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•

'
d
h
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Court or ers ex umatzon zn

VEHICLE REGISTRAfiON perliOII. ·
OOLIJMBUS {UPIJ -- The ·. BecaUIO! of the extra ,...Up.

OAK GROVE- The Oak Grove Sunday School Class held
a picnic at Racine Locks and Dam July 17. Attending were
Gamet Chapman, Laura Gibbs, Jo Robinson, Roy and Martha
Friend, Raymond, Norman and Bruce ; Rev. Bobby Woods,
Eddie and Craig; Sue Icenhower, Amy and Allen; Clarence
and Naomi Yeager, Beverly Jordan, Hollice aivl Albert
'Thompson; Lester and NeiUe Adkins, and Ercell Adkins.
MASON- The Helping Hand Extensjon Homemakers met
Wednesday for a cookout at the home of Mrs. Freddie
Thabet's. Mrs. Earl Ingels, Sr., led in the Pledge of Allegiance
and Lord's Prayer.
Mrs. Lester (Joy) Foreman presented devotionals, 2nd
Psalm, lffid a poem, 1 '0thers.'~
,
. Mrs. Ingels -reported on the Mason County Homemakers
County Council meeling which she attended.
Tbe next county council meeling will be Sept. 6 and in
November there will be a Learn and Return Day at Cedar
Lakes for lesson leaders in January, February, March and
APril.
On August 12 Mrs. Doc is Roberts and Lois Ann YoWJg will
work at the Homemakers' booth at the Mason County Fair. She
asked club members to have items ready to take to Mason
County Fair on August 9, tbe opening day.
The club will hold a picnic at the former Virgil A. Lewis
home on Aug. 17 at 6 p.m.
·
At the close of tbe cookout - Mrs. Charlotte Jenks was
awarded the door prize.
Attending were Mrs. Earl Ingels, Sr., Mrs. Lois Ann
Young, Mrs. Delwon Roberts, Mrs. Joy Foreman, Mrs. Lucy
\Johnson, Mrs. Freddie Thabet and Mrs. Charlotte Jenks.

Wednesday

legislation motor vehicle reslstratloo

Ch. eshz·re Twp. J-'armer's_r _d_e_a_t_h_..:.~:·ug~"!t=:~u!~~~e.::~:a:::.:u:.::;..:~:::to:;.:~:.;~:on.:::--:;.R~-banon-Rep_.:
[~~u~-;:~~r.o;:;j ~:~:y~:,·~~:::~y~ ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
4

The remains of Albert
Thompson , 70, Rt . 21
Cheshire. a possible murder
victim last S&lt;:ptember, will
be exhumed from its resting
place at Gravel Hill
Cemetery for pathological
study at the Franklin County
Coroner's office in Columbus.
That decision
came
Wednesday prior .to the
opening of a preljminary
hearing for Clyde . Ramey
Ratcliff, 50, Athens, charged
with first degree murder in
Thompson's death.
Acting Municipal Court
Judge Thomas Moulton
granted a request by
Prosecuting Attorney Joseph
L. Cain for a continuance in
the matter based upon section 5-B-1 of the Criminal
R,ules for the State of Ohio.
Under that section, a

a van uaed.by a handicapped

circumstances in the best Cheshire Twp. fanner, whn
interest of jll.!tice.
may have ~n murdered last
Pro!II'Cuting Attorney cain Sept. 14, was not found for
argued that since no autopsy two weeks. At that time, no
was taken when the victim's autopsy was ordered and the
body was found last Sep- exact cause of death was not
tember he felt it would be in detennined.
the best interest of justice if
According to the deat,b
the body were exhumed for certificate, no autopsy was
examination.
·
· perfonned due to decom. Court appointed defense position of the body because
counsel William Conley made wild animals had consumed
exceptions to the request. He parts o( it.
said the defendant - Clyde
First degree murder
Ratcliff- did not wish to charges have also been filed
waive his right to a against Terry McCune, 28,
preliminary hearing within Columbus. His preliminary
the five day limitation period hearing has been set for 11 a.
and that the state had failed m. Monday, Aug. I. However,
to prove any basis for a it too' is expected to be concontinuance.
tinued pending the results of
Judge Moulton sel the tests by forensic experts in
Colwnbus. Bonds have been
set at $250,000 for each

Last distribution made

an additional $5 levy on each
set of license plates sold in
1975. The counties received 47
per cent of the remainder of
$3,049,892.04 while the
municipalities shared 34 per ·
cent, or $3,261,620.34, on the
basis of vehicle count.
Meigs County received
$30,338.97.

State Auditor Thomas E.
CLIFTON -AnopenmeelingwillbebeldAug.17 at 7 p.m .
Ferguson's
office - reported
in the courtroom at Mason County Courthouse by citizens of
Tuesday
the
final
distribution
Clifton concerning inoorporaling the town.
of 1975 state motor vehicle
MASON - Gary Schwabe of New Orleans, was honored registration fees totaling
recently at a family get--together at the home of his aWJt and $11,197,135.4S to Ohio coununcle, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Harbour: on his i3th birthday. A ties, cities, townships and
.
football shaped cake was served along with ice cream by the villages.
Of
the
amount,
$3,816,450.13
hosts to Gary, Mrs. Matilda Noble, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Elmer
and daughter, Nancy; Mr. and Mrs. Mike Harhour, Mr. and went to 80 counties or their
municipalities that imposed
Mrs. Pete Karschnik, Keith and Kevin.

Cain

and his assistant Richard C.
Roderick, Jr., have declined
to give a complete account.
!Wbbery has been mentioned
as a possible motive.

of the ltll.

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
FINAL DAYS OF OUR
ANNUAL JULY CLEARANCE SALE
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8

MEN'S AND BOYS' WEAR
Save so Per Cent on men's short sleeve shirts · entire stock at dress shlr1s · sport shirts
. knit shirts. Save on entire stock of boys' back-to.schoollunt 1nd slacks- 1port shirts
and knit shirts. Men's sport coats are Jh Price - plus select group of men's dress
slacks at so Per Cent Savings.
·

VOL XXVIII

NO. 74 ·

'.

.

•

•

JO s

ore miners 0
United Press International.
An estimated 52,100 Appalachia ·coal miners
remained off the job today In
protest of cutbacks in
medical and reiirement
benefits, after United Mine
Workers officials met
privately Thursday In West
Virginia trying to find ways

IAl coax them back to work.

The nwnber of strikers in
. West Virginia swelled to
40,000 Thursday, increasing
bY 12,000from the day before.
In Kentucky, 10,QOO miners
boycotted work and another
2,700 were out in Ohio,
· apparently following roving
picketing by West Virginia

miners.

snowball, so too did a planned
march on Washington.
Miners in District ·17, tbe
largest district in the UMW,
voted tn establish a
fundraising conunittee for
the event, which is acheduled
for next week.
The strikes have flared
repeatedly dtll'in!t the past

About 2,000 miners were off
in Pennsylvania, mostly as a
result of closings .following
last week's severe flooding .
Most coal operations in
eight 50Uthern West Virginia
counties were shut do~n
Thursday,
As the strikes conlinued to

five weeks stnce the cutbacks
were announced when the
Biturninooll 'Coal &lt;Jperal,ors
Association, which pays
royalties to the funds based
on production, refused to shif\
money from the retirment
fund to prop up the health
fund.
"Everybody's just going to
continue as it is s&amp;id miner
Roger Hammack at a union
rally in Whitesville, W.Va.
"We'll stay out 'til we get
what we want or to hell with
it."
. vernon
Massey,
International Executive
Board member from District
17, criticized the striking
miners.
"I
believe
they're
worsening the situation,
rathlir than bettering lt,"
Massey said. "I'm still
pleading and begging the
membership to go back to
work."
According to the ·West Virginia Coal Association, tbe
wildcat strike has cost West
1"

Save
50 Par Cent on children's sportswear - swim wear. tops - sfeepwear . and
savings too on women's sports.wear, dresses. uniforms.

SAVE $5000 AT THE WAREHOUSE

'-.On Refrtgerators -

PRICE Fl FTEEN CENTS

FRIDAY, JULY 29, 1977

POMEROY·MIODLEP08T, OHIO

WOMEN'S
AND
CHILDREN'S
WEAR
over

Due to the complexity of
Prosecutor~

!lpOiliiOl'

.j

suspect.

the Ca.se,

at y· enttne

~~'!n~:ntu~a~m~:~ =~orcas::;=:·=

'

•

•

Sale prices limited to stock on hand.

OPEN SATURDAY 9:30 TO 5 P.M.

Virginia about one million
tons of coal, $7 million in
wages· and $2 million _in
contributions to the Health
and Retirement Funds since
July 11, when the miners
returned from the annual
two-week mine shutdown.
"It's going to hurt the funds
every day they don't go back
to work," lamented Sam
Church, vice president-elect
of the UMW. "It's probably .
going to result in further
cuts."
John Guzek, president of
UMW district 6 in Bellaire,
Ohio, had a slmUar view.
wfhis
won't
solve
anything," he sald. "There's
not a damned thing to be
gained by it...
.
UMW
Church
said
President Arnold Miller has
been hospitalized for high
blood
pressure
and
exhaustion while the strike
was building. Church said he
is teipporarily supervising
day-t&lt;H!ay union operations.

New books at library listed

Mason Personals
Mrs. stella Turner, Pt. Pleasant, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
Songer of St. AlbanS, W. Va. visited over the weekend with Mr.
Twenty-five books of new Maria and Georgette Heyer'S
and Mrs. Darrell Jenks.
fiction at the Pomeroy April Lady.
Mr.and Mrs. Ross King, New Haven, Mr. and Mrs. LeSter Ubrary are:
Also available at the
Johnson, Clifton, spent a vacation at Cass, W.Va. and other
Library
as
Laura Conway's ' Dark Pomeroy
interesting places.
Dream, Carson McCuller's reference bOoks are several
The Member of the Wedding, telephone books for anyone
•
MASON- Tbe Mason Extension Homemakers met in July Daphne Du Maurier's who would want to find nonat the former Virgil A. Lewis home for a potluck dinner. Mrs. Frenchman's Creek, local telephone numbers and
Laurene Lewis, president, presided during a brief business Kingleys Amis' The Green addresses.
meeting when the Mason CoWJty Fair was discussed, Man, Richard Brautigan'§
Volunteers are needed for fair booth on Saturday evening, Sombrero Fallout, William
GERIATRIC MEDICINE
Aug. 13, from 6 to 9 pm.
·
Trevor's The Children of
.
OOLUMBUS(UPI)-Each
The next meeting will be .a picnic at 6 p.m. at Mason's Dynmouth,
William
school
or college of medicine
Park. Lessons and leaders for tbe coming year were reviewed Golding's Lord of the Flies,
by the 'leader.
Custom
Ken Kesey's One Flew Over · in Ohio would be required to
She reported that a Learn and Return Day will be held at the Cuckoo's Nest, Robert create an office of geriatric
Cedar Lakes, Nov. 1. Four lessons will be taught in tbe Bloch's Cold ChiUs. P, N. medicine under terms of a It
morning for January, February, March and April.
Gwynne's Finnly by the Tail, bill passed by the Ohio Senate It
At the opening of the meeling following the Pledge of James A. Michener's Hawaii, Wednesday.
The bill, which was sent to . It
Allegiance and Lord's Prayer, the treasurer, Mrs. Roberta Robert Ludlum's The
Gov.
James A. Rhodes for his It
Youllg, reported.
Chancellor Manuscript,
review,
paased 32-to-1.
It
Mrs. Dorothy Queen thanked the club for· tbe potted Sylvia Townsend Warner's
flowers she received during ber recent hospitalization.
~
Kingdoms of Elfin, F. Scott
Mrs. Lester Johnson and Mrs. Helen Williams will be Fitzgerald's Tender is the
hostesses in September. The July lesson on auto care was Night, Henry Btowtnell's The
taught by Mrs. J . Marshall.
Slightest Distance, Leonard
Thur.-Fri.
Attending were Mrs. Catherine Smith, Mrs. Laurene Harris' The Masada · Plan,
July 28-29
Lewis, Mrs. Lilah Zerkle, Mrs. Alma Marshall, Mrs . .Dorothy Victor Canni·ng's The
Q.teen, Mrs. Evelyn Stewart, Mrs. Hazel Smith, Mrs. RobE:rta Runaways, Charles MeDouble feature
Program
Young, Mrs. Clara Williams, Mrs. Sarah Spencer, Mrs. Joyce Carry's The ' Tears of
Burt
Reynolds
Carson.
Autumn, Joanna Glass'
GATOR
Reflections on a Mountain
PG
POINT PLEASANT -I received a West Virginia Artists' Summer, Stephen Baker's
and Craftsmen's Guild Newsl~tter from 0. L. "Tubby" Dog Tags, Brian Aldiss'
Richard Harris
FitzRandolph of Pt. Pleasant. Tubby is the editor and for Frankenstein Unbound, E. M.
THE
sometime we haven't heard from him.
Beekman's The Killing Jar,
RETURN
As many of you know, Tubby and his wife Helen turn out a Eve Stephens' Mission to
PG
lot of handmade items of wood. Tubby whittles birds and all Malaspiga, Eugenia Price's
kinds of creatures. I'm not real sure what all his critters arethere are so many -but anyhow, Helen paints the birds and
what have you. I saw them at Cedar Lakes this year amon~
Beauti fy · and protect your home at a money-saviQg
their birds, hand carved wooden fruit, etc.
'
.
low Price. This low shtien exterior latex hoUse pai~t ·
'WEATHERALL"' - -Our finest finish for house and
This year their daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Win
hides sUrface irreguliHft ies. Produce~ a smooth, un1 · ..
ttim. It's tough, duHtlJie ac,yli.; formula protects and
Holt of Charleston; displayed and sold their handcarved items
form paint film that resists fumes, blisterin.g, fading
wears like oi l·base ; resists weather. stains and smog . .
at Cedar Lakes. Mr. Holt became interested and was taught by
and mildew. D.ries bug-free in 30 minutes. Water
Yet it's la tex easy-to-apply. Super hiding. Fast drying.
Tubby, so now,afterfive years of carving wood items, Mr. and
cleanup. For primed wood, concrete, stucco. White &amp;
Water cleanup. For primed wood, concrete.~ stucco.
'Mrs. Holt have joined in the family !lllterprise. ·Among their ·
Rich, low sheen. 36 new "Jamestown" Colors and
items were a nativity scene, ducks of all kinds, and birds.
-9 popular colors .
He is 'elllployed' by the Libby Owens Ford Co. in
White.
Charleston.
'
At the guild's annual meeling at Cedar lakes several
olrlcers were elected : 0. L. FitzRandolph was elected first
,
&gt;
•
vice president; Edna Henderson, Charleston, second vice
president; Jerry Weaver, Salem, W. Va., Pat Fetty, Sweet
Springs, and Helen Harris, Charleston, were all elected to the·
hoard of directors.
Philip Maxwell is tbe guild president and other directors
are Harley Burns of Pt. Pleasant; Sally Blackwood, L. Eugene
Dickinson and Susan Barnhart Maslowski. Patricia Morrison
of Charleston is secretary-treasurer.
Here is an excerpt from Tubby's letter: "They say old
news writers never die, their pencil just runs out of lead. Tain't
so, for I take Geritol.
''There's been a lot of water over the dam and a lot of good
·crafts produced by all since I wrote my last newsletter, but I'm
back. You'll be hearin' from me from time to time."
P.S.-Hppeso, Tubby, we enjoy your Jews letter, and your
" &gt; lun lo look ol
humor.
'

!

.....

MASON DR. IN

LATEX

"'t--~~ HOUSE

PAINT

Leadir)g economic indexes·

dipped again during June

RACINE AREA - This is not debris left behind
following a hurricane or flood in Ira!!, or Honduras. It Is
just ·the normal appea'rance of the area surrounding a

lrash container on CR 28 near Recine, a civilized
COIDI1IIIIlity in. Meigs County, Ohio, United States of
America.
·

Public
asked
to
help
.
.
fi.gllt garbage dumpers
"

'

.

.

WASHINGTON (UP!) - The index ·of leading
lndlcators dipped 0.8 per cent in J1100 for the second
CCil.!eCUtive mmthly decline In the government's
barometer of future economic trerids, the Commerce
Department said today.
Except for the cold.weather induced 1.3 per cent
decline In January, the June e&lt;:Upse was the bjggest
sinCe the receBSioo ended two years ago.
Tightening of the money supply, which was the
pdmary reason for the May decline .of 0.2 per cent,
again contributed to slippage in the index. But the
· Commerce Deparbnent said the primary dampening
factor was the worker layoff rate. ,
Unemployment rolie to 7.l per cent in June for the
first increase in the jobless rate since the Carter
administration took office.
Tbe index, which stood at 129.4ln June from the 1967

=y

=::.!.~:.-= ~==o:~

a s•~''"J

!

They'll Do It Every Time

ffie PAC,K AA'ffi WI&lt;O NEVER
ffiRCMI ANYTHING f'WAY· ··

'lER.ES O'IE .. ·/AOWIN6
LAWN, JUNE 1956... 6 ...
AND TJ&lt;E PLUMBeR,

~-

~

Wotd'l1r'19 o grow•ng So-.,"ng~ oa oun f • ~ o
~pe c 'ml ltmd of en 1oymer1t Ope-n you r

.-

oc;tou nf here ond WATCH lfl

••

TilEY PAID Ti&lt;EIR

""""'I 1-j • • •

FLAT INTERIOR lATEX SELECT RmWOOD STAIN LATEX FLAT ENAMEL

--

HOME NAliOfW.

~lloii;Tt)N, c.~

.. 91-110

BANK
RACINE

is easy to apply. Dries 'tast.

washable. Water cleanup. For

RACINE
-

T·N · HUE looks like velwt; so
!!':::::~ It's thick, creamy "no-drip"

~

People

M6 "'ILDRED TJ.Yi.l:lR
414 NC), WOR:f'M ~~

Weather

For
Meigs County

'1fillj(J

l·ll

A Home Ban:k

FIRST BILL··· ~
NC1T' n&lt;E Rl~
ONE· ..

REcEfPT.. ·"TMEY
81L.L.E0ME

REDWOOD SI'AlN 11

nAT INTERIOR LATEX

EV!;~. Kli-ID
OF RECEIPT SINCE

LAST MON'TJ&lt; ... I 1M ·
LOOKING FOR TI&lt;E

. LATEX

SA T-N-HUE

191&gt;0"'

I f'~Co.ID CAS!&lt; ,
WHEN I !&lt;AD 'TI&lt;E
CAR TOWED I~

1![

By United Pma !Dteruational
' WASHINGTON ·- AN ALLIANCE Of RURAL and city
lawmakers spurred the House to overwhelming ~pproval of an
$11 bUllon bill carrying a free food slllmP system for the needy
and higher price supports for depressed fanners.
With the threat of ~ presidential veto hanging ov~ the
measure, conferees prepared to · meet next week ·to
compromise the House 'measure with a more costly Senate
version passed in May. House Agriculture Coolmlt!ee
'chainnan Thomas Foley, D-WI!Sh., ealled Thursday's product
-approved294 to 114-a ''very balanced bi.i.i'' giving farillers
"substantial improvements In agricultural programs along
with action which makes food stamps more accessible to the
truly needy."
·'
·

JOHNSTOWN, PA. - DISASTER CREWS TODAY
foeilsed on a squar&amp;mlle pile of debris fioaling in tbe
. Conemaugh River where they feel they may find the hodles of
many of the 100 persons still listed as rnl8slng in l8st week's
floods.
. The debris, ~imated to be six feet deep, had gathered
behind tbe 900-foot-wide Conemaugh Dam, about 35 mil~s
norlbwesl of here, during thE: 1Z.lnch rainfall of July 19-20. The
dam was the final barrter to the millions of tons of water that ·
flooded the area and killed alleast 88 perso!lll.
,
Under that pressure the dam finally burst and the f)otsilm
swept through the dam's crwnbllng concrete walls in one huge
mass. Officials sald the bodies of many of the nearly 100
persons still missing may have been swept down the winding
river and trapped ln_the debris.

Five actions
are placed ·on
'
court
. . docket

1

OHIO

!~~:~~· wallboard, etc• .White &amp; 44
jl:
Custom colors higher.

True redwood color for wood shingles,

siding, shakes, fences, . picnic tabl ...
Dries fast. Velvety latex finish. Soapy
water cleans hands and tools. Use in·
side or out. Save now at this low prie&lt;JI

"E-Z KARE" - Looks like flat~-~~~r
clean like enamell Perfect for
walls and woodwork in every
Stains and grease can't readily
trate •its hard enamel turfoce. Ch•&gt;Otjji.
from 44 colors and pure white.

·'

TEBlS SCHEDULED

Valley Lumber &amp;Sppply Corporation
.·923 SOUTH 3rcl AVL
MIDIM IP011', OHIO
Open: 7:00 II 5:00 IIGIICIIJ tllru Fridlf. 7:00 II 3:00 Sr'

All team.. and school
"'11iere'U be JllOI'e trouble; emp~ of Fe•ern School
you can count oo that," said Dlatriet are to have lkln te1tt
...~ worker from the plpellne m Manday, Aug. 1, at the TB
terminal. "Hinr do I know? ort;ce of the Health Dept.
Becauae there are men ft'Gin 8:JII to 11 a.m. and 1to3
rtlllninll thle thing, and p.m., John Riebel announced
~ wtp screw up.".
today.

.

•

News. . . in Briefsl

1

containing the coins from a
train !bat had cme from
Pessac, near Bordeaux,
(Continued on page 10)

~rsJb'ok·
o Sovmg\ poubook'

·:::-:::."::::::::::::::::::::::::::::a.::::::::::::;:::::::::;;;:::;:::::::::~::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::t::::::::~

C LATEX HOUSE PAINT SELECT LATEX HOUSE P

~'J ft,tn

f"'

;hO:e

lndu, are sui&gt;~ to portend future activity of
productioo and employment.
The Commerce Departinent -said six ·of the 10
Indicators available for June decUned. ·They were the
layoff rate, money supply, new factory orders, capital
spending orders, sensitive wholesale prices and ~~~~Stts
that can be quickly converted tn cash.
The, Index has risen almost · every month since
February, 19'15, when lt began slgnallng the end of the
worst recessioo since World War ll ended.
.
Tbe ooly downturns were caused· by weather ·that
forced temporarY layoffs of two milliOn workers In
Januao:y and strikes las,\ September and October in the
automobile and farm equipment indUBtrtes.

TON-AND-A-HALF STEEL BALL is swinging today
against Second Ave. front of the midcentury wing of old
Holzer hospital in Gallipolis. Carter and Evans
Construction Co. l;l razing the wing.

Two suits for money lind
several
actions
for
dissOlution of marriage and
divorce were filed In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court Thursday.
In one judgment action
Elberfelds in Pomeroy filed
suit seeking $895.65· from
Ronnie and Susie Casto,
· Pomeroy; in the other,
Jo!eph R. Tardif of Northbrook, ru., asked $4,000 plus
interest and costs from
Rllbert· D. Pocklluton.
Chicago,
Judith
K.
(Pockllngton) Vaughan,
Middleport, The Pomeroy
National Bank, and Meigs
·County Treasurer George
Collins.
• Filing fOr dissol.utlon of
.marriage were Donald
Gerald Guthrie and Joyce
Ann Guthrie, both of Tuppers
Plains. Dallas D. Jarrell of ·
Radne has flied suit for
dlvorcil . from Linda p.
Jarrell, VIrginia Beach, Va.
and Marcia Spaulding from
M1llanl Spaulding, both of
M1ddleport.

-- • BOARD TO MEETEastern Local School
Board wUl meet In special
session Monday at 9 a:m. to
act oo realgnations al!(l to
coulder appllcatlonl for
teachlnl fobs.

DETROIT -AMERICAN AUI'O BUYERs WHO like big
cars and vans helped push the "Big Ttree" u. s. auto
companies to their highest profit level in automotive history $1.73 billion in the second quarter of this year.
'lbe previoUB three-mooth high was $1.5 billion In the
second quarter last year. Somil'ftnanclal analysts think that
may be the Industry's petik for some time to come and are ·
predicting a modest downturn in the coming year; saYing both
car sales and profits could decline next year.
NAIROBI,KENYA-GROtlNDAND AIR FIGIITING between Ethiopian and Somah forces has spread to tens. of
tbdlsands of square miles of desert and mountain, with both
sides issuing new victory claims._
Somalia acknowledged for the first time it was direcUy
involved in the fighting, which has expanded across a territory
the size of Colocado. It previously maintained it was merely
supporting guerrilla forceil. Diplomatic sources In Addis
Ababa BSid Ethlopla airlifted thousands of fresh troops and
members of Ita CUban-trained pe~~sant army Into Its three
embattled southern provinces to try to tun\ the tide of battle.
. WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT CARTE~ is lendltig a
hand in the. South Korean bribery investigation, and Attorney
General Griffin Bell says eventnally he intends to look into why
rr..ontinued 011 page IIi)

Rutland EMTs
•

take I-V course
' - Life Squad emergency scen.e greatly .
RUTLANI;&gt;
technicians of the RuUand improves chances for sur!llllt of- the regional vival and recovery.
Taught by · SEOlj:MS
emergency medical services
(SEOEMS) are better Paramedic . Instructor prepared now to belp the sick Coordinator Susan Barnes,
and injured In Meigs County. · R.N., the EMTs ~ertified to
SEOEMS
personnel use the l.V.s , are Joan
recently completed a course Stewart .( R&lt;~Iland Station
in i_ntravenous therapy, "Chief), Janet Bolin, Wilma
COIIllOOnly koown ·as I.V.'s. Davidson, Charles Eads,
The training included Joanne Fetty, Richard Fetty,
lectures and starting the Judy Hart, Warren Hart,
l.V.'s on each other. The Merle Johnson, Paul PatRutland Emergency Medical terson, Joan • Snowden,
Technicians (EMTs) learned . Raymond Wilcox, Billy
that intravenous fluids Williamson · and Janet
provide a life line to replace '\Yilltamson.
The Rutland unit provides
body fluids lost from
bleeding.
Hfe squad service to much of
Since shock from . an Meigs County. With SEOEMS
emergency causes blood practice of sending the
presaure to fall and veins closest life squad to each
collapee by the time a patient emergency, Rutland also
reaches a hospital (often responds to almost all calli at
making a time-consuming the Southern Ohio Coal
surgical proceSs necesaary), Company's Melga Mlnea
starting the I.V. at the Center (Nos. 1 and 2) minea.

1

�•

-:: : ···::'':t:::::t:::·:,i::::,··::::::;:::::::::::··:-.:. -{'ffff':':::it@::,::~=:::F:··,::~iii

:l-'nlen.lly ~I, Middloport-Pameroy,O., Friday, July 29,1!17'1

.
•

'

·' .;

Agreement-reached on splitting education's pie
benefits an extra $9.Stnillion and to
COWMBUS (UPI ) -An Ohfo
House and Sente conference • set a lower limit of 20 mills by 1979
oo the amount of local property
committee reached agreement
taxes that are required for a school
earl)' today and sent w both
district to receive bas1c state aid.
chambers a 400-page budget
Because of provisions In
" language" b11l telling state
legislation enacted last year
agegcies bow w allocate state
roiling back unvoted property tax
funds, including $2.5 bUlion in state
mcreases due to inflated property
aid to primary and secondary
values, some rural districts with
education.
low property valuation and low
The six-member conference
property taxes were Ul danger of
committee worked for two and onehalf hours late Thursday , further reducmg taxes because of
the automatic tax roll back
favorably reporting the comprovisions now in state law.
promiSe bill to eaclt Chamber on a
Urban school districts would
5-to-1 vote shortly after midnight.
benefit more from the rewritten
Concurrence ll1 the language bill
school foundation formula than
-the second and most important
rural districts because of sections
half olthe legiSlature's work on the
biennial budget - was expected "'in the bill giving more state aid to
districts with a high percentage of
later today.
welfare rec1p1ents.
The most critical work of the
The "language" bill called for
conference committee was on the
$64.5
million already appropriated
school foundation formula dividing
the $2,58~ ,400 , 000 appropriation to be divided according to a
through June 1979 among each of "Disadvantaged Pupil Impacted
Allowance" based on the number
the state's 617 school districts.
The committee voted to give of pupils who receive ADC
urban sChool districts with a high benefits.
The higher the percentage nf
percentage of pupils receiving aid
to dependent children (ADCl

ADC recipients, the more money a
school district would rece1ve on a
sliding scale of $7 50 per pupil to
$110.50 per pupil.
The compromise reaChed by the
• committee cut a $15 3 million m·
crease voted by the House to $9 5

million

•

The basic state aid of $1 53
billion and categorical aid of $9811.9
mlll1on over the next twoyears was
left unchanged by the conference
committee.
. In addition to the school foun·
dabon fonnula, the compromise
bill, which was the last unresolved
obstacle standing in the way of
summer adjournment today:
-Sets a new reimbursement
schedule for Medicaid recipients m
nursmg bomes.
-C1ves the state auditor broad
powers over state accounting.
-Empowers the Controlling
Board with broad authority over
budget reallocation during the
biennium.
•
The bill also requires that Oh•o
State Umversity hire a beekeeper
and that the state set up a toll-free
"women's hotline" to provide

m£onnatiooal services. .
The House passed its version of
the bill July 18 on a 57-to-38 vote
after two hours of debate. The
Senate, which passed its bill June
15 on a party-line vote, then
refused to immediately agree to
the House Changes.
That sent the measure to the
conference comnuttee chaired by
the bill's sponsor, Sen Harry
Meshel, [).Youngstown.
The 1978-79 state budget was
divided this year for the f1rst time
into two parts - the bieMial appropriation and the "language"
portion.
The change was a policy decision
by majority Democrats to av01d
line-item vetoes by Gov. James A.
Rhodes, who would be prohibited
from cutting specific sections from
the budget 'language" b1ll because
11 technically does not appropriate
any money - only directmg how
the dollars shall be spent.
Three, minor line-1tem vetoes by
Rhodes of appropriatiOnS in the
1978-79 funding bill were
overridden by both Chambers July
7
.

