<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="15012" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/items/show/15012?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-03T23:23:57+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="47789">
      <src>http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/files/original/9e3cad6725d83fc888ded0193c26bfdf.pdf</src>
      <authentication>665e8dd394e972badaf841ef2851c7d5</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="48236">
                  <text>--.....--.
12 - The Dallv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Wednesdav. April20, 1977

'I'h.ree bonds are forfeited
Three defendanu forfeited fined In the court of
bonds and three others were 11tiidleport Mayor . Fred
HoHman TUesday night.
Forfeiting bonds were
Alvin L. Purkey, Maaon, $300,
posted for DWl; JOiePhlne
Blevins,
Middleport, $25,
Fri ., Sat., Sun .
failure to yield .right of way,
and David S. Ridgway,
MIDWAY
Pomeroy, U7, speeding.
Charlelon Heston
Fined were Robert L. Dugan,
Rutland, $2~ and costa ,
Henry Fonda
disorderly manner; James E.
- AiscrChapman, New llz"emen, ~
NEWMAN'S
and cost!, lrespasslng, and
Darrell L. Edwards, Akron,
LAW
$00 and costs, speeding.
George Peppard

MASON DRIVE-IN

TilE INN PLACE
Thursday Night Special

Home
winteri%ation
program
.
.
.
untknoay in ·Meigs and Galli.a
CHESHIRE - The Gawa • provided
to
eligible
Meigs Community Action applicants at no COlt. Anyone
Agency
is
accepting needing to have their home
appUcations from low-income winterized can obtain an
individuals and families for application by stopping by or
home winterization.
contacting any of the
The program is funded by following Gallia-Meigs
the Community Services Community Action Agency
Administration and includes oftices : Cheshire Office weatherstripping,
window 367-7343 ; Meigs County
caulking, installation of Courthouse - 992-5605; and
storm windows and attic the Gallla County Courthouse
insulation. The~ services are - 446-4612, Ext. 72.

Local news, in briefs
RACINE - rhe Southern
High School choir under the
direction of Mrs. Lee Lee will
present a concert at the high

school Sunday , April 24, at
2: 30 p .m . free of charge .
The re will be 80 students
participating In f~e concert .
Two hlghllgfits are montages

of "A Sentimental Journey
Throug~ t~e 40s" and " Rock
Around the 50s." Mrs. Lee

· lee IS also the accompanist .

RACINE - A variety show
will be presented at Southern
High School Friday May 6,
Nrs. Lee Lee has announced .
· The junior high glee club will

present a concert date to be
announced.
There will be a hymn sing
at the Hazel Community
·Church Saturday 1 April 23, at
7: 30p.m . The Jolntalres wil l
be featured ~lngers . The Rev.
Edsel Hart, pastor, Invites
the public .

.

Work parties for t~e
Pomeroy Baseball League
"have been sc~eduled . at I he
ball fields today al 6: 30p.m .
and Saturday from noon to 5
p.m . All parents of youths
participating In t~e summer
program are asked to com e
and help prepare the fields.

Visit Out Salad Bar

Veal Pattie
Mashed Pot a toes

and Gravy
Vegetable
Hot Rolls
Coffee, Tea or Milk

Plus Tax

THE MEIGS INN
Pomeroy,O.
Phone 992-6304
PIZZA SHACK
992-6304

FOUR FINED
Four defendants fined
TUesday night by Pomeroy
Mayor Clarence Andrews
were Helen Rood, Pomeroy,
noD and costs, assault and
battery; Aaron Hysell,
1 Pomeroy, $350 and costs and
three days in jail, DWl;
Alfred Tomney, no address,
$00 and costs, intoxication,
and Harrison Rood, Jr.,
Pomeroy, noD and cost!, on
assault
and
battery.
Forfeiting a ~ bond poated
.for speeding was Lawrence
Hysell, Middleport.

State No. 223X
CONSOLIDATED REPQRT OF CONDmON

The Farmers Bank &amp;
Savings Company
ul Pomeroy, Ohio and Forelgo aod Domestic Subsidiaries, at the close of
bulbless Marcb 31, 1977, a state banking lns.ti!Utioo organized aod operat!Dg
UDder the banking laws of thiiJ State and a member of the Federal Reserve
System. Publl8bed lD _accordance with a call made by the Stale ljanktng
Authorities aod by the Federal Reserve lllmll of thiiJ District. ·

ASSETS

Clish and due from banks ..... ... .• .. . •........•.. .. .. .....• , ... 3,020,000.00
U.S. Treasury securities : . •.... . .. .. . . .. , ........ . ........... . 4,722,000.00
ObUgations of U.S. Government
agencies and corporations ... . .................. . .. . ... . . .... . 1!4,000.00 •
Obligations of States and political subdivisions ... . ....... . .. ... .. 2,043,000.00
Federal Reserve stock and corporate stock ..... ... . . . . .. . . . ....... 24,000.00
Federal flinds sold and securities purchased under
agreements to resell in domestic offices. .... . ... ... ........... , . 600,000.00
a. Loana, Total( excluding unearned income) ...... .. ... 8,882,000.00
b. Less: Reserve for possible loan losses . ................. 90,000.00
c. Loans, net. ....... •. .... . .............. . ..... .. . .. ' .. .. .. .. 8,792,000.00
Bank premis&lt;i., furniture and fixtures, and
.
other assets representing bank premises ... •... . .. . . . . . ... .. . . .. 405,000.00
other assets ..... .. ~ . . . ... . ..... . .. .. ....... . ... .. . •• ... . .. . . . ... 4.000.00
TOTAL ASSETS . . ... . . .. .. ....... .. . . ........ .. .... . ... .. . . 191724,000.00
UABJLl'I'IF.'i

Demand deposits of individuals,
·
partnerilhipsandcorporations ..... : . . . .. .... ... .. . .. , . . .. . . . 5,173,000.00
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
·
partnerships, and corporations ..... ..... .. .. . . . ..... . . . . .... 12,622,000.00
Deposits of United States Government. . ... ... . .. . ................. 50,000.00
Deposits of States and political subdiVisions .. ................ . .... ~95,000.00
Deposits of cominercial banks . .. . .. . ..... . .• . ..•............... . . 4,000.00
Certified and officers' checks . . ....... . . . ... ..... , . .............. 65,000.00
Total Deposits In Domestic Offices ... . ... .. .. .. . . . .
a. Total demand deposits . ... .... .. ....... , . . . . . . . . . . 1122
b. Total time and savings deposits . . .. . ...... . , . . .. .. .
Total Deposits in Domestic and il'oreign Offices . . .............. .
Other liabilities ........... . ....... : . .................. . ... .
TOTAL IJABILITIES ...•.. . ..... . ... .. . .. . ..•. .. . .. . .... . ..
EQUITY CAPITAL
Common stock:
a. No. shares authorized 12,000
b. No. shares outstanding 12,000 . .. . ............ (parvalue)
300,000.00
Surplus... . . .. .. . .. . ....... . . ... .... .. .... ... . .... .. .. . . ..... . 500,000.00
Undivided profits . . . . . . ... ... . . . , . .. . ... . . . . . ...... ............ 3205!000.00
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL ... .. ... . . . . ...... .. . . . ..... .... ... .1,1 ,000.0
TOTAL UABILITIES AND
EQUITY CAPITAL . ... . .. . . . . . .................. , . . . . ..... 19,724,000.00
MEMORANDA
Average for I~ or 30 calendar days ending with call date:
a. Cash and due from banks.. . .... .. . . . ... . .... .......... : . . ... 1,943,000.00
b. Federal funds sold and securities purchased under
agreement to resell . ... . . . . .. ....•. . .. . . . ... . . . . . ... . . ... . .. . 903,000.00
c. Totalloans .......... .. .. .. .. . .. ·....... .. .. .. . ... . .. .... .. . 8,900,000.00
e. Total deposits. . . .... . . . . . . . . ..... .. . •· . . .. . . .. .... . ... . . .. .. 17,647 ,000.00
SUPPLEMENTAL MEMORANDA
Ple_dged assets and securities loaned (book value) :
U.~. Government obligations, direct and guaranteed,
pledged to secure deposits and other liabilities . .. . . . . . ... . .•.... .. 890,749.60
TOTAL . .. . . .. ... . . . .... . . . . . .... ..... . ..... . . . . .. . ... . ...... . 890,749.60
I, &amp;ger W. Hysell, Cashier, of the above-named·bank do hereby declare
· that this report of condition is true to the best of my knowledge and belief.
·
' Roger W. Hysell
We, the undersigned diri!ctors, attest the correctness of this report of condition and declare that it bas been enmined by us and to the best of our
knD'II'Iedge and belief is true and coiTect.
Fred R. Carsey, Jr.
FredW. Crow, Jr.- Directors
'
R. C. Follrod
state of Ohio CowJt)i of Meigs, SB:
Sworn to and 1ublcribed before me this 12th day of April, 1'm.
JoAnn Crisp, Notary Public
My Commiltllon Explrell July 17,1978.

•

•

Opinion heavy
against public
employe strike
- ~

First results of a poll

conducted by the Ohio
Information Committee
(OIC) of its members on
proposed
legislation
pennitllng public employee
strikes released on the
question, "Do you favor
legislation in Ohio permitting
public employee strikes?," 95
percent voted "no."
·
The poll began All"il I and
ends May I. · The Ohio
information committee is a
state-wide, year-around,
independent, · nonpartisan,
graSIH"oots, political action
organization.
GET NEW NUMBERS
James Page, project
engineer for tile Meigs county
house numbering project
announces that the following
roads have received new
house numbers : SisSon Run
Road (TR12), North Run
Road (TR10), Cone Road
(~7), Happy Valley ,Road
(TR8), Laurel Road (TRil),
Fauber Road (TR65),
Erickson Road (TR&amp;j, Peck
Lane (TR617), Throckmorton
Road (TR2), Rutherford
Road (TRZ1), Orchard Road
(TR616) and SR3~.

Women in

App~chia

(Continued from page 1)
the Leagoe of Women Voters. Her husband is active in the
Community Action Council, a group which administers
federal funds .
"You've got to have an adequate transportation system
to get your products out," said Mrs. Whealey.
''Oltting a highway Into the area does the same thing
strip mining does to the land, and It can ruin a
watershed." she said.
"Either you live in a flood plain or you're Sl.idlng off a
hill," she said. "If you put in dams to ·hold back the water,
then you're flooding someone else's land and a dam can
ruin wbat good land there Ia.
"Industries won 't locale in areas where there are no
sewage facilities," llhe added. "Some people in this area
don't even 111\ve home sewage facilities,"
What is being done to help people in the area is being .
done through the use of federal funds - mainly through
the Appalachian Regional Commission,
"When we first came here, there wasn't even Planned
Parenthood," she said.
She says there are Planned Parenthood facilities, day
care centers, child development centers, prtHlatal care
and wellbaby clinics for the women .
Federal funds baye created programs where the people
can learn to help themselves.
"For some women, the only meetings they ever
attended are church functions, and some don't even
belong to a church," she said. ''These programs now offer
the women an opportunity to get together."

SENIOR CIT I ZENS ' HEA RING SC REEN I NG

Name ••••• • •••• ••• • • ••••• •• •• • •••

Aq e • ••

Audio

Hospital News
Holzer Medical Center
(Ditclulr1eol
Clyde Adams Martha
•
Bevan, JeSBica Covert, Gusta
Culligan, Don CuUuns, Nancy
Downard, Carl Drummond,
Dyke Garrett Mrs. Norbert
Gatrell and u:rant daughter·
J
'
uanlta Halley, John Hill,
Arlene Hornsby,. Mrs. Ed·
ward Keslar. and mfant son ;
Tanya Ughtfoot, Catherine
Mlller, Jared Mnore, Ruth
Nichols, Mary Parker,
Connie Parsons Irene
Reynolds, Marjori~ Robin·
son, Earlene Saunder.s, Mrs.
Dale Stewart and infant
daughter d J hn Th
~UU::.
omas.
(AprlllB)
Mr. and Mrs. Billy Johnson, Oak Hill, daughter. Mr.
and Mrs. Joseph McCarty,
Pomeroy son.
'

•

News •• in Briefs

(Conllnued from page 1) '
lradition by defeating five opponents Tuesday in the
Democratic mayoral primary - a victory considered
tantamount to election.
Bllandic, selected by Daley as alderman of the South Side
ward which has provided Ollcago with all Its mayors smce
1933, earned 51.1 per cent of the votes. His chief opponent, . VETERANS MEMORIAL
Alderman Roman C. · Pucinsld, gained 32.~ per cent of the
Admitted- Audrey Woods,
Long Bottom; Charles·
votes.
McCloud,
Middleport;
JERUSALEM - ISRAEL CAME TO A HALT for two Richard Winebrenner,
minutes today in a silent vigil to honor the dead from four wars Syracuse; Betty Baroni&amp;,
with the Arahe and hundreds of smaller conflicts . Prime Pomeroy; Ralph Rose, Jr.,
Minister Yitzhak Habin laid a wreath at the Mount Herzl Racine;
Mary
Call,
Cemetery outside the Israeli capital and said, "Every inch of · Pomeroy; Dorothy M!Uer,
Shade; Pearl Garnes,
our land is soaked with the blood Of our heroic sons."
Cars and buses stopped in the streets and drivers got out to Dexter; Loneda Varney,
stand at attention at Ham. (4am. EST), when air raid airens Vinton; James Black, West
across the cotDllry walled for two minutes. The silent pause Columbia; Hell French,
came as part of Memorial Day ceremonies to honor 12,400 war Pomeroy; Adrienne French,
dead and others kllled in the undergroWld struggl.es that led to Pomeroy.
Discharged - Audrey
the founding of the Jewish state II} 1948.
McFarland, Clarence
Longstreth, Charles
E-RCALLED
McCloud, Elmer Van Mete~.
The Pomeroy Emergency
Peggy Smith.
Squad was called to the home
· of Mrs. Betty Baronick,
Chance of thundershowers
Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy,
tonight.
Lows tonight be- •
Tuesday morning. Mrs.
tween
55
and
60. Showers and
NOW YOU KNOW
Baronick, who was confined
thundersbowers
· likely
Ounce for ounce, the most
to her home with a fractured
leg, had fallen and fractured Thursday afternoon. Highs to ferocious · of all mammals is
Probability
of the llny shrew, which kU1s
her other leg. She was taken 80.
precipitation
~0
per
cent
. and eats twice Its weight in
to Veterans Memorial
today,
30
per
cent
tonight,
60
food every day.
Hospital where she ·was
per
cent
Thursday.
admitted.

(Continued frool paKe 1),
bla(ory bearin8 loa in the
on
ell might
· family, dilea- wbi
bave affected hearin8, ear
problema and symptoma.
Injury to head or ear and
'
noise exposure.
It includes a Tym· ,
panometry teat which, according to the audlologl.st,
tests the "health of the
middl ea , Mn Stephena
said
~~ Ia ~pab1e of
detecting potential medical
bl
-"'ch
uire
pro ems '"" may req
follow-up treatment.
After a senior cltisen lB
tested, Mrs. Stephenll will
review the resulttt wtth the
Individual and If further .
treatment or testing is lndlcated, she wW ln!llte the
referral to an ear speclalillt
or anothe.r_audio~.
Mrs. Tbomaa Ia urging that
all senior eltisens take advantage of the hearing
screeniQg program,
Detection of infection,
problems of dizziness, as well
aa finding_o\11 how weU one
hears and understands what·
ill being said are objectives of
the new service being offered
to senior citizens on May 5
and 6.
·.

Weather

Rev. 8-17 -73

•

(.. ) 20, '2? , ltc

MEIGS THEATRE

CLOSED FOR
VltAOON
WAlQI FOR .
OPENING DATE

Reg. $1089.00 Sectional w-Sieep or Lounge•••••••••••••••••••••• sale $544.50.
Reg. $1165.00 Sofa and 2 Chairs •••••••• .. ••••••••••••••• .. •••· Sale $582.50
Reg. $498.00 Sofa and Chair ••• ... , •• • • •• ••• ......... u ..... .,Sale $249.00
Reg. $1440.00 Sofa, Love Se;~t and Chair""'"''''''''''''''"'Sale $999.00
· Reg. $955.00 Sofa and Love S e a t . • " " " ' ' " ' ' " " " " ' ' " " " Sale $649.00
Reg. $958.00 Sofa and loY!! Seat ••• .... •••••• ..... •• ... o •••• , ,, Sale $649.00
Reg. $961.00 Sofa and Love Seatoo ........ , ..·,,,, .... ,, .... , . . Sale $649.00
Reg. $970.00 SOfa and Love Seat ......................... , .. ~. Sale $649.00
Reg. $878.00 Sofa and Love Seat .............................. Sale $649.00
Reg. $895.00 Sofa and Chair ................. . " ' " " " " ••••••" Sale $695.00
Reg. $789.00 Sofa and C~airoo•oo•••••••••oo••••""'"'"•••· SaiE $589.00
Reg. $749.00 SOfa and Chair'"'""""'""'""""""''''"~" Sale $549.00

Reg. S529.~ Sofa • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••Sale 5366.00
Reg. $492.00 Sof•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••S.Ie S3.49.00
Reg. S459.00 Sof••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••eSale $399.00
-

-

FURNITURE DEPARTMENT - 3RD R.OOR

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

conservatioo.
- Starting with 1978 olodel
cars, those going In
showrooms this fall , an
attack on the American
status symbol - the big va with taxes of from $52 to t449
on gas guulers. The tax
would reach nearly $2,500 by
1985 on low mileage cars.
Rebates of as much as $500
would be paid buyers of cars
that get 39 miles to the gaUon.
- standby authority to
ratioo gasoline and creation
of a national petroleum
reserve of one billion gaUons

systems.

Carter's central points:
- A hMvy wellllead tax on
To take tile ating from the · domettlic oil to bring its price
taxes he propoeed - and to the world price of over $13
a barrel to encourage

typical conunenl

'·

- a 10-month supply - to
cope with a new oil embargo.
- A goal of reducln8 total
gasoline consumption
through a tax of 5 cents per .
gallon In 19'19 and every year
that conawnption increases.
- Tax credits of as much
as $410 foc home owners who
install

storm

WORTHINGTON, Ohio currently assigned as a
.The Adjutant perSOQnel recorda specialist
. General's Department said with the 2nd BattaliOn, !74th
today Spec. 5 John Morrow, Air Defense Artillery in
28, Welllton, has been named Athens.
·
Ohio Army National Guard
·An Ohio State University
soldier of the year.
graduate, Morrow will be
· Morrow, an engineer with honored at the Ohio National
lhe National ·Cash Register Guard Enlisted Association
Co. in Cambridge, baa been a oonference April 30 in Cincinmember of the Buckeye nat!.
.Guard aince 1971. He Is
•
·
· ··
(UPI) -

•..

NO. 5

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.- ·
abandorunent, about keeping
weeds betw~en the railroad
tracks and outside · between
the tracks and curb clean.
Crow hought that the
chamber should consider a
fund drive just for clean up.
Jack Carsey thought
"something should be done"
to the roadway between the
river and parking 11!1 wall on
the river bank side as It is
needed when boats are being
used.
.
. It was announced by
Barbara Chapman that
Calesta Searles is selling ads
in the area for the Regatta
program. Crow said Jim
Dalll)er will be selling ads in
Galllpolls and ~ohn Kerr in
Athens.
Crow indicated the only
money the chamber receives
from the Regatta is from the
ads and the carnival.
Carsey said BW Quickie
had lined up the Lorain Boat

WASIUNG'l'ON (UPI) Higher prices for fuel oU,
restaurant meals and coffee
'spurred the. ctist of living by
0.6 per cent in March, the
Labor Department said
today.
The department said the
·Conswner Price Index bas
increased at an annual rate of
10 per cent for the first three
montha of 1977, compared
with 4.2 per cent in the final
quarter of 1976.
The effect of the price
lncreaaes along with higher
income tuM was to reduce
the average porke~'s buying
power by 0.1 per "cent from
· February.
But there was some good
news in the report.
Although the 0.6 per cent
rise in March was high by
traditional standards including most of 1976 - it
was lower than the inflation
rateof0.8percentinJanuary

ehttne
THURSDAY, APRIL 21, 1977

•

Pay up
soon now
or else
COLUMBUS (UPI)- Custamers of Colwnbia Gas of
Ohio who have not settled

.
Club for boat races on the
regatta Sunday. The races
will be similar to those In the
past. There will be $1,100 to
$1,200 in prizes and trophies
given, Carsey Indicated.
It was reported that
possibly hoUBe boat races
could be held on Saturday and
tbat F. 0. Day of Marietta
will be in charge of the PA
system again this year.
BW Mayer said a sign
should be placed at the SR 7
BypaSB directing motorists to
Pomeroy. Mayer is to head a
comniittee · to do that, if
possible. .
Mayer commended Virgil
Teaford on his recent improvement of placing a
cement driveway next to his
Realty Company. Mayer
added tbat Pomeroy has a
newly remndeled Dime Store.
Attending were Crow, Simon,
Mayer, Mr. and "Mrs. VIrgil
Teaford, Barbara Chapman,
secretary, Fetman Moore,
Dale Warner, BW Grueset,
Thereon Johnson, N. W.
Coll)pton, Carsey, C. E.
Blalteslee and Jack Kerr.

terminated next week
Wllllam Chaddock ·media
spokesman for coiumbia,
said utilliy representatives
began making house calls
Monday to warn residents
that service would be shill off
In six days unless payment or
credit arrangements are
made
·
Chaddock said about 40 ooo
C!181omers are 60 days' or
more behind on their' bills in
Colwnbia's 57 county area.
The only cases where dellnquent customers will be shut
off this week will be·where a
customer refuses to pay
c1oesn •t dispute the amount
owed and voices no objection
ID termination of service,
Chaddock said.
Tlte Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio says
1,860 gas customers around
Ohio bad lost gas service as of
Monday
because
of
nonpayment of bills.
PUCO said more than half
of those Shut-offs were made
by the Cincinnati Gas &amp; .
Electric Co which has
terminated
to 986
C!181omers.

;;rvice

SOUCITING SCOUT DONATIONS- Members of the
Beta Sigma Phi Sororities of Meigs Countt·are soliciting
businesses and individuals in the Community Phase of the
Sustainjng Membership Drive for the Boy Scouts of
America's 1977 fund drive. The drive in Meigs CoUnty is
being conducted by the City Council of the Beta Signia Phi
with Mrs. June VanVranken chairperson. Meetin~ above

loses one hour
Saturda-y night
WASHINGTON (UP!) Most of tbe liation tul'll!l the
clock ahead oue bour
starting Suuday, begbuiing
six montha of Dayligbt 1
SaviDg Ttme.
The "fast Ume" becomea
official al 2 a.m. EST April
24, but the Department of
Transportation, wblcb
handles lime zones and
changes lD the coontry,
advises sellillg the clock
abead one boar before
retiring Saturday Dlgll.t.
U you go lobed, say, at'to
· p.m., then turn tbe clock ·to
11. You lo&amp;e an hour, but
get It back agaiD oD tlielast
Sunday in October wben
clotks are turned back ooe
hour to Staodard Time.
IT'S A MUST NOW
Effective
at
once
audometer readings must be
Written on all vehicle titles
received in the Meigs County
Automotive Title Office. The
rea~ing on the mileage .must
be put on the title by the
seller.

Gas to ·build
massive storage field

.CHARLESTON, W.Va.
(UP!) - The Colwnbia Gas
Transmission Corp.
announced today it will
proceed with construction of
a huge natural gas storage
field in Ohio.
The company, which
supplies gas to ccmpanies in
seven states and the District
of Columbia, said the Federal
Power Commission approved
the first phase of the project
last month and the company
late Wednesday agreed ,to
begin construction. .
When fully completed,
possibly as. long as 20 years
from now, the new storage
field v.m have a capacity of
115 liltion cubic feet, making
1it the largest storage field in
the Colwnbia gas system.
But the FPC approval was
only Ior first phase construction, which wiil have a
capacity of about 32 blllion
cubic feet when completed in ·
about 1981. The company,
which serves customers in
West Virginia, Virginia,
Pennsylvania, Ohio, New
York,
Maryland
and

•

.•

CRI11CISM OF Andrew Young's
t .b e

Ohio Unlvenlty.
"But there's an interesting parallel here with Daniel
- Moynihan (former U.N. ambaSsador). "Moynihan was more
oullpaken, critical 10~. offelllive, but he wa1 not
•
(Continued on pace 12)

•'

A "I!IOOSEGMENT" IS EXPECTED to be a highUght
of the apring concert of the Meigs High School vocal
chorus at 7:30 thiiJ evening in the Meigs Junior High
Auditorium in Mlddli!port. AmOIIII th011e talting part from
Auditorium in Middleport. Amon~ thole talting part from ·

with Pete Meadows, M~-M District-Scout Executive, are
representatives of the several chapter~· in the City Council
of the sorority, from left, seated, Maurisha Nelson, Ohio
Etta Phi; Mrs. Mildred Karr, preceptors Beta Beta, and
Meadows; standing, Mrs. VanVranken, preceptors Beta
Beta; Sonya Ohlinger, Ohio Etta Phi, and Susan Baer, Xi
Gamma Mu.

;::;''':~:;;:;;Columbia

, SAN SALVADOR, EL SALVADOR - FOUR Cenlral
, American government&amp; ·bave urged El Salvador to release 37
priaoners ip a change for the life of Foreign Minister Mauricio
Borgonova Pohl, kidnaped TUesday by leftist terrorists. One of
, the countries, Colla Rica, offered to stve political aaylum to
tile 1(/, jailed for alleged pollllca1 crimea.
llut by Wedn ·~l' lllcbt. tbe aovemment of Pre81dent
~~Molina bad made JM&gt; response to the demands
cl tbe leftist Farabundo Marti Popular Liberation Front or to
the offer of aylum. A communique se~~t by the lddnapen
Wednelday aald the 31-year-old Borgonovo was In good health
but bad received cuts on hia bacl! when he smashed through a
,wlndO'II' whUe lrying to escape the terrorists who bunt into his
home Tuesday.
.

ATHENS. OHIO -

PRICE FIFTEEN CHiTS

and I per cent in February
when cold weather damaged
crops and led to higher fuel
consumption. The
department said the rate of
food price increases eased in
March except for coffee, up 7
per cent, fresh fruit, up 4.9
per cent, and poultry, up 3 per
cent.

By UDited Press Intenaatiooal
BELLAIRE, OHIO - DISTRICT 6 of the United Mine
· Workers union Wednesday ordered 1,800 striking miners in
eastern Ohio to return to their johe. A dlapute between a
foretl!IID and a miner at the North American No. 7 mine in
C1ar1nJ1on lriliered a wallwut by aboUt 500 mlnent.
, About 500 mlnen stru,ck the Conaolldation Coal Co.
. ,Frlllldla No. Zl mine in the Cadi&amp; area·and another 500 walked
outoftbeNo. 232PeabodyCoalCo.deepmineinCollhocton in a
dispute over local grievances. Local grievances also caUJed a
' -,ralkout by about 300 miners at the no Saginaw mine in the
Cadi&amp; area. The UMW said the strikes were unauthorized.

='114nce • U.S. emfw•nclor to United Natiolla baa
llnpd with l'ldlm, avs Ma~ Jacfllon, llle lint
bfadiiUJCII' of Atlanta ud a Y0U1111 confldallt,
"By "bll hanelt)l Yosq IIIII allealed ane people In be
Coantr7," Jadrwm l8ld Wedlletiday niBbt prior to a apeech at

Carter would retain
controls, but encourage
conservation l:ly raising
prices through the new
wellhead taxes with th e
billions raised returned to
consumers through rebates.
For the time being, Carter
rejected a favorite proposal
of liberals - legislation to
break up the oil giants. But he
proposed .to monitor profits
and performances with the
govenunent collecting data it
now relies upon the industry
to furnish.
.

Cost of living
up .6 in March

Pomeroy cleanup urged~:~~::~:=E

·clean up Pomeroy
. and the Big Bend Regatta in
June were reviewed when the
Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce met in regular
~on Wednesday at noon at
tile Meigs IM.
Paul Simon, vice president
of the chamber who serves on
the clean up committee, said
he bad secured permission
from Pomeroy Vlllage
Council to bum the river bank ·
from the Salt Works to Nye
Ave.
.
. Simon said • council had
approved regatta park
. exhibit&amp;. on the streets this
. year from Sycamore to
Simon's Market. Tbis will
leave the two parking lots
open for parking. Exhibit
apace Is for sale for $35 for :IAl
f,-&amp; plus a Sl.75 a foot. for
space over :IAl feet.
Fred Crow, president,
-disclosed he had Written to
the Chessie System prior to

con-.-ation measures.
- Reform of utility rilles 1o
eliminate discounts to highvolume customers and to
offer lower rates to those who
use electricity at night, when
demand is lowest.
- New emphasis on coal
and coal research, with a tax,
starting in 1979, on large
industries that refuse to
switch from oU or gas to coal.
- Conllnued price conlrols
m oil, but a minimum price
for natural gas so gas wW not
be "cheap" relative to oil.

•

at
VOL XXVIII

windows and

insulation .and of up to $2,:/DO
for those willing to spend
$7,400 or more to lnstallaolar
heating systems. A 10 per
cent tax credit to businesses
for
investments
In

•

·Wellston soldier state's best

r-UIM· to

RE IAIL PRICES!

avoid causing a dopreaalm Carter's plan would return to
the taxpayers the billions
collected in new energy
taxes.
The money would flow back
In the form of tax cuts,
rebates and rewards for thOle
who ·con~e fuel, insulate
homes and tap the sun for
heat with solar energy

0

..

• "'-"-

SUGGESTED

the battle."

Employment of Earl
McKinley, Jr., was announced today by Harold E.
Hubbard, president, of the
Cltill!lll Nattonal Bank of
Middleport.
•A native of Middleport, ·
MclCinley haa been employed
at the Middleport Post Office
for the past tO&gt;,&gt; years. He is
married to the former Betty
Mattox and the couple reside
on Middleport Hill with their
two dilldren, Earl Scott, 9,
and Jennifer, 5.
MclCinley lB the son of Mrs.
Lena McKinley, Front St.,
Middleport, and the late Earl
EARL McltiNLEY, JR.
MclCinley, Sr. A member of
the Middleport Church · of resigooo recently to accept
Chrl.st, he served four years employment with the State of
In the U. S. Navy.
Ohio. McKinley began his
McKinley succeeds Chester new duties at the bank
King on the bank's staff. King Monday.

•

50% OFF
MANlFPCT'lJ1ER'S

dlfferencM with Cart« over
"tlama and taxes were mere
llk1rmlabea, he said : ''Thitt is

bank
staff
..

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
UPlO

brulaing fight. Congress' pUt

Congreaslonal u"eelllnea
wao .1110111 llppllfent over a
gradual gaaoline tax Increase
of aa much aa 57 c.nta a
gallon by lila. Americans
burn 7 million gallons of
gasoline a day, mucb of it
drlvlnll to and from wort.
"l am not willing to vote a
tax m people who face a real
struilgle to pay their ,preaent
gaaollne bUls," said Rep.
Paul Simm, D-Ill., In a

added to

RECEIPTS NOTED
Meigs County Auditor
Howard Frank reports
receipta of $23,639 in federal
revenue sharing ·funds to the
county. Included is one·
quarter of the $72,000
payment which it was in·
dicated recently that the
county had not completed the
necessary forms to obtain. It
was later acknowledged that
the forms had been completed and received by the
federal government. Frank
also reports recelpta of f,!,085
in anti-recession funds.

t&lt;ROEt-l.ffi WEEK

,Oorld oll supplies dwindle in
the IINIOtl. ~
1be Democra
nm
Congr- w
'with
a standinl! ova
t thin
. applaule for hia specifics.
They promised to give his
ideas a fair bearing .
House Speaker Thomas
O'Neill, who supports
c.rt«'a program, foresaw a

McKinley

Jus

April 1. ml
contract S•les Legal

DAVID L. WEIR
DIRECTOR

Pr eJiclent Carter Ia ~ 1
wary Congreaa to curb
America's big appetite for
eMriY by making auoiiDe,
beatinl oU, natural gas - and
heavy can - much more
apeDiive.
"Reward thoae who
cona«Ve and penalize thole
Who wute," the President
pleaded In hia first apeecll to
a joint -.ion of Congnu hia 1econd television
appearance this week to warn
qt a : ·ca~" when

•• .• • • • •• • •• · • • • ••· • • ;. • •• •

NOTIC.E TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, Ohio

bids.

By 11m£ JlmNIJLBER
WASHINGTON (UPI)

. . . .. . ... . .... .......... .

Telep h one No .. . . . .. . .. ..... ....... • •

YARD SALE, April 21, 9 to 5;
glassware, . clothes,
misceJianeous. Cherry Ridge,
Faye Schultz. Phone 99:1-7794. .

Copy No. 77·462
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Sealed propos.als will be
receiVed e~t the office of the
Director
~
the
Ohio
Oepartmen•t
of
Trans ·
portetlon, ColvmQus, Ohio,
until 10:00 A . M ., OhiO
Standard Time, Thursday,
M•v s, 1977, for 1m :
provements In: .
Athens end Meigs counties.
Ohio, on Various Sections .
ATH -MEG - State- Route 12A
In Athens l!lnd Mei gs Coun ties , by resurfacing with
nphett concrete.
Pavement Width - Varies .
Prolect end Work Length .. 2. 187 feet or 7.99 mnes .
"The dille set tor com.
ptetlon of this work shall be
as set forth In the ' bidding
proposal "
Each · bidder shall be
required to tile with his bid a
certified check or cashier's
check for an amount equal to
five ptr c•nt of tllllllld. but In
no event more than fifty
thousand dollars, or a bond
tor ten per cent of hIs bid,
payable to the. Director.
,
Bidders must apply, on the
proper
forrris ,
for
quallfh;:atlon at least ten days
prior to the dat~ ut tor
op_enlng bids In accordance
with Chapter 55'25 Ohio
Revised Code.
Plaris and specifications
are on file In the Department
of Transportation .and the
office of the District Deputy
Director .
The Director reserves the
rloht to reJect any and all

Congress wary o Carter's proposals

Mail to, Th e Se nior Citi zen•
Cente r , Po me roy. Oh i o

A_ddress . . . .

