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•

'

i{ ~dda~:;·~s.nt~'r·s::Wl~d•:Y·=·~a~,9~7·------"-::=~1 Apple Grove

Cloudy •nd mild tOO. wllh
occasional rain likely e;trenlf
south, High In onid to upper 70s.
Cloudy and scattered showers
tonight and Tue sday with
chance or thundershowers

Beat ...

A-1.

quantity of
stolen guns

Of the .Bend .-: · ·

PT. PLEASANT A
quantity of gWJs, apparently
stolen from Russ's Swap Shop
in Point Pleasant, has been
recovered from a Marshall
University dormitory room in a
raid in lluntington.
A St. Al bans fr eshman has
been arrested on two counts of
receiving and possessing stolen
property, through combined
efforts of police here and in
HWJtington .
M:ll'k H. Tanner III, 19,
whose address was listed as St.
Albans, but who is believed to
be atso from the Gallipolis
area, was held on $15,000 bond.
No date ha ~. been set for his
preliminarr hearing.
Point Pleasant Police Chief
James Gaskins, State Police
Cpl. James Fitzwater of the
·local detachment, Sheriff Elvin

POMER.OY - ~ ·Iorence Reefer, former Letart Falls
resident, has gone to her home at 176 Second Sl., Athens, afler
spe'nding the last live months In O'Bleness Memorial Hospital in
Athens and the Russell Nursing Horne In Albany. She fell in her
yard on Easter Swtday receiving a fractured hip. However, after
a long siege she's progressing weU and is now home again.

E . Wedge, ac ting on in-

formation supplied by Huntington City Police, went to
HWJtington Thursday evening
to pursue the ·case further.
Tanner was arrested at·2:30
a.m. Friday where police foWld
him asleep in his dormitory
room.
Police said they found about
30 pistols, six rifles and several
knives, along with a 'quantity of
tape decks, watches and rings,
in the East Twin Towers room
of Tanner. ·
Huntington Police Chief
Lawrence Nowery said the
guns and other goods were for
sale on the black market and
that Tanner was arrested when

three of the weapons were
traced back to the Point
Pleasant store, through serial
numbers. The probe is continuing.
Butter has been made since
ancient times when it was
used· as· medicine and as fuel
in Lamps, as well as food .

COLORFUL
DRIED

Flower
Arrangements
From

/~,. llob lllH'j1ich

~ Jill

DELMAR A. CANADAY HAS RETURNED to his Pomeroy
home and is sailing about town - quite slowly, however - afler
being in the intensive care ward of University ·Hospital in
Columbus several days. Delmar recently had a pacemaker inserted, but water on the lungs developed, leading to the most
recent hospitalization .

MR. AND MRS. RICHARD Rupe and daughter, Lori, now
making their home in South Africa, sent a long a leiter telling of

their experiences in their new residence.
They comment that their town - Pietersburg - is lovely and
that people are friendly there. However , the pace is slower than
the Rupes are used to and they have a little problem in not being
busy every minute.
Pietersburg has the only Engllsh speaking elementary and
high school north of Joburg so studenl.s go to Piertersburg to live
and board in hostiles and maybe see their parents only once a
year. At Lori's school they have a pool, tennis courts, Rugby
field, cricket boxes and plenty of playgroWld. The Rupes find
that the schools are not as advanced as the local schools. Lori
was placed in the finishing stages or the fifth grade since it is her
first experience in the school. However , Lori - a pretty bright
girl - comments that she is doing third grade work.
Incidentally, unless a teacher is off 14 days, no one bothers to
get a substitute and as a result students sometimes just sit.
SChool starts for Lori at 7:30a.m. and goes to I pm. She returns
at 3 p.m·. for tennis, cross country and swimming. School clothes
are more of a Wliform and each student is required to wear the
same uriiform.
The Rupes have a maid, Martha , who comes twice a week to
do the cleaning. She sweeps-as all working women do-on her
hands and knees with a handbrush and a dust pan. She prepares
her own LWlch and won't use dishes and pans of the Rupes', but
did ask them to obtain some for her own use. " Martha " eats her
..
meals out of doors.
Taking no furnishings or household goods with them, the
Rupes were given an allowance by Foote Mineral for whom Dick
is working to purchase new furniture anrt other needs for their
flat. Ann writes that the experience of everything new at one
time was "like being a new bride."
The Rupes are without television , but everyone listens to
radio. Some stations play American music - much of it from the
. World War 11 era. The food is cheaper than back home but Ann
writes that the foods,· for some reason. look "second class''.
The present temperature is about 62 inside both night and day;
but with the doors open in the daytime, the flat warms up to 75.
Incidentally, there are no screens and Ann discovered only one
fly with the open doors. Incidentally, she comments that women
do not wear shorl.s to town or on the golf coUTS&lt;l. They are strictly
apparel for the home.
That's about it with the Rupes, except they are looking for
word from Pomeroy friends. The address is Larochelle Flats No.
15, Rabe st., Pietersburg, Transveal, South Africa 0700.

SQUIRREL SEASON OPENED Friday and extends through
Nov. 9 on private lands and through Dec. 21 on state public
hunting areas. HWlting hours are daylight to dark with the dally
bag limit being four.
The Division ofWUdlJfe in southeastern Ohio reports that the
squirrel population \his season is generally the same as last
year's, which was considered good.

MURDER CHARGED
COLUMBUS (UP!) _
Marvin Lynn Preece, 23,
59 N. Second St.
Columbus, has been charged
Middleport
with aggra·1ated murder In the
_________
_.
·slaying
of his mother-in-law
1
and with assault In the shootin~

of his father-in-law, police said
·Saturday. Police said Phyllis
: Collins, 37, was shot to death
and her husband Buford, was
shot in the left thigh during a
family argument.

TO BE HOME

SALE

MONDAY, SEPT. 9th • 9 A.M.-9 P.M.

News, Events
•
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Creg Donohew of Columbus
. spenl the weekend with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Donohew.
Tuesday guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Homer Warner were Mr.
and Mrs. Woodrow Brown of
Ft. Pierce, Fla., Mr. and Mrs.
Ed Kane of Summerville, N. J.,
Mr . and Mrs. Hoyt Fergerson
MA'J'H WORKSHOP participants In the new Ginn
of Pt . Pleasant,
Mathematics program are, seated in photo at left, teachers
camping at the Robe rt Lewis
Marvin Hufford, Marjorie Mink, and Charles Murray;
ca mp for a week were Mr . a nd
standing, teachers Roy Sprague, James Bostick, John Holle,
Mrs. Don Hay ma n and
children of Laurel, Md., Mr.
and Mrs. Gerald Hayma n and
Keith, Mr. a nd Mrs. Gene
Jewell and children of Letart,
w. va., Mr. and Mrs . ted
CA LLI P O LI S
government for the th ird year .
Hay ma n und children of
ModUications
have
been
made
The first year of the project
Wester vill e, 0. joi ned the
in Ma thematics instruction in was spent in a needs
group over La bor l;&gt;ay
the Gallipolis City Schools assessment of the Local school
weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. Ott Boston, being programmed under the system and to form a plan to
Mrs. Dorsa Parsons visited ESEA Title III Project (Three- meet these needs. Committees
relatives of the (Qrrne'r at New 1) fund ed by the federal of students, parents, citizens,
Haven park Sunday afternoon
where the Rollins famil y
reunion was being held.
Mrs. Iva Orr was a Sunday
RACINE - Class officers for Willford , president ; Juli
dinnel' guest of Mrs. Alie&lt;&gt; the new school year have been Gooch, vice president ; Brenda
Balser.
selected at Southern High Lawrence, secretary ; Danny
Codner, treasurer, and Carol
Mr. and Mrs . Charl es School. They are :
Glenn,
reporter.
Michael children Judy, Chuck
Seniors - Glenn Simpson,
Freshmen - · Larry Fisher,
and Becky, Mrs. Iva Orr, Mr. president; Jeff Circle, vice
president;
Steve Baker. vice
and Mrs. Herbert Roush were president ; Susan Gooch,
dinner guests Labor Day of Mr . .· secretary : Vicki Wolfe, president ; Kim . Taylor ,
and Mrs. Roger Roush.
treasurer; Megan Brown, secretary, and Lois Bailey,
Mr. and Mrs. Don Bell, business manager ; Tammy treasurer.
daughter Lorna, Miss Linda R oush , assis tant business
Hill enjoyed a vacation trip manager ;
Steve
Hupp ,
through the states of Maryland reporter.
and West Virginia. They were
JWliors - Randy Dudding,
joined by Mr. and Mrs. Robert president; Tim Jenkins, vice
POMEROY - Nine defenEuler of Charleston. On the president; Becky Sayre,
Bells' return home, they spent secretary ;
Stan
Davis, dants were fined and !0 others
Thw:sday and Friday night treasurer ; John Young, forfeited bonds in Meigs
camping at the Ohio State Fair. business manager, and Paul County Court Friday.
On Friday evening they visited Shultz, reporter.
Fined by Judge ·Frank w.
Dr. and Mrs. Earl Grimm and
Sophomores
Kevin
Porter
were Randall L. Butchildren at Columbus.
cher, Pomeroy, Rt. 4, $5 and
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Durst
costs, defective muffler ·
and daughters of Gallipolis
POLICE BATTLED
Lawrence R. Lipscomb:
visited Mr. and Mrs. Don Bell
SEOUL ( UPI ) - Thousands
Hemlock
Grove, $10 and costs,
Sunday .
of rock · • throwing South speeding; Connie Ball, MidMr. and Mrs. Robert Morris Koreans battled helmeted riot
purchased the former Roberts police guarding the Japanese dleport, $10 and costs, stop sign
property from Mr. and Mrs. embassy Saturday in the violation; Southern Ohio Coal
Co., Albany, Rt. 3, $25 and
Russell Quillen.
second anti-Japanese
Mr. and Mrs. Don Riffle and demonstration in as many costs, failure to report fire
while shooting dynamite;
children of Lucasville, 0., Mr. days.
Lewis Taylor, Pomeroy, $60
and Mrs. Jim Connolly and

••

with Ginn COilSUltont !lop Hall a!ld project dlreciAlr Millard
cassidy. In the photo at right are teacher aides Ruth Comer,
Ann Meadows, and Vicki Jeffers: standing, Judith Hennessey, Jean Henderson, Sue Bostic, Mary Ungo, and Mary
Weaver .

Math instruction modified this year

Officers elected

program of the Ginn Company.
The remaining third will use
the Learning Unlimited CQrp.
" programmed '' math instruction plan .
Achievement and attitudes of
the students will be analyzed at
the end of the year to determine changes needed to improve the instruction of math in
the local school system.
In-service training for
personnel in tbe new Ginn
math program was given in
July. Project "Three-!" funds
are provided by the Ohio State
Department of Title III
through the Elementary and
Secondary Education Act of
1965.

and school staffs got involved
in all activities of the project in
the first year.
M ~ th
instructi on
was
selected for research In the
record year of . tbe project.
Three methods of math instruction were used in gr11Qes
five thru eight.
Math instruction will be
researched further this sc~ool
term, with modifications in two
of the three kinds of instruction.
One third of all math classes
in grades five thru eight will
use the traditional type of
instruction.
Another third of the classes
will be using the personallied

9 fined Friday in court
and costs , $30 suspended,
overload; Hal Borden, Jr.,
Bidwell, $68 and costs, $38
suspended, overload; William
D. Davis, Middleport, $48 and
costs, $28 suspended, overload;
Nancy Lawson, Portland, Rt. I,
$10 and costs, no operator's
license; Randolph L. Fraley,
Cheshire, Rt. 2, $10 and costs,
failure to renew c~;~mping
permit .
Forfeiting bonds were Trula
Miller, Tennessee, $200 bond,
forgery: Ameal Nicholson,
Gallipolis, $50, assault; Ralph
Markell, Mentor, Ohio, $25,
failure to keep on right 11alf of

roadway; Ronilie K. Withfow,
Hutchins, Ky., $27.50, passing
without
assured · clear
distance; Gerald Provens,
· Northup,
$27.50,
failto
obtain
regisure
tration ; William
Thoma,
Racine, Rt. 2, $25, no cycle
license or endorsement; Larry
Wells, Portland, Rt. 1, $25
disorderly conduct; Charles
Hubble, Parkersburg, $25,
disorderly conduct: Glenn
F:
Horton,
Grayson,
Ky.,
$27.50,
speeding;
Arvis E. Hurt, Rio Grande,
$22.50, defective muffler.

Mt. Vernon,
0 . . .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. .
children
spent
the ofweekend
with Mr.
and Mrs. Lester Roush, Mr.
and Mrs. Everette Connolly
· and attended the Roush
reunion at State Park 33
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Roush
were visitors at Pt. Ple3sant
Tuesday evening.
Mrs. Marshall Adams, Rev.
Freeland. Norris, Mrs. Delores
Wolfe, Mrs. Jerry Powell,
Dennis Manuel were at Rev.
Charles Norris's at South Point
Tuesday night to make a tape
for Rev. Norris' TV program.
Mrs. Marjorie Grimm, Mrs.
Caroline Miller of Racine spent
Wednesday afternoon with
Mrs. Marshall Adams, Mr. and
Mrs. Vernon Cady , children
Lori and Jerry of West Jef.
ferson, 0. were Labor Day
weekend guests of the Adams.
Mrs . Flossie Church of
Delaware was a recent
weekend guest of the Adamses. .
Jay Cremeans of Cincinnati
was a guest of Raymond
Adams.
Mr. anct Mrs. ·Edison lirace,
Mrs. Jack Adams visited Mr.
and Mrs. Frederick Brace and
family in Kentucky .
Mr. and Mrs. Elza Birch
ca lied on Mr. and Mrs. Bert
HWlt.
Mr. and Mrs. Edison Brace,·
Mrs. Jack Adams were
shopping in Parkersburg
Friday.

ELBERFELDS lN POME.ROY
FURNITURE DEPARTMENT· 3RD FLOOR

I

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NOW YOU KNOW
Most wood ants af.e industrious and work at several
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are lazy an4 only rWJ around
looking btlSy while actually
doing no work.

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t!O fl tU•

A

•

Weather

e

Oval cocktail table

•

Round )amp table goes anywhere, has a
shelf for those " extras."

e

e

h-as that authentl,c

warm tone.

Squareiamp table " lglhto up" a corner
with ih charming beauty .
Ste·p table Is a verr.atlle piece for books1
lamps ·or accesSOries.

enttne

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Now You Know

Dt•voted To Th e lntere.~ts Uf

The Meigs·Masoll

The crocOdile Is the cl(IO&lt;.,\
Uving relative to the dinooa ur.

A rt'il

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WASHINGTON (UP I)- The pardon of Richard NIJ:on ::::
may l)lake It I)!Ore difficult for the government to proseeute ::::
stx of the former president's aides lor the Watergate cover- :~:~
up. according to sources close to the case.
l:~;
At least one ponlblHty, which a source said was ::~
reasonable, Is thatlhe jury for Jhe Sept. 30 trial will be more
sympathetic now toward the defendants.
::::
There Is a possibility that it will be unpalatable to send ;~:
some aides to prison when Nixon was· juat given a pardon, ::::
but that all rerDJJns to be seen," said one source who asked ~:~:
not to be Identified. John N. MltcheU, H. R. Haldeman, Jobn ::;:
D. Ehrlichman, Gurdon Strachan, Kenneth W. Parkinson· f
and Robert C. Mardlan aU face charges of obstruction of ;:;:
justice, perjury or conspiracy Jo connection with the ctlver- :~:~
up of the Watergate break-In,
:;:;

t

~

~:~:~:::~:~:~~:::::~:~:~:::~::=~=:~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:::;:::::::: :;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:;:;;;:;::•:i:i:i:;:!:::::;::::::

Rentodeling
of Capitol
begins now
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The space to insure a modern and
legislative
reconstruction and renovation efficient
of the 113-year-old state capitol operation," Sommer said.
Sommer said architectural
has been awarded to the
Columbus architectural firm of work will begin immediately
Adams, Harder, Kincheloe, and reconstruction could take
Kochner and Swearingen, up to two years · to complete
Joseph J. Sommer, director of following the architect's
\]le . Department of Ad· report.
The current budget has
ministrative Services, an·
appropriated $200,000 to cover
noWlced today.
Sommer said the firm was the cost of architectural work,
chosen on the basis of its past Sommer said.
performance on histor.ical
renovations. The firm planned
"We are asking the architect
and directed the restoration of to come up with plans that preAdena State Memorial a( serve the heritage and histori:
Chillicothe and the Piqua cal features of this great build·
Historical Area and the design ing and at the same time proand construction of Fort Meigs vide efficient working spaces
State Memorial at Perrysburg. in those areas not normaUy
"We expect the architectural open to the public," Sommer
study to take nine months. In- said. "These spaces would in. eluded in the architect's clude legislative offices, secrereports will be recom· tarial pools, libraries and the
mendations on how to adapt the like ."

•

Former President Nixon
By JOHN MlLNE
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - President Ford says he pardoned Richard M. Nixon as an act of mercy and to bind the
nation's woWlds, but the reactil)ll showed few wounds had
healed and the Watergate controversy was back in the White
House.
Ford's swprise statement said he wanted to write a
conclusion to the Watergate tragedy.
HiS friend and press secretary, J. F . ter Horst, resigned
as "a matter of conscience," and repreSentatives and
senators had strong reactions almost certain to end his
0
honeymoon" with Congress.
Ford signed the document at noon SWlday. lt was a "full,
free and abSolute pardon unw Richard Nixon for all offenses
against the· United States which he, Richard Nixon, has
committed or may have committed or taken part in during
the perioc:l from Jan. 20,1969 through Aug. 9, 1974 ."
In San Clemente, Calif., Nixon accepted the pardon,
saying, "No worda can de8cribe the depth of my regret and
pain at the anguish.my mislakes over Watergate have caused
the nation and the presidency.''
He said he was wrong in not acting "more decisively and
more forthrightly" but the former President did not admit
breaking the law.
White House officials denied that there had been a deal.
"I know there· was non!!," said. L. William Seidman, a
close Ford friend from Grand Rapids. But the Chicago
TribWle said today there had been a "six'llart package"
depending on Nixon's statement.
Special prosecutor Leon Jaworski now will not be able to
seek an indictment against Nixon. Six months ago, a grand
jury had voted 19.() to call Nixon a ca.eonspirator in the
Watergate cover-up, but he was not indicted.
Legal sources said it might help Nixon's six a.ides who
face trial Sept. 3o for the Watergate cover-up. As one said, "I
think you can't escape the fact that the No. I man among the
team of top {l!!Ople at the White House got away free."
Sen. Barry M. Goldwater, R-Ariz., caUed it "the only
decent and prudent course."
Sen. George McGovern, O.S.D., complained that Nixon
was being granted "a pardon while his subordinates are
befng sent off to prison."

~dmits

to making mistakes

pa rdon fer Nixon would be " untimely and unwise" before
an y charges had actually been brought.
His old taw partner and legal c'Ouns•l, Philip Buchen, told
reporters Sunday that the President apparently made the
de cision some time last week.
Buchen said he checked with Jaworski and found there
were ••no time bombs'' in the form of new charges.
Last Thursday , Ford a uthorized Washington lawyer
Benton Becker to go to San ClemeQte and, Buchen said, "to
advise the former President that President Ford was intending to give a pardon ."
Becker, according to the t'Ounsel, brqught word of
Nixon's plan to issue a statement, but the wording was left
open . J;J,uchen said he considers Nixon's statement "an act of
contrition ."
Ford had deliberately chosen Sunday for his statement.
Instead of services at the seminary nea r his old home in
Alexandria, he went to holy communion at St. J ohn's church,
where Presidents since James Madison have worshiped.
He had not told his wife, Betty, of his decision. Through
an aide, she later said Ford "gave a great deal of thought" to
a pardon .
His statement was full of references to prayer and
conscience, to the tragedy of Nixon and his family, to the

Watergate aH~gations that "ti.1ng like a sword over our
form~r President's head , threa te ning his health as he tries to
reshape his life." Buchen said Jaworski had predicted a
Nixon trial could not begin for 4!1 le(lst nine months .
"I am compelled to conclude that many months and
·perhaps more years will have to pass before Richard NiJ&lt;on
would obtain a fair trial," Ford said.
" During this long period of delay and potential litigation,
ugly passions wo uld again be arow;ed. And our people would
a~ain be polarized in their opi nions.
"And the credibility of our free institutions of govern- ment would again be challenged at horne and abroad .''

THEN F'ORD WENT TO PLAY GOLF as the White
House switchboard beg~ n ringing with "angry calls, heavy
and constant," of those opposed to a pardon.
At his vice presidential nomination hearings he had been
asked about pardon and predicted "the country wouldn't
sta nd fOr it."
As he resigned, terHorst said he could not "credibly
defend ' ' Nixon's pardon ''in the absence of pardons for those
who evaded the Vietnam war in good conscience and former
Nixon aides who have suffered under th e same Watergate"
troubles.
·

Ford had told a news conference last Wednesday that a

Martha bitter
HOT SPRINGS, Ark'. (UPI)
- Martha Mitchell, commenting on President Ford's
pardon of Richard Nl'&gt;lon,
today said she did not feel
sorry for the former president
or his family because 14 they're
too stupid to know what they're
doing.
'
11
1 knew
Nixon
had
something up his sleeve when
he left the White House," said
Mrs. Mitchell, estranged wife
of former Attorney General
John N. Mitchell.
"Nixon's just as guilty and
responsible as anybody else,
and it's a horrible, horrible

. thing."
Mrs. MitcheU, a native of
Pine Bluff, Ark., is visiting
relatives in this resort town 55
miles from Uttle Rock.
"I don't feel sorry for him or
his .family either because
they're too stupid to know what
they're doing," Mrs. Mitchell
said.
HJ don't believe in pardoning
one person and not pardoning
everybody else - especially
when they're the ones that did
A house burned to the groWld
the dirty work for him. And
that goes for even old H. R. in Pomeroy Sunday afternoon.
In Middleport, firemen
Haldeman and old John
struggled to rescue ah
Ehrlicl)man, whom I hate."
unidentified man trapped
Wider the Middleport stadium.
First aid buffs administered
resuscitation to a lifeless body
at
th'e Meigs Junior High
staging the show were Mrs.
Robert Lewis, Mrs. Robert school.
There were even other exThompson, and Mrs. Richard
Collins, Winding Trail Club; citing events, but It was all
Mrs. Letha Morris, Mrs. Bert mock training ·taken as a part
Grimm, Mrs. Wilson Car- of a Hocking Valley Regional
penter, Bend 0' the River Fire School In Middleport and
Club; Mrs. Oris Ginther, Mrs. Pomeroy SWlday. Over !50
Roy Holter, Chester Club; Mrs. area firemen attended the
Joe Bolin, Mrs. Howard Birch- school which offered in·
field, and Mrs. Larry Edwards, struction in flrefighting and
rescue
and
Rutland Friendly Club; Mrs. emergency
Charlea Lewis, Rutland Club; treatment.
The Meigs Junior High
Mrs. Harry Moore and Mrs.
)iarold Lohse, Middleport school was headquarters for
Amateurs: Miss Anna Wiles, the school with the Middleport
SWlbonnet Girls·, and Mrs. Volunteer Fire Dept. the host.
John YoWlg, Wilson carpenter At noon the auxiliary of the
and James Carpenter, along Middleport deparlment served
with members .of the Meigs Lunch during the daylonr
school.
CoWl ty Fair Board.
Instruction· was by. Joe
Continued on page 8

Firemen
• •
tra1n m
school

AREA FIREMEN LEARNED how to use portable pumps to secure water from rivers or
streams in fire fighting at the Middleport levee Sunday afternoon.

Shows drew 224 entries

ews•• rn
By United PressiDteruatlonal
BATON ROUGE, LA. - HURRICANE CARMEN sf!Uished
into the lush sugar fields of Louisiana this weekend and
destroyed most of the crop before it wound down to a 35-mile-anhour rainstorm drifting across Texas .
.
'G'ov. Edwin Edwards toured the stricken area ~unday and
estimated crop-related losses alone at $400 milllon. One death
was attributed to the storm. "What's doubly bad about this is that
·this particular crop was badly needed for the sugar of .our
COWltry," Edwards said. "The farmers were all looking at this
year and all of a sudden this hurricane comes and dashes their
dreams," tile governor said.
As he spoke children paddled their canoes up and down the
flooded road separating Bayou Lafourche from their homes.

WAsHINGTON - FORMER PRESIDENT NIXON has
reached an agreement with the government which insures that
only he can write the story of his administration using the papers
and tapes not required In court. Afterward, the docuJilents and
tapes could be destroyed. The agreement, signed by Nixon and
the General Services Administration, the goverrunent's
housekooping agency, was announced SWlday. It gives NIJ:on
"all legal and equitable title to tbe materials, .including all
literary property rights."
.
There have been recurring reports that NIJ:on is considering
use of this material in a book about his presidency, and that he
might get as much as $2 million for h.is memoirs."The White
House released the statements along with .an opinion from AI·
torney General William B. Saxbe, establishing that Nixon's
White House papers were the personal property of tbe former
president. Historically, Saxbe said, presidents had control over
documents !hey sa~, signed ;,r issued.
ATHBNS - SEARCHERS FROM THE U. S. AIRCRAFT
carrier Independence and Greek ships gave up hope today for all
88 persons aboard a crippled Trans World Airlines 707 jell~r
that crashed Sunday in the Ionian
" We don 't expect to find
any survivors,'.' said Ammanuel Kefaloyannis, Greek deputy
·mlnlater of transportation In charge of civil aviation who was In
charge of aU search efforts.
.
Kefaloya'nnis said that as of mid-morning, the Independence
and a Greek vessel had recovered 17 bodies. He said they would
be flown 1Al Athens for autopsies before being handed over to next
of ldn. A maverick Arab guerrilla group said in Beirut a commando 011 a death mission bombed the Boeing 707, but the major
Palestinian orgiullzatlon denied Involvement by any recognized
guerrilla band. Au\(&gt;psles would Indicate if the victims died Ln an
exploaion or the crash.

s....

GUARALAJAR, MEXICO
PRESIDENT Luis
Echeverria 's 87-year-old father-in-law has ended a llklay kidnap
continued on page R
· ···

Final reports on the two
flower shows held at the Meigs
CoWlty Fair Wider the dlrec·
tion of Mrs. James Carpenter,
chairwoman, have been
completed and entered In
competition with the Ohio
Association of Garden Clubs.
Mrs. Carpenter said the
shows had 224 entries, 42 of
which were made by persons
not affiliated with garden
clubs, including 26 junior
exhibits. All but one club of the
Meigs CoWl ty Garden Clubs
Association participated in the
shows, and Individual member
cooperation and participation
was excellent.
Assisting Mrs. Carpenter In

THESE FIREMEN, WEARING MASKS, PrePared to go under the dark Middleport
stadium to rescue an unidentified man trapped in the structure.

Fallout from the pardon

Ford went full circle
WASHINGTON (UPl) During his confirmation
hearings Cor vice president,
Gerald 'R. Ford said the
COWl try would not stand for one
president to pardon another.
· But SWlday - after doing
just that In the cue of Richard
M. NIJ:on - Ford said he had to
study tbe question In a much
different light now that he sits
in the Oval Office ..
"I have learned already In
this office that the difficult
decisions always come to this
desk," Fordsaid In announcing
the pardon . "I IJIUSt admit that
many of them do not look at .all
the same as the hypothetical
queauono that I have answered
frooly and perhaps too fast on
previous occasions."

former President Richard
Nixon came as soon as it did
because Ford was told any
delay would damage Nixon's
emotional
state,
the,
Washington Post reported
today.
The newspaper attributed its
infotmation to "sources close
to the situalion," and said at
leaat two of Nixon's friends had
"commWJicated to President
Ford their belle! that the
rormer president was so
emotionally depressed that he
would have been unable to
withatand prolonged in-

decLsion."

Tlie Pool said Nixon knew of
Ford's intention to grant him a
!&gt;'irdon at least since last
rei!(! ted with bitterness SWlday
to President Ford's surprise
WASHINGTON - President .pardon of ex-President Nixon.
Ford 's decision to pardon Thooe who agreed with Ford
~

Thursday.
MANY AMERICANS
thought it best to get Watergate
over with.
"
A random sampling of man- .
on-the-street reaction showed
opinions varying from, "It
pays to steal," to, 11 1t's time to
have the cOW1try all together.''
A good many shared the view
of Nell Hoffman, an auto
mechanic in Champlain, Mich.,
who said if Nixon got a pardon,
"so should all the others involved In Watergate."
GOV . JOHN J . Gilligan
Sirnday expressed disbelief at
President Ford's decision to
grant a full pardon to Richard
Nixon on all matters relating to ·
'
'
the Watergate scandal.
" I have never heard of a
continued. on page s

THIS OLD DWELLING on Mulberry Ave. fn Pomeroy WM bur~ to the ground
afternoon to provide first hand experience In fire lighting .

'J&gt;

\
i

8uiJclly

�n... Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Sept. 9, 1974

2-

•

Nixon is premature ani:l,

therefore, unfortunate."
Without the process of

wtfair in either Instance," he
said.
"! coold understand and
sympathize with the compassion which would have
granted a merciful pardon for
someone whose guilt had been
established under the law. But
I do not feel a total exemption,
at this time, from further legal

justice moving to a conclsuion,
the innocence or g uilt
cr Richard Nixon wiU never •processes affords adequate
be O$tabllshed; and that is legal consideration for Richard

Nixon, othens involved tn ·the
Watergate matter or the
general public.
" 1regret that President Ford
took this action at this time."
Sen. Robert Taft Jr., R.Qhio,
said Sunday he was in full
accord with Ford's decision to
grantNixonaJull pardon on all
rna tters relating to the
Watergate scandal.
" I feel that President Ford

Citizens' opinions divide
By tlnlted Press loteruatlonal
A wide variety of opinions on
President Ford's full pardon of
Richard Nixon Sunday was
expressed by citizens of Ohio.
"I'm for it," said a Colwnbus
housewife,
Mrs.
Susan
Stevenson.
Mrs . Stevenson said she
thought it was time to have the
country all together.
" I wanted him (Nixon ) to get
out of the presidency," she
said, " but now I just want it to
be over."
Michael Kattus, Cincinnati,
said he was favorable toward
the President's decision.
"I have a tendency to believe
that Nixon is guilty but the trisl
and the publicity that goes
along with it would be harmful
to the country," the 44-year-&lt;Jid
General Electric Co. salesman
said. "I admire President Ford
for his staunch decision on this
subject - not beating around
the bush and taking the bull by ,
the horns, and no acting like

most politiciaris.."
John M. Corcoran, 48, Cin·
cinnati, commented that "if
the others involved in
Wlller!late have to serve time
in prison, he (Nixon) as their
leader . should also go to

" It seems to me he had to
have some koowledge of what

was going on ari?Ufld him," the
Postal Service employe said.
" Maybe he didn't have all the
facis , but he must have known
what was happening.••
Eleanor Starrun, 62, an East

Cleveland retiree, said '''fhis is
shameful, especially for young
people," when she heard of the
pardon.
"I simply want to state my
indignation at the pardon
President Ford just issued to

Nixon," she said. "There are
two kinds of law now - one for
the poor and ordinary person,
and one for the man with
wealth. Never mind the consitution,
"Does this mean he (Ford) is
going to pardon all crimin81s?
Does this mean complete
amnesty for draft dodgers?
Nixon has not suffered. He
hasn't been persecuted. n
Betty
Murdock,
6(
Cleveland retiree, commented
that " I'm beginning to beiieve
no onecafl help any of us now.''
"President Ford's decision
gave the next man every
reason not to live up to the
law,'' she said . .. I was speech~
less when I heard the decision ,

I'm afraid it's going to cause
an uprising In this country.
Kids won't hold still for this."
Lettie Jenks, a Cleveland
housewife said she is "making
plans to lead a walk on
Washington" because she Is

"very wrought." She sald she
would go to Cleveland Public
Square Monday noon with a
sign to begin an organizing

walk,
Mrs . Joyce Wilcox, a
Columbus housewife, said she
is "relieved that he (Ford ) did
it, I ,1
" But I'm still a litt.le shook
up that we had a president that
wasn't honest," she said. "I
can really harjlly believe that It
did happen. We'll never fmd
out what involvement Nixon
had In it anyway, It will look
bad for Mr. Nixon but they
would have hushed it up

anyWay."
Karen Green, a 23-year-&lt;Jid
Cleveland student, said "he did
break the law and he should

serve as an example.

tl

"He's got to take his lumps,"

she said.

11

Americans are

getting away with too much.
It's like spanking a child - no
one wants to do it but it's got to
be done. "

.~::;;;:;;:;:::;:=:?.:~~~:~:::::~::::::::::~&amp;::::::::::::::::::!:!:!:!:!:!:=:::::~::::::;:::;::::..;::;:;:;:;~~~~~8=~8!::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::.-:::.:::;;;:;:;:;:;:;:;::!:~:!:!:!!i:~:*:~:~*~~=i:::::::::~::::

I
B

'

Early parachute puzzling
.

because he had been taught by
ByTERRANCEMcGARRY
TWIN FALLS, Idaho (UPI ) rocket designer Robert Truax
- Evel Knlevel blasted over that ~ ·if I could see the opposite
the Snake River Canyon In a walls of the canyon, instead of
powerful steam rocket Sunday just sky, to pull the chute
but a puzzling, premature .because that meant I was
parachute opening yanked him rolling"- going out of controh
But television tapes of the
to a halt and dropped him on
launch
showed the parachute
the near .shore of the river, $6
millioo richer but 10 seconds began deploying as the
"skycycle" boomed up the
short of his 8-year goal.
Knievel's
"skycyele" short, steeply Inclined launch
bumped and battered against ramp with a blast of steam.
·the lava walls of the canyon as power that awed spectators.
It was braking the rocket
he floated down into the 600foot deep gorge and bounced even as it shot off the ramp
bound for the other side of the
oniD a rock outcropping.
The motorcycle stuntman's chasm,
The · crowd gasped and
face was cut and bruised and
his knees were lacerated, but shoute&lt;! lri alarm as the
"skycycle" floated down out of
be was not hurt otherwise.
"The peOple prayed and God view. ·Knlevel could be seen
made the wind blow," Knievel struggling with the straps
said, explaining the 15 mile per holding him In, trying to bail
mile breeze that blew him back
to a landing on the south shore
VISIT RELATIVES
of the river and saved him
LETART FALLS - Mr. and
from pbsslble drowning in the Mrs. Bert Grimm, Letart
turbulent currents at mid· Falls, are In Columbus visiting
stream.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Grimin and
The rocket ascended for only family, and In St. Clairsville
8. 7 seconds. Had It gone on as visiting Mr. and Mrs. Russell
planned, an extra 10 seconda of Grbnm and famlly .
thrust was expected to have
carried him to the other side.
There were conflicting exHOFFMAN LISTED
planations about just what
Ronnie Hoffman, son of Mr.
went wrong ·with the much and Mrs. Perry Hoffma11,
ballyhOOed launch.
Middleport,
will
leave
Evel said first that he had tomorr~w for U.S. Air Force
accidentally popped the chute basic training in Texas, He
- designed to' bring him to enlisted for six years. For the
earth after he had crossed the past year, Hoffman has been
1,600-foot-wide canyon employed at the Meigs Inn.

has made a very coora8eous
decision and. one that I thlnk Is
correct," Tart said at hl.s h0111e
in Cincinnati.
" At the time that Richard
Nixon resigned, I stated on that
occasion that I felt that he
s hould not be further
prosecuted," Taft said. "There
was also the serious question of
whether or nota fair trial coold
have been conducted because
of the enormous publicity given

Ule case."

priSon."

'"

•
UIC

·ons divide sharply over pardon of Nixon

By tllllted PrHa laternau..,.r
Rep. Claren&lt;;e Brown, ROhio, said " the decision by
President Ford to grant a
pardon to Conner President

11

3- "l'he ll(IU Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, Q., Monday, Sept. f, 19'14

i1
%

out with a reserve parachute
before he got too low to use it,
1
' l've beard it said that it's

not whether you've won or lost
but how you've played the
1
, g~e;' Knievel said.
"And to lose to a beautiful
canyon like this Is, to me, no! a
real loss. I would rather have
bad a happy landing on the
other side."
Robert Arum, president of
Top Bank ·Inc., promoters of
the leap, said It was a draw ,"Knlevel didn't defeat the
canyon, but the canyon didn't
defeat Knievel either, He made
the jump. He pulled the trigger

and new."
Arum · said the promoters
expected to take In about $26
million In revenue from the $25
a head admission fee at the
site, closed circuit television
showings and other income.

Sen. Howard Metzenbaum,
O.Oh,io, howe:ver, disagreed
with his fellow senator's
opinion on. the pardon.
" I respect the hyman kindness tluit motivated President

Ford's action," Metzenbawn
said.
"But when I thlnk of all the
others that either have gone or
will go to prison because of
their association with Mr.
Nixon, I question whether this
is equal justice under the law."

made any decision," Glenn
said,
"I had been hoping that we
could bring out every single
factor in Watergate and
everything related to It before
any decisions such as that was
made. Of coorse we want to get
Watergate behind us.
" If there are things to be
learned that would Indicate
that we need legislative or
constitutional changes in our
system to protect against this
ever happening In our future, I
want to see all those carda out
face up on the table so we can
make our decisions for the
future In this based on the vest
be$t Information that we have
surrounding what happened."
Mayor Ralph J . Perk of
Cleveland, Republican candidate for the U.S, Senate, said
the action by President Ford

John Glenn, the Democratic
nominee for the U. S. Senate, showed " decisiveness and
said he believed a pardon courage."
"I believe that President
decision should have been
deferred until more facts had Ford has stated the true, the

common sense, and the
been brought out.
" I don't know that all the humanity of the matter better
than anyone else could possibly

Fairview
News Notes
By Mrs. Heroen Roush
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert sayre,
Howard SOyre of Syracuse,
Paul S;lyre, Columbus, spent
the weekend with Mr. and Mrs,
Norman Styer at Waterford, 0.
and attended the River Rat
party held yearly. Mr. and
Mrs. David S;lyre spent Sunday with the Styers.
Mrs. Rose Bachus, mother of
Mrs. Howard (Mary) Donohue,
has been admitted to the Angel
of Mercy Ntirslng Home at
Albany, due to Mrs. Donohue
not being able to care for her.
She would appreciate cards.
Peggy, Chri.s. and Tim McDade, all of Troy, spent Sunday
night with Mr . and Mrs,
Russell Roush and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis,
Clifton, Mr .- and Mrs. Ronald
Russell and children of Wolf
Pen, Mr. arid Mrs. Gary
Wilford and baby were also
callers on the Roushes Sunday.

Mr.

and

Mrs.

Howard

Robinson of Flatwoods, W.Va.,
spent Sunday with Mrs. Bertha
Robinson.
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Shielda
visited Miss Millie Ripley at
Charleston, W.Va. Sunday and
·brought Mrs. Maggie Roush to
her home at Letari.
Mr, and Mrs, Herbert sayre
visited Mr. arid Mrs. James
Sayre at Kanauga Thursday
and were also shopping at the
·
Silver Bridge Plaza.

Wolfpen

YARD SALE SET
SYRACUSE - A yard sale ·
will be held Thursday and
Friday, Sept, 12 and 13 at the
Syracuse Asbury United
Methodist Church, across !rom
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Russell
· the park. The event is being
sponsored by the Eagles Class. recently spent their vacation
with Mr . and Mrs; To.m
Summerfield and daughters of
illinois. They toured Chicago
OESTOMEET
and also places of interest in
HARRISONVILLE - The Milwaukee, Wis.
Harrisonville OES will meet at
Mrs. Howard Thoma and
7:30 p.m. Tuesday. Initiation Patricia visited a few days last
will be held and final plans week with Mr. and Mrs. Frank
made for friends night tO be Sarver and boys (Johnnie and
heid this Thursday.
Eddie) of Bridgeman, Mich.

News, Notes

DR. LAMB

::;:;;::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::~;..;::::~

Final NFL
E xhlbitlon Standings

By United Press International

do, and there Is no reason of me
to reatate It," Perk said.
'"The
acUon
ahow1
decisiveness and couuge on
the President's part, and I
believe all Americans can
draw (rom his strength. Only
be has the power to put
Watergate behind us, and he
has had the coorage to do it.
Not only the people or the
tlnlted States, but the people or
the world, will love or respeet
him for It."
William Lavelle, slilte
Democratic Party chalnnan,
said President Ford's pardon
of Richard Nixon has tied the
Watergate scandal with the
Ford presidency.
11

1t's an outrage.'' Lavelle

said. " We are ~upposedly
Uvlng under a rule of law. This
brings the whole Watergate
Issue right Into the Ford
presidency.
Lavelle said he was sympathetic with Nixon's problems
had
Special
Watergate
Prosecuto-r Leon Jaworski
decided to prosecute the former president, but felt the
legal process must go on.
"I am not after his Nixon's
hide, but a pardon In advance
will no~ be received very weU

Kingsbury

American Conference
East

Miami
New Englnd
Bufralo
NV Jets
Baltimore

w 1 t pet. pf pa

4 2 0 .667 UJ

4 2 0 ,667 105

98

4 3 0 .571 141 129
2 4 0 .300 l01 122
1 4 0 .200 69 59

Central

w 1 t pet. pf
6 0 0 1.000 155

Pittsbgh
Cincinnati
Cincinnati
Houston
Cleve.

96

pa
99

4 2 0

.667 135 102

4 1 0
3 3 0
2 3 0

.667 135 102

West

.500 144 74
..400 83 118

w 1 t pet. pf ga
Oakland
5 1 0 .833 151 83
Denver
4 2 0 .667 128 .127
San Diego
2 A 0 ·.333 84 163
Kan . City
3 3 0 .SOO 130 153
National Conference
East
w I t pet. pf

Dallas

3
2
2
2

St. /rouiS
Ph1

pa

3 3 0 .500 86 119

a

NY Giants
W.ash .

4
4
4
4

0
0
0
0

Central

.4'29
.333
.333
.333

111 p?
124 153'
94 99
80 129

w I t pet. pf pa
Green Bay . 4 2 0 .667 106 99
Minn .
3 2 0 .600 118 71
Chicago
1 5 0 .167 85 163
Detro! t
2 4 0 .333 70 126
West
w 1 t pet. p,f pa
Los Ang .
5 1 0 .833 166 86
Atlanta .
4 2 o .667 99 75
New ·orteans 3 3 0 .500 84 108
·san Fran .
0 6 o .000 62 114
sundAy's Result•
'Atlanta 20 Denver 14
New England 27 Philadelphia 17
Los Angels 11 San Frzmclsco 7
(On lv games scheduled)

Carmel News,

By the Day
Mr. and Mrs. George Circle
and daughter, Cheryl, Mr. and
Mrs. James Circle of New
Haveb, W. Va. visited with
Mrs. Mary Circle on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs.,Shelby Pickens
and family of Pomeroy, Mr,
and Mrs. Frank Hudson, Mr.
and Mrs. Gene Hudson of
Racine spent Sunday with Mr,
and Mrs. Allan Taylor.
Mr. and Mrs. William
Carleton of Racine and
~ephews, Raymond Sayre,
Clyde sayre II and niece,
Kimberly Sayre of Point
Pleasant called at the home or
Mrs, Dean Brinker a recent
evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Earl
Johnson and daughter, Sheryl
LeAnn attended the Wllbarger
reunion In Pennsylvania on
Sunday.
Betty VanMeter, Patrick
Johnson, Mrs. Dean Brinker
and Mr, and Mrs. WUUam
Carleton or Racine attended
the Gainer reunion held In
Hebron on Sunday,

News, Notes
Mr. and Mrs. John Walter
Dean dedicated their son, John
Jeremy Sunday morning at the
Carleton Church.
The dedication services were
held following Sunday School
with Rev. Jay Stiles officiating.
Recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Nev White and Mrs,
Jennie Holley were Emmit
Holley and Effie Holley of
Columbus.
Visitors Sunday of Mr. and
Mrs . John Dean and Mr. and·
Mrs. John Walter Dean and
son, John were Mrs. Walter
Terrell, Mr. and Mrs. Robert ,
Riel, Rodney, David, all of :
Pataskala, Mr. and Mrs. l
Kenneth Markins, Racine , .
Mrs. Francis Miller and . Mr. ••
and Mrs. Roger Swarts . and
daughter, Jeilnlfer, of Belpre.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Banks
and daughter of Baltimore,
Maryland are visiting friends ·
and relatives here.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Carl and
Ro'dney visited her falher: Mr.
Clyde Harrison at Middleport
recently,
Mrs. Virgil King returned
Geneva Klpg and Mary Lou
King to college at Kankakee,
Dtinnis recently, Jnining her
from Reynoldsburg was Mrs.
Neva King.
Mr. and Mrs. Nev White
visited his brother, Dennie
White at Logan, W. Va.
recently:
Recent visitors of Mrs. Hazel
Arnold were Mr. and Mrs.
Lester Arnold and Billy,
Columbus, Mr . and Mrs.
Patrick Williams and famlly of
McArthur. and Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald McNally and daughter
of Athens,
Mr. and Mrs. John Dean, Mr.
and Mrs. John Walter Dean
and son and Rodney Rled
visited Mr. and Mrs. Garold
Gilkey and family at Athens
Sunday evening where they
honored Mr. Gllkey on his
birthday. Other guests for
dinner were Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Paynter of Carpenter. Calling
later In the evening were
Marshall and Sandra Ruth who
are missionaries home from
Tajeon, Korea .