Ohio adds 25% more public workers

EVENT AT DEXTER
There will be an 1ce cream
COLUMBUS (UPI)- The
socialattheDexterChurchof
, Christ Tuesday August 2 at 7 Ohio Expenditure Council re·
'
'
ported Tlrursday the number
p.m.
of full-time stale and local
governmental
employes
An
be . increased by 2S per cent
held this evening ll1 the between October, 1966 and
basement of the Forest Run October, 1976.
The
c.ouncil,
an
Methodist Church at 7 p.m.
independen I research
agency, sa1d the number of

governmental employes,
excluding federal employes,
increased from 350,21~ in
October, 1966, to 439,294 in
October, 1976, an mcrease of
89,079.
The number of full-time
slate employes jncreased
from 68,730 in OcWber, }966,
to 99,431 m October, 1976, for
an lllCrease of 30,701 or 45 per
cent.
Local government
empioyement mi:reased from
218,485 in October, 1966, to
339,86S m October, 1976.
Total stale payrolls
increased by $16.7 million,
while local government
payrolls increased by $193.6

:'~e~~.:~~f~

HEALTH
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

High blood calcium
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I need
your opinion and any information you can give me.
What causes the parathyrmd
glands to malfunction and
form an excess amount of
calcrwn that flows into the
blood stream? How harmful
is this excess? It was sug. gested that all dairy products, liver, fish and vitamins
A and D be eliminated from
my diet. What can be done to
avoid this excess calcium]
DAR READER - The
parathyroid glands are on
each Side of the thyroid gland
around your trachea ( wmd
J)lpe) m your throat. The hormone they form causes
, . calcium w.be mobilized from
the bones and does increase
the calcium content in the
blood. The glands do not form
calcium themselves. They
work with VItamin D and your
calcium intake to help
regulate your blood calcium
level.
Over active parathyroid
glands produce Wo muclt hormone that can mobilize
calcium from your bones.
That results in a high blood
calcium and may cause your
bones to fracture easily. The
excess calc1um may also
cause kidney sWoes, and may
ihcrease the acid digestive
juices from the sWmaclt
causing digestive complamts.
This combination has led doctors to say the hyper·
parathyroid state is a disease
• of bones, .Wnes and gl'08~
.
Sometimes this overacti •
ty is caused by some
disease in the body. Some
forms o.f kidney disease and
. diseases that interfere with
. the absorption of calcilllll
from your digestive system
· are examples of underlying
: disesses that may cause an
• over active parathyroid
: gland.
: Other cases are caused by a
• small tumor (rarely malig·
•

nant) hat causes over produc·
lion of the bormone.
The ideal treatment
depends upon the cause. If
there is a small tumor of the
parathyroid glands the treatment IS surgical.
If the over actiVIty IS secm&gt;dary w another underlying
disease the treatment is
directed toward try;ng to cor·
reel that abnormality.
I am a bit puzzled by your
dietary advice. Cutting down
your calcium mtake Will not
help. If surgery IS not needed
or the underlying problem is
not completely correctable
then it is usually wise to
direct treatment efforts
toward replacing lost
chemical salts which may
even include replacing
calcium and phosphorous.
Most important of all it IS adVISBble to drink plenty of
fluids every day, spaced
throughout the 24 hour penod
w ensure a continuous
passage of dilute unne. This
will help prevent kidney.
stones.
I think you would be WISe to
ask your doctor to •refer you
to an endocrinologist for a
consultation. I see from ,your
address that the city you llve
in has a uruverslty medical
center. You could be referred
11&gt;-the endocrinology section
there. Management of such
cases is often complicated
and they may be able w help
your doctor mth your case.
Do you know what to do If
someone near you drops over
With a heart attack? You can
save lives if you know bow.
For more information on
what to do send 50 cents for
The Health Letter number
7-4, Save a Ufe: Heart and
Lung Arest. Include a long,
stamped, self-addressed
envelope with your request,
addressed w Dr. Lamb, ll1
care of this newspaper, P.O.
Box 1~1. Radio City Station,
New York, NY 1001~ -

millioo in that tune penod.
Average weekly earrungs
of govermnental employes
increased by $123 over the 10
year penod while employes
m the pr1vate sector were
gettmg raises totaling $41 a
week.
"Ohw's state and local
government employes, witb
the exceptwn of county
government personnel, now
earn more per week on the
average than employes in the
private sector," the council
said.
"Saianes· and wages and
fringe benefits constitute, by
far, the largest cost of
operating government," the

Long session expected to
clean up pressing business
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
OhiO General Assembly today
planned a marathon sess1on
w wind up business for the
swruner and recess until
Sept. 19.
Floor meetings, With heavy
calendars, were to hegm at 10
a.m. in the House and Senate.
Main item on the agenda
was expected to be a
conference report on the
second half of the 1978-79
state budget -a "language"
bill setting forth spending
directives and providing a
new version of the stall!
school subsidy formula.
In moving smoothly wward
the summer break, the lawmakers Thursday sent to
Gov. James A. Rhodes bills
clamping down on cigarette
smuggling and b a n n i n g
fluorocarbons In aerosol
spray cans.
However, a collective bar·
' gaining bill for public
employes was formally sent
to a joint Senate-House
conference comnuttee and
apparently will be left behind
for negotiations when the
legislature adjourns for six
weeks later today or tonight
"A cooling-off perind for a
few weeks might be a good
Idea for both the legislature
and the interest groups," said
Sen. Harry Meshel, D·
Young.Wwn, who said the
House version approved
Wednesday had Wo many
benefits
for
public
employers.
Meanwhile, the House
passed on an 116-ll vote a
major Democratic energy
bill creating a n!!W state
Department of Energy to
coordinate state policres in
•fuel supply, demand and
conservation . That measure

reqwres Senate action and
also w1il be left behind until
September.
Rev1ved and passed was a
bill defeated by two votes
Wednesday authorizing state
income taxpayers to check
off $1 on their tax return and
earmark it for a political
campaign contribution.
But tile House defeated, 33
to 60, a conference report on
legislatiOn requirmg highsalaried public officials and
employes tn fi)e financ1al
disclosure statements and
exempting those pa1d only
reasonable and necessary
expenses for 'their part-time
work .
Arid further progress
apparently was put off until
September on legislation, already approved by the House,
giving minimal users of gas
and electricity a 2S per cent
break on their winter fuel
bills.
The prpposal came out of
the
Senate
Energy
Committee
but
was
immediately referred to the
Finance Committee, whiCh
planned no immediate meetings.
The proposed new cabinetlevel Department of Energy,
forwarded to the Senate for
further action, would replace
the Ohio Energy and
Resource Development
Agency as the overall
coordinstor of fuel policies ll1
Obio.
It would have five divisions
dealing, with cooservation,
resource development,
supply forecast, information
and technology and power
siting.
The chief sponsor, Rep.
Thomas J . Carney, D-Board·
man, sa1d it would "preserve

New farm bill's effects noted
-

.
WASHINGTON (UPI) Here are highlights of the
·· • ways-the House farm-food bill
: would affect the nation's
: fanners :
For grain growers
The 1977 wheat support
: target, $2.47 a bushel under
· current law, would go to
: t2.90. This means that if
market prices sink, as
, spected, to the crop support
• loan 1111e of t2.2S under the
: impact rJ. a heavy crop,
govemnent income support
subsidies bridging the . gap
between the market and the
' tariet could be up to 65 cents
: a bwlbel, or over
billion.
For 1t'1l, &amp;be wheat loan
would rile to $2.3&amp; and the
taraet 1D tl, wltll provision
-

•1.1

'

ror

higher targets in later
years as farm costs rise.
For the 1977 corn crop, both
the loan and target prices
would be advanced to the
same figure, $2 a bushel. This
would eliminate potential
direct income support
payments but would increase
the value of the crop, since
the currently scheduled
S141port loan IS $1.75 a bushel.
In 1978, the corn target
would go w $2.10, and would
escalate in future years.
Loan rates could be
reduced below scheduled
rates beglrulng in 1171 if
necessary to keep crops
world
competitive on
markets. But if loam are
reduced, the .government
.
.&gt;

council said. "In these times
of rapully increasing costs,
both to governments and
taxpayers, public officials
should evaluate carefully all
proposals and programs thai
would add personnel to
c urrent
governmental
employee payrolls.
"Of equal unportance is the
fact, seeMll1gly unrealized by
many taxpayers, that thell'
co nstant demands upon
government for additional
serVIces contioues to place
public offiCials in a position of
expanding governmental
progra!Jls
and
the
accompanying corollary hiring more employes," the
council S&amp;ld.

would have wtake offsetting
steps to make up any
potential loss in farm income.
Producers of grains, cotton
and rice.also would have the
number of acres eligible for
\llrget price protection on
each fann set by a new
system related to actual
plantings instead of past
historic records.
A Senate version of the bill
would" set the 1978 wheat
target at $3.10 a bushel and
the corn target at $2.28.
Payment llmlts
Grain and cottoh growers
now llmlted w t3),000 in
payments would go w 1
$35,000 ceiling next year wil.b
annual increases to U8,586 by
1981. Rice farmers who now

have a $55,000 ceiling would
scale down in steps to the
level fir otber crops by 1981.
No limit would be set oo
payments made under a
special disaster aid program.
A Senate version seta a flat
$50,000 payment ceiling for
grains, cottoo and rice beginning in 1978.
Dairy, wool and other provisioos
~ curre~~t 80 per cent of
parity Door under milk lOpports would be continued
through MarCh, 1981, "and
wool supporll would be
increllsed. A controversial
system
of
indemnity
payments to beekeepers
would be extended for four
years.

Kent demonstrators
arrested on catnpus
KENT, Ohio (UPI)- Sixty
demonstral&lt;rs,
protesting·
the construction of a
gyiMIISlum complex at Kent
State UniverSity near where
four students were killed,
were arrested early today
when sheriff's deputies
formed a wedge to break
through a group of spectawrs
attempting to block the
arrests.
The demonstrators,
members of the May 4th
Coalition, believe the $6
million
complex
will
desecrate the site where the
students were shot w death
by National Guardsmen
during
an
anti-war
demonstration seven years
ago. Portage County Common
Pleas Court Judge Joseph
Kainrad last Monday ruled
the umversity should be
allowed
to
continue
construction of the facility.
That decision has been
appealed to the nth Ohio
District Court of Appeals in
Painesville, Ohio.
Demonstrators late
Thursday night marChed oo
"Blanket Hill", the site of tbe
proposed facility, and early
today scaled a slx.foot fence,
vowing to set up another
"Tent City" in an attempt to
halt the construction project.
Portage County deputy
sheriffs and campus pollee,
armed only with riot clubs
and wearing helmets, carried
the demonstrators w waiting
buses for transport to the
Portage CoWlty jail in nearby
Ravenna.
Some 80 spectawrs stood
by, chanting and heckling authorities , while police
removed the demonstrators,
who bad formed a circle on
the ground with the1r arms
entwined with each other.
The arrests came after
Portage County Sheriff Allen
McKitnck, university
Security Director Robert
Maione and KSU Vice
President-AdminiStration
Walter Bruska went to the hill
and ordered the protesters w
leave.
They were shouted down by
demonstrators, who then

the economic health of Ohio
and respond to short-and
longterm problems m
energy."
But one of !be opponents,
Rep. Irma Karmol, R-Toledo,
complained It would merely
"create a monstrous new
bureaucracy Without giving
us a bit more energy ."
The proposed deparbnenl
would develop an energy
conservation plan an&lt;\ energy
emergency procedures . II
also would be empowered w
review rate structures of
heating utilities.
The new agency would he
partially funded by an excise
tax on coal of 15 to 40 cents a
to!!, dependmg on how muclt
sulfur the coal contained. The ·
$11 million generated by the
tax would be administered by
a
nine-member
Coal
ResearCh Commission, whiCh
would exist for four years
under the bill unless extended
by the leg1stature.
The House refused to go
along with the conference
report on financial disclosure
because the Senate had
stripped out a requirement
that existing members of
college and university boards
of trustees reveal their
sources of income.

began climbing the fence and
pitching tents.
Agroupofabout30specta·
tnrs attempted to block deputies who were hauling
demoostraWrs to the waiting
buses. The deputies formed a
wedge and broke through the
spectators amid cries of
"pollee harrassment." One
newsman was knocked to the ·
ground when he attempted to
question a deputy.
"We're just starling," said
Mary Anne C~nfora, a
member of the May 4th
Coalition and a former
student who was at KSU in
1970 when the students were
shot. •·we'll be back."
Frank Cedervall 73 of
Willoughby spok; to' the
demonstraW:.s before they
moved to take the hill, and
encouraged them to make the
attempt.

"I didn't come here to
listen to your silly
dissertations," said
Cedervall, "I Ctlllll! here for
you to do something."
Cedervall said the coaliwn
members should get a
student and a prOleaor with
"impeccable credentla~" w
go to organlud labor and a!k
unioos to set up pickets at the
construction site.
It was the secood group of
mass arrests since the
protests began May 12. A
Wtal of )93 persons were
arrested on July 12 when
authorities broke up the
original Tent City.
On July 22, demonstrators
crossed a rope barrier at the
&amp;te which resulted in Charges
filed against Tl of them.
Three were arrested Tuesday
night and IS surrendered
Wednesday.

Europeans will
build breeders

BRUSSELS , Belgium become locked in an intense
(UP!) - The European competition with the United
Common Market, fearing States and Russia for
that reliance on oil could dwindling reserves.
U the Market needs still
bring about an energy
disaster, has rejected an greater oil supplies by that
appeal by President Carter time, Brunner said, "not only
and voted w go ahead with will we not be able to afford
researCh into fast breeder them but we will not he able
to find them."
nuclear reactors.
The Market's Executive
So far the Common Markel
Commission issued a has mvested l2.S billion in
statement Thursday fast breeder research and,
approving the development of because of a foreseen
the controversial devices for shortage of uramum, the
the nine-member body ll1 I he Commission said:
1900s.
"The Community and its
At the same time, it called member
states
must
for close cooperation among preservetheoptlonofmaking
the member countries in fast breeder reactors
safely diSposing of tbe waste available to utilities m a
from the breeder as well as commercial basis during the
scores of conventional early 1900s."
nuclear reaCtors.
Prowtype breeder reacWrs
Carter has called for a two- already ar &lt; functioning in
year moratorium on the Britain and France. This
development of fast breeder month,
France,
West
reactors - which produce Germany, Italy, Belgium and
more fuel.tban they burn and Holland created a jomt
thus pose the danger of company to develop and
nuclear proliferation - w market them.
give the industrial nations
By
separating
out
time to study the problem. plutonium from ,the was~~! of
Guido Brunner of West conventional reactors,
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Germany,
, scientists can obtain new fuel
Admissions - Lora Circle, M a r k e t ' sthe e Coinmon
n e r g y for the breeders, whiCh then
Racrne; Patsy Laudermlit, commissioner, sa1d the produce more fuel than they
Racme; Annette Boyd, Commumty has "no Choice" consume. But plutonium m
Pomeroy; Glenn Lawson, but to g&lt;l ahead with its only small quantities can be
Minersville; Lois McKenzie, development program.
turned into nuclear bombs,
Racine ;
Lafe
Cogar,
Unless the Market tightens even by mini-lltates or sophisSyracuse.
lts belt to an aMual import of ticated terrorist groups;
Discharges - General 500
rnilllon metric tons of oil according to some critics.
McCune, Lloyd Moore, by 1985, he warned, It will
Catherine Roach, Jimmie
Wolfe, Audrey Woode,
Norman
Hysell,
Ruth
Mediey, Millard Ball, ·Edna
Hunnell, Alice Clark, Emma
Jacobs, Helen Smith

Hospital News

POLLY'S POINTERS

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, July 28)
Polly Cramer
Donna Aberls, Francis
Bakies, Phyllis B•atton,
Use old furs to line coats
Dorothy Chandler, Robert
Crews, Raymond Cun·
put the hooks lllSlde. The lid
POLLY'S PROBLEM
nmgham, Ronald Davis,
snaps
on the top and they are
DEAR
POLLYWhat
can
Terri Davis, Charlet Devore,
in
safe
keeping. -N.M.B.
Laura Dillinger, Gerald I do with my old Persian
DEAR
POLLY- While at
Fragale, Nora Harrell, lamb coat other than linillg a
work
my
husband had to do
Ronnie Haskmgs, Mrs. cloth coat or making a
some
painting
with a roller.
D1ck1e Huffer and daughter, coverlet? I do not want to
He
had
to
paint
With two colGary Johoson, Rasey Jones, keep 1t in cold storage any
Alberta LewiS, Hank Malone, longer and would be l!l- ors of oll base pain!, one right
Danny Matney, Verman terested m bearing what after the other, and did not
Nicely, Sarah Powell, Nancy other readers may have done have anything wclean out the
Powers, Letha Prater, with old fur coats. -MRS. pamt pan that the roller is
dipped in. He covered the enWyvonna Radavaugh, O.W.H.
DEAR MRS. O.W.H. - You tire paint pan with a length of
Charles Rowland,' Virginia
Russell, Mrs. RiChard Smith seem to have two good ideas 111-mch mde heavy duty
your own. I once had a wool alwninum foil and when he
r---------... and
son, Mrs. John Spaulding of
cape
lined with the fur from a finished doing one color he
and son, Lois Thompson,
niE DAO..Y SENTINEL
coat
and
loved it. Such a coat removed the foil, threw it
DEVOTED TO 11IE
Arlene Tracy, Mrs. Roy
INTEREWOF
would
make
one or two of away and put in another piece
Vaughn and daughter,
MEIGS-MASON AREA
those
big
noor
pillows that for the second color. There
CHESTER L. TANNFJIILJ...
Howard Yeager Sr.
l!&gt;ee. Ed.
arebeingusedtoday. lam was no paint in the roller pan
(Births, July 28)
IWBERT HOEFLICH
Mr. and Mrs . Terry sure we will be hearing from so a lot of cleaning was saved.
CllfEdllor
PubU.hed dally "'""'( Sotunlay
Jenkins, Sr., a son, Loveland. others whu bave put such -DONNA.
by The Ohio Valley Publishing ComDEAR POLLY- If I wipe
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wijlls, coatswgooduse. -POLLY.
any, Ill Court St, Pomeroy, Ohio
my
grater with vegetable oil
DEAR
POLLY
Those
T~789 BWIUltsS Olf1ce Phone 992a son, Oak Hill.
21~. EditOnal Phone tn-2157
shirts With rubber backed before grating cheeae the
Second class postage paid at
pictures in front are hard w shreds do not sti&lt;:k so badly
Pomeroy, Ohio
N'aUonal . advertiatng rep~~
keep looking nice so I started and it is so much easier w
tative Ward · Griffith ComJ)Ilfly,
soalting them in a mild clean.
Inc, BOttinelU and Gallagher Di~~·
SURGERY
TODAY
Those mothers who use a
P.o7 Third Ave, New Yotlc. NY.
de\ergent and then hung
Virgil King, Rt. 2, them up to dry. Keeping them bar of SIIBp near baby's bed10017.
'
Subl!lcnpLion tales Delivered by
Pomeroy, will undergo out of the washer and dryer Side for sharpening pins
earner where available 75 cenU per
surgery
today at Mount certainly keeps tlie pictures should keep the soap In the
week By Motor Route where t:amer
serva , not a,vaUable, One month,
Carmel West Medical Center. clear longer. -JOANN.
wrapper so it catches all
.
$3.15 By mall In Ohio and W Va ..
For those who wlah to aend
thole
annoying soap crumbs.
One Yur, $2200, Sb: months,
DEAR READERS - Do be
$11 so, Thr~e mont.ha, 17 oo;'
cards lhe address is 793 W. sure your pictures are color -:-FLORENCE.
Ellewbere t26 00 yur ; Six months
State Street, Columbus, 0. fast and will take wsoaking. I
DE.AR POLLY- So aa w
$13 50 , Three months, ,7.50.
Sultst'l'ipUon priCe includes SUnday
43222. - His room number is am sure Joann just forgot to save money I use the oulside
Time.SenUnel.
779-B.
say that llhe rinaed them ¢Ilea fi WonHlUt pennanent
preaa sheets for inner-facing
before hanging up.·POLLY.
DEAR POLLY ·- To take in garments I may be malt·
care rJ. aU my embroidery ing. The middle ol the sbeetl
floos I put each color In an usn•lly wears out first but the
The Meigs County Dairy item of bus1neas. Mary empty plaltic pill container. good sides In wide enoucb to
Better Uvestock Club met Colwell made a report on The HWe tab that talla the col- be cat either 111 tlie biBB or
July 28 at the borne of Mary questions at an Interview. or, IWIIlber and brand II put llrllgbt. -F.E.R.
and Dean Cohrd,) with one Dean Colwell gne a inllde 10 It can be read
PGIIy will lend you one of
advisor and 12 club members demonatn~Uon . on cleaniall without opening the CCIII- her •lcned thank-you
present.
hoofs. A report wu allo glven tainer. All u- IIWe bottlell fteWIPIIper ooupon cllppen if
Sweepltakes money was on the daneen of weeda.
1he uaa your fnorlte
ue kept In a ~~~)all byket.
Relrellunentl
were
111'9ed
collected aild fair pauea
To 1tore my crochet boob I Polnler, Pave ... Prublem in
were given out. An "old old' by Mrs. Colwell The ~ pUt 11111111 bit ol cotton In tile ber cclumn. Write POLLY'S
pro claa w be started at the meeting
let for Allgllft 2 bottom of an old plullc POIN IERB In care ol IIIIa
fair wu also dlscus8ed as an at the home 'of Julie FJa«g. toothbrush holder and then newipllper.

Colwells host -livestock club

w•

"

I.

Cubs outlast Reds in
13 innings, 16 to 15
CHICAGO (UPI) - When
Dave Rosello came to bat
with two out in the 13th
inning, runners on fll'st and
thU"d and tbe Chicago Cubs
tied 15-1~ with the Cincinnati
Reds, he wasn't thinking of
redemption.
There was good reason
though because Rosello
missed a throw from pitcher
Pete Broberg for a 12th
innmg error which allowed
the Reds to take a 15-14 lead
when George Foster scored
an unearned rWl from second
base on !be play.
George Mitterwald gave
Rosello a Chance for redemption,however, when he hit his
second homer of the game
With one out in the Cubs' 12th
, w tie the contest again l!lld
make 11 possible for Chicago
to win 16-15 Thursday
afternoon
II was U"omc that a game in
which two major league
home run records were lied
was decided by a smgle. The
Reds hit three home runs in
the first lllDing and the Cubs
two w tie a major league

record of five home runs in
one mning by two teams.

and I am sure he felt bad but I
was glad to see him get the
base hll to wm the ballgame.
"I had to go up looking for a
home run because the wmd
was blowing out. He gave me
•· fast ball to h1t and
fortunately I got into it pretty
good.
4
'We made some super
plays," M11terwald added.
"(First baseman Bill)
Buckner made one of the
greatest plays I've ever seen
and that might have been the
end of the ballgame If he
didn 'I make it. I'm sure the
fans will always remember
this game because it was so
fantastic ."
The game drew 33,286 fans
to produce a wtal of 111,373
for the three-date series w1th
the Reds, barely 1,500 short of
an attendance record, set in a
thrt!l!'$ame series with the
New York Mets m 1969 and
putting the Cubs more than
300,000 ahead of 1976
attendance at the same point

Mltler'l'ald's game-tying
homer was the 11th in the
game, the sixth by the Cubs,
tn lie the major league record
for both teams m an extra
inning game.
Rick Reuschel, the seventh
Cubs pitCher m the game,
faced only two batters. But he
started himself toward his
15th win, the most so far this
year by any major league
hurler, when he singled w
center with two out in the
13th. He reached third on
Steve Ontiveros' single and
scored on Rosello's hit.
"I was just trymg to make
contact," Rosello said, "and
the ball got through. So 11 was
good for me.
"I wasn't thmking of
redeemmg myself. I was sure
of only one thmg . We can't
lose tllis game, no way."
Mitterwald had similar
thoughts on his home run. "I
wanted to make up for them
going ahead of us on a play in the season.
The victory extended the
that was tough," he said .
"That ball really slid on Rosy . Cubs' lead in the National

Jets, Bears clash
in Canton contest

Bengals
ship out

Bob Brown

Hall of Fame 'gets

to them all'-Brown

Major LUI""' Stand1ngs
8y United Prell International
National League
IE iii I
W l

Pel GB
59 39 602
58 42 580 '2
Pt11Sb9h
S7 42 576 2 1 "1
Pt11la
S-4 46 SAO 6
St LOUtS
48 51 485 Ill ~
Montreal
..., 51 418 18
New York
West
W L Pet GB
l..os Arig
63 38 624
C1nc•
49 49 500 12''
Houston
.46 56 451 17 1 2
San Fran
.46 56 451 1? 1/ 1
San O!ega
•• 60 4'23 ~0''7
Atlanta
35 64 JS4 27
Thundl¥ 15 Results
Chicago 16 , Cinci 15, 13 1nns .
Los Angeles 2. Ph.lladelph la 1

CtliC~90

•

-D iehl
leads

Montrul S, San Diego 4
P tllsburgh 9, Houston 4
St Louis 3, Atlanta 0

Today•s Probable Pttchen
(All Times E DT l
St Louis ( Eastwtck S 6 and

Rasmussen 7-11)) at Clncmnat•
(Seaver 10 5 and Mosklw 1 2).
2, 530pm
P ftts burgtl (Reuss 6101 at
Atlanta (Ntekro 9 12 ). 1 35 p m
Los Angeles 1Rau 11 2) at
Monlreal (ROQers tl -8l. 7· 35
pm .
San Fra('lclsco (Hallckt 8 9) at
PhtladeiJ)hla (Lerch 6·2l, 8 05
pm
San D1eQO (Shirley 6-11 ) al
New York (Koosman 7 10), 8 05

pm

by one
PHILADELPHIA (UPI ) Terry Diehl admits that
losing a playoff at last year's
Philadelphia Golf Classic
ISO't hiS fondest memory. But
there's no place else he'd
rather be this weekend.
Diehl, playing as if he
wants w gel so far in front he
won't need a playoff, fired a
11-under-par ~ Thursday in
the first round of the $200,000
tournament for a one.fihot
lead over two former
Champions, J. C. Snead and
Tom Kite.
Danny Edwards, the
winner of the Greater
Greensboro Open last April,
and B1ll Rogers were next at
67. Five more golfers were at
68, including former Masters
Champion Ray Floyd and Bob
Gilder, who was assessed a
two-stroke penalty for
reporting tate for his starting
time.
In aU, 52 players shot par or
better over the 6,687-yard,
par-71 Whitemarsh Valley
Country Club course.
Diehl lost to Kite last year
oo the fifth bole of a sudden
death playoff but he doesn't
dread returning to bid for the
$4(),o00 first prize.
"I'm just happy to be
here," the 27-year-old
Rochester, N.Y., native sa1d.
"I have a lot of fond
memories of this place,
although losing a playoff isn't
one of them. There were a lot
of people rooting for me today
and it's nice to have people ill
your corner."
Diehl has won just $24,000
th1s year on the tour but
credits "intelligently applied
practice" and tutoring from
former U.S. Open champion
Ken Venturi with bringing his
game around in the last three
months.
"I learned a lot from Ken
Ventur1," he said. "Now I can
control the ball better and
I'm a better chipper and

Chicago

American League
EUI
W L Pet GB
51 •3 SIO
Balti mre
55 43 .5bl
I
Boston
55 ;cs .5SO 2
New York
45 53 459 11
DetfOtt
43 5J 448 12
Clevelnd
44 S6 4.60 13
Mdw
34 6.4 347 22
Toronto
West
W L Pet. GB
ChicAgO
59 37 615
Kan Cltv
55 40 579 3112
Mtn n
56 45 554 5 1'2
Texn
s2 .u 542 1
Caht
47 50 485 12 112
Seattle
45 59 433 18
Oe~kland
42 57 .A1A 18 112
Thur~day ' s Resul1s
Boston 12, Milwaukee 0
New York 14, Baltimore 2
5eaf11e 5, M innesota 2
Texas 3. Toron to 0
Kan City 5, Cleve .t, 11 Inns
Oakland 6 , Cal1forn1a 4
Toav 's Probable Pttchers
I All Times EDT)
M innesota (Goltz 12 6 ) al
Cleveland {G ar land 7-ll), 7·30
Mtlwaukee (Travers J .S) at
Toronto (Lemanczyk 8 9J. 7 JO

pm

Kansas CifV (Hass.ler 6 3J at
Chicago (Kravec 7 2), 8.30 p m
Delro1t
( Rozema 9 .t)
at
Texas (Alexander 11 5), 8 35

(Bonham

pm

New York (Guidry 7 SJ at
Oakland (Langford 7 11) , 10 30

pm

Boston
Cahtorma

where you won last year," he

smd. "I won't say this is my
favonte course but l do enjoy
playing it."
Kite's thoughts on the
Whitemarsh course were
echoed by Snead, the 1972
champion. "! personally feel
thiS · is one of the better
courses we play on the tour. I
enjoy playing a golf course
like this."
Gilder, who does not wear a
walclt, stayed too long on the
practice range after being
misinformed of the lime, then
had to dash 150 yards to the
6rst tee before his playing
partners hit their second
shots, w narrowly escape
disqualification.
Ben Q-enshaw, the eighth·
leading money winner on the
tour, withdrew after shooting
an 81. Kermit Zarley was
disqualified after felling to
assess himself a tWlH!!roke
penalty by picking up and
looking at the club a member
of hiS threesome had used on
the 17111 hole.

(J enkms 7])
at
(Ryan 14-9) , 10 · 30

pm

Sllurday's Games

San D1ego a l New York
Los An9 ill! Montreal, night
Scm Fran at Philadelphia, night
P1ttsbur,gh at At lan ta. night
St . Louis at Ctnctnnati , n1ght
Ch1cago at Houston. ntght

Kite , whose only lour
VlCWry was here, lost his
chance for a share of the lead
by ~.-mg a bogey on the par4 sixth hole, the 15th of his
round.
"It's fun to go out and play
pretty well on a golf course

"Match the hatch" is a to area . This is especially
saying that any experienced true in streams. Keep
trout
fisherman
will checking and stay nextble .
Pre&amp;entauon plays a big
recognize.
pari
in any type of fishing So
it 1s an admonishment to
does
stealth and any nwnber
the angler to be aware of
what the fish are feeding on of other variables. Still it's ·
and try tn duplicate 1\ as got to tip the odds m your
favor if you offer the finicky
nearly as possible.
ThiS IS, good advice to the fish something he would have
bass fisherman, too Or for eaten anyway 1f you weren't
that matter, anglers seeking around.
any species
If the fish you're after IS
International league
United Press lnternattonal
gorging himself on crayf1sh
w I pet. GB
and you're out tilere throwiti"g

pm

9 9) at
Hooston (N1ekro 53). B 35 p m

putter ."

