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WP..ather

Sunny Wednesd:ly, highs in
upper 80s. Clear tonight , lows
" -in the . 60s. Probability of
precipitation lS neat zero 'p er
- cent today and tonight and 10
·--per- C!~t w~~Y ·

VOL .. ~NO. 55

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Antiwar Democrats in the · · •
years before the Civil War
acquired the sobriquet
"Copper heads" 'frQm a
newspaper editorial likening ·
them to venomous· snakes
that strike without warning.

Devotee/• Tb The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area
·.
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO ·.
TUESDAY, JULY 1, 197·5

'.
PRICE 15'

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•
Regatta In th·e black
Mrs. Carolyn Thomas ,
secretary of the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce,
confjrmed Monday at the
regular meeting of the
chamber that the Regatta
was a financial success.
She reported because all
bills and income are not in yet
it is impossible to know the
exact financial picture .
However, at this point. " it
looks as if the 1975 regatta
ended up in the .black," she
said.
The Regatta committee is
to meet soon to work out
details and a budget for the
1976 regatta.
Presiding at the meeting in
the absence of Ted Reed ,
president, was Fred Morrow ,
vice president.
Meeting with chamber
·members waS&gt; Doc McCoy,

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owner of the ferry boat
service that will operate
while the Pomeroy-Mason
ijridg'e is closed beginning
,
Aug. 1.
McCoy will have two boats,
one holding 15 ~:ars, the other
8. He said he will be able to
handle 7,!100 cars daily . This
is believed to be more than
adequate as the last count of
traffic on the ~ridge ~as
approxim~tely 6,800 daily.
McCoy will operate 24
hours a day to accommodate
shift workers. The cost will be
80 cents per car one way .
Two-ton trucks will be
charged $2.
Also meeting with the
chamber was Milton Miller,
safety advisor for industrial
accident prevention, Division
of Sa~ and Hygiene, the

Industr ia~ Commissiol) of
area to consider sending at
Ohio.
least one em pl oye or
Miller discussed
the represe ntative to the classes .
possibility of the chamber He suggested joining with the
sponsoring a safety ~lass of 14 Middlepor1 Chamber for a
week duration for employers combined class.
and employes of the area . ·._,; Ferman Moore, of the
The classes ·would be two Royal Crown Bottling Co.,
hours per night. All the has offered a building for the
chamber would be required classes. The matter wHI be
to furnish is a place for the referred to President Reed
classes, a 4x8 blackboard, and the board of directors.
and a minimum of 18 students
A note of thanks was read
(maximum is 30).
from Miss Robin Rager, Miss
The classes would touch on Ohio State Fair, thanking the
all phases of safety whether chamber for invitin!l he r to
industrial or retail store the -Big Bend Regatta.
employes. He said courses
Members were asked to
such as these are very helpful return the ballots for board of
in cutting down costs of work- director s' e lecti on
imman 's compensation . He mediately so they may be
urged each business · in the counted . The annual dues of

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$35 are payable as of July 1.
A letter was read from the
Athens Chamber of Com- ·
merce inviting local members to attend ·an emergency
meeting today or representatives from an eight county
area of southeastern Ohio,.
including Meigs, to discuss
the
go vernor 's
4-point
program . It indicated that the
eight COWl ties involved could
share in between 30 to 40
million dollars.
At tendi ng were Mrs .
Morrow,
Bob
Th oma s,
Ja cobs, C. E. Blakeslee,
Virgil Teaford, Jack Carsey,
Fred Crgw, John Koebel , Bill
Grueser, George Hobstetter,
Earl Ingels, Don Thomas,
iind Becky Mallory·:

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fNew~ . .. in Brief~

By United International
BEIRUT- PREMIER-DESIGNATE RASHID KARAMI
today Installed a "salvation government" to try to pull
Lebanon .from the anarchy and civil strife that has turned
Beirut into a battleground and ~lalmed hurdreds of casualties
in the worst upheaval of the country's 32-year history. Beirut
was ablaze with dozens of fires from more than 100 explosions
during the night and the casualty toll for a week of fighting be·
tween right and left-wing militias rose to more than 200 dead
and 600 wounded; about half of..them from the past two days of
fighting.
'
.
Terrified families weretrappedJn burning buildin~ and
sniper fire blocked rescue vehicles. The unchecked violence
wls reported spreading to other parts of the country. Kar .. mi
said the six-man cabinet, which had to overcome last minu~.e
bickering between its would-be ministers before it could be
formed, would ·be an "interim cabinet - a salvation government to rescue Lebanon from further bloodshed.".

. LAS VEGAS, NEV. - TELEVISION singer-comedienne
·Cher Bono and rock smger Gregory Lenoir Allman were
married in a brief civil ceremony at a hotel four days after the
bride' obtained a divorce decree in California.
It was the second marriage for Cher and the third for the
bridegroom, who is the lead singer in the Allman Brothers
Rock Band. Allman wore a white suit with a scarf and the bride
wore an Ice blue two-piece satin gown.
CHICAGO - SYNDICATED ADVICE columnist Ann
Landers, in "a sad and personal message" to her readers,
announced Monday night she will be divorced from her.
husband, Jules Lederer, after 36 years of marriage.
The Chicago Sun-Times columnist, whose real name is
Epple Lederer, said In early Tuesday editions she felt she owed
it to her readers to make the lfnnouncement in her column. She
said her' marriage was "one of the.world's best" and refused to
elaborate on the reasons for ending it in divorce.

CLOSEUP OF ELONdA TED MYSTERY FRUIT .::._ Enlarged approximately six times
·
the fruit still is firm, of red and green color, and to date, untasted.

EXTENDED FORECAST
Thursday
through
Saturday, a chance of
showers Thursday and ·
Friday and fair Saturday.
Highs will be in the mid or
lower 80s. Lows will be in
the mid or lower 60s.
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Food stamps
affected by
SS increases

FRUIT TREES, YES, BUT WHAT KIND OF FRUIT? - Mr. and Mrs. Henry Cleland,
Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy, have in their back yard a fruit tree that no one so far has
identified. Cleland purchased the tree about five years ago as a peach tree . It definitely is
not a peach tree. Even the county agricultural agent isn 't sure what kind of fruit the tree
bears. Cleland said at least 50 people have examined the tree but no one has come up with
answer. Mrs. Cleland is shown by the loaded tree. Fruit experts are welcomed by the
Clelands to examine the tree. Long and slender, the fruit is red and green, and still firm,
suggesting 'it may yet grow larger. No one·- to date - has tasted it.

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Recession-may be prolonged
by in,c reases in oil prices
By MIKE FEINSll.BER
. WASHINGTON (UPI)
The Congressional Budget
Office says increases in oil
prices expected this fall can .
take $33 billion out of the U.S.
economy, reawaken inflation
and drag out the recovery.

Increases in Social Security
and Supplemental Security
WASlllNGTON - ELEVEN .OOPPER firms agreed Income ( SSI) benefits, efMonday to end a practice under which · they allegedly fective today will affect
pressured plumbing manufacturers to use copper instead of Food Stamp issuance , acother materials. The eleven companies all hold patent rights cording to Barbara Shuler,
on a money saving Swiss system,. called sOvent, for installing . director, Meigs County
'
plumbing in multi-storey buildings.
Welfare.
·
The suit charged that the Copper Development Association
The director emphasized
and the 11 firms conspired to limit sales of the patent right to that all recipients of federal
companies which agreed to use copper alloy exclusively in Food Stamps in Meigs County UPI White House Reporter
WAsHINGTON (UPI) making plumbing Instead of galvanized steel, cast iron, plastic must furnish the Food .Stamp
President
Ford told black
or other materials. The proposed court order would require the Office with verification of
defendants to sell patent rights to any applicant for a their July checks and be leaders today that economic
maximum royalty of 3 per cent of the net selling price of the recertified before July Food hard' times are ending, but
.. paiented fittings, the same royalty the defendants pay to the . Stamp cards are issued. the adminstration will not
"turn its back" on the conReceipts of rent, mortgage
( Contlnuea on page 8)
cerns of the poor in its effort
payments, etc., utility bills,
to halt the ~epression .
and medical receipts will be
While
stressing
that
'
necessary, in · recertifying
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equality for blacks can be
each household on the new
achieved only through . full
income . .
economic opportunity, Ford
In addition to increase in
· would not promise any easy
income, there will also be an
solutions or specifics fqr
increase in the amount of
blacks in his speech prepared.
Food Stamp coupons to each
for the 66th annual conhousehold July 1, 1975, she
vention of the National
"
Sunday
afterl)oon
39 · Hoover, Barbara Fultz, Gene , said.
Assoc;iatiori for the Adyouths and adults from the Shively, Terry.' Clark, Jim
vancement of Colored PeoUnited Methodist Churches in Jeffers, Ron Hawkins, Linda
ple . ..
MEETING PUT OFR'
Meigs County rode bicycles Baker, Evelyn Well, Barbara
"Obviously," he said ,
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
from the Rock Springs
M. Well, Linda Well, Brian Well, 'Mayor Herman London · "some ·indicators will conepurch to the Rutland U. M. .Norma Hawthorne·, Lynn announced today the village tinue to- be: depressed for a
- Cirurch, a distance of 10 . Slater, Todd Rawlings, council meeting has been few months , ·because they
miles, to help raise money for Jennifer Wise, Jo McKinney, postponed · from Thursday, record only w!J.aUs past. But
young people to attend the Tim Rawjings, Mark Slater, July 3 to Thursday, July 10 at ·-I am cqnfide,nt 'the economic
week of Church Camp at Tina Randolph, Tracey 7:'30 p.m.
decline is over."
Lanca,ster.·.
Jeffers, Diillas Weber, Bob
.Striking a note reminiscent
Many
organizations, :Williamson, Duane Weber,
of President Lyndon B.
churches, businesses and Dave Williamson, . Ricky
LONG HOLIDAy
Johnson, Ford said he was
indiVidUals of th·e county Wj II ia m sJJ n, . Debbie
Offices of the Meigs County speaking as president of " all
· sponsored the riders to help Williarrison, Donna Webe~. Courthouse will be closed .the people" to discuss the
them raised over ·$360. The , Ellen Rice, Paul Rice, reresa Saturday morning so that " common problems pnd
Meigs County Sheriff's Dep,t, · Ervin, Steve Pullins, Kevin employes can enjoy a long co~on .sense appr?aches"
provided a safety e~~ort and Pullins, Cathy Smith, Cindy 'weekend which will include which blacks 11nd whites can ·
the RC company . donated Pitzer., . Steve Trussell, Friday, July 4th, when offices . achie~e
together
f9r
cans of pop to refresh them in :I'helma :Jeffers, Tammy are also closed. Common AmeriCa .
.
,
the 95 degree heat.
·
Pitzer and Rod Pullins.
Pleas Judge John c. Bacon
"An unstable economy is
The Rev. D. William
Others who assisted with authorized the closing .
the enemy of equal opSydenstricker, coordinator the Bike Hike, providing •
portunlty,1' Ford said. " While
for the U .. M. County Youth e.lth.e r a supportive escort or
important -advances ca.TI be
Council; and Andy Hoover, helping w«h the dinner· af·
made during economic good
LOCAL
TEMPS
.
·president of the . coul'!cil, terwards, · were ·. Vernon
times they can be quickly and
The
teplperature
in • cruelly erased during , hard
extend' appreciation to all Weber ; Wendel·k Jeffers ,
Pulli.ns,
ijarold downtown Pomeroy at 11 times.
. riders and spo_n sors fQr their Susie
participation.
Blackston, and the Rev . and a .m . Tuesday was 83 degrees
- "America is an •economic
·Those who rode were Andy ' ·Mrs. William Sydenstricker. under SWlny skies.
(Continued on page 8)

Ford has no

easy way for

black advance

Bicycle ·r iders earned

$360 for chnrch camp
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Based on its expectation embargo and fourfold price
that oil prices are going up, rise by the Organization of
CBO issued a report Monday Petroleum Exporting
forecasting
il
glo9my Countries, CBO said.
The report calculates
economic situation of the
events
as likely to add about
next 18 months.
The report predicted the $5.50 to the price of a barrel of
recent decline .in the inflation · oil by the end of 1976. That
rate can be expected to compares to the average
reverse,
with
prices increase of $5.35 in 1973.
Going into the $5.50 would
resuming their upward
march, and the recovery be an additional. $1 a barrel
from the recession will be import fee, a $2.25 OPEC
sluggish, with unemployment increase this fall and phased
almost as severe at the end of "decontrol" of domestic oil
1976 as it was at the start of prices, as President Ford
recommends.
1975.
If domestic oil prices in.. If the worst happens on the
crease
$5.50 and consumption
oil front, the effect will be
remains
stable , the cost
about as severe as the 1973

would be $33 billion.
"Households
and
businesses, that is, would
have to reduce nonoil outlays
or savings by $33 billion to
maintain their level · of oil
consumption, " CBO said .
"And this allows only for
higher oil prices ; if prices of
-natural gas and coal also
increase, the cost would be
closer to $40 billion.
"This would represent a
direct ·loss of pur.chasing
pawer almost twice as great
as the increase provided by
the recently enacted tax cut.
" A similar reduction in
purchasing power in 1973 and
1974 occurred as a result of

the OPEC embargo; the
sharp cutback in real
spending it produced was a
major fartor iii the current
economic downturn. "
Largely as a result of the
e;xpect oil price rise , these
were the CBO predictions for
the next 18 months :
- After falling to an annual
rate of 5 per eent in May,
consumer prices will climb to
a rate of 6.3 to 8.7 per cent by
the end of.' next year.
- The unemployment rate
will be 7.8 to 8.2 per cent by
the end of 1976, compared to
the White House prediction of
7.6 per cent at that time and a
rate of 9.2 per cent in May.
&lt;

Dowler on

th~

job in Meigs Local

Charles L. Dowler began special session Monday night
his duties today as the pew and agreed to ask Dowler to
assistant superintendent of start his duties a month
the Meigs Local School earlier since Supt. George
District.
Hargraves
- since the
been · employment of Dowler ~ .had
Dowl e r who has
.
principal of the Bidwell- s ubmitted his .resignation .
Porter Elementary"School in Har grav es re s igned as
Gallia ·County, was hired for superintendent last Wedthe assistant's post 'recel)tly nesday _night and informed
by the Meigs LOC;ll Board of
Education and was to have
begWl his duties on Aug .. 1.
However, the board met in
The Meigs County· commissioners today announced
Driver. goes off _ that the county landfill will be
closed the 4th of July.
road, up a ·hank
The commissioners also
·
Sheriff Robert C. Hart t•
tenbach's Dept. investigated .
IOn
a single car accidentMonday
at5:45 p.m . on SR -124.
The Gallia-Meigs ComPaul E. Sturgeon, 63, Rt. 1, • ml.lnity Action · Agency is
Middleport·, traveling west,
conducting pre-registratfon
approached a vehicle that
for the newly funded Head
was stopped on the highway
Start Program to begin ln
waiting to make a left hand ..early autumn with limited
turn . Sturgeon applied his
enrollment.
brakes, which failed, and to
-Preregistration is intend·ed
avoid hitting the car in front
to identify all eligible
pulled off the highway to the
children in the two. counties.
tight, going up an emBecause eligibility is
bankment, and hitting a tree.
dependent upon incoUle,
The driver sustained a- slight
economically disadvaatfled
~bump on · his forehead .
3-year-Qlds up to schoo1 age
Damage was minor . No ·may apply . Applicaticms are
citation was issu~d.
available at t?e Co~unlty

.

s~_atlons

board of education members
by
telephone
of
hi s
resignation. Hargraves has
been superintendent since
1966.
At last nig ht 's special
session, the · board accepted
the resignation of Hargraves.
Clerk of the Board L. W.
McComas is · presently ac-

cepting applications for the
superintendent"s post.
Hargra ves has accepted
the position of superintendent
of the Jefferson County Joint
Vocational School and will ,
begin his duties there on Aug. ·
1. His work in the Meigs Local .
District will be concluded on
the last day of July.

abused says .commission.

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Preregts

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reported that " If abuse of the . at the stations are· OVE:J'·
trash stations, located flowmg and trash is dumped
throughout the cou nt y, a longside
making
it
continues the stations will b~ necessary at times to use end
abandoned . '"Containers used l~aders. to ~lean up the area,
,
they said ,
•
Asked by a reporter ·what
IS UD
action people should take
when they arrive at a conAction Offices in the county tainer and find it full courthouses and at the · should they return their
Community ·Aetion-.Center in g arbage
home?
a
Cheshire.
representative · of the c.om,
Head start is a child mission had n o suggestion to
development program fWlded offer.
"
through the Department of
Attending today's meeting
Health, Education and were Henry Wells, Warden
Welfare . The program will Ours, and Bernard Gilkey,
provide a comprehensive commissioners, and Martha
. program of parental in- Chambers, clerk.
·
· · ...,
volvement , nutritional,
A public heai'ing will be
m ed ica I
d e it t a r , held on the annual budget fm
psychologic~! and social 1976 on July 15 at 9:30a.m. at .
· services.
the· office · of the com•
miSsioners.
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plant'.
. FoUr Wor~e:q,.. fireman gRs~~d to dead! at Columbus.
.
COLUMBUS,Ohio(UPI) came from or what type it . Bill Stevens, 46, Amanda,
Gas fiUlles seeping into a
was, It entered the .pll whe,e Ohio, a maintenance foreman
where animal entrails are animal entrails are itlide Into at the plant; Franklin Doyle,
processed at a repdering paste, fertilizer and dOg food. 38, Chillicothe, Ohio, a plant
plant killed four workmen "whatever it was hit.the men maiqtenance employe ; and
-and a volunteer fireman . immei:liately when they got to Wendell Tackett, 18 , Ol;eint,
attempting to rescue them the bottom of the pit, " said Ohio, and Chris Spaulding, 21,
here. Monday.
Franklin Township Fire tiief Columbus, both laborers at
Eleven other persons were M E. Olney . The gas was the factory . injured in the incident at thought to be methane or
Firemen were called to the
Inland Products, Inc. Cause hydrogen sulfide .
scene when the four employe~
of death tentatively was
Autopsies were to be failed to emerge from the pit.
listed as asphyxiation by a performed today on the Franklin Township fireman
toxic gas.
bodies' of Gary Fulton, '1:1, David Crawford, who was not
Franklin wearing an oxygen mask, fell
Authorities said they were Columbus, · a
uncertain where the gas Tow11,Ship voiWlteer fireman; into the well whe"'l'e reached
inlo pull out one of the men .
Fulton was apparently
killed immediately when he
fell in trying to save the other
RACINE
Bon me leader for the Ohio Univer- five , said fire officials.
Marlene. Fisher , Racine, sity-Meigs Local Teachers
Admitted to Mt. Carmel
received her m"'ter's degree Corps program .
· . . Medical
Center
were
in elementary education at
Mrs. Fisher, lhe daughiet
Crawford, in critical conOhio University in JWle with of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert .diti&amp;R.;. Leonard Weidner, a
a 3.7 grade average . Mrs. ( Pete) Shields of East Letart,
Franklin Township fireman
Fisher
received
her has three children, Molly, a
in critical condition in the
bachelor's degree, cum senior ; Larry. a sophomore
hospital's intensive care Wlil;
laude, in 1974 from Ohio at Southern Local ' Hlgb
Lt. Ronald Temple, a FrankUniversity. She has taught in School, and Amy, an eighth
lin Township fireman in
the SOuthern Local and Meigs grader in jWliO~ high
guarded condi lion; Ronny
Local School Districts and is Southern .
Puckett, a Jackson Township
now employed . as a team
fireman · m satisfactory

pit

Master degree taken in June

at

DR. LAMB
...

What cause_si face wrinkles?
'.

conditw'll ; and W1lllam
Hixon, 48, and Francis Cox,
40, both Columbus poli~men
in satisfactory condition. .
Treated and released were
Jackson Township firemen .

-Bishop Krumm
officiating at
seroice Sunday
The Right Rev. John M.
Krumm will officiate at
Confirmation Service at
Grace Episcopal Church,
Pomeroy at 10 :30 a.m.
Sund,y, July 6. Following the
service and holy commWlion
there wfll be a parish luncheon .
Members of Grace Church
tO be confirmed are_ Mr . and
Mrs. Lawrence Brogan, Mr.
and Mrs. Raymond Douglas
and Mrs. Paul Etch. The Rev.
Harold Deeth, rector of
Grace Church, will assist
Bishop Krumm.
Bishop Krumm, who has
been a rector of the Church of
the Ascensidll In New York
City, was na.med to his
current post in 1971. A native
of South Bend, Ind ., he
received his docklrate from
Yale in 1948, an honorary
degree from Kenyon College
in 1962, and an honorary
doctorate from General
Theological Seminary In
May, 1975.

By
E. Lamb, M.D.
lo?ki~g at the fa~ in the, · wrinkling.
DEAR DR. LAMB - Some mormng when you flrst get Ufj
The SWl is more dangerous
MORGAN HONORED
time ago one of your readers and in the evening when you and causes more wrinkles
SAN
FRANCISCO (UP!) asked you what can be done
eady to go to bet!.
than most other factors . The
when the face and neck
e "on arising face':-:.!&amp;~ ..rays that induce a tan d~ Cincinnati sec.ond baseman
_b ecomes
creepy.
You al~ less wrinkled· ~~~use -~ damage the elastic skin Joe Morgan is the latest
suggested · she do facial th re IS more flt,dlf in '«~~!"!. fibers and prematurely ages National League "Player of
the Week."
exercises.
li ues in the face. from lying the skin.
NL 'Pregident Chub Feeney
· Recently I read an article do · I night.
ThoSe who want to avoid
announced that
Monday
in a leading magazine written
There e several factors wrinkles needn 'l avoid
by someone who claims to be that ca
wrinkling of ~ smiling. Ills better to smile Morgan had been honc!red
an expert on skin 'care. She face . Sud en weight lo~ · and say no when you are after hitting .348 for the week,
states that sup.~rflcial lines often brin
fac,i.a l offered 8 cigarette. It has with three homers, eight
can make the face seem wrmkles. Why · ~lllil .,of been shown that facial RB!s and five stOh!'n bases.
Morgan scored or knocked
older, tired and drawn . ·They the loss .of ti.ssue und~r .the wrinkling occurs 10 years
in
the game-tying or gameare not necessarily a sign of skin . Th1s pomts up the un- earlier and to a greater
winning
runs in four of
true aging, but bare an jn- portance of your tissue mass degree in heavy smokers.
dication of facial wear and . under the skin in preventing This causes those crow's feet Cincinnati's six victories
tear .
·
wrinkling. Maintaining ·your wrinkles aroWld the corners during the week.
She also stated the way to , muscle mass for the fa_c~: of the eyes, in particular.
minimize damage to the ~kin helps f!ll ou~ out the tissues . JBeing overweight is also an
and to prevent collagen fibers Wlder the skin, and,~lllte !J!t, '"' impor!&amp;nt factor . The obese
from being broken down is to heips . to . pre¥ebt such face · j)ennanently stretches
reduce facial expressions-as w.rmkhng. Of the two, the skin· which is much more
mucll as possible.
building and maint,aitling dama2i'ng
than
the
Please, Dr. Lamb, will you your facial muscles vers114. momehtary stretching thai
set me straight and let other the adverse effects of .facial occurs with natural facial
I : believe expressions. Then, if the
By ED SAINSBURY
concerned women know if we expression.
are deferring wrinkling by maintaining the muscles Is overweight person loses
facial exercises?
bethe mos: ~tant .. y~ weight, , which is often , ~.::=;~rl~{ (UPI) DEAR READER- The tl tter,hooll.f oiwallth}~;;,~ fo , ,medicallynecessary,theface'' .. vtctortollti·. Hal~ ~in will
skin
has
remarkable
•roug
e w ,. "" . ... • \1
· kl d so k
·
.
1
Th'
.
pressionless,
vacailt
look
-on'
lsse
efre
'yalwrm
el
.
.
'
eoodep
debate
.
anybody
who
.
t
regenera IVe power· . ere 18
,
your ac1 muse es m g
questions whether he won the
the lhought that facial ex- ,the face.
.
shape don't overdo the SWl W
,
pressions lead tOliiies, frown "'"" The skin naturally grQ.ws as , expos~e avoid getting fat
t!l!lem Open Monday for bJs
lines, smile lines and it is true you get older, and this and st~y away from : n d tournament lriiUllp)l
you . cad" wrinkle. the skin combined with loss of fac!al cigarettes. And th,l!lf smile, lost itear or George Johnaon
temporarily by fac1al muscle tissues from loS$ of facial because you will have done
· .
.
But
I
d
k
d
th
tr
tl
Y
con ac ons. ou can see e muse e mass an wea ene
some importan 1 things for
_on
.... the record • Johnaon
difference sometimes by relaxed muscles, leads to
f
was anead at the halfway
.
· ,"
, your ace·
point, tied · with 18 boles
.,i··
,
piay,andtiedwithonlythree
holes to play. Then his golf
game exploded, and he lost.
Irwin won the $200,0001 event
willl
a one-under-par 283.
THURSDAY AND
Irwin said at midpoint
. , .. • . IATURDA Y SALE
when he was a stroke behind
"two,par· rounda might pa11
.·' .,.~. " "'
everybody."Hedidn'tdotliat
weil. He bad a par round and
a · twoover-par round, and
whether be would have won
the $40,000 had Johnson's
game not collapsed wil111ever
ltt ·Jie settled;'
But Inrlll'got the lead on
the 16th hole when Johnscill
drove into a trap, c}llpped
badly and took two putts to go
over par. On the 17th hole,
Johnson, trying to ~
the second black man to
. qualify !Oi',,lhe Masters, gave
Irwin the.tourn~ent. · .. ·
There, after a drive into a
rutted lie In the rough,
Johnson pulled out a 9-lron

/ 'u.f

·~

logged Monday.
·,

Purl H. Van Meter, 43, of
R.utland, was charged . with
failure to stop within th~
assured clear distancE
Monday at 4: 15 p.m
foUowlng a traffic accident 01
Rt. 7, one mile north of
Cheshire.
~~e Gallia-Meigs Post
S~ Highway Patrol said an
auto driven by Harold c.
Roush, 32, of Rt. I, Letart,
alaWed for a car making a left
turn and.his car was struck in
th~t~rear by an auto driven by
CARPENTER - Meigs
V.iiti· Meter. There was
County Pomona Grange was
moderate damage to both
honored when Miss Crystal
vehicles.
Beckley, Ohio Slate ' Grange
Princess
for
1975,
represented the Ohio Slate
Grange in the Big Bend
Regatta parade.
Also riding with Miss
Beckley were Keith Ashley,
Meigs CoWlty Grange Prince
( 197~, who was third rWlnerup in the State Grange Prince
contest; Mendal . Jordan, : tJAYTONA BEAcH, FLA.
Stale Grange Deputy in ('\IP}) - 'l'wte in Friday at
MeigS' CoWlty, and Nonnan -Diitona lntematlonal SpeedWill, Meigs County Pomona W'-Y for a new chapter in 'the
Grange Master.
Cillltlnuing saga, "The King
Miss Beciqey, daughter of lllif-,Siiver Fox."
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Beckley
··Will the Fox -David
Bremen,
will
be •Piliraon -outwit the King of
representing the State ~ Petty --to win the
&lt;;lrll!l&amp;~ at many other acFourth Firecracker 400
tivities over the State during stOCk car race for the fourth
· the summer. In October, she ~ight year? Or will ·the
will ,participate in the State Ki!li ):W'eVllil?
Grange session in Cleveland
~tty, :t?. of Randleman,
arid in November compete N;'e;, the aCclaimed king of
with other State Grange soiithern stock car racing and
Princess contestants from five-time winner of the
the entire United States for Daytona 500, has never won
National Grange Princess ·at the July 4 race. He has
the National Grange s~n fii!J,sbed second the last four
in Columbus.
y~ : ·
·Pierson, 41, of SparI
laljurg, S.C., cailed "Silver
Fat" because of his black
Bi)d· silver haii- and foxy
b6haviour on the race b"ack,
willibe looking for his first

Recognition is

given Grange

...

WED

..

.

-

Men's &amp; Boys'
~NIT

SHIRTS

Styles Not Inc Iuded

Men's. &amp; BoJs'

ODD LOT

WALKING •
SHORTS

MEN~S

Men's &amp; Boys'

LEISURE
SUITS
.
.

NOW 1/3 OFF ·.

SWIM WEAR
•.

,I

I

·POMEROY

Funeral services for
Charles (Frldl\~) . Ke88inger
were conducted at' 2 p.m.
,: Tuesday · at the Rawlings• Coats Funeral Home with the
Rev. -F~Iink Cheese brew
offici!l~ing. Bw-lal was in the
Rock ', ~rlngs Cemetery.
Out.of-coWlty relatives and
·. friends calling at the funeral
hoin.e • and attending the
serviCes were Charles H.
Wise, Wav.erly; Mr. and MrS.
, Janles L.' Uttie, Mrs. Floyd
Wise, Mrs. PhyUla Rathburn,
Wilberine Davidson, Mr. and
M~s. Roy Miller, Mrs.
M1ldred Mea4e, Mr. and .Mrs.
' _J,.arry Flowers, an · · of
Columbus; · Mr.. and Mrs.
Dale Roust(and famjly, St
AlbiiQs,. W., Va.; Mrs. Conn!~
Engle, DaVid WilliamS, -.Mr.
and llfrs. Paul Willlams and
Lisa, GreenvUie, Ohio; Joy
Martin, Fort Bragg, N. C.;'
I.~.

. 1'

+,

J..ty

'1 thought I won it on the
ltllr::OOie. I hit from the tee
tn$:abunkeranditookouta
66
and' when I hit it, I
kn'tlliF It was a hell of a shot.

My :heart didn't start purnpi~!(' again until I got w the
green. It was 155 yarda out of
the bunker, over water, ink!
the wind, 011to the middle of
Johnson stlid. "I don't know the. green and I got d own in
what! did. It was a bad shot." l'l'ril'lllltls. And as far as I was
Irwin didn 'I challenge C116ined, that was the tourJohnson's statement. He ~t.
challenged !be idea that he
"1. made 16 pars and two
backed into victory.
bogeYB and that's hard to
"I was behind all day," he beat playing under the
said. "Bpton the 12th green, I conditions Monday. You oori't
looked at the leader board eiject·a 73 to be the winning .
and George had just bogeyed ~'icore, but in this CBlle
_No. 11 and I was ·a stroke. ·~eenl ~&lt;were extremely
behind. That's when· l-felt I fiJ!i!iiy and the course dried
was in it again.
up~derably. It was an
"No pressure was being put en~y different course than
on George. He was going to in .~ morning."
have to make a mistake. He . ·Kin's prize boosted his
had to, then or later, or wben. ~~ to $175,627 and ·
You can't play this ,:course
third place in the .
and not make a mlabilrli and
behind Jack
he couldn't make all those
d Johnny Miller.
putts coming d~wn the Irwin was the only player
stretch. I won It because I under par and Cole, winning
made less errors. I made the ~800; finished in seco1,d
putts, I hit the shots, or pla'dl Ill par 284. Ed Sneed
what,ever you want ·to say, .•
tlt200forhisthird
· coming down the stretch, that ..,:c '·' :finbth .· witb . 'Jifl the
I had to make. I ma!!,e so ' .. ~'wlilc;h lroUsht victory
many good putts cCllliblg in to ,~ Watson a year ago,
and the greena were so allci '!Jerry Heard, John
bumpy, It was unnerving.
Uster, who equalled the
· COill'ie reco!'d witb 65 Monday
and Gibby Gilbert
fiftb and $8,267.67

2811.

•.

.'

rune

POLE OUr OF ACnON
BOSTON (uPI) - Pitche1
Dick Pole, struck on the right
cheek Monday night in a
game agafust the Baltimore
Orioles; will be lost to the

'

National Asaociation of Sklck .
Car Racing (NASCAR)
victory this year.
"The facti I've won three
Firecrackers in a row doesn't
make any diffe.ren.ce,"
Pearson said. "ThiS IS a
different year. But don't get
me wrong. All things being
equal, there's no reason we
can't make it qumber four."
"If David beats me again
this year he's going w have to
do it by just plain outrunning
m~," . said P.H!Y, · Gr~nd
National racings all-tune
winningest driver. "I'm not
going to be tri~ed again."
Petty, who drives a Dodge,
still rememboirs Pearson, in
his Mercury, outfoxing him in
last year's dramatic finish .
Pearson deliberately let
Petty pass him on the last lap
only to "slingshot" by him at
the finish line by using the
draft created by Petty's car.
The Fox beat the King by less
than a carlength.
.
Forty cars are SCheduled to
start the record ·$127,375 Independence Day event at
10:00 am EDT. Pole pOsttion
qualifying is today with Petty
and Pearson among the
favorites to win the number .
one starting position.
Pearson won the pole last
year with a speed of 180.759
miles per hour.
. The • first 20 starting
positions will be up for grabs .
The rest of the starting field

positions will be detennined ·
in. time trials Thursday.
Other- contenders · are
Bobby Alllson of Hueytown
Ala., driving, a Matador;
Buddy Baker, of Olarlotte,
N.C., in a Ford; Cale Yar·
borough, of Tirnmonsville,'
S.C., in a Chevrolet; atuJ this •
year's 500 victor Benny • ...
Parsons, of Ellerby: N.C., in
a Chevrolet.
A.J. Foyt, of Houston, Tex.,
three-time wiimer of the Indlanapolis 50ll and twice
winner of the Firecracker
and Johnny Rutherford 1974
Indy 500 winner,
in
Chevroleta will represent the
U.S. Auto Ctub ·(USAC).

both

•
•

TARRIVED

:

Star Flowers
Happy Flowers
Hill Flowers

59 N. Second St.

Middleport,

fo¥rth -bllll,1_ sa_id Johnny,
"but il w"" upstairs a Uttle ."
Joe Niekro was the victun
of Bench ' s homer which
followed a double by Ken
Griffey and and an intentional w.alk to Joe Morgan
and boosted h1s leagueleading RBI total to 65.
" The first two knucklers
Niekro threw me were hard
ones," Bench said. "I'm glad
they weren 't strikes because
I didn't want any more like
them ."
~
" You ' re hitting all the
way ," Reds', manger Sparky

Anderson had told Bench as to do was hit any more balls into the ninth lnnln&amp; behind.
foul into the seats. Don't I
"That's the bl&amp;gest· difhe went to the plate.
. ference thll Ieason..::. he
" I still glanced doW!\ at have i3 of those noy;? "
third base to look at Alp · The Reds, who extended added.
Clay Kirby, itbo pined his
tGranunas) and see whether their record streak of
errorless
games
to
15,
were
fifth
victory bt eliht decisions
Spark; had changed his n'lind
with the 3-11 coWl!," said d9lvn 6-2 before scoring three with a scorele88 thrte-inning
tlms In the eighth and adding fellel stint, was in the
Johnny.
" The way I 've · been a tying run in the ninth to go trainer's room getting his
arm Iced down when Bench
swinging the bat lately, it has into extra innings.
"That's
the
eighth
jiime
homered. been pretty~ frustrating," he
" You know ho'tV Merv
continued . " I've been moving we've w~n on our last turn 111
aroWld too much in the ' bat," noted Anders;,n. "Lilll R~tterimund's always kidbatter 's box .. my hands have yearwe wononlyonegamein ding," . said KirbY. "SO 'I
our last at bats while the didn't believe ~ when he
been slow .' '
" Ahd, " he added, smiling, Dodgers won 17 after going walked in and con&amp;ratulated
"another thing I didn 't want

•

•

Chicago manager) is a real
saint for going a long with me
in so 'many games because in
many cases, I did not deservec
it," said Wood. lie began this
season by losing 10 of i2
decisions --after a 90-65
record and 181 starts-over the
past four ye 1rs.
·
" I knew I ~ 't have it
early in the se p, but I've
really gotten in
groove the
last couple of games," Wood
said.
His seven-hitter Monday
night snapPed an eight-gam~o
winning streak by the A's,
who are coasting atop the

•

Minnesota 10-3. Kansas City
and Texas were
not
schediiled.
In the National uague, it
was Pittsburgh 5 Montreal' S,
New York 5 Chicago I, Cincinnati 9 Houston 6 in 12 innings, St. Louis 4 Phila·
delphia 2 and Los Angeles 4
Sarr Diego 1.
Orioles W, Red Sox 5-Z
Carl Yastrzernaki had a
pair of doubles and a $Jgle
and drove in two runs for
Boston in the first game. In
the second, Dave Duncan tied
a major league record with
four consecutive doubles for

ThioFrig-MobileDilhw.-gli-lo
the link. fait 1nd Mly, then hookS up to
the hot water faucet ui secondS. Super.

Surge Welhing Action ICrubs soft lood

wutn off tabteware, pota and pans; etlml· .
net• the need for pr.rlnalng or noi'm1Uy ·
oollod dillies. UM the handy Formico"
brand top for e}(tra work apace When
,&lt;, 11.iklo,lrm1 ade
lalt
Ia has your
,.
I
. .It inlllill

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any-

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exrr•

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a

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BAIER.'FURNITURE'

~

•••

I~,

seeded Connors an od~
favorite to beat elghth«eded
Ramirez and· advai)Ce to the
semifinals where he will meet
the winner of the match
between Guillermo Vilas of
Argentina and 11th seed
Roscoe Tanner, the big hitter
from Lookout Mountain,
\

Heat mars. title bout

.

.
;

.\
'.

