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Cos t of the tw n-tmit plant is
111 excess of $600 millin11 .

General James M. Gavin
power plant~ s ituated he r'e rm
the .Ohio River midway be-

Appr(JximHtely 15 pe r eenl of
tha i a n)ount wa s spen t for i:tir
and water polluti on CDn trol
and Mid- · equipm~n t . namely :

dleport-Pomer~JY. · is in fu ll ·-· Elec trustn li c: precipital.urs

HOSPITAL NEWS

pany.

and opera tion of this plant' not

" The deVelopment of the
M (!' ig s mi n.etrto ·pr ovide

r 1nly

(;nvin 's c oal
cus tomer s

effect on the econ"my, locally
a nd throughout the Ohio
Power service territory . We

as.."'w·es uur
that
fuel

has had 1 but will continue to hav e, a beneficial

reqtti rernents will be met
eff i c icr1 tly
and

are

co nfident

in · the

Holzer Medlcal Ceoter
(Discharges, July 7)
Brenda Adrian, Sharon
Bailey , Debra Bradshaw ,
James Cline, Matthew
Collins, }1rs. Sherman
Crabtree and infant son, Mr~.
Michael Dameron and infant
son, Nellie. Eblin, Gary
Exline, Wendy Gatewood,
Paul Harris, Alice Hoschar,
EWlice Houston, John Lewis,
Rosa Martin, Mrs. Darrell
Nickels and infant son, Elsie
Pfeasant, Jennifer Robinson,
Mrs. Roger Warren and infant son, Cornie Williams.
(Births)
Mr.. and Mrs. William .
Albtight,
a . daughter,
Wellston; Mr. and Mrs.

are des igned to re move 9!1. 7
pe r ('CIIt &lt;&gt;f lhc fl y ash par-

econ omica lly," according to

foreseeable future · that . no

the utility official.

businesses or industries

1.3-milli on-kw gene r at in g
Wlits has ju~ t been pla ced in

ficl(' s that result fr om the
bw·ni ng of coa l

" The origi na l cos t est im ate
for the plant whe:1 con s truc-tion started in March
1971 was $488-nullion." Mr .
Rien n oted . " The actual cos t

s• rv e will have to close down
and no jobs will be los t due to
a shortage or e lectric power,
thanks to the power output of
Gavin Plant and other

of $600-million is attributable

generating s tations operated

..to the ravages of infl;;~:tion ,

by' Ohio Power Company. "
The plan l,is named for Lt.
Gen. James M. Gavin, U. S.
Army tR~tired ). who during David Saunders , a son,
World War 11 was com- Jackson.
mandPr of the 82nd Airborne
Division. He personally led
his paratroopers on their
history-making drop behind

se rv ice.

Its

operational sta tus raises Ohiu
Power Company' s generati ng
capability to ~.9 million kw

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The 1.10 :~-fool stac k

nouncem c nt, Frank Bien,
executive vice president of

which se rves both Wlils puts
e mi sshm s into the
upper atmosp he re where th e
~ascs arc dtluted '(nd
di s pt:'rsed, e limi nati ng h.arm fuJ &lt;:onl'cnlrations at g ruund

Ohio Power, said. " Addition

lt•vcl.

In

ma kin g

the

an-

gaS(&gt; I )lJ S

lncludirlg the in cr eased cost
e nv ir onm e ntal equip-

,,f

ment. "

of thi s unit will he lp us ensure ·
- Two cooling lOwer s 1 one
our 575, 000 eustomers in Ohio fur e&lt;-~c h uni t l crea te a closedan ample an d d epefldable d rcui t cooli ng system for the

supply of electric power at

plant's operati on. Purpose of

leas t through the remai nder
of this deca de "
He added that some other
sections of t he nation a re not
in such comfortable situation,

the cooli ng tuwars is to
preven t the return of warmed
water tn the river after it ha s
• s team m
.
coo led
t he condenser.

so far as power capacity is
concerned. It is generally
agreed within the elec tri c
utility industry that certain
areas of the country .will

NOW THAT THE POWER
plantts in ftul operati on. it is
expected to burn about eight
rnillwn tons of coal per year.
Most of that coal will come

experience

b lac kout s,

fr um a se ries of mines be ing

brownouts or some form of
electricity curtai lments by
1980 or before. he said .

developed north uf the plan t.
by an Ohio Power subsidiary,
Southe rn Ohio Coal Com-

He said that it is fortunate
for til e ' company and its
c ustomers that construction

of the plant started ' when it
did . " If we began building
Gavin Plant today , instead of
costing $600 million, it would
carry a price tag of about $1
billion," Bfen sa id .
He pointed out that during
construction of the plant,
employm ent peaked at 4,025
in February, 1974, and that
cons truction payrolls totalled
$150 million . Almost 300
people presently are on the
permanent operating payroll.

we

Contributions
to be inVited
.

German lines in Normandy

un D-Day, 1944. A director
since 1961 of American
On SWlday, July 13, ther e
Electric Power Company,
parent com pany of Ohio will be 84 volWlleers conPower, he now is chairman of . tacting friends and neighbors
Arthur D. Little, Inc., an in Middleport, Pomeroy ,
Cheshire
and
internationally known in- Racine ,
Rutland
to
acce
pt
co
ndustrial
research
and
trrbutions for the 1975
management
consulting
company in Cambridge , "March Against Muscular
Dystrophy" .
Mass .
Volunteers will be idenBien said , "Construction
tified byofficial Jerry
Lewis marcher badge, and
brochures and receipts will
be available . Contributors
are reminded that con tributions are tax deductible.
FWlds raised will be used to
Mills for the , past · six the James M. Gavin Plant as
months has served as reron a boilermaker and at one provide authorized patient
investigator for the G.allia time was employed at Bob care for those patients in
County Prosecuting Al- Evans Farms. The son of Meigs CoWlty as well as to
help defray costs for the
torney's Office .
Jack L. and Eleanor Mills of
A native of Gallia CoWlty, Gallipolis, he is married and national research program
maintained by the Muscular
he graduated from Gallia has two sons.
Dystrophy Association . For
Academy Hi gh School and
Mills was appointed in
additional
information
Marshall University with a accordance with the terms of
B.S. Degree in Education . the city charter of Gallipolis. · persons may contact the
Mills served three years in an He will serve at the discetion MDA District Office at 4770
airborne division of the U. S. of the city commission. Indianola Ave., Colwnbus.
Army and was a squad Terms of his salary were not
leader.
disclosed, Willer was paid
Prior to becoming a felony $17,300 per year.
AGNEW ARRESTED
investigator,, Mills worked at
BALTIMORE (UP!) - The
29-year-&lt;Jld son of former
Vice President Spiro T.
Agnew has been arrested on a
trespassing charge stemming
from what the chief witness
against him says was a
"Peeping Tom " incident.

an

Dick Mills new city manager
c

Com- Willer wrote, "As mutually
Gallipolis ' City
missioners today appointed agreed under Section B of my
RichardT. (Dick) Mills, 32, employment agreement with
of 19 . Evans Hei ghts, the City of Gallipolis, I resign
Gallipolis, city manager ' my employment with the City
replacing Paul Willer who of Gallipolis, effective this
resigned.
'
da,le, July 8.
In a letter submittP.d to
Willer came to Gallipolis
John Allison, President of..the two years ago from Lake
Gallipolis City Commission, Orion, Mich. , where he
served in a similar capacity.
He has been in management
10
years .
1
Under the terms of Willer's
' / ,I till W \id
contract signed with the

MASON DRIVE-IN
;, ( .r '•Hill

Nrq~lllv

TONIGHT

Double Feature
"CAPONE"
' Rated R'
Plus
" ZARDOZ 11
' Rated R'

MEIGS THEATRE
TONIGHT
AIRPQRT 1975
-~~ . f.lechriic:alor}
Based on the novel by
Arthur Hailey .
"Rated PG "

Show starts al7:00 p.m.
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former

city

commission

composed of Richard Carter,
C. H. McKenzie and Wymond
Bradbury, the city manager
could leave on his own if he
desired to take another
position, could leave by
mutual agreement of him and.
the city commission or could
be terminated .
Under : the codified ordinance form of goverpment
for the City of Gallipolis, the
city manager serves at the
discretion of the commission .
During Willer's tenure, the
city began work on its new
muni cipal pool, secured
grants for a new water
treatment
plant,
a
recreational
complex,
developed off-streh parking
and began re-modernization
of the city's traffic light
~vstem .

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HSTOMEET
The Meigs CoWlty Hwnane
Society will meet Thursday at
7: 30 p.m . at the Middleport
Village Hall. The public is
welcome .

&lt;c:::::~-

@

19nbvNEA. Inc~(6~

"Of course, we're delighted that you have all A's
and B's in your college courses, but we've just
read tliat so does almost everybody else!''

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WE HAVE
MOVED

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The Downing-Orilds Agency

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IS ...
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is Meigs County's oldest
and largest insurance agency.
After 108 years at the same
location we have moved to
155 North 5econd,

...

Middleport.
(l'fonnerly Grover Studio)

._ Conie IIi and See Us For All _
Your Insurance Needs .- . '

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Uotrodde~s plan

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Conservatzves

8 event schedule

surround Ford

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operation.
The sound of tw o identtca l

commercial

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Gavin Plant ·at full go
tween Gallipolis

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_8,--- The Daily Sentinel, Middlepor t-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, July 8, 1975

· CHESHIRE · The
2,600,00o - kilowalt , coal-fired

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Downing~Childs

,}'gency l.nc.

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES Mrs.
BobbyStargill, Beaver, Ohio;
Mrs . Richard Garfield,
Pomeroy; Mrs. Kenneth
Jeffers, ·Southside ; Mrs .
Elmer Haleny, Buffalo;
Daniel Bush, Gallipolis ;
Dolly Lockhart, Crown City ;
Mrs. Jason Sturgeon, Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Donald
Sprague, Tuppers Plains .

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McKenzie

·ber Federal .Depcis;t Insurance .

•.-o.ooo

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ONE OF THE MOST UNUSUAL groups to stop at the Big Bend C. B. Club Holiday break
at the state parks on U. S. 33 over the 4th was a caravan of five Model A cars. The group , of
Dearborn, Mich ., had traveled 1,800 miles. Members of the Big Bend C. B. Club are thanking
Holsum and Betsy Ross Baker y , Royal Crown Bottling Co., Roger Hysell Garage, Rutland
Dept. Store, Rutland Furniture Store, AnteMa Specialists, Powell 's Super Val'!., Kroger
Store, Fred Berson , Evelyn's Grocery, the Churches of Christ at Bradbury, Brjidford,
Rutland and Keno for donation s making the operation possible.

2,000 PERSONS SERVED - Approximately 2,000 persons took advantage of the July 4,
5, 6 Big Bend C. B. Club Holiday Safety break. The club served coffee, donuts, pop and
cookies to the motorists that stopped at the stqte parks on U.S. 33. A total of 357 man hours
was contributed. Motorists from California and Alaska stopped at the parks. Above, some
girls, mPillbers ofa ball team "on the road" took advantage of the free drinks and food .

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enttne
Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-MIISOII Area

VOL. XXVII

NO. 50

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WEDNESDAY, JULY 9. 1975

PRICE 15'

a

A budget calling for $2,553,080 In 1976 was approved py the only mustaches.
Meigs Local BOard of Education Tuesday night at its regular
Resignations were acmeeting, the last with Supt. George Hargraves.
cepted from Wendy Frieder,
The budget will be submitted to the county budget com- teacher ; Russell Mo ore ,
mission by July 20.
jWlior high school principal ,
Fred Ruth, assistant band
director; Austin Phillips, bus
1976 budget P.,oposal for Meigs Local School District
driver , and Willard Miller,
General Fund
welding teacher .
Anticipated balance, January 1, 1976, $137,484.38
Jolane Curtis was aprotal anticipated reveaue, 1976, $2,550,000 _
pointed as a teacher of
Anticipated Expendltures
French and English, Greg
. AdmlnlstralloJI,. f.74,!!8!!McCall as Title I coordinator,
lnstructlon; $1,533,000 .
libraries, $30,500.
and Sam Crow as gralle 9
. football coach .
'Transportation, pupils, $194,000
other auxiliary agenclesJ $385,000
The board appointed the
Operation of scbool plant, $270,400.
following as substitute bus
drivers,
pending
cerMaintenance of school plant, $52,700
capital outlay' $12,500
'Total estimated expenditures, $2,5S3,080
Anticipated balance, January 1, 1977, $134,404.38.

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El.berfelds-, ln Pomeroy

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By United Press International

WASHINGTON - CLOSE ALLIES OF FORMER·
California Gov. Ronald Reagan w!ll.establish a Reagan-for- , .
President Co/nmittee this month to convince him to challenge
President Ford for the GOP nomination.
.
· Sources close to the California conservative said the
conunittee's formation will be announced by the end of the
month In Washington, although- Reagan has still made no
decision on whether he_will seek the nomination. Nonetheless,
Reagan strategists told UPI Tuesday, the fonner ~ovef110~ has
told supporters he is "neither encouraging nor d1scouj-agmg"
their efforts. ·
' ·
One key figure In the group doing the groundwork for the
committee, who did not wish to be identified, said Reagan will
decide to run by the end of the sununer.

NEW F ACE•LIFT - The building which houses the Green Lantern on the first floor and
the office of attorney James B. O'Brien on the second floor is being painted by Sail} Pickens.

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. CbLUMBUS --'- LT. GOV. RICHARD F, Celeste is_ planr_Ung
to SJJQIIS!Ir a ~ries of Cj)ntests In small .and med1~..s1zed
counties to encourage cutting goverrunent red tape. Prtze for
· the best suggestion will be a $25 U..S. Savings Bond. .-_
. ·
· Celeste said ~esday he will put on ·a "Red Tape CUtl!Dg
ComJ)etition" 'lit Democratic party _boo~hs at 36 COIJI!tY f~trs,
Starting with the Jackson County Falf this month. _A bipartisan
panet:of local civic· and goveniment leaders will judge tbe
competition in each county. · . •
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.
· · ·If .the idea works, the lieutenant governor satd, 1t may be
expanded next year . . ~ · ·
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·. WASHIN(jTON - 'I.'HE HOUSE WAYS AND , MEANS
Committee is enterlng,ll)to a revision of tax laws with onlr. one
decision almost certain: current lower Individual tax rateli will
hll ·extended into next year.
··
Treasury Secretary William· Simon told the committee
·
Continued on Page 14

one for Supt. George
was taken.
Downing-Childs Insurance ·Hargraves who expressed his
Agency was again contracted gratitude to the board and the
for student accident in- former boards for the opportunity to work in this area.
surance .
The board, having received He said the work had been a
reports that the auto shop's challenging and demanding
request for supplies was 'ell'perience, and that he
overestimated, met with wishes only the best for the
Vocational Director Ray school district in the future :
Attending were Hargraves,
Goodman and will meet again
McComas,
members Hoover,
auto
mechanics
wlt!l
teachers. _
Kin g, Joe Sayre , Carol
Pierce
, and Bob Snowden,
The board also met with
John Beaver, in charge of and Goodman, Willard
buses and bus maintenance , Miller, Beaver, and Printo review the present con- cipals Robert Morris and
James Diehl, and Asst. Supt.
dition of buses.
Charles
Dowler .
The meeting was the last

SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Village Council Tuesday
evening gave Oris Hubbard,
supervisor · of maintenance,
authority to regulate use of
the mWlicipal park during
day light hours - 8 a .m . to 6
p.m . - and Mayor Herman
London announced the village
ha s been accepted into the
National Flood Insurance
Program effective July 2,
1975.
Acceptance in the flood
insurance program means
- that property owners are
eligible to buy flood insurance protection at - affordable federally-subsidized
rates, offering more extensive coverage under the
expanded
program
authori-zed' by the 1973 Flood
Disaster Protection Act.
Since flood insurance is ,
now available, the law .
requires that it must b~
purchased by owners of
property in areas identified
as flood-prone by the Ho\lsing
Urban Development (HUD ) . .
In order to be eligible for
virtually all forms of federal
or federally related financial
assistance for building
· purposes in those areas.
This would include FHA or
VA mortgages, loans from
the S111all Busin~ss Ad-

any federally regulated or
supervised banks and savings
and loan institutions.
While flood insurance is
available to all residents of
the commWlity, J . Robert
Hunter, federal insurance
administrator, emphasized
L~ t the federal economic
sanctions against buildings .
assistance will not apply to
property outside the danger

subsidized rate of 25 cents per
$100 coverage. The rate goes
to 40 cents per $100 for nonresidential building.
The " contents of all
residential buildings can be
insured up to $10,000 per unit
at 35 cents for $100 coverage
and the rate goes to 75 cents
per $100 for the contents of
non-residential structures up
to a maximilln of $100,000 in
zones .
coverage per unit.
Under
the
expanded
In other business council
program, broader coverage discussed the possibility of
ca n be obtained for all entering into its own
buildings and their contents. sanitation service. The first
The limit of insurance for step for COWlCi! would be to
single-family homes is now purchase a dwnp truck for
$35,000 and $100,000 for other garbage pick up.
residential
and
nonCounc il also discussed
residential building ~. at the
Conti nued on page 14
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ministration , or loans from

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Budget adopted by Eastern District
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AND-AT .THE MECHANIC STREET WAREHOUSE ·

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WASHINGTON- GOVERNMENT INVESTIGATORS say
It costs the taxpayers $84 million a year to provide junior Nary
and Marine officers with servants to fix ·their meals, do thelf
laundry, make their beds and shine their shoes. The G~neral
Accounting Office, in a report released by Sen. William
Proxmire, D-Wis., said the officers get cut-rate meals for
which -the average check is one-third the cost of buying and
·
preparing the food.
Proxmire said the GAO has identified 8,416 enllsted men 5 429 stewards a hoard ship and 2,987 at shore Installations - in
addition to 500 servants who are assigned to generals and
admirals. "The Navy and Marine Corps are the only services
which use servants for lower-ranking officers,". Proxmire
said. "The Army and Air Force have no s~r program.':
"The $84 million provides Nary and Marme Corps officers
_ with the pr(vileg\!!1 of a 'closed mess' - meaning _a spedal
cutrate food service using tax dollars - and free ma1d service
on shore and ship," Proxrilire said.
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Bargains
In Very Department Ira
.
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FREE CUSTOMER fARKJNG -ON SECOND STREET

has a chance at the
nomination will depend .a
great deal · on the performance of the President
between now and next summer ," McClure told UP!. "!
don 't think the President has
an automatic right to the
1
nomination that precludes
someone else from seeking
the nomination.
"!think the question of wbo
will get the nomination is still
an open question," McClure
said . "! don 't mean to imply
that I'm opposed to Jerry
, Ford. It's still a loll! time
· Wltil the convention next
year."
Ford did not refer direetly
to Watergate -the scandal
·that thrust him into the
presidency - !&gt;ut said he
would conduct "an open and
aboveboard campaign."
''I want every delegate and
vote I can get ... within tbe
spirit and the letter of the
law, " Ford said .
He named these campaign
aides : the director, Howard
" Bo" Callaway, former ,
Georgia congressman and
Army secretary; the finance
chairman, David Packard,
form er deputy defense
secretary; the campaign
treasurer, · Robert Moot,
former Pentagon camptroller; and a campaign
adviser,
Dean
Burch,
Republican national chairman during Sen. Barry
· Continued on page 14

Park control assigned

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I!News . . _in Briefsll

NOW IN. PROGRESS

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ANNUAL JULY CLEARANCE SALE

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rey, Ramona Hawk, Meriwn the COWlty board of education
Hoffm an, Adeline Snowden, which makes Martin Luther
Diana Phillips, Marv el King Day a school holiday,
Quill en , Marie Birchfield , and approved participation in
and Shirl ey Priddy .
the Southeastern Ohio Sp~&gt;cial
A year's leave of absence Education
Regional
was gran ted Phyllis Hackett Resource Center for the 1975to attend graduate school . 76 school year .
Member Wendell Hoover
Clerk Lee McComas read a
moved that the board ap- letter from Carl R. Hysell ,
prove the leave, but the juvenile officer, asking that a
motion got no second . After smoking area be reinstated at
further discussion, Virgil the high sc hool. No action
Kin g made the motion and was taken.
Hoover · seconded it, and it
A letter from Mary Carolyn
passed Wlanimously .
Wiley , kindergarten teacher
The board approved the at P omeroy ·Elementary ,
revised school calendar fr om asked for the return of Lois
H~ wley a s an aide . No action

In other business:
The high school student council requested that beards be
allowed to be worn during the school year, but the board voted
unanimously to continue-the present dress code which allows

Elberfelds In PomeroY

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tifi c ati on : J ohn Ar no tt,
Roger Black , Warren Bla ck,
Virgil Carl , Raymond Co tterill , _ Donna
Daniel s,
Charlotte Dillard , Co ra
Loftis.
Beverly
Long,
Charlotte Marriner , Carl
Morris , Leland Parker, Sue
Smith, Amos Tillis, Harold
White, and Lee Wood.
Appointed as subs titute
cooks were Trecie Abbott,
Alma Beller, Sylvia Neece,
Addalou Lewis, Eva Milliron ,
Dorothy
Long , Connie
Quivey, Katherine Powell,
Ella Southern, Ruby King ,
Joan Kaldor, Millie Hwnph-

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Hy WESLEY G. PIPPERT
· WASHINGTON (UP! ) President Ford has begWl his
own bid for election to the
White House by renouncing a
Watergate-type
campaign
and assemblin g". a group of
largely conservative, Pentagon-&lt;Jriented campai gn
m'des.
Although a committee to
seek
th e . Republican
nomination for Ronald
Reagan is expected to be
formed this month , there was
an air of optimism at the
White House as Ford an"
noWlced his candidacy .
One aide, who asked to
remain Wlidentified, said the
White House "is not the least
bit disturbed by the Reagan
camp" and "things are going
just beautifully ."
The three-minute public
announcement in the Oval
Office Tuesday was no surprise. The "President Ford
Committee" In June filed a
statement required to raise
campaig n funds tantamounl' to a legal declaration of candidacy.
Sen. James McClure , RIdaho, a conservative spokesman and chairman of the
Repu~lican Senate Steering
Comrhittee,
said
that
although
Ford
had
strengthened his claim on the
nomination,
the
announcement had not block,ed
out other contenders.
I "Whether any other person

•

Meigs Local '75-76 budget set at $2,553,080

Free enterprise in the hospital room

The MClin Store, Alu1e~ and Warehouse

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use

miles, issued
1,370tickets
collected
$3,439
from and
the
parking meters. The police
•
car
was serviced twice.
Advertising the convenience of a check·
Ralph Werry reported $549
lrig account In thla day and a1e eeems
had been collected from .old
kind of allly-but there's still many pf
parking tickets · billed by
Captain Henry Werry of the
you out there that are using that old·
··
police fore.
fashioned stuff called 'cash. You know,
Norma GOodwin, through
you don!t need a.lot of money to open a
the mayor, ·asked if council
coWd
control the rates of the
checkln'g account-a11d you'll love the
local cab company . Mrs.
convenience!
·
Goodwin, a florist, has the
cab operators walk the
WALK-UP TELLER WINDOW AND
flowers
frQm her shop to the
AUTO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
· flinerai home which is only a
FRI. -EVENINGS5 To7 P.M• .
shor,t distance .. At first they
charged 50 cents, then in"THE FRJ.t:NDLY BAJVK"
creased to 75 cents, then to·$1.
Council · noted that . they
RGit
could not control the cost but
·it was suggested that when
. she needs the service, call tlie
police department and they
I
. would do the job free.
..
4 \ Attending were MayQr 1
Smith, RaJph Werry, LQu
..,
··"---- -- -- ----~ Osborne; John , Manley and ·
William Snouffer, cou·n~il.Jilen; McKenzie·, Henry
(A)rporation
Werry, Web~ter, Legar,
·Edith Sisson , Ph¥llis HenOl~~IT$
INSURED
10 .
.
.
.
.
.
.
nessy, tr~asurer, and Mrs.
Walton, clerk .

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The standard advice given to patients considering which hospital to choose has been
"profit-making no, nonprofit yes."
The concept was·based on the idea that any hospital in business to make a profit, couldn't,
at the same time,also be in the business of taking the best possible care of patients.
Also, the proprietary, or profit-making hospitals, received a had name because they were
often owned by groups of physicians who also staffed them- a situation that could (and often
ASK TOWED
did) lead to conflicts _of interests that caused the patient to suffer both financially and
William Nelson Morris, 38, medically.
·
.
Racine and Robin Annett
Today, however, things have changed ari&lt;l.,~ere is an increasing amount of attention being '
Wills, 18, Pomeroy; John shown toward investor-&lt;Jwned and operated hosplta~. Ownership ol such hospitals has changed
Stewart Thomas, 22, Mid- from Individuals and small groups of giant corpora tlons listed on the major stock exchanges.
dleort, · and Bronwyn Ann
And according to Barron's business and financial weekly, these lnvestor-&lt;Jwned hospitals
Dailey, 21, Middleport.
are the fastest growing segmentofnon-goverruneot health care.
Everybody knows hospitals of all sizes have been notorious for red tai;&gt;e, poor customer
DIVORCE GRANTED
of capital. Because of the bureaucracies that
service, substandar.d food and inefficient
Donna Koehler has been developed In many large nonprofit hospitals, archaic fmancial and management systems often
granted· a divorce 1 om John 'became more firmly entrenched Instead of outmoded.
Koehler.
.
Coupled with booming operating costs the mismanagement has led to real problems.
Hospitals patients may pay more than $200 per day and the hospitals still lose money. Consumers wonder how they can pay more than twice what they would have to shell out for a
SERVICES END
luxury hotel, and still receive poor service and unpalatable meals.
The Bethlehem Baptist
The idea behind the.invi)Stor-&lt;Jwned and operated hospital groups is that the free;enterprise
Church will discontinue system'can return more satisfying patient care at lower costs.'-._
Sunday night services until
For example, nine months after the Lorna Linda (Calif.) Conltnunity Hospital had opened,
further notice.
$700,000 had been lost and the hospital was near bankruptcy. .
But within only two' months after. the hospital's management was taken over by Hospital
Affiliates, one of the larges~ hospital management firms, "the staff was FUt, laboratory contracts
renegotiated, three internal medicine specialists recruited, collections doubled from
·'
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$100,000 to $200,000 and the h~ital was operating in the black," Barron's notes.
The tide is turning, albeit slow, and the dlly may soon come when all hospitals are either
privately
owned .or professionally managed. When that time comes perhaps the patients will
(Continued from page 1)
to
receivo.
me services they are entitled to.
begin
made 68 arrests, drove 4,256 .

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· the outcome of the ·1976
Winston World Championship
Seri
Thes. Winston Series ne:U
yea/will open with the 16th
annual ·winter· nationals at
p
Calif • Jan -2!1-Feb
· om:"win con~lude ·with
1
w:rld Finals at Ontario,
Calif., Oct. 11-10 _
In between, the '76 schedule
.includes the Gatomationals,
Gainesville, F1a., March 12-- 14 . the Springnatlonais,
eoiumbus, Ohio, JWle 11-13;
the
Summernationals,
EnglishiDwn, N.J. ,' July 9-11;
the Grandnatlona!Molson,
Aug . -. · th us
Montrea1'
. ....,; e ..
als India
Us Sept
Nation •
napo .' , ·
U andSethe
Se'
t Fallnationals,
_
11
at e, P · 17 19·

With most of us not even look' 1g, the United States is in the process of picking up a few
additional square miles.
Not many - 246, to be exact. And these divided among 14 islands stretching across 500
miles of open Western Pacific.
·
They are the Northern Marian&lt;!l&gt; since World War II a United Nations Trust Territory
Wlder U.S. administration whose vo~rs '14,000plusof them -have n_ow opted Ina plebiscite
for commonwealth status "in political union with the United States."
The Marianas people may have spoken, but the vote is only a first step in what could be
a lengthy and complicated process of ratification. Next must come presidential and
congressional approval and, eventually, UN Security Council agreement to dissolution of ·the
trusteeship and transfer of full soverengnty to the United States. When and if all this comes to·
pass, around 1980 as expected, it will mark the first major U. S. territorial acquisition since
.
purchase of the Virgin Islands In 1917.
A glance at the state of the islands today might raise questions as to why the Marianans
would want closer association. Claimed by Magellan for Spain ijl1521, the Marianas (with the
exception of Guam, aU. S. possession since the Spanfsh-~erican war) were held successively
by Germany and Japan before passing to the Uni\ed States through conquest In the closing
months of the Pacific war.
The names of the major islands - Saipan, taken by storm In 1944, and Tlnian, base for the
sturation bombing of Japan - still evoke the island&gt;hopping course of that conflict.
Liberation, U. SA;iyle, has turned out to be something less than happiness ever after for
the 14,000 Marianans, however. Under previous rulers, the islands at least had functioning if
primitive economy, bas&lt;:&lt;! on sugar cane and copra . Under U. S. administration, agriculture
has deteriorated and the economy is fu~led primarily by $10 million plus that Washington
pumps Into the islandS'-anmlally. Saipan has been described by some resident Americans as
"an island slum."
Washington's pump-priming is probably what most voters had In mind In favoring commonwealth. Once legally inside the Union, the islands will be eligible for a full range of federal
aid programs from Medicaid to mortgage Insurance. Direct U. ~-expenditure In the isalnds is
also expected to go up to $14 million annually, a clear dollars and cents gain for the Marianans.
On paper, at least .
.
That raises the question, however, of why the United States should want to shell out even
mdre on an existing economic liability. The answer is geosraphy. Five-thousand miles from
California, the Marianas are only 1,500 miles fromthe coast of Asia. Tinian, already openly
earmarked for major troop facilities and potentially an air base, would replace Okinawa and
various U.S. footholds In allied coWltries on Asia's fringe. There would be no question of host
goverrunent changing heart and policy and kindly asking U.S. forces to depart.
The military advantages are cheap at many times the price In Pentagon eyes. They are
also obvious to other eyes. Which may make Security Council acquiescence, necessarily including the Soviet Union and People's China, something more than an automaticformality.
Nevertheless, with the prize in question already firmly under U. S. control, opposition is
Wllikely to develop into an immovable object.
·
And if anyone·should ask whatever became of Manifest ~stiny, the irresistable force that
once devoured a continent, it seems to be alive and twitching out there In the far Pacific.

MIDDLEPORT, ·OHIO

- MIDD...POtrr, 0.
• Ma-2342 -

·
L
NORTH HQLLYWOOD ,
Calif. (UP!) - Bolstered by a
1975 attendance increase ol
-18.1 per cent, the _National
Hot Rod Association Monday
announced . an elght-&lt;&gt;vent
national championship
racing. schedule for next
year, mcluding a -stop at
Colun,tbus, Ohio .
In 76, drivers may earn
po~ts toward .world 1hg
racmg champiOnships m
three categories-top fuel,
fuMy _car and pro stock.
A nmth major event, ~he
Sportsna tionals at Bowling
Green, Ky., May 23-30, does
. cl d
titi
.
no t m u e compe on m
either of those three
·
professwnal
brackets and
thus will have no bearin.l! on

.
Manifest destiny strikes again

-

'155 N. SECOND•ST.

,

A
PERSONAL
CHECKING
·A'CCOU.NT

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS - Agpes
Isaacs, Coolville; Shirley
Rawson, Racine; · Linda
Preston, Rutland; Melinda
Cu.ster, Middleport; Betty
Brooks, Albany; Dayton ·
McElroy, Minersville; Lovie
Watson, Albany ; S~even
Hankla, Cincinnati.
DISCHARGES---= - .James
Reynolds, Alice WiUba.~ger,
CUrtis Smith, Steven Hankla.

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Eastern Local Board of
Education · Tuesday night
adopted the . budget for the
1975'76 school year and hired
. several teachers.
Elotse Boston , clerk,
r~ported that the budget will
be at the school for anyone to
view for . the next 10 days.
The board hired · the
following: Maida Y,ng, an
English and Social Studies
teacher; Joseph . Mi t~hem,
eltomi!'ntary
physical
educati on . te acher and
assistant baseball · and

,.

football coach, . and Duane as bus driver and a~nOWlced . Plains Elementary Schools
Wolf!!, who. was hired e~rlier that there, are three openings and agreed to replac~ the
as . principai and teacher at for regular bus drivers , and locks on the old high school
Ch.e ster. Elementary . and substitute drivers are also building.
head ba~~etball coach at needed:
A thank-you note was '
Eastern'"'i:li.gp School. as
The amen'ded· .school addressed to the board room
. a·!;Sisiant football coach .
· HARTINGER PINS ON THIRD STAR- The United
calendar calls for n~ school the Middler class who used
States Senate confirmed the Pres.ident's . nomination of
Dorothy Myers was named .on Jan . 19, Martin , L~ther the · Riverview . Eleml!ntary
James V. Hartinger to the grade of Lieutenant General,
assistant custodian and 'Janie Kin g Day:
School for Bible school. ·
United States Air · Force, effective July 1,' 1975. ·The
Head! y was hired as
They also approved par- · ~,ttending were Howard
promotion coincided with General Hartmger's being
secretary · to ,John Riebel , ticipating
in
speciaf C&amp;IC!well, president ·of the
made Commander of Tactical Ali- Command's l'jibth Air
superintendent, and assistant education regional program· board ; Oris ' Smith , and
Foree, Shaw AFB, South Carolina. Fellow jet fighter pilot
clerk-treasurer.
and hired I\'IUTray Sheet Dorsel
Larkins , board
and son, First LieutenantJimmer Hartinger, who flies the
1 Th~y
ac cepted
the Metal to repair the roofs at members, John Riebel and
F-106 with the Florida Air National Guard; is showrt
.resignation of Cecil Caldwell the (:hester ·and Tuppers Eloise Boston .
pinning on his father 's third star.
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2- The Da1lySentmel, M1ddleport-Ponieroy, 0., Wednesday, July 9, 1975

Refugees have yet
•
to meet America

A Chronicle of America

July 6, 1775:
Congress adopts the 'Dec la ration of the &lt;;auses and
Necess tlt es of Ta ktn g Up Arms Im ha ll y wr111en by
ThomaSVeffer.son (w ho took ht s sea ttn Congress June20)
the documentts ex tenstve ly rewntten by John Dfcktnson
-an advoca t e or reconc •h a110n The document 1s, m ef

feet a declaratton of war agatnst Brttatn It says "We
have count ed the cost of thts contest and !tnd nothtng so
dreadful as volun tary slavery· Honor JUSti ce and
humamty for btd us tamely to surrender that freedom
wh1ch we received from ou r gallant ancesto r s. and whach
our mnocent postenty have a nghl to rece tve from us We
ca nnot endure the mfamy
and gu1lt of res1gmng suc-

ceedtng generations 10 tha t
wret ched ness wh1ch
In evitabl y awami them, 11 We

'
basely enta il heredttary bon

dage upon t hem Ou r ca use ts
Ou r un1on 1s perfecr

JUSI

Our Internal resources are
grea t
W11h one mtnd !we
are J resol ved to d•e free men
rather 1han to It ve I as]
sl aves ·

r

By Tom Tiede
FORT
INDIANTOWN
GAP, Pa - The crowds of
cunous are gone now
The Important People who
were 10 attendance early on
have s10ce left for other
pursw ts Now comes reahty
to thts VtetnEmese refugee
ca mp, and wtth tt almos t
loneliness Only the homeless
are sttll here, wa1t10g, thetr
faces
pressed
agamst
Amertca's
wtnd owglass,
hop10 g someone wtll come to
take them away
Two months'&gt;after the fall of
lndoc h10a , there ts as ye t no
assurance the refugess wtll
soon be taken a way Not all of
them
a nyway
Though
pos tllve success has been
made tn relocatmg some
45,000 of the war tmmtgrants,

- By
Maekt'nZit'
/ «1_
1975_
Unlt
ndJC&amp;
8pphcat10nS
..__
_Rms
__
_ _ AI_Jeff
_MacNt-lly
___
_t&gt;d_Ft'&amp;I
_Urt'
_Sy
.;.....
_IE'__, SpOnSOrShip
have dwtndled
as the

refu gees
have
become
yesterda y's news Nm e ty
thousand on entals a re s till
locked m to' depots throug hout
th e natt on, 14,000 of them
here There ts no pamc yet,
nor should there be, but some
are beginmng to feel a sense
of early desperatton
"lam a proud man,'' says a
former VIetn amese naval
captam , " but I would do
anythmg to get out of here
There ts an offtctal named
Grelly - s pelled with two L's
- he works for the 1.). S.
Government Do you know
htm ? Have you heard of him ?
He ts my frtend We worked
toge ther tn Satgon Wtll you
tell htm I'm here, wtth my
family 1 Maybe he can help
us Wtll you tell htm ?"
The desperalton ts only
natural. The refugees are
bemg kept tn v~rtual

DR. LAMB

Alcohol won't help diabetes
Lawrence E. Lamb. M.D.
DEAR DR LAMB - I am
37 years old and have had
dtabetes smce 1968 I have
been go10g to several doctors,
always trymg to avotd the
10sul10 101echons whtch I fear
ftercely I have been on p1lls
to control my blood glucose
The doctor I am seemg now
says th~re ts only one thmg
left to do tf thts doesn't brmg
the blood sugar down , and
that ts the needle. I don ' t
want to start that because I
wtll have to take tt the rest of
my hfe
Smce October my blood test
results have been 320, 289,
and 283 Then I JOined Wetght
a nd
From
Watc hers
December 26 to January 31tt
dropped to 269
Now I am havmg trouble
wtth my dnver 's license The
doctor won't stgn a statement
on uncontrolled dtabetes I
asked hun what my blood
sugar must be before he w11l
stgn the card so I could get

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my hcense back and he satd
120 Don 't you thmk this 18
unfatr ? I have had thts for
seven years and not had any
dtzzy spells or blacking out
Do you think I should go to
some other doctor who mtght
gtve me a better break?
You had a column once that
mentioned a cerlain kind or
alcohol whtch woilld drop the
blood sugar What was tt?
' Also, ts losmg weight a
deftmte answer to a safe and
sure way of bringing the
blood sugar down? Or is there
shll a possibility of havmg to
take msulin 1 Is be10g
depressed and losmg your
temper connected wtth
diabetes ?
DEAR READER - The
kind of alcohol that drops
blood sugar ts the kmd you
m1x m cocktatls or get tn
beer It acts by chemically
thmg up an unportant en.
zyme m the liver (NAD) used
to convert food stores to
glucose It won't help you

though, and wtll make your
dtabettc problem worse I
don 't approve of alcohol for
diabetics
I do approve of your effort
to lose weight, tf you have any
obestty problem at all Many
overweight women wtll have
normal blood sugar tests
after they get down to normal
wetght I usually constder a
good diet and correchon of
any obesity the ftrst step m
treatment of the obese
patient wtth htgh blood sugar
levels Dtet alone usually ts
as useful as the ptlls. II
reqwres more effort, but tf
you want to avotd that needle ,
I'd recommend betog con·
sctenttous about gettmg your
wetght under control.
Exerctse also lowers blood
sugar A good exerctse
program, done senstbly,
mtght help w1th your dtet
program Those htgh blood
sugar levels you have to·
diCate that the liver is con.
veqtmg more food to glucose

-•

border of Honan and ShanSI
provmces where a musical
sound drifts up from the
:
valley floor like the tinkle of a
:
thousand wind chimes.
:
The chiming comes from
~
hammers and chisels striking
"
rock. Tena of thousands of
~
hand-hewn rocks have been
1o
lifted on men's backs to build
••
a dam 400 feet tall across thiS
~
valley. Behind it already
stretches a blue-green lake to
; By ~UGENE PAfrERSON water the Huihslen fields or
• Follow the hand-built ac- guard them from flood . Now
;; queduct that lifts a river's the chiming chisels are
: waters up mto the Tal Hang building a power plant at the
: mountams to irrigate fields · foot of the dam, thetr fa10t
::; torn mto rock slopes, and music unbroken by a smgle
~ pass
through the cool pneumatic hammer's thud or
:: darkness of a mile-long the rumble of a tractor or
• tunnel which farmers picked truck.
These peasants
:.and shoveled through a recruited from the fields have
~ mountain usmg basms of no machines. They are
:. water as their level, and buildlllg China by hand.
., clunb the terraces at last to a
In the age of technology
: strange hetght ne.!lit the Chatrman Mao Tse-tung has

.
~Berrys World

· .---~----~---------•

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" Doggone it, Ron! Couldn't you have waited until my meatmg was over to tell him the new
swtmr)lmg pool ts ready?"
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Ma1or L eaque Standmgs
By Untied Press lnternat.onal
N..attonal League

' East
w 1 pet
.., P tttsburgh
so 31 610
Ph 1ladelph 1a
New York
St Louts
ChiCago
Montreat

...,m...

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Actors fight battle with frogs
&lt;.:HJLLICOTHE -

actors

organtzed and moltvated a revolutionary difference, IS
human sea of hand labor to that water control Is blocking
claw China's way into the off flood and drought, and
modern world. Appalling and tnsectictdes have stopped the
mspmng, this must be locusts, and state planrung
history's most massive ex- and
management
of
periment
m
soc18l granartes IS movtn~a
englneermg. After 25 days out of the dark age of fallllne.
among these drivQII people
An old Chinese greet10g
who make up one fourth of after "nihao" (hello) IS to
humanity, my conclusion 18 ask, "Have you eaten?" The
that they are attempting the monumental
ac.
unposs1ble, but that the world complishmenl of the Com·
Will be foolhardy to un- mWii.St regune after tis first
derestunate their capacity tO quarter century of tule is that
achieve it.
800 million people, or more
It IS easy to stand on thiS probably 900 trullion, are
worn and ancient land and getting fed, housed and
say these- laborers are clothed. It boggles the
foolishly SJ)ending their lives western mind to see the price
and strength trying to re- bemg paid for those three
invent the wheel. But then spare necessities - old men
you look at the dam and It 1s in harness with donkeys
there, a year and half's work pulling carl loads of coal or
by 2,800 men, and the tunnel rook, women and children
18 there (133,000 man days),
spreading human manure on
and the aqueduct 18 there the wheat stubble before men
(740,000 lnan days). In thiS flood it for rice and plow 11
once barren county of 550,000 with water buffalo (there are
population in a provmce of 60 ihcreasmg numbers of two·
million, the endless hands wheeled hand tractors now
have built 32 water reservoirs but the draft anunal remains
and 860 retaining pools, sunk the main motive force).
5,000 wells and dug 16,000
Mud adobe huts, often with
cisterns to store rainwater, dirt floors, still are staple
latd 1,500 miles of lrrlgatiOJI' rural shelter. The peasant's
canals lined with stone ~r aspiration, when he has
cement and built 138 pumping saved some yuan, IS for a
stations ,to elevate water bicycle, a sewing machine
through the canals ~ the and a watch .
greening fields whose-;tlijisoil
And constantly his brain is
they hauled in by cart
buffeted by the din of man·
And now they are har- datory Communist tdeology
vesting the early wheat which
makes
factory
Stooping women chop It a managers and professors,
handful at a time with the 10. along with .the workers and
inch blade of a hand scythe. peasants,
talk
like
Raked and shocked by hand, mechanical wind-up toys it is hauled to a hard, flat Chairman Mao whose picture
threshinll area where Olten or IS everywhere is good; Liu
an occasional small trattor Shaochl, Lin Piao and Conpull stone rollers back and fucius are bad. Good harvests
forth across It to break the and high production spring
grain from the straw. Men from Chainnan Mao's line
and women with tree-tined and all measurements are
w.9,0,den pitchforks then toss taken agamst two benthe mass again and again into chmarks in h.lstory
the air until the breeze liberation ( 1949) and the
blowing through the golden cultural revolution ( 1968 on) .
geyser separates the chaff _when Mao saved the people
from the wheal arid finally from the revisionism of his
the grain Is sacked. Peasants rivals, Uu and Lin. Bad
did it this way a thousand harvests
and
failed
years ago. The only dif- production were the devil's
ference now, and it 18 a work of those tw.o. Recitation

a.t

The 80

~~ Tecumseh r "

Bt cen t enn t a l
Drama
Chtlltcothe, are ftgh tmg ~
swnmer battle wtth the frogs
softball''"
Softball , m fact, would be
ntce And TV, and m ov tes,
and Kool Atd and Milky
Ways What the refugees
need, almos t as much as new
homes, are thmgs Amencan
Many of them do not kn ow
how to operate flush lmlets,
the m a JOr! ty hav e never
expen enced a1r condthon10g,
almost none have stood a t the
chec kout counter tn a
Safeway

Th ts year, however,

the hghts go out (between
scenes) and resuming as the
hghts come back on " Every
year we are plagued wtlh
requests to 'turn down the
recorded anunal sounds.' "
Thts year, however, thtogs
are dtfferent " We hired
large actors, with even larger
votces In fact the actors can
be heard so well that several
of the larger frogs have
stopped their notse to hsten to
the play "
The Drama's '75 season
con tmues through Aug. 30,
mghtly, except Sunday . Call,
10 Ohto, toll free , 8()().282-2015

th e

actor s are wmnmg
Complatnts about not
heanng actors' vo tces,
because of the earl y swnmer
frogs, and cnc kets have
almost vamshed, thts season,
accord10 g to Allen Wttt ,
spokesman for the drama
Throughout tts three year
run , lhe drama has been
plagued wtth these notsy
mght creatur es, begmmng
soo n afte r ope m ng and
cont10wng unhl mtd·July
Som e audtence members
beheve that the notses are
arltftc ta l, accordm g to Wttt
Th e frogs add to thts behef,
by ceas10g thetr nmse when

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38

553
525
476
459
4)6

Chtlhcothe, 45601

!ly hand

of this numbtog litany is as to leave the farmmg com· scnptures tlfat gwde and
automattc as a kowtow to the mWie~ for the urban bnght comlort these peasants 10
emperor or the landlord 10 lights. Life must be struggle, the1r own hard lot, a lot which
another time Dissent ts not hard and prunttive
many Am ertcans ha ve lived
expressed Dtscusston of
Fires of hatred must not be through But even 10 the
d 1 f fer en t
p o 11 t 1c a 1 allowed to dwindle, because bleakest times the Amertcan
philosophies stops with an class hatred, not Confuctan dreamed of a brtghter miron clang the moment moderatton,ts the pW'e flame dtvidual future for hts
Chairman Mao's mfalllbility that guards the peasantry chtldren
who, through
Is quest10ned.
agalll8t a restoralton of the educalton and a system of
1
Parents say un versally treacherous bourgeoisie And fr ee and competitive enter.
thetr highest hope for thetr the eternal hand labor, the pnse, could riSe to the limits
children Is that they be hard , grindmg work of wtoch· of thetr mdtvidual abtlity and
assigned to labor for the tog a sampan upstream wtth hopefully to a better life. Mao
state. "My childre are not tts own anchor line like an gives the Ch10ese only a
asset of mme, " said a father toc¥.orm , the load on the v tsion of mass struggle
to Harbm "They are t he shoulder pole and the toward the day when all of
property of the state " In· desolation of a hot hovel at society , espectally the
div1dual freedom ts a selftsh dusk , all these acceptances poorest, will be a httle better
indulgence.
can move the Western vtsitor off .
Educated people are sent to to heartsiCkness WI)ess they
But tha t, to the context of
do manual labor m factories are put mto the context of the Chtoese lime, is a great
or farms to keep them time, Amencan as well as deal. The older Chmese have
humble . llleducated con. Chtoese.
worked m sweatshops for
d 1r e c t
For the Amencan hYing Japanese mvaders who gave
f o r lJl 1 s t s
schoolteachers. The world 's ~ standard IS a postwar them acorns to eat, or farmed
hugest society 18 a para· product Those who lived m despamngly for slavemilttary organ!Z3tion with the rural old south when drtv10g landlords who lived m
discipline imposed by the • Prestdenl Franklin Roosevelt fine houses whtle th etr
state and enforced by the labeled
tt
Amen ca's peasants starved · They
herd. Universtty professors economtc problem number remember the fatrune of 1941·
who were trained to pursue one can remember a life not 42 when three trulllon people
the truth now say their much less desperate than the died in Honan provmce alone,
miSSion IS to mdoctrinate the Chmese peasants of today. or back to 1938 when Ch1ang
yoWig to serve the Com- Does he hve threadbare in a Kat-shek's army blew the
munlst party The inquirtng rude house lacking mdoor Yellow River dike man effort
mind IS deliberately stunted plumbmg, runnin g water, to block the Japanese and
in the intere$t of assurmg electrtcity, refrtgeralton or killed 800,000 of his own
that the proletariat will an automobile? So did we, to people wtth the flood. They
dictate to their Intellectual this lifelune Does he plow have seen ststers sold 10to'
betters. Shrill loudspeakers wtth a mule or an ox, plant marrtage or abandoned to
wake the roosters and set the seeds by hand and hoe the adopl!on to order that they
masses to domg calisthemcs rows, water the plants from a might eat Chma's landscape
to a counted cadence, with bucket with one dipper.full at tS still largely ~enuded of
martiaLmustc.
a time, pick cotton and scythe trees, not only because the
This hwnan mass Is so gram and butcher the hogs he human masses needed wood
utterly organized to a reflex has slopped? So did we . for the charcoal With whtch ·
obedience that Americans, Americans 1\new a ltfe they cooked 10 the old days,
who are treated with great without money, when they but because many Chinese
courtesy and friendltness dug m the earth for their own ate the bark of trees When
now, ate acutely aware that potatoes, sewed shtrts from the locusts ate their crops
anovetnlghlshiftin the party flour sacks and took thetr they ate fried locusts.
line could fill tbe city squares children out of school to help "Before the liberation we
with angry erunity in place of wilt! planting and harvest never had a tliatch over our
the present waves and because they could not afford heads," satd a workworn
smiles.
·
to pay for labor. ln that hard Honan farm wife Sittmg
There Is little beauty m the time thetr ethic was also set proudly in her two-room
shabby, ~enung cities or in • or influenced by one fun- ' adobe hut Wider a ptcture of
vast tracts of ugly, earthen damentalist fa ith o~ another Chairman Mao. Throughout
countryside. The earth Is to whtch the small com- the thousands of years of 1ts
there to provide food, nOt mumly was · expected to history China was disumted
and exploited · by every
flowers , and the ,l uxury of eonform.
paml . on buildings in the
The Chinese detty ts Mao variety of adventurer 01
dilaplllated towns would only and the CalvtnlSt ascetictsm pretender and Its hlll)dreds o1
make more youngsters want of h111 parables are the millions of poor did the dYmg