;-Of

;::i:\
..·::-:·
•},

League East to 2 1·2 games
over Philadelphia, while
CinClllnati fell 12 1-2 behind
Los Angeles m the- West
Division.
The CmclM8tl home runs
were by Pete Rose, JohMy
Bench, his 23rd, Mike Lum,
Ken Griffey and Cesar
Geronimo. The Cubs got two
homers e~ch from Buckner
and
Mitterwald
and
additional drives from Bobby
Murcer and Jerry Morales.

the Cleveland Browns, Gale the NFC Central Division this
Sayers of the Bears and year, acquU"ed quarterback
Frank Gifford of the New Mike Phipps from the
.,Cleveland Browns during the
York Giants.
"We don't have a pattern off season and are expected
for how our players are gomg to have a more potent air
to go," said Michaels. ul attack this year .
Bob Avellini, the Bear's
think Richard (Todd) will
probably play the 6rst half quarterback last season ,
(at quarterback ) and then threw 271 limes with 118
we'll take a look at Marty c0mpletions for 1,580 yards
Domres and Steve Joachun. and eight touchdowns.
The Bears wtal yardage m
RiChard was excellent in our
scrimmage lasi week and be the air - 1,705 - was the
lowest m the league last year.
moved the club well .
Walter Pa)'Wn, the NFC
"Our long range objective
rushing
champion last
1s to get ready for the season
opener, but we do want to see season, is the mainstay of the
what progress we've made in Bear's rushing attack.
Bears Coach Jack Pardee
camp," said Michaels. "The
Bears are a good yoWlg team said, however, a recent
with an excellent chance of scrunmage in whiCh some
winning !herr diVISion and outstandmg running was
they should be a good shown by rookie fullback
Robin Earl, "showed you
barometer for us.''
can't
carry your' offense
The Jets, 3-lllast season,
are a young team with 24 totally w1th passing.
"It also proved again that
rook1es or fU"st year men and
12 second year players on the early in the season the
del ense is abe ad of the
roster.
WILMINGTON,
Oh1o
'!'lie Bears, 7-7 last season offense," said Pardee .
(UPI) - Veteran defensive but one of the favorites to wm
tackle Bob Brown, probably
overweight and defmltely
late for trainmg camp, has
been shipped by the
unsympathetic Cincinnati
Bengais to the Oakland
Raiders for the basic $100
waiver fee
•
The Bengals, m letting the . CINCINNATI (UPI) - history of football With a 351·
37-year old veteran of 13 NFL Paul Brown says the nation's 133-16record) will be 69 years
seasons go Thursday, simply finest football players, old in September, but he
said they were tired of despite being bese1ged With remalllS healthy, trim and fit,
wailmg aroWld to see 1f honors throughout their looking about 20 years
Brown was going to show up careers, become emotionally yoWlger than most persons
involved when inducted into his age.
for camp.
·
Brown likes to spend most
Although Brown told the Pro Football Hall of
of his time now at the
reporters th1s week he Fame.
"They're big, tough Cincinnati Bengals'
mtended to arrive later th1s
people,"
he says, "but it gets Wilmington, Ohio, training
week - a week late - the
camp with his coaches and
Bengals complained Brown w them all."
Husky football players players, but admits he's
never contacted them .
"A football team can't be breakmg into tears - whiCh looking forward lo Saturday
built properly with players regularly happens at Hall of in Canton. His hometown of
wlio decide on their own when Fame ceremonies - might Massillon 1s close by.
"I never cease to marvel at
to report and practice," said surprise some people, but not
Bengals assistant general Brown, a Hall of Farner the enthusiasm for foot ball in
manager . Mike Brown. "We himself who will be the Canton-Massillon area,"
aren't gomg to wait any presenting an mductee for a he smd. "!love to go through
iongerfor Bob wtell us when record fourth tune Saturday the Hall of Fame. It's like a
Mecca w go back there.
at Canton, Ohio.
he is ready w go w work."
"! love to see the old
Says
Brown ,
"It's
Brown came to the Bengals
something that has never uniforms, the pictures of the
ll1 197~ as a free agent and
was credited with helping the happened to you before, old players. Push a button
team shore up its defensive something you dream about lllld a fllm shows you Marion
line. The Bengals, still - the highest honor in Motley (one of Brown's old
emphasizing defensive line football - and when it comes, lollbacks) running again.
"When I go back there," he
work this season, made two it really gets to you.
"It is truly an emotional said, "I see the llfe that I've
young defensive lmemen Eddie Edwards and Wilson experience. You parade in an lived." '
Brown, now general
Whitley - their top draft open-air car with the person
manager
of the Bengals,
presenting
you.
Thousands
picks.
became
a
football legend
are
lining
the
streets,
Brown helped the Green
while
coaching
the Cleveland
and
waving
to
you.
bollaring
Bay P-ackers win the Super
Browns,
and
It'll
be another
"You're the special guest
Bowl last decade and in his
prime was an All-Pro choice. at a big breakfast and dinner. of his old Cleveland players
Brown
presents
He later played with the San You've got 1,500 people' at t)lat
Willis,
Saturday
Bill
each
event.
You
think
about
Diego Chargers.
"Bill was the fastest
Brown has had problems what a good life you've had
lineman
I've ever seen,"
through
football.
It
all
keeping his weight down
recalled
Brown.
"W.e likened
recently and the Bengals, in catches up with you and
his
defensive
Charge
w the
winds
lip
with
emotions
you
their announcement about
fangs
Idea,
he
struck
so
snake
Brown Thursday, oulid he don't feel any other time."
Brown, wbo erided his 41· quickly. He was very big and
"weighs m the neighborbond
year
coaching career on New strong, but not heavy. He was
of 300 pounds."
Brown had been wid to Year's Day, 1976, (he Is the fast enough w run the sprints
report to the Bengals' wlnningest coach in the at Madison Square Garden.
training camp at 285 pounds,
'
but he conceded w reporters
via .telepbone from his West
Memphis, Ark., h&lt;me this
The Hoyat Crown softball awarded to the wp two teams
week that he wasn't down to
team of Middleport will with sponsor trophies going to
285.
"Yeah, I've got a Httle sponsor an A.S.A. double the top four fin!Jhers. For
weight problem, b1lt I'm not elimination softball tour- additlooal lnfonnaUon call
won1ed about It," he said. "! nament at Syracuse on Aug. 6 Jerry Davenport at 992-7323
or Gary H11rrlaon at «6-1059.
haven't weighed myself in and 7.
Individual trophies will be
five JllQilths. I'm heavy."

CAN '!'ON, Oh10 (UP!) The New York Jets, under
new head coach Walt
Michaels and searching for a
quarterback to replace Joe
Namath, meet the Chicago
Bears Saturday m the annual
Professional Football Hall of
Fame Game m Canwn.
The nationally televised
game, which will he the first
NatiOnal Football League
gafl\1' of the exh1b1tion sea·
son, follows enshrinement
ceremonies at the Hall of
Fame for Bart ·Starr and
Forrest Gregg of the Green
Bay Packers, Bill Willis of

Outdoors

Baltimore (Flanagan B 8) at
Sea ttle (Galasso Q. l J. 10 35

pm

Saturday's Games
New York at Oakland
Kansas C1ty at Chicago
M innesota at Cle"eland
Ba llimore al Seattle. n 1ght
Boston attCallfornia , mght
Detroit at Texas, n1ghl
Mtlwaukee at Toronto , ntghl

Eastwick will
hurl opener
will be oppossed by Reds'
rookie Paul Moskau.
EastwlCk was publicly
critical of Reds' management
JUst before hemg traded an&lt;\
when
the
Cardmals
announced that Easlwick
would he startmg agamst the
Reds, there was speculation
the Reds were specifically
picked for Eastw1ck's
starting debut.
"No " sa1d a Cardinals
.
11
Miljor League Leader!i
spokesman.
There's
no conBy United Press International
nectiOn. We're thm on
BaHmg
(based on 250 at batsl
starlmg pitchers right now.
Nalionat League
G AB H Pet. We've had three pitchers off·
Parker p,t
99 408 139 3.41 and-&lt;ln the disabled list thiS
Mora les Ch1
96 342 114 333 week. We had another
Stennett P1 t
94 368 122 332
Luzmski Phil
89 336 111 330 reliever - John Urrea Simmons St L
92 324 1P7 . 330 starting for us Thursday
Gntley Cln
96 383 126 329
RObinSOn P1t
80 275 88 320 night.
Templtn St L
94 390 124 318
"It 's a matter of necessity.
Foster Ctn
97 381 121 318 Although he's a reliever. we
Randle NY
78 287 90 31.4
American League
figure Eastw1ck has the
G AB . H Pet
capability of going a fairly
Carew Mtn
97 380 147 387
Bostock Mm
96 371 126 340 long distance."
R1ce Bos
98 399 128 321
Eastwick has started
Singleton Bal
91 320 102 31 9
games
in the minor leagues,
sailor Tor
86 347 110 317
Dade Cle
81 255 80 314 but never in the majors. He
Cowens KC
95 371 115 310
Munson NY
92 364 113 310 relieved in 71 games for the
Zisk Ch i
86 327 101 309 Reds last year and was vot&lt;!li
Rivers NY
86 344 106 308 the
National League's
Page Oak
88 315 97 308 41
Fireman of the Year,"
Home Runs
Nalianal League Fosler, Cin
symbolic of the league's best
32 , Schmidt, Phil 27. Gl!lrvey.
LA
2.4,
Bench .
Cin
and reliever .

CINCINNATI (UP!) - St.
Louis Cardmals' rehef
pitcher Rawly Eastw1ck
makes his major league
debut as a starter tonight
against the Cincinnati Reds,
the team thai traded him
away earlier this season.
EastWlck Will start the
openmg game of a 5·30 p.m.
twi-nighl doubleheader and

.

Pawtucket
worms around , your success Tidewater
will be limited at best. Take · Charleston

the time wfmd out what your
quarry prefers and offer hun
that
There are a couple of ways
to do this. First you can catch
a couple of hsh and examine
the contents of thm stomach.
Th1s 1s the most direct
method and, perhaps, the
most accurate. But if you're
having trouble catching the
fish to begm Wllh, 1t won't
help you much
The second method is to
simply run a seme net
through a portion of the
waters you're flshmg . nus
won't tell you for sure what
they're eating, but chances
are that if the net is full of
sqmrmmg minnows, that at
least SO!De of the nearby
predators are eatmg them.
The same 1s true of crayfish
and other types of bve bait. If
the net shows an abundance
of this or that ba1t, tlult 's
where to put your money.
Using a net to help in your
research has an added
·advantage of leaving you
with a plentiful supply of
whatever you plan to use.
Take along a smtable
contamer for keeping your
ba1! alive and stock up w1th
!be thmgs you catch.
Sometimes the fish may be
feeding on things that are not
found in the water at all. For
example, if there's a lot of
'surface activity near a field
full of grasshoppers, try
using them for bmt. They
aren't hal'S! to catch, and you
can have a good supply Wlthm
a rew mmutes
Sure fire. Going to work all
the time . Right ' Not qu1te.
Feeding patterns and prey
densities may vary from area

Luzmsk1 . Phd 23
American League : Rice , Bos
27 ; Scott, Bos 25. Hisle, Mtnn
and Netlles. NY 23; Bonds , Cal
21
Runs Batted In
N.-tlonal League : Foster , Cin
96 ; Garvey, LA 83, Cey , LA 82,
Luz1nski , Phil 71, Ben c h , em

58 42 560
54 .45 . 545

31/2

54 47 535 41h

Richmond

SO
51
48
45
44

Syracuse

Rochester
Columbus
Toledo

49
51
52
58

.50S 7'1&gt;

500
480
437
60 .423

8
10
14'h
16

Thursday's Results

Columbus 4. Pawtucket 2

Tidewater 10, Syracuse 8

Rochester 7, (.;harleston 6, 10
1nnmgs
R1chmond 3, Toledo 1. 1st, 7

1nnings
R1chmond 2, Toledo 1, 2nd, 9
mnlnQs

A thought for the day :
Commenting on the fad that
boys can't wait to be men and
men would like to be boys
agam, Booth Tarkington
said. " It really is the land of
nowadays that we never discover."

Eat a Honda CB750
for lunch!
The

Based on manufa cturer 's
suggested list pnce ex clud ing freight dealer prep
title , state and loca l taxes
Pnce suo1ect to change
wtthout notice
J&amp;R SPORT SHOP

748 E. Main St

Pomeroy, Ohio
992 -2 184

'77 Kawasaki

J't..estone
FAIRLAWN®19"

"

Amentan League:
H1s1e,
M1nn 87 , Hobson , 8os 72 , Ztsk.
Cht and Munson , NY 71.

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Thompson. Det 70
Stolen Bases
National League
Taveras,
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Cedeno, t-iou 32 , Morgan. Cln,
Cabell, Hou and Lopes, LA 31
American League· Patek, KC
32. R:emy , Cal 31 , Page, Oak
25, Bonds, Cal 23 . LeFlore, Det

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20

PltChtng
Mast Victone s
National League : R Reuschel.
Chi 15 3, Forsch , St L 13 4 ,
Car11on, Phl1 13·6 Rau , LA 11
2. Candelana, P 1tt 11 3, John ,
LA 11 4 , Rhoden , LA 11 7,
Rogers , Mtl 11 8
American League: Ryan, Cal
14 9 , Goltz. M lnn 12 6 , Tanana .
Cal 12 7; Palmer, Bait 12 8,
T Johnson, Minn 11 -3, Alexan
der , Tex 11 -5, R May , Bait and
Colborn , KC 11 9
Earned Run Average
(based on 90 1nnings pitched)
National League : R Reuschel ,
Chi 2 14 Candelana . Pitt 2.62.
Rogers. Mtl 2 67 . Hooton , LA
271, R1chard, Hou 2 84
Amerlun League · Tillnana,
Cal 2 25 , Blyleven , Tex 2 39 ,
Ryar, , Cal and Rozema, Det
2 64 , T .Johnson , Mlnn 2.90
Str 1keouts .
Nat1onll League Nlekro, Atl
148. Richard , Hou , Rogers, Mtl
and Koosman. NY 129; Seaver.
Cfn 115

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Softball tourney is planned

SERVICE
'

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992·2094

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�Li.Descores

Balls sail out ~f Wrigley·
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~RIDt.Y .

JULY :It, 1t77
5 : ~~dam - 1 2 . , News 6; Family Aflair 8; Eiec. Co.

By Unitect Pr•u lnttrn•tional
H•tioul League
( 13 innings. I
Cincinnati

and •sl"lbv w- Perrv . f I. L-

Ch lca9(1

(11 inningd
Cl~
000 100 120 GO- 4 13 1
K.C.
003 010 000 Of- S 10 0

Ml4l 001 '210 00 1 !)- IS 19 l

431 '200 OJI 001 1- 16 7A l
Murray, &amp;orbon {2' ), Sarm it'n
to (7 ), Norman {f ), Bll llngt-tam
nn and Bench ; Burris, MoOre
U) , P . Reuschel {4 ), Hernandez
( 7) , Sutler (9 ). Broberg Ill) , R .
ReuscM·t (12) and Mifterwtl d.

G~rvl n ,

7 11

Plans have been completed and Mr. Phillip Sasser.
for the July 30 wedding of brother-in-law of the groomMiss Melinda Jean Amsbary, elect !rom Fredericktown.
Afraid She's 1 DES Baby ...
ofMrs. Kenneth D. David Olshlne 'of Cincinnati
daughter
Dear Helen:
Amsbary,
Pomeroy, and the will serve as best man.
l'm afraid I might have been a DES baby - you know : the
late
Dr.
Kenneth
D. Amsbary
Miss Nicole Conrath.
mes who are susceptible to cancer because of a hormone their
and.&gt;Mr.
Mark
William
Athens,
and Miss Ann Sasser
mothers took.
Rowland,
son
of
Mr.
and
MrS.
of
Fredericktown,
nieces of
Before Mcm died blst year, she told me her doctor
0
.
Rowland
of
the
groom-elect
will
be flower
William
preocribed pills to prevent a miscarriage while she was
Athens.
girls
while
Gary
Wickham,
carrying me, 21 years ago.
The bridal attendants will B&lt;lston, Mass., nephew ol the
The doctor who cared for her is also dead, a.nd hospital
include
Miss Nancy SeiSOn groom-elect will light the
records aren'tmuch help. How can [find out? - DELIA
and Miss Lucy Holter, both candles.
friends of the bride-elect
The 6:30 p.m. ceremony
Dear Delia:
will
be officiated by the Rev.
from
Pomeroy.
Miss
Betsy
• Try your phannary's files, and check with relatives of
sister
of~e
bride·
Ha~old
Deeth of the Grace
Amsbary,
your deceased doctor. '!'hey may have kept his records.
.
elect,
will
serve
as
maid
of
Ep1scopal
Church, Pomeroy.
Above all, getr.egular medical check-ups, and he sure your
The custom of open church
honor.
present physician knows your possible history.
.
Groomsmen will Include will be observed with an open
For further information, write to DES-Watch, Room 281,
John
Rowland, Athens, reception following in the
19 West 56th St., New York, N. Y., 10019. - H.
'
brother of the groom-elect Parish hall.
+++
Dear Helen:
We were invited to stay at my husband's cousins for the
weekend. We have two well-behaved children, ages nine and

MATCHING
WEDDING
RINGS

Randle fined $1,000
for March incident

ten.

When we got there, the cousins put us in the famUy room
down in their basement. It was very dark, with rro air. They
served all'llleals in the basement kitchen where the wife does
hercarmingand heavy cooking. She said she didn't want to use ·
upstairs rooms for fear they'd get dirty. We only used their
guest bedroom for sleeping. Even bad. to use the basement
shower!
:1\'}len they came to our house, they had the run ofthe whole
place. Seems to be a basement is okay for your family, but
when you bave company, you should eat in the dining room
where it's comfortable. Don't you agree? - VERY
DISAPPOINTED

°

Dear VD.:
There are basements and basements: If your cousins bad
just rf\lone theirs into a recreation room, perhaps they
considered it highly appropriate for "play."
What's the difference whether you eat in a formal dining
room or a "family area" so long as the company and food is
good?- H.

Keepsake

HEADQUARTERS

Dear C.D.:
.
.
You might say, "This is my mother and new father" .. . or
•:Second father " ... Or possibly, ''This is my mother and her
·
..
husband ... "
Or simply call them "Mom and Dad." Explanations can
come later if you feel they're necessary. - H.
NOTE TO YOUR MOTHER: I don't like those cringe
words- step, in-law, etc. -either!

Celebrates birthday
Richard Darrell Stewart
was honored on his first
birthday with a party at the
home of his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Harry Stewart, Rt. I,
Middleport. He received gifts
!rom Patsy Oiler. and Lisa,
Emma Moodispaugh and
Jolean, Narsa Moodispaugh,
Patty JohnSOll and Gene, Mr.
and Mrs. Brian Friend, Stacy

!~~ ~:!h'st~~~ ~~w:

David A. Watts of WUdllfe
· Dl!trict 4 Is offering hints for
protecting sweet corn. He
warned that the raCcoon can
ca~ extensive damage to
sweet com in a very short
time. If the ]llltch IB located
wbere
raccoons
are
numerous, 'try one of the
following control metboda:
Poultry fence wUl keep
raccoons from the com patch
if a single electrified wire IB
place around _the poultry
fence approximately one foot
from the ground level.
Raccoons are nocturnal
feeders and light will
10metlmes deter them from
damaging the crop. These
can be incandescent bulbs if
electric-power is available, or
kerosene lanterns or nares
scattered throughout the
field. Movement of lights
obtain better results, but this
metbod Ia ·not · always succealful.
Oil of mllltard IB obno:do111
to anlm•la, allo people. It IB
111118ested for uae on the
ground or objects being
da-pd "' . _•. Mix

0-

me ounce ol. oil of

ud -

Your sen-interests are extremely
pronounced today. but those
you must deal with match you In
this area. You may have to make
ap. conca!lsions.

F

X W H F C

JHZHBTHW

L E H

L H A A L

THWN

C E H

CEBKXL

J H F W

LEH
LHHYL
co XBTH
QL . water. Several spray
pllcations at tbree-&lt;lay In- PIICES (Fob. 20-Marcll 201
TOBCQWH
tervals may be necessary to You ' ll know the signs if TBKZHKC
stop the persistent raids of someone's trying to take advan.
Yesterdoy'sCrntoquote: LET US BE THANKFUL FOR THE
tage of you today. Don't be FOOLS; BUT FOR .THEM THE REST OF US COULD NOT
I
raccoons . n sweet corn, wishy-washy or you'll play right
SUCCEED.-MARK TWAIN
avoid spraying directly on tbe Into their hand a.
earl, but treat the ~!'Qund and Allti!l (Mereft.21-Aprtt11) You
base of the stalks later In the must be exttol'(lely careful
evening.

Other control methods are

to spread newspapers on the
ground to encircle the sweet
com patch. This method has
been auccesaful In some in- ·

socially today . If something
catchet you otf~uord, you could

handle It poorly and tater hllva
regrets.
TAURUI (April 20-lley 201 The
most vatuobla thing you hove Is

LIGHTWEIGHT
ALUMINUNr" ''
FISHING AND
'FUN BOATS

your reputation·. KeeP this in

stances.
mind today so that your ·amDehydrated llme used in bHions don't load you 'o stop on
the same mBIVIer as the too many tooo. ·
newspapers bas been ef- GIIIINI (liar 21-Juno 211
fectlve.
There's a chonee today you lad&lt;
Another good con'trol tho ability to see merit In otl1et's'
method Is to miJ: one part !does. It's O.K. to puoh your
cr0080te with 50 parts of fuel cou.... but don't feel you're the
only It-" In the ...:
oil. Use a sprinkling can to
encircle the ground area · CANCIR (,_11-.IUIJ 221 Tho
around the com patch. This cl- of tho Ilona In the commercii\ arona are extremely lh8rp
hai alao helped to deter the today. Don't go Into the 'fray
noct,umal raiderll.
withOUt your wmor.

I

I
I

Class picnic held

In the service

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Watch for red tagged
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store.

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'

STOP IN TODAY, TAKI A LOOK .AT YOUR

BAUM TRUE VALUE
915-3301

•VASES
•FOLIAGE PLANTS
UP TOS()%

.
•!

"

..
~

to
Install andground
maintain comhighpowered
munications equipment and
will now serve with a unit of
the Air
Force
Communications Service.
Completion of the course
earned the Individual .credits
towards an associate in
applied science degree,
through the Community
College ol the Air Force.
The airman Is a 1976
graduate of Meigs High
School.

CRISISLINE

CALL
992-5554·

l

I

CHUTIR. OHIO ;

............................~..............................~

ol. bouehold

p.iilrl·------•
PRE-INVENTORY

NIW .ARIA Df.AUR

detergent, rib me ga1lan or

'

AQUARIUS (Jen. 211-Fob. 11)

BL

parents. A cake in the Iann of
clown was made by his
mother . lee cream, mints and
l!everages were also served.
Sending gilts were Pat
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Davis ·
Johnson, Martha ·Stewart,
Reynoldsburg are announMirl Ratliff and Marjorie of
cing the birth of their first
. 1
BaU. .
·'
child at University ,Hosplta
on July 23. The 7 lb:, 4 oz.
baby boy ' has been named
·Matthew Patterson.
Grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs.
Kenny Davis of
The Loyal Berean Class of
Mrs. Earl Patterthe Middleport Church of Rutland;
son, Cambridge and t1!f late
Christ held its picnic Tuesday
Patterson.
.
evening at the Kyger Creek Mr.
Great Grandparents are ·
·R ecreational Center. Prayer Mr. and Mrs . .Worley Davis,
was given by George Glaze, Dexter· Mr. Walter Gibbs,
pastor.
Upper ''Marlboro, Md.; Mrs.
. Attending were Clyda Luther Betts, Cambridge;
Allensworth, Clarence Mc- and Mrs. D.E. Patterson,
Neal, Martha Childs, Marie Cambridge.
Frances, Martha Haggerty,
Eula Rice, Allee Robson,
Jesee Saunders, Etta Mae
Daugherty, Cathryn Ervin,
The son of a Pomeroy
Cynthia Gohring, Bessie couple has been assigned to
Ashley, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Robins AFB, Ga., following
McElhinney, Mr. and Mrs. graduation from the comMarvin Kelly, Mr. and Mrs. munications equipment
Dana Swift, Mr. and Mrs. repainnan course at Keesler
George Glaze~ Trent and AFB, Miss.
Trey and Lena McKinley.
Ainnan Robert R. Musser,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert E.
Musser of Rt. 4, was trained

Son born to Davis '

METAL JEEP TOPS

DOWCQKH

RICHARD STEWART

1

SUGAR RUN MILLS

Raccoons can be
kept from coni

For the first time in the five
seasons rWllling of "Gallia
Country," college credit was
offered by Rio Grande
College - Rio Grande Community College to participants in the production.
Two courses were offered :
Drama Lab Practlcum and
Dramatic Production. All
participation was under the
supervision pf the drama's
director, Greg Miller, of
Jackson, Ohio.
The following students
enrolled In the program :

Dear Helen :
My dad died'five yeats ago and Mom remarried last year.
In introducing her and her husband recently, I said, "This is
my stepfather Dick and my mother Jane." (False names.)
Mom was very upset, as she told me later I was rubbing in
the fact that he isn't.my real Dad; that "step" is one of those
" cringe" words.
I like and respect him, but how do I introduce him
properly? -CONFUSED DAUGHTER

Seed and Milling

59

N. Second St •

Social ·
Calendar

In Lab Practicum: Dawn
Derks, Jean Henry, Tim
McGhee, Kim Waugh, Mike
Wigglesworth and Mark
Wood.
Those
in
Dramatic .
Production: Paul Brown,
John · Gilliam, Jean Henry,
Tim McGhee, Wilma Mullins,
Ed Roark· and Mark Wood.
This historical musicaldrama, presented by the
Gallia
Dramatic
Arts
Society, &amp;
will start at 9 p.m.
and tiekets are available at
the gate on performance
nights. There are no reserved
seats since each seat offers a
good vantage point of the

•

AMY ROUSH

.
TO SPEAK
The Rev. Melvin Freeman
will be the guest speaker at
the Mt. Moriah Baptist
Church, Middleport, Sunday,
July 31, at 10:45 a.m.

·Shower f?iven ·

stage, and the new sound
equipment being used affords
everyone the opportunity to
hear aU dialogue and songs.
This is · family
entertainment at its best, at the
same time telling the history
of the local area, the
characters who were among
those early settlers, and the
dedication of the · pio~eers
who carved out a home for
their families In the
wilderness. All of this told In
a charming, song-filled
program
that
leaves
audiences humming the
original songs composed by
author, Lee Durieux. The

FRIDAY
MEETING for all buys ·
Interested in playing varsity
football lor Meigs High
School Friday, 6:30 p.m.. at
th• hlgh school.
SQUARE DANCE ·at tlie
Senior Citizens Center Friday
from 8:3(1-11 :30 ·p.m. MU.Ic
by Stringdusters. Cake walks
and round dancing. Admission $1 per adult, children
under 12 admitted free with
parents.
·
UMWA
SUPPORTERS
Club Friday at 10 a ,m . at
park on Plum St., Middleport,
next to swimming pool.
Election of officers. Members
welcome.

INTEREST

On CertificateS
Of Deposit
$1,000 Minimum
1 Yr. Term

Meigs Co. Branch

SATURDAY
THE
COOLVILLE
Allegeny Wesleyan Methodist
Church will hold services
Saturday 7:30 p.m. F. E.
Mansell, conference
president, will be speaker .
Pastor is Rev. Robert
Brooks. Public welcome.
ICE
CREAM
social
sponsored by the Rock
Springs . Community to
benefit
the
Pomeroy
E
Sq d Sa
mergency ua . turday
at the ·Ro.ck Springs Grange
Hall, fairgroWids. Se.-ving at
6:30. Members of the community who have not been
contacted may caU Helen
Blackston, Louise Radford or
Wihnetta Leifheit.
MtETING of ·the Shade
River Lodge No. 453 F&amp;AM of
Chest
S rda 7 30
er, atu y, : p.m.
Work in Master Masons
degree.
OUTDOOR Hymn Sing
Saturday 7:30p.m. at Forest
Acres Park (Ft. Meigs). All
singers welcome. Bring lawn
chairs. In case of rain It will

-------,------,~---'-----_,.

be cancelled.
· suNDAY
CHESTER High School
class of 1931 annual reunion
SWJday at Chester Firehouse.
Basket dinner at 12:30 p.m:
All members· of the class,
teachers and schoolmates
welcome.

COMES HOME
Joey Burton, Pomeroy, has
returned home after spending
a week at Muskingum Valley
with B&lt;ly Scout Troop 242.

ASH STREET Freewill
Baptis_t Church, Middleport
featunng Good News Trio
SWJday at 2 p.m. Lunch at
noon. Everyone welcome .
HOMECOMING at Long
Bottom Methodist C1Jurch
Sunday. Basket dinner at
noon. Program and special
singing. Public Invited. ,
DAN HAYMAN and the
Country Hynmtimers Sunday
1:30 at Broad Run United ·
Methndlsl Church two mUes
from Philip Spam Plant.
MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT Garden
Club Monday 7:30 . p.m. In
garden at home of Mrs. M. J.
Fry, Cheshire. Members are
invited to bring guests.
THE MIDDLEPORT
Garden Club will meet
Monday, A11g. I, at 7:30p.m.
In the prden. of Mrs. M. J.
Fry, Cheshire. Memben are
Invited to bring guests.
REGULAR meeting of the
Racine Chapter No. 134 OES
Manday, at I p.m. at the
Masonic T~ple.

DUPLEX

Ninety diiY interest penalTy
II
withdrawn
belor
maturity date.

' (!)

Electronic
Coolcing Centers

The Athens County
Savings &amp; Loan Co .
296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

The Old Adamsville Mill wUl cease to turn for another season foUowing the final three
weekend performances of ''Gallia Country," July 29, 30 and 31, In the amprutheatre at Rio
Grande', Ohio.

PARTY PLANNED
The Syrcuse - MinersviUe
Baseball Assn. will hold a
swinuning party for members at London Pool Monday,
Aug. I, from 8 to 10 p.m.
Members are to tum in their
unifonns and _pick up their
_
.
pictures.
•
'
GOODBIU.
OOLUMBUS (UP!) -Sen.
Anthony 0. Calabrese, DCieveland, rose from his
chair Thursday to ask the
Ohio Senate to agree in a
conference committee report
tin one of his bills.
"They ·
made
good
changes," said Calabrese,
sinking back down behind his
desk to the laughter of his
colleagues.
Sen. Thomas A. Van Meter,
R-Asltland, jumped up llnd
asked for a little more
detaU~ explanation of the
changes before he decided
how to vote.
Cal&amp;hrese rose again and .
said the changes were ''for
the good of U1e biU."
The '(ole was 32-to-1 to
accept the conference
committee vote. Van Meter
voted "no."

YOUR AREA

-

fiiirl

~

REYIVAL PLANNED
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Tuppers Plains Church of
Christ Is holding a weekend
revival today through July 31
at 7:30 p.m. nightly. ·
Sunday morning services
are at 9:30 and 10:30 a.m.
Dean Mills, president of the
Ohio Bible Institute is the
speaker. Eugene C. Underwood1 minister1 invites
the public to attend . .

Pomerc:&gt;J
Flower
. Shop

-

Oucisal'

VISIT US FOR AFREE BOOKLET
AND IU.USTRATED DIRECTIONS

DIALER

CON,VEN lENT
FREE
PARKING

OPEN:
Mon. thru Sat ••
8:00to 5:00p.m.

40fM. 2nd AVE.
.• j

J

Golden Rule Class meets

'Gt!llia Country' coming to an end

+++

~ "

Others may covet what you have
today. If you leave your house or
car. lock up well.

