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•

POMEROY,MIDDLEPORT, OHIO .

TIPS ON FIRE BUILDING in preparation for cooking the noon meal are given by Mark
Norton, Boy Scout Troop 249, to Melissa Tyree, left, and Sherri Russell, both of the Pomeroy
Brownie Troop. Looking is leader, Mary Jo Pooler of Middleport.

MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif.
(UP!) - If man ever decides
to leave earth en masse,
where to? The planet Mars with proper irrigation -is
one possibility, scientists say.
Another is a man-made
planetoid.
These were among ideas
before 25 university and government experts gathering
today at the high-security
Ames Research Center for a
study or " the · visionary
concept of cities in space" -a
comparison of ideas on where
human beings could best
emigrate outside earth's
environment.
"The group will concentrate on reducing theory
to engineering, social and

•

8\' CHARLENE HOEFLICH

YOUr
GOO

NeigHBOr

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Tax rollbacks wanted kept in Ohio law
GATHERING AROUND A TREE to sing camp songs was a popular diversion for some
of the Browmes. Ptctured here are front, 1 to r, Sherr! Sisson, Kathy Arnott, Beth Wolfe
Ruth Ann Fry, Veronica Pro~o, Suzan Thoma, and Becky Arnott, and standing, Tamm;
Capehart,T eresa Pratt: Debbte Werry, Melinda Hill, Danielle Reece, Monica Hill, Becky
Adkms, Lisa Baxter, Jtll Nease, and Charlotte Lyons.
guest.
The girls and their leaders
were transported back and
forth to the camp site on the
boy scout bus driven by
Frank Casto who was
prese nted a gift in appreciation.
Units for the day camp and
the Brownies and leade rs in
eac h were:
Settlers: Gertrude Casto
and Patty Mi chaels, leaders,
with Laura Horsley, Robin
Gaspers, Carolyn Casto , Amy
Sisson, J anie Amberger,
Debbie Micha el, Susie
Po ole r ~ Ann ette J ohn so n
Tamm y Capeha rt , Di Ki~
Eblin , Angie Pr att, Lori
Michael, and Jenny Bentley.
Beavers: Mrs. Carolyn
Reeves and Mrs. Kay Hill ,
leaders, with Cathy Stotts,
Ruth Ann Fry, Melinda Hill,
Bec ky Arn ott , Veronica
Provo, Suzie Thoma, Kathy
Arnott, Becky Adkins, and
Beth Wolfe.
Pilgrims : Mrs. J oyce
Sisson, Mrs. Mary Pullins, .

and Mrs. Kay Rupe, with Gill
Nease, Becky Roush, Lisa
Dewart, Charlotte Lyons,
Christina Arn old, Tammy
Adkins, Kim Eblin, Trina
Reeves, and Shelly Pullins.
lndiana s: Mrs. Esther

POMEROY
Four
defendants were fined and
three others forfeited bonds
in the cow-l of Pomeroy
Mayor Dale E. Smith Thursday night.
Fined were Franklin Giles,
Route 4, Pomeroy, $160 and
costs, three days in jail,
driving while intoxica ted·
Forrest Jones, Charleston:
$10 and costs , un safe ·
operation of a motor vehicle ·
•
•

-

REFRIGERATORS
RANGES
DISHWASHERS
WASHERS
DRYERS

BAKER FURNITURE

.~

~

~··....

,...

~

.... . . .

~ .

~

·~

1

.l
SAVE$1.00
" SUPPORT CAN BE BEAUTIFUL"' Broa

ON SALE FOR THE FIRST TIME EVER
# 100 - Sofl Cup Rag. SUS NOW S5.t5
# 102 - Fiberlill R09. 17.50 NOW SUO

Address ________________________________

Phone --------~---------. M ail entry to Ga ll ipoli s Chamber of Commer ce Offr ee, 16 Slate St ., Gall ipolis , Ohio , 4563 1. All entri es'
must be .tn prior to Tu"esday, July 1.

7114 Pet . per year on a

... ---

~ -~--

4 year certificate of

mmrmum

GOSPEL MEETING

deposit, interest paid
quarterly.

JUNE 17 THRU 22

Meip Co. Brnh

7:30 EACH EVENING
EXCEPT SUNDAY ·to AM &amp; &amp; PM

Thoi Atllena County
S.,.lnga &amp; l.o811 Co.

WESTSIDE CHURCH OF CHRIST

S.cand st.

lroa

.

SAVE*1.50

when rou buy 2 "CROSS YOUR HEART''• lru
IIP' JI Reg. M.IS eech
.
NOW 2 FOR $1.411
#173 - lace Cups Reg. $5.10 each

-@
m

whan rou ltuy ~

# JI - Conon Bra A•t- $3.15 eech
NOW 2 FOR SI.IO

Foundations Dept.
Second Floor

HOW2FORIUO

SAVE*1.51

"BODY MAQIC" 8 Olrdlei
· ~o. 2170 Bri ef\ White, Beige)
Rag. SI.IG NOW 14.H
STOCK UP ON YOUR SUM~ER NEEDS N0wt

ELBERFELDS

SAL E ENDSJULY2, 1975. ·

Pomerlir, Ohio

200 W. MAIN

POMEROY, OHIO

SPEAKER: TOMMY THOMAS
·'j

,.-. ... '..

'

J

ri

.

.

-

. ..

--~ -

--

,.

&lt;See Bob Hoeflich's ·account and more pictures on page 2 today)
·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::;:::::::.:::.:.:::.:-:·:·:·:-:-:-:::·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:·:·:::·:·:~·:!:·:·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::w

fNews. . .in Briefs!

CHICAGO - NEW YORK POUCE investigators have
been ordered to Chicago to determine if there is a connection
between the weekend bombings of two Loop buildings and last
fall's blasting of five New York structures.
A Puerto Rican terrorist group has claimed credit for both
the Cllicago and New York bombings.
The Chicago explosions, which occurred before the Puerto
Rico Day parade, ripped the Mid-Continental Plaza and the
United Bailk of America, injuring four persons.
The Puerto Ricans nationalist group FALN, - initials for
the Spanish name which translates "Armed Forces of National
liberation" - said it did the bombings. It also bas claimed
responsibility for the bombings in New York last October and
for an explosion in January that killed four persons and injured
53 at the historic Fraunces Tavern in New York. r

Ex-governors
inducted by
Boys' State
ATHENS, Ohio (UPI )
Two former Ohio governors
were inducted into the Boys
state Hall of Fame Sunday
night at Ohio University here
where a record 1,373 young
men have gathered for the
1975 American · Legion·
. sponsored
week-long
go~nunen! school.
ceremomes bo~rs former
Govs. John W· Brtckers and
Frank J · Lausche.
Deleg~tes voted_today for
state-wtde candtdates by
computer on punch-card
ballots used by the Athens
County Board of Elections.
The ballots will be processed
by the university computers.
Election returns will be in
tonight, with inauguration set
for Tuesday night. Ohio Supreme Court Chief Justice
C.William O'Neill will address the inauguration
ceremonies.
Gov. James A. Rhodes will
also speak to the delegates
later this week.

FIREMEN CALLED
The Pomeroy F:ire Dept.
answered's call to Pine Grove
NEW YORK - A POWERFUL BOMB EXPLODED short- at 8:32p.m. Saturday where a
ly before dawn today in the doorway of a Puerto Rican bank in ·tractor on the Eddie Frecker
Rockefeller center, injuring one man slightly ami shattering farm had ca_ught fire .
windows. Pollee said the explostion, apparently caused by a
pipe bomb, went off at about 4:40a.m. in the doonvay of the
Banco de Ponce.at 49th Street and Rockefeller Blaza.
Shortly after 6 a.m., a woman identifying herself as a
member of the Weather Underground telephoned the
Wanda L. Barry, Rt. I,
Associated Press to take credit for the bombing. She told the
Scottown,
was taken to St.
AP the attack was in support of cement workers in Ponce,
Mary's
Hospital
in HunPuerto Rico. The woman said a communique was ·placed betington
for
treatmept
of
tween two buildings at West loth Street and Greenwich
Avenue, ap]X"ollimately three blocks from the scene of a11.. -minor injuries suffered in an
explosion in 1970 at a townhouse on West lllh Street allegedly unusual traffic accident at
6:20 p.m. Saturday on
used by radicals to manufacture bombs.
Police said two notes were found at the location and were Township Road 13, two tenths
taken to a police laboratory for analysis. Contents of the of a mile northwest of Rt . 218.
The Gallia-Meigs Post
messages were not disclosed.
State Highway . Patrol said
RALEIGH, N.C .-EIGHT GUARDS AND FIVE inmates Mrs . Barry's car stalled due
were injured today when the guards tried to end an all-night to a defective starter . Mrs.
demonstration at the North Carolina women's prison. The Barry went to the front of her
inmates fought back when the guards, armed with nightsticks, car to short the starter to get
herded them into a gymnasium. They atta~ked the guards with the car running again. The
"vehicle jumped , forward ,
pieces of concrete, rakes, hoes and baseball bats.
The women later' threw down their makeshlfi weapons at knocking her onto the
the urging of celene Clleniere, a member of. an organization blacktop, the right front
-Interested in women ]X"lsoners called,''Group For Forgotten wheel stopping on top of her{.
Luckily, a passing motoris
Women."
· "Now," she said, "sit down and do what you should have stopped and assisted in
been doing all, along." She then began singing "We Shall ge[tjng the car off Mrs.
Barry. She was taken to the
Overcome" and the women
joined
her.
i
•
•

planetoid

for construction•of a collector
of solar energy, which would
be converted to electricity
and beamed by microwave to
Earth.
Taking a new look at the
planet Mars as a target for
human migration will be
coordinated by Ames' Dr.
Robert MacElroy. He said
the red,planet was more like
earth than any other in the
solar system.
"The trick is to bulla a
breatheabhi atmosphere in
what is now an alien environment," MacElroy said.
Theorists, he said, believe
this could be accomplished in
a matter of decades if conditions were created where
algae-like orgapisms would

economic considerations to
see what really would be
needed to send human
colonies \0 new homes in
space," said a spokesman for
the National" Aeronautics and
Space Administration
facility .
It is at Ames that radio
telescopes constantly scan
the universe for signs of intelligent life.
One consideration is an'
orbiting community in a
space habitat proposed by
Princeton University's Dr .
Gerard O'Neill . Such an
artificial planetoid could be
made by using raw materials
from the moon or asteroids.
Once built, said O'Neill, the
planetoid could be the base

use solar energy and
photosysnthesis to make
oxygen, such as green plants
do on earth.
He said these conditions
may be possible if a way is
found to irrigate the planet
with water suspected to he in
or under the soil.
The problems of colonizulg
space "are staggering but
maybe within the grasp of
current technology," according to a joint. statement
by NASA 's Richard Johnson
and William Verplank of
Stanford University.
They said it was time to
make such assessments
should mankind ever want or need -to leave Earth.

no ·longer exempt from
price fixing practice
WASHINGTON (UP I) - The Supreme Court
ruled ·s to 0 today that the practice of law as a
profession is not exempt from the restrictions of
tederal antitrust law .
This is the first time the Court has addressed
itself to whether federal laws against price fixing
apply to the " learned professions." The opinion
was written by Chief Justice Warren E . Burger.
Justice Lewis F . Powell Jr. did not participate ..
The case was started by Lewis H. and Ruth S.
Goldfarb, who encountered minimum fees for title
searches, issued by the Fairfax County Bar
Association, when they bought a $54 ,000 house in
Reston, Va ., in 1971.
Under ethical standards of the Virginia State
Bar, title examinations can be handled only by
lawyers.

Summer jobs assured with
release of $486 million
WASHINGTON (UP!) The Labor Department said
Sunday it would release
almost $456,350,000 for 840,400
5U!.llnter jobs for youpg_
people.
The legislation for the summer jobs, part of the adminis·
!ration 's anti-recession
program, was signed by the
President Friday.
The jobs program earlier
was included in another and
broader bill which the
President vetoed because he
feared an innationary impact.
The surruner jobs program
will provide 9 to 12 weeks of
employment at at least minimum wages of $2.10 hourly
for youths aged 14 through 21.

The jobs are intended for
young . people
from
economically disadvantaged
families.
Typically tbe jobs include
dfrection of children's activities at parks and com·
munity centers, day care
work, school and liqrary
assistance
and
envirorunental tasks.
The money will be
distributed to 433 state and
local govenunent agencies.
Ohiowasallocated
$18,917,185.
The breakdown of those
funds in Ohio included :
Cincinnati · $1,665 ,394;
Butler County $285,077; Clark
County $216,116; Hamilton

County $245,438; LickingDelaware counties $273,131;
Lorain County $356,211 ;
Akron $910,618; Canton
U42 , 549 ; Cle v eland
$5,493,5 74; Columbus
$1,080,036; Miami Valley
$815,592 i Greene County
$51 ,585; Toledo $897,043;
Northeast Ohio Manpower
$1,277,146; Allen County
$197 ,lll; Clermont County
$508,253.
The rest of the state will get
$4,202,311.

No injw-ies were reported
in three traffic accidents over
the weekend investigated by
the Meigs County Sheriff's
Department.
·
Saturday at 3:30p.m. on SR
338, near Racine, Harold J.
Young denied the request, Black, Syracuse, was
CLEVELAND (UP!) traveling north when he went
U.S. District Court Judge stating, a basic issue in the off the highway in front of the
Donald Young ruled today trial was ''how far may a
that defeiL'Ie attorneys could man act in support of his Junior Neigler residence and
question the plaintlHs in the beliefs and how far may the · sideswiped a utility pole. It
was raining at the time of the
Kent State University governrnentsuppress,notthe
accident. No citation was
damage suit about their holding of those beliefs, but
the translation of them into issued.
political beliefs.
Sunday at 2:55 a. m. on SR
Testimony resumed today action ."
124
in Minersville Ruth V.
Barry Morris, who testified
in the $48 million damage suit
Proffitt,
43, Rt. 2, Racine, ran'
filed by the parents of the last week he extended his
off the road to her right,
four students killed and nine right arm and fired two
pulled back on the highway,
wounded by National Guard rounds from his .45 automatic
struck
a guardrail cable, and
troops May 4, 1970, during an at approllimately knee height
antiwar demonstration on the into tbe crowd of student broke off a post. No citation
Kent ..· State University demonstrators, concluded his was issued. There was
moderate damage.
testimony today .
campus.
At 4:45 p.m. Sunday in
Morris described the
Joseph Kelner asked Young
to stop questioning of the events and movements of the Sutton Twp. on SR 124, Guay
political beliefs of the Guardsmen as they moved to A. Rose, Rt. I, Portland and
plaintiffs because "this is not the area where they turned Paul M. Kauff, Rt. .I, Middleport were driving cars
and fired on the students.
a political trial."

Political beliefs can
enter 'into Kent trial

hospita1 by the Chesapeake
Ambulance
of
the
Southeastern
Ohio
Emergency Medical Service.
A Cheshire youth was
struck while bicycle riding
Saturday on Rt. 7, three
tenths of a mile north of Rt.
554.

The patrol said 17-year old
Timothy Moles, Rt. I,
Cheshire, at tempted to turn
left as an auto driv,en by
Donald L. Frymyer, 27, of ·
Middleport, began to ·pass.
Moles was not injured; no
charge was filed.
Frederick A. Wooten , Jr.,
17, Rt. 2, Albany, was cited to
Meigs County court for
failure to stop within the
assured clear distance
Sunday following a lraffic
accident at 2:50 p.m. on Rt.
I

.

.

124, one tenth of a mile east of
Salem center.
According to the Patrol,
Wooten's car stru~k the rear
end of a vehicle driven by his
father, Frederick A. Wooten,
37, Rt. 2, Albany. There was
minor damage to the father 's
vehicle and moderate
damage to the son's.
Clair P. O'Hara, 70, of
Columbus, was charged with
OWl following an accident at
7:15p.m. Satui"dayon Rt. 7in
Kanauga . 'officers said
O'Hara lo.st control of his car
which ran off the right side of.
the highway, striking a mailbox.
A single car collision oc·
curred at 8:40p .m. SUIIIIay on
County Road 12, one and .five
tenth miles west of Rt. 218
where John A. Baker , 20,

The Goldfarbs contacted 20
attorneys, all of whom told
them there was a set fee for
various services related to
home buying . They paid
$637.00 for title insw-ance, a
deed of trust and other
papers.
1'he case now returns to U.
S. District Judge Albert V.
Bryan Jr . in Alexandria, Va .,
who will determine damages
not only for the Goldfarbs but
for 2,400 others who bought
homes in Res ton - a new
town near Washington, D. C.
- during the four years prior
to the filin g of the suit.
The 4th U. S, Circuit Court
·of Appeals had ruled that the
Sherman Antitrust Act
rea ches only " trade or
commerce" and not activities

of th~ "learned professions."
But t:· eger said "whatever
else it ma y be , the
examination of a land title is
a service; the exchange of
such a service for money is
'commerce' in the moat
common usage of that word."
" It is no disparagement of
the practice of law as a
profession to acknowledge
that it has the business
aspect," the opinion said.
It cited an earlier Supreme
Cow-t opinion saying that the
act on iIs face shows "a
carefully studied attempt" to
bring within its terms "every
person engaged in business
whose activities might
restrain or monopolize
commercial
intercourse
among the states. "

None injured in accidents

Car 'jumps'. onto Scottown woman

#11 - Fiberf ill R•i· Sl.t5 NOW $5.15

#12 - Fully Padoed ROll· SUS NOW IO.H
"FREE SPIRIT'' Glrdtaa .
. #2112 - Briel Reg. $7.511 NOW $150
#2114 - Short ie Rig. 11.50 NOW 'sJ.IO
#2HIS - Ave rage l eg Reg. Sl.ts NOW S7.tl
#2lfl - l ong Leg Reg. Sl.15 NOW $1.H

SAVE *tOO
"CROSI YOUR H!&gt;UIT,.

deposit.

$1,000.00

"FREE 8PIAIT''8 lr11
#10 - Solt Cup Rag. S5.85 NOW SUS

. UNDERNEATH THIS UNIQUE COSTUME . is
talented Cindy Patterson who was given an enthusiastic
reception as she presented a novelty number in the MidPorn School of Dance recital.

