oifering an honest 20 PCT. DISCOUNT ON a
complete line of Ind ian Jewelry .
Mr. E. R. Cross. an Indian Jewelry specialist. will be
on hand Friday, June 18 and Saturday. June.J9, with a .
vast selection of jewelry to show and sell.
~

.•

r(.(...~r. ·.... ,·

3

Sale
Prices

the poet's corner

But who is that someone who weathers each storm
To provide for his loved ones at each break of dawn,
Regardless of preferen ce or life's situation The security and happiness , His precious creation -

Daddy!

Includes our
entire stock of
men's
sport
and
dress
shirts.

$4 99

GOESSLER'S JEWELRY STORE
COURT ST..

POMEROY, OHIO

e

admitted shooting her
huaband in the chest with a
.12 gauge shotgw1.
The grand jury indicted
Rex D8rst, RDute I, Mid·
dleport, on two counta, one of
theft, Blld receiving stolen
goods. Two other persons
wm Indicted on a charge of
possesalon of barbiturates
resulting from an auto accident on the Pmeroy parking

lot several weeks ago. They
are Timothy Gibbs of Mason,
W. Va., and Pamela Petrie,
New Haven.
Making up the jury were
Edwin F. Neutzllng, Susan
Lanning, Sam Hicks, Jr.,.·
Laura Harrison, - Helen
Woode, Dale Barr, Joe
Bailey, Edila M. Swick,
Harry Clark, Cecil Stacy,
Bonnie Lawrence and Helen
Jeffers.

the Big Bend Regatta frog
jumpa in Pomeroy tomorrow, .
Vitamin n
received a """"'al
""""'
,.
12 shot and Uurough physical
examination Thursday af.
iemoon from Dr. Dan Noth!r,
left, Gallipolis veh!rinarlan.
Bll1 Young, Grand Tadpole
of the Ohio Society lor the
Promotion of Bullfrogs, Inc.,
comforted Godfred during
the shot. Young said exams
for frogs In training are held
every three weeks. Viiamin
shots have been. approved by

•

are prohibited. Godfred, who
possesses unusual blue eyes,
he
d
hs
is 17t,2 inc s 1ong an we1g
one and one-hall pounda. He
will participate in the frog
jumps as part of an exchange
program with the city of
·
tali
Rayne. A frog represen
ve
will
from the Regatta
trave1
to the Rayne frog festival In
Seph!mber.
The Regatta Jumps will
begin Saturday at 6 p.m. in
th
1 f tball stad!urn a1
Poe Me gs oo
meroy.

at y

1

..

mtghty ktngdom or the Father -

Where rewards are given

according to deeds. - Matt. 13-43.

enttne
Ford askS
for unity
Flfteea Ceall
Vol. !8, No. "

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter

~estern Shirts -all arranged for your ea-sy selection. you'll
ltke these styles; the colors and fine quality.
Sport and Dress Shirts- dress shirts (a famous brand) in neck
size 14'h to 17'12, sport shirts in small. medium, large and extra
large.

8:30 TIL 12:30

The MEIGS INN
Ph. 992-3629
I'OMEROY

You can really save during this special two day
sale. - Father's Day is next Sunday.

895 with 1,130 needed to win
the nomination.
"1976 is a \'!tally lrflportant
election year," Ford said. "It
is the year that we can ride a
wave of great victory. Now It
makes no sense for us to
scramble down to the wire for
the nomination and then have ·
our party fall apart the next
day."
' .
He reCIJUed Ute JlllrlY took a
"bad beating" In 1964 when
Lyndon Johnson wm over
Sen. Barry Goldwater by a
landslide. He said the party
was built up again In 19118
when Richard Nixon won the
presidency but in the 1974
congressional elections ''we
took another disastrous
defeat."
·
"Now we have had a
spirited contest for the
presidential nomination,"
Ford aaid, "but all of us muat
work equally hard to )l'event
this 1976 prl!llldential cmteat
in the Republican party ... we
mwrt strive to prevent It from
becoming a grudge battle.

E-ite panel to
help pick veep

Weather

Tank Tops- solid colors and fancies small, medium. large and
extra large. Regular prices 2.95 to 4.98.

The party cauc111 had Kheduled a meetl!lg for
Wednesday to act on a
reeolution llrlpplng Hays of
the Chalrmanablp in the wake
'-&gt;f sex:scandal allegatlonii '
lodged against him by
Elizabeth Ray . That cauCIIA
Pfesumably could act m the
sleeting commlltee
nomination at that time
'sending it to the Door lor full,
Jfollllll approval.
In another move, Rep.
Michael Harkredin~~.:_~·
Mass., has as
"'""' u ..n
numas Morgan ol tlle Holllll
lnterna Ilona I Relations
Committee t 11 De
ts
.
o ca
mocra
oo that panel together to v«e
onh I rem oving fHa Ys thas
c a rman · o
e
sub commIttee on
Intemationa I ()pera Uons.
It
t immedi t 1
was no
a eY
known whether Morgan
agreed to tbe move.
In his letter, HaY!l said, "l
am confident that 1 will be
vindl. ca ted as •·
·
"' any wrmg·
Continued on page_5

•

Wews . . :in Brief~

Beflffi.ng a king ,- which on earth he has won '
May hiS merit up there be placed second to none - Daddy!
· - By Margaret Holter.
Then shalt the righteous shine fOrth as the Sun on that

.TONIGHT

NOW

am·

auto acCident

Farone whom their life has so generousl.y been given
A crown - I know - in heaven there's waiting

FROM PARKERSBURG

QUALITY
JEWELRY

but

i:'''i:J::i''£:; .Democrats name Wells chainnan·

THE UNSUNG HERO
There must be a division in heaven - I know
Where ~arth's unrewarded and righteous must go
To rece1ve of a crown much more precious than gold
For a life's sacrifice and endurance untold.

3 GALS

·

Society,

Qver Greenup dam

"TIGRESS"

Reg.$9-00

the

New bridge going

At The Inn

The new TWISTED
liquid silver necklaces.

lo Albert. Hays indicated In
the le~r he would try to
regain the chairmanship of
the administration panel if he
is vindicated of the !eX·
scandal allegailons.
"The charges which have
been made against me and
the current state of my health
make it lmpo$11ble foc me to
J!
•
.
devote the time necessary to
carry out my l'ellPOnslbiUties
·
· as chairman," Hays said in
Godfred M
· the letter.
tomorrow :nso~~s f~~~
Albert said Hays offered no
comment and he did not
colinty's best kept secreta. inquire of the Ohio Democrat
There has been ~ulation of a· report that he woul.l not
he (or she) could be fired
k
1· 1
1
see
re-e eel on
n
from the lailnchingpad by (I) November . HliY!l has alr~ady
Jim C1atworthy of Mid· wion nom1na tl on for re·
dleport, .one-Ume CIA agent; e ection.
(2) Atty. Frederick O'ow II,
Albert said he would call
Pomeroy, former FBI agent the Democra uc Pollcy
. and
and All·American end at Ohio St in c m1
-.State University under the
eer g om ttee toget... r
after he receives Hays' letter
late Francia Sehrrddt; or, and to nominate a SUCceBl!Or,
petlsh the thought, (S) even whom sources say will ·be
Penelope McGillicuty, the Rep. Frank 'l'hompson, ().
Big Mac of journallaUc fame. N'J ·• ranking Democra t m
the. Pllnel behind Hays.

WASHINGTON (UP!) Appealing for Republican
party unity, Prl!lildent Ford
says his coolest with Ronald
Reagan for the presidential
nomination must not be
allowed to become a "grudge
battle."
, "I can say qtat Is my
lntentloo and I feel sure that
it Ia equally the intention of
my Republican opponent,"
Ford said Thursday on the
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
eve of hla departure today for
Sunday tbrougb
DISCUSS ACTION-State Rep. Ron Jam'es met Thursday a.m. with residenls of
Des Moines.
Tuesday, a cbance of
Syracuse to a hazardous road condition in the village on SR 124 near the Eura Largent
Bolh Ford and Reagan are
showen or thundenbowen
residence. Going o~er the problem with James is Anna RoWih; In tbe background, left, is
competing for 36 delegates 1o
Sunday, Monday aad
FRANKFORT, Ky. (UPI)
Ross Norris. The wtdth of the highway In the area which is only 18' 9" has been a point of
The bridge Is designed 1o
be chosen by the Iowa GOP
Tuelday. Hlgha will be In
- Plana to cmstruct a new, alleviate cmgestlon m the
con!"nlim for sometime. Residenls and village officials have tried frequently to get the
convenUm this weekend.
the upper IIOs to the low IIOs
two-lane bridge acr0!18 the U.S: Grant Bridge over the
assistance of the state highway deparlment in widening the road. James promised to do ail
Ford's remarks, delivered
and low1 will be In the
Ohio River between Greenup, Ohio River near South Shore,
that he could to help. James will be·on 'IV's "At Issue" on channel3 Sunday.
somberly to a White House
upper 80s to the low 70s.
Ky., Blld Wheelersburg, 0., Ky., and Portsmouth, Ohio.
gathering of nearly 200 Teenwere alUlounced Thursday by
age Republicans, appeared to
Kentucky's share of the
Kentucky Transportation cost of coostructing the new
be a backdrop for tonight's
Secretary John C. RDberts, bridge Is expected to run
joint appearance with
Roberts said the Kentucky about $12 million. Funding
•
Reagan at a GOP dinner In
and Ohio departments of will be 70 per cent federal and '
. a new chairman and vice
Chester Wells of Reedsville sought reelection to their Des Moines.
tranaportatioo have agreed to 30 per cent state, with monies
chairman of the Meigs was named chairman of the posta. Bruce May, Rutland,
So far, the President has
start design Oil the bridge and coming from Kentucky's
Co111ty
Democrat
Executive
1,013
delegates to Reagan's
executive
committee
suc·
was reelected secretary.
Abee In the hair of a driver
approaches over the Greenup Appalachian Development
Committee
were
named
ceedlng
E.
A.
Wingett
of
Central committee officers
caused a minor accident
Dam as soon as possible. He Program Fund.
Thursday night In· an Racine and Dave Gerard, were reelected, including
Thursday
at
11:55
a.m.
in
said officials of b«h states . Roberts · said actual
organizational session at Middleport, was named vice
alJo agreed ·the Kentucky construction of the bridge Is Letart Township on SR 338 Grace Episcopal Parish chairman, replacing Henry Norman Will, chairman;
Celia Bailey, vice chairman;
the Meigs County Sheriff's
oor will be the lead agency still "several years away." Department
House.
HIDlter of the Chester area. Bruce May, secretary, and
reported.
Scott
for the new project.
Neither Wingett noc Hunter Bill Cozart, !reasurer.
.
D. WoJfe, 16, Racine,
traveling south on SR 338, had
~WIIIm!IIIIAIIIIIIAIIIIM&lt;:
. :w.:!:;:~~~iS~:*:.;:*=i~~~::::::::::~ a bee come in the window of
his car and into his hair which
caused him tPleave the highBy WESLEY G. PIPPERT.
way and go into a ditch.
SEA ISLAND, Ga. (UP!) There were no injuries and
. By uoiied P.- IDien!atiooal
Seeking-to avoid anyone who
only minor property damage.
LAS VEGAS, NEV. TEAMSI'ERS PRESIDENT Frank
might be tainted by acandal,
. - Fltzsinunms and ,olber trustees of tbe union's $1.3 billion
Jimmy Carter says be may
Central States Pension Fund are under subpoena for
ask a blue rlbbm panel of 12
informatloo relating to charges they are guilty of financial
to 15 peraons - and perhaps
. wntng-doing.
the FBI - to help him select a
Fltzalmmoos mentioned the subpoenas for the first tline
running mate.
Mostly cloudy, showers or
Thuraday in a speech charging tbat he and other union officials
The frontrunner for the
were being harassed by fedl!l'al prosecutors and coogressional thunder shower• likely
Democratic presidential
committees investigating alleged corruption in the union and tonight and SatiD'day. Lows
nomination said, however,
the dlaappearance of f&lt;l'lllel' Teamsters leader Jimmy Hoffa. tonight will be In the mid tAl
that he wtll try to honor the
"fm in receipt now of a subpoena to.appear in Washington, D. upper 60s and highs Saturday
privacy of those who may be
c., as a few otherssittingoo thisrostrumare,"he tOld the final will be In the lower 608.
considered lor the vice
Probability of rain 20 per cenl
•on of the union's 21st convention.
)l'esldentlal.nominatim .
today, 60 per cent tonight, 70
Carter talked to reporters
JOHANNESBURG, 9JUTH AFRICA -SOUTH Africa's per cent Saturday.
on St. Simons Island
racial violence today spread to exclusive white suburbs where
Thursday following two day
angry blacis stmed cara. The rioting also engulfed at least six
of staff dlscu.satons planning
black townships and a university camp111.
the rest of the campaign,
Pollee 181d atlesst 58 peraons have been ldlled and more BANKS' BAD.
Carter CCillpletes a four-day
than 778 wounded in three days of rioting touched off
vacation on oak and myrtle
SAN FRANCIS&lt;X&gt; (UPI)Wedneflday when .black ltudenta cluhed with pollee In Soweto A baU hearing for Indian
covered Sea Island Saturday.
township during demOIIIIratlons qalnst the teaching of the leader Dennis Banks on
Carter said he would
Afrlbana language in acboola. Pollee Minister Jimmy Kruger fugitive charges has been
disclose "in a couple of days"
banned all public meetings - tliCept sports gat!terlngs, postponed until July 19 to give
the detalla of how he will
meetings within bUildings or those authorized by a magistrate. Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr.
an opportunity · to act · Cll
MANSFIELD, OHIO- TWO VETERAN &lt;X&gt;NTESTANTS exiradltltm .
bave Will the swimault •nd talent dlvillons during the first
13anks, convicted in South
The Children's Caatlrt!l
·prellmlnary round of CCillpetitlon in the Ml.u Ohio Pageant. Dak«a of rioting and asaault,
Derby, a major attraction of
Janice Elaine Cooley of Porl.lmouth, competing sa Ml.u faces extradition from both
the Big Bend Regatta in the
allo Valley, won the nlmlult dlvialon and Marietta Lee Clark California and Oregon.
pall, will be held lhll y~
ol Xenia, Mils Ohio Stale Unlvenlty, won the talent dlvlalon Recently, both states raised
cliring the first of two nights of preliminary c0111petitlm bali from ts,ooo 1o $10,000.
FROG HAvEN ..: Mei,t O!unty;i uniqut "frog hlftll" tOcated near Racme on 111e qain on the Pomeroy tenn1a
Thlll'ICiay ntgllt at Mansfield Malabar High School.
court adjolnlnc the Pomeroy
Banks was given until June Basilan Road Ia owned by Mr. and Mrs. Eber Pickens. Near the entrance are Jim
First Baplilt Olurch.
Cia
!Worthy,
1~.
(!Bsl
grand
croaker
of
the
Ohio
Society
for
the
Promotion
o1
the
Bull
Frog
·
14 to raise the new amount
SANFRANCISCG -KENNE'l11W. CARLSON, 88, fonner and was Wl&amp;ble ~ do so. He
.The derby will begin at 10 a.
and Eber and Helenl&gt;lckens-:The ·sign was made by Eber and Charles King, Belpre. Thlf
m. Sattll'day. Age groupa
adliliniltrator of Northern California Teamsters Union trust surrendered Monday, but frog ha-ven has a driveway entrance with a frog on each side that weighs 110 poWlda or mart
fundi, hal been lndict«&lt; on charges of embezzling $2.38 went free on Thesday when each. At the lop of the hiD looking toward a lake Is a garden area that contains a dance hall
eligible to parUclpate are the
mlllloo. The ledl!l'al grand, jury charged Thurflday in an Ill- his attorney persuaded a with frogs, and a frog providing the music sitting on a tree stump, guitar in hand. There Is
5 lhru ll·yev~ldland the 12
count indictment that Carllon stole or embezzled the lunda judge to allow him to post a stlll another area with a bird bath surrounded by frogs. Maxine King also helped create frog
thru l~year~lda. 1bere will
from the union'• .....,. benefit pU.na.
haven.
be prizes for everyone.
r-tnrnphiP t5fWI 1vmtt

Leisu~e Shirts- size.s small through extra large, an excellent
s_electton, _regular pnce 9.95 to 20.00.

SPECIAL SALE ·

FRoG IN TRAINING - Dr. DanNotter,left, gaVe buillrog Godfred Monster a thorough
physical examination and vitamin shot Thursday afternoon as part of the frog's training for
the Big Bend Regatta frog jump this weekend. Godfred made a special trip !rout Rayne, La .
to participate In the jump. Bill Young, Grand Tadpole r:A the Ohio Society for the Promotion
of Bullfrogs, Inc., Is In charge of Godfred's training program here.
·

FolD' persons were indicted
when tJie Meigs County grand
jury · met Wednesday,
Prolecutlng AttQmey Ber·
nard Fultz said today.
Indicted on inilrdet
charges as the result of the
death of hl!l' huaband, Floyd
Eugene (Buddy) Hendricks,
50, Mlnenvllle, on JIDle 1 was
Mary Vlrt!lnla Hendricks, his
1Afe.Airs.llendricks,51,has

Knit Shirts- crew necks, knit shirts with collars, dress knits.
Regular prices 3.50 to 13.95.

• RINGS
• EARRINGS
• BRACELETS
• NECKLACES
• SQUASH·
BLOSSOMS
• TIETACS

Godfred Monster, a Rayne,

1..11., bullfrog shipped here for phetamines and barbiturates

Indiclment for
murder brought .

Dress Shirts

accused ol keeping his down from the chairmanship.
mistress on the government I assume that mearis he will
payroll, denied he wiD resign resign."
from Congress.
. Hays is in a Barnesville,
Albert !old reporters he Ohio, hospjtal recovering
talked by telephone with from an overdose of sleeping
Hays Thursday "and he pills.
verified he would send me a
Hays' office released the
letter on Monday stepping text of the letter he will send

G0 dfred Monster rea· died .tOr Jumps

Pemero:r-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, JWie 18, 11171

AND ·

Thi s is his obl igation , to r ight every wrOng
To brighten each day with a smile or a song,
Though hi sown may be burdened. his spirits be low.
He mustoe courageous, and not let it show - Daddy!

20°/o off SALE

WASHINGTON (UPI) Rep. Wayne HaY!l, D.Qhio,
· will ~lgn as chairman of the
Influential House
Administration Committee
m Monday, Speaker Carl
Albert said today.
Hays, who has been

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

For the sake of a child much more precious to Him
Th~n all earthly treasure, or worldly accla im
Th1 s world has to offer in fortune or fame ;
Yet few words of praise e'er honor the name - Daddy .

AUTHENTIC AND INDIAN STYLE JEWELRY

By GENE BERNHARDT

.

Men's Sport

J

Hays quitting as chairman
of committee; to hold seat

PLO says

select his running mate. He
said he would not reveal the
names of those under
consideration - apeculatioo
by the news niedla will take
care of \hal, be said - but
that he wlll annOWICe the
names of some of the "dlalin·
gulshed Americans" w~o
would asaist him In the
screening.
. He said he would use the
FBI only If it Is legal and if
the potential n0111inee agreed.
"I think It's Important In
this procetl8 to honor the
privacy ol those being
conaidl!l'ed - that's a main
reaaon I would not want a full
background check by the FBI
or any agency without hil or
her permlaslon," Carter said.
ArepOrter asked if Carter's
caution was cailsed by the
burgeoning sex 1candal in
W&amp;!hington.

Rerun of casting derby set

•

SALE PRICES!
SHOP FRIDAY 9:30 TO 8 PM. OPEN SATURDAY
9:30 TO 5 PM

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
...

'II ~ -1

'&gt;•

•

,.,

.... .

..

- "'

4L .

•• •

Department of Naturaf
Resource•, Di viiion of
Wildlife, II In ch&amp;rwe of the
derby. He ..... all Pill'·
ticlpanta to recilter in ll)e
buement of the Pomiii'O)'
Firlt Baplilt Olurch by 8::10
a. m. the motJIInc of the
event.
Anyone with queations
ahould cont.ct the Pcmeroy
Ownber of Commerce in the
Pot,~
""'\"
, COurt Ho111e or call

....

•

�~";;-......

Dat:ly S.tntlr~elJMlddleport·P&lt;meroy, 0 , Friday, June 18, 1976 •

Pony Express rides again
LAKE CITY (UPI ) - Troy Austin
lltood In lhe middle of Mam Sl awaiting lhe
gun Fifty feet away his horse reared and
1

'
I

screamed
The gun went off, Austin ran for the horse,
picked up the mad pouch and the Pony
Express rode again
A samilar sc-:ne unfolded simultaneously
In Sacramento, Calif , Thursday and the
opposing teams of horsemen rode off on a
Bicentennial challenge race matching the
hell-bent-for-leather rides ol l~l - days
when the reckless riders of the Pony
fo:xpress were the newest and fastest
development m mail sertice
The race l;tarled as a chauenge by Utah
Gov Cal Hampton to caiiforma Gov
Edmund G Brown Jr The starling guns 10
Salt Lake City and Sctamento were £ired
simultaneously oo the signal of an offiCial
starter m Sacramento
The first 10 of 79 riders from the caiiforma
State Horseman's Asllociation took oil from
Sail Lake City racllll! against a team of 39
riders from Utah s Weber County Sheriff's
Mounted Posse headed 10 the opposite
direction
The riders will recreate the origina I 7511mlle Pony Express route through Utah and
Nevada to Sacramento They carry yellow
pouches With 500 pieces of commemorallve

Mars landing. site looks good

By AI. ROSSITER Jr.
UPI S&lt;lenc:e EdltoL
mail observ10g the BicenteMial
PASADENA, calif (UPI J
In Salt IJJke City, pohce roped off a block - Vllting l's first good distant
on Ma10 St and the ca lifornia riders gllfnpse of Its landing site on
saddled their mounts m front of the Tribu ne
Mars showed the area was
Buildmg - a stop on the or1gmal express free of the kind of dust storm
roule
lha l would force proJect
Square dancers do-si-(!oed Riders tugged offi Cials to delay the probe 's
at their bright red bandannas and adJUSted planned July 4 landing
the heavy leather mad pouches
The big spacecraft IS scheAustm s horse apparently was oot anxious duled 0to swmg mto orbit
to get on the road The nder wh1pped the around Mars Saturday and
horse's head around and, m the fmesl Pony then spend the rest of June
Express tradiilon , scattered onlookers and scoutmg the landing area
new!llllen as he mounted his steed sideways With a pa1r of television
on a gallop out of town
cameras to make sure no
Betty Ph1l11ps of Fresno, one of 2!i women unexpected hazards awa1l the
on the cahforma team, was anxious lD gel three-legged landmg section
on the trail, which includes hundreds of
The Inllial pictures taken
miles of raw desert m western Utah and as VIking was shU a few
Nevada "I've lived m the desert I'm not hundred thousand miles
alratd of riding through 11 "
away from Mars alljO showed
Both teams will be on the road 24 hours a broad secllons of the wmtry
day and both hope to make it to their home Southern HemiSphere
towns by Saturday
covered by what appear to be
The or1gmal Pony Express lasted only 18 ground logs and layers of
months on a 1,831kmle route between St frost
Joseph, Mo , and Sacramento II was
"It says not only that we
replaced by the telegraph The express are not m trouble, but It looks
allracted such riders as Buffalo Bill Cody, as though' w!l_ter vapor may
who was 118 youngest member at age 15
be reasonably abundant and
that's exactly what we're

Prosecutor criticizes easy sentence
I

By JOHN PRYOR
NEW YORK ( UPI ) - The
lemency of a federal Judge m
senlcncmg former nursmg
home operator Bernard
llergman to just four months
In Jail lor his part 10 a II 2
million Medicaid fr aud
ar~used
a storm of
l'IJiltroversy
Special state Prosecutor
Olorles J Hynes, m charge
of' the nursmg home
Investigation, said Thursday
he was "extraordmar~ly
diSappointed"
by
the
sentence Imposed by U S
llistr~cl Court Judge Marv10
li'rankei
Hynes called the JUdge's
tleciSion "special JUstice lor
the privileged" and Rep
Edward I
Koch, D-

Manhattan, sa1d It 1s an
outrage "
'Instead of spending four
months . m a real )811
Bergman Is gomg to be
perm11ted to hvc In a hsllway
house, one that IS effectively
a hole I " Koch said
Hynes sa1d Bergman also
hss refused to hve up to an
agreement to cooperate m the
mvestigatlon and to make full
reshluhon of the taxpayers'
money he 1s Sllld to have
stolen Hynes sa1d Bergman
has agreed to pay back only
$360,000 of the $2 5 million
aud1tvrs say he owes the
state
Both Hynes and stale Su·
preme Court Jushce AloysiUS
Mella served nollce • they
were not bound by any

Losses measured
UDiled Preullllernalional
Texans today conlmued
their
battle
agamst
lloodwaters that ravaged
Houston earlier this week and
upper Midwest farmers
a•sessed losses from the
worst drought since the 1930s
and waited for prom1sed
federal a1d
'
Workers 10 Houston were
still pumpng out water from
bosemenls and bulldmgs
deluged by up lo 13 10ches of
' rain Tuesday Texas Gov
J)]Iph Briscoe ordered the
Division
of
Disaster
Emergency Service to survey
the damage
The Houston floods left
eight persons dead
But there was no moiSture
In sight for thirsting crops In
U1e nation's upper Midlands
Minnesota Agriculture
Commissioner Jon Wefald
said his estimates that the
drought has damaged onetlttrd of lhe slate's crops and
caused $1 b1lllon m losses are
"very conservative "
"Every farmer thai has
called me In the last 15 days
l!llys my estimates are too
low," he sa1d "This 1s the
most severe drought we've
ever had.
"Most people don't realize
this drought baSically started

m July of last year there's
beem nothmg like 11 smce the

federal plea-barguntng
agreements mvolv1ng the 54year old orthodox rabbi and
onellme mlihona~re, who
pleaded gwlly m March to
two counts of an 11-count
mdlclment The former
nursmg home operator also
faces senlencmg on stale
charges
Slate
and
federal
prosecutors had agreed that
any term of confinement
unposed by the state courts
should
be
served
concurrently with the federal
penalty But Meha and Hynes
said they do not feel they are
bound by lhst agreement
'My hands aren't hed ,"
Mella said
Bergman, once the central
ftgure 1n the massive nW'smg
homes mqmry, admitted he
took part in the conspiracy
and he filed false corporate
Income tax returns He 1s

scheduled to surrender June
28 to begm serving his 120-&lt;lay
sentence
In sentencmg Bergman,
who could have been sent to
pnson for five years and
lmed $15,000, Frankel said he
conSidered the four months to
be a ''stern ' sentence
For people hke Dr Bergman, who might be disposed
to en gage m Similar
wrongdomg , 11 should be
sui!Iclenliy frightemng to
serve the major end of
genera I dete rrence," he
said

Hynes disagreed, saymg,
One wonders whether
essenual JUSllc-e has been
accomplished when a man
such as Bernard Bergman IS
giVen th1s kind of sentence "
The elderly who hved 1n
Bergman's nursmg homes
must feel abandoned and
alone once agam, 11 he satd

Rose in workshop at Athens

Archie C Rose of Meigs
County Is participating m an
President Ford declared a OhiO University workshop on
state of emergency for more classroom management for
than 100 drought-stricken secondary teachers at the
counties m Mmnesola, South Athens campus lh1s week
Dakota and Wisconsin
The primary focus of the
The
presidential flve-(!ay workshop was on the
emergency declaration 1deas of Halm Ginott, W1lham
cleared the way for a Glasser, Carl Rogers and
federally funded Agriculture Thomas Gordon Informality
Department program to tran- was keynoted 10 the teaching
sport hay to cattlemen and techmques used, which indairy farmers until the cluded lectures, group
drought breaks
discussions and role-playmg
Some stockmen hsd started
Dr Bernard Cleveland,
seU10g off part of their herds workshop director and mbecause of the drought, which
hss Withered pastures and
cut heavily mto feed crops THISTLEDOWN
parttcularly hay Wheat, oat
and other small gratn crops
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
also have suffered heavily IUPI) - With Benme
A spokesman for the Feliciano 10 the Irons,
Federal Disaster AsSistance Borosun woo the . featured
Administration said allowance
purse
at
emergency hay shipments Thistledown Thursday,
would be sent to 40 counties m covermg the mile and 40
central
and
northern yards m 1 43 3-5 and paymg
MlMesota, 56 counties m $4 80 lo WID
north-central and eastern
A &amp;-1-10 tr1fecta of cantina
South Dakota and 18 counties Pete, Z1ppy Idea and Crafty
m northern WISCOilsm
Destmo paid $3,764 40 to 12
' The drought has Impacted WlMmg ticket holders
heavily on livestock, as the
A 11-3 dally double of Lovmg
pastures . have died out Hope and Overland Way paid
because of the lack of $278 40
mmsture," the White House
The 4,390 fans wagered
statement said
$424,498
1930s "

DR. LAMB

lookmg for," s~ud Harold
Masursky , a government
geologist, who directs the
team of scientists selecting
lhe Site frr America's first
attempt to land a life-eeetlng
spa(.'Ocrall on Mars
' I think we 're proceeding
on the right course," he sa1d
alter looking a\ the latest
picture received from Vildng
Thursday at the Jet

DEAR DR LAMB Prease tell me, will CocaColas damage my 15-year.old
son's health• He drinks four
or five each day along with
lots of milk at meals
Theile Cokes are drunk
mostly between n.!als, while
at work In a grocery store,
after IIChool and at recess in
school
He is 6 feet laU, weighs 135
pounds and is fairly healthy
DEAR READER -Ills not
the worst habit in the world
'nlere Is IIWie caffeine In
Cokes, about 35
to 55
miUigrams In a 12-ounce
boUle. That is about one-third
u much asln a brewed cup of
Clll'•e Certainly he is not
ptUng as much caffeine as
IJIOSt people gel from their
dally coffee habit
Apparently the calories in
lhem do not bother him as he
ill hOlfat Aalon,_,s he eat; a
well-balanced diet otherwise
I wouldn't !forry too much
about It The only prohlem 1

can see IS that treqll&lt;!nl
eatmg, drinking or snacking
mcreases the chances of
dental car1es
To g1 ve you more Informa bon on colas I'm
sending you The Health
Letter number 1-1, Coffee,
Tea, Cola, Cocoa Others who
want this information can
forward 50 cents with a long,
stamped, , self-addressed
enveolpe for mailing Address your letter to me m
care of this newspaper, P 0
Box 1551, Radio C1ty Station ,
New York, NY 10019
DEAR DR LAMB - I hear
so much abo11t whiplash and
know very ltttle about 11
Could you explain the term
and Its symptoms to me•
DEAR READER
Whiplash means a violent
backward Jerking of the head
as may occur If you are hit
suddenly from the rear II
most often occurs m
automobile accidents from a
rear end collision The head
snaps back 11 liH" IS ~ n t
adP.r. " ~ le SWliiV" •••endws

up from the seat behind the

head The backward thrust of
the head as the body Is thrust
forward from the unpact
strains the neck area The
term whiplash refers to the
snapplng~lke action which
can occur from such an
unpact. If you pop a whip the
end of the whip IS jerked In
this fashion and that's the
origin of the term
A whiplash injury may be
mUd with only a mdd strain
on the muscles In the area of
the neck This can result In
very sore neck muscles and a
headache for some time after
the accident II muscle strain
is all that happens the person
usually has a total recovery
w1th no residual problell18
If the slraln on lhe neck
area pulls the neck vertebrae
m such a way as to put
pressure on nerves that come
out of the spine, then one can
have a variety of symptoms
1'hLS can even affect the
nerves that go to the
diaphragm and mfluence

spacecraft went tnto or hi.
arollld Mars m 1971, the
planet was blanketed by thick
clouds of dusi for weeks A
Russian spacecraft failed 1ll
seconds after landing In that
dust storm.
Masurksy said a p1cture
received Thursday of " the
Viking 1 landing site showed
the atmosphere 111 the area
was clear

By NAT GIBSON
WANDA, Angola (UPI) prosecutors
Angolan
wrapped up their case
agamst 13 British and
American mercenanes with
demands that the ''scum of
human society" be put to the
fmng squad Spectators
chanted "death, death'"
Prosecutor Rui Monteiro
said Thursday aU 13 soldiers
of fortune should be
sentenced to death by firing
squad as a deterrent to other
merc~nanes despite wide
differences In charges
agamst them
"It Is not our job to give
graduated sentences here,"
Monteiro said. "For their
grave crunes against the
Angolan people, they can only
be punished by death by shooting"
As the bearded prosecutor
flmshed his arguments,
spectators packing the
br1ghUy ht courtroom burst
mlo sustamed applause
Interspersed with shouts of
'death, death 1"
Montero characterized all
the defendants as the "scum
of human society," but
praised the estllll8ted 14,000
Cuban troops In Angola as
' comrades" for aiding the
Angolan Marxists during the
natiOn's c1vU war.
Final defense arguments
for Costas "Col Tooy Callan"
GeorgiOU - the mercenary
commander accused of
ordermg the execution of 14 of
his own British troops - were
scheduled today
Also scheduled were arguments for Gordon McKenzie,
who IS accused of carrying
out CaHan's orders, and

VIetnam war veteran Daniel
Gearhart, 34, who has a wife
and lour children In
KensinglM, Md
The prosecutor, during a
three-hour, »minute closing
argument, said neither Gary
Acker, 21, an ex-Marine from
Sacramento, calif • nor
Argenllne-Amerlcan Gustavo
Grillo, 25, of Jersey City,
N J , should be shown any
leniency.
Both men, who had
expected to come off tighter
than most of the other
defendants, VISibly slumped

Patrol will
announce new
academy class
Lt E W Wigglesworth,
commander of the Gallipolis

Post of the Ohio State lllghVIay Patrol, IDday advised au
persons interested In pursuing a career as a Patrol
Officer to contact their
nearest Patrol Post for
further Information
"Although no date has been
set to begin a patrol recruit
training class, we recommend that mteresled parties,
including persons who have
previously contacted the
patrol, inquire now in anticipation of the start of such
a class," Lt. E W Wigglesworth said
Basic requiremenIa are .
age 21 through 30, height,
5'8" to 6'4" with weight 10
proporUon to height; hlgli
school diploma, OED, or
equiValent, valid driver's
license; vision, 20-30 uncorrected, 20..20 corrected
and then corrected one eye
at least ~ and the other
eye 2()..100 or better, and good
phySical and mental health,
and of good moral character.
I

structor, has taught at all
levels of the public school
svstem For mne years he
was In the Social Studies
Department at Marshall
Un1vers1ty and he IS a
licensed mslructor for
Gordon's "Teacher Effech veness Tram10g"
program
The workshop was sponsored by the School of
Curr~culwn and lnstruchon
CINCINNATI I UPI) - Lei·
at OhiO Umvers1ty m
ters
beheved to contain inleccooperalion with the Office of
hous
hcks have been
Workshops, Conferences and
rece1ved
10 the CinCinnati
Institutes
area, the FBI confirmed
Thursday
The FBI would not say who
RIVER DOWNS
m CmciMati had received
CINCINNATI (UP!)
such leiters but did say more
Tommy Meyers guided than one had been recetved
Aislay to a one-half-length here
wm over Exemplary In the
C Edwm Enright, aSSistant
fea tured $2,900 allowance agent 10 charge of the local
race at R1ver Downs FBI office, sa1d the letters
Thursday
had been sent to Washington,
Aistay went the s1x furlongs D C for analysis and that
m I 12, good for returns of FBI Director Clarence Kelly
$14, $5 80 and $4 20 would release a statement
Exemplary pa1d $3 40 and when the IOVesllgaUon Is
$2 40 while Zookeeper came complete
m third to pay $3 40
The Clncmnati Enquirer
An ~daily double of G l's repocted today a source said
Girl and It's Brownie paid he saw a container of licks
$106 60
and other bugs which came In
The crowd of 3,901 bel a leiter Wednesday to a
$338,576
CinCinnati company
The source said there were
two ticks and "about onequarter teaspoon of wings
and parts of other bugs They
were llny little black lhlngs,
according to the report.
The paper sa1d the source
did not know which company
received the letters but the
letters and contents were also
breathmg 11 the neck ver- sent to the Fm •
tebrae are fractured or
dislocated In some way from
,
the Impact then you can have ..---------1
pressure on the spmal cord m
The Daily Sentinel
the neck area This can be
DEVOTEO
TO THE
qwte serious 1f the pressure IS
INTEREST OF
excessive and presses on
MEIGS MASON AQEA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
vital areas of the cord In the
euc Ed
..
ultimate extreme form you
ROBE IT HOEFLICH
CliJ Editor
could have a broken neck and
Pubtlshe dally •&gt;&lt;epl
actually sever the cord at
Saturday by The Ohlo
VaHey Publishing Com
some level causmg peroan~
Ill . Couro Sl .
mancnl paralysis from the
Pomeroy
Of\ lo
45769
Business Office Phon&amp; 992
neck down The type of
2156 Editorial Phone 992
symptom that results
1157
•
Second class postagtt
depends entirely on where the
paid at Pomeroy, Ohio
level of mjury LS to the spinal
Nallonal
advertising
reprnental111e Ward
cord Each level of the cord
Gr1tflfh Company lnt,
w1th10 the neck Involves
BOlllnelll &amp; Gallagher Dlv .,
757 Third Ave New Vor~
different funcUons of the
N Y 10017
'
Sublcr l p tlon
rates
body
Oellvered by carrier Whert
So a whiplash injury may
avell&amp;ble 75 cents p•r
hP nul hmg more than a mild week By MQtor ROutt
where carrier \trvlce not
sprain w the muscles In the available
One month
neck to a Vel\ serious Injury S3 25 By mall In Ohio anci
Va Otle Vur 122 oo
resullmg m to~;~l paralysis or W
Six month~ Sll 50 Three
S7 00 Elsewhere
even death Withlll l~e broad months
S26 00 year
months
spectrum of dlsordtiS you S13 50 three monthS , S7 so
ubscrlpllon price lncludn
can lmd a w1dc var1el) of l.:~ unday
Times Sentinel
&lt; ompiamts

sIC• k liC• k S

recei'ved m'

Cincy area

.

,.x

LO'ITERY WINNERS
Tbl1 week'• wiDDiog
numben:
Three-dicit namber 147 ( •b·lour·uven).
Four-digit number 111%1 (OIIe-ellb•two-oae).
Five dicit uamber 811141 ( zero-lliDe-lll·folll'-

on their stools as they heard
themselves Singled out before
Callan, who appeared almoSt
certain to receive the death
penalty
Gearhart, who like Acker
and Grillo claims to have
been in nortbem Angola only
three days before his capture
last February and never fired
a shot, was believed to be In
greater jeopardy than the
other Americans because he
ran an advertisement In a
soldier of fortune magazme
offer10g himself as a
mercenary.

Sport Parade

has:

DAVID THOMAS

Evangelistic
meetings will
begin Sunday

ll

j

'
t

Harrisonville
has easy tune
•

•23.85

VALUE STORE

°

~tmNew

amateur I'm one of the ducks."

,,

'.
!'
·~

education, regional conferences, Interagency con-o&lt;
lerences and professlonaF
meetings.
·~
Ohio's 1976 Appalachiati'"
Development Plan and' •
Project lnvealment Package&lt; '
cootatns approllmately $9
mllllon In f1111dlng propoeals
lor Ohio's 28 Appalachlarl'"
counties In areas of health, ' '
child development, com·';;
munlty developmen t ; •
education, energy and 'n
nalll'al reiiOUI'cea
.,.,
ARC Is a state-federal'"
parlnenhlp which promotes· "
the economic and social
development of the Ap·''"
palachian region of the ' •
T•lflt11A

'

BAUM'S TRUE

Velefllll Memerlal Hospital
ADMISSIONS - Myrtle
Thomu, Pomeroy; Juanita
Ferrell Middleport Martha
Searls' Mlddlepo~t · E!za
Lar~, Long Bot~.
DISCHARGES - Ollie
Boston, Joan Pickens, Kevin
Anderson, Gerll'ude Lehew,
Mazie Hannahs, Louise
Eshelman Errol Follrod
'
Dorothy Anthony,
Annette'
lambert

The project is designed to
Improve th~ health care
delivery system In rural
areas of 110utheaatern Ohio
through microwave commllllcation between The Ohio
Stale University's College of
Medicine and O'Blene111
Memorial tlolptlal in Athens,
Athens Mental Health and
Mental Retirdallon Center
and Holzer Medical Center In
Galllpolls.
Programming actlviUea
occurring with the medical
microwave system include
medical consultation,
psycbiatric conaultatlon,
continuing education for
physicians and nurses, allied
hoollh nrnf•AAinn. rontinlllmr

U•d

~~~~~! a~'!!~~~!jSthe!!mor

U :; m
il mll nm

lf

J: m

r.,argaret McFarland c
Juanlla McKenzie, Jamel'o
McPeek, Alma Meaige,
Kathleen Moody, Ona Moore,.
Phyills Perry, Catherlnl!'
Price, Kathl Rhea, Harry~
Rhodes, Rebecca .Robinson,
Melissa Rouse , Gertrude,
Roush, Donald Skaggs, Betty;
Stewart, Maxine Tabor,
Debra Whitlatch, Charles ,
Whitt, Audrey Williams, Roy,.
Woolum, Russell Wooten, ,.
Raymond Wright
(Btrtlls, June 17)
Mr.
and
Mrs Claude Sines1 •
Holzer Medical Center
son,
Leon,
W Va.; Mr and "
BLAKE SETIU:S
(DileUrle&amp;, JUDel7)
LOS ANGELES (UPI) Plttllp Adkins, Kimberly Mrs Larry Woods, son, ~
"
Actor Robert Blake reached Allen, Adele Brooks, Freda Gallipolis
an out.of-eourt settlement of Burns, Edna Butterfield,
"'
his contract dispute with Michael Cochran, Lew Cook,
Universal Studios and will Etta Cottrill, Belb Cowan,
"•
remain the star In the Olartes Neal, Clova Fair·
NOW
YOU
KNOW
•·
"Baretta" television series. child, Oscar Fink, Lena
The terms of the Foglesong, Michael Gallion, In the days of the pony,,:
settlement, announced Scotty George, Rosa Grif- elt)Jreu, postage on a halfThursday, were not revealed. fiths, Mra. Wllllarn Guinther ounce letter was a $5 pony
The agreement was and son, Walter Harvey, elt)Jress stamp, plus a reguiW: ,
reached a week beftre trial Phlllp Heck, Robert Hill, 1ik.'ent U S stamp - l.hls to; ,
was scheduled to begin In Mary Howell, Karen John· gel the letter !rom St Jo!leph1
Blake's swt to lreak hla, son, Rollella Johnston, Homer Mo to Sacramento, Calli , IIi
contract with Universal, Jones, Patricia Leach, Hazel the advertised time of 1a "
which runs through 1980.
Lear, Olrlstopher Masters, days

COLUMBUS- Gov. Jamea
A Rhodes today announced
the approval of a $181,617
grant from lite Appalachian
Regional Commlllloo (ARC)
to the Ohio Educational
Television Network Commlaalon for the Medical
Adaptation of Microwave to
Health Delivery project.
Local _.... will COli·
lrlbule t&amp;f,M4 lD ~upplement
the ARC grant
The project was submitted
to the ARC lor approval b)'
the Deparlment of Economic
and Community Development's Appalachian
Development Office whlcb
administers
lhe
ARC
oro«ram In (lhlo

a..aal
Oblo Gel!
AAHIIU. T-eat,
lialed C. becfa Ieday It
Albeu ( Proo,\111 play) will
be ell'l'led Uve by WMPO
Tbe

8eatbea~tern

FIBER
ALUMINUM
ROOF COATING

m

Jl ll

HOSPITAL NEWS

ARC grant approved

He added ,
Sure, It
became llle first amateur m
By DAVID MOFFIT
five years to take an Open surprised me to play so well,
UPI Sports Writer
lead Thursday by putting but II was no shock This has
DULUTH, Ga (UPI )
Young amateur Mike Reid together a strmg of three to be my biggest thrill "
A number of the pros were
respects all those big-flame straight birdies and post10g a
under
par at some pomt m the
golf stars he 's playing 3-under-par 67
(lrst
round
but couldn't stay
That
was
good
enough
for
a
agamst m the U S Ooen but
there
three-stroke
lead
over
five
not enough to keep him
from beating their pants off professionals tied l&lt;r second ' AI Ge1berger, was 2 under
and even though that lead going mto the !mal hole, a 46()..
10 the openmg roUild
He was the only man able to might not hold up 10 today 's yard , par-4 fronted by a lake
break par over a course second round, Reid sa1d he but put his ball m the water
where the fairWay grass was wasn't plaMIOg to worry when he went against his own
judgement and tried to drive
about 11
left too long by accident,
the green
''I'm
not
going
to
let
the
While his Idols like Jack
"I made a stupid m1stake ,"
Nicklaus, Johnny Miller, lead bother me,'' he said
Hale lrwm and Tom Weiskopf "I'm going to enJOY It for as said Ge1berger alter takmg a
were struggling w1th the high long as I can It's go10g to be double bogey and wmdmg up
at even-par 70, alon ~ w1th
bermuda grass, Reid, 21, fun "

the SCOREBOARD

Cub Scouts in
bike rodeo

Six·dl&amp;il uumber UOBZ% (elgbt•foar-aeroetcb•two-twol.
Spirit of '71 wlunln&amp;
aumben:
Two-dlcfl 111Uilber - •
(lllree-tll), 41 (IOIII'Diae),
S5 (lllree-ftvel aad 5l (five- •
one).
Fear-digit Dumber MU (tb-etcb•two-oae).
Five-digit Dumber rllll Calae-aevea-elcht·
fOIII'OIIe)
·t
b
81x· di1 I aam er ZIM33 (two-oae-IIIDe-foarlbree-lllree ).

';?.1

Big Three reunited

TUPPERS PLAINS - An
evangelistic meellng wtii be
held at 7 30 each evening,
Sunday through Friday, June
25, at the Tuppers Pialns
Church of Christ mth David
Thomas, a nat1ve of
Yolllgstown as speaker ,
A 1964 graduate of the
Cincinnati Bible College, Mr
School will run
Thomas did gr-aduate work
there and also at Xavier
Unlversltv .
He
held
through Friday
ministries at the StanUil
The Middleport Olurch of Christian Church, StanlM,
the Nazarene announces its Ky ; Mt. Pleasant ChrisUan
Church, Greenville, N c,,
va~atlon Bible school Mon.
day lhrongh Friday under the and the Jefferson Olurch cil
direction of Tom and Geneva Christ, Rural Hlill, North
Carolina. In July, 1972, he
McElroy.
Classes lor children, three entered the field of worldthrough 18, will be held each wide evangelism and joined
evenmg from 8 30 to 8 30 p the personnel of Person lo
m with "Praise and Person Evangelism ul
Triumph" the subject of the HlliBboro. Since the fall of
school The school will end 1967, he worked In over 100
with a program at 9 30 a m evangelistic meetings m I~
on Sunday, JIDie 17. A special states and seven foreign
feature of the Bible School countries. He and hiS wile:
mil be dauy appearances of Nancy, reside In Wlnstoll
"Toml", the magician, and Salem, N C
his puppet friends The Rev.
Each night of the Tuppera
Don Cole, pastor, Invites Plams service will have a
yoiDig people of the com- special emphasis Including
mlllity to attend.
Monday, youth night ~
Tuesday, old·fashloned
night; Wednesday, officers
night; Thursday, !ill-a-pew
night; Friday, family nlgbt
There will be special music
each evening. The pastor,
Eugene E Underwood, InCHESTER - The Chester- vites the public to attend '
Tuppers Plalrul Cub Scouts
recenUy held a bike rodeo at
the Eastern High School Edwards, Todd Tripp, Keno}'
parking lot.
Riggs, Bill Call, Kevin Fick,
The rock drop was won by Randy Bahr, Bob Brooks;
Randy Bahr The coast race Jim Brooks and David Edwas won by Todd Trlpp,llrat; wards The Cub Scou~
Bob Brooks, second, and BID Olympics were announced for
C811, third Winning In the Saturday at Galllpolls SlaW
drag race were Kevin Flck, Institute Thanks were exllrat, John Heln, second, and tended to parents who helped
Bob Brooks, third The boys leaders with the blcycleo
were presented ribbons events Cookies and a
Participating were John beverage were served at the
Heln, John Davis, John conClusion of the rodeo

oae)

....~ :=--:&lt;....

Masters cham piOn Ray the fa1rway grass
Floyd, Rod Funselh John
USGA executive Frank Rtldlo (bolls AM-FM) . Tile
Mahaffey
and
R1k Tatum explained thai Atlanta Mlddleporl • Pomeroy
Massenga le Floyd and Alhletlc Club groundskeeper atatloa piaU to carry ID
Funseth both bogeyed the Bob McGee mlsadjusted the boun ol actiUD, •lartlal 11
!mal hole
mowers cauSing the fairways l:Up.m.loday. Salllntay'a
lly MILTON RlmMAN
Jerry Pate, 2-under after to be cut a quarter~nch radio ICIIOD wiU be&amp;ID at11
UPI Sporll Edit«
alld Suaday'a Uve coverqe
eight holes, was at 71, along higher than planned.
Defending Open champion at I p.m.
with Butch Ba1rd, Terry
DULimi,Ga (UPl) - MikeReid Is an amateur
,Diehl, Don January, Lyn Loti Lou Graham, a 75 shooter
In golf, that slamiJl him as someone completely apart from
and Mike Morley
Thursday, said, " The
/ anybody else,110meooe special, Uke the late Bobby Jones was
fairways were as bad as I've
WeiSkopf
finished
double
Mike Reid goes Into the setond round of the U S Open today
bogey-bogey for a 73 Miller ever played ftr a U S Open " blame the fairways for hls 4
leading by three strokes He's the first amateur to lesd the
But pr e- tournament over SCI)re 'Basically, I just
closed wllh a double bogey
Open In live years, but that doesn't matter, he ISO 't supposed to
for a 74 Nicklaus, who favonte Nicklaus refused to didn 't play well,'' he said
bother his head thinking about winning any money because as
couldn't make a birdie all day
an 81118leur, there's no way he can.
long, also was at 74 while
He supposed to have mly good, clean thoughts about golf,
lrwm, !;.over alter five holes,
which he
so llll8gtne )low he fell when some JOker sidled uo
had a 75 and led the attack on
next to him after his three-under-par 67 eyepopper m
Tlnnday's opening roWld and asked him if he ever heard of
1}
Lee Mackey, Jr •
Red So1 8, A's 3:
Chester 11 Monday battled the frame lD hang on for the
Mike Reid reflected a moment
Dwight Evans, Jim Rice down to wire with the visiting win. Buckley teamed up with
"I've heard the name. Wasn't he a golfer who played m the
and carlton Fisk homered lor Chester 1 team coming out on Eddie Werry to share the
'518 '" he asked, flshmg back In hiS memory
the Red Sox, who got an eight- lop 14-12 Four costly errors pitching chores Werry
"That'srlght," conflnned the guy, who had approached the
hit pitchmg effort from Dick and 15 walks proved to be the slruck out five and walked
skinny, 21-year-&lt;Jid "He shot a 64 the !lfSt day of the 1950 US
Pole and handed Mike Torrez 111dolng of the hosla
three while Buckley fanned
for
the
Rangers
Healy,
Wilhe
Randolph,
By FRED DOWN
Open at Ardmore, Pa , and you know what he had the second
h1s
elghlh
loss
agamst
six
Angels
2,
Brewers
0:
Chester
blew
lour
and walked two
apparently
Oscar
Gamble
and
Carlos
1
UPI Sports Writer
round?"
wms
Evans
sent
Boston
off
the
game
open
In
the
third
Todd
Norton led the win·
Gary
Ross,
p1tchmg
hiS
May
led
the
12-lut
New
York
The New York Yankees
" "I suppose now you're gonna tell me 75," sa1d Reid , have
with
a
two-run
homer
In
the
when
they
plated
IP
blj
runs
ners
with
a homer and double
first
complete
game
since
attack,
which
tagged
Terry
reumted the "Big
anticipating a little
first
and
the
Red
Sol
kayoed
with
Norton
cleaning
the
while
Buckley
helped his own
July
6,
1968,
hurled
a
twoForster
w1th
his
fourth
defeat
Three" of the Oakland A's
~ 11 NO," came the answer, "81."
world champiOnship pitching and sent the White Sox to hitter for the Angels Ross Torrez m the second w1th bases with a home run and cauae by socking two double&amp;
• "Oh great," Mike Reid replied, movmg on quickly
staff from 1972 through 1974 their seventh straight loss allowed a smgle by Darrell Evans' double the knockout Buckley and Bissell adding and a single Roger Bissell
Lee Mackey, Jr , was a kid out of Binning ham, who nobody
doubles But the bottom of the had a double and single, and
Baltunore defeated Texas, Porter m the Sllth and a blow
but at least one of them thinks
really knew m the 1950 US Open, the same way nobody here reliever Sparkt l.yle may be 4-1,
Inning saw the hosts bounce Werry had two singles
Cahforma
beat smgle by Von Joshua m the Phtllles 3, Giants 2
really knows Mike Reid out of Provo, Utah, m thiS one, and the key to wmmng the Milwaukee, 2~. MIMesota nmth while winning his 4th
Dave CaSh's sacrifice fly back with six runs of their
For Chester II, besides
alter commg apart mth that 81 following hiS openmg round 6-4, American League peMant lDpped DetrOit, W , m a ram- game agamst e1ght losses
w1th one oul m the n10th own with Nicky Leonard Leonard's homer, Lee Gainer
he finished 25th, picked up $100 and went back home never to
He's Jim Hunter, who shortened, f1ve-mnmg game, Cahforma scored m the drove In the WlMIOg run for hilling home run , Olarlle had a triple, and doubles
-be heard from any more
scored his eighth vtctory with and Boston downed Oakland , second mmng on singles by the Phillles and gave rehever Ritchie a double, Tom Crow a were collected by Gaul,
• The same thmg cmce1vabiy could hnppen to Mike Reid , only
Tommy Davts and Bruce Gene Garber the victory double, and Lee Gainer 8 Riebel, Ritchie, Crow, Hlbba,
the rehel help of Lyle 11-3, m other AL games
ooe In the 151knan field to break par Thursday, but ISD't likely Thursday mght, when lhe
and Sayre. Gelling singles
Philadelphia shaded San Boehle, a sacrifice fly and Mike Schmidt hit his 17th triple
to because unlike Lee Mackey, Jr , he doesn't seem at all Yankees beat the Ch1cago Francisco, 3-2, and New York Dave Chalk s smgle
homer for Philadelphia,
The hosts narrowed It to !2- were Ridenour, Leonard,
overwhelmed rr Oustercd by what's happenmg to hun
which dealt Gary Lavelle his 11 with four runs In the Riebel, Gaul, Hibbs, and
White Sox, 5-4, and mcrea'sed mpped Los Angeles, 1-ll,ln 14 Twins 4, Tigers 0:
" He has played m only a half-(!ozen or so tournaments with their AI. Eastern DIVISIOn 1nnmgs m the only scheduled
Dave Goltz won hls seventh fourth setback
fourth but the visitors Iced It Gainer Terry Sayre, David
big name pros and he respects their ability but he ISO 't dazzled lead to six games Hunter has National League games
game for the Twins when a Mels I, Dodgers 0
with t~ tallies In the top of Wolf, and Charlie Ritchie
1ly them He showed that when he began being peppered w1th
MaJor
league
leader
Dave
four-run
Tiger
sixth
was
Orioles
4,
Rangers
I
the
shrth, and winning pitcher teamed up for the loss,
e1ght v1ctor1es and Lyle four
(juestlms from the press.
Reggie Jackson's three-run Wiped out by ram and the Kingman hit his 23rd homer Bryce Bucldey allowed only slrlklng out eight and walking
wms and 10 saves
Sample
those fifteen
"Last year the Yankees homer m the e1ghth mmng score reverted to the end of in the 14th innmg, lifllng the
"How come you go out there today and break par and the didn't use Sparky "sa1d Hun- hfted the Or10ies over Texas the fifth mnmg M1ke Mels over the Dodgers
I
11 10 002-14 9 2
biggest golfers can't•"
11
10 8 401--12 14 4
Kingman's
homer
tagged
Cubbage
drove
10
LOFGRAN DIES
ter, now reumled wtlh VIda Wayne Garland, gettmg a
"I dunno," s8ld Mike Reid, so casually, he provoked some Blue and Ken Holtzman after chance to start as a result of M10nesota's f1rst three runs rehever Charhe Hough with
Werry,
Buckley and
SAI.TLAKE CITY (UPI)
laughs "I'm still looking around at all these golfers I still got Tuesday's sensational sales Baltimore's recent trades, al- with a two-run double and a the loss and gave Skip - DoD Lelgrau, who put
Brogan Sayre, Wolf, Ritchie
toothpicks m my eyes I guess they're lookmg around at me and trades "ThiS year they lowed four hils m seven sacr1f1ce fly and Larry Hisle Lockwood the wm Craig lbe Uolvenlty of Sao
and Leonard, Newell
too"
Swan
had
a
three-lutter
for
drove
m
the
other
With
a
mmngs
and
raised
h1s
record
Francuco
on
the
baall:elstarted usmg hun and be
Among those looking at Reid, a 6-loot, !50-pounder w1th a looks like the old SparRy " to tHl Nelson Briles lost hiS sacr1f1ce fly Vern Ruhle lhe Mets for the first 10 ball map wbea be led the
r.eddish cast to hiS brown hslr, IS former PGA champ AI
IMIDgS
unheralded Dooa to lise
Run..scormg hils by Fran third game agamst SIX wms suffered h1s third loss
Ge1berger, who played one threesome In front of htm
National ln"ttatlon
Geiberger was the same as Reid, three-under, un Ill the 14th ~:·:::·:,:,:,:, :,~•·,:,:: ::::::::: :: ::::::::::::::'!::::,,~v:::i••:::.,: ::::'::::::::::::: ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:: : :: : :::::: ::::: ::::::::::::::::: : :::::::::::::::::::::::::: : :::::::::::::::·:..:::::::·:::·:::::::~?:i~::··:A
Tournament title Ill 1941,
bole where he bogeyed and went two under, after which he took 1!:.,.
:·:·
·
• • ••
• ••• r.::
was found dead Ill a cbeop
adoublebogeystlonthe!8tltandflnlshedwltha70withfour ..
Standmgs
!
hotel Tbunday nlgbl.
others
t'
Averages
~ :a
Tile 1-fooH Lofgrlll 1et a
"He came mto 18 three up and llooked around and saw him
Results
:J
In Middleport Youth scbool reeord iu 1148-41
hit his drive right down the rruddle," Ge1berger sa1d, talking
':.J League action, Harrisonville wben be acored 44! polnll
about the way Reid never buckled at au under the pressure
romped over the Rutland and led the Dooa to a 2&amp;-5
"Then, when I was Slgrung my card, he threw his second shot Byrn~~~~~dL~::~: 1~\~~:~~?:nal
Saturday's Games
Rose Cin
62 250 55 82 328 Reds, 24-8, at Rutland The
record. He waa the Moat
M tlwaukee at Oakland
MaddoK Phil 51 184 28 59 321
I;tghl at the !Iag That sh ows me a Iol nght there, especla IIy
Natoonal League
Balllmore at Texas. nlghl
Andrews Hou 32 134 15 43 m Reds stayed with the visitors Valuable Player iD the NIT
llfter what l did on the hole."
E~sl L Pel GB Delroll
al Mlnnesola
American I.ugue
10 the first, but Harrisonville and weal on to wiD AllNew York 01 Chicago nigh t
G AB R H Pet
MIke Reld IS the son oI a retired AIf ForCe Colonel He has Pholadelphlo " 17 707
Kan Cllv al Cleveland night
Bretl Kc
sa 239 37 BS 356 exploded for eight runs In the America bonon the nell
just completed his senior year at Brigham Young Umvers1ty ~~~~~:
l;~ 1
IOnlv games scheduled!
McRae KC sa 217 38 77 355 second to tee the game
season wbea be averaced
5 Gallon
where he majored m public relations, but when he talks, he Chocago
21 33 45o 15
LeFlore Del 52 211 35 12 341 WlnniOg pitcher T Hanning IU polnll lor the Doua,
1
doesn't talk that way He talks more like a retired colonel's ~o~t~~~~
l~
jj~
Major League Results
~~~log, Mon ~~ l~j
fanned nine and walked only who led the nation In
'
son Straight to the point and fast
•
west
Bv Unl ed Press International Lvnn, Bos
48 1s2 25 59 324 four, and he also slammed defeuse by boldfa&amp; lbe
Sometimes he talks SO last people have to tell him to slow up
W L Pet GB San Frn~r:~~·~do ~~~~ 2 7 o ~o~us~~,N~C
two doubles. Larry Cotterill opposiUou to 18 polDII per
and go back the way they did alter hiS openmg round here ~~~cA~~~tl~s
~l
J Phi adelphia 000 100 011- 3 6 0 Polek KC 55 174 32 55 316 and Danny Riggs socked coulesL
where, m response to which City he came from, he rattled off San DoO&lt;IO
33 27 550 5
D'AcQulsto Motion &lt;71 La Carew Min 57 222 34 69 311 triples and Gibson •ot a
Lolgrao held a variety of
""oad
d t
Houston
Home Runs
0
29 l-4 460 t lOh velle {9) pnd Rader Chr 1sten
places like a raw
coo uc or
Atlanta
National League Kingman double
Harrisonville's odd jobs afler &amp;raduatloD
24 35 407 131h son Reed (6l Garber (9J and
, He started by saymg he was born In Balnbndge, Md , and san Francisco 23 41 359 17
Boone WP- Gorber 12 11 LP- NY 23 Schmldl Ph il 17 record Is now 3-4 while the
and was knoWD to bave
then had moved to Delaware, Alabama, the Phllippmes, Ma·
Thursday's Results
Lavelle (2 41 HR - Phlladel Foster and Morgan Cln 12 Reds are I •
Pholadelphla
3
san
FranciSco
2
Ph
la,
Schmldl
1171
Monday
Chi
and
Cey
LA
11
..,
problems
with alcohol. Hla
Kirkl
nd
d
F
l9on, Dl , Sa n An tomo, De nver, Sa n ranctseo an
a • New York 1 Los Ang 0 ,_4 Inns
American League Yastrzem
Craig Bolin led the Reds laat job wa1 aa a cook al a
Wash, where he now lives with his father
!Only games schedul ed)
n~ lnnongsJ
ski Bos and Oils KC 12
th
ht dV
Today•s Probable Pitchers
Los-Angeles
L May Ball11 Ban do Oak 10 WI a 31or 3 n1g , an ance Sail Lake Clly lounge.
Reid has a mind of his own An mtervtewer diScovered that
tAll Times EDTJ
000 000 000 000 oo-- 0 3 0 Fisk and Rice 8os Hendrick socked a homer and Eddie
Pollee said be blld been
985-3301
the other day when be asked him if he had some kind of ldenllty
Ch icago IR Reuschel 6 •J al New Yo~ ooo ooo ooo Ol - I 9 o Clev and Ford Mlnn 9
Bishop a double Wilford,
dead
for aeveral daya
51 7 35 P m
problem as a 21-year.old unknown amateur among all the Allan
Ia
(Morton
sutton.
Marshall
1101
Hough
Natlon~~t~:;.:!•d
~~sler
Con
Bishop,
and
Craig
Taylor
Chester,
Ohio
Los Angeles !Rhoden 5 OJ al
dy
swan Lock
celebrated pros U1 thiS event.
Montrea l (Fryman 7 4) e OS 1121 an
eager
56 Perez, Cln and Kingman teamed up to fan six but
Talldng about the episode, Reid said he had told the p m
wood 161 and Grole WP- NY so Morgan Cln 48 ,
•
Houston (Richard 7 6 ) at Lockwood 13 21 LP- Hougn 17 Schmidt Ph ol 47
walked a Whopping 17.
mtervteweritwasn'tanyproblemforhunatall
Ptttsburgh (Candelana 5 41 2) HR- New York Kingman
Am e r 1 c 1 n League Bur H
l 815 0-24 16
"Thts fellow kept saying 'problem,' 'problem,"' he said "I s 05 p m
1231
roughs Tex 46 Otis KC 43
lhoughlltwasonlyaproblemforhlm lknowwholam J'man
San Francisco !Dressler 141
Chambloss NY 42 Munson NY R
II 40 3-810

