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                  <text>32-The Sunday Times . S.ntinel, Sunday, June 27, 1976

County court has

Excursion boats were
for dining, dancing
BY FRAN!I,HIU,
boats arrived ?
GALL!POUS - How many
An agent .of these boats
old-timers remember the would arrive in town several
weeks before the date of
arrival and the local store
windows would be full of
large crowds that gaU1ered at posters about a short cruise
the parkfront many years ago that .could be taken on one of
when one of the old Excursion these ~ra nd old boats. Most

Gallia History

NEW
SHIPMENT!
If you got the
GUTS,
. Lee has the
PANTS!

usually there would be
dancing, and refreshments
available for a fee of about $3
Ul $5 per cou~le . These short
cruises
were
usually
moonlight trjps. Youngsters
as well as older folks were
quick to grasp this golden
opportunity to take the gi,rl of
his choice on one of thel\).
Many folks would come from
miles around fqr the danci ng
and ride on these magnificent
boats.
Long before reachiflll port
th e caliope would start
playing to announce the
arrival. This beautiful old
organ type instrwnent could
be hea rd for miles. Playing
such tunes as the Washington
and I.e€ Swing, The Beer
Barrel Polka, Dream Train ,
and many other well known
tunes of tbe day, these grand
old boats were something to
behold as thev landed.
Some of the names I reca ll
of these boats were the
Washington, Homer Smith, J .
S. Deluxe and near the end of
the period the Avalon; and I
must not forget the Island
Queen. I believe the J. S.
Deluxe was about the largest.
Here is another part of
vanishing America gone but
not forg otten by us old

30 cases Friday

Gallia
Hy H.obart Wilson

Jr.

POMEROY - Nineteen
EVERYTHING is "rea dy" for the 1976 Gallipolis River defendants were lined and II
Hecreation Festival according to Casby 1Skip) Meadows, forleited bonds in Meigs
general chairman.
County Court Friday.
.
1 I1
Fined by Judge Robert E.
THE 12th annual(gosh , has it bee n that long since the Buck were John S. Theiss,
festival began'') is scheduled July 2, 3 and 4 along the Rt. 5, Athe!IS, speeding, $15
Upstream Public Use Area and Public Square area.
and costs; Milain Sargent,
+++
Kanauga, speeding, $12 and
MEADOWS and bis committees have done another costs; Sherman F. Paig, Jr.,
outstanding job in preparing for the an nual Fourth of July Front Royal, Va ., speeding,
celebra tion . This year's event will have a special meanin~ in $14 . and costs; William R.
that residents will also be observing the nation.'s 2001)1 birth- Thacker, Hamden, speeding,
day . It should be one residents will remember for yea rs to · $11 and costs; Stephen L.
Colne
Ba. Jdwin, Racine, speeding,
.
+++
$12 and t.'Osts; George W.
LOOSE NOTES - A. A. Medved , PO.f Box
Tyus , J r ., Cl eve 1an d •
fA 322,B Cape
.
Vincent, N. Y., is collecting material oh the l1 e 0 . nn a11ey. speeding, $10 plus costs;
In a letter to the Tribune last week, Medved sa1d tlhas been 22 John V. Gross, Rochester,
years since he left Gallia County ' and that his bu&gt;-htstortcal Ind., speedin~, $10 and costs;
novel vn " Mad Ann " is near completion, He added Galhpohs Dorothea .Pearl Remy,
has a prominent place in later chapters in the novel. He is · Gallipolis, stop ·sign
seeking addition al materia l, along wtth a Galha County map violations, $10 and costs;
showing both the location of Chpper Mills and Hamson Twp., Ralph K. Oiler, Langsville,
where her son, Richard, resided.
failure
to
displa y
+++
registration, $2fl .and costs;
Ricky C. Clark, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy, unsafe vehicle , $30
and costs, $15 suspended;
· Paris K. Hess, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy, unsafe vehicle, $30
and costs, $15 suspended ;
Richard Taylor, West Colum·
bia, W.Va. , _speed,_$13 and
costs; Theodore Hayes, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, speeding, $30 and

The boats were somewhat
like the Della Queen in
appearance, but whereas the
Delta
Queen
takes
passen'ge1·s on long cruises
the old Excursion hoats were
for short, local cruises and
dancing. The Excursion boats
also stopped at most all of the
larger ports along the river.

,''

' l :

I .I

LEE Rlll:RS'"
BOOTCUlS"
For men who ride
bulls 'n broncs, or just
like to watch the action.
look 101 l h1s branded Lee lObei

IN THE
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

Lane moves

renovated with grant

MARIETTA - Approval of
a$150,000granttohelpcreate
inunediate construction jobs
,...
)
for the unemployed he~e , was
announcedSat~nlily by John
RUMORS were circu lating around town after the recent W. Eden, Achng Assistant
To those who may be
circus at the Ga llia County Junior Fairgrounds that one of the Secretary of Conunerce for
interested :
Development.
animals
got loose and was left behind after the circus moved Economic
Many years ago there was
Ohio Showboat Drama,
a bea utiful heavy iron fence on. Monday , Dave Tawney happened to have his camera along Inc., of Marietta applied for
in fron t of Washington school. when 'this ·'gorilla " pulled up bes id e him in an automobile, and the grant from the Econonnic
Near the bottom of lbe asked that his picture be taken. Aw, come on, Dave! It wasn't a Development
AdminisMIDDLEPORT - The Oh·
posts was the name Enos &amp; real gorilla , was it '&gt; Maybe it was just someone promoting the tration , U. S. Depart· Kan Coin Club will conduct a
Hill Compan y, Gallipolis, new Kin g Kong nick.
ment of Conunerce. The regular business meeting
Ohio and a date in the 1880s
+++
funds
will · be
used Monday evening in the social items. Alan Milnone of
TWENTY YEARS AGO , from the files of the Daily to help renovate the rooms of the Columbus and Belpre, Ohio will be the guest
when U1e fence was cast and
Tribune and weekly Gallia Times ... Stanley Eva ns donates 15 Becky Thatcher riverboat Southern Ohio Electric Co. speaker.
erected.
A54-lot coin auction follows
·'Enos and Hill" was a acres of land for permanent fairgrounds just off Rt. 35, four for use as a thea- building, Mill St., Mid·
the
meeting. Refreshments
machin e shop loca ted . on miles north of Gallipolis ... Leo Mossman inducted president of ter,
restaurant
and illeport.
will
be served. Area resi·
Third Ave . wher e the Gallipolis ,Rotary Club ..'. Haskins-Tanne r Store celebrates museum. Six unemployed
A social hour and trading
interested
in
Buckeye Rural Elec tric 90th anniversary ... M. Harold Brown named Gallipolis Clinic persons will be hired for the sess ion prec edes the dents
monCom pany 's office is. This ad ministra tor ... Harry Boggs elected new Legion conunander project. Construction is ex· meeting, starting at 7 p.m. coins or paper
company was formed in 1867 ... Rupert Trout to head Rose Conunandery, Knights Templar pected to begin within 90 days Several out-of-town coin ey are invited' to attend
and was known as Enos. ... Ca rroll Null, li, a native of Cadmus, injured in Colwnbus and be completed in nine dealers will be present to new memberships are now
Menager &amp; Co. In IB6 9 auto wreck ... Ernest like) Wiseman joins staff of insurance months.
buy, sell, or trade collector being accepted.
Menager sold out to Hill and firm in Columbus .. . Opal Camden and Hazel Dauber will
it became known as Enos &amp; represent Bidwell High School in 1956 Ga llia County Junior ·:;:·:-:.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;:;.;:;.;.;.;.;:;.;:;.;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::·:::::::·:·:·:::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::::;:;:::::::;:;:;:::::;:;:·:·:;:;:::::::
Fair Queen pageant ... Large crowd attends grand opening of
Hill Co.
Thi s company made Bo b ~aunder s Quaker Stale Service Ce nter.
marine Stationary engines.
Thev also handled stea m
gauges and whistles and gu m area .
WAREHOUSE ON MECHANIC STREET
and leat her belting.
Tile answer to last week's
Tiley did lots o( work for the question:
ri ve r boa ts an d became
Isaac Lewis was an ea rly
known for quality work . At negro se ttler of our city. He
one time they manufactured lived in the Texas Road area .
the best engines in the entire I once read that most all of
th is area of town was owned
at one time by negroes.
.
About IB33 these folks mel
in Mr. Lewis' home and
organized the Paint Creek
Ba ~tist Church, tak ing the
name from the small creek
which runs nearby . They
latet· constructed the grand
old church still standing just
up street from the Tribune
WITH THIS
off ice on Third Ave.
S&lt;Jmething to think about:
DEBRA PRIDDY
Who owned the firs t truck
COMPACT AIR CONDITIONER
POMEROY
- Alrwoman
in our city ?
Debra A. Priddy, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Dale L.
AT A LOW, LOW PRICE!
Priddy of Rt. 4, Pomeroy,
ha s been assigned to
Keesler AFB, Miss., alter
completing Air Force basic
training. She will now
recei&gt;e speCialized
training
In
the
administrative field. The
alrwoman is a 1975
graduate of Meigs High
School.

______

Com luh will'
meet On MOn d

·ELBERFELD$ IN .POMEROY

Whirlpool

Where You Savel

6.50%

Even off the
beaten path,
State.F~£111,.
IS

·

I Yr. Certificates of Deposi t
Minimum $1,000.00

7.50%
4 Yr. Certificates of Deposit

Minimum $1,000.00

Insu re the good 11mes. too It
you vc I o ke r~ to ol1 the road 1r.;we1
lor exc rlem en t and retrea tron
you ·rc lrKely to need the el(t ra
prOtt!ctrun or our Rtc:re(l tron al
Vet1rc1e Polrc~ Ca!l or vrsrt l or all
lllC t!PitliiS

Federa l r egu l ations req~ ire 11
substantial penally for pr emrtfure
wi thdr awa l of cer tif ica te funds

CARROL K. SNOWDEN
14

State Street

Gallipolis

Home 446 -4516

••• QullJ s.inp &amp;' - Co.

m W. 2nd St..

Pomeroy, Olllo 45769
RICHARD E. JONES, MANAGER

l1ke a good neighbor.
S/,tfe Fann 15 there
SlA Jl f"HM MUIUA l
II

IAIM

, 'I" • I

~" "'"' "' ·'
I j f, t I

\llll

HOFFMAN'S TRIP
WASHINGTON (UP!)
President Ford designated
Milton Hoffman of Riverdale ,
N. Y., Friday as his special
rep resentative for the
groundbreaking ceremonies
of the American Bicentennial
Park in Israel on July 4.

pa~1~e

5,000 BTU/ Hr.
Check th;;e

~ah;teb~~~sea~~~~J~

Whirlpo~/"

'){'.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, , , , , , , ,, ,, ,,, , , , , ,.,

official rcognition by the "
:-:·
:-:Am e r ic an Revolution ~l
COfflfOtf·COnvenience features: ?
·~·~
Bicen:ennial Administration,
} See all the other }
TI1e park is located In the
• 3-speed fan puts you in
(Exhaust) lor removing !i!! ~odels of Whirlpool }
townofBeitShemesh, Israel, '*
cool command
stale, smoky air from ;:;: A1r Conditioners - ::;;
west of Jersusalem.
• SUPE R COOL setting
a room
:!l 8,000, 12,000 and :!:!
tor madx imumdcooling
• COMt F0hRT G UA~D ·. : .::. 1 8 , 0 0 0
8 T U ;:_!•.
when eman s are
con ro 1 e1ps ma111tarn
grea test
comlort rang e you
!'!• capacities. Models !:!:
• 2-way air directlbn puts
select
\ priced as low as;;:;
WALTON QUITS
coo ling air where.you
• Pus hbutton controls
';:; $199.95,
.;:::
NORFOLK, Va. (U P!)
want it
for las\, easy operation }
t
Former · child actor A. w.
Walton began his second ' • Air cha nger co ntrol
' ''"'' : .,...
,,,_, / :i,:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:,:,:,))
retirement today . His first
SELECT THE MODEL THAT'S BEST FOR YOU
W!l~ more than 40 years ago
when he quit playing the
curly haired little rich kid in
the ''Our Gang" movie series
. l•f lite 19;!~ ann :lib.
:;::::: :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:,:-:;:::::::::·:;:;:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·~;:-:·:·:·:::·:·:·:·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::~::::::::

t

Phone 446-429 0

MEIGS BRANCH

8
- '~

to 855 2nd

I I&lt; I II I . I&lt; I I

~

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

JUDGE ROBERT BUCK TRIES one of the old
Pomeroy Hlgl) School band hats on his young daughter,
Jennifer, at Saturday's Meigs Local School District public
sale. Judge Buck, a graduate of Pomeroy High School and
Ohio State University Law SChool, is judge of the Meigs
County Court. When "the jedge" was in the PHS band, he
played the t"ba.

BARBARA OOA~ BETZING bought the old
Middleport High Sc)JOQI band's bass drum at Saturday's
public sale In tjle Meigs Local School District. Mrs.
Betzlng intends to use it as a coffee table. She is a granddaughter of the late C. T. Coates, superintendent of
Pomeroy schools many years.

•

e
VOL. XXVIII NO. 50

public sale of hundreds of unuaed Items from Mefss Local
schools moving at a good pace.

School days, school days.

-I

businesses

Don't repair it,
replace it now...

It Does Make
A DiHerence

DAN SMITII, LEFT, AND JIM CARNAHAN, In
country straw hats had a ball Saturday as they kept a

Becky Thatcher to he

timers.

r

costs ; Ronnie M. Pickens,
Middleport, failure to yield,
$35 plus costs; James B.
Argabrite, Belpre, reckless
operation, $30 plus costs;
Lula F. Westfall, Rt. I, umg
Bottom, speeding $17 and
costs; Terry A. Cain, Rt. 3, ,
Albany, speeding, $8 · and
costs; Donald Sedgwick, I
Tuppers Plains possession of
illegal &lt;1rug, $100 and costs;
Dave Darst, Midilleport,
possession of stolen articles,
BOB LANE
90 days confinement, 60 days
suspended, creditgiven for30
days served.
Forfeited bonds were
Thomas A. Mathes, South
Point, speeding, $27.50; Sid·
ney Ellis, Rutland, speeding
$27.50 ; David R. Wells,
Reedsville, speeding, $31.50.
John A. Kearns, Logan,
speeding, $27.50; Fred E.
GALLIPOLIS _ Bob Lane
Kuhn, Charleston, W. Va., has announced moving hi.s
speeding, $27.50; Bill Powell businesses to. a single new
Jr., Parkersburg, W. Va., location in Gallipolls. Having
speeding, $27.50; Ralph S. recently purchased the "Mr.
Bickle, Belpre, speeding, · Tax of America" franchise in
$27.50; William Hill, 'l'l/orn- town from Roger E. Stover,
ville,
speeding&gt;
$35.50 ; Lane is moving Toney Realty
David J. Hudson, Colwnbus, Gallery of Homes and his
speeding, $27.50 ; John . D. bookkeeping and tax business
Corn, Jr., Ironton, speedin~, , into the Mr. Tax building at
$27.50; David Wills, Rio 855 Second Ave. He will be
Grande, speeding, $27.50.
operating three businesses
out of this new location:
Toney Rea lty Gallery of
Homes, Bob Lane's Complete
Bookkeeping and Tax
Service, and Mr. Tax of
America .
Lane is being · assisted by
his wife Vicky In the office.
Two associate salesmen are
Ohio Showboat Drama, working with this branch of
Inc., will provide $100,000 to Toney Realty Gallery of
complete the $2,:;0,000 total Homes, Joe Crans in the
cost of the project.
Crown City to Chesapeake
,
area, andDenverK.Higleyin
C
the Gallipolis area. Denver
with the company on a
came . b · fr
Ra h
ay part-llme asis om nc 0

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

ByBobHoelllcb
"Going, going gone."
These traditional calls by
auctioneers rang out In the
Rutland gymnasium
Saturday when the Meigs
Local School District held a
public sale which brought
over $3,500 4tto its treasury.
The sale not only put those
dollars Into the district pot
but gave residents a chance
to purchase a piece of

• ••

memorabilia from bygone
days . Sold were over 3110 old
desks, equiJillent no longer
needed, some old Pomeroy
High School band uniforms, a
couple of bass drums, maps,
typewriters, duplicating
equipment and old books.
Residents thronged to the
auditorium and enjoyed
thoroughly the humor which
auctioneers, Jim Carnahan
and Dan Smith, Injected into

their sale pitches. The sale buyers ran out an&lt;l the
offered "something for remainder - some 30
everyone." No one appeared probably- went for $1 for the
to leave empty handed. entire group.
Outdatal desks, dusty and
Typewrlten aold well. One
carved with lnltials, could be went for a high bid of eome
seen stlcldng out ol trunks or $62; another for $50; others
perched on top o! vehicles as sold for $26.50. The machlnea
shoppers left the auditorium had not been u8ed for a
parking area .
munber of years.
Carnahan, of Racine, was
Student desks went for fl
highly cClllllllended for his and many were bought llt that
work· with the auction. He · price. Toward lhe end some
took on the "chore" of of the desks sold for as low as
moving all of the Items, ~. A pickup truck - after
which have been collecting cooslderable urging from the
dust ·for years, at a fiat fee of auctioneers ~ went for $66.
$100, far 1ess than !.he usual One baBS drum 110ld for $11
percentage. He brought with and another for fl.
him a crew of four who
The man behind the sale
insured a l!lllooth running was Dan Morris, aBSIIItant
sale.
superintendent o! Melga
Particularly popular with Local Distrlct1 who aald he
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS bidders were several large, was quite pleased with the
framed contour maps which $3,GOO raised through the
went for f57 bach. ·
tlf!ort. There's more stock
Pomeroy High School band around lind another sale wlll
Wllforma went for 75 cents be annolmced, Morrla aald.
each and a few more moved.
There's no doubt about It
A few minutes later, the though, on Saturday thoae
whole batch was sold for auctioneers said "gone"
$1.25, Band hats sold for $1 often and "gone" in no Ume
Entebbe.
each on the first roWld with
were hyndredl o! items
Uganda Radio said the ooe lady purchasing 50. The really
which
will find good u~~e In
hijackers Issued a 8\atement price then dropped to 50 cents
Meigs
County homes for
saying "the Popular Front and a few more went. Then
many
years
to come.
for the Liberation of
Palestine seized the plane to
declare war on France, which
Is an enemy of the Arabs."
It called France "an
Important executor ' of .
imperialism
in
the
Mediterranean.
The guerrillas, reported to
nwnber between four and
seven, commandeered the
NEW YORK (UP!) - The ground crew lor the lateat
twin-engine jet Sunday less
solo attempt to crou the Atlantic by balloon haa oot heard
than 30 nninutes after tt left
from pilot Karl Tho11181 since 4 a.m. Sunday, but a spokesAthens on a Tel Aviv to Paris
man today expressed optimism that the German-born
flight.
flier was still aloft.
After
refueling
In
"The balloon Is equipped with lleepere tllat
Benghazi, Ubya, the plane
automatically start If the balloon goes down," the spokesheaded for Khartoum but was
. man said. "The fact that the beepers haven't been picked
refused landing pennlssion
up Is our biggest reason for optlnni8m."
and arrived in Entebbe with
He said at least 20 ships .were In the .area where
only IS minutes of fuel left,
Thomas was last reported and could pick up the beeper
Alr Franee officials said in
slgnala If the craft waa In the water.
Paris.
"I'm worried over the lack o! communlcaUon ... any
Indication of Karl's position would be re&amp;BSurlng," said
Wally Clayton, a member of the New York ground control
crew.
But he said Sunday there was no lnunedlate cause
Cllance of showers tonight.
for
alann.
.
.
Lows tonight in lower 608.
Thomas'
flight
was
the
13th
attempt
at
a
solo
transCloudy, a little cooler
atlantic balloon crossing. All similar previous attempts
Tuesday, chance of showers.
failed
and six of the 12 who tried died in the process.
Highs in lower 80s.
Thomas,
27, of Troy, Mich., waalaat reported about
Probabllity of rain 30 per cent
650
miles
east
of New York and 450 mlles south of Cape
today and tonight, 40 per cent
Breton,
Nova
Scotia.
Tuesday.

en tine
MONDAY, JUNE 28, 1976

Arab guenillas take over airliner
Four to die
LUANDA, Angola (UP!) Areyolutionary peoples court
today sentenced four mer·
cenaries, including one
American, to death by firing
squad and handed down long
prison terms against nine
others.
The defendants - three
Americans and 10 Britons 8\ared in shocked silence as
the presiding judge told them
their fate.
The J\ldge sentenced Daniel
Gearhart, 34, of Kensington,
Md., to death because he ran

an advertisement ·offering
himself as a soldier of fortune
and
contacted
an
international mercenary
group based in South Mrica .
Also condemned to be shot
we~e "Col. Tony Callan" and
Andrew Mackenzie because
they participated in the
massacre of 14 of their fellow
· British mercenaries. A·third
Briton, John Barker, was
given death because he
c ommanded other
mercenaries.

·:::::::~=~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::~:~:~:::::~:~:::::::::::::::::::::!:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::

lfNews. . •in Briefsft
·=··

··'J

By United Presalntematlonal
SfOCKHOLM, SWEDEN - A FOUR-CAR conunuter
train bound for the southern Swedish city of Malmoe crashed
head~n with a freight outside Helsingborg today scattering
bodies along the track and pinning others in the wreckage.
Rescue workers on the scene said at least seven persons were
killed and ahout 25 Injured in the crash.
"We know that there are more bodies still trapped inside
the train, but the cars are so badly smashed that we have not
been able to get inside," a rescue spokesman said. The
accident happened on a single track several miles south of the
southern city of Helsingborg. Pollee said the collision was so
violent that one of the two locomotives of the northbound
freight destroyed the first passenger car and came to a stoy in
the second car.
BEIRUT, LEBANON - RIGHT-WING CHRISTIAN
gunners shelling Beirut airport destroyed a Middle East
Airlines jet Sunday and door-to-door fighting raged through
the capital, already left without electricity and water and
threatened by a typhoid epidemic. The Christian Phalangist
siege of two Palestinian refugee camps In southeastern Beirut
raged into a sixth day and estimates were as many as 900
persons has died in the fightlng~viest of Lebanon's Ifmonth civil war.
An estimated 3,000 heavy shells fell in the area o1 the Tal al
Zaater and Jisr al Pasha camps in 24 hours, but the two camps
. dl!l, oot fall, rightist and leftist reports said. The war of the
camps set off wild battles on "traditional" fronts as leftists
and Palestinians launched counter offensives and Christians
bombarded the airport with rockets.
USBON, PORTUGAL - GEN ANTONIO RAMALHO
Eanes swept to a landslide victory today in Portugsl's first
free presidential elections on his reputation as a no-nonsense
nnilltary leader promising to put the country back to work .
With about 99 per cent of the votes CQIIIIted, Eanes had just
over 61 per cent compared to Jess than I7 per cent for his
, nearest rival, far-left Maj. Otelo Saralva de Carvalho.
Prime Minister Adrn. Jose Pinheiro de Azevedo, who
suffered a heart attack last week and watched the returns
from his bed in an ()porto hoapltal, had about i4 per cent and
·emununlst candidate Octavio Pato was a poor fourth with
nearly 8 per cent. Eanes ssid in a brief television statement the
election showed "all Portuguese as a free people can choose
wbo they want .to be president - this includes those who
wantal to Impose a dictaiorshlp on November 25."

. LOUISVILLE, KY. -SEN. WENDEU.. FORD, D-Ky .,
says he understands Democratic presidential favorite Jinuny
Carter'sllst of possible vice presidential cantlldatl!s has been
narrowed to four or five names.
The Kentucky Democrat said Sunday speculation In
Washington is that Sen. John Glenn, )).Ohio, will end up as
carter's runningmate. "I would be very satlsfied·lf It Is John
Glen.n," Ford said. Other possiblllties Include Sens. Walter
Mondale o! Mimesota and Frank Church of Idaho, he said.
NEUFVIILE, BELGIUM - AN AMSI'ERDAM ·to· Paris
express packed with holiday travelers deralled Sunday as it
sped through the Belgian countryside, Oinglng five cars into
electrical pylona and leaving a haH·mlle tangle of smashed
coacnes anct dl8membered bodies.
Eleven p8118ertgers were killed and 211 injured in the
accident 20 mlles south of russels, a Belgian railways
communique said, Local officials earlier had put the injured
toll at 59. There were no conflnned American casualties
although an American girl, Law-a 011U of Morris, Minn., was
reported missing by a traveling companion.
l

"(

NAIROBI, Kenya (UPI) Arab guerrillas who hijacked
a French airliner with 258
persons aboard from Athens
to Entebbe, Uganda, said
today they did it to "declare
war on France."
The hostages aboard the
Air France jet reportedly
included nine Americans and
at least 86 Israelis as well as a
crew o! 12. The guerrillas
said they were members of
the Popular Front for the
Liberation of Palestine.

An official of an airline image of the Palestinian
operating out ol!'ntebbe told resistance.n
UPI by telephone he had seen
There was contact with the
a number of passengers hijackers at Entebbe by
disembarking, but he French Ambassador Pierre
couldn't see how many left Renard, a colonel of the
the guarded aircraft more Ugandan army and a
than a nnile away at the old representative for the PW.
part of the airport.
Ugandan President ldi Annin
There was no confirmation came !rom Kampala, stayed
of this report. In Paris, the . for a short time, then went to
Palestine Liberation a home he maintains in
Organization dissociated
itself from the hijack, calling ::::::::!::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;::::
it "an attempt to tarnish the

Dateline 1776

Reagan pulling
close to Ford
United Press International
President Ford is moving
closer to the magic nwnber of
1,130 delegates needed for the
Republlcan nomination - but
Ronald Reagan is moving
closer to Ford.
·
According to UPI's tabulation, Ford's 17·1 victory in
Minnesota Saturday brought
him to within 76 votes of the
number he needs to win . But
Sunday, Reagari's sweep of 45
delegates in Idaho, Montana
and New Mexico moved him
to within 70 votes of Ford.
In the Democratic race,
with only five Puerto Rican
delegates still to he chosen,
the UP! tabulation shows
Jlnuny Carter with at least
1,714 - well over the 1,505
needed for the nomination at
the convention next month in
New York.
The person-by-person count
in the the Republican race
shows 103 uncommitted and
98 still to be chosen, including
. entire
delegations
In
Connecticut, North Dakota
and Utah and a partial
delegation 'In Colorado.
The UPI tabulation
Includes ' the following
delegates "leaning" to one or
the other candidate: three In
Guam for Ford, 17 in Hawaii
lor Ford, five for Ford and
oile for Reagan in filinols, two
each in Minnesota, lour for
Ford in South Carolina, one

CHARLESTON, S. C.,
June 28 - A British
squadron under Adm.
Samuel Parker tried to
the cbauuel to Cllarlestoa
by
the
A111erlcan
fortlflcatloas at Sulilvan's
Islaud. After a l~our
fray, the Brltlsb warihiJlfl
withdrew with aeveral
shiJlfl severely damaged
and Adm.
Parter'a
breeches blown off by an
American shell. The
British casualties were 281
wounded and killed,
lnclud!Dg fatally wouuded
South Carolina Gov.
Campbell. American
lorees sustained 12 dead
and 23 wounded,

run

for Ford in Vermont, one for
Ford and four for Reagan in
Virginia, four for Ford In the
Virgin Islands, one for Ford
and 14 for Reagan in
Wyoming.
The rest are conunitted.
As the contests of the
weekend ended, Reagan said
in a UPI interview aboard his
plane returning to California
that his own "spirit of unity"
has not reached the breaking
point, but added that II ,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:;:;:;:::::;:;:,:,:,:,:::::::,:,:,:,:,:,::
"divisive" tactics by . the
Ford campaign worsen, the
backing
of
Reagan
supporters may not be
forthcoming If the President
wins the nonnination.
The Pomeroy Emergency
He said he s~metlmes Squad was calledtoNye Ave.
thinks Ford iS more at 9:01 p.m. Saturday for
mterested In bemg nominated ·., Hines Coates who was taken ·
than in winning the election. · to the Holrer Medical Center.
Rep. John Anderson, R-Ill., His was the first o! five
a member of the GOP weekend runs. It also went:
platform candidate, said in a
To the Meigs Theatre at
Reagan nomination "would 10:16 p.m. Saturday for
have a very adverse Impact Henrietta Jenkins, who saf·
on our abllity to gain seats In fered a possible hlp fracture
the House."
·She was taken to Holze~
Anaerson
said
the Medical Center.
President "started with a
At 12:50 a.m. Sunday to
disadvantage" since he SR 143 to assist Arvilla
"didn't have the builtin Don'ahue to Veterans
polltical network that any Memorial Hospital.
·
mcumbent president usually
To the scene of an accident
has."
at 6:13p.m. SundayonSR 124
A Gallup Poll published to take Ann Thomaa to VMH.
Sun~ay showed Carter
And at8:16 p.m. Sunday for
beahng both Ford and Mary Braley, State St.,
(Continued on page 8)
Pomeroy, who was taken to
VMH.

Pomeroy unit

called 5 times

Balloonists'
radios silent

Weather

'Goal too
By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White Houee Reporter

DORADO, Puerto Rico
President Ford,
delivering an analysis of the
world's
most
recent
economic downturn, has \
urged Western leaders to aet
more "realistic" social goals
to hold down lnflatioo.
Ford and the leaders of six
other nations attending the
E c onom I c S u m m it
Conference were to hold two
more sessions today on
subjectll ranging from trade
and oorth-tOuth relationships
to energy.
u.s. officlala hostlnll the
twcHlay conference at lhla
tropical resort on the AtlanUc
Ocean said the mood at
Sunday'sopening sess)on was
one of "determination,
confidence
and
joint
(UPI) -

Mars landing delayed by site dQubts
PASADENA, Calif. (UP!)
- Scientists searched the
surface of Mars today for an
alternate landing site for
Viking I 's llfe-hunling lander,
canceling the July 4
Bicentennial touchdown
because "Mars would not
cooperate."
The original landing site
"appears to have too many
unknowns and could- be
hazardous," said project
manager James Martin.
The July 4 landing,
scrubbed after years of effort ·
to keep the da~, waa to have
been part of the nation's 200th
birthday celebration.
"I am disappointed, aa are
many people," Martin said.
"But we've always had in the
back of ow- minds that Mars

would not cooperate.
vanished Martian rivers.
"! would say It has not."
Although the site was
The landing will be late by among the most promising In
at leaat four days and the search for evidence olllfe
possibly by weeks, dependin~ - more likely to develop
on the site chosen.
where there was the most
Scientists considered a spot water - the lander needs a
dubbed "the Northwest Ter· comparatively smooth spot to
ritory," hoping It _would touch down.
provide safer groWld than the
It could be wrecked If It
original site, "A·l," with both came down atop a m8n111zed
In the first general area boulder or on a steeply
chosen, the plain of Cllryse, · sloping crater wall.
Three other locatlona on the
With Viking orbiting 1,000
llst included one all the way nniles above the surface, ill
around the planet.
televlalon cameras cannot
The Viking team at Jet see anything less th4n about
Propulsion Laboratory 3110 feet acroas, maldng any
decided It would lle too risky landing site a gamble of
to send down the lander in the sorts.
A-1 area, laced by canyons
The decision. to delay was
and the dry beds of long- founded on arguments -

opposed by several scientists
- that a site with rough
features large enough to be
seen Ia more likely to have
Ulll1een obstacles as well.
Martin said the most
Important consideration Is to
get the automata! laboratory
ooto the Martian surface in
working order even at the
sacrifice of the "river delta"
landing site.
After examining four
areas, Martin said, scientists
may find "that all areas of
Mars are equally rough and ·
that's the kind of sltuaUon we
will have to live with.
"In that case we can decide
to go back to A·l and then
would land somewhere
lletween July 8 and 12."

\

high'-~Ford

responsibility."
leaders recession and
. The
other
nations joblesaneu were caused by •
·participating were Great decade o! penlstent Inflation.
Britain, France, Gennany,
Grewpan said Fcrd exItaly, Canada and Japan.
prl'llled his own lotlll-beld
The talks have been free· . view that the United ,Stalel
wheeling and dealt frOill the and other govenunenta had
outset
with economic overextended themlelvet~ ' in
recovery and monetary the drive to right BOCial
i.uues.
wronp,
The globallnfiationary cliAlan Greenspan, Ford's
chief ecooomlc adviser, said mate came about in large
the President told the other
(Continued on page 8)

Local news, in briefs
RUTLAND - A "battle of
the bonds" planned as the
evening entertainment of
July 5 os a port of tbe threeday weekend celebration In
Rutland has given way to a
talent show with cash prizes
totaling $100.
The folent show will be of 8
p.m. In the community pork
but will be moved Into the
gymnasium In case of rain.
Prizes of $25, $15 and S10 will
be awarded to the top winners
In two categories which
Include through 17 years of
age and those over 18 In the
competition. A panel of
lodges will select the
winners. Contestants may
register by calling Mrs. Joan
Stewart, 742-2421 , or Jack
Walker at 742-2333.
MARTHA LOU FOX,
Middleport, filed tor support
under
the
reciprocal
agreement act against Lerry
Lee Fo•, Clifton, In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court.
Betty Williams, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, has tiled tor
divorce against Wendell H.
Williams, Buffalo.
TO all spouses of coal
miners and loco! unions 1890,
1886, and 1957 there will be a
meeting at Forest Acres Park
Wednesday, June 30 at 10 • ·
m. to form a club formerly
called \he Coal Miners Wives.
Please bring a covered dish .
Those who have any

r

questions call 669-3635.
SYRACUSE
The
Syracuse Volunteer Fire
Deportment ond Emergency
Squad will hold a yard sale on
July 10 at the fire station ,
Money donotlons, Iorge or
small, will be appreclatad.
The money will be used
toward lhe cost of the new
squad truck .
Those who wish to donate
Items for the sole and for
pickup may celt these
numbers: Oris Hubbard at
~ -2239, Clyde Triplett atm.
3125, or Ralph Levender at
992-5888.

RACINE -

The Racine

emergency sqlllld answered a

call to Letart Falls at 11 :55 a .
m. Sunday tor Wilbert
McClain, 42, who hod o head·
Injury , He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital .
At 9: 50 p. m. Sunday, the
squad took Goldie Roberts of
Racine to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. Both McClain and
Mrs. Roberts were admlttad.
AT 1: 55 p. m. Sai\Jrday the
Mlddlpeort Emergency
Squad was called to Tall
Timbers night club to ass11t
Jam.. Ritchie, who had been
InJured In a fight. He wa1 ,
taken to Veterans Hospital.
The squad answered a call at
5:05 p. m. Sunday to 699
Broa'llway St. to · assl1t
Elizabeth Scott to Holzer
Medical Cen.ter.

�3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Fomero~. 0 .. Monda~ . June 38, 1976

2- The 11ail~ Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Mooda~,June 28.1976

Larry's Wayside Furniture Store

Current crisis may reunite Oakland squad
By FREO McMANE
UPI !!porte Writer
The Oakland A's, not used
to getting their way withowner !;harles 0 . Finley,
flnaUy got the upper hand oo
their colorful boss Sunday
and that could be a bad omen
for the rest of the American
League clubs.
It seems whenever the A's
are involved in internal
squabbles they become
practically unbeatable on the
field. During the three years
.!hey won world champ. 1onshlps from 1972 - 74

ONCE IN A LIFETIME

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two gone, Mike Nesselroad
Two of the top American drew a walk, went to third on
Legion teams in southeastern Mick Davenport's single, and
Ohio met at Syracuse Sunday scored when the catcher unin a twin bill, Meigs taking successfully tried to nail
first contest but Ports- Davenport stealing second.
mouth battled back ID take
They went ahead ~ by
the second. Meigs went into plating two nms in the fourth.
the day at 11-3 (now 12-4) and ·Gary Swain walked, but then
Portsmouth was 14-2 (now If&gt;. there came two quick outs.
3).
Brent Johnson drew the
Although outhit H behind second walk of the inning,
the fine pitching of righthan- and Swain scored on an error
der Steve Baird, Meigs came by the first basemen. With
away with a close 3-2 win in men on second and third, the
that first game. Meigs
catcher tried a pickoff play at
ped .out to a quick I~ lead in third and his throw went into
the first inning whim, with left field, Johnson scoring.

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came

some errors by the Wellston
outfield. Wilson singled and
eveptually seored on a
groundout by Nesselroad.
Johnson teamed with Greg
Smith to fan eight and walk
seven while Wellston pitching
struck out two and walked
five. Hitters for Mei~s were:
Nesselroad, single and a
home run; Sayre, Bill
Metzner, Wilson, two singles,
each; Mick Davenport and
James, a double each, and
Johnson, three singles.
Meigs has a rematch with
Wellston Wednesday at
Syracuse. Coach George
Nesselroad's team has drawn
a bye in the first round of the
American Legion Tournament and will play the win·
ner of the Lancaster-Glouster
game the last of July.
Meigs
202 013100-9 13 3
W'lston 001 002100-4 10 8
Johnson (WP), Smith (7)
and Soulsby, Metzner (6).
Gill (LP), Collins and
Peoples.