By Unlled Press Iuternational
VILLACH, AUSTRIA - "THE BRAKES DON'T WORK,"
the driver shouted as his bus careened down a steep road in the
Carinthian Alps. "Jump out the windows if you can." But only
·one of the terrified passengers managed to get out of the
speeding vehicle as it roared off the road and plunged down a
130-foot-high precipice.
.
Josef Ramsbacher, the 43-year-&lt;Jid driver and father of
four, was killed along with 20 of his passengers in Austria's
worst bus accident . Twenty-five passengers were injured, 14 of
them seriously. All except the driver, who owned the bus, were
Austrian old age pensioners on an outing. The accident took
place Sunctay·as the bus traveled down a mountain road near
the town of Iobriach, 170 miles southwest of Vienna, close to
the Yugoslav bord
er ·

WANT AD

Name of individual _ _____ _ _ _ _ __ _

•
_.

The most unfortunate thing
about the younger generation is
that we don't belong to it any
more .

tract it .down
much faster
wi t h a

Type of entry _ _ __ _ _ _~-------

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

--...-- --....... .. - . ...,.

statements to the press but that there are many
concerning the unfairness of provisions that should · be
the provisions . "It is im- changed to protec t taKpayers
perative that the people of the and school children.
92nd District let their
opinions be known about this
and all other pieces of
legislation," said James.
James said he believes in
You' II
the basic concept of S. B. 170,

J.ohn T. Ash, Pomeroy, $10
and costs, squealing tires ;
Karen Sue Hart, eftoute 1,
Rutland, $5 and costs, running stop sign.
Forfeiting bonds were Pat
Snider: Athens, $25 each for
assault and disturbing the
peace; Mi cha el Ohlin ger,
West
Columbia ,
$25,
speeding , and Jeffr ey
Wendorf, no address $30 ·
open flask.
'
'

TENTH ANNUAL RIVER
RECREATION FESTIVAL PARADE
Gallipoli s. Ohio
Official Entry Blank
1975 theme : " Eve of the Revolution "
July4 ,_1975
lO:JQA.M.
Organ1zat1on
(Or individual entering) _ _ _ __ __ _ _ __

1~%

·FRIGIDAIRE
SCHOOL APPLIANCES
NOW AVAILABLE

DeMoss, Mrs. Charl otte
Wam sley, Mrs. Mar y J o
Pooler, with Danielle Reece,
Sheila Pullins, Teresa Pratt,
Lisa BaKter, Sherry Sisson,
Meli ssa Tyree, Sherry
Russell, and Debbie Werry.

:::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::

Four fined in mayor's court

ON

SAVE ON '
LIKE NEW

ENTENDED OUTLOOK
We dn e sda y through
Friday, chance of showers
Wednesday and Friday.
Fair Thursday. Highs in
the 80s and low 90s. Lows in
the 60s.

NO DISHWASHERS at Camp Kiashuta eJt:cept the Brownies. Here Kim Eblin washes
her dishes as Tammy Atkins, Trina Reeves, Christina Arnold, Shelly Pullins, Lisa Dewart,
and Becky Roush wait their turn.

COLUMBUS
State
Representative Ronald H.
Jam es said Friday he wants
to keep real property tax rate
rollbacks in the law as it
cw-rently exists.
'' It is not fair to the taxpayers to have a provision
prohibiting tax rollbacks in
Senate Billl70," said James.
"I am working to get this
unfair provision out of the
Bill," he said.
James also said he was
glad Meigs Coun ty A d"to
Howard F
k . u 1 dr
ra n
tssue

15'
- PRICE
.- -

'Learned professions'

man-mad~

Mars, or

way to learning
teaching the scouts to live
comfortably in the out-&lt;Jfdoors, and to teach some selfrelia nce, .along
wi th
cooperation at its best.
Firebuilding, crafts, knot
tying, safety programs,
nature tours and talks ,
lashing, and a study of wildflowers ha ve all been included on the camp agenda
arra nged by Mrs. Pa t
Thoma, director, and Mrs.
J udy Werry, assistan t
direc tor and
business
manager .
Smokey the Bear made a
visit Tuesday as a feat w-e of a
fir e pre vention program
presented by Lee Cates and
Mike Pooler of the Division of
Forestry. They also showed a
film, "Smoke in the Hollow"
and gave each of the
Brownies a pictw-e of Smokey
- - - - - - -- -- - - and
balloons.
Featured Wedn esday afternoon was Greg Taylor and
his friend , a month old baby
cnon. Taylor , Meigs County
Wildlife Division , showed the
film ,
" Where
Should
the Squirrels Live."
Thursday Mark Norton ,
Todd Nortnn, Paul Reed, and
Scoutmaster Frank Casto of
Pomeroy Boy Scout Troop 249
Carrol K. Snowden
gave th e girls some in struction on tying knots, and
24 State St .
Margaret
Ella
Lewis
Gallipolis
demonstrated
the
making
of
Phone 446-4290
terrariums and gave a study
on identifying wildflowers.
See him lor all your family
1nsurance needs.
Today's activities included
an awards ceremony with the
like A HATI f AIM
presentation of ribbons,
Good Neighbor,
Black Diamond patches for
StaltJ Farm
the Brownies, and bookmarks
I N I UIANCI
Is The,.
for the leaders , gifts of Mrs.
Thoma. Each of the units
Sl ate Fa rm Insura nce Compan ies
presen ted a bicentennial skit.
Home Offices; Bloomington, Illinois
Mrs. Isabelle Fosler ,
p 7302
.
district advisor for the Black
Diamond Council , was a

mr'7"' h"!rnrt roRrr1'·

MONDAY, JUNE .16, 1975

Where to, man? ·

BURNED BUT GOOD was the corrunent of these girls as they ale the food they
prepared on an open fire.

The ar t of outdoor living
doesn' t come easy for some,
but the 40 or so Brownies who
have broken the silence of
Camp Kiashuta this week
have learned that day camp
is a very special way of
learning.
Rain several days dampened the ground but not the
spirits of the Brownies and
their leaders. Even a snake
which slithered into one of the
camp s ites failed to
discow-age the youngste rs
from exploring the wooded
area which sw-rounds the
lodge.
With the program geared to
the Brownie B's - Be a
di scovere r, Be a fri endmaker, and Be a ready helper
- the emphasis was on

1o Chicago during the early
1920s covered '!7 different

Court finds lawyers' .work
falls .under anti -trust law

,.

Day camp special

-A car trip from New York

Devoted To Th e Interests of The Meigs-Mason A rea

., ....
-i· '

REST TIME FOR Sheila Pullins was on an old log.

en tine

ary

Fair tonight, low in low 60s.
Cloudy Tuesday, chance of .
showers, highs in the mid 80s.
Probability of rain 10 per ce nt
ton ight and 50 per ce nt
Tuesday.

VOL. XXVII NO. 44

Now You Know

.
'
Troy, Ohio, lost control of his
car which ran off the left side
of the highway, striking a
fence. There was moderate
damage ; no charge was filed.
A tw&lt;K:ar collison occurred
at 3:15 p.m. Sunday on Tom
Glenn Rd. two and two tenths
miles from Vinton where cars
driven by Teresa L. Meade,
19, Rt. 2, Bidfwell, and Earl
K. Lowden, 28, Rt. 2, Patriot,·
collided in a blind curve.
There was heavy damage to
both vehicles.
A final accident occurred
on Rt. 7 in Crown City where
Patty L. Watson, 76, of Crown
City, lost control of his car
which ran off the road and
overturned . There · was
moderate damage. No one
was injured or cited.
'

'

east on SR 124.
Rose, in the passing lane,
approached Kauff to pass
when Kauff pulled out to pass
a third vehicle to his front.
There was slight property
damage in the collision, no
injw-ies, and no arrest.
The Sheriff's Department

GM readies its
mini car plant
. DETROIT (UP!)
General Motors closed its
Wilmington, Del., assembly
plant today in the U.S. auto
indUstry's first major
response to competition from
the small foreign cars that
~romise
huge gasoline
savings.
When the 1,150 idled
workers return to their jobs
in nine weeks, they 'II begin
building a mini-car that GM
hopes to advertise with fuel ·
economy certified at better
than 40 miles per gallon on
the highway.
Now code-named the
Cllevette, or T-ear, GM's
entry Is an .automobile
similar In size and appearance to Volkswagen's
new Rabbit. SmaUer than a
Vega,,it will be a three-door
model powered by a fourcylinder engine.
The :Wilmington plant is
one of two of the Industry's 58
car and truck plants that will
be closed this week. Total
layoffs dropped by more than
1,200from last week to 160,967
workers, still 23 per cent of
the lnduatry's 712,000 hourly
labor Ioree.
The other plant cbal thl.s
week is the Ford Motor Co .'s
L9s Angeles car asaembly
facility, idllng 1,300 workel:s
for the week. Another 2,300
were on temporary layoffs at
I&gt;

..

also investiagted a hit-skip
incident Sunday at 12: 21 a.m.
on the parking lot at TaU
Timbers tavern . •A parked
car owned by Harry
Richards, Rt. I, Long Bottom, was struck. The incident
is still undet: investigation.

four manufacturing plants,
including .two in Michigan.
Ford laid off 1,350 at the
Cleveland Engine Plant No.2
and 800 at the engine plant in
Lima, Ohio.
Open-ended layoffs this __
week stood at 156,217, down
just over 1,300 from last week
and the lowest since the
second week of January.
GM still has 102,000
workers idled out of its
400,000 bluecollar workers;
Ford 19,525, up 300 from last
week; Chrysler 34,100, down ·
1,600 and the first time below
a5,000
since
last
Thanksgiving; and American
Motors just 592 of Its 24,000
blue collar workers. ·
DINE ON FISH
Middleport Firemen will
hold a public fish fry
beginning at 2 p. m. Friday at
the fire house. Fish san&lt;l·
wiches and fl.sh dinners will
be available.
FIREMEN TQ,MI!lET
' ·The Mea Volunteer Fire
and Emergency Assn. will
meet at 7:30p.m. Wednesday
at the Gallipolis Fire Station. ,
"Aerial Ladders" will be the
program topic. Each chief ill
to take radio and mutual aid
equipment llats as well aa call
totals for the month of May,
Bob E. Byers, prellident,
said.
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_2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, June 16,

3::- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., M_onday; June 16, 1975

DR. LAMB

SMU's Oscar RoaiJ. bypasses agent

Today's Desensitizing best

Sport Parade

for insect allergy
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - In one
of your columns you mentioned a treatment for persons allergic to bee stings.
My daughter is highly
allergic , and each sling she
gets a worse reaction. We
have been told the only
treatment is bi-weekly shots
for about seven years and
even then it is no assurance
that they will help. Do you
recommend an easier, surer

procedure?
DEAR READER - I wish I
could . There are probably
nearly a million people who
have severe reac tions to bee
and wasp stings each year.
As many as 40 deaths occur
annually. I mention this to
emphasize it is not a minor
matter , and you must get
proper treatment for your
daughter.
The most commonly
available method of treatment is to give repeated
injections of an extract
prepared from the crushed
whole bodies of slinging insects, referred to as WBE.
This is really a desensitizing
procedure .
A review of the success of
this procedure shows that 95
per cent of patients treated
this way do not have any
problem with subsequent
stings. But, that may often be
a happy coincidence, tending
more to prove that many
people who have a severe
reaction once will not have
such a reaction a second
lime. In a controlled study of
untreated patients, 60 per
cent didn't have any serious
reaction to subsequent stings,
either.
Even more disquieting is
the observation that some
patients treeated with WBE
are still likely to have severe
shocklike reactions with a
subsequent sting. Dr. William
Busse of University of

Wisconsin and his associates
recently published one of
their cases in the Journal of
the American Medical
Association (March 17, 1975).
The young women was not
protected by the WBE
trea tment. She was then
treated with a purified venom
from honey bees. This treatment gradually worked, and
she became fully protected
from the dan ger of honey bee
slings. Similar results have
been noted by scientists at the
State University of New York
at Buffalo and in Baltimore's
Good Samaritan Hospital.
Purified venom seems to be
far superior, and it can be
specific for that patient's
reaction. Some people are
reactors to bee stings but not
wasp stings and vice versa.
Unfortuna tely , . purified
ve nom is not available
readily at present. It is expected to be produced in
commercial amounts soon.
Meanwhile the best you and
other people with similar
problems can do is use the
WBE treatment available.
And, I would strongly support
your doctor in recommending
this treatment.
You should also take all the
important precautions you
can against exposing your
daughter to bee stings. That
means keeping flowers and
shrubs down from around the
house. Also, have her wear
white or li ght colored
clothing. She should avoid
using scents, such as perfume
and cosmetics that tend to
attract bees.
You should talk to yoW'
doctor about the advisability
·of having a readily available
sting kit. Reactions are
sometimes swift and severe.
Be prepared for a severe
reaction ahead of time. If she
gets stung, scrape the stinger
out, don't pull it and squeeze
more venom into her.

,,

CINDY PATTERSON AND SANDI HAMILTON were an excellent team in the Mid-Porn
School of Dance recital. Here they dance to "Spanish F1ea ".

NRS. JUDY FRASER AND DAUGIITER, APRIL,
who assists with the Mid-Porn School of Dance, as they
danced an effective tOe number in Friday night's recital.

..
.,

11

Theme".

THESE TINY SI'UDENTS - Judi Mees, Erin Anderson, Mary Jacobs, Laura McCullough and Jodi
Harrison - were well received in their attractive
costumes during the Mid-Porn dance recital.

Mid-Porn School
dance recital
good·show biz·
By Bob Hoeflich
Students of the Mid-Porn
School of Dance again proved
the old adage that " there's no
business like show business"
Friday night when they
presented one of their best
recitals of the II annual
events.
Under the direction of Mrs .
Judy Fraser, assisted by her
daughter, April, students
moved through some outstanding numbers. Costumes
were colorful and attractive,
some of the solo and group
numbers were excellent and
Mrs. Fraser pulled some real
crowd-pleasing nove,l ty
pre sentations ou t of her

on permanent
55 speed limit

Syracuse who was attractive,
versatile and talented in her
presentations . During the
recital staged in the Meigs
Junior High School at Middleport, Miss Patterson
appeared in a unique dance
number completely hidden by
a large tophat and small
clothing to provide a unique .
effect.
She returned to the
spotlight for an excellent
baton routine which drew
interrupted applause from
the large crowd on hand.
Miss Patterson teamed
with Sandi Hamilton, a real
comer, on two excellent

The audience saw smooth
and difficult tap numbers by
ESTHER LOWERY, AN
the team of April Fraser and
advanced
student, danced .
Teresa Buckley who performed well. M;iss Fraser well in this toe number
teamed with her mother, during Friday nlght 's
director of the school , on an 'recital.
effective toe number , "Time
in a Bottle" and Miss Buckley Spanish outfits tapped to
presented ·an acrobatic solo. "Tiajuana Taxi" in contrast
Advanced students im- to pale pink satin outfits worn
pressive . in their solo num - on their ballet number.
Amber Warner, Angela
bers were Esther Lowery,
graceful and poised in a toe Clifford, Libby Watkins.,
routine ; Suzy Samuels -in a Terri Johnson, Lynne Oliver,
fast tap, and June Wamsley, · Beth Weaver, Tammy
who performed a potpourri of Starcher, and Melanie Sisson
dance in an impressive were effective in court jester
comedy manner. The three outfits in a combination
advanced students joined for balletcacrobatic type numa graceful ballet number, her . The same group opened
"Color My World" and an the show with a tap routine
effective tap, " California and appeared again on a
Dreamin'.' '
favorite of a few months
Timely, what with Big back, "Tie a Yellow Ribbon
Bend Regatta Weekend and 'Round the Old Oak Tree".
its frog activities coming up,
Real "cuties" were the tiny
were Sharon Griffin, Barbara dancers, Jodi Harrison, Erin
Grueser and Andrea Batey in Anderson, Mary Jacobs,
a lively acrobatic presen- Judy Mees and Laura Mctation
wearing
frog Cullough, who performed
costuming. The same trio both in tap and ballet. Jenny
performed also in the recital Bentley, April Clark, Belll
together in both a tap and a Wolfe , Audra Houdashelt,
ballet num ber.
Joelle McLaughlin , Jill
Enhancing the Friday night Nease, Terrie Starcher and
presentation also was an Jane Amberger showed
effective blacklight number potential In thei,r tap and
which featured some half ballet routines.
dozen of the advanced
The finale included the
students dancing while _entire group of students
seated. Only gloves moving in p~rforming in an acrobatic
an intricate pattern and knee feat .
socks in florescent colors
Adding to the effective
showed in the lighting .
presentation were stage
Group rtumbers which settings which featured
revealed that more excellent subtle blinking lights behind
advanced students are in the colorful panels and a slow
making w'e re attractively moving color pattern across a
costumed.
frosted glass panel. Ernie
A line composed of Jean Fraser, husband of the
Horton , Kay Hart, Ruth Ann director, was in charge of the
Fry, Marcia Sisson, Paula music, and all stage
Horton and Kimberly Bir- properties were created by
chfield in orange and black the Dale Jacobs family and
Mrs. Fraser's son, Scott.
Mi-s, Fraser was presented
red roses and a gilt of jewelry
by her students.