· fa~zs:=~~~o~:gktn~

"The heat was ba:d," Ali" 16th title fight over a· Min wjlatCOllld .~~ ll!.f first.
By BERr OK•" ~y
u""'
allAmerlciinmen'sfmalin 28'
KUALA LUMPUR (UPI) " said of the 90-degree tern- worldwide ' closed-drcuit years . · •
· ·
_ ·Muhammad Ali retained peratures made even less theater and TV hookup. The
In the other quarterfinals,
his world heavyweight boxing ~Ierable by television lights. King and, Queen ?I Malay~ia Hollbnd's ninth seed,'~m
championship Tuesday
I thought I would knock Joe occupied a Specl81 rmgs1de Okker, playa AUstralia's !Sth
morning with a unanimous out in 10 rounds but I section.
.
seed, Tony Roche, who ousted
15-round decision over couldn't."
"It was the heat tha! did me Ken Rosewln last week in the
European challenger Joe
Only about 15,000 spec- in, :· _said the 6-foot:-1 Bugner, tournament's big'gest upset .
The men had a ' rest day
Bugner in intense tropical tators turned up at the 38,000- · whO· entered the rmg at 230
heatwhichtookits toll of both seat stadium because the pounds. "I don't think I'm Monday while top seed Olris
· fighters.
match was televised Iocaily, finished yet. I'll come baCk · Evert, third seed 'Billie Jean
The 33-year-old Ali said but millions watched Ali's and have a.nother go. at 1t. Ki
f Sa Ma
Calif
bl
ng o
n
teo,
.,
bel
Thi
before entering the canopied
.
$ was JUSt un leva e fourth . seed
Evonne ·
heat.'~
ring at Merdeka (InGoolagoog Cawley and fifth
Promoter Don King said seed Margaret Court, both of
dependence) Stadium in the
Malaysian capital that he had
· Ali, who got $2.5 million for Australia -women who hold
bowed to pressure that he call
hiS · fight Tuesday ; probably a total of 10 Wimbledon
off his retirement and, even
t
la
l
will pick up nearly twice that singles crowns among them
before disposing of Bugner,
0 .S
On Op amount for the bout in -reached the semifinals.
Manila. Bugner rece.lved
Miss Evert, the Fort
said he would defend the
crown against Joe Frazier in
$500,000 and Frazier's cut in Lauderdale, Fla. defending
SYRACUSE
Sll{lday at M 'I8
b 8 bl
~esforyou:
8 hould
Manila Oct. I.
am h pro
Syracuse Park in in.., milli'Y011 King champion, dt'....m.wl
..,.,_. a set to
Bugner, who opened a
approac
••
•
un••eded
Be
..
dependent baseball action
'd t ·
'de
~
" y Stove of
slight cut around the
Syracuse remained in first S8lAli a rmgslil · ·
trol f Holland, who play·ed the
·
was eas Y m con
tennis of her life in the early
champion's left eye in the
11-3 win over th
in
da
'th
place with
,
sevellth
round,
was
e open g roun • WI
games, before coming back
: Reuter-Bragan aggressive from the opening Minersville . Jeff Hubbard ·Bugner a dopt'mg a peek.a-boo to win S-7, 7-6, 6-0 and win an
was the winning pitcher and d f
· il •· th "rope
bell, but simply did not have
e ense sun ar "' e
• ovation that was as much for
INSURANCE
Jed Will was tagged with the
d
" • ~ ti the hamJ)iOII
it in his repertoire to handle
loss .
·
a ope ..,c cs
c
her fighting BjJirlt as for her
uses in leaning back on the
Ia
the confident, rl'ngw 1·8 e
Hitters for Syracuse were
d
nng· h' head
P y.
' ;
champion.
ropes an cove
lS
.
"I just -·•.._'t get going,"
\.'UWUII
:11m Hemsley wtth 3 hits in 5 AI''
1 s cu t was hardly Miss Evert
· The officials gave Ali eight
said. "It wasn't
THE
at bats. The big blow for
t'
bl
t'l
th
late
1
rounds, the 25-year.old
no lcea e un
e
till the thtr' d set that I really ·
Minersville was a 370 ft.
nd
nd tr8 in
4nn I
Bugner two and called five
rou s a
er ~..,.e 0 felt 1 was playm· g as I
I~SURANCE
"I should."
homerWl blast over the new Dund ee sal'd a fte r the f'ght
1
even ifil.a bout which .ended
fence in left center field by
ed
t stuH
with
the
challenger's
never us
any cu
Mrs King, eliminated from
Butch Hanning. Minersville ( ed' · ) 00 1't "
STORE
manager screaming for
m lcme
·
the tournament at the same ·
played good ball, but errors
" Joe Bugner will be the
Bugner to start punching.
stage last year by Olga
and walks was their downfall .
t
h
·
h n I
nex c ampwn w e
Morozova, did -not give the
Next SWlday Minersville retire," Ali said, reiterating a
.
Russian seventh seed , a
Plays Portland at Portland, " predtction he made m
chance. She took. an early
Letart plays Tuppers Plains February 1973 when he
'
'
lead on a court made tricky
at Letart, and !)yracuse goes decisioned the Hungarian- by cross winds and was never
against Pomeroy at M1d- born challenger in 12 rounda in serious trouble. Her
dleport, all at 1 p.m .
in Las Vegas. "I kno"K~ he can backhand had the pigtailed
do it. Joe Frazier didn't give Morozova mu~rlng aloud in
me such a rough time.
Norton did not and (George) R~;pt' thinldi1g about last
Foreman did not."
year out there on ' court,"
Frazier, who occupied · a Mrs. King said ~ter her 6-3,
ringside seat and exchanged 6-3 wiri. "I aalcl,' 1 can't let
a few words with AU prior w that happen again. I feel very
' .- ,-1-~ti•P opening beil, said he was - confident," she said .of her
Wlimpressed with the cham- chances for a sixth singles ·
pion's showing h're. All title. "There's npthing more 1
Js the time weighed 225 pounl'ls at last can do to prepare myself
Saturday's official weigh-in mentally or physically."
to call me for the best
an · said before the. fight he ., Miss co'u rt, who only
car insurance value anywhere .
was "in the best shape of my decided to coltlpete three .
days before the toutnament
Steve Snowden life." I might have appeared to opened
btcauee She 'th~ught
1 she was out of condition due
have
been
victorious
but
·
i 258 Powell St.
guarantee you I feel wQrse to 8 second baby and 8 call
Middleport, 0 .
than he does at my age' and I m]ury , demolished the
was in extra good slu.pe," All
PH. 9112-71SS
. . . dr .
chWlky second seed, Martina
Navratilova of Czechos ..
,saJd m hiS essmg room.
Ali's
best
chance
..
at
a
.
lovakia
H ....._,4
,,,;. agood llAJI IAIM
knockout Clime in , .the ~ .,
&lt;!a.c..;,'.-,roke
ne•ghbor ,.
haUminute ~f the~. Whet("'; thousands • 'llf ·. ~ llametown
State Fwm
IN!oUIANCI
IS there .
he had Bugne:- in bJs own hearts by ellDilllilUng the
•
comer, .slightly ~tumed, al)ll British hope, Vl,rginia Wade,
W.
VA
•
NEW HAVEN'
I
TU
I
I
AifiiMUl
U
I
~
UJI
G
YDI
H
t
!UIIIU
t(
.
was dehve~g r~ght and left- the sixth seed, 5-7, 6-4, ~7.
COMPUf • 110M! !HIICI · I U niiiiiiCI O• • Ill
ha?d
combmallons to t_he The former Mlu Goolagong
882-2525
P71
Bnton 's head.

SyracUSe wins
Y

°

,.

\ .

Hassler

3 81

at

Minnesote

Ange les ( Hooton 6 7), 10 · 30 . &lt;Goltz 6 6 and Blyleven s.J). 2,
Tenn. And the bookies expect produced some of the artistry pL os
m
·
6 00 p ,m
Connors wgo on to retain his for which she is famous but A t l anta (Thompson 0 ·'2) at San
Wed_nesday's Oam&amp;s
Ka~sas City at Te;.as, night
what really beat the British pF rman cis co (C aldwel l 4-7), 11 . 05 Californ
UUe.
ia at Minnesota, night
Wednesday ' s Games
Oakland at Chicago, night
Both the abovt matches are girl was the hometown
Atli'lnta !It San Franc 1sco
Boston at Milwaukee, 2. twi in the top hall of the draw. In crowd, yearning for victory. Chl
cago at New York . night j
nigh t
the lower half, Arthur Ashe of She has always said it is a Houston at · Cincmnatl. n ight
Baltimore at Oetro1t, night
1tt sburg h at Montreal , ntghl
New York at Cleveland. night
Miami, the sixth seed wbo mental hazard to carry the PSan
D 1ego at Los Angeles , night
was second betting favorite dreams of so many people. St L OU IS at Ph il adelph ia, ntght
until he dropped a set w an :::::;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ;.;.;.;.;.; .;:;:;;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;;;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:l
unseeded Briton, plays
SWeden's l~yearold Bjorn
Borg, the third seed, today.

.

••

Middleport, Ohib

(Jefferson 1·2 L 9 :00p .m .
Balli more (Mitchell 0-0) at
7 35 p m
Boston (Wise 8 6) , 7 :30p.m . '
Chicago ( Burr is 7 51 at New K ansas City (Busby 11 ·51 at
York ( W ebb 1· 3). 8 :0S p m .
TeKas (Jenkins 6· 8). 9 :00p .m
Hou s ton
( Ri chard
5 3)
at Detroit ( Lol l ch 8-S) at Ctevt ·
Ctnc1 nnat 1 ( C Carroll S 4), 8. 05 land (Bibby 3 7), 7: JO p .m
p m
.
New York (Dobson a 61 at
P1tt sburg h ( Candelar ia 2 1) at Milwaukee
!CastrO
3-1 or
M ontreal ( F ryman 6.4 ); 8 05 Colborn 2·6 ), 8 •30 p .m . •
p m
Californ ia (Figueroa 6--4 end

San Diego ( F reisteben 3 8 l at

They'll get a good idea
today when Connors meets
Raul Ramirez, who was
largely responsible for the
Mexican victory, in the
singles quarterfinals of the
J268,600 Wimbledon Tennis
Championships.
The bookmakers have no
doubt. They have made lop-

American• League
Eest
w. f. pet. v. b.

l-'

St LOUIS (M cGlothen 9 ·51 at
Ph iladelph ia ( Tw i tchell 4-8 &gt;.

'.Mra.'' ·

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Connors vs. Ramirez today
BY ROBERT MUSEL
WIMBLEDON,
England
(UPI) When Mexico
blasted the United States out
of the Davis Cup, many an
expert wondered what the
result would have been if
Jimmy Connors had been on
the American team.

11 hill in .the Ilia lnnln&amp;l 'be
pitched and walked only. one.
Sinslea by Concepcion,
pfiiclf hitter Ed ' Armbrtlter
and ~te Roee preoeeded
Griffey's balesloaded triple'
in the elghtb whl~ pulled the
Reds within one nm lif the!
Astros.
A single by Ilrieuen, .Tony
Perez's double and an in·
tentlon pass to ConcepciCII
preceeded pinch hitler Bill
Plu,mmer's IIBcriflce fly
which tied the score at kll in
the ninth .

Baltimore wllile Jim · Nor- when Cleveland was helped
East
Boston
41 31 569
tltrup had three l)its, in- by six Deb"oit errors. Rick
W. I. pc1 . g . b ~- New York
41 33 554 1
eluding a three.nm"homer. Manning's third hit, a two- P tltsburgh
45 2q 608
Milwaukee
40 34 .541 2
Bftltimore
34 39 ... ~ 7'12
Brewen 5, Y.See1 4
run single in the eighth, won Ph il adelphia 42 34 553 4
37 34 521 6''1 Cleveland
32 41 .438 9112
New Y or k
Bobby Danr!P, aCiqulredhy the second game .
36 31 493 8' 2 G&gt;etroit
27 4S .375 14
St Lo ui s
36 40 47.4 10 .
Weoo; t
Ch i cag o
Milwaukee in riJid.,June from ' Angela 10, I'wlns 3
3 1 39 443 12
w. I. pet. g.b.
Mont r ea l
Minnesota, hit a two-nm,
Frank Tanana, who struck
we st
Oakland
..a 27 .640
w . 1. pet. g . b. K ans~s C•tv
41 34 .547 7
pinchhlt homer in the bottom out 17 batters in a game little
C•ncrnna l•
49 28 .636
T e~as
36 39 .480 12
of the ninth for the victory. morethanaweekago,fanned Los Angeles
43 36 544 1
Ch 1cago
35 38 .479 12
33 39 458 13'11
The winning home run 15 to raise his record to 6-4. San Fr an cisc o 37 39 .487 111 ·~ M innesota
San 01ego
36 41 474 13
California
35 '43 ,. 449 U 'l:~
followed an infield single by California got to Minnesota's At lanta
32 43 427 16
MondiV'I Retultl
28 52 350 22u~ Bos ton5Baltlmore2, 1st
Siito
Lezcano.
Chris Ray Corbin 'tor six runs Houston
Mondly's Results
Baltimore 8 Boston 2, 1:n&lt;l
Chambll.u had put,New York before a man was reUred in N ew Y ork 5 Chh; ago 1
Cleveland 4 D.e.trolt 1. 1st
Cleveland 3 Detrott 2. 1f1tt"-..
ahead with a IWIH'WI homer the first, knocking hjm out P 11tsburg h 5 ¥ontr ea l 3 "
Los Ang eles 4 San Dl~go 1
Ca!iforn fa 10 M l nnesot~J 3
in the top lif the ninth.
, alter John J:&gt;ol!erty's three- 'iSt Louis 4 Philadelplila 2
Chicago 6 Oakland 1
Cinc1 nnati 9 Houston 6, 121 nns
M i lwaukee 5 New York 4
IDdlana ~. l"'aen l·Z
run homer.
(Only games 'scheduled)
'?
Tod~v · s Probable Pltchtrl
Rorie Hart:llon pitched a
Today' s Probable Pitcher~
&lt;All Times EDT)
(All Times E DTl .
Oakland CBlue 11 -Sl at Chicago
seven-hitter in the opener

Ken

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Astro rookje righthander
Doug Konofeczny also failed
to complete the second inniog
as the Reds got two of the
runs back.
The Astros took their 11-2
lead when Bob Watson
homered off Pedro Borbon '
alter a singe by Enos Cabell
in the seventh. The homer
was the lith of the season for
Watson and one of 18 Astro
hi~. a season high for the
Reds .
Borbon, the third Reds
pitcher to see action. gave up

Major L.eague Standings
By Un1led Pren International
National l,.eague

.

From Frigidaire and Genera I Motors, a
mobi.Je dishwasher that converts to a builtin anytime.

•
me on the victory."
Kirby was equally su(prlsed when he wound up in
the game. He had been
scheduled' to start tonight 's
game.
" Now," said Anderson,
" I'll go with Rawly Eastwick
instead of Kirby. I'll also play
Darrel Olaney at shortstop
klnighl and give Davey (Concepcion } a rest."
Tom Carroll, the Reds'
starter, failed to survive the
second iMing during which
the Astros scored four runs.

/
American League 's Western
Division with a seven-game
lead.
Jerry Hai,rston, playing his
first game since being
recalled from the minors,
singled, doubled, scored
twice and drove in. a run as
the While SOx equalled their
longest winning streak in
more than two years.
Elsewhere in the AL
Monday night, Baltimore
beat Boston 8-2 alter losing ·
the first game &gt;-2, Milwaukee
edged New York 5'-4,
Cleveland swept Detroit 4-1
and 3-2 and California routed

an

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1l'ot'the bird whei\ you
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tree the other
:)light?
: Fear not. Just wing
on down to the experts
•
l)~ trouble: your independent insurance
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Colorful Zesty

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By IRA MilLER
UPI Sports Writer
II 's a little unusual to hear
a pitcher with a 6-11 record on
July 1 talk ~bout winning 20
games.
Mter all, a guy with a
record like that usually would
be lucky even to get 14 more
startS the rest of the season,
let alone win 14 more gaines.
But when it's Wilbur Wood
talking about winning 14
more, you have to listen,
because you can always be
sure of one thing where he's
concerned -he'il get plenty
of chances.
Wood, who pitched the
Chicago White SOx to a &amp;-1
victory over the Oakland A's
Monday night !Or Chicago 's
ninth straight victory, figures
he 'II throw his rubber arm
into action perhaps 25 more
times this season in a try for a
fifth successive 20-victory
year.
"I think Chuck Tanner (the

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Chisox make zt· nzne zn row;

Boston Red Sox for an undetermined time.
Doctors reported Pole had
suffered a fractured tight
cheek when hit by a Tony
Muser line drive in the ninth
inning ·of the ' first game of a
doubleheader won by Botlton
S-2. He was taken to the'
Hahnernann Hospital where
the injury was diagnosed as a
fractured cheekbone, a
contusion of the right eye and
diminished vision in the eye.

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op Astros · on ·Bench's· homer

•

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Gary Lee Matheny, Leon, W.
Va. ; Mrs. Homer Roush, Sr., 1,'--j!l:...-..::-::.:...,....:-:'---:---&lt;;.
Blacksville, W. Va.; Homer,
Roush, Hyattsville,. Md.
-', Cliristlhe Cumberledge,
Braze, Pa.; . the Mlircello
family, Lancaster; Thomas
Redmrin, Mason, W. Va.;
Mrs. Lillian Reitmire
Mason, W.Va. ; Mr.' and Mrs:
Clyde W. Kessinger, Ak;on;
the Rev. and Mrs. Frank
Cheeaebrew, Shawnee, Mr.
and Mrs. James Ro4ehaver,
Mrs • . Nora
Neighbors
. ~auncey; Mr. and Mrs:
Roger Roush, Pataskl'!;
Donald Kessinger and
WallaC'e Kessinger, Jr., : I
, . Akron; 'Mr. and Mrs. ,'li:ph
Herdmaif, Lynette 'Heromlm,, ..
. Mrs . . Bonnie Math~y an!l
,: Doug, Leooard Miller, .Leon, · ..
·W. Va. and Mr. ·anci ·Mrs.
Gro'ver ·Arnold and · Jtinmy
·Joe; .Lancaster.
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A GooD 'DAY'S CATCH - 'Riese.
fish were
caught at Forked Run State Park near Reedlvllle 90 June
21 by Larry Thimmes of Lancaster, Ohio. The larg~ was
an 18lb. catfish. Together they weighed approlimately 90
lbs .

}nly .5 00 victory

FWJeral
services
conducted ·
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Petty eyes first