The
Meigs
High Jane Sisson, Pai~e Smith, Jill
Oleerteaders bave returned Batey, Sandi Hamilton,
bome after spending several Sherr! Osborne, She!~
days
at
u.s .c .A. Sargent and Julie Kitchen .
Cheerleading Camp at Ohio The girts were presented a
MASON - The birthday ul State University, Columbus. plaque for being the most
Amy Roush,3, was celebrated
Attending were Judy Hall, improved in competition.
July 10 at the hom• of her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. AHred
Roush, Mason.
A Raggedy Ann cake, baked by Mrs. Joyce Brewer,
The Golden Rule Class of rooms rather than in
was served with ice cream
the
First Baptist Church, members' homes . The group
and kool-aid. The honored
Middleport,
met Tuesday in continued their study or the
guest received a number of
the
social
room
at the church. Book of Acts.
gifts.
It
was
decided
to purchase
Attending w'e re Louise
Celebrating with Amy were
Mr. and Mrs. Harry C. a Bible dictionary for use in Thompson , Marjorie
Roush, Sr. and Mr. and Mrs. the classroom. All future Walburn, Kathryn Metzger
Frank G. Smith, grand- meetings will be In the ,social and Mary Brewer. The group
will meet on the fo·urth
parents; Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Tuesdsy
in August. ·
Little, DaleaMa and Dale
Ray; Mrs. Joyce Brewer and
Mrs. Roy (Linda) Vaughan
Mikey; and Mr. and Mrs. was guest of honor at a
RETURN HOME
Wesley Roush.
layette shower at . a lawn
Mr. and Mrs. Keith Howell,
party held at the home of Springfield, and daughter
Mrs. Bernard (Sherrie) and husband, Mr. and Mrs.
Might, Mulberry Ave., Kennlt Hall, Rapid City, S.
Wednesday evening.
D., spent the weekend with
Rainbow colors were the Howells' mother, Mrs.
predomlnimt In the color Beatrice Howell, Rutland .
good time had by the per· scheme used.
They also went boating on the
Guests included MrS. Lue river while here.
fonners also reflects upon the
audience, perfonners who Shenefield and Lori Ann,
have dedicated themselves to Mrs. clara Shenefield, Mrs.
long, tiring hours of rehearsal Mary Montgomery, Mrs.
to provide some of the.Jjnest Tom Lambert, Mrs. Harold
sununer theatre to be 'found White, Mrs. Merium . Hoffanywhere. All perfonners, man, Mrs. Grace Colwell,
paid,
ate Mrs. Catherin~ Colwell, Miss
while
not
professional in every sense of Mary Colwell, Mrs. Pam
Colwell, Mrs.
Rowena
the word .
That is· why the Gallla Vaughan, Mrs. Marie Wat·
Dramatic Arts Society Is soh, Mrs. Roma Harrish,
proud, In every sense of the Miss Myra Roush, Mrs.
word, to invite everyone to Wykle Whitley and Master
~
attend this final weekend Decker Cullum.
Co-hostesses were Mrs.
presentatlon of "Gallla
Country."
Kay Cullum, Mrs. Sherri
Abbott, and Mrs. Ann
Elizabeth Turner. Garden
flowers
and
candles
decorated the refreshment
table. A salad course was
served.

turns three

IL:Jit}-N.t_ws 3,-!,8. 10 13.15; ARr' tllews 6, Z.oom 20 .33.
. By FRED M&lt;MANE
Cincinnati 24-19, finally woo helping Jim Rooker to his the aid of three oouble plays, W- R: . Reuschel. lS-3. L 8111\nghai-n , 8·8. HRs- Cincln·
6 :»-NBE:News 3,. ,15; ABCNews 13, AndyGrlffllh 6:
UP~ Sports Writer
the' game in the 13th when ninth victory. Joe Ferguson laced the minimum number nati,
Ro~ [7) , Bench (23). Lum
of
batters
in
eight
innings.
and
Bob
Watson
homered
for
CBS News a, 10: Vil la Alegre 33; V-Iable Soup 20 .
The Olicago tubs chances Dave Rosello atoned for a
C2 ), Griffey (9), Geronimo (1) ;
Expos 5, Padres 4:
Ch icago, Buckner 2 (4). Murcer
7:DO-Truth or Cons. 3: To Tell the Tr~th 4; Liar' s Club
of winning the National 1~-inning error that had Houston.
Andre Dawson hit a two- OS ). Mitterwald 2 (t ) , Morales
6; $128,000 Question 8 ; News 10; To Tell the Truth
League East pennant may be given the Reds the lead by Cardinals 3, Braves 0:
I l l.
written In the wind. It blew singling home pitcher Rick
13; My T.hree Sons 15: To Be Announced 20; Black
Rookie J ohn Urrea, making run homer in the eighth
000 010 000 - 1 6 0
Journal 33.
Thursday and basebslls were Reuschel with two out. only his secood major league i.[)nlng to give th~ Expos a Pl"llla
000 100 001 - 2 4 I
7:30-PorterWaqoner3: GonqShow4: Candid Camera
sailing out of Wrigley Field Reuschel, wbo picked up his start, tossed a five-hitter and victory over the Padres. The L.A.
Kaat. Gi!lrber (91 and Boone.
6 ' Treasure Hunt 8; MacNeil -Lehrer Report
like they were ejected from a 15th victory with two-thirds of Garry Templeton tripled Padres led ~ after six John and Yeilger. W- John ( 11 ·
Superbly crafted by
. L - Kut ( 4 -6 ). HR - LOS
10
• ~~~~ 'inh~t V:~:::~3~ ' Pop Goes the Country l5:
rocket launcher.
an inning In reUef,started the home a pair of runs to lead innings, but the Expos scored 4)
KeepsakP to symbol ize
Ang~tes , Cey (20).
S:DO-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4,15: Movie " Time Travelers"
And once again, the CUbs winning rally with a two-&lt;&gt;UI the Cardinals to their sixth three runs in the seventh
you r lovP . . . In 14K
000 000 320- 5 10 I
6, 13; World Famou~ .. Moscow Circus , ~.10 [ .._
took advantage . of it - and single and took third on a consecutive triumph . Urrea, belore mo~nting their Mntral
~o l d . . . wi th t he Ke~p ­
San Dgo
. 000 004 ooo- 4 S 1
·,Washington Week rn Review 20.33.
~ ·- ~ .· ...... oiltsiugg.ed the' · hard.hittirig single by Steve Ontiveros. · :}-3, struck out six and, with winning. rally, "
Twitchell , !-foldsworth (6 ),
sake
assura nce of t imeKerr igan (7). ·stant\Ouse &lt;&amp; l and
Cincinnati Reds, 111-15, In 13 Rosello the'Y delivered his
8:3_0 -Chico &amp; the Man 3,4, 15; Wall Street W.eek 20,33, ·
Carter ; Owchinko, Spillner (9)
less qua lit y.
9 :DO-Rockford Flies 3,4, 15 ; . Lowell Thomas
innings .
game-winning hit off Jack
and Tenace. W- Kerrlgan , 2·3.
L-Owchlnko , 3·7. HR - Mon Remembers 20; Documentary Showcase 33.
The two teams tied a major Billingham.
trell l, Dawson (12) .
9 :30-Movle " Gordon' s War" 6,13; Something Perleague home run record for
In other NL games, Los
sonal 20
.
Houston
010 100 Olo- 4 9 l
'
lO:OD-Quincy 3,4,15: News 211,: Firing Line 33 _
extra innings by rutting 11 in Angeles edged Philadelphia,
Pttsbgh
410 00.. OOx- 9 13 0
10 :30-Woman 20.
the contest, including a 2-1, Pittsburgh whipped
Larso.n , Pentz (71 and Ferguson ; Rook~r and Ott . w11 :DO-Nws 3,4,6,8,10, 13,15: Monty Python' i Flying
record:tying five in the first Houston , 9-4, St. Louis
Rooker , 9·5. L - U~trson , 0·4,
Circus 20: Black Perspective on the N~ws 33.
innirig. Olicago had six of the blanked Atlanta, ~. and
HRs- Houston . F~rouson (14),
11 :30-Johnny Carson3,4,15; Borella 6, 13; Movie "The
homers, Including two each Montreal edged San Diego,-&gt;
an earlier plea-bargaining Watson 113 ) ; P i t t • b u r b h.
ORLANDO, Fla . (UPI) session .
Garner (13) , Robinson 03) .
by Bill Buckner and George 4.
Mephlsto Waltz" 8: Mary Hartman 10; ABC News
New York Mets infielder
33.
Mitterwald.
Dodgers Z, Phlllles 1:
Circuit Judge Maurice Paul Allan1a
000 000 ooo- o s 0
12 :DO-Movie " Stanley•: 10; Janak! 33.
B&lt;lbby Murcer and Jerry
Pinch hitter Reggie Smith Lenny Randle drew a $1,000
.
d
Rand!
guilt
d t ld St.L
100 020 OOx- 3 6 0
f
oun
e
Y an
Capra, Hanna 16) and Nolan ;
12: 40-Mod Squad 6: Ironside 13.
Morales also homered for the drew a bases loaded walk in fme, a $50 surcharge and free
career advice Thursday for him, 11If you want to engage Urrea and Rader . W- Urrea, 3·
1 :DO-Midnight Special 3,4, 15.
1:40-News 13 , 2:30-News 3, 3 :DO-M&lt;&gt;vle " soy
CUbs while Johnny Bench, thenlnthinningtoforcehome punching former Texas in that kind of activity, you 3. L'-Capro, 2.8 .
Friend'' 3.
Pete Rose, Mike Lum, Cesar the winnjng run for Los Rangers' Manager Frank ought to get into boxing, get
American League
Milw
000 000 1)00-- 0 4 2
4:30-Movle "She Wrote the Book" 3: 5:30-Movle
Geronimo and Ken Grlftey Angeles. Tommy John Lucchesi last March.
in the ring and give your Boston
016 010 OAx- 12 14 o
"Out All Night" 3: 6:30-Bewllched 3.
connected lor Cincinnati.
. allowed only six hits In going
an
equal
Hinds, Rodriguez (3) and
Randle earlier was fined opponent
Haney, Moore- (8) ; Paxton and
Movie Channel4 -sand 9 P.M. - Hindenberg.
Chicago, which out hit the distance to win his 11111 $10,000 by the Rangers and Opportunity.
Fisk . W- Paxton (4-2) . L1 and 11 P.M.-And Then There Were Non,e .
game in 15 decisions.
"1 think not only baseball Hi nds (0-31 . HRs ~ Boston,
suspended for 30 days without
Pirates 9, Astros 4:
Carbo
19) , Rice 1211 . Hobson
pay before being traded to the but organized sports suffered
·
(20 ), Doyle (2 ).
The Pirates moved ahead
~ THISTLEDOWN
from that action," the judge
Mets.
B;,lt
lOCI 000 lCIO-- 2 4 1
SATURDAY, JULY 30,1977
NORTH RANDALL, Oruo of the Phillies into second
Randle originally had been saJ."d'
N .Y .
203 022 32x- U 15 0
place
In
the
NL
East
by
6:DO-Summer Semester 10; 6: 15-Persi?Odlve 19;
(UP!) - Union Solider,
Paul fined Randle · $1,000 · R. May , McGregor 13) , T.
charged with aggravated
6:30-Fun for Everyone 6; TV Classroom 8; U.S.
Martinez ( 7) and Criscione ;
malting his first start since · winning their eighth game in battery, a felony, for the plus a $50 surcharge the Torrez
and Munson, Healy (7 L
Farm Report 10; Kentucky Afield 13.
a row. BUl Robinson hit a
last
Augus!,
came
from
judge
said
had
been
added
to
W- Torrez (9-10) . L- R. May
28
beating
but
the
March
7:DO-Saturday Report 3; Children's Theatre 4; Eddie
behind Thursday 10 win the grand slam homer and Phil charge was reduced to fines by the Florida I 11 -9L HRs- Baitlmore, oe.
Saunders 6: Treehouse Club 8; Public Polley
Tra~icional Wtddinrc Rings
Legts'lature this year .
Cinces (ll) ; New YQrk. Munson
featured eighth race at Garner clubbed a solo shot in battery, a misdemeanor, in
· Forums 10; Gilligan 13.
&lt;U ). Nettles (23). White (8).
- .Thistledown, going the · six
Randle later refused comMIIin
100 ooo 01Q...- 2 e o
furlongs in I : 13 4-6 and
· 7:30-Builwlnkle 3; World of Survival 4:
Valley of
ment on a report in the Seattle
310 000 Oh:- 5 10 1
the Dinosaurs 6 ; Way Out Games 8: Oddball
paying $11.40 to win.
Orlando
Sentinel Star ' Zahn, Serum (3), Burgmeier
(8) and Wynegar; Wheelock ,
Couple 13.
Bllly Wtlson was aboard the
Thursday that Lucchesi had LaXton
(7 }. Montague (8) and
8:DO-Woody Woodpecker 3,4,15; Tom &amp; Jerry 6,13:
winner. Night Salute was
decided to file a personal Jutze . W- Wheelock, 6·6. L Sylvester &amp;'Tweety 8,10.
Zahn , 9"8.
second and Tanya Boy was
by THOMAS JOSEPH
injury suit against him.
8:30-Pink Panther 3.4,15; Jabberjaw 6,13; Clue Club
third.
newspaper
quoted
The
100 000 002- J 4 0
Texas
8, 10; Mistster Rogers 20.
.
ACROSS
2 Swedish
000 000 ooo-- 0 11 2
sour1;05 as saying Lucchesi's Tronto
The trifecta of 5-9-4 paid 1 Lobster part
9:DO-Scooby-Doo. DynomuH 6,13; Bugs Bunny 8,10;
man's
15,306 .10 to nine winning 5 ·•Roscoe"
decision was reached at the
Sesame 51. 20.
name
proddirig of other baseball
ticket
holders.
10:DO-Speed Buggy 3,4,15; Tarzan 8,10; Unce Upon a
II Robust
3 Police blotter
people, Including Los Angeles
Classic 20.
12 Asiatic
name
10:311,-Monster Squad 3,4,15: Kro!H Supershow 6, 13;
Dodgers
' _Manager Tom
wild
4 "Your point
Batman 8,10: Consumer Survival Kit 20.
LaSorda and B&lt;lston Red Sox'
sheep
is -''
11 : ~Space Ghosts, Frankenstein Jr. 3,,.115; ShazamManager Don Zimmer.
13
Seed
( 2 wds.)
lsls 8,10; Crockett's Victory Garden 20.
1
' My concern is to concen·
Bernice
Bede
Osol
coating
5 Descendant
11 :30-Big John, Little John 3,4,15; Superfrlends 13;
trate on baseball with the
Big Blue Marble 6.
.
.
14 Dawdled
o{ a son
Yesterday's
New York Mets," Randle ·
12:00-Land oflhe Lostl, 15: Short Story Speclal6; Pro
15 Ra~out of
of Noah
Soccer 81 Fat Albert 10; Action News for Kids l3 .
26 "Mouse" said.
game
6 God of love 16Bare
12:30-Kids from C.A.P.E.R. 3,15; American. Band·
19
Playing
29 Slow, in
Randle,
28,
slugged
17 Cartoonist
7 Gone by
stand 13; Soul Train 6: Ark II 10.
card
music
Lucchesi
at
spring
training
in
Dorgan
· 8 Trumpet
1:011-Ara's Sports World 3; Movie "Aiona the Rio
22
Febrile
31
Theater
Orlando
after
Lucchesi
18 Proofreading
blare ·
Grande" 4; Movie " Fat~ is the Hunter" 10;
disease
box
started playing rookie Bump
July 30, 1t77
dir
ti on
9 - o·f
ec
Wrestling 15; Nova 33.
·
This corT)Ing year will be
23
Unyielding
32
Monarch
Wills ahead of him.
1: 30-Greatest Sports Legends 3: l'olnt ot VIew 6:
dlfferenl .in that you may form 19 Sensible
Aquitaine
24
Increase
34
see
Lucchesi, SO, who was later
10 Past
Movie " The Day the Fish Came Out" 13.
more partnerships than usual . !0
• "You 25
Once
and
5
Across
fired
as manager of the
2:00-Grandsfand 3,4,15: Miniature Golf 6: Racers 8:
Some will pan out - others may
So Fair"
participle
(2 wds.)
36 " Of course' Rangers and now serves as a
Bll! Moyers' Journal 33.2:15-Baseball 3,4,15.
cau$e you headaches.
21 Ferrous
of ride
~'"1':'~~=-T..-=scout for the club, suffered a
2:30-Bowllng 6: Movie "Run of the Arrow" 8.
L!O (July 23-Aug. 22)irrespec· 2% Constrqct r:--r,~~or::-­
cheekbone and
3:DO-Urban League 10; Cancer : life or Death 33.
tive of wno you d'eal with on a 24 Growl
3:30-NFL Football 6,13; Celebrity Bowling 10; Book
one•to-one basis today . don't 25 Disappear .,_--+-+--+rib plus other
Beat 33.
I"~t-lt-t-t-J~;~~~d from
the attack .
• feel you have them under yOur 26 Droop ·
4:DO-Pro-Fan 10:. Woman 33.
thumb. A bolt from the blue m,ay 2'7 "The
4:30- 4-H W.Va. Extension Services B; Sports Specbrmg any encounter to pustiEarth"
. tacular ,!0: Montage 33.
·
and-shove. . Find Out more about .
SCI&lt;YfO RESULTS
· S:DO-Star Trek 3; Marcus Welby, M.D. 4; Space: 1999
yourself by sending for your
heroine
.
::OLUMBUS
(UP!) ~ JJR,
B; To Be Announced 15: Catch-33 33.
.copy of Astra-Graph Letter . Mall 21 Breed's
·I
starting
from
the
No. 3 post
6:DO-News 3,A,6,10: Lawrence Welk B; God Has the
50 cents for each and a long.
or Bunker
self-addressed.
stamped
F
Answer -15. .
~+--J.-+---1 position, led all the way in
envelope to Astro-Graph, P.O. 30 ordham
6:30-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; News 6; CBS
defeating Coaltown Charli.e
•
BoK 489. Radio City Station, N.Y.
mascot
News 10; Lilias, Yoga.&amp; You 33.
by three-quarters of a length
10019.
Be
""'"
to
specify
your
31
Ancestral
· 7:DO-Muslc Hall America 3; Lawrence Welk 4.15: Hee
in the $10,300 Ohio Sires
Seeds- Bird Seeds- Oyster Shells and Gritbi~h sl~n .
33 Region of
Haw 6,8; .In The Know 10; Let's Make a Deal 13:
Stakes trot at Scioto Downs
Fertilizers- Lime- Cement &amp; Mortar - Stock
VIIIGO
(Aut.
23-hpt.
22)
Extra
Spain
World War II 33.
Thursday night.
strength and fortitude may be lS Scene of
· 7:30-Dolly 10; In Search of 13; Wodehouse Playhouse
Salt - Water Softener - Remedies - Salt Scribe showed.
.., needed for you to deal wllh un·
Ute " Diad"
33.
Litters - Vaccine - Roofing - Paints - Red
The winner, driven in 2:02
&amp;: DO-Emergency 3,4,15: Wonder Woman 6,13; Mary
· usual pressures today . Keep 37 Publisher's •=+--+Brand Fencing · ·Baler and Binder Twine your recall - you. too, have
concern ,
2-ii by Loa Rapone, returned
Tyler Moore 8,10
.
Sprays - Gates.
limitations.
·
8:30-Bob .Newhart 8,10: Something Personal 33.
$8.80, $3 and $3.40.
38 Bugbear
9:DO-Movle "Harrjl In Your Pocket" 3,4, 15; Starsky &amp;
The 2-3 nightly double
LIIIIA (SopL 21-0tt 23)Dpn't 39 Foregoing
Hutch 6,13; All In The Family 8,10; AI The Top 33.
gamble today on yoursell or ·
B k
"-;,;--t-+--1-+--l...;_
b-+--+--1--&lt;--1 combination of Speedy Bye
others. no matter how well you tO eC ons r:
9:30-AIIce 8,10.
Bye and Baroness Brewste~
know them. Even it you win.
DOWN
10:DO-Feather &amp; Father· Gang 6,13; Switch 8,10;
b-+--+--1--&lt;--1
was worth $21.80.
you're going to wind up a loser.
l Oriental
Shades of Greene 33.
'--.1--l..-Ld Attendance was 4,627 and
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Now. 22)
tea
Mulberry Ave.
992-2115
Pomeroy
the handle $294,952.
11 :DO-News 3,4,6,8. 10,13, 15; Janak! 33.
Shun any remarks that cOtJid
11: 15-ABC New$6; Film 15; 11 :30-Mary Hartman 3;
trigger a domestic rumble today.
DAILY: CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
Saturday Night 54,15; Movie " Tomb of !he Living
If you get one started . chances
AXYDLBAAXR
are otd wounds will be reopened .
Dead" 6; Movie "Jane Eyre" 8; Movie "Guys and
is
LONGFELLOW
Dolls" 10; Movie "Return to Peyton Place" 13.
IAtlmARIUS (Now. 23-Dec.
1:DO-Movie 4: L30-News 3; Lohmnan &amp; Barkley'6.
21) Once in a while you tend to
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A i•
1 :40---Movle "Equinox" 13; 2:QO.-.&lt;Movle " Sand" 3;
express yourself bluntly. If you
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, ctt. Single letters,
3: 10-ABC News 13.
do so today. there's a good
apostrophes, the len gth and formation of the words are all
3:30-Movle "Slightly Terrific" 3: 5:00-Movle
chance you'll have to eat .your
hints. Eaeh day the code letters are different.
.
" You're Telling Me" 3; 6:oo-Movle " That's the
words.
Solri!H 3.
CRYPTOQUOTES
Ct.PRICORN (D..,_ 22..,.,, 18)

ASI RO•GRIPH

MeiKs cheerleaders -return home

Amy Roush

Ptf'ry •nd Suodbef'Q ; Girv in

•

992-5020
992-3748

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

�""

·~--., -

...•-.••t•·---r .. •••w• ........ .Jt-·'~·· •

CHURCH
NEWS

l.

~ 4 ,

THESE MESSAGES Of OUR RELIGIOUS HERITMiE ARE SPONSORID EM:H WEEK BY 1HE F'Ol.UMING

..

MEIGS TIRE CENTER INC.

MEIGS PlAZA

LINDA'S LADY FAIR
BEAUTY SALON

· EWS &amp; SONS SOtiiO

BEJSY ROSS BAKERY

7·30p m .
MASON ASSEMtl Y Of GOO.
Dudding lofl•. Mos.on W. Va .
Chest•r Tennant , PaJtor. SuJ'Idoy
School 9:45 a .m.: Children'•
Church 6:45 p.M. Yovn; P~l•:s
Service 6:45 p.m EvangelistiC
S.rvi&lt;:e 7:30 p m. Wom.n's Nlis ·
aionory Council 10 o .rn. firlt ond
rh 1rd Tu••days . Prayer and Blble
Study, Wednesday , 7:30p .m.
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST
IN CHRISTIAN UNION , The Rev .
William Compbetl, poslor. Sunday
School, 9:30a.m., James. Hughes ,
supt ., evening service, 7:30p.m.
Wedne1day ev•ning prover
meeting. 7:30 p.m Youth prayer
service each Tuesday.
FAIRVIEW BIBlE CHURCH ,
Letorl , W. Va ., Rt. I , Rev. Charles
HargrOY8$, pa1t0r . Worship ser·
... ~cas. 9:30 a.m .: Sunday school ,
11 a .m.: evening worship , 7,30
p.m Tuasdoy cottage prayer
meeting and Bibla stydy, 9.30
o. m WorJh1p service , Wednes·
day , 7:30p. m.
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH , 26 N.
Se&lt;ond .. Middleport , pastor, CuF·
tis Stephen . Chui"Ch ~chool , 9 30
a .m., preaching setv1ces , 10.30
a . m. and 7 30 p.m. Wednesday,
.... enrng8iblestudy . 7 30p .m.
INOEPENOENr HOliNESS
CHURCH . INC ....... Corner Fqurth
and lincoln Sts ., Middleport ; Rev.
O'Dell Manley , pastor , Sony Hudwn , Sunday School super inten·
dent. Sunday school , 9:30 a .m.,
evening worship, 7:30 p.m :
prayer (Jnd praise service,
Wednesday , 7:30pm.
·
THE PEOPlE'S CHURCH 0~
POMEROY - Corner Main ond
Court Sts., th1rd floor over
Ligl-lthouu Restaurant. Hen ry
Cook . pastor . Sunday school , 10
a.m ., mornmg worshrp , 11 am ,;
evening servrce, 7;30. Wednes·
day avemng serviCe , 7:30. In·
terdenominateonal , full gospel .
RUTlAND CHURCH OF GOD
Pastor Dennis Boles Sundo'{
School, 10om,; worship service,
11 ·30 om . ond 7:30 p.m Prayer
meeting, Wednesday, 7:30p .m.
RUTlAND APOSTOliC CHURCH
OF JESUS CHRIST, Thomas l.
Holmes, pastor. Bibl&amp; study,
Saturday, 7:30 p.m., Evon~eles,ic
p.m. ; prayer meeting, Tuesday,
7:30 ,p m.; Bible Study. Thursday,
7:30p.m,
POMEROY
WESlEYAN
HOLINESS ....:... Harmonvllle Rood;
Dewey King. poster, Edison
Weo'Yer, ass.ittant, Henry Eblin ,
Jr , Sunday school supt. Sunday
school, 9:30 o .m ; morning war
shtp 11 a .m. Sunday uvenmg survice, 7:30 . prayer meeting, Tllurs ·
day , 7:30 p.IT'
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF
GOO - Not Penreco!ltal. Rev .
George Oiler, pastor. Worship
service Sunday , q·AS o .m ; Sun.
cloy scl-lool, 11 a .m.; worsh1p sur ·