By LEE LEONARD
mittee probably would be
UP! Statehouse Reporter
needed to iron out differences
dance numbers , " Spanish
COLUMBUS (UP!) - State between the House and
Flea" and a moden type
"show biz" hat.
senators return to work late Senate before the new fiscal
If the recital had a "star," number, "St. James Inthis afternoon to vote on year starts July I.
then possibly the rank would firmary." Miss Hamilton's
Housecapproved legislation to
The Senate Finance
go to Cindy Patterson of solo number was of " Love's
make permanent Ohio's 55 Committee late Friday night
m.p.h highway speed limit. cut $69.8 million worth of ·
The Senate is also to vote )X'ograms from the HouseTuesday on the reduced $10.6 passed budget and gained an
billion state budget for fiscal additional $24.2 million worth
1976-77 if the legislation could of revenues through revised
be reprinted for Senators to . JrO jections to eliminate a $94
study.
milliion imbalance, · acThe speed limit measure cording
to
majority
RED ROSES TO A HAPPY LADY: Mrs. Judy Fraser
would increase fines for Democrats.
was presented roses by her students Friday night as she
speeding violations but
Minority Republicans said wrapped up the lith annual recital of the Mid-Porn School
continues the practice of not the budget is still $96 million of Dance.
imposing driver 's license underfunded, but their atpoints except for speeding tempts to make massive
more than 60 m.p.h. on a public welfare cuts failed as personnel to get adequate accidents, but would allow
primary road inside a city the budget was reported out medical practice insurance lawsuits to recover damages
and over 70 m.p.h on of committee on a party~ine at a reasonable cost.
greater than $1,500.
freeways. It also grants no vote. Democrats took care of
The legislation, however,
The House Commerce and
ideal weather basis for ex- a cash flow problem to the attempts to put limitations on Labor Committee scheduled
ceeding the 55 m.p.h. limit. satisfaction of state Finance the insurance industry, a Tuesday night hea~ing on
Since the lower speed limit Director Howard L. Collier, medical profession, patients .Se~te~ssed legts)ation setimposed early last year as a by requiring quarterly .·and their lawyers. It would;' ting up -collective llargaining
fuel conservation measiU'e payments of taxes by large require Ohio insurance prOcedures&gt; for public emexpires June 30, the Senate corporations during the next companies, including Blue ployes and authorizing a
would have to apJrove an biennium.
·
Cross and Blue Shield, to limited right to strike.
emergency priority so it
Cuts in Education
offer mal]ractice insurance
The Senate, ,Energy and
would continue the cur- - Collier said this would pro- under a "shared risk" pool. Environment Committee will
THESE THREE ADVANCED students, June Wamsley, Suzy Samuels and l&gt;stner
tailment next month. It vide an even flow of $219 Physicians would be required hold·a hearing Wednesday on
Lowery performed beautifully in solo and group numbers in the Mid-Porn dimce recital
requires
a
two-thirds million in cash into state to take a minimuum of 150 House-jlasse!l legislation
Friday night.
·
majority, or 22 of 33 votes, in coffers to keep the treasury bours of continuing education providing a 30-year tax
abatement _plan for an inthe upper chamber to retain from going broke by Septem- every three years.
the speed limit.
her, 1976.
·
·
Sets Llnilts
dustry locating a coal
Its ending would permit · The major cut pushed
Although medical benefits gasification plant In Ohio.
higher speeds but would through by Democrats diU'ing and Joss of wages would be
terminate federal highway . a marathon 11-hoiU' com- paid in malpractice awards,
for
and suf.. :::::::::~::::::::·:;:::::::::·:::::::·:::f.::::::::::-::::~~:::::·::=o
funds for Ohio road projects. mittee meetina10 Friday was damaaes
•••,.,•••,.,•,•,•,0:•,•,•.-,•,·:0,•.•,-:-,•,•.•,•,•0".~'·'•'•'"'•"•0:0X
10
$45million frOffi Jrlmary and fering'' WOuld be limited to '•'•'•'•'•'•'•'•'•'•'•W•'•'•'•'•'•'•'•'•'•'•'•'•'ooWo'•'•'oW,
ll:mergency Clause Crucial
PAINT TONIGHT
·ShuUiallie Senate ap]rove secondary education. $200,000under the bill . .'
the emergency clause, the Democrats said a new school
Lawyers ' fees ould be
There wiD be a league
House would have to foundation formula could be based on a reverse graduated
meeting of the M&amp;M Sll!'
reconsider that aspect, since. funded with $457 million In scale - the higher the award,
Pitch Softball League at
representatives dropped the additional state funds rather the lower the percentage that
the Kyger Creek field
emergency feature in order than the $502 million ap- would go to the attorney.
tonight
at 6 p. m. Each
to gain p8S811ge May 6th . Only ]roved by tl)e House.
Patients WPllld be able to
team
must
have at least
three of the 11 members
The rest of the deficit was · agree to binding arbitration
two repr.esg,ntatives
absent that day would hltve to eliJn\naled thrPllgh juggled on malpractice claims,
present. Painting wlll be
approve In order to get the bookkeeping, and Collier avoiding court. Otherwise,
done on the park to get It
emergency clause through warned the level of spending cases would be settled in the
re;l,dy for the upcoming
the lower chamber.
could not I be supported Ohio Court of Claims.
Kyger Creek Little League
Senate leaders scheduled a. beyond June, 1977, witbout
The no-fault automobile
Tuesday vote on the reduced additional state taxes.
Tournament. In ease of
inaurance bill, with hearings
· $1D.8 billion state budget for
rain, the meeting will be
State representatives scheduled Tuesday and
n-1 197&amp;-771f the legislalloo return Tuesday · afternoon Wednesday, is to be reported postpon~d until Wednesday
coaJd be printed 80011 enough and are to vote on com- out of the House lnsiU'ance
at the same time.
for readin8 and study by prehenslve legislation aimed .Committee this week . It
THESE YOUNG DANCERS exhibited their ballet training in the "Pink Fantasy Ballet"
senaton before the balloting. at allo.wlng physicians, would end the "fault" con- .,~:
•'
•:;:x:;:;::-:•i•XO;•;-;r~~;r~•·~..u::;·~··········
of
the
recital by the Mid-Porn SchOol of Dance.
·
. .
· au to ..x ·o:;:&gt;?.·:.·.:-.:::·
..···~~.... •.,..;::::::,.:·:::::::.:·:·:·
~o:-zn &lt;'•' "•:·:·:·
A joint conference com- bospl'tals and other medical cept for Oht'o dr'tvers 10
"'""'-"'-:r.!.~:::.:·k&lt;
' '. p a i n

l

'

"I 'm sure there is a place
and a time for an agent, but·in
most cases he is not needed,11
Roan said. " I feel the
response I got from the
Browns pretty well backs me
up."

Roan, is here this week
preparing for Saturday
night's 15th annual Coaches
AllAmerica Football game,
matching the best of the West
against those from the South
in a 9 p.m. EDT kickoff to be
telecast nationally by ABC .

Roan admits he doesn't
know that much about agents
since he didn 't use one, but he
says in his own case when
Cleveland learned he was
handling his own bargaining
instead of calling upon an
agent, it was more responsive
to the bargaining.
"They said they knew for
sure what I was asking for
was what I wanted, not what
some other man wanted for
the both of us," Roan said.
Roan said after he received

his invitation to play . in
Saturday's Ali-Star game for
the West, he contacted Cleveland and they were thrilled
for him to play.
"They told me it would give
me a good chance to get back
into shape under game and
football-type conditions
before going to rookie camp,"
he said.
Cleveland will open rookie
camp this year July 20 at
Kent State in Ohio , and Roan
said he planned to use All-

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lnternattonal League
Standings

By UPI
w. t. pet. g.b.
Tidewater
36 25 .590
Char leston
34 26 567 P/2
Rochester
Syracuse
R ic hmond
Pawtucket

To l e~o

36 28 .563

llh

34 28 548

21!,
S

30 30 .500
26 34 .433

9 l!2

26 35 .426 10 24 39 .381 13.

Memphis
Saturday's Results
Memphis 4 Syracuse 3
Charleston 3 Rochester 0
Richmond 7 Toledo 6, 1st. 7
inn
Richmond at Toledo , 2nd ,
ppd ., rain
Tidewater 6 Pawtucket 1, 1st, "
7 inn .
Tidewater 4 Pawtucket 3,
2nd, 10 inn .
Sunday's Results
Memphis 7 Syracuse 4
Tidewater 4 Pawtucket 2
Charleston 5 Rochester 1. lst.
7 inn .
Char l eston 7 Rochester 0,
2nd , 7 inn.
Richmond at Toledo, ppd .,
. rain·

I

&lt;

Exec. Ed.
n
HOEFLICH
'
City Editor
..
Poblishod dolly excep •
alwdoy by The Ohio Volle · 1 "
R~BE .RT

~
~

Publish in g Company, 11 ~
ourt St., Pomeroy , Chit·'
.45769. Bus iness Office Phont
2 - 21S6 .. Edllorlol Pho~e 992&gt;
57.
'
Second class pos+ege pal~
Pomeroy, Ohio .
.NaJlonat
o~utvPrtlsl~}
: • ePresentatlve
Warui""

Grlflil h Compony

Inc

,.

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;

San PI ego 7 New York 1
Los Angeles 4 Phila 3
Sunday's Results
P 1ttsburgh B Atlanta 6
Cincinnati 11 Chicago J
Chicago 4 Cinncinnati J
Houston B Sf . Lou is 7
Phi!a 4 Los Ange l es 3
N ew York 6 San D iego 0
Montreal 1 San Fran 1, I sf
Montreal 5 San Fran 2, 2nd
Monday's Probable Pitchers
(All Times EDTl
PhiladelPhia (Carlton 6-51 at
Chicago (Burris 6-5·) , . 2:30 p .m .
san Diego (Folkers 1-3) at San
Francisco (Halicki 2 2), 4 05
p .m .
Sf . Louis
(Bryan t Q.O) at
Pittsburgh (Kison 6·2) , 7: 35
p .m .
Atlanta CN iekro 6-4) at Cincin ·
nati {Gullett a.J), 8: 00p.m .
Houston (Dierker 6·6) at Los
Angeles ( Sutton 10 ·51. 10 .30

p.m .

Tuesd•v 's Games
Ph i ladelphia at Chicago
NY at Montreal, 2, twl -night
St . Louis at Pitt, night
Atlanta at Cincinati. night
Houston at Los Angeles , night
san OIE!go at San Frp n . night

Irk

Bottlnelll &amp; G'altatJher Dlv· · •
757 Third Ave., trew York1 ·
N , Y. 10017~
1.

~arrier
v

SubscrlptiQn

ranu• :·

ellvered by carrier wher•· ·

1'\

valtable 75 cents per week~; ; .
Motor Route wht~
service
n
':'

vollobl~. One month, $3 .2 .
_,
By mall in Oh io and W. Vo j,
ne Year, S22 .0.Q ;
Sla
1....
onlhs,
$11.50 ;
Thr••
onths. $LOO . ElseO.her~ "'
26 .00 vear; SIK month 'l ,..

l3 .SO; three months, 57 .5 . '·
ubscrlptlon price lncludl'l
undav Tlmes .sentlnel.
·
·• ·- :rn··
··· ~ ' a

\

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field lor 49 per cent, and 25 of included 19 college coaches.
41 at the line for 61 per cent ,
It also was anounced that a
including 17 of 24 in the final decision would be made in
period . The North ·stars July concerning the site of
dominated the boards 50 to 39, next year's North-South Cage
and four players fouled out in Classic.
the contest.
NORTH 109
The pressure tactics of the
F red Dav1s 2 6 8 10 , Gr eg
North forced the South into 36 Kobb 6 2 6 14 . Fre d B alse r a o
16, Dave H eck ,, o.o B, T im
turnovers, while the North 0Stei
nhilber 1 0 0 2, T ruman
Cla y 1on 7 56 19, J ohn Me
totaled 24.
Cu i Iough J 0 0 6. Kevin Appe l
Behind Hubbard · for the 4 0 0 8, John Will iams 1 0 0 2,
winners were Clayton with 19 Ph i l Hu bba rd 10 11 7 24 .
17-27 -109.
points, Balser canned 16 and TOTALS 46
SOUTH89
Tod d Jone s 3 5 6 11, Fred
Kobb finished with 14. Mike
e 5 0 3 10, Roy Stut z 2 Q. Q
Shoemaker, a Classy guard 4,Pool
Dav1d Br unslon 2 4 -6 8 , Ke n
from Paint Valley, led the Ch r is tensen 2 1 2 5, Mike
emak er 5 6 10 16, J1 m
South scoring parade with 16 PSho
axson J 8 8 l A, Mike K 1nnard
points while Jim Paxson of 1 0 2 2, Bob Schae fer 4 1-2 9,
Walerman 5 0 ·2 10 .
Kettering Alter dropped in 14. Tim
TOTALS 32 H -4 1 89 .
Hubbard, when questioned Nor th
27 28 28 26 - - 109
South
/1 21 20 27 - 89
about a college choice, said
F ou l ed ou t· Bal se r , Me .
he would make his decision Cui Iou gh, Wi ll iams , Kinna rd
T otal fou l s No r th 35 South
Wednesday in Canton.
2J
Those attending the game
A
2.300.

Madlock's big
hat stops Reds

CHICAGO (UP!) - If
anyone had told Chicago Cub
third baseman Bill Madlock
that he would be leading the
National League with a .360
batting average after 60
games, he probably would not
have believed it.
But Madlock, who had his
troubles earlier in the season,
finds himself in that enviable
position today, thanks to
some tips from Cubs
Manager Jim Mars~all and
his own ability "to go for
doubles and triples."
Madlock climaxed the best
series
of his career Sunday
Division race. But what does
with
a
4-4 performance
that mean to a team which
against
Cincinnati
as the
thinks trading Nolan Ryan to
the California Angels was a Cubs stopped the Big Red
Machine 4-3.
good move?
For Madlock, it gave him II
Seaver, mixing fastballs
with sliders and changeups, hits in 13 times at bat against
pitched a three-hitter Sunday the Reds and lifted his
as the Mets beat the San average 17 points , overtaking
Diego Padres 6-0. He has now Reggie Smith of the St. Louis
pitched 22 consecutive Cardinals.
"We told Bill in spring
shutout innings, his ERA
training
that we did not want
leads the NL and he has a
him
trying
to hit the long ball,
lifetime 16-1 record against
san Diego. His record a year that we would be satisfied
ago, in the midst of his time of with a Jot of singles," Martroubles, incidentally, was 3- shall said.
"! guess I've been doing my
5.
Seaver protected a I-ll lead share on offense lately,"
until the ninth when the Mets Madlock said, "but I'm not
scored five runs with two San going to talk about winning
Diego errors, two wild pit- the batting title until the
ches and a run._&lt;;coring single season ends on Sept. 28. I
by Seaver contributing to the guess I had trouble seeing the
rally. Brent Strom, making
his first major league appearance since 1973, suffered
the loss for San Diego.
The Pirates defeated the
Atlanta Braves 8-6, the
Chicago Cubs beat the Cincinnati Reds 4-3 after losing
the suspended game of
Saturday
11-3.

Seaver posts
lOth .victory

1

The 'DailY Sentinel · --, ~
DEVOTED TO I Ht
.
INTERE!i'T OF
I MEIGS-MASON AREA
~HESTER L. TANNEHILl

11

midway in the third period
when Hubbard dropped an
ihside jumper and Gregg
Kobb of Olmsted Falls
started connecting from the
outside to send the North
Stars to a 21-point lead, at 7958.
At the buzzer, the North
Stars still held the 21-point
margin, at ~2. In the final
period , John Williams of
Riverview gave the North
Stars their biggest lead of the
night, of 23 points, when he hit
a driving jumper.
The South Stars, using the
foul line, managed to climb
back within 12 points on two
occasions before Hubbard
and Fred BaLser of Elyria
ended any comeback hopes of
the Rebels.
North
Coach
Jack
Greynolds of Barberton
credited the victory to the
balanced attack of his first
and second teams , as well as
the fast break.
··voc ., got some guards in
this game, .. ~ said.
Assistant Walter Harrop of
Warsaw Riverview-said the
game plan was to put the
pressure on and it worked.
The North Stars took 98
attempts from the field,
hitting 46, for 49 per cent
while at the line they were 17
of 27 fpr 63 per cent. The
Rebels were 32 of 65 from the

ACQUIRE McGREW
ToLEDO (UPI) - The
Toledo Mudhens of the lnternatioital League Saturday
obtained ouUielder Alvln
McGrew from Rochester in a
,. straight cash deal.
He · was to arrive here
today.

,_

Sunday's Results
N ew York 3 Chicago 0
Boston 8 Kansas City 7
Minnesota 5 Balti more 4
California 8 Milwaukee 7, 1st
Mi lwaukee 4 Ca l ifornia 2. 2nd
Cleveland 5 Texas 1
Oakland at Detroit , ppd , rain
Monday's Probable Pitchers
(All Times Eon
Baltimore (Palmer 10-3J at

Pomeroy Pony clubs in
lopsided diamond wins

Cleveland (Bibby HI, 7' 30

ball earlier in the season. I
remember a series against
Houston here, when 1 strucli
out four times in a row and I
. thought I had had it at that
point."

Madlock's performance
overshadowed }Cincinnati
catcher Johnny Bench's live
hits in a suspended game
played Saturday and Sunday
and Cesar Geronimo's 9-for12 series.
Marshall commented, "I
'have said all along that we
have got in Madlock a great
third baseman and now his
fielding has picked up, too."
For Chicago, the 4-3 win
was only the Cubs' first
triumph against Cincinnati
alter six losses. Madlock
drove in a run with a thirdinning .single and two more
with a seventh-inning double.
But Madlock had to share
hero honors with pitcher Bill
Bonham, who struck out
twelve batters lor a career
high.
" A lot of people have accused me of not concentrating when I Jose,"
Bonham said. "But I'm the
same pitcher every time out.
I guess, however, I really had
good stuff, because all four
times Cincinnati got two men
on, I was able to retire the
side without any damage."

.

don't realize
I
IIII·CI
to se~ve them
money on their

.
·ce~r-1nsumnce
..."

Steve Snowden

Like a good neighbor, ·
A State
Fann ·is there.