Crowd chants death, death

Mom questions son's Coke habit
By l.awrellCe E. Lamb, M D

Propulsion Laboratory
control center "Things look
very good Indeed."
AI 11 p m EDT Thur!lday,
Viking 1 was 193.9 million
miles from Earth and 2'10,000
miles from Mars It was
movmg toward the planet at
5,9110 miles per hour.
Dust has been a big concern
to project scientists because
when the Mariner 9

Amateur has U. S. Open lea d

Today's

:: • ·"

Kuhn expected
to approve sale
By RICK GOSSEIJN
UPI Sporll Writer
NEW YORK (UP!) - Com·
missioner Bome Kuhn today
Is expected to approve three
of the most controversial
de$ m baseball history
Kuhn met with Charley 0
Finley, owner of the Oakland
A's and representatives of the
Boston Red Sox and New
York Yankees and officials of
the American League for
about 95 minutes Thursday
He probably will annoWJce
his formal approval of the
sales today or wlth10 the next
48 hours
,
fmley, the ''ugly duckling
of the
baseball
establishment," announced
TUesday night the sales of Joe
Rudl and Rollle Fingers to
the Red Sox and VIda Blue to
the Yankees-each frr $1·
mlllloo The sales virtually
dismanUed the 1972-74 Wocid
Champion A's in much the
same maiiiiCr that Conroe
Mack ll'oke up the !929-3().31
PhlladelpliiB A's
The decisive argument presented at Thursday'smeeting
was the pledge made by
Finley -that he Intended to
use the $3 million he received
for the three players to
''r.ebuild the A's "
: •we will rebuild and fast,''
F\.ttley said, when he
announced the sales Tuesday
night, and he repeated that
pledge to Kuhn Finley said
that he was "tired and
~ppolnled" butthathe was
determined to reo1st the
demands of players for
''ulljultly high contracts."
1Culm entered the picture
under a section of the Major
League Agreemen~ which

os

York (Seaver 6 5l, e
Cincinnati (Billingham 4) at
Philadelphia (LonbOrg B 3) s OS
p m
san Diego (Jones 12 2l at st
Lou is (Falcone 4 5) s 30 p m
saturday's Games
Los Angeles at Montreal
San Francisco at New York
Cincinnati at Philadelphia ,.
Houston at F'lttsburgh
san Diego at St Louis, night
Chlcago at Atla 2 twl n ight

s

(Qnl vA:~fc'.~ct~~~~~~

(SInning!., rain}

Detroit

41

Maybt;~~enKi 13:es

National

Le1gue

Cedeno

000 oo---o 3 2 Hou 26
Morgan . Cin 22
002 0'2- 4 1 0 Griffey Cln 17 Lopes LA 16

Minnesota
Ruhle
Crawford (5) and
Freehan
Goltz
(7 Jl
and
Wyneoar LP - Ruhte (5 3l

New York
000102 02G-- 5121
Chicago
100 000 12Q- 4 8 0
Hunter Lyl e (9) and Healv
Munson (8), Forster Carroll
(7) and Esslan Downing (8)
WP - Hunter U! 6) LP- Forster
(1 4)

Brock, st LIS
American League Patek KC
34 North Oak 30 Carew M lnn
29
Baylor Oak 25, Cam
panerls Oak 24
Petchlng
Mos1 VIctories
N1tlon11 League Jones SO
12 2, Matlack, NY 8 1 LonbOrg,
Phil 8 3
Hough
LA 7 2
Christenson Ph il 7 J Fryman.
Mtl 7 4
Reuss
Pi ll 7 5
Ruthven Atl Richard Hou and
Montefusco, SF 7 6
American League F ltzmor
ris, KC 8 2, Travers Mil 8 3
Tlant Bos and Slaton Mil 8 4
Tanana, Cal 8 S Hunter, NY 8
6
Earned Run Averac~e
( biSid on S4 Innings pitched)
N•tlontl Ltlgue Fo!.ter, SO
2 09 Gullett, Cln and Jones SO
2 10 Matlack NY 2 29 Zachry
Ctn 2 57
American League Travers

his left hand
The 23-year old left-ilanded
hitter was batting 32'1 with
the Bears before Thursday
mght play m lhe American
Assoc1a tion

Jc~ Treat Dad

went mto effect Jan 12, 1921,
American L.e•tue
Balt 1more
000 010 OJo- 4 8 1
EISt
g1ving the comm1ss1oner
1
000 001 ooo- I 4 1
W
L
Pet
~ GB Texas
broad powers to act 10 "the New York
Garland, Pagan (B) and
34 22 607 l _
Duncan Briles Foucault (91
mterests of the morale of the
Cleveland
28 28 500 ' 6 and
Sundberg WP- Garland (6
Boston
27
29
&lt;82
7
players 110d the honor of the
Ol
LP - Briles (6 3)
HR 27 31 466 8
Baltimore
game"
Delrolt
25 32 439 9111 Baltimore Jackson (5)
23 31 426 10 Milwaukee 000 000 OOQ--- 0 2 1
Havmg coovinced hiJIISelf Milwaukee
West
of Finley's mtent10ns to
020 000 OOx- 2 7 1
W L Pel GB Californ ia
Slaton (8 4) and Porter Ross
rebuild the A's, however, Kansas City 38 20 655
Texas
33 23 589 4 (4 Bland Etchebarren
Kuhn had every right to fall Minnesota
28 30 483 10
Boston
312 001 lOG- 8 13 0
back on the precedent of 45 Chicago
27 29 .482 10
100 100 001 - 3 e 1 Mil 1 59 Fldrvch. Del 1 86
29 32 .475 10112 Oakland
years ago when Mack lroke Oakland
Pole (3 4) and Fisk, Torrez Garland, Bait and WOOd, Chi
California
26 38 .406 15
Bahnsen (2 ) and Hosley LP2 25 Umbarger, Tex 23.5
up his three-time American
Thursday's Results
Torrez (6 81 HRs-Bosto, Rice
Strikeouts
Mlnn .4 Detroit 0, 5 Inns, rain
League championship clubs
191 Evans {8l Fisk (9 1
National L11gue Seaver NY
York
5
Chicago
"
New
Judge Kenesaw Mountam Baltimore 4 Te11.11 1
•
88 Richard Hou and Montetus
(Onl-y games scheduled )
co SF 75 Messersm ith Atl 67
Landis, baseball's ftrst California 2 Milwaukee 0
Nlekro All 63
8 Oakland 3
commissiOner, who came to Boston
Amerlc•n League Tanana
{Only games scheduled)
Cal
12J
Ryan
Cal
112,
power after the 1919 Black
ToCiay•s Probable Pitchers
Blyle~o~en , Te x 94 Hunter NY
(All
T1mts
EDT)
Sox World Series scandal,
73 Jenkins 8os 67
Major League Leaders
Kansas City !Leonard 6 21 at
took no action m that Cleveland
By United Prttlt International
(Walts I 1), 7 30 p m
MONTREAL (UPI) - The
aanlng
Detro it (Roberts s 5) at
mstance Mack had purged
Montreal
Expos recalled
( b•sed on 125 •t bats)
M innesota (Hughes 2 7) 9 p m
his own club once before- In
National Le1gue
New York (Holtzman 5 Ill) at
third
baseman
Pat Scanlon
1915 when baseball had oo Chicago (JOhnson J 71 9 P m
G AB R H Pet
from
the
Denver
Bears of the
Me
Bride
Sl
L
42
159
24
57
358
Beltlmore (May Ill 3) at Texas
commtss1oner but was ruled I Umbarger
7 4), 9 OS p m
Oliver Pll
51 205 32 71 346 Amencan
Associallon
by a National ComrruSSionBoston (Jones 1 0) at Cal l Robinson Pit 43 146 22 50 3A2
and no action was taken In fornla (Kirkwood 2 6 ) 10 30 Foster, C.n 57 223 32 76 341 Thursday to replace Andre
Griffey Cln 56 208 52 70 337 Thornton who was placed on
pm
lhat case either
Milwaukee (A4Qustlne 2 21 Bt Herndon SF 36 1:1&lt; 19 45 336 the 15-&lt;lay dlS8bled list last
"I tried to trade them but Oakland IBosmen o OJ, 11 p m Morgan , Cln 54 176 49 59 335
week with a broken
nobody wanted to take m
unsigned players,'' Finley
said Thursday "There's
absolutely no way the game
can continue to operate with
On dad s day treat h1m to our Super Shef and
.UNTIL 5 PM
these astronomical salaries.
large fnes He'll get a big patty of ground beef,
This 1s the day of reckonmg
SATURDAY, JUNE 19TH
served on a deliCious bun with lettuce, tomato,
"I ihlnk the commissioner
sweet
oman and melted cheese
for
called the meeting because
he wanted to know how we
As a special treat on h1s day, we II furn1sh h1m w1th
wenl about making the
a free large soft dnnk and free turnover
salea," added Finley "I lhlnk
OF
he was happy withour
prelll!ntatlon."
Finley also said that Brad
Corbett, owner of tile Texas
OPEN TO PUBLIC AFTER S PM
Rangers, was "a hypocrite"
for demanding that the sales
1503 EASTERN AVE., GALLIPOLIS, OHIC?,
be declared void He said the
Rangers' owner had tried to
c 1976 Burger Chef Svstems Inc
U.S. 60 WEST-HUNTINGTON
buy Oakland outfielder Don
Closed Every Monday Except LabO( Dly
Baylor on the same day he
l.-.._
__::2:.::3=25:....:.:JACKSON AVE., PT. PLEASANT, W.VA.
sold !he other three players

to dinner at
Burger Chef®
on
•
Father's Day-June 20.
Free turnover and
large soft drink
with purchase of
a Super Shef®
&amp; large fries
at regular price.

PARK RESERVED

MMER OUTING

LARGE INDUSTRIAL CONCERN

CAMDEN PARK

Cltet ~

\I

OFFICE
:30 lo12, 2 to 5 !CLOSE
AT NOON QN THURS.l- EAST COI{RT

•

''

�~";;-......

Dat:ly S.tntlr~elJMlddleport·P&lt;meroy, 0 , Friday, June 18, 1976 •

Pony Express rides again
LAKE CITY (UPI ) - Troy Austin
lltood In lhe middle of Mam Sl awaiting lhe
gun Fifty feet away his horse reared and
1

'
I

screamed
The gun went off, Austin ran for the horse,
picked up the mad pouch and the Pony
Express rode again
A samilar sc-:ne unfolded simultaneously
In Sacramento, Calif , Thursday and the
opposing teams of horsemen rode off on a
Bicentennial challenge race matching the
hell-bent-for-leather rides ol l~l - days
when the reckless riders of the Pony
fo:xpress were the newest and fastest
development m mail sertice
The race l;tarled as a chauenge by Utah
Gov Cal Hampton to caiiforma Gov
Edmund G Brown Jr The starling guns 10
Salt Lake City and Sctamento were £ired
simultaneously oo the signal of an offiCial
starter m Sacramento
The first 10 of 79 riders from the caiiforma
State Horseman's Asllociation took oil from
Sail Lake City racllll! against a team of 39
riders from Utah s Weber County Sheriff's
Mounted Posse headed 10 the opposite
direction
The riders will recreate the origina I 7511mlle Pony Express route through Utah and
Nevada to Sacramento They carry yellow
pouches With 500 pieces of commemorallve

Mars landing. site looks good

By AI. ROSSITER Jr.
UPI S&lt;lenc:e EdltoL
mail observ10g the BicenteMial
PASADENA, calif (UPI J
In Salt IJJke City, pohce roped off a block - Vllting l's first good distant
on Ma10 St and the ca lifornia riders gllfnpse of Its landing site on
saddled their mounts m front of the Tribu ne
Mars showed the area was
Buildmg - a stop on the or1gmal express free of the kind of dust storm
roule
lha l would force proJect
Square dancers do-si-(!oed Riders tugged offi Cials to delay the probe 's
at their bright red bandannas and adJUSted planned July 4 landing
the heavy leather mad pouches
The big spacecraft IS scheAustm s horse apparently was oot anxious duled 0to swmg mto orbit
to get on the road The nder wh1pped the around Mars Saturday and
horse's head around and, m the fmesl Pony then spend the rest of June
Express tradiilon , scattered onlookers and scoutmg the landing area
new!llllen as he mounted his steed sideways With a pa1r of television
on a gallop out of town
cameras to make sure no
Betty Ph1l11ps of Fresno, one of 2!i women unexpected hazards awa1l the
on the cahforma team, was anxious lD gel three-legged landmg section
on the trail, which includes hundreds of
The Inllial pictures taken
miles of raw desert m western Utah and as VIking was shU a few
Nevada "I've lived m the desert I'm not hundred thousand miles
alratd of riding through 11 "
away from Mars alljO showed
Both teams will be on the road 24 hours a broad secllons of the wmtry
day and both hope to make it to their home Southern HemiSphere
towns by Saturday
covered by what appear to be
The or1gmal Pony Express lasted only 18 ground logs and layers of
months on a 1,831kmle route between St frost
Joseph, Mo , and Sacramento II was
"It says not only that we
replaced by the telegraph The express are not m trouble, but It looks
allracted such riders as Buffalo Bill Cody, as though' w!l_ter vapor may
who was 118 youngest member at age 15
be reasonably abundant and
that's exactly what we're

Prosecutor criticizes easy sentence
I

By JOHN PRYOR
NEW YORK ( UPI ) - The
lemency of a federal Judge m
senlcncmg former nursmg
home operator Bernard
llergman to just four months
In Jail lor his part 10 a II 2
million Medicaid fr aud
ar~used
a storm of
l'IJiltroversy
Special state Prosecutor
Olorles J Hynes, m charge
of' the nursmg home
Investigation, said Thursday
he was "extraordmar~ly
diSappointed"
by
the
sentence Imposed by U S
llistr~cl Court Judge Marv10
li'rankei
Hynes called the JUdge's
tleciSion "special JUstice lor
the privileged" and Rep
Edward I
Koch, D-

Manhattan, sa1d It 1s an
outrage "
'Instead of spending four
months . m a real )811
Bergman Is gomg to be
perm11ted to hvc In a hsllway
house, one that IS effectively
a hole I " Koch said
Hynes sa1d Bergman also
hss refused to hve up to an
agreement to cooperate m the
mvestigatlon and to make full
reshluhon of the taxpayers'
money he 1s Sllld to have
stolen Hynes sa1d Bergman
has agreed to pay back only
$360,000 of the $2 5 million
aud1tvrs say he owes the
state
Both Hynes and stale Su·
preme Court Jushce AloysiUS
Mella served nollce • they
were not bound by any

Losses measured
UDiled Preullllernalional
Texans today conlmued
their
battle
agamst
lloodwaters that ravaged
Houston earlier this week and
upper Midwest farmers
a•sessed losses from the
worst drought since the 1930s
and waited for prom1sed
federal a1d
'
Workers 10 Houston were
still pumpng out water from
bosemenls and bulldmgs
deluged by up lo 13 10ches of
' rain Tuesday Texas Gov
J)]Iph Briscoe ordered the
Division
of
Disaster
Emergency Service to survey
the damage
The Houston floods left
eight persons dead
But there was no moiSture
In sight for thirsting crops In
U1e nation's upper Midlands
Minnesota Agriculture
Commissioner Jon Wefald
said his estimates that the
drought has damaged onetlttrd of lhe slate's crops and
caused $1 b1lllon m losses are
"very conservative "
"Every farmer thai has
called me In the last 15 days
l!llys my estimates are too
low," he sa1d "This 1s the
most severe drought we've
ever had.
"Most people don't realize
this drought baSically started

m July of last year there's
beem nothmg like 11 smce the

federal plea-barguntng
agreements mvolv1ng the 54year old orthodox rabbi and
onellme mlihona~re, who
pleaded gwlly m March to
two counts of an 11-count
mdlclment The former
nursmg home operator also
faces senlencmg on stale
charges
Slate
and
federal
prosecutors had agreed that
any term of confinement
unposed by the state courts
should
be
served
concurrently with the federal
penalty But Meha and Hynes
said they do not feel they are
bound by lhst agreement
'My hands aren't hed ,"
Mella said
Bergman, once the central
ftgure 1n the massive nW'smg
homes mqmry, admitted he
took part in the conspiracy
and he filed false corporate
Income tax returns He 1s

scheduled to surrender June
28 to begm serving his 120-&lt;lay
sentence
In sentencmg Bergman,
who could have been sent to
pnson for five years and
lmed $15,000, Frankel said he
conSidered the four months to
be a ''stern ' sentence
For people hke Dr Bergman, who might be disposed
to en gage m Similar
wrongdomg , 11 should be
sui!Iclenliy frightemng to
serve the major end of
genera I dete rrence," he
said

Hynes disagreed, saymg,
One wonders whether
essenual JUSllc-e has been
accomplished when a man
such as Bernard Bergman IS
giVen th1s kind of sentence "
The elderly who hved 1n
Bergman's nursmg homes
must feel abandoned and
alone once agam, 11 he satd

Rose in workshop at Athens

Archie C Rose of Meigs
County Is participating m an
President Ford declared a OhiO University workshop on
state of emergency for more classroom management for
than 100 drought-stricken secondary teachers at the
counties m Mmnesola, South Athens campus lh1s week
Dakota and Wisconsin
The primary focus of the
The
presidential flve-(!ay workshop was on the
emergency declaration 1deas of Halm Ginott, W1lham
cleared the way for a Glasser, Carl Rogers and
federally funded Agriculture Thomas Gordon Informality
Department program to tran- was keynoted 10 the teaching
sport hay to cattlemen and techmques used, which indairy farmers until the cluded lectures, group
drought breaks
discussions and role-playmg
Some stockmen hsd started
Dr Bernard Cleveland,
seU10g off part of their herds workshop director and mbecause of the drought, which
hss Withered pastures and
cut heavily mto feed crops THISTLEDOWN
parttcularly hay Wheat, oat
and other small gratn crops
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
also have suffered heavily IUPI) - With Benme
A spokesman for the Feliciano 10 the Irons,
Federal Disaster AsSistance Borosun woo the . featured
Administration said allowance
purse
at
emergency hay shipments Thistledown Thursday,
would be sent to 40 counties m covermg the mile and 40
central
and
northern yards m 1 43 3-5 and paymg
MlMesota, 56 counties m $4 80 lo WID
north-central and eastern
A &amp;-1-10 tr1fecta of cantina
South Dakota and 18 counties Pete, Z1ppy Idea and Crafty
m northern WISCOilsm
Destmo paid $3,764 40 to 12
' The drought has Impacted WlMmg ticket holders
heavily on livestock, as the
A 11-3 dally double of Lovmg
pastures . have died out Hope and Overland Way paid
because of the lack of $278 40
mmsture," the White House
The 4,390 fans wagered
statement said
$424,498
1930s "

DR. LAMB

lookmg for," s~ud Harold
Masursky , a government
geologist, who directs the
team of scientists selecting
lhe Site frr America's first
attempt to land a life-eeetlng
spa(.'Ocrall on Mars
' I think we 're proceeding
on the right course," he sa1d
alter looking a\ the latest
picture received from Vildng
Thursday at the Jet

DEAR DR LAMB Prease tell me, will CocaColas damage my 15-year.old
son's health• He drinks four
or five each day along with
lots of milk at meals
Theile Cokes are drunk
mostly between n.!als, while
at work In a grocery store,
after IIChool and at recess in
school
He is 6 feet laU, weighs 135
pounds and is fairly healthy
DEAR READER -Ills not
the worst habit in the world
'nlere Is IIWie caffeine In
Cokes, about 35
to 55
miUigrams In a 12-ounce
boUle. That is about one-third
u much asln a brewed cup of
Clll'•e Certainly he is not
ptUng as much caffeine as
IJIOSt people gel from their
dally coffee habit
Apparently the calories in
lhem do not bother him as he
ill hOlfat Aalon,_,s he eat; a
well-balanced diet otherwise
I wouldn't !forry too much
about It The only prohlem 1

can see IS that treqll&lt;!nl
eatmg, drinking or snacking
mcreases the chances of
dental car1es
To g1 ve you more Informa bon on colas I'm
sending you The Health
Letter number 1-1, Coffee,
Tea, Cola, Cocoa Others who
want this information can
forward 50 cents with a long,
stamped, , self-addressed
enveolpe for mailing Address your letter to me m
care of this newspaper, P 0
Box 1551, Radio C1ty Station ,
New York, NY 10019
DEAR DR LAMB - I hear
so much abo11t whiplash and
know very ltttle about 11
Could you explain the term
and Its symptoms to me•
DEAR READER
Whiplash means a violent
backward Jerking of the head
as may occur If you are hit
suddenly from the rear II
most often occurs m
automobile accidents from a
rear end collision The head
snaps back 11 liH" IS ~ n t
adP.r. " ~ le SWliiV" •••endws

up from the seat behind the

head The backward thrust of
the head as the body Is thrust
forward from the unpact
strains the neck area The
term whiplash refers to the
snapplng~lke action which
can occur from such an
unpact. If you pop a whip the
end of the whip IS jerked In
this fashion and that's the
origin of the term
A whiplash injury may be
mUd with only a mdd strain
on the muscles In the area of
the neck This can result In
very sore neck muscles and a
headache for some time after
the accident II muscle strain
is all that happens the person
usually has a total recovery
w1th no residual problell18
If the slraln on lhe neck
area pulls the neck vertebrae
m such a way as to put
pressure on nerves that come
out of the spine, then one can
have a variety of symptoms
1'hLS can even affect the
nerves that go to the
diaphragm and mfluence

spacecraft went tnto or hi.
arollld Mars m 1971, the
planet was blanketed by thick
clouds of dusi for weeks A
Russian spacecraft failed 1ll
seconds after landing In that
dust storm.
Masurksy said a p1cture
received Thursday of " the
Viking 1 landing site showed
the atmosphere 111 the area
was clear

By NAT GIBSON
WANDA, Angola (UPI) prosecutors
Angolan
wrapped up their case
agamst 13 British and
American mercenanes with
demands that the ''scum of
human society" be put to the
fmng squad Spectators
chanted "death, death'"
Prosecutor Rui Monteiro
said Thursday aU 13 soldiers
of fortune should be
sentenced to death by firing
squad as a deterrent to other
merc~nanes despite wide
differences In charges
agamst them
"It Is not our job to give
graduated sentences here,"
Monteiro said. "For their
grave crunes against the
Angolan people, they can only
be punished by death by shooting"
As the bearded prosecutor
flmshed his arguments,
spectators packing the
br1ghUy ht courtroom burst
mlo sustamed applause
Interspersed with shouts of
'death, death 1"
Montero characterized all
the defendants as the "scum
of human society," but
praised the estllll8ted 14,000
Cuban troops In Angola as
' comrades" for aiding the
Angolan Marxists during the
natiOn's c1vU war.
Final defense arguments
for Costas "Col Tooy Callan"
GeorgiOU - the mercenary
commander accused of
ordermg the execution of 14 of
his own British troops - were
scheduled today
Also scheduled were arguments for Gordon McKenzie,
who IS accused of carrying
out CaHan's orders, and

VIetnam war veteran Daniel
Gearhart, 34, who has a wife
and lour children In
KensinglM, Md
The prosecutor, during a
three-hour, »minute closing
argument, said neither Gary
Acker, 21, an ex-Marine from
Sacramento, calif • nor
Argenllne-Amerlcan Gustavo
Grillo, 25, of Jersey City,
N J , should be shown any
leniency.
Both men, who had
expected to come off tighter
than most of the other
defendants, VISibly slumped

Patrol will
announce new
academy class
Lt E W Wigglesworth,
commander of the Gallipolis

Post of the Ohio State lllghVIay Patrol, IDday advised au
persons interested In pursuing a career as a Patrol
Officer to contact their
nearest Patrol Post for
further Information
"Although no date has been
set to begin a patrol recruit
training class, we recommend that mteresled parties,
including persons who have
previously contacted the
patrol, inquire now in anticipation of the start of such
a class," Lt. E W Wigglesworth said
Basic requiremenIa are .
age 21 through 30, height,
5'8" to 6'4" with weight 10
proporUon to height; hlgli
school diploma, OED, or
equiValent, valid driver's
license; vision, 20-30 uncorrected, 20..20 corrected
and then corrected one eye
at least ~ and the other
eye 2()..100 or better, and good
phySical and mental health,
and of good moral character.
I

structor, has taught at all
levels of the public school
svstem For mne years he
was In the Social Studies
Department at Marshall
Un1vers1ty and he IS a
licensed mslructor for
Gordon's "Teacher Effech veness Tram10g"
program
The workshop was sponsored by the School of
Curr~culwn and lnstruchon
CINCINNATI I UPI) - Lei·
at OhiO Umvers1ty m
ters
beheved to contain inleccooperalion with the Office of
hous
hcks have been
Workshops, Conferences and
rece1ved
10 the CinCinnati
Institutes
area, the FBI confirmed
Thursday
The FBI would not say who
RIVER DOWNS
m CmciMati had received
CINCINNATI (UP!)
such leiters but did say more
Tommy Meyers guided than one had been recetved
Aislay to a one-half-length here
wm over Exemplary In the
C Edwm Enright, aSSistant
fea tured $2,900 allowance agent 10 charge of the local
race at R1ver Downs FBI office, sa1d the letters
Thursday
had been sent to Washington,
Aistay went the s1x furlongs D C for analysis and that
m I 12, good for returns of FBI Director Clarence Kelly
$14, $5 80 and $4 20 would release a statement
Exemplary pa1d $3 40 and when the IOVesllgaUon Is
$2 40 while Zookeeper came complete
m third to pay $3 40
The Clncmnati Enquirer
An ~daily double of G l's repocted today a source said
Girl and It's Brownie paid he saw a container of licks
$106 60
and other bugs which came In
The crowd of 3,901 bel a leiter Wednesday to a
$338,576
CinCinnati company
The source said there were
two ticks and "about onequarter teaspoon of wings
and parts of other bugs They
were llny little black lhlngs,
according to the report.
The paper sa1d the source
did not know which company
received the letters but the
letters and contents were also
breathmg 11 the neck ver- sent to the Fm •
tebrae are fractured or
dislocated In some way from
,
the Impact then you can have ..---------1
pressure on the spmal cord m
The Daily Sentinel
the neck area This can be
DEVOTEO
TO THE
qwte serious 1f the pressure IS
INTEREST OF
excessive and presses on
MEIGS MASON AQEA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
vital areas of the cord In the
euc Ed
..
ultimate extreme form you
ROBE IT HOEFLICH
CliJ Editor
could have a broken neck and
Pubtlshe dally •&gt;&lt;epl
actually sever the cord at
Saturday by The Ohlo
VaHey Publishing Com
some level causmg peroan~
Ill . Couro Sl .
mancnl paralysis from the
Pomeroy
Of\ lo
45769
Business Office Phon&amp; 992
neck down The type of
2156 Editorial Phone 992
symptom that results
1157
•
Second class postagtt
depends entirely on where the
paid at Pomeroy, Ohio
level of mjury LS to the spinal
Nallonal
advertising
reprnental111e Ward
cord Each level of the cord
Gr1tflfh Company lnt,
w1th10 the neck Involves
BOlllnelll &amp; Gallagher Dlv .,
757 Third Ave New Vor~
different funcUons of the
N Y 10017
'
Sublcr l p tlon
rates
body
Oellvered by carrier Whert
So a whiplash injury may
avell&amp;ble 75 cents p•r
hP nul hmg more than a mild week By MQtor ROutt
where carrier \trvlce not
sprain w the muscles In the available
One month
neck to a Vel\ serious Injury S3 25 By mall In Ohio anci
Va Otle Vur 122 oo
resullmg m to~;~l paralysis or W
Six month~ Sll 50 Three
S7 00 Elsewhere
even death Withlll l~e broad months
S26 00 year
months
spectrum of dlsordtiS you S13 50 three monthS , S7 so
ubscrlpllon price lncludn
can lmd a w1dc var1el) of l.:~ unday
Times Sentinel
&lt; ompiamts

sIC• k liC• k S

recei'ved m'

Cincy area

.

,.x

LO'ITERY WINNERS
Tbl1 week'• wiDDiog
numben:
Three-dicit namber 147 ( •b·lour·uven).
Four-digit number 111%1 (OIIe-ellb•two-oae).
Five dicit uamber 811141 ( zero-lliDe-lll·folll'-

on their stools as they heard
themselves Singled out before
Callan, who appeared almoSt
certain to receive the death
penalty
Gearhart, who like Acker
and Grillo claims to have
been in nortbem Angola only
three days before his capture
last February and never fired
a shot, was believed to be In
greater jeopardy than the
other Americans because he
ran an advertisement In a
soldier of fortune magazme
offer10g himself as a
mercenary.

Sport Parade

has:

DAVID THOMAS

Evangelistic
meetings will
begin Sunday

ll

j

'
t

Harrisonville
has easy tune
•

•23.85

VALUE STORE

°

~tmNew

amateur I'm one of the ducks."

,,

'.
!'
·~

education, regional conferences, Interagency con-o&lt;
lerences and professlonaF
meetings.
·~
Ohio's 1976 Appalachiati'"
Development Plan and' •
Project lnvealment Package&lt; '
cootatns approllmately $9
mllllon In f1111dlng propoeals
lor Ohio's 28 Appalachlarl'"
counties In areas of health, ' '
child development, com·';;
munlty developmen t ; •
education, energy and 'n
nalll'al reiiOUI'cea
.,.,
ARC Is a state-federal'"
parlnenhlp which promotes· "
the economic and social
development of the Ap·''"
palachian region of the ' •
T•lflt11A

'

BAUM'S TRUE

Velefllll Memerlal Hospital
ADMISSIONS - Myrtle
Thomu, Pomeroy; Juanita
Ferrell Middleport Martha
Searls' Mlddlepo~t · E!za
Lar~, Long Bot~.
DISCHARGES - Ollie
Boston, Joan Pickens, Kevin
Anderson, Gerll'ude Lehew,
Mazie Hannahs, Louise
Eshelman Errol Follrod
'
Dorothy Anthony,
Annette'
lambert

The project is designed to
Improve th~ health care
delivery system In rural
areas of 110utheaatern Ohio
through microwave commllllcation between The Ohio
Stale University's College of
Medicine and O'Blene111
Memorial tlolptlal in Athens,
Athens Mental Health and
Mental Retirdallon Center
and Holzer Medical Center In
Galllpolls.
Programming actlviUea
occurring with the medical
microwave system include
medical consultation,
psycbiatric conaultatlon,
continuing education for
physicians and nurses, allied
hoollh nrnf•AAinn. rontinlllmr

U•d

~~~~~! a~'!!~~~!jSthe!!mor

U :; m
il mll nm

lf

J: m

r.,argaret McFarland c
Juanlla McKenzie, Jamel'o
McPeek, Alma Meaige,
Kathleen Moody, Ona Moore,.
Phyills Perry, Catherlnl!'
Price, Kathl Rhea, Harry~
Rhodes, Rebecca .Robinson,
Melissa Rouse , Gertrude,
Roush, Donald Skaggs, Betty;
Stewart, Maxine Tabor,
Debra Whitlatch, Charles ,
Whitt, Audrey Williams, Roy,.
Woolum, Russell Wooten, ,.
Raymond Wright
(Btrtlls, June 17)
Mr.
and
Mrs Claude Sines1 •
Holzer Medical Center
son,
Leon,
W Va.; Mr and "
BLAKE SETIU:S
(DileUrle&amp;, JUDel7)
LOS ANGELES (UPI) Plttllp Adkins, Kimberly Mrs Larry Woods, son, ~
"
Actor Robert Blake reached Allen, Adele Brooks, Freda Gallipolis
an out.of-eourt settlement of Burns, Edna Butterfield,
"'
his contract dispute with Michael Cochran, Lew Cook,
Universal Studios and will Etta Cottrill, Belb Cowan,
"•
remain the star In the Olartes Neal, Clova Fair·
NOW
YOU
KNOW
•·
"Baretta" television series. child, Oscar Fink, Lena
The terms of the Foglesong, Michael Gallion, In the days of the pony,,:
settlement, announced Scotty George, Rosa Grif- elt)Jreu, postage on a halfThursday, were not revealed. fiths, Mra. Wllllarn Guinther ounce letter was a $5 pony
The agreement was and son, Walter Harvey, elt)Jress stamp, plus a reguiW: ,
reached a week beftre trial Phlllp Heck, Robert Hill, 1ik.'ent U S stamp - l.hls to; ,
was scheduled to begin In Mary Howell, Karen John· gel the letter !rom St Jo!leph1
Blake's swt to lreak hla, son, Rollella Johnston, Homer Mo to Sacramento, Calli , IIi
contract with Universal, Jones, Patricia Leach, Hazel the advertised time of 1a "
which runs through 1980.
Lear, Olrlstopher Masters, days

COLUMBUS- Gov. Jamea
A Rhodes today announced
the approval of a $181,617
grant from lite Appalachian
Regional Commlllloo (ARC)
to the Ohio Educational
Television Network Commlaalon for the Medical
Adaptation of Microwave to
Health Delivery project.
Local _.... will COli·
lrlbule t&amp;f,M4 lD ~upplement
the ARC grant
The project was submitted
to the ARC lor approval b)'
the Deparlment of Economic
and Community Development's Appalachian
Development Office whlcb
administers
lhe
ARC
oro«ram In (lhlo

a..aal
Oblo Gel!
AAHIIU. T-eat,
lialed C. becfa Ieday It
Albeu ( Proo,\111 play) will
be ell'l'led Uve by WMPO
Tbe

8eatbea~tern

FIBER
ALUMINUM
ROOF COATING

m

Jl ll

HOSPITAL NEWS

ARC grant approved

He added ,
Sure, It
became llle first amateur m
By DAVID MOFFIT
five years to take an Open surprised me to play so well,
UPI Sports Writer
lead Thursday by putting but II was no shock This has
DULUTH, Ga (UPI )
Young amateur Mike Reid together a strmg of three to be my biggest thrill "
A number of the pros were
respects all those big-flame straight birdies and post10g a
under
par at some pomt m the
golf stars he 's playing 3-under-par 67
(lrst
round
but couldn't stay
That
was
good
enough
for
a
agamst m the U S Ooen but
there
three-stroke
lead
over
five
not enough to keep him
from beating their pants off professionals tied l&lt;r second ' AI Ge1berger, was 2 under
and even though that lead going mto the !mal hole, a 46()..
10 the openmg roUild
He was the only man able to might not hold up 10 today 's yard , par-4 fronted by a lake
break par over a course second round, Reid sa1d he but put his ball m the water
where the fairWay grass was wasn't plaMIOg to worry when he went against his own
judgement and tried to drive
about 11
left too long by accident,
the green
''I'm
not
going
to
let
the
While his Idols like Jack
"I made a stupid m1stake ,"
Nicklaus, Johnny Miller, lead bother me,'' he said
Hale lrwm and Tom Weiskopf "I'm going to enJOY It for as said Ge1berger alter takmg a
were struggling w1th the high long as I can It's go10g to be double bogey and wmdmg up
at even-par 70, alon ~ w1th
bermuda grass, Reid, 21, fun "

the SCOREBOARD

Cub Scouts in
bike rodeo

Six·dl&amp;il uumber UOBZ% (elgbt•foar-aeroetcb•two-twol.
Spirit of '71 wlunln&amp;
aumben:
Two-dlcfl 111Uilber - •
(lllree-tll), 41 (IOIII'Diae),
S5 (lllree-ftvel aad 5l (five- •
one).
Fear-digit Dumber MU (tb-etcb•two-oae).
Five-digit Dumber rllll Calae-aevea-elcht·
fOIII'OIIe)
·t
b
81x· di1 I aam er ZIM33 (two-oae-IIIDe-foarlbree-lllree ).

';?.1

Big Three reunited

TUPPERS PLAINS - An
evangelistic meellng wtii be
held at 7 30 each evening,
Sunday through Friday, June
25, at the Tuppers Pialns
Church of Christ mth David
Thomas, a nat1ve of
Yolllgstown as speaker ,
A 1964 graduate of the
Cincinnati Bible College, Mr
School will run
Thomas did gr-aduate work
there and also at Xavier
Unlversltv .
He
held
through Friday
ministries at the StanUil
The Middleport Olurch of Christian Church, StanlM,
the Nazarene announces its Ky ; Mt. Pleasant ChrisUan
Church, Greenville, N c,,
va~atlon Bible school Mon.
day lhrongh Friday under the and the Jefferson Olurch cil
direction of Tom and Geneva Christ, Rural Hlill, North
Carolina. In July, 1972, he
McElroy.
Classes lor children, three entered the field of worldthrough 18, will be held each wide evangelism and joined
evenmg from 8 30 to 8 30 p the personnel of Person lo
m with "Praise and Person Evangelism ul
Triumph" the subject of the HlliBboro. Since the fall of
school The school will end 1967, he worked In over 100
with a program at 9 30 a m evangelistic meetings m I~
on Sunday, JIDie 17. A special states and seven foreign
feature of the Bible School countries. He and hiS wile:
mil be dauy appearances of Nancy, reside In Wlnstoll
"Toml", the magician, and Salem, N C
his puppet friends The Rev.
Each night of the Tuppera
Don Cole, pastor, Invites Plams service will have a
yoiDig people of the com- special emphasis Including
mlllity to attend.
Monday, youth night ~
Tuesday, old·fashloned
night; Wednesday, officers
night; Thursday, !ill-a-pew
night; Friday, family nlgbt
There will be special music
each evening. The pastor,
Eugene E Underwood, InCHESTER - The Chester- vites the public to attend '
Tuppers Plalrul Cub Scouts
recenUy held a bike rodeo at
the Eastern High School Edwards, Todd Tripp, Keno}'
parking lot.
Riggs, Bill Call, Kevin Fick,
The rock drop was won by Randy Bahr, Bob Brooks;
Randy Bahr The coast race Jim Brooks and David Edwas won by Todd Trlpp,llrat; wards The Cub Scou~
Bob Brooks, second, and BID Olympics were announced for
C811, third Winning In the Saturday at Galllpolls SlaW
drag race were Kevin Flck, Institute Thanks were exllrat, John Heln, second, and tended to parents who helped
Bob Brooks, third The boys leaders with the blcycleo
were presented ribbons events Cookies and a
Participating were John beverage were served at the
Heln, John Davis, John conClusion of the rodeo

oae)

....~ :=--:&lt;....

Masters cham piOn Ray the fa1rway grass
Floyd, Rod Funselh John
USGA executive Frank Rtldlo (bolls AM-FM) . Tile
Mahaffey
and
R1k Tatum explained thai Atlanta Mlddleporl • Pomeroy
Massenga le Floyd and Alhletlc Club groundskeeper atatloa piaU to carry ID
Funseth both bogeyed the Bob McGee mlsadjusted the boun ol actiUD, •lartlal 11
!mal hole
mowers cauSing the fairways l:Up.m.loday. Salllntay'a
lly MILTON RlmMAN
Jerry Pate, 2-under after to be cut a quarter~nch radio ICIIOD wiU be&amp;ID at11
UPI Sporll Edit«
alld Suaday'a Uve coverqe
eight holes, was at 71, along higher than planned.
Defending Open champion at I p.m.
with Butch Ba1rd, Terry
DULimi,Ga (UPl) - MikeReid Is an amateur
,Diehl, Don January, Lyn Loti Lou Graham, a 75 shooter
In golf, that slamiJl him as someone completely apart from
and Mike Morley
Thursday, said, " The
/ anybody else,110meooe special, Uke the late Bobby Jones was
fairways were as bad as I've
WeiSkopf
finished
double
Mike Reid goes Into the setond round of the U S Open today
bogey-bogey for a 73 Miller ever played ftr a U S Open " blame the fairways for hls 4
leading by three strokes He's the first amateur to lesd the
But pr e- tournament over SCI)re 'Basically, I just
closed wllh a double bogey
Open In live years, but that doesn't matter, he ISO 't supposed to
for a 74 Nicklaus, who favonte Nicklaus refused to didn 't play well,'' he said
bother his head thinking about winning any money because as
couldn't make a birdie all day
an 81118leur, there's no way he can.
long, also was at 74 while
He supposed to have mly good, clean thoughts about golf,
lrwm, !;.over alter five holes,
which he
so llll8gtne )low he fell when some JOker sidled uo
had a 75 and led the attack on
next to him after his three-under-par 67 eyepopper m
Tlnnday's opening roWld and asked him if he ever heard of
1}
Lee Mackey, Jr •
Red So1 8, A's 3:
Chester 11 Monday battled the frame lD hang on for the
Mike Reid reflected a moment
Dwight Evans, Jim Rice down to wire with the visiting win. Buckley teamed up with
"I've heard the name. Wasn't he a golfer who played m the
and carlton Fisk homered lor Chester 1 team coming out on Eddie Werry to share the
'518 '" he asked, flshmg back In hiS memory
the Red Sox, who got an eight- lop 14-12 Four costly errors pitching chores Werry
"That'srlght," conflnned the guy, who had approached the
hit pitchmg effort from Dick and 15 walks proved to be the slruck out five and walked
skinny, 21-year-&lt;Jid "He shot a 64 the !lfSt day of the 1950 US
Pole and handed Mike Torrez 111dolng of the hosla
three while Buckley fanned
for
the
Rangers
Healy,
Wilhe
Randolph,
By FRED DOWN
Open at Ardmore, Pa , and you know what he had the second
h1s
elghlh
loss
agamst
six
Angels
2,
Brewers
0:
Chester
blew
lour
and walked two
apparently
Oscar
Gamble
and
Carlos
1
UPI Sports Writer
round?"
wms
Evans
sent
Boston
off
the
game
open
In
the
third
Todd
Norton led the win·
Gary
Ross,
p1tchmg
hiS
May
led
the
12-lut
New
York
The New York Yankees
" "I suppose now you're gonna tell me 75," sa1d Reid , have
with
a
two-run
homer
In
the
when
they
plated
IP
blj
runs
ners
with
a homer and double
first
complete
game
since
attack,
which
tagged
Terry
reumted the "Big
anticipating a little
first
and
the
Red
Sol
kayoed
with
Norton
cleaning
the
while
Buckley
helped his own
July
6,
1968,
hurled
a
twoForster
w1th
his
fourth
defeat
Three" of the Oakland A's
~ 11 NO," came the answer, "81."
world champiOnship pitching and sent the White Sox to hitter for the Angels Ross Torrez m the second w1th bases with a home run and cauae by socking two double&amp;
• "Oh great," Mike Reid replied, movmg on quickly
staff from 1972 through 1974 their seventh straight loss allowed a smgle by Darrell Evans' double the knockout Buckley and Bissell adding and a single Roger Bissell
Lee Mackey, Jr , was a kid out of Binning ham, who nobody
doubles But the bottom of the had a double and single, and
Baltunore defeated Texas, Porter m the Sllth and a blow
but at least one of them thinks
really knew m the 1950 US Open, the same way nobody here reliever Sparkt l.yle may be 4-1,
Inning saw the hosts bounce Werry had two singles
Cahforma
beat smgle by Von Joshua m the Phtllles 3, Giants 2
really knows Mike Reid out of Provo, Utah, m thiS one, and the key to wmmng the Milwaukee, 2~. MIMesota nmth while winning his 4th
Dave CaSh's sacrifice fly back with six runs of their
For Chester II, besides
alter commg apart mth that 81 following hiS openmg round 6-4, American League peMant lDpped DetrOit, W , m a ram- game agamst e1ght losses
w1th one oul m the n10th own with Nicky Leonard Leonard's homer, Lee Gainer
he finished 25th, picked up $100 and went back home never to
He's Jim Hunter, who shortened, f1ve-mnmg game, Cahforma scored m the drove In the WlMIOg run for hilling home run , Olarlle had a triple, and doubles
-be heard from any more
scored his eighth vtctory with and Boston downed Oakland , second mmng on singles by the Phillles and gave rehever Ritchie a double, Tom Crow a were collected by Gaul,
• The same thmg cmce1vabiy could hnppen to Mike Reid , only
Tommy Davts and Bruce Gene Garber the victory double, and Lee Gainer 8 Riebel, Ritchie, Crow, Hlbba,
the rehel help of Lyle 11-3, m other AL games
ooe In the 151knan field to break par Thursday, but ISD't likely Thursday mght, when lhe
and Sayre. Gelling singles
Philadelphia shaded San Boehle, a sacrifice fly and Mike Schmidt hit his 17th triple
to because unlike Lee Mackey, Jr , he doesn't seem at all Yankees beat the Ch1cago Francisco, 3-2, and New York Dave Chalk s smgle
homer for Philadelphia,
The hosts narrowed It to !2- were Ridenour, Leonard,
overwhelmed rr Oustercd by what's happenmg to hun
which dealt Gary Lavelle his 11 with four runs In the Riebel, Gaul, Hibbs, and
White Sox, 5-4, and mcrea'sed mpped Los Angeles, 1-ll,ln 14 Twins 4, Tigers 0:
" He has played m only a half-(!ozen or so tournaments with their AI. Eastern DIVISIOn 1nnmgs m the only scheduled
Dave Goltz won hls seventh fourth setback
fourth but the visitors Iced It Gainer Terry Sayre, David
big name pros and he respects their ability but he ISO 't dazzled lead to six games Hunter has National League games
game for the Twins when a Mels I, Dodgers 0
with t~ tallies In the top of Wolf, and Charlie Ritchie
1ly them He showed that when he began being peppered w1th
MaJor
league
leader
Dave
four-run
Tiger
sixth
was
Orioles
4,
Rangers
I
the
shrth, and winning pitcher teamed up for the loss,
e1ght v1ctor1es and Lyle four
(juestlms from the press.
Reggie Jackson's three-run Wiped out by ram and the Kingman hit his 23rd homer Bryce Bucldey allowed only slrlklng out eight and walking
wms and 10 saves
Sample
those fifteen
"Last year the Yankees homer m the e1ghth mmng score reverted to the end of in the 14th innmg, lifllng the
"How come you go out there today and break par and the didn't use Sparky "sa1d Hun- hfted the Or10ies over Texas the fifth mnmg M1ke Mels over the Dodgers
I
11 10 002-14 9 2
biggest golfers can't•"
11
10 8 401--12 14 4
Kingman's
homer
tagged
Cubbage
drove
10
LOFGRAN DIES
ter, now reumled wtlh VIda Wayne Garland, gettmg a
"I dunno," s8ld Mike Reid, so casually, he provoked some Blue and Ken Holtzman after chance to start as a result of M10nesota's f1rst three runs rehever Charhe Hough with
Werry,
Buckley and
SAI.TLAKE CITY (UPI)
laughs "I'm still looking around at all these golfers I still got Tuesday's sensational sales Baltimore's recent trades, al- with a two-run double and a the loss and gave Skip - DoD Lelgrau, who put
Brogan Sayre, Wolf, Ritchie
toothpicks m my eyes I guess they're lookmg around at me and trades "ThiS year they lowed four hils m seven sacr1f1ce fly and Larry Hisle Lockwood the wm Craig lbe Uolvenlty of Sao
and Leonard, Newell
too"
Swan
had
a
three-lutter
for
drove
m
the
other
With
a
mmngs
and
raised
h1s
record
Francuco
on
the
baall:elstarted usmg hun and be
Among those looking at Reid, a 6-loot, !50-pounder w1th a looks like the old SparRy " to tHl Nelson Briles lost hiS sacr1f1ce fly Vern Ruhle lhe Mets for the first 10 ball map wbea be led the
r.eddish cast to hiS brown hslr, IS former PGA champ AI
IMIDgS
unheralded Dooa to lise
Run..scormg hils by Fran third game agamst SIX wms suffered h1s third loss
Ge1berger, who played one threesome In front of htm
National ln"ttatlon
Geiberger was the same as Reid, three-under, un Ill the 14th ~:·:::·:,:,:,:, :,~•·,:,:: ::::::::: :: ::::::::::::::'!::::,,~v:::i••:::.,: ::::'::::::::::::: ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:: : :: : :::::: ::::: ::::::::::::::::: : :::::::::::::::::::::::::: : :::::::::::::::·:..:::::::·:::·:::::::~?:i~::··:A
Tournament title Ill 1941,
bole where he bogeyed and went two under, after which he took 1!:.,.
:·:·
·
• • ••
• ••• r.::
was found dead Ill a cbeop
adoublebogeystlonthe!8tltandflnlshedwltha70withfour ..
Standmgs
!
hotel Tbunday nlgbl.
others
t'
Averages
~ :a
Tile 1-fooH Lofgrlll 1et a
"He came mto 18 three up and llooked around and saw him
Results
:J
In Middleport Youth scbool reeord iu 1148-41
hit his drive right down the rruddle," Ge1berger sa1d, talking
':.J League action, Harrisonville wben be acored 44! polnll
about the way Reid never buckled at au under the pressure
romped over the Rutland and led the Dooa to a 2&amp;-5
"Then, when I was Slgrung my card, he threw his second shot Byrn~~~~~dL~::~: 1~\~~:~~?:nal
Saturday's Games
Rose Cin
62 250 55 82 328 Reds, 24-8, at Rutland The
record. He waa the Moat
M tlwaukee at Oakland
MaddoK Phil 51 184 28 59 321
I;tghl at the !Iag That sh ows me a Iol nght there, especla IIy
Natoonal League
Balllmore at Texas. nlghl
Andrews Hou 32 134 15 43 m Reds stayed with the visitors Valuable Player iD the NIT
llfter what l did on the hole."
E~sl L Pel GB Delroll
al Mlnnesola
American I.ugue
10 the first, but Harrisonville and weal on to wiD AllNew York 01 Chicago nigh t
G AB R H Pet
MIke Reld IS the son oI a retired AIf ForCe Colonel He has Pholadelphlo " 17 707
Kan Cllv al Cleveland night
Bretl Kc
sa 239 37 BS 356 exploded for eight runs In the America bonon the nell
just completed his senior year at Brigham Young Umvers1ty ~~~~~:
l;~ 1
IOnlv games scheduled!
McRae KC sa 217 38 77 355 second to tee the game
season wbea be averaced
5 Gallon
where he majored m public relations, but when he talks, he Chocago
21 33 45o 15
LeFlore Del 52 211 35 12 341 WlnniOg pitcher T Hanning IU polnll lor the Doua,
1
doesn't talk that way He talks more like a retired colonel's ~o~t~~~~
l~
jj~
Major League Results
~~~log, Mon ~~ l~j
fanned nine and walked only who led the nation In
'
son Straight to the point and fast
•
west
Bv Unl ed Press International Lvnn, Bos
48 1s2 25 59 324 four, and he also slammed defeuse by boldfa&amp; lbe
Sometimes he talks SO last people have to tell him to slow up
W L Pet GB San Frn~r:~~·~do ~~~~ 2 7 o ~o~us~~,N~C
two doubles. Larry Cotterill opposiUou to 18 polDII per
and go back the way they did alter hiS openmg round here ~~~cA~~~tl~s
~l
J Phi adelphia 000 100 011- 3 6 0 Polek KC 55 174 32 55 316 and Danny Riggs socked coulesL
where, m response to which City he came from, he rattled off San DoO&lt;IO
33 27 550 5
D'AcQulsto Motion &lt;71 La Carew Min 57 222 34 69 311 triples and Gibson •ot a
Lolgrao held a variety of
""oad
d t
Houston
Home Runs
0
29 l-4 460 t lOh velle {9) pnd Rader Chr 1sten
places like a raw
coo uc or
Atlanta
National League Kingman double
Harrisonville's odd jobs afler &amp;raduatloD
24 35 407 131h son Reed (6l Garber (9J and
, He started by saymg he was born In Balnbndge, Md , and san Francisco 23 41 359 17
Boone WP- Gorber 12 11 LP- NY 23 Schmldl Ph il 17 record Is now 3-4 while the
and was knoWD to bave
then had moved to Delaware, Alabama, the Phllippmes, Ma·
Thursday's Results
Lavelle (2 41 HR - Phlladel Foster and Morgan Cln 12 Reds are I •
Pholadelphla
3
san
FranciSco
2
Ph
la,
Schmldl
1171
Monday
Chi
and
Cey
LA
11
..,
problems
with alcohol. Hla
Kirkl
nd
d
F
l9on, Dl , Sa n An tomo, De nver, Sa n ranctseo an
a • New York 1 Los Ang 0 ,_4 Inns
American League Yastrzem
Craig Bolin led the Reds laat job wa1 aa a cook al a
Wash, where he now lives with his father
!Only games schedul ed)
n~ lnnongsJ
ski Bos and Oils KC 12
th
ht dV
Today•s Probable Pitchers
Los-Angeles
L May Ball11 Ban do Oak 10 WI a 31or 3 n1g , an ance Sail Lake Clly lounge.
Reid has a mind of his own An mtervtewer diScovered that
tAll Times EDTJ
000 000 000 000 oo-- 0 3 0 Fisk and Rice 8os Hendrick socked a homer and Eddie
Pollee said be blld been
985-3301
the other day when be asked him if he had some kind of ldenllty
Ch icago IR Reuschel 6 •J al New Yo~ ooo ooo ooo Ol - I 9 o Clev and Ford Mlnn 9
Bishop a double Wilford,
dead
for aeveral daya
51 7 35 P m
problem as a 21-year.old unknown amateur among all the Allan
Ia
(Morton
sutton.
Marshall
1101
Hough
Natlon~~t~:;.:!•d
~~sler
Con
Bishop,
and
Craig
Taylor
Chester,
Ohio
Los Angeles !Rhoden 5 OJ al
dy
swan Lock
celebrated pros U1 thiS event.
Montrea l (Fryman 7 4) e OS 1121 an
eager
56 Perez, Cln and Kingman teamed up to fan six but
Talldng about the episode, Reid said he had told the p m
wood 161 and Grole WP- NY so Morgan Cln 48 ,
•
Houston (Richard 7 6 ) at Lockwood 13 21 LP- Hougn 17 Schmidt Ph ol 47
walked a Whopping 17.
mtervteweritwasn'tanyproblemforhunatall
Ptttsburgh (Candelana 5 41 2) HR- New York Kingman
Am e r 1 c 1 n League Bur H
l 815 0-24 16
"Thts fellow kept saying 'problem,' 'problem,"' he said "I s 05 p m
1231
roughs Tex 46 Otis KC 43
lhoughlltwasonlyaproblemforhlm lknowwholam J'man
San Francisco !Dressler 141
Chambloss NY 42 Munson NY R
II 40 3-810

Crowd chants death, death

Mom questions son's Coke habit
By l.awrellCe E. Lamb, M D

Propulsion Laboratory
control center "Things look
very good Indeed."
AI 11 p m EDT Thur!lday,
Viking 1 was 193.9 million
miles from Earth and 2'10,000
miles from Mars It was
movmg toward the planet at
5,9110 miles per hour.
Dust has been a big concern
to project scientists because
when the Mariner 9

Amateur has U. S. Open lea d

Today's

:: • ·"

Kuhn expected
to approve sale
By RICK GOSSEIJN
UPI Sporll Writer
NEW YORK (UP!) - Com·
missioner Bome Kuhn today
Is expected to approve three
of the most controversial
de$ m baseball history
Kuhn met with Charley 0
Finley, owner of the Oakland
A's and representatives of the
Boston Red Sox and New
York Yankees and officials of
the American League for
about 95 minutes Thursday
He probably will annoWJce
his formal approval of the
sales today or wlth10 the next
48 hours
,
fmley, the ''ugly duckling
of the
baseball
establishment," announced
TUesday night the sales of Joe
Rudl and Rollle Fingers to
the Red Sox and VIda Blue to
the Yankees-each frr $1·
mlllloo The sales virtually
dismanUed the 1972-74 Wocid
Champion A's in much the
same maiiiiCr that Conroe
Mack ll'oke up the !929-3().31
PhlladelpliiB A's
The decisive argument presented at Thursday'smeeting
was the pledge made by
Finley -that he Intended to
use the $3 million he received
for the three players to
''r.ebuild the A's "
: •we will rebuild and fast,''
F\.ttley said, when he
announced the sales Tuesday
night, and he repeated that
pledge to Kuhn Finley said
that he was "tired and
~ppolnled" butthathe was
determined to reo1st the
demands of players for
''ulljultly high contracts."
1Culm entered the picture
under a section of the Major
League Agreemen~ which

os

York (Seaver 6 5l, e
Cincinnati (Billingham 4) at
Philadelphia (LonbOrg B 3) s OS
p m
san Diego (Jones 12 2l at st
Lou is (Falcone 4 5) s 30 p m
saturday's Games
Los Angeles at Montreal
San Francisco at New York
Cincinnati at Philadelphia ,.
Houston at F'lttsburgh
san Diego at St Louis, night
Chlcago at Atla 2 twl n ight

s

(Qnl vA:~fc'.~ct~~~~~~

(SInning!., rain}

Detroit

41

Maybt;~~enKi 13:es

National

Le1gue

Cedeno

000 oo---o 3 2 Hou 26
Morgan . Cin 22
002 0'2- 4 1 0 Griffey Cln 17 Lopes LA 16

Minnesota
Ruhle
Crawford (5) and
Freehan
Goltz
(7 Jl
and
Wyneoar LP - Ruhte (5 3l

New York
000102 02G-- 5121
Chicago
100 000 12Q- 4 8 0
Hunter Lyl e (9) and Healv
Munson (8), Forster Carroll
(7) and Esslan Downing (8)
WP - Hunter U! 6) LP- Forster
(1 4)

Brock, st LIS
American League Patek KC
34 North Oak 30 Carew M lnn
29
Baylor Oak 25, Cam
panerls Oak 24
Petchlng
Mos1 VIctories
N1tlon11 League Jones SO
12 2, Matlack, NY 8 1 LonbOrg,
Phil 8 3
Hough
LA 7 2
Christenson Ph il 7 J Fryman.
Mtl 7 4
Reuss
Pi ll 7 5
Ruthven Atl Richard Hou and
Montefusco, SF 7 6
American League F ltzmor
ris, KC 8 2, Travers Mil 8 3
Tlant Bos and Slaton Mil 8 4
Tanana, Cal 8 S Hunter, NY 8
6
Earned Run Averac~e
( biSid on S4 Innings pitched)
N•tlontl Ltlgue Fo!.ter, SO
2 09 Gullett, Cln and Jones SO
2 10 Matlack NY 2 29 Zachry
Ctn 2 57
American League Travers

his left hand
The 23-year old left-ilanded
hitter was batting 32'1 with
the Bears before Thursday
mght play m lhe American
Assoc1a tion

Jc~ Treat Dad

went mto effect Jan 12, 1921,
American L.e•tue
Balt 1more
000 010 OJo- 4 8 1
EISt
g1ving the comm1ss1oner
1
000 001 ooo- I 4 1
W
L
Pet
~ GB Texas
broad powers to act 10 "the New York
Garland, Pagan (B) and
34 22 607 l _
Duncan Briles Foucault (91
mterests of the morale of the
Cleveland
28 28 500 ' 6 and
Sundberg WP- Garland (6
Boston
27
29
&lt;82
7
players 110d the honor of the
Ol
LP - Briles (6 3)
HR 27 31 466 8
Baltimore
game"
Delrolt
25 32 439 9111 Baltimore Jackson (5)
23 31 426 10 Milwaukee 000 000 OOQ--- 0 2 1
Havmg coovinced hiJIISelf Milwaukee
West
of Finley's mtent10ns to
020 000 OOx- 2 7 1
W L Pel GB Californ ia
Slaton (8 4) and Porter Ross
rebuild the A's, however, Kansas City 38 20 655
Texas
33 23 589 4 (4 Bland Etchebarren
Kuhn had every right to fall Minnesota
28 30 483 10
Boston
312 001 lOG- 8 13 0
back on the precedent of 45 Chicago
27 29 .482 10
100 100 001 - 3 e 1 Mil 1 59 Fldrvch. Del 1 86
29 32 .475 10112 Oakland
years ago when Mack lroke Oakland
Pole (3 4) and Fisk, Torrez Garland, Bait and WOOd, Chi
California
26 38 .406 15
Bahnsen (2 ) and Hosley LP2 25 Umbarger, Tex 23.5
up his three-time American
Thursday's Results
Torrez (6 81 HRs-Bosto, Rice
Strikeouts
Mlnn .4 Detroit 0, 5 Inns, rain
League championship clubs
191 Evans {8l Fisk (9 1
National L11gue Seaver NY
York
5
Chicago
"
New
Judge Kenesaw Mountam Baltimore 4 Te11.11 1
•
88 Richard Hou and Montetus
(Onl-y games scheduled )
co SF 75 Messersm ith Atl 67
Landis, baseball's ftrst California 2 Milwaukee 0
Nlekro All 63
8 Oakland 3
commissiOner, who came to Boston
Amerlc•n League Tanana
{Only games scheduled)
Cal
12J
Ryan
Cal
112,
power after the 1919 Black
ToCiay•s Probable Pitchers
Blyle~o~en , Te x 94 Hunter NY
(All
T1mts
EDT)
Sox World Series scandal,
73 Jenkins 8os 67
Major League Leaders
Kansas City !Leonard 6 21 at
took no action m that Cleveland
By United Prttlt International
(Walts I 1), 7 30 p m
MONTREAL (UPI) - The
aanlng
Detro it (Roberts s 5) at
mstance Mack had purged
Montreal
Expos recalled
( b•sed on 125 •t bats)
M innesota (Hughes 2 7) 9 p m
his own club once before- In
National Le1gue
New York (Holtzman 5 Ill) at
third
baseman
Pat Scanlon
1915 when baseball had oo Chicago (JOhnson J 71 9 P m
G AB R H Pet
from
the
Denver
Bears of the
Me
Bride
Sl
L
42
159
24
57
358
Beltlmore (May Ill 3) at Texas
commtss1oner but was ruled I Umbarger
7 4), 9 OS p m
Oliver Pll
51 205 32 71 346 Amencan
Associallon
by a National ComrruSSionBoston (Jones 1 0) at Cal l Robinson Pit 43 146 22 50 3A2
and no action was taken In fornla (Kirkwood 2 6 ) 10 30 Foster, C.n 57 223 32 76 341 Thursday to replace Andre
Griffey Cln 56 208 52 70 337 Thornton who was placed on
pm
lhat case either
Milwaukee (A4Qustlne 2 21 Bt Herndon SF 36 1:1&lt; 19 45 336 the 15-&lt;lay dlS8bled list last
"I tried to trade them but Oakland IBosmen o OJ, 11 p m Morgan , Cln 54 176 49 59 335
week with a broken
nobody wanted to take m
unsigned players,'' Finley
said Thursday "There's
absolutely no way the game
can continue to operate with
On dad s day treat h1m to our Super Shef and
.UNTIL 5 PM
these astronomical salaries.
large fnes He'll get a big patty of ground beef,
This 1s the day of reckonmg
SATURDAY, JUNE 19TH
served on a deliCious bun with lettuce, tomato,
"I ihlnk the commissioner
sweet
oman and melted cheese
for
called the meeting because
he wanted to know how we
As a special treat on h1s day, we II furn1sh h1m w1th
wenl about making the
a free large soft dnnk and free turnover
salea," added Finley "I lhlnk
OF
he was happy withour
prelll!ntatlon."
Finley also said that Brad
Corbett, owner of tile Texas
OPEN TO PUBLIC AFTER S PM
Rangers, was "a hypocrite"
for demanding that the sales
1503 EASTERN AVE., GALLIPOLIS, OHIC?,
be declared void He said the
Rangers' owner had tried to
c 1976 Burger Chef Svstems Inc
U.S. 60 WEST-HUNTINGTON
buy Oakland outfielder Don
Closed Every Monday Except LabO( Dly
Baylor on the same day he
l.-.._
__::2:.::3=25:....:.:JACKSON AVE., PT. PLEASANT, W.VA.
sold !he other three players

to dinner at
Burger Chef®
on
•
Father's Day-June 20.
Free turnover and
large soft drink
with purchase of
a Super Shef®
&amp; large fries
at regular price.