)

the left are Charles Hossler, Vicki Ebersbach, Dorsel
Thomas, Christy Evans, Jeff Daniels, Carl Gheen, KathY
Quivey and Lee l..ewis. Juniro high students will present
their concert during the evening also. Mrs. Paige Hunt
directs both groups.

Kentucl!y, said it hopes to
achieve some storage
capacliy for use during the
winter heatlilg season of 19771978.
Known as the Crawford
storage field, t!Je overall
project encompasses an area
12 miles long and five .miles
wide in Fairfield and Hocking .
Counties, Ohio. · It . was
formerly a production area,
dallng back to 1894.
·
•'This wW increase our
flexibility," said company
spokesman Tom Houck. "It
will not increase the total pie

but will help us distribute ihe
pie more evenly during !he .
peak heating season."
Hod additional storage
been available last fall; it
might have helped Colwnbia
Transmission alleviate some
of the shortages of last
winter, Houck said.
Last September, the
company had a full storage
capacity of about 595 bWion
cubic feet, but .with no place
to store additional gas ,
to
suspend
decided
curtailment during !hat
(Conllnued on page 12)

Brewer arraigned
in Buck's court
Terry Lee Brewer, 30, RD farm machinery . Collins had
Portland, arrested T~esday the machinery parked at the
by Meigs County Sheriff's David Dodderer Iarin on 681
Dept., has been charged with East of Tuppers Plains.
In other official duties, the
arson in connection with the
fire tbat destroyed a house in sheriff's department today
Chester March 29 owned by transported three prisoners
Ida VanMeter of Middleport. to Columbus to begin serving
The department reported their terms for robbery of
today that Brewer was taken Thomas Zano, Rt. 1, Rutland,
before County Judge Robert lastJan . 14. They were Sunny
Buck Tuesday afternoon for Derricks, John Man~in and
arraignment and bond Randall Dawson, all of the
hearing. The charge was read Belpre-Parkersburg area.
and rights e•plained to the
defendant. Attorney Charles Two actions for
Knight was appointed by the
coUrt to defend Btewer. Bond
was set at $50,000.
money are filed
The
defendant
was
Two suits for money have
remanded to the custody of
the sheriff when he was been filed in Meigs County
unable to post bond. Ris Common Pleas Court by the
preliminary hearing is Fanners Bank and Savings
scheduled for 1 p.m.. Friday ,~ Co.,.Pomeroy.
April 22.
· One in the amount of $9~3 .98
Sheriff Proffitt said George was filed against Everett R.
Collins, Rt. 1, Reedsville has Cremeans, Belpre . The
reported the theft of a second, asking $1 ,437.68, was
hydraulic cylinder . and filed against Donald L.
couplers for a piece of his Cremeans, Rt. 2, Coolville
and Irvin L. Cremeans, same
address.
In other coUrt entries Carol
PIERCE SENTENCEDMike Pierce, Rt. I, Mid· A: Shuler filed for support
Reciprocal
dleport, who plead guilty to under the
escape, was sentenced by Agreement Act against
Judge John C. Bacon to a Volney Joel Ward, Spokane,
Julia
Elliott,
penal institution for not Jess Wash.r
than stx months or more than ·Pomeroy, filed for divorce
five years and was ordered to against William Elliott,
pay costs according to an address unknown .' ·and
entry in Meigs County Vanessa Cr4tes were granted
divorce from Michael Crites.
Common Pleas Court.
l

�"

I

2-The Daily SenUnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, April21, 1977

Generruexecuted

'

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

Coal and cars big in Ohio
and in Carter energy plan

By ALAN DAWSON
BANG KOK , Thailand
(UP!) - A Thai general who
led an unsuccessful coup
attempt was execuled by
machine gun without trial at
high noon lodsy, government
sources said.
The sourcessaid Gen. Chalard
Hiranyasiri
was
blindfolded arnt--hls rank
stripped from his uniform
before he was taken before
the official executioner' s
vintage World War I German
machine gun.

ooly a battalion of troops and
some· minor government
officials against the milltaryba.cked Tanin adminil!tration.
During the coup attempt, a
Thai general commanding
the 1st Army Division was
slain, aUegedly by Chalard
himself, when the general
failed ID order his Bangkokbased troops to back the
CQI!p.
There has been little public
sympathy for Chalard .since
the day of the ooup, partly
because he began his move
The execution was ordered against the administration
by Prime Minil!ter Tanin only minutes after he
Kraivixien after a meeting emerged from a stint as a
with his cabinet and the 24- Buddhisl mook .
man military junta. Under
He became a monk last
the present constitution, the OciDber, after his dismissal
prime minister has the power from active service. He had
to order summary ·executions once been the ' Thai army 's'
of persons judged a danger to deputy commander.
society.
Following the abortive
Government
spokesmen coup, Chalard sought asylum
said Chalard was the in Taiwan, but was turned
mastermind of an abortive down by the Nationalist
coup ~arch 26, which failed . government.
when he was able to muster

.

Hints: · things to come
By UDited Preu Int.erllaUoul
PHOENIX, ARIZ. - STEVEN HUGHES probably will not
st.ore hia solar reflector under his house traUer again. Firemen
said sunshine reflecting off the 4-loot solar reflector caused a
fire that resulted in $500 dam!lgc to tbe trailer Wednesday.
Hughes had built the solar reflector for use·In Boy Scout
projectors.
·
LONDON- A SPEAKER AT A LONDON conference on
food pointed out Wed!lesday that the Lord's Prayer c'ontalns 56
.words, the Ten Commandments 297 words, the American
Declaration of Independence 300 words and the European
Common Market directive on the export of duck eggs 26,911
words.

By TIM-MilLER
Unlted Press International
In presenting his ef\ergy proposals
to a joint session of Congress
Wednesday night President Carter
talked a great deal about two of
Ohio's main industries - coal a.nd
cars.
And some of the Buckeye State's
labor, business and industrial
leaders reacted sharply 1D tluit.
"He's looking to ~oal · as a
saviour," said Leonard Pnakovich,
president of the Ohio Coal
Association, "and I heard that 25
years ago. I've been in the industry
many years, and in the past coal has
been regarded as a dirty, last resort
fuel, and that attitude has limited its
growth.
"But, that's aU changed now," he
said, and tbe industry ia ready.
"It will take time·arld money. You
can't develop coal mines overnight.
But if the Industry can attract the
capital, thedemarld can be met," he
said.
He said wildcat strikes during the
present United Mine Workers
presidential campaign, and the
threat of a major strike when the
UMW contract runs out thia year,
could hamper production, but, "all
these problems can be solved by
Industry working with the union."
"And we've got to cooperate. We
au have a responsibility not just to
ourselves but ID the entire country.
The President's outline and goals
are staggering, but it 'Was
staggering when (President
Franklin) Roosevelt talked about
the war effort," he sald. "This Isn't
war, but it's a terrible situation and
if we don't recogniztl it, we 'U aU be
Sl'tting in the cold and dark.''
Edgar Hinton, state coordinator
for the United Auto Workers'
Community Action Program, said
the proposed increased tax on

Today's

$port Parade

.

gasoline will mean "the rich wiU
drive, while the poor walk."
"The problem ;, we have to meet
emission standards - which
reduces mileage_ and we also have
IDincreasemileage," be said. "lt'sa
real ·problem, but I'm sure the
technology of the auto Industry can
meet tbe task.
" If the' (emission) standards are
not relaxed, yoti may not be legally
able ID build cars," he said. "But,
. I'm still glad to see the President
take a position, a~ long as he makes
everyone sacrifice,notjust the little
guy and the auto Industry. The oil
industry and the executiVes will
have to do their share."
Joseph Kinder, director of United
Steelworkers Union District 26 in
Cleveland, sharply criticized the
proposals.
"He's asking the people who want
ID use their cal'S w pay for the
research that he and the big
suppliers of energy should be doing I
on their own," be said. "The little
guy ;, goiilg to get it 1n the neck,
while the big business guy is going to
wallow in dough."
But, warren Smith, executive
director of the Ohio AFL-CIO, said,
"Inalotofwaysitrnightensurethat
there Is enough energy for Ohio
Industry. It's a proposal and we'll
have to wait and see what eventually
comes out .
. "I don 't think the effect on the
Ohio aulD industryts going to he aU
that bad," he said. "Americans are
going to drive, he just wants to see
that they use less fuel. What yoo 'U
. sma11er cars tha t
proba bly see IS
cost more.''
Dud1ey J. Taw, pres1'den t of East
Oh'10 Gas Co., sa1'd, "Th e mam
·
bl
.
·
pro em 1s 1oo exc 1us1ve an
. on conserva ti on. It's no1
empha s1s
that the President;, asking for too

muchconservation - theproblemia
we need more than conservation.
"We must increase our efforts to '
. improve the availability of aU
energy, not only coal and solar
energy, but oil, nuclear energy arid
natural gas," he said.
Hays Watkins, president of the
Chessie
System
railroad,
headquartered in Cleveland and the
nation's largest hauler of coal, said
the railroad industry ia capable of
hauling aU the additional coal that
would be mined if Carter's goal of
increasing coal production by twothirdo! 1$ met.
In anticipation of Carter 's
announcement, Chessie recently
added 16,000 additional 1oo.ton coal
hopper cars.
Sen. John Glenn, [).Qhio, said
Carter ;, "100 per cent correct" in
focusing national attention on
energy.
·"His proposals tonight were
complex and, in some cases,
controversial," said Glenn. "That
doesn't erase the fact that he has
done something that presidents
spoke of for years but failed to
achieve: a comprehensive energy
policy that can see down the road
and doesn't think of energy as an
.· iasue that will be with the nation for
just a year or twq.
"I'm eager ID study hia proposals
in dep)h," Glenn said, "but at first
glance, 1 have a few reservations,
particularly the failure to expand
natural gas allocation authority .
"I'm disappointed that he didn't
act ID extend emergency allocation
authorl'ty to industry, " sal'd Glenn.
" Last winter's (energy-weather)
catastrophe proved bey!J!ld a doubt
that present law doesn't protect
Industry and workina
u"' people who
happen to be on the wrong pl'peline
systems."
. .

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports EdiiDr
.
NEW YORK ( UP!) - Boxing is back in the guUer todsy ,
kicked, stomped on and left bleeding by the very individuals
Who promised ID better it and now are piOUily putting their
hands out Ina ludicrous attempt to prove they are clean.
Don King, whowasglven$!.5million by ABC-TV ID.find the
best fighters in the country and employ them in what would be
caUed the U.S. Boxing Championships, stoutly insists he's
imocent of any wrongdoing ·
AI Braverman and Pat Flood, two of the men who worked in
Klng'sofflce here as "bookers" and helped provide fighters for
his tournament, also swear they are blameless concerning
allegations of extortion, kickbacks and falsification of fighters'
records in King's tournament which have led to a full..scale
Federal Grand Jury.investigation.
.
Likewl8e, Jam~ A. Farley, Jr., .the N~w York State Athletic
Commission chalrlll8n ~hom King hired ID . se~e on hia .
tournament comnutlee, IS protesting there wasn t anything
wrong with what he did. That Is pretty much tbe same line
being taken by John Ort, _whose "World Ratings" in Ring
magazine were used by King and then proven to have been
. doctored.
ABC·TV &lt;lis&lt;;lalms any_knowledge of·what ~as.going on, and
as evidence of 1ts good f&amp;th, has suspended King s IDumament
and hired Mich~el ~Iron~. former chief counsel of the
Knapp Co~on, to mvestlga~ the mess.
Everyb:ody s mnocent; nobody s to blame.
The eVIdence strongly suggests otherwise, however.
For example:
,
Fact: Of the eight heavyweights who particiapted in King~s
tournament, seven of them - Larry Holmes, Johnny
Boudreaux, Leroy Jones, Stan Ward, Dino Dennis, Kevin
Isaacs and Scott LeDoux- were either managed or advised by
KJng or members of his staff.
Fact: Braverman and Flood called themselves "booking
agents" for King, but acted as matchmakers and managers at
the same time, a practice specifically prohibited in every
athletic conunission charter in this country.
Fact : Some of the fighters in Ort's "World Ratings" were
discovered to have "viciDries" added ID their records in
''fighta" they never had.
.
Fact: A featherweight in the IDurnameni said he was paid
only $5,000 of a $7,500 purse he had been promised ID fight
David Vasquez, ·the remainder going to Braverman as a
" booking fee ."
Fact: New York Stale law forbids any member of the
Athletic Commission, most certainly its chairman, Ill involve
himself with any outside boxing organization, but Farley allied ·
himself with King 's tournament and even attended meetings in
King's office.
How can Farley possibly explain away tbat?
King faithfully promiaed Roone Arledge, ABC-TV's president of sports, he would obtain only the "hest" U.S. fighters for
his tournament, but that turned out Ill be a laugh. Ali he did
was obtain mediocrities. Tbe only one who could get exdted
about them was Howard Cosell, you know, the fellow who
always teUs it like it is.
Farley now says everybody is overreacting, but I'm sorry, I
have to disagree with him.
When fighters come forth, as they have already, and testify
that their won.Jost records 'were falsified ID make them look
better so they could "qualify" for the "championships" and
when they also reveal they had Ill kick back part of their purses
to those who ran the event so they could fight in it at all, I don't
think they are overreacting. Neither are . those legitimate
managers who say they had thelrfighters stolen away from
them by members of King's staff. That doesn't ~ound like any
overreaction to me and I don't think it does to anyone else who
. has_c;ome to learn what transpired in the socalled U.S. Boxing
Championships.
"
.
, · I also have ID wonder about ABC-TV's astonishing naivete in
• the whole business. Four years ago, it televised Madison
, Square Garden's American Boxing Championships which had
: honest-to-goodness; legitimate contenders in it. The ratings
' were good and Arledge was happy.
lllstead of going back and dealing with the Garden again,
' though, he bought King's pie-inthe.,o;ky extravaganza, at considerably greater cost, and now he finds the only thing •he
· really bought was a bunch of sour lemons.

PEGGY GffiOLAMI, PRESIDENT of the junior class
of Meigs High School, arranges prizell ranging from gift
certificates to stuffed animals and crackpots which will be
among many awarded Saturday night when the class
bolds a candy sale duflng int.ermtsston of the annual
"Spring Fling" of the Big Bend Minstrel Association at
the Meigs High School"Auditoriwn.

Computer farming
next revolution
By

MICHAEL ROSENBAUM
them
u
ochout11 in the fields.
f
R

ROCHELLE, I . (UP! ) R e e area armer oo
The cu1next · revolution in Rainwater U8ed the tprogram
d
WASffiNGTON - LEONARD WOODCOCK, retiring
agri lure IS being plotted last year to s u Y a
president of the United AulD Workers, ia in line to become the
far from the fields In modem bottleneck
he Ia was
l
chief U.S. envoy to China, according to White House sources.
rooms brightly . lit wlth encountering at P nt
. ng
Woodcock ia the man who just headed a delegation to Vietnam
fluorescent lights and time.
1 ed · b yin
for an accounting of missing U. S. servicemen.
carefully protected from dust
"We p ugg ....m· u edg
and moisture.
anotherplantera,.. lt c1ear
CLEVELAND- A SUSPECTED BURGLAR was ahot In
The rooms contain the the deficiency up, so this year
the heart and killed early tod8y by the owner of a home of 7720 L- - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --' latest
tool
for
the • we bought another planter,"
Deck~ Ave., homicide detectives said. Douglas Griffin, 19,
businessmanfarmer. It's not he said. At a recent Rochelle
· Cleveland, was dead on arrival at LakeS:de Hospital. Tbe
.
·
a plow, reaper, thresher or seminar, he got a favorable
tractor, : but a compl!ter response on adding 160 acres
apparent burglary attempt iook place about 12:30 a .m.
whose program helps to his ii()(Hlcre operaUon and
DETROIT -AUTO INDUSTRY ANALYSTS have a bit of
maxhniz~ profits and output now he is "shopping around"
advice for those planning ID run right out and buy a large car to
.
.
for mdiv1dual farms.
for the land.
•
avoid President Carter's tax on "gas.guJZilng" models : Don't.
"If a farmer is going to stay ,
·
Their immediate reaction to Carter's energy ~onservatlon
in busineSS, he'S going to ' • THE DALV SENTIJ'IEL
bave Ill start using something
DEVOTED TO THE
message Wednesday night was that there will be a spurt in
INTEREST OF
sales by persons trying ID get the last of the beloved big cars.
like this," said Robert . ·
MEIGS.MASONAREA
Those blg-car buyers may regret the hasty decision.
Boysen,
WhO
takes
CIIFSTERLTANNEHIIL
"These people may. find themselves penallzed three or
International Harvester's
ROBE~~~o~Fucu
four years from now when their trade-in value falls ," says
Pro-Ail program Ill seminars
c11, .........
fo f
· the' g · belt
Published daily ex.cep.t Saturday
analyst Arvid Jouppi, a research vice president for the
r armers m
ram
•
by The Ohio VaUey'PuUlishing Com.
investment firm of Colin, HQChatln Co.
''This is the next revolution in
1111y , Ill Cow1 St., Pomeroy, Ohlo
would "look at the possibility bave begun to increasingly agricul~e.
COLUMBUS
(UP!)
A
best
answer,
bu(be
asked
for
·
·
46769. Business Office Phone m"Their trade-in value ·probably won't be as good as it Is
of state funding," but he did rely on the importation of
2156. Editorial PhonC992-2157.
panel
of
Industrialists,
labor
an
Independent
analysis.
now," he sald. "And those cars that are unpopular now- the
"Basically, the computer
Sei.:ond class postage paid 11l
Fluidized bed combustion not elaborate or · specify low-sulfur coal ,from the will
small models~ may have a better value." Besides the trade- · leaders and coal industry
look
at
the
resources
a
eomeroy,Ohio.
.
which industries might begin western United States and
- basan d do II years or'
National advertising· represen[anner
in, Jouppi sees the prlce of gasoline riaing to the point where official$ says Ohio's high- mixed finely-ground high- to instaU the devices.
ta:Livt!'Ward- Griffith .Company Inneighboring states rather
sulfur coal can be used by · sulfur coal with limestone
their cars are. no looger economical to run.
computations
of
what
he
can
&lt;
.. Bottinelli and Goliagi"Oc Oiv.
He
did
say,
however,
that
than
purchase
expensive
industry without· violating before the mixture ia burned.
do With those inputs. It takes 75i
Third Ave ., New York , N . v : ~
10017.
'
•
manufacturing plants, not pollution conti'ol equipment
RIO GRANDE CITY, TEX. - Sl'ATE and federal officers envirorunental standards if The sulfur dioxide gases coal.flred electric utility and burn Ohio's high&lt;1ulfur the COmputer a'bout 8
·s ubscriplion rates: DeliVered by
minute. ''
carrier whcnt available75 cents per!
Wednesday arrested 34 of 62 suapected drug traffickers in the industries convert to produced by the combustion generating stations, would be ' coal.
week. By Mulor Route where currier '
Starr County, 1,200 square miles of dusty, brush~vered land ''fluidized bed combustion.'' are absorbed by the
The Pro-Ag program,
~rvice not avt~ilable, One monlh. i
the first facilities to begin
"FluidiZed bed combustion
·
In
·
a
report
given
to
Gov.
limestone,
which
become
a
along the Texas-Mexico border, known as one of the poorest
offered
through
I-H
dealers
a~
13.25. By I!Uiilln Ohio and W. Va;
retro-fit
conversion
or
is
tbe
way
to
go
tn
control
James Rhodes Wednesday, recyclable by-product.
· · fr
fr ID One Year, $22.00; Six mon!lui,
counUes In the natioo.
·
$1UO; Three months, $7.00;
of
new sulfur dioxide. Jt ;, an 'up- costS rangmg Om - ee
McDevitt said the work of installation
The ''poorest" figure comes from cena\18 reports, but Firestone Tire and Rubber
$200,
allows
the
farmer
to
test
Elsewhere $26.00 year ; Six months
. equipment.
front' cleaning method- you
oposed changes through · $13 .50; Three months, $7.50.
authorities say there is a lot of money made in Starr Coonty Co. attorney Herbert T. the committee ia far from
pr
McDiVitt said his panel also clean the coal before you
Subscription price int'ludes Sunday
frtm an industry which doesn't report income. Fifteen teams McDevitt, cbairman of the over.
the computer, before trying '-;-_
Times-Sentinel.
confirmed that fluidized bed burn it," said McDevitt.
_ _,........._:..J
by
Rhodes
"The
governor
instructed
panel
assembled
of state and federal officers began arresting the 62 suspects
cOmbustion was also tbe sole
On April4 the panel tnured
March
25,
said
the
technique
118 to develop a program to
who, authorities say, took advantage of a breakdown In law
the
acquisition , technique to cleanly bum a fluidized 'bed pilot plant
enforcemenf to smuggle tons of Melican marijuana arid drugs "is a most promising .fund
high&lt;~~ur coal and a.t the . built and opera ted by
for
Ohio's
Industry
installation
and
maintenance
approach
across the Rio Grande. By the end of the day 34 had been
same time controL rutrous . Babcock and Wilcox In
Ill
meet...
air
quality
of
this
technology
in
selected
jailed.
standards."
indUstries in Ohio," he said. O)[ide e~issions, another Alliance, Ohio, and visited
•·
By JOAN HANAUER
Batte II e M em or i a I
"Fluidized bed systems
"You're going to see highly-toXJC pollutant.
'• .
UPI television Writer
Rhodes f?'llled the group Laboratories in Columbus,
bave the pc;tential to allow for activity in thia area in the
NEW YORK (UPI)- If the Madiaon Avenue ·approach can
the continued consumption of near future. It's a question of last month m response Ill the which also ·has · )lnder
decreased production and development various coal sell anything from dishwashing liquid to would-he presidents,
Ohio's coal resources," said how many and where."
why can't commercials sell salvation lhrough Jesus Christ?
of high-sulfur coal combustion pilot projects.
sale
Terry D. Michael, 29, was removed to Veterans McDevitt. ·
McDevitt said large&lt;~Cale
The Baptist General Convention of 'Jlexas decided to glve It~
because
of
the
proposed
state
The
group
also
visited
Pomeroy, suffered minor Memorial Hospital.
Rhodes called the officlals fluidized bed combustion
A single vehiCle accident IDgether last month and in- units cost about $10 million and federal sulfur-dioxide Armco Steel Firestone and a try through the Bloom Agency of Dallas in a $U million
injuries in a traffic accident
..
300 mega~~tt utility plant televiaion evangellsin campaign that began In February and
at 2:1J) pm. Wednesday on occurred at I p.m. Wed· structed them to look iniD all ' each to produce 100,000 pollution .st~dards:
nesday
on
SR
218
In
Gallia
Both
utilities
and
mdustr1es
which
all uS. the technique. will end this week. The ad agency estimates that everyone in
Sumner Rd., four miles west
available methods ·to burn pounds of steam per hOW: .
Texa~ over the age of 3 has been e~ an average' of 40
County
where
the
brakes
of SR 7 In Meigs County.
high&lt;~ulfur coal and at the
McDevitt said his panel
times to the spots troadcast on 50 televiaion and 300 radio
failed
on
a
truck
driven
by
same time ml!j!t proposed
The Gallla-Melgs Post
stations.
John
T.
Griffiths,
26,
State Highway Patrol said
state and federal air pollution
The Tel!BS paptists wllllted to promote Chrl$tian discipleship
Michael lost control of his car Gallipolis. The vehicle rolled standards.
among
non.chrlstlans and inactive Christians, and persude
Rhodes said ·then it was hia
which ran off the left side of backwards down a smaU
Baptist
church members to increase church involvement .
the road striking an em· grade striking a telephone opinion that fluidized bed
Research
r~ealed that Ute problems most often cited as • ·
Meigs
High
School
recently
pole.
combustion was ~robablv tbe
Guidance Program Self effective dissemination of
b~~;!;~mr~T.~h.e:~re
was
disturbing
today
were a feeUng of distrust, that life was a goalPRIDE Review In their building. guidance information to
completed
a
n:
. Michael
less
rat
race,
and
that the·pressures of life were oppressive.
PRIDE,
an
acronym students, well certified
·
It
also
revealed
that a personal relationship with Jesus
meaning Program Review counselors who are sensitive
for the Improvement, to students' needs, and an Christ was a more appealing solution ID most people than
. Development and Expansion annual foUow-up study which belonging ID a Christian group or trying to find a solution in the
of vocational education and gives information on all Bible.
Next step was to · find the right format. Among th..,.
guidance, Is a review graudat.es' post-high school
considered
was the hOCTid example of what happens Ill tholle
careers.
process that allows for exLawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
who
place
their trust in the world, which would be the
It
was
recommended
that
. That will meet tensive lay citizen inp11t
.
and this newspaper, P.O. Box milligrams
evangelical
equivalen~ of what happens to the houaewlfe wbo
DEAR DR. LAMB - I am are irritaUng to your
relative to the adequacy of an adviaory committee be .1
uses
the
wrong
kitchen mop; and the good example ot. a
15 years old and I·have very cause the Inflammation that 11&gt;51, Radio City Station, New the needs of most healthy vocational education courses established
to
make
York, NY 10019.
flction.al
person
who finds comfort in Jesus despite the
oily skin. I've been to a damages your skin.
people -particularly if they and guidance program recommendations and assist
of
DEAR DR. LAMB - How don't smoke.
Regular
use
dilficulties
of
the
world, which would be the ad eq~~ivalent of
dermatologisl and he gave
services.
&gt;'
in carrying out the plans of
the
housewife
whose
laundry detergent can get out even
me soap and a tube of cream. tetracyclines In younger old ia too old for Vitamin C
I would suggest keeping
The PRiDE review activity the guidance department,
He also gave me a pill to take people may damage the pills? I bought two expensive vitamin tablets in the was conducted with the and that guidance activities greasy dirt most of the time.
But the most effective approach was the personal
once a :day. The chemical in development of normal teeth. bottles of natural Vitamin C refrigeraior and keeping · assistance of the Ohio should Include more job
the pill was leli'acycllne. I The tooth development phase • and my hU8band won't touch vitamin C no l9nger than six , Department · of Education procurement and placement t.estimooial by fDI'll\OI' black acUvl$1 Eldridge Cleaver, wbo
used it for a few months and it. Is over by 12 years of age and them since you said they montha, There ia no inherent (Division of Guidance and activities for students not· asks, "Can He be trusted .ID untangle a mesaed up life? I'm
worked terrific. Then my this danger no longer exl.sta. could poison \18. If we camot advantage of natural vitamin Testing ·and .Division of planning to attend post high living proof of it.''
Guided by these findings, the Bloom people developed 30 and
father read in a newspaper Since the acne problem eat citrus is it ~ to C over aynthellc vitamin C. v ·
school Institutions upon
Chemically
they
are
identical
ocatlonal
Education).
eat
vitamin
C
tablets
to
get
.
usually
beglna
after
this
age,
60
secmd commerciala with testimonials by actor Dean Jones,
that this chemical could have
graduation.
or
they
both
wouldn't
be
The
guidance
self
review
enough
vitamin
C?
during
adolescence,
It
is
businessman
Allan Mayer, Houston Oilers stat BWy "White ·
some bad effects on young
Plans are being made now
vitamin
C.
The
only
real
was
spearheaded
by
a
DEAR
READER
safe
to
use
perfectly
.
Johnson, singers Connie Smith and Jeannine C. Riley,
people. It nev... bad any on
committee representative of by the Board of Educition for Shoes"
tetracyclines for thl$ purpose Regular . vitamin C tablets advantage is to the company teachers,
me.
students, coun- timely implementation of the and 1977 Miss Teen-Age America, Rebecca Ann Reid.
Not everyone believes In this kind of television evangellam.
My dermatologist said It and this has been · dooe for stored In a refrigerator lose ~hich ia marketing natural selors,
parents,
ad- recommendations.
Bloom
reported that some celebrities were wamed off the
was OK but he did cut down many years now with good about half their potency in a vitaminCata fancy price . An mlnistrators, board of
Guidance counselofs at
the dosage from 500 to 250 success and few if any year's Ume. The vitamin C au purpose dally vitamin pill education members, and lay Meigs are Mrs. Martha testimonials because their agents worried that good ·news
may be converted to oxalic will be adequate.
would be bad image for their clients.
milligrams. My father says dil!iculties.
If you can't eat cllr)ls fruits citizens. The committee Vennart, Tim. Flesher, and
I would have sent you The · acld which has been
The agency also said that aome mlniat.ers objected on the
better Ufe than sorry but will
.several
weeks John Redovian.
gro~ds that prayer, not television, was the patl1 to salvation.
be guided by an explanation Health Letter numbet' 8-2, implicated in triggering you may not be able to eit spent
Acne Can Be Treated, to help diabetes or associated with tnmatoes either - some reviewing varto\18 guidance
fl'llm you.
review
·• Only In television do rumora IIJli'OUt rumors. Firat tbere has
DEAR READER -Your you but you didn't Include urinary tract infectionl and people classify them as citrua activities before the
1
too.
But
you
can
eat
was
cubninated
in
meeting
fruits
been the persistent but unconfirmed rumor that Roone
dermatoiGgllt wu doing the your address on your kidney stones. Otherwiae old
three-and-a-half
ounces
between
the
committee
and
a
vitamin
C
will
nol
polson
you.
letterhe,od.
Let
me
remind
Arledge,
president of ABC Sports, ~ be promoted to a
rlgbt thing. TetracyclJnes are
TIME CHANGED
(cooked
weight)
of
any
of
the
representative
from
the
readers
who
want
a
copy
of
ObviOUily
hannful
effeCts
newly
created
presidency of current affaln, which would
used to eliminate small
Due to the time ch&amp;lll!e,
following
foods
to
get
your
Division
of
Guidance
and
frtm
old
vitamin
C
tablets
my
reply
to
please
put
their
include
news,
oports
and documentariea.
bacllria that live jlllt Inside
Orange Townllhip rrustees
RDA
fer
vitamin
C:
broccoli,
Testing.
are
more
likely
to
occur
In
the
on
their
letterhead.
address
Now
the
acandala
Involving kickbacks and false boling
the llldn pore. Tbese bacteria
will meet at 8 p.m. Instead of
spro\ltS,
collards,
Meigs
High
School's
brusael
person
who
want
The
Health
who
insist•
on
Others
records
In
comecti911
with
ABC'1 broldcaat of the U.S. Boling
act (II the aebum, the oily
d . ch d turn! guidance program • was 7p.m. effective Monday, May OwnplonahiPI. haaoprouted the rumor thai Arledge mi8ht not
swallowing
large
amounts.
Letter
on
acne
can
serld
50
secretion your U:ln gllndll
mustar or
' SJiUl8
an (rawp commended for its excellent z. The ~e schedule change
cauliflower
be gettiag the promotloo that he rnl8ht or mtcht not have been
fcnn, to break the fat down to cents with a long, lltamped, The Recommended Daily greens
·
ht
pupi)-eounselor ratio, first- wiU be in effect during the in line for in the flrllt place. Arledge w11 unavoDable for
fatty acldl. The fatty adda eelf-ackhued envelope for Dietary Allolraoce ia only 60 welg )·
rate facilitlea and materials, sllltlJiler months.
it. Just write to me In care .X
coinment.
· ·
I
t

d
Bnght
·
p
romIse
future
coal reserves in Ohio

/

e

e

.

.

TV. ••in Review

CINCINNATI (UP! ) - l.os
Angeles Dodgers catcher
Steve Yeager described Don
Sutton • s p 1 tc hi n g
performance as a "display of
real major surgery ."
"That was a pitcher, not a
thrower, you saw out there on
the mound today," added
Yeager after Sutton rm ),he
Dodgers' winning streak ID
seven games Wednesday with
a 3-1 victory over the
Cincinnati Reds in the finale
of a two-game set at
Riverfront Stadium
Tommy Lasorda ·the bodgers' colorful, fa;t-talking
manager, offered a different
description of Sutton's
performance.
" It was like holding up a
bank in broad daylight and
escaping," said Lasorda .
"Don just showed everyone
what a great pitcher and .
competitor he is."
·
Fred Norman, the li0ttle
·

B enson
MVP
IS
o

o

m Big 10
CHICAGO

(UP!)
Indiana center Kent Benson,
who sat out the final four
games of the Hoosier season
with a back injury, has been
named the Big Ten's most
valuable basketball player.
The announcement
Wednesday marked the third
straight year an _Indiana
player has won the award.
Scott May took back to back
awards the past two seasons.
Benson narrowly defeated
Minnesota's Mike Thompson,
the league leading scorer, for
the honor.
Benson received seven first
place votes and six for second
place for 19 points, one more
than Thompson, who had six
votes for both first and
second. Northwestern's Billy
McKinney finished third with
14 points and Michigan's. Phil
Hubbard fourth with 10.
Benson averaged !9.'8
points per game for the
season and was fifth in Big
'fe n scoring with a 21.1
average.
Other nominees for the
award were Bruce Kjng of
Iowa, Walter Jordan of
Purdue, Bob Falk of
Wisconsin, Bob Chapman of
Michigan State, Audie
MaHhews of Illinois and
Bolden of Ohio State.

V.W. - AMC - JEEP

Terry Michael hurt in wreck

AS A RESULT OF OUR RECORD VW SALES,
,

WE NOW HAVE THE BEST USED CAR
INVENTPRY IN THE AREA.

CALL GALLIPOLIS

Counseling work reviewed

HEALTH .

Stumbling Reds lose
again to LA Dodgers .

RIVERSIDE

'

446-9800

Red lefty who wound up with
the loss even though he
yielded only fiv e hits and
struck out eight in the seven
innings he pitched, said he
made one mistake w bile
Sutton didn 't make any.