'

The 'rice diet' can he helpful
.

lacta have been out, so I woold
have thought It would be more
appropriate to walt untll
everything Is out before we

Steppe's

•

Still it does have Its place In
medical problems associated
with retention of salt, kidney
proplems, and high blood
pressure. The chief value of the
diet has been demonstrated to
be Ill! extremely low sodium
content (low salt) .
Since neither rice nor fruit
contain any major annount of
fat and neither contain any
cholesterol,itls·truly a low-fat,
low-cholesterol diet. It Is an
e 1 baustlng diet In many
respeets. It Is certainty not
something I coold ever advise
anyone to take just to manage
normal cycllc changes In fluid
retenUon , AbsOlutely no one
shoold be on this diet unless the
doctor has recommerlded ltror
a
particular
problem.
However, ifl had a patient who
could not be managed properly
with medicines and a more
general diet, I woold give It
serious consldenotion.
You have to Umit your
calories on this diet to lose
weight. l:a)ortes do count. I

I

always remember one of my
patienl.s I had told to eat
nothing but rice and fruit in the
hopes of controlling hl.s weight
and heart disease problems.
·He dld not lose weight. So I
asked him, "Alan, what have
you been eating?" He replied,
"Just what you told me, doc.
Just rice and fruit, rice and
. fruit."
Being of a suspicious 1\ature,
I asked him, ''what kind of
fruit?" "Bananas, doc."
"How many bananas,
Aian?"
· "Oh, I've just been giving
them hell," When the fruit was
Umited, his weight began to
disappear .
Send your questions to Dr.
Lamb, in care of this
oewiJI'!per, P.O. Box 1551,
Radio City Station, New York,
N.Y. 10019. For a copy or Dr.
Lamb's booklet on . losing
weight, send ~ . centa to the
same addreu and ul! for the
"Losing Weight" bookl~t.'

'.

Connors, Rosewall ;
clash for .crown ..
•

FOREST HILLS, N. Y.
(UP!) - The throng at the
Wimbledon final in July rooted
In vain for Ken Rosewall to
beat Jimmy Connors. The
throng at the West Side Tennis
Club today w!U root for Ken
again,
For Kenny is its man. There
are all the years ahead for the .

opportunity to pick up the only ~
major crown she has miSsed. ··
Winner in France and '
Wimbledon in 1971, champion •·
of Australia this year, the 23year-&lt;&gt;ld Aussle now faces ;
Billie Jean King for the $22,500 .:
top prize and all the en- ·
dorsement money that goes ,,
with the U. S. tiUe.
v

Rosewall," or another 22-year-

old like blmaelf, another left..
bander, this time Roscoe.
Tanner.
Connors took out Tanner In
straight sets Sunday, 7~. 7-ll, 84. He took out the 39-year-&lt;Jid
Rosewall In the Wimbledon
final, 6-1, 6-1, 8-4.
Today he Intends taking out
Rosewall again, as quickly as
possible.
. Connors is sorry his bride-tobe, Chris Evert, lost her
chance to add the U. S. Open
crown to her Wimbledon
diadem, but his pride in· her
· could not be diminished by
Chris' valiant, yet fo.illng,
effort here · against Evonne
Goolagong,
Chris, down 6-0, 4-3 and a
service break when rain halted
play on Friday, gave the
record crowd of 15,402 SUnday
an unforgettable match,
fighting off two mate~ pOints to
win the second set In Ue-break,
then see It all get away-in a
heart stopping third set when
Evonne refused to crack and
woo It an, fi.O, 6-7, 6-3,
While Jlmn)Y was consoUng
Chris, Ro:iewall was busy
repeating his Wimbledon
quarter final win over Forest
Hills' defending champion
John Newcombe,
As usual, Rosewall dropped
the first set. As ilaual, he came
on to win 11-7- 11-4, 7-ll, 11-3,
For Evonne, today Is her

Bill Battle, who gambled and
lost a crucial game lui season,
turned co~~~ervaUve Saturday
but may have lOot oome respect

this tlme.

0

f
Class

Uni-Perm

Saturd•v's Ohlo ColleGe
Football Results
Br United Press lnternAtion•l
Miami 39 Eastern Michigan 0
Kent State 21 Central Mlhclgan

CINCINNATI (UP!) - Walt
Alston termed it the " Mike
Marshall misquote."
"And I think it did our club
more good than the Reds," said
Alston after the Los Angeles
Dodgers beat the Reds, 7.o!,
Sunday in the last of a threegsme set to take a 3.,. game
lead in the National League
West.
Marshall allegedly said facing the Reds was " like pilching
against a high school team"
after he picked up his 20th save
last Friday night when the
Dodgers WO!l the series opener,
3-!,
.
The slur supposedly infuriated Reds and, with Joe Morgan
delivering the game-wlimlng
two-run homer, Cincinnati
. gave M'a rshall his comeuppance saturday afternoon by
tagging him with his nth loss
against 13 victories.
Sunday Marshall blanked the
Reds over the last two innings,
striking out the side In the
ninth, to preserve Dodgers'
lefthander Doug Rau's 13th
victory against seven losses,

meeting," said Alston.
Was Marshall's quote mentioned ?
"Marshall's misquote was,"
corrected Alston,
A commentary on Marshall's
alleged statement wasn't all
Alston had for his players
during the pregame meeting.
" I told them I thought we
were pitching some or the
Reds' batters incorrectJy, •'
said Walt without mentioning

names.
" I reminded them too that
we 've got a higher team batting average than the Reds, a
lower team earned run

~

Olivet, Mich . 20 Defiance 7

Akron 31 Central State 20
Indiana Central 8 Findlay 6

-...

·~

This Week's

Ohio College FoOtball Sched.u le

By United Press International '
Saturday
Oh lo State at Mlnnesotll
Bowling Green .at
East
Carolina (n)
Kent State at Syracuse
Ohio Unlversltv at North
Carol Ina
Toledo at Tampa In)
Delaware at Akron
,
Ashland at Ferris St . (Mich . ) ·
Bluffton at Taylor ( Ind . )
Case Western at Thiel (Pa . J Tennessee st . at central St .'-'
Cincinnati at washington
..,
Eastern Kentucky at Dayton 1•
In l
Heidelberg at Defiance
Earlham (Ind .) at Flfldlav (nl HI ram at John carroll
'""
Auston Peav
(Tenn . ) .at •
Youngstown St.
Wittenberg
at
Baldwin Wallace (n)
Denison lit Marietta (n)
Westminster
(Pa . )
at •
Musklngum
Manchester (Ind .) at Otterbein
In)
~
Wlscons ln -Eay Clair at Capital
Mount U.nlon at St . Joseph's ..
(Ind .)
·
.,
Ohio
Northern
at
Ohio '
Wesleyan
~,
Bethany (W. va.) at Kenyon
Centre I Ky . 1 at Oberlin
·•
n -denotes night Q"'!me
d

•

Saturday•• Ohio High School
Football Reults
•
By United Press International u
Canton McKinley 43 Berea :-

Midpark o

,

Beellsvllle 20 Warwood (W . "
Va . &gt; 14 (of)
St . Marys (W . Va . J 21 Frontier
6
Brooklyn 0 Rhodes a (tiel
,
Cleve. Heights 27 Benedictine • ·

,.

Amer.ican League

cE as f)

w. I. pet. g.b.
14 65 .532

New York
Boston
Balt i more
Cleveland
Milwaukee
Detroit

74 65 .532
73' 66 .525 1
Pittsburgh
76 63 .5-47
68 70 .49 3 Slh
74 66 .529 2lh
St . Louis
67 74 .475
Phlhidelph l a
69 71 .493 ] lh
65 75 . 464 91f7
64 73 . . 467 11
New York
(West)
Montreal
61 76 .445 14
w . I. pet . g.b.
Chlcol!lgo
56 81 .409 19
Oakland
so 61 .567
(West)
75 67 .528 S'h
w. 1. pet. g.b. Texas
Kansas City
70 69 .504 9
Los Angeles
87 52 .626
Chicago
70 71 .496 10
Cincinnati
84 56 .600 J'h
Minnesota
69 71 ·.493 10%
Atlanta
78 63 .553 10
Callforn Ia
55 86 .390 25
Houston
71 68 .511 16
Saturday's Results
San Fran.
64 76 .457 2J lh
Detroit 8 New York 3, 1st
San Diego
51 90 .362 37
New York 1 Detroit o, 2nd
Saturday 1 s Results
Baltimore 3 Cleveland 2
Ch ic ago 3 Philadelphi.a 0
Texas 8 Oakland 2
San Diego 8 Houston 4
Boston 4 Milwaukee 3, 10 inn.
Cincinnati 1 Los Angels 5
California 3 Ch lea go 1
St . Louis 2 New York 1
Kansas City 1 Minnesota 0
San Franicsco 6 Atlanta 0
Sunday's Results
P i ttsburgh 6 Montreal 5, 12 inn.
Cleveland 7 Baltimore 4
Sundey•s Results
·easton 8 Milwaukee 6
Pittsburgh 8 Montreat 2
Detroit 11 New York 3
New York 5 St . Louis 3
Minnesota 8 Kans as Cltv o4
P'hitadelphla 11 Chicago 10
Texas 5 Oakland 1
Los Angeles 7 Cincinnat i .4
Chicago 1 Callforn Ia 0
Atlanta 5 San Francisco 3
Today•s Probil!ble Pitchers
Houstpn 3 San Diego 2
All EDT
( Todav ' s Probable Pitchers}
Texas !Brown 11 · 11 and Hand
All Times EDT
Pittsburgh (Demery 6-4) at 4-5) at California !Figueroa 2-7
Chicago (Jones 6-5), 2:3a p .m. and Lockwood 2·5J. 2, 7: 00p .m .
Kansas City (Busby 10-13 and
Montreal (Blair 8-6) at New
York (Sadeck·l 7-7), 8: 05 p.m. Spllttorff 13-15 ) at Oakland ·
San D ie go (Freisleben 0-10) at {Hunter 22 -10 and Blue 14141 ,
Cincinnati {Norman 10-11 ). 8:05 9 :00p . m .
Chicago {J ohnson 7·31 at
p.m .
Ph iladelphia (Lonborg 14 -11) Minnesota !Goltz 7·8L 8: 30p .m .
Baltimore (Cuellar 18·101 at
at St . Louis (Curtis 8-12 1. 8: 30
Milwaul!,ee
(Kobel 6-12 ), 8: 30
p.m .
Los Angeles (Zahn 2-.4 ) at p.m . f/1'
Detroit (Holdsworth 0-3 or
Atlanta (Capra 13 -7), 7: 30 p·.m .
Lemanczvk
1· 1 l
at
San Francisco (Montefusco 10) at Houston ( o lerker 9-8) , 8: 35 Cleveland (Bosman 5-31 , 7:30
p.m .
p.m .
New York {Med ic h 17 ·12) at
Tuesday's Games
Boston (Moret 7·S), 7 : 30 p .m .
Pittsburgh at Ch i cago
Tuesday's Games
Los Angeles at Atlanta, twllight
Kansas
Cltv at California ,
Montreal at New York, night
Sen D iego at Cincinnati, night night
Chicago at Minnesota . night
Phlledelphla at St . LOUIS , night
Baltimore at Milwaukee,
San Francisco at Houston , night
night
·
Detroit at Cleveland , night
New York at Boston , niQht
&lt;Only games scheduled I
g . b.

a

_
The

"'.......

~'l'lllt

JI

• No Apj~Oiiil•llfl N""'....

9 Til' Mon.· Thurs.· Fri.
9 T1 I 5 Tu.s.• Wed.· S.t · ·

The YOWIIl coach of 15thranked Tenneuee opened
hlmlelf up for the oecondgueaen when he elected to dlaorganlzed
· play for the tie acaJnot No. 12
In the only other liiJI'III
OCLA In Saturdlly'o ..tlonaiJ.y 11110111 top.nnUd teama, No.
• televised game. Battle'• 13 AI"- Slife Upeat No. 10
declalon came after Tenne- · HQWIIOII JO.I and No, II North
hldacond ma ls.,wd run by Carolina Slate ~at Wake
Contlredae HolloWly with only Forut U·lt. IClchtetnth •
3:Jl remalnin(l to draw within rlnktd Tullnt llfu tdltdulad
,., point of the llnllnl. Illllead to play but 1N1c1 Ill 11J111 with
of trylna for a two-point con- MIMiealppl t:1lltd
bec:IUM
'llnkll,howi!YV, Battlll loci I ol Hlll'l'lc!IIMI Clll'll'lln.
17·17 Ue u .R1cJ11 TOwnlend
W1i1e moat ~ 11M ~ ranlwd
booled an atn point.
leaml blpn tll4lr nat
Battle, who ea1t IU 1411m a S.turday, lfilrd.ft!UI Notre
win qa1n11 GeorJ(IIMt JNr
Dime wW 111*1 1111 Clmpailn
bJ .-,for a lint t1o1m late tn lanllhl
In ·Alilnll whlre It
the 11111111 lllllud 111 Jlllllllnl.
meet~ 0 .... Tech, Tllllrllh
uld ldl "'ddlon to llttla for a lll'tl • PI'GIIIbi!Wt iaYOrlta to
llewu_P.UIIIpledbfllllnjary opoU the deiM Ill Taah'a nn

I
1

:
•

,
;

.

• FrM CoMult•tton
• FrM Gift
•Retlster ,for Dr•wlnq 1$25 cold w•vel .
Sllvilr
lrldte
Sllopplnt
llllllrea bJ llallon7
llftlrrun.
lila -c:ll, PIPIJW Raclpn,
.__ _ _
__
__
_ _Plu8
_ _ __ . ll*laeullr
JS.,II'd 'I'D
f

.

CllliH'I'EBLT~

AsaWnlng that a tie Is better
than a toea, Battle may have
been right In not trying for two
)KIInts without Holloway.
Holloway missed more than
half the game with a lhoulder
Injury and during hll abaence
the Vola were a terribly

.
f

1.
:
•

!
!
:
'

/ ·
•

!
,!
.

·:
'

!'

!
:
•

l

..•
;

As for reasons for the sue..

cess, ~ton just figured he was
ge tting both superior pilching
and hitting from his club.
" We'll let the pitching and
the bats teke care of the wins,
and the standings will take
care of themselves," he sald.
Meanwhile, Dodgers outfielder Jimmy Wynn was

shouting, uwe're No. J, we're
No. 1."

" If we can win two out of
three next weekend.'' figured
Wynn, " then it's ours."
As might be expected, the
Dodgers called on a~e relief

Slail MRM•

.· nt.'Mtf6.

Mcn••rOIN

..........

lf you're lookfl1ll IO&lt; tho bell
niUI in ~Ill iniUIIIICI
- you'll lind ~at Stato Form.
Gin 1111 1 call today. YOOI11
diiCOYir wllan 1111111 Stale Farm
tht nuirlbor one· hollltiiWIIIrt inIn tht world.

By NEIL HERSHBERG
UP! Sports Writer
Nearly two hundred years
since . Paul Revere's famous
midnight ride, Boston once
again Is up In arms - only this
time Fenway Park is the
battlefield and the American
League East championship,
the si&gt;oils.
Boston rallied from a 4-0
deficit Sunday and went on to
defeat the Milwaukee Brewers,
8-6, as they moved back into a
tie with the New York Yankees
for first place In the AL East.
The Yankees dropped an 11-3
decision to the Detroit Tigers
while ·the Baltimore Orioles,
only one game back, had a !().
game winning streak snapped
by dropping a 7-4 decision to
the Cleveland Indians.
New York .travels to Boston
tonight to begin a crucial twogame series with the Red , Sdx.
The Red Sox have won all
seven of their home games
with the Yankees this season,
they hold an 11-game home
winning streak over New York
since July 31, 1973, and have
won 19 of their last 20 meetings
against New York at Boston.
The Red Sox snapped an
eight-game losing streak at the
expense
of
Milwaukee
saturday but despite their skid,
the Red Sox insist they have
not been playing that badly.
Dwight Evans' two-run
homer in the seventh proved to
be decisive. Evans' homer was
the firstfor Bos.ton since Sept. I

~'
Mldclleport, 0. ~~
PH. 992-7155 ~·~~
(0r8Vtl Hill)

,..,,......,..

--·-·,,.. -·-_._
.

MllltOfld

.'-----.,,_
'II

I

. . ..

1111111

AUTO GLASS

'

"For All· Your Gtu. Neelh"
'-IIERCIIUESIDENTIAL

PHONE .
•

.

i,

when Carl Yastrzemski hit one
in Minnesota , The Red Sox
have hit only four home runs
since the middle of August.
In other AL games, Texas
whipped Oakland 5-1, Chicago
edged California 1-0 and
Minnesota tripped Kansas City
8-4.
Tigers 11, Yankees 3
Bill Freehan had four hits,
including a grand slam homer,
and knocked in seven nms and
AI Kallne added three RBis to
lead the Tigers to victory over
the Yankees.
Indlans7, Orloles4
George Hendrick's two-cun
homer and solo shots by Tom
McCraw and Charlie Spikes
ended Baltimore's winning
streak at 10 games as the Indians beat the Orioles.
Rangers5,A'sl
Ferguson Jenkins tossed a
· seven-hitter and recorded his
22nd win of the season In pilching the Rangers past the A's
and moving surprising Texas
to within a'h games of first
place Oakland in the West.
WhiteSoxl, Angels 0
California pitcher Andy
Hassler allowed oply one hita third in~ing double by Lee
Richard- but lost the game on
a throwing error by third
baseman Dave Chalk as the
White Sox njppoo the Angels
behind the combined seven-hit
· pilchlng of Jim Kaat and Terty
Forster.
Twlos 8, Royals 4
Light-hitting Phil Roof

under-par 69 Sunday and
match.e d the one-under 36-hole
total of 139 of Player, who had a
721n the second round, was not
as disturbed about staying
around an extra day, possibly
for just one hole.
Trevino was scheduled to be
In Newark, Ohio, only 100 miles
from here. "I'll just be a little
late," he said.
Bobby -Nichols, the host pro
at Firestone playing In his
second World Series, shot a 3735 - 72 Sunday and a 36-hole
total of 143 to pick up third
money of $7,500. Nichols got
Into thi.s year's event by virtue
of his win In the Canadian
Open, the first alternate
tournament for the WSG, as
Player won beth the Masters
and British Open.
Hale Irwin, the U. S. Open
champion who was nine shots
off the pace going Into Sunday's action, had a 35-37 - 72
and finished at 148, collecting
last-place money of $5,000.
Player, who was two under
par through the first five holes
Sundsy and six strokes ahead
of Trevino at the time, appeared to have an easy time of
It until problema with his
driving arose.
He bogeyed the sixth, nlnth,
lOth, 13th and 15th holes, all
due ro poor tee shots, while
Trevino, who picked up seven
strokes In a space of nine holes,
actually grabbed the lead with
a birdie oo the par-four 14th.
Two holes later, however,
Trev~o ran Into drlvlng trou. bleB of his own which coat him
·a bogey-eix 111 the ~yanl
(Monster) 16th hole, 11nd things
were aU even again as Player

AKRON, Ohio (UPI ) - Both
Gary Player and Lee Trevino
were late for appolnbnents
today.
The two superstars of golf,
who battled head-to-head
through five sudden death
holes in the 13th annual World
Serle$ of Golf Sunday on the 7180-yard · par-70 Firestone ·
Country Club course only to be
halted by darkness, were to
resume · their quest for the
$50,000 ltrst priie at 10 a.m.
(EDT).
· The playoff, third In the
history of the World Series,
which annually matches the
winr1ers of the Masters, U. S.
and British Opens and the
PGA, was halted by PGA Tour
Director Jack . Tuthill, who
ruled at 7:30 p.m. It was too
dark to continue.
"I would Uke to have called It
a tie," said Player, who took a
three-ehot lead over Trevino
Into SUnday's flnal18 holes and
.who atone time led the ·"Merry
Mex '' by six shots. Player had.
been scheduled to play an
exhibition at l:!llton Head, S.C.,
today,
Trevlno, who had a one-

.POINT ,I.EASANT - MASON

~

tireless MarahaU,""l've never
seen anyone who can go that
often or be that effective."
The Reds-Dod«ers confrontaUon here, which created
a World Serles type atmosphere,
attracted
a
Riverfront Stadium record
crowd of m,562 fans for the
three games.
Both the Dodgers and Reds
play lour games this week
before next weekend's series.
Los Angeles Is at Atlanta
tonight whlle Cincinnati enter.
t.ains San Diego.

-- MONDAY
-----thru FRIDAY
----

cl ubhouse.
"They _ are
motivated by pride, not
money," said Anderson. "They
want to prove they can come
off the floor again just as they
did last year:- I haven't heard
any talk at all about rrioney."
The Reds and Dodgers meet
three more times, next Friday,
saturday and Sunday in Los
Angeles.

crashed a grand slam homer,
the first of his career'· in a fiverun si.th inning to lead Minnesota over the Royals. Behind
3-1, the Twins loaded the bases
in the sixth on singles by Tony
Oliva and Jerry Terrell and a
walk to Pat Bourque. When
Danny Thompso n walked,
forcing in Oliva, Steve Mingori
relieved starter and loser
Bruce Dal Canton, 8-9. ·Roof
greeted Mingori with his
second homer of the year.
IN OTHER National League
games, Pittsburgh increased
its lead in the NL East to 2'h
games by whipping Montrealll2, New York defeated St. Louis
S-3, Philadelphia nipped
Chicago 11-10, flouston edged
San Diego 3-1 and Atlanta
topped San Francisco 5-3.
Cleveland downed Baltimore
7.o!, Boston beat Milwaukee 8-6,
Detroit whipped New York 1!3, Minnesota defeated Kansas
City 8-4, Texas topped Oakland
a-1 and Chicago blanked
California 1-0 in American
League games.
Pirates 8, Expos 2
Jim Rooker tossed a sixhitter and Dave Parker plnchhit a grand slarri homer to
give the Pirates their sixth
triumph In a row and 14th ·in
their last 16 games. Rich
Hebner also contributed a tworun triple as the Pirates tagged
Steve Rog~rs with his 20th loss.
Mets 5, Cardinals.a
Wayne Garrett's three-run
homer capped a fou,t-run

eighth inning that carried the
Mets to victory over the
Cardinals , Tom Seaver, though
harassed by the base-stealing
antics of Lou Brock, went the
distance to gain his loth win ..
Phllllesll, Cubs 10
Willie Montanez drove in
four runs with three hits to
spark the Phillies' triumph
over the Cubs. Jerry Morales
hit a grand slam homer for the
. Cubs while Rick Monday had a
solo shot.
Astros 3, Padres 2
Rookie Wilbur Howard hit
his first major league homer in
the seventh inning to give the
Astros a victory over the ·
Padre$. Howard's blast was
one of only four hits the Astros
managed off lefthander Randy
Jones, who also became a 2Q..
game loser.·
Brave• 5, Giants 3
Vic Correll drove in three
runs with a double and a single
to lead the Braves over the
Giants. Ron Reed went the
distance to register his lOth
win. Gary Matthews had a
homer for San Francisco.

NO 'COUPON NECESSARY
.

CARRY-OUT OR DRIVE-IN ONLY

11:00 A.M. TO 3:00 P.M.
'

SALIS

773-5710
773-5111

'

••

LUNCH SPECIAL

HOT, LIGHT, THRIFTY AND FUN · ·
OJr .Lunch Special 11 another rNson whv
"Meigs County l.ovn. whet the .Colone1 cooks.'~

TM

2 PIECES CHICKEN, SlAW AND ROLL

Have abarrel of fun

~

Pitdewft•.
tROW'S SfEAK HOUSE
POMEROY, ~OHIO

SAVE AT
MOORE'S

Merry Mex, Player settle
Golf's World Series today

STEVE SNCMDEN
553 Russell St.

the meeting," said Jimmy
Wynn . " He told us we were
flyin g high but that we
shouldn't expect to beat the
Braves by merely throwing our
gloves out on the field!'
Reds Mana ger Sparky Anderson refused to throw in the
towel.
"Those guys aren't scared
out there," said Anderson,
noddin g towards· the Reds

pitcho:r Mike Marshall In all
three games , At his best
Sunday when he broke his own
major league record by appearing in his 93rd !!lime of the
season, Marshall got the final
six outs of the game and struck
out the side in the ninth inning.
But Marshall wasn't lmpressed with the recOrd.
" Individual statistics cannot
be important to a ballplayer,"
he said. " You ca n't have your
mind on statistics and be of
help to the team."
SOld ~ton of the seemlngly

Boston challenges again

Alston.
Dodgers outfielder Willie
Crawford, for one, found
Alston's remarks during the
pregame meeting somewhat
out of cliaracter.
"Usilally the only things we
hear from him are what We're
doing \vrong," said Willie. "So
I was surprised when he
started telling us how good we

Shaktr Heights 20 Chane! 12
Padua Jl Normandy 6
B••chwood 30 Ledgtmont 0
Columbia 13 Edison 8

'!

win SUndBy and a 3-1 decision
"But Oct. 1 is still a long way
Friday night.
off. September does funny
Of Sunday's loss, Rose said, things to different people. We'll
"This was a very important just have to wait and see whal
game. lt w"" either going to be It does.
l lf.l out or 31h. It's sw-e going to
"II probably depends on who
be harder now; but it doesn't can win JOO games. If you win
mean the season ls over." 100 games you 're going to ·win
Reds' Manager Sparky And- it."
er son wss subdued, but
Dodgers' Manager Walter
hopeful.
Alston sported a blg smlle after
" Thank God we've got the serle$,
another series left with them,"
"Of course we tried to win aU
he said so!Uy , " We'll probably three, but winning two out of
have to beat them all three out three, well, I think you could
there.
almost say we're satisfied,"
Alston said.

Just as they did in the first went on to add their final run In
two games, the Dodgers the eighth.
jumped orr to an early lead,
Marshall, lopping his own
scoring one run in the first major league record by
inning and adding two more in making his 93rd appearance of
the fourth . one on a homer by the' season, wound up with a
Joe Ferguson.
flourish.
A three-cun sixth inning,
The Dodgers move on to
capped by Bill Buckner's Atlanta where they meet the
double, broke a 3..1 tie and Bravea tonight.
tagged Jack Billingham with
" That was another thing
his ninth loss, and the Dodgers Alston reminded us of during

average, we've scored more
runs; hit more homers and
stolen more bases," continued

(EASt)

w. 1. pet.

Dayton 21 Drake 7

ers u

arshall misquoted-Alston

Major League Standings.
By United Press International
· National Lugue·

· )A

ott

'22.()0 Complete

2.,.

Coming to town with a
game advantage over Cincinnati, the Dodgers left with a 3.,.
game margin , The pressure is

games

team.

Helene Curti!

&gt;

from the start."

This week's

Battle takes 17-17 tie

A
Touch ·

clearly on the Reds for next
weekend's remalch In Los
Angeles.
That three-game series will
be the final head-to-head encounter between the teams,
both of which sport better
records than the leaders of
baseball's
three
other
divisions.
Only once over the weekend
here did Cincinnati manage to
catch up with the fast-etarUn g
Dodgers, rallying saturday for
a 7~ win. Los Angeles made its
early leads stand up for a 7.o!

Angeles leads were the keys ID
the series .
ul've never seen a team put
so many runs on the board In
the first inning," marveled
Rooe. "That gave their pitchers a big psychoiOIJical lift
and took our offensive game
plan away from Us. We couldn't
hlt..and.-un or steal~ whenr
we were always behind right

"Yes, I had a pregame are."

brash, sometimes abrasive
Connors, 'to win here.
But the 22-year-&lt;Jid American
looks upon every match as a
personal war to be won, be the
surface grass, clay, or broken
bottles. The name of the game
to him is "win" - and It
matters not if the man on the
other side of the net Is, In his
.,.ords, "a legend like

By RICK VANsANT
CINCINNATI (UPI ) - With
the llrst "crlUcal" weekend
oerles over and the secmd
COming up, the Loo Angeles
Dodgers have Increased their
lead over the ClncinnaU Reds
In " baseball's beat divislon"the NatiQnal League West.
Jumping off to early4Ming
luds like 3-0, ~ and ikl the
•
Dodgers took two of three
pmea from the Reds here last
-kend.
Cinclpnati Reds captain Pete
Rose said those quick Los

-start

'

.

By Llwreoce E. Lamb, M.D.
DUke University years ago, In
DEAR ·oR. LAMB - A ita original form it concluded
friend hits recently been put on only limited amounts of rice
a strange diet by a doctor of and fruit.
gond reputation, and It makes
The rice diet has two big ·
Uttie senae to me. I understand ~advalitages,lt Is low In salt and
it was given for the purpose of low In protein. You might
fluid ln. the body and for a wonder what advantage there
kidney condition. I'd like to try would be to having a low
It for the fluid condition but protein diet. If you have kidney
hesitate to do anything so disease you sometimes bave
drastic. Nothing but cooked trouble ellminatlng urea, the
rtce and orange Juice for every ammonia part of annlno acida
In the excess protein m06t
meal for four or five days.
Is It worth the try and has It people eat. It is also low In
any benefit for the system? calories and can be used as a
Seellll very unbalanced to me, weight reducing diet. Like
and I try to balance my diet to oiher sueh· diets it can make
the best of my knowledge as I you very weak. You need . to
cannot take drugs too well take vitamins and minerals if
' wltboutlllde eflecta.
you are on such a . diet .inore
DEAR READER - There than a few days.
lll'e IIWIY "strange dlell". used
The rice diet was used very
for l!p8clal modlcel problems succeufully In many patienta
lhlt abould never be used by with high blood pri!MW'e In the
the paltlle wlti!Gut a doctor's days when we had few, if any,
r - * i o n , The diet you effecUve medicines to ollfl' for
..,.ak of II • variation of the this problem . With new
"rtee diet." II was popularized medicines It Is rarely used.
by Dr. Walter. Kempner of

by the American people.
" He (Ford) shoold let tbe
normal legal process In thb
wbole thing proceed,'' Llvelle
added. "I regret this. He
(Ford) was doing very well to
bring this country together and
now he has made a poUUcal
Issue out of Watergate again."
Kent McGough,
state
Republican Party . chalnnan,
said he was pleaMd with
President Ford's decision.
"I think lhlt the explanation
for the pardon was In order and
that he did the right thing,"
McGough said.
Rep. Samuel Devine, R.Qhio,
a close friend of Richard
Nix~n's, received a call from
President
Ford
Sunday
morning prior to the announcement of the pardon.
Devine ssid Ford told him he
had decided . to grant a full
pardon to Nixon,
" He (Ford ) has Information
available thai makes this the
decision that 1.s be$t for the
country,"
Devine
said.
President Ford would Uke to
get the Watergate matter
finally terminated and behind
us and get on with theaHairs of
the nation." Devine said he
didn't think a trtal or conviction would serve any useful
purpose and there would be
nothing gained In forcing a

conteaalon of guilt !rom the
former pi'Oildent unluo ''you
w'"t to bring him to hil 1mand hwnlliate him further ."
"It oeems to me that ln the
lntereot of the presidency this,
ta a proper decision," Devine
'
added.
Rep. Charles Fanlk, )).()hlo,'
said he thought Ford had ex·,
ceeded his authority In
gr.. Ung the pardon.
,
"I think that President Ford
has exceeded his authority··
under the Constitution In:
granting Richard Nixon an·
anticipatory Plrdon," Vanlk,
said, "He can pardon a guilty
person but he cannot suspend
the law snd due process.
"Under the only federal
precedent I can find on this
subject, In an 11120 Attorney~
General opinion it was ~!early •
set forth that the presidentcannot pardon by anticipation,
otherwise he woold be vested
with the power to dispenae with':
the law," Vanlk said.
"
Rep. Chalmers P , Wylie, R. Ohio, said he felt the pardon~ .
was a "move In the right'
direction.
" I think President Ford's'·
decision is fine . I think Richard ~
Nixon and his lamlly have··
suffered enough and the :
pardon is a move In the right
dlrecUon," Wylie said.
"

We have a complete line of natio11ally
advertised hunting ·equipment. You'll
probably save money here!. Check our
values.

parred.
Both players birdied the 17th,
Trevino with a 13-footer and
Player from 12, On 18, Player
hit a magnificent second shot
to save par, knocking a twoiron out of a fairway trap some
210yardsfrom the green to just
14 feet from the hole,
The two players took turns
scrambling back from defeat
during the five playoff holes.
Alberta , Ca nada , i s
ni cknam ed the "sunshine"
province because of its good
weather.

GUNS
Harrington- Richardson
Ithaca &amp; Remington

WE ISSUE

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•

•

ln the thirty years ihat Smokey Bear has
been telling us lS) be careful wirh fire, we've cut the
number of forest fires we sta rt in half.
But we still start over 100,000 carele,. flres

Someday, one of two things wUl happen, and
Smokey will stop reminding us to be careful: Either

there won't be any more foreu ·fire's, or there won't
be any more forests.

It's up to you .

every year.

Pub1is~«l u; public ~ervice in cooperation with the Advettillnt Council, the U,S. Fore•t Se:rvk•, 11\c Na~l

Anod ation of State Fornten and the lmemational Newspaper Advcnillnl Executi\lr•.

•

"

•
1

�n... Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Sept. 9, 1974

2-

•

Nixon is premature ani:l,

therefore, unfortunate."
Without the process of

wtfair in either Instance," he
said.
"! coold understand and
sympathize with the compassion which would have
granted a merciful pardon for
someone whose guilt had been
established under the law. But
I do not feel a total exemption,
at this time, from further legal

justice moving to a conclsuion,
the innocence or g uilt
cr Richard Nixon wiU never •processes affords adequate
be O$tabllshed; and that is legal consideration for Richard

Nixon, othens involved tn ·the
Watergate matter or the
general public.
" 1regret that President Ford
took this action at this time."
Sen. Robert Taft Jr., R.Qhio,
said Sunday he was in full
accord with Ford's decision to
grantNixonaJull pardon on all
rna tters relating to the
Watergate scandal.
" I feel that President Ford

Citizens' opinions divide
By tlnlted Press loteruatlonal
A wide variety of opinions on
President Ford's full pardon of
Richard Nixon Sunday was
expressed by citizens of Ohio.
"I'm for it," said a Colwnbus
housewife,
Mrs.
Susan
Stevenson.
Mrs . Stevenson said she
thought it was time to have the
country all together.
" I wanted him (Nixon ) to get
out of the presidency," she
said, " but now I just want it to
be over."
Michael Kattus, Cincinnati,
said he was favorable toward
the President's decision.
"I have a tendency to believe
that Nixon is guilty but the trisl
and the publicity that goes
along with it would be harmful
to the country," the 44-year-&lt;Jid
General Electric Co. salesman
said. "I admire President Ford
for his staunch decision on this
subject - not beating around
the bush and taking the bull by ,
the horns, and no acting like

most politiciaris.."
John M. Corcoran, 48, Cin·
cinnati, commented that "if
the others involved in
Wlller!late have to serve time
in prison, he (Nixon) as their
leader . should also go to

" It seems to me he had to
have some koowledge of what

was going on ari?Ufld him," the
Postal Service employe said.
" Maybe he didn't have all the
facis , but he must have known
what was happening.••
Eleanor Starrun, 62, an East

Cleveland retiree, said '''fhis is
shameful, especially for young
people," when she heard of the
pardon.
"I simply want to state my
indignation at the pardon
President Ford just issued to

Nixon," she said. "There are
two kinds of law now - one for
the poor and ordinary person,
and one for the man with
wealth. Never mind the consitution,
"Does this mean he (Ford) is
going to pardon all crimin81s?
Does this mean complete
amnesty for draft dodgers?
Nixon has not suffered. He
hasn't been persecuted. n
Betty
Murdock,
6(
Cleveland retiree, commented
that " I'm beginning to beiieve
no onecafl help any of us now.''
"President Ford's decision
gave the next man every
reason not to live up to the
law,'' she said . .. I was speech~
less when I heard the decision ,

I'm afraid it's going to cause
an uprising In this country.
Kids won't hold still for this."
Lettie Jenks, a Cleveland
housewife said she is "making
plans to lead a walk on
Washington" because she Is

"very wrought." She sald she
would go to Cleveland Public
Square Monday noon with a
sign to begin an organizing

walk,
Mrs . Joyce Wilcox, a
Columbus housewife, said she
is "relieved that he (Ford ) did
it, I ,1
" But I'm still a litt.le shook
up that we had a president that
wasn't honest," she said. "I
can really harjlly believe that It
did happen. We'll never fmd
out what involvement Nixon
had In it anyway, It will look
bad for Mr. Nixon but they
would have hushed it up

anyWay."
Karen Green, a 23-year-&lt;Jid
Cleveland student, said "he did
break the law and he should

serve as an example.

tl

"He's got to take his lumps,"

she said.

11

Americans are

getting away with too much.
It's like spanking a child - no
one wants to do it but it's got to
be done. "

.~::;;;:;;:;:::;:=:?.:~~~:~:::::~::::::::::~&amp;::::::::::::::::::!:!:!:!:!:!:=:::::~::::::;:::;::::..;::;:;:;:;~~~~~8=~8!::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::.-:::.:::;;;:;:;:;:;:;:;::!:~:!:!:!!i:~:*:~:~*~~=i:::::::::~::::

I
B

'

Early parachute puzzling
.

because he had been taught by
ByTERRANCEMcGARRY
TWIN FALLS, Idaho (UPI ) rocket designer Robert Truax
- Evel Knlevel blasted over that ~ ·if I could see the opposite
the Snake River Canyon In a walls of the canyon, instead of
powerful steam rocket Sunday just sky, to pull the chute
but a puzzling, premature .because that meant I was
parachute opening yanked him rolling"- going out of controh
But television tapes of the
to a halt and dropped him on
launch
showed the parachute
the near .shore of the river, $6
millioo richer but 10 seconds began deploying as the
"skycycle" boomed up the
short of his 8-year goal.
Knievel's
"skycyele" short, steeply Inclined launch
bumped and battered against ramp with a blast of steam.
·the lava walls of the canyon as power that awed spectators.
It was braking the rocket
he floated down into the 600foot deep gorge and bounced even as it shot off the ramp
bound for the other side of the
oniD a rock outcropping.
The motorcycle stuntman's chasm,
The · crowd gasped and
face was cut and bruised and
his knees were lacerated, but shoute&lt;! lri alarm as the
"skycycle" floated down out of
be was not hurt otherwise.
"The peOple prayed and God view. ·Knlevel could be seen
made the wind blow," Knievel struggling with the straps
said, explaining the 15 mile per holding him In, trying to bail
mile breeze that blew him back
to a landing on the south shore
VISIT RELATIVES
of the river and saved him
LETART FALLS - Mr. and
from pbsslble drowning in the Mrs. Bert Grimm, Letart
turbulent currents at mid· Falls, are In Columbus visiting
stream.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Grimin and
The rocket ascended for only family, and In St. Clairsville
8. 7 seconds. Had It gone on as visiting Mr. and Mrs. Russell
planned, an extra 10 seconda of Grbnm and famlly .
thrust was expected to have
carried him to the other side.
There were conflicting exHOFFMAN LISTED
planations about just what
Ronnie Hoffman, son of Mr.
went wrong ·with the much and Mrs. Perry Hoffma11,
ballyhOOed launch.
Middleport,
will
leave
Evel said first that he had tomorr~w for U.S. Air Force
accidentally popped the chute basic training in Texas, He
- designed to' bring him to enlisted for six years. For the
earth after he had crossed the past year, Hoffman has been
1,600-foot-wide canyon employed at the Meigs Inn.

has made a very coora8eous
decision and. one that I thlnk Is
correct," Tart said at hl.s h0111e
in Cincinnati.
" At the time that Richard
Nixon resigned, I stated on that
occasion that I felt that he
s hould not be further
prosecuted," Taft said. "There
was also the serious question of
whether or nota fair trial coold
have been conducted because
of the enormous publicity given

Ule case."

priSon."

'"

•
UIC

·ons divide sharply over pardon of Nixon

By tllllted PrHa laternau..,.r
Rep. Claren&lt;;e Brown, ROhio, said " the decision by
President Ford to grant a
pardon to Conner President

11

3- "l'he ll(IU Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, Q., Monday, Sept. f, 19'14

i1
%

out with a reserve parachute
before he got too low to use it,
1
' l've beard it said that it's

not whether you've won or lost
but how you've played the
1
, g~e;' Knievel said.
"And to lose to a beautiful
canyon like this Is, to me, no! a
real loss. I would rather have
bad a happy landing on the
other side."
Robert Arum, president of
Top Bank ·Inc., promoters of
the leap, said It was a draw ,"Knlevel didn't defeat the
canyon, but the canyon didn't
defeat Knievel either, He made
the jump. He pulled the trigger

and new."
Arum · said the promoters
expected to take In about $26
million In revenue from the $25
a head admission fee at the
site, closed circuit television
showings and other income.

Sen. Howard Metzenbaum,
O.Oh,io, howe:ver, disagreed
with his fellow senator's
opinion on. the pardon.
" I respect the hyman kindness tluit motivated President

Ford's action," Metzenbawn
said.
"But when I thlnk of all the
others that either have gone or
will go to prison because of
their association with Mr.
Nixon, I question whether this
is equal justice under the law."

made any decision," Glenn
said,
"I had been hoping that we
could bring out every single
factor in Watergate and
everything related to It before
any decisions such as that was
made. Of coorse we want to get
Watergate behind us.
" If there are things to be
learned that would Indicate
that we need legislative or
constitutional changes in our
system to protect against this
ever happening In our future, I
want to see all those carda out
face up on the table so we can
make our decisions for the
future In this based on the vest
be$t Information that we have
surrounding what happened."
Mayor Ralph J . Perk of
Cleveland, Republican candidate for the U.S, Senate, said
the action by President Ford

John Glenn, the Democratic
nominee for the U. S. Senate, showed " decisiveness and
said he believed a pardon courage."
"I believe that President
decision should have been
deferred until more facts had Ford has stated the true, the

common sense, and the
been brought out.
" I don't know that all the humanity of the matter better
than anyone else could possibly

Fairview
News Notes
By Mrs. Heroen Roush
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert sayre,
Howard SOyre of Syracuse,
Paul S;lyre, Columbus, spent
the weekend with Mr. and Mrs,
Norman Styer at Waterford, 0.
and attended the River Rat
party held yearly. Mr. and
Mrs. David S;lyre spent Sunday with the Styers.
Mrs. Rose Bachus, mother of
Mrs. Howard (Mary) Donohue,
has been admitted to the Angel
of Mercy Ntirslng Home at
Albany, due to Mrs. Donohue
not being able to care for her.
She would appreciate cards.
Peggy, Chri.s. and Tim McDade, all of Troy, spent Sunday
night with Mr . and Mrs,
Russell Roush and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis,
Clifton, Mr .- and Mrs. Ronald
Russell and children of Wolf
Pen, Mr. arid Mrs. Gary
Wilford and baby were also
callers on the Roushes Sunday.

Mr.

and

Mrs.

Howard

Robinson of Flatwoods, W.Va.,
spent Sunday with Mrs. Bertha
Robinson.
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Shielda
visited Miss Millie Ripley at
Charleston, W.Va. Sunday and
·brought Mrs. Maggie Roush to
her home at Letari.
Mr, and Mrs, Herbert sayre
visited Mr. arid Mrs. James
Sayre at Kanauga Thursday
and were also shopping at the
·
Silver Bridge Plaza.

Wolfpen

YARD SALE SET
SYRACUSE - A yard sale ·
will be held Thursday and
Friday, Sept, 12 and 13 at the
Syracuse Asbury United
Methodist Church, across !rom
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Russell
· the park. The event is being
sponsored by the Eagles Class. recently spent their vacation
with Mr . and Mrs; To.m
Summerfield and daughters of
illinois. They toured Chicago
OESTOMEET
and also places of interest in
HARRISONVILLE - The Milwaukee, Wis.
Harrisonville OES will meet at
Mrs. Howard Thoma and
7:30 p.m. Tuesday. Initiation Patricia visited a few days last
will be held and final plans week with Mr. and Mrs. Frank
made for friends night tO be Sarver and boys (Johnnie and
heid this Thursday.
Eddie) of Bridgeman, Mich.