4 HIGH BACK CHAIRS.

Mirmesota Twins unless the
ban was lifted.
Finle~, who had originally
threatened to use minor leaguers to take the place of the
striking yeterans, changed
his mind under threat of new
law suits and gave in to the
pla~ers' demands Sunday ·
on !~ minutes before the
scheduled start of the gameor strike.
The aJUlouncement in the
clubhouse that Finley had
relented brol!Bht loud cheers
from the A's players and they
went out and whipped the

95

NOW

Yankees' sweep of the
Brewers. Gralg Nettles
chipped in with a pair of
homers in the second game as
the Yankees boosted their
lead over Cleveland ID nine
games in the AL East.
Tigers t, Red Sox 2
Tom Veryzer and Dan
Meyer drove home runs in the
I lth inning to give the Tigers
a victory over the Red Sox.
Rookie Jason Thompson hit
his lOth homer for Detroit,
which took three of four
games from Boston in the
weekend series. A·mistake b~
Tigers' manager Ralph Houk
in making up his lineup card
forced the Tigers to use their
starting pitcher, Frank
MacCormack, as a batter and
he went ().for-a. It was the
first time a Detroit pitcher
has batted since the AL
designated hitter rule was
started in 1973.
Royals 5, Angelo 4
George Brett tied the game
for Kansas City with a
dramatic twMun homer in
the ninth illl)ing and John
Mayberr~ won it with a
bases-loaded bloop single in
the 11th. Ma~berry also
homered for Kansas City in
the seventh while Bob Jones

In the little leagues
in Little League action
Saturday, the Pomeroy
Pirates picked up two more
wins and raised their season
record to 6-7 by thwnping
host Portland 15-10 and 16-5.
In the first game, Randy
Murray picked up the win by
striking out six and walking
13, but chipping in with a

homered for California . .
Indians 8-2, Orioles 3-4
George Hendrick h~d four
hits , including his 10th
homer, and Buddy Bell drove
in three runs wilh three hits
to lead the Indians to victory
in the opener, but Baltimore
came back to win the

nightcap on a homer by
Andres Mora and Bob Grieb's
run -scoring double . AI
Bumbr~ and Ken Singletoo
homen'li for Baltimore in the
first game while Cleveland
manager Frank Hoi)inson hit
his 585th career homer in the
nightcap.

Girls, women's softball
Last week in Junior Girls
Softball action, Syracuse
squeaked b~ Letart at
Minersville in an extra inning
contest, 13-12. Deana White
got the win and also led her
team in hitting with a home
nm, a triple, and two singles.
Crouch led Letart with a
double and single.
Other hitters for Syracuse
were Gibbs, Slavin, Morrow,
and Amberger, each with a
single. Other hitters for the
losers were Roberts. Morris,
Bem8n and· ·rume, all with
the singles.
MIDDLEPORT HAD an
easy time with Salisbur~ at
Miners ville , winning 20-2.
Leading the viciDrs' attack
was T. Ferguson with a home
run and single while B. Hart
got the win . P. Hurdman led
the losers with a double and
two singles.
Other acUon saw New
Haven romp over host Rllcine
9-2, with Starr getting the
win, but no other slats are
available

single ; Pam Vaughan and
Li sa Allen, triple ; · K .
Whitlatch and Jean Ritch·
hart, three singles each; 0 .
Holsinger, a single. ·
A. Mills, P. Br~uer , and L.
Bailey each had a single for
Forest Run.
In another game, Pomero~
beat host Rui.land 17-10, but
no other statlslics were
available.
Portland WiDH
PORTLAND -· Portland
women IIUlde a clean sweep
of the afternoon In softball by
downing the ladies from
Middleport, 20-2. Ritchie led
the winners with three
singles, and C. Larkins had a
double and single . Quillen
had two base hits, and
Bryant, Donavan, ami Allen
each had a single.
Mid\Jieport was held to just
five hits, but no Mmes were
available.

home run, double, and single.
Ray Justice had two singles
and a triple, and Todd Fife
CIDCAGO (UPI) -- ~ll proSenior Softball
bad a triple and single. Other
quarterback Jim Hurt of the
Thursday night's Senlol' St. Louis Cardinals was
hitters were Brian Zirkle,
Girls
Softball saw the Hit 'n llllmed the 1976 recipient of
three singles; Greg Thomas,
Misses
hand Fore&gt;'! Run its the Justice Byron H.
two singles, and Fred
first
loss
, 10-0. Winning "Whizzer" White
Colburn and Ken McCullough
pitcher
was
Rhonda West, humanitarian award Sunday.
each a single.
and
leading
hitter was V.
The 10-year veteran, a
Troy Ward was charged
Weber
with
three
singles and native of Evanston, Ill., and
t~::;~:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;~:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:; :;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:::::::::::::;:~:;:::::::::::;:::::;:;:;:::~
with the loss, fam\ing two and
walking ten. Steve Souder a double. Lee Ord led the graduate of Southern Illinois
University c'liged out Denver
socked a double and single, losers with two singles.
Standings :::: Sherry Beegle had two Other hitters for the Bronco defensive end Lyle
::::
Averages
::::
Results
) singles, Dave Br~ant a wlluiers were D. ·Ash, Pat Alzado and Da lias Cowboy
~
~ double, and Lawrence Powell Vaughan, and Nancy Roy, quarterback Roger Staubach
and Wade Connolly a single two singles; West, double and for the award .
MacCormack , Hi l ler ( 1 J,
Wt!OI
American League Standings
each.
W. L. Pet. GB Grilli (10) and Kimm ,
United Press International
Wo ckenfuss 191; Pole . p
Cincinnati
4.d 28 .611
033 45 - 15 16 0
East
Murphy (9 1, House (10) and p
W. L. Pel. GB Los Angeles · 40 33 .548 4'h
011 44-10 7 I
Fisk. WP - Gril li 12-1) . LP San .Diego
36 34 .526 6
New York
43 24 .642
Murphy 12-31. HB - Defroif.
Atlanta
33 39 .456 11
34 33 .507 9
Cleveland
Brian Zirkle picked up the
Thompson (10) .
32 40 .444 12
Baltimore
34 34 .500 9'12 Houston
San Fran.
30 45 .400 15112
second win, striking out six
32 35 . 478 11
De troi t
I 11 innings)
Saturday's Results
Boston
31 35 .470 11 '12
and walking seven. He also
Ci-lflf
nnn 1?0 001 00--4 1 ?
Milwaukee 25 39 .391 16'12 New York 10 Chicago 2
socked
a single and double.
KC
001
000
102
015
6
1
Sf. Louis 3 Phi ladelphia 2. 10
West
Other
hitters
were Todd Fife
Kirkwood
,
Drago
(7).
inn
ings
W. L. Pel. GB
Hassler (11) and Humphrey. and Velvet Justice, triples ;
Pittsburgh 7 Montrea l 6
Kansas City 42 26 .6J8
Garrell (5) : Busby, Hall 16). singles, Murray, Thomas (2)
Houston ·3 Cincinnati 0
Texas
38 29 .567 J 1!2
Bird (7) and Martinez.
Ook land
35 36 .493 av, San Diego 9 Atlanta 7. lsi
Ray Justice (3), and Br~an
· Play it oufe and· l!llre
Stinson (91 . WP - Bird 18-ll
Atlanta 7 San Diego 3, 2nd
Chicago
33 35 .465 9
Betzh1g.
San Francisco 4 Los Angeles LP - Drago (1-6) . HRS Minnesota
32 37 .46-4 lO,h
Ii may be time to
California. Jones (3) ; Kansas
Wade Co~nolly took the
2
California
29 45 .392 16
have your preoent•
City , Mayberry 110). Bretl loss, whiffing three while
Sunday 's Results
Saturday's Results
policy updated.
14 ).
Philadelphia 6 Sf. Louis 2
Baliimore 2 Cleveland 1
issuing thirteen walks. PortNew
York
13
Chicago
3
New York 6 Milwaukee 3
Mlnn
000 003 000- 3 o o land was held ID three hits- a
let's Talk Soon
Montreal 4 Pilfsburgh 3
Boston 3 Detroit 1
Qak
202
000 Ol x- 5 6 0 triple by Powell, a double by
Cincinnati
4
Houston
2
Minnesota 11 Qak land 3
Redfern. Campbe ll (61 and Connoll~, and a single by
San Diego 3 Atlanta 2
Kansas Cify 3 California 0
Wrnegar ; Bosman, Lindblad a,erry Beegle. Their record
Los Angeles 12 San Francisco
Texas 1 Chicago 0, 10 innings
16 , Fingers 16) and Haney .
8
Sunday'sresults .
is now ().12.
WP - Bosman 12-0). LP Monday's Games
992 -2143
New York 6 Milwaukee 2, lsi
p
Redfern 12 -5) . HR S 614-41-16 II 2
IAll Times EDT)
New York 10 Milwaukee 2,
102 W. Main
Pomeroy
Qakland. Bando 12) 1131 .
Houston' (Cosgrove 2-4) at
p
100 4().. 5 3 2
2nd
Cleveland 6 Baltimore 3, lsi Sa n Francisco (Dressler 1-5).
Chi
000 042 000- 6 7 0
4:05p.m.
l::!altlmore 6 Cleveland 2, 2nd
000 000 20Q-2 7 I
Philadelphia ICarlton 6-3) Tex
Detroit 4 Boston 2, 11 innings
B. Johnson. Hamillon (9)
Kansas City 5 Ca lifornia 4, II a' Montreal I Rogers 2-4),
and Downing ; Briles, Hargan
8:05p.m.
·
Innings
Sf. Louis I Denny 3-4) at 161 and Sundberg, Fahey (8) .•
Qakland 5 Minnesota 3
New York I Seaver B-5L B:05 WP - Johnson 15-7). LP Chicago 6 Texas 2
p_m_
Briles 16-5). HRs - Chicago.
Monday's Games
'Chicago (Coleman 0-21 at Bell 13) : Te xas, Harrah I81 .
IAU Times EDT)
.
Qakland !Norris 1-21 al Pittsburgh I Rooker 6-3), 7: 35
National League
p.m.
Te xas (Umbarger 7-5}, 9: 0S
000 101 000--2 8 0
Aflanfa I Ruthven 9-6) af SL
p.m.
.
000 600 OOx-b 8 0
Kansas City ILeonard 7-31 Los Angeles I Rhoden 6-0) , Phil
McGlothen, Solomon lSI ,
10:30 p.m .
at Minnesota (Singer 6-JL
Rasmussen
I 7)
and
Cincinnati (Alca la 6-2) at
9 05 p.m.
New York IHolfzman 5-51 San Diego I Foster 2-3), 10 Fergusoo; Lon borg. Reed (6)
and Boone. WP - Lonborg
af Detroit (Fidrych 7-1), 8:30 p.m.
110-4). LP - McGlothen 16·
Tuesday's Games
p.m.
Houston at San Francisco, 7) . HR - Philadelphia, Boone
Milwaukee !Colborn 4-9) al
(3).
Cleveland (Hood 2-4)0, 7:30 night
Philadelphia af Montreal ,
p.m.
,
Pills
000 010 20Q-3 6 3
Baltimore I Palmer 9-7l af 'night
003 010 oox- 4 4 2
St. Louis at New Yor~, Mont
Boston 1Jones 1-0), 7: 30 p.m.
Medlch. Tekulve (61 .
!Only games schedu led) night
Chicago at Pittsburgh , Moose 181 and Sangu illen;
Tuesday's Games
Fryman, Murray (7) and
night
Qak land at Texas. night
Atlanta at Los Angeles, Morales. WP - Fryman (8Kansas City at Minnesota,
5) . LP - Medich 15-6) . HR night
night
Cincinnati at .San Diego. Piffsburgh , Ol iver (11).
New York at Detroit, night
Milwaukee af Cleve land. night
NY
181 030 ooo-u 16 o
nigh I
Chi
000 010 002- 3 7 2
Baltimore at Boston, night
Sunday's Baseball Results
Swan, Lockwood 18) and
Ca lifornia at Chicago, night
United Press International
Grote.
, Kleven (6) ; R.
American teague
Reuschel, P. RP.uschel 121 ,
I lSI Gamel
National League Standings
Milw .
100 010 OOQ-2 9 o Garman (3 ), Sutler (6 ),
United Press International
NY
000 100 23X--6 11 1 Knowles (8) , and Swisher,
East
Augustine , Sadeckl (6). Millerwald (7) . WP - Swan
W. L. Pet. GB Castro (8), Austin 18 and (4.7) . LP - R. Reuschel (7Philadelphia 48 20 .706
Pooler ; Hunter, Lyle (9) and 5). HRS - New York, Phillips
Pittsburgh
38 29 .SU 9'1, Healy. WP - Hunter (9-7). 3, Kranepool (6). Madlock
(7) ; Chicago. Walli s {1) .
New York
37 37 .500 14
LP - Augustlne (2-41. HAS St. Louis
31 39 .443 18
Milwaukee, Joshua 12): New
Cin
020 200 OOQ-4 6 0
Chicago
30 40 .429 19
York, Chambliss
Hous
010 001 OOQ-2 4 1
Montreal
24 41. .:~69 22'1•
· Norman, Eastwlck 181 an.d
(2nd Gamel
Milw. 010 ·001 000-- 2 8 0 Bench ; Richard, Sieber! (6).
23x- 10 13 0 Pentz (8) and Herrmann . WP
The Dai~ Sentinel ' NYBroberg201, t01Sadecki
- Norman 16·2) . LP
{7),
DEVOTED TO THE
Rodriguez (7), and Kusnyer: Richard 17 -9). HR
INTEREST OF
Tidrow, Lyle (B) and Hend- .Houston, Watson 181.
MEIGS-MASON A·REA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL ricks. WP - Tid row 13-0) . LP
ooo 020 000--2 5 2
- Broberg (1 -6). HRS - New All
Exec. Ed .
000 200 ,001- 3 8 0
York. HegM I 1), Nettles 2 so
ROBERT HOEFLICH
Messers mith 17-6) and
First of all, let's npt kid ourselves that the natu.,J g.1s short.1ge
I 11) .
'
City Editor
Williams; Strom 17-71 and
Published dally except
isn't for real. It is very real.
Saturday by Th e Ohio
Kenda ll.
'' ( Jst Game)
And yes, we all know that gas bills are goingup.
Valley Publ i shing Com . Cleve
300
010
200--6
11
0
pany,
Ill Court
St .,
SF
003
030
0116
10
2
But
the gas shortage has a price that doesn't show up . o~ our
Ball.
110
ooo
1003
6
1
Pomeroy , Otlio
45769
LA
104 121 03x- 12 16 0
Business Office Phone 992 : , Dobson Bu skey ( 71 , Kern
gas bills. It's the cost of curtailment - mlioni118 -- of natural gas.
D'Acquisto, Heaverlo (4),
2156. Editorial Phone 992 - 17) and Fosse : ·May, Miller
ln 1975, U.S. industry couldn't get all the gas it needed. Companies
2157.
Caldwell (5), Williams (5),
(1) , Flanagan 17) and
Sec ond cl ass !JOStage
could afford to, switched to alternate fuels - at a cost of nearly
that
Lavelle
161
and
Rader;
Dun can. WP - Dobson (9-5) .
pa id at , Pomeroy , Ohio .
Su tton. Hough (6), Wall (9)
llirrr billio•1 dollars 111or&lt; than their gas bill would have been! And
LP - May 15-4). HRS Nat1onai
advertising
and Rodriguez . WP - Sutton
representative Ward - Baltimore, Bumbry IJJ.
who pays for that extra cost? All of us do. In the cost of the prodLicts
17-7) . LP -- Caldwell I0-5) .
Griffith " Company , Inc ., Singleton 4; Cleveland, Hendthose firms make.
·
Bottlneltl &amp; Gallagher D lv ., rick 110).
HRS - San Francisco, 1
757 Third Ave ., New York ,
Murcer
12)
(9
),
Matthews
I
And
when
companies
cut
back
or shut down because they can't
N . Y . 10017 .
.
Su bscription
rates :
_1 10) .
-- - .I2nd Game)
of
going
to
alternate
fuel s, there's an even higher
afford
the
cost
Delivered by carrier where Cleve.
100 000 001- 2 8 1
price
to
pay.
Lost
jobs.
a vailable 75 ce nts per
Ball.
221 000 Olx--6 10 2
weetl: . By Motor Rbute
Higher product prices and higher unemploym ent .
Waits, Thomas (2), Buskey
where ca rrier Ser-vice not
(B) and Fosse : Grimsley,
available, One month,
They don't show up on the ga~ bill.
53.25. By mail in Ohio and
Martinez 19) and Dempsey.
But they're a ,.,,J cost of the gas·shortage.
w , Va ., Otle Year, f"2 .00 ; WP - - Grim sley f2:4) . LP Si)( months , $11 .50 1. "fhree Walls
(2
-2}.
HRS
months , 57 .00. Elsewllere
Mora
15);
')26.00 year ; Six months ·- Baltimore.
~ 1 3 . 50 : three m'on'ths , S7 .50 .
Cleveland, F. Robinson 12).

.

:{ the SCOREBOARD

t

DALE C. WARNER

The natural gas
shortage
·
•
•
ts
costing
more
than just higlier gas bills.

m:

ALIAS: /'i,{ns pond ero.w
AGE: I yeor
HEI GHT 4 indws
HEI GHT AT MATLI IUT\ I iL1w 2 JOfce1
WHERE FOUND· \lh 1nn Uniic·d Stall'&gt;,
frCHll tht· D ;tk u t ;l ~ Sl'tl!h\\':m.l. in the
P;K ifK nml Rocky Mou nt:1in L\l lllltry
to Ari:ona and New Ml·x i~._·p ,
The P&lt; mdl'n):--a Pint' , ~Cl tl1l't imrs en lied
the WL'stl' rn Yt'llo\\' PinL'. is ;m import ;\ nt
lu m hn tree . Radnl;lll ti t'S, r lywllml, ;lnd many
0t hl' r n lll~t n h.: tit 111

"OPEN MONDAY &amp; FRIDAY NIGHTS TIL 8 P.M."
THIRD &amp; OLIVE STREET
PH•.446-1830
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

The visitors didn't give up, coasted to a 10-3 victory.
but battled back with single
Mter that disastrous mruns in the fifth and sixth in- ning, Meigs shut the visitors
nings. In the fifth they plated out, ~ut the damage was
one as the result of two walks done. The winners plated
and an error on a double play those nine on four walks, two
ball. They got ooe more in the singles, and two doubles.
sixth with two singles and a
Meigs got one back in the
ground-out, but Baird then second and two in the last in·
set them down.
ning, but it wasn't near
Baird went the route, fa!l- enough. Losing hurler Calvin
ning nine and walking five Minnis teamed with Greg
while loser Harness struck Smith and Brady Huffman to
out five and walked eight. fan three and walk nine, but
Hitters for Meigs were winner Hock and Purdy
Nesselroad with a double and didn't fare much better as
Davenport, Swain. and they struck out five and
Calvin Minnis each had a walked six. Leading . Meigs
single.
hitter was Mick Davenport
P'smouth
000 011 0-2 5 0 with a double and single
Meigs
100200x-3 4 I .while Gary Swain and Terry
Harness and PowelL Baird Wail chipped in with a single
and Johnson .
each.
P'smouth 1900000- 10 5 2
010 000 2- 3 4 3
The story of the second con· Meigs
Hock
(
WP),
Pllrdy and
test is told by the top of the
Simpson. Minnis (LP ), Smith
second inning · when Ports(2), Huffman (6) and Metzmouth plated nine runs and ner, Souls by (5) .
·

Minnesota Twins, S-3, with
Fingers, w~o hadn't pitched
since June 13, playing a key
role in the triwnph .
" It was like a football team
corping out of the huqdle,"
said TaiUler about the team 's
reaction to the reinstatement
of Rudi, Fingers and Blue.
Fingers, who allowed two
hits and struck out five In 3 1-3
innings of relief to gain his
ninth save, and Sal Bando,
who hit a pair of homers,
were the stars of the A's
triumph and Bando admitted
the reinstatement was ~
great morale booster for the
club.
In other AL games, New
York swept a doubleheader
from Milwaukee, 6-2and 1().2;
Detroit defeated Bostoo, 4-2,
in 11 innings; Kansas City
downed California, H , in II
innings; Cleveland topped
Baltimore 6-3 before losing 62, and Chicago beat Texas, 62.
Yankees 8-10, Brewers Z.2
Micke~ Rivers, extending
his hitting streak to 20 games,
drove in two runs with a
single and a sacrifice fl~ in
the opener and had three hits
and scored three runs in the
nightcap to spark the

A piece of the energy puzzle.

EUREKA SWEEPER.......~ 5495
LARGE SELECTION OF LAMPS

$94995

11

Behind eight Wellston
errors and 10 stolen bases,
the Meigs American Legion
team Saturday wanned up
for a Sunday showdown with
Portsmouth by whipping host
Wellston, 9-4. It was Meigs'
ball game all the way with
the local team plating two
runs in the first inning on
winning pitcher Brent Johnson's single and a Mike
Nesselroad home run.
Meigs went ahead 4-() in the
third when Brett Wilson
singled and stole second and
hOme on an error. Left·
fielder Greg James reached
on that error, promptly stole
second, and scampered home
on John Sayre's single. '
Meigs actually won it in the
fifth when Nesselroad singled
and later scored the winning
run on another Sa~re base
hit, but they added some insurance runs in the sixth.
Wall led off with a walk aild
Jolmson followed with a
single and both scored on

•sooo

Y2 OFF
ODD TABLES.............Y2 OFF

FLEXSTEEL SOFA &amp;
LOVESEAT
WAS

million only to have the sale
nullified by commissioner
Bowie Kuhn as being "detrimental to basebalL" Angered
over Kuhn's interference and
fearing lawsuits resulting
from the deals if the three
players continued to play for
the A's, Finley ordered his
manager, Chuck Tanner, not
ID use them.
Kuhn, however, ordered
Finley to use the three
players and when the A's
owner refused, the A's
players threatened to boycott
Sunday's game . with the

Meigs, Portsmouth divide two

SHOP TONIGHT UNTIL 8:00 P.M.
SAVE

the . A's were involved in
several clubhouse fracases
and
numerous verbal
skinnishes with their colorful
owner.
And now their latest crisis
just might reWiite the club for
one last shot at a sixth
straight West Division
tiile ... even though Oakland
currently is mired in third
place eight and one-half
games behind Kansas City.
Two weeks ago Finley sold
three of his star pla~ers, Joe
Rudi, Vida Blue and Rollle
Fingers, for a total of $3.5

tfl'L' . Th~

I

m ;Hl ' n td~ lOilll' fwm thi ~

1\mdcl\l~;l i" :d~' Mtlllt tlll :l's S t&lt;ltl' Tree

Smoke ~· B~,.•;Jr h:1:-. I"L' quc ~tL· d th :H nnyonc
sccin}! thL'SL' tn'c~ L'X t' rci ~l' L'X trcnw c: 1ution

wilh fire . HPld mnlchc; un1il wid. Crush
:-~II cit.!&lt;lrcttcs. And drnw n youn·;1 mpfirc .
Your ht:lp \\'ill h~,.• ;lpprccioncd.

A Public

Ser~rtc

g~!~

ot Th1s Newspaper &amp; The Mvcr r.s•n CJ Countd

:1u bsc r lp !lon price includes
c; unday Times .senfinel .

Det.
"os
\)

cc J!l s

( 11 innings)

001 100 000 02--4 9 0
100 000 100 00-- 2 8 3
1

.

------------~UJMBIAGAS.,

�3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Fomero~. 0 .. Monda~ . June 38, 1976

2- The 11ail~ Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Mooda~,June 28.1976

Larry's Wayside Furniture Store

Current crisis may reunite Oakland squad
By FREO McMANE
UPI !!porte Writer
The Oakland A's, not used
to getting their way withowner !;harles 0 . Finley,
flnaUy got the upper hand oo
their colorful boss Sunday
and that could be a bad omen
for the rest of the American
League clubs.
It seems whenever the A's
are involved in internal
squabbles they become
practically unbeatable on the
field. During the three years
.!hey won world champ. 1onshlps from 1972 - 74

ONCE IN A LIFETIME

SAVINGS
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By Greg !Ialley
two gone, Mike Nesselroad
Two of the top American drew a walk, went to third on
Legion teams in southeastern Mick Davenport's single, and
Ohio met at Syracuse Sunday scored when the catcher unin a twin bill, Meigs taking successfully tried to nail
first contest but Ports- Davenport stealing second.
mouth battled back ID take
They went ahead ~ by
the second. Meigs went into plating two nms in the fourth.
the day at 11-3 (now 12-4) and ·Gary Swain walked, but then
Portsmouth was 14-2 (now If&gt;. there came two quick outs.
3).
Brent Johnson drew the
Although outhit H behind second walk of the inning,
the fine pitching of righthan- and Swain scored on an error
der Steve Baird, Meigs came by the first basemen. With
away with a close 3-2 win in men on second and third, the
that first game. Meigs
catcher tried a pickoff play at
ped .out to a quick I~ lead in third and his throw went into
the first inning whim, with left field, Johnson scoring.

jwn-

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Wellston falls
to Meigs Legion

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came

some errors by the Wellston
outfield. Wilson singled and
eveptually seored on a
groundout by Nesselroad.
Johnson teamed with Greg
Smith to fan eight and walk
seven while Wellston pitching
struck out two and walked
five. Hitters for Mei~s were:
Nesselroad, single and a
home run; Sayre, Bill
Metzner, Wilson, two singles,
each; Mick Davenport and
James, a double each, and
Johnson, three singles.
Meigs has a rematch with
Wellston Wednesday at
Syracuse. Coach George
Nesselroad's team has drawn
a bye in the first round of the
American Legion Tournament and will play the win·
ner of the Lancaster-Glouster
game the last of July.
Meigs
202 013100-9 13 3
W'lston 001 002100-4 10 8
Johnson (WP), Smith (7)
and Soulsby, Metzner (6).
Gill (LP), Collins and
Peoples.

4 HIGH BACK CHAIRS.

Mirmesota Twins unless the
ban was lifted.
Finle~, who had originally
threatened to use minor leaguers to take the place of the
striking yeterans, changed
his mind under threat of new
law suits and gave in to the
pla~ers' demands Sunday ·
on !~ minutes before the
scheduled start of the gameor strike.
The aJUlouncement in the
clubhouse that Finley had
relented brol!Bht loud cheers
from the A's players and they
went out and whipped the

95

NOW

Yankees' sweep of the
Brewers. Gralg Nettles
chipped in with a pair of
homers in the second game as
the Yankees boosted their
lead over Cleveland ID nine
games in the AL East.
Tigers t, Red Sox 2
Tom Veryzer and Dan
Meyer drove home runs in the
I lth inning to give the Tigers
a victory over the Red Sox.
Rookie Jason Thompson hit
his lOth homer for Detroit,
which took three of four
games from Boston in the
weekend series. A·mistake b~
Tigers' manager Ralph Houk
in making up his lineup card
forced the Tigers to use their
starting pitcher, Frank
MacCormack, as a batter and
he went ().for-a. It was the
first time a Detroit pitcher
has batted since the AL
designated hitter rule was
started in 1973.
Royals 5, Angelo 4
George Brett tied the game
for Kansas City with a
dramatic twMun homer in
the ninth illl)ing and John
Mayberr~ won it with a
bases-loaded bloop single in
the 11th. Ma~berry also
homered for Kansas City in
the seventh while Bob Jones

In the little leagues
in Little League action
Saturday, the Pomeroy
Pirates picked up two more
wins and raised their season
record to 6-7 by thwnping
host Portland 15-10 and 16-5.
In the first game, Randy
Murray picked up the win by
striking out six and walking
13, but chipping in with a

homered for California . .
Indians 8-2, Orioles 3-4
George Hendrick h~d four
hits , including his 10th
homer, and Buddy Bell drove
in three runs wilh three hits
to lead the Indians to victory
in the opener, but Baltimore
came back to win the

nightcap on a homer by
Andres Mora and Bob Grieb's
run -scoring double . AI
Bumbr~ and Ken Singletoo
homen'li for Baltimore in the
first game while Cleveland
manager Frank Hoi)inson hit
his 585th career homer in the
nightcap.

Girls, women's softball
Last week in Junior Girls
Softball action, Syracuse
squeaked b~ Letart at
Minersville in an extra inning
contest, 13-12. Deana White
got the win and also led her
team in hitting with a home
nm, a triple, and two singles.
Crouch led Letart with a
double and single.
Other hitters for Syracuse
were Gibbs, Slavin, Morrow,
and Amberger, each with a
single. Other hitters for the
losers were Roberts. Morris,
Bem8n and· ·rume, all with
the singles.
MIDDLEPORT HAD an
easy time with Salisbur~ at
Miners ville , winning 20-2.
Leading the viciDrs' attack
was T. Ferguson with a home
run and single while B. Hart
got the win . P. Hurdman led
the losers with a double and
two singles.
Other acUon saw New
Haven romp over host Rllcine
9-2, with Starr getting the
win, but no other slats are
available

single ; Pam Vaughan and
Li sa Allen, triple ; · K .
Whitlatch and Jean Ritch·
hart, three singles each; 0 .
Holsinger, a single. ·
A. Mills, P. Br~uer , and L.
Bailey each had a single for
Forest Run.
In another game, Pomero~
beat host Rui.land 17-10, but
no other statlslics were
available.
Portland WiDH
PORTLAND -· Portland
women IIUlde a clean sweep
of the afternoon In softball by
downing the ladies from
Middleport, 20-2. Ritchie led
the winners with three
singles, and C. Larkins had a
double and single . Quillen
had two base hits, and
Bryant, Donavan, ami Allen
each had a single.
Mid\Jieport was held to just
five hits, but no Mmes were
available.

home run, double, and single.
Ray Justice had two singles
and a triple, and Todd Fife
CIDCAGO (UPI) -- ~ll proSenior Softball
bad a triple and single. Other
quarterback Jim Hurt of the
Thursday night's Senlol' St. Louis Cardinals was
hitters were Brian Zirkle,
Girls
Softball saw the Hit 'n llllmed the 1976 recipient of
three singles; Greg Thomas,
Misses
hand Fore&gt;'! Run its the Justice Byron H.
two singles, and Fred
first
loss
, 10-0. Winning "Whizzer" White
Colburn and Ken McCullough
pitcher
was
Rhonda West, humanitarian award Sunday.
each a single.
and
leading
hitter was V.
The 10-year veteran, a
Troy Ward was charged
Weber
with
three
singles and native of Evanston, Ill., and
t~::;~:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;~:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:; :;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:::::::::::::;:~:;:::::::::::;:::::;:;:;:::~
with the loss, fam\ing two and
walking ten. Steve Souder a double. Lee Ord led the graduate of Southern Illinois
University c'liged out Denver
socked a double and single, losers with two singles.
Standings :::: Sherry Beegle had two Other hitters for the Bronco defensive end Lyle
::::
Averages
::::
Results
) singles, Dave Br~ant a wlluiers were D. ·Ash, Pat Alzado and Da lias Cowboy
~
~ double, and Lawrence Powell Vaughan, and Nancy Roy, quarterback Roger Staubach
and Wade Connolly a single two singles; West, double and for the award .
MacCormack , Hi l ler ( 1 J,
Wt!OI
American League Standings
each.
W. L. Pet. GB Grilli (10) and Kimm ,
United Press International
Wo ckenfuss 191; Pole . p
Cincinnati
4.d 28 .611
033 45 - 15 16 0
East
Murphy (9 1, House (10) and p
W. L. Pel. GB Los Angeles · 40 33 .548 4'h
011 44-10 7 I
Fisk. WP - Gril li 12-1) . LP San .Diego
36 34 .526 6
New York
43 24 .642
Murphy 12-31. HB - Defroif.
Atlanta
33 39 .456 11
34 33 .507 9
Cleveland
Brian Zirkle picked up the
Thompson (10) .
32 40 .444 12
Baltimore
34 34 .500 9'12 Houston
San Fran.
30 45 .400 15112
second win, striking out six
32 35 . 478 11
De troi t
I 11 innings)
Saturday's Results
Boston
31 35 .470 11 '12
and walking seven. He also
Ci-lflf
nnn 1?0 001 00--4 1 ?
Milwaukee 25 39 .391 16'12 New York 10 Chicago 2
socked
a single and double.
KC
001
000
102
015
6
1
Sf. Louis 3 Phi ladelphia 2. 10
West
Other
hitters
were Todd Fife
Kirkwood
,
Drago
(7).
inn
ings
W. L. Pel. GB
Hassler (11) and Humphrey. and Velvet Justice, triples ;
Pittsburgh 7 Montrea l 6
Kansas City 42 26 .6J8
Garrell (5) : Busby, Hall 16). singles, Murray, Thomas (2)
Houston ·3 Cincinnati 0
Texas
38 29 .567 J 1!2
Bird (7) and Martinez.
Ook land
35 36 .493 av, San Diego 9 Atlanta 7. lsi
Ray Justice (3), and Br~an
· Play it oufe and· l!llre
Stinson (91 . WP - Bird 18-ll
Atlanta 7 San Diego 3, 2nd
Chicago
33 35 .465 9
Betzh1g.
San Francisco 4 Los Angeles LP - Drago (1-6) . HRS Minnesota
32 37 .46-4 lO,h
Ii may be time to
California. Jones (3) ; Kansas
Wade Co~nolly took the
2
California
29 45 .392 16
have your preoent•
City , Mayberry 110). Bretl loss, whiffing three while
Sunday 's Results
Saturday's Results
policy updated.
14 ).
Philadelphia 6 Sf. Louis 2
Baliimore 2 Cleveland 1
issuing thirteen walks. PortNew
York
13
Chicago
3
New York 6 Milwaukee 3
Mlnn
000 003 000- 3 o o land was held ID three hits- a
let's Talk Soon
Montreal 4 Pilfsburgh 3
Boston 3 Detroit 1
Qak
202
000 Ol x- 5 6 0 triple by Powell, a double by
Cincinnati
4
Houston
2
Minnesota 11 Qak land 3
Redfern. Campbe ll (61 and Connoll~, and a single by
San Diego 3 Atlanta 2
Kansas Cify 3 California 0
Wrnegar ; Bosman, Lindblad a,erry Beegle. Their record
Los Angeles 12 San Francisco
Texas 1 Chicago 0, 10 innings
16 , Fingers 16) and Haney .
8
Sunday'sresults .
is now ().12.
WP - Bosman 12-0). LP Monday's Games
992 -2143
New York 6 Milwaukee 2, lsi
p
Redfern 12 -5) . HR S 614-41-16 II 2
IAll Times EDT)
New York 10 Milwaukee 2,
102 W. Main
Pomeroy
Qakland. Bando 12) 1131 .
Houston' (Cosgrove 2-4) at
p
100 4().. 5 3 2
2nd
Cleveland 6 Baltimore 3, lsi Sa n Francisco (Dressler 1-5).
Chi
000 042 000- 6 7 0
4:05p.m.
l::!altlmore 6 Cleveland 2, 2nd
000 000 20Q-2 7 I
Philadelphia ICarlton 6-3) Tex
Detroit 4 Boston 2, 11 innings
B. Johnson. Hamillon (9)
Kansas City 5 Ca lifornia 4, II a' Montreal I Rogers 2-4),
and Downing ; Briles, Hargan
8:05p.m.
·
Innings
Sf. Louis I Denny 3-4) at 161 and Sundberg, Fahey (8) .•
Qakland 5 Minnesota 3
New York I Seaver B-5L B:05 WP - Johnson 15-7). LP Chicago 6 Texas 2
p_m_
Briles 16-5). HRs - Chicago.
Monday's Games
'Chicago (Coleman 0-21 at Bell 13) : Te xas, Harrah I81 .
IAU Times EDT)
.
Qakland !Norris 1-21 al Pittsburgh I Rooker 6-3), 7: 35
National League
p.m.
Te xas (Umbarger 7-5}, 9: 0S
000 101 000--2 8 0
Aflanfa I Ruthven 9-6) af SL
p.m.
.
000 600 OOx-b 8 0
Kansas City ILeonard 7-31 Los Angeles I Rhoden 6-0) , Phil
McGlothen, Solomon lSI ,
10:30 p.m .
at Minnesota (Singer 6-JL
Rasmussen
I 7)
and
Cincinnati (Alca la 6-2) at
9 05 p.m.
New York IHolfzman 5-51 San Diego I Foster 2-3), 10 Fergusoo; Lon borg. Reed (6)
and Boone. WP - Lonborg
af Detroit (Fidrych 7-1), 8:30 p.m.
110-4). LP - McGlothen 16·
Tuesday's Games
p.m.
Houston at San Francisco, 7) . HR - Philadelphia, Boone
Milwaukee !Colborn 4-9) al
(3).
Cleveland (Hood 2-4)0, 7:30 night
Philadelphia af Montreal ,
p.m.
,
Pills
000 010 20Q-3 6 3
Baltimore I Palmer 9-7l af 'night
003 010 oox- 4 4 2
St. Louis at New Yor~, Mont
Boston 1Jones 1-0), 7: 30 p.m.
Medlch. Tekulve (61 .
!Only games schedu led) night
Chicago at Pittsburgh , Moose 181 and Sangu illen;
Tuesday's Games
Fryman, Murray (7) and
night
Qak land at Texas. night
Atlanta at Los Angeles, Morales. WP - Fryman (8Kansas City at Minnesota,
5) . LP - Medich 15-6) . HR night
night
Cincinnati at .San Diego. Piffsburgh , Ol iver (11).
New York at Detroit, night
Milwaukee af Cleve land. night
NY
181 030 ooo-u 16 o
nigh I
Chi
000 010 002- 3 7 2
Baltimore at Boston, night
Sunday's Baseball Results
Swan, Lockwood 18) and
Ca lifornia at Chicago, night
United Press International
Grote.
, Kleven (6) ; R.
American teague
Reuschel, P. RP.uschel 121 ,
I lSI Gamel
National League Standings
Milw .
100 010 OOQ-2 9 o Garman (3 ), Sutler (6 ),
United Press International
NY
000 100 23X--6 11 1 Knowles (8) , and Swisher,
East
Augustine , Sadeckl (6). Millerwald (7) . WP - Swan
W. L. Pet. GB Castro (8), Austin 18 and (4.7) . LP - R. Reuschel (7Philadelphia 48 20 .706
Pooler ; Hunter, Lyle (9) and 5). HRS - New York, Phillips
Pittsburgh
38 29 .SU 9'1, Healy. WP - Hunter (9-7). 3, Kranepool (6). Madlock
(7) ; Chicago. Walli s {1) .
New York
37 37 .500 14
LP - Augustlne (2-41. HAS St. Louis
31 39 .443 18
Milwaukee, Joshua 12): New
Cin
020 200 OOQ-4 6 0
Chicago
30 40 .429 19
York, Chambliss
Hous
010 001 OOQ-2 4 1
Montreal
24 41. .:~69 22'1•
· Norman, Eastwlck 181 an.d
(2nd Gamel
Milw. 010 ·001 000-- 2 8 0 Bench ; Richard, Sieber! (6).
23x- 10 13 0 Pentz (8) and Herrmann . WP
The Dai~ Sentinel ' NYBroberg201, t01Sadecki
- Norman 16·2) . LP
{7),
DEVOTED TO THE
Rodriguez (7), and Kusnyer: Richard 17 -9). HR
INTEREST OF
Tidrow, Lyle (B) and Hend- .Houston, Watson 181.
MEIGS-MASON A·REA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL ricks. WP - Tid row 13-0) . LP
ooo 020 000--2 5 2
- Broberg (1 -6). HRS - New All
Exec. Ed .
000 200 ,001- 3 8 0
York. HegM I 1), Nettles 2 so
ROBERT HOEFLICH
Messers mith 17-6) and
First of all, let's npt kid ourselves that the natu.,J g.1s short.1ge
I 11) .
'
City Editor
Williams; Strom 17-71 and
Published dally except
isn't for real. It is very real.
Saturday by Th e Ohio
Kenda ll.
'' ( Jst Game)
And yes, we all know that gas bills are goingup.
Valley Publ i shing Com . Cleve
300
010
200--6
11
0
pany,
Ill Court
St .,
SF
003
030
0116
10
2
But
the gas shortage has a price that doesn't show up . o~ our
Ball.
110
ooo
1003
6
1
Pomeroy , Otlio
45769
LA
104 121 03x- 12 16 0
Business Office Phone 992 : , Dobson Bu skey ( 71 , Kern
gas bills. It's the cost of curtailment - mlioni118 -- of natural gas.
D'Acquisto, Heaverlo (4),
2156. Editorial Phone 992 - 17) and Fosse : ·May, Miller
ln 1975, U.S. industry couldn't get all the gas it needed. Companies
2157.
Caldwell (5), Williams (5),
(1) , Flanagan 17) and
Sec ond cl ass !JOStage
could afford to, switched to alternate fuels - at a cost of nearly
that
Lavelle
161
and
Rader;
Dun can. WP - Dobson (9-5) .
pa id at , Pomeroy , Ohio .
Su tton. Hough (6), Wall (9)
llirrr billio•1 dollars 111or&lt; than their gas bill would have been! And
LP - May 15-4). HRS Nat1onai
advertising
and Rodriguez . WP - Sutton
representative Ward - Baltimore, Bumbry IJJ.
who pays for that extra cost? All of us do. In the cost of the prodLicts
17-7) . LP -- Caldwell I0-5) .
Griffith " Company , Inc ., Singleton 4; Cleveland, Hendthose firms make.
·
Bottlneltl &amp; Gallagher D lv ., rick 110).
HRS - San Francisco, 1
757 Third Ave ., New York ,
Murcer
12)
(9
),
Matthews
I
And
when
companies
cut
back
or shut down because they can't
N . Y . 10017 .
.
Su bscription
rates :
_1 10) .
-- - .I2nd Game)
of
going
to
alternate
fuel s, there's an even higher
afford
the
cost
Delivered by carrier where Cleve.
100 000 001- 2 8 1
price
to
pay.
Lost
jobs.
a vailable 75 ce nts per
Ball.
221 000 Olx--6 10 2
weetl: . By Motor Rbute
Higher product prices and higher unemploym ent .
Waits, Thomas (2), Buskey
where ca rrier Ser-vice not
(B) and Fosse : Grimsley,
available, One month,
They don't show up on the ga~ bill.
53.25. By mail in Ohio and
Martinez 19) and Dempsey.
But they're a ,.,,J cost of the gas·shortage.
w , Va ., Otle Year, f"2 .00 ; WP - - Grim sley f2:4) . LP Si)( months , $11 .50 1. "fhree Walls
(2
-2}.
HRS
months , 57 .00. Elsewllere
Mora
15);
')26.00 year ; Six months ·- Baltimore.
~ 1 3 . 50 : three m'on'ths , S7 .50 .
Cleveland, F. Robinson 12).