L ____

\1

Jenkins far out
-.
front in classic
PHIL,o\DELPHIA (UP! ) You can't blame Tom
Jenkins, a pro determined to
make i~ on his own on the
tour, if he feels a little
strange today even though he
is playing on a course "that
feels like home."
Jenkins, a three-year
veteran of the pro tour, who
has never won a tournament
or even led a round, holds a
five-stroke lead going into
today's 36-hole finale of the
twice rain-delayed
Philadelphia !VB Golf
Classic.
Jenkins, 27, who sponsors
himself on the pro tour, shot a
six-under-par 65 Sunday lor a
36-hole total of 134, eight
l!llder par, and held a fivestroke lead over Jim Dent,
who had a 67 for a 139 total.
f!ut those at 140 included
defending champion Hubert
Green, Jim Simons, and
Johnny Miller, No. 2 on this
year's money winning list,
who said Jenkins "is a nice
guy and a good golfer" but "if
I get it going, I could win."
Those at 141 in the tournament at the Whitemarsh
Valley Country Club were
Buddy Allin, Tom Shaw,
Jerry McGee, J .C. Snead and
little-known Nate Starks.
Among those at even-par
142 were Lou Graham, the
Opening romtd ]eader Who
soared to a six-&lt;&gt;VeriJar 77
after a 65. Gary P1ayer was at
144, while Billy Casper just
made the cut with a 145.
The 36 holes today were
necessitated beca use rain
and course flooding postponed Thursday 's and
Friday's rounds .
And
because of the threat of
thundershowers today, the

PGA made the 36-hole cut at
Ute 50 low scores and ties to
try and get in all of the play.
This meant 61 golfers qualified for today's play, while 12
other players, who did not
make the abbreviated cut but
would have made the normal
146 cutoff, got $191.25 and will
gain exemptions "for the
Western Open which follows
next week's U.S. Open.
Jenkins, whose best finish
on the pro tour was a third
place tie here last year, had a
second round of six birdies
and no bogeys and saved
three pars with some excellent chip shots to the
green .
Jenkins said he is "keeping
a little ahead of expenses" in
his pro play . But he has
earned only $11,180 so far this
year and $30,826 last year.
Miller, who won the 1973
U.S. Open and kmws a little
bit about pressure, said "a
fiveshot lead is not a big lead
for a guy who has never won a
tournament before."
.,.._ _ _ _,.._ _,.
•
yolir
0

t
coun
1nsurafti'll,a

agenl"1!
Rt

One is all you
really need.
Your Naho~wida agaht t1n

netp you "'9'• ways tnan
almost anyone. 1nd might
1ust 51 ve .,.ou ~&lt;~ma
mone.,. too

P. J. PAULEY
307 Spr-ing Ave .•
Ph.992·2311

Po""'•••

~I NATIONWIDE
1!\.J ~~!'!~~~~
fo4lo~nw + dll

MUIIMI l~tw•lfi C I CO..,PI~y
Nt ii OIIW I.,_ lrtl~tl uil f"l lfiiUII/It ll Co
'lllloltw•cie Ldll l fl...,rln(.l CoftoQet~y
H - OMCI Colu"'bul, Otuc

~~Some people still

In Pony League action last the A-s were Browning with a
Milwaukee 1Broberg 6·7) at week the Pomerov A-s double and single, · Rick ··
New York (May 7·2L 8 p .m .
Boston (Burton 0·1) at D etr oit pounded out 13 hits to blank · Johnson two singles, Mark
(Lolich 7 4), 8: 15p.m .
Letart 12-0 and the Pomeroy Mitch a triple and Dwane
California (Figueroa 5-4) at
Kansas City {Busby 8 5), 8: 15 Tigers smacked 12Safeties to White and David Harris each
p.m
a-single .
down Hartford 13-1.
Oak l and
(Bosman
J.J)
at
B~sides Stale Farm 's tradi tionally low rales and good
Getting the only Letart hit
For the A-s, Dale Browning
Mint1esota (Campbell 0 ·2). 9
serv1
ce. we also offer a variety of discounts and
p .m .
started on the mound and was Miller . Letart is now ll-4,
even spec ial car pool classilicalions. Slop by or give
Tuesday's Games
worked 4 innings. He gave , the A-s are 3-lln league play.
Ch icago a1 Te xas. night
me a call. Why pay more I han you have to?
Boston at Detro11 , night
Mike Trippiet pitched five
up
I
hit,
struck
out
9,
and
Baltmore at Cleve , night
walked qne. Greg Smith innings on his way to
Calif at KC, night
Oak at M inn , 2, twi .night
came ~to finish the contest defeating Hartford, striking
M i lwaukee at N Y, 2. twi -nigh t
which \vas called after the out II of 16 batters he faced .
1258 POWELL STREET
RACES POSTPONED
'
fifth inning because of the 12- Tripplet had a no hitter.going
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
in to the fourth · inning with 2
MALMOE, Sweden (UP!) run rule.
- Unfavorable weather
Brian Hamilton continued out when Hartford got its only '
PH. 992-7155
conditions caused a 24-hour to carry the hot bat for hit of the game, a single.
postponement of Sunday's Pomeroy as he had three Hitters for the 'Tigers were
two races in the World Finn doubles and a triple for a fine Tom Hawley with a triple and
nan ' 111 ""
Dinghy Yachting Cham- night at the plate. Thus far , a 'double, Jeff Grueser a
pionships. A jury disqualified Hamilton has had 10 hits in 13 double and Pat Owens a , 1
uuuuNu
the winner of Saturday's times at bat this season .
double.
.
1
STATE FARM .MUTUAL
second race, Australia's John
Warren and Scott Fields 1
Carl Carmichael and Smith
AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE COMPANY
Bertrand, because he ex- · also helped out with their bats pitche~ for Hartford, comceeded his craft's weight . a.s they each smacked home bining' to fan five, walk six,
HomeOifi~e: Bloominglon,lllinoiS
!~it of 42 pounds by six
and
give
up
12
hits,
and
the
13
__
.
-- - - - ---'
runs over the right field
pounds.
P-743P·
·, fence . Other3 getting hits ful' run s.
p.rn

Roan will be a key receiver
for the West, to be coached by
Baylor's Grant Teaff of the
Southwest Conference and
quarterbacked by Baylor's
Neal Jeffrey and Nebraska's
Dave Hwrun.
A near-capacity crowd of
45,000 is expected at Jones
Stadium as the West carries
an ~ series advantage into
the game. The West will be
seeking its third straight
victory- something neither
team has been able to gain in
the history of the game.

America week to get in a lot
of conditioning .
"The beat out here, the
competitive spirit, the
timing- it's all these things
put together that you just
can't get when you condition
by yourself."
Roan said being from
Texas and having competed
against Texas Tech over the
years has given him many
friends in the Lubbock area,
which is another reason he
looks forward to Saturday
night 's matchup .

North clobbers South, 109-89

Senate voting today

••

LUBBOCK, Tex. (UP! ) Oscar Roan, a tight end from
Southern
Methodist
University, said he never
By MILTON RICHMAN
considered using an agent to
UPI Sports Editor
bargain with the Cleveaiand
Browns because " I just
NEW YORK (UP!)...,. Pete's smile lit up his whole face.
thought of his cost versus his
. He stroked the little boy's head in front of his locker and gave benefits and decided 'to do my
him a gentle hug, being careful not to hurt the 5-yearold team own bargaining."
owner'sson or get him wet with the perspiration from his body . ' The !Hi, 215iJounder made
Pele had every right to feel happy with himself and with his own deal with Cleveland
everybody else around him Sunday, even if this was shabby and feels the . pro club was
Downing Stadium on Randall's Island with its dull gray more ready to deal with him
weather-beaten exterior, hopelessly limited capacity and than it would have been if he
sandlot style field.
·
had gone through an agent.
"! only planned to play the first half, but I felt so good, I
played the whole game," he bubbled in Portuguese .
And how he played.
Pele was Mr. Everything . He picked up the New York
Cosmos, carried them on his back imd personally led them to a
2-2 tie with the Dallas Tornado. He was ticke t._&lt;;eller , goalMARION, Ohio (UP!) scorer and cheerleader.
Class
AAA Player of the Year
When the Cosmos fell behind by two goals at half-time, he
Phil
Hubbard of Canton
talked to them in the locker room and persuaded them they
could come back . What helped him convince them most is that McKinley poured in 24 points
to pace the North Ali-Sttars to
he didn't use the word you,'' he said We. ''
•
a
convincing 109-89 victory
"We can still do it," he told them.
telling you we can."
over
the South All-Stars at the
Pete didn't only tell them, he showed them.
Marion
Coliseum Saturday
He showed them a few moves in the second half that were
magnificent, truly vintage Pele, and when you consitler the night.
Hubbard hit 10 of 19 from
man is 34 and played in his last previous game eight months
the
field and four of seven
ago, his was the performance of a virtuoso.
Millions saw Pele 's North American Soccer League debut from the line, and led all
because the game was not only televised nationally but in- cagers in rebounding with 15,
ternationally as well to nine LatinAmerican countries and as the North Stars evened the
Japan . Ordinarily, the Cosmos average 7,000 fans a game . The series at eight games each
one with Dallas Sunday wasn't even a regular contest, only a and snapped the South's twoexhibition set up principally to introduce Pele, and it attracted game win streak in the Cage
·
a near-capacity 21 ,278, all of whom got their money's worth. Classic.
The South grabbed brief
Granted, when a guy is getting paid $4.7million as Pele is, he leads in the opening period,
should give something back in return, but he was being asked the last at 5-3, before the
to prove himself immediately, on the spot, so to speak, in a North Stars took charge with
strange environment, on a strange field and with some 10 straight points to snap a 9-9
strange help. That takes a little doing.
deadlock.
Indeed, the only hitch in the entire production, the only thing
With 2,300 fans watching,
that kept It from being perfectly orchestrated was something the North stars built a 27-21
Pele had absolutely no control over ~his accompanists.
first quarter lead . In the
Unfortunately, they left a little to be desired. That was the second period, the RebeLs
New York Cosmos playing behind ·Pele, not the New York closed the lead to 27-26 with
Philhannonic .
8:47 remaining, when Fred
Sadly, at times, he'd be in excellent position., but there'd be Davis
of
Youngstown
nobody there to get the bali to him. Other times, the c;osmos Boardman led the North
would keep looking at Pele, trying to get the ball to him , when Stars into a commanding lead
they would have been better advised to try working it in again with a field goal and
themselves.
two foul shots .
At the end, Pele had kind words for everybody, the fans, his
The South never recovered,
teammates and his opponents.
as the North Stars behind
He said he was "happy" with the Cosmos and sure he'd work Hubbard and Truman
even better with them as the season went along.
Clayton of Toledo Scott rolled
"I felt some of the players were looking for me too much ," he to a 55-42 halftime bulge.
said.
The North Stars mainPele was impressed by Dallas' Kyle Rote, Jr., the most tained the 131&gt;oint lead until
celebrated player in the league until he came along.
"He has the potential to be a world class player ," said the
Cosmos' "rookie" superstar. "He reads the game well."
Some of Pele's teanunates were so thrilled over having
played in an actual game with him they looked as if they might
ask him for his autograph.
"It feels great," beamed defender Tony Picciano, a 22-yearold Brooklynite when someone wanted to know how it felt
playing on the same team as Pele. "We cannot fail now."
Mirko Liveric, another 22-year-&lt;&gt;ld from Yugoslavia, was
By FRED DOWN
equally thrilled over playing with Pele, but he talked about one
UP! Sports Writer
of the difficulties involved.
·
The New York Mets have
"At first it was hard to adjust tg his style of play," said stopped talking abOut the old
Liveric. "You have to know where he's going with the ball and Tom Seaver and what he did
where he's going to pass it."
for them. They 're too busy
Ah , yes.
talking about the new Tom
The Cosmos play one game; Pele plays another. There .is a Seaver and what he can do for
slight difference in the two games. About $4.7 million worth. them .
Seaver's current calling
card includes a lll-4 record, a
1.82 earned run average and
· two consecutive shutouts numbers which answer all
questions about whether h~
has recovered from his 11-11
performance in 1974.
American League
Major League Standings
The remaining question is
East
By United Press International
g.
b.
pet.
w.
I.
Nat•onal League
whether the new Seaver can
32 24 .57 1
Bos ton
East
2
the Mets to a National
lead.
.534
31
27
New
York
w. I. pet. g . b .
29 29 .500 4
Milwa ukee
League
pennant, just as the
33 23 .589
Pittsburgh
25 30 .455 6' I
31 24 .564 11 1 Detroit
New York
]
I
7
old
Seaver
did In 1969and 1973
25 32 .4 39
J2 27 .542 21 ' Baltimore
Philadelph ia
.4
14
9
24
34
Cleveland
1
-and right now the Mets and
30 29 .508 4 'z
· Chicago
West
27 29 ..:18'2 6
St . Louis
their frenetic fans are opw
.
1.
pet.
g.b.
23 30 .434 8 1 1
Montreal
Oakl and
35 24 .593
timistic. The definition for
W,e st
35 28 .556 2
w. 1. pet. g.b. Kansas City
optimism in Mets' fans is that
Minneso1a
28 27 .509 5
Cincinnati
38 25 .603
30 30 .500 5 ~ they are already planning the
Los Angeles
JS 29 .547
3 1 2 Texas
Calilornia
31 33 .484 6''2
San Francic co 29 32 .475 B
ticker tape celebration down
Chicago
26 33 .44 1 9
San Diego
29 32 .4 75 8
Saturday's
Resu
lts
Broadway.
Atlanta
26 35 .426 11
Houston
24 42 .364 15 1 1 Detroit 3 Oakland 2
It Is a fact, of course, that
Balt1more 7 Minnesota 0
Saturday 's Results
Milwaukee 6 California 4
the Pittsburgh Pirates still
Cincy 11 Chicago 3, susp 8 inns
Texas 2 Cleveland 1
Montreal 3 San Franc isco 1
lead the Mets by a game and
Chicago 7 New York 2
Houston 9 St. Lou is 0
·eos-ton ~ Kansas C il y~ 3
a
half in the NL's Eastern
P ittsburgh 2 Atlan'a 1

"

FROM GARBAGE
TO'GARDEN
ENOUGH
PEOPLE CARED.
2000 species ot

plants grow at 5/lvth cn/stBotanic Garden

in Palos Verdes Peninsula, Ca liforniA,..07e'r-3 .million tons of
trash and garbage lie just beneath the surface.'
A dump transfo rmed mto a paradise. Impossible? Not when
enough peoplt: in a comm unity get together and work .
You can help by becomh1g a community -volunteer in your

area. We'd likelo send you I he name of the Keep America
Beautiful group nearest you.

Write : Keep Ameri ca Beautiful. Inc., 99 Park Avenue,

New York, New York 100 16

People start pollution.
can stop iL
People
.,
' -1

,. . . !I

l . \ • 1.

Keep America Beautiful. inc.
•

1}-IUTI\..$"
'

0

A PubliC Strvlet Ol lt'!iiNtWIPIPer I Tha '-Mrtltlng Council.
~~
1'1
..)

•

�r

,

\.
r

•

'

_2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, June 16,

3::- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., M_onday; June 16, 1975

DR. LAMB

SMU's Oscar RoaiJ. bypasses agent

Today's Desensitizing best

Sport Parade

for insect allergy
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - In one
of your columns you mentioned a treatment for persons allergic to bee stings.
My daughter is highly
allergic , and each sling she
gets a worse reaction. We
have been told the only
treatment is bi-weekly shots
for about seven years and
even then it is no assurance
that they will help. Do you
recommend an easier, surer

procedure?
DEAR READER - I wish I
could . There are probably
nearly a million people who
have severe reac tions to bee
and wasp stings each year.
As many as 40 deaths occur
annually. I mention this to
emphasize it is not a minor
matter , and you must get
proper treatment for your
daughter.
The most commonly
available method of treatment is to give repeated
injections of an extract
prepared from the crushed
whole bodies of slinging insects, referred to as WBE.
This is really a desensitizing
procedure .
A review of the success of
this procedure shows that 95
per cent of patients treated
this way do not have any
problem with subsequent
stings. But, that may often be
a happy coincidence, tending
more to prove that many
people who have a severe
reaction once will not have
such a reaction a second
lime. In a controlled study of
untreated patients, 60 per
cent didn't have any serious
reaction to subsequent stings,
either.
Even more disquieting is
the observation that some
patients treeated with WBE
are still likely to have severe
shocklike reactions with a
subsequent sting. Dr. William
Busse of University of

Wisconsin and his associates
recently published one of
their cases in the Journal of
the American Medical
Association (March 17, 1975).
The young women was not
protected by the WBE
trea tment. She was then
treated with a purified venom
from honey bees. This treatment gradually worked, and
she became fully protected
from the dan ger of honey bee
slings. Similar results have
been noted by scientists at the
State University of New York
at Buffalo and in Baltimore's
Good Samaritan Hospital.
Purified venom seems to be
far superior, and it can be
specific for that patient's
reaction. Some people are
reactors to bee stings but not
wasp stings and vice versa.
Unfortuna tely , . purified
ve nom is not available
readily at present. It is expected to be produced in
commercial amounts soon.
Meanwhile the best you and
other people with similar
problems can do is use the
WBE treatment available.
And, I would strongly support
your doctor in recommending
this treatment.
You should also take all the
important precautions you
can against exposing your
daughter to bee stings. That
means keeping flowers and
shrubs down from around the
house. Also, have her wear
white or li ght colored
clothing. She should avoid
using scents, such as perfume
and cosmetics that tend to
attract bees.
You should talk to yoW'
doctor about the advisability
·of having a readily available
sting kit. Reactions are
sometimes swift and severe.
Be prepared for a severe
reaction ahead of time. If she
gets stung, scrape the stinger
out, don't pull it and squeeze
more venom into her.

,,

CINDY PATTERSON AND SANDI HAMILTON were an excellent team in the Mid-Porn
School of Dance recital. Here they dance to "Spanish F1ea ".

NRS. JUDY FRASER AND DAUGIITER, APRIL,
who assists with the Mid-Porn School of Dance, as they
danced an effective tOe number in Friday night's recital.

..
.,

11

Theme".

THESE TINY SI'UDENTS - Judi Mees, Erin Anderson, Mary Jacobs, Laura McCullough and Jodi
Harrison - were well received in their attractive
costumes during the Mid-Porn dance recital.

Mid-Porn School
dance recital
good·show biz·
By Bob Hoeflich
Students of the Mid-Porn
School of Dance again proved
the old adage that " there's no
business like show business"
Friday night when they
presented one of their best
recitals of the II annual
events.
Under the direction of Mrs .
Judy Fraser, assisted by her
daughter, April, students
moved through some outstanding numbers. Costumes
were colorful and attractive,
some of the solo and group
numbers were excellent and
Mrs. Fraser pulled some real
crowd-pleasing nove,l ty
pre sentations ou t of her

on permanent
55 speed limit

Syracuse who was attractive,
versatile and talented in her
presentations . During the
recital staged in the Meigs
Junior High School at Middleport, Miss Patterson
appeared in a unique dance
number completely hidden by
a large tophat and small
clothing to provide a unique .
effect.
She returned to the
spotlight for an excellent
baton routine which drew
interrupted applause from
the large crowd on hand.
Miss Patterson teamed
with Sandi Hamilton, a real
comer, on two excellent

The audience saw smooth
and difficult tap numbers by
ESTHER LOWERY, AN
the team of April Fraser and
advanced
student, danced .
Teresa Buckley who performed well. M;iss Fraser well in this toe number
teamed with her mother, during Friday nlght 's
director of the school , on an 'recital.
effective toe number , "Time
in a Bottle" and Miss Buckley Spanish outfits tapped to
presented ·an acrobatic solo. "Tiajuana Taxi" in contrast
Advanced students im- to pale pink satin outfits worn
pressive . in their solo num - on their ballet number.
Amber Warner, Angela
bers were Esther Lowery,
graceful and poised in a toe Clifford, Libby Watkins.,
routine ; Suzy Samuels -in a Terri Johnson, Lynne Oliver,
fast tap, and June Wamsley, · Beth Weaver, Tammy
who performed a potpourri of Starcher, and Melanie Sisson
dance in an impressive were effective in court jester
comedy manner. The three outfits in a combination
advanced students joined for balletcacrobatic type numa graceful ballet number, her . The same group opened
"Color My World" and an the show with a tap routine
effective tap, " California and appeared again on a
Dreamin'.' '
favorite of a few months
Timely, what with Big back, "Tie a Yellow Ribbon
Bend Regatta Weekend and 'Round the Old Oak Tree".
its frog activities coming up,
Real "cuties" were the tiny
were Sharon Griffin, Barbara dancers, Jodi Harrison, Erin
Grueser and Andrea Batey in Anderson, Mary Jacobs,
a lively acrobatic presen- Judy Mees and Laura Mctation
wearing
frog Cullough, who performed
costuming. The same trio both in tap and ballet. Jenny
performed also in the recital Bentley, April Clark, Belll
together in both a tap and a Wolfe , Audra Houdashelt,
ballet num ber.
Joelle McLaughlin , Jill
Enhancing the Friday night Nease, Terrie Starcher and
presentation also was an Jane Amberger showed
effective blacklight number potential In thei,r tap and
which featured some half ballet routines.
dozen of the advanced
The finale included the
students dancing while _entire group of students
seated. Only gloves moving in p~rforming in an acrobatic
an intricate pattern and knee feat .
socks in florescent colors
Adding to the effective
showed in the lighting .
presentation were stage
Group rtumbers which settings which featured
revealed that more excellent subtle blinking lights behind
advanced students are in the colorful panels and a slow
making w'e re attractively moving color pattern across a
costumed.
frosted glass panel. Ernie
A line composed of Jean Fraser, husband of the
Horton , Kay Hart, Ruth Ann director, was in charge of the
Fry, Marcia Sisson, Paula music, and all stage
Horton and Kimberly Bir- properties were created by
chfield in orange and black the Dale Jacobs family and
Mrs. Fraser's son, Scott.
Mi-s, Fraser was presented
red roses and a gilt of jewelry
by her students.