FIELD EVENTS
Shot P u t -

Ritenour (FH )

29'

Discus - Roll ing CK C) 81'3

Long iump 13'9
High

(KC I

j ump -

Str oud ( KCl
T hompson

4'

RUNNING EVENTS
80 yard hurdles - Str oud
I KC l 12.5 •
100 yard dash - Stroud
(KC) 12.1
220 yard dash - . Stro ud
(KCJ 26 .9
440 yard dash - M ill s ( FHI
74
880 yard run - Thompson
( KC) 3.25.7

Pirates
upend
Meigs 9
Five costly errors and cold
bats again ' proved the
downfall of the Meigs
Marauders as they lost to
visiting North Gallia 7-3
Wednesday. Brett Tackett
picked up the win as he gave
up six hits, fanned five, and
walked only one.
North Gallia jumped off to
a 5~ lead after five Innings,
enough to ca rry them
through , although Meigs got
three runs ln the bottom of
t~e filth :
The Pirates had a single
and two triples in the two-run
first, and then collected
another r~n in the second on
absolutely no hits, but on an
error, and ~ sacrifice fly that
scored a runner from secon.d.
They got two more in the fifth
when Plants socked a home
run that made it over the
fence by bouncing off the left
fielder 's glove.
Meigs got back In the game
in . the fifth when Rick
Johnson singled, Ray Andrews did the same, and both
scored on fielder's choices,
with an error sandwiched in
between.
Dale Browning took the loss
· as he went five innings, and
he and Reliever Mike Triplett
fanned three and walked a
like number. Getting hits for
Meigs were Johnson with a
double and single, Andrews

M i le run .._ Thompson (KCl
7.05
On Apr il 19 the Kyger
Creek gir' ls played host to
Sy mm es
Valley,
Point
Pl easa nt and Gallipolis
Po i nt Pleasa nt won the
quadrangular meet with 80112
po ints. Kyger Creek placed
second with 46 112, Symmes ·
Val ley t hi rd with 32 and
Galli pol is scored 24 points .
Ky g~ r Creek's Vicki Stroud
was hig h scorer with 21 points
fol lowed by Gallipolis' Beth

Pratt a single each.
l.ogan had two singles for
the winners, Plants had a
triple to ·go with his homer,
·and Minnis a triple,
NG
210 020 2- 7 5 3
M
000 030 0-3 H
Ta&lt;:kett and Minnis.
BroWning (LP ), Triplett (6 )
and Johnson.

Apr 13- Mtl 3 51 Lou is 0
Apr 16--Mtl 5 S t, Louis I
Apr 17- Mtt 4 Sl . Louis I

"

.CORDOBA

318, vinyl lop; · air
conditioning, power
steering, 54,000 miles.

V-8,
radials, air
conditioning, Sharp!!

149 South Third

Middleport, 0.
Phone 992-7155

$1995

Apr
Apr
Apr
Apr

11 - Boston 8 Los Ang l
13- Boston 6 Los Ang 2
IS- Boston 7 LOS Ang 6
17- Los Ang 7 Boston 4

Apr 19- Los Ang 2 Boston I
Apr 21 - Bost on at Los Ang
x Apr 24- Los Ang a t Boston

'7f GOlD
DUSTER

va, automatic,

power
steering, vinyl top,
20,000 miles.

&gt;·

..'"

V-8, clean .

6 cylinder, topper.

"

$2495 .

'$2195
'

AGENT NAME
BI~L FLETCHER

.. .......

A

like a good neighbor,
Scate Farm ts there.

Gravely Tractor Sales
204 Condllr St .
Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone 9.92·2975

with us!
PLANNING APIZZA PARTY
PHONE

. Meigs was ahead IH going
into the bottom of the siXth,
but Waverly pushed across
three runs In the inning for
the margin of the victory .
Pam Vaughan had a good
night at the plate for the
locals as she went four for
four and three runs batted in
while Tracy Burdette also
had a good night as she
socked a single and knocked
in the other three runs.
The girls host Trim ble
F
~iday
night for a make-up
M~rauder
ladi es were
double
header.
handed their first loss,

THE ALL NEW

MEIGS INN PIZZA SHACK
-Enjoy three sizes of your favorite
pinas .
-Try our· delicious subs while you
si p your favorite suds.
Eat In Or Carry Out
Phone
992-6304 .

•.

@

r1n
Save $400 on every gallon
CHIEF

Chief Latex Wall

"POLY"
FLOOR
ENAMEL

~~~Paint
Guaranteed to ·
Cover in .
One Coat!~~

Mfr. 's sugg.
retail pri ce
$12 .89

Heavy duty plastic polyurethan e for int eri o r-ex t er ior

Special · Sale Price ,.,_"s.e•. .c o.l.or.s .a.nd· W-hi.te•. --1
ON£ COAT

T FINISH LATfX

Mfr.'s suggested
retail price
511.99 gallon

Save s2.00

$ 99

CHIEF

Famous for its one coat hiding powe~!
Co vers most old colors in a sirig le ap-

mod e . One coo t will cover up
to 400 square feet ~ e r gallon.
wh en applied as direc ted on

p li cat i on ! Dr ie s in minutes with no
st ro ng after-odor. Use rooms same day.

tht:l l abel. If it doe;; not cover
In one coat. add it ional ptlin l
w ill be Jurnishcd to insure

too ls. Save on newest co lors!

Mfr.' s sugg.

retail price

lll.99
·

$1169

LATEX
HOUSE
PAINT
Mfr.' s sugg .
re1ail

Easy cleanup; wat er .washes hands and
colora available hi aeml-gloll.

19.99

$799
GAL.

Fin es t a cr yl ic ! 30 mi nut e
dry . Wate r cle ans tools.
Lead-free pigments.

Sale! Save s2.31

Save s3.40! Finest Chief

FINEST CHIEF
GLOSS ENAMEL

1-COAT LATEX SEMI..GLOSS
ENAMEL

• Durable alkyd gloss enamel
wood, melal, plaster; made wi
-lead-fre e pig ments! Save on all
co lors and White.

WASHABLE!
STAIN.RESISTANTI
I'Lood·t'ce• Pigment•

Prevents Rust!
Chief Metalex"
Protects, b,~ autifies iron, steel, all
&lt;f!1etal! Fo r gu tters, tools, ouldoor
furn iture, etc, Locks out rust! ·

'73 QIEVY
"h TON TRUCK

'72 atEVROLET
C-10 PICKUP

• LiQUid-cooled, Iough
IItile 2-c ylmder dresel tha t
thrn ks rt"s a b•g tracror
B1g on work-easy on fuel
Thnfly buy .
Many other mOdels
Bnd 1mpfe.ments avaiiBbls

loss.

METAL PAINT

$2595

B-6000T

. NY Islanders vs. Bulfalo

bringing ffieir record to 3-1,
as host Waverly came from
behind to down them H in a
real thriller. Although the
visitors outhit the hosts, Kim
Grueser was tagged with the

The Meigs girls softball
team raised its record to J~
Tuesday ni ght by tromping
visiting Bel pre 25-6 with
Tracy Burdette pitching the
win.
. A make-up contest, Burdette got plenty of hitting
support as five girls got four
hits each, Mary Boggs ,
Glenda Brown, Kim Grueser,
Kelly Burdette, and Kathy
Howard. Hitting roundtrippers were Boggs, Dorothy
Chapman , and Tracy Bur- ·
dette.
Belpre was led by M.
Shutts' triple and single while
Hogway and Bachus each
got a single.
Wednesday evenin g the

gallon

This is my Stale Farm office
where I canserve yuu with the
best value in car. home. Ide
and heallh insurance I invrle
you to call or drop in any time.

~

Boston vs . Los Angel es
I Boston leads, 3·2)

Fr an.klin

Mat~hlng

CHARGER

For those 100 1
· in-between
jobs!

Pt'l ila delphll vs. Toronto
1 Philade lph ia le ad s, 3·2)
Apr 11- Toronto 3 Phila :1
APr 13- Toronto 4 Phile1 1
Ap r 15- Phllil A Toronto 3, ot
Apr 17- Phila 6 Toronto 5 , ot
Apr 19- Phila 'J Tor onto 0
Apr 21 - PhHa at Toronto
x AI) I 24- Toron to at Ph ita

Marauder girls split

'72 DODGE

'75 QIRYSI.ER

••• the right
little
tractor!

Qu a r te r -F inals

44,000 miles, 1 owner,
air conditioning .

••

KUBOTII~~

~

RUNNING EVENTS
&lt;NY Islanders win. -4·01
eo yar d hurdl es - St r oud Apr 11- NY lslndrs A Bflo 2
Apr 13- N Y ls lndrs 4 EH IO 2
(KCl 12 .3
Apr lS- N Y IS indr s .. 8 flo 3
Str oud
100 ya r d dash
Apr l7- N Y lslndr s A a t lo 3
jKCI 11.9
x.lf neces sary
no yard dash
Stroud
(KCI 27.5
A thought for the day :
.440 yard dash ~ Hanning
British statesman Sir
(P PJ 70
880 yard r un - Abels (G ) Winston Churchill said, "If
2.45.5
Mile Run - Abels (GI 6.07 . we open a quarrel betw~en
the past and the present, we
RELAYS
Abels wi th 18.
'
shall
find that we have lost
BO
medley
I
KCl
2.20
B
FIELD EVENTS
BBO relay- IPPJ 2.06.7 . the future ."
Shot Pu l - Meaige ( PP I
440 rel ay (PP I 57.6
28' 10 112
Mile rel ay - (PP I 5.05. 1.
Discus ....,-'- Pink erman (SVJ

To ba a mong the finest qu a li ty

BEffil

-

Pl ay off ~

Prns uuern•tio na l

( Monfl""toa l w ins. 4-01
Apr 1 1- Mtl 1 S1. LOU i$ 2

High Jump - Abels (GI 4'4

two singles, and Young and

'72 vw

Acne can be helped

"

75 '6' '2
Long jump
(PPJ 15'1

U n l t ~d

f Bes t of Seven)
M on tn~al vs. St . Louis

get it fa r enough away .11

Bobcat gals lose to FH
The Kyger Creek girls
track team traveled to
Federal Hocking and was
defeated 61-!6 recently.
Vicki Stroud was the top
individual scorer with 20
points.

NH L

By

center field fence In the sixth
inning with Dave !.opes on
base and the scored tied 1-1.
"Cey .hit a fastball," said
Norman. "I wanted ID get it
away from him, but I didn't

"Sutton made the pitches
when he had to," said a grim·
faCed No rman. "I didn't just
the one time and it beat me."
Norma n was referr ing to
the 3-1 fastball Ron Cey
slammed over the rig ht

skin

.,

NHL playoffs

ALL COLORS &amp; WHITE
Mtr.'s

GUARANTEED

-

.q-· ,_ """ . , ....u.
""''
... "''-",.......
.. _ ,..."'"_,_,
'" ""G -Iloo-1"""'~
~. 0... """' -~' - ..

.. t llll

tloo lob.l II 1o. d-. -

---·

-

..

-- ~-- - -

suggested

sgs9

retail '512 .9'1

GALLON
Ideal fo r kitchen ·walls ,
woodwork lh rbughout your
. home ! Water cleans tools.

�I
'

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., T!lursday, Apr\121, 1977

76e~s,

BASEBALL
Major L.ague St•nelln!U

By United Preu International
E.st

w.
5

Pet. GB
.607 .- .600 1 4
?
~ .500
6 .4S5 21 1

4
3

6 .:1:13

Sl Lou is
Montreat

8
6

NewYork
P i ttsburgh
Chicago
Ph iladelphlll

6

l

6 .400

3
Jl

1

W. l
Pet. GB
9 1 .818
1 .s .583
1• ,

Afl.omta

Houston

S
5

San Frl!lnCi!iCO
San Diego

5

6 .•SS

4

6 . 455
8 .385

5

4

Clnc lnnat•
4 8 .333
. Wednes da y's Results

51 ,

St Louis 4 New York. 2
Los Angeles J Cincinna ti 1

P ittsburgh 8 Montreat 6
Ph•la at Chicago , ppd .. ra in
Atlanta 2 San D iego{)

San Franc i sco l Hovston 0
Thursday 1 s Gilmes
( fljO Qllmts scheduled)

Friday ' s Games
Ciflcin nati a1 Ch icago

San Fra ncisco at Mon treal
Pitt.sbgh "' New York, night
L~u i s at Phila . nighf
Los Ang at Aflanta , n.ight
San Di ego at Houston , night
St.

American League
East
W. L Pet. GB
Milwaukee
7 3 .700
Bal timore
6 4 .600 1
Toronto
7 6 .S38 11!1
Cleveland ,
· 4 6 . ADO J
Boston
4 6 .400:1
Detro if
4
9 .308
41h
New York.
3 8 .273 4' '~
West
W.
Chicago
7
Oakland
8
Texas
6
Kansas Ci t y
6
Miflnesota
7
Ca l ifornia
6
Sea ttle
6
.
. Wednesday · ~

L

Julius Erving, who led the
76ers with.30 poiilts, knows a
good game when he sees .

3 .700
A .667
A .600
5 .545
6 .538
8 . .4 29
9 ..400

1
Ph

By BILL MADDEN
UPI Sportl Writer
Rich McKinney, who had to
be coaxed by Oakland owner
Charlie Finley into reporting
to the A's' trail!illg camp this
spring, is off to his best start
ever in this, his last shot at
the big time.
In the A's' 4-2 victory over
the Milwaukee Brewers Wednesday, McKinney broke a 2-2
tie in the sixth inning with a
solo homer after singling
home the second Oakland run
in the first. And after eight
Baseball results, games as the A's' righthanded designated hitter,
McKinney bas three homers
with live runs batted in.
line scores
"Finley told me I'd be a
fool not to join the A's in
Malor Ltlgue Results
training camp," McKinnw
By Unite(f Press lntern•tional
said.
''My lather was aJao
Nitional League
urging me to try one more
Phlla at Chicago, ppd ., rain
time because an expai:UIIon
New York
000 000 002- 2 6 0
St. Louis
000 003 Olx- A 10 o club could use me U the A's
Matlack, $aqecki (8 ) and couldn't. I didn't have any
Stearns ; Rasmussen {1 -2) and
Simmons . LP- Matlack (0-2) . assurances from Finley but
HRs- St. Louis , Simmons (Jl; he gave me a decent contract,
New York , Boisclair (1).
which had clauses in it that
spelled
out how much I'd get
Los Angeles 100 002 ooo- 3 S 2
Cincinnati
000 010 ooo- 1 7 o if I did certain things."
Sutton · (2 ·0) and Yeager ;
Norman. Eastw ick (8) and · Mike Torrez yielded siz hits
Bench. tP- Norman (0-1). HRs in going the' route for the A's,

his third victory without a

Toronto {J efferson 0-0l at
New York (Holtzman 0-0J. 2
p.m.
Detroil · (Rozema 0·0) at
Boston (CieVe.l and 1-0) , 2 p.m. ;
Chicago (Slon e 1- ll at Cali for-nia ( Hartzel! 1-0L 10 :30 p.m.
M in nesota
(Zat"ln 2-0} at
Te)(as (Biy lev~n 1-ll. 8: 35p .m.
Frlday•s Games
Boston at Toronto
Ba lt imore at Detrojt
Kan. City at Seattle. night
Chicago .at Oak f ar'1d~ night
Milw at California , night
Minnesota a.t Texas, night
New York at Cleveland, night

loss.
Elsewhere in the AL, Baltimore downed Cleveland, 72, New York put away
Toronto, 7-5, Minnesota
edged Kansas City, 3-2,
Detroit shaded Boston, 3-2,
Tmwsdefeated SeaWe, &gt;~
arid
Chicago
nipped
·
California, 3-2.
Orioles 7, Indians 2:
The Orioles pounced on
their $2.3 million exteammate Wayne Garland to
notch their fifth straight
victory. DQug DeCinces and
rookie Eddie Murray each
clouted two-run homers,
while rookie Scott McGregor
went 71-31nnings for the win.
Garland was pounded for four
runs in 3 1-3 innings while
going down to his second loss
without a win.
Yanll.eea 7, Blue Jays 5:
Yankee Manager Billy
Martin drew his lineup out of
a hat in an effort to end his
team's five-game losing
streak and Willie Randolph,
Thurman Munson and Reggie
Jackson, the 1-2-3 hitters,
responded with seven hits.
and four RBis between them.
Don Gullett, with ~er help
from Sparky Lyle, struggled
to his first win as a Yankee.
Twins 3, Royall Z:
The Twins used solo
homers from ,Larry Hisle,
Dan Ford and Craig Kuslck
plus a club record-tying five
dohble plays to quell the
Royals, who bad 15 hits.
Kusick's homer, which broke
up a 2-2 tie in the eighth,
came off ace Kansas City

- Los Angeles . Lopes (1) , Cey
(3) .
.

·- - ooo-

Pittsburgh
1-10 22·2
8 10 1
Montreal
010 CliO 220--6 9 1
Rooker, Gossage (7). Jackson
(8) , Tekulve (8) and Oyer i
Hann~hs , Terpko (6), Warthen

Kerrigan (8) and Carter .
WP- R:ooker· (2.1). LP-Hai"l naM
( 1-p.
HR:s- Montreal ,
Carte-r 3 (5). Pere:z
(3):

·(7)..

Pittsburgh , Garner (2). Parker
12}.

000 000 ooo- o 1 2
000 101 OOx - 2 7 0
Jones, F ingers (7) and
Tenace ; Mll!ssersmith , Camp
(8 l and Correll. WP - Messersmih' &lt;2-l l. LP--J ones (1-2). HR
San O le-go
All anta

.--

- Atlan ta. Burroughs (5}.

Leaders
M1 jor Le1tue Leaders
8¥ UnHed Press International
Bitting
(based on 20 at bats)
National Leag'ue
G AB. R. H. Pet .
Matnews •.Atl 12 4S 10 19 .&lt;422
Cey, LA
11 43 ' 9 17 .J9S
Smmns. St .L 12 46 9 18 .391
Parker , Pit 11 A6 10 18 .391
Hndrck. so 13 49 6 19 .388
Yeager , LA 10 32 6 12 .375
Evans. SF
10 30 7 11 .367
Crpmrti , Mtt 10 39 S 1A ,359
Smith . LA
Robnsn,
Pi I

11
42 137 10
IS .357
10 28
.357

American L,aoue

000 000 01G- 1 9 0
000 000 ooo- 0 4 1
Ha ltckl , Moffitt (81. LAY~IIe

Houston

(9} and Sadek ; L~mongello ,
Samblto (8 } and Ferguson . WP

- Hal ic ki (2,1) . LP- Lemongel ·

lo 10-3) .

ir:;:;;;;:;;;:;

6 21 3
·. 10 38 8
Wsh ingtn . Te 8 32 2
M cRae; KC 11 A7 1Cl
Evans .

eos

1D 40.

Brnhrdt, Sea. 8 30
vetez. Tor
9 25
Cubbge, Min 11 ~
Porte r , KC
9 33
Page, Oak
·12 16

10 .476
16 .A21

Yepsi - You can still get Cartoon glasses

13 .Ao6

19

..404

8 16 .400

Minnesota

Detroit, Staub {3).

- --

002 000 010-- 3 10 I
Kansas City 001 001 ooo- 2 15 0
Thormodsgard,
Burgme ler
(4) , Johnson (8) ana Borg mann ; Splittorff, Littt"ll U) ,and
Porter. WP- Burgmel&amp;r {1 -1) .
LP-LitteU 0 -1). HAs- Min ·

9 17 .395
6 13 .394
9 16 .391

on~

nesote, Hisle IJ), Ford
Kusick (2 ).

Texas
Seattle

(1},

E•rned Run Aver11e
&lt;based on t innings pitched)

National League: Sh irley, SO

.0 .53; Esplndsa, NY 0.69; SuMer,
002. 101 Olo- .5 9 1 Ch i 0.90 ; Sutton, LA, Seaver,

000 010 1GO-- 2 _. l

Briles, Devine (7) lncl Sund ·

berg; Montague, Pagan _(6) ancl
Stinson. WP- Briii!'S (1-0) . LPMontague (0-2). HAt-Texas ~
May (1), Harrah (41 ; Seattle,
sernhllrdl {4) .

,

010 110 ooo- 3 71
California · 000 100 Olo- 2 7 1
Knepp.
LaGrow (7) and
Es'ian ; Ryan (2-2) end Etch Ch icaOO

ebarren . WP-Knaf)p (2.0) . HR
~ic:ago., SOdert'flm

(2) .._

NY and

~uthven ,

Atl 1.08.

Amerlnn Le1gue: . Palmer,

Ball 0 .64 ; Lindblad, Tex 0.82 ;

L"'""·t&lt;C ond Hortenstein. Tor
UJO; Slaton, Mil 1.06.

Strikeout•
N•tlonill Ltlgue: Montefusco,
SF 23; Runwen , All 20; Niekro,
Atl , Norm~n . Cin and Seaver,

NY If.
Alllerken L.atue : Ryan, Cal

Tox
21 ; EckerSley,
31 : Tenena.
Cal 29 ;
Garvin.:_ To~ 18.

Clev
and
Blyleven.

spa~ing

to show lor my season.
homer and Dave Lopes
Burroughs led olf the fourth addded a solo shot as Los
inning with his homer and the Aogeles' Don Sutton pitched a
Braves added their other run live-hitter and won his second
in the sixth when Gary straight game. Cincinnati
Matthews doubled and scored 'SCOred their run in the fifth
on a single by Rod Gilbreath. inning when Ken Griffey
Andy Messersmith allowed doubled
home
Cesar
four hits in seven Innings Geronimo. Fred Norman was
before retiring with a cramp the losing pitcher.
in hio left side al)d Ron Camp Pirates 8, Expos 6:
finished the game earning his
Pittsburgh's Dave Parker
fourth save. .
and Phil Garner ea'ch hit a
Elsewhere in the NL Los two-run homer to offset thret!
Angeles defeated Cinci~nati homers by Montreal's Gary
3-1,
Pittsburgh
beai Carter. Jim Rooker went six
Montreal, 8-6·, St. Louis innings to pick up l)is second
Cardinals topped the New win · while Gerald Hannahs
York Mets 4-2 and San was the loser. Tony Perez
'
' Houston
Francisco edged
the
also ho.mered for the Expos.
Astros, loll. Philadelphia at Cards 4, MetS 2:
Cbicagq was postponed by • Ted Sinunons snapped a
rain.
scoreless tie with a three-run
Dodgers 3, Reds 1:
homer in the sixth inning to
Ron Gey hit a tw01un back the six-hit pitching of
Eric llasmussen, who walked

Today , GAHS will host
powerful Ravenswood (11-1)
in a non..conference contest
on Memorial Field, starting
at 5 p.m.
Art Fog lest rom,
sophomore, was credited
with the Gallipolis victory
Wednesday. Foglestrom went
the dis.t ance . He allowed
three runs on seven hits.
GAHS made two errors.
Foglestrom fanned six and
walked three ·in his first
varsity start.
Danny Porter started for
Pt. Pleasant. He was relieved
,bY Rick Smith in the fourth
inning with two out. The two
Big Black hurlers gave up
eight runs on six hits . Pt.
Pleasant made two errors.
Gary
Swain
paced
The Meigs Reserves Gallipolis with a single and
baseball team kept its record triple in three trips to the
clean at~ Tuesday night by plate. Brent Johnson, Terry
· coming from behind to defeat
host Southern 8-7, although
the host.· squad outhit the
Marauders seven to six. The
game saw a total of 31 walks,
18 to Southern hitters and 13
to Meigs' batters. Meigs'
pitchers struck out six while
Southern ~urlers fanned Gallipolis erupted with six
runs in the fourth inning, then
went on to hand visiting Pt.
Pleasant an 8-3 nonconference baseball setback
on Memorial Field Wednesday evening.
The victory left Coach Jim
Osborne's Blue Devils with a
&gt;2 season mark. The Big
Blacks dropped to 5-7 on the
year.

REG. PRICE

MED,. LUAUN ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
MOUNTAINEER BLEACHED .•••••••••••••••
MOUNTAINEER HICKORY·········~··•••••
MOUNTAINEER WALNUT•••••• ; •••••••••
MAPLliROOK HONEY•••••••••••••••••••••
MAPLEBROOK AMBER •••••••••••••••••••••
WOODCUT STRAW
•••••••••••••••••••• , •••••
'
MOUNTAINEER BUnER •••••••••••••••••••
1111~1), lll~tl •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

EASTLAND PECAN~ •••••••••••••••••••••••••
SEAFOAM WHITE .......................... .
BLUE MIST••••••••••••••.•••••••••••••••••••••••
NATURAL BIRCH••••••••••••••••• ••••• •••••••.
WATCHTOWER ELM •••••••••••••••••••••••••
~ll~11r III .. E•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
TSUGA SIERRA ............................... .

'3.95
'4.99
•4.99
•4.99
'6A5
'6A5
'6.65
•4.99
'6.59
'6.95
'6.95
. '6.95
•7.99
'9.35
'9.89
•12A5
'14.95

s4.95
'6.85
'6.85
'6.85
·ss.29
$8.29
ss.65
'6.85
$8.48
sa.99
ss.99
ss.99
sg,95
'11.95
$12.80
$15.95
s17,95

Reserves
stay hot

in 3·0 win

struck out five. Jon
Matlack 11Ufiered his second
straight loss for the Mets,
Tile host Southern TorEAST MEIGS - The
who scored their runs in the
nadoes
dropped only their
and
Eastern
District
T-Ball
ninth on a two-run homer by
-..nd
contest
or the year
Pee
Wee
sign
up
date
is
Bruce Boisclair.
they
fell to
last
night
as
,
Saturday,
April
23
from
2-4
Giants 1, Astros 0:
visiting
Federal
Hocking
8-S
p.m.
There
will
·!&gt;e
a
$5
Ed Halicki, Randy Moffitt
as
the
Lancers
plated
lour
registration
fee
.
and Gary Lavelle combined
The age group for T-Ball is unearned runs in the last
on a four-hitter fiX' San
5
thrnugh
7, you have to be 5 inning. T!lat dropped SouthFrancisco, which scored the
before
May
1st and cannot be em's record to 7·2.
game's only run in the eighth
Southern .took a I-ll lead in
8
before
Aug.
I.
inning on Terry Whitfield's
the
bottom of the first when
Tile
age
group
for
Pee
Wee
single, a sacrifice and Rob
Greg
Cundiff led off with a
is
8
and
9
years
old,
having
to
Andrews' single. Mark
.
walk,
the
pitcher balked, and
be
8
before
Aug.
I
and
not
10
Lemongello suffered his third
Cundiff
raced
home when
before
Aug.
1.
straight loss for the Astros.
John
Sayre
cracked
a double.
Locations
for
the
sign
up
PhlWes.Cubs:
·
Federal
Hocking
went
anead
are
:
Rain
forced
a
2-1
in
the
top
of
the
third
on a
Tuppers Plains - Orange
postponement with th~
double,
two
walks,
and
single,
l'!lillies ahead, 2-1, after 4\2 Township Firehouse.
a
Southern
error.
Olive
Reedsville
innings . The game is
But Southern regained the
expected to be made up when Township Firehouse.
lead
3-2 in the bottom of that
Chester
Chester
the Phillies next play in
inning
on lour singles and a
Firehouse.
Chicago in mid-August.
hit batter. Both teams again
scored two runs each in the

none and

GOLD LACE WHITE ••••••••••••• ~ •••-•••••••••
AVOCADO. FLORENTINE ••••••••••••••••

seven.·

Cafe Doors
I

•&amp;.69
'9.69

'11.84

Solid or ·perferatecl

4x8-'h"

PLASTIC PIPE

SUB-SIDING

'2"

4"x10'

s1o~so

Reg. $3.00 ' Sheet
Joint

NOW

'249

Sheet

LOUVER
Bl.fOLDING

32" AND 36"
WIDTHS

DOORS
lila"

thick-hardware

Included-available In ·

$1995

Pepsi!

SET

sizes 24." to 72" In

ill I

COLUMBUS (UPI ) -Ohip
State basketball coach Eldon
Wall, Tim Carman and Mark Miller would just as soon see
Dobson each had singles lor Muhammad Ali stick to
boxing.
the Blue Devils.
Miller, you see, has been
Scott Howard, Geoff
recruiting
~ 11 home grown
Garritch, Joe Turner, Tom
basketball
star Herbie
Bateman, Porter, Smith and Williams of Columbus
Marion
Ron Barnett each hit safely
Franklin
High
School
and
for Pt. Pleasant.
sees
Williams
as
a
sure
Pl. Pleasant took a I-ll first .
nf
basketball
inning lead. That beld up until return
prominance
at
Ohio
State.
the Blue Devils explosion in
But,
the
University
of
the fourth inning in which 10 Louisville, among others,
men went to the plate.
GAHS added two more runs also likes Williams and has
sought the help of
in the sixth. Pt. Pleasant reportedly
Ali,
a
Louisville
native, to
plated its final two runs after recruit him.
two were out in the seventh
Williams, the UP! Clii8S
rung.
AAA player of the year, was
Linescore :
orr to UCLA Wednesday
Pt. Pleas. 100 000 2-3 7 2 afternoon for a recruiting
GAHS
000 620 x-8 6 2 visit, his fourth, and may yet
Batteries : GAHS
go to Louisville before
Foglestrilm (WPJ &amp; Barr. Pt. · making his decision about
Pleasant - Porter (LPJ &amp; May 1.
Smith (4) and Swann.
·
·"Louisville/' said Miller,
"has everyone calling him
just like we have, including
Muhammad Ali."
"He (Ali) didn't go to
Louisville and he lives in
Chicago now," said MiUer
with a twinge of sarcasm,
"but he's calling Herbie for
Louisville. I'd be impressed if
he called me. In fact, I'd like
tq talk to him."
Miller told the final
Fraley (LJ Baird (5) and
meeting of the season of his
Westfall.
S. Beaver (W) and Den- Center Circle booster's club
Wednesday he was ''very
nison.

Wildcats .upset
Bobcats 4 to 3

REG. PRICE

49' filled with a

16 oz.

wldlh. All are 80" In
height.
AS LOW AS

$2995

Meigs looked like it was
In . the . well-balanced
going to run away with it in
So!lthern V~lley . Athletic
• the second as they scored
Conference race Wednesday
four big runs and added one
night, Coach Tom Belville's
to it In the. third to take a 5-1!
Hannan Trace Wildcats got
~ lead. But the Southern bats
back into the title picture
, came alive in the bottom of with a 4-3 victory over the
• the Inning to plate one and
struggling Kyger Creek
: then In the fourth they got to· Bollcats.
starting .pitcher Tom Owens
Righthander Steve Beaver
, and relievers Willford- and hurled a three-hitter to pace
~ Elkins for six tallies lor a 7-5
the Wildcats to their second
~ lead.
straight league win.
• Three Southern errors and
Hannan Trace plated a
: a walk in the fifth brought the single run in the second in' visitors within one, and then ning on a single by Beaver,
~ Jeff Grueser's RBI single in
two hit batsmen and a walk.
• the sixth tied it. Meigs won it Kyger Creek took a 3-1 lead in
~ in the seventh when Taylor
the fourth on a walk, ground
~ singled and came home on
rule double by Claude Cor' Greg Becker's booming nelius, a two-run single by
triple. other Meigs hitters losing pitcher Ron Fraley and
, were Hawley with a triple a three·base throwing error.
• and .Elkins and Woods with a
Hannan Trace took the lead
;· single each.
lor good in the fifth as Frank
; Southern hitters were Kelly Mooney, Tom Beaver and T.
Winebrenner and three Wright singled before Pack
11' singles,
Tim Brinager a doubled.
double and single, Jim
Beaver fanned six while
~ O'Brien a double, and John
walking two . Fraley and
; West a single.
reliever Steve Baird Canoed
= Meigs
041 011 1-8 6 2 eight while walking four.
- 'South.
001 600 0-7 7 4 Kyger Creek, 6-f&gt;-1 goes to
Owens, Willford (4), Elkins Meigs tonight.
• (4, WP) and Becker.
Linescore:
:: Winebrenner, O'Brien (2), KC
000 300 0-3-3-3
• Powell (3), Winebrenner (7, HT
010 030 --4-7-3
•" LP) and Brinager.
w

.

-

fifth.

·pleased, with the four all·

Ohio players already signed
to national letters or intent,
but added, ''what we need
now is Herbie Williams."
Williams, said Miller, "Is a
great prospect who needs a
lot .of work to reach his
potential. He's a fine major
college player right now, but
his · potential · is unlimited.
There isn't anyone in the
country like him, no one in
the coUhtry with his potential.
Miller said he got "no
reading at all" on Williams'
intentions, but related a
converSation he bad with the·
big youngster's mother,
possibly his greatest fan.
"Hls mother told me once
she- didn't think · she could
stand it if she couldn't see
him play," said Miller,
adding, "that's not too bad."
Miller earlier signed Cleveland East Tech's 6-9 .Jim·
Smith, 6-9 Marquis Miller of
Columblll' St. Charles and 5-9
Todd Penn of Columbus
Linden McKinley. And,
Tuesday night, got Barberton's ~2 Carter Scott to
ink a Buckeye tender.
That leaves him with two
tenders to give out this year.
One is ticketed for.Williams if
he wants it and the other will
probably go to either 6-3
Kenny Page of New York City
or 6-10 Kevin Nash of
Trenton, Mich.
"I get excited about the

After the Lancers took a 4-3
. lead, the hosb! got the lead
back as they got their two
runs on two errors, a stolen
base, and a run scoring single
by Sayre. Then came that
disastrous seventh that sent
the Lancers home. winners.
Sayre took the loss as he
and two other pitchers
combined to fan seven and

Chadwell socked a triple and
single.
number out on strikes and
walked lour also.
Southern's next game is
Monday
when they host
Sayre led the hitters .with a
Symmes
VaUey.
·
double and single, Richard
002020~95
TeMord and Mark Forbes F
each had two singles, and s
102 020 1&gt;----li 8 3
Hatfield (WP ), Greene (7)
Steve Hendricks and Scott
Wolfe each cracked a single. and Poston. Huddleston,
Hatfield got a triple and Cundiff (4), Sayre (6, LP)
double lor the winners as· and Forbes, Cundiff (6).

Greene

sent

the

same

.

............ SHOW YOUR PRIDE WITH .......... ..

: Nl•l~t~l.\1~ t•II'I,X

1..1'4-lt Yttlllt 411L\It. l

TIMEXe

walk lour while winning
pitcher Hatfield and reliever

PRICED FROM

$2795
TO $3995

people we have now," said
MiUer, "about the different
combinations we can put on
the floot .'
Miller was pleased with the
signing of Scott, who
averaged 24 points per game
for Barberton the past
1

~~~

season.
"Early in the season we
questioned whether Carter
could play the second guard
spot," said Miller, "but at the
end of the season there was
no question. One scouting
service called him one or the
two most underrated players
in the Midwest area and a
five..star (top) second guard
prospect. ADd I rate him a
five..star person."