.

:{ the SCOREBOARD

t

DALE C. WARNER

The natural gas
shortage
·
•
•
ts
costing
more
than just higlier gas bills.

m:

ALIAS: /'i,{ns pond ero.w
AGE: I yeor
HEI GHT 4 indws
HEI GHT AT MATLI IUT\ I iL1w 2 JOfce1
WHERE FOUND· \lh 1nn Uniic·d Stall'&gt;,
frCHll tht· D ;tk u t ;l ~ Sl'tl!h\\':m.l. in the
P;K ifK nml Rocky Mou nt:1in L\l lllltry
to Ari:ona and New Ml·x i~._·p ,
The P&lt; mdl'n):--a Pint' , ~Cl tl1l't imrs en lied
the WL'stl' rn Yt'llo\\' PinL'. is ;m import ;\ nt
lu m hn tree . Radnl;lll ti t'S, r lywllml, ;lnd many
0t hl' r n lll~t n h.: tit 111

"OPEN MONDAY &amp; FRIDAY NIGHTS TIL 8 P.M."
THIRD &amp; OLIVE STREET
PH•.446-1830
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

The visitors didn't give up, coasted to a 10-3 victory.
but battled back with single
Mter that disastrous mruns in the fifth and sixth in- ning, Meigs shut the visitors
nings. In the fifth they plated out, ~ut the damage was
one as the result of two walks done. The winners plated
and an error on a double play those nine on four walks, two
ball. They got ooe more in the singles, and two doubles.
sixth with two singles and a
Meigs got one back in the
ground-out, but Baird then second and two in the last in·
set them down.
ning, but it wasn't near
Baird went the route, fa!l- enough. Losing hurler Calvin
ning nine and walking five Minnis teamed with Greg
while loser Harness struck Smith and Brady Huffman to
out five and walked eight. fan three and walk nine, but
Hitters for Meigs were winner Hock and Purdy
Nesselroad with a double and didn't fare much better as
Davenport, Swain. and they struck out five and
Calvin Minnis each had a walked six. Leading . Meigs
single.
hitter was Mick Davenport
P'smouth
000 011 0-2 5 0 with a double and single
Meigs
100200x-3 4 I .while Gary Swain and Terry
Harness and PowelL Baird Wail chipped in with a single
and Johnson .
each.
P'smouth 1900000- 10 5 2
010 000 2- 3 4 3
The story of the second con· Meigs
Hock
(
WP),
Pllrdy and
test is told by the top of the
Simpson. Minnis (LP ), Smith
second inning · when Ports(2), Huffman (6) and Metzmouth plated nine runs and ner, Souls by (5) .
·

Minnesota Twins, S-3, with
Fingers, w~o hadn't pitched
since June 13, playing a key
role in the triwnph .
" It was like a football team
corping out of the huqdle,"
said TaiUler about the team 's
reaction to the reinstatement
of Rudi, Fingers and Blue.
Fingers, who allowed two
hits and struck out five In 3 1-3
innings of relief to gain his
ninth save, and Sal Bando,
who hit a pair of homers,
were the stars of the A's
triumph and Bando admitted
the reinstatement was ~
great morale booster for the
club.
In other AL games, New
York swept a doubleheader
from Milwaukee, 6-2and 1().2;
Detroit defeated Bostoo, 4-2,
in 11 innings; Kansas City
downed California, H , in II
innings; Cleveland topped
Baltimore 6-3 before losing 62, and Chicago beat Texas, 62.
Yankees 8-10, Brewers Z.2
Micke~ Rivers, extending
his hitting streak to 20 games,
drove in two runs with a
single and a sacrifice fl~ in
the opener and had three hits
and scored three runs in the
nightcap to spark the

A piece of the energy puzzle.

EUREKA SWEEPER.......~ 5495
LARGE SELECTION OF LAMPS

$94995

11

Behind eight Wellston
errors and 10 stolen bases,
the Meigs American Legion
team Saturday wanned up
for a Sunday showdown with
Portsmouth by whipping host
Wellston, 9-4. It was Meigs'
ball game all the way with
the local team plating two
runs in the first inning on
winning pitcher Brent Johnson's single and a Mike
Nesselroad home run.
Meigs went ahead 4-() in the
third when Brett Wilson
singled and stole second and
hOme on an error. Left·
fielder Greg James reached
on that error, promptly stole
second, and scampered home
on John Sayre's single. '
Meigs actually won it in the
fifth when Nesselroad singled
and later scored the winning
run on another Sa~re base
hit, but they added some insurance runs in the sixth.
Wall led off with a walk aild
Jolmson followed with a
single and both scored on

•sooo

Y2 OFF
ODD TABLES.............Y2 OFF

FLEXSTEEL SOFA &amp;
LOVESEAT
WAS

million only to have the sale
nullified by commissioner
Bowie Kuhn as being "detrimental to basebalL" Angered
over Kuhn's interference and
fearing lawsuits resulting
from the deals if the three
players continued to play for
the A's, Finley ordered his
manager, Chuck Tanner, not
ID use them.
Kuhn, however, ordered
Finley to use the three
players and when the A's
owner refused, the A's
players threatened to boycott
Sunday's game . with the

Meigs, Portsmouth divide two

SHOP TONIGHT UNTIL 8:00 P.M.
SAVE

the . A's were involved in
several clubhouse fracases
and
numerous verbal
skinnishes with their colorful
owner.
And now their latest crisis
just might reWiite the club for
one last shot at a sixth
straight West Division
tiile ... even though Oakland
currently is mired in third
place eight and one-half
games behind Kansas City.
Two weeks ago Finley sold
three of his star pla~ers, Joe
Rudi, Vida Blue and Rollle
Fingers, for a total of $3.5

tfl'L' . Th~

I

m ;Hl ' n td~ lOilll' fwm thi ~

1\mdcl\l~;l i" :d~' Mtlllt tlll :l's S t&lt;ltl' Tree

Smoke ~· B~,.•;Jr h:1:-. I"L' quc ~tL· d th :H nnyonc
sccin}! thL'SL' tn'c~ L'X t' rci ~l' L'X trcnw c: 1ution

wilh fire . HPld mnlchc; un1il wid. Crush
:-~II cit.!&lt;lrcttcs. And drnw n youn·;1 mpfirc .
Your ht:lp \\'ill h~,.• ;lpprccioncd.

A Public

Ser~rtc

g~!~

ot Th1s Newspaper &amp; The Mvcr r.s•n CJ Countd

:1u bsc r lp !lon price includes
c; unday Times .senfinel .

Det.
"os
\)

cc J!l s

( 11 innings)

001 100 000 02--4 9 0
100 000 100 00-- 2 8 3
1

.

------------~UJMBIAGAS.,

�. ::::-:;:;:~:::::::::-:'
:-:·:·:·:::::·:::::::::·:· :·: ·:·.·:· :·. ·:·:.;.. ·:·: -:.

Norman cops
'" sixth victory
HOUSTON
t UP I)
Cincinnait Reds left -hander
Fred Norman surrendered
only four hits in seven innings
Sunday to help the Reds get
by the Houston Astros 4-2 but he couldn 't have gotten
the win without clutch hitting
from his teallUlli!tes.
Cesar Geronimo had the
biggest bat lor the Reds,
picking up three Bingles and
Pete Rose provided a single
in the second inning Which
brought UJe first two runs
across UJe pia te .
Geronimo's bunt single in
the second was followed by a
walk and an infield single by
Norman. With the Ulree men
on, Rose hit a shot into the
outfield for a two-run scoring
single, giving the Reds a 2.{)
lead.
Mter Houston scored a run
on two walks and Roger
_Met•ger 's single in the
second, UJe Reds came back
with two unearned runs m the
fourth.
Geronimo beat out an
infield hit ~d Mike Lum

Unser

walked to start the uprismg
and loser J .R Rtchard threw
wildly to third on Norman 's
bunt attempt, allowi ng one
run to score. Rose walked to
load the ba ses and Ken
Griffey 's infield out scored
another run .
Norman , raising, his record

wms at

AStraGraph

0

GEMINI (Moy 21-J une 201 It
ISil ' l hk.f&gt; YOU IO m&lt;Jk(l f' XCUSeS
tr~·

lo dn toil . !~'

f' II OI

ynu llllqll l

II yrm r e

Ill

ft'S·i Ul)

CA NCER (June 21 -July 221
1h('w s a qood posstbt ltl y yo u
CU ll d

bl~

PE'rl!lY · WISQ

a nd

PO\IIl CI· foOitS il tortn y A.::;k ft rs t tl

Pocono

Uiddlc UriUing-

to 6-1, allowed only three hits
over the first six innings, but dcfcated Lctur1
Bob Watson homered for
Houston in the sixth and
Alter falling behind · 3.{),
Rawly Eastwick came in to visiting Diddle Drilling came
pitch the last two tnnings.
from behind to defea t host
Letart (Miller Homes)
Sunday in Ind ependent
baseball action , 10-5. Ronnie
Bachtel picked up the win by
fanning ten. Leading hitter
was Greg Roush with Ulree
singles, Wallbrown had a
.. Berntce BecJe Oso1
triple, Pete Sayre had two
singles, Fitch got a single
For Tuesdny , June 29, 1976
and double, and Knapp,
ARIES (March 21 ~ April 19)
Snodgrass, Salser, and Theiss
AwJI(I Stlf'klllq llnnnc1al lav01s
each had a single.
lr om per so ns you kno w on a
J)ill \ ly 50C ii:l l brt SIS 1 hey mrt y
Steve Jenkins took the loss
tl('llp fro m a ~ t·n !&gt;e' ol ob iJga t ton
and teamed with Tucker to
bul tlwy won t li~e 11
str ike · out eight, but he
TAURUS (April 20 -Moy 201 Oe
walked eight too. For Miller
cml'liil tudny lest you say
Homes , Gary Roush had
5Q !!W!tl lllQ llll 1tll ll klf1 qi )' t il ~!
three singles, Sheppard got a
II)IQhlllu rt flllOIIJP r piH IIC:II i&lt;Hiy
double
and stngle , and
' ' lnmtly member H II be hard
Tucker had a double.
to mc1kl' .uncnd s
f)U f th ,l! &lt;:; jU S ! WIHl l

•

PICTURES OFFERED
All coaches in the Meigs
County area wishing to
have his (or her) team's
picture taken lor the Dally
Sentinel, should leave your
name and phone numher at
the office on Court Street,
or phone Ule office, 992·
2156, and a photographer
will call and , make
arrangements. This must
be done by Friday, July 2.

"O nH •tru nq

w tll la s1

no t t1ow

rn ucll 1! co•; ts
LEO {July 23· Aug . 22) You r tnrwr

l tnC ettatr1 \ y

d tlli i('S your
IOdfl y
Others co ultl srn se 111rs Jncl be
rf&gt; lur l &lt;~n t to fo llo w as rP&lt;~ d rly as

MT. POCONO. Pa . I UP!)
- AI Unser lives by the
philosophy that "once you' re uo;udl
a winner, you know you cun
VIRGO (Aug . 23 -Sepl. 21 The
do it again ."
Pn d ., do nnt tu•, lrly u u-. me&lt;r tt':&gt;
The United States Auto toctay Oorr I use t ;~chcs 111.11
Club's championship trail has othPr '&gt; cnn crrtr crw you lor
been lull of potholes fm· Unser Somf" woultl we tco rllP 111C opsince his ba ck-to -back por1l11ll1y
Indianapolis victories in 1970- LIBRA t Sept. 23 -0cl. 231 Don 1
lit:' rncon&lt;; t derat r~ nl c los e
71.
T11e
37-yeal'-&lt;&gt;ld
Albuquerque, N.M., driver tr to rrrt&lt;; t ocl t~y You ll o tt c nd
very ttur cklv tl yo ri ren ege on
entered Sunday's Schaefer VOLH
:; tr;rr e o t thP. work or th e
500-mile ra ce wit hout a CllPt.k
trtumph -since the Michigan
SCORPIO (Oc t. 24 -Nov. 22 1
250 in 1974.
AdrrPvrrrq •torrr qoal s rs rmp or On past performances at
tant hu t you II frnd the quest
Pocono raceway, Unser 's c an lo c;; r~ lis luster rl you ad chances were not considered V;)IICC' your cause by
A-I. He crashed into the wall downctr adrng anotht"r
in the first la'p of the 1973 SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23-0ec .
race, finished 22nd ml974 and 21) Y o~r ll ll&lt;'IVe small pa trf' nce
lor thnsc no t rn 11111 accord w 11h
was 32nd last year.
you r ld P ,t !'i 111o u qh th err
"But I never had doubts JCrl SOil S rl rC valtd
about my ability to win, "
Unser drawled. He proved CAPRICORN ( Dec . 22 - Jan .
19) Yot r may r un rn t o a
that by leading 75 of the final
pro bl('m tOdA y wr111 one wr th
80 laps ·s unday to beat Mike
w llO n1 vou st1a rc .:1 11 rn ter est
Moseley by 3.2 seconds.
Oprnrurr ~ wr it ctrll er ThP r esu lts
It 's possible Un ser was the co uld IJf' ~Hl r · r o d uc l rv c
only one who believed victory
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20 -Feb. 191
could be achieved after he Drl trcxrH decr sron s bo qqle yo ur
was down two laps with 200 rnrnd tocl::ly Seek tile .:id\lrCe or
miles to go. He lost an ea rly &lt;1 trwl! ecl co unselor
lead when his hydraulic atr PISCES (Feb. 20 -March 201
jack malfunctioned on a 58th- Dorr I vnlurr teer 11Pip wr th a JOb
you re not lamrllCH wrth Th ere
lap pitstop that cost him 311,
cou lcl be CJ:pen sr ve tools or
seconds.
mrl tcr r.11 you co uld .?ICCr denwUy
Unser dropped another lap Ill Ill
and was confronted with near
disaster when his Parnelli\:JOU(
Cosworth ran over some
debris on the track and
oirthelay
ripped his left rear tire.
June 29, 19 76
"I thought I was going to
The rewards fo r you r etl ort s
lose it," Unser blinked. "The
\111s )' OM may pay off more
tire went as I was passing
slowly t han you ant rcrpated
Janet Guthrie down the front
Don 'l be d rscouraqed Later.
straight. It was bad. The tire
you' ll pr c k up mom ent urn swrft ly
was coming apart and I was
just wishing there was an
opening in the pit wall. I had
FINALS TODAY
to go all .the way around
CHAGRIN FALLS, Ohio
before I could get mto the I UP II - JoAnne Carner
pits."
needed to charge and Judy
There were 17 lead changes Rankin wanted to recharge.
during the 200 lap race and
Those two superstars of the
nine different drivers held Ladies Professional Golf Ascommand at some stage of sociation went head-to-head
the event.
today in the final round of the
Wally Dallenbach finished $100,000 Babe Za harias
a distant UJird to Moseley, In vitational Classic with
22.5 seconds back. Johnny Rankin holding a three-shot
Rutherford, a 1974 winner lead goi ng into the round in
here and victor in the 1976 Ule battle for the $15,1100 first
Indy 500, was fourth and prize.
Mario Andretti finished fi!U1.
Guthrie, the first woman to
drive in a USAC 500-mile
race , completed 89 laps
before a malfunctioning gear
boK and overheating forced
VALENCIA , Calif. (UP!)
her from the race. She was - Sue Fish, a 17-year-old
credited with a 24th place h~h K hool ~n~r h om
finish, seven notches higher Monterrey Park, Calif.,
than defending champio n Sundsy captured UJe 250cc
A.J. Foyt, who went out on and 125cc titles at the third
the 31st lap with a blown annual Women 's National
engine.
Motocross championships.
Unser averaged 143.622
Fish, riding Yamahas, won
mph for the race that was both of her 30-minute 250cc
slowed by nine yellow caution classes, captured one 125cc
flags and took three hours class and. finished second in
and 28 minutes to complete. the other 125cc class in
Unser's margin was large temperatures that hovered
enough for him to fuel up on around 110 degrees at Indian
the 18lst lap and retain Dunes Cycle Park.
command. He led the race for
Second and third in the
106 laps and was one of 17 250cc competition was Joann
cars still running at the end . Miley, 30, San Juan
The first four finishers Capistrano, Calif., and
were in the sa me lap. Johanna Stenersen, 18,
Andrettl and sixth-place Monterrey Park.
driver Roger McCluskey
In the 125cc competition.
completed
198
laps . Stenersen was runner-up folAndretli's engine blew five . lowed by Unda Barnes, 21 ,
miles from Ule finish line.
Houston.
'
l(' ,l (l('rSilip

0

ql l&lt;l h ! I OS.

MONTE CARLO IUPli The World Boxtng Council
Sunday stripped world
heavyweigh t cha mpi on
Muhammad Ali of its 1975
boxer of the year award,
WBC
President
Jose
Sulaiman
of
Mexico

Mets maul Cubs, 13-3
By JACK SA UNOERS
UPI Sports Writer
If th e New York Mets ever
decide to vacate Sheo
Stadium, it 's lik ely they'll put
tn a bid for Wrigley Field.
The Mets compl eted a
three-game sweep of their
series with th e Chicago C.'ubs
Sunday with a 13-3 rout,
capping a 30-run weekend.
"Sometimes we don't score
30 runs in a monUJ ," said
Mets first basema n Ed
Kranepool , who went Ulreefor -four , includin g his sixth
home run, for three runs
batted in Sunduy.
ln Uleir last Wrigley Park
series with the C'ubs, the
meek-hitting Mcts scored 19
runs in three games, although
they lost two of them.
Eight of the Mets runs
Sunday were scored in the

sing! ~ .

Geiberger champt

on a two-r un double by F'oii
and .Jim Lyttle 's run-scoring
sing le. Foli singled home
wha t proved to be the winning
run in UJe fifth .
Dodgers 12, Giants 8
Ellie Rodriguez and Manny
Mota, who had his lOOth
career pinch hit, singled in
runs in the fi lth inn ing
following one-out singles by
Ed Goodson and Bill ·RUBsell
to brea k a 6-6 tie. Babby
Murcer hit a three-run homer
in the third and a solo homer
in the eighth for the Giants.
Don Sutton struggled through
five i1mings , but received
cn'&lt;lit for his sevenui win in
14 decistons.
Padres 3, Braves 2·
Tito Fuentes punched a
single past third base with
two out in the ninth inning to
score Ted Kubiak from third
with the wmning run. Brent
Strom went the distance to
~et his fir st wm in his last five
starts and even his record at
7-7, whtlc Andy Messersmith,
a wtnner in his last ftve
gmnes, was the loser to fall to
7-1&gt;.

RAST PROVIDENCE, R.I
IU PI ) - Bob Byman of
Raleigh , N.C., a former
USGA junior champion, fired
a oneover-par 70 Sunday l1l
win the 15th annual Northeast
· Amateur Golf Tournament at
U1c Wannan10isett Country
Club.

OAK BROOK, !11. ( UPI) AI Geiberger regards himself
as a conservative golfer- just
the style needed to give him
his lOth career triumph, a
Qne-&lt;;troke victory Sunday in
tile $200,1100 \v.Stern oP.n.
" lt is so tough it jumps
right up and grabs you, "
Geiberger said of the 7,002yard Butler National Golf
Club layout.
"My game pian was to be
conservative, but I deviated
from it and it didn't work.
You ca n't be a bold,
aggressive player on this
course because it is going l1l
hurt you more times than it

wiD help you.
''On this course yo11 reaDy
have to think and be patient
and wait for the pars 8lld
birdies to come. It's a
precision golf course."
His fOur-()Ver-par 288, good
for first prize money of
$40,000, was the highest
winning 11ltal on the PGA tour
since Jack Nicklaus won the
1972 U.S. Open at Pebble
Beach with a six-()veriJar
290.
Geiberger, starting the
final day Sunday five strokes
behind Bob Dickson, abo
1made the tour's comeback of
Ule year.

TR¥
nut,I\L.u F.

en

w

a:

.....
z
w

RIVIERE

OR A. J. STA!HU Ol. FillMAN lMLn
FOR PRICES CALL COU£CT
r==AREA COO£ (114,__,

L_ 252-3181 ~

One or Two Day Full Denture
Service, Partials, Extractions,
X· Rays, Cleanmg

an energy-sa~ device
right attpe tip Ofyour
fmger.

nuts, potato chips, PIJIICh and
coffee were served. The
recently with a bridal shower plates, cups, napkiru; and nut·
at the Slusher home, cups carried out the true love
Pomeroy, honoring Christine theme of the shower.
Bailey, bride-&lt;!lect of E.
Attending were Mrs. Irene
Michael Jolmson, Mason. Bailey, mother of the brideThe wedding will take place elect; Mrs. Mary Jolmson,
on July 17.
mother of the prospective
Games were played and groom, and Mrs. Dorothy
prizes awarded. The gift Bailey, Mrs. Mary McAngus,
table featured a "true love" Mrs. Max Davis and Joyce,
theme with gold and white Mrs. Vickie Gilkey, Miss
streamers extending from Sarah Bechtle, Miss Vickie
the ceiling to the corners of Grate, Mrs. Brenda Johnson;
the table. Suspended from Mrs. Naomi Smith, Mrs. Jan
the ceiling over the table was Knapp, Mrs. Linda Darnell,
a bride and groom replica Mrs. Dorothy Reeves, Mrs.
with love birds encircling it.
William Morris, Tony and
A gold lace cover was used Randy Jewell ,
on the refreslunent table. The
Sending gifts were Mrs.
centerpiece was. a crystal Evelyn Ihle, Mrs. Diana
conta~er with teardrops
Harrison, Miss Jerry Bass,
with three gold tapers and Mrs. Cathy Bailey, Mrs.
flowers all on a round Millie Miller and daughters,
cutglass mirror. Wedding Mrs. Jo Worley and Buddy
bell sandwiches, ribbon cake, McAngus.
strawberry ice cream, mints.

"Personhood" Can Be Awkward
Dear Helen:
As a fellow writer, I'm sure you'll sympathize:
I do a book review column for our newspaper. In answer to
a reader-query, I wrote, "Ask your librarian - she's there to
help you."
Irhmediately came a letter from a women's affirmative
actionist: Librarians can be male; too, you know as can
secretaries, kindergarten teachers , also nurses a nd housekeepers. Please don't stereotype certain jobs as "female only"
the use

of

"she. ' 1 Conversely, don't use

"he"

w ill be held on fh e budge t

prepared by lhe V1 1lage ol
Midd l e port , Meig s Co unty ,
Ohio for fh e nex t succeeding
F1sca l year , ending Decem ber

3 I. 19 77
Su ch heanng wt ll be held a t

I he Vi ll age Hall a l Midd leporl.

Ohio

Gene Grate, Clerk ,

Village ol M1dd teporl. Ohio
June 28

NOT I CE T O CONTRACTORS
STA TE OF OHIO
DEPARTMEN T
OF TRANSPORT AT ION
Columbus, Ohio
June11. 1976

Contract Sales l ega l Copy
No . 76-581
U NIT PRICE CONTRACT

:~

~

I~

JOAN ROUSH HUDSON , her husband, Bill, a sergeant in
UJe U. S. Marines, and her two children, Curtis, 17, and Cindy,
16, wiD be spending the next three years in Okinawa . The
family will leave Jacksonville, N. C. the middle of July and
after visiting here with her parents, Mr . and Mrs. Alhert
Roush, and in Arkansas with his parents, they'D be on their
way to California and then Okinawa.
Another son, ~eff Matheny , graduated from high school
this month and on July I will leave from Wiimington, N. C. for
Texas to begin basic training with the Air Force.
VICKY AND MORTON Barnes ar• doing great in Brazil,
Ind., where he ls employed as a ceramic technician with Logan
Clay and·she's taken a summer job. However, Vicky ha s been
accepted at St. Mary's of the Woods College and in late AugUBt
will begin training there to hecome a medical laboratory
technician.
This weekend they were in Pomeroy for a visit and last
we heard, Vicky's parents, Fay and Clifford Manley, were to
bave returned to Brazil with them for a short stay.
FOR THE ARTS and crafts enthusiasts, Monday will be a
nice day for you to spend at Rutland. That afternoon in the
gymnasium there, a variety of demonstrations will be going
on .
Kathryn Evans will be working with ceramics,.everything
from pouring the molds 4&gt; the final finish . The Rutland
Btcentennial Committee advises that she will display
greenware, fired and unfired, and then show the same ceramic
piece finished in several different ways .
Then, too, Ule Rutland senior ciiliens will do a variety of
thinlls.... Quiltilll(, crochetin~. making novelty items.
Betty Carpenter, cake decorating tea cher at Rio Grande
Conununity College, will also be giving demonstrations . Sne
will conduct two sessions on novelty cakes and then award the
cakes to someone there watching the demonstrations.
And speaking of cake decorating , the contest on Saturday
should attract numerous entries. It's a ftrst for Meigs County,
but not only that, a number of Meigs area women have been
enrolled in courses . Mrs. Carpenter has conducted several
extension courses at the Rutland United Methodist Church in
recent months.
Another thing about SaturdayWe earlier reported that a Maypr's Trophy would be
awarded to Ule "hest of show" in cake decorating. We now
understand that one will also be awarded to the "best of show "
in the bicentennial flower show.

indiscriminately.
I realize in this instance, I could have avoided the "she "
FOR SOMEONE who asked , the bells will toll across the
replacing it with ''who," but sometimes a writer is stuck: ;,e land at 2 p. m. on July 4.
must either use the awkward "he or she " or be accused of
sexism.
. Since we now have "Ms." as part of our language, isn't it
hme we invented a word for "he or she?" And also for "his or
her?" - FOR PERSONHOOD WITHOUT PAIN
Such words f" ti" for "he or she," and ljtis' ' for " his or

LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF PUBLIC
HEARING
OF THE BUDG E T OF
Mt DOLE PORT, OHIO
Notice is hereby g1 ven th a t
on th e ll lh d ay ol July , 1976, a t
7 30 p. m a Pub l ic Hea ring

J une 21 , 28

Mrs. Edna SlQIIher and

Mrs. Judy Jewell entertained

~

.

Bobo reunion
held recently

Social
Calendar

RUTLAND - The !lobo
reunion was held recently at
Forest Acres Park with a
basket dinner at noon hetng
enjoyed by 39 persons.
Mrs. Nora Bobo was the
oldest one present. Others
attending were Mrs. Pearl
Edwards, Sr., Cheshire; Mr.
and Mrs. Pearl Edwards, Jr.,
Becky, John, David and
Mary, Chester ; Miss Susie
Edwards, Middleport; Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph · Edwa rds,
Joy , Troy·; Anita and Stacy,
Middleport;
Mrs. Joe
Edwards, Sr., Janet and Joe,
Jr., Cheshire; Billy Ross, Mr.
and Mrs. Clyde Van Cooney,
Mesa, Arizona; Debby and
Melissa Van Cooney, Key
West, Fla.; Miss Hazel Van
Cooney, Middleport; Mr. and
Mrs . Arthur Eblin, Pomeroy;
Mr. and Mrs. Carl DeLong ,
Jeff and Cathy, Pomeroy;
Vi cky John ston, Salem
Center; Mr. -a nd M'rs.
Kenneth Eblin, Tony, J ohn ,
Jim and Janey, Rutland ,
R.D., and Mr. and Mrs.
Wilbu r
Van
Cooney,
Sandusky.

her") have already been suggested , but unfortunately they
haven't as yet caught on with the American public.
MONDAY
Unfortunately, too, I can't remember the name of the
SPECIAL MEETING
suggestor . IT ti will introduce timsell, I will glady publish tis Racine Chapter 134 Monday
name in the colunm, with appropriate fanfare. It's high time at Masonic Temple at 8 p.m.
we simplified this equality tiling . - H.
for purpose of initiation.
· +++
OF.
all
MEETING
Dear Helen :
interested
people
for
the
I've gone to all the classes around : sewing, .rug-making
choir practtce , YWCA. Have tried volunteer work, group bicentennial observance and
therapy and senior citirens clubs. Yet I've never made a ox.roast, Monday, 8 p.m. at
the Rutland Fire Department
frjend !
,
headquarters.
Each time I start new. Each time I fail.
I design and paint, write poems and short articles - not
WEDNESDAY
ba d either. I've even tried politics and have written my
WEEKEND
Meeting at
congressman. Now I'm reduced l1l walking my dog and
Ash
St.
Free
Will
Baptist
reading half the books in the library. With my track record a
Church,
Middleport,
begins
job wouldn't help my loneliness, even if I could find one. What
Wednesday,
7:30
p.m.
with
next ' - SLOW, QUillT 60
Paul Taylor from Utah as
evangelist. Public invited.
Dear 60:
You may be a quie t 60, but you certainly aren't "slow!" In
THURSDAY
fact, I'd guess that a good part of your problems stems from
movillg too fast. You've sampled "everything around," from
EVANGELINE CHAPhobby classes to therapy, but - perhaps anticipating rejection
TER, O.E.S. 7:30 Thursday,
- have you dropped out before anyone discovered you were
Mtddleport Masonic Temple.
there?
Trouble with the quiet ones is they sit in a back row
expecting others to make the first move. But many of those
others are shy too . They'd rather not risk a rebuff from
, someone who appears "unfriendly."
My suggestion: Don 't just enroll. Participate! Ask
questions, smile, show interest, reach out. Start conversations.
Stop worrying about the impression YOU'LL make and think
Instead how you cna put your neighbor at ease. (And admit
you're shy- it's a great opener.)
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
You're a well-read person of many talents and as such Theiss, Vinton, Mr. and Mrs.
you'd be an asset to any organization. Offer your help and Ted Bailey and children,
you'll soon learn how much you are needed. - H.
Patriot, Mr. and Mrs. Otis
Bailey and daughter, Racine,
++ +
Dear Helen:
Elaine Lehew, Portland,
I'm tired of all this diet talk. If God had meant us to be spent Father's Day at
the home of the Rev. and Mrs.
pencil-&lt;;lim, He wouldn't have given us these huge appetites. FATTY
Lawrence Giuesencamp and
Nicki Van Meter. Miss Van
Dear Fatty :
Meter recently returned
You sound like the man who said, "If God meant us to go from a three week visit at the
to the moon, He wouldn't have given us TV sets so we could home of her sister, Mrs.
watch astronauts from here." - H.
Theiss.
The Rev. and Mrs.
Gluesencamp recently were

Su laiman said

Re v . 8 17·73

Christine Bailey

by

,~

wCommunity
~:j C
· By Charlene
i Orner
Hoeflich
•
~

Dear FPWP:

disrep ule,"

PMS - OOOS!&gt;SI
Sea ted proposals w1 11 be
rec erved at th e o1fi ce of the
D1r ecto r ot th e Ohio Depart .
me nt of
Tr ansportation ,
Co lumbus , Ohio, until 10 :00
AM , Ohto St andard T ime,
Tuesday , July 13. 1976, f or
rmprovements in
Dis trict 10 {Pl an 10 A l
Athens , Gallia . Hoc krng ,
Me i gs , Morgan , Noble , VInton
and Washington Co unties ,
Oh io , on vario us roads in the
Ci t y ol Athen s, the V illages of
Chauncey , Cool v il l e and m
Athens County ; the Crty of
Ga l l ipolis and in Ga llia
coun Ty ; in Hoc king County ;
tl'1e Vr ttag e of Rac ine and in
Me rgs County ; in Morg an
Coun ty . 1n N oble Coun ty , in
Vinton Co unty , the Vi l lage of
Beverly and in Wash ington
Co un ty , bv app l ying paint to
edge, ce nt er and lan e l ine s.
Proj ec t L ength - 0 fe e t or- 0
mile
Work Length - 0 feet or 0
mrle
The Ohio Departm ent of
Tr an sportatron
h e reby
not i f ies all bidders that it writ
aff irma tive ly insure that in
any c ontra c t entered tnt o
pursuant
to
th i s
ad
verltseme nt ,
m in or i ty
business en terprises w i ll be
afford ed full opportunity to
submi t bid s in r esponse to th is
inv i tation and w ll l no t be
drscrim inaled against 011 th e
grounds of ra ce, color , or
natural orig in in con side r at ron
for an award
" M in i mum wage rates tor
lh 1s prolect
ha ve
oeen
predetermined as requrred by
l aw and are set forth in the bid
proposa l. "
" The date set for completion
of this work sha ll be set fo r th
In the bidding ~roposeL "
Each bidder shel l
be
required to file w i th h i s b id a
cer t ifi ed check or cashier 's
che ck for an a moun 1 equal to
fi't'e per cent ol his bid, but in
no even t morf' tha n f if ty
thousand dollar s, or a bond fo r
ten per cent of h is bid , payab l e
to the Director .
Bidders must apply , o n the
proper f orms , f or qualif 1cat ion
at least ten days prior to the
da te set tor opening bids in
ac c ordance w rlh Chap te r 5525
Ohio Revised Code .
Plans ahd specificat ions are
on file in the Department of
Transportation and the off i ce
of
the
District
Depu t y
D , rector
The Director rese r ves tt1e
right to re ject any and a ll bids .
RIC H ARD 0 JACKSON
01 RECTOR

:r-:&lt;w.=,;,;:;:::;:;:.:--::,,,,~,.,.,.,.,.,.,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,;,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,~,,,,,,,~:

0

You have

Sulaima n sa id Ali had
brought boxing into disrepute
because of his exhibition
match aga in st Japane se
wrestler Antomo Inoki
Saturday .
"Our r ec ognition and
trophy to him represented the
fee ling of our federation
members, who now feel very
embarrassed and disgusted
at Ali's action in bringing
into

in the socond .Jerry Grote
Mid
John Miln er also
co nt ributed run -scorin g
singles in the second . The
Mets got their last three runs
in the sixth on Wayne
Garrett's run-Koring double
and Jay Kleven's two-run

Bill Madlock homered for
Chicago in the sixth off
winning pitcher Craig Swan,
4-7 , and Joe Wallis hit a tworun homer in the ninth off
reliever Ski~ Lockwood.
Elsewhere in the NL,
Philadelphi a defea ted St.
Louis, 6-2; Mor treal edged
Pittsburgh, 4-3; Los Angeles
outlasted San l"rancisco, 128; San Diego nipped Atlanta.
3-2, and Cincinnati downed
Houston, 4-2.
l'hillies 6, Cardinals 2
Bob Boone's first ma jor
second inning, a Na tiona l lea1,'1Je gram! slam capped a
League high this season and six-run, fourth inning an d
equalling a New York team helped Jim Lonborg to his
record for mosl nms i11 on~ lOth win of the yea r. St. Louis
inning.
carried a 1.{) lead into the
"It 's a good ballpark to hit fourU1 when the Phillies se nt
in," said Kranepool , who ha s 10 ba tters to the plate and
hit safely in 11 of his last 13 scored six runs in .an inning
games, batting .409 by going fo r the sixth time this sea son .
111-for-44. He hit a two-run
Expos 4, Pirate• 3
homer in the second , Ius sixth
Tim Folt drove in three
homer this season, and had a runs wtUJ a double and a
sacrifice ny m the third smglc and 11-year vetera n
Sunday .
Woody Fryman worked 6 2-3
Mike Pltillips also drove in innings to gain his 10001
U1ree runs, hitting his third career v1e1ory and raise hts
homer in as lljany days to 1976 record to 8-5. The Expos
lead off the game and took a 3 • 0 lead in
banging out a two-run single the third off loser Doc Medich

announced.

box1 ng

Shower en te rtains

5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Mooday, June 28, t976

4- The Daily Sentinel. Middleport- l'omeroy. 0 ., Monday. June 28 1976

Stiversville News Notes
at Blackwater Falls, W. Va.
and in Virginia and Maryland
on vacation. They viBited An·
nie Thomas and daughter at
Palynna, Va. The Gluesen·
camps joined by Garnet and
Henry Ervine of Racine also
visited recently in Gatlinburg, Tenn. with Mr. and
Mrs. Rayinond Carpenter
and son, and Mr. and Mrs. L.
Swartz and family .
Recent visitors at the
Gluesencamp home were
Leah and Lona Greer, Don
Meadows and son and Mrs.
Glen Carpenter.
Mrs. Mike Evans and
children were recent visitors
at the home of Mrs. Ada Van·
Meter.