It Is against such a ""'""groWid that the full extent of
Commumsm's achievement
to Chtoa must be measured.
For the ftrsl time in history
tis people -all of them know the securtty of being fed
adequately , and sheltered
and clothed at small prices
they can pay from the
meager wages they earn
through their hard, and
seemmgly willing Ia bur for
the state. For the time, under
Mao, they are Witted nat10n,
an unheard-of feat, and
whatever price they have
paid m mdividual liberty
must seem cheap to the
peasant masses to wh9m
subststence livmg is the
greatest luxury they ever
dreamed of. As their expectations riSe, there will be
complications, but that Is a
future story
What they see now, beyond
the food on thetr tables at
last, 18 the begmnmg of a•
Chtna m whtch :IH!e lowest
have d1gmty and carry
themselves with prtde. They
see tens of milhons of
poplars, willows and eucalyptus tUrntog the edges of roads
and railroads and waterways
gree n, under Chairman
Mao's Instruction to reforest
(Continued on page 6)

~ .Dany ~Sentinel
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
" HESTER L TANNEHIL
E xec Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH
C1ty Ed1fD't
1
'u b l rshed d~lly except '
S_.turday by The Oh rct Valley 1
( 'Publrshing Compa"'y, llJ

St

Pomeroy , Ohio

~

157
t

S ~cond

Ohro

_ N_lltt•o~al ~· ad~ertlsi,IJ. t

ward )
Grrf.f rth CQmpany, Inc l

BoH mell r &amp; Ga/la~her Dl v ,
751 Thrrd Ave , New York •
, N Y 10017

S ub sc rrptTO n rar~s :
Delivered by ea rn e r where

'

J:arrrer

~

service

no.'t

' !availa bl e, One month, $3 2~ . •

ma•l•n Oh1o and w va ,,
ne
Yea r , S22 0,0.
SIX
months ,
Sll 50 .
Thre~

~

'

Y

months, S7 00 Else~here
526 00 year , Stx monthiS
S1l.50, three months. S7: 50.
ubscnphon

~vnda
-- y ,T tmes Senttnel

pn ce ,nelud

'

be · goi ng back to In·
dianapolis."
Shepard ctted Don Gullett,
who :s now recuperatmg from
a fractured left thwnb .
" If you continue to pttch as
yo u have been, who do you
thmk will he the first to go
when Gullett comes off the
dtsabled hst• " Shepard
asked Eastwtck
" I knew how badly he
wanted to pitch up here with
the Reds," recalled Shepard
Tuesday night "I remember
the tears he had m his eyes
when he learned he was betog
sent to Indta napohs thts
sprmg ."
&amp;l, Shepard can't really
say he ts surpriSed by the
about fa ce Eastwtck has done
on the mound smce thetr talk
Aware of Shepard's talk
w1th Eastw1ck, one also was
not surprised by the com·
phment Reds • manager
Spark Anderson patd hts
pttc hing coach Tuesday
rught.
" Yes, I'm thankful for the
JOb my bullpen ts domg," !llud
Anderson . "But first, I'm
thankful I've got Shepard."
The Reds haven 't got a
com pi ete game from a
starter smce June 11
" But that doesn 't concern
me as long as we keep wmnmg," satd Anderson And
the Reds' victory Tuesday
mght was their . 34th agatost
mne losses at home. On the
road, they have won 15 of
their last 20 games while
butldmg up a lead over the
Dodgers

Marshall

•

IS

1

Eastwlck, who starred for
the Reds late last season but
lost hts seat tn the bullpen
NL AfrENDANCE UP
wtth a medtocre spnng
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)tra101ng, came on wtth two.()n
Last week's attendance of
and tw~ut to the seventh
962,900 was the highest smgle
mnmg to bail out starter Gary
week total in the Nat10nal
Nolan and preserve CtnLeague since 1973, according
cmnati's 2-I trtumph over the
to ftgures released Tuesday
streakmg Phtlade lphta
by the N .L office.
Ph lilies.
In addition, the weekend
Eastwtck was sent to In·
total -eovering games of
dianapolis to start the season,
July 4, 5 and 6 -.(If 574,560 Is
but was tmpresstve to Triplethe highest weekend total m
A ball and was back wtth the
-. 1975
Btg Red Machme by the first
week of May. Eastmck didn't
allow a hit Tuesday to htS 2 1.J
IMmgs work, picking up hiS
fourth save of the year
Marshall, who spent six
By FRED McMANE
Baltunore, and although I
weeks on the d1sa bled list
UP! Sports Writer
dido 't pitch that well, I felt
early
thts season wtth a torn
Like a comedian who had confident. Then I went back
rtb
cage,
flashed hts best
forgotten bow to make people to my old way agamst
laugh , all Joe Coleman Mtlwaukee and became my performance m the month
smce hts return at the Ptttsneeded to become a winrung old sloppy self
burgh Ptrates 10 hurhng
pitcher agam was a change m
"&amp;l,l thought I'd go back to
three
mmngs of one-htt rehef
his deltvery.
the fast malton and try to be
The 28-year-old right· aggresstve, and •t wa s to assure Don Sutton his 13th
hander of the DetrOit Tigers, workmg. I was really VIctory of the season
Marshall struck out ftve
struggling through the worst throwmg the curve for
batters
m 3 10nmgs for hts
half-year of his major league stnkes I discarded the
save,
prunmg hlffiSelf
stxth
career, SWitched from hts old Sidearm pitch. I used to'
dehberate style of pttching t.o stdearm when I felt my for his tour of duty by hurling
a speeded-un modern ver- fastball wasn 't nght, but then batting practice for the first
ltme 10 a month
sion, similar to that used by I got mto a rut pttchmg that
" We dectded I'd walt a
Chtcago 's Jim Kaat, Tuesday way when I shouldn't."
month after the to)ury before
rught and the results were
Ron LeFlore and Leon
I
started throwmg batting
qmte pleasmg.
Roberts provided Coleman
Coleman, who had won only wtth the rWis he needed by practtce a gam," Marshall
four of 16 decisons and hitting homers LeFlore hit a expla10ed. " The month was
earned an earned run solo shot in the !ourth and up today I throw battmg
average of 6,37, pitched Roberts a two-run blast in the practice to work on my slow
shutout ball for eight mnings etghth off knuckleballer breakmg pitches. Every pttch
before givmg way to John Wilbur Wood, who lost his I threw was effectiVe on those
five strikeouts.
Hiller as the Tigers defeated 13th game in 19 dectstons
" I'm not back at full speed
the White Sox :H&gt; to rWI thetr
In other Amencan League
yet,
but I'm getting there ."
wlnmng streak to s eveh games, Kansas City routed
In other games, the San
games.
Milwaukee 9-1, Boston edged
Otego
Padres ouUasted the
With htS new delivery Cole-. Minnesota !Hi, New York
man gets the ball back from blanked Texas W, Oakland Clucago Cubs 8-6 m 15 m\he catcher then proceeds to routed Cleveland 15-5 and mngs , the Houston Astros
blasted the Montreal Expos 5pitch right away Without Balttmore
defeated
1, the New York Mets tripped
gomg through a lot of California 8-5 m 10 mnings.
deliberation. The quickened
Pace tends to wear him down
somewhat, but forces him to
Concentrate more.
' "I got the Idea !tom watching Kaat p1~ch m sprmg
'
training," said Coleman: "He
gelS the ball,, he 's ready to
throw 1t. His fielders ·are
ready and they like tl. I even
ran from the mound to the
dugout toni!Wt. At times I'm
very lackadatSical and ' it
feels fwmy running out there
after eight ye~;~rs m the btg
leagues.
"It could have been just one
of thOse crazy nights, hut I
hOpe not. I was working on 11
(the new delivery ) agamst

'
·~

I '

&lt;base d on 200 at bahl
NattOnal League
9 ab r
h pet

Morgn Cn 79
Madlck Ch 75
Cash Phd 85
San gtn Pt "
war son Ho 80
Jos,...ua SF 66
Bowa Ph•l so
Porkr Pll 71
Brock St L 75
Garvv LA 86

275 so 97
302 43 106
35{1 61 118
16 1 19 86
299 38 98
24 7 J6 81
155 32 83
261 40 85
295 50 94
361 46 115

Amencan League
g ab r
h

353
351
330
330
318

328

315

314
319
318
pet

Carw Mnn 78 188 52 106 368
Hargrv Tx 75 264 .tB
Munsn NY 7q 301 44
Lynn Bos 74 163 54
Wash Oak
Hts.l e Mnn
McRa KC
Mdd)( N y
Ystrzm Bs

82 375

60 220
82 3 17
) 5 2 18

50
34
41
36

90
99

86

341
379
317

103
69
98
67

317
314
309
307

Three more out of t.o urney
The Cheshir e Ttgers,
J Wtlcoxen, and P King
Syracuse Astros and John· had the only Whtle &amp;lx htts
son's Market posted vtctones McClellan was the wtnmng
Tuesday night tn the second pttcher whtle King took the
mght of the 17th Annual loss
Kyger Creek Tournament.
In tomght's action, Salem
Cheshtre, beh10d the ptt· plays Salem Center, Pomt
c h10g of Ttm Pnce, blasted Pleasant 's Peoples Bank
the Pomeroy Ptrates, 11-4
battles the Pometoy Tigers
Lead10g !he Tiger attack and the Mtddleport Braves
were Metzner wtth a double
and s mgle , · Layne, two
smgles; Gtlmore, a tnple,
Mark Pnce, a s togie
Cheshtre led 5-2 after three
mmngs and wrapped tt up
wtth ft ve run s m the fourth
Gettmg htts for Pomeroy's
Pirates were Thomas. a
,s mg le'
Carm ichae l ,
a
double, Land-ers, two s mgles
and Moon, a stngle
yea r Furm T ra cto r
Syracuse edged Mtd· Good
ll alt f w•s o re dcs1gned
dlepor t's Jndtans , 3·2 10 the fo r lOst a n t s la rl 1 n ~
re spo n se 10 a ll typ es o f
second game D Nance fired
fa rm t rnc to rs - c vcn nfte r
a four httter for the '"" Top
lo n g res i po n od s
Astro ht tters 11ere S Hayes, Amp e m hour c apa c tii CS
two smgles, J Wilhams , a a rc e q ua l to o r greR ter
tnple , and E Jeffers, a th nn , or1 s ma l equipment
bn!Hme s - n stze for almost
smgle
A!
Mtddleport httters ww re S
Carson, a tr1ple and double , •• '"'Y
S Smtth, a Single and S
Hartmger. a smgle

By RICK GOSSELIN
UPI Sports Wrlter
The Los Angeles Dodgers
have wheeled the heavy arlll·
lery to the front and have
taken aun at the front run·
mng Cinctnnat1 Reds, f1rmg
the ftrst volley With the nght
arm of a once-agam-healthy
Mtke Marshall.
But thts year the Reds are
returning the flre ... and
Tuesday mght tt was Rawly
EastwiCk who commanded
the barrage.

the Atlanta Braves 4-3 and
the San Franctsco Gtants
edged St. Louts 6-4
In the Amencan League.
Detrmt blanked Chtcago :H&gt;,
Kansas
Ci ty
pasted
Milwaukee ~1. Boston rupped
Mmnesota !Hi, New York
dumped Texas W, Oakland
blasted Cleveland 15-5 and
Balttmore edged Califorrua S5 to 10 mnmgs
Padres 8, Cubs 6
Fred Kendall smgled home
Don Hahn and Dave Winfteld
wtth two out m the top of the
15th to end the National
League 's longest game of the
season Bobby Tolan and
Wtlhe McCovey pounded
home runs for San Otego
while Rick Monday belted hiS
eighth for Chtcago Joe
Mcintosh ptcked up the win to
even h1s record at 7·7
Astros 5, Expos 1
Dave Roberts hurled a
fourhttter and knocked m two
runs with a patr of stogies m
ptcking up htS fifth victory m
15 games . Larry Parrish hit
his stxth home run of the
season for the only Montreal
nm
Mets 4, Braves 3
Dave Kingman clubbed hiS
15th home run of the season
wtth two teammates on base
to carry the Mets and pttcher.

Ohto law requires that all
watercraft wi'th closed
compartments which could
trap fuel must be properly
venltlated, reminds · the
Watercraft Divlston of the
Ohto Department of Natural
Resources

MfEmiG

J o hn so n ' s

Market

I . t d th e Ga II tpo l ts
80 188 53 86 199 e tmtn a e
Bran Mnn 68 111 27 66 199 Whtte Sox from further action
Home Runs
th 8 4• J VICt ory G MCNat•onat League
Luzmsk , Wl

1
Bench Cm 17 Foster . Clellan led
C n K1ngman NV and Parker , two smgles
Pill 15
Amertcan L eague Bonds NY
19 Jacks on Oak. 18 Mayber ry
KC 17 H endr1ck Clev Horton •
Det Scali , M1 l and Burroughs
T ex 1~
~
Run s Biltt ed In
Nat lana i League
Luzl nsk 1,
Phd 73 Bench Ctn 69 Morgan
C•n 59 Watson Hoo 58 Staub
Pt1tl 72

NY

meet Green

GOOD-YEAR
FARM
TRACTOR
BATTERIES

Johnson 's wtth

CENTER

POMEROY

JOHN F. FULTZ
PH. 992-2101

OHIO

5~

Amer .can League
Hor ton
Det 60 Lynn Bos 59 Scott , Md
58 May Ball 56 R1ce Bos and
N eHtes NY 55
Stolen B ases
Naf 10na l League
Morgan
C1n 38 Brock St L 35 Cedeno
Hou
33
Lopes,
LA
37
Con cepc 1on Cm and Mangual

. ,,,,.,.
,,, ,,,•.

Mtl 19

Amencan League / RJver s
Ca t 46 Washtngton Oak 32
Ott s KC 19
Remy Cal and

I Ba sed on m osl v tc fon es)
Nalt onal League Sulton L A
13 8 Seave r NY 12 .4 Messers
mtlh LA 11 S Jones SO 11 5
Bdlmgt1am Ctn 10 3 Ma ltack
NY and M c Glothen St L 10 6

•
WID

...
.
\..11

Jerry Koosman to vtctory
Koosman held the Braves to
just f1ve hits hefore betog
hfted for a pmch-h1tter m the
mnth, wtth Ken Sanders
hur l10g a perfect runth tontng
for his ftrst Nattonal League
save
Giants 6, Cardinals 4
Bobby Murcer belted a
two-run home run to push St
LouiS off to a 4.{) lead and then
the Gtants held on to wto 6-4
after Ron Fatrly blasted hiS
seventh career grand slam to
pull the Cards w1th10 strtking
range Rookte Pete Falcone
( 7~) ptcked up the wm wtth
Gary Lavelle not chmg the
save

WILL YOUR CAR

cars are msure d
w1th us than w1th

any olhe r romp
Fm d ou t whv nowI
STEVE
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PH 992 7155

H ~..,~OJ!oo

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If your brakes have not been checked for 12,000
miles, we recommend thts serv1ce.
Stxteenth in a series of money-saving serv1ce
coupons.
This Coupon.
is Worth

Good through

July

~0.

1975

tCoupon No 16

•4.00
on the Purchase of a

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Bra~e Inspection
remov1ng .all wheels. rnspectlng

INCLUDES:

linmgs, tnspechng cylinders, lubrtcate b.:,cktng
plates, mspect entire systems for leaks, pack wheel

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Special Prtce ... $8..00
(Disc Brake• -$5.00 morel

DON WAIT 'TIL lfS
,
HAVE YOUR .BRAICF.S INSPECTED TODAY.
Stop by or call tor an appoJOlment, Keep watching our ads for
more &gt;money·SiiVing service coupons, coming y,our way
weekly.

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DO BUSINESS WITH A LEADER
1

PT. PLEASANT

Smith N'elson Motors Inc.

5GO E Mam St
Phone 992·2174
Pomeroy, 0 .
Servtce Hours . Mon .- Fri. 8·4 :30, Saturday 1· 12 noon

2325 Jackson Ave.

GAU. IPOLIS
1503 Eastern Ave .

•

'

'•
~

Ma1or Leag ue Leaders
By Unlled Pr e~s Int erna tion al
Lea dmg Batters

back, hut

Reds continue to

8 PAK
16 ·0Z.

~============~

.

.

North Oak 23
Ptfchmg

COLA

l

r e presen r aH v e

avarlable 75 cents per we~k ~&lt;
By Motor Route whe&gt;rl

the game that E:astwtck
replaced Nola!\ wtth two out
Dtsplaymg the potse of a
vete r an, the young rtght
hander
mduced
the
dangerous Dave Cash to htt
mto a mmng~nding force
play He then proceeded to
blank the Phils the final two
mntogs wtlhout a h1t while
strtk mg out two batters along
the way .
And, one of those batters
Rawly s truck out m the nmth
was Phils slugger Dick Allen
In his last four rehef appearances, Eastw1ck had
)'lelded only four hits , no
nms, walked one and struck
out 11 over a rune 2·3 mrung
spa n
Rawly's r ecord for hts first
16 relief appearances after
hts recall from t he In·
dianapolis fa rm club wasn't
what one mtght call tm·
presstve - !Bruns, 31 htts and
12 walks over a ~toning
span
That'swhy Shepard had hts
ta lk with Eastwtck
"&amp;lmetimes a httle shock
treatment hfl.lps ," sa td
Shepard And that's what
Larry gave Eastwtck.
" You're pussy-footmg out
there on the mound .. trymg to
spot your pitches," Shepard
told Eastwtck
" You got your chance when
they recalled you from Indianapolis a nd now you're
throwmg It away "
" I'm not threatemng you, "
Larry said, "but I'm tellmg
you, you'd better throw the
ball the way you can or you 'II

'

class pos-tage paid

Pomeroy ,

CINCINNATI (UPI) - Cin·
c tnnati Reds nghthander
Gary Nolan owes Raw ly
Eastw1ck a "thank you" for
the 2-1 vtctory he notched
over the Phtladelphta Phtls
last mght .
,
And Eastw1ck, the Reds'
young rookie rehef pttcher, ts
equally mdebted to Larry
Shepard for the "man-to·
man" talk the Reds· pitching
coach had with htm some two
1All Times eon
San Otego (Strom
3 7 1 at weeks ago
Ch1cago (Zahn 2 5) , 1 30 p m
E:astwick , mak10g hts
Los Angeles ( Hooton 6 e1 at
fourth
rehef appearance
Pt ttsbu rgh { Eilts 6 4) , 7 35 p m
New Y ork (Seaver 17 41 at w1thto a lklay span, blanked
Atlanta 1Sadeck• 11 or Dal
tlle Phils without a htl the
Can ton02l 7 35pm
Philadelph ta (Lonborg 7 6 ) at fmal 2 l-3 mmngs Tuesday
Cmc,nnat• ( Bdlmgt1am 10 3)
rught after taking over for
8 05 p m
San Franosco (Montefusco 6 3 J Nolan
at St Lou1s ( Denny 3 3 ), 8 30
And he not only preserved
pm
Montreal ( Bia 1r 6 9) at Houston Gary 's etghth vtctory agamst
(F ors ch 7 6) B 35 p m
ftve losses, but he also gamed
Thursd ay' s Games
San D•ego at Chtcago
his fourth save as the Reds
Montrea l at Atlanta n1gt1t
ran
their wtnmng streak to
LA at P1ltsborgh n1ght
(Only gam es sc heduled I
ftve games and mamtamed
th etr 8 1-2 game marg10 over
A m encan League
the Dodgers m the Nattonal
East
w I pet g b League West
Boston
45 37 549
A double by George Foster,
N ew Yor k
44 38 537
I
one of hiS four stratght htts
MtiWaukee
44 40 524
1
Ba lt 1more
39 41 488 s
for the night, and three
Cleveland
37 45 45 1
~. , straight walks, the hrst tn·
Detro•t
35 46 437
West
tenttonal, gave the Reds their
w 1 pet g b
ftrst run Of the gan'le to the
Oak I and
52 31 627
Kansas C1ty
46 37 554
6
second mnmg
Tex as
40 45 47 1 13
And, m the fow-th, Ken
Ch1cago
38 43 .469 13
Cahforma
39 47 453 14 1 Griffey's 19th tnfteld htt of the
M 1n nesota
37 46 4.t6 15
season scored Merv Reiten·
Tuesday 's Re sults
Boston 6 Mmnesota 5
mWid wtth the wmmng run
New Y or k 4 Texas o
after
the Reds outftelder
Detrott 3 Chtcago 0
Kansas Ctf y 9 Milwaukee 1
walked, stole second and
Oakland 15 Cleveland 5
advanced
to thtrd on an tn·
Balt1more a Calif 5, 10 mn
Today ' s Pr obable P1tch ers
field out.
(All Times EDTI
It was after the Phtls
M 1nn esota (Co rb m 4 6 or Golt z
7 6) at Bos ton (Moret 5 OJ 3 30 bunched three smgles m the
pm
Cleveland
CRa 1ct1
s 2l at seventh for their only run of

R. C. &amp; DIET RITE

45769 Busmess Off•ce Phone •
92' r2 1 56 Edttorral Pho"e 992

• TOURNEY SET
Tht• 1975 Ohio- ~ailey
Baseball
double
ollminatlon tournament
"IIJ start at Branch Rickey
Park. Portsmouth, August ,
I Entry fee Is $50 a nd •••
nc"
baseball
-The entry deadline Is
July 23, "lth a bracket
dra .. Ing Saturday, July 26
4t 8 p.m at Branch Rtckey
Park P la y will be two
games
per
night.
For more Information,
rontaot Charles " Mickey"
Cochrane, 1707 8th Street,
Ports mouth, Ohio 45662, or
call 614·353-2869.

41 )

Coleman winning

a

Court

=============

on really heavy

1
11

Oakland (Bosman 5 31
4 30
pm
Texas (Bacs1k 1 1) at New
York (May 7 51 8 p m
Ch•cago
(Jeffer son
1 3l
at
Detro 1t '(Bar e 3 5) . 8 p m
M 1tw au ke e (Colbotn 3 7) at
Kan sas Clly ( Bu sby 116) 8 30
pm
Balttmore (Gr•msl ev 5 q ) at
Ca ltforn1a (Tanana 6 5) , 10 30
pm
Thursday's Gam es
Texas at Boston , n 1ght
Mmnesota at N Y n tght
Det ro tt at KC . n 1ght
Balhmore at Calif n1ght
(Only games scheduled)

or wnte ''Tecumseh,'' Bos 73,

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39 43
39 46
17'
34 44
14
West
w I pet
g t1
Cmc.nnar,
56 19 659
Los Angeles
48 38 558 a• ~. .
San Fr a,c•sco 40 44 476 15',
San O•ego
39 45 464 16' 1
A tl anta
36 47 434 19
Houston
31 57 351 26,
Tu es day 'r. R esu lts
San O•ego 8 Ch1cago 6 15 1nns
New York 4 Atlanta 3
Houston 5 Montrea l 1
Los Angeles J P1HSburgh o
C•ncmnar, 7 Philad elph•a 1
San Franctsco 6 St LOu iS 4
Today•s Probabl e Pttchers

Modern -china raising

Inside Mao's land
(Eugene Patterson, editor
and president of the St.
Petersburg flmes, ·Jed a
delegation of 15 American
editors on a 4,350.mlle
reporting tour of China May
29-June 22. fhe first of his
reports on the trip appeared
In the nmes Sunday and Is
being distributed by UP! for
release elsewhere Monday or
hereafter.)

than you body uses, not JUSt
that you have a problem 10
absorbmg too much sugar
For more detatled tn·
formation on dtabetes, wrtte
to me m care of thts news·
paper, P 0 Box 1551 , Radto
Ctty Slatton, New York, NY
10019 and ask for The Health
Letter humber 3-11 Send a
stamped,
self·
long,
addressed envelope 1 and 50
cents for mathng and costs
Severe dtabetics may still
need 10sulm even when they
are not obese. They have a
dtfferent problem and lose
enormous
amounts
of
calones through the excess
glucose ehmmated tn the
urtne , unless they are
properly controlled by 10·
sultn
I'm sur04 your doctor ts
trymg to encourage you to do
the best thmg for your overall
health You can help by
following a good program and
working hard on the dtet
aspects of your problem

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Eas\wick
coming
BASEBALL ··

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agnoran ce of thear fates and,
a t Indi antown a nyway, m

quarters tl'at would worry
anyone's
amaganat10n
Because of laws and convemence, the refugees are
conlmed to roped-of£ en·
campments, never to see
anythtng of the country unhl
they are perm11nenUy settled
Thus tempers are s hor t ,
ftghts are frequent and many
of the less-ed ucated a r e
beginning to wonder If Jn.
dtan town Gap ts all there ts to
Amenca '' I would hke to go
off base and look at a town,"
says a naval caplatn, " You do
have towns, don' t you?"
In the capta m's case, the
secluswn and lack of tn·
formatton ts merely a r ub He
has been tn Ame n ca
pr~vtously, and his concern
for "hts fate ts more
frustratton than anxtety Yet,
he says, some of the less
are
w,orldl y
r efu gees
;ctevelopmg genume fears
Wtll they be sold m to
bondage? Wtll they sta rv e tf
they can' t f10d work ? Wtll
they be thrown mto pnson tf
they cannpt spea k E nghs h?
The captam says adult men
weep tn the m ght wt th
anxiety, Buddhtsts a r e
conv ertmg to Chnsltamtry 10
hopes uf appeahng more to U
S mterests, and m others tell
thetr c hildren grab the leg of
any visttor so the famtly wtll
be rec ogmzed as lov mg and
adoptable
Many of these fea rs and
rea ctto ns
are
perhaps
unavotdable. But there ts
~eason to beheve, almost
predtctably ,
that
the
government whtch ts helpmg
the refug ees has gotte n so
entangled m the mechamcs of
assistan ce that scarce at·
tentton ts gtven the emottons
of tt Hen ce a doc tor
provtdmg moculabons m the
chmc hne here operates wtth
robot efft ctency but nary a
smtle or soft word And when
asked about the avatlabthty
of recreatton for refugees
another offt cta says coldly
that "you can 't worry about
that with all these bodtes to
proc ~ss - what do you want,

'

' 3 - The Daily se'ntmel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday , July 9, 197~

"Ar.d we used to worry about the wolf."

TOM TIEDE

,We Hold These
Truths ...
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2- The Da1lySentmel, M1ddleport-Ponieroy, 0., Wednesday, July 9, 1975

Refugees have yet
•
to meet America

A Chronicle of America

July 6, 1775:
Congress adopts the 'Dec la ration of the &lt;;auses and
Necess tlt es of Ta ktn g Up Arms Im ha ll y wr111en by
ThomaSVeffer.son (w ho took ht s sea ttn Congress June20)
the documentts ex tenstve ly rewntten by John Dfcktnson
-an advoca t e or reconc •h a110n The document 1s, m ef

feet a declaratton of war agatnst Brttatn It says "We
have count ed the cost of thts contest and !tnd nothtng so
dreadful as volun tary slavery· Honor JUSti ce and
humamty for btd us tamely to surrender that freedom
wh1ch we received from ou r gallant ancesto r s. and whach
our mnocent postenty have a nghl to rece tve from us We
ca nnot endure the mfamy
and gu1lt of res1gmng suc-

ceedtng generations 10 tha t
wret ched ness wh1ch
In evitabl y awami them, 11 We

'
basely enta il heredttary bon

dage upon t hem Ou r ca use ts
Ou r un1on 1s perfecr

JUSI

Our Internal resources are
grea t
W11h one mtnd !we
are J resol ved to d•e free men
rather 1han to It ve I as]
sl aves ·

r

By Tom Tiede
FORT
INDIANTOWN
GAP, Pa - The crowds of
cunous are gone now
The Important People who
were 10 attendance early on
have s10ce left for other
pursw ts Now comes reahty
to thts VtetnEmese refugee
ca mp, and wtth tt almos t
loneliness Only the homeless
are sttll here, wa1t10g, thetr
faces
pressed
agamst
Amertca's
wtnd owglass,
hop10 g someone wtll come to
take them away
Two months'&gt;after the fall of
lndoc h10a , there ts as ye t no
assurance the refugess wtll
soon be taken a way Not all of
them
a nyway
Though
pos tllve success has been
made tn relocatmg some
45,000 of the war tmmtgrants,

- By
Maekt'nZit'
/ «1_
1975_
Unlt
ndJC&amp;
8pphcat10nS
..__
_Rms
__
_ _ AI_Jeff
_MacNt-lly
___
_t&gt;d_Ft'&amp;I
_Urt'
_Sy
.;.....
_IE'__, SpOnSOrShip
have dwtndled
as the

refu gees
have
become
yesterda y's news Nm e ty
thousand on entals a re s till
locked m to' depots throug hout
th e natt on, 14,000 of them
here There ts no pamc yet,
nor should there be, but some
are beginmng to feel a sense
of early desperatton
"lam a proud man,'' says a
former VIetn amese naval
captam , " but I would do
anythmg to get out of here
There ts an offtctal named
Grelly - s pelled with two L's
- he works for the 1.). S.
Government Do you know
htm ? Have you heard of him ?
He ts my frtend We worked
toge ther tn Satgon Wtll you
tell htm I'm here, wtth my
family 1 Maybe he can help
us Wtll you tell htm ?"
The desperalton ts only
natural. The refugees are
bemg kept tn v~rtual

DR. LAMB

Alcohol won't help diabetes
Lawrence E. Lamb. M.D.
DEAR DR LAMB - I am
37 years old and have had
dtabetes smce 1968 I have
been go10g to several doctors,
always trymg to avotd the
10sul10 101echons whtch I fear
ftercely I have been on p1lls
to control my blood glucose
The doctor I am seemg now
says th~re ts only one thmg
left to do tf thts doesn't brmg
the blood sugar down , and
that ts the needle. I don ' t
want to start that because I
wtll have to take tt the rest of
my hfe
Smce October my blood test
results have been 320, 289,
and 283 Then I JOined Wetght
a nd
From
Watc hers
December 26 to January 31tt
dropped to 269
Now I am havmg trouble
wtth my dnver 's license The
doctor won't stgn a statement
on uncontrolled dtabetes I
asked hun what my blood
sugar must be before he w11l
stgn the card so I could get

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my hcense back and he satd
120 Don 't you thmk this 18
unfatr ? I have had thts for
seven years and not had any
dtzzy spells or blacking out
Do you think I should go to
some other doctor who mtght
gtve me a better break?
You had a column once that
mentioned a cerlain kind or
alcohol whtch woilld drop the
blood sugar What was tt?
' Also, ts losmg weight a
deftmte answer to a safe and
sure way of bringing the
blood sugar down? Or is there
shll a possibility of havmg to
take msulin 1 Is be10g
depressed and losmg your
temper connected wtth
diabetes ?
DEAR READER - The
kind of alcohol that drops
blood sugar ts the kmd you
m1x m cocktatls or get tn
beer It acts by chemically
thmg up an unportant en.
zyme m the liver (NAD) used
to convert food stores to
glucose It won't help you

though, and wtll make your
dtabettc problem worse I
don 't approve of alcohol for
diabetics
I do approve of your effort
to lose weight, tf you have any
obestty problem at all Many
overweight women wtll have
normal blood sugar tests
after they get down to normal
wetght I usually constder a
good diet and correchon of
any obesity the ftrst step m
treatment of the obese
patient wtth htgh blood sugar
levels Dtet alone usually ts
as useful as the ptlls. II
reqwres more effort, but tf
you want to avotd that needle ,
I'd recommend betog con·
sctenttous about gettmg your
wetght under control.
Exerctse also lowers blood
sugar A good exerctse
program, done senstbly,
mtght help w1th your dtet
program Those htgh blood
sugar levels you have to·
diCate that the liver is con.
veqtmg more food to glucose

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border of Honan and ShanSI
provmces where a musical
sound drifts up from the
:
valley floor like the tinkle of a
:
thousand wind chimes.
:
The chiming comes from
~
hammers and chisels striking
"
rock. Tena of thousands of
~
hand-hewn rocks have been
1o
lifted on men's backs to build
••
a dam 400 feet tall across thiS
~
valley. Behind it already
stretches a blue-green lake to
; By ~UGENE PAfrERSON water the Huihslen fields or
• Follow the hand-built ac- guard them from flood . Now
;; queduct that lifts a river's the chiming chisels are
: waters up mto the Tal Hang building a power plant at the
: mountams to irrigate fields · foot of the dam, thetr fa10t
::; torn mto rock slopes, and music unbroken by a smgle
~ pass
through the cool pneumatic hammer's thud or
:: darkness of a mile-long the rumble of a tractor or
• tunnel which farmers picked truck.
These peasants
:.and shoveled through a recruited from the fields have
~ mountain usmg basms of no machines. They are
:. water as their level, and buildlllg China by hand.
., clunb the terraces at last to a
In the age of technology
: strange hetght ne.!lit the Chatrman Mao Tse-tung has

.
~Berrys World

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" Doggone it, Ron! Couldn't you have waited until my meatmg was over to tell him the new
swtmr)lmg pool ts ready?"
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Ma1or L eaque Standmgs
By Untied Press lnternat.onal
N..attonal League

' East
w 1 pet
.., P tttsburgh
so 31 610
Ph 1ladelph 1a
New York
St Louts
ChiCago
Montreat

...,m...

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Actors fight battle with frogs
&lt;.:HJLLICOTHE -

actors

organtzed and moltvated a revolutionary difference, IS
human sea of hand labor to that water control Is blocking
claw China's way into the off flood and drought, and
modern world. Appalling and tnsectictdes have stopped the
mspmng, this must be locusts, and state planrung
history's most massive ex- and
management
of
periment
m
soc18l granartes IS movtn~a
englneermg. After 25 days out of the dark age of fallllne.
among these drivQII people
An old Chinese greet10g
who make up one fourth of after "nihao" (hello) IS to
humanity, my conclusion 18 ask, "Have you eaten?" The
that they are attempting the monumental
ac.
unposs1ble, but that the world complishmenl of the Com·
Will be foolhardy to un- mWii.St regune after tis first
derestunate their capacity tO quarter century of tule is that
achieve it.
800 million people, or more
It IS easy to stand on thiS probably 900 trullion, are
worn and ancient land and getting fed, housed and
say these- laborers are clothed. It boggles the
foolishly SJ)ending their lives western mind to see the price
and strength trying to re- bemg paid for those three
invent the wheel. But then spare necessities - old men
you look at the dam and It 1s in harness with donkeys
there, a year and half's work pulling carl loads of coal or
by 2,800 men, and the tunnel rook, women and children
18 there (133,000 man days),
spreading human manure on
and the aqueduct 18 there the wheat stubble before men
(740,000 lnan days). In thiS flood it for rice and plow 11
once barren county of 550,000 with water buffalo (there are
population in a provmce of 60 ihcreasmg numbers of two·
million, the endless hands wheeled hand tractors now
have built 32 water reservoirs but the draft anunal remains
and 860 retaining pools, sunk the main motive force).
5,000 wells and dug 16,000
Mud adobe huts, often with
cisterns to store rainwater, dirt floors, still are staple
latd 1,500 miles of lrrlgatiOJI' rural shelter. The peasant's
canals lined with stone ~r aspiration, when he has
cement and built 138 pumping saved some yuan, IS for a
stations ,to elevate water bicycle, a sewing machine
through the canals ~ the and a watch .
greening fields whose-;tlijisoil
And constantly his brain is
they hauled in by cart
buffeted by the din of man·
And now they are har- datory Communist tdeology
vesting the early wheat which
makes
factory
Stooping women chop It a managers and professors,
handful at a time with the 10. along with .the workers and
inch blade of a hand scythe. peasants,
talk
like
Raked and shocked by hand, mechanical wind-up toys it is hauled to a hard, flat Chairman Mao whose picture
threshinll area where Olten or IS everywhere is good; Liu
an occasional small trattor Shaochl, Lin Piao and Conpull stone rollers back and fucius are bad. Good harvests
forth across It to break the and high production spring
grain from the straw. Men from Chainnan Mao's line
and women with tree-tined and all measurements are
w.9,0,den pitchforks then toss taken agamst two benthe mass again and again into chmarks in h.lstory
the air until the breeze liberation ( 1949) and the
blowing through the golden cultural revolution ( 1968 on) .
geyser separates the chaff _when Mao saved the people
from the wheal arid finally from the revisionism of his
the grain Is sacked. Peasants rivals, Uu and Lin. Bad
did it this way a thousand harvests
and
failed
years ago. The only dif- production were the devil's
ference now, and it 18 a work of those tw.o. Recitation

a.t

The 80

~~ Tecumseh r "

Bt cen t enn t a l
Drama
Chtlltcothe, are ftgh tmg ~
swnmer battle wtth the frogs
softball''"
Softball , m fact, would be
ntce And TV, and m ov tes,
and Kool Atd and Milky
Ways What the refugees
need, almos t as much as new
homes, are thmgs Amencan
Many of them do not kn ow
how to operate flush lmlets,
the m a JOr! ty hav e never
expen enced a1r condthon10g,
almost none have stood a t the
chec kout counter tn a
Safeway

Th ts year, however,

the hghts go out (between
scenes) and resuming as the
hghts come back on " Every
year we are plagued wtlh
requests to 'turn down the
recorded anunal sounds.' "
Thts year, however, thtogs
are dtfferent " We hired
large actors, with even larger
votces In fact the actors can
be heard so well that several
of the larger frogs have
stopped their notse to hsten to
the play "
The Drama's '75 season
con tmues through Aug. 30,
mghtly, except Sunday . Call,
10 Ohto, toll free , 8()().282-2015

th e

actor s are wmnmg
Complatnts about not
heanng actors' vo tces,
because of the earl y swnmer
frogs, and cnc kets have
almost vamshed, thts season,
accord10 g to Allen Wttt ,
spokesman for the drama
Throughout tts three year
run , lhe drama has been
plagued wtth these notsy
mght creatur es, begmmng
soo n afte r ope m ng and
cont10wng unhl mtd·July
Som e audtence members
beheve that the notses are
arltftc ta l, accordm g to Wttt
Th e frogs add to thts behef,
by ceas10g thetr nmse when

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553
525
476
459
4)6

Chtlhcothe, 45601

!ly hand

of this numbtog litany is as to leave the farmmg com· scnptures tlfat gwde and
automattc as a kowtow to the mWie~ for the urban bnght comlort these peasants 10
emperor or the landlord 10 lights. Life must be struggle, the1r own hard lot, a lot which
another time Dissent ts not hard and prunttive
many Am ertcans ha ve lived
expressed Dtscusston of
Fires of hatred must not be through But even 10 the
d 1 f fer en t
p o 11 t 1c a 1 allowed to dwindle, because bleakest times the Amertcan
philosophies stops with an class hatred, not Confuctan dreamed of a brtghter miron clang the moment moderatton,ts the pW'e flame dtvidual future for hts
Chairman Mao's mfalllbility that guards the peasantry chtldren
who, through
Is quest10ned.
agalll8t a restoralton of the educalton and a system of
1
Parents say un versally treacherous bourgeoisie And fr ee and competitive enter.
thetr highest hope for thetr the eternal hand labor, the pnse, could riSe to the limits
children Is that they be hard , grindmg work of wtoch· of thetr mdtvidual abtlity and
assigned to labor for the tog a sampan upstream wtth hopefully to a better life. Mao
state. "My childre are not tts own anchor line like an gives the Ch10ese only a
asset of mme, " said a father toc¥.orm , the load on the v tsion of mass struggle
to Harbm "They are t he shoulder pole and the toward the day when all of
property of the state " In· desolation of a hot hovel at society , espectally the
div1dual freedom ts a selftsh dusk , all these acceptances poorest, will be a httle better
indulgence.
can move the Western vtsitor off .
Educated people are sent to to heartsiCkness WI)ess they
But tha t, to the context of
do manual labor m factories are put mto the context of the Chtoese lime, is a great
or farms to keep them time, Amencan as well as deal. The older Chmese have
humble . llleducated con. Chtoese.
worked m sweatshops for
d 1r e c t
For the Amencan hYing Japanese mvaders who gave
f o r lJl 1 s t s
schoolteachers. The world 's ~ standard IS a postwar them acorns to eat, or farmed
hugest society 18 a para· product Those who lived m despamngly for slavemilttary organ!Z3tion with the rural old south when drtv10g landlords who lived m
discipline imposed by the • Prestdenl Franklin Roosevelt fine houses whtle th etr
state and enforced by the labeled
tt
Amen ca's peasants starved · They
herd. Universtty professors economtc problem number remember the fatrune of 1941·
who were trained to pursue one can remember a life not 42 when three trulllon people
the truth now say their much less desperate than the died in Honan provmce alone,
miSSion IS to mdoctrinate the Chmese peasants of today. or back to 1938 when Ch1ang
yoWig to serve the Com- Does he hve threadbare in a Kat-shek's army blew the
munlst party The inquirtng rude house lacking mdoor Yellow River dike man effort
mind IS deliberately stunted plumbmg, runnin g water, to block the Japanese and
in the intere$t of assurmg electrtcity, refrtgeralton or killed 800,000 of his own
that the proletariat will an automobile? So did we, to people wtth the flood. They
dictate to their Intellectual this lifelune Does he plow have seen ststers sold 10to'
betters. Shrill loudspeakers wtth a mule or an ox, plant marrtage or abandoned to
wake the roosters and set the seeds by hand and hoe the adopl!on to order that they
masses to domg calisthemcs rows, water the plants from a might eat Chma's landscape
to a counted cadence, with bucket with one dipper.full at tS still largely ~enuded of
martiaLmustc.
a time, pick cotton and scythe trees, not only because the
This hwnan mass Is so gram and butcher the hogs he human masses needed wood
utterly organized to a reflex has slopped? So did we . for the charcoal With whtch ·
obedience that Americans, Americans 1\new a ltfe they cooked 10 the old days,
who are treated with great without money, when they but because many Chinese
courtesy and friendltness dug m the earth for their own ate the bark of trees When
now, ate acutely aware that potatoes, sewed shtrts from the locusts ate their crops
anovetnlghlshiftin the party flour sacks and took thetr they ate fried locusts.
line could fill tbe city squares children out of school to help "Before the liberation we
with angry erunity in place of wilt! planting and harvest never had a tliatch over our
the present waves and because they could not afford heads," satd a workworn
smiles.
·
to pay for labor. ln that hard Honan farm wife Sittmg
There Is little beauty m the time thetr ethic was also set proudly in her two-room
shabby, ~enung cities or in • or influenced by one fun- ' adobe hut Wider a ptcture of
vast tracts of ugly, earthen damentalist fa ith o~ another Chairman Mao. Throughout
countryside. The earth Is to whtch the small com- the thousands of years of 1ts
there to provide food, nOt mumly was · expected to history China was disumted
and exploited · by every
flowers , and the ,l uxury of eonform.
paml . on buildings in the
The Chinese detty ts Mao variety of adventurer 01
dilaplllated towns would only and the CalvtnlSt ascetictsm pretender and Its hlll)dreds o1
make more youngsters want of h111 parables are the millions of poor did the dYmg

It Is against such a ""'""groWid that the full extent of
Commumsm's achievement
to Chtoa must be measured.
For the ftrsl time in history
tis people -all of them know the securtty of being fed
adequately , and sheltered
and clothed at small prices
they can pay from the
meager wages they earn
through their hard, and
seemmgly willing Ia bur for
the state. For the time, under
Mao, they are Witted nat10n,
an unheard-of feat, and
whatever price they have
paid m mdividual liberty
must seem cheap to the
peasant masses to wh9m
subststence livmg is the
greatest luxury they ever
dreamed of. As their expectations riSe, there will be
complications, but that Is a
future story
What they see now, beyond
the food on thetr tables at
last, 18 the begmnmg of a•
Chtna m whtch :IH!e lowest
have d1gmty and carry
themselves with prtde. They
see tens of milhons of
poplars, willows and eucalyptus tUrntog the edges of roads
and railroads and waterways
gree n, under Chairman
Mao's Instruction to reforest
(Continued on page 6)

~ .Dany ~Sentinel
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
" HESTER L TANNEHIL
E xec Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH
C1ty Ed1fD't
1
'u b l rshed d~lly except '
S_.turday by The Oh rct Valley 1
( 'Publrshing Compa"'y, llJ

St

Pomeroy , Ohio

~

157
t

S ~cond

Ohro

_ N_lltt•o~al ~· ad~ertlsi,IJ. t

ward )
Grrf.f rth CQmpany, Inc l

BoH mell r &amp; Ga/la~her Dl v ,
751 Thrrd Ave , New York •
, N Y 10017

S ub sc rrptTO n rar~s :
Delivered by ea rn e r where

'

J:arrrer

~

service

no.'t

' !availa bl e, One month, $3 2~ . •

ma•l•n Oh1o and w va ,,
ne
Yea r , S22 0,0.
SIX
months ,
Sll 50 .
Thre~

~

'

Y

months, S7 00 Else~here
526 00 year , Stx monthiS
S1l.50, three months. S7: 50.
ubscnphon

~vnda
-- y ,T tmes Senttnel

pn ce ,nelud

'

be · goi ng back to In·
dianapolis."
Shepard ctted Don Gullett,
who :s now recuperatmg from
a fractured left thwnb .
" If you continue to pttch as
yo u have been, who do you
thmk will he the first to go
when Gullett comes off the
dtsabled hst• " Shepard
asked Eastwtck
" I knew how badly he
wanted to pitch up here with
the Reds," recalled Shepard
Tuesday night "I remember
the tears he had m his eyes
when he learned he was betog
sent to Indta napohs thts
sprmg ."
&amp;l, Shepard can't really
say he ts surpriSed by the
about fa ce Eastwtck has done
on the mound smce thetr talk
Aware of Shepard's talk
w1th Eastw1ck, one also was
not surprised by the com·
phment Reds • manager
Spark Anderson patd hts
pttc hing coach Tuesday
rught.
" Yes, I'm thankful for the
JOb my bullpen ts domg," !llud
Anderson . "But first, I'm
thankful I've got Shepard."
The Reds haven 't got a
com pi ete game from a
starter smce June 11
" But that doesn 't concern
me as long as we keep wmnmg," satd Anderson And
the Reds' victory Tuesday
mght was their . 34th agatost
mne losses at home. On the
road, they have won 15 of
their last 20 games while
butldmg up a lead over the
Dodgers