PARK RESERVED

MMER OUTING

LARGE INDUSTRIAL CONCERN

CAMDEN PARK

Cltet ~

\I

OFFICE
:30 lo12, 2 to 5 !CLOSE
AT NOON QN THURS.l- EAST COI{RT

•

''

�4- The Dailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pumeruy, 0., ~'riday, June 18, 1911i

ABA merges with NBA
frl:l n chis l' ~.

By GIL PETERS
UPI Sports Writer
HYANNIS , Mass. I UP]) .:_
Goodbye red, white and blue
ball. So long three-point field
goal.
The American B&lt;lsketball
Associ a Hon is no more .
The 9-yea r-old leag-ue
became in sta nt trivia
Thursday when four ABA
teams merged int o""""'e
Na tional Basketball Association following 31 , days
of long and compli cated Ui lks
between offtcials of the two
leagues.
In the end it was NBA
Commissioner l..ctwr ence F .
O' Brien, vetera n poli ltea l
wh ee ler -de ale r , who
reopened broken-&lt;lown talks
very ea rly Thursday and
smoothed out an agreement
acceptable to both sides.
Under the plan agreed to,
the San Antonio, Denver,
Indiana and New York Nets
franchises will be added to
the NBA as expansion teams
at an entry fee of $:1. 2 million
cash per club.
Players from t11e Utah.St.
Louts
and
Kentu cky

:\J''

whll'h

were

appearance of the di'IJersal
&lt;lraft plan caused Seattle
owner Sam Schulman to cast
the lone · dissen ting vo te
a iii OIIg the Ill-m ember NBA
Board of Governors.
" I voted agains t the
merger as a protest against
the di;versal draft plan but l
am in favor of the merger
11Belf because it is good for
basketball, " said Schulman .
O'Brien was exuberant but
exhausted after the frui tful
all-night session . "It's a great
day for spons and one of the
10 most memorable events in
my life," O'Brien said.
The merger most likely
ended the chance of two suits
aga inst the NBA . ABA
Players Associa tion lawyer
Prentiss Yancey said
inclusion of the dispersal
draft elmunatcd a chance of a
suit by his group aga inst the
NBA .
In another suit to have been
heard today in a New York
federa l eourt, the ABA had
charged the NBA with
restraint of trade in violation
nf antitrust la ws. Judge
Robert I. Ca rter was
ex pected to dismiss it.

bought out by U1e remaining
ARA own~rs for an estimated

$3 millio11 each, will be put

mto a dispersa l draft , along
wtth players from previously
folded AHA cl ubs. All 22 NBA
teams- includ tn ~ the four
newest members- wtll select
U1e players in reverse order
a&lt;.·cording to their winning
!Jt!rcent.Hge l~st season.
Under the merger plan,
roste rs of ABA tea ms have
been frozen retroactive to
May I , 1916. Any player on
the Nets, Nug~ets , Spurs or
Pa cers, who also were
dra ft ed by NBA clubs will
sta y wt lh their presen t
teams .
Players in ttx! di spersal
draft poo l, who were selected
by NBA learns in previous
years, become rree agents
and any dub that picks them
must also pick up th e
rermti nder of their present
ARA contr;Jds

Th AFIA owners hav e
agrt-cd to pay up in full the
contracts of all players not
selected tn th e dtspersa l
draft.
Th e
l a s t - mtnut c

,,,M
.,.,,.,, ...,,.a,_..,, ,r,... ,.a,, ,.,.,u.,.,,,,.,,d
,,,,.,.e,, ~~s
''" ' ,;:p
.,. , .,,.,.;~·;·;~;~d·.:,.-.·:·:·:.;,:_~1

', ··,·.·,

f

'Reds' country well
By Greg-Bailey
Southeastern Ohio, long noted as a part of
"Reds Country, " can also be proud or the
fine baseball it annually produces in the
Southeas ter n Ohio Athlettc League .
Whether we know it or not, we are known
around the stale as having one of the
toughest baseball leagues around . TI1is is
appar en t in the fact that nearly every year
the SEOAL baseball race is a toss-up, and
often the champ isn't decided until the last

....
\
\

Class AA Sectional, District, and Regional
titles enroute to the State semifinals.
In case you missed it , the Marauders were
one of the four teams left in the tournamen t
before being knocked out by eventual stale
champ Elida 1-0. Elida's ace Rick Rumer
tossed a no-hitter at the Meigs team, which
overshadowed the fine one-hitter that
Meigs' ace hurler Jeff McKinney threw at
Elida.
It was a game that has to be considered
one of the besllo be seen on the OSU campus
in years, and it was une that fans not only
from Meigs County but also all of
southeastern Ohio can be proud of. They
represented our league well , and the staff of
the Ohio Valley Publishing Company extend
tis congratulations once more.
Following is a hsl of the final individual
and team stattstics that prove that Meigs'
season was no fluke . Congratulations'

week of the season, as was the case th1s

year.
Nearly every season , the leag ue has a
representative team show up among the
best teams in the state in post-season play ,
nearly always making it to the ·Reg ional
tournament and often as far as the Stale
contest.
This season the Meigs Marauders, considered the Cinderella team, captured the

i!EIGS MARAUD -R SAS EnALL STATIS'r!CS ( OFFE:·:SIVF.) 1976
In cludl nc; all c;runos••SFX&gt;AL, non-l cneuo . &amp; To urna.t!onts

Dt g.

Pla)'ers

!!!.!.

~

R

II.!Iar notto

. )60
.350
·333
. 254
.25
.250
. 250
.231
. 227
,212
.209
.207
.187
.1 50

25
80
81
27

16

~.l.fnrs h all

B.l!am11ton
J.Brown111G
P.Sou1 Sb7
lt.Dav onport
c.Co.rmlohaol
J.r.J111 or
J.Howard
J, MoKinney

S.Baohner
GoSmith
K.Manlcin

C.Pratt
Mei gs
Oppononto

!i

2bh Jbh

i~ n
7

26

27

5

.251

13

4

0
0

1
l
1
1

136 169
657 117 165

2
0
0
0
0
0
0
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0

19
1

11

0

3

15
7
13
12

16

6

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19

J . Rro11.n in g

t.1. Da ven part

J . Smith
J . ;iownrd

G

14
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77 46 ~6
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Pi t chers
J , ~!c Kinney

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51

l

Something Speci11l
To fit afl wfndow styles, sliding casements,
double-hung mobile homes, even thru the
wall. Limited Supply .

5,000 BTU--- - - - - - - $ 168
6,000 BTU
$185
8,000 BTU
$218
10,000 BTU
$318
12,000 BTU
$298
14,000 BTU
$288
18,000 BTU
$348
23.000 BfU
$428

McKinney

COLUMBUS ~ Director of
the Ohio Department of
Transportation, Richard D.
Jackson, announced today
that distribution of the 1976
Ohio Bicentennial Highway
Map will begin Tuesday , June
22.
Jackson said this year's
edition includes a refined
highway map and a special
revolutionary period picture
and story map . This map
promises to be a national
collector's item as well as an
educational document.
The Director said while the
1976 map co ntinues ·the
promotion of advantages of
the ·Buckeye States, Its major
message will be the heritage
of the pivotal role played by
the people of the Ohio
territory, outpost of the
American Revolution .
The
highway
map,
designed and scribed for the
first time by ODOT cartographers , includes
numerous new additions
including new sU!ndards for
road classification. Scenic
highways are designed after
a lapse. Seventy-six bodies of
water have been added
among other new points of
interest.
Reverse side of the map
will inc! ude a co lorillustrated map and history
produced by Worthington
artist, William E. Turner and
Columbus copywriter, Jim
Kiepser . Turner and Klepser
spent a year studying a broad
bibliography involving the
British, the French, the Ohio
territory Indians and the
Americans of the period.
Randall L. Buchman of
Defiance College, Associate
Professor of History and
Archaeology, served as

1 yea r fr ee le r vices on a ll Gi bson Ai r Condi f•oncrs ~ 5
yea r s on the compr esso r - 1 year on parts
a l9o on
any 5,000 or 6,000 BTU air condi tr oncr, if the
refrigeration unit goes bad we will gi ve you a new a1r
cond it ioner - within a 5 yea r peri od.

RIDENOUR TV&amp; APPLIANCE
GAS SERVICE
992-2020

L..c.h_eMsf·e~r,_o_h_io~.------------~~~~_j

association with graphics,
historical consultant.,
A gallery of detailed design, production, writing ,
sketches depi cts fifty in - and artist Turner. Klepser 's
dlvirluals including eighteen days in anthropology and
Indian s
Shawnees, journalism at Northwestern
Wyandots , Mingus and University, appar ently
Delawares - involved in primed him for the work with
events on the revolutionary Turner. Klepser ca lls it
!visual co mmunication
frontier . They include among
others: Daniel Boone, George prodded by historical facls."
The two men say their
Rogers Clark, Lord Dun·
more , Cor nstalk , Tarhe , greatest satisfaction comes
Logan, and White Eyes. The in knowing that their work is
gallery is designed as a an ai d of students In
dramatic border for the maps visualizing the Ohio heritage.
showing Indian territories, They agree wholeheartedly to
town s and trails, and the allow a New Albany High
routes of American British School Class to be the first
mllltary and explorations. Ohioans outside the map
Miniature color panels and prod uction group to preview
narratives describing 14 the Bicentennial edi lion .
events that put Ohio on the
New features of the 1976
map of the Revolution, Bicentennial map are a
surround the territorial map. comple!A!Iy new sU!ndards for
In those and a special panel, road classifica tion, new
miniature figures are shown listing in index for National
in historical authenticity . The Parks, Amtrak Railroad and
dress, weaponry , and other Passenge r Stations (only
artifacts of the people on the these railroads are shown on
Ohio frontier - "Indians, map), county lines more
Continental Soldiers, Land highhghted, new symbol for
Agents, Traders and Mer· facilities for the handicapped
chants , Scouts, British and scenic highw.ays (not
Troop s, Frontiersman, listed since 1913 ).
Settlers, Surveyors, Indian
New wtmcorporaled towns
Guides,
and
Virginia shown include Alfred in
Militia," are depicted in the
panels.
Thurber , whose specialty is
historical illustration, says
his work is "visualizing the
invisible." He has designed
and produced diaoaramas for
the National Road - Zane
Grey Museum in Zanesville
and the Historical Society of
Maysville, Kentucky on the
Ohio River. Turner has done ·
• OUiet four-stroke
work for organizations in
OHC 398cc engtne .
other sUites we wlll as for the
previous Ohio Htghway
• Tuned 2-1nto-1 exhaust
Maps.
system boosts mtleag(
Kl ~pse r
has a long
while 11 cuts costs :
• A beaut1lul blend
ol stze, pert'orn1an•ce.:~
and economy.

Meigs CoiUity.
New points of lnttreat
shown include Burr Oak
Lodge and Hocking Lodge.
New Lakes, Dama, and
Reservoirs include Burr Olk
Lake and Lake Snowden, both.
1n Athens rnWitv .

No,,,...., No glmmlca

5%%
ON PASSBOOK .
SAVINGS
S\4 per cent v••~ PliO on
Rlfjutar PollboOk Savtnu.
No Minimum . lntoroll
from dolo ol dopoalt to dato
of wlthdrowol . tnltrllt
compounded QUirterly ..

/~J MEIGS
~BRANCH
2N Second St.
Pomeroy, Ottio

All A~unts Insure~

li"

KZltOO SPECIAL Street ... .
onlY\

$795)
,.___ .. /

and crime
needdedicated
both money
and
persons
to
finding a solution, said
Gerard Seton, pastor of the
Pomeroy Seventh-day M·
venlist Church. His church is
taking an offering for innercity work at services this
Saturday,
" The Seventh-day Ad·
ventist work in urban centers
combines social activism
with the redeeming power of
Christianity," said Seton.
"The money that will be
collected in our · church
Saturday will go to nearby
major metropolitan center
cities, like Columbus, Ohio.
There it will be used for
church operated medical and
soclal programs." A goal of
$150,000 has been set
nationwide for this offering.
This money wlll be added to
$500,000 from other church
coffers, to support health
nonscreening
vans ,
sectarian tutoring programs
for slow learners, and a
program
of
juvenile
deliquency prevention called
STOP-IT (Society For
Training Of People In
Trouble).
"These programs are not
evangelistic In the sense that
we are using them to recruit
new members for the Ad·
ventisl Church," said Seton.

Choose yours. today. at.,

J&amp;R SPOil SHOP
148

Open Friclay·Evenlng TiiB
'Pomero , 0.

E. Main , . .9tl4184 .

ll"""-------••••••••••••••••••••~1

ftrestone
Bell

bt'fore J.!ning lo 1ht! ,\slru.s in ct

The Tax Books are now open for
.June or Second half Collection .of
1975 ReaJ Estate Taxes. Also
delinquent tax. Closing date
June 22, 1976.

will

,

B

~'ord .

.

MAN DIIOWNI

CAMBIUOOE; .~ (UPI)
• - BIUie .J(, ~lei', 311, of
;, Sommlll'fleld, drowned'
: ThuredaY lifterntiiiii','Wbilt
• pullliig~ofhil~
• from ~· Creek. Noble
, COunty Sheriff's d~ l8ld
' Carpenter llld hll · Wy
: were filhlng ln. the •t fbrk
~ of the creek when Carfenlff
: spotted . 'several of ' the
children In trouble. The
: father dro'!ne(j rescuing

:

: them.

·

.' .
•

'

~

J

I

\

'

DEMON·
STRATION of the' Utton
Combination range and
table top ovens w!U be
given by "Lola" of the
tracy Wells Co., Colwn·
bu1, Monday, June 21, from
4 to 8 p.m. at Ridenour's TV
and AppUaoce Store In
Racine ooly. Lola Is well
experienced In lhe field of
demonstrating the ranges.
FREE

t

Carter:talks of

1
'

l'

!

' By

·

.Unhetl
Pres• apart," Ford said.
· International
Ford met again with John
Democr~t Jimmy Carter Is Connally, fueling speculation
• talkingof.lrlnnlnl·every state the former .. Democratic
~ in Ute : t{~mbet .. Pelton, goveri)Or of Texll$ might be
; while ··Mildent .f'drd Is his choice for a running mate
• voicing hope the ~liqn in an effort to win back tbe
' party w'on't fall~ ;_ ; , GOP conservative wing and
Carter; vacatioou~biqlea · also counter. Carter's
, Island, Ga., told repotten he . SOuthern strength.
Both Ford and Reagan
. will campaign ag~vely
, until
the · Democratic planned to be in Des Moines
" National Convention next tonight for a Republican
; mooth,. tiltbough he already· dinner on the eve of the Iowa
has at least '1,636 delegates - GOP convention.
30 more•tl!an 'required for the · Nine ty.five na tiona!
' nomlnaUon,"
·,
. convention delegates are
" If I am 'the nominee, we· being chosen this weekend by
' are going to go out aild win · Republicans meeting in Iowa,
every state in the Union," Washington, Delaware and
· Carter said.
·
Texas, Reagan is favored to
Carter' said he . was win mOB! of them ' but not
• considerlrig asking "12.'IQ 15 enough to erase Ford's lead.
According to UPI's tally, ·
; distinguished Americans'' to
: help him select a running Ford currenUy has 1,009 of
" mate.He said he wants a vice the 1,130 delegates needed for
' presidential nominee free of . the nomination. Reagan has
• sex or money scandals.
893 and 98 are uncommitted
: "We'y~ 'hjld ·.~ . ;~~plrited. lvith 259 delegates still to be
; contest for ,tile .l)oml)lat!on 1: 1 chosen.
~ Ford told 8 group of tteii-age
The Federal Election ComRepubllcaril at Ute White mission Thursday approved
House. ·"BUt au Of ua must another $322,905 in matching,
strive to prevent it from federal funds for Ford and
becoming a grudge ~!Ue." $241,840 for Reagan .
Carter, who received
Ford said he bellmd hill
opponent, Ronald Reagan, $198,938 in
additional
shares his view that Republl- ·campaign funds, ·plans 16
cans should "~~rork together at fund-raisers before the
the national, state and local national convention. His
campaign debt is officially
levels instead of fighting.
"Ilmakesnosense for us to pegged at $1.2 million and, he
.scramble d!lwn to the wire., said, "I think we'll gel it paid
· and havt · oor party· fall off."

. ·.
'

OXFORD, Ohio (UPI)
·regardless oJ who makes the
The third &lt;!BY :of the .U.S. ,_ Olympic team , the Americas
Olympic . tr,cltery .trialS: team will include McKinney,
opened , toiliiy &gt;:a~ ·.lit~l ·..Pace, · Brothers, Bednar,
University 'iritll" tltit&lt;Ciilf I·.Ryon, Strausburg; Silcocks
leaders Ri~ McKinney and · and Lorensen.
Luann Ryon still oo ,top.
The Olympic team will
Their lead8 were cllt'tome. consist of two men and two
what Thtlrlltay by l)arreU women, one Jess .in each
Pace, natltital ~ tvr,, division lhan in 1972.
.
the past tllnie years aiJIId:tlie - Two more days of compe!J.
1975 world cha,npion ~~ b)i, , Uon remain, Today,. the men
Unda Myers. ·,.,
· ·.~ shoot a standard round of 36
McKinney, 22, Muncie, arrows each at 90 and 70
Ind., led the men's division meters. The women shoot
with 1,267; Pace of Reading · their 36 at 70 and 60 meters.
.
Saturday both men and
had 1 iS6 ~~ .lit , ~tenilon ··~:,; ,w001en will shoot a round of
Doug ~. Cilcliutatl '· 36 arrows each at 50 and 30
and Rich Bedn'ar of &amp;dfleld, meters.
tied for third at 1,229.
Ryon, 18, · of Riverside,
CARBONDALE, ni. 1UPI I
Calif., led the women, •!th _ Former Chicago Bears
1,213 whlle: L!"da My~
· of,, star running back Gayle
,York, Pa.,: ~ 1972 ~-· . ..., .. 'Sayers is one of five finalists
team m~.~llf!ll iN: •In the search for a new
_champk1!:;~d.;'l; 1,191:. ;~!• SOuthern Dllnols University
' The ~· ~Sty of 'btl'
athletic director it was
saw Ca~ol : raua urg, disclosed Thursday.
Huntlngtoll Beach, Calif., at
Under
consideratio'n
1,163 in third_place, Marlene besides Sayers are Paul
gilcocks, £trrltos. 9&amp;111., Lambert, SIU's basketball
fourth at·.l,li!&amp;, and Irene coach· Leo Cahill former
Lorensen, .('hoimlx, ~- at gener~l ma nager' of the
1,146.
•
, :.i/. · ·~ Memphis Southmen of the
Shooting · Wednesday and World Football League ; Dale
Thursd~y was to delet'mlne Foster athletic director at
the team whi~h will reprf!lient · the university or. Dayton; and
the U.S. in the Cham!llonsblp Blll Belknap, •assistant
of Americas,: Jo be · he)ll ~ athletic director at the
lluring•_the ~!Jit t'lo djtya ~{ University of Arizona.
·
. the n~Uan'.tii:·~!Jttllil at.. •• , 'rhe new director will
.Yalley Fli&amp;~~'tit,, Bfl!!i' the'· "replace Doug Weaver, who
p1ymplcs:
·
•
resigned to take the athletic
Smce Myers did not director's job at Georgta
register . for the event and Tedt.

C78 -14
E78 ·14
F78 14
G78 14
H78 ·14
J78 -14
F78· 15
G78 ·15

H78·15

MEIGS COUNTY TREASUR

by

cun vo y

to

Hrllish F.mlmssy prrMnncl
ht•ft r..liu~ fur IIH• ~yrwn
lllllltaSt'US, follows the &lt;'a pital.
slayiu g Wt,lnesday of U,•
A
U.S.
Embassy
U.S ambasS&lt;tdor to Lebanoll, sp&lt;•kesrnan S&lt;ti•t lhe embassy
his e&lt;'&lt;lllornic t•ounselor and would not organize convoys
&lt;'hauffeur . The bodies of the itself, but would participate
two sla in dipl omats left in the llrilish·led exodus in
Fleirut t&lt;lday in a convoy of cars and buses under the
a rmed

prol~tinn

LAKESIDE, Ohio I UP! ) More than 200 United
Methodist churches in the
West Ohio Conference will
have new pastors or associate
pastors beginning Sunday as
a result of appointments
announced today by Bitilop
F. Gerald~.
The annoliiCI-.1 - •
close of a Mell-long ant~~Rl
meeting of delegates in the
conference, which includes
1,402 churches.
The ~ Ill*il:t
hldriltn~ U.811Jfl

Gov. Stratton received his
B.A. degree in political
science from the University
of Arizona and was twice
elected to Congress from
Dlinols, from the State-atLarge, and also served two
tenns as State Treasurer;
Governor of Dlinois for two
tenns, 1953-1961; served on
several State and Federal
Advisory Commissions. He is
presently •·ice president ,
Director of Corporate
Relations, for Canteen
Corporation; and &amp;olfrd
member of The Darlnell
Corporation. He is active in
Rev . Donald E. Mumma of civic affairs, includin g
the Olilllcolhe Trinity United church board chairman,
Metbodlat Olurcl! has been college board, and vic e
named Portsmouth dblrlct president of Rotary Club of
superintendent of the West Chicago, He resides in
Ohio Conference of the United Ollcago with his wife and
Methodist Church . Rev . daughter.
MwgQII follow• Rev. Hughey

, _ wilt .W become
... hllllllll "
Ute
Colambal Nerfll Mid.

A partial list of area
ministerial charges was
releaaed today by tile conIll
..... "-'7 Prlct of

tilt llll P X '
••11
the other 13 dl!llrlcts with •· Coltlp Cll.rdt, Jllenrt
Athens District was next with district, will transfer to the

19, while Lima, Dayton South
and Newark districts each
had 18.
Ensley's announcement
marked the close of two of tbe
longest ministries at one
church in the conference.
Charles F. Murphy, pastor
a t Walnut Hills-Avondale
Church in the Cincinnati
area, and George Herd,
pastor at First Church of
Lancaster, both are retiring
after 30 years in the ministry
at their respective churches.

Hays
(Continued from page I)
doing and when that occurs I
shall ask for a reexamination of my position
by the .caucus."
Afootnote to the Jetter said
"additionally, Congressman
Hays denies rumors that he
will resign from the
Congress."

Wolfpen
News Notes
Mr. and Mrs. Rober't
Reeves; Bryan and Jamie of
Middlepor l were Tuesday
evening visitors, of Mr. and
Mrs . James Reeves . Ronald
Haning also visited.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Venoy
were Sunday evening visitors
of Mrs. Bertha Russell.
Mr . and Mrs. Robert Slack
and family spent a few days
with Mr. and Mrs . Harley E.
Johnson and family and Ada
Slack.
Kevin Knapp is spending
several days with hi~ grandmother, Mrs . Lena Knapp, of
Langsville.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl McElroy
of Columbus were recent
visitors of Mr . and Mrs. Paul
McElroy and Mr . and Mrs.
Bill McElroy and family.

3 PC.

Reedsville
J\ T

1\ T

11eWS 110fes
Mra.

Oils

lroui)S · and
('OIIllllillld os.
r In Wa shin~ lon , a State
Oepar lmcnt ~po kcsmun Sll id
Furd ordered the CVHCUHtion
"due to the continut'd uncerIHint y of the situation . in
Beirut. Only those embassy
offi ci a Is not essential are
let;~ vin~ . ")

The Reiru l embassy
spokesman said. Wushington
had sen! orders to begin
" immediately and urgently"
the evacuation of Americans.
He said Ins tructions to
I\Jne1·icans on where to report
for evacuation would be
broadcast over the Voi&lt;.-c of
1\Jnerica, beginning tonight.
The Amerirun Emba ssy,
like the British , will remain
open with a skeletal staff, he
said. TI1e embassy is now
down to 53 employes.
The first British convoy of
about 30 ca rs left this
morning and if all goes well, a
larger convoy of up to SO
buses
ca rrying
2,000
foreigners will leave from the
British Embassy Saturday.
Families also crammed
children and pets into cars
C!lfrying extra gasoline and
supplies and one by one
form ed a line for the
procession to Damascus.
"See you in London,"
shouted one driver as l1e
passed the crowd of reporters
watching the convoy speed
by.
"Follow us sooon ," shouted
another . " We' re leaving hell
for good ."
The conv ny ca rried the
flag-draped coffins of U.S.
Ambassador Francis Meloy,
Jr . and economic counselor
Robert Waring. Their bodies
will be flown by a special
State Department plane from
Damascus to Washington.

H!f~~RTS
.

LOOKING FOR AGOOD BOOK?
NATIONAL RELIGIOUS
BESTS ELLERS

HARDCOVER

o.

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l THE HIDIN G PLACE , T ENBoom . S p~r e. R eve l l
1. EVIDENCE THA T DEMANDS A VE RDIC T,
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Mr1. Millard van Mtttr

Ph. "1·2019

Ph. "2-5711

99 M1ll Street

Middleport, 0 .

I,

"

Mdoy , Wm· in~-t :uttl ttil'ir
Lcbam·sc dwuffcur , Zuhcr
Mug hrabi, were ktdiHlltC d
aiHI kill c~IWcdnesd•ll' as they
d1·uve through u no nmn 's·

far-left Lebanese group tl l!\l
sU.ged a speriJteular hoslafie
drama al lhe Beirut bnUich of
the Bank of Anwrku in 197J
The PI .O said the :il le~t·d
land Wllf zone t•n route to a ktllCl'S would iJc tumed ovct
llll'!'l ing with President"''h:ct to the Arab l"'iii!Ul' 's jowt
J•:litL' Sarkis.
(lt)HtCkl't:tping fort e, dut' to
The Pa lestint• Liberat ion :trrive souu to polit (' a pmtiHl
Orgunizn ti on said it hnd ('eus~fire tl111t hilS Jl!l lo lilkL'
Hrrr sted
thrct•
me n hold.
n•spunsjble for the slHyings.
It was nul t'ltlHI' how ur
A PI .0 spokesman told a wher e the 1\rnU I.l'llglu.: for t\'
news con ferenl'c 111Ursdny
the t hl'ec l.t~buncse gunmen

CCIU)d

bring the

.S USJJCl'IS

hmt confessed to the killings
anti the crime was being
'' fully Investi gated "
"This wa s 1tol an isolated
aet ," he said . "They were
working for so mebody else.
We :1re still lrJ1ng lo find OUI
who.' '
The Pl.O spokes mnn
identified the all eged
ttssassi n~ only as " l.eb~nese
uationals." Lefti st :;ourCes,
however, said at least twu of
the suspects were believed
membet·s of the Arab
Communist Or~m1izalion , a

Don't Forget
Our Sidewalk
Specials
Friday &amp;Saturday
heritage house
Middle port
Open Friday TiiiU : OO

So t. Ti ll l : OO

GOOD
VALUES!

BATH SIZE

i

JOY
DISHWASHING
DEJERGENT
32

.'

to

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oz.

NELSON'S
REG. $1.33

TYLENOL
24 CT.

79~

NELSON'S
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50 CT.

BUTTER MINTS
Nelson's ReS; 89c

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PEANUTS
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·

1. ANGELS, Graham , Lloubleday
2 BORN AGAIN, Colson. Chosen -Revel !
3. WHAT WIVES WISHED THEIR HU SBANDS KNEW
ABOUT WOMEN, Dobson, TyDdale
4 REMEMBER THE WOR D, Luca s, Acton
5. A SHEPHERD LOOKS AT PSA LM 23. Kell er ,
Zonder van
6. SOM ETHI NG MOR E. Mar shall . Mc Gra w Hill
7. M A N IN BLACK , Cash, Zondervan

M r Dn VI f•l l

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO
Pomeroy,

has

l.i b~l fl ll

Pah~tini l m

Lang &amp;ttom
News Notes

I MO~ I

Brake Service - Fronf End Alignment

Casto

returned home after eye

and

surgery
at
Marietta
Memorial
Hospital at
Thurman
Charge .
He Marietta.
replaces Rev. James Sands
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Spencer Lewis LaRue dies
who will go to Barlow in the of Tuppers Plains visited
Athens district. Rev. JICit Sunday evening with Mr. and in car collision
Rankin, lay speaker, has Mrs. Edward Chevalier.
been named minister at the
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bise
HARTFORD, W. Va.
Crown 'aty United Methndlst attended their newhew's
Word has been received by
Church. He succeeds Rev. weddin~ ( Ro~er Bise 1 ~~
relatives here of the death of
Richard Graham who' has not Seville on saturday
Lewis Richard LaRue, killed
received an appointment.
Mrs. Mabel Hetzer · has in a two-&lt;:ar accident Wed·
been visiting with Mr . and nesday In Shreve, Ohio.
Mrs. Arthur Hetzer at Belle ,
A former resident of
W. Va .
Hartford, Mr. LaRue, died
Mr . and Mrs. Fred Hiney of insU!nlly approximately 100
Michigan visited with Mr . yards from his homP .
ByRuthLarklns
and Mrs . Frank Bise
Survivors Include his wife,
Mary Pierce spent Sunday recently .
Alva;
three
children,
with Ernestine and Marian
Mrs . Meda Milch of
Charles, Shane, Crystal, all
•Hayman.
Massillon , Mrs . Freda
Mr . and Mrs. Torn Hayman Kraulter and Mr. and Mrs . at home; parents, Mr . and
and family are visiting her Melvin Smith of Pomeroy Mrs, Orland T. LaRue,. 3312"
sister in Richmond, Va.
weredinnergueslsofMr.and 33rd Street, Nitro; and
brother, Gerald, GerMr. and Mrs. Ernest Mrs. Dale smith and family .
mantown,
Ohio. Funeral
Mr. and Mrs. Dille Smith
Griffin and family have
wlll
be held Saturservices
returned home from a trip to spent Sunday at Tappan
day at I p.m. at the Mcintyre
the East Coast.
oam.
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsel
saturday evening guesll! of Funeral Home in Woosler,
Larkins and family are Mr. and Mrs . Marvin Reed Ohio, with burial there.
visiting their daughter Mrs. were Mr. and Mrs. John
Steve Salisbury in North Douglas ~nd Miss Linda
Carolina .
Gibson of Parkersburg, W.
Mrs. · Freda
Beam, va.
Guysville, Ohio spent Friday
Recent visitors of Mrs.
evening with Mr . and Mrs. Rose Thomas were Mrs.
Fred Larkins.
• Gladys Baughman and Jack
Mr. and Mrs. Jehn Rouse Gale of Gahanna and Frank
Harvester, Ohio, visited Mr. Gale of Columbus.
. . ·..·....
and Mrs. Fred Larkins .
Mrs. Ila Osborne is a .....
•,·,·'S-........
·.······. •
.•:O::X:·.·
••••• ;•.••.. '
Mr. and Mrs. Russ~ll S.hirk surgical patient at Camdenand daughter of Sprmgfte!d,, Clark Hospi~l, Parkersburg,
Ohio visited her aunt Mrs. w. va.
Ruth Thornton and Mr . .and
Mr. and Mrs . Isaac
Mrs: Howard Lawrence ar1d Frydman of Columbus spent
famdy,
the weekend with her
M~s. Howard Lawrence parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
recetved word her aWJt Mrs. Whitehead and daughters.
or Mrs . Frydman also visited
Delmar:
Thornton
Gallipohs, Oh1o has had a with the Williams-Balderson
serious heart attack.
families.
Mrs. Walter Schreiller and
Mrs. Ben Buckley is a
Mrs. Edward Ball called on patient at the Camden-Clark
ROYAL CROWN
Mrs. Ruth Thornton who is ill. Hospital, Parkersburg, W.
Patti Lawrence fell at her va.
' BOTTLING COMPANY
home and injured her arm.
~Mrs . Lyle Balderson
Middleport
_ _
_;L
Mrs. Emogene Mercer of
Gallipolis, Ohio called on her
mother Mrs. Ruth Thornton
and her sis!A!r Mrs. Howard
Lawrence.
Mrs. Ronnie Beaver and
children of Springfield, Ohio
These Books Are Featured In Our Store
called on her grandmother,
Mrs. Ruth Thornton .

ANOTHER GOOD BUY
FROM
BAKER'S BUDGET SHOP

ITE
992-2094

uf Svr ian

Former Governor of sesions will be held in the
Dlinois, William G. Stratton, College Dining Hall.
will be among the faculty
The annual workshop for
teaching at the Rio Grande high school seniors and high
College Free Enterprise schoolteachers is an effort by
Workshop June 21-25 . Rio Grande College to expose
Governor Stratton will the participants to producdiscuss government tivity, processes·, performregulation in the Free En- ance and problems and the
terprise System at 9 a.m., potential of the private and
Wednesday, June 23. All Free Enterprise System.

BEDROOM

th4Jf
tht'
for
b'
'·

GEORGE M. COLLINS

t' V;u·u:tl iun ,

Pastors switch

Arch~ry· tnals resume

**

'l'h&lt;•

overl and

Former Illinois governor Wl•11 be on
hand for workshop at 'R io Grande .

'

:taking ~hem all

",

MEIGS COUNTY
REAL ESTATE OWNERS
ANA HEIM 1UPI)
Ca tcher Terry Humphrey
and pitcher Mike Barlow,
formerly with Houston, have
been essigned to the
Ca lifornia Angels' Sail Lake
City farm club to complete
th e ilslros' June 6 acquisil ion
uf calcher l'Cd Herrmann .
Hwnphrey , 26, spen t the
1975 season with ll Piro it

.

Tho AHI..,, County
Savings &amp; Lolli Co.

RIDEAWAYA~ ·
\:1 •76 Kawasaki

"We believe a part of our
ministry as people is to care
for the needs of the less
fortunate, as Jesus did when
He was on earth . You know ,
He spent less time preaching
than healing ."

•
•
:
~

In The Alta

The Oliny Sentinel, Middlepurt-l''"lll1'u), 0 .• •'ri&lt;la), JurK· IX . 1•1.,
DEVINE ILl;.
SANTA ROSA, CaliC. ( VPI\
- Andy Devine, 70, Veleflll
actor in Welllft'n movlea and
television shows, was
reported In rertous conditloo
today at a hoepltal wbere he
" Wc'rr Lcaviug Ht•ll fur
was under treatment for
G•Mid,."
kidney
failure
and
Ry OOYLF. ~~~·MANUS
pneumonia. Devine was
RF.IRUT, J.cbanou 1 UP[.)
stricken Sunday whUe al·
·nw U.S. F.mbassy today
tending the lllnual Behemlan
began
urgantziug th e
Grove encampment In lhe
"urgent " eVH('Uatioo of 1he
Redwood Forest near
1,800 Americans in Lebanoo
GuernevUJe on the 1\-.rt
011 vrders from . President
River.

Americans ordered out of Lebanon

~

Adventists' offering may go
to Columbus inner-city work
Because
many
of
America's cities are in
trouble, a local pastor thinks
it's lime Americans did
something about it.
Problems of blight, poor
health care, lack of
education, unemployment

s-

;

1

RIVERS BEND
CAMPG'ROUND

Gibson Air Condit,i!lners have "Air .Sweep"
which circulate more air - NO ORA FT.

Racine, Ohio

Bench
homers
in 7-3
•
VICtory

New Bicentennial map
available on June 22

INDIANAPOLIS , Ind.
I UP!) ~ Johnny Bench
slapped a three-run pinch-hit
E.Q!.,.
homer
as
Cincinnati
overca me a 2-1 deficit
-583
-555
Thur sday night to beat
. )33
Indianapolis ~ its American·
.ooo
Association farm team, 7-3, in
,000
an exhibition baseball
game.
Bench's four-bagger keyed
a five-run Reds' fifth inning
which gave the world champions a 6-2 advantage.
Indianapolis had won three
of the last five games
entering the contest.
Behind the three-hit pitDave Revering homered
ching of Perk Ault, the for the Indians and he also
Middleport Friendly Tavern drove in another run with a
squeaked by Portland 4·1 in single in the third . Joel
Independent action at Youngblood also socked a
Syracuse Thursday evening. home run for the Reds which
Ault limited the host Port- also got RB!s from Ed
land team to just three Armbrister
and
Bill
singles, one each by Greg Plummer.
Roush, Jeff McKinney, and
Santo Alcala sU!rted the
Profitt, and in the sixth In- game for Cincinnati and
ning struck out three straight lasted until the ninth inning
with the tying runners on when he was relieved by
base and nobody out. Rawley Eastwick. Alcala was
Altogether Ault fanned nine the winner while Loren Grow
SEASON CAMPSITES
and walked only one.
was
the
loser
for
Rick Van Malre was the Indianapolis.
AVAILABLE
leading hitter lvilh two
DAY-WEEKsingles and a double while
MONTHLY
Taylor had two singles. Ault
Under New
seven
player
winter
trade
.
also chipped in a single.
Management
Losing pitcher McKinney Barlow, 28, appeared in nine
Rt . 144
games
for
St.
Louis
last
year
allowed only those six hits
Hockingsi'Orl, Ohio
before
being
traded
to
and fanned nine while
Phone 667-3530
walking just two, but the Houston .
Tavern got the timely hits.
Due to a late start, the game
LEGAL
went only seven innings.

GIBSON_____ Ault tops
AIR CONDITIONERS

Charles W. Slater, 83,
RDute 2, Hebron, formerly of
Meigs County, died Monday
June 7 in Licking Memorial
HQspital.
Mr. Slater was born June
24, 1892 at Dyesville in Meigs
County, a son of the late
Worthington L. and Mary
Dye Slater. At the age of II he
moved with his parenll! to the
Lincoln County homestead in
Union Twp. where he resided
until his death. His wife,
Ethel Julia Sharer, died In
July, 1963.
Surviving are five children,
Margaret RQlh of Painesville, Charles Edwin of Clyde,
Mary Alice of Dernberger,
John David of Hebron, and
Robert Worthington, Mlllersport; IS grandchildren, and
three great-grandchildren.
Mr. Slater attended Ohio
Universtty after finishing
Lakeside School where he
returned as teacher for the
last three years that the
school served South Union
Township. He taught at Flag
School in Fairfield County for
one year and then began his
farming career of 60 yel!fS,
His interest . in education
continued with 23 \2 years of
driving the school bus for the
Hebron Centralized Schools.
He was a member of the
Hebro n Christian Church
Disciples of Christ for 49
years and had been named as
deacon emeritus. He has been
a charter member of two
Farm Bureau Councils and
was a 25 year member of the
Hebron Lions Club. He was a
43 year member of the Ad·
vance Lndge No. 601 IOOF at
Millersport. He was a
granger, served on the Union
Township Zoning Board, and
Hebron Library Foundation
and was a member of the Old
Time Fiddlers Club of the
community.
He
was
recognized in October, 1956,
as the typical American
Farmer by being pictured on
the Newsweek Magazine
cover .
Attendtng the funeral
services Thursday at the
Hebron Christian Church
Disciples of Christ was Mrs.
Nellie Vale of Rutland. Mr .
Slater was a nephew of the
late Electa Daye Vale of
Meigs County. Burial was in
the Kirkersville Cemetery.

.§.!l

16

1~

Meigs native
died in Hebron
on June 7th

15c Size

�4- The Dailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pumeruy, 0., ~'riday, June 18, 1911i

ABA merges with NBA
frl:l n chis l' ~.

By GIL PETERS
UPI Sports Writer
HYANNIS , Mass. I UP]) .:_
Goodbye red, white and blue
ball. So long three-point field
goal.
The American B&lt;lsketball
Associ a Hon is no more .
The 9-yea r-old leag-ue
became in sta nt trivia
Thursday when four ABA
teams merged int o""""'e
Na tional Basketball Association following 31 , days
of long and compli cated Ui lks
between offtcials of the two
leagues.
In the end it was NBA
Commissioner l..ctwr ence F .
O' Brien, vetera n poli ltea l
wh ee ler -de ale r , who
reopened broken-&lt;lown talks
very ea rly Thursday and
smoothed out an agreement
acceptable to both sides.
Under the plan agreed to,
the San Antonio, Denver,
Indiana and New York Nets
franchises will be added to
the NBA as expansion teams
at an entry fee of $:1. 2 million
cash per club.
Players from t11e Utah.St.
Louts
and
Kentu cky

:\J''

whll'h

were

appearance of the di'IJersal
&lt;lraft plan caused Seattle
owner Sam Schulman to cast
the lone · dissen ting vo te
a iii OIIg the Ill-m ember NBA
Board of Governors.
" I voted agains t the
merger as a protest against
the di;versal draft plan but l
am in favor of the merger
11Belf because it is good for
basketball, " said Schulman .
O'Brien was exuberant but
exhausted after the frui tful
all-night session . "It's a great
day for spons and one of the
10 most memorable events in
my life," O'Brien said.
The merger most likely
ended the chance of two suits
aga inst the NBA . ABA
Players Associa tion lawyer
Prentiss Yancey said
inclusion of the dispersal
draft elmunatcd a chance of a
suit by his group aga inst the
NBA .
In another suit to have been
heard today in a New York
federa l eourt, the ABA had
charged the NBA with
restraint of trade in violation
nf antitrust la ws. Judge
Robert I. Ca rter was
ex pected to dismiss it.

bought out by U1e remaining
ARA own~rs for an estimated

$3 millio11 each, will be put

mto a dispersa l draft , along
wtth players from previously
folded AHA cl ubs. All 22 NBA
teams- includ tn ~ the four
newest members- wtll select
U1e players in reverse order
a&lt;.·cording to their winning
!Jt!rcent.Hge l~st season.
Under the merger plan,
roste rs of ABA tea ms have
been frozen retroactive to
May I , 1916. Any player on
the Nets, Nug~ets , Spurs or
Pa cers, who also were
dra ft ed by NBA clubs will
sta y wt lh their presen t
teams .
Players in ttx! di spersal
draft poo l, who were selected
by NBA learns in previous
years, become rree agents
and any dub that picks them
must also pick up th e
rermti nder of their present
ARA contr;Jds

Th AFIA owners hav e
agrt-cd to pay up in full the
contracts of all players not
selected tn th e dtspersa l
draft.
Th e
l a s t - mtnut c

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f

'Reds' country well
By Greg-Bailey
Southeastern Ohio, long noted as a part of
"Reds Country, " can also be proud or the
fine baseball it annually produces in the
Southeas ter n Ohio Athlettc League .
Whether we know it or not, we are known
around the stale as having one of the
toughest baseball leagues around . TI1is is
appar en t in the fact that nearly every year
the SEOAL baseball race is a toss-up, and
often the champ isn't decided until the last

....
\
\

Class AA Sectional, District, and Regional
titles enroute to the State semifinals.
In case you missed it , the Marauders were
one of the four teams left in the tournamen t
before being knocked out by eventual stale
champ Elida 1-0. Elida's ace Rick Rumer
tossed a no-hitter at the Meigs team, which
overshadowed the fine one-hitter that
Meigs' ace hurler Jeff McKinney threw at
Elida.
It was a game that has to be considered
one of the besllo be seen on the OSU campus
in years, and it was une that fans not only
from Meigs County but also all of
southeastern Ohio can be proud of. They
represented our league well , and the staff of
the Ohio Valley Publishing Company extend
tis congratulations once more.
Following is a hsl of the final individual
and team stattstics that prove that Meigs'
season was no fluke . Congratulations'

week of the season, as was the case th1s

year.
Nearly every season , the leag ue has a
representative team show up among the
best teams in the state in post-season play ,
nearly always making it to the ·Reg ional
tournament and often as far as the Stale
contest.
This season the Meigs Marauders, considered the Cinderella team, captured the

i!EIGS MARAUD -R SAS EnALL STATIS'r!CS ( OFFE:·:SIVF.) 1976
In cludl nc; all c;runos••SFX&gt;AL, non-l cneuo . &amp; To urna.t!onts

Dt g.

Pla)'ers

!!!.!.

~

R

II.!Iar notto

. )60
.350
·333
. 254
.25
.250
. 250
.231
. 227
,212
.209
.207
.187
.1 50

25
80
81
27

16

~.l.fnrs h all

B.l!am11ton
J.Brown111G
P.Sou1 Sb7
lt.Dav onport
c.Co.rmlohaol
J.r.J111 or
J.Howard
J, MoKinney

S.Baohner
GoSmith
K.Manlcin

C.Pratt
Mei gs
Oppononto

!i

2bh Jbh

i~ n
7

26

27

5

.251

13

4

0
0

1
l
1
1

136 169
657 117 165

2
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

19
1

11

0

3

15
7
13
12

16

6

;

l

3

0

~~6 t

7
1!)

0

1
0

1
0

t~
1~
~~

3

4

~

1
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9
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3
t
-.257 --6;;6

~~

1b
19

J . Rro11.n in g

t.1. Da ven part

J . Smith
J . ;iownrd

G

14
12

5
2
1

IP

R

E

77 46 ~6
53 35
2) 21 2
7 13 12

3

so llil.
31

g j~
lo

21
1)

4

5

4 5

2

V!Oil

1

1Q§!

7

5

1
0

t
2

1
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2

8

6

10

K
3

3 111
10 100

a

~

2

0

?ITCJI I HG

Pi t chers
J , ~!c Kinney

!!]!

~

0
6

3
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11
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w.

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2

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A
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0

0
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11

0
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2

5

103 104
1 ~1.
70

3

0
0

0

-14
13

37.

51

l

Something Speci11l
To fit afl wfndow styles, sliding casements,
double-hung mobile homes, even thru the
wall. Limited Supply .

5,000 BTU--- - - - - - - $ 168
6,000 BTU
$185
8,000 BTU
$218
10,000 BTU
$318
12,000 BTU
$298
14,000 BTU
$288
18,000 BTU
$348
23.000 BfU
$428

McKinney

COLUMBUS ~ Director of
the Ohio Department of
Transportation, Richard D.
Jackson, announced today
that distribution of the 1976
Ohio Bicentennial Highway
Map will begin Tuesday , June
22.
Jackson said this year's
edition includes a refined
highway map and a special
revolutionary period picture
and story map . This map
promises to be a national
collector's item as well as an
educational document.
The Director said while the
1976 map co ntinues ·the
promotion of advantages of
the ·Buckeye States, Its major
message will be the heritage
of the pivotal role played by
the people of the Ohio
territory, outpost of the
American Revolution .
The
highway
map,
designed and scribed for the
first time by ODOT cartographers , includes
numerous new additions
including new sU!ndards for
road classification. Scenic
highways are designed after
a lapse. Seventy-six bodies of
water have been added
among other new points of
interest.
Reverse side of the map
will inc! ude a co lorillustrated map and history
produced by Worthington
artist, William E. Turner and
Columbus copywriter, Jim
Kiepser . Turner and Klepser
spent a year studying a broad
bibliography involving the
British, the French, the Ohio
territory Indians and the
Americans of the period.
Randall L. Buchman of
Defiance College, Associate
Professor of History and
Archaeology, served as

1 yea r fr ee le r vices on a ll Gi bson Ai r Condi f•oncrs ~ 5
yea r s on the compr esso r - 1 year on parts
a l9o on
any 5,000 or 6,000 BTU air condi tr oncr, if the
refrigeration unit goes bad we will gi ve you a new a1r
cond it ioner - within a 5 yea r peri od.

RIDENOUR TV&amp; APPLIANCE
GAS SERVICE
992-2020

L..c.h_eMsf·e~r,_o_h_io~.------------~~~~_j

association with graphics,
historical consultant.,
A gallery of detailed design, production, writing ,
sketches depi cts fifty in - and artist Turner. Klepser 's
dlvirluals including eighteen days in anthropology and
Indian s
Shawnees, journalism at Northwestern
Wyandots , Mingus and University, appar ently
Delawares - involved in primed him for the work with
events on the revolutionary Turner. Klepser ca lls it
!visual co mmunication
frontier . They include among
others: Daniel Boone, George prodded by historical facls."
The two men say their
Rogers Clark, Lord Dun·
more , Cor nstalk , Tarhe , greatest satisfaction comes
Logan, and White Eyes. The in knowing that their work is
gallery is designed as a an ai d of students In
dramatic border for the maps visualizing the Ohio heritage.
showing Indian territories, They agree wholeheartedly to
town s and trails, and the allow a New Albany High
routes of American British School Class to be the first
mllltary and explorations. Ohioans outside the map
Miniature color panels and prod uction group to preview
narratives describing 14 the Bicentennial edi lion .
events that put Ohio on the
New features of the 1976
map of the Revolution, Bicentennial map are a
surround the territorial map. comple!A!Iy new sU!ndards for
In those and a special panel, road classifica tion, new
miniature figures are shown listing in index for National
in historical authenticity . The Parks, Amtrak Railroad and
dress, weaponry , and other Passenge r Stations (only
artifacts of the people on the these railroads are shown on
Ohio frontier - "Indians, map), county lines more
Continental Soldiers, Land highhghted, new symbol for
Agents, Traders and Mer· facilities for the handicapped
chants , Scouts, British and scenic highw.ays (not
Troop s, Frontiersman, listed since 1913 ).
Settlers, Surveyors, Indian
New wtmcorporaled towns
Guides,
and
Virginia shown include Alfred in
Militia," are depicted in the
panels.
Thurber , whose specialty is
historical illustration, says
his work is "visualizing the
invisible." He has designed
and produced diaoaramas for
the National Road - Zane
Grey Museum in Zanesville
and the Historical Society of
Maysville, Kentucky on the
Ohio River. Turner has done ·
• OUiet four-stroke
work for organizations in
OHC 398cc engtne .
other sUites we wlll as for the
previous Ohio Htghway
• Tuned 2-1nto-1 exhaust
Maps.
system boosts mtleag(
Kl ~pse r
has a long
while 11 cuts costs :
• A beaut1lul blend
ol stze, pert'orn1an•ce.:~
and economy.

Meigs CoiUity.
New points of lnttreat
shown include Burr Oak
Lodge and Hocking Lodge.
New Lakes, Dama, and
Reservoirs include Burr Olk
Lake and Lake Snowden, both.
1n Athens rnWitv .

No,,,...., No glmmlca

5%%
ON PASSBOOK .
SAVINGS
S\4 per cent v••~ PliO on
Rlfjutar PollboOk Savtnu.
No Minimum . lntoroll
from dolo ol dopoalt to dato
of wlthdrowol . tnltrllt
compounded QUirterly ..

/~J MEIGS
~BRANCH
2N Second St.
Pomeroy, Ottio

All A~unts Insure~

li"

KZltOO SPECIAL Street ... .
onlY\

$795)
,.___ .. /

and crime
needdedicated
both money
and
persons
to
finding a solution, said
Gerard Seton, pastor of the
Pomeroy Seventh-day M·
venlist Church. His church is
taking an offering for innercity work at services this
Saturday,
" The Seventh-day Ad·
ventist work in urban centers
combines social activism
with the redeeming power of
Christianity," said Seton.
"The money that will be
collected in our · church
Saturday will go to nearby
major metropolitan center
cities, like Columbus, Ohio.
There it will be used for
church operated medical and
soclal programs." A goal of
$150,000 has been set
nationwide for this offering.
This money wlll be added to
$500,000 from other church
coffers, to support health
nonscreening
vans ,
sectarian tutoring programs
for slow learners, and a
program
of
juvenile
deliquency prevention called
STOP-IT (Society For
Training Of People In
Trouble).
"These programs are not
evangelistic In the sense that
we are using them to recruit
new members for the Ad·
ventisl Church," said Seton.

Choose yours. today. at.,

J&amp;R SPOil SHOP
148

Open Friclay·Evenlng TiiB
'Pomero , 0.

E. Main , . .9tl4184 .

ll"""-------••••••••••••••••••••~1

ftrestone
Bell

bt'fore J.!ning lo 1ht! ,\slru.s in ct

The Tax Books are now open for
.June or Second half Collection .of
1975 ReaJ Estate Taxes. Also
delinquent tax. Closing date
June 22, 1976.

will

,

B

~'ord .

.

MAN DIIOWNI

CAMBIUOOE; .~ (UPI)
• - BIUie .J(, ~lei', 311, of
;, Sommlll'fleld, drowned'
: ThuredaY lifterntiiiii','Wbilt
• pullliig~ofhil~
• from ~· Creek. Noble
, COunty Sheriff's d~ l8ld
' Carpenter llld hll · Wy
: were filhlng ln. the •t fbrk
~ of the creek when Carfenlff
: spotted . 'several of ' the
children In trouble. The
: father dro'!ne(j rescuing

:

: them.

·

.' .
•

'

~

J

I

\

'

DEMON·
STRATION of the' Utton
Combination range and
table top ovens w!U be
given by "Lola" of the
tracy Wells Co., Colwn·
bu1, Monday, June 21, from
4 to 8 p.m. at Ridenour's TV
and AppUaoce Store In
Racine ooly. Lola Is well
experienced In lhe field of
demonstrating the ranges.
FREE

t

Carter:talks of

1
'

l'

!

' By

·

.Unhetl
Pres• apart," Ford said.
· International
Ford met again with John
Democr~t Jimmy Carter Is Connally, fueling speculation
• talkingof.lrlnnlnl·every state the former .. Democratic
~ in Ute : t{~mbet .. Pelton, goveri)Or of Texll$ might be
; while ··Mildent .f'drd Is his choice for a running mate
• voicing hope the ~liqn in an effort to win back tbe
' party w'on't fall~ ;_ ; , GOP conservative wing and
Carter; vacatioou~biqlea · also counter. Carter's
, Island, Ga., told repotten he . SOuthern strength.
Both Ford and Reagan
. will campaign ag~vely
, until
the · Democratic planned to be in Des Moines
" National Convention next tonight for a Republican
; mooth,. tiltbough he already· dinner on the eve of the Iowa
has at least '1,636 delegates - GOP convention.
30 more•tl!an 'required for the · Nine ty.five na tiona!
' nomlnaUon,"
·,
. convention delegates are
" If I am 'the nominee, we· being chosen this weekend by
' are going to go out aild win · Republicans meeting in Iowa,
every state in the Union," Washington, Delaware and
· Carter said.
·
Texas, Reagan is favored to
Carter' said he . was win mOB! of them ' but not
• considerlrig asking "12.'IQ 15 enough to erase Ford's lead.
According to UPI's tally, ·
; distinguished Americans'' to
: help him select a running Ford currenUy has 1,009 of
" mate.He said he wants a vice the 1,130 delegates needed for
' presidential nominee free of . the nomination. Reagan has
• sex or money scandals.
893 and 98 are uncommitted
: "We'y~ 'hjld ·.~ . ;~~plrited. lvith 259 delegates still to be
; contest for ,tile .l)oml)lat!on 1: 1 chosen.
~ Ford told 8 group of tteii-age
The Federal Election ComRepubllcaril at Ute White mission Thursday approved
House. ·"BUt au Of ua must another $322,905 in matching,
strive to prevent it from federal funds for Ford and
becoming a grudge ~!Ue." $241,840 for Reagan .
Carter, who received
Ford said he bellmd hill
opponent, Ronald Reagan, $198,938 in
additional
shares his view that Republl- ·campaign funds, ·plans 16
cans should "~~rork together at fund-raisers before the
the national, state and local national convention. His
campaign debt is officially
levels instead of fighting.
"Ilmakesnosense for us to pegged at $1.2 million and, he
.scramble d!lwn to the wire., said, "I think we'll gel it paid
· and havt · oor party· fall off."

. ·.
'

OXFORD, Ohio (UPI)
·regardless oJ who makes the
The third &lt;!BY :of the .U.S. ,_ Olympic team , the Americas
Olympic . tr,cltery .trialS: team will include McKinney,
opened , toiliiy &gt;:a~ ·.lit~l ·..Pace, · Brothers, Bednar,
University 'iritll" tltit&lt;Ciilf I·.Ryon, Strausburg; Silcocks
leaders Ri~ McKinney and · and Lorensen.
Luann Ryon still oo ,top.
The Olympic team will
Their lead8 were cllt'tome. consist of two men and two
what Thtlrlltay by l)arreU women, one Jess .in each
Pace, natltital ~ tvr,, division lhan in 1972.
.
the past tllnie years aiJIId:tlie - Two more days of compe!J.
1975 world cha,npion ~~ b)i, , Uon remain, Today,. the men
Unda Myers. ·,.,
· ·.~ shoot a standard round of 36
McKinney, 22, Muncie, arrows each at 90 and 70
Ind., led the men's division meters. The women shoot
with 1,267; Pace of Reading · their 36 at 70 and 60 meters.
.
Saturday both men and
had 1 iS6 ~~ .lit , ~tenilon ··~:,; ,w001en will shoot a round of
Doug ~. Cilcliutatl '· 36 arrows each at 50 and 30
and Rich Bedn'ar of &amp;dfleld, meters.
tied for third at 1,229.
Ryon, 18, · of Riverside,
CARBONDALE, ni. 1UPI I
Calif., led the women, •!th _ Former Chicago Bears
1,213 whlle: L!"da My~
· of,, star running back Gayle
,York, Pa.,: ~ 1972 ~-· . ..., .. 'Sayers is one of five finalists
team m~.~llf!ll iN: •In the search for a new
_champk1!:;~d.;'l; 1,191:. ;~!• SOuthern Dllnols University
' The ~· ~Sty of 'btl'
athletic director it was
saw Ca~ol : raua urg, disclosed Thursday.
Huntlngtoll Beach, Calif., at
Under
consideratio'n
1,163 in third_place, Marlene besides Sayers are Paul
gilcocks, £trrltos. 9&amp;111., Lambert, SIU's basketball
fourth at·.l,li!&amp;, and Irene coach· Leo Cahill former
Lorensen, .('hoimlx, ~- at gener~l ma nager' of the
1,146.
•
, :.i/. · ·~ Memphis Southmen of the
Shooting · Wednesday and World Football League ; Dale
Thursd~y was to delet'mlne Foster athletic director at
the team whi~h will reprf!lient · the university or. Dayton; and
the U.S. in the Cham!llonsblp Blll Belknap, •assistant
of Americas,: Jo be · he)ll ~ athletic director at the
lluring•_the ~!Jit t'lo djtya ~{ University of Arizona.
·
. the n~Uan'.tii:·~!Jttllil at.. •• , 'rhe new director will
.Yalley Fli&amp;~~'tit,, Bfl!!i' the'· "replace Doug Weaver, who
p1ymplcs:
·
•
resigned to take the athletic
Smce Myers did not director's job at Georgta
register . for the event and Tedt.

C78 -14
E78 ·14
F78 14
G78 14
H78 ·14
J78 -14
F78· 15
G78 ·15

H78·15

MEIGS COUNTY TREASUR

by

cun vo y

to

Hrllish F.mlmssy prrMnncl
ht•ft r..liu~ fur IIH• ~yrwn
lllllltaSt'US, follows the &lt;'a pital.
slayiu g Wt,lnesday of U,•
A
U.S.
Embassy
U.S ambasS&lt;tdor to Lebanoll, sp&lt;•kesrnan S&lt;ti•t lhe embassy
his e&lt;'&lt;lllornic t•ounselor and would not organize convoys
&lt;'hauffeur . The bodies of the itself, but would participate
two sla in dipl omats left in the llrilish·led exodus in
Fleirut t&lt;lday in a convoy of cars and buses under the
a rmed

prol~tinn

LAKESIDE, Ohio I UP! ) More than 200 United
Methodist churches in the
West Ohio Conference will
have new pastors or associate
pastors beginning Sunday as
a result of appointments
announced today by Bitilop
F. Gerald~.
The annoliiCI-.1 - •
close of a Mell-long ant~~Rl
meeting of delegates in the
conference, which includes
1,402 churches.
The ~ Ill*il:t
hldriltn~ U.811Jfl

Gov. Stratton received his
B.A. degree in political
science from the University
of Arizona and was twice
elected to Congress from
Dlinols, from the State-atLarge, and also served two
tenns as State Treasurer;
Governor of Dlinois for two
tenns, 1953-1961; served on
several State and Federal
Advisory Commissions. He is
presently •·ice president ,
Director of Corporate
Relations, for Canteen
Corporation; and &amp;olfrd
member of The Darlnell
Corporation. He is active in
Rev . Donald E. Mumma of civic affairs, includin g
the Olilllcolhe Trinity United church board chairman,
Metbodlat Olurcl! has been college board, and vic e
named Portsmouth dblrlct president of Rotary Club of
superintendent of the West Chicago, He resides in
Ohio Conference of the United Ollcago with his wife and
Methodist Church . Rev . daughter.
MwgQII follow• Rev. Hughey

, _ wilt .W become
... hllllllll "
Ute
Colambal Nerfll Mid.

A partial list of area
ministerial charges was
releaaed today by tile conIll
..... "-'7 Prlct of

tilt llll P X '
••11
the other 13 dl!llrlcts with •· Coltlp Cll.rdt, Jllenrt
Athens District was next with district, will transfer to the

19, while Lima, Dayton South
and Newark districts each
had 18.
Ensley's announcement
marked the close of two of tbe
longest ministries at one
church in the conference.
Charles F. Murphy, pastor
a t Walnut Hills-Avondale
Church in the Cincinnati
area, and George Herd,
pastor at First Church of
Lancaster, both are retiring
after 30 years in the ministry
at their respective churches.

Hays
(Continued from page I)
doing and when that occurs I
shall ask for a reexamination of my position
by the .caucus."
Afootnote to the Jetter said
"additionally, Congressman
Hays denies rumors that he
will resign from the
Congress."

Wolfpen
News Notes
Mr. and Mrs. Rober't
Reeves; Bryan and Jamie of
Middlepor l were Tuesday
evening visitors, of Mr. and
Mrs . James Reeves . Ronald
Haning also visited.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Venoy
were Sunday evening visitors
of Mrs. Bertha Russell.
Mr . and Mrs. Robert Slack
and family spent a few days
with Mr. and Mrs . Harley E.
Johnson and family and Ada
Slack.
Kevin Knapp is spending
several days with hi~ grandmother, Mrs . Lena Knapp, of
Langsville.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl McElroy
of Columbus were recent
visitors of Mr . and Mrs. Paul
McElroy and Mr . and Mrs.
Bill McElroy and family.

3 PC.

Reedsville
J\ T

1\ T

11eWS 110fes
Mra.

Oils

lroui)S · and
('OIIllllillld os.
r In Wa shin~ lon , a State
Oepar lmcnt ~po kcsmun Sll id
Furd ordered the CVHCUHtion
"due to the continut'd uncerIHint y of the situation . in
Beirut. Only those embassy
offi ci a Is not essential are
let;~ vin~ . ")

The Reiru l embassy
spokesman said. Wushington
had sen! orders to begin
" immediately and urgently"
the evacuation of Americans.
He said Ins tructions to
I\Jne1·icans on where to report
for evacuation would be
broadcast over the Voi&lt;.-c of
1\Jnerica, beginning tonight.
The Amerirun Emba ssy,
like the British , will remain
open with a skeletal staff, he
said. TI1e embassy is now
down to 53 employes.
The first British convoy of
about 30 ca rs left this
morning and if all goes well, a
larger convoy of up to SO
buses
ca rrying
2,000
foreigners will leave from the
British Embassy Saturday.
Families also crammed
children and pets into cars
C!lfrying extra gasoline and
supplies and one by one
form ed a line for the
procession to Damascus.
"See you in London,"
shouted one driver as l1e
passed the crowd of reporters
watching the convoy speed
by.
"Follow us sooon ," shouted
another . " We' re leaving hell
for good ."
The conv ny ca rried the
flag-draped coffins of U.S.
Ambassador Francis Meloy,
Jr . and economic counselor
Robert Waring. Their bodies
will be flown by a special
State Department plane from
Damascus to Washington.