~

Village Pharmacy
27 N. 2ND

Middleport, 0.

·Haggar' Avant Gabs"of 100%
texturized Dacrori polyester
gabardine from Klopman:
Gabardine. It's a long-standing favorite with men who
know fashion . Especially when. Klopman provides it .a nd Haggar
styles it.
Take this top and slacks combination. It's get a look that's
right for spring. And it's available in a variety of mix and match
colors, •(Jilttems, and solids.
The leisure top features front darts, straight front yoke,
and square patch pockets.
The contrasting check slacks are the Comfort-PlusrM
Ambassador' Mmodel. With belt loops, fashion pockets, plus a
slif!ht flare. Unmistakably Haggar.

Double Scoop

Top,$26

What serves up best on scooped-out
flexible wood wedges? Soft, rich leather
uppers- a special treat for your casual
fashion tastes! Criss-cross st~ap in
camel, $18.50. T-strap in golden latigo,

Slacks, $18

$~0 . 50.

~

:"

r----~----"""""!"~~----.
.· .·

. .. .

....

24"xao" Door-

I

...
.......
•••
..
-..
-"..
....•
•

I

M
A

FOR THE FULL SIZE

~

r

~

WOMEN

u

60' VINYL

NEW GIGANTIC 25 FLAVOR
M1LKSHAKE MENU
CHOOSE FROM THESE FLAVORS:
Purple . Cow
Orange Creme

Maple

Gi'anhopper
Ett Not
Candy Spice
IIICic Walnut

i

lurevndy

Root aur
Lemop
Cherry Almond
lt•ckberry

R . . pbtrry

Butterscotch

Blueberry

Ptnupple
Strawberry
Peach

V•nllla

M•nhm•ll•w

Chtrry

Banana

GARDEN

HOSE

REG.

$895

Nylon reinforced ... flel(.i b le
in all weather, strong in hot

sun. 5/B" I.D .

T666-6G

()

FASHIONS

~

l ied· with two 'victor ies .
American. Li!agul' : . Tanana,
Cal. Torrer:. Oak and Garvin,
· Tor 3·0: Knapp, Chi and Zahn,
M lnn 2-0 ; Palmer. Salt. Brett.
Ch i, R:uhle, Det , Colbof"n, KC,
Augustine, Mil , Wheelock, Sea
and Lemanczyk, Tor 2- 1; Ryan,
Cal 2-.2.

p

with Pepsi ~ They're a real "steal" at.

5 12 .AOO
3 10 .AOO

Tex and Ault, Tor 4; 12 players
Milwaukee
000 101 ooo- 2 6 1 lied with three .
Oakland
200 001 01x- 4 B 1
Runs aaned In
National Leigue : Tenace, SO ·
Augustine, Rodriguez (8) and
Moore ; Torrez (3 -0l and Wil · 15 ; Garvey end Sm i th , LA 13 ;
IIams , LJ)- Augustine (2· 1L HR Morgan, Cln and Cey, LA 12.
-Q,!Jkland, McKinnty. (3) .
. American LNgue : Rudl , Cal
19; page, Oak 15 ; Ault, Tor 13 ;
Cleveland
000 000 020- 2 7 0 Hobson, 8os 12 : Mayberry. KC .
Balt imore
201 101 20X- 7 9 1 Carew, M lnn and Allen , Oak ll .
Garland, Hood .(4) , BuskP.y
Stolen lases
(4) i!lnd Fosse; McGr~or , D .
National League : Cabell , Hou
MMtinez (8) and Dempsey . \VP and Lopes , LA II ; Ollone, Pitt
- McGregor (1 .(1) , LP-Gi!lrland 5 ; Concepcion, Cln and To"!lve.
(0-2).
HRs- Ba ltimore,
De- ras, P itt 4.
Ameriun League: Remy. Cal
Cinces (3). Murrav (2).
8: Lintz , Oak 7; Grich, Cal,
D~trolt
011 001 ooo- 3 10 0 Patek, KC and Hisle, Minn s.
Pitching
Boston
100 000 OlG- 2 8 1
Ruhle. Foucault (Ill. Hiller
Most ~lctorles
(8) and May ; Tiant, Willoughby
National League: , Ruthven,
{7) and . Fisk . WP-Ruhle &lt;2-1l. Atl. Seaver , NY . Denny and
LP- Tiant (1 . 1) . HRs-Boston, Forsch , St.L 3-0; 12 pitchers
Kemp (3) .

Don Ford 14 for Los
Angeles.
Barry was backed by
Jamaal Wllke9 with 11 points
and Clifford Ray with 14.
Maurice Lucas hit a twisting
jump shot from close range
with II seconds remaining to
lift the Trail Blazers over the
Nuggets in the opening game
of their best-&lt;Jf-seven Western
Conference semifinals.
After Lucas, ba~ket,

reliever Mark - Littell, who
had not given up a hit this
year.
Tigers 3, Red Soli: 2:
Rusty Staub and Steye
Kemp hit solo homers, the
third this season lor both,
while three Detroit pitchers
combined on an eight-hitter.
Kemp's aixtli-inning homer
proved -to be the gamewinner. Vern Ruhle was the
winner, his second. while
Luis '!'!ant, 1-1, took the
loss.
IWigers 5, lllarl!len Z:
Nelson Briles and Adrian
Devine limited Seattle to four
hits, while Dave May and
Toby Harrah each homered
to spark Texas. The 33-year
old Briles pitclied no-hit ball
-until Juan Bernhardt hit a
solo home run with two out in
the fifth inning. May hit a
two-run homer in the third
and Harrah smacked a solo
shot in the sixth for the
Rangers.
White Sox 3, Angell Z:
Eric Soderholm, continuing
his comeback from knee ·
surgery, stroked a home run
and two singles, drove home
two runs and scored two
others as the White Sox took
advantage of Nolan Ryan's
wildness to down the Angels.
Ryan yielded seven walks,
one to Soderholm with the
bases loaded in the fourth.
Soderholm also hit his second
homer in as many games in
tlie fifth. Chris Knapp was the
winner, but needed three
innings of relief from Lerron
LeGrow, who notched his
third save.

Tontadoes handed 2nd loss
are annom1ced of season by Lancer nine

out
. .
Blue Devils top Big Blacks. Louisville
to get Williams
•
8-3 for fifth diamond wzn

Ca~eRusselladdedl9and

G AB . R . H. Pet.

Smith, Bal
Vas, Bos

American Le1gue
Home Runs
National League: Burroughs ,
Toronto
201 000 020- S 9 2
New York . 320 110 oox-- 7 14 o Atl and
Carter.
Mtl
5;
Hargan, Johnson ( 2). Willis Kingman , NY and Valentine,
C6 l and Ashby; Gull!tt, Lyle Mtl 4; 12 players tied with
{8 ) and . Munson . WP- Gullett three.
(1 . 2). LP- Hargan (1 . 1). HR Americln .Le1gue: . Bonds .
New Yor~ . Randolph {1}.
Cal, Bernhardt, Sea , Harrah ,

Rice (1);

Golden State, ll&gt;lll6, and
Portland clipped Denver, 101100. Waahington, which leads
I-ll in its series with the
Rockets, is at Houston
tonight .
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
scored 'rl points, grabbed 16
rebounds and handed off
seven assists as the takers
offset a brilliant 40-point
performance by Golden
State's Rick Barry to take a 10 lead in their Western
Conference semifinals.
Los Angeles, ahead by just
points at the half, shot a
torrid 74 per cent in the third
period to put the game away.

A ~s continue hot spree,
Yankees end slump, 7-5

3'12

Texas 5 Seattle 2
Chicago 3 Cal iforn ia 2
Todey 's Pr oblble Pitchers
( All Tim es EST)

San Fran

By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Writer
Jeff Burroughs, acquired •
by the Atlanta Braves in a
winter trade, claims he
literally "knocked the cover
off the ball" lour or. five times
last season and Atlanta
Br~ve IB:"s are inclined to
be~eve him.
.
T11.at ball they used m the
American League last season
was sopoorlymade I actually
knocked the cover off it four
or live times," Burroughs
said Wednesday night, after
his .fifth homer of the season
helped the Braves beat the
San Diego Padres, ~.
"Also , you don't have to
~tend with an unfavorable
wmd m Atlanta such as we
ahnost always had in Texas.
Tile way, the ball carries in
Atlanta I U have much more

I V~

Milwaukee 2
Balti more 7 Cleveland 2
Detroit 3 Boston 2
M innesota 3 Kansas City 2

'

one.
"Henry was unreal," he
said. "He reaUy came ready
tb play tonight. He
handcuffed Jo Jo (White) and
really made him work on the
other end of the floor."
Before a charged up crowd
of 18,'r/6, the 76ers led by as
many as 18 in the third
quarter . Darryl Dawkins,
who asserted himself under
the hoards and helped contain
Boston's Dave Cowens,
provided the muscle lor
Philadelphia.
Uoyd Free had 17 points for
the 76ers and McGinnis 16.
Tile celtlcs were topped by
36-year-old John Havlicek
with 31 points. Cowens added
21 while White was kept to
just 14 courtesy of Bibby .
Boston Coach Tom Heinsohn
was ejected in the last minute
of the first half after referee
Richie Powers hit him with
tWo technical fouls . ·
Game 3 will resume Friday
night in Boston.
In other NBA playoff
action, Los Angeles defeated

Eastern T -ball
signup days

Braves blank Padres, 2:.0

3

Oa~1and A

i

By FRED UEF
UPI Sporu Writer .
For someone who was
nearly out of a job at the start
of the season, it's one of life's
little oddities that Henry
Bibby may well be the player
who helps the Philadelphia
76ers bankroll their way to an
NBA championship .
. But that seemed to be the
case in !he 76ers Wednesday
night's 113-101 victory over
the Boston Celtics, which
evened the best-of-seven
Eastern Conference
semifinals at 1-1.
Bibby scored 22 points,
hitting nine of 14 shots from
the floor,
but more
importantly played rugged
defense and added a measure
of stability to Philadelphia's
offense.
"Henry just had a super
game," Philadelphia Coach
Gene Shue said. "He worked
very hard on defense. He's
been outstanding for us all
year_."

Pet. GB

Results
New York. '7 Toronto 5

I

~The Daily Sentinel, MiddlePOrt-Pomeroy: 0 ., ~ursdaY, April2l. !~

with 22 and Bob Gross with polnll . David Thompaon,
shifted from f()C'Wal'd to guard
18.
Denver, playing its first position, added :16. ,
Tile ll!rles resumes Friday
game after a llklay layoff,
at
Denver.
was topped J!1_[lan_lsael's :Ill

A

wesr

Los Angete$

Lakers.,
Blazers triumph

Tile Trail Blazers, which
Denver's Ted McClain threw
trailed
by as many as five
up a jumper which could have
polnla
with
less than four
won the game but it hit the
ininutes
to
go,
were led by
rim and Portland ' s Bill
Lucas
with·
23
points,_Walton
Walton snared the rebound.

..
.
...

'•

• '• .. 0

~

Porch
SWING
5-foot .. Solid oak, varnish
finish. Shaped ' seat.

Unassembled.

Wh"lbarrow

$}91'

Take lo~ds to 4 cu . ft . Wide,
puncture -resistant tire . Bali . bearing wheel.

.
M

...

• Slacks - 32 ·40 with
coordinating jackets.

~

• Blouses
• Shir-ts

4'x8'xlh" COX PLYWOOD ...:.................,......................~7.99 SHEET

• Tops
• Shorts

Peanut Butter

dachoci•••,••·YMorstiJm+•S"••Je ~~.

Locust &amp; Fourth
0.
~~!;:~~~·~=·
=---;_-~~~:.\:~~·;_J

VALLEY LUMBER. &amp;SUPPLY CORPORATION
923 SOUTH 3RD AVE.

992-2709

OPEN: 7:00 to 5:00 MONDAY THRU FRIDAY
ALL ITEMS CASH&amp; CARRY

heritage house
-

MIDDLEPORT. O.

7:00 to 4:00 Saturday

20%0FF
OF SHOES

~

••

.......'

OPEN :

*

MondaY thru Thursday &amp;

-- ----·Saturday 9:30 to S

OPEN FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY TILL 8:00

...
m

'

.Fridn 9:30 to B

Middleport,

BAHR CLOTHI

o.

..'

N. 2nd Ave. Middleport, 0 •

"'

!,

�---

--~----~------~--·-------

--~-~-

•

6-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Thursday, April21, 1977

Five Ohio 4-H members to receive
Quarter Horse yearlings April 23

Rev.Dr.Lewis honored
for service to cht1rch ·
WINSTON SALEM, N. C. The Rev. Dr. Edward W. W.
Lewis, son of a Middleport,
Ohio coal miner, was honored
last week at a special
meeting of Memorial Church
of the Southern Conference
for "unusual and outstanding
service" to the United Church
of Christ.
Program
chairman
President Robert L. Brinkley
of Memorial Church of the
Southern Conference of the
United Church of Christ
referred to the noteworthy
parish mini'stry of Dr. Lewis

Virginia Universities as well
as professionally
at
Cleveland and Pittsburgh.
The other is Dr. Lewis,
believed to be tbe only native
son in the history of Meigo
County. to have the four
degrees, Bachelor of Science,
Master of Arts, Master of
Theology and Doctor of
Divinity.
Dr. Lewis married artist
Judith Andress, dsughter of
the late Dr. and Mrs. J. Mace
Andress. They have four
children. His parishes have
been in Ohio, Massachusetts,

since his first sennon in 1933

Connecticut,

and to his leadership on the
local and state levels in the
Congregational Churches and
then the United Church of
Christ. President Brinkley

New

York,

Michigan and North Carolina
(as Interim).
Dr. Lewis was questioned
for ordination In Pomeroy
and ordained at the First
was enthusiastic in his praise Baptist Church in Mid·
of Dr. Lewis ·in ministerial dleport. He is one of four
health and life insurance and ' Lewis boys who participated
of both I..ewises for their In the athletic program of
dedicated mission emphasis. southeastern Ohio league. As
Dr. Lewis is the third of brother, Lawrence Leonard
nine children born to Mr. and Lewis, still lives across the
Mrs. Harry Lewis. Though river in Mason. Art "Pappy"
they lived in a "Company Lewis and Harold "Tufty"
House" with 11three rooms Lewis are deceased brothers.
and a path", two Lewis sons Three sisters live in
became college graduates, Columbus, o~e lives in Logan
and to this day they are and the fifth · lives in
believed to be th~ only local Hurricane, W. Va.
miner's family· to have two ·- In addition to giving,
sons with university degrees. leadership in the local, state
The first son was the late Art and national fields, Dr. Lewis
"Pappy" Lewis, all.SEOAL, has preached in numerous
All-American and courttries on four continents
professional football player, with his greatest Interest in
who later coached at missions, evangelism and
Mississippi State and West education. He and Mrs.
Lewis, without any financial
aid or support from the Boar&lt;
for World Ministries, UCC,
went "Eighty Days Around
the Mission World", and he
has given nearly aU his
vacation time and days off
since 1968 to go aU oyer
America, mostly at his own
SPRAY BODY
expense but sometimes
COLOGNE REFRESHER
through the Speakers Bureau
of the ucc Stewardship
Council. to speak for the
Christian World Mission, to
help raise tens of thOusands
of dollars for missions, and to
help raise up missionaries to
serve in the United states and
~~tout the whole, wide

SOMETHING
SPECIAU

:41nbttJ~

Even though he is the son of

par.ents who had no former

ONLY

J.50

Seven·and·a·half ounces
in a great, unbreakable
spray containera fantastic buy at this
once-a-season low price.
Now you can spray,
spray, spray.. .with the
cool , tingly scent
of citrus·fresh Ambush.

WISHER

LU~)c

Ph or r,...01

'r

schooling In the mining
communities, he studied at
Ohio, Harvard and Columbia
Universities as well as the
Andover Newton Theological
School, and he has a living
. interest in ~allege and
d t t In' f
11 h
gra us e ra mg or a w 0
desire it. Dr. Lewis has
helped over 300 young people
in college and graduate study
in various fields, but he is
most moved that nine of the
young men became fully·
trained . ministers of the
Christian Gospel. Several
missionaries have also come
from his churches and served
abroad. Jesus Christ has used
Dr. ·Lewis to reach almost
2,000 lndlviduala to take their
public stand for the Master
and proclaim their lifelong
lo)'\lhy to Christ and His
·
th
Church . In addllion,
ano er
2,000 have been reached
Indirectly as the Lord used
Dr. Lewis in missions and in
evangelism
·
About a quarter of a cen·
tury ago, before the United

Church of Christ was formed,
Dr.
Lewis
proposed
Denomination-wide Insurance protection for
Ministers and Church••
In the Congregational
Denomination. Ria motion
carried at the Annual
Meeting of ihe Annuity Fund
for Congregational Ministers
and Churches held in New
Jersey. After several years
(during which time the
Congregational Christian
Churches
and
the
Evangelical and Reformed
Church' fo.rmed the United
Church of Christ), a plan :was
adopte&lt;), and the insurance
program covera nearly all of
the thousands of United
Church of Christ ministers.
In 1933, during the heart of
the great depression, he
preached his first sermon,
and during more than four
decades of preaching, he
found a vital hobby,
numlamatics. He read so
mt~ch and spoke so often on ·
coin history and coin
collecting that he becsme
known as one of the
authorities in numlamat!cs in
the U.S.A. In 1948, he became
Life Member No. 214 of the
American Numismatic
Association, which now has
over 40,000 members. He is
Honorary Life Member No. I
of the Uncas Numismatic
Association in Connecticut.
Early in 1974, because of
health concerns, Dr. Lewis
retired from the fulltime
parish
ministry
in
Massachusetts. He now has
his headquarters in Henniker, New Hamphire, from
which he goes anywhere on
invitation to .coi)tinue his
m•ss•on
witness
and
evangelistic fervor lor Christ
and His Church.

Honor roll

at Meigs
announced
One· hundred "and ninety
five students at Meigs High
School have been named to
the honor roll tor the fourth
sl• week grading period.
Students must maintain a
"B"
or better to be nam!(j to
the roll. Named were:
SENIORs-Cheryl Barn.
hart.
Darlene
Barrett.
eecky Bego, Debbie Blr,
chfield, Mary Blaettnar,
Gene Blankenship, Tammy
Blake, Teresa Brown, Kellee
Burdette, Charles Burton.
Deanna Knopp, Carl
Carmichael, Brenda Caskey,
Kathy Coleman, Elaine
Corsi , John Davidson, Mark
Davis, Marlin Davis, Robert
Davis. Robin Qewhurst.
Barbara Douglas, Jean
Durst. Mary sue Durst, Opal
Dyer , Paula Eichinger,
Teresa Ellis, Andy Eskew,
Connie Fish, Sandy Garnes,
Dan Granda!.
Jenni Grate, Kim Grueser,
Crystal Hall. Trucy Hall,
Debra Hartenbach, Connie
Hoffman, Debbie Holsinger.
Jayne Hutchison, Karen
Hysell, Fumiko Iwasaki.
· VIcki Johnston , Cheryl
Kennedy, Sal'ly Kennedy ,
Tom Kennedy, Jacqueline
· King, Debbie Lambert, Mark
Lawson.
Randy Lyons .
Duane McLaughlin, Denise
Marshall. Vicki Metheny.
Eugene Morrison, Scott
Napper, Pamela North,

DR. EDWARD LEWIS

contributors to our economy.
COLUMBUS - April 23 will E . Roach, 14, of Rt. 3, children from his familY We mlllt do everything we
be a day to remember for five Gallipolis and Diane Mat· currently involved in 4-H. He can to support young people
has been involved lour years.
Ollio 4-H members.
cum, '13, of Sterling. .
in 4-H progr&amp;llll."
At 3 p.m. at the Ohio State
According to farmer and Unda Laribee ts currently
Evans Ia a truotee ol.
University Horse Barn five sausagemaker Bob Evans, president of her local club, a theBob
Ohio
4-H FolUidllllon. He
young people from across nearly aU of the 16,017 young member for six years. John
has
a
kInterelt In ralllnc
Oltlo will each receive a people enrolled in the Ohio 4- Taylorhaswon6 "A" ribbons Quarter Horaea
and baa
Quarter Horse yearling from H horse program were as a member of the horse
served
aa
director
ol
both the
Bob Evans Farms, Inc. In eligible to win one of ·five program. Gerald Roach, s Ohio
Quarter
Horae
recognition of outstanding yearlings. Five recipients member for five years, has
Asaoclatlon
and
the
National
work
and
leadership were chosen from hundreds been competing In horse ·
displayed within 4-H, at of applications representing shows since the age of five. Quarter Horse Auoclatlon.
And Diane Marcum has been He said the compsny plana
school, and In other ac- aU 88 counties.
similar awards In eleven
tivities.
Charles Lifer, State 4-H Queen of the Year of her local eastern states during 19'17.
The 4-H members are: Leader, described the win· club and has been responsible
•
- ·
Lawrence Ray Steyer, 13, of ners
as
''extremely for recruiting numerous new
Madison; John Taylor, 15, of representative of the 218,000 members to 4-H.
Your "E)Ctra Touch"
All plan to show the horses
Batavia; Linda Sue Laribee, Ohio ..H'ers."
Florls(Since 1957
13, of Rt. 2, Crestline; Gerald
Larry Steyer is one of four at local fairs and shows.
The five young people will
receive their award during
the State 4-H Horse Show
Judging Clinic. The yearlings
will be presented by Bob
Evans, Lifer and by Roy M.
Kottman, Dean of the College
of
Agriculture and Home
Polly Cramer
Economics at OSU.
PH. 992·2644
"1 was raised on a fannt''

Ways to' remake maternity pants

LEGGE1TSELEcrED

PORTLAND - Airman
Virgil L. Leggett Jr., son of
Mrs. Ruby Cooper of' .Port·
Ian&lt;!, Ohio, has been selected
for technical training at
lowry AFB, Colo., in the Air
Force avionics systems field.
Airman Leggett attended
Norton (Ohio) High School.
His sister, Mrs. De~ble
Morrie. resides at 407 Neal
St.,
W. Va.
. Parkersburg,
'

Sports Transactions
Ualted Press lntetlllltlooal
Tuesday Baseball
Chicago
(NL)
Reactivated first baseman
Bill Buckner and optioned
catcher Mike Gordon to
Wichita of American As·
soclat!on.
Seattle - Placed Enrique
Romo on 21-day disabled list
and reactivated catcher
·
Larry Cox.
Kansas City- Reactivated
oultielder Tom Poquette and
placed Infielder Dave Nelson.
on the liklav disabled list.

Blankenship, Jana Burson ,

Tammy

Charle$,

Mary

Colwerl , Diana Davidson ,

Patricia Dyer, Christina
Evans.

Beverly Faulkner, Kevin
King, Shari Mitch, Mark
.Magnotta , Valerie Matson,
Usa Nash, Vicki Pickens,
Ruthanna Plants , Rhonda
Reuter, Dollie Rousey, John
Stewart, Craig Swick, Rita
Vining, R.oger Wamsley,
C.ro~ Wilkes.

Danna A. Will.
FRESHMAN - Tonia Ash,
Ric~ard
Basham, Rlc;ky
Birchfield; Danny Carman,
Ron Cullums, Chris Eber·
sbach, James Fish , Genla
Grover, Vicki Hood, Janet
Horky, David Hysell, Tracey
Jeffers , Cllftord Ken~edy,
Lori Kloes.

Rachelle LeFebre. Maria
Legar, David Lewis, Tammy

Lou
McDaniel,
Dede
McEwen, Brian McKinney,

Kathie Quivey, Rick Rider.
Cindy Thompson , Larry
.Tucker, Greg Walker , Kim
Warner, Rick- Williamson.
Terri Yeauger.

DE~ POLLY- My small
son has spilled various things
on my wool-blend sofa so it
has a very peculiar odor. I
have used various cleaners
with no results so do you have
any suggestions for getting
rid of this unpleasant odor? D.R.B.
DEAR READERS - So
many letters - we can't print
them all - ask for ways to

remove odors from furniture,

rugs and clothing. Today
there is one from Vance, who
wishes to make a musty room
smell fresh, ahd one from
Margaret, whose sofa still
llirs an odor of dog vomit even
though it was professionally
clean!!d. So perhaps the
following letters from
readers will offer some help
to all ofthem.- POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - I read
about the reader who has a
freezer with a terrible odor
and I want to tell her to
sprinkle wet coffee grounds
in her deep freeze. - MYR·
~.

.

DEAR POLLY - Do tell
Mrs. J .S.P. and anyone else
who needs a room deodorizer
that household ammonia is
very good, especially for
cooking odors, and is not as
expensive as vanilla. A small
amount in an open container
will do the trick. Keep out of
the way of children and pets.
-MRS.R.L.B.
DEAR P.OLLY - We
bought a travei trailer and
discovered that someone had
left fish bait in the
refrigerator. It had rotted
and left a strong fishy odor.
Neither soap, bleach nor
vinegar helped one bit, but
we finally heard about
crushing newspapers and
sprlnk!lng kitty litter in the
refrigerator. We did this and
the odor disappeared. It now
smells sweet as new. - BONDEAR BONNY - Perhaps
those ideas came indirectly
from this column as both the
newspaper and litter have.
been suggested separately.
Together they certainly
should do a job.- POLLY.
DEAR POLLY- A couple
of years ago-! read in your
column about the odor from
spoilage in a deep freeze and
a suggested remedy was
small chunks of cedar closed

Faith Perrin, Crenson Pratt,

Margaret Province, Gregory

Sheets, Melanie

I

I.

ALL

OFF

SIZES
If you haven't visited our "'
new location. come in to see
our:

..•

'

..•
•

'

•

•SHORTS
•CARTER UNDERWEAR .

Karen

•SHIRTS
•PLAYSETS

MANY GIFT ITEMS
LAY-AWAY

•

.._.,..,,o.
211d
. ._
_St._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. ._ _ _ _ _•

Thornton,

Paula

Thomas.

Sally CarletOn, Ron easel ,
Lori Clonch, Patricia Corsi,
Jeff Cooch.
Tammie DeBord, Jeff
Delong, Robert Delong,
DeMoss

Dennls

Donohue, Cindy Dorst. Pam

Evans, Barbara Fetty, Terry

Fife. Anne · Fitch, Chuck
Follrod, Becki Frye. VIcky

German.

Judy Gilkey, David Harris,
Kelly Hawk, Christi Hess,
Judy Halliday, Tim Hood.
Laura

Mrs. Thereon

Action styles that kids want .• • quality th.at
parents demand ... that's K I 0 POWER.
That's magic ... that's the
..
"Kid-Proof" sneaker!

'! '.

MARGUERITE'S SHOES
Betty Ohlinger
Pomeroy

102 E. Main

·

Paint Up

NOW

I

I.

ITIIIIIII

Hoover,

~oy

'.

1. Select the shirt
and style you
want .

With Our·

XTERIOR HOUSE
.PAINT
.
White
and Colan

2. Select a
Roach design, •
100 pet. colorfast
and anything
from Allee
Cooper to
motorcross.
3. Our machine
operator will
custom-print your
shirt In less than
11 minute

·Randy

Houdashtlt, Kallly Howard,
Pwnny Hywll, Vicky Hyufl,
Ray E. Janey, SU5an KOfl·
nody, William King, Pavia
Kloes.
kimberly Klouller.
Martha Krawsc2yn, Cheryl
Lefebre, Cynthia Mckinney,
Dennis Musser, lance Oliver,
Mark O'Dell, John Nelson,
Robert Nakamoto, Metk
Mitch, Pam Powers. Lise
Prater, Debbie Queen.
SOPHONIPRES
·- Carin
l!alllty,
Elaine a.rnhart.

I

CHESTER - Plans for the
June 4 reunion of the Chester .
Alumni Association to be beld
at the Chester Elementary
School were made at a
meeting of the ·~ommittees·
and officers last week.
It was noted the Chester
PTA will serve a steak dinner. Music will be provided
by the Country Bunch from

WE ALSO HAVE
LE'I"IERING AND NUMBERS
FOR FOOTBALL JERSEYS

NEW YORK
CLOTHING HOUSE

THURSDAY
ROCK SPRINGS Better
Health Club, I p.m. 11\ursday
at the home of Mrs. Ethel
Grueser. Program prepared
by Mrs. Buena Grueser to be
presented. by Mrs. Lenora
Lelfbeit. Contest by Mrs.
Frances Goeglein.
SATURDAY
HYMN SING Saturd~y ,
7:30 p.m. at Hazel Com·
munity Church. Jointaires,
featured singers. Rev. Edsel
Hart, pastor, invites the
public to attend.
SUNDAY
CONCERT Sunday at
. Southern High School at ~ : 30
p.m. under the direction of
Mrs. Lee Lee. I&gt;ighty
students will participate.
Admlaslon free .
MONDAY
RUTLAND GARDEN Club,
bome of Mrs. James Tit~
with Mrs. Virgil Atkins, cohostess, 7:30 p.m. Monday.
For roll call members are to
name an easy to grow patio

:,:;:;;:;:,::¥'·""'·:::::w~-:::::w~

the Poet's
Comer

•LATEX

eOIL BASE

6g vOA(JtJ.ON/;"
.

LATEX

sg95
.

GALLON

OIL BAS~
GALLON :

$1295
.

ARE WE READY?
There's so many longing
For kind words of cheer,
There's so maily waiting
In sadness, I fear.
· · So we lhould be ready
And wUllng to give
Kind words unto others,
As long as we live.

~

Ebersbach
HardWare
PAiNTiNG SUPPUES
.

110 W. MAIN

.

·992·2111

---POMEROY

......,...__

-.-

:.

The Personal Advocacy
advocates had physical
therapy recently for their
"special friends" at the
Pomeroy Lanes Bowling
Alley.
Attending were Judi!h
McHaffie, Hug~ RoWlh, Jr..,
Maggie Hoys, Charles Bush,
Maurice ~mith, Charles
Grueser, David Diddle, Mary
Jones, Timothy Jones, David
Might, Linda Watson, Oscar
Price, Virgil Saunders, Etta
Mae Ellis, Benjamin Skinner,
Enna Yoho, Jessie Might,
Rhea Roush; Linda Dayton,
Helen E. Bailey, Mary
.Skinner, Arthur Skinner,

ATTRACTIVE Pam Kautz,
YARD SALE SET
daughter of Mr. and ·Mrs.
Dale Kautz, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, Auxiliary will hold a yard
was named Princess of the . sale Fr~day and Saturday at
Meigs Dairy Service Unit at 10 a.~. at the home of Mrs.
the organization's annual Boruue Shaffer located off Rt.
dinner Wednesday night in 7 at the Pomeroy Corporation
the fellowahip hall of the St. line on old Chester Road.
Paul Lutheran Church. Miss
Apple Grove
Kautz was presented flowers,
Mrs . Owen Anderson called
a tiara and other gifts. A . on Mrs . Dorsa Parsons
s.enlor at Eastern High recently.
School, she will represent the
Mrs. Eileen Buck, Early
local unit in psrades and Roush were Easter dinner
other events.
guests of Mr . and Mrs.
Herbert Shields. ·

•

~II

-

+++

.. '

J

+++

RAP :

and Julie SiBaon will make their first appearance dancing
'to "Baby Face" In the association's "Spring Fling" to be
preoented at 8:10p.m. Saturday in the Meigs High School
Auditorium.

·

So Beautiful" and "J ust a
Closer Walk." There was a
comic rendition of "The Way
She Looks", banj() sOlos,
11
MOuntain Dew", and 11 Up
On Rocky Top." Other
numbers were "Ticket to
Ride", "'Ibere's Got to be a
Morning After", "This Land
is Your Land", "Country
Road", "Tie a Yellow Rilr
l:x&gt;n", and "Love is a Song."
A gift of money was
presented to the Chorale and
an invitation to return next
year.
During the business
meeting new officers were installed by outgoing president,
Mrs. Clarence Lambert.
They are. Mrs. James Fry,

Rev. Wm. Middleswarth,
Rev. Robert Bumgarner,
Barbara Van Meter, Craig
Van Meter, Teressa Van
Meter, Mary Seaman. This
was t~e third bowling activity.
'

president; Mrs. Robert
Sloan, vice president; Mrs.
Atland King, secretary; and
Mrs. Don Runnel, treasurer.
John List•, ptlncipsl, announced that the current six
weeks period will end April
29, and June 7 will be the last
dsy of school. The PTO voted
to purchase award ribbons
and popsickles for field day.
It was also voted to purchase
toothpaste needed for the
dental health program under·
way in the school. Mrs. Ray
Pullins asked. members to
bring their bottle caps to the
May meeting and reported
that all proceeds from the
redemption will be used to
buy prizes for the fall
festival.
Mrs. Arland King, Mrs:
William Clark, and Mrs. Ed
Kennedy were appointed to
tl)e auditing
Wallace
Hatfieldcommittee.
. sent word
that he would be unable to
coacl! the gorls' softball team
and suggested anyone in·
terested in taking his place,
contact him. Purchase of a
used popcorn machine was
discussed and a price limit

set.
ACTIVITY SET
CHESTER - The Life
Science Church at Chester
wm sponsor a gospel sing
and a talent variety show
at 7 p.m. Monday, May 2 at
tbe Meigs Junior High
School auditorium in
Middleport. All local
talented Individuals .and
groups wishing to lake part
are asked to call 985-4174 .
Proceeds wlif go to the
church building fund.
Admission will be 50 cents
for students and 75 cents
for adults. Refreshments
wOI be sold In the scbool
cafeteria and a door prize
wOI be awarded.

. .. .

.,. ·:...

•

-

!

1.J
t

a.

+++

WRECK A LA ROCK

LOS ANGEJ,.ES (UP!)
Rock Hudson's Insurance
company agreed to psy n Gerage
million to a former teacbet , ger ' In
paralyz~d by an auto'
accident involving Hudson •s
former chef, according to a chef, when Ma.!~ciin
a road
settlement approved Tuesday a curve and went
by a Superior Court judge. near Palm Springs at aboUt
Richard Gerage, 31, of 100 miles an hour in
Laguna Beach, sued Hudson · November 1975.

r-----::;::~::::;:::;:~~~~

.