Marshall

•

IS

1

Eastwlck, who starred for
the Reds late last season but
lost hts seat tn the bullpen
NL AfrENDANCE UP
wtth a medtocre spnng
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)tra101ng, came on wtth two.()n
Last week's attendance of
and tw~ut to the seventh
962,900 was the highest smgle
mnmg to bail out starter Gary
week total in the Nat10nal
Nolan and preserve CtnLeague since 1973, according
cmnati's 2-I trtumph over the
to ftgures released Tuesday
streakmg Phtlade lphta
by the N .L office.
Ph lilies.
In addition, the weekend
Eastwtck was sent to In·
total -eovering games of
dianapolis to start the season,
July 4, 5 and 6 -.(If 574,560 Is
but was tmpresstve to Triplethe highest weekend total m
A ball and was back wtth the
-. 1975
Btg Red Machme by the first
week of May. Eastmck didn't
allow a hit Tuesday to htS 2 1.J
IMmgs work, picking up hiS
fourth save of the year
Marshall, who spent six
By FRED McMANE
Baltunore, and although I
weeks on the d1sa bled list
UP! Sports Writer
dido 't pitch that well, I felt
early
thts season wtth a torn
Like a comedian who had confident. Then I went back
rtb
cage,
flashed hts best
forgotten bow to make people to my old way agamst
laugh , all Joe Coleman Mtlwaukee and became my performance m the month
smce hts return at the Ptttsneeded to become a winrung old sloppy self
burgh Ptrates 10 hurhng
pitcher agam was a change m
"&amp;l,l thought I'd go back to
three
mmngs of one-htt rehef
his deltvery.
the fast malton and try to be
The 28-year-old right· aggresstve, and •t wa s to assure Don Sutton his 13th
hander of the DetrOit Tigers, workmg. I was really VIctory of the season
Marshall struck out ftve
struggling through the worst throwmg the curve for
batters
m 3 10nmgs for hts
half-year of his major league stnkes I discarded the
save,
prunmg hlffiSelf
stxth
career, SWitched from hts old Sidearm pitch. I used to'
dehberate style of pttching t.o stdearm when I felt my for his tour of duty by hurling
a speeded-un modern ver- fastball wasn 't nght, but then batting practice for the first
ltme 10 a month
sion, similar to that used by I got mto a rut pttchmg that
" We dectded I'd walt a
Chtcago 's Jim Kaat, Tuesday way when I shouldn't."
month after the to)ury before
rught and the results were
Ron LeFlore and Leon
I
started throwmg batting
qmte pleasmg.
Roberts provided Coleman
Coleman, who had won only wtth the rWis he needed by practtce a gam," Marshall
four of 16 decisons and hitting homers LeFlore hit a expla10ed. " The month was
earned an earned run solo shot in the !ourth and up today I throw battmg
average of 6,37, pitched Roberts a two-run blast in the practice to work on my slow
shutout ball for eight mnings etghth off knuckleballer breakmg pitches. Every pttch
before givmg way to John Wilbur Wood, who lost his I threw was effectiVe on those
five strikeouts.
Hiller as the Tigers defeated 13th game in 19 dectstons
" I'm not back at full speed
the White Sox :H&gt; to rWI thetr
In other Amencan League
yet,
but I'm getting there ."
wlnmng streak to s eveh games, Kansas City routed
In other games, the San
games.
Milwaukee 9-1, Boston edged
Otego
Padres ouUasted the
With htS new delivery Cole-. Minnesota !Hi, New York
man gets the ball back from blanked Texas W, Oakland Clucago Cubs 8-6 m 15 m\he catcher then proceeds to routed Cleveland 15-5 and mngs , the Houston Astros
blasted the Montreal Expos 5pitch right away Without Balttmore
defeated
1, the New York Mets tripped
gomg through a lot of California 8-5 m 10 mnings.
deliberation. The quickened
Pace tends to wear him down
somewhat, but forces him to
Concentrate more.
' "I got the Idea !tom watching Kaat p1~ch m sprmg
'
training," said Coleman: "He
gelS the ball,, he 's ready to
throw 1t. His fielders ·are
ready and they like tl. I even
ran from the mound to the
dugout toni!Wt. At times I'm
very lackadatSical and ' it
feels fwmy running out there
after eight ye~;~rs m the btg
leagues.
"It could have been just one
of thOse crazy nights, hut I
hOpe not. I was working on 11
(the new delivery ) agamst

'
·~

I '

&lt;base d on 200 at bahl
NattOnal League
9 ab r
h pet

Morgn Cn 79
Madlck Ch 75
Cash Phd 85
San gtn Pt "
war son Ho 80
Jos,...ua SF 66
Bowa Ph•l so
Porkr Pll 71
Brock St L 75
Garvv LA 86

275 so 97
302 43 106
35{1 61 118
16 1 19 86
299 38 98
24 7 J6 81
155 32 83
261 40 85
295 50 94
361 46 115

Amencan League
g ab r
h

353
351
330
330
318

328

315

314
319
318
pet

Carw Mnn 78 188 52 106 368
Hargrv Tx 75 264 .tB
Munsn NY 7q 301 44
Lynn Bos 74 163 54
Wash Oak
Hts.l e Mnn
McRa KC
Mdd)( N y
Ystrzm Bs

82 375

60 220
82 3 17
) 5 2 18

50
34
41
36

90
99

86

341
379
317

103
69
98
67

317
314
309
307

Three more out of t.o urney
The Cheshir e Ttgers,
J Wtlcoxen, and P King
Syracuse Astros and John· had the only Whtle &amp;lx htts
son's Market posted vtctones McClellan was the wtnmng
Tuesday night tn the second pttcher whtle King took the
mght of the 17th Annual loss
Kyger Creek Tournament.
In tomght's action, Salem
Cheshtre, beh10d the ptt· plays Salem Center, Pomt
c h10g of Ttm Pnce, blasted Pleasant 's Peoples Bank
the Pomeroy Ptrates, 11-4
battles the Pometoy Tigers
Lead10g !he Tiger attack and the Mtddleport Braves
were Metzner wtth a double
and s mgle , · Layne, two
smgles; Gtlmore, a tnple,
Mark Pnce, a s togie
Cheshtre led 5-2 after three
mmngs and wrapped tt up
wtth ft ve run s m the fourth
Gettmg htts for Pomeroy's
Pirates were Thomas. a
,s mg le'
Carm ichae l ,
a
double, Land-ers, two s mgles
and Moon, a stngle
yea r Furm T ra cto r
Syracuse edged Mtd· Good
ll alt f w•s o re dcs1gned
dlepor t's Jndtans , 3·2 10 the fo r lOst a n t s la rl 1 n ~
re spo n se 10 a ll typ es o f
second game D Nance fired
fa rm t rnc to rs - c vcn nfte r
a four httter for the '"" Top
lo n g res i po n od s
Astro ht tters 11ere S Hayes, Amp e m hour c apa c tii CS
two smgles, J Wilhams , a a rc e q ua l to o r greR ter
tnple , and E Jeffers, a th nn , or1 s ma l equipment
bn!Hme s - n stze for almost
smgle
A!
Mtddleport httters ww re S
Carson, a tr1ple and double , •• '"'Y
S Smtth, a Single and S
Hartmger. a smgle

By RICK GOSSELIN
UPI Sports Wrlter
The Los Angeles Dodgers
have wheeled the heavy arlll·
lery to the front and have
taken aun at the front run·
mng Cinctnnat1 Reds, f1rmg
the ftrst volley With the nght
arm of a once-agam-healthy
Mtke Marshall.
But thts year the Reds are
returning the flre ... and
Tuesday mght tt was Rawly
EastwiCk who commanded
the barrage.

the Atlanta Braves 4-3 and
the San Franctsco Gtants
edged St. Louts 6-4
In the Amencan League.
Detrmt blanked Chtcago :H&gt;,
Kansas
Ci ty
pasted
Milwaukee ~1. Boston rupped
Mmnesota !Hi, New York
dumped Texas W, Oakland
blasted Cleveland 15-5 and
Balttmore edged Califorrua S5 to 10 mnmgs
Padres 8, Cubs 6
Fred Kendall smgled home
Don Hahn and Dave Winfteld
wtth two out m the top of the
15th to end the National
League 's longest game of the
season Bobby Tolan and
Wtlhe McCovey pounded
home runs for San Otego
while Rick Monday belted hiS
eighth for Chtcago Joe
Mcintosh ptcked up the win to
even h1s record at 7·7
Astros 5, Expos 1
Dave Roberts hurled a
fourhttter and knocked m two
runs with a patr of stogies m
ptcking up htS fifth victory m
15 games . Larry Parrish hit
his stxth home run of the
season for the only Montreal
nm
Mets 4, Braves 3
Dave Kingman clubbed hiS
15th home run of the season
wtth two teammates on base
to carry the Mets and pttcher.

Ohto law requires that all
watercraft wi'th closed
compartments which could
trap fuel must be properly
venltlated, reminds · the
Watercraft Divlston of the
Ohto Department of Natural
Resources

MfEmiG

J o hn so n ' s

Market

I . t d th e Ga II tpo l ts
80 188 53 86 199 e tmtn a e
Bran Mnn 68 111 27 66 199 Whtte Sox from further action
Home Runs
th 8 4• J VICt ory G MCNat•onat League
Luzmsk , Wl

1
Bench Cm 17 Foster . Clellan led
C n K1ngman NV and Parker , two smgles
Pill 15
Amertcan L eague Bonds NY
19 Jacks on Oak. 18 Mayber ry
KC 17 H endr1ck Clev Horton •
Det Scali , M1 l and Burroughs
T ex 1~
~
Run s Biltt ed In
Nat lana i League
Luzl nsk 1,
Phd 73 Bench Ctn 69 Morgan
C•n 59 Watson Hoo 58 Staub
Pt1tl 72

NY

meet Green

GOOD-YEAR
FARM
TRACTOR
BATTERIES

Johnson 's wtth

CENTER

POMEROY

JOHN F. FULTZ
PH. 992-2101

OHIO

5~

Amer .can League
Hor ton
Det 60 Lynn Bos 59 Scott , Md
58 May Ball 56 R1ce Bos and
N eHtes NY 55
Stolen B ases
Naf 10na l League
Morgan
C1n 38 Brock St L 35 Cedeno
Hou
33
Lopes,
LA
37
Con cepc 1on Cm and Mangual

. ,,,,.,.
,,, ,,,•.

Mtl 19

Amencan League / RJver s
Ca t 46 Washtngton Oak 32
Ott s KC 19
Remy Cal and

I Ba sed on m osl v tc fon es)
Nalt onal League Sulton L A
13 8 Seave r NY 12 .4 Messers
mtlh LA 11 S Jones SO 11 5
Bdlmgt1am Ctn 10 3 Ma ltack
NY and M c Glothen St L 10 6

•
WID

...
.
\..11

Jerry Koosman to vtctory
Koosman held the Braves to
just f1ve hits hefore betog
hfted for a pmch-h1tter m the
mnth, wtth Ken Sanders
hur l10g a perfect runth tontng
for his ftrst Nattonal League
save
Giants 6, Cardinals 4
Bobby Murcer belted a
two-run home run to push St
LouiS off to a 4.{) lead and then
the Gtants held on to wto 6-4
after Ron Fatrly blasted hiS
seventh career grand slam to
pull the Cards w1th10 strtking
range Rookte Pete Falcone
( 7~) ptcked up the wm wtth
Gary Lavelle not chmg the
save

WILL YOUR CAR

cars are msure d
w1th us than w1th

any olhe r romp
Fm d ou t whv nowI
STEVE
SNOWDEN

1258 Powe ll St
Mtddteport, 0
PH 992 7155

H ~..,~OJ!oo

l ~ omn 1 1 on

lll no t

p 6210 14

STOP!

If your brakes have not been checked for 12,000
miles, we recommend thts serv1ce.
Stxteenth in a series of money-saving serv1ce
coupons.
This Coupon.
is Worth

Good through

July

~0.

1975

tCoupon No 16

•4.00
on the Purchase of a

. Complete
Bra~e Inspection
remov1ng .all wheels. rnspectlng

INCLUDES:

linmgs, tnspechng cylinders, lubrtcate b.:,cktng
plates, mspect entire systems for leaks, pack wheel

bearings
R~ut~r Pr~ce .

$12 .00

Special Prtce ... $8..00
(Disc Brake• -$5.00 morel

DON WAIT 'TIL lfS
,
HAVE YOUR .BRAICF.S INSPECTED TODAY.
Stop by or call tor an appoJOlment, Keep watching our ads for
more &gt;money·SiiVing service coupons, coming y,our way
weekly.

There's more to like afBurger Chef!

DO BUSINESS WITH A LEADER
1

PT. PLEASANT

Smith N'elson Motors Inc.

5GO E Mam St
Phone 992·2174
Pomeroy, 0 .
Servtce Hours . Mon .- Fri. 8·4 :30, Saturday 1· 12 noon

2325 Jackson Ave.

GAU. IPOLIS
1503 Eastern Ave .

•

'

'•
~

Ma1or Leag ue Leaders
By Unlled Pr e~s Int erna tion al
Lea dmg Batters

back, hut

Reds continue to

8 PAK
16 ·0Z.

~============~

.

.

North Oak 23
Ptfchmg

COLA

l

r e presen r aH v e

avarlable 75 cents per we~k ~&lt;
By Motor Route whe&gt;rl

the game that E:astwtck
replaced Nola!\ wtth two out
Dtsplaymg the potse of a
vete r an, the young rtght
hander
mduced
the
dangerous Dave Cash to htt
mto a mmng~nding force
play He then proceeded to
blank the Phils the final two
mntogs wtlhout a h1t while
strtk mg out two batters along
the way .
And, one of those batters
Rawly s truck out m the nmth
was Phils slugger Dick Allen
In his last four rehef appearances, Eastw1ck had
)'lelded only four hits , no
nms, walked one and struck
out 11 over a rune 2·3 mrung
spa n
Rawly's r ecord for hts first
16 relief appearances after
hts recall from t he In·
dianapolis fa rm club wasn't
what one mtght call tm·
presstve - !Bruns, 31 htts and
12 walks over a ~toning
span
That'swhy Shepard had hts
ta lk with Eastwtck
"&amp;lmetimes a httle shock
treatment hfl.lps ," sa td
Shepard And that's what
Larry gave Eastwtck.
" You're pussy-footmg out
there on the mound .. trymg to
spot your pitches," Shepard
told Eastwtck
" You got your chance when
they recalled you from Indianapolis a nd now you're
throwmg It away "
" I'm not threatemng you, "
Larry said, "but I'm tellmg
you, you'd better throw the
ball the way you can or you 'II

'

class pos-tage paid

Pomeroy ,

CINCINNATI (UPI) - Cin·
c tnnati Reds nghthander
Gary Nolan owes Raw ly
Eastw1ck a "thank you" for
the 2-1 vtctory he notched
over the Phtladelphta Phtls
last mght .
,
And Eastw1ck, the Reds'
young rookie rehef pttcher, ts
equally mdebted to Larry
Shepard for the "man-to·
man" talk the Reds· pitching
coach had with htm some two
1All Times eon
San Otego (Strom
3 7 1 at weeks ago
Ch1cago (Zahn 2 5) , 1 30 p m
E:astwick , mak10g hts
Los Angeles ( Hooton 6 e1 at
fourth
rehef appearance
Pt ttsbu rgh { Eilts 6 4) , 7 35 p m
New Y ork (Seaver 17 41 at w1thto a lklay span, blanked
Atlanta 1Sadeck• 11 or Dal
tlle Phils without a htl the
Can ton02l 7 35pm
Philadelph ta (Lonborg 7 6 ) at fmal 2 l-3 mmngs Tuesday
Cmc,nnat• ( Bdlmgt1am 10 3)
rught after taking over for
8 05 p m
San Franosco (Montefusco 6 3 J Nolan
at St Lou1s ( Denny 3 3 ), 8 30
And he not only preserved
pm
Montreal ( Bia 1r 6 9) at Houston Gary 's etghth vtctory agamst
(F ors ch 7 6) B 35 p m
ftve losses, but he also gamed
Thursd ay' s Games
San D•ego at Chtcago
his fourth save as the Reds
Montrea l at Atlanta n1gt1t
ran
their wtnmng streak to
LA at P1ltsborgh n1ght
(Only gam es sc heduled I
ftve games and mamtamed
th etr 8 1-2 game marg10 over
A m encan League
the Dodgers m the Nattonal
East
w I pet g b League West
Boston
45 37 549
A double by George Foster,
N ew Yor k
44 38 537
I
one of hiS four stratght htts
MtiWaukee
44 40 524
1
Ba lt 1more
39 41 488 s
for the night, and three
Cleveland
37 45 45 1
~. , straight walks, the hrst tn·
Detro•t
35 46 437
West
tenttonal, gave the Reds their
w 1 pet g b
ftrst run Of the gan'le to the
Oak I and
52 31 627
Kansas C1ty
46 37 554
6
second mnmg
Tex as
40 45 47 1 13
And, m the fow-th, Ken
Ch1cago
38 43 .469 13
Cahforma
39 47 453 14 1 Griffey's 19th tnfteld htt of the
M 1n nesota
37 46 4.t6 15
season scored Merv Reiten·
Tuesday 's Re sults
Boston 6 Mmnesota 5
mWid wtth the wmmng run
New Y or k 4 Texas o
after
the Reds outftelder
Detrott 3 Chtcago 0
Kansas Ctf y 9 Milwaukee 1
walked, stole second and
Oakland 15 Cleveland 5
advanced
to thtrd on an tn·
Balt1more a Calif 5, 10 mn
Today ' s Pr obable P1tch ers
field out.
(All Times EDTI
It was after the Phtls
M 1nn esota (Co rb m 4 6 or Golt z
7 6) at Bos ton (Moret 5 OJ 3 30 bunched three smgles m the
pm
Cleveland
CRa 1ct1
s 2l at seventh for their only run of

R. C. &amp; DIET RITE

45769 Busmess Off•ce Phone •
92' r2 1 56 Edttorral Pho"e 992

• TOURNEY SET
Tht• 1975 Ohio- ~ailey
Baseball
double
ollminatlon tournament
"IIJ start at Branch Rickey
Park. Portsmouth, August ,
I Entry fee Is $50 a nd •••
nc"
baseball
-The entry deadline Is
July 23, "lth a bracket
dra .. Ing Saturday, July 26
4t 8 p.m at Branch Rtckey
Park P la y will be two
games
per
night.
For more Information,
rontaot Charles " Mickey"
Cochrane, 1707 8th Street,
Ports mouth, Ohio 45662, or
call 614·353-2869.

41 )

Coleman winning

a

Court

=============

on really heavy

1
11

Oakland (Bosman 5 31
4 30
pm
Texas (Bacs1k 1 1) at New
York (May 7 51 8 p m
Ch•cago
(Jeffer son
1 3l
at
Detro 1t '(Bar e 3 5) . 8 p m
M 1tw au ke e (Colbotn 3 7) at
Kan sas Clly ( Bu sby 116) 8 30
pm
Balttmore (Gr•msl ev 5 q ) at
Ca ltforn1a (Tanana 6 5) , 10 30
pm
Thursday's Gam es
Texas at Boston , n 1ght
Mmnesota at N Y n tght
Det ro tt at KC . n 1ght
Balhmore at Calif n1ght
(Only games scheduled)

or wnte ''Tecumseh,'' Bos 73,

~-

''

47

4 2'

g b

-

39 43
39 46
17'
34 44
14
West
w I pet
g t1
Cmc.nnar,
56 19 659
Los Angeles
48 38 558 a• ~. .
San Fr a,c•sco 40 44 476 15',
San O•ego
39 45 464 16' 1
A tl anta
36 47 434 19
Houston
31 57 351 26,
Tu es day 'r. R esu lts
San O•ego 8 Ch1cago 6 15 1nns
New York 4 Atlanta 3
Houston 5 Montrea l 1
Los Angeles J P1HSburgh o
C•ncmnar, 7 Philad elph•a 1
San Franctsco 6 St LOu iS 4
Today•s Probabl e Pttchers

Modern -china raising

Inside Mao's land
(Eugene Patterson, editor
and president of the St.
Petersburg flmes, ·Jed a
delegation of 15 American
editors on a 4,350.mlle
reporting tour of China May
29-June 22. fhe first of his
reports on the trip appeared
In the nmes Sunday and Is
being distributed by UP! for
release elsewhere Monday or
hereafter.)

than you body uses, not JUSt
that you have a problem 10
absorbmg too much sugar
For more detatled tn·
formation on dtabetes, wrtte
to me m care of thts news·
paper, P 0 Box 1551 , Radto
Ctty Slatton, New York, NY
10019 and ask for The Health
Letter humber 3-11 Send a
stamped,
self·
long,
addressed envelope 1 and 50
cents for mathng and costs
Severe dtabetics may still
need 10sulm even when they
are not obese. They have a
dtfferent problem and lose
enormous
amounts
of
calones through the excess
glucose ehmmated tn the
urtne , unless they are
properly controlled by 10·
sultn
I'm sur04 your doctor ts
trymg to encourage you to do
the best thmg for your overall
health You can help by
following a good program and
working hard on the dtet
aspects of your problem

•
'

_
Eas\wick
coming
BASEBALL ··

•

agnoran ce of thear fates and,
a t Indi antown a nyway, m

quarters tl'at would worry
anyone's
amaganat10n
Because of laws and convemence, the refugees are
conlmed to roped-of£ en·
campments, never to see
anythtng of the country unhl
they are perm11nenUy settled
Thus tempers are s hor t ,
ftghts are frequent and many
of the less-ed ucated a r e
beginning to wonder If Jn.
dtan town Gap ts all there ts to
Amenca '' I would hke to go
off base and look at a town,"
says a naval caplatn, " You do
have towns, don' t you?"
In the capta m's case, the
secluswn and lack of tn·
formatton ts merely a r ub He
has been tn Ame n ca
pr~vtously, and his concern
for "hts fate ts more
frustratton than anxtety Yet,
he says, some of the less
are
w,orldl y
r efu gees
;ctevelopmg genume fears
Wtll they be sold m to
bondage? Wtll they sta rv e tf
they can' t f10d work ? Wtll
they be thrown mto pnson tf
they cannpt spea k E nghs h?
The captam says adult men
weep tn the m ght wt th
anxiety, Buddhtsts a r e
conv ertmg to Chnsltamtry 10
hopes uf appeahng more to U
S mterests, and m others tell
thetr c hildren grab the leg of
any visttor so the famtly wtll
be rec ogmzed as lov mg and
adoptable
Many of these fea rs and
rea ctto ns
are
perhaps
unavotdable. But there ts
~eason to beheve, almost
predtctably ,
that
the
government whtch ts helpmg
the refug ees has gotte n so
entangled m the mechamcs of
assistan ce that scarce at·
tentton ts gtven the emottons
of tt Hen ce a doc tor
provtdmg moculabons m the
chmc hne here operates wtth
robot efft ctency but nary a
smtle or soft word And when
asked about the avatlabthty
of recreatton for refugees
another offt cta says coldly
that "you can 't worry about
that with all these bodtes to
proc ~ss - what do you want,

'

' 3 - The Daily se'ntmel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday , July 9, 197~

"Ar.d we used to worry about the wolf."

TOM TIEDE

,We Hold These
Truths ...
•

'

'

' '\ '

..
'

I·

..

�.

-· .

I'

'

"! .

&lt;4 -

.
The Daily Sentinel, Middleport,Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, July 9, 1975
.

-

-

-

..~

2.

go-ing

three

before
ne r

Kelly

ca me

•

Syracuse. 4-fi.
Tile · Pomeroy

fin -

CHIPS :

32 Ol JAR
· FULLY COOKED

STYLE

IT'S SANDWICH TIME
LB.

A real nice selec tion of styl es and colors all from our
regular stock of high quality sport coats. You wi ll cer tainly recognize the name In these coats . Regulars. shorts

FRANKIE

&amp; longs. Reg . price S60.oo to $80,00.

Sm all cha rg e for a lt e rations .

Both pla in co lors &amp; fancy patterns .
Regu lar pr ice $14.98 to $27 .50.

BOYS JEANS &amp;
DRESS SLACKS
1h PRICE

MENS UNIFORM

Mens Short Sleeve

PANTS VJ·OFF

Dress Shirts % OFF

Sizes are broken . Reg . $3.98 to
$12 .98.
Sale Price $1.99 to $6.49

Sizes 32 to 54 except 36 &amp; 38
waist. Reg . $6.98 &amp; $7 .98 . Now
Just $4.66 to $5.32.

Sizes 14 to 17 . A very good name
in shirts. Reg . $5.98 to $9.98 .
Sale Price $3.99 to $6.66

Men's Short Sleeve Knit

Mens Short Sleeve

M~ns All Cotton &amp; Ban Lon

Mens Ughtweight

Dress Shirts %·off

Sport Shirts 1h Price

Placket Shirts '-h off

A very 'l imited supply. so come
early' to get them, Reg. $5.98 to
$12.00.
Sale Price $2.99to $6.00

A nice selection of .colors. S. M.
L. &amp; XL. Reg . $7.98 to $9.98.
Sale Price $5.32 to $6 .66

Sale P r ice S7 .49 to $13.75
Sma ll charge for altera t ion.

All from our r egu lar stoc k of
high quality dress shirts . Sizes
14 112 to 17 _ Reg . $8 .98 to $11.98_
Sale Price $5.99to $7.99

Mens long Sleeve
KNIT SHIRTS
·s2.00
Values To $8.98

Mens

JACKETS

OFF

1/3

extra large. Reg . $8.98 to $28.00.
Sizes 29 to 42 .

Walking

Knit Shirts /z Price
1

I.G.A.

Sizes 28 to 42. Reg . $5.98 to
$12.00.
Sale Price $2 .99 to $6.00

1

Sizes are broken. Reg . $5.98 to
$9 .98 .
Sale PJ ice $2.99 to $4 .99

.~
'~m'~''"'''A
~~

Boys Short Sleeve

Sizes 10 to 20. These are ideal
for back to school. Round neck
&amp; button western styles. An
ipeal selection of styles &amp;
colors. Reg . $3 .98 to $6 .98.
.Sale Price $2 .66 to $4.66

Sport .Coats
·$10.00

Wlnnen Namt~~~ WU1
Be. Pooled, In 0.U
Stou Each WMk

EA.

M0

PU~H·S! NECl •• AaY
fllllltOIIt ANO lW'I.OYllS
.MOT t~tollll TO I'""ICIPATI

• coME ·10 RlOil!NER

Suits &amp; Sport·
. . Coats
'5.00

BOYS' KNIT

Off

style~

.

l13
.L
· OFF
.

'

SUN KIST

15 OZ. CAN

~

SAVE 45¢

0
.R

GET

P-U-Z-Z-l-E

9

'

CANTALOUPES

I

·Enjoy

~JG BAG~.

OF GROCERIES

' GET APIEC£ Of IGA
PUllU EVERmME YOU

EA.

OOME 10 RIOOI.INER .

..
..

FUN!
FUN I

-·

·- ~

. , .... O Q GO" o

~ ~o&gt;· • •

"".

~ t O TU ~ ··

'

Shopping ·eenter

M&amp;R

. . MiofftEPORT, o.
0

-·_.....,..
...·-...

110).: .

MO ~\IIICHASl HlCEIS,.II;Y
MfHOII;S lt.MO EWPLOYI!U
HOT lliOIIL..l TO ~.I.IIITICII'A'PI!

1 LB.
STICKS

•&gt;o go

·• ~.0,~6

I

Right Reseryed
To
Limit

'"'&gt;"

.

• I

I

.
-·

'

I •

.

.

.....
"..

~··

.;.

..

~- ··

'

'f

•

--.

. ..........

·•r

QuClhtities

'

•

.
.'

...,

WinnenNam.. ww
B• Pooled in Our
Stor1 Eac:h Week

PRIZES

'

.

•.•
.,

'~-

.

..

'
'

·oLEO

•

•
'

"

PARKAY

Large S1ze

NowI

.&lt;•

'

doz.

Po.mel"()y

¥
0
R

COFFEE
CUPS

PIECES AT OUR STORE .

L

'

.

PORK &amp;-BEANS

¢

I

STYLE

STONEWARE·

Items ·Too.Numerous
·.l Mention. On Salel .

Kerm's Korner •

.

BOLOGNA

CHUNK

SHOWBOAT

LEMONS

SHOPPING ··
CENTER·
0.

oz.

LOAVES

59~

~ManrOther

Lot Luggage

A very .famous ,arne

PKG.

LB.

JUMBO

I

Off

.

Sizes 10 to 20. Reg . $3.98 to $5.98 __
Sale Pric!! $2.66 to $3.99

io luggage; Not every

"

16

2 for

Beach . Robes
1/z Price--

'

1/3

69¢

8 oz.

All Remaining Stock

TANK TOPS

. color in every

CAN

Sizes 8 to 20. Reg. Price $3 .98 to
$6.98.
.
Sale Price $1.99 to,$3.49

Sizes are broken .

Od~

ot M • ttoon

oz.

WALKING SHORTS
Y2 Price

Y2 Price

TANK TOPS
1/3 _
0H

46

BOYS'

Suits &amp; Sport Coats

Values to $29.50. All first
'quality . They have been around
too long.

ECKRICH
BOLOGNA

$19!, LB.

BREAD

A very good name in shirts .
Sizes .8 to 20. Reg . $3 .98 to $6 .98.
For 3 days only Now Just $2.66
to $4.66.
·

Sizes are broken. -There are a
lot of large sizes in the group .
Reg . $5.98 to $9 .98 .
Sale Price $2.99 to $4.99 _
BOYS'

. Reg . $3.98 to $4.98 .
Sale Price $2 .66 to $3.32
Sizes S.M. L. &amp;. XL.

Values To $60.00

FUN I
FUN I

Some are short sleeve. An
excellent name in leisure suits.
Reg. $49.50 to $60.00.
Sale Price $24.75 to $30.00

Mens Knit

2 Men's

Pric&amp;-~

V2

Odd Lot Boys'

Knit Shirts 1h Off

Win-rize

Large Heads

SPORT SHIRTS
1/3

CHUNK STYLE
2lfz lb. avg.

ICKEE HAMS

•

Boys' Short Sleeve

SPORT SHIRTS

OR

I.G.A.
WHITE

LETTUCE
LEISURE SUITS
1f2 Price

BON

Not a lot in the group but this is
a real buy . Reg . $3 .98 to $8.50.
Sale Price $2 .00 to $4.25

Football Jerseys 1h Off.

Men's Long Sleeve

99~

for

"WASTE FREE"

UNSWEETENE_,

Mens &amp; Boys

Mens Brown Duck

DRESS SHIRTS
Y2 Price

REIGEL CANADIAN BACON

Grapefruit JuiCe

5ai&lt;

9

HAM SANDWICHES

READY TO EAT

Bathing Trunks
1h Price

Shorts

All cotton &amp; cjacron &amp; cotton.
Round neck &amp; V-neck styles.
S., M.• L. &amp; XL. Reg. $3.98 to
$7.98.
Sale Price $1.99 To $3.99

BACON

FRESH
.

This is probabl y as nice a se lection as
we have ever had . Nylons, Dacron· &amp;
Cotton &amp; Polyester . Small through

Cabana Sets
1/z Price

GET P-U-Z-Z-L-E. PIECES

3 OZ. PORTION
SLICED

COLUMBIA

Mens Short Sleeve

NEW YORK (UP! ) - The
Am~rican League Tuesday
named Boston's Fred Lynn
its player of the month for
;June after the rookie outfielder reached base in each
of the Red Sox 31 games
during the month.
Tjle 23-year-old Lynn
became only the ninth player
in 11)8jor league history to
!mock in 10 runs in a single
game when he battered
Detroit Tiger pitching for
three home runs, a triple and
a single in a game June 18.

¢

WEINERS

SALE PRICE $30.00 to S40 .00

Cod Fish

BREADED

12 OZ. PKG.

MEN'S KNIT
DRESS SLACKS
lf2 PRICE

FRED LYNN HONORED

50 BOOKS

1 lb.

MEN'S SPORT COATS
1/z PRICE

M os t of these are double k'"!it fabr ics that really hold a
crease . Some of the se are sport sui ts with contrasting
slack s. Pla ids and p la in colors . Shorts, regulars &amp; longs.
Sizes37 to 50 . Reg . Pri ceS90.00toS150.00 . Sale Price S45 .00
to S 75 .00 ,

MATCH-ES

CALlA

~

Save Y2 and More On Most ·Items In This Salefl

MEN'S SUITS
1h PRICE

I.G.A.

CRACKERS

PICNICS

Remember. we have just 2 sale.s like this a year. This is the one everyone
looks forward to each July . Be here early ;tnd see all your friends . They
will be here. too. All sales cash! We reserve the right to limit quantities .

f-------------------~------------------~------------------~------------------~
MEN'S
Odd Lot
Odd Lot Mens

'

I.G.A. SALTINES

Tig e rs

I.

lool o&lt;lu

I

PICKLES

OZ.

REIGEL "SPECIAL TRIM" SMOKED

FRI., SAT., MON., JULY 11, 12 &amp; 14
Doors Open Promptly At 9 am

In Pomeroy Jjttle League
action this week the Giants
bombed the Pirates 38-7, C.
Allen starting for the winners
and going 5 innings, fanned 7,
walked 4, and gave up 8 hits.
Andy
Youn g
finished,
allowed no hits, only I run,
got 2 strike outs, and walked ·

BIG
BAGS
OF GROCERIES
!
.
:

~

•'

· 3 PACK

p· I.rates
•

0fl

•

JIF

18 oz.

Tuppers Plains Giants put
blanks Letart · b.
In independent . base ball
Ig SCOre

GET APIECE Of IGA
I'U22I.E .£¥Em!ME YOU

.·

•

Winebren·

nn : tu

The Mason Merchants
slipped by Syracuse 5-3 with
Don Russ ell go ing the
distance, _ walking 4 and

•

~

'

1.

one - th ird innings. fanning 1 an d wa lkin g 6

J eff Grueser and Triplett_
For Hartford, Jeff Fields had
a double and hitting si ngles
were Warren Fields and Greg .
Kearns .

"

131fz

a"t1d

s ingles were Chris Taylor ,

-~

..... -· ........

•

sta rl ed un the Syracu s e
m ound

-·-

~OTATO

,,

fannin g 4_ Don Hend riCks

1·1 0,

PRIZE.S

,l·-

SEMI-ANNUAL

Hitters for the A-s were nipped th e Hartford Padres :!Hrian Hamilton with a triple 2 wit h Mike Trip lett getting
an d double ; Dal e Browning th e wi lL Triplett fanned 9 an d
ha d a doubl e an d 2 s in ~lcs, wal ked only L Warr en Fields
Dwayne Wh ite had a doubl e pitc hed for th e Pa dr es,
and single, Ron Snyder :t striking out 4 and walking :1.
.singles , Dave Harri s 2 With the win, the Tigers'
sin gles , and Mark Mitc h a reeords is :1-7 while the loss
single _ For Letart, O'Brien dropped the Padres to 2-9,
Hitters for the Ti ger s were
had a single. The win for the
Tom
Hawley with a double
A-s moved their record to II
wins an~ll oss while Letart is and si ngle, an d ge tting

action Sunday T)lppers
Plains blanked Le tart 7-0,
Jack Rood going all the way
on the hill for the winners
picking up the win allowing
just 3 hits.
Brady Huffman wenl all
the way for Letart pitchin g a
fine game but losing due to
costly errors_ Hitters for
Tuppers Plains were Gary
Durst with a homerun and
single, Fitch a double and
single, and getting s ingles
were Kerr , Hanley, Rood ,
and "Wilson . For Leta rt ,
Rusty Tuck~r had a double
and gettin g singles were
Gary Roush and David Hupp .
, Don Hupp manages the
Letart club and Gary Durst
the Tuppers Plains squad .

I

.

.

~

Dale ·Browni ng s tarting on· ish the contest. striking out
the Pomeroy hill , fanning 5 in 4 and walking 4,
Hillers for the winnerS't'
the three innings he pitched.
were
Phtl Hobbs, Ch uck
Greg Smith came on to walk 2
and strike out I in his stinL Stanley. and Kenny Young,
Rick Miller and Jimmv each getti ng a single . For
Powell each pitched for th~ Syracuse, Hendri&lt;·ks had 2
Letart team with Miller go ing singles and Kenny Kuehler
the first 11 "l innings. fanning and Oannv Rifne ea ch one
one. Pow ell fini shed the swg l£'. Ma son is now 4-7,
game 1 fanning 2 an d w.alkin g

#

.
.
.
-..;;..---------......
.NEW _YORK-CLOTHING -HOUSE IN POMEROY

in Pony action
The Pomeroy A-s. Mason
Merchants, and Pomeroy
Tigers posted victories in
Meigs·Mason Pony . League
·action last nigh L
'Fhe A-s blanked the Letart
~nies by a 13-0 count with

•

r--~--~·~----------....,;,..----

I

Victories posted

•

:

. -·'

�.

-· .

I'

'

"! .

&lt;4 -

.
The Daily Sentinel, Middleport,Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, July 9, 1975
.

-

-

-

..~

2.

go-ing

three

before
ne r

Kelly

ca me

•

Syracuse. 4-fi.
Tile · Pomeroy

fin -

CHIPS :

32 Ol JAR
· FULLY COOKED

STYLE

IT'S SANDWICH TIME
LB.

A real nice selec tion of styl es and colors all from our
regular stock of high quality sport coats. You wi ll cer tainly recognize the name In these coats . Regulars. shorts

FRANKIE

&amp; longs. Reg . price S60.oo to $80,00.

Sm all cha rg e for a lt e rations .

Both pla in co lors &amp; fancy patterns .
Regu lar pr ice $14.98 to $27 .50.

BOYS JEANS &amp;
DRESS SLACKS
1h PRICE

MENS UNIFORM

Mens Short Sleeve

PANTS VJ·OFF

Dress Shirts % OFF

Sizes are broken . Reg . $3.98 to
$12 .98.
Sale Price $1.99 to $6.49

Sizes 32 to 54 except 36 &amp; 38
waist. Reg . $6.98 &amp; $7 .98 . Now
Just $4.66 to $5.32.

Sizes 14 to 17 . A very good name
in shirts. Reg . $5.98 to $9.98 .
Sale Price $3.99 to $6.66

Men's Short Sleeve Knit

Mens Short Sleeve

M~ns All Cotton &amp; Ban Lon

Mens Ughtweight

Dress Shirts %·off

Sport Shirts 1h Price

Placket Shirts '-h off

A very 'l imited supply. so come
early' to get them, Reg. $5.98 to
$12.00.
Sale Price $2.99to $6.00

A nice selection of .colors. S. M.
L. &amp; XL. Reg . $7.98 to $9.98.
Sale Price $5.32 to $6 .66

Sale P r ice S7 .49 to $13.75
Sma ll charge for altera t ion.

All from our r egu lar stoc k of
high quality dress shirts . Sizes
14 112 to 17 _ Reg . $8 .98 to $11.98_
Sale Price $5.99to $7.99

Mens long Sleeve
KNIT SHIRTS
·s2.00
Values To $8.98

Mens

JACKETS

OFF

1/3

extra large. Reg . $8.98 to $28.00.
Sizes 29 to 42 .

Walking

Knit Shirts /z Price
1

I.G.A.

Sizes 28 to 42. Reg . $5.98 to
$12.00.
Sale Price $2 .99 to $6.00

1

Sizes are broken. Reg . $5.98 to
$9 .98 .
Sale PJ ice $2.99 to $4 .99

.~
'~m'~''"'''A
~~

Boys Short Sleeve

Sizes 10 to 20. These are ideal
for back to school. Round neck
&amp; button western styles. An
ipeal selection of styles &amp;
colors. Reg . $3 .98 to $6 .98.
.Sale Price $2 .66 to $4.66

Sport .Coats
·$10.00

Wlnnen Namt~~~ WU1
Be. Pooled, In 0.U
Stou Each WMk

EA.

M0

PU~H·S! NECl •• AaY
fllllltOIIt ANO lW'I.OYllS
.MOT t~tollll TO I'""ICIPATI

• coME ·10 RlOil!NER

Suits &amp; Sport·
. . Coats
'5.00

BOYS' KNIT

Off

style~

.

l13
.L
· OFF
.

'

SUN KIST

15 OZ. CAN

~

SAVE 45¢

0
.R

GET

P-U-Z-Z-l-E

9

'

CANTALOUPES

I

·Enjoy

~JG BAG~.

OF GROCERIES

' GET APIEC£ Of IGA
PUllU EVERmME YOU

EA.

OOME 10 RIOOI.INER .

..
..

FUN!
FUN I

-·

·- ~

. , .... O Q GO" o

~ ~o&gt;· • •

"".

~ t O TU ~ ··

'

Shopping ·eenter

M&amp;R

. . MiofftEPORT, o.
0

-·_.....,..
...·-...

110).: .

MO ~\IIICHASl HlCEIS,.II;Y
MfHOII;S lt.MO EWPLOYI!U
HOT lliOIIL..l TO ~.I.IIITICII'A'PI!

1 LB.
STICKS

•&gt;o go

·• ~.0,~6

I

Right Reseryed
To
Limit

'"'&gt;"

.

• I

I

.
-·

'

I •

.

.

.....
"..

~··

.;.

..

~- ··

'

'f

•

--.

. ..........

·•r

QuClhtities

'

•

.
.'

...,

WinnenNam.. ww
B• Pooled in Our
Stor1 Eac:h Week

PRIZES

'

.

•.•
.,

'~-

.

..

'
'

·oLEO

•

•
'

"

PARKAY

Large S1ze

NowI

.&lt;•

'

doz.

Po.mel"()y

¥
0
R

COFFEE
CUPS

PIECES AT OUR STORE .

L

'

.

PORK &amp;-BEANS

¢

I

STYLE

STONEWARE·

Items ·Too.Numerous
·.l Mention. On Salel .

Kerm's Korner •

.

BOLOGNA

CHUNK

SHOWBOAT

LEMONS

SHOPPING ··
CENTER·
0.

oz.

LOAVES

59~

~ManrOther

Lot Luggage

A very .famous ,arne

PKG.

LB.

JUMBO

I

Off

.

Sizes 10 to 20. Reg . $3.98 to $5.98 __
Sale Pric!! $2.66 to $3.99

io luggage; Not every

"

16

2 for

Beach . Robes
1/z Price--

'

1/3

69¢

8 oz.

All Remaining Stock

TANK TOPS

. color in every

CAN

Sizes 8 to 20. Reg. Price $3 .98 to
$6.98.
.
Sale Price $1.99 to,$3.49

Sizes are broken .

Od~

ot M • ttoon

oz.

WALKING SHORTS
Y2 Price

Y2 Price

TANK TOPS
1/3 _
0H

46

BOYS'

Suits &amp; Sport Coats

Values to $29.50. All first
'quality . They have been around
too long.

ECKRICH
BOLOGNA

$19!, LB.

BREAD

A very good name in shirts .
Sizes .8 to 20. Reg . $3 .98 to $6 .98.
For 3 days only Now Just $2.66
to $4.66.
·

Sizes are broken. -There are a
lot of large sizes in the group .
Reg . $5.98 to $9 .98 .
Sale Price $2.99 to $4.99 _
BOYS'

. Reg . $3.98 to $4.98 .
Sale Price $2 .66 to $3.32
Sizes S.M. L. &amp;. XL.

Values To $60.00

FUN I
FUN I

Some are short sleeve. An
excellent name in leisure suits.
Reg. $49.50 to $60.00.
Sale Price $24.75 to $30.00

Mens Knit

2 Men's

Pric&amp;-~

V2

Odd Lot Boys'

Knit Shirts 1h Off

Win-rize

Large Heads

SPORT SHIRTS
1/3

CHUNK STYLE
2lfz lb. avg.

ICKEE HAMS

•

Boys' Short Sleeve

SPORT SHIRTS

OR

I.G.A.
WHITE

LETTUCE
LEISURE SUITS
1f2 Price

BON

Not a lot in the group but this is
a real buy . Reg . $3 .98 to $8.50.
Sale Price $2 .00 to $4.25

Football Jerseys 1h Off.

Men's Long Sleeve

99~

for

"WASTE FREE"

UNSWEETENE_,

Mens &amp; Boys

Mens Brown Duck

DRESS SHIRTS
Y2 Price

REIGEL CANADIAN BACON

Grapefruit JuiCe

5ai&lt;

9

HAM SANDWICHES

READY TO EAT

Bathing Trunks
1h Price

Shorts

All cotton &amp; cjacron &amp; cotton.
Round neck &amp; V-neck styles.
S., M.• L. &amp; XL. Reg. $3.98 to
$7.98.
Sale Price $1.99 To $3.99

BACON

FRESH
.

This is probabl y as nice a se lection as
we have ever had . Nylons, Dacron· &amp;
Cotton &amp; Polyester . Small through

Cabana Sets
1/z Price

GET P-U-Z-Z-L-E. PIECES

3 OZ. PORTION
SLICED

COLUMBIA

Mens Short Sleeve

NEW YORK (UP! ) - The
Am~rican League Tuesday
named Boston's Fred Lynn
its player of the month for
;June after the rookie outfielder reached base in each
of the Red Sox 31 games
during the month.
Tjle 23-year-old Lynn
became only the ninth player
in 11)8jor league history to
!mock in 10 runs in a single
game when he battered
Detroit Tiger pitching for
three home runs, a triple and
a single in a game June 18.

¢

WEINERS

SALE PRICE $30.00 to S40 .00

Cod Fish

BREADED

12 OZ. PKG.

MEN'S KNIT
DRESS SLACKS
lf2 PRICE

FRED LYNN HONORED

50 BOOKS

1 lb.

MEN'S SPORT COATS
1/z PRICE

M os t of these are double k'"!it fabr ics that really hold a
crease . Some of the se are sport sui ts with contrasting
slack s. Pla ids and p la in colors . Shorts, regulars &amp; longs.
Sizes37 to 50 . Reg . Pri ceS90.00toS150.00 . Sale Price S45 .00
to S 75 .00 ,

MATCH-ES

CALlA

~

Save Y2 and More On Most ·Items In This Salefl

MEN'S SUITS
1h PRICE

I.G.A.

CRACKERS

PICNICS

Remember. we have just 2 sale.s like this a year. This is the one everyone
looks forward to each July . Be here early ;tnd see all your friends . They
will be here. too. All sales cash! We reserve the right to limit quantities .

f-------------------~------------------~------------------~------------------~
MEN'S
Odd Lot
Odd Lot Mens

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I.G.A. SALTINES

Tig e rs

I.

lool o&lt;lu

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PICKLES

OZ.

REIGEL "SPECIAL TRIM" SMOKED

FRI., SAT., MON., JULY 11, 12 &amp; 14
Doors Open Promptly At 9 am

In Pomeroy Jjttle League
action this week the Giants
bombed the Pirates 38-7, C.
Allen starting for the winners
and going 5 innings, fanned 7,
walked 4, and gave up 8 hits.
Andy
Youn g
finished,
allowed no hits, only I run,
got 2 strike outs, and walked ·

BIG
BAGS
OF GROCERIES
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· 3 PACK

p· I.rates
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JIF

18 oz.

Tuppers Plains Giants put
blanks Letart · b.
In independent . base ball
Ig SCOre

GET APIECE Of IGA
I'U22I.E .£¥Em!ME YOU

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Winebren·

nn : tu

The Mason Merchants
slipped by Syracuse 5-3 with
Don Russ ell go ing the
distance, _ walking 4 and

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one - th ird innings. fanning 1 an d wa lkin g 6

J eff Grueser and Triplett_
For Hartford, Jeff Fields had
a double and hitting si ngles
were Warren Fields and Greg .
Kearns .

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a"t1d

s ingles were Chris Taylor ,

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sta rl ed un the Syracu s e
m ound

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~OTATO

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fannin g 4_ Don Hend riCks

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PRIZE.S

,l·-

SEMI-ANNUAL

Hitters for the A-s were nipped th e Hartford Padres :!Hrian Hamilton with a triple 2 wit h Mike Trip lett getting
an d double ; Dal e Browning th e wi lL Triplett fanned 9 an d
ha d a doubl e an d 2 s in ~lcs, wal ked only L Warr en Fields
Dwayne Wh ite had a doubl e pitc hed for th e Pa dr es,
and single, Ron Snyder :t striking out 4 and walking :1.
.singles , Dave Harri s 2 With the win, the Tigers'
sin gles , and Mark Mitc h a reeords is :1-7 while the loss
single _ For Letart, O'Brien dropped the Padres to 2-9,
Hitters for the Ti ger s were
had a single. The win for the
Tom
Hawley with a double
A-s moved their record to II
wins an~ll oss while Letart is and si ngle, an d ge tting

action Sunday T)lppers
Plains blanked Le tart 7-0,
Jack Rood going all the way
on the hill for the winners
picking up the win allowing
just 3 hits.
Brady Huffman wenl all
the way for Letart pitchin g a
fine game but losing due to
costly errors_ Hitters for
Tuppers Plains were Gary
Durst with a homerun and
single, Fitch a double and
single, and getting s ingles
were Kerr , Hanley, Rood ,
and "Wilson . For Leta rt ,
Rusty Tuck~r had a double
and gettin g singles were
Gary Roush and David Hupp .
, Don Hupp manages the
Letart club and Gary Durst
the Tuppers Plains squad .