H!f~~RTS
.

LOOKING FOR AGOOD BOOK?
NATIONAL RELIGIOUS
BESTS ELLERS

HARDCOVER

o.

'PAPERBACK
l THE HIDIN G PLACE , T ENBoom . S p~r e. R eve l l
1. EVIDENCE THA T DEMANDS A VE RDIC T,
McDowel l. Crusade
3 FOREVER MY LOVE . Hardisty, Har ves t
' THE ..-oTAL WOM AN, Morgan , Spire Re vel l
I TRAMP FOR THE' I ORD . len Boom , Re vell
n f HF &lt;HR IST I AN ['A M II Y Chri stenson, llcth ,•ny

r VlflFN I I i IIAI

f) f

MA ND; A VE RD IO .

Middleport Book ·store
Mr1. Millard van Mtttr

Ph. "1·2019

Ph. "2-5711

99 M1ll Street

Middleport, 0 .

I,

"

Mdoy , Wm· in~-t :uttl ttil'ir
Lcbam·sc dwuffcur , Zuhcr
Mug hrabi, were ktdiHlltC d
aiHI kill c~IWcdnesd•ll' as they
d1·uve through u no nmn 's·

far-left Lebanese group tl l!\l
sU.ged a speriJteular hoslafie
drama al lhe Beirut bnUich of
the Bank of Anwrku in 197J
The PI .O said the :il le~t·d
land Wllf zone t•n route to a ktllCl'S would iJc tumed ovct
llll'!'l ing with President"''h:ct to the Arab l"'iii!Ul' 's jowt
J•:litL' Sarkis.
(lt)HtCkl't:tping fort e, dut' to
The Pa lestint• Liberat ion :trrive souu to polit (' a pmtiHl
Orgunizn ti on said it hnd ('eus~fire tl111t hilS Jl!l lo lilkL'
Hrrr sted
thrct•
me n hold.
n•spunsjble for the slHyings.
It was nul t'ltlHI' how ur
A PI .0 spokesman told a wher e the 1\rnU I.l'llglu.: for t\'
news con ferenl'c 111Ursdny
the t hl'ec l.t~buncse gunmen

CCIU)d

bring the

.S USJJCl'IS

hmt confessed to the killings
anti the crime was being
'' fully Investi gated "
"This wa s 1tol an isolated
aet ," he said . "They were
working for so mebody else.
We :1re still lrJ1ng lo find OUI
who.' '
The Pl.O spokes mnn
identified the all eged
ttssassi n~ only as " l.eb~nese
uationals." Lefti st :;ourCes,
however, said at least twu of
the suspects were believed
membet·s of the Arab
Communist Or~m1izalion , a

Don't Forget
Our Sidewalk
Specials
Friday &amp;Saturday
heritage house
Middle port
Open Friday TiiiU : OO

So t. Ti ll l : OO

GOOD
VALUES!

BATH SIZE

i

JOY
DISHWASHING
DEJERGENT
32

.'

to

trial.

oz.

NELSON'S
REG. $1.33

TYLENOL
24 CT.

79~

NELSON'S
REG. $1.03

50 CT.

BUTTER MINTS
Nelson's ReS; 89c

17¢

.7 oz.

BUTTER TOASTED
PEANUTS
14 oz.

·

1. ANGELS, Graham , Lloubleday
2 BORN AGAIN, Colson. Chosen -Revel !
3. WHAT WIVES WISHED THEIR HU SBANDS KNEW
ABOUT WOMEN, Dobson, TyDdale
4 REMEMBER THE WOR D, Luca s, Acton
5. A SHEPHERD LOOKS AT PSA LM 23. Kell er ,
Zonder van
6. SOM ETHI NG MOR E. Mar shall . Mc Gra w Hill
7. M A N IN BLACK , Cash, Zondervan

M r Dn VI f•l l

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO
Pomeroy,

has

l.i b~l fl ll

Pah~tini l m

Lang &amp;ttom
News Notes

I MO~ I

Brake Service - Fronf End Alignment

Casto

returned home after eye

and

surgery
at
Marietta
Memorial
Hospital at
Thurman
Charge .
He Marietta.
replaces Rev. James Sands
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Spencer Lewis LaRue dies
who will go to Barlow in the of Tuppers Plains visited
Athens district. Rev. JICit Sunday evening with Mr. and in car collision
Rankin, lay speaker, has Mrs. Edward Chevalier.
been named minister at the
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bise
HARTFORD, W. Va.
Crown 'aty United Methndlst attended their newhew's
Word has been received by
Church. He succeeds Rev. weddin~ ( Ro~er Bise 1 ~~
relatives here of the death of
Richard Graham who' has not Seville on saturday
Lewis Richard LaRue, killed
received an appointment.
Mrs. Mabel Hetzer · has in a two-&lt;:ar accident Wed·
been visiting with Mr . and nesday In Shreve, Ohio.
Mrs. Arthur Hetzer at Belle ,
A former resident of
W. Va .
Hartford, Mr. LaRue, died
Mr . and Mrs. Fred Hiney of insU!nlly approximately 100
Michigan visited with Mr . yards from his homP .
ByRuthLarklns
and Mrs . Frank Bise
Survivors Include his wife,
Mary Pierce spent Sunday recently .
Alva;
three
children,
with Ernestine and Marian
Mrs . Meda Milch of
Charles, Shane, Crystal, all
•Hayman.
Massillon , Mrs . Freda
Mr . and Mrs. Torn Hayman Kraulter and Mr. and Mrs . at home; parents, Mr . and
and family are visiting her Melvin Smith of Pomeroy Mrs, Orland T. LaRue,. 3312"
sister in Richmond, Va.
weredinnergueslsofMr.and 33rd Street, Nitro; and
brother, Gerald, GerMr. and Mrs. Ernest Mrs. Dale smith and family .
mantown,
Ohio. Funeral
Mr. and Mrs. Dille Smith
Griffin and family have
wlll
be held Saturservices
returned home from a trip to spent Sunday at Tappan
day at I p.m. at the Mcintyre
the East Coast.
oam.
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsel
saturday evening guesll! of Funeral Home in Woosler,
Larkins and family are Mr. and Mrs . Marvin Reed Ohio, with burial there.
visiting their daughter Mrs. were Mr. and Mrs. John
Steve Salisbury in North Douglas ~nd Miss Linda
Carolina .
Gibson of Parkersburg, W.
Mrs. · Freda
Beam, va.
Guysville, Ohio spent Friday
Recent visitors of Mrs.
evening with Mr . and Mrs. Rose Thomas were Mrs.
Fred Larkins.
• Gladys Baughman and Jack
Mr. and Mrs. Jehn Rouse Gale of Gahanna and Frank
Harvester, Ohio, visited Mr. Gale of Columbus.
. . ·..·....
and Mrs. Fred Larkins .
Mrs. Ila Osborne is a .....
•,·,·'S-........
·.······. •
.•:O::X:·.·
••••• ;•.••.. '
Mr. and Mrs. Russ~ll S.hirk surgical patient at Camdenand daughter of Sprmgfte!d,, Clark Hospi~l, Parkersburg,
Ohio visited her aunt Mrs. w. va.
Ruth Thornton and Mr . .and
Mr. and Mrs . Isaac
Mrs: Howard Lawrence ar1d Frydman of Columbus spent
famdy,
the weekend with her
M~s. Howard Lawrence parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
recetved word her aWJt Mrs. Whitehead and daughters.
or Mrs . Frydman also visited
Delmar:
Thornton
Gallipohs, Oh1o has had a with the Williams-Balderson
serious heart attack.
families.
Mrs. Walter Schreiller and
Mrs. Ben Buckley is a
Mrs. Edward Ball called on patient at the Camden-Clark
ROYAL CROWN
Mrs. Ruth Thornton who is ill. Hospital, Parkersburg, W.
Patti Lawrence fell at her va.
' BOTTLING COMPANY
home and injured her arm.
~Mrs . Lyle Balderson
Middleport
_ _
_;L
Mrs. Emogene Mercer of
Gallipolis, Ohio called on her
mother Mrs. Ruth Thornton
and her sis!A!r Mrs. Howard
Lawrence.
Mrs. Ronnie Beaver and
children of Springfield, Ohio
These Books Are Featured In Our Store
called on her grandmother,
Mrs. Ruth Thornton .

ANOTHER GOOD BUY
FROM
BAKER'S BUDGET SHOP

ITE
992-2094

uf Svr ian

Former Governor of sesions will be held in the
Dlinois, William G. Stratton, College Dining Hall.
will be among the faculty
The annual workshop for
teaching at the Rio Grande high school seniors and high
College Free Enterprise schoolteachers is an effort by
Workshop June 21-25 . Rio Grande College to expose
Governor Stratton will the participants to producdiscuss government tivity, processes·, performregulation in the Free En- ance and problems and the
terprise System at 9 a.m., potential of the private and
Wednesday, June 23. All Free Enterprise System.

BEDROOM

th4Jf
tht'
for
b'
'·

GEORGE M. COLLINS

t' V;u·u:tl iun ,

Pastors switch

Arch~ry· tnals resume

**

'l'h&lt;•

overl and

Former Illinois governor Wl•11 be on
hand for workshop at 'R io Grande .

'

:taking ~hem all

",

MEIGS COUNTY
REAL ESTATE OWNERS
ANA HEIM 1UPI)
Ca tcher Terry Humphrey
and pitcher Mike Barlow,
formerly with Houston, have
been essigned to the
Ca lifornia Angels' Sail Lake
City farm club to complete
th e ilslros' June 6 acquisil ion
uf calcher l'Cd Herrmann .
Hwnphrey , 26, spen t the
1975 season with ll Piro it

.

Tho AHI..,, County
Savings &amp; Lolli Co.

RIDEAWAYA~ ·
\:1 •76 Kawasaki

"We believe a part of our
ministry as people is to care
for the needs of the less
fortunate, as Jesus did when
He was on earth . You know ,
He spent less time preaching
than healing ."

•
•
:
~

In The Alta

The Oliny Sentinel, Middlepurt-l''"lll1'u), 0 .• •'ri&lt;la), JurK· IX . 1•1.,
DEVINE ILl;.
SANTA ROSA, CaliC. ( VPI\
- Andy Devine, 70, Veleflll
actor in Welllft'n movlea and
television shows, was
reported In rertous conditloo
today at a hoepltal wbere he
" Wc'rr Lcaviug Ht•ll fur
was under treatment for
G•Mid,."
kidney
failure
and
Ry OOYLF. ~~~·MANUS
pneumonia. Devine was
RF.IRUT, J.cbanou 1 UP[.)
stricken Sunday whUe al·
·nw U.S. F.mbassy today
tending the lllnual Behemlan
began
urgantziug th e
Grove encampment In lhe
"urgent " eVH('Uatioo of 1he
Redwood Forest near
1,800 Americans in Lebanoo
GuernevUJe on the 1\-.rt
011 vrders from . President
River.

Americans ordered out of Lebanon

~

Adventists' offering may go
to Columbus inner-city work
Because
many
of
America's cities are in
trouble, a local pastor thinks
it's lime Americans did
something about it.
Problems of blight, poor
health care, lack of
education, unemployment

s-

;

1

RIVERS BEND
CAMPG'ROUND

Gibson Air Condit,i!lners have "Air .Sweep"
which circulate more air - NO ORA FT.

Racine, Ohio

Bench
homers
in 7-3
•
VICtory

New Bicentennial map
available on June 22

INDIANAPOLIS , Ind.
I UP!) ~ Johnny Bench
slapped a three-run pinch-hit
E.Q!.,.
homer
as
Cincinnati
overca me a 2-1 deficit
-583
-555
Thur sday night to beat
. )33
Indianapolis ~ its American·
.ooo
Association farm team, 7-3, in
,000
an exhibition baseball
game.
Bench's four-bagger keyed
a five-run Reds' fifth inning
which gave the world champions a 6-2 advantage.
Indianapolis had won three
of the last five games
entering the contest.
Behind the three-hit pitDave Revering homered
ching of Perk Ault, the for the Indians and he also
Middleport Friendly Tavern drove in another run with a
squeaked by Portland 4·1 in single in the third . Joel
Independent action at Youngblood also socked a
Syracuse Thursday evening. home run for the Reds which
Ault limited the host Port- also got RB!s from Ed
land team to just three Armbrister
and
Bill
singles, one each by Greg Plummer.
Roush, Jeff McKinney, and
Santo Alcala sU!rted the
Profitt, and in the sixth In- game for Cincinnati and
ning struck out three straight lasted until the ninth inning
with the tying runners on when he was relieved by
base and nobody out. Rawley Eastwick. Alcala was
Altogether Ault fanned nine the winner while Loren Grow
SEASON CAMPSITES
and walked only one.
was
the
loser
for
Rick Van Malre was the Indianapolis.
AVAILABLE
leading hitter lvilh two
DAY-WEEKsingles and a double while
MONTHLY
Taylor had two singles. Ault
Under New
seven
player
winter
trade
.
also chipped in a single.
Management
Losing pitcher McKinney Barlow, 28, appeared in nine
Rt . 144
games
for
St.
Louis
last
year
allowed only those six hits
Hockingsi'Orl, Ohio
before
being
traded
to
and fanned nine while
Phone 667-3530
walking just two, but the Houston .
Tavern got the timely hits.
Due to a late start, the game
LEGAL
went only seven innings.

GIBSON_____ Ault tops
AIR CONDITIONERS

Charles W. Slater, 83,
RDute 2, Hebron, formerly of
Meigs County, died Monday
June 7 in Licking Memorial
HQspital.
Mr. Slater was born June
24, 1892 at Dyesville in Meigs
County, a son of the late
Worthington L. and Mary
Dye Slater. At the age of II he
moved with his parenll! to the
Lincoln County homestead in
Union Twp. where he resided
until his death. His wife,
Ethel Julia Sharer, died In
July, 1963.
Surviving are five children,
Margaret RQlh of Painesville, Charles Edwin of Clyde,
Mary Alice of Dernberger,
John David of Hebron, and
Robert Worthington, Mlllersport; IS grandchildren, and
three great-grandchildren.
Mr. Slater attended Ohio
Universtty after finishing
Lakeside School where he
returned as teacher for the
last three years that the
school served South Union
Township. He taught at Flag
School in Fairfield County for
one year and then began his
farming career of 60 yel!fS,
His interest . in education
continued with 23 \2 years of
driving the school bus for the
Hebron Centralized Schools.
He was a member of the
Hebro n Christian Church
Disciples of Christ for 49
years and had been named as
deacon emeritus. He has been
a charter member of two
Farm Bureau Councils and
was a 25 year member of the
Hebron Lions Club. He was a
43 year member of the Ad·
vance Lndge No. 601 IOOF at
Millersport. He was a
granger, served on the Union
Township Zoning Board, and
Hebron Library Foundation
and was a member of the Old
Time Fiddlers Club of the
community.
He
was
recognized in October, 1956,
as the typical American
Farmer by being pictured on
the Newsweek Magazine
cover .
Attendtng the funeral
services Thursday at the
Hebron Christian Church
Disciples of Christ was Mrs.
Nellie Vale of Rutland. Mr .
Slater was a nephew of the
late Electa Daye Vale of
Meigs County. Burial was in
the Kirkersville Cemetery.

.§.!l

16

1~

Meigs native
died in Hebron
on June 7th

15c Size

�e:c.. The Dally Sentl_nei,Middleport.Pomeroy, 0., Friday, June 18,1976 ·

Mrs. Nicholson hosts

Open house honors 50 years
LANGSVJLLE - Mr. and
tMra. F. W. (Buck) Wllco, of
t.nsavllle were honored
recenUy wl.th an open houae
Ill celebration of their 50th
weddlnc anniversary .
Hoellne lbe obaervance were
Mr. and Mra':" Kenneth
Wllcoz, Middleport, Mr. and
Mra. Raymond Wilcox,
Middleport, Route I, and Mr.
and Mra. WlWam PhlWps,
Frankford.
,
The refreshment table,
decorated with lace over a
yellow cloth, featured a
three-tiered anniversary
cake topped with a golden
anniversary ,~&gt;Duple beneath
an arch and yellow tapers.
The cake was baked by Mrs.
Joanne Fetty of Rutland.
Yellow roees and green leaf
mlnta, nuts, punch and coffee
were served to the guesta.
Those
visiting
and
preaenllne glfta and cards to
the couple were Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Oisp, Langsville; Mrs.
Pauline Alldns, Mrs. Ruby
Halllday, Rutland; Mr. Bl)d
Mrs. Woodrow Wilcox,
Sandusky; Mr . and Mrs.
Otester Erwin, Middleport;
Mrs . Crystal Anderson,
Huntington, W. Va.; Mr. and
Mrs . Lawrence Chapman ,
Wllkesvllle ; Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Stewart, Pomeroy ;
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Morris,
Dexter; Mr. and Mrs. Avery
Goegleln, Pomeroy ; Dorothy

Wright, Mr. and Mrs. Ber·
nard Ledlle. Mr. and Mrs.
Bruce Morris, Bernice
ledlle, Langsville; Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Bolin, Mr. .and
Mra. Norman Will, Mr. and
Mri. Richard Grueser, Mr.
and Mrs . Clair Taylor ,
Rutland.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Lyons,
leon, W. Va.; Mrs. lelia
Rumfleld, Mrs. Maxine Dyer,
Opal, Patty and Bill, Bidwell;
Mr. and Mrs. Lealie Hoffman,
Langsville ; Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Denelsbeck, Mrs .
Mollie Mitchell, Proc!Alrvllle :
Mr . and Mrs. Willi all'!
Phillips, Frankfort ; Miss
Nancy Stanley and Mrs. Ida
Stanley, Darwin; Mr. and
Mrs. Wayne Kennedy and
Sally, Langsville : Mr. and
Mrs. Allen Mlsaler, Andy and
Tammy, Bellevue: Mr. and
Mrs. James Council and sens,
Langsville ; Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Sigman, Langsville; Mr. and
Mrs. Wendell Thomas, David
and Greg, Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Giles and Mrs. Evelyn
Thomas, all of Gallipolis ; Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Holliday and
children, Dexter; Mr. and
Mrs. Robert King , Mid·
dleport.
Mr . and Mrs. Robert
Canaday, Mr . and Mrs .
Harry Erlewine, Rutland;
Mr. and Mrs. Rex Shenefield,
Langsville; Mr. and Mrs.
John Halliday, Dexter ; Mr.

and Mrs. Carl Denison, Mrs.
. Evelyn Rife, Mrs. Jestie
Molden, Mr. 1111d Mrs. Vlc!Alr
Braley, Rutland ; Mr. 1111d
Mrs. Myron Miller, Minersville; Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Miller, Athens; Mrs. Sidney
WellB, Rutland : Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph ·Welker, Pomeroy;
Mrs. Elvira Barr, Langsville ; Ida Young, Edith
WlWamson, Murfal Foley,
l:farriet Warner, Mary
Baumgardner, Freda David
of the Sliver Circle Senior
atlzens Center ; Mr. and
Mrs, Elwood Kennaw, New
Albany; Mr. 1111d Mrs. Dale
Nicholson, Middleport; Mr.
and Mrs. Carl Shenefield,
Langsville.
·
Others attending the
celebration were Beverly 1111d
Bryan Wilcox, Middleport,
Route I: David 1111d Darla
Wllcox, Middleport ; Sherry
Burton, ChUllcothe, grlll1d·
chlldren of the honored
couple; Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Davis, Addison; Mrs. Grace
Colwell, Mrs . Kathryn
Colwell 1111d Dean, Vinton ;
Mrs. Kathryn Mitchell,
Langsville ; Mrs. Edith Dartt,
Cedar Grove, W. Va.; Alice
Hudnall, Charlestnn, W.Va.;
Greg Browning, Chester, and
Sheree Holter, ChUllcothe.
The Rutl1111d Emergency
Medical Service staff 1111d the
Rutland Senior Citizens also
sent gifts tAl Mr. 1111d Mrs.
Wilcox .

OES has annual inspection
Annual Inspection of
Evangeline Chapter 172,
Order of the Eastern Star,
was held recently at the
Middleport Masonic Temple
with Mu. Loella Hayes,
deputy gr1111~ matron at the

inspection officer.
Distinguished gue sts
presented were Roberta K
Mlndllng, past gr1111d. matron
of the Gr1111d Chapter of Ohio
and a 50 year member; Mrs.

Florida trip enjoyed
Mrs. Leona Smith has
returned from Lakeland, Fla.
where she visited her
daughter, Mrs . Martha
Biggerstaff, the former Mary
Martha Smith of Pomeroy.
Mrs. Smith traveled with
the Biggerstaff family to
Columbia, Mo. where they
attended the graduation of
VIcky Lynn Biggerstaff from
the University of Mlsseuri.
Miss Biggerstaff, gran'd·
daughter of Mrs. Smith,
received her master 's of
education In remedial
reading and learning
disablllties. She had received
her bachelor of science
degree In elementary
education from the same
University last August,
graduating In three years
with honors .
Miss Biggerstaff was a
member of Kappa Delta PI
and PI Lambda Theta,
educational honor soclelles.
She was selected for the 197475 edlllon of "Who's Who

Among American Colleges
1111d Universities," 1111d was a
Sigma Phi Epsilon "litUe
sister" as well as a member
. of the University of Mi1111ourt
Dance Co., engineering and
barnwarmlng queen candidate; treasurer and
secretary of the student
branch of the Missouri Slate
Teachers Asaociatlon ,
member of the National
Scien c e S eachers
Association, and the 1975
homecoming parade com.
miltee member. She was also
a chairman for several
committees In her dorm.
Miss Biggerstaff Is
currenUy In Pomeroy visiting
Mrs. Smith and Mr. 1111d Mrs.
Richard R. Rupe, daughters,
Lori and Linda . She Is
enroute to Lakeland, Fla. tAl
see her parents before
&amp;llllumlng her posillon as
learning disabilities
specialist with the Ottumwa
Public Schools In Ottumwa,
Iowa In August.

Folmer earns degree
Max Edison Folmer, sen of
Max Folmer, Pomeroy, and
the late Mrs . Folmer,
from
the
graduated
University of Cincinnati
Sunday evening with a
bachelor of science degree.
Ceremonies were held at
Nibert Stadium with the Hon.
Barbara Jordan, Con- .
greaswoman from Texas,
as lbe apeaker.
Folmer Ia employed as a
chemist In the laboratories of
Hilton-Davis Otemical Co. In
Cincinnati. Married to the
former Rhonda Hysell, he Is a
1970 graduate of Meigs High
School.
Sunday afternoon Mrs.
Folmer entertained with an
open house for her husband.
Sbe was assisted by Mr. and
Mrs. James Hayman of
Dayton. Among the guests
were friends of lbe couple
from the Goesick United
Methodist Church In Cfn.

INITIATED
Joy E. Rulsenberry,
daughter of Dr. and Mrs.
Roger C. Qulaenberry of
Athena, 1111d granddaughter
of B. F. Quisenberry of
Syracuae, was recently
In!lilted Into Ph! Beta Kappa
In ceremonies at Nelson
Commons on the Ohio
University campus. Miss
Qulaenbmy was one of 10
area atudenll Initiated Into
Pill Beta Kappa. She Is a
junior at Ohio U.

clnnatl and .several of his coworkers at Hilton-Davis.
In Cincinnati for the
commencement and open
house were Paul and Jane
Folmer, Madison ; Max
Folmer, Sr. and Vanessa,
Pomeroy ; Mr. and Mrs .
Robert Hysell, Syracuse;
Theresa Roush, Follansbee,
W. Va.; Alma Dallas, Rich-,
mond, and Mr. and Mrs. Phil
Yoachlm and children, .
Columbus. The graduate
received numerous cards and
gifts.
RIGHT W1111 WORW
CAMBRIDGE, Mass.
(UPI ) - Former U.N.
Ambassador Daniel P.
Moynihan told Harvard
Univ ersit y graduates
Thursday " the educated
cta1111" must deblink growing
belief Western democracies
are "what Is wrong with the
world."
"The educated class has
before it a · challenge of
' reformati-on and
reconstitution greater than
any It has faced · In the
modern age ," Moynihan said.
He said faith In democracy
has been replaced by belief
among the "intellectual
class"
that
Western
civilization, "far from being
needed by the world ... Is
what is wrong with the
world."

American
astronauts Otarles Conrad,
lACk HOME
Joeeph Kerwin and Paul
Mra. Vietor (Kathryn) Weltz entered their 25th day
Brown bu returned to her ln_the Skylab apace station,
lllllne Ill Mlnenvllle from the breaking a living-In-space
Holzer Medical Center where record set by the RUSBJans In
abe wcM - t llll'gery.
le71.
Ino

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1973,

Hayes, deputy grand matron
of Dlstrlc125 1111d district vice
president; Patricia Wilson,
grand representative to
Kansas In Ohio, 1111d worthy
matrons, Barbara Roush ,
Racine; Ella Smith, Pomeroy
and Sherrie Might, Wilkesville, and worthy patrons,
James Roush, Racine ; Dale
Smith, Pomeroy, and Bob
Hammond, McConnelsville,
Also presented were · the
past matrons of Evangeline
chapter, Marie Hawkins,
Jenevee Chesler, Naomi
King , Emma Clatworthy,
Roma Hawkins, Evelyn
lewis, Grace French, KBthy
Miller, Bessie King, Farle
Kennedy, Marylri Wilcox,
Euvetta · Bechtle ; past
patrons, Raymond Wilcox,
Harry Chesher, Allen
Hughes, James aatworthy,
Paul Darnell , Bob King ;
honored masons , Ralph
Webb, worshipful master of
Racine Lodge and Wesley
Buehl, Knight of the York
Cro1111 of Honor; five-year
members, Evelyn lewis and
Grace French, and district
offlc,ers, Mary Wooley,
secretary, Louise Stewart,
treasurer; gr1111d page, Lois
Pauley; thoee with former
gr1111d appointments, Mary
Hughes, Naomi King, Grace
French, Emma aatworthy
and Cora Webb, 1111d past
matrons 1111d past patrons of
other chapters.
Sunshine PRies for the
evening were Marie Hawkins
and Grace French. Harry and
Jenevee Otesher were pro
tern candidates with Sherry
King as soloist presenting
11

Never Alone. '~
A bicentennial theme was

carried out In the program
and pin-ons, as well as the
dining room decorating .
Refreshmenla were served.

Social
Calendar· Star Garden Club
DEXTER - Mrs. Seth
FRIDAY
· Nicholson hosted the Star
REVIVAL nightly through Garden Club recen tly.
June 20 at the First South Devotions of the 2&amp;-d Psalm
Baptist O!Urch, 282 Mulberry were given by the hostess,
Ave., Pomeroy, 7:30 p.m. and the prayer, creed and
Singing nlghUy. Ev1111ge11Bt collect were given by the
brother Paul White.
members.
SAnJRDAY
Roll call was "A New Rose
PUBLIC LUNCHEON, I want." Announ cement of a
noon Friday and Saturday for flower show July 3 1111d 4 at
Regatta Weekend at Meigs .th e Rutland Methodist
Count y Humane Society Oturch was made. Members
headquarters, E. Second St., were asked tAl exhibit. The
Pomeroy .
flllwer show at Big Bend
INSPECTION of the Athens Regatta was announced. Mrs.
Chapter , Order of the Sharon Jewell and Miss Ruby
Eastern Star, home chapter Deihl will help Friday and
with Dr. Howard I. Shull,
·
worthy grant patron of the
Grand Chapter of Ohio, will
be held Saturday. For Information contact Mrs. Ella
Smith , Pomeroy Chapter
worthy matron,
SUNDAY
COUNTY-WID E prayer
meeting Sunday , 2 p.m.
White.'s Chapel Church.
..
MONDAy· -lly Polly Cramer
MEI G S ·Muz .'
Polly's Problem
ZLELOADERS Club, 6:30,
DEAR POLLY - How do I
p.m. Monday at the r1111ge. get crayon marks out of dark
clothes? Acrayon got IniAl my
--TUESDAY- ·
dryer and ran on a towel,
AMERICAN LEGION jeans and a nylon knit Shirl. I
Auxiliary, Racine Post 602, have not tried 1111ythlng on
will meet at 7: 30 Tuesday at them yet, as I am afraid I
the haiL Members are to take might use the wrong thing. or send eyeglasses to be sent RUTH.
to the Eyes for the Needy.
DEAR RUTH - Tbe
fabrics that are spotted are
dlffereat, so wbat works oa
ooe mlghl not work oa aiL
ALWAYS lest OD an lncoasplcuous spot first. Tootbpute will remove s.ucb
marks from many lhiDgs.
Also wblte vinegar Is a
'poulbllily. Crayon makes a
greaoy alain ao greaay stain
.removers might be tried auch
aa salad oil or petroleum Jelly
rubbed iniAl the apol tAl sofien·
A bicentennial program It and then rub with detergent
was presented by Mrs. Fay aDd water. H neces.&amp;ry tAl
Wildermuth at the Wed· repeat treatment apply a
nesday night meeting of lbe liquid household cleaner for a
Past Presidents of the pre-treatment and then Rush
American l.A!glon Auxiliary out with clear water. Remove
of Drew Webster Post 39 at aay reiJl&amp;lnillg stains with
the home . of Mrs. Grace soapy water·with just a bit of
. Pratt.
ammonia added IF the eolor
Mrs. Wildermuth had a permits. - POU.Y
reading on Thorilas Jefferson
DEAR POLLY - For
1111d a bicentennial prayer. economy 's sake I have
Mrs. Veda Davis presided at started cutting facial tissues
the meeting with MillS Erma In half, so I get twice the use
Smith giving the prayer .. from a box. What a saving
There was alse silent prayer that Is. Sorry, Mr. Tissue
and the pledge tAl the Oag.
Miss Smith read "Rainbow"
1111d "Shepherd of. My Ufe"
for devotions, with Mrs .
Rhoda Hackett giving "Just
for a Minute."
The Ml1111ionary Society of
· Plans were made for a
·picnic at the ·home of Miss the Laurel Cliff Free
Smith and Mrs. Genevieve Methodist Church met
Meinhart on July 21. Games recenUy at the Route 33
were played with prizes going roadside park for a wiener
to Miss Smith and Mrs. roast and devotional service.
Mrs. Je1111 Wright presided
Marge Reuter, a guest: The
hostess served refreshments
"Whatwith
a Friend
We
at the meeting
the group
tAl those named and Mrs. Jed singing
Have
In
Jesua."
Mra.
Sharon
Webster, Sr ., Mrs. Iva
Powell, Mrs. Catherine Welsh Folmer gave devotions using
Psalm 46, and Mrs. Joan
1111d Mrs. Pearl Knapp.
Clark read "When You
Quarrel." Prayer was by
Miss Susan Fleshman.
Attending besides those
VISITS HOME
named were Mrs. Tina
Mrs. Sallie Byers, Rt. 2, Jacobs, Mrs. Doris Shook,
Pomeroy, visited In her home Mrs. Mildred Jacobs, Mrs.
community of Mingo County, Wanda Eblin, Mrs. Linda
W. Va. over tbe Memorial Foster, Mrs. Kathy ScarDay weekead with her sisters berry, Mrs. Donna Gilmore,
and nieces. She was taken Mrs. Iva Powell, Gina
there by Mrs. Mabel Grim· Scarberry, Tim Braley 1111d
mette and son, Howard.
Robin Campbell.

GiveDiiii A

TERRARIUM
FOLIAGE PlANT
Or

FOLIAGE .GARDEN
For His Desk at
Home oi- Office

20% OFF

59 N. Secoqd St.

Mra. Grace Turner, Saturday. The traveling prize
donated by Mrs. Turner was
won by Mrs. Pearly Nelson .
Mrs. Henry Turner 's topic
was "A Spectrum of Plnka."
The told of the charmlns
varieties of colors, longUme
blOOming period and noted
lbey are fr&amp;~rant. She also
talked about the soil 1111d
plan !food. Some•a1se grow
and give a carpet-like effect.
Mrs. Lawrence Otapman
discussed the New Roses for
76. She alse had pictures of'
them.
Refreshmenta were served.

Try toothpaste on
melted crayon mark

Program
presented

Society has
wiener roast .'

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The Gospel Inspirations

: . ··:&gt;~·!::~.$~:~~"; Q:S:W~®;:::w:::;:i?4

Helen Help

Polly's Pointers

BmTH ANNOUNCED
Mr. and Mrs. Phillip 11111
Miller of Anna are an nouncing the birth of their
first child, a daughter, May
29 at Mary Rutan Hospital in
Bellefontaine. The baby was
named Sarah Marie and
weighed 7 lbs., 9 ~ ozs .
Maternal grandparents are
Mr.andMrs. George Neigler,
Racine and the paternal
grandparenta are Mr. and
Mrs . William B. Miller,
Columbus . Great·
grandmothers are Mrs.
Frankie Neigler, Racine and .
Mrs. Roma Griffiths, •4
Columbus. . . ·
'l
June 20th

_7- Tbe DIIUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, June 18, 1976 ·

Maker. - M~H.
DEAR POU.Y - My Pet
Peeve ls with stove
manufacturers who put four
pilot Ughta on the top of a
stnve when one would do. I
lind this very d1111gerous with
grandchildren around. If
there was just one In the
middle It would not be so
eXJl!lled tAl cause a fire and
would •tay cleaner, alnce It
would be hidden. There are
five on my s!Alve and this Is a
waste ol energy. With the one
on my hOt water heater and

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Teens of the Bradford
&amp;
&gt;
.. Oturch of Olrlsl will travel to
By IJ.elen Bollel ~ King's Island Tuesday for 1111
. all-day outing. Pl1111s for the
··~trip were made at a meeting
of the youth group recenUy at
Tllree Men In Her Life .•. Now
DEAR HELEN:
the home of Vlckl 1111d Scott
I'm married, 26, and have had an affair with another man Pickens.
for a year. But now there are two lllell . Don't misunderstand.
The bus will leave at 6:30
I'm nota ses:pot.ll just seemed to hawen, mainly because my a.m. and those going are to
husband oo.t•t enjoy going out·and I like my freedom.
take a sack lunch 1o eat at a
I know that if I contlnue.tbe affairs, l'illose a good, hard· roadside park. The next
working husband who loves me and offers a lot of security. I meeting will be June 29 at the
love him too, b\lt I enjq,y excl~ent1111d the fun of being wilb · Blake hOme , with Mark
~er people. I'm not made for just D!le humdrum llfe style.
Gilkey 1111d David Blake to
la•ed a psychiatrist what tAl do and ~ said I'd have to have devotions. Other ac·
malt~ my own decision. (For $50 an hour, you'd think he'd Uvl lies discussed were a
advise!)
campout and slumber party
So what do you say?tO lake place on July 23 and 24
. .... EATING CAKE
wilb David Blake .to secure a
camp site. Slngsplratlon will
DEAR E.C.:
I'd asy you've already made your decision, and it will
·eventually break up your marriage.
And !ben you'll find that single Ufe ian't such a great piece
of cakeeither. Butremember- you asked for it. - H.

Us •••

A IOCial hour to welcome the prealdent ol a tbeolosb4
the relln of -the Rev. Robert college In Borneo.
Hayden. u pastor of the
Refreahmenta were llei'Yed
Pomeroy United Methodlat by Mrs. V. D. Ednrda .ad
Olurch for another year was Mra. T. J,.. Downie.
planned for Sunday morning • foUDWing lbe worship aervtce
when the United Methodlat
Women met Tuesday night at
the chqrch.
"The Concept of Mlaslons"
waslbe theme of the provam
presented by Mrs. RObert
Warner. 'lbere was group
singing. of "God of Grace and
God of Glory," with scripture
from Ephesians 2 by Myrtis
· Parker, a poem by Mrs.
Gerald Wlldermulb, 'll.ord
You Placed Me Here," and
more scripture by Mrs. GleM
Dill.
. In the program, work&amp; of
the missions of Methodist
Churches were cited In·
eluding the work In foreign
qrlculture projects where
help, not handouts, were
given, community development In Nicaragua, '"d tbe
work in South Aaia where
~portunlty for learning Ia
provided In education as wen
as social fields, and where
Instruction Is given In tnol
''I'
1 .,.
.., f
fl/
and craft resources. A ·
•
resume was beard of the Ufe
of IVy Chow, a Cbhiese
Christian who waa the first
crusade scholar of the
Methodist Oturch, presenUy

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DEAR HELEN:
I've just solved what I considered a huge problem and
would lille to pass It on tAl your readers.
My husband Is very active In men's organlzlltion which
meetll regularly once a week. ReCently he was elected an
; 'officer In the club and since then he's been out two or three
, evenings !l week.
·
·
~
I found myself resentful, since I was becoming an unpsid
' baby-eltter. (After an, lbey're hla kids too.)
•
So now I'm keeping a notebook for the hours, aDd figure
thus: regular meeting nights are worth $$ per hour. (That
might sound high, but after all, who could "sit" better.than
good old mom, right?) All other nlghta which are "ei:tra" are
Worth $8 per hour. When I have enough hours added up, I go out
andbuymyaelfsomethingreallynlce, aDd charge It, of course.
The outcome? No more resentment, no more nagging, and
a fantastic wardrobe which I feel I truly earned. - I'M
WORTH IT _
- -- ..
DEAR IWr:
.
Great: but can your husband alford It? - H.

+++

another
on the
furnace
have seven
pilotgas
lights
going.I ~-------------~---·
I
. SUNDAY
You are a dear tn offer so ' ~ .De
JUNE20
much help tAl · mothers and
grandmothers and I would
a A.M. to 2 P.M.
like to belp others by paaalng
on a few of my favorite hlnll.
MEAT
Use lighter Ould to remove
gum. Rub lightly and see 11
Baked steak, ham, nii.sf
disappear. When eyeglasses
beef, flounder fish,
fog up just apply a thin fUm of
hamb'!"••~.st~~-k. . .
soap on lbe lens and tissue
VEGETABLES
off. Add a few drops of oil to
Lima
beans; peas anci .
the buttar you are using for
carrots,
nCWJclln.
frying and It wiD not burn.
Put rusty naliB In your house
POTAlOES .
plants and If you do not have •"Tell you wha·t . .. treat:;·,~ · ~
rusty ones they wlil rust In a good steak dinner 11 the Bakea, mosned. home
Ume.lflnd this lsreally great . ' Steamboat Inn, and I'll show fries.
for my African vlolela. you how to make money In tho
MARGE.
stock marketl"
7-up, iossed
DEAR MARGE ...:. You wbo
cottaae cheese.
PIE
share se generously are tlie
·Cherry,
apple
,
raisin.
real dean- POU.Y.
DEAR POU.Y - My Idea
SoH ice crum, milk shakes, lie.
Is for L.C.S. and others with
Starting Wednesday June 23 our walk up window will
rusty lunch boxes. When my
be open from 7:00 to 10:00.
son's lunch box started tAl rust
. OPEN WEEKDAYS 6 A.M. to 7:00P.M.··
I lined the box with that
adhesive backed washable
paper. This not only
brightens up the box but Is
easy tAl wipe cie1111. It comes
"Real Old-Fashioned Home Cooking"
In so many preUy patterns
there Is always one tAl suit any
I
3rd St., Rseine, Ohio
nial 949-2515
.
Individual. - MRS. H.C.

DEAR HElLEN:
I'm a 5&amp;-year-old woman In need of advice. When I was
very young, I had a haby for a man I dearly loved. He wanted
to marry me, but iny folks wouldn't have lt. So I married
someone else, ralaed my daughter (who Is now happily
married) and was recenUy widowed, after taking care of an
Invalid husband for five years. It's been a hard, loveless life.
The father of my daughter wants to keep company with
me. (He's a widower.) I'm not real well, and be's near 75 but
hale and hearty. Would 11 be wrong after to years, to go back to
my first love? ~WORRIED .
DEAR WORRIED:
What's wrong about keeping company wllb semeone
you've known more than half a lifetime? Enjoy the years you
have ten! - H.

lair·

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Buy an MF lawn or garden
·tractor and save up·to
S525 on a rotary tiller,,
attachment
~Ul

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"
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OPEA.I.l i ~ O.

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THIRD &amp; OLIVE STREET

FRIDAY
&amp;
SATURDAY
JUNE 18 &amp;19

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

SUNDAY, JUNE 20
SCHEDULE
- Will sing ot Sunday school, 9: 45
- B;uket dinner at noon, hymm sing all :30
- Quartet singing also 11 the 1,30 service.
flev. Ray Brown, Supply Pastor
Joe Sayre, Deacon and Sun, Sch. Supt.

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BIG

REDUCED

ON

UPTO

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·~

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TV's

.•'••'
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think of the money
you'll save, not to
mention the work you'll
. save in your garden. ·
Hurr -while they last!

,,

SATURDAY'S SALE WILL BE

HEL~

I'

ON OUR PARKING LOT

BIG SAVINGS ON CASH ' &amp; CARRY ITEMS
'

sso

DAY

A $575.00
value!

NLY

DON'T MISS THIS SALE

· N~TE - Rnt.ary til leratllchmenLi aubject t.o avai labili\)';

-..........

fl'!!ght, de1ler prep and loc:al taxes ex tra.

MODERN SUPPLY

399 Wtst Main St. - · 9H-21M
Tilt Store Wllh "All Kinch of Stuff" For PeiiStllilts- Large&amp; Small Animals- Gardens

l lt-~lf

PH. 44t.:-1830

TABLES

...

Buy an MF 14 (14 hp) or MF 16 ·
. ('16 hp) lawn and garden tractor and you're entitled to an
MF 550 Rotary Tiller for only

A $410.00
value!

111~••

FRIDAY
&amp;
SATURDAY
JUNE 18 &amp; 19

2 mi. south of Carpenter, on Co. Rd. 10

Homecoming Celebration

lt&gt;lll~'llu'l

'

SAVE

),

You'll save $360 to
$525 on a rotary
tiller attachmentwhen you buy a new
MF garden tractor
from 10 to 16 hp.

Mount Union Mlulonary
Baptist Church

3~

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Will Be AI Tilt

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr. and Mrs. Warren
Miller and daughters, Barbara of St. Petersburg, Fla .,
Mrs. Betty Bry1111 of Bartow,
Fla. were guests of Mr. 1111d
Mrs. Herbert Shields lind
other relatives. Millie Ripley
and Harriett Morton of
Charles!Aln were guests of the
Shields'.on Tuesday.
Mrs. Marlene Fisher of
Racine was in Woodsfield
Tuesday where she was in·
terviewed for a school ad·
mlnistrator.
Mrs . Georgia Wolfe of
WashingtOn, D. C., Is a guest
of her brother, Mr. and Mrs .
Alex Wheeler. Bill Wheeier of
Columbus spent a few days
with his parents ; the
Wheelers.
Mrs. Don Bell called on
Mrs. Bessie Ervin Monday at
Racine.
Mrs. Benny Bogge1111 held a
dinner recenUy at her home
for ber sisters, Mrs. leo
Wlggingtnn, St. Albans, W;
Va., Mrs. David Jones, New
Haven, Mrs. Everette Clark
and son, Paul, of Cot.
tageville, Mr. 1111d Mrs . Jess
Anderson and Mr. 1111d Mrs. ·
Wayne Roseberry.
Mr. and Mrs.lewls Pickett
of Crown City have moved

Reeves meet

LARRY'S WAYSIDE FURNITURE

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These tillers are worth
hundreds ofdollars-