Mrs. Ed Kennedy announc·
ed another meeting of per·
sons interested in the forma·
tion . of a parent-teachers
forwn for Meigs Junior High
School. The meeting will
behel be held Tuesday at 7:30
p.m. ln the Meigs Junior High
School cafeteria . Members
may contact either Mrs. Ken·
nedy or Mrs. Lambert for
transporation.
Mrs. Wendell Hoover's first
grade won the room count.
Mrs. Fry reported on proceeds from the Pomona
Grange dinner. To open the
meeting the Rev. Floyd
Shook of the Free Methodist
Church at Laurel Cliff had
prayer. Refreshments were
served.

New Lady Schick llatnetter Tw4~IY
Rollers and beautlfylq -~&lt;,;.lift
your hair wltb Schick
lilinates lat,. comb loto
favorite style. .

llu~&lt;Jh

~,j,.l\.ti)P.!~.~4'

----SPECIAL

WHITE
SMOOTH
LEATHER

,, ·"'·'"
For a limited time only,
h.'ovi···!i!.l~
Ambush spray body cologne by D~a,
Tabu and Ambush In solid cologne. . .

f

i

..
n '
. ,.

Also
In Brown
Brushed
Pigskin

I

.. .
,..
White footwear lor men 1s alway s 1n fas h1o n lor warm
weather leisure living .. especia lly when they're ·
Hush Puppies,. CO'J11ort casuals. Greal wtlh slacks and
"''~' •' " ' "'.' ' · •&lt;I '" '

""" '

h•·• (',.,,,,. ~~··"'' ''"'

W1t1 1 ll" · I"" "• ' l ui!U I &lt;tt&lt;· I'' lh iO f l y ,

"""'" ' ' ""d ~ lyh"q "' u.,. ·""' II• · ~ 1 ,., ·1 . ~ .._1

shirts or m a dressed up blaz er look And Hu sh
Puppies.., wh•te- is righl casual s are crea ted comfo rt 4

able .easy.to·care tor

THE ·sHOE BOX

who prepared
begin peace
BAKER FURNITURE
taiD
wltb tbeto ComDil1niltl
Middleport. Ohio
fnm the ncrtb.
....,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___, - - - -.....---~!~""----

·J

'r t -t -~

I'm a childbirth educator and can aay from experience :('! .~
that "Unmarried," the pregnant teen, wOuld ~ ncla ~; . , "
by showing up alone for a natural (Bradley) or Pnpsrallon ~ •
For Childbirth (Lamaze) claaa. A coacb can 'be. provided, If . : ~ .
ftlenda .or parento aren't available.
. :
. . , .;. ~.·'!I
The 14-year-&lt;lld won't be tlltned away f&lt;if. ial;k ~ Jj)~•. , · ·;i
el~er.lnmany areaa, the county Jlll:f\lthe'!llllall fetlf· ~Jt •iilft·;, •,
is11 t able to. - 1EACHER .
• '~ · . ., •
DEAR HELEN AND SUE: .
.
:··;,'"; ~F
'
If you print this, maybe It win help a lot'of Bli'!l. ' ; :. '.. H. , •·
When you find youtaelvei prepant, glrla, Uilk''W j~ :'. )
parenta!
··
·.
.:;_ . J;
They love you and will help all theY can. I know! My parenta _· 'l
helped me.
'
i
I thought they would throw me out or dlaown me, but all !bey .. •
wanted to do was 1118ke things as easy as poellble. I wu five
month&amp; and showing when l finally admitted it.l kepl·~·.r
'~
was getting fat. I even broke up with Ill)' boyfriend, thlnldnlllf
~·
he left, so would the baby. Of courae,lt didn't
·
·
We oow plan to be married in September. Our daugbtlr Ia
beautiful J.month-&lt;lld.
I love my folks, and brothers and slllter for aeeln'g me
through. - SOMEONE WHO KNOWS.

FOR THE LADIES WHO
WANT A BEAUTIFUL
TAN COME IN &amp; TRY
OUR HAWAIIAN
TROPIC: WE HAVE
...... "

'.

·

-

Sun's Screening Gel

r iWM II~'

· ,~'' ~

'

RJRNITURE

And

,1

A WORD FROM HELEN :
(Sue doesn't speak from peraonal experience -no matt. ' " ~
what she says ... And don't say It, Sue! I)
. ..
o
Could be Ben is partly responsible for the ''weddq riilglng
• :_,
In his mo!ber ears." Who !mows what he has told her about a ""' ·
hoped.for marriage?
.. .;'•
1
If perslatence runs in the family- and you're IW'e thia llll1an
"'
wouldn't work - .you'd better cltmb out r1 the trap bilcri \be • 'i~ :
net descends.
·
'
. ·~ : t

Ul'llltSIIRED
TOO "IU LOOIIIIG fCM

- .•,.

..:'1 •

. ··. . l

.

If IT IS fiNE

.

.

By Helt:n and Sue Bottel

.

·Bowling party enjoyed

plant. Mrs. Bernice WinD will
review "Gardening Without
Work." Ideas for May will be
given by Mrs. Vernon Weber,
and there will be an el!hibit of
plants or bulbs easy to grow
by the members . A
gardeners' auction will follow
· the meeting.

treasurer, and Clarice Alleq,

The Almanac
By
Ualted
Press
IDternatloaal
Today is Tllltsday, AprU
21,
the lllth day of 1977 with
·I
254 to follow.
'I'
'!be moon is between its
new phase and first qusrter.
The morning stars are
Mars and Venus.
There's so many lying
•The evening stars are MerAnd groaning with pain,
cury, Jupiter and Saturn.
While hoping and praying
Those born oo this date are .
For goOd health again.
wider the sign of Taurus.
There's so many looking
Fonner U.S. Secretary of
For dear ones to come,
State Dean Acheson was born
. "·,
And make a short visit
Aprtl 21, 1893:
f ,
With 1h1111 Iii their home..
Oli IIIla day In .hlatlJty:
~ :• '
In '153 B.C., RDme was
.,
There's so many people
founded by Romulus.
Around everywhere.
In 1954, U.S. Air Force
Wbo rieed love and kindness, . planes began flying · French
And need tender care.
· troops to Indochina to
0 say! are we ready
reinforce the besieged
To do all we can
bastion of Dienblenphu. It
To briRg a real blessing
subsequently fell to the
Unto fellow-man?
Vietnam Communists.
.....~.: ~
.
1D 111'1, tbe Gfftll ·army
· • · ' "' Ot trill ·we keep sh!rldng,
took wer canttol of the
~
Jet othetl do
govenunent.
The work that's Intended
In 1975, Nyugen Van Thleu
For me and for you?
resigned as president of
God glve1 each a talent,
South Vietnam, dellOUllcins
So we lhould all use
the United States as
What-ever He gives us,
untrustworthy. He was
And never refuse. ·
replaced by Tran Van Huong,

Highlighting Salisbury
Elementary School's PTO
~ting Tuesday night was a
concert by the Rio Grande
Chorale under the direction of
Merlyn Ross.
Other features of the
meeting were the installation
of officers for the 1977-78
school year, and plans for the
remaining six weeks of
school.
The Chorale composed of
eight boys and eight girls
with two inStrumentalists,
presented a varied program
of solo and choral work. Their
selections included "Day by
Day", "I Don't Know How to
Love Him", from Jesus
Christ Superstar, "You Ate

.

the Marietta area. Officers
planning the reunion are Bertha Smith, president;
Howard Knight, vice presi·
dent; Blaine Milhoan, second
vice president; Roger Keller,
third vice president;
Rosemary Keller, secretary;
Norma ·Hawthorne, ·assistant
secretary; John Reibel,
assistant treasurer. Named
to the decorating conunittee
have been Dale Kautz, Bob
Woods, Betty Dean, Donald
Mora and Maxine Goegleln.

::;:

not enough to. marrr •4=6; ·"#.· .
wouldn't work. But ever a1Dce be took me Ujllla• to
·
motber, !lhe'•'-d wedding bella l'ingq In bet illll'l. Silt ·pt· ~ , ,,
ltallovertheirtownwe'rtlettblglJWTiedral-.
• ;/ ~t; ' •
She writes me !ellen lliped "Mom," and lelepbiMI nit ,.. •
every fi!W days. She's even Invited my folD up fat a weeUnd ' ~- •· ,
Ben saya laugh It off, but I feel trapped. MUll lin* ujl wltb . { •:·'
him to avoid being an - UNWIUJNG "DAUGHTER-IN· ·~ .
LAW"
· :~.; •·
UNWILUNG .
~
Perhaps you've been too akltzy about brelklllg ''MOiil'l", ·:,j ·. ~
bubble. Next time she calls, tell her up front tb4re "ilri't~ 1
,
be no wedding" and all this marriage chatllr ~ ·.
,
.. ' t
• ,l l
.
You •
'
'"'
I '
•
Reinforcement from Ben on the extenaion l1lle may c:oiJ+1n(le 1' :·
her, butdon'te:rpect!lm!racle: matchmaking mothers Nldom -.[{ ,
refonn-theyjustgetlessobvlous. -SUE
·
' !

1

Alumni to reunite

many exciting dasigos.'

by ROACH

0

been successful. A letter was
read from the national president concerning scholarships
to be awarded. Local persons
Interested in applying should
do so through the local club
president.
Thank you notes were read
from Mrs. Nellie Vale, Miss
Freddie Houdashelt and Mrs.
Pearl Reynolds for flowers
and cards. Family fun
weekend was announced for
Oct. 8 and 9 at the Shawnee
State Park.
It was alUlounced that all
annual reportsare to be given
at ·the May meeting. Named
to the nominating conunitteewere Mrs. Catherine
Welsh,
Mrs.
Mary
Kumelman and Mrs. Mrs.
Korn. Officers will ·be elected
and installed at the · next
meeting. Mrs. Wanda Eblin,
· Mrs. Pratt and Miss David·
son were appointed to the
auditing . committee. The
silver dollar attendance
award was won by Mrs.
Kunzelman. Eva Robson won
the. traveling prize.
Refreshments were served.

Generation Rap ·

~: sort of love Bentley;

Johnson

Karen Sutherland, Donna
Davidson and Marjorie
Walburn were welcomed into
the membership of the Middleport Business and Professional Women's Club at Mon·
day ni~ht's meeting at the
Columbia Gas Co. offices.
Mrs. Janet Korn and the
membership collllhittee had
charge of the meeting and
presented gifts to each of the
new members.
Miss Erna Jesse reported
that the club again this year
will be conducting the pretty
baby contest at .the · Meigs
County Fair. It will be spon·
sored by Elberfelds.
The BPW mltional conven.
tlon, Mrs. AJwUda Werner announced, will be held July
24-28 at Louisville, Ky. Miss
Jesse is making a. crocheted
cushion to serve as a door
Prize. Six members attended
the 50th anniversary of the
Logan Club recently. They
were Mn. Werner, ~­
Kom, TelTI Walker, EloiseWilson, Oototha~Salser and
Miss Sutherland. ·
Mrs. Grace Pr~tt reported
that the ~al)cevdrive had

~~

RELUcrANT 'DAUGin'ER-IN1AW'

presldi!d at the meeting and
named Mn. James Brew·
lngton, .Mrs. Mary Yost and
Mrs. Emerson Jones to the
nominating cplll!llittee. It
was reported that Mrs.
Lowell Burnell of Glouster is
a patient at O'Bleness
Hospital. Mrs. Johnson read
the president general's
message which extended
farQweU greetings to the
chapter and outlined some of
the accomplishments of bet
tenn as improvements to
DAR buildings, and more
assistance to the mountain
and American Indian schools.
Mrs. Emerson Jones gave
the national defense report
citing the danger of losing
private enterprise, the proillemsof small businesses and
lack of craftmanship and
pride in prodUct. lfrs. Eich
was appointed to purchase
the pewter mug which will be
placed In Waldschmidt
Tavern near Cincinnati. Mrs.
THESE YOUNGSTERS are geWng an early start in
Mar'-aret Parsons, chaplain,
working in the dance lines of the Big Bend Minstrel
assisted in the ritualistic
Asltoclatlon. The group composed of, I tor, ClndySoulaby,
opening.
Kelll Whitlatch, Jeanna Pauley, Kim Eblin, Usa Ba:der ·
Mrs. Weber , Mrs.
Lawren~ Milhoan and Mrs..
J. Edward Foster served a g_o,· " 92
b bLb .l5J
dessert course. Mrs. Johnson
waa at the silver service.

,-;into Middleport club

••

e. •' $t #!$)if'~$$: :=c~w.:.~· :-.

.:·:

Social '.Rio Grande College Chorale
Three women wekomed Calendar ·performs at Tuesday meet

.c hainnan.

ILLUSTRATED SHIRT

Janie Van Meter, Sherr!
Vining, Kay .Vulakllya,
Patrl~l a
Warner, June
Wamsley , Tracie Weese,
Beverly Will, Dan~ Will,
Beverly Wilcox.
J1.JNIORS - Jeff Arnold. '
Rita Bailer. Larry Ball, Rory
Bartrum, Dale Bing, Beverly
Bishop, Cathy Blaettnar,
Patty
Boyles,
Doug

Browning,

•PANTS

•

Taylor. Becky Thomas.

•SLACK SETS
•COVERALLS
•ANGEL TOPS

'

Simmons,

cher, Kenneth Stewart,
Deborah Taylor, Donna

Also, .Diana

. .,,.

Stop In To See

Dusty Smith, Stanley Star-

•I•

up in the box until the odor
disappeared. I forwarded
this to a friend who used it
with great success. - A
Reader in Colorado.
DEAR POLLY - A fuse
blew and there was spoiled
food left in my refrigerator.
Cleaning did nothing for the
odor that seemed to grow
worse. It finally dawned on
me that in aU my cleaning I
had never let any of the
cleaning solutions rim down
the· drain of my self·
defrosting
refrigerator
freezer. So out went all the
new frozen foods. I cleaned
the walls again with a strong
hot baking soda solution. I
poured some of this solution
down the drain being careful
not to let it overflow the
evaporating pan below. A
sort of jellied residue came
down in lumps from the drain
pipe so I emptied and washed
this pan: What an odor! When
the water came clean and ·
clear from the drain pipe I
returned the pan, turned the
freezer back on, put the food
back and there was not a
whiff of an odor left. This is
simple and really works. R.F.
Polly will send you one of
her signed thank-you
newspaper coupon clippers if
she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
ber column. Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this
. newspaper.

Moln, Pomtf'Oy
Your FTD Florist

JS2 E.

A report Qr. the Ohio Room
In Constitution Hall in
Washington, D. C. was given
by Mn. Richard Henderson
ol Athena at a meeting of
Return Jonathan Meigs
·Chapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution beld
reeenUy at the borne ol Mrs.
VernonWeber.
Mn. Henderson, a member
d. the local chapter, described the antique 'furniahings of
the Ohio Room. She also commented on the early years of
the local chapter and con·
eluded her program with a
prayer used at the first DAR
meeting.
Mn. Paul Eich and Mrs.
Nancy Reed reported on the
state conference held recent.ly in Columbus on the theme
''A Key' to Tomorrow" with
Mrs. Rawson Smith, pres!- ·
dent general of the national
society, as speaker. Mrs.
Eich noted that Sandy
Luckeydoo waa a page and
cOmmended bet for her work.
Mrs. Reed told of the receptloo held for the state officers
and of someof the items on
display. It was noted that
Mrs. Luckeydoo has been
named state junior sales

NY.

Osborne, Jeffrey Patterson.
Rawson, Paul Reed , Trudy
Roach.
Su&gt;y Samuels, Timothy
Scites, Kimberly Sebo, Greg

•

--

Evans asid, "and I greatly
respect the role of the family
farmer as one of the chief

r:::::$~,~~-~·~x-x.x:~:::~':i$S..~*··

Report presented
on Ohio Room

POLLY.$ POINTERS

Beaver, David Blake. VIcki

Pamela Offenberger, Debra

.7-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. o.., Thursday. Apri121, ili:7

Dark Tanning Lotion
Dark Tanning Oil
Royal Tanning Blend
Forever Tan Aloe E
COME IN TO Du1'TON8 AND,fiND' .~
ALLTIUS AND MORE • · :' ·

D~tton Drug Store ·:·
992·3106

L~~~~-,;_-~-"'!~==!J
122 N. 2nd. Ave.

,

�1-1be Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, April21 , 1977

@';~;::;:::;:;:;&lt;::::::::.:-::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;::::::::::::::::::::'::::;:::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:::::::;:;:::;:::;:;:;:::::::;:;:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:':':':':': ':':':':':':':·:·:-:-:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::;:::::;:::::::;:::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·,\;

i\!

Girls State delegates chosen

Delegates and alternates to
the 31st Annual Session of
Buckeye Girls' ·State which
· officially opens June ll at
Capital University, _Col urn·
bus, have been selected by
the American ~gion Awr·
iliaries of Feeney-Bennett
PUit 128, Middleport, and
Drew Webster Post 39,
Pmleroy.
Delegates sponsored by the
.Feeney-Bennett Unit are
Mary Mora, Eastern High
School, and Laura Hoover,
Meigs Hlgh School. Alternate
to Miss Mora is Becky Windon, and the alternate to Miss
Hoover is Helen King.
Delegate sponsored by
DreW Webster Post is Pam
Powers, Meigs High School,
and her alternate · is Cathy
Blllettnar.
Daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Mora , Rt. 3,
l'mleroy, Miss Mora is a
· member of the National
Honor· Society, a varsity
cheerleader, president of the
junior class, vice president of
lhe BOE Club, treasurer of
the Vanity Letter Club, and
Is aetive with the pep club,
the marching, concert and
contest band, and the mixed
chorus of Eastern High.
Her comJiiunity activities
Include serving on the local
plaMing committee for 4-H,
lhe Meigs County 4-H Ad·
vllory Board, the Farm
'Bureau Youth Council and
lhe Junior Guernsey Catue
Club.
She is vice president of her
local4-H club, a junior leader
in ._H, serves on the Fashion
Board, iS a Meigs County
Achievement Award winner,
and bu served as a counselor
for Beginners 4-H Camp.
Mary iS alSo a member of the
ClleBter MethodiSt Church.
Laura Hoover Is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
WendeD Hoover,and is being
· ·CtHpOMOred by the Mid·
dleport Awdllary and the
Cltlsens National Bank, Mid·
dleport. She iS taking a col·
J.ge preparatory course at
Meip Hlgh School where she
llel'\'!8 u president of the
Future Teachers of America
and Ia a past president of the
Fnnch Club. She is an alter·
lllte to the Student CoWlCil.
,,
Mi.ss Hoover bad a leading
role In the junior class play
and pllys first chair in trom·
bone with the marching, con·
c:ert, and jazz bands. having
received superior f!ltings at
IOio and ensemble coillesi.S.
... Sbe bu attended the Ten·

Laura Hoover

MASON -

Mrs. Barbara

Marion Lee Litchfield,
Worth)' Patron of Mason
·Cbapter 167 are inviting area
m.obera of lbe Order of the
Eaatem Star to attend
friendship night at the
.Muonlc HaD in Mason, W.
Va.oa Wednesday, April27 at
I p.m.
1bere wiD not be any
Initiation. Dress is lonna!.
immediately following the
meeting,
a
reception
bonorlng Mn. Nellie Casto,
Grand Representative of

PAGEANT PLANNED

The Ohio State Our Utue
Mila and Ideal Mlaa Pageant
wiD lie beld in Aahland, Ohio
JWJe ZZ. :16 at Aahland Senior
Hilb Scbool. 1be pageant
IN nnta many eltperiences
. for the age divisions of
LaPetlte 3-6, Our Little Miss
7-12, Ideal Mlaa 1~17 and
Unlvenal Girl 111-26. For
complete information,
CJdlct: Our Little Miss, P.O.
.Bolll31lUbland, Ohio 44800.
Deadline tor entries Ia June 4,
lm.'

-·

•

Helen King

'nessee Tech Composers
Clinics at T.T.U. and is the
junior class representative to
the band council. She also
sings with the MHS choir and
girls' ensemble.
. Laura attends the Heath
United Methodist Church
where she is Sunday school
secretary and a member of
the choir.
~amela
Kay Powers,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Powers, Middleport, is
a member of the National
Honor Society, serves on the
student council, plays with
the senior band, and is a
member of the B.O.E. Steno
Club. She is a pa'st junior
president o( Drew Webster
American Legion Auxiliary
39, and a past Eighth District
· Junior president. She has now