and slammed the bail out of
bounds. It cost him 8 triple
bogey seven and put Irwin
fours! k 8 h dofhlm
ro es ea
and
one ahead lif Bobby Cole. It
shook JOhnson so much that
he bl
ew 00 another double
~gey and a tie for seventh at
~~~~~ a crummy shot,"

CINCINNATI (UPI)
Johnny Bench didn't even
bother to look as his two-out
t.hree-nm homer in the 12th
inning Monday night sailed
into the.seats to give lfre Reds
a U victory over Houston .
"I knew it was out because
it was as good as I can hit a
bail," said the Reds' catcher.
Bench's game\ winning
homer, his 16th or the season,
came on a three-ball, nostrike pitch .
" I don 'l know whether the
pitch I hit would have been a -

Traffic mishap

Irwin claims Western
title with 283 mark

w

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John Lester, 31, Grove City,
Timothy .
Ohio, John Beard, 30, Columbus,
a
Columbus, Larry Roberson, Tewnship fireman , un·
29, Grove City, and Franklin ·ll!r1ivent · treatment al the
Township fireman Freddy hdiipital -late Monday night
arid was expected _ to · be
Hoop, 38, Grove City.
.
released.
WILL DO MORE
Myers Paving Co. , engaged
in repairing Pomeroy streetS,
will also 'blacktop private
property.--Upon- nquest the
finn will q~te a price. Myers
Paving Company is located at
Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va. and
may be contacted•there or by
calling Pomeroy City Hall.•

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3 -;" The Daily ~ntinel, Middleport-Pomeroy·, b., Tuesday, Julv 1. '1975.

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2- ThtDaily Sentinei,Mi(ldlepori-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, July I , 1975

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.Legion takes ·1 of 4 i

The Me1gs Legion baseball fanned 7 and walked 7.
called on to finish the game.
In the second game Meigs Watson in his relief iPteam returned SWlday night
from a four game road trip lost 8-~ on sloppy play . pearance did a fine job and
into Kentucky where a good Nesselroad was the losing pick~ up the first Meigs
lime was had everywhere but pitcher for Meigs and Mack victory on the trip. For
Morehead, Ashland Hawkins was the
on the diamonds as they started for
dropped 3 of 4 decisions to two relieved in the third by loser. Meigs hurlers fanned 4
very tough Blue Grass Bluefield, who got the win . and walkJ!d 5 while the· home \.
Ault relieved Nesseiroad town hurlers did the same.
squads.
for
Meigs in the fifth.
Saturday Meigs los t a
Hlelping Watson in hia
Meigs pitchers fanned 6 moWld appearance at · the
doubleheader to a Morehead
squad of moslly college and walked 6 and the op- plate were Nesselroad who
players from Eastern Ken- ponents fanned I~ and walked had a perfect afternoon, ·
tucky , Kentucky University, 6.
going 4-4, all singles. Neasel·
Leading hillers for Meigs road went 6-)2 on the road
and Morehead State . According to Coach George Saturday were Nesseiroad, trip and picked up 5 RB!s.
Nesselroad, they were, Hamilton, and Wilson with 2 Also giving support from the
" Really an all-star team. " smgles, Ault had a double and home base were HainUwn
Durmg the four game a single, and Perry, Jim with 2 singles, Wilson had 3
weekend lnp "Ness" felt, Niday each ha:d a double, and safeties, Watson a double and
"We faced the best pitchmg Daavenport and FoldeD' had a single, and Perry a double,
singles.
we have seen all year."
and . getting singles were
For
Morehead,
Kiser
led
The Saturday games were
Davenport and Niday.
lost by 7-1 and· 8-5 margins . with 4 singles and he had
The Meigs Legion team
substantial
help
from
and according lo. Nesselroad,
thanks everyone who made
" We gave them that last Davisson who had 3 singles on this trip into the Blue GraSI
the day.
State possible, and special
game. "
With not much rest at all, thanks go to the Boy Scouis
The second game of the
Saturday twinbillla.~ted Wllil the Meigs Legionairres arose for the use of their bus.
11 p.m. and with two to play Sunday and tangled with
tough
squad,
the following day, the team another
001 000 o-1 3 3
Ashland,
and
being
asleep, Meigs
got little sleep .
Morehead
033 010 x-7 5 0
In the first g~e1gs was was blanked 11-&lt;1 with Perk
Perry
and
Hamilton.
still asleep·, losing 11-&lt;1, but m Ault suffering the loss. Ault W~rner (WP) Bluefield (6)
the second game they began fanned I and walked 3 in his anC! Prater.
003 ·200 0.....5 9 2
Meigs ·
h1ttmg the ball and won 8-7. mound appearance . For Morehead
Ill 500 x-8 10 1
High points of the weekend Ashland Skaggs picked up
Nesselroad ( LPl Ault (5)
Hamilton.
Mack,
trip were the hitting of Mike the win, fanning 6 and and
Bluefield
(3)
(WP)
and
Nesselroad who went 6-12, walking 3.
Prater.
Io the second game after Meigs
includmg a 4:4 !mal game,
000 oo- 0 J 1
252 2x-ll 8 1
the
rude awakening in the Ashland.
and Brett Wilson who was 5Au It and Hamilton. Skaggs
13. Another bright spot was opener. Meigs got it.together and
Gothard.
1
!me rebel pitching of . Mike and slipped by their Ken- Meigs
200 312 o-8 11 2
032 100 1- 7 9 2
Watson who came on in the tucky opponents by a slim 8-7 Ashland
Perry, Watson (J), (WP)
cOWl
I.
Jim
Perry
started
on
third inning of the final game
and Hamilton. Hawkins ( LPI
and went the rest of the way, the moWld and went~ innings and ·McKenzle.
was
picking up the victory.
Here is how the weekend
FACTORy BUY OUT
went :
.
'
On Saturday the Meigs
Ful14-Ply Polyester
squad facing and outstanding
Morehead club, went down 778 Series Whitewall
•
1 in the opener with Jim
Perry on the rnOWld suffering
the loss. Warner and
Bluefieltl each saw action for
Morehead with Warner the
starter, gelling the win.
Perry fanned 9 and walked 12
while opposing pitchers

SUMME_R
SANDALS

A78/13 ----------•19.95
E78/14.--------- '21.95
F78/14-------·---'22.95
G78/14 or 15 -----'23.95
H78/14 or 1)----- '24.95·

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HEADQUARTERS
h~ritag~

..

Jlouse

•

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Your Tho,;, MeAn Store
· Middleport, Ohio

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plant'.
. FoUr Wor~e:q,.. fireman gRs~~d to dead! at Columbus.
.
COLUMBUS,Ohio(UPI) came from or what type it . Bill Stevens, 46, Amanda,
Gas fiUlles seeping into a
was, It entered the .pll whe,e Ohio, a maintenance foreman
where animal entrails are animal entrails are itlide Into at the plant; Franklin Doyle,
processed at a repdering paste, fertilizer and dOg food. 38, Chillicothe, Ohio, a plant
plant killed four workmen "whatever it was hit.the men maiqtenance employe ; and
-and a volunteer fireman . immei:liately when they got to Wendell Tackett, 18 , Ol;eint,
attempting to rescue them the bottom of the pit, " said Ohio, and Chris Spaulding, 21,
here. Monday.
Franklin Township Fire tiief Columbus, both laborers at
Eleven other persons were M E. Olney . The gas was the factory . injured in the incident at thought to be methane or
Firemen were called to the
Inland Products, Inc. Cause hydrogen sulfide .
scene when the four employe~
of death tentatively was
Autopsies were to be failed to emerge from the pit.
listed as asphyxiation by a performed today on the Franklin Township fireman
toxic gas.
bodies' of Gary Fulton, '1:1, David Crawford, who was not
Franklin wearing an oxygen mask, fell
Authorities said they were Columbus, · a
uncertain where the gas Tow11,Ship voiWlteer fireman; into the well whe"'l'e reached
inlo pull out one of the men .
Fulton was apparently
killed immediately when he
fell in trying to save the other
RACINE
Bon me leader for the Ohio Univer- five , said fire officials.
Marlene. Fisher , Racine, sity-Meigs Local Teachers
Admitted to Mt. Carmel
received her m"'ter's degree Corps program .
· . . Medical
Center
were
in elementary education at
Mrs. Fisher, lhe daughiet
Crawford, in critical conOhio University in JWle with of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert .diti&amp;R.;. Leonard Weidner, a
a 3.7 grade average . Mrs. ( Pete) Shields of East Letart,
Franklin Township fireman
Fisher
received
her has three children, Molly, a
in critical condition in the
bachelor's degree, cum senior ; Larry. a sophomore
hospital's intensive care Wlil;
laude, in 1974 from Ohio at Southern Local ' Hlgb
Lt. Ronald Temple, a FrankUniversity. She has taught in School, and Amy, an eighth
lin Township fireman in
the SOuthern Local and Meigs grader in jWliO~ high
guarded condi lion; Ronny
Local School Districts and is Southern .
Puckett, a Jackson Township
now employed . as a team
fireman · m satisfactory

pit

Master degree taken in June

at

DR. LAMB
...

What cause_si face wrinkles?
'.

conditw'll ; and W1lllam
Hixon, 48, and Francis Cox,
40, both Columbus poli~men
in satisfactory condition. .
Treated and released were
Jackson Township firemen .

-Bishop Krumm
officiating at
seroice Sunday
The Right Rev. John M.
Krumm will officiate at
Confirmation Service at
Grace Episcopal Church,
Pomeroy at 10 :30 a.m.
Sund,y, July 6. Following the
service and holy commWlion
there wfll be a parish luncheon .
Members of Grace Church
tO be confirmed are_ Mr . and
Mrs. Lawrence Brogan, Mr.
and Mrs. Raymond Douglas
and Mrs. Paul Etch. The Rev.
Harold Deeth, rector of
Grace Church, will assist
Bishop Krumm.
Bishop Krumm, who has
been a rector of the Church of
the Ascensidll In New York
City, was na.med to his
current post in 1971. A native
of South Bend, Ind ., he
received his docklrate from
Yale in 1948, an honorary
degree from Kenyon College
in 1962, and an honorary
doctorate from General
Theological Seminary In
May, 1975.

By
E. Lamb, M.D.
lo?ki~g at the fa~ in the, · wrinkling.
DEAR DR. LAMB - Some mormng when you flrst get Ufj
The SWl is more dangerous
MORGAN HONORED
time ago one of your readers and in the evening when you and causes more wrinkles
SAN
FRANCISCO (UP!) asked you what can be done
eady to go to bet!.
than most other factors . The
when the face and neck
e "on arising face':-:.!&amp;~ ..rays that induce a tan d~ Cincinnati sec.ond baseman
_b ecomes
creepy.
You al~ less wrinkled· ~~~use -~ damage the elastic skin Joe Morgan is the latest
suggested · she do facial th re IS more flt,dlf in '«~~!"!. fibers and prematurely ages National League "Player of
the Week."
exercises.
li ues in the face. from lying the skin.
NL 'Pregident Chub Feeney
· Recently I read an article do · I night.
ThoSe who want to avoid
announced that
Monday
in a leading magazine written
There e several factors wrinkles needn 'l avoid
by someone who claims to be that ca
wrinkling of ~ smiling. Ills better to smile Morgan had been honc!red
an expert on skin 'care. She face . Sud en weight lo~ · and say no when you are after hitting .348 for the week,
states that sup.~rflcial lines often brin
fac,i.a l offered 8 cigarette. It has with three homers, eight
can make the face seem wrmkles. Why · ~lllil .,of been shown that facial RB!s and five stOh!'n bases.
Morgan scored or knocked
older, tired and drawn . ·They the loss .of ti.ssue und~r .the wrinkling occurs 10 years
in
the game-tying or gameare not necessarily a sign of skin . Th1s pomts up the un- earlier and to a greater
winning
runs in four of
true aging, but bare an jn- portance of your tissue mass degree in heavy smokers.
dication of facial wear and . under the skin in preventing This causes those crow's feet Cincinnati's six victories
tear .
·
wrinkling. Maintaining ·your wrinkles aroWld the corners during the week.
She also stated the way to , muscle mass for the fa_c~: of the eyes, in particular.
minimize damage to the ~kin helps f!ll ou~ out the tissues . JBeing overweight is also an
and to prevent collagen fibers Wlder the skin, and,~lllte !J!t, '"' impor!&amp;nt factor . The obese
from being broken down is to heips . to . pre¥ebt such face · j)ennanently stretches
reduce facial expressions-as w.rmkhng. Of the two, the skin· which is much more
mucll as possible.
building and maint,aitling dama2i'ng
than
the
Please, Dr. Lamb, will you your facial muscles vers114. momehtary stretching thai
set me straight and let other the adverse effects of .facial occurs with natural facial
I : believe expressions. Then, if the
By ED SAINSBURY
concerned women know if we expression.
are deferring wrinkling by maintaining the muscles Is overweight person loses
facial exercises?
bethe mos: ~tant .. y~ weight, , which is often , ~.::=;~rl~{ (UPI) DEAR READER- The tl tter,hooll.f oiwallth}~;;,~ fo , ,medicallynecessary,theface'' .. vtctortollti·. Hal~ ~in will
skin
has
remarkable
•roug
e w ,. "" . ... • \1
· kl d so k
·
.
1
Th'
.
pressionless,
vacailt
look
-on'
lsse
efre
'yalwrm
el
.
.
'
eoodep
debate
.
anybody
who
.
t
regenera IVe power· . ere 18
,
your ac1 muse es m g
questions whether he won the
the lhought that facial ex- ,the face.
.
shape don't overdo the SWl W
,
pressions lead tOliiies, frown "'"" The skin naturally grQ.ws as , expos~e avoid getting fat
t!l!lem Open Monday for bJs
lines, smile lines and it is true you get older, and this and st~y away from : n d tournament lriiUllp)l
you . cad" wrinkle. the skin combined with loss of fac!al cigarettes. And th,l!lf smile, lost itear or George Johnaon
temporarily by fac1al muscle tissues from loS$ of facial because you will have done
· .
.
But
I
d
k
d
th
tr
tl
Y
con ac ons. ou can see e muse e mass an wea ene
some importan 1 things for
_on
.... the record • Johnaon
difference sometimes by relaxed muscles, leads to
f
was anead at the halfway
.
· ,"
, your ace·
point, tied · with 18 boles
.,i··
,
piay,andtiedwithonlythree
holes to play. Then his golf
game exploded, and he lost.
Irwin won the $200,0001 event
willl
a one-under-par 283.
THURSDAY AND
Irwin said at midpoint
. , .. • . IATURDA Y SALE
when he was a stroke behind
"two,par· rounda might pa11
.·' .,.~. " "'
everybody."Hedidn'tdotliat
weil. He bad a par round and
a · twoover-par round, and
whether be would have won
the $40,000 had Johnson's
game not collapsed wil111ever
ltt ·Jie settled;'
But Inrlll'got the lead on
the 16th hole when Johnscill
drove into a trap, c}llpped
badly and took two putts to go
over par. On the 17th hole,
Johnson, trying to ~
the second black man to
. qualify !Oi',,lhe Masters, gave
Irwin the.tourn~ent. · .. ·
There, after a drive into a
rutted lie In the rough,
Johnson pulled out a 9-lron

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logged Monday.
·,

Purl H. Van Meter, 43, of
R.utland, was charged . with
failure to stop within th~
assured clear distancE
Monday at 4: 15 p.m
foUowlng a traffic accident 01
Rt. 7, one mile north of
Cheshire.
~~e Gallia-Meigs Post
S~ Highway Patrol said an
auto driven by Harold c.
Roush, 32, of Rt. I, Letart,
alaWed for a car making a left
turn and.his car was struck in
th~t~rear by an auto driven by
CARPENTER - Meigs
V.iiti· Meter. There was
County Pomona Grange was
moderate damage to both
honored when Miss Crystal
vehicles.
Beckley, Ohio Slate ' Grange
Princess
for
1975,
represented the Ohio Slate
Grange in the Big Bend
Regatta parade.
Also riding with Miss
Beckley were Keith Ashley,
Meigs CoWlty Grange Prince
( 197~, who was third rWlnerup in the State Grange Prince
contest; Mendal . Jordan, : tJAYTONA BEAcH, FLA.
Stale Grange Deputy in ('\IP}) - 'l'wte in Friday at
MeigS' CoWlty, and Nonnan -Diitona lntematlonal SpeedWill, Meigs County Pomona W'-Y for a new chapter in 'the
Grange Master.
Cillltlnuing saga, "The King
Miss Beciqey, daughter of lllif-,Siiver Fox."
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Beckley
··Will the Fox -David
Bremen,
will
be •Piliraon -outwit the King of
representing the State ~ Petty --to win the
&lt;;lrll!l&amp;~ at many other acFourth Firecracker 400
tivities over the State during stOCk car race for the fourth
· the summer. In October, she ~ight year? Or will ·the
will ,participate in the State Ki!li ):W'eVllil?
Grange session in Cleveland
~tty, :t?. of Randleman,
arid in November compete N;'e;, the aCclaimed king of
with other State Grange soiithern stock car racing and
Princess contestants from five-time winner of the
the entire United States for Daytona 500, has never won
National Grange Princess ·at the July 4 race. He has
the National Grange s~n fii!J,sbed second the last four
in Columbus.
y~ : ·
·Pierson, 41, of SparI
laljurg, S.C., cailed "Silver
Fat" because of his black
Bi)d· silver haii- and foxy
b6haviour on the race b"ack,
willibe looking for his first

Recognition is

given Grange

...

WED

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Men's &amp; Boys'
~NIT

SHIRTS

Styles Not Inc Iuded

Men's. &amp; BoJs'

ODD LOT

WALKING •
SHORTS

MEN~S

Men's &amp; Boys'

LEISURE
SUITS
.
.

NOW 1/3 OFF ·.

SWIM WEAR
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I

·POMEROY

Funeral services for
Charles (Frldl\~) . Ke88inger
were conducted at' 2 p.m.
,: Tuesday · at the Rawlings• Coats Funeral Home with the
Rev. -F~Iink Cheese brew
offici!l~ing. Bw-lal was in the
Rock ', ~rlngs Cemetery.
Out.of-coWlty relatives and
·. friends calling at the funeral
hoin.e • and attending the
serviCes were Charles H.
Wise, Wav.erly; Mr. and MrS.
, Janles L.' Uttie, Mrs. Floyd
Wise, Mrs. PhyUla Rathburn,
Wilberine Davidson, Mr. and
M~s. Roy Miller, Mrs.
M1ldred Mea4e, Mr. and .Mrs.
' _J,.arry Flowers, an · · of
Columbus; · Mr.. and Mrs.
Dale Roust(and famjly, St
AlbiiQs,. W., Va.; Mrs. Conn!~
Engle, DaVid WilliamS, -.Mr.
and llfrs. Paul Willlams and
Lisa, GreenvUie, Ohio; Joy
Martin, Fort Bragg, N. C.;'
I.~.

. 1'

+,

J..ty

'1 thought I won it on the
ltllr::OOie. I hit from the tee
tn$:abunkeranditookouta
66
and' when I hit it, I
kn'tlliF It was a hell of a shot.

My :heart didn't start purnpi~!(' again until I got w the
green. It was 155 yarda out of
the bunker, over water, ink!
the wind, 011to the middle of
Johnson stlid. "I don't know the. green and I got d own in
what! did. It was a bad shot." l'l'ril'lllltls. And as far as I was
Irwin didn 'I challenge C116ined, that was the tourJohnson's statement. He ~t.
challenged !be idea that he
"1. made 16 pars and two
backed into victory.
bogeYB and that's hard to
"I was behind all day," he beat playing under the
said. "Bpton the 12th green, I conditions Monday. You oori't
looked at the leader board eiject·a 73 to be the winning .
and George had just bogeyed ~'icore, but in this CBlle
_No. 11 and I was ·a stroke. ·~eenl ~&lt;were extremely
behind. That's when· l-felt I fiJ!i!iiy and the course dried
was in it again.
up~derably. It was an
"No pressure was being put en~y different course than
on George. He was going to in .~ morning."
have to make a mistake. He . ·Kin's prize boosted his
had to, then or later, or wben. ~~ to $175,627 and ·
You can't play this ,:course
third place in the .
and not make a mlabilrli and
behind Jack
he couldn't make all those
d Johnny Miller.
putts coming d~wn the Irwin was the only player
stretch. I won It because I under par and Cole, winning
made less errors. I made the ~800; finished in seco1,d
putts, I hit the shots, or pla'dl Ill par 284. Ed Sneed
what,ever you want ·to say, .•
tlt200forhisthird
· coming down the stretch, that ..,:c '·' :finbth .· witb . 'Jifl the
I had to make. I ma!!,e so ' .. ~'wlilc;h lroUsht victory
many good putts cCllliblg in to ,~ Watson a year ago,
and the greena were so allci '!Jerry Heard, John
bumpy, It was unnerving.
Uster, who equalled the
· COill'ie reco!'d witb 65 Monday
and Gibby Gilbert
fiftb and $8,267.67

2811.

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rune

POLE OUr OF ACnON
BOSTON (uPI) - Pitche1
Dick Pole, struck on the right
cheek Monday night in a
game agafust the Baltimore
Orioles; will be lost to the

'

National Asaociation of Sklck .
Car Racing (NASCAR)
victory this year.
"The facti I've won three
Firecrackers in a row doesn't
make any diffe.ren.ce,"
Pearson said. "ThiS IS a
different year. But don't get
me wrong. All things being
equal, there's no reason we
can't make it qumber four."
"If David beats me again
this year he's going w have to
do it by just plain outrunning
m~," . said P.H!Y, · Gr~nd
National racings all-tune
winningest driver. "I'm not
going to be tri~ed again."
Petty, who drives a Dodge,
still rememboirs Pearson, in
his Mercury, outfoxing him in
last year's dramatic finish .
Pearson deliberately let
Petty pass him on the last lap
only to "slingshot" by him at
the finish line by using the
draft created by Petty's car.
The Fox beat the King by less
than a carlength.
.
Forty cars are SCheduled to
start the record ·$127,375 Independence Day event at
10:00 am EDT. Pole pOsttion
qualifying is today with Petty
and Pearson among the
favorites to win the number .
one starting position.
Pearson won the pole last
year with a speed of 180.759
miles per hour.
. The • first 20 starting
positions will be up for grabs .
The rest of the starting field

positions will be detennined ·
in. time trials Thursday.
Other- contenders · are
Bobby Alllson of Hueytown
Ala., driving, a Matador;
Buddy Baker, of Olarlotte,
N.C., in a Ford; Cale Yar·
borough, of Tirnmonsville,'
S.C., in a Chevrolet; atuJ this •
year's 500 victor Benny • ...
Parsons, of Ellerby: N.C., in
a Chevrolet.
A.J. Foyt, of Houston, Tex.,
three-time wiimer of the Indlanapolis 50ll and twice
winner of the Firecracker
and Johnny Rutherford 1974
Indy 500 winner,
in
Chevroleta will represent the
U.S. Auto Ctub ·(USAC).

both

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TARRIVED

:

Star Flowers
Happy Flowers
Hill Flowers

59 N. Second St.

Middleport,

fo¥rth -bllll,1_ sa_id Johnny,
"but il w"" upstairs a Uttle ."
Joe Niekro was the victun
of Bench ' s homer which
followed a double by Ken
Griffey and and an intentional w.alk to Joe Morgan
and boosted h1s leagueleading RBI total to 65.
" The first two knucklers
Niekro threw me were hard
ones," Bench said. "I'm glad
they weren 't strikes because
I didn't want any more like
them ."
~
" You ' re hitting all the
way ," Reds', manger Sparky

Anderson had told Bench as to do was hit any more balls into the ninth lnnln&amp; behind.
foul into the seats. Don't I
"That's the bl&amp;gest· difhe went to the plate.
. ference thll Ieason..::. he
" I still glanced doW!\ at have i3 of those noy;? "
third base to look at Alp · The Reds, who extended added.
Clay Kirby, itbo pined his
tGranunas) and see whether their record streak of
errorless
games
to
15,
were
fifth
victory bt eliht decisions
Spark; had changed his n'lind
with the 3-11 coWl!," said d9lvn 6-2 before scoring three with a scorele88 thrte-inning
tlms In the eighth and adding fellel stint, was in the
Johnny.
" The way I 've · been a tying run in the ninth to go trainer's room getting his
arm Iced down when Bench
swinging the bat lately, it has into extra innings.
"That's
the
eighth
jiime
homered. been pretty~ frustrating," he
" You know ho'tV Merv
continued . " I've been moving we've w~n on our last turn 111
aroWld too much in the ' bat," noted Anders;,n. "Lilll R~tterimund's always kidbatter 's box .. my hands have yearwe wononlyonegamein ding," . said KirbY. "SO 'I
our last at bats while the didn't believe ~ when he
been slow .' '
" Ahd, " he added, smiling, Dodgers won 17 after going walked in and con&amp;ratulated
"another thing I didn 't want

•

•

Chicago manager) is a real
saint for going a long with me
in so 'many games because in
many cases, I did not deservec
it," said Wood. lie began this
season by losing 10 of i2
decisions --after a 90-65
record and 181 starts-over the
past four ye 1rs.
·
" I knew I ~ 't have it
early in the se p, but I've
really gotten in
groove the
last couple of games," Wood
said.
His seven-hitter Monday
night snapPed an eight-gam~o
winning streak by the A's,
who are coasting atop the

•

Minnesota 10-3. Kansas City
and Texas were
not
schediiled.
In the National uague, it
was Pittsburgh 5 Montreal' S,
New York 5 Chicago I, Cincinnati 9 Houston 6 in 12 innings, St. Louis 4 Phila·
delphia 2 and Los Angeles 4
Sarr Diego 1.
Orioles W, Red Sox 5-Z
Carl Yastrzernaki had a
pair of doubles and a $Jgle
and drove in two runs for
Boston in the first game. In
the second, Dave Duncan tied
a major league record with
four consecutive doubles for

ThioFrig-MobileDilhw.-gli-lo
the link. fait 1nd Mly, then hookS up to
the hot water faucet ui secondS. Super.

Surge Welhing Action ICrubs soft lood

wutn off tabteware, pota and pans; etlml· .
net• the need for pr.rlnalng or noi'm1Uy ·
oollod dillies. UM the handy Formico"
brand top for e}(tra work apace When
,&lt;, 11.iklo,lrm1 ade
lalt
Ia has your
,.
I
. .It inlllill

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BAIER.'FURNITURE'

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I~,

seeded Connors an od~
favorite to beat elghth«eded
Ramirez and· advai)Ce to the
semifinals where he will meet
the winner of the match
between Guillermo Vilas of
Argentina and 11th seed
Roscoe Tanner, the big hitter
from Lookout Mountain,
\

Heat mars. title bout

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· fa~zs:=~~~o~:gktn~

"The heat was ba:d," Ali" 16th title fight over a· Min wjlatCOllld .~~ ll!.f first.
By BERr OK•" ~y
u""'
allAmerlciinmen'sfmalin 28'
KUALA LUMPUR (UPI) " said of the 90-degree tern- worldwide ' closed-drcuit years . · •
· ·
_ ·Muhammad Ali retained peratures made even less theater and TV hookup. The
In the other quarterfinals,
his world heavyweight boxing ~Ierable by television lights. King and, Queen ?I Malay~ia Hollbnd's ninth seed,'~m
championship Tuesday
I thought I would knock Joe occupied a Specl81 rmgs1de Okker, playa AUstralia's !Sth
morning with a unanimous out in 10 rounds but I section.
.
seed, Tony Roche, who ousted
15-round decision over couldn't."
"It was the heat tha! did me Ken Rosewln last week in the
European challenger Joe
Only about 15,000 spec- in, :· _said the 6-foot:-1 Bugner, tournament's big'gest upset .
The men had a ' rest day
Bugner in intense tropical tators turned up at the 38,000- · whO· entered the rmg at 230
heatwhichtookits toll of both seat stadium because the pounds. "I don't think I'm Monday while top seed Olris
· fighters.
match was televised Iocaily, finished yet. I'll come baCk · Evert, third seed 'Billie Jean
The 33-year-old Ali said but millions watched Ali's and have a.nother go. at 1t. Ki
f Sa Ma
Calif
bl
ng o
n
teo,
.,
bel
Thi
before entering the canopied
.
$ was JUSt un leva e fourth . seed
Evonne ·
heat.'~
ring at Merdeka (InGoolagoog Cawley and fifth
Promoter Don King said seed Margaret Court, both of
dependence) Stadium in the
Malaysian capital that he had
· Ali, who got $2.5 million for Australia -women who hold
bowed to pressure that he call
hiS · fight Tuesday ; probably a total of 10 Wimbledon
off his retirement and, even
t
la
l
will pick up nearly twice that singles crowns among them
before disposing of Bugner,
0 .S
On Op amount for the bout in -reached the semifinals.
Manila. Bugner rece.lved
Miss Evert, the Fort
said he would defend the
crown against Joe Frazier in
$500,000 and Frazier's cut in Lauderdale, Fla. defending
SYRACUSE
Sll{lday at M 'I8
b 8 bl
~esforyou:
8 hould
Manila Oct. I.
am h pro
Syracuse Park in in.., milli'Y011 King champion, dt'....m.wl
..,.,_. a set to
Bugner, who opened a
approac
••
•
un••eded
Be
..
dependent baseball action
'd t ·
'de
~
" y Stove of
slight cut around the
Syracuse remained in first S8lAli a rmgslil · ·
trol f Holland, who play·ed the
·
was eas Y m con
tennis of her life in the early
champion's left eye in the
11-3 win over th
in
da
'th
place with
,
sevellth
round,
was
e open g roun • WI
games, before coming back
: Reuter-Bragan aggressive from the opening Minersville . Jeff Hubbard ·Bugner a dopt'mg a peek.a-boo to win S-7, 7-6, 6-0 and win an
was the winning pitcher and d f
· il •· th "rope
bell, but simply did not have
e ense sun ar "' e
• ovation that was as much for
INSURANCE
Jed Will was tagged with the
d
" • ~ ti the hamJ)iOII
it in his repertoire to handle
loss .
·
a ope ..,c cs
c
her fighting BjJirlt as for her
uses in leaning back on the
Ia
the confident, rl'ngw 1·8 e
Hitters for Syracuse were
d
nng· h' head
P y.
' ;
champion.
ropes an cove
lS
.
"I just -·•.._'t get going,"
\.'UWUII
:11m Hemsley wtth 3 hits in 5 AI''
1 s cu t was hardly Miss Evert
· The officials gave Ali eight
said. "It wasn't
THE
at bats. The big blow for
t'
bl
t'l
th
late
1
rounds, the 25-year.old
no lcea e un
e
till the thtr' d set that I really ·
Minersville was a 370 ft.
nd
nd tr8 in
4nn I
Bugner two and called five
rou s a
er ~..,.e 0 felt 1 was playm· g as I
I~SURANCE
"I should."
homerWl blast over the new Dund ee sal'd a fte r the f'ght
1
even ifil.a bout which .ended
fence in left center field by
ed
t stuH
with
the
challenger's
never us
any cu
Mrs King, eliminated from
Butch Hanning. Minersville ( ed' · ) 00 1't "
STORE
manager screaming for
m lcme
·
the tournament at the same ·
played good ball, but errors
" Joe Bugner will be the
Bugner to start punching.
stage last year by Olga
and walks was their downfall .
t
h
·
h n I
nex c ampwn w e
Morozova, did -not give the
Next SWlday Minersville retire," Ali said, reiterating a
.
Russian seventh seed , a
Plays Portland at Portland, " predtction he made m
chance. She took. an early
Letart plays Tuppers Plains February 1973 when he
'
'
lead on a court made tricky
at Letart, and !)yracuse goes decisioned the Hungarian- by cross winds and was never
against Pomeroy at M1d- born challenger in 12 rounda in serious trouble. Her
dleport, all at 1 p.m .
in Las Vegas. "I kno"K~ he can backhand had the pigtailed
do it. Joe Frazier didn't give Morozova mu~rlng aloud in
me such a rough time.
Norton did not and (George) R~;pt' thinldi1g about last
Foreman did not."
year out there on ' court,"
Frazier, who occupied · a Mrs. King said ~ter her 6-3,
ringside seat and exchanged 6-3 wiri. "I aalcl,' 1 can't let
a few words with AU prior w that happen again. I feel very
' .- ,-1-~ti•P opening beil, said he was - confident," she said .of her
Wlimpressed with the cham- chances for a sixth singles ·
pion's showing h're. All title. "There's npthing more 1
Js the time weighed 225 pounl'ls at last can do to prepare myself
Saturday's official weigh-in mentally or physically."
to call me for the best
an · said before the. fight he ., Miss co'u rt, who only
car insurance value anywhere .
was "in the best shape of my decided to coltlpete three .
days before the toutnament
Steve Snowden life." I might have appeared to opened
btcauee She 'th~ught
1 she was out of condition due
have
been
victorious
but
·
i 258 Powell St.
guarantee you I feel wQrse to 8 second baby and 8 call
Middleport, 0 .
than he does at my age' and I m]ury , demolished the
was in extra good slu.pe," All
PH. 9112-71SS
. . . dr .
chWlky second seed, Martina
Navratilova of Czechos ..
,saJd m hiS essmg room.
Ali's
best
chance
..
at
a
.
lovakia
H ....._,4
,,,;. agood llAJI IAIM
knockout Clime in , .the ~ .,
&lt;!a.c..;,'.-,roke
ne•ghbor ,.
haUminute ~f the~. Whet("'; thousands • 'llf ·. ~ llametown
State Fwm
IN!oUIANCI
IS there .
he had Bugne:- in bJs own hearts by ellDilllilUng the
•
comer, .slightly ~tumed, al)ll British hope, Vl,rginia Wade,
W.
VA
•
NEW HAVEN'
I
TU
I
I
AifiiMUl
U
I
~
UJI
G
YDI
H
t
!UIIIU
t(
.
was dehve~g r~ght and left- the sixth seed, 5-7, 6-4, ~7.
COMPUf • 110M! !HIICI · I U niiiiiiCI O• • Ill
ha?d
combmallons to t_he The former Mlu Goolagong
882-2525
P71
Bnton 's head.

SyracUSe wins
Y

°

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Hassler

3 81

at

Minnesote

Ange les ( Hooton 6 7), 10 · 30 . &lt;Goltz 6 6 and Blyleven s.J). 2,
Tenn. And the bookies expect produced some of the artistry pL os
m
·
6 00 p ,m
Connors wgo on to retain his for which she is famous but A t l anta (Thompson 0 ·'2) at San
Wed_nesday's Oam&amp;s
Ka~sas City at Te;.as, night
what really beat the British pF rman cis co (C aldwel l 4-7), 11 . 05 Californ
UUe.
ia at Minnesota, night
Wednesday ' s Games
Oakland at Chicago, night
Both the abovt matches are girl was the hometown
Atli'lnta !It San Franc 1sco
Boston at Milwaukee, 2. twi in the top hall of the draw. In crowd, yearning for victory. Chl
cago at New York . night j
nigh t
the lower half, Arthur Ashe of She has always said it is a Houston at · Cincmnatl. n ight
Baltimore at Oetro1t, night
1tt sburg h at Montreal , ntghl
New York at Cleveland. night
Miami, the sixth seed wbo mental hazard to carry the PSan
D 1ego at Los Angeles , night
was second betting favorite dreams of so many people. St L OU IS at Ph il adelph ia, ntght
until he dropped a set w an :::::;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ;.;.;.;.;.; .;:;:;;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;;;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:l
unseeded Briton, plays
SWeden's l~yearold Bjorn
Borg, the third seed, today.

.

••

Middleport, Ohib

(Jefferson 1·2 L 9 :00p .m .
Balli more (Mitchell 0-0) at
7 35 p m
Boston (Wise 8 6) , 7 :30p.m . '
Chicago ( Burr is 7 51 at New K ansas City (Busby 11 ·51 at
York ( W ebb 1· 3). 8 :0S p m .
TeKas (Jenkins 6· 8). 9 :00p .m
Hou s ton
( Ri chard
5 3)
at Detroit ( Lol l ch 8-S) at Ctevt ·
Ctnc1 nnat 1 ( C Carroll S 4), 8. 05 land (Bibby 3 7), 7: JO p .m
p m
.
New York (Dobson a 61 at
P1tt sburg h ( Candelar ia 2 1) at Milwaukee
!CastrO
3-1 or
M ontreal ( F ryman 6.4 ); 8 05 Colborn 2·6 ), 8 •30 p .m . •
p m
Californ ia (Figueroa 6--4 end

San Diego ( F reisteben 3 8 l at

They'll get a good idea
today when Connors meets
Raul Ramirez, who was
largely responsible for the
Mexican victory, in the
singles quarterfinals of the
J268,600 Wimbledon Tennis
Championships.
The bookmakers have no
doubt. They have made lop-

American• League
Eest
w. f. pet. v. b.

l-'

St LOUIS (M cGlothen 9 ·51 at
Ph iladelph ia ( Tw i tchell 4-8 &gt;.

'.Mra.'' ·

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6~1

Connors vs. Ramirez today
BY ROBERT MUSEL
WIMBLEDON,
England
(UPI) When Mexico
blasted the United States out
of the Davis Cup, many an
expert wondered what the
result would have been if
Jimmy Connors had been on
the American team.

11 hill in .the Ilia lnnln&amp;l 'be
pitched and walked only. one.
Sinslea by Concepcion,
pfiiclf hitter Ed ' Armbrtlter
and ~te Roee preoeeded
Griffey's balesloaded triple'
in the elghtb whl~ pulled the
Reds within one nm lif the!
Astros.
A single by Ilrieuen, .Tony
Perez's double and an in·
tentlon pass to ConcepciCII
preceeded pinch hitler Bill
Plu,mmer's IIBcriflce fly
which tied the score at kll in
the ninth .

Baltimore wllile Jim · Nor- when Cleveland was helped
East
Boston
41 31 569
tltrup had three l)its, in- by six Deb"oit errors. Rick
W. I. pc1 . g . b ~- New York
41 33 554 1
eluding a three.nm"homer. Manning's third hit, a two- P tltsburgh
45 2q 608
Milwaukee
40 34 .541 2
Bftltimore
34 39 ... ~ 7'12
Brewen 5, Y.See1 4
run single in the eighth, won Ph il adelphia 42 34 553 4
37 34 521 6''1 Cleveland
32 41 .438 9112
New Y or k
Bobby Danr!P, aCiqulredhy the second game .
36 31 493 8' 2 G&gt;etroit
27 4S .375 14
St Lo ui s
36 40 47.4 10 .
Weoo; t
Ch i cag o
Milwaukee in riJid.,June from ' Angela 10, I'wlns 3
3 1 39 443 12
w. I. pet. g.b.
Mont r ea l
Minnesota, hit a two-nm,
Frank Tanana, who struck
we st
Oakland
..a 27 .640
w . 1. pet. g . b. K ans~s C•tv
41 34 .547 7
pinchhlt homer in the bottom out 17 batters in a game little
C•ncrnna l•
49 28 .636
T e~as
36 39 .480 12
of the ninth for the victory. morethanaweekago,fanned Los Angeles
43 36 544 1
Ch 1cago
35 38 .479 12
33 39 458 13'11
The winning home run 15 to raise his record to 6-4. San Fr an cisc o 37 39 .487 111 ·~ M innesota
San 01ego
36 41 474 13
California
35 '43 ,. 449 U 'l:~
followed an infield single by California got to Minnesota's At lanta
32 43 427 16
MondiV'I Retultl
28 52 350 22u~ Bos ton5Baltlmore2, 1st
Siito
Lezcano.
Chris Ray Corbin 'tor six runs Houston
Mondly's Results
Baltimore 8 Boston 2, 1:n&lt;l
Chambll.u had put,New York before a man was reUred in N ew Y ork 5 Chh; ago 1
Cleveland 4 D.e.trolt 1. 1st
Cleveland 3 Detrott 2. 1f1tt"-..
ahead with a IWIH'WI homer the first, knocking hjm out P 11tsburg h 5 ¥ontr ea l 3 "
Los Ang eles 4 San Dl~go 1
Ca!iforn fa 10 M l nnesot~J 3
in the top lif the ninth.
, alter John J:&gt;ol!erty's three- 'iSt Louis 4 Philadelplila 2
Chicago 6 Oakland 1
Cinc1 nnati 9 Houston 6, 121 nns
M i lwaukee 5 New York 4
IDdlana ~. l"'aen l·Z
run homer.
(Only games 'scheduled)
'?
Tod~v · s Probable Pltchtrl
Rorie Hart:llon pitched a
Today' s Probable Pitcher~
&lt;All Times EDT)
(All Times E DTl .
Oakland CBlue 11 -Sl at Chicago
seven-hitter in the opener

Ken

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Astro rookje righthander
Doug Konofeczny also failed
to complete the second inniog
as the Reds got two of the
runs back.
The Astros took their 11-2
lead when Bob Watson
homered off Pedro Borbon '
alter a singe by Enos Cabell
in the seventh. The homer
was the lith of the season for
Watson and one of 18 Astro
hi~. a season high for the
Reds .
Borbon, the third Reds
pitcher to see action. gave up

Major L.eague Standings
By Un1led Pren International
National l,.eague

.

From Frigidaire and Genera I Motors, a
mobi.Je dishwasher that converts to a builtin anytime.

•
me on the victory."
Kirby was equally su(prlsed when he wound up in
the game. He had been
scheduled' to start tonight 's
game.
" Now," said Anderson,
" I'll go with Rawly Eastwick
instead of Kirby. I'll also play
Darrel Olaney at shortstop
klnighl and give Davey (Concepcion } a rest."
Tom Carroll, the Reds'
starter, failed to survive the
second iMing during which
the Astros scored four runs.

/
American League 's Western
Division with a seven-game
lead.
Jerry Hai,rston, playing his
first game since being
recalled from the minors,
singled, doubled, scored
twice and drove in. a run as
the While SOx equalled their
longest winning streak in
more than two years.
Elsewhere in the AL
Monday night, Baltimore
beat Boston 8-2 alter losing ·
the first game &gt;-2, Milwaukee
edged New York 5'-4,
Cleveland swept Detroit 4-1
and 3-2 and California routed

an

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on down to the experts
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Colorful Zesty

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By IRA MilLER
UPI Sports Writer
II 's a little unusual to hear
a pitcher with a 6-11 record on
July 1 talk ~bout winning 20
games.
Mter all, a guy with a
record like that usually would
be lucky even to get 14 more
startS the rest of the season,
let alone win 14 more gaines.
But when it's Wilbur Wood
talking about winning 14
more, you have to listen,
because you can always be
sure of one thing where he's
concerned -he'il get plenty
of chances.
Wood, who pitched the
Chicago White SOx to a &amp;-1
victory over the Oakland A's
Monday night !Or Chicago 's
ninth straight victory, figures
he 'II throw his rubber arm
into action perhaps 25 more
times this season in a try for a
fifth successive 20-victory
year.
"I think Chuck Tanner (the

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Chisox make zt· nzne zn row;

Boston Red Sox for an undetermined time.
Doctors reported Pole had
suffered a fractured tight
cheek when hit by a Tony
Muser line drive in the ninth
inning ·of the ' first game of a
doubleheader won by Botlton
S-2. He was taken to the'
Hahnernann Hospital where
the injury was diagnosed as a
fractured cheekbone, a
contusion of the right eye and
diminished vision in the eye.

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op Astros · on ·Bench's· homer

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Gary Lee Matheny, Leon, W.
Va. ; Mrs. Homer Roush, Sr., 1,'--j!l:...-..::-::.:...,....:-:'---:---&lt;;.
Blacksville, W. Va.; Homer,
Roush, Hyattsville,. Md.
-', Cliristlhe Cumberledge,
Braze, Pa.; . the Mlircello
family, Lancaster; Thomas
Redmrin, Mason, W. Va.;
Mrs. Lillian Reitmire
Mason, W.Va. ; Mr.' and Mrs:
Clyde W. Kessinger, Ak;on;
the Rev. and Mrs. Frank
Cheeaebrew, Shawnee, Mr.
and Mrs. James Ro4ehaver,
Mrs • . Nora
Neighbors
. ~auncey; Mr. and Mrs:
Roger Roush, Pataskl'!;
Donald Kessinger and
WallaC'e Kessinger, Jr., : I
, . Akron; 'Mr. and Mrs. ,'li:ph
Herdmaif, Lynette 'Heromlm,, ..
. Mrs . . Bonnie Math~y an!l
,: Doug, Leooard Miller, .Leon, · ..
·W. Va. and Mr. ·anci ·Mrs.
Gro'ver ·Arnold and · Jtinmy
·Joe; .Lancaster.
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A GooD 'DAY'S CATCH - 'Riese.
fish were
caught at Forked Run State Park near Reedlvllle 90 June
21 by Larry Thimmes of Lancaster, Ohio. The larg~ was
an 18lb. catfish. Together they weighed approlimately 90
lbs .

}nly .5 00 victory

FWJeral
services
conducted ·
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Petty eyes first

and slammed the bail out of
bounds. It cost him 8 triple
bogey seven and put Irwin
fours! k 8 h dofhlm
ro es ea
and
one ahead lif Bobby Cole. It
shook JOhnson so much that
he bl
ew 00 another double
~gey and a tie for seventh at
~~~~~ a crummy shot,"

CINCINNATI (UPI)
Johnny Bench didn't even
bother to look as his two-out
t.hree-nm homer in the 12th
inning Monday night sailed
into the.seats to give lfre Reds
a U victory over Houston .
"I knew it was out because
it was as good as I can hit a
bail," said the Reds' catcher.
Bench's game\ winning
homer, his 16th or the season,
came on a three-ball, nostrike pitch .
" I don 'l know whether the
pitch I hit would have been a -

Traffic mishap

Irwin claims Western
title with 283 mark

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John Lester, 31, Grove City,
Timothy .
Ohio, John Beard, 30, Columbus,
a
Columbus, Larry Roberson, Tewnship fireman , un·
29, Grove City, and Franklin ·ll!r1ivent · treatment al the
Township fireman Freddy hdiipital -late Monday night
arid was expected _ to · be
Hoop, 38, Grove City.
.
released.
WILL DO MORE
Myers Paving Co. , engaged
in repairing Pomeroy streetS,
will also 'blacktop private
property.--Upon- nquest the
finn will q~te a price. Myers
Paving Company is located at
Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va. and
may be contacted•there or by
calling Pomeroy City Hall.•

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3 -;" The Daily ~ntinel, Middleport-Pomeroy·, b., Tuesday, Julv 1. '1975.

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2- ThtDaily Sentinei,Mi(ldlepori-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, July I , 1975

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.Legion takes ·1 of 4 i

The Me1gs Legion baseball fanned 7 and walked 7.
called on to finish the game.
In the second game Meigs Watson in his relief iPteam returned SWlday night
from a four game road trip lost 8-~ on sloppy play . pearance did a fine job and
into Kentucky where a good Nesselroad was the losing pick~ up the first Meigs
lime was had everywhere but pitcher for Meigs and Mack victory on the trip. For
Morehead, Ashland Hawkins was the
on the diamonds as they started for
dropped 3 of 4 decisions to two relieved in the third by loser. Meigs hurlers fanned 4
very tough Blue Grass Bluefield, who got the win . and walkJ!d 5 while the· home \.
Ault relieved Nesseiroad town hurlers did the same.
squads.
for
Meigs in the fifth.
Saturday Meigs los t a
Hlelping Watson in hia
Meigs pitchers fanned 6 moWld appearance at · the
doubleheader to a Morehead
squad of moslly college and walked 6 and the op- plate were Nesselroad who
players from Eastern Ken- ponents fanned I~ and walked had a perfect afternoon, ·
tucky , Kentucky University, 6.
going 4-4, all singles. Neasel·
Leading hillers for Meigs road went 6-)2 on the road
and Morehead State . According to Coach George Saturday were Nesseiroad, trip and picked up 5 RB!s.
Nesselroad, they were, Hamilton, and Wilson with 2 Also giving support from the
" Really an all-star team. " smgles, Ault had a double and home base were HainUwn
Durmg the four game a single, and Perry, Jim with 2 singles, Wilson had 3
weekend lnp "Ness" felt, Niday each ha:d a double, and safeties, Watson a double and
"We faced the best pitchmg Daavenport and FoldeD' had a single, and Perry a double,
singles.
we have seen all year."
and . getting singles were
For
Morehead,
Kiser
led
The Saturday games were
Davenport and Niday.
lost by 7-1 and· 8-5 margins . with 4 singles and he had
The Meigs Legion team
substantial
help
from
and according lo. Nesselroad,
thanks everyone who made
" We gave them that last Davisson who had 3 singles on this trip into the Blue GraSI
the day.
State possible, and special
game. "
With not much rest at all, thanks go to the Boy Scouis
The second game of the
Saturday twinbillla.~ted Wllil the Meigs Legionairres arose for the use of their bus.
11 p.m. and with two to play Sunday and tangled with
tough
squad,
the following day, the team another
001 000 o-1 3 3
Ashland,
and
being
asleep, Meigs
got little sleep .
Morehead
033 010 x-7 5 0
In the first g~e1gs was was blanked 11-&lt;1 with Perk
Perry
and
Hamilton.
still asleep·, losing 11-&lt;1, but m Ault suffering the loss. Ault W~rner (WP) Bluefield (6)
the second game they began fanned I and walked 3 in his anC! Prater.
003 ·200 0.....5 9 2
Meigs ·
h1ttmg the ball and won 8-7. mound appearance . For Morehead
Ill 500 x-8 10 1
High points of the weekend Ashland Skaggs picked up
Nesselroad ( LPl Ault (5)
Hamilton.
Mack,
trip were the hitting of Mike the win, fanning 6 and and
Bluefield
(3)
(WP)
and
Nesselroad who went 6-12, walking 3.
Prater.
Io the second game after Meigs
includmg a 4:4 !mal game,
000 oo- 0 J 1
252 2x-ll 8 1
the
rude awakening in the Ashland.
and Brett Wilson who was 5Au It and Hamilton. Skaggs
13. Another bright spot was opener. Meigs got it.together and
Gothard.
1
!me rebel pitching of . Mike and slipped by their Ken- Meigs
200 312 o-8 11 2
032 100 1- 7 9 2
Watson who came on in the tucky opponents by a slim 8-7 Ashland
Perry, Watson (J), (WP)
cOWl
I.
Jim
Perry
started
on
third inning of the final game
and Hamilton. Hawkins ( LPI
and went the rest of the way, the moWld and went~ innings and ·McKenzle.
was
picking up the victory.
Here is how the weekend
FACTORy BUY OUT
went :
.
'
On Saturday the Meigs
Ful14-Ply Polyester
squad facing and outstanding
Morehead club, went down 778 Series Whitewall
•
1 in the opener with Jim
Perry on the rnOWld suffering
the loss. Warner and
Bluefieltl each saw action for
Morehead with Warner the
starter, gelling the win.
Perry fanned 9 and walked 12
while opposing pitchers

SUMME_R
SANDALS

A78/13 ----------•19.95
E78/14.--------- '21.95
F78/14-------·---'22.95
G78/14 or 15 -----'23.95
H78/14 or 1)----- '24.95·

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HEADQUARTERS
h~ritag~

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Jlouse

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Your Tho,;, MeAn Store
· Middleport, Ohio

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How .to get

Mrs. Dorothy Smith was spoke. on
rid ol:.;:
elected president of the Wild- weed~ suggesting that gar•
wood Garden Club during a dens be band weeded, .
meeting Thursday night at mulched, or chemi cally
· the &amp;pith home .
treated. Mulches suggested
Other officers elected were were pine needles, leaves,
Mrs. Marcia AI nold, vice bark or pebbles of a
president;
Mrs. Hilda decorative · natur e, black
Yeauger , treasurer ; and (!ias\ic. newspapers, grass
Mrs .
Doris
Grueser ,_ clippings when dry .
. She t&lt;!!ked on the sounds of ; ,;.
._
· secretary.
A picnic was planned for the g~oting flower&amp; ,. · ,::;
July at the home of Mrs. ·which are : lld)illds by name • - · :·~,-}:
at
6 :30 p.m . such as bells; lind the sounds·
~
Arnold
I '•'r,
Suggestions for th e new of birds and bees . She talked
· ·· ~
program books are to be about unusual ·recipes made
. submitted at that meeting . A from plants noting that the.
thank you note was read from red berries of the shumate
Linda Mayer of the Pomeroy trj!e are edible , .that elderAlwnnl ~iation thanking berries can be added to
the
club
for
flower pancakes and used to make
arrangements. Also read was jelly, and tl!at the roots of
a note from Margaret Ella day lilies and rosebud s can be
Lewis
expressing
ap- used for flavoring.
Mrs. Mary Nease talked of
preciation for help with the
Regatta flower show . Mrs. the mysteries of the evening .
Smith and Mrs. Erma Roush primrose and Mrs . Ada:·
Holter demonstrated how to
assisted.
A communication from make flower arrangements .
Mrs. Dorsey Bumg ardner . She suggested that oasis be
announced the 45th annual soaked at least two hours and
convention to be held at then wrapped in foil and
Perrysburg, July 29-31. Also shpwed
the
usc
of
MASON
The
. .
read was a letter from the needlepoints.
Blue-ribboM were awarded engagement and approaching
Rutland Garden Club announcing an open meeting. 'iO Mrs; Snillh for an African : martlage ~of . _their; dalli!hter,
For roll call, members &amp;let· to E . Holter for -.· Vlc_kle Bll!llell , wa s ,an·
named a border plant. ' Mrs. ·ll:"'red, w'lllle and blue. noli.ri,!:,e.d ~dll)' . . by ,.Iter
Grueser pre~ided with Mrs. ~angement, to Mrs. Arnold par~ts, River Captai_n and
, Roush giving devotions rot an arrangeynent of white Mrs . Joseph A. B1ssell,
from the Upper Room with and purple larkspur; to Mrs. Maso~, to John Northup , son
scripture from St. John. The Mary Nease for a pink violet of Mi:. and Mrs . Thomas D.
Lord's Prayer was given in and to Mrs. Holter for scotch Northup , Gallipolis Ferry.
brooin
and · · yarrow
Miss
Bissell
a t tends
unison .
Wahama Hig_h School and the
Mrs . Evvelyn ·Hollon · arrangement.
Miss
Erna
Jesse
was
a
groolh-elect
IS a graduate of
presented a paper on the
weed, describing it as a plant guest at the meeting . Mrs. Point Pleasant High School
out of place, unwanted, gr.ows Yeauger won the door prize .
,wild and whose virtues have Homemade ice cream and
pot yet been discovered. She punch were served .

~- "·

Engagement announced
and is presently employed at
Gavin Power Plant. .
The wedding will take place
August 1 . at the United
Christian Brethren Church i'n
Mason at 7:30p.m . The Rev.
James Lewis will officiate. A
reception will foll ow in the
chur ch s ocial ro om im ·
mediately
a fter
the
ceremony.
The traditional custom of
open church will be observed .

Mrs. Key speaks .

?j$:'!:~:::::~:"'(.:::::::::::::::::::::::::;: ;:::~:~:~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:· :·: :::~:~~~:

Mrs . • Henry Ke y of beginning of life to a sunrise
Colwnbus was guest speaker and the end to the setting sun.
at the Women's Day ob- Life. she said . is a gift of God,
servan ce he,ld a t Mount as is the s unrise. Real love,
Moriah Ba pti s t Churc h, she said, is not something to
By l-;lelen and Sue Bottel
111:
Middleport , Sunda y.
be found easily but is the gift
· A Girl Needs an "Identity" • .Born in .Dayton, Mary , of God. The guiding force in
Rap:
,
•
• P~J'l.:'lOn Key was raised in ali of our lives, is the love of
I'm 23 and have no identity. No, I'm not -miXed up. 1 just . ,.G~bus -tlilt. an uncle and God, she fZ.otJcluded .
Mrs . Ca~eli Harper was
iill!lt; Mr. and Mrs. Russell
_can't convince business people I'm me.
pianis
t for the day with Mrs.
I don't drive, so have no license. 1 work for a very small, Em~ry • g:adll~ted from Ohio
finn,. and have no worker's identification card . 1 don't go to Sta~~ · Unrvers1ty and later· Arnold Richards presiding .
college, so have no J.D. I pay cash, so have no credit cards, received her master's degree Mrs. Ervin Baumgardner
which I couldn't get anyway, for above reasons.
from Atlanta University in presented to Mrs . Key a
Today I had trouble opening~ an account at a bank. I hbrary scemce . She worked corsage from the Missionary
probably can't cash my' checks anyway, _so what's the use? as . a librarian at Dillard Society, and a gift from the
Last week I couldn't get a parcell!t the Post Office as I couldn't Unrverslty rn New Odeans women of the church.
Mrs. Henrietta Robinson
~ove who I was. I can't visit ·a mend in .prison , as 1 have no and at the North Carohna
"-identity.
College, and is now head of and Mrs. Nellie Winston gave
Any suggestions? - THE ME NOBODY KNOWS
Cataloging Service at Ohio devotions . Mrs . John Moon
·
State. She is the wife of the gave a welcome to the
pastor of Mt. Moriah and · visitors with the response
M~
·
mother
of two childr e n, being given by Rev . Mr.
It's the business world s "Catch-22": You need "idenKey's mother, Mrs . Helen
tification" (usually via credit cards) to make it in these Jenny and David.
"Ufe
and
Love"
was
her
McClain, Columbus. The
. computerized·times, but to get a card, you must "prove" your
She
compared
the
topic.
prayer was given by
morning
• iden~ity with a card you can't obtain "beCI\USe you don't have
· ·
-.
an Identity."· For starters, call your Division of Motor Vehicles and ask
about Its nondriver identification card, issued specifically for
car-less persons who need to cash checks, etc.
''. · Then apply for credit at a local department store.
·"'(MII!lllgers here usually take new customers .on the strength of,
., their paychecks and personal ref~rences.) Even though you _. ·
liYPOLLYCitAMER
-.. ~efer "cash only," this credit card will provide your needed ~ ·
· identity.
·
Good luck! - HELEN AND SUE-

Generation Rap

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Talent night was held at the
Thursday night meeting of
the Meigs Cotinty Churches of
Qlrist Women 's Fellowship
· held at the Dexter Church .
Tiiere was group singing of
"At Calvary" 'to open the
meeting. Each church was
represented with talent with
the Bradbury Church having
the songs, ·" One Day Too
Late" and " Who Do You Say
~That I Am?", the Bradford
Church , "Follow Me", and
the Dexter Church, "Mansion
Over the Hilltop" a&lt;&gt;d
"Church if Finally Over ".
The
Hemhtck
Grove
Churc h women sang " Home
of the Sour" and gave
readings about grandmothers
and bygone days, with the
Pomeroy Chw-ch having the
song, " Beyond the Sunset" , a
JOem, "If Jesus Came to
Vour House," and a reading

Mrs. Allen Hampton . Soloist
was Rev . Henry Key, who
sang " Does Jesus Care" .
Coming especially for the
services were members of
Mrs. Key's family from
Dayton, Mrs. Ethel Pinson,
Mr . and Mrs. Jimmy
Washington, Mrs. Betty
Smith, Mrs . Marie Drasimon,
VISITED
_
Inman Kennemore, James
Mr. and Mrs. Dale K.
Vinzant, and Mrs. Delores Roush and daughter Kathy,
Powell. Others from out of Apple Creek, were weekend
town ·were Mrs. McClain, visitors of Mr. and Mrs. B. F .
Mrs. Delores Dibbs, Mr . and • Turner, Middleport. Also
· Mrs . Edward Smith and visiting with the Turners
family, Mrs. Edna Marns, were . Mr. and Mrs. Clyde
Columbus . Mrs .
Allen Turner of Huntington, W. Va .
Hampton, Oscar Qualls, Mrs.
Susie Venable, Mrs. Bobby
Payne and Mrs. Fred Scott
attended !roll) the Na.9ffii
Baptist Church, and :Mrs.
Zuelelia Smith from .the
KITCHEN
Forest Run Church .
STATE
INSl'ECTED
Officers of the Missionary
LICENSED BAKER
Society which had charge of
AND DECORATOR
the se rvice are Mrs. Harper,
presid-e nt; Mrs. Baumgardner, vice president; Mrs .
Winston ,
secontl
vice
F latwaods, Ohio
Pomeroy, Ohio
president; and Mrs. Ernest
Slop In Or
Bowles, program chairCa 11992-7537
person unable to a !tend due{"

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V -8.

auto., P.S., blue-blue

inf .• 1 owner, low mileage.