News, Notes

DR. LAMB

::;:;;::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::~;..;::::~

Final NFL
E xhlbitlon Standings

By United Press International

do, and there Is no reason of me
to reatate It," Perk said.
'"The
acUon
ahow1
decisiveness and couuge on
the President's part, and I
believe all Americans can
draw (rom his strength. Only
be has the power to put
Watergate behind us, and he
has had the coorage to do it.
Not only the people or the
tlnlted States, but the people or
the world, will love or respeet
him for It."
William Lavelle, slilte
Democratic Party chalnnan,
said President Ford's pardon
of Richard Nixon has tied the
Watergate scandal with the
Ford presidency.
11

1t's an outrage.'' Lavelle

said. " We are ~upposedly
Uvlng under a rule of law. This
brings the whole Watergate
Issue right Into the Ford
presidency.
Lavelle said he was sympathetic with Nixon's problems
had
Special
Watergate
Prosecuto-r Leon Jaworski
decided to prosecute the former president, but felt the
legal process must go on.
"I am not after his Nixon's
hide, but a pardon In advance
will no~ be received very weU

Kingsbury

American Conference
East

Miami
New Englnd
Bufralo
NV Jets
Baltimore

w 1 t pet. pf pa

4 2 0 .667 UJ

4 2 0 ,667 105

98

4 3 0 .571 141 129
2 4 0 .300 l01 122
1 4 0 .200 69 59

Central

w 1 t pet. pf
6 0 0 1.000 155

Pittsbgh
Cincinnati
Cincinnati
Houston
Cleve.

96

pa
99

4 2 0

.667 135 102

4 1 0
3 3 0
2 3 0

.667 135 102

West

.500 144 74
..400 83 118

w 1 t pet. pf ga
Oakland
5 1 0 .833 151 83
Denver
4 2 0 .667 128 .127
San Diego
2 A 0 ·.333 84 163
Kan . City
3 3 0 .SOO 130 153
National Conference
East
w I t pet. pf

Dallas

3
2
2
2

St. /rouiS
Ph1

pa

3 3 0 .500 86 119

a

NY Giants
W.ash .

4
4
4
4

0
0
0
0

Central

.4'29
.333
.333
.333

111 p?
124 153'
94 99
80 129

w I t pet. pf pa
Green Bay . 4 2 0 .667 106 99
Minn .
3 2 0 .600 118 71
Chicago
1 5 0 .167 85 163
Detro! t
2 4 0 .333 70 126
West
w 1 t pet. p,f pa
Los Ang .
5 1 0 .833 166 86
Atlanta .
4 2 o .667 99 75
New ·orteans 3 3 0 .500 84 108
·san Fran .
0 6 o .000 62 114
sundAy's Result•
'Atlanta 20 Denver 14
New England 27 Philadelphia 17
Los Angels 11 San Frzmclsco 7
(On lv games scheduled)

Carmel News,

By the Day
Mr. and Mrs. George Circle
and daughter, Cheryl, Mr. and
Mrs. James Circle of New
Haveb, W. Va. visited with
Mrs. Mary Circle on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs.,Shelby Pickens
and family of Pomeroy, Mr,
and Mrs. Frank Hudson, Mr.
and Mrs. Gene Hudson of
Racine spent Sunday with Mr,
and Mrs. Allan Taylor.
Mr. and Mrs. William
Carleton of Racine and
~ephews, Raymond Sayre,
Clyde sayre II and niece,
Kimberly Sayre of Point
Pleasant called at the home or
Mrs, Dean Brinker a recent
evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Earl
Johnson and daughter, Sheryl
LeAnn attended the Wllbarger
reunion In Pennsylvania on
Sunday.
Betty VanMeter, Patrick
Johnson, Mrs. Dean Brinker
and Mr, and Mrs. WUUam
Carleton or Racine attended
the Gainer reunion held In
Hebron on Sunday,

News, Notes
Mr. and Mrs. John Walter
Dean dedicated their son, John
Jeremy Sunday morning at the
Carleton Church.
The dedication services were
held following Sunday School
with Rev. Jay Stiles officiating.
Recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Nev White and Mrs,
Jennie Holley were Emmit
Holley and Effie Holley of
Columbus.
Visitors Sunday of Mr. and
Mrs . John Dean and Mr. and·
Mrs. John Walter Dean and
son, John were Mrs. Walter
Terrell, Mr. and Mrs. Robert ,
Riel, Rodney, David, all of :
Pataskala, Mr. and Mrs. l
Kenneth Markins, Racine , .
Mrs. Francis Miller and . Mr. ••
and Mrs. Roger Swarts . and
daughter, Jeilnlfer, of Belpre.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Banks
and daughter of Baltimore,
Maryland are visiting friends ·
and relatives here.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Carl and
Ro'dney visited her falher: Mr.
Clyde Harrison at Middleport
recently,
Mrs. Virgil King returned
Geneva Klpg and Mary Lou
King to college at Kankakee,
Dtinnis recently, Jnining her
from Reynoldsburg was Mrs.
Neva King.
Mr. and Mrs. Nev White
visited his brother, Dennie
White at Logan, W. Va.
recently:
Recent visitors of Mrs. Hazel
Arnold were Mr. and Mrs.
Lester Arnold and Billy,
Columbus, Mr . and Mrs.
Patrick Williams and famlly of
McArthur. and Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald McNally and daughter
of Athens,
Mr. and Mrs. John Dean, Mr.
and Mrs. John Walter Dean
and son and Rodney Rled
visited Mr. and Mrs. Garold
Gilkey and family at Athens
Sunday evening where they
honored Mr. Gllkey on his
birthday. Other guests for
dinner were Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Paynter of Carpenter. Calling
later In the evening were
Marshall and Sandra Ruth who
are missionaries home from
Tajeon, Korea .

'

The 'rice diet' can he helpful
.

lacta have been out, so I woold
have thought It would be more
appropriate to walt untll
everything Is out before we

Steppe's

•

Still it does have Its place In
medical problems associated
with retention of salt, kidney
proplems, and high blood
pressure. The chief value of the
diet has been demonstrated to
be Ill! extremely low sodium
content (low salt) .
Since neither rice nor fruit
contain any major annount of
fat and neither contain any
cholesterol,itls·truly a low-fat,
low-cholesterol diet. It Is an
e 1 baustlng diet In many
respeets. It Is certainty not
something I coold ever advise
anyone to take just to manage
normal cycllc changes In fluid
retenUon , AbsOlutely no one
shoold be on this diet unless the
doctor has recommerlded ltror
a
particular
problem.
However, ifl had a patient who
could not be managed properly
with medicines and a more
general diet, I woold give It
serious consldenotion.
You have to Umit your
calories on this diet to lose
weight. l:a)ortes do count. I

I

always remember one of my
patienl.s I had told to eat
nothing but rice and fruit in the
hopes of controlling hl.s weight
and heart disease problems.
·He dld not lose weight. So I
asked him, "Alan, what have
you been eating?" He replied,
"Just what you told me, doc.
Just rice and fruit, rice and
. fruit."
Being of a suspicious 1\ature,
I asked him, ''what kind of
fruit?" "Bananas, doc."
"How many bananas,
Aian?"
· "Oh, I've just been giving
them hell," When the fruit was
Umited, his weight began to
disappear .
Send your questions to Dr.
Lamb, in care of this
oewiJI'!per, P.O. Box 1551,
Radio City Station, New York,
N.Y. 10019. For a copy or Dr.
Lamb's booklet on . losing
weight, send ~ . centa to the
same addreu and ul! for the
"Losing Weight" bookl~t.'

'.

Connors, Rosewall ;
clash for .crown ..
•

FOREST HILLS, N. Y.
(UP!) - The throng at the
Wimbledon final in July rooted
In vain for Ken Rosewall to
beat Jimmy Connors. The
throng at the West Side Tennis
Club today w!U root for Ken
again,
For Kenny is its man. There
are all the years ahead for the .

opportunity to pick up the only ~
major crown she has miSsed. ··
Winner in France and '
Wimbledon in 1971, champion •·
of Australia this year, the 23year-&lt;&gt;ld Aussle now faces ;
Billie Jean King for the $22,500 .:
top prize and all the en- ·
dorsement money that goes ,,
with the U. S. tiUe.
v

Rosewall," or another 22-year-

old like blmaelf, another left..
bander, this time Roscoe.
Tanner.
Connors took out Tanner In
straight sets Sunday, 7~. 7-ll, 84. He took out the 39-year-&lt;Jid
Rosewall In the Wimbledon
final, 6-1, 6-1, 8-4.
Today he Intends taking out
Rosewall again, as quickly as
possible.
. Connors is sorry his bride-tobe, Chris Evert, lost her
chance to add the U. S. Open
crown to her Wimbledon
diadem, but his pride in· her
· could not be diminished by
Chris' valiant, yet fo.illng,
effort here · against Evonne
Goolagong,
Chris, down 6-0, 4-3 and a
service break when rain halted
play on Friday, gave the
record crowd of 15,402 SUnday
an unforgettable match,
fighting off two mate~ pOints to
win the second set In Ue-break,
then see It all get away-in a
heart stopping third set when
Evonne refused to crack and
woo It an, fi.O, 6-7, 6-3,
While Jlmn)Y was consoUng
Chris, Ro:iewall was busy
repeating his Wimbledon
quarter final win over Forest
Hills' defending champion
John Newcombe,
As usual, Rosewall dropped
the first set. As ilaual, he came
on to win 11-7- 11-4, 7-ll, 11-3,
For Evonne, today Is her

Bill Battle, who gambled and
lost a crucial game lui season,
turned co~~~ervaUve Saturday
but may have lOot oome respect

this tlme.

0

f
Class

Uni-Perm

Saturd•v's Ohlo ColleGe
Football Results
Br United Press lnternAtion•l
Miami 39 Eastern Michigan 0
Kent State 21 Central Mlhclgan

CINCINNATI (UP!) - Walt
Alston termed it the " Mike
Marshall misquote."
"And I think it did our club
more good than the Reds," said
Alston after the Los Angeles
Dodgers beat the Reds, 7.o!,
Sunday in the last of a threegsme set to take a 3.,. game
lead in the National League
West.
Marshall allegedly said facing the Reds was " like pilching
against a high school team"
after he picked up his 20th save
last Friday night when the
Dodgers WO!l the series opener,
3-!,
.
The slur supposedly infuriated Reds and, with Joe Morgan
delivering the game-wlimlng
two-run homer, Cincinnati
. gave M'a rshall his comeuppance saturday afternoon by
tagging him with his nth loss
against 13 victories.
Sunday Marshall blanked the
Reds over the last two innings,
striking out the side In the
ninth, to preserve Dodgers'
lefthander Doug Rau's 13th
victory against seven losses,

meeting," said Alston.
Was Marshall's quote mentioned ?
"Marshall's misquote was,"
corrected Alston,
A commentary on Marshall's
alleged statement wasn't all
Alston had for his players
during the pregame meeting.
" I told them I thought we
were pitching some or the
Reds' batters incorrectJy, •'
said Walt without mentioning

names.
" I reminded them too that
we 've got a higher team batting average than the Reds, a
lower team earned run

~

Olivet, Mich . 20 Defiance 7

Akron 31 Central State 20
Indiana Central 8 Findlay 6

-...

·~

This Week's

Ohio College FoOtball Sched.u le

By United Press International '
Saturday
Oh lo State at Mlnnesotll
Bowling Green .at
East
Carolina (n)
Kent State at Syracuse
Ohio Unlversltv at North
Carol Ina
Toledo at Tampa In)
Delaware at Akron
,
Ashland at Ferris St . (Mich . ) ·
Bluffton at Taylor ( Ind . )
Case Western at Thiel (Pa . J Tennessee st . at central St .'-'
Cincinnati at washington
..,
Eastern Kentucky at Dayton 1•
In l
Heidelberg at Defiance
Earlham (Ind .) at Flfldlav (nl HI ram at John carroll
'""
Auston Peav
(Tenn . ) .at •
Youngstown St.
Wittenberg
at
Baldwin Wallace (n)
Denison lit Marietta (n)
Westminster
(Pa . )
at •
Musklngum
Manchester (Ind .) at Otterbein
In)
~
Wlscons ln -Eay Clair at Capital
Mount U.nlon at St . Joseph's ..
(Ind .)
·
.,
Ohio
Northern
at
Ohio '
Wesleyan
~,
Bethany (W. va.) at Kenyon
Centre I Ky . 1 at Oberlin
·•
n -denotes night Q"'!me
d

•

Saturday•• Ohio High School
Football Reults
•
By United Press International u
Canton McKinley 43 Berea :-

Midpark o

,

Beellsvllle 20 Warwood (W . "
Va . &gt; 14 (of)
St . Marys (W . Va . J 21 Frontier
6
Brooklyn 0 Rhodes a (tiel
,
Cleve. Heights 27 Benedictine • ·

,.

Amer.ican League

cE as f)

w. I. pet. g.b.
14 65 .532

New York
Boston
Balt i more
Cleveland
Milwaukee
Detroit

74 65 .532
73' 66 .525 1
Pittsburgh
76 63 .5-47
68 70 .49 3 Slh
74 66 .529 2lh
St . Louis
67 74 .475
Phlhidelph l a
69 71 .493 ] lh
65 75 . 464 91f7
64 73 . . 467 11
New York
(West)
Montreal
61 76 .445 14
w . I. pet . g.b.
Chlcol!lgo
56 81 .409 19
Oakland
so 61 .567
(West)
75 67 .528 S'h
w. 1. pet. g.b. Texas
Kansas City
70 69 .504 9
Los Angeles
87 52 .626
Chicago
70 71 .496 10
Cincinnati
84 56 .600 J'h
Minnesota
69 71 ·.493 10%
Atlanta
78 63 .553 10
Callforn Ia
55 86 .390 25
Houston
71 68 .511 16
Saturday's Results
San Fran.
64 76 .457 2J lh
Detroit 8 New York 3, 1st
San Diego
51 90 .362 37
New York 1 Detroit o, 2nd
Saturday 1 s Results
Baltimore 3 Cleveland 2
Ch ic ago 3 Philadelphi.a 0
Texas 8 Oakland 2
San Diego 8 Houston 4
Boston 4 Milwaukee 3, 10 inn.
Cincinnati 1 Los Angels 5
California 3 Ch lea go 1
St . Louis 2 New York 1
Kansas City 1 Minnesota 0
San Franicsco 6 Atlanta 0
Sunday's Results
P i ttsburgh 6 Montreal 5, 12 inn.
Cleveland 7 Baltimore 4
Sundey•s Results
·easton 8 Milwaukee 6
Pittsburgh 8 Montreat 2
Detroit 11 New York 3
New York 5 St . Louis 3
Minnesota 8 Kans as Cltv o4
P'hitadelphla 11 Chicago 10
Texas 5 Oakland 1
Los Angeles 7 Cincinnat i .4
Chicago 1 Callforn Ia 0
Atlanta 5 San Francisco 3
Today•s Probil!ble Pitchers
Houstpn 3 San Diego 2
All EDT
( Todav ' s Probable Pitchers}
Texas !Brown 11 · 11 and Hand
All Times EDT
Pittsburgh (Demery 6-4) at 4-5) at California !Figueroa 2-7
Chicago (Jones 6-5), 2:3a p .m. and Lockwood 2·5J. 2, 7: 00p .m .
Kansas City (Busby 10-13 and
Montreal (Blair 8-6) at New
York (Sadeck·l 7-7), 8: 05 p.m. Spllttorff 13-15 ) at Oakland ·
San D ie go (Freisleben 0-10) at {Hunter 22 -10 and Blue 14141 ,
Cincinnati {Norman 10-11 ). 8:05 9 :00p . m .
Chicago {J ohnson 7·31 at
p.m .
Ph iladelphia (Lonborg 14 -11) Minnesota !Goltz 7·8L 8: 30p .m .
Baltimore (Cuellar 18·101 at
at St . Louis (Curtis 8-12 1. 8: 30
Milwaul!,ee
(Kobel 6-12 ), 8: 30
p.m .
Los Angeles (Zahn 2-.4 ) at p.m . f/1'
Detroit (Holdsworth 0-3 or
Atlanta (Capra 13 -7), 7: 30 p·.m .
Lemanczvk
1· 1 l
at
San Francisco (Montefusco 10) at Houston ( o lerker 9-8) , 8: 35 Cleveland (Bosman 5-31 , 7:30
p.m .
p.m .
New York {Med ic h 17 ·12) at
Tuesday's Games
Boston (Moret 7·S), 7 : 30 p .m .
Pittsburgh at Ch i cago
Tuesday's Games
Los Angeles at Atlanta, twllight
Kansas
Cltv at California ,
Montreal at New York, night
Sen D iego at Cincinnati, night night
Chicago at Minnesota . night
Phlledelphla at St . LOUIS , night
Baltimore at Milwaukee,
San Francisco at Houston , night
night
·
Detroit at Cleveland , night
New York at Boston , niQht
&lt;Only games scheduled I
g . b.

a

_
The

"'.......

~'l'lllt

JI

• No Apj~Oiiil•llfl N""'....

9 Til' Mon.· Thurs.· Fri.
9 T1 I 5 Tu.s.• Wed.· S.t · ·

The YOWIIl coach of 15thranked Tenneuee opened
hlmlelf up for the oecondgueaen when he elected to dlaorganlzed
· play for the tie acaJnot No. 12
In the only other liiJI'III
OCLA In Saturdlly'o ..tlonaiJ.y 11110111 top.nnUd teama, No.
• televised game. Battle'• 13 AI"- Slife Upeat No. 10
declalon came after Tenne- · HQWIIOII JO.I and No, II North
hldacond ma ls.,wd run by Carolina Slate ~at Wake
Contlredae HolloWly with only Forut U·lt. IClchtetnth •
3:Jl remalnin(l to draw within rlnktd Tullnt llfu tdltdulad
,., point of the llnllnl. Illllead to play but 1N1c1 Ill 11J111 with
of trylna for a two-point con- MIMiealppl t:1lltd
bec:IUM
'llnkll,howi!YV, Battlll loci I ol Hlll'l'lc!IIMI Clll'll'lln.
17·17 Ue u .R1cJ11 TOwnlend
W1i1e moat ~ 11M ~ ranlwd
booled an atn point.
leaml blpn tll4lr nat
Battle, who ea1t IU 1411m a S.turday, lfilrd.ft!UI Notre
win qa1n11 GeorJ(IIMt JNr
Dime wW 111*1 1111 Clmpailn
bJ .-,for a lint t1o1m late tn lanllhl
In ·Alilnll whlre It
the 11111111 lllllud 111 Jlllllllnl.
meet~ 0 .... Tech, Tllllrllh
uld ldl "'ddlon to llttla for a lll'tl • PI'GIIIbi!Wt iaYOrlta to
llewu_P.UIIIpledbfllllnjary opoU the deiM Ill Taah'a nn

I
1

:
•

,
;

.

• FrM CoMult•tton
• FrM Gift
•Retlster ,for Dr•wlnq 1$25 cold w•vel .
Sllvilr
lrldte
Sllopplnt
llllllrea bJ llallon7
llftlrrun.
lila -c:ll, PIPIJW Raclpn,
.__ _ _
__
__
_ _Plu8
_ _ __ . ll*laeullr
JS.,II'd 'I'D
f

.

CllliH'I'EBLT~

AsaWnlng that a tie Is better
than a toea, Battle may have
been right In not trying for two
)KIInts without Holloway.
Holloway missed more than
half the game with a lhoulder
Injury and during hll abaence
the Vola were a terribly

.
f

1.
:
•

!
!
:
'

/ ·
•

!
,!
.

·:
'

!'

!
:
•

l

..•
;

As for reasons for the sue..

cess, ~ton just figured he was
ge tting both superior pilching
and hitting from his club.
" We'll let the pitching and
the bats teke care of the wins,
and the standings will take
care of themselves," he sald.
Meanwhile, Dodgers outfielder Jimmy Wynn was

shouting, uwe're No. J, we're
No. 1."

" If we can win two out of
three next weekend.'' figured
Wynn, " then it's ours."
As might be expected, the
Dodgers called on a~e relief

Slail MRM•

.· nt.'Mtf6.

Mcn••rOIN

..........

lf you're lookfl1ll IO&lt; tho bell
niUI in ~Ill iniUIIIICI
- you'll lind ~at Stato Form.
Gin 1111 1 call today. YOOI11
diiCOYir wllan 1111111 Stale Farm
tht nuirlbor one· hollltiiWIIIrt inIn tht world.

By NEIL HERSHBERG
UP! Sports Writer
Nearly two hundred years
since . Paul Revere's famous
midnight ride, Boston once
again Is up In arms - only this
time Fenway Park is the
battlefield and the American
League East championship,
the si&gt;oils.
Boston rallied from a 4-0
deficit Sunday and went on to
defeat the Milwaukee Brewers,
8-6, as they moved back into a
tie with the New York Yankees
for first place In the AL East.
The Yankees dropped an 11-3
decision to the Detroit Tigers
while ·the Baltimore Orioles,
only one game back, had a !().
game winning streak snapped
by dropping a 7-4 decision to
the Cleveland Indians.
New York .travels to Boston
tonight to begin a crucial twogame series with the Red , Sdx.
The Red Sox have won all
seven of their home games
with the Yankees this season,
they hold an 11-game home
winning streak over New York
since July 31, 1973, and have
won 19 of their last 20 meetings
against New York at Boston.
The Red Sox snapped an
eight-game losing streak at the
expense
of
Milwaukee
saturday but despite their skid,
the Red Sox insist they have
not been playing that badly.
Dwight Evans' two-run
homer in the seventh proved to
be decisive. Evans' homer was
the firstfor Bos.ton since Sept. I

~'
Mldclleport, 0. ~~
PH. 992-7155 ~·~~
(0r8Vtl Hill)

,..,,......,..

--·-·,,.. -·-_._
.

MllltOfld

.'-----.,,_
'II

I

. . ..

1111111

AUTO GLASS

'

"For All· Your Gtu. Neelh"
'-IIERCIIUESIDENTIAL

PHONE .
•

.

i,

when Carl Yastrzemski hit one
in Minnesota , The Red Sox
have hit only four home runs
since the middle of August.
In other AL games, Texas
whipped Oakland 5-1, Chicago
edged California 1-0 and
Minnesota tripped Kansas City
8-4.
Tigers 11, Yankees 3
Bill Freehan had four hits,
including a grand slam homer,
and knocked in seven nms and
AI Kallne added three RBis to
lead the Tigers to victory over
the Yankees.
Indlans7, Orloles4
George Hendrick's two-cun
homer and solo shots by Tom
McCraw and Charlie Spikes
ended Baltimore's winning
streak at 10 games as the Indians beat the Orioles.
Rangers5,A'sl
Ferguson Jenkins tossed a
· seven-hitter and recorded his
22nd win of the season In pilching the Rangers past the A's
and moving surprising Texas
to within a'h games of first
place Oakland in the West.
WhiteSoxl, Angels 0
California pitcher Andy
Hassler allowed oply one hita third in~ing double by Lee
Richard- but lost the game on
a throwing error by third
baseman Dave Chalk as the
White Sox njppoo the Angels
behind the combined seven-hit
· pilchlng of Jim Kaat and Terty
Forster.
Twlos 8, Royals 4
Light-hitting Phil Roof

under-par 69 Sunday and
match.e d the one-under 36-hole
total of 139 of Player, who had a
721n the second round, was not
as disturbed about staying
around an extra day, possibly
for just one hole.
Trevino was scheduled to be
In Newark, Ohio, only 100 miles
from here. "I'll just be a little
late," he said.
Bobby -Nichols, the host pro
at Firestone playing In his
second World Series, shot a 3735 - 72 Sunday and a 36-hole
total of 143 to pick up third
money of $7,500. Nichols got
Into thi.s year's event by virtue
of his win In the Canadian
Open, the first alternate
tournament for the WSG, as
Player won beth the Masters
and British Open.
Hale Irwin, the U. S. Open
champion who was nine shots
off the pace going Into Sunday's action, had a 35-37 - 72
and finished at 148, collecting
last-place money of $5,000.
Player, who was two under
par through the first five holes
Sundsy and six strokes ahead
of Trevino at the time, appeared to have an easy time of
It until problema with his
driving arose.
He bogeyed the sixth, nlnth,
lOth, 13th and 15th holes, all
due ro poor tee shots, while
Trevino, who picked up seven
strokes In a space of nine holes,
actually grabbed the lead with
a birdie oo the par-four 14th.
Two holes later, however,
Trev~o ran Into drlvlng trou. bleB of his own which coat him
·a bogey-eix 111 the ~yanl
(Monster) 16th hole, 11nd things
were aU even again as Player

AKRON, Ohio (UPI ) - Both
Gary Player and Lee Trevino
were late for appolnbnents
today.
The two superstars of golf,
who battled head-to-head
through five sudden death
holes in the 13th annual World
Serle$ of Golf Sunday on the 7180-yard · par-70 Firestone ·
Country Club course only to be
halted by darkness, were to
resume · their quest for the
$50,000 ltrst priie at 10 a.m.
(EDT).
· The playoff, third In the
history of the World Series,
which annually matches the
winr1ers of the Masters, U. S.
and British Opens and the
PGA, was halted by PGA Tour
Director Jack . Tuthill, who
ruled at 7:30 p.m. It was too
dark to continue.
"I would Uke to have called It
a tie," said Player, who took a
three-ehot lead over Trevino
Into SUnday's flnal18 holes and
.who atone time led the ·"Merry
Mex '' by six shots. Player had.
been scheduled to play an
exhibition at l:!llton Head, S.C.,
today,
Trevlno, who had a one-

.POINT ,I.EASANT - MASON

~

tireless MarahaU,""l've never
seen anyone who can go that
often or be that effective."
The Reds-Dod«ers confrontaUon here, which created
a World Serles type atmosphere,
attracted
a
Riverfront Stadium record
crowd of m,562 fans for the
three games.
Both the Dodgers and Reds
play lour games this week
before next weekend's series.
Los Angeles Is at Atlanta
tonight whlle Cincinnati enter.
t.ains San Diego.

-- MONDAY
-----thru FRIDAY
----

cl ubhouse.
"They _ are
motivated by pride, not
money," said Anderson. "They
want to prove they can come
off the floor again just as they
did last year:- I haven't heard
any talk at all about rrioney."
The Reds and Dodgers meet
three more times, next Friday,
saturday and Sunday in Los
Angeles.

crashed a grand slam homer,
the first of his career'· in a fiverun si.th inning to lead Minnesota over the Royals. Behind
3-1, the Twins loaded the bases
in the sixth on singles by Tony
Oliva and Jerry Terrell and a
walk to Pat Bourque. When
Danny Thompso n walked,
forcing in Oliva, Steve Mingori
relieved starter and loser
Bruce Dal Canton, 8-9. ·Roof
greeted Mingori with his
second homer of the year.
IN OTHER National League
games, Pittsburgh increased
its lead in the NL East to 2'h
games by whipping Montrealll2, New York defeated St. Louis
S-3, Philadelphia nipped
Chicago 11-10, flouston edged
San Diego 3-1 and Atlanta
topped San Francisco 5-3.
Cleveland downed Baltimore
7.o!, Boston beat Milwaukee 8-6,
Detroit whipped New York 1!3, Minnesota defeated Kansas
City 8-4, Texas topped Oakland
a-1 and Chicago blanked
California 1-0 in American
League games.
Pirates 8, Expos 2
Jim Rooker tossed a sixhitter and Dave Parker plnchhit a grand slarri homer to
give the Pirates their sixth
triumph In a row and 14th ·in
their last 16 games. Rich
Hebner also contributed a tworun triple as the Pirates tagged
Steve Rog~rs with his 20th loss.
Mets 5, Cardinals.a
Wayne Garrett's three-run
homer capped a fou,t-run

eighth inning that carried the
Mets to victory over the
Cardinals , Tom Seaver, though
harassed by the base-stealing
antics of Lou Brock, went the
distance to gain his loth win ..
Phllllesll, Cubs 10
Willie Montanez drove in
four runs with three hits to
spark the Phillies' triumph
over the Cubs. Jerry Morales
hit a grand slam homer for the
. Cubs while Rick Monday had a
solo shot.
Astros 3, Padres 2
Rookie Wilbur Howard hit
his first major league homer in
the seventh inning to give the
Astros a victory over the ·
Padre$. Howard's blast was
one of only four hits the Astros
managed off lefthander Randy
Jones, who also became a 2Q..
game loser.·
Brave• 5, Giants 3
Vic Correll drove in three
runs with a double and a single
to lead the Braves over the
Giants. Ron Reed went the
distance to register his lOth
win. Gary Matthews had a
homer for San Francisco.

NO 'COUPON NECESSARY
.

CARRY-OUT OR DRIVE-IN ONLY

11:00 A.M. TO 3:00 P.M.
'

SALIS

773-5710
773-5111

'

••

LUNCH SPECIAL

HOT, LIGHT, THRIFTY AND FUN · ·
OJr .Lunch Special 11 another rNson whv
"Meigs County l.ovn. whet the .Colone1 cooks.'~

TM

2 PIECES CHICKEN, SlAW AND ROLL

Have abarrel of fun

~

Pitdewft•.
tROW'S SfEAK HOUSE
POMEROY, ~OHIO

SAVE AT
MOORE'S

Merry Mex, Player settle
Golf's World Series today

STEVE SNCMDEN
553 Russell St.

the meeting," said Jimmy
Wynn . " He told us we were
flyin g high but that we
shouldn't expect to beat the
Braves by merely throwing our
gloves out on the field!'
Reds Mana ger Sparky Anderson refused to throw in the
towel.
"Those guys aren't scared
out there," said Anderson,
noddin g towards· the Reds

pitcho:r Mike Marshall In all
three games , At his best
Sunday when he broke his own
major league record by appearing in his 93rd !!lime of the
season, Marshall got the final
six outs of the game and struck
out the side in the ninth inning.
But Marshall wasn't lmpressed with the recOrd.
" Individual statistics cannot
be important to a ballplayer,"
he said. " You ca n't have your
mind on statistics and be of
help to the team."
SOld ~ton of the seemlngly

Boston challenges again

Alston.
Dodgers outfielder Willie
Crawford, for one, found
Alston's remarks during the
pregame meeting somewhat
out of cliaracter.
"Usilally the only things we
hear from him are what We're
doing \vrong," said Willie. "So
I was surprised when he
started telling us how good we

Shaktr Heights 20 Chane! 12
Padua Jl Normandy 6
B••chwood 30 Ledgtmont 0
Columbia 13 Edison 8

'!

win SUndBy and a 3-1 decision
"But Oct. 1 is still a long way
Friday night.
off. September does funny
Of Sunday's loss, Rose said, things to different people. We'll
"This was a very important just have to wait and see whal
game. lt w"" either going to be It does.
l lf.l out or 31h. It's sw-e going to
"II probably depends on who
be harder now; but it doesn't can win JOO games. If you win
mean the season ls over." 100 games you 're going to ·win
Reds' Manager Sparky And- it."
er son wss subdued, but
Dodgers' Manager Walter
hopeful.
Alston sported a blg smlle after
" Thank God we've got the serle$,
another series left with them,"
"Of course we tried to win aU
he said so!Uy , " We'll probably three, but winning two out of
have to beat them all three out three, well, I think you could
there.
almost say we're satisfied,"
Alston said.

Just as they did in the first went on to add their final run In
two games, the Dodgers the eighth.
jumped orr to an early lead,
Marshall, lopping his own
scoring one run in the first major league record by
inning and adding two more in making his 93rd appearance of
the fourth . one on a homer by the' season, wound up with a
Joe Ferguson.
flourish.
A three-cun sixth inning,
The Dodgers move on to
capped by Bill Buckner's Atlanta where they meet the
double, broke a 3..1 tie and Bravea tonight.
tagged Jack Billingham with
" That was another thing
his ninth loss, and the Dodgers Alston reminded us of during

average, we've scored more
runs; hit more homers and
stolen more bases," continued

(EASt)

w. 1. pet.

Dayton 21 Drake 7

ers u

arshall misquoted-Alston

Major League Standings.
By United Press International
· National Lugue·

· )A

ott

'22.()0 Complete

2.,.

Coming to town with a
game advantage over Cincinnati, the Dodgers left with a 3.,.
game margin , The pressure is

games

team.

Helene Curti!

&gt;

from the start."

This week's

Battle takes 17-17 tie

A
Touch ·

clearly on the Reds for next
weekend's remalch In Los
Angeles.
That three-game series will
be the final head-to-head encounter between the teams,
both of which sport better
records than the leaders of
baseball's
three
other
divisions.
Only once over the weekend
here did Cincinnati manage to
catch up with the fast-etarUn g
Dodgers, rallying saturday for
a 7~ win. Los Angeles made its
early leads stand up for a 7.o!

Angeles leads were the keys ID
the series .
ul've never seen a team put
so many runs on the board In
the first inning," marveled
Rooe. "That gave their pitchers a big psychoiOIJical lift
and took our offensive game
plan away from Us. We couldn't
hlt..and.-un or steal~ whenr
we were always behind right

"Yes, I had a pregame are."

brash, sometimes abrasive
Connors, 'to win here.
But the 22-year-&lt;Jid American
looks upon every match as a
personal war to be won, be the
surface grass, clay, or broken
bottles. The name of the game
to him is "win" - and It
matters not if the man on the
other side of the net Is, In his
.,.ords, "a legend like

By RICK VANsANT
CINCINNATI (UPI ) - With
the llrst "crlUcal" weekend
oerles over and the secmd
COming up, the Loo Angeles
Dodgers have Increased their
lead over the ClncinnaU Reds
In " baseball's beat divislon"the NatiQnal League West.
Jumping off to early4Ming
luds like 3-0, ~ and ikl the
•
Dodgers took two of three
pmea from the Reds here last
-kend.
Cinclpnati Reds captain Pete
Rose said those quick Los

-start

'

.

By Llwreoce E. Lamb, M.D.
DUke University years ago, In
DEAR ·oR. LAMB - A ita original form it concluded
friend hits recently been put on only limited amounts of rice
a strange diet by a doctor of and fruit.
gond reputation, and It makes
The rice diet has two big ·
Uttie senae to me. I understand ~advalitages,lt Is low In salt and
it was given for the purpose of low In protein. You might
fluid ln. the body and for a wonder what advantage there
kidney condition. I'd like to try would be to having a low
It for the fluid condition but protein diet. If you have kidney
hesitate to do anything so disease you sometimes bave
drastic. Nothing but cooked trouble ellminatlng urea, the
rtce and orange Juice for every ammonia part of annlno acida
In the excess protein m06t
meal for four or five days.
Is It worth the try and has It people eat. It is also low In
any benefit for the system? calories and can be used as a
Seellll very unbalanced to me, weight reducing diet. Like
and I try to balance my diet to oiher sueh· diets it can make
the best of my knowledge as I you very weak. You need . to
cannot take drugs too well take vitamins and minerals if
' wltboutlllde eflecta.
you are on such a . diet .inore
DEAR READER - There than a few days.
lll'e IIWIY "strange dlell". used
The rice diet was used very
for l!p8clal modlcel problems succeufully In many patienta
lhlt abould never be used by with high blood pri!MW'e In the
the paltlle wlti!Gut a doctor's days when we had few, if any,
r - * i o n , The diet you effecUve medicines to ollfl' for
..,.ak of II • variation of the this problem . With new
"rtee diet." II was popularized medicines It Is rarely used.
by Dr. Walter. Kempner of

by the American people.
" He (Ford) shoold let tbe
normal legal process In thb
wbole thing proceed,'' Llvelle
added. "I regret this. He
(Ford) was doing very well to
bring this country together and
now he has made a poUUcal
Issue out of Watergate again."
Kent McGough,
state
Republican Party . chalnnan,
said he was pleaMd with
President Ford's decision.
"I think lhlt the explanation
for the pardon was In order and
that he did the right thing,"
McGough said.
Rep. Samuel Devine, R.Qhio,
a close friend of Richard
Nix~n's, received a call from
President
Ford
Sunday
morning prior to the announcement of the pardon.
Devine ssid Ford told him he
had decided . to grant a full
pardon to Nixon,
" He (Ford ) has Information
available thai makes this the
decision that 1.s be$t for the
country,"
Devine
said.
President Ford would Uke to
get the Watergate matter
finally terminated and behind
us and get on with theaHairs of
the nation." Devine said he
didn't think a trtal or conviction would serve any useful
purpose and there would be
nothing gained In forcing a

conteaalon of guilt !rom the
former pi'Oildent unluo ''you
w'"t to bring him to hil 1mand hwnlliate him further ."
"It oeems to me that ln the
lntereot of the presidency this,
ta a proper decision," Devine
'
added.
Rep. Charles Fanlk, )).()hlo,'
said he thought Ford had ex·,
ceeded his authority In
gr.. Ung the pardon.
,
"I think that President Ford
has exceeded his authority··
under the Constitution In:
granting Richard Nixon an·
anticipatory Plrdon," Vanlk,
said, "He can pardon a guilty
person but he cannot suspend
the law snd due process.
"Under the only federal
precedent I can find on this
subject, In an 11120 Attorney~
General opinion it was ~!early •
set forth that the presidentcannot pardon by anticipation,
otherwise he woold be vested
with the power to dispenae with':
the law," Vanlk said.
"
Rep. Chalmers P , Wylie, R. Ohio, said he felt the pardon~ .
was a "move In the right'
direction.
" I think President Ford's'·
decision is fine . I think Richard ~
Nixon and his lamlly have··
suffered enough and the :
pardon is a move In the right
dlrecUon," Wylie said.
"

We have a complete line of natio11ally
advertised hunting ·equipment. You'll
probably save money here!. Check our
values.

parred.
Both players birdied the 17th,
Trevino with a 13-footer and
Player from 12, On 18, Player
hit a magnificent second shot
to save par, knocking a twoiron out of a fairway trap some
210yardsfrom the green to just
14 feet from the hole,
The two players took turns
scrambling back from defeat
during the five playoff holes.
Alberta , Ca nada , i s
ni cknam ed the "sunshine"
province because of its good
weather.

GUNS
Harrington- Richardson
Ithaca &amp; Remington

WE ISSUE

PANTS • JACKETS • VESTS
• SHELLS • HATS

MOORE'S
124 W. MAIN

AMERICAN HARDWARE

992-2848

POMEROY

r------------------ ----------=--=-=====7======
•

•

ln the thirty years ihat Smokey Bear has
been telling us lS) be careful wirh fire, we've cut the
number of forest fires we sta rt in half.
But we still start over 100,000 carele,. flres

Someday, one of two things wUl happen, and
Smokey will stop reminding us to be careful: Either

there won't be any more foreu ·fire's, or there won't
be any more forests.

It's up to you .

every year.

Pub1is~«l u; public ~ervice in cooperation with the Advettillnt Council, the U,S. Fore•t Se:rvk•, 11\c Na~l

Anod ation of State Fornten and the lmemational Newspaper Advcnillnl Executi\lr•.

•

"

•
1

�4 - ~ Doily Sentlnel, Mlddleport-Pomeroy,O., Mooday,Sept. 9, 1974

Today's

Sport Parade

Rog~rs .

10 L HR -

'

wbo never has heard anything like this from a ballplayer before
or ever does again afterward. "Last year I pressed you too hard.
I got more money than I deserved. I'm going to give you credit
for that now."
Werber signs for less than Giles originally offered.
When he left baseball, Billy Werber went into the insurance
~In Washington and was eminently successful. He retired
last year at 65,la working on a book a boot his era in baseball and,
according to witnesses, "still hits the baD a country mile" on the
golf course just ootslde ~g Gap, N. C.
Werber's basic philosophy basn'tcbanged at all since he was
playing ball, .
"He is obsessed with the idea of anybody getting something
without working for It," says Gahe Paul, the Yankees' President
wbo was in the front office for the Reds when Werjler played for
them. "He is a terrific person, a solid human being and one of the
he,gt competitors I've ever seen in the 46 years I've been in
baseball."
With his type phliOilOphy, the hackles on Billy Werber's back
went straight up not long ago when he heard Baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn had said "now is the time for the major
leagues to have a blackmariager." Kim also said he would "push ·

..
'
•

••
'

hard" to see one was named.
Ii was one of those politically opportune statemenL'l, so

•
' ,.

transpan!flt that it didn't really fool anyone, least of all the
bla.c ks.
But Werber had some questions he wished to put to Klihn. So
he wrote.him a letter, copies of which he sent to a number of
newspapers as well as several major league officials. Werber's
letter aloog irith Kuhn's answer were printed by the New York

.

••
•

•

~..,Sunday.

.

.

Werber IISked Kuhn 21 questioos in his letter.
"Why,"he wanted to know, •'haveyou taken the position that
'now Is the time for the major leagues to have a black manager?'
Since blacks represent 25 per cent of the playing personnel, why
·
not push for 25percentin the managing category? ·
"Would this not he more equitable? If 25 per cent of the
players are black and 25 per cent of th!! managers are black,
would you 'favor a black commissioner for 25 per cent of the
time?
· "Inasmuch as you distinguish players tiy race, will not the
Jews aok for tepresentation on the mana~ment level?"
Perhaps they should. For both Kulm's and Werber's benefit,
there have been only two Jewish major league managers in
history ,- Johllny Kling, very brlefiy, and Harold "Lefty"
· Pllllllps, not much longer.
To continue with Werber's questions of Klihn, though.
"Wbaf do you propose to aay should the Italians demand an
Italian manager and the Puerto Ricans demand a Puerto Rican
mallager? Are you of the point of view that only blacks are to be
considered as a minority race?" as!&lt;ed Werber.
"Moot cl the questions raised in your letter are irrelevant to
the !slue," Kului wrote .b ack Werber.
"I bave never suggested that being black by itseH was
enough of a qualification," he added.
Certainly It Isn't, but it would seem Billy Werber was sharp
enough to see that, or at least say that, before Bowie Klihn.
Gahe Paul says Werber's letter might lead some people, who
don't know him to think he's a racist "arxi I can assure you
unquallfledly he is anything but that."
On the othersideofthe coin, Palil says Werber isn't aware of
all the facL'l when he makes some references in his letter to
Frank Robinson's past.
PeriOilally, I can easily understand the impatience of the
black man with not getting an opportunity to manage a major
league cl\lb solely because of his color, and simtlarly, I can
rudDy understand Billy Werber's Impatience with the idea of
simply handing over a job to an individual only because of his

ootor.

,

There is mequity here on both sides, and only one thing really
can solve the problem. Education. in tlme,l'msure it wiD.
I havt a world of confidence Iii 'the individuals struggling
irith it now. The individuals I'm talking about are black, white,
' red, yellow - all different colors.

Lions club
Browns, 21-7
By

RICHARD E. GOSSELlN

DETROIT ( UPI ) - Bill
· Munsoruays be's ready to go in
'tbe Detroit Llooa' National
JPootball league opener next
week against the Chicago

·Bears.

•••

defmltely.
Landry ·was expected to be
the backup man to Munson.
Munson's performance Saturday indicated Landry's lllOS
can he ablorbed wlthoot much
dama~ to the club.
Munson, who gut~ the club
to a 4.-! record after Landry

u-

..

•

San Fran .

000 300 000- l 6

000 110 lOx - 5 8 0

4

Sosa

( 7)
Reed (10 8)
Bryar'll (3.

(S) ,

Maflhews !16th) .

Los Ano .
100 203 010- 1 1.4 1
Cinc inna t i 000 110 010- .,j s 1
Rau , Houugh (6L Marshall
( 8 ) and Ferguson ; Billi n gham.
Bo r bon
16) ,
Ba ney
(81.
McEnaney 18 l and Benc h . WP
- Rau 113-71 . L P - B ill i ngha m
( 18 9 ) . H RS - Fergus on ( 15t h ),
Pe-r ez (23 rd l, Dr iessen ( 6th),
Rose (Jrd l.
N ew Yor k
001 ooo 040- S 8 o
St . LOUiS
100 000 01Q-3 8 0
Se a ver ( 10 . 8) and D ye r ;
M cG lot h en , Gar man ( 9 ) and
Sim m on s. L P - M cG loth en (1 69L HR - Gar r ett (1 1th ) .
San D iego
011 000 000- 2 8 3
Hous ton
100 00 1 lOx- 3 4 1
Jones 17-20)
Can l zzaro ;
Qr iff in , F or S:c h (BJ and C.
John son . W P - Gr iff in f13 -8J.
HR S - H il ton ( l stl , Howard

""d

l lst l.

Ph il a .
001 000 040- 11 14 I
Chic ago
300 200 104 - 10 10 3
Twit c hell ,
Garb er
( 4),
Chr istenson (8) and Boone ;
Dettore , Todd ( 3) LaR oc h e (SJ ,
Zamora 18 1, K remme i {8),
Hutson 19 1 and Swisher . WP Garber (2-0l. LP - Dettore (1 .
3). HR S M onda y ( 16t h ),
Morales ( 14th l.
American League
Bait .
ooo 300 001 - ..t 9 1
Cleveland
211 ooo 21x - 7 9 1
Palmer , Jackson (1) and
Hendri c ks ; J . Perry , Buskey
(7) and Ell is. WP J . Perry
( 1 ~ · 10 ). LP Palmer ( 6-11) .
HRS Hendrick s ( 19th L
M cCraw (5 th ), Cabel l (2n d),
Spi kes (20th ).