By LEE LEONARD
mittee probably would be
UP! Statehouse Reporter
needed to iron out differences
dance numbers , " Spanish
COLUMBUS (UP!) - State between the House and
Flea" and a moden type
"show biz" hat.
senators return to work late Senate before the new fiscal
If the recital had a "star," number, "St. James Inthis afternoon to vote on year starts July I.
then possibly the rank would firmary." Miss Hamilton's
Housecapproved legislation to
The Senate Finance
go to Cindy Patterson of solo number was of " Love's
make permanent Ohio's 55 Committee late Friday night
m.p.h highway speed limit. cut $69.8 million worth of ·
The Senate is also to vote )X'ograms from the HouseTuesday on the reduced $10.6 passed budget and gained an
billion state budget for fiscal additional $24.2 million worth
1976-77 if the legislation could of revenues through revised
be reprinted for Senators to . JrO jections to eliminate a $94
study.
milliion imbalance, · acThe speed limit measure cording
to
majority
RED ROSES TO A HAPPY LADY: Mrs. Judy Fraser
would increase fines for Democrats.
was presented roses by her students Friday night as she
speeding violations but
Minority Republicans said wrapped up the lith annual recital of the Mid-Porn School
continues the practice of not the budget is still $96 million of Dance.
imposing driver 's license underfunded, but their atpoints except for speeding tempts to make massive
more than 60 m.p.h. on a public welfare cuts failed as personnel to get adequate accidents, but would allow
primary road inside a city the budget was reported out medical practice insurance lawsuits to recover damages
and over 70 m.p.h on of committee on a party~ine at a reasonable cost.
greater than $1,500.
freeways. It also grants no vote. Democrats took care of
The legislation, however,
The House Commerce and
ideal weather basis for ex- a cash flow problem to the attempts to put limitations on Labor Committee scheduled
ceeding the 55 m.p.h. limit. satisfaction of state Finance the insurance industry, a Tuesday night hea~ing on
Since the lower speed limit Director Howard L. Collier, medical profession, patients .Se~te~ssed legts)ation setimposed early last year as a by requiring quarterly .·and their lawyers. It would;' ting up -collective llargaining
fuel conservation measiU'e payments of taxes by large require Ohio insurance prOcedures&gt; for public emexpires June 30, the Senate corporations during the next companies, including Blue ployes and authorizing a
would have to apJrove an biennium.
·
Cross and Blue Shield, to limited right to strike.
emergency priority so it
Cuts in Education
offer mal]ractice insurance
The Senate, ,Energy and
would continue the cur- - Collier said this would pro- under a "shared risk" pool. Environment Committee will
THESE THREE ADVANCED students, June Wamsley, Suzy Samuels and l&gt;stner
tailment next month. It vide an even flow of $219 Physicians would be required hold·a hearing Wednesday on
Lowery performed beautifully in solo and group numbers in the Mid-Porn dimce recital
requires
a
two-thirds million in cash into state to take a minimuum of 150 House-jlasse!l legislation
Friday night.
·
majority, or 22 of 33 votes, in coffers to keep the treasury bours of continuing education providing a 30-year tax
abatement _plan for an inthe upper chamber to retain from going broke by Septem- every three years.
the speed limit.
her, 1976.
·
·
Sets Llnilts
dustry locating a coal
Its ending would permit · The major cut pushed
Although medical benefits gasification plant In Ohio.
higher speeds but would through by Democrats diU'ing and Joss of wages would be
terminate federal highway . a marathon 11-hoiU' com- paid in malpractice awards,
for
and suf.. :::::::::~::::::::·:;:::::::::·:::::::·:::f.::::::::::-::::~~:::::·::=o
funds for Ohio road projects. mittee meetina10 Friday was damaaes
•••,.,•••,.,•,•,•,0:•,•,•.-,•,·:0,•.•,-:-,•,•.•,•,•0".~'·'•'•'"'•"•0:0X
10
$45million frOffi Jrlmary and fering'' WOuld be limited to '•'•'•'•'•'•'•'•'•'•'•W•'•'•'•'•'•'•'•'•'•'•'•'•'ooWo'•'•'oW,
ll:mergency Clause Crucial
PAINT TONIGHT
·ShuUiallie Senate ap]rove secondary education. $200,000under the bill . .'
the emergency clause, the Democrats said a new school
Lawyers ' fees ould be
There wiD be a league
House would have to foundation formula could be based on a reverse graduated
meeting of the M&amp;M Sll!'
reconsider that aspect, since. funded with $457 million In scale - the higher the award,
Pitch Softball League at
representatives dropped the additional state funds rather the lower the percentage that
the Kyger Creek field
emergency feature in order than the $502 million ap- would go to the attorney.
tonight
at 6 p. m. Each
to gain p8S811ge May 6th . Only ]roved by tl)e House.
Patients WPllld be able to
team
must
have at least
three of the 11 members
The rest of the deficit was · agree to binding arbitration
two repr.esg,ntatives
absent that day would hltve to eliJn\naled thrPllgh juggled on malpractice claims,
present. Painting wlll be
approve In order to get the bookkeeping, and Collier avoiding court. Otherwise,
done on the park to get It
emergency clause through warned the level of spending cases would be settled in the
re;l,dy for the upcoming
the lower chamber.
could not I be supported Ohio Court of Claims.
Kyger Creek Little League
Senate leaders scheduled a. beyond June, 1977, witbout
The no-fault automobile
Tuesday vote on the reduced additional state taxes.
Tournament. In ease of
inaurance bill, with hearings
· $1D.8 billion state budget for
rain, the meeting will be
State representatives scheduled Tuesday and
n-1 197&amp;-771f the legislalloo return Tuesday · afternoon Wednesday, is to be reported postpon~d until Wednesday
coaJd be printed 80011 enough and are to vote on com- out of the House lnsiU'ance
at the same time.
for readin8 and study by prehenslve legislation aimed .Committee this week . It
THESE YOUNG DANCERS exhibited their ballet training in the "Pink Fantasy Ballet"
senaton before the balloting. at allo.wlng physicians, would end the "fault" con- .,~:
•'
•:;:x:;:;::-:•i•XO;•;-;r~~;r~•·~..u::;·~··········
of
the
recital by the Mid-Porn SchOol of Dance.
·
. .
· au to ..x ·o:;:&gt;?.·:.·.:-.:::·
..···~~.... •.,..;::::::,.:·:::::::.:·:·:·
~o:-zn &lt;'•' "•:·:·:·
A joint conference com- bospl'tals and other medical cept for Oht'o dr'tvers 10
"'""'-"'-:r.!.~:::.:·k&lt;
' '. p a i n

l

'

"I 'm sure there is a place
and a time for an agent, but·in
most cases he is not needed,11
Roan said. " I feel the
response I got from the
Browns pretty well backs me
up."

Roan, is here this week
preparing for Saturday
night's 15th annual Coaches
AllAmerica Football game,
matching the best of the West
against those from the South
in a 9 p.m. EDT kickoff to be
telecast nationally by ABC .

Roan admits he doesn't
know that much about agents
since he didn 't use one, but he
says in his own case when
Cleveland learned he was
handling his own bargaining
instead of calling upon an
agent, it was more responsive
to the bargaining.
"They said they knew for
sure what I was asking for
was what I wanted, not what
some other man wanted for
the both of us," Roan said.
Roan said after he received

his invitation to play . in
Saturday's Ali-Star game for
the West, he contacted Cleveland and they were thrilled
for him to play.
"They told me it would give
me a good chance to get back
into shape under game and
football-type conditions
before going to rookie camp,"
he said.
Cleveland will open rookie
camp this year July 20 at
Kent State in Ohio , and Roan
said he planned to use All-

'

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lnternattonal League
Standings

By UPI
w. t. pet. g.b.
Tidewater
36 25 .590
Char leston
34 26 567 P/2
Rochester
Syracuse
R ic hmond
Pawtucket

To l e~o

36 28 .563

llh

34 28 548

21!,
S

30 30 .500
26 34 .433

9 l!2

26 35 .426 10 24 39 .381 13.

Memphis
Saturday's Results
Memphis 4 Syracuse 3
Charleston 3 Rochester 0
Richmond 7 Toledo 6, 1st. 7
inn
Richmond at Toledo , 2nd ,
ppd ., rain
Tidewater 6 Pawtucket 1, 1st, "
7 inn .
Tidewater 4 Pawtucket 3,
2nd, 10 inn .
Sunday's Results
Memphis 7 Syracuse 4
Tidewater 4 Pawtucket 2
Charleston 5 Rochester 1. lst.
7 inn .
Char l eston 7 Rochester 0,
2nd , 7 inn.
Richmond at Toledo, ppd .,
. rain·

I

&lt;

Exec. Ed.
n
HOEFLICH
'
City Editor
..
Poblishod dolly excep •
alwdoy by The Ohio Volle · 1 "
R~BE .RT

~
~

Publish in g Company, 11 ~
ourt St., Pomeroy , Chit·'
.45769. Bus iness Office Phont
2 - 21S6 .. Edllorlol Pho~e 992&gt;
57.
'
Second class pos+ege pal~
Pomeroy, Ohio .
.NaJlonat
o~utvPrtlsl~}
: • ePresentatlve
Warui""

Grlflil h Compony

Inc

,.

··~

,,

;

San PI ego 7 New York 1
Los Angeles 4 Phila 3
Sunday's Results
P 1ttsburgh B Atlanta 6
Cincinnati 11 Chicago J
Chicago 4 Cinncinnati J
Houston B Sf . Lou is 7
Phi!a 4 Los Ange l es 3
N ew York 6 San D iego 0
Montreal 1 San Fran 1, I sf
Montreal 5 San Fran 2, 2nd
Monday's Probable Pitchers
(All Times EDTl
PhiladelPhia (Carlton 6-51 at
Chicago (Burris 6-5·) , . 2:30 p .m .
san Diego (Folkers 1-3) at San
Francisco (Halicki 2 2), 4 05
p .m .
Sf . Louis
(Bryan t Q.O) at
Pittsburgh (Kison 6·2) , 7: 35
p .m .
Atlanta CN iekro 6-4) at Cincin ·
nati {Gullett a.J), 8: 00p.m .
Houston (Dierker 6·6) at Los
Angeles ( Sutton 10 ·51. 10 .30

p.m .

Tuesd•v 's Games
Ph i ladelphia at Chicago
NY at Montreal, 2, twl -night
St . Louis at Pitt, night
Atlanta at Cincinati. night
Houston at Los Angeles , night
san OIE!go at San Frp n . night

Irk

Bottlnelll &amp; G'altatJher Dlv· · •
757 Third Ave., trew York1 ·
N , Y. 10017~
1.

~arrier
v

SubscrlptiQn

ranu• :·

ellvered by carrier wher•· ·

1'\

valtable 75 cents per week~; ; .
Motor Route wht~
service
n
':'

vollobl~. One month, $3 .2 .
_,
By mall in Oh io and W. Vo j,
ne Year, S22 .0.Q ;
Sla
1....
onlhs,
$11.50 ;
Thr••
onths. $LOO . ElseO.her~ "'
26 .00 vear; SIK month 'l ,..

l3 .SO; three months, 57 .5 . '·
ubscrlptlon price lncludl'l
undav Tlmes .sentlnel.
·
·• ·- :rn··
··· ~ ' a

\

"

field lor 49 per cent, and 25 of included 19 college coaches.
41 at the line for 61 per cent ,
It also was anounced that a
including 17 of 24 in the final decision would be made in
period . The North ·stars July concerning the site of
dominated the boards 50 to 39, next year's North-South Cage
and four players fouled out in Classic.
the contest.
NORTH 109
The pressure tactics of the
F red Dav1s 2 6 8 10 , Gr eg
North forced the South into 36 Kobb 6 2 6 14 . Fre d B alse r a o
16, Dave H eck ,, o.o B, T im
turnovers, while the North 0Stei
nhilber 1 0 0 2, T ruman
Cla y 1on 7 56 19, J ohn Me
totaled 24.
Cu i Iough J 0 0 6. Kevin Appe l
Behind Hubbard · for the 4 0 0 8, John Will iams 1 0 0 2,
winners were Clayton with 19 Ph i l Hu bba rd 10 11 7 24 .
17-27 -109.
points, Balser canned 16 and TOTALS 46
SOUTH89
Tod d Jone s 3 5 6 11, Fred
Kobb finished with 14. Mike
e 5 0 3 10, Roy Stut z 2 Q. Q
Shoemaker, a Classy guard 4,Pool
Dav1d Br unslon 2 4 -6 8 , Ke n
from Paint Valley, led the Ch r is tensen 2 1 2 5, Mike
emak er 5 6 10 16, J1 m
South scoring parade with 16 PSho
axson J 8 8 l A, Mike K 1nnard
points while Jim Paxson of 1 0 2 2, Bob Schae fer 4 1-2 9,
Walerman 5 0 ·2 10 .
Kettering Alter dropped in 14. Tim
TOTALS 32 H -4 1 89 .
Hubbard, when questioned Nor th
27 28 28 26 - - 109
South
/1 21 20 27 - 89
about a college choice, said
F ou l ed ou t· Bal se r , Me .
he would make his decision Cui Iou gh, Wi ll iams , Kinna rd
T otal fou l s No r th 35 South
Wednesday in Canton.
2J
Those attending the game
A
2.300.

Madlock's big
hat stops Reds

CHICAGO (UP!) - If
anyone had told Chicago Cub
third baseman Bill Madlock
that he would be leading the
National League with a .360
batting average after 60
games, he probably would not
have believed it.
But Madlock, who had his
troubles earlier in the season,
finds himself in that enviable
position today, thanks to
some tips from Cubs
Manager Jim Mars~all and
his own ability "to go for
doubles and triples."
Madlock climaxed the best
series
of his career Sunday
Division race. But what does
with
a
4-4 performance
that mean to a team which
against
Cincinnati
as the
thinks trading Nolan Ryan to
the California Angels was a Cubs stopped the Big Red
Machine 4-3.
good move?
For Madlock, it gave him II
Seaver, mixing fastballs
with sliders and changeups, hits in 13 times at bat against
pitched a three-hitter Sunday the Reds and lifted his
as the Mets beat the San average 17 points , overtaking
Diego Padres 6-0. He has now Reggie Smith of the St. Louis
pitched 22 consecutive Cardinals.
"We told Bill in spring
shutout innings, his ERA
training
that we did not want
leads the NL and he has a
him
trying
to hit the long ball,
lifetime 16-1 record against
san Diego. His record a year that we would be satisfied
ago, in the midst of his time of with a Jot of singles," Martroubles, incidentally, was 3- shall said.
"! guess I've been doing my
5.
Seaver protected a I-ll lead share on offense lately,"
until the ninth when the Mets Madlock said, "but I'm not
scored five runs with two San going to talk about winning
Diego errors, two wild pit- the batting title until the
ches and a run._&lt;;coring single season ends on Sept. 28. I
by Seaver contributing to the guess I had trouble seeing the
rally. Brent Strom, making
his first major league appearance since 1973, suffered
the loss for San Diego.
The Pirates defeated the
Atlanta Braves 8-6, the
Chicago Cubs beat the Cincinnati Reds 4-3 after losing
the suspended game of
Saturday
11-3.

Seaver posts
lOth .victory

1

The 'DailY Sentinel · --, ~
DEVOTED TO I Ht
.
INTERE!i'T OF
I MEIGS-MASON AREA
~HESTER L. TANNEHILl

11

midway in the third period
when Hubbard dropped an
ihside jumper and Gregg
Kobb of Olmsted Falls
started connecting from the
outside to send the North
Stars to a 21-point lead, at 7958.
At the buzzer, the North
Stars still held the 21-point
margin, at ~2. In the final
period , John Williams of
Riverview gave the North
Stars their biggest lead of the
night, of 23 points, when he hit
a driving jumper.
The South Stars, using the
foul line, managed to climb
back within 12 points on two
occasions before Hubbard
and Fred BaLser of Elyria
ended any comeback hopes of
the Rebels.
North
Coach
Jack
Greynolds of Barberton
credited the victory to the
balanced attack of his first
and second teams , as well as
the fast break.
··voc ., got some guards in
this game, .. ~ said.
Assistant Walter Harrop of
Warsaw Riverview-said the
game plan was to put the
pressure on and it worked.
The North Stars took 98
attempts from the field,
hitting 46, for 49 per cent
while at the line they were 17
of 27 fpr 63 per cent. The
Rebels were 32 of 65 from the

ACQUIRE McGREW
ToLEDO (UPI) - The
Toledo Mudhens of the lnternatioital League Saturday
obtained ouUielder Alvln
McGrew from Rochester in a
,. straight cash deal.
He · was to arrive here
today.

,_

Sunday's Results
N ew York 3 Chicago 0
Boston 8 Kansas City 7
Minnesota 5 Balti more 4
California 8 Milwaukee 7, 1st
Mi lwaukee 4 Ca l ifornia 2. 2nd
Cleveland 5 Texas 1
Oakland at Detroit , ppd , rain
Monday's Probable Pitchers
(All Times Eon
Baltimore (Palmer 10-3J at

Pomeroy Pony clubs in
lopsided diamond wins

Cleveland (Bibby HI, 7' 30

ball earlier in the season. I
remember a series against
Houston here, when 1 strucli
out four times in a row and I
. thought I had had it at that
point."