Apple Grove
News Notes

SYRACUSE - Dr. and
Miss Quise nberry, 1 tclerice degree In lnd111trial
Mrs. Roger C. Quisenberry of graduate of Ohio University, Manaeement:
be held at 7:30 on Aug. 13 a!
.
'"Athens announce
the Is employed by American
the church with the com·
The weddlnc will be at lhe't'
encagement
of
th eir International Underwriters Glenn Memorial Unltecl
mittee on that to meet after
·
,
daughter,
Janice
Lynn,
to In AU1111ta. Her fian ce, at- Methodist C2turch In Atlanta
the next meeting.
Roger
Barton
White,
Jr.,
son
lending the Georgia Institute on Sept. 11.
A softball game was held
of Mr. and Mrs. Roger White of Technology, will graduate
precedin g th e meeting 1
Molher of 1be brlde-eltct II
of Atlanta, Ga.
conducted by Greg Brown.
this year with a bachelor of the former Margaret Holmee
lng with Vicki Pickens
of Syracuse. B. F. Qulaen.
MR. FLUGG
by Jon Peterson berry
giving the secretary's report.
of Syracute II her
Browning also · had the
grandfather.
devotions. Hotdogs, potato ·
BE:: I-IIND EVE.R:Y
chips, cookies and Kool-Aid
were served . Others atS UCCE-SSFUL- MAN
tending ·were Scott and
Bonnie Pickens, Carol
JULIE DIANNE RIF·
THER6. 1:;. A WOMA~
Morris, Tammy 1111d Sylvia FLE celebfated her second
The Raeve~~ funUy cetBlake, Mike and Jeff birthday on Thursday and
t,ogether was held recently at
•. ' R..I$\4\~G-.
Wayland, Brenda Sayre, her
the Glouster Park. Atlendllll
sister, Brenda,
Belinda and Edle Grim, Jack celebrated her 13th birthwere Mra. Merle Johneon,
1111d Kitty Perry, and Herbie day on Friday. They are
Arthur Raevea, Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry Johnson, Karrle and
Noel.
the dauchtera of Mr. and
Sonya, Rutland; Mr. and
Mrs. Roy F. RlfDe, TupMrs . John Judson, John ,
pers
Plalru.
Grandparents
Into the former Harold Roush
Rhonda and Sheila, Trimble;
are
Mrs.
Lela
Riffle
residence at letart.
Oma Grimm, Mr. and Mra.
Mr. and Mrs. Wh eeler Roblnaon, Racine and Mr.
Wendell Grimm, Marietta ;
Sarsons of Missouri spent a and Mrs. Charles Bissell,
Mr.
and Mra. Dean Wooley,
vacation with his mother, Bashan.
Athens
; Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Mrs. Ethel Sa rson and
Hammond,
Beverly, Tracy
family.
Barbie
and
Ray, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Burri and
Mrs
.
Frank
Gleaock and
Billy Wilson of Bolivar Dam
gather~
Frankie,
Pataskala
; Mra.
were weekend guests of Mrs.
Margaret
Oark,
Mr.
and
REEDSVILLE
The
Erma Wilson and family.
Mra.
Elmer
Orme,
Lu(
...
Reedsville
U.M.w:
met
Mrs: Sherry Dillon of
ville:
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Helen
recenUy
at
the
home
of
Mrs.
Hartselle, Ala., spent a
Marcum, James, Brenda,
vacation with her parenta, Lorraine Wigal with Mrs.
Role and Joyce,. Columbua.
Mamie
Buckley
as
co·
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Shuler.
hostess.
Rev. and Mrs. 0 . G.
Mrs. Buckley led the
McKinney are at their mobile
devotions
uiling the topic,
home at Maplewood l.A!ke for
"Faithfulness
In all Things".
the summer.
Readings
were
given and a
Mr. and Mrs . Herbert
Roush attended revival Bible quiz held, Devotions
meeting at Morgan Center closed with prayer. There
church Saturday and Sunday were 19 shut-in calls repor.evenings where the Rev. 0 . ted. A committee consisting
ICI
I
1" 1 CAltGOI11f.S
!D ) c' APilAL
MAINlt:NAN CE
t tHII L~MiiNl P£FI100, JU~Y 1, ii11 Tt11\0V011
G. McKinney was evangelist. of Patty Martin, Sandy
Rev. Edward Griffith Is Cowdery and Dorotha Riebel
l U/6\,/l'l.IV4S
ACCOVNI
TO SI'"No
NO l HF.IiF.
]~ J HJNDS
0S3 OQI
fOR TfH! FUJ\II OIU
back ·home after undergoing was appointed to arr1111ge a
•,
visit
to
a
nursing
home.
surgery at University
Refreshments were served
RUTLAND TOWNSHIP h2
Hospital. While recuperllng
TWP CL E RK
to
guests Mrs . leona Ruth,
he stayedwith Mr. 1111d Mrs.
MEIGS COUN T Y
Mrs.
Verna
Rose
and
Mrs.
Gary Griffith at Bashan.
RUTLAND OHIO 4177!
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Elleen Bibbee and Mrs.
Mugrage visited Mrs. Benny Alberta Edwards, Mrs. Dolly
Boggess one evening Reed , Mrs. Nell Wilson, Mrs.
Ullian Pickens, and those
recenUy.
Mr. and Mrs, Carl named. A game was enjoyed
Robinson of Norfolk, Va., with prizes awarded. Mrs.
i~~ IQ~na M. Swick
. ,. cop, ol t~l t •'I'Ofl, .,..
~~~aE==
aupoou•no Gt~twrntnla. Rrt 011tn lor publiC acrijtlnr
spent Saturday with Mr. lind Buckley won the door prize.
••_~iJien,~d.'-'0=
11.1'~---:-----:---:-Mrs. Herbert Shields and There will be no meeting in
. lE I "SI:iUA ...NC£9 tAtltt tu
fl I
lht IMlft\II Y gJ II"
'·"'i+±'""'-J
marlhl n~n · llltQnlniiii ii On • M &lt;11!,., tl el v ld f ~ ••q.O r tmtn l t lltled In P t~ l I of
visited Mr. 1111d Mrs. Charles July or August. The place of
r::'l:
rht rnr;tr~CIIQ"I •~ccnr~ • ~ll"\llhlt rtPO&lt;I woll bt complrl~ wit h by lhil &lt;f!IIP~I
Qll;l!nl!'l•l WI ~ ;illlittl\0 IMI I".Wt.." 'nl l ~ftCf ~ ~ MI IIIOA
Manuel, Mr. and Mrs. the September meeting wlll
Chri5sle Powell of R8clne and be announced . A white
. · William Smllh
---r.:~Oii;;---: ~
&amp;1~nalu r1 :rM.T.f(,IT.JTvta,l;t;r
elephant sale will be held at
Mrs. Bertha Robinson . · ·
Wi.IUam Smith, Pres.
6·
11 10T"U
that meeting.

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CSteatnboat Inn

Here's how it.works.
Choose your MF
tractor, then you're
entitled to buy an MF
rotary tiller for only $50.*

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.Miss Quisenberry betrothed·

Teens plan ·outing

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�e:c.. The Dally Sentl_nei,Middleport.Pomeroy, 0., Friday, June 18,1976 ·

Mrs. Nicholson hosts

Open house honors 50 years
LANGSVJLLE - Mr. and
tMra. F. W. (Buck) Wllco, of
t.nsavllle were honored
recenUy wl.th an open houae
Ill celebration of their 50th
weddlnc anniversary .
Hoellne lbe obaervance were
Mr. and Mra':" Kenneth
Wllcoz, Middleport, Mr. and
Mra. Raymond Wilcox,
Middleport, Route I, and Mr.
and Mra. WlWam PhlWps,
Frankford.
,
The refreshment table,
decorated with lace over a
yellow cloth, featured a
three-tiered anniversary
cake topped with a golden
anniversary ,~&gt;Duple beneath
an arch and yellow tapers.
The cake was baked by Mrs.
Joanne Fetty of Rutland.
Yellow roees and green leaf
mlnta, nuts, punch and coffee
were served to the guesta.
Those
visiting
and
preaenllne glfta and cards to
the couple were Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Oisp, Langsville; Mrs.
Pauline Alldns, Mrs. Ruby
Halllday, Rutland; Mr. Bl)d
Mrs. Woodrow Wilcox,
Sandusky; Mr . and Mrs.
Otester Erwin, Middleport;
Mrs . Crystal Anderson,
Huntington, W. Va.; Mr. and
Mrs . Lawrence Chapman ,
Wllkesvllle ; Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Stewart, Pomeroy ;
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Morris,
Dexter; Mr. and Mrs. Avery
Goegleln, Pomeroy ; Dorothy

Wright, Mr. and Mrs. Ber·
nard Ledlle. Mr. and Mrs.
Bruce Morris, Bernice
ledlle, Langsville; Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Bolin, Mr. .and
Mra. Norman Will, Mr. and
Mri. Richard Grueser, Mr.
and Mrs . Clair Taylor ,
Rutland.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Lyons,
leon, W. Va.; Mrs. lelia
Rumfleld, Mrs. Maxine Dyer,
Opal, Patty and Bill, Bidwell;
Mr. and Mrs. Lealie Hoffman,
Langsville ; Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Denelsbeck, Mrs .
Mollie Mitchell, Proc!Alrvllle :
Mr . and Mrs. Willi all'!
Phillips, Frankfort ; Miss
Nancy Stanley and Mrs. Ida
Stanley, Darwin; Mr. and
Mrs. Wayne Kennedy and
Sally, Langsville : Mr. and
Mrs. Allen Mlsaler, Andy and
Tammy, Bellevue: Mr. and
Mrs. James Council and sens,
Langsville ; Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Sigman, Langsville; Mr. and
Mrs. Wendell Thomas, David
and Greg, Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Giles and Mrs. Evelyn
Thomas, all of Gallipolis ; Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Holliday and
children, Dexter; Mr. and
Mrs. Robert King , Mid·
dleport.
Mr . and Mrs. Robert
Canaday, Mr . and Mrs .
Harry Erlewine, Rutland;
Mr. and Mrs. Rex Shenefield,
Langsville; Mr. and Mrs.
John Halliday, Dexter ; Mr.

and Mrs. Carl Denison, Mrs.
. Evelyn Rife, Mrs. Jestie
Molden, Mr. 1111d Mrs. Vlc!Alr
Braley, Rutland ; Mr. 1111d
Mrs. Myron Miller, Minersville; Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Miller, Athens; Mrs. Sidney
WellB, Rutland : Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph ·Welker, Pomeroy;
Mrs. Elvira Barr, Langsville ; Ida Young, Edith
WlWamson, Murfal Foley,
l:farriet Warner, Mary
Baumgardner, Freda David
of the Sliver Circle Senior
atlzens Center ; Mr. and
Mrs, Elwood Kennaw, New
Albany; Mr. 1111d Mrs. Dale
Nicholson, Middleport; Mr.
and Mrs. Carl Shenefield,
Langsville.
·
Others attending the
celebration were Beverly 1111d
Bryan Wilcox, Middleport,
Route I: David 1111d Darla
Wllcox, Middleport ; Sherry
Burton, ChUllcothe, grlll1d·
chlldren of the honored
couple; Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Davis, Addison; Mrs. Grace
Colwell, Mrs . Kathryn
Colwell 1111d Dean, Vinton ;
Mrs. Kathryn Mitchell,
Langsville ; Mrs. Edith Dartt,
Cedar Grove, W. Va.; Alice
Hudnall, Charlestnn, W.Va.;
Greg Browning, Chester, and
Sheree Holter, ChUllcothe.
The Rutl1111d Emergency
Medical Service staff 1111d the
Rutland Senior Citizens also
sent gifts tAl Mr. 1111d Mrs.
Wilcox .

OES has annual inspection
Annual Inspection of
Evangeline Chapter 172,
Order of the Eastern Star,
was held recently at the
Middleport Masonic Temple
with Mu. Loella Hayes,
deputy gr1111~ matron at the

inspection officer.
Distinguished gue sts
presented were Roberta K
Mlndllng, past gr1111d. matron
of the Gr1111d Chapter of Ohio
and a 50 year member; Mrs.

Florida trip enjoyed
Mrs. Leona Smith has
returned from Lakeland, Fla.
where she visited her
daughter, Mrs . Martha
Biggerstaff, the former Mary
Martha Smith of Pomeroy.
Mrs. Smith traveled with
the Biggerstaff family to
Columbia, Mo. where they
attended the graduation of
VIcky Lynn Biggerstaff from
the University of Mlsseuri.
Miss Biggerstaff, gran'd·
daughter of Mrs. Smith,
received her master 's of
education In remedial
reading and learning
disablllties. She had received
her bachelor of science
degree In elementary
education from the same
University last August,
graduating In three years
with honors .
Miss Biggerstaff was a
member of Kappa Delta PI
and PI Lambda Theta,
educational honor soclelles.
She was selected for the 197475 edlllon of "Who's Who

Among American Colleges
1111d Universities," 1111d was a
Sigma Phi Epsilon "litUe
sister" as well as a member
. of the University of Mi1111ourt
Dance Co., engineering and
barnwarmlng queen candidate; treasurer and
secretary of the student
branch of the Missouri Slate
Teachers Asaociatlon ,
member of the National
Scien c e S eachers
Association, and the 1975
homecoming parade com.
miltee member. She was also
a chairman for several
committees In her dorm.
Miss Biggerstaff Is
currenUy In Pomeroy visiting
Mrs. Smith and Mr. 1111d Mrs.
Richard R. Rupe, daughters,
Lori and Linda . She Is
enroute to Lakeland, Fla. tAl
see her parents before
&amp;llllumlng her posillon as
learning disabilities
specialist with the Ottumwa
Public Schools In Ottumwa,
Iowa In August.

Folmer earns degree
Max Edison Folmer, sen of
Max Folmer, Pomeroy, and
the late Mrs . Folmer,
from
the
graduated
University of Cincinnati
Sunday evening with a
bachelor of science degree.
Ceremonies were held at
Nibert Stadium with the Hon.
Barbara Jordan, Con- .
greaswoman from Texas,
as lbe apeaker.
Folmer Ia employed as a
chemist In the laboratories of
Hilton-Davis Otemical Co. In
Cincinnati. Married to the
former Rhonda Hysell, he Is a
1970 graduate of Meigs High
School.
Sunday afternoon Mrs.
Folmer entertained with an
open house for her husband.
Sbe was assisted by Mr. and
Mrs. James Hayman of
Dayton. Among the guests
were friends of lbe couple
from the Goesick United
Methodist Church In Cfn.

INITIATED
Joy E. Rulsenberry,
daughter of Dr. and Mrs.
Roger C. Qulaenberry of
Athena, 1111d granddaughter
of B. F. Quisenberry of
Syracuae, was recently
In!lilted Into Ph! Beta Kappa
In ceremonies at Nelson
Commons on the Ohio
University campus. Miss
Qulaenbmy was one of 10
area atudenll Initiated Into
Pill Beta Kappa. She Is a
junior at Ohio U.

clnnatl and .several of his coworkers at Hilton-Davis.
In Cincinnati for the
commencement and open
house were Paul and Jane
Folmer, Madison ; Max
Folmer, Sr. and Vanessa,
Pomeroy ; Mr. and Mrs .
Robert Hysell, Syracuse;
Theresa Roush, Follansbee,
W. Va.; Alma Dallas, Rich-,
mond, and Mr. and Mrs. Phil
Yoachlm and children, .
Columbus. The graduate
received numerous cards and
gifts.
RIGHT W1111 WORW
CAMBRIDGE, Mass.
(UPI ) - Former U.N.
Ambassador Daniel P.
Moynihan told Harvard
Univ ersit y graduates
Thursday " the educated
cta1111" must deblink growing
belief Western democracies
are "what Is wrong with the
world."
"The educated class has
before it a · challenge of
' reformati-on and
reconstitution greater than
any It has faced · In the
modern age ," Moynihan said.
He said faith In democracy
has been replaced by belief
among the "intellectual
class"
that
Western
civilization, "far from being
needed by the world ... Is
what is wrong with the
world."

American
astronauts Otarles Conrad,
lACk HOME
Joeeph Kerwin and Paul
Mra. Vietor (Kathryn) Weltz entered their 25th day
Brown bu returned to her ln_the Skylab apace station,
lllllne Ill Mlnenvllle from the breaking a living-In-space
Holzer Medical Center where record set by the RUSBJans In
abe wcM - t llll'gery.
le71.
Ino

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1973,

Hayes, deputy grand matron
of Dlstrlc125 1111d district vice
president; Patricia Wilson,
grand representative to
Kansas In Ohio, 1111d worthy
matrons, Barbara Roush ,
Racine; Ella Smith, Pomeroy
and Sherrie Might, Wilkesville, and worthy patrons,
James Roush, Racine ; Dale
Smith, Pomeroy, and Bob
Hammond, McConnelsville,
Also presented were · the
past matrons of Evangeline
chapter, Marie Hawkins,
Jenevee Chesler, Naomi
King , Emma Clatworthy,
Roma Hawkins, Evelyn
lewis, Grace French, KBthy
Miller, Bessie King, Farle
Kennedy, Marylri Wilcox,
Euvetta · Bechtle ; past
patrons, Raymond Wilcox,
Harry Chesher, Allen
Hughes, James aatworthy,
Paul Darnell , Bob King ;
honored masons , Ralph
Webb, worshipful master of
Racine Lodge and Wesley
Buehl, Knight of the York
Cro1111 of Honor; five-year
members, Evelyn lewis and
Grace French, and district
offlc,ers, Mary Wooley,
secretary, Louise Stewart,
treasurer; gr1111d page, Lois
Pauley; thoee with former
gr1111d appointments, Mary
Hughes, Naomi King, Grace
French, Emma aatworthy
and Cora Webb, 1111d past
matrons 1111d past patrons of
other chapters.
Sunshine PRies for the
evening were Marie Hawkins
and Grace French. Harry and
Jenevee Otesher were pro
tern candidates with Sherry
King as soloist presenting
11

Never Alone. '~
A bicentennial theme was

carried out In the program
and pin-ons, as well as the
dining room decorating .
Refreshmenla were served.

Social
Calendar· Star Garden Club
DEXTER - Mrs. Seth
FRIDAY
· Nicholson hosted the Star
REVIVAL nightly through Garden Club recen tly.
June 20 at the First South Devotions of the 2&amp;-d Psalm
Baptist O!Urch, 282 Mulberry were given by the hostess,
Ave., Pomeroy, 7:30 p.m. and the prayer, creed and
Singing nlghUy. Ev1111ge11Bt collect were given by the
brother Paul White.
members.
SAnJRDAY
Roll call was "A New Rose
PUBLIC LUNCHEON, I want." Announ cement of a
noon Friday and Saturday for flower show July 3 1111d 4 at
Regatta Weekend at Meigs .th e Rutland Methodist
Count y Humane Society Oturch was made. Members
headquarters, E. Second St., were asked tAl exhibit. The
Pomeroy .
flllwer show at Big Bend
INSPECTION of the Athens Regatta was announced. Mrs.
Chapter , Order of the Sharon Jewell and Miss Ruby
Eastern Star, home chapter Deihl will help Friday and
with Dr. Howard I. Shull,
·
worthy grant patron of the
Grand Chapter of Ohio, will
be held Saturday. For Information contact Mrs. Ella
Smith , Pomeroy Chapter
worthy matron,
SUNDAY
COUNTY-WID E prayer
meeting Sunday , 2 p.m.
White.'s Chapel Church.
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MONDAy· -lly Polly Cramer
MEI G S ·Muz .'
Polly's Problem
ZLELOADERS Club, 6:30,
DEAR POLLY - How do I
p.m. Monday at the r1111ge. get crayon marks out of dark
clothes? Acrayon got IniAl my
--TUESDAY- ·
dryer and ran on a towel,
AMERICAN LEGION jeans and a nylon knit Shirl. I
Auxiliary, Racine Post 602, have not tried 1111ythlng on
will meet at 7: 30 Tuesday at them yet, as I am afraid I
the haiL Members are to take might use the wrong thing. or send eyeglasses to be sent RUTH.
to the Eyes for the Needy.
DEAR RUTH - Tbe
fabrics that are spotted are
dlffereat, so wbat works oa
ooe mlghl not work oa aiL
ALWAYS lest OD an lncoasplcuous spot first. Tootbpute will remove s.ucb
marks from many lhiDgs.
Also wblte vinegar Is a
'poulbllily. Crayon makes a
greaoy alain ao greaay stain
.removers might be tried auch
aa salad oil or petroleum Jelly
rubbed iniAl the apol tAl sofien·
A bicentennial program It and then rub with detergent
was presented by Mrs. Fay aDd water. H neces.&amp;ry tAl
Wildermuth at the Wed· repeat treatment apply a
nesday night meeting of lbe liquid household cleaner for a
Past Presidents of the pre-treatment and then Rush
American l.A!glon Auxiliary out with clear water. Remove
of Drew Webster Post 39 at aay reiJl&amp;lnillg stains with
the home . of Mrs. Grace soapy water·with just a bit of
. Pratt.
ammonia added IF the eolor
Mrs. Wildermuth had a permits. - POU.Y
reading on Thorilas Jefferson
DEAR POLLY - For
1111d a bicentennial prayer. economy 's sake I have
Mrs. Veda Davis presided at started cutting facial tissues
the meeting with MillS Erma In half, so I get twice the use
Smith giving the prayer .. from a box. What a saving
There was alse silent prayer that Is. Sorry, Mr. Tissue
and the pledge tAl the Oag.
Miss Smith read "Rainbow"
1111d "Shepherd of. My Ufe"
for devotions, with Mrs .
Rhoda Hackett giving "Just
for a Minute."
The Ml1111ionary Society of
· Plans were made for a
·picnic at the ·home of Miss the Laurel Cliff Free
Smith and Mrs. Genevieve Methodist Church met
Meinhart on July 21. Games recenUy at the Route 33
were played with prizes going roadside park for a wiener
to Miss Smith and Mrs. roast and devotional service.
Mrs. Je1111 Wright presided
Marge Reuter, a guest: The
hostess served refreshments
"Whatwith
a Friend
We
at the meeting
the group
tAl those named and Mrs. Jed singing
Have
In
Jesua."
Mra.
Sharon
Webster, Sr ., Mrs. Iva
Powell, Mrs. Catherine Welsh Folmer gave devotions using
Psalm 46, and Mrs. Joan
1111d Mrs. Pearl Knapp.
Clark read "When You
Quarrel." Prayer was by
Miss Susan Fleshman.
Attending besides those
VISITS HOME
named were Mrs. Tina
Mrs. Sallie Byers, Rt. 2, Jacobs, Mrs. Doris Shook,
Pomeroy, visited In her home Mrs. Mildred Jacobs, Mrs.
community of Mingo County, Wanda Eblin, Mrs. Linda
W. Va. over tbe Memorial Foster, Mrs. Kathy ScarDay weekead with her sisters berry, Mrs. Donna Gilmore,
and nieces. She was taken Mrs. Iva Powell, Gina
there by Mrs. Mabel Grim· Scarberry, Tim Braley 1111d
mette and son, Howard.
Robin Campbell.

GiveDiiii A

TERRARIUM
FOLIAGE PlANT
Or

FOLIAGE .GARDEN
For His Desk at
Home oi- Office

20% OFF

59 N. Secoqd St.

Mra. Grace Turner, Saturday. The traveling prize
donated by Mrs. Turner was
won by Mrs. Pearly Nelson .
Mrs. Henry Turner 's topic
was "A Spectrum of Plnka."
The told of the charmlns
varieties of colors, longUme
blOOming period and noted
lbey are fr&amp;~rant. She also
talked about the soil 1111d
plan !food. Some•a1se grow
and give a carpet-like effect.
Mrs. Lawrence Otapman
discussed the New Roses for
76. She alse had pictures of'
them.
Refreshmenta were served.

Try toothpaste on
melted crayon mark

Program
presented

Society has
wiener roast .'

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The Gospel Inspirations

: . ··:&gt;~·!::~.$~:~~"; Q:S:W~®;:::w:::;:i?4

Helen Help

Polly's Pointers

BmTH ANNOUNCED
Mr. and Mrs. Phillip 11111
Miller of Anna are an nouncing the birth of their
first child, a daughter, May
29 at Mary Rutan Hospital in
Bellefontaine. The baby was
named Sarah Marie and
weighed 7 lbs., 9 ~ ozs .
Maternal grandparents are
Mr.andMrs. George Neigler,
Racine and the paternal
grandparenta are Mr. and
Mrs . William B. Miller,
Columbus . Great·
grandmothers are Mrs.
Frankie Neigler, Racine and .
Mrs. Roma Griffiths, •4
Columbus. . . ·
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June 20th

_7- Tbe DIIUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, June 18, 1976 ·

Maker. - M~H.
DEAR POU.Y - My Pet
Peeve ls with stove
manufacturers who put four
pilot Ughta on the top of a
stnve when one would do. I
lind this very d1111gerous with
grandchildren around. If
there was just one In the
middle It would not be so
eXJl!lled tAl cause a fire and
would •tay cleaner, alnce It
would be hidden. There are
five on my s!Alve and this Is a
waste ol energy. With the one
on my hOt water heater and

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Teens of the Bradford
&amp;
&gt;
.. Oturch of Olrlsl will travel to
By IJ.elen Bollel ~ King's Island Tuesday for 1111
. all-day outing. Pl1111s for the
··~trip were made at a meeting
of the youth group recenUy at
Tllree Men In Her Life .•. Now
DEAR HELEN:
the home of Vlckl 1111d Scott
I'm married, 26, and have had an affair with another man Pickens.
for a year. But now there are two lllell . Don't misunderstand.
The bus will leave at 6:30
I'm nota ses:pot.ll just seemed to hawen, mainly because my a.m. and those going are to
husband oo.t•t enjoy going out·and I like my freedom.
take a sack lunch 1o eat at a
I know that if I contlnue.tbe affairs, l'illose a good, hard· roadside park. The next
working husband who loves me and offers a lot of security. I meeting will be June 29 at the
love him too, b\lt I enjq,y excl~ent1111d the fun of being wilb · Blake hOme , with Mark
~er people. I'm not made for just D!le humdrum llfe style.
Gilkey 1111d David Blake to
la•ed a psychiatrist what tAl do and ~ said I'd have to have devotions. Other ac·
malt~ my own decision. (For $50 an hour, you'd think he'd Uvl lies discussed were a
advise!)
campout and slumber party
So what do you say?tO lake place on July 23 and 24
. .... EATING CAKE
wilb David Blake .to secure a
camp site. Slngsplratlon will
DEAR E.C.:
I'd asy you've already made your decision, and it will
·eventually break up your marriage.
And !ben you'll find that single Ufe ian't such a great piece
of cakeeither. Butremember- you asked for it. - H.

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A IOCial hour to welcome the prealdent ol a tbeolosb4
the relln of -the Rev. Robert college In Borneo.
Hayden. u pastor of the
Refreahmenta were llei'Yed
Pomeroy United Methodlat by Mrs. V. D. Ednrda .ad
Olurch for another year was Mra. T. J,.. Downie.
planned for Sunday morning • foUDWing lbe worship aervtce
when the United Methodlat
Women met Tuesday night at
the chqrch.
"The Concept of Mlaslons"
waslbe theme of the provam
presented by Mrs. RObert
Warner. 'lbere was group
singing. of "God of Grace and
God of Glory," with scripture
from Ephesians 2 by Myrtis
· Parker, a poem by Mrs.
Gerald Wlldermulb, 'll.ord
You Placed Me Here," and
more scripture by Mrs. GleM
Dill.
. In the program, work&amp; of
the missions of Methodist
Churches were cited In·
eluding the work In foreign
qrlculture projects where
help, not handouts, were
given, community development In Nicaragua, '"d tbe
work in South Aaia where
~portunlty for learning Ia
provided In education as wen
as social fields, and where
Instruction Is given In tnol
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1 .,.
.., f
fl/
and craft resources. A ·
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resume was beard of the Ufe
of IVy Chow, a Cbhiese
Christian who waa the first
crusade scholar of the
Methodist Oturch, presenUy

-.~----

+++

DEAR HELEN:
I've just solved what I considered a huge problem and
would lille to pass It on tAl your readers.
My husband Is very active In men's organlzlltion which
meetll regularly once a week. ReCently he was elected an
; 'officer In the club and since then he's been out two or three
, evenings !l week.
·
·
~
I found myself resentful, since I was becoming an unpsid
' baby-eltter. (After an, lbey're hla kids too.)
•
So now I'm keeping a notebook for the hours, aDd figure
thus: regular meeting nights are worth $$ per hour. (That
might sound high, but after all, who could "sit" better.than
good old mom, right?) All other nlghta which are "ei:tra" are
Worth $8 per hour. When I have enough hours added up, I go out
andbuymyaelfsomethingreallynlce, aDd charge It, of course.
The outcome? No more resentment, no more nagging, and
a fantastic wardrobe which I feel I truly earned. - I'M
WORTH IT _
- -- ..
DEAR IWr:
.
Great: but can your husband alford It? - H.

+++

another
on the
furnace
have seven
pilotgas
lights
going.I ~-------------~---·
I
. SUNDAY
You are a dear tn offer so ' ~ .De
JUNE20
much help tAl · mothers and
grandmothers and I would
a A.M. to 2 P.M.
like to belp others by paaalng
on a few of my favorite hlnll.
MEAT
Use lighter Ould to remove
gum. Rub lightly and see 11
Baked steak, ham, nii.sf
disappear. When eyeglasses
beef, flounder fish,
fog up just apply a thin fUm of
hamb'!"••~.st~~-k. . .
soap on lbe lens and tissue
VEGETABLES
off. Add a few drops of oil to
Lima
beans; peas anci .
the buttar you are using for
carrots,
nCWJclln.
frying and It wiD not burn.
Put rusty naliB In your house
POTAlOES .
plants and If you do not have •"Tell you wha·t . .. treat:;·,~ · ~
rusty ones they wlil rust In a good steak dinner 11 the Bakea, mosned. home
Ume.lflnd this lsreally great . ' Steamboat Inn, and I'll show fries.
for my African vlolela. you how to make money In tho
MARGE.
stock marketl"
7-up, iossed
DEAR MARGE ...:. You wbo
cottaae cheese.
PIE
share se generously are tlie
·Cherry,
apple
,
raisin.
real dean- POU.Y.
DEAR POU.Y - My Idea
SoH ice crum, milk shakes, lie.
Is for L.C.S. and others with
Starting Wednesday June 23 our walk up window will
rusty lunch boxes. When my
be open from 7:00 to 10:00.
son's lunch box started tAl rust
. OPEN WEEKDAYS 6 A.M. to 7:00P.M.··
I lined the box with that
adhesive backed washable
paper. This not only
brightens up the box but Is
easy tAl wipe cie1111. It comes
"Real Old-Fashioned Home Cooking"
In so many preUy patterns
there Is always one tAl suit any
I
3rd St., Rseine, Ohio
nial 949-2515
.
Individual. - MRS. H.C.

DEAR HElLEN:
I'm a 5&amp;-year-old woman In need of advice. When I was
very young, I had a haby for a man I dearly loved. He wanted
to marry me, but iny folks wouldn't have lt. So I married
someone else, ralaed my daughter (who Is now happily
married) and was recenUy widowed, after taking care of an
Invalid husband for five years. It's been a hard, loveless life.
The father of my daughter wants to keep company with
me. (He's a widower.) I'm not real well, and be's near 75 but
hale and hearty. Would 11 be wrong after to years, to go back to
my first love? ~WORRIED .
DEAR WORRIED:
What's wrong about keeping company wllb semeone
you've known more than half a lifetime? Enjoy the years you
have ten! - H.

lair·

.

.

••'
•
••

•.!,

''·•
I

••••
..•'

~

I

fl

Buy an MF lawn or garden
·tractor and save up·to
S525 on a rotary tiller,,
attachment
~Ul

,,~
,..""
"
.:

'

UMW

OPEA.I.l i ~ O.

0

i~~3~~~§~~~31f'·~::l

~

..

THIRD &amp; OLIVE STREET

FRIDAY
&amp;
SATURDAY
JUNE 18 &amp;19

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

SUNDAY, JUNE 20
SCHEDULE
- Will sing ot Sunday school, 9: 45
- B;uket dinner at noon, hymm sing all :30
- Quartet singing also 11 the 1,30 service.
flev. Ray Brown, Supply Pastor
Joe Sayre, Deacon and Sun, Sch. Supt.

',

'·••

BIG

REDUCED

ON

UPTO

••''
•'. l

'.

••0··.~

'•
.,.,.,.
·~

,.,,1!

'• :I

TV's

.•'••'
I'

•;

,,.,' .·
' 'f

think of the money
you'll save, not to
mention the work you'll
. save in your garden. ·
Hurr -while they last!

,,

SATURDAY'S SALE WILL BE

HEL~

I'

ON OUR PARKING LOT

BIG SAVINGS ON CASH ' &amp; CARRY ITEMS
'

sso

DAY

A $575.00
value!

NLY

DON'T MISS THIS SALE

· N~TE - Rnt.ary til leratllchmenLi aubject t.o avai labili\)';

-..........

fl'!!ght, de1ler prep and loc:al taxes ex tra.

MODERN SUPPLY

399 Wtst Main St. - · 9H-21M
Tilt Store Wllh "All Kinch of Stuff" For PeiiStllilts- Large&amp; Small Animals- Gardens

l lt-~lf

PH. 44t.:-1830

TABLES

...

Buy an MF 14 (14 hp) or MF 16 ·
. ('16 hp) lawn and garden tractor and you're entitled to an
MF 550 Rotary Tiller for only

A $410.00
value!

111~••

FRIDAY
&amp;
SATURDAY
JUNE 18 &amp; 19

2 mi. south of Carpenter, on Co. Rd. 10

Homecoming Celebration

lt&gt;lll~'llu'l

'

SAVE

),

You'll save $360 to
$525 on a rotary
tiller attachmentwhen you buy a new
MF garden tractor
from 10 to 16 hp.

Mount Union Mlulonary
Baptist Church

3~

~

:J
·'
...
•'
N
'·••

Will Be AI Tilt

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr. and Mrs. Warren
Miller and daughters, Barbara of St. Petersburg, Fla .,
Mrs. Betty Bry1111 of Bartow,
Fla. were guests of Mr. 1111d
Mrs. Herbert Shields lind
other relatives. Millie Ripley
and Harriett Morton of
Charles!Aln were guests of the
Shields'.on Tuesday.
Mrs. Marlene Fisher of
Racine was in Woodsfield
Tuesday where she was in·
terviewed for a school ad·
mlnistrator.
Mrs . Georgia Wolfe of
WashingtOn, D. C., Is a guest
of her brother, Mr. and Mrs .
Alex Wheeler. Bill Wheeier of
Columbus spent a few days
with his parents ; the
Wheelers.
Mrs. Don Bell called on
Mrs. Bessie Ervin Monday at
Racine.
Mrs. Benny Bogge1111 held a
dinner recenUy at her home
for ber sisters, Mrs. leo
Wlggingtnn, St. Albans, W;
Va., Mrs. David Jones, New
Haven, Mrs. Everette Clark
and son, Paul, of Cot.
tageville, Mr. 1111d Mrs . Jess
Anderson and Mr. 1111d Mrs. ·
Wayne Roseberry.
Mr. and Mrs.lewls Pickett
of Crown City have moved

Reeves meet

LARRY'S WAYSIDE FURNITURE

•'·

~--------------------------.

These tillers are worth
hundreds ofdollars-

Apple Grove
News Notes

SYRACUSE - Dr. and
Miss Quise nberry, 1 tclerice degree In lnd111trial
Mrs. Roger C. Quisenberry of graduate of Ohio University, Manaeement:
be held at 7:30 on Aug. 13 a!
.
'"Athens announce
the Is employed by American
the church with the com·
The weddlnc will be at lhe't'
encagement
of
th eir International Underwriters Glenn Memorial Unltecl
mittee on that to meet after
·
,
daughter,
Janice
Lynn,
to In AU1111ta. Her fian ce, at- Methodist C2turch In Atlanta
the next meeting.
Roger
Barton
White,
Jr.,
son
lending the Georgia Institute on Sept. 11.
A softball game was held
of Mr. and Mrs. Roger White of Technology, will graduate
precedin g th e meeting 1
Molher of 1be brlde-eltct II
of Atlanta, Ga.
conducted by Greg Brown.
this year with a bachelor of the former Margaret Holmee
lng with Vicki Pickens
of Syracuse. B. F. Qulaen.
MR. FLUGG
by Jon Peterson berry
giving the secretary's report.
of Syracute II her
Browning also · had the
grandfather.
devotions. Hotdogs, potato ·
BE:: I-IIND EVE.R:Y
chips, cookies and Kool-Aid
were served . Others atS UCCE-SSFUL- MAN
tending ·were Scott and
Bonnie Pickens, Carol
JULIE DIANNE RIF·
THER6. 1:;. A WOMA~
Morris, Tammy 1111d Sylvia FLE celebfated her second
The Raeve~~ funUy cetBlake, Mike and Jeff birthday on Thursday and
t,ogether was held recently at
•. ' R..I$\4\~G-.
Wayland, Brenda Sayre, her
the Glouster Park. Atlendllll
sister, Brenda,
Belinda and Edle Grim, Jack celebrated her 13th birthwere Mra. Merle Johneon,
1111d Kitty Perry, and Herbie day on Friday. They are
Arthur Raevea, Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry Johnson, Karrle and
Noel.
the dauchtera of Mr. and
Sonya, Rutland; Mr. and
Mrs. Roy F. RlfDe, TupMrs . John Judson, John ,
pers
Plalru.
Grandparents
Into the former Harold Roush
Rhonda and Sheila, Trimble;
are
Mrs.
Lela
Riffle
residence at letart.
Oma Grimm, Mr. and Mra.
Mr. and Mrs. Wh eeler Roblnaon, Racine and Mr.
Wendell Grimm, Marietta ;
Sarsons of Missouri spent a and Mrs. Charles Bissell,
Mr.
and Mra. Dean Wooley,
vacation with his mother, Bashan.
Athens
; Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Mrs. Ethel Sa rson and
Hammond,
Beverly, Tracy
family.
Barbie
and
Ray, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Burri and
Mrs
.
Frank
Gleaock and
Billy Wilson of Bolivar Dam
gather~
Frankie,
Pataskala
; Mra.
were weekend guests of Mrs.
Margaret
Oark,
Mr.
and
REEDSVILLE
The
Erma Wilson and family.
Mra.
Elmer
Orme,
Lu(
...
Reedsville
U.M.w:
met
Mrs: Sherry Dillon of
ville:
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Helen
recenUy
at
the
home
of
Mrs.
Hartselle, Ala., spent a
Marcum, James, Brenda,
vacation with her parenta, Lorraine Wigal with Mrs.
Role and Joyce,. Columbua.
Mamie
Buckley
as
co·
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Shuler.
hostess.
Rev. and Mrs. 0 . G.
Mrs. Buckley led the
McKinney are at their mobile
devotions
uiling the topic,
home at Maplewood l.A!ke for
"Faithfulness
In all Things".
the summer.
Readings
were
given and a
Mr. and Mrs . Herbert
Roush attended revival Bible quiz held, Devotions
meeting at Morgan Center closed with prayer. There
church Saturday and Sunday were 19 shut-in calls repor.evenings where the Rev. 0 . ted. A committee consisting
ICI
I
1" 1 CAltGOI11f.S
!D ) c' APilAL
MAINlt:NAN CE
t tHII L~MiiNl P£FI100, JU~Y 1, ii11 Tt11\0V011
G. McKinney was evangelist. of Patty Martin, Sandy
Rev. Edward Griffith Is Cowdery and Dorotha Riebel
l U/6\,/l'l.IV4S
ACCOVNI
TO SI'"No
NO l HF.IiF.
]~ J HJNDS
0S3 OQI
fOR TfH! FUJ\II OIU
back ·home after undergoing was appointed to arr1111ge a
•,
visit
to
a
nursing
home.
surgery at University
Refreshments were served
RUTLAND TOWNSHIP h2
Hospital. While recuperllng
TWP CL E RK
to
guests Mrs . leona Ruth,
he stayedwith Mr. 1111d Mrs.
MEIGS COUN T Y
Mrs.
Verna
Rose
and
Mrs.
Gary Griffith at Bashan.
RUTLAND OHIO 4177!
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Elleen Bibbee and Mrs.
Mugrage visited Mrs. Benny Alberta Edwards, Mrs. Dolly
Boggess one evening Reed , Mrs. Nell Wilson, Mrs.
Ullian Pickens, and those
recenUy.
Mr. and Mrs, Carl named. A game was enjoyed
Robinson of Norfolk, Va., with prizes awarded. Mrs.
i~~ IQ~na M. Swick
. ,. cop, ol t~l t •'I'Ofl, .,..
~~~aE==
aupoou•no Gt~twrntnla. Rrt 011tn lor publiC acrijtlnr
spent Saturday with Mr. lind Buckley won the door prize.
••_~iJien,~d.'-'0=
11.1'~---:-----:---:-Mrs. Herbert Shields and There will be no meeting in
. lE I "SI:iUA ...NC£9 tAtltt tu
fl I
lht IMlft\II Y gJ II"
'·"'i+±'""'-J
marlhl n~n · llltQnlniiii ii On • M &lt;11!,., tl el v ld f ~ ••q.O r tmtn l t lltled In P t~ l I of
visited Mr. 1111d Mrs. Charles July or August. The place of
r::'l:
rht rnr;tr~CIIQ"I •~ccnr~ • ~ll"\llhlt rtPO&lt;I woll bt complrl~ wit h by lhil &lt;f!IIP~I
Qll;l!nl!'l•l WI ~ ;illlittl\0 IMI I".Wt.." 'nl l ~ftCf ~ ~ MI IIIOA
Manuel, Mr. and Mrs. the September meeting wlll
Chri5sle Powell of R8clne and be announced . A white
. · William Smllh
---r.:~Oii;;---: ~
&amp;1~nalu r1 :rM.T.f(,IT.JTvta,l;t;r
elephant sale will be held at
Mrs. Bertha Robinson . · ·
Wi.IUam Smith, Pres.
6·
11 10T"U
that meeting.

•'

CSteatnboat Inn

Here's how it.works.
Choose your MF
tractor, then you're
entitled to buy an MF
rotary tiller for only $50.*

•
•

I

.Miss Quisenberry betrothed·

Teens plan ·outing

•

.;;::-

·rvmlf'Oy,
0. .

•

•
'

•
..

\

�9- The Datly Senttnel, Mtd&lt;Urpml-l'utllt'l " ' II , lt ltl,l\ , ,Jutll W l'l,lo
DICK TRACY

8- The Dally Sentmel, Mtddleporl·PUIIICJO) 0, f'nday , Jum· IH 197h

With the hope tt will, in some measure', foster and help sustam that
which 1s good in family and community ltfe , this feature is sponsored by
'the bust ness ftrms and organtzations whose names appear below

Honaon. Supt , Morning WO&lt;shtp,
II a m., Young ~OCIIle 't JO&lt;VIco,
7 p m ., Evonlng MrVI&lt;o, 7 30
p m , Wednesday Mtd -Wook
Prayer Service 7 30 p.m. Yru:'h
meetine. 6 30 p m. Evening vt\1' ·

I hlp , 7 30p

KINGSBURY HOME SALES
&amp; SERVICE, INC.

F

MEIGS TIRE CENTER, INC.

1Ht ~!N ES T IN MOBILE HOMES
1100 E. Matn
Pomeroy
Ph . 992-7034

PROMISE

Ph 992 2101

WILKINSON'S

214 E Matn

COMPLETE AUTOMOTIVE SER VICE
Locust &amp; Beech Sls. MtddleportPh 992 9921

BETSY ROSS BAKERY

Nattonw•de Ins Co of Col umbus, 0

It look s hke fun out std e A bnght happy, wonderfu l day - and a
pal to share 11 wtth A world of pron11sc
Whether tl ll\e s up 10 our ex pectatiOns deper" '

whal' s OU ISJd e than what s 1ns1dc, Human c hMac ter tends 10 · 11a'lC' the
events and expcnences of lt fe

MARK V STORE

lWIN CITY GATEWAY

Mtddleport, Ohto

Mtddleparl, Ohto
WE HANDLE ONLY
USDA Cj;jOICE ME A-TS

.

.

GOEGLEIN SAND &amp; GRAVEL

251-13

Ph 992 l2B4

Mtddleport

MIDWAY MARKET
BOB'S MARKET
.

am Chotr rehearsal

Tuesday

7 30 p m under dlrect10n ot Mrs
Paul Nease

POMEROY CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE Corner Umon and
Mulberry Rev Clyde V Hender
son pastor Sunday school 9 30
a m Glen McC lung supt morn
mg worship , 10 30 am a ... enlng
seNice 7 30 mtd week service
Wednesday 7 30 p m

GRACE EPISCOPAL The Rev
Harold Deeth rector Church sar
v1cas I 0 30 a m Holy commu
nlon first Sunday of month chur
ch school 10 30 o m for nursery
through 12

POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST
R1chard Evanson pastor Bible
school 9 30 a m , worsh•p 10 30
a m adult worsh1p serv1ce and
young peoples meeting 7 30
p m Combined B1ble study and
prayer meeting Wednesday 7 30

RUTLAND FREEWill BAPTIST

OLD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN
CHURCH Re'f' Ron Terry pastor
Mrs
Sunday school 10 a m
Worley Fronc11 supermtendenf
Mornmg worsh1p II a m Sunday
ll'o'Bmng sarvtce 7 30

GRAHAM UNITED METHODIST
Preaching 9 30 am f~rsf and u
cond Sundays of each month ,
th ird and fourth Sundays each
month worship service at 7 30
p m Wednesday evemngs at
7 30 Prayer and Bit:lle Study

SEVENTH DAY

ADVENTIST

Mulberry He1ghts Rood Pomeroy
Pastor , Gerard Seton , Sabbath
School Superlntandent
Clara
Mci ntyre Sabbath School Satur
day atternoon at 2 00 wtlh Wor
sh1p Serv1ce follow 1ng ot 3 15

RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHUR
pm
CH Rev Roger Ford Jr pas for
THE SALVATION ARMY Envoy Drewy Gore supt
Sunday
Ray W Wlnmg off~eer '" charge
10 a m , Holiness
Sunday
10 30 a m
Sunday
meet1ng
School Young Peoples Leg1on 7
p m Thursday 1 to 3 p m
Ladles Home League 7 p m Prep
clones

school , 9 30 a m
sh1p 10 45o m

morn1ng wor

Thursday evening prayer service

SACRED HEART Rev Father Dexter Rd Langsville Oh1o Rev
Paul D Welton pastor Phone Clyde Ferrell , Pastor Sunday
992 2825 Saturday evening Mou School II a m
Saturday
7 30 Sunday Mou, 8 and 10 am
preachtng serv•ces 7 30 p m
Conteuion, Saturday 7 7 30 p m Wltdnesday evening Btble study
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST Rev at730pm
Ralph Zundel , pastor William
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH
Watson Sunday school supt
Bailey Run Road , Rev Emmett
Sunday school 9 30 o m BYF b Rowson , pastor Handley Dunn
p m , Bible study Wednesday 7 supt Sunday school 10 o m Sun
p m choir practice Wednesday day eventng service 7 30, B1ble
830pm
teachtng 7 30 p m Thursday

BURLINGHAM CHURCH

Rev

FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, 282
Mulberry A ve Pomeroy Paul J
Wh ite Pastor Gory B9sham Sun
day school tupt Sunday school
9 30 a m , morning worsh1p
1030 evenmgworship 6 3Jp m
MklwHk prayer 1erv1c• 7 30

pm
FAIRPLAY CHAPEL located on

'

CHURCH

OF

CHRIST

DYESVILLE COMMUNITY CHUR
CH Roger C Turner pastor
Sunday school 9 30 a m Sunday
mormng worship 10 30 Sunday
evening service 7 30

THE SAlVATION ARMY

115

Butternut Alo'e Pomeroy Envoy
and Mrs Ray Wining off1cers '"
cha rge Sunday he linen meellng
10 a m Sunday school 10 30
a m Leader YPSM Ela11e Adg_ms
7 30 p m salvot1on meeting
ladles Home league 12 noon to 2
p m , Thursday prayer meeting
and B1ble study Thursday 7 30

Praise service

Thursday

7 30 Ruuell Young Sunday School
Supt Sunday School 9 30 a m
Eventng
worsh i p
7 30
Wednesday prayer meeting 7 30

pm
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF
GOO Rev George Otler pastor
Sunday tchool, 9 45 a m morn ing
preaching
11
a m
tvon~llstlc tervice , 7 30 p m
Prayer mHfing Tl'lursdoy, 7 30
pm
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH
OF CHRIST 200 W Main St , Jerry
Paul minister phone 992 7666
Contervahve non -instrumental

Sunday worahtp, 10 o m

Btble

pm
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF GOO
Racine Route 2 the Rev James
M Muncy poster Sunday school
9 45 a m , mormng worsh1p 11
a m , everung worthip , 7 30
Prayer meeting Tuesday 7 30
p m Young people s meet1ng
7 30 p m Tllursday

MIDDlEPORT FIRST BAPTIST

R:acme

I .

HARRISONVILLE

am Sunday school , lOam Mrs
Sampson Hall sup I
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD,
Rev James D Guynn pastor
Sunday school 10 a m Sunday
worsh1p II a m , Sunday evening
servtce, 7 p m , Wednesda~ worship service 7 30 p m

HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH ,
Near long Bottom Edsel Hart
pastor Sunday school 10 am
Church
1 30 p m
prayer
meetmg 7 30 p m Tllursday

MIDDLEPORT

THE STOR E WITH A HEAR T
Ph 949-2626

Ra e me

SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Rev Howard Sh1veley
Rev Steven W1lson
Re.., Zelia t&lt;ruszewski
BETHANY (Dorcas), Warsh1p

PENTECOSTAL , Practice Thursday 8 p m
LETART FALLS, Church School
1st 2nd 3rd Sundays 10 15 a m
&lt;4th Sunday 9 15 a m , Worahip
hi 2nd, 3rd Sundoyo 9 15 o m
4th Sundoy 7 30 p m
MORNING STAR, Worship 9 30
MIDDLEPORT FREEWill BAP o m , Churcll School 10 30 a m
liST Corner Ash and Plum Noel Mtd w..k Service Wednesday 8
Herrman, pastor Saturday even pm
mg strvice , 7 30 p m Sunday
MORSE CHAPEl Worshp II
School I 0 a m Sunday evening a m Church Scnooll 0 o m
worsh1p, 730p m
PORTLAND, Wouhop 7 :J0 p m
MEIGS
Church School 9 30 a m
COOPERATIVE PARISH
SUTTON , Church School 9 30
METHODIST CHURCH
a m Worship I stand 3rd Sundays
Robert T Bumgarner
10 30a m
O~rector
NORTHEASTCLUSTER
POMEROY CLUSTER
Rev Robert Meece

pm
RUTLAND

Jelfrey Gorber
Po1for Worsh1p 10 30 am Chur
ch School9 30 am
SYRACUSE ClUSTER
Rev Richard E Jor¥il
ASBURY , Worshtp II om Chur

ch S&lt;hool 9 50 o m UMW ltrsl
Tuesday

TRY IT ON

'

oGIR ~- l

YOU 5EfZ IT LL LEAVE
YOU FRE' o TO Cl tMB
AND AL50 HIDE YOUR

TH INK vou LL FIND
IT 5 JU5T WHAT

Wodnotdoy prayer "'"""~· 7 30
p m. youth Mrvic", Sunday, 7
p m , Sunday night wonhlp, 7.30.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE, Rov lloyd 0. Grimm,
Jr , pastor Sunday school, 9 :JO
o m.; worship service, 10 30 am
Broodcaotllvoovor WMPO, young

YOU Ro AF TI'R. :

RIGHT Q/'J ,
EA-"Y: YOU LOOK
LIKE YOU JU5T
CLI MBED DOW&gt;.!
FROM THE
TREE ,; :

WH OLE FA CE :

Camera 6 E¥enma Ed it ton w1th M artm Agronsky

(

THE 5AME
WA Y

WIN AT BR..l:. :D=-.:..
G_E_ _r_,d..:_"Y_Ju_ne_
IB
NT strain attacks duplicate

p•ople 's
serv ic e ,
6 45,
evangelistic tervlce, 7 30 p m

Syracuse

.

Tnursday, 7 p m

REMitJD lj()U Cf3J!_~~

•

9 30 o m morn1ng worsh1p and
communion , 10 30 am , Sunday
evening
youth
Chrtlflon
Endeavor, 6 30 p m , worsh1p ser
vice 7 30 p m Wednesdod even·
lng prayer meeting an Bible
study, 7 JOp m

ST JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH
Pine Grove The Rev William
Mtddleswarth, Pastor . Church
seNicea 9 30 o m Sunday School
10 XI am

BRADBURY

CHURCH

OF

CHRIST Kim Cole , patter kavm

Wednesday Bp m
LONG BOTTOM Worship
9o m , Sundoy School 9 45 o m
Prayer MHtmg Wednesday 7 30
pm
NORTH BETHEL Worship II
a m Church Sc:hool 10 a m

ALFRED Sunday School 9 45
a m , Worsh1p 11 a m Prayer
mHhng Wednesday 7 11115 p m ,
UMW Jrd Tuesdoy 8 p m

ORPHAN ANNIE-"AS THROUGH
BUT

HE WAS AN
EXPERT ON
I

1H~Y

GLASS DARKLY"

7 30

pm

Wednesday

11 am, Sundoy night sorvic"
ch.,.ttan Endoovor 7 30 p m
Sang Mrvtco 1 p m., Proochtng
e 30 p m Mldwook Prayer
7
moettng loy
, Wednotday
P m • Roy
Adams,
loodor

Roy Rouse pattor Robert

hening service, 7 p m

prayer

Brown, supply poator, Sunday
school 9 a m., Sundoy evening
worship 7p m

TUPPERS PLAINS CHRISTIAN
CHURCH , Eugone Underwood ,
Howard Caldwell,

Sundar School

II

.
,.

I .1st

Suuth

Ia

I ' ISS
I ) ISS
I '.I SS

~
I~

l A

~~~~~)1§1

I

A ( ~mo~ lh &lt;m rt•.tdt' r \.\ ,mt s to
knu\\ wlw t rs lll Cdll l bv suymg
thJI a hand

h ,JS cl poor bodv
Thrs meljns tlld l Its spot

AVENGED AND TEN TIMES
OVER - WI\R8UCK5 1 HIS
lOSS WOULD BE A
GREATER BLOW TO OUR
ENEMIES THAN TEN
FACTORIES ..

E'):PlOSWE:S'
HE. WOU lD
NOT HAVE
~N ACCIDEttT •

cdrds are hm ones
A t\ I) 4 I~ ¥ 4 12 + \ 2 "'" \ l ht! s
.r vc1v pour hml\ ( h,mgP th(•
sp.ldt•s IH A K 4 H7 .tiHI ~ lulls lu
K IH 11 r~ nd tht• h tnd hoi !\ ~ood

wc•tt

pli:i\CI ~

t h c~ t

h.JW found

tl III(' V mtJ kc 11 lot uf t11 ~k::i lit
th z ec noll ump t:o nlrat t
w tltC1' gel a good ma tc h pomt
PL~~.i.5 scon.• even II the no trump 1 onll d&lt;. I \\d S d poor on e
St:o: c lub s wheels tn &lt;J nd Js t~n
&lt;ontr de l t o get to tl Sou th
ll :-i
llldkt.• s l11 s nuJm ,li
rr spunsr ul I~\O dubs to tu s
P" rtn et s spodc opcmng II

Ari

NAlURf. 3

ti ll' sp&lt;~ d c

bul

lht• t tub s l c~ 111

tu r ubbe1 bndge IJI.Ivct s A
vuult. nl ~ II &lt;Jill dti&lt;Jt bi m,Ji t h
po rn\ d upl t&lt;&lt;Jt e pl,t\cr s c~ s

P.RHAf'S AM THA1 putnl

ks lh· ht•,tl.dl

still WfJUIHJ Up
\\llh .1 J&gt;IJI/1 stu rt Some how
or ot hc 1 .J lot ul jld ll s 1t•.rt hl'd

ol hlt

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~~~~~':':::':'::':":":'::' So m l'hO\\ u1 otht.Jt m,t tl h-

I-

5HALl BE

tJmh diHI 1s l,u s lron~c r
rDo you have a quest1on
lor th e experts? Wnte 'Ask
the Jacobys care of th1s
newspaper The Jacobys w111
answe r tndiVIdual questiOns
•I stamped sell addressed
envelopes are enclosed The
most mreres rmg quesr10ns
wrll be used m fh1s column
and wrll re ce rve cop1es of
JACOBY MODERN J

~
38 Flortda

~------------------I
Letlen of opiDion are welcomed. They sboald be
I less lban 300 wordo long (or be sabjeet to tetDclloa by
I tbe editor) and m111t be algaed wflll tile •lcnee'l 1111-

GASOLINE AI LEY

Jr ,

Supt : Sunday

Schoo , 9 30 a m , Morning S.r·
mon, 10 XI am Sunday evenIng aervlct, 7 p.m.

m

,8

I

'~-~-

I
I

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~Fdi~Dt

1 •• •
1
1

•

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•

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39 Becharm
40 Colonng
expert

DOWN
I " Mr Deeds "
dtrector
2 Any
Yesterday's Aoswer
Chmese
H Btography
24 Heavy book
native
by Hotchner 25 Ehte
3 Flowmg
( 2 wds 1
26 Terpstchtr
gown
(2 wds )
9 Cotton
rean
28
Verdi's
fabrtc
4 Snoop
10
Stgnify
'- Miller"
5 Potentially
16 German city 29 Do busmess
active
19 Disable
30 One quoted
6 Stde ·
22 Boundary
35 Tall tale
step
23 Clip
36 Total
1 Venttlate

w1tll " up"
24 "- on My
Hands"
25 Buddy
26 Ceylonese
vessel
27 Play wtlh

~~~~Br--------~=-~~~~~~-;--·r.-~~=7:=~~-;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~28Jeremtads
wvNvAAE YOU,

I GIVE HER A 3/4

,.

WHAMMY ' - SHE
PIJRPLEOLI6HTA SNAP
L.IPPE:D LITfL£
CUTA IT SOME- CREEP-To
TIM E NEXI
INTERFERE WITH

31 Eye

:13 Fondness
33

~~ style

35 " South

Amerlca,

" :n
(

Take It -"
Reddish
color

k + +--+-+-+-

()AlLY CRYI'TO(!l i OTE - llu ,,·, hrm tn
~

Is

1

DRINKS BEFORE

11

ON TJ-jE PlANE:. WHAT
I'D LIKE TO KNOW ,
MR HITCHCOCK

1.0:-;Gt'EI.I.OW

hmt s Each da' thr rndc It ltt•ts
!

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RLETMET - JVWYMI.HT
Yesterday's Cryptoquote : I CLAIM NOT TO HAVE CON·
TROLLED EVENTS BUT CONFESS PLAINLY THAT
EVENTS HAVE CONTROLLED ME - ABRAHAM LINCOLN

I

I
I

I

(C

To their so-called friends
To our so-called friends and neighbors, In and near the
Lortghollow area, where I live wtth my two teenage sons
We- the three of us - do not thank you citizens who ·helped
m anyway to destroy the lives of our two family pets.
Last February OIU' pet Peek-ka-poo dog lost an eye This
reqwred surgery at Dr . Theiss, offtce, Shade, Ohio . He
recovered, an1 1s domg fine.
Today our b1g white Angora mother cat was rushed to the
vet at Athens to have her leg amputated, because of a severe
blow of Wlknown origm.

1t

IOOAI&lt;DED .

I

Dear Sir·

\\utk

X l D J, II \ \ X It

One lelh.•r s1 mpl) s1and .. for ,molht·r In th r~.; ~.1m p h· A I S
used forth&lt;' th 1rc l. s X to 1 the t~n U s etc S1ngl£' l&lt;tters,
apostrophes the IC'ngth and rmma t1on nf th e \\onl ~ alP all

IM DEATHLY AFRAID . AND A COUPlE MORE
OF FLYING AN D I
HA D A COUPLE OF

6 3()-F un For Everyone 6, Summer Semester 8.
Treehouse Club tO, Kentucky Afield 13
7 oo-Salurday Report 3, AG USA 4, Eddie Saunders
6, Treehouse Cl ub 8, U S FMm Reporl 10,
Groovte Gooll es 13
7 3~Bu llwlnkl e 3. 1 Dream of Jeannie 4, Je lsons 6.
Vegelable Soup 15, Horlem Globetrollers Popcorn
Machine e, Man From COS I 10, Make A Wish 13,
Mister Rogers 20
B DO-Emergency Plus 4 3,4,15, Hong Kong Phooey
6, t3, Pebbles &amp; Bamm Bamm 8, tO, Sesame St 20
8 J~Josle &amp; I he Pussyca ls 3,4, IS Tom &amp; Jerry-Grape
Ape 6, 13, Bugs Bunny Road Runner e. Bugs Bunny
&amp; Friends to
9 QO-Secrel Lives of Waldo Kitty 3,4, 15, Elec Co 20
9 3~Pi n k Panl her 3,4, 15, Adventures of Gilligan 6, 13,
Scooby Doo, Where Are You 8, tO Mister Rogers 20
to o ~ Land ollhe Lost 3 4, 15, Super Friends 13 Hog
Dog 6, Shazam Isis a 10, Sesa me St 20
tO 3 ~ Run Joe Run 3,4 15 Big Blue Marbl e 6
t 1 o~ Relurn to the Plane! ollhe Apes 3,4 IS. Speed
Buggy 6, 13, Space Nuts 8, tO, Elec Co 20
II 3 ~Wes t w lnd 3,4, 15, Oddball Couple 13 , CBPA
Bowl ing 6 Ghosl Busllers 8 10, Mister Rogers 20
12 o~Jetsons 3,4, 15, Valley ol lhe Otnosuors 8, 10,
Acllon News for !&lt;Ids 13, Vegetoble Soup 20
12 Jt&gt;-Go USA 3 4,15 Ameri can Bandstand 13, Fat
Alber I 8,10
1 o~Davld Niven's World 3 Chomplons 4, Soul Tra in
6.. Children 's Film Fesllvo l 8,10, Wreslllng 15,
Lowell Thomas Remembers 33
t 3~G reatesl Sports Legends 3. Ja cques Cousleou
13 Tennis lor Everyone 33
2 oo-Grandsland 3,4,15 , That Good Ole Nashville
Music 6, World of Survival 8 Urban League 10,
Fami ly Theolre 33
2 15- Baseba l l 3,4,15
2 3~Minlalure Goll 6, Vlewpolnl 8 Movie " Lillie
Norse Prince ' 10, Fishing wllh Roland Marl in 13,
Valiant Years 33
3 o~Wide Worl d ot Sport s 6, 13, Overseas Mi ssion 8,
Family at War 33
3 3~Champlons 8
4 DO-U S Open 6,13 , Resourceful Wesl Vlrglnlo
33
4 3~U S Open 6 13 Sports Spec la cular 8 tO Lei's
Grow a Garden 33
5 o~FBI 3. Don Adams Screen Test 4, To Be An
nounced IS Whal' s Cooking 33
5 3~Adam 12 4. Guppies to Groupers 33
6 o~News 3, 4,a , tO , God Has the Answer 15, Mark ol
Jazz 33
6 3~NBC News 3.4,1S ABC News 13 . News 6 Rhodo
a. CBS News 10. Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33
7 DO-Wor ld al War 3, Lawrence Welk 4, Hee Haw 6 8
' Fir ing Line 33 , In The Know 10 . News maker '76 13,
Lawrence Wet k 15
7 3~Treasure Hunl 3 Lasl of the Wild tO, Wild
Kingdom IJ
a O~E m ergenc y' 3,415 , Good Heavens 6, 13, Jef
lersons B 10 Rivals of Sherlock HolrTJeS 33
a J~PI I ol 6,13 , Do c 8,10
9 o~Movl e "Charrot " 3,4 15 Coaches All Am erica
Fool ball Game 6, 13, Mary Ty ler Moore 8, tO, Auslln
City Llm ll s 33
9 J~Bob Newhart 8,10
10 O~Di nah Shore 8,10, Soundstage 33
I I O~ News 3,4,e,10,15, Janakl33
t I 15-PMA Pulse IS
11 3~Movle " This Is My Alfalr" 3. Friends 4, 15,
Movie "That Kind of Woman' B, Movie "Lisa" tO
12 o~ABC News 6, News 13
12 I S- Movi e "Ferry to Hong Kong" 6
12 3G-Movie " The Mad Doclor of Markel Streel" 13
1 o~Don Kirshner's Rock Concert 8
1 15- News 3
t JG-Movie " Welcome to Hard Times" to
1 45-Movle " Molher Wore Tights " 3
2 o~Movle "The Leech Woman" 13
3 15-Movle " Tobruk" 3
3 3~Movle "The Yellow Rolls Royce" 10
4 45-Movle " If I Had a Million" 3

32 One &lt;Fr I

MY

--------1

*'ell, Names may be wllllbeld .....,
....- pub"-"-.
...,.....,
However, 00 request, UIDel wlU be dllcloaed. Letten
should be
Cood taste, addreulllg l.uues, Dot -~
IODalllles,
,.....

county

fun spot
5 Vaulted
II Hebrew
lyre
12 Fl y
13 Be
merciful
14 Wtld
As1al1c
horse
15 Joe Col·
lege yell
16 FoW1dat10n
17 I love
(!.at )
18 Wtnd·
nower
20 CoUtde
Wtth
21 Rave
22 Smooth
consonant
23 Climb,

Howard

McCoy supt, Morning 1armon

pastor,

heJ rl Suuth \\.I s .rbl e to 1.1 kt•

Nuu ump1t1s ts not u miJnPd

second

Muuor, Sunday School oupl Sun
day ochool 10 :JO a tn worahlp
7 30
p m Btblo Study,
RACINE CHURCH OF THE WodnMday,
7,30 p.m., Saturday
NAZARENE Rov John A CoH ntghl prayorsorvlco, 7 tOp m
man, pastor Sunday School, 9 30
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN,
o m Gerald Wells supt Morn· Roger Watson , pallor, Wallace
lng worship 10 30 am , Su11day Bradford, supt
morning wor·
e\lenlng worship , 7 30. Prayer ship, 9 :JO church tehaot, 10.30,
mntlng Wednesduy 7 ~ p m
young people's mHtlng, 6.30
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST, Don l
p.m , evening worship , 7:30 p m ,
Walker , Pastor Ronnie Salser, Btblo study, Wodnotday , 7.30
Sunday school supt
Sunday p.m
scl'lool 9 30 o m , mornmg wor
MT UNION BAPTIST Rov R D

REEDSVILLE Sunday School9 JO sh1p 10 40 a m Sunday evening
a m Worship 7 30 p m , Prayer wanh•r. 7 30 Wednesday even·
Mooting 7 :JO p m Tuotday , UMW tng Bib ostudy, 7 :JO
7 30 p m hi Thursday
DANVILLE WESLEYAN , Rov
SILVER RIDGE Worshtp 10 a.m lelon Glosure pastor Sunday
Church School9 a m
S&lt;hool, 9 30 a m , youth and
TUPPERS PLAINS Worshtp 9 lunlor youth serv1ce, 6 45 p m
am Church School lOam ,
evening worthlp
7 JO p m
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST prayer ond praise Wednesday
George Frederick supt S•rvlce 7 30p m
weekly 9 30 a.m on Sunday
SILVER RUN FREE BAPTIST
Preachmg first ond th~rd Sundoys Miles Trout
pastor
Sunday
of month by CltHord Smith 9 30 school, lOam Steve Linle, supt
om
Evening service 7 p m , prayer
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION mooting Thursday 7 p m
Dorrell Ooddrill pastor Sunday
SILVER RUN FREE BAPTIST,

¥tce ,

meeting,

Sunday School 10 a m

Rev

11 WL• sl hc1rl lL·d " didlllllllll
Suu l)r wou ld 11!1\l' ht' l n ~t· t
But wht•n \\ ust op pn(• d .1

\ h

4
A\Ki lJh4
\ui lll South \lllllll

!'.......

" Dare to be a Daniel, Dare to stand alone
Dare to have a purpose firm, Dare to make 1t known "

King, Sundoy tchool oupt Sunday
sc~ool , 9 30 o m , wcrshlp aerI
vice 10 30 a m , Sunday !ler1
vices 7 p m , youth mHting,
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST,
W~nesday, 1 p m.
La&lt;ated Ol Rutland on N- Lima :
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST , Rov Rood,
no•l lo FarMI Aero Park, I

Pastor
Denn11Creegor,
Frnland Norris , pastor Sunday
Anoc . Mimster
school 10 am , Church seNice, 7
JOPPA Worship 10 am , Chur - p m Wednosdoy Blblo Study 7
ch School 9 a m. Prayer MHting pm

t \ KI I

• lj .,

Ht sf

6 oo-Summer SeiT\ester tO

\\h er L' llj)llll Su u th
JlH npt•d tu thr ee not r\llnp

a tp

M D I 1\-IOUbHT A.\A.'I BE"
!{OU L'D\Jt..D

SATURDAY , JUNE 19,1976

s p ~r d cs

SOl Ill

I CALHD TO

That is the kind of determination and piU'pOSe we need m
order
to serve God; a purpose so deep and fii'Til that we wtll he
Wodnoedoy 7 30 p m
UNITED
FAITH
NON w1llmg to lay our lives on the line for 1t, and stand by that '
DENOMINATIONAL Rov Robort purpose and make tl known to all about us - Floyd F Shook,
Smith pastor. Sunday School
9 :JO o m , Clan lead or Loo Hill, pastor, Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Church,
wontlip seN Ice, 10 30 a.m , chur·
ch730pm
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
CHRIST, Eldon R. Blako pastor
m1nlanary

I.M.; I
A Ill 11 r, 2
• j IJ j.!

olo fl

vice, Thursday 7 30 p m

given a brilliant performance, and after the concert he was
approached by a yolUlg adrmrer who sa1d how much he
would like to he able to play like that. The miiStCian assured
him lha t he could if he would practice faithfully every dAy lor
etght hours for 25 years. A purpose that ts deeply rooted ,
expresses the reason for one's exiStence, provides the
standard for d1sc1phne, and the mcenltve for personal
achievement.
When one ts committed to a purpose, that, purpose U!kes
on two bas1c steps . First, 11 milS! be clearly defmed m one's
own mind, and it miiSt be m specifiCS,
Second, that purpose must be clearly commwucated lo
every segment of the society m which one moves.
Daniel ts tin example of someone who illiiSirates these two
haste steps. In the first place, his belief and fwth m God was
absolute This resulted m a quality of personal holmess and
rtghteousness whtch is the charactertstic of all who claim to be
God's children. That deeply rooted purpose was then reflected
m his behavior and relationship to all men.
This very unportant text in the first chapter of Dante! IS
one lhat every CIVIC and offiCial and reltgious leader would do
weU to follow . BecaiiSe Dante! was a man of prmctpal and
resolute purpose, God honored hun and used him in an official ·
'
capacity This extended over three different kmgdoms

Racme

meet~ng,

No thmg hkt• 11 1.11 tppt'&lt; tled
to StiU III fl(' 1\,lllli.'d to pl,i\
ntJt tur rtp
,tn d SI IIIPJ
J&gt; IOll'l'd lng s ll\ t t.:spund1 n g
two dt.llllon ds NO! th 1elm! Ins

\'I ~I
I I
y II Ill H I
f l/ ill XI !.

Purposes are vttaUy unportant, You can be what you want

949-2020

prayer meeting 7 30 p m

A \1\.Kh~

• 1\ 'i 4

a

' BORN LOSER

Will 11\.lkl'

I I It u ks

••

ScrtptiU'e Daruel1.8 "But Dante! purposed m hts heart that
he would not defile hunself • . "

TV &amp;APPLIANCE
GAS SERVICE

Chester
9BS-3307

sp:.nlt•"' tht· dt•&lt; 1.11 cr

,.lJ il~

" A MAN WITH APURPOSE"

Ph 992-397B

RIDENOUR

i\lor th .rn d Sou th p l.n• tn

lfl

\1111'111 111 1

IT'S bi..AD-/S

76 Years on

Pres1dents

slA H AND I

the sermonette

Gerald &amp; Melva Elbln, Owner
Open Blo 7 datly · 12 SSun
Ruff and
Ph . 742 2424

FOREST RUN, Worship 9 am.
Church School 10om UMW third
wtdnosday 7 30 p m
MINERSVIllE Worship 10 om
Church School 9 o m UMW third
Monday 7 30 p m
School
9 30 a m
leonard M1les Trout pastor
Sunday
SYRACUSE Chruch School 9 J0 G•lmore first elder e\lening ser school lOam Sfevet,•tle ,supt

a m Worsh•p ,.serviCe 7 30 p m

, CAPTAIN EASY

o.m ,

News 10

Camera 13, Family Altai r 15, Ohio Journal 20
7 3~ Porler Wagoner 3, Treasure Hunt • Candid

ACROSS

MT MORIAH CHURCH OF GOO,
CHESTER CHURCHOF GOD.
Racme Route 2 The Rev Charles Rev Bobby Porter, pastor Sun·
Hand pastor Sunday school 9 11115 day school, 9.30 o m , wcratllp
a m morning worsh 1p, 11 a m
9 :JO o m Church School I 0 30 Evening servlcea, Tuesday and serviCe 11 a m evening service.
7 30, youth service Wednesday,
om
Froday 7 30 p m
7:Jilpm
CARMEL Chruch School 9 :J0
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHUR
a m Worsh1p 10 30 a m 2nd end OF CHRIST
Doug Seomon CH Ted Jones, pastor Sunday
4th Sundays
minister B1ble study 9 30 am ,
APPLE GROVE, Sunday School morn.ng worship , 10 30 a m , school, 9 30 o m Roy Sigmon,
sup!
morning wortlllp 10 30,
9 30 a m Worsh1p 7 30 p m hf evening worship
7 30 p m Sunday evening service, 7 30,
and 3rd Sunclays Prayer meeting Wednesday Blbl01ludy, 7 30 p m
mid week service, Wednesday,
Wednesday 7 30 p m Fellowship
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST,
supper f~rst Saturday 6 p m UMW George Frederick supt Sunday 7:Jilpm
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE
2nd Tuesday 7 30 p m
mormng seNice 9 30 o m with
EAST LETART Chruch School preoclllng on first and th1rd Sun NAZARENE, Rov . Dolo Boll,
pastor
Bob Moore, Sunday
ht 2nd 3rd Sundays 9 30 a m day of month by George Plchens
School tupt., Sunday school
Fourth Sunday 10 30 a m War
STIVERSVILLE COMMUNITY
1h1p 2nd Sunday 7 30 p m 4th CHURCH, Sunday School service, clatses far all ages , 9:30 a m .
morning worsh ip 10 45 a m ,
Sunday 9 30 a m Prayer meeting 10 am
Prayer meeting
Wednesday 7 30 p m UMW I st Thursday 7 p m Sunday evening NYPS, 6 30 p m , evangelistic ser
\liCe
7 30 p m Prayer and
Tuesdoy7 30p m
SeNICe, 7 p m
fasting
Tuesday , 10 om .
WESlEYAN (Roctno) Sunday
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST Mtdweek
prayer
tervlce,
School 10 a m Worsh•p 11 a m
Pomeroy Harrisonville Rd Mike
Jr UMYF Wednesday 3 :J() p m Girton, pastor Bill McElroy, Sun · Wodnoadoy, 7 :JO p m mon's
81ble Study Thursday 7 p m Choir doy school supt Sunday,.. school prayer mHtlng, Soturdoy, 1 p m .,

Third A\le the Re'l William Kmttel pas tor Ronald Dugan Sun·
day School Supt Clones for all
ages even1ng ser..lce 1 30, Bible
study Wednesday 7 ~ p m
youth services, Friday 7 30 p m

Rev Robert Hayden
Rev D Wm Sydenstrlcker

Weather 33

I Sll!llTTle r

RACINE PLANING MILL

Ph 949 9130

oo- ~onanza J ,

Partridge Family a. Mission lm
posSible IS
5 31&gt;-Adam 12 4, News 6 Fami ly All air 8 Etec Co
20,33, Adam 12 13
•
6 00-News 3,4,B, 10, 13, IS, ABC News 6, Zoom 20,33
6 31&gt;-NBC News3,4,15. ABC News 13, Andy Gllltth 6,
CBS News B, lO , Hodgepodge Lodge 20 .
Carrasco lendas 33
7 oo-Truth or Cons 3, Ameri can Li te Styl e 4,
BowllnQ for Dollars 6, Space 1999 8. Avlolion

.

SALEM STREET MARKET

'"

PRESBYTERIAN , Re v
Ernest
Str1dd1n pastor Sunday church
school 9 30 a m Mrs Homer
Lee supt , morrnng worsh1p

11

;

by THOMAS JOSEPH

Keepsake Diamond RmQs
Pomeroy
Ph 992 3785

Ph . 992 3a63

RACINE FOOD MARKET

am
morntng worship 10 30
a m
Sunday
evongelis
meetmg , 7 30 p m
Prayer
meetln9 , Wednesday 7 30 p m
Dwtght l Zov11I d1rector

service

1u. S1&gt; ooo Pyramtd tV, Pop l.&gt;oe the Country IS.
Black Perspective on the News 33
8 00 Santord &amp; Son 3 IS Donny &amp; Marte 6, 13,
Baseball 4, Julie on Sesame St 8, Washlnglon
wee~ tn ~ evlew 20,33, Presldenls 76 Years on
Camera 10
8 3 The Prac ti ce 3, Oral Roberts' We the People IS.
Watt Slreel Week 20,33
9 oo-Rock lord Fl ies 3. Movie 'Th e Culpepper Callie
Co" 8, tO, FIring Line 20. Maslerplece Thea Ire 33
10 oo-Poll ce Slory 3, I S, New s 20. Paul Nuchlms 33
tO 3~U S Open 6, 13, NFL Action 76 4, Avia tion
Wea ther 20
11 oo- News 3,4,6,8 10,13 15 ABC News 33
11 3 Johnny Carson 3,4, 1S. Rookies 6, 13. Movie
" Sailor Beware" 8 Movie 'Thin Air" 10, Janak!
33
12 40- Don Kirshner's Rock Concert 6, Wrestling 13
1 oo-Mtdnlghl Spe clal 3,4 15, Mov te ' Mul lny In Outer
Space ' tO
I 4 ~ N e ws 13
2 3~ N ews 3
3 O~ Movle " Breakout" J
4 I S- Sal nl J
5 IS- Movie ' It ' s a Gill 3
6 3~Green Acres 3

FRIDAY , JUNE 11, 1976

to be 1f you are prepared to pay the prtce. Afamous p1antst had

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE Rev Don Co le ,
pas for Mrs Mary Lathey Sunde y
school sup! Sunday school 9 JO

UNITED PRESBYTERIAN
MINISTRY OF MEIGS COUNTY

•.

AND DIU A Nli'I'IBER.' '

212 E Matn Sl

ROSEBERRY'S SERVICE CENTER

dleport Sth and Mom George
Glore miniSter James Skeet I
supenntendent B•ble school 9 :J()
am
mornmg worsh1p 10 :J()
om
evemng worsh1p 7 30
prayer
ser'f'ICB,
7 p mn.
Wednesday

Meigs County Rood 1 off either
CHESTER Worship 9 IS om
325 or 124 Pastor, Rev Ttleron pm
Church School lOam
Durham Sunday School 10om
MIDDLEPORT
POMEROY Worship, 10 30 o m
worthlp ter..lce, 7 30 p m Sun
MT MORIAH BAPTIST Corner Church S&lt;hool 9 15 am UMYF
day Prayer mHiing Tuesday Fourth and Mom, Middleport
6JOpm
7 30 p m youth service 1 30 Re... Henry Key , Jr pastor Sun
ENTERPRISE, Worship 9 a m
p m Friday
day School 9•30 a m Mn Er..in Church School tOo m
RUTLAND APOStOliC CHURCH Baumgardner, supt
Morn1ng
ROCK SPRINGS Worship 10
OF JESUS CHRIST Thomas L worthlp 10 "'5 a m
a m Church School 9 a m UMYF
Holmes
pastor Btble study
JEHOVAH S WITNESSES, Lorry 630pm
Soturdoy
7 30 p m
Sunday Carnahan presiding miniSter
FLATWOODS Worship I I om
school 10 am , Evangeltst1c ser Sunday Bible lec:ture 9 30 a m
Church
S&lt;hool 10 a m
v1c• , 7 30 p m Sunday
Watchtower study 10 30 am
MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
POMEROY
WESLEYAN Tuesday, Btble study 730 p m
Rev Robert Bumgarner
HOLINESS CHURCH, Harrlsonv1lle Thursday m1nlstry School 7 30
HEATH
, Worship I 0 30 o m
Rev
O'Dell Manley
Pastor p m serv1ce meetm; 8 30 p m
Church S&lt;hool 9 JO a m UMYF 6

Henry Eblin Sundoy ,$&lt;hoot Supt
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF
Sunday School 9 30 a m Evening CHRIST IN CHRISTIAN UNION
worship 7 30 p m Prayer and Lawrence Manley pastor Mrs

Pomeroy

worship

•

Television log for easy vzewzng

THE MOST WONDERFUL
GROUP WAS IN HE R~

K&amp;C JEWELERS

THE ATHENS COUNTY SAVINGS
&amp; LOAN CO.
296 W Second

Ruttall, Sr , minister

Rev James H. Leach, pastor Sun-

MEIGS COUNTY BRANCH

Ml d

10 JO
MIDDLEPORT Sunday school
THE HilAND CHAPEL George 9 30 a m RIChard Vaughan supt
Casto pastor Sunday School , Mornmg worship 10 30
9 30 a m e"ening worsh1p 7 30
AYRACUSE Morning worship 9

7J0pm
ST PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH,
RACINE APOSTOliC CHURCH
Corner of Sycamore and Second E'f'angellstlc ser\lice Sunday 7 30
Sh Pomeroy The !lev W1lham p m , prayer meeting Tuesday,
M iddleswortl'l Pastor
Sunday 7 JO p m Bible Study Thursday
School at 9 45 a m and Church 7JOpm
Services 11 a m
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CENTER

Bobby Elkins patter Sunday
school 10 a m worsh1p serv1ce
11 am and 7 p m Wednesday
ev•nlng service 7 p m

'l

Mtddleport, Ohto

Mason ,

Ph 773-5721

INDU STR IAL &amp; COMMERCIAL
Ph 446 0963 AddiSon, OhiO Ph 992 6173

doy School WMPO Rodlo pr0
gram 7 &lt;45 o m Sunday Sclloo•I.
9 15 am
Mormng Wor~h1
10 15 a m Youth aCt!'o'ltleS anpd
fellowship for jUniOr and sen1 or
h1gh students 6 p m Sunde
even mg worship 7 30 p m M1
week
prayer
se r v1ce
Wednesday 7 30 p m

RALL'S BEN FRANKLIN STORE

Pomeroy,

Ph 992 2S82

AMERICAN PAINTING CO.

Corner Sl)(th and Palmer theRe v
Peter Grandal pastor Donn y
Thompson supermtendent Su n

Sunday 1choo l 10 am mornmg
ser\IICI II a m Sunday eventng
ser\IICe 7 30 p m Wednesday B1
ble study 7 30 p m

THE DAILY SENTINEL
Dedtealed to the Interests of
Metgs Mason Area
Phone 992-2156

FRESH PRODUCE&amp; PLANTS
2 CONVENIENT MARKETS

I,.:Opyr~gnJ 19761(esler AC!ver11smg Se!VIce Inc S11asblll9 \11rgon.a

worsh1p b p m
Wednesday Bible study 7 p m

TWO LOCATIONS
39 N Second Sl
Mtddleparl. 0
46 Court St
Gallipolis, 0 .
.