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Dale ·Browni ng s tarting on· ish the contest. striking out
the Pomeroy hill , fanning 5 in 4 and walking 4,
Hillers for the winnerS't'
the three innings he pitched.
were
Phtl Hobbs, Ch uck
Greg Smith came on to walk 2
and strike out I in his stinL Stanley. and Kenny Young,
Rick Miller and Jimmv each getti ng a single . For
Powell each pitched for th~ Syracuse, Hendri&lt;·ks had 2
Letart team with Miller go ing singles and Kenny Kuehler
the first 11 "l innings. fanning and Oannv Rifne ea ch one
one. Pow ell fini shed the swg l£'. Ma son is now 4-7,
game 1 fanning 2 an d w.alkin g

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.NEW _YORK-CLOTHING -HOUSE IN POMEROY

in Pony action
The Pomeroy A-s. Mason
Merchants, and Pomeroy
Tigers posted victories in
Meigs·Mason Pony . League
·action last nigh L
'Fhe A-s blanked the Letart
~nies by a 13-0 count with

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Victories posted

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,-1 .Social

.I ~Calendar

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WEDNESDAY
PAST Councilor 's Club,
Chesler Council, Daughters
· of America, 7 p.m . at the
home of Sadie Trusse.ll with
Doro~hy LaY~Son, ca-hostess.
Beverage , dessert and table
service furnished by the
'
hostess .

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TilE "PIANO PLAYER" in the 1975 performance of "Gallia CoWltry" is portrayed by
Brant Adams . Brant is accompanist and arranger for the historical drama opening Friday
evening.

RACINE Grange at the
Grange Hall at 8 p.m .
THURSDAY
ROCK Springs Grange, 8
p.m. Inspection and COWlty
contests will be held .
CATHOLIC Wome n's Club.
Sacred Heart Parish, monthly meeting, 8 p .m . preceded
by Mass 7:30. Hostesses Becky Broderick , Emma
Broderick, Susan Baer, and
Mildred Wells .
COMMITTEE FOR the
Mentally Retarded , Meigs
County Courtroom, 7:30p.m .
Public is invited.
HAPPY Harvester Class of
Trinity Church Friday at 6
p.m. Potluck dinner followed
by program Wlder direction
of Carrie Neutzling .
FRIDAY
MEIGS County Pomona
Grange, 8 p.m., at the Rock
Springs Grange HalL Athens
County Pomona Grange will
visit, Potluck refreshments .

On this day in history :
In 1900, Australia entered

KIMBAll (Red) Suiter is shown during recent rehearsal for "Galha U1w1Lry. · ~UJter
is the musical director of the outdoor drama.

Lt. Karl Russell is
commanding platoon
RACINE - Marine LL
Karl R Russell , formerly of
Racine, is in command of the
106th Recoiless Rifle Platoon ,
Hq. Co., 15th Battalion, 8th
Marines, 2nd Marine' Division
at Camp LejeWle, N. C.
The son of Mr. and Mrs .
Kenneth Russell, Rt. 2.

fhe Almanac
By United
Press
In·
ternatlonal
Today is Wednesday, ju ly
9, the !9oth day of 1975 with
175 to follow .
The moon is between its
new phase and first quarte r.
The morning stars are
Mercury, Mars and Jupiter .
The evening stars are
Venus and Saturn.
Those born on this date are
·ooder 'the sign of Cancer.
Elias Howe, inventor of the
sewing machine, was born
July 9, 1819. This also is the
47th birthday of American
actor Vince E(jo,vards.

Modern

RaCine, Russell enlisted in
th e Marines in 1967, and has
served from the rank of Pfc.
to S. Sgt. in Vietnam and in
the Pentagon.
A 1966 graduate .of Southern
High School and o( M.A.T.A.
College, Colwnbus, Russell
also attende d college at
Ywna, Ariz., while stationed
there and Palomar College of
' San Marcos, Calif., where he
holds an associate degree in
business administration .
He gradua ted from Marine
offi ce1·s candidate sc hoo l in
Quantico , Va . last November
and completed six additional
months of extensive exercises in field problems and
command in JW1e .
He is married to the former
Linda Smith, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Roy 0. Smith, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy. They are the
par ents of two children,
Melissa Lynn , 5, and Kenneth
Hoy, 3. Their address is
General Delivery, Marine
Corps Base . Camp ·LeJeWle ,
N. C. 28542.

I

Lt. Karl Russell

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Letters ol opinion are welcomed. They should be
less than '300 words long 1or be subject to reduction by
the edlton and must be signed with the signee's address. Names may h&lt;' withheld upon publication.
However, on request , names will be disclosed. Letters
should be in good taste, addressing Issues, not per·
sonalltles.
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The District II office of the
I Watercraft Division of the
: Ohio Department of Natural
1 Resources is at Grand· Lake
1 St., Marys State Park, P. 0.
t

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~lilitbt&amp;.-:
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ifh~L.,.

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Box 426, Celina 45822.

I
The District IV office of the
I Watercraft Division of the

l Ohio Department of Natural

:

1 Resources is at 655 Latham

1 Lane , Akron 44319.

Bigger, better th;m ever
'

.De!!f Sir : ,
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It matters not what accomplishments·are attempted to· be
m&amp;de in this day aod·age, except that each is hoped to be a
suctess. These goals are generally accompanied by a lot of
hard work from a lot of poople, which brings rrie to the ~ubject
of this article, the 4th of July events in Racine this past week .
. The gQl!l naturally was to provide a day of entertainment
for an; and especially this year due to the probl.e ms incurred
during last year's celebration, This 4th was considered a huge
success by ~departnlent as bNhe public, from the response
we have re&lt;:eiVl!d'. . ·
. . .
. •
. An event such as this dqes involve hardshipS however,
~lly when the organization .of the event is provided by a . ·
· small Jilimber of volunteer perS()imel, who ·are usually:limited
ui whlit they· can produce, bi!Cause of the lack of necessary

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A \bought for the day:
German poet Friederich Wilhelm
Nietzsche
said,
" Distrust all those in whom
the impulse to punish is
powerful .' ' .

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Plans ljl'e
being formulated toWljl'ds tne 4th of "76/'1 .
and the gOal is to pre&amp;~mt an
better celebration for
everyone. On behalf of the departl)lent, I willb to thank" the
Racine Home National J;!ank, Racine American Legion ." Post ·
602, area.fire unit's, chutch and civic organizations,local· news : ·
media, and to YOU the people '!or making .this 4th an eventful
·
one.

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the Federal British Commonwealth .
In · 1943,
American,
Canadian and British forces
invaded Sicily 'during World
War II.
In 1960, Soviet Premier
Nikita Khrushchev
threatened tli,e United States
with rockets if American
forces attempted to oust the
Castro Communist regime
from Cuba.
In 1974, Earl Warren,
former governor of California
and Chief Justice of the
Onited Stales, died at the age
of 83.

(Continued from page 2)
China. They see streets swept
clean daily though the cities
are dingy and drab, and they
find their parks free of litter,
· and DDT sprayers ably
implacably pursuing the few
remaining flies an(Uhe many
remaining mos.Quitoes (at
great probable cost: few
birds are seen in China except· for the enemy sparrow,
which eats grain). They see
no
beggars,
hawkers ,
prostitutes, drunks or dopeheads anywere in any city or
across the countryside, and
they take pride in knowing
foreigners leave cameras and
money in their hotel rooms
without even locking the
doors because stealing is a
rare
betrayal of the
revolution.
In inany ways their nation
is still landlocked from the
rest of the world as if the 19th
century emperors were still
trying to shut out aU contact,
but behind the wall, in which
the government is guardedly
opening some gates to
visitors now, the present
guiding Mao thought is selfreliance - "Take the initiative into our owri hands" and while this suspicion of
interd~pendence is holding
the masses in a sweatbath of
hand labor while ·the wheel is
laboriously re-invented, these
latecomers to the lndustr~l
age feel the pride of
pioneering. Chinese shopgirls
are not interested in the new
electronic des ·ktop
calculators. They have not
even come to the cash
regiSter yet. They still use the
abacus. But the abacus is, ·
they will tell you, Chinese- ·
made.

N.ation. s h o. m. es d ange_ro.us·· .

mWlition If .· kept in the ·
e
'
home, must be locked up and
out of the child's reach ,
Home accidents can be
.
..
-•-~ supervtston and adequate . prevented - : safety ih the
E. vcry ho• .. _ across' the children shoul
. d be instruc-..:u
.
h
· the responst'bill' ty of
~
fencing or enclosure 1o
15
country - :! persons will be ' in the_importance of keepm_g
f
11orne
farnt' ly members
·
killed and 470 . injured in toys m areas where they w1ll Pre vent yoWlg childref!.. rom,
f a
accidents aroWld the, home . not be stepped on or tripped entering the area. Sel •
Closing and self-latchingh·
According to Selim J . over.
Men and Women's
Bla7.ewicz, M.D. of Meigs
Burnsr~d fi'res can be gates or doors with . t ,e
.
CoWlly Health Department, prevented by cauhon,
care mechanism out of the chtld s
·
la st year 961 Ohioans lost and Iearmng awareness. Th e reach, may be effective in
their lives as the result of a handles of cooking utensils preventing yoWlg children
home accident. This year Dr. should be turned to the back from reaching the pool and
Blazewicz e s timates that of the range, matches and tottering in .
over one-million Ohioans will lighers kept out of children 's
YoWlg .child ren especially
·
ht
need
close supervision at all
be injured - again - in their reac h an d s1g ,
Careless storage and tiines . Never leave a small
own homes.
Falls, fires and poisonings handlin g of flammable child alone in the bathtub or
Your Thori1 MeAn 5tore
are the leading causes of liquids cause thousands of when the phone or doorbell
'Middleport, Ohio
home deaths and injuries to injuries and deaths every . rings. Firearms and am:
Ohi oans. Firearms , suf- year . Such injuries can be
focati ons and drownings prevented by storing nam follow, accoWlting for most of mabie liquids in galvanized
the remainder of Ohio's steel-fuel · cans that are
accidental home deaths and equipped !'lith vapor-sealing
injuries.
caps and ke pt in the garage
As homes throughout Meigs or tool shed - outside, away
County are , undergoing from the home.
sp rin gti me cleaning , Dr .
Decaying or run-down
Blazewicz.in cooperation with . building structures may lead
the Accident Prevention and to serious injuries . Be sure all
Product Safety Unit, Ohio trash, rubb~h, decaying or
Department of Health, urges abandoned structures are
area residents to correct completely removed from the
FABULOUS FUT URA" 11
conditions which may lead to yard and premise .
'· MACHIN[BY SINGE R
an accidental home death -or
Keep all poisons out of the
injury,
·reach and sight of yoWlg
For example, tacking down children. Keep all poisonous
stairway carpeting and products in their original
repairing shaky stair rails · containers, never transfer
will help reduce the accident products like gasoline, to
toll. Many falls are caused by soda pop bottles or drinking
littered stairways. Such Iiller containers - keep products
)u&gt;l fli l'! pantl,
in-t"e.rnund!
should be cleared away and in their original containers
[xdu~iwo E.li~fuwre ,
bu l l nr&gt;fill1ng I ~UpbUI IOnh ole r ,
with proper labeling inp"sh - bt~ tt o n bob bin,o lher Jod•.ll!(t1.
U rr\·ins ~~!.0!
ubinel e~ •~~ formation.
A backyard swimming pool
NOW SAVE S700N A TALENTED~· l 1G-ZA.GMACHIN_E109!li Feuure\ a hu ih -i n bl ind-hem \tilch, 1M udu&gt;ive front drop·m
will invite trouble if it is not
-;J
OObbin, mo1t. Model 152/242. C~ rryin&amp; u~ m .a bint l t:ura .
adequately enclosed to
RACINE - B. Marlene prevent and discourage tresFisher was guest of honor at a passers - especially small
4th of July picnic at the home children. Authprities
....,.'" ,_'" ""''
of Don and Sue Beegle, estimate that as many as half
Racine, . celebrating her of all drownings could be
birthday and the completion prevented
with
adult
of her master's degree work.
Attending were Mildred
Ripley, Charleston, W, Va.;
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Robinson and Rod, 'and Mr.
and Mrs. Gary Robinson,
New Bern, N. C.; Raymond
Robinson
and
friend,
Columbus, Ohio; John Pat
Anderson and Mr, and Mrs.
Philip
Radford
and
Stephanie,
Pomeroy;
Lawrence Beegle, John
Fisher, Jr., Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Sargent, Jo, Pat,
Dave, Berta, Pete, Brad and
Jane Robinson, all of Racine;
Belva Bucky, Carol and
Jenny
Fisher,
Bertha
Robinson, Ea,rly Roush,
Eileen Buck, Pete and Mabel
Shields, of East Letart; and
the honored guest's children,
Molly, Larry and Amy
Fisher.

heritage house

N. SECOND,

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The Fabric. Shop

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SUBJECT
TO
PRIOR
SALE

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&lt;r;w

Beegles host
picnic on 4th

WAID CROSS SONS
Pearl St.
STORE Racine, Ohio
949-5772

FRENCH CITY
LARGE FRANKS
lb;

TASTY BRAND'

Cookout given
granddau$hter

BOLOGNA.•.•••.•..•••••.•• !~:

Mr. and Mrs. Ber-t Romine,
Hemlock Grove, ente~tained
recently with a cookout
supper for the birthday
celebration of their grand-·
daughter,
Connie
Sue
Romine.
Guests were the honoree's
parents, Mr, and Mrs.
Kenneth Romine, Pomeroy;
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Romine,
Thomas and Kevin of
Pickerington ; Mr. and Mrs.
Doyle Sargent, Mr, and Mrs.
Richard Sargent, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Roush, Mr. and
Mrs. Jessie Brinker, Ethel
Euler, and Lori Euler . of
Charleston, W, Va.
Evening callers were Mrs.
Evelyn
Romine,
Mrs.
·Roberta Sawyer and Shawn
of Columbus· and Linda
Shepward and Marie Shepward of Athens.

HEA'D LETTUCE...... ~~~~ 2 9 ~

'S REGULAR LOW DISCOUNT PRICE

$1 79

FOLGER'S .
_
INSTANT COFFEE.:~~:~~!••••.
VALLEY BELL

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$

.

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eGIRLS' WEAR
eBOYS'· WEAR
eLADIES' WEAR
eMEN~S WEAR

29'

2% MILK ..... •...•••••...
•

PETER PAN
.
59~
PEANUT BUnER .•••••~~.o:~.

.

INTERE$T

bn Certificates

~E-TTY C~OCKER - .

49~
·. CA.KE M.XES••.•..• }~~~.o:~~~!..
·.

Of DePOSit
s1,000 ·MinimtpD
30 Mo.. Term
if , witttdrawn
matur'i ty date~

59e

POLISH SAUSAGE .. ~-.99e

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WHITE, YELLOW, DEVil'S FOOD

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ADV A.NTAGE OF THIS MONEY
SAVING.. CLEARANCE.. .

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32 ·Oz. Jclr .

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MiDDLEPORT
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:l Opt:ratcirl'!: Mary, Phyllis;
~;mmi, .la•w and h'ay.
.
.
Appointment Not Always. Necessary
·
~hOne 99n725

·rhe Athens CouiJty

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effective -: ·
Thursdi!'y thru Saturday
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Savings &amp; Li&gt;an C:o.

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TICKETS ON SALE

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,. --·- OUTFIT THE ENTII~E FAMILY. FOR
A BIG 20% OFF HECK'S REGULAR PRICE

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H~MBURGER DILL · ..

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· Hours·: Tues . through Fri. 8:00-4:30 ·
Sat. 8:00-2:00 E;veningsbY ApJ!Ointment ·

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ALL
ITEMS
SUBJECT
TO
PRIOR
SALE

$802!:f

Ninety day interest peMity

169

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DECK SHOES

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·KAY'S BEAUTY
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SALON

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We Reserve Right To Limit Quantity

· Pete Shnpson, Racine Fire Dept.

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, .~

,-1 .Social

.I ~Calendar

,._•\
·-·-'
·:

&gt;.-:

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•.0:

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WEDNESDAY
PAST Councilor 's Club,
Chesler Council, Daughters
· of America, 7 p.m . at the
home of Sadie Trusse.ll with
Doro~hy LaY~Son, ca-hostess.
Beverage , dessert and table
service furnished by the
'
hostess .

. I ..

'

. Jl :·

.

'.
'

TilE "PIANO PLAYER" in the 1975 performance of "Gallia CoWltry" is portrayed by
Brant Adams . Brant is accompanist and arranger for the historical drama opening Friday
evening.

RACINE Grange at the
Grange Hall at 8 p.m .
THURSDAY
ROCK Springs Grange, 8
p.m. Inspection and COWlty
contests will be held .
CATHOLIC Wome n's Club.
Sacred Heart Parish, monthly meeting, 8 p .m . preceded
by Mass 7:30. Hostesses Becky Broderick , Emma
Broderick, Susan Baer, and
Mildred Wells .
COMMITTEE FOR the
Mentally Retarded , Meigs
County Courtroom, 7:30p.m .
Public is invited.
HAPPY Harvester Class of
Trinity Church Friday at 6
p.m. Potluck dinner followed
by program Wlder direction
of Carrie Neutzling .
FRIDAY
MEIGS County Pomona
Grange, 8 p.m., at the Rock
Springs Grange HalL Athens
County Pomona Grange will
visit, Potluck refreshments .

On this day in history :
In 1900, Australia entered

KIMBAll (Red) Suiter is shown during recent rehearsal for "Galha U1w1Lry. · ~UJter
is the musical director of the outdoor drama.

Lt. Karl Russell is
commanding platoon
RACINE - Marine LL
Karl R Russell , formerly of
Racine, is in command of the
106th Recoiless Rifle Platoon ,
Hq. Co., 15th Battalion, 8th
Marines, 2nd Marine' Division
at Camp LejeWle, N. C.
The son of Mr. and Mrs .
Kenneth Russell, Rt. 2.

fhe Almanac
By United
Press
In·
ternatlonal
Today is Wednesday, ju ly
9, the !9oth day of 1975 with
175 to follow .
The moon is between its
new phase and first quarte r.
The morning stars are
Mercury, Mars and Jupiter .
The evening stars are
Venus and Saturn.
Those born on this date are
·ooder 'the sign of Cancer.
Elias Howe, inventor of the
sewing machine, was born
July 9, 1819. This also is the
47th birthday of American
actor Vince E(jo,vards.

Modern

RaCine, Russell enlisted in
th e Marines in 1967, and has
served from the rank of Pfc.
to S. Sgt. in Vietnam and in
the Pentagon.
A 1966 graduate .of Southern
High School and o( M.A.T.A.
College, Colwnbus, Russell
also attende d college at
Ywna, Ariz., while stationed
there and Palomar College of
' San Marcos, Calif., where he
holds an associate degree in
business administration .
He gradua ted from Marine
offi ce1·s candidate sc hoo l in
Quantico , Va . last November
and completed six additional
months of extensive exercises in field problems and
command in JW1e .
He is married to the former
Linda Smith, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Roy 0. Smith, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy. They are the
par ents of two children,
Melissa Lynn , 5, and Kenneth
Hoy, 3. Their address is
General Delivery, Marine
Corps Base . Camp ·LeJeWle ,
N. C. 28542.

I

Lt. Karl Russell

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Letters ol opinion are welcomed. They should be
less than '300 words long 1or be subject to reduction by
the edlton and must be signed with the signee's address. Names may h&lt;' withheld upon publication.
However, on request , names will be disclosed. Letters
should be in good taste, addressing Issues, not per·
sonalltles.
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The District II office of the
I Watercraft Division of the
: Ohio Department of Natural
1 Resources is at Grand· Lake
1 St., Marys State Park, P. 0.
t

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~lilitbt&amp;.-:
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Box 426, Celina 45822.

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The District IV office of the
I Watercraft Division of the

l Ohio Department of Natural

:

1 Resources is at 655 Latham

1 Lane , Akron 44319.

Bigger, better th;m ever
'

.De!!f Sir : ,
.
. .
It matters not what accomplishments·are attempted to· be
m&amp;de in this day aod·age, except that each is hoped to be a
suctess. These goals are generally accompanied by a lot of
hard work from a lot of poople, which brings rrie to the ~ubject
of this article, the 4th of July events in Racine this past week .
. The gQl!l naturally was to provide a day of entertainment
for an; and especially this year due to the probl.e ms incurred
during last year's celebration, This 4th was considered a huge
success by ~departnlent as bNhe public, from the response
we have re&lt;:eiVl!d'. . ·
. . .
. •
. An event such as this dqes involve hardshipS however,
~lly when the organization .of the event is provided by a . ·
· small Jilimber of volunteer perS()imel, who ·are usually:limited
ui whlit they· can produce, bi!Cause of the lack of necessary

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mimpower. .

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now

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A \bought for the day:
German poet Friederich Wilhelm
Nietzsche
said,
" Distrust all those in whom
the impulse to punish is
powerful .' ' .

·

Plans ljl'e
being formulated toWljl'ds tne 4th of "76/'1 .
and the gOal is to pre&amp;~mt an
better celebration for
everyone. On behalf of the departl)lent, I willb to thank" the
Racine Home National J;!ank, Racine American Legion ." Post ·
602, area.fire unit's, chutch and civic organizations,local· news : ·
media, and to YOU the people '!or making .this 4th an eventful
·
one.

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even

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the Federal British Commonwealth .
In · 1943,
American,
Canadian and British forces
invaded Sicily 'during World
War II.
In 1960, Soviet Premier
Nikita Khrushchev
threatened tli,e United States
with rockets if American
forces attempted to oust the
Castro Communist regime
from Cuba.
In 1974, Earl Warren,
former governor of California
and Chief Justice of the
Onited Stales, died at the age
of 83.

(Continued from page 2)
China. They see streets swept
clean daily though the cities
are dingy and drab, and they
find their parks free of litter,
· and DDT sprayers ably
implacably pursuing the few
remaining flies an(Uhe many
remaining mos.Quitoes (at
great probable cost: few
birds are seen in China except· for the enemy sparrow,
which eats grain). They see
no
beggars,
hawkers ,
prostitutes, drunks or dopeheads anywere in any city or
across the countryside, and
they take pride in knowing
foreigners leave cameras and
money in their hotel rooms
without even locking the
doors because stealing is a
rare
betrayal of the
revolution.
In inany ways their nation
is still landlocked from the
rest of the world as if the 19th
century emperors were still
trying to shut out aU contact,
but behind the wall, in which
the government is guardedly
opening some gates to
visitors now, the present
guiding Mao thought is selfreliance - "Take the initiative into our owri hands" and while this suspicion of
interd~pendence is holding
the masses in a sweatbath of
hand labor while ·the wheel is
laboriously re-invented, these
latecomers to the lndustr~l
age feel the pride of
pioneering. Chinese shopgirls
are not interested in the new
electronic des ·ktop
calculators. They have not
even come to the cash
regiSter yet. They still use the
abacus. But the abacus is, ·
they will tell you, Chinese- ·
made.

N.ation. s h o. m. es d ange_ro.us·· .

mWlition If .· kept in the ·
e
'
home, must be locked up and
out of the child's reach ,
Home accidents can be
.
..
-•-~ supervtston and adequate . prevented - : safety ih the
E. vcry ho• .. _ across' the children shoul
. d be instruc-..:u
.
h
· the responst'bill' ty of
~
fencing or enclosure 1o
15
country - :! persons will be ' in the_importance of keepm_g
f
11orne
farnt' ly members
·
killed and 470 . injured in toys m areas where they w1ll Pre vent yoWlg childref!.. rom,
f a
accidents aroWld the, home . not be stepped on or tripped entering the area. Sel •
Closing and self-latchingh·
According to Selim J . over.
Men and Women's
Bla7.ewicz, M.D. of Meigs
Burnsr~d fi'res can be gates or doors with . t ,e
.
CoWlly Health Department, prevented by cauhon,
care mechanism out of the chtld s
·
la st year 961 Ohioans lost and Iearmng awareness. Th e reach, may be effective in
their lives as the result of a handles of cooking utensils preventing yoWlg children
home accident. This year Dr. should be turned to the back from reaching the pool and
Blazewicz e s timates that of the range, matches and tottering in .
over one-million Ohioans will lighers kept out of children 's
YoWlg .child ren especially
·
ht
need
close supervision at all
be injured - again - in their reac h an d s1g ,
Careless storage and tiines . Never leave a small
own homes.
Falls, fires and poisonings handlin g of flammable child alone in the bathtub or
Your Thori1 MeAn 5tore
are the leading causes of liquids cause thousands of when the phone or doorbell
'Middleport, Ohio
home deaths and injuries to injuries and deaths every . rings. Firearms and am:
Ohi oans. Firearms , suf- year . Such injuries can be
focati ons and drownings prevented by storing nam follow, accoWlting for most of mabie liquids in galvanized
the remainder of Ohio's steel-fuel · cans that are
accidental home deaths and equipped !'lith vapor-sealing
injuries.
caps and ke pt in the garage
As homes throughout Meigs or tool shed - outside, away
County are , undergoing from the home.
sp rin gti me cleaning , Dr .
Decaying or run-down
Blazewicz.in cooperation with . building structures may lead
the Accident Prevention and to serious injuries . Be sure all
Product Safety Unit, Ohio trash, rubb~h, decaying or
Department of Health, urges abandoned structures are
area residents to correct completely removed from the
FABULOUS FUT URA" 11
conditions which may lead to yard and premise .
'· MACHIN[BY SINGE R
an accidental home death -or
Keep all poisons out of the
injury,
·reach and sight of yoWlg
For example, tacking down children. Keep all poisonous
stairway carpeting and products in their original
repairing shaky stair rails · containers, never transfer
will help reduce the accident products like gasoline, to
toll. Many falls are caused by soda pop bottles or drinking
littered stairways. Such Iiller containers - keep products
)u&gt;l fli l'! pantl,
in-t"e.rnund!
should be cleared away and in their original containers
[xdu~iwo E.li~fuwre ,
bu l l nr&gt;fill1ng I ~UpbUI IOnh ole r ,
with proper labeling inp"sh - bt~ tt o n bob bin,o lher Jod•.ll!(t1.
U rr\·ins ~~!.0!
ubinel e~ •~~ formation.
A backyard swimming pool
NOW SAVE S700N A TALENTED~· l 1G-ZA.GMACHIN_E109!li Feuure\ a hu ih -i n bl ind-hem \tilch, 1M udu&gt;ive front drop·m
will invite trouble if it is not
-;J
OObbin, mo1t. Model 152/242. C~ rryin&amp; u~ m .a bint l t:ura .
adequately enclosed to
RACINE - B. Marlene prevent and discourage tresFisher was guest of honor at a passers - especially small
4th of July picnic at the home children. Authprities
....,.'" ,_'" ""''
of Don and Sue Beegle, estimate that as many as half
Racine, . celebrating her of all drownings could be
birthday and the completion prevented
with
adult
of her master's degree work.
Attending were Mildred
Ripley, Charleston, W, Va.;
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Robinson and Rod, 'and Mr.
and Mrs. Gary Robinson,
New Bern, N. C.; Raymond
Robinson
and
friend,
Columbus, Ohio; John Pat
Anderson and Mr, and Mrs.
Philip
Radford
and
Stephanie,
Pomeroy;
Lawrence Beegle, John
Fisher, Jr., Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Sargent, Jo, Pat,
Dave, Berta, Pete, Brad and
Jane Robinson, all of Racine;
Belva Bucky, Carol and
Jenny
Fisher,
Bertha
Robinson, Ea,rly Roush,
Eileen Buck, Pete and Mabel
Shields, of East Letart; and
the honored guest's children,
Molly, Larry and Amy
Fisher.

heritage house

N. SECOND,

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The Fabric. Shop

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ALL
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SUBJECT
TO
PRIOR
SALE

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&lt;r;w

Beegles host
picnic on 4th

WAID CROSS SONS
Pearl St.
STORE Racine, Ohio
949-5772

FRENCH CITY
LARGE FRANKS
lb;

TASTY BRAND'

Cookout given
granddau$hter

BOLOGNA.•.•••.•..•••••.•• !~:

Mr. and Mrs. Ber-t Romine,
Hemlock Grove, ente~tained
recently with a cookout
supper for the birthday
celebration of their grand-·
daughter,
Connie
Sue
Romine.
Guests were the honoree's
parents, Mr, and Mrs.
Kenneth Romine, Pomeroy;
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Romine,
Thomas and Kevin of
Pickerington ; Mr. and Mrs.
Doyle Sargent, Mr, and Mrs.
Richard Sargent, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Roush, Mr. and
Mrs. Jessie Brinker, Ethel
Euler, and Lori Euler . of
Charleston, W, Va.
Evening callers were Mrs.
Evelyn
Romine,
Mrs.
·Roberta Sawyer and Shawn
of Columbus· and Linda
Shepward and Marie Shepward of Athens.

HEA'D LETTUCE...... ~~~~ 2 9 ~

'S REGULAR LOW DISCOUNT PRICE

$1 79

FOLGER'S .
_
INSTANT COFFEE.:~~:~~!••••.
VALLEY BELL

~

$

.

~~·····~·1

eGIRLS' WEAR
eBOYS'· WEAR
eLADIES' WEAR
eMEN~S WEAR

29'

2% MILK ..... •...•••••...
•

PETER PAN
.
59~
PEANUT BUnER .•••••~~.o:~.

.

INTERE$T

bn Certificates

~E-TTY C~OCKER - .

49~
·. CA.KE M.XES••.•..• }~~~.o:~~~!..
·.

Of DePOSit
s1,000 ·MinimtpD
30 Mo.. Term
if , witttdrawn
matur'i ty date~

59e

POLISH SAUSAGE .. ~-.99e

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WHITE, YELLOW, DEVil'S FOOD

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·-············ ... ....... ..........

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ADV A.NTAGE OF THIS MONEY
SAVING.. CLEARANCE.. .

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32 ·Oz. Jclr .

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MiDDLEPORT
',_-

:l Opt:ratcirl'!: Mary, Phyllis;
~;mmi, .la•w and h'ay.
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Appointment Not Always. Necessary
·
~hOne 99n725

·rhe Athens CouiJty

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effective -: ·
Thursdi!'y thru Saturday
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Savings &amp; Li&gt;an C:o.

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''(/}Jldkahulfo SRJw~

TICKETS ON SALE

"

,. --·- OUTFIT THE ENTII~E FAMILY. FOR
A BIG 20% OFF HECK'S REGULAR PRICE

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H~MBURGER DILL · ..

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· Hours·: Tues . through Fri. 8:00-4:30 ·
Sat. 8:00-2:00 E;veningsbY ApJ!Ointment ·

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ALL
ITEMS
SUBJECT
TO
PRIOR
SALE

$802!:f

Ninety day interest peMity

169

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DECK SHOES

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·KAY'S BEAUTY
.
SALON

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· Pete Shnpson, Racine Fire Dept.

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Unbeautiful Dreamer ...
Dear Helen:
I got marr\ed seven n'lonths ago, mainly so ! 'could get a
little rest. But these three other broads won 'I leave me alone .
They keep after me to come and see them and, if I don ' t they
threaten w tell my wife - when they aren't doing the " I can't
live without your love" scene.
So at lunch there's Theresa, and alter work, there 's Doris,
and on my "poker night" there's Louise, and my wife is very
··
loving too.
What does an irresistible guy like me do to get a little
peace' - GABE
' ·
Dear Gabby '
Freudian slip No. 5762.
Keep dreaming, Gabby. It's probably all yo u've got. - H.
+ ++
Dear Helen :
E:ver since I read the letter from the woman who agreed to
hand-stitch a white wedding gown lor her daughter - if she
remained virgin until marriage - I've been meaning to write .
Two years ago, I would have thought that was hot stuff.
Now I'm not so sure.
I was a virgin on my wedding day. My parents were immensely proud of this, and so was I.
My husband did not believe in "waiting," but respected
my wishes. It was immaterial w him , wbether I was a virgin

or not.

'

I half expected to undergo great spiritual and
psychological changes that lirst night, but I didn't. I got up in
the morning and found I was still me. I sincerely doubt· I would
have changed if I had had intercourse prior to my marriage .
Perhaps it would have made me a more loving wife , perhaps
not. I must admit that during my engagement I wore my
virginity like a banner. Looking back, I wonder what made me
think I was somehow "better" than those who had chosen the
other route.
I can appreciate parents wanting to protect their
daughters from opportunists. Bu.t a girl should learn to identify
and avoid these.
When a young woman is physically , chronologically,
psychologically and spiritually ready' for sexual love, why
should she flaunt virginity ' With contraceptives available,
why do her parents still fly the double standard?
My husband never for a minute made me regret choosing
my way, but still if I had it to do over again, I - MIGHT NOT
HAVE WAlillD
.
Dear MNHW :
Parents still fly the double standard because they've been
programmed to protect their daughters , but expect escapades
of their sons.
Honest now, MNHW, if you had a teenage girl, wouldn' t
you feel just as your folks felt about you? And your reason, just
as theirs, would be, "You're vulner~ble. We don't want to see
you hUrt ." - H.

+ ++
Dear Helen :
Please let your readers know how Timmy Copeland, the
boy paralyzed from a fall, is getting along. - READERS
Dear Readers :
Timmy Copeland is due to be discharged from the hospital
this week. His parents report he has been coming home every
weekend, and is wdrki~g very hard to walk with braces and
crutches.
"During one of our visits to the hospital," writes-his father,
"Timmy had a surprise for us . He was up from his·wheelchair,
and with the help of a nurse, walked all the way down the hall
to greet us." - H.
FAMILY MOVING
RACINE - Guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Russell,
Racine, over the 4th of July
weekend were Mr. and Mrs.
Floyd T. Chapman t the
former Kenda Russell) and
daughters, Shelley and
Kimberly, Columbus. The
Chapmans will be moving
aoon io Pittsburgh, Pa. where
he has been transferred in his
job as eastern division
manager of the Transport
Motor Ex!X'eSS Co. They have
purchased a home in the
North Hils section of the city.

Both Mr. and Mrs. Chapman
are 1961 graduates of
Southern Local High School.
CAMP TO PICNIC
The Modern Woodmen
Camp 7230 of Burlingham will
hold a picnic Sunday at the
roadside park on US 33 on the
left going south. A basket
dinner will be served at 12:30,
and games will be played
with prizes awarded. All
members and friends are
invited .

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Wedding
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The Lawton Templeton
famil y reunion was held 'Ill
Lake· Alma Sunday, July 6
with· Lawton Templeton of
Jackson , Ohio, the guest of
honor and the follow;'ng
children and their families
present:
Mr . and Mrs. Edwa rd
Templeton, Mr. and Mrs.
Junior Templeton, Bettie
Ann, Hobart, Lisa and Eddie
of Pomeroy ; .M~ . and Mrs.
Ben Batey ( Daisy ), Katy
an d Timmy; Mr. and Mrs .

on

CHARACTERS PORTRAYED - Nancy W~lk~r
portrays Catherine Cameron and Rev. Tim Heaton is cast
as Col. Saff9rd in this yeaT'S production of "Gallia
Country" sctleduled to open Friday night. The outdoor
historical pageant is presented by the Gallia Dramatic
Arts Society at the Bob Evans Farms in Rio Grande. The
drama is scheduled to run July 11-13, 111-20 and 25-27 with
performanc~s beginning at 9 p.m .,

Polly'S Point-arc
BY POLLY CRAMER

·Instant tea sans foam
a broom and see the spots
DEAR POLLY - I always disappear . I thought this was
drink iced tea for lunch and so simple it could not work
use instant tea making only ·but it was magic. Do try it. one glass at a time . It tastes MRS. E . C.
fine but always has foam on
DEAR POLLY - I like to
the top. l would like to know use dust ruffles on my beds.
how to make it without this Since I live alone I always
foam. - MRS. E . S.
had to wait for someone to
DEAR MRS. E.S. '-- I, too, help me move the mattress to
am a constant user of Instant wash the ruffles . Finally I cut
tea (with lemon and sugar off (with pinking shears ) all
added) and have nevrr had the material that fit under the
the foam problem. I always mattress except for about
put water In the glass before eight in che s above each
adding the Instant Iced tea ruffle . When I had someone
powder. Try it this way if you help me rem ove the top
have been putting the power mattress I put a ·bed , pad
in the glass first. - POLLY. under each mattress. Now
when I want to wash them I
DEAR POLLY - My P.e t have no trouble just pushing a
Peeve is when I buy an article mattress over a few inches to
with the price tag direc tly on remove or put on the dust
the front that leaves a spot ruffles. They are just pinned
that sbows when it is to the pad all around . This
· removed . This is especially has worked fine and I no
true of pillow-cases that are longer have to wait for
to be embroidered. It seems n any one to help me. would be just as easy to put DOROTHY.
the price on the inside back or
DEAR POLLY My
on the margin below the daughter-in-law was comstamped edge. MRS . plaining about the fibers in
R.M.F .
her carpet being so stiff after
DEAR POLLY - I am 10 she shampooed it. I suggested
and a ·fifth grader and like to that she put some fabric
fish when I have the chance. softener in wi!h the shampoo
My Pointer - for other she was using when she next
fishermen- is that they 'find cleaned her rug and she did .
a clean toothbrush ideal for This left the fibers soft and
cleaning the inside of a Y.
gave the rug a nice
DEAR POLLY - For years fragrance, too. - - DOT.
we battled with oil sp~ts on
the driveway. We swept sand
You will receive a dollar if
on and off, used commercial Polly uses your favorite
products, etc. Recently a homemaking Idea,
Pet
friend asked if we had any Peeve, Polly's Problem or
dry cement and suggested solution to a problem. Write
that we throw a small amount Polly in care of this newson the oil spots, spread it with paper.
'

RACINE - Wedding plans
have been completed for the
forthcoming marriage of
Cookie Weddle, Rt. 2, Racine,
and Danny Dodscllt, 927
Brownell Ave ., Middl eport .
She is the daughter of Audrey
md Jess Anderson, and he is
'he son of Gene and Agnes
Dodson.
The wedding will be an
:, event 'of Sunday, July 13, at
the Racine Church of the
Nazarene. The gracious
custom of an open church
wedding will be observed. A
: reception will follow the
· ceremony at the home of the
bride's sister and brother-inlaw, Mr. and · Mrs. F,loyd
Dailey, Racine.
Debbie Holsinger will be
maid of honor with Sharon
Roush , Cindy Roush , and Mel
Waldnig as bridesmaids.
Serving Dodson as best
man will be his brother, Dave
Dodson. Ushers will be Allen
Dodson, Jack.Oiler, and Perk
Ault.

OPEl DAILY
10 to· 9

. OPIIhi.T
10 to 9

VACATION OVER
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Baugh·
man and Jeffrey , Middleport,
returned recently from
vacationing in Myrtle Beach,
S. C.

GOINGTOFESfiVAL
SYRACUSE - Howard and
Geneva Nolan, Syracuse, will
be showing their handcraft
work at the Indian Sununer
Festival '75, the 16th annual
crafts exhibition, being held
September 5-7 at the Ban
Johnson Field 'House on the
campus of Marietta College,
Marietta. The festival is
sponsored by the . Marietta
Area Arts and Crafts League ,
Marietta Area Arts Council,
Marietta College Art Department, Marietta Tourist and
Convention Bureau, and the
Marietta Area Merchants
Association.

better because il's DuPont!

PICKENS HARDWARE CO.
MASON, W.VA .

Heck's Reg . $22.88

REWEB

·- ----- ·-

KIT

..

17FT. RE-WEB
WITH SCREWS

....

24 foot

26 foot

28 foot

'22.10

•20.40

'23.80

(4/12
. pitch)

.•

4 PLAYER
BADMINTON SET

MASON, W. VA.
MATERIALS CO.

quart

99C

Round Steak ~b.

Prices. Effective
.

Ju~
,1

·s g·¢
.

·. ·

lb•

' '1 ~39
'1.09'

I

K~---' cans 99c

loaves 89c-·
- - 21b .. 49c
ct. 49c'
-"'!

ilz gal . ·sg~.~ · .

BUTTERMILK·
.
.

¥2 gal.

69¢.

..

FRANKS
-

LETtUCE

....

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. $21.88

TO SELL

$229
Jewelry Dept.
Reg. 13.44

200

To Sell

..
"
"

HECK'S REG. '2.34

rorllll'r.

G.E.
MIST HAIR
SETTER

II

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$}fi66

lOO's

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HECK'S REG . $23 .96

HECK'S REG. $1.18
Cosmetic Dept .

Heck's Reg. $2 .13
Sporting Goods

.

Garcia
50000

3

ONLY .

OIL ·

SUPERB
MOTOR

OIL

ats.
,;· ·

·

$2999

Heck's-Reg. $38.99
. Sports Dept, · ·

.

7 PC. TEFLON II SET

KENDALL

ats.

Here is new beauty in poppy and avocado for your ·

47¢
-

.rro99

. .;~

kitchen . You'l l enjoy cqo king with tne Teflon 11, 7 piece

•

KENDALL
8Up«A•

-

•aTo• DIL

.........

Heck's Reg . 69c~'!'t""-.· .
Auto . Oep ·

"

;.Ll

tUCK'S
REG.
$16.88

.NOUSIW.it "E 1111'1•

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CONTINUOUS STREAM
OF BUBBLES.

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Mike's
Deluxe Ch~ese
EGGS

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BEE

Heck's Reg. 78c
Toy Dept.

]SO 1'0 SELL

KENDALL GT-1 .

$1]88
HECK'S REG.
$19.99
HARDWARE Dt/11.

48e

140

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40 TO SELL

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IUGGfD, QUAUTY ~tr\~Ctioft. HAN)$0111.E Jw;"'-1 finittl _ ~
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SAUSAGE
lh.

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AMBASSADOR
Heck's Reg.

or in o win dow . 1 spMd.

91h" PLAY
BALLS

800

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lb.•1.09

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l·

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VALL,EY BELL

(

Frome mode of strong sturdy tubular ste~l.
Four point hamm ock mode of weather r~sts·
tont polyester .

....

'fb.

....

- --

Jewelry Dept.

HAMMOCKTo~~LL

ROUND· ROAST
WI.EN.ERS

.. Monday Thru fridaY

.

Heck's Reg. •1.99

FOOT LONG -

9-16·

. g;()({to 7:0if . '
'.Saturday 9 to 9

'$}49
CK-40

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.

Accept teet Food. :&gt;tamps
'

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Glad~

CAMERA CASE.

Thi\ po.... erfvl pv shbullon fa n con
eo~i ly be v~ e d on the floor , table,

Heck's r&lt;eg. 88c
Cosmetic n~·~•

14 TO SELL

Sports Dept-

USDA Choice Meats - U: S. Government Inspected

Can

We

Heck's Reg
. . .$6.99
'

FOR POCKET CAMERA

s oz.

Heck's Re.g . $104 .96

'366

$399

69'~

$84
~

20 INCH FAN

2SO TO S E,l.L

88

D~PT.

McGRAW .EDISON

.).DAY
· ·· •
ROLL.ON DEODORANT

T.V.

40 TO SELL

JEWELRY

Hardware Dept. - -...

PANASONIC
BLACK &amp; WHITE

DELIVERED TO JOB SITE

773-5554

Heck's Reg .
$5.99

Heck's Reg . $6 .96

To Sell

500 TO SELL.

Hardware Dept.

•26 99

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

50'

$266

Heck's Reg .
$3.99

15

LAWN
CHAIR

PLASTIC
WATER HOSE

Heck's Reg. $42 .99

Careless habits can be
costly says Highway Safety
Director Donald Cook. Most
of you know the rules of safe
driving but slip into careless
habits at times. Practice
defensive driving . It's the
sensible thing to do.

X

$499

ss~

Heck's Reg. 68c •
Dept.

Dept.

1/2"

'

BONELESS

18

the newest most popular SX70.

150 TO SELL

TREASURE :
FINDER

SALAD DRESSING

.-

This beautiful case was designed for

24 TO SELL

2S TO SELL

JETCO .

DIAMOND POUCH CASE FOR
POLAROID SX70 CAMERA

-

ZIPPIES ROLLER
..SKATES

rieck's Reg. S9c
Hardware Depl.

More Order)

.

AUTO OEPl

Hardware Dept.

Heck's Reg. $2.99

(With $10.00 or

SMUCKER'S

36x72 Heck's Reg. 15.88 $344

TOOTHPASTE

,

.You, WE ll KE"

HECK'S REG.
$11.99

AUTO

JEWELRY DEPT.

Hrs ., 8-5: 30 Mon.-Thurs.
A-8' 00 Fri. .Sat:

MIRACLE WHIP

.c~riN'.~~ ........................ 3

$788

15 i'o SELL

Heck's Reg . $37.96

Follow the signs to " Safer
Bike Riding," says Highway ·
Safety Director Donald Cook.
Each traffic sign has a
meaning all its . own ...
Familiarize yourself with the
varying signs - Know and
Obey the instructi()ns for a
"safe summer of cycling ."

Cans
For

5 FT. STEP
LADDER

FAN

$2899!

and goes on IM I. Tools clean up in soap and water. LUC ilE ...

WOOD

OSCIUATING

Compotiblemonollf~ c~t?l o;o~ridge wit.,
duol synthetic $0pph1ttl sty\1 wOI'l ' do~
stereo records. High -i mpact poly1tyrer~e
case . faur-tpeed changer . , , 45 RPM
spindle included ... p&lt;Merful 6" ovol
dynamic speaker.

l.UCI TE House P&lt;~inl pro v•des longer-tast•niJ protec ti on fewer
repatrlt )Obs - tess work: lor you Na tion wide lesl s on actual non;es
prove LUC ITE resisls cr!l~kmg longer than o ther largest-selling
na t•onal brands. Ano , LUC ITE ts easy l o use. It has a built in pri mer

25 'TO SELL

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Vacations - Fun or folly'
Vacations can be fun - but
only if they are accident free .
Plan ahead - secure your
home - thoroughly check
your car and safety equipment - plan your time drive defensively and enjoy a
safe, fun-filled vacation .

ALL QUANTITIES
SUBJECT
TO PR

FANTASTIC JULY

8

Pre-Fabricated Trusses

ES LAST

PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH SUNDAY JULY 13 WHILE

'

"

i

5th and PEARL .STS., RACINE
"The Store With A Heart

•

WELCOME SUMMER
.WITH A rnrllil@!]JIT
NEW LOOKING HOME!
LUCITE '
Makes it Easy

· .july 13th

.

..

Marshall Batey, Mr. and Ed, on the banjo, and Junior
Mrs . Bennie Batey and on the guitar, and group
daughter, c+o nnie, all · of singing.
Jackson; On'la .Lee Martin
and J ohn Wolfe, Palynwa.
REUNION SET
Pa .; Mr. and Mrs. Vidor
The Nelson reunion will be
( Lelia ) Marchionna of held July ?:1 at Forest Acres
Dayton, Ohio ; Mrs. Sarah Park .
•
Conway, Micky, Pal and
J oey,, and Mr. and Mrs . Jim
AITEND FAIR
Batey , Angie, Jimmie , and
Mr . and Mrs. Tholll&amp;S
Andy , all of Columbus.
Carsey 31Jd Mr. and Mrs.
The group enjoyed a picnic Joseph E. Carsey atten~ed
di nner and swimming, and the arts and crafts fair at
afterward, music furnished Ripley,
West
Virginia
by the Templeton bro,thers, Saturday ..

VFWTOMEET
The VFW will meet t9night
at 7:30 at Jack Ward's Club,
Rt. 143 just off Bypass 7.

•
.,

============= Templeton .}amily reunion held Stl.pday
fO KING'S ISLAND
fhe Senior Citizens
Center ls spoasorlng a trip
to King's island ·Thursday,
July 17, for those age 50 and
over. Cost of the trip is $I6
which includes bus fare
'and admission ticket to the
park. The admission to. the
park entitles you to all the
rides and entertainment at
King ' s Island. II Interested in the trip: call 99117886.

'

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.['ii;i:.;'"'ii;i;-,~-,
I_ Us . . .
Bottt~l \i~
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·.::·

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'

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8 - The Daily Sehtinel, Middle:--:-rt-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, J~y 9, 1975

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Unbeautiful Dreamer ...
Dear Helen:
I got marr\ed seven n'lonths ago, mainly so ! 'could get a
little rest. But these three other broads won 'I leave me alone .
They keep after me to come and see them and, if I don ' t they
threaten w tell my wife - when they aren't doing the " I can't
live without your love" scene.
So at lunch there's Theresa, and alter work, there 's Doris,
and on my "poker night" there's Louise, and my wife is very
··
loving too.
What does an irresistible guy like me do to get a little
peace' - GABE
' ·
Dear Gabby '
Freudian slip No. 5762.
Keep dreaming, Gabby. It's probably all yo u've got. - H.
+ ++
Dear Helen :
E:ver since I read the letter from the woman who agreed to
hand-stitch a white wedding gown lor her daughter - if she
remained virgin until marriage - I've been meaning to write .
Two years ago, I would have thought that was hot stuff.
Now I'm not so sure.
I was a virgin on my wedding day. My parents were immensely proud of this, and so was I.
My husband did not believe in "waiting," but respected
my wishes. It was immaterial w him , wbether I was a virgin

or not.