•2895

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

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You'll Like Our Quat'lty
Way of Doing Business.
GMAC FINANCING
992-5342
Pomeroy
Open Evenings 'til 6:00
Til s p~m . Sa!,

We Accept Feder11l Food Stampx
PHONE:

**!**************~***********··~·
Superiors All Meal
Superrors Rouno
llI
.
&gt;t
! BOLOGNA l DUTCH LOAF

Who Is Eligible

(2) Supplemental Security Income (SSI)

recipients.
(3). Medicaid (Title XIX) recipients.

SUPERIORS

(4) Persons in immediate danger, needing
social proteptive services. "

Estimated annual
expenditure
Federal
Slate and local

(5) LQw incdme families. (Example : Family
of 4 with not over $5,500).

$73,687,000
$55,347,000
$18,340,000

(6) Other eligibles to be determined as
matching funds become available .

WIENERS

Public Review and Comment

Written. comments on the plan may b~ made
to _your Couf!ty Welfare Department or to
th~ Social Servl,ces Division, Ohio Depart·
ment pf Public Welfare . Comments and · requests may be sent to : .

Copies of the complete state plan and your
local 'c ounty- plan are available for review at
your loca_l County Welfare Department.

•

Detailed summaries of thE! plan -are available
by writing to the Social Servipes Division,
· Ohio Depart'm ent of Public- Welfare .
_
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Mrs. Mildred_Madry, Director
Social 'services Division
Ohio Department of Public Welhar~ 30th. Floor, 30 East Broad Street
Columbus, Ohio 43215

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James A. Rhodes
Governor
State cif Ohio.

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Ra~mo",;d 'e.JJcKenna, ' '
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Director , ... ,
Ohio Department of Public Welfare

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CANDY
BARS
...

REBECKA ANN WISE
BIRTH ANNOUNCED Sp-4 and Mrs. Danny Wise
of Germany, formerly of
MiddlepOrt, · :'"1lfe:~.
nounclng the birth of a
daughter, Rebecka Ann,
born · • ' May
31.
Grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Charles· Wise,
Middleport, and Mr. and
~rs. JobnSberdan of Cary,
DL Sp-4 Wise and bls
family will be returning to
lbe States some time In
October. He Is stationed In
Germany wllb the u. s.
Army.

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and Cheddar

FREEZE PAKS)

•

oz.

Bot.

·t.aD: ;

GEBitARDrS

HOTDOG
SAUCE

'
'

tARNATION

Cooler!

INSTANT ~·

NESTEA-

•

$1'

99¢

BOX

3 OZ. JAR

l'UESDAY
STATE MEETING,
Middleport Masonic Lodge
363, F&amp;AM, 7:ao p. m. All
Master Masons· Invited.
REGULAR MEETJNG,
MARC, 7:30p.m. Tuesday at
Meigs Mentalltealth Center,
236 W. Sl!cond St., Pomeroy.
~veryone welcome. ·
REVIVAL
at
Hazel
Community Church off Route
124 between Long Bottom and
Portland, 7:30 each evening;
Rev. Bud Hatfield in charge;
special singing each evening.
POMEROY Chapter 186,
O.E.S., . 7:45 p.m. at the ·
Pomeroy Masonic .Temple.
Initiation with all officers to
wear formals.

FOR

BREAKFAST

INSTANT TEA

CARNATION
INSTANT
'************************************

\

\
.

*

i: WATERMELONS *
!,. .
$·
9
...
...:
*

--

\

'\

89

,,

.

WEDNESDAY
&gt;t
REGULAR Meeting,
: .
Poml!!'oy Lodge 164, FMM,
7:30p.m.AIIMasterMasons"\ - ~
invited.
'
...
:
REYIV AL at the Freewill
Baptist Church on Ash St. in
MiddleRort beglnnil)g
tonight. Serviceswill begin at
7:30 nightly. Everyone is
invited and special singers
are wan ted.

~

'

DRY MILK

*

-

14 QUART

:

*~

EACH

SIZE

...
: .

,

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•

Thurs. Only

-

All Week Price - -

~

:a
PAK ;·

.
·-

RC

-DIET RITE

16 oz. bots.

FLAVORS

.
$}.09
8
PAK

'

4

·

.

for

\

DAD'S

ROOT BEER .
OR
DIET RITE
COLA

16. ~ oz.
·. bottles

~

$100
Plus .Dep.

•

I.

·,

All Week Price

. Friday Only _

-

RC
COLA

--.•
•l· I . .

69e

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,.

WIENERS , :

FRIDAY
EASTERN
Athletic
Boosters will sponsor chicken
barbecue and pony : puii.'Serving beginning at 11 a.m ., ·
. pony pull, I p.m. with weigh•.
in'at II. ~ Three weight classes
for ponies, 1050, 1350 and 1650 .
.FRID,AY
· . COFFEE Break, July· 4, 5'
and 6 at both roadside patks
on Rt. !l3 for hollday travels
. sponsor~d by Big Bend CB
Ral)lo Club; free coffee, pop
·and donuts.
•
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T~is adv~~lise ment has been placed in compliance with fed~ral. regulations ~nder Title XX. · '

1

lb.

:

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•

Comment•

SHORT RIBS
OF BEEF

BEEF

SUPERIORS
ALL BEEF , :

*

This Social Services . Plan has been develo~d with the cooperation of a l,arge ~umber ~~ ~r­
gan1zat1ons and 1nd1v1duals. A period for public review and comment is being provided from July
1 to August 15.
·
v'

79e

12 OUNCE PKG.·

...

./ Revl_!llf Cciples

.

USDA CHOICE

BOILING

89~ ! lb. $1.39 ~
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Social .
Calendar

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USD-A CHOICE

lb.

'

Maximum federal allotment for Ohio at
this time would be about $127,000,000 annually witti the availability of at least
$42,000,000 in state and local matching
funds . The state plan has the following proposals based on c·uHently iQentifiable matching State and Local funds .

*

&gt;t

I

D. Childs

Funding

Eligible Ohio residents would include:
(1) Aid. for Dependent Children (ADC) recipients.

i

LB.

MIDDLEPORT 0'

~ULV4th

*

1

57

_ Serv_ices in the -plan include foster care for children, day care for children, family planning,
mformat1on and referral, adoption services, training and employment services, comprehensive care
for adults, comprehensive protective care for children, guardiimship servic!!S, health-related services. counseling services, and certain other optional services that counties may elect to offer
where there 1s need and where resources are available

Superiors
USDA· Choice
. Beef

AND LEAN

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily 9 to 10 · Sun.. 10 -to 10

HEINZ

Purpose

-

FRESH

PeoPle

DOWNlNGOIILDS
1GENCY, INC.
MIDDLEPORT, OtiiO

~-

OPEN FRIDAY, JULY 4TH - 9 AM TO 6 P M

'

insurance, see me ... )

Mick Childs

.

MIN.UTE STEAK.

cote

~ ~IIIia~

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recognize him by his warm
smite and sweet disposition .
"You know what Mommy, I
never noticed that ."
OK . but When you »}ink pf

DAY NURSERY

49 2

73 OfEV.
NOVA 2 DR.

The purpose of this plan is to provide in Ohio social services that will help residents of Ohio
to restore, maintain or improve their capabilities for self-support, self-care, independent living. to
strengthen fam1ly lofe, and where necessary to provide improved institutional living .

:.} \!In: Jl.eeP.:

of

USED CARS

PUBLIC NOTICE

... . .

THE

~~· adding yOur hew last name only. -;- HELEN AND He can go in to a clean rooni
,
· and in two ' minutes have ·it
open 7 ·a.m. • 6 p.m.
, ,.
•·
' .· _ ·
,
.
. ~i119ster area. Diles anyone,• ·
. Personnel with
• - .. ·
· .
·
_·
,lSIT~ lN Gli:~RGIA _, · h~re any id~s as to how I .
. MO!IicaiTraining
One
the most ' remarkable:,;,~~~·~·- , RObert Duck:
hlril ·.fpl'!Jl doing .. ~~:,:,,_child;. int.a nt.or
·JI1illeums in Italy displays only":'!~-"' ~'*,ii)l;.~by, Mod) -.~.
-~ .:J&lt;AtlQI!)N! i·•. ~· , IU:MONABLJ: RATES
·um'brellu'. The Um·I Jre.lla dleport, . rec~ly spent · a .• ··' .
.. kl!rlll:I!:EN . :... · Lunch ahd 2 snacks are
Mueu111 in lbe village of .Gignese v.:eek in W~ner1.f\~bbins. Ga. "l·talie t easy or" you. may· find · provided . :
.
.
redlll the days when -VIrtually VISiting their son-m.law and yourself with a neat room but
By hour, day or week
tile entire tow.n made a·nd dqughter, Mr . and Mrs'. - "'tlt'us ,
something
(or
. w~;.~~~:2. ·J:~_8 ~
repaired umbrellas and p.a rasols
'
· that niea
• - u· .
. . Rayrnoli\1 Zirkle.
.sOmebOdy)
. .
_ ns more
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Th!.' week's Specia.l

_ , This plan for Ohio has been developed in accordance with Title XX of the Social Security Act
enacted by_Public
Law 93-647, effective October 1 ' 1975.
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P.S. Another way: Keep .YOUf ·before-marriage credit. DEAR POLLY_ My Pet
earcll, aloog wllb yD\11' malden name - ot ask that they be Peeve is wiih my husband.

•

Proposed Plan for Social Services In Ohio

:lliOj!ll

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. Mrs. Roger Keller and son
Russell, Mrs. Ralph Keller,
Mrs. Philip Meinhart and
Miss Erma Smith were
recent ~inner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Norman Rose,
Bidwell.
,
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Weber,
Columbus, spent the weekend
here visiting her mother Mrs.
Enna Roush and Mr . and
Mrs. Alfred Yeauger.
Delbert Call is. a patient at ·
the O'Bieness Hospital,
Athens, where he was taken
Saturday after fracturing
both his. hip and his arm in a
fall.
Micha~l Goeglein was
sched¥led foo release today
from the St. Joseph Hospital
in Parkersburg . Michael
received a severe laceration
of the ann in a fall against a
window. He is the. son of Mr .
and Mrs. Charles Goeglein,
Mrs. Philip Meinhart, Miss
Erma Smith; Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Keller and sons Randy
· and Russell
were
in
Williamstown,
W.
Va .
recenUy for a tour of the
Fenton Glass Co . They
stopped in Parkersburg'for a
dinner in observance of Mrs .
Smith's birthday hosted/by
the Keller family :
Mrs. Sadie Thuener ,
Syracuse, and grandson. Ted
Lehew, Pomeroy, spent
Thursday and Friday in
Cincinnati where they attended th-e ' Reds baseball
ganie and visited several
places of interest.
Mr. and Mrs. Ja!lles
Buchanan, Wheeling, W. Va.
and Mr. and Mrs. Carl Offutt,
Bashan, were - weekend
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Opha
Offutt.

~

Charcoal dims
fish odor

+++

&lt;

sweetheart.

Kuhl Cake .Decor

Rap: .
. to you. - POLLY.
POLLY'S PROBLEM
' c. Yes, ! _agree that married women should have credit cards
DEAR POLLY - When a
'. issued in TimiR names, rather _than their husband's (i.e., DEAR POLLY _ I certainly
need
some
help.
I
·stored
bordered
tablecloth is ·too
" Jane Doe, not John Dee's NQ. ~ card). But most companies still
,won't do this. So, comes a divorce, the w;orium is left cardless. some fish in the refrigerator long form a box pleat through
Take a look at your credit .. cards, you two married . that ended up in the garbage, the center. When the cen·
colwnnlsts, _and see how many have YOUR first names on but not before it left an odor terpiece ,is placed on it the
lbemi So hOW do we change things ? - ALMOST DIVORCED in the refrigerator that I pleat is scarcely noticeable.
.. AT 23 . '
cannot get rid of. I've tried
Children delight In having
"
·'
everything . 1 am now temp- their names on their own
23:
ted to get rid of the thingS, particularly their
You'rerlght:Outofadozencreditcardsaround·ourhouse, ref r i g era t 0 r.
bikes and clothing. But the
,., 'only one (Mastercharge) has MY first name on it. All the other DESPERATE.
,
'thought occurred to me that
compani!!S send us two cards, botli made mlt to Robert E.
DEAR DESPERATE
in so doing we give str;mgers
Botte1.
_
,
. .
Vinegar _18 good
for the opportunity ti learn their
1
I m told that some companies will issue• cards in both ellmlniltlng lbe odor of fish. names. Then the _children can
names, upon request, but others refuse, giving ·only t~e vague 'W,psb.lilterior of thAox with be misled into thinking they
reason, "It's l!gainst our policy," Even in casea where the wife .. w'htte; vinegam and a bit of are close friends be~cause
earns more than the hus~nd, iii a s~dler jab,_credit cardS:;:·Wl~~;;_ RIDlle ,.imtl·;dry well. they know their names . We
. will be issued In HIS name "!!ly, this probabfY because h1s : ..
dam!'1JionBe could be adults should take all the
name comes first on the application.
sprlnkted with ary baking precautwns w~ can and ~ot
• Frustrating, isn't It?- HELEN
soda &amp;lld every corner wiped ~ ~ake II eas1er for kid· ·
with ·rt. Rinse with a clean napplngsand other crunes to
'23: dampc.&amp;ponge and dry. .
be comm1tted.- MRS. R. G.
. HoW to change things? By complaining loud, long, 8lld in Charcoal left Inside often DEAR POLLY - Storing
· great num]lers,. to the .yarioils. credit-giyll!g companies who will ' absorb odors
plastic bags I had washed and
· wori1{ give us women the privilege of'iiur first names.
gradually not overnight. It Is . saved used to drive me u'p the
. Too many businesses are still locked into th~ days when a good p~adlc~ to keep an wall until I found a simple
·: married womep wer~ "dependents," atld the niajority of them open box of baking soda In the method. Just re'Yrap thein on
lltayeli 'm arried.
.
'·
·refrigerator to absorb nomaI an empty paper roll that
• Granied, this-will cause more company bookkeeping, but odors. Change about once a ·- bags, loll or plastic wrap
. If a woman wants her own name on the credit card -and can nionth and empty the used C!'ffie on. Hold in place with a
~y .her billa With her own el!rnings - then she should' be box down the sink drain to rubber b!lfld. - MILDRED.
allowed to have it. - SUE ·
·
·
· .
• sweeten it.- POL_LY.

.,. .

~­

Columbus; Mrs. Harold
Blackston, Mrs. Walter
Morris and Carol, Mrs. Pat
'Duffy,- Patricia Duffy, Mrs.
Schmoll, Mrs. Clifford
Kennedy, Qlff and Chris,
Mrs. Osboll\, Mrs. · Blaker
and Teresa, Mrs. Kenn~th
Harris Kenneth and David.

My Wife was telling me abOut
a conversat ion with our little
girl
...
" Mommy,
If
policem en and firemen wear
uniforms ,
why
doe!n't
Daddy wear an insurance
man's un i form?" Daddy
doesn't need a uniform,

WANTED

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· ~ POrnenJ1
Permnal Notes

: ..

WHEN YOU SEE ME,
DON'T THINK OF
INSURANCE ..• BUT
WHEN YOU THINK OF
INSURANCE, SEE MEl

CAKE BAKING

Polly's Pointers

+++

Mrs . John B!Jiker was
voted
the
outstanding
member of the year and
presen~ the 11 pixie award"
by the Middleport Child
"Flag of '76", and the Zion
COnservation League at a
Church a poem entitled " A
family picnic held Thursday
Minister's Wife " . To cona
at the Route 33 Roadside
elude. the program the group
Park .
sang
" Ameri ca
· the
Also recognizect during the
B~autiful" and
Charles
meeting was Mrs. Robert
Russell had prayer . ..--Schmoll who was presented a
Mrs. Ruby Rife presided at
nower arrangement in apthe business meeting with
preciation .for her special
Laura Hoover giving the
efforts to make the district
secretary 's report and
spring
conference successful.
Catherine Russell, the
Qf.!iJ:- for the 1975-76 year
treasW"er 's report.
were
installed with eacli one
It was announced that the
being presented a ribbon in
next meeting will be a family
picnic at the Route 33 the color symbolizing her
Roadside Park, 6:30p.m. The office, lll)d a white carnation.
Hemlo ck Grove Christian Mrs . Blaker was the installing officer . The officers
Church will have charge of
the picnic . It was also an- are Mrs . Lou Osborne,
president ;
Mrs .
Gene
nounced that church camp
Houdashelt,
vice
president;
·
will begin this Sunday
Mrs . Clifford Kennedy ,
evening.
.
secretary; Mrs. Thoma·s
Cookies, tea and chips were
served in the church Grueser, treasurer; Mrs.
Robert Schmoll, historian;
basement.
and Mrs. Walter Morris,
reporter.
The pledge to the flag and
a death in the family. the Mother 's Prayer opened
Assisting in the kitchen for a the .business meeting . At·
dinner served at noon in tending the picnic were Mrs.
addition to the, ,Missionary Dale Colburn, Jim and Fred,
Society members were Mrs . and Mrs. Colbw-n's nephews
Ann Angel and Mrs. Hobart Steve and Ernie Bowen of
Goggins.

talent night

Vickk Bissell

i

A ward presented..

Women hold

:i

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·Tuesday, July I, 1975

ii

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5- The Daily Sentinel,

~..:..The ~Uy Sentinel,Middlep6rt-~ornetoy, 0 ., Tuesday . Jul~ 1.;is2$

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.Garden club ·
elects ·officers·

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SPAK$119
'16 '()1 .

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PIUS d ep .
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How .to get

Mrs. Dorothy Smith was spoke. on
rid ol:.;:
elected president of the Wild- weed~ suggesting that gar•
wood Garden Club during a dens be band weeded, .
meeting Thursday night at mulched, or chemi cally
· the &amp;pith home .
treated. Mulches suggested
Other officers elected were were pine needles, leaves,
Mrs. Marcia AI nold, vice bark or pebbles of a
president;
Mrs. Hilda decorative · natur e, black
Yeauger , treasurer ; and (!ias\ic. newspapers, grass
Mrs .
Doris
Grueser ,_ clippings when dry .
. She t&lt;!!ked on the sounds of ; ,;.
._
· secretary.
A picnic was planned for the g~oting flower&amp; ,. · ,::;
July at the home of Mrs. ·which are : lld)illds by name • - · :·~,-}:
at
6 :30 p.m . such as bells; lind the sounds·
~
Arnold
I '•'r,
Suggestions for th e new of birds and bees . She talked
· ·· ~
program books are to be about unusual ·recipes made
. submitted at that meeting . A from plants noting that the.
thank you note was read from red berries of the shumate
Linda Mayer of the Pomeroy trj!e are edible , .that elderAlwnnl ~iation thanking berries can be added to
the
club
for
flower pancakes and used to make
arrangements. Also read was jelly, and tl!at the roots of
a note from Margaret Ella day lilies and rosebud s can be
Lewis
expressing
ap- used for flavoring.
Mrs. Mary Nease talked of
preciation for help with the
Regatta flower show . Mrs. the mysteries of the evening .
Smith and Mrs. Erma Roush primrose and Mrs . Ada:·
Holter demonstrated how to
assisted.
A communication from make flower arrangements .
Mrs. Dorsey Bumg ardner . She suggested that oasis be
announced the 45th annual soaked at least two hours and
convention to be held at then wrapped in foil and
Perrysburg, July 29-31. Also shpwed
the
usc
of
MASON
The
. .
read was a letter from the needlepoints.
Blue-ribboM were awarded engagement and approaching
Rutland Garden Club announcing an open meeting. 'iO Mrs; Snillh for an African : martlage ~of . _their; dalli!hter,
For roll call, members &amp;let· to E . Holter for -.· Vlc_kle Bll!llell , wa s ,an·
named a border plant. ' Mrs. ·ll:"'red, w'lllle and blue. noli.ri,!:,e.d ~dll)' . . by ,.Iter
Grueser pre~ided with Mrs. ~angement, to Mrs. Arnold par~ts, River Captai_n and
, Roush giving devotions rot an arrangeynent of white Mrs . Joseph A. B1ssell,
from the Upper Room with and purple larkspur; to Mrs. Maso~, to John Northup , son
scripture from St. John. The Mary Nease for a pink violet of Mi:. and Mrs . Thomas D.
Lord's Prayer was given in and to Mrs. Holter for scotch Northup , Gallipolis Ferry.
brooin
and · · yarrow
Miss
Bissell
a t tends
unison .
Wahama Hig_h School and the
Mrs . Evvelyn ·Hollon · arrangement.
Miss
Erna
Jesse
was
a
groolh-elect
IS a graduate of
presented a paper on the
weed, describing it as a plant guest at the meeting . Mrs. Point Pleasant High School
out of place, unwanted, gr.ows Yeauger won the door prize .
,wild and whose virtues have Homemade ice cream and
pot yet been discovered. She punch were served .

~- "·

Engagement announced
and is presently employed at
Gavin Power Plant. .
The wedding will take place
August 1 . at the United
Christian Brethren Church i'n
Mason at 7:30p.m . The Rev.
James Lewis will officiate. A
reception will foll ow in the
chur ch s ocial ro om im ·
mediately
a fter
the
ceremony.
The traditional custom of
open church will be observed .

Mrs. Key speaks .

?j$:'!:~:::::~:"'(.:::::::::::::::::::::::::;: ;:::~:~:~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:· :·: :::~:~~~:

Mrs . • Henry Ke y of beginning of life to a sunrise
Colwnbus was guest speaker and the end to the setting sun.
at the Women's Day ob- Life. she said . is a gift of God,
servan ce he,ld a t Mount as is the s unrise. Real love,
Moriah Ba pti s t Churc h, she said, is not something to
By l-;lelen and Sue Bottel
111:
Middleport , Sunda y.
be found easily but is the gift
· A Girl Needs an "Identity" • .Born in .Dayton, Mary , of God. The guiding force in
Rap:
,
•
• P~J'l.:'lOn Key was raised in ali of our lives, is the love of
I'm 23 and have no identity. No, I'm not -miXed up. 1 just . ,.G~bus -tlilt. an uncle and God, she fZ.otJcluded .
Mrs . Ca~eli Harper was
iill!lt; Mr. and Mrs. Russell
_can't convince business people I'm me.
pianis
t for the day with Mrs.
I don't drive, so have no license. 1 work for a very small, Em~ry • g:adll~ted from Ohio
finn,. and have no worker's identification card . 1 don't go to Sta~~ · Unrvers1ty and later· Arnold Richards presiding .
college, so have no J.D. I pay cash, so have no credit cards, received her master's degree Mrs. Ervin Baumgardner
which I couldn't get anyway, for above reasons.
from Atlanta University in presented to Mrs . Key a
Today I had trouble opening~ an account at a bank. I hbrary scemce . She worked corsage from the Missionary
probably can't cash my' checks anyway, _so what's the use? as . a librarian at Dillard Society, and a gift from the
Last week I couldn't get a parcell!t the Post Office as I couldn't Unrverslty rn New Odeans women of the church.
Mrs. Henrietta Robinson
~ove who I was. I can't visit ·a mend in .prison , as 1 have no and at the North Carohna
"-identity.
College, and is now head of and Mrs. Nellie Winston gave
Any suggestions? - THE ME NOBODY KNOWS
Cataloging Service at Ohio devotions . Mrs . John Moon
·
State. She is the wife of the gave a welcome to the
pastor of Mt. Moriah and · visitors with the response
M~
·
mother
of two childr e n, being given by Rev . Mr.
It's the business world s "Catch-22": You need "idenKey's mother, Mrs . Helen
tification" (usually via credit cards) to make it in these Jenny and David.
"Ufe
and
Love"
was
her
McClain, Columbus. The
. computerized·times, but to get a card, you must "prove" your
She
compared
the
topic.
prayer was given by
morning
• iden~ity with a card you can't obtain "beCI\USe you don't have
· ·
-.
an Identity."· For starters, call your Division of Motor Vehicles and ask
about Its nondriver identification card, issued specifically for
car-less persons who need to cash checks, etc.
''. · Then apply for credit at a local department store.
·"'(MII!lllgers here usually take new customers .on the strength of,
., their paychecks and personal ref~rences.) Even though you _. ·
liYPOLLYCitAMER
-.. ~efer "cash only," this credit card will provide your needed ~ ·
· identity.
·
Good luck! - HELEN AND SUE-

Generation Rap

I

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Talent night was held at the
Thursday night meeting of
the Meigs Cotinty Churches of
Qlrist Women 's Fellowship
· held at the Dexter Church .
Tiiere was group singing of
"At Calvary" 'to open the
meeting. Each church was
represented with talent with
the Bradbury Church having
the songs, ·" One Day Too
Late" and " Who Do You Say
~That I Am?", the Bradford
Church , "Follow Me", and
the Dexter Church, "Mansion
Over the Hilltop" a&lt;&gt;d
"Church if Finally Over ".
The
Hemhtck
Grove
Churc h women sang " Home
of the Sour" and gave
readings about grandmothers
and bygone days, with the
Pomeroy Chw-ch having the
song, " Beyond the Sunset" , a
JOem, "If Jesus Came to
Vour House," and a reading

Mrs. Allen Hampton . Soloist
was Rev . Henry Key, who
sang " Does Jesus Care" .
Coming especially for the
services were members of
Mrs. Key's family from
Dayton, Mrs. Ethel Pinson,
Mr . and Mrs. Jimmy
Washington, Mrs. Betty
Smith, Mrs . Marie Drasimon,
VISITED
_
Inman Kennemore, James
Mr. and Mrs. Dale K.
Vinzant, and Mrs. Delores Roush and daughter Kathy,
Powell. Others from out of Apple Creek, were weekend
town ·were Mrs. McClain, visitors of Mr. and Mrs. B. F .
Mrs. Delores Dibbs, Mr . and • Turner, Middleport. Also
· Mrs . Edward Smith and visiting with the Turners
family, Mrs. Edna Marns, were . Mr. and Mrs. Clyde
Columbus . Mrs .
Allen Turner of Huntington, W. Va .
Hampton, Oscar Qualls, Mrs.
Susie Venable, Mrs. Bobby
Payne and Mrs. Fred Scott
attended !roll) the Na.9ffii
Baptist Church, and :Mrs.
Zuelelia Smith from .the
KITCHEN
Forest Run Church .
STATE
INSl'ECTED
Officers of the Missionary
LICENSED BAKER
Society which had charge of
AND DECORATOR
the se rvice are Mrs. Harper,
presid-e nt; Mrs. Baumgardner, vice president; Mrs .
Winston ,
secontl
vice
F latwaods, Ohio
Pomeroy, Ohio
president; and Mrs. Ernest
Slop In Or
Bowles, program chairCa 11992-7537
person unable to a !tend due{"

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V -8.

auto., P.S., blue-blue

inf .• 1 owner, low mileage.

•2895

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

--

You'll Like Our Quat'lty
Way of Doing Business.
GMAC FINANCING
992-5342
Pomeroy
Open Evenings 'til 6:00
Til s p~m . Sa!,

We Accept Feder11l Food Stampx
PHONE:

**!**************~***********··~·
Superiors All Meal
Superrors Rouno
llI
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&gt;t
! BOLOGNA l DUTCH LOAF

Who Is Eligible

(2) Supplemental Security Income (SSI)

recipients.
(3). Medicaid (Title XIX) recipients.

SUPERIORS

(4) Persons in immediate danger, needing
social proteptive services. "

Estimated annual
expenditure
Federal
Slate and local

(5) LQw incdme families. (Example : Family
of 4 with not over $5,500).

$73,687,000
$55,347,000
$18,340,000

(6) Other eligibles to be determined as
matching funds become available .

WIENERS

Public Review and Comment

Written. comments on the plan may b~ made
to _your Couf!ty Welfare Department or to
th~ Social Servl,ces Division, Ohio Depart·
ment pf Public Welfare . Comments and · requests may be sent to : .

Copies of the complete state plan and your
local 'c ounty- plan are available for review at
your loca_l County Welfare Department.

•

Detailed summaries of thE! plan -are available
by writing to the Social Servipes Division,
· Ohio Depart'm ent of Public- Welfare .
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Mrs. Mildred_Madry, Director
Social 'services Division
Ohio Department of Public Welhar~ 30th. Floor, 30 East Broad Street
Columbus, Ohio 43215

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James A. Rhodes
Governor
State cif Ohio.

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Ra~mo",;d 'e.JJcKenna, ' '
,

Director , ... ,
Ohio Department of Public Welfare

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,.,.
,. GROUND
J:,. **
&gt;t
:

,....

FRESH AND LEAN

FRESH AND LEAN

ROUND~

**
*

*

!Sl
.29
!

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'

.

lb.

•1.09

FRESH AND LEAN

GROUND
CHUCK

ll-"

GROUND
B~EF

!.1.19

lb.

lb.

lit-

:

89e

i

***********************************************'************** **************

CANDY
BARS
...

REBECKA ANN WISE
BIRTH ANNOUNCED Sp-4 and Mrs. Danny Wise
of Germany, formerly of
MiddlepOrt, · :'"1lfe:~.
nounclng the birth of a
daughter, Rebecka Ann,
born · • ' May
31.
Grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Charles· Wise,
Middleport, and Mr. and
~rs. JobnSberdan of Cary,
DL Sp-4 Wise and bls
family will be returning to
lbe States some time In
October. He Is stationed In
Germany wllb the u. s.
Army.

5

Mars Bars
Milky Way
3 Musketeers
M&amp;M· Bars

FAVORITE
BREAD

b

PAK

NEW! NEU:! NEW! NEW!

MR. 0" JR •
11

.6 9e
'

FREEZE PAKS

'

-PRINCE BRAND DINNERS
'

~av!l

STEAK
SAUCE

STRAWBERRY

PACKAGE

AND ORA NGE
14 SQUEEZE

Macaroni &amp;
Cheese
Shell Macaroni
and Cheddar

FREEZE PAKS)

•

oz.

Bot.

·t.aD: ;

GEBitARDrS

HOTDOG
SAUCE

'
'

tARNATION

Cooler!

INSTANT ~·

NESTEA-

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$1'

99¢

BOX

3 OZ. JAR

l'UESDAY
STATE MEETING,
Middleport Masonic Lodge
363, F&amp;AM, 7:ao p. m. All
Master Masons· Invited.
REGULAR MEETJNG,
MARC, 7:30p.m. Tuesday at
Meigs Mentalltealth Center,
236 W. Sl!cond St., Pomeroy.
~veryone welcome. ·
REVIVAL
at
Hazel
Community Church off Route
124 between Long Bottom and
Portland, 7:30 each evening;
Rev. Bud Hatfield in charge;
special singing each evening.
POMEROY Chapter 186,
O.E.S., . 7:45 p.m. at the ·
Pomeroy Masonic .Temple.
Initiation with all officers to
wear formals.

FOR

BREAKFAST

INSTANT TEA

CARNATION
INSTANT
'************************************

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i: WATERMELONS *
!,. .
$·
9
...
...:
*

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89

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WEDNESDAY
&gt;t
REGULAR Meeting,
: .
Poml!!'oy Lodge 164, FMM,
7:30p.m.AIIMasterMasons"\ - ~
invited.
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...
:
REYIV AL at the Freewill
Baptist Church on Ash St. in
MiddleRort beglnnil)g
tonight. Serviceswill begin at
7:30 nightly. Everyone is
invited and special singers
are wan ted.

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DRY MILK

*

-

14 QUART

:

*~

EACH

SIZE

...
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Thurs. Only

-

All Week Price - -

~

:a
PAK ;·

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·-

RC

-DIET RITE

16 oz. bots.

FLAVORS

.
$}.09
8
PAK

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4

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for

\

DAD'S

ROOT BEER .
OR
DIET RITE
COLA

16. ~ oz.
·. bottles

~

$100
Plus .Dep.

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All Week Price

. Friday Only _

-

RC
COLA

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WIENERS , :

FRIDAY
EASTERN
Athletic
Boosters will sponsor chicken
barbecue and pony : puii.'Serving beginning at 11 a.m ., ·
. pony pull, I p.m. with weigh•.
in'at II. ~ Three weight classes
for ponies, 1050, 1350 and 1650 .
.FRID,AY
· . COFFEE Break, July· 4, 5'
and 6 at both roadside patks
on Rt. !l3 for hollday travels
. sponsor~d by Big Bend CB
Ral)lo Club; free coffee, pop
·and donuts.
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T~is adv~~lise ment has been placed in compliance with fed~ral. regulations ~nder Title XX. · '

1

lb.

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Comment•

SHORT RIBS
OF BEEF

BEEF

SUPERIORS
ALL BEEF , :

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This Social Services . Plan has been develo~d with the cooperation of a l,arge ~umber ~~ ~r­
gan1zat1ons and 1nd1v1duals. A period for public review and comment is being provided from July
1 to August 15.
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79e

12 OUNCE PKG.·

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./ Revl_!llf Cciples

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USDA CHOICE

BOILING

89~ ! lb. $1.39 ~
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Social .
Calendar

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USD-A CHOICE

lb.

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Maximum federal allotment for Ohio at
this time would be about $127,000,000 annually witti the availability of at least
$42,000,000 in state and local matching
funds . The state plan has the following proposals based on c·uHently iQentifiable matching State and Local funds .

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D. Childs

Funding

Eligible Ohio residents would include:
(1) Aid. for Dependent Children (ADC) recipients.

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MIDDLEPORT 0'

~ULV4th

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_ Serv_ices in the -plan include foster care for children, day care for children, family planning,
mformat1on and referral, adoption services, training and employment services, comprehensive care
for adults, comprehensive protective care for children, guardiimship servic!!S, health-related services. counseling services, and certain other optional services that counties may elect to offer
where there 1s need and where resources are available

Superiors
USDA· Choice
. Beef

AND LEAN

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily 9 to 10 · Sun.. 10 -to 10

HEINZ

Purpose

-

FRESH

PeoPle

DOWNlNGOIILDS
1GENCY, INC.
MIDDLEPORT, OtiiO

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OPEN FRIDAY, JULY 4TH - 9 AM TO 6 P M

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insurance, see me ... )

Mick Childs

.

MIN.UTE STEAK.

cote

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recognize him by his warm
smite and sweet disposition .
"You know what Mommy, I
never noticed that ."
OK . but When you »}ink pf

DAY NURSERY

49 2

73 OfEV.
NOVA 2 DR.

The purpose of this plan is to provide in Ohio social services that will help residents of Ohio
to restore, maintain or improve their capabilities for self-support, self-care, independent living. to
strengthen fam1ly lofe, and where necessary to provide improved institutional living .

:.} \!In: Jl.eeP.:

of

USED CARS

PUBLIC NOTICE

... . .

THE

~~· adding yOur hew last name only. -;- HELEN AND He can go in to a clean rooni
,
· and in two ' minutes have ·it
open 7 ·a.m. • 6 p.m.
, ,.
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,
.
. ~i119ster area. Diles anyone,• ·
. Personnel with
• - .. ·
· .
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_·
,lSIT~ lN Gli:~RGIA _, · h~re any id~s as to how I .
. MO!IicaiTraining
One
the most ' remarkable:,;,~~~·~·- , RObert Duck:
hlril ·.fpl'!Jl doing .. ~~:,:,,_child;. int.a nt.or
·JI1illeums in Italy displays only":'!~-"' ~'*,ii)l;.~by, Mod) -.~.
-~ .:J&lt;AtlQI!)N! i·•. ~· , IU:MONABLJ: RATES
·um'brellu'. The Um·I Jre.lla dleport, . rec~ly spent · a .• ··' .
.. kl!rlll:I!:EN . :... · Lunch ahd 2 snacks are
Mueu111 in lbe village of .Gignese v.:eek in W~ner1.f\~bbins. Ga. "l·talie t easy or" you. may· find · provided . :
.
.
redlll the days when -VIrtually VISiting their son-m.law and yourself with a neat room but
By hour, day or week
tile entire tow.n made a·nd dqughter, Mr . and Mrs'. - "'tlt'us ,
something
(or
. w~;.~~~:2. ·J:~_8 ~
repaired umbrellas and p.a rasols
'
· that niea
• - u· .
. . Rayrnoli\1 Zirkle.
.sOmebOdy)
. .
_ ns more
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Th!.' week's Specia.l

_ , This plan for Ohio has been developed in accordance with Title XX of the Social Security Act
enacted by_Public
Law 93-647, effective October 1 ' 1975.
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P.S. Another way: Keep .YOUf ·before-marriage credit. DEAR POLLY_ My Pet
earcll, aloog wllb yD\11' malden name - ot ask that they be Peeve is wiih my husband.