Scotland in West Virginia and
Past Matron of Mason
Chapter 157 will be held for
ail in attendance. Refresh·
ments will be served.

~~~~~R~::' of
incorporation for profit have
been filed with Secretary of
State Ted W. Brown by the
Tri-State •Chipping Inc. of
Middleport, by Charles R.
Karr Jr., Jay Brown and
Richard Bailey, with Atty. J.
B. O'Brien their agent.
FIVE EARN HONORS
Five students from Meigs
County rated on the honor roll
at Gallipolis Business College
for lhe Winter Quarter which
ended March 10 are June
Baker, Racine; Guy Harper,
Middleport; Rodney Karr,
Pomeroy; Clarence King,
Pomeroy, and Daniel
Spencer, Middleport.

VICTOR
OF

Pomeroy, 0.

114 Court St.

1 to 6

Vegetable Plants,
Potted Plants,
Hanging Baskets
992-5776 ·Syracuse, 0.

CUSTOM
TAILORS

&gt;;:t'.~ · -··

Kingsbury Home Sales, Inc.
·"For '111e Finest In Manufactured Housing"
992·711~4

41%

BOOKSHELF
HI-FI SPEAKER

Aeg.5995
Ea.

Realistic 's MC- 1000 delivers dynamite sound
in genuine walnut veneer . Big s· woofer and
tweeter for fu ll 30-20 .000 Hz. Now $25 OFF '

CAR CASSETTE
FM STEREO
TAPE PLAYER
Add " no-fade " cassette
Jape and FM stereo to your
car or boat . Stereo/mono
switch , slide controls.
locking fast forward and
rewind . Realistic makes it
easy to own. easy to install!

SAVE

sao

Reg.9995

69~~

Tlle se two crediT cards are
honored at oartiCIPaT ing l'=lad io
Shack store s Other- crediT
plans may also be ava1lable

-====~~====~=~D~el~a~
ds~a~t

SAVE

20%

'

~TC . )

\

Victor's is the best buy .

~

IN POMEROY
for 1 DAY ONLY
Friday Apri I 22

your nearby

SAVE

store

AM-FM DIGITAL
CLOCK RADIO

Reg.4995

34~~4
AM-FM RADIO
FOR YOUR BIKE

Reg. 2995

95

23

.12-195

Disconnects
instantly. Fits
any handlebar.
With batteries.

REALISTIC®
BATTEIW-AC CASSETTE RECORDER
Pushbutto[l CTR-308
features full auto-stop,
auto-level . cue/review.
counter. With ACcord ;
batteries not included.
Now $40 OFF 1

3~?e

sA\ 'E 28%

KY
Aeg.4177

29~.?,
Archer ~ Smoke Al:lrm
mounts on wall
or ceiling .
1 yr. batt . included.

lOW 1975 PRICES

UPI Auto Writer
DETROIT (UP!)
President Carter's energy
conaervation plln wiD change
car buying and driving habit.s
by penalizing Americans who
refuse to give up their "gasguulfng" automobiles and
reward those who do.
Executive•
of
the
automotive "Big Three" quick to criticize when there
was only specualtlon refUsed immediate comment
W~sday night following
the President's ·address to
Congresa.
But Roy D. ChaPin 'Jr.,
chainnan of American
Motors Corp., which is
counting on the rebates to
pull it out of a year'long
slump, commended · the
proposals.
"The President has issued
a tough cball~e to the
American people - one'
which recognlzes that we are
facing an inevitably critical
period," Chapin said. ''Our
energy P.!'oblems are real and
they wiD not go away with
wishful thlnldng ...
• Thomu A. Murphy, chair·
of llie giant General
::Motors Corp., whose large

0

WASHINGTON (UP!) ':~j~~:~ht: of President
•t
energy program :
::;GaaoUIDe ·Tax
The federal gasoline tax,
4centaagallon, would go
a nickel starting Jan. 15,
1979, if gasoline use increases
by I per cent or more over a
set target in 1978. Another
nickel would be added on if
constwlption rises I per cent
or more over the target in
1979 and then a nickel each
year consUIIlption does not ,
decrease through 1987.
The maximum effect could
be a 50-cent-a-gallon tax ·
increase plus 7 cents a gallon
from oil taxes reflected in
gasoline. But the tBJt could be
reduced· 5 cents a year if
consumption declines.
New Cars
Tall;es would be imposed on
new cars that are not fuel
efficient and rebates would
be given for cars that get
&amp;oodmileage.Theflguresare
based Oli a sliding scale
starting with 1978models this
.fall and going through 1985. A
gas guzzler getting less than

cars are now the most fuel·
efficient built by a U.S.
automaker, scheduled an 8
a.m. news conference to
outline his reaction. Two
weeks ago, he labeled any las
on large cars as usimplistic,
Irresponsible and
shortsighted."
One industry observer, Au·
lomollve News publisher
Keith Crain, said the
President's
message
probably caused ''panlc" in
the
auto
industry
boardrooms.
"They have to be feeling
like voodoo dolls getting
stuck with pins," Crain said.
"First there was the
emissions requirements and
then the fuel economy laws
and now the tax on large
cars.''
Analysts, both inside and
outside the auto industry,
said the President's plan is
~ uniikely to cause the plant
closings, lost revenues and
economic chaos Industry
executives have warned
would follow implementation
of
Carter's
energy
conservation measures.
"In the short tenn, there
will be some inctease in the
big car sales," said Arvid

ASK FOR
HOME OFFICE
VICTOR OF HONG KONG
1039 Burke St.. Winston -Salem, N ~ C .

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

13 miles a gallon next fall
would be IBJted $449, and a
car ~g 39 miles per
gallon or an electric car
would get a $473 rebate. By
1985, however, the maximum
rebate would be $493 and the
maximum tax would be
$2,488.
Insulation Rebates-Credits
To encourage insulation
homeowners could get a tax
credit of up to $410 if they
spent up to $2,200 In a single
year between April 20, 1977,
and Dec. 31, 1984, on
conservation measures such ,
as insulation or weatherstripping: , Businesses could
get a 10 per cent tax creditfor
such improvements. There
would be a tax credit of up to
$2,000 for expenses of $7,400 in
a year on certain solar
energy equipment for both
houses and businesses.
Income Tlll' System
Money collected from gasoline and auto taxes would be
rebated to Americans
through the 'income tax
system and by direct
payments to people who don't

Conservation. • •
down on the farm
By John Cooper
Son Coos. Service
POINT PLEASANT - The
Western Soil Conservation
District is still taking orders
for seed packets for wildlife
plantings. The seeds contained in the packet will be
buckwheat, soybeans, grain
sorghums, millet and sun·
flowers. The packets will be
available for planting around
the first of May. Additional
- .. qrders may be made by

Upper Thirteen Mile Creek
and Adam Krebs near Pl.
Pleasant. The work discu&amp;Sed
and planned at these farms
was mostly obstruction
removal from· the center of •
the channels to prevent water
from· swirling around the
obstructions and causing
erosion along the banks.
Clarence Williamson is
clearing trees from part of
his farm near Beech Hill.
This farm is all bottom land
with the exception of a few
banks along small streams.
Cleared land will be reseeded
to hayland. The bu~dozer of
the ~est~rn. Soli . Conserva_t•on D1str1ct ts domg the
cleanng work.

.Iay·. 0 f the land ,·

calling the afstrict office at
230't.! Main Street. Each .
• packet 18 about $4 and will
'include enough seed to plant
- one-fourth acre.

~..

Earthmoving has been
completed on a diversion and
the waterway around the
modular mobile home of Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Sayre.on Route
-;· 2 near Flatrock. The purpose
o! this diversion was to in·
tercept .the water coming ,
down the slope behind their
home, and convey the water
to an outlet near the road.
After this diversion and
waterway have been seeded,
· It wiD appear to be part of the
landscaping -around their
home as well as serving the
purpose · of ridding them·
selves of unwanted water.
The size of the development is
1.2 feet deep and 20 feet wide
on top. The slope of the benil
and the parabolic section of
the ditch is smooth and can be
easily mowed.
.
The waterway Is 1. 4 feet
deep and 22 feet wide with the
, , croas section of It being
parabolic also. 'l'bis work was
\' planned and designed by
technicians of Soil Con·
' servation Service and the
- earthmoving' was done byE &amp;
• Construction Company.

•

THE MEIGS INN

OPEN 11-7
Late By
Appointment

Reg.7995

SMOKE KILLS! DETECT IT EARLY

RADIO SHACK'S 1977 PRICES ARE ON AVERAGE WITHIN 1%

at
TAROJ. GANGWANI

'.

'SAVE

Wa!&lt;e to music or 24 hour
alarm Snooze bar . sleep
swi tch. big lighted digits and
dial. Wood grain styling'

( PRICES INCLUDE

EVERYTHING

'

•

SAVE 30%

Shirts from 522 .00

You will aqree

We ba:ve the an new house type exterior and
IIIIDIIe. Designed for permanent
lutaUatloa on your property.

14·945

50%

Slacks from S4B.OO

I

9995.:

Realistic proves h•· fi doesn·t have
to be hight Listen to radio. play
pre-recorded tapes and record your
own . Auto-manual program change.
auto-stop. mike inputs. headphone
jack. phono input. Now 37% OFF!

40-1980

compare our selection,

~

1.5R9egg5

95
34 EA.

Open Daily
9 to6
Sunday

.

AM-FM STEREO 8-TRACK
RECORD/PLAY SYSTEM " .'

· HUBBARDS
GREEN HOUSE

fit, finishing with any
name brand re'ady -

11.. E. Main St.

992-5120

'

Suits from 5165.00
Sp. coah from S115.00

'

'.

Davis Insurance Service

'' government~in·action''

Selection Ovei-- 10,000 sw-atches including S. Sk i ns , Gabardine, Flannel ,
Mohair , Silk-Wool, Cashmere, Knits .
Fit- All measure·menfs taken by upert
fitters.
Styles - Choose ariy style, even bring a
picture i_
f desired.
Price :

.
They're All Different!

'

Ughtning Rod Farm Insurance. State
Aut om utual. Western Reserve . Also
insurance coverage for motorcycles and
mobile homes.

HONG KONG

SHIPPING , TARIFFS,

·" ...

SON BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
McCarty, Rt. 2, Pomeroy, are
announcing the birth of an
eight pound son, Keith Allen,
at 7:2$ a.m. Tuesday at
• Holzer Medical Center.
Grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Lewis J, Smiih, Rt. 2, ·
Pomeroy, and Mrs. Olga
McCarty, Bidwell .

leadership
· training
workshop.
The aim of Buckeye Girls'
State is "to inculcate a sense
of individual responsibility to
community, slate and nation.
With this objective each girl
is assigned to a party, either
Nationalist or Federalist; to
one of the 25 cities which are
named for famous Ohio-born
women; and one of the five
counties which are mimed for
past department presidents
of the Ohip Amer-ican l.egion
Awriliary. Programs will.em·
phasize the various-phases of
government

A Few Reasons Why
Victor's Tailoring Gives
You Your Best Buy

'

.~

•

'·

tific course at Meigs High and
planillo go to Ohio University
after graduation. She is a
member of Trinity Church,
Pomeroy where she teaches a
Sunday school class. Her hobbies are swimming: and bike
riding.
Buckeye Girls' Stale is a
mythical state which began
in the late Forties with 304
citizens, and has grown until
this year's attendance is expected to surpass 1,250. Girls
from all corners of Ohio wiU
participate in the eight-day

been endorsed by the Eighth
District as a candidate for
Department Junior President
of the American Legion Auxiliary. Her hobbies include
bowling and swimn).ing, and
she collects tapes and
records. She attends the Mid·
dlepor! Church of Christ.
Miss King,_ alternate to
Miss Hoover, is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Virgil King,
PoJlleroy. She is a member of
the Mount Union Baptist
Church where she serves as
treasurer and pianist for the
youth group.
Miss King is enrolled at
Me,igs High School in the
business office education
course and is a member of fhe
Juriior BOE Club, and the
Elmer Elsworth Historical
Society, and serves on the
yearbook staff. Her hobbies
are music, reading and bik·
ing . .
Becky Windon is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Virgil Windon of near Chester
and at Eastern she is a
member of the marching,
concert and pep bands, plays
on the girls' basketball team,
and belongs to the language ~
club. She is a member of the
Chester United Methodist
Church and of the Meigs·
County Better Beef Club.
Daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
John William Blaettnar,
Cathy is a majorette with the
Meigs High Band. She is a
member of the JaZl: Band, the
student council, and vice
president of the Boosters
Clu.b. Cathy was associate
director ol the junior class
play, and is on the soft bail
team at Meigs.
She is enrolled in the scien-

'

...

Check with us for best rates. We
ofhtr good driver and student dis·
counts and low-cost auto financing
plans.
·

•

made suit .

"-

Hayes, Enna Cleland, Ada
Van Meter, Doris Grueser
and Dawna, Opal Hollon,
Julie Rose. Sadie Trussell,
Mary K. Holter, Helen Wolfe,
Amy and Kelly Satterfield.
Sending gifts were Nara
Hartman, Alice Dotson, Edna
Wood, Dorothy Ritchie, Mary
Newell, Kathryn Windon,
Laura Mae Nice, Mabel Van
Meter and Opal Eichinger.

Cathy Blaettnar

Becky Windon

MANUFACTURED
HOMES

,_

· By EDWARD S. LECHTZIN

Jouppi, a vice president for
the investment firm of Colin,
Hochstin Co. "But even if
there is a big demand, the
industry couldn't meet it
because they don't have any

more

rOom

in

their

to $473 on 1978-model cars were quick to attack it.
Ralph T. Millet, spokesman
that top 39 miles per gallon is directed mainly at for the Automobile Importers
domestic ma.kes, importers of America, ssid the rebate
plan is a "double lax subsidy
for Detroit."
Millet said the ~uto mileage
rebate
would switch a
IN THE
purchaser from a 42 m.p.g .
COMMON PLEAS COURT .
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
import, on which no rebate
may be a vailabie, to the best
ATHENS
C OUNTY
SAVINGS
Detroir can muster - a. 36
&amp; LOAN CO . &amp;
m.p.g.'Chevette which would
OHIO CORP .
be eligible for a $436 rebate.
PLAINTIFF

production schedules for the
remainder of the model
year."
Jouppi reconunended that
Americans not rush out to
buy the last of the "gas
guzzlers" because their
worth will drop stea!llly over VS
•RED . GOEGLEIN.
the next three or four years, AND BARBARA A
eroding the trade-in value. He GOEGLEIN ET AL
DEFENDANTS
said automakers should not
~ NO . 16052
LEGAL NOTICE
complain
about
the
Pursuant to an Order of
President's plans because Sale
issued by tile Court of
they won't force anything Comm·on Pleas of Meigs
County, Oh i o , I will orfer for
more than already Is !ale
at public auclion on the
required by upcoming fuel 21st day
of May 1977 at 10 : 00
AM at the Court House steps
economy standards.
i n the VIllage of ot Pomeroy.
In Pontiac, Mich., where Me
i gs County, .O hio the
GM builds fui!Hized Pontiac following descr i bed real
:
models, an assembly line estate
Situate in the Township of
worker said she was Ruflltnd , County of Melg1 ,
concerned about her job State of Ohio, and bei ng Lot
No . 20 of the Hutch inson
because the plan "will have Subdivision
as Is recorded In
an unfair burden on auto Plat Book No . 4. Page No . 57 ,
Of the Records of Plals of
workers and the auto Meigs
County, Ohio.
industry." But, she said,
Terms of Sate : Cash for not
less th,an two. thirds or the
"People will still drive the big appraised
value , subject to
cars they seem to want."
Hen tor real estate taKes .
Appraised value : $13, 500 .
Since the rebate plan -up
James J . Proffi tt,
Sheriff
Meigs County, Ohio
28 (5) 5. 1'2. 19. 5tc

::...... ighlights of energy plan

BELIEVIN:.. ·
'

plan would change Americans' buying, driving habits

rman

...'·

....

at layette shower
CHESTER A layette
shower honoring Mrs. Fern
Morris, Chester, was given
recently by Mary Showalter
and Myrna Carpenter.
A yellow and green color
scheme was carried out with
a bassinet being used for -the
gifts. Refreslunents of cake,
decorated with booties and
rattles, were served along
with nuts and punch . Games
were played with prizes being
won by Mary Hayes and
Carolyn Satterfield. Ellen
Showalter won the door prize.
Other guests were Julia
Carpenter, Janet Brooks,
Ada Neulzling, Phyllis Morris, Nancy Morris, Lela Win·
don, Clara Conroy, Iva
PoweU, Mildred Broo!ls.-Jo
Ann Francis, Kathy Reed,
Zelda Weber, Dru Hayes,
Karen Showalter, Linda
Roberts, Jaye and Joey, Bel·
ty Roush, Ada Morris, l.etha·
Wood, Sue Caldwell, Mary

Pam Powers

Mary Mora

•

NEED AUTO INSURANCE?

u

Members invited to OES event
Dum, Worthy Matron . ll!ld

.\\l

Fern Morris feted

~1be Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday , April 21, l!l'l;

Torres Williamson and
Louis Stevens are planning to
complete their cooperative
drainage project on their •
fanns near Kanawha Sixteen
Mile Creek. This drainage ·
project consists of a large
ditch from the highway to the
river on the property line between the two farms. Work on
this project was started two
yenrs ago. The completion
work now involves installing
some pipe outlets on each
side ofthe ditch which·will be
part of sub-surface drainage
systems in the future and at
the present time will serve as
surface inlets for water. They
also plan to, reseed all
disturbed areas.

COUNTY ; MEIGS

o'

Legal Records Sect ion • .Ohio
EPA, P. 0 . Box 101!9,.
Columbus , Oh io 43216 , (6141
-466 -6037. Uh·te ss ·otherwise
stated in particular notices ,
IN THE
all other ·communicat ions
COMMON PLEAS COURT.
Including
comments
on
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
proposed ac tions. should be
addressed either to The New
ATHENS
COUNTY
Sou r ce, Air, or .- NPDES
SAVINGS
Permit Records Sec tion ,
&amp; LOAN CO . a.
whichever is apprQpriate, at
OHIO CORP .
The Oh iO EPA, P . 0 . Box
· PLAINTIFFS
1049, Columbus, Ohio 43216 .
vs .
Adjudication
hearing
FRED B. GOEGLEIN
sc hed uled
AND BARBARA A .
H'a rrl sonvil l e Stlloo l
GOEGLEIN ET AL
Rt. 4
'
DEFENDANTS
Pomeroy, Ohio
F'acillty
de scription:
No . 16051
0653000030 8001
LEGAL NOTICE
Adjudication
hearing
PURSUANT TO AN Order
of Sale issued by the Court of scheduled for 10 :00 AM on
Common Pleas of Meigs June 20 , 1977 at OhiO EPA, 361
e : eroad St .• Columbus, Ohio
County, Ohio, I will Of-fer for
Docket No . 77 -av -064
sa le at public auction on the
Entity requ est for hearing .
21st day of May 1971 at ·10 : 00 ·
AM at the court House steps
Salem Elementary School
in ,the Village of Pomeroy~
R F D Langsv ille
Me i gs County, Ohio tile
Langsv ille , Ohio
following desCr i bed real
Fa c ility
description:
estate :
.
Situate in the Township of 0653000016 8001
Adjudication '~- hearing
Orange, CoUnty of Meigs, and
State of Ohio, and being tract scheduled for 10 : 00 AM on
No. 2of the Riggscrest Manor June 20, 1977at OhiO EPA, 361
as recorcled i n Plat Book No . E. Sroa·d St ., CotumblJS, Ohio
Docket No . 77 -AV -'065
4, Page No . "4, Plat Records
Entity request for hearing .
of Meigs County .
Excepting one -half acre
sold to Roy F . Riffle and (4) 21. ltc
Frona K. Riffle, A1J9USI 6,
·1974 described in Volume No .
-258, Page No . 371 1 D_e ed
Record s of Meigs County,
Ohio .
Terms of Sa(e : Cash for not
tess than two -thirds of the
appraised value , sl.ib iect to
l ien for real estate taJCeS .
Property · Appraised at
Eleven thousand dollars

the real

estate ot

Through

Saturday, April ·23rd
MYSTERY TIME
?

,•

'

1

,

I

''.

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
The Ohio Departmen t of
Natural Resources , through
the Div ision of Parks and
Re creation, pursuant to and
in accordance with Sections
1501.09 and 1501.091 ot the
Ohio Revised Code. proposes
to contract lor the operation
ot three (3 ) public service
facilities
located
and
described as follows :
( 1) Marine · (Boat Renta l)
and m iscellaneous refresh ment c oncession at Forked
Run
St~ le
Park , Meigs
Coun·ty , Ohio . The Dl\lision of
Parks wilt furnish docks , one
building appr'ox·Jmate l y 32
fee1 by 20 feet, 15 rowboa ts
w itll
oars.
and
one
refrigerated i ce hou!:ie .
(2)
Boa,t
renta l
and
misc-ellaneous
refreshment
concession at Barkcamo
State
P·ark in
Belmont
Coun ty , O-hio The Division of
Parks and Recreation · will
furnish S rowboats with oars
and assigned land tor mobi le
un 11 ( to be provided by
concessionaire) .
(3)
Boat
rental
and
ni iscellaneous
refresh·m ent
concession at Strouds Run
State Park, Athens County,
Ohio . Tile D i v ision ot Parks
will fUrnish ~ rowboats w i th
oars and assigned land for
mobile unlt (to be provided
by concessionaire ).
The
Department
w i lt ,
fu rnish e)(isting State owned
buildings and equipment as
listed i n bid specifications .
Mobile concession ui'1its to be
provided
by
the
con .
cessionaire must conform to
standards as listed in bid
spe c ifi ca l ions .
The Con c~s sionaire w i ll
furnish all other eQuipmen t.
merchand i se.
mater ia ls ,
utilities,
labor ,
etc . ,
necessary to operate the
concessions to · app rov ed
standards .
It shal l be the inleht of the
contrac:t t hat the season of
operation for the marina wi l l
be from April 15 to October
1st . The season of operat ion
tor the. beach .concess i ons will
be from · Memorial Day
through Labor Day .
.
The above dates ar·e i n tended to estab lis h only
minimvm
guidelines
r egardi ng
season
Qf
operat ion .
Certain
ci r cum5tances may necessitate
extend i ng or sllorten ing the
operating season$ for the
various facilit ies. In any
event, season and hour s of
operation will be ·sub(ec- t to
annual review .
The co ntra ct w il l be tor a
term of tour (41 years and
seven (7J months from May
20, 1977 to December 31, 1981.
Official bid proposals witt
be receive'd in· th e Off ice of
the Divis ion of Parks and
Recreation ,
Con cess ions
SeCtion 1 until 2 : 00p .m ., May
19. 1977 . Bids wilt be public ly
opened thereafter by th e
Cllief or his authorized agent .
The rignt is reserved to re ject
any and al l bids .
Requests lor b id propos al
forms shou l d be made to th e
Divi sion
of.
Park s
and
Re c reation ,
Concessions
Unit,
Fountain
Square ,
Building C ., Th i rd Floor ,
Columbus ,
Oh io
43224 .
Telephone (61-4) 466·3277.
ROBERT W . TEATER
Dire c- tor
(4 ) 21. 28 (5) 5, 12, 4tc

MASON FURNITURE

STORE HOURS
..

Mon., Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat.-B:JOtil5:00
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

CUSTOM WHEELS
OUR SPECIALTY

,

Time" periods •• .all

J

•

•

1
•

'

persons calling or stopping
at The Daily Sentinel

'

'\ •

.'\
' "·

•

During 15-minute "Mystery

I

•

?•

,

1

•

I

James J . Proffitt,
Sheri ff
Meigs CountY , Ohio
(4) 21, 28 (5) 5, 12, 19, Stc

MASON FURNITURE

Emory

EJCecutor of Estate of
Emory Creed Janes
(4) 4, 11 , 18, 19, 21 • 5tc

ISil,OOO . I

Geo~ge Viar, engineer of
' SoU Conservation Service,
bas been in Mason County to
Uliat with creek jobs on the
Walter Kidd farm of
Kanawha Sixteen Mile Creek
Mason, W.Va.
773~5592
Herman Grate
and Jolin sturgeon farm near ,
Ashton, Clifford King on \+.,.H+.,.H++._.....,._.....,._........,......

International Want Ad Week
Monday, April ·l8th

NOTICE
I w ill offer for sa l~ , at
pr lv-B ie sale , at the office of
The Rac ine Home Nat ional
Bank , Recine, Ohi o , on Apr il
22. 197 ~ at ten o ' clock A .M .,
Creed Janes, of Port land .
Ohio. Bids may be s.ubmltfed
in advance of the date of sale,
for the purchase of the
property , and competitive
bi ds w ill be enterta ined at
t im e of s.ate . The undersigned
reserves the r ight to reject
any and all bidS. The real
estate consists of 100 A c- res ,
all in Lot 169 , Section 17,
Town2 , Range 11 , In Lebanon
Township , Me igs County ,
Oh i o. and the property
consists of approKl mately 4.5
Acres Of river bottom crop
land with tne balance in
Pasture and woodland , and
has a 5-room dwelling , not
modern. The real estate is
situated on State Route 124 i n
Eastern Meigs County , and Is
approJCimately one -half mile
from the OlliO R lver . In ·
terested panies may call the
lllders igned at 61.4 .9-49 -2210 .

those above gaining cash
incentives and those cars
below taxed.

Special Offer During

JOHN T . WQL•E

PUBLIC NOTICE
pay taxes.
The folloWing documents
Natural Gas
were received or prepared by
Prices could go up to a The Ohio Environmental
Protection Agency during the
maximum $1.75 per thousand previous
week . The issuance
cubic feel at the beginning of date of each proposed action
1978 and federal jurisdiction is stated . The effective tlate
~ach final acfion iS slated .
would be extended to
-Anyone aggrieved or ad intrastate production. The versely affected by a
acti on to issue.
emergency power the proposed
deny, modify, revoke, or
President got this year to renew a perm If. license, or
variance, or to approve or
.require sharing of scarce disapprove
plans
and
supplies, through allocation specifications, may file a
for an adjudication
orders, would be extended request
t'learing before the dire:ctor
three years.
wifhi,n thirty (30) days of
issuance, pursu!llnt to Ohio
Dom.Stlc OU
Rev is~d Code Section 3745 .07
Oil would be taxed so thai Such
persons may file an
over a three-year period its appeal with. The Env iron .
Board Of Review,
prices would reach the world mental
Suite 305. 391 E . Broad St.,
price, now $13-$14 a barrel_. Columbus, Ollie 43216, on a
action to Issue, deny ,
The ultimate size of the final
modify, revoke, or renew a
strategic oil reserve would be permlt 1 l icense, or variance ;
doubled to I billion barrels. or to approve or disapprove
p!a·ns and specificat i ons ,
Industrial Conservadon
within th irty (30) days of th e
lnduslries ·and utilities effective date, if that f i nal
was not preceded by a
would be required in some action
proposed action , or was
instances to switch from preceded by a substantially
proposed action
natural gas and oil to coal. different
Final actions. of these types
Gas used by industries and are
identlfied '.1-s such . ORO
utilities would be taxed to the 3745.07 does not provide for
hear i ng
approximate same price as adjudication
ret~uests or appeals on ap .
alternate fuels, and industrial plications. orde;rs, verified
, or enforcement
and utility use of oil woul,d be complaints
com pi iance schedule letters,
·taxed ala fiat rate starting at within 30 days of Pl!bllc.a tlon
in a,newspaper in the affected ,
90 cents a barrel in 1979 for county
any person may also:
industries and $1.50 a barrel (1) submit
writren comments
relating to actions. proposed
in 198a' for utilities.
verified complaints ,
Natural gas would be · actions,
or enforcement compliance.
prohibited from use in new schedule letters ; (2) ret~uest
a publ i c meeting regarding
boilers, and existing facilities proposed
actions; and ·or (3)
with the ability to switch to request notice of further
coal would he forced to make ~;~ie~; t ~r ,tf:o~~~~~~rcs~ +~~~
the switch, ''with limited hearings
and
public
temporary exceptions." New . meetings , and other com .
munications
concerning
coal-fired plants would have public
meetings, adjudication
to install the best available hearings, verified CQm ptainls, and regulations ,
controls on pollution.
sho uld be addressed to The

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

As proposed by the automakers must meet on
President, the 18 m.p.g. fuel their 1978-model auto fleets
economy
average will be the cutoff point -

?~

office will receive free
want ads regardless of size
or number of times

•

,

ad is to run •

Yesterday's Mystery Times:

•

jThis COULD be the time your ad was placed)
12:00 A.M.
3:30 P.M.

Yesterday's Winners of Free Ads:

lAnd Thisspace COULD be reserved for your name)

Mrs. Larry Parsons, Pomeroy
George Mora, Pomeroy
To celebrate International Want Ad Week The
Daily Sentinel Want Ad Dept. is offering

FREE WANT ADS to voluntaJY (non-commercial) advertiseiS:
1. A mystery time period of 15 minutes each morning and afternoon

during Want Ad Week will be set aside ...

2. Everyone calling or stopping in at The Daily Sentinel during the
.
.
mystery time will be given free wan\ ads...
3. Mystery times will not be announced in advance and persons

calling during the mystery time will be published in the next day's
issue of the Sentinel...
4. But, regardless of the size of the ad or the number of times it is to

run, there will be no charge for the ad...

·

5. The Mystery Time will be changed daily and all mystery times
and·winners o( free ads will be announced the followmg day . .

To be eligible for a Free Want Ad, you
must place your ad during Inter·
national Want Ad Week ... beginning 8
a.m, April 18th and ending 12:00 noon,
April 23rd.

r

~~Nl~OS
gg'l.-'l.\S6

.l

The Daily Sentmel
Want Ad Dept.
located At:

111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio

�,.

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

I

WANT AD
CHARGES
ll,lii.)'
2da)'~

30ayli
6dt~ys

(1uwgt•

12S
1.00
t~

.l 15

E:at'li wurd \!Vl'r tlil' 1111/l!lt!Wil 15
v..,rds ts ~ l"l'lllS pi:'t ~· un1 pt'l' l.l!l.y

AdS

rumHJifi olill1r

than

eOJL'il't'lltiW

dli}S WIJl bt• f' har'gl'tl ll\ Lht• l dlty
flllt'

lu memOI)', Cart! ul Th:tnks u1u.l
Ob!Lillll')'' 6 t'CIIL&lt;; pt'r wunl, SJ 00

mmunum C:A,o,h mallvant.•c
MvPI\e

~ l ouw

s.ak-s :mti'Y:mi salt!S

are ilt't'Cfllt.'(l unl~ With' ea!.h w1Lh

onirr 25 t'ent l'iaarge fur ad!&lt;i carl")•
tng Box Nwn~r In Ca 1 P uf Tht• &amp;•Jiunel
Tht• Pu!Jhs h1·r rrscn· l' ~ the ngl11 ~

tu

t'tlJL

m· l'i'Jl'l'l any alls l.leeuwd olr

}el'tiOIUtl . TIH• J&gt;uLh.s llf'r will IIHl l.k•
l't'S!)UilSilllt• fur !IIOI'C tJ iOlll lltll' LILnll'·
l't't't U\Sl'rtlll!l

PhHIIl' 99:!-2156

NOTICE

41'.M
tilt! day bt'forc publlt.:a! 1011
ol E'.M.
f'ru..lay aftcrnwn

STATE

3290.

~ 'i n~-. -c~-----------­
.

YARD SALE , Weds ., Thursday and
Friday . Few old things . s.ome
women 's new clothing , Quarter
mile above junk yard in
Miners'll'ille, Jerry Grueser's.
YARD SALE , Now till? On Co . Rd .
6 and 4. 1 mile west of Dexter .
Ohio. Ant ique dishes . avon
bottles , rugs , curta i ns. Old and
new
clothes ,
croche ted
afghans . Everytl-ling from nuts
to bolts .
•
·

- - - - · - ....-,-'---c-

IN THE

COMMON PLEAS COURT.

MEIGS COUNTV. OHIO

COUNTY
ATHENS
SAVINGS
&amp; LOAN CO . &amp;

OH IO CORP .

PLAINTIFF

GOEGLEIN ,

AND
· BARBARA
GOEGLE IN , ET AL

A.

DEFENDANTS
NO . 16,054
LEGAL NOTICE

Pursuant to · an Order of
Sale issued bY the court of
Common Pleas ot Meigs
County, Oh io, I witl offer tor
sale at publ!c auction on the
21st day of May 1977 at 10 :00
AM at the Court House steps
in 1-he Village of Pomeroy.
Meigs County , Ohio, the
follow i ng described real
estate :
·
Situate in the Townsh i p of
Orange, County of Meigs ,
State of Ohio, and being Lot
No . 3 In R lggscrest Manor
Addit i on as recorded In
Volume No . 4, Page No . 44 ,
Meigs County Plat Records .
E xce pt ing and reserv i ng to
the Grantors, all minera ls
under said real estate with
the r fght to mine and remove
the same without l n[ury to the
surface.
Terms of Sale : Cash for not
less than two -thirds of ap pr'alsed value, subjed to lien
for real estate taxes.
Property apprBised at
126,000.
James J . Proffitt ,
·
Sheriff
Meigs County , Ohio
12, 19, 5tc

SEVEN FAMILY Yard So le this
Thursday and Fndoy in RuSt ic
Hi lls , Syracuse. 10·00 A.M. to
3:00P .m. Nothing sold before
10:00! lots of good quali ty boys
and girl s summer and winter
cloth ing . Sizes infant tl-lru 12.
Also, ladies clott11ng and other
misc. items .
YARD SALE, Thursday and
1doy. 1 'I~ mile on Rt. 143 off Rt.
7, April 21, 22.

---

YARD SALE at Bertha Ru ssell at
Wolf Pen Rood , Thursday , Fri·
dey,
Soturda .., ,
Sounday.
lawnmowers , eletlric motors ,
tools, ell k inds of rugrags , T.V.
B &amp; W portable 10 in . little of
everything .
YARD SALE ; Margaret Marshall
residence i n Mason . House
behind bowling alley. Clothing ,
appliances , trailer steps. Friday
and Saturday .
MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS , toys ,
clothes. bass inets and avon
' bottles . Apr il 23rd, 25th, 2bth,
ond :htl-l . County Rood 28 , I
end 1·4 miles north of Boshan
at Mrs. Rolph Br llard.s.

tokem , old
pocket watches and chains,
silver ond gold . We need 1964
and older silver cams. Buy , sell,
or trade' Call Roger Wamsley,

----------

CASH ! I! for junk cars . Frye 's
Truck ond Auto. WRECKER SERVICE! , Phone 7.42 -2081 .

-

~

-

OLD FURNITURE . ice boxes , bra ss
beds ,
etc ..
comp le te
households. Wrife M . D. Miller,
Rt. 4, Pomeroy , Oh io or call

992-7761).
WANTED .• CHIPWOOD Poles.
Max . diameter, 10 inches on
largest en~ . $8 per ton: bundl ·
ed slabs . $6 per ton . Delivered
to Ohio Pollet Company, Rt . 2
Pomeroy .
Ohio .
Phone

992-2689

COMMONPLEASCOURT.

A T""H E N "!;
SAVINGS &amp;

OHIO CORP .

-- c 0

LOAN

0 N T Y
CO . &amp;

PLAINTIFF

VS
FRED B. GOEG LE IN
AND BARBARA A.
NO . 16,053

LEGAL NOTICE

Pursullht to an Order of
Sale issu ed by the Court of
Common Pleas of Meigs
Notice is herebr given that
County. Oh i o. ·1 w i l l otter for
on May 2, 1977 , a 10 :00 AM .
sale at publ ic auction on the
a public sale -will be held at . 21st day of May , 1977 at 10 . 00
Pomeroy Motor Company ,
AM at the Court House step s
Pomeroy , Ohio , to sell for
in the Village of Pomeroy ,
cash ' the following collateral,
Meigs County, Ohio the
to wit : 1972 Chevrolet Nova
following described . real
Serial No . lX27E2H106260, 2·
estate :
•
' dr said collateral be i ng held
Situate In the Township of
to secure an obligation
Rutland, County of M eigs ,
arising under a retail in stalment security agreement ' State of Ohio·, and be i ng Lot
No. 19 of the Hutchinson
held by General Motor AC ·
Subsid i v ion as is recorded in
ceptance Corporation 'as
Plat Book No. 4, Page No . 57
secured ·p arty . Said public
of the · Records of Plats of
sale is to be conducted ac .
Meigs County, Oh i o. •
cording to the laws of the
Terms of Sale : castl not not
State of W . va . General
less than two -th i rds of ap .
Motors Acceptance Cor .
praised value , subject to lien
poratlon reserves the right to
for real estate taxes .
bid at th i s sate .
· .
PROPERTY appraised at
The collateral is presently
$13,000.
owned and may be seen at
Pomeroy Motor Company.
James J , Proff i tt,
Pomeroy. Ohio.
•
Sheriff

TO WHOM IT MAY CON ·
CERN :

Me i gs County , Ot'!io

GN ER"AL MOTORS

( 4 ) 21, 28 (5) 5, 12, 19, 5tc

OHIO VAU.EY HORSE SHOW ASSOC.

HORSE &amp; TACK.
. SALE
MEIGS COUNTY
FAIRGROUNDS

1975 JEEP CHEROKEE , d.b ., ps.
Ouodrotrock . Goo
fires.

Phone 130&lt;1877-2340.
1976 (AMARO, 305 2 barrel\
automat ic, silVer with red
pin striping . Still under warren·

1971 PONTIAC Firebird 350 V-8. 4
new tires. Am -Fm radio and
tope , AC , vinyl top . 51900 or
be st offer. Phone 992-6071 .
1974 OLOS Cutlass S. 37,000
miles , good co ndition , $3000.
Phone 992 -2629 or coll992-5852
after 5 p .m.

1971 PONTIAC Firebird 350 V-8, 4
new tires, Am -Fm rQdio and
tope , AC , \linyl top , $1900 or
best offer. Phone 992 -6071 ,

This sale is open to horses and ponies of all
breeds and misc. items anyone wishes to
bring. There will be a gate fee of $3.00 a
horse or pony. 5 per cent commission of
horse sells;- free passout on no sales.
Terms: CasJI or prior clearance at sales
office.

Dave Darst
304-675-3147

H. A. Cole
614-667-3405

PIGS FOR sale. Coll949-2857 .
1973

All BREED Dog grooming ,
rea sonable roles . Call for ap·
pointment , :J &amp; B Kennels,

K~WASAI&lt;I ,

750

_ 192·7548.
'flOOD BURNING Firepla ce, free
standing with oss . l B,(X)() BTU
oir cond itioner; baby bed with
mattress: port-o -crib : pressurer
conner . Phone 992·2201 ,

7&lt;2-3162
FOUR WALKER Coonhound pup s.
I mole, 2 yrs . old . Phone

350 HONDA 'Motorcycle Street·
bike. $500. Phone 992-7307 .

7 WEEKS OLD A .K.C. mole toy
poodle. Chomp1on color. Phone

4 TIRES, FIRESTONE sfeel radial
500 H R 78 - 15, 8,000 miles.
$120. Phone 742-2826.

985-3803.

NEED A
Idea pull type
one Ford 7 ft .
pt .; one Early
piece living room
Volkswogon. Coli

-

let

Pomeroy landmark
soften &amp; condition your
water ·and a Co-op water

softener. Model UC-XVI .
:Now Onl)$
, _

ECONOMY TRACTOR with all ot ' tochments. like new. Phone

279 9 5

(6 14) 698-3290.

Let

197J HARLEY DAVIDSON Electro
Glide. Full dress. Phone

us

test

your

water

Free.

949-2657.

Pom~roy Landmark

·

r:.i

.

Jack ·w. C.rsey, Mgr:
Phone 992-2181

1

VA-FHA, 30 yr. financing. Ireland
, Mortgage, 77 E. State , Athen s,

_ Coll992-5146.

phone (6141592-3051 . -·· :
3 BEDROOM Ranch , I 'h both , 1
acre, oll ·elec . flnisl-led goroge .
Fully carpeted , Five ·-Ppinls
orea. $30,000 . Phone 992·2928
otter 5 p.m .
·

SPECIAL:

ONION SETS
lb.

---------

~

-

45t

GOOD SUPPLY OF
GARDEN SEEDS.

104 ACRE FARM , 25 acres bottom ,
rest i n pasture and woods . 3
bedroom home , double garage
and new b'o rn . located on East
branch of Shade Ri"'er , $42 ,000.

....~J~~.~- ~~~~~~r

COUNTRY Mobile Home Park, Rt.
33, ten miles north of Pomeroy.
large lots with concrete patios ,
sidewalks , runners and off
_ Slre!t pork~ng . ~~_?n• 99_? ·7~_!:.
Brown's
Trailer Pork. Phone 992-3324 .

MOBILE HOME , ci ty water and
gas . Nice location . Phone

9&lt;9 -2261.
TRAILER, ADULTS
~92 - 3181 .

742-2685.

FOR SALE.

8 RM. HOUSE plus Iof, 2 bat l-Is.
Con be mode into 2 aport 'll: m~. Phone m -b263.

New CG·OP water sof.
teners, model VC·SVI.

6 ROOM House for sole. 33 acre in.
Rose Volley . Phone 992 -3792 .

1 Good Used McCul1ough

5434.

.'

only . Phone

Ch1ln S~w
~95
..I)! ow In stock, complete line
of bulk 11rden seeds •nd
onion sets.
1 Good used Unl~o

6 ROOM HOUSE for sole , 33 acres
-· in Rose Vqlley . Phone 992 ·J792.

I tood McCullough Chain

13 ACRES, 3 Bedroom , oil utilities ,
Rt. 124. Cooks Gop Hill. Phone

Freenr

FIFTEEN ACRES off New limo
Rood near Forrest Acres Pork.
Phone 742-2336.

$175

Saw

S6S

Saw

SSO

--~

--'19~~~- ------------

1 Good Used Poulan Ch8in
Onion Sets
Survivor Safes

lb. 4Sc
only S29 .95

Pomeroy hndmark

~9.~-i•CIC w. ~eruv. Mgr
~

-

Phone 992·2111

-- Syracuse

Owner
Shirley (Jeffers) Wolfe
.

Aer4al
Commercial
Schools
Weddings

KEN GROVER
PHOTOGRAPHY
(6141 985-&lt;155
'

10-17-1 mo(Pd)

Formerly
lola's Beauty Salon
For appointment ca II
992 -2549' Tuesday thru
Saturday 8:00a.m. to
5:00p.m. Open nights
by appointment.

.o. i.)· l mo. .

'

EXPERIENCED
Radiator ,...-.....,.
Service

ES
ANY PlliCtf
ANY SIZE

--

Southeastern Ohio
Truss Rafter Co.
Located irt Langsville
Box28-A

1

11 :OC&gt;-News 3,-4 ,6,8, 10,13, 15; MacNeil -Lehrer Report

.

33.
11:311-Johnny Carson 3,4,15 ; Lou Rawls 6,13; Kolak 8;
Mary Hariman 10; ABC News 33 .
12 :1l0--Movle "The New Interns" 10; Janakl 33.
12:411-Movle "Parlners In Crime" 8.

Young's Carpeting
Route 3, Pomeroy, 0 .

.

1 :oo-Tomorrow 3,4; News 13 .

Free Estimates

'ftll~Nl ID~ ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

Installation. samples
brought to your home
with no charge.

~ ~ ~~"

IS ~l-~16 ALL
WE'Ile
HAVIN' 7

C.rpet-Lino.-TIIt
Phone Mlkt Young 11
992-2206 or '"·7630
.

-

1\-\ERI" ISN'T

Un~e~ llmbM

A~ INS

one letter to each square, to fOrm
four ordinary words.

l"l.SE, PET...

LOVEL Y FOUR Bad rom home
within walking distnnce to
town and Pomeroy Elementary
School.
Fully
carpeted
downstairs with working
fireplace. Modern kitchen ond
both, 2 parcheli , full size attic .
Phone.992 -2261.
~

these four Jumbfes.

'
2-23-1 mo.. I

~

(]
DABBlE

I [J

La ·a··~:a.a;

HARLEY HANING.

PEOPLE; IN !HIS
REGION OFTEN SUFFER
EMC::K PAINS.

uRPHAN ANNIE-WON'T

ANNIE! WE'RE ALL

Phone 992·3339

TERRIBLY SOIIRY,
ANNIE ;_ I 5UPPOSE. I

A-13·1 m!l.- pd.

SHOULD HAVE 10'-'L)DLILiYOU)H1-·.·••
Bur SOME&gt;10W, I "

I HOPED MII'Wf IT WAS
A hUSlAKE· - 1SHOULD
HAVE 1040WN SOMEONE

LII&lt;E ELDEEN WOULD
COME A~ -·

ANNIE
HfAR
AT M£
SOME'THING,
AN"IE!

J I I J

Now arrange the circled fetterS to
fonn the surprise answer, as sug·
gested by the above cartoon.

FllEE E Tl

(Answers tomorrow)

Blalrl

- ~ Jumbles : CLEFT

Insulation Senices

HOMESITES for 1ole, I acre and
up . Middleport , near Rutland.

Yesterday's

FiolociltA......

Coll992·7481 .

S11llll

~

~~~-~­
.£~,£111

by THOMAS JOSEPH

WJIJDOII$

AUIIIINUM
SI01118oSOFTm

SMALL farm lor sole, 10% down,
owner tinonced. Monroe Coun·

ly. W. Vo. Phone (OO•I 772·
3102 or (30•) 772-3227.

ACROSS
1 1 'The
. Naked - "
5 Yellow
11 Venezuelan
copper
center
12 Disinclined
13 Shadow
HWee
15 Sea eagle
16 Nominated

GUTI£JIS.MIIIIIGS

wrq,wFER

COUNTRY farmland with seclud ed woods, water ond good oc·
cess in Monroe County, W. Va.
$1 ,000 down, call (304) 772 -

~h. HZ·lHJ

.

4-10·1 my.1

Commercial property approx. 17
BRADFORD, Auctioneer, Comacres, level lond , located at
plete Service. Phone 9"9·2487
Tuppers Plains on Ohio, Route Will do odd !l"'I~S . rooting, pain·'"' or 9-49-2000. Racine, Ohio, Critt
7. Phone (6141667·6304.
tlng, gutl1r work . Phone 992·
Bradford.
NEW J bedroom house , built-in
kitchen , both and '11, Phone
742-2306 or contact MilO B. Hut·
chison , Rutlol"ld , Ohio .

COMMERCIAL BRICK BUILDING In
downtown Pomeroy , Ohio.
Presently renfed with income
over $SOC() per year. Two ren tals downstairs and one
upstairs . Ha$ unfins i hed aport·
ment ' upstairs. Entire upstairs
con easily be mode into 3
apartments . W·air condition
upstairs . 3 separate water, gas
and electric meters. Con be
financed IOOpercent to reliable
party. Contact Paul Simon or
Guido Girolomi to secure on
appointment. Priced upon inspection of property only .
4 UNDEVELOPED acre~ iri Meigs
County . Vmton moil route1 Call
742 -2867 or see Dick Lambert .

7409.
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR SEWING-AlTERATIONS:
Sweepers, toasters, Irons, all
Upholstering ,
drapes
reasonable. 572 South Third
Ave .. Middleport . Phone

small appliances. Lawn mower,
next to State Hlgttwoy Garage
on Route 7. Phone (6H) 985·

992-6306.

3625:.,
. --.,--,---,-------

anew
17 Rodent
ingress
(2 wds.)

One of the
L _ _.;..!.!!!.:,!::!!;.:;.;.!;:!.!l.~~-..J . 19 Aliens

PIANO TUNING , lone Daniels . 12 REMODELING, Plumbing, heating
years of . service. Phone
ond all types of general repair .
992·2062.
Work gtiaronteed 20 years ex·
perience.
Phone992-2o409.
Will 00 building and remodel-

20 Suspect
. - , - , - - - - -....... :~1 Repute
Before
- Mahal
24 Bawled
Z6 Go by C'll'
Z8 Old music .J

f;I\SQIJNE ALLi'V

ing, rooting , /lumbing, elec· SEWING MACHINE Repairs, ser·
tricol work on general repair.
vice, all makes, 992·2284. The
Fr" estimates and reasonable
Fabric Shop , Pomeroy .
rat~ . Phone Charles Sinclair ,
Authorized Singer Soles , and
(61lT9M-&lt;121.
Service. We sharpen Scls5on .

this point.
Ned realizes
he loves lila!