'

I half expected to undergo great spiritual and
psychological changes that lirst night, but I didn't. I got up in
the morning and found I was still me. I sincerely doubt· I would
have changed if I had had intercourse prior to my marriage .
Perhaps it would have made me a more loving wife , perhaps
not. I must admit that during my engagement I wore my
virginity like a banner. Looking back, I wonder what made me
think I was somehow "better" than those who had chosen the
other route.
I can appreciate parents wanting to protect their
daughters from opportunists. Bu.t a girl should learn to identify
and avoid these.
When a young woman is physically , chronologically,
psychologically and spiritually ready' for sexual love, why
should she flaunt virginity ' With contraceptives available,
why do her parents still fly the double standard?
My husband never for a minute made me regret choosing
my way, but still if I had it to do over again, I - MIGHT NOT
HAVE WAlillD
.
Dear MNHW :
Parents still fly the double standard because they've been
programmed to protect their daughters , but expect escapades
of their sons.
Honest now, MNHW, if you had a teenage girl, wouldn' t
you feel just as your folks felt about you? And your reason, just
as theirs, would be, "You're vulner~ble. We don't want to see
you hUrt ." - H.

+ ++
Dear Helen :
Please let your readers know how Timmy Copeland, the
boy paralyzed from a fall, is getting along. - READERS
Dear Readers :
Timmy Copeland is due to be discharged from the hospital
this week. His parents report he has been coming home every
weekend, and is wdrki~g very hard to walk with braces and
crutches.
"During one of our visits to the hospital," writes-his father,
"Timmy had a surprise for us . He was up from his·wheelchair,
and with the help of a nurse, walked all the way down the hall
to greet us." - H.
FAMILY MOVING
RACINE - Guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Russell,
Racine, over the 4th of July
weekend were Mr. and Mrs.
Floyd T. Chapman t the
former Kenda Russell) and
daughters, Shelley and
Kimberly, Columbus. The
Chapmans will be moving
aoon io Pittsburgh, Pa. where
he has been transferred in his
job as eastern division
manager of the Transport
Motor Ex!X'eSS Co. They have
purchased a home in the
North Hils section of the city.

Both Mr. and Mrs. Chapman
are 1961 graduates of
Southern Local High School.
CAMP TO PICNIC
The Modern Woodmen
Camp 7230 of Burlingham will
hold a picnic Sunday at the
roadside park on US 33 on the
left going south. A basket
dinner will be served at 12:30,
and games will be played
with prizes awarded. All
members and friends are
invited .

·~

'i
'

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,============
Wedding
'

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The Lawton Templeton
famil y reunion was held 'Ill
Lake· Alma Sunday, July 6
with· Lawton Templeton of
Jackson , Ohio, the guest of
honor and the follow;'ng
children and their families
present:
Mr . and Mrs. Edwa rd
Templeton, Mr. and Mrs.
Junior Templeton, Bettie
Ann, Hobart, Lisa and Eddie
of Pomeroy ; .M~ . and Mrs.
Ben Batey ( Daisy ), Katy
an d Timmy; Mr. and Mrs .

on

CHARACTERS PORTRAYED - Nancy W~lk~r
portrays Catherine Cameron and Rev. Tim Heaton is cast
as Col. Saff9rd in this yeaT'S production of "Gallia
Country" sctleduled to open Friday night. The outdoor
historical pageant is presented by the Gallia Dramatic
Arts Society at the Bob Evans Farms in Rio Grande. The
drama is scheduled to run July 11-13, 111-20 and 25-27 with
performanc~s beginning at 9 p.m .,

Polly'S Point-arc
BY POLLY CRAMER

·Instant tea sans foam
a broom and see the spots
DEAR POLLY - I always disappear . I thought this was
drink iced tea for lunch and so simple it could not work
use instant tea making only ·but it was magic. Do try it. one glass at a time . It tastes MRS. E . C.
fine but always has foam on
DEAR POLLY - I like to
the top. l would like to know use dust ruffles on my beds.
how to make it without this Since I live alone I always
foam. - MRS. E . S.
had to wait for someone to
DEAR MRS. E.S. '-- I, too, help me move the mattress to
am a constant user of Instant wash the ruffles . Finally I cut
tea (with lemon and sugar off (with pinking shears ) all
added) and have nevrr had the material that fit under the
the foam problem. I always mattress except for about
put water In the glass before eight in che s above each
adding the Instant Iced tea ruffle . When I had someone
powder. Try it this way if you help me rem ove the top
have been putting the power mattress I put a ·bed , pad
in the glass first. - POLLY. under each mattress. Now
when I want to wash them I
DEAR POLLY - My P.e t have no trouble just pushing a
Peeve is when I buy an article mattress over a few inches to
with the price tag direc tly on remove or put on the dust
the front that leaves a spot ruffles. They are just pinned
that sbows when it is to the pad all around . This
· removed . This is especially has worked fine and I no
true of pillow-cases that are longer have to wait for
to be embroidered. It seems n any one to help me. would be just as easy to put DOROTHY.
the price on the inside back or
DEAR POLLY My
on the margin below the daughter-in-law was comstamped edge. MRS . plaining about the fibers in
R.M.F .
her carpet being so stiff after
DEAR POLLY - I am 10 she shampooed it. I suggested
and a ·fifth grader and like to that she put some fabric
fish when I have the chance. softener in wi!h the shampoo
My Pointer - for other she was using when she next
fishermen- is that they 'find cleaned her rug and she did .
a clean toothbrush ideal for This left the fibers soft and
cleaning the inside of a Y.
gave the rug a nice
DEAR POLLY - For years fragrance, too. - - DOT.
we battled with oil sp~ts on
the driveway. We swept sand
You will receive a dollar if
on and off, used commercial Polly uses your favorite
products, etc. Recently a homemaking Idea,
Pet
friend asked if we had any Peeve, Polly's Problem or
dry cement and suggested solution to a problem. Write
that we throw a small amount Polly in care of this newson the oil spots, spread it with paper.
'

RACINE - Wedding plans
have been completed for the
forthcoming marriage of
Cookie Weddle, Rt. 2, Racine,
and Danny Dodscllt, 927
Brownell Ave ., Middl eport .
She is the daughter of Audrey
md Jess Anderson, and he is
'he son of Gene and Agnes
Dodson.
The wedding will be an
:, event 'of Sunday, July 13, at
the Racine Church of the
Nazarene. The gracious
custom of an open church
wedding will be observed. A
: reception will follow the
· ceremony at the home of the
bride's sister and brother-inlaw, Mr. and · Mrs. F,loyd
Dailey, Racine.
Debbie Holsinger will be
maid of honor with Sharon
Roush , Cindy Roush , and Mel
Waldnig as bridesmaids.
Serving Dodson as best
man will be his brother, Dave
Dodson. Ushers will be Allen
Dodson, Jack.Oiler, and Perk
Ault.

OPEl DAILY
10 to· 9

. OPIIhi.T
10 to 9

VACATION OVER
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Baugh·
man and Jeffrey , Middleport,
returned recently from
vacationing in Myrtle Beach,
S. C.

GOINGTOFESfiVAL
SYRACUSE - Howard and
Geneva Nolan, Syracuse, will
be showing their handcraft
work at the Indian Sununer
Festival '75, the 16th annual
crafts exhibition, being held
September 5-7 at the Ban
Johnson Field 'House on the
campus of Marietta College,
Marietta. The festival is
sponsored by the . Marietta
Area Arts and Crafts League ,
Marietta Area Arts Council,
Marietta College Art Department, Marietta Tourist and
Convention Bureau, and the
Marietta Area Merchants
Association.

better because il's DuPont!

PICKENS HARDWARE CO.
MASON, W.VA .

Heck's Reg . $22.88

REWEB

·- ----- ·-

KIT

..

17FT. RE-WEB
WITH SCREWS

....

24 foot

26 foot

28 foot

'22.10

•20.40

'23.80

(4/12
. pitch)

.•

4 PLAYER
BADMINTON SET

MASON, W. VA.
MATERIALS CO.

quart

99C

Round Steak ~b.

Prices. Effective
.

Ju~
,1

·s g·¢
.

·. ·

lb•

' '1 ~39
'1.09'

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K~---' cans 99c

loaves 89c-·
- - 21b .. 49c
ct. 49c'
-"'!

ilz gal . ·sg~.~ · .

BUTTERMILK·
.
.

¥2 gal.

69¢.

..

FRANKS
-

LETtUCE

....

.
'

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. $21.88

TO SELL

$229
Jewelry Dept.
Reg. 13.44

200

To Sell

..
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HECK'S REG. '2.34

rorllll'r.

G.E.
MIST HAIR
SETTER

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lOO's

'

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HECK'S REG . $23 .96

HECK'S REG. $1.18
Cosmetic Dept .

Heck's Reg. $2 .13
Sporting Goods

.

Garcia
50000

3

ONLY .

OIL ·

SUPERB
MOTOR

OIL

ats.
,;· ·

·

$2999

Heck's-Reg. $38.99
. Sports Dept, · ·

.

7 PC. TEFLON II SET

KENDALL

ats.

Here is new beauty in poppy and avocado for your ·

47¢
-

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kitchen . You'l l enjoy cqo king with tne Teflon 11, 7 piece

•

KENDALL
8Up«A•

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Heck's Reg . 69c~'!'t""-.· .
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REG.
$16.88

.NOUSIW.it "E 1111'1•

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'

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'

'&gt;
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'

_. NECTARINES..••..••. .".••....... Jb •. 494
,

'

$J77

as~

MOTOR

v

'

·suCARYL
PACKETS

'119

"

MAKES A
CONTINUOUS STREAM
OF BUBBLES.

sao TO SELL

Mike's
Deluxe Ch~ese
EGGS

..

BUBBLE
BEE

Heck's Reg. 78c
Toy Dept.

]SO 1'0 SELL

KENDALL GT-1 .

$1]88
HECK'S REG.
$19.99
HARDWARE Dt/11.

48e

140

· each

~

40 TO
SELL

40 TO SELL

·. . ·.·29¢
'

'

Mold• yow coiN6atoo ot W. PaffCT ANGil frDio Wfto. ADJUST$ 6
WA'rS ,_., GI.Ail JIIIE ......ifit. P'OitT otr.tl.lloldt ..,...__._ ~­
IUGGfD, QUAUTY ~tr\~Ctioft. HAN)$0111.E Jw;"'-1 finittl _ ~
fR'r hllkl h, _.,.top or onor.

. REEL

SAUSAGE
lh.

.

AMBASSADOR
Heck's Reg.

or in o win dow . 1 spMd.

91h" PLAY
BALLS

800

, POLISH

lb.•1.09

.
l·

CALCONVERTER

1300

. Nice S~lid Head

VALL,EY BELL

(

Frome mode of strong sturdy tubular ste~l.
Four point hamm ock mode of weather r~sts·
tont polyester .

....

'fb.

....

- --

Jewelry Dept.

HAMMOCKTo~~LL

ROUND· ROAST
WI.EN.ERS

.. Monday Thru fridaY

.

Heck's Reg. •1.99

FOOT LONG -

9-16·

. g;()({to 7:0if . '
'.Saturday 9 to 9

'$}49
CK-40

oi..-

GRAP.E JELLY............... ~.~~....
.

Accept teet Food. :&gt;tamps
'

4S TO SELL

,,

. Right Reserved to .Limit Quantities
Glad~

CAMERA CASE.

Thi\ po.... erfvl pv shbullon fa n con
eo~i ly be v~ e d on the floor , table,

Heck's r&lt;eg. 88c
Cosmetic n~·~•

14 TO SELL

Sports Dept-

USDA Choice Meats - U: S. Government Inspected

Can

We

Heck's Reg
. . .$6.99
'

FOR POCKET CAMERA

s oz.

Heck's Re.g . $104 .96

'366

$399

69'~

$84
~

20 INCH FAN

2SO TO S E,l.L

88

D~PT.

McGRAW .EDISON

.).DAY
· ·· •
ROLL.ON DEODORANT

T.V.

40 TO SELL

JEWELRY

Hardware Dept. - -...

PANASONIC
BLACK &amp; WHITE

DELIVERED TO JOB SITE

773-5554

Heck's Reg .
$5.99

Heck's Reg . $6 .96

To Sell

500 TO SELL.

Hardware Dept.

•26 99

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

50'

$266

Heck's Reg .
$3.99

15

LAWN
CHAIR

PLASTIC
WATER HOSE

Heck's Reg. $42 .99

Careless habits can be
costly says Highway Safety
Director Donald Cook. Most
of you know the rules of safe
driving but slip into careless
habits at times. Practice
defensive driving . It's the
sensible thing to do.

X

$499

ss~

Heck's Reg. 68c •
Dept.

Dept.

1/2"

'

BONELESS

18

the newest most popular SX70.

150 TO SELL

TREASURE :
FINDER

SALAD DRESSING

.-

This beautiful case was designed for

24 TO SELL

2S TO SELL

JETCO .

DIAMOND POUCH CASE FOR
POLAROID SX70 CAMERA

-

ZIPPIES ROLLER
..SKATES

rieck's Reg. S9c
Hardware Depl.

More Order)

.

AUTO OEPl

Hardware Dept.

Heck's Reg. $2.99

(With $10.00 or

SMUCKER'S

36x72 Heck's Reg. 15.88 $344

TOOTHPASTE

,

.You, WE ll KE"

HECK'S REG.
$11.99

AUTO

JEWELRY DEPT.

Hrs ., 8-5: 30 Mon.-Thurs.
A-8' 00 Fri. .Sat:

MIRACLE WHIP

.c~riN'.~~ ........................ 3

$788

15 i'o SELL

Heck's Reg . $37.96

Follow the signs to " Safer
Bike Riding," says Highway ·
Safety Director Donald Cook.
Each traffic sign has a
meaning all its . own ...
Familiarize yourself with the
varying signs - Know and
Obey the instructi()ns for a
"safe summer of cycling ."

Cans
For

5 FT. STEP
LADDER

FAN

$2899!

and goes on IM I. Tools clean up in soap and water. LUC ilE ...

WOOD

OSCIUATING

Compotiblemonollf~ c~t?l o;o~ridge wit.,
duol synthetic $0pph1ttl sty\1 wOI'l ' do~
stereo records. High -i mpact poly1tyrer~e
case . faur-tpeed changer . , , 45 RPM
spindle included ... p&lt;Merful 6" ovol
dynamic speaker.

l.UCI TE House P&lt;~inl pro v•des longer-tast•niJ protec ti on fewer
repatrlt )Obs - tess work: lor you Na tion wide lesl s on actual non;es
prove LUC ITE resisls cr!l~kmg longer than o ther largest-selling
na t•onal brands. Ano , LUC ITE ts easy l o use. It has a built in pri mer

25 'TO SELL

12"

Ly AUTOMATIC
PHONOGRAPH

80 TO SELL

Vacations - Fun or folly'
Vacations can be fun - but
only if they are accident free .
Plan ahead - secure your
home - thoroughly check
your car and safety equipment - plan your time drive defensively and enjoy a
safe, fun-filled vacation .

ALL QUANTITIES
SUBJECT
TO PR

FANTASTIC JULY

8

Pre-Fabricated Trusses

ES LAST

PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH SUNDAY JULY 13 WHILE

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5th and PEARL .STS., RACINE
"The Store With A Heart

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WELCOME SUMMER
.WITH A rnrllil@!]JIT
NEW LOOKING HOME!
LUCITE '
Makes it Easy

· .july 13th

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Marshall Batey, Mr. and Ed, on the banjo, and Junior
Mrs . Bennie Batey and on the guitar, and group
daughter, c+o nnie, all · of singing.
Jackson; On'la .Lee Martin
and J ohn Wolfe, Palynwa.
REUNION SET
Pa .; Mr. and Mrs. Vidor
The Nelson reunion will be
( Lelia ) Marchionna of held July ?:1 at Forest Acres
Dayton, Ohio ; Mrs. Sarah Park .
•
Conway, Micky, Pal and
J oey,, and Mr. and Mrs . Jim
AITEND FAIR
Batey , Angie, Jimmie , and
Mr . and Mrs. Tholll&amp;S
Andy , all of Columbus.
Carsey 31Jd Mr. and Mrs.
The group enjoyed a picnic Joseph E. Carsey atten~ed
di nner and swimming, and the arts and crafts fair at
afterward, music furnished Ripley,
West
Virginia
by the Templeton bro,thers, Saturday ..

VFWTOMEET
The VFW will meet t9night
at 7:30 at Jack Ward's Club,
Rt. 143 just off Bypass 7.

•
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============= Templeton .}amily reunion held Stl.pday
fO KING'S ISLAND
fhe Senior Citizens
Center ls spoasorlng a trip
to King's island ·Thursday,
July 17, for those age 50 and
over. Cost of the trip is $I6
which includes bus fare
'and admission ticket to the
park. The admission to. the
park entitles you to all the
rides and entertainment at
King ' s Island. II Interested in the trip: call 99117886.

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.['ii;i:.;'"'ii;i;-,~-,
I_ Us . . .
Bottt~l \i~
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8 - The Daily Sehtinel, Middle:--:-rt-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, J~y 9, 1975

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11 --:- T.J!e Dl;lily Sentjnel, Mi!ldle;~=~~.:=.:

Slayton

10 - :The-Daily Sentinel, Mio11eport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, July 9, 1975

Ford decisiqn r ==D~~~~;;;~;:=A~l-c - ,D elays seen on re"a ppropriation bill
is good news
Anwrica

Thnmp ~ on

COLUMBUS 1UP! I - The
decision by President Ford to
rWl For a full term "comes a s
good news in the ind ustria l
heartland of this nation"
according to G ov. Jam es A.

'

Republican ' part y ...
Rhod es said nu prC"si d en t in
the hi story uf lhe Un itrd
Sta les took uffi ee fa c ing m orr
proble m s lh;:m did Ford .
·· He e ntered offi cL' with l ht'

Rhodes, wh o ha s pledged twin l)f U bll'lll ~ nf Ufl Cnl ·
support for Ford 's can didacy p!'oynwnt an d inflati o n
from the Ohio Hepubli can thr eatening tile Wl' ll -bei ng uf
every American workl'r ,'
party .
''President Ford is a neigh- saiCJ the govern or
"He. enc ounte r ed &lt;.1 cTipbor of us here in Ohi o. and a
good one, " Rhodes said pling e nergy cris is, :m years
Tuesday. " He has not in the rn&lt;Jki ng, that com forgo tten what is on the pou nd s lhe pr ob lem of
minds of peop le in middle bringin g a bo ut a n economic
recu very
America.
·'Ge rald F ord is tacklin g
''His decision to run for iJ
full term as president comes these prob lems in a for thright
as good news in the industrial man ner, which is typi cal uf
heartl and of thi s natio n, e veryth ing he dues," Rhodes
where we live by the values silld . ' 'He is wnrki ng s tnGerald Ford holds import- cere ly, and with all his

.

ant," said Rhodes in a news

release . " He will have the
support of
the
Ohio

en e r~y ,

on so lvin g the
problem s uf !he working
people uf this nation . "

ingt.o n
Clarence
·Report By Miller

forward
uf

David

North

· Caro lina St:Jtt• has &lt;·o mC to
an agret.•rn c nt with th t.•
J\rncri&lt;·a n Ha!ikctball
J\ssnt• i at i o n
I&gt;cnvl'r
Nuggds. marking the rir,s t
-time the eight· yea r -o ld
lcag ut• has be1•n 'a blt&gt; to
&lt; i ~n the Nn. t pick of th &lt;·
rival Na liurwl Bask&lt;.'tball
i\ ssoda t ion.
D enver
PrrsidC'IIl
(~c nl'r al M;Juagcr Carl
Sdtt.'l' r
sai d Tu e s day
Thumpson agrt•t•d to terms
pt·nding tht• c·nmplt•tiun of
lhi• purc·h ast• or
tht·
N uggds from Fra nk Goldl&gt;l'rg hy ~~ Jofai grou p

COLUMBUS (UP!)
Republicans have
introduced a $345 million
reappropriation of fund s
eliminated fr-om the 1976-77
state budget by Gov. James
A. Rhodes last week, but
action on t he bill will
probably be delayed until
majority Democ rats decide
which of the governor 's
ve toes to try to override.
The new bill, offered
Tuesday by Rep. Frederick
N. Young , R-Day ton, would
send the money direcUy to
H o ~ se

th e s tate agencies involved,

rat her than through the state
Controlling Board.
claims
the
Rhodes
exe,cutive agencies have a
right to rece ive the money
directly and should not be
required to go through the

headed by Scheer. Gnldbt·rg ha s purchased the
ABA 's San Diego frant·hist·.

·= ==========~t

They have one more than
Controlling Board as mandated in the Democratic- the required number in the
· written budget passed last ' Senate, but fall one vote short
month.
of the 60 needed in the House.
Democrats contend the
If the Democrats were to
Con tr o IIi n g Board, override Rhodes' veto of the
dominated by legislators, $345 million worth of apshQuld maintain control over propriations, the Republican
the agency spending .
bill would not be acted upon
Major appropriations in the since the money would be
GOP bill are $258.5 million for · distri buted by the Controlling
the Department of Public Board during the next two
Welfare to upgrade benefits years.
and $56 m@on for a state
Of the welfare money in the
employe pay raise of 20 cents GOP bill , $134.5 million would
to $1 per hour .
go for aid to families with
DeCision Expected
d epe nde nt c hildr en , · $91.5
A decision on possible over.- million for health care and
ride action is expected some- $32 .5 millio"fl 'for public
time nex t week . Democrats assistance.
mu st raise thr ee-fifth s
Another $15 million would
majorities in each chamber be sent to the Department of
to override a gubernatorial Mental Hea lth and Retarveto.
dation for services for the
\

Witness says students 300 ft. away

Gen. Hull dies
in Washington
Gen. J ohn E. Hull , 80 ,
hu sband of the former Lucille
Davis,
formerly of Middl eport , died re ce ntl y in
Washington, D. C. where they
resided at the Wi sc onci n
Avenue Nw-sing Home.
Ge n. Hull was United
States and United Nations
commander-in-chief in the
Far East fr om 1953 until 1955.
In a Wash in gton Post article reporter Jean R. Halley
wrote , " Gen . Hull, who once
referred to hi mself as 'the
general that nobody kn ows·.
wa s well known by the high
mil itary command as a
steady, dependable sold.ie r
whose decisions could be
trusted implicitly ."
Gen . Hull was a ' m ajor
architect of the plan that Gen.
Eise nh oweF followed in the
inva sion of France, and he
directed the first pla nning of
the North African in vas ion
led by Gen . E isenhower.

CLEVELAND ( UP!) - A
former Kent State University
year book photographer told a
fede ra l court jury here he
saw no students within 300
feet of Ohi o National Guard
soldiers when tr oops opened
fire on the K.SU cam pus May
4, 1970, killing four students
and wounding nine other
persons.
Ronald McNees a dded,
how eve r , hi s view was
somewhat obstructed by a
line of trees.
McNees was scheduled to
resume testimony today in
th e $46 'million U. S. District
Court civil damage s uit filed
by parents of the dead a nd
injw-ed students.
In
other
t estimony
Tuesday , a former Guard sman said he shot his MI rifle

from ato p KSU 's Blanket Hill
after hea ring someone yell,
"Fire!"
Robert E . James, 31, now a
plant pathologist from Fredricksburg, Ohio, said .
severa l shots already had
been discharged during a
cam pus anti war demonstration when he heard the
or der.
"I don 't know where it
came from, who said it, but
then I fired my own weapon,"
James said.
James said he fired one
shot into the air and, when he
saw a student near him fall
wounded, got "real scared "
and ejected the remaining
seven rounds in the clip of his
rifle.
" I was scared and terrified
for my life," James said.

Fortunately each year an some thing to be ultimate ly
increasingly larger number re paid. A giga ntic debt a nd
of Members of Congress are huge year-to-year inc reases
coming to the conclusion that are a r elative ly · recent
there has to be a better, more development. (n 1929 the debt
responsibl e alterna tive to level was $17.5 billion . This
handling government fiscal level ac tually dropped by $200
problems than permitting .. million I n 1930. In contrast,
another gigantic increase in the final measure ap proved
the federal debt.
by Congress in June sets the
In the past, Congress had ceiling a t $577 billion - a
engaged itself in the routine fi g ur e which, given pa st
chore of debating, in long- performances , will continue
winded fashion, the raising of to rise.
the federal debt ceiling.
Obviously somethi ng is
Theoretically the debt ceiling drastically wr ong with a
was to be a devi.c e to limit the financial syste m which
amount of federal spending, requires continuous deficits
but in reality it never worked of this magnitude. Dr . Arthur
that way - Congress would Burns, Chairman of the
:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::;:::: :;:;.;:;:::::::::::::;:;::::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·
just raise the ceiling once the Federal 'Reserve Board , arfd
Gall ip olis Areaw i de
En try fees are 75 cents per
old level was reached. I have Treasury Secretary William
Striders
will
sponsor
a
Track
track
even t a nd $2 for the
Farewell party
never supported this con- Simon , have both warned that
and Cr oss -co untry m ee t cross-country .
tinuous raising of the debt our free enterprise system is
Satw-day, Jul y 19, a t Evans
planned for
Awards will be medals to
ceiling . It is far better to cut being des troyed . The massive
Field, Rio Grande. Startin g the top five finishers in the
down on the massive spen- increase in the federal debt
Mr. Hargraves
time will be 6 p.m.
cross-country race for both
ding· pro~ra ms
whi c h will comple tely crowd out the
Events are the 100 yd., 220 age divisions ( 12-15; 16 and
necessitat q' increasing the private sector . Federal
A farew e ll party for
yd. and 440 yd. dashes; 120 over ). and certificates to
debt rather than to go borrowin g already
George
Hargraves .
acyd . high hurdl es, 160 yd . low othe r winners in other tra ck
through the yearly charade of counts for over
superintendent of Meigs
twohurdl es ; long, triple, hig h and field 'events.
setting an ima~ inary ceiling tQjrds
School
District,
will
Local
of
the
toMail entries to Edw ard
jump, shot put., and di scus,
that, in fact, won 't restrain tal capi tal m arket . The
be held Monday evening at
and the s ix mi] e cross- Sayre, Box 151 , Ri o Grande,
anything. In a surprising vote end result of all this is
the Meigs High School
muo 45674 .
countr.v .
on June 16,. the House of that we are leaving our
cafeteria at S p.m. for all
Representatives turned down children a heritage of debt
district employees and
,------------~-------------1
by a substantial margin a bill which they mus t pay - or at
their families. Hargraves
I
JULY TRACK MEET
:
· to raise the "temporary" least the interest on that debt .
has served as superinI
I
ceiling by another $85 billion This year's interest on the
tendent for the past nine
1 Name
for another year . Sub- f_e deral debt only 40 years ago
years since the conAge
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sequently a compromise and is approximately the
solidation of Pomeroy,
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measure raising the ceiling same as the total federal
Middleport, and Rutland
1 Address
Phone
1
by $44 bilUon for six months outlay in fiscal year 1946.
Districts. He will be
I
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was agreed to, but even this
leaving July IS for JefI
I
Thi s
spe ndin g-de bt
1
I wish to enter the following events:
passed only by a · narrow treadm ill cannot go on
ferson County where he ha s
1
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accepted a new job as
margin. In general, those forever. If the debt ceiling
superintendent of th e
Members who voted to raise concept ever had any validity.
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3.
:
the ceiling are the same ones as spending control weapon,
Vocational School there.
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who see it as politically ad- it seemingly has lost that
Cross-country race.
vantageous to co ntinually effectiveness over the las t &gt;&gt;&gt;&gt;:·:·:·:.:.:-:::::::::::::::::&gt;::::&gt;::::::::::::::::-:':"':"-:':':': 1
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vote for the big spending two decade s. What is
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programs that cause the debt urgently needed now is an
1
Total entry fees
ANOTHER SUCCESS
1
limit to be reached.
end to the un coordinated
RUTLAND ' - The Rutland
I
These .close votes by the spending, such as ha s oc- Fow-th of · July celebration
1
Deadline
is
July
16,
Wednesday
'
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House reflect the fa ct that a curred in rece nt months .i n
was a big success again this
large portion of the ·mem- the name · of rece ssio n year a nd the Rutland L---------------------~----~
bership realizes that there is fi ghting. This will put an end Volunteer Firemen a"re
something terribly wrong to government borrowing to thankin g eve r yo ne who
with federal finan ces. The fin ance the debt - which helped to make it a success.
numbers have grown so huge runs coun ter to sustained
P earl Little es pe,c ia ll y
and the issues so complex economic recovery - and tha nks everyone who worked
that we are los jng per- ca n lead to making the debt in her food stand a t the
spective. Throughout most of ceiling a truly legi timate Rutland ox roa st.
·Our nation's existence the device for holdin g down
debt was small and was federal spendin g.
regarded as truly temporary,
ASK DIVORCES
Filing
for divorce in Meigs
SIDE GLANCES
by Gill Fox County Common Pleas Court
are Ad a Yvonne Ta ckett,
Rutland , from Fred Tackett ,
Rutland; Brenda Haning, Rt ..
I Middleport, from Lester
Haning , Rt. I, Middleport;
Anna L. Swain , Rt. I, Portland, from Ron.a ld L. Swain,
Rt. I, Portland.

Track, cross country

meet set on July 19th

~

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Win ~er. gets either a Bo_y's' Siladium ring _o r an elegant
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. QUANTITY RIGHTS
By BRUCE E. HICKS
UP! Science Writer
Dooald K. "Deke " Slayton
wailed 16 Y.ars for a ride into .
.
space.
The last of the original
seven Merclll1\ astronauts to
get a ticket into space,
Slayton would rather have
gone to the moon , flown a
three-orbit Mercury mission
or even a two-man Gemini
flight , but any space trip will '
do just fine .
He is finally malting it, as
the third crewman in the
Apollo that will rendezvous in
earth orbit with two Russians
in a Soyuz.
At age ~I, Slayton will
become the oldest man to fly
in space, fulfilling a dream
that looked like it might have
become a recurrent nightmare . If he had missed this
mission he would have had to
wait at leaSt five years for
another chance and his age
then would have made a ride
doubt! pl.
The rough, outspoken
Slayton was selected in the
first astronaut group in April,
1959, and was slated for the
Mercury AUas 7 flight in
May, 1962. A heart defect
called idiopathic atrial
fibrillation caused him to be
replaced by Scott Carpenter.
Slayton
fought
the
grounding which meant he
even had to have a copilot to
fly jets while the other
astronauts appealed to then
President Kennedy. Nothing
worked aod Slayton moved in
as head of the · astronaut
corps, assigning the pilots for
each flight and watching his
chances of ever getting in
space grow dimmer.
But, 10 years later doctors
said the minor heart problem
had cleared up and Slayton
was returned to flight status.
Then in February, 1974, he
was named along with
Thomas Stafford and Vance
Brand to the crew for the
Apollo-&amp;:lyuz flight.
"To some people, life
begins at 40," Slayton said.
"To me, it's more like 50, but
I guess I'd rather be a 5Gyearoi&gt;ld rookie than a 5Gyearoi&gt;ld has been."
The native of Sparta, Wis.,
said, though, he won't count
on anything until liftoff.
"I got about this close to
one on(!e, about 12 or 13 years
ago so I'm not building up any
high hopes 'til we get Qff that
pad," he said recently. ·
Despite the chalice to fly ,
'·he still gets angry about the

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Sundays 10 AM to 10 PM ·

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"It was a lousy decision
then and I still figure it was a
lousy decision," he said. " But
that's water over the dam. I
can't fix that. Press on from
where you are. "
Slayton is married to the
former Marjory Luney of Los
Angeles. They have one son,
Kent, 1il.
Slayton entered the Air
Force in April, !"943, and flew
63 B25 bomber combat

KRAFT

FRENCH
DR·ESSING

Japan during World War II.
He went to the University of
Minnesota after t))e war, l)ut
was recalled to active duly in
1951 and served in Germany.
Before selection · to the
astronaut corps, Slayton
attended the Air Force test
pilot school. He reSigned his ·
commission as an ·Air Force
major in 1963 to become
NASA's director of flight
crew operations but left that
position to prepare for the
joint flight.
He said ·he's not sure what
he will do after the mission,
but ·plans to begin working
toward the next American
space . program, space
Shuttle, which is slated for
late . this decade at the
earliest.
r
Those flights are a long
way off and he will be that
much older and less likely to
'fly' but to som.One .
walt.e d so long fQr his first
.mission, he says he's not
' pl~nn!ng to quit there . .

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Rutland, 0.

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OHIO

RUTLAND
"'DEPARTMENT STORE

•

Cl lt1! ~,~EA

agencies. Democrats
had tw-ned down those two
items in the budget.!
Meanwhile, the House Finance Committee scheduled
a hearing for Thursday on a
oontroversial bill revising the
state's school subsidy formula.
The Senate-passed bill is
headed for a committee vote
next week amid reports that
an agreement has been
reached on new provisions,
including rete ntion of state
financing of local property
tax rollbacks.
The $457 million coSt of the
biD is already financed by the
budget.
Bipartisan legislation was
introduced by Reps. Sam
Speck, R-New Concord, and
Robert J. Boggs, D-Jefferson,
designed to increase natural .
gas supplies in Ohio and
assure Ohio landowners of
proper royalty payments for
the tapping of oil and gas
wells on tneir property.
The House passf\l eight
bills during its floor session .
One, passed 64 to 24 and sent
to the Senate, would allow
limited local option Sunday
liquor sales at establishments
in resort areas designated by
the stat e Department of
Economic and Community
I;levelopment.
The Senate was to reconvene at 11 a.m: today, and the
House at 1:30pm.

SAVE $100

. So Reg ister i-.ow for the dra wi ng : August ·lO, 1975.

MO.N.

tho~

James was asked on cross- birds hot cartrid'ge, which
. examinatio n by Joseph couldn 't do any damage to
Kelner, attorney .for th e anybody at th at distance ."
plaintiffs, why he ejected the
shells if he was so a fraid for
his life .
" Because it scared me
ROCK V'S 67TH
when I saw that student fall,"
WASHINGTON (UP))
replied James. " I wan ted to Vice President Nelsop A.
be sure I only fired one Rockefeller
qui et l y
round .' '
celebrated his 67th birthday
Another witness, former Tuesday at his Washington
Guard Sgt. Leon Smith of . estate after returning from a
Beach City, Ohio, who sa.id Ew-opean vacation.
five years ago he thought he
wounded a KSIJ student with
\
a shotggun blast , denied the
sta tement Tuesda y, saying
he only fired a warning shot
in the student's direction.
Under cross examination
by plaintiffs' attorney Steven
Sindell, Smith said he fired
" a warning shot over the
student's head" with a 12guage shotgun.
Sindell read part of a
statement Smith gave the
Ohio Highway Patrol shortly
after the shooting in which
the Guardsman said he fired
his shotgun at a student and
then saw the student "grab
hi s right shoulder and run
down the hill and out of
sight. "
" Do you now have re ason to
believe you hit that student?"
Sindell
asked
Smith
Tues day.
" I don 't think my shot hit
anybody," res)l&lt;!nded Smith.
MIDDLEPORT,
" I used a fine, powder-like

I

.

mentally retarded.
Th e bill also would
, ~uthorize payment of $2.5
million of a · s pecial $10
million supplement to the
University of Ci ncin nati
through the Board of Regents
if U .C. achieved state
university status by July I,
1976.
The other $7 .5 million
would be paid to . th~
university during the secOnd
fisca l year, but $5 million of it
would go through the Controlling Board .
Inserts Money
The Republican bill also
inserts $3 million for the
Department of Natural Resources and $2 million for the
Department of Taxation to
maintain personnel levels in

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11 --:- T.J!e Dl;lily Sentjnel, Mi!ldle;~=~~.:=.:

Slayton

10 - :The-Daily Sentinel, Mio11eport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, July 9, 1975

Ford decisiqn r ==D~~~~;;;~;:=A~l-c - ,D elays seen on re"a ppropriation bill
is good news
Anwrica

Thnmp ~ on

COLUMBUS 1UP! I - The
decision by President Ford to
rWl For a full term "comes a s
good news in the ind ustria l
heartland of this nation"
according to G ov. Jam es A.

'

Republican ' part y ...
Rhod es said nu prC"si d en t in
the hi story uf lhe Un itrd
Sta les took uffi ee fa c ing m orr
proble m s lh;:m did Ford .
·· He e ntered offi cL' with l ht'

Rhodes, wh o ha s pledged twin l)f U bll'lll ~ nf Ufl Cnl ·
support for Ford 's can didacy p!'oynwnt an d inflati o n
from the Ohio Hepubli can thr eatening tile Wl' ll -bei ng uf
every American workl'r ,'
party .
''President Ford is a neigh- saiCJ the govern or
"He. enc ounte r ed &lt;.1 cTipbor of us here in Ohi o. and a
good one, " Rhodes said pling e nergy cris is, :m years
Tuesday. " He has not in the rn&lt;Jki ng, that com forgo tten what is on the pou nd s lhe pr ob lem of
minds of peop le in middle bringin g a bo ut a n economic
recu very
America.
·'Ge rald F ord is tacklin g
''His decision to run for iJ
full term as president comes these prob lems in a for thright
as good news in the industrial man ner, which is typi cal uf
heartl and of thi s natio n, e veryth ing he dues," Rhodes
where we live by the values silld . ' 'He is wnrki ng s tnGerald Ford holds import- cere ly, and with all his

.

ant," said Rhodes in a news

release . " He will have the
support of
the
Ohio

en e r~y ,

on so lvin g the
problem s uf !he working
people uf this nation . "

ingt.o n
Clarence
·Report By Miller

forward
uf

David

North

· Caro lina St:Jtt• has &lt;·o mC to
an agret.•rn c nt with th t.•
J\rncri&lt;·a n Ha!ikctball
J\ssnt• i at i o n
I&gt;cnvl'r
Nuggds. marking the rir,s t
-time the eight· yea r -o ld
lcag ut• has be1•n 'a blt&gt; to
&lt; i ~n the Nn. t pick of th &lt;·
rival Na liurwl Bask&lt;.'tball
i\ ssoda t ion.
D enver
PrrsidC'IIl
(~c nl'r al M;Juagcr Carl
Sdtt.'l' r
sai d Tu e s day
Thumpson agrt•t•d to terms
pt·nding tht• c·nmplt•tiun of
lhi• purc·h ast• or
tht·
N uggds from Fra nk Goldl&gt;l'rg hy ~~ Jofai grou p

COLUMBUS (UP!)
Republicans have
introduced a $345 million
reappropriation of fund s
eliminated fr-om the 1976-77
state budget by Gov. James
A. Rhodes last week, but
action on t he bill will
probably be delayed until
majority Democ rats decide
which of the governor 's
ve toes to try to override.
The new bill, offered
Tuesday by Rep. Frederick
N. Young , R-Day ton, would
send the money direcUy to
H o ~ se

th e s tate agencies involved,

rat her than through the state
Controlling Board.
claims
the
Rhodes
exe,cutive agencies have a
right to rece ive the money
directly and should not be
required to go through the

headed by Scheer. Gnldbt·rg ha s purchased the
ABA 's San Diego frant·hist·.

·= ==========~t

They have one more than
Controlling Board as mandated in the Democratic- the required number in the
· written budget passed last ' Senate, but fall one vote short
month.
of the 60 needed in the House.
Democrats contend the
If the Democrats were to
Con tr o IIi n g Board, override Rhodes' veto of the
dominated by legislators, $345 million worth of apshQuld maintain control over propriations, the Republican
the agency spending .
bill would not be acted upon
Major appropriations in the since the money would be
GOP bill are $258.5 million for · distri buted by the Controlling
the Department of Public Board during the next two
Welfare to upgrade benefits years.
and $56 m@on for a state
Of the welfare money in the
employe pay raise of 20 cents GOP bill , $134.5 million would
to $1 per hour .
go for aid to families with
DeCision Expected
d epe nde nt c hildr en , · $91.5
A decision on possible over.- million for health care and
ride action is expected some- $32 .5 millio"fl 'for public
time nex t week . Democrats assistance.
mu st raise thr ee-fifth s
Another $15 million would
majorities in each chamber be sent to the Department of
to override a gubernatorial Mental Hea lth and Retarveto.
dation for services for the
\

Witness says students 300 ft. away

Gen. Hull dies
in Washington
Gen. J ohn E. Hull , 80 ,
hu sband of the former Lucille
Davis,
formerly of Middl eport , died re ce ntl y in
Washington, D. C. where they
resided at the Wi sc onci n
Avenue Nw-sing Home.
Ge n. Hull was United
States and United Nations
commander-in-chief in the
Far East fr om 1953 until 1955.
In a Wash in gton Post article reporter Jean R. Halley
wrote , " Gen . Hull, who once
referred to hi mself as 'the
general that nobody kn ows·.
wa s well known by the high
mil itary command as a
steady, dependable sold.ie r
whose decisions could be
trusted implicitly ."
Gen . Hull was a ' m ajor
architect of the plan that Gen.
Eise nh oweF followed in the
inva sion of France, and he
directed the first pla nning of
the North African in vas ion
led by Gen . E isenhower.

CLEVELAND ( UP!) - A
former Kent State University
year book photographer told a
fede ra l court jury here he
saw no students within 300
feet of Ohi o National Guard
soldiers when tr oops opened
fire on the K.SU cam pus May
4, 1970, killing four students
and wounding nine other
persons.
Ronald McNees a dded,
how eve r , hi s view was
somewhat obstructed by a
line of trees.
McNees was scheduled to
resume testimony today in
th e $46 'million U. S. District
Court civil damage s uit filed
by parents of the dead a nd
injw-ed students.
In
other
t estimony
Tuesday , a former Guard sman said he shot his MI rifle

from ato p KSU 's Blanket Hill
after hea ring someone yell,
"Fire!"
Robert E . James, 31, now a
plant pathologist from Fredricksburg, Ohio, said .
severa l shots already had
been discharged during a
cam pus anti war demonstration when he heard the
or der.
"I don 't know where it
came from, who said it, but
then I fired my own weapon,"
James said.
James said he fired one
shot into the air and, when he
saw a student near him fall
wounded, got "real scared "
and ejected the remaining
seven rounds in the clip of his
rifle.
" I was scared and terrified
for my life," James said.

Fortunately each year an some thing to be ultimate ly
increasingly larger number re paid. A giga ntic debt a nd
of Members of Congress are huge year-to-year inc reases
coming to the conclusion that are a r elative ly · recent
there has to be a better, more development. (n 1929 the debt
responsibl e alterna tive to level was $17.5 billion . This
handling government fiscal level ac tually dropped by $200
problems than permitting .. million I n 1930. In contrast,
another gigantic increase in the final measure ap proved
the federal debt.
by Congress in June sets the
In the past, Congress had ceiling a t $577 billion - a
engaged itself in the routine fi g ur e which, given pa st
chore of debating, in long- performances , will continue
winded fashion, the raising of to rise.
the federal debt ceiling.
Obviously somethi ng is
Theoretically the debt ceiling drastically wr ong with a
was to be a devi.c e to limit the financial syste m which
amount of federal spending, requires continuous deficits
but in reality it never worked of this magnitude. Dr . Arthur
that way - Congress would Burns, Chairman of the
:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::;:::: :;:;.;:;:::::::::::::;:;::::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·
just raise the ceiling once the Federal 'Reserve Board , arfd
Gall ip olis Areaw i de
En try fees are 75 cents per
old level was reached. I have Treasury Secretary William
Striders
will
sponsor
a
Track
track
even t a nd $2 for the
Farewell party
never supported this con- Simon , have both warned that
and Cr oss -co untry m ee t cross-country .
tinuous raising of the debt our free enterprise system is
Satw-day, Jul y 19, a t Evans
planned for
Awards will be medals to
ceiling . It is far better to cut being des troyed . The massive
Field, Rio Grande. Startin g the top five finishers in the
down on the massive spen- increase in the federal debt
Mr. Hargraves
time will be 6 p.m.
cross-country race for both
ding· pro~ra ms
whi c h will comple tely crowd out the
Events are the 100 yd., 220 age divisions ( 12-15; 16 and
necessitat q' increasing the private sector . Federal
A farew e ll party for
yd. and 440 yd. dashes; 120 over ). and certificates to
debt rather than to go borrowin g already
George
Hargraves .
acyd . high hurdl es, 160 yd . low othe r winners in other tra ck
through the yearly charade of counts for over
superintendent of Meigs
twohurdl es ; long, triple, hig h and field 'events.
setting an ima~ inary ceiling tQjrds
School
District,
will
Local
of
the
toMail entries to Edw ard
jump, shot put., and di scus,
that, in fact, won 't restrain tal capi tal m arket . The
be held Monday evening at
and the s ix mi] e cross- Sayre, Box 151 , Ri o Grande,
anything. In a surprising vote end result of all this is
the Meigs High School
muo 45674 .
countr.v .
on June 16,. the House of that we are leaving our
cafeteria at S p.m. for all
Representatives turned down children a heritage of debt
district employees and
,------------~-------------1
by a substantial margin a bill which they mus t pay - or at
their families. Hargraves
I
JULY TRACK MEET
:
· to raise the "temporary" least the interest on that debt .
has served as superinI
I
ceiling by another $85 billion This year's interest on the
tendent for the past nine
1 Name
for another year . Sub- f_e deral debt only 40 years ago
years since the conAge
I
I
I
sequently a compromise and is approximately the
solidation of Pomeroy,
I
I
measure raising the ceiling same as the total federal
Middleport, and Rutland
1 Address
Phone
1
by $44 bilUon for six months outlay in fiscal year 1946.
Districts. He will be
I
I
was agreed to, but even this
leaving July IS for JefI
I
Thi s
spe ndin g-de bt
1
I wish to enter the following events:
passed only by a · narrow treadm ill cannot go on
ferson County where he ha s
1
I
I
accepted a new job as
margin. In general, those forever. If the debt ceiling
superintendent of th e
Members who voted to raise concept ever had any validity.
:
I.
3.
:
the ceiling are the same ones as spending control weapon,
Vocational School there.
I
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4.
I
I
who see it as politically ad- it seemingly has lost that
Cross-country race.
vantageous to co ntinually effectiveness over the las t &gt;&gt;&gt;&gt;:·:·:·:.:.:-:::::::::::::::::&gt;::::&gt;::::::::::::::::-:':"':"-:':':': 1
I
I
vote for the big spending two decade s. What is
I
I
programs that cause the debt urgently needed now is an
1
Total entry fees
ANOTHER SUCCESS
1
limit to be reached.
end to the un coordinated
RUTLAND ' - The Rutland
I
These .close votes by the spending, such as ha s oc- Fow-th of · July celebration
1
Deadline
is
July
16,
Wednesday
'
:
House reflect the fa ct that a curred in rece nt months .i n
was a big success again this
large portion of the ·mem- the name · of rece ssio n year a nd the Rutland L---------------------~----~
bership realizes that there is fi ghting. This will put an end Volunteer Firemen a"re
something terribly wrong to government borrowing to thankin g eve r yo ne who
with federal finan ces. The fin ance the debt - which helped to make it a success.
numbers have grown so huge runs coun ter to sustained
P earl Little es pe,c ia ll y
and the issues so complex economic recovery - and tha nks everyone who worked
that we are los jng per- ca n lead to making the debt in her food stand a t the
spective. Throughout most of ceiling a truly legi timate Rutland ox roa st.
·Our nation's existence the device for holdin g down
debt was small and was federal spendin g.
regarded as truly temporary,
ASK DIVORCES
Filing
for divorce in Meigs
SIDE GLANCES
by Gill Fox County Common Pleas Court
are Ad a Yvonne Ta ckett,
Rutland , from Fred Tackett ,
Rutland; Brenda Haning, Rt ..
I Middleport, from Lester
Haning , Rt. I, Middleport;
Anna L. Swain , Rt. I, Portland, from Ron.a ld L. Swain,
Rt. I, Portland.