Mr. and Mrs. Michael Boring

Vikings,
Dolphins

Detroit
105 013 010- 11 12 2·
New York 000 110 100- 3 7 I
Coleman
( 12- 12 )
and
Freehan ; T idrow , Mart inez ( 4),
M cDowell (6) and Mun son .
Dempsey ( 7) . L P - Tidrow ( ll ·
12 ). HRs F reehan (1 3th l.
Chambl iss (5th ).

~~~~(uy ~gg ~g6 l8J=: :~ ~ I

rugged
M:!=~~klngs

If the
and
Blyleven , Campbell ( 7 ) and the Miami Dolphins, the two
Roof ; Dal Caoton . Mingor i 161. partic!'pantsl' nSuperBowlVIII
Me Daniel IB l and Martinez.
Healy (8 ) . WP .!... Blyleven 04 - la~t
season , have any
15 l. LP - Dal Canton {8-9) . HRs
- Roof 12nd ), Darwin (23rdJ . weaknesses, they weren't in
--evidence Saturday night as
Milwaukee 400 000 020- 6 9 1
Boston
ooo 132 20x- a 10 1 both clubs w.ound up preseason
Rodt:ig·uez , Wright (5) , Mitlfr play with corivincing victories.
(6 ), Sprague (8) and Port.er ;
JOHN E. CONNOLLY
Mar ichal , Pole · {l ), Vea l e ra J,
The
defending
world
Segui (.8) and McCarber . WP champion Dolphins-rode the 40Pole (I -OJ. tP - Wr ight { 8-19 1. year--oldarmo!Earl Morrall to
HR - Evans (8th ) .
a 3().7 victory over the Chicago
Texas
200 0·10 101- 5 11 1
Oakland
000 000 001 - 1 7 2 Bears. The Dolphins waited
LONG BOTTOM - The lOth
Jenkins !22 -11) and Sund berg ; Holtzman , Parsons ( 8) , until lbere were nine minutes birthday of John Edward
Knowles (8 ) and Fosse . L P. left in tbe second quarter Connolly, son of Mr. and Mrs .
Holtzman 117 -14) . HR - Sund · before they made a first down · Dale ·Connolly, was celebrated
berg ("3rd ).
. ·
·
and then scored 10 quick points recently with a cookout at the
Chicago
001 000 000- 1 1 2
Connolly home ,. Long Bottom.
Calif .
ooo Ooo ooo- o 7 3 in the final 1:34 of tbe half.
Bnb Griese hit Paul Warfield
Cake and ice cream were
Kaat.
Forster
( 1)
and
Downing ; Hassler (4 -10) and
on a 40-yard .TD pass and Garo served following the dinner and
Egan . WP - _Kaat 116-13) .
Yepremian added · a 43-yard the afternoon and evening were
spent playing. baseball ,
field goal.
Major League Leaders .
Morrall entered the game in basketball, horseshoes and
By United Press International
Leading Batters
the second 'half and promptly badminton.
National League
Guests were Mr. and Mrs.
g ab · r h pet . launched the Dolphins on
Garr , All
136 576 79 204 .354 successive touchdown drives of Dale Connolly, Sr., Dale Lee,
Grvy, LA
134 559 83 183 .327
John, Disna and Deena, Mr .
Zisk, P itt
127 463 68 150 .324 73 and 68 yards, ending them
Olivr, Ptt
124 518 82 166 .320 with scoring passes. of 21 yards
and
Mrs. Chesler Foully ,
Sm ith , St. L.
Johnny Deeter, Betty Jo Hunt,
.
122 433 67 138 .319 to'Howard Twilley and 19 yards
Strgll , Pitt
to
Marlon
5riscoe.
Mrs.
Connie Connolly' Amy
117 428 79 135 .315
Morraif was 7-for-7 for 102 and Kristina, Mr.s . Mabel
Brck, st.'t:
132 544 89 111 .314
Gross, Ho
134 500 69 157 .314 yards passing before he was
Sanderson, Long Bottom; Mr.
Bcknr , LA
122 487 69 152 .312 lilted for third string quarMontanez , Ph i l
121 434 44 135 ,311 terback Don Strock,
American League
Bob Berry passed for three
g ab r h pet.
Crw , Mnn
134 528 74 192 .364 touchdowns and Oscar Reed
Hrgrv , Tx
114 363 .52 123 .339 ran for three ~ore to spur the
Orta, Chi
121 452 69 146 .323 ·
Yaz , Bos
131 453 82 139 .307 Vikings to a 42-U romp over the
McRa, KC
126 457 61 140 .306 San Diego Chargers.
Rand I, Tx
134 462 62 140 .303
The Dolphins, who have won
Mddx, NY
115 379 60 115 .303
Allen , Chi
128 462 84 139 .301 26 out of 28 games the past two
Pin ill , NY
120 445 63 134 .301
Jcksn , Ok
131 450 81 135 .300 seasons, romped to their
Home Runs
second consecutive Super Bowl
National League : Schmidt,
Phil 3~ ; Wynn , LA 30 ; Bench , victory with a 24-7 triumph
Cin 28 ; Perez, Cin. Cedeno . Hou over the Vikings in Houston
and Starg_ell, Pitt 23 .
American League: Allen , Ch i last January . Miami and
32 ;
Ja c kson ,
Oak
28 ; Minnesota
finished with
Burroughs, Tex 25 ; Darwin ,
identical 12-2 records in the
Minn and Tenace, Oak 23.
Runs Batted 1n
1973 campaign and are rated
SYRACUSE - Thirty-lwo
National League: Ben ch . Cln
108 ; Schmidt, Phil 106 ; Wynn , the favorites to win their visits with the sick and shut.in
LA 100 ; Garvey, LA 97 ; Zlsk , divisional championshl"' again
were reyorted during the
Pitt 92 .
American
League : this . season. Regular season recent meeting oi the United
Burroughs, Tex 112 ; Bando , competition hegins next week.
Methodist Women . of . the
O.!!k 9~ ; Allen , Chi and Jackson ,
In other Saturday games it Syracuse Asbury United
Oak 88 ; Darwin, M lnn and Rudl ,
Oak 86 .
was New Orleans 24 Houston Methodist Church held at the
Stolen Bases
National League : Brock , St. L 16, Detroit 21 Cleveland 7, and
home
of
Mrs.
Dana
103 ; Morgan , Cln 58; Lpes. LA Oakland 31 New York Jets 6.
Winebrenner.
55 :
Wide receivers Doug WinsAmerican League : North ,
Mrs. Opal Kloes, president,
Oak 49 ;
Patek ,
Kc
32 ; low and Joel Parker ran for a
gave
the call to worship by
Lowenstein, Clev and Carew ,
touchdow.n_ ·apiece on end reading "Golden Nuggets" and
M Jnn 31 .
Pitching
around plays to spark the lwo other articles from the
National League : Bi llingham ,
Cln 18-9 ; Messers.mith , LA 16 ·6 ; Saints to a come-from-behind
' 'Healing Fountain" .
McGlothen , St . L 16-9 : . P . 24-16 victory over Houston.
Devotions
by Mrs. Helen
Niekor , Atl16-11 ; Reu.ss , P itt 15Winslow's 13-yard scamper Teaford were
9 ; Gullett , Cln IS -10 .
' entitled "Witness
American League : Hunter, came . with 13:00 left in the
the Spirit". Officers' reports
Oak 22 -10 ; Jenk in$, Tex 22 -11 ;
Tlant , Bos 20-11 : Wood , Chl 20 - game and capped a 52-yard were given and the birthday of
17 ; Busby , KC 19-13.
drive. Placekicker Bill Mc-- Mrs, Irene Parker was ob·
Clard's el&lt;tra point put the served.
Even more of a factor than Salilts ahead for the first time
The program by Mrs.
Munson and Jones In the Lions' since they led 10-.1 at half.
Dorothy Winebrenner included
Allie Taylor and charlie two
win was lhe play of the defense,
articles,
"Unlikely
which ·held the Browns Sanders scored touchdowns in Church" 8nd uwomen of In~
scoreless unW the final 25 a 3: 16 span early in the third dia". Both were taken from
seconds when Mil!:e PhiPI"' quarter to lead Detroit over the Response Magazine . Mrs .
.
threw a 13-yard scoring pass to Browns.
Teaford read "A Man Must he
Taylor's t)lree-yard touchSteve Holden.
fot Something". Attending .
"They just kept coming, down run broke a scoreless tie besides those named were Mrs.
didn't they?" Forzano asked at the start of the second half.
Margaret Eichinger, Mrs.
after the game ol his defense. It climaxed a drive made Linda Ferrell, Mrs . Anna
''Our defense really went after possible when Jimmie Jones Hllldore, Miss Marchi Karr,.
them. They r@ally wanted that returned the kickoff 53 yards to
Mrs. Mary Lisle and Mrs.
shutout and it's a shame they the Cleveland 37.
Dorothy Jarvis.
Rookie quarterback La.,.Y
didn't ~I it."
'l'he Uon front four got to Lawrence pas8ed 44 yards lor
Phipps five times for 50 yards one touchdown and ran 19 to set
Iii looseS, and twice capitalized up another as Oakland
Tuesday, Sept. 10, will he
on the safety blitz to disrupt def'l8ted the Jets.
the last day 1o register lor
Lawrence, a free agent from
deep Cleveland penetrations.
the bus lrlp lo the Marshal~
One safety blitz caused Iowa, hit newly-acquired
Morehead
game.
To
Phipps to thrown an intercep. Frank Pitts on a scoring pass
register, call Jobn Henztion after the Browns had in the third quarter .
maM 875-1401. The bus will
Lawrence completed four of
driven to the Detroit 12.
leave Pleasant Valley
"We're still making mis- nine ~sses for 89 yards while
Hospital at 4:30 p.m. and
takes," Cleveland Coach Nick playing. only the third quarter
retura 1boul I :30 a.m. The
Skorich said. "We stopped and. a portion of the fourth.
Price is fll per person which
ounelves twice in the first half. Early in the final period he ran
includes a rnerve seal ticket
But yoo can do those things 19 yards to the New York 15
lor the game.
when you're still experimen- and three plays later . Leroy
Kelly, scoreii from the lour.
ting."
.

REEDSV ILLE
Miss Rutland, bridesmaids . Miss g uests. Mra . Tom Slley,
Robyn Ma r lene Mills, daughter Holly Miller, daughter of Mr. Marietta, an d Miss Jane Mn
o1 Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mills, and Mrs . Ml ck Miller, Mid- Sc.hwarz, Ma.son , W. Va .,
served as hostesses.
Route 3, Pomeroy, and Mr. dleport, was nower girt.
For a wedding lr ip to
Michael Grant Boring, son · of
Miss Mills and Mrs . Stewart
Columbus
the bride changed
Mr. and Mrs. Grant L. Boring, wore identica l gowns of yellow
Reedsville, were' married on polyester with flower design. into a three piece navy blue
Jun e 9, 2:30p.m., at the Helen The empire wais ts we r e and white polyester pan!suit
Mauck Galbreath Memorial trimmed with gold velvet with which she wore white
Chapel, Athens.
ribbOn and they had puffed access&lt;t"ies a nd the corsage
from he r bridal bouquet.
The Rev , Fred B. Hill per- sleeves and
s w eet he ~ r t
Mr. and Mrs. Boring res ide
for med the do uble ring necklil)es . They wore white
ceremQny. Dr. Eugene Wick- picture hats trimmed with gold at 648 S. Second St., Mid·
strom, Athens, was organist, velvet ribbon. Mi..ss Mille r 's dlepor t.
Mrs . Boring is a June
and Mrs . Cliff Colem a11 , dress was ide ntical a nd she
Ja ckson, soloist. She sang wore a band of daisies in her graduate of Ohio- University
where s he received a bac he lor
" We 've Only Just Begun ," hair.
" Time in a Bottle/' ''Speak
The bri desmaids' go wn s or science in elementary
Softl y Love," " My Sweet were ide ntical in design but education. She is a member of
Lady," a nd " T he Lord 's were in pastel green trimmed Kappa Delta Pi, educati on
Pra yer."
with dar k green velvet ribbon . honora r y, and is working in the
Two baskets or ye ll ow The ir white pic ture hats were teacher corps program at the
Elementary
gl a di oli with candela bra also trimmed in dark green Middlep ort
ribbon. They carried one long- School.
decora ted the altar .
Given in marr iage by he r- sterruned ye Uow rose . The
Mr. Boring is a senior at Ohio
pare nts, the brlde wore a: gown flow e r girl carried a baske t of Unive rsity where he is
of silk organza with Venise lace yellow daisies .
maj oring
in
secondary
trim . II was fa shioned with a
Mr . Hugh Martin , Jr ., education with a major in ·
cameo neck1 ine , sheer full Reeds ville, was best man, a nd biology. He will graduate in
bish op slee ves, an e mpire Mr . Michael Stewart, Racine, June, 1975. He is a member of
wais t, and a fitted bodice with was a groomsman. Ushers the Air Force ROTC, Arnold
a sheer yoke . The A-line skirt we r e Mr . Ken Ye rian , Air Society and will be comwas designed with lace· trim Glouster ; Mr . Roger Freeman, missioned in June as a Second
around the bottom , and the Deshle r , Mr. David Mills, Lieutenant in the Air Force.
attached c hapel length train Pomeroy, Route 3. Master
Out-or-county guests at the
was also trimmed with lace . Michae l Marlin , nephew of the wedding included Mr . and Mrs.
·The headpiece was a cap of groom, was the ringbearer .
Clifford B. Coleman and
Venise lace from which fell the
For her daughter's wedding, family, Jackson ; Mr. and Mrs.
bride's shoulder length veil Mrs. Mills wore a blue Tom Siley, Marietta ; Mrs.
which was of illusion with lace polyester A-line gown with Alma Jordan, Springfield; Mr.
trim. She carried a bouquet of jacket, white accessories , and and Mrs. Dave Mills and
yellow sweeUleart roses. Her a white sweetheart rose cor- family , Springfield; Miss Anna
jewelry was mother of pearl sage. Mrs. Boring ·was in a Jones, Proctorville; Paul
earrings and a gold brooc h lon g-s leeved
pink
dress Storz , Massillon ; Mr . Ja
belongin g to he r gr eat- trimmed with lace. She wore Moore, Bloomingburg, 0.; and
_g randmother, Mrs. Thomas black accessories and white Mr. and Mrs. Terry Hollman,
Riggs.
sweetheart rose corsage.
Morehead, Ky.
The bride's attendants were
Following the wedding, a
="==;;;;;
Miss Marylu Mil1er , Pomeroy , re ception was held in the
Route 3, sister of the bride, the Alumni Lounge in Baker
maid of honor; Mrs. Sharon Center. The bride ' s table
Stewart, Syracuse, the matron featured a three . tiered wedof honor , ahd Miss Debbie ding cake topped with the
Wood, Chester, Miss Patti lhle, traditional miniature bride and
Racine , Miss ·oonna Weber, · groom. An ·arrangement o£
yellow roses and white chrysan themwns were also used on
the table.
Mrs. Hugh Martin, sister of
the gr9om, reg_istered \he
and Mrs. Robert Barber, Steve
and Kevin, Gene Jones, Erma
Jean Connolly, Mike Connolly,
SERVICE ON
Arlene Connolly, Ricky Put- ·
man, Donald Putman, Mr end
Mrs. Jerry Griggs, Gary, Mike ·
and Kevin, Mrs. Gladys Dillon
and Dale D., Reedsville; Mr.
Ask your Nationwide ag.,nt
and Mrs. James Robertson and
ab out Nationwide's Hom.,Jimmy, Guysville; Mr. and
owne rs Insuranc e with
bullr-ln lnl/atlon protection}
MrS _Cecil Waggoner, _Rutland ;
In by 10, Out at 5
Cal l today.
Mrs. ~une Mullen anil Peggy,
Coolville: Steve Mullen,
P. J. PAULEY
·Belpre:
Stevie' Mullen,
PH. 992-2318
Parkersburg, W.Va.; Mr. and
307 Spring Ave ., ~omeroy
Mrs . Kenneth Barber and
Tammy, Hebron ; Jeff Dillon,
DRY CLEANING
Columbus; Bob Haney, Akron;
and Gary Hamlin, Akron.
LAUNDRY
Sending gifts were Mr. and
Notlan wllll Muluol Fir• lnourone• Co .
Mrs. John Johnson, Ft. Myers,
Hom o O ~lc • : Col umb us. Oh oo
992-5428 Pomeroy
Fla .

2 HR.
DRY

CLEAI'JING

(ON REQUEST)

•
1 DAY

1Oth birthday is celebrated

Syracuse
UMW

meets

or

Unfortunately for the Uons
Coach Rldt Fonano, two
,lrey lelmmates cl Munson was mjured la.91110811011; threw
,...,, he lolnlrW the club em the 15 of 21 panes against the
llldellnelat Soldier FlekL
Bl'OWIII lor 179 yards and one
S.fety Mllte Weger; ihe touchdown.
ttelldylnc lnftuence in the
Munson broke Detroit tradlJOUIIC Detratt aecondary, lcire · Ucm and Passed freqliently on
Hp.....,ll Iii bla left lee In a flnt down, and even put the
~ in f1nt quarter action long pass back lri the Uons
lllllardly nfchl u the Uons play book. He hit three dlf.
dllbbad the punchlell Ceve- ferenl receivers with ~­
lind llrvwna Ill their ahlbiUon covering lll yards or lliQI'e, The
llnlle, 21-7.
longest, a »-yarder to rookie
,.._ QullrteriMiclt Grec Lan- Jlrnmle Jones, wbo spent last
dr7 IUihnd al)U'IIne fra~ 110811011 playing in the shadows
1D ldl lhauJder in the llnal cl Kermit Joonson and James
...,_ wbln he threw a block McAlister at UCLA.
ll7lnl to .-tac flldter Jim · Jones alao returned a ldcltoff
O'llt:llo Cll aa end 81'1Uld.
53 yards to set up the lint
• Wtllr wiD be apsntecl on Detroit lll'OI'e, and added a
ltltiiJ Ill ..... Halpllal. Both he pointer himself in the llnal
... r...dl7 wiD be out in- Quarter on a !-yard run.

a

an d

Allan ta

'1.-) , HR -

"No, I ,t l)lnk you're offering me .too much," he says to Giles,

''

£11

P•rker ("h).

;Jn&lt;t Boccabella ;
and Correll. L P -

UPI Sporta Editor
NEW YORK (UPI) - They just doo 't make 'em like Billy
Werber anymore.
He hassomethlnl! on his mind, he says it strightout .
He was that way during his II years as a major league ballplayer with the Yankees, Red Sox, A's, RedsandGianL'l , and he's
the same way now.
Billy Werber hasn 't changed a bit. He's so hooest, it hurts.
Example :
'!be Reds are battling lor the National League pennant In
1939. They tratl the Cardinals In St. LouiB by one run late in the
sea1011 with Eddie Joost oo second base In the ninth innlnl! and
two out.
Werber, whom the Reds used to call ''Tiger," walks up to the
plate. He notices umpire Larry Goetz and, almost off-handedly,
says to him:
"I'm the best hitter in the coontry in a situation like this." He
then alngles to drive in Joost.
Example:
Werber bas an excellent year lor the Reds in 1939 and hell"' .
them win the pennant. The following spring he's offered a contract by Warren Giles, the Reds' general manager, but declines
to sign it.

••.

Walker

Brv.,nt, Metzg~r

By 1\IILTON RICHMAN

•

000 030 0.$)(- 8 8 0

Foote- ; Rooker (U IO J an d
SanQvllltn . LP - Rogers 07

By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sporu Editor

•

Mills-Boring vows taken

M• ior LIU IUe R f'I Uif i
e y Un i"CI Pr ~ss l ntern•f lon•l
Na t iOnll l Utve
Montreal
001 001 000- 2 6 0

Pitts .

~!M-"///.1.!

t*t

inflation .

SHIRT

FINISHING

Robinson's

If you're so rich,
wliy aren't you·smart?
So you 're makiilg a good
salary. But you' re not saving
any of it. Instead, you want to
go after the "big deal" that's
. going to make you a cool
mHiion. Maybe.
.
What happens if your big
scheme goes sour? You've still
got to get through the future.
And, let's face it. Nobody can
afford to take tomorroW for
granted.
So maybe you 'd better join
the P~t:yroll Savings Plan now.
Just stgn up at work. An
amount you specify will be set
aside from your ESYcheck cind
used to buy U.S. ~Savings Bnnds.
· That way, you can still
sfford to taken few financial
risks if that's your bag. But
you'll always have a solid cash
reserve to fall back on. And
that's being smart.

i Social I
~

Polly 's Pointers

~

•

j Calendari
MONDAY
SALEM CENTER PTA, at
the echool, 7:30 p. m. Program
by the '1-H Club. ·
BETHEL 62, International
Order of Job's Daughters, 7:30
p. m ., Pome r oy Maso nic
Temple .
MORGAN CENTE R Home
Mission , open lOa. m. to 2 p. m.
Free clothin g for needy.
SChoolhouse at E no.

•
'

f

I

•
•

~,

J V•

"

• •

"""

POME ROY E LEMENTARY
PTA, 7:30 p.m. Monday for a
get-acqua inted and mem bership drive meeting, All
pare nts urged to attend .
MEI GS GIRLS ' Bette r
Athleti c Boos te rs, 7 p.m .
Monday at Meigs Senior High
SChool. Everyone welcome.
POMEROY
Eleme ntar y
PTA Monday, 7:30p.m . at the
school. It will be a ge t
acquainted meeting. E veryone
is invited to attend . Refr es hments will he served.

11!1:
';: '

CHAD CARBON

Mr. and Mrs. Victor Young l/l

Wedding vows taken
at church in Indiana

•

..... .

PLAINFIEI,D, Ind. - The and tied in back with large .
First Baptist Church at Plain- bows. Both wore lace trimmed
field , Ind . was the setting for capelets. They carried white
!be wedding of Miss Katherine baskets trimmed with blue
Marie Eggleton and Vic tor bows' and streamersfiiled with
Charles Young Ill, both of red rosebud petals.
Indianapolis, Ind.
Master
Michael
Paul
The bride is the daughter of Eggleton,
Indianapolis ,
Edwin E. Eggleton and Nancy· brother of the bride and Master
Allen
Young,
J ... Eggleton, both of In- Bradley
dianapolis. Mr. Young is the Pomeroy, brother of the brideson of Mr. and Mrs. Victor c. groom , were the ringbear~rs .
Young, Jr. , East Main St. , They were in white polyester
Pomeroy.
pants with light blue shirts,
·The wedding was an event of white ties , and navy polyester
June29at 2 p.m. with the Rev. sport coats. They carried
Sonny Hayes performing the identical heart-shaped satin
double ring ceremony. Miss pillows trimmed with lace and
Judy
Lydick,
organist, white satin streamers . Ali of
presented nuptial music in- the bride's attendants wore
eluding "They Long to be pendants, gifts of the bride.
ClOse," "Precious and FeW,"
For her daughter's wedding ,
"We've Only Just Begun" and Mrs. Eggleton wore a long blue
" Love Story."
polyester lmi~own with white
The church decorations lace ruffles at the neckline and
featured gold altar vases with the wrists. She wore a corsage
white gladioli and blue tinted of yellow tinted carnations.
pointed mwns. White satin · Mrs. Young was in an aqua
bOws marked pews for the blue polyester knit dress with
.
short sleeves and a high
families.
Given in marriage by her rounded collar. Her acgrandfather, Mr. Clifton cessories were aqua with
Wilcoxon, the bride was attired cream accen.t. She also wore a
in a gown of nylon organ~a corsage or yellow carnations .
accented with embroidered
A reception honoring 'the
lace and bands of nylon. The couple was held in the church
gown was fashioned with ·a auditorium immediately
fitted bodice, a collar of lace following the ceremony. The
providing a bib effect in both bride's table featured a fourfront and back, sheer bishop tiered wedding cake with blue
sleeves witli a ruffle at the and yellow roses, topped with a
wrist. A ruffle of rayon and large heart encircled with
cotton trimmed the hemline lovebirds, rings ~nd l~ce. Blue
and the gown featured an at- mums were used on the table.
Presiding were Mrs. Katherine
tached chapel .train.
The bride wore a Juliet cap M. Wilcoxen, grandmother of
with embroidered lace and the bride, Pam Snyder, Kathy
seed pearls which held her Parks, and Judy O'Day and
elbow length veil. Her bouquet Shirley Whiteman, aunts of the
was a Windsor cascade of bride. They wore daisy corwhite carnations, yellow sages. Guests were registered
sweetheart roses, and baby's by Kathy Parks.
breath tied with white and
For a trip to the Vincenses,
ivory satin streamers. She Ind. the bride changed into a
wore a cameo necklace, gilt of navy blue polyester !mit dress
the groom.
with scoop neckline trinuned m
Miss Pamela J. McKinney, white . She wore white ac.
lndianap ollS. ,· was the bride's cessories and the yellow
·
mal' d of honor. She was in a rosebud corsage from her
blue snd yellow flowered voile bridal bouquet.
with capeiet, and a light blue
Mr. and Mrs. Young reside at
picture hat .With dark blue satin 910 Broken Bow Trai,!, Apt.
streamers . Her
nosegay 10! 4, Indianapolis, Ind. 46224 ·
bouquet was of yellow and The bride is a graduate of Ben
white daisies with blue corn- Davis High School, Inflowers and - yellow satin dianapQlis, class of 1974, and is
streamers.
a member of the Wesley United
Miss
Rebecca
Lynn Methodist Church. She is
Eggleton, Indianapolis, sister employed at the Plainfield
of the bride, and Miss Janice ·. National Bank as a teller.
Louise Young, Pomeroy, sister
Mr. Young graduated from
of the bridegroom, were the Meigs High School in 1972 and
b r'desmaids. Tbey also wore is a member of the First
'
h
h
i ' f'ld
blue and yellow flowered voile Baptist C urc of Pam le •
.gowns with matching capelet.s Ind. He is a member of Local
and had white picture hats with Union IBEW 1393 and iS emlight blue satin streamers. All ployed with the Underground
of the attendants carried Electric Construction Co. as an
nosegays of yellow and white operator.
daisies with blue cornflowers.
Going from here for the
Mr. Douglas Wade Moffitt, wedding were Mr. and Mrs.
Indianapolis, brother of the · Victor C. Young, Jr., Miss
bride, was best man, and the Janice Young, Bradley Young,
ushers were Mr. Thomas Pomeroy: Kimberly Dean,
Edwin Eggleton, Indianapolis, Middleport; and Mr. Thomas
brother of the bride, and Mr. Salzer, Reynoldsburg.
Allen Keers, Indianapolis,
ushers. Tlie groom and the
OESPARTYSET
male attendanls wore light
The 1974 OES District 25
blue brocade tuxedos trimmed Party will be held at the
In black with matching black Alexander High School, adpants. The groom wore a white jacent to the Albany Masonic
shirt, the attendanls light blue Temple . on US 00, Saturday,
'shirts.
Oct. 5 at 6:30 p.m. The party
. Kimberly Kathleen Deem, theme
this
year
is
Middleport, niece of the bride- "Hobgoblins" with special
groom, and Wendy Ann Justis, halloween entertslnment and a
Indianapolis, cousin of the Uve band. Reservations are $4
bridegroom, were the flower with check by Sept. ·30 to Mrs.
girls. They wore long white Ida Keirns, Rt. I, Bnx 304,
dotted swiss gowns with blue Albany, 45710. Mrs. June
and green heart accent. The Stanley, district president,
gowns were fashioned with Invites aU OES members to
lace collars, empire waists, attend.

D.

SARAH EYNON
Sarah Elizabeth Eylion,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Eynon, Pomeroy,
will observe her first birthday at the home of her
parents on Wednesday, Sept.

'

TIJESDAY
MEIGS CHAPTER 53, DA V,
Tuesday, 7:30 p .m. at chapt.:r
home on Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy. Refreshments, all
members asked to attend.
RACINE LODGE 461 F&amp;AM,
regular meeting, Tuesday
night at temple. Sojourners
night to be observed; all
Master Masons welcome.
XI GAMMA MU CHAPTER,
B~ta Sigma Phi Sorority,
progressive dinner starting at
the home of Mrs . Annie
Chapman, 6: 30 p.m. and
concluding at the home of Mrs.
Jennifer Anderson . Business
meeting to follow.
WINDING TRAIL GARDEN
Club, 8 p.m. Tuesday at the
horne of Mrs. Faye Pratt. Mrs .
Thompson to demonstrate
plaque making.
REGULAR
meeting
Southeastern Ohio Gospel
Music Assoc., 6 p .m ., potluck,
7:30p.m ..

11.

Mr. and Mrs. Dan Swartz

Couple honored at church
COLUMBUS - Mr. and Mrs . and silver coffee service and
Dan Swartz of Columbus were punch bowl adorned the bullet
honored on Saturday evening, table . Decorated cakes comAug. 24, at the Second Ave. plimented the decor .
·Presbyterian Church with a
A bOok of pictures depicting
party in observance of their different aspects in the life of
25th wedding anniversary. Mr. the celebrating couple was
Swartz is a former . Meigs displayed on the guest book
County resident.
table.
For the celebration the
Attending the affair ·were
tables were. decorated with Mr. Swartz's daughter, Mrs.
arrangements of summer Ila Faye Kimes, and Mrs .
garden flowers and candles. A Virgie Buckley and family,
lB.ce · cloth, silver candle Athen~; ·
Mrs.
Swartz ' s
holders with pink tapers, pink . daughters, Mrs . Millicent
and white flower arrangement Hart, Lancaster, and Mrs.
Mary
Lou
Thompson,
Columbus, and their families ..
6
Nwnerous other relatives and
friends from throughout Ohio
. attended the celebration.
Entertainment included
piano selections with a solo by

UM Wp ledaeJ
support of
I

By Polly Cramer

Panel 'peeling '
/ a disappointment
DEAR POLLY - My parents bought a new 30-inch ran ge to
replace Je..inch stove and now the white laminated pLastic wall
(a best known brand) back of it is stained. They tried various
cleaner s but the paneling just peeled off so we need some ideas .
- Ms. C.B.

a

DE AR POLLY - My Pet Peeve is with the curre nt practice
of supermarkets advertising meats at a sale price and then wben
you go to buy it lind it packaged in such large quantities t hat a
single packa~e costs several dollars. Unless one has a ~r~zer or
a lar ge family it is not feasible to buy such large qua nt1ties. How
discouraging th is must be for the elde rly and those livin g alone to
lind the large packages ar e not within tbeir limited budgeL'l . MRS. H. W.
DEAR POLLY - I have help for Mrs, K. F . who sought a
recipe for treating materials so they would be flame resistant.
Mix nine ounces borax , 4 ounces bOric a cid and a gallon of water.
Dip fabric in solution, wring by hand and let dry. - MRS. C. W.
DEAR GIRLS - Several readers recommended this same
solution . 01 course, such a treatment must be repeated after
each washing and the fabric is put in !be solutlon DRY.
Remember, too, this is to make an article (not a Christmas tree )
fire resistant, not rireproof. A fife prevention ~uthorlty. I talked
with says they no longer recommend this, as they formerly did,
as there are commercial producL'l (look in the yellow l"'ges of the
phone book ) that do a better job. It also was suggested that
should one want to use this it is well to take a piece of tho' Iabrie,
treat with the solution and when dry carefully hold a lighted
match to it to see the results. I also was told tbe fabric will
doubtless he stiff and feel clammy to the touch so would not he
good lor clothing but only draperies, etc. A trial run might bring
one to the de~ ision that it is not worth the time and energy
required. - POLLY.
·
DEAR POLLY - Keep a magnifying glass handy in Y"ur
car's glove compartment. .You will find it is useful for rear'.mg
small print or maps when on a trip.
To keep short stemmed nowers neatly arranged floot. a lacy
plastic doily in the container or water and pokP tile sten•&lt;: through
the holes in the design. - MRS. R. L
DEAR POLLY - A beauticie.•• neighbor gave me the
following money-5aving idea. Try .nixing your shamlJ(lO with
equal parts of water. They are now so concentrated that we
usually use more than is needed.
diluting we can use and
alford any desired brand. lthink
more and rinses out
easier. - ALICE.
·

WEDNESDAY
WHITE ROSE LODGE
Wednesday at 1:30 p~ m . at
Middleport Legion Hall.

Plans have been cm~pJet.d
for the open-dlurch weddln&amp; ol
Miss Opal Mae Berry ,
dau ghter of Mrs . Thelma c
Be rry , Middleport,
and
Chester Wigal , Jr., son of Mr.
and Mrs. Chester Wigal, alao ol
Middleport.
The wedding will he an event
of Sept. 27 at 7:30p.m. at the
Middleport Church of Christ.
R ev. George Gla•e wlii of.
ficiate at the dooble rlnl
c e remony . Immediately
foll owing the ceremony a
r ece ption wUI he held in the ,
church fellowship hall for the
couple .
·
Miss Berry will graduate
from the School o! 'Nursing at
th e Technical College la
Nelsonville. Wigal is employed
at the OrvUle Products Co.,
Orville. The couple will reside'
there following the wedding.
SING SLATED

The
Duncan
Family,
. Florida, will he featured at a
hymn sing to be held at the
Freedom Gospel Mission at
7:30p.m . Tuesday. The public
is invited.

WOMEN'S

CLOGS

Latigo Leather
Navy Leather
and Suedes

'5.00 f'r,
heritage house
Your Thom MeAn Store

Middleport, 0 .

TUESDAY NIGHT IS
FAMILY FUN NIGHT
AT BURGER CHEF/ .

Church, 7:30 p.m. Persons
interested in helping promote
the 255 miD operatmg tax levy
are asked to attend.

INCREDIBURG/BLE!

STEW.. El&lt;TRACTlOH

CARPET
CLEANING

THURSDAY
LAUREL Cliff Better Health
Club, 7:30 pro. at the home of
Mrs. Nellie Tracy.
MEIGS Crnmunity School,
operation tax levy promptional
planning meeting, Trinity
Teresa Buckley, Allred, guitar
and vocal numbers and gospel
duets with gUitar • accordion
accompaniment.
Gifts and ·c ards were
presented to the couple, Mr.
and Mrs, Swartz were married
25 years ago in Girard by Mrs.
Swartz' father, the late Rev. R.
P . Hudnell,

'
Special
Family Meal Prices
4 p.m. to cloelng

I

FOR ADULTS
C~mmarclal

·

Big Shet•
French Fries,
Turnover &amp;
.arge Drink

CLEANING

..1/' ,.;,,fl',. /!,r JG;i, ..
11' ~Jo, i .sc ,.,,t · if;~/·· ·

Only

.,

FOR KIDS

$}15

Funburger'" .
Only
.
French f'!ies, . ,~&amp;o~
· Small Dnnk · ·.
&amp; lollipop

·-·

JFOR FREE EST/MATt
CALL: "2·2635

Hindu girl
LETART FALLS - Support
of a 12-year-old girl in India
was pledged lor another year·
when the United Methodist
Women of the Letart Falls
Church mel Wednesday night
at the home of Mrs. Bert

Layette shower held
SYRACUSE - Mrs. Homer Terry Moore, Helen Harris and
Mills and Mrs. Ralph Sham Mrs. Hugh McPahil, Syracuse.

entertained recently with a
layette shower honoring Mrs.
Diane Mills, Syracuse.
A pink and blue color scheme
was carried out in tbe gift table
G =. at the meeting was a decorations and also featured
letter from the child ex- on the table was a decorated
pressing her appreciation for cake.
the support of Methodist
Games were played with
women . Mrs. Ernest Shuler prizes going to Teresa Holstein
presided at the meeting and and Sandy Winebrenner with
announced that during the past Mrs. Antha Mills winning the
lwo months 90 visitations to door prize. Sandwiches, mints,
community shut-ins were· potato chips, coffee and punch
made. To open the meeting were served with a decorated
Mrs. Shuler read scripture cake.
I
G I 5 1•26
Other guests were Mrs.
rom a . '"' ·
"The Importance of Gen. Benny Spears, Mrs. Randy
tleness" was the program topic Cross, Peggy Yeauger, An·
by Mrs. Grinnm . . Readings nette Mills, Mrs. Austin
were "The Spirit in Human Newsome, Susie Craig, Mrs.
Nature" by Mrs. Don Bell'; William Zirkle and Jackie,
"Strength in Numbers" by Launa Gr~n, Mrs. Grace
· Mrs. Shuler; "Each Day is a Greer, Mrs. Robert Holstein,
New Account" by Mrs. Andrew all of Syracuse; Mrs. Rufus
Cross; ''Friends"by Mrs. Johh Browning, Mrs. Frank Mllls,
Hill; and "Gentleness" by Mrs. Rutland; Mrs. Perry Hollman,
Grimm. Mrs . Shuler had Debbie and Frances, Midprayer.
dleport.
Refreshments were served to
Sendi~g gifts were Mrs .
those named and Mrs. Harold Charles Hively, Shirley
Roush, Mrs. Alice Balser, and Sigman, Gallipolis; Mrs. Sam
Mrs. Erma Wilson. Mrs. Cross Shain, Racine ; Mrs. Belvia
will host the October ineetlng. Amberger, Brenda Hayes,
Mrs . Marie Devetro, Mrs.

AT ANYTIME

-....J

·tngels Furniture

1503 EASTERN AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

MIDDLEPORT

;.::::.:==-:::.::::.::::==~~~~~~~~~~~~--=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::=..

"Wise laundry habits save mon~ and
valuable gas."
.

"These washing ond drying sugges- naturol .resources wisely. l urge you
dons will help you to conserve gas to take part in conserving energy
energy. And that means less gas to with your very next wash."
pay tor. As our nation faces an
yJ
erlergy cr.lsls, we must use all our
. p~
1 (_~/"(/

·

o/l.-::7=A

,..
Autorriatlc washers use lots '
of hot water. A full load .

And don't over'dry. SynthetIcs and other light clothes

makes the best use of water
and the gas that makes it
hot. So avoid partial loads,

heat to dry. Follow your in-

which WB!iile both these re~

drying times.

don't take as much time or

struction book for proper

sources and the money that
pays tor them.

Wipe the Inside of the tub
with a damp cloth and clean
the lint filter each ttme you
use your dryer. Check .yol!r
operating manual for In ~
structions on keeping your
appliance In top shape .

Washing a lull load repaye
you.r efforts again when you
dry your clothes In your gas
dryer. A full load makes the
most efficient use of your
dryer, Don't waste
your money and gas ~~~
on partial loads.

,--n

New Gas Appliances

PACKAGE POLICY:
'TOTAL COVERAGE

992·2143
992-742P

~f

1

properly, it re ducea the efficiency de·
signed Into ·vour ·g al dryer.
Use a full loa~. but nothing
more, .to gel the moet for

Our
complete
comprehensive
homeowners.' policy covers loss due to
fire, theft, storm damage, more. One
premium.

102 W. Main

But don't overload your
dryer, either. 11 the air can't

your money:

you•re thinking -of rapl•cyour Old
dryer or

no

circulate

DALE C. WARNER INS. AGENCY ,

OFFICE HOURS 9:30 TO 12, 2 TO 5 I CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT ST .•

'...

Mr. and Mrs. Gene Carson.
Route 4, Pomeroy, e n!ertamed recently with a
party honoring their son,
Chad, on his third birthday.
Cake and ice eream were
served to Mrs. Maxine
Owens, Mrs. Freda Casto,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Carson, Debbie Carson, and
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Sigman
and Aady.

Wigal-Be"y
vows
slated
.

a••

water heater, remember
you'll contln .. to gtt illo
g.. you need. And the new,
modom goo oppli•IICh help

'"

conaerve gla bec1u1e
U..y're moro olltclonL

I

Pomeroy,

.,
'

• •

•

�4 - ~ Doily Sentlnel, Mlddleport-Pomeroy,O., Mooday,Sept. 9, 1974

Today's

Sport Parade

Rog~rs .

10 L HR -

'

wbo never has heard anything like this from a ballplayer before
or ever does again afterward. "Last year I pressed you too hard.
I got more money than I deserved. I'm going to give you credit
for that now."
Werber signs for less than Giles originally offered.
When he left baseball, Billy Werber went into the insurance
~In Washington and was eminently successful. He retired
last year at 65,la working on a book a boot his era in baseball and,
according to witnesses, "still hits the baD a country mile" on the
golf course just ootslde ~g Gap, N. C.
Werber's basic philosophy basn'tcbanged at all since he was
playing ball, .
"He is obsessed with the idea of anybody getting something
without working for It," says Gahe Paul, the Yankees' President
wbo was in the front office for the Reds when Werjler played for
them. "He is a terrific person, a solid human being and one of the
he,gt competitors I've ever seen in the 46 years I've been in
baseball."
With his type phliOilOphy, the hackles on Billy Werber's back
went straight up not long ago when he heard Baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn had said "now is the time for the major
leagues to have a blackmariager." Kim also said he would "push ·

..
'
•

••
'

hard" to see one was named.
Ii was one of those politically opportune statemenL'l, so

•
' ,.

transpan!flt that it didn't really fool anyone, least of all the
bla.c ks.
But Werber had some questions he wished to put to Klihn. So
he wrote.him a letter, copies of which he sent to a number of
newspapers as well as several major league officials. Werber's
letter aloog irith Kuhn's answer were printed by the New York

.

••
•

•

~..,Sunday.

.

.

Werber IISked Kuhn 21 questioos in his letter.
"Why,"he wanted to know, •'haveyou taken the position that
'now Is the time for the major leagues to have a black manager?'
Since blacks represent 25 per cent of the playing personnel, why
·
not push for 25percentin the managing category? ·
"Would this not he more equitable? If 25 per cent of the
players are black and 25 per cent of th!! managers are black,
would you 'favor a black commissioner for 25 per cent of the
time?
· "Inasmuch as you distinguish players tiy race, will not the
Jews aok for tepresentation on the mana~ment level?"
Perhaps they should. For both Kulm's and Werber's benefit,
there have been only two Jewish major league managers in
history ,- Johllny Kling, very brlefiy, and Harold "Lefty"
· Pllllllps, not much longer.
To continue with Werber's questions of Klihn, though.
"Wbaf do you propose to aay should the Italians demand an
Italian manager and the Puerto Ricans demand a Puerto Rican
mallager? Are you of the point of view that only blacks are to be
considered as a minority race?" as!&lt;ed Werber.
"Moot cl the questions raised in your letter are irrelevant to
the !slue," Kului wrote .b ack Werber.
"I bave never suggested that being black by itseH was
enough of a qualification," he added.
Certainly It Isn't, but it would seem Billy Werber was sharp
enough to see that, or at least say that, before Bowie Klihn.
Gahe Paul says Werber's letter might lead some people, who
don't know him to think he's a racist "arxi I can assure you
unquallfledly he is anything but that."
On the othersideofthe coin, Palil says Werber isn't aware of
all the facL'l when he makes some references in his letter to
Frank Robinson's past.
PeriOilally, I can easily understand the impatience of the
black man with not getting an opportunity to manage a major
league cl\lb solely because of his color, and simtlarly, I can
rudDy understand Billy Werber's Impatience with the idea of
simply handing over a job to an individual only because of his

ootor.

,

There is mequity here on both sides, and only one thing really
can solve the problem. Education. in tlme,l'msure it wiD.
I havt a world of confidence Iii 'the individuals struggling
irith it now. The individuals I'm talking about are black, white,
' red, yellow - all different colors.

Lions club
Browns, 21-7
By

RICHARD E. GOSSELlN

DETROIT ( UPI ) - Bill
· Munsoruays be's ready to go in
'tbe Detroit Llooa' National
JPootball league opener next
week against the Chicago

·Bears.

•••

defmltely.
Landry ·was expected to be
the backup man to Munson.
Munson's performance Saturday indicated Landry's lllOS
can he ablorbed wlthoot much
dama~ to the club.
Munson, who gut~ the club
to a 4.-! record after Landry

u-

..

•

San Fran .

000 300 000- l 6

000 110 lOx - 5 8 0

4

Sosa

( 7)
Reed (10 8)
Bryar'll (3.

(S) ,

Maflhews !16th) .

Los Ano .
100 203 010- 1 1.4 1
Cinc inna t i 000 110 010- .,j s 1
Rau , Houugh (6L Marshall
( 8 ) and Ferguson ; Billi n gham.
Bo r bon
16) ,
Ba ney
(81.
McEnaney 18 l and Benc h . WP
- Rau 113-71 . L P - B ill i ngha m
( 18 9 ) . H RS - Fergus on ( 15t h ),
Pe-r ez (23 rd l, Dr iessen ( 6th),
Rose (Jrd l.
N ew Yor k
001 ooo 040- S 8 o
St . LOUiS
100 000 01Q-3 8 0
Se a ver ( 10 . 8) and D ye r ;
M cG lot h en , Gar man ( 9 ) and
Sim m on s. L P - M cG loth en (1 69L HR - Gar r ett (1 1th ) .
San D iego
011 000 000- 2 8 3
Hous ton
100 00 1 lOx- 3 4 1
Jones 17-20)
Can l zzaro ;
Qr iff in , F or S:c h (BJ and C.
John son . W P - Gr iff in f13 -8J.
HR S - H il ton ( l stl , Howard

""d

l lst l.

Ph il a .
001 000 040- 11 14 I
Chic ago
300 200 104 - 10 10 3
Twit c hell ,
Garb er
( 4),
Chr istenson (8) and Boone ;
Dettore , Todd ( 3) LaR oc h e (SJ ,
Zamora 18 1, K remme i {8),
Hutson 19 1 and Swisher . WP Garber (2-0l. LP - Dettore (1 .
3). HR S M onda y ( 16t h ),
Morales ( 14th l.
American League
Bait .
ooo 300 001 - ..t 9 1
Cleveland
211 ooo 21x - 7 9 1
Palmer , Jackson (1) and
Hendri c ks ; J . Perry , Buskey
(7) and Ell is. WP J . Perry
( 1 ~ · 10 ). LP Palmer ( 6-11) .
HRS Hendrick s ( 19th L
M cCraw (5 th ), Cabel l (2n d),
Spi kes (20th ).

Mr. and Mrs. Michael Boring

Vikings,
Dolphins

Detroit
105 013 010- 11 12 2·
New York 000 110 100- 3 7 I
Coleman
( 12- 12 )
and
Freehan ; T idrow , Mart inez ( 4),
M cDowell (6) and Mun son .
Dempsey ( 7) . L P - Tidrow ( ll ·
12 ). HRs F reehan (1 3th l.
Chambl iss (5th ).