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Proposed Plan for Social Services In Ohio

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. Mrs. Roger Keller and son
Russell, Mrs. Ralph Keller,
Mrs. Philip Meinhart and
Miss Erma Smith were
recent ~inner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Norman Rose,
Bidwell.
,
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Weber,
Columbus, spent the weekend
here visiting her mother Mrs.
Enna Roush and Mr . and
Mrs. Alfred Yeauger.
Delbert Call is. a patient at ·
the O'Bieness Hospital,
Athens, where he was taken
Saturday after fracturing
both his. hip and his arm in a
fall.
Micha~l Goeglein was
sched¥led foo release today
from the St. Joseph Hospital
in Parkersburg . Michael
received a severe laceration
of the ann in a fall against a
window. He is the. son of Mr .
and Mrs. Charles Goeglein,
Mrs. Philip Meinhart, Miss
Erma Smith; Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Keller and sons Randy
· and Russell
were
in
Williamstown,
W.
Va .
recenUy for a tour of the
Fenton Glass Co . They
stopped in Parkersburg'for a
dinner in observance of Mrs .
Smith's birthday hosted/by
the Keller family :
Mrs. Sadie Thuener ,
Syracuse, and grandson. Ted
Lehew, Pomeroy, spent
Thursday and Friday in
Cincinnati where they attended th-e ' Reds baseball
ganie and visited several
places of interest.
Mr. and Mrs. Ja!lles
Buchanan, Wheeling, W. Va.
and Mr. and Mrs. Carl Offutt,
Bashan, were - weekend
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Opha
Offutt.

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Charcoal dims
fish odor

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&lt;

sweetheart.

Kuhl Cake .Decor

Rap: .
. to you. - POLLY.
POLLY'S PROBLEM
' c. Yes, ! _agree that married women should have credit cards
DEAR POLLY - When a
'. issued in TimiR names, rather _than their husband's (i.e., DEAR POLLY _ I certainly
need
some
help.
I
·stored
bordered
tablecloth is ·too
" Jane Doe, not John Dee's NQ. ~ card). But most companies still
,won't do this. So, comes a divorce, the w;orium is left cardless. some fish in the refrigerator long form a box pleat through
Take a look at your credit .. cards, you two married . that ended up in the garbage, the center. When the cen·
colwnnlsts, _and see how many have YOUR first names on but not before it left an odor terpiece ,is placed on it the
lbemi So hOW do we change things ? - ALMOST DIVORCED in the refrigerator that I pleat is scarcely noticeable.
.. AT 23 . '
cannot get rid of. I've tried
Children delight In having
"
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everything . 1 am now temp- their names on their own
23:
ted to get rid of the thingS, particularly their
You'rerlght:Outofadozencreditcardsaround·ourhouse, ref r i g era t 0 r.
bikes and clothing. But the
,., 'only one (Mastercharge) has MY first name on it. All the other DESPERATE.
,
'thought occurred to me that
compani!!S send us two cards, botli made mlt to Robert E.
DEAR DESPERATE
in so doing we give str;mgers
Botte1.
_
,
. .
Vinegar _18 good
for the opportunity ti learn their
1
I m told that some companies will issue• cards in both ellmlniltlng lbe odor of fish. names. Then the _children can
names, upon request, but others refuse, giving ·only t~e vague 'W,psb.lilterior of thAox with be misled into thinking they
reason, "It's l!gainst our policy," Even in casea where the wife .. w'htte; vinegam and a bit of are close friends be~cause
earns more than the hus~nd, iii a s~dler jab,_credit cardS:;:·Wl~~;;_ RIDlle ,.imtl·;dry well. they know their names . We
. will be issued In HIS name "!!ly, this probabfY because h1s : ..
dam!'1JionBe could be adults should take all the
name comes first on the application.
sprlnkted with ary baking precautwns w~ can and ~ot
• Frustrating, isn't It?- HELEN
soda &amp;lld every corner wiped ~ ~ake II eas1er for kid· ·
with ·rt. Rinse with a clean napplngsand other crunes to
'23: dampc.&amp;ponge and dry. .
be comm1tted.- MRS. R. G.
. HoW to change things? By complaining loud, long, 8lld in Charcoal left Inside often DEAR POLLY - Storing
· great num]lers,. to the .yarioils. credit-giyll!g companies who will ' absorb odors
plastic bags I had washed and
· wori1{ give us women the privilege of'iiur first names.
gradually not overnight. It Is . saved used to drive me u'p the
. Too many businesses are still locked into th~ days when a good p~adlc~ to keep an wall until I found a simple
·: married womep wer~ "dependents," atld the niajority of them open box of baking soda In the method. Just re'Yrap thein on
lltayeli 'm arried.
.
'·
·refrigerator to absorb nomaI an empty paper roll that
• Granied, this-will cause more company bookkeeping, but odors. Change about once a ·- bags, loll or plastic wrap
. If a woman wants her own name on the credit card -and can nionth and empty the used C!'ffie on. Hold in place with a
~y .her billa With her own el!rnings - then she should' be box down the sink drain to rubber b!lfld. - MILDRED.
allowed to have it. - SUE ·
·
·
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• sweeten it.- POL_LY.

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Columbus; Mrs. Harold
Blackston, Mrs. Walter
Morris and Carol, Mrs. Pat
'Duffy,- Patricia Duffy, Mrs.
Schmoll, Mrs. Clifford
Kennedy, Qlff and Chris,
Mrs. Osboll\, Mrs. · Blaker
and Teresa, Mrs. Kenn~th
Harris Kenneth and David.

My Wife was telling me abOut
a conversat ion with our little
girl
...
" Mommy,
If
policem en and firemen wear
uniforms ,
why
doe!n't
Daddy wear an insurance
man's un i form?" Daddy
doesn't need a uniform,

WANTED

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· ~ POrnenJ1
Permnal Notes

: ..

WHEN YOU SEE ME,
DON'T THINK OF
INSURANCE ..• BUT
WHEN YOU THINK OF
INSURANCE, SEE MEl

CAKE BAKING

Polly's Pointers

+++

Mrs . John B!Jiker was
voted
the
outstanding
member of the year and
presen~ the 11 pixie award"
by the Middleport Child
"Flag of '76", and the Zion
COnservation League at a
Church a poem entitled " A
family picnic held Thursday
Minister's Wife " . To cona
at the Route 33 Roadside
elude. the program the group
Park .
sang
" Ameri ca
· the
Also recognizect during the
B~autiful" and
Charles
meeting was Mrs. Robert
Russell had prayer . ..--Schmoll who was presented a
Mrs. Ruby Rife presided at
nower arrangement in apthe business meeting with
preciation .for her special
Laura Hoover giving the
efforts to make the district
secretary 's report and
spring
conference successful.
Catherine Russell, the
Qf.!iJ:- for the 1975-76 year
treasW"er 's report.
were
installed with eacli one
It was announced that the
being presented a ribbon in
next meeting will be a family
picnic at the Route 33 the color symbolizing her
Roadside Park, 6:30p.m. The office, lll)d a white carnation.
Hemlo ck Grove Christian Mrs . Blaker was the installing officer . The officers
Church will have charge of
the picnic . It was also an- are Mrs . Lou Osborne,
president ;
Mrs .
Gene
nounced that church camp
Houdashelt,
vice
president;
·
will begin this Sunday
Mrs . Clifford Kennedy ,
evening.
.
secretary; Mrs. Thoma·s
Cookies, tea and chips were
served in the church Grueser, treasurer; Mrs.
Robert Schmoll, historian;
basement.
and Mrs. Walter Morris,
reporter.
The pledge to the flag and
a death in the family. the Mother 's Prayer opened
Assisting in the kitchen for a the .business meeting . At·
dinner served at noon in tending the picnic were Mrs.
addition to the, ,Missionary Dale Colburn, Jim and Fred,
Society members were Mrs . and Mrs. Colbw-n's nephews
Ann Angel and Mrs. Hobart Steve and Ernie Bowen of
Goggins.

talent night

Vickk Bissell

i

A ward presented..

Women hold

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·Tuesday, July I, 1975

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5- The Daily Sentinel,

~..:..The ~Uy Sentinel,Middlep6rt-~ornetoy, 0 ., Tuesday . Jul~ 1.;is2$

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.Garden club ·
elects ·officers·

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SPAK$119
'16 '()1 .

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Fast Results Use T~e ·sentinel Classifieds
Business
Services
2 SIGNS . Pomeroy
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OUR MUTUAL.
VVELZ , YOU GO

6 '}Q M e

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~" c=~N:-:-,L :-=~H:-:-:. ~::~~7N=~::=-Aw-=R~:.t-L"V"T_HA
__:r__
,N_c_L_u:-"-e-s-.:ll
E:-r

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1

....____;G::..O::, Ml NE.

nlrl ' f' N o
E 71 , 'lS ~ t'WMd R t'lurn t o
r o w e l Is '-.f'rvor r .t,li i OI I
M 1dd i Pport

d '(C.I /\ l

Y~•lerd•r'•

bfm t'lf to mt rrd - KNtniNG

house
l'i9 N
St h
I'.::.¢C
Mrdcll e port
P t1one
b el or e ~ p 111 l .t7 56 75 o r see
Milrtor, e Molhon &lt;1 1 Rut l and
7 I 61c

God saw the ro ad wvs qell •n q
rou g h ,
Th e h il l s w e r e h a r d To cl~mb
She gen tly closed her 11r e d

e yes
An d whr s p ere d peace be t hrne
Her l onely hou r s . her days of
parn ,
He r wear y nrgh t s are past

Her e ve r
fram e

pat •ent worn

out

Has found swee t rest a t l as t
Wh e n w m t e r 's co ld ft cak.

storm s
Halo'e p asse d an d Sp r rng
com es fr es h an d ra ' r
We w fll hum b ly kn ee l b tos1 d e
your g rav e
And pla ce our flow er s th e r e
Mr s R 1chard T ho m as an d
n i ece , Mary Ett e n Jo n es
7 1 11 p

•

Bashan
' News

Spending Father ' s Day
with Mr . and Mrs. Stanley
Trussell, were Mr . and Mrs.
Donald Trussell and Dawn of
Mt. Vernon, 0 ., Bob Trussell
of Reedsville R .D. and Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph Trussell and
children, local. Also vistting
tHem, recently were Mrs .
Mary Carson, Coolville, 0 .,
and Mrs. Millie Dill, daughter
Cindy and granddaughter ,
Lori, of Long Bottom R.D.
Cindy and Rocky Pitzer,
Terri Pullins, Renee Trussell,
Teena Beaver and the
counselor, Miss Mandie Rose
attended 4-H Camp at Can·
· ter's ~;,ave, Jackson, 0 from
Thursday IUitil Monday.
Mr. and Mrs . Vinton Jones
spent a recent weekend at
Detroit, Mich., guests of their
son, Duane and family.
The home of Don Mea9ows
of Bald Knobs was destroyed
by fire Tuesday. The Bashan
Volunteer Fire Dept., Chester
Fire Dept. and Racine Fire
Dept. were all called but the
fire was too much out of
control for them to save the
house .
Ernie Deeter's mother,
Mrs. Freda Deeter is very ill.
Her ~e is at Colwnbus, 0 .
Mary K. Holter, Mrs.
Sadie Trussell, Mrs. Dorothy
Lawson and Mrs. Margaret
Tuttle attended Lodge at
Syracuse, Thtirsday night.

Mrs:

La:urel Oiff
'News Notes
BY BERTHA PARKER
Sabbath School attendance
Jl!De 29 at the Free JVIethodist
Church was 83. Number of
persons attending worship
service was 66. Offering was
~.10, building fund was

$4l.ll.

Mobile Homes For Sale
1911 11x60COVE N TRY Mobd e

H o me \d 300 washe r an d
drye r cen t ral a1r , 7 bed r m
Roa d .
R uiNvil l c P o r te r
G aJ li pO I I~
Phone -l4fl 769!
7 1 41p

Notice

IN L O VIN G memo r y of my
dear srs t e r . N e tt rc Phr l lrps
who pas se d away Ju l y 1
1969

N OW sc l l1nq f. ut ter
B ru s h
Products
p h orw
99'1 ].1J O
1 2&lt;1 !fc
I L EI\ M,l rkcl o p e n We d
n cs d ,l y H1rouqh \und a y on
h' I 17 1 ~ ~ Cro&lt;;'".rOilds . tf1kes
b re &lt;tk l ac; t sets I nns q un .
nni 1QUf' S
Pho ne 7•17 496'11
7 1 .If c

Wanted ·
CAS H p .=t1 d tor a ll ma k es and
m odels of mo b ile h omes
Phon e area c ode 61 &lt;1 &lt;123
~5]1

c1

TH E Me1Q S Coun t y I 1Sh and
Ga m&lt;' Assn
W1ll mee t
W&lt;&gt;dnesday a t B p m at the
Coon H un te r s Cl ub or, Snow
R~l tl H 1ll
7 I 1! c

13

t~ c

Bl k
v tn y l top, red
s teer mg &amp; b r a k es

R UMMAGE Sa le 1n M1 d
dl epor t beS 1de Dr
n oo n
su e's Off 1c e f rom~ a m till 5

pm

7 1 2 1c

L ARGEya r dsa t eonot d RI 33
at Home r H yse ll r es1d ence ,
an d
Sa t u r da y
F r 1dt1Y
C urt .:Ji ns , c lo t h mq . diShes .
an t 1qu es an d nu m ero u s
ot h e r 1t erns L o o k fb r s1gns
7 1 3t c
SOMET HIN G f o r eve ryon e,
s o me il nt 1ques. c tot h1ng ,
d1 SI1 es. old p 1c tu re f r am es.
m 1SC 57 0 Gra nt St . M1d
d l cpo rt · Wed n esday a nd
T h ursday, 9 a rn to 4 p m
7 1 itc
3 F AM 1-L Y ya r d sate co r n er
Sl h and Ma1n Mi ddl epO r t .
We d nesda y an d T hu rs d &lt;;~ y
s t a rt mg a t 9 a m Se t a b e d .
ruqs . ro ta r y po w er mo w er
36 1n
doo r . pl us st or m
nn d
sc r een
w 1n d ow
c to th 1ng . 1n l an t s th rou gh
a d ults
' 7 1 21c
FA MIL Y
g ar age
S al e
Tu es day an d W edn es day
a cro s s
from
Br ad b ury
S!i= hOO I
7 \ 21t

Y A R D Sa l e at 1678 Lin co l n
H g t s All w ee k unt d Sat
aft er n oon
7 1 J tc
G A R A GE SALE. 1 rt1 1le from ..
ea s tla n on Co Rd 32 to war d
124 N ew an d u se d cl othing
an d otll er .,,,sc 1te m s J une
25th t hr u J uly 2
6 26 61 p
HU G E 5 fa m il y yard sale .
July 3. 4 and 5 Coll ectables.
baby item s. m1 sc , Frank
Hudson .
r e sid e n ce
•n
Ra c ine, acro ss from Ractne
rood Mark e t
6 29 51 p
6 F A MI LV Yard Sa le, July 1, 2
a nd 3 a t 711 South T h 1rd St
N ex t
to
Spe ed
Queen
Laundro m at , Middl eport 10
a m t d 1 dark Phon e 992
749 4
6 29 4tc

R EG lr 1sh Se i te r Pups . $65
Phon e 8 13 706 1
7 I ti l c

kenr--lfy
Contract Work

POMEROY, OHIO

NEED
s o meo n e t o
WE
r e pla ce a ma n wh o 1S
r e ltr i n g aft er 28 y ea rs w11t1
o ur c ompany T t'11S c on st sts
o f se rv1 ce and sa tes on a
loc al ~s labli s tl e d 1n suran ce
d eb1t
Mu s t own a c ar .
Sa l ary p l us c ommi ss ion s,
all fr•nge ben ef1t s If you ar e
t he r1 g ht p er son , your futur e
can be th e be st F or m or e
mformtlt 1on , send a brt ef
re s um e o f y ~ u rs elf to Bo x
All
672, Pom eroy , O h1 0
.nqu,n es c onf,d en t1 al
7 I •li e

For Rent
TR A ILER sp ace, a ll u t ~l1t res
c h eap Pho ne 99 2 5535
• ·
6 29 lf c
~~----~~

3

-

BEDRM
hou s e .
un
furn 1st1ed Also . J· furni s h ed
a pt Phone '1192 27 80 or 992

34 32.

6-2V ttc

1 and 2 b edrm mobi l e h om es.
depos 1l requ ,r ed Ptlon e 99 2
35 09
6 29 6t c
'F URNISHED
ap artment ,
adul t s only 1n Midd l epor t
Phone 9~2 38 74
3 25 -lfc

t96A (f,MfiRO
6 c y l ,n d c r
.l ut onl .JI• (
W olh
v e ry low
II I IIC.l q l · S800
Phone 997
't;Jj.9
6 77 6tc

CARPE Nf ~Y

WORK
Ce d 1n(J p ane l 1n g !l oor1n&lt;l
etc Phon e V'll2 7759
6 2·1 77tc

1?7 1 PINT O
0nq ,ne ne w
an(f pom ts .
mdes Phon e
'!771

W I LL take cnre o f ? pr 1va tc
P&lt;l llr&gt;n l s 1r1 my h Om(' Phone
69H 'i607
6 76 6t c

--

s p eed . 2000
valves . p lu gs
.H . OOO actua l
V97 72 80 o r 99?

TERRACE
An tiQU e
S hop
re t1r 1ng lr om bu stness A ll
rne r c handt se m s t oc k W1ll be
s oiM at a la r q e d1 sco unt
Te nac e
A nt -IQu es
l OB
Legion
T errace
Lee
Rud1 sil l
6 6 76 1p
C H ECK our pri ces , N ew s t ee l
t oe work b oo t s . le ath er
up pe r S1 6 95 $ 1~ 95. s 1zes 7
t o 14 N ew r eg t oe w ork
bo o ts . l ea th er upp er $ 15. 9.5
'i 17 9'5 s r zes 6 to t .t Men 's
useo wo rk c loth es . sh 1rt s
99 c . pa nts , $ 1 09 N ew s tor e
ho ur s. v oo to 5 00 Mon day
thr ough Sa tur da y
C l osed
Thursday a'ld Sun day
11
year s 1n th1 s l oc a t i o n ,
B a iley 's Bar ga 1n St o r e,
Midd le port
6 26 ~l p

_.GAr...,.

for I H C 300
ut ll lly
Good s hap e. new
hoses . Sj 5Q o r o ff er Phone
742 1786
7 1 4lp

Washer &amp; Drver
and
Appliance
Repair

PORTA-COOL TM
ROOM-to-ROOM

I'

NEIGLER
Building Supply
We Bu1ld - the Be51 .. and

Bed r ooms ,
1 1 ] ~ b a th s,
Sun deck Phon e 992 77 90
6 26 61c

40x85
Brick Building

I

Sales &amp; Service
992-3092

Chain
Precisi
Ground
Al so Repa1rs On All
R rd.ng TractC~rs
498 locust Sf
Mtddleport, Ohro
5 9 1mo
__

I

ON
CORNER LOT IN
POMEROY
Business Section
Phone 992-3975 or
992-5786

--------,

__;=:~

R &amp; S Ex cavat1n g, Bac k b oe
etn d l 1g h t h a utmg se rv 1ces
D ri Ve Way Sl aq d e ii Ve r P('I
P h on e ( 304 J 77 3 53.16 Of" 7 42
3664 day or even 1nq s
6 4 26 t c

potato es

D &amp; D TREE T r im m tn g , ~0
yea r s ex p ert en ce In su r ed .
fr ee es tima tes Cal l 991 3057,
Coo l v il le
P h on e ( l l 667

.

6 29 Jt c
1971 BL A ZER wtth r o l l bar
wh1t e s pok e whe e ls an d b 1g
'ti r es
Excell en t con d t1 ton
Phon e 712 .7473
6 29 61 c

FOR SALE

~ 0 .1 1

4 30 tf c

BY OWNER

CLA RINE T . v ery go oa con
d tt1on . 51 00 Phon e 985 4236
6 29 3t p

NE E O A n ew n o me b u t l t on
yo ur toP Con t act M rle B
Hu tC hi SOn . R u tl an d , O h 10
Ptlon e 742 36 15
5 8 tf c

Abo~ average, 6 room
house, 1 yr . old, g~rage,
near
mines,
utilities,
located on R:t. 124 west of
Rutland, 2 acres of ground .

25 0
CC
Y a m ah a
1971
Tra d bik e, 6500 mil es $450
Phone Ro g er K a rr , 98 5 353 8,
c a ll or c om e a ft e r 5 p m
6 ?V 4t p
ONE 3 pi ece blond e b edrm
su1te , $ 100 · Ca ll 8 432 111
Sunday or w eekdays aft er 7

Real Estate for Sale
1 72 ACR E 5 land . and lO CUSI
pos t s A l so 1965 For d L T O
Ptlon e 747 3656
5 73 52 tp

PH. 7424794

pm

rwo B EDR OOM h ouse f or
sale Phon e 985 4102
6 10 26 t c

6 29 3t c'
T WO · B EDRM
m odular ,
c arp e t ed . utiliti es pa 1d , no
c hildren o r p e t s
N ea r
Pom e roy . nic e l o ca t 1on
A vailabl e now P h one 99 2 ·
7666 or 99 '1 701 7
6 29 Jt c

.J

STORAGE BUILDfNG .-

GENERAL Repa1r . clean up
an d
tl au t.n g
cu ll1 ng.
weld 1n g.
·carpen tr y,
plu m b1n g , e t ec mas on r y
a n d gene r a l r e rn odel ~rHJ
Ca l l Sk d Pool
Ph on e 99 7
5 126
6 17 ttc

R OOF I NG,
S pou tlf\g
al u m1n u m an d v1 n y l S1 d1n g .
c omp l ete
r emodel 1n g
P h on e 742 6273
6 25 'l61p
R O N ::,·h ep ar d Contr a c t 1n g a nd
R emode lmg Serv1 ce Wh o l e
hou se
re mod el t n g ,
k il c h en and
Sp ec 1a l lte s b ath Phon e (3 04 J 773 53 .:1 6 or
'742 3664 d a y or eve n 1n g
6 4 26 t c
S E PTI C i A N KS CLE A N E D
R easonab l e RA T E S P h on e
-14 6 4782 Ga tt ,p of , s
Joh n
R usse t t. own er
&lt;1 9 tf c
H UU :c. t: an d r oof p a 1n T1 n g a n d
r epa 1r s F or 1r ee es tt m at es.
ca ll 992 61 VO or 9n 5837
6 15 26 t c
~

_-=..:::::-_--=

~-

S EPT I C T A NK S c l ea n e d
M od ern Sa n rt at i on 99 2 39 5-l
or 997 7).19
9 18 •fc

in Middleport. one V'.!ith 4
apartments and business

ntce k1tchen-w range. some

room

concrete patio , nice large

.

2 FAMILY HOME -

Reduced

11 rooms , nat .

for a real buy

ga s, c1ty water. Lot 100'xl 00 '

3__7_!!.::

WilL TRADE - I' or camper,
mobile home, oickuo, boat or
what have you, that doesn ' t
eat. ·

NEW LISTING - On ·Rt . 33.2
bedrooms, bath, 2 p(,rches,
and yard.
'

POMEROY BUSINESS good

locati on

on

the

In

upper

block
. BUILDING LOTS -.., Several
locations for houses or mobile

hom es $1 500 00 up .

..

iHERaTAU~

OSCAR ...

DIDN'I 'IOU, DOC?

.

....,
7· I

DOZ E R w ork , land c l eann·g
by the acr e, hourly or
co ntr ac t
F ar m
p o nd s,
r oads , e t c Large do zer "and
oper a tor wit h over 20 y ears
Pullms Ex
e xpe r 1e n ce
~ a vatt ng.
Pom eoJ , Oh10
Ptlon e V92 2&lt;1 78
12 19 tfc

POMEROY - HERE IS A
DILLY .69 acre . 4

"'---""

UL ABNER

6ET THAI&lt;

WIW BLUE YONDGR.f!'

.
Cra1g

has 3 BR, own water
syst&lt;lm. barn and other
bulld lhgs, • cellar . house,
l-3, 500 down balan ce like
rent . -~!_al $17.500.
LIKE N. FISH? Close to

.

acre grcound . LOOK JUST
' $4.700.
MANY
OTHER
PROPERTIES
TO
CHOOSE FROM - WHY
WAIT AND PAY MORE
NEXT
YEAR . CALL
TODAY..
•
CALL 992 .2259

J

WHY, YES .. ~
GUESS YOU
COULD CALL

IT "THAT'

'

'·

.

'

2 J()- Ooc tors 3.4. 15. Bog Showdown 6.13; Edge o,f
No ght 8. 10. Saqa of Weslern Man 33.
3:oo-Anolher World 3,4,15. General Hospital 6,13 :
Price Is Right 8, 10; Music of the People 20.
3 . 3~ne Life to Live 13; Lucy Show 6; Malch Game
8,10; The Way It Was 20: Erica J:l..
15 ; Gilligan 's Is. 6, Musical Chairs 8 Sesame St.
20,33: Mov ie " The Night of lhe Grizzly" 10; Mike
Gouglas 13.
4 3()-Bewllched 3; Merv Gritfln 4; · Mod Squad 6 ;
Mickey Mouse Club 8, Bonanza 15:..
s :oo-FBI 3: Lucy Show 8; Mlsler Rogres' Nelqh.
borhood 20.33; lron so de 13 . Andy Grl ff llh 8. Gel
Smart 15; Elec Co. 20,33 .
6 : 0Q-New~ 3,4,8,10, 13,)5; ABC News 6; Sesame St . 20;
You Owe II To Yourself 33
6:3()-NBC News 3,4,1S : ABC News 13; Bewllched 6.
CBS News 8, 10 ; Jody's Body Shop 33
7 oo-Trulh orCons 3,4; Bowling lor Dollars 6; What's
My Line 8; News 10 ; Country Music Jubilee 13 ; Ph il
Donahue 15: Feeling Good 20: The Romagnolls
Tabi• 33
7 ~Pollee Surgeon 3, Name That Tune 4; Let's
Make a Deal 6, Wilburn Brothers 8; Book Beat ; 20;
To Tell lhe Truth 13: EpiSode ActiOI}33.
8·0Q-Little House on lhe Prairie 3,4; Thal's.My Mama
6, 13 ; Baseball 15, Tony Orlando 8, 10; The Many
Faces of Love 20; Voices at Eastern Kentucky 33 .
8:3()-Movle " The Great Niagara" 6.13 ; The ShadOw
Catcher 20; Another Look at Appalachia 33.
9 oo-Lucas Tanner 3,4, Cannon 8, 10; Masterpiece
Theatre 33 .
IO :oo-Petrocelll3.4: Baretta 6.13; Mannix 8; Alaska ' s
Inside Passage 10: News 20:' Famlly at War 33.
10 :3()-Pelrocelli 15
n .oo-News 3,4,6.8.10.13.15; ABC News 33
11 ·3()-Johnny Carson 3.4,15: Wide World Special 13:
FBI 6; Movie " Mr lnslde.Mr Outside" 8; Movie
" Inhe rit lhe Wind" 10; Janaki 33
12 :3()-Wide World Spec1al 6.

Yesterday's Answer
21 Ottoman
31 Related
official
33 Taro root
.22 Pretense
34 North
23 Slippery
Carolina
24·Whacked
college
the ball
35 Sheer
in vain
36 - Calloway
(2 wds.)
37 Have
25 Oriental
debts
38 Cable 39 Japanese
river

1 · ~ Tomorrow

AstroGrapt:l
~

lhyph.

Yo u II be luck y today w 1th
soc1 a l c ontac t s b ut y o u c ould
gene r ate s par ks W f th a
bu s1ness assoc1a te o r on t he
hom e f ron l

~~~t

4o
41 English
royal
family
42 .. Games
People
Play"
author
t3 Expiate

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Id eas o t he r s tr y t o tm p ose
u pon you to day a ren ' t
necessarily tn yo ur b est tntere s ts Do th1 ng s t h e w ay y ou
feel the y should be d o ne

GEMINI CMay 21-Ju.oe 20)
how to work
AX ·YDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

Contmue to t re at you r p urse
wtlh re s p e c t t o da y.
Stay
a br eas t o f you r cur rent
o bl tgatJons. A void m ak rng new
o nes .

it:

.

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's. etc. Sin1le letters,
apostrop!)es, the length and formation of the words are all
hints . Each dal'_tlle code letters are different.

QFBCD

VA.

ZBCL

.. WHEN HE 61T5
CARRIED
AY

~amsey,

UMB
WPB

THE 6115 15
GOING TO

LEAVE ...

WMPO F.M. 92.1 :6:00-10:00
-WMPO A.M. 1390 6:00-7:60
'.I

.

..,

EBM

CANt::ER (June li-July 22)
You II fa r e b ett e r in c ommer ctal
d ea ttngs to d ay 1f yo u bar t hose
w ho hav e no b u s rne ss be i ng
t h e re D ea l ont y w 1th th os e mvo lve ct

XPU

LEO (July 23· AUII. 221 Though

CML

you r m o tr ve s w tll b e ho no rab le
tod ay , one who ltk es ·to ma ke
proble m s w tll try to d rst ort your
1 n ~ en t

MBXQFCF .BZQ

-MVBWRQNPB
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: IT IS HUMAN NATURE TO TI1INK
WISELY AND TO ACT IN AN A!lliURD . FASHIOif. ANATOLE FRANCE
(C 117$ Kina Faaturn S~l'dialc, 1M. )

JOE, I THINK

Mo!;.ning Radio ·

uo

YCMJGCJB

QCEB

' '
' '

·· f

'.
l

"'

·~

'"

'

......"
·v
.\

•
•

•

ow

"

...
. nl

,,,

""

.,.
0

(

I I~

..

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-·
'

··~

'"

..

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Ol' )
1) 11

.,
I

o

ARIES CMarch 21-Aprll 19)

JZUG F

,,'

3,4; News 13.

Bernice Bede Oaol

c

,

4 QO---Mr . Cartoon 3 , I Dream of Jeannie 4; Somerset

For Wednesday, July 2, 1975

MCWVUM:

LISTEN lNG TO
.
.

•

W a,y . I t was 33

CJlYPTilQuon:s

Great Country
'
)

~~~rp

Is

YOU'RE
MISSING
'
.

own water system, about 1

seHn ; 1f he doe"n 1 you w1ll sttll
have a good play. Bid seven hearts

by THOMAS JOSEPH

U.;;;&gt;UI-'11..

BUT
WHO .. ??

'

river , large home with nice

A · If

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

IF YOU'RE NOT

laying grmmd ,,,creek, home,

do now"

7(

.•

DEXT,ER- 30 acres, nice

vou

r ec omm end th at a reverse bid H you feel hke gambling

:IREATM~T:-___,.~a

MA·S ON FURNITURE
MASON,

P ass
6 t
So lh h ld

4NT
5N T

c:::::=::~-~~LJE~T~SCM~V\is~3Ri~~'--:Z::i[......,\]"jp.,~H~'LLLU1~A~K&lt;iE.~YI~D)''11Cto0}f'FF~IN~E~S~T=J:l32 ~:::~~~r
BLOW M~ OFF INTO •u.=
AMERICAN HOS PITAL , AN' YO'LL 36 Rooster

At..

773-5592

Pt~s s

Pass

o; ·..; J"915 °• A K Q J 4 "'A 2

ACROSS
DOWN
1 Italian
I "- the
city
Knife"
6 Outmoded
2 Court star
11 Daisylike
3- Kenton
flower
4 Verdict
12 Slur
5 Work of' over
6 Deterioration
13 " Reynard
7 Confederate
the Fox"
8 Kinship
rooster
9 Ending for
IS Superman's s~mp or
byline
imp
16 Negative
10 "- Bingle"
(Crosby
She's -l:ellinq us he
17
nickname)
19 Stripling
uses them to juqql~!
14 Habitual
22 Sub's
18 Indian mail
nemesis
19 California
24 Mining.
city
find
20- pinch of
25 Fowl
salt ( 2 wds. )
27 Salubrious
28 Old
Greek
colony
29 Poet
""..
Lowell
~
'
30 .. Green
Gables"
0
~~
;,....,~~
""'~
girl
31 Brewery

F

I

tO a n ea rlie r bid SUit at the
lo w es t p oss ibl e level We

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

yard for the k1ds . JUST

South

h ld th
e
W e dehne 1t as an y b1d of a
your par 1ner 0 5
new s uit that shuts out a return queen o! hearts )ou. will be ~old r?r

!

M A CHINE.
S EW IN G
Re pa1r s. se r v i ce , .all make s.
992 228J T h e F abr ic Shop ,
Po m er oy A uthori zed Singer
Sates a nd . Se r v1c e
We
sh a r pen Sc1ssor s
3 29 lfc

$9,500.

3¥
5¥

What do

know JU St what a reverse b1d IS .

... SLOW DOWN , MA~KO.' ~AI LOOKS

'!liS, I CAUGHT
HIM AI HOM!:,

Sale Now
In Progress

garage , storage building,

ARE
YOU
H)IVING
TRQUBLE SELLING? SAVE
MONEY AND TIME.

'oOU CAUI:D
P£l'I:2SON l'1iPM

Bu il d an all steel bu tlding at
P o l e e arn prtces '? Golden
Gia nt Al l Steel Buildings ,
Rt
4, Box 148, W a verly ,
O h1o Phon e 94 '&amp; 2296
6 24 -26tc

carpeting,· full basement,

t:ast

ALLEY OOP

Anniversary
Mattress

R., 2 cr. garage, part
basemen , F.A. heat; part
basement, lots of trull trees
( bear.ing). 520,000.

Pass
Pass
In the languadge of b&lt;ds a Pass
rever se b1d shoul always show y
e xtra stre ngth . More &lt;mportant • 2

Hysell'~

ELWOO D B O WER SREPAIR
Swee p er s. toasters . irons ,
a l l sm all ap p lt ances Lawn
m ower , n ext to Slate Hrgh
way Ga rag e on Rout e 7
Phone 985 3825
READY M I X CONC~ETE e
4-16 tfc
de l! vered r 1gh t to your
p r otect Fas t and easy F re€
W I LL TRIM or cu t tree-s and
es t 1mates P hone 992 3284
sh ru b b ery and paint roofs
Goeg lem R ea d y M1x Co ,
P h one 949 -3221 or 742 4441
N'H d d l ep ort. Oh1 0
6-24-26tp
6 30 tt c'

.bedrooms, bath, kitchen
has l ots of ~Cabinets~ r~f ­
range , dintng area , utility

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

J

5·2·S2tp
-------- - - -- - WOU L D YOU BELIEVE?

POMEROY
VALUE
PLUS. - 3 bedrooms, bath,

Nprth

by ope ne r be a one-round for ce
TODAY 'S QUESTION
a nd g u a rant ee at l east 16 Y ou hol d 01e same h and Eas t
po mts. a reverse by responder opens one spade. Wh a t d o yo u do?
be a game force and show at
Answer Tomorrow
lea st 13 pomts For the rest of -=----:---:---:-:-: --:-::c::-::thl s week we Will show reverse Send $1 lor JACOBY MODERN
bid s a t w o rk
book to. "Win at Bridge,·· (c/o this
Soulh s two- heart btd was a newspaper), P 0 Box 489. Rad10
class 1c reverse call North CllySiafion, Now Yolk . NY 10019

992·7121

,0

i

1¥

you and your partfler s~ould

WAV· A BILLION "'I:A~ S ... GOON1.'1' ll-IE EBB "flOE OF LIFE
BEFORE- CV&lt;;I..ES Wrf\.I!N
CYCLES - HAf WI-IV, SCIEN CE TO DAY
HAS ONLY TOUCHED 1\-IE EP6E
or: E'II:ISTENCE- UP- uP WE MUS T
&amp;0 Wrrl-1 n!E T IDE -

SEALY

stori es with parking and 3 car
garage to rent , near the T in

) BUS.INESS Bl11LDINGS - 2

,_'

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-MAYBE SHE'S SEASICK

lOader - · - - -- - - . _S_·_I4~
~ 1 _m_o_. .J.
and ba c khoe work
sept1c
Dozer ,
tanks ¥s t al)e d .
dump EXCAV ATIN G,
Back h oe, dllc her , water
tr u cks an d lo boys f or h tre .
l1nes , fo ote r s, d rains , roads
w d l hau l fil l dtrl. t op soil .
an d br ush c teantn g. No 10b
l1mes tone an d grave l, Call
t oo sma ll , no weather t oo
Bob or R oger Je ll e r s , day
b ad
P h on e C tl arles R .
ptlon e 992 7089 , n tght phone
H a tf 1e ld , R t
1, - Rutland ,
992 3515 or 992 5232
Oh 10 Phon e 74'2 6092 2 11 tfc

-- ::;_-- _-:__,..- -=--

~

.

6 : 0Q--Sunrlse Seminar ; Summer Semester 10.

~

~----------~~-----J 9 ~----------~1..-----~

Phone 992 -568:1 or

2

Middleport .