Turners return home

In the hands of the right people, the tip of a
fmger can be an impressive device that helps
keep electric costs in line.
Especially when that finger flips off light
switches, radios and television sets before it
leaves the room.
Or when it nudges refrigerator doors
closed between snacks and waits until the
dishwashers, clothes washers and dryers are
ftlled before it turns them on.
No one's going to tell you that running
around your home turning off lights and

&gt;.

things will dramatically lower your electric
bill. But it can help. In the battle to keep
your bills down, conserving power is an
unportant weapon.
And, while you're fighting on the home
front, we're working to help keep your bills
in line, too. By continuing to expand our
search for economical fuel sources and to
hold the line on building and operating costs.
Working together. It's the only way we
can hope to lick the problems that affect the
cost of electricity today. And tomorrow.

Ohio Power Company
Working to(Tt&gt;ther is the only way.

Mr. and Mrs. Joe Turner
bave returned from Bucyrus
where they spent three weeks
with their son and daughterin-law, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Turner and family. They
went especially for the high
school graduation of their
granddaughter, Sandra .
Following graduation, Mr.
and Mrs. Turner entertained
with an open house for their
daughter.
. Speaker for the corrunence- .
ment was U. S. Representative Temyson Guy-

er. He used the five
"ships" or American life craftsmanship, stewardship,
citizenship, moral leadership
and friendship
as
necessary quallties for
success.
While in Bucyrus the birthday of Gary Turner, 17, was
also celebrated..

LAFF - A- DAY
.'l

PUBLIC RECORD
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio
(UPI) - City Law Director
William J . Higgins has ended 1
a controversy between the 1
aty Service Corrunission and I
city cou!lcil by saying I
commission tests are matters
of public record, once I
eligibillty
tests
are I
· certified.
I
The comrnissioo had denied I
city council's right to review I
certain tests that some I
councibnen suspected might 1
contain questions not related 1
to Jobs.
I
The commission contended 1
that
releasing
its I
examinations would violate
the security of its procedures. 1
Higgins issued his ruling 1
I
Saturday.
·

FAMILYGATIIERS
A surprise Father's Day
celebration was held at the
home of Mr. and Mrs, Vernon
Bing with aU of their children
and their famllies home for " \'mi:-~:~ ;&gt;i;m-pty 1
llUIId
the day, The I[I'OUP included hl11\ o . lo•~ er doghouse ...
Sharon Bing, Mr. 111d Mrs.
Bill McElroy, Jeffrey 8lld
Joey, Pomeroy; Mr.andMre,
Vernon Bing, Sonny, Melissa,
Dwane, Tony , Gallipolis; Mr.
OFFICE
RS : 9:30 to 2, 2 to 5 (CLOSE
and Mrs . Doug Hudson,
AT NOON ON THURS.l- EAST COURT
Dayton, and Mrs. Pearl
Hoffman, Middleport.

N.

Couple surprised on anniversary
Mr . and Mrs. Thomas D.
Sayre of Great Bend, Rt. 1,
Portland were surprised by
relatives SUnday, June 20 at
their home in honor of their
40th weddtng anniversary.
Sons,
Dwain
of
McCurtchenville, Ohio and
Roland of West Carrollton,
Ohio and their wives hosted
the remembran ce event.
They prepared and served a
barb ecued chicken dinner

and later in afternoon served Raymond Furbee and
homemade Ice cream and a Richard , Route 2, Racine;
decorated heart shaped cake Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bidwell and
furnished by Mrs . -Marion
Furbee and punch made by
Mrs. Raymond Furbee.
Gue&gt;ts present included
Mrs. Sayre's mother, Mrs.
Marion Furbee , Portland;
Mr . and Mrs. Robeft
Schaefer, Susan and Gregy,
Kettering; Mr . and Mrs _

Dehumidifier

Workshop scheduled
RliTLA.ND - A workshop
for the bicentennial flower
show to be staged Saturday at
Rutland was set for 6:30p.m.
at the home of Mrs. Joan
Fetty during a recent
meeting of the Rutland
Friendly Gardeners at the
home of Mrs. Suzy Carpenter .
AIBO discussed during the
meeting was the Regatta
flower show with Mrs .
Carpenter winning several
ribbons , and th e Mei gs
County Fair shows to be
staged Aug . 18 and 19, and
Aug. 20 and 21. A donation
was made by the club toward
the expenses of the Regatta
show.
An invitation to attend the
Rutland Garden Club 's open
meeting at 8 p.m. Monday at
SESSION SET
A camp skills training
session will be held
tomorrow
tit
Camp
Kiashuta. All leaders and
helpers for the Big Bend
Girl Scout day camp, July
12 through 16, are asked to
attend the all-Gay training
session which will be
conducted by camp
personnel and senior boy
scouts and their leaders.
For
all
those
participating in the day
camp program, Mrs. Judy
Werry, camp director, asks
that they save three pound
coffee cans ilnd gallon jugs
with handles for special
project work. She sayd that
plastic tablecloths are also
needed,

Ule United Methodist Church
was read. The Ohio
Association of Garden Club's
convention to be held Aug . 10,
11 and 12 at Otterbein College
was announced . A trip to the
Ripley Arts and Crafts Fair
was set for July I.
Mrs. Lois Walker gave the
gardening til'S noting that
now is the time to set out
chrysanthemum plants and
l1l sow seeds of beets, carrols
and leaf lettuce . She said thai
the final planting of croms
from glads and iris can be
made now and to remember
to· plant oriental poppies
before Sept. I.
Mrs . Fetty won the
traveling prize. The hostess
served refreshments,

MAN CRUSHED
RAVENNA, Oh10 (UPI) Barney DeOerio, ii£, Poland,
Ohio , was crushed to death
Saturday while unloading a
shipment of groceries at a
supermarket here.
Police said DeOerio was
standing behind his truck
when the brake line snapped
allowing the vehicl~ to roll
back and pin to the dock.

pay your

I
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'"'..

Iii

rent

Middle port Ohio
j

est

on your savings?

no rpatte(what .you're looki,ng
for In .saVIngs or Investment

certificates. ..
RAil

•

II you 're sick or diubled
tnd can 't work. N1tlonw!dl!l
can he lp you keep your
ftmHy end hOme logether.
Ctll an agent1nd see.

P. J,
804

PAULEY

'Ill· Main

GOLDEN PASSBOOK

3- M ONTH CE RTIFICATE

5 ~. 5:.~.~%

when you can't!

11 !11)

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Wlwn il com!'s to your savi ngs, you • This i~ exa ctl y ' whai Ohio Va lley
wa n! II fair rl'iurn , ilw hi glwsl le- Hank wa nts and prom ises I heir de.ga ily possible, with a guarantee of f""i lors. No wondPr savi ng s desafdy for _vour fu nds, anrl ac-'
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In 15 to 32 pml !) lzes (Water remova l in 24 hours)
Priced from S129.00 up

DAIRY PRINCESS
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Norma Rhodes, 20, Salem, a
junior majoring in home
economic s at Ohio State
University, will represent the
Ohio dairy ind\IStry this year
as th e 1976 Ohio Dairy
Princess.
She was crowned Saturday
in competition where girls
!rom 46 counties were
entered.

I
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The Admlrrtl dehumidif ier ~;;an
ot her damp areas mor e co"&gt;lortob
exces s m oisture out ot th e

Whdll pay you the

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Michelle of Columbus; Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Sayre and
Paula of Portland.

OhioValley Bank
Gnll•pofrs . Oh io

·

~em be r FDI ':

The leading savings plans are at the leading savings bank.

POMEROY

·----·-----------------·
'·

'

�. ::::-:;:;:~:::::::::-:'
:-:·:·:·:::::·:::::::::·:· :·: ·:·.·:· :·. ·:·:.;.. ·:·: -:.

Norman cops
'" sixth victory
HOUSTON
t UP I)
Cincinnait Reds left -hander
Fred Norman surrendered
only four hits in seven innings
Sunday to help the Reds get
by the Houston Astros 4-2 but he couldn 't have gotten
the win without clutch hitting
from his teallUlli!tes.
Cesar Geronimo had the
biggest bat lor the Reds,
picking up three Bingles and
Pete Rose provided a single
in the second inning Which
brought UJe first two runs
across UJe pia te .
Geronimo's bunt single in
the second was followed by a
walk and an infield single by
Norman. With the Ulree men
on, Rose hit a shot into the
outfield for a two-run scoring
single, giving the Reds a 2.{)
lead.
Mter Houston scored a run
on two walks and Roger
_Met•ger 's single in the
second, UJe Reds came back
with two unearned runs m the
fourth.
Geronimo beat out an
infield hit ~d Mike Lum

Unser

walked to start the uprismg
and loser J .R Rtchard threw
wildly to third on Norman 's
bunt attempt, allowi ng one
run to score. Rose walked to
load the ba ses and Ken
Griffey 's infield out scored
another run .
Norman , raising, his record

wms at

AStraGraph

0

GEMINI (Moy 21-J une 201 It
ISil ' l hk.f&gt; YOU IO m&lt;Jk(l f' XCUSeS
tr~·

lo dn toil . !~'

f' II OI

ynu llllqll l

II yrm r e

Ill

ft'S·i Ul)

CA NCER (June 21 -July 221
1h('w s a qood posstbt ltl y yo u
CU ll d

bl~

PE'rl!lY · WISQ

a nd

PO\IIl CI· foOitS il tortn y A.::;k ft rs t tl

Pocono

Uiddlc UriUing-

to 6-1, allowed only three hits
over the first six innings, but dcfcated Lctur1
Bob Watson homered for
Houston in the sixth and
Alter falling behind · 3.{),
Rawly Eastwick came in to visiting Diddle Drilling came
pitch the last two tnnings.
from behind to defea t host
Letart (Miller Homes)
Sunday in Ind ependent
baseball action , 10-5. Ronnie
Bachtel picked up the win by
fanning ten. Leading hitter
was Greg Roush with Ulree
singles, Wallbrown had a
.. Berntce BecJe Oso1
triple, Pete Sayre had two
singles, Fitch got a single
For Tuesdny , June 29, 1976
and double, and Knapp,
ARIES (March 21 ~ April 19)
Snodgrass, Salser, and Theiss
AwJI(I Stlf'klllq llnnnc1al lav01s
each had a single.
lr om per so ns you kno w on a
J)ill \ ly 50C ii:l l brt SIS 1 hey mrt y
Steve Jenkins took the loss
tl('llp fro m a ~ t·n !&gt;e' ol ob iJga t ton
and teamed with Tucker to
bul tlwy won t li~e 11
str ike · out eight, but he
TAURUS (April 20 -Moy 201 Oe
walked eight too. For Miller
cml'liil tudny lest you say
Homes , Gary Roush had
5Q !!W!tl lllQ llll 1tll ll klf1 qi )' t il ~!
three singles, Sheppard got a
II)IQhlllu rt flllOIIJP r piH IIC:II i&lt;Hiy
double
and stngle , and
' ' lnmtly member H II be hard
Tucker had a double.
to mc1kl' .uncnd s
f)U f th ,l! &lt;:; jU S ! WIHl l

•

PICTURES OFFERED
All coaches in the Meigs
County area wishing to
have his (or her) team's
picture taken lor the Dally
Sentinel, should leave your
name and phone numher at
the office on Court Street,
or phone Ule office, 992·
2156, and a photographer
will call and , make
arrangements. This must
be done by Friday, July 2.

"O nH •tru nq

w tll la s1

no t t1ow

rn ucll 1! co•; ts
LEO {July 23· Aug . 22) You r tnrwr

l tnC ettatr1 \ y

d tlli i('S your
IOdfl y
Others co ultl srn se 111rs Jncl be
rf&gt; lur l &lt;~n t to fo llo w as rP&lt;~ d rly as

MT. POCONO. Pa . I UP!)
- AI Unser lives by the
philosophy that "once you' re uo;udl
a winner, you know you cun
VIRGO (Aug . 23 -Sepl. 21 The
do it again ."
Pn d ., do nnt tu•, lrly u u-. me&lt;r tt':&gt;
The United States Auto toctay Oorr I use t ;~chcs 111.11
Club's championship trail has othPr '&gt; cnn crrtr crw you lor
been lull of potholes fm· Unser Somf" woultl we tco rllP 111C opsince his ba ck-to -back por1l11ll1y
Indianapolis victories in 1970- LIBRA t Sept. 23 -0cl. 231 Don 1
lit:' rncon&lt;; t derat r~ nl c los e
71.
T11e
37-yeal'-&lt;&gt;ld
Albuquerque, N.M., driver tr to rrrt&lt;; t ocl t~y You ll o tt c nd
very ttur cklv tl yo ri ren ege on
entered Sunday's Schaefer VOLH
:; tr;rr e o t thP. work or th e
500-mile ra ce wit hout a CllPt.k
trtumph -since the Michigan
SCORPIO (Oc t. 24 -Nov. 22 1
250 in 1974.
AdrrPvrrrq •torrr qoal s rs rmp or On past performances at
tant hu t you II frnd the quest
Pocono raceway, Unser 's c an lo c;; r~ lis luster rl you ad chances were not considered V;)IICC' your cause by
A-I. He crashed into the wall downctr adrng anotht"r
in the first la'p of the 1973 SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23-0ec .
race, finished 22nd ml974 and 21) Y o~r ll ll&lt;'IVe small pa trf' nce
lor thnsc no t rn 11111 accord w 11h
was 32nd last year.
you r ld P ,t !'i 111o u qh th err
"But I never had doubts JCrl SOil S rl rC valtd
about my ability to win, "
Unser drawled. He proved CAPRICORN ( Dec . 22 - Jan .
19) Yot r may r un rn t o a
that by leading 75 of the final
pro bl('m tOdA y wr111 one wr th
80 laps ·s unday to beat Mike
w llO n1 vou st1a rc .:1 11 rn ter est
Moseley by 3.2 seconds.
Oprnrurr ~ wr it ctrll er ThP r esu lts
It 's possible Un ser was the co uld IJf' ~Hl r · r o d uc l rv c
only one who believed victory
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20 -Feb. 191
could be achieved after he Drl trcxrH decr sron s bo qqle yo ur
was down two laps with 200 rnrnd tocl::ly Seek tile .:id\lrCe or
miles to go. He lost an ea rly &lt;1 trwl! ecl co unselor
lead when his hydraulic atr PISCES (Feb. 20 -March 201
jack malfunctioned on a 58th- Dorr I vnlurr teer 11Pip wr th a JOb
you re not lamrllCH wrth Th ere
lap pitstop that cost him 311,
cou lcl be CJ:pen sr ve tools or
seconds.
mrl tcr r.11 you co uld .?ICCr denwUy
Unser dropped another lap Ill Ill
and was confronted with near
disaster when his Parnelli\:JOU(
Cosworth ran over some
debris on the track and
oirthelay
ripped his left rear tire.
June 29, 19 76
"I thought I was going to
The rewards fo r you r etl ort s
lose it," Unser blinked. "The
\111s )' OM may pay off more
tire went as I was passing
slowly t han you ant rcrpated
Janet Guthrie down the front
Don 'l be d rscouraqed Later.
straight. It was bad. The tire
you' ll pr c k up mom ent urn swrft ly
was coming apart and I was
just wishing there was an
opening in the pit wall. I had
FINALS TODAY
to go all .the way around
CHAGRIN FALLS, Ohio
before I could get mto the I UP II - JoAnne Carner
pits."
needed to charge and Judy
There were 17 lead changes Rankin wanted to recharge.
during the 200 lap race and
Those two superstars of the
nine different drivers held Ladies Professional Golf Ascommand at some stage of sociation went head-to-head
the event.
today in the final round of the
Wally Dallenbach finished $100,000 Babe Za harias
a distant UJird to Moseley, In vitational Classic with
22.5 seconds back. Johnny Rankin holding a three-shot
Rutherford, a 1974 winner lead goi ng into the round in
here and victor in the 1976 Ule battle for the $15,1100 first
Indy 500, was fourth and prize.
Mario Andretti finished fi!U1.
Guthrie, the first woman to
drive in a USAC 500-mile
race , completed 89 laps
before a malfunctioning gear
boK and overheating forced
VALENCIA , Calif. (UP!)
her from the race. She was - Sue Fish, a 17-year-old
credited with a 24th place h~h K hool ~n~r h om
finish, seven notches higher Monterrey Park, Calif.,
than defending champio n Sundsy captured UJe 250cc
A.J. Foyt, who went out on and 125cc titles at the third
the 31st lap with a blown annual Women 's National
engine.
Motocross championships.
Unser averaged 143.622
Fish, riding Yamahas, won
mph for the race that was both of her 30-minute 250cc
slowed by nine yellow caution classes, captured one 125cc
flags and took three hours class and. finished second in
and 28 minutes to complete. the other 125cc class in
Unser's margin was large temperatures that hovered
enough for him to fuel up on around 110 degrees at Indian
the 18lst lap and retain Dunes Cycle Park.
command. He led the race for
Second and third in the
106 laps and was one of 17 250cc competition was Joann
cars still running at the end . Miley, 30, San Juan
The first four finishers Capistrano, Calif., and
were in the sa me lap. Johanna Stenersen, 18,
Andrettl and sixth-place Monterrey Park.
driver Roger McCluskey
In the 125cc competition.
completed
198
laps . Stenersen was runner-up folAndretli's engine blew five . lowed by Unda Barnes, 21 ,
miles from Ule finish line.
Houston.
'
l(' ,l (l('rSilip

0

ql l&lt;l h ! I OS.

MONTE CARLO IUPli The World Boxtng Council
Sunday stripped world
heavyweigh t cha mpi on
Muhammad Ali of its 1975
boxer of the year award,
WBC
President
Jose
Sulaiman
of
Mexico

Mets maul Cubs, 13-3
By JACK SA UNOERS
UPI Sports Writer
If th e New York Mets ever
decide to vacate Sheo
Stadium, it 's lik ely they'll put
tn a bid for Wrigley Field.
The Mets compl eted a
three-game sweep of their
series with th e Chicago C.'ubs
Sunday with a 13-3 rout,
capping a 30-run weekend.
"Sometimes we don't score
30 runs in a monUJ ," said
Mets first basema n Ed
Kranepool , who went Ulreefor -four , includin g his sixth
home run, for three runs
batted in Sunduy.
ln Uleir last Wrigley Park
series with the C'ubs, the
meek-hitting Mcts scored 19
runs in three games, although
they lost two of them.
Eight of the Mets runs
Sunday were scored in the

sing! ~ .

Geiberger champt

on a two-r un double by F'oii
and .Jim Lyttle 's run-scoring
sing le. Foli singled home
wha t proved to be the winning
run in UJe fifth .
Dodgers 12, Giants 8
Ellie Rodriguez and Manny
Mota, who had his lOOth
career pinch hit, singled in
runs in the fi lth inn ing
following one-out singles by
Ed Goodson and Bill ·RUBsell
to brea k a 6-6 tie. Babby
Murcer hit a three-run homer
in the third and a solo homer
in the eighth for the Giants.
Don Sutton struggled through
five i1mings , but received
cn'&lt;lit for his sevenui win in
14 decistons.
Padres 3, Braves 2·
Tito Fuentes punched a
single past third base with
two out in the ninth inning to
score Ted Kubiak from third
with the wmning run. Brent
Strom went the distance to
~et his fir st wm in his last five
starts and even his record at
7-7, whtlc Andy Messersmith,
a wtnner in his last ftve
gmnes, was the loser to fall to
7-1&gt;.

RAST PROVIDENCE, R.I
IU PI ) - Bob Byman of
Raleigh , N.C., a former
USGA junior champion, fired
a oneover-par 70 Sunday l1l
win the 15th annual Northeast
· Amateur Golf Tournament at
U1c Wannan10isett Country
Club.

OAK BROOK, !11. ( UPI) AI Geiberger regards himself
as a conservative golfer- just
the style needed to give him
his lOth career triumph, a
Qne-&lt;;troke victory Sunday in
tile $200,1100 \v.Stern oP.n.
" lt is so tough it jumps
right up and grabs you, "
Geiberger said of the 7,002yard Butler National Golf
Club layout.
"My game pian was to be
conservative, but I deviated
from it and it didn't work.
You ca n't be a bold,
aggressive player on this
course because it is going l1l
hurt you more times than it

wiD help you.
''On this course yo11 reaDy
have to think and be patient
and wait for the pars 8lld
birdies to come. It's a
precision golf course."
His fOur-()Ver-par 288, good
for first prize money of
$40,000, was the highest
winning 11ltal on the PGA tour
since Jack Nicklaus won the
1972 U.S. Open at Pebble
Beach with a six-()veriJar
290.
Geiberger, starting the
final day Sunday five strokes
behind Bob Dickson, abo
1made the tour's comeback of
Ule year.

TR¥
nut,I\L.u F.

en

w

a:

.....
z
w

RIVIERE

OR A. J. STA!HU Ol. FillMAN lMLn
FOR PRICES CALL COU£CT
r==AREA COO£ (114,__,

L_ 252-3181 ~

One or Two Day Full Denture
Service, Partials, Extractions,
X· Rays, Cleanmg

an energy-sa~ device
right attpe tip Ofyour
fmger.

nuts, potato chips, PIJIICh and
coffee were served. The
recently with a bridal shower plates, cups, napkiru; and nut·
at the Slusher home, cups carried out the true love
Pomeroy, honoring Christine theme of the shower.
Bailey, bride-&lt;!lect of E.
Attending were Mrs. Irene
Michael Jolmson, Mason. Bailey, mother of the brideThe wedding will take place elect; Mrs. Mary Jolmson,
on July 17.
mother of the prospective
Games were played and groom, and Mrs. Dorothy
prizes awarded. The gift Bailey, Mrs. Mary McAngus,
table featured a "true love" Mrs. Max Davis and Joyce,
theme with gold and white Mrs. Vickie Gilkey, Miss
streamers extending from Sarah Bechtle, Miss Vickie
the ceiling to the corners of Grate, Mrs. Brenda Johnson;
the table. Suspended from Mrs. Naomi Smith, Mrs. Jan
the ceiling over the table was Knapp, Mrs. Linda Darnell,
a bride and groom replica Mrs. Dorothy Reeves, Mrs.
with love birds encircling it.
William Morris, Tony and
A gold lace cover was used Randy Jewell ,
on the refreslunent table. The
Sending gifts were Mrs.
centerpiece was. a crystal Evelyn Ihle, Mrs. Diana
conta~er with teardrops
Harrison, Miss Jerry Bass,
with three gold tapers and Mrs. Cathy Bailey, Mrs.
flowers all on a round Millie Miller and daughters,
cutglass mirror. Wedding Mrs. Jo Worley and Buddy
bell sandwiches, ribbon cake, McAngus.
strawberry ice cream, mints.

"Personhood" Can Be Awkward
Dear Helen:
As a fellow writer, I'm sure you'll sympathize:
I do a book review column for our newspaper. In answer to
a reader-query, I wrote, "Ask your librarian - she's there to
help you."
Irhmediately came a letter from a women's affirmative
actionist: Librarians can be male; too, you know as can
secretaries, kindergarten teachers , also nurses a nd housekeepers. Please don't stereotype certain jobs as "female only"
the use

of

"she. ' 1 Conversely, don't use

"he"

w ill be held on fh e budge t

prepared by lhe V1 1lage ol
Midd l e port , Meig s Co unty ,
Ohio for fh e nex t succeeding
F1sca l year , ending Decem ber

3 I. 19 77
Su ch heanng wt ll be held a t

I he Vi ll age Hall a l Midd leporl.

Ohio

Gene Grate, Clerk ,

Village ol M1dd teporl. Ohio
June 28

NOT I CE T O CONTRACTORS
STA TE OF OHIO
DEPARTMEN T
OF TRANSPORT AT ION
Columbus, Ohio
June11. 1976

Contract Sales l ega l Copy
No . 76-581
U NIT PRICE CONTRACT

:~

~

I~

JOAN ROUSH HUDSON , her husband, Bill, a sergeant in
UJe U. S. Marines, and her two children, Curtis, 17, and Cindy,
16, wiD be spending the next three years in Okinawa . The
family will leave Jacksonville, N. C. the middle of July and
after visiting here with her parents, Mr . and Mrs. Alhert
Roush, and in Arkansas with his parents, they'D be on their
way to California and then Okinawa.
Another son, ~eff Matheny , graduated from high school
this month and on July I will leave from Wiimington, N. C. for
Texas to begin basic training with the Air Force.
VICKY AND MORTON Barnes ar• doing great in Brazil,
Ind., where he ls employed as a ceramic technician with Logan
Clay and·she's taken a summer job. However, Vicky ha s been
accepted at St. Mary's of the Woods College and in late AugUBt
will begin training there to hecome a medical laboratory
technician.
This weekend they were in Pomeroy for a visit and last
we heard, Vicky's parents, Fay and Clifford Manley, were to
bave returned to Brazil with them for a short stay.
FOR THE ARTS and crafts enthusiasts, Monday will be a
nice day for you to spend at Rutland. That afternoon in the
gymnasium there, a variety of demonstrations will be going
on .
Kathryn Evans will be working with ceramics,.everything
from pouring the molds 4&gt; the final finish . The Rutland
Btcentennial Committee advises that she will display
greenware, fired and unfired, and then show the same ceramic
piece finished in several different ways .
Then, too, Ule Rutland senior ciiliens will do a variety of
thinlls.... Quiltilll(, crochetin~. making novelty items.
Betty Carpenter, cake decorating tea cher at Rio Grande
Conununity College, will also be giving demonstrations . Sne
will conduct two sessions on novelty cakes and then award the
cakes to someone there watching the demonstrations.
And speaking of cake decorating , the contest on Saturday
should attract numerous entries. It's a ftrst for Meigs County,
but not only that, a number of Meigs area women have been
enrolled in courses . Mrs. Carpenter has conducted several
extension courses at the Rutland United Methodist Church in
recent months.
Another thing about SaturdayWe earlier reported that a Maypr's Trophy would be
awarded to Ule "hest of show" in cake decorating. We now
understand that one will also be awarded to the "best of show "
in the bicentennial flower show.

indiscriminately.
I realize in this instance, I could have avoided the "she "
FOR SOMEONE who asked , the bells will toll across the
replacing it with ''who," but sometimes a writer is stuck: ;,e land at 2 p. m. on July 4.
must either use the awkward "he or she " or be accused of
sexism.
. Since we now have "Ms." as part of our language, isn't it
hme we invented a word for "he or she?" And also for "his or
her?" - FOR PERSONHOOD WITHOUT PAIN
Such words f" ti" for "he or she," and ljtis' ' for " his or

LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF PUBLIC
HEARING
OF THE BUDG E T OF
Mt DOLE PORT, OHIO
Notice is hereby g1 ven th a t
on th e ll lh d ay ol July , 1976, a t
7 30 p. m a Pub l ic Hea ring

J une 21 , 28

Mrs. Edna SlQIIher and

Mrs. Judy Jewell entertained

~

.

Bobo reunion
held recently

Social
Calendar

RUTLAND - The !lobo
reunion was held recently at
Forest Acres Park with a
basket dinner at noon hetng
enjoyed by 39 persons.
Mrs. Nora Bobo was the
oldest one present. Others
attending were Mrs. Pearl
Edwards, Sr., Cheshire; Mr.
and Mrs. Pearl Edwards, Jr.,
Becky, John, David and
Mary, Chester ; Miss Susie
Edwards, Middleport; Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph · Edwa rds,
Joy , Troy·; Anita and Stacy,
Middleport;
Mrs. Joe
Edwards, Sr., Janet and Joe,
Jr., Cheshire; Billy Ross, Mr.
and Mrs. Clyde Van Cooney,
Mesa, Arizona; Debby and
Melissa Van Cooney, Key
West, Fla.; Miss Hazel Van
Cooney, Middleport; Mr. and
Mrs . Arthur Eblin, Pomeroy;
Mr. and Mrs. Carl DeLong ,
Jeff and Cathy, Pomeroy;
Vi cky John ston, Salem
Center; Mr. -a nd M'rs.
Kenneth Eblin, Tony, J ohn ,
Jim and Janey, Rutland ,
R.D., and Mr. and Mrs.
Wilbu r
Van
Cooney,
Sandusky.

her") have already been suggested , but unfortunately they
haven't as yet caught on with the American public.
MONDAY
Unfortunately, too, I can't remember the name of the
SPECIAL MEETING
suggestor . IT ti will introduce timsell, I will glady publish tis Racine Chapter 134 Monday
name in the colunm, with appropriate fanfare. It's high time at Masonic Temple at 8 p.m.
we simplified this equality tiling . - H.
for purpose of initiation.
· +++
OF.
all
MEETING
Dear Helen :
interested
people
for
the
I've gone to all the classes around : sewing, .rug-making
choir practtce , YWCA. Have tried volunteer work, group bicentennial observance and
therapy and senior citirens clubs. Yet I've never made a ox.roast, Monday, 8 p.m. at
the Rutland Fire Department
frjend !
,
headquarters.
Each time I start new. Each time I fail.
I design and paint, write poems and short articles - not
WEDNESDAY
ba d either. I've even tried politics and have written my
WEEKEND
Meeting at
congressman. Now I'm reduced l1l walking my dog and
Ash
St.
Free
Will
Baptist
reading half the books in the library. With my track record a
Church,
Middleport,
begins
job wouldn't help my loneliness, even if I could find one. What
Wednesday,
7:30
p.m.
with
next ' - SLOW, QUillT 60
Paul Taylor from Utah as
evangelist. Public invited.
Dear 60:
You may be a quie t 60, but you certainly aren't "slow!" In
THURSDAY
fact, I'd guess that a good part of your problems stems from
movillg too fast. You've sampled "everything around," from
EVANGELINE CHAPhobby classes to therapy, but - perhaps anticipating rejection
TER, O.E.S. 7:30 Thursday,
- have you dropped out before anyone discovered you were
Mtddleport Masonic Temple.
there?
Trouble with the quiet ones is they sit in a back row
expecting others to make the first move. But many of those
others are shy too . They'd rather not risk a rebuff from
, someone who appears "unfriendly."
My suggestion: Don 't just enroll. Participate! Ask
questions, smile, show interest, reach out. Start conversations.
Stop worrying about the impression YOU'LL make and think
Instead how you cna put your neighbor at ease. (And admit
you're shy- it's a great opener.)
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
You're a well-read person of many talents and as such Theiss, Vinton, Mr. and Mrs.
you'd be an asset to any organization. Offer your help and Ted Bailey and children,
you'll soon learn how much you are needed. - H.
Patriot, Mr. and Mrs. Otis
Bailey and daughter, Racine,
++ +
Dear Helen:
Elaine Lehew, Portland,
I'm tired of all this diet talk. If God had meant us to be spent Father's Day at
the home of the Rev. and Mrs.
pencil-&lt;;lim, He wouldn't have given us these huge appetites. FATTY
Lawrence Giuesencamp and
Nicki Van Meter. Miss Van
Dear Fatty :
Meter recently returned
You sound like the man who said, "If God meant us to go from a three week visit at the
to the moon, He wouldn't have given us TV sets so we could home of her sister, Mrs.
watch astronauts from here." - H.
Theiss.
The Rev. and Mrs.
Gluesencamp recently were

Su laiman said

Re v . 8 17·73

Christine Bailey

by

,~

wCommunity
~:j C
· By Charlene
i Orner
Hoeflich
•
~

Dear FPWP:

disrep ule,"

PMS - OOOS!&gt;SI
Sea ted proposals w1 11 be
rec erved at th e o1fi ce of the
D1r ecto r ot th e Ohio Depart .
me nt of
Tr ansportation ,
Co lumbus , Ohio, until 10 :00
AM , Ohto St andard T ime,
Tuesday , July 13. 1976, f or
rmprovements in
Dis trict 10 {Pl an 10 A l
Athens , Gallia . Hoc krng ,
Me i gs , Morgan , Noble , VInton
and Washington Co unties ,
Oh io , on vario us roads in the
Ci t y ol Athen s, the V illages of
Chauncey , Cool v il l e and m
Athens County ; the Crty of
Ga l l ipolis and in Ga llia
coun Ty ; in Hoc king County ;
tl'1e Vr ttag e of Rac ine and in
Me rgs County ; in Morg an
Coun ty . 1n N oble Coun ty , in
Vinton Co unty , the Vi l lage of
Beverly and in Wash ington
Co un ty , bv app l ying paint to
edge, ce nt er and lan e l ine s.
Proj ec t L ength - 0 fe e t or- 0
mile
Work Length - 0 feet or 0
mrle
The Ohio Departm ent of
Tr an sportatron
h e reby
not i f ies all bidders that it writ
aff irma tive ly insure that in
any c ontra c t entered tnt o
pursuant
to
th i s
ad
verltseme nt ,
m in or i ty
business en terprises w i ll be
afford ed full opportunity to
submi t bid s in r esponse to th is
inv i tation and w ll l no t be
drscrim inaled against 011 th e
grounds of ra ce, color , or
natural orig in in con side r at ron
for an award
" M in i mum wage rates tor
lh 1s prolect
ha ve
oeen
predetermined as requrred by
l aw and are set forth in the bid
proposa l. "
" The date set for completion
of this work sha ll be set fo r th
In the bidding ~roposeL "
Each bidder shel l
be
required to file w i th h i s b id a
cer t ifi ed check or cashier 's
che ck for an a moun 1 equal to
fi't'e per cent ol his bid, but in
no even t morf' tha n f if ty
thousand dollar s, or a bond fo r
ten per cent of h is bid , payab l e
to the Director .
Bidders must apply , o n the
proper f orms , f or qualif 1cat ion
at least ten days prior to the
da te set tor opening bids in
ac c ordance w rlh Chap te r 5525
Ohio Revised Code .
Plans ahd specificat ions are
on file in the Department of
Transportation and the off i ce
of
the
District
Depu t y
D , rector
The Director rese r ves tt1e
right to re ject any and a ll bids .
RIC H ARD 0 JACKSON
01 RECTOR

:r-:&lt;w.=,;,;:;:::;:;:.:--::,,,,~,.,.,.,.,.,.,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,;,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,~,,,,,,,~:

0

You have

Sulaima n sa id Ali had
brought boxing into disrepute
because of his exhibition
match aga in st Japane se
wrestler Antomo Inoki
Saturday .
"Our r ec ognition and
trophy to him represented the
fee ling of our federation
members, who now feel very
embarrassed and disgusted
at Ali's action in bringing
into

in the socond .Jerry Grote
Mid
John Miln er also
co nt ributed run -scorin g
singles in the second . The
Mets got their last three runs
in the sixth on Wayne
Garrett's run-Koring double
and Jay Kleven's two-run

Bill Madlock homered for
Chicago in the sixth off
winning pitcher Craig Swan,
4-7 , and Joe Wallis hit a tworun homer in the ninth off
reliever Ski~ Lockwood.
Elsewhere in the NL,
Philadelphi a defea ted St.
Louis, 6-2; Mor treal edged
Pittsburgh, 4-3; Los Angeles
outlasted San l"rancisco, 128; San Diego nipped Atlanta.
3-2, and Cincinnati downed
Houston, 4-2.
l'hillies 6, Cardinals 2
Bob Boone's first ma jor
second inning, a Na tiona l lea1,'1Je gram! slam capped a
League high this season and six-run, fourth inning an d
equalling a New York team helped Jim Lonborg to his
record for mosl nms i11 on~ lOth win of the yea r. St. Louis
inning.
carried a 1.{) lead into the
"It 's a good ballpark to hit fourU1 when the Phillies se nt
in," said Kranepool , who ha s 10 ba tters to the plate and
hit safely in 11 of his last 13 scored six runs in .an inning
games, batting .409 by going fo r the sixth time this sea son .
111-for-44. He hit a two-run
Expos 4, Pirate• 3
homer in the second , Ius sixth
Tim Folt drove in three
homer this season, and had a runs wtUJ a double and a
sacrifice ny m the third smglc and 11-year vetera n
Sunday .
Woody Fryman worked 6 2-3
Mike Pltillips also drove in innings to gain his 10001
U1ree runs, hitting his third career v1e1ory and raise hts
homer in as lljany days to 1976 record to 8-5. The Expos
lead off the game and took a 3 • 0 lead in
banging out a two-run single the third off loser Doc Medich

announced.

box1 ng

Shower en te rtains

5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Mooday, June 28, t976

4- The Daily Sentinel. Middleport- l'omeroy. 0 ., Monday. June 28 1976

Stiversville News Notes
at Blackwater Falls, W. Va.
and in Virginia and Maryland
on vacation. They viBited An·
nie Thomas and daughter at
Palynna, Va. The Gluesen·
camps joined by Garnet and
Henry Ervine of Racine also
visited recently in Gatlinburg, Tenn. with Mr. and
Mrs. Rayinond Carpenter
and son, and Mr. and Mrs. L.
Swartz and family .
Recent visitors at the
Gluesencamp home were
Leah and Lona Greer, Don
Meadows and son and Mrs.
Glen Carpenter.
Mrs. Mike Evans and
children were recent visitors
at the home of Mrs. Ada Van·
Meter.