Track, cross country

meet set on July 19th

~

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By BRUCE E. HICKS
UP! Science Writer
Dooald K. "Deke " Slayton
wailed 16 Y.ars for a ride into .
.
space.
The last of the original
seven Merclll1\ astronauts to
get a ticket into space,
Slayton would rather have
gone to the moon , flown a
three-orbit Mercury mission
or even a two-man Gemini
flight , but any space trip will '
do just fine .
He is finally malting it, as
the third crewman in the
Apollo that will rendezvous in
earth orbit with two Russians
in a Soyuz.
At age ~I, Slayton will
become the oldest man to fly
in space, fulfilling a dream
that looked like it might have
become a recurrent nightmare . If he had missed this
mission he would have had to
wait at leaSt five years for
another chance and his age
then would have made a ride
doubt! pl.
The rough, outspoken
Slayton was selected in the
first astronaut group in April,
1959, and was slated for the
Mercury AUas 7 flight in
May, 1962. A heart defect
called idiopathic atrial
fibrillation caused him to be
replaced by Scott Carpenter.
Slayton
fought
the
grounding which meant he
even had to have a copilot to
fly jets while the other
astronauts appealed to then
President Kennedy. Nothing
worked aod Slayton moved in
as head of the · astronaut
corps, assigning the pilots for
each flight and watching his
chances of ever getting in
space grow dimmer.
But, 10 years later doctors
said the minor heart problem
had cleared up and Slayton
was returned to flight status.
Then in February, 1974, he
was named along with
Thomas Stafford and Vance
Brand to the crew for the
Apollo-&amp;:lyuz flight.
"To some people, life
begins at 40," Slayton said.
"To me, it's more like 50, but
I guess I'd rather be a 5Gyearoi&gt;ld rookie than a 5Gyearoi&gt;ld has been."
The native of Sparta, Wis.,
said, though, he won't count
on anything until liftoff.
"I got about this close to
one on(!e, about 12 or 13 years
ago so I'm not building up any
high hopes 'til we get Qff that
pad," he said recently. ·
Despite the chalice to fly ,
'·he still gets angry about the

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"It was a lousy decision
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Slayton is married to the
former Marjory Luney of Los
Angeles. They have one son,
Kent, 1il.
Slayton entered the Air
Force in April, !"943, and flew
63 B25 bomber combat

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He went to the University of
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He said ·he's not sure what
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earliest.
r
Those flights are a long
way off and he will be that
much older and less likely to
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RUTLAND
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Cl lt1! ~,~EA

agencies. Democrats
had tw-ned down those two
items in the budget.!
Meanwhile, the House Finance Committee scheduled
a hearing for Thursday on a
oontroversial bill revising the
state's school subsidy formula.
The Senate-passed bill is
headed for a committee vote
next week amid reports that
an agreement has been
reached on new provisions,
including rete ntion of state
financing of local property
tax rollbacks.
The $457 million coSt of the
biD is already financed by the
budget.
Bipartisan legislation was
introduced by Reps. Sam
Speck, R-New Concord, and
Robert J. Boggs, D-Jefferson,
designed to increase natural .
gas supplies in Ohio and
assure Ohio landowners of
proper royalty payments for
the tapping of oil and gas
wells on tneir property.
The House passf\l eight
bills during its floor session .
One, passed 64 to 24 and sent
to the Senate, would allow
limited local option Sunday
liquor sales at establishments
in resort areas designated by
the stat e Department of
Economic and Community
I;levelopment.
The Senate was to reconvene at 11 a.m: today, and the
House at 1:30pm.

SAVE $100

. So Reg ister i-.ow for the dra wi ng : August ·lO, 1975.

MO.N.

tho~

James was asked on cross- birds hot cartrid'ge, which
. examinatio n by Joseph couldn 't do any damage to
Kelner, attorney .for th e anybody at th at distance ."
plaintiffs, why he ejected the
shells if he was so a fraid for
his life .
" Because it scared me
ROCK V'S 67TH
when I saw that student fall,"
WASHINGTON (UP))
replied James. " I wan ted to Vice President Nelsop A.
be sure I only fired one Rockefeller
qui et l y
round .' '
celebrated his 67th birthday
Another witness, former Tuesday at his Washington
Guard Sgt. Leon Smith of . estate after returning from a
Beach City, Ohio, who sa.id Ew-opean vacation.
five years ago he thought he
wounded a KSIJ student with
\
a shotggun blast , denied the
sta tement Tuesda y, saying
he only fired a warning shot
in the student's direction.
Under cross examination
by plaintiffs' attorney Steven
Sindell, Smith said he fired
" a warning shot over the
student's head" with a 12guage shotgun.
Sindell read part of a
statement Smith gave the
Ohio Highway Patrol shortly
after the shooting in which
the Guardsman said he fired
his shotgun at a student and
then saw the student "grab
hi s right shoulder and run
down the hill and out of
sight. "
" Do you now have re ason to
believe you hit that student?"
Sindell
asked
Smith
Tues day.
" I don 't think my shot hit
anybody," res)l&lt;!nded Smith.
MIDDLEPORT,
" I used a fine, powder-like

I

.

mentally retarded.
Th e bill also would
, ~uthorize payment of $2.5
million of a · s pecial $10
million supplement to the
University of Ci ncin nati
through the Board of Regents
if U .C. achieved state
university status by July I,
1976.
The other $7 .5 million
would be paid to . th~
university during the secOnd
fisca l year, but $5 million of it
would go through the Controlling Board .
Inserts Money
The Republican bill also
inserts $3 million for the
Department of Natural Resources and $2 million for the
Department of Taxation to
maintain personnel levels in

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.

�......~..~..~--~·.......~~....~....,...,.......,.....~~........................~..........~............~.............................~----~~~~-----~ 1' 1

.•

.....

•

I .
Ill

l . •
\
"

.
'

~

~
••

'

..

'

·.

....

13- The ~ilv Sentlnel 1\.f;rtdleP,Jrt-Pomeroy,'O., Wcidnesdav, July 9, 1975
DICK-TRACY

..

~

~

,1"

.
·,.___._..,_,_._._._._...__.
__
_._.. __
r

I.

.

,,,,"

In Memory

I

UNS/,t

IN f1/ lf\ O f.-Y o t J &lt;~ m('S l{.
Cl cu-k In IOvtnQ merno ry of
o ur
be lbved · tl u sband ,
f'alher , qrandfather who
n a sse d awav J ul y 9, 197?
It has bee n 3 years and
nol hmq ca n ever ll!lke awa'y
ltl£1 l ove •n ou r hea rr s w e
hold so d e ar
I ond m£'mor~cs lln{J e r ever y
day ana keep s h1m ncar
Sadly m•ssed by w• l e .
Elhel
son
dauq ht ers,
Qrilnd c hildren and ste p
dauqhle r s

I

I ) I

' 9 11 c

Now arran.re the c ircled 14."tte-u
to form the surprise answer , u

1111!

lost
'I Jl,l

11'109

Yt!•lf'rday·.-

FROZE

ONION

BAMBOO

SUBMIT

C/\M E R 1\ cq u ,pmenl between
Al h cns and Ga ll •po ll s Wllh
•n l o rmation . ca ll
Ken.
co l lec t 5'? ? 3J f&lt;J
7 8 3tp

rrQt 'nl 11 me wf, ., , ~f, rlu1
hmt IIH' fJ/am•t~ 1r1 n flmny - "IN ·FOR MATJ ON '

Ant.,. tor: 1/u· f 'll f' lll lf

ulft' !lrql ' fl( 'f

Card of Thanks

Linescores

0 12010010000000 - 6141
Jones , Fr. se rra (9l
Folker s
(9), Greif ( 9 ), Sp d lne r ( 11 1
Mcin tosh - ( 14 ) and Kenda ll ,
Ston e, Kno wles (BJ. Dettore (81
an d Mitterwald , s w.sh er (9 1.
Hos l ey ( 10) WP Mc i ntosh (7
lJ
LP ~ Dettore
(i 2 1 HR s
Monday ( B!h) , Tola n (3r d )
Me Covey (1 1th I

Montreal
000 010 000- 1 4 2
H ous to n
200 20 1 00x - 5 11 2
Ren ko , Warthen t 6J. M urra y
(7 ).
Taylor (8 ) and Foote .
Roberls ( 5 10 ) and May LP R enko ( 4 6l HR - Parnsh ( 6th )

Phila

Cmcmnat t
0 10 100 OOx - 2 8 1
Underwood, McGraw (l J and
'bates ; Nol an Eastwtc k (7l and
Ben ch WP - Nolan (S 5) LP Underwood (9 61
American League
ChICago
000 000 000- 0 5 0
Detroit
000 100 02,.; - 3 9 o
Wood (6 13 ) and Downmg ,
Coleman , Hitter (9) and Free
han . WP - Col eman (5 lil ,..i::i R.::::-LeFiore Olh) , Roberts Oth l
Texas
New York

000 000 ooo-- o 7 i
210 000 lOx - 4 10 o

Harg an , U m barge r O L
Moore
(S }
and
Sundberg ,
Hun ter Cl2 -8l and Munson LP
- Hargan (6 4) HR - Biomberg

(4th) ,

Minnesota
00 1 ooo 22o- 5 9 2
Boston
111 020 001 - 6 12 o
Campbell , Johnson (-7) and
Borgmann , Tiant , Drago (8 ).
Burton (8 ), Cleveland (91 and
Fisk WP - Cieve land ( S 6) LP
- Johnson 10 1)

YARD Sa l e , Jul y 10 and 11t h ,
Rai n o r sh 1n e , Th .rd St ..
Syracuse on R t 124 Hour s
10 am till B p m Clp thmg .
dr::. h es, t oo ts . high cha ir.
sc hool d esk, wal l t el ep tJ on e.
wood en bowls , trunk , other
mtsc ttems , ant iq ues. and
co ll ect •bl es
7 8 J tp~

"'

YARD Sette , J u ly 13, a ll da y
Drshes ,
avo n
bottle s,
m• sce lta neo u s
R e fr esh
ments , Sold by Me1gs Co . H
S F r om SR 7 turn off at F1ve
Po•nl s onto Flat Woods
Road F ollow sig n s
7 8 dip

;:;;J

R OBER T C HARTEN BACH
Sh eri ff of
M e 1gs Cou nt y, Oh10

Jast week with a 1:&gt;-for-28
-!ltreak to boost his average 26
place in the circuit's
fi3esignated hitter rankings.
~: Horton hit .536 last · week
cand boosted his American
league leading RBI comrt to
60. He also is the top
designated hitter In home
~s with 16 and in hits with
81. His home run against
Balt!Jnore last Thursday was
''the 239th of his career to tie
Jliiri with Rudy York for
fourth •place on the all-time
•Tiger list.
AI Bwnbry of Baltimore
and Jim Rice of Boston
continue to lead the league's
designated hitters with a .'Jifl
'
. '
.av.,-age.

,,

~~ .
I

.
,

. : · Eqtial · rights for all
lf'edestrlans, cyclists , ·and
~vers all have equal rights
po practice courtesy, caution,
'!JIIld care regardles8 of the
ategory you fill .· Know an.d
, ~ the laws (or safety on
·me highways and byways of

.

bhto.

.. -

(7)

9, lie

w r L L do baby s1 tt.ng
Ma •n St , Pomeroy
99? 5092

- Board of
Comm 1ss ioner s
Martha Chambe r s.
Cl erk

w

&lt;~09

P h on e
7 7 6tc

Wanted To Buy
camper

Phon e

CJ9 7

7

8 31c

OLD furri rt ur e. rce boxes ,
bras s b ed s. or co mplete
hou se hold s
Wrlle M
D
M i ller, Rt
4, Pome r oy,
Oh tO Ci!ll 992 7760
10 7 74

For Rent

TOMATO E 5,
cucu mb e r s,
C l eland Far m s Ge- ra l din e
C l e- land
7 6 .rf c

h ome
Ph one 98 5 3S8i

1n

Cheste r

7 B 6tp
TRA IL ER space l or rent 1n
M1ddleport Phone 99 2 5434
7 8 6tp
1 TRAI LER, e ll old R t 33 at
K tn gs bury
Road
2
b e d rooms , I c hild per
m died , no pets Phone 7 41
) 173
7 8 3tc
1

BEDRM trail er w1th a i r
co nd•t•on c r ,
deposlf
r equired Call 992 5867
7 9 3tc

3 BE DROOM mobile ho me
loca t ed on 14 3, 2m lies from
Pomeroy Phon e ~92 5858
7 .2 lfc
FURN I SHED
apartm c nt ,
adults only in Middleport
Phone 992 3874
J 2S . tfc
TR A ILER spa c e , all uti l1t-1eS,
c h ea p PhQne 99 2 5535
6 29 tf c

------- - -- -

lB EDRM 65x 12mo bd eh ome
for ren •, ut d il •es pa 1d ,
located 1n Burl rnqham Call

MUELLER and I Lennox
fue l o!l
furnace ,
both
com plet e, a l so 19 19 mode l T
Fo rd tr u c k Wilt sel l or Ira d e
for
Ford
trac t or
and
eq ur pment
A l so Kenmore
ga s range Phone 98 5 A1 l 8
7 7 Jtc
FAB R I C SAL E Larg es t and
Best sa l e S&lt;n ce op en mg of
o ur bu s.n ess A ll m ate r 1a l m
shop on sa t e- Doubl e kn tt
acry 11 c S 1 49 p er yd , a good
.. se l ect.on of fir st qua lit y
"poly este-r kn •Is , fan cies and
so li ds S? 29 pe r yd Sal e one
week o nly Monday July 7
thru Sat , July 1:&gt; Open 9
a m t o 5 p m Satu r da y We
wilt be c losed for vacation
fr om J u l y 14 to July 28
Carol •na Fa bric s, Rt 7 one
ha ll mtle north of Chester ,
Oh 10
Henry and Ma ry
H unter, owner s
7 6 6tp

FISH I NG l•cens e, Ca n a d•a n
Nd e c rawler s, 60c d oz- Du g
worms. 3 doz $ 1 Ottler ba 1f
ta c k l e. q un s, ammo . c b 's,
lndr a n Joe 's Sport s
308
Paqe St , Phone 992 3509
7 1 26 t c
YOLJ N G rab b its f or sal e,
Reedsvdle Phone 378 626 1
7 8 7tc
-----

-

- - - 7H

7 1 tt c

1 ROOM l urn •s h ed an d
un_furn rshed
apa rt ments
Pl1 0nC' 992 513.1
;~ 12 fi e

H AY for sa l e, d e livered or
P.icked up in field . Phone
74? 3743
7 8 6tc

.!

-

-

-

For Sale

MODI:;:f.!N Walnut Co n so l e
ste r eo radiO comb1natton 4
s peed c hang er
Bala n ce
$ 101 40 or terms Call 992

3965

.a

7 9 tfc

NEW
Improved
" Z 1pp1es."
!he gr eat •ron p t1 1 now W1fh
V1tam.n C N elson Dr ug
7 9 He
TE LEV I S I O N Sho p . comple te
c ont e nt s ol a TV Re pa ir
Sh op Phone 843 29 11
7 9 3tc

197·1 SEAR S 36 ! M. g arden
tractor and mower , elec tr ic
start,
light
a nd wheel
weights Lrke n ew Ca ll 992
??57 aft e r 3 p m
7 9 Me
P IGS f or sa l e. 6 weeks old. one
ma r e pony . On e ge lding , 6
year s o td Phone 37 8-6152
7 9 4lp
TW O wh ee l Shas t a Cam p er ,
sleeps s•x. S900 Phone 9&lt;~9
5161

76

I 1 9, 21 C

PRIV/'.TE mee tin g room for
anyo r gan tzat •on . phone9CJ2

PH ILCO 14 cu II r efr• gerato r
fre eze r While , $ 120. 31 1
years o ld Phone 7&lt;12 6722
7 6 dtp

Real Estate For Sale
r &gt;No 8E DR00M hou se lo r
sa l e Phon e 98 5 4102
6 10 26t c
5

RM S, bath , a l uminum
s• din g, r emode l ed k lfch en
lnqu,r e Don Sa yr e, 443 Si xth
Ave nue , M1ddleporl , Oh1o
45760
7 9 4tp

HOU SE 1n Portland , 5 rm s
and bat h , good w ell , i acres
of ground Ph one 843 -2292
7 9 12tc

3529

7 8 6tp

] 11 H e
APT l •k c n ew . J rooms , w•th
larqe bath, lab l et op ra n ge,
large close t Eas t Ma1n ~.t,
Pomeroy Se e lo app r ec •a t e
r' hone Ga lt1p oh s dur• ng da y ,
cl-'16 7699 , even1n1;1S &gt;146 9539 .
- ,, IU ft c
T R:AILER space .' 1 mile fr om
P o m e roy
Phone 992 5858
5 2 tfc

COW and call
afler 5p m

Ca ll 992 7165
7 8 3tc

1973 K/\WA SAK L 350 B1g
hO rfl En g• n e m top sh ap e,
qood rub ber , and 3 b •ke
trailers Phon e 992 71 10
7 2 6t C

ap t 5 room san d ba th ,
n1 cc l arqe yard . b a lh a nd '
190
~ outh
&lt;. ccond
~. t ,
i\~• d dlepor t
adults onl y
Phon e 992 5262 ev en •ngs
52 1,lfc
Nl RY
Mob• l c
Home
PMk . R t 33 ten m 1IC S norlh
o t P omeroy L arge lo i s with
c oncrete pat•os, Stdewalks ,
runner s and of f s tr e et
PM"-• nq P hone t;9'1 7.179
12 31 lfc

COLONIAl

1./STING
NEW !, ISTING - 2 bedrooms,
ip&gt;th. nat . ga5 , F .A. furnace,

NEW LISTING - Renovaled 'l'

~~:::'!~~

R-eg 159 95

139.95
''. 000 BTU
L. nly 43 l b
models
on sale .

(( ' l

4 ROOM unlurn 1she d h ou se,
l 650 L1n coln Hgt s , phone
991 3874
7 6 tfc

NEW

bedr ooms, 3 full baths, centra l
a tr , and heat, large family
room, sun deck , love ly kit chen , d i shwa sher, stov e and
refrigerator
Double garag e
and extra features . NEW

Wk floors and sto rm ad
d1tlves. A neat conservative
lrttle bungalow

.1 RM ap t wtlh wal l to wall
c arpe t . 10 4 Spring AI/C .,
Pom er oy Ca ll 992 5908
6 22 lfc

Qedroom • home ,
s tove ,
r'efrigerator &amp; dishwasher,
nat. gas , FA furnace , sliding
gla ss doors, 2 porches and

double garage .
MIDDLEPORT - 2 bedroom
home, bath, nat . gas heat,
dining , uti !Tty. 2 'porches and

POMEROY LANDMAIU&lt;
...._Jectc w. Cerst~, Mtr.
iltiitl Phone H2·2111
·
BAND saw, good working
c ond1tion SI SO 586 L m corn
St , .Y 1ddlepor1 Phone 992
76? !
7 2 6tc

midget garden on good street.
Want only S7500.oo.
IF YOU WANT QUALITY
AND BUY AT A BARGAIN,
SEE

2 BEDROOM trailer , $27 per
w ee k , ut 1flt tes oa1d Phone
992 3314 ,,
7 6 l fc
r. EO RM
hou se .
un
f ur n.shed Mso I l ur n •shed
i'lp l Phone 997 2180 or 992
]1 32
6 29 lfc

American League ~ Palrrter ;
Ball and _Kaat, Ch • lJ 5. Bt'ue,
Oak. 126 . Hun t er . N V 12 S.
Busby , KC 11 6 , Tian1 , Bos 11 8

-

Pets For Sale

Fo r Sate
A PPR OX 6 ft. x 7 It n e w
plush
c arpet
remnant,
neu l ral color, S 15 Phon e
.991 34.96 a ft er 5 30
..

.,

' 9 He

0.
Shop Us La st &amp; Save
Open 9 5 Wed through Sun .
Ph . 667 -3858

r R E E f emale k1 tt ens
99?34 10

Ph one
7 ) 6\C

9

WEEK Old f em a le AKC
1apr• co t poodle, $50 . Phone
949 ?Oi l
7 9. Jtc
' '.
------

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
B roam frame house, 3 bedrooms, batt't
.&amp; lavatory, y, basement,2 P,Orches, new gas
furnace, n~w hot waler·tank, new plumbing,
double garage, priced-to sen-fast arsr2',500.
Located in Rac'ine; Ohio across from grade
school.
GeorgeS. Hobstelter Jr.
REAL ESTATE BROKE~
P.hone 949-3211, Hilton Wolfe, Salesman

.

-

~ ~

I

1

I WE

2 Moles West
On St. Rt . 124
Off Rt. 7 By- Pass

MECHANICAL
WORK
Phone 992-5682
or 992 -7121
7-8-1 mo.
H OUS E and r oo f parn t in g and
repai r s F or free est i ma t es ,
ca t I ~ 92 6190 or 992 5837
6 1S 26tc

Real Estate for Sale
I 72 ACR E S l a n d

and lo cu st
pos t s 1\ l so 196 5 rord LTD
Phone 7.n 365 6
5 23 52 t p

S RM S and bath , n• ce l o l ,
large outbulld rn g fro n t an d
back por ches, front shaded ,
n eeds repa• r l ocated 1n
C l•llon W v a Cat I 992 5325
1 9 7tC

.. ..

-·

327 N. 2nd

STORM
WINDOWS&amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING-SOFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

BORN LOSER
~

Rll~

r:¥&gt;-.'tS TI11S lH /f.}0
SM00\11 AS A

...OTI-\E:R D\'!S IT ~'7, SfUI'T8&lt;.S
AI-ID S/JCRIS . \JJHAT SHQU..D

~H

'!1.WS IT

RV~

I

Syrac~s~: ohro
Ph 992 -3993

4 10- I

S EWI N G
MACHINE ,
Re p~tr s, serv •ce . all makes
qqz ?284 lhe Fabnc Shop ,
Pomeroy Aut horiz ed Smg er
\ ales a nd Se rv1 ceVvc
sharpen S ciSSor ~
3 29 l f c
DOZER work , land c l ea r~ng
by the acre.
h ourly or
co nt r act
Fa rm
p o nd s,
r oa d s, et c Larg e dozer and
op erato r wtth ove r 20 yea r s
eK p e r •ence
P ull •n s Ex
cavat1 n g. Pomeroy , Ohio _
Phone 992 2478
12 19 tf c
E LW O,OD BOWER S REPAIR
Sweeper s, t oasters . •r ons .
al l smarr ap p lr an ces L awn
mow e r next to St ate H1gh
way Ga r age on Route 7
Phone 935 3825
&lt;1 16 tf c
WILL Tt-. ... "'cu t t rees a n d
shrubbery and pa.n t r oo f s.
Phone 949 322 1 or 742 -4&lt;1&lt;11
6 24 26tp

o

R easonable RATES Pho ne
\46 47B2 Ga ll tpolis
Jo h n
Ru sse ll , ow ner
.:1 9 li e
rANKS cle an e d
SEPT I L
Modern Sanit ation 992 J95d
or 992 7349
9 18 H e

..

--

J;.ITTLE

MASTER.

ROOF IN G ,
Sp out1ng ,
atum .num and v1ny l S1drng ,
complete
r e mo.:;iel•nQ
Phone 742 6273 or (3 041 773
5684 Free esl!mates
6 25 26tp
NEED A new nome built on
your lo P Contact M~o B .
Hut ch tson , Rutland , Oh •o
Phone 742 3615 .
5 8 tfc

OLSON PERIODICALLY
BURIED HIS BUSINE'SS

,, DIRI:CTIONS '10
HIS CACHE ARlO
~F/'TS IN A PLACE
DESCRIBEO IN
CAL.U:D SOUR DOUGH
'lHPir L.EnER!
CANYON .. , .JUST Ol!TSIDE /----------.
PANAMINT CiTY!

naL ME

50ME1H/NG,

JACK .. ,

... w~ DIDN'T
OLSON EVER
GO SACK AND
DIG IT UP?

D

WOULD YOU BE L IEVE ?
Bu d d an a ll steel butl dmg at
Po le Barn pr1c es? Gold en
G•ant A ll Steel Bulldmgs ,
Rr
4, 6ox 148, Waver l y ,
Oh ro Phone 947 2'296
6 2&lt;~ 26tc

r-----------·
- ----- ------- -

LET US DO IT! !

7· 8

Carpeting

She was

501 NYLON

499

That liH!e
k1d.Walt?

balanc inq
the broom
on her

heard old Papo

I&lt;. now

sa4 how clums4

she

what

is'

saw,Doc!

JUqqilnq
all that

RUBBER BACK

w ilh

CALt. 742 -4211
TALK TO WENDELL

GRATE,
CARPET CONSULTANT

RUTLAND
FURNITURE
R"uTfana'

,

• J93

5.

Pass

ACROSS
I Irish port
5 Abrade
It Molding
12 Utensil on
a pencil
13 Spill
14 Hopeful
poker
player
45 " Ltttle Indians" population
16 Box

16
18
21
22

Yeoterday 's Answer
Printing
25 Won a foot
blunders
race
Beyond
27 Mild cigar
Ascend
29 Where
- Arnaz
colliers
Roofing
enter
material
31 Pain
Way
32 Inert gas

23
24 - Aniilles

34 "'KU·tv "

AstraGraph

Malt kiln
UL ABNER

,---------~::~~~:;=::-~~--~~--~--~--------~~~7.;~~~:7~~=-~==~------~--,~Attractive
-IT WAS SiLLY ID ATfKK l'r\E
28 ';':rtiveness 1=--+---+--BECAUSE YOU'RE CH~PLY
30 Pale
,,
MADE AND IM /2 MILLION
33 Indian

• Bemoce Bede Oso•

WATCH
JT"

DOLLARS WORTH CF
""~~;;:=~"~~"'~.,_'i':t-MACJ-liNERYr!-

street,

~

__

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

refrigerator and other
furn ., some carpeting, new
natural gas forced air furn _
and HW tank, e&gt;ecellent at

There s no reaso n to prck u p
the en ! Jre tab today for a fun
act ivity wl!h t• rends Le t e~Jch
pay a l a1r share

34 Old Indian
coin
35 New York

TAURUS (Aprii20 -May 20/ Be
eKtra·patlent w1th mc m bPrs o f
your household even thouqh
they may pu ll a few s1unt s that
will e)(aspe r ate you You c.:~n
ha n d le lh tng s

city
36 Roman

--- 1

emperor

Is

WINNIE
I&amp;N'T WfoNDY BEIN6
AWFULLY MYSTERIOUS
ABOUT THIS GUY
SHES SEE ING'?

ARIES (March 21-April 19)

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE -

,,.

AREN'T YOU C'UR/Ol/6 ?
DON'T YOU WANT 10
KNOW WHO HE 15,
WHERE HE~ FROM,
WHAT HIS IN-

For Thur•day, July 10, 1975

VIP

""".--~

OF CCURSE , 13UT
A BIG GIRL NOW. I
CAN'T PRY INTO HER

IF""""[ PRIVATE

Here's how
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

to

work

It:

One leller simply stands lor another. In this sample A lo
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single leiters.
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each dny the code lellers are different.

li !OE. ---"

CRYPTOQUOTE

TENTIONS AI&lt;E ?

WFKRN
CWE

,.

.

~~

a :oo-Giadys Knight and the P 1p5 3. 4.15; Barney Miller
6, 13; The Waltons 8, 10 , Evening at Pops 33;
Hollywood Tel evision Theatre 20
8 : 3~ Texas Wheelers 6, 13
9:QO--Movle " If It' s Tuesday , This mu51 be Belgium,"
3,4, 15; Streets of Sa n Francisco 6.13; Movie "The
Naked Jungle" 8; Hollywood Te levision Theatre
33; Movie " Any Wednesday " 10.
10 : ~Harry 0 6, 13, News 20
II :QO--New• 3.4,6,8, 10.13, 15.
II :J~Johnny Carson 3,4, 15 ; Wide Wor ld Spec ial 13;
FB/6; Movie "Dav id Copper fi el d" 8, Movie " Pork
Chop Hill " 10; Janaki 33.
12 : 3~Wide World Special 6
I :QO--Tomorrow 3,4, New5 13

Ending for
&lt;lepend

~"'