~~~~(uy ~gg ~g6 l8J=: :~ ~ I

rugged
M:!=~~klngs

If the
and
Blyleven , Campbell ( 7 ) and the Miami Dolphins, the two
Roof ; Dal Caoton . Mingor i 161. partic!'pantsl' nSuperBowlVIII
Me Daniel IB l and Martinez.
Healy (8 ) . WP .!... Blyleven 04 - la~t
season , have any
15 l. LP - Dal Canton {8-9) . HRs
- Roof 12nd ), Darwin (23rdJ . weaknesses, they weren't in
--evidence Saturday night as
Milwaukee 400 000 020- 6 9 1
Boston
ooo 132 20x- a 10 1 both clubs w.ound up preseason
Rodt:ig·uez , Wright (5) , Mitlfr play with corivincing victories.
(6 ), Sprague (8) and Port.er ;
JOHN E. CONNOLLY
Mar ichal , Pole · {l ), Vea l e ra J,
The
defending
world
Segui (.8) and McCarber . WP champion Dolphins-rode the 40Pole (I -OJ. tP - Wr ight { 8-19 1. year--oldarmo!Earl Morrall to
HR - Evans (8th ) .
a 3().7 victory over the Chicago
Texas
200 0·10 101- 5 11 1
Oakland
000 000 001 - 1 7 2 Bears. The Dolphins waited
LONG BOTTOM - The lOth
Jenkins !22 -11) and Sund berg ; Holtzman , Parsons ( 8) , until lbere were nine minutes birthday of John Edward
Knowles (8 ) and Fosse . L P. left in tbe second quarter Connolly, son of Mr. and Mrs .
Holtzman 117 -14) . HR - Sund · before they made a first down · Dale ·Connolly, was celebrated
berg ("3rd ).
. ·
·
and then scored 10 quick points recently with a cookout at the
Chicago
001 000 000- 1 1 2
Connolly home ,. Long Bottom.
Calif .
ooo Ooo ooo- o 7 3 in the final 1:34 of tbe half.
Bnb Griese hit Paul Warfield
Cake and ice cream were
Kaat.
Forster
( 1)
and
Downing ; Hassler (4 -10) and
on a 40-yard .TD pass and Garo served following the dinner and
Egan . WP - _Kaat 116-13) .
Yepremian added · a 43-yard the afternoon and evening were
spent playing. baseball ,
field goal.
Major League Leaders .
Morrall entered the game in basketball, horseshoes and
By United Press International
Leading Batters
the second 'half and promptly badminton.
National League
Guests were Mr. and Mrs.
g ab · r h pet . launched the Dolphins on
Garr , All
136 576 79 204 .354 successive touchdown drives of Dale Connolly, Sr., Dale Lee,
Grvy, LA
134 559 83 183 .327
John, Disna and Deena, Mr .
Zisk, P itt
127 463 68 150 .324 73 and 68 yards, ending them
Olivr, Ptt
124 518 82 166 .320 with scoring passes. of 21 yards
and
Mrs. Chesler Foully ,
Sm ith , St. L.
Johnny Deeter, Betty Jo Hunt,
.
122 433 67 138 .319 to'Howard Twilley and 19 yards
Strgll , Pitt
to
Marlon
5riscoe.
Mrs.
Connie Connolly' Amy
117 428 79 135 .315
Morraif was 7-for-7 for 102 and Kristina, Mr.s . Mabel
Brck, st.'t:
132 544 89 111 .314
Gross, Ho
134 500 69 157 .314 yards passing before he was
Sanderson, Long Bottom; Mr.
Bcknr , LA
122 487 69 152 .312 lilted for third string quarMontanez , Ph i l
121 434 44 135 ,311 terback Don Strock,
American League
Bob Berry passed for three
g ab r h pet.
Crw , Mnn
134 528 74 192 .364 touchdowns and Oscar Reed
Hrgrv , Tx
114 363 .52 123 .339 ran for three ~ore to spur the
Orta, Chi
121 452 69 146 .323 ·
Yaz , Bos
131 453 82 139 .307 Vikings to a 42-U romp over the
McRa, KC
126 457 61 140 .306 San Diego Chargers.
Rand I, Tx
134 462 62 140 .303
The Dolphins, who have won
Mddx, NY
115 379 60 115 .303
Allen , Chi
128 462 84 139 .301 26 out of 28 games the past two
Pin ill , NY
120 445 63 134 .301
Jcksn , Ok
131 450 81 135 .300 seasons, romped to their
Home Runs
second consecutive Super Bowl
National League : Schmidt,
Phil 3~ ; Wynn , LA 30 ; Bench , victory with a 24-7 triumph
Cin 28 ; Perez, Cin. Cedeno . Hou over the Vikings in Houston
and Starg_ell, Pitt 23 .
American League: Allen , Ch i last January . Miami and
32 ;
Ja c kson ,
Oak
28 ; Minnesota
finished with
Burroughs, Tex 25 ; Darwin ,
identical 12-2 records in the
Minn and Tenace, Oak 23.
Runs Batted 1n
1973 campaign and are rated
SYRACUSE - Thirty-lwo
National League: Ben ch . Cln
108 ; Schmidt, Phil 106 ; Wynn , the favorites to win their visits with the sick and shut.in
LA 100 ; Garvey, LA 97 ; Zlsk , divisional championshl"' again
were reyorted during the
Pitt 92 .
American
League : this . season. Regular season recent meeting oi the United
Burroughs, Tex 112 ; Bando , competition hegins next week.
Methodist Women . of . the
O.!!k 9~ ; Allen , Chi and Jackson ,
In other Saturday games it Syracuse Asbury United
Oak 88 ; Darwin, M lnn and Rudl ,
Oak 86 .
was New Orleans 24 Houston Methodist Church held at the
Stolen Bases
National League : Brock , St. L 16, Detroit 21 Cleveland 7, and
home
of
Mrs.
Dana
103 ; Morgan , Cln 58; Lpes. LA Oakland 31 New York Jets 6.
Winebrenner.
55 :
Wide receivers Doug WinsAmerican League : North ,
Mrs. Opal Kloes, president,
Oak 49 ;
Patek ,
Kc
32 ; low and Joel Parker ran for a
gave
the call to worship by
Lowenstein, Clev and Carew ,
touchdow.n_ ·apiece on end reading "Golden Nuggets" and
M Jnn 31 .
Pitching
around plays to spark the lwo other articles from the
National League : Bi llingham ,
Cln 18-9 ; Messers.mith , LA 16 ·6 ; Saints to a come-from-behind
' 'Healing Fountain" .
McGlothen , St . L 16-9 : . P . 24-16 victory over Houston.
Devotions
by Mrs. Helen
Niekor , Atl16-11 ; Reu.ss , P itt 15Winslow's 13-yard scamper Teaford were
9 ; Gullett , Cln IS -10 .
' entitled "Witness
American League : Hunter, came . with 13:00 left in the
the Spirit". Officers' reports
Oak 22 -10 ; Jenk in$, Tex 22 -11 ;
Tlant , Bos 20-11 : Wood , Chl 20 - game and capped a 52-yard were given and the birthday of
17 ; Busby , KC 19-13.
drive. Placekicker Bill Mc-- Mrs, Irene Parker was ob·
Clard's el&lt;tra point put the served.
Even more of a factor than Salilts ahead for the first time
The program by Mrs.
Munson and Jones In the Lions' since they led 10-.1 at half.
Dorothy Winebrenner included
Allie Taylor and charlie two
win was lhe play of the defense,
articles,
"Unlikely
which ·held the Browns Sanders scored touchdowns in Church" 8nd uwomen of In~
scoreless unW the final 25 a 3: 16 span early in the third dia". Both were taken from
seconds when Mil!:e PhiPI"' quarter to lead Detroit over the Response Magazine . Mrs .
.
threw a 13-yard scoring pass to Browns.
Teaford read "A Man Must he
Taylor's t)lree-yard touchSteve Holden.
fot Something". Attending .
"They just kept coming, down run broke a scoreless tie besides those named were Mrs.
didn't they?" Forzano asked at the start of the second half.
Margaret Eichinger, Mrs.
after the game ol his defense. It climaxed a drive made Linda Ferrell, Mrs . Anna
''Our defense really went after possible when Jimmie Jones Hllldore, Miss Marchi Karr,.
them. They r@ally wanted that returned the kickoff 53 yards to
Mrs. Mary Lisle and Mrs.
shutout and it's a shame they the Cleveland 37.
Dorothy Jarvis.
Rookie quarterback La.,.Y
didn't ~I it."
'l'he Uon front four got to Lawrence pas8ed 44 yards lor
Phipps five times for 50 yards one touchdown and ran 19 to set
Iii looseS, and twice capitalized up another as Oakland
Tuesday, Sept. 10, will he
on the safety blitz to disrupt def'l8ted the Jets.
the last day 1o register lor
Lawrence, a free agent from
deep Cleveland penetrations.
the bus lrlp lo the Marshal~
One safety blitz caused Iowa, hit newly-acquired
Morehead
game.
To
Phipps to thrown an intercep. Frank Pitts on a scoring pass
register, call Jobn Henztion after the Browns had in the third quarter .
maM 875-1401. The bus will
Lawrence completed four of
driven to the Detroit 12.
leave Pleasant Valley
"We're still making mis- nine ~sses for 89 yards while
Hospital at 4:30 p.m. and
takes," Cleveland Coach Nick playing. only the third quarter
retura 1boul I :30 a.m. The
Skorich said. "We stopped and. a portion of the fourth.
Price is fll per person which
ounelves twice in the first half. Early in the final period he ran
includes a rnerve seal ticket
But yoo can do those things 19 yards to the New York 15
lor the game.
when you're still experimen- and three plays later . Leroy
Kelly, scoreii from the lour.
ting."
.

REEDSV ILLE
Miss Rutland, bridesmaids . Miss g uests. Mra . Tom Slley,
Robyn Ma r lene Mills, daughter Holly Miller, daughter of Mr. Marietta, an d Miss Jane Mn
o1 Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mills, and Mrs . Ml ck Miller, Mid- Sc.hwarz, Ma.son , W. Va .,
served as hostesses.
Route 3, Pomeroy, and Mr. dleport, was nower girt.
For a wedding lr ip to
Michael Grant Boring, son · of
Miss Mills and Mrs . Stewart
Columbus
the bride changed
Mr. and Mrs. Grant L. Boring, wore identica l gowns of yellow
Reedsville, were' married on polyester with flower design. into a three piece navy blue
Jun e 9, 2:30p.m., at the Helen The empire wais ts we r e and white polyester pan!suit
Mauck Galbreath Memorial trimmed with gold velvet with which she wore white
Chapel, Athens.
ribbOn and they had puffed access&lt;t"ies a nd the corsage
from he r bridal bouquet.
The Rev , Fred B. Hill per- sleeves and
s w eet he ~ r t
Mr. and Mrs. Boring res ide
for med the do uble ring necklil)es . They wore white
ceremQny. Dr. Eugene Wick- picture hats trimmed with gold at 648 S. Second St., Mid·
strom, Athens, was organist, velvet ribbon. Mi..ss Mille r 's dlepor t.
Mrs . Boring is a June
and Mrs . Cliff Colem a11 , dress was ide ntical a nd she
Ja ckson, soloist. She sang wore a band of daisies in her graduate of Ohio- University
where s he received a bac he lor
" We 've Only Just Begun ," hair.
" Time in a Bottle/' ''Speak
The bri desmaids' go wn s or science in elementary
Softl y Love," " My Sweet were ide ntical in design but education. She is a member of
Lady," a nd " T he Lord 's were in pastel green trimmed Kappa Delta Pi, educati on
Pra yer."
with dar k green velvet ribbon . honora r y, and is working in the
Two baskets or ye ll ow The ir white pic ture hats were teacher corps program at the
Elementary
gl a di oli with candela bra also trimmed in dark green Middlep ort
ribbon. They carried one long- School.
decora ted the altar .
Given in marr iage by he r- sterruned ye Uow rose . The
Mr. Boring is a senior at Ohio
pare nts, the brlde wore a: gown flow e r girl carried a baske t of Unive rsity where he is
of silk organza with Venise lace yellow daisies .
maj oring
in
secondary
trim . II was fa shioned with a
Mr . Hugh Martin , Jr ., education with a major in ·
cameo neck1 ine , sheer full Reeds ville, was best man, a nd biology. He will graduate in
bish op slee ves, an e mpire Mr . Michael Stewart, Racine, June, 1975. He is a member of
wais t, and a fitted bodice with was a groomsman. Ushers the Air Force ROTC, Arnold
a sheer yoke . The A-line skirt we r e Mr . Ken Ye rian , Air Society and will be comwas designed with lace· trim Glouster ; Mr . Roger Freeman, missioned in June as a Second
around the bottom , and the Deshle r , Mr. David Mills, Lieutenant in the Air Force.
attached c hapel length train Pomeroy, Route 3. Master
Out-or-county guests at the
was also trimmed with lace . Michae l Marlin , nephew of the wedding included Mr . and Mrs.
·The headpiece was a cap of groom, was the ringbearer .
Clifford B. Coleman and
Venise lace from which fell the
For her daughter's wedding, family, Jackson ; Mr. and Mrs.
bride's shoulder length veil Mrs. Mills wore a blue Tom Siley, Marietta ; Mrs.
which was of illusion with lace polyester A-line gown with Alma Jordan, Springfield; Mr.
trim. She carried a bouquet of jacket, white accessories , and and Mrs. Dave Mills and
yellow sweeUleart roses. Her a white sweetheart rose cor- family , Springfield; Miss Anna
jewelry was mother of pearl sage. Mrs. Boring ·was in a Jones, Proctorville; Paul
earrings and a gold brooc h lon g-s leeved
pink
dress Storz , Massillon ; Mr . Ja
belongin g to he r gr eat- trimmed with lace. She wore Moore, Bloomingburg, 0.; and
_g randmother, Mrs. Thomas black accessories and white Mr. and Mrs. Terry Hollman,
Riggs.
sweetheart rose corsage.
Morehead, Ky.
The bride's attendants were
Following the wedding, a
="==;;;;;
Miss Marylu Mil1er , Pomeroy , re ception was held in the
Route 3, sister of the bride, the Alumni Lounge in Baker
maid of honor; Mrs. Sharon Center. The bride ' s table
Stewart, Syracuse, the matron featured a three . tiered wedof honor , ahd Miss Debbie ding cake topped with the
Wood, Chester, Miss Patti lhle, traditional miniature bride and
Racine , Miss ·oonna Weber, · groom. An ·arrangement o£
yellow roses and white chrysan themwns were also used on
the table.
Mrs. Hugh Martin, sister of
the gr9om, reg_istered \he
and Mrs. Robert Barber, Steve
and Kevin, Gene Jones, Erma
Jean Connolly, Mike Connolly,
SERVICE ON
Arlene Connolly, Ricky Put- ·
man, Donald Putman, Mr end
Mrs. Jerry Griggs, Gary, Mike ·
and Kevin, Mrs. Gladys Dillon
and Dale D., Reedsville; Mr.
Ask your Nationwide ag.,nt
and Mrs. James Robertson and
ab out Nationwide's Hom.,Jimmy, Guysville; Mr. and
owne rs Insuranc e with
bullr-ln lnl/atlon protection}
MrS _Cecil Waggoner, _Rutland ;
In by 10, Out at 5
Cal l today.
Mrs. ~une Mullen anil Peggy,
Coolville: Steve Mullen,
P. J. PAULEY
·Belpre:
Stevie' Mullen,
PH. 992-2318
Parkersburg, W.Va.; Mr. and
307 Spring Ave ., ~omeroy
Mrs . Kenneth Barber and
Tammy, Hebron ; Jeff Dillon,
DRY CLEANING
Columbus; Bob Haney, Akron;
and Gary Hamlin, Akron.
LAUNDRY
Sending gifts were Mr. and
Notlan wllll Muluol Fir• lnourone• Co .
Mrs. John Johnson, Ft. Myers,
Hom o O ~lc • : Col umb us. Oh oo
992-5428 Pomeroy
Fla .

2 HR.
DRY

CLEAI'JING

(ON REQUEST)

•
1 DAY

1Oth birthday is celebrated

Syracuse
UMW

meets

or

Unfortunately for the Uons
Coach Rldt Fonano, two
,lrey lelmmates cl Munson was mjured la.91110811011; threw
,...,, he lolnlrW the club em the 15 of 21 panes against the
llldellnelat Soldier FlekL
Bl'OWIII lor 179 yards and one
S.fety Mllte Weger; ihe touchdown.
ttelldylnc lnftuence in the
Munson broke Detroit tradlJOUIIC Detratt aecondary, lcire · Ucm and Passed freqliently on
Hp.....,ll Iii bla left lee In a flnt down, and even put the
~ in f1nt quarter action long pass back lri the Uons
lllllardly nfchl u the Uons play book. He hit three dlf.
dllbbad the punchlell Ceve- ferenl receivers with ~­
lind llrvwna Ill their ahlbiUon covering lll yards or lliQI'e, The
llnlle, 21-7.
longest, a »-yarder to rookie
,.._ QullrteriMiclt Grec Lan- Jlrnmle Jones, wbo spent last
dr7 IUihnd al)U'IIne fra~ 110811011 playing in the shadows
1D ldl lhauJder in the llnal cl Kermit Joonson and James
...,_ wbln he threw a block McAlister at UCLA.
ll7lnl to .-tac flldter Jim · Jones alao returned a ldcltoff
O'llt:llo Cll aa end 81'1Uld.
53 yards to set up the lint
• Wtllr wiD be apsntecl on Detroit lll'OI'e, and added a
ltltiiJ Ill ..... Halpllal. Both he pointer himself in the llnal
... r...dl7 wiD be out in- Quarter on a !-yard run.

a

an d

Allan ta

'1.-) , HR -

"No, I ,t l)lnk you're offering me .too much," he says to Giles,

''

£11

P•rker ("h).

;Jn&lt;t Boccabella ;
and Correll. L P -

UPI Sporta Editor
NEW YORK (UPI) - They just doo 't make 'em like Billy
Werber anymore.
He hassomethlnl! on his mind, he says it strightout .
He was that way during his II years as a major league ballplayer with the Yankees, Red Sox, A's, RedsandGianL'l , and he's
the same way now.
Billy Werber hasn 't changed a bit. He's so hooest, it hurts.
Example :
'!be Reds are battling lor the National League pennant In
1939. They tratl the Cardinals In St. LouiB by one run late in the
sea1011 with Eddie Joost oo second base In the ninth innlnl! and
two out.
Werber, whom the Reds used to call ''Tiger," walks up to the
plate. He notices umpire Larry Goetz and, almost off-handedly,
says to him:
"I'm the best hitter in the coontry in a situation like this." He
then alngles to drive in Joost.
Example:
Werber bas an excellent year lor the Reds in 1939 and hell"' .
them win the pennant. The following spring he's offered a contract by Warren Giles, the Reds' general manager, but declines
to sign it.

••.

Walker

Brv.,nt, Metzg~r

By 1\IILTON RICHMAN

•

000 030 0.$)(- 8 8 0

Foote- ; Rooker (U IO J an d
SanQvllltn . LP - Rogers 07

By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sporu Editor

•

Mills-Boring vows taken

M• ior LIU IUe R f'I Uif i
e y Un i"CI Pr ~ss l ntern•f lon•l
Na t iOnll l Utve
Montreal
001 001 000- 2 6 0

Pitts .

~!M-"///.1.!

t*t

inflation .

SHIRT

FINISHING

Robinson's

If you're so rich,
wliy aren't you·smart?
So you 're makiilg a good
salary. But you' re not saving
any of it. Instead, you want to
go after the "big deal" that's
. going to make you a cool
mHiion. Maybe.
.
What happens if your big
scheme goes sour? You've still
got to get through the future.
And, let's face it. Nobody can
afford to take tomorroW for
granted.
So maybe you 'd better join
the P~t:yroll Savings Plan now.
Just stgn up at work. An
amount you specify will be set
aside from your ESYcheck cind
used to buy U.S. ~Savings Bnnds.
· That way, you can still
sfford to taken few financial
risks if that's your bag. But
you'll always have a solid cash
reserve to fall back on. And
that's being smart.

i Social I
~

Polly 's Pointers

~

•

j Calendari
MONDAY
SALEM CENTER PTA, at
the echool, 7:30 p. m. Program
by the '1-H Club. ·
BETHEL 62, International
Order of Job's Daughters, 7:30
p. m ., Pome r oy Maso nic
Temple .
MORGAN CENTE R Home
Mission , open lOa. m. to 2 p. m.
Free clothin g for needy.
SChoolhouse at E no.

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POME ROY E LEMENTARY
PTA, 7:30 p.m. Monday for a
get-acqua inted and mem bership drive meeting, All
pare nts urged to attend .
MEI GS GIRLS ' Bette r
Athleti c Boos te rs, 7 p.m .
Monday at Meigs Senior High
SChool. Everyone welcome.
POMEROY
Eleme ntar y
PTA Monday, 7:30p.m . at the
school. It will be a ge t
acquainted meeting. E veryone
is invited to attend . Refr es hments will he served.

11!1:
';: '

CHAD CARBON

Mr. and Mrs. Victor Young l/l

Wedding vows taken
at church in Indiana

•

..... .

PLAINFIEI,D, Ind. - The and tied in back with large .
First Baptist Church at Plain- bows. Both wore lace trimmed
field , Ind . was the setting for capelets. They carried white
!be wedding of Miss Katherine baskets trimmed with blue
Marie Eggleton and Vic tor bows' and streamersfiiled with
Charles Young Ill, both of red rosebud petals.
Indianapolis, Ind.
Master
Michael
Paul
The bride is the daughter of Eggleton,
Indianapolis ,
Edwin E. Eggleton and Nancy· brother of the bride and Master
Allen
Young,
J ... Eggleton, both of In- Bradley
dianapolis. Mr. Young is the Pomeroy, brother of the brideson of Mr. and Mrs. Victor c. groom , were the ringbear~rs .
Young, Jr. , East Main St. , They were in white polyester
Pomeroy.
pants with light blue shirts,
·The wedding was an event of white ties , and navy polyester
June29at 2 p.m. with the Rev. sport coats. They carried
Sonny Hayes performing the identical heart-shaped satin
double ring ceremony. Miss pillows trimmed with lace and
Judy
Lydick,
organist, white satin streamers . Ali of
presented nuptial music in- the bride's attendants wore
eluding "They Long to be pendants, gifts of the bride.
ClOse," "Precious and FeW,"
For her daughter's wedding ,
"We've Only Just Begun" and Mrs. Eggleton wore a long blue
" Love Story."
polyester lmi~own with white
The church decorations lace ruffles at the neckline and
featured gold altar vases with the wrists. She wore a corsage
white gladioli and blue tinted of yellow tinted carnations.
pointed mwns. White satin · Mrs. Young was in an aqua
bOws marked pews for the blue polyester knit dress with
.
short sleeves and a high
families.
Given in marriage by her rounded collar. Her acgrandfather, Mr. Clifton cessories were aqua with
Wilcoxon, the bride was attired cream accen.t. She also wore a
in a gown of nylon organ~a corsage or yellow carnations .
accented with embroidered
A reception honoring 'the
lace and bands of nylon. The couple was held in the church
gown was fashioned with ·a auditorium immediately
fitted bodice, a collar of lace following the ceremony. The
providing a bib effect in both bride's table featured a fourfront and back, sheer bishop tiered wedding cake with blue
sleeves witli a ruffle at the and yellow roses, topped with a
wrist. A ruffle of rayon and large heart encircled with
cotton trimmed the hemline lovebirds, rings ~nd l~ce. Blue
and the gown featured an at- mums were used on the table.
Presiding were Mrs. Katherine
tached chapel .train.
The bride wore a Juliet cap M. Wilcoxen, grandmother of
with embroidered lace and the bride, Pam Snyder, Kathy
seed pearls which held her Parks, and Judy O'Day and
elbow length veil. Her bouquet Shirley Whiteman, aunts of the
was a Windsor cascade of bride. They wore daisy corwhite carnations, yellow sages. Guests were registered
sweetheart roses, and baby's by Kathy Parks.
breath tied with white and
For a trip to the Vincenses,
ivory satin streamers. She Ind. the bride changed into a
wore a cameo necklace, gilt of navy blue polyester !mit dress
the groom.
with scoop neckline trinuned m
Miss Pamela J. McKinney, white . She wore white ac.
lndianap ollS. ,· was the bride's cessories and the yellow
·
mal' d of honor. She was in a rosebud corsage from her
blue snd yellow flowered voile bridal bouquet.
with capeiet, and a light blue
Mr. and Mrs. Young reside at
picture hat .With dark blue satin 910 Broken Bow Trai,!, Apt.
streamers . Her
nosegay 10! 4, Indianapolis, Ind. 46224 ·
bouquet was of yellow and The bride is a graduate of Ben
white daisies with blue corn- Davis High School, Inflowers and - yellow satin dianapQlis, class of 1974, and is
streamers.
a member of the Wesley United
Miss
Rebecca
Lynn Methodist Church. She is
Eggleton, Indianapolis, sister employed at the Plainfield
of the bride, and Miss Janice ·. National Bank as a teller.
Louise Young, Pomeroy, sister
Mr. Young graduated from
of the bridegroom, were the Meigs High School in 1972 and
b r'desmaids. Tbey also wore is a member of the First
'
h
h
i ' f'ld
blue and yellow flowered voile Baptist C urc of Pam le •
.gowns with matching capelet.s Ind. He is a member of Local
and had white picture hats with Union IBEW 1393 and iS emlight blue satin streamers. All ployed with the Underground
of the attendants carried Electric Construction Co. as an
nosegays of yellow and white operator.
daisies with blue cornflowers.
Going from here for the
Mr. Douglas Wade Moffitt, wedding were Mr. and Mrs.
Indianapolis, brother of the · Victor C. Young, Jr., Miss
bride, was best man, and the Janice Young, Bradley Young,
ushers were Mr. Thomas Pomeroy: Kimberly Dean,
Edwin Eggleton, Indianapolis, Middleport; and Mr. Thomas
brother of the bride, and Mr. Salzer, Reynoldsburg.
Allen Keers, Indianapolis,
ushers. Tlie groom and the
OESPARTYSET
male attendanls wore light
The 1974 OES District 25
blue brocade tuxedos trimmed Party will be held at the
In black with matching black Alexander High School, adpants. The groom wore a white jacent to the Albany Masonic
shirt, the attendanls light blue Temple . on US 00, Saturday,
'shirts.
Oct. 5 at 6:30 p.m. The party
. Kimberly Kathleen Deem, theme
this
year
is
Middleport, niece of the bride- "Hobgoblins" with special
groom, and Wendy Ann Justis, halloween entertslnment and a
Indianapolis, cousin of the Uve band. Reservations are $4
bridegroom, were the flower with check by Sept. ·30 to Mrs.
girls. They wore long white Ida Keirns, Rt. I, Bnx 304,
dotted swiss gowns with blue Albany, 45710. Mrs. June
and green heart accent. The Stanley, district president,
gowns were fashioned with Invites aU OES members to
lace collars, empire waists, attend.

D.

SARAH EYNON
Sarah Elizabeth Eylion,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Eynon, Pomeroy,
will observe her first birthday at the home of her
parents on Wednesday, Sept.

'

TIJESDAY
MEIGS CHAPTER 53, DA V,
Tuesday, 7:30 p .m. at chapt.:r
home on Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy. Refreshments, all
members asked to attend.
RACINE LODGE 461 F&amp;AM,
regular meeting, Tuesday
night at temple. Sojourners
night to be observed; all
Master Masons welcome.
XI GAMMA MU CHAPTER,
B~ta Sigma Phi Sorority,
progressive dinner starting at
the home of Mrs . Annie
Chapman, 6: 30 p.m. and
concluding at the home of Mrs.
Jennifer Anderson . Business
meeting to follow.
WINDING TRAIL GARDEN
Club, 8 p.m. Tuesday at the
horne of Mrs. Faye Pratt. Mrs .
Thompson to demonstrate
plaque making.
REGULAR
meeting
Southeastern Ohio Gospel
Music Assoc., 6 p .m ., potluck,
7:30p.m ..

11.

Mr. and Mrs. Dan Swartz

Couple honored at church
COLUMBUS - Mr. and Mrs . and silver coffee service and
Dan Swartz of Columbus were punch bowl adorned the bullet
honored on Saturday evening, table . Decorated cakes comAug. 24, at the Second Ave. plimented the decor .
·Presbyterian Church with a
A bOok of pictures depicting
party in observance of their different aspects in the life of
25th wedding anniversary. Mr. the celebrating couple was
Swartz is a former . Meigs displayed on the guest book
County resident.
table.
For the celebration the
Attending the affair ·were
tables were. decorated with Mr. Swartz's daughter, Mrs.
arrangements of summer Ila Faye Kimes, and Mrs .
garden flowers and candles. A Virgie Buckley and family,
lB.ce · cloth, silver candle Athen~; ·
Mrs.
Swartz ' s
holders with pink tapers, pink . daughters, Mrs . Millicent
and white flower arrangement Hart, Lancaster, and Mrs.
Mary
Lou
Thompson,
Columbus, and their families ..
6
Nwnerous other relatives and
friends from throughout Ohio
. attended the celebration.
Entertainment included
piano selections with a solo by

UM Wp ledaeJ
support of
I

By Polly Cramer

Panel 'peeling '
/ a disappointment
DEAR POLLY - My parents bought a new 30-inch ran ge to
replace Je..inch stove and now the white laminated pLastic wall
(a best known brand) back of it is stained. They tried various
cleaner s but the paneling just peeled off so we need some ideas .
- Ms. C.B.

a

DE AR POLLY - My Pet Peeve is with the curre nt practice
of supermarkets advertising meats at a sale price and then wben
you go to buy it lind it packaged in such large quantities t hat a
single packa~e costs several dollars. Unless one has a ~r~zer or
a lar ge family it is not feasible to buy such large qua nt1ties. How
discouraging th is must be for the elde rly and those livin g alone to
lind the large packages ar e not within tbeir limited budgeL'l . MRS. H. W.
DEAR POLLY - I have help for Mrs, K. F . who sought a
recipe for treating materials so they would be flame resistant.
Mix nine ounces borax , 4 ounces bOric a cid and a gallon of water.
Dip fabric in solution, wring by hand and let dry. - MRS. C. W.
DEAR GIRLS - Several readers recommended this same
solution . 01 course, such a treatment must be repeated after
each washing and the fabric is put in !be solutlon DRY.
Remember, too, this is to make an article (not a Christmas tree )
fire resistant, not rireproof. A fife prevention ~uthorlty. I talked
with says they no longer recommend this, as they formerly did,
as there are commercial producL'l (look in the yellow l"'ges of the
phone book ) that do a better job. It also was suggested that
should one want to use this it is well to take a piece of tho' Iabrie,
treat with the solution and when dry carefully hold a lighted
match to it to see the results. I also was told tbe fabric will
doubtless he stiff and feel clammy to the touch so would not he
good lor clothing but only draperies, etc. A trial run might bring
one to the de~ ision that it is not worth the time and energy
required. - POLLY.
·
DEAR POLLY - Keep a magnifying glass handy in Y"ur
car's glove compartment. .You will find it is useful for rear'.mg
small print or maps when on a trip.
To keep short stemmed nowers neatly arranged floot. a lacy
plastic doily in the container or water and pokP tile sten•&lt;: through
the holes in the design. - MRS. R. L
DEAR POLLY - A beauticie.•• neighbor gave me the
following money-5aving idea. Try .nixing your shamlJ(lO with
equal parts of water. They are now so concentrated that we
usually use more than is needed.
diluting we can use and
alford any desired brand. lthink
more and rinses out
easier. - ALICE.
·

WEDNESDAY
WHITE ROSE LODGE
Wednesday at 1:30 p~ m . at
Middleport Legion Hall.

Plans have been cm~pJet.d
for the open-dlurch weddln&amp; ol
Miss Opal Mae Berry ,
dau ghter of Mrs . Thelma c
Be rry , Middleport,
and
Chester Wigal , Jr., son of Mr.
and Mrs. Chester Wigal, alao ol
Middleport.
The wedding will he an event
of Sept. 27 at 7:30p.m. at the
Middleport Church of Christ.
R ev. George Gla•e wlii of.
ficiate at the dooble rlnl
c e remony . Immediately
foll owing the ceremony a
r ece ption wUI he held in the ,
church fellowship hall for the
couple .
·
Miss Berry will graduate
from the School o! 'Nursing at
th e Technical College la
Nelsonville. Wigal is employed
at the OrvUle Products Co.,
Orville. The couple will reside'
there following the wedding.
SING SLATED

The
Duncan
Family,
. Florida, will he featured at a
hymn sing to be held at the
Freedom Gospel Mission at
7:30p.m . Tuesday. The public
is invited.

WOMEN'S

CLOGS

Latigo Leather
Navy Leather
and Suedes

'5.00 f'r,
heritage house
Your Thom MeAn Store

Middleport, 0 .

TUESDAY NIGHT IS
FAMILY FUN NIGHT
AT BURGER CHEF/ .

Church, 7:30 p.m. Persons
interested in helping promote
the 255 miD operatmg tax levy
are asked to attend.

INCREDIBURG/BLE!

STEW.. El&lt;TRACTlOH

CARPET
CLEANING

THURSDAY
LAUREL Cliff Better Health
Club, 7:30 pro. at the home of
Mrs. Nellie Tracy.
MEIGS Crnmunity School,
operation tax levy promptional
planning meeting, Trinity
Teresa Buckley, Allred, guitar
and vocal numbers and gospel
duets with gUitar • accordion
accompaniment.
Gifts and ·c ards were
presented to the couple, Mr.
and Mrs, Swartz were married
25 years ago in Girard by Mrs.
Swartz' father, the late Rev. R.
P . Hudnell,

'
Special
Family Meal Prices
4 p.m. to cloelng

I

FOR ADULTS
C~mmarclal

·

Big Shet•
French Fries,
Turnover &amp;
.arge Drink

CLEANING

..1/' ,.;,,fl',. /!,r JG;i, ..
11' ~Jo, i .sc ,.,,t · if;~/·· ·

Only

.,

FOR KIDS

$}15

Funburger'" .
Only
.
French f'!ies, . ,~&amp;o~
· Small Dnnk · ·.
&amp; lollipop

·-·

JFOR FREE EST/MATt
CALL: "2·2635

Hindu girl
LETART FALLS - Support
of a 12-year-old girl in India
was pledged lor another year·
when the United Methodist
Women of the Letart Falls
Church mel Wednesday night
at the home of Mrs. Bert

Layette shower held
SYRACUSE - Mrs. Homer Terry Moore, Helen Harris and
Mills and Mrs. Ralph Sham Mrs. Hugh McPahil, Syracuse.

entertained recently with a
layette shower honoring Mrs.
Diane Mills, Syracuse.
A pink and blue color scheme
was carried out in tbe gift table
G =. at the meeting was a decorations and also featured
letter from the child ex- on the table was a decorated
pressing her appreciation for cake.
the support of Methodist
Games were played with
women . Mrs. Ernest Shuler prizes going to Teresa Holstein
presided at the meeting and and Sandy Winebrenner with
announced that during the past Mrs. Antha Mills winning the
lwo months 90 visitations to door prize. Sandwiches, mints,
community shut-ins were· potato chips, coffee and punch
made. To open the meeting were served with a decorated
Mrs. Shuler read scripture cake.
I
G I 5 1•26
Other guests were Mrs.
rom a . '"' ·
"The Importance of Gen. Benny Spears, Mrs. Randy
tleness" was the program topic Cross, Peggy Yeauger, An·
by Mrs. Grinnm . . Readings nette Mills, Mrs. Austin
were "The Spirit in Human Newsome, Susie Craig, Mrs.
Nature" by Mrs. Don Bell'; William Zirkle and Jackie,
"Strength in Numbers" by Launa Gr~n, Mrs. Grace
· Mrs. Shuler; "Each Day is a Greer, Mrs. Robert Holstein,
New Account" by Mrs. Andrew all of Syracuse; Mrs. Rufus
Cross; ''Friends"by Mrs. Johh Browning, Mrs. Frank Mllls,
Hill; and "Gentleness" by Mrs. Rutland; Mrs. Perry Hollman,
Grimm. Mrs . Shuler had Debbie and Frances, Midprayer.
dleport.
Refreshments were served to
Sendi~g gifts were Mrs .
those named and Mrs. Harold Charles Hively, Shirley
Roush, Mrs. Alice Balser, and Sigman, Gallipolis; Mrs. Sam
Mrs. Erma Wilson. Mrs. Cross Shain, Racine ; Mrs. Belvia
will host the October ineetlng. Amberger, Brenda Hayes,
Mrs . Marie Devetro, Mrs.

AT ANYTIME

-....J

·tngels Furniture

1503 EASTERN AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

MIDDLEPORT

;.::::.:==-:::.::::.::::==~~~~~~~~~~~~--=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::=..

"Wise laundry habits save mon~ and
valuable gas."
.

"These washing ond drying sugges- naturol .resources wisely. l urge you
dons will help you to conserve gas to take part in conserving energy
energy. And that means less gas to with your very next wash."
pay tor. As our nation faces an
yJ
erlergy cr.lsls, we must use all our
. p~
1 (_~/"(/

·

o/l.-::7=A

,..
Autorriatlc washers use lots '
of hot water. A full load .

And don't over'dry. SynthetIcs and other light clothes

makes the best use of water
and the gas that makes it
hot. So avoid partial loads,

heat to dry. Follow your in-

which WB!iile both these re~

drying times.

don't take as much time or

struction book for proper

sources and the money that
pays tor them.

Wipe the Inside of the tub
with a damp cloth and clean
the lint filter each ttme you
use your dryer. Check .yol!r
operating manual for In ~
structions on keeping your
appliance In top shape .

Washing a lull load repaye
you.r efforts again when you
dry your clothes In your gas
dryer. A full load makes the
most efficient use of your
dryer, Don't waste
your money and gas ~~~
on partial loads.

,--n

New Gas Appliances

PACKAGE POLICY:
'TOTAL COVERAGE

992·2143
992-742P

~f

1

properly, it re ducea the efficiency de·
signed Into ·vour ·g al dryer.
Use a full loa~. but nothing
more, .to gel the moet for

Our
complete
comprehensive
homeowners.' policy covers loss due to
fire, theft, storm damage, more. One
premium.

102 W. Main

But don't overload your
dryer, either. 11 the air can't

your money:

you•re thinking -of rapl•cyour Old
dryer or

no

circulate

DALE C. WARNER INS. AGENCY ,

OFFICE HOURS 9:30 TO 12, 2 TO 5 I CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT ST .•

'...

Mr. and Mrs. Gene Carson.
Route 4, Pomeroy, e n!ertamed recently with a
party honoring their son,
Chad, on his third birthday.
Cake and ice eream were
served to Mrs. Maxine
Owens, Mrs. Freda Casto,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Carson, Debbie Carson, and
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Sigman
and Aady.

Wigal-Be"y
vows
slated
.

a••

water heater, remember
you'll contln .. to gtt illo
g.. you need. And the new,
modom goo oppli•IICh help

'"

conaerve gla bec1u1e
U..y're moro olltclonL

I

Pomeroy,

.,
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S- The llailv Sentinel, MiddleDOri·Pomer&lt;ly, 0 .. Mondav. Seot. 9.1974

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
Notice

@)

Our yard and office
will be closed Tuesday,
17 September. Wed·
nesday. 18 September
and
Thursday
26
September.

•

79 Depot Street
Athens, 0 .

1971 DODGE DART
Sl99S
Swinger HT cpe., med . green finish with blk . vinyl root,
green vinyl Interior tr im , V-8 engine, automatic trans .,
sport St. wheel , full wh . cover. Like new w-w tires, radio,
real nice.

~

'--~--- · ·· · -

NOTICE
AUCTION every Thursday 1
p m . Horton St. in Mason
Consignments welcome from
11 a .m . to .5 p m or ca ll nJ
5471
a 21-tfc

POMEROY LANIIMARK
• • _ Jack W. Carsey, Mgr .
. . .. .. ~one 992-2181 __
TRESPASSING on the
Jacob Baer property
m Nease Settlement .
9-8-6tp

NO

--------------

~ormer

•

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

------------RUMMAGE Sale, Fry Building ,

Mill St , Middleport starting 9
am . Monday
morning.
Anyth ing and everything ,
9-B-2tc

------------FOR COM PLETE moblle home

service call Kinosbury Homes
Sales and Service In c We
have factor y trained personel
to handle your needs . We also
do
mobile
home
lm .
provements such as awn ings ,
corrorts and unde rpinning .
Clll 992 -70341 from 9:30 a . m
to 6 p. m . Monday thru
Saturday For service after 6
p m and weekends call 992
7671 or 949 -3655

Wanted To Do
GENERAL hauling
1284 or 992 7241.

-------------For Sale

'MARBLE top dresser . StH of
china dishes, k1tchen cabinet.
record player , full 8 drawer
ches t of drawers. Magnus
ch ord organ
See Katie
Car pente-r , Lark1ns St ,
Rutland
1966 CHEVELLE SS 421 cu .
Also , Accel Distributor .
Crane cam and kit , TRW
Racing pistons , and r 1ngs for WALK beh ind Gravely lOA
tractor, 19 mo . old , 30 in
327 cc . Hooker headers for 55brush hog - 40" yard mower
.57 Chev , TM 1 Tarantula
- rotary plow and tiller ,
intake . Everything new , will
homemade sulky. Phone 992
sell cheap . All tor a smal l·
7084.
black Chev . Call 949 4114 after
6 p m
9-4 5tp
9-6-3tp

-------------

--------------

1967 FO RO (!JStom 500, 289 CU .
m ., ps, pb , runs good . $350
Phone 985 3926.
9·9·12tc
9 4 .5tc
446

-------------

-------------f9T2 DODGE Colt 37.800 miles.

Help Wanted
SOMEO NE with knowledge of
auto part s and hardware
helpfvl. Appl y in person at
Moore 's in Pomeroy, Ohio.
9-5 ftc

radial t ires , good condi tion :
Phon e 992 7066.
8-23 -tfc

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

ELECTROLUX

Vacuum

Cleaners complete wlu,

tachments , cordwlnder and
POint spray , Used but In like

new condition . Pay $34 .•U
cnh or budgrt plan available.
Phone 992 -26.53 .

SOLID
VINYL SIDING
Produced frQro a special
vinyl com pound made by B
F. Goodri ch and Monsanto . 5
times thicker than metal
si d ing . Will not dent, chip,
cra ck , peel , rot, rust or
chalk .

OONST. CO.
Chester. Ohio
985-4102

All Small Appliances
I.Jwn MowetS

B&amp;K EXCAVATING
Milldlepof1, Ohio
9t2-5:U7

REDECORATING?

K&amp;H ROOFING.
J~mes

Don't forget the roof of your

home. Have a beautiful new

LOCAL
NIGHT CLUB

roof installed by AII-We,ather
Roofing Co.

.
All that ts mteded for a

.
free

e$timate is a phone call.
Please Phone:

1.S1N. ,...A'¥

Free Estimate.