To dtscover all the Promtse m thts world the soul mu st begm by
realtzmg the promtses of God

TRINITY CHURCH , Rev W H study 11 a m

Pomeroy

DUDLEY'S

LOUI S W OSBOR NE
no E Matn
Pomeroy
Ph 992 2178

Saturday
Matthew

As a wmdow let s l 1ght reach mstde , the teachmg of moral and
reltgtou s truth lets fatth f1nd tl s nghtful place m each youthful heart

WE FILL DOCTORS
PRESCRIPTIONS

W Vtt

SEAR'S CATALOG MERCHANT

Mark
13 33·37

O\

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE PHARMACY
992-29SS

Tuesday
Psalms
146 7 10

Fr~day

Our tremendous re sponstb titl) as parents tS to nurture,, human
soul , foster ti s spmtual growth , culll\ate the cructal development
our chtld' s character

Huntmgton ,

Thursday
Luke
12 35·48

s on

m 23t8

BA KERS OF GOOD BREAD

Wednesday
Ezek1el
3 16·21

A s the future unfolds m e~erv hi e 11 looks hk e a world of

Ph

BAKER S OF GAY90 BREAD
Mtddteporl
Ph 992-3030

HEINER'S BAKERY

Monday
Psalms
126 1·6
1

Pomeroy

e04 W Matn

OF

I

r.

Prayor mMfing, Wednotdoy, 7.30
p m , Missionary meetlnv. 7 30
p m, first Wodnoedoy al month.
MASON COUNTY
MASON FIRST BAPTIST, Second
William Roush, pastor Denny and Pomeroy Sts , Stan Craig,
Evans Sundar. School Director. pastor . Sunday tchool, 9 o15 a.m 1
Sunday Schoo , 9 30 o m , Morn· worttlip tervlce, 11 a m , training
Ing worship, 10 30 am., Sunday union 6 30 p.m.; evening worevening service 7 p m ship 10rvlco 7 30 p m. Mid Wool&lt;
Wedneaday evening prayer ser· prayer service, W«&lt;nesday 1 30
\Iicea, 7·30 p m
pm,
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST, R1111. Earl
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, P
Shuler , pastor Worship service 0 . to• 487 Mlllor St. Maoon, W.
9·30 a m. Sunday tchool, IO.:JO Va. Sundoy Blblo Study 10 a m ,
o m Blblo Study and proyor tor· Wonhlp 11 a m. and 7 p m Blble
vice Thursday. 7 30 p m
Study Wednoedoy 7 p.m., Vocol
1
CARLETON CHURCH , Klngabury mutlc
Rood Gory King pastor Sunday
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST Cor·
school, 9 30 a m , evening wor - ner of Second and Anderton,
ship, 7 30 p.m Prayer mHtlng, Moton Pastor, Wollor Cloud
Wednotday, 7.30p.m.
Sunday tchool 9 45 a m , wonlilp
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN , tervlce, 11 o.m and 7 30 p m.
Bruce Smith, PQ&gt;tor Wallaco Wooldy Btblo otudy Wodnotdoy,
Da.,.wood, Supl Bible School, 7:Jilpm
9 30 a m Preaching service ,
MASCH ASSEMBLY OF GOD,
10 -45 a m. No evening service.
Dudding lano, Moton , W Va,
HYSEll RUN FREE METHODIST ChMter T•nnant, Paator Sundav
CHURCH, Rov Paul N011illo, School 9 45 a.m. Chtldren 1 Chur·
po1tor. Sunday School 9 30 a.m , ch 6.45 p m Young POCjlle's Sor·
Morning seN Ice, 10 30 a m
vice lt·..S p m Evangoltlltc Sor·
youth
urvice , ~ "'5 p m vice 7.30 p m Women 1 Mit·
Evangell•tlc qrvlce 7.30 p.m. slonary Council I 0 a m first and
Prayer mHtlng, Thursday, 7 30 third Tuoodoys. Pray•• and Btblo
pm
Study, Wednoedoy, 7 :JO p m
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION of
HARTFOIID CHURCH OF CHRIST
Bald Knob Rov E J Griffith IN CHRISTIAN UNION, Tho R1111
supt of church, Rev L. R. William Compboll pastor. Sunday
Gluesencamp, patter, Roger School, 9 30 a m ; James Hughes
Wtllfrod, Sr , Sunday Schooltupt tupt., evening servlc•. 7·'¥J p m,
Sunday School, 9 30 a.m., prayor Wednesday evening prayer
mooting Tuotday 7 :JO p.m m-tlng, 7 30 p m Youth prayer
youth mHting, 6 p m Sunday service eoch Tuetday
Leaders Ada Van Meter and Gret
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH.
to Suttle Sunday evening wor- letart W Vo , Rt 1, Rev George
ship 7 p m through winter mon- Hotchar, paator Sunday School
lho
9 30 a.m Proyor and 81blo study
MT HERMON CHURCH Of THE 7 30 p m Cottage Prayer Service
UNITED BRETHR~N IN CHRIST, Tuotdoy, 10 om, Worahlp Sor·

ELLIS &amp; SONS SOHIO

--

meeting ,

Rl&lt;k Mocombor, supt. Sunday
school , 9 30 am , wonlllp servlco, 10·30 am Btblo Study,
Tuotdoy, 7.30p.m.
REORGANIZED CHURCH Of
JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER DAV
SAINTS. Portland Rodno Rood

Rac1ne, Ohto

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
Sunday
Psalms
107 1·9

Charles

Open 81o s- Closed Thurs

GROCER IE S &amp; GENERAL
I.
M ERCHANDI SE
Raclhe
Ph. 949 2550

Prayer

day School 9:30 o.m., morning
church I0 30 a m • Sunday even
Ing service , 7 30 p. m
Wodnoaday sorvlco, B p m,
LAUREL CLIFF FREE MfTHOOIST
CHURCH, R1111 Floyd F. Shook,
pastor, lloyd Wright, Sunday
School Supl : Mamlng Worship
9 30 am ., 5!tnday School 10 20
o.m., Wednoedoy Proyor and II·
blo Study 7 30 p m , Sunday
0\lontng worship 7 :JO p m.: Choir
Procttce Thursday, 7 p.m
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST

PAUL'S BARBER SHOP

Ph 992 S130

Pomeroy

upt

CHRIST , Jock Perry , mlnltter Sun

Call949-2838 For An Appointment
Racme, Ohto

• WAID CROSS SONS STORE

9 15 am , worstHp serv~ee 10 30

I

WodnMday, 7 30p .m,
BRADFORD CHURCH

LINDA'S LADY FAIR BEAUTY SALON

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE
SERVICES

doy school supt Church School,

.

Mtddlepart, Ohio

'HEll' DEALER
Rae me
Ph 949 28B2

Thtrd Sl

Perrin, pastor Roy Moyer Sun

pastor Wor~hlp MNice, 11 a m

and 7·:J() p m, Sunday . Sunday
School 9 30 a.m Richard lorton

Pomeroy

BIG JIM'S PLAZA

RACINE PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

Swptc11es selected by The Amencan BOle SocJely

John F Full!

.
SMALL ENGINE SA LES &amp; SERV IC E
49B Locust Sf
Moddleport Ph 992 3092

promiSe

m
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE. A"" Horberl Grato,

day tchaot, 9 30 a m , Rua•ll
Spencor, aupt., w...hlp .... tee.
I 0 45 o m ; Evening _..,lp
altornallng with C E. at 7·30 p m
on Sunday Proyor meotlng, 7 30
m Wodnotday, Alfrod WoKo
ay loader.
WHITES CHAPEL Coolvtllo RD
R1111 Roy Deotor , po1tor. Sundey'
1Chool9.30am -•hlp~
10:30 a m, Bible sflldy and proy01
Mrvice, Wednotday, 7 30p.m :
RUTLAND
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Carl Pook pastor, Bill lr-n.
Sunday tchool tupt Sunday
tchool 9 30 a.m.; _..,lp ond
commuqlon, 10·30 a m. Ewnlna
IOI'VI&lt;o, 7 30 p m. Regular boord
moellng, Saturday, 7 p.m.
RUTLAND COMMUNITY CHUR·
CH, Sunday School 9:30 a.m.:

e

TH' PARSON 'S
WIFE WILL II

BE HERE

....,._, ,

AUNT LOWEEZ.\f..
HAVE \fOU SEEN
MY SLING SHOT?

1976 Kin&amp;

~uturu

Syndtcall' Inc I

III

LJ I

~[
..:N.:.:Av:D~IJ;.rf:.:C=-tr-,--,-,

I I I
~~t:,~,.j:'::==-~~·::;:::·=~·
r

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Now arranr• tht circled lelttrt
to form the .urprile •nnn:r. u
suneeLtd by the abo•t cartoon.

1· PrittlikStM~mwEum I "D-r XI )-0"
Jiirnl.t .. ~ CHESS

HURRY

FAULTY

\ ..\11n•• r

\ lWH tiiM flll h11lt l 11hulllli IHII t 11/lt e1 11 / mu
111 1111 h wunr - GUEST

THAR
IT IS!!
I

AUTHORITIES
ADMITTED

ENNVSECONT
AN'--

TO

6EIN6

PUZZLED"

LET ART FALLS UNJTED
BRETHREN Rov FrHial)d Norris,
pa1tor Floyd Norrla supt Sunday
school, 9:30 o m : morntng ter Please, dear cillzeTUl, don't take your spite out on our
mon I0 30 a m. Prayer Hrvlce, family pets - because we love them, They did you no harm
Wodnosdoy 7 30 p m
If ?fOU must hate, hate me, not our family pets They don't
CHESHIRE CHURCH OF GOD OF
PROPHECY G P. Smith pastor destre tt and can't fight back. - Sylvia C Cannan and sons
Sunday School 10 o m , Arthur Rruc.oe and Don.

\

'

EULOGY

l r"lr r ib ~ "

•,

''

�9- The Datly Senttnel, Mtd&lt;Urpml-l'utllt'l " ' II , lt ltl,l\ , ,Jutll W l'l,lo
DICK TRACY

8- The Dally Sentmel, Mtddleporl·PUIIICJO) 0, f'nday , Jum· IH 197h

With the hope tt will, in some measure', foster and help sustam that
which 1s good in family and community ltfe , this feature is sponsored by
'the bust ness ftrms and organtzations whose names appear below

Honaon. Supt , Morning WO&lt;shtp,
II a m., Young ~OCIIle 't JO&lt;VIco,
7 p m ., Evonlng MrVI&lt;o, 7 30
p m , Wednesday Mtd -Wook
Prayer Service 7 30 p.m. Yru:'h
meetine. 6 30 p m. Evening vt\1' ·

I hlp , 7 30p

KINGSBURY HOME SALES
&amp; SERVICE, INC.

F

MEIGS TIRE CENTER, INC.

1Ht ~!N ES T IN MOBILE HOMES
1100 E. Matn
Pomeroy
Ph . 992-7034

PROMISE

Ph 992 2101

WILKINSON'S

214 E Matn

COMPLETE AUTOMOTIVE SER VICE
Locust &amp; Beech Sls. MtddleportPh 992 9921

BETSY ROSS BAKERY

Nattonw•de Ins Co of Col umbus, 0

It look s hke fun out std e A bnght happy, wonderfu l day - and a
pal to share 11 wtth A world of pron11sc
Whether tl ll\e s up 10 our ex pectatiOns deper" '

whal' s OU ISJd e than what s 1ns1dc, Human c hMac ter tends 10 · 11a'lC' the
events and expcnences of lt fe

MARK V STORE

lWIN CITY GATEWAY

Mtddleport, Ohto

Mtddleparl, Ohto
WE HANDLE ONLY
USDA Cj;jOICE ME A-TS

.

.

GOEGLEIN SAND &amp; GRAVEL

251-13

Ph 992 l2B4

Mtddleport

MIDWAY MARKET
BOB'S MARKET
.

am Chotr rehearsal

Tuesday

7 30 p m under dlrect10n ot Mrs
Paul Nease

POMEROY CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE Corner Umon and
Mulberry Rev Clyde V Hender
son pastor Sunday school 9 30
a m Glen McC lung supt morn
mg worship , 10 30 am a ... enlng
seNice 7 30 mtd week service
Wednesday 7 30 p m

GRACE EPISCOPAL The Rev
Harold Deeth rector Church sar
v1cas I 0 30 a m Holy commu
nlon first Sunday of month chur
ch school 10 30 o m for nursery
through 12

POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST
R1chard Evanson pastor Bible
school 9 30 a m , worsh•p 10 30
a m adult worsh1p serv1ce and
young peoples meeting 7 30
p m Combined B1ble study and
prayer meeting Wednesday 7 30

RUTLAND FREEWill BAPTIST

OLD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN
CHURCH Re'f' Ron Terry pastor
Mrs
Sunday school 10 a m
Worley Fronc11 supermtendenf
Mornmg worsh1p II a m Sunday
ll'o'Bmng sarvtce 7 30

GRAHAM UNITED METHODIST
Preaching 9 30 am f~rsf and u
cond Sundays of each month ,
th ird and fourth Sundays each
month worship service at 7 30
p m Wednesday evemngs at
7 30 Prayer and Bit:lle Study

SEVENTH DAY

ADVENTIST

Mulberry He1ghts Rood Pomeroy
Pastor , Gerard Seton , Sabbath
School Superlntandent
Clara
Mci ntyre Sabbath School Satur
day atternoon at 2 00 wtlh Wor
sh1p Serv1ce follow 1ng ot 3 15

RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHUR
pm
CH Rev Roger Ford Jr pas for
THE SALVATION ARMY Envoy Drewy Gore supt
Sunday
Ray W Wlnmg off~eer '" charge
10 a m , Holiness
Sunday
10 30 a m
Sunday
meet1ng
School Young Peoples Leg1on 7
p m Thursday 1 to 3 p m
Ladles Home League 7 p m Prep
clones

school , 9 30 a m
sh1p 10 45o m

morn1ng wor

Thursday evening prayer service

SACRED HEART Rev Father Dexter Rd Langsville Oh1o Rev
Paul D Welton pastor Phone Clyde Ferrell , Pastor Sunday
992 2825 Saturday evening Mou School II a m
Saturday
7 30 Sunday Mou, 8 and 10 am
preachtng serv•ces 7 30 p m
Conteuion, Saturday 7 7 30 p m Wltdnesday evening Btble study
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST Rev at730pm
Ralph Zundel , pastor William
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH
Watson Sunday school supt
Bailey Run Road , Rev Emmett
Sunday school 9 30 o m BYF b Rowson , pastor Handley Dunn
p m , Bible study Wednesday 7 supt Sunday school 10 o m Sun
p m choir practice Wednesday day eventng service 7 30, B1ble
830pm
teachtng 7 30 p m Thursday

BURLINGHAM CHURCH

Rev

FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, 282
Mulberry A ve Pomeroy Paul J
Wh ite Pastor Gory B9sham Sun
day school tupt Sunday school
9 30 a m , morning worsh1p
1030 evenmgworship 6 3Jp m
MklwHk prayer 1erv1c• 7 30

pm
FAIRPLAY CHAPEL located on

'

CHURCH

OF

CHRIST

DYESVILLE COMMUNITY CHUR
CH Roger C Turner pastor
Sunday school 9 30 a m Sunday
mormng worship 10 30 Sunday
evening service 7 30

THE SAlVATION ARMY

115

Butternut Alo'e Pomeroy Envoy
and Mrs Ray Wining off1cers '"
cha rge Sunday he linen meellng
10 a m Sunday school 10 30
a m Leader YPSM Ela11e Adg_ms
7 30 p m salvot1on meeting
ladles Home league 12 noon to 2
p m , Thursday prayer meeting
and B1ble study Thursday 7 30

Praise service

Thursday

7 30 Ruuell Young Sunday School
Supt Sunday School 9 30 a m
Eventng
worsh i p
7 30
Wednesday prayer meeting 7 30

pm
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF
GOO Rev George Otler pastor
Sunday tchool, 9 45 a m morn ing
preaching
11
a m
tvon~llstlc tervice , 7 30 p m
Prayer mHfing Tl'lursdoy, 7 30
pm
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH
OF CHRIST 200 W Main St , Jerry
Paul minister phone 992 7666
Contervahve non -instrumental

Sunday worahtp, 10 o m

Btble

pm
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF GOO
Racine Route 2 the Rev James
M Muncy poster Sunday school
9 45 a m , mormng worsh1p 11
a m , everung worthip , 7 30
Prayer meeting Tuesday 7 30
p m Young people s meet1ng
7 30 p m Tllursday

MIDDlEPORT FIRST BAPTIST

R:acme

I .

HARRISONVILLE

am Sunday school , lOam Mrs
Sampson Hall sup I
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD,
Rev James D Guynn pastor
Sunday school 10 a m Sunday
worsh1p II a m , Sunday evening
servtce, 7 p m , Wednesda~ worship service 7 30 p m

HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH ,
Near long Bottom Edsel Hart
pastor Sunday school 10 am
Church
1 30 p m
prayer
meetmg 7 30 p m Tllursday

MIDDLEPORT

THE STOR E WITH A HEAR T
Ph 949-2626

Ra e me

SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Rev Howard Sh1veley
Rev Steven W1lson
Re.., Zelia t&lt;ruszewski
BETHANY (Dorcas), Warsh1p

PENTECOSTAL , Practice Thursday 8 p m
LETART FALLS, Church School
1st 2nd 3rd Sundays 10 15 a m
&lt;4th Sunday 9 15 a m , Worahip
hi 2nd, 3rd Sundoyo 9 15 o m
4th Sundoy 7 30 p m
MORNING STAR, Worship 9 30
MIDDLEPORT FREEWill BAP o m , Churcll School 10 30 a m
liST Corner Ash and Plum Noel Mtd w..k Service Wednesday 8
Herrman, pastor Saturday even pm
mg strvice , 7 30 p m Sunday
MORSE CHAPEl Worshp II
School I 0 a m Sunday evening a m Church Scnooll 0 o m
worsh1p, 730p m
PORTLAND, Wouhop 7 :J0 p m
MEIGS
Church School 9 30 a m
COOPERATIVE PARISH
SUTTON , Church School 9 30
METHODIST CHURCH
a m Worship I stand 3rd Sundays
Robert T Bumgarner
10 30a m
O~rector
NORTHEASTCLUSTER
POMEROY CLUSTER
Rev Robert Meece

pm
RUTLAND

Jelfrey Gorber
Po1for Worsh1p 10 30 am Chur
ch School9 30 am
SYRACUSE ClUSTER
Rev Richard E Jor¥il
ASBURY , Worshtp II om Chur

ch S&lt;hool 9 50 o m UMW ltrsl
Tuesday

TRY IT ON

'

oGIR ~- l

YOU 5EfZ IT LL LEAVE
YOU FRE' o TO Cl tMB
AND AL50 HIDE YOUR

TH INK vou LL FIND
IT 5 JU5T WHAT

Wodnotdoy prayer "'"""~· 7 30
p m. youth Mrvic", Sunday, 7
p m , Sunday night wonhlp, 7.30.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE, Rov lloyd 0. Grimm,
Jr , pastor Sunday school, 9 :JO
o m.; worship service, 10 30 am
Broodcaotllvoovor WMPO, young

YOU Ro AF TI'R. :

RIGHT Q/'J ,
EA-"Y: YOU LOOK
LIKE YOU JU5T
CLI MBED DOW&gt;.!
FROM THE
TREE ,; :

WH OLE FA CE :

Camera 6 E¥enma Ed it ton w1th M artm Agronsky

(

THE 5AME
WA Y

WIN AT BR..l:. :D=-.:..
G_E_ _r_,d..:_"Y_Ju_ne_
IB
NT strain attacks duplicate

p•ople 's
serv ic e ,
6 45,
evangelistic tervlce, 7 30 p m

Syracuse

.

Tnursday, 7 p m

REMitJD lj()U Cf3J!_~~

•

9 30 o m morn1ng worsh1p and
communion , 10 30 am , Sunday
evening
youth
Chrtlflon
Endeavor, 6 30 p m , worsh1p ser
vice 7 30 p m Wednesdod even·
lng prayer meeting an Bible
study, 7 JOp m

ST JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH
Pine Grove The Rev William
Mtddleswarth, Pastor . Church
seNicea 9 30 o m Sunday School
10 XI am

BRADBURY

CHURCH

OF

CHRIST Kim Cole , patter kavm

Wednesday Bp m
LONG BOTTOM Worship
9o m , Sundoy School 9 45 o m
Prayer MHtmg Wednesday 7 30
pm
NORTH BETHEL Worship II
a m Church Sc:hool 10 a m

ALFRED Sunday School 9 45
a m , Worsh1p 11 a m Prayer
mHhng Wednesday 7 11115 p m ,
UMW Jrd Tuesdoy 8 p m

ORPHAN ANNIE-"AS THROUGH
BUT

HE WAS AN
EXPERT ON
I

1H~Y

GLASS DARKLY"

7 30

pm

Wednesday

11 am, Sundoy night sorvic"
ch.,.ttan Endoovor 7 30 p m
Sang Mrvtco 1 p m., Proochtng
e 30 p m Mldwook Prayer
7
moettng loy
, Wednotday
P m • Roy
Adams,
loodor

Roy Rouse pattor Robert

hening service, 7 p m

prayer

Brown, supply poator, Sunday
school 9 a m., Sundoy evening
worship 7p m

TUPPERS PLAINS CHRISTIAN
CHURCH , Eugone Underwood ,
Howard Caldwell,

Sundar School

II

.
,.

I .1st

Suuth

Ia

I ' ISS
I ) ISS
I '.I SS

~
I~

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~~~~~)1§1

I

A ( ~mo~ lh &lt;m rt•.tdt' r \.\ ,mt s to
knu\\ wlw t rs lll Cdll l bv suymg
thJI a hand

h ,JS cl poor bodv
Thrs meljns tlld l Its spot

AVENGED AND TEN TIMES
OVER - WI\R8UCK5 1 HIS
lOSS WOULD BE A
GREATER BLOW TO OUR
ENEMIES THAN TEN
FACTORIES ..

E'):PlOSWE:S'
HE. WOU lD
NOT HAVE
~N ACCIDEttT •

cdrds are hm ones
A t\ I) 4 I~ ¥ 4 12 + \ 2 "'" \ l ht! s
.r vc1v pour hml\ ( h,mgP th(•
sp.ldt•s IH A K 4 H7 .tiHI ~ lulls lu
K IH 11 r~ nd tht• h tnd hoi !\ ~ood

wc•tt

pli:i\CI ~

t h c~ t

h.JW found

tl III(' V mtJ kc 11 lot uf t11 ~k::i lit
th z ec noll ump t:o nlrat t
w tltC1' gel a good ma tc h pomt
PL~~.i.5 scon.• even II the no trump 1 onll d&lt;. I \\d S d poor on e
St:o: c lub s wheels tn &lt;J nd Js t~n
&lt;ontr de l t o get to tl Sou th
ll :-i
llldkt.• s l11 s nuJm ,li
rr spunsr ul I~\O dubs to tu s
P" rtn et s spodc opcmng II

Ari

NAlURf. 3

ti ll' sp&lt;~ d c

bul

lht• t tub s l c~ 111

tu r ubbe1 bndge IJI.Ivct s A
vuult. nl ~ II &lt;Jill dti&lt;Jt bi m,Ji t h
po rn\ d upl t&lt;&lt;Jt e pl,t\cr s c~ s

P.RHAf'S AM THA1 putnl

ks lh· ht•,tl.dl

still WfJUIHJ Up
\\llh .1 J&gt;IJI/1 stu rt Some how
or ot hc 1 .J lot ul jld ll s 1t•.rt hl'd

ol hlt

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(II(

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~~~~~':':::':'::':":":'::' So m l'hO\\ u1 otht.Jt m,t tl h-

I-

5HALl BE

tJmh diHI 1s l,u s lron~c r
rDo you have a quest1on
lor th e experts? Wnte 'Ask
the Jacobys care of th1s
newspaper The Jacobys w111
answe r tndiVIdual questiOns
•I stamped sell addressed
envelopes are enclosed The
most mreres rmg quesr10ns
wrll be used m fh1s column
and wrll re ce rve cop1es of
JACOBY MODERN J

~
38 Flortda

~------------------I
Letlen of opiDion are welcomed. They sboald be
I less lban 300 wordo long (or be sabjeet to tetDclloa by
I tbe editor) and m111t be algaed wflll tile •lcnee'l 1111-

GASOLINE AI LEY

Jr ,

Supt : Sunday

Schoo , 9 30 a m , Morning S.r·
mon, 10 XI am Sunday evenIng aervlct, 7 p.m.

m

,8

I

'~-~-

I
I

?Itt

~Fdi~Dt

1 •• •
1
1

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•

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39 Becharm
40 Colonng
expert

DOWN
I " Mr Deeds "
dtrector
2 Any
Yesterday's Aoswer
Chmese
H Btography
24 Heavy book
native
by Hotchner 25 Ehte
3 Flowmg
( 2 wds 1
26 Terpstchtr
gown
(2 wds )
9 Cotton
rean
28
Verdi's
fabrtc
4 Snoop
10
Stgnify
'- Miller"
5 Potentially
16 German city 29 Do busmess
active
19 Disable
30 One quoted
6 Stde ·
22 Boundary
35 Tall tale
step
23 Clip
36 Total
1 Venttlate