Turners return home

In the hands of the right people, the tip of a
fmger can be an impressive device that helps
keep electric costs in line.
Especially when that finger flips off light
switches, radios and television sets before it
leaves the room.
Or when it nudges refrigerator doors
closed between snacks and waits until the
dishwashers, clothes washers and dryers are
ftlled before it turns them on.
No one's going to tell you that running
around your home turning off lights and

&gt;.

things will dramatically lower your electric
bill. But it can help. In the battle to keep
your bills down, conserving power is an
unportant weapon.
And, while you're fighting on the home
front, we're working to help keep your bills
in line, too. By continuing to expand our
search for economical fuel sources and to
hold the line on building and operating costs.
Working together. It's the only way we
can hope to lick the problems that affect the
cost of electricity today. And tomorrow.

Ohio Power Company
Working to(Tt&gt;ther is the only way.

Mr. and Mrs. Joe Turner
bave returned from Bucyrus
where they spent three weeks
with their son and daughterin-law, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Turner and family. They
went especially for the high
school graduation of their
granddaughter, Sandra .
Following graduation, Mr.
and Mrs. Turner entertained
with an open house for their
daughter.
. Speaker for the corrunence- .
ment was U. S. Representative Temyson Guy-

er. He used the five
"ships" or American life craftsmanship, stewardship,
citizenship, moral leadership
and friendship
as
necessary quallties for
success.
While in Bucyrus the birthday of Gary Turner, 17, was
also celebrated..

LAFF - A- DAY
.'l

PUBLIC RECORD
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio
(UPI) - City Law Director
William J . Higgins has ended 1
a controversy between the 1
aty Service Corrunission and I
city cou!lcil by saying I
commission tests are matters
of public record, once I
eligibillty
tests
are I
· certified.
I
The comrnissioo had denied I
city council's right to review I
certain tests that some I
councibnen suspected might 1
contain questions not related 1
to Jobs.
I
The commission contended 1
that
releasing
its I
examinations would violate
the security of its procedures. 1
Higgins issued his ruling 1
I
Saturday.
·

FAMILYGATIIERS
A surprise Father's Day
celebration was held at the
home of Mr. and Mrs, Vernon
Bing with aU of their children
and their famllies home for " \'mi:-~:~ ;&gt;i;m-pty 1
llUIId
the day, The I[I'OUP included hl11\ o . lo•~ er doghouse ...
Sharon Bing, Mr. 111d Mrs.
Bill McElroy, Jeffrey 8lld
Joey, Pomeroy; Mr.andMre,
Vernon Bing, Sonny, Melissa,
Dwane, Tony , Gallipolis; Mr.
OFFICE
RS : 9:30 to 2, 2 to 5 (CLOSE
and Mrs . Doug Hudson,
AT NOON ON THURS.l- EAST COURT
Dayton, and Mrs. Pearl
Hoffman, Middleport.

N.

Couple surprised on anniversary
Mr . and Mrs. Thomas D.
Sayre of Great Bend, Rt. 1,
Portland were surprised by
relatives SUnday, June 20 at
their home in honor of their
40th weddtng anniversary.
Sons,
Dwain
of
McCurtchenville, Ohio and
Roland of West Carrollton,
Ohio and their wives hosted
the remembran ce event.
They prepared and served a
barb ecued chicken dinner

and later in afternoon served Raymond Furbee and
homemade Ice cream and a Richard , Route 2, Racine;
decorated heart shaped cake Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bidwell and
furnished by Mrs . -Marion
Furbee and punch made by
Mrs. Raymond Furbee.
Gue&gt;ts present included
Mrs. Sayre's mother, Mrs.
Marion Furbee , Portland;
Mr . and Mrs. Robeft
Schaefer, Susan and Gregy,
Kettering; Mr . and Mrs _

Dehumidifier

Workshop scheduled
RliTLA.ND - A workshop
for the bicentennial flower
show to be staged Saturday at
Rutland was set for 6:30p.m.
at the home of Mrs. Joan
Fetty during a recent
meeting of the Rutland
Friendly Gardeners at the
home of Mrs. Suzy Carpenter .
AIBO discussed during the
meeting was the Regatta
flower show with Mrs .
Carpenter winning several
ribbons , and th e Mei gs
County Fair shows to be
staged Aug . 18 and 19, and
Aug. 20 and 21. A donation
was made by the club toward
the expenses of the Regatta
show.
An invitation to attend the
Rutland Garden Club 's open
meeting at 8 p.m. Monday at
SESSION SET
A camp skills training
session will be held
tomorrow
tit
Camp
Kiashuta. All leaders and
helpers for the Big Bend
Girl Scout day camp, July
12 through 16, are asked to
attend the all-Gay training
session which will be
conducted by camp
personnel and senior boy
scouts and their leaders.
For
all
those
participating in the day
camp program, Mrs. Judy
Werry, camp director, asks
that they save three pound
coffee cans ilnd gallon jugs
with handles for special
project work. She sayd that
plastic tablecloths are also
needed,

Ule United Methodist Church
was read. The Ohio
Association of Garden Club's
convention to be held Aug . 10,
11 and 12 at Otterbein College
was announced . A trip to the
Ripley Arts and Crafts Fair
was set for July I.
Mrs. Lois Walker gave the
gardening til'S noting that
now is the time to set out
chrysanthemum plants and
l1l sow seeds of beets, carrols
and leaf lettuce . She said thai
the final planting of croms
from glads and iris can be
made now and to remember
to· plant oriental poppies
before Sept. I.
Mrs . Fetty won the
traveling prize. The hostess
served refreshments,

MAN CRUSHED
RAVENNA, Oh10 (UPI) Barney DeOerio, ii£, Poland,
Ohio , was crushed to death
Saturday while unloading a
shipment of groceries at a
supermarket here.
Police said DeOerio was
standing behind his truck
when the brake line snapped
allowing the vehicl~ to roll
back and pin to the dock.

pay your

I
I

'"'..

Iii

rent

Middle port Ohio
j

est

on your savings?

no rpatte(what .you're looki,ng
for In .saVIngs or Investment

certificates. ..
RAil

•

II you 're sick or diubled
tnd can 't work. N1tlonw!dl!l
can he lp you keep your
ftmHy end hOme logether.
Ctll an agent1nd see.

P. J,
804

PAULEY

'Ill· Main

GOLDEN PASSBOOK

3- M ONTH CE RTIFICATE

5 ~. 5:.~.~%

when you can't!

11 !11)

C 1m~ou ~au

Dlrlf '

1-YEAR CERT IFICATE

2-YEAR CERTIFICATE

6 !?,,

6!?..

UTI

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Pom eroy

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Mrnrmum

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An~ rn a!ldtr ron
Qu ~r lttl y ·n~om1

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• f'l!lbte Quurury ~ ~ ~ ~ lot,ll m 11 ,000

PMII1J IC! llU maTutt WIIMI IWi l Ol Cllll ll
Wt lund!

(H)

you11 find it at ,

OhioValley Bank
'

Fur garments c1eaned,'turrier method . Cold
storage for furs, modest charges.

pt~ ·

I edt! I I AIQU IIII Cfll f i~U •!I I !U~I IInl ill

• Plr•~•• ~uarle r r, • Mrnrm11n Sl 000 CO

H-. Olk9 . Colltlfth•, Ohoo

arments
Insured

lhr ~•

II vou ~nlre on terlriiCIIU
wlrt lace Jmount ol $5 000 00 11 rnort

HIIIOntfiCII l f,. 1-rt~et Co"'Pin~

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tllld on one Jwo,

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Nlhonwode M~hlal lruuruce ' ''""OFIF

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to til tnl1 , . monlhiJ or

lour or 111 rur certrflcllts lnterur

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Why s••lih· for .lcss ihHn I he best? onrcaBon able nolic~ uf withdmwal.
Wlwn il com!'s to your savi ngs, you • This i~ exa ctl y ' whai Ohio Va lley
wa n! II fair rl'iurn , ilw hi glwsl le- Hank wa nts and prom ises I heir de.ga ily possible, with a guarantee of f""i lors. No wondPr savi ng s desafdy for _vour fu nds, anrl ac-'
tXIsit s cohl inu c to he al an
•
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cess th il tl y lu thes" fund s

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I
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PH, 992 -3428

BAKER FURNITURE

best in

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We will dry clean and store - Pay for in the
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r

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dampn e ss. II re tards Ill I
I
musty odors and
rust and gives you r home more living a rea . Available
In 15 to 32 pml !) lzes (Water remova l in 24 hours)
Priced from S129.00 up

DAIRY PRINCESS
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Norma Rhodes, 20, Salem, a
junior majoring in home
economic s at Ohio State
University, will represent the
Ohio dairy ind\IStry this year
as th e 1976 Ohio Dairy
Princess.
She was crowned Saturday
in competition where girls
!rom 46 counties were
entered.

I
I

8

The Admlrrtl dehumidif ier ~;;an
ot her damp areas mor e co"&gt;lortob
exces s m oisture out ot th e

Whdll pay you the

r•••••••••••••••••••••""l1

..
fll"fl

Michelle of Columbus; Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Sayre and
Paula of Portland.

OhioValley Bank
Gnll•pofrs . Oh io

·

~em be r FDI ':

The leading savings plans are at the leading savings bank.

POMEROY

·----·-----------------·
'·

'

�6 - The Datly Semmel Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Monct.y , June 2B, 1976

Noto~~~SL~~reNb~Tgt ·~·~n

on Second Sl reel
p/ mercy , Oh io

IN~~~::..:f,~N·

lhat

sealed b ids w ill be re ceived at
the offtce ot lhe Vtllage Clerk,

Vtllagr of
until 11

0 clock noon on the 19th of
J u ly, 1916 1 for the purch~se of
the
follow tng
parc el s

desc ribed reat es tate

CEAOL.INES
p M
Day
Before

5

Pub ltc a11on
Cllncell a tiOns

co rre c

Hans acce p ted f i rst dey of

n e Publisher reserves

Tt1a t the totloW •ng d esert bed
rea l estate belongtng to the

the right 10 edt ! or re ject
a ny
a ds
d eeme d o b

VIllage of Pomc re v •s not
needed tor any mun• c •pal
Purpos e , to W1f
Parcel 1 Lot 12 m V B
Horton 's Add111on to Pomeroy ,
Lot 1J tn v B Horton s Ad
d •tton to Pomer oy
Reference Deed
Vo lume
20S Page 387 of the Me tgs
Cou n t.,., Ohio, D eed Record s
Pa rc el 2 Begmnmg on Nv e
Str eet at the Northeast co rn er
of a lot heretofore deeded by
Cu rt is. D Ree d and Laura
A lber t a Reed to John M
Roe d el by deed dated April 24 ,
1899 re corded m Volum e 84 ,
Page 386, rec ords of Dee ds of
Meigs County, Ohto Then ce
So uth parall el w 1th N ye Stre et
e1 ghteen ( IB l feet , then ce
Wes t twenty stx 1261 fe et
thence nor th e• ght een ( 18 l
t eet , then ce East twenty stx
{ 26) f ee t to the p lace of
begtnn lng
Sav tng and e&gt;~
cep tmg a ll coal and other
m tne rat s un d erl y i ng
the
p r em1ses h ere by grant ed
Together wtt h th e nght to
m1 ne the sam e w ttll ou t any
unn ecess ar y dam ttge to the
surf ac e of th e same
Dee d Reference Volume 94
Pag e 28 6. Metgs Co unty Deed
Reco rd s
Parce l l · S1 tuat ed m th e
Town sh•P of Sal ts bury county
of Me1gs an d Sta l e of OhfO and
mo r e partiCularly bo und ed
and d esc rib ed as follow s
S•tuated In th e Village of
Pomeroy bemg Lot No 43
com mencmg on the North stde
of Co nd or Street 1n sa id C1 t y at
a s tone pla ce d at a permanent
corn er thence ru n nmg a t ngh t
angles w 1th sa td stree t 100
feet , thence runnmg parallel
w 1t h the ltne f1r st r un 100 fe et
to the street fi r st named
then ce eas t erly n long sa •d
stre e t J8 fe et t o the p la ce of
begt nnmg be1ng th e sa me
prem •ses
conveye d
to
Margare t Kau t z by C Ha mm
&lt;J nd Susan H amm h1s W1f c by
deed dated Aug Jrd , 184 f, and
re cord ed m Vol 9 pag e 449 of
the R eco r ds of Deed s Ill M e1gs
County Oh io Said p rem1 ses
ar e known as No 202' Condor
Stre et
Th e fo!!owm g r ea l es tat e
s ttuated .n th e Villag e of
Pomeroy
TownshiP
of
Sa ! •sbury County of Mc1gs
an d Sla t e of Oh10 and mo r e
par t• c u l arly bounded and
de scn bed as follow s
Be• n g Lot No 42 , on Condo r
St satd lot bemg 36 fee t front
on Condor Str ee t 1n Second
Ward of Siltd V 11tag e of
Pomeroy
Ohto , bc1 ng the
same prem1ses so ld by Jos 1ah
Hoff and w1 f e Sa rah A Hoff ,
a s are d esc nb ed m Vol 108
page 256 , Me1g s Co un ty D eed
Rec ords Sa•d prem•se s ar e
known as No 102 Condo r
Stre et
Parc•l 4 Til• follow"l9
descri bed r ea l es ta te Si tua ted

tec t lon al Th e pub l i sher
w ill no t be respons•ble lor
more than on e In cor r ect
ms.eriiOn
RATES
ForWilntAdServ lce
S cen ts per word one
•nse r t ton
Mm1mum Ch arg e $ 1 00
l .t cents per word three
conse cut1ve •n.sert.ons
26 cents pe r word s• x
con secutive in se rti ons
25 Per Cen t DI SCOUn t on
pa1d ads and ad s pa•d
wtlhln 10 days

1n th• V"lagc 01 Pomeroy

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

S2 00
for
80
w ord
m1n1mum
Each add l tlont~l wor d J
c ents
BLIND ADS
Add •l lonal 25c Charge
pe r Adv ert 1sement

OFFICE HOURS
8 30 a m t o s 00 p m
Da tt v, 8 30 a m to 11 00

Noon Saturday
Phon e today 9Q1 2t 56
NOTICE S
ATTN II

ALL HOUS EW IVES

All Ya rd Sates Rummage
Por ch and Bas eme nt Por c h
and Basement Sa l es et c
must be pa1d tn advan ce
Get yours 10 ea rly by
s topp ing by our off ice at
The Daily Se nttnel. 111
Court St or wrtllng Bo x
729, Pomeroy Oh 1o 45 769
Wt th your r em11tance

In Memory
In Memory of Charl es W Fndley
who pa ssed away June 28

1966
Your memm y ~~ o ur keepsake
W1th which we II neve r port
God ha s rou 111 H1 s keepmg
W &amp; hove you Ill our heart s
Sadly m1ss ed by th e Fom •l y

Notl"es
~

NOTICE As o f June 23 1976 the
Ches ter Vo lunteer F1r e Dept
w1 ll no longe r haul wotPr
WOU LD th e lady who recetved o
wh1te long ho1red k1t1en at 1he
home ol Fredd10 Houdoshelt
Fndoy afternoon please con
ta ct M1 ss Houdoshel l at 992

2520 or 997 3345

ol Lot 141, 100 f ee l or to the
norlh !m e ot an unnu mbe red
lot
loc ated be twee n lots
numbered 14 1 an d 15 2 m sr11d
v illa ge thence sou th westerly
foll OW in g th e norlherly l1ne of
Lot 152 and th e her etofor e
mcnltoncd un numbered lot to
the nor the a s ter ly corn er of th e
pr emises now or form erly
owned by the Elberfeld Really
Company t Fo r rf'f eren ce deed
see Vol 161 page 350 ) Tne nce
southeast erl y parallel w1lh the
westerly l1n e Lot 152 of Second
Street, th en ce northcaslerly
followt ng th e south erly l• ne of
Lot 152 and the unnumlj'e r ed
Lot l oca ted between Lots 151
and 152 to the place of
beg• nn lng Tht s lot to be sold tS
known as the C1ty Hall ,
Pomeroy , Oh10
The re tS a! iO mcluded a
strip of land on the easterly
s1de of the here1n desc r1 bed
pr em1se s, extend1ng f rom
seco nd Street to the rear of
satd Lot , a strtp 5 t eet w tde for
the purpose of an alley , to be
us ed In common by t h e
Methodtsl Eptsc opa l Chur c h
of Pomeroy , Oh •O and the
here1 n named Village o f
Pomeroy , the1r
successo r s
and ass.g ns
There Is also Included the
•t ght louse an a I ley 4 fee t and
10 1nches wtde on the wes t st de
of the here•n descnbed real
est ale st•11d al ley to b e used m
c ommon w•th tht&gt; El be rfel d
Re ally com pany and the
Village of Pomeroy for the
purpo se of 1ngr ess and eg r ess
satd all ey Is located 1n Lot 152
That the said Counc1 t ol the
V1 1lage ol Pome ro y havmg
the
s u pe rvt s1o n
or
mana gem ent of the property
to be so ld . be and her eby •s
authorized to advert •se sa•d
rea l estate tor sale to the
htgh est b•dder ac cordmg to
law , upon t he f ollowmg term s
Cash m hand on th e day of the
sate
Each btd mus t conta•n the
full name of eve r y per son or
company 1n l erested •n !he
same , and be accompanted by
a bond or ce rhfled chec k •n the
sum o f $100 00 to the
sal tsfaclton ol Vt lla g e Council
as a guM an ty th at d the b1ds IS
accepted co n t ract w 11 1 be
entered mto an d tis perf orm
an ce proper l y secured
These checks or bond s w il l
be r etur n ed at once to all
exce pt the successfu l btdd er
H ts che ck or bond wil l be held
until t he contra ct or b td Is
propertv ex ecuted by h1m
SA•d counctl reserves the
r ight to ret eel any and all b1ds
r ece•ved for the sale of any
par c el of real estate Th 1s
Ord in ance shall go 1nlo ef fect
from and after th e earlies t
penod allowed by law

ATTEST

Ralph Werry ,
Pre stdent of
Village Coun cil
V11tage of Pomeroy

Jan e W alton ,
Clerk of Vll tag e
of Pomeroy

(6) "

21, 28 17 1 5 t2 5tc

Auto sales
.

START EARNING
TOMORROW ~

Lost an df 0Und
chesonul more

Columbus compan y wttl
tully tr am a few re l tabl e
people to asstst tn out of
plant produ ctton to mak e
small urethane part s on
contra ct , s ma l l ga rage size
shop area and a mean s t o
deliver prod uc t to our loca l
ware house requtred
No
expertence necessa r y, tf
you can prove you are

Coli 997 215b
YARD Sol e Monday Tuesday
Wedn es day Ma xme M•chael
lnur el ct .H DepreSS IOn gloss
some l ur n •ture and m1 sc
7 Family Yard Sole lues and
Wed s Juno 29 and 30th 9 30
a m 1111 4 p m on corner of
Cen ter and lh•rd A ve Mason

W Vo
YARD Sole July I 2 3 Bo ll om ot
Massar H1ll slorls ot 9 a m
D1 shes po ts pon s .. some on II
quc s Cl othmg
1ce cream
heezer m1sc vanety of thmgs
ENORMOUS 4 Fom•ly Yard Sole
July I st 2nd 3td Fronk Hod '
son res1den ce cor ner Filth
and Pearl Stree ts Rae ne
Ohio Ant•qu e ttunk key w•nd
clock co llecto rs 1tems G1bson
gu110r omphh er lawn mow er
5 p1ece d1nelle too ls rn1 sc
from A to Z

A

minimum

cash

requ tre m ent
of
$5950
necessary 6 month r efund
program
l ntervt ews can
be arranged tor those wtth

r ece tved at the off ice of th e
Dtre c t or
of
th e
Oht o
Department
of
Tran s
portalton , Col um bus , Ohto ,

unlol

10 00

AM ,

Oh1 0

Standard T1me, Tuesday, J uly
13, 1976, f or tmprovemen ts tn
M elgs County Ohto, on
roads and fa ctft tt es - MEG -

For ked Run Sta le Pa rk.
DEPARTMENT
OF
NAT URAL RESOURCES, by
r esurrac •n g wt th asp h alt
concrete
Pavement W tdth - Vartes

Pro1ec l and Work Length Vary
" Th e date set for co mplet ton
of lht s work shal l be as set
forth tn t he b1ddmg pro po sa l '

Each b•dd er shall be
reqwed to hie w1 th hi s bod a
cert1t1ed cneck or cashter 's
check tor an amount equal t o
five per ce nt of ht s btd, but m
no even t more th an ftfty
thou sand dollars, or a bond for
ten per cent of hts btd , payab le
to the Dtrector

B'dders must app ly, on the
proper form s, tor qualtf lcat ton
at least ten days prtor to the
date set for openmg b tds In
accordance w tt h Chap ter 5525

Ohto Re vtsed Code
Plans and spectflcahons are

on fil e on the pepartment of
Transportation and the oftlce
ROUEN, France ( UPI) Mauricto Flammtru of Italy of fh e DtSf roc f Deputy
D irector
drove his Formula 2 March to
The Director .. reserves th e
victory Sunday in the 26th rtght to ret ect any and a ll bods
Rouen Grand Pru
RICHARD D JACKSO N
Flanunini covered the 135
DIRECTOR
mile distance in one hour, 9
minutes and 29 seconds for a n Rev81773
average speed of ll2 miles
161 28 171 6. l ie
per hour.

302 V 8 automati c trans , P
tnt erior, blue ltnt sh

1972 AMC HORNET

$1995

V

a,

$1495

POMEROY MOTOR CO
1

r===-~~

®

LAST week of n1 ce Anni ver sary
Sole on Storcroft mm1 molot s
S12JOOor$10500 20 11 7 mch
se lf conlotned tra der $4799
\old downs $1900 We !i€rv1Ce
what w e se ll Cam p Con ley
Storcro ft Soie'.i Route 62 N Pt
Pleasant
16 f t compmg tro•ler goodcond•
11011 Pho ne 8d 3 2542
tq72 Trave l tra1 ler 18 It se ll
con to1n ed
good co nd•t•on

Sl"tUat"ons
Wanted
I
Wl l l DO odd JObs roofing pam
tmg huul 1119 treework and
mow1ng Pho.-, e992 7409
I WOU LD like to do bobys•lt•ng m
my home w1lh pr e schoo l
ch1ldren Hove e)(perience and
references Phon e 992 6012

1972 Ford 1/t ton p1ckup truck

$1350 00 Coli I 37a 6349
BlUE 6 crlmder Belo1r Chevy 1967
mode $225 Phone 949 2417 or
see Randy Fr1end
197fl Pont 1oc $500 wooden porch
sw •ng $10 Coli 949 2698 after
Sp m

DO YOU HAVE PARTY PLAN EX
FR IENOl Y

TOY

PARTIES HAS OENINGS FOR
MANAGERS IN YOUR AREA
RECRUiliNG IS EASY BECAUSE
DEMS HAVE NO CASH INVEST
MENf

DELIVERING CA ll COLLECTTO
CAROL DAY 518 489 8395 OR

WR ITE FRIENDLY HOME PAR
liES
20 RAILROAD AVE
ALBANY N Y 12205

CARRIER WANTED
FOR GOOD
SYRACUSE
ROUTE
38 c ustomers
Ear n eK t ra
spendtng
mon ey and wm valuable
Approx

Call The Datly

Senttnel at 992 -2156 today

Pets for sale
POODlES 6 wek s old $35 Phone

9902 767 1
PUPS to g•ve away Port Spnnger
Spomel pori Se9gle Cal l 992
5170or 992 2669
SIAMESE ktttens $10 Seolpotnt s
phone qcn 3210

HOUSEWIVES open the doo r to
e)( tro eornmg s Jom the sue
cess l ul women wh o or e mok
1ng good money 1n th elf spor e
t1me
No
experience
necessary no deli ver y 110 col
lectmg no cosh tnvestment
Call now ond ge t ex tra early
bene I• ts Phone 949 2803 or
9.t9 2786 Al so bookmg pa r

(b14)44b 139t
1969 12&gt;~60 Schultl 2 bedrooms
o1r co nd1ttoner good cand11ion
Phon e evemngs 742 301B

1974 Ford 110n E300 senes
owner Ph one 992 7320

1967 No110 2 dr hardtop ex
ce llent body no ru st nor putty

Coll (b 14)9a5 Ja06

OLD fu rni ture 1ce boxes brass
beds
wolf telep hones and
por i $ or complete households
Wrile M 0 Miller , Rl 4
Pomeroy Oh1o Col! 992 77t:IJ
CASH po1d for all make s ond
model s of mobde homes
Phone area co de 61 4 423 %3 1

mob il e
hom e
3 SSCoshSSS l or tun ked auto Frye s
Truck Auto Port s Ru tland
bedroom s with f uel 011 hea l
bottled
go s
1onge
Phone 742 2081
ref n gerator dmo tte se t bunk
COINS to lo. en s On'( lor m gold or
b•ds $2000 Phone 991 5786
s1fver tewelry spoons rmgs
4 Bed rm double w1de home 60&gt;1
den tal W1ll !rode Ca ll Roger
24 on lot n Mason W Vo
Wams le y Rutland Oh10 742
233t
Call 992 703 4

For Rent
FURNISHED 2 bedrm apar tmen t
adults on ly m Middleport
Phone 992 J974
3 AND 4 RM furn1 shed and un
fu rn1shed opts Phone 9?2
5434
CQUNTR Y Mobile Home Pork Rt
33 ten miles nor th of Pom eroy
large Jots Wllh C011Crel patiOS
s•d ewalks runne1s ond off
street po rkmg Phon e 992 H79
ONE bedroom apartment s at
VIllAGE MANOR 1n M1ddleporl
for $104 monthly plus elec or
$130 mcludtng electr• c LOWER

RATES FOR SENOR CITIZE NS
Co nvenient to shopp1ng on
lh1r d on d M1ll Stree ts tn Mtd
dleport Brand new htgh quoit
See th e
ty apartment s
monoger at Rlvers•de Apa rt
men ts or co lt 992 3273 Fur
ntshed
apartm ents
al so
ova• lable
TRAILER spoce l or ren t m M1d
dleport Phone 992 5434
UNFURN ISHED apt
rooms an~d both

lor rent 4
Ph on e· 992

590a
TRAILER lo t m Chester elecll•c•ty
or:d c•ly water Phon e 992 6072
2 bedroom mobile hom e Br owns
Tratl er Pork 992 3324
NEW 3 bed• oorn home 111 Rutlan d
lor rent Furn1shed tncludmg
colored TV near mmes Con

locl (614) 9as 3574 ofter 6 p m
LAR GE 3 room furnts hed apor l
men! Phone992 6161 ~

for Sale, Rent dr Trade
197&lt;~

Su.zuk1mo tarcross b1ke 1957
Che vy 327 4 speed tronstn• s
ston Wtll sel l or !rode Coil

9&lt;12·3105

RAINBOW RIDGE
(B.Wn Ate~

Cltaon

s.....

pants
Shtr fs
sieve
M1d

1973 Hondo 350 4 cylinder ltke
11ew 2800 m•les w •th eKtros
$875 or best otter Phone 949

2181
RC A
relngerotor
ex ce llent
cond 1t1on Phone (614) b67
3808 Tuppers Plams
17 hea d 50 lb p1gs S35 o p1ece
lor all or S37 each Phone (614 )
667 3493 before I 0 30 a m or
alter 5 30p m

INSTAMATIC block ond while Ad.
m1rol lele v•s•on olso s1ud10
couch Both good con dtllon
Phone 991 7319
Three ye ar old regulered block
An9us bull for sole Phone (614)

985 3555
23 channel CB f1 ts
om lrn rnp)( rad1 o

P HONE 5 PROBABLY
HE R PlACE 15

SHE' I?
!!&gt;ISING WAT CHED'

.bUGGED.. ANt:&gt;

$0 FAR THEY DON'
KNOW $ HE'5 ONE
OUR, ' BUT IF Af.J Y
RE~ULAR

AGE NT

1RtE5 TO CONTACT
HER 11 ll BE A
()Ell() 17/YEIIWAY!

THERE,;

GOTTA BE

A REASON YOU ' RE

l.10n
SAlEH RENIAL
frllflel Trltlers

fillettRtdmc
Tracto11

BUT l 'M ~OT S URE
r WANT TO HEAR IT~

OPE~

NEW loon Boy mooeo, Ptone11 Mt-

Oap nd ewentngs ocepl Tues and
Wed or bJ contilclmg R Codner,
owner
S-21 1 mo.

Culloueh cltatn saws, Bolen's Mowen.
Meny Ttllers, MTD Mowers

491locust SL
Mtddlepo!1, Oh~ "2·3092

"' K 2
WF:ST

• .12
¥Q 10
BORN LOSER

Ractne, Ohto

new roof or old
re patred, House , rooL 1
barn shtngtes, build up,
patnhng , electrtcal work,
gutter s &amp; downspouts,
furnac:es , water heaters,
water softner s, mstalfed &amp;
Need

.A 865 4
¥ A • 753
• fi !

4A
Roth vu lnemblc

6-IJ.761 mo

RACINE
CARPET SHOP

and thiS ad . Good through
6-JO 76.

'6.95

DONELLI'S PfZZA

J28 1mo ,

LITTLE

Davtd Parsons, OWner
949-2814

•n dash
8 track

stereo Coll992 3965
MAYTAG wn nger washe r and
dryer Phone (614 ) 985 3554
Harold Br ewer l on g Bollom
OhiO
TUL SA truck w1nch 12 000 lbs
capaCity A lso two overhead
10•10 garage doors Phone
(614 ) 985 3554 Harold Brewer
l on g Boll om Oh1o

S EEJNG

HUSH I TOO
WATCH rHE MAN
~T THE THIRD

6-7-1 mo.

LOCUST pos ts round or spill
Phone 949 277 4
1973 450 Pro to type Kawasaki
motorcross good condtt1on

Scrap-lion

The Complete
Remodeling Servtce
For Your Home

RIDERS SALVAGE

AL TROMM CONST

Car Bodtes

$650 Phone 992 3B43
LATEN paper roller '2 trucks
reasonuble Phon e 992 7481
1975 Bulla co 360 Fronller motor
cycl e End uro model many ex
tros reasonably pn ced Phone
992 7291 alter p m

Sl RLI24

a

Pomeroy, Ohto
Phone 992 5468

Rutland
742 2328
All Work Guaranteed
Free Estimates
6-lH mo

'-ll mo.

74 Kowosolo $475 00 Phone 742

EYE
DARK. KINHY HAIR

SMAIL MUSlACHE -

SCOI'iliHCi EYES A
SNEERINU MOUTH- ·

EXPERIENCED

Aluminum Siding,
Roofing, Gutters,
Painting and Repair

Junk Battenes $1.25
Motor Cast Clean
$3.50 Pet Hundred
Copper 35c

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

"THEN HE D SEnE~ EAT IT fi!AW .

3891
1973 25 ft
Yu k on Del to
houseboa t al l self cont01ned
w1th 1976 Chry sler 105 h p
eng1ne Phone 992 5532
19 nch portable Adm 1rol co lored
TV ~ 1ust li ke new Cal l 992

3441

YOUR HOTPOI N T
AP P L I ANCE STORE

FREEZER SALE!

Save up to $100 on 20
cu. ft . Chest or 16 cu.
It. Upright.
Choice

$26995

Ap p lia n ce Depar t ment

'
POMEROY LANDMARK
"''._JackW Carsey, Mgr
Ail Phone 992 -2181

BRADFORD Aushoneer Com
plet e Se rv1ce Phone 9A9 2487
or 949 2000 Rac1ne Oh to Crtll
Brodlord

ACROSS

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers to asters trans all
small appliance s la wn mower
ne x t to State Htghwoy Goroge
on Rou te 7 Ph one (6 14) 985

382£&gt;

WILL tnm or c"'u l trees and sh rub
ber y phone 949 25A5 or 742

3tb7
sPRAY PAINTIN G Al TROMM
CONSTRUCTION PHONE 742
-7.;-- ' - ' - - - - : - - - 2328

VERMEER BALER SALES AND SER
VI&lt;::E Me1gs Athens Coun ty
Balers from $3995 up Mernlt
Chose (614 )698 3~~- _

- --

REMODEliNG Plumbmg heattng
and all typ es of general repo1r
Work guarant eed '2 0 years ex
peoence Phone 992 ~ 09_ _

ExCAVATING

dozer loade r and
backhoe work dump trucks
ond lo boys for htre , w1 ll haul
f1tl d~rt top sod t.mes tone and
gro vel Call Bob or Roger Jef
lers
day phone 992 7099
mght phone 992 3525 or 992

bus tness
less than 2 years A man
and
wtfe
operatton.
Ground, bulldtng s, and

stock WE HAVE 3 OTHER
BUSINESS PLACES FOR
SALE If Interested drop In
the office
A NICE PLACE TO LIVE

5232
SEPTIC TANK S cleaned Modern
Son •tatton 992 3954 or 992

HOUSE for sole by owner Iorge
l1v1ng room Iorge kt tchen w 1th
built m b1rch cobme ts
3
bedrooms
both
hardwood
floors wall to we ll co rpetm oil
rooms Carport ut1 i1ty room
house fu lly msuloted sto rm
door s w tndows e)( tro Iorge lot
loca ted ouls1de Pomeroy Corp
on Un1on Ave nue Phone 992·
7874 for oppomtmenl

to rent Locate on Mulberry
Ave Large briCk wtth low
u pkee p

recently

reno vated,

3

kttch en
range &amp; re f
Enormous
work shop ,
carport, obout 3 acres

PR ICE D RIG HT
MANY
OTHER
PROPERTIES
TO
CHOOSE FROM - YOUR
CHOICE- BRAND NEW
OR OLDER CLELAND
REALTY - THE HOME
OF REAL ESTATE IN
MEIGS COUNTY . LIST
WITH US &amp; YOU ARE IN.
HENRY E CLELAND,
BROKER

ROOMY 7 yr old one story wood
two bedrm
home
!rome
located betweel) Coolville and
Tupper s Ploms One acre lot
two cor garage , c• ty wafer , gas
heal
ha rd wood
f loors
corpetd hv tng room mce vtew

521 000 Phone (614)667 3519

2 story frome house 2 bedrooms
NEW 16ft flatbed tandem tro 1ler
poss1bly 3 ltvmg room bo th
Phone {61A ) 985 3554 Harold
k 1tchen ond utiltty room new ly
9&lt;12 llab
Bre wer long Bot tom Oh•o
carpeted porflol ba sement and
carport '1 stories out buddmg HOMES ITES for sole 1 acre and
SMITH and Wes son r~\. • ~ • 41
up Middleport near Rutland
forced o•r nalurol gos heal
au tomatic 22 col tolgl:! t p1~t o l
Coll992 7481
lo ts of st01oge space $17 500
new SIBOftrm 1970 Dat sun 510
Phone 992 7360 aft er 5 p 111
Sedan lo1r cond1t1on 1uns
NEW 3 bed room house, 2 baths
good $500 Po t belly stove 3 bedroom house w all to wall
oil e lec I acre , Mtddleport,
$65 Phone 991 7aOS
close to Rutland Phone 992·
carpet, olummum s1d1ng new
74at
cobmel s some furn•t ure new.
NEW deluxe Tappa n efectnc
bathroom
tust
built
polto
and
range full warranty Has chtp
SM All form for sole 10 ~. down
walk Ono hall acre lot 650
on doot w•ll socnftcc , Sl:JS 00
owtHH I nonced Monroe Coun
Osborne St Pomero.,. Pho ne
K1ngsbu1y Home ~oles ~all
ty W Vo Phone (304 ) 772
'192-5688
992 7UJ4
3J02 ol j l04 ) 772 3'227

exteri o r

lovely bedrooms , 1'1&gt; baths,
full basement woth 2 ca r
garage This home Is far
above the average $18,500
ABOUT 6 MILES WEST
OF THE COURTHOUSE.
Modern 1 fl oor pl an Steel
Stdong , lull basement, 3
BR . bath . ultra modern

CARPENTER
floormg
cedtng
ponel1ng Ph one 992 2759

more or le ss st!uo ted m Sec·
lion 26 Frocllon Jl m Rullond
Towns h1p, Metgs County Ohto
Fpr furth er mformot1on contact
Bernard V Fultz, Pomeroy No
lt o nol
Bonk
Bu tldt n g,
Pomeroy Oh1o
Teleph one

on

at $20,000
YOUR DREAM WILL
COME TRUE WITH THIS
HOME - 2 story frame,
Sacn f~ee

SEPTIC Sys tems tnstolled by
li censed tnslall er
Shepard
Contractors Phone 742 2409

4'2 one four th acres of real es tate

Charles
18 Mara or
Jergens
Zll Prepared

We come
call in'
t' wi sh

/'""C--h---... a drama
OUr !3 Vote down
is a minute?n "Hanuner-

We can
onl4 sta4

and Ph4/l is had
r qolden anniversar4
a m1nute~1---, las-t week!

tn' Hank"
!8 Concluding
Banking

I.IOU a

ht1PPLI

thu't~­

4t Albanian
capital
u Lumpkin

43Dlda

M Sine qua
DOWN
1 Wlngllke
1110

z

centesimi

~lllllOOIDM;!:' ==~~ .-~ c:

I E:tUde
4 Set at

Unocramble the•• four Jumbtet,
intervals
1:;;;::+--t----i one tetter to each oquore lo
5 Russian
form four ordinary wo~ds .
wcrkers'
union
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It: L..:=r:.:::::r;;---.:r~;.;;;,;;;~

house, modern k itchen ,
new 2 ca r garage and level

~UTLAND

742-2211

IJSTX'W.