'

We st

"'

6: 25-Farm Report 13 .
6.3()-F ive Mlnufes to Live By 4: News 6; Bible An
swers 8: Sc hool Scene 10 ; The Story 13.
6 : 35-Col~mbus Today 4
~ornlng Reporl 3; Farmtlme 10.
7 00- Toda y 3 4.15. AM Amen ca 6, 13 ; CBS News 8,10 .
8 OQ- Lassle 6: Capt J&lt;,angaroo 8: Schoolles 10,
Sesame Sl . 33
8: 3()-Big Valley 6, Popeye 10
8: 55-Chuck Whole Reports 10.
9·0Q-A M 3; Phil Donahue 4; Muriel Slevens 8.; Capl .
Kangaroo 10; Morning wlfh O.J .•13.
9: 3()-Not For Women Only 3i Dinah 6; Galloping
Gourmet 8; New Zoo Revue 1·3.
•
10 OQ-Celebrlty Sweeps lakes 3.4.15; , SpJn.Off 8, 10;
Dinah 13 ; Jody' s Body Shop 33 . .
10 ·3()-Wheel of Fortune 3,4, 15, Gambll 8,10, French
Chef 33
·
II ·OQ-H igh Rollers 3,4, 15, One Lite to Live 6; Tat
tletales 8, 10 ; Flower Show 9.
~.
II · 3o-H611ywood Squares 3,6, 15'; Brady Bunch 13 ;
Midday 4: Love of Lite 8, 10.
II : 55-Take Kerr 8; Dan Imel's World IQ.
12 ·0Q-Jackpot 3, 15 ; Showoffs 13 ; Bob Braun' s 50.50
Club 4, News 8. 10; Mister Rogers 33 .
12 :3()-Biank Check 3,15; All My Children 6,13; Search
for Tomorrow 8, 10; Elec. Co. 33 .
12 ·55-NBC News 3,15
1 OQ-News 3: Phil Donahue 8; Young &amp; lhe Restless
10; Not For Women Only 15; VIlla Alegre 33 ..
1. 3o-Davs ol Our Lives 3,4, 15; Lei's Make a Deal 6, 13;
As. th e W o rl d Tu rn s 8, 10, F o lk G -u 1tar 33.
2 00- SI O.OOO Py ra m od 6.13. Gu iding Li ghl 8.10, !he

South

The b1ddmg ha s been

33

WEDNESDAY, JULY 2, 1975

of d ubs. ruffed a club. pla yed
dummy·s kmg a nd Jac k of
hearts a nd ove rtook with has
queen afte r East pla yed the 10
The n he ruffed hiS la st d1 a·
mond . played ace a nd a noth e r
spade . ruffed 1t. d rew the lnsl
trump . a nd mad e 'the la st two
tncks w1th small clubs

Ope mng lead - Q •

'

J

1:00- Torrlo rrow 3, 4 , N e w s 13

th e second onr cashed ace- kmg

Pass
Pass
Pass

P tbS

,

•.•

Automobile
Transmission
Repair

-

F I SH I NG li ce ns e. Can-adi an
N1t e craw l er s . 60c doz . bug
worm s. 3 do z . $1. Othe r bart ,
tackle. guns. ammo , cb 's,
tnd 1an Joe 's
Sport s
308
Page St , Phon e 992 ·3509
7 1 26t c
A - -- - - - - - - - - - - - 12FT A LUMINUM Jo·hn Bq at
wtlh 3 1 1 h p gas , motor and
e tec m o tor Phon e 742 3631
7 1 Jlp

1

PAAAOOID,
l.f\'1 80·/t

and

J

•:ast

North

P c~ ss
P a ~s

TAAT'S_,

Garage

:J -7 I 111 0.

K 542

-'

I
II :OQ- News 3 ,~ .6 . 8 . 10. 13, 15; ABC News 3j\.
I
II J()-Johnny Carson 3.~ . 15, Wide World Myslery 13 ; ,.
F Bl 6, Mov ie " The Dunw lch Horror" 8; Movie
'
" Ride the High Country" 10 ; Janak! 33 .
" ''
12 ·3()- W,de World Mystery 6

'I()) I

E~~/\-V ~~ (~~-~~ze r .

.•

FOR SALE!

Roger

.,

Call Biliiore 7:30A.M.
Dr lfier 6:00P.M.
949·3604

WILKINSON
SMALL ENGINE

3

Wt'S I

5-8·1 mo .

Racine, Ohio
Reparr the Rest.

SOUTH 10 (

l\1\tJI&lt; PW!'tf
t:Ql'T t..II&lt;E

UTTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

John St., Next TQ
Grade School
992 -2549 Syracuse, 0.

• 10 5
t K 142
... Q 106

Nor th South vul ner aloJie

BEAUlY SALON

I

¥ 963

ponents· card s we re di v&lt;ded He
du cked the ftrs l dwmond wo n

"' t\

lOLA'S

Pomeroy

Ph . 992 -'2174

to the ve r y even way h1s op-

'{OJR W1XQ£
IS 'OJ

Cosmetics

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

~; A S T

• Q J 91

• 11 .1 105
A .I 9 7

"·
'

Barnaby Jones 10; N e w s 20 .

A K 10 5

BORN LOSER

Merle Norman

"'

10 3()-Pollllcal Ta lk 3,4, IS, Monty Pylhon' s Flying

w~; sr

A "l
¥A Q H 4
• i\ 9 6

F rom
Tru ck or
,B ulldoz er Rad1ator to t h e
sma l le s t Hea-ter Core ~;;

Nathan Biggs
Radtafor Specialrst

... 8 3

GOI NG TO PAY
FOR THI S !

Middleport
5-30·1 mo.

'
fh e· far g est

992-3313

1

327 N. 2nd

'

Phone

Real
Estate
for Sale
N EW H OME 1 ~ a c r es.

• R3

GOL DEN GEEK5

Free Estimates
PH . 992 -2550

- Cabinets lnsta lied-

+-----------6-·1_
8-_l_
m_o_
.~

• K J, i 2

TI ME TO 6 ET
MY PAW S ON
FRUB)' - 5 UT THAT

Construction
and Plumbing

1 EXPERIE.t4CED
,.. "
Radlato
I
-:--.'
Service

sne

R eg 159 95
I ) 9 Q5
4. 000B T U
On ly l) l b
Hh er mode l s
on sale

I

55 1 m o

BARGAI N S
ar e
ou r
m1d dl e n a m e" 1n clean
use d
t u rn 1 tu r e ,
GUARA N TEED
ap
p lta n ce~ &amp; new f ur ni t u r e
Op en 9· !» W ed through Sun
Ph
667 38 58
s 15 1 mo

~ON l

C H EV R O LE T 1963 Em pata
H d tp . 6 c yl , s t an dard
lr an s rn 1SS 10n 20 M P G $27·5
P h on e 992 7826
6 29 ] l p
r i!d10 .
modern
S T ER E O
des1g n . B tra c k ra p e . A M F M
ra d 10 com b,n at1on Ba t .:~nce
$ 102 9'11 o r t erms Ca l l 997
3965
6 25 !f c

Room Acklltlont

lt t\ 81) 4 3

'

IT MAY

ALL-WEATHER
ROOFING

Home Bulldl"''t

.j

wou ld have to re tu r n V' r lub s at
the th ree level 1f he wa nted to
bid clubs As 1t was. No r th b1d
three hea rt s ~tn d Sout h se ttt ('d
fo r ga me
li e m~maged to ma ke sax due

NOR TH

TA KE' A LON G

..

19 OQ-Mar cv s We lby . M. D 6, 13; Oral Roberls Be

.'

n I WP ~ tPrn M~n 11 -

You·v E A
YOU JLIMP
WHEN
TOlD!

r-

••

l

&gt;

Reverse moves contract ahead

WHIC H
ME AN S
C HA N CE TQ
-';UICVIVE•.. IF

Siding
Roofing
Home
Complete
Maintenance

Ph. 915-4102

" AI Cautrori L•ght "
Rt 7 , Tupp e r s Plain ~, 0

For
Sale
r
l oader

CAPTAIN E'ASY: YO!J.LL
S EE WE' FtE APPROA CH·
IN6 A SPIT OF LAN D!

•
"l

f·

Mu sic In Brass 33
.
•
7·3()-Hollywood Squares 3, ~ ; Public Affalrs ·6; Buck
Owens 8; New Price ·Is Right 10; To Tell The Truth
13 : Car and Track 15 , One 01 A Kind 20; Car Careo
33
B:OQ-Movle " Shadow In the Street" 3.~ ; Happy Days
6, 13; Baseball15: Good Times 8,10: The Way II Was
20,33.
·
8 3()-Movle " A Cry For Help" 13 : Mov ie "The Monk "
• · 6: M·A- S·H 8,10: World Press 20: Nova 33.
9 .0Q-Hawall F ive 0 8, 10.
9 3()- Pollc e Story 3; Oral Roberts 4; ~oman 20; Saga

Circ u s

\WE DO:

Chesttr, Ohio

~ 13; Ameri can Lite Style 15; Antiques 20; New

TUE'SDAY , JULY 1, 1975
4' JU- I! ewlched 3; Merv Gr iff in 4: Mod Squad 6.
M1 ckey Mouse Club 8; Bonanza 15.
5 OQ-FBI 3; Luc y Show 8; ' Mi ster Roger s' Nei gh ·
l&gt;orhood 20,33:' Irons ide 13
s : J()-1Ww•6: Andy Grlllllh B. Ge l Smarl 15: El ec frlc
Company 20,33.
6.0Q- News 3,4,8,10, 13, 15, ABC New s 6: Sesa me Street .
20: Catch·33 33 .
6· 3()-NBC News 3,4,15: AB C News 13 ; Bewitched 6:
CBS News 8,10; Lilias, Yooa and You 33
7·0Q-Truth or Consequences 3.~ : Bowling for Dollars

WIN AT BRIDGE

TAKE A NOTHE' I&lt;. LOOk •

your
holhe.
ooes
require any of these
I services?

Canstrumon Co.

On atumtnum r eplacem e nt
wtndows, Stdrng .· storm
doors. and wtndows . ratltng .
phon e
Charles
L1 s t e,
Syracu se,
Ohto
Carl
Jacob , Sale s Repr e Hn lattv e

KUHl'S
BARGAIN CENTER

1967 1 O R O convcrh b l e , q ood
c ar
~100
Phone 997 530 1
6 29 5t c

LA R GE ca bm t ent W1ll'1 f l oo r
A l so . 5000 BT U a c 1 sm al l
re f r ,qe r a tor
PhOn(&gt; 99 7
7 -19·1
6 29 61 (

ffiR FREE
ESTIMATES

I

1Q67
D O DGE
Van .
qood
c ond1 t 1o n SA50 Phon e 985
] 59 ·1
6 19 7t p

I ll r

- .- - - - - - - - .

T elevis~on ·log ' for· eas_y viewing ·

• 6 i What' s Mv Line? 8; N e w s 10; _Name ~_!?
• at T u n e

Free Estimates
Phone 949-5961
Emergency 949-2211
or 992-5700
n 7S

992.2478

V. V. JOHNSON
AND SON, INC.

6 ?V Jt p

REMODEL IN G .
P tumb1 n g,
h eat,hg and al l types o l
ge n e r a l
re p a1 r
Work.
g u a ra nJee d
20 y ea r s ex
pe r1•ence
Ph on e 991 2-109

C A B B A GE
and
Phon e 8·13 2&lt;t95

9R\ -17/1

7 1 6t c

W I LL 00 Odd tobs p ai nll nq .
hau l 1n q
a nd
r oo l 1n Q ,
rnow1nq Call 997 7.109
6 25 6tc

1\ P T l•ke new , 3 room s Wtlh
la r g e bath , tabletop r an g e ,
large closet E as t M a in St ,
Pomeroy See t o a pp re ctate
Phon e Gat1 1po l,s du r m g d a y ,
· 446 7699; evenmgs 446 VSJ9
«~ IU t tc
. . .
5 RM
f urntshed apt
1n 8 H P RIDING lawn m o w er
M1ddl e port
Wa s h e r and . $200 P h on e 985 .4 245 7-1 5tc
d ry e r , u t i l tf i es pa1d Phon e
99 2 2676
HOME grown sw ee t c orn ,
tomQ t o es,
c a b ba ge,
----~--~-- .!
c u c u mbers and s qva s h
12 x 52 2 B EDR M t r ail er , r ea l
J a l}l CS Hil l, L e tart, Oliio
n1 ce P tl on e 9'117 3324
7 1 .lit e
•
6' 19 tf c
--~ -· ~ -.....!--------·
~- - - .
STAR CRAFT trave l trailer s
'"TKAILER space. 1 rfi tl e froiii
and
fold downs , Sth
An .
Porn eroy. .Phone 992 58 58
n1versa r y Sale . Clos ed July
5 2 tfc
4 , 5. and 6. Camp Co nl e y
Starcraft Sale s, Rt 62 N of
Pt Pl e asant , w v a
Tw o houses ·tn Po me r'oy , 210
7 1 3tc
a n d 212 Condor St . Call 99 2
2659
B
e x c e ll ent
6 18 12tp MO B ILE C
c on d1f10n Pa ce 2376 A , S100
..---- B rand n ew super scann e r
·1 RM d pl wtt h wall to wa l l
base ant enna , never been
ca r pet. 1 0~ Sprtng A v e .
· out of box , S100 A lso 3 spe ed
Pome roy ( all 99 2 5908
s td t ransm i SS IOn . e xc ert en.t
6 22 lf c
c ondtt1on : For a 1971 to 1973
Vega , sso. Phone 992 -5213 or
Home
C O U NTR Y M obil e
se e 'at 111 Pearl St , M1d
Park Rt 33, ten m il es north
dl epo rt, Oh io
of Pomero y ~a r ge lo ts w tth
7 1 41p
c Orlo(rete patios , Sid ewalks ,
runn er s and off s tre e t
REG A ngu s h e tf e r s. br ed or
p arking Phon e 9V'2 7A7 9
o p en Call B il l Witt e , Ro c k
12 3 1 lfc
~ pr 1 nQ s . V9 2 2789
'
·
7 1 6tc
r t· R N apt 5 room s and bath ,
n rce larg e y ard . bath a nd 1 .,
1974 G M C 6 c yl tr uc k w i th
390
S.outh
s eco o d
st .
c amp er top and new ft r e s .
M (dd le p o ft. ad u l ts only
E x.c e ll .cnt cond i t ion . S2. 9QO.
Ph on e 9V 2 ,526'2 even 1ngs
..
Ph one 985 4745 '
'· ? 1 tt c '
7 1 Stc

-

c &lt;111

C~ lt r-r

Help Wanted

P ART
T tME
P e r ma n ent
l o c al
w o rk
chec kt ng
se r1 a i1Z ed i n v en t ory a t re t a il
s t o re s
l or
m a1or
rnanu l ac t ure r s
No
tn
vestment
lnven c he k
Box
76680, A tlan t a . GA 30328
6 19 3t p

.

T OYO TA
6 p n,

19~9

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

Oh10

!

A1r c ondt1ioning , plumbing , h e al1ng , roofrng,
spouttng , general Jheet
m etal work .

4 10 I mo

- - -- - - -

Employment Wanted

&amp;

Seohc Tanks lnstalleCI

Ph 991.3993

co. ® I

POME~~~ E~~.~~~

For Sale

H O U SEK E EP E R , miJ SI l 1ve
,n , far m hom e If tn l e r es t ed.
w rtt e t o Mr
Holl1 e E
Rt
Box 11.1.
Sta rc her
Portland , Oh1 0 J57 70
6 25 121 p

Syracu s e,

Hour

R egula r and
E J:Ca valor Type

LARRY lAVE~DER

S229S

U SED me t al ft Sh1nq bo at , 11
ft Ptl on e 992 5535
6 29 li e O N E Wcs t ,ngnouse roaj)t c r
w il h cab and c lock P ttonc
O LD fu r n ll ur e,
1ce b oxes,
V91 2267
bra ss b ed s, or c ompl e t e
6 29 3tc
ho useh old s
Wrde M
D
Mi ll e r , Rt
4 , Pome ro y . 1V71 350 V John D ee r e doze r . 6
O hto Cal l 9V2 J760
tt
b l a d e , c anopy
and
I0 7 74
d r awbar
D1ese l enq 1n e .
q ood cond1110 n 'li6 500 PhoiH•
9B5 35 94
fl 29 7lp

-------·-------

~

i ii9S

XL T T n m, P s teert ng w h tte wa ll ti res, ra d io , li ke n ew
w w ltr es . ch r ome b um per s a nd whee l t rtm Clea n

5

G A R AG E SA LE S. T uesday ,
W edn esday and Thursday
from 9 a m
I ti l 5 p m , 6 RM ap t , $85 p er m onttl
lnqu ,r e a t Blu e a nd G r e y
Min e rsville . on Dutchtown '
7 1 4tp
Ht\1 Nic e cloth ing in c ludmg
e x tra large work uniforms
and women 's c lothing , rugs , 3 BEDRM 65x1 2 m obile hom e
for rent. ut111t 1e s. pa 1d ,
b e dspr ea d s, stl e et s, c ur
loca t ed tn Burl 1ngham Call
1atn s, dt s h es and other
992 77 51
.
art1 cl es too num erous to
7 I IIC::
m ent1on
6 30 3tc
TWO b edrm
modular . car
peted , utd t ties paid . no
YAR D SA LE . e v ery Thurs
chtldren or pe t s . N e ar
day . Fr 1d ay an d Saturday ,
Pome r oy , n tce location
qu a rt e r
m il e
from
Availabl e now Ph on e 99 2
L a ng sv ill e off D ex te r Road .
7666 or 99 2 7Q 17
Fo ttow t h e st gn s Phone 74 2
6273
7 I Jlp
6 25 tfc
3 A ND 4 ROOM turn1 sh ed and
unfurn ts tled
ap artm ents
L ARGE
Y a rd
Sa l e,
50.J
Pho ne 9'111 5434
Broa d w a y ,
Middl e port
4 12 t fc
M ond a y thr o u g h W e d s ..
St.!i r t1n g a t 10 a m
6 29.Jtc PRIV AT E mee tin g room fo r
an y organ•za t1 on phon e 992
' 397 5
3 11 lfc

Rev. and Mrs. Floyd Shook
left Tuesday for 10 days cam\&gt;
meeting at Mansfield.
Rev. Cecil Wise will be
A thought for the day :
prea&lt;:hing the next two Horace, the Roman poet,
Sundays in absence of Mr. said, "He has h;ill the dee!~
Shook: Robel-! Barton 1"ill dol¥), who has made the
have charge of the evening
beginning ."
services.
Rev. Shook, Mr. Steve
Eblin, daughter Becky attended services early Sunday
morning at Royal Oak Park.
Mr. and Mfs. Phill Wise,
Mr . and Mrs. Guy Mut Athens,
visited
McConnelsville, Mr. Ira Wolf, chler,
~utland, · attended worship
recently with Mrs. Nellie
service Sunday morning at Tracy.
the local church.
Mrs. · Georgia Giehl, Mr.
Mr. · Wyatt
Schaefer , Charles Diehl called on Mr .
Marlon, spent several days and Mrs : Walter Heilmah,
with his father, Mr. Norman · Ball RJIII, and Mr. and Mrs .
Schaefer, and visited his Orril Allen , Honer Hill.
mother, Mrs. Schaefer, a . ..,Rev.andMrs. Floyd Shook,
patient at Veterans Memorial · Mr. and Mrs. Cliff Jacobs
Hoepltal. · , .
attended a reception for Mr.
'1fr .
Alston
Tracy, and Mrs. Harry Bates,
Columbus, ,v isited recently Akron .. on Saturday.
,, wi!lfhls mother, Mrs . Nellie
Mr. H\18h Leifheit caught
'fracy.
•
. his arm ' in farm machinery
Mr1. deorgla Di~hl and . Saturday. He was taken by
Charles · · Anthony .Diehl his • sister, Mrs . Isabel
vilited recently with Mr. and Winebtenn.e r to " Holzer
Mn. ·~ Foglesong, ' Mill· Medical C~nter. He was
lleld.
_,
treatell 81\d released .

FOr

1nto Walls &amp; AHies
STORM
WINDOWS&amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING-SOFFITT
GUTTERS -AWNINGS

power

1969 CHEVY NOVA: 4 DR

Wanted To Buy

Yard Sale

au toma t tc.

Plumbing
J RacineHeating
HElL

j!ACKHOES

Blown
Insulation Services

i99S

v e.

l tnt sh.

•

Pets For Sale

tOR you r
' O il o f Mm k ·
Cosme t1 cs
-Ptl o n e BOS T O N T err1 er ma l e p up s
1\ K c bla d.. \17 5 Phone 992
BRO'I.~N 'S 992 5 11 3
7680
1 7 If €
6 19 41c

2

1968 CHEV IMPALA CPE

1972 FORD •:a" PICKUP

t,t l N\

GUTIER

An•wer! A hohhy fn rt&gt;p(•r,;~o n rrh o 's U'll ll rII (J fo r· fw11 k 1 t1

In Memory

I .ttp

For Rent or Sale
.,

(An••,.r• lo morruw.

TRICKV

FREE ESTIMATES .

6 cy l , a ut om a f tc t r il n s, c lea n tnle rt or. g ood tir es, ~
r a di o. New pa tnt

Now arranre the circled lttten
to form the surprise answer, as
surgeAtM by the above cartoon.

KNOWN

1,ccn sc

I

I"'-·--· I "CD-r I X X X I X I J"
Jumble•- EIGHT

Motor.': Co.

Blown

•

[J

•

' '

I'

MOTHEI&lt;: STAYED
E'EHIN D· AND PF&lt;'I=TENDI,DI
"TO BE S ICK.

J [)

OF
QUAliTY

I

~-----.,...-;:-----.:...-----,. 1 ------__;- ·- ~-·~¥....¥~,·-····.---~·--"
.

I.!E D 1 /\GG[lt k.ev , ,IH t ,, •ll 1 6
k e y s ~ c wilrd Pf'I OIIt· 9.19
') IQ l

',,

"

WAY AND I'LL MAKE IT A TRIO!

Auto Sales

lost

,

.

'

•

' '

'·

TFLAC::V~ntinel, M!ddlePort~Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday: July I. 1975

•

•

'

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) If
you want o t he rs to s hare . you' ll
fi rst have to p u1 o n t he lin e
some o f what you're hold rng
bac k

t:IBRA CSepl. 23 -0cl. 23)

r

Yo u 'll b e InVOlved In a ven ture "
w tth two f rr e nds E ach will pull a-.
tn a dttfe r e nt d tr ecl ton Yo u
may en d up w•th a gr raUe . r n ~
st ead o f a horse

SCORP.IO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)

It
work1ng w t th unfamil i ar
ma1ertal s
b e e xtra wc areful
Tes t you r pro ce dures a s y o u
go You c o uld be very wa st ~fu l

,
•
..,
• J

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) U su a lly you can count o n
L ad y L-uck to ba rl you o u t o f .
ttg h l s p o t s Today she ts n 't J ll ... ~.
t h at rel i able
• ]). :::

CAPRIC-ORN (Dec. 22-Jon.
19) D o n 't negleci

Impor tan t :
hom e pto1ec l s If yo u sWeep
th em under c- th e r ug t h.y ' ' ?
h a unt yo u la ter at an e m · " '
ba rrassrng m o m ent
"
'

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 19) '"'

B e sure you' re able to b ack any ,, 11
o ral c ta tm :; today S omeo ne ts
wa•ttng t o c h alleng e you

PISCES (Feb. 2D·Mor~h. 20) :~
Yo u 'll s ttll have to res1s t temp· ~~
tat1011 to spend fn v ol ous ty. P tck
up tha t n e w dress late r . a t a .......
be tt er ba rgatn
Q:;.

~Your

_

~u~2~~~r~day ;: ~.

You r c ar eer pr os pects lhrs ..,~ "'
year are very pro iT) JSing. 1f you ·~­
k eep y ou r sho~r . to t he '
Wh ee l Whate ve r press ures •u &lt;&gt;
you·ll have to fa ce c an b e over· ., 11
come
(NEWSPAPER ENtER PRISE ASSN 1

· ,.

·lf•
I 1 ,•.

•

THE BUS 15 LEAVING!
THROW THE BALL, JOE!

THROW THE 6ALL!!!

-

l J, I
II

-if

•

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'

\

.

I',

.,

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Fast Results Use T~e ·sentinel Classifieds
Business
Services
2 SIGNS . Pomeroy
•
.

.

i

,

1

l

'

OUR MUTUAL.
VVELZ , YOU GO

6 '}Q M e

I [)

tiJ

-

~" c=~N:-:-,L :-=~H:-:-:. ~::~~7N=~::=-Aw-=R~:.t-L"V"T_HA
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,N_c_L_u:-"-e-s-.:ll
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1

....____;G::..O::, Ml NE.

nlrl ' f' N o
E 71 , 'lS ~ t'WMd R t'lurn t o
r o w e l Is '-.f'rvor r .t,li i OI I
M 1dd i Pport

d '(C.I /\ l

Y~•lerd•r'•

bfm t'lf to mt rrd - KNtniNG

house
l'i9 N
St h
I'.::.¢C
Mrdcll e port
P t1one
b el or e ~ p 111 l .t7 56 75 o r see
Milrtor, e Molhon &lt;1 1 Rut l and
7 I 61c

God saw the ro ad wvs qell •n q
rou g h ,
Th e h il l s w e r e h a r d To cl~mb
She gen tly closed her 11r e d

e yes
An d whr s p ere d peace be t hrne
Her l onely hou r s . her days of
parn ,
He r wear y nrgh t s are past

Her e ve r
fram e

pat •ent worn

out

Has found swee t rest a t l as t
Wh e n w m t e r 's co ld ft cak.

storm s
Halo'e p asse d an d Sp r rng
com es fr es h an d ra ' r
We w fll hum b ly kn ee l b tos1 d e
your g rav e
And pla ce our flow er s th e r e
Mr s R 1chard T ho m as an d
n i ece , Mary Ett e n Jo n es
7 1 11 p

•

Bashan
' News

Spending Father ' s Day
with Mr . and Mrs. Stanley
Trussell, were Mr . and Mrs.
Donald Trussell and Dawn of
Mt. Vernon, 0 ., Bob Trussell
of Reedsville R .D. and Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph Trussell and
children, local. Also vistting
tHem, recently were Mrs .
Mary Carson, Coolville, 0 .,
and Mrs. Millie Dill, daughter
Cindy and granddaughter ,
Lori, of Long Bottom R.D.
Cindy and Rocky Pitzer,
Terri Pullins, Renee Trussell,
Teena Beaver and the
counselor, Miss Mandie Rose
attended 4-H Camp at Can·
· ter's ~;,ave, Jackson, 0 from
Thursday IUitil Monday.
Mr. and Mrs . Vinton Jones
spent a recent weekend at
Detroit, Mich., guests of their
son, Duane and family.
The home of Don Mea9ows
of Bald Knobs was destroyed
by fire Tuesday. The Bashan
Volunteer Fire Dept., Chester
Fire Dept. and Racine Fire
Dept. were all called but the
fire was too much out of
control for them to save the
house .
Ernie Deeter's mother,
Mrs. Freda Deeter is very ill.
Her ~e is at Colwnbus, 0 .
Mary K. Holter, Mrs.
Sadie Trussell, Mrs. Dorothy
Lawson and Mrs. Margaret
Tuttle attended Lodge at
Syracuse, Thtirsday night.

Mrs:

La:urel Oiff
'News Notes
BY BERTHA PARKER
Sabbath School attendance
Jl!De 29 at the Free JVIethodist
Church was 83. Number of
persons attending worship
service was 66. Offering was
~.10, building fund was

$4l.ll.

Mobile Homes For Sale
1911 11x60COVE N TRY Mobd e

H o me \d 300 washe r an d
drye r cen t ral a1r , 7 bed r m
Roa d .
R uiNvil l c P o r te r
G aJ li pO I I~
Phone -l4fl 769!
7 1 41p

Notice

IN L O VIN G memo r y of my
dear srs t e r . N e tt rc Phr l lrps
who pas se d away Ju l y 1
1969

N OW sc l l1nq f. ut ter
B ru s h
Products
p h orw
99'1 ].1J O
1 2&lt;1 !fc
I L EI\ M,l rkcl o p e n We d
n cs d ,l y H1rouqh \und a y on
h' I 17 1 ~ ~ Cro&lt;;'".rOilds . tf1kes
b re &lt;tk l ac; t sets I nns q un .
nni 1QUf' S
Pho ne 7•17 496'11
7 1 .If c

Wanted ·
CAS H p .=t1 d tor a ll ma k es and
m odels of mo b ile h omes
Phon e area c ode 61 &lt;1 &lt;123
~5]1

c1

TH E Me1Q S Coun t y I 1Sh and
Ga m&lt;' Assn
W1ll mee t
W&lt;&gt;dnesday a t B p m at the
Coon H un te r s Cl ub or, Snow
R~l tl H 1ll
7 I 1! c

13

t~ c

Bl k
v tn y l top, red
s teer mg &amp; b r a k es

R UMMAGE Sa le 1n M1 d
dl epor t beS 1de Dr
n oo n
su e's Off 1c e f rom~ a m till 5

pm

7 1 2 1c

L ARGEya r dsa t eonot d RI 33
at Home r H yse ll r es1d ence ,
an d
Sa t u r da y
F r 1dt1Y
C urt .:Ji ns , c lo t h mq . diShes .
an t 1qu es an d nu m ero u s
ot h e r 1t erns L o o k fb r s1gns
7 1 3t c
SOMET HIN G f o r eve ryon e,
s o me il nt 1ques. c tot h1ng ,
d1 SI1 es. old p 1c tu re f r am es.
m 1SC 57 0 Gra nt St . M1d
d l cpo rt · Wed n esday a nd
T h ursday, 9 a rn to 4 p m
7 1 itc
3 F AM 1-L Y ya r d sate co r n er
Sl h and Ma1n Mi ddl epO r t .
We d nesda y an d T hu rs d &lt;;~ y
s t a rt mg a t 9 a m Se t a b e d .
ruqs . ro ta r y po w er mo w er
36 1n
doo r . pl us st or m
nn d
sc r een
w 1n d ow
c to th 1ng . 1n l an t s th rou gh
a d ults
' 7 1 21c
FA MIL Y
g ar age
S al e
Tu es day an d W edn es day
a cro s s
from
Br ad b ury
S!i= hOO I
7 \ 21t

Y A R D Sa l e at 1678 Lin co l n
H g t s All w ee k unt d Sat
aft er n oon
7 1 J tc
G A R A GE SALE. 1 rt1 1le from ..
ea s tla n on Co Rd 32 to war d
124 N ew an d u se d cl othing
an d otll er .,,,sc 1te m s J une
25th t hr u J uly 2
6 26 61 p
HU G E 5 fa m il y yard sale .
July 3. 4 and 5 Coll ectables.
baby item s. m1 sc , Frank
Hudson .
r e sid e n ce
•n
Ra c ine, acro ss from Ractne
rood Mark e t
6 29 51 p
6 F A MI LV Yard Sa le, July 1, 2
a nd 3 a t 711 South T h 1rd St
N ex t
to
Spe ed
Queen
Laundro m at , Middl eport 10
a m t d 1 dark Phon e 992
749 4
6 29 4tc

R EG lr 1sh Se i te r Pups . $65
Phon e 8 13 706 1
7 I ti l c

kenr--lfy
Contract Work

POMEROY, OHIO

NEED
s o meo n e t o
WE
r e pla ce a ma n wh o 1S
r e ltr i n g aft er 28 y ea rs w11t1
o ur c ompany T t'11S c on st sts
o f se rv1 ce and sa tes on a
loc al ~s labli s tl e d 1n suran ce
d eb1t
Mu s t own a c ar .
Sa l ary p l us c ommi ss ion s,
all fr•nge ben ef1t s If you ar e
t he r1 g ht p er son , your futur e
can be th e be st F or m or e
mformtlt 1on , send a brt ef
re s um e o f y ~ u rs elf to Bo x
All
672, Pom eroy , O h1 0
.nqu,n es c onf,d en t1 al
7 I •li e

For Rent
TR A ILER sp ace, a ll u t ~l1t res
c h eap Pho ne 99 2 5535
• ·
6 29 lf c
~~----~~

3

-

BEDRM
hou s e .
un
furn 1st1ed Also . J· furni s h ed
a pt Phone '1192 27 80 or 992

34 32.

6-2V ttc

1 and 2 b edrm mobi l e h om es.
depos 1l requ ,r ed Ptlon e 99 2
35 09
6 29 6t c
'F URNISHED
ap artment ,
adul t s only 1n Midd l epor t
Phone 9~2 38 74
3 25 -lfc

t96A (f,MfiRO
6 c y l ,n d c r
.l ut onl .JI• (
W olh
v e ry low
II I IIC.l q l · S800
Phone 997
't;Jj.9
6 77 6tc

CARPE Nf ~Y

WORK
Ce d 1n(J p ane l 1n g !l oor1n&lt;l
etc Phon e V'll2 7759
6 2·1 77tc

1?7 1 PINT O
0nq ,ne ne w
an(f pom ts .
mdes Phon e
'!771

W I LL take cnre o f ? pr 1va tc
P&lt;l llr&gt;n l s 1r1 my h Om(' Phone
69H 'i607
6 76 6t c

--

s p eed . 2000
valves . p lu gs
.H . OOO actua l
V97 72 80 o r 99?

TERRACE
An tiQU e
S hop
re t1r 1ng lr om bu stness A ll
rne r c handt se m s t oc k W1ll be
s oiM at a la r q e d1 sco unt
Te nac e
A nt -IQu es
l OB
Legion
T errace
Lee
Rud1 sil l
6 6 76 1p
C H ECK our pri ces , N ew s t ee l
t oe work b oo t s . le ath er
up pe r S1 6 95 $ 1~ 95. s 1zes 7
t o 14 N ew r eg t oe w ork
bo o ts . l ea th er upp er $ 15. 9.5
'i 17 9'5 s r zes 6 to t .t Men 's
useo wo rk c loth es . sh 1rt s
99 c . pa nts , $ 1 09 N ew s tor e
ho ur s. v oo to 5 00 Mon day
thr ough Sa tur da y
C l osed
Thursday a'ld Sun day
11
year s 1n th1 s l oc a t i o n ,
B a iley 's Bar ga 1n St o r e,
Midd le port
6 26 ~l p

_.GAr...,.

for I H C 300
ut ll lly
Good s hap e. new
hoses . Sj 5Q o r o ff er Phone
742 1786
7 1 4lp

Washer &amp; Drver
and
Appliance
Repair

PORTA-COOL TM
ROOM-to-ROOM

I'

NEIGLER
Building Supply
We Bu1ld - the Be51 .. and

Bed r ooms ,
1 1 ] ~ b a th s,
Sun deck Phon e 992 77 90
6 26 61c

40x85
Brick Building

I

Sales &amp; Service
992-3092

Chain
Precisi
Ground
Al so Repa1rs On All
R rd.ng TractC~rs
498 locust Sf
Mtddleport, Ohro
5 9 1mo
__

I

ON
CORNER LOT IN
POMEROY
Business Section
Phone 992-3975 or
992-5786

--------,

__;=:~

R &amp; S Ex cavat1n g, Bac k b oe
etn d l 1g h t h a utmg se rv 1ces
D ri Ve Way Sl aq d e ii Ve r P('I
P h on e ( 304 J 77 3 53.16 Of" 7 42
3664 day or even 1nq s
6 4 26 t c

potato es

D &amp; D TREE T r im m tn g , ~0
yea r s ex p ert en ce In su r ed .
fr ee es tima tes Cal l 991 3057,
Coo l v il le
P h on e ( l l 667

.

6 29 Jt c
1971 BL A ZER wtth r o l l bar
wh1t e s pok e whe e ls an d b 1g
'ti r es
Excell en t con d t1 ton
Phon e 712 .7473
6 29 61 c

FOR SALE

~ 0 .1 1

4 30 tf c

BY OWNER

CLA RINE T . v ery go oa con
d tt1on . 51 00 Phon e 985 4236
6 29 3t p

NE E O A n ew n o me b u t l t on
yo ur toP Con t act M rle B
Hu tC hi SOn . R u tl an d , O h 10
Ptlon e 742 36 15
5 8 tf c

Abo~ average, 6 room
house, 1 yr . old, g~rage,
near
mines,
utilities,
located on R:t. 124 west of
Rutland, 2 acres of ground .

25 0
CC
Y a m ah a
1971
Tra d bik e, 6500 mil es $450
Phone Ro g er K a rr , 98 5 353 8,
c a ll or c om e a ft e r 5 p m
6 ?V 4t p
ONE 3 pi ece blond e b edrm
su1te , $ 100 · Ca ll 8 432 111
Sunday or w eekdays aft er 7

Real Estate for Sale
1 72 ACR E 5 land . and lO CUSI
pos t s A l so 1965 For d L T O
Ptlon e 747 3656
5 73 52 tp

PH. 7424794

pm

rwo B EDR OOM h ouse f or
sale Phon e 985 4102
6 10 26 t c

6 29 3t c'
T WO · B EDRM
m odular ,
c arp e t ed . utiliti es pa 1d , no
c hildren o r p e t s
N ea r
Pom e roy . nic e l o ca t 1on
A vailabl e now P h one 99 2 ·
7666 or 99 '1 701 7
6 29 Jt c

.J

STORAGE BUILDfNG .-

GENERAL Repa1r . clean up
an d
tl au t.n g
cu ll1 ng.
weld 1n g.
·carpen tr y,
plu m b1n g , e t ec mas on r y
a n d gene r a l r e rn odel ~rHJ
Ca l l Sk d Pool
Ph on e 99 7
5 126
6 17 ttc

R OOF I NG,
S pou tlf\g
al u m1n u m an d v1 n y l S1 d1n g .
c omp l ete
r emodel 1n g
P h on e 742 6273
6 25 'l61p
R O N ::,·h ep ar d Contr a c t 1n g a nd
R emode lmg Serv1 ce Wh o l e
hou se
re mod el t n g ,
k il c h en and
Sp ec 1a l lte s b ath Phon e (3 04 J 773 53 .:1 6 or
'742 3664 d a y or eve n 1n g
6 4 26 t c
S E PTI C i A N KS CLE A N E D
R easonab l e RA T E S P h on e
-14 6 4782 Ga tt ,p of , s
Joh n
R usse t t. own er
&lt;1 9 tf c
H UU :c. t: an d r oof p a 1n T1 n g a n d
r epa 1r s F or 1r ee es tt m at es.
ca ll 992 61 VO or 9n 5837
6 15 26 t c
~

_-=..:::::-_--=

~-

S EPT I C T A NK S c l ea n e d
M od ern Sa n rt at i on 99 2 39 5-l
or 997 7).19
9 18 •fc

in Middleport. one V'.!ith 4
apartments and business

ntce k1tchen-w range. some

room

concrete patio , nice large

.