w1tll " up"
24 "- on My
Hands"
25 Buddy
26 Ceylonese
vessel
27 Play wtlh

~~~~Br--------~=-~~~~~~-;--·r.-~~=7:=~~-;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~28Jeremtads
wvNvAAE YOU,

I GIVE HER A 3/4

,.

WHAMMY ' - SHE
PIJRPLEOLI6HTA SNAP
L.IPPE:D LITfL£
CUTA IT SOME- CREEP-To
TIM E NEXI
INTERFERE WITH

31 Eye

:13 Fondness
33

~~ style

35 " South

Amerlca,

" :n
(

Take It -"
Reddish
color

k + +--+-+-+-

()AlLY CRYI'TO(!l i OTE - llu ,,·, hrm tn
~

Is

1

DRINKS BEFORE

11

ON TJ-jE PlANE:. WHAT
I'D LIKE TO KNOW ,
MR HITCHCOCK

1.0:-;Gt'EI.I.OW

hmt s Each da' thr rndc It ltt•ts
!

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RLETMET - JVWYMI.HT
Yesterday's Cryptoquote : I CLAIM NOT TO HAVE CON·
TROLLED EVENTS BUT CONFESS PLAINLY THAT
EVENTS HAVE CONTROLLED ME - ABRAHAM LINCOLN

I

I
I

I

(C

To their so-called friends
To our so-called friends and neighbors, In and near the
Lortghollow area, where I live wtth my two teenage sons
We- the three of us - do not thank you citizens who ·helped
m anyway to destroy the lives of our two family pets.
Last February OIU' pet Peek-ka-poo dog lost an eye This
reqwred surgery at Dr . Theiss, offtce, Shade, Ohio . He
recovered, an1 1s domg fine.
Today our b1g white Angora mother cat was rushed to the
vet at Athens to have her leg amputated, because of a severe
blow of Wlknown origm.

1t

IOOAI&lt;DED .

I

Dear Sir·

\\utk

X l D J, II \ \ X It

One lelh.•r s1 mpl) s1and .. for ,molht·r In th r~.; ~.1m p h· A I S
used forth&lt;' th 1rc l. s X to 1 the t~n U s etc S1ngl£' l&lt;tters,
apostrophes the IC'ngth and rmma t1on nf th e \\onl ~ alP all

IM DEATHLY AFRAID . AND A COUPlE MORE
OF FLYING AN D I
HA D A COUPLE OF

6 3()-F un For Everyone 6, Summer Semester 8.
Treehouse Club tO, Kentucky Afield 13
7 oo-Salurday Report 3, AG USA 4, Eddie Saunders
6, Treehouse Cl ub 8, U S FMm Reporl 10,
Groovte Gooll es 13
7 3~Bu llwlnkl e 3. 1 Dream of Jeannie 4, Je lsons 6.
Vegelable Soup 15, Horlem Globetrollers Popcorn
Machine e, Man From COS I 10, Make A Wish 13,
Mister Rogers 20
B DO-Emergency Plus 4 3,4,15, Hong Kong Phooey
6, t3, Pebbles &amp; Bamm Bamm 8, tO, Sesame St 20
8 J~Josle &amp; I he Pussyca ls 3,4, IS Tom &amp; Jerry-Grape
Ape 6, 13, Bugs Bunny Road Runner e. Bugs Bunny
&amp; Friends to
9 QO-Secrel Lives of Waldo Kitty 3,4, 15, Elec Co 20
9 3~Pi n k Panl her 3,4, 15, Adventures of Gilligan 6, 13,
Scooby Doo, Where Are You 8, tO Mister Rogers 20
to o ~ Land ollhe Lost 3 4, 15, Super Friends 13 Hog
Dog 6, Shazam Isis a 10, Sesa me St 20
tO 3 ~ Run Joe Run 3,4 15 Big Blue Marbl e 6
t 1 o~ Relurn to the Plane! ollhe Apes 3,4 IS. Speed
Buggy 6, 13, Space Nuts 8, tO, Elec Co 20
II 3 ~Wes t w lnd 3,4, 15, Oddball Couple 13 , CBPA
Bowl ing 6 Ghosl Busllers 8 10, Mister Rogers 20
12 o~Jetsons 3,4, 15, Valley ol lhe Otnosuors 8, 10,
Acllon News for !&lt;Ids 13, Vegetoble Soup 20
12 Jt&gt;-Go USA 3 4,15 Ameri can Bandstand 13, Fat
Alber I 8,10
1 o~Davld Niven's World 3 Chomplons 4, Soul Tra in
6.. Children 's Film Fesllvo l 8,10, Wreslllng 15,
Lowell Thomas Remembers 33
t 3~G reatesl Sports Legends 3. Ja cques Cousleou
13 Tennis lor Everyone 33
2 oo-Grandsland 3,4,15 , That Good Ole Nashville
Music 6, World of Survival 8 Urban League 10,
Fami ly Theolre 33
2 15- Baseba l l 3,4,15
2 3~Minlalure Goll 6, Vlewpolnl 8 Movie " Lillie
Norse Prince ' 10, Fishing wllh Roland Marl in 13,
Valiant Years 33
3 o~Wide Worl d ot Sport s 6, 13, Overseas Mi ssion 8,
Family at War 33
3 3~Champlons 8
4 DO-U S Open 6,13 , Resourceful Wesl Vlrglnlo
33
4 3~U S Open 6 13 Sports Spec la cular 8 tO Lei's
Grow a Garden 33
5 o~FBI 3. Don Adams Screen Test 4, To Be An
nounced IS Whal' s Cooking 33
5 3~Adam 12 4. Guppies to Groupers 33
6 o~News 3, 4,a , tO , God Has the Answer 15, Mark ol
Jazz 33
6 3~NBC News 3.4,1S ABC News 13 . News 6 Rhodo
a. CBS News 10. Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33
7 DO-Wor ld al War 3, Lawrence Welk 4, Hee Haw 6 8
' Fir ing Line 33 , In The Know 10 . News maker '76 13,
Lawrence Wet k 15
7 3~Treasure Hunl 3 Lasl of the Wild tO, Wild
Kingdom IJ
a O~E m ergenc y' 3,415 , Good Heavens 6, 13, Jef
lersons B 10 Rivals of Sherlock HolrTJeS 33
a J~PI I ol 6,13 , Do c 8,10
9 o~Movl e "Charrot " 3,4 15 Coaches All Am erica
Fool ball Game 6, 13, Mary Ty ler Moore 8, tO, Auslln
City Llm ll s 33
9 J~Bob Newhart 8,10
10 O~Di nah Shore 8,10, Soundstage 33
I I O~ News 3,4,e,10,15, Janakl33
t I 15-PMA Pulse IS
11 3~Movle " This Is My Alfalr" 3. Friends 4, 15,
Movie "That Kind of Woman' B, Movie "Lisa" tO
12 o~ABC News 6, News 13
12 I S- Movi e "Ferry to Hong Kong" 6
12 3G-Movie " The Mad Doclor of Markel Streel" 13
1 o~Don Kirshner's Rock Concert 8
1 15- News 3
t JG-Movie " Welcome to Hard Times" to
1 45-Movle " Molher Wore Tights " 3
2 o~Movle "The Leech Woman" 13
3 15-Movle " Tobruk" 3
3 3~Movle "The Yellow Rolls Royce" 10
4 45-Movle " If I Had a Million" 3

32 One &lt;Fr I

MY

--------1

*'ell, Names may be wllllbeld .....,
....- pub"-"-.
...,.....,
However, 00 request, UIDel wlU be dllcloaed. Letten
should be
Cood taste, addreulllg l.uues, Dot -~
IODalllles,
,.....

county

fun spot
5 Vaulted
II Hebrew
lyre
12 Fl y
13 Be
merciful
14 Wtld
As1al1c
horse
15 Joe Col·
lege yell
16 FoW1dat10n
17 I love
(!.at )
18 Wtnd·
nower
20 CoUtde
Wtth
21 Rave
22 Smooth
consonant
23 Climb,

Howard

McCoy supt, Morning 1armon

pastor,

heJ rl Suuth \\.I s .rbl e to 1.1 kt•

Nuu ump1t1s ts not u miJnPd

second

Muuor, Sunday School oupl Sun
day ochool 10 :JO a tn worahlp
7 30
p m Btblo Study,
RACINE CHURCH OF THE WodnMday,
7,30 p.m., Saturday
NAZARENE Rov John A CoH ntghl prayorsorvlco, 7 tOp m
man, pastor Sunday School, 9 30
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN,
o m Gerald Wells supt Morn· Roger Watson , pallor, Wallace
lng worship 10 30 am , Su11day Bradford, supt
morning wor·
e\lenlng worship , 7 30. Prayer ship, 9 :JO church tehaot, 10.30,
mntlng Wednesduy 7 ~ p m
young people's mHtlng, 6.30
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST, Don l
p.m , evening worship , 7:30 p m ,
Walker , Pastor Ronnie Salser, Btblo study, Wodnotday , 7.30
Sunday school supt
Sunday p.m
scl'lool 9 30 o m , mornmg wor
MT UNION BAPTIST Rov R D

REEDSVILLE Sunday School9 JO sh1p 10 40 a m Sunday evening
a m Worship 7 30 p m , Prayer wanh•r. 7 30 Wednesday even·
Mooting 7 :JO p m Tuotday , UMW tng Bib ostudy, 7 :JO
7 30 p m hi Thursday
DANVILLE WESLEYAN , Rov
SILVER RIDGE Worshtp 10 a.m lelon Glosure pastor Sunday
Church School9 a m
S&lt;hool, 9 30 a m , youth and
TUPPERS PLAINS Worshtp 9 lunlor youth serv1ce, 6 45 p m
am Church School lOam ,
evening worthlp
7 JO p m
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST prayer ond praise Wednesday
George Frederick supt S•rvlce 7 30p m
weekly 9 30 a.m on Sunday
SILVER RUN FREE BAPTIST
Preachmg first ond th~rd Sundoys Miles Trout
pastor
Sunday
of month by CltHord Smith 9 30 school, lOam Steve Linle, supt
om
Evening service 7 p m , prayer
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION mooting Thursday 7 p m
Dorrell Ooddrill pastor Sunday
SILVER RUN FREE BAPTIST,

¥tce ,

meeting,

Sunday School 10 a m

Rev

11 WL• sl hc1rl lL·d " didlllllllll
Suu l)r wou ld 11!1\l' ht' l n ~t· t
But wht•n \\ ust op pn(• d .1

\ h

4
A\Ki lJh4
\ui lll South \lllllll

!'.......

" Dare to be a Daniel, Dare to stand alone
Dare to have a purpose firm, Dare to make 1t known "

King, Sundoy tchool oupt Sunday
sc~ool , 9 30 o m , wcrshlp aerI
vice 10 30 a m , Sunday !ler1
vices 7 p m , youth mHting,
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST,
W~nesday, 1 p m.
La&lt;ated Ol Rutland on N- Lima :
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST , Rov Rood,
no•l lo FarMI Aero Park, I

Pastor
Denn11Creegor,
Frnland Norris , pastor Sunday
Anoc . Mimster
school 10 am , Church seNice, 7
JOPPA Worship 10 am , Chur - p m Wednosdoy Blblo Study 7
ch School 9 a m. Prayer MHting pm

t \ KI I

• lj .,

Ht sf

6 oo-Summer SeiT\ester tO

\\h er L' llj)llll Su u th
JlH npt•d tu thr ee not r\llnp

a tp

M D I 1\-IOUbHT A.\A.'I BE"
!{OU L'D\Jt..D

SATURDAY , JUNE 19,1976

s p ~r d cs

SOl Ill

I CALHD TO

That is the kind of determination and piU'pOSe we need m
order
to serve God; a purpose so deep and fii'Til that we wtll he
Wodnoedoy 7 30 p m
UNITED
FAITH
NON w1llmg to lay our lives on the line for 1t, and stand by that '
DENOMINATIONAL Rov Robort purpose and make tl known to all about us - Floyd F Shook,
Smith pastor. Sunday School
9 :JO o m , Clan lead or Loo Hill, pastor, Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Church,
wontlip seN Ice, 10 30 a.m , chur·
ch730pm
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
CHRIST, Eldon R. Blako pastor
m1nlanary

I.M.; I
A Ill 11 r, 2
• j IJ j.!

olo fl

vice, Thursday 7 30 p m

given a brilliant performance, and after the concert he was
approached by a yolUlg adrmrer who sa1d how much he
would like to he able to play like that. The miiStCian assured
him lha t he could if he would practice faithfully every dAy lor
etght hours for 25 years. A purpose that ts deeply rooted ,
expresses the reason for one's exiStence, provides the
standard for d1sc1phne, and the mcenltve for personal
achievement.
When one ts committed to a purpose, that, purpose U!kes
on two bas1c steps . First, 11 milS! be clearly defmed m one's
own mind, and it miiSt be m specifiCS,
Second, that purpose must be clearly commwucated lo
every segment of the society m which one moves.
Daniel ts tin example of someone who illiiSirates these two
haste steps. In the first place, his belief and fwth m God was
absolute This resulted m a quality of personal holmess and
rtghteousness whtch is the charactertstic of all who claim to be
God's children. That deeply rooted purpose was then reflected
m his behavior and relationship to all men.
This very unportant text in the first chapter of Dante! IS
one lhat every CIVIC and offiCial and reltgious leader would do
weU to follow . BecaiiSe Dante! was a man of prmctpal and
resolute purpose, God honored hun and used him in an official ·
'
capacity This extended over three different kmgdoms

Racme

meet~ng,

No thmg hkt• 11 1.11 tppt'&lt; tled
to StiU III fl(' 1\,lllli.'d to pl,i\
ntJt tur rtp
,tn d SI IIIPJ
J&gt; IOll'l'd lng s ll\ t t.:spund1 n g
two dt.llllon ds NO! th 1elm! Ins

\'I ~I
I I
y II Ill H I
f l/ ill XI !.

Purposes are vttaUy unportant, You can be what you want

949-2020

prayer meeting 7 30 p m

A \1\.Kh~

• 1\ 'i 4

a

' BORN LOSER

Will 11\.lkl'

I I It u ks

••

ScrtptiU'e Daruel1.8 "But Dante! purposed m hts heart that
he would not defile hunself • . "

TV &amp;APPLIANCE
GAS SERVICE

Chester
9BS-3307

sp:.nlt•"' tht· dt•&lt; 1.11 cr

,.lJ il~

" A MAN WITH APURPOSE"

Ph 992-397B

RIDENOUR

i\lor th .rn d Sou th p l.n• tn

lfl

\1111'111 111 1

IT'S bi..AD-/S

76 Years on

Pres1dents

slA H AND I

the sermonette

Gerald &amp; Melva Elbln, Owner
Open Blo 7 datly · 12 SSun
Ruff and
Ph . 742 2424

FOREST RUN, Worship 9 am.
Church School 10om UMW third
wtdnosday 7 30 p m
MINERSVIllE Worship 10 om
Church School 9 o m UMW third
Monday 7 30 p m
School
9 30 a m
leonard M1les Trout pastor
Sunday
SYRACUSE Chruch School 9 J0 G•lmore first elder e\lening ser school lOam Sfevet,•tle ,supt

a m Worsh•p ,.serviCe 7 30 p m

, CAPTAIN EASY

o.m ,

News 10

Camera 13, Family Altai r 15, Ohio Journal 20
7 3~ Porler Wagoner 3, Treasure Hunt • Candid

ACROSS

MT MORIAH CHURCH OF GOO,
CHESTER CHURCHOF GOD.
Racme Route 2 The Rev Charles Rev Bobby Porter, pastor Sun·
Hand pastor Sunday school 9 11115 day school, 9.30 o m , wcratllp
a m morning worsh 1p, 11 a m
9 :JO o m Church School I 0 30 Evening servlcea, Tuesday and serviCe 11 a m evening service.
7 30, youth service Wednesday,
om
Froday 7 30 p m
7:Jilpm
CARMEL Chruch School 9 :J0
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHUR
a m Worsh1p 10 30 a m 2nd end OF CHRIST
Doug Seomon CH Ted Jones, pastor Sunday
4th Sundays
minister B1ble study 9 30 am ,
APPLE GROVE, Sunday School morn.ng worship , 10 30 a m , school, 9 30 o m Roy Sigmon,
sup!
morning wortlllp 10 30,
9 30 a m Worsh1p 7 30 p m hf evening worship
7 30 p m Sunday evening service, 7 30,
and 3rd Sunclays Prayer meeting Wednesday Blbl01ludy, 7 30 p m
mid week service, Wednesday,
Wednesday 7 30 p m Fellowship
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST,
supper f~rst Saturday 6 p m UMW George Frederick supt Sunday 7:Jilpm
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE
2nd Tuesday 7 30 p m
mormng seNice 9 30 o m with
EAST LETART Chruch School preoclllng on first and th1rd Sun NAZARENE, Rov . Dolo Boll,
pastor
Bob Moore, Sunday
ht 2nd 3rd Sundays 9 30 a m day of month by George Plchens
School tupt., Sunday school
Fourth Sunday 10 30 a m War
STIVERSVILLE COMMUNITY
1h1p 2nd Sunday 7 30 p m 4th CHURCH, Sunday School service, clatses far all ages , 9:30 a m .
morning worsh ip 10 45 a m ,
Sunday 9 30 a m Prayer meeting 10 am
Prayer meeting
Wednesday 7 30 p m UMW I st Thursday 7 p m Sunday evening NYPS, 6 30 p m , evangelistic ser
\liCe
7 30 p m Prayer and
Tuesdoy7 30p m
SeNICe, 7 p m
fasting
Tuesday , 10 om .
WESlEYAN (Roctno) Sunday
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST Mtdweek
prayer
tervlce,
School 10 a m Worsh•p 11 a m
Pomeroy Harrisonville Rd Mike
Jr UMYF Wednesday 3 :J() p m Girton, pastor Bill McElroy, Sun · Wodnoadoy, 7 :JO p m mon's
81ble Study Thursday 7 p m Choir doy school supt Sunday,.. school prayer mHtlng, Soturdoy, 1 p m .,

Third A\le the Re'l William Kmttel pas tor Ronald Dugan Sun·
day School Supt Clones for all
ages even1ng ser..lce 1 30, Bible
study Wednesday 7 ~ p m
youth services, Friday 7 30 p m

Rev Robert Hayden
Rev D Wm Sydenstrlcker

Weather 33

I Sll!llTTle r

RACINE PLANING MILL

Ph 949 9130

oo- ~onanza J ,

Partridge Family a. Mission lm
posSible IS
5 31&gt;-Adam 12 4, News 6 Fami ly All air 8 Etec Co
20,33, Adam 12 13
•
6 00-News 3,4,B, 10, 13, IS, ABC News 6, Zoom 20,33
6 31&gt;-NBC News3,4,15. ABC News 13, Andy Gllltth 6,
CBS News B, lO , Hodgepodge Lodge 20 .
Carrasco lendas 33
7 oo-Truth or Cons 3, Ameri can Li te Styl e 4,
BowllnQ for Dollars 6, Space 1999 8. Avlolion

.

SALEM STREET MARKET

'"

PRESBYTERIAN , Re v
Ernest
Str1dd1n pastor Sunday church
school 9 30 a m Mrs Homer
Lee supt , morrnng worsh1p

11

;

by THOMAS JOSEPH

Keepsake Diamond RmQs
Pomeroy
Ph 992 3785

Ph . 992 3a63

RACINE FOOD MARKET

am
morntng worship 10 30
a m
Sunday
evongelis
meetmg , 7 30 p m
Prayer
meetln9 , Wednesday 7 30 p m
Dwtght l Zov11I d1rector

service

1u. S1&gt; ooo Pyramtd tV, Pop l.&gt;oe the Country IS.
Black Perspective on the News 33
8 00 Santord &amp; Son 3 IS Donny &amp; Marte 6, 13,
Baseball 4, Julie on Sesame St 8, Washlnglon
wee~ tn ~ evlew 20,33, Presldenls 76 Years on
Camera 10
8 3 The Prac ti ce 3, Oral Roberts' We the People IS.
Watt Slreel Week 20,33
9 oo-Rock lord Fl ies 3. Movie 'Th e Culpepper Callie
Co" 8, tO, FIring Line 20. Maslerplece Thea Ire 33
10 oo-Poll ce Slory 3, I S, New s 20. Paul Nuchlms 33
tO 3~U S Open 6, 13, NFL Action 76 4, Avia tion
Wea ther 20
11 oo- News 3,4,6,8 10,13 15 ABC News 33
11 3 Johnny Carson 3,4, 1S. Rookies 6, 13. Movie
" Sailor Beware" 8 Movie 'Thin Air" 10, Janak!
33
12 40- Don Kirshner's Rock Concert 6, Wrestling 13
1 oo-Mtdnlghl Spe clal 3,4 15, Mov te ' Mul lny In Outer
Space ' tO
I 4 ~ N e ws 13
2 3~ N ews 3
3 O~ Movle " Breakout" J
4 I S- Sal nl J
5 IS- Movie ' It ' s a Gill 3
6 3~Green Acres 3

FRIDAY , JUNE 11, 1976

to be 1f you are prepared to pay the prtce. Afamous p1antst had

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE Rev Don Co le ,
pas for Mrs Mary Lathey Sunde y
school sup! Sunday school 9 JO

UNITED PRESBYTERIAN
MINISTRY OF MEIGS COUNTY

•.

AND DIU A Nli'I'IBER.' '

212 E Matn Sl

ROSEBERRY'S SERVICE CENTER

dleport Sth and Mom George
Glore miniSter James Skeet I
supenntendent B•ble school 9 :J()
am
mornmg worsh1p 10 :J()
om
evemng worsh1p 7 30
prayer
ser'f'ICB,
7 p mn.
Wednesday

Meigs County Rood 1 off either
CHESTER Worship 9 IS om
325 or 124 Pastor, Rev Ttleron pm
Church School lOam
Durham Sunday School 10om
MIDDLEPORT
POMEROY Worship, 10 30 o m
worthlp ter..lce, 7 30 p m Sun
MT MORIAH BAPTIST Corner Church S&lt;hool 9 15 am UMYF
day Prayer mHiing Tuesday Fourth and Mom, Middleport
6JOpm
7 30 p m youth service 1 30 Re... Henry Key , Jr pastor Sun
ENTERPRISE, Worship 9 a m
p m Friday
day School 9•30 a m Mn Er..in Church School tOo m
RUTLAND APOStOliC CHURCH Baumgardner, supt
Morn1ng
ROCK SPRINGS Worship 10
OF JESUS CHRIST Thomas L worthlp 10 "'5 a m
a m Church School 9 a m UMYF
Holmes
pastor Btble study
JEHOVAH S WITNESSES, Lorry 630pm
Soturdoy
7 30 p m
Sunday Carnahan presiding miniSter
FLATWOODS Worship I I om
school 10 am , Evangeltst1c ser Sunday Bible lec:ture 9 30 a m
Church
S&lt;hool 10 a m
v1c• , 7 30 p m Sunday
Watchtower study 10 30 am
MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
POMEROY
WESLEYAN Tuesday, Btble study 730 p m
Rev Robert Bumgarner
HOLINESS CHURCH, Harrlsonv1lle Thursday m1nlstry School 7 30
HEATH
, Worship I 0 30 o m
Rev
O'Dell Manley
Pastor p m serv1ce meetm; 8 30 p m
Church S&lt;hool 9 JO a m UMYF 6

Henry Eblin Sundoy ,$&lt;hoot Supt
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF
Sunday School 9 30 a m Evening CHRIST IN CHRISTIAN UNION
worship 7 30 p m Prayer and Lawrence Manley pastor Mrs

Pomeroy

worship

•

Television log for easy vzewzng

THE MOST WONDERFUL
GROUP WAS IN HE R~

K&amp;C JEWELERS

THE ATHENS COUNTY SAVINGS
&amp; LOAN CO.
296 W Second

Ruttall, Sr , minister

Rev James H. Leach, pastor Sun-

MEIGS COUNTY BRANCH

Ml d

10 JO
MIDDLEPORT Sunday school
THE HilAND CHAPEL George 9 30 a m RIChard Vaughan supt
Casto pastor Sunday School , Mornmg worship 10 30
9 30 a m e"ening worsh1p 7 30
AYRACUSE Morning worship 9

7J0pm
ST PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH,
RACINE APOSTOliC CHURCH
Corner of Sycamore and Second E'f'angellstlc ser\lice Sunday 7 30
Sh Pomeroy The !lev W1lham p m , prayer meeting Tuesday,
M iddleswortl'l Pastor
Sunday 7 JO p m Bible Study Thursday
School at 9 45 a m and Church 7JOpm
Services 11 a m
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CENTER

Bobby Elkins patter Sunday
school 10 a m worsh1p serv1ce
11 am and 7 p m Wednesday
ev•nlng service 7 p m

'l

Mtddleport, Ohto

Mason ,

Ph 773-5721

INDU STR IAL &amp; COMMERCIAL
Ph 446 0963 AddiSon, OhiO Ph 992 6173

doy School WMPO Rodlo pr0
gram 7 &lt;45 o m Sunday Sclloo•I.
9 15 am
Mormng Wor~h1
10 15 a m Youth aCt!'o'ltleS anpd
fellowship for jUniOr and sen1 or
h1gh students 6 p m Sunde
even mg worship 7 30 p m M1
week
prayer
se r v1ce
Wednesday 7 30 p m

RALL'S BEN FRANKLIN STORE

Pomeroy,

Ph 992 2S82

AMERICAN PAINTING CO.

Corner Sl)(th and Palmer theRe v
Peter Grandal pastor Donn y
Thompson supermtendent Su n

Sunday 1choo l 10 am mornmg
ser\IICI II a m Sunday eventng
ser\IICe 7 30 p m Wednesday B1
ble study 7 30 p m

THE DAILY SENTINEL
Dedtealed to the Interests of
Metgs Mason Area
Phone 992-2156

FRESH PRODUCE&amp; PLANTS
2 CONVENIENT MARKETS

I,.:Opyr~gnJ 19761(esler AC!ver11smg Se!VIce Inc S11asblll9 \11rgon.a

worsh1p b p m
Wednesday Bible study 7 p m

TWO LOCATIONS
39 N Second Sl
Mtddleparl. 0
46 Court St
Gallipolis, 0 .
.

To dtscover all the Promtse m thts world the soul mu st begm by
realtzmg the promtses of God

TRINITY CHURCH , Rev W H study 11 a m

Pomeroy

DUDLEY'S

LOUI S W OSBOR NE
no E Matn
Pomeroy
Ph 992 2178

Saturday
Matthew

As a wmdow let s l 1ght reach mstde , the teachmg of moral and
reltgtou s truth lets fatth f1nd tl s nghtful place m each youthful heart

WE FILL DOCTORS
PRESCRIPTIONS

W Vtt

SEAR'S CATALOG MERCHANT

Mark
13 33·37

O\

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE PHARMACY
992-29SS

Tuesday
Psalms
146 7 10

Fr~day

Our tremendous re sponstb titl) as parents tS to nurture,, human
soul , foster ti s spmtual growth , culll\ate the cructal development
our chtld' s character

Huntmgton ,

Thursday
Luke
12 35·48

s on

m 23t8

BA KERS OF GOOD BREAD

Wednesday
Ezek1el
3 16·21

A s the future unfolds m e~erv hi e 11 looks hk e a world of

Ph

BAKER S OF GAY90 BREAD
Mtddteporl
Ph 992-3030

HEINER'S BAKERY

Monday
Psalms
126 1·6
1

Pomeroy

e04 W Matn

OF

I

r.

Prayor mMfing, Wednotdoy, 7.30
p m , Missionary meetlnv. 7 30
p m, first Wodnoedoy al month.
MASON COUNTY
MASON FIRST BAPTIST, Second
William Roush, pastor Denny and Pomeroy Sts , Stan Craig,
Evans Sundar. School Director. pastor . Sunday tchool, 9 o15 a.m 1
Sunday Schoo , 9 30 o m , Morn· worttlip tervlce, 11 a m , training
Ing worship, 10 30 am., Sunday union 6 30 p.m.; evening worevening service 7 p m ship 10rvlco 7 30 p m. Mid Wool&lt;
Wedneaday evening prayer ser· prayer service, W«&lt;nesday 1 30
\Iicea, 7·30 p m
pm,
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST, R1111. Earl
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, P
Shuler , pastor Worship service 0 . to• 487 Mlllor St. Maoon, W.
9·30 a m. Sunday tchool, IO.:JO Va. Sundoy Blblo Study 10 a m ,
o m Blblo Study and proyor tor· Wonhlp 11 a m. and 7 p m Blble
vice Thursday. 7 30 p m
Study Wednoedoy 7 p.m., Vocol
1
CARLETON CHURCH , Klngabury mutlc
Rood Gory King pastor Sunday
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST Cor·
school, 9 30 a m , evening wor - ner of Second and Anderton,
ship, 7 30 p.m Prayer mHtlng, Moton Pastor, Wollor Cloud
Wednotday, 7.30p.m.
Sunday tchool 9 45 a m , wonlilp
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN , tervlce, 11 o.m and 7 30 p m.
Bruce Smith, PQ&gt;tor Wallaco Wooldy Btblo otudy Wodnotdoy,
Da.,.wood, Supl Bible School, 7:Jilpm
9 30 a m Preaching service ,
MASCH ASSEMBLY OF GOD,
10 -45 a m. No evening service.
Dudding lano, Moton , W Va,
HYSEll RUN FREE METHODIST ChMter T•nnant, Paator Sundav
CHURCH, Rov Paul N011illo, School 9 45 a.m. Chtldren 1 Chur·
po1tor. Sunday School 9 30 a.m , ch 6.45 p m Young POCjlle's Sor·
Morning seN Ice, 10 30 a m
vice lt·..S p m Evangoltlltc Sor·
youth
urvice , ~ "'5 p m vice 7.30 p m Women 1 Mit·
Evangell•tlc qrvlce 7.30 p.m. slonary Council I 0 a m first and
Prayer mHtlng, Thursday, 7 30 third Tuoodoys. Pray•• and Btblo
pm
Study, Wednoedoy, 7 :JO p m
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION of
HARTFOIID CHURCH OF CHRIST
Bald Knob Rov E J Griffith IN CHRISTIAN UNION, Tho R1111
supt of church, Rev L. R. William Compboll pastor. Sunday
Gluesencamp, patter, Roger School, 9 30 a m ; James Hughes
Wtllfrod, Sr , Sunday Schooltupt tupt., evening servlc•. 7·'¥J p m,
Sunday School, 9 30 a.m., prayor Wednesday evening prayer
mooting Tuotday 7 :JO p.m m-tlng, 7 30 p m Youth prayer
youth mHting, 6 p m Sunday service eoch Tuetday
Leaders Ada Van Meter and Gret
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH.
to Suttle Sunday evening wor- letart W Vo , Rt 1, Rev George
ship 7 p m through winter mon- Hotchar, paator Sunday School
lho
9 30 a.m Proyor and 81blo study
MT HERMON CHURCH Of THE 7 30 p m Cottage Prayer Service
UNITED BRETHR~N IN CHRIST, Tuotdoy, 10 om, Worahlp Sor·

ELLIS &amp; SONS SOHIO

--

meeting ,

Rl&lt;k Mocombor, supt. Sunday
school , 9 30 am , wonlllp servlco, 10·30 am Btblo Study,
Tuotdoy, 7.30p.m.
REORGANIZED CHURCH Of
JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER DAV
SAINTS. Portland Rodno Rood

Rac1ne, Ohto

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
Sunday
Psalms
107 1·9

Charles

Open 81o s- Closed Thurs

GROCER IE S &amp; GENERAL
I.
M ERCHANDI SE
Raclhe
Ph. 949 2550

Prayer

day School 9:30 o.m., morning
church I0 30 a m • Sunday even
Ing service , 7 30 p. m
Wodnoaday sorvlco, B p m,
LAUREL CLIFF FREE MfTHOOIST
CHURCH, R1111 Floyd F. Shook,
pastor, lloyd Wright, Sunday
School Supl : Mamlng Worship
9 30 am ., 5!tnday School 10 20
o.m., Wednoedoy Proyor and II·
blo Study 7 30 p m , Sunday
0\lontng worship 7 :JO p m.: Choir
Procttce Thursday, 7 p.m
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST

PAUL'S BARBER SHOP

Ph 992 S130

Pomeroy

upt

CHRIST , Jock Perry , mlnltter Sun

Call949-2838 For An Appointment
Racme, Ohto

• WAID CROSS SONS STORE

9 15 am , worstHp serv~ee 10 30

I

WodnMday, 7 30p .m,
BRADFORD CHURCH

LINDA'S LADY FAIR BEAUTY SALON

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE
SERVICES

doy school supt Church School,

.

Mtddlepart, Ohio

'HEll' DEALER
Rae me
Ph 949 28B2

Thtrd Sl

Perrin, pastor Roy Moyer Sun

pastor Wor~hlp MNice, 11 a m

and 7·:J() p m, Sunday . Sunday
School 9 30 a.m Richard lorton

Pomeroy

BIG JIM'S PLAZA

RACINE PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

Swptc11es selected by The Amencan BOle SocJely

John F Full!

.
SMALL ENGINE SA LES &amp; SERV IC E
49B Locust Sf
Moddleport Ph 992 3092

promiSe

m
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE. A"" Horberl Grato,

day tchaot, 9 30 a m , Rua•ll
Spencor, aupt., w...hlp .... tee.
I 0 45 o m ; Evening _..,lp
altornallng with C E. at 7·30 p m
on Sunday Proyor meotlng, 7 30
m Wodnotday, Alfrod WoKo
ay loader.
WHITES CHAPEL Coolvtllo RD
R1111 Roy Deotor , po1tor. Sundey'
1Chool9.30am -•hlp~
10:30 a m, Bible sflldy and proy01
Mrvice, Wednotday, 7 30p.m :
RUTLAND
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Carl Pook pastor, Bill lr-n.
Sunday tchool tupt Sunday
tchool 9 30 a.m.; _..,lp ond
commuqlon, 10·30 a m. Ewnlna
IOI'VI&lt;o, 7 30 p m. Regular boord
moellng, Saturday, 7 p.m.
RUTLAND COMMUNITY CHUR·
CH, Sunday School 9:30 a.m.:

e

TH' PARSON 'S
WIFE WILL II

BE HERE

....,._, ,

AUNT LOWEEZ.\f..
HAVE \fOU SEEN
MY SLING SHOT?

1976 Kin&amp;

~uturu

Syndtcall' Inc I

III

LJ I

~[
..:N.:.:Av:D~IJ;.rf:.:C=-tr-,--,-,

I I I
~~t:,~,.j:'::==-~~·::;:::·=~·
r

~

Now arranr• tht circled lelttrt
to form the .urprile •nnn:r. u
suneeLtd by the abo•t cartoon.

1· PrittlikStM~mwEum I "D-r XI )-0"
Jiirnl.t .. ~ CHESS

HURRY

FAULTY

\ ..\11n•• r

\ lWH tiiM flll h11lt l 11hulllli IHII t 11/lt e1 11 / mu
111 1111 h wunr - GUEST

THAR
IT IS!!
I

AUTHORITIES
ADMITTED

ENNVSECONT
AN'--

TO

6EIN6

PUZZLED"

LET ART FALLS UNJTED
BRETHREN Rov FrHial)d Norris,
pa1tor Floyd Norrla supt Sunday
school, 9:30 o m : morntng ter Please, dear cillzeTUl, don't take your spite out on our
mon I0 30 a m. Prayer Hrvlce, family pets - because we love them, They did you no harm
Wodnosdoy 7 30 p m
If ?fOU must hate, hate me, not our family pets They don't
CHESHIRE CHURCH OF GOD OF
PROPHECY G P. Smith pastor destre tt and can't fight back. - Sylvia C Cannan and sons
Sunday School 10 o m , Arthur Rruc.oe and Don.

\

'

EULOGY

l r"lr r ib ~ "

•,

''

�10 - The Daily Sent inel, Middlet•&gt;rt -Pun"'""' , u" r'rida) . June 1~. I!17~

S

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES

P .M .
Day
Publ ication .

Cencellat io.ns ,

Before

corr ec

lutoSales.
1974 Ford 4 door hardtop, power
!itear ing power brakes, Qrr
conditionmg, rod1al trres . mce

lion s ac cepted f irs t day of
PUblic ation .

co• . $1 995. Phone I61A) 985·
355&lt;.

The Pub lishe r reserves
the right to edi! or reject
eny ads deemed ob

1967 Comoro, 396 4 speed ,
headers , cam , reworked
head$ , new engine , Be$t offe1 .
Phone 949·28W,

REGULATIONS

iec;:t ional

The pub li sh e r

will not be respons ible for
mo re than on e m correc t

insert ion .

R.O. TES
Fpr Want Act Serv ice
5 c ents per word on e
insert ion
Mi n imum , Ch~rg e Sl 00

14 cents per word Thr ee

consecutive insert 1ons .
26 cents

per word si )(

consecutive insert ions .
25 Per Cent Dis count on
paid . ads and ad s pa id
wit hin 10 days

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
\2 .00
f or
80
word
minimum .
Each ad&lt;;titional word 3

cen ts .

BLI NO ADS
Ad di tio n~!
25c Charg e

per Adve r tisenun!
OFF ICE HOURS
B· 30

a rrt .

10 5

oo . p m

Dai ly , 8 30 a .m . to 12 :00
Noon Sa turd ay .
Phon e today 992 2156 .

{61 &lt;) 965.J596_

1969 Plyrnovth Sotell it'e. $1 200.

Phone992·6131.

1971 Che vy wagon , power'
brakes , power steering, oir
conditioning . nice family cor .
1967 one-half ton lnt8rnationol
pi ckup truck . 5 new tire s:. good
condi tion, $650 or best offer .

Phonel6 I~) 98~ - 3371.

1969 V.W. l ot sale. Cell 247 ·220 1.

2971.

FURNISHED , 2 bedrm. apartment ,
adults only , in Middleport.
Phone 992 -387-4 .

-

3 AND 4 RM , furn1 shed and 1.1n ·
fur n1shed opts . Phone ~2 ·

5434.

-

-

cOUNTRY Mob ile Home Pork, Rt.
33. ten miles north of Pomeroy .
Lorge lots with concret pa tios,
sidewalks . run ners and qff
ONE bedroom apartments at
VILLAGE MANOR in Middleport
lor $104 monthly plu s elec, or
5130 including electric . LOWER

RATES FOR SENOR CITIZENS .
Convenient to shopping on
Thtrd and Mtl l Stree ts in Mid·
dleporl. Brand new ·high quali ·
ty apar tmen t s. See the
manager at Riverside Aport.
ments or coli 992 -3273. Fur rlit hed
opo rh nenls
also
avai lobl e.
One bedrm , and 2 bedrm . fur·
nished apartmenh . Phone
992 -3129 or qq2·54J4 .
TRAILER space for rent in Mid ·

TRAVI S A. RUTH
In ius! three short yea r s he
becC!me a better person
!han we could ev er hope t o
be, spr ea ding love and
show i ng
courag ~
for
eve ry one to see .
With loving aching hear t s.
Boyd &amp; Judy Ruth

'
IN Lo11ing Memory
of our dear
mother ond grandmother, Mrs.
Amelio Walker, June IS, 1976.
Mom, Mom ,
Li ttle did we know that morn
The sorrow the day would brmg .
For th e call was ~udde n .
The shock severe,
' To part wi th one we loved so
deer .
It b(oke our heart s to lose her,
But she did not go alone ,
F.or port of us wen t w ith her.
The da y God called her home.
Please . God lorgi ... e o1.1 r many
tears ,
That secret wis h tho t she be here.
There were others . Yes we know
But she was ours we to ... ed her so.
Sadly mi ssed by children and
grandchildr en , Her l o"¥ing
Forn i~---·_~-_ __

_j~~J~ h o~e 992 ·~~-4

FURNISHED 2 room apar tmen t,
126 M1.1 lberrJ' Ave ., adu lh and
references . Ph one 992-2030
ev~~~~s ~-992 · 2167 :_ ___ ._
2 bedrm , an d I bedrm . fu rn i:;hed
apar tmen t. Phone 992-2288 or

992 -2346 .

5906.

Trailer Park . Phone 9?2 -3324.

LOCUST pos ts , round or split .
Phone 94 9·277.. .

1973 450 Prototype Kawasak i
mo torcrou, good condition.

$650. Phone 992·3843.

HOUSE in Raci ne, Vine St., 6 EXCAVATING , dozer, loader end
backhoe work: dump trucks
rooms and bo th, some '
carpe ti ng. gas furnace. ya rd · and lo-boys for hire: will ~ou 1.
fil l dirt, top soil, limestone and
and nice: garden . Good buy,
grovel. Call Bob or ROger Jefpsoo Ph ~_3_47 :~ '~2:. _
fe rs. day · phone 992 -7009,
OLDER . remodel11d all elec. 3
night phone 992 -3525 or 992·
bedrm. ~ome , $12,500. Call
5232.

3 bedroom house ond lot' m
Racine on Main St. by Carpel
Shop . l ot is approximately 62
ft. )( J 19 ft . Phone 992 -708 1 or

9'12 -5886
6 rooms and bath home, lo t. If in·
teres ted . call 994·3704.

Tru tors
NEW: Uwn Boy mowers, Pioneer, Me·
CullouKh cNrin saws, Bolen's Mowe1s,

Merry Tille1s, MTD Mowers.

-----~--~

_~ppo i n tm ent..:...~ -~- -~-HOMES ITES lor sal e. 1 acre and
up, Midd leport near Rutl ond

Virgil B. Sr .', Realtor

3 brs.,

Middleport, Ohio
992·6167
6-1-76-1month
BRADFORD, Austioneer . Com·
plete Ser"¥ ice . Phone 949 -·2487
or 949-2000. Racine. Ohio, Crill

8•odlord.
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -

Sweepers , toasters , iron s, all
small appliances . Lawn mower,
ne xt to State Highway Garage

Mod. 3

k i l che n w -range, ref. ,
d ispo sa L dishwa sher, other
ex tr as. 5 BR . 2 ba th s. N.G.
hot water heat. Par t
ba sem enl. $20, 000

lor lh e child re n. NE W
LISTING al 129,000 be-

RUTLAND - On Lead ing
Creek, 1.72 acr es mosll y in
lawn . Excell en t for home
or trai ler . Thi s you mu st
see . $3,300 .

tween coa l m ines.

NEAT - 2 b•. bunga low,
st. doors and wi ndow s,
cook un its,
nat.
gas
fur nace , ba sem ent, la r ge
yar d. $13,500. Owner wil l
he l p finance.

HERE IS A BUY - 3 BR ..
ba th , d in in k it chen w. 17ft.

cab, doub le bow l S.S. sink.
Lar ge li v ing R. 2 por ches,

RIV ER VIEW -

N.G. heal. storage bldg .
$7,900
FARM5 &amp; ACREAGE 1- 30 A.. 1- 157 A , 1- 135

Lovely

k it. wi th cook units, 3 br s.,
au to . stea m hea t. Por ches,
garage, a nd basem en t .

$29 .500
TUPPERS PLAINS - Nice
3 brs., bat h. gas FA

fo r

POMEROY - Large brick
&amp; block bui lding, 2 story,

73

7&lt;2-22 17.

I,

IJTIL•

BEDRM, ,

B~EDRM,
D '
t:::l 1..../

No. 3

No . 2

I

lWO BEAUTIFUl

LIVIl&lt;O
Rllqol

. (Orner thence running

feet ; th ence run nina parallel

with the line first run 100 lttl
to the slreet ltrst named ;
thence eulerly tlong said
streel 3t teet lo the place or
beginninG· being the seme

HOMES
D&amp;D TREE Trimming, 20 y4Kirs 8 liC·
perience . lns1.,1red free
estimores. Call 99'.2-2384 or

74

VOLKSWAGEN .. . . ........... ........ ... .. . '2895

prem I an

74

PLYMOUTH ............ ...... ...... .... .. .. '2995

acy l. Dust er , 2 dr .. powe r st eeri ng , automa ti c trans., a
sha rp ca r .

deed dated Aug. 3rd, 1841 , and
rticordtd In Vol. ' pogo 4•9 of

A 56x24 Penthouse by Fuqua Inc. If y.o u have looked
at other modulars you will be pleasantly surprised
to find that this one is different. It has the Island
range with loads of kitchen cupboard space, 3
bedrooms and 2 full baths .

1614) 698-7257 Albany.

74

FORD MAVERICK .. .. . ... .......... .. ..... ~

'2995

74

PINTO .... , .......... .. ...... .......... : ...

'2795

1972 Vega, 4 cyl ., factory air ,
hatchback .

\

. ....

\

~ .,

....

the Records of Oeeds of Melg•
County , Ohio. Said premises
are known as f\IQ. 202 Condor
Street . .
The · following ·real es.teti

sttualed In the Vlttage ot

Pomeroy , Township of SillSbury , County of Meigs and

Slate or Ohio and more par ttcutarly
bounded
and
deicrtbtd u foitows:
· setng Lot No . 42, on Conaor
Slrott, sold Jot being 36 teet

,~

This home Is FHA approved and is constructed like
a site bu lit home.

front on

..,...-.

Recor-.s.

FORD GRAN TORINO .. .. ..... .. ... ....... '2795

4 dr sed an . one ca r eful local owner, J0 2 VB.

73

lower ha s 3 ren tal rooms,
( 2 ar e r en ted) $6,800. A
good inves tme nt ,

FORD PINTO ........ .. .. .. .. .. .. .... .. .. .. '2195

1969 Ford, 6 cyl., stand., 2 dr .,

furnace .

Full

base m ent .

·Just S5.500.
SOON THINGS WILL BE '
BOOMING. IF YOU WANT
TO
ENJOY
PROSPERITY, JOIN US,
WITH YOUR PROPERTY.

1967 Camaro

2 dr . sedan , like new, dark green fini sh.

2 dr. , ha rd t op ; factor y air , shows t ender ca re.

TRUCKS

dining room , fi r e pla ce, lull ba sement; nice porches
11nd ou t buil dings. large scen ic lake wit h green g r e~ss
,1nd pine tr ees a r·ound il. Watc h th e large bas s swi m
along in th e clear wa ter . Prett y as a pictu r e. Pri ce d to

73

CHEVROLET LWB PICKUP. ... .. ... ... . .. .. '1995
one careful loca l owner.

1975 Pinto Station Wagon, 4 cyl ., 4 speed ,
with power s teering , only 10,000 miles . Now
$2895

'2995

1972 Pinto Runabout, 4 cyl., 4 speed, AM-F M
rad io,2toneqreen , SHARP.
Now$1595

FORD LWB .. ........ .... .. . ....... ...... ..

Econolin e va n, excep tiona l in ever y way .

74

FORD

Lfz T. LWB PICKUP .. . .... .. .. ..... •a495
1

70

CHEV

4 W.

DRIVE PICKUP .. . ...... ... ...

'2095

Wort.h muc h m or e .

73

DATSUN .. ... .. . .. ........ . . . : .... . ... . .. . .. '2695

4 cyi., sma ll pi ck up, shows t ender ca r e.
'

&gt;12,800 - S lxd roo111 ~ . l br~lh s. e)( t. lg. li v . rm ., porches ,
gar nat gas furnil ct&gt;. elms., hdwd fir s. , Lac. Scout Rd
' in Chesl er .
·

1972 Ford LTD, 4dr., factory air , P. S., P. B.,
vinyl roof.
Now $1595

Ole loca l owner .

69

DODGE

lf2

T. PICKUP .. .... .. ...... .. .. .. . '1395

Extra goOd tini sh, no rust .

'

&gt;CE NI C COUNTRY HOME - Well cared lor home in

M"NY MORE

th e cou ntr y contai n ing 2 bPrt .. ooms, l iving room ,
1Dnice su n porch . A lso
ki t chen . smr1l l dining ..
cell ar and c ella r houst ~\,..: . and barn . . . Tha t 's
not all . . 37 acres g ot..~ w1fh 1! .. . all over looking !he
beau tif ul Ohio River . On ly !!15,000.

·r -n\

See: Fred Blaettnar, Melvin Little,
or f&gt;at Hi II
Open Evenings Til7 :00
Except Thurs •.and Sat. Til5:00
•Closed Sunday

~ ll , 0.1 r 1 .v iii buy modern hom e OC'M l ai rgrounds, 2
bedr ooms , l ivi ng r oom . kilchen , bil lh , g&lt;trage. ? ca r
con cre te block gMagc and garden space , nlc~ fo·r sma ••
fami l y.

DAN THOMPSON
FORD

WE NEED FARM LAND
Call Jimmy Deem

Phone
992-2196

949-2388

'

'

'

r.

~iddleport

·~=~~~r~:a~r:rr;'c~~~~~
!1't~:
now
prem lsts

Generalized List of Items

f,

I

,I

'

f\

f

I

1974 Pontiac Catali.na, 4 dr. se dan, factory
atr , P.S., P. B., crutse control, rear window
defogger , v inyl roof .
Now$2995
1973 Ford LTD Brougham, 4 dr ., H. T., ful ly
equipped .
·
Now$2495

.-~. ~

IF YOU have a WYict to offer, ot.D lurnlture, Ice bo-. brass
_,,to buy or Mil somelhlng,
bods. old wall t.IOPhonll and
are looking for - " . · · 0 '
porlo, or complet. houllholds.
1iiha-r , • , you'll got r11ult1
Wrlle M. D. Miller, Rt. 2,
!astor with a Sentinel Wonl Ad.
Pomeroy, Ohio, Co11992-n60.
CAIII992·21S6.
CASH paid for all mokoo and
YARD Salo, June 18th ond 19th.
mc!&lt;lei• ol mobllo hamel.
All day at lht r~~ldonco ol
Phone a•oa c~ 614·423·9531 .
Carol Smith, Happy Hollow
$$Cosh$$$
lor lunked auto. F'Y•'•
Road, """left on top of hill.
Truck Auto Parts, Rutlond.
YARD SAlE, Salurdoy and SunPhono742·2081.
day, 10 till 6. o.p.o..lon
COINS,
tokOfll, any form gold or
gloll, new Tupperwore ,
sllvor ltwel'Y, spoons, rl"ff,
carr11roo, mile. Rt. 124 Wnt ol
Rutland. lot- Canon Toxoco.
dontol. Will lrado. Call Rogor
Womaloy, Rudond, Ohio, 742·
• ratn, cancellod.
:13:11.
.
YARD Salo Thursday, Friday and
WHITE
unllorms,
ponloulto
or
Saturday at cor"" ol Collego
droson. Size 9 to 1: . Call 992·
Rood and Sixth Str11t,
:1924.

•.

1 " •)( E. '0t.l'\

ooNERCn. C&gt;

1971 Chevy Chevelle Malibu, 2 dr., H. T., 307,
V-8, automatic , P.S., vinyl roof . Now $1895

·•

••

...

TRUCKS
1970 Chevy,6 cyl ., standard, long wide
bed.
Now $995
1971 Ford F-250, 3/4 ton . auto ., trans., P.s :,
P. B.. with topper
Now $1795

Located on St . Rt. 7

I

'.

Second
the wide
tear tor
or
ltld
Lot,Street.
1 stripto5 feet

;---------------------~
....

the purpose of an alley, to be
used In common by the

.

"You'll Uke OUr Quality Way
,
of Doing Business
GMC FINANCING
Pomeroy
992.5342
~Open Evenings Untii6:00-TII6p.m. - t. ..
·
,

NOTICE

Methodist Episcopa l Church

and aaslgns.

There Is elso lll£)ud

Wa will ba clo•d

tho

•-'*·

mln lstretrlx WWA of the
Estate of Mary
Hoffman,
deceased , late of Box 31,

Realty Compenv lncl the
VIllage of Pomeroy tor ""
purpo11 of tngreas and egrets,

fiduciary with in three months.

tht

c.

Chester, Meigs caunly, Ohio. said tltoy II IO&lt;IItd In Lot152,
Creditors are required lo
Thtl tho Slid Council or tho
tile lhelr claims with sa id llllloge or , Pomeroy, htvlng

Dated this 1st day of June,
1976.
Menning D. Webster, Judge
(6) 4. ,, , 18, 31c

_ N11TICE
Tne Eottern Local Board ol
EGucatlon will sell . tht
tollowtng at t Public Auction
· at ·ttle Tuppers Plains But
· Gerage on SoturGay, July 10,
1976 at 10:00 A.M·.:
1- 1969 Dodge 60 Passenger
School Bus Superior Body .
1- 196B Dodge 60 Panenger
Schoof Bus Superior Body.
1- 1,64
Cnavrolet
66
Pasoonuer
School
Bus
utlful
Do
Surer lor Body.
l¥ouraelf end seve. R111UII1r [l
- 1965 Dodge 66 Passenger
sq. yd.
4 llooultful loogle Hovnch, lu•f ·school Bus Wayne Body.
1 - Bas~etbell
Scoreboard.
rlghl Olfll to train for hunting
Several old school desks.
••ason
.
loth
~enh
51!: vii.
Other mlscetleneous ttems.
roglsltNd. Phono 949·
.
(6) II, 18, 25 (7) 2
llOIIERMAN

I till :I nOon'
•••
;• FRIDAY TIL 8 •: =
~..
Sat.
'~
•

Ats p.m.

••••••••••
.RUn.AND FURNITURE
141·221i

••

aRNOLD GRan

e•
.

l

~itii.iii:daiii,

JUtLAND

'

~254. '

CALL 742·2211
TALK TO
WINOILL o•ATI!
CAR,.T CONSULTANT ·

RUTLAND
. FURNITU.

puppln.

Champion brod, AJ(C Roq.
llad&lt; and rust. Wormed , roacty
for salo. $150. Phone (614) 388·
999t.
.
FliEE klllens, I mole, 2 fomal11,
Tupflln Plains. Phono {614)

Tltursday

jJ-..

Plnchor

I

AJ(C R111111t.rod Toy Poodle pups
for sale. One whit. male, ono
apricot male, I Wilks old, $75.
"'-' t.l9·2571 '
NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
- .
CUI No. 21129
Estote or Mary c. Hottman,
Notice Is hereby given lhat
M•rl orle 4. Goeft . of 830 East

. aupervlllon

· ·or

management or lh~ property
to bo sold, be and ~treby 11
authorized to edvtrllst told
real
•stat•
tor eccordlng
•• ~. to lhe
highest
blddtr
to
taw, upon the following terms:
Cllh In ~and on the day of the
se~ac~ bid must conteln the
full name o'
every person
or
compony
lnterllltd
In l~t
seme; ana be accompenlod by
1 bond or carllflad check In the
sum of · $100.00 lo fha
llllstactton of Village Council
•• a uuoronly that II tne bid 11

accepted contract will be
entered Into and Its Ptr ·
formence proplrfy secured ,

Thou checks or bondo will

be retui-ntd · at once to all
except the IUCCellfUI bidder.
H to chock or bond wlll bo hold
untlt the contr1ct or bid Ia

properly oxocuttd by nlm.
Sold Council roservn tho
rtuht to roltct any end ell Dldl.
received for tho lift or any
parctt or reel estalt. Tnts
Ordlnlnco lhttl go Into ettoct
, from ena liter tho oerllolf·
period tllowed by taw .
PASSED : .
.
NOTICE OF
Relph Werry, Prttfdenl
APPOINTMENT
or Vllloge Council
C11e No. 21137
VIllage of Pomeroy
Estate of lucille Juu, ATTEST:

Deceased.
Notlce ' ls hereby given that ,

Clarence Andrews , Mayor
Palled : June7, ·1976

George R. Young. of Roule 3, (6) 11·25, (7) 2·31c

Pomeroy , Ohlo, has been duly
appointed EKecutor of the
E s tete of Lucltte Jesse~
(:leceased, late of Route 3,

Pomeroy, Meigs County, Ohio.
Creditors are required to

Deceattd.

Saturday, June 19th,

-Ma in street, Pomeroy , haS ' estate, said alley to be Ulld In
been duly appointed Ad - common wltn lht Elberfe ld

:... ~_ . =·.

1976 Impala, 'l1 loot, uH· WILL DO odd lobs, roofing, paincantolnod. lwln beck, tondom
ling, hauling,
and
whotls, air conditioned, lots ol
'"""'lng. Phono992·7&lt;10'1.
oxlrtii.Sttanyllmoalltoftdor·
do building and remodeling,
;.,., Trallor Pork, Hondo,...,.,, WILL
- rooting. plumbing, lurnoco
W. Va.
repair, gas or oil or _.,1
ropalr, Froo 11Hmat11 and
1970 Community Co1avan, 12x52,
rea1onable rates . Phone
two a&lt;, plus w·d, good condl·
Charl11 Sinclair, {614) 985-4121
tlon. Phono (6t 4)98!-429.4.
of992-2221'
t965 Shafto Coml1or traitor, Mlf.
cantolnod, 15 ft.,1p0rw wheel, EXPERIENCED polntors, lnlerlor,
exterior, flexlblo ralll , oil
lacks, oloctrtc brokll, outo
hook-up, lrans-&lt;OOior, N75.00. work guarantoed. Call Dalo
i;;;Phone;;;;
;;;992
;;;-35;;;;17;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ Harrison, 992-3004 or Mike
lcrr, 742-3011.
WILL do ~~trolarlol work, 1 hovo
•· Jot •rt ....____ 1
SAVE ON
an rwiOC 11 " ...,.." n
luolneu. II noedod, phono
CARPETINO
992·3612.
WILL '-'-•If In our homo. Phono
-•
992.3119.

I:UOtll5:011

'•

Chester. 0.

zandf

1111•••••••••••••••••••1

from

K arr &amp; V an

of Pomeroy, Ohio, •nd the
herelri named, Villa,ue of
Pomeroy, their succcsors

Sale Sf'

· Mon., Tues., Wed .

Clo$e

RIGGS USED CARS

See one of these courteous salesmen: Pete
Burris, Lloyd Me L1ughlin or M1rvln
Keebaugh .

ue Vol. 161, pave 3501 . Thence
soutneattorty parallel wllh the
Wllltrly tint Of Lot 152 IO
Second Stroot, ,lnence nor_lh·
easterly following the south·
etiY uno or Lol m and t~e
unnumbered Lot .located be.·
tween Loll 151 and 152 to the
place or beginning, This lot to
be sold 11 known •• the City
Hall, Pomeroy, Ohio.
There 11 also Included e
strip
of .lhe
landherein
on theducrlbtd
tlllerly
side or
premi-ses. extending

Candy Stripe

Now$1595

1973 Buick Electra, 225 l_imited , 2 dr ., H. T.,
fully equipped , radial tires .
Now $2995

(1) Eldorado

10 In thea wide on tho west side
of the herein aoocrtbtd rltt

1971 Ford LTD,4dr, factory a ir , P. S., P. B.,
·

(1) Coupe DaVIlla

right to use an alley,,. feet end

Syr-.fram9~.m.lo6p . m .

vinyl roof, SHARP.

formerly

Company (For reference deed

1 •.

PI-! . QQ') 7031

or

owned by tne Etborltfd Rully

Now $400

Now$1195
1973 American Motors Matador, 4 dr., air ,
·
Now $1395
P .S., P. B., vinyl roof.

Ve r y low m ileage,

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

&amp;PHONOGRAPH

1971 Chevy, 4 dr. sta.

FORD LTD ...... . .. .. .... ..... .... .... ..... '1795

71

Now

$400

VOLKSWAGEN .... .... .. .... .. .. .. .... .. .. . 11500

71

H. T.,

PIESAFE CUPBOARD

s.elc:t prtmlsea ere

73 Cldille Sed. DeVIIe, DOW, li • · · ·'4595
72 Cldillc Cpe. DeV"IIIe. DOW•, li • • ! ' •
71 Cadillac Eldorado Cpe., power,-llr • 13&amp;15
75 Dodp Dart Swinpr Cpe., lllfo. . • • 13495 .
74 Chev. lmp. 4 dr. H.t, power, air••• '3295
74AMC Hornet 2daar, ••to. bails • , • 12295 ·
73 Olds 88 4 dr., full power, air ••••• 11195
73 Olds Cul Sup. Coupe, power, lir •• 13495
73 Chtv. Monte Carlo, power, air • ••• '2&amp;95
72 Olds TOI'OIIIdo, air, V·roof• • • ••• • 12295
72 Pontile Catalina 4 Dr., air r . . : . : '1995
72 Olds 98 4 door, full power, lir • •• • 12295
72 Buick Elec. 225 HT Cpe~, power air. 12495
72 Chtv. Imp. 4 Door, V-8, auto., air •• 11595
72 Buick LISibre Cust Con., air • • • • 12695
72 Ford TG!'ino CouPe, V-I auto. • •• • • '1695
72 Olds 98 4 door, power &amp;air •. ••• 12295
72 Dodge 1ton Stake, V-8, 4speed. • • 12295
71 Olds Cutlas 4 dr., V-8, auto. ••.•• 11995
71 Pontiac Cal Coupe, power, air..•• 11095
71 Chev. lmJIIII HT Sed., pow., air ••• 11495
71AMC Hornet Sportabout Waa. •• •• '1095 .
71 Buick Skylark HT Cpe., air . : •_••• '1695
70 Olds 98 4 dr., power. air · · · • • · '1395 ·
70 Olds 98 4 door, poW•, air ••••• • 11095
70 Chrysler NY 4Dr., PB, PS •••••• • '9t5
70 Ford LTD WQIII, PB, PS, air•• •••• '895
70 Chevelle Coupe, V-8, auto., PS•• • • '1395
69 Chev. NM 2 Dr.~ vin~ top • • . . . . • 1995
.69 Olds Cul Sup. H.T., PB, PS, air •• •• 1895
68 VW Transporter Bus, 3st1ter •••• 11095
68 Chev.lmp. Cus. Cpe., V-8, auto.• ••• '595
66 Olds 18 Uoor, air . • • • . • . • • • • '695
· 65 Ford CauniiJ Sed. Wqon. • ...•. ; '395
76 Cadlllaa
In StOck
.
.

followtnu lhe northerly ltnt or
Lot 152 end lht htrtlotort

HOMES

Mahogany Dining Room Suite (Includes China- 60" Round Tablel, Oak
Dining Room S!ljte (Includes China, Etc.), Old Carpets, Marbletop Stand,
Chairs (All Kinds), Tables, Sofas, Beds (Metal-Wood), · Secretary,
washstand, Swivel Chairs, Sewing Machines, Piesafe, Jelly Cupboards,
Mirrors, Dressers, Vanities, Buffets, Kitchens Cupboards, Wardrobes,
Pump Organ, Player Piano (Minimum Bid 250), Cash Register, Stoves,
Insulators, Clocks (Mantel &amp; Cuckoo), Edison Cylinder &amp; RecortiPhonographs·, Metal Milk Separator, Fruit Jars, Washing , Machines,
Trunks, Coin Vending Cigarette Ma_c hine, Old Radios, Lanterns, Old
Lamps, Glassware (Depression, Pattern, Carnival, Etc.) Pottery; Clllna,
Old Bottles, COin (Silver Dollars, Pennies, Etc.), r Lot Stone Jars,
Crocks;
Lot
&amp;

1972 Olds Delta 88, 4 dr ., H.T., factory air,
P . 5., P . B., vinyl roof.
Now $1595

2 dr .. carefu l loca l owner.

71

Partial

1973 Buick Century, 2 dr ., red with . vinyl
interior. 'h vinyl roof, radial tires, P.S.,
P . B., automatic .
Now $2695

2 d r . sedan , 4 cv l ., economy a t it s best .

74

REGISTER FOR FREE PRIZES -

Now $1595

In

Street, at th·e sO.u theasterly
corner of the building now or
. fqrm~r:ly owned by _sa ld City of
Pomeroy {known 11 the City
Hell) ; thence northwesterly
parallel w ith the westerly line
of Lot 151, 100 feet or to the
north line of an unnumbered
lot , located betWeen lots
numbered 151 and 152 In sa id
village, thence southwesterly .

KINGSBURY

Starting At 1:00 PM
Saturday, June 19 &amp; Sunday, June 20, 1976

Street

as No. 202 . Condor
street.
.
PA~CEL .~.: . The loltowlng
described real esllle situated
In the Village &lt;if . Pomeroy,
Counly or Meigs and. Slate of
Ohio: Beginning 60 feet end 7
Inches southwellerly from· tht
southeuterly corner or Lot lSI
In sold Vllltge on Second
~now_n

ION

KINGSBURY HOME SALES &amp; SERVICE, INC.
1100 EAST MAIN STREET, POMEROY, OHIO

condor

Second Word Of satd VII lege Of
Pomeroy, On 10, being the
same premt111 sold by Joslth
Holt and wtte saroh A. HoN,
u ar• described In Vol. 101
page 256, Meigs County Deed

A 48 x 24 by Skyline Corporation. This home has 3
bedrooms, Is fully furnished, carpeted throughout,
total wrap fom· (or for maximum energy saving,
has shingle roof and lap 'Siding .

AU

1975 Mercury Montego MX 4 dr ., factory
air. P.S., P. B., vinyl roof.
Now $2995

,jdr . seda ~, a. conditioning, P.S., A .T., "A cr ea m puff "

· to

conveyed

Margaret Kaulz by C. Hemm

end Susan Hemm , his wife , by

1971 Ford Thunderbird 2 dr ., coupe,
automatic, P. S., P. B., factory air, ti II
wheel. cleanest '71 around.
Now $1695

2 d r ., low mi lea ge,. li ke new.

at right

anglll wllh sold strut 100

1'11.99~·2174

1973 Buick Regal 2 dr., while with white
vinyl roof, factory air, P.S., P. B., tilt wheel ,
AM·FM · stereo, cruise control, chrome
reverse wheels with radial tires . Sharp. Now
$3495

CHEV. MONTE CARLO . .... ...... .. . .... .. '3495

9'12·7086.

S Family Ya rd Sole , Wed . thru RIDiNG lawn tractor , Bh,p. 32 in ch cut . Phone 742 -266 1.
Sot., 81 Garfield A'le. Dishes ,
clo thing&amp; misc . ite.m s.
23 channe l Couier Cora ... elle CB
.
· -; Bose . station was coax and
SOMEONE needed to bole hoy
onfenno. Used only 3 mon ths,
must ha'o'e own equipmen t.
O$k ing $200. like ne w portable
Phone ·992·2i21 or See Ben Ew ·
dishwasher , white , $50. Phone
__ in~ : _ _ - ··-

Porctl 3: SltUIIId In lht
Townsntp or Soltsbury, counly
ol Metgl end Stott or onto end
more perttcularty bounded
end dtscrlbld .U fOllOWS:
SltUIItd In lhe Vl!tage Of
Pomeroy, being Lol No. 43,
com manctng on the North l ido
ot condor Slreelln sold City at
a stone placed at a permanent

1974 Monte· Carlo, factory air, automatic,
P.S., P . B., vinyl roof, beautiful green
finish.
Now .$3995

furnace . Lot 100 x.-375. On J ,.

acre . Or.ty $1 9,500.
NEW LISTING - 1 brs,
ba lh. nat. gas, F.A.

sell S37 ,lDO .OO.

CU STOM mode can opy lor picnic
fable, five piece Hickory Fami ly
room set , largo Foley gri nder
for rea l mowers . Ph one (6 14)

ui1nece11ary damage to the
of rhe same.

surfa~:;e

CARS

Fu ll ai r and all goodies, a beau tiful car .

ex-

mine the same without any

ON DISPLAY

CHECK and COMPARE
OUR -QUALITY AND .
PRICES! · .

REMODELING, Plumbing heating
and all types of general repair.
Work guaranteed 20 y&amp;ars ex·
peri@nce. Phone 992-2409.

and

Saving

Records.

, First Quality

· on Route 7. Phone {614) 985·
3825.

f t tt ;

Deed Reference: Volumt 94, ·
Page 216, Metgs County Dttd

'6.95

REGATTA
SPECIALS

-----

;

DONELli'S PIZZA

Square Yard Installed
David Parsons, Owner
949-2814
6-7-l mo .

·------------------..----·
.73 Cadillac Cot. DeVllt. power, air •• ,' '4295

Togelher with the right 10

Take this opportunity to make some _
f ine antique purchases and
view the latest in factory built housing .

SMITH NELSON
. MOTOliS, INC.

BACK CARPETING

ar THESE

2

br s .. bath , k it has st ove,
r efr ig . and ba r w ith d in ing
room . Leve l lot . $18,000.
DE XTER ~ Business
buildi ng 30 x 40. one f loor .
Askin g onl y $5,500.
COUNTR Y SETTING - II
beaut if ul ac r es , fe n ced
blue grass, garden, co r n
pa t ch, 4 br . r esi d e n ce.
Spr ing water, lar ge ya rd

2 co rner lot s. Bea uti fu l

DON 'T LOSE MONEY LIST WITH US TODAY .
HENRY E. CLELAND,
BROKER
992-2259 or 992-2566

ASSORTED RUBBER

YOU'LL JUMP FOR JOY

TEAFORD

608 E.
MAIN
POME-ROY, 0:
LOVELY OLD BRICK

~ ca ll

+Ta x
With any $4.00 purcha se
and this ad. Good through
6-30-76.

Driwef· Ed. CIIS,.••• , •, ................... ~'5395
power, air, AM/FM !ldio

m nerels under lying -the
prem lses hereby grant,d .

"'

ONE FLOOR -

A.
P lease
par ticular s.

b~lnntng .

.BA,

Racine, Ohio

(2) 76 Olds Cutllss Supreme,

cor,ttng . all coal and other

Radlato~Jilj
Service

4-10-1mo.

f.26 )

USED CARS

thence north elghteon ( 18)
felt ; thence, Eest twenty .sl~
1261 feel to lht piece or

I!DR0~\1

51 ACRE S FREE GA S- Mode•n I', sfo•y house , 3 br ..

HOUSEWI VES , open the door to
extra earnings Joi n the su e·
678-2166.
cessful women w ho are mok·
1972
Hondo 175 CC , runs good ,
ing good money in their spore
$275. P~one l6 14 ) 985 -411 9.
l ime . ' N o
expe r ie n ce
n ece~ · ·y, no delivery , no col· 10 speed blcv cle, a track home
lec tiny , no cash in ... es tmen t,
stereo with 2 speakers, $30. 20
Cali now and get edro early
in r h~cycl~ Phone 99~:!551 .
benefits , Phone 949-2803 or
9,.9 -2786. A lso, booking par - LATEN paper , roller, 2 trucks,
reasonabl e. Phone 992·7,.Bf .
ties.

.

--~-

bat hs. nice ki t . , f u ll
basemen t , ci t y water and
gas, 1.4 acre s. $31.500.

bn

West t wenty .alx

''

EXPERIENCED

RACINE
CARPET SHOP

98~ - 3 97 4 .

616 New Holland Choppe'r , gross
and co rnheods. $-ISO. Coli 997.

11 dreues, proctical l~ new , lite
17. l adies shoos, 5Yt to 6. 2
pocke tbook s, new , 3 pairs of
men's pants , I coot. Phon e

Ridint

6 room house , very we ll kept , 3
498Lom1 Sl
· bedrms., modern kitchen , wal l
MiddiOJHJ&lt;I,
Ohio 992·3091
to wall carpet, H.W. floors. lull
ba sement, new gas furnace ,
small lot to mow, ·ideal for
older couple or small fomiiJ" in BUILDING and remodeling , ex·
good
neighb or h o od
in
COIIOfion , concrete work , elecPomeroy, Ca ll.lor appointmen t.
triccil work , plumbing, rough
Phone 992·3097.
and finished, carpen try and
roofin g. Phone 992-7A81 .
HOUSE l or sol e in Chester area .
Three year old, four bedroom, SEWING MACHINE Repairs , ser·
brick ra nc h on fi ve acres of
vice , ,all makes , 992·228.4 , The
land. Has I"'VO baths , Iorge
Fabr ic Shop , Pomer o y .
rooms. fin ished basement wi th
Authorized Singer Sales and
fireplace in fam ilv room . Phone
Ser"¥ice. We sharpen Scis sors.
(6 14 ) 985-3938 or contact Don
Roush.
SEPTI C TANK S clean ed. Modern
. ~~c----c10 roo m bric k , 2 famil y dwelling
Sani tati on. ~ 2-39.54 or 992wi th basemen t, Iorge yard.
2428.
-redecorated on B10wnelf A11e.
in Middleport . Phone .(6 1-4)

247-2161.

ON OUR LOT AT

"' DlliNP
6-13-76 I mo.

10

Ph. 992·3!193

'1.00

-~Tillers­

$21 ,000. Phonel61 4) 667-3519.

OVERLOOK ING the rive r, 3 plus
acres ond trailer, $6800 Norris
of Raci ne on Rt . 338. Phone

5·21-1 mo

6 CANS OF RC

[\~ ~:,,_

ROOMY 7 yr. old one story wood
frame, two bedrm . home
located be tween Coolville and
Turpers Plains. One ocr8 lot
tw o cor ga ra ge, ci tr water , gas
heel .
ha r dwood
f loors,
carpetd , li vmg room, nice view,

9'12·2166.

JIICUse,

&amp; SUN., JUNE 20

'

lloi2U
Rullln~ Ohio 45775
Ph. (614) 141-2409

LARG~EU~NDER

JUNE SPECIAL

Chain

...£~~723.-2_
. ~~

985-4245.

WILKINSON'S
Complete SmaN En1.
ReJ)'II

42 one-fo ur th acres of real es ta te ,
more or less , situated in Sec ·
f1on 26, Fraction 31, in Rv tlo nd
Towns hip , Meigs County, Oh10.
For f1.1rth er jnf ormotion, contact
Bernard V. Fultz, Pomeroy Notion a l
Bonl-1
Bu i ld i ng ,
Pomeroy. Ohio. Telephone:

owner.

SAT~. JUNE 19

•'

Truss Rafter Co.

I

HOUSE . wa ll to wal l carpe l , partly
furn ished , 650 Osborn e St.,
Pomeroy . P ~_?~ne 9?.~_5668 .

OPEN
Oars and ewenings except Tues. and
Wed. 01 bJ ton1actin1 R. Codner,

4-12 Pitch
24'- $17.28
26'- $18.72
28'-$20.16
Southeastern Ohio

STORM
I'IINDQIIS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
StOING-50FFITT

Trawel Trailen

OPEN HOUSE and
ANTIQUE AUCTION

a~~ ..

B&amp;ow1 into Walls I AttiCS

SALES&amp; RENIAL

'

l'llilalllt, i11o.

F•11111 till lor

992-5011.

56 AC RE S - Modern l ' 1 story home 3 bedroom s w ith
firep lace and basement . Apple, cherry an d other fr u it
trees . Mostly fenced wit h pa st ur e, som e fa rm land .
Close t o Dan v il le. Pr iced re duce d Ia $18.700 .

WOOD burning heater, used very
little , $100. Also 8 trai ler ti res .
like new . $150. Ph one (614 )

"

2160.

-

I

,.,m

~1:1-1 m~

FREE ESTIMATES
Blown
lnsu~tion Services
Fin!PJCin&amp; Availolll

CODNER'S CAMPERS
RAINBOW RIDGE
IBIIShan A"''
LONG BOTTOM

lill ,..lt·pat!111ti 1111P1.

Midtlllpotl

Ulm"

Pomeroy City Melt su ltdlng .
NOT NEE DED FOR ANY
M U N ICI P A~ PURP0$E .
8t It ord olnod by lhl
council · or the Vllloge or
Po mer oy, 111 membtrl
tltcttd thtrtto coi'l currlna .
-That the follow ing dtscrlbtd
real ntote .belong ing to the
· Vltlege or Pomeroy 'II not
' nttdt d lor any muntclpol
purpoat, to wtt :
Ptrctl I : Lol -12 In V. 8 .
Horton 's Addltton to Pom eroy,
Lot 13 In V. 8 . HMion 'l Ad dillon to Pomeroy .. .
Reference Deed : Volume
2GS, Pege 387 of tho Molu
County, Oh io, Ottd Records.
Ptrcol2 : Beglnnlnu on Nye
Strtttat the ·Northttsl corner
of • lot heretofore dotdtd .by
Cur tis D. Retd and l eure
Alberto Rttd to John M.
Roedel by dttd dated April 24,
11" recorded In Volume 14,
Pove 316, recorda or Datds or
Meigs County . Ohio. Thtnco
South par alit with P\1 yt Street
otghltlfl 118) loti : lhtnco

l''"'d pool kits I• '

aPNI -

I'IIONE992·5724

P1111101, Oh~

t:lomeroy , better known 11 lit

Word FlrehOIISt : Porcot 3,
Lots 4J ond 42 . .VItllgo of
Pomeroy , better known 11 2nd
Word Flroh0111e : Pt rcll f,
· per t Of LOI 151 . Vltlege of

Pom troy, better known 11

N~. 5umm" Rd.,

Phone992-5461

\llll• a• or Pomerov ; Partet2,
port or Lol 296, Vltlogo of

Home Sales _Is Having A Combination•••

!

-

8 . Horton's Addition to .tht

It's Regatta Time Again and Tills Year _Kingsbury

D. Bumgardner

i

RIDERS SALVAGE
5L Rll 24

O.O INAN C•thoNO.Jti.J
. Uf _ o1 . , .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..
AuthoriJIP!.IL.
Porco! 1, Loll12 end 13, of V.

SWIMMING
POOLS
M pool

Batteries $1.25
Mot01 Cut Clun
.$3.50 Per Hund,led
· Copper 35c
C~r Bodies
· Smp.lron

5-9·76

Raci ne, Ohio
Need new roof
Old
re pa ire d? H.o us4;! . ' ro of,
ba r n, shin gl.es, build up,
pa intin g, electri ca l w or k,
gutt ers &amp; do w nspo u t s,
f u r n ace~.
wat er hea t er s,
wa t er · softn er s, in stall ed &amp;
r e p r~l r e d , Se w age.
Ca ll us at '1 49-288 2
or 949-22 03 .
3 28 1mo .

EXPER IENCED house
poin ter.
Phone Arth ur ·Musser , 7.. 2.

MODERN. -

2307.-

DO YOU HAVE PARTY PlAN EX PERI ENCE? FR IENDL Y TOY
PARTIES HAS OENINGS FOR
MANAGERS IN YOUR AREA .
RECRUITING IS EASY BECAUSE
OEMS HAVE NO CASH INVESTMENT , NO COLLECriNG OR
DELIVERI NG: CALL COLLECT TO
CAROL DAY 518-489-8395 OR
WRITE FRIENDLY HOME PARTIES. 20 RAILROAD AVE ..
· ALBANY , N.Y. 12205.

rooms and both , 7b9 Short
Fourth St. To be seen, go t o 291
South Sycamore, Middleport .
Ohio .

5-26·1"'"

Racirie Plumbing
&amp;Heating

3167.
SPRAY PAINTING. Al TROMM
CONSTRUCTION. PHONE 7422328.
VERMEER
BALERSALES AND SER·
Phone 1614) 368·8371 o• 1304)
VICE, Meigs·Athens County.
773 -5877.
.
- Balers from $3995 up . Merrill
REAL es tate for rent or sale. 7
Cho•e.l614)
69B·3021.
-

VEG ETABL ~

MAKE spring cl eaning prof itable .
turn unwanted 1tems into cosh .
Adver tise in th e Wan t ~ds .

Replacement

Windows and Doors
Free Estim al es
We r ecommen d and

---

l'

.

High prices lot scrap aulD$,
motors and other melals.
Phone 992-ZZ28. Monday thru
ft iday 8·3, Saturday 8-12. .

Aluminum -Vi n yl. Steel
Conti nuous Gu tter

WILL tnm or cut trees and shrub·
bery , phone 949·25.45 or 10·

11 0 Mechani c Pom eroy , 0 .
Phon e 992 -JJH

pl an ts of oil J..i nds, 10
di ff erent varie ties of tomatoes,
incl ud i ng non-acid white
tomat o. Very Iorge selec tion of
b eddi n g p la n t s.
Al so
Ge rani ums and other polled
pl an ts . Han ging ba ske t s.
Cleland Farms and Green .
house. Geroldino Cleland ,
Racine .

304·485-0386
614-42J-6474

Se tl Qua lily

--

HALLS
SALVAGE

Parkersburg, W. Va .

CARPENTER , flooring, ceiling ,
paneling , Phone 992·2759..

LARGE 3 bedroom house , 1300 sq.
H. split-level on three·fo.u rth
acre lot , 100x300 locat ed on Rt.
160 acrou from North Gallia
High School , less than 2 years
old . Musl sell now. going wes t.

I, r

J ~nk

2013 lOth Ave.

-

(

·-

Sa les &amp; Service

SEPTIC Systems installed by
licensed ins tpller. Shepard
Co[ltroclors. Phone 742·2409.

For Sale

SKY Diving , Gr eene County Sport MODERN stereo console, 4 speed,
Parachute Center , open eve ry
chang er, om -fm rad io. Balance
day near Gallipolis. For fu rther
$ 106 . ~0 or terms . Call992 ·3965 .
information, call (6 1,.) 2-45-9339
1970 Hon do CC 350; 2 ma tc hing
or P.O. Box 91 , Bidwell , Ohio
helmets, highrise hand leba rs,
45614 .
" black wi th white stripes, exTHE Shaeffer Family from Crown
ce llent cond tti on . $A50. Phone
9'12-2272.
City w ill sing in the Ash St.
Freewil l Baptis t Church , Mid·
1971 lnternofiono l . C.O. 4070A
dleport 1 Sa turday, 7:30 p.m.
twin screw, V-8 Cummins
Everyone welcome,
_
engine, 7b ,OOO miles. 13 speed
STUD Service , firs t year breeding.
overdrive, good ru bber. factory
Registered Wa lk in9 Stallion,
air. radio , !ilide -i n fift h wheel.
big and colorful . II doesn't cos t
Phone Cool'o'1 lle (61-4 ) 667 -6355 .
anything to toke a look. Com Con see at Sohio Station. Tup·
pare him to your Quarter
y ers P loi1~s . -~ ~
Horse , American Saddle Horse ,
ALLIS Cha l mer~ CA tractor ; No. 7
Appa loosa or Mor gan . Phone
mowing machine. Co li al ter 7

742·3182.

.POMER OY LANDMARK
... _Jac k W. Carsey , Mg r
ilil Phone 991·21 81

TRAI LER, 3 bedrooms , fu rnished,
Coll992·7461.
12x60 near the Albany mines .
$150 incl udes wa ter. Phone . NEW 3 bedroo m house , 2 ba ths.
{614 )69_6:_5_..965 0~98 · 7~-all elec . I acre, Middleport ,
d ose to Rutlond . Phone 992·
748 1.

CHANGE OF HOURS ~ 8119inriin g
June 12 we w ill be closed Satur"GRAPEFRUIT PI LL" with Diadox
days. New hours wi ll be Mon·
pi on more convenien t tho n
day through Friday , 9 a.m. til l
grape fru its . Eat sa tisfying
7 p.m. Carolina Fabr ics ..Route
meals and lose we ight. Nelson
7, one-half mile nor th of
Drug.
Ches ter , Ohio. Henry and Mar y
Hun ter , own ers.
ONE dinette se t, excellen t condi ·
tion. Two end tabl es , motchn g
IT IS THE POLICY OF . ARCADIA
antique
bed and buffet dresser .
NURSING · HOME, COOLVILLE .
Phone 992·6092.

TO ADMIT AND TREAT All PA·
TIENTS WITHOUT REGARD TO
RACE , COLOR , OR NATIONAL
ORIGIN.

$26995

.

Siding Center

24J8.
EXCAVATING , BACKHOES AND
DOZER , LARGE AND SMALL,
SEPTIC TANKS INSTALLED. BILl
PULLINS, PHONE 992 ·2478. DAY
OR NIGHT

Go•oge. Coil {614 ) 985-3584 foe

2 bedrm . mobi le home . Brown 's

.

GREG'S CB SALES, located ot Er·
win 's Gulf Ser'o'ice , Mid·
dleport . Ohio. Phofle 992·

3 room ·furn ished opt . . util iti es
paid. 356 North Fourth. Mid - 3 bedroom brick ranch s,yle
home, lull basem ent with
d i !_P~."!_:__ recreation room, 1 ~'1 bath s,
UN f URNISHED opt . for rent , 4
carport , loca ted in 8oum Ad&amp;
room5 and bo th. Phone 992·
lion near State Highwoy

COAL, limes tone and oil types of
salt and rock salt lor ice and
snow remo ... ol. Exce lsior Soli
Works , Ea st Main St., Pomerov .
Oh io ~ Phone 992 ·3891.
RACI NE Fire Depart men t wi ll
ho'o'e a gun shoo t Sa turday at
6:30p .m . at thei r new building
off Bashon Rood .

Choice

-

I

EXCAVATING, dozer, backhoe
and ditcher . Choi-les R. Hat·
field , Bo ck Hoe Service .
"Rutland, Ohio. Phone 742·2008.

FREEZER SALE!
Save up to $100 on 20
cu . ft . Chest or 16 cu .
fl , Upright .

..

I Business Services

MODERN Walnut Stereo. AM ·FM WILL do roofing . cons truction
rod10, ,.. speed changer , 8 track
plumbing and heating . No jot
tope combination . Balance
too Ioree or too small. PhonE
SI 02.40or terms . Co ll992 · 3~ .
742-2348 .

Real Estate for Sale

1971 Ford Gola)l.ie 500, 2 door .
runs good needs body work ,
$350. Also, 1%7 Ford Pi ckup ,
g·ood condi ti on, $600. Phone

.

Business Services

1973 Monte Carlo 350 engine , ·
29,500 m1les . rally wheels , L---'-~----~.....J
$3400 . Phone 992·2035 or 992·

sire_~ I p~king . Ph ~_ne 99~- 7~79 .

In Memory

For sate -=--

$1 500. Phone 161 &lt;) 985·4119,

NOTICES

.

Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds ·

} ,or

1968 Chevetle Mol tbu , 2 door h. t ..
auto .. II·B engine . $-4SO. Call

9'12·2200.
ATTN .; !!
ALL H OU SEW I VES
All Y ard Sal es. Rumm;;~ge .
Porch and Basem ent "Porch
Md Ba~ement SEtl es, etc.
mus t be pa id in ild11anc e.
Ge t yours in early b y
stopping by our ofl ice at
The Daily Sen tinel. 111
Court St or writing Box
129 , Pomeroy , Ol'lio 45769
with your r cmillan c e

'

.. _

·- ·

tlte tnetr claims with uta PITI'liliiJRGH {UPI) tlduct 0ry within throe monlns . . The Pittsburg·h Pirates have
· Doted this Btn day or June ·
1976.
signed haH of the 36 players
Menning Webster
Judgo llley chose in last week's free
(6) 11 , 18, lS
a'-ent rtroft.

10

that our amployaa1 may

anloy the Regatta WHkend.

SMITH NELSON MOifORS

L-------------------_.
POMEROY, OHIO

2 SIGN$

OF
QUI.m

Pomeroy

'

Mote».r to.

1975 CHEVROLET CAPRICE
S5295 ·
Classic coupe, less then 7.000 miles, delu•e belts, tinted
glass, atr conditioned, delu•e bumper guerds, remote
_LHrh mirrors. 400·4bbl. VB , AM redlo and tape, auxl .
fighting , comlorlllt, dar~ red and black vinyl roof, like
new. - a re~.l sharpie.
1973 FORD TORINO
""'
4 door, VB, automatic, radio; good red lei tlrt5, blue
fini sh: clean Interior.
19!3CHEVROLET
alt5·
Caprice Estate Wagon, 1 owner, low mileage, · lull
equipment Includes factory a!r. dark green, grvlnvl.
·

POMEROY lttOTOR 00.

OPhl EVE~t:OO P.M. . .
POMERO'(, ....10 ..

@)
.

I

�10 - The Daily Sent inel, Middlet•&gt;rt -Pun"'""' , u" r'rida) . June 1~. I!17~

S

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES

P .M .
Day
Publ ication .

Cencellat io.ns ,

Before

corr ec

lutoSales.
1974 Ford 4 door hardtop, power
!itear ing power brakes, Qrr
conditionmg, rod1al trres . mce

lion s ac cepted f irs t day of
PUblic ation .

co• . $1 995. Phone I61A) 985·
355&lt;.

The Pub lishe r reserves
the right to edi! or reject
eny ads deemed ob

1967 Comoro, 396 4 speed ,
headers , cam , reworked
head$ , new engine , Be$t offe1 .
Phone 949·28W,

REGULATIONS

iec;:t ional