The1.1
embrace!

PAINTING, INTERIOR and ex- EXCAVATING, dozer, loader and
terior. Rooting and general
backhoe work: dump trucks
repair. Phone 843-2701 after 4
and fo-bcys for hire; will haul
fill dirt, to sail, limestone and
P.m...,...,,-:-------,---,--gravel. Call B"ab or Roger Jef·
1WILL do babysitti ng in my home
fers, day phone 992·7089,
with children one to four years
night phone 992.-3525 or "992·
old . Mrs . Glenn Smith, Rockspr·

no~

field , Back Hoe Sar\lice,
Rutland, Ohio. Phone 7"':2· 2008.

POMEROY, 0.
JUST LISTED - Exactly
what you have been looking
for! Split Entry: · 3-4
BDRMS .• 1112 baths, 2 car
garage, on 1 acre close to
town . Air cond., allelec.,

appx. I yr . old. $39,500.00.
COUNTRY - Close to
beautifully

remodeled older home, 3
BDRMS ., nice kilchen,
carpeting,

garage

and

other bldgs. 537,,234.00.
FARM LAND - 103 A., 2
story f , m hoU!

~.

I ""ge
barn, 1.0 . ~( , ' · 11b . ·, !S
tillablt: •• enc. ... lil. reo~Jt.::.c to

Virgjl

B. Sr., R&amp;attor'

LARGER OLDER HOME
- 9 ·rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, equipped kitchen,
full basement, and coal

furnace. Large corner

lot

with double garage.
A REAL SHOWPLACE Antique brick 3 bedroom
home with central heating
and air conditioning. Has
gas burning fireplace and
nlte woodwork. Brick polio
and

3-car

garage.

Just

basement, 1 floor plan, nice

$25,000.
$12,000 - 4 bedroom home
with 11h acres, its own
water supply , utility
building with cellar and 1

kitchen. ONLY $16,500.00. ·
GOOD HOUSE - This 2

BUILDING-Goodfor flea

$2'/,000.00.
BEAUTIFUL - View and
home, this 2 BDRM home Is
priced to sell, 1 acre, part

star

·.me will sel , .tt a

SIO 'Q.OO
basem •n'

ce

low

PJR '·.~

r

· · .g. · ~.

nt

~.

c. ·II

.•

et ,

f, Jt 'I ·

Flio~&lt;o•CING AVAILI.io.~E

- If you're qualllled, 3
ElDRMS ., If• A. NICE FOR
rHE PRICE . $9,000.00.
A STEAL - 5 Acres, close
to Pomeroy , 3 BDRMS.,
older
home .
ONLY
$7,900.00.
31/4 ACRES Building
sites in Pomeroy. ONLY
55.800.00.
OLDER HOMES - We
have _several reasonably
priced homes.

WE HAVE BUYERS . FOR
YOUR HOMES, LIST
WITH US TOOAY.
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
Hank Clelond
Assocloto
992-2259-992-2568
985-4112

car garage .
market,

church,

trading

post, etc. at Dexter. Will
consider Land Contract.

ss.soo.

PLAY~GROUN D- .&amp;.I acres
of WoodS. Site for trailer,
doubre wide, or A-frame
with Leading Creek water,
electric, • septic tank .
Peaceful setting. Better
see today. Want S12,500.
BUILDING LOTS - 2
large lots In an Improving
subdivision. Nice location
_lust out of town . 55,000 for

both.

NOW HAVE NEARLY.
A MILLION DOLLARS
WORTH OF. PROPERTY
AVAILABLE.
IF YOU'RE THINKING
OF SELLING, TO BYPASS PROBLEMS, CALL
TEAFORD.
·
G. Bruce Ttlford
Holen L.

wd"s.)

9 Respect
10 Heckle
·16 Took a
cab
18 Stag

21 Destiny
Z3 Perkins .or
Randall

24 Fused
25 Malbin
or May

26 Mer¥ed
27 Jackson
novel

An,swer
29 Gaggle·s
members
30 Lake
Geneva's
other
name
32 Sullen
35 Loser to
DDE

kr-+~+--

.,...--4--+--l

Love of Life 8,10; Sesame St. 20.33 .
11 :55--CBS News 8; Ms. Flxlt 10 .
f2 :1l0--News 3.4.6.10; Second Cha~ce 13; Name That
Tune 15; Divorce Court 8.

12:3G-lovers &amp; Friends 3,15; Ryan's Hope 6,13 ; Bob
Braun 4; Search for Tomorrow 8,10.
·
l : OD--Gong Show 3; All My C~lldren 6, 13; News 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1_:311-Days of Our Lives 3,., 15: Family Feud 6, 13; As
The World Turns 8, 10.
2:1l0--S20,000 Pyramid 6,13.
2:3G-Doctors 3,4, IS; One Life fo Live 6, 13; Guiding
Light 8, 10.
3:1l0--Another World 3.4.15; All In The Family 8,10;
Crockett's VIctory Garden 20.
3:1.\-.-General Hospital 6,13.
3:3G-Malch Game 8,10; llllas Yoga &amp; You 20.
4:1l0--Mister Cartoon 3; Edge of Night 4; Gong Show ·
IS; New Mickey Mouse Club 6; Lucy Show 8;
Sesa me St. 20,33; Movie "Off Limits" 10; Dfnah 13.
4:3G-My · Three Sons 3; Portrldge Family 4;
Emergency One 6; Partridge Family 8; Fllntstones
15.
S:llO--Big Valley 3; My Three Sons 4; Brady Bunch s·
· Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Emergency'
One 13; Star Trek 15.
5:3G-Adam-12 4; News 6; Elec. Co. 20,33 .
6;1l0--News 3,4.6,8,10,13.15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33·.
6;311-NBC News3,4,15; ABC News ll ; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8, 10;_Vegetable Soup 20; VIlla Alegre 33.
7:00--Trufh or Cons. 3; To Telllhe Truth 4; Bowling lor
Dollars6; $128,000Quesllon 8; News 10; To Tell the
Truth 13; Ohio Journal 20; Marshall Unlverslly
Report 33.
7; 311-Porter Wagoner 3; Gong Show 4; Candid Camera
6; Horse Race 8; MacNeil -Lehrer Reoort :!033 ·
Andy Willi oms 10; Name Thai Tune 13: Pop Goes
the Country 15 .

8:00-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4, 15; Donny &amp; Marie 6, 13;
Gunsmoke 8; Washington Week In Review 20.33;
Code R 10.
8:3D--&lt;:hlco &amp; the Man 3,4,15: Wall Street Week 20,33.
9:1l0--Rockford Files 3.4. 15; Future Cop 6, 13; Nashville
99 8, 10; Lowell Thomas Remembers 20; Woman
Alive 33 .
9:3D--The Way II Was 20.
10:()0-Qulncy 3.4.15; ABC News Closeup 6,13; Hunier
8, 10; News 20; Firing line 33.
10:311-Lock, Stock &amp; Barrel 20.
II :OD--News 3,4,6,8,10,13, 15; Monty Python's Flying
Circus 20; Balck Perspective onthe News 33 .
11 :311-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Barel!a 6, 13; NBA Play.
Off 8, 10; ABC News 33.
12 :1l0--Janakl 33.
12:4D--Mod Squad 6; Ironside 13.
I :OD--Midnlght Special 3",4, 15.
1:4G-News 13.
2:3o-.,.News 3.
3&gt;1l0--Movle "' VIva Zapata•· 3.
4;3G-Movle "Chicken Wagon Family" 3.
6:00--FBI 3.

Lawbreaker plays safe

+97 53
+ AJ IO
oloJ9 74
.Q 852
SOUTII 101
AK J543

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

Ei&lt;·

¥A 5

.• K 8 6 2
• A 10

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply 'stands for another. In this sample A ~is
used for the three L's, X lor the two O's, etc. Single letters,

paving , Rt. 1&lt;3. Phone I (61&lt;1 ·
698·7331.
DUGAN 's FRONT End Alignment,
Odell 's

Neilher vu lnerable

II

cova~ing,
septic systems ,
dozer, backhoe, dump truck,
limestone, grovel , blacktop

apostrophes. the length and formation

-~~~~~:t~~~~~~~G~~~~----~~;~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~----,--

Alinement

behind Rullond Grodo School.
Alignment, wh"l baklncing,
tuna -up , , brakes and minor
repoir. Phone 7-42-2005 or
742·20().4. Evening work by op·
pointment .

Or CO{JRSE!

FILMMAKING
18MYLIFE!

HARRISON'S T.V. Repair. Sarvlce
Colis. 276 Sycamore, St. , Mid ·

DO 'IOU 11:-fiNK I

dfeporl. Phono 992·2522.
BROWN"S FIRE and Safety htln ."

MOO! AMI
GLAD YOU

CALLED!!!

LIKE RUNNING

A

quishers , All sizes, busln..s, :
home, boot. Refilled, tested ."
Bill Brown, Rutland, Ohio.
Phona742-2m.
:;:.:;:;:: -~::;:::-.-=~- :

SAIRVJANEH

ccnditionlnv. lol .45 x 155. 75
Elm St ., Middleport .. Phon•

'-IE BEEN SETTIN:

·•n•

furnished. Phone99:2·38n,

NEED CENTRAL Air condl!ionl"'!

for your mobile home? w•
hove the bast. lei our exper•

install a worry frM Col.man
unit. We servlcil what we sell.
Kingsbury
Home
Soles,
Pomerov . Ohio.
Phone

...
..

CHOf'
CIIOP
CfiOP
Ci·IOP

· ONL'r' IF 'IOO'RE FLI(IN6 .
LOW ... THEN I{OU ~-lAVE
TO 11.1&lt;\TCH OUT FOR "TREES

AND TELEPHONE Wli(E5 ...

AND THE
CAT NExr
DOO~!

Nor th Eas t

South

Pass
Pass

2•
Pass

4olo

Pass
Pass

'"'

Opening lead - Q ¥

the words are all By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

, BARNEY

room. A:llnew carpet

m -7307. Sl3.ooo .
1975 MOBILE HOME, 14 x 70.
$9000. 3 bedrooms. 21ull batht.
Phone (30&lt;) 7.73-5:133 oftor 4
_ _p.!...m·~-==:-:c--c:-.:._-~
10 ;x 50 TWO Bodroomt. un·

or

West

sure of my contract H 1t lost
or if it won .··
The Professor was right as
always. If the finesse had lost,
the defense would win that
trick . one heart and the ace of
diamond s . Eventually the
Professor would have ruffed
hi s last two diamonds with
dummy 's la st two trumps and
made hjs game . After the
f inesse succeeded

th e

Professor still made only four
because he had to Ipse a low
diamond at the fini sh.
If the Professor had played .
ouLhis ace and king of spades,
East would ha ve been · left
with the good queen. He would
cash it when he got in with the
ace of diamonds and t he

Professor would have wound
up one trick short.

~Q~~

The
student
wa s
An Ohio reader wants to
hiuts. Each day the code letters are dift"erent.
flabbergasted . It seems that
CRYPTOQUOTES
know
wha t to bid with a
the Professor had won the
21 points after the
balanced
heart lead , led a trump to
oswwsu WB KGRS WMXZ dummy's
GW
GL
bidding
has
gone one notrumpace and fine ssed ,
pass-pass,
successfully against East"s
HBLWL queen at trick three .
GW
XZQ
All you can do is to pa ss . nd
WB
v s z Q'
try
to set the notrump bidder.
'" You've told me time and
LGU time again that it is correct to If you double your partner will
LXDS
WMS
play to drop the queen when take your dou ble out.
( For a copy ol JACOBY
KGOOL
EMGVGE
you have nine cards in a sui t. I
know your linesse worked , but MODERN. send $1 to; ·w m
at Brrdge . •· c l o this
Yellerday'a Cryptoquole: EIGHTY PERCENT OF OUR why did you take it?"
" For the simple rea son that newspaper. P. 0 . Bo&lt; 489.
{:RIMINALS COME FROM UNSYMPATHETIC HOMES.
I didn 't care how the finesse Radio Cily S t~tion . Now York,
·
-11ANS CHRISTIAN ANDERSEN
came out. I was _gomg to be N. Y. 10019)
C) ta'7'7 JCiq reatv.n• S7od.l.eete, toe.

60 x 1:2 HOUSE trailer with axpon·
1 thru· out , washer and dryer, air

21

EAST
AQ9 7
¥ K86

• Q J 10 3

MOBILE Home Repair, Elec.,
plumbing and heating. Phone

992-7034.

11 : QO-Wheel of Fortune 3,A,1Si Morning Show 13.
11 :3G-Shoot for the Stars 3,&lt;,15; Happy Days 6, 13;

DOWN

MARTIN

•

8:30--Big Valley 6.
9;1l0--A.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4,13,15; Andy Grlflllh 8;
Mike Douglas 10 .
9:30--Cross-WIIs 3; Edge of Night 6; Concentration 8 .
10;1l0--Sanford &amp; Son 3.&lt;. 15; Dinah 6; Double Dare
8,10; Mike Douglas 13.
10:3G-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15; Price Is Right 8, 10.

WEST
A6

I Eton boy's
mother

992 -5858.
HOWERY AND

•

NORTH
A A I082
• 9742
+ Q4
"' K 6 3

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

do living

Report 3.
6 :50--Good Morning . West Virginia 13.
6 :5$--Good Morning , .Trl Slate 13.
7:1l0--Today 3.4,1 5; Good Morning America 6,13; CIIS
News 8; Chuck White Reports 10.
7:05--Porky P ig IQ.
7: 30--Schoolles 10.
B:OD--Howdy Doody 6; Capl. Kangaroo 8 10 · Sesame

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

Will do roofing, construction
plumbing ond heating. No jo"E:
too large or t'oo small. Phone

fonnarly

Overseas Mission 10.
6 : ~Mornlng

BRIDGE

volcano
P\,;;L'N~:;-::;.::;;~;:;-:;;-:;;-)---~'-""--=-o;o 38 Con~idered
39 Gaelic
John

7&lt;2-23&lt;8.

216 E. Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone 992-3325

(2

Yesterday~•

(2 wds.)
37 Sicilian

SEPTIC TANKS cleaned. Modern
Sanitation, 992-39S.. .

TEAFORD

lr'end
(3 wds.)
f Indian
mulberry
5 With
fortitude
6 Sheeplike
7 Horne of
song
8 HaU-time
entertainer

degree
33 Uncle(d.al.)
Used th&lt;!
telephor.e
35 Iota; whit
36 Functiun

EXCAVATING. dozer . backhoe
and d"iteher. Charles R. Hat-

MA

Z Macaws
3 Follow a

29 Universal
j1 31 To a great

5~2~-~~~----~~-

ings Road , phone 992-3613.

town ,

SCARY HAZING GRAVEN
Answer; Hoo!IO alop a horse- "HALT-'ER "'

BiDwl1 iiwtlalsl Altia

NEW 3 bedroom house, 2 batks, ·
a!l elec .. I acre , Middleport,
close to Rutfond . Phone 9927481.

6 ; 30--Columbus Today 4; News 6; Sunrise Semester 8; ·

4rl5-Little Rascals 4.

CARPENTER &amp;
BUILDERS

"-tl2·2174

byHenriAmofdandBoblee

I

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Rutland , Otlio 4S17S
Ph . (6t4l 742-24011
W e Deliver
12·22 ·4 mos .

TilE' LATEST

NEW HOMES
&amp; REMODELING

HOUSE FOR Sale , 4 rooms , one
both , ponnelled ond carpeted .
living room . Reduced for , quick
sole . 10 lynn Street , just off
Grant and Vine, Middleporf .
May see after S p.m .

Onlv 5279 .95
lii~i~ ·, S01ve
UD.DD
an
1 new
Hatpoint Refrigerator.

3 AND 4 RM . furn1shed and un ·
furnished opts . Phone 992·

John St.

Prehistoric Indian 6.

9:0D--Besl Sellers 3,4,15; Barney Miller 6,13; Hawaii
Flve-0 8; Classic Theatre 33; Movie "CaslleKeep"
10.9:30--Three's Company 6. 13.
IO :OD--Frank Sfnatra 6, 13; Barnaby Jones 8; News 211
10:30--Woman 20.

3102 or (304) 772-3227.

WATER SOFTENER?

985·3805.

SINGER GOLDEN Touch N' Sews.
Odes it all ! Zig -Zags , makes
designs,
automati c
but ·
tpnholer, ond mony other
features.
Just like new ,
original price , $549.9S. Must
se ll for $129.95. Cosh or term$ .

Phone

---

2 BEDROOM · Trailer.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION:

367-0292.

1967 MUSTANG with 1%8 289
~. Phone 992 -2181
motor , Fair shocks , 3 speed
Phone (6141667·6227.
standard transmission . Good
HOOVER UPRIGHT sweepers. 118 ACRES , 2 story house at Rt . 1
co nditiofl.. Just been pointed.
1977 tnodels on sole for just a
Rutland , Ohio. $39,500. Call A I
traction bars . Pl-lol"le 985 -3861 .
fraction of the original cost .
or
Sorgen (61 4) 927 -9081
1975 FORO GRANADA 6 cylil"l9er,
Reduced to $26.50. cosh or
837-S215.
outomatk transmission , power
terms . Co11992-5146.
REDUCED $2000 . 3 bedroom , 2 1/t
st·ering, 4 door . $3000 . Phone
1964 HONDA 305 Scrambler. Has
baths ,
double
garage ,
_ 9M · •~2~
45~·--------~--~
ports for repair or con be u sed
fireplace. air conditioning , I
for ports . A lso, o 1949 Chrysler ~ere tot . Phone99~- 2492 .
body in good shape, $75 each .
HOUSE FOR Sole. Syracuse, 2
Phone 992-5006.
bedrooms and both . lot 100 x
CODNER's CAMPERS. See quality 1975 KAWASAKI KZ -400 street 150. Garage, cement drive and
of SWISS COLONY; BARTH;
bike. Elec. start , disc broke .
small storage bldg. Furnished
CRICKET truck campers ; MAPLE
low mi leage . showroom condi·
or unfurnished . Col/992· 7147,
LEAF spocemoker, PlY MOR ;
tion. Phone 992·3564.
·
CAP KIT cops . NEW-USED Soles ,
tiOUSE IN Pomeroy. 4 bedrooms ,
rental , service , supplies . Toke 1976 CUSTOM KZ7.50 K:owosokl.
both and v~. full basement, 2
low
mileage
.
Cus!lioned
sissy
Meigs 28 or 32 to Boshon .
porches . Phone 992· 7074 or
bar , excellent condition . Call
located on Rainbow Ridge ,
992-3465.
985-4117
.
long Bottom , Ohio . Robert
-40 ACRE Form , Tonner's Run
Codner , owner ,
16FT. Slick 'Croft Soot, fiberglass
Rood , Racine, 1 acre stock
boftom . 80 h.p . Johnson , trailer
1970 APACHE FO LD ·DOWN
pond , ideal for gardening.
and ski equipment. Also 60 h .p. . fishing, 1-lunt!ng . Modern home ,
Com per , sleeps 8, hos extras .
motor
ond
tanks
.
Phone
Phone 992-5756.
seen by appointment only .
992-7201.
_ Phone 949-2605.
NEW Xl -2 Chain saw , $100. Phone 5 RM . Hou$e , 2 bedrooms ,
949·2725 . Or contact landmark .
3 'h a c res ,
Sutton
Twp .
Minersville . Phone 992-6268 or
HOUSE SOLO, couple with 4

...,._

APRIL 23-5 P.M.

EQUIPMENT.

( ANISTER , TYPE Vacuum cleaner
with otl attachments (new).
New INfra·Red heot lamp; 39
inch metal bed ond springs ; us·
ed wnnger type wosl-ler. ~5b
North Fourth St . Middleport ,
Wi lliam Smith .

HOOF HOLLOW Buy, sell , trade
or train horses. RUTH REEVES ,
trainer . Phone (614) 698 -3290.

1970 CHRYSLER NEWPORT. ne-eds
transmission , won 't move .
Good motor ond body, also
other ports . · $100 . See on
Fourth 51. , Syracuse after b

P.:!" .

FORESTRY

Smur~r~·----------------RISING STAR Kennel Boarding,
lndoor·Outdoor runs , grooming
oll breeds , clea n sani tary
faci li ties . Chesh1re. Phone {614)

Shirley's Beauty Nook

PHOTOGRAPHY

EAT HEARTY. Mci&lt;EE!

THI$ COULD E!~ 'lOUR
LAST ltfML!

DECISION IIY
TOMOF&lt;:ROW
MORNIN6 AT"

A

FRIDAY, APRIL22, 1t77
6:1l0--Su.,.lse Semester 10.
6: 15--Form Report 13.
6 :20-Nol For Women Only 13.

&lt;:.t 'tl.

Q

8:1l0--Fantasllc Journey 3,&lt;, IS; Welcome Back, Kotter
6, 13; Wallons 8, 10; Classic Theatre 20; Masterplece
Theatre 33
8:30--What's Happening!! •,13; Porlrall ol a

Retdsvllle, 0 . Ph. 378-6250
~.-_ _._____ .3-27-1 mo.'

.

Chesler, Ohio

Taylor Skidder Model 5· 112;
Timberjock Grapple Skidder
Model 360 GPG : Prentice G -BC
w-342 Bypass groppie . Phone
(614) B38-5345, contact Denni s

'1'12-3333.

1970 CHRYSLER NEWPORT , needs
transmission won't move . Good
motor ond body, also other
parts . $100 . .See on Fourth St . .,
S(!:acuse after 6 p. m .

daughters in need Immediately
of home, 3 or 4 bedroom in or
around Middleport oreo . Phone
9Ci2 -6294 .

Pomeroy, Ohio

USED

and

Sales

t DUNNO·· f5Ui
L"D II~TTER MAKE

RATES

·Service ond SuiJPites.

mo.

PROFESSIONAL

992-7639.

with
license , . '1'f'r&amp;Qe.

ONE NEW
wheelroke ;
mower , 3
American 2
suite. One

-

·Complete

lS.

tAPI'AIN EASJ ..

REASONABLE

Nobil Summit Rood
Rt. 1
Middleport, 0 .
992-572&lt;

"The Origi nators
Not The Imitators' '
2,23-1

Truth 13; Wild Kingdom 15; Almanac20; Consumer
Survival Kll 33.
7:30--Hollywood Squares J.&lt;; O~lo State Lottery 6;
Price Is Righi 8; MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20,33;
Wild Kingdom 10; Nashvil le on the Road 13; Dolly

PARTS • LABOR
GUARANTEED

3, Pomeroy, 0 .

Carpet &amp; Upholstery
"Phone Mike Young
At
992 -2206 or 992·7630

TOMATO , PLANTS, Cabbage,
broccoli , cauliflower. brussel
sprouts , egg plants , hanging
baskets , pots , geraniums ,
begon i as . flats , petunias ,
marigolds, pansies , so lzia ,
bol ·.l m , d i anthu s,
sn ap ·
drobions , olyuum , Vinca, co leus, Cleland's Greenhouse ,
Racine . Geraldine Cl81and.

'192 · 5:..:4.:.:
16:.:...~----~,-

WANTED OLD Pianos, any condi tion . Paying SIO and $25 each,
,irs! floor only. Expert mo\ling.
Fully insured Company. Write
gi\ling direction,s ,
Witte n
Pianos , 8oK 188, Sardis Ohio
43946 . Phone (614)483 -1605.

Automatic
Transmission Service

B.·Model ALLIS ChoJ,.,er tractor .
plows and cultivator included .
Run s good , $800. Phone
843-283&lt; ._~--1974 KAWASAKI '250. i972 Hondc
01
125 . Phone 992 -3181

8EAO'T~N

wANTED - .
manager ' s

7:GO- Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth A; Bo_:tYIIng for
Dollars 6; Treasure Hunt 8; News 10; To Tell the

Young's Carpeting

1973 JEEP CJ5, good condition ,
Plus u tro s. $2900 . Hunker Hi ll
Rood ocron from cemetery.

COUNTRY COUSINS now occep·
ling oppl1cofions for porttime
_
o peni ng s. Apply in person two
tiJI 6 p .m . Friday and Saturday .
April n-Glld 23 .

8,10; Once Upon a Classic 20,33.

SWAIN'S

(304 1773-5721 .

742-2331.

$1100. Phone 949-2307.

IN THE

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC SALE

CORPORATION

---COINS , CURRENCY ,

1972 VEGA , $800. 1972 Plymouth,

GOEGLEIN, ET AL

ACCEPTANCE

TIMBER , ·Pomer oy Fores t Products . Top price for standing
sawtimber . Coil Kent Hanby,
1-446 -8570,

ty . Coli 992-2208.

DEFENDANTS

Roy A. Daugherty
304-675- 1799

.THURSDAY, APRIL 21, 197l
5:30--Adam.12 A; News 6; Family Altair 8; Elec. Co.
:!0.33.
6:Cl0-News 3.U.IO,l3,15; ABC News 6; Zoom :!il, J3.
6:30-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC N~ws 13; Andy Griffith

Superior
Stea·m Extraction

Route

SPfUNG GARDEN Supplies , Cob·
boge , ca uliflower , broccoli ,
end head lettuoe plonfs ,
yellow , white, ond red onion
sets, onion plants . Kennebec.
· cobbler. l&lt;otohdin , Red Pontiac
and Red Losada seed potatoes.
Bulk garden seeds, potting soil ,
peof moss . fruit trees and rose
bushes . M i dway Market ,
Pomeroy , Oh i o , 992 -2582 ,
Bob ·s Market , Mason, W.Va .

_

CASH paid for all makes ond
models of mobile homes .
Phone oreo code 614·423-953 1.

PHONE

STEREO . NEW AM.FM stereo
rad io com bination . S129.95 or
easy terms . Co ll9~·~9b5

Only experienced apply. Contact
Leonard Wilkes, service · manager,
Bob Hawk, Chrysler Plymouth, 280
E. State St. Athens, Ohio. Phone 5936653.
Wiiit~tiEIJtl.F=~r

689 .

CAMPER , $600. Al so. horse
tra iler: ~50 . Phone (614) b9B·

Auto Mechanic Wanted

= - . '"':

ROUTE

WILKESVILLE . (61&lt;1669-3785.

HELP WANTED

-

GARAGE SALE , Misc. items ,
Weds . 20th thru Saturday 23,
6:30 til l 4:30. 4 M i les north of
Chester on the Sumner Road
Watch for signs . Wando Findl·

THANKS TO everyone who
donated their ti me , help , and
talent to our Min strel and
Variety Shaw Ta the people
who donated and worked of
our yard sales' ol~o . to area
business establishments for
their help . A special thanks to
all Sixth Grode parents.
Ches ter Grade School Safety
___fotro
: ;l.:..----~-~-

{41 21 , He

APPLES . FITZPATRICK ORCHARD.

call 992-2156.

SwH.II:I)'

s.

Experienced electrician. good pay. year
around work, must be capable of building
electrical control panel for ir1dustrial ·
machinery from engineering drawings .
Must be familiar with J IC Specifications for
General Purpose Machine Tools. Duties will
include installation of control panel on
machmery and complete wiring of
machinery incl uding installation of conduit
and cable. Please send resume or contact
Dennis McCune c -o Clark Tool and Design,
Inc . 886 Stratford Road. P.O. Box 418
Delaware, Ohio 43015, (614) 363-1961.

IF YOU hove o ser'll'ice to offer
won t to buy or sell something :
oe looking for work . . . or
whatever ... you 'll get resu lts
foster with o Sentinel Wont Ad.

lhru Fru.la y

(4) 21. 28 (51

RUPTUREO TEAR CiAS
FLOOOED THE CAR,
TO DON MV CiAS

Business Services

COAL. limestone. and colclum
chloride and calcium brine tor
dust control ond 5pecial mix ing
salt for farmers . Ma in Street ,
Pomeroy , Ohio or phone 992 ·
3891 ,

WANTED I

FOR RENT OR lease. Moo Moo
Dai ry Born located ol Forked
Run State Pork entrance, l ong
. Bottom . Ohio . For inform ot1on.
call (614 ) 378-6209, after S p.r'! .

~mRS~

Tuc~d&lt;l y

B.

SOMETHING TO Crow About :
Chickel"l d inners feat uring
HOMEMAOI: gravy , homeode
slaw by •Sonny 's reci pe! Dairy
Isle , Middleport .

-

NoonunS:nUrday

FRED

SHIRLEY ' Jeffers" Wolfe is now
the new owner o f lola's. Beau ty
Solon in Syracuse. Ohio . John
St . Sh1rley wos' forme rly
employOO ot Undo's lody Fair ,
Racine , Ohio, Any of my former
patron$ wishing appointmel"lls ,
may coli 992 -25411J. Phone I"!Ow
liited under lolo"s Beauty Shop
Ul"lti l new directories ore issued
ot whkh time the nome wilt be
Shirley's Beauty Nook .

For Sale

--

RACINE GUN Club, We ha..,e
changed our gun shoot to FRI .
DAY . nights. starling ot7 p.m .

SHOO TING MATCH, just o ff Rt . 7
bypas s. Eve ry Sunday at noon .

Muml:i\1

vs

Help Wantiid

Notices

SHOOTING MATCH at Rutland
legion Hall, every Friday .
even1ng . 7 p.m .

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
·

TOP OF THAT, THE

MAS~.

15 Wurdlnu Umlt&gt;•·

C11.Joh
100
150
180
.! 00 .

Television log.for easy viewing

•

111-The Oailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., ThursdaY, April2J, 1977

DOWN ONTH'
JOB AG'IN~!

.l GOOD
J GIRL!!
!

I

�•

•
12-ThP Oailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 , Thursday, April21, 1977

~------A~~a -De;th~-~-1
I

Hike-Bike route
change · announced

I
JAMES SHAWVER
Funeral services will

~

held at 10 : 30 a .m . Friday at

Warehime Fune-ral · tiome on
Airport Rd . for James K.
Shawver, 59 , a resident of 10
Evans Heights , Gallipol is,
who died Wednesday morning in the Holzer Medi ca!

Center . Rev . Frank Hayes

and Rev. Rura Hayes will
officiate. Burial will follow in
Centenary Cemetery .

A retired carpenter at the

I lowers, contributions should
be made to the American
Cancer Society .

MRS. H. E . COLE SR.
The Meigs Association for
wo,-d was received in R
ded Cit'
(MARC )
Galnpolis today ol the death . etar
1zens
chan•ed
the
Hike-Bike
today
o I M rs . Harry E . Co Ie , Sr .,
,..,
mother ol Rev . Harry Cole, route to be easier on older

with the first ch..,kpoinl
being at the Bradbury School.
Riders will then travel TR 174
to SR 124 into Rutland. CR 3
fOrfTler associate pastor of riders.
will be followed to Fort Meigs
the First Baptist Church .
The 25-mile course will and the second checkpoint for
Funeral services w ill be
held Saturday. April 2J, at begin in Pomeroy at 1he lunch where sandwiches and
Peoria, Ill .
Senior Citizens CenLer and pop will be provided.
Survivors include her travel through Middleport to
After lunch the ride will
husband Harry ; three sons : Rt. 7 and then tum left on CR continue on 'CR 3 to TR 171
Richard , Donald and Rev.
near Harrisonville.
Cole.
The third checkpoint will be.
Rev . Cole Is now employed

Gallipolis Sta te Institute. Mr.
Shawver had been In fall ing
health for se¥eral years .
He is surv ived by his wife.
Julia Jones Shawver. two
children, Kent, a senior at as assistant manager of the
Cedarville College Book
G3Uia Academy High School
and
a daughter,
Julia Store. His address is Harr y
E. Cole, PO Box 73~ ,
Roderus of North Versalles .
Pa .. t wo grandchildren , a ' Cedarville. Ohio, 45314 .
sister , Mai-y Ruth Morgan of
F lor ida and a brother,
. OLIVE C. ERDMAN
Charles
Shawver
of
Olive C. Erdman, 68, Long
Mississippi. He was a \n~ te ran Bottom , d ied th is morning at
of World War II .
VE.&gt;terans Memorial Hospital.
Friends may call at the
Mrs. Erdman was born
funeral home from 7 to 9 p.m . June _ 11 1908 to the late
this evenlna . In l ieu of Wi l liam 1and Ol ive Root. She
wa~ a lso preceded in d.eath by
her husband , Loring, in 1954
from all of us to
and one sis ter . Helen Quinn .
She is survived by a
daughter, Joan Carna~a n ,
Long Bottom ; one so n, \,-arry,
Mentor, Ohio ; three sisters,
Mildred Olson and Beverly

Hirsch , both of Willoughby ,

Ohioi two brothers, Frank,
Cape Coral, Fla. and Jack,
Mentor ; three grandchildren ,
and several nie ces C!nd
nephews .
She was a member of the
Jehova h Witne ss Ch urch and
attended serv ices at the
Midd leport Kingdom Hal l.
Funeral services wil l be
Su ndar , 1: 30 p.m . at Ewi ng
Chape with Rona ld Shepard
officiating . Burial will be i n
Chester Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funera l home
after 2 p.m . Friday .

64, formerly of Racine, died
Wednesday morning at the
Adams County Hospital.
A resident of Manchester,
Mrs . Stum·p is survived by
two sons , Gregory and
Danny , both of Manchester ;
two daughters. Bernie Salser
and Dreama Hudson, both of
Racine. Funeral services w ill
be held at 1 p.rn , Friday at the
Wilson Funeral Home in
Manchester and burial wil l be
il"' the Manchester Cemetery .
M o l her s lovtl •~ e • o•e ss.~d

L E. REYNOLDS
Lawrence _
Edgar Reynolds,
71, well known former
Middleport businessman ,
died unexpectedly Wed nesday evening at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Mr. Reynolds, who had not
been
feeling
well
for
sometime ,
entered
the
hospital only a couple of
hours before his ,death.
During hiS career , Mr. ·
Reynolds wbr'ked w ith . his
father at the De Maine
Funeral Home in •Middleport,
later at the Rawling_
s ,Funeral
Home, and fcir thr.ee years .at
the funeral home when it
became· the Rawllngs .Coats
Mortuary. · Mr . Reynolds

her Ch&lt;ldren

tJ~

lhe qlow•ng

bll lh smrs nr color s pr;i l

match lhe l,lnlh n10nth of
ear-lr ch old
8ea1.li!IUI Sly~e S Willi Slill S

td • I to 6 ch•ldren - o•
grandc hrldren Come. on dnd
see me ra.rt•anl cclor!&gt; of all

,......... "'- ""'•"

GOESSLER'S

JEWELRY STORE
Court ~1.
Pomeroy, Ohio

checkpolllt 5.