2 FAMILY HOME -

Reduced

11 rooms , nat .

for a real buy

ga s, c1ty water. Lot 100'xl 00 '

3__7_!!.::

WilL TRADE - I' or camper,
mobile home, oickuo, boat or
what have you, that doesn ' t
eat. ·

NEW LISTING - On ·Rt . 33.2
bedrooms, bath, 2 p(,rches,
and yard.
'

POMEROY BUSINESS good

locati on

on

the

In

upper

block
. BUILDING LOTS -.., Several
locations for houses or mobile

hom es $1 500 00 up .

..

iHERaTAU~

OSCAR ...

DIDN'I 'IOU, DOC?

.

....,
7· I

DOZ E R w ork , land c l eann·g
by the acr e, hourly or
co ntr ac t
F ar m
p o nd s,
r oads , e t c Large do zer "and
oper a tor wit h over 20 y ears
Pullms Ex
e xpe r 1e n ce
~ a vatt ng.
Pom eoJ , Oh10
Ptlon e V92 2&lt;1 78
12 19 tfc

POMEROY - HERE IS A
DILLY .69 acre . 4

"'---""

UL ABNER

6ET THAI&lt;

WIW BLUE YONDGR.f!'

.
Cra1g

has 3 BR, own water
syst&lt;lm. barn and other
bulld lhgs, • cellar . house,
l-3, 500 down balan ce like
rent . -~!_al $17.500.
LIKE N. FISH? Close to

.

acre grcound . LOOK JUST
' $4.700.
MANY
OTHER
PROPERTIES
TO
CHOOSE FROM - WHY
WAIT AND PAY MORE
NEXT
YEAR . CALL
TODAY..
•
CALL 992 .2259

J

WHY, YES .. ~
GUESS YOU
COULD CALL

IT "THAT'

'

'·

.

'

2 J()- Ooc tors 3.4. 15. Bog Showdown 6.13; Edge o,f
No ght 8. 10. Saqa of Weslern Man 33.
3:oo-Anolher World 3,4,15. General Hospital 6,13 :
Price Is Right 8, 10; Music of the People 20.
3 . 3~ne Life to Live 13; Lucy Show 6; Malch Game
8,10; The Way It Was 20: Erica J:l..
15 ; Gilligan 's Is. 6, Musical Chairs 8 Sesame St.
20,33: Mov ie " The Night of lhe Grizzly" 10; Mike
Gouglas 13.
4 3()-Bewllched 3; Merv Gritfln 4; · Mod Squad 6 ;
Mickey Mouse Club 8, Bonanza 15:..
s :oo-FBI 3: Lucy Show 8; Mlsler Rogres' Nelqh.
borhood 20.33; lron so de 13 . Andy Grl ff llh 8. Gel
Smart 15; Elec Co. 20,33 .
6 : 0Q-New~ 3,4,8,10, 13,)5; ABC News 6; Sesame St . 20;
You Owe II To Yourself 33
6:3()-NBC News 3,4,1S : ABC News 13; Bewllched 6.
CBS News 8, 10 ; Jody's Body Shop 33
7 oo-Trulh orCons 3,4; Bowling lor Dollars 6; What's
My Line 8; News 10 ; Country Music Jubilee 13 ; Ph il
Donahue 15: Feeling Good 20: The Romagnolls
Tabi• 33
7 ~Pollee Surgeon 3, Name That Tune 4; Let's
Make a Deal 6, Wilburn Brothers 8; Book Beat ; 20;
To Tell lhe Truth 13: EpiSode ActiOI}33.
8·0Q-Little House on lhe Prairie 3,4; Thal's.My Mama
6, 13 ; Baseball 15, Tony Orlando 8, 10; The Many
Faces of Love 20; Voices at Eastern Kentucky 33 .
8:3()-Movle " The Great Niagara" 6.13 ; The ShadOw
Catcher 20; Another Look at Appalachia 33.
9 oo-Lucas Tanner 3,4, Cannon 8, 10; Masterpiece
Theatre 33 .
IO :oo-Petrocelll3.4: Baretta 6.13; Mannix 8; Alaska ' s
Inside Passage 10: News 20:' Famlly at War 33.
10 :3()-Pelrocelli 15
n .oo-News 3,4,6.8.10.13.15; ABC News 33
11 ·3()-Johnny Carson 3.4,15: Wide World Special 13:
FBI 6; Movie " Mr lnslde.Mr Outside" 8; Movie
" Inhe rit lhe Wind" 10; Janaki 33
12 :3()-Wide World Spec1al 6.

Yesterday's Answer
21 Ottoman
31 Related
official
33 Taro root
.22 Pretense
34 North
23 Slippery
Carolina
24·Whacked
college
the ball
35 Sheer
in vain
36 - Calloway
(2 wds.)
37 Have
25 Oriental
debts
38 Cable 39 Japanese
river

1 · ~ Tomorrow

AstroGrapt:l
~

lhyph.

Yo u II be luck y today w 1th
soc1 a l c ontac t s b ut y o u c ould
gene r ate s par ks W f th a
bu s1ness assoc1a te o r on t he
hom e f ron l

~~~t

4o
41 English
royal
family
42 .. Games
People
Play"
author
t3 Expiate

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Id eas o t he r s tr y t o tm p ose
u pon you to day a ren ' t
necessarily tn yo ur b est tntere s ts Do th1 ng s t h e w ay y ou
feel the y should be d o ne

GEMINI CMay 21-Ju.oe 20)
how to work
AX ·YDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

Contmue to t re at you r p urse
wtlh re s p e c t t o da y.
Stay
a br eas t o f you r cur rent
o bl tgatJons. A void m ak rng new
o nes .

it:

.

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's. etc. Sin1le letters,
apostrop!)es, the length and formation of the words are all
hints . Each dal'_tlle code letters are different.

QFBCD

VA.

ZBCL

.. WHEN HE 61T5
CARRIED
AY

~amsey,

UMB
WPB

THE 6115 15
GOING TO

LEAVE ...

WMPO F.M. 92.1 :6:00-10:00
-WMPO A.M. 1390 6:00-7:60
'.I

.

..,

EBM

CANt::ER (June li-July 22)
You II fa r e b ett e r in c ommer ctal
d ea ttngs to d ay 1f yo u bar t hose
w ho hav e no b u s rne ss be i ng
t h e re D ea l ont y w 1th th os e mvo lve ct

XPU

LEO (July 23· AUII. 221 Though

CML

you r m o tr ve s w tll b e ho no rab le
tod ay , one who ltk es ·to ma ke
proble m s w tll try to d rst ort your
1 n ~ en t

MBXQFCF .BZQ

-MVBWRQNPB
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: IT IS HUMAN NATURE TO TI1INK
WISELY AND TO ACT IN AN A!lliURD . FASHIOif. ANATOLE FRANCE
(C 117$ Kina Faaturn S~l'dialc, 1M. )

JOE, I THINK

Mo!;.ning Radio ·

uo

YCMJGCJB

QCEB

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ARIES CMarch 21-Aprll 19)

JZUG F

,,'

3,4; News 13.

Bernice Bede Oaol

c

,

4 QO---Mr . Cartoon 3 , I Dream of Jeannie 4; Somerset

For Wednesday, July 2, 1975

MCWVUM:

LISTEN lNG TO
.
.

•

W a,y . I t was 33

CJlYPTilQuon:s

Great Country
'
)

~~~rp

Is

YOU'RE
MISSING
'
.

own water system, about 1

seHn ; 1f he doe"n 1 you w1ll sttll
have a good play. Bid seven hearts

by THOMAS JOSEPH

U.;;;&gt;UI-'11..

BUT
WHO .. ??

'

river , large home with nice

A · If

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

IF YOU'RE NOT

laying grmmd ,,,creek, home,

do now"

7(

.•

DEXT,ER- 30 acres, nice

vou

r ec omm end th at a reverse bid H you feel hke gambling

:IREATM~T:-___,.~a

MA·S ON FURNITURE
MASON,

P ass
6 t
So lh h ld

4NT
5N T

c:::::=::~-~~LJE~T~SCM~V\is~3Ri~~'--:Z::i[......,\]"jp.,~H~'LLLU1~A~K&lt;iE.~YI~D)''11Cto0}f'FF~IN~E~S~T=J:l32 ~:::~~~r
BLOW M~ OFF INTO •u.=
AMERICAN HOS PITAL , AN' YO'LL 36 Rooster

At..

773-5592

Pt~s s

Pass

o; ·..; J"915 °• A K Q J 4 "'A 2

ACROSS
DOWN
1 Italian
I "- the
city
Knife"
6 Outmoded
2 Court star
11 Daisylike
3- Kenton
flower
4 Verdict
12 Slur
5 Work of' over
6 Deterioration
13 " Reynard
7 Confederate
the Fox"
8 Kinship
rooster
9 Ending for
IS Superman's s~mp or
byline
imp
16 Negative
10 "- Bingle"
(Crosby
She's -l:ellinq us he
17
nickname)
19 Stripling
uses them to juqql~!
14 Habitual
22 Sub's
18 Indian mail
nemesis
19 California
24 Mining.
city
find
20- pinch of
25 Fowl
salt ( 2 wds. )
27 Salubrious
28 Old
Greek
colony
29 Poet
""..
Lowell
~
'
30 .. Green
Gables"
0
~~
;,....,~~
""'~
girl
31 Brewery

F

I

tO a n ea rlie r bid SUit at the
lo w es t p oss ibl e level We

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

yard for the k1ds . JUST

South

h ld th
e
W e dehne 1t as an y b1d of a
your par 1ner 0 5
new s uit that shuts out a return queen o! hearts )ou. will be ~old r?r

!

M A CHINE.
S EW IN G
Re pa1r s. se r v i ce , .all make s.
992 228J T h e F abr ic Shop ,
Po m er oy A uthori zed Singer
Sates a nd . Se r v1c e
We
sh a r pen Sc1ssor s
3 29 lfc

$9,500.

3¥
5¥

What do

know JU St what a reverse b1d IS .

... SLOW DOWN , MA~KO.' ~AI LOOKS

'!liS, I CAUGHT
HIM AI HOM!:,

Sale Now
In Progress

garage , storage building,

ARE
YOU
H)IVING
TRQUBLE SELLING? SAVE
MONEY AND TIME.

'oOU CAUI:D
P£l'I:2SON l'1iPM

Bu il d an all steel bu tlding at
P o l e e arn prtces '? Golden
Gia nt Al l Steel Buildings ,
Rt
4, Box 148, W a verly ,
O h1o Phon e 94 '&amp; 2296
6 24 -26tc

carpeting,· full basement,

t:ast

ALLEY OOP

Anniversary
Mattress

R., 2 cr. garage, part
basemen , F.A. heat; part
basement, lots of trull trees
( bear.ing). 520,000.

Pass
Pass
In the languadge of b&lt;ds a Pass
rever se b1d shoul always show y
e xtra stre ngth . More &lt;mportant • 2

Hysell'~

ELWOO D B O WER SREPAIR
Swee p er s. toasters . irons ,
a l l sm all ap p lt ances Lawn
m ower , n ext to Slate Hrgh
way Ga rag e on Rout e 7
Phone 985 3825
READY M I X CONC~ETE e
4-16 tfc
de l! vered r 1gh t to your
p r otect Fas t and easy F re€
W I LL TRIM or cu t tree-s and
es t 1mates P hone 992 3284
sh ru b b ery and paint roofs
Goeg lem R ea d y M1x Co ,
P h one 949 -3221 or 742 4441
N'H d d l ep ort. Oh1 0
6-24-26tp
6 30 tt c'

.bedrooms, bath, kitchen
has l ots of ~Cabinets~ r~f ­
range , dintng area , utility

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

J

5·2·S2tp
-------- - - -- - WOU L D YOU BELIEVE?

POMEROY
VALUE
PLUS. - 3 bedrooms, bath,

Nprth

by ope ne r be a one-round for ce
TODAY 'S QUESTION
a nd g u a rant ee at l east 16 Y ou hol d 01e same h and Eas t
po mts. a reverse by responder opens one spade. Wh a t d o yo u do?
be a game force and show at
Answer Tomorrow
lea st 13 pomts For the rest of -=----:---:---:-:-: --:-::c::-::thl s week we Will show reverse Send $1 lor JACOBY MODERN
bid s a t w o rk
book to. "Win at Bridge,·· (c/o this
Soulh s two- heart btd was a newspaper), P 0 Box 489. Rad10
class 1c reverse call North CllySiafion, Now Yolk . NY 10019

992·7121

,0

i

1¥

you and your partfler s~ould

WAV· A BILLION "'I:A~ S ... GOON1.'1' ll-IE EBB "flOE OF LIFE
BEFORE- CV&lt;;I..ES Wrf\.I!N
CYCLES - HAf WI-IV, SCIEN CE TO DAY
HAS ONLY TOUCHED 1\-IE EP6E
or: E'II:ISTENCE- UP- uP WE MUS T
&amp;0 Wrrl-1 n!E T IDE -

SEALY

stori es with parking and 3 car
garage to rent , near the T in

) BUS.INESS Bl11LDINGS - 2

,_'

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-MAYBE SHE'S SEASICK

lOader - · - - -- - - . _S_·_I4~
~ 1 _m_o_. .J.
and ba c khoe work
sept1c
Dozer ,
tanks ¥s t al)e d .
dump EXCAV ATIN G,
Back h oe, dllc her , water
tr u cks an d lo boys f or h tre .
l1nes , fo ote r s, d rains , roads
w d l hau l fil l dtrl. t op soil .
an d br ush c teantn g. No 10b
l1mes tone an d grave l, Call
t oo sma ll , no weather t oo
Bob or R oger Je ll e r s , day
b ad
P h on e C tl arles R .
ptlon e 992 7089 , n tght phone
H a tf 1e ld , R t
1, - Rutland ,
992 3515 or 992 5232
Oh 10 Phon e 74'2 6092 2 11 tfc

-- ::;_-- _-:__,..- -=--

~

.

6 : 0Q--Sunrlse Seminar ; Summer Semester 10.

~

~----------~~-----J 9 ~----------~1..-----~

Phone 992 -568:1 or

2

Middleport .

'

We st

"'

6: 25-Farm Report 13 .
6.3()-F ive Mlnufes to Live By 4: News 6; Bible An
swers 8: Sc hool Scene 10 ; The Story 13.
6 : 35-Col~mbus Today 4
~ornlng Reporl 3; Farmtlme 10.
7 00- Toda y 3 4.15. AM Amen ca 6, 13 ; CBS News 8,10 .
8 OQ- Lassle 6: Capt J&lt;,angaroo 8: Schoolles 10,
Sesame Sl . 33
8: 3()-Big Valley 6, Popeye 10
8: 55-Chuck Whole Reports 10.
9·0Q-A M 3; Phil Donahue 4; Muriel Slevens 8.; Capl .
Kangaroo 10; Morning wlfh O.J .•13.
9: 3()-Not For Women Only 3i Dinah 6; Galloping
Gourmet 8; New Zoo Revue 1·3.
•
10 OQ-Celebrlty Sweeps lakes 3.4.15; , SpJn.Off 8, 10;
Dinah 13 ; Jody' s Body Shop 33 . .
10 ·3()-Wheel of Fortune 3,4, 15, Gambll 8,10, French
Chef 33
·
II ·OQ-H igh Rollers 3,4, 15, One Lite to Live 6; Tat
tletales 8, 10 ; Flower Show 9.
~.
II · 3o-H611ywood Squares 3,6, 15'; Brady Bunch 13 ;
Midday 4: Love of Lite 8, 10.
II : 55-Take Kerr 8; Dan Imel's World IQ.
12 ·0Q-Jackpot 3, 15 ; Showoffs 13 ; Bob Braun' s 50.50
Club 4, News 8. 10; Mister Rogers 33 .
12 :3()-Biank Check 3,15; All My Children 6,13; Search
for Tomorrow 8, 10; Elec. Co. 33 .
12 ·55-NBC News 3,15
1 OQ-News 3: Phil Donahue 8; Young &amp; lhe Restless
10; Not For Women Only 15; VIlla Alegre 33 ..
1. 3o-Davs ol Our Lives 3,4, 15; Lei's Make a Deal 6, 13;
As. th e W o rl d Tu rn s 8, 10, F o lk G -u 1tar 33.
2 00- SI O.OOO Py ra m od 6.13. Gu iding Li ghl 8.10, !he

South

The b1ddmg ha s been

33

WEDNESDAY, JULY 2, 1975

of d ubs. ruffed a club. pla yed
dummy·s kmg a nd Jac k of
hearts a nd ove rtook with has
queen afte r East pla yed the 10
The n he ruffed hiS la st d1 a·
mond . played ace a nd a noth e r
spade . ruffed 1t. d rew the lnsl
trump . a nd mad e 'the la st two
tncks w1th small clubs

Ope mng lead - Q •

'

J

1:00- Torrlo rrow 3, 4 , N e w s 13

th e second onr cashed ace- kmg

Pass
Pass
Pass

P tbS

,

•.•

Automobile
Transmission
Repair

-

F I SH I NG li ce ns e. Can-adi an
N1t e craw l er s . 60c doz . bug
worm s. 3 do z . $1. Othe r bart ,
tackle. guns. ammo , cb 's,
tnd 1an Joe 's
Sport s
308
Page St , Phon e 992 ·3509
7 1 26t c
A - -- - - - - - - - - - - - 12FT A LUMINUM Jo·hn Bq at
wtlh 3 1 1 h p gas , motor and
e tec m o tor Phon e 742 3631
7 1 Jlp

1

PAAAOOID,
l.f\'1 80·/t

and

J

•:ast

North

P c~ ss
P a ~s

TAAT'S_,

Garage

:J -7 I 111 0.

K 542

-'

I
II :OQ- News 3 ,~ .6 . 8 . 10. 13, 15; ABC News 3j\.
I
II J()-Johnny Carson 3.~ . 15, Wide World Myslery 13 ; ,.
F Bl 6, Mov ie " The Dunw lch Horror" 8; Movie
'
" Ride the High Country" 10 ; Janak! 33 .
" ''
12 ·3()- W,de World Mystery 6

'I()) I

E~~/\-V ~~ (~~-~~ze r .

.•

FOR SALE!

Roger

.,

Call Biliiore 7:30A.M.
Dr lfier 6:00P.M.
949·3604

WILKINSON
SMALL ENGINE

3

Wt'S I

5-8·1 mo .

Racine, Ohio
Reparr the Rest.

SOUTH 10 (

l\1\tJI&lt; PW!'tf
t:Ql'T t..II&lt;E

UTTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

John St., Next TQ
Grade School
992 -2549 Syracuse, 0.

• 10 5
t K 142
... Q 106

Nor th South vul ner aloJie

BEAUlY SALON

I

¥ 963

ponents· card s we re di v&lt;ded He
du cked the ftrs l dwmond wo n

"' t\

lOLA'S

Pomeroy

Ph . 992 -'2174

to the ve r y even way h1s op-

'{OJR W1XQ£
IS 'OJ

Cosmetics

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

~; A S T

• Q J 91

• 11 .1 105
A .I 9 7

"·
'

Barnaby Jones 10; N e w s 20 .

A K 10 5

BORN LOSER

Merle Norman

"'

10 3()-Pollllcal Ta lk 3,4, IS, Monty Pylhon' s Flying

w~; sr

A "l
¥A Q H 4
• i\ 9 6

F rom
Tru ck or
,B ulldoz er Rad1ator to t h e
sma l le s t Hea-ter Core ~;;

Nathan Biggs
Radtafor Specialrst

... 8 3

GOI NG TO PAY
FOR THI S !

Middleport
5-30·1 mo.

'
fh e· far g est

992-3313

1

327 N. 2nd

'

Phone

Real
Estate
for Sale
N EW H OME 1 ~ a c r es.

• R3

GOL DEN GEEK5

Free Estimates
PH . 992 -2550

- Cabinets lnsta lied-

+-----------6-·1_
8-_l_
m_o_
.~

• K J, i 2

TI ME TO 6 ET
MY PAW S ON
FRUB)' - 5 UT THAT

Construction
and Plumbing

1 EXPERIE.t4CED
,.. "
Radlato
I
-:--.'
Service

sne

R eg 159 95
I ) 9 Q5
4. 000B T U
On ly l) l b
Hh er mode l s
on sale

I

55 1 m o

BARGAI N S
ar e
ou r
m1d dl e n a m e" 1n clean
use d
t u rn 1 tu r e ,
GUARA N TEED
ap
p lta n ce~ &amp; new f ur ni t u r e
Op en 9· !» W ed through Sun
Ph
667 38 58
s 15 1 mo

~ON l

C H EV R O LE T 1963 Em pata
H d tp . 6 c yl , s t an dard
lr an s rn 1SS 10n 20 M P G $27·5
P h on e 992 7826
6 29 ] l p
r i!d10 .
modern
S T ER E O
des1g n . B tra c k ra p e . A M F M
ra d 10 com b,n at1on Ba t .:~nce
$ 102 9'11 o r t erms Ca l l 997
3965
6 25 !f c

Room Acklltlont

lt t\ 81) 4 3

'

IT MAY

ALL-WEATHER
ROOFING

Home Bulldl"''t

.j

wou ld have to re tu r n V' r lub s at
the th ree level 1f he wa nted to
bid clubs As 1t was. No r th b1d
three hea rt s ~tn d Sout h se ttt ('d
fo r ga me
li e m~maged to ma ke sax due

NOR TH

TA KE' A LON G

..

19 OQ-Mar cv s We lby . M. D 6, 13; Oral Roberls Be

.'

n I WP ~ tPrn M~n 11 -

You·v E A
YOU JLIMP
WHEN
TOlD!

r-

••

l

&gt;

Reverse moves contract ahead

WHIC H
ME AN S
C HA N CE TQ
-';UICVIVE•.. IF

Siding
Roofing
Home
Complete
Maintenance

Ph. 915-4102

" AI Cautrori L•ght "
Rt 7 , Tupp e r s Plain ~, 0

For
Sale
r
l oader

CAPTAIN E'ASY: YO!J.LL
S EE WE' FtE APPROA CH·
IN6 A SPIT OF LAN D!

•
"l

f·

Mu sic In Brass 33
.
•
7·3()-Hollywood Squares 3, ~ ; Public Affalrs ·6; Buck
Owens 8; New Price ·Is Right 10; To Tell The Truth
13 : Car and Track 15 , One 01 A Kind 20; Car Careo
33
B:OQ-Movle " Shadow In the Street" 3.~ ; Happy Days
6, 13; Baseball15: Good Times 8,10: The Way II Was
20,33.
·
8 3()-Movle " A Cry For Help" 13 : Mov ie "The Monk "
• · 6: M·A- S·H 8,10: World Press 20: Nova 33.
9 .0Q-Hawall F ive 0 8, 10.
9 3()- Pollc e Story 3; Oral Roberts 4; ~oman 20; Saga

Circ u s

\WE DO:

Chesttr, Ohio

~ 13; Ameri can Lite Style 15; Antiques 20; New

TUE'SDAY , JULY 1, 1975
4' JU- I! ewlched 3; Merv Gr iff in 4: Mod Squad 6.
M1 ckey Mouse Club 8; Bonanza 15.
5 OQ-FBI 3; Luc y Show 8; ' Mi ster Roger s' Nei gh ·
l&gt;orhood 20,33:' Irons ide 13
s : J()-1Ww•6: Andy Grlllllh B. Ge l Smarl 15: El ec frlc
Company 20,33.
6.0Q- News 3,4,8,10, 13, 15, ABC New s 6: Sesa me Street .
20: Catch·33 33 .
6· 3()-NBC News 3,4,15: AB C News 13 ; Bewitched 6:
CBS News 8,10; Lilias, Yooa and You 33
7·0Q-Truth or Consequences 3.~ : Bowling for Dollars

WIN AT BRIDGE

TAKE A NOTHE' I&lt;. LOOk •

your
holhe.
ooes
require any of these
I services?

Canstrumon Co.

On atumtnum r eplacem e nt
wtndows, Stdrng .· storm
doors. and wtndows . ratltng .
phon e
Charles
L1 s t e,
Syracu se,
Ohto
Carl
Jacob , Sale s Repr e Hn lattv e

KUHl'S
BARGAIN CENTER

1967 1 O R O convcrh b l e , q ood
c ar
~100
Phone 997 530 1
6 29 5t c

LA R GE ca bm t ent W1ll'1 f l oo r
A l so . 5000 BT U a c 1 sm al l
re f r ,qe r a tor
PhOn(&gt; 99 7
7 -19·1
6 29 61 (

ffiR FREE
ESTIMATES

I

1Q67
D O DGE
Van .
qood
c ond1 t 1o n SA50 Phon e 985
] 59 ·1
6 19 7t p

I ll r

- .- - - - - - - - .

T elevis~on ·log ' for· eas_y viewing ·

• 6 i What' s Mv Line? 8; N e w s 10; _Name ~_!?
• at T u n e

Free Estimates
Phone 949-5961
Emergency 949-2211
or 992-5700
n 7S

992.2478

V. V. JOHNSON
AND SON, INC.

6 ?V Jt p

REMODEL IN G .
P tumb1 n g,
h eat,hg and al l types o l
ge n e r a l
re p a1 r
Work.
g u a ra nJee d
20 y ea r s ex
pe r1•ence
Ph on e 991 2-109

C A B B A GE
and
Phon e 8·13 2&lt;t95

9R\ -17/1

7 1 6t c

W I LL 00 Odd tobs p ai nll nq .
hau l 1n q
a nd
r oo l 1n Q ,
rnow1nq Call 997 7.109
6 25 6tc

1\ P T l•ke new , 3 room s Wtlh
la r g e bath , tabletop r an g e ,
large closet E as t M a in St ,
Pomeroy See t o a pp re ctate
Phon e Gat1 1po l,s du r m g d a y ,
· 446 7699; evenmgs 446 VSJ9
«~ IU t tc
. . .
5 RM
f urntshed apt
1n 8 H P RIDING lawn m o w er
M1ddl e port
Wa s h e r and . $200 P h on e 985 .4 245 7-1 5tc
d ry e r , u t i l tf i es pa1d Phon e
99 2 2676
HOME grown sw ee t c orn ,
tomQ t o es,
c a b ba ge,
----~--~-- .!
c u c u mbers and s qva s h
12 x 52 2 B EDR M t r ail er , r ea l
J a l}l CS Hil l, L e tart, Oliio
n1 ce P tl on e 9'117 3324
7 1 .lit e
•
6' 19 tf c
--~ -· ~ -.....!--------·
~- - - .
STAR CRAFT trave l trailer s
'"TKAILER space. 1 rfi tl e froiii
and
fold downs , Sth
An .
Porn eroy. .Phone 992 58 58
n1versa r y Sale . Clos ed July
5 2 tfc
4 , 5. and 6. Camp Co nl e y
Starcraft Sale s, Rt 62 N of
Pt Pl e asant , w v a
Tw o houses ·tn Po me r'oy , 210
7 1 3tc
a n d 212 Condor St . Call 99 2
2659
B
e x c e ll ent
6 18 12tp MO B ILE C
c on d1f10n Pa ce 2376 A , S100
..---- B rand n ew super scann e r
·1 RM d pl wtt h wall to wa l l
base ant enna , never been
ca r pet. 1 0~ Sprtng A v e .
· out of box , S100 A lso 3 spe ed
Pome roy ( all 99 2 5908
s td t ransm i SS IOn . e xc ert en.t
6 22 lf c
c ondtt1on : For a 1971 to 1973
Vega , sso. Phone 992 -5213 or
Home
C O U NTR Y M obil e
se e 'at 111 Pearl St , M1d
Park Rt 33, ten m il es north
dl epo rt, Oh io
of Pomero y ~a r ge lo ts w tth
7 1 41p
c Orlo(rete patios , Sid ewalks ,
runn er s and off s tre e t
REG A ngu s h e tf e r s. br ed or
p arking Phon e 9V'2 7A7 9
o p en Call B il l Witt e , Ro c k
12 3 1 lfc
~ pr 1 nQ s . V9 2 2789
'
·
7 1 6tc
r t· R N apt 5 room s and bath ,
n rce larg e y ard . bath a nd 1 .,
1974 G M C 6 c yl tr uc k w i th
390
S.outh
s eco o d
st .
c amp er top and new ft r e s .
M (dd le p o ft. ad u l ts only
E x.c e ll .cnt cond i t ion . S2. 9QO.
Ph on e 9V 2 ,526'2 even 1ngs
..
Ph one 985 4745 '
'· ? 1 tt c '
7 1 Stc

-

c &lt;111

C~ lt r-r

Help Wanted

P ART
T tME
P e r ma n ent
l o c al
w o rk
chec kt ng
se r1 a i1Z ed i n v en t ory a t re t a il
s t o re s
l or
m a1or
rnanu l ac t ure r s
No
tn
vestment
lnven c he k
Box
76680, A tlan t a . GA 30328
6 19 3t p

.

T OYO TA
6 p n,

19~9

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

Oh10

!

A1r c ondt1ioning , plumbing , h e al1ng , roofrng,
spouttng , general Jheet
m etal work .

4 10 I mo

- - -- - - -

Employment Wanted

&amp;

Seohc Tanks lnstalleCI

Ph 991.3993

co. ® I

POME~~~ E~~.~~~

For Sale

H O U SEK E EP E R , miJ SI l 1ve
,n , far m hom e If tn l e r es t ed.
w rtt e t o Mr
Holl1 e E
Rt
Box 11.1.
Sta rc her
Portland , Oh1 0 J57 70
6 25 121 p

Syracu s e,

Hour

R egula r and
E J:Ca valor Type

LARRY lAVE~DER

S229S

U SED me t al ft Sh1nq bo at , 11
ft Ptl on e 992 5535
6 29 li e O N E Wcs t ,ngnouse roaj)t c r
w il h cab and c lock P ttonc
O LD fu r n ll ur e,
1ce b oxes,
V91 2267
bra ss b ed s, or c ompl e t e
6 29 3tc
ho useh old s
Wrde M
D
Mi ll e r , Rt
4 , Pome ro y . 1V71 350 V John D ee r e doze r . 6
O hto Cal l 9V2 J760
tt
b l a d e , c anopy
and
I0 7 74
d r awbar
D1ese l enq 1n e .
q ood cond1110 n 'li6 500 PhoiH•
9B5 35 94
fl 29 7lp

-------·-------

~

i ii9S

XL T T n m, P s teert ng w h tte wa ll ti res, ra d io , li ke n ew
w w ltr es . ch r ome b um per s a nd whee l t rtm Clea n

5

G A R AG E SA LE S. T uesday ,
W edn esday and Thursday
from 9 a m
I ti l 5 p m , 6 RM ap t , $85 p er m onttl
lnqu ,r e a t Blu e a nd G r e y
Min e rsville . on Dutchtown '
7 1 4tp
Ht\1 Nic e cloth ing in c ludmg
e x tra large work uniforms
and women 's c lothing , rugs , 3 BEDRM 65x1 2 m obile hom e
for rent. ut111t 1e s. pa 1d ,
b e dspr ea d s, stl e et s, c ur
loca t ed tn Burl 1ngham Call
1atn s, dt s h es and other
992 77 51
.
art1 cl es too num erous to
7 I IIC::
m ent1on
6 30 3tc
TWO b edrm
modular . car
peted , utd t ties paid . no
YAR D SA LE . e v ery Thurs
chtldren or pe t s . N e ar
day . Fr 1d ay an d Saturday ,
Pome r oy , n tce location
qu a rt e r
m il e
from
Availabl e now Ph on e 99 2
L a ng sv ill e off D ex te r Road .
7666 or 99 2 7Q 17
Fo ttow t h e st gn s Phone 74 2
6273
7 I Jlp
6 25 tfc
3 A ND 4 ROOM turn1 sh ed and
unfurn ts tled
ap artm ents
L ARGE
Y a rd
Sa l e,
50.J
Pho ne 9'111 5434
Broa d w a y ,
Middl e port
4 12 t fc
M ond a y thr o u g h W e d s ..
St.!i r t1n g a t 10 a m
6 29.Jtc PRIV AT E mee tin g room fo r
an y organ•za t1 on phon e 992
' 397 5
3 11 lfc

Rev. and Mrs. Floyd Shook
left Tuesday for 10 days cam\&gt;
meeting at Mansfield.
Rev. Cecil Wise will be
A thought for the day :
prea&lt;:hing the next two Horace, the Roman poet,
Sundays in absence of Mr. said, "He has h;ill the dee!~
Shook: Robel-! Barton 1"ill dol¥), who has made the
have charge of the evening
beginning ."
services.
Rev. Shook, Mr. Steve
Eblin, daughter Becky attended services early Sunday
morning at Royal Oak Park.
Mr. and Mfs. Phill Wise,
Mr . and Mrs. Guy Mut Athens,
visited
McConnelsville, Mr. Ira Wolf, chler,
~utland, · attended worship
recently with Mrs. Nellie
service Sunday morning at Tracy.
the local church.
Mrs. · Georgia Giehl, Mr.
Mr. · Wyatt
Schaefer , Charles Diehl called on Mr .
Marlon, spent several days and Mrs : Walter Heilmah,
with his father, Mr. Norman · Ball RJIII, and Mr. and Mrs .
Schaefer, and visited his Orril Allen , Honer Hill.
mother, Mrs. Schaefer, a . ..,Rev.andMrs. Floyd Shook,
patient at Veterans Memorial · Mr. and Mrs. Cliff Jacobs
Hoepltal. · , .
attended a reception for Mr.
'1fr .
Alston
Tracy, and Mrs. Harry Bates,
Columbus, ,v isited recently Akron .. on Saturday.
,, wi!lfhls mother, Mrs . Nellie
Mr. H\18h Leifheit caught
'fracy.
•
. his arm ' in farm machinery
Mr1. deorgla Di~hl and . Saturday. He was taken by
Charles · · Anthony .Diehl his • sister, Mrs . Isabel
vilited recently with Mr. and Winebtenn.e r to " Holzer
Mn. ·~ Foglesong, ' Mill· Medical C~nter. He was
lleld.
_,
treatell 81\d released .

FOr

1nto Walls &amp; AHies
STORM
WINDOWS&amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING-SOFFITT
GUTTERS -AWNINGS

power

1969 CHEVY NOVA: 4 DR

Wanted To Buy

Yard Sale

au toma t tc.

Plumbing
J RacineHeating
HElL

j!ACKHOES

Blown
Insulation Services

i99S

v e.

l tnt sh.

•

Pets For Sale

tOR you r
' O il o f Mm k ·
Cosme t1 cs
-Ptl o n e BOS T O N T err1 er ma l e p up s
1\ K c bla d.. \17 5 Phone 992
BRO'I.~N 'S 992 5 11 3
7680
1 7 If €
6 19 41c

2

1968 CHEV IMPALA CPE

1972 FORD •:a" PICKUP

t,t l N\

GUTIER

An•wer! A hohhy fn rt&gt;p(•r,;~o n rrh o 's U'll ll rII (J fo r· fw11 k 1 t1

In Memory

I .ttp

For Rent or Sale
.,

(An••,.r• lo morruw.

TRICKV

FREE ESTIMATES .

6 cy l , a ut om a f tc t r il n s, c lea n tnle rt or. g ood tir es, ~
r a di o. New pa tnt

Now arranre the circled lttten
to form the surprise answer, as
surgeAtM by the above cartoon.

KNOWN

1,ccn sc

I

I"'-·--· I "CD-r I X X X I X I J"
Jumble•- EIGHT

Motor.': Co.

Blown

•

[J

•

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I'

MOTHEI&lt;: STAYED
E'EHIN D· AND PF&lt;'I=TENDI,DI
"TO BE S ICK.

J [)

OF
QUAliTY

I

~-----.,...-;:-----.:...-----,. 1 ------__;- ·- ~-·~¥....¥~,·-····.---~·--"
.

I.!E D 1 /\GG[lt k.ev , ,IH t ,, •ll 1 6
k e y s ~ c wilrd Pf'I OIIt· 9.19
') IQ l

',,

"

WAY AND I'LL MAKE IT A TRIO!

Auto Sales

lost

,

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TFLAC::V~ntinel, M!ddlePort~Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday: July I. 1975

•

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'

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) If
you want o t he rs to s hare . you' ll
fi rst have to p u1 o n t he lin e
some o f what you're hold rng
bac k

t:IBRA CSepl. 23 -0cl. 23)

r

Yo u 'll b e InVOlved In a ven ture "
w tth two f rr e nds E ach will pull a-.
tn a dttfe r e nt d tr ecl ton Yo u
may en d up w•th a gr raUe . r n ~
st ead o f a horse

SCORP.IO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)

It
work1ng w t th unfamil i ar
ma1ertal s
b e e xtra wc areful
Tes t you r pro ce dures a s y o u
go You c o uld be very wa st ~fu l

,
•
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• J

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) U su a lly you can count o n
L ad y L-uck to ba rl you o u t o f .
ttg h l s p o t s Today she ts n 't J ll ... ~.
t h at rel i able
• ]). :::

CAPRIC-ORN (Dec. 22-Jon.
19) D o n 't negleci

Impor tan t :
hom e pto1ec l s If yo u sWeep
th em under c- th e r ug t h.y ' ' ?
h a unt yo u la ter at an e m · " '
ba rrassrng m o m ent
"
'

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 19) '"'

B e sure you' re able to b ack any ,, 11
o ral c ta tm :; today S omeo ne ts
wa•ttng t o c h alleng e you

PISCES (Feb. 2D·Mor~h. 20) :~
Yo u 'll s ttll have to res1s t temp· ~~
tat1011 to spend fn v ol ous ty. P tck
up tha t n e w dress late r . a t a .......
be tt er ba rgatn
Q:;.

~Your

_

~u~2~~~r~day ;: ~.

You r c ar eer pr os pects lhrs ..,~ "'
year are very pro iT) JSing. 1f you ·~­
k eep y ou r sho~r . to t he '
Wh ee l Whate ve r press ures •u &lt;&gt;
you·ll have to fa ce c an b e over· ., 11
come
(NEWSPAPER ENtER PRISE ASSN 1

· ,.