tRINITY CHURCH . lev , W. H..
P..-nn , pastor; Roy Mayer, Sun.
Complete Automotive Service
John F. Fult1
do)' schOol supt. Church Sct-.ool ,
BAKERS OF GAY tO BREAD
Locvst &amp; Beech Sis. Middleport
Pit. 992-2101
Pomeroy
C•ll 949-28311 For Appoinlmenl
9:15a.m .. wonhip service, 10:30
"'iddleport, Ohio
Midd'-Port
Ph. tf2-IOJO
Ph . 992-9911
a .m. Choir rehearsal, Tuesday ,
R1 cine-. Ohio
? •XI p .m. under direct1on ot Mrs.
PouiNeos•.
POMEROY CHURCH OF tHE
NAZARE:N.E : (Df'ner Union and
Mulberry, Rev. Clyde V 1-jenderson. pOt. tor . Sunday S&lt;haOI. 9:30
a .m., Glen McClung, supt .. morn·
BUICK- PONTIAC-GMC
WE FILL DOCTORS
ing worship. 10.30 a .m .. evening
500
E
. Main
Pomeroy
PRESCRIPTIONS
wrvi&lt;:e , 7:30; rnid·week. service,
Ph
.
992-2174
Wednesday , 7:36pm .
Pomeroy
992-29SS
GRACE EPISCOPAL , The Rev.
Harald Deeth, rector . Church ser·
Vices, 10:90 a .m. ; Holy commu ·
nron ftnf Sunday · of month;
church ~ochool , 10:30 . a .m. for
&lt;FOr a re•l auction call the Real
nursery through 12.
McCoy I
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST ,
212 W. Moin- Pomeroy-992-9962
I. 0 . 1Mac) Me Coy
· Richard Evanson, postor, Brbla
510
N. 2nd, Middltporf-992· 3451
985-:1'144
school. 9 : 30a.m . ~ won tup, l0:30 .,.
a .m., adult wonh1p service and
young people'• m"ting, 7:30
p m . Combined Bible study and
prayer meeting, Wednesday , 7·30
p.m.
N1tionwide Ins. Cso. of
THE SAlVATION ARMY, Envoy
Columbus, 0.
Ray W. Wrmng , officer in charge.
Ph. 949-9130
Pomeroy
8114 W. Main
Sunday. 10 a .m.. Holiness
me•ttng , 10 .30 a .m.. Sunday
Ph. 992-23tl
School Young People's Legion , 7
p m .; Thursday , 1 to 3 p.m,,
MEIGS COUNTY BRANCH
ladies Home league , 7 p m , Prep
classes .
BURliNGTON SOUTHERN BAPTIST CHAPEL , Roule I, ShadeTHE STORE WITH A HEART
Pastor Bobby Elktns. Sunday
Rilcine
Ph. 949·2626
Pomeroy
296 W. 2nd
school , 5 p.m. ; Sunday worshrp,
5·4S p. m . ~ Wednesday prayer s.r·
Ph . 99HI63
vice , 7·30 p m.,. "
ST PAUl LUTHERAN CHURCH ,
Corner of Sycamore and Second
2 CONVENIENT MARKETS
Sts. , Pomeroy. Tha Rev. William
Mtddlesworth, Pastor. Sunday
Pomeroy
School at 9:•5 a .m. and Church
Racine
Ph. 997-2582
Services 11 a .m.
Ph. 949-2000
Ph. 949-24t7
Mason
SACRED HEART. Re v Father
Ph.
773-5121
Paul D. Welton , pastor . Pllone
992 -2825. Saturday evening Mass,
7:30, Sunday Mass , 8 and 10 am.;
Confess1on , Saturday , 7·7 :30 p.m.
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH
OF CHRIS'f,, 200 W. Main St., Jerry
Paul, minister, phone 992·7660.
THE FINES'I'.IN MOBILE
ttin9 on a false
Conservative, non ·i11strumentol ;
HOMES .
216 E. Second
,
Ne
~ou pU d" )hat you . s are
Sunday worsh1p , 10 am .; Bible
Pomeroy
Ph. 992-3325
study, 11 a .m. , worsl-lip , 6 p.m.
....- be your p_ict'!,'e,.\re you
1100 E. ·Main
Ph. 992-70:14
Wednesday B1ble study, 7 p.m
Could uoiS h morruOQ · ?Qr on~ bOtn un\UC\&lt;yoa
OlD DEXTER BIBlE CHRISTI/'IN
get up eac . ht balloons. 'ere iusl . "&gt;
CHURCH, Re v. Ro lrh Smrth ,
you ded ~big. bn~ Or )hat you wn do abOUt ll.
I'""~ o! ~
pastor . Sunday schoo , 9:30 a.m ..
roun
doWO·
•
u ca
\haO a "~ d r
. n·t much ~o
•""re is more •"" nigh sl eo
Mrs Worley Francis. superinten·
d own · (\OWO.
t)olere IS
d it )hat u)her on us a lot
dent . Preaching services first &amp;
CARS&amp; TRUCKS
\ate date
ld ha~e to a m )hers-woe ld come acros
thrrd Sundays follow•ng Sunday
46l S. lrd
Middleport
Racine
Third St .
1'\osto! us wo~ we present ~ause we wou
d
Schoo l.
Ph . 992·2196
Ph. 949-2812
GRAHAM UNITED METHODIST.
·n )he 1mi!Q . ~ pitY·
an f1n
'
--------------~ vice
, 7·307·30
p .mp. m,
Thu rsday prayer
cloW0 1 "de. r-wres be 0 ursel,e5·
wnere yo~~
Preach1ng 9:30a.m .. first and se·
meetrng,
11
~ \oW s• could JUSt
n be yourse ' '\ you tr'J i\,
cond Sundays of each month;
MT HERMON Umted Brethren
third and fourth Sundays · each
better II we
where you ca cnurch. won
Church . Sunday School 9.30 a .m.
.
place
d1 The
month, worship service at 7:30
Worsh1p service 10 45 a .m.
There IS a
\ions as\&lt;.e .
.
p .m. Wednesday evenings at
Preaching serv1ces every Sundoy
n \'10 ques
I
7 30 Prayer and Bible Study .
alternating with C E. Wednesday
yourse"
SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST ,
prayer· meeting 7:30 p. m Rev
214 E . Main
Pomeroy
Mulberry Heights Road , Pomeroy .•
James leach, pastor. David
Ph. 992-5130
Pastor, Albert Difles : Sabbath
=~e"--f Holter, lay lerJde r
School Superintendent . Clara
Scnplures seltreted by T ~ Amencan Brble 59clety
JEHOVAH S WITNESSES , 1 mole
Mcintyre. Sobboth School , Sotur·
east of Rutla nd , JUnctio n of Route
Copynght 1977 K815tflr MverbSlng SaNa , Strast&gt;uq) , Vlrg.fd;
doy afternoon at 2·00, with War·
12.4 and Noble Summit Rood {T.
shipServrce following at3 ·15.
SALES-SERVICE
174
). Sunday Bible leelure. 9:30
GROCERIES&amp; GENERAL
RUTlAND FIRST BAPTIST
a .. ; WatchtOwer study, . 10:30
MERCHANDISE
Fire Extinguishers
am .; Tuesday. Bible study, 7 and
CHURCH- Drewy Gore, stJipt.
Sunday School, 9:30 o .m. , morn·
--+.!!~~!,F.ir•e•De-pi_
.•E•q~u~ip~.;,!!~,!!:~~
8:15
Thursday
Ph. '949-2550
Ractne
mg wonh tp . IO:•Sa.m .
Rutland
Ph.
schoolp.m.;
, 7·30
p .m, ; theocratic
service
THE HilAND CHAPEL . George
meet rng, 8:30pm .
Casto, pastor , Sunday Scl-lool .
HOPE BAPTIST - 570 Grant St ..
9 30 a . m.; evening worshrp 7 .30.
Middleport. Bobby Elk ins , pastor .
Thursday 'evening prayer service.
Sunday School. 10 o.m .: worsl·up
70:l0p,m.
service, 11 a .m., e vening sel'\lice ,
Featurino
PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
For All Your Shopping Needs
BAKERS OF GOOD BREAD
· POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST ,
7:30 p m. Thursday piayer
Deep
Steom
Exfraclion
·
Middleport,
Ohio
Ph . 992-2178
234 E . Main
William Watson , · Sunday School
meeting and l!lble study , 7·ao
· Huntingtonf W. Va .
Aerial-Schools-Weddings
Ph . 992-2206
Ph. 992-7630
Pomeroy
Supt. Sunday school 9:30 a .m. ;
p m.
L
Chester
PW. 915-4155
Rt. 3, Pomeroy
mormng ~rshtp, 10:30 a .m. BYF ,
RUTLAND FREEWill BAPTIST
6p.m. ; Bible study, Wednesday , 7
Church
Leland
pastor .
p.m., followed by choir practice
Sunday -school
, 10 Haley,
a . m.: e\lentng
at 8:30 p.m. Kerb'; Oiler will be
service, 7 : 30 p .m. Proyer
guest speaker on Sunday.
meeting , Wednesday. 7:30p. m.
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, 282
CHURCH OF GOD oi Prophecy .
Church &amp; Office Supplies
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy , Paul .J
FURNITURE &amp; HARDWARE
located on the 0 . J . Wh11e Rood
Roger Riebel
· Ray Riggs
White, Pastor , Gary Basham, Sun Home lite saws
ofl heghwoy 160 Sunday School
GIFTS
51. Rl . 7
KERMIT'S KORNER
Chester
day school supt . Sunday school ,
10 o. m Superi11tendent John
Ph . 985-3308
Pomeroy, Ohio
99 Mill Sl.
Chester
Middleport
Ph. 985-4100
Pomera'y, Oh1o
9:30 a . m.; morn ing worship ,
Loveday. First Wednesday night
10:30; eYemng worsh1p , 6 30 p.m 1......................~......1.....................-......J~..........................J.............................~............................, ofmonthCPMAse~ices , socond
M1dweek prayer service, 7:30
Wednesday WMB meeting , thrrd
p.m.
p
w
h'
10
45
p
·
h"
7
oo
p
~~
h
1
~
do..
through Croyle.
fifth pastor
yauth. serv ece.
'
lb
H"l
UTlANO
W
youth mtnisler fSible sct'lool. 9 30
R
, 1 ur 1 t , astor o . m . ors rp . a .m.: royer eveneng wors tp,
:.JV;
royer auysc oo , 10·30 a . m., evenrng Road. Gory Kmg, postor; Sun y . George
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CENTER , a .m ; morning worship , 10·30 Worshrp I0:30a.m. Chur~:h School meeting Wednesday 7.45 p m . fneet ing , Wednesday, 7:30 p m.
servtce. 7:30. Wednesday Brble sc~ool , 9·30 om .; eventng Y&lt;!Or·
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL _
570
Dexter Rd .• langsville , Ohio, Rev . o. m : evenmg worsh 1p, 7·30:
- UMW3rdTuesday8p. m.
RACINE FIRST BAPT IST Don L. Study, 7:30p .m.
shep , 7:30p.m . Prayer meeting, GrantS! ,, Middleport ; Rev. Bobby
Clyde' Ferrell, Pastor Sunda'; prayer service, 7 p.m Wednes· 9 :30o m.
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
REEDSVILLE, SundaySchoolq30 Walker, Postal" , Ronn•e Salser ,
MT . UNIONBAPTIST , Rev. John Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Elk.'
S d
h I
School
11
a .m. Saturday day .
10 ~ ·
Rev. Harvey Koch , Jr
o .m Worship 7 30 p. m., Prayer Sunday school s.up t ; Sunday Elsw1ck, pastor, Sunday school
LONG BOTIOM CHRISTIAN ,
un oy ~c 00 • 10 a .l!' .;
1
preaching services 1·30 p. m
MIDDlEPORT CHURCH OF THE
ASBURY, Worsh1p 11 o .m Me,efing 7 30 p m , Tuesday ; school. 9.30 a .m,; morntng war - superintendent, Don Wilson , Sur· Bt;uce Smeth, past~r. Wallace · :~;~~~~. '";?;~hr~, m~ :l, Th~~~d~~
Wednesday evening Bible study NAZARENE, Rev , Jim Broome,
Church School 9.50 a .m. UMW Vrsitotion7·30 p m 1st Thursday .
sh •p 10 40 a m .. Sunday evenrng day school, q.45 a .m. ; e\lenlng Damewood , Supt. ~tble School. evening Bible study ond prayer
ot7 ·30p .m.
pastor; Mrs. Mary lothey, Sunday first Tuesday. B1ble Stud'; Thurs . ' SILVER RIOGE1'Worship 10 O.m worship , 7 30 Wednesday even · worship. 7 ·30 p . m
Prayer 9:30 a.m. Preac~tng s~rvece , meetrng , 7 . p .m. Affili ated with
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH , school supl . Sunday school , 9 30 7:30p.m.
30
Church School9 am .
ing Bible study, 7:30.
meeting , 7·30 p .m. Wednesday.
10:•5 a .m. No ~enmg servtce.
S BC
Bailey Run Rood, Rev. Emmett o. m.; morneng worship, 10 30
FOREST RUN , Worshop 9 o. m,
TUPPERS PlAINS , Wo"h;p 9
DANVIlLE WESlEYAN , Rev. R,
TUPPERS PlAINS CHRISTIAN
HYSEll RUN FREE METHODIST
HV.SEll
RUN
FREE
Rowson , pastor. Handley Dunn , o . m ..
Sunday
evange listic ChurchSchool10a.m .
o .m. Church Sch'ooiJOc .m.
D. Brown , pastor. Sunday School . CHURO{, Eugene Underwood, CHURCH , Rev . Herbert Ael1ng . METHODIST- Rev. Herbert Ar isupt. Sunday school. 10 a .m. Sun· meeting. 7:30 p.m . Prayer
MINERSVILLE , Wots hip 10 o.m,
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST , 9:30 am.· morning worship · pastor; Howard Coldwell , Jr., posto.r . Sunday. School ~ . 30 a .m .. ing , pastor. Sunda school 9 .30
day evenmg service 7:30; Bible meeting , Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. Church School9o.m.
Geo~
Fredenck . supt. Servece 10 45 youth service, 6:45 p m ., Sunday School Supt , Sunday Morneng servtce, 10·30 a .m.,
_
Y. ._ .
•
teaching , 7:30p.m. Thursday.
UNITED
PRESBYTERIAN
SYRACUSE, Churcl-l Scl-lool 9 00 weekly , 9:30 o.m . on Sunday . evemng worshep, 7:30 p m.: School. 9.30 a .m.; Morn•reg Ser· youth
ser\lice , 6: 4~ p . m
fj~':mm~:~~~gge~~~:'~~ · i 1 0: I~ ~
OYESVILlE
COMMUNITY MINISTRY OF MEIGS COUNTY , a . m. Worship service 7 ·30 p m
1 . rv ce , :
Preochrng first and th1 rd Sundays prayer and praise, Wednesday , man, 10:30 a .m.: Sunday avanmg Evongelisllc service 7:30 p .m
· ·
CHURCH . Roger C. Turner, pastor. Dwight l. Zovih:, director ,
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
of mont I-I by Clifford Sm1th . 9 30 7.30 p.m.
service. 7 p .m.
Prayer meeting , Thursday , 7:30 ~h~;~d:yr~yer meehng . 1 P m.
Sunday St.Chool, 9:30a.m.; Sunday
HARRISONVIllE
RaY, Timothy Smith
a .m.
SILVER RUN FREE BAPTIST,
LETART
FALLS
UNITED p m
morning worship, 10:30; Sunday PRESBYTERIAN , Rev . Ernest
Cluster Leader
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION , Mrles Trout, pastor . Sunday BRETHREN , Rev. Freeland Norris.
. FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION ot
~RADFORD . CHURCH
OF
evening service, 7:30.
Stricklin , pastor. ~unday church
Rev. Steven Welscn
Dorrell Doddrill , pastor. Sunday school . 10 a .m.: Steve l rttle , supt . pastor: Floyd Norris , supt. Sunday Bald Knob. Rev . Lawrence ~~:~~~-;~::~~.·~ .:r:.r:~ .;~s~~~:
THE SAlVATION ARMY. 115 school, 9:30 a.m ., Mrs. Homer
Assoceate
School. 9:30 a .m : Leona rd Evening service. 7 p.m .: prayer school, 9:30 a :m.; morning ser· Gluesencamp, Sr. , pastor; Roger ing (hurch 10
c .m Junio r
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy. Envoy Lee , supt.: morning wonh1p ,
30
BETHANY , (Dorcas ), Worship G ilmore fir st elder; evening ser· meeting, Tl-lursdoy . '7 p. m.
man, 110 ·30 o.m ,; Prayer Mrvlce. Willford , Sr., Sunday school supt
church proQram under direction
and Mrs Ray Wining, officers in 10 ,30.
9.30 a.m . Church School 10:30 vice , 7·30 p m . Wednesday prayer
CHE STER CHURCHOF GOD , Wednesday ,"7·30 p. m.
Sund?y sch~l 9:30 o,. , Sunday of Koren Mraz for children, 2 _10. .
charge. Revival Friday and Satur·
MIDDLEPORT. Sunday school. a .m.
meetrng , 7·30 p m .
' Rev Bobby Porter. pastor Sun CHURCH OF GOD OF P~O· e\len1.ng serv1c•. 7 p.m . Prayer during regular church hour in
doy7 p m . wethMato r Walter Hm· 9:30a.m. , Rechord Vaughan. supt .
CARMEL , Chruc:h School 9:30
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF GOO, day school, 9·30 am : worship PHECY , O.J . White Rood off 160, meeting. Tuesday:, ?:30 p .m. church bo•ement . Sunday even·
shaw, rellred, of Ene Po. Public Morning worship, 10:30.
.
a .m. Worship 10:30 a .m. 2nd and Rocme Route 2 The Rev. Charles serv•ce , 11 a .m. even ing ser¥"ice , Rev. George Groyle , pastorSun· Ernest Deeter. class leader .
invited .
Sunday ,
Holiness
SYRACUSE , Morning wor,shlp, 9 4th Sundays .
,
Hond , pastor. Sunday school , 9 45 7.30, you th servic e , Wednesday, day School. 10 a.m.; Arthur Hen· ' Youth m~ting, Wedne~oday, 7:30 ~~~v:ce;,v~~;o ~. ~ : m. ; 1/o{ednesday
meeting 10 a .m. speaker, Major a.m .: Sunday school, 10o.m. Mrs .
APPLE GROVE , Sunday School a .m .; morn1ng worsh rp, II o .m 7:30p.m.
son, Supt. ; Mornmg Worship, 11 p. m. weth Don and Martha
JUBILE,E CHRISTIAN CENTER _
Hinshaw , Sunday School 10·o45 Sampson Hall , sup I .
LANGSVILLE
CHRISTIAN Ct. m .; Yaung People 's service, 7 Meadows, leaders_
G
• C k R d Ch
h
9:30a.m. Worship 7:30pm. 1st Evening serv1ces , Tuesdoy and
leader V.P.S.M. Eloise Adam,,
00 ·.
RUTlAND CHURCH OF GOO , ond 3rd Sundays; Prayer mee ting Ft'idoy . 7·30 p.m.
CHURCH , T&amp;d Jones , p·asto r. Sun p.m.; Evening J8r¥1Ce, 7:30p.m.;
WHITE 'S CHAPEL Coalville RD .
.eorge s
ree
urc
Solvatton m"ting 7 p.m .. revival Rev James D. Guy.nn , pastor . W ~~nesday 7·30 p.m. Fellow' h'p
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH dey school • 930
am
Rov w-~
d
Mtd . w ee k proyer Rev. Roy 0 ee 1er, pos
' 1at". sun d. oy ship,
school10·30:
, 9~30ei.lening
a.m.; mornmg.
wor·
tJU
.
.•,
"""'nes ay
service, 7:30.
1peoker Major Hinshaw. Thur$· Sunday school , 10 a .m.; Sundar supper
first Soturday 6 p.m. UMW OF CHRIST , Doug Seamon, Sigmon , sup!, ; morning warship , Service, 7 :30 p . m. ; Youth school9:30 ~.m.; wonhrpservrce , Prayer meeting Wednesdo
day : 10 a .!Tl . clothing doy. Wor· worship, 11 a .m., Sunday even•ng 2nd Tuesday 7:30p.m .
minister Bible study . 9·30 om.; l0:30, Sunday even eng servece, meeting , 6:30pm. £yening wor· 10:30 a .m . B1ble study and prayer
m
y, 7 ·00
ship, Mrs. Bettie McGuire 11 ·30 service, 7 p .m., Wednesday war·
EAST LETART, Chruch School morning worst-tip, 10·30 a .m.; 7·30; mid · week servtce. Wednes· ship, 7:30p .m.
service , Wednetday , 7:30p.m.
P ·
a .m. junior sold1ers meeting, ship service. 7:30p.m .
Itt, 2nd , 3rd Sundays, 9,30 a .m. evening worshep, 7:30 p.m. day, 7·30p.m.
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE
RUTLAND
Jock1e Justis , leader . Birthday
HAZEl COMMUNITY CHURCH , Fourth Sunday 10:30 am. Wor· Wednesday Bible study 7 30 P m.
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE , Rev . Herbert Grate,
·RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST .
Lynne Arms . 7:30p.m Bible Study Near long Bottom, Edsel Hart, ship 2nd Sunday 7.30 p.m. 4th ' KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST, NAZARENE. R&amp; v. Do le Boss , pastor. Worship service, 11 am. Oenni'\ Sm th, pastor; Frank
1
Genes is 25 by Rev Noel Her· pa•tor. Sunday school. 10 a . m.; Sunday 9:30a.m. : Proyermeeting " George Frederick , supt. Sunday pastor , Bob Moore, Sunday and 7:30pm . Sunday . Sunday Young.Sunday school supl . Sun·
mann,
Chvrch. 7:30 p.m .. prayer Wednesday 7:30 p.m . UMW ht morning service, 9:30 a .m. w1th Schoof supt. , Sunday school School. 9:30am . Richard Borton, day school and communion. 9:30
MIDDlEPORT
preochtng on lersl and thi rd Sun· classes for oil ages, 9 30 ' a . m.; supl. Prayer meeting , Wednes· a . m. Worship and com union ,
Tuesday 7:30p.m .
meeting. 7:30p.m. Thursday.
MT. MORIAH 'IIAPTIST, Corner
WESLEYAN (Racine) , Sunday doy of month by George Pickens . morning worship , 10:•5 a . m ; day, 7:30p.m.
10:30 a .m.
Florence Circle visited her
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL ,
Fovrth and Moln, Middleport. Third Ave., the Rev , William Knit· Scliool 10 o .m . Worship 11 a .m.;
STIVERSVILLE COMMUNITY NVPS , 6.30 p.m., evangefistec ser·
BRADFORD
CHURCH
OF
RUTLAND
COMM UN lTV aunt, Mrs. J..aura ~iselstein
Rev. Henry Key , Jr., pastor. Sun· tel, pastor. Ronold Dugan, Sun · Jr. UMYF Wednesday 3:30 p.m.; CHURCH , Sunday School serv1ce . v1ce . 7:30p.m. Prayer and jesting CHRIST, Gabnel Mzrs , po 1nor. 81· CHURCH , Sunday School , 9:30
day School , 9.30 a .m.; Mrs. Ervin day School Supt. Clones for all Bible Study Thursday 7 p .rn , Choir 10 om : Praye r meet ing . Thurs· Tuesday. 10 a .m. j Midweek " ble Sunday Schoof9:30 a.m .; mor· a.m .; worship service, 11 a .m. ; and son of Pomeroy a recent
Baumgardner, supt .. Morning ages : evening sel'vica, 7:30; 81ble ProctkeThursday8p.m
day , 7 p .m.; Sundoy evening ser· prayer servi.ce, Wedne~day , 7:30 nlng church 10:30 a.m. ; Sunday Wednesday prayer meeting, 7:30 Saturday.
worshep, 10:45 om .
Mr. and Mrs. Donald
study, Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.;
LETART FALLS, Church School vice , 7 p .m.
p.m ; mens prayer meeting. u'/ening service, 7:00 p. m. p.m . youth 18rYices, Sundoy. 7
MIDDlEPORT CHURCH OF yt;luftl serYICes , Friday, 7:30p.m .
1st, 2nd, 3rd Sundays 10 IS a .m.
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST, Saturday , 7 p.m.; missionary ..Vednesday servlc•. 7:30p.m.
p. m.; Sunday night worship, 7 :30. Pien:e of Athena visited with
CHRIST IN CHRISTIAN UNION,
MIDDlEPORT FREEWill BAP- .cth Sunday 9 :15 a .m.; Worsh rp Pomeroy· Horrisonville Rd .; Oon meeting, second Wednesday.
lAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE Mary Circle on Saturday
Lawrence Manley , pastor; Mrs . TIST , Corn•r Ash arid Plum; Noel 1st, 2nd , 3rd Sundays 9. 15 om.. Kennedy , pastor, Bi ll McElroy, 7.30 p m.
CHURCH, Rev.• Floyd F. Shook, NAZARENE, Rev. Lloyd 0. Grimm ,
Russell Young, Sunday School Herrman , pastor. Saturday eYen· .CthSunday7:30p.m.
Sunday school supt
Sunday
UNITED
FAITH
NON · paslor; lloyd W,.ight , Sundby Jr ., pastor. Sunday school. 9:30 evening. Mr. and Mrs. James
Supt. ,Sunday School _9·30 o.rh : ing setvice. 7.30 p .m.; Sunda)'
MORNING STAR , Worshep 9;30 schaot , ~ . 30 am. ; morn1ng wor· DENOMINATIONAL, Rev. Robert School Supt. ; Morning .Worship a . m.; ,w orship s.rvice, 10:30 o.m . Circle, New Haven, W. Va.,
Evening worsl-lip, 7:30, Wednes· School. 10.30o ,m,
om.; Church School 10 30 a .m .. shep and communlon, 10.30 a .m., Smith, pastor. Sunday School, 9:30 a .m., Sunday School 10:20 8roodcaslllve over WMPO; young were at the Circle home on
day prayer meeting, 7·30 p.m.
Mid-Week Sat'Vice Wednesday 8 Sunday &amp;\Ianing youtli Chrislran 9:30 o.m .. Closs l&amp;oder , leo Hill; a .m .. Wednesday Prayer and Bi· people' 5
6 : 45 ; Sunday.
MEIGS
1 ervice ,
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOO,
p .m.
Endeavor, 6 p .m.: worship ser· worshrp servece , 10:30 a . m.; ble Study 7:30 p rn. ; Sunday even· evongeli..-lic' service, 7:30 p . m
COOPERATIVE PARISH
1
Callers at ~e Douglas
Racine Rout&amp; 2, ti-le Rev. Jomes
METHODIST CHURCH
MORSE CHAPEl, Worshp 11 ¥"ice. 7 p .m. Wednesday evenmg church 7:30p .m.
ing wo"h1p 7.30 p .m .; Choir Proc· Prayer m..ling, Wednesday , 7:30
M_ Muncy, pastor . Sunday scl-lool ,
a
.
m.;
Chuhh
School
9
30a
m.
prayer
meet
eng
and
Bible
study
,
EDEN
UNITED
BRETHREN
IN
tice
Thursday
,
7
p.m.
p.
m.;
Missionary
,.,....hng
,
7
:30
Circle
home were Mr. and
Aobert T Bumgarner,
9:C5 o .m ; morning worship, 11
Director
PORTlAND , Wo"hip 7 30 p m.; 7:30p.m .
CHRIST . Elden R. Bloke, po"or.
DEXTER CHU~CH OF CHRIST, p. m. llrotWoclnMdoy of month.
Mrs. Glen Tuttle and son,
a .m.; evening worship, 7·30.
Church Schoal9 :30 o .m.
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH , Sunday School 10 a~ m .; Howord Cl-lorles Russell , S1., mlnl1ter:
MASON COUNTY
POMEROY ClUSTER
John,
Mrs. Ray Johnson and
Prayer meeting, Tuescloy, 7:30
SUTTON , Church School 9.30 Pine Grove. The Rev . William McCoy , supt.: Morning sermon, Rick Macomber, 1upt. Sunday
MASON FIRST B~PTIST, Second
Rev Robert Hoyden
son,
aU
of Eagle Ridge; Jlll
p.m .; Young people's lneehng,
a.m . Warship 1st and Jrd Sundays Middlesworth , Pastor. Church 11 a.m.: Sunday nlgfll services school, 9:30 a.m. ; worship ter· and Pomeroy Stt. , Stan Craig ,
Rev . James Corbitt
7·30 p .m . Thursday
services 9:30 a m. Sunday School Cl-lristion Endeavor, 7r30 p.m .; vice, 10:30o.m. Blbl• Study, TYet· pastor. Su~ school, 9:45a.m. ; Erich of Columbus, Mr. and
CHESTER , Worship 9·1 5 a .m. 10:30a.m.
MIDDlEPORT FIRST BAPTIST . Church School10o.m .
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
lO &lt;JOa ,m .
Song service, 8 p. m., Preaching day , 7:30p.m.
worship HNice. 11 a.m.; training Mrs. Jim Pattenon or
Corner Sheth and Palmer, the Rev.
Rev. Richard Thomas
BRADBURY
CHURCH
OF 8:30 p m. Midweek Prayer
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF union, 6:30 p.m. ; evenl,g WOf'·
POMEROY, Worship , 10:30 am.
Splller, Rocky Pitzer of
Peter Grandol, pastor; Manneng Chu"'h School 9:30 o ,m. UMYF
Po~ofor
CHRIST . Mr. Donald Roley , postor. meeting, Wednesday, 7 p.m .; R-v JESUS CHRIST OF LAnER DAY ship service, 7:30p.m Mid Week
Kloes, su,-rintendent Sunday 6:30p .m .
Ouane Syd,nstricker
Sunday school, q.30 am .. wor· Adams , loy l~oder .
SAINTS, Portland Racine Road. prayer HrYice, Wednesday, 7:30 ~. Randy and Jimmy
School . WMPO Radio program
John Douglas
ship serv1ce, 10.30 a .m.; Sunday
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST, Wilham Roush, potlor. Tom p.m .
Werry, Morning Star;
ENTERPRISE, Worship 9 a .m .
N5 a.m .; Sunday School, 9· 15 Church SchoollO o .m . .
Associates
services, 7 p.m .; youth group, Located at Rutland on New lima Stoborl, Sunday School Director.
MASON CHURCH OF J;:HRIST, P. Qlester Van Meter, Morning
a .m.; Morning WoNhip, 10· 15
JOPPA , Worsl-lip tO a .m.; Wednesday, 7 p .m .
Rood, next to Forest Acre Pork , Sunday School, 9:30a.m .; Motn· O.lox 47 , Miller St., Mason, W.
ROCK SPRINGS, Worship 10
11
a.m . Youth activities ond o m. 01\lrch School 9: ISo.m. Church School 9 a .m .; Prayer
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST, Rev Earl Rev. Roy Rouse, pastor: Robert '"i wanhlp , 10:30 a.m.; Sunday Va. Sunday Bible Study 10 a .m. : Star.
Fl-.ce
Circle
visited witb
fellowship for ;unior and senior UMVF6·30p.m.
MMting W4tdnesdoy 8 p .m
Shuler , po~tor . Sunday school Musser , Sunday SChoolaup1. Sun - even1ng Mrvice 7 p.m. Wednes· Wonhip 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. Bible
LONG
BOTTOM,
Sunday
school
9.30o.m."
Church
ser\IICB
,
7
p.m.
;
day
school
,
10:30
a.m.;
worship
cloy
evening
ptoyer
MI'Yic•.
7:30
Study
WedMidoy
1
p.m.,
Vocal
Mr
.
Mrs.
Garrett
Circle
lligh stvdonts. 6 p.m . Sunday
FLATWOODS, Worship, Jl a.m.
ot 9;30 a .rn . Worship services at youth mHtlng, 6 p .m.Tuesdoy Bl· 7·30 p . m.81ble Study , Wednet · p.m .
.music.
~ning worshep, 7 ·30 p.m. Mid·
Church School10o .m .
of Racine 011 Friday.
7 :30p .m. Bible otody ond Youlh ble Slu~y . 7 p.m.
dey, 7:30 p.m .. Solurdoy nlghl
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST , • ..,. Earl
FltiST SOUTHERN IAPTIST, Corweek proy•r servkes. Wednft·
EI'OIIT ClUSTER
Mr. and Mnl. "Art)Jur
rn•eting
ot 8 p . m
on
RACINE CHURCH OF THE prayer servK:e, 7:30p. m.
Sl-luler. pastor. Wor1hip HrVice. ner of Secortd ond Andel lOll,
day, 7:30p .m.
Obert Bumgarner
John11011
wen at the home 01
W.dntsdoys
.
NAZARENE.
Rev.
John
A.
Cofl'
HEMlOCK
~OVE
CHRI$TIAN
.
9:30
a.m.
Sunday
school,
10:30
Moton.
Pottor,
Woltw
Cloud.
CHURCH 'OF CHRIST, MidH
Robert Sum garner,
NORTH BETHEl, wo.,hip 11 man , postO&lt;. Svndcy School , 9:30 Rog..- Wotton, posiOr: .Iettie a .m. llble Study and pray..- - - Sunday school9:45 o.m.;
df•port. 5th and Main , Goor~ Post
Mr.
Mra. Dourlaa
orship 10 30 a . m.
a .m ., ~rald Wells , supt. Morn · White, Sunday Khooltupt. Mom · ¥"it.:e Thursday, 7:30p.m .
14rvlce, 11 a.m. ond 7:30 p.m . Jobnlon of Racine over the
Glaza, minitf•r. Mike Gerlach, Church SchO&lt;&gt;I 9:30 o. m. U~VF 6 o .m.; Church Sc:hool10 a .m.
ALFRED. Sunday School 9:30 ing wo"~'P · 10:30 o .m.; Sundoy"· inA wo"hlp , 9:30 a.m. ; Sun·
C~lETON CHURCH, K;npbury Weekly Blblt study, Wocln&lt;Hdctp,
Su~int.ndent.
T.,.ry Yonkft'. p.m .
.,etend.

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY

SMITH NELSON MOlORS.
INC.

FRENCH'S SUNOCO
SERVICE CENTERS .

McCOY AUCTION SERVICE

1---------------"f
ROSEBERRY'S PENNZOIL

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

RACINE FOOD MARKET

THE ATHENS COUNTY
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.

BRADFORD AUCTION CO.

MIDWAY MARKET
BOB'S MARKET

·or oFalse
~~~e~~~
O'true

KINGSBURY HOME SALES
&amp; SERVICE, INC.

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD SR.
REALTOR

pret~~~and.lhal ~~)his

_RACINE PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

o,M THOMPSON FORD, INC.

1

ANV TIM!: YOU
WANNA FLY &amp;ACK
TO CALIFORNIA WITH
ME'-· WLADEK WILL
SHOW YOU HIMSElF!

NOT AS GREAT AS IT SOUNDS ...
WHAT IF ! TOLD 'IOU HE~
DREAMED UP THE WOICLD'5
H&lt;1rTE6T WEAPON... AND
CAN'T 101/E'N S!?LL IT(

ON THE OTHER HAND-I" HE'S COME UP WITH
SOMETHING ALL THAT
HOT-- HMM-- MAYBE' I
SHOUU&gt; GRAB A

WELL . L DO HAVe
A FEW OTHER
THINGS T ' DO-·
LIKE RUNNING
McKEE ,
INDUSTRIESI

PE'eK

A! IT!

7·30

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-"KISS THE BOYS GOOD BYE"!
DH "0APO'f 1 -· l 'MOl lHIS liME HAlE. TO HAVE

'fOU GO .' S.Ul I
t&lt;NOY'I IT'S !'tO
USE ASI(fl' lOU
TO STAY--

THEm'S AJOB
'TO BE DoNE
'THAT CAH'T
WA tT-

AN ' I WANi TO
K\55 CHUCK
GOOO·BYE--AN'
1~ '

ASP ·· AN '

PUN.JAB - ·

~~~~~~~1

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-EVERYBODY'S BUSINESS

NOW, tfiR lj:lNf .. . WE'LL

Get:! 0\UCK GONE --

TUR;N YOUR FORMUlA AND
YOU OVER TO Tt\E R1Crt1T
PEOPLE , WHERE 'J'OUILL

MR.IANE ••

AND PUNJP.B ~N 1 'H1 1

ASP GOt4E •• ll SURE
QUIET AROUND

BE SAFE· -

I JU51 WtSH I

OH SURE· ·
ALL T~' roLKS
WHO COM~ TO
5EE. DR, ZEE - -

~OADOY­

&gt;F;;;;;;;;;;;=

COULD GO AlONGi
Wrtf1 HIM ·-

.JUST ONCE--

HERE--

POINTVIEW CABLE TV
SYSTEMS, INC.

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE
SERVICES

AND COME UP AND

UN De&lt;
ARRE51;SIR:"' )t)LJ HAllE" L.Osr

WAID CROSs SONS STORE

Ycx_v::! MIND, AND ARE" A
DANG-ER TO-

•

HEINER'S BAKERY

KEN GROVER PHOlOGRAPHY

SEAR'S CATALOG

MARK V STORE

YOUNG'S CARPETING

/------"'!'--------+--------------+--------------t--------------+-:-------------'f
NEW YORK
POMEROY
RIDENOUR SUPPLY
RIGGS USED CARS, INC.

•

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE

CLOTHING HOUSE

WINNI.E
ONE 'THING I

BEN FRANKLIN STORE

• IF Y&lt;JU WERE 10 WALK ARoUND

mwN Will-I !Hoe!= BAGBIN
YOUR HANDS AND lEN
BUCKS IN YOUR. POCKET;
'IOU'D BE HU6TI..ED IN
NO l1ME

IMNOT
E:XACTLYA
KID ..... AND
REMEMBER;

I 'VE

•I•
I
l

.Del

-•Itt!&gt;

I ·,
I.