Madlock's performance
overshadowed }Cincinnati
catcher Johnny Bench's live
hits in a suspended game
played Saturday and Sunday
and Cesar Geronimo's 9-for12 series.
Marshall commented, "I
'have said all along that we
have got in Madlock a great
third baseman and now his
fielding has picked up, too."
For Chicago, the 4-3 win
was only the Cubs' first
triumph against Cincinnati
alter six losses. Madlock
drove in a run with a thirdinning .single and two more
with a seventh-inning double.
But Madlock had to share
hero honors with pitcher Bill
Bonham, who struck out
twelve batters lor a career
high.
" A lot of people have accused me of not concentrating when I Jose,"
Bonham said. "But I'm the
same pitcher every time out.
I guess, however, I really had
good stuff, because all four
times Cincinnati got two men
on, I was able to retire the
side without any damage."

.

don't realize
I
IIII·CI
to se~ve them
money on their

.
·ce~r-1nsumnce
..."

Steve Snowden

Like a good neighbor, ·
A State
Fann ·is there.

L ____

\1

Jenkins far out
-.
front in classic
PHIL,o\DELPHIA (UP! ) You can't blame Tom
Jenkins, a pro determined to
make i~ on his own on the
tour, if he feels a little
strange today even though he
is playing on a course "that
feels like home."
Jenkins, a three-year
veteran of the pro tour, who
has never won a tournament
or even led a round, holds a
five-stroke lead going into
today's 36-hole finale of the
twice rain-delayed
Philadelphia !VB Golf
Classic.
Jenkins, 27, who sponsors
himself on the pro tour, shot a
six-under-par 65 Sunday lor a
36-hole total of 134, eight
l!llder par, and held a fivestroke lead over Jim Dent,
who had a 67 for a 139 total.
f!ut those at 140 included
defending champion Hubert
Green, Jim Simons, and
Johnny Miller, No. 2 on this
year's money winning list,
who said Jenkins "is a nice
guy and a good golfer" but "if
I get it going, I could win."
Those at 141 in the tournament at the Whitemarsh
Valley Country Club were
Buddy Allin, Tom Shaw,
Jerry McGee, J .C. Snead and
little-known Nate Starks.
Among those at even-par
142 were Lou Graham, the
Opening romtd ]eader Who
soared to a six-&lt;&gt;VeriJar 77
after a 65. Gary P1ayer was at
144, while Billy Casper just
made the cut with a 145.
The 36 holes today were
necessitated beca use rain
and course flooding postponed Thursday 's and
Friday's rounds .
And
because of the threat of
thundershowers today, the

PGA made the 36-hole cut at
Ute 50 low scores and ties to
try and get in all of the play.
This meant 61 golfers qualified for today's play, while 12
other players, who did not
make the abbreviated cut but
would have made the normal
146 cutoff, got $191.25 and will
gain exemptions "for the
Western Open which follows
next week's U.S. Open.
Jenkins, whose best finish
on the pro tour was a third
place tie here last year, had a
second round of six birdies
and no bogeys and saved
three pars with some excellent chip shots to the
green .
Jenkins said he is "keeping
a little ahead of expenses" in
his pro play . But he has
earned only $11,180 so far this
year and $30,826 last year.
Miller, who won the 1973
U.S. Open and kmws a little
bit about pressure, said "a
fiveshot lead is not a big lead
for a guy who has never won a
tournament before."
.,.._ _ _ _,.._ _,.
•
yolir
0

t
coun
1nsurafti'll,a

agenl"1!
Rt

One is all you
really need.
Your Naho~wida agaht t1n

netp you "'9'• ways tnan
almost anyone. 1nd might
1ust 51 ve .,.ou ~&lt;~ma
mone.,. too

P. J. PAULEY
307 Spr-ing Ave .•
Ph.992·2311

Po""'•••

~I NATIONWIDE
1!\.J ~~!'!~~~~
fo4lo~nw + dll

MUIIMI l~tw•lfi C I CO..,PI~y
Nt ii OIIW I.,_ lrtl~tl uil f"l lfiiUII/It ll Co
'lllloltw•cie Ldll l fl...,rln(.l CoftoQet~y
H - OMCI Colu"'bul, Otuc

~~Some people still

In Pony League action last the A-s were Browning with a
Milwaukee 1Broberg 6·7) at week the Pomerov A-s double and single, · Rick ··
New York (May 7·2L 8 p .m .
Boston (Burton 0·1) at D etr oit pounded out 13 hits to blank · Johnson two singles, Mark
(Lolich 7 4), 8: 15p.m .
Letart 12-0 and the Pomeroy Mitch a triple and Dwane
California (Figueroa 5-4) at
Kansas City {Busby 8 5), 8: 15 Tigers smacked 12Safeties to White and David Harris each
p.m
a-single .
down Hartford 13-1.
Oak l and
(Bosman
J.J)
at
B~sides Stale Farm 's tradi tionally low rales and good
Getting the only Letart hit
For the A-s, Dale Browning
Mint1esota (Campbell 0 ·2). 9
serv1
ce. we also offer a variety of discounts and
p .m .
started on the mound and was Miller . Letart is now ll-4,
even spec ial car pool classilicalions. Slop by or give
Tuesday's Games
worked 4 innings. He gave , the A-s are 3-lln league play.
Ch icago a1 Te xas. night
me a call. Why pay more I han you have to?
Boston at Detro11 , night
Mike Trippiet pitched five
up
I
hit,
struck
out
9,
and
Baltmore at Cleve , night
walked qne. Greg Smith innings on his way to
Calif at KC, night
Oak at M inn , 2, twi .night
came ~to finish the contest defeating Hartford, striking
M i lwaukee at N Y, 2. twi -nigh t
which \vas called after the out II of 16 batters he faced .
1258 POWELL STREET
RACES POSTPONED
'
fifth inning because of the 12- Tripplet had a no hitter.going
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
in to the fourth · inning with 2
MALMOE, Sweden (UP!) run rule.
- Unfavorable weather
Brian Hamilton continued out when Hartford got its only '
PH. 992-7155
conditions caused a 24-hour to carry the hot bat for hit of the game, a single.
postponement of Sunday's Pomeroy as he had three Hitters for the 'Tigers were
two races in the World Finn doubles and a triple for a fine Tom Hawley with a triple and
nan ' 111 ""
Dinghy Yachting Cham- night at the plate. Thus far , a 'double, Jeff Grueser a
pionships. A jury disqualified Hamilton has had 10 hits in 13 double and Pat Owens a , 1
uuuuNu
the winner of Saturday's times at bat this season .
double.
.
1
STATE FARM .MUTUAL
second race, Australia's John
Warren and Scott Fields 1
Carl Carmichael and Smith
AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE COMPANY
Bertrand, because he ex- · also helped out with their bats pitche~ for Hartford, comceeded his craft's weight . a.s they each smacked home bining' to fan five, walk six,
HomeOifi~e: Bloominglon,lllinoiS
!~it of 42 pounds by six
and
give
up
12
hits,
and
the
13
__
.
-- - - - ---'
runs over the right field
pounds.
P-743P·
·, fence . Other3 getting hits ful' run s.
p.rn

Roan will be a key receiver
for the West, to be coached by
Baylor's Grant Teaff of the
Southwest Conference and
quarterbacked by Baylor's
Neal Jeffrey and Nebraska's
Dave Hwrun.
A near-capacity crowd of
45,000 is expected at Jones
Stadium as the West carries
an ~ series advantage into
the game. The West will be
seeking its third straight
victory- something neither
team has been able to gain in
the history of the game.

America week to get in a lot
of conditioning .
"The beat out here, the
competitive spirit, the
timing- it's all these things
put together that you just
can't get when you condition
by yourself."
Roan said being from
Texas and having competed
against Texas Tech over the
years has given him many
friends in the Lubbock area,
which is another reason he
looks forward to Saturday
night 's matchup .

North clobbers South, 109-89

Senate voting today

••

LUBBOCK, Tex. (UP! ) Oscar Roan, a tight end from
Southern
Methodist
University, said he never
By MILTON RICHMAN
considered using an agent to
UPI Sports Editor
bargain with the Cleveaiand
Browns because " I just
NEW YORK (UP!)...,. Pete's smile lit up his whole face.
thought of his cost versus his
. He stroked the little boy's head in front of his locker and gave benefits and decided 'to do my
him a gentle hug, being careful not to hurt the 5-yearold team own bargaining."
owner'sson or get him wet with the perspiration from his body . ' The !Hi, 215iJounder made
Pele had every right to feel happy with himself and with his own deal with Cleveland
everybody else around him Sunday, even if this was shabby and feels the . pro club was
Downing Stadium on Randall's Island with its dull gray more ready to deal with him
weather-beaten exterior, hopelessly limited capacity and than it would have been if he
sandlot style field.
·
had gone through an agent.
"! only planned to play the first half, but I felt so good, I
played the whole game," he bubbled in Portuguese .
And how he played.
Pele was Mr. Everything . He picked up the New York
Cosmos, carried them on his back imd personally led them to a
2-2 tie with the Dallas Tornado. He was ticke t._&lt;;eller , goalMARION, Ohio (UP!) scorer and cheerleader.
Class
AAA Player of the Year
When the Cosmos fell behind by two goals at half-time, he
Phil
Hubbard of Canton
talked to them in the locker room and persuaded them they
could come back . What helped him convince them most is that McKinley poured in 24 points
to pace the North Ali-Sttars to
he didn't use the word you,'' he said We. ''
•
a
convincing 109-89 victory
"We can still do it," he told them.
telling you we can."
over
the South All-Stars at the
Pete didn't only tell them, he showed them.
Marion
Coliseum Saturday
He showed them a few moves in the second half that were
magnificent, truly vintage Pele, and when you consitler the night.
Hubbard hit 10 of 19 from
man is 34 and played in his last previous game eight months
the
field and four of seven
ago, his was the performance of a virtuoso.
Millions saw Pele 's North American Soccer League debut from the line, and led all
because the game was not only televised nationally but in- cagers in rebounding with 15,
ternationally as well to nine LatinAmerican countries and as the North Stars evened the
Japan . Ordinarily, the Cosmos average 7,000 fans a game . The series at eight games each
one with Dallas Sunday wasn't even a regular contest, only a and snapped the South's twoexhibition set up principally to introduce Pele, and it attracted game win streak in the Cage
·
a near-capacity 21 ,278, all of whom got their money's worth. Classic.
The South grabbed brief
Granted, when a guy is getting paid $4.7million as Pele is, he leads in the opening period,
should give something back in return, but he was being asked the last at 5-3, before the
to prove himself immediately, on the spot, so to speak, in a North Stars took charge with
strange environment, on a strange field and with some 10 straight points to snap a 9-9
strange help. That takes a little doing.
deadlock.
Indeed, the only hitch in the entire production, the only thing
With 2,300 fans watching,
that kept It from being perfectly orchestrated was something the North stars built a 27-21
Pele had absolutely no control over ~his accompanists.
first quarter lead . In the
Unfortunately, they left a little to be desired. That was the second period, the RebeLs
New York Cosmos playing behind ·Pele, not the New York closed the lead to 27-26 with
Philhannonic .
8:47 remaining, when Fred
Sadly, at times, he'd be in excellent position., but there'd be Davis
of
Youngstown
nobody there to get the bali to him. Other times, the c;osmos Boardman led the North
would keep looking at Pele, trying to get the ball to him , when Stars into a commanding lead
they would have been better advised to try working it in again with a field goal and
themselves.
two foul shots .
At the end, Pele had kind words for everybody, the fans, his
The South never recovered,
teammates and his opponents.
as the North Stars behind
He said he was "happy" with the Cosmos and sure he'd work Hubbard and Truman
even better with them as the season went along.
Clayton of Toledo Scott rolled
"I felt some of the players were looking for me too much ," he to a 55-42 halftime bulge.
said.
The North Stars mainPele was impressed by Dallas' Kyle Rote, Jr., the most tained the 131&gt;oint lead until
celebrated player in the league until he came along.
"He has the potential to be a world class player ," said the
Cosmos' "rookie" superstar. "He reads the game well."
Some of Pele's teanunates were so thrilled over having
played in an actual game with him they looked as if they might
ask him for his autograph.
"It feels great," beamed defender Tony Picciano, a 22-yearold Brooklynite when someone wanted to know how it felt
playing on the same team as Pele. "We cannot fail now."
Mirko Liveric, another 22-year-&lt;&gt;ld from Yugoslavia, was
By FRED DOWN
equally thrilled over playing with Pele, but he talked about one
UP! Sports Writer
of the difficulties involved.
·
The New York Mets have
"At first it was hard to adjust tg his style of play," said stopped talking abOut the old
Liveric. "You have to know where he's going with the ball and Tom Seaver and what he did
where he's going to pass it."
for them. They 're too busy
Ah , yes.
talking about the new Tom
The Cosmos play one game; Pele plays another. There .is a Seaver and what he can do for
slight difference in the two games. About $4.7 million worth. them .
Seaver's current calling
card includes a lll-4 record, a
1.82 earned run average and
· two consecutive shutouts numbers which answer all
questions about whether h~
has recovered from his 11-11
performance in 1974.
American League
Major League Standings
The remaining question is
East
By United Press International
g.
b.
pet.
w.
I.
Nat•onal League
whether the new Seaver can
32 24 .57 1
Bos ton
East
2
the Mets to a National
lead.
.534
31
27
New
York
w. I. pet. g . b .
29 29 .500 4
Milwa ukee
League
pennant, just as the
33 23 .589
Pittsburgh
25 30 .455 6' I
31 24 .564 11 1 Detroit
New York
]
I
7
old
Seaver
did In 1969and 1973
25 32 .4 39
J2 27 .542 21 ' Baltimore
Philadelph ia
.4
14
9
24
34
Cleveland
1
-and right now the Mets and
30 29 .508 4 'z
· Chicago
West
27 29 ..:18'2 6
St . Louis
their frenetic fans are opw
.
1.
pet.
g.b.
23 30 .434 8 1 1
Montreal
Oakl and
35 24 .593
timistic. The definition for
W,e st
35 28 .556 2
w. 1. pet. g.b. Kansas City
optimism in Mets' fans is that
Minneso1a
28 27 .509 5
Cincinnati
38 25 .603
30 30 .500 5 ~ they are already planning the
Los Angeles
JS 29 .547
3 1 2 Texas
Calilornia
31 33 .484 6''2
San Francic co 29 32 .475 B
ticker tape celebration down
Chicago
26 33 .44 1 9
San Diego
29 32 .4 75 8
Saturday's
Resu
lts
Broadway.
Atlanta
26 35 .426 11
Houston
24 42 .364 15 1 1 Detroit 3 Oakland 2
It Is a fact, of course, that
Balt1more 7 Minnesota 0
Saturday 's Results
Milwaukee 6 California 4
the Pittsburgh Pirates still
Cincy 11 Chicago 3, susp 8 inns
Texas 2 Cleveland 1
Montreal 3 San Franc isco 1
lead the Mets by a game and
Chicago 7 New York 2
Houston 9 St. Lou is 0
·eos-ton ~ Kansas C il y~ 3
a
half in the NL's Eastern
P ittsburgh 2 Atlan'a 1

"

FROM GARBAGE
TO'GARDEN
ENOUGH
PEOPLE CARED.
2000 species ot

plants grow at 5/lvth cn/stBotanic Garden

in Palos Verdes Peninsula, Ca liforniA,..07e'r-3 .million tons of
trash and garbage lie just beneath the surface.'
A dump transfo rmed mto a paradise. Impossible? Not when
enough peoplt: in a comm unity get together and work .
You can help by becomh1g a community -volunteer in your

area. We'd likelo send you I he name of the Keep America
Beautiful group nearest you.

Write : Keep Ameri ca Beautiful. Inc., 99 Park Avenue,

New York, New York 100 16

People start pollution.
can stop iL
People
.,
' -1

,. . . !I

l . \ • 1.

Keep America Beautiful. inc.
•

1}-IUTI\..$"
'

0

A PubliC Strvlet Ol lt'!iiNtWIPIPer I Tha '-Mrtltlng Council.
~~
1'1
..)

•

�.

. . . . .... " " . - ....
~

·f
(

4- The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Monday, June 16, 1975

Brent's

Hunter blanks .Chisox, 3-0
By FRED McMANE
UPI Sports Writer
When Jim "Catfish "
HW!ter is at his best, it
doesn't Djlltter if the Dolly
Sisters or the Kingston Tr10 is
playing in the outfield.
W1th his three regular outfielders all sidelined with
injuries.,Jrumager Bill Virdon
of the New York Yankees
started two catchers and a
rookie who had never played
a big league game in his
outfield Sunday against the
Chicago Wh1te Sox , then
turned the ball over to Hunter
and hoped for the best.
Hunter, who always seems
w pitch his best under ad' verse or pressure-packed
conditions , was simply
masterful as he allowed only
four hits in pitchmg the
Yankees wa ~ triumph . The
29-year ""ld nght-hander
struck out six and walked
only two in notching his 12th
complete game in 16 starts.
The outfield, which con·
sisted of rookie Kerry Dineen
flanked by catchers Thurman
MW!son and Rick Dempsey,
handled nine chances
flawlessly, but none were of

the diff tcull vanety. Dmeen,
recently brought up from the
mmors, recorded six of the
putouts and three tunes cut m
front of the other outfie lders
in left and right-centerfie ld to
make the catch.
" I told him to ta ke everything w1thin reason," said
Virdoh·, alludmg to the fact
that 11 was Munson's first
game ever as an outfielder
and only the third time
Dempsey had played there.
" I d1dn't want him to embarrass my other outfielders
and catch them down the foul
lines ."
All three outfielders con-

tnbuted offensively w the
Vlc!Dry. Munson drove in two
rW!S with a pair of singles,
while Dempsey and Dineen
each had a hit and scored a
rW! .