Ann

Gardner .

,

(Continued from page 1)
castigated the way Young has been, "The differnece is he,'s
white and Young is black. Unfortunately some people still
make that distinction."
·
LEGISLATORS IN TEXAS and Oklahoma have giv~n
tentative approval to replacing the electric chair '!ith lethal
injection_s to execute condemned men "humanely' like you do
stray dogs."
· ·
·
.
The Oklahoma House Wednesday approved an amended
version of the bill already passed by that state's Senate, The
Texas House also gave its tenalive ~pproval to a lethal
injection bill, In Oklahoma the measure now returns to the
Senate for c0nsidaration of House amendments. The Texas
death by inj..,lion bill faces one more House vote before being
sent to the Senate for considers lion.
In both states, supporters argued the electric chair was.a
barbaric method of execution.

Monday,

a rbaat!e of

contest with a perfect 3-4 burled the final two fnlmel
record but was the victim~ a and wu touched for the Dolll
barrage of Poca nfetles final three runa.
resulting in bill first mount • Poca's live I'Wl raUy in tbe
defeat of the oeaJOn.
third UteraUy ldlled the loeal1l
Coach Bruce Knell's Dots and came after two _.. out.
::::·:,:·:•:::::::::::,:·::::::::::::::::::::•:::::::::.:,:·:·&gt;=,:·:&lt;':·:=:· time in their last nine games unloaded a wtal of 11 bue hill Cottrill and Euler bolll flied
Wednesda·y evening when . of which three went for extra out to open the 1nn1n1 but tblll
Poca scored a 9-1 victory over haaes enroute 14 their second the roof fell In 011 the Wbll.tl
the Mason County school.
win of the year over the Bend Falcona. Four couecutlve
Wahama after getting off w
·•~~•- and
,__ •~~• ....
Area nine Poca trlml'ned 11"1 - a ...,_ a roaring start with. six Whlte Fal~ons bY a 5-3 margin triple produced four rulll
ttl'!ffipbs in their first seven .
ftlst
· te back followed by a I'Wl ICOrinl
outings have run Into some in their
encoun r
single to left " the Dolll an
rough going as of late mainly on April 11 and started the
ta: ~ lead
due to some shoddy pitching !ocala in\4 their current skid. tn;""~ managed to' pulh
by a weaky mound COI'JIII arid
The Dots scored one J;llllln aCI'OII their 1ooe IallY In lbe
some key injuries.
the first and added flve !110"' flflh 011 singles by Tim Devil
April 28 is the deadline for
Jeff Collier went into the in the third offTColli~ and Mike Goldlbel'ry. Tim
h
th
four innings. om .. ~......-· Lilclllleld, Rick B......,.
---~-' ......
.
,
1
k
rna mg c anges n
e
.....
Pomeroy • Middleport .
Dulte Smith completed the
telephone directory, Gener~l ·
remainder of the White Falccln
Telephone Co. of Ohio said
offensive attack with a. bue
todaJ YL
·
Veteraas Memorial
Loren WoU~, Juanita Work- hit each with Buzzard's bit
, , Pafker of Athellll,
Admitted - Bessie Sellers,
·
being a double leacllnll off lbe
customer service manager, Racine; Efrain Perey, man. (BtrlllarAPriUI)
fourth.
said any customer with an Pomeroy; Martha Trussell,
Mr. and Mrs. John Rouah,
WaMrna will now return to
incorrect phone listing should
Gilbe Wllso
oo
notify the company's IIOrvice LongBottom;
rt
n, son, Mason, W.Va.; Mr. a
Bachtel Field for two llmell
·office no later than April 28. Tuppers Plainsl Lawrence Mrs. Gary McClaskey, son, before clollng out the week at
He also said customers Reynolds, Middleport; Vinton·, Mr.andMrs. William Eaatern on Saturday af·
Audrey McFarland, Athens; Bums, son, Rio Grande.
temoon. Parken'"••d South
should call if they're planning Gl d
Shi Jd
R ·
~
a change of address before
a ys d Ce Sd,'ff apcmle;t
move&amp; In today fora 4:1$ p.JD,
July 17.
Raymon
un I ,
0 n
PLEASANT VALLEY
meeting with Eastern vlaltlng
1easant.
P
DISCHARGES
Albert
Mason on "'nday.
Discharged - . Glenna ' Runlm, Robertsbarg; James
~
" If we know 0f changes in
advance, we can mak e sure Uttle, Mary Ross, Mary Call,
th e cust omer •s name, ad· Rodney Cremeans, Bessie O'Neil, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
· t h
Basil Evans, Gallipolis; Von
dress an d correc
P one Barnhart, LI' llian Walker, WalJls, Pliny; Mrs. Vemon
·
th
number are listed m e new Ralph Ross, Mary Pickens.
(Continued from ~· 1)
directory," he added.
Rizer, Westerville, 0 .; Mrs.
mmlh.
But tile weatber 111
The 1977 directory is being
Melvin Halstead, Point
October
turned ut~emely
compiled and is scheduled to
Pleasant; Brldgette Pat·
cold
aM
the company
be delivered in July, Other
HolzerMedlcalCenter
terson, Point Pleasant; Bart
entered
the
winter heating
communities listed in the
(Discbarges, Apr1120)
Patrick, Patriot; Mrs. Don
seam
beginning
Nov. 1 at
book with Pomeroy and
William Barnett, Donna Russell, Bidwell; Mont Hill,
below
full
storage
capacity.
Middleport are Letart Falls, Blake, Sylvia Brewer, Leon; and Mrs. Jent Queen,
"Crawford
storage
will
Portland, Racine and Dorothy Buckley, Robbie Middleport.
alleviate
lhla
sltuatilln
by ·
Rutland.
DeLong,
Cloda
Dray,
providing
additional
daliy
Patricia Eldridge, Elsie
E-RCALLED
Farley, Georgia Greene,
The Pomeroy Emergency storage lnjecUon capability
Nora Haner, John Harrison, Squad was called to lot~ and thu the necesaary
Lona Herdman, Douglas Spring Ave., at 7:20 p.m. fiexlbUity to emure full
$15,513 ARRIVES
Hem, Stanley Higgs, Vanessa Wednesday for Infant, utlllzatlm of the nallable
Gov. James A, Rhodes has Johnson, Mary Lookado, Sabrina Hawley, who w.. ill. gas SIIPPly on any giVlll
announced that the Bureau of Elton · Lykins, Richard The child was taken to day," the e&lt;mpany said in a
Motor Vehicles has released McGoon, Lawrence Veterans Memorial Hospital statement.
The e&lt;mpany appl!ed to the
an advance of $4.~06,019 in McQuaid, Melissa Nance, where she was treated and
FPC
for penpl.alon to CCXI·
1976 license plate revenues Robert Nunley, Hurst Prater, returned home. At 9:11p.m.,
for distribution among county Betty Saunders, Shirley the squad went to Bultemut struct the Cr&amp;llford storage
. and local governments across Smith, Jennifer Stover •'' Ave. for Alma Vaughan who facllities in 1973 and It toot
the state. Meigs ·County Virginia Stroop, Beulah was also taken to VMH where four years to obtain FPC
received $15,512.87 of the Walker, Edna Wamsley, she was treated and released. approval for the flrll pbue d.
COIIIIrucllm.
total.
BY GARY CLARK
The
Wahama . White
Falcons, in one of their worst
slwnps in recent years, went
down w defeat for the sixth

sbowen Saturday and lair
Sunday and Monday. Hlgbs
wUI be In the Jllo or the low
70s and low• will be In tbe

....

Deadline

for phone
changes set

H QSPJTAL NEWS

Columbia

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

, ASPEN, COLO. -GRAFFITI COVERS the yellow walls of
the cell in a condemned Aspen jail equipped to hold two
prlspners, liut only one currently is in residence ;_ enterta!J!er
Claudine Looget Miss Longet, her tan from a Mexican
vacation contrasting with the jail-issued white jumpsuite, is
serving a 31klay sentence for the shooting death of her lover,
Vladimir "Spider" Sabich,
·
. Miss Longet, 36, began serving the sentence at .the Pitkin
County Jail Monday, but authorities did not release that
information until Wednesday. She will spend the time in a 14- ·
by·l&amp;-foot cell which is "painted yellow, has private lilva~o,ry
facilities and two beds," a jail spokesman said. The official
said Miss Longet "had no complaints" about the graffiti on the
cell walls.
The cell is the jail's only facility for a female prisoner and
Miss Longet will have to share it with any woman who might
be arrested prior ~ completion of her sentence.

SPECIAL

Non-Slip

Posters,to promote

EARN
MONEY
WITHOU
WORKING!

all Ohio milk

/

..•,

. '

~
lii '\

. -.
SURE! AT
!,.

~

.

Racine Home National Bank
Here, your money works for you even .
when you are on your days off. on weekends and holidays! Money deposited in
-·
time certificate· accounts or passbook
savings accounts earns interest com·
pounded daily. So enjoy your leisure
time knowing that your money is work·
ing for you at the highesi interest rates.

A Home Bank
For
Meie;s County
People

~-

Surv iving are his w ife, Rose

News •• in, Briefs

OPAL L STUMP
RACINE - Opal L Stump,

· by the 9enumc d .amcnd

Riders will then tum south to
SR 143 back Into ·SR 7 and
proceed to the Highland
Ch oreh (chec kporn
· t 4 ) . F rom
there they will go up
Mulberry Heights and back to
the Seuior Citizens Center for

Sta ce Reynolds; a son and . The ride will begin ·at 1q
daughter·on·law, Val Edgar a.m. April 30 and should be
and
Betty
Reynold s, completed in the afternoon.
Morgantown, W. Va .; a
W
doth ·1
ill
sister, Mrs . Gerald (Sara)
ater an
er 1 ems w
Rupe, Midd leport ; a brother. be provided at the checkThomas Ga rdn er Reynolds, points.
Leba non ;
two
grandSince safety iS the key
daughters, Lynn and Gwynn ,
f
and
a grandson
Val feature to a success ul event,
Reynolds, all ol Morgantown ; much effort has been put into
an aunt , Mrs. Will Reynolds, this area . The Meigs County
Middle port , and several Sheriff's Dept has agreed to
meces, nephews and cousins.
d
Funeral services will be help as has the Pomeroy an
held at 2 p.m, Saturday at the Middleport Pollee Dept. Guy
Rawlln~s - Coats · Funeral
Hysell of the Meigs County
Horne w1th Mr. Geor~e Glaze REACT is in charge of safety.
officiating . Burial w1ll be In
Midi:lleport Hilr Cemetery ,
S!}onsor
sh~ets
are
Friends may call at the available at the High Schools,
funeral horne after 2 p.m. Community Mental Health
Frid,ay. The family will Center and Cleland Realty.
rece1ve friends from 2 to 4
.
·
ll
and 7 to 9 p.m . Friday 13 t the For more mformat10n ca
funeral h9me.
992.:1232, 742-3089 or, 9115-4112,

and Shir ley Airwyke , Leroy,

her great rlng

Zion Church on SR 143.

Middleport and d•y cleaning "
establishment and was also
employed by the New York
Cen
tral Ra ilroad tor some
tlme.
Mr , Reynolds was born
May ·1 8, 1905 in Middleport. a
son of the late Val H. and
Margaret

MOM

·"Wlo..,~U
~-Rmg

..,~ da iry shop ln

operated

~

Poca over Falcons 9-1

EXTENDEQ OUTLOOK
Saturday through

RACINE

HOME NAnONAL

BANK

RACINE

OHIO

..

The Ohio Purebred Dairy
Cattle Assn. is sponsoring a
poster contest to promote
milk and milk products.
Posters are to be 14 x 22 inches in size, and be finished
and in the hands of the State
Secretary Kenneth H. Miller,
6435 Hughes Road, Prospect,
Ohio 43342, by Aug. 14.
Posters will be judged the
first part of the Ohio State
Fair, eXhibited In the Booth of
Ohio P.D.C.A. The contest
will be conducted in three
groups this year, the first is
any boy or girl up to age 12
years, the second from age
13·1~ years, and the third
group from ages 1&amp;-19, all
ages determined as of
_January 1, 1977.

MASON DRIVE-IN .
Fri., Sat., ·son.

MIDWAY
Charletoll Heston
Henry Fonda

-AlsoNEWMAN'S
lAW

MULTI-USE

Three trophies will be
awarded in each group, with
the grand champion to
receive a $25 savings bond
(rom the association. Awards
will be made on Saturday,
August ~7.

Mayor declares
fair housing
proclamation
Pomeroy Mayor t:larence
Andrews has issued a formal
proclamation in conjunction
with the observance of Falr
Housing Monday during
April.
It emphasises two points:
-The National Fair
Housing Law of 1968 prohibits
di~crlrnination in housing and
d..,lares it a national policy
to provide, within constitutionalllrnits, fair housing
in the United States.
-Fair housing is not only
national law and national
policy· but a fundamental
human concept and en·
titlement for all Americans.

URATHANE

FOAM BACK

MACHINE
WASHABLE
•
NO IRONING
NEEDED
•
FRINGED
A(L AROUND
•
PROTEOS YOUR
FURNITURE

FOR &amp;TUDitl COUC:ItU

FOR HOLLYWOOD lEOS

FOR OAY!ND H1DEMIDI

fOitM

E....

George Peppard

VACATION

SPEAKERS NOTED
PORTLAND
The .
Reorganized Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter Day Saints
will have two guest speakers
Sunday, April 24. They will be
John Curnmings and Michael
Orin, elder both of Patrian:h,
Dinner wW follow the wor!lhip oervlce.

WATCH FOR

A marri.age license was

MEIGS THEATRE
CLOSED FOR

OPENING DATE

·----,..,.--:=t!

ASK TOWED

issued to Clifford Brent
Manley, :!l:l, Middleport lind
Pamela Jane Morris, 18, Rt.
2, Racine.

SIZE 60x70
VALUES TO S7'1J
SIZE 70x90
VALUE~ 11141
t-

SPECIAL

'377
SPECIAL

•7•7

SIZE 70x120
· VALUES TO '14"
SIZE 70x140
VALUES TO '1~

.,.7

' SPECIAL

SPECIN.

•1017

HOME FURNISHINGS DEPT.-1.ST FLOOR

ELBERFELDS /IN POMEROY

.

By J . R. KIMMINS .
COLUMBUS ( UPI)
Attorney General William J.
Brown charged today that
Columbia Gas of Ohio
decided not to purchase 50
billion (b) cubic feet of
natural gas last Feb, I as part
of a ' 'pattel'!l aoo practice" to
maximize the company's
Jli'Ofits during last winter's
energy crisis,

The charges were made in cuStomers in Ohio, that the
a formal complaint filed by company be prohibited from
Brown belpre the Public terminating service to any
Utilities Commission of Ohio custrrmer and that the
(PUCO) on behalf of gas · officers and dir..,tors of the
conswners who he said 11Suf. Columbia Gas System, Inc.
fered a substantial harm" be removed by court action.
because of mismanagement
Named
in
Brownls
on the part of Colwnbia.
complaint were Columbia
Brown asked that the Gas of Ohio, Inc,, Columbus;
PUCO approve an inunediate Colwnbia Gas Transmission
rate decrease for Colwnbia's Corp, Chatleston, W. Va ., and

the Columbia Liquefied
Natural
Gas
Corp.,
Wilmington, Del .
Bcown said that 110fl or
about Feb, 1, 1977, the Brock ,
Exploration Co. of New Orleans, I.a., offered 50 bUlion
cubic feet of gas lor sale
either to Columbia Gas or
directly to various Ohio
induslrial concerns'; via
Colwnbia Transmission or

Columbia Gas pipelines.
"Columbia Gas refused to
purchase the Brock gas or to
act as the conduit lh a
1ransaction between Brock
and one or more ofthe 41 Ohio
industrial concerns,' ' said
Brown,
" The Brock incident is not

~rtU:~~tt~~a~:'pc;'~c:~

that has as its primary

objective maximizing
Columbia System's profits
and convenience without
regard to Columbia Gas's
obligation to give adequate
service.''
Brown listed 63 specific
i n s t· a n c e s
o f
" mismanagement" in his
complaint to back up his
contention
that
"an
emergency exists in which

program.
- Failed to build adequate
underground gas 11orage
supplies.
harm.''
Among the specifics of
- Sold 4.0 billion (b) cubic
Brown's complaint, in feet of natural gas in late
addillon to the " Brock July, lp75, even though the
incident," were that the utility
had
already
Colwnbia system:
announced It would Mt be
. Prevented
full able to meet its d(&gt;mestlc
production of natural gas in demand in the coming winter.
Ohio through the "self-help"·
(Continued on page 12)

enttne

CHICAGO (UP!) - Republican elder statesman Alf
M. Landon gave President Carter high marks aoo atrong
support today for his bipartisan foreign policy.
In a speech prepared for delivery at Chicago's
Executives' Club, Landon, 89, wamea the Soviet Union
remained on a path of world domination. ·
He said Western leadets inust recognize. the Soviets
"see detente not only as a way to avoid a catastrophic
nuclear war but as a powerful tactical weapon" iQ their
global strategy.
Landon, the former GOP governor of Ka"""" and
Franklin Roosevelt's opponent for the presidency in 1936,
offered no criticism of Carter in his speech devoted to a
reassessment of American foreign policy.
"! endorse President Carter's firm stand on keeping
the Helsinki Accord - and his prompt action in pulling
together NATO," Landon said,

J

VOL. XXVIII NO. 6

POM EROV-MIDDLEPDRT, OHIO

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 1977

Sr. citizens
day planned

Carter vows
real fight
'

be refunded directly to every
WASHINGTON (UP!) - person in the United States"
President Carter vowed as a dir..,t tax credit on their
today to "fight ,,. to the last income tax returns or as a
vote in Congress" for his refund in the case of a person
proposal to encourage energy who doesn't pay income taxs.
conservation with a gasoline A family oi four, he said,
tax that could reach liO cents would receive a $100
a gallon.
reduction in taxes or that
In a nationally televised much of a refund.
news
conference that
The propoSed standby tax,
Wrapped up his weeklong he sald, "is not severe."
euergy blitz, Carter said the
Ca r t e r r e i t e r a I e d
gasoline tax is an essential opposition to business tax
part of his plan despite the incentives approved
con1roversy it .'. has raised Thursday by the Senate as
among members of Congress. part of an overall tax bill.
He denied he proposed it as a Carter, who . originally
proposed business tax incen•
bargaining chip.
· "I will fight for it to the last lives, asked they be dropped
vote in Congress," Carter at the same time he
abandoned his $50 individual
881'd.
He denied he would tax rebate.
,
use the increased tax . He said he would meet with
on gasoline '· as a bar- Senate Finance Conunittee
gaining . chip for other Chairman Rllssell Long, [).
programs, declaring, "I'm La., later today to discuss the
deeply committed to the bill, and would d..,ide when
standby gasoline tax as part the measure reaches his desk
of a comprehensive and well whether to sign it.
bslanced overall energy pro- . carter also said there had
gram.,.
'been "erroneous reporting"
He said !he standby tax is a of his decision to ask that
"good idea"that will actually independent petroleum
"help greatly families who drillers be allowed intangible
participate in the program by drilling expellSe deductions,
cutting down on gasoline which would result in a tax .
break of up to $50 million,
consumption,' •
If the nation fails to meet
He nQted that the 1976 tax
conservation goals and the · reform act took away
first 5-&lt;'ent-tax takes effect, intangible drilling deduc,ions
Carter said, the federal frorri individuals - but not
1reasury would receive about from corporations.
$6 billion in revenue,
"That needs to be
This swn, he said, "would equalized," he said.

the public has suffered a
substantial injury and is in
danger of suffering further

•

Landon gives Carter high
marks for foreign policy

By EDWARD K. DeLONG

TillS DANCE TRIO WilL be among the featured
performers in the clown theme minstrel making up onehaU of the annual "Sprin~ F~" of the Big Bend Minstrel
ASSociation. From the left are Jayne Hoeflich, Cathy

Blaettnar and Velvet Swisher. Curtain time Is 8:10 p,m.
Saturda~ in the Meigs High School Auditorium.
Sponsormg the show are the Meigs Local Athletic
Boosters.

'

Tuesday, May 17 has been
proclaimed by Governor
Rhodes as Senior Clti2ens
Day in Ohio. Each of the 88
counties · is planning ob·
servances in honor of their
citizens.
Cb·
senior
chairpersons for the Meigs
County Council on Aging are
Mrs, Lula Belle Hampton and
Mrs. Lillian Moore.
A special luncheon Is being
planned that day honoring
Meigs County senior citizens.
The lunch is being provided
thro"gh
the Nutrition
Program of the Community
Action Agency. There will be
no donations accepted .that

2 charged
·Piketon plant's
future
··
,
·
,.
.
·in traffic
clouded by Carter plan accident
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Worried state Qfficials are after
President Carter for reassurance his ene~gy policy will not
mean dwnpmg the $4.4 billion planned addition to the Piketon, .
Ohio, uranium enrichment plant.
.
Carter's energy speech to Congress Wednesday touched ofi
the cpncern because although he pledged to expand enriched
uranium production in the U.S,, Carter urged use of centrifuge .
technology,
The Piketon addition, first budgeted by former Presid.ent
Ford, however, is a gaseous diffusion plant design.
An administration official, who refused to commit President
Carter to either site, later said a major new factory will be
boilt in Ohio or Tennessee and the addition at Piketon would be
affected,
In his revised budget in February, Carter apj,roved the 197778 budget outlay for the Piketon plant. A White House fact
sheet issued before Carter's speech, however, did not specify it
for expansion.
Gov. James A. Rhodes fired off a telegram to the President
Thursday saying his failure to fulfill the commitment made by
the federal goverrunent in Piketon would be a "sell-out to the
people of soUthern Ohio."
Rhodes said southern Ohio is experiencing the state's
highest unemployment rate, and loss of the ·planned facility,
which would double the capacity of the Piketon plant, would
"wreak an everlasting hardship on the people."

Improvements ,Spring concert
draw' interest well received

~e
FOR SOFAS

Columbia profiteered PUCO told

A capacity audience gave
The chann and beauty of who has indicated interest in an enthusiastic reception to
fomeroy as an Ohio River the project.
Meigs Junior and Senior High
community will be restored
Much of the architectural Vocal students of Mrs, Paige
and preserved if interest style, typical of America in D. Hunt at the annual spring
shown by properly owners is the 1890s is almost com- concert held at the Meigs
a gauge.
pletely intact on Pomeroy's Junior , ~ligh School in MidThat was how the Pomeroy buildings with cornices, dleport Thursday night.
Citizens' Action Commitee wrought iron hanging
The audience gave, special
described the reaction after it balconies and architectural . approval to a girls' quintet of
invited owners of property in ornamentation.
Jo McKinney, Bev Wilcox,
the downtown area to par- The emergence of the Laura Hoover, Jeni Grate
ticipate ,in a building front Pomeroy Citizens Action and Paula Eichinger, ac·
improvement program.
group indicates a major pride companied by Teresa Ellis,
The first phase of the arid commi tmen t in im~ who presented excellent
project
includes
an proving the appearance of the vocal work and movement
evaluation of the buildings by town. A special 119nse of over· doing 11 No One's Perfect"
a design group from Ohio all
community
prid ~
and "The Boogie Woogie
University , Graphic hopefully will be a major Bugle Boy of Company B."
presentations and design accomplishment of the
The audience also was
proposals will be revie.wed project.
especially receptive to a
with each property owner
salute to the 1950s by the
senior high studen.ts who
wore clothing of the era as
they sang and moved about
the stage doing such songs as
"Peppermint Twist ,''
''Blueberry Hill," ~~Rock
By Uolted Press International
Around the Clock," "Let the
WASmNGTON -FIVE SUPREME COURT justices have Good Times Roll" and others,
decided in secret not to consider the Watergate convictions of
Senior high vocal I!J'OUP
Richard Nixon;s three top advisers, but Chief Justice Warren instrumentalists included
Burger is trying to change their minds, National Public Radio Miss Ellis and Jeni Grate
is reporting. NPR correspondent Nina Totenburg reported with Bev Wilcox as the
Thursday the justices, at the court's weekly s..,ret conference student director.
a week ago, voted 5-3 against hearing the appeals of John
The senior high gro up
Mitchell, H, R. Haldeman a.od John Ehrlichman.
after a costume change,
Totenberg quoted Supi\me Court sources as saying tbe returned to the stage to do
three justices who voted to review the cases all were Nixon "Send in the Clowns,"
appointees- Burger and Justices Harry Blackrnun and Lewis ''Sabbath Prayer." "Sum(Continue&lt;! on page 12)
·
mer Me, Winte·r Me," "All ls

"The economy of the region sorely needs the stimulus that
is being generated by the present expansion of the Piketon
plant," said the·governor.
Sens, John Glenn and Howard Metzenbaum, both Mhio,
have also written Carter to urge completion of the project.
The senators have also set up a citizen's meeting in
Portsmouth for S;Iturday with Robert Fri, head of the Energy
Research and Development Administration (ERDA),
sponsoring agency of the plant.
The meeting is to allow state aoo federal officials, busuiessmen, citizens and civic and labor leaders the chance to look at
President Carter's statements and express their views.
The senators said in a joint press release, "The public wants
to know why, after promises and studies to tbe contrary, the
goverrunent is reconsidering construction of the plant near
Portsmouth, Atremendous amount of money has already been
spent ·on planning, site st11dies, environmental impact
statements and staffing."
They- like Rhodes in his telegram-stressed that the
Piketon site could be used for the new technology.
The meeting ls scheduled for 12:30 p.m. Saturday at the
PortsmoUth American Legion HaiL
,
Milan Marsh, president of the Ohio AFUIO, wired Ohio
congressmen Thursday asking their belp in restoring the
powet project.
"I understand President Carter has canceled this project
and .intends to have the addition built in Tennessee," said
(Continued on page 12)

'''~:~=;::,;:== ~~~=~ ,,~,, . $250,000 suit
Sunday through Tues- .filed ag,..;..,St
day,
a
chance of
showers Sunday and
Monday and mostly fair
Tuesday. Highs will be in
the 60s or the low 70s and
lows will be In the 40s.

~L

3 ,defendants

Fair In Love," and "Comer
of the Sky."
A suit in the amount of
Light numbers which
$250,000 has been filed in
received the approval of the ::;;;::::::::·:::::::::::::::::::::::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::::::::::::· Meigs County Common Pleas
audience were prellented by
Court by Clayton E, Schar·
the seventh grade and the
tiger, administrator of the
eighth grade choral groups.
estate of Cora Schartiger,
Seventh graders, ·many
deceased,
carrying their favorite
Defendants in the suit are
stuffed animals, sang .
·
Landma.rk . Inc,, Columbus,
"Playground in My Mind,"
Residents of the Meigs Pablo
Jan
Vannoy,
"Sing.'' &lt;~Happiness/' uChim · County Infinnary will be Newport, Ohio, and Otto A.
Chirn Cber-ee" and "Mickey guests of the Meigs High Marcinko, Rt I, Reedsville,
Mouse
March ,''
In· Athletic Boosters at the as the result of an accident in
strumentalists were Jeff Saturday night presentation which Mrs. Schartiger was
Nash, Fred Young and of the Big Bend Minstrel killed on Sept 9, 1976 on SR 7
Melinda Thomas.
Association's "Spring Fling" near Tuppers Plains.
Eighth graders sang "Top at the Meigs High SchooL
A second suit filed was by
of the World," " I Write the , Joining the cast of the show the Pomeroy National Bank
Song " 10 Let's Get Together/' m a novelty number for against the Ohio Valley Mfg,
"Ticket to Ride," and ''Song tomorrow night'~ show will Co., Tuppers Plailjs and H. A.
Sung Blue!'
be Kim and Randy Batey in Col~, Tuppers Plains in the
Instrumental numbers the original dance routine to amount of $3,022.06.
were by Jayne Hoeflich, Beth "Who Loves You?" Some 30
A declaratory judgment
Perrin Camille Swindell, numbers make up this was filed in court in favOI' of
Jean H~rton and April King. spring'~ show with ~embers the Grange Mutual Casualty
Receiving the award for the of the high sc~ool jumor class Co., Columbus, against John
outstanding member of each to hpld a priZe candy sale S, Thomas, Middleport, et aL
group were Greg Thomas and durin~ the , intermission.
The petition said Elson
Jeff Nash, seventh g~ade; Curtam t•me IS 8:10p.m, , . O'Connor negligently pulled
Unda Eason, eighth grade,
into the path of Thomas, and
and Bev Wilcox, senior high,
by reason of negligence of
who · will receive trophies
O'Conner, Thomas was in·
later . Seniors who were in~
jured. He fixed his special
IN HOSPITAL
traduced also will ·receive
and general damages In
Mrs. Laura Watson, RD. excess of the policy limits of
awards later.
The program closed with . Racine, is a patient at $12,500,
the senior high chorus bei~g Pleasant Valley Hospital.
In another entry Homer
joined by the eighth grade Her room numbet is 220. Hysell was appointed a
chorus to do Beethoven's r:ards and letters would be deputy sheriff of Mei gs
appreciated.
"Hallelujah ."
County,

Boosters will

sponsor guests

'

day.
Invitations are being sent
to the county commissioners,
the mayors of th.e villages
and other dignitaries.
Recognition will be given lo
persons and organizations
who because of their tlme and
effort on a voluntary basis
have helped the Meigs County
senior citizens programs to
become one of the best in the
State of Ohio,
Special recognition will be
given to the 260 senior
citizens in the Retired Senior
Volunteer Program,
Persons 100 years of age
and older will be honored and
persons between 90 and 100
years of age will be
recognized, The council Is
trying to locate senior
citizens in this age group,
Persons who know of
someone 90 years of age or
older should call Mrs,
Hampton 992-2021, Mrs.
Moore 992-7231 or the staff at
the Center.
An open Invitation is given
to all senior citizens in Meigs
County to attend Senior
Citizens Day. If wsslble, call
the Center 992-7886 or 902-7884
prior to Tuesday, May 17 so
that the kitchen staff will
have an estimate of the
number to prepare for ,
Churches are being asked
to honor senior citizens in
some way on Sunday, May lo. ·

Both drivers were charged
with driving left of cent.e r and
one person was injured ,in a
headon collision at 4 p.m.
Thursday on the ·Eno-Vinton
Ret six tenths of a mlle east of
SR 160.
The Gallla • Meigs Post
Slate Highway Patrol said
cars driven by Rebecca A,
Denney, 25, Vinton, and
Pamela M. Alley, 19 , ·
Senior citizens who have .
Gallipolls, collided at a hillnever been to the Center have
crest
Mrs. Denney was taken to a special invitation to attend
the Holzer Medical Center for Senior Cltiz.ens Day at the
treatment of minor injuries. Meigs County Senior Citizens
There was heavy damage to Center in Poljleroy,
both cars,
.
James D. McGuire, Jr,,
20,
Crown City, escaped
injury
in
an
accident at 12:10 'll.m.
today oli SR 218 In the village
of MercerviUe: The patrol
said McGuire appareutly fell
asleep at the wheel of his
pick-up truck. His vehicle ran
off the left side of the highway
then rolled over on its top.
There was heavy damage.
The first of two Meigs
County accidents occurred at
Classes for the 1977·78
1:15 p.m. Thursday on SR 7, school year will gei underway
at CR ~ where an auto driven on Tuesday, Aug, 30, acby David Lucas, 28, Zanes- cording to the new calendar
ville , sideswiped a ca r adopted by the Meigs Local
operated by Jennifer M, . Board of Education.
Miller, 25, Letart. There was
Teachers of the district will
moderate damage . · Lucas meeton Monday, Aug, 29, and
was Cited for passing at an schools will close on Monday,
intersection.
Sept. o, for Labor Day. The
A single vehicle. mishap · first six weeks will end Oct. 7.
occurred at 3:25 p.m. on TR
There wUl be no school on
12, one and three tentbs miles Oct. 21 during the second six
souih of SR 248 where an auto weeks grading period due to a
driven by Vonna K, Taylor, teachers meeting. The second
48, Long Bottom, ran off the six weeks will end on Nov, 18.
roadway striking a large
Vacations are
more
rock. No citation was issued, prevalent during the third six
weeks grading period with
classes being dismissed on
Cloudy, cooler toni ght , Nov. 24, Thanksgiving, for a
showers likely; lows around long weekend and on Dec. 22
50, &lt;;:hnce of showers for the Christmas holiday
Saturday morning ; highs in period with Students retur·
the upper 60s. Probability of ning to classes on Jan. 3. The
pr..,ipitation ncar 100 per six weeks will eud Jan , 13.
Students will have a
cent today, 70 per cen t
holiday on the first day of the
tonight, 40 per cent Saturday
fourth six weeks with the
morning.
observance of Martin Luther
~
King Day on Jan. 16, The six ·
CALLS ANSWERED
weeks will end on Feb. 24,
The
Middl e port
Spring break falls in the
Emergency Squad answered
fifth six weeks period which
a call to 3'16 Beech St, at
starts on Feb. 'lJ . The spring
10:26 a.m. Thursday for Orin
break will begin at the close
Smith. Dr. J . J , Davis was
of
classes on March 23 with
called to the home. At 9:48
classes to be reswned on
p.m. Thursday , the fire
March 28.
department went to ·the
The final six weeks will
Storys Run Road w,hcre a
begin
on April 17 and will
truck owned by Jack
enn
May 26 with no
Frederick was on fire .
holidays
during the entire
Damages to the truck were
period.
set at $200,

Oasses
to begin
Aug. 30

Weather

'\

I

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="789">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11324">
                <text>04. April</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="48238">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="48237">
              <text>April 21, 1977</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="106">
      <name>cole</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2766">
      <name>erdman</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="278">
      <name>reynolds</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4248">
      <name>shawver</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3632">
      <name>stump</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