The pub li sh e r

will not be respons ible for
mo re than on e m correc t

insert ion .

R.O. TES
Fpr Want Act Serv ice
5 c ents per word on e
insert ion
Mi n imum , Ch~rg e Sl 00

14 cents per word Thr ee

consecutive insert 1ons .
26 cents

per word si )(

consecutive insert ions .
25 Per Cent Dis count on
paid . ads and ad s pa id
wit hin 10 days

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
\2 .00
f or
80
word
minimum .
Each ad&lt;;titional word 3

cen ts .

BLI NO ADS
Ad di tio n~!
25c Charg e

per Adve r tisenun!
OFF ICE HOURS
B· 30

a rrt .

10 5

oo . p m

Dai ly , 8 30 a .m . to 12 :00
Noon Sa turd ay .
Phon e today 992 2156 .

{61 &lt;) 965.J596_

1969 Plyrnovth Sotell it'e. $1 200.

Phone992·6131.

1971 Che vy wagon , power'
brakes , power steering, oir
conditioning . nice family cor .
1967 one-half ton lnt8rnationol
pi ckup truck . 5 new tire s:. good
condi tion, $650 or best offer .

Phonel6 I~) 98~ - 3371.

1969 V.W. l ot sale. Cell 247 ·220 1.

2971.

FURNISHED , 2 bedrm. apartment ,
adults only , in Middleport.
Phone 992 -387-4 .

-

3 AND 4 RM , furn1 shed and 1.1n ·
fur n1shed opts . Phone ~2 ·

5434.

-

-

cOUNTRY Mob ile Home Pork, Rt.
33. ten miles north of Pomeroy .
Lorge lots with concret pa tios,
sidewalks . run ners and qff
ONE bedroom apartments at
VILLAGE MANOR in Middleport
lor $104 monthly plu s elec, or
5130 including electric . LOWER

RATES FOR SENOR CITIZENS .
Convenient to shopping on
Thtrd and Mtl l Stree ts in Mid·
dleporl. Brand new ·high quali ·
ty apar tmen t s. See the
manager at Riverside Aport.
ments or coli 992 -3273. Fur rlit hed
opo rh nenls
also
avai lobl e.
One bedrm , and 2 bedrm . fur·
nished apartmenh . Phone
992 -3129 or qq2·54J4 .
TRAILER space for rent in Mid ·

TRAVI S A. RUTH
In ius! three short yea r s he
becC!me a better person
!han we could ev er hope t o
be, spr ea ding love and
show i ng
courag ~
for
eve ry one to see .
With loving aching hear t s.
Boyd &amp; Judy Ruth

'
IN Lo11ing Memory
of our dear
mother ond grandmother, Mrs.
Amelio Walker, June IS, 1976.
Mom, Mom ,
Li ttle did we know that morn
The sorrow the day would brmg .
For th e call was ~udde n .
The shock severe,
' To part wi th one we loved so
deer .
It b(oke our heart s to lose her,
But she did not go alone ,
F.or port of us wen t w ith her.
The da y God called her home.
Please . God lorgi ... e o1.1 r many
tears ,
That secret wis h tho t she be here.
There were others . Yes we know
But she was ours we to ... ed her so.
Sadly mi ssed by children and
grandchildr en , Her l o"¥ing
Forn i~---·_~-_ __

_j~~J~ h o~e 992 ·~~-4

FURNISHED 2 room apar tmen t,
126 M1.1 lberrJ' Ave ., adu lh and
references . Ph one 992-2030
ev~~~~s ~-992 · 2167 :_ ___ ._
2 bedrm , an d I bedrm . fu rn i:;hed
apar tmen t. Phone 992-2288 or

992 -2346 .

5906.

Trailer Park . Phone 9?2 -3324.

LOCUST pos ts , round or split .
Phone 94 9·277.. .

1973 450 Prototype Kawasak i
mo torcrou, good condition.

$650. Phone 992·3843.

HOUSE in Raci ne, Vine St., 6 EXCAVATING , dozer, loader end
backhoe work: dump trucks
rooms and bo th, some '
carpe ti ng. gas furnace. ya rd · and lo-boys for hire: will ~ou 1.
fil l dirt, top soil, limestone and
and nice: garden . Good buy,
grovel. Call Bob or ROger Jefpsoo Ph ~_3_47 :~ '~2:. _
fe rs. day · phone 992 -7009,
OLDER . remodel11d all elec. 3
night phone 992 -3525 or 992·
bedrm. ~ome , $12,500. Call
5232.

3 bedroom house ond lot' m
Racine on Main St. by Carpel
Shop . l ot is approximately 62
ft. )( J 19 ft . Phone 992 -708 1 or

9'12 -5886
6 rooms and bath home, lo t. If in·
teres ted . call 994·3704.

Tru tors
NEW: Uwn Boy mowers, Pioneer, Me·
CullouKh cNrin saws, Bolen's Mowe1s,

Merry Tille1s, MTD Mowers.

-----~--~

_~ppo i n tm ent..:...~ -~- -~-HOMES ITES lor sal e. 1 acre and
up, Midd leport near Rutl ond

Virgil B. Sr .', Realtor

3 brs.,

Middleport, Ohio
992·6167
6-1-76-1month
BRADFORD, Austioneer . Com·
plete Ser"¥ ice . Phone 949 -·2487
or 949-2000. Racine. Ohio, Crill

8•odlord.
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -

Sweepers , toasters , iron s, all
small appliances . Lawn mower,
ne xt to State Highway Garage

Mod. 3

k i l che n w -range, ref. ,
d ispo sa L dishwa sher, other
ex tr as. 5 BR . 2 ba th s. N.G.
hot water heat. Par t
ba sem enl. $20, 000

lor lh e child re n. NE W
LISTING al 129,000 be-

RUTLAND - On Lead ing
Creek, 1.72 acr es mosll y in
lawn . Excell en t for home
or trai ler . Thi s you mu st
see . $3,300 .

tween coa l m ines.

NEAT - 2 b•. bunga low,
st. doors and wi ndow s,
cook un its,
nat.
gas
fur nace , ba sem ent, la r ge
yar d. $13,500. Owner wil l
he l p finance.

HERE IS A BUY - 3 BR ..
ba th , d in in k it chen w. 17ft.

cab, doub le bow l S.S. sink.
Lar ge li v ing R. 2 por ches,

RIV ER VIEW -

N.G. heal. storage bldg .
$7,900
FARM5 &amp; ACREAGE 1- 30 A.. 1- 157 A , 1- 135

Lovely

k it. wi th cook units, 3 br s.,
au to . stea m hea t. Por ches,
garage, a nd basem en t .

$29 .500
TUPPERS PLAINS - Nice
3 brs., bat h. gas FA

fo r

POMEROY - Large brick
&amp; block bui lding, 2 story,

73

7&lt;2-22 17.

I,

IJTIL•

BEDRM, ,

B~EDRM,
D '
t:::l 1..../

No. 3

No . 2

I

lWO BEAUTIFUl

LIVIl&lt;O
Rllqol

. (Orner thence running

feet ; th ence run nina parallel

with the line first run 100 lttl
to the slreet ltrst named ;
thence eulerly tlong said
streel 3t teet lo the place or
beginninG· being the seme

HOMES
D&amp;D TREE Trimming, 20 y4Kirs 8 liC·
perience . lns1.,1red free
estimores. Call 99'.2-2384 or

74

VOLKSWAGEN .. . . ........... ........ ... .. . '2895

prem I an

74

PLYMOUTH ............ ...... ...... .... .. .. '2995

acy l. Dust er , 2 dr .. powe r st eeri ng , automa ti c trans., a
sha rp ca r .

deed dated Aug. 3rd, 1841 , and
rticordtd In Vol. ' pogo 4•9 of

A 56x24 Penthouse by Fuqua Inc. If y.o u have looked
at other modulars you will be pleasantly surprised
to find that this one is different. It has the Island
range with loads of kitchen cupboard space, 3
bedrooms and 2 full baths .

1614) 698-7257 Albany.

74

FORD MAVERICK .. .. . ... .......... .. ..... ~

'2995

74

PINTO .... , .......... .. ...... .......... : ...

'2795

1972 Vega, 4 cyl ., factory air ,
hatchback .

\

. ....

\

~ .,

....

the Records of Oeeds of Melg•
County , Ohio. Said premises
are known as f\IQ. 202 Condor
Street . .
The · following ·real es.teti

sttualed In the Vlttage ot

Pomeroy , Township of SillSbury , County of Meigs and

Slate or Ohio and more par ttcutarly
bounded
and
deicrtbtd u foitows:
· setng Lot No . 42, on Conaor
Slrott, sold Jot being 36 teet

,~

This home Is FHA approved and is constructed like
a site bu lit home.

front on

..,...-.

Recor-.s.

FORD GRAN TORINO .. .. ..... .. ... ....... '2795

4 dr sed an . one ca r eful local owner, J0 2 VB.

73

lower ha s 3 ren tal rooms,
( 2 ar e r en ted) $6,800. A
good inves tme nt ,

FORD PINTO ........ .. .. .. .. .. .. .... .. .. .. '2195

1969 Ford, 6 cyl., stand., 2 dr .,

furnace .

Full

base m ent .

·Just S5.500.
SOON THINGS WILL BE '
BOOMING. IF YOU WANT
TO
ENJOY
PROSPERITY, JOIN US,
WITH YOUR PROPERTY.

1967 Camaro

2 dr . sedan , like new, dark green fini sh.

2 dr. , ha rd t op ; factor y air , shows t ender ca re.

TRUCKS

dining room , fi r e pla ce, lull ba sement; nice porches
11nd ou t buil dings. large scen ic lake wit h green g r e~ss
,1nd pine tr ees a r·ound il. Watc h th e large bas s swi m
along in th e clear wa ter . Prett y as a pictu r e. Pri ce d to

73

CHEVROLET LWB PICKUP. ... .. ... ... . .. .. '1995
one careful loca l owner.

1975 Pinto Station Wagon, 4 cyl ., 4 speed ,
with power s teering , only 10,000 miles . Now
$2895

'2995

1972 Pinto Runabout, 4 cyl., 4 speed, AM-F M
rad io,2toneqreen , SHARP.
Now$1595

FORD LWB .. ........ .... .. . ....... ...... ..

Econolin e va n, excep tiona l in ever y way .

74

FORD

Lfz T. LWB PICKUP .. . .... .. .. ..... •a495
1

70

CHEV

4 W.

DRIVE PICKUP .. . ...... ... ...

'2095

Wort.h muc h m or e .

73

DATSUN .. ... .. . .. ........ . . . : .... . ... . .. . .. '2695

4 cyi., sma ll pi ck up, shows t ender ca r e.
'

&gt;12,800 - S lxd roo111 ~ . l br~lh s. e)( t. lg. li v . rm ., porches ,
gar nat gas furnil ct&gt;. elms., hdwd fir s. , Lac. Scout Rd
' in Chesl er .
·

1972 Ford LTD, 4dr., factory air , P. S., P. B.,
vinyl roof.
Now $1595

Ole loca l owner .

69

DODGE

lf2

T. PICKUP .. .... .. ...... .. .. .. . '1395

Extra goOd tini sh, no rust .

'

&gt;CE NI C COUNTRY HOME - Well cared lor home in

M"NY MORE

th e cou ntr y contai n ing 2 bPrt .. ooms, l iving room ,
1Dnice su n porch . A lso
ki t chen . smr1l l dining ..
cell ar and c ella r houst ~\,..: . and barn . . . Tha t 's
not all . . 37 acres g ot..~ w1fh 1! .. . all over looking !he
beau tif ul Ohio River . On ly !!15,000.

·r -n\

See: Fred Blaettnar, Melvin Little,
or f&gt;at Hi II
Open Evenings Til7 :00
Except Thurs •.and Sat. Til5:00
•Closed Sunday

~ ll , 0.1 r 1 .v iii buy modern hom e OC'M l ai rgrounds, 2
bedr ooms , l ivi ng r oom . kilchen , bil lh , g&lt;trage. ? ca r
con cre te block gMagc and garden space , nlc~ fo·r sma ••
fami l y.

DAN THOMPSON
FORD

WE NEED FARM LAND
Call Jimmy Deem

Phone
992-2196

949-2388

'

'

'

r.

~iddleport

·~=~~~r~:a~r:rr;'c~~~~~
!1't~:
now
prem lsts

Generalized List of Items

f,

I

,I

'

f\

f

I

1974 Pontiac Catali.na, 4 dr. se dan, factory
atr , P.S., P. B., crutse control, rear window
defogger , v inyl roof .
Now$2995
1973 Ford LTD Brougham, 4 dr ., H. T., ful ly
equipped .
·
Now$2495

.-~. ~

IF YOU have a WYict to offer, ot.D lurnlture, Ice bo-. brass
_,,to buy or Mil somelhlng,
bods. old wall t.IOPhonll and
are looking for - " . · · 0 '
porlo, or complet. houllholds.
1iiha-r , • , you'll got r11ult1
Wrlle M. D. Miller, Rt. 2,
!astor with a Sentinel Wonl Ad.
Pomeroy, Ohio, Co11992-n60.
CAIII992·21S6.
CASH paid for all mokoo and
YARD Salo, June 18th ond 19th.
mc!&lt;lei• ol mobllo hamel.
All day at lht r~~ldonco ol
Phone a•oa c~ 614·423·9531 .
Carol Smith, Happy Hollow
$$Cosh$$$
lor lunked auto. F'Y•'•
Road, """left on top of hill.
Truck Auto Parts, Rutlond.
YARD SAlE, Salurdoy and SunPhono742·2081.
day, 10 till 6. o.p.o..lon
COINS,
tokOfll, any form gold or
gloll, new Tupperwore ,
sllvor ltwel'Y, spoons, rl"ff,
carr11roo, mile. Rt. 124 Wnt ol
Rutland. lot- Canon Toxoco.
dontol. Will lrado. Call Rogor
Womaloy, Rudond, Ohio, 742·
• ratn, cancellod.
:13:11.
.
YARD Salo Thursday, Friday and
WHITE
unllorms,
ponloulto
or
Saturday at cor"" ol Collego
droson. Size 9 to 1: . Call 992·
Rood and Sixth Str11t,
:1924.

•.

1 " •)( E. '0t.l'\

ooNERCn. C&gt;

1971 Chevy Chevelle Malibu, 2 dr., H. T., 307,
V-8, automatic , P.S., vinyl roof . Now $1895

·•

••

...

TRUCKS
1970 Chevy,6 cyl ., standard, long wide
bed.
Now $995
1971 Ford F-250, 3/4 ton . auto ., trans., P.s :,
P. B.. with topper
Now $1795

Located on St . Rt. 7

I

'.

Second
the wide
tear tor
or
ltld
Lot,Street.
1 stripto5 feet

;---------------------~
....

the purpose of an alley, to be
used In common by the

.

"You'll Uke OUr Quality Way
,
of Doing Business
GMC FINANCING
Pomeroy
992.5342
~Open Evenings Untii6:00-TII6p.m. - t. ..
·
,

NOTICE

Methodist Episcopa l Church

and aaslgns.

There Is elso lll£)ud

Wa will ba clo•d

tho

•-'*·

mln lstretrlx WWA of the
Estate of Mary
Hoffman,
deceased , late of Box 31,

Realty Compenv lncl the
VIllage of Pomeroy tor ""
purpo11 of tngreas and egrets,

fiduciary with in three months.

tht

c.

Chester, Meigs caunly, Ohio. said tltoy II IO&lt;IItd In Lot152,
Creditors are required lo
Thtl tho Slid Council or tho
tile lhelr claims with sa id llllloge or , Pomeroy, htvlng

Dated this 1st day of June,
1976.
Menning D. Webster, Judge
(6) 4. ,, , 18, 31c

_ N11TICE
Tne Eottern Local Board ol
EGucatlon will sell . tht
tollowtng at t Public Auction
· at ·ttle Tuppers Plains But
· Gerage on SoturGay, July 10,
1976 at 10:00 A.M·.:
1- 1969 Dodge 60 Passenger
School Bus Superior Body .
1- 196B Dodge 60 Panenger
Schoof Bus Superior Body.
1- 1,64
Cnavrolet
66
Pasoonuer
School
Bus
utlful
Do
Surer lor Body.
l¥ouraelf end seve. R111UII1r [l
- 1965 Dodge 66 Passenger
sq. yd.
4 llooultful loogle Hovnch, lu•f ·school Bus Wayne Body.
1 - Bas~etbell
Scoreboard.
rlghl Olfll to train for hunting
Several old school desks.
••ason
.
loth
~enh
51!: vii.
Other mlscetleneous ttems.
roglsltNd. Phono 949·
.
(6) II, 18, 25 (7) 2
llOIIERMAN

I till :I nOon'
•••
;• FRIDAY TIL 8 •: =
~..
Sat.
'~
•

Ats p.m.

••••••••••
.RUn.AND FURNITURE
141·221i

••

aRNOLD GRan

e•
.

l

~itii.iii:daiii,

JUtLAND

'

~254. '

CALL 742·2211
TALK TO
WINOILL o•ATI!
CAR,.T CONSULTANT ·

RUTLAND
. FURNITU.

puppln.

Champion brod, AJ(C Roq.
llad&lt; and rust. Wormed , roacty
for salo. $150. Phone (614) 388·
999t.
.
FliEE klllens, I mole, 2 fomal11,
Tupflln Plains. Phono {614)

Tltursday

jJ-..

Plnchor

I

AJ(C R111111t.rod Toy Poodle pups
for sale. One whit. male, ono
apricot male, I Wilks old, $75.
"'-' t.l9·2571 '
NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
- .
CUI No. 21129
Estote or Mary c. Hottman,
Notice Is hereby given lhat
M•rl orle 4. Goeft . of 830 East

. aupervlllon

· ·or

management or lh~ property
to bo sold, be and ~treby 11
authorized to edvtrllst told
real
•stat•
tor eccordlng
•• ~. to lhe
highest
blddtr
to
taw, upon the following terms:
Cllh In ~and on the day of the
se~ac~ bid must conteln the
full name o'
every person
or
compony
lnterllltd
In l~t
seme; ana be accompenlod by
1 bond or carllflad check In the
sum of · $100.00 lo fha
llllstactton of Village Council
•• a uuoronly that II tne bid 11

accepted contract will be
entered Into and Its Ptr ·
formence proplrfy secured ,

Thou checks or bondo will

be retui-ntd · at once to all
except the IUCCellfUI bidder.
H to chock or bond wlll bo hold
untlt the contr1ct or bid Ia

properly oxocuttd by nlm.
Sold Council roservn tho
rtuht to roltct any end ell Dldl.
received for tho lift or any
parctt or reel estalt. Tnts
Ordlnlnco lhttl go Into ettoct
, from ena liter tho oerllolf·
period tllowed by taw .
PASSED : .
.
NOTICE OF
Relph Werry, Prttfdenl
APPOINTMENT
or Vllloge Council
C11e No. 21137
VIllage of Pomeroy
Estate of lucille Juu, ATTEST:

Deceased.
Notlce ' ls hereby given that ,

Clarence Andrews , Mayor
Palled : June7, ·1976

George R. Young. of Roule 3, (6) 11·25, (7) 2·31c

Pomeroy , Ohlo, has been duly
appointed EKecutor of the
E s tete of Lucltte Jesse~
(:leceased, late of Route 3,

Pomeroy, Meigs County, Ohio.
Creditors are required to

Deceattd.

Saturday, June 19th,

-Ma in street, Pomeroy , haS ' estate, said alley to be Ulld In
been duly appointed Ad - common wltn lht Elberfe ld

:... ~_ . =·.

1976 Impala, 'l1 loot, uH· WILL DO odd lobs, roofing, paincantolnod. lwln beck, tondom
ling, hauling,
and
whotls, air conditioned, lots ol
'"""'lng. Phono992·7&lt;10'1.
oxlrtii.Sttanyllmoalltoftdor·
do building and remodeling,
;.,., Trallor Pork, Hondo,...,.,, WILL
- rooting. plumbing, lurnoco
W. Va.
repair, gas or oil or _.,1
ropalr, Froo 11Hmat11 and
1970 Community Co1avan, 12x52,
rea1onable rates . Phone
two a&lt;, plus w·d, good condl·
Charl11 Sinclair, {614) 985-4121
tlon. Phono (6t 4)98!-429.4.
of992-2221'
t965 Shafto Coml1or traitor, Mlf.
cantolnod, 15 ft.,1p0rw wheel, EXPERIENCED polntors, lnlerlor,
exterior, flexlblo ralll , oil
lacks, oloctrtc brokll, outo
hook-up, lrans-&lt;OOior, N75.00. work guarantoed. Call Dalo
i;;;Phone;;;;
;;;992
;;;-35;;;;17;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ Harrison, 992-3004 or Mike
lcrr, 742-3011.
WILL do ~~trolarlol work, 1 hovo
•· Jot •rt ....____ 1
SAVE ON
an rwiOC 11 " ...,.." n
luolneu. II noedod, phono
CARPETINO
992·3612.
WILL '-'-•If In our homo. Phono
-•
992.3119.

I:UOtll5:011

'•

Chester. 0.

zandf

1111•••••••••••••••••••1

from

K arr &amp; V an

of Pomeroy, Ohio, •nd the
herelri named, Villa,ue of
Pomeroy, their succcsors

Sale Sf'

· Mon., Tues., Wed .

Clo$e

RIGGS USED CARS

See one of these courteous salesmen: Pete
Burris, Lloyd Me L1ughlin or M1rvln
Keebaugh .

ue Vol. 161, pave 3501 . Thence
soutneattorty parallel wllh the
Wllltrly tint Of Lot 152 IO
Second Stroot, ,lnence nor_lh·
easterly following the south·
etiY uno or Lol m and t~e
unnumbered Lot .located be.·
tween Loll 151 and 152 to the
place or beginning, This lot to
be sold 11 known •• the City
Hall, Pomeroy, Ohio.
There 11 also Included e
strip
of .lhe
landherein
on theducrlbtd
tlllerly
side or
premi-ses. extending

Candy Stripe

Now$1595

1973 Buick Electra, 225 l_imited , 2 dr ., H. T.,
fully equipped , radial tires .
Now $2995

(1) Eldorado

10 In thea wide on tho west side
of the herein aoocrtbtd rltt

1971 Ford LTD,4dr, factory a ir , P. S., P. B.,
·

(1) Coupe DaVIlla

right to use an alley,,. feet end

Syr-.fram9~.m.lo6p . m .

vinyl roof, SHARP.

formerly

Company (For reference deed

1 •.

PI-! . QQ') 7031

or

owned by tne Etborltfd Rully

Now $400

Now$1195
1973 American Motors Matador, 4 dr., air ,
·
Now $1395
P .S., P. B., vinyl roof.

Ve r y low m ileage,

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

&amp;PHONOGRAPH

1971 Chevy, 4 dr. sta.

FORD LTD ...... . .. .. .... ..... .... .... ..... '1795

71

Now

$400

VOLKSWAGEN .... .... .. .... .. .. .. .... .. .. . 11500

71

H. T.,

PIESAFE CUPBOARD

s.elc:t prtmlsea ere

73 Cldille Sed. DeVIIe, DOW, li • · · ·'4595
72 Cldillc Cpe. DeV"IIIe. DOW•, li • • ! ' •
71 Cadillac Eldorado Cpe., power,-llr • 13&amp;15
75 Dodp Dart Swinpr Cpe., lllfo. . • • 13495 .
74 Chev. lmp. 4 dr. H.t, power, air••• '3295
74AMC Hornet 2daar, ••to. bails • , • 12295 ·
73 Olds 88 4 dr., full power, air ••••• 11195
73 Olds Cul Sup. Coupe, power, lir •• 13495
73 Chtv. Monte Carlo, power, air • ••• '2&amp;95
72 Olds TOI'OIIIdo, air, V·roof• • • ••• • 12295
72 Pontile Catalina 4 Dr., air r . . : . : '1995
72 Olds 98 4 door, full power, lir • •• • 12295
72 Buick Elec. 225 HT Cpe~, power air. 12495
72 Chtv. Imp. 4 Door, V-8, auto., air •• 11595
72 Buick LISibre Cust Con., air • • • • 12695
72 Ford TG!'ino CouPe, V-I auto. • •• • • '1695
72 Olds 98 4 door, power &amp;air •. ••• 12295
72 Dodge 1ton Stake, V-8, 4speed. • • 12295
71 Olds Cutlas 4 dr., V-8, auto. ••.•• 11995
71 Pontiac Cal Coupe, power, air..•• 11095
71 Chev. lmJIIII HT Sed., pow., air ••• 11495
71AMC Hornet Sportabout Waa. •• •• '1095 .
71 Buick Skylark HT Cpe., air . : •_••• '1695
70 Olds 98 4 dr., power. air · · · • • · '1395 ·
70 Olds 98 4 door, poW•, air ••••• • 11095
70 Chrysler NY 4Dr., PB, PS •••••• • '9t5
70 Ford LTD WQIII, PB, PS, air•• •••• '895
70 Chevelle Coupe, V-8, auto., PS•• • • '1395
69 Chev. NM 2 Dr.~ vin~ top • • . . . . • 1995
.69 Olds Cul Sup. H.T., PB, PS, air •• •• 1895
68 VW Transporter Bus, 3st1ter •••• 11095
68 Chev.lmp. Cus. Cpe., V-8, auto.• ••• '595
66 Olds 18 Uoor, air . • • • . • . • • • • '695
· 65 Ford CauniiJ Sed. Wqon. • ...•. ; '395
76 Cadlllaa
In StOck
.
.

followtnu lhe northerly ltnt or
Lot 152 end lht htrtlotort

HOMES

Mahogany Dining Room Suite (Includes China- 60" Round Tablel, Oak
Dining Room S!ljte (Includes China, Etc.), Old Carpets, Marbletop Stand,
Chairs (All Kinds), Tables, Sofas, Beds (Metal-Wood), · Secretary,
washstand, Swivel Chairs, Sewing Machines, Piesafe, Jelly Cupboards,
Mirrors, Dressers, Vanities, Buffets, Kitchens Cupboards, Wardrobes,
Pump Organ, Player Piano (Minimum Bid 250), Cash Register, Stoves,
Insulators, Clocks (Mantel &amp; Cuckoo), Edison Cylinder &amp; RecortiPhonographs·, Metal Milk Separator, Fruit Jars, Washing , Machines,
Trunks, Coin Vending Cigarette Ma_c hine, Old Radios, Lanterns, Old
Lamps, Glassware (Depression, Pattern, Carnival, Etc.) Pottery; Clllna,
Old Bottles, COin (Silver Dollars, Pennies, Etc.), r Lot Stone Jars,
Crocks;
Lot
&amp;

1972 Olds Delta 88, 4 dr ., H.T., factory air,
P . 5., P . B., vinyl roof.
Now $1595

2 dr .. carefu l loca l owner.

71

Partial

1973 Buick Century, 2 dr ., red with . vinyl
interior. 'h vinyl roof, radial tires, P.S.,
P . B., automatic .
Now $2695

2 d r . sedan , 4 cv l ., economy a t it s best .

74

REGISTER FOR FREE PRIZES -

Now $1595

In

Street, at th·e sO.u theasterly
corner of the building now or
. fqrm~r:ly owned by _sa ld City of
Pomeroy {known 11 the City
Hell) ; thence northwesterly
parallel w ith the westerly line
of Lot 151, 100 feet or to the
north line of an unnumbered
lot , located betWeen lots
numbered 151 and 152 In sa id
village, thence southwesterly .

KINGSBURY

Starting At 1:00 PM
Saturday, June 19 &amp; Sunday, June 20, 1976

Street

as No. 202 . Condor
street.
.
PA~CEL .~.: . The loltowlng
described real esllle situated
In the Village &lt;if . Pomeroy,
Counly or Meigs and. Slate of
Ohio: Beginning 60 feet end 7
Inches southwellerly from· tht
southeuterly corner or Lot lSI
In sold Vllltge on Second
~now_n

ION

KINGSBURY HOME SALES &amp; SERVICE, INC.
1100 EAST MAIN STREET, POMEROY, OHIO

condor

Second Word Of satd VII lege Of
Pomeroy, On 10, being the
same premt111 sold by Joslth
Holt and wtte saroh A. HoN,
u ar• described In Vol. 101
page 256, Meigs County Deed

A 48 x 24 by Skyline Corporation. This home has 3
bedrooms, Is fully furnished, carpeted throughout,
total wrap fom· (or for maximum energy saving,
has shingle roof and lap 'Siding .

AU

1975 Mercury Montego MX 4 dr ., factory
air. P.S., P. B., vinyl roof.
Now $2995

,jdr . seda ~, a. conditioning, P.S., A .T., "A cr ea m puff "

· to

conveyed

Margaret Kaulz by C. Hemm

end Susan Hemm , his wife , by

1971 Ford Thunderbird 2 dr ., coupe,
automatic, P. S., P. B., factory air, ti II
wheel. cleanest '71 around.
Now $1695

2 d r ., low mi lea ge,. li ke new.

at right

anglll wllh sold strut 100

1'11.99~·2174

1973 Buick Regal 2 dr., while with white
vinyl roof, factory air, P.S., P. B., tilt wheel ,
AM·FM · stereo, cruise control, chrome
reverse wheels with radial tires . Sharp. Now
$3495

CHEV. MONTE CARLO . .... ...... .. . .... .. '3495

9'12·7086.

S Family Ya rd Sole , Wed . thru RIDiNG lawn tractor , Bh,p. 32 in ch cut . Phone 742 -266 1.
Sot., 81 Garfield A'le. Dishes ,
clo thing&amp; misc . ite.m s.
23 channe l Couier Cora ... elle CB
.
· -; Bose . station was coax and
SOMEONE needed to bole hoy
onfenno. Used only 3 mon ths,
must ha'o'e own equipmen t.
O$k ing $200. like ne w portable
Phone ·992·2i21 or See Ben Ew ·
dishwasher , white , $50. Phone
__ in~ : _ _ - ··-

Porctl 3: SltUIIId In lht
Townsntp or Soltsbury, counly
ol Metgl end Stott or onto end
more perttcularty bounded
end dtscrlbld .U fOllOWS:
SltUIItd In lhe Vl!tage Of
Pomeroy, being Lol No. 43,
com manctng on the North l ido
ot condor Slreelln sold City at
a stone placed at a permanent

1974 Monte· Carlo, factory air, automatic,
P.S., P . B., vinyl roof, beautiful green
finish.
Now .$3995

furnace . Lot 100 x.-375. On J ,.

acre . Or.ty $1 9,500.
NEW LISTING - 1 brs,
ba lh. nat. gas, F.A.

sell S37 ,lDO .OO.

CU STOM mode can opy lor picnic
fable, five piece Hickory Fami ly
room set , largo Foley gri nder
for rea l mowers . Ph one (6 14)

ui1nece11ary damage to the
of rhe same.

surfa~:;e

CARS

Fu ll ai r and all goodies, a beau tiful car .

ex-

mine the same without any

ON DISPLAY

CHECK and COMPARE
OUR -QUALITY AND .
PRICES! · .

REMODELING, Plumbing heating
and all types of general repair.
Work guaranteed 20 y&amp;ars ex·
peri@nce. Phone 992-2409.

and

Saving

Records.

, First Quality

· on Route 7. Phone {614) 985·
3825.

f t tt ;

Deed Reference: Volumt 94, ·
Page 216, Metgs County Dttd

'6.95

REGATTA
SPECIALS

-----

;

DONELli'S PIZZA

Square Yard Installed
David Parsons, Owner
949-2814
6-7-l mo .

·------------------..----·
.73 Cadillac Cot. DeVllt. power, air •• ,' '4295

Togelher with the right 10

Take this opportunity to make some _
f ine antique purchases and
view the latest in factory built housing .

SMITH NELSON
. MOTOliS, INC.

BACK CARPETING

ar THESE

2

br s .. bath , k it has st ove,
r efr ig . and ba r w ith d in ing
room . Leve l lot . $18,000.
DE XTER ~ Business
buildi ng 30 x 40. one f loor .
Askin g onl y $5,500.
COUNTR Y SETTING - II
beaut if ul ac r es , fe n ced
blue grass, garden, co r n
pa t ch, 4 br . r esi d e n ce.
Spr ing water, lar ge ya rd

2 co rner lot s. Bea uti fu l

DON 'T LOSE MONEY LIST WITH US TODAY .
HENRY E. CLELAND,
BROKER
992-2259 or 992-2566

ASSORTED RUBBER

YOU'LL JUMP FOR JOY

TEAFORD

608 E.
MAIN
POME-ROY, 0:
LOVELY OLD BRICK

~ ca ll

+Ta x
With any $4.00 purcha se
and this ad. Good through
6-30-76.

Driwef· Ed. CIIS,.••• , •, ................... ~'5395
power, air, AM/FM !ldio

m nerels under lying -the
prem lses hereby grant,d .

"'

ONE FLOOR -

A.
P lease
par ticular s.

b~lnntng .

.BA,

Racine, Ohio

(2) 76 Olds Cutllss Supreme,

cor,ttng . all coal and other

Radlato~Jilj
Service

4-10-1mo.

f.26 )

USED CARS

thence north elghteon ( 18)
felt ; thence, Eest twenty .sl~
1261 feel to lht piece or

I!DR0~\1

51 ACRE S FREE GA S- Mode•n I', sfo•y house , 3 br ..

HOUSEWI VES , open the door to
extra earnings Joi n the su e·
678-2166.
cessful women w ho are mok·
1972
Hondo 175 CC , runs good ,
ing good money in their spore
$275. P~one l6 14 ) 985 -411 9.
l ime . ' N o
expe r ie n ce
n ece~ · ·y, no delivery , no col· 10 speed blcv cle, a track home
lec tiny , no cash in ... es tmen t,
stereo with 2 speakers, $30. 20
Cali now and get edro early
in r h~cycl~ Phone 99~:!551 .
benefits , Phone 949-2803 or
9,.9 -2786. A lso, booking par - LATEN paper , roller, 2 trucks,
reasonabl e. Phone 992·7,.Bf .
ties.

.

--~-

bat hs. nice ki t . , f u ll
basemen t , ci t y water and
gas, 1.4 acre s. $31.500.

bn

West t wenty .alx

''

EXPERIENCED

RACINE
CARPET SHOP

98~ - 3 97 4 .

616 New Holland Choppe'r , gross
and co rnheods. $-ISO. Coli 997.

11 dreues, proctical l~ new , lite
17. l adies shoos, 5Yt to 6. 2
pocke tbook s, new , 3 pairs of
men's pants , I coot. Phon e

Ridint

6 room house , very we ll kept , 3
498Lom1 Sl
· bedrms., modern kitchen , wal l
MiddiOJHJ&lt;I,
Ohio 992·3091
to wall carpet, H.W. floors. lull
ba sement, new gas furnace ,
small lot to mow, ·ideal for
older couple or small fomiiJ" in BUILDING and remodeling , ex·
good
neighb or h o od
in
COIIOfion , concrete work , elecPomeroy, Ca ll.lor appointmen t.
triccil work , plumbing, rough
Phone 992·3097.
and finished, carpen try and
roofin g. Phone 992-7A81 .
HOUSE l or sol e in Chester area .
Three year old, four bedroom, SEWING MACHINE Repairs , ser·
brick ra nc h on fi ve acres of
vice , ,all makes , 992·228.4 , The
land. Has I"'VO baths , Iorge
Fabr ic Shop , Pomer o y .
rooms. fin ished basement wi th
Authorized Singer Sales and
fireplace in fam ilv room . Phone
Ser"¥ice. We sharpen Scis sors.
(6 14 ) 985-3938 or contact Don
Roush.
SEPTI C TANK S clean ed. Modern
. ~~c----c10 roo m bric k , 2 famil y dwelling
Sani tati on. ~ 2-39.54 or 992wi th basemen t, Iorge yard.
2428.
-redecorated on B10wnelf A11e.
in Middleport . Phone .(6 1-4)

247-2161.

ON OUR LOT AT

"' DlliNP
6-13-76 I mo.

10

Ph. 992·3!193

'1.00

-~Tillers­

$21 ,000. Phonel61 4) 667-3519.

OVERLOOK ING the rive r, 3 plus
acres ond trailer, $6800 Norris
of Raci ne on Rt . 338. Phone

5·21-1 mo

6 CANS OF RC

[\~ ~:,,_

ROOMY 7 yr. old one story wood
frame, two bedrm . home
located be tween Coolville and
Turpers Plains. One ocr8 lot
tw o cor ga ra ge, ci tr water , gas
heel .
ha r dwood
f loors,
carpetd , li vmg room, nice view,

9'12·2166.

JIICUse,

&amp; SUN., JUNE 20

'

lloi2U
Rullln~ Ohio 45775
Ph. (614) 141-2409

LARG~EU~NDER

JUNE SPECIAL

Chain

...£~~723.-2_
. ~~

985-4245.

WILKINSON'S
Complete SmaN En1.
ReJ)'II

42 one-fo ur th acres of real es ta te ,
more or less , situated in Sec ·
f1on 26, Fraction 31, in Rv tlo nd
Towns hip , Meigs County, Oh10.
For f1.1rth er jnf ormotion, contact
Bernard V. Fultz, Pomeroy Notion a l
Bonl-1
Bu i ld i ng ,
Pomeroy. Ohio. Telephone:

owner.

SAT~. JUNE 19

•'

Truss Rafter Co.

I

HOUSE . wa ll to wal l carpe l , partly
furn ished , 650 Osborn e St.,
Pomeroy . P ~_?~ne 9?.~_5668 .

OPEN
Oars and ewenings except Tues. and
Wed. 01 bJ ton1actin1 R. Codner,

4-12 Pitch
24'- $17.28
26'- $18.72
28'-$20.16
Southeastern Ohio

STORM
I'IINDQIIS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
StOING-50FFITT

Trawel Trailen

OPEN HOUSE and
ANTIQUE AUCTION

a~~ ..

B&amp;ow1 into Walls I AttiCS

SALES&amp; RENIAL

'

l'llilalllt, i11o.

F•11111 till lor

992-5011.

56 AC RE S - Modern l ' 1 story home 3 bedroom s w ith
firep lace and basement . Apple, cherry an d other fr u it
trees . Mostly fenced wit h pa st ur e, som e fa rm land .
Close t o Dan v il le. Pr iced re duce d Ia $18.700 .

WOOD burning heater, used very
little , $100. Also 8 trai ler ti res .
like new . $150. Ph one (614 )

"

2160.

-

I

,.,m

~1:1-1 m~

FREE ESTIMATES
Blown
lnsu~tion Services
Fin!PJCin&amp; Availolll

CODNER'S CAMPERS
RAINBOW RIDGE
IBIIShan A"''
LONG BOTTOM

lill ,..lt·pat!111ti 1111P1.

Midtlllpotl

Ulm"

Pomeroy City Melt su ltdlng .
NOT NEE DED FOR ANY
M U N ICI P A~ PURP0$E .
8t It ord olnod by lhl
council · or the Vllloge or
Po mer oy, 111 membtrl
tltcttd thtrtto coi'l currlna .
-That the follow ing dtscrlbtd
real ntote .belong ing to the
· Vltlege or Pomeroy 'II not
' nttdt d lor any muntclpol
purpoat, to wtt :
Ptrctl I : Lol -12 In V. 8 .
Horton 's Addltton to Pom eroy,
Lot 13 In V. 8 . HMion 'l Ad dillon to Pomeroy .. .
Reference Deed : Volume
2GS, Pege 387 of tho Molu
County, Oh io, Ottd Records.
Ptrcol2 : Beglnnlnu on Nye
Strtttat the ·Northttsl corner
of • lot heretofore dotdtd .by
Cur tis D. Retd and l eure
Alberto Rttd to John M.
Roedel by dttd dated April 24,
11" recorded In Volume 14,
Pove 316, recorda or Datds or
Meigs County . Ohio. Thtnco
South par alit with P\1 yt Street
otghltlfl 118) loti : lhtnco

l''"'d pool kits I• '

aPNI -

I'IIONE992·5724

P1111101, Oh~

t:lomeroy , better known 11 lit

Word FlrehOIISt : Porcot 3,
Lots 4J ond 42 . .VItllgo of
Pomeroy , better known 11 2nd
Word Flroh0111e : Pt rcll f,
· per t Of LOI 151 . Vltlege of

Pom troy, better known 11

N~. 5umm" Rd.,

Phone992-5461

\llll• a• or Pomerov ; Partet2,
port or Lol 296, Vltlogo of

Home Sales _Is Having A Combination•••

!

-

8 . Horton's Addition to .tht

It's Regatta Time Again and Tills Year _Kingsbury

D. Bumgardner

i

RIDERS SALVAGE
5L Rll 24

O.O INAN C•thoNO.Jti.J
. Uf _ o1 . , .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..
AuthoriJIP!.IL.
Porco! 1, Loll12 end 13, of V.

SWIMMING
POOLS
M pool

Batteries $1.25
Mot01 Cut Clun
.$3.50 Per Hund,led
· Copper 35c
C~r Bodies
· Smp.lron

5-9·76

Raci ne, Ohio
Need new roof
Old
re pa ire d? H.o us4;! . ' ro of,
ba r n, shin gl.es, build up,
pa intin g, electri ca l w or k,
gutt ers &amp; do w nspo u t s,
f u r n ace~.
wat er hea t er s,
wa t er · softn er s, in stall ed &amp;
r e p r~l r e d , Se w age.
Ca ll us at '1 49-288 2
or 949-22 03 .
3 28 1mo .

EXPER IENCED house
poin ter.
Phone Arth ur ·Musser , 7.. 2.

MODERN. -

2307.-

DO YOU HAVE PARTY PlAN EX PERI ENCE? FR IENDL Y TOY
PARTIES HAS OENINGS FOR
MANAGERS IN YOUR AREA .
RECRUITING IS EASY BECAUSE
OEMS HAVE NO CASH INVESTMENT , NO COLLECriNG OR
DELIVERI NG: CALL COLLECT TO
CAROL DAY 518-489-8395 OR
WRITE FRIENDLY HOME PARTIES. 20 RAILROAD AVE ..
· ALBANY , N.Y. 12205.

rooms and both , 7b9 Short
Fourth St. To be seen, go t o 291
South Sycamore, Middleport .
Ohio .

5-26·1"'"

Racirie Plumbing
&amp;Heating

3167.
SPRAY PAINTING. Al TROMM
CONSTRUCTION. PHONE 7422328.
VERMEER
BALERSALES AND SER·
Phone 1614) 368·8371 o• 1304)
VICE, Meigs·Athens County.
773 -5877.
.
- Balers from $3995 up . Merrill
REAL es tate for rent or sale. 7
Cho•e.l614)
69B·3021.
-

VEG ETABL ~

MAKE spring cl eaning prof itable .
turn unwanted 1tems into cosh .
Adver tise in th e Wan t ~ds .

Replacement

Windows and Doors
Free Estim al es
We r ecommen d and

---

l'

.

High prices lot scrap aulD$,
motors and other melals.
Phone 992-ZZ28. Monday thru
ft iday 8·3, Saturday 8-12. .

Aluminum -Vi n yl. Steel
Conti nuous Gu tter

WILL tnm or cut trees and shrub·
bery , phone 949·25.45 or 10·

11 0 Mechani c Pom eroy , 0 .
Phon e 992 -JJH

pl an ts of oil J..i nds, 10
di ff erent varie ties of tomatoes,
incl ud i ng non-acid white
tomat o. Very Iorge selec tion of
b eddi n g p la n t s.
Al so
Ge rani ums and other polled
pl an ts . Han ging ba ske t s.
Cleland Farms and Green .
house. Geroldino Cleland ,
Racine .

304·485-0386
614-42J-6474

Se tl Qua lily

--

HALLS
SALVAGE

Parkersburg, W. Va .

CARPENTER , flooring, ceiling ,
paneling , Phone 992·2759..

LARGE 3 bedroom house , 1300 sq.
H. split-level on three·fo.u rth
acre lot , 100x300 locat ed on Rt.
160 acrou from North Gallia
High School , less than 2 years
old . Musl sell now. going wes t.

I, r

J ~nk

2013 lOth Ave.

-

(

·-

Sa les &amp; Service

SEPTIC Systems installed by
licensed ins tpller. Shepard
Co[ltroclors. Phone 742·2409.

For Sale

SKY Diving , Gr eene County Sport MODERN stereo console, 4 speed,
Parachute Center , open eve ry
chang er, om -fm rad io. Balance
day near Gallipolis. For fu rther
$ 106 . ~0 or terms . Call992 ·3965 .
information, call (6 1,.) 2-45-9339
1970 Hon do CC 350; 2 ma tc hing
or P.O. Box 91 , Bidwell , Ohio
helmets, highrise hand leba rs,
45614 .
" black wi th white stripes, exTHE Shaeffer Family from Crown
ce llent cond tti on . $A50. Phone
9'12-2272.
City w ill sing in the Ash St.
Freewil l Baptis t Church , Mid·
1971 lnternofiono l . C.O. 4070A
dleport 1 Sa turday, 7:30 p.m.
twin screw, V-8 Cummins
Everyone welcome,
_
engine, 7b ,OOO miles. 13 speed
STUD Service , firs t year breeding.
overdrive, good ru bber. factory
Registered Wa lk in9 Stallion,
air. radio , !ilide -i n fift h wheel.
big and colorful . II doesn't cos t
Phone Cool'o'1 lle (61-4 ) 667 -6355 .
anything to toke a look. Com Con see at Sohio Station. Tup·
pare him to your Quarter
y ers P loi1~s . -~ ~
Horse , American Saddle Horse ,
ALLIS Cha l mer~ CA tractor ; No. 7
Appa loosa or Mor gan . Phone
mowing machine. Co li al ter 7

742·3182.

.POMER OY LANDMARK
... _Jac k W. Carsey , Mg r
ilil Phone 991·21 81

TRAI LER, 3 bedrooms , fu rnished,
Coll992·7461.
12x60 near the Albany mines .
$150 incl udes wa ter. Phone . NEW 3 bedroo m house , 2 ba ths.
{614 )69_6:_5_..965 0~98 · 7~-all elec . I acre, Middleport ,
d ose to Rutlond . Phone 992·
748 1.

CHANGE OF HOURS ~ 8119inriin g
June 12 we w ill be closed Satur"GRAPEFRUIT PI LL" with Diadox
days. New hours wi ll be Mon·
pi on more convenien t tho n
day through Friday , 9 a.m. til l
grape fru its . Eat sa tisfying
7 p.m. Carolina Fabr ics ..Route
meals and lose we ight. Nelson
7, one-half mile nor th of
Drug.
Ches ter , Ohio. Henry and Mar y
Hun ter , own ers.
ONE dinette se t, excellen t condi ·
tion. Two end tabl es , motchn g
IT IS THE POLICY OF . ARCADIA
antique
bed and buffet dresser .
NURSING · HOME, COOLVILLE .
Phone 992·6092.

TO ADMIT AND TREAT All PA·
TIENTS WITHOUT REGARD TO
RACE , COLOR , OR NATIONAL
ORIGIN.

$26995

.

Siding Center

24J8.
EXCAVATING , BACKHOES AND
DOZER , LARGE AND SMALL,
SEPTIC TANKS INSTALLED. BILl
PULLINS, PHONE 992 ·2478. DAY
OR NIGHT

Go•oge. Coil {614 ) 985-3584 foe

2 bedrm . mobi le home . Brown 's

.

GREG'S CB SALES, located ot Er·
win 's Gulf Ser'o'ice , Mid·
dleport . Ohio. Phofle 992·

3 room ·furn ished opt . . util iti es
paid. 356 North Fourth. Mid - 3 bedroom brick ranch s,yle
home, lull basem ent with
d i !_P~."!_:__ recreation room, 1 ~'1 bath s,
UN f URNISHED opt . for rent , 4
carport , loca ted in 8oum Ad&amp;
room5 and bo th. Phone 992·
lion near State Highwoy

COAL, limes tone and oil types of
salt and rock salt lor ice and
snow remo ... ol. Exce lsior Soli
Works , Ea st Main St., Pomerov .
Oh io ~ Phone 992 ·3891.
RACI NE Fire Depart men t wi ll
ho'o'e a gun shoo t Sa turday at
6:30p .m . at thei r new building
off Bashon Rood .

Choice

-

I

EXCAVATING, dozer, backhoe
and ditcher . Choi-les R. Hat·
field , Bo ck Hoe Service .
"Rutland, Ohio. Phone 742·2008.

FREEZER SALE!
Save up to $100 on 20
cu . ft . Chest or 16 cu .
fl , Upright .

..

I Business Services

MODERN Walnut Stereo. AM ·FM WILL do roofing . cons truction
rod10, ,.. speed changer , 8 track
plumbing and heating . No jot
tope combination . Balance
too Ioree or too small. PhonE
SI 02.40or terms . Co ll992 · 3~ .
742-2348 .

Real Estate for Sale

1971 Ford Gola)l.ie 500, 2 door .
runs good needs body work ,
$350. Also, 1%7 Ford Pi ckup ,
g·ood condi ti on, $600. Phone

.

Business Services

1973 Monte Carlo 350 engine , ·
29,500 m1les . rally wheels , L---'-~----~.....J
$3400 . Phone 992·2035 or 992·

sire_~ I p~king . Ph ~_ne 99~- 7~79 .

In Memory

For sate -=--

$1 500. Phone 161 &lt;) 985·4119,

NOTICES

.

Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds ·

} ,or

1968 Chevetle Mol tbu , 2 door h. t ..
auto .. II·B engine . $-4SO. Call

9'12·2200.
ATTN .; !!
ALL H OU SEW I VES
All Y ard Sal es. Rumm;;~ge .
Porch and Basem ent "Porch
Md Ba~ement SEtl es, etc.
mus t be pa id in ild11anc e.
Ge t yours in early b y
stopping by our ofl ice at
The Daily Sen tinel. 111
Court St or writing Box
129 , Pomeroy , Ol'lio 45769
with your r cmillan c e

'

.. _

·- ·

tlte tnetr claims with uta PITI'liliiJRGH {UPI) tlduct 0ry within throe monlns . . The Pittsburg·h Pirates have
· Doted this Btn day or June ·
1976.
signed haH of the 36 players
Menning Webster
Judgo llley chose in last week's free
(6) 11 , 18, lS
a'-ent rtroft.

10

that our amployaa1 may

anloy the Regatta WHkend.

SMITH NELSON MOifORS

L-------------------_.
POMEROY, OHIO

2 SIGN$

OF
QUI.m

Pomeroy

'

Mote».r to.

1975 CHEVROLET CAPRICE
S5295 ·
Classic coupe, less then 7.000 miles, delu•e belts, tinted
glass, atr conditioned, delu•e bumper guerds, remote
_LHrh mirrors. 400·4bbl. VB , AM redlo and tape, auxl .
fighting , comlorlllt, dar~ red and black vinyl roof, like
new. - a re~.l sharpie.
1973 FORD TORINO
""'
4 door, VB, automatic, radio; good red lei tlrt5, blue
fini sh: clean Interior.
19!3CHEVROLET
alt5·
Caprice Estate Wagon, 1 owner, low mileage, · lull
equipment Includes factory a!r. dark green, grvlnvl.
·

POMEROY lttOTOR 00.

OPhl EVE~t:OO P.M. . .
POMERO'(, ....10 ..

@)
.

I

�'

..- .

~

12 - The Daily Sentinel , MidcUepurL-Pumeruy. 0., Friday, Juc •e 18, 1976

'
,.

Another million needed to explain electric bills
have begun to drop off."
l~ave a better ~rasp nf why
s~id .
A spokesman for the . rates will he going up, " she
Sijid
whole
S ic ~
Columbus-based Coalition or
ConL-e rned Utility Users wa.~
skeptica l or U1e program's
success.
"The companies have used
1
• lot or sophisticated public
.-,
relations techniques, but they
haven 't convinced people lo
be happy with their utility
bills," said Steven Sterrett.
"All the [JJblic relations work
CHII.LI COTHE , Ohio southern Ohio.
isn't going to change their 1UP! 1- "Tecumseh, " one of
La st year Tecumseh
ang ry re~ctions lo upcoming the fa stes t growing of brought nearly S7 million in
rate increases.' r
Ameriea 's $2 outdoor dramas tourist spending to the area,
The seven companies have starts its fourth season next acco rding to Allen Wit t,
a combined $4&amp;2.1 million Monday night when the promotions directo.
worth of pending rate hike colorful historical masterWith polls iooicating 32 per
requests before the Public piece opens its fourth season cent' of the na lion will be on
Utilities Commission of Ohio atop Sugarloaf Moun ta in the road this year taking
t PUCO I, The agency is here.
vaca tions and economic
expected to act on the
The
official
Ohio iooka tors appearing stable
increases within the next bicentennial drama is and favorable, the 1976
year .
expected to attract 80,000 impact should hit a high of
Those requests include $120 spectators during its June 21· nearly $10 million, Wilt said.
11
million by the Cleveland Sept. 4 run at 8:45 daily ,
0utdoor
drama
is
Blectric Illuminating Co., Monday through Saturday, becoming an established art
$58.7 million by Cincinnati according to W.L. Mundell , form" he declared.
Gas &amp; Electric aoo $50.7 prodijcer -&lt;lirector.
"We have a regular and
millio n by Columbus &amp;
Produced by the non-profit dependable audience . For inSouthern Electric Co.
Scioto Society, the drama stance, audience members
The CEI case is going was created to a ttract have returned to Tecumseh
through the public hearing tourists in the Ross-Pike- a·s often as II t.imes in a single
Tonight through Thursday
process
right now. The other Pikaway counties' area in season .
June 18 thruJune 24
two compa nies will have their
, NOTOPEN
"Our fans are just as avid
cases considered in public
as those for any football team
Fri .-Sat.-Sun.
sessions beginning next
and t heir numbers are
June 25 -26 -27
month.
growing every year. Our only
Walt Disney's
Mrs . Johnso n said the
major problem now is dealing
Blackboards Ghost
"groundwork" she has done
with the increasing demand
Dean Jon es, Peter Ust inov,
around
the
slate
with
for
our product. Our parking
Suzanne Pleshe1te, Elsa
electricity consumers should
and ticket fa cilities are in the
La nches ter , :Joby Ba ker ,
pa y off.
Elt ioll Rei d. " G"
process of being expanded,"
" If they have he ard
Show starts 1 p.m.
It really is a "new"
anything I said, they will
Tecumseh this year.
New weapons that shatter
Tenth
District U1e surrounding historic hill
Congressma n Clarence with their noise have been
Miller has introduced added tu the drama's already
legislation to strip the House formidable Ointlclcks and
Administration Committee, cannons.
chaired by Representative
New stag ing tech niques
Wayne Hays , of its power will
su rround
tbe
over internal House ex· bicentennial audience with
penses.
sights arid sounds of Indian
In 1971, the House Ad- wars. In one battle scene
ministration Committee , alone, over 90 actors and a
despite opposition from herd of horses will perform
Miller and 166 other House on the 12 huge stages.
members, was given power to
The drama's huge artificial
unilaterally fix and adjust cliffs and rock formations
various allowances or House have been enlarged by nearly
members without a House 30 per cent.
vote.
Over 740 board feet of
The Miller bill would de~ej:'bre polyurethane roam
require that any changes in ha ve
gone into
the
salary, travel, and other construction or the enlarged
allowances be voted upon by new formations, marking one
the full membership of the or the first large scale uses of
House .
this dense-core foam in the
"The liberal majority in the nation.
House irresponsibly
Heading the drama's
surrendered control over company and crew of 130 is
House allowances to a single Mel Cobb, television and
man despite warnings that stage actor who created ·the
such authority would be role of Tecumseh in 1973-74.
subject to abuse," Miller Cobb is supported by the
said.
English actress, Jane Ridley,
"Repeatedly the majority as Rebecca Galloway ,
lias voted to uphold the Hays'
Tecumseh officials advised
power structure, '' Miller patrons to call or write ahead
continued, "and now it should for best sealing. Advance
he apparent from the current tickets must be picked up by
salary and travel scandals 8:15p .m. on the night of the
that
the
House
of performance.
Representa tives must
Prices are Monday through
retrieve full control over its Thursday, adults, $4.50, chi!·
own expenses.''
dren, $3.50 and on Fridays
and Saturday's, adults $5 and
CAN'T WORK?
children $4. Information may
NEW YORK I UPI I - be obtained by calling toll
Seeking to rebut singer free !100-282-201$ from any
Connie Francis' claim that point in Ohio. Group rates are
she has been unable to work available during June and
since she was raped two July .
years ago, defense attorneys
in
a $5 million suit Thursday
Everyone is inviled to slop in the main
testimony from a
presented
office at Pomeroy and our branches in
music promoter, who said he
Rutland and Tuppers Plains on
offered her at least 15
Saturday, June 19 , for refreshments
SNIFFER DIES
enga~ements in the pas t
. se rved by our bicentennial hostesses .
HAMILTON, Ohio UP! year.
Martin H. Kummer said John T. Crow, 21, Hamilton,
Miss Francis turned down an died Wednesday night after
offer as recently as three he was found unconscious
weeks ago.
after sniffing contents of an
She is suing Howard John- aerosoi can, Butler County
son's Motor Lodges, charging sneru~ · s aepuues sa1a. 1ney
there was inadequate said Crow had apparently
security in the motel room sniffed contents of a Pam
where she was assaulted in coating spray.
1974,

COLUMBUS iUP I) Ohio's seven major electric
companies have decided to
pour aoother $1 million into a
public relations campaign to
explain to consumers why
th.cir monthly bills have been
soaring,
The campaign, which
began last August with the
Industry-sponsored Ohi o
Electric Utility Institute and
financed by an initial $1
million , has started to pay
dividends, according to two
spokesmen .
"We felt that we had just
started to make an impact on
con s umers ,~and we wanted tO
continue for another year,"
Arthur G. Green , institute
president
and
board
chairman of Columbus &amp;
S()llthem Ohio Electric Co.
said Thursday.
Patti Johnson, institute
consumer adviser . said ,
"We are seeing positive
results, The complaints
against th.e utility companies

Tecumseh opens fourth
season Monday night

MEIGS THEATRE

Miller's bill

would strip

Hays' power

rationale uf the institute 's
program has been to fnake
thern understand U1e need for
rate hikes, not to make them
l13ppy.
The institute's public relations campaign has begun to
branch off into another area :
a poss ible co nsti tutional
amendment on November
ballot to pr.ovide additional
safeguards ror nuclear power
plants in Ohio.
The institute is behind an
organization called Citizens
for Safe, Lower Cost
Electricity, which ilctends to .
fight
the
pr opose d
amendment if it gets on the
ballot. Supporters of the issue
need a minimum of 307,000
valid signatures by Aug_ust to
plat-e it on the ballot.
The institute has hired
Eugene " Pete" O'Grady , a
politica l co nsultant and
former chairman of the Ohio
Democratic Party, to direct

NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
Ca se No . 21.772

the committee 's work.
O'Grady said he will need
about $1 million to do his job,
Much or the money will come
from the utilties.
The utilities have already
contributed nearly $18,000 to
the campa ign,

The contribution s are :
Columbus &amp; Southern $2,127;
Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric
$2,289; Cleveland Electric
Uluminating Co. $3,433; Ohio
Power Co., $2,909; Toledo
Edison $1,243 ; Ohio Edison,
$3,910, and Dayton Power &amp;

B e rn i~c

·Father's Day is Next Sunday!

Big sale, too, on f.ampus make mens ties clearance sale - mens dress slacks.
Buy Hallmark Father's Day gift
Father's Day cards.

POMEROY - Godlred Monster, a
bullfrog from Rayne, La., was one of the
early favorites in the annual Big Ben
Regatta frog jumping . co ntest here
Satw-day night.
·
'
Godfred · underwen t a phy sical
examination Friday by Dr. Dan Nolter or
Gallipolis, official jump veterinarian, and
also received a vitamin B-12 shot to help
. boost his jumping. He was pronounced fit.
Godlred, and the hundreds of other fr ogs
expected to enter the contest, also had to
undergo an added exam Saturday - a
saliva test.
Noller said officials of the Ohio
Association for the Promotion of Bullfrogs
want to prevent any frogs from receiving
. jump-boosting amphetamines or barbiturates.

special

wrapping~ Hallmark

OPEN SATURDAY 9:30 AM TO 5 PM

. Cr editors are requi re d to

Co urf of Common Pl eas,
Probat e Di vis ion

1 I, 18, 31c.

lberfelds in

Other awards were made ror marching
units and mounted units. They were given
1st, ~nd and 3rd place trophies . Cash
awards or $25 for 1st place, tl5 for 2nd
place, and $7.50 for 3rd place were
awarded to displays which were judged in
four _categories. These categories were :
bicen tennial theme, frog, commercial , and
noncommerciaL Cash awards were also
given for lhe bicycle-•notorcycle category.
The winners in the marching ' unit
category were: So~thern L&lt;&gt;cal Marching
Band, lsl place ; Meigs High School
Marching Band, 2nd place; and the Gloettes Baton Corps finishing 3rd.
The Athens County' Mounted Posse

Pome·~·

were accepted.
Several jwnp contests highlight frog ·
jumping day. There are jump contests for
children and for senior citizens.
And the main event features an interstate rivalry between frogs entered by
Sen. Oakley Collins, D-Ironton, and Mr .
Cartoon , a Huntington, W. Va., television
(Continued on page 2)

Weather

Sugar "Run Mills Announces; A Paint Special For

VO. 11

NO. 21

GALLIPOLIS-POINT PLEASANT

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ROBERT WOOD (LEFT ), VICE PRESIDENT and Director of Bob Evans
Farms, Inc., presented Dr. Paul Hines, President of Rio Grande College. Community College, with a check for $10,000 in behalf of Bob Evans Farms to
assist in the construction of a Field House on the Stanley L. Evans athletic fields on
the Rio Grande campus.

Marshall takes Hines
for community college

1171111 ....

2 G••

Fathers are especially invited in
&lt;lbservance of Father 's Day, and
wtll be given favors .

'Of• (7.110UIB•)

ON

ON

SALE

SALE'

NOW

II&gt;EVOE *PAINT since 17 54 -Imagination from CI.ELANESE

"
••

NOW

3 GALS

'1

FROM PARKERSBURG

A119.76 VALUE

TQNIGHT and
SATURDAY
Ph. 992·:1629

FOR ONLY
***************

$

95
2 GAU.ONS

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HUNTINGTON -Dr. Paul D. Hlnes,
president of Rio Grande College and Rio
Grande Community College in Gallia
County, Ohio, has resigned that position to
become head of the Community College of
Marshall University ,
The appointment of Hlnes as Marshall
vice president in charge of the Community
College will become effective July 1,
l'r!arshall President Robert B. Hayes said.
Hines, who assumed the Rio G•· ·· ~e
position last swnmer, is a former Mar ~ hull
professor of education,
"We're very pleased that Dr. Hlnes
has ·accepted an offer to become head of
Marshall's Community College," Hayes
said, "Since he has served at Marshall
before, we are well aware of his enthusiasm and his ability to achieve excellent results. He has the quillities we
need to make the new Community College
an outstanding educational organization."
Hlnes, 42, is a native of Missouri. Before
asswning the Rio Grande position last
summer, he had served four years as
president of Barton Coun ty Community
College in Great Bend, Kan.
"While I enjoyed working with the
many fine people at Rio Grande, i felt the

' ew hours mvefi
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POMEROY

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tmts
r

,,

M.-mber FDJC

DHE&amp;'lED IN Al1'HACTIVE COLONIAL costum ing, this color guard from
Post 39, America n Legion , fronted the annual iji~ Bt•nd Hegutlll Pnrade, """ uf the
best In the history of Blg Bend Hcgollll We-ekend.

MISS GALLI ACOUNTY, Karen Folden, also took part in the large parade held
in Middleport and Pomeroy Friday evening.

}'our ltwitetl Guest

•

tnttnt

R enf'l1ing More
1'ha11 12,000
Families

Devoted To The Grenter Middle Ohio Valley

and See Us Saturday

The MEIGS INN

The Pomeroy National Bank
received the first place award given in
lh e commercial category . while the
Pomeroy Flower Shoo finished second,
(Continued on page 2)

+

Partlv , cloudy Sunday
through Monday with a
chance of thundershowers.
Highs Sunday and Monday in
the 80s. Lows Sunday ni ght in
the 60s .

•
m
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10:00 TIL 2:00

second .

enter the race, since last minute entries

Hop

"TIGRESS"

flnishl'&lt;i first in the frog category , while
the J&amp;R Sport Shop in Pomeroy was

The OAPB has sponsored the event for
several years as a prelude to Sunday's Big
Bend Regatta, a hydroplane race on the
Ohio River . This .vear , because the
Pomeroy-Mason bridBe is under repair,
and a ferry operates in front of Pomeroy,
only a canoe race will be held in the waters
Sunday.
It is not known hciw many frogs were to

We want to make you smile.
And we have the services to do it.
Come on in today.
We'll make happy things happen.

At The Inn

tuok the only prize given for the mounted
unit category.
Winners of the regatta theme included
the Meigs Minutemen, 1st place; FivePoints Star Stitchers 4-H Club , 2nd place;
and the Chesler D. A. Daughters of
America came .in 3rd.
The Meigs High School Cheerleaders

Godfred favored

Save this weekend during our big sale of men's shirtsdress shirts, sport shirts, leisure shirts, western and knit
shirts .
·

Dars t. dccea_sed . rare

f~ l e ~ t'l ci r c la ims wi th said
f rdu crary within three mont h s.
Dated this t sr day of June
1976 .
Milnning D . Web ster , Judge
&lt;1 ,

POMEROY - ·n,. 12th annual Big
Bend Regatta got underway here and in
Middleport Friday evening amidst colorful
floats , marching bands, and large crowds
·or people who lined both sides or the main
streets In both or their river towns to watch
the parade.
The theme of the Bicentennial editio~
or this year's Big Bend Regatta was "200
Years of Progress Along the River ." This
tlleme was carried throughout the parade
by several historical displays.
The Meigs, Soutnern and Kyger Creek
High school marching ban ds took part in
tile parade. Each band received a trophy
for appearing,
·

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8 PM

of M c1gs Co unty , Oh io

I 1'1 )

This regatta parade biggest ever

lberfelds in Pome

Estate of Pernic e Dar st,

Deceased .
No t ice is her eby given thnt
Wr l.l iam Dars t of Miamisburg ,
Ohro , has been duly a ppointed
E);ecutor of th e E s tate of

Ught $1,981.
•
A PUCO spokesman said
these contributions cannot be
charged off to the utililil!!l
customers. through the
monthly electric bills.
However, the institute's',
p!lblic relations campaign if.
being paid by conswners. Thli
total cost to each consumer
will be about 56 cents,
according to institute
estimates.

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' GALLIPOLIS - Mrs . Evelyn· North ,
Gallipolis Deputy Registrar, Saturday
announced new hours for purchase of auto
license tags.
On Monday, Tuesday, Wedoesday ,
j"rlday and Saturd2y, the office will be
open frJm 9 a.m . until 5 p.m . The office
will be open from 9 a.m. to 12 noon on
Thw-sdays.
The office will be closed from I until 2
p.m. daily for lunch break.
.
The reil&amp;ar's Mflr.e has moved to 602
Third Ave., nexl to the Cedar Street
Market. The new office telephone nwnber
Is 446-7514,
Operations will begin at the new site
Monday morning after having been
located at 24 ~ate St., the past year and
one~ha~ .
·

Marshall University position was too good
a professional opportunity to pass," Hlnes
said, "My family and I have many good
friends in the Huntington area and we are
looking forward to living there again."
Hines served on the Marshall faculty
from 1968 to 1970. He was director of
special programs, director of the Teacher
Corps and associate director of the West
Virginia Triple-'r Project which provided
programs for college personnel involved In
teacher training .
While in the Huntington area, Hlncs
also served as consultant to the
Chesapeake, Ohio, schools and to school
systems in Wayne and Logan counties.
Hines Is the apthor of many articles
published in profession·al journals and is a
member of several professional
organizations. He and his wife, Pauline,
have five children.
Hines will succeed Dr. Robert 0.
Halton in the Marshall Community College
position. Dr. Hatton resigned last January .

SUNDAY, JUNE 20, 1976

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY

PRICE 25 CENTS

Official salaries raised
'

GALLIPOLIS - The June Primary
Election has come and gone, and Interest
in the November General Election likely
will not pick-up until late September. But a
proposed pay increase for county officials
under consideration in Columbus is certain
to hold interest. ,
There 's little wonder that so many
loca l candidates ran for Gallla Co unty
Commissioner and sheriff.
On June · 11 , "the Ohio House of
Representatives passed amended sub·
stllute House Bill 784 to Increase elected
county official salaries effective Jan , 1977
with compensalion fo&lt; each class increased the first day or January, 1978 and
each year until 1984.
In several instances, s ubstanti al
.
raises are forthcoming .
For example , the Proseculing Attorney 's pay will be raised locally , $10,000
from $8,000 to $18,000 per year. The
sheriff's salary will go from $9,200 to
$13,500.
Another big hike would be in the pay of
the Gallia County Coroner from $2,000 per
year to $6,000.
In adjacent Meigs County , the

Prosecuting Attorney 's salary will be
increased from $6,600 per year to $17 000·
the sheriff's from $8,200 to $12.,000 and th~
coroner's fro'!' $2,3110 to $5,000,
The proposed salary schedule for
Gallia County is as follows :
County Auditor now $10,914.75, 1977 $13,500;
County Treasurer now $9,000, 1977 $12,500;
Coun ty Sheriff now $9,200, 1977 $13,500;
•Clerk of Courts now $9,20{), 1977 $12,500;
Conn ty Recorder now $8,900, 1977 $12,000;
County Commissioners now $6,000,
1977 - $8.800;
County Engineer now $15,700, 1977 $19,200;
Prosecuting Attorney now $8,000, 1977
-, $18,000 and County Coroner now $2,900,
1977 - $6,000,
Meigs Conn ty present and prOposed
salaries are as follows :
County Auditor now $10,914.7$, 1977 12,000;
County Treasurer now $8,000, 1977 _

Gavin job produces
million plu~i suit

GALLIPOLIS - J. J, Blazer Con- of the work,
struction Company, Wheelersburg, late
The complaint also claims said adFriday afternoon filed suit for a $1,130,5$4 dendurns were to be pursuant to a uniform
judgment in Gallia County Common Pleas rate of production.
Court against Ohio Power Company,
The complaint says Ohio Power did
Canton.
not pay the escalation to Blazer pursuant
According to the complaint, on March to the contract and did not. permit a
211, 1971, J, J. l)lazer Construction Com- uniform rate of production requiring
pany entered Into a contract with the Ohio Blazer to incur extra equipment moves
Power Company to furnish labor , equip- and standby rental costs.
ment and materials to perform the earth
Blazer con tends he Is due $214,013.94.
moving in connection with the construction
The construction firm also maintains
of the James M. Gavin Plant at Cheshire. it Is due the swn of $29,085.84 for watering
The suit contends the contract was performed and performed machine backentered with the understanding that heavy · fill work and handback fill work in and
equlpment and highway wage rates would - around certain structures with different
be used for labor.
rates of compensation.
According to the suit, in fact, Ohio
According to the complaint, Blazer
Power had agreed with the South Central erroneously billed the WfOng ratio of
Ohio Building and Construction Trade handback fill to machine backfill and such
Council to pay its higher rates.
billing was not In accordance with the
J. J. Blazer was instructed to proceed actual work performed, J . J. Blazer said
with construction.and pay the higher rates he Is due the amount of $67o,9$1.83,for that
which would be paid back to Blazer by work.
Ohio Power. Blazer said he is due
Under a second claim, Blazer C'on$157,394.12 under that agreement.
structlon says during construction, It
The suit also claims under ad- excavated and stoc~piled sand from the
dendwns,
certain construction labor was Swisher Pit, and Is due the sum of $54,108.
LAKEWOOD - Meigs County will
bid and contracted to he paid, based on the
Plaintiff seeks a judgment totaling
have four new Methodist ministers
following the annual Methodist Conference existing wage rates. An escalation In $1 ,130,$54 plus costs.
wages occurred dw-ing the performances
here this week .
Timothy J. Smith, Colwnbus was
named as a replacement for Howard
Shively at the Racine charge in the
Southern Cluster.
.
Richard W. Thomas, a recent
Deputy Parsons returned Jones on a
GALLIPOLIS - !)allla County
grad~ate of the Louisville Presbyterian Sheriff's deputies Friday ni~ht In- fugitive warrant. Jones Immediately
Seminary, will handle the Northeast vestigated vandalism of ·a mobile home appeared in .Municipal Court where he
Cluster .
owned by Jack Drwninond which is entered a not guilty plea . A preliminary
Wilbur Hilt from New Plymouth located at the junction to the 0. J. White hearing wa~ set for June 21. Bond was
Charge, Vinton County, was transferred lo and Prospect Church Roads.
fixed at $10,0110.
the Hoiland Charge and James Corbitt
Deputies said someone fired a shotgun · Riohar" l'&lt;e. 22, Gallipolis, charged In
comes from lhe Bartlett C1large near blast Into the rear of his trailer.
the same case, was returned to Gallipolis
Marietta for the Enterprise · Rock Springs
from
the Ohio State Reformatory at Mans·
In other action, James Jones, 25,
• Flatwood charge .
Garden Grove, Calif. has been returnell to field as a material witness .
James V. Frazier, Cincinnati Charge, Gallia County by deputy Paul Parsons to
Meanwhile, Gallipolis City Police
replaces Paul Hawks at the Grace United face charges of grand theft in the heist uf :c Investigate&lt;! the ·theft of a battery taken
Methodist Church. in Gallipolis. Rev . Holzer Medical Cenler money ba~ last frocn a c•:cr owned !Jy Warren W. W11ite, 645
Hawks was translerred to .M.tf'ion .
April.
Ft.m 111 -¥-\ '.te.

Four churches in
Meigs resupplied

Shotgun blast hit home

.

.

$11,000;
Coun ly Sheriff now $6,200, 1977 $12,000;
Clerk of Courts now $8,300, 1977 $11 ,000;
County Recorder ~ow $7,900, 1977 10 500
; ty cornm1ss
· 1oners now $5 ,1 oo,
' ' coun
1977 - $7,4000;
$18,~~ty Engineer now $H,GOO, 1977 Prosecuting Attorney now $6,600, 1977
- $17,000; and County Coroner now $2,300, ,
1977 - $5,000.
According to population Meigs County
falls in Class 1 ( 1-25,000) while Gallla
County is In Class 2 (25,1100-50,000). Class 1
through 8 will receive an annual increase
of $750 from Jan . I, 1978 through 19&amp;1.

·. '.:
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_:',·.:_,:. :
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![!

POMEROY - The Convulesccnl ::,:
Developers and Consultant,, In c. ;;;;
Springfield, Ohio has filed an ap· ;:;:
plication with the Ohio Department :::;
ol Health to const1·uct a 100-bed ;:;:
health care laclllty ip Pomeroy.
(
The facility would be named ::;,
Pomeroy Park Care Center , Inc. and ::::
would cost an estimated $1 ,242,450. i;i:
Persons interested In the proposed )
prolect may contact the Ohio Valley ;:;

: . , ~,: ~~~,:~;:~~.!·:~:s:~~~~;:;,_ ~::. ; ,:~:,J/

Huge show
is assured
GALLIPOLIS - 11le largest flrework:i
display in the area will be conducted July 4
at 10 p.m. as the climax of the lith annual
River Recreation Festival at tile parklront
in downtown Gallipolis .
Jim Northup, Gallipolis Fire Chief,
said nearly $2,000 have been raised and
donated for the fireworks that this year
will Jnclude huge American nag dl spl f' ys,
These pole-moun ted, colorful, patr!ollc
MYRON (BUD) McGHEE
displays will be visible all along th~ 300
block of First Avenue .
In addition, an aerial bombardment
will light up the sky for 45 mlnules lor
miles around . Northup said the show
would be the largest ever In the Ohio
Valley .
GALLIPOLIS - Announcement .was
All told, 25 firemen will be required to
made today that Myron L. "Bud" McGhee, run the program. Funds to purchase the
367 Debby Dr., Gallipolis, will open a real fireworks were provided by the Gallipolis
estate branch office Monday at 428 Second Volunteer Firemen, the Gallipolis Retail
Ave.
.!'.ferchanl.'l Assn .. and numerous private
McGhee will be branch manager for donations .
the VS Realtors of Columbus, Ohlil. John
The Sunday evening show will be the
W. Barnhart is the broker . The new firm final event of the three-day river
will se ll farm, residential and commercial recreation festival held annually during
properties .
the July 4th holiday In downtown Galllpoils
For the past i5 years, McGhee has and sponsored by the Gallipolis Area
been a salesman for French City Meats. Chamber of Commerce.
He graduated from Coalton Hlgh School in
Jackson Coun ty and attended Rio Grande
College.
McGhee has completed four courses In
real es!Jlte, appraisal , principles and
practicl!s, finance and real es!Jlte law. He
GALLIPOLIS - The Tri-State Red
has been a real estate salesman for the last
three years.
Cross Bloodmobile will be in GalUa County
McGhee is president of the Gallipolis Thursday, June 24 at Grace United
Recreation Board11nd past president or the Methodist Church from 12 noon to 6 p.m.
Southeastern Ohio Spor tswriters and
To assure an adequate supply of blood
Broadcasters Association , He Is a former for swnmer and to maintain Gallla
voice or the "Gallipolis Blue Devils'' and Co unt)·~s quota all eligible blood donors
currently does football and basketball are w-ged to visit the bloodmobile. 1110se
telecasts on cable tv .
18 through OO,years of age and 17-yeru:-&lt;&gt;lds
He Is a member of the Gallipolis Elks with parental consent may bfcome blood
Club and Grand Lodge of Free and Ao- donors. For more information phone 446cep ted Masons. He is married to the for- 3760.
mer Donna Cundiff of Wellston . They have
three children, Mrs . John (Beth) Null,
FIRE PUT OUTGallipolis; Vickie, a sophomore at Ohio
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport
Stale University and Steve, a sophomore )Fire Department answered a call at 4:21
at Gallia Academy, High School. He is the
.m. Friday to ,the Carrie Rickman home
son of the late )\1 yron McGhee and Mrs.
n Custer St. where a maitre-. had caught
Mprl' McGhee &amp;t Jacksoc. .
1 il!t). 'l11ere was minor1smoke d•ma~e.

McGhee ip his
own business

Bloodmobile coming

to Ga11ia Jwte 24

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