NEW 1974 ZIG ZAG SEWI NG
MACHINES
In original
fa ctory carton Z1g -Zag to
make buttonholes , sew on
buttons, monogrBms, and
make fan cy des1gns wlth lust
the twi st of a single -dial Lett
In lay .a .way and never been
used . Will sell for only S47
cash, or terms avar labl e.
Phone 992-2653.
8-20 -tfc

BOB'S ASHLAND

Known &amp;
R eliable Service

If so, Call us Now lor a

ROGER HYSEU'S
GARAGE .

992 -9949
J90Mulberry
Pomeroy, O._
• EXPERIENCED
MECHANIC ON DUTY
8 : 30A.M. foS ·P.M.

_D&amp;D
CONJRUCTION

asrake Work
• General Overh1ul
• Tune Up-$5 .00 up
e Carburetor Adjustment

1967 FORD Galaxie 500 con
---- --- --~ --PHONE ,
vertible, good condition $550
ELEC1ROLUX
vacuum On Slate Rt. 124, 'h mit from
•••
f4f.3BJ2 or 843-2667
Also , 1965 Chrysler New
FREE HOME ESTIMATES
c leaner. A 1 con d ition, uses Route 7 by-pass towards
•
Yorker good cond ition SJOO .
paper bags , has co rdwinder Rutland.
Phone 742 6501
SUPERIOR
and
many attachments Also,
All Types of
BEAU1 /ClAN wanted . Phon e
shampooer
attachment In VINYL
PRODUCTS
9-6-Jtc
Ph.
992
-5682
or
992-7121
992 3551 . .
BUILDING
c luded (Only 4 ava ilable ) at
9 4 61C
1973 CUS TOM Delu)(e pickup
Call Collect 1-592-5544
S37 70
Cash
or
terms
All Mechanical Work
and REMODELING
V8 Automat ic transmission '
Athens, Ohio ·
available Phone 992 -2653
Excellent con dition Phone ....__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~__, __ ___ _______ _.!·20 -ttc
From a shelf to a . house.
Open Mon. - Sat.
-----L_________
_
992 -7810.
9-5-5tc
PaJnting, siding, roofing,
8
A.M
•.
6
P.M.
CANN lNG tomatoes , bring
paper hanging , kitchen
container s. Phone 247 -2852, USED PIAN O, good cond it1on , 2
~ION '1 KNOW THAT! MGM
cabinets, etc.
Andrew
Cross,
Racine,
Ohio
l=he Market Specials . S5
years old , credit terms
9-8-6tp ava11able
Inside . S3 outs ide. S pr l n~;~·
. Phone 446-0687 or
Ave ..
Pomeroy ,
~Ohio ,
write Brunicardl Hou se of
Collectors, dealers , etc .
WRIGHT power saw, a;4 Music, 61 Court Sf, Gallipolis,
Ever y Sat . end Sunday.
Arabian mare , portable air Ohio
1971
DUSTER
340.
4 speed
GRCAT PAINT VALUES AT
8.7 ·tfC
9 5 6t c
Phone
992
2019.
tank
, 1970 Karmanghia VW ,
ALL-WEATHER
HARD Uncoln Hill
1969 VW, 1965 Dodge Station -----------~~WARE .
9-6-6tp
VINYL SIDING ·
wagon , 4 dr 6 cyl. automatic , SHE1LAND PONY . Gentle
and
On Sale Now quality Devoe
with ch tldren Call 992 -71 80
.
PH.
991-7~ or
Wanted
car
s
can
be
seen
at
Raw
l1
ng
s
1967 VW, good cond it ion . Phone
West Main St.
Bright Wh1te Latex House
after 1 p m or 985 -3913
Auto Parts PHone 992 1889 or
.
992-2897.
•
992-7129
aoyt 1me
Pa•nt in 2 gallon cans. Only
992-2151
9-5-6tc
$6.49 fer gallon .
9 5 6tc
9-8-5tc
Free Edlm•llllilr'wd'slj 1 ...
L
Bran name Roof Paint, 10
1971 DATSUN P ickup, good 2 LOT S with vaults in Meigs 1973 350 C B Honda , good con pet. off While they last.
Year and Up
condition . Phone 992-3847
dition . P hone 992 -7605.
Take
advantage of these
Memory
Gardens
,
worth
Phone 992-2156
ALSO SHAMPOO
great
buys
While they are
9-8
Jtp
S1,200,
sell
for
only
5500.
9-5
6tp
With Your Own
still in. S1ock.
Phone 992 3032
CARPETS
FEMALE needs r ide to and 1963 FO RO st ation wagon,
Business.
9-8-3tp 1974 HONDA 750 Phone 992 AND CLEAN
from Athens, Working hours
Phone 992 3847 .
ALL -WEATHER
- -- - - - - - - - - - - 1511
from 7.30 to 4.30 p .m Mon HARDWARE
9-8-3tp
ONE
used
E
flat
Saxophone
and
9
5
6t
Water 1 L~ries · and, Powerr
UPHOLSTERY
E)(cluslve dealership
day , Thursday, and Friday .
337 No.-th second Ave .
case, $100. Call 992 -2428. after
· - p
LinM. 1111 work done bl' thtl'
Ca ll 992 n26
available in Meigs County
1967 FIAT, good condilton
Midctleport, Ohio
5 p.m . any day .
11 foot or contract. Also sto1ef/
Phone 992 -9981
9 6-3tc
992·2550
and surrounding counties.
9 8-6tp
9-8-3tc
work aod septic tanks irr~
Inventory Investment $3,895.
• .. lied . .
5 OR 6 l1ve lambs , $35 a head , 3
CREMEANS
CONCRE1E SE PTIC TA NKS cleaned ,
THE Citizens National Bank
Western ewes for $35 a head , 1
Call Marketing Manager
delivered Monday through
will offer for sale at t he1r
utility tra iler , S75 . White
rea sonabl e rates . Ph . 4146See or Call
Saturday and evenings
office in Middleport, Oh io at
geese George G Roberts,
4782, GaiHpolls . John Russell, ' 1 '
For Appointment
Phone
446
-1142
10 a .m . Sept . 18, 1974. A 1912
Bashan , R 0 1, Long Bot' j Bob o~ Roger Jlitfers
owner and operator
(304) 342-1234 Today. ·
Plymouth Duster , 2 dr .
tom , Ohio
6-13-tfc
5-12-ffc
special , auto . tran smission
. Day 992,7089
9-8-3tp
and air condition, Serial No
SE
PiiC
TANKS,
AROBIC
FOR your remodeling , roof ing ,
Night 992-3$25
VL-29 -G28493974 .
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
painting, repairing, concrete
WALNUT
d
ining
room
table
-~ Employment Wanted
9-8-3tc
We sell both new and used
CLEANED ,
REPAIRED .
_or '92-52~
and masonr-y work , call
with c hairs and pads , good old furniture. Such brands as:
MILLER SANITATION,
Ronn
ie
Hubbard
,
992-3511
or
~
WILL tr im or cut trees and
metal bed Phone 992 7066.
1964 FORD Van will Sell or
STEWART , OHIO PH . 662 992 -7302 Wor-k by hour or
..:.... shrubbery , Al so, c lean out
trade for pickup Phone 742
9-4 ttc Zenith TV, Frigidaire,
3035.
1h con1ract
REAOY . MIX
CONCRETE
.. .;,v
basements, attics , etc . Phone
5943 . '
Gibson, Norwal.k Living
10-4-ttc
delivered r ight to your'
8-7-26tc
•~. . . -. 9419-3221 or 742 -4441.
9 8-3tc NEW Idea 2 row corn picker. Room
Suites,
Bassett
project. Fast and easy. Free
-.... ,.,;..,
9-6-26tc
Phone 251 -2852 . Andrew
...__
FINISH Carpentry, paint-Ing , DOZER or backhoe work .
Furniture, Sunray, Sawyer,
estimates. Phone 992-J2a•.
Cross. Racine , Ohio.
1962 WILLYS Jeep, 4 wheel
Phone 446.3981 or 446·34159.
Goegleln Ready -MI)( co .,
inter ior and exterior, carpet
/ 'DAY NURSERY , 8to6p .m. any
Qrive, 4 cyl motor with cab,
9-4-6tp Collins. Before you buy,
Middleport, Ohio.
9-8-tfc
Installation
,
economy
and
""! ''
age . Reliable people With
A-1 condition . S875 See at 105
check with us first .
e)(cellence. Phorte 742-5081.
6-30-tfc:
Union Ave , Pomeroy . Call
.p~ medical training , will also
1972
SUPER
Beefle
VW
,
ex
992
-3293.
9-5-tfc
.., •• ·~&lt;- babysit at night . Call 992·7474
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
cellent condttlon . Also ,
·~ , before .5 and 742 -4902 after 4
Estate
9-8-6tc
Complete Service
portable Maytag dryer .
1
p. m.
Several Chests &amp; Dressers
SEPTIC TANKS c leaned
NICE 6 room house at
Phone 949 2602
Phone 949 -3821 or 949 -3161
Modern
Sanitation,
992-3954
or
9-3-12tc reasonable rent . We are in Racine, Ohio
S20.00andup
9 -6 6tc
992-7349,
-~ :--- '
terested In someone who will
Crltf Bradford
-· ,WILL do babysitt ing In my help sell monuments on our
10-23 -tfc
s.J. ttd
HUMP HREY heat ing stove, One &amp; Two Piece Living
- -home nights . Reasonable fine memorial lot This is a
----------I
60,000 BTU , good condit iO n. Room
EXCAVATING, dozer , loader
weekly or n ig htly rates . good opportun ity for the r ig ht
FOR FREE estimates on:
Call 992 -5508.
,,_,. Phone 992-7474 or 742-4902 person . Logan Monument
and
backhoe
work
.
septic
Suites
$20.00 and up
alum lnum
replacement •
~
after 4 p.m .
tanks installed ; dump trucks
9-6-3tc
Company,
Inc
Leo
L
w indows , siding, storm doors
and lo-boys for hire , will haul •
8-27 -12tc Vaughan, Phone 992 2588.
and windows , Railing . Phone '
1967 390 CU IN Ford Motor, Gas Range &amp; Refrigerator
fill dirt , top sol/, limestone &amp;
8 23 -tfc
Charles Lisle , Syracuse, Ohio. ,
S60 Ford 3 speed standard Gold
graver; Call Bob or Roger WEEKEND HIDEAWAY - 5
$449,95
Carl
Ja c ob,
Sales.
transmi ssi on w ith c hange
Notice
Jeffers , dlly phone 992 -7089 ; acres, one floor plan 2 bedroom
Representative,
v.
V.
over , SJO. Phone 7412 -6878
ni ght phone 992 -3525 or 992
Rent
Johnson and Son , Inc.
GARAG-E sale, clothing, rugs ,
Elec.
Range
&amp;
Refrigerator
1
.5232
9-6-3tp
hom~, with full basement and
• 4-30-tfc
ftr ., toys , car seat. Avon , FURNISHED apt 3 rooms and
-----::-----~---Green
5399.95
2-11
tfc
well
water.
NEW
LISTING.
peperbacks. class 2 trailer
PUP S - German Shepherd. 8
bath . Phone 992 -2780 or 992 Only $6,500.00.
hitch , wigs , plastic crafts,
weeks, female , purebred ,
SEWING MACHINES . Repalr 1
3.432,
AUTOMOBILE
insurance
been
Elec.
Self-Clean
Range
and
off ice ftr. , misc . Tues .. Wed ..
NEW
LISTING
Nice
7
room
black,
sso.
Phoebe
Roberts
,
service, all makes , 992-2284.
9-6-tfc
cancelled?
Lost
your 1
and Thurs . afternoon only at
949 &lt;13 42 or 247.2641
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy. •
Refrigerator, copper $399.95
home In Rutland with hardoperator's
lice
nse
.
Call
992
the Enterpr ise parsonage 011 APT .. private entrance, bath
Authorized Singer Sales and
9-6-3tc
7428.
wood
and
pine
floors
,
bath,
and
Rt 33
Service . We sharpen Scissors.
and k itchen
Gentlemen
6-15-tfc gas
2-Sets Bunk Beds
heat.
Stove
and
9-9-3tc
please Cal l 992-5508.
3-29-tfc
A FEW new band instruments
Priced to Sell
refrigerator. Garage. · Large
Contact Renee Stone 992-7567
9-6-3tc Wanted To Buy
DozeR-;;;
k,l~d;i;;-;jno
by ·
outbuilding and barn. Large
9-4 tfc
Rent
JUNK
autos
,
complete
and
the
acre
hourly
or
contract,
NICE 3 room apt . and bath ,
Several twin &amp; full size
lot . All this for $12,000.00.
delivered to our vard . We pick
farm ponds, roads, etc . Leroe
APT ., private entrance, beth
all electric In Pomero y.
LOCAL
Night
Club
do
lng
strong
Beds
S29.95
and
up
LEVEL LOT - 3 bedrooms,
up auto bodies and buy all
dozer
and operator with over I
and kitchen . Gentlemen
Tabletop range, wall oven ,
6 figure business. Priced
kinds of scrap metals and
20 Yellrs experience . Pullins 1
please . Call 992 -5508.
dining
all
carpeted.
Nice
kit,
nicest apt. around . Phon e
right . Small down payment,
iron . Rider's Salvage, St Rt .
Excavating, Pomeroy. Ohio. ,
9-9 2fc
chen. bath, util ity, living, and
Gall ipolis ,
446 -7699
or
can finance balan ce Easy 2-Kitchen CabinebS29.95 up
Phone 992.2478.
, ,
124,
Rt
4.
Pomeroy
,
Oh
io
.
even ings , 446 9539.
lease of real estate available .
fruit room . Asking ju$t :
Ca ll 992 -5468
· 12·19-tfc '
8-23 -ffc
Phone 992 -9972 for , deta l Is .
Gas &amp; Oi I Heaters for the
$12.500.00.
9-6-26tp
---~---------8 28 -tfc Winter.
TUPPERS PLAINS - A little o ·DELLAilne;en-;-:-,-;catld J
2 BEDROOM Mobile Hom e in
behind Rutland Grade Schoo1. 1
•
place
on Rt . 7 with city water. 2
the Racine Area . Phone 992- ' WE NEED 200 tons of sheet, WALNUT , Modern , stereo complete
front end service, '
5858 .
bedrooms, bath, garage and
radio. am -fm 8 track tape Several Breakfast Sets $20 up
brakes and tuneups , wheels
cast, new or: old alumJnum
combinat ion , 4 speaker sound
balllnced electron ically , Open
8-29 -lfc
Keep cans se parat e . The
near an acre of land. Want only
system . Belance $110.76, or 4--Bedroom Suites $100 up
Rosenberg Co., Athens , Ohio.
a to 8 dally , Call 742-3232 on
$9,500.00.
'J. BEo...:&lt;;~OM mobile home
budget terms . Call 992 -3965
Sunday for ajjpt .
POMEROY - Walk to shop.
s .J5-tfc
COUNTRY HOME
4
12x52, green carpeting In
8-22-tfc
7-16-tfc
5 rooms, 2 or 3 B. R., llf~
front room with green CASH pa td for all makes and
Check the quality and p~:ices
bedrooms, balh, large living,
baths
,
part
basement,
utilities
.
No
pets,
Sec
ur
ity
at the Rutland Bargain
Miss
Patricia
Thoma
nice carport and garden. A
mode-ls of mobile homes . KOSCOT
KOSMETICS
&amp;
deposit req ., clean , available
porches, can be financed
Phone
erea
code614
-423·9531
.
Center
with
all
the
used
WIGS
·
(T
he
Mink
Oil
Base
place for only 516,500.00.
lovely
returned to reswne her dulles
immediately Quiet on Rt . 33,
With low down payment to
·4-13-tfc
Cosme- t ics)
Phone furniture dealers in the area.
about
9
miles
north
of
BUSINESS
BUILDING - with
at Louisville, Ky . after spenrlghl party. $9,500.00.
BROWN 'S, 992-5113 .
Pomeroy in the country . OLD FU RNITURE , oak tables ,
We're sure you'll return to
rooms
up
for an apartment.
3
Phone 696-1051
8-20-Uc
ding two weeks vacation with
Tile 2
MIDDLE PORT clocks, Ice- boxes, brass beds ,
Needs
renovating,
but will sell
9-8 4fc
story butld lng , bu si ness
her parents, Mr. and Mrs .
d iShes, desks, or complete
right
.
Call
for
a
look
then we' ll
households . Wr ite M . D. 1970 18 FT , SCOTTIE Ca mper,
room a'nd lovely 3 B. R.
Howard Thoma .
s ROOM house w ith bath, 2 Miller,
t•lk.
$8,000.00.
sleeps
6.
Good
condition
Rt . 4, ~omeroy , Ohio,
ap•rtment, with dining R.,
miles from Pomeroy , adults
Phone 992 -7126.
·
call 992 -7760.
Mrs. Daniel Worley of
IN THE FUTURE
only , Write in ca re of Box
H.W. floors with carpeting,
8-27
tfc
S-13.tfc;
STMENT NOW
Beckley spent last Friday till
729E, The Da lly Sen t inel,
H.W. heaf. good location .
Pomeroy,
Ohio
45769
PR,OPIER·ry
WILL GI\IE
Sunday with her parents, Mr.
S26,:SOO.oo.
9-8-61c
STEREO -RAOJO , am .fm 8
and Mrs. Charley Smith.
POMEROY Close to
track tape combination ' 41
1972 3 BEDROOM Windsor'
shopping,
3
B.R.,
dining
R.,
Mr. and Mrs . George Warner
••e•ker
sound
svstem ·
F URNI SH ED apartment ,
Mobile Home on I acre of
Balance 1106 .78 or easY .
e
-or
toH
bath, new forced air gas
and Mr. and Mrs. James
adults only In Mid dleport
ground . For
more
in terms . Call 992-3965 .
SMALL HOUSE , can be seen at
furna ce, porch, good con format ion. call 992 7638
Phone 992-38741.
Proffitt returned home WedI.
ttc
240 Condor St Pomeroy . dition , ca n be financed .
8·14
5.12-ffc
7 -30-tfc - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Phone 992 -7126.
~y after louring places of - - --------"""':'---SlO,SOO.OO.
9-5-tfc
GROCERY busine-ss for sale
Interest 1n the ·western states.
1974 SPR ING Manor Mobile
M IDOL E PORT - l story
Bvlldlng for sale or le-ase: - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Home , 12x 60, all electric, 3
Phone 773-5618from 8 :30p .m .
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Johnson TWO • room and bath eptl. in · months
frame,
3 B. R., d ining R .,
old
.
Sell
tra
iler
1o 10 p.m. for appo in tment , BUSINESS building , SOX60
·Middleport . For lllformat lon.
separate
or with 150' x 165' lot
bath.
utility
R.• some car vial ted l'e&lt;'enUy with Mr. and
ce-ment
dr
ive
,
Rt.
124,
near
call 992-2550 or 742-6551 ,
3-20 -tfc
in Tupp1ers Plains, Phone 992 Rvtland . Phone 742 -5052,
peting
,
tile
&amp; paneling,
7-3-ttc
Mrs. Lincoln R11811eil and Mr.
-------~-----2420 or 667·3363.
111 Co polity
8-21 -tfc
porches,
gas
heat,
level lot.
WE
ARE
picking
up
a
p
lano
In
and Mrs. Franklin R11811ell .
9-6 6tp
Maytay
1RAILER , Brown 's Trailer
vour area end would like
sa,~ .oo .
,
Automat u
Court. Pomeroy . Phone 992
Mr. and Mto. Harley Smith
some.
·
responsible
party
to
HOU
SE,
630
Mill
St.,
Mid
·
;t ; apeed •r•ratJon .
3324.
WE HAVE 3 FARMS ;- 27
1970 VAL IANT 65x l2, 3 be-droom
take over payments . Call
dlorort , 6 room a, 1•12 baths,
of Kanauga were Friday
-iA'hoJce o w•t•r
fully carpeted, LP oas heat .
acres - 60 ecres - 205 acres.
7-18-tfc
basement, partially
rul
Cred it Manager , (61" ) 772-.
,
tempt. Auto , water
Phone 992-7751.
evenlntl vlaltora of Mr. and
carpe
ted
,
k11chen
complete,
5669 or write- 260 East Main
BUY
NOW
SAVE
~level control. Lint
8-2.5 -tfc
Street, Chillicothe, Ohio 45601 ,
weshtr end dryer, etc . Could
Mrs. Charley Smith . Also
YOURSELF
LOTS OF
Filter or Power F=ln
be 3 bedrooms, gu furnace ,
4·7-tfc
Agltltor.,.
MO!'IEY .
'
vlsiUng were Kall, Charles and 3 AND 4t ROOM furnishe-d and
fireplace, storm doors and
Ptrma4~ret 1
unfurnlshe-Cl
ap.artmenh . 1967 2 BEDROOM fLM .C. EXCELSIOR Salt Works , E .
w indows , curtains and drapes
Kevin Knapp.
Maytaw
Phone 992 5434
·
ASSOCIATES
Inc luded. For Information ca ll
Ma in St ., Pomeroy. All kinds
Mobile Home. wash er and
Halo er Heat
Mr. Guy Russell of Columbus
Elden
Walburn
,
992-2805.
HENRY E . CLELAND Jr .
4-12-tfc
dryer , furn is hed or un of s.a:tt water pellets 1 water
Dryer~
B-13·tfc
KATHY CLELAND
nuggets , block salt and owr
and Terri Lynn were weekend P~VATe-;;tJ;-ro~-~r
furnlsh!'d . Good condition .
Surrpund
clothes
Oh io R:lver Salt. Phone 992
Phone J ohn Damewood ,
with · gentle, •vtn
LEONA CLELAND
vlsltan of Mr. Lincoln R1181ell
any organization ; phone 992 ·
3891 .
Reedsville, Ohio. Phone 9851 AND 9-10 acres Mulberry
heat . No hot apota,
3975
4278 .
and Nlted with Mrs. Lincoln
Hgts ., 3 be-droom , tu11
no overctrylna . P:lnt
6-5·tf(
992·2259
or
m
-2561
3-11 -ttc
ba semen t, cen tral a ir con
M~ Lint Filter.
9 -8 ·6f~
RuiHII at Holzer Medical
dltl on lng, Marble window
We lpeclallae In
CA
NNING
tomatoes,
preen
COUNTRY Mobile .;;;;;;;:k,
Center.
MAYTAO
11111. MlhOQinv woodwork LOTS tor life, 'tralftr or'i~~~dt
peppers
.
Geraldine
Cleland.
Rt . J3, ten mllet north of
IIOd Carpal
alum Inurn acre ens for ali
Racine, Ohio.
All
utllltltl.
Phona
7
•
l(r._and Mrs. Harley Johnson
Pomeroy. L,arge lots with
' ltrvlct
outslcre windows . Nice plac•
Rutland, Ohio Price. , ..
9·5-tf c
concrete pa tios , sidewalk!, Pets F01
Yllilllt Sunday with Mrs. J. R . rur,ners
for cou ple With feml/y , tast
7 -1•·tfc
fnel off street
house on left on Catholic
~. Mrs. John Downs,
parking . Also , spaces for AKC St . Bernard puppies, NEW Whiskey barrel for sale.
Cemetery
Road
,
Ce
ll
992
-717$
0 . E . Salley, Succes:!l Road , after J P.m. Can be seen by 15 ACFfE farm , 6 room hOUtt.,
small tra ilers , Phone 992 -7419 .
phone 843 ·2438.
~.Carmel, Barblra.
Re-edSYIIIe . Phone 667·63ot o4 , liPPOirffment only.
barn , other outbuilding.,
7-21 -tfc
' ·6·6tc
9-1-12tp
S19
,SOQ , ~hone 742.584S .
Arnold Grttl
«utllncftt '
9·6·6tc'
-----------'~~26tp ..,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..._....;j,j

--------------

--------------

--------------

CARRIERS

.,

WANTED

IN POMEROY ---------------------------

HOME
DEOORATING
.

THE DAILYSENTINEL ------------ --- --------------

--------------

INTERIOR AND
EXTERIOR

--------------

---------------

------ -----""'"'";....,..

.

'45,000

.

--------------

--------------

--------------

CARRIERS
WANTED

--------------

IN

SYRACUSE

RUTLAND
BARGAIN
CENTER

MASON

THE DAILY SE~TINEl -------------PHONE 992-215&amp; .
POMEROY, 0.

- -------------

--------------

dtlOIING SE~VJ.CE

I

PHONE 992·5476

--------------- --------------

--------------

--------------

----------------------------

--------------- Real

--------------

--------------

For Sale

- -------------

------------------

::Z."!·

-------------

lfem·CJCielfllt

--------------

AND

_______ ____ _

--------------

.....,_,_...

DeiLNtkp&amp;4

I.

20 · ABC New&amp;
t

· Pyle IJ. News 3·•.15; CBS Newsa, tO; Bewitched 6: Gomer
7:1l0-Trulhor Conseq 3 , N
20; Worksh
. , ews 10; What's My line 8; Elec. Co .
Insight 33. Op 15; Bowling for Dollars 6 ; Candid Camera ll ;
7: 30-ThatGood Ole N• 5 h Ill M
v e usk J; Buck Owens 8 ; Episode
Action 33 .
Court . T~ ~e:r ;~v ~elghtm 4: Pollee Surgeon 6; Munlc lp•l
Song
e
e ruth IJ; Mountwood Park ; Mounta in

2o.

a:oc;;;;:~olthet
8,10; Born Free 4,6, tS;
g m•re 33; Kiilero 20

Rookies 6,13 ; Chrome.

9 ·oo-Mo vie "J Kldd"
·
15 ; College Football 6, 13; Maude
• 8,10; Death ~oddess
9:30-Rhoda 8,10 ; Breast Cancer 20
10· llO-Medi I
.
ca Center 8, 10; Performance 33 · News :w
10 .: ~ ay at
Night 33
'
·
lt · llO.
3
4
6
8
·
Ne~.s • • • •lO, lJ.15 ; Janak I 33. Movie " The Vlcllm " a.
Movie So~~,rut and the Fury" 10.
'
l2:1l0-News 6 ; Janokl 33.
12 :30-Misslon: Impossible 6; Untouchables 13
1: 00--Tomorrow 3,4; Take Five For Life 15 . .
1:30-News 13.
2:1l0-News 4.
CABLE C!iANNEL FIVE
7:00p.m.- High School Football MeiQs at PPHS
9 :30p.m.- Superstar Theatre Dick Powell ShoW.

;j''

-

-·o

a;

337 N. 2, Middleport
992-2550

~.0.

~H-e_l_e_n_H
_e_l_
p~

TUESDAY, SEPI'EMBER 10, 1974
6:00--Sunrt.se Seminar 4; Sununer Semester 10.
6:~Farm Report 13.

All-WEATHER

I 992-2550 I

,•

Next to Highway
Garage on Route 7
Pomeroy Route 3

,171 P. . rl St.

Does
your
home
require an v of these
services?

' :*-News J.~. l.S; News 8, 10; Sesame Sfr~t
6· ~~B~IerJan Cou"sellng Techniques 33.

BOWERS
REPAIR

Will do
Dozer
&amp;
Backhoe Work, Install
Septic Tanks. ltaul
D i r t,
Gravel.
Limestone or Rent One
Of
Our
Trucks,
Backhoe or Dorers.

--------------

Doing strong 6 figure
business . Priced right .
Small down payment .
Can finance balance .
Easy lease of rea I
estate
available.
Phone 992-9972 for
details .

Te~~~~.?.~..~~g

.

Building
&amp;
Home
Additions .
Aluminum ·
&amp; Vinyl Siding, Floor
Sanding &amp; Finishing.

oJI

--------------

--------------

Ph

brand
new ~lo - Z.ag In nln walnut
table . In original cartons,
Never used , Cle aran ce on '74
models
(O nly
4
few
illlvallable. ) '43 40 cash or
1errru a¥ail41!ble . · Pnone 992 2653.
9-5-tfc

'1- The DIIUy Sentinel, Mlddleport-Ponteroy, 0., Monday ,Sepl. 9, 1974

•

MACttiNES ,

9-.5 -lfc
1969 CHEVY Townsman staTion STEREO -RADIO. AM -FM 8
track tape combination, 4.
waoon . $1,195 good condltloll
Phone 992-7620.
speaker
sovnd
system .
Balance Sll2 . ]1 or eas.y
S-24 -tfc
terms . Call 992-3965. '""'
8-29 -tfc
I969VAN
5651 . . 8cyllnder . Phone 772 - I ----------....,
8-16-tfc

oPEN EVES. 8 : 00P.M.
POMEROY, OHIO

7:30P.M.
Landmark, Store
Everyone and •nyone is
invited. Come and see the
latest in welding .

r

'

1910 TON. 4 whe-el drive- , Ford
pickup , bfo 6 cyl , 4 speed
Harold Brewer, Long Bottom ,
Ohio . 985 -35S4
8 18 -tfr

-

.I

Business Services ..

--------------- BISSEll BROTHERS

---------------------------v,

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

· SEPT. 9, 1974

;
,

PLYMOUTH Satellite,
dark Qreen, Wll lte inter ior,
very good conditlon . 1650
Pt)one 9P2·5388 ur 9o:-2 -5ot26.
9-8 Jtc

1967

1'74 OPEL MANTA
,
$2995
2 Door, orange finish , blk . vinyl Interior, bucket seats, less
than s,ooo miles &amp; 3 mo. old. Radio, deluxe bumpers.

Twentieth Century
Welding Clinic
and Demonstration

B•tence

,-

9 5 tfc

condition . SEWING

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

Mo'or Co.

1910CHEVELLE MALIBU
Stns
H.T. Cpe .. V-8, automatic power steering, good w-w tires,
clean Interior, rad io.

------------- -

good

1850. Phone 992 SJ88 or 992
.54'26 .
t 1 ltc

TilE ROSENBERG
RECYCLING CO.
A TO Z M.A. R T, used furniture .
appliances and m isc . Rt . 33,
Hartford , W. Va .
1·211 -tfC

well ,

svstem .

S109.78 or t-asv terms . P.,one
' " lt6.S.

vw Station W•gon , '•" •

runs

Pomeroy

QUAUTY

combination , 8 track tape.
AM FM radio 1 4 spe•ktr

Auto Sates
1966

2 SIGNS
Of

Moo eRN Wolnut stereo radiO
sound

Auto Sales

NOTICE

For Sale

----------..----

--------------

8:36-Bible Answers News&amp;; Five Minutes to Live By 4; Rev.
Cleopltus Robinson 13 ; Concerns and Comments 10.
• B :~lwnbus Today 4.
B:~Moming Report 3; Farmtime 10.
7:00--Today 3,4,15; CBS News 8,10; Osmonds 6; Farmer's
Daughter 13.
7:36-New Zoo Revue 6; H. R. Pufnstuf 13.
8:00-Capt. Kangaroo 8 ; New ZOO Revue 13; Sesame Sl. 33;
Jell's Collie 6; Popeye 10.
8:25-Jack LaLanne 13; Capt. Kangaroo 10.
8:36-Brady Bunch 6.
8:55-News 13.

9 : 00--Pa~ Dixon4; AM 3;

Phil Donahue 15; Wild, Wild, West 6;
Bullwinkle 8; Mo'Vie "These Thousand HiU.." 13.
9:36-NotFor WomenOnly3 ; HazelS; Tatlletales 10.
10:00--Company 6; Joker's Wild 8,10; Name That Tune 3, 15.
10:36-Winnlng Streak 3,15; Gambil8,10; Phil Donahue 4.
11 :00--Password 13; Now You See lt 8,10; High Rollers 3,15;
$10,000 Pyramid 6.
11:36-Brady Bunch 13; Hollywood Squares 3,4,15; Love Of Life
, 8,10; Lucy Show 6.
11:~ News 8; Dan !mel's World 10.
12:00--Pafssword 6; News 8,10,13 ; Bob Braun's 5().5() Club 4; Mr.
Rogers 33; Jackpot! 3,15.
12:36-Afternoon with OJ 13; Celebrity Sweepstakes 3,15;
Electl'icCo. 33; Split Second 6; Search For Tomorrow 8,10.
12: 55-News 3,15.

Us.

By Helen Bottel

••

Use Spank.lug Good Sense
Dear Helen :
Thlo may sound kinky, but you've got a lot of common sense,
so here goes :
My wife and I are bQth 24 and have no kids . We seem to have
a more tiberated marriage than our friends , but one day I proved
I was a chauvinist pi~ at heart. Sslan\11 bad a big argument and
she got so bitchy that I took her over my kuee and spanked her hard !
I was sorry the minute f let her go, but she got all sexually
heated up. For the last week, she's been doing all sort. of
irritating lhings, as !hough she's asking for a repeat perform·
ance.
Isn't lhis pretty weird for (U1 intelligent, mentally healthy
woman ? I think slapping your wife around degrades her and I
couldn't bring myself to -it again. But 1 can't stand her sudden

mearutess either.
,
fn two years of marriage and tbree of going together, she has
always appeared straight. What can I do' - STRAIGHT SAM
Dear Sam :
The obvious, for a liberated couple : together discuss
husband-wife spankings, what kind of feelings they inspire, and
the big question : Why ?
Your wife may only wan\ a playful whack to liven things up
- and lhat 's far from sadiHitllsochlsm. But if she "bitches" you
into beating her (or keeps on trying). that 's another dish of tease.
It could cause trouble sex won't ew-e.
You might remind her of the first rule In a good love
relationship: Don't insist on anything that completely turns your
mate off_ - H.

+++

Dear Helen:
We are forever hear~ and reading Uta! smokers should
have their rights, which " No Smoking" signs remove. What they
don 't realize is that they invariably hold their cigars and

2:30-Girlln My Life 6,13; Edge of Night 8,10; Doctors 3,4,15.
3:00-General Hospital6,13; Price Is Right 8,10; Another World
3,4,15.
3:3()....Qne Life to Live 13; How To Sur'Vive A Marriage 3,~.15;
Lassie 6.
4:00--Mr. Cartoon 3; Somerset 15; Sesame St. 33; Tatlletales 8;
Gilligan's fsland 6; $10,000 Pyramid 13; Bonanza 4; Movie
" Incredible Mr . Limpet" 10.
4:36-Bonanza 15; Mod Squad 6; Gilligan's Island 13 ; Bewitched
3; Lucy Show 8.
5:00--Mr. Rogers 20,33; Merv Griffin 4; FBI3; Andy Griffith 8;
Ironside 13.
5:30-Eiec. Co. 33; Hodgepodge Lodge 10; News 6 ; Trails West
1:00--News 3; AU My Children 6,13; Not For Women Only 15;
15.
Phil Donahue 8; Young and Restless 10.
6:00-Sesame St. 20; News 3,4; Lilias, Yoga &amp; You 33; News 8,
1 : ~uck White Reports 10.
10,15; ABC News 6,13.
1:30-Jeopardy 3,4,15; Let's Make ,). Deal 6,13; As The World
6:36-News 8,10; NBC News 3,4,15; French Chef 33; Bewitched
Turns 8,10.
6; Goomer Pyle 13.
, 2:00--Days Of Our Lives 3,4,15; Guidlng Ligh18,10; Newlywed
7 :DO--What's My Line 8; Elec. Co. 20; Truth or Conseq. 3; Paul
•
Game 6,13.
Nuchims 33; Bowling for Dollars 6; News 10; Name That
Tune
13;TBA 15; Elecbic Company 20; Art of Football 33.
WIN AT BRIDGE
1: 30-RFD 20;Hollywood Squares 3; Hollywood Squares 4; Wild,
Wild World of Animals 6; $25,000 Pyramid 8; Price Is Right
10; To Ten The Truth 13; MarcoSportllte 33.
Oook ro · " Wm al Bridge," (clo 8:00--Man Builds, Man Desb'oys 33; Happy Days 6,13; Movie
th•s newspaper) , P.O Box 489 .
NORTH
'
HBorn Innocent" 3,4,315; Good Times 8,10.
Rad1o City Station . New York ,
• AJ9
9
8:30-Eye To Eye 33; Bafiacek 3,4,15; Movie "Hurricane" 13;
N.Y 10079.
•as
Movie "Five Desperate Women" 6; MASH 8,10.
+A•
(NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE
~SSN
.)
9: 00--Firingl..ine20; Jeanne Wolf witl133; Hawall5-08,10.
... AKQ762
WEST
EAST
'
ORI'~ ANI&lt;ll!:
• 783
.2
'AK974
'QJI053
t JIOS
+ Q9962
... J5
.103
I
SOUTH !D)
.KQ!0954
'2 '
t K73
... 9U

American first - before gadgets

Ligareltesln a way llmtsrnoke blows AWAY from them and on to
the nearest Innocent bystander. Or else IIley put lighted
cigarettes in an ash tray and let them burn down, whlc)l e&lt;ealeo a
terrible stench.
Last nlght,ln a nice resU.urant, a man near us held his cigar
at the edge of his table so that the heavy smoke completely
en~ulfed us and our food. Women on the other side were waving
their cigarettes In the same fashion . You'll ootice oo smoker
ever holds the burning weed directly under his OWN ROllE'!
To avoid an unpleasant scene, we got up and left a delicious
meal unfinished . What else could we have done? - MRS . H . K.
per500 but today you're likely

For TuHdl~ , Sept. 10, 187~
ARIES (Morch 21 -April HI)
Be sure lo follow through on
promises you 've made to your
mate or parlner. Half-measures
wtll awaken resentment you
can do without
TAURUS (April 20·May 20)
You may feel you 'll have tune
for both your responsibih lies
and your pleasurable pursulls
today - but you won't
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20)
You're apt to jump at the fir st
price offered you for some thing you want to buy . Move
slowly am;:l bargain a b il.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
In order to sell your 1deas to
others today it's going to take
more than JUSt a light presentation . Know your s ubjeCt IMr·
oughly .
LEO (Jul~ 23-Aug. 22) A
kindness ol yours toward another Will go unappreciated
This Will anger you more than
IS reasonable,
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sopt, 22)
This is not a good lime to get
too 1nvolved w1th friends where
money IS concerned. Somethmg m!ghl go wrong and hard
feelings could result
LIBRA (Sept. 23·Dcl. 23)
You 're normally a very shanna

Weot
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

,..

North

3+ '

51
Pass

East
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

-------------

For

---------

--------------

-------------

:--------------

--------------

Real Estate For sale

--------------

--------------

WoHpen

-------------

News, Notes ---------------

--------------

------------- ------------

--------------

-------------

--------------

-------------

---------------------------'Mobile Homes For Sale

-------------

GaE T

CO.UNTRY

STEREO
91.1
WMPQ:FM

Real Estat F ""le

.

---------------

- - --------------

--------------

-------------

--------------

------------- ---------------

--------------

----------

..

-------------- -------------Sale
--------------

--------------- -"""("----·------

-------------

RUTlAND FURNITURE ·

---------------- --------------

'

.-

1

-

,_

Unsc.-amble these four Jumbles.
one letter to each Bquare, to
form four ordinary words.

.l

You could have requested soother table. After 1il, 110ft.
smokers have rights, and rrwty reltluranll reco(lllbe llle!n
!IIese days by pro'Vidlng spedal ltaze.lm areao .
Thartks lor poolntlng out an annoylne habit llllOilC "ad.
dicll." Smokers often seem Ul'lllware that when they bold their
clgareUes or cigars away from their OWN no..., other nearby
ooses are getting the fumes full force. -H.
'

•

~"by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

U Actress

1 Au naturel
5- of

Jackson

DOWN
1 Infant

reference
It Asian
river
11 Actor

z Surrounded
by

3 Balleto-

Gilbert

mane's

13 Dwell

favorite
( 2 wds.)
l Before
5 liberate
6 Georgia
city
7 Brewery
offering
8 Partner for

11 Appear
15 Taro

root
16 Duffer's

Yesterday'• Auwer
16 Actor
%3 Resoun:eo
Donahue 30 Kansas

need
17 Vam0011e
18 Celtic
god
%8 Departed
3 Down
Z1 Continental
(2 wds.)
prefix
9 M.l.'j.'.
%Z Change
grad
Z3 Pester
12 Inhibits
Zf Strong
boxes
%5-Lonigan
26 Redolence
%1 Withered
Z8 Dawson of
football
29 Nigerian
city
30 Nigerian
bibesman

and others

city

31 Kind of

19 Wear
away

gun

20 Clearing
21 Precede

33 Caution
341 11 Dies -"

cbronolog· 36 Wahine's
lcally
garland
Z2 Italian
3'7 Puture
commune
ground

32 - . nlght
doubleheader
35 Liz or

Rod
r7 Cordelia's
father
38 Anthony or

h&lt;+-i-

Barbara
38 Wild

',.,.,,.,,c
....... ...
....,............

LKYWAG

,~

cal

~

40 French

PLUJE

I I
1/NFREY

I I

I
~

resort

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

m

Ia

0

&lt;ON611:~W

COUL.DN'T
l'l:e.\1\AIN 51'-EJ.JT!

Now arranre the circled le-tteri
to form the surprise answer, as
surcested by the above cartoon.

\Prill11i1SMIIlliiSWII1W.\ THE

(llilllJ
(Aauwen lomorrow)

Jmnhl••,.1 RIVET

how to work lt:

AXYDLBAAXIl
LONGFELLOW

One tetter simply Jrtanda for 8/IOtber. ln thla 11mplo A II

TH i5

I I I

(IJ

ADULT

GUNNER

i\n~'llf'r: What NDU might ~xpect to fi11d

o jockey's £'ontrart - A RIDER
OlCK m.ACV

LADING
iff

used for the three L's, X for llle two O'a, etc. Single !etten.
apoatrophea, the length and formation of the worda are all
hint&amp;. Each day the eode !etten are dlfterent.

cRYProQUOTES
TESUZISO

•
TUSD

BTDL

DISVD

UK

ALS
ALS

ZIT D L

JHLDO-

ISDBLZLV

C LIZ 0

ORUH·

IEU . - EULORL

Yesterday's Cryploqoote: ... MEN 00 NOT SEE1 "niE
TRUTII. ITISTHETRUTHTHAT PURSUES MEN WHo, .:UN
AWAY AND WILL NOT LOOK AROUND.-UNCOU. "rEF·

FENS

•

,.