•

•

•

·'

•!HI

JOEYt_I CAN'T
l1.JRN 'f6U Ou 1 ON iHE

• LDOK

TO ME FIR&amp;T, .JOEY/

B'TREET WITH ONLY TEN

HANDLE

BUCK&amp; IN YOUR POCKET

MYSELF/

5ERVEP

~~~~='il

TIME!

GASOLINE ALLEY

BRIDGE

LAFF ·A. DAY

~

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

·Discards throw South off
NORI"H
•Q9S4l
• AQ6
t K8
• K 10 4

lll •ln~~on.. C~&gt;~T·­

Cannel News,
By the Day

,..

LEARNED IN
PRISON WAS
HOW "TO

'wELL.!. y0U 1QE GOING .
10 HAVE 10 PROVE IT

••....,•"'-

%1

WEST

EAST

• 3
•J9532
tJ764
•Q65 .

.10
.K87
tQI0953
.9832

SOUTH tDI
.AK.I7S5
• 10 4
t A2

S!RL

•AJ 7

WH4 WOUL-D
H~ '5e!JD IJ:e

A·~r wa.t-''

Both 'iulnerable

()Jl.D, 6UT
I

I'M t¥Jr
SI{.K!

North Easl

Pass
Pass

GA~D~

3•
Pass

Opening lead -

Pass
Pass

3•

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
L..;_ _ _:;;;._ _ __;.....::..._ _....,

',.

BARNEY

I WONDER IF URIAH,TH'

MAILMAN, LEFT
ENNI/THING FER
US TOD,AY;-~r;::::---;

GLORY B.E!!
A DOUBLE
WHAMMY!!

took his king and returned Ute
suit
Soutlt still had a two-way
guess for Ute queen of clubs to
make his contract. but fine
discarding by East and West
led to hi• losing two more
tricks.
Soutlt drew trumps, cashed
Ute high diamonds and ran the
rest of h1s trumps West's last
four cards were the nine of
hearts and three clubs ; East's
Ute seven of hearts and three
clubs.
WesL unguarded the queen
of clubs on the last trump
while East chucked his heart.
So South led a club to the king,
finessed against East and lost
Ute last two tricks to the
queen of clubs and nine of
hearts.

- ~~~

~~

~,,

·----·----

.

~

"I'U never send my husband
again! Yesterday he bou&amp;hl two
things that have to be
COOKED!"

\lfi'\}ruf ID'\1

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ 6l
Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to form
lour ordinary words.

I DUPON

rxJ

I

byHenriArnoldandBOblee

Had a chance to gel a
piece ol thai operation

,( ro~r

~~~

,' '&gt;'b.:

Some players use the • A Vermont reader wants to
second-best
lead have
fromasa good
long know If you should count three
suit that doesn't
lOs as one point in de&lt;lidin~ if
as the jack at the head of it your hand is wortl! an opemng
agamst all contracts.
If West had been playing ' notrump.
We do this as &lt;!o most
this convention, his lead of the
experts,
Utree of hearts would have in- •A lOx .K tOxtK IOx•A J 91
1
sured Ute slam for South who
THE EXERCI~E
could have just played the six becomes a notrump opening
OF' 'YOUR: CHOICE.
of hearts from dummy ~~ bid
(Do you have a qu11tlon for
triclt one, It wouldn't matter
Now arrange lho clrclecf to
which high heart West held. If the e..-perrs? Wnte "Aak the
fonn the surpnae ...._. 11 sug.
it werf the kine East would Jacobya" . care of thil
gesled b y l h e - -,
take his jack, but Soutlt would newapaper. The Jecobys wilt
answer IndiVIdual qu.,t#Ons· ''
have a sure finesse again~! the stamped. self·addressed
Print answer here:
king later on and would get to envelopes ere enclosed. The
discard one of his cluba.
moat mtereatmg quution• wUI
(Answers tomorrow)
They weren't playina this 1&gt;t used in this column and will
J u -: T~GY MINOR FABLED ENGINE
•
convention and South decided rece1~1 coplll of JACOBY Yesterday·s .
Ans- What wortdng allhe mill might be-A GRIND
to tr~ dummy"s queen , F.a~t MODERN I

NIUEG

ONE PITCHER POST CARD AN'

rJ

THAT CUP OF CORNMEAL
HIS WIFEMATE BORRIED
.
'iESTlDDY
l

) I [

AN[IIlii)

I

.,

'··

,

�•
1-n.e OailvSentinel, Middleport-1\meroy, 0 ., Friday, July %!1, 1m

.~

'

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

WANT AD
CHARGES

P21

t '=

~

Side"J~

__ _

--

Moliile "oms" .foi- Sat.. I'm- s.m,

RISifltG STAA Kennel Boording , 197-4 MOBILE Home, 2 bedroom, COAl, llmet ton•. ond calcium VA·FHA, 30 yr . hnonctng . Ireland
12 • bS Greenbrier, to tal ele&lt;.,
Indoor-Outdoor runs 1 grooming
chloride and calcium brine for
Mortgage , n E. State, Athetb,
unfurnished . In excelfent condi·
bntet-ds.
dean
sanitary
all
dutt control and spedol mi•ing
phone (614) 592·3051 .
'
6days
tion. ASking price . $6500.
focUities oe367-7112. Chttshire.
salt for former-5 , Excelsior Salt
Phone992-5771.
2.
STORV
3
bed.-oont
frome
Phonol614) 367-02'12.
Works . Main Street , Pomeroy-,
E&lt;lch word lt\'et Ole muumwn U
- acre Ohio
' hov1e. F.A. ft/rnoce , dormwm wurus lS 4 L't!fiU per lro'Urtl ~ d,My .
2
BEOI:OOM
MOBILE·
home,
or phone 992- 3891 .
HOOF HOLlOW. Boy , sell, trade
dews . tireploce in Middleport.
Ads n.ummg oll"ll'r blltll L'Utl!ltt'Uti\lt"
'It of ground, goroge, out- CAMPE-R , $600. Also,
or train horses. ~UTH REEVES.
horse
Pho11e 992·3457.
dityi will be t:hart:~ ~I lht· 1 dMy
building , ci ty water ond septic
trainer . Phone (61.4) 698,.,3290 .
'nlte.
trailer . $4.50. PhOne (6Jo4) 698tonk . long Bottom , Oh~. Prlc·
2
NEW 3 BEDROOM Houses for
3290.
AKC SHETlAND sheep dogs.
ed $5500. Phone 985·~290 .
,ole . One with 2 c:or goroge,
In mem9"')\ Clird of Thanks and
(Min .) Collies, 2 femoles , 7
one with ntcreotio.n room. lH
Ol.ntu.ary : ' 6 L~lls per wun.l, ~ 00
weeks old. Shots ond worm~ . 6 ROOMS &amp; BATH trailer for !Ole. BACKHOE DUMP truck and trailer
mi.nunwn. OWl u1 advanc~.
Conslrucflon
, 992 -34$.4 or
fo':!ole . Pho~e 7A2-2451.
Phone 247-2252 .
Phone {614 ) 367-0292 or
9'12·54_:;5 . .,.:......_ _
Mol.n~ Home saWiltiJIIJ Y1ml !fillet .
367-7112.
1975 AllEN 2 bedroom . front liv are Si.'t't'Jlled onJ,y w11h cash wJtl!
2 STORY FRAME house. 3
ing room with factory ins lolled
MEIGS COUNTY Humane Society
ordt!r. :0 ~nt dwrgt&gt; fur ads L'ltn-ybedroom, goroge with 3 room
woodburning fireplace. 1975
Animal Coreline, 992-7680: or
IUg Box NwnOOr lu C:ir~ I)( The Sen·
FOR SALE
opt. in Middleport. Phane .{30-c}
Hillcrest
,
2
bedroom,
total
l.llld .
ofter6p.m., 99:1-5427.
~
675·4205 betore noon .
elec., like new. 1970 ~tie 2
~-;--:New Co - Op water sof ·
TO
GIVE
Away
,
y,
Collie,
•,c,
Ger•
, fht' Publuht:r 1~1"\'t!S tht• . n.ght. .
bedroom. We also 1-tove o clean
33A
FARM, free gas, good water
lene-rs . mod'l VC•SVJ ,
mqn Shepard· puppilltS. Also .
to~~ or n!jtcr~tn)'lt¢i Ut:t!mt!d..oiJ..
8 x 35 for that second hom(!' or
and fencet . Nice Mobile horne,
'
Only 127t. U
je!.1lOI' LHI. The Publl5htor wlll lwt 1w
twins. I year old grey tlriped
the riverbank . See these homes
olso 2 1/r A 3 miles south ol
Savt
uo
.oo
on
a
new
resp~.~nsiblt&gt;· for more Uuut .one UlL'vr·
cots . Grey stnped kiMen, o4
ol Kingsbury Home Soles . 1100
Hotpoint R:etrigerator.
Albony on 681. Ed Holley. 681
rrt1msertwn.
months old. Phone 7_.2-3162.
1
New zo cubic ft . Chest
E.
Main
St.
Pomeroy
,
OH
.
South of Albany to Snowville
Pho11e 992-2156
Free1er
Stor• . Toke Grovel road, 1.4
BEAGLE PUPS. 9 wHks old . 3
us.oo Discount
mile . Phone {61~ ) 698-7255.
moles , 2 females , SID each .
NoW In stock , completeJine
Pkone 9A9-2590.'
of bulk ta.rden seeds.
1 Good McCullougft Chain
AKC REGISTERED Old English 3 AND 4 RM. furn ished and un BEAT THE C-ost of o Rea ltor! 3
S•w
1i6S
bedroom 2 'It bi-level with off
She&lt;&gt;p clog. pope,., Champl011
1 Good Used Poulan Chain
furnished apts. Phone 992blood line, shots and wonned .
e:~~tros on acre lot. Nice drive to
Saw
.
SSG
543-1 .
Call daytimes, 992-2696 or
Power Plant, $.13,000. Phone
1 Good Used Unl~o
COUNTRY
Mobile Home Pork, Rt.
Dryer
110.00
evenings' 992-7262,
161&lt;) 992-2&lt;9:1.
~
Elel:fric Trim·AII, cuh
33, t•n milel north of Pomeroy.
Will give away S port Coll ie pvpwlfh nylon
129.95
lorg, !ots with concrete patios,
pies . Phone 992-3A91 or
(1) Go~u:t Refrlttrator noo
sidewalks, runners and off
992-2012.
1treet parking. Phone 992-7479.
Monday
_NOOn 1mSHturda.v
3 ~OTTENS , 2 mon . old, 2 female FURNISHED APT. Adults only. "0
Pomeroy Landmark .
and I mole, Long J19ired for
992-357&lt;
,
·
Mid.·
pets.
Phono
T~asW!y
good home. Phone 992-7m.
thruF~y
-~port.
J11ck W. Clrsey, Mgr.
-IP.ltl.
Phone ff2· 2111
FREE PUPPY, femclle Block cocker
ol V;llo;e Manor
the day before public11tion
spanieL Coli 992-7467 after AVAILABLE
Aportments- 1 bedroom fully
noon .
VIRGIL B. TEAFORD, SR .
carpeted with kitchen ap- SWEET CORN, 60c doren. Pick
SuntWy
REALTOR
4P.M.
pliances , furnished . Starting of
your own. Coll949-2231 .
216 E . Setond Street
·Fridcly aften10on
$104 per mont . Phone 992-n21 .
SILVER QUEEN sweet corn , 70'
Pomeroy, Ohio45769
Equal housing opportunity.
dozen
.
Phone985-3914
.
Phone '91-3325
1964 FORO 1h ton pickup, goOd BUSINESS BUILDING in New
$1•0
BEELINE
FASHIONS
for
$35
or
Hoven , W.Va., 20 x o45 main
tires and' motor . Contact Elden
BIG - 5 bedroom home
$90 fosh lons for $20 . Call JanWalburn , 380 S. Third , Mid·
business corner. Phone (614)
with
1 y,
baths, , full
nine
Petrel
,
9.-49-2786.
742-2255 .
dleport, OH . Phone 992-2805.
IN LOVING Memory of my darling
basement, and central
3R~:::=D':B:-a':th-f:u--rn'"=;'"=
sh-ed
-;-a-pa--:rt. TOMAJOES .
gr anddaughter, Jul ie Ann 1977 FORD Ax A. Phone 949-2673 .
PEPPERS .
heating . Furnished or
cucumbers. Cleland Forms,
Fisher on her l .. th . July '29th
ment , oil utilities paid . 356 N.
unfurnished . City water
1973 VEGA HATCHBACK . $900.
Greenhouse . Gerald ine
birthday.
Fourth St., Middleport.
and
large lot.
843-252-4
.
Phone
Grandmother , Lor•na Beegle
Cleland.
fRAilER LOT for rent on Bi-ownell
NEW
LISTING - 53 atres
1966 FORD CUSTOM, 500. 6 cyl.
A ve . · Middle-p ort :
Phone ·
of clean fenced pasture.
standard. Goad cortdltion,
992-2625 .
NEED A WATER Nice home site, barn and 2
$375. Phone992-264'9 .
'
UPSTAIRS APT. unfurnished,
$100
§prings. All minerals ..•.
1972 4 DR. BUICK LoSobro .. 1967 2
per month. 300 Main St.,
LIKE NEW - All elec:tr ic 3
dr . Chev . Impala. Phone
D &amp; J's HOUSE of Fabric Clearance
Pomeroy. PhornJ992-62BO.
bedroom
ranch style home
985-3839.
Sole, Now thru August · 3, T: Let Pomeroy landmark
on quiet street. Fenced
Shirt knits, reg. $1.98 yard. 1976 CHEVY LAGUNA 350 2 BEDROOM Mobile home for soften &amp; condition your
rent, I mile from Racine. Phone
back yard and only 5 years
now 89 1 • T-Shirt Knits Reg .
automatic, p.s., p.b., air condiwater and a Co -op water
992·5858.
old.
518,500.
·
$2 .49 now, $1.69 y.-d. All ou.tioned , am radio tope player.
softener, Model UC-XVI.
ht Quality poly. knils reduced
LAND - 0!1 old Route 33.
Real sharp . Excellent condition . HOUSE CLOSE to Meigs Mines on
price. one table poly knits.
Buy 1 to 41;, acres. Tra ilers
S.R. 12-4 , married couple only. Now Cl!&gt;l'll1279 o9 5
Phone 992-2386.
$1.00 yard. 0 &amp; J 's Fabric, 1
Coll742·2166.
O. K.
us test your water
mile south of Middleport on 1977 Dodge Von , customized.
1 let
NEW LISTING ~ 105 acres
t:tedders , side pipes, Stripes FURNISHED 5 room ond bath Free.
StateRt. 7,
·
lays well , sui-rounded by
Call9~5-3350
.
apartment.
and scene . CoU 773-5909.
I WOULD like to wo·rk with retardSouthern Cillo Coal. wn 1
ed children in any wOy, not post 1%8 lmpollo 9 rssenger station MOBILE HOME for reo I. dly waler ,ljP0meroy
sell lor less than $150 per
and gas , Nice location . Albert
Jack W. ·ca.~sey , Mgr.
wagon . e cy . 327 motor . . 20
age 14 ." E-xperienced,. ·Phone
acre.
miles to gall. Don t use oil , air
H•ll . Racine, Ohio . Phoria L-____;P:.;ha::::;n::;e.;9.:;92~-2~1~B~1-..J
4
LUXURIOUS
~tn~-7~5~13~-~~~--~--­
9&lt;9-2261 .
.
conditioner, heater, new tire~ .
MEIGS COUNTY Fish and Game
bedrooms ~" large dining,
Coll9~9- 2144.
Assn : Will hove a dinner for ·
GENERAL ELECTRIC. chest 'r.P•
modern kitchen . fa.mii ·Y
freezer. Contact Vevo Sear es,
member$ OJ}Iy, J~ly 29 of the
room with fireplace and
New limo Rood , alter4 p.m.
Shade River Rood · Club
pool table. 2 ~ acres.
grounds , .sociol hour7 to8 p.m . 1969 DODGE , air conditioned, A
REASONABLE
3
liVE CATFISH for sole to stock TWO HORSES for sole , stallion
new tires . S300. 1967 thrH·
and gelding . Phc;&gt;ne 992 -~58 .
bedrooms. bath, flreplate,
lakes, ponds , etc . Phone
quorler ton heavy duty Ford
742-3167 or 9A9-2545.
utility room. basement.
MINOLTA SRT-100 35 mrn comero
t.-uck , 4 new tires, 4 speed
includes 50 mm , 135 mm , 28
and 2 car garage . $17,500.
transminion. good condition, AllAODIN KEROSENE LAMPS and
mm, and 90-210 toom len1 ,
SBSO. Phone 985-4290.
NEW LISTING - ~unlry
FOUND. MALE ho•md d09. Block
heaters . Replacement parts ·
with ton markings . Well moncasas included, $200 . Coli
estate of 145 acres. Has a 7
chimneys, mant.les . wicks .
net"ed. Phone985-C24A .
1969 FAIRLANE. Phone 992-7815
992-6298 daily.
etc .. Stop in for demonsrrqti~n
room house and large barn.
30'::Pc,·,m
and free catalog·. Mountain 3600 LF FENCING of 6!' • 16'
FOUND - MEDIUM Sized wir'e ...,..co_ft_ce_r 4-'-=:
.-..,.:-::-:-:-:--=::-:::c
Some tra'ctor land and
leather and General store.
haired terrier type , young mole · 1971 INTERNATIONAL TRUCK
Yellow pi!"'e. 300 glazed block .
some fen.,:ed for cattle
10-4-106 W. Union St. (61.-4)
dog. Blonde ond white. Coli
1600 Series, cob. o.nd chassis,
Glispie Howard. oi miles out.Rt
srazlng
.
597-$178 , Athens.
992 -5325.
hew point and tires. Excellent
l.C3 , Pomeroy.
1
BROWNELL
Nicely
condition. $2100. Coii9B5-3806. . 4 YEAR OLD small horse more,
located 4 bedroofT' home
marked pretty , gentle, gor;»d for
1970 MA'LIBU 350, gopd work cor,
with , natural gas, cfty
advanced youth. Coli '949-2593 .
$300 .. Phone 992-5911.
wat!r. qnd garage. Owner
1972 SUZUKI 550, $750. Phone
FRIENOL Y· TO'( Parties has open·
will sell on Land Contract.
. lngs for managers · and
9~9-2&lt;63.
HOUSE FOR sole, 6 rooms and
S1.550 down, balance in
demonstrators. Demonstrate
both , v,ocre , lot fruit ,frHs ,
monthly payments.
20 H.P. Outboard motor with
guaranteed toys and gifts . No STARCRAFT lOth anniversary sale 1971
shrubbery,
3 bedrooms. buill-in
RACINE AREA 2
controls. $250. Phone (614)
cash investment · no collecting
brick cabinets in kitchen, utHity
on mini-motors, trailers , and
667-6227.
bedroom
frame
home
.
or delivering - no service
room with storage, wall-to-wall
folddowns . Trovelstor 25 ft.
Bath, full basement, clfy
charge, cor and telephone
carpet
in
living
rC&gt;Om
.
Carport
.
$4~00 .00; 20 ft. mini -motor
water and natural gas.
About 15 yrs . old . Well kepi ,
necessary. Call collect to Carol
$10,850.00. We sell service and
Garage
and plenty of
Day (S18) oi89-8395 or write
good
condition,
good
location,
quality. Camp Conley ·starcroft
CB SPECIAL
Fr iendly Joy Parties, 20
to
school
.
Coli
for
op·
garden
space.
Now 517,500 . ·
Close
Soles , Rt. 62 north of Pt . Plea ~
Railroad Ave . Albany , N.Y.
ROBYNWV-23
pointment, 992-320-4 .
5 POINTS - Nice (lewer
sant .
12205 . _____________
home on 1 .acre, has 3
IN SYRACUSE , .-4 rooms and both,
JAv:co .-,C-A:-:M
-:-P
:ci-N
:--:G:---::T-ro"'l.,-lo_r_s .
c B Mob i1e Tr tns c e Iv e r
bedrooms~ full basement,
MERRI-MAC has openings for, Parnol'urol
gas
heat.
fireplace
,
custom mode SWISS COLONY ,
complete with weather
ty Plan Supervisors and
Partially
furn
ished
,
3
rooms
garage,
and is in a good
small tandems Maple leof , 1-f,...OI PA speak~r. j way
Demonstrators in your area.
remodeled . Needs some work . , fam II y neighborhood .
CODNER'S CAMPERS . Soles ,
~~ne loaded C~ antenna ,
Highesl commission , . no
Approximately 2 acres . Phone
Rental. Service, SupplieJ ; . for roof top or trunk. mounl.
532,1)00.
delivering. or coilec'ting .
992-5395.
Meigs 28 or 32 to Boshon .
Power cord, co·ax , an.t enna
SHELTER
AND
cable and all hardware
Demonstrate top quality toys
HOlJsE--~sole
(cheap) 3
Owner Roberl Codner, long " included .
· COMFORT IS WHAT WE
ond gifts. Coli collect to Ann
Bottom, Ohio.
bedrooms, fireplace, ';. cor
ALL
NEED
AT
A
ONLY
Ba:.:ter, (319) 556-8881 or write
garage
.
,potio
,
fully
·
carpeted
REASONABLE
PRICE.
1975
CAVALCADE
21
y,
CAMPER
.
MER~~-MAC ,
801 Jackson ,
569.95
with 1 acre lot. Rutland . ·coli
fully seJf~contoined , 6' gasCALL 992-3325. SMALl,
Dubuque , Iowa 52001 .
7&lt;2-2988 .
•electric refrigerator, 3 burner
DOWN PAYMENT.
DEPENDABLE LADY for general
COn AG.-Ecc
;: O~N:-,-:t:h-e-:::0;-:h;:-o-.::Fu_r_n;-:;s:h·
stove, with oven , forced air furHelen L. Teaford
housework 2 mornings a week ,
nace , sleeps si)C , Pllone
Pomeroy Landmark
ed,, ..JN · upkeep, river right-ofC.
Bruce Teaford
$2 per hour. Phone949-2774 .
985-3356.
way . Must see to appreciate.
Associates
Coli (61-4 ) 378-6307 between
STARCRAFT END Of Year Sale on
Carsey, Mgr.
8:00a.m. and 5:00p.m.
mini-trailers Ond fold-downs .
Ph~ne 992·2111
NEW 3 bedroom house , 2 baths.
Lowest prices ever offered , 1-;:•. -,_
: ;_::::-:;:_-----------'
all el'ec., 1 acre, Middleport ,
SECLUDED 2 story older horne on
' fold -downs, $1.825 up; 2 used
IF YOU have a service to 'oHer,
dose to Rullond. PI-lone 992lhree-quorter ·acres, lots pf
trpilers
in
stock.
We
SPRING
GARDEN
Supplies.,
CabStorcroft
wont to buy or sell something,
7401.
shade, fertile ground for
boge , cauliflower, broccoli,
sell service olid quality', Camp
ae looking for work . .. . o.garden ; 2 cor detached garage, SMALL form for sole , 10% down ,
Con fey Storcroft Soles, Rt. 62 N.
and head letti.Joe plants,
whatever ... you'll get results
3 bedrooms, Iorge living room
red
onion
Pt.
Pleasant.
yellow,
white,
and
owner financed . Monroe Counfoster with a Sentinel Want Ad.
with brick w.b.. fireplace ,
's ets , onion· planfs, Kennebec,
ty. W. .Vo. Phone (304) 772Call992-2156.
carpeting , sunny kitchenette ,
cobble,r, Katahdin, Red Pontiac
3102 or (304)772-3227.
·
dining room . partial basement
YARD SALE , new ond used toys
and Red Lasoda seed potatoes .
BUlk garden 'seeds, potting soil,
with forced oir furnace and COUNTRY farm land with secludand games , various othfi
ed woods, water ond good acnew hot water heater. Located
items . July 29 and 30th . .(14 S.
peat moss , fruit trees ond rose
cess in Monroe County, W. Vo .
On
Martin
Or.,
Pomeroy
.
Priced
SiXth Ave. Middleport.
bushes . Midway Market ,
$1.000 dow". call (304) 772·
below market \lalue, $17 ,500.
Pomeroy
,
Ohio
,
992-2582
,
YARD SALE, Marvin McGuire
3102 or 1304) 772·3227 . .
Phone 992-6328 or 985-3573.
Bcb:s Market, Mason .· W.Va .
residence, Rt. 7 by·poss , Fridoy
_1304) l73-5721.
and Saturday .
National Fast
ECONOMY TRACTOR wilh all ol·
YARD SALE. Saturday . July 30. 9
tochments. like new, asking
a .m. till .-4:30p.m. 9-47 Ash St. ,
Food Franchise
$225Q. Phonel614) 698 -~290.
J iddleport.
HANGING BASKETS, pots, ond
YARD SALE . SATURDAY , · 930
Avall~blel
geraniums.
Cleland ' s
logon St., Middleport. Misc.
EASTERN DISTRICT - Here's what you've been •
Greenhouse ,
Gerald ine
Now
you
have
the
items. Phone 992-7~16.
asking
for . Beautiful6 yr. old. all carpet&lt;:&lt;~ home with 3
Cleland,
Racine,
Ohio.
opportunity to join a fast
YARD SALE , July 29 "at Ma)Cine
bedrooms. l'h baths, utility room . Nice kitchen with .
growing national las! food
COAL NUM~ER 6, STOKER . OR
Michoeil on4 Nancy Manley on
dining area . Concrete porches. Nat. gas F .A, furnace .
company. Total investment
LUMP ' DELIVERED. Coli 1614)
laurel Clift. RoOd . 1 twin
Nice country setting with approx . 33,4 acre land in
311-4·281~.
varies. cas:h required washtub,, Salt and pepper
· Eastern District, 2 mi. off Rt. 7. Asking $29 ,800.
approx. $1S;000-$35,000.
shakers , wat not, and clothing ;
'
Program includes training,
KIDS IN YOUR HAIR, LOOK HERE - · Five
advertising, national
bedrooms, nice 1112 story house. large living room with
account buying status, ate.
shining oak flooring, large kitchen with dining area. 2
tulf baths, 2 bedrooms down and 3 upstalr.s. Completely
insulated with F.A. !'lat. gas furna~e. Latge Po(ches &amp;
PIANO 'rUNif\IG, lone Daniels. 12
garage . Loc. ;n Chester. Price $19,800.
'strickly .lesale to all.
years of service. Phone
Not less lila n Vt case. -.
992-2082 .
MINERSVILLE- 4 bedroom house, mostly carpeted,
Respond to P. 0. Box
wrap around porch. garage, large lot, all overlooking
WATER WELL drilrtng . Phone
the Cillo River . Ask;ng $16,500.
William P. Gront at 742-2879
927, Portsmouth, OH
otter 6p.m.
4S662 .
EASTERN DISTRICT - l'h acres of lel(el land, nite
P,ENNZOIL RUTLAND o.,.n da;ly
12x64
all carpet&lt;:&lt;~ mobile home with 2 BRs, living
• tHI 10. · Closed ~6ndo'fs ,
room, kitchen and bath, 2 rooms bullf on, nice family
• wrecker seJVice, tire repair .
room with fireplace, plenty of garden sp.o~ce, some fruit
WANTED I
; Phone 7~2·9575or 7~2·2001.
1210 Washington Blvd.
trees.
Large workshop and block tellar. City water and
Belpre, Ohio
WILL DO bobyJitting, cleaning,
septic tank. Nice country se«&lt;ng on Cou"IY Rd. 28.
LAND OWNERS
. yard work or gardening in
Price 515,900. ·
Interested in bui lei to
Chester, Long Bottom, or
JOHNDEERE
420 Uvo po-r . l
Racine area . Phone 949-2660 suit tenant . National
,point hitch . John Deer No , 5
UPPER SYRACUSE - Good 2 bedroom house with
and ask for RenH or pllone
mower, 7 pt. cut. John Deer 2
Fast
Franchise
both . Two more small bedrooms could be flnl$hed
949-2443 ond ask for Kim.
row cultivator Ford - two 14 in.
upstairs. Also garage, s1orage building, strawberry
Expanding Operations.
boHom plow. Coll247 ·2195.
pofch and garden sp.o~ce. Driveway Is electric healed .
Nice Ohio River view. Furniture can be bought extra. ·
ASHLEY STOVE Oeaiers, Running
Price lor quick cale. House and . lot. 112.600.
Sp«tal Summer Sale. ~orge
EXC,.VATING, BACKHOE. dozer,
C60. $300. Blowon , $40. Coli
tr~ch.,, low loy, dump truck
morning•. (61~) 6'18·7191.
trucks , Mf)tic syst.,... Bill
tau Jimmy
AI 949-2311
JOHN
DEERE Crowlor Bockhoo
Pullins. phone 992-2-478 cloy or
Respond to P .O. Box 917,
endlooder and dump trUck.
Phon• 992-7479.
-~~~t·~-~---------- Porlsmoulll, OH 45602.
I dAy

---

------

--

Business Services
' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Siding,
Storm
Windows
&amp;
Insulation.
Call Professionals

GUTTER SERVICE
Continuous ono ploco
gu11ors. We hong It, or do II
yourHif. Special prlcn to
builders.

.

.

A local contractor
Phone 949-2801
949-286o

I

RACINE CARPET
SHOP6-16-1 mo.
.

I·

1:.

TEAFORD

•===-------------'

· or

Free Estl~ates
No Sunday c.! Is Please
6-13-1 mo.

--

SOFTENER?

landmark

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

CASE lDT

Kelly's Bastret
of Ohio .

CAN GOODS.

Miller Produce

'---------------J

'

Garden Callier

Kelly's Baet
.of OhiO

.

o..m

----- -.

~- ~

-·- ·----·---,--

INC.

SWAIN'S

109 High Sf.
Pomeroy

Automatic
Transmission Ser',!ice

Bob Hoeflich

m-5292
6-22-1 mO.

Tl

TES

TO YOU AT .

Still the simple mach

PA!tTS • LABOR

GREAT SAVINGS

USED CARS

GUARANTEED

REASONABLE
RATES

. 76

.'

CADILlAC

CADILlAC

75

74

COUPE DEVILLE
Full power &amp; air.
Was S6800

SEDAN DEVILlE
Full power &amp; air.
wa·s Sa900

Reedsville, 0 . Ph. 371-4250
5-27-TFC

CARTER'S

Insulation Se!Vites

rtUIId.,A-

PLUMBING

Bioll• illtd Wolls &amp;AHles

SIOitll

CADILlAC

l5 DODGE

lllfiOiiiiS

LARRl,~~~DER
n

4- 11).1 ~

· ·~

SEE US FOR ALL YOUR
C.RAFT AND ·ARTIST
SUPPLIES .
CLASSES OFFERED IN
DIFFERENT
CRAFTS.
OPEN 6 DAYS A WEEK,
10:00 to 5:00

CRAFTY LADIES
HANDICRAFT
804 West Main Street
Just Below the Jones
Boys' in Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone 992-2198
6-15-1 mo.
EXCAVATING. dozer, backhoe
ond ditcher. Charles R. Hatfield , Back Hoe Service.
Rutland. Ohio. Phono 7&lt;2·2008.

'

Was $5500

PWMBING

GENERAL
CONTRACTING
Roure 2
Pomeroy, Ohlo4576'
Kitchen Cabinets . Roofing
Concrete
Patios ·
Sidewalks ·
New
Construction
&amp;
Remodeling .
Ph. 992-7119 or 696-1055
Estimates applied tO jOb.
6·27· 1 mo. pd.

Route 3, Pomeroy. 0.

2-23-1 mo.

JUST LISTED - This 2
story hQme has llh baths. o4
Bdrft1S., large living room,
dining
room. . 1Px30
enclosed sll11ng porch and
garage. Located on a
corner lot In a good
neighborhood . A STEAL
AT 511.250.00.
PRICE REDUCED - 0!1
this 2 Bdrm. frame home.
Dining
room ,
F .A.
Furnace, carpeting, 1 floor
plan .
NOW
ONLY
$13,800.00.
MIDDLEPORT Good
older 2 story home, large
lot, garage, up to 4 Bdrms.,
porches. A good buy,
513,850.00.
yd.
CARPENTER, flooring , ceiling,
BACK ON THE MARKET
paneling. Phone 992-2759.
Reg. N .tS.fiO!Inslal'-1
- 1 acre. modern kitchen.
knotty pine paneling,
rolls of carlio1 in stoi:ii:'·
I
carpeting, 2 Bdrm ., dining
Goad oeloc11on all on ulo.
room, part basement.
Instal'-! wHil PICkling, no
516.500.00.
1xlr• to PIIY·
CLOSE TO TOWN - 6'4
acres, 3 Bdrms., great for
C.ll74:1-2211
kids, 3 acres fenced, pole
TALK TO
barn .
NOW
ONLY
WENDELL GRATE
$17,200.00.
CARPET CONSULTANT
' BRICK &amp; FRAME - V.A.
approved, 112 acre ground,
about 5 yrs. old ranch type.
Up to 4 Bdrms. , bar,
carpeting, storage , bldg .
$28,500.00.
742-2211
Ru11and
PRIVATE - Over 3 atres
nice ·ll!tylng grbund, about
10 yrs. · old · ranch type
home. l Bdrms. , dining
room, 22x23 living room,
large ' kiL carpeting.
Garage, Insulated cold
storage bldg. 2 other barns,
many ofher features. Raise
•
Mon., Tues., Wect.
kids and animals here.
•
8 : 00til5:00
e.
ASKING $3~,900.00.
Thursday W.t il Noon
NOW
FEATURING
e
PHOTO
LISTING · e
SERVfCElll LET US
,••
TELL YOU HOW THIS
SERVICE CAN HELP
SELL YOUR PROEATY.
IF YOU A EALL Y WANT
e
TO SELL, CALl TODAY.
WE NEED PROPERTIES.
• •
HENRY E. CLELAND
le
REALTOR
•
Hank, Kallly&amp; LAona
~·.
Cleland
•
• .-.....
:C
:
'
...
m-:nst m-2561
'• 742-2211
• AJlNOLD tAAT•·
·. R~ND ..

'4.88 sQ.

lo

RUn.4ND
FURNITURE .

FRIDAY Tll5

:ee

e.

Close .Sit. AI 5 P.M.

RUTLAND"

e'

'----.:..:"'~41.:..:12:...__--J 'l• ............... ..
~-.

•

.,

t•••·-····..
\,

•

While with Llpslltk red trim, half vinyl roof, leather
Interior, AM-FM Quad stereo with tape, cr·u lse
-trol, tilt w•--•, twin comfort seats, forgo:&lt;!
-·
'~
aluminum wheels, full power, lu)(ury group . Real
Sharp.

•
•
•
•

•
•
•
•

SHIRLEY SWAN,
Address Unknown,
Defendants. '
NOTICE
SERVICE BV
p·uaLJCATION
Thelma
Chrlstofo~elti,
whose last place of residenc1e
was 317 Albert, Shrevepor ,
Louisiana 11105, address now
unknown , and Shirtey R.
Swan, whose · last place of
residence was 451 E . Sayers,
San· Antonio , Texas 72314,
address now unknown, are
hereby notlf;ed !hal the

CPE

•.

Was S1895

BUICK ELEC.

Was 51395

CUTLASS

ROYALE CPE
Air.

4

ctr.

720LDS88

•4395

S2495

FORD

COUNTRY SQUIRE

NOW '1495

NOW '795

Was 51095

72

CHEVY IMPALA

4 DR

Was $2495

Was $1295

N .OW

NOW'1095 "\

'2295

710LDS98

71

wx.,

PONnAC

CATALINA

Power &amp; air.

4 dr ., air. vinyl roof.
Was $895

Was $1995

-

1 1795

NOW 11095

'2095

75 OLDS 88

72

88

Air .

72 FORD IDRINO

Was S2295

73 OLDS

'2695

4 dr. H.T., power &amp; air ..
NOW "1295

2 DR

NOW

NOW •1695

SUPREME
4 dr. 1 air .
Was S2895

CPE.
Air, aUtomatic.
· Wis S1695

Was S1495

HT CPE

'2595

CUTLASS

LIMITED

Was S1895
S1695

Full power &amp; air.

73

72 BUICK

VISTA, CRUISER ·
WagOn, air.

72

DELT~

72

CUTLASS S

72_OLDS

OLDS 88

NOW

NOW '1995

'695

70 T-BIRD

Ud

72

Wa• nn5

CHARGER
COupe, air.
Was 52195

Was $34'5
12995

NOVA

DODGE

73

HT CPE

NOW

74 CHEVY

NOW '2595

Was $1095

NOW 11595

CHRISTOFOLETTJ,
Address' Unknown.

•
·•

IV

•

PlaintiHs ,

'1795 .

V-8, standard trans .

HT · SEDAN
Vinyl roof~. f1ir .
Was $1795

THV~LMA

•
•
•
•
•

·
'
• ,. · 1976
CON
IIN£NT'AN.I

Aliljnment,
whe!'l
tune-up,
balancing,
'
brake work, minor
repair. - '
Behind Rutland Grade
School. Evening Wc&gt;rk by
appolntmon1. Ph. 742·2005.
6·5·1 mo. 'I'd.

BRADFORD, AuCtioneer, Com· MOBILE Home Repair , Elec.,
plate Service. Phone 9-49-2487
plumbing and heoting. Phone ·
or 9oi9-2000 . Racine, Ohio , (rift
992-5058.
Bradford .
HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex·
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR coveting , septic systems ,
Sweepers. toasters . irons , all · dorer, backhoe, dump truck,
llme 1tone, grovel, blacktop
small appliances . lawn mOwer ,
oe:~~t lei State Highway Garage
paving, Rt. 143 . Phone I (6 14)
·on Route 7. Phone (614) 985·
698· 7~1.
3B25 .
-===c::-::--~---,--HARRISON'S T.V. Repair. Seryice
REMODELING, Plumbing, heating
Calls. 276 Sycamore, St., Midand aU types of general repoir,
dleport. Phone 992-2522.
Work guaranteed 20 years e)(•
perience. Phone 992·2..(()9.
SEWING MACHINE Rep&lt;tlrs . sor·
vice, all r;nokes , 992-2264 . The
SAVE ON
Fabric Shop , Pomeroy .
CARPETING
Autl-torited Singer Sales ond
Service. We sharpen Scissors.
C.nft 51rip
EXCAVATING, doter, loader Qnd
Rublier
Back
backhoe work ; dump lrucks
Regular$U5
and lo.boys for hire; will ho~l
s.ovesue Sq. Yd.
fill dirt, to soU , limestone and
grovel. Call Bob or Roger Jeffers , day phon' 992-7089,
night phone 9'92-3525 or '992- . 12 and 15 H. widni C~rpo1 .
rubber bock.
~ 5232.

I

READY
fOR SUMMER TRAVEl.!

••
'

AL ,

NOW'2795

4 dr., V-8, auto., vinyl roof.

Was 52795

73 BUICK REGAL

NOW '2595

COMMON PLEAS COURT
. OF MEIGS COUNTY, .
OHIO
RICHARD L. BORLAND, ET

NOW

2 DR

Vinvl roof.
Was $2795

72

COUPE

73 GREMLIN

4 DR

IN THE

DUGAN'S
FRONT END
ALIGNMENT

1

"The Originators
Not The Imitators"

Goad Deal on a New or Used VehiCle
Open evenings 1117' 00 except
· Thursday and Saturdly. Closo:d Sunday
991-2196
·
Middleport, 0.
For~

8 A. M.Io 4:30P.M.
SALES AND SERVICE
6-23-1 mo. Pd.

VOIJRJ$ ,._.rpeting
1
I W

992-2206 or 992-7630

&amp;

Phone 992-6282

Steam Extraction

Carpet &amp; Upholstery
Phcme Mike Young
At .

See Pol Hill, RQcky Hupp or Darrel Dodrill

HEAnNG INC.
Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration
300 t$in 51.
Pomeroy, Ohio

r-----------,
Superior

7-42·23-4~ .

HOMESITES fOr ' sole, 1 acre and
. up. Middleport , near Rutland .
._So11992-74B1 .

CAifrER'S

DAVID BRICKLES

GT CPE.

4 ~peed.

NOW '2195

73 CUnASS

Buckeye Golden
Card Honored On
Parts &amp; Service

74 ·Ply. GOLDUSTER

4 .DR
Air .
Was $2495

NOW '2495

DAN THOMPSON FORD

74 CHEVY VEGA

Was $1995

73

VInyl roof, air .
Was S2695

oersonal car

7-20-1 mo.

88

. NOW s3295

•4295

4 DR

Our sporty little

WAGON
6 cyl.
Was S299S

CHARGER
Pow~r &amp; air .
Was 54695

SEDAN DEVILLE
Full power &amp; air.

ROYAL CPE.
Power &amp; air.
Was $3595

74 GRAND TORINO

'77 Mustang II

28 1
L-----------~7-~·~m~oCCJ
.

WILL do roofing , construction.
ph.Jmbing and heating. No job
too large or too small . Phone

MAIN
POMEROY, O.

NOW

OLDS

74

, MONTE CARLO
Power &amp; air.
Was $4695

300 Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone 992-6282
orm·6263
IA.M.Io4 :30P:M.
SALES AND SERVICE

AUIIIINUI
$11)111$.$00111
'UnEIIs-AWIIIIGS
Ph. 992-lMJ

&amp;

75 PINID

'4295

75 CHEVY

HEATING INC.

WIIIIIOIIS &amp; DOORS
IEPIAC(,Elll

'

'77 Maverick ...

NOW

lilOwn

•

'

"- ttz-2174

THE PHOTO PLACE

r------------------,

lila ._..,Ck W.
.-Iii.

MOTORS~

WE HAVE TOO MANY
.
.
USED CARS ON OUR
LOT SO WE ME
OFFERING lHEM

'77 Pinto . ,
A lot of little car

SMITH NILSON

Weddings
Portraits
Passports
Anniversaries
Special Occasions

Nobil Summit Road
Rt. 1
. Middloport, o.
992-5724
Complete
Sales
and
Service and Supplies.

FREE E

'

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT

Small Fords with low sticker price, low upkeep!

--

BISSEll SIDING CO

Phone 949-2814
9 a.m . to 5,f.m.

NOTICE

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

We've got
great little
nomycars

Rm ~e for SaJ..,

.....,..
3days

---

OYER

75 FORD GRANADA

71 FORD

4 DR

500 ,.

Air .

· .4 Dr .• air .

s1795

'695 '

4 DR

'495

S3295 .·

•••••••••••••••••• 'N~e ~~=~:~~~~~~=~---=~;~~~~-~~~e·~·e·o~~~~~.~H~co:u:rt:~~~:~~~:s:m:e:n~:=~:t:e~~=rr:~:.~M:a:r:v:~~K~"~~=~=h~or~~=r:ge~H~a;rr~~;.--t7;3~~~~~CA~J~~~;N~A~
• 75PINID4~~
·
13495 •
defendants in lhe above 72 PLY. SATELUTE
~
•
•

75 CHEV. CAMARO,. .............. .,.....
·

Kar·r &amp; Van Zandt

named court by filing !heir
complaint on the 14th day of

2 DR

OlDS OMEGA V-3 AUID, 2 DR., ....'2295 • Ju+~·e ~9~{ect of thecomplalnt
2 DR
"You'IILikeOUrQualityWay Of_iloing Business"
Air.
.
ANS 2 DR
'2895. Is !hal I he pla;nt;ffs are
·~Me
FINANCING
Pomeroy
74 PONTIAC lEM
.............
• seek;ng to have ,the court
992-5342
'1795
5
adjud;cate real
Iitie estate
to themherem
to the' ~---:*1~6~9~5~---J.--------~Ope=n~:;::::~u~n~li~I6~,=-~T~I~I~S:;;;~s~a~t,~~~~~~~~~~~:=::::::~
2695 •
destrlbed
74 BU- ICK CENTURY 3 SEAT WAGON
.
....
·
and !hal their interest ;n sold
75

•

I
I

•

v

•
•
•
•.

·
'2595. real estate be quieted as
73 FORD J-BIRD LOADED'"'''""'"""'
ogalnsl any adverse claim,
·
'
$
•
inleresl or t;tle .of lh.e
2595
defendants and the costs .
•
DR ...................
74 BUICK REGAL
•
hereln ; ·that said real estate
•
12495. iS descr;bed as follows:
74 FORD GAlAXIE 4 DR ........ , •• ,.....
The following descr;bed
real estate situated In the
•
74 FORD GRAN roRINO 2 DR......... .
•
~fwM:r~~·!nL:bthn:nst~~~n6~
12295. 0 h;o, boun d e d an d d eS c ' "bed
'
•
74 PLY. FURY
4 D R ,.................
as follow" Beg;nning at an
12295. iron stake along the East
•
boundary of land owned by
DR
4
QIEV
IMPALA
73
•
•
····•••••••••••..
•
Fred Wilcoxen; thence 537
·
CK CENTURY 4 DR
'
51995
feet South along sa;d line to
~" .
Slate Route 124 ; thence East
'1895
200 feet along said Stale
•
AUTO
CHEV. NOVA 2
6
Route 124; thente North East
640 feel tO an iron pin; th&amp;nce
1
2295 . Wbee s tnn5ln20 . feel to plate of
D R 6 CYL AUTO.....
0
91
• 73 Ply. SCAMP
TEREY 4 DR
, $}795
'
TillS being the extreme
· ··
•
~~·••
~ . Northwest ·cQrner of the real
.
CH
.
.
EV
.
m
'
E
4
DR
WAGON.
'1695.
·estate conveyeEddfromB"JOOdhfnoArd'
•
. ,..,,
. Bradford to
na r
73 QIEV,
Park bVJ deed dated Sep ·
•
•
9 94
1
e
PINTO STAnON WAGON, AIR,
1695e
·
'1495
Book No. 155. Page 365,1n the ·

2

•

S2495 •

Ill

73 BUl ·
.• 73

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

DR

en.

2
72 MERCURY MON

•

.....

••

••..

7i

'

PUBLIC NOTICE
IN ACCORDA''CE WITH
SECTION 301.12'
THE CASH pa
. ;d . for all mokes and
OHIO REVISED cooe.
models of mobile homes.
SEALED BIDS WILL BE
RECEIVED BV THE MEIGS
Phoneareacode61~·~23-9531.
C 0 U N T Y
C 0 ' M - TIMBER, Ponieroy Foresl ProMoH5,CIOENEINRST, HIEN Tc~j~;
duels. Top pr;ce for slond!n;
r r
HOUSJi:. POMEROY. OHIO t sawtimber. Coli 992-5965 oc
Koni_Ho"by. 1-446•B570.
4576h Ji'IT IL 4 :00 P .M. ON
AUGUST 9tli, 1917 : AT 7:00 COINS, CURRENCY, tokens, old
P .M. THE BIDS . WILL BE
OPEN EO
AN 0
READ
pocket watches and chains.
ALOUD FOR THE SALE OF
sHver and gold. Wo need 1964
SCRAP BRIDGE STEEL .
andoldersilvercoins.Buy , sell ,
The following are to be
or trade' Call Roger Wamsley ,
considered as m in ;mum '- 742-2331.
requ irements for the bidders :
The scrap bridge sleel wUI OLD FURNITURE. ice boxes. brass
be sold as a lump sum (Lot
beds , elc., complete
No. ll with no additions
households . Wrile'M. D. Miller,
before or after the sale..
Rl .. 4 , Pomeroy. Ohio or call
Approximate quantity (Lot
m -n60.
No . 11 10 Ions .
. h
The bidders will fl.lf!'.!~.. CASH! 1. Junk cars, Fry's Truck &amp;

bF

~~;~2-~~~;.n~~.~~on,.:-.~~!·:.' 1

AUTO.
ll'~~;;/ \~, Mr,d ;~co6~:~ ;~~~~ ~~n th'td eri~~;'ci~;, T!•
closing the Diet- musL•..pe
•12
fORD
GRAN
lORINO
·2
DR..........
•
CDoeuendly,ROehc,o0 r'dcosnt"of~n~e3i.}~ marked "Scr ap · Bdl:fge
• •
•
Steel'
PINTO
RUNABOIJT
•.••
,.u
..
••••••••••
~1395.
llc:S:~·
n~o~~dore~~:Pting
the
'73
1 d hi th t hlch moT~;· sP~cy~~~~~nbt~u~frt:rh_s~
• ·
'
·
·
tool an r 1g s ere ow
Boord al Meigs county
e72 PLY. DU SJER 2 DR AUJO............. $}395. • . are
reserved unto Elson P . ,C ommissioners befor,e the

Sayre.
Reference Deed ' Vol.
Page 391, Meigs County D ed
QIEV.
AIR ............... 01
•
R~o~;dc~mplal~lalleges that
, 1n95
defenoan!Smayhaveatlalm
2 DR 6 CYL .~
~ ~:1.
•
l!tgalnsl said re~l estate by
virtue of them being heirs 'a t
95 •
PONnAC I'A'I'AtiNA 2 DR" .
lawandnoxtotklnofHerberJ.
""1....
• •• .-... ••• • ••
R.. Swl!tn, deceased.
~
4 DR
.
1395 •
• You are required to answer
•
OOI)G[
n
'
••••••••••••••• .
•
the complaint within twenty .
$
eight days after the last
•
PLY: DUSTER 2 DR 6 CYL............ 395 •• Which
publlcalion
th;s notice,
will beofpublished
once
each week for six successive
~95
ra~ BAI'II'
'
lost
rn.JI
~ •• •••• ••
··~. ·········
wee k s,
an d · th e
•
publlcl!ttlon will be made on
- ·
LARK 2 DR
·
lhe 261h day of August, 1977.
•
BUICK SKY
.
................ ..
ln case of your failure to
•
•
'195 •
ariSwtr or otherwise respond
&lt;1!0 IN'J,
DR :.................
.•
as pe'rmltted by" the Ohio
•
VO ..-...
Rules. at Civil Procedure
within· Jhe nm~ steled,
•
•
ludgment bY default will be
aga;nst you tor the
•
• . 'rendered
relief deml!tnded ln the
. 1
•
•
1
• •
•
camp I••n ·
QIEV,
1,1 TON ..... ,.,..
••
Larry E. Spencer ,
- - - -·
· $1595.
Clor~ofCoursl,
·
•
Meigs County, Ohio
i!Niillft!!!F
171 22,29 111 5, 12, 19, 26, 61c
~ .,._n
"'0
-~ PB
E
auto.. P.S. ••N · · ·
,
••
How~~l~'~r':,~~,1 ~1erk of
1495
std:;' P.S:
•
:;':m!l:~~:,, c::sn':...!~:l:J
there wni" be a mHiino
Monday. -Auguot J, 1977, at
1:00 P.M. In the Audi!O&lt;'S
Clfflce of the Court House.
'"'•"'-1
Ray Ql •
Thls mullno 1s In com • -.-....
- - ,..,._
s tl 5705 27 0 I
.ltltaJidOft
St. Rf,7 .
985-4100. r~:,0'(,~: 1:'!v~~"Cooe
;
• .,.
O..ter. Ohio
HoW.rll E . Frank
•
•

R.
'1095 •
,
73 PLY. FURY 4 D .....................
•
•

• 72

sc.gs

VEGA AUTO.

• 72 MER• COMET
• -71
• 70
COROIIEJ
.·
• 70
70 VW
70

f.1,

. ........ '6

4

....

•

•

•

'99S.

SAmuTE 2

TRUCKS

'2695
· ·73
CUSTOM 10,
n CAMINO...... ;............
•
• 72. QIEV.
p•G. y• ...... '2995 •
• 75 QIM

e.
• ·n -·-

v.a
· SED

CUSIOM F·100

•• · ,· RIGGS U

CARS

••

Rl

• .................. ee
~·

\

171 28: 29·2tc

scrap brldgt ·s teel Is removed
and removal of the some
must. teke place wiThin ten
dot~.":~~~:~~~~~~steel may
be Inspected 01 the ln lersection 0 ; C-28 and C-32
and marked Lot No. 1: .for
addlllonal
;ntorma.Hon ·
concerning fhe sale, please
con loci
Meigs
county
Engineer at the Highway
Garage, Rt. 7 By -Pass Rock
Springs,
, Ohio ·or
calj 992 _291Pomeroy
1. .
·The Meigs county Cqm . ·
missioners reserve the riQh "...
to l!tccept or relect any or all
bidS or anv pari thereof.
Mary Hobsteller, CJOrk
Board of Meigs·
County Commiuloners
(7 ) 22 , 29 . :2tc
.
_

HaatiDgtoD,W.Va,
Huntington Is the largest
urban area In West Virginia
with a city population of
nd
M--..1tt•n
.74,31~ a
a Dl......,....-•.
area of 2117,280. Situated on

the Ohio River near

per

year.

~

To Abe ~~T~i~er, whose
address Is unknown, . but
whosela•tplaceofres;Qente
wu c-o Queen Bee Motel /
Gallipolis,\ Ohio 45631. You
ore hereby notified that you
have been made defendant In
the case of Ohio Casualty
Insurance Co.. et al.,
Plalntlff.s vs. Abe F . Miller,
Defendant
. This
has
been assigned
No.. actlon
16,280, and
1$· pending In the Court at
Common Pleas Of Meigs
County, Ohio, Pomeroy, Ohio
~5769. Th~ oblecl of this
Camplolnt IS for money only
and cantl!tlns It demand for
Judgmenl against you in the
amountofS721.86onbehaltof
Ohio Casualty l"surance Co.
and Manning and June t&lt;loes.
and costs. You tre requlrod
to answer the Complaint
within 21 days after the last
publication · of this notlce,
whlch will bo published six
success1¥oweeks.Thedoteof
~~~y 1;:,' 1:f7~ 1 ~C::J 1:;e ~~~~a~:
w111 commence on that date.
In case of your falture to
answer,orotherwllero1f&gt;ond
as roqulrod by the Ohio