In other AL games, Boston

nipped Kansas Ctty , 8-7 ;
Minnesota edged Baltunore,
5-4 ; Cleveland beat Texas, :;..
I , and Cahfornia beat
Milwaukee ll-7 in 11 innings,
then lost 4-2. Oakland at
Detroit was ramed out. ,
Red Sox 8, Royals 7
Rico Petrocelli slapped a

lndians, Braves win in
Youth League contests
In. Middl eport You th
League actwn last week the
Ind1ans defeated the Mets 124, and the Braves downed the
Reds 12-5. Shane Smtih ptl·
ched 5 mnings for the Jndtans
fanmn g 7, walkin g 2, and
giVing up 3 h1ts. Steve Carson
finished the contest, fa nning I
and walking 1
Tony Scott and Bob Fox
each saw mound actton for
the Mets. Scott p1tched 5
innings and walked I I, fanned
6, and gave up 6 hits. Fox
pitc hed the sixth, sinking out
3, walking I and allowm g I
h1t. Thts con test was a ramed
out makeup game from
earlier in the season
Hitters for the Indians were
Sm1th wtth a grand slam
home run m the second in-

mng, April Kmg a double and
single, Carson 2 smgles, and
Scott Ptckens a smgle.
For the Mets Scott, Keith
Pummeli and Steve Powell
each had a smgle each.
For the Mtddleport Braves,
Jeff Wayland and Mtke Miller
worked on the mound and for
the Reds, Oavid Demosky
sa w mound actwn
Ge ttt ng hits for the wtnners
were Ste••e Ftfe wtth 2 home
runs and 2 doubles, Wayland
had 2 doubles and 2 smgles,
Jim Boyer I smgle, Nathan
Smt th and Rick Ebersbach
each s1ngles.
For the Reds , Kevm Mllan,
Ray Stewart. and Vern Slavm
each had a smgle, Oemoskey,
Earl Wines , and Ttm Justis
each 2 smgies

Week 's softball games
-

tte·bl·ea ktpg smgie to start a
fo ur -nm etghth mmng which
enabled the Red Sox to defeat
the Royals Bill Lee, despite
givmg up 13 hits , went 7 2-3
innmgs and rece1ved credit
for h1s nmth vicwry . Denny
Doyle had a twCH"un homer
for Boston and rookie Fred
Lynn collected two htts to
stretch his h1t1mg streak to 20
games, longest by a Red Sox
player smce Eddie Bressoud
in 1964.
fwins 5, Orioles 4
Enc Soderholm drove in
three runs with a pair of
singles and Ray Corbin scattered 11 hits to pace the Twms
to vicwry over the Orioles.
Dan Ford homered for
Minnesota, while Don Baylor
connected for Baltimore.
Indians 5, Rangers 1
Boog Powell collected a
pa1r of doubles which led to
three runs as the Indians
pound ed ext e ammat e
Gaylord Perry for 10 h1ts m
six innings enroute to
snappmg a seven-game
losing
streak.
Dennis
Eckersley, with last out reiirt''
help· froin Jackie Brown,'
gained his fourth victory
against no losses .
Angels 8-2, Brewers 7-4
Lee Stanton drove in five
rW!S with a grand slam
homer and a double to spark
the Angels' opening game
triumph . The Angels pushed
across two runs in the lith
inning on three singles and a
bases-loaded walk. Gorman
Thomas, who homered for
Milwaukee in the f1rst game,
hit a two-£un shot in the
rughtcap w give the Brewers
a split. Ellie Rodriguez had a
two-run homer for California
m the second game, while
Pedro Garcia hit a solo
homer for Milwaukee in the
opener.
Mator Leag ue L ea der s
B y Umted Press lnternat tonal
L eadmg Batter s
( Based on 125 at b a tsl
Naftonal L eague

g , ab. r.
M ad lck Ch 60 239 3J
Sm 1th St L 39 145 25
Wa l son Ho ~8 21J 28
M or g n Cn 58 198 4 1
Bow a Ph il 41 175 18
Sang ln . PI 52 185 20
Ca sh , Phd 59 245 38
Gr u bb, SO 58 22J JS
Unse r N Y 54 198 JO
Par kr , Ptt 52 195 30
Griffey Cn 51 1.:;.1 32

Car~

h. pet

86
50

64

360
345
JJJ
34J
337
335
327
323
323

6'1
48

318

7J
68
59

62
80

72

Ame n can L eague

Mn n 5~ 1; 7b 3~

7~

--..- .. Hargr v, Tx52 176 36 63
Lynn, Bas 51 l BJ 36 6J

•

Here ts the M&amp;M Men's Slo
Royal Crown vs Midwes t
Pitch Softball schedule for Steel, 8 p. m.
this week:
JUNE 19- AT LAKIN
Fitzgerald Sportmg Goods
JUNE 17-AT LAKIN
Jtm's Campers vs. Fit- vs. G.avm , 6 p. m.
zgerala Sporting Goods, 6 p.
Fruth Pharmacy vs. Royal
m.
Crown, 7 p. m .
F1ve Points vs. B1ll's Body
At Kyger - Jim's Campers
Shop, 7 p. m
vs Midwes t Steel, 6 p m.
At Kyger
Village Eh Demson Post 467 vs Ftve
Pharmacy vs Eh Demson Pmn ts, 7p m
Bill's Body Shop vs VIllage
Post 467, 6 p. m.
Gavm vs. Fruth Pharmacy, Pharmacy, 8 p. m.
7 p. m . .

FREE
GARMEN'I'
S!'ORAG
~w

you c1n · ~u~ve 111 your fall and winter
g1rments dry clunecl end stored frH of •
charge until niedld latwor.
Bring thln'lln HOW. Then pick up leter end PAy
ONLY tht cltlnlftg dlerge.

INSURED FUR STORAGE

pet

' 01
358

7J

348
338

32 66

320

29 71
25 57

315

JA

2:!
20
21
39

57
46
61

57

J 18

Hom !! Run s
Bench , C1 n
IJ , Baker ,
Atl , W ynn L A and Schm idt ,
Phd 12

L eague

Hor ton ,

Del. Bond s, N Y and Burroughs,
Tex 15
Ja ckson, Oak
1J .
Carbo , Bas 12
Runs Batt ed In
Nat 1ona l L eag ue Bench, Cm
54 . Pt:r ez. C•n 44 , L uz1nSk1,
Ph d JJ
Wa t son
Hou 42
W1n f1el d , SO 41
A m e r~ c a n
L eag ue
Hor t on ,
De t 45, Sco tt. Mtl 42, Bonds,
N Y 41. M cR ae, KC 40 , L ynn ,
Bos and Bur r oughs, Tex 39
Stolen Bases
Nat 1ona l L eag ue
Cedeno ,
Hou 27 Mor ga n , C1 n 26, Lopes,
LA 21, Br ock , St L 20 , L 1n t z
and Mangua l , M il 14
A m en can L eague
R tve r s,
Cal 3J , Ot1s , KC 29 , Wa shmg
ton , Oak 18. Pat ek , KC \7,
H 1sle, Mtnn 16
P•tchmg
( Based on most v•cfon esl
Nat 1onal L eag u e Se aver . NY
10 4, Su tt on . LA 10 5 , Messers
m 1th . LA and Jones, so 9 3.
Gullett Cln 8 3, M atl a ck , NY 8

'

A me r~ca n L eagu e
Pa lmer.
Bil l! 10 3. Ryan , Cal 10 5. Kaa L
Ch1 9 3, L ee , Bos and Blue, Oak
9 5 - Hun t er. N Y 9 6

%," ~ ,Md . (UPI )-~

Robinson's Cleaners
POMEROY

..veeck, who has tried for eiglil
months w buy the Baltimore
Orioles, said Sunday he is
considering filing suit against
Oriole board chairman Jerold
C. Hoffberger to try to make
him sell the club.
,,

'
G E f'! ERA l

REVENUE

SHA

A.l N Q PLAN N E 0 USE REP 0 R T
tt-. gcwwnmenta Thll report of vour gowrnment •
CS.CIIIon on hOW 1M
w11 ~

IIICAffTAL

RACINE VILLAGE 1371
VILLAGE CLERK
RACINE, OHIO ~571

.,
;

.-n

11

OMAHA Neb (UP! ) Ston e Wa tt
'
•
Loc ker (SJ and M•tt erw a ld WP ··The "Texas Longhorns, who
K&gt;r bv 14 Jl LP- Slone IS 11 have appeared in the NCAA
1Regul ar Gamel
World Series more than any
Cl ncy
ooo ooo 012- J 10 o other team, have ended a z:;..
Ch1 ca go
001 000 3 0 x ~ 4 13 1
Darcy . McEnaney 171, Easl yea r drought between
w •ck ( 7) and Bench , Bonha m. championships .
Kn ow les (9&gt;. Zamor a ( 9 ) an d
Hosley WP - Bonham 16 51 LP
The Longhorns, who last
Darcy 11 d\ HR - Morgan won the titl e in 1950,
{8 th )
capitahzed on arm-weary
Hous ton
100 003 004- 8 12 1 South Carolina pitcher Earl
5 1 LO IJ IS
I 12 000 O J O ~ 7 15 2
Kon •ec zn y , K
F or sc h ( SJ. Bass, the pitching of their
Gr an ger (8) , Crawfor d (8 ) J
own Richard Wortham and
N1e kro ( 8 1 an d May , Jut ze ( 8) ,
hitting of Mickey
B
For sc h.
Hra bos k y
(9) , the
Ga r man ('il l and S1m mon s W P Reichenbach for a 5-I chamJ N1 ekr o ( 2 I J L P- Ga r m an
(2 3 ) H R S· DaV IS (6th ) Sm 1fh pionship v1ctory 's aturday
( 10 th ) Jo hllSOn ( 4th )
night over the Gamecocks.
Texas and South Carolma
( 1st Gam e)
Mon tr ea l
200 000 OOD- 2 6 0 entered the title game with
San Fran
000 000 Ol o- 1 7 3
Ren ko , War th en
(8 ) and one loss each, with the
Foote Barr , M off1 1f (9) and Gamecocks losing to th e
Rad er W P - Renko (2 4) L P ~
Longhorns Thursday night
Ba r r (6 6 )
and Texas losing to Arizona
( 2nd Gamel
Mon tr ea 1 201 1oo oo1- s 14 o State last Sunday in the
San Fran
000 020 000-- 2 7 2 double-elimmation classic.
Bla 1r Scher m an ( 7) DeMol a
IB I and Foote. Ca ldwell .
Bass worked with just two
Wtll .ams 161 Moff •tl 191 and days rest following series
H ill
W P · Bla 1r (J 8)
LP Ca\dwe\1 IJ 61 HR s- Man gual victories over Sewn Hall and
15\hl, Hdl l3rdl
Arizona State that put South
Ptl t
012 120 020- e 16 1 Carolina in 1ts first chamAtl anta
100 110 JOO- 6 16 o pionship game. He threw 85
Can del an a , Moose {6 ), G 1ust•
17 1, Demery 181 and sangu d pitches in the first four inlen. Sadec k•, Bea rd lSI Sosa - ningsandhadtossed 141balls

:
':.:

S

~

·

e e e

BOOTS
by
ACME

heritage house
Your Thom MeAn Store
Mtddleoort, Ohio

( 1s1, 11 mmng s)
Ca l

005 00000 102-

Mt l

100 031001 01- 7 11 3
K1r k w ood (8 ) and El
u e z Ed R odr~ g u e z ,

R

T an an a,
o d r 1g

Mll
H assler

By Helen Bottel

MAJORmE

8 13 1

"

H ausm an k(4 ) CC ham p1o n {9) ,
Sprague ( 11) and Porter W PKi r k w ood (1 2) L P- Champ 1on

•

:S:
~

wward the plate when he was
lifted with two out in the ninth
inning, suffermg his f1rst loss
after 17 victories this 9eason .
Wortham, a lefthander, allowed four hits, struck out
eight and walked just one
batter in winning his 15th
game in 16 decisions this
season. The only run he
yielded was a 300-foot smash
over the right centerfield
fen ce by Gamecock first
baseman Hank Small In the
fourth Inning .
Reichenbach , who was
voted the outstanding player
in the series, hit a Bass
fastball in the third inning for
a 380-foot homer over the
right centerfield wall that
produced two runs for the
Longhorns. ·
Rei chenbach's 'drive
padded a one rW! lead that
was produced in the second
inning on a basesloaded walk
by Bass. Keith Moreland
drove in the Longhorns'
fourth run with a double in
the fourth and Gary Pyka
sent the fifth.orun across with
a sacrifice bunt in the eighth
inning.

POMEROY WINS
The Pomeroy Angels
defeated Cheshire 14-1 in pee
pee baseball play last week.
For the Angels, Bnan
Zerkle went the distance on
the mound and for Cheshire
Wamsley and Gilmore pitched. Getting hits for the
winners were Nicky Riggs
with a homer, Ryan Oliver a
grand slam home run and
Scott Harnson, Zerkle, and
King each had singles. The
only Cheshire hit was a single
by Cooper

r~H;}';;·:·: :·ii';}'p
.~~~~::=:!o$i*.-.: ~to~.c~:l i£Lfl l.lil ~~d~~a.~:;I ~:::~~~::J2:': II
0 10 210 oox- 4 12 1
( 3 7J and E l
Ro

FOR

ADULT MEAL
8 19 Shcl "
Reg Fre nc h F11 es
•
T u rno v er~

lf!

La rge So fl Dunk

Dear Helen :

Reg So ft Dnnk &amp;
a Sweet Treat

201 020 000- s 11 1
ooo 100 ooo- 1 6 1

Ec ker sley, Brown (9) and
E ll•s
Perr y ,
K ek• ch
{7J ,
Bacs1k (8) and Sundberg W P-

Our daughter taught for 10 years w put her husband Eckersley 14 01 LP- Perry 16
through medical school. She was never happy in her marriage, 101
and planned wleave him when he was graduated. But then she
found herself pregnant. So she stayed on.
Now she stays for security. She hates teachmg and doesn 't
like off1ce work; doesn 't want a job until the baby is of school
age. Our no-fault divorce laws would only give her child
support, so she'd have to work, and she worries that she ·
couldn't find a job she would want anyway. As she says, 1t's a
hard decision between a completely hopeless marriage and
frightening uncertamty.
'•
She is healthy, pretty, a good housekeeper, and has a
winsome personality, but no matter how hard she tries, her
husband pu'ts her down. She feels like a slave - and she's
never been able to fight.bact;. She realizes it's getting worse.
Tell me (and her) - WHAT'1&gt;RICE SECURITY

PT. PLEASANT
2325 Jack &gt;on Ave.

-

GALLIPOLIS
~503 Eastern Ave.

Special Sale At lngelsl

Dear WPS :
Assuming this marriage is as hopeless as you say, and
counseling wouldn't help, my answer is:
O(lly YQ\11" daughter knows what price (in lost self-esteem,
lost'bl;&gt;port1inities; lost happiness) she is paying for security and she may not realize this fully until late middle age when a
hard fact hits her : the time for a second chance is past !
Ask her wproject in the future, p1cture the beaten.&lt;Jown
person she may become, if drastic changes aren't made. Then
try to make ber see a needed divorce is often therapeutic and
single life can mean freedom , more than fear.
orlh~ saddest people around are those who stay
becli\tse Oiey're af~ai'd'to go- and that's not only in marriage, •
but" ih' jobs, miserable faffiily situations (mvolving grown
children who can't break away ), many areas of life that
require more guts than their dependent natures can
manufacture.
1
J'wiSh I could Wt-ap up a box of courage and send it wyour
daul!fili!~piarcel'!los\'.' Since I can't, my best advice to her is :
knoclrOf!the"!!Mf-pltji'liri'd illdecision ; find a part-time job - it
will give you confidence ; learn wfight bapk - if your husband
doesn'trespeetyoufor it (and I've an idea he may !), at least it
will bring you closer W "Independence Day."
And if divoree is inevitable, relax and enjoy it. Others
have! - H.
P.S. Read on. And take hope:
Dear Helen :
J!IISCovered in the first year of my marriage we'd made a
mistake: I was as wrong for h him as he was for me, We didn't
catch fire, it was more like a slow burn. But I was very depend·
ent, unwilling wadmit I'd made a terribly bad decision, and,
besides, a baby was on the way.
We stayed together three more miserable years before I
suddenly re,alized I was becoming a dead ringer for his
mother, a quiet neurotic who said "Yes dear" wavoid a fight
and divided her time between migraine and ulcers.
So I walked out of his life. Llke that !
Today,little Tommy and I are doing just great. I've pever
been happier. In fact, after that first week of feeling "lost"
without someone to boss me;-l: slowly blossomed into an independent, self-&amp;ufficient WOMAN. I have a fme job, a good
babysitter, (Tommy has blossomed, wo ) and a wonderful
male friend who treats me as a person. •
All wo often divorce is pictured as a traumatic experience
that leaves lasting scars. And the "poor divorcee" is pitted
right into self-pity. Believe me, it isn 't that way! Sometimes
a divorce is the best thing that can happen to two people. It
cancels out a mistake. - HAPPILY SINqLI!: AGAIN
.r
·1

r· .