\

~

'

:
:
t

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••
I

rERROF

CRVPTOQUOTES
ILJKMHF
NZIP

IPF

1

RUTLAND

"

._,,--,,,----t-.,.,....,.,,-...,

•·:

FURNITURE

I
I I
III
I
tr

You're the secund

and he's the tlmdl

One letter stmply stands for another. In this sample A Is
NOJ/T
used for the three L's, X for the two O's , etc Single lellers,
apostrophes, the tenglh and formallon of lhe words are all
hmts Each day the code letters are different
r-~=::::=:::---""-...OL-.J

12 rm s , 5 up

with bath, 7 down woth
bath Nat gas heat. c1ty
water . and nlce lot Only
$19,000
WE HAVE A HOME FOR
EVERYONE. COME IN
AND HAVE A LOOK .

AP.NOLDGRATE -

AXYDLBAAXft
LONGFELLOW

Is

lot, 90x90
NEW LISTING - Large 2

•
••• e ••••
•••
Mon .• Tues., Wed.
•••
•• ••
B:OOtiiS:OO
••·
•• ••
Thursday Bli! 12 noon

t

TUESDAY , JUNE 29, 1916
6 DO--Summer Semester 10
6 15--Form Report 13
6 20--Rev Cleopltus Robinson 13
6 3D--Columbus Today ~~ News 6, Summer Semester
8. Concerns &amp; Comments 10
6 ~s--Mornlng Reporl 3
6:50--Good Morning , West Virg inia 13
6·Ss-chuck While Reporls 10; GQOd Morning, Tr l
State 13
7:DO--Todlly 3 .~ . 15 ; Good Morning, America 6,13, CBS
News 8; Bugs Bunny and Fr iends 10,
7 30-Schoolles 10
a GO-Lassie 6, Captoln Kongaroo a,10, Se~ame Slroot
33.
a·JO-Big Valley 6.
9 DO--AM 3, Phil Donohue 4, 15; Lucy Show 81 Mike
Douglas 10. Morning With D J 13
9·30--Cross Wits 3, One Life io Live 6, Tattletales o.
Mike Douglas 13
10 DO--Sanford and Son 3,4,15, Edge of Night 6, Price
Is Right a, 10; Bit With Knit 33
10 3D--Celebrity Sweepstakes 3,4, 15; Dinah I 6, Lilias.
Yoga and You 33.
11 DO--Wheel of Fortune 3, 15, Weekday 4. Gambit
8, 10; Farmer 's Daughter 13
·11 :3D--Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15; Happy Days 13, Love, ·
of life 8,10
11 ·5s--Take Kerr 8. Dan !mel's World 10
12:DO--Fun Factory 3,15; Let's Make a Deal 13, Bob
Braun 4; News 6,8, 10, Sesam e Street 33.
12 30--Gong Show 3,15, All My Children 6, 1 ~; Search
For Tomorrow 8.10.
12 ·5s--NBC News 3,15
1 DO--News 3, Ryan's Hope 6, 13, Phil Donlihue U,
Young and the Restless 10, Not For Women Only
15; Electric Company 33
1·30--0ays Of Our Lives 3,4,15; Rhyme and Rcosa&gt;l6,13; As The World Turns a, 10, Family Theahe 33
2:DO--S20,DIIO Pyramid 6,13, BI-Ways 33
2· 30--Doctors 3 1 ~. 15, Break The Bank &lt;1 , 13, Gu iding
Light 8,10, Unto lhe Hills 33
3 DO--Another World 3,4, IS ; General Hospital 6, 13, All
In the Famlly8.10, Lilias, Yoga and You 20; Catch
33 33
3 JO-One Lite to Live 13, Mickey Mouse Club 6, M,&gt;lch
Game 8,10, Inner lenni• 20 ; Title X JJ
4 O~Mister Cartoon J; Merv Griffin 4. Somerset 15;
Bewitched 6; Mickey Mouse ClltJb B. Mlsler Roger&gt;
20,33; Movie "The Black Orchid" 10, Dinah 1 13
4 30--Bewllched 3, Mod Squad 6; Andy Griffith O;
Sesame Street 20,33. Fllntstones 15
5 DO--Bonanza 3; Partridge Family a. Mi ss ion lm
possible 15
5 30--Adam 12 4,13, News 6; Family Affair 8; Eloc
trlc Company 20,33
6.DO--News 3,4,B,1D,13,1S; ABC News 6, loom 20,33
6 30--NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News8,10. Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Lili as, Yoga '
and You 33
/ ·DO--Truth or Consequences J; To Tell the Truth 4,
Bowling for Dollars 6, Let's Go to the Races o,
News 10, Name That Tune 13; Family Altair 15;
Romagnolls' Table 2C ; Wild, Wild World or
Animals 33
7 3D--Hollywood Squares 3,4; Let's Deal With If 6;
Match Game 8. Evening Edition With Martin
Agronsky 20; Price Is Right 10, To Toll The Truth
13; Nashville on the Road 15; Family Theatre 33.
a DO--Movle"1776" 3,4,15; Happy DayS6,13; l've"Got a
Secret a, 10, Burglar Proofing 20,33
8 30--Laverne 1!. Shirley 6, 13; Good Times 8,10.
Consumer Survival Kit 20,33
9 oo--s W AT 13. World at War 6; MA-S H a. 10; More
Music From Aspen 33 , Evenlng at Symphony 20
9 3o--Dne 0Qy at A Time B. 10.
10.oo--Rookles 13; Great American Music Colebrollon
6, Vaudeville 8, Dance For Camera 33, Switch 10.
News 20
10 30--Biack Perspective on the News 2U. Woman JJ
10 4s--To Be Announced 3,4, 15.
11 DO--News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15, ABC News 33
11 30--Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Mystery ot lhe Week
" The Murderers" 6, 13, Movie "Show Boot" 8,
Movie "Up From The Beach" tO; Janakl 33
1 oo- Tomorrow 3, 4. News 13

plaything

FAJUJCX

:

11 DO--News 3,4,6.8. 10, 13, 15 , ABC News 33.
11 JO--Johnny Canon 3. ~ . 15 . Geraldo Rivera Good
Night America 6, 13, Movie "Summertime" a;
Mov)e ''The GalebQ" 10; Janakl 33
1 00- Tomorrow 3,4, New5 13

Baby's

-6ULP ~·- FIND OUT ~!

F A furnace, basement, st

••

20.33; Rhoda 10
8.30--We Think You Should Know 3; Baseball6; Mork
Russell 20,33. Phyllis 10. Movie " From He1e lo
Eterni ty " 13
9 DO--Joe Forrester 3, ~. 15 ; All In The Folmlly 8, 10,
Si ng America Sing 33, How We Got Here The
Chinese 20.
9·30--Mavde 8, tO; World Press 20
10 DO--Jigsaw John 3,4,15; Medlc• l Center 0,10, New•
20, Bl Ways 33
i0.30--Catch 33 JJ

holllehold
cbore
Aasuage

WAL- AH S'POSE

drs &amp; Windows Only sasoo
PORTLAND - 9 room

_.

(2 wda.)

• Sandy

basement $38,500
POMEROY - 2 bedroom
frame house, bath , nat gas

_

II BlbUcal
abode
41 TIDy leaf.
cutter

mark

bedroom home wtfh ni ce
ktt chen w h tch tncludes
range • glass oven over
Dtntng, central atr heat,
family room with ftreplace,
and 2 car garage In dry

.
.: ...,...........

(hypb.
wd,)

»Rested

$22.500
2 YRS. OLD - Modern 3

TIL 8
..i• :. • FRIDAY
.
Close Sat. At 5 p.m.

38Paaable

31 Bowling

bedrooms, 1111 ceramtc ttle
b a th s,
n ice
fru•twood
kttchen , otl F A furnace , 2
car garage All on 1 acre

...

(1~1)

35Run
rr Pearl
Buck
heroine

•Oar

secon'
weddin'
ahnl vers'r4'

Vtrgil B Sr, Realtor
1
110 Mechantc Pomeroy, 0.
Phone 992-131'
TUPPERS PLAINS - 4

~amlly home,

Yemen
U Testimony
Zll- volaWe zt Victory cry
21 Coamic
!8 Bus
truth, In
paaeenger
China
30 Marcil
!% Coacb
graa
Paraeghlan
event
%4 Wind up
3Z Inatrument 25 Fonner
33 Agitate
chesa
34 - grievance
champion
(complain)

service

TEAFORD

- 2 furnt sh ed apar t m ents

992 SOt I

6 room house very we ll kepi 3
bedrm s modern k•tchen wall
to wall carpe t H W floors f ull
ba semen t new gas fu rnace
5mall lot to mow Ideal for
old er co upl e or smo ll fomtly m
good
neighborhood
1n
Pomeroy Coil for oppotntment
Phone 992 3097
-

17 Singer

BUILDING and remodel 1ng, ex
covot•on concrete work elec
Inca! work plumb1ng rough
ond fm 1shed carpentry and
roof •ng Phone 992 7491

MAIN
POM
NEED A

742 2348
HOUSE for so le m Roc1ne Oh1o
Sl Rt 33B ]USI out st de !own a EXCAVATI NG dozer backh oe
room:i bo lh porch po lio City
and d1tcher Charles R Ho t
wat er gas fo rced 01r furnace
f1 eld
Ba ck Hoe Servtce
good lot Call owner anytime
Rutland Oh1o Phone 742 2008
W11110m Maynard 949 26 13
GREG S CB SAlES located at Er
OLDER remodeled 3 bedroom
wtn s Gulf Ser 'IIC9
M1d
h om~ al l electnc on corner lot
dleport
Oh1o
Phone 9921n Pome roy
$12 ~00 Phone
2438

149 acre farm two houses barns
shed several bulldtngs c• ty
wate r mmerol nghts ltmber
100 acres t•llable good post ure
land 8 mtl es north of Pomeroy
oft Route 33 Hem lock Grove
Oh1 o Phone 992 5014 evenm gs
alt er 5 p m

D. Bumgardner

2180

WILL
roolmg co nstruc ti on
plumb1ng ond heohng No ta b
too Iorge or too sm oll Phone

WHY RENT? Buy o new home w tt h
payments some or lower than
rent 3 bedrooms den 2 baths
corpet plus all the extras o
housewt fe would wont Shown
by oppotntm ent 74 2 · 23~~

treadmiii

EXPERIENCED house
potnler
Phone Arthur Mu sser , 7-4 2

-

most mterestmg questtons
w11/ be used m th •s co lumn
and wtll recewe coptes of
JACOBY MODERN)

examples

(2 wda.)

&amp;-13- 1mo

-do

$1 000 down col i (304) 771
3102 or (304 ) 772-3227

Allow aotl llllow lfllll•l pool Ills lot
tlto do-tt·JOU11011 "'"
AI pool •pPia miiablo, too.

lltdd~pot1

SEwiNG MACH INE Repotrs ser
vtce all makes 992 2294 Th e
Fobr1c
Sh op
Pomer o y
Authonzed Smger Soles and
Ser v1ce We sharpen Sc 1ssors

(Do you have a questiOn
tor fh e experts? Wflle "Ask
the Jac obys care of thos
newspaper The Jacobys wr/1
answer IndiVIdual questtOJlS
If stamped, sell-addressed
envelopes are enclosod The

8 Blazing

Offering

PltONE992-5124

(bl4) b98 ?257 AI bony

A Mtchtga n reader wants to
know tf th e prectstOn c lub ts
really a prec1se system
No more than any other ex peri syslem and m common
wtlh all other expert systems
ts vet y ltlllc better than standard Amertca n
Today every expert patr
follows a lot of tls own tdeas,
bul m Ihis country well over 90
per cent base thctr methods
on s la nd~ rd Amen can

14 Be present 11 Port of
15 Clonlnnuters'
South

llob~ S•mmM Rd.,

241a

COUNTR Y farmland w 1th sedud
ed woods water and good oc
cess m Monroe Coun ty W Vo

SWIMMING
POOLS

o&amp;D TREE Trimmmg 20 years ex
per~en ce
Insured t ree
estima tes Call 992 -2384 or

~~~~

1 Kin to stout 7 Contend
4 Bogart film 8 Rockfish
10 Drooping
9 One of the
1% Verified
Hardy a
U Anna Moffo 11 Excellent

2980
COAL lime stone and calc1um
chlor1de and cok1u m brme for
dust con trol and spec1ol m1xmg
sal t lor formers Mom Street
Pomer oy Oh1o or phone 992

3.
6•

~"~~-'
by THOMAS JOSEPH

II= lHIS DUDE FIGURE:S
MAKING A MEAl
OFF OF l"H', i=ISH HE STOLE Ff(QM ME&lt; ,

Pom...,

Ph. 992-2174

Pass

Oswald "Now that you
l'"ve reached the age of 43
you should learn some respect
for the old man I am s ttll trymg to lea rn although tl gets
more dtfftcult as the years go
by The man who taught me
more than anyone was the late
Hal Sttns flat' s play of the
cards was magnt!tcenl Hts
btddtng was · of lhe ' Btd 'em
flt glt and tell em nothtng
school' Here IS Hal at work "
.J tm "Hts problem was to
avotd two he,tr l losers One
wav would be to stnp Ute

1

for sale
MAK E spnng clean tng proft loble
turn unwon ted 1lem s 1nto cosh
Adverllse m th e Wont Ads

South

I N 1 P,ts~
5 tfl
Pass

ever a student ?"

LITILE ORPHAN ANNIE

Square Yard Installed

Mtddleport, Ohto
992 6167
~~ 76-1 month

Call us at 941J. 2882
or 949-2201

North East

By Os~ald &amp; James Jacoby
Jtm
I have JUSI wntten
aboul so me or my problems tn
Ieat ntn g brtdge Wer e you

ASSORTED RUBBER
BACK CARPETING

Tax

\\ es t

P.t ss P.1 ss Pc~s!'l
Opcnm.: lead ~ V eft

Racine, Ohio

'1.00+
Wtth any so.oo purchase

repa~red, Sewa~jje .

• 9 5 4J

Ph (6141742-2409

6 CANS OF RC
.

• 9 54
4Qil08 7U
SO UTI!

Bolli-A

JUNE SPECIAL

Racine Plumbing
&amp;Heating

• 10 3
¥K H
• J 10 7 2

R•t~nd, Oh~ 45175

We Dehre1

haml, play ace ~ nd one heat·t
.tnd hope thai the wmner of
that tnck would not hold the
lasl hearl "
Os wald " Hal fou nd a
squeeze He stmp ly d rew
trumps, dtscardcd one heart
on lite ktng or clubs and duck
cd a hcarl He won lhe heart
return and cashed hts lasl
three trumps ·
.Jun '!tal was left w1th two
hearts and lw o dtamonds
North wtth our diamonds East
could not h'•ld a heart and
protcc l the j ack or
dtamonds "

28

• 6 42
t A K Q8

Southeastern Ohio
Truss Rafter Co.

Is 13, Friends ot Man 15, Inner Tenni s 33
8 DO--Bobby Vlnfoh 3; Yankee Doodle Cricket 13; Rich
Lillie~ . 15, Gunsmtlke 8. U SA People &amp; Politics

WIN AT BRIDGE
Hal Sims showed Ozzie how

TELL IN6 ME ALL THI$

"'K Q97

FLOOR WINDOW-

TIMBER
Pomeroy Fo rest Pro·
ducts Top pnce lor stond1ng
sowl1mber Co li Kent Hanby
j 446 8570

MENS used wo rk umfor ms
28 1nch 36 InCh WO ISt
S M l shor t ond long
S1 98 set Bodey s Store
die pori

WHICH MEAN$ HER

4.12 Ptlch
24'-$17.28
26'-$18.72
28'-$20.16

lONG BOnDM

Mowers-

1960 Chevrolet t ruck $85 See ot
570 Pearl Mtddleport

I 0 )(55

WANTED to ren t 3 bedr oom horne
locally or would hke to buy
home on lond co ntra ct Phone
247 2167

I

Redu ce sale and f ast w1th GoBese
Tab let s and E Vop
water
pil ls Nelson Drug

Mobile Homes for Sale _ Wanted to Buy
TWElVE 8 w1de mobile homes I
and 2 bedroom s comple tely
lurn1s hed Cass •us Canada y
1900 Central St
Gol l•pohs
Oh• o Near Sm1th Bu iCk Phone

TAILED

At RPOR.T-

TAPPED.

NO COLLECTING OR

pm es

THE

3451

Country Cousins Cookshoppe will be
accepting applications June 28-29-30
at their new location at 698 W. Main
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio from 9:00 to
5:00.

PERIEN CE?

""R0!&gt;1E' F ROM

r~&amp; ·
'

CODNER'S CAMPERS

Rtpt!f

1975 Ford Gran ad o 30'2 V 8 p s
pb a c $3895 Phone 992

O kA~ 50 AN E&gt;JEMY AGENT

NO RTfl (DI

Comp~lt SIIIJII En~

~

CAPTAIN EASY

4-10·1 mo.

Ph. 992-1991

WILKINSON'S

1974 Fo td Couner 4 speed II OOCl
rndes
$200 and assume
paymen ts 1974 Kowasc k• 250
1966 Ntmrod compmg Ira ler
lor fast sole Phone 992 706h

HELP WANTED

LARRl,.~Jfh~DER

6 27 76

•

..

Htlh prtces lor Strip lUlGI,
motors and other meiiiL
Phone 992·2228. Monday th11
Frtday 8-3, Saturdly 1-12.
5-26-1 mo.

RErlACEIIENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING-SOFFIT!
GUTTERS.IWNINGS

992 -7320 evenings

automa tt c, P st eenng , good tire s, clean 1n1enor

1

HALLS
SALVAGE

Fonantlnl ANt~bll
Blown onto Wails &amp;ltttcs
STOAII
WINDOWS l DOORS

Phone 949 -2814
9 A. M. to 5 P. M.

Sport about Wagon , 6 cy\ automatic tran s, radto ,
good tires, whtte finish good economy "

1971 FORD STA WAGON

Blown

lrt111l11ton Ser~tces

Conttnuous one ptece
gu"ers We hang It, or do tf
yourself Spectal pn ces to
butld ers

steering . radto, clean

' MONDAY, JUNE2i, 197'
5 DO--Bonanza 3, Partridge Family 8. Mission ·
Impossible 15
5 30--Adam 12 • News 6; Family Affair 8, Elec. Co.
20,33, Adam 12 13
6 DO--News 3,4,8,10,13,15, ABC News 6. loom 20,33
6 30--NBC News3,4,15; ABC News 13, Andy Griffith 6.
CBS News 8.10 . Hodgepodge Lodge 20 ,
Carrascolendas 33
7 DO--Truth or Cons J; To Tell the Truth 4, Bowling lor
Dollars 6, Buck Owens 8; News 10. Candid Camera
13, Family Alta ir 15, Lowell Thomas Remembers
20. Resourceful West VIrginia 33.
7 30--That Good Ole Na shvi lle Music 3, What Do You
Want to be When You Grow Old ? 4; Space · 1999 6,
Price Is Right a. Evening Edlflon with Martin
Agronsky 20; High Road to Adventure 10; Freedom

FREE ESTIMATES

GUTTER SERVICE

11895

Television .log for easy viewing

·

Business Services

av aolable sp a ce a nd
OPEN EVES . 8: 00P. M.
lonances
who
are
ready
to
.
POMEROY, OHIO .
start
1m med t ate l y
by
\.._ _ _ _ _...,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....;_.,;--...;;;-...;,11'
callong Collect
6" 252 4967
!
1969 Plymouth So tclhtc $1200
Ask For Mr Green
Help Wanted
Phor1e 992 613 1

Wanted to Rent
NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbu s, Ohto,
June 18. 1976
Conlract Sales Legal Copy
No 76-624
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Sealed proposa ls wtl l be

1972 FORDMAVERICK2 DR

dependable and wt llmg to

Yard Sale

IF YOU hdve a serv ce to alt er
won t to buy or se ll someth1ng
ore look1ng tor work
or
whatever
you II get resul ts
faster w1th o Sen tmel Want Ad

2 SIGNS Pomeroy
OF
QUALITY _Motor Co.

Parttime
MANUFACTURING
PIECE WORK

,_

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

Full or

Phone (b f4 )985 4245

Cou n ty Of M c1 q s and Sta te Of
Phone992 5382
Ohto Begtn nm g 60 t ee t and 7
lllC hes SOU !tlWCS!Cr l y from the LOST Tues doy mghl po1r of ligh t
so uth east erl y co r ne r o f Lot 151
blue pre scr1 pt1 on glosses
•n Sl11d Vll!a9 e on St c- ond
poss 1bly los t on Pomeroy park
Street at th e soulheas terl t
mg lot Reword tf found Coli
co rn er of the building now or
949 '23 14
form erly owned b y sa1d Ct iV of
Pom eroy ( known as the C11y
Hat tJ , th en ce northwes t erly

poratt ct w''" the wcstc rt v ,,n c

HelPWan~
'•"

work

'} j

j

camping Equipment

RACINE Ftrc Deportm en t w• ll
hove o gun shoot Sa tur day at
6 30 p m at the1r new buildtng
off Ba 5han Rood

LOST hom

Vast Results Use ,.,.,he
Sentr·ne-l Classi+ieds
..l.

£vor
I
.L' 0

pub I! cali on
REGULATIONS

7- The D•tly Senttnel , Midulepoti-Pomeroy , 0, Mootlay, Jw te 2B, 1976
DicK THAC\•

ZW

LZAP

NPFU

'/ONDER GOES
SNUFFY-- AMBLIN'
DOWN TH' ROAD WIF
HIS PRIDE AN 'JOY

WHO SAID
EI'JN\fTHING
ABOUT HIS
'IOUI'JG ·UN ?

IPTI

ZI'W

PF ' W

WTC

AIN'T HI ~ '-IOUI'JG-Ur\!
S'POSED TO BE IN
KIDDY' GARDEN?

ZW

THH

MLJVF

NPFU
JU

Z I' W

T

CTU

0T0F L .
AT

()

-

ENGO/P
tT;;;)F-T
I :::__+~(,....~....,
'l

the circled lettero
I toNowformarranr•
lhf! aurpri~e answer, as

w p . ~~~~=~~~.A::::=~ ouneoted by the above cartoon•

CTLAJUZ

Yesterday'• Cryptoquote: A BACHELOR GETS TANGLED
UP WITH A LOT OF WOMEN IN ORDER TO AVOID GET·
TING TIED UP TO ONE. - HELEN ROWLAND

Priiiiii-JIISW!Im

'!(

I I I I I J"
IA.newrn

S1turrl•r'•

lbmt~rrow)

Jumloh RAINY GULCH HECKLE THRUSH

I

1\tllWt'rl Wlatrt IVIrMIIIi"f Ulldtr lilt IU n appeora

to fl&lt; 1•1•1--SKY·HIGH

BELLE!!!

�6 - The Datly Semmel Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Monct.y , June 2B, 1976

Noto~~~SL~~reNb~Tgt ·~·~n

on Second Sl reel
p/ mercy , Oh io

IN~~~::..:f,~N·

lhat

sealed b ids w ill be re ceived at
the offtce ot lhe Vtllage Clerk,

Vtllagr of
until 11

0 clock noon on the 19th of
J u ly, 1916 1 for the purch~se of
the
follow tng
parc el s

desc ribed reat es tate

CEAOL.INES
p M
Day
Before

5

Pub ltc a11on
Cllncell a tiOns

co rre c

Hans acce p ted f i rst dey of

n e Publisher reserves

Tt1a t the totloW •ng d esert bed
rea l estate belongtng to the

the right 10 edt ! or re ject
a ny
a ds
d eeme d o b

VIllage of Pomc re v •s not
needed tor any mun• c •pal
Purpos e , to W1f
Parcel 1 Lot 12 m V B
Horton 's Add111on to Pomeroy ,
Lot 1J tn v B Horton s Ad
d •tton to Pomer oy
Reference Deed
Vo lume
20S Page 387 of the Me tgs
Cou n t.,., Ohio, D eed Record s
Pa rc el 2 Begmnmg on Nv e
Str eet at the Northeast co rn er
of a lot heretofore deeded by
Cu rt is. D Ree d and Laura
A lber t a Reed to John M
Roe d el by deed dated April 24 ,
1899 re corded m Volum e 84 ,
Page 386, rec ords of Dee ds of
Meigs County, Ohto Then ce
So uth parall el w 1th N ye Stre et
e1 ghteen ( IB l feet , then ce
Wes t twenty stx 1261 fe et
thence nor th e• ght een ( 18 l
t eet , then ce East twenty stx
{ 26) f ee t to the p lace of
begtnn lng
Sav tng and e&gt;~
cep tmg a ll coal and other
m tne rat s un d erl y i ng
the
p r em1ses h ere by grant ed
Together wtt h th e nght to
m1 ne the sam e w ttll ou t any
unn ecess ar y dam ttge to the
surf ac e of th e same
Dee d Reference Volume 94
Pag e 28 6. Metgs Co unty Deed
Reco rd s
Parce l l · S1 tuat ed m th e
Town sh•P of Sal ts bury county
of Me1gs an d Sta l e of OhfO and
mo r e partiCularly bo und ed
and d esc rib ed as follow s
S•tuated In th e Village of
Pomeroy bemg Lot No 43
com mencmg on the North stde
of Co nd or Street 1n sa id C1 t y at
a s tone pla ce d at a permanent
corn er thence ru n nmg a t ngh t
angles w 1th sa td stree t 100
feet , thence runnmg parallel
w 1t h the ltne f1r st r un 100 fe et
to the street fi r st named
then ce eas t erly n long sa •d
stre e t J8 fe et t o the p la ce of
begt nnmg be1ng th e sa me
prem •ses
conveye d
to
Margare t Kau t z by C Ha mm
&lt;J nd Susan H amm h1s W1f c by
deed dated Aug Jrd , 184 f, and
re cord ed m Vol 9 pag e 449 of
the R eco r ds of Deed s Ill M e1gs
County Oh io Said p rem1 ses
ar e known as No 202' Condor
Stre et
Th e fo!!owm g r ea l es tat e
s ttuated .n th e Villag e of
Pomeroy
TownshiP
of
Sa ! •sbury County of Mc1gs
an d Sla t e of Oh10 and mo r e
par t• c u l arly bounded and
de scn bed as follow s
Be• n g Lot No 42 , on Condo r
St satd lot bemg 36 fee t front
on Condor Str ee t 1n Second
Ward of Siltd V 11tag e of
Pomeroy
Ohto , bc1 ng the
same prem1ses so ld by Jos 1ah
Hoff and w1 f e Sa rah A Hoff ,
a s are d esc nb ed m Vol 108
page 256 , Me1g s Co un ty D eed
Rec ords Sa•d prem•se s ar e
known as No 102 Condo r
Stre et
Parc•l 4 Til• follow"l9
descri bed r ea l es ta te Si tua ted

tec t lon al Th e pub l i sher
w ill no t be respons•ble lor
more than on e In cor r ect
ms.eriiOn
RATES
ForWilntAdServ lce
S cen ts per word one
•nse r t ton
Mm1mum Ch arg e $ 1 00
l .t cents per word three
conse cut1ve •n.sert.ons
26 cents pe r word s• x
con secutive in se rti ons
25 Per Cen t DI SCOUn t on
pa1d ads and ad s pa•d
wtlhln 10 days

1n th• V"lagc 01 Pomeroy

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

S2 00
for
80
w ord
m1n1mum
Each add l tlont~l wor d J
c ents
BLIND ADS
Add •l lonal 25c Charge
pe r Adv ert 1sement

OFFICE HOURS
8 30 a m t o s 00 p m
Da tt v, 8 30 a m to 11 00

Noon Saturday
Phon e today 9Q1 2t 56
NOTICE S
ATTN II

ALL HOUS EW IVES

All Ya rd Sates Rummage
Por ch and Bas eme nt Por c h
and Basement Sa l es et c
must be pa1d tn advan ce
Get yours 10 ea rly by
s topp ing by our off ice at
The Daily Se nttnel. 111
Court St or wrtllng Bo x
729, Pomeroy Oh 1o 45 769
Wt th your r em11tance

In Memory
In Memory of Charl es W Fndley
who pa ssed away June 28

1966
Your memm y ~~ o ur keepsake
W1th which we II neve r port
God ha s rou 111 H1 s keepmg
W &amp; hove you Ill our heart s
Sadly m1ss ed by th e Fom •l y

Notl"es
~

NOTICE As o f June 23 1976 the
Ches ter Vo lunteer F1r e Dept
w1 ll no longe r haul wotPr
WOU LD th e lady who recetved o
wh1te long ho1red k1t1en at 1he
home ol Fredd10 Houdoshelt
Fndoy afternoon please con
ta ct M1 ss Houdoshel l at 992

2520 or 997 3345

ol Lot 141, 100 f ee l or to the
norlh !m e ot an unnu mbe red
lot
loc ated be twee n lots
numbered 14 1 an d 15 2 m sr11d
v illa ge thence sou th westerly
foll OW in g th e norlherly l1ne of
Lot 152 and th e her etofor e
mcnltoncd un numbered lot to
the nor the a s ter ly corn er of th e
pr emises now or form erly
owned by the Elberfeld Really
Company t Fo r rf'f eren ce deed
see Vol 161 page 350 ) Tne nce
southeast erl y parallel w1lh the
westerly l1n e Lot 152 of Second
Street, th en ce northcaslerly
followt ng th e south erly l• ne of
Lot 152 and the unnumlj'e r ed
Lot l oca ted between Lots 151
and 152 to the place of
beg• nn lng Tht s lot to be sold tS
known as the C1ty Hall ,
Pomeroy , Oh10
The re tS a! iO mcluded a
strip of land on the easterly
s1de of the here1n desc r1 bed
pr em1se s, extend1ng f rom
seco nd Street to the rear of
satd Lot , a strtp 5 t eet w tde for
the purpose of an alley , to be
us ed In common by t h e
Methodtsl Eptsc opa l Chur c h
of Pomeroy , Oh •O and the
here1 n named Village o f
Pomeroy , the1r
successo r s
and ass.g ns
There Is also Included the
•t ght louse an a I ley 4 fee t and
10 1nches wtde on the wes t st de
of the here•n descnbed real
est ale st•11d al ley to b e used m
c ommon w•th tht&gt; El be rfel d
Re ally com pany and the
Village of Pomeroy for the
purpo se of 1ngr ess and eg r ess
satd all ey Is located 1n Lot 152
That the said Counc1 t ol the
V1 1lage ol Pome ro y havmg
the
s u pe rvt s1o n
or
mana gem ent of the property
to be so ld . be and her eby •s
authorized to advert •se sa•d
rea l estate tor sale to the
htgh est b•dder ac cordmg to
law , upon t he f ollowmg term s
Cash m hand on th e day of the
sate
Each btd mus t conta•n the
full name of eve r y per son or
company 1n l erested •n !he
same , and be accompanted by
a bond or ce rhfled chec k •n the
sum o f $100 00 to the
sal tsfaclton ol Vt lla g e Council
as a guM an ty th at d the b1ds IS
accepted co n t ract w 11 1 be
entered mto an d tis perf orm
an ce proper l y secured
These checks or bond s w il l
be r etur n ed at once to all
exce pt the successfu l btdd er
H ts che ck or bond wil l be held
until t he contra ct or b td Is
propertv ex ecuted by h1m
SA•d counctl reserves the
r ight to ret eel any and all b1ds
r ece•ved for the sale of any
par c el of real estate Th 1s
Ord in ance shall go 1nlo ef fect
from and after th e earlies t
penod allowed by law

ATTEST

Ralph Werry ,
Pre stdent of
Village Coun cil
V11tage of Pomeroy

Jan e W alton ,
Clerk of Vll tag e
of Pomeroy

(6) "

21, 28 17 1 5 t2 5tc

Auto sales
.

START EARNING
TOMORROW ~

Lost an df 0Und
chesonul more

Columbus compan y wttl
tully tr am a few re l tabl e
people to asstst tn out of
plant produ ctton to mak e
small urethane part s on
contra ct , s ma l l ga rage size
shop area and a mean s t o
deliver prod uc t to our loca l
ware house requtred
No
expertence necessa r y, tf
you can prove you are

Coli 997 215b
YARD Sol e Monday Tuesday
Wedn es day Ma xme M•chael
lnur el ct .H DepreSS IOn gloss
some l ur n •ture and m1 sc
7 Family Yard Sole lues and
Wed s Juno 29 and 30th 9 30
a m 1111 4 p m on corner of
Cen ter and lh•rd A ve Mason

W Vo
YARD Sole July I 2 3 Bo ll om ot
Massar H1ll slorls ot 9 a m
D1 shes po ts pon s .. some on II
quc s Cl othmg
1ce cream
heezer m1sc vanety of thmgs
ENORMOUS 4 Fom•ly Yard Sole
July I st 2nd 3td Fronk Hod '
son res1den ce cor ner Filth
and Pearl Stree ts Rae ne
Ohio Ant•qu e ttunk key w•nd
clock co llecto rs 1tems G1bson
gu110r omphh er lawn mow er
5 p1ece d1nelle too ls rn1 sc
from A to Z

A

minimum

cash

requ tre m ent
of
$5950
necessary 6 month r efund
program
l ntervt ews can
be arranged tor those wtth

r ece tved at the off ice of th e
Dtre c t or
of
th e
Oht o
Department
of
Tran s
portalton , Col um bus , Ohto ,

unlol

10 00

AM ,

Oh1 0

Standard T1me, Tuesday, J uly
13, 1976, f or tmprovemen ts tn
M elgs County Ohto, on
roads and fa ctft tt es - MEG -

For ked Run Sta le Pa rk.
DEPARTMENT
OF
NAT URAL RESOURCES, by
r esurrac •n g wt th asp h alt
concrete
Pavement W tdth - Vartes

Pro1ec l and Work Length Vary
" Th e date set for co mplet ton
of lht s work shal l be as set
forth tn t he b1ddmg pro po sa l '

Each b•dd er shall be
reqwed to hie w1 th hi s bod a
cert1t1ed cneck or cashter 's
check tor an amount equal t o
five per ce nt of ht s btd, but m
no even t more th an ftfty
thou sand dollars, or a bond for
ten per cent of hts btd , payab le
to the Dtrector

B'dders must app ly, on the
proper form s, tor qualtf lcat ton
at least ten days prtor to the
date set for openmg b tds In
accordance w tt h Chap ter 5525

Ohto Re vtsed Code
Plans and spectflcahons are

on fil e on the pepartment of
Transportation and the oftlce
ROUEN, France ( UPI) Mauricto Flammtru of Italy of fh e DtSf roc f Deputy
D irector
drove his Formula 2 March to
The Director .. reserves th e
victory Sunday in the 26th rtght to ret ect any and a ll bods
Rouen Grand Pru
RICHARD D JACKSO N
Flanunini covered the 135
DIRECTOR
mile distance in one hour, 9
minutes and 29 seconds for a n Rev81773
average speed of ll2 miles
161 28 171 6. l ie
per hour.

302 V 8 automati c trans , P
tnt erior, blue ltnt sh

1972 AMC HORNET

$1995

V

a,

$1495

POMEROY MOTOR CO
1

r===-~~

®

LAST week of n1 ce Anni ver sary
Sole on Storcroft mm1 molot s
S12JOOor$10500 20 11 7 mch
se lf conlotned tra der $4799
\old downs $1900 We !i€rv1Ce
what w e se ll Cam p Con ley
Storcro ft Soie'.i Route 62 N Pt
Pleasant
16 f t compmg tro•ler goodcond•
11011 Pho ne 8d 3 2542
tq72 Trave l tra1 ler 18 It se ll
con to1n ed
good co nd•t•on

Sl"tUat"ons
Wanted
I
Wl l l DO odd JObs roofing pam
tmg huul 1119 treework and
mow1ng Pho.-, e992 7409
I WOU LD like to do bobys•lt•ng m
my home w1lh pr e schoo l
ch1ldren Hove e)(perience and
references Phon e 992 6012

1972 Ford 1/t ton p1ckup truck

$1350 00 Coli I 37a 6349
BlUE 6 crlmder Belo1r Chevy 1967
mode $225 Phone 949 2417 or
see Randy Fr1end
197fl Pont 1oc $500 wooden porch
sw •ng $10 Coli 949 2698 after
Sp m

DO YOU HAVE PARTY PLAN EX
FR IENOl Y

TOY

PARTIES HAS OENINGS FOR
MANAGERS IN YOUR AREA
RECRUiliNG IS EASY BECAUSE
DEMS HAVE NO CASH INVEST
MENf

DELIVERING CA ll COLLECTTO
CAROL DAY 518 489 8395 OR

WR ITE FRIENDLY HOME PAR
liES
20 RAILROAD AVE
ALBANY N Y 12205

CARRIER WANTED
FOR GOOD
SYRACUSE
ROUTE
38 c ustomers
Ear n eK t ra
spendtng
mon ey and wm valuable
Approx

Call The Datly

Senttnel at 992 -2156 today

Pets for sale
POODlES 6 wek s old $35 Phone

9902 767 1
PUPS to g•ve away Port Spnnger
Spomel pori Se9gle Cal l 992
5170or 992 2669
SIAMESE ktttens $10 Seolpotnt s
phone qcn 3210

HOUSEWIVES open the doo r to
e)( tro eornmg s Jom the sue
cess l ul women wh o or e mok
1ng good money 1n th elf spor e
t1me
No
experience
necessary no deli ver y 110 col
lectmg no cosh tnvestment
Call now ond ge t ex tra early
bene I• ts Phone 949 2803 or
9.t9 2786 Al so bookmg pa r

(b14)44b 139t
1969 12&gt;~60 Schultl 2 bedrooms
o1r co nd1ttoner good cand11ion
Phon e evemngs 742 301B

1974 Ford 110n E300 senes
owner Ph one 992 7320

1967 No110 2 dr hardtop ex
ce llent body no ru st nor putty

Coll (b 14)9a5 Ja06

OLD fu rni ture 1ce boxes brass
beds
wolf telep hones and
por i $ or complete households
Wrile M 0 Miller , Rl 4
Pomeroy Oh1o Col! 992 77t:IJ
CASH po1d for all make s ond
model s of mobde homes
Phone area co de 61 4 423 %3 1

mob il e
hom e
3 SSCoshSSS l or tun ked auto Frye s
Truck Auto Port s Ru tland
bedroom s with f uel 011 hea l
bottled
go s
1onge
Phone 742 2081
ref n gerator dmo tte se t bunk
COINS to lo. en s On'( lor m gold or
b•ds $2000 Phone 991 5786
s1fver tewelry spoons rmgs
4 Bed rm double w1de home 60&gt;1
den tal W1ll !rode Ca ll Roger
24 on lot n Mason W Vo
Wams le y Rutland Oh10 742
233t
Call 992 703 4

For Rent
FURNISHED 2 bedrm apar tmen t
adults on ly m Middleport
Phone 992 J974
3 AND 4 RM furn1 shed and un
fu rn1shed opts Phone 9?2
5434
CQUNTR Y Mobile Home Pork Rt
33 ten miles nor th of Pom eroy
large Jots Wllh C011Crel patiOS
s•d ewalks runne1s ond off
street po rkmg Phon e 992 H79
ONE bedroom apartment s at
VIllAGE MANOR 1n M1ddleporl
for $104 monthly plus elec or
$130 mcludtng electr• c LOWER

RATES FOR SENOR CITIZE NS
Co nvenient to shopp1ng on
lh1r d on d M1ll Stree ts tn Mtd
dleport Brand new htgh quoit
See th e
ty apartment s
monoger at Rlvers•de Apa rt
men ts or co lt 992 3273 Fur
ntshed
apartm ents
al so
ova• lable
TRAILER spoce l or ren t m M1d
dleport Phone 992 5434
UNFURN ISHED apt
rooms an~d both

lor rent 4
Ph on e· 992

590a
TRAILER lo t m Chester elecll•c•ty
or:d c•ly water Phon e 992 6072
2 bedroom mobile hom e Br owns
Tratl er Pork 992 3324
NEW 3 bed• oorn home 111 Rutlan d
lor rent Furn1shed tncludmg
colored TV near mmes Con

locl (614) 9as 3574 ofter 6 p m
LAR GE 3 room furnts hed apor l
men! Phone992 6161 ~

for Sale, Rent dr Trade
197&lt;~

Su.zuk1mo tarcross b1ke 1957
Che vy 327 4 speed tronstn• s
ston Wtll sel l or !rode Coil

9&lt;12·3105

RAINBOW RIDGE
(B.Wn Ate~

Cltaon

s.....

pants
Shtr fs
sieve
M1d

1973 Hondo 350 4 cylinder ltke
11ew 2800 m•les w •th eKtros
$875 or best otter Phone 949

2181
RC A
relngerotor
ex ce llent
cond 1t1on Phone (614) b67
3808 Tuppers Plams
17 hea d 50 lb p1gs S35 o p1ece
lor all or S37 each Phone (614 )
667 3493 before I 0 30 a m or
alter 5 30p m

INSTAMATIC block ond while Ad.
m1rol lele v•s•on olso s1ud10
couch Both good con dtllon
Phone 991 7319
Three ye ar old regulered block
An9us bull for sole Phone (614)

985 3555
23 channel CB f1 ts
om lrn rnp)( rad1 o

P HONE 5 PROBABLY
HE R PlACE 15

SHE' I?
!!&gt;ISING WAT CHED'

.bUGGED.. ANt:&gt;

$0 FAR THEY DON'
KNOW $ HE'5 ONE
OUR, ' BUT IF Af.J Y
RE~ULAR

AGE NT

1RtE5 TO CONTACT
HER 11 ll BE A
()Ell() 17/YEIIWAY!

THERE,;

GOTTA BE

A REASON YOU ' RE

l.10n
SAlEH RENIAL
frllflel Trltlers

fillettRtdmc
Tracto11

BUT l 'M ~OT S URE
r WANT TO HEAR IT~

OPE~

NEW loon Boy mooeo, Ptone11 Mt-

Oap nd ewentngs ocepl Tues and
Wed or bJ contilclmg R Codner,
owner
S-21 1 mo.

Culloueh cltatn saws, Bolen's Mowen.
Meny Ttllers, MTD Mowers

491locust SL
Mtddlepo!1, Oh~ "2·3092

"' K 2
WF:ST

• .12
¥Q 10
BORN LOSER

Ractne, Ohto

new roof or old
re patred, House , rooL 1
barn shtngtes, build up,
patnhng , electrtcal work,
gutter s &amp; downspouts,
furnac:es , water heaters,
water softner s, mstalfed &amp;
Need

.A 865 4
¥ A • 753
• fi !

4A
Roth vu lnemblc

6-IJ.761 mo

RACINE
CARPET SHOP

and thiS ad . Good through
6-JO 76.

'6.95

DONELLI'S PfZZA

J28 1mo ,

LITTLE

Davtd Parsons, OWner
949-2814

•n dash
8 track

stereo Coll992 3965
MAYTAG wn nger washe r and
dryer Phone (614 ) 985 3554
Harold Br ewer l on g Bollom
OhiO
TUL SA truck w1nch 12 000 lbs
capaCity A lso two overhead
10•10 garage doors Phone
(614 ) 985 3554 Harold Brewer
l on g Boll om Oh1o

S EEJNG

HUSH I TOO
WATCH rHE MAN
~T THE THIRD

6-7-1 mo.

LOCUST pos ts round or spill
Phone 949 277 4
1973 450 Pro to type Kawasaki
motorcross good condtt1on

Scrap-lion

The Complete
Remodeling Servtce
For Your Home

RIDERS SALVAGE

AL TROMM CONST

Car Bodtes

$650 Phone 992 3B43
LATEN paper roller '2 trucks
reasonuble Phon e 992 7481
1975 Bulla co 360 Fronller motor
cycl e End uro model many ex
tros reasonably pn ced Phone
992 7291 alter p m

Sl RLI24

a

Pomeroy, Ohto
Phone 992 5468

Rutland
742 2328
All Work Guaranteed
Free Estimates
6-lH mo

'-ll mo.

74 Kowosolo $475 00 Phone 742

EYE
DARK. KINHY HAIR

SMAIL MUSlACHE -

SCOI'iliHCi EYES A
SNEERINU MOUTH- ·

EXPERIENCED

Aluminum Siding,
Roofing, Gutters,
Painting and Repair

Junk Battenes $1.25
Motor Cast Clean
$3.50 Pet Hundred
Copper 35c

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

"THEN HE D SEnE~ EAT IT fi!AW .

3891
1973 25 ft
Yu k on Del to
houseboa t al l self cont01ned
w1th 1976 Chry sler 105 h p
eng1ne Phone 992 5532
19 nch portable Adm 1rol co lored
TV ~ 1ust li ke new Cal l 992

3441

YOUR HOTPOI N T
AP P L I ANCE STORE

FREEZER SALE!

Save up to $100 on 20
cu. ft . Chest or 16 cu.
It. Upright.
Choice

$26995

Ap p lia n ce Depar t ment

'
POMEROY LANDMARK
"''._JackW Carsey, Mgr
Ail Phone 992 -2181

BRADFORD Aushoneer Com
plet e Se rv1ce Phone 9A9 2487
or 949 2000 Rac1ne Oh to Crtll
Brodlord

ACROSS

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers to asters trans all
small appliance s la wn mower
ne x t to State Htghwoy Goroge
on Rou te 7 Ph one (6 14) 985

382£&gt;

WILL tnm or c"'u l trees and sh rub
ber y phone 949 25A5 or 742

3tb7
sPRAY PAINTIN G Al TROMM
CONSTRUCTION PHONE 742
-7.;-- ' - ' - - - - : - - - 2328

VERMEER BALER SALES AND SER
VI&lt;::E Me1gs Athens Coun ty
Balers from $3995 up Mernlt
Chose (614 )698 3~~- _

- --

REMODEliNG Plumbmg heattng
and all typ es of general repo1r
Work guarant eed '2 0 years ex
peoence Phone 992 ~ 09_ _

ExCAVATING

dozer loade r and
backhoe work dump trucks
ond lo boys for htre , w1 ll haul
f1tl d~rt top sod t.mes tone and
gro vel Call Bob or Roger Jef
lers
day phone 992 7099
mght phone 992 3525 or 992

bus tness
less than 2 years A man
and
wtfe
operatton.
Ground, bulldtng s, and

stock WE HAVE 3 OTHER
BUSINESS PLACES FOR
SALE If Interested drop In
the office
A NICE PLACE TO LIVE

5232
SEPTIC TANK S cleaned Modern
Son •tatton 992 3954 or 992

HOUSE for sole by owner Iorge
l1v1ng room Iorge kt tchen w 1th
built m b1rch cobme ts
3
bedrooms
both
hardwood
floors wall to we ll co rpetm oil
rooms Carport ut1 i1ty room
house fu lly msuloted sto rm
door s w tndows e)( tro Iorge lot
loca ted ouls1de Pomeroy Corp
on Un1on Ave nue Phone 992·
7874 for oppomtmenl

to rent Locate on Mulberry
Ave Large briCk wtth low
u pkee p

recently

reno vated,

3

kttch en
range &amp; re f
Enormous
work shop ,
carport, obout 3 acres

PR ICE D RIG HT
MANY
OTHER
PROPERTIES
TO
CHOOSE FROM - YOUR
CHOICE- BRAND NEW
OR OLDER CLELAND
REALTY - THE HOME
OF REAL ESTATE IN
MEIGS COUNTY . LIST
WITH US &amp; YOU ARE IN.
HENRY E CLELAND,
BROKER

ROOMY 7 yr old one story wood
two bedrm
home
!rome
located betweel) Coolville and
Tupper s Ploms One acre lot
two cor garage , c• ty wafer , gas
heal
ha rd wood
f loors
corpetd hv tng room mce vtew

521 000 Phone (614)667 3519

2 story frome house 2 bedrooms
NEW 16ft flatbed tandem tro 1ler
poss1bly 3 ltvmg room bo th
Phone {61A ) 985 3554 Harold
k 1tchen ond utiltty room new ly
9&lt;12 llab
Bre wer long Bot tom Oh•o
carpeted porflol ba sement and
carport '1 stories out buddmg HOMES ITES for sole 1 acre and
SMITH and Wes son r~\. • ~ • 41
up Middleport near Rutland
forced o•r nalurol gos heal
au tomatic 22 col tolgl:! t p1~t o l
Coll992 7481
lo ts of st01oge space $17 500
new SIBOftrm 1970 Dat sun 510
Phone 992 7360 aft er 5 p 111
Sedan lo1r cond1t1on 1uns
NEW 3 bed room house, 2 baths
good $500 Po t belly stove 3 bedroom house w all to wall
oil e lec I acre , Mtddleport,
$65 Phone 991 7aOS
close to Rutland Phone 992·
carpet, olummum s1d1ng new
74at
cobmel s some furn•t ure new.
NEW deluxe Tappa n efectnc
bathroom
tust
built
polto
and
range full warranty Has chtp
SM All form for sole 10 ~. down
walk Ono hall acre lot 650
on doot w•ll socnftcc , Sl:JS 00
owtHH I nonced Monroe Coun
Osborne St Pomero.,. Pho ne
K1ngsbu1y Home ~oles ~all
ty W Vo Phone (304 ) 772
'192-5688
992 7UJ4
3J02 ol j l04 ) 772 3'227

exteri o r

lovely bedrooms , 1'1&gt; baths,
full basement woth 2 ca r
garage This home Is far
above the average $18,500
ABOUT 6 MILES WEST
OF THE COURTHOUSE.
Modern 1 fl oor pl an Steel
Stdong , lull basement, 3
BR . bath . ultra modern

CARPENTER
floormg
cedtng
ponel1ng Ph one 992 2759

more or le ss st!uo ted m Sec·
lion 26 Frocllon Jl m Rullond
Towns h1p, Metgs County Ohto
Fpr furth er mformot1on contact
Bernard V Fultz, Pomeroy No
lt o nol
Bonk
Bu tldt n g,
Pomeroy Oh1o
Teleph one

on

at $20,000
YOUR DREAM WILL
COME TRUE WITH THIS
HOME - 2 story frame,
Sacn f~ee

SEPTIC Sys tems tnstolled by
li censed tnslall er
Shepard
Contractors Phone 742 2409

4'2 one four th acres of real es tate

Charles
18 Mara or
Jergens
Zll Prepared

We come
call in'
t' wi sh

/'""C--h---... a drama
OUr !3 Vote down
is a minute?n "Hanuner-

We can
onl4 sta4

and Ph4/l is had
r qolden anniversar4
a m1nute~1---, las-t week!

tn' Hank"
!8 Concluding
Banking

I.IOU a

ht1PPLI

thu't~­

4t Albanian
capital
u Lumpkin

43Dlda

M Sine qua
DOWN
1 Wlngllke
1110

z

centesimi

~lllllOOIDM;!:' ==~~ .-~ c:

I E:tUde
4 Set at

Unocramble the•• four Jumbtet,
intervals
1:;;;::+--t----i one tetter to each oquore lo
5 Russian
form four ordinary wo~ds .
wcrkers'
union
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It: L..:=r:.:::::r;;---.:r~;.;;;,;;;~

house, modern k itchen ,
new 2 ca r garage and level

~UTLAND

742-2211

IJSTX'W.

\

~

'

:
:
t

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••
I

rERROF

CRVPTOQUOTES
ILJKMHF
NZIP

IPF

1

RUTLAND

"

._,,--,,,----t-.,.,....,.,,-...,

•·:

FURNITURE

I
I I
III
I
tr

You're the secund

and he's the tlmdl

One letter stmply stands for another. In this sample A Is
NOJ/T
used for the three L's, X for the two O's , etc Single lellers,
apostrophes, the tenglh and formallon of lhe words are all
hmts Each day the code letters are different
r-~=::::=:::---""-...OL-.J

12 rm s , 5 up

with bath, 7 down woth
bath Nat gas heat. c1ty
water . and nlce lot Only
$19,000
WE HAVE A HOME FOR
EVERYONE. COME IN
AND HAVE A LOOK .

AP.NOLDGRATE -

AXYDLBAAXft
LONGFELLOW

Is

lot, 90x90
NEW LISTING - Large 2

•
••• e ••••
•••
Mon .• Tues., Wed.
•••
•• ••
B:OOtiiS:OO
••·
•• ••
Thursday Bli! 12 noon

t

TUESDAY , JUNE 29, 1916
6 DO--Summer Semester 10
6 15--Form Report 13
6 20--Rev Cleopltus Robinson 13
6 3D--Columbus Today ~~ News 6, Summer Semester
8. Concerns &amp; Comments 10
6 ~s--Mornlng Reporl 3
6:50--Good Morning , West Virg inia 13
6·Ss-chuck While Reporls 10; GQOd Morning, Tr l
State 13
7:DO--Todlly 3 .~ . 15 ; Good Morning, America 6,13, CBS
News 8; Bugs Bunny and Fr iends 10,
7 30-Schoolles 10
a GO-Lassie 6, Captoln Kongaroo a,10, Se~ame Slroot
33.
a·JO-Big Valley 6.
9 DO--AM 3, Phil Donohue 4, 15; Lucy Show 81 Mike
Douglas 10. Morning With D J 13
9·30--Cross Wits 3, One Life io Live 6, Tattletales o.
Mike Douglas 13
10 DO--Sanford and Son 3,4,15, Edge of Night 6, Price
Is Right a, 10; Bit With Knit 33
10 3D--Celebrity Sweepstakes 3,4, 15; Dinah I 6, Lilias.
Yoga and You 33.
11 DO--Wheel of Fortune 3, 15, Weekday 4. Gambit
8, 10; Farmer 's Daughter 13
·11 :3D--Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15; Happy Days 13, Love, ·
of life 8,10
11 ·5s--Take Kerr 8. Dan !mel's World 10
12:DO--Fun Factory 3,15; Let's Make a Deal 13, Bob
Braun 4; News 6,8, 10, Sesam e Street 33.
12 30--Gong Show 3,15, All My Children 6, 1 ~; Search
For Tomorrow 8.10.
12 ·5s--NBC News 3,15
1 DO--News 3, Ryan's Hope 6, 13, Phil Donlihue U,
Young and the Restless 10, Not For Women Only
15; Electric Company 33
1·30--0ays Of Our Lives 3,4,15; Rhyme and Rcosa&gt;l6,13; As The World Turns a, 10, Family Theahe 33
2:DO--S20,DIIO Pyramid 6,13, BI-Ways 33
2· 30--Doctors 3 1 ~. 15, Break The Bank &lt;1 , 13, Gu iding
Light 8,10, Unto lhe Hills 33
3 DO--Another World 3,4, IS ; General Hospital 6, 13, All
In the Famlly8.10, Lilias, Yoga and You 20; Catch
33 33
3 JO-One Lite to Live 13, Mickey Mouse Club 6, M,&gt;lch
Game 8,10, Inner lenni• 20 ; Title X JJ
4 O~Mister Cartoon J; Merv Griffin 4. Somerset 15;
Bewitched 6; Mickey Mouse ClltJb B. Mlsler Roger&gt;
20,33; Movie "The Black Orchid" 10, Dinah 1 13
4 30--Bewllched 3, Mod Squad 6; Andy Griffith O;
Sesame Street 20,33. Fllntstones 15
5 DO--Bonanza 3; Partridge Family a. Mi ss ion lm
possible 15
5 30--Adam 12 4,13, News 6; Family Affair 8; Eloc
trlc Company 20,33
6.DO--News 3,4,B,1D,13,1S; ABC News 6, loom 20,33
6 30--NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News8,10. Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Lili as, Yoga '
and You 33
/ ·DO--Truth or Consequences J; To Tell the Truth 4,
Bowling for Dollars 6, Let's Go to the Races o,
News 10, Name That Tune 13; Family Altair 15;
Romagnolls' Table 2C ; Wild, Wild World or
Animals 33
7 3D--Hollywood Squares 3,4; Let's Deal With If 6;
Match Game 8. Evening Edition With Martin
Agronsky 20; Price Is Right 10, To Toll The Truth
13; Nashville on the Road 15; Family Theatre 33.
a DO--Movle"1776" 3,4,15; Happy DayS6,13; l've"Got a
Secret a, 10, Burglar Proofing 20,33
8 30--Laverne 1!. Shirley 6, 13; Good Times 8,10.
Consumer Survival Kit 20,33
9 oo--s W AT 13. World at War 6; MA-S H a. 10; More
Music From Aspen 33 , Evenlng at Symphony 20
9 3o--Dne 0Qy at A Time B. 10.
10.oo--Rookles 13; Great American Music Colebrollon
6, Vaudeville 8, Dance For Camera 33, Switch 10.
News 20
10 30--Biack Perspective on the News 2U. Woman JJ
10 4s--To Be Announced 3,4, 15.
11 DO--News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15, ABC News 33
11 30--Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Mystery ot lhe Week
" The Murderers" 6, 13, Movie "Show Boot" 8,
Movie "Up From The Beach" tO; Janakl 33
1 oo- Tomorrow 3, 4. News 13

plaything

FAJUJCX

:

11 DO--News 3,4,6.8. 10, 13, 15 , ABC News 33.
11 JO--Johnny Canon 3. ~ . 15 . Geraldo Rivera Good
Night America 6, 13, Movie "Summertime" a;
Mov)e ''The GalebQ" 10; Janakl 33
1 00- Tomorrow 3,4, New5 13

Baby's

-6ULP ~·- FIND OUT ~!

F A furnace, basement, st

••

20.33; Rhoda 10
8.30--We Think You Should Know 3; Baseball6; Mork
Russell 20,33. Phyllis 10. Movie " From He1e lo
Eterni ty " 13
9 DO--Joe Forrester 3, ~. 15 ; All In The Folmlly 8, 10,
Si ng America Sing 33, How We Got Here The
Chinese 20.
9·30--Mavde 8, tO; World Press 20
10 DO--Jigsaw John 3,4,15; Medlc• l Center 0,10, New•
20, Bl Ways 33
i0.30--Catch 33 JJ

holllehold
cbore
Aasuage

WAL- AH S'POSE

drs &amp; Windows Only sasoo
PORTLAND - 9 room

_.

(2 wda.)

• Sandy

basement $38,500
POMEROY - 2 bedroom
frame house, bath , nat gas

_

II BlbUcal
abode
41 TIDy leaf.
cutter

mark

bedroom home wtfh ni ce
ktt chen w h tch tncludes
range • glass oven over
Dtntng, central atr heat,
family room with ftreplace,
and 2 car garage In dry

.
.: ...,...........

(hypb.
wd,)

»Rested

$22.500
2 YRS. OLD - Modern 3

TIL 8
..i• :. • FRIDAY
.
Close Sat. At 5 p.m.

38Paaable

31 Bowling

bedrooms, 1111 ceramtc ttle
b a th s,
n ice
fru•twood
kttchen , otl F A furnace , 2
car garage All on 1 acre

...

(1~1)

35Run
rr Pearl
Buck
heroine

•Oar

secon'
weddin'
ahnl vers'r4'

Vtrgil B Sr, Realtor
1
110 Mechantc Pomeroy, 0.
Phone 992-131'
TUPPERS PLAINS - 4

~amlly home,

Yemen
U Testimony
Zll- volaWe zt Victory cry
21 Coamic
!8 Bus
truth, In
paaeenger
China
30 Marcil
!% Coacb
graa
Paraeghlan
event
%4 Wind up
3Z Inatrument 25 Fonner
33 Agitate
chesa
34 - grievance
champion
(complain)

service

TEAFORD

- 2 furnt sh ed apar t m ents

992 SOt I

6 room house very we ll kepi 3
bedrm s modern k•tchen wall
to wall carpe t H W floors f ull
ba semen t new gas fu rnace
5mall lot to mow Ideal for
old er co upl e or smo ll fomtly m
good
neighborhood
1n
Pomeroy Coil for oppotntment
Phone 992 3097
-

17 Singer

BUILDING and remodel 1ng, ex
covot•on concrete work elec
Inca! work plumb1ng rough
ond fm 1shed carpentry and
roof •ng Phone 992 7491

MAIN
POM
NEED A

742 2348
HOUSE for so le m Roc1ne Oh1o
Sl Rt 33B ]USI out st de !own a EXCAVATI NG dozer backh oe
room:i bo lh porch po lio City
and d1tcher Charles R Ho t
wat er gas fo rced 01r furnace
f1 eld
Ba ck Hoe Servtce
good lot Call owner anytime
Rutland Oh1o Phone 742 2008
W11110m Maynard 949 26 13
GREG S CB SAlES located at Er
OLDER remodeled 3 bedroom
wtn s Gulf Ser 'IIC9
M1d
h om~ al l electnc on corner lot
dleport
Oh1o
Phone 9921n Pome roy
$12 ~00 Phone
2438

149 acre farm two houses barns
shed several bulldtngs c• ty
wate r mmerol nghts ltmber
100 acres t•llable good post ure
land 8 mtl es north of Pomeroy
oft Route 33 Hem lock Grove
Oh1 o Phone 992 5014 evenm gs
alt er 5 p m

D. Bumgardner

2180

WILL
roolmg co nstruc ti on
plumb1ng ond heohng No ta b
too Iorge or too sm oll Phone

WHY RENT? Buy o new home w tt h
payments some or lower than
rent 3 bedrooms den 2 baths
corpet plus all the extras o
housewt fe would wont Shown
by oppotntm ent 74 2 · 23~~

treadmiii

EXPERIENCED house
potnler
Phone Arthur Mu sser , 7-4 2

-

most mterestmg questtons
w11/ be used m th •s co lumn
and wtll recewe coptes of
JACOBY MODERN)

examples

(2 wda.)

&amp;-13- 1mo

-do

$1 000 down col i (304) 771
3102 or (304 ) 772-3227

Allow aotl llllow lfllll•l pool Ills lot
tlto do-tt·JOU11011 "'"
AI pool •pPia miiablo, too.

lltdd~pot1

SEwiNG MACH INE Repotrs ser
vtce all makes 992 2294 Th e
Fobr1c
Sh op
Pomer o y
Authonzed Smger Soles and
Ser v1ce We sharpen Sc 1ssors

(Do you have a questiOn
tor fh e experts? Wflle "Ask
the Jac obys care of thos
newspaper The Jacobys wr/1
answer IndiVIdual questtOJlS
If stamped, sell-addressed
envelopes are enclosod The

8 Blazing

Offering

PltONE992-5124

(bl4) b98 ?257 AI bony

A Mtchtga n reader wants to
know tf th e prectstOn c lub ts
really a prec1se system
No more than any other ex peri syslem and m common
wtlh all other expert systems
ts vet y ltlllc better than standard Amertca n
Today every expert patr
follows a lot of tls own tdeas,
bul m Ihis country well over 90
per cent base thctr methods
on s la nd~ rd Amen can

14 Be present 11 Port of
15 Clonlnnuters'
South

llob~ S•mmM Rd.,

241a

COUNTR Y farmland w 1th sedud
ed woods water and good oc
cess m Monroe Coun ty W Vo

SWIMMING
POOLS

o&amp;D TREE Trimmmg 20 years ex
per~en ce
Insured t ree
estima tes Call 992 -2384 or