$38,000.00.
2112 5tory
frame, cou ld have 2 apts ., 5
BR , 2 baths , range,

DOWN

Actress, MernU
Emily Shell beads
Put. on
cargo

~~~,.)~

Interest ; total
POMEROY -

4 ·30-Bewltched 3; Merv Griffin 4; Mod Squad 6;
Mickey Mouse Club 8, Bonan za IS.
5 :QO--FBI 3; Lucy Show 8: Mister Rogers' Neigh borhood 20,33; Ironside 13.
5:30-News6 ; Andy Griffith B; Get Sma r t IS; Electric
Company 20,33.
6:QO--News 3,4,8, 10,13,15: ABC News 6 ; Sesame Street
20; Book Beat 33 .
6 .30-NBC News 3,4,15, ABC news (3; Bewltchetl 6;
CBS News 8,10; Lilias, Yoga and You 33.
7 :lXI-Truth or Consequence• 3,4; Bowling for Dollars
6; What's My Line' 8; News 10; Let's Make a Deal
13; Jimmy Dean 15; Making It Count 20; Nova 33.
7:30 - Hollywood Squares 3,4; Ohio Lottery 6; Evening
Edition with Marlin Agronsky 20; Wild Kingdom
10; To Tell The Truth 13; American Outdoorsman

38 Subsequently

10

J; I Dream of Jeannie 4; Somerset

IS; Gilligan' s Island 6; Musical Chairs 8, Sesame
Street 20,]3; Movie " Rhubarb" 10; Mike Douglas
13.

37 JOill"IUilist,
James -

1 Expenditure
2 Wolf's look
3 Hit it off
(4 wds.)
4 In the know
5 Mexican
shawl
6 Hoisting
deVice
receiver
7
Military
from
tactic
Jup1ter
8 Fraternize
17 Purplish
wds. )
blue color
19 Townsman ~9~~~""'1':~
20 French

stuff'

11

water

~ : oo-Mr. Cartoon

river

742-4111

system , $7,600 down, bal.
$290 per mo., includ ing

$19,000.00.
CALl 992 -2259

4 NT

by THOMAS JOSEPH

We have hundreds · ot
carpet values _ Your 10b ctul
be completed m 1 to 2
weeks
No l ong wa •ting
per iod Our mslall er has 28
years experience
E xpert
installation
Yo u ' l l like
what you get

land is clean and lays nice ,
2 story frame home, barn
and o ther outbuildings ,

we ll

I

nose and

Square
Yard

$8' 300' 00'
157 ACRES - Near Dexter,

good

D DEAD A

COUPLE: OF WEEKS
AFTER HE WIIOTI&lt; 'THIS !

ut. room ,

good

Pass
Pa ss
Pa ss

JA
...

6'&amp;uau~'Dtr

HE f'ROSABLV VOJL.D

~OSCAR, BUT HE

sh opping, 2 story frame. 3
on

I t

2.

5- 14-1 mo .

yrs old . $16,000.00.
MIDDLEPORT - Close to
located

,3...

Sweeps lakes 3,4, 15;
Spln-Otr 8,1 0, Dinah ' 13; Lilias, Yoga and You 33.
10 · 30-Wheel Of Fortune 3.4.15; Gambit 8,10; Frying
Pans West 33 .
11 .oo-High Rollers 3.4.15, One Life to Live 6; Tot 1/etales B. 10.
11 :30-Hol/ywood Squ"JP!S 3, IS ; Brady Bunch 13;
Midday 4; Love of Life 8, 10.
11 :5,_ Take Kerr 8; Dan Imel 's World 10
12:30-Magnlflcent Marble Machine 3, 15; Showotfs 13;
Bob Braun 's 50-50 Club 4; News 6,18, 10; Mi ster
Rogers 33
12 : 30-Jackpot! 3, 15; All My Children 6, 13 ; Search For
Tomorrow 81 10; E lectr lc Company 33.
12 :S,_NBC News 3,15 .
1:oo-News J ; Ryan 's Hope 6, 13; Phil Donahue 8;
young and the ResllessiO; Not For Women On I~ IS;
VIlla Alegre 33
I : 3~Days Of Our Lives 3.4.15 ; ABC Afternoon
Playbreak . Comedy 6, 13 ; As The World Turns a, 10;
Episode Action 33.
2:QO--Guld lng Light 8, 10 ; Family at War 33.
2:30-Doctors 3,4, IS; Edge ot Night 8, 10,
3:QO--Another World 3,4, 15; General Hospital 6, 13;
Prfce Is Rlght8,10, Lilias , Yoga and You 20; Play
Chess 33.
.
J : ~ne Life To Live 13 ; Lucy Show 6; Match Game
8, 10; Feeling Good 20. Folk Gui tar 33 .

1Do you have a quest1on to r
the .J aco 'Jys? Wnte "Ask the
.Jaco'J ys " ca re ' of th1 S
ne w spaper The most i nteres tmg quest1ons wifJ be
used 1n th1 s col umn and
wnters w11J receiVe copies of
JACOBY MODERN i

nice kitchen, din . area, ut .
room, carpeted, carport, 5

BR, 2 baths.

IO · ~Celebrlty

992 7121

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

Sesame S1reet 33

8:30-Big Valley 6, Popeve 10
B : S~huck White Reports 10.
9 ·QO--A . M. 3; Phil Donahue 4, 15; Muriel Stevens B.
Captain Kangaroo 10; Morning with D J . 13 .
9 :30-/'jot For Women Only 3; Dinah! 6; Galloping

QuestiOn from Mame I held
4 Q tO 6 5 • 3 2 + A K 8 7

Phone 992-5682 or

--

Today 4.
·•
6:45-Mornlng Report 3, Farmt l me 10.
6.5,_News 13
7·QO--Today 3.4,15; A. M America 6,13; CBS News
8. 10.
B:QO--Lassle 6, Captain Kangaroo 8; Schoolles 10;

Our opponents reached lour
spades
w1th no b1ddmg t\Y either
7•
my partner or myself . Should I
have doubled '
0p4?nrng lead - 10 •
Th1s 1s lhe sort of question
_ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ that is impossible to answer
really well because we don't
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
have e nough mformatwn How
· What sorl of free b1d was d1d th e bidding go' Who was on
.
that''" roared North . " Onl y 13 ' lead ?
Alter some b1ddmg sequences
h1gh -ca rd po1nts and there you
wer e way up al the three a double is indicated Alter
others . you should pass if your
level ·
· It turned oul to be very double may Iell declarer how to
eostl y." rephed South " We had play and make the contract We
a game . s lam and rubber suspect th1 s d1d happen afler
wa111ng lo r us and you had lo our correspondent stuck Ill-"
b1d seve n and throw it all double .

Automobile
Transmission
Repair

w ILL do odd robs , paintm g ,
r oofing ,
ha uling
and
mowmg P hon e 992 7409
7 6 12tc

swers 8, School Scene 10, PaHerns tor Living 13 .
6 : 3~olumbus

South

North

Pass
Pass

and

mo

-se· pr-~-c- :r A-NKS - cLEA N- E

Pass
Pass

Garage

LARRY LAVENDER

6. 2,_Farm Report 13 .
6 30-Five Minutes to Live By 4; News 6; Bible An .

Gourmet 8, New Zoo Re vue 13
We st

Pas~

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

THURSDAY , JULY 10 , 1975
6 ()()--Sunrise Seminar 4 , Summer Serr.ester 10 .

Ul&lt;£ A WATC-H 1'5Et.t.ll!

IW~

•

I ·oo- Tomorrow 3.4, News 11

Nur lh-South vulnt'rable

Middleport
5-30-1 mo

Roger Hysell's

FARM and 2 homes, y ea r o~d, GEN ERAL Repa ir . c l ean up
and
hau l ing ,
cut tmg ,
total elec
Double wide
welding,
ca rpentry ,
tra•ler , c o mp l e tP iy c ar
plum bing, e le c masonry
p eted, 3 la r ge bedrooms
and ge n er al remodel 1ng
with l arge c lo!. e t s, a n d 2 full
Cal l Sktl Pool
Phone 992
baths , hom e also has den
5 126
6 17 tfc
l ivin,g r oom , d1 ning room :
and k1tch en wllh plenty of
s torage space
Al l lar ge EXCAV&gt;\ I IN...., , ooze.r , load era.t~d bac khoe wo rk , sep t ic
rooms
Also po nd above
tanks
1n stalle d , . dump
trailer
A l s o , on same
tru cks and lo boys for h1re
p r operty •S a 2 story 7 rm
wi ll hau l ftll dirt , top so il ,
f arm hou s .-.
r eal good
l1m estone and gravel , Ca ll
plum bing , p.
• J of well
B ob or Roger Jeffers , day
water, and n ew t , ,Ja in ted on
p hone, 992 7089 , n rght p hon e
the outside Huge barn and
9Q2 3525 or 99 2 5232
garage , other bu i ld ing s t oo
2 11 tf c
Great grazing and gar d en
-- - -.. - - - - - l and All on 20 acr es for sa l e
Cal l 992 7590 .
CARPET rn stallat•on , $1 25
7 7.6tc
per y ard
Ca ll
R i chard
Wes t . phon e 8&lt;13 2667
7 2-26tp

POMEROY, 0
1;, ACRE - 3 BR , bath,

I

Free Esli males
PH . 992-2550

Blown rnto Walls &amp; AHrcs

ALL

PON'TA~tc.!

Construction
and · Plumbing

Blown
Insulation Services

HJ

AFSWO

VWFRHDN

K~OW

F

FTE

AFT

FTE

WFKR N

DWFRHDN
EWFE. -

HJ
FTE

BFAWO

GEMINI (May 21-J un e 20)
Do n I rehash an old rr r ola !1'lQ
ISSue w 1th a person .n 1ou r
charge today Fo r g •vel"'C% ,•.rll
wm you an all y

CANCER (June 21-July 22) II
_ s ho pp1n g today be care f ul
when •I comes t o nove l
mercha n d•se Ther e s a qood
chance you 11 buy sometn on q
you 11 never use
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) A•,ood
lhe company loday of
who'se goals are not •n
many w1th yours It wol"l
worth th e effort to try and
vmce h1m you re r 1ght

onP
ha r
t be
con -

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sep1. 22)

11 s
to your advantag e to p tay a lillie ha r d - to-ge t t o d ay 1n vou r
dea lm gs Lett hem come to ~ou
for a change
.;

MONTGOMERY -WARD &amp; CO..
(Serving America for lj)() Ye.ars)
Offers_.~n- ~xciting opportunity to operate a business of
. your own _'wit.h a v~r_y sma II iri ;estment. W~_ are in, · tere~ted m a quah!ted Sales oriented person with
prev1ous retail exp'enence to own and operate a catalog
store in Pomeroy, Ohio.
·
I

.

--If-you-are-willing to accept responsibility in return for a
future in your own business, write giving full personal
·
qualifications to:
E. A. Smith, 4-1
1000 S. Monroe Street
Baltimore, Maryland 21232

----

,,
'

.

Theatre 33.
9 . 3~Jean Shepherd's America 20 .
10 ·QO--Petrocelll 3, 4, 15. Barel! a 6, 13, Mannix 8, 10;
· News 20; Fam il y at War 33
11 :QO--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 " Big Rose" a. Movie " Island In the
Sun " 10; Janak ! 33
·
12 3~Wide World Special 6

- - - - -- - - - - - - me tor b1oomg three clubs "
The argument may still be goNOR Tit
mg
on so we w1ll try to answer
•AQJ76
11
lor
you , our readers
• A64
ll
East
had not stuck m his
• 10
b1d . So uth would
two
-heart
• KJ 32
merely have rebid to two clubs
EAST
When he did b1d two hea rts
• K 10
South
was given a choice. He
• 10 3 z
• K o&lt;J ~7 5
co
uld
pass
and maybe never gel
'' ti.l 972
• J 53
to
show
hiS
club su1t or he could
A64
• 10 6
b1d
at
the
three
level.
SOUTH lUI
This
lime
the
pass
would have
.. 3 2
worked
out
better
. because
.8
North
uverb1d jp an unsound
t AK864
se ven Yea r an fld year out the
A AQ97&gt;
b1d w1ll be the tinnmg action

I

ALL-WEATHER
ROOFING

FREE ESTIMATES

ROGER HYSEU'S
GARAGE

MOST OFFENSIVE!

DO:
'
Roofing
Siding
Complete
Home I
Mainlenancf!.

Pome-roy

Ph . 992 -2174

,,
.J

..

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

7 -7-lmo

ASSUI?ANCE THAT I FIND

home~

Does
your
require any of these
services?

Rt.7, Tuppers Plain s,

Q.ELAND
608 E.
REALTY
MAIN

1971 350 CL Honda , Phone 992

) 97~

1

'

61 C

I

Nathan Biggs
Rad•alor Specialist

" AI Caution Loght"

$ELF-

Evenings 742· 4902
.7 -7-1 mo .

Fro m the largest Tru c k or
Bu l ld ozer Radiator to th e
smatlest Hea t er Core

BARGAIN CENTER

G R AVE L Y ~~r~~ t o_r___.;i lh --fc?E ;, oY M I X CO~ ~ ~E-TE
everyt hi ng
7
Lib er t y
d e l 1ve r cd rrqh l to you r
Avenu e a bov e th e Jon es
pro rec t f ast a nd ('asy F ree
Boys , or ca ll 99 / 7 135
estima t es Phon e 992 328·l
7 9 3tp
Goeq l em Rea d y M 1K Co.
-- --M•dd leport Oh• o
6 JO lfc
17 FT Comm odore boat wi t h
40 h p Johnson motor and
0 &amp; D TRE E Tr• m mr n"Q, 20
traile r Ph one 949 2963 aft er
years expe r. en ce In sur ed .
6 p m
f r ee est. ma l e-s Ca ll 992 3057 ,
7 9 4fC
Coo l vtlte
Ph one ( 1l 667
30 l\
BA RN - No r eason a b l e offe r
4 JO tfc
r e fused Ph one 985 -3952 .
7 9 3tp

1

(7

KUHL'S

OF S U6 MA!7CULINE

't'E'AH l'... WELL , 'IOU WANT
...
TO KNOW WHAT KIIJD OF IMAee
A MA'-1 - HATlNcS FEMALE: LII&lt;.E:
YOU PROJECTS TO ME, ~~~ FIWBY1

Ph. 992 -7608

~

!

__

9 :oo-Lucas Tanner 3,4.15; Cannon 8,1 0; Masterpiece

Complication with free bid

'

THAT YOU SM&amp;ODY ALL THE'
WOR~T MACH IGMO TR.AIT'5

Liability I nsurance

EX PER.I.ENCED
I Radlato
Service - -. :.

Guaranteed
appliances
used furniture at
'

YOU KNOW WHAT' -iOUR P&gt;IOT'O
CLE'ARLV 1'-IPICATE'D TO ME 'F

We Carry

' -18-1 mo .

.

Tell The Truth 1.3; Episode Action 33 . .
8:QO--Lit!le House on the Prairie. 3,A,15; That's My
Mama 6 , 13 ; Tony Orlando and Dawn e,10; F""llng
Good 20,33 .
8 . 3~Movle " The Day The Earth ·Moved 6 13 ·
Philadelphia Folk Festival 20 ; Another Look' at '
Appalachia 33

WIN AT BRIDG.E

CAPl' AIN EASY

..

V1nyl ~~ding , aluminum
s 1d1ng , patio covers, storm
w 1ndows. ,
kitchens ,
bathrooms and garage~

I

CASH ' N CARRY
SAVH U S'5on

-

' r N L•
~

For Sale

8 WEEK o l d baby Chicks _ Call
843 29 11 o r 949 38 36
7 3tc

J
"

99277 51

f lJ RN

PUBLIC NOTIC:E
Oids wil l be r ece •ved at t he
.CommrSS10ners Oll •ce . Co urt
Hou se . Po m e.-oy , Oh 10 un td
10 30 a m on Ju l y 15. 197S fo r
a Spr .nk l er System f o r t he
Mc,q s County tn f1rm ar y
· r 1dS are to me tud e 1n
sl alfation , , all materral and
labor
and
to
mee t
si)ect f, ca t.mls ol the State F 1r e
MnrShil ll 's offrce

t~re s,

~

POMEROY, OHIO

5 1 ' t r-

RM
hou se. bath , Ir on!
po r c h . gas h ea r , ul•llly
r oom , references reau1red
Ca ll 9&lt;~9 3658
7 8 4t c

WE_DNESDAY, IUL Y ,, 1975
6:QO--News Js,4,8, 10.1J, 15; ABC News 6; Sesame
Street 20; You Owe II To Yourself 33 .
6·30--NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Bewitched 6;
CBS News 8.10; Jody's Body Show 33 .
. 7 :oo-Truth or ConSequences 3,A, 15; To Be Announced
15; Bowling For Dollars 6 ; What's My Line&gt; a,
News 10; Country Music Jubilee 13; Book Beat 20;
The Romagnolls' Table 33
7·30-Pollce Surgeon 3; Name That Tune 4; Let's
Make A Deal 6 ; Wilburn Brothers 8; Evening
Edltionwtth Martin AQronsky 20; The JudgeiO; To

REMODELING

Phone
992-3313

Al so R epa ~r s On All
R 1d1n9 Tractors
49'8 Locust St .
M•ddleport , Oh 1o
5 9 1 mo

s1195

POM~~~!v ~9,!0R CO.I(J..\

1913 - ll )( 70 rldl c r e$1 Mob1le
H ome. 3 bedroom , total
e l ectric. red shag carpel
throug hout ,
und erptnning
and :&gt;sets o f s t ep s m cl uded
Phone 247 3941
7 9 6tc

3 BEDRM

A NTIQUE SAL E
VA RIE TY of An t1 que s from
c ountry hom e 9 am !n 9
p m
fr om July 9 ' till ')
· one t e nth mile So uth of
Porre r , OhiO on St a t e Rt
16Q
7 9 3tp

power

New pamt

Mobile Homes For Sale

YARD sare- , Bonn te Mil l er
res tdence.
Ma1n
St ,
Rut l and ,
Wed n es day
th r ough F r• day

,pf American League pitching

' rad•o

REMODE L IN G,
P l umb •n g
h ea l 1n g and all type s o l
qc nerar
repa1r
Wo r k
q u ar ant ec d
20 years ex
pertenc e
Phone 991 :&gt;.-t09

On
• Lincoln Hill
Pomeroy and
in Syracuse
Phone 992 -2156
TODAY

J

Milwaukee
000 000 100- 1 9 2
' Kansas City 500 300 Oh - 9 10 o
Travers , Broberg ( t J. Cham
pion (6 ), A ust •n (8 ) and Porter ,
PUBLIC NOTICE
Leonard 15 4) and Hea ly LPTravers (4 2) HR s- Mayberry Sh e rtff 's Sale of Chattel
117th l, Scott (16th)
P.-operty
- R1ta J ea n Taylor, Plarnt•lf
(10 mnings)
vs
u Baltimore 003 000 020 3- 8 10 1 Herman A Taylor, Defendant
"' Calif
200 100 002 o- s 6 3
Palm er , A lexander (9 ), Jack
In
pur s uan ce
to
an
son (10 ) and Hendncks , Ryan, Execu t 10n issued from t h e
,\Scott (10), K1 rkwood (101 and Common Pl eas Court ol Me 1gs
, Rodriguez WP - Aiexander (3 County , Pomeroy , Oh10 , in the
LP- Ryan
(10 -81
HR case of Rita Jean Taylor .
Stanton (9t h l
Herman A'
P ta.nti ff , vs
Taylor , Defendant, bemg case
, ~ cleveland
200 000 300- 3 12 1 No 14,5 10 1n satd Court , 1 w il l
Oakland
400 702 02x - 15 IS 1 o lfer at Pomeroy m sa id
Hood , Beene ( 4) and Ellis . County on the 19th day of July,
....Holtzman , Todd (7) "and Fosse 1975, at 10 00 O'Clock A M .,
- WP - Holtzm an
( 10 7)
L P - th e fo ll owing goo d s · and
11 t'IOOd { 2-5)
HRs Tenace c hattels , to wit
•• J 14th ), W1ll1ams (llth l, Suda ki s
I -- 1970 Honda Mo t orcyc le
{2nd)
Mod e l No C B360 an d Serial
No C 6360 1038338 and al so 1 1969 Oldsmob il e br onze bot
to m b la c k v•ny l top 2 Or
Se dan
Se r ia l
No
oHORfON MOVES UP
3S 45 79M 1947 13
" ' NEW YORK (UP!)
Tak e n as t he property of
.Muscular Willie Horton of the H e rm an A Ta y lo r to sa ti sfy
Execut •on rn favor of Rita
Petroit Tigers went on a blitz an
Jean Tay l or

"')JOints and move into fifth

BE A
..SENTINEL
CARRIER"

N OW se l! .ng Fu ll e-r Bru sh
Products
phone 992 3.:1 10
t 24 ltc

ooo 000 100- 1 6 o

automa ti c,

, 6 cyl , automatic t rans, clean 1nten or , good

US ED
550?

Yard Sale

v a.

l in1sh .

Employment Wanted

SWEE PER
&amp;
Se w1ng
Ma c h tn es Repa . r. Parts ,
and
Suppl1es •
Dav •s
Vac uum Clean er , 1 J m rl e up
Ge-o rg e's Cre ek Rd off Stare
R 1 7 Phon e 446 0?94
7 9 lrc

Los Angel es 001 101 000- J J 1
PittSburgh
000 000 000- 0 &lt;1 2
Sut ton
Marsha ll
(7)
and
Yeager ; Ell is, D emer y (8 ) and
Sanguill en WP - Sutt on (13 8)
L P - EII IS
(6 5)
HR - Wynn
(lAth )

vinyl top, r ed
&amp; brak es

Help Wanted

Notice

N ew York
100 003 000- 4 7 0
A rtan ta
010 100 010
3 54
Koosman , Sander s (9) and
Grote , Morton , Leon (7), Sosa
(9) and Corr ell WP - Koosman
(8 6) LP - Morton (9 91 HRsGarrell {Jrd) , Wil li am s (6t h l,
Gas ton ( 5th J, K 1ngman (15th 1

Bl k

$895

Wanted

THE FAM I LY of the late
E rv1n G
Baumgardner
wo uld Idee 10 thank Ve Tera ns
Memor.a l and Oh •o Stale
Un •v e r sr ty
H os p.ta l,
lr. e nds . n eighbor s wh o we r e
so k 1nd dun ng the Illness
and
death
of
Mr
Ba umgard n e r
Your k.nd
nes s
was
g r ea tly
ap
pr ec.ated
M r s E rv 1n Baumga r dner
an d Fam.ty
7 9 lie

San Fran
100 031 010- 6 15 0
Sl LOUI S
000 OO.t 000- d 9 I
Fa l c on e, M oll•tt (6) , Lave ll e
(81 and Ra der , G 1bson. Ter
l ecky
(6) , Curt •s
(8 )
and
S1mmons WP - Fal cone ( 7 6 )
LP- G1bson ( 2-81. HR - Murcer
I 101h I , F a 1rty (Jrd )

1968 CHEV IMPALA CPE .

Black

YE I LO W and wh ole long
h&lt;~ • red lul!en wilh whole flea
c o ll ar Los t n ea r Beec h Sl ,
19 /J DU S r ER , l)rown metal
M rd d l c port $10 Rf' ward r1
flak e W1lh while s tr •pe Atr
rP i urned P hone 99 7 )&lt;1 16, •f
co ndd ooncd , p 5 ,
p b ,
ry-e answe r cal l 9Y ? 50 16
au•omat 1c
tr ansm•Ss ron ,
LAS H paid tor all ma k es ana
?) 000 mrles
340 mo pa r
t 8 31c
mode l s of mobrl e hom es
e n gone. am l m radi o, g ood
Phon e a r ea c od e 614 &lt;~23
co nd •hon Ca ll 99? 7768 a fter
953 1
5 p m
,1 13 tfc
7 8 6tc
HC'U SEKEEPER
rnust l 1vC
•n f a rm hom e H •nler es t ed .
F"ORO Prckup lr uck, 37.0 00
w r ile t o Mr
Holl re E
miles Phon e 99? 56 17
&lt;;, tar c her
Rl
Aol( JJ ,J
CARPE
N
TRY
WORK
7 6 31p
Por tland . Ohro .rsno
Ceilr n q , pane l tng , lt oo r.ng ,
6 25 12tp
Jljl l ] C HEVR OLE T
I mpala
e t c Ph one 991 2759
.
.
Cus to m , ar r con d AM &amp; F M
6 2·1 Jl t c
B T r ~lck , exce tl enl con d llro n
PAINllNG rr1s 1de and out ,
Ph one 99 ? 748 5
trE- e esl•males Ph on e 99 7
7 7 51c
3? 17
7 J 6tc

WE WI SH to e• pr ess o ur
a pp rcc hJI IOn to lrt e n ds ,
ll l' lg hbors , i.lnd re l at rves tor
the ass rsl an cc a nd k•ndne ss
s hown to
m1..• and my
c hildren fo ll ow rnq th e d eat h
of ou r be loved wr lc and
mo th er , Evelyn Whal.ey
Spec1c1l lhank s qo to the
Rev
C ly de F l'rrell, lhl'
p a llb earers a nd t he Lem l ey
Ouarlcl
t or
t he.r
t rnc
s•nQ•ng We would a l so like
to
lhank the Pomeroy
·Emerq ency Sq uad and the
shenfl' s depa rtm en t God
b le ss al l tll a t h el ped on any
way Thank s aga 1n , H er be rt
Wha le y and 01 ildren
7 9 ltp

Tuesda y's Ba se ball Res ult s
By Umted Pr ess lnternat1ona1
Nattonal League
( 15 mnrng sl
San D iego
000 202 002 000 001- 8 15 ?
Chicago

top

992-3092

7 2 6t c

(A"tWf'n lomorro'"')

Jun•blu

tir es,

1969 CHEVY NOVA4 DR

I ..,, 0 hlrl rk Crl• r n 1 C' l rr cr 5 on
Co k'd ?H Rcw,;rd Phone

'lXIllllT'

SUIIPIIISI ANSW!R here

Viny l roof. grey fln ts h . htgh mi leage. good
&lt;'~utomal!c , power st eer1n g, rad•o. silve r f1n1sh

s t ee r~ng

surtrested by the &amp;bon cartoon.

I Prill

and
Small Appliance
Repair

Sales &amp; Service
$1295

I

I

Pomeroy I
OF
· ~~~~~~~==~.
WILKINSON
Co.
Washer &amp; Dryer
QUALITY
SMALL EN
JOHNSON

1970 NOVA V-8 CPE .

~-~--"~--·-----..__.--- . ~- -_,.....,..._..

I

Business Services

.2

'

Television logior easy viewing .

l·

Sentinel Classifieds

''

._

UBRA (Sept. 23 -0cl. 23) II s

q uest s ol a mater 1a l nal u re
t rom your fnend s It co uld
nrovf'! e mbar a sstng when
'i" Ou re turned down

SCOR PIO (Oct. 24 -Nov: 22)
Un l orl u hate ly yo u c an I base a
me110r c!P c •s• on today on
whether you t read upon
:.omeone s toes F •rst protect
you r o w n 1nteres t s .

SAG ITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc.
21) A c o -work e r today wtll have
n ralh e r sha rp to ngue He can
be wo n over easily 11 you react
t.l c t f•tlly not ang rily

CAPRICORN (De c. 22 -Jon.
19) You II pr o f •! mo r e m I he
long run today •I yo u lh1n k tn
term s a t what s best fo r all con·
cerned r ath er tha n What's m
•1 for mc':l

AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19}
You h,lv(' a 1endenc y today to
1ump •o conc luSIOns Your hast~ nssump t1o ns coul d c reate a
pr oblem

PISCES (Feb 20-March 2Q)
Thr s co n. be a very produCtive
per.o d rt you don I try to bu• ld
Ro rt1e 111 one day M 1s ta kes a re
l• k.ely II you rush yowsell

~Your ·
~ Birthday
July 10. 1975
You r fl nanc•af prospects took
very prom1S 1ng thtS yeac .
prov• ciN1 you d on t spend
money as l ast as '' coriles ti:.
Prudent m an flgement put s ydu
on th e pa th to prosper1 1y

not a goo d day to rnak e r e'•

MIZ SiVI IF ..
I BEEN
COLLECT II\!'
OL' CLOTHES
FER TH'POR!;
FOLKS IN
HOOT IN'
HOLLER

IF I FAlL IN TH IS
MISSION, IT COULD CAUSE
WORLD WAR I TO DRAG
ON FOR 'fEARS ..

AI\! '- -

""' Ill~
-·····-.l.,...,
\joo-..go,..............
••

..

~

I

-

�......~..~..~--~·.......~~....~....,...,.......,.....~~........................~..........~............~.............................~----~~~~-----~ 1' 1

.•

.....

•

I .
Ill

l . •
\
"

.
'

~

~
••

'

..

'

·.

....

13- The ~ilv Sentlnel 1\.f;rtdleP,Jrt-Pomeroy,'O., Wcidnesdav, July 9, 1975
DICK-TRACY

..

~

~

,1"

.
·,.___._..,_,_._._._._...__.
__
_._.. __
r

I.

.

,,,,"

In Memory

I

UNS/,t

IN f1/ lf\ O f.-Y o t J &lt;~ m('S l{.
Cl cu-k In IOvtnQ merno ry of
o ur
be lbved · tl u sband ,
f'alher , qrandfather who
n a sse d awav J ul y 9, 197?
It has bee n 3 years and
nol hmq ca n ever ll!lke awa'y
ltl£1 l ove •n ou r hea rr s w e
hold so d e ar
I ond m£'mor~cs lln{J e r ever y
day ana keep s h1m ncar
Sadly m•ssed by w• l e .
Elhel
son
dauq ht ers,
Qrilnd c hildren and ste p
dauqhle r s

I

I ) I

' 9 11 c

Now arran.re the c ircled 14."tte-u
to form the surprise answer , u

1111!

lost
'I Jl,l

11'109

Yt!•lf'rday·.-

FROZE

ONION

BAMBOO

SUBMIT

C/\M E R 1\ cq u ,pmenl between
Al h cns and Ga ll •po ll s Wllh
•n l o rmation . ca ll
Ken.
co l lec t 5'? ? 3J f&lt;J
7 8 3tp

rrQt 'nl 11 me wf, ., , ~f, rlu1
hmt IIH' fJ/am•t~ 1r1 n flmny - "IN ·FOR MATJ ON '

Ant.,. tor: 1/u· f 'll f' lll lf

ulft' !lrql ' fl( 'f

Card of Thanks

Linescores

0 12010010000000 - 6141
Jones , Fr. se rra (9l
Folker s
(9), Greif ( 9 ), Sp d lne r ( 11 1
Mcin tosh - ( 14 ) and Kenda ll ,
Ston e, Kno wles (BJ. Dettore (81
an d Mitterwald , s w.sh er (9 1.
Hos l ey ( 10) WP Mc i ntosh (7
lJ
LP ~ Dettore
(i 2 1 HR s
Monday ( B!h) , Tola n (3r d )
Me Covey (1 1th I

Montreal
000 010 000- 1 4 2
H ous to n
200 20 1 00x - 5 11 2
Ren ko , Warthen t 6J. M urra y
(7 ).
Taylor (8 ) and Foote .
Roberls ( 5 10 ) and May LP R enko ( 4 6l HR - Parnsh ( 6th )

Phila

Cmcmnat t
0 10 100 OOx - 2 8 1
Underwood, McGraw (l J and
'bates ; Nol an Eastwtc k (7l and
Ben ch WP - Nolan (S 5) LP Underwood (9 61
American League
ChICago
000 000 000- 0 5 0
Detroit
000 100 02,.; - 3 9 o
Wood (6 13 ) and Downmg ,
Coleman , Hitter (9) and Free
han . WP - Col eman (5 lil ,..i::i R.::::-LeFiore Olh) , Roberts Oth l
Texas
New York

000 000 ooo-- o 7 i
210 000 lOx - 4 10 o

Harg an , U m barge r O L
Moore
(S }
and
Sundberg ,
Hun ter Cl2 -8l and Munson LP
- Hargan (6 4) HR - Biomberg

(4th) ,

Minnesota
00 1 ooo 22o- 5 9 2
Boston
111 020 001 - 6 12 o
Campbell , Johnson (-7) and
Borgmann , Tiant , Drago (8 ).
Burton (8 ), Cleveland (91 and
Fisk WP - Cieve land ( S 6) LP
- Johnson 10 1)

YARD Sa l e , Jul y 10 and 11t h ,
Rai n o r sh 1n e , Th .rd St ..
Syracuse on R t 124 Hour s
10 am till B p m Clp thmg .
dr::. h es, t oo ts . high cha ir.
sc hool d esk, wal l t el ep tJ on e.
wood en bowls , trunk , other
mtsc ttems , ant iq ues. and
co ll ect •bl es
7 8 J tp~

"'

YARD Sette , J u ly 13, a ll da y
Drshes ,
avo n
bottle s,
m• sce lta neo u s
R e fr esh
ments , Sold by Me1gs Co . H
S F r om SR 7 turn off at F1ve
Po•nl s onto Flat Woods
Road F ollow sig n s
7 8 dip

;:;;J

R OBER T C HARTEN BACH
Sh eri ff of
M e 1gs Cou nt y, Oh10

Jast week with a 1:&gt;-for-28
-!ltreak to boost his average 26
place in the circuit's
fi3esignated hitter rankings.
~: Horton hit .536 last · week
cand boosted his American
league leading RBI comrt to
60. He also is the top
designated hitter In home
~s with 16 and in hits with
81. His home run against
Balt!Jnore last Thursday was
''the 239th of his career to tie
Jliiri with Rudy York for
fourth •place on the all-time
•Tiger list.
AI Bwnbry of Baltimore
and Jim Rice of Boston
continue to lead the league's
designated hitters with a .'Jifl
'
. '
.av.,-age.

,,

~~ .
I

.
,

. : · Eqtial · rights for all
lf'edestrlans, cyclists , ·and
~vers all have equal rights
po practice courtesy, caution,
'!JIIld care regardles8 of the
ategory you fill .· Know an.d
, ~ the laws (or safety on
·me highways and byways of

.

bhto.

.. -

(7)

9, lie

w r L L do baby s1 tt.ng
Ma •n St , Pomeroy
99? 5092

- Board of
Comm 1ss ioner s
Martha Chambe r s.
Cl erk

w

&lt;~09

P h on e
7 7 6tc

Wanted To Buy
camper

Phon e

CJ9 7

7

8 31c

OLD furri rt ur e. rce boxes ,
bras s b ed s. or co mplete
hou se hold s
Wrlle M
D
M i ller, Rt
4, Pome r oy,
Oh tO Ci!ll 992 7760
10 7 74

For Rent

TOMATO E 5,
cucu mb e r s,
C l eland Far m s Ge- ra l din e
C l e- land
7 6 .rf c

h ome
Ph one 98 5 3S8i

1n

Cheste r

7 B 6tp
TRA IL ER space l or rent 1n
M1ddleport Phone 99 2 5434
7 8 6tp
1 TRAI LER, e ll old R t 33 at
K tn gs bury
Road
2
b e d rooms , I c hild per
m died , no pets Phone 7 41
) 173
7 8 3tc
1

BEDRM trail er w1th a i r
co nd•t•on c r ,
deposlf
r equired Call 992 5867
7 9 3tc

3 BE DROOM mobile ho me
loca t ed on 14 3, 2m lies from
Pomeroy Phon e ~92 5858
7 .2 lfc
FURN I SHED
apartm c nt ,
adults only in Middleport
Phone 992 3874
J 2S . tfc
TR A ILER spa c e , all uti l1t-1eS,
c h ea p PhQne 99 2 5535
6 29 tf c

------- - -- -

lB EDRM 65x 12mo bd eh ome
for ren •, ut d il •es pa 1d ,
located 1n Burl rnqham Call

MUELLER and I Lennox
fue l o!l
furnace ,
both
com plet e, a l so 19 19 mode l T
Fo rd tr u c k Wilt sel l or Ira d e
for
Ford
trac t or
and
eq ur pment
A l so Kenmore
ga s range Phone 98 5 A1 l 8
7 7 Jtc
FAB R I C SAL E Larg es t and
Best sa l e S&lt;n ce op en mg of
o ur bu s.n ess A ll m ate r 1a l m
shop on sa t e- Doubl e kn tt
acry 11 c S 1 49 p er yd , a good
.. se l ect.on of fir st qua lit y
"poly este-r kn •Is , fan cies and
so li ds S? 29 pe r yd Sal e one
week o nly Monday July 7
thru Sat , July 1:&gt; Open 9
a m t o 5 p m Satu r da y We
wilt be c losed for vacation
fr om J u l y 14 to July 28
Carol •na Fa bric s, Rt 7 one
ha ll mtle north of Chester ,
Oh 10
Henry and Ma ry
H unter, owner s
7 6 6tp

FISH I NG l•cens e, Ca n a d•a n
Nd e c rawler s, 60c d oz- Du g
worms. 3 doz $ 1 Ottler ba 1f
ta c k l e. q un s, ammo . c b 's,
lndr a n Joe 's Sport s
308
Paqe St , Phone 992 3509
7 1 26 t c
YOLJ N G rab b its f or sal e,
Reedsvdle Phone 378 626 1
7 8 7tc
-----

-

- - - 7H

7 1 tt c

1 ROOM l urn •s h ed an d
un_furn rshed
apa rt ments
Pl1 0nC' 992 513.1
;~ 12 fi e

H AY for sa l e, d e livered or
P.icked up in field . Phone
74? 3743
7 8 6tc

.!

-

-

-

For Sale

MODI:;:f.!N Walnut Co n so l e
ste r eo radiO comb1natton 4
s peed c hang er
Bala n ce
$ 101 40 or terms Call 992

3965

.a

7 9 tfc

NEW
Improved
" Z 1pp1es."
!he gr eat •ron p t1 1 now W1fh
V1tam.n C N elson Dr ug
7 9 He
TE LEV I S I O N Sho p . comple te
c ont e nt s ol a TV Re pa ir
Sh op Phone 843 29 11
7 9 3tc

197·1 SEAR S 36 ! M. g arden
tractor and mower , elec tr ic
start,
light
a nd wheel
weights Lrke n ew Ca ll 992
??57 aft e r 3 p m
7 9 Me
P IGS f or sa l e. 6 weeks old. one
ma r e pony . On e ge lding , 6
year s o td Phone 37 8-6152
7 9 4lp
TW O wh ee l Shas t a Cam p er ,
sleeps s•x. S900 Phone 9&lt;~9
5161

76

I 1 9, 21 C

PRIV/'.TE mee tin g room for
anyo r gan tzat •on . phone9CJ2

PH ILCO 14 cu II r efr• gerato r
fre eze r While , $ 120. 31 1
years o ld Phone 7&lt;12 6722
7 6 dtp

Real Estate For Sale
r &gt;No 8E DR00M hou se lo r
sa l e Phon e 98 5 4102
6 10 26t c
5

RM S, bath , a l uminum
s• din g, r emode l ed k lfch en
lnqu,r e Don Sa yr e, 443 Si xth
Ave nue , M1ddleporl , Oh1o
45760
7 9 4tp

HOU SE 1n Portland , 5 rm s
and bat h , good w ell , i acres
of ground Ph one 843 -2292
7 9 12tc

3529

7 8 6tp

] 11 H e
APT l •k c n ew . J rooms , w•th
larqe bath, lab l et op ra n ge,
large close t Eas t Ma1n ~.t,
Pomeroy Se e lo app r ec •a t e
r' hone Ga lt1p oh s dur• ng da y ,
cl-'16 7699 , even1n1;1S &gt;146 9539 .
- ,, IU ft c
T R:AILER space .' 1 mile fr om
P o m e roy
Phone 992 5858
5 2 tfc

COW and call
afler 5p m

Ca ll 992 7165
7 8 3tc

1973 K/\WA SAK L 350 B1g
hO rfl En g• n e m top sh ap e,
qood rub ber , and 3 b •ke
trailers Phon e 992 71 10
7 2 6t C

ap t 5 room san d ba th ,
n1 cc l arqe yard . b a lh a nd '
190
~ outh
&lt;. ccond
~. t ,
i\~• d dlepor t
adults onl y
Phon e 992 5262 ev en •ngs
52 1,lfc
Nl RY
Mob• l c
Home
PMk . R t 33 ten m 1IC S norlh
o t P omeroy L arge lo i s with
c oncrete pat•os, Stdewalks ,
runner s and of f s tr e et
PM"-• nq P hone t;9'1 7.179
12 31 lfc

COLONIAl

1./STING
NEW !, ISTING - 2 bedrooms,
ip&gt;th. nat . ga5 , F .A. furnace,

NEW LISTING - Renovaled 'l'

~~:::'!~~

R-eg 159 95

139.95
''. 000 BTU
L. nly 43 l b
models
on sale .

(( ' l

4 ROOM unlurn 1she d h ou se,
l 650 L1n coln Hgt s , phone
991 3874
7 6 tfc

NEW

bedr ooms, 3 full baths, centra l
a tr , and heat, large family
room, sun deck , love ly kit chen , d i shwa sher, stov e and
refrigerator
Double garag e
and extra features . NEW

Wk floors and sto rm ad
d1tlves. A neat conservative
lrttle bungalow

.1 RM ap t wtlh wal l to wall
c arpe t . 10 4 Spring AI/C .,
Pom er oy Ca ll 992 5908
6 22 lfc

Qedroom • home ,
s tove ,
r'efrigerator &amp; dishwasher,
nat. gas , FA furnace , sliding
gla ss doors, 2 porches and

double garage .
MIDDLEPORT - 2 bedroom
home, bath, nat . gas heat,
dining , uti !Tty. 2 'porches and

POMEROY LANDMAIU&lt;
...._Jectc w. Cerst~, Mtr.
iltiitl Phone H2·2111
·
BAND saw, good working
c ond1tion SI SO 586 L m corn
St , .Y 1ddlepor1 Phone 992
76? !
7 2 6tc

midget garden on good street.
Want only S7500.oo.
IF YOU WANT QUALITY
AND BUY AT A BARGAIN,
SEE

2 BEDROOM trailer , $27 per
w ee k , ut 1flt tes oa1d Phone
992 3314 ,,
7 6 l fc
r. EO RM
hou se .
un
f ur n.shed Mso I l ur n •shed
i'lp l Phone 997 2180 or 992
]1 32
6 29 lfc

American League ~ Palrrter ;
Ball and _Kaat, Ch • lJ 5. Bt'ue,
Oak. 126 . Hun t er . N V 12 S.
Busby , KC 11 6 , Tian1 , Bos 11 8

-

Pets For Sale

Fo r Sate
A PPR OX 6 ft. x 7 It n e w
plush
c arpet
remnant,
neu l ral color, S 15 Phon e
.991 34.96 a ft er 5 30
..

.,

' 9 He

0.
Shop Us La st &amp; Save
Open 9 5 Wed through Sun .
Ph . 667 -3858

r R E E f emale k1 tt ens
99?34 10

Ph one
7 ) 6\C

9

WEEK Old f em a le AKC
1apr• co t poodle, $50 . Phone
949 ?Oi l
7 9. Jtc
' '.
------

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
B roam frame house, 3 bedrooms, batt't
.&amp; lavatory, y, basement,2 P,Orches, new gas
furnace, n~w hot waler·tank, new plumbing,
double garage, priced-to sen-fast arsr2',500.
Located in Rac'ine; Ohio across from grade
school.
GeorgeS. Hobstelter Jr.
REAL ESTATE BROKE~
P.hone 949-3211, Hilton Wolfe, Salesman

.

-

~ ~

I

1

I WE

2 Moles West
On St. Rt . 124
Off Rt. 7 By- Pass

MECHANICAL
WORK
Phone 992-5682
or 992 -7121
7-8-1 mo.
H OUS E and r oo f parn t in g and
repai r s F or free est i ma t es ,
ca t I ~ 92 6190 or 992 5837
6 1S 26tc

Real Estate for Sale
I 72 ACR E S l a n d

and lo cu st
pos t s 1\ l so 196 5 rord LTD
Phone 7.n 365 6
5 23 52 t p

S RM S and bath , n• ce l o l ,
large outbulld rn g fro n t an d
back por ches, front shaded ,
n eeds repa• r l ocated 1n
C l•llon W v a Cat I 992 5325
1 9 7tC

.. ..

-·

327 N. 2nd

STORM
WINDOWS&amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING-SOFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

BORN LOSER
~

Rll~

r:¥&gt;-.'tS TI11S lH /f.}0
SM00\11 AS A

...OTI-\E:R D\'!S IT ~'7, SfUI'T8&lt;.S
AI-ID S/JCRIS . \JJHAT SHQU..D

~H

'!1.WS IT

RV~

I

Syrac~s~: ohro
Ph 992 -3993

4 10- I

S EWI N G
MACHINE ,
Re p~tr s, serv •ce . all makes
qqz ?284 lhe Fabnc Shop ,
Pomeroy Aut horiz ed Smg er
\ ales a nd Se rv1 ceVvc
sharpen S ciSSor ~
3 29 l f c
DOZER work , land c l ea r~ng
by the acre.
h ourly or
co nt r act
Fa rm
p o nd s,
r oa d s, et c Larg e dozer and
op erato r wtth ove r 20 yea r s
eK p e r •ence
P ull •n s Ex
cavat1 n g. Pomeroy , Ohio _
Phone 992 2478
12 19 tf c
E LW O,OD BOWER S REPAIR
Sweeper s, t oasters . •r ons .
al l smarr ap p lr an ces L awn
mow e r next to St ate H1gh
way Ga r age on Route 7
Phone 935 3825
&lt;1 16 tf c
WILL Tt-. ... "'cu t t rees a n d
shrubbery and pa.n t r oo f s.
Phone 949 322 1 or 742 -4&lt;1&lt;11
6 24 26tp

o

R easonable RATES Pho ne
\46 47B2 Ga ll tpolis
Jo h n
Ru sse ll , ow ner
.:1 9 li e
rANKS cle an e d
SEPT I L
Modern Sanit ation 992 J95d
or 992 7349
9 18 H e

..

--

J;.ITTLE

MASTER.

ROOF IN G ,
Sp out1ng ,
atum .num and v1ny l S1drng ,
complete
r e mo.:;iel•nQ
Phone 742 6273 or (3 041 773
5684 Free esl!mates
6 25 26tp
NEED A new nome built on
your lo P Contact M~o B .
Hut ch tson , Rutland , Oh •o
Phone 742 3615 .
5 8 tfc

OLSON PERIODICALLY
BURIED HIS BUSINE'SS

,, DIRI:CTIONS '10
HIS CACHE ARlO
~F/'TS IN A PLACE
DESCRIBEO IN
CAL.U:D SOUR DOUGH
'lHPir L.EnER!
CANYON .. , .JUST Ol!TSIDE /----------.
PANAMINT CiTY!

naL ME

50ME1H/NG,

JACK .. ,

... w~ DIDN'T
OLSON EVER
GO SACK AND
DIG IT UP?

D

WOULD YOU BE L IEVE ?
Bu d d an a ll steel butl dmg at
Po le Barn pr1c es? Gold en
G•ant A ll Steel Bulldmgs ,
Rr
4, 6ox 148, Waver l y ,
Oh ro Phone 947 2'296
6 2&lt;~ 26tc

r-----------·
- ----- ------- -

LET US DO IT! !

7· 8

Carpeting

She was

501 NYLON

499

That liH!e
k1d.Walt?

balanc inq
the broom
on her

heard old Papo

I&lt;. now

sa4 how clums4

she

what

is'

saw,Doc!

JUqqilnq
all that

RUBBER BACK

w ilh

CALt. 742 -4211
TALK TO WENDELL

GRATE,
CARPET CONSULTANT

RUTLAND
FURNITURE
R"uTfana'

,

• J93

5.

Pass

ACROSS
I Irish port
5 Abrade
It Molding
12 Utensil on
a pencil
13 Spill
14 Hopeful
poker
player
45 " Ltttle Indians" population
16 Box

16
18
21
22

Yeoterday 's Answer
Printing
25 Won a foot
blunders
race
Beyond
27 Mild cigar
Ascend
29 Where
- Arnaz
colliers
Roofing
enter
material
31 Pain
Way
32 Inert gas

23
24 - Aniilles

34 "'KU·tv "

AstraGraph

Malt kiln
UL ABNER

,---------~::~~~:;=::-~~--~~--~--~--------~~~7.;~~~:7~~=-~==~------~--,~Attractive
-IT WAS SiLLY ID ATfKK l'r\E
28 ';':rtiveness 1=--+---+--BECAUSE YOU'RE CH~PLY
30 Pale
,,
MADE AND IM /2 MILLION
33 Indian

• Bemoce Bede Oso•

WATCH
JT"

DOLLARS WORTH CF
""~~;;:=~"~~"'~.,_'i':t-MACJ-liNERYr!-

street,

~

__

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

refrigerator and other
furn ., some carpeting, new
natural gas forced air furn _
and HW tank, e&gt;ecellent at

There s no reaso n to prck u p
the en ! Jre tab today for a fun
act ivity wl!h t• rends Le t e~Jch
pay a l a1r share

34 Old Indian
coin
35 New York

TAURUS (Aprii20 -May 20/ Be
eKtra·patlent w1th mc m bPrs o f
your household even thouqh
they may pu ll a few s1unt s that
will e)(aspe r ate you You c.:~n
ha n d le lh tng s

city
36 Roman

--- 1

emperor

Is

WINNIE
I&amp;N'T WfoNDY BEIN6
AWFULLY MYSTERIOUS
ABOUT THIS GUY
SHES SEE ING'?

ARIES (March 21-April 19)

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE -

,,.

AREN'T YOU C'UR/Ol/6 ?
DON'T YOU WANT 10
KNOW WHO HE 15,
WHERE HE~ FROM,
WHAT HIS IN-

For Thur•day, July 10, 1975

VIP

""".--~

OF CCURSE , 13UT
A BIG GIRL NOW. I
CAN'T PRY INTO HER

IF""""[ PRIVATE

Here's how
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

to

work

It:

One leller simply stands lor another. In this sample A lo
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single leiters.
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each dny the code lellers are different.

li !OE. ---"

CRYPTOQUOTE

TENTIONS AI&lt;E ?

WFKRN
CWE

,.

.

~~

a :oo-Giadys Knight and the P 1p5 3. 4.15; Barney Miller
6, 13; The Waltons 8, 10 , Evening at Pops 33;
Hollywood Tel evision Theatre 20
8 : 3~ Texas Wheelers 6, 13
9:QO--Movle " If It' s Tuesday , This mu51 be Belgium,"
3,4, 15; Streets of Sa n Francisco 6.13; Movie "The
Naked Jungle" 8; Hollywood Te levision Theatre
33; Movie " Any Wednesday " 10.
10 : ~Harry 0 6, 13, News 20
II :QO--New• 3.4,6,8, 10.13, 15.
II :J~Johnny Carson 3,4, 15 ; Wide Wor ld Spec ial 13;
FB/6; Movie "Dav id Copper fi el d" 8, Movie " Pork
Chop Hill " 10; Janaki 33.
12 : 3~Wide World Special 6
I :QO--Tomorrow 3,4, New5 13

Ending for
&lt;lepend

~"'

$38,000.00.
2112 5tory
frame, cou ld have 2 apts ., 5
BR , 2 baths , range,

DOWN

Actress, MernU
Emily Shell beads
Put. on
cargo

~~~,.)~

Interest ; total
POMEROY -

4 ·30-Bewltched 3; Merv Griffin 4; Mod Squad 6;
Mickey Mouse Club 8, Bonan za IS.
5 :QO--FBI 3; Lucy Show 8: Mister Rogers' Neigh borhood 20,33; Ironside 13.
5:30-News6 ; Andy Griffith B; Get Sma r t IS; Electric
Company 20,33.
6:QO--News 3,4,8, 10,13,15: ABC News 6 ; Sesame Street
20; Book Beat 33 .
6 .30-NBC News 3,4,15, ABC news (3; Bewltchetl 6;
CBS News 8,10; Lilias, Yoga and You 33.
7 :lXI-Truth or Consequence• 3,4; Bowling for Dollars
6; What's My Line' 8; News 10; Let's Make a Deal
13; Jimmy Dean 15; Making It Count 20; Nova 33.
7:30 - Hollywood Squares 3,4; Ohio Lottery 6; Evening
Edition with Marlin Agronsky 20; Wild Kingdom
10; To Tell The Truth 13; American Outdoorsman

38 Subsequently

10

J; I Dream of Jeannie 4; Somerset

IS; Gilligan' s Island 6; Musical Chairs 8, Sesame
Street 20,]3; Movie " Rhubarb" 10; Mike Douglas
13.

37 JOill"IUilist,
James -

1 Expenditure
2 Wolf's look
3 Hit it off
(4 wds.)
4 In the know
5 Mexican
shawl
6 Hoisting
deVice
receiver
7
Military
from
tactic
Jup1ter
8 Fraternize
17 Purplish
wds. )
blue color
19 Townsman ~9~~~""'1':~
20 French

stuff'

11

water

~ : oo-Mr. Cartoon

river

742-4111

system , $7,600 down, bal.
$290 per mo., includ ing

$19,000.00.
CALl 992 -2259

4 NT

by THOMAS JOSEPH

We have hundreds · ot
carpet values _ Your 10b ctul
be completed m 1 to 2
weeks
No l ong wa •ting
per iod Our mslall er has 28
years experience
E xpert
installation
Yo u ' l l like
what you get

land is clean and lays nice ,
2 story frame home, barn
and o ther outbuildings ,

we ll

I

nose and

Square
Yard

$8' 300' 00'
157 ACRES - Near Dexter,

good

D DEAD A

COUPLE: OF WEEKS
AFTER HE WIIOTI&lt; 'THIS !

ut. room ,

good

Pass
Pa ss
Pa ss

JA
...

6'&amp;uau~'Dtr

HE f'ROSABLV VOJL.D

~OSCAR, BUT HE

sh opping, 2 story frame. 3
on

I t

2.

5- 14-1 mo .

yrs old . $16,000.00.
MIDDLEPORT - Close to
located

,3...

Sweeps lakes 3,4, 15;
Spln-Otr 8,1 0, Dinah ' 13; Lilias, Yoga and You 33.
10 · 30-Wheel Of Fortune 3.4.15; Gambit 8,10; Frying
Pans West 33 .
11 .oo-High Rollers 3.4.15, One Life to Live 6; Tot 1/etales B. 10.
11 :30-Hol/ywood Squ"JP!S 3, IS ; Brady Bunch 13;
Midday 4; Love of Life 8, 10.
11 :5,_ Take Kerr 8; Dan Imel 's World 10
12:30-Magnlflcent Marble Machine 3, 15; Showotfs 13;
Bob Braun 's 50-50 Club 4; News 6,18, 10; Mi ster
Rogers 33
12 : 30-Jackpot! 3, 15; All My Children 6, 13 ; Search For
Tomorrow 81 10; E lectr lc Company 33.
12 :S,_NBC News 3,15 .
1:oo-News J ; Ryan 's Hope 6, 13; Phil Donahue 8;
young and the ResllessiO; Not For Women On I~ IS;
VIlla Alegre 33
I : 3~Days Of Our Lives 3.4.15 ; ABC Afternoon
Playbreak . Comedy 6, 13 ; As The World Turns a, 10;
Episode Action 33.
2:QO--Guld lng Light 8, 10 ; Family at War 33.
2:30-Doctors 3,4, IS; Edge ot Night 8, 10,
3:QO--Another World 3,4, 15; General Hospital 6, 13;
Prfce Is Rlght8,10, Lilias , Yoga and You 20; Play
Chess 33.
.
J : ~ne Life To Live 13 ; Lucy Show 6; Match Game
8, 10; Feeling Good 20. Folk Gui tar 33 .

1Do you have a quest1on to r
the .J aco 'Jys? Wnte "Ask the
.Jaco'J ys " ca re ' of th1 S
ne w spaper The most i nteres tmg quest1ons wifJ be
used 1n th1 s col umn and
wnters w11J receiVe copies of
JACOBY MODERN i

nice kitchen, din . area, ut .
room, carpeted, carport, 5

BR, 2 baths.

IO · ~Celebrlty

992 7121

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

Sesame S1reet 33

8:30-Big Valley 6, Popeve 10
B : S~huck White Reports 10.
9 ·QO--A . M. 3; Phil Donahue 4, 15; Muriel Stevens B.
Captain Kangaroo 10; Morning with D J . 13 .
9 :30-/'jot For Women Only 3; Dinah! 6; Galloping

QuestiOn from Mame I held
4 Q tO 6 5 • 3 2 + A K 8 7

Phone 992-5682 or

--

Today 4.
·•
6:45-Mornlng Report 3, Farmt l me 10.
6.5,_News 13
7·QO--Today 3.4,15; A. M America 6,13; CBS News
8. 10.
B:QO--Lassle 6, Captain Kangaroo 8; Schoolles 10;

Our opponents reached lour
spades
w1th no b1ddmg t\Y either
7•
my partner or myself . Should I
have doubled '
0p4?nrng lead - 10 •
Th1s 1s lhe sort of question
_ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ that is impossible to answer
really well because we don't
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
have e nough mformatwn How
· What sorl of free b1d was d1d th e bidding go' Who was on
.
that''" roared North . " Onl y 13 ' lead ?
Alter some b1ddmg sequences
h1gh -ca rd po1nts and there you
wer e way up al the three a double is indicated Alter
others . you should pass if your
level ·
· It turned oul to be very double may Iell declarer how to
eostl y." rephed South " We had play and make the contract We
a game . s lam and rubber suspect th1 s d1d happen afler
wa111ng lo r us and you had lo our correspondent stuck Ill-"
b1d seve n and throw it all double .

Automobile
Transmission
Repair

w ILL do odd robs , paintm g ,
r oofing ,
ha uling
and
mowmg P hon e 992 7409
7 6 12tc

swers 8, School Scene 10, PaHerns tor Living 13 .
6 : 3~olumbus

South

North

Pass
Pass

and

mo

-se· pr-~-c- :r A-NKS - cLEA N- E

Pass
Pass

Garage

LARRY LAVENDER

6. 2,_Farm Report 13 .
6 30-Five Minutes to Live By 4; News 6; Bible An .

Gourmet 8, New Zoo Re vue 13
We st

Pas~

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

THURSDAY , JULY 10 , 1975
6 ()()--Sunrise Seminar 4 , Summer Serr.ester 10 .

Ul&lt;£ A WATC-H 1'5Et.t.ll!

IW~

•

I ·oo- Tomorrow 3.4, News 11

Nur lh-South vulnt'rable

Middleport
5-30-1 mo

Roger Hysell's

FARM and 2 homes, y ea r o~d, GEN ERAL Repa ir . c l ean up
and
hau l ing ,
cut tmg ,
total elec
Double wide
welding,
ca rpentry ,
tra•ler , c o mp l e tP iy c ar
plum bing, e le c masonry
p eted, 3 la r ge bedrooms
and ge n er al remodel 1ng
with l arge c lo!. e t s, a n d 2 full
Cal l Sktl Pool
Phone 992
baths , hom e also has den
5 126
6 17 tfc
l ivin,g r oom , d1 ning room :
and k1tch en wllh plenty of
s torage space
Al l lar ge EXCAV&gt;\ I IN...., , ooze.r , load era.t~d bac khoe wo rk , sep t ic
rooms
Also po nd above
tanks
1n stalle d , . dump
trailer
A l s o , on same
tru cks and lo boys for h1re
p r operty •S a 2 story 7 rm
wi ll hau l ftll dirt , top so il ,
f arm hou s .-.
r eal good
l1m estone and gravel , Ca ll
plum bing , p.
• J of well
B ob or Roger Jeffers , day
water, and n ew t , ,Ja in ted on
p hone, 992 7089 , n rght p hon e
the outside Huge barn and
9Q2 3525 or 99 2 5232
garage , other bu i ld ing s t oo
2 11 tf c
Great grazing and gar d en
-- - -.. - - - - - l and All on 20 acr es for sa l e
Cal l 992 7590 .
CARPET rn stallat•on , $1 25
7 7.6tc
per y ard
Ca ll
R i chard
Wes t . phon e 8&lt;13 2667
7 2-26tp

POMEROY, 0
1;, ACRE - 3 BR , bath,

I

Free Esli males
PH . 992-2550

Blown rnto Walls &amp; AHrcs

ALL

PON'TA~tc.!

Construction
and · Plumbing

Blown
Insulation Services

HJ

AFSWO

VWFRHDN

K~OW

F

FTE

AFT

FTE

WFKR N

DWFRHDN
EWFE. -

HJ
FTE

BFAWO

GEMINI (May 21-J un e 20)
Do n I rehash an old rr r ola !1'lQ
ISSue w 1th a person .n 1ou r
charge today Fo r g •vel"'C% ,•.rll
wm you an all y

CANCER (June 21-July 22) II
_ s ho pp1n g today be care f ul
when •I comes t o nove l
mercha n d•se Ther e s a qood
chance you 11 buy sometn on q
you 11 never use
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) A•,ood
lhe company loday of
who'se goals are not •n
many w1th yours It wol"l
worth th e effort to try and
vmce h1m you re r 1ght

onP
ha r
t be
con -

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sep1. 22)

11 s
to your advantag e to p tay a lillie ha r d - to-ge t t o d ay 1n vou r
dea lm gs Lett hem come to ~ou
for a change
.;

MONTGOMERY -WARD &amp; CO..
(Serving America for lj)() Ye.ars)
Offers_.~n- ~xciting opportunity to operate a business of
. your own _'wit.h a v~r_y sma II iri ;estment. W~_ are in, · tere~ted m a quah!ted Sales oriented person with
prev1ous retail exp'enence to own and operate a catalog
store in Pomeroy, Ohio.
·
I

.

--If-you-are-willing to accept responsibility in return for a
future in your own business, write giving full personal
·
qualifications to:
E. A. Smith, 4-1
1000 S. Monroe Street
Baltimore, Maryland 21232

----

,,
'

.

Theatre 33.
9 . 3~Jean Shepherd's America 20 .
10 ·QO--Petrocelll 3, 4, 15. Barel! a 6, 13, Mannix 8, 10;
· News 20; Fam il y at War 33
11 :QO--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 " Big Rose" a. Movie " Island In the
Sun " 10; Janak ! 33
·
12 3~Wide World Special 6

- - - - -- - - - - - - me tor b1oomg three clubs "
The argument may still be goNOR Tit
mg
on so we w1ll try to answer
•AQJ76
11
lor
you , our readers
• A64
ll
East
had not stuck m his
• 10
b1d . So uth would
two
-heart
• KJ 32
merely have rebid to two clubs
EAST
When he did b1d two hea rts
• K 10
South
was given a choice. He
• 10 3 z
• K o&lt;J ~7 5
co
uld
pass
and maybe never gel
'' ti.l 972
• J 53
to
show
hiS
club su1t or he could
A64
• 10 6
b1d
at
the
three
level.
SOUTH lUI
This
lime
the
pass
would have
.. 3 2
worked
out
better
. because
.8
North
uverb1d jp an unsound
t AK864
se ven Yea r an fld year out the
A AQ97&gt;
b1d w1ll be the tinnmg action

I

ALL-WEATHER
ROOFING

FREE ESTIMATES

ROGER HYSEU'S
GARAGE

MOST OFFENSIVE!

DO:
'
Roofing
Siding
Complete
Home I
Mainlenancf!.

Pome-roy

Ph . 992 -2174

,,
.J

..

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

7 -7-lmo

ASSUI?ANCE THAT I FIND

home~

Does
your
require any of these
services?

Rt.7, Tuppers Plain s,

Q.ELAND
608 E.
REALTY
MAIN

1971 350 CL Honda , Phone 992

) 97~

1

'

61 C

I

Nathan Biggs
Rad•alor Specialist

" AI Caution Loght"

$ELF-

Evenings 742· 4902
.7 -7-1 mo .

Fro m the largest Tru c k or
Bu l ld ozer Radiator to th e
smatlest Hea t er Core

BARGAIN CENTER

G R AVE L Y ~~r~~ t o_r___.;i lh --fc?E ;, oY M I X CO~ ~ ~E-TE
everyt hi ng
7
Lib er t y
d e l 1ve r cd rrqh l to you r
Avenu e a bov e th e Jon es
pro rec t f ast a nd ('asy F ree
Boys , or ca ll 99 / 7 135
estima t es Phon e 992 328·l
7 9 3tp
Goeq l em Rea d y M 1K Co.
-- --M•dd leport Oh• o
6 JO lfc
17 FT Comm odore boat wi t h
40 h p Johnson motor and
0 &amp; D TRE E Tr• m mr n"Q, 20
traile r Ph one 949 2963 aft er
years expe r. en ce In sur ed .
6 p m
f r ee est. ma l e-s Ca ll 992 3057 ,
7 9 4fC
Coo l vtlte
Ph one ( 1l 667
30 l\
BA RN - No r eason a b l e offe r
4 JO tfc
r e fused Ph one 985 -3952 .
7 9 3tp

1

(7

KUHL'S

OF S U6 MA!7CULINE

't'E'AH l'... WELL , 'IOU WANT
...
TO KNOW WHAT KIIJD OF IMAee
A MA'-1 - HATlNcS FEMALE: LII&lt;.E:
YOU PROJECTS TO ME, ~~~ FIWBY1

Ph. 992 -7608

~

!

__

9 :oo-Lucas Tanner 3,4.15; Cannon 8,1 0; Masterpiece

Complication with free bid

'

THAT YOU SM&amp;ODY ALL THE'
WOR~T MACH IGMO TR.AIT'5

Liability I nsurance

EX PER.I.ENCED
I Radlato
Service - -. :.

Guaranteed
appliances
used furniture at
'

YOU KNOW WHAT' -iOUR P&gt;IOT'O
CLE'ARLV 1'-IPICATE'D TO ME 'F

We Carry

' -18-1 mo .

.

Tell The Truth 1.3; Episode Action 33 . .
8:QO--Lit!le House on the Prairie. 3,A,15; That's My
Mama 6 , 13 ; Tony Orlando and Dawn e,10; F""llng
Good 20,33 .
8 . 3~Movle " The Day The Earth ·Moved 6 13 ·
Philadelphia Folk Festival 20 ; Another Look' at '
Appalachia 33

WIN AT BRIDG.E

CAPl' AIN EASY

..

V1nyl ~~ding , aluminum
s 1d1ng , patio covers, storm
w 1ndows. ,
kitchens ,
bathrooms and garage~

I

CASH ' N CARRY
SAVH U S'5on

-

' r N L•
~

For Sale

8 WEEK o l d baby Chicks _ Call
843 29 11 o r 949 38 36
7 3tc

J
"

99277 51

f lJ RN

PUBLIC NOTIC:E
Oids wil l be r ece •ved at t he
.CommrSS10ners Oll •ce . Co urt
Hou se . Po m e.-oy , Oh 10 un td
10 30 a m on Ju l y 15. 197S fo r
a Spr .nk l er System f o r t he
Mc,q s County tn f1rm ar y
· r 1dS are to me tud e 1n
sl alfation , , all materral and
labor
and
to
mee t
si)ect f, ca t.mls ol the State F 1r e
MnrShil ll 's offrce

t~re s,

~

POMEROY, OHIO

5 1 ' t r-

RM
hou se. bath , Ir on!
po r c h . gas h ea r , ul•llly
r oom , references reau1red
Ca ll 9&lt;~9 3658
7 8 4t c

WE_DNESDAY, IUL Y ,, 1975
6:QO--News Js,4,8, 10.1J, 15; ABC News 6; Sesame
Street 20; You Owe II To Yourself 33 .
6·30--NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Bewitched 6;
CBS News 8.10; Jody's Body Show 33 .
. 7 :oo-Truth or ConSequences 3,A, 15; To Be Announced
15; Bowling For Dollars 6 ; What's My Line&gt; a,
News 10; Country Music Jubilee 13; Book Beat 20;
The Romagnolls' Table 33
7·30-Pollce Surgeon 3; Name That Tune 4; Let's
Make A Deal 6 ; Wilburn Brothers 8; Evening
Edltionwtth Martin AQronsky 20; The JudgeiO; To

REMODELING

Phone
992-3313

Al so R epa ~r s On All
R 1d1n9 Tractors
49'8 Locust St .
M•ddleport , Oh 1o
5 9 1 mo

s1195

POM~~~!v ~9,!0R CO.I(J..\

1913 - ll )( 70 rldl c r e$1 Mob1le
H ome. 3 bedroom , total
e l ectric. red shag carpel
throug hout ,
und erptnning
and :&gt;sets o f s t ep s m cl uded
Phone 247 3941
7 9 6tc

3 BEDRM

A NTIQUE SAL E
VA RIE TY of An t1 que s from
c ountry hom e 9 am !n 9
p m
fr om July 9 ' till ')
· one t e nth mile So uth of
Porre r , OhiO on St a t e Rt
16Q
7 9 3tp

power

New pamt

Mobile Homes For Sale

YARD sare- , Bonn te Mil l er
res tdence.
Ma1n
St ,
Rut l and ,
Wed n es day
th r ough F r• day

,pf American League pitching

' rad•o

REMODE L IN G,
P l umb •n g
h ea l 1n g and all type s o l
qc nerar
repa1r
Wo r k
q u ar ant ec d
20 years ex
pertenc e
Phone 991 :&gt;.-t09

On
• Lincoln Hill
Pomeroy and
in Syracuse
Phone 992 -2156
TODAY

J

Milwaukee
000 000 100- 1 9 2
' Kansas City 500 300 Oh - 9 10 o
Travers , Broberg ( t J. Cham
pion (6 ), A ust •n (8 ) and Porter ,
PUBLIC NOTICE
Leonard 15 4) and Hea ly LPTravers (4 2) HR s- Mayberry Sh e rtff 's Sale of Chattel
117th l, Scott (16th)
P.-operty
- R1ta J ea n Taylor, Plarnt•lf
(10 mnings)
vs
u Baltimore 003 000 020 3- 8 10 1 Herman A Taylor, Defendant
"' Calif
200 100 002 o- s 6 3
Palm er , A lexander (9 ), Jack
In
pur s uan ce
to
an
son (10 ) and Hendncks , Ryan, Execu t 10n issued from t h e
,\Scott (10), K1 rkwood (101 and Common Pl eas Court ol Me 1gs
, Rodriguez WP - Aiexander (3 County , Pomeroy , Oh10 , in the
LP- Ryan
(10 -81
HR case of Rita Jean Taylor .
Stanton (9t h l
Herman A'
P ta.nti ff , vs
Taylor , Defendant, bemg case
, ~ cleveland
200 000 300- 3 12 1 No 14,5 10 1n satd Court , 1 w il l
Oakland
400 702 02x - 15 IS 1 o lfer at Pomeroy m sa id
Hood , Beene ( 4) and Ellis . County on the 19th day of July,
....Holtzman , Todd (7) "and Fosse 1975, at 10 00 O'Clock A M .,
- WP - Holtzm an
( 10 7)
L P - th e fo ll owing goo d s · and
11 t'IOOd { 2-5)
HRs Tenace c hattels , to wit
•• J 14th ), W1ll1ams (llth l, Suda ki s
I -- 1970 Honda Mo t orcyc le
{2nd)
Mod e l No C B360 an d Serial
No C 6360 1038338 and al so 1 1969 Oldsmob il e br onze bot
to m b la c k v•ny l top 2 Or
Se dan
Se r ia l
No
oHORfON MOVES UP
3S 45 79M 1947 13
" ' NEW YORK (UP!)
Tak e n as t he property of
.Muscular Willie Horton of the H e rm an A Ta y lo r to sa ti sfy
Execut •on rn favor of Rita
Petroit Tigers went on a blitz an
Jean Tay l or

"')JOints and move into fifth

BE A
..SENTINEL
CARRIER"

N OW se l! .ng Fu ll e-r Bru sh
Products
phone 992 3.:1 10
t 24 ltc

ooo 000 100- 1 6 o

automa ti c,

, 6 cyl , automatic t rans, clean 1nten or , good

US ED
550?