~ =~:~~~~r.~or:do~f•ntCib~

West Virginia, Obio an
Kentuc:kf meet it Is a center
fo __ , , __.:...,. and the
r ..,... ,. _ _,.,..
lal'l!eltportforlnland vesaalll ,
Cal'-'"' t '--...alt.a
In the
,_.,.aes,,_..,
nearly 211 mUllan tons of
materials

NOITEMTOOlorgeorloosmoll .
Will buy 1 piece or complete
household. ~ewF, us.ed, or anNti·
ques. Martins urn.ture, 20 .
2nd St., Middleport. Phone
992-6370.

default will be rendered
ooalnst you for · tho relltl
dema!"((ed in tho Complaint. .
Datod June 22, 1t71.
Larry E! . Spencer
Clerk of Courts
MelosCounfy , Ohlo
161 24 111 1, B, 15, 22, 29, 61c

SHERIFF'S SALE
Raci"e Home Natjonal Bonk
~la;ntlff
vs.
Rudolph T. &amp;
Erma J. Rlftle
Defendants
COURT OF

c;,.o~r:~~o"uLNEAS

CA 5 E NO · 16373
In pursuante of on Ana
Executjon issued lrom the
Clerk's Offic e of lhe Court of
Common Plel!ts of Meigs
coulfty, Ohio, on Jhe 21st day
of July 1977 . and to me
directed In the case above
named, I w;JJ expose to Sale
at Public Auction. on the
lront steps of the Courthouse
of Meigs County, Pomeroy,
Ohio, on Saturd,ay the 6th dav
of Augu$1, 1971, at 10:00
o'clock Ad.MC.h lh,,el foltlowlrtg
goods on
a e s, o-w '
1969 .Ford Fairlane 2 dr.

9 30 9 6

~'aNy ~e :e eO.S :t

Codner's
Texaco, Syracuse, Ohio ..
haTnedr.rl)S of Sale: Cash In

RJ~'QeCP~s {~e,ror~~e~t.l' ~~

RI''LE
rr
To satisfy an execution in
favor of the Racine Home
Notlo"ol Bank.
T
. JAMESJ . PS~~/,~TF ,
MEIG SCOUNTY .OHIO
27, 28, 29 (8) 1, 2, Stc
-·-------------(7)

Me· S
Property .
T rans
· ' ersJg•

-raUl E. J:Srooka, EUzabeth
Bl'ooU to Artbur H. Kibble,
Vi let A Kibble 3 858 A
0
•
•
·•
Ollve
Li ·d
St 0 ph'en
D I
arner,
Wamer,JeffreyJayWarner,

w

MarlonF.Ebenbach, Trua.,
Marion Jean Warner, dec. to
John L. War.ner, Lots,
Pomeroy.
Gladwin G. Werner, NeiUe
J. Womer to Ann Dunl, Jean
Stewud, Jack J. Werner,
WIUilm C. Wa-ner, 141 Lot,
u 1. . . . , _
...._.,...,.. ••
WIUilm Fred Smith Sr.,
.,._,
Betltrlce E. Smith to .,_en
P. Cbaney, DlaNI Cbaney,

Parcel, Salllbury.
\

ON USED CARS

1974

~ly.

Valiant 4

Dr.......... .

'2295

o~yl., auto .• P .S., ftic1. air, V-lop

%

1973 Chevv
Ton Plckup .....
\i.e, 3 spd.; 22,000 miles
1973 Pont. Station Wagon .•••
·V-8, au1o.,P.S .• P.B., foci. air, v . top, lilt wheel

.

•2495
·

'1995

.

1972 P!l_. Satellite Sebrlna .... ,.
8, a;;to., P . S., ro:d wlthwhlle, V-lop

v.

.

1972 Chevelle 4

'995
.

Dr..... , ••••••• : ..

'1495

Dr~ •••••

'1095

V-8, auto., P.S., real nlte
1971

Ford

6 cyl auto., nice

Maverlctc 2
~conomy

car

s ......:..... :.. •1295

197001ds Cutlau
V-8 auto.: P .S., fact. olr, - v :top, 46,000 mile.
1965 Cadillac 2

Dr. Hdtp ••••••••••

All!"e options and real nice fOr
1965 Ford LTD 4

\/.a· auto.,
. .,_

'795.

6s model

clr. Hdtp.........

P.S., like new cond.

'795

'
'

.•.

'

RUTLAND
AUTO SALES

742-2719

Rutland, 0•.
Wlnptt, Maline
Wingett to Edwin S. Cosart,
ODie Mae Court, Pm:el,
, Erneat A.

Sulton.
Prkldy

Pridd1, Marpnt
to J11111811 R. Prkldy,

Rath

A.

GUJ L.
R•rtt.nd.

Priddy,

2.

A.,

�LO-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, July 29, 11117

r--------------------------~

! Area Deaths !
JOHN 5 TRAIGHT

Jonn E. (Pat) Straight, 11 ,
died July 26 of Wesf Palm
Beach, Flo ., where he had
made his home the past

Mveral years. O@ath followed
Injuries re-celved In an

automobile

accident

oc -

curring In late May .
He was born MarchJ61 1906

ln Walnut Twp. to the late
John A. and Ollie Neal
Strolgnt. He is survived by
two children . John W.
~ Straight. Huntington, W. Va .
and Mrs . Allison Farley , Del
Rio , Te•as. four grandchildren, Sherry and Leah
.SJ-qtigtlt, and David and
Kristen Farley. Two chi1dren ·
preceded him in death .
He is also survived by one
brother · aod two sisters ,
Loren L. Straight , Cir .
deville; Mrs. Erma Allison

and Mrs . Harry (Mary) Betz,

Gallipolis. Two sisters and
one brother , Mrs . Myrtle
Fryant, Mr-s . Emogene Setliff

and
Joseph
Straight ,
preceded him in deatn

MASON DR. IN
-Fri.
July

·29

Double Feature.
Progr"11m
Burt Reynolds

GATOR

PG

Richard Harris
THE
RETURN

PG

'~ ~ ~: : t:;:;:;:~::~~~~::::::t $3.5

News •• in Briefs
(ConUnued frGm fllle 1)

I the Ford administration delayed siarlinl! the Inquiry. BeU told
a news conference Thursday the United States now is trying
A retired steel construc1ion
"at the hig~ diplomatic level" to' get an opportunity to.
worker. he was a veteran of
WW II, serving in U. S. Air
questim South Korean businessman TongsWl Park.
Force . He received lhe
Although the State Department and other agenciell gave
Bronze Star as a Sergeant ot
the
J~ice Department lead&lt;! In 1975, Assistant Attorney
th.- 9tn Weather Recon·
General
Benjamin Civiletti !old House members Wednesday
nalssance Squadron.
Funeral services will be
no investigation was begun Wltil July, 1976.
held Saturday , July 30, at
Lake Worth. Fla.
PIUL.ADEIPHIA - THE DISCHARGE OF radioactive
tritlwn into the Ohio River from a nuclear power station in
Beaver County is being monitored by the Environmental
Protection Agency but poses no threat to public heaUh .
HERMAN A. FISHER
"Based on the Information that we've received, the spill
· ·Word has been received
poses no problem to downstream drinking water srurces, "
here of the death of Herman
A. Fisher . Thursdav morn Ina
said IJF. Alvin R. Morris, acting administrator of EPA Region
at a hospital . In Sar:tford 1 . m here. "However, to alleviate the coocerns of the public, the
Fl~ .• ending a lorJg .illness.
Mr. Fisher" born and reared · EPA IS monitorillg the river to ·irace the movement of
· in Pomeroy, was the son of discharge and take samples."
the. late Mr. and Mrs. A. H.
. Fisher . He was also preceded
WASHINGTON- ADVOCATES OF PUBUC financing d
in death by his first w ife,
Senate
campaigns, with a fresh endorsement frttn President
Cecile; a brother. Harold ,
Carter,. are making ·a first effort to stop a filibuster by
and sister , Mrs. Ella Bryant.
He is survived by his wife,
Republicans and southern Democrats against the bill.
Nelle ; two sons, Joe, . of
After an hour of morning debate, a vote was scheduled
Sanford. and Richard, of
today
m limiting further discussion on the measure which has
Glendora ,
Calif. ;
four
tied
up
the Senate all week. It will take 60 votes to invoke
grandsons , one grand daughter. a brother -in-law
cloture, setting a time limit on the Iaiit. Senate Majority
and sister, Trell and Edna
rUder Robert Byrd, D-W. Va ., said Thursday be was not sure
Scl'loenleb , Pomeroy; two
he had enough votes to end debate, but would try today and
nephews,
Edaar · Vale ,
agaill Monday if necessary .
Sanford, and the Rev. John
Bryant. Columbus ; a niece. ·
NOW YOU KNOW
Mrs . John. Werry, Hemlock
Moscow's
Red Square was
Grovel and two aurtts, Mrs.
EXTENDEDOUTWOK
Marie Custer and Mrs,. Clara
not named by the Com·
Sunday . through
Miller . Pomeroy .
munists. It was known as
Mr . . Fisher operated a Tuesday, fair Sunday and
such before the so-called "ten
barber shop in . Pomeroy but Tuesday with a cbance of
days that shook the world" ill
· had resided In Florida many
showers Monday. Highs In
years.
1917.
Burial will be in Orlando, tbe upper 711s and 80s, and
Fla . Funeral arrangements lows In tbe tupper 50s and
are incomplete.