~~~~

1 Kin to stout 7 Contend
4 Bogart film 8 Rockfish
10 Drooping
9 One of the
1% Verified
Hardy a
U Anna Moffo 11 Excellent

2980
COAL lime stone and calc1um
chlor1de and cok1u m brme for
dust con trol and spec1ol m1xmg
sal t lor formers Mom Street
Pomer oy Oh1o or phone 992

3.
6•

~"~~-'
by THOMAS JOSEPH

II= lHIS DUDE FIGURE:S
MAKING A MEAl
OFF OF l"H', i=ISH HE STOLE Ff(QM ME&lt; ,

Pom...,

Ph. 992-2174

Pass

Oswald "Now that you
l'"ve reached the age of 43
you should learn some respect
for the old man I am s ttll trymg to lea rn although tl gets
more dtfftcult as the years go
by The man who taught me
more than anyone was the late
Hal Sttns flat' s play of the
cards was magnt!tcenl Hts
btddtng was · of lhe ' Btd 'em
flt glt and tell em nothtng
school' Here IS Hal at work "
.J tm "Hts problem was to
avotd two he,tr l losers One
wav would be to stnp Ute

1

for sale
MAK E spnng clean tng proft loble
turn unwon ted 1lem s 1nto cosh
Adverllse m th e Wont Ads

South

I N 1 P,ts~
5 tfl
Pass

ever a student ?"

LITILE ORPHAN ANNIE

Square Yard Installed

Mtddleport, Ohto
992 6167
~~ 76-1 month

Call us at 941J. 2882
or 949-2201

North East

By Os~ald &amp; James Jacoby
Jtm
I have JUSI wntten
aboul so me or my problems tn
Ieat ntn g brtdge Wer e you

ASSORTED RUBBER
BACK CARPETING

Tax

\\ es t

P.t ss P.1 ss Pc~s!'l
Opcnm.: lead ~ V eft

Racine, Ohio

'1.00+
Wtth any so.oo purchase

repa~red, Sewa~jje .

• 9 5 4J

Ph (6141742-2409

6 CANS OF RC
.

• 9 54
4Qil08 7U
SO UTI!

Bolli-A

JUNE SPECIAL

Racine Plumbing
&amp;Heating

• 10 3
¥K H
• J 10 7 2

R•t~nd, Oh~ 45175

We Dehre1

haml, play ace ~ nd one heat·t
.tnd hope thai the wmner of
that tnck would not hold the
lasl hearl "
Os wald " Hal fou nd a
squeeze He stmp ly d rew
trumps, dtscardcd one heart
on lite ktng or clubs and duck
cd a hcarl He won lhe heart
return and cashed hts lasl
three trumps ·
.Jun '!tal was left w1th two
hearts and lw o dtamonds
North wtth our diamonds East
could not h'•ld a heart and
protcc l the j ack or
dtamonds "

28

• 6 42
t A K Q8

Southeastern Ohio
Truss Rafter Co.

Is 13, Friends ot Man 15, Inner Tenni s 33
8 DO--Bobby Vlnfoh 3; Yankee Doodle Cricket 13; Rich
Lillie~ . 15, Gunsmtlke 8. U SA People &amp; Politics

WIN AT BRIDGE
Hal Sims showed Ozzie how

TELL IN6 ME ALL THI$

"'K Q97

FLOOR WINDOW-

TIMBER
Pomeroy Fo rest Pro·
ducts Top pnce lor stond1ng
sowl1mber Co li Kent Hanby
j 446 8570

MENS used wo rk umfor ms
28 1nch 36 InCh WO ISt
S M l shor t ond long
S1 98 set Bodey s Store
die pori

WHICH MEAN$ HER

4.12 Ptlch
24'-$17.28
26'-$18.72
28'-$20.16

lONG BOnDM

Mowers-

1960 Chevrolet t ruck $85 See ot
570 Pearl Mtddleport

I 0 )(55

WANTED to ren t 3 bedr oom horne
locally or would hke to buy
home on lond co ntra ct Phone
247 2167

I

Redu ce sale and f ast w1th GoBese
Tab let s and E Vop
water
pil ls Nelson Drug

Mobile Homes for Sale _ Wanted to Buy
TWElVE 8 w1de mobile homes I
and 2 bedroom s comple tely
lurn1s hed Cass •us Canada y
1900 Central St
Gol l•pohs
Oh• o Near Sm1th Bu iCk Phone

TAILED

At RPOR.T-

TAPPED.

NO COLLECTING OR

pm es

THE

3451

Country Cousins Cookshoppe will be
accepting applications June 28-29-30
at their new location at 698 W. Main
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio from 9:00 to
5:00.

PERIEN CE?

""R0!&gt;1E' F ROM

r~&amp; ·
'

CODNER'S CAMPERS

Rtpt!f

1975 Ford Gran ad o 30'2 V 8 p s
pb a c $3895 Phone 992

O kA~ 50 AN E&gt;JEMY AGENT

NO RTfl (DI

Comp~lt SIIIJII En~

~

CAPTAIN EASY

4-10·1 mo.

Ph. 992-1991

WILKINSON'S

1974 Fo td Couner 4 speed II OOCl
rndes
$200 and assume
paymen ts 1974 Kowasc k• 250
1966 Ntmrod compmg Ira ler
lor fast sole Phone 992 706h

HELP WANTED

LARRl,.~Jfh~DER

6 27 76

•

..

Htlh prtces lor Strip lUlGI,
motors and other meiiiL
Phone 992·2228. Monday th11
Frtday 8-3, Saturdly 1-12.
5-26-1 mo.

RErlACEIIENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING-SOFFIT!
GUTTERS.IWNINGS

992 -7320 evenings

automa tt c, P st eenng , good tire s, clean 1n1enor

1

HALLS
SALVAGE

Fonantlnl ANt~bll
Blown onto Wails &amp;ltttcs
STOAII
WINDOWS l DOORS

Phone 949 -2814
9 A. M. to 5 P. M.

Sport about Wagon , 6 cy\ automatic tran s, radto ,
good tires, whtte finish good economy "

1971 FORD STA WAGON

Blown

lrt111l11ton Ser~tces

Conttnuous one ptece
gu"ers We hang It, or do tf
yourself Spectal pn ces to
butld ers

steering . radto, clean

' MONDAY, JUNE2i, 197'
5 DO--Bonanza 3, Partridge Family 8. Mission ·
Impossible 15
5 30--Adam 12 • News 6; Family Affair 8, Elec. Co.
20,33, Adam 12 13
6 DO--News 3,4,8,10,13,15, ABC News 6. loom 20,33
6 30--NBC News3,4,15; ABC News 13, Andy Griffith 6.
CBS News 8.10 . Hodgepodge Lodge 20 ,
Carrascolendas 33
7 DO--Truth or Cons J; To Tell the Truth 4, Bowling lor
Dollars 6, Buck Owens 8; News 10. Candid Camera
13, Family Alta ir 15, Lowell Thomas Remembers
20. Resourceful West VIrginia 33.
7 30--That Good Ole Na shvi lle Music 3, What Do You
Want to be When You Grow Old ? 4; Space · 1999 6,
Price Is Right a. Evening Edlflon with Martin
Agronsky 20; High Road to Adventure 10; Freedom

FREE ESTIMATES

GUTTER SERVICE

11895

Television .log for easy viewing

·

Business Services

av aolable sp a ce a nd
OPEN EVES . 8: 00P. M.
lonances
who
are
ready
to
.
POMEROY, OHIO .
start
1m med t ate l y
by
\.._ _ _ _ _...,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....;_.,;--...;;;-...;,11'
callong Collect
6" 252 4967
!
1969 Plymouth So tclhtc $1200
Ask For Mr Green
Help Wanted
Phor1e 992 613 1

Wanted to Rent
NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbu s, Ohto,
June 18. 1976
Conlract Sales Legal Copy
No 76-624
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Sealed proposa ls wtl l be

1972 FORDMAVERICK2 DR

dependable and wt llmg to

Yard Sale

IF YOU hdve a serv ce to alt er
won t to buy or se ll someth1ng
ore look1ng tor work
or
whatever
you II get resul ts
faster w1th o Sen tmel Want Ad

2 SIGNS Pomeroy
OF
QUALITY _Motor Co.

Parttime
MANUFACTURING
PIECE WORK

,_

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

Full or

Phone (b f4 )985 4245

Cou n ty Of M c1 q s and Sta te Of
Phone992 5382
Ohto Begtn nm g 60 t ee t and 7
lllC hes SOU !tlWCS!Cr l y from the LOST Tues doy mghl po1r of ligh t
so uth east erl y co r ne r o f Lot 151
blue pre scr1 pt1 on glosses
•n Sl11d Vll!a9 e on St c- ond
poss 1bly los t on Pomeroy park
Street at th e soulheas terl t
mg lot Reword tf found Coli
co rn er of the building now or
949 '23 14
form erly owned b y sa1d Ct iV of
Pom eroy ( known as the C11y
Hat tJ , th en ce northwes t erly

poratt ct w''" the wcstc rt v ,,n c

HelPWan~
'•"

work

'} j

j

camping Equipment

RACINE Ftrc Deportm en t w• ll
hove o gun shoot Sa tur day at
6 30 p m at the1r new buildtng
off Ba 5han Rood

LOST hom

Vast Results Use ,.,.,he
Sentr·ne-l Classi+ieds
..l.

£vor
I
.L' 0

pub I! cali on
REGULATIONS

7- The D•tly Senttnel , Midulepoti-Pomeroy , 0, Mootlay, Jw te 2B, 1976
DicK THAC\•

ZW

LZAP

NPFU

'/ONDER GOES
SNUFFY-- AMBLIN'
DOWN TH' ROAD WIF
HIS PRIDE AN 'JOY

WHO SAID
EI'JN\fTHING
ABOUT HIS
'IOUI'JG ·UN ?

IPTI

ZI'W

PF ' W

WTC

AIN'T HI ~ '-IOUI'JG-Ur\!
S'POSED TO BE IN
KIDDY' GARDEN?

ZW

THH

MLJVF

NPFU
JU

Z I' W

T

CTU

0T0F L .
AT

()

-

ENGO/P
tT;;;)F-T
I :::__+~(,....~....,
'l

the circled lettero
I toNowformarranr•
lhf! aurpri~e answer, as

w p . ~~~~=~~~.A::::=~ ouneoted by the above cartoon•

CTLAJUZ

Yesterday'• Cryptoquote: A BACHELOR GETS TANGLED
UP WITH A LOT OF WOMEN IN ORDER TO AVOID GET·
TING TIED UP TO ONE. - HELEN ROWLAND

Priiiiii-JIISW!Im

'!(

I I I I I J"
IA.newrn

S1turrl•r'•

lbmt~rrow)

Jumloh RAINY GULCH HECKLE THRUSH

I

1\tllWt'rl Wlatrt IVIrMIIIi"f Ulldtr lilt IU n appeora

to fl&lt; 1•1•1--SKY·HIGH

BELLE!!!

�8Tt.e·Daily Sentinel, Middlrport-Polll crol . 11.. \1omil'Y .. June 21l, 197!i

Highway Departn1ent has cash pains
Due to an apparent &lt;:&lt;~sh
Row problem, the Gulli11
County Highway Department
Is In serious finanda l trouble.
Dlsspelling curre'nt rumors
tho! "the cow1ty" is broke,
Mrs . Do1·othy Conde~·. Gallia
Cow1ty Au&lt;litor, Sllid today it
is the highway dcpa rtm,nt,
which opera tes throuvh
Malntenanl'e and Hoad
t'uuds fu rnished by the stall'

MEIGS THEATRE
Munday t hru Thu rsdttV

June 28.Julv 1
NOT OP EN

. . . . .,

AlliE

ROOSTER COGBURN

(. . . AN D THE LAOYl
Jot1n W e~t n e , Ka th cH~n e
Hepbum. Jol1n Mclntl r l'.
St r o thP.r

,

Show Sta rt s 1 p. rn .

1976 bu(jget totaled $1 ,09'2,000.

gasoline . tux collections,

Earlier this month, the
Auditor's Office rcce&gt;vc'll a

which is broke.
Mrs. Condee said these
funds arc coming in v~ry
slowly since the Ohio
Highway Patrol Is conduclmg
an invt•stiga tion into the
(Continued from page 1)
MrJior Vehicle Dep.1rtment. part , Ford said, because
GI!IIW, HS all other COWJties "gover!Ullen\s overin Ohio is suffering finan· committed themselves to
ciuiJy fr om the investige~tiun . ;unelioriatc soda! inequities
(;aUia ('&lt;Jwliy's highw11y al home and abroad and to
dcpartlllcnt. rw1 by Cmully acllieve 1·ising standard of
Engineer Paul Stull, employs living," ' Gree nspan told
43 persons. The dep~rtment's reporters.
"These commi tment s
proved to be, in retrospect, in
eco nomic
terms,
\ oo
ambitious in wh at they
actually achieved as well as
( Continuc~t from page 11 in ~xpectations they raised,
Reagan by 2-1 margins in the and as a consequence, the
Sou th , where 13 slates maj or task of the next severoI
provide on.,-third of the years is both economic and
electoral votes needed to win politica l to restore the
tlH• pr~s idPn&lt;' y .
economy to a sustain ed
growth pattern but also to
accept realistic goals that are
accepted by the public as a
whole."
Greenspan said 1&lt;o1'd did
not specify ll lly country in
cr iti cizin g governm ent
spendi ng for social programs
but he has opposed U.S.