Yard Sale

v a.

l in1sh .

Employment Wanted

SWEE PER
&amp;
Se w1ng
Ma c h tn es Repa . r. Parts ,
and
Suppl1es •
Dav •s
Vac uum Clean er , 1 J m rl e up
Ge-o rg e's Cre ek Rd off Stare
R 1 7 Phon e 446 0?94
7 9 lrc

Los Angel es 001 101 000- J J 1
PittSburgh
000 000 000- 0 &lt;1 2
Sut ton
Marsha ll
(7)
and
Yeager ; Ell is, D emer y (8 ) and
Sanguill en WP - Sutt on (13 8)
L P - EII IS
(6 5)
HR - Wynn
(lAth )

vinyl top, r ed
&amp; brak es

Help Wanted

Notice

N ew York
100 003 000- 4 7 0
A rtan ta
010 100 010
3 54
Koosman , Sander s (9) and
Grote , Morton , Leon (7), Sosa
(9) and Corr ell WP - Koosman
(8 6) LP - Morton (9 91 HRsGarrell {Jrd) , Wil li am s (6t h l,
Gas ton ( 5th J, K 1ngman (15th 1

Bl k

$895

Wanted

THE FAM I LY of the late
E rv1n G
Baumgardner
wo uld Idee 10 thank Ve Tera ns
Memor.a l and Oh •o Stale
Un •v e r sr ty
H os p.ta l,
lr. e nds . n eighbor s wh o we r e
so k 1nd dun ng the Illness
and
death
of
Mr
Ba umgard n e r
Your k.nd
nes s
was
g r ea tly
ap
pr ec.ated
M r s E rv 1n Baumga r dner
an d Fam.ty
7 9 lie

San Fran
100 031 010- 6 15 0
Sl LOUI S
000 OO.t 000- d 9 I
Fa l c on e, M oll•tt (6) , Lave ll e
(81 and Ra der , G 1bson. Ter
l ecky
(6) , Curt •s
(8 )
and
S1mmons WP - Fal cone ( 7 6 )
LP- G1bson ( 2-81. HR - Murcer
I 101h I , F a 1rty (Jrd )

1968 CHEV IMPALA CPE .

Black

YE I LO W and wh ole long
h&lt;~ • red lul!en wilh whole flea
c o ll ar Los t n ea r Beec h Sl ,
19 /J DU S r ER , l)rown metal
M rd d l c port $10 Rf' ward r1
flak e W1lh while s tr •pe Atr
rP i urned P hone 99 7 )&lt;1 16, •f
co ndd ooncd , p 5 ,
p b ,
ry-e answe r cal l 9Y ? 50 16
au•omat 1c
tr ansm•Ss ron ,
LAS H paid tor all ma k es ana
?) 000 mrles
340 mo pa r
t 8 31c
mode l s of mobrl e hom es
e n gone. am l m radi o, g ood
Phon e a r ea c od e 614 &lt;~23
co nd •hon Ca ll 99? 7768 a fter
953 1
5 p m
,1 13 tfc
7 8 6tc
HC'U SEKEEPER
rnust l 1vC
•n f a rm hom e H •nler es t ed .
F"ORO Prckup lr uck, 37.0 00
w r ile t o Mr
Holl re E
miles Phon e 99? 56 17
&lt;;, tar c her
Rl
Aol( JJ ,J
CARPE
N
TRY
WORK
7 6 31p
Por tland . Ohro .rsno
Ceilr n q , pane l tng , lt oo r.ng ,
6 25 12tp
Jljl l ] C HEVR OLE T
I mpala
e t c Ph one 991 2759
.
.
Cus to m , ar r con d AM &amp; F M
6 2·1 Jl t c
B T r ~lck , exce tl enl con d llro n
PAINllNG rr1s 1de and out ,
Ph one 99 ? 748 5
trE- e esl•males Ph on e 99 7
7 7 51c
3? 17
7 J 6tc

WE WI SH to e• pr ess o ur
a pp rcc hJI IOn to lrt e n ds ,
ll l' lg hbors , i.lnd re l at rves tor
the ass rsl an cc a nd k•ndne ss
s hown to
m1..• and my
c hildren fo ll ow rnq th e d eat h
of ou r be loved wr lc and
mo th er , Evelyn Whal.ey
Spec1c1l lhank s qo to the
Rev
C ly de F l'rrell, lhl'
p a llb earers a nd t he Lem l ey
Ouarlcl
t or
t he.r
t rnc
s•nQ•ng We would a l so like
to
lhank the Pomeroy
·Emerq ency Sq uad and the
shenfl' s depa rtm en t God
b le ss al l tll a t h el ped on any
way Thank s aga 1n , H er be rt
Wha le y and 01 ildren
7 9 ltp

Tuesda y's Ba se ball Res ult s
By Umted Pr ess lnternat1ona1
Nattonal League
( 15 mnrng sl
San D iego
000 202 002 000 001- 8 15 ?
Chicago

top

992-3092

7 2 6t c

(A"tWf'n lomorro'"')

Jun•blu

tir es,

1969 CHEVY NOVA4 DR

I ..,, 0 hlrl rk Crl• r n 1 C' l rr cr 5 on
Co k'd ?H Rcw,;rd Phone

'lXIllllT'

SUIIPIIISI ANSW!R here

Viny l roof. grey fln ts h . htgh mi leage. good
&lt;'~utomal!c , power st eer1n g, rad•o. silve r f1n1sh

s t ee r~ng

surtrested by the &amp;bon cartoon.

I Prill

and
Small Appliance
Repair

Sales &amp; Service
$1295

I

I

Pomeroy I
OF
· ~~~~~~~==~.
WILKINSON
Co.
Washer &amp; Dryer
QUALITY
SMALL EN
JOHNSON

1970 NOVA V-8 CPE .

~-~--"~--·-----..__.--- . ~- -_,.....,..._..

I

Business Services

.2

'

Television logior easy viewing .

l·

Sentinel Classifieds

''

._

UBRA (Sept. 23 -0cl. 23) II s

q uest s ol a mater 1a l nal u re
t rom your fnend s It co uld
nrovf'! e mbar a sstng when
'i" Ou re turned down

SCOR PIO (Oct. 24 -Nov: 22)
Un l orl u hate ly yo u c an I base a
me110r c!P c •s• on today on
whether you t read upon
:.omeone s toes F •rst protect
you r o w n 1nteres t s .

SAG ITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc.
21) A c o -work e r today wtll have
n ralh e r sha rp to ngue He can
be wo n over easily 11 you react
t.l c t f•tlly not ang rily

CAPRICORN (De c. 22 -Jon.
19) You II pr o f •! mo r e m I he
long run today •I yo u lh1n k tn
term s a t what s best fo r all con·
cerned r ath er tha n What's m
•1 for mc':l

AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19}
You h,lv(' a 1endenc y today to
1ump •o conc luSIOns Your hast~ nssump t1o ns coul d c reate a
pr oblem

PISCES (Feb 20-March 2Q)
Thr s co n. be a very produCtive
per.o d rt you don I try to bu• ld
Ro rt1e 111 one day M 1s ta kes a re
l• k.ely II you rush yowsell

~Your ·
~ Birthday
July 10. 1975
You r fl nanc•af prospects took
very prom1S 1ng thtS yeac .
prov• ciN1 you d on t spend
money as l ast as '' coriles ti:.
Prudent m an flgement put s ydu
on th e pa th to prosper1 1y

not a goo d day to rnak e r e'•

MIZ SiVI IF ..
I BEEN
COLLECT II\!'
OL' CLOTHES
FER TH'POR!;
FOLKS IN
HOOT IN'
HOLLER

IF I FAlL IN TH IS
MISSION, IT COULD CAUSE
WORLD WAR I TO DRAG
ON FOR 'fEARS ..

AI\! '- -

""' Ill~
-·····-.l.,...,
\joo-..go,..............
••

..

~

I

-

�•

...

·-'
::

4

'

14- The Daily Sentinel, M1ddleport-Pon~y, 0., Wedn~sday. July 9,ol975

C'OLUMBUS - The Ohiu
~. Department of Mental Health
and Mental Retardation has
:, approved tnc(eases on fede ral
;:: and state fundm g totallin g
• approximately $197,000 for
.;
., the · constructwn of a com.... mWlity me ntal health center
" to serve Gallia, Ja ckson and
:::. Meigs Counties . The appr oval
~ was announced Monrl ay bv
the department 's director.

Acc ording to Dr . Montz.
plans fur the cen ter. to be
located near the jwJcliOil of
U S Houle 35 and Sta te
Houl e 160. have been fw·tticr
devrloped s tnce th e 1n1t1a l

planmng of funds for it.
To tal cos t of the cen te r

1s

now csttmatcd at $1. 145,400.
f"ecler a l

fundmg ha s been.-

In c t cased by $185 ,940, to
Stale fundm g has
been Increased by $1,880, to
$7 0, 5911. Th e rematn mg
$70.590 is fr om local Funds

~I ,004,220

;, Otarles St.
Oair is dead
Charles Avery St. Clair, 56,
Rt. 2, Pomeroy passed away
· Tuesday nigh t at his
residence. Mr. St Clai r wa s
preceded in death by hi s
father, Johh. He is survived
by his wife , Ola St Clair ; four
· children, Carolyn Wil son,
Corning; Gail St Cla ir ,
Pomeroy ; Janel Picken s,
'. Syracuse ; Nancy Burn s.
Savannah, Georg ia ; her
· mother , Mae Br yso n St .
· Clair; four grandchildren .
·: three sisters, Pauline Kohl,
:. New York , New York ,
; Bernice Saxton , Pomeroy;
·: Ida Mae Clark, Pomeroy .
; Mr. St. Clair was a long
: time employee of the
: Pomeroy Cement Block
• Company and a veteran of
: World War 2, serving m the
: European Campaign.
~ Funeral services will be
~ held Friday at 2 p.m. at the
: Ewing Chapel with burial to
: follow in the Wells Cemetery.
: Friends may call any time
: after 7 p .m . tonight.

MEIGS THEATRE
TON ITE &amp; THURSDAY
NOT OPEN
AIR PORT 1975
( Technicolor)
Based on the novel

" Rated PG"

Show starts at 7:oop.m.
-

L

"···~

MASON DRIVE-IN
"

t

t

,',

'

I

" ( ,, t.,,,, Ni(Jhll)

TONIGHT
Double Fea1ure

"CAPONE 11
'Ra1ed R'

1s

the Gallia Cowtty Board of
Co unty Commtssw ners. w1th
J oh n son
as

Clarence
president

Acc ordin g tu Dr

the

ce nt er

Will

e m e r ge n cy

Moritz ,
pr ov id e

treatm e nt ,

ConstructiOn IS expected to
beg in thts fall, with completion by fall, 1976. The
awardm g of the addtltona l
funds to the county board is
st ill subject to the approval of
!he sta te controlling board.

"'

Plus
"ZAROOZ''
'R&lt;tted R'

IRONTON - The Hun l1n~ton He rald Di s patch
repor ted today Lawrence and
, Calh a counties could be the
sttes of a mul tt-mtlli on doll ar
exploration proJect If it is

lures 111 shale beds similar to approved The exact sites of
natural fr actures drtlled m · the wells would be se lected
normal exploratiOn projects, a fter the project 's approval,
accordw g to a company he added .
spokesman.
The $8.5 million three-year
T I. Ryan , publi c relali on s
proJec t ha s been outlined to a
dtreclor of Co lumbia Gas U. S. House subcommittee on

0:1ppruved by the
Power Cummtsswn

Transnussion Co rp .,
in
Char les ton, W. Va, sa id the

expe nm enta l n at ur a l ga s
F'edera l
'-

Columbus Gas Trans- prOject.,would be the " first
mtsswn Corp . pla ns to dnll 10 t1me 1111 the U.S. 1 that wells
tesl wells 111 the two counlies will be drill ed 111 unfrac tured
at a cos t of $1,540,000 a shal e form atiOns to induce
c ompan y spokesman said
rrac tw- es."
Plans als o ca ll fo r dnlhng
Ryan sa id he could not
20 wells 111 Trumb le and es hmate the number of jobs
Mahonm g coun ties m Ohw at

mvulved

a cost of $1 ,960,000: 10 wells in
Roane and Ja cks on couln tes
In We. . Vtrgmta at a cost of
$1 ,920,000 and 10 wells tn
Buchanan County , Va. at a
cost of $2,080,000
The pr oject will test
me th ods of mducmg fra c·

County proJect until after II is

the

Lawrence

Park

(Continued from page I )
possibly making a portion of
College Road a one-way
street traveling east from the
Dick Harris residen ce to the
Orville Crooks residence .
Council wolild like to have the
PAPERS FILED
opinion of residents on this.
Articles
of mcorporation
Attending were Mayor
London, Troy Zwilhng, Eber ha~e been filed in Columbus
Pickens , Robert Wingett, and with Secretary of State Ted
Bary
McCoy,
council W. Brown by Bradbury
members ; Chief of Police ChW'ch of Chnst, by Robert
Milt on Varian , Hubbard, V. King, Wilbur Hanning and
Naomi London, Patty'ltpush, : 'Ernest Vanlnwagen. Agent is
secretary for the mayor ; Robert V. King , Rt. I, MidRichard Duckworth , and dleport. They were filed by
Robert E . Buck, attorney.
Kathryn Crow, Clerk .

l!YORANT!!II)FF
Mayor Herman London
announced today that from
Bridgeman St. goingap river
to the corporation limits fire
hydrants will be flushed all
day Friday. Water going into
homes in the area may be
muddy m color but it will only
be a temporary si tuation .
SWIM STARTS
Sw immih g lesson s will
begin July 21 at Middleport
Pool for all ages. Eaeh class
will have 15 persons, and
there .)~ill be adult lessons if
there are enough people
interested. Jimmy Brewer is

"'

~eceived

instructor .

P-------~··.---------~

Chapman's Summer

Big Shipment

Clearance Sale!

.

·NEW 1976

-------------------------OVER 100 PAIRS

TENNIS
SHOES
'

TELEVISION

'

1h

PRICE

'

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

. S'
LADI E

I

SHOES

I

Dress &amp; Sandals
·Miss AmeriCa
Connies

·-

Save s100 to s150

'

I
I
I

f
I
I

I
I
I
I
I

Reg.
to
$19 .99

ONE GROUP
LADIES'

SHOES
Dress &amp; Sanda Is
White &amp; Colors
Reg. to $1.9.99

2

$10

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

ON. ALL CONSOLE MODELS

;

NOW

Children's- Ladies'- Men's

· Big Closeout On All '75 Models .

.'

· Meanwhile , the gas company early last week began
an expenmental three-well
project in Mingo County, W.
Va .. to test the applica ti on of
massive hydrau)tc fracturmg
in Appala c hian s ha le, a
c ompany spokes m an

both exc hanges beca use the
e xi sting
fac ili ties
a re
reachmg ca pacity an d cann ot
be econom ically expanded .
Both
e xc hanges
will
receive new e quipment ,
known as "CXP-5" which
features
''crosspo in t-' '
s wt tchmg
and
pr oves
" c o mm o n

CLOSEOUT

Children's Shoes
--------------~----------

, INGELS

reported .
The
fede r al
E nergy
Research and Development
Adminis tration will share the
cost and operation or the $4 .2
million 30-month projec t.
Ryan satd the difference
between the two projects is
that " the 5o-well program
will test different methods of
simlilating natural fractures,
while th e Mingo County
program will try to ex tend
fractures that alrea dy ex1st."
Ryan said sites of tes t wells
111
Mingo Cou nty will
pr obabl y be se lec ted 111
September .

James

(Continued from page I)

is easier to mamtain than the

Tuesday he wolild propose large tax cuts for corporations and
investors m an effort to stimulate capital investment. Almost
everyone in Congress agrees industry must be s~pplied ~th
sufficient investment funds to expand and moderruze. But w1th
a presidential election year coming up, it appears unlikely
Congress would pass big new corporate tax breaks.

exi s tmg facthlles, he said.
Th e CXP-5 switching system
··WASJITNGTON - SECRETARY OF STATE Henry A.
was jus t recently develop ed.
It has been in production only Kissinger prepared to leave today for Europe, where he in tends to discuss the Middle East with Soviet Foreign Minister
a coup le of years .
Krinn noted the combmed Andrei Gromyko and Israeli Prime Minister Yitshak Rabin.
cost of the new equipment Kissinger goes first to Paris to discuss efforts to convene a
conference of oil consuming and producing nations.
ms talla tion is $382,100.
Cons !ruction of new 40-X-40
fo ot mas onry buildings
recently was completed in
COURSES OFFERED
both communities to house
Don Stivers, manager of
(Continued from page I )
the new switchmg systems.
the Middleport Pool, anGoldwater's 1964 campaign.
The CXP-5 is readily
nounced today persons
T h e conservative backadaptable to new services in
Interested In taking junior groWlds of most of these were
the future, such as push
and senior life saving are to
abnost Certain to be used to
buttons instead of dials,
register at the pool appeal to the Reagan wing of
said Krinn . Such services will
Saturday or Sunday .
the party. Their Pentagon
be offered when market
The cost Is $8 plus text orientation pointed to another
studies indicate they are
book. Classes In senior !He development that White
economically feasible.
House aides say has helped
saving will begin ~~tonday
Both
exchanges
now
for a two week period
push Ford up in the polls -his
use relay 1electro-magnetic)
followed by the junior
handling of the incident indevices to make phone
class.
volving the Mayaguez, the
connectiOns.
He also reported that
American ship seized by the
The Racme exchange
~ours for night swimming
Cambodiaps in May.
serves 675 customers in a 42UPI learned through
on Tuesday and Thursday
s quare-mile-area,
and
evening have been changed · sources close to Reagan that
Rutland has 743 users in a 86from 7 to 9 to 8 to 10.
the
former
California
square-mile-area Both are in
...·.·.·,·,·.·.·.·.·, .·.·.. ..·.·.·,·.·.·.·.·.....·.·.·.·.·.-.·.·,·.·. governor has discussed the
Metgs county.
........·.·.·.·.·.-.·.·.·.·.-.·.·.·.·.·.-.·.·,·.-.-.·.·.-.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·. idea of establishing a cam:rhe two exchanges were
UNIT CALLED
. paign conunitttee and has
acqwred by General of Ohio
The Middleport E-R squad neither encouraged nor
ml946. Racine was converted was called at 12:55 a .m. today discouraged the move. Aides
to dial operation in 1952 and
to assist Cap Caldwell , said, however, Reagan has
Rutland was switched in 1956. Hobson Road.
not decided whether to run .

Holzer Medical Center
I Discharges, July 81
Clar a
Adam s,
Ora
Brumfield, Leah Carpenter,
Patncta Cerbes, Cheryl
Clark, Wtlham H. Clark,
Robert
Conk le,
Lizzie
Davidson ,

The fe lony c harged to 1973.
She is sur,;fved by her
Charles Tyree , Jr .· feloni ous assalilt - colild mother , Marie Dudding,
cha nge,
according
to Middleport ; and her father,
Prosecutng Attorney Ber .... John Dudding, of Sam Mateo,
nard Fultz, smce the deaijl of Fla.; four brothers, John
Ruby Jarvis Tuesday mor - Dudding, Jr ., Racine; Gene
ning .
Dudding , Elyria ; Bob J .
Tyree was sentenced to 2-15 Dudding, San An'"i'Onio, Texas,
)'ears for felonious assault and Roger Leffingwell,
following the Jun e 19 shooting Columbus; three sisters,
m Middleport in which Mrs . Doris Roof, Colull)bus,
Jarvis was fatally wounded . Shirley Herman, Middleport,
However, Fultz said that a nd
Juanita
Thoma s,
under the circumstances of Columbus.
the mctdenl I it occ urred
Funeral services will be
during an argument) the held ThJJI'sd.ay at I p.m . at
ultimate sentence wolild not Leslie Henderson Funeral
be changed anyway .
Home in Olive Hill, Ky., with
A deci sion will be made the Rev. Noel Herman of
later this week .
Midd lep o rt , officiating.
Ruby
E ll en
Dudding Burial will be in Ohve Hill .
Jarvis , Middleport, was born Friends may call at the
Feb. 20, 1934 . She wa s funeral home today from 2 to
preced~ in death by · her 10 p.m.
husband, Wilham F. Jarvis in

News •. in Briefs

capabthty.
As s uch , usc 111 ot her
locali l.ilfs ha s shown It
operates more efficiently and

control''

Ford

DWlcao ,

Ida Durkee, Cecilia Fife,
J ohn Gills, Mrs. Richard Hall
and infant so n, Rt chard
Hampton, Wilham Franklin
Hughes , Mollie John son,
Mary
Kemper,
Henry
McKinney, Emogene Norton,
Hubert Pullins, Mary Riley ,
Nellie Sayre, Anna Scaggs,
Mary Smtih, Virginia Smtih ,
James Strawser, Harriett
Th oma s , Bonni e Tribby,
Martm We1ll, Bonnie White,
Frank Wood s, Dame! Workman .

1Births)
Mr . and Mrs . Wtlford
Gilli land ,
a
daughter,
Ja ckon.

EXTENDED FORECAST
Friday through Sunday,
~hance of showers Friday,
fair Saturday and Sunday.
Highs will be in the 70s or
lower 80s. Lows will be in
the 50s or the lower 60s.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Mason Area
News Notes

BLUE DENIM

WESTERN JEANS
Regular Price 1229 and ll~
Special
Sale

CARY GRANT, DIRECTOR
CULVER CITY, Calif.
· (UPI) - Cary Grant was
e lected to the board of
directors of Metro- Goldwyn Mayer ·Tuesday. Grant, 71,
retired from moviemaking
for almost 10 years, has for
many years been a top
executive of a men ' s
toiletries firm and ,guided the
corporation into some-movie
producing ventures.

'

.

.\ 4

$

88

A big selection Lee
quality
d.enim
jeans . &lt;;hoose the
straight h:ig style the flare leg style boot cut or the new
flares in cotton
polyester
blends.

'

An excellent selection of
sizes from 29 to 46 waist.

Dress Shoes

FU.
RNITURE
.
.

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

Chaptnan.'s Shoes

PH. 992-2635
MIODLEPORl',
10

MAIN ST.

POMEROY

. TWO HONORED
Two . area students have
been named to the dean's list
at Capital University for the
second semester. They were
Edith A. Mees, 410 Lincoln
Hill, Pomeroy , and Glenna
' M. Sprague, 780 High Street,
Middleport.
•

Shop ThursdaJ 9;30 to 5:00

•

Open Friday and Saturday 9:30 to 8:00 PM

Elberfelds In Po·meroy
'

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1

{

- ,.,

'\

•

Athenian zs new
•
•
conservatzonzst
Boyd A. Ruth is the new
Distric t
Co nservattoni s t
succeeding Dave Parry for
the local Sot! Consetvation
Service , U.S. De pt of
Agriculture .
Ruth will work through the
Meigs Soil and Water Conservation Dis trict whi ch IS
headquartered in Pomeroy .
He will provide assistance
re latmg to soil , water and
plant resour ces to la.ndowners 111 Meigs County.
Ruth brin gs with him experience ga ined 111 five Ohio

coun ties over the past four
)'ears He has been a sot!
co nserva li omst for the Soil
Conservati on Se rvice a t the
Newa rk .
Ca mbrid ge.
Ca ldwell.
Toledo,
and
Columbus, Ohio field offi ces.
Prwr to his employme nt
with the S.C.S., Ruth took a
Bachelor of Science deg ree m
ag ronomy from the Ohto
Sta te Umversily.
He is a native of Athens
Coun ty, where he was rai sed
on a dairy farm . Ruth , and
hts wife Judy , will reside on
RD 3.

'

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Weather
Showers likely today,
tomg ht. Lows tomght in the
lower 60s. Cloudy Friday,
htghs m the 70s . Probabthty
of preci pitatiOn Is 60 per cent
today and lomgM, 20 per ce nt
Fnday .
LOCAL TEMPS
Tempera iW'e 111 downtown
Pomeroy Thursday alll a .m.
was 78 degrees und er cloudy
skies.

"In summary the Ohio
econQmy is slowly recoveoing
from the _worst recession to
Ohio since the 1930's," the
report said. "The recovery
wiU be painfully slow with the
un emp loym e n t
rat e
remaining above 7 per cent in
1975.
"Inflationary
pressures,
which hav e abate d , will
rema in weak ·tor the rest of
1975," sa1d the report.
"Among Ohio's citJtes,
Columbus has been the least
affected beca use of its
lar ge ly r ecess 1on -proof
economy," said the report.
"The worst affected areas
have been Toledo, because of
the cutback in automobile
production, and Youngstown
and Warren , due to the
decline in steel production."

;:;.;:'=·:;:;:·.·.·:;.;:·.·.··:·:·:···· :·:·:·:·:·· :·:·:·:···:·:·:·: :·.. ·::: ; :.;.;.;:; . ;.;.;. ;:;: ; :;.;.; : ;: ;:~;:;:· :;:;:;:;.;:;:;:;::i::: :::::::: :;:;:;~~
'•'

T:

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Astronauts·
get checkups
....
before joirit space jump

.·:

.·.·.

...•
::~

.::::·
...

;:;

.·:
CAPE CA-NAVERAL, Fla. (UP!) -Three U. S.
::: astronauts got their last major pre-Right medical
::: checkuP" today and· tile commander of the Russian
:: space crew reported that everything was oa schedule
at the Soviet launch site.
·
Brig . Gen . Thomas P. Stafford, the commander of
':; the Apollo crew, talked by telephone to Col. Alexei A.
. . Leonov 9,570 miles away afte~ the three Americans
completed head to toe physicals at the Johnson Space
:· Center In Houston . .
...
Leonov reported that the Russian launch crews at
the Balkonur Cosmodrome In Central Asia worked on
··· the rocket and Soyuz spacecraft Wedaesday. Leonov
~:: and Valeri N. Kubasov were to get their big medical
,,. examinations today also but there bas beeo 110 word on
·. whether the tests were completed.
:::

::::
.... :..;·:.:.;. ' :...: :.; :-:.:.:-:-:.;.;. ;.;.:.;'.·:.:...;. ....-: . :·;.....·. :·:- :- ..:·: . : :. :·:::.:':::::·:.;.;:;:;.;-:·

.;.::: :.:-:.: ;. :.:

enttne
VOL. XXVII

NO. 61

Devoted To Th~ Interests of The Meig.~·Ma.~otl Are;1
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
THUR SDAY, JULY 10, 1975

in
Blue Shield charged t
fixing doctor's fees

PRICE 15'

1

.ili., . ~::;,:· ; ·: :·; : · : ~~~~·,·:::;., . ,. ,. ,\!

arms to Turkey asked

··

=··:

WASHINGTON !UPI) -A top State Departmeat
oHJclal today asked Coagress to partially. !Ht Ita
military a·rms embargo against Turkey because the
"" ban weakens American lnflueace, tbreateno NATO,
,.,. and lessens chaaces of a settlement of the Cypfus
:::: situation.
~
Acting
with
unusual
speed,
the House IDteraatlonal
:::
... Relations Committee llegaa bearings on President
:.:: Ford's request, made Wednesday, for. Immediate
,::. release of $184 million of military equipment already
;::: purchased by Turkey aad permit future mWtary sales
.,.. to that country.
_,
:-:·
;:::

•
By United Press International
WASHINGTON VICE PRESIDENT NELSON
Rockefeller says it was his idea that President Ford should run
an independent campaign and not select a running mate until
after securing the nomination at the 1976 Republican convention . Rockefeller told reporters Wednesday he was not
dismayed at statements by Ford's campaign manager that the
President would not rWl a Ford-Rockefeller campaign,
because that is what he had recommended all along .
"It's my strategy," Rockefeller said. "That's what I've
been telling him (Ford) . That's what I've been sa)'lllg for s1x
months."
.
Rockefeller talked with newsmen after returning from
Atlanta where he presided over a day-lon g meeting of the
National Commission on Water Quality and met privately with
Republican leaders. "Lets be frank about it, the important
thing is to get President Ford .nominated, hopefully
Wlanimously, at the convention," Rockefeller said. " Then,
following the historical pattern, he picks a running mate. Not
before."

KAMPALA, UGANDA - UGANDAN PRESIDENT ldi
Alliin today dramatically freed an imprisoned British lecturer
and said he wanted to strengthen ties with the country's former colonial ruler. Amin freed Dennis Hills, 61, durmg. talks
with British Foreign . Secretary James &lt;;:aUaghan at tbe
Kampala State House. Hills was sentenced to death for calling
Amin "a village tyrant" in an unpublished manuscript .
"I have kept my word to release Mr. Hills," Amin said.
"This proves! am not mad as British newspapers said." In the
three months since Hills was jailed Amin demanded and got an
apology from Queen Elizabeth II, demanded that Callaghan fly
to Uganda, accused Britain of preparing to invade Uganda and
threatened to jail 700 British residents as "spies."
BEIRUT, LEBANON - LEBANESE AUTHORITIES
expressed "grave fears" tod/!Y for the life of a kidnaped
American colonel held by Palestinian guerrillas in defiance of
commando leader Vasser arafat.
Arafat's Palestine Liberation Organization accused two
splinter guerrilla groups Wednesday of refusing orders to
release 43-year.ald Col. Ernest Morgan. The harshly worded
statement identified the kidnaper.s as the Poplilar Struggle
Front and the Poplilar Front for the Liberation of PalestineGeneral Command .
r;
The PW said talks "reached a deadlo~k because of the
intransignece of the' kidnapers" -members of lhe breakaway
"rejeCtion front" of guerrilla groups.

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Blue G~l William J . Brown .
Shield Inc. has been charged
The suit named as defenviolating state and federal dants t~Jj! Ohio State Medical
antitrust laws by conspiring Association and its wholly
With the Ohio State Medical owned subsidiary Ohio
Association to fix doctor fees - Medical Indemnity Inc .,
in 83 Ohio counties.
which Brown said has exAn anti-trust suit was filed clusive rights to promote and
m U.S. District Court here sell Blue Shield insurance
Wednesday against Blue plans in all but five Ohio
Shield by Ohio Attorney counties.
OSMA has 10,500 physician
members and is the dominant
trade organization for physicians in Ohio. OM! is the
largest underwriter of doctor
insurance in Ohio with 1973
Work night will be Jlily 24 sales totaling about $118 milfor the Uons Club to prepare lion .
for the club's annual Hole-In'
'
" The
reason for this
law
One Contest Jlily 28-Aug . 2, it swt is very simple," Brown
wa s decided at the regular said. "I believe it is ·against
meeting Wednesday at noon the law for the doctors to own
at the Meigs Inn . Gordon the dominant company that
Teaford was m charge.
says how much Blue Shield
The club also decided to will pay for their serViceS.
buy more flags to rent to
" Health care in Ohio is a $5
merchants in the area yearly. billion
industry
with
There are now 69 flags bem g physician fees rising at a rate
displayed Proceeds go to the of 13.5 per cent each year.
Lwns ' Sight program . In This lawsuit is aimed at
lighter matters, the club held curbing the skyrocketing cost
a '·roast -session' ' honormg of doctor care in Ohio by
retirin g
president
Lou opening the insurance field to
Osborne.

Lions called
to work night

competition. ''

services at will .
Brown alleged the defen- · Brown also alleged that
dants attempted to raise the OSMA 's ownership of Ohio
cost of physician services and Medical Indemnity reslilts in
restrict competition in the an attempt to monopohze the
sale of health insurance in health insurance industry in
Ohw . He charged that 83 Ohio counties and prevent
OSMA 's 100 per cent open competition among the
ownership and control of OM! insurers .
allows OSMA to raise and
Blue Shield plans are sold
stabi11ze fees for physiCians m Cuyahoga, Lake, Lorain,
As htabula and Geauga
counties by Medical Mutual
of.Cleveland Inc. which is not
involved in the action taken
Wednesday .
The attorney general asked
the federal court to declare
Pomeroy
police
in- that the Ohio State Medical
vestigated a twa&lt;ar accident Association and Ohio Medical
Wednesday at 11:15 am . on Indemnity have engaged in
West Main St.
price fixing of physician fees
Cha rl es 0 . Lisle , 53 , and permanently enjoin them
Syracuse, traveling wes t, from any anti-competitive
wa s stopped in line of traffic activity.
when a car dr..iven by Patricia
He also asked the court to
Barton, 30, Rt. 3, Pomeroy , order OSMA to divest itself of
who failed to see Lisle 's control of OMI to allow a
vehicle, s truck .it in the rear . competitive market; and to
Barton was Cited to court enjoin the defendants from
for failing t o keep assured attempting to use illegal
clear dis tan ce. There was activities to prohibit other
heavy damage to the Barton insurance companies from
car and moderate to the Usle developing any doctor insurvehicle.
ance plans for sale in Ohio .

Autos collide

on West

Mam

::~:
::: . ·::·:-: :-::::::··:-:::::·:·:·:::::::::. :;::·:: ·::;:;:::.:;:·::::;·::::::;:::::::::::::·««:;::·.:::::::;:-:-:::::::·:.:;:::::::::;:::;:::;::!:'

EXTENDED FORECAST
Saturday
through
Monday, fair Saturday and
Sunday, with a chance of
showers Monday. Hlgh.l!
wl11 be In the 70s or lower
80s and overnight lows will
be In the 50s or lower 60s .

Parks to
stay open

COLUMBUS (UP!) - State
Natural Resources Director
Robert W. Teater says his
department is opposed to
eliminating or reducing state
recreatwnal fees for any
special groups, such as senior
citizens, but promises not to
close any parks to save
money.
"We understand the pressures on you legislators for
free hunting and fishing
licenses for persons over 65,
or reduced greens fees at golf
courses in state parks ,"
Teater told the Senate
Energy and Environment
Committee Wednesday at its
one day in 1922 and someone kept it in safe keeping smce. gown someday , preferably to hearing on confirming hts
cut off one of the ties. She has
Roney plans to sell the a state h1stoncal society.
appointment as director .
" But we must oppose any
reduction in fees for special
groups. We feel our parks are
a bargain for anybody . You
can hunt and fish for what it
I
costs to get you there and
I'
sustain yourself. And golfers
already have(' inves ted a lot of
money in equipment, so they
can afford the fees ."
'!'eater said despite an 18
per cent reduction in his
agency's budget from the last
bienniwn, and reduction or
200 e mployes from last
swruner, the department will
be able to operate.
" It will place a dire hardship on us, and services to the.
publi~ will suffet," he said.
,,
.f ,.
Teater told Sen. Harry
Meshel, D-Youngstown , a·
committee member, the state
'
parks will stay open.
" You aren't going to close
·~ .
any of the parks, are you?"
Meshel chided Teater,
recalling that former Gov. ·
John .}. Gilligan received a
heavy barrage of adverse
pubhcity when he closed the
' '
parks as an austerity
measure in late swrimer of
1971.
"We will not close any
parks," Teater laughed. "We
may ask you to come help
pick up the trash , but we
won 't close the parks. We
learned this lesson three
times over the years -&lt;lon't
'
MRS. ANNIE P. RONEY
gave a child's robe believe&lt;!. to have been·' worn by Abraham
mess with the park~ . Even
Lincoln when he was a child to her son, H. C. Roney, on the' occasion of her 90th"birthday.
oe Qru.e who don 't go to them
Mrs. Roney.has had the robe in safe keeping for the pasl53 years.
, (Continued on page 10):

On·e of little Abe Lincoln's robes
•1
owned by New Haven 's Roney fiamz y
By Jo Ellen Diehl
NEW HAVEN , W. Va .
Not every son receives a gift
on his mother's birthday,
especially not like the one H.
C. Roney, Ne w Haven ,
received.
Robes
that
Abraham Uncoln wore as a
c hild aren't easy to come by.
The extra long gow n which
was the fashion in the 1800s
and early 1900s has been
handed down in the family ,
and Mrs Roney decided to
give 11 to her son on the occasion of her 90t~ birthday.
The gown came into the
family 's hands when Mrs.
Roney's aunt, Carolyn Edwards, was travelling on
board a s hip with her
husband, Donald Edwards,
who was captain of the ship.
There they met a couple by
the name of Baker, he 'being
an ambassador to a South
American country . Mrs .
Edwards was expecting a
child at the time, and Mrs.
Baker gave her the robe,
saying sh~ had received it
fr om a 1rierid who had ta~en
care of Lincoln when he was a
c hild .
Mrs . Edwards gave the
robe to Mrs. Roney's mother,
Mrs. William . F . Randolph ,
who in turn g,a ve it to Mrs .
Roney
.
The gown itself is shortsleeves, made of cotton, with
lace completel y down its
fr on t an d ties in the back.

•

H owever,
Mrs .
R oney
a ll owed her d a ug hler t o
display !he guwn at ' schunl

'

'

trast to the double digit inflation rates of 1974, a 6 to 7
per cent inflation rate is
expected by the end of 1975,"
said the report.

•

•

'

slow, steady and modest ."
said the report. " It will occur
earlier in the consume r
sector than in the production
of capital goods. There are
signs that th\ demand for
co nsum er · durable s and
housing IS picking up, and
that the recovery of the
automobile sales, as slow as
11 is, has beg un ."
The report said capital
- goo ds ' product ion in the
Buckeye state, "a vital
component of the state's
economy ," is soft while
"steel production continues a
decline that began in March,
r e fle c ting inv e ntory
reductions by users.
. " Inflationary pressures
have eased in Ohio as they
have let up elsewhere," the
report said. "In sharp con-

·.·.·.

SANTA MONICA, CALIF. - "I made a mistake," said
Cher moving to divorce her second husband only 12 days after
divo;cjng the first. The svelte singer arid television star, 29,
Wednesday announced the end of her mar~iage to rock star
Greg Allman, 27. The announcement came llll1C days af\er the
wedding, and the marriage apparently lasted five days.
Wearing a broad-brimmed straw hat and a deep
decolletage blouse, she appeared Tuesday to file a divorce
petition in the, sa\ne courtroom where she was formall y
divorced June ~0 from Sonny Bono, her husband of 10 years
(Continued on page 10)

-- ~

BOYD A. RUTH

'

One Gro'\lp jfadies'

·'

,.

COLUMBUS (UP!) - ·The
Ohio economy is . "slowly
recovering from the worst
recessiOn to hit Ohio since ihe
1930's"' but the recovery in
.1975 and !976 will be "slow,
steady and modest," said a
report by Ohio's largest bank
holding company which was
released today.
The report by BancOhio
Corp., was prepared by its
subsidiary , Midwe s t
Econometrics, Inc.
"There are enough positive
signs indicating that the
worst of the 1975 U ..S.
rece ssion has passed, and
that1 a steady but slow
economic recovery is occurring in the nat10n and
Ohio," the report said.
"The economic recovery in
Ohio in 1975 and 1976 will be

MONTGOMERY, ALA. - - ALABAMA GOV. George
Wallace's presidential compaign has raised $1.6 million this
year - the the first presidential primary is still nine months
away. Alton Dauphin, the campaign's financial director,
released figures Wednesday showing the campaign raised $1.3
million between March I and June 30 of this year, while
__... "
spending $858,892.
That raised total receipts since Jan. I, 1973, to $4.3 million,
far more than any other candidate has raised . The campaign
has $726,522 in the bank now. Dauphin, Wallace's brother-inlaw as well as financial director, said the campaign had no
Wlpaid bills as of June 30. He said fund..-aising was "going
tremendously right now," spurred by Wallace's statement he
intends to seek the Democratic nomination.

c

.. '

\

- - -j

WASJITNGTON - PRESIDENT FORD has a set of
proposals on how to reform federal regulations of American
business. He planned to explain them to representatives of
major regulatory agencies today. The President later in the
day was meeting with 100 of the nation 's mayors on problems
of federal revenue sharing.
The President has set a goal of reducing federal regulation
and cutting bureaucratic r~d tape. He says curr~ulatory
practices cost consumers "millions and millions of dollars"
and has damaged industry and the economy, according to a
White House aide.

July Clearance Sale

Mr. and Mrs. Sherman
Ford and their daughter and
family , Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Dav
and
sons
of
Pickerington, Ohio spent two
weeks vacation at Pensacola
Beach, Florida .
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley
Saunders and children of
Columbus and .her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis McDaniel of Mason, spent
several days vacationing in
Florida . While ' there they
visited Mr. and Mrs. James
Rhoden and sons, Mr. and
Mrs . Max Ward, Mrs.
Claudia K~rton, all at
Boynton Beacn. Highlights of
their trip was a visit to Lion
Safari, Disney World and in
Georgia, a visit to Rock City.
Mrs. James Loyd and sons
of Nashport, Ohio visited over
the weekend with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Curtis
McDaniel.

I'

Victim of assault dies

New calkswitch systems
•
•
gomgm Racine, Rutland

LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature in downtown
Pomeroy Wednesday at II
a .m. ' was 78 degrees under
cloudy skies.

Ingels Just

1n

conservation, ene r gy and
na tura l
r esour ces,
the
sp okesman sa1d

HOSPITAL NEWS

INFANT DIES
Corey Patrick Cummins,
Infan t son of Ja ckie and
Vtckie Brown Cummins,
R11cin e,
passed
away
Tuesday eve ning at th e
Holze r Medical Cente r
Surviving are the parents,
maternal grandparents, Mr .
and Mrs. Vtclor Brown,
Mme~vtlle, an d pa ternal
grandpar ents , Mr . and Mrs
Floyd Cummins, Racine : one
brother;' Todd ; one sister,
Mtssi e, bolh !l[ home, and
several auntS and uncles.
Private graveside riles will
be held with the Ewmg
Funeral Home m charg e.

.
'

Eight draw
court fines

se rvtces. consu ltatio n an d
e duca twn, and a ft e rc a re .

.

.

Installation Is und er way on
the esl&lt;!blishment or new ca llsw ttchm g systems fur the
Ra c ine and Rutl an d e xchan ges , General Telephone
Co. of Ohio announced today .
Ke nley R. Knnn, Athen s
Eight persons were fin ed custom er service mana ge r,
and tw o others forfeit ed sa td a complete changeout of
bonds 111 Middleport Mayor 's eqwpmenl IS necessar y in
court Tuesday night With
Mayor
Fred
Hoffman
prestding .
Fmed were Charles R.
F erguson , 18, Bellefontaine, Veterans Memorial Hospital
petty theft , $40 and costs;
ADMISSIONS - Marjorie
John W. Roush , 21 , Mid- Gtbbs, New Haven : Peggy
dleport, petty theft, $40 and Bum ga rdner,
Mason ;
costs ; Willard D. Mohler, 53, Sherdin Pierce, Long BotPhney Plat , Tenn ., DWI, $150 tom:
James
Wilson ,
and costs: Dennis C. Butcher, P ome r oy; Har old Ntce,
22, Cheshire, speeding, $20 Pomeroy .
and costs ; Delbert W.
DISCHARGES - Paul a
Fridley, 25, Pomeroy, DWI, McKinney , Arthur Roberts,
$150·~nd costs and three days Shirley
La wson,
Steve
In jail , and drivmg under
Hankla.
suspe'ilslon , $150 and costs
PLEASANT VALLEY
and five days In jail ; Charles
DISCHARGES, - Wt!harn
Boyles, 37 , Middlepor t,
Sch
oo nov e r, Gallipolis;
destruction of property, $30
and cos ts, J ohn Slavin , Dorothy Wei a nd, Letart ;
Walters,
Powt
Middleport, allowing dog to Leland
run loose, $5 and costs, and Pleasant ; Delbert Blessing,
Don Lovett, 52, Middleport, West Columbia : Roy Pritt,
disorderly manner, $10 and Jr ., Point Pleasant; James
Bailey, Pomt P!eas11nt ; Mrs.
costs .
~·
Eugene
Holley, Vtnton ; Lesa
Forfeitu]g bonds were John
Glenwood;
Earl
L. Skidmore, 21 , -Gallipolis, Gill ,
Wallace,
Pliny,
and
Beverly
... ceding , $25, and Richard
~·
, ,, ., · 21,
Pom~roy . Woomer, Point Pleasant.
d&gt;.·• I'&lt;JIS•• Y: mlmner, $30. r
f..

oulpa iJent and inpatient care.
day tr eat ment , Lhlidr e n 's

by

Arthur Hailey.

'"

The owner of the center

' '

'

r

'

Lawrence, ·Gallia. proposed
as sites of ten test gas wells

Dr Tmwthy B. Mon tz

...

,,
'

·: Co~struction of
' health center
wins approval

'

••

•

...

'

' II

Street
•
repa1rs
ordered

r

RACINE - Racine VIllage
Council in regular session
Monday night agreed to have
three mlles of streets in the
village repaired with a double
seal of asphalt.
The repair will cost tfie
village $15,000, or $5,000 a
mile . Mayor Charles Pyles
and Councilwoma n Grace
Roush met with the county
commissio ners earlier in
regard to the county assisting
with the use of men and
equipment which they agreed
to do .
Streets will be ditched and
patched before the seal is
placed .
1
Council in other action
noted that residents are using
the river bank to dump trash.
No dumpm g signs are posted
in the area . Persons caught In
violatiOn will be fined $500 in
the future .
Due to the dumping of trash
on the road leadmg to the
river it is necessa ry to have
the township come in with a
grader in order that people
ca n put boats in the river .
Mae Cleland, clerk , said
·Clarence Bradford , councilman, agreed to contact the
trustees to get the work done.
Council also agreed to have
new r oofs placed on the firll station and council room.~
work will be done by Harvey
of Lancaster at a cost of
$1 ,600. It will begin immedl~tely .

Eleanor · Thomas, director
of the Meigs County Council
on Ag in g, asked for a
donation of $200 toward the
semor citizen program
to which co uncil agreed .
Several personal donations
were given to Mrs. Thomas
by council.
Counci l asked that In the
future if anyone has brush or
refuse to be removed please
contact the .street commissioner, Ernest Triplett at
949-2591. Attending were
'
Mayor Pyles, Albert Hill, .
Grace Roush, Glenn Rizer,
Henry Lyons, Clarence
Bradford and Unley Htll't,
council members, and Mrs.
Cleland, clerk.

IN HOSPITAL
RACINE - Mrs. Jake Lee
e ntered Holzer Medical
Center Wednesday where she
will undergo surgery today.
~

,,

..

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