Public

60s.

Nelson
Giant Print Bibles
King James • Red Letter
Special Features:
• 16-point type on high·opacity P"Jl'!'r

• B·page Full-color Family Record Section 'N!th
Presentatk&gt;n ~ge (e:xcep~ 580)
• 8 Pages of Full·color Maps (PJtCept 580)
• S·page Harmo~ of the GospE'Is
• &amp;.page sealon on the Messilllnic Prophecies
Fulfilled in Jesus Christ
•1 11 ~of B!bleStudy Helps Including:
The Bible and Its Trllnslatlons
·
\Vhat !s In the Bible
Summary of the Books of the Blbk!
• 16 pages of Hoty U.nd photos and ·
artmasterpiec~ (5828. 585. 58SBr· only)
• Messlanic.Prophedes Staned (•I

NOW AVAILABLE AT

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE
99 Mil Sl

Middleport, 0.

(Continued from page I)
of travel, description of
persons involved,i!ntl last but
not least, be wiUing to give a
signed statement and to
testify In court if necessary.
Materials not suitable for
the containers can be
disposed of at the landfill off
SR 143. Hours are Monday
through Friday 8 a.m. to 4
p.m., and on Saturday from 8
a.m. to 11 :30 a.m.
Sheriff Ptoffitt advises his
department will begin
checking dumping · areas
more frequently and anyone
caught littering will be
.charged under section 3767.20
of the Ohio Revised Code:
"Disposal of garbage, refuse,
or junk on public ways. "
The penalty for this offense
is a fine not less than ~ nor
more than $500 or imprison·
ment not more than 30 days
or both.

REPORT OF CONDITION
Consolidating domeS!ic subsidiaries of the

THE POMEROY NATIONAL BANK OF POMEROY

close

in tbe state or Ohio, at the
of business .on JWle 30, 1977 published ill response to call
made by ComptroUer of tbe Currency, under title 12, United States Code, Section 161.
Charter nwnber 1980

...1ft

5-

II

-....
oC

---+-&gt;-

..1

..., oC

5 !:A.

0.......
..,
U

--"-+oC

Q

z

!C
1111:

0

...~

Average for 15 or 30 calendar days ending with call date :
.
Cash and due from banks .. . ... .. ........... : .. .. . ..................... $1,433,795.57
Fed. fund/l sold and securities purchased .
·
· under agreements to resell .. ... ....... . ..... ... : ..................... ·... . 880,833.33
Tolalloans .......... . ............................................... 11,424,328.27
Total deposits ......... ... ........ .. ... . .................... .......... 22,554,168.27
TOTAL ASSETS . ......... ..... .. ......... . ....... .. .................. $24,868,n8.66
I, Joan Wolfe, ASsistant Cashier, of the above-named bank do hereby declare that this
Report of Condition is tru~ and correct to the best of my knowledge and belief.
Joan Wolf~
July29,1!117

We, the undersigned directors attest the correctness of this statement of resources and
liabilities. We declare tbat it has been examined by us, and to the best of our knowledge and
belief is true and correct.

58

ttt~~t~f~~W~~t:~:~~~:~;~;~:~;~:r~:~:;:~;{}~;~~~ engine,'' driver Maurice

Trottin said. "At that
moment, we were suddenly
In 1974, ~he House·
encircled by four armed men
Judiciary Coounlltee voted a ·
· who tbreatent!d us and forced
second ltnpeBchment !111icle
us to get into a car that was
against President Nixon. The
parked nearby."
vote was 28-10.
Police said they had not
found any trace d the truck
or of the getaway car.
They also said the cargo of
Dale Dye, Mrs. Thad Dye
the
truck had been listed as
and daughters, Madge Black"miscella
neou s metal
wood and Lisa Dye and Murl
pieces"
and
not as money and
OPEN FRIDAY "NIGHT TIL 8
Galaway, local, and Mrs.
that
consequently
no
special
Grant Price and sQns,
Colwnbus, were among those security arrangements had
attending the wedding of Mr. been made.
The $3.5 million heist was •
Dye's grandson, Kevin
Walker, of Thurman Qn one of the largest in French
®
· history, although burglars
Sunday .
Mr. and Mrs. Dwaine . last summer tunneled their
Jordan, Bryan and Keith, Mr. way irito the vault of a Nice
and Mrs. William Culwell, bank branch and made off
Tony Woodyard and Kevin with an estimated $10 million
Cone were among the Pony in valuables.
League players and their
families who attended a DISPLACED
Dlsplaeed Homemakers
Red's baD game at Cincinnati
COLUMBUS ( UP!)- The
recently. Bryan Jordan and
Ohio
Senate gave final
T-SHIRTS
Tony Woodyard are on a
legislative
approval
and
sent
team.
3 for· 13.59
Loura and Scott Leeds, to Gov: James A. Rhodes
Rockledge, Fla ., spent a · Thursday legislation to
vacation here with their establish a "displaced
multi"Jlurpose
grandmother, Mrs. Florence homemakers"
ce nter
at
Cuyahoga
staneart.
CoUege.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Community
The center, which is funded
BRIEFS
Crabtree have returned from
a
$200,000
a vacation trip into the under
in the biennial
3 fir 13.69
western states. They traveled' appropriatim
budget , would provide
5,400 miles viewing sights in divorced, separated or
twelve states, especially the widowed women at least 35
Badlands, Mt . Rushmore , years old who suddenly lind
Yellowstone National Park, themselves the head of a
Grand Canyon National Park household job counseling, job
and ·they crossed the Great training and employment
Divide. They enjoyed Other referral services.
· sights along the route.
Mr. and Mrs. Michael
Lawson, Columbus, were
weekend guests of his inother WORKERS PROTJi'SI'
COLUMBUS (UPI)
and sister, Katherine Lawson
About
a dozen members of
and Cheryl and her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Jeffers the "Unemployed Workers
Committee"
and sons.
.
.. Organizing
demtinstrated
near
the State
Among those attending tht
Boys' HANES T·sh~rts and
Capitol
ThiD"sday
protesting
Carpenter Baptist Church
bnefs
keep their Iii You can
SWlday Scltool picnic at Lake a reduction in eligibility
machine-wash
and machine.
Snowden recently were Mr. standards f()l" unemployment
dry
these
T·shirts.
and Mrs. Reed ·Jeffers, Mr. compensation.
HANES for maximum
The demoostrators handed
and Mrs, GranviiJe Lyons,
shrink.
resistance . ... they
Earl Starkey, Mrs. Rex out leaflets and carried signs
won
"
I
lose
their original fit.
Cheadle, Don and Kathy, on the· sidewalk of a
Reinforced neck. Sizes: :i-20.
Mrs. R-aymond Nelson, Mr, downtown intersection on
· Bnefs with' heat-resistant
and Mrs. Steve Booth, . Capitol Square. Because of a
elastic.
Shnnk-resislant.
R.ayma Sue and Mathew, Mr. decrease in Ohio's rate of
Back
to
sc hoot - In comfort
and Mrs. Rexie Cheadle, Mr. tmemployment earUer this
SIZes 3·20.
and Mrs. Ronald Whittington, summer, unemployed
Kristen Powell, jo Ann and workers were cut from. 39
Shawn McWhorter, Mr. and weeks to 26 weeks eligibility
\.
:
Mrs. BiU Brooks, Richard for - unemployment
and Tonya and Mr. and Mrs. compens;~tion.
Leaflets handed out · to
Gordon Perry· and Troy.
lunch-hour
people on the
Relatives who gathered at
streets
said
the 13-week
the home of Mr. and Mrs.
reduction
was
"slashing
the
Dwaine Jordan . to celebrate
Open Satur!lay
very-food
friBII
our
tables,
the
the fifth birthday of their
9:30A.M.
to 5 P,M.
daughter, Sarah Faye, WON roofs from over our heada
•
Mr. and Mrs. William and .the clot ties off . our
Culwell, Mr. and Mrs, Alfred backs."
A spokesman for the
Rice, Mr. and Mrs. Mendal
organization
said It had
Jordan, Mr. and Mrs. Walter
chapters
.
in
Dayton,
Jordan and Joshua and the
Coliunbus,
Cleveland,
Akron
host family including Bryan
Ha"e• ••' revis to red trademark of Henes Cori)Orttion.. Wlnl!on·Salem. N C
and
Cincil\nati.
and Keith.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale stansbury and daughter, Wanda
Turner, were ln Col,wnbus on
Saturday to see Jerry stansAPPEARING
bury who is still confined to
University Hospital there. He
THIS WEEKEND
is slowly improving.
Mr. and Mrs. Reed Jeffers.
AT THE
visited at the home of their
son-in-l11.w and daughter,. Mr.
1
and Mrs. Lavern J,g,rdan.
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Rice,
who \ are moVlng from
Alabama · to Georgia, have
been spending a few days
bere with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. William Culwell and
'
her brother-In-law and sister,
Mr. and Mrs. Dwaine Jordan
and family.
.
Maude
Holcomb
is
recovering satlsfac;torily at
her home here after being
FROM
released from O'Biene•s
Memorial Hospital, Athens,
where she was treated for a
WHEELERSBURG, OHIO
bip injury and fractured knee
·cap. Her sister, Ruth
SwiSher, R-adcliff, has been
siaying with her.
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Smith,
local, and frienda., Mr. and
Mrs. Leo Daugherty, l't.
Pleasant, W. Va., spent a
night near Cincinnati and
attended Fai'II)erS Nighrfor a
Cincinnati Reds ball game.
Mr. and Mn. Larry Stansbury and 10111, ReynoidJburg,
are spending • we!tk's
•
vacation with hla Pllreall,
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Stansbury
and other relatives and
camping aome at Lake
Snowden.
Mr. and Mrs. William
Qdwell, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred
• Rice and the Dwaine 1ordan
family .Uended the Rice
relllllon at Lake White In
Jackson County on llunday.
'

Carpenter
Personals

f

New attendance record
expected at 6-day fair
GALLIPOLIS - Excellent weather
aod an extra day could help establish •
new attendance record as the 21th annual
Gallia County Junior Fair begins at 7 p.m.
Monday.
The 1977 Gallia County Junior Fair
.features lots of entertairunent, varied ·

OON1COX CONSTRUCTED shelveo in the storeroom at the 4-H cafeteria
building oo the Gallia County Jwtior fairground.

'.

Hanes

1NN PLACE'

FLIGHT

,•

.

3 PC. GROUP

...

·TONIGHT &amp; SATURDAY
10.2

THE .MEIGS

INN

POMEIOY, 0.

Commercial Exhibit building.
F'or the most part, parking will be on
the former Salisbury property adjacent th
the fairgrounds. That land was purchased
by the fairboard two years ago. Parking
inside the fairgrounds will be restricted to
merchants, 4·H leaders, exhib~~rs,
program personnel and news· media.
Parking will be conducted on a first
come-first--serve basis, with the • early
urrivals getting priority spaces.
A major change this year is in
memberships.
Fair membership is $4 and a season
pass will also cost $4. The passes and
membership can be used throughout the
six-day fair. Persons, Who do not wish to
purchase $4tickets, may pay a daily fee of
$1.25. Individuals purchasing daily tickets
will be stamped upon entry, and will be

tree to come and go during that particular
day without having to worry as long as
they display the identification marker at
the games. Children under 12 and 4-H
exhibitors will be admitted Ire&lt;.
The admission prices will help defray
some of the fair's costs which .have
skyrocketed· in recent ·years.
Program for the fair was completed
early this summer according to program
C&lt;Kordinator Bill Matthews. It features a
variety of events for the youth, middle

aged and old alike.
•
The Gallia:Queen Contest Pageant has
been changed from Wednesday nightlo the
opening night. It follows the annual
majorette contest and Pld Tyme Chorus
program sponsored by ihe Gallia cOunty
Senior Citizens.

iCoatillued oa Page A-21

SUNDAY, JULY 31, 1977

GALLIPOLIS-POINT PLEASANT

NO. 26

pulled from river

by officer Little
MIDDLEPORT - Sid Utile of
tbe Mlddlepor1 PoiJce Depl, wao
credited Salurdoy wtlb IIVIIIC IH
ol a womaa wba attempted
su)clde Friday alpt at lO:U p.m.
Tbe womaa, ,PatrtclJI Tea.Jley,
GaOipoill, jumped ill the river aear
tbe old Soblo'Balk StaUoo al Front
arul Hudson 818.
Ul1le waa the lint periiDII to
arrive at !he sceao IUid belore tile
oquad arrived bad the wom111 OGt of
lbe river. She was taken to Vtterau
Memorial H01pltal by the oquad IUid
admitted.
Ufe

..

tnlittt

tmts
vo. 12

Gallipolis woman

I

+

T·Shirt &amp; Brief

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

'·

programs fo r the young and old alike and
the usual animal and amusement attractions. This year's event runs from
Monday through Saturday, the first sixday fair in the history of the highly suecessful Gallia county fairs.
Since last August, fairboard members
and other interested fair boosters, have
been actively working on fairgrolind
improvements. New draining tile has been
installed, a fence erected around the
fairgrounds and a new conference room
addedtothefairboardoffice,locatedinthe

I

ELBERFELD$

992-3629

R. E. Boice
Edison Hobstetter - Directors
Roger Morgan

(

·LUCKY BUCK
Three-digit number
982
·
~!;idiglt aumber
•

Walker, Apple Grove; Mn.
Pltu!Swaln 1011 Rlo Grinde·
• •
•
Mu.
Dale . Randolph,
dauehter•. Rodney, 0.; Mn.
William Kinnaird, Galllpolla
Ferry; Mrs. Larry Oldham,
~tart; Mrs. Michael
0 Brien, Gallipolis; Mrs.
Allen Collen, Gallipolis;
Patricia Duncan, Point
Holt,
1Pieasant ; Robert
Daruela, W. Va.; Mrs. Gary
Deal, Ashton; Viva WIJillley,
Point Pleasant· Mrs. Darrell
Sanders, New Haven; Carrie
Camp 1 Muon: and Charles
Qurfee, Gallipollil Ferry.
Birth - A daughter to Mr.
and Mrs. Michael Jone!t
Point Pleasant and ~
daughter to Mr.' and Mrs.
Paul Grimm, Lelllrt .

80N lS IIOIIN

Mr. and Mn. TbomU Earl
Ewln11. Rt. a, Pomeroy
(former Held! Milhoan )
NIIIOunce the birth of their
flnt child, a ·1011, Jamel
Cullus, July 11 at Holzer
Medical Center. '!be infant
weighed elllhl pounds three
and one-ball ounces. GrandPIIreni.S ue Mr. and Mrs.
Earl Ewing, Maaoll, and Mr.
and Mrs. Dwight Milhoan,
Pomeroy . Great·
grandparentl are Mr. and
Mra.
Linder
Dains,
Pomeroy, and Mrs. Everett
Milhoan, Chester.

MIDDLEPORT·POM EROY

PRICE 25 CENTS

I•

I

\

·I

Entrance court

New memorial library
has $250,000 cost tag
t·

~

Cash and due from banks, ................. .... .... ..... .. ... ...•.. .. .... $1,:j35,837. 74
U.S. Treasury securities . . ....... .. .................... , ..... .. . . ..... .. .. 9,465,894.81
Obligations of States and political subdivisions .. , .....•.. . ......... c . •.• •..•• 1,931,074.93
Other bonds, notes, and debentures ........................... ....•.......... . . 1,742.50
Federal Reserve stock and COillOrate stock ....... ; ............ . .............. 45,000.00 ·
Federal fWlds sold and securities purchased
· .
·
·
under agreements to resell .... :. ·......... ..... ........ . ................ 1,000,000.00
Loans, Total (excluding unearned income)·........ .. ........ 11,154,103.36
~ : Reserveforpossibleloanlosses . ...... . .. .... ........... 71,114.14
~
Loans, Net .. ...... ........ ...... .................. . .......... .. .. ... 11,082,989.22
Baitk premises, furniture and fixtures, and
other assets representing bank premises .. .... ... . , ....•................... 317,5411.92
Other assets ............ .. . . ........... . ................... , , . • . .......!:::'...,g.gg~
TOTAL ASSETS ...... .. .... .. .... . ..................•. , ............. .
Demand deposits of individuals, prtnshps., and corps ...... . ,. , .... . ..... ..... .
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
prtnships, and corps ................................ .... ..... .. ..... .. 15,853,086.13
Deposits of United States Government ........ . ., .. . .... .. , .... . ., • .......... 32,043.27
Deposits of States and political subdivisions .................. . ....... , . .... 2,006,286.38
Certified and officers' checks ...... , ......... .• . ..... , .. ...... .. .. .......... 65,885.81
TQTALDOMESTICDEPOSITS ...... ...... .. . . .. . . .. ........... . .. : .... 23,021,908.63
Total demand deposits ............................ . ....... 5,892,331.26
Totaltime &lt;tnd savings deposits ....... .... . ... ............. 17,129,5n.37
Other liabilities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . .
3.1lljO 18
TOTALUABIU'I'IES (exc!uding suboi"dinated notes and debentures) ....... f23.0§5.'l6U1
Common stock :
a. No. shares authorized 8,000
b. No. shares outstanding 8,000
(par value) .... ..... ...... . ..... . . ....... $200,000.00
Surplus ... . ....... . ..................................... .. ..... . ... . .... 1,400,000.00
Undivided profits ..................... , ..... . . .. . ..... •. . . . ............... 506,967.64
Reserve for contingencies and other capital-reserves ..... .' ... , ... . .... . . .. ..... 35.923.53
TOTALEQillTYCAPITAL ............................ , .... ... ..... ·.... $2.14289117
TOTAL UABIUTIESAND EQillTY CAPITAL .......... , .. . .......... , . . $,25.197,959.98

95788

(Col!tinued from pa&amp;e l)
wher~ eoins are ~ed: The
cootatner and cow wetghed
17 .tons.
The chauffeur and guard
told police the tractor-trailer
had been loaded and was
rolling down a ramp out of the
staUon when another truck
apparently broke down ln
front of them .
"I had 1o stop 10 talk with
the driver who had gotten out
of the truck to look at his

or~v~cey

\

National Bank Region Nwnber 4

Statement of Resources and Uabilities

--+--

This
k' w••• Ohl0
wee • "' ..,.
Lottery umbers ·
POT 0 • GOLD
Three-digit number
u 9.
Thl"f:eodl 11 number
g
531 .
Flvt·diglt number

million

'

Gl!LLlPOLIS Gallla County
t&gt;latrict Librarian Jonathan Louden said
•Saturday bids will be invited 'Aug. 15 on the
· new Dr. 'samuel L. Bossard Memorial
Library, a Project estimated to coSt
$250.~.
.Louden said ·the district library's
board of trustees loob forward to a
completion date late In the spring of 1978.
located In the !00 block between First
and Second Aves. the initial pbi8e of the
pruject wlll be the rernodellag of the
existing 7,000 square foot structure on the
site, and the addition of a small structure.
The majority of the funds for the
project were made avalhble by the late
Ruby P , Bossard. Mrs. Bossard made this
generous contribution to the COIII!llunitY in
memory of her late husband, Dr. Samuel
L. Bouard.
ArtJsta' sketches show the architect
has captured the flavor of the community
in an attractive brick bulldlng. It features
arched windows and doorways with corbeling over th0m. The rose window from
the old buildiJIR will be incorporated In the
new building to give a tie to the library
tradltion prosont In the community many
years.
. An esterior reading court will be
provided to·give an infonna1J 0uch lor th~
library patron who wishes to read or

'

relax.
A · conveniently
located
P.otocopying room is plaMed that will
make access to this popular service more
convenient.
The circulation desk will be located in
the center of the library serving
nu111erous functions. The reference
department will be adjacent to the circulation~ making It easy for the patron
to ask for assistance concerning reference

One side of the desk will be children's
height to make it suitable for children to
check .out materials. The children's
department will be multi-level, giving
them an easily identifiable area. Within
the area will be carpeted riJers providing
an lnfonnal place ·for children to sit on
lii~~PSand read. This will also be conducive
for children's programming.
The Rare Book .room will be located to
allow rnaximwn use of the materiel by the
public, yet Insure a reasonable amount of
oontrol over the collection.
.
The back maguine area will be open
to the public. The magazines will be flied
111 open hanging fUes and color coded as to
the year and month of pubtlcation.
The parking area 1n front of the
library, sidewalks, entrances and interior
(Continued on page B-7 l

Several juveniles were observed in the
area.
Marion Sloter, Racine, reported the
R.acine Recreation Center wss entered
around.1:30 a.m. Tuesday. Several per80111 irore aeen loitering in the vicinity.
Alao under Investigation Is the entcy of
the Silver ~1111 Church and vandaUsm that
occurred there. It Is beUeved that
juvenile~ were Involved.
Friday at noon, Raymond Hensler, Rt.
2 Racine, reported that· a black over white
aulooloblle had w•"M+d In front of his
r nldellee and 111 aJIPirenl teenager
jumped Old of the car and stole two ten
pound
of lornatoes that be bad out
8t
the
edge
bla lawn. The vehicle constop ladder. hatcl!et, and fire atlniJUlsher.
tinued Din1h Into Racine.
Sometime the put.....,.. the Columbia
Gas replator blllldlnc Located on the
Number I Roed In Olive ToWIIIblp was
Vl'ndaJIP!I), The buildlns had boen Jill&gt;"
pared wllb wblt ......... to bava bien
pellets 'l1le metal buUdlnl bad dllplln the
paint and 11110 the ..... bad 111111 lbot.
GALLIPOLIS - A lilt Harley Glltlllll tile ~of the btd..... bad beat
Dlitl1 r Et.ctra JJOO cc ~ laiDcbd oa&amp; Wllh rodll. A .,....._ for
oWIIIl by Llrrr w....... llameton, w. 1111 llrm uid lbe bnfidlnll baa had vanVa., 11o1aD ear1J Sl\llrday IIIIII'IIIDII Mho before.
, _ tbiPIII'l'Cial at ... One Gablee

Harley cycle stolen
from parking lot

Nile Qllb.
.
Gdla Qtu1J .i ba lft'a des! U• llld
tile ........ eyde illtlae 1111111111 fall *-· It
wu ....,..u, "twtwll lid." One II'Nit
Wlllllm Lewll, a, Rt. 2,
Ga1UpaHI, for ••••

._,..-a.

DON JEFFERS

material.

Vandalism, thefts put
on investigative list
POMEROY - Complainlll by Ted
Hatfield, custodian of tbe HarriJQnville
Elementary School, that 29 school windows bave been broken by rocks, bricks
and a pop botUe, and I!!Ofll atarlea Sheets
of Hemlock Grove that he hal had SO white
ehlckenl.stolen, have been added to the Ust
of ongoing lnvestlpUOIUI being conducted
by the Meigs County SheJ1.ff'a Dept. This
llat Includes the recent entriel. of Brady
GllbeJt's sarag~ at story's Run and the
Racine Recreadoo Center.
Gilbert adviled depdles "that hilt
prage WBI ilnlend lP&amp; Sunday evening
and a CB radio taken from a traek be bad
inlide being repUed. Allo takm nno a

INSPECriON CONTINUE;S -Inspection of .the Silver
Memorial Bridge did not end several ~eeks ago when a
crack, which forced the elosute of the bridge, was
discovered. With the inspection continuing, rumors of a

baak.or

Grid star
·dies ·in
car wreck·
·

I

possible se.:OOd crack are persisting and bave not been
denied by.highway officials In Charleston. Above, a worker
from the lnspectioo team Is shown hi~ atop the span.

More Bridge Work
May .Be Necessary
•

Silver Bridge which collapsed December
American Bridge Co., a subsidary of
CADMUS - Don Jeffers, 16, Rt. 1,
1967, claiming 461ives, was closed July 6 U.S.Steel,iscarryingouttherepairwork,
Patriot; veteran senior fullback at Southwhen the large crack was discovered in a which Blake described as progressing
western High School, was fatally injured in
weld.
· 'satisfactorily.
a single car accident at I : 15 a.m. Saturday
on Patriot.Cadmus Rd. five tenths of a
mile east of SR 141.
The Gallia-Meigs Post state Highway
Patrol, stiiJ investigating the accident
Saturday, said Jeffers apparently lost
control ol his statio!l wagon which ran off
the right side of the highway and over an
embankment. Although the accident oc· This and other matters were reviewed
curred early Saturday morning, it was not
By Boyd R11tb
discovered urttn 8 a.m.
by the Meigs SWCD B~ of Supervisors_
Soli Comservallonlllt
Aci:ordlng to Trooper Williams of the
POMEROY- Legal boundaries of the In a regular session ill the Farmers Bank
Ohio State Highway Patrol, the inMeigs Soli and Water Conservation cooference room last week. Supervllors
vestiga!ing officer, Jeffers was found
District (SWCD) now include all 'territory Rex Shenefield, Roy MJJJer, and David
Gloeckner attended as did district
within Meigs CoWlty.
inside his car. Cause of death had not been
determined by Dr. DonaM R. Warehime,
According to Floyd Heft, executive cooservationist Boyd Ruth, SCS technician
GaWa Co WilY Coroner. The body was
secretary of the Ohio Soil and Water Reid Young, and district secretary Leota
.
removed to the Warehime Funeral Home.
Cmservation Commission, petltioos for Young.
In other action the board voted to supply
Jeffers, a 200 pounder, was one of the
the villages of Pomeroy, Middleport
veteran Highlanders expected to return
Racine, Syzacuse and Rutland 1o ~ championship rosettes fer !he winners In
for this fall's football program at South·
incorporated into the Meigs SWCD were the upcoming Meigs County Fair "-!'
we~ern. He was the son of Mr. and Mrs.
favorably coollidered by the Commission Show. Participation is urged for the
Leon Jeffers of Rt. I, Patriot. It was Gallia
011 July 6. Technical assistance can now be expanded 1977 show· which will include ·
County's fourth traffic fatality of 1977.
made available fOr natural resoiD"ce these five ela~. 75 percent ior more
management within the incorporated aUaUa, 75 tler,~;ent or more clover, All
One person was Injured In a traffic
areas.
(Coat!Jiued on Page A4)
accident at 3 p.m. Friday on SR 7, nine
tenths of a mile south of US 35.
The patrol said an auto driven by
Dorothy Jane Ojala, 41, Rt. I, Gallipo!ls,
·
pulled from the Silver Bridge Shopping
Plua Into the patb of a vehicle operated by
·
.
·
.
.
34
2
~~J. StraEiturek,• R8t· • RGalllpolls. Hilda. WASHINGTON (UPI)
Commerce Social Security bufden," she ioaid in an future years If current patterns coritinue,
· .....e. 55,
a tar t., a passenger Secretary Juanita Krepa said Saturday interview.
and President Cllrter has asked Congress
In the Strait car had minor lnjuries.Ojata adniinistraUon·offl~ls are discussing the , Asked if she thinks the payment deferral to dip into general revenue lunda to shore
was cited to Municipal Court for failure to mone)Hlavmg poSSibility of Withholding idea might become administralioo policy, up the pension reserves.
yield the right of way· '
payment of full Social Security benefits Mrs. Kreps replied, "I wish I knew the
According to the Treasury 1&gt;eJ11u1ment,
A large rock In the roadway was Wltil recipients reach age 68.
answer 1o that.
which makes out the checks, the federal
blamed for an accident at 8: 15a.m. Friday
The objective she said would be to ease
"I now see in the press frequent government now pays out ...1 billion more
on SR 141 at Safford School Rd.
the financlJIIstr'ain m th~ nation's pension r.eferences to the fact tha.t the only way to in Social Security benefits annually than it
. Officers saki Joe W. Undamood,. Jr., · sy&amp;tem
·
solve the Social Security problem is to collects from workers and employers. , · ·
19, Rodney, was traveling west when his
Mrs Kreps- cautioning that tall&lt;s are spread the work life out a little longer. r
Mrs: Kreps long has been 111 advocate of
car rounded a curve and struck the large ooly br the explcratory stage -said :he never saw reference to that except in my "flexible" working schedulea - .llllowlJIII
ruck. The impact ruined two tires and bent deferral of benefllll is being discuSsed ill own writings untll the last several months. older persons to work beyood •111 Ill anil
two .!.h!18· . J
·
.
conjunclion with efforts to posh the
"It could gain some momentwn; it oould permitting younger people to · take
DefeCtive steering was blamed on a " mandatcry retirement age beyond flO.
happen. We would do it gradually. But I extended leaves of aboence without IOIIng
fllnRI• ear acddlnt at 5 p.m. FrJdav on SR
Under current law people are entitled to think within eight years it •8 possible that seniority or promotions.
IG, niMieallll of 1 mile welt of SR 7 In pertlal Social Security benefllll at ltge 62 could become a policy, sure."
Carter also has said he thinlt81t Is unfair
MelpCounty. Thepatro!uld\besteertng and fuU beneflta at Ill. Many companies Shesaidahehasbeendlacusslngtheidea ID require everyone to tetlre at 85, and
ftiled 011 Carol A. li:ICIU! I elf causing the require empl~ to retire at 65, and Mrs. with Josep. Califano, secretary of Health, Labor Secretary Ray Marothallltllppor1a a
Ill. I. Albany resident to lose control of her Kreps thinks that could be changed.
Education and Welfare.
bill passed by the House IA!xr OommiUee
Clf which r111 off the ro~~dway Into an
"0 you were to extend work life to Bllaod
"I'll keep reminding him," she ssid.
hiking the mandatory ~t 11141 to '/8
embankment.
oot start Soda! Security beneflt!l until age Government experla say the Social for most Americans and ellmlnalinl! II
(c.trne&lt;l oa Pa&amp;e A-2
68, you would reduce enormously the Secw:Ity system could run out of money In entirely on federal employes.
GALLIPOLIS- Rwnors of additional
cracks and the possibility of more cqn·
struction work on the Silver Memorial
·Bridge persisted Saturday as area
residents anticipated ·the opening of the
span this week.
Deputy Commissioner of the West
Virginia Department of Highways Dean
Blake Friday afternoon would not quiet the
rumors of at least orie more crack besides
. the one discovered several weeks ago
which Jed to the closing of the bridge. •
Blake said a decision regardiiig the
opening of the bridge may be made
Monday.
.
The deputy commissioner said officials, referring to Friday, were checking
out the possibiiJty of another crack.
He also noted the inspection would
C(Jntinue through Wednesday. When asked
if the bridge would be open Monday, he
said it definitely will be closed.
Earlier this week, both Blake and
Commissioner Joseph "Speed" Jones,
Indicated the bridge would probably
reopen this week. However on Friday,
B1ake refiiSed to speculate on a possible
opening date.
.
The btldge, ·a replacement lor the

Meigs towns now part
of conservation unit

Full retirement
•
may b e at 68.

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