Goal high

Reagall

•

Fri.Sat.suo.
July 1·3-4

Tommy Lee,
M iJrt in. ·

from motor vehicle a11d

tPGl

----------·-·--·--

sensational Value!
23" console Special
...

,

' 1 Gr~t

Socie ty " programs in

the past because of the heavy
federal spendin~ involved.
l•'ord sa id "inflation by
itself crea tes recession and
unemployment ... and the
way to cope is to eliminate
inflati on, " acco rding to
Greenspan.
Prime ministers Aldo Moro

m woud

V C: I JC I~ f ";

(rn i Jp l 'rt) nt

r•ntl '; -t nd 1).1-;n o f
ll l·dr 1unv ~ unu t,ltc J
W&gt;!.XI 11l, l\ £l- ll &lt;tl

-·-·-·

·-·-

~--~· " .

Beautiful Mediterranean
styling

hom n or bust ut the

1

'?J'IN/!ft

~

I I IE QUALI TY GOES IN OEfl\flE

INGELS
fURNITURE
BANK RATE F INANC ING

'192-2635
---~·- -

.

111[ NAMF GOES

~nmc

time.
French President Valery
, Gis ca rd D'Esta in g said
France also ha s an

• ,..,,te nt ed PowCI 5cnt,y V(J!Ia(t~? Rngul.il, nq Sy'.!Pm

ON

the cow1ty highway depmtment would he f1nanted
through other cow1ty funds.
However, she said, the county eannot continue to float the
department much over a
month.
Hopo1·L&lt; tlmt cow1ty employL'CS will not be paid
Friday are also false. according to the cow1\y auditor.
·•we will meet the payroll
as usual," ~ he staled.

Another problem, apparently adding to the cowr
ty's ~·oes , is the slow tax
collection for the second half
ceal estate taxes.
County Treasurer Oty M.
Stewart reported today only
rme-fuulih of the amount due
from the second half collection has been paid thus far .
Two of the cow1ty'; biggest
taxpayers, Ohio Valley Electric (Kyger Creek Plant) and
Ohio Elcdric (James M.
Gavin Plant ) have not paid
their se cond half taxes.
Friday, .July 2 at 4 p.m. is
th~ deadline. Stewart said
any !Hxes received in the
mail postmarked befo1·e midnight Friday will be acct•pted. l'enalties will be added after t11e deadline.

Patrol reports
two aecidents

•~ r Hl ·L' It•;.. tlnrtJ ,-.•ot)d
"rtlr~h

U1e ' 'time being, at least,"

of Juliy and James Callaghan
of Great Brita in told the
summit their economies
needed more lime before
economic brakes are applic'!l
by the strange!' nations,
chiefly lhe United States,
West Germany and Japan .
Canadian Prime Minister
Two traffic accidents in·
Pierre Elliott Trudeau told volving Meigs area persons
the conference UJC differing were reported today by the
rates of recovery fi-mn the &lt;;ailia·Meigs Post, Stale
worldwide recession were R Highway Patrol.
blessing.
Saturdav· at 1:2() p.m. on
He said lhilt if nil the Sl! 7 three and one tenth
nations had synchrolli zed miles north of Crowr1 City"''
rates of growth all could go auto driven ~)' Hubern

f 'jl'~ h' J ~) ( i OIIlll f lr&gt;
Pr!~.

$30,000 'heck in returned
gasoline taxes, but has not
received a check from the
Department of Motor.
Vehicles since Atlril6.
At the end of May, the
Gallia Count y Highway
Department fund had $.13,000,
but since that time three
payrolls have been mel.
Mrs. Condee noted that for

unemployment p!'Oblem but

curbing irulation was a more
urgent pnonty .

c~~'.?elloratt~~:~tg sc1:1~i~~

of West Germany and Prime
MIDDLEPORT
Mini ster 'fak eo Miki of
______
_ _ _ _ Jaonn.

...~•••e••••••• •••••••••••• •• ••

SENIOR CITIZENS
Are Preferred People

At Farmers Bank

Thompson, 51, Ro ute 1,

Morral Ohio struck the rear
of an a"uto dri~en by Phyllis
Rankin, 47, Route . 1,
Cheshire. There wao;; rmnor

damage. No charge was fil ed .
filed.
At 6 p.m. s~nda y on SH 124
in Meigs Cow1ty an auto
driven by ,Jotm Manley, 20,
Middleport , 11ttempted to
pass au unidentified vehicle

and his car struck the rear of
a Urinl vchicJe.driven by An·
· nabelle Thomas, 38, Mid. dleport. l'here was moderate
dam£tge.

Mrs. 'l11omas was removed
to Holzer Medical Center IJ)
the Pomeroy E-ft squad. The
accident is still under Ul·
vesligation. '!'he patrol investigated fiv e other ac·
cidents in the two cuunlles,
norte of a serious nature .

C eorl!e H. Ewing
dies in Akro n
George Henry Ewing, 79,
Akron, died Sunday evening
al a hospital in Akron.
The son of the late John T.
and Geneva Ewing, he spent
his early years in Pomeroy.
He was a graduate of Ohio
Umvers1ty.
Survivors include his wife,
Mari on ; a da ugh ter .
Marilyn, and a brother,
Charles of Akron, and a
sister, Mrs. Ethel William·
son, Pomeroy.

Free Checking Account For You
::,ef! u:; no w .

Surprise inside
detergent box

\

llv

Polly Cram&lt;r

Mr fr

"'The botlom rung of the
ladd er of success shou ld be

POME ROY, OHIO

suppo( ts the most pao ple".

People

li nd

thai

lh e
" FR I ENDLY ONES" '" e
dedicated lo finding the
materials you need, When
you need them , and gett ing

1hcm to you as soon as

possible.

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

••••••

open

McARTHtJR-..-The Vlntoo stage starting at 9p.m.
Saturday's Big Event will
County Athletic Boosters
Assn, is sponsoring Its a!Ulual be entertainment by Mlaa
Fourth of July celebration at Susan Ray and the Flo;wen
the Marvin Koenecke Show at8 p.m. at the Football
Memorial Football field at field. This is the big money
VInton County High School making event lor the benefit
of Vinton County Athletes so
bere.
This year's Bicentennial why not support your yoq
celebration is a four-day JM!llllle by seeing and hearing
event July 1-4 which SUsan Ray, top-fllgbt country
promises to be bigger alid and western songstreaa and
better than ever according to the ever popular Flowers
Clarence "Beany'' Ward, Singing group? Admissloo is
$2 for adults and $1 for
chainnan.
The Bicentennial Pageant, children.
On Saturday at 10 a.m.
"The People of Vinton County" an original script by there will be a Junior OlymLoisene Hoy will be directed pics competition and at noon
by Gerry Frye. The pageant an antique Auto Show at the
will open the celebration football field. Also. reduced
ThUrsday at 7:30 p.m. with rides (prices reduced) from Z
to5p,m.
rides and games.
Sunday's festivities get unThe parade at 7 p.m.
der
way with a bicycle rodeo
Friday, JUly z ww reature
(Blacktop)
at 1:30 p.m. The
county and out of county
Talent
Show
Is scheduled for
floats, marching bands and a
5
p.m.
and
the
Miss Vintoo
variety of ot)ler units. This
County
Contest
is
at 8 p.m.
year, for the first time,
Following
the
crowning
of
trophies will be awarded winning floats. It is still not too Miss .Vinton CoUnty, 1111
late to enter a float. Cantact Bicentennial Queen, there
Gus Kaaz, Parade Chainnan will be the drawing for
at 617 Engle Drive, McArthur prizes. The grande finale, the
fireworks, will get under way
or call596-4409.
Inunediately following the by !0:30p.m.
Among the many side
parade the little Miss VInton
County will be selected and features is a display at the
crowned. "Wildfire" popular high school of Vinton County ·
rock group will perfonn on artifacts sponsored by the
Historical Society.

Oepartm elll Store

CLEARANCE
SALE
Ad In Wed.'s Paper

CEMENT BLOCK
The
Bui

SUMMER

of

heritage house
Middleport, 0 .

---'

underway Saturday with a 7~lus unit parad~ beginning a\
10:30 a.m.
Units of the parade will go to the Eli Denison American
Legion Post Home on Beech Grove Road where they will !,&gt;e put
into line of march:
Members of the lire department and the cvdununlty's
bicentennial committee have worked for months In preparing
for tbe J~ly 4th weekend celebration. They )1ave held moneyraising events and there have been a number of contributions
from churches, individuals and businesses to make the
weekend olJlervance possible,
A number of trophies have been purchased as awards for the
best parade entries. There are first, second and third place
trophies for the best CMunerclal and the best non .commercial
float type entries in the parade. The bicentennial theme Is of
course, being stressed.
,
1 There will be three trophies for tbe best horse and rider with
the costwning also to be judged and three trophies for the best
decorated bicycle and costwned rider. There is a large trophy
to be awarded to an entry which might not fall into regular
categories. This would be an unusual, unique or an outslanding
entry according to the judges' opinion.

clotting factors respond. You
can only tell this with blood
tests. I do not think anyone
should be taking Cownadin
unless they have fairly
regular tests done to be sure
the dose is properly'
regulated.
Individuals
taking
Coumadin and other
medicines to prevent clotting
of the blood should be aware
that some common·
medicines can increase their
tendency to bleeding. Aspirin
alone can increase the
bleeding tendency and has
been known to cause
hemorrhages in people
taking large amounts.
Tylenon will not cause
bleeding when taken alone,
but it will increase the action
of Cownadin and in this way
increase the tende!ICY to
hemorrhage. Since people
can get aspirin and Tylenol
without a prescription the
doctor may not know they are
taking these medicines and
that plays hob with trying to·
regulate the blood-clotting
mechanism.
MO~HERATOSU

COLUMBUS (UPI)- U. S.
Rep. Charles A. Mosher, !\.
Ohio, retiring from Congress
at the end of this tenn, will
deliver the main address at
Ohio State University's
summer commencement
exercises Aug. "J:/.

..

NOW YOU KNOW
The metal pen replaced the .
quill when Josiah Mason ,.
perfected the slip-in metal
nib In 1828 in Birmingham,
England.
TWO MEN DROWN
LOGAN, Ohio (UP!) - Two
Lancaster men drowned ,
Sunday during a canoe outing
on the Hocking River near
here, Dead are Douglas Hoy,
24, and Brent Garret, 23, botli
of Lancaster,

Save .during our sale of
furniture on the Third Floor
and Porch, Lawn and Patio
Furniture at the Mechanic
Street Warehouse.
MAIN STORE, ANNEX AND WAREHOUSE OPEN WEEKDAYS
AND SATURDAYf9:30 TO 5, OPEN FRIDAYS 9:30-TO 8 PM.

Elberfelds In Pomero

Trophies have abo been purchued for preientlltion to tile
three best dressed coupleurtendlnu square dance to be l)eld
In the RuUand gymnasium 9 p.m. Saturday. There will be a
mayor's trophy to be awarded to the "bestohhow" at a nower
show and a decorated cake lhow with both of th- events to be
held Satw-day In the gy~siwn.
f. tug of war wlll belield at ~ p.m. Sunday_ at the Rutland
lAlmmunlty Park which will be the scene of many othl!r
activities during the three days, There will be a large trophy
and an Individual trophy awllrded to each member of the
winning 12-man !tam.
·
Other Sunday features will include a. hymn sin&amp; at 2 p.m. in
the gytll!UiS!wn and just before that lime all of the bella in the
conunwnlty wiiJ be rung.·
On Monday there will be a tractor pulling contest at 1p.m.
In the park and there will be old.faahloned conu.ts for the
youngest set. The evening program -a talent show with $100 to
be awarcted to the top three adults, 18 and older, and c:hUdren's
acts,17 and under - will be followed by a firework&amp; dlaplay,
Mrs. Joan Stewart, head of the blcenteMial committee,
has llpe8rbeaded action In the community over the past few
months. There have been welcome signa and flower planters
placed at entrances of the town and bridges have been painted
I" red, white and blue.

Ford in

final
push
By ELIZABiml WHARTON

Ualtecl l'nll Iaterutblal
Prtlident Ford II home
from Puerto Rico and
planning stratesy to pick up
the remaining sa deJecatllll he
needs to l!'ln the GOP
nomiilatlon next month 1!1
Kanaas City,
Ford arrived back In Wash·
lngton late Mooday night,
enthllllastic over the resultl
of the economic conference of
the leaders of six Western
countries and Japan.
Alter briefing hll Catinet
today, he wualated to confer
with his carnp.lgn atrategllts
on wllit they acc:mnpllshed In
his abeence and on what
moves to make next in the
per1011-by-per100 fight for the
magic number of 1,130 GOP
convenU011 deleaates.
. Ria challenger, Ronllld
Reagan, entertained the
Meeting in regular session project would be difficult, It
trawllnl! preu corp~~ at his
Monday night, Middleport was agreed to advertise for and Park.
that needed to carry out the California randl, and the
Village Cauncll voted to ad- the materials and then fit the
Some 650 tons of materials resurfacing on the four apparent Democratic
vertise for bids on resur- project to • the finances will be needed to carry out streeta.
candidate, Jimmy Ca~~L ~
Gene o11 on inother lund-rllllllll
' facing up to four of its available. The four streets the resurfacing , The town · Clerk-treasurer
streets.
are BrowneD 11ve. , Chestnut · has ,$3,725in revenue sharinB Grate read a letter from tour with hllh hopes of
While it was the consensus St., Plwn St., and the part of funds eannarked for street Colwnbla Gas of Ohio in- helping to pay off the
of council tbat finan cing the Beech St. between Locust repairs but that amount dlcatlng that as of !he July 31 campaign debts of hla
would be onlv a fraction of biWng, gas costa to each primary oppone~~ta as wen as
cfllllomer, due to the coet ad- his own,
JIIBiment, wiU Increase .8.:18
Several dozen membere of
cents per 1,000 cubic feet.
· Reagan's traveling preu
A requeat was received · corpa were treated to a
from the Tew Co. asking barbecued beef lunch at the
permission to enclose a lot on former California governor's
Park St., which is leased at ~ere ranch north of Santa
$150 a year from the village Barbara Monday.
liY the company. Council took
Whe~ Reagan was ahout to
TUESDAY, JUNE 29, 1976
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS no action until membere have demonstrate hla riding techan opportunity to study the niques for photocraphers, a
legal Implications of fencing reporter asked him to mount
the lot.
the horse from the rear with a
Cauncil also agreed to runnlnl! jUmp, as he had done
study further ali ordinance in Western movies yeara ago.
which would change the
"Are you kidding?" was
zoning on a piece of property the reply.
on Broadway St., 1Ollmed by
Democrat Carter left hill
John Kra..,.,...,.,,
A
first
ho'
•M· Ga,, at
··-···
me 1n PI au..,,
reading of the ordinance was midday for an eight-city fundapproved recently giving the ralalng tour, And his chief
property owner a non- fundo!'aiB- waa 10 confident
confonnlng pennlt ao that a he predicted Carter would not
repair garage could be built ooly pay off 1111 own debta,
on it. However, three but ret~uome mooey to the
readings will be required federal govenunent and even
~~. the pennlt can he help pay off the debt. ol10me
student - .teacher ratio ex- can still take part.
Motors ·for the swruner ........
j:Bndldat1111 he defeated in \Ill!
ceeds suggested state recomThe board employed Joe driver education prosram
Councd
received
a
comprtmarlei.
mendations.
Mitchem, junior high teacher and passed a resolution
Mortla Deea, In chuge of .
There wns no decision and IIBSistant football coach, authorlzlng Clerk-Treasurer plaint agalnat motorcycles
and
the
noise
they
make
in
Carter's
fund raillnf!, 11ld
reached last night. The board as head foottiall coach of the Eloise Boston to request, an
the
conununity.
It
wu
reporJ118!1Y
candldat1111
who hid
will discuss the matter again high school for next fall.
advance draw on school fun- ted that perhaps some of the dropped out of the race have
at the regular meeting in
There Is still a vacancy lor ds from the county auditor.
July. Mrs. Grace Weber, a history - health - phyilical · Attending the meeting vehicles have illegal muf- big campaign deflcltl,
principal of Riverview, and educati~n teacher at the high were Supt. . Riebel, Mrs. Hera. It was reported" that specifically mentioning
. three teachers there, led school. Those Interested Bol!ton, and board members, charges could be flied with Morrill Udall. The law forblda
parents on a tour of t!Je should contact Riebel at the Oris Smith, David Smith, the poUce In such Instances. Carter to give any candidate
However, It was agreed money outright, but he may,
school.
high school. The board leased Dorothy Calaway and Doug
Mayor Fred Hoffman would attend their fundralslng '
Alter the meeting, the a car from Smith-Nelson Bissell.
lnatead
have the poUce eventa and add 1111 prestige to
board met and accepted the
department
llaue some wal' their appeals.
resignation of Lewis (Spike)
nlngs
in
an
attempt to see
At the first atop In
Berkhimer, head football
that
the
lltuatiOilll
are
C&lt;II'J"eClAllheville,
N.C., Carter raised
coach, teacher and swruner
tedwlthoutcourtaction.
101ne
•100,000
at a fl,OOO..driver education instructor.
Attendln~
tbe
meeting
per1011
reception.
Sue Thompson was employed
were Mayor Hollman, ClerkRep. Albert P. Morano, ft.
as sununer driver education
Treasurer
Gnte,
Council
Conn.,
who Ia contelltlng the
instructor and the program
members,
Marvin
Kelly,
Senate
aeat
now held by Sen.
was organized this morning,
George Meinhart,- Carl Lowell P. Welcker Jr.,
Students wishing the course
Horky, Allen lee Kine, and invited Reagan to addrl!lll
James Brewer. Prayer that state's July ltl-17 Judge Paul E. Riley, set- Appeals In the case of Carter before the meeting was by convenUoo - tbe iqt of the
,:::,:,:::;:.:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: tlng by assignment in Gallia vs the Board Qf Education of the Rev. DwightZavitz.
year, but has not yet received
County Common Pleas Court, Southwestern Sc~ool
·a reply.
bas found in favor of the District.
Welcker supports Ford,'
defendant, the Galila County
who ls expected to win mOlt
"From the facts, lt would F~
Local Board of Education, In appear that plaintiff profited
WlLtlAMSBURG, Va.,
.u
of the state's 36 delegates.
a suit for back pay filed by in the amount of $2,254.87 lor
June 29 - The Vlrglaia
linda Rusk, a teacher in the the year by not having her
Convention adopted a coDschoolsystem.
stltution drafted by George
contract renewed. It is a funMrs. Rusk had been em- damental maxim of the law aU 0ffi0
Mason wblcb provided for
e
ployed by the fonner South- that if one C8IUIOt establlsh
tbe separation of !be
western Local School District damage, then one caJUJot
executive, legislative and
. RACINE - The Racine
for the year 1972-73. The
judicial branches of !be
recover. It would appear that Fire Deparbnent answered a
board on March · 20, 1973, plaintiff,
colonial govemmeat with a
under the facts call to the Pearl Deein
voted not to rehire Mrs. Rusk stipulated, suffered no actual , residence, Racine, at 11:30
bicameral legislature elecand 10 other teachers for the loss, monetary or otherwise. p.m. Saturday when an uninted. by popular vote, and a
197H4 school year.
governor with restricted
For the foregoing reasons, sured auto owned by WWlam
•
powers.
On June 7, 1974, the Fourth the court feels that the case J. Reibnlre, Pomeroy, was at SUJttffiit
District Court of Appeals
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:,:,:,:,:,::::::::::: reversed the action of the must be reaolved in favor of destroyed by fire. Wiring onthe defendant."
dar the dash was beUeved to
board because .the recomBy JIM ANDERSON
have been the cause of the
mendation of the county
OORADO,
Puerto Rico
fire. Lcea wu set at fl,200.
school superintendent was
(UP!)
The
West's aeven
Nine men and two trucks annot made to the board llefore
leading
Industrial
nations
Swered the caD.
its vote was taken. Under the
ended
a
Caribbean
lllnlnit
At a:tt p.m. Saturday the
I
1973-74 salary schedule of the
pledging
''better
department went to the Portdistrict, if plaintiff had been
land
area wbere an overiDad cooperation" to achieve
A Pomeroy man is in employed, her contract
. on an electric line callled a steady recovery from
would have been $6,922.30.
satisfa~tory condition at
r~on whUe avmdlng a
~~ in a home owned by
Veterans Memorial Hospital Plaintiff actually earned
new boom and buJi cycle of
CHARLESTON W. Va, JamesProffittandresldedln Inflation.
following a two car accident $4,233.42 during the school
by Raymond Ginther. Loe.s
at 11 :05 p.m. Monday in year and$9,176.97 overall.
(UP!) - Qlaker State on to the structure was p00 and . The leaders of the United
In his ruling, Judge Riley Refining
Chester Township on SR 7.
Corp.
has $800 to the contentl. Elcht States, Britain, Japan,
The Meigs County Sheriff's cited a similar case (Justus announced Valley Camp Coal men and two trucks an- France, Canada, West
Germany and Italy agreed
Department said Ronald L. vs Brown) in which the Corp. has become a swerect the call.
that IInce they met lut year
Carr, 38, Pomeroy, was Supreme Court ruled against subsidiary'
The merger follows
In Ramboaillet, France,
thrown from his car Into a , the plaintiff, but In favor of
approval last month by
"economic recovery Ia well
ditch and his car landed on the board of education.
Judge Riley stated, "All to stockholders of
both Dragging begun
under way."
.
top of him.
According to the report the issue, the court is of the cwnpanies,
But the cautious laniuage
Under terms of the merger,
Mikel P, Milhoan, 58, Rt. 1, opinion that the ruling in
of their cloalnc communique
Justus
vs
Brown
overrules
a
ma:dmum of 3.16 million lot missing boy
Long Bottom, traveling north
did not quite conceal the
on SR 7 was passed by Carr, the Fourth District Court o( shar• of Quaker State stock
es~entlal disagreement
POINT Pll:ASANT
is ileuable to shareholders of
who cut in too quickly and the
betw.n the blc three - the
Valley Camp, a Cleveland, John McDade, 15, ol 111 United States, West Germany
two collided. Carr's vehicle
Ohio-based company with Smith St., Point Pleuant was and J11pa11 - and the two
left the highway, going over
major coal production in reported mlBilnR Sunday at 9 Wilker economiel, Britain
an embankment; Carr was
Cloudy
tonlghl
ana
Wed·
West VIrginia,
p.m. He Ia the 1011 of Mr. and and Italy, where lnOaUon Ia
thrown from out into a ditch
Mn.
Roy McDade. McDI!de IIIII running above 15 per cent
nesday,
chance
of
showers
,\~though
Quaker
Stile's
and the vehicle landed on top
·
tonight
but
mcire
likely
Wed·
first
venture
into
the
coal
was lut near the river- and . 20
of him.
per
cent
bank.
Point
Pl..m
VoJbn. reepectlvely.
nesday.
Lows
tonight
in
buslneu,
the
merger
follows
Carr was taken to the
"Our objective now Ia to
hospital by the Pomeroy lower 60s; highs Wednesday a general trend in American leer Fire Department bepn
Emergency Squad. Carr was in the upper 70s, Probability · lndllltry where many large draggins operaUona In manage eHec:tlvely a
cited to court on charges of of rain 30 per cent today, 40 . coal companies s· '\llrUaUy Crooked Creek near the Point tramltloil, which will ~ce
per c-ent tonight, 60 per· t-ent or wholly oWile
.Jjor oil Pleasant boat launch this the
hi&amp;h
level
of
reckless operation.
Wednesday,~
companies.
morning.
' (Continued on,pace tl)

Bids wanted on street project

-

JACK WALKER AND JANET WILLIAMSON show the many trophies to be awarded.
over the three-day July 4th celebration in Rutland starting Saturday.

VOL. XXVIII

Vitamin need after surgery

Watch For Our

RUTLAND- This community will roll out its w~lcome mat

to a three-day holiday weekend celebration which gets

•

e

DR. LAMB

Hospital News ·

75-unit parade will launch
Rutland holiday celebration

Vinton 'Fourth'

money, prolong the use of
IN FLA'fiON FIGHTER
DEAR POLLY - When a your control-top pantyhose
powdered detergent box and be very cvmlorlable in
seems empty I always cut it hct weather. Take a pair with
open. It is surprising how runs and cut off the legs
much detergent is stuck to where they are joined to the
the bottom of the box and panty. The control top can
would be wasted otherwise. then be used as a light weight
This is very easily scraped off panty gird)e that is especially
good under slacks when you
into the washer. ~ ANNA .
go bare legged. It is cooter
DEAR POLLY - Instead and still your twnmy Is kept
of buying a commercial oven under control. These cut
clea ner , I find regular downs wash and dry quickly
household anunonia is better, and easily, too. - ·cARRIE
DEAR POLLY - To save
easier and ce rta inly less
on
the high cost of soap, make
expensive. I pour one-third to
one-half cup of the full a small sack out of nylon net
strength ammonia into a and put a drawstring in the
small glass, jar or bowl and top. Drop aU those little ends
set it on the oven rack of soap in llie bag, pull up tbe
. ov ernight. Next morning string and it is just as good or
even baked-&lt;&gt;n food lifts off better than a regular bar of
and away and there is no dull soap. This way every bit of
film or unpleasant odor. ~ every bar is used. - JOE ,
DEAR POLLY - Ifound I
TAN A.
was
using a roll of paper
DEAR POLLY - Kate
towels
every week just lor the
wrote a Pet Peeve conc-erning
kids
to
dry their hands in the
lhc odd shapes of some jam
kitchen.
I had an oldjars and how hard it is to get
that last bit out. My sons get fashioned wooden paper
every last bit of ia m or iellv towel holder so I bought two
by adding \'.! cup milk bright colored towels to
and then shaking the jar to match my kitchen and pinned
make a delicious flavored to the holder. This looks great
in my country kitchen and
milk shake. ~ D.A.L.
DEAR POLLY - When a surely saves money. There
tube of maseru:.• gets dry or are no more towels dropped
seems to be empty I place it, on the floor and when dirty
tightly closed, in a glass of the towel is thrown in the
hot wa ter while I apply other washer and a clean one
make-up. Soon it has warmed pinned on. ~ SHIRLEY.
so J am able to use it several
more times . - MRS. J . K.
DEAR POLLY ~ I have a
small famil y and have found
that I can save a considerably
amount of money by doing
grocery shopping only every
two weeks rather than every
week. I buy meal in larger
packages. TI1is is usually
cheaper and then I divide it
needs I'm sending you The
into smaller packages. I bake By Lawrence E. LaiQb, M.D .. Health Letter nwnber 4-6,
DEAR
DR.
LAMB
I
am
a
our own bread, cookies, etc,
vegetarian. I've read that Balanced Diet, RecomBy foll owing a complete
the best of vegetarian mended Daily Dietary
even
grocery list I usually only
diets
Jack vitamin B-12, but Allowances (RDA), Others
have to pick up milk in beother
books say that there is who want this information
tween my regular shopping
nothing
lacking. Would you can send 50 cents with a long,
days. ~ LiNDA M.
·
set
the
record
straight and let Btarnped self-addressed enDEAR POLLY ~ Save
us vegetarians know if we're velope for mailing. Address
getting all the vitamins and your letter to me in care of
this newspaper, P. 0. Box
•mtrients we need?
1551, Radio City Station, New
DEAR
READER
Veterans Memorial Hospital
York.
Vitamin
B-12
is
found
in
ADM ISSIONS - Melvin
DEAR DR. LAMB - Could
animal
products.
Strict
Foreste r, Racine; Gladys
there
be any danger of
vegetarians
who
use
no.
Barton, Coolville; Clara
hemorrhage
from taking 10
animal
protein
at
all
in
their
Honey, New Haven; Edna
milligrams
of
Cownadin as a
diet
are
conswning
a
vitamin
Swick, Rutland ; Wilbert
blood
thinner
over
a period of
B-12
deficient
diet.
MicroMcLain , RaCi ne; Arbella
time?
organisms
do
live
in
the
Donahue, Pomeroy; Linda
DEAR READER - II Is
Grimm , Racine; David nodules of Jegwnes that syncertainly
a warning that you
thesize
coenzyme
8-12
and
Carter, Pomeroy ; Mildred
should
see
a doctor at once
that
delays
the
Will, Pomeroy; Goldie
and
have
your
blood tested. A
of
B-21
manifestations
Ro berts, Racine; Elsie
dose
of
10
milligrams
a day is
deficiency.
The
strict
Spence, Pomeroy.
the
upper
range
that
is
vegetarians also get plenty of
DISCHARGES - Craig
usually
given
and
is
likely
to
Dorst, Burwell McKinney, folic acid from leafy
Martha Searls, Myrtle Durst, vegetables. The folic acid be too much over a period of
Bar ~ ara
Smith , Elson may help to prevent part of time.
The dose does have to be
the prob
of B-12 deficienSpencer.
cy but no• ne of the vital regulated for each patient according to how his bloodones.
Holzer Medical Center
Vegetarians
who
use
milk,
(Births, June 25)
Mr. and Mrs. Basil C. cottage cheese and dry milk
Shaffer, daughter, Point powder will get some B-12 EXTENDED OUIUlOK
from these products. Also,
Wednesday tbrougb
Pleasant, W.Va .
tlje1
·e
is
an
adequate
amount
mostly fair and
Friday,
(Births, June Z6)
of
B-12
in
egg
yolks.
But
if
cool
lbrough
!be period
Mr. and Mrs. Michael E.
these
items
are
not
in
the
diet
with
highs
in
!be
70s and
Stapleton, so n, Gallipolis;
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond P. then you should seriously lows In .tbe 50s.
consider adding some B-12 to
Denuit , son, Oak Hill.
your daily nutrient intake. I'd
1Births, June Z7)
Mr . and Mrs. Robert Kight, recommend that such individuals just take an orson, Jackson .
WINS CROWN
dinary daily all-purpose COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) vitamin pill and that will Jay Springsteen, Flint,
Tax distributed
meet
the daily needs for B-12. Mich., led almost the entire
COLUMBUS
Slate:
You can get sufficient way in capturing the
Auditor Thomas E .
Ferguson's office distributed amounts of protein in a American
Motorcycle
$4,664,000 in gasoline taxes in vegetarian diet that includes Association Camel Pro Series ,
Jw1e to Ohio's counties and plenty of beans, particularly event at the Ohio State
townships. Each of 1,320 soybeans, plus some wheat in Fairgrounds Sunday,
townships received $1,200 for the diet. . However, for
Springsteen, a 19-year-old
a IOWllShip total of $1,584,000 growing children who need member of the Harleyand each of the 88. counties greater amounts of some of Davidson factory team,
received $35,000 for a county the amino acids I think it Is moved from a fourth place
total of $3,080,000. The state's wise to also include milk and start to seize the lead on the
967 cities and villages, which milk products in the diet.
first lap of the 20 lap national
To give you more in- event on the half mile dl!1
normally receive gasoline
taxes eight times a year, fonnation on daily dietary track.
were excluded from the June
distribution.
OHIOAN IS FIRSF
BECKLEY, W. Va. (UP! )
- Melvin D. Helmondollar,
211, of Columbus, Ohio, Friday
became the first victim to die
this year on the West Virginia
Turnpike. Police said he was
pronounced dead on arrival
at a Beckley hospital after his
car collided head-&lt;&gt;n wit11
another car in a three.Jane
portion of the toll road. It was
raining at the time.

th e strOnges t becn us.e it

Fanners.Bank

~o

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Because We Furnish A

We invite ynu to use th is preferred serv ice wi lh no
servi ce charge. All those 65 years and over are
we lcome lo open nn acco unt any l ime. Slo p in and

Polly's Pointers

Pageant

NO. 51

at

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

en tine

~~Busing for better
Classroom aired

By United PresslnteruaUonal
DAN DIEGO-S.SGT. HAROLD BRONSON, a Marine
drill instructor court-martialed lor the death of a recruit
fatally beaten in training, was found Innocent of all charges
Monday. His attorney called for dismissal of charges against
two other sergeants and a captain;
A panel of five officers and three enlisted men, including
two other drill sergeants, deliberated three hours and 15
miootes before brb)glm! in qte verdict, ending an 11-&amp;ly trial
at Marine Corps Ri.Tuit' Depot. They apparently accepted
Bronson's defense that he acted reasonably and was carrying
out orders.when Pvt. Lynn McClure was fatally beaten In a
bout with pugll sticks as he refused to fight back and screamed
for mercy.
LONDON - PRINCE STAN ISLAUS RADZIWILL, the
Polish-born fonner husband of Princess Lee Radzlwill, sister
of Mrs. Jacqueline driassis, died Sunday after a brief illness.
He was 61. Radzlwill, who has a home near Buckingham
Palace, died at the hlime of miiiJonaire racehorse owner lvor
1
Bruce in Essex, northeast of London.
The Radziwills married in 1959 but were divorced in 1915
after living apart for two years. Princess IAle, 44, flew to
London with her daughter when she heard the news and said
she wanted to be at Radziwill's funeral and to visit their son,
Antoine, at school in London.
"Despite our divorce, we were very close," she told the
Jaily Express. "I last saw him in New York about three weeks
1go. He had been In indifferent health for some time."
LONDON - A SALE OF 27 impressionist and modem
J)Bintlngs from mainly French and Swiss private art
collections totaled $2.8 million at Sotheby's Monday evening,
A painting by VIncent Van Gogh, "L'Heure de Midi ou
Jardin pres d'une Maison," was sold to an anonymous buyer
lor $8114,000. The record price for a Van Gogh is $974,880paid in
New York in 1970. A painting by Paul Gauguin entiUed "I.es
premieres Fleurs ·ou les BretoMes aux Avlns" brought
$396,000.
AKRON, OIDO - A STRIKE BY THE city's sanitation
department workers halted all garbsge collections Monday,
Local 1360 of the American Federation of State, County and
Municipal Employes, representing the 80 garbage men, said it
walked out over a »day suspenaion given to one of ill
members last week.
·
The union said tbe worker had an "altercation with a
cltl2en" on his route. City officials said no garbage pickups
would he made until the dispute was settled. They also Insisted
there would be no negotiations until the men returned to work.
SEA'ITLE - GA80IJNE STATION OWNER John E.
Banda did a brlak business Sunday, but tbe cash wasn't going
. into the till. It went into a bag held by a robber hidden inside
the office.
·
Banda told pollee a man In his early 20s came to the office
and asked for directions. "I have a gun," the intruder said and
then positlooed himself out of sight under a desk where he
stayed while business boomed. "Thanks, sucker," the robber
said before he left the statloo.
Pollee said that the bandit fled after he hauled In $500.
WASHINGTON- IN THE PAS!' MONTH, four tourists
were arrested for ca~ their guns with them as they went
through the White House tourist line. The U. S. attorney's
office said r.1Ionday the toiD'ists all brought their guns to
Washington for protection and were apparently unaware of the
city's gun cCIIIIrol laws.
.
The office said It fears many tourlsts may be arrested diD'ing
the July 4 w"kend for carrying unregistered guns. Assistant
U. S. Attorney Bette Uhrmacher said maily tourlats bringing
guns with them come from states with leas stringent gun
control laws than those in Washington. She said the guns were
discovered when the tourl8la were searched as they entered
the White House.

REEDsvilLE
Apptoximately 35 to 40 parents
expressed views on proposed
reassigrunent of pupils in order to achieve an improved
teacher-student ratio at a
public meeting conducted by
. the Eastern Local School
District Board of Education
Monday night at Riverview
School.
Pros and cons of the issues
were voiced by the parents;
several expressed ·strong
opinions against the change.
· Supt. John Riebel said the
. plan is being considered by
the board because oi the high
student- teacher ratio at the
Chester Elementary Scllool
and the low student-teacher
ratio at . the ltivervie"w
School. At Chester the

Cambridge

firm wins
bridge hid
A bid of $43,145 to replace a
bridge in Chester Township
on TR 112 submitted by the
Ohio Bridge Corp. of. Cambridge was accepted by the
Meigs County CommissionersMonday.
Meeting with the commission were members of the
Winding Trail Garden club
who asked for and got a
promise of help in replacing a
beautification project in front
of the Infirmary damaged
when new water lines were
laid recently. The prject consisted of a bird bath, benches,
flowers and trees,
The conunissionets approved an animal claim of
$50 for the Joas of a lamb submitted by George Roberts,
Long Bottom. Attending were
Henry Wella, Warden Ours,
and Bernard Gilkey commissioners, Wesley Buehl,
engineer and Martha Chambers, clerk.

ACfJONS FILED
Rita Hughes, Chester, has
filed suit for support in the
amownt of $700 against Herman Taylor and Vona Taylor,
Middleport, in Meigs County
Common
Pleas Court. Wanda
UNll'CALLED
UNrrCALLED
Gardner,
Rt. 1, Langsville,
The Pomeroy Emergency
The
Middleport
ER
Sqllld
filed
suit
lor
divorce against
Sqllld was called at5 :41 p.m. ,
was
caD~
Monday
at
11
:22
David
Gardner,
a&amp;nie adMooday' to ·the Hiland Road
a.m.
to
Syeamore
Street
for
dress,
and
Dottie
Capehart,
for Harry Eblin, Jr., who was
ill, He was ta11en to Holzer Woodrow Call, 12, medical, Rt. 4, PomerOy, was granted
who was taken to Holzer a divorce from Michael
Medical Center.
Medical
Center.
Capeha~Sprlng Lake, N.C.
~

•

Teacher loses
hack pay ·suit

Dateline 1776

...e guts
1

. j'ured
Carr m

Oil finn has

, ace ,d ent
m

swallowed up

Valley Camp

Weather

biJ · CoA · t'
upera IOn
pledged

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