·lf•
I 1 ,•.

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THE BUS 15 LEAVING!
THROW THE BALL, JOE!

THROW THE 6ALL!!!

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8""' The Daiiy Sentinel, Middlepor)-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, July 1, 1975

·'

A-rmy .major ·assaulted
.,I!;()UL, South Korea
(UPI) - A U.S. Army major
seriously injured when he
was assaulted by almost 20
North Koreans was flown to
the United States today "for
treatment of a fractured
larynx.

A female
American
sergeant attacked in the
•
•
same melee was not injured.
A military spokesman said
Maj. William D. Henderson of
Tacoma, Wash., was tn

with Henderson began
teasing ,him. Henderson
pointed a finger at the North ,
Korean , -who responded by
•

punching the major in the
faee.
Sgt. 1st Class Patricia Currans, a newswriter from the
8th U.S. Army ptlblic information office, ran to his
:·:::·:::·:;:;:;:;:::::::::::-.:::::::&lt;:::::::,;:c:&lt;.~IPJW~ rescue and also was attacked.
···
.. The U.s. Military Command

,~~ T~:I~:t 'S

·=·

--

ArtCarved
wedding
•
rmgs.

GODHADTROUBLES
Jus t th1nk o l all the thing s he
h&lt;.t s done ,
And al l the

troub les he 's
had ,
Aut they .1 11 weren't tun
When we al l' s been brtd
~e

probably thought " What's

th e u sc, so m e w ill qo to
d r ug abuse : "
But the r e ,Ire&gt; qood ones he
ca n sec
Good

wh at we shou ld be

1!.

" What 's

happened to th•s
world," he thmk s ;
" M111i 's k1r1 S, bik mi s an d
more shrink s. '
No wonde r the-y're buri ed 1n
si n.
Ami 's no way I'm going to
s l.l r l all ove r again .

.,

.

" But I ' m coming back to take
fhe good ones away on a
golden bu s."
WelL ..L guess.. ib.at exclu de s

us.

M&lt;lybe we shou ld ge t down
and p ray , that he takes us

up,

" Tha t's very go o d, my
friend s,
You a re relieved of your sins .
You will not go to Hell ;
You wi ll hear fhe m usic of my
golden bell.

"And as t hi s poem e nd s,"
says th e Lord,
,
" I hope the devil wi ll g1ve
up hi s si n s,
•
And decide to leave Hell
To come to heave n to s ft a
spell ,"

MEIGS lHEATRE
Tuesday &amp; Thur sday

NOT OPEN

Friday - Tuesday

AIRPORT 1975
Technicolor
Show s tarts at 7:00p .m .

•

If you believe in
lasting love, · select
your wedding ring
from our ArtCarved
collection today.

The Jrd Annual Meigs
Alumni Dance will be
held July 5, · 1975 at
Meigs High School
Gym, starting at 8 ;00
p. m .
rickets now on sale- at
Village
Pharmacy
in

Middleport. al New York
Clothing

GOESSLER'S

Jewelry Store
Court St., Pomeroy

Hous e

(Continued from page I)
fam:ly . We must live b~ the
rules that .any family must
follow. We cannot spend more
!han we earn by endless
borrowing. We must end our
propensity for short term
solutions at the expense of
long range setbacks."
At the same time he said a
policy of fiscal restraint
"does1lot mean this nation
will turn its back on major
problems of employme nt ,
housing,
transportation,.
health care and education."
The conVeJl tion opened
Monday with"a sharp attack
against the administr"!tion by
NAACP Board Chairman
Margaret Bush Wilson.
Mrs. Wilson cited Ford's
recent vetoes of employment
and housing bills as indications the administration
is

In a Cadillac that 's gray

For those
who believe
in lasting
. love.

no~ jnjured.

Ford has

- --.., .

serious condition when he

was placed-aboard a special
military plane for a flight to
Walter Reed Hospital outside
Washington, D.C.
· North Korean guards and
newsmen punched and kicked
Henderson in th e face
Monday at the truce village of
Panmunjom.
Witnesses said the fight
. started when a North Korean
reporter sitting on a bench

said she was

in

11

in different

ahd

unresponsive.
to
the
humiliation and suffering
that millions of Americans
are enduring."

Mrs. Brown died
June 12 in west
NEW HAVEN, W. Va.
Mrs. Jessie M. Brown , 83, of
23 13 . w'. Orchid Lane,
Phoenix, Ariz., died on June
12 at Phoenix following a four
months' illness. Mrs. Brown
was born here on Dec . 18,
1891, the daughter o( the late
Perry and Eliza Dove Kay
Grinstead.
Surviving are a daughter,
Dorothea G. Brown , Phoenix,
with whom she resided ; two
sons, Walter and Charles, of
Phoenix; a sister, Mrs . Alma
Robbins, and a brother,
Robert Grinstead, both of
Columbus.
Funeral services and burial
were held in Phoenix.

GREEI::ESHAKEN
ATHENS (UP!)- A strong
earthquake measuring 5.75
on the open ended Richter
scale shook central and
western Greece Monday, the
Seismological Institute of the
Athens Observatory said. No
major damage or casualties
were reported.

Pomeroy . For those who
have

purchased

banquet

tickets._you can obtain a
refund from the place of
purchase since the 6:00
banquet has been can -

.

celled.

•

COZY WITH REDS
.
BANGK,OK (UP!) - China
and Thailand established
diplomatic relations today in
Peking, Thailand radio announced . Thailand immediately broke diplomatic
ties with Taiwan.

"ONE STOP"
"MEAT SHOP"
MON .- FRI. 8-5, SAT. 9-5, CLOSED SUN.

-~

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•
•

-••

3 lb. Grou·nd Beef
4 lb~ &amp;huck Roast
3 lb. ·All -Meat Wieners
3 lb. ASsorted luhch Meat
2 lb. Sliced .Armour Bacon

•,,

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. -"'"

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Ph. 992-3502

,J IJ

r--

$

..ISTEN TO WMPO WED. THRU SAT.
FOR MORE MEAT BARGAINS .

-SPECIALS THIS WEEK-

G_
rqund Chu~k ...............:.......3..~.~-~·••'!':.~~~~...... ;.. 99~,b.
:Rath's All Meat Wieners .... ~..~.~~:.~.~:~~.r.~ ......:.7_9~,b;
Round Steak ·~--r-: ........................:.................. sl~ 9 ,b.
' . --... . . . . . . .::.;~
. . 79~ lb.
Chuck Roast .•...•...
Homemade Saus;age....:..:.........:............ .-......... 694 ,b.:.
~..........................................

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Gua~d

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leaders ignored
option of firll.tg .guns

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Young

' Beat.••

Of the Bend

.. II

Pom~roy

Elberfelds In

·---

'News1.. in Briefs

13-0 victory

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II

tJ q)

I

That down-home counlry look . . . ciillied and prettified
the Vic~y Vaug,hn way . Top-stitched ''overall" jumpar
with pocketed bib and skirt. Criss-cross straps really
hook! Wear It over all your. own.tops. Woven polyester(

~HORTCAKE .

I

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

:Avril rayon Q&amp;bardine, machine washable/dryable.

··.Adolph's ·,Dairy Valley

Double Feature
"THE SISTER IN LAW"
Plus
," 'SUPER CHICK"

Devoted To The lnterests of The Meigs-Mason A rea
PRICE

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

~XVII

~INr~~;~;;;·,:=·:-:-:-:;·:···::=·=i;··'·'·B;i;,~;~m~- Moore
.

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.,..
ByUaitedPreulatemadonal
'
..
... .., QOJ,:I.!MBUS -JAMES A. RHODES TODAY_as,ked Martin
A. Janis, new director of the Ohio Commission oli Aging, to
move quickly to draft legislation elevating the commission to a
state cabinet-level department.
"Oblo needs a strong, working department witll additional
powers to work on behaH of our older citizens," Rhodes said.
The 1.5 million Ohioans over the age of 6() need the best
possible advocate at the state le~~eJ. "Mr. Janis, who first
Initiated CJb!o's programS fOI' the elderly during his tenure as
director of Mental Hygiefie"and Corrections from 1963 through
1970; iJ •uniquely equipped to bring our programs to full
·department status," Rhodes added.
u, . '

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WASHINGTON -. DE:FENSE ·SECRETARY James
·Schlesinger says the United Slates might be first to use nuclear
weapons and might even consider striking first at the Soviet
Union, although It Is a ''very, very low probability)'
"The United States has consistently refrained from
disavowing the first- use 'flf nuclear weapons," Schlesinger
said. Asked if tile Soviet Union may be'a target, he said: ·
"First .use could conceivably - let me underscore confcelvably - involve what we define as strategic forces and
possibly, possibly - let me underscore possibly - involve
selective strikes at the Soviet Union. WI!" do no\ necessarily
exclude that but it is indeed a very, very low probability.' '
DETROIT- U. S. AUTO PRODUCTION SI.JPPED to its
lowest point In 14 years in the first half of the,year, but will be
stepped up in the third·quarter as the 1976 -model run begins.
Industry analysts predicted Wednesday production in the third
quarter will be within I per cent of last year's July-Beplember
~.
The four U . S. auto companies, struggling to pull out of
their worst prolonged sales slump since the Depression,
reported Tuesday the June o_utput of 632,134 cars was 4.2. per
cent below-already sluggish leveLs of 1974. It was the highest
production since October, but still the lowest for any June
since 1962. General Motors topped last June by 5 per cent and
Ford by 1 per cent. American Motors was down 6.4 per cent
and Chrysler 35 per cent.

5-13. Juniors Dresses &gt; Second Floor .
~· ·

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I

'''"""''·······
Elb~rfelds In

P.M

Hrs;: 10:00 A.M. Til.ll :00
Sun.- Thur.
' 10:00 A.M. Til12;00 P:M. Fri. &amp; Silt.
' .
. . 992-2556
POMEROY,O.
' W. MAIN

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Although no firm recommendations were made for
Salisbury Township and
Pomeroy' Village in the
expected reduction of voting
precincts, recommendations
for other areas were received
by the Meigs County Board of
Elections Tuesday night.
Pomeroy Village In the
future will have only four
voting places rather than six
and Salisliur y Township will
be reduced from three to two
voting places. E. A. Wingett,
who headed the movement to
reduce .. the voting places of
the county from 40 to 30 said
recommendations on how the
· reductions are ~ made In
Salisbury · Township and
Pomeroy will be made later.
Wingett indicated that
every effort is being made to
sel up the polling places
where changes are to be
15' made at central locations In
regard to population, with
consideration also given to
roads and other factors .

~

VOTERSSAYNO
Voters In the GaiUpolls
City School District
Tuesday soundly defeated
two two mlll lll.x levies
sought by the city ·board of
education. The levies
would have provided funds ·
for construction of addltlobal classrooms and
staffing and operation of
those rooms.

new job

MondayofJanuar~asMartin

;:;:::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::·

Damages
of $517,347
.
.
are asked
!!!!1111_ _ _ _ __ ""-'_ _.,.._""""'

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THIS OW FRAME BUIWING ON Null St. in Middleport is taking on a New England
look as it undergoes renovation. The building for a number of years was used for the printing operationsofthe late Harry Houdashelt. When completed, the structure will be used for
an antique shop by Mrs. Kay Cecil.
'\

Taping idea from LBJ
WASHINGTON (UP!) _
Former President Richard

in U.S. District Court in hampe_re·d- hrni in the
support o'r . his suit ·to regain preparation of his memoirs
control of the tapes and other and also preparing material
White House materials · for a presidential library .
"! am 62 years old and
relating to his presidency.
to complete the task of
desire
Nixon has sued the General
Services Administration over reviewing my presidential
during
my
the constitutionality of the materials
1974 Jaw which gave the GSA lifetime, " Nixon said. "Each
control over. all of Nixon's month that these materials
remain unavailable for that'
presidential papers .
Nixon said'the restrictions purpose can never be
and the retention of the recaptured and thus reprematerial , in Washington has sent an invaluable loss."

pr~~l.

board conducted :i:,~;ce:sov~ 0~:de ~:s~ar:dg.
b usmess
·
rou t'me
an d there," Nrx· on sar·d .
h
·
r
d
aut orized routrne un . " Presr"dent Johnson sar'd
transfer.
that the recordings he had
made of hls conversations
while president had proved to
.
be exceedingly valuable in
preparing his memoirs and
he urged that I reinstall tbe'
recording devices,"· Nixon'
said.
.
.
Nixon filed an affidavit on
the subject of tape recordings

Kanauga

home lost

Fire of undetermined
orrgrn destroyed a 1971
mobile !!orne owned by the
Robert Gardner fiunily·of 423
Fourth Ave., Kanauga, and
oaused $500 damage to •an
adjacent mobile home eatly
today.
Gallipolis Fire Chief James
A. Northup said the_ alarm
~
at 4:45 a.m. The
sounded
COFCTOMEET
::::::::::~:::::::::::::;:;:::;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·
Gard/ler
family
was not at
The Middleport Chamber of
home at1 \he time. The fire
.. . Commerce will hold , a lun- 'EXTENDED FORECAST
consumed
the five room 1971
cheon meeting at 1~ : 15 p.m.
Friday through Saturhome and it.. content... 'Also
Thursda¥ ·. at the Martin· day, a chance of dally
damaged
· was the f972
Resta\D'an t.
showers and little change
Champion mobile home
· In lemperatures. Higlis will
LOCAL TEMPS
'
\
tuvned
by Ronald Angel of 425'
be fu ·the 001 ·and lows will
Temperature in down(9wn
Fourth
Ave., Kanauga .
Pomeroy Wednesday at 11
be In tbe OOs.
Fifteen men responded to
a.m. was· 85 degrees under
,_
the
84th a,) arm of the year.
sunny skies.
·
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· Wingett proposed that
voting in Columbia Township
be held · at . the township
building on the school lot ; ·
Salem Township at the Salem
Ce nter School;
Letart
Township in the East Letart
Township building; Lebanon
Township in the- township
building at Spiller; Olive
Township being reduced from
3 to 2, at the Reedsville
Fire Station, and the balance
at the Success Church;
Orange Township at the
Orange Township fire
department •building near
Tuppers Plains; Middleport,
being reduced from five to
four precincts, moving the
line for the first w.ard to Mill
St. and dividing the other four
precinc'ts equally into three .
According to the proposal,
all of the changed precincts
will be renamed. No action
was taken on the proposal
al~red by Wingett . The
board will meet agafn on July
15.

::;:;:::::::::::::::::;:::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::·

.

Russ Moore, principal of
the Meigs Junior High School
in Middleport, was employed
as a Meigs County School
Supervisor by the Meigs
County Boar~ of Education il'
regular .session Tuesday
night.
Moore was employed In the
Pomeroy Exempted Village
Schools for eight years before
the formation of the Meigs
Local District. He has been
with Meigs Local for eight
years and has served as
principal of the junior high
school. He \\'ill begin his new
duties in August, succeeding
Mrs. Nellie Vale who recently
resigned and will be retiring .
Moore, a resident of
Syracuse, will have grades
seven through 12 as his
' primary duties in his position
.
'
as supervisor.
The county ' board revised
the school calendar in accordance , with
recent
legislation setting the third

TelUIS. ·
Fwleral services ·will be
held Fr,lday at 2 p.m. at'
Ewing Chapel with the Rev.
William Voris -off.lclating .
Burial will be In -Addison
Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home Thursday
from 1 to 4 and 7 to 9.

Precinct cuts
recommended·

iii :.---

taking

f •

WASHINGTON- REP. MORRIS K. UDALL of Arizona
anriounced ~yhehasqualified for federal matc!ring funds in
the19'16jrlmarles. He called ita "significant milestone" inliis
campaign for the .Democratic presidential nomination. Udall
~ald he has ralse!i nearly $300,000 since the start of the year,
Including at least $5,000 in donations of ~or less In each of 20 ·
states - the requirement for matching funds.
.
Udall became the fourth Democrat to raise the requrred •
lhresl!old money to qul!lify for matching taxpayer funds. All
tlle cfalms are still subject to verlficatldh by the Federal
Elections cOmmission: oihers who )lave raised the required
money are .Ai!lbama Gov. George G- ·Wallace, who has not
fOrmally declared.his candidacy, and Sens. Henry M. Jackson
of Washlngton and Uoyd Bentsen of Texas, both announced
candl!lates.
..

STRAWBERRY

'

enttne

Organization of Petroleum Exporting Nations goes through
with a -'ce
hike.
.
JA•
"We're a great nation. we're a powerful nation," the
secretary liB)III. But he adds ; "They_can, for a time, get away
with tliat blackmall." Another oil price increase of $2 to~ a
barrel this fall could abort recovery from the recession - ·a
recowry that appears likely to be painfully sluggish in any
event.

Feafu:ring

&lt;

•

I:uther King Day. The new
calendar to be approved by
local board will recommend -M. Nixon says he got,the idea
ibat schools be closed on that for his elaborate White House
Wl\SHINGTON - TREASURY SECRETARY William
taping •system from his
Simon Is spreading the word the United States is going to do day.
predecessor, Lyndon B.
someUllng if the oil producing nations raise the pi-ice of oil in
A course of study for fifth Johnson, according to federal
,......... graders as worked out by the court documents.
Se~em,ber. He implies the response will be economic ratuer
h 1
·
"Presr'dent Johnson sent
than milltary, but he declines to go beyond th at. He conce des county sc oo supervrsors
h
.
h
.
th
and
fifth
grade
teac
ers
was
word
to me that he has
that In the short run the-oil nations can get w atever prrce ey
11
demand. He calls this blackmail.
approvved and wi be for - learned that as one of my first
.
.
h
d
k
In
bo
ts
"s·
'd
warded to the Ohio
Departactr·ons upon arrr·v;na
" We don't)ust~tt erean qua e our o , unonsar
t'
r
- ... at the
Tuesday when asked what the United States will do if the men! of Educa ron or ap- White House , I had ordered

(Continued from page 1)
Swiss corporation, Aktiengesellshaft Oederlin &amp; Cie.
:rtre defendant companies were Anaconda American Brass
Co., 311d Scovill Manufacturing Co., both of Waterbury, Conn.;
In Meigs-Mason Pony Chase Brass _and Cooper Co. Inc., Cleveland, Qhio; Mueller
action Monday night Racine · Brass Co :, Port Huron, Michigan; Nibco Inc., Elkhart, Indefeated M3son 13-0 at diana; Reading Industries Inc., Fort Lee, N. J.; Triangle
MilsDn. Mark Sayre~ for Industrlesinc.,Holmdel,N.J.; andfourNewYorkCityftrms.
Racine pitched a no hit • no National Distillers and Chemical Corp., CeiTO Corp., Phelps
run game, fanning 14 and Dodge Industries Inc., and Revere Cooper and Brass Inc.
walking only 3. For Mason
there were 4 pitchers, with
. NEW YORK ~ SANITATION WORKERS staged a wildcat
Van Meter, the starter, strike her.~ today and threateqed . to make the nation's
getting the loss.
metropolis "Stink City." The 'strike was .called to Pr-otest
Sayre helped himself at the , layoffs forced by budget cuts,
plaie as he smacked a double,
"We dOn't have one truck·in the city rolli!li!,'' a Sanitation
triple, and a single. , Mike"
Huddleston helped out with 2 Department spokesman said. "The menoare In but they're not
singles, and.· getting one doing anything ."
.
,
single each for Racine were
The spoke:unan said sanitation officials worked all night ·
Jonathon Rees, Steve Hill, d!lveloj&gt;ing a_ "s ontl_n_s.ency plan" for garbage collecijon In
Terry Clark ; John Pape, anticipation of the walkout. He would not elaborate on the
Greg Huffman and Dan specifics .of the plan but did concede that ''unless some-of the
Dudding. The Ra~ine club . men g~ b.a fk to work It probably won't be very effective.:' The
sco_r.,ed what proyed to be . action came a day after the Sanitatlonmen's union lost a court
. enough for the win in the · battJ.e in which they attempted to avoid the layolfs of 2 934
second inning when two runs· worl\ers. . .
'·
c~ossed the pia te on a double · · ·
by · Herb Ervin.
,~.....,.,-----~-----'-=-...::_---....,.--=;
.Racine
020 800 l--13 13 U .
Mason
000 000
No~
,. 0- 0 0 2 ·

MASON DRIVE-IN I

:,:,:~,:~:;~:,: :~::.:~:~:;::,:~::,,,,:~.,.1: ~::.,,::.:&lt;•:= • • • :• •:•: •: : ;: : : : : :.:': :

VOL.

Meigs Mines, Is survived by
his wents, Mr . and Mrs.
Paul Baker, Syracuse; \WO
brothers, James of Ft. Wqrth,
Texas and David of Rutland;
two sisters, Ann Votls,
Puyallup, Washington and
Lynne Baker at home, his.
grandparents, Davis and
Marjorie Butche~. Huston .

Ecker resigns

Weather

HOSPITAL
NEWS

Meigs )
Propert,y
Transfers

.'

SR 1~4 followed by ·a car Car, . Rosella Secoy, 61,
driven by Randolph P. sustained abrasions, and was
Holbrook, 53, Chesapeake.
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital by the Syracuse. E·R
Secoy made a Jef.t hand turn ·where she was treated and·
off of SR 124 into ·a private released .
driveway in froot of Baker.
The Secoy car was
Baker's cycle slruc'k the &lt;Mmolished as was . the
Secoy car broadside. After motorcycle . There was
impact, the bike continued in moderate damage to the
a
westerly
direction , Holbrook car
stlking a car driven -,by
Robert Carroll Baker, 22,
Randolph P. Holbrook who Syracuse, employed at the
had pulled off the highway
when he saw the accident
happen. Baker's body was
thrown beyond the point of
The Gallipolis City School
impact and past Holbrook's
Board, for the first time In
vehicle.
oeven
years, began searching
I
The accident happened
·Clear tonight, low in the almost directlv in front of fOr a new head football coach
middle 60s . Partly cloudy Codner's Ashland St~ion .
at Gallia Academy High
Thursday, highs in the upper
Called to the scene was School follpwing the surprise
80s .
Pr.obablli ty
of Coror10r R. R. Pickens and announcement today of
precipitation 10 per cent Prosecuting Attorney Ber- Coach C. L. (Johnny ) Ecker's
·today and tonight, 20 per cent nard Fultz .
resignation as a teacher and.
Thursday .
coach.
A passenger in the Secoy
Coach.Ecker submitted his
letter of resignation to board
MANNING ROUSH , AT !.EFT, DEPU'I'\' of the ':;: president Dean Circle today .
Meigs County Sheriff's Department, is at the scene where ::;: Action on the letter will take
Robert Carroll Baker was killed in a car-motorcycle \ place during the board's
regular meeting one week
from !&lt;!day, July 9

By Hoh Hoefiich .

By ROBERr PENICK
· standing orders permitted troops moved out.
CLEVELAND (UP!).
Jones had a 'non-millfary
Guardsmen to fire when orOhio National Guard leaders dered by ari officer or a key weapon that day, accordillg
Pats on .the back for thoee working with the public just
meeting ~ minutes before noncom , or "to defend to an earlier witness, Capt. aren't too frequent so we'd like let )IIIII along a c&lt;JIIIIilendatlon
Guardsmen shot and killed himself when he feels, no Ron Snyder of Ravenna, ·to the P.omeroy'Street Department whicb Ia under the direction
four Kent State students and doubt in his mind, that his life Ohio, who had lent him a .22 of Don McKenzie these days.
..
wounded nine others in 1970, will be taken."
caliber beretfa pistol.
A Pomeroy business penon' thOught the crew did a great
did not discuss the likelihood
Snyder said he lied to some job in cleaolng up the town, particularly, the parking lots
Within an hour after the
of their men opening fire.
meeting broke up, he said, earlier inquires, including following the regatta:·Thi! crew was out on Sw1day night when
That was Qle t.,;timony of Canterbury sent out a jeep author James Michener, in the regatta ended faking care of the chore. All of WI would have
Guard Maj. Harry D. Jones with a bullhorn and when !he.,. saying he found a pistol by complained about the mess had It not been cleaned up but since
Monday at the opening of the students. h~Jd their ground,. the body of Jeffrey Miller, it was cleaned up quickly' hardly any of us got around to
seventll week of the trial on a ordered the Guard to disperse .one of the students slain.
ll)entioning that. Human nature, .unfortunately
$48 million civil damage suit . them. The shooting occurred
Also, he said, "he got
brought by the relatives of about 30 minutes after the locked up in a story" of
AS A NEWS PERSON and an Individual, I'm sorry to see
the victims.
pleading self defense on the George Hargraves leaving tbe 'Meigs Local School DIBtrlct.
Jones, Doylestown, Ohio,
basis of the rusty pistol and a
In the almost nine years that Hargl;llves haf been
now working in the Ohio
paii- .of brass knuckles which, superintendent of the ~let, I have yet to find him anything
National Guard headquarters
he said, he ''kiddingly " but attentive, helpful and under8landing with any problem that.
in Columbus, was one of the
mentioned to anotht!r Guard I've taken to him be it of an educational or other nature. I have
top four ranking officers on
·officer or two.
neyer had a telephone call unreturned and he's ·never
the scene. He was to resume
The plaintiffs' lawyers sidestepped any questions.
testifying today.
tried to get U.5-&lt; Diatrict ·
The future .of the Meigs Local School Diatrict at this point
The meeting· centered Veterans Memorial Hospital Judge Donald Young to admit doesn't appear to be exceptionally bright. Hargraves came to
mainly, he said, on word from
ADMITTED - Russell as evidence transcripts of the district when it was first fonned and knew the cirGuard Gen. Robert Can- Slayton, Vinton; Mildred Snyder's testimony to a CUJllSUinces of the development: While I personally feel that
terbury that . a
noon Sisson, Middleport; Nancy federal grand jury last year the Meigs Local Dis\rlct is too large to be as effective as it
demonstration by students on Pope, Middleport ; Mae but the judge would not ac· should be - and I think the same about big districts no matter
tl'.e campus commons would Boston , Racine; Corden' cept it.
where they are- the resignation of the superintendent is a loss
be dispersed whether or not it Randolph, Racine; Emma
The defense moved to have to the community. While the Ohio Department of Educatioo
was peaceful.
the case against Snyder appears to smile on large school districts today1 wonder if the
Hayman, Syracuse..
"The decision was made,
DISCHARGED - Rose dismissed, since there was no pendulum won 'I some day swing back to smaller schools
not by him but by somebody Moler, Doris Darst, Bernice evidence he fired or ordered where the individual can be just that -the individual. I hope
else, I had the impression, Molden, Edna Schaefer, others to fire, but Young so.
that it would not be per- Dorsel Miller.
declined on the basis it would
,mitted/' Jones said .
be premature.
JEANETTE LAWRENCE RECEIVED a report from the
Asked _if Guard leaders
"Stars and Stripes" in Germany sent to her by her son, Gene
PLEASANT VALLEY
discussed the use of weapons DISCHARGES R.
Lawrence.
.
Ernie
· or the circumstances under · Wray, Ashton; Mrs. Josie
The article from the service newspaper deaLs With a bill on
which firing would be orfrog
racing reaching tlle Olllo Legislature. This, of course,
Roush , Point Pleasant ; Mrs.
dered, he said 11 NO."
being in conjunction with Big Bend Regatta activities.
Larry
Darenge,
Point
Earlier· he testified that Pleasant; Mrs . Raymond
Claire Ball, Athens, a representative to the legislature
"\
at the time the bill came up that the whole thing
commented
Ray, Carroll, Ohio; Mrs .
was a ''tongue in cheek" situation. I'm encouraged. It would be
J~hn Barker, Point Pleasant;
a
bit disturbing to think that our Obio Leglalature bas no II).Ol'e
Mrs . Randy Henry and
ASK TOWED
to do than to deal with legislation on frog racing. Incidentally,
Wil-liam Douglas Justis, 20, daughter, Kanauga.
my sense of humor hasn't disappeared but It does have its
Middleport, and Sonja Jean
llrnltations. .
....
· '
S...rbour White, 18, Rt. I,
HolzerMedlca!Center
Anna M. Ryther, Com.,
Minersville; Gary' Louis
IF PICKUP SERVICE by the Sanitary Sanitation· Co .
(Discharges,
June30)
Walter
Hudson , dec. to Lsrry
Ellis, 22, Middleport, and
Linda Barney, Jonathan Hudson , Parcels, Pomeroy. nonnally takes place for you on Friday, then a reminder. This
Dorothy Derba Harbrecht,
Beattie, Roger Blankenship,
Ruth Hawkins to Franklin week, Friday pickups will be made on Thursday s0 that em·
22, Pomeroy. ~
Joseph Bowman, Ronald E. Eastep, Shirley M. Eastep, ployes of the firm £an enjoy the Fourth of July holiday. So get ready for pickup a day earlier,'II your regular day is
Cremeans, Retha Flint, Dyke Pt. Lot 66, Middleport.
DIVORCE ASKED
·Friday
.
Robert H. 'Burson, Donna
Doris
Smith, . Mid- Garrett, James Goody,
dleport, has filed suit for Co~nie Graves, Jackalene Jeanne Burson to Robert
THROUGH THE YEARS, I've had the privilege of
Hall, Mark Hart, Donald Steven Burson , Pamela Lynn '
divorce from Frederick J.
Hinkle, Timothy Hughes, Burson, Mark Owen Burson , working with some of the top Meigs County teens through the
Smith, Sr., Middleport,
Epith Maddox , Fayanna 6() Acres, Bedford.
musicals of the Big Bend Minstrels. I've had some dandy
charging gross neglect of
McCray, Craig Morgan, John
Mary C. Salser, dec . to young people during those years.
duty and extreme cruelty'
We are prone -Myself probably a ring leader- to
R. Morgan, Timothy Reese, . Robert E. Salser, ,Cert. of
and Rebecca Dunfee was
Mrs . Henry Rollins and son, trans., Sutton.
criticize young people. So let me ay that during the spring
granted a divorce from
Robert c. Hysell , Connie S. musical of the minstreal association, that an almost com- ·
Frederick Scarberry, Oma
Kendall E. Dunfee in Meigs
Wamsley, Kathy Waters , Hysell to Addison A. Seaman, pletely new group of young people came forth to fake Plll"t:
Col!!1ty ComnlQn.Pleas Court.
Elizabeth Woods.
Mary M. Seaman, Pt. Lots Althoughnewtotheshowandltsdiscipline,thesesome16orso
594, 606, Pomeroy .
youngsters were probably the best group of young people that
Mary Triplett to Ernestine I've encountered overall In some 25 years . They were enREUNION SET
LIFE SPARED
Evelyn Price, Minerals , thusiastic, punctual, cooperative, hard-working and agreeab
The
annual· Douglas
KINSHASA, Zaire (UP! )- Lebanon.
le from every standpoint. A little late, perhaps, but they do
Family reunion will be Ugandan President ldi Amln .
Robert E. Salser to Archie have my commendation. Theyrestoredmyfaithcompletelyin
Sunday, July 6, at the state announced today he has E. Lee, June P. Lee, 65.54 today's young people- I just don't think we're going to the
park 1north bound on- right ) decided to spare the life of Acres, Sutton .
dogs, all that fast, with young i&gt;eople like these around.
gqing toward Athens on U. S. British lecturer Dennis Hills;
Meigs Co. Board of Coinm.
Rt. 33. A basket dinner will be ser&gt;tenced to death by a
to Letart Corp., Deed of
held. at noon. Friends and Ugandan ' military court for
Correction,
Letart. ·
relatives are invited. ·
treason.
Donald R. Bell, Lois L.
'·
Bell, Affidavit, Let1jfl. .
r
JANIS NAMED
A. D. Tuttle, to Rodney D.
UNIT CALLED
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Tuttle, Brenda Kate Tuttle,
The Pomeroy E-R squad Martin 'A. Janis, a former
was called to 160 Mulberry director of the old Ohio Parcels, Chester.
Iva M. Stewart, Ernest W.
Ave .,' at f:07 p.m. Monday for Department of Mental
Bernice Molden who was Hygi~ne, has been named by Stewart to Alice 1.. White,
taken to Holzer Medical Gov . James A. -Rhodes as Parcels, Salisbury.
Phillip L. Mowery, Carol J .
Center .
executive director of the Ohio
Mowery to Billy J . Kennedy
Commission on Aging, it was and Lilly M. Kennedy, Lot.
announced today.
' Rutland.

.·

SYRACUSE - Tragedy
struck. Tuesday at I :28
p.m. here, when Robert
Carroll Baker, 22, son of Mr.
and Mrs, Palll Baker, was
ltiii,ed in a car-motorcycle
accident not far from ~is
home.
The driver of the car, Pearl
. Ceci1Secoy,6l,Syracuse,has
been char-ged with vehicular
homicide and posted a
property bond of $2,500.
Manning Roush, sheriff's
deputy, gave the following
details of the accident:
t Secoy was traveting east on

A parade at JU: 15 a .m.
Friday will be a highlight of
the annual Racine Fire
Department's July 4th
celebration.
. The parade, under the
chairmanship of Pete Simpson, was dropped fr om the

RUTLAND -Atalentshow
·at 8 p.m. Friday with Vernon
Weber as · master of
ceremonies will be a
highlight of' the a~nual July
4th celebration of the Rutland
Volunteer Fire Departtnent.
.The annual celebration will
be staged in the community ,
park which is located behind
the second hand store of
Arnold Grate in Rutland :
EvMt,; will get underWay at 9
a.m. with. games and contests. There will be · stringed
· music in the afternoon and
auxiliary members are

J

,.

program last year· but this
year is being resumed with
several prices to be awarded.
A $25 bond will go to the best
church· float carrying. out the
Independence Day theme and
a $25 bond will go to the best
float on the theme which isnot
prepared by a church group.
· A S15 cash prize wiD gn to
the best float carrying out
any theme . A trophy will go to
preparing over900 pounds of the best marching unit and
beef for .the "ox roast".
three $5 prizes v,:il! be
Adults -and children are awarded the bes! decorated·
invited to participate in. the bicycles. The parade follows
talent competition with cash · the 10 a.m. flM raising.
a.m. the fire
prizes to be awa~ded the top . AI 11
acts. Anyone interested in .. department will start s~rving
taking ·part should contact barbecued chicken .dinners
W~ber or they may report to
and · homemade ice · cream
the show area before 8 Friday and other refresbrnent• will
night. Each contestant must be available. At 2 p.m. at the
provide
his own ac- junior high scbo9i ganies for
companiment. A fireworks young people will be held
display following the ~ talent including · the greased pole,
show will cl ose the ob- greased pig, bicycle races
servance .
and sack races.
At 7 p.m. there will be

'
• 1.

I ,.

Two suits for money have
been filed in Mefgs County
Common Pleas Court. They
were:
J . B. Plumbing Supply Co.,
Huntington, is suing for
$1,099.32 from All. Weather
Roofing
Construction •.
Middleporet, alleged due on

account.

'

..

awarded to
Congressman Clarence
Miller, R. lOth District ,
Lancaster, and the U. S.
Corps of Engineers said in
Washington Tuesday a
contract has been awarded to
.tepair the parking lot wall in
Pomeroy .
The sale price was $103,100,
awarded to the Alan Stone Co .
of Chesterhill, Ohio. The work
includes stabi li zing the
parking lot wall .which in the
ap proximately 25 years since
its construction has been
serious ly weakenecj by
erosion of water and weather.
Although no ·starting or
finishing date was included in
the anno un cement, Cong.
Miller said he " hopes that
work will be star·ted soon now
that the contract has been
awarded."

Sprinkler

ads ·ready

Company.

,_

.. "

Also meetin g with the ' ·
commission was Meigs
County Sherif£ Robert C .
Hartenbach in regard to a
square dancing on Main St. fire escape to the sheriff's
and at 10 p.m. a fireworks quarters . The commission
display will close the . will take care of tfre situation
as soon as possible .
celebrati on.
Also meeting with the
commission were Fred Crow
and Virgil Teaf?rd"lll-1'egard
to a road into private
property for a proposed horrie.
for the eld~rly.

·Cash prizes
.
bei.rig offered

\n pony· pull
TUPPERS PLAINS - '
:cash prizes will be offered to
the top eight teams at a pony
pull to be staged for- three
weight classes at 7:30 p.m.
Friday at the Bar 30 grounds,
south of Tuppers Plains.
Weigh.jn time is 4 p.m.
Saturday and classes include
1050 pounds, 1350 pouni!S and
1650 pounds. Money prize•
include $30, $25, $25, -$15, $10
and $7.50 and two $5 prizes.
Trophies will ·be awarded to
the first and second places in
each weight classes.

•'
,,

Contract

Gregory S. Grover, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, is suing for
$517,347 .05, from Amos B.
Cross and Rutland Furniture .
Plaintiff filed suit for alleged
permanent injuries and
earning capacity that h~s
been permanently Impaired .
Grover in his petition
charged that he was riding a
The Meigs County commotorcycle on State Route missipn Tuesday agreed to
124 in Rutland on Juyly 3, advertise for bids for a
1974, and was stopped to spr inkl er system for th e
-make a left hand turn into a Meigs County Infirmary.
private drive when Grover,
The bidsonust be receive r\
driving a truck owned by by 9:30 a.m. on 'July lo
Rutland Furniture, ran into Meeting with the com the side of Grover '8nd per- missioners in rega rd to a
manently injured him. He is sprinkler system was Eddie
unable to walk without Blake who operates the R. E .
crutches or canes .
Tracy Fire Equipment ,

Parad~ to begin at 10: 15

Talent show . set

,I

:

I,

.;

I'

~

'
, -1

I .

••

I'

-, ~· .,

TONIGHT

'.'ONE STOP.
MEAT -sHOP"

.

''

no-hit, no run

D&amp;D's

.

....

,,

Sayre spins

AT

'

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

ONE RUN MADE
The Middleport E-R squad
made one run yesterday
evening at· 5:30p.m. to Main
Street, Rutland where they
transported f!~ula McKin~ey
!o V~terans Memonal
Hospital.
CHANGED AGAIN
· Due to conflicting dates the
meeting of Syracuse Council
has 'been changed a secor.d
time to :Tuesday, July 8, at
. 7:30 p.m. instead of July 10.

•

•

1 ...

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