South
Pass
3.
4 N.T.
61

GASOLINE ALLEY

Opening lead-K"
WOTTYA
THE'
vVHIP5NAOE

For

GE1'
An&amp;mol

.
sept. 10. 1ar4
You Will undet1ake some c reative new projects this year.
They 'll prove both stimulating
and rewarding Contacts Will
~~~:~~a~~~~~ w1th pera~ •n

;JJWMID11rn® u..t -&amp;1.1--.~

IIJTI'LE

Both vulnerable

lo place your Interests tar
above your teammates
SCORPIO (Oc:t. 24·Nov. 22)
II you keep looking for ulterior
mollve~ 1n everything another
does. you 're bound to lind
something that will cause you
undue distress.
8AOITTAR1US (Nov. 23·
OK. 21) Someone in your
group ollnends haa been rubbing you the wrong way lately .
You may cross swords it you
run lnlo each other.
CAPRICORN l"-&lt;· 22-Jan.
11il) Best you double check .to
be sure thai one you think is In
harmony with an Idea ot yours
really IS .
AQUARIUS (Jon . 20·Feb.
1 g) Don't attempt any task thai
•s beyond your talents or
capabililies. The result could
be a big fiasco
PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20)
Even though the grass on the
other stde ol the fence may
look greener to you, you 'll find
out tl ISn't 11 you stray from
your own back yard

Dear Mn. K.:

MEA~ --

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

zoo~

Oswald : "Gadgets are
great help in World's cham·
plonship slam bidding. But
most of the time common
sense biddin~. plus a few sim·
pie conventmns like Black·
wood, will do the trick."
Jim: "I have a hand right
here . I watched a very
gadgel·minded pair gello six
after South opened with a
weak two· bid. They were
very proud of their method
which involved an asking bid

in hearts."

HE'~ DATED
INTERNATIONAL
6EAUTiE5 AND
MO£irGIRL5

·

Oswald: "Asking bids were
invented by Ely Culbertson in
1936 and abandoned by him
in 1938. An asking bid is ar·
tiflcial and asks partner
about his liolding in a specific
suit. II works beautifully ev·
ery year or so. "
Jim: "The bidding in the
box shows standard Ameri·
can getting to the SSrt:Je s~de
slam. North opeltB m third
seat; jump reb1ds in his sultj
raises spades to four ana
leaves the rest to South."
• Oswald: "It requires a little
faith In partner for South to
go on but he should. South haa
a perfect hand for Blackwood
afler North's verr strong bid·
ding and can b1d the slam
confidently after North shows

three aces.

_,, .... ,.,.....

¢ ...... ' "''"' '''' "' "

·WlNNfE WINKI o;

WOULDFUP

uu&amp;T ro
MEET HiM ...

INCREASE n-IE
SHLEMEELIUM IN

EACH BOTTLE OF

SURPSI · BOOMA

~~s/

I I&lt;NOWITlL
RELAX THE PALEFACES
· I MEMI THE WHITE
DEVILS·ER-1
MEAN YOUR PEOPLE-

II

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE o\SSN.I

c:a;t:l•!ttMZXJ
The bidding has been:
Well

North

Eaol

••

PaS!

I

•

SOuth
?

. You, South, hold:
.AK843,A2 tQ4+KQ17
Wluit do you do now?
A-BI.two opadH. You wool
1e , .. ,.. yoor ;real atrent~lh

... ~.....y.· .
TODAV'8 QUESTION
Your partner rebids to two
notrump. Wluil do you do now?

.••

I

00

l
l

I DON'T Tf-IINK I'LL 60
10 SCHOOL TODAI{...

•

0

J

..,

STRANEiE ume
illll1 Aull/fl;
TALWRI M£?
I'VE &amp;fEN IUAI1l~6
ALL li!m:END

~~l

j

j
J
•

FOR HER ...

-,.

. ........-

An1wer Tomorrow

/~

s111 aI 1 /no JA coli vMODE/IN

'

•

~-

(,)..Eit£'5 ~T

.

I

'

'

.. .....

~· •
' ~
J •

••

•

.
~.

~

I

,;

�.

•

•

S- The llailv Sentinel, MiddleDOri·Pomer&lt;ly, 0 .. Mondav. Seot. 9.1974

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
Notice

@)

Our yard and office
will be closed Tuesday,
17 September. Wed·
nesday. 18 September
and
Thursday
26
September.

•

79 Depot Street
Athens, 0 .

1971 DODGE DART
Sl99S
Swinger HT cpe., med . green finish with blk . vinyl root,
green vinyl Interior tr im , V-8 engine, automatic trans .,
sport St. wheel , full wh . cover. Like new w-w tires, radio,
real nice.

~

'--~--- · ·· · -

NOTICE
AUCTION every Thursday 1
p m . Horton St. in Mason
Consignments welcome from
11 a .m . to .5 p m or ca ll nJ
5471
a 21-tfc

POMEROY LANIIMARK
• • _ Jack W. Carsey, Mgr .
. . .. .. ~one 992-2181 __
TRESPASSING on the
Jacob Baer property
m Nease Settlement .
9-8-6tp

NO

--------------

~ormer

•

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

------------RUMMAGE Sale, Fry Building ,

Mill St , Middleport starting 9
am . Monday
morning.
Anyth ing and everything ,
9-B-2tc

------------FOR COM PLETE moblle home

service call Kinosbury Homes
Sales and Service In c We
have factor y trained personel
to handle your needs . We also
do
mobile
home
lm .
provements such as awn ings ,
corrorts and unde rpinning .
Clll 992 -70341 from 9:30 a . m
to 6 p. m . Monday thru
Saturday For service after 6
p m and weekends call 992
7671 or 949 -3655

Wanted To Do
GENERAL hauling
1284 or 992 7241.

-------------For Sale

'MARBLE top dresser . StH of
china dishes, k1tchen cabinet.
record player , full 8 drawer
ches t of drawers. Magnus
ch ord organ
See Katie
Car pente-r , Lark1ns St ,
Rutland
1966 CHEVELLE SS 421 cu .
Also , Accel Distributor .
Crane cam and kit , TRW
Racing pistons , and r 1ngs for WALK beh ind Gravely lOA
tractor, 19 mo . old , 30 in
327 cc . Hooker headers for 55brush hog - 40" yard mower
.57 Chev , TM 1 Tarantula
- rotary plow and tiller ,
intake . Everything new , will
homemade sulky. Phone 992
sell cheap . All tor a smal l·
7084.
black Chev . Call 949 4114 after
6 p m
9-4 5tp
9-6-3tp

-------------

--------------

1967 FO RO (!JStom 500, 289 CU .
m ., ps, pb , runs good . $350
Phone 985 3926.
9·9·12tc
9 4 .5tc
446

-------------

-------------f9T2 DODGE Colt 37.800 miles.

Help Wanted
SOMEO NE with knowledge of
auto part s and hardware
helpfvl. Appl y in person at
Moore 's in Pomeroy, Ohio.
9-5 ftc

radial t ires , good condi tion :
Phon e 992 7066.
8-23 -tfc

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

ELECTROLUX

Vacuum

Cleaners complete wlu,

tachments , cordwlnder and
POint spray , Used but In like

new condition . Pay $34 .•U
cnh or budgrt plan available.
Phone 992 -26.53 .

SOLID
VINYL SIDING
Produced frQro a special
vinyl com pound made by B
F. Goodri ch and Monsanto . 5
times thicker than metal
si d ing . Will not dent, chip,
cra ck , peel , rot, rust or
chalk .

OONST. CO.
Chester. Ohio
985-4102

All Small Appliances
I.Jwn MowetS

B&amp;K EXCAVATING
Milldlepof1, Ohio
9t2-5:U7

REDECORATING?

K&amp;H ROOFING.
J~mes

Don't forget the roof of your

home. Have a beautiful new

LOCAL
NIGHT CLUB

roof installed by AII-We,ather
Roofing Co.

.
All that ts mteded for a

.
free

e$timate is a phone call.
Please Phone:

1.S1N. ,...A'¥

Free Estimate.

NEW 1974 ZIG ZAG SEWI NG
MACHINES
In original
fa ctory carton Z1g -Zag to
make buttonholes , sew on
buttons, monogrBms, and
make fan cy des1gns wlth lust
the twi st of a single -dial Lett
In lay .a .way and never been
used . Will sell for only S47
cash, or terms avar labl e.
Phone 992-2653.
8-20 -tfc

BOB'S ASHLAND

Known &amp;
R eliable Service

If so, Call us Now lor a

ROGER HYSEU'S
GARAGE .

992 -9949
J90Mulberry
Pomeroy, O._
• EXPERIENCED
MECHANIC ON DUTY
8 : 30A.M. foS ·P.M.

_D&amp;D
CONJRUCTION

asrake Work
• General Overh1ul
• Tune Up-$5 .00 up
e Carburetor Adjustment

1967 FORD Galaxie 500 con
---- --- --~ --PHONE ,
vertible, good condition $550
ELEC1ROLUX
vacuum On Slate Rt. 124, 'h mit from
•••
f4f.3BJ2 or 843-2667
Also , 1965 Chrysler New
FREE HOME ESTIMATES
c leaner. A 1 con d ition, uses Route 7 by-pass towards
•
Yorker good cond ition SJOO .
paper bags , has co rdwinder Rutland.
Phone 742 6501
SUPERIOR
and
many attachments Also,
All Types of
BEAU1 /ClAN wanted . Phon e
shampooer
attachment In VINYL
PRODUCTS
9-6-Jtc
Ph.
992
-5682
or
992-7121
992 3551 . .
BUILDING
c luded (Only 4 ava ilable ) at
9 4 61C
1973 CUS TOM Delu)(e pickup
Call Collect 1-592-5544
S37 70
Cash
or
terms
All Mechanical Work
and REMODELING
V8 Automat ic transmission '
Athens, Ohio ·
available Phone 992 -2653
Excellent con dition Phone ....__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~__, __ ___ _______ _.!·20 -ttc
From a shelf to a . house.
Open Mon. - Sat.
-----L_________
_
992 -7810.
9-5-5tc
PaJnting, siding, roofing,
8
A.M
•.
6
P.M.
CANN lNG tomatoes , bring
paper hanging , kitchen
container s. Phone 247 -2852, USED PIAN O, good cond it1on , 2
~ION '1 KNOW THAT! MGM
cabinets, etc.
Andrew
Cross,
Racine,
Ohio
l=he Market Specials . S5
years old , credit terms
9-8-6tp ava11able
Inside . S3 outs ide. S pr l n~;~·
. Phone 446-0687 or
Ave ..
Pomeroy ,
~Ohio ,
write Brunicardl Hou se of
Collectors, dealers , etc .
WRIGHT power saw, a;4 Music, 61 Court Sf, Gallipolis,
Ever y Sat . end Sunday.
Arabian mare , portable air Ohio
1971
DUSTER
340.
4 speed
GRCAT PAINT VALUES AT
8.7 ·tfC
9 5 6t c
Phone
992
2019.
tank
, 1970 Karmanghia VW ,
ALL-WEATHER
HARD Uncoln Hill
1969 VW, 1965 Dodge Station -----------~~WARE .
9-6-6tp
VINYL SIDING ·
wagon , 4 dr 6 cyl. automatic , SHE1LAND PONY . Gentle
and
On Sale Now quality Devoe
with ch tldren Call 992 -71 80
.
PH.
991-7~ or
Wanted
car
s
can
be
seen
at
Raw
l1
ng
s
1967 VW, good cond it ion . Phone
West Main St.
Bright Wh1te Latex House
after 1 p m or 985 -3913
Auto Parts PHone 992 1889 or
.
992-2897.
•
992-7129
aoyt 1me
Pa•nt in 2 gallon cans. Only
992-2151
9-5-6tc
$6.49 fer gallon .
9 5 6tc
9-8-5tc
Free Edlm•llllilr'wd'slj 1 ...
L
Bran name Roof Paint, 10
1971 DATSUN P ickup, good 2 LOT S with vaults in Meigs 1973 350 C B Honda , good con pet. off While they last.
Year and Up
condition . Phone 992-3847
dition . P hone 992 -7605.
Take
advantage of these
Memory
Gardens
,
worth
Phone 992-2156
ALSO SHAMPOO
great
buys
While they are
9-8
Jtp
S1,200,
sell
for
only
5500.
9-5
6tp
With Your Own
still in. S1ock.
Phone 992 3032
CARPETS
FEMALE needs r ide to and 1963 FO RO st ation wagon,
Business.
9-8-3tp 1974 HONDA 750 Phone 992 AND CLEAN
from Athens, Working hours
Phone 992 3847 .
ALL -WEATHER
- -- - - - - - - - - - - 1511
from 7.30 to 4.30 p .m Mon HARDWARE
9-8-3tp
ONE
used
E
flat
Saxophone
and
9
5
6t
Water 1 L~ries · and, Powerr
UPHOLSTERY
E)(cluslve dealership
day , Thursday, and Friday .
337 No.-th second Ave .
case, $100. Call 992 -2428. after
· - p
LinM. 1111 work done bl' thtl'
Ca ll 992 n26
available in Meigs County
1967 FIAT, good condilton
Midctleport, Ohio
5 p.m . any day .
11 foot or contract. Also sto1ef/
Phone 992 -9981
9 6-3tc
992·2550
and surrounding counties.
9 8-6tp
9-8-3tc
work aod septic tanks irr~
Inventory Investment $3,895.
• .. lied . .
5 OR 6 l1ve lambs , $35 a head , 3
CREMEANS
CONCRE1E SE PTIC TA NKS cleaned ,
THE Citizens National Bank
Western ewes for $35 a head , 1
Call Marketing Manager
delivered Monday through
will offer for sale at t he1r
utility tra iler , S75 . White
rea sonabl e rates . Ph . 4146See or Call
Saturday and evenings
office in Middleport, Oh io at
geese George G Roberts,
4782, GaiHpolls . John Russell, ' 1 '
For Appointment
Phone
446
-1142
10 a .m . Sept . 18, 1974. A 1912
Bashan , R 0 1, Long Bot' j Bob o~ Roger Jlitfers
owner and operator
(304) 342-1234 Today. ·
Plymouth Duster , 2 dr .
tom , Ohio
6-13-tfc
5-12-ffc
special , auto . tran smission
. Day 992,7089
9-8-3tp
and air condition, Serial No
SE
PiiC
TANKS,
AROBIC
FOR your remodeling , roof ing ,
Night 992-3$25
VL-29 -G28493974 .
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
painting, repairing, concrete
WALNUT
d
ining
room
table
-~ Employment Wanted
9-8-3tc
We sell both new and used
CLEANED ,
REPAIRED .
_or '92-52~
and masonr-y work , call
with c hairs and pads , good old furniture. Such brands as:
MILLER SANITATION,
Ronn
ie
Hubbard
,
992-3511
or
~
WILL tr im or cut trees and
metal bed Phone 992 7066.
1964 FORD Van will Sell or
STEWART , OHIO PH . 662 992 -7302 Wor-k by hour or
..:.... shrubbery , Al so, c lean out
trade for pickup Phone 742
9-4 ttc Zenith TV, Frigidaire,
3035.
1h con1ract
REAOY . MIX
CONCRETE
.. .;,v
basements, attics , etc . Phone
5943 . '
Gibson, Norwal.k Living
10-4-ttc
delivered r ight to your'
8-7-26tc
•~. . . -. 9419-3221 or 742 -4441.
9 8-3tc NEW Idea 2 row corn picker. Room
Suites,
Bassett
project. Fast and easy. Free
-.... ,.,;..,
9-6-26tc
Phone 251 -2852 . Andrew
...__
FINISH Carpentry, paint-Ing , DOZER or backhoe work .
Furniture, Sunray, Sawyer,
estimates. Phone 992-J2a•.
Cross. Racine , Ohio.
1962 WILLYS Jeep, 4 wheel
Phone 446.3981 or 446·34159.
Goegleln Ready -MI)( co .,
inter ior and exterior, carpet
/ 'DAY NURSERY , 8to6p .m. any
Qrive, 4 cyl motor with cab,
9-4-6tp Collins. Before you buy,
Middleport, Ohio.
9-8-tfc
Installation
,
economy
and
""! ''
age . Reliable people With
A-1 condition . S875 See at 105
check with us first .
e)(cellence. Phorte 742-5081.
6-30-tfc:
Union Ave , Pomeroy . Call
.p~ medical training , will also
1972
SUPER
Beefle
VW
,
ex
992
-3293.
9-5-tfc
.., •• ·~&lt;- babysit at night . Call 992·7474
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
cellent condttlon . Also ,
·~ , before .5 and 742 -4902 after 4
Estate
9-8-6tc
Complete Service
portable Maytag dryer .
1
p. m.
Several Chests &amp; Dressers
SEPTIC TANKS c leaned
NICE 6 room house at
Phone 949 2602
Phone 949 -3821 or 949 -3161
Modern
Sanitation,
992-3954
or
9-3-12tc reasonable rent . We are in Racine, Ohio
S20.00andup
9 -6 6tc
992-7349,
-~ :--- '
terested In someone who will
Crltf Bradford
-· ,WILL do babysitt ing In my help sell monuments on our
10-23 -tfc
s.J. ttd
HUMP HREY heat ing stove, One &amp; Two Piece Living
- -home nights . Reasonable fine memorial lot This is a
----------I
60,000 BTU , good condit iO n. Room
EXCAVATING, dozer , loader
weekly or n ig htly rates . good opportun ity for the r ig ht
FOR FREE estimates on:
Call 992 -5508.
,,_,. Phone 992-7474 or 742-4902 person . Logan Monument
and
backhoe
work
.
septic
Suites
$20.00 and up
alum lnum
replacement •
~
after 4 p.m .
tanks installed ; dump trucks
9-6-3tc
Company,
Inc
Leo
L
w indows , siding, storm doors
and lo-boys for hire , will haul •
8-27 -12tc Vaughan, Phone 992 2588.
and windows , Railing . Phone '
1967 390 CU IN Ford Motor, Gas Range &amp; Refrigerator
fill dirt , top sol/, limestone &amp;
8 23 -tfc
Charles Lisle , Syracuse, Ohio. ,
S60 Ford 3 speed standard Gold
graver; Call Bob or Roger WEEKEND HIDEAWAY - 5
$449,95
Carl
Ja c ob,
Sales.
transmi ssi on w ith c hange
Notice
Jeffers , dlly phone 992 -7089 ; acres, one floor plan 2 bedroom
Representative,
v.
V.
over , SJO. Phone 7412 -6878
ni ght phone 992 -3525 or 992
Rent
Johnson and Son , Inc.
GARAG-E sale, clothing, rugs ,
Elec.
Range
&amp;
Refrigerator
1
.5232
9-6-3tp
hom~, with full basement and
• 4-30-tfc
ftr ., toys , car seat. Avon , FURNISHED apt 3 rooms and
-----::-----~---Green
5399.95
2-11
tfc
well
water.
NEW
LISTING.
peperbacks. class 2 trailer
PUP S - German Shepherd. 8
bath . Phone 992 -2780 or 992 Only $6,500.00.
hitch , wigs , plastic crafts,
weeks, female , purebred ,
SEWING MACHINES . Repalr 1
3.432,
AUTOMOBILE
insurance
been
Elec.
Self-Clean
Range
and
off ice ftr. , misc . Tues .. Wed ..
NEW
LISTING
Nice
7
room
black,
sso.
Phoebe
Roberts
,
service, all makes , 992-2284.
9-6-tfc
cancelled?
Lost
your 1
and Thurs . afternoon only at
949 &lt;13 42 or 247.2641
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy. •
Refrigerator, copper $399.95
home In Rutland with hardoperator's
lice
nse
.
Call
992
the Enterpr ise parsonage 011 APT .. private entrance, bath
Authorized Singer Sales and
9-6-3tc
7428.
wood
and
pine
floors
,
bath,
and
Rt 33
Service . We sharpen Scissors.
and k itchen
Gentlemen
6-15-tfc gas
2-Sets Bunk Beds
heat.
Stove
and
9-9-3tc
please Cal l 992-5508.
3-29-tfc
A FEW new band instruments
Priced to Sell
refrigerator. Garage. · Large
Contact Renee Stone 992-7567
9-6-3tc Wanted To Buy
DozeR-;;;
k,l~d;i;;-;jno
by ·
outbuilding and barn. Large
9-4 tfc
Rent
JUNK
autos
,
complete
and
the
acre
hourly
or
contract,
NICE 3 room apt . and bath ,
Several twin &amp; full size
lot . All this for $12,000.00.
delivered to our vard . We pick
farm ponds, roads, etc . Leroe
APT ., private entrance, beth
all electric In Pomero y.
LOCAL
Night
Club
do
lng
strong
Beds
S29.95
and
up
LEVEL LOT - 3 bedrooms,
up auto bodies and buy all
dozer
and operator with over I
and kitchen . Gentlemen
Tabletop range, wall oven ,
6 figure business. Priced
kinds of scrap metals and
20 Yellrs experience . Pullins 1
please . Call 992 -5508.
dining
all
carpeted.
Nice
kit,
nicest apt. around . Phon e
right . Small down payment,
iron . Rider's Salvage, St Rt .
Excavating, Pomeroy. Ohio. ,
9-9 2fc
chen. bath, util ity, living, and
Gall ipolis ,
446 -7699
or
can finance balan ce Easy 2-Kitchen CabinebS29.95 up
Phone 992.2478.
, ,
124,
Rt
4.
Pomeroy
,
Oh
io
.
even ings , 446 9539.
lease of real estate available .
fruit room . Asking ju$t :
Ca ll 992 -5468
· 12·19-tfc '
8-23 -ffc
Phone 992 -9972 for , deta l Is .
Gas &amp; Oi I Heaters for the
$12.500.00.
9-6-26tp
---~---------8 28 -tfc Winter.
TUPPERS PLAINS - A little o ·DELLAilne;en-;-:-,-;catld J
2 BEDROOM Mobile Hom e in
behind Rutland Grade Schoo1. 1
•
place
on Rt . 7 with city water. 2
the Racine Area . Phone 992- ' WE NEED 200 tons of sheet, WALNUT , Modern , stereo complete
front end service, '
5858 .
bedrooms, bath, garage and
radio. am -fm 8 track tape Several Breakfast Sets $20 up
brakes and tuneups , wheels
cast, new or: old alumJnum
combinat ion , 4 speaker sound
balllnced electron ically , Open
8-29 -lfc
Keep cans se parat e . The
near an acre of land. Want only
system . Belance $110.76, or 4--Bedroom Suites $100 up
Rosenberg Co., Athens , Ohio.
a to 8 dally , Call 742-3232 on
$9,500.00.
'J. BEo...:&lt;;~OM mobile home
budget terms . Call 992 -3965
Sunday for ajjpt .
POMEROY - Walk to shop.
s .J5-tfc
COUNTRY HOME
4
12x52, green carpeting In
8-22-tfc
7-16-tfc
5 rooms, 2 or 3 B. R., llf~
front room with green CASH pa td for all makes and
Check the quality and p~:ices
bedrooms, balh, large living,
baths
,
part
basement,
utilities
.
No
pets,
Sec
ur
ity
at the Rutland Bargain
Miss
Patricia
Thoma
nice carport and garden. A
mode-ls of mobile homes . KOSCOT
KOSMETICS
&amp;
deposit req ., clean , available
porches, can be financed
Phone
erea
code614
-423·9531
.
Center
with
all
the
used
WIGS
·
(T
he
Mink
Oil
Base
place for only 516,500.00.
lovely
returned to reswne her dulles
immediately Quiet on Rt . 33,
With low down payment to
·4-13-tfc
Cosme- t ics)
Phone furniture dealers in the area.
about
9
miles
north
of
BUSINESS
BUILDING - with
at Louisville, Ky . after spenrlghl party. $9,500.00.
BROWN 'S, 992-5113 .
Pomeroy in the country . OLD FU RNITURE , oak tables ,
We're sure you'll return to
rooms
up
for an apartment.
3
Phone 696-1051
8-20-Uc
ding two weeks vacation with
Tile 2
MIDDLE PORT clocks, Ice- boxes, brass beds ,
Needs
renovating,
but will sell
9-8 4fc
story butld lng , bu si ness
her parents, Mr. and Mrs .
d iShes, desks, or complete
right
.
Call
for
a
look
then we' ll
households . Wr ite M . D. 1970 18 FT , SCOTTIE Ca mper,
room a'nd lovely 3 B. R.
Howard Thoma .
s ROOM house w ith bath, 2 Miller,
t•lk.
$8,000.00.
sleeps
6.
Good
condition
Rt . 4, ~omeroy , Ohio,
ap•rtment, with dining R.,
miles from Pomeroy , adults
Phone 992 -7126.
·
call 992 -7760.
Mrs. Daniel Worley of
IN THE FUTURE
only , Write in ca re of Box
H.W. floors with carpeting,
8-27
tfc
S-13.tfc;
STMENT NOW
Beckley spent last Friday till
729E, The Da lly Sen t inel,
H.W. heaf. good location .
Pomeroy,
Ohio
45769
PR,OPIER·ry
WILL GI\IE
Sunday with her parents, Mr.
S26,:SOO.oo.
9-8-61c
STEREO -RAOJO , am .fm 8
and Mrs. Charley Smith.
POMEROY Close to
track tape combination ' 41
1972 3 BEDROOM Windsor'
shopping,
3
B.R.,
dining
R.,
Mr. and Mrs . George Warner
••e•ker
sound
svstem ·
F URNI SH ED apartment ,
Mobile Home on I acre of
Balance 1106 .78 or easY .
e
-or
toH
bath, new forced air gas
and Mr. and Mrs. James
adults only In Mid dleport
ground . For
more
in terms . Call 992-3965 .
SMALL HOUSE , can be seen at
furna ce, porch, good con format ion. call 992 7638
Phone 992-38741.
Proffitt returned home WedI.
ttc
240 Condor St Pomeroy . dition , ca n be financed .
8·14
5.12-ffc
7 -30-tfc - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Phone 992 -7126.
~y after louring places of - - --------"""':'---SlO,SOO.OO.
9-5-tfc
GROCERY busine-ss for sale
Interest 1n the ·western states.
1974 SPR ING Manor Mobile
M IDOL E PORT - l story
Bvlldlng for sale or le-ase: - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Home , 12x 60, all electric, 3
Phone 773-5618from 8 :30p .m .
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Johnson TWO • room and bath eptl. in · months
frame,
3 B. R., d ining R .,
old
.
Sell
tra
iler
1o 10 p.m. for appo in tment , BUSINESS building , SOX60
·Middleport . For lllformat lon.
separate
or with 150' x 165' lot
bath.
utility
R.• some car vial ted l'e&lt;'enUy with Mr. and
ce-ment
dr
ive
,
Rt.
124,
near
call 992-2550 or 742-6551 ,
3-20 -tfc
in Tupp1ers Plains, Phone 992 Rvtland . Phone 742 -5052,
peting
,
tile
&amp; paneling,
7-3-ttc
Mrs. Lincoln R11811eil and Mr.
-------~-----2420 or 667·3363.
111 Co polity
8-21 -tfc
porches,
gas
heat,
level lot.
WE
ARE
picking
up
a
p
lano
In
and Mrs. Franklin R11811ell .
9-6 6tp
Maytay
1RAILER , Brown 's Trailer
vour area end would like
sa,~ .oo .
,
Automat u
Court. Pomeroy . Phone 992
Mr. and Mto. Harley Smith
some.
·
responsible
party
to
HOU
SE,
630
Mill
St.,
Mid
·
;t ; apeed •r•ratJon .
3324.
WE HAVE 3 FARMS ;- 27
1970 VAL IANT 65x l2, 3 be-droom
take over payments . Call
dlorort , 6 room a, 1•12 baths,
of Kanauga were Friday
-iA'hoJce o w•t•r
fully carpeted, LP oas heat .
acres - 60 ecres - 205 acres.
7-18-tfc
basement, partially
rul
Cred it Manager , (61" ) 772-.
,
tempt. Auto , water
Phone 992-7751.
evenlntl vlaltora of Mr. and
carpe
ted
,
k11chen
complete,
5669 or write- 260 East Main
BUY
NOW
SAVE
~level control. Lint
8-2.5 -tfc
Street, Chillicothe, Ohio 45601 ,
weshtr end dryer, etc . Could
Mrs. Charley Smith . Also
YOURSELF
LOTS OF
Filter or Power F=ln
be 3 bedrooms, gu furnace ,
4·7-tfc
Agltltor.,.
MO!'IEY .
'
vlsiUng were Kall, Charles and 3 AND 4t ROOM furnishe-d and
fireplace, storm doors and
Ptrma4~ret 1
unfurnlshe-Cl
ap.artmenh . 1967 2 BEDROOM fLM .C. EXCELSIOR Salt Works , E .
w indows , curtains and drapes
Kevin Knapp.
Maytaw
Phone 992 5434
·
ASSOCIATES
Inc luded. For Information ca ll
Ma in St ., Pomeroy. All kinds
Mobile Home. wash er and
Halo er Heat
Mr. Guy Russell of Columbus
Elden
Walburn
,
992-2805.
HENRY E . CLELAND Jr .
4-12-tfc
dryer , furn is hed or un of s.a:tt water pellets 1 water
Dryer~
B-13·tfc
KATHY CLELAND
nuggets , block salt and owr
and Terri Lynn were weekend P~VATe-;;tJ;-ro~-~r
furnlsh!'d . Good condition .
Surrpund
clothes
Oh io R:lver Salt. Phone 992
Phone J ohn Damewood ,
with · gentle, •vtn
LEONA CLELAND
vlsltan of Mr. Lincoln R1181ell
any organization ; phone 992 ·
3891 .
Reedsville, Ohio. Phone 9851 AND 9-10 acres Mulberry
heat . No hot apota,
3975
4278 .
and Nlted with Mrs. Lincoln
Hgts ., 3 be-droom , tu11
no overctrylna . P:lnt
6-5·tf(
992·2259
or
m
-2561
3-11 -ttc
ba semen t, cen tral a ir con
M~ Lint Filter.
9 -8 ·6f~
RuiHII at Holzer Medical
dltl on lng, Marble window
We lpeclallae In
CA
NNING
tomatoes,
preen
COUNTRY Mobile .;;;;;;;:k,
Center.
MAYTAO
11111. MlhOQinv woodwork LOTS tor life, 'tralftr or'i~~~dt
peppers
.
Geraldine
Cleland.
Rt . J3, ten mllet north of
IIOd Carpal
alum Inurn acre ens for ali
Racine, Ohio.
All
utllltltl.
Phona
7
•
l(r._and Mrs. Harley Johnson
Pomeroy. L,arge lots with
' ltrvlct
outslcre windows . Nice plac•
Rutland, Ohio Price. , ..
9·5-tf c
concrete pa tios , sidewalk!, Pets F01
Yllilllt Sunday with Mrs. J. R . rur,ners
for cou ple With feml/y , tast
7 -1•·tfc
fnel off street
house on left on Catholic
~. Mrs. John Downs,
parking . Also , spaces for AKC St . Bernard puppies, NEW Whiskey barrel for sale.
Cemetery
Road
,
Ce
ll
992
-717$
0 . E . Salley, Succes:!l Road , after J P.m. Can be seen by 15 ACFfE farm , 6 room hOUtt.,
small tra ilers , Phone 992 -7419 .
phone 843 ·2438.
~.Carmel, Barblra.
Re-edSYIIIe . Phone 667·63ot o4 , liPPOirffment only.
barn , other outbuilding.,
7-21 -tfc
' ·6·6tc
9-1-12tp
S19
,SOQ , ~hone 742.584S .
Arnold Grttl
«utllncftt '
9·6·6tc'
-----------'~~26tp ..,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..._....;j,j

--------------

--------------

--------------

CARRIERS

.,

WANTED

IN POMEROY ---------------------------

HOME
DEOORATING
.

THE DAILYSENTINEL ------------ --- --------------

--------------

INTERIOR AND
EXTERIOR

--------------

---------------

------ -----""'"'";....,..

.

'45,000

.

--------------

--------------

--------------

CARRIERS
WANTED

--------------

IN

SYRACUSE

RUTLAND
BARGAIN
CENTER

MASON

THE DAILY SE~TINEl -------------PHONE 992-215&amp; .
POMEROY, 0.

- -------------

--------------

dtlOIING SE~VJ.CE

I

PHONE 992·5476

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--------------- Real

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For Sale

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::Z."!·

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lfem·CJCielfllt

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AND

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.....,_,_...

DeiLNtkp&amp;4

I.

20 · ABC New&amp;
t

· Pyle IJ. News 3·•.15; CBS Newsa, tO; Bewitched 6: Gomer
7:1l0-Trulhor Conseq 3 , N
20; Worksh
. , ews 10; What's My line 8; Elec. Co .
Insight 33. Op 15; Bowling for Dollars 6 ; Candid Camera ll ;
7: 30-ThatGood Ole N• 5 h Ill M
v e usk J; Buck Owens 8 ; Episode
Action 33 .
Court . T~ ~e:r ;~v ~elghtm 4: Pollee Surgeon 6; Munlc lp•l
Song
e
e ruth IJ; Mountwood Park ; Mounta in

2o.

a:oc;;;;:~olthet
8,10; Born Free 4,6, tS;
g m•re 33; Kiilero 20

Rookies 6,13 ; Chrome.

9 ·oo-Mo vie "J Kldd"
·
15 ; College Football 6, 13; Maude
• 8,10; Death ~oddess
9:30-Rhoda 8,10 ; Breast Cancer 20
10· llO-Medi I
.
ca Center 8, 10; Performance 33 · News :w
10 .: ~ ay at
Night 33
'
·
lt · llO.
3
4
6
8
·
Ne~.s • • • •lO, lJ.15 ; Janak I 33. Movie " The Vlcllm " a.
Movie So~~,rut and the Fury" 10.
'
l2:1l0-News 6 ; Janokl 33.
12 :30-Misslon: Impossible 6; Untouchables 13
1: 00--Tomorrow 3,4; Take Five For Life 15 . .
1:30-News 13.
2:1l0-News 4.
CABLE C!iANNEL FIVE
7:00p.m.- High School Football MeiQs at PPHS
9 :30p.m.- Superstar Theatre Dick Powell ShoW.

;j''

-

-·o

a;

337 N. 2, Middleport
992-2550

~.0.

~H-e_l_e_n_H
_e_l_
p~

TUESDAY, SEPI'EMBER 10, 1974
6:00--Sunrt.se Seminar 4; Sununer Semester 10.
6:~Farm Report 13.

All-WEATHER

I 992-2550 I

,•

Next to Highway
Garage on Route 7
Pomeroy Route 3

,171 P. . rl St.

Does
your
home
require an v of these
services?

' :*-News J.~. l.S; News 8, 10; Sesame Sfr~t
6· ~~B~IerJan Cou"sellng Techniques 33.

BOWERS
REPAIR

Will do
Dozer
&amp;
Backhoe Work, Install
Septic Tanks. ltaul
D i r t,
Gravel.
Limestone or Rent One
Of
Our
Trucks,
Backhoe or Dorers.

--------------

Doing strong 6 figure
business . Priced right .
Small down payment .
Can finance balance .
Easy lease of rea I
estate
available.
Phone 992-9972 for
details .

Te~~~~.?.~..~~g

.

Building
&amp;
Home
Additions .
Aluminum ·
&amp; Vinyl Siding, Floor
Sanding &amp; Finishing.

oJI

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Ph

brand
new ~lo - Z.ag In nln walnut
table . In original cartons,
Never used , Cle aran ce on '74
models
(O nly
4
few
illlvallable. ) '43 40 cash or
1errru a¥ail41!ble . · Pnone 992 2653.
9-5-tfc

'1- The DIIUy Sentinel, Mlddleport-Ponteroy, 0., Monday ,Sepl. 9, 1974

•

MACttiNES ,

9-.5 -lfc
1969 CHEVY Townsman staTion STEREO -RADIO. AM -FM 8
track tape combination, 4.
waoon . $1,195 good condltloll
Phone 992-7620.
speaker
sovnd
system .
Balance Sll2 . ]1 or eas.y
S-24 -tfc
terms . Call 992-3965. '""'
8-29 -tfc
I969VAN
5651 . . 8cyllnder . Phone 772 - I ----------....,
8-16-tfc

oPEN EVES. 8 : 00P.M.
POMEROY, OHIO

7:30P.M.
Landmark, Store
Everyone and •nyone is
invited. Come and see the
latest in welding .

r

'

1910 TON. 4 whe-el drive- , Ford
pickup , bfo 6 cyl , 4 speed
Harold Brewer, Long Bottom ,
Ohio . 985 -35S4
8 18 -tfr

-

.I

Business Services ..

--------------- BISSEll BROTHERS

---------------------------v,

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

· SEPT. 9, 1974

;
,

PLYMOUTH Satellite,
dark Qreen, Wll lte inter ior,
very good conditlon . 1650
Pt)one 9P2·5388 ur 9o:-2 -5ot26.
9-8 Jtc

1967

1'74 OPEL MANTA
,
$2995
2 Door, orange finish , blk . vinyl Interior, bucket seats, less
than s,ooo miles &amp; 3 mo. old. Radio, deluxe bumpers.

Twentieth Century
Welding Clinic
and Demonstration

B•tence

,-

9 5 tfc

condition . SEWING

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

Mo'or Co.

1910CHEVELLE MALIBU
Stns
H.T. Cpe .. V-8, automatic power steering, good w-w tires,
clean Interior, rad io.

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good

1850. Phone 992 SJ88 or 992
.54'26 .
t 1 ltc

TilE ROSENBERG
RECYCLING CO.
A TO Z M.A. R T, used furniture .
appliances and m isc . Rt . 33,
Hartford , W. Va .
1·211 -tfC

well ,

svstem .

S109.78 or t-asv terms . P.,one
' " lt6.S.

vw Station W•gon , '•" •

runs

Pomeroy

QUAUTY

combination , 8 track tape.
AM FM radio 1 4 spe•ktr

Auto Sates
1966

2 SIGNS
Of

Moo eRN Wolnut stereo radiO
sound

Auto Sales

NOTICE

For Sale

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8:36-Bible Answers News&amp;; Five Minutes to Live By 4; Rev.
Cleopltus Robinson 13 ; Concerns and Comments 10.
• B :~lwnbus Today 4.
B:~Moming Report 3; Farmtime 10.
7:00--Today 3,4,15; CBS News 8,10; Osmonds 6; Farmer's
Daughter 13.
7:36-New Zoo Revue 6; H. R. Pufnstuf 13.
8:00-Capt. Kangaroo 8 ; New ZOO Revue 13; Sesame Sl. 33;
Jell's Collie 6; Popeye 10.
8:25-Jack LaLanne 13; Capt. Kangaroo 10.
8:36-Brady Bunch 6.
8:55-News 13.

9 : 00--Pa~ Dixon4; AM 3;

Phil Donahue 15; Wild, Wild, West 6;
Bullwinkle 8; Mo'Vie "These Thousand HiU.." 13.
9:36-NotFor WomenOnly3 ; HazelS; Tatlletales 10.
10:00--Company 6; Joker's Wild 8,10; Name That Tune 3, 15.
10:36-Winnlng Streak 3,15; Gambil8,10; Phil Donahue 4.
11 :00--Password 13; Now You See lt 8,10; High Rollers 3,15;
$10,000 Pyramid 6.
11:36-Brady Bunch 13; Hollywood Squares 3,4,15; Love Of Life
, 8,10; Lucy Show 6.
11:~ News 8; Dan !mel's World 10.
12:00--Pafssword 6; News 8,10,13 ; Bob Braun's 5().5() Club 4; Mr.
Rogers 33; Jackpot! 3,15.
12:36-Afternoon with OJ 13; Celebrity Sweepstakes 3,15;
Electl'icCo. 33; Split Second 6; Search For Tomorrow 8,10.
12: 55-News 3,15.

Us.

By Helen Bottel

••

Use Spank.lug Good Sense
Dear Helen :
Thlo may sound kinky, but you've got a lot of common sense,
so here goes :
My wife and I are bQth 24 and have no kids . We seem to have
a more tiberated marriage than our friends , but one day I proved
I was a chauvinist pi~ at heart. Sslan\11 bad a big argument and
she got so bitchy that I took her over my kuee and spanked her hard !
I was sorry the minute f let her go, but she got all sexually
heated up. For the last week, she's been doing all sort. of
irritating lhings, as !hough she's asking for a repeat perform·
ance.
Isn't lhis pretty weird for (U1 intelligent, mentally healthy
woman ? I think slapping your wife around degrades her and I
couldn't bring myself to -it again. But 1 can't stand her sudden

mearutess either.
,
fn two years of marriage and tbree of going together, she has
always appeared straight. What can I do' - STRAIGHT SAM
Dear Sam :
The obvious, for a liberated couple : together discuss
husband-wife spankings, what kind of feelings they inspire, and
the big question : Why ?
Your wife may only wan\ a playful whack to liven things up
- and lhat 's far from sadiHitllsochlsm. But if she "bitches" you
into beating her (or keeps on trying). that 's another dish of tease.
It could cause trouble sex won't ew-e.
You might remind her of the first rule In a good love
relationship: Don't insist on anything that completely turns your
mate off_ - H.

+++

Dear Helen:
We are forever hear~ and reading Uta! smokers should
have their rights, which " No Smoking" signs remove. What they
don 't realize is that they invariably hold their cigars and

2:30-Girlln My Life 6,13; Edge of Night 8,10; Doctors 3,4,15.
3:00-General Hospital6,13; Price Is Right 8,10; Another World
3,4,15.
3:3()....Qne Life to Live 13; How To Sur'Vive A Marriage 3,~.15;
Lassie 6.
4:00--Mr. Cartoon 3; Somerset 15; Sesame St. 33; Tatlletales 8;
Gilligan's fsland 6; $10,000 Pyramid 13; Bonanza 4; Movie
" Incredible Mr . Limpet" 10.
4:36-Bonanza 15; Mod Squad 6; Gilligan's Island 13 ; Bewitched
3; Lucy Show 8.
5:00--Mr. Rogers 20,33; Merv Griffin 4; FBI3; Andy Griffith 8;
Ironside 13.
5:30-Eiec. Co. 33; Hodgepodge Lodge 10; News 6 ; Trails West
1:00--News 3; AU My Children 6,13; Not For Women Only 15;
15.
Phil Donahue 8; Young and Restless 10.
6:00-Sesame St. 20; News 3,4; Lilias, Yoga &amp; You 33; News 8,
1 : ~uck White Reports 10.
10,15; ABC News 6,13.
1:30-Jeopardy 3,4,15; Let's Make ,). Deal 6,13; As The World
6:36-News 8,10; NBC News 3,4,15; French Chef 33; Bewitched
Turns 8,10.
6; Goomer Pyle 13.
, 2:00--Days Of Our Lives 3,4,15; Guidlng Ligh18,10; Newlywed
7 :DO--What's My Line 8; Elec. Co. 20; Truth or Conseq. 3; Paul
•
Game 6,13.
Nuchims 33; Bowling for Dollars 6; News 10; Name That
Tune
13;TBA 15; Elecbic Company 20; Art of Football 33.
WIN AT BRIDGE
1: 30-RFD 20;Hollywood Squares 3; Hollywood Squares 4; Wild,
Wild World of Animals 6; $25,000 Pyramid 8; Price Is Right
10; To Ten The Truth 13; MarcoSportllte 33.
Oook ro · " Wm al Bridge," (clo 8:00--Man Builds, Man Desb'oys 33; Happy Days 6,13; Movie
th•s newspaper) , P.O Box 489 .
NORTH
'
HBorn Innocent" 3,4,315; Good Times 8,10.
Rad1o City Station . New York ,
• AJ9
9
8:30-Eye To Eye 33; Bafiacek 3,4,15; Movie "Hurricane" 13;
N.Y 10079.
•as
Movie "Five Desperate Women" 6; MASH 8,10.
+A•
(NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE
~SSN
.)
9: 00--Firingl..ine20; Jeanne Wolf witl133; Hawall5-08,10.
... AKQ762
WEST
EAST
'
ORI'~ ANI&lt;ll!:
• 783
.2
'AK974
'QJI053
t JIOS
+ Q9962
... J5
.103
I
SOUTH !D)
.KQ!0954
'2 '
t K73
... 9U

American first - before gadgets

Ligareltesln a way llmtsrnoke blows AWAY from them and on to
the nearest Innocent bystander. Or else IIley put lighted
cigarettes in an ash tray and let them burn down, whlc)l e&lt;ealeo a
terrible stench.
Last nlght,ln a nice resU.urant, a man near us held his cigar
at the edge of his table so that the heavy smoke completely
en~ulfed us and our food. Women on the other side were waving
their cigarettes In the same fashion . You'll ootice oo smoker
ever holds the burning weed directly under his OWN ROllE'!
To avoid an unpleasant scene, we got up and left a delicious
meal unfinished . What else could we have done? - MRS . H . K.
per500 but today you're likely

For TuHdl~ , Sept. 10, 187~
ARIES (Morch 21 -April HI)
Be sure lo follow through on
promises you 've made to your
mate or parlner. Half-measures
wtll awaken resentment you
can do without
TAURUS (April 20·May 20)
You may feel you 'll have tune
for both your responsibih lies
and your pleasurable pursulls
today - but you won't
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20)
You're apt to jump at the fir st
price offered you for some thing you want to buy . Move
slowly am;:l bargain a b il.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
In order to sell your 1deas to
others today it's going to take
more than JUSt a light presentation . Know your s ubjeCt IMr·
oughly .
LEO (Jul~ 23-Aug. 22) A
kindness ol yours toward another Will go unappreciated
This Will anger you more than
IS reasonable,
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sopt, 22)
This is not a good lime to get
too 1nvolved w1th friends where
money IS concerned. Somethmg m!ghl go wrong and hard
feelings could result
LIBRA (Sept. 23·Dcl. 23)
You 're normally a very shanna

Weot
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

,..

North

3+ '

51
Pass

East
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

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Real Estate For sale

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WoHpen

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News, Notes ---------------

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---------------------------'Mobile Homes For Sale

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GaE T

CO.UNTRY

STEREO
91.1
WMPQ:FM

Real Estat F ""le

.

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RUTlAND FURNITURE ·

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'

.-

1

-

,_

Unsc.-amble these four Jumbles.
one letter to each Bquare, to
form four ordinary words.

.l

You could have requested soother table. After 1il, 110ft.
smokers have rights, and rrwty reltluranll reco(lllbe llle!n
!IIese days by pro'Vidlng spedal ltaze.lm areao .
Thartks lor poolntlng out an annoylne habit llllOilC "ad.
dicll." Smokers often seem Ul'lllware that when they bold their
clgareUes or cigars away from their OWN no..., other nearby
ooses are getting the fumes full force. -H.
'

•

~"by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

U Actress

1 Au naturel
5- of

Jackson

DOWN
1 Infant

reference
It Asian
river
11 Actor

z Surrounded
by

3 Balleto-

Gilbert

mane's

13 Dwell

favorite
( 2 wds.)
l Before
5 liberate
6 Georgia
city
7 Brewery
offering
8 Partner for

11 Appear
15 Taro

root
16 Duffer's

Yesterday'• Auwer
16 Actor
%3 Resoun:eo
Donahue 30 Kansas

need
17 Vam0011e
18 Celtic
god
%8 Departed
3 Down
Z1 Continental
(2 wds.)
prefix
9 M.l.'j.'.
%Z Change
grad
Z3 Pester
12 Inhibits
Zf Strong
boxes
%5-Lonigan
26 Redolence
%1 Withered
Z8 Dawson of
football
29 Nigerian
city
30 Nigerian
bibesman

and others

city

31 Kind of

19 Wear
away

gun

20 Clearing
21 Precede

33 Caution
341 11 Dies -"

cbronolog· 36 Wahine's
lcally
garland
Z2 Italian
3'7 Puture
commune
ground

32 - . nlght
doubleheader
35 Liz or

Rod
r7 Cordelia's
father
38 Anthony or

h&lt;+-i-

Barbara
38 Wild

',.,.,,.,,c
....... ...
....,............

LKYWAG

,~

cal

~

40 French

PLUJE

I I
1/NFREY

I I

I
~

resort

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

m

Ia

0

&lt;ON611:~W

COUL.DN'T
l'l:e.\1\AIN 51'-EJ.JT!

Now arranre the circled le-tteri
to form the surprise answer, as
surcested by the above cartoon.

\Prill11i1SMIIlliiSWII1W.\ THE

(llilllJ
(Aauwen lomorrow)

Jmnhl••,.1 RIVET

how to work lt:

AXYDLBAAXIl
LONGFELLOW

One tetter simply Jrtanda for 8/IOtber. ln thla 11mplo A II

TH i5

I I I

(IJ

ADULT

GUNNER

i\n~'llf'r: What NDU might ~xpect to fi11d

o jockey's £'ontrart - A RIDER
OlCK m.ACV

LADING
iff

used for the three L's, X for llle two O'a, etc. Single !etten.
apoatrophea, the length and formation of the worda are all
hint&amp;. Each day the eode !etten are dlfterent.

cRYProQUOTES
TESUZISO

•
TUSD

BTDL

DISVD

UK

ALS
ALS

ZIT D L

JHLDO-

ISDBLZLV

C LIZ 0

ORUH·

IEU . - EULORL

Yesterday's Cryploqoote: ... MEN 00 NOT SEE1 "niE
TRUTII. ITISTHETRUTHTHAT PURSUES MEN WHo, .:UN
AWAY AND WILL NOT LOOK AROUND.-UNCOU. "rEF·

FENS

•

,.

South
Pass
3.
4 N.T.
61

GASOLINE ALLEY

Opening lead-K"
WOTTYA
THE'
vVHIP5NAOE

For

GE1'
An&amp;mol

.
sept. 10. 1ar4
You Will undet1ake some c reative new projects this year.
They 'll prove both stimulating
and rewarding Contacts Will
~~~:~~a~~~~~ w1th pera~ •n

;JJWMID11rn® u..t -&amp;1.1--.~

IIJTI'LE

Both vulnerable

lo place your Interests tar
above your teammates
SCORPIO (Oc:t. 24·Nov. 22)
II you keep looking for ulterior
mollve~ 1n everything another
does. you 're bound to lind
something that will cause you
undue distress.
8AOITTAR1US (Nov. 23·
OK. 21) Someone in your
group ollnends haa been rubbing you the wrong way lately .
You may cross swords it you
run lnlo each other.
CAPRICORN l"-&lt;· 22-Jan.
11il) Best you double check .to
be sure thai one you think is In
harmony with an Idea ot yours
really IS .
AQUARIUS (Jon . 20·Feb.
1 g) Don't attempt any task thai
•s beyond your talents or
capabililies. The result could
be a big fiasco
PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20)
Even though the grass on the
other stde ol the fence may
look greener to you, you 'll find
out tl ISn't 11 you stray from
your own back yard

Dear Mn. K.:

MEA~ --

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

zoo~

Oswald : "Gadgets are
great help in World's cham·
plonship slam bidding. But
most of the time common
sense biddin~. plus a few sim·
pie conventmns like Black·
wood, will do the trick."
Jim: "I have a hand right
here . I watched a very
gadgel·minded pair gello six
after South opened with a
weak two· bid. They were
very proud of their method
which involved an asking bid

in hearts."

HE'~ DATED
INTERNATIONAL
6EAUTiE5 AND
MO£irGIRL5

·

Oswald: "Asking bids were
invented by Ely Culbertson in
1936 and abandoned by him
in 1938. An asking bid is ar·
tiflcial and asks partner
about his liolding in a specific
suit. II works beautifully ev·
ery year or so. "
Jim: "The bidding in the
box shows standard Ameri·
can getting to the SSrt:Je s~de
slam. North opeltB m third
seat; jump reb1ds in his sultj
raises spades to four ana
leaves the rest to South."
• Oswald: "It requires a little
faith In partner for South to
go on but he should. South haa
a perfect hand for Blackwood
afler North's verr strong bid·
ding and can b1d the slam
confidently after North shows

three aces.

_,, .... ,.,.....

¢ ...... ' "''"' '''' "' "

·WlNNfE WINKI o;

WOULDFUP

uu&amp;T ro
MEET HiM ...

INCREASE n-IE
SHLEMEELIUM IN

EACH BOTTLE OF

SURPSI · BOOMA

~~s/

I I&lt;NOWITlL
RELAX THE PALEFACES
· I MEMI THE WHITE
DEVILS·ER-1
MEAN YOUR PEOPLE-

II

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE o\SSN.I

c:a;t:l•!ttMZXJ
The bidding has been:
Well

North

Eaol

••

PaS!

I

•

SOuth
?

. You, South, hold:
.AK843,A2 tQ4+KQ17
Wluit do you do now?
A-BI.two opadH. You wool
1e , .. ,.. yoor ;real atrent~lh

... ~.....y.· .
TODAV'8 QUESTION
Your partner rebids to two
notrump. Wluil do you do now?

.••

I

00

l
l

I DON'T Tf-IINK I'LL 60
10 SCHOOL TODAI{...

•

0

J

..,

STRANEiE ume
illll1 Aull/fl;
TALWRI M£?
I'VE &amp;fEN IUAI1l~6
ALL li!m:END

~~l

j

j
J
•

FOR HER ...

-,.

. ........-

An1wer Tomorrow

/~

s111 aI 1 /no JA coli vMODE/IN

'

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~-

(,)..Eit£'5 ~T

.

I

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J •

••

•

.
~.

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�•
•

B- The

Dail~ Senvnel, Middleport-Pouwruy. 0 .. M_twul&lt;~y ,Sepo . 9,

1974

VISITS MOTHER

Dr. and Mrs. E . A. Trat-y, with his moUter . Nellie Trflt')',
Colwnbus. spent the ...., ..end

·MEIGS.THEATRE
Toni9ht &amp; Tuesday
SEPT. 9-10

WALK.INGTALL

· t Rl
CARTOONS

Show Starts 7 p .m .

Pomeroy.
CLUB TO MEET
Laurel Cliff fleallh Club will
meet Thursda)' at the home of
Nellie Tracy at 7:30p.m .

p a t roI Iogs 3 a CCI"dents
Mrs. Mabel Haneoek. 60,
Johnstown , Ohio, suffen•d
minor- inj W"ics in a lr()fri&lt;·
accident at 11 :50 !' ·Ill· Sunday

on Rt. 143, one and one lr nth

miles sou th of 6!12.
T() VISIT CHURCH
The Gallia-Meigs PIJsl Statr
SYRACUSE - Rev. Orville
Hi~hway Patrol s aid the
Carningham, Cable, will be the
Hancock
t•ar madt&gt; a leU turn
guest spea ker at the First
Churcho!God, Thursday, Sept. in the path or a vehicle
12 at 7:30 p.m. Rev . Cun- operated by Curtis Frate)•. 24,
ningham has visited tht&gt; Holy . Rt. 4, Pom.eroy . There was
modt&gt;rate damage to both
Land. The public is invited to
vehicles.
allcnd.
A deer was str uck in an
accident at 11 : lS p rn. Satur-

Ford

day on Rt . 35. two miles west vf
Hl. 160 where the animal ran
into the fk"'lh of 4:1 car operated
by Wes ley Canter. 37. ol

Continued fr om page I
presidential ~rdon before an
indkbnent," GUiigan said .
"There will be a lot nf
American people who will
suspect thi s may be the result
' a deal made
.
of
before Nixon
resigned his presidency."
Gilligan asked how John
Dean could be convicted and
Nixon pardoned. but admitted
he had no way of knowing
President Ford's motives in
granting the pardon . "A lot of
people will think it is unjus t to
rap tbe little guy and let lhe big
guy oil," Gilligan added.

Jackson.
Timolhy Lee, 16, Rt 2,
Racine, had minor injuries in
an accident l'!l 12:4C p.m .

Saturday on T~lOO , one and one
tenth miles west of Rt. 338 in
Meigs County.
J
The patrol said Lee losl
control of his car which ran
the right side of lhe highway.
s triking a jWlk ca r owned by
Don Stobart of Rl. 2, Rfl cine.

orr

EHS majorette line featured
EASTERN - As the hand
played " Roc k Around the
Clockll, the Eastern Eagle
majorettes were fe.atut·ed in a
hoop baton wilh clock lace
twirling routine when the
Eastern bandsmen of Charles
Wills presented a halftime
show at the Zane Trace game
Friday night.
Making up the majorette
corps a re Louan n Newell, head
majore tte, and Joanne Fick,
Bel.sy Amsbary, Teresa Carr
and Belinda Deeter.
The band began its show in
one company front mov ing via
step-fours into four compan y
fr onts , Th e ba nd move d
lhroagh a wedge dr ill into a
block band and the n did a steplour drill at midfield. The

Your dollars
can be
stret c h ed
by good
management
11:!:_ by keeping your spares at
work for you in a Savings Account
or Certificates of Deposit with
us ... where they will grow some
every day.
And eve n a very good money
ma nager 's job LS easier whe n
he ha s mor e of it 'to manage.

The Farmers Bank

"It ' s

much

a nd Savings Co.

Mrs. Lola Ma rie Imler Meek,
73, Sycamore St., Middlepor t,
died Sarday evenin g at the
Holzer Med ical Center . She
was born Dec. 15, 1900, in
Vinton, Iowa, tile daug hter of
the late Simon a nd Addle
Twain Imler . She was also
preeeded in death by her
husband, Joseph Meek, in 1971 ;
thr ee br oth e rs, · a nd four
sisters.
Surviving are a niece, Mrs.
Harold (Mary Helen ) Mel2ger,
New Lexington, and a nephew .
Sherman Browne, New Straitsville, and several cousin~.
Mrs . Meek was employed as
a dietician in Vinton for a
nwnber of years and she was a
50 year member of the Royal
Neighbors of America a t
Vinton .
Fare ra l services will be held
at I p.m. Wednesday at the
Rflwlings-Coals Funeral Heme
wilh Rev. Steve Skaggs officiating . Burial will be in the
Middl e port Hill Cemetery .
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2 to 4 and from 7 to 9
p.m . Tuesday.

Our " FRIENDLY ONES"
ma ke it a pra ctice to treat

reopened today

as

th e

" FRIENDLY

ONES. "

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . - - - -M[MHfR Ft.OfRAL DfPOS.IT INSlJRANC( CO RPORATION
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- -

p.C.p.:\\~~_,.....-;I~T'S~-GOOD
o"t9.

died on Stmday

Ga11ia schools

the y were the custcim er .
That 's why th ey' re known

"

Lola Marie Meek

than it is to practice it."

ev ery customer li ke th ey
would want to be treated if

POM EROY, O HIO

WASHINGTON - J . F .
terHors l, who had promised to
be candid in his job as White
House press secreta ry, quit
because he could not support or
de fend President Ford's
pardon of Richard Nixon . HJ
felt in good consc ience I could
not support his decis ion, 1 '
terHorst told UPI, "because I
did n ' t kn ow how 1 could
cr edibly d efe nd it in the absence or pa r dons for those who
evaded the war in Vietnam in
good conscience a nd former
Nixon aides who have suffered
under the sa me Watergate"
troubles as Nixon.
" Mercy,like justice, must be
eve n-handed," terHors t said.
"" I jus t _ concl ude d th e
Pres ident (Nixon) is no more
deserving of a pa rdon tha n
people in lesser s tations of
life," he said. Te rHor st, 52 1
was the £ir st Ford a ppoin tee
and lhe first to quit.

musi cal Sele ction for the
routine was " Grandioso 11 •
Majorettes presented a twobaton routine at midfield while
lhe band did a drill consisting
of box eights, step-lours and a
wedge drill at midfield.

BERKELEY, CALIF. - A
Uni ver sity of Californi a
po litical scie ntis t s a ys t he
pardon for Richard Nixon may
" kick open" the Watergate
scandal again .
" If the President thinks this
is going to stop people from
worry ing ab out Water gate,
he 's in for a surprise / ' said
professor Nelson Polsby. the
author of 12 books on nati ona l
politics.
" I feel this will raise mor e
questions than lt an swers. "
Polsby said President F ord
was "making it muc h more
difficult, if n ot impossible, lor
lhere to be an official determination of the fac ts."
He said the Pres ident was
''not 's lamming the door at all ' '
on Watergate, addin g : " He
may be kicking it open."

easier to ,

memorize the Golden Ru le

,TO BE HOME

SALE

MONDAY, SEPT. 9th • 9 A.M.-9 P.M.

I Do It

Gallla County students
returned to the classroom this
morning f~llowing · ratiflcation
Sarday of agreements reached
over the weekend by striking
members of the Gallla County
Local Teachers Association
and Gallia OAPSE Chapter and
lhe Gallia County Local Board
of Education.
Teachers
ratified
the
agreement 135-0 while lhe noncertificated employes agreed
to the package by a 65-0 vote.
Under the new agreements,
OAPSE employees were given
a 7.5 pet. increase in wages and
paid hospitalization insurance.
Teachers wtll get a starting
base salary of 17,100, an Increase of 1200 now and it will go
to $7,400 in January.
The board was in session this
morning to approve both
contrac ts.

.

Firemen

Continued from page 1 .
Albert, Yorkville, ropes and
ladders; Earl Goodin , Alhens,
extin g uishmen t; William
Hammond, Jr ., Pleasantville,
marks;
Andy
Lemley,
Gallipelis, portable pumps and
tanker operations ; Joe Struble,
P omer oy,
closed
heart
, massage and rescitation, a nd
Stan ley Wilson , Lithopolis,
elec lrical hazards and LPG
gas.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Saturday Admissions Wilma Anderson , Long Bottom ; Elva Minix, Racine ;
Myrna Wears, Pomeroy_
Saturday Discharges Clara Smith , · John Tyree ,
Ronnie Anderson, Jr ., Dorothy
Clark , Jennie Newmyer,
Shirley Bis hop , Deborah
Hammach.
Sunday Admissions
Thomas Cook, Jr., Pomeroy ;
Annie Patric k, Middleport ;
Charles Spires, Rutland; Linda
Warner, Racine; Albert Pearl,
Clifton, W. Va.; Vivian Phelps,
Rflclne; Mabel Swan. Langsville; Howard Dailey , Middlepert.
Sunday Discharges
Michael Stilh, Ava Greenlees ,
Gary Seholderer .

Ell- tll,THANKS--· I
DON'T' THINK 50-· 8lif

W. ·IMY8E JUSf

WI N~5.'-P
f!U&lt;XZ~ ~~

ON! MV.f'L.l.
I(XJ HAVe,

~, OH!

Qll " I(! GI1AB

()IJE,CU&amp;a·--

~~! C(JJi

Time

DIVES OfF
~~

WI60N!

EXTE NDED OUTLOOK
W e da 01 d a~
throu g h
Frlday: Warm Wedllellday,
lumlag a little cooler Tbunda ~ oad Friday. A oboace ol
ohowen dally. Hl&amp;bo !G to 15
Wednetday droppln1 to 70o
Friday. Lows SO to 65 earl ~
Wedaesday ood In 50• early
Friday.

l&gt; NC!.~

WINe.sN'?

Vinton
By-MARIE ALEXANDE R
Mr _ and Mrs. David Payne
and daughter left Friday for
California whe re t hey will
make their permanen t home.
They had lived In California
before moving here .
Luci lle Fitch ol Detroit
visited her parents, Mr. and
Mrs . Cli nt Fitch recenUy.
Recent guests of Mrs. Verla
Knight were Mr . and Mrs.
Charles Knight , Wheeling, W.
Va., and Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Knight and family, Colwnbus.
Mrs . Tom Knight remained for
lhe week to help care lor her
mothe r ·in-law
wh o
w as
r ece ntly ..d ischa r ged fr om
Holze r Medical Center.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cen!Osta
were recent callers of Mr. and
Mrs . Osca r Dyer .
Mr . a nd Mrs. Harr y
Ric hardson and sons , Troy,
Ohio and Mr. and Mrs. Karl
Justus and family , Lancaster,
spent a weekend here with
lheir mother, Mrs. EUzabelh
Cloud and.helped her celebrate
her birthday wilh a lamlly
picnic in the Vinton Civic Park
Sarday wtlh 34 in attendance.

Storys Run

BY GLENNA SHULE R
Liz Niber t ca lled there also.
Mr _ and Mrs. Denny Spires
Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Searls,
Diane a nd David, or Chicago, and fam ily called on Mrs .
Mr. and Mrs . Ase.l Sea r ls of Murie l Spires and Ir ma Bales a
Day t on. Rev. and Mrs. day recently , Also calling were
Os bor ne Farley of Canal Mr . and Mrs. Rfllph Bales, Mr .
Winchester, Kenneth Sea rls and Mrs. J im Ables, Raci ne,
a nd daug h ter Vi ck ie of Mr . a nd Mrs . Junior White.
Balti more, Ohio, Mrs. Jean
Dennis Shuler , R t. l LangsFife, Timmy and Melissa. Rt .. ville, ha d lhe misfortar e of
7. we re recent weekend visitors falling while at play. breaking
of Mr. and Mrs . Paul Searls. both arms and a head injary.
Mr . an d Mrs. Eddie Rife and Alte r several days i n Veterans
Tammy of Wells ton spent a day Mem ori a l Hos pital he is
recently with Mr. and Mrs. re cupera ting at home. Dennis
is a s ixth gra de pupil at Salem
Marlin Rile.
Mr . a nd Mrs. Danny Spires, Center . He is the gr andson or
De nise and Julie and Stephen, Mr. and Mrs. Alex Shuler , Rt. I
FILES FOR DIVORCE
called on Mr. a nd Mrs. Calvin Cheshire.
Dottie Capehart, Rt . 4,
Caldwell, J ohnny and Jeanie of
Spending a day recently witll Pomeroy, filed suit for divorce
Gallipolis a day recently _ Also Mr _ and Mrs . J ohnny Reedy in Meigs County Common
ca llin g th e r e was Ri cky and daughter at Roseville were P leas Court against Michael
Martin.
· Stanley Searls and Mr. and Capehart, Pomeroy, charging
Denise and Julie Spires spent Mrs . Clare nce Searls, Rt. I , extreme cruelty and gross
a day reeently with Mr . and Bidwell.
neglect of duty.
Mrs. Jari or White at Kyger.
Mr . and Mrs . J ohn Ve ith
LOCAL TEMPS
Pleasant Valley Hospital
spent a weeke nd ·with Mr . and
The
temperature in downDavid
Disc har ge d
Mrs . George Ve ith, Jr . and Sullivan , Leon ; lloyd Smith, town Pomeroy at 11 a .m.
family in Columbus.
New Have n ; Mrs. James Monday was 71 degrees arder
Mrs. Marie Spires called on Carter, Point Pleasant; Mrs. extremely cloudy skies.
Mr . an d Mrs. Harl ey Taylor a David Chapman, Southside;
MORE SUPPORTS
day recently.
Margare t Rainey, Henderson ;
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
Mr . a nd Mrs . J erry Mat- Mrs. William Hoffman , Letart ;
president
of the National
thews and Jerr'y, Jr. called on Melinda Waugh, ~e sa g e ;
Mr. and Mrs. Danny Spires and Ralph
Holcum ,
Point Farmers Union says almost 100
family recently.
·
Pleasant ; Mrs . Bernard NFU members from Ohio· and
Mrs. Rosa Searls of Mid- Jordan , Gallipolis Ferry ; Mrs. nine olher states have asked
dleport spent a d ay r ~c e ntly Gale Conohue, Letart; J ohn lor a White House meeUng to
plead lor an emergency inwilh Mr . and Mrs. Paul Sea rls. Chapman, Gallipolis Ferry .
in milk price supperts.
crease
Also calling the r e were Mrs.
Kay Frederick, J eff and J odi.
Mrs. Rhonda Able s of
Racine , Mrs. Connie Bales of
Kyger called on Mrs. Marie
Continued from page 1
Spires a day rece ntly.
Mr . and Mrs . Denny Spires, ordeal with criticism of lhe government and praise for his Je!Ust
Denise , Juli e a nd Steph en captors . Jose Guadalupe Zuno Hernandez, a political power in
called on Mrs. Elsie Lipscomb, his own right, attacked hla son; ln-law's government for letUng
William and Robe rt at Mason " itself c ome under control of lhe reactionary forces of lhe
City recently .
world ."
Denny Spires c alled on Mr.
Zuno told a news conference at his home Sunday the leftist
and Mrs. Dewey F erguson of guerrillas who kidnaped him from a Guadalajara street Aug. 28
Rio Grande. Also calling were were "clean-livilll! good bays." fie also denounced " Yankee
Joe Clark or· Gallipolis and Mr. lmperallism" and attacked the U.S. Cenlrallntelligence Agency
Akers .
as a group of " capitalists who have no respect for anything."
Mr s . Ma ri e Spires and
The People's Revolutionary Armed Forces freed him
Stephen spent a day recently unharmed Saturday night even lhough his son-in-law refUBed to
with Mr. and Mrs. Calvin meet lhe leftist group's demands for $1.5 million in r a nsom and
Caldwell, J ohnny and Jeanie. lhe release of IS jailed leltists.

News

• • •

i·n Briefs

that never n e eds
•
mg.

SAVE NOW

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT

,.

•r

..

HIO

.,,,

the !Qt meeting.
Paul Gerard diJcllllOed with council the need for tbe rate
increase. The company 1s expenses have been on the Increase
and lhe firm has lost over 167,000 during the post year, Gerard
said.
Gerard aald lhat the whole system hao been upgraded and
more irnprovemento are planned. He said the company Invite~~
calls from anyone dlasali-llled wilh the IM!I'Vlce. On the second
reading last night lhe rate increase went down to defeat witll
councilmen Marvin Kelly, James Brewer, Fred Hollman aad
David Jenkil!s voting no. William Walters lavored it. The
compa ny had asked t b41t the rate In Middleport be Increased
from $5.50 to 16 and from $3.50 to $-l.!iO l or senior cltizena and
diaa bled persons.
A letter !rom County Elll!lneer Wesley A. Buehl was read
giving the village permission to erect "No Through Truck
Traffic" signs on county roads leading into town above Mid·
dleport HID, a t Hobson and a t the norlh corporation line. It was
repor ted tl!at no word has been received lrom Pomeroy en the
village's request to post a slmUar sig n near lhe br idge. It was
agreed lhat maintenance supervisor Harold Chase wlll order the
new signs and place til em at the locations .

Ohio
Considerable
cloudiness, scattered s howers.
Low tonight in 60s. Wednesday
partly cloudy and chance of
showers or thundershowers,
high In low 80s.

Availa ble in the
follow ing Sizes:
52 X 52

Today·s lun cheo n tab le beco mes tomo rrow's
forma l d inner sett in g. Leacock's permanen t p ress
Tablecloth neve r needs ironing a nd beca use

.52 X 70
60' 83
60 x 8 3 Oval
60' l 0 2
60x 102 0 val
60.!26
60 &gt;e 126 Oval
66" Fr inged Rou nds
Matc hing Napkins.

it

is t reated wi t h "CO ME -CLEA N" : common s tains was h
out in regu la r home washings ei the r by mach in e

or !land. Selec t from 10 ne w House a nd G" rd eh Colors:

Antique Gold - Avocado - Citron . Ecru .
Orange- Red. White.
Unens, First Floor

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

'"lectric Ca. is al!o seeking a rate hike .
A letter was read from lhe Ohio Environmental ProtecUon
Agency (EPA) indicating that lhe village's permit to continue
dumpilll! from the sewage lagoon Into lhe Ohio River Is bellll!
renewed. Chase said the discharge from theil)goon into the rtver
is no problem and in all probability lhe pennlt wtU be renewed,
probebly until January, 1977.
Council discussed requesting Greyhound of Cleveland to
extend it. services into Middleport. It was reported that
Greyhoard has taken over the territory ol Lakeshore, but Is
coming sculh only as far as Athel\8 , No action was taken.
Council discussed a medical aid band radio which it approved for the emergency squad from federal revenue shart.ns
funds not to exceed $1,500. A requisition for l,he equipment has
not complied with the action by cou ncil, it was reported. It was
agreed to plaee aprons on several streets to belp wit h drainage
while the Sbelly Co. is still in town doing street resurfacing
projecls. Following the meeting, coun cil looked at a lot on Norlh
Second Ave., owned by the LaSalle HoteL The Hotel hiis
requested a curbing be taken out so that lhe lot ca n be used lot
parking. It was also agreed to place a metal grating near lhe
Dan Thomas property.

Police will enlorce tile state law thai prohibit. trucks of over
5,000 lbs . gross weight in interstate traffic from leaving state or
federal highways unless following a designated truck route
through town. Not affected, are any trucks with boslness in
town .
REPORT APPROVED
Council approved lhe August report of Mayor John Zerkle
sllowing nx:e ipts of ll,B33.30 in lines and fees, and $1 33 in
merchant police lees for a total ol$1,766.30. A letter from The
Meigs County Council on Aging was read thanking lhe council
for it.:l contribution to the council's second year progri!m for
senio~

citizens.

David Ohlinger and Russell Mills. asked lhat janitorial
services be provided for the new fire department headquarters.
Olase Indicated lhat a CAP worker will be assigned.
Council agreed to send $167.04 to tile city of Tro~ . Two years
ago Tre~ had asked village officials to join in a light against
forthcoming proposed rate hikes by UH! General Telephone Co.
or Ohio. Council had agreed at lhat time to provide six cenls per
capita, so last night the village agreed to pay the amoart which
had not been needed until this time. Through a long letter the
village was advised lhat lhe Calwnbus and Southern Ohio

•

Weather

•

Now YouKnow

enttne

Most penguins live in Antarctica, but one species lives
as far north as lhe Galapagos
Islands, on lhe Equator.

Devoted To The Interests Of The Meigs-Mason Area
POM EROY-MIDDLEPO'RT, OHIO

-VOL XXVI , NO. 104

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1974

PHO NE 992-2156

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

TENCENTS

'

Stor:rn growing over Nixon's pardon
WASHINGTON ( UPI ) - The · and his deputy, William D.
reaction over President F ord's Rucke lshaus, r esigned.
pardon of fonn er President
Nixon had sald..Cox had the
Nixon is reaching lhe Intensity full story .of Watergate and
of the firm storm produced by ordered him not to seek furlher
the firing of Wa tergate evide nce. The violent national
prosecutor Archibald Cox.
opposition was called a "fire
There are some similarities storm" by White HoWie aide
between Ford's action and lhe Alexander M. Halg.
so~alled "Saturday night masFord's action was even more
sacre" of0ct.19, 1973, in which final for Cox' successor, Leon
COx was fired and Attorney Jaworski. It effectively preGeneral Ellie! L . Richardson . vents him from seeking an

indic tment against Nixon lor
the Water gate cover-up.
The grand jury that returned
lhe charges against six Nixon
aides who face trial on Sept. 30
also named Nixon an unindicted e&lt;&gt;&lt;:onspirator.
There was litUe recourse bot
protest. Philip A. Lacovara, a
top assistant to Jaworski,
resigned, tbe second adminis·
!ration official publicly to quit
the g overnment since the

quit _ ~

Gallia sheriff to
Gallia Coun ty Sheriff James
W. Saunders, in a letter to
Common Pleas Coart Judge
Ronald R. Calhoun Monday,
announced his intention to
resign from office, effec tive
Dec. 31.
Saunders stated, "This is to
notify you, and lhe people of
GalUs County, State. of Ohio,
lhllt I do hereby submit my
intention of resignin g m y
position as sheriff
said
county, effective Dec. 31, 1974.
1 place _lhis letter in yoar hand
for further disposition and-&lt;Jr
whatever actlon is necessary_to
tennlnate my position on Dec.
31, 1974. Signed James W.
Saarders, sheriff."
If Saarders r esigns as his
letter
indi cates,
th e
Republican Central Committee

or

will be called on to name a
replaceme nt.
Membe~s of Saarders' staff
reported this morning lhat
Saarders , a former member o(
lhe Gallipolis Pollee Depart.
men! and federal agent, ill
employed as a pilot by a large
coal company in Kentucky.

'

.

WASHINGTON - A WHITE HOUSE SPOKESMAN says the
state of Richard NIJ:on's mental and physical heallh was oot a
factor In President Ford's decision to grant a pardon. "The
question of healtll was never discussed" among senior aides, said
ac Ung press aecrelllry Jebn W. Hushen.
On the other hand, an old a nd close friend of Ford's, Sen.
Robert P. Griffin, R-Mlch., aaid: "I have no doobtln my own
mind lhat the condition of the health of the fll111ltr president was
a factor In the Presldent'smlnd In reacht,. his decillon."
AIJth!lt was known officially wulhat as Ford was telilng lhe
naUon Sunday lhat " setl0118 allegations and accusations hlng
Conllnued on page I

Eggs, tomatoes, insults too

t

'l

PRESENTED PLAQUE - 'lbeodore Reed, left, at the
Pomeroy Chamber ol Commerce meeting Mon&lt;lay at lhe
Meigs lM, .presented Earl Ingles, out going president, 11.
plaquo for a job well done while ser ving as president of lhe
chamber for 1~73-74 . Reed took pver _tlle duties as p resident
!or the ensuing year Menday .

t

1

~

·~

:•:::::::::::::::::;::;;:::;;::::::::::;:::~~:,:::i:i~~8:::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~::~:::::~:::!::::::::::::~:::::.

-- . .

•.

JAMESW. SAUNDERS

ews•• in Briefi Surprise

WASHINGTON - TilE FOREMAN OF THE GRAND JURY
tllat Implicated Richard M. Nixon in the Watergate cover-uR
·says he feels " left up the creek" by the pardon granted lhe former Presldent. He said lhe jurors are considering whelher tbey
can make public some of the damaging evidence.
Last March, tt vated 19-0 to name Nixon as a co-conaplralor
1n lhe Watergate cover-up, but to bring no formal charges
becauae of the constitutional ban on Indictments against a
president In ofllce. Philip Lacovara, 29, one of the chief lawyers
on the staff of Watergate Proseculot Leon Jaworski, expressed
his dlsaatlafactlon over lhe pardon Monday by resigning.

som e of his fellow jurors ex- to 1 against lhe pardon Sunday
pressed opinions betwee n bot later leveled oil.
" deep dismay and high outWestern Union officials In
rage" and wanted to consider Ne w York
said 24, 000
possible action , perhaps lhe telegra ms
and
similar
r e lease of the still-sec r e t messages went to the White
evidence behind the 19.() vote to House a nd Capitol Hill on
Implicate Nixon.
Sunday.
The reaction Monday was
The normal Sarday volume
massive: The White Hfiuse is about 3,200. According to a
switchboard said there were White House spokesman, tel&amp;thousands of calls and tele- grams wer e coming at the rate
phone sentiment was roM!ng 3 of 700 a n hour and lhey were 5
to I against a pardon .
:::::::::::::~::::::;:;:;::~ : :::::!:!:!:!:!:!:!:!:!:!:!~:!:!:!::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::;;;;:;:;:::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::;:;:::;:i
''The pardon,'' said Sen. Sam.
~
~ J . Ervin. D-N.C., "aids and
l1i
abet. the efforts of those who
~
=~. oought to hide the truth In
:~1
BOSTON (UP!) A crowd protesting a
~
« respect to Mr.Nixon's personal
;:~ desegregation order lor Boston schoola threw eggs aad ,:;:: involveme nt in the Watergate
:;~:
tomatoes at Sen. Edward Kennedy when be showed up at ::;:. affair from the American
'; lhe rally Monday. Tbe demoostrators hlased, turaelllhetr '!:l people and lhus continues the
backs on the Massachusetts Democrat and sang " God :;~f cover-up operations."
Bless America."
:.-=:
Another fear was expressed
A ·few In tile erewd restricted themselves to ;~. by Rep. James G. O'Hara, DgeoetaUttes such 8s '~ou're a dlsiJl'BCe to the Irtsb," but ~~ Mich,, Who .uid, " It appears
others lllJouted penonal remarks about his sou and :;:;: Obvious that the immunization
---·
brothers.
·•·•
Continued on page 8
~==
('Why don't you put your one-legged soo on a· bus for ::~
Roxbury," one shouted. the senator's son had one leg :§
amputated because ol cancer. Roxbury Is a ~;~
predomlnanUy black area.
::::
"Why don't you let tllem shoot you Uke they shot· your :;~
~ two brothen," another yelled. B&lt;lth the late President
;~ Jobn F. Kennedy aad Sen. Robert F. Kennedy were
~l assassinated.
·
::)
pardon.
F ord 's fr iend and press
secretary, J .F. terHorst, whe ·
resigned Sundsy a s "a matter
of conscience," went back to
work for the Detroit News .
Some House members suggested reopening the Impeachment inquiry and Rep. Jerome
Waldie, D-Calif., sugges ted
calling Nixon as a witness.
Vladimir Pregelj, lhe for eman of the grand jury, said

-

.

Sheriff Saunders was electelt
in November, 1972. Last ye.-,
he and the Gallla Counlf
Commiss ioners
had
a
disagreement over the ll'li"· .
chase of. cruisers .
.
At one time , the sheriH's·h
departme nt budge t was overspent, causing the commission
to appr opriate additional
m onie s from September
lhroagh December to continue
its operations.

NEW YORK - TilE POIJTICAL TIJRMOIL created by
President Ford's pardon of fanner President Richard M. Nixon
ended Ford's period of "sweetness and light" with the nation's
financial commtu~ity , severa l economists said Monday. The
suddenness of the_decision to grant an WlCOnditional pardon lor
any crimes lhat may have been committed daring Nixon's
presidency took money managers and economists by surprise
and sent unsettling ripples through lhe stock market .
"In two words, it is a disaster," said economist Eliot
Janeway. " The realissae is not what Ford did, but whe is ronDing the White House." Ford, he said, "electrified lhe at·
rnosphere when taking over by saying tllere will be a whole new
deal. But this idiot Haig is still clicking his heels aroard lhe
White House and is ruMing it."

SQUAD CALLED
The Middleport Emergency
Squad was called to Oleshlre
at 7:30p .m . Saturday for· Eva
Swisher , a medical patient,
who was Loken to the Holzer
Medical Center.
.THREE ASSISTS
RACINE ~ The Rflcine E·R
Squad made lhree runs over
lhe weekend, Friday at II :25
p.m . lo Southern High School
for Lisa Grihdley, Minersville,
who had s ustained an injury to
her left knee , and was take n to Holzer
Medical Center ;
Saturday at 1:45a .m. for Gus ta
Triplett, Rflclne , a medical
patient taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospilal, and at 8:05
p .m. Saturday to remove Jack
Cornell, Portland , a medical
patient, to Ve terans Memorial
HospitaL

Mlddlepor't can benefit by up to $250,000 toward permanent
Improvement. of Ito sewage la~oon retaining wall.
Middleport counell Monday night heard a letter read b~ clerk·
trea!IW'er Gene Grate oo lhe community's river erosion problem
at the sewage lagoon. The letter, from Tbe COrps of !!;lll!lneers al
HunUnglon, upon the request of COng. Clarence Miller, pointed
out lhlltlhe corps CaMot reimburse lhe vlllajle lor work which
had already been done by lhe village to repair the retaining
wall.
However, the Corps said il lhe work Ia only a temporary
correcUon, lhe corps Is pennltted under new legislation to study
the sltuaUon and participate in repairs up to l2:i0,000, with lhe
village to bear an~ el&lt;)lense above lhat figure. The corps asked
for a letter of Intent, th!lt is, if lhe village wants tbe corps to
proceed.
l t was pointed cut lhat lhe matter sllould be referred to the
board of public affairs, and several council members Indicated
that In lheir opinion lhe board sllould give its letter of intent.
Cable Denied
Council turned down a rate increase requested by the Pointview Cable Television Co. by a 4-1 vote. The increase was up lor
a second reading, lhe first reading havilll! narrowly passed at

By Ualted Press Internatloaal
WASHINGTON - MAUREEN DEAN, THE WIFE ef chief
Watergaie witness J ohn W. Dean lli, said Monday President
Ford sllould remember others involved in lhe scandal now that
be has pardoned former President Nixon. " lam gratified by lhe
President's spirit of forgiveness, but dismayed by lhe apparent
limitations he has applied to it/ ' Mrs. Dean said in a statement
transmitted Monday through a friend, Peter Kin!i~y . " Mr. Nixon
and his family are not lhe only ones who have suffered enough
because of Watergate.
"Since tbe President has adopted this posture, 1 pray he will
oot overlook those whe have fully cO-&lt;Jperat.ed wilh lhe government in getUng out tbe troth of Watergate to the American
people. These individuals are also suffering because they told lhe
trulh - which is something we have yet to hear from Mr. Nixon."

A tablecloth
•
~ron

Corps offers up to $250,000 lagoon repair aid

adm1tted
CLEVE(#W (UPI) - U.S.
Attorney General William B.
Saxbe said today he was not
consulted by President Ford
prior to Ford's decision to
pardon former President
Nixon and said it came as a
"surprise" to him.
Saxbe made tile statement at
a news conference prior to
~ddressing lhe 65th annual
Ohio Association ef Realtors
Convention here.
"1 was net a party to the
planning, though I was notified
shorUy before he made the
announcement Sunday mor~
ning ,n said Saxbe. "It was
somewhat a surprise to me.
"I will say lhls - first th!lt It
was within tile president's
power to do Ibis and second,
that I feel he thorou ghly
considered It and did it as tile
best thing for lhe country _
"What he dld was from a
general concern."
ln his text prepared for
delivery to lhe realtors , Saxhe
said violent crime is spreading
so intensively lhat vigilante
groups may organl2e to take
lhe law Into lheir own hands.

Boyer on board
Larry Bayer, 6211': Third
Ave., Gallipolis, was elected to
serve on the American Cancer
Society Division 9 board or
trustees at a district meeting at
the Holiday Inn , Chillicothe ,
Monday evening. ·
He will resign lhe presidency
of tile Gallla Coarty Chapter
American Cancer Society in
order to
assume
the
trusteeship Sept. 18.
Members of lhe board of
trustees, Who serve a two year
term, are responsible for
development and coordination"
or the Ohio Division Annual
Cancer Control Program of tile
American Cancer Soc ie ty ,
valued at approximately $4.5

Rhodes probe
is announced

million.
Boyer will r epresent society
members in Gallia, Meigs,
VInton , Hoc king, J ac kson,
Pi~e , Scioto and l..awrence
Coarties.
One half the 66 members of
lhe board are elected in district
elections and lhe olher half atlarge. The board ls also divided
between medical professionals
and lay persons.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Bailey
and Mr . and Mrs. J ohn Reece
attended the mee tin g from
Meigs Coar ty .

.J

Reed opens C of C year

BY KATIE CR()W
Ne wly ins ta lle d Po me roy
Of
C()mme r ce
Cham ber
President The odore T . Reed
COLUMBUS ( UP I )
Secretary of State Ted W. pledged Monday lhe cha m ber 's
Brown said today he has full cooperation wilh Mayor
started ai1 investigation into Dale Smith and hi s a dwhelher ptoper procedure was min istration to make Pomer oy
used In b41ndllng tic ke t sales by a better place to li ve.
Ute Governor Rhodes LarReed, president ol Th e
c he en Committee , wh ich Farmers Bank and Savings
raised $158,864.
Ca., who succeeded Earl In~e ls
Brown asked for an eX- as head of the c ha mbe r
planation after Charl es A.· following a lun cheon at lhe
Orwig, a Logan businessman, Meigs Inn, said in his inaagl!fa l
tw o
pressin g
wrote a le tter arging Rhod•s re ma rks
supporters to purchase ticke ts problems face the Pomer oy to a November, 1973, larcheon, and Meigs County - comand admitted he purchased $50 mar ity. These are lhe bus
wortll of Uckets.
se r vlce fr om Pome r oy to
Persons who mak e con- Ath ens, whic h has bee n
tributions of over '25 must be discontinued, and ferry service
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
identified according to law.
whe n the P olJier oy-Mason
Consldoroble cloodlness
bridge is closed ea rly in 1975
and turolag a Ultle cooler
lor a minimum of live monlhs
Tbunday through Saturday.
but possibly lor as long as nine
A chance ol ohowero durlq
months.
·
lbe period. High temThe
Lake
Shore
bus
system
The Meigs Unit of the
peraluret Thunday In upper
American
Cancer Society will that served Pome roy hils been
70o ud low8111, oad Ill mld to
hold Its annual meeting at 7:30 fiquidal ed and the Greyhoard
upper 70o Saturday. Lowo
p .m . today at the Middleport system ha s taken over . It is not .
early Tbut1day Ill low ...
Church of Christ, Tho public is coming to Pomero~ .
•ad Ill 50• Satnrday.
Following a sug gestion by
invited. Or . Lewis Tolle,
;~"«=:;:..-...~~8~~::::::».
Reed,
the c h41mber voted to
medical advillor for the Meigs
unit, wiU be attending the support a pe tition -te th e
LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature In downtown fourtll annual cancer sym- Grey hound Sy s tem seekin g
I'Ollleray Tuesday at 11 a .m . PQSIIID In Columbus Sept, II . res t oration of service · in
was 7t" degreu under cloudy He -..111 be accompanied by his . pomeroy. The peUtlons wlil be
loca ted at lhe olll ce or Dale c.
son. a pre--med s~t .
skies.
•

or

Society to meet

NEW OFFICERS - Theodore Reed, left, is new president d. the Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce. Fred Morrow is vice president, and carolyn Thomas Is secretary-treasurer . The
new officers offi cially took over duties Monday a t lhe first meeting of tile Chamber since the
Regat ta in June. L-R a re Reed, Mrs. Thomas and Morrow .

War ne r Ins urance ,
Second St., Pomeroy.

We s t

Reed a lso suggested that
Mayor Smilh attend chamber
mee tings. This would lead to
fulle r understanding by lhe
chamber of prOblems in
Pomeroy, he said.
Reed inb'oduced the new vice

president, Fred Morrow, local
manager of tile Ohio Power Co.
Morrow said the chamber's
board of directors should be
deeply involved '" the
cham ber's program ;
He urged each c hamber
member to head a comlnittee
to encourage
additional
bus iness a nd ho us ing in

Pomeroy and coupty. "We
be
a
civic .
s hou ld
organization," he said .
Reed, commenting on lhe
soliciting of business places b y
diffe r ent
organiza ti on s,
suggested
the
chamb e r
cooperate with council to
clarif~ the siluallon.
" We cannot bar-people !rom
solici ting In town but we jTIUOt
cut down on unnecessary
soliciting/; he sald .
Meeting with the chamber
He also will confer wilh w~s Pomeroy Pollee Olle! Jed
Former British Prime. Minister · Webster in regard to a me r~
Edward Heath and welc ome chant policeman. Webster said
Is raeli Prime Minister Vil2hak David wollafd has been a
Rflbin to Washington for talks. nlghtwatchman paid by tile
Asked whelher Ford consid· Leading Creek COnservancy
ered lhe Nixon purdon ''mor~ District. He pointed out th!lt
argent" than the . amnesty Wollard Is doing a n "excelle nt
announcement, which the Presl- job" but that he had to have
dent now has twice postponed , additional In come. We bste r
k ushen s a id " that seems a as ked the chamber lo r
conclusion you can draw since suggestions . In th e past
merchants paid a policeman to
one came before lhe olher ."
Ford 's plU'don or Nixon was check their s lores at night.
his most controversial acUon to - The c hamber agreed 10
date, a nd ,supporters across the cooperate wllh Weblite&lt; to
nation we re fa lling off . his work out a solution.
bandwagon.
Attending w~re
Reed ,
The President was Involved Morrow, Mrs. Thomao, Earl
in meetings with his top lngeb, N. W. Comp ton, Jac- .
advloers who were keeping an Ker r , Bill Gr uuer, J ack
eye on the backlash , but when Carsey, Dale Warner , 11011
asked whether Ford had any Jacobs,
lla lph
Oravu,
regr£1S, Hus hen . replied : Mell$1118 Corlao, llelllah J.,..,
eoritlnued on ~age 8
Webster. "'d Katie Cr"'f·

Amnesty policy delayed
By HE LEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
WASHINGTON ( UPI) P r eside n t Fo r d apparently
wants the controversy over his
pardon of President Nixon to
settle down before he announces his plan (or cond itional
amnes ty lor Vie tna m era dra ft
evaders and mili tary deserters.
Ford had planned to ·unveil
tile amnesty plan today . But
Deputy Press Secretary John
W. Hushe n said tile President
had been focusing his attenUon
on lhe Nixon pardon and
needed more time to consider
lhe "complex" prOblem
amnesty .
• He gave no finn. date lor the
amnesty announcement. but did
not rul e out tloe cha nce it would
come this week.
Ford summoned his economic
advisers for,. a .meeting today.

or

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