ch Fnes

:f{r1se Pme

dn guez {1st 1_ _

Cleve
Texas

KIDS -

FUNMEALtM
Fun Tray,

~ and
Moor e wP- Siaton 14Ro
Bl
H Rs- T hOmas (3rd l. El

Divorce Often Therapeutic

JOB

308

NCAA baseball crown

( 8\
(6 ) , F ra ll •ng ( 7) , ,

L ee ( 9 5 ) LP - McDant el {3 I )
HR - Doy le ( 1st)

i

Longhorns capture '75

181 and Be nch Plum mer

CLEVELAND (UP! )
Trainer Jim Morgan called
him "a big boy " but Brent 's
Prince turned out to be the
"b1g winner" Sunday af.
ternoon
"We knew he would be on
the board and we thought he
could win," said Morgan , who
watched the dark brown 3year-&lt;Jld colt hang in for a
nose victory over Sylvan
Place m the $100,000 Ohio
Derby at Thistledown Race
Track.
Brent 's Prince, who had not
finished worse than second in
his last eight starts, took the
lead going inw the club house
turn imd r eelect off a 1.10.2
clocking for diStance.
"When I saw that stxfurlong time, I just hoped that
he could hang in there,"
smiled Morgan.
Bj!nit.ie Feliciano, leading
rider at ,tb.e c"urrent Thistledown meet, rode Brent's
Prince for the first time and
felt he might have a difficult !71 , Eas t erl y ( 8 ), Ho use {9) and
Corr ell WP -· Oem er y ( 3 ll L P
lime ratmg the horse,
- Sosa {Q 5 ) H Rs ~ H ebn er
"! thought I would have (61h l. Rob ert son (l st l, Ba ker
som~
trQ.uble , but. he ( 12th / , Pa r k er (9 th )
responded to my every ef- New York
000 000 105- 6 110
for1," 1Felid ano said. "When San 0 1ego 000 000 000- 0 3 5
Seave r ( 10 4 ) and Stea rn s ,
I saw -Sylvan Place come Strom , Tom lm (9 ), Gr e 1f ( 9 )
alongside nearing the 16th and Kendall L P- Strom (0 1)
pole, I used a left-banded Phtl a
100 002 010- 4 8 o
LA
200 010 ooo- J 7 o
whip and he came on."
Und er wood , Ga r ber ( 7) and
Mrs. Mary Classen, owner Boon e
Rau,
Rhod en
( 6) ,
of Brent's Prince, watched M ar sha ll (8 ) an d Y eager WP Ga r ber ( 5 3) L P Mar sh al l (2
her favorite colt collect 'il H Rs - Cash ( 2nd ) L u zlnsk1
$66,780 in covering tbe mile ( lJih )
----and one-eighth distance m
I :49.2 and return $33.60 ,
Am encan L eague
Oakland at Detro1t, ppd .• ratn
$12.20 and $7.80.
Sylvan patd $8.80 and $7.20 Ch1c ago
000 000 000- 0 4 0
001 010 lOx- 3 8 0
for second, while Canvasser New Yor k Gossage
(]) an d
Bahn sen
returned $10.00 for third.
Down •ng . Hun ter ( 9 6 ) and
Money Mark, who finished Her rma nn L P- Bahns en ( 4 6 )
13th in the Kentucky Derby, Ba lf 1m or e 000 100 210- 4 11 0
went off as the 9-5 favorite M1n nesot a 301 100 OOx - 5 10 1
Torr ez (7 A ) and D un can ,
and finished sixth after Corb 1n (3 3 ) and Borg m ann
runmng third for the ftrst SIX HR s- · For d (2nd l. Ba ylor (8 th)
furl ong_s
Bo ston
120 100 040 - 8 IJ 2
001 300 02 1- 7 15 0
The mutuel handle set • n Kan C1t y
Mor et (8 ) and Black
all-ltme high with $1 ,268,415 weLee.
ll
L eonar d . McDaniel (6 ).
going through the windows. M1ngon ( 8) and H eal y W P-

~~~

N a! Jonal Lea gue
14 L UZIOSkl, Ph il

Am er1 can

•
wznner

Sund ,,y' s Baseball Resul ts
By Un1 f ~ d Pr ess Inter natiOnal
N ah onal L eague
( Com pi of Susp Ga m e ot 6-14 '
Cmcv
OJ 1 100 150 11 14 1
Ch1cago
000 0 10 020- J 8 2
K•rbv . Nor man ( 6 / , Borb on

318

VEECK MAY SUE

For All Your Furs 'Avalloble Here

216 E. 2nd

M un sn . N Y 56 2 19
H 1S ie. Mnn 54 206
was h r~g t n Oak
59 223
Youn t, M tl 48 18 1
Cha mb l iSS, NY
49 182
Bmbr y , Bit 42 149
M ay , Ch t
56 198
Wh 1te. NY 49 185

Prince

Linescores

·ABA DRAFI'S TOl&gt;AY
""S'i'. LOUIS, Mo. (API)
Guard Gus Wllliams of tbe
University of Southern California was expected wbe the
opening-£oUJid plck of the
Spirits of St. Louis in today's
American Basketball
Association college draft.
Williams, who averaged 20
points and 5.4 assists a game
last year for USC, was a
second-£ound choice by tbe
NBA champion Golden State
Warriors in that league's
recent draft.
One problem for the Spirits
m signing a first-£ound choice
may be salary. The club lost
as much as·$! million its first
year in tbe league and Lewis,
Chaney and the rookie front
line of last season- Marvin
Barnes, Gus Gerard and
Maurice Lucas --all reportedly command slx-flgure
salaries.

-·· J

·~

'

Ingels,:: Just~ Received
· c;:r,....
•I•

.~nqi'J

t

.TRAILERLOAD

NEW l976

·-SOme

TELEVISION
,
...

·:·:·:·:·:·:·:~:!:!:!~:~::::::;:.;;;;:::::::::::::;:.-:::;:·:;:·~:·z·

.

's Pointers:
'

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I made
the v aglc mistake of
fastenin g card s on a
mahogany-stain ed,
var nished door with cellophane
tape. I removed all the tape
but marks still remam . 1
certa1nly would like to
correct this Without having to
paint over these beautiful
doors. - ANNIE

DEAR POLLY - I want to
tell the readers how I solved
th e dirty clothes storage
problem A hamper in the
bathroom catches the towels,
shee ts, washcloths and such
things tha t ar e washed
toge ther. The rest of the
laundry IS divided in separate
hampers so no sorting 1s
needed. Each fam1ly member
knows knits and shirts go in
the gold hamper, jeans and
DEAR ANNIE - Since colored socks in the orange
no tape remains you might one, my husband 's work
try the following remedy that clothes m the green hamper
removes many spots from and dainty thmgs like lingerie
varnished wood. Rub cam· in the white hamper. Sorting
phorated oil on, following the is done for me . Such hampers
grain of the wood, and then can be placed wherever is
immediately rub it off wlth a most convement for each
dry cloth. For more severe homemaker. The hampers
damage you might rub will have to be Ia beled for a
GENTLY the area with a dry while until everyone is used
steel wool soap pad. This is to the tdea If one doesn ot
painstaking work. Do only a want the expense of buying
little at a lime and remove new hampers plasltc clothes
the powdery dust. Then go on baskets m different colors
to the next place. When spots could be used. - JOETTA.
are removed polish like the
DEAR POLLY - When a
rest of the door.
group of us were learning to
Or, It may be that your embroider, our resourceful
marks could he removed by teacher made embr oidery
the use of a stain remover hoops from the rather heavy
furniture polish just rubbed plasltc containers that
Into the stains and then whipped topping comes in.
blended out Into the rest of She cut !he center out of a
the door. I have sometimes plastic lid leaving about a %
darkened spots on dark mch rim . The inner part of
varnished floors wllh a the hoop was made by cutting
colton-tipped slick dipped In the top off the rim of the
iodine and rubbed the iodine contamer so it was about%
off Immediately after mch deep. Fabric to be
removing any that extended embrmdered is firmly held
beyond the spots. Good luck! between these two hoops and
-POLLY.
they are mce and Ugh t to
hold. - EUNICE.
DEAR POLLY - Mf Pet
DE AR POLLY - Try
Peeve is with restaurants removmg those scuff marks
that do not think babies and fr om light colored (be1ge,
small children deserve clean whtte, etc.) shoes with an
high chair trays. In many ordinary sponge eraser. I was
different places I have had to amazed at the results when I
ask the waitress to wipe off first tr1ed it and even think 1t
the tray before I would even shmes them up a btl. put my child in the chair . ELAINE.
LINDA.

••••••••••••••••••••••••••
•
•
: Green
:
••
••

: Thumb
•
:• Notes
-

:
•
:•

Save $JOO f.o $J50
ON ALL CONSOLE_MODELS
/

ALL
THIS
WEEK

I·NGEL.S
FURNITURE
PH. 992-2635
MIDDLEPOIRT, OHIO

COLUMBUS - Six Meigs
County girls are at Capital
Umversity, Columbus, this
week to attend the 29th Annual Sess ion of Buckeye
Gtrls' State, an Americanism
project of the America n
Legion Amollary.
Goin g
to
Colum bus
Saturday, opening da y of
G1rls' State, were Molly Ann
Fisher of Racme, Southern
High School juniOr, sponsored
by Racme Unit 602; Patncia
Ann Windon, Long Bottom ,
Eas tern High School, Mid·
dleport Umt 128 and the
Cihzens Nahonal Bank;
Angela Louise S1sson,
Pomeroy, Meigs, Pomeroy
Umt 39 ; Tamra Lee Stanley,
Albany, Me1gs High, Unit 128
and Xi Gamma Mu Chapter,

Club has
picnic
GALLIPOLIS - Partners
of Gallia County Salon 612,
Eight and Forty met at the
home of lnes Marchi for a
p1cnic supper Thursday
evening. Followfng the picmc
Le Petit Chapeau Erma
Smith opened a re gular
meeting in which plans for
, the coming year were made.
It was decided that each partner w1ll be asked to pay $1
each meeting instead of
having other money raising
projects. Gifts and favors will
be omitted and the money
placed in the children and
youth fund.
A letter was read announcmg
La
Marc he
Departementale at the
Ramada Inn, Dayton, July 20
and 21. Delegates who wtll
attend are Erma Sm1lh,
Emma Wayland, Grace
Pratt, Dorothy Hecker and
Gladys Cumings. Carrie
Neulzhng and Mabel Brown
are delegates at large.
Other communications
announced candidates for
Departmental offices. Joy
Bowman, Galion , ls a candidate for La Concierge .
Marzella Huston, Cmcinnati ,
1s candidate for Chapeau
Departemental.
A report was given on
Pouvoir at Toledo in May· by
Erma Smith, Mabel Brown,
Gladys Cumings, Dorothy
Hecker and Emma Wayland.
Lelia Hunt, Lansing, Mich.,
La Chapeau National, was
guest speaker at the banquet.
Other guests were Marie
Sm1th, a candidate for
Chapeau National , Violet
Aichholz, National Children
and Youth Chairwoman and
Mary Martin , La Demi
Chapeau of Central Division.
The salon was recognized
at the Pouv01r for having
been the first salon in the
state to attain goal in ,partnership.
The next regular mee ling
of the salon will be a picnic
supper at the home of Gladys
Cummgs near Pomeroy
Aug. 7.

Bu Margaret Ella Lewis
Rutland Garden Club
Showlng Specimen Flowers in a Flower Show :
A judge determines a good individual specimen by the use
of a score card, usually as follows:
Form of flower, 15 points, nearly perfect stage, typical of
type;
'
Substance of Dower, 15 points, fresh, crisp, well.Jlilrdened;
Color of flower, 10 polnlll, brilliant, clear, typical of type;
Size of Dower, 15 points, typical for variety, but large size
Is not an indication of quality;
Foliage, 25 points, all foliage on steam should be present in
good condition, no evidence of spray or insect damage .
Stem, 20 points, good proportion to the bloom, straight and
strong with no evidence of recent disbudding.
You will note that 45 of the 100 points are assigned to the
foliage and stem of a specimen. Dower. The schedule should
always be followed in showing specimen blooms, such as how
many are to be shown, and in what kind of a container.
The score card for a spike, stalk, or multiple Dowers
SCOUTS REMAIN
is
as
follows:
Eight
Browme scouts in the
cimen
spe
Settlers unit at the Girl Scout
Spacing of Dowers, 15 points, Dowers should be regular
day camp at Camp Kiashuta,
and well spaced or arranged on the stem.
Nmnber of Dowers and buds, 15 points, with the nmnber of remained Thursday over·
·
1
ti ht buds all ·
od night at the camp. Mrs.
open Dowers or buds showmg co or, or g
m go
Ca t
"t
d
proportion presenting a balance.
Gertrude s ~· un1 1ea er,
Substance, 15 points: with the texture of all florets w a~d her assistant~ Patty
indicate good "keeping" qualities with all hardened suf- M1chael, were w1th the
ficienUy ;
scouts, Tammy Cape_h art,
Color, 10 points, should be clear and characteristic of Carolyn Casto, Amy Sisso?,
variety, clear, brllllant, no spotting or streaking ;
Annette Johnson , D1x1e
Size, 10points typical and in good proportion to the stalk;
Ebll~, Laura Lee Horsley,
Stem length and strength, 20 points, stem' should be Robm Gaspe~s, and .Sus1e
straight and strong to the very Up of the Dower head and in Pooler· The gU:Is slept m ~e
very good proportion;
lodge after havmg .a campftre
Foliage and general cultural perfection, 15 points, foliage and_ homemade . tee cream
should not be removed from the stem, but should be clean, dur1ng the evemng · Durmg
healthy, and vigorous, with no indication of disease, insect the fly up . ceremony condamage, or spray residue.
ducted Fr1day for Tammy
Capehart, Carolyn Casto,
Amy Sisson and Annette
Johnson,
Mrs .
Casto
presented overnight camper
patches w her group.
Mrs . 6scar Roush is home when the accident
recuperating at home from happened. The CW!ningham
an injury she received in an car and a truck sideswiped at
automobile accident at York- an inll;rsection. The injured
ville, Dl. last week. spe were taken to the Aurora, Dl.
suffered a vertebra fracture hospital where they were
and is required to wear a treated and then continued
neck collar mOllt of the time. home.
At Prior Lake they visited
Mrs. Roush had accompanied her son-in-law Mr. and Mrs. Merle Sayre
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. and from there went to
Cunningham
Qf Lamont, Iowa where they
Ray
Syracuse, w Prior Lake, left Ron CW!nlngham for a
Mlnn, and they were enroute swnmer visit with Mr. and
Mrs. Jim Boggs. ·

Mrs. Roush_recuperating
Big Closeout On All
'75 Models
.
.

Six attend Girls ' State
Beta Stgma Pht Soronty;
Crys tal Glaz e , Po meroy ,
t.1eigs High, Unit 128 and
Prece ptor
Beta
Beta .
-..._
Chapter, Beta Sigma Ph1
Sorori ty ; and -Melissa- Kay
Th omas , Pomeroy, Metgs
High, Unit 128.
Purpose of the eight.&lt;Jay
workshop 1s to educate young
women 1n th e dultes,
privileges, r ights and
responsibilities of American
citizenship, to give them m a
realt shc mann er an oppo rt umty to learn the
problems of government wtth
spectal emphasis upon the
conlribulton

wom en can

make to the welfare of the
city, county, state and nahon.
The enhre sess ton of
Buckeye Girls' State takes
place at Capttal University
where each girl is assigned to
one of 25 cit1es and f1ve
counttes. Wtlh the guidance
of experienced advisors and
public officials , they organize
a two-party system, campatgn for office, elect officials
m the1r cities, counltes, and
"state" and function in their
var ticular
capaciti es ,
wheth er elective or ap pomllve Each gtrl has an
offi ce.
To supplement th eir
practical experience, girls
hear speakers throughout the
week on vartous phases of
government.
The keynote address on
Saturday night was g1ven by
Hon . John W. Brown, Ohio
Lake Lands admimstrator .
Tomght the address will be
g1v en by Hon. Elizabeth
Paddoc k,
ma yor
of
Plymouth, and Tuesday the
program will be "Highway

Sa fety and You" by
Patrolmen R L Phillips and
D. R. Chne.
C. Wllham O'Netll, Ch1ef
Justtce of the Supreme Court
of Ohio, wtll participate m the
In augur ation ceremonies
Wednesday mghl with the
address to be by James A.
Duerk, Direcwr of Economic
and Communi ty Development , represenhn g Go v.
James A Rhodes.
Thursday's schedule will
include a conducted bus tour
to pomts of governmental
mterest in Columbus tn·
cludmg the state capitol. Mrs.
Nadm e Henmger Mtiler,
Legal Inter)l, will speak on
"The Educ~ted Woman and
her Roles."

On Fnday there Will be a
study of Oh1o Courts w1th the
speakers to be Hon . Alba L
Wh1teside , J udge , lOth
"Dtstrict Court of Appeals, and
the Hon . Georgene Howell,
J udge, Franklin County
Municipal Court
Tha t
evemng the program will he
the topic, "Status of Wome n
m Government" wit~, the
speakers to include M1ss
Martha Wheeler, assistant
director for ln shtu tional
Servtces, Ohio Department of
RehabilitatiOn and Correction; Ethel G. Swan beck,
Representative, Ohio's 111th
General Assembly; and Ohio
State Treasurer Gertrude W.
Donahey ..
Dr . N1cholas Nyarad1 ,
director of the Institute of
International Studies at
Bradley University , Peoria,
Ill. will gtve the address at
the Saturday night closmg
sesston of Buckeye Girls'
State.

I

Social i ·Flower arranging
Calendar course is offered

I

MONDAY
MEIGS Band Boosters,
7:30p.m., at the Metgs H1gh
School band room.
DAILY Vacati on Bible
School begms through June
20,9: 30 to noon dally, at F1rst
Southern Baptist Church, 282
Mulberry Ave All children
are welcome. ·
THE Mtddleport Bustness
and Professional Women's
Club wtil JOIO the Gailipohs
Club for a dtnner tomght 6·30
p.m. at Oscar 's For those
who need transportalton,
Miss Freddie Houdasheit or
Mrs Elmse Wtlson may be
contacted.
POMEROY Chamber of
Commerce noon at Me1gs
Inn
TUESDAY
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Woman 's AUloliary, 7:30p.m.
at the hospital. Hostesses w1ll
be Mrs Ina Massar, Mrs.
Nettie Hayes, Mrs Mildred
Mttch and Mrs. Maria Waldmg.
PTA STUDY Course on the
manual will be offered 7 to 9
p m. at the Pomeroy
Elementary School by the
Me1gs County Counc1l of
Parents and Teachers All
officers, delegates, teachers,
admmistrators, or members
of the PTA are welcome.
Manuals will be avatlable for
those who do _not have them.
GROUP II, Ftrst United
Presbyterian Church, 7 · 30
p.m. Tuesday at the home of
Mrs. Joseph Batley, w1th
Mrs. Th omas Rue" as hostess.

A
stx-week
fl ower
arrangmg course 1s betng
offe red as a par t of the
summer adult education
progr am at Metgs H1gh
School.
Arran ged by Ray Goodman, vocational educa tional
dtrector, the course will begtn
June 17 to be conducted for
stx consec utt ve Tuesdays
from I to 3 p.m. by Mrs.
James Jackson of Wellston,
well-known for her arrangement techmque. ·
The class 1s open to
begmners as well as ad·
vanced flower arrangers, and
non -garden club members as
well as club members are
ehg1ble to attend. There wtll
be a fee for the course
Further tnformatwn about
the program may be obtamed
from Mrs . Altce Thompson of
Pomeroy
.
For the fir st sesswn,
arrangers are to take a flat
tray-type contamer, a large
needle holder, seven pieces of
fresh or dned !me matenal
etther stratght or curved , fi ve
to seven round flowers, or
more tf the flowers are small,
three to fi ve lea ves such as
hosta or rhubar:~,, a hand ful of
small stones, such as gravel
or crushed marble, tools for

Assoctation was organized in
1908 by the descendants of
Isaac
W1 seman ,
a
Revolutionary War sold1er,
father of eleven sons and
daughters. They have met
every year since except for
certam war years . Isaac's

an cestry has now been traced
back to the stxteenth century
m Europe.
Anyone bearing the name
Wiseman or a descendant of a
Wiseman 1s cordiallv mv1ted.

REGULAR meeltng, Drew
Webster Post 39, American
Legion, 8 p.m. Elect1on of
officer s and nammg of
dele ga tes to depar tment
convention, July 17-19, in
Dayton.
FRI EN DLY C1 r cle of
Trtnily Chur ch, annual ptcmc
6 p m. at the Globokar R1ver
Camp. Take table service.
Mrs. W. H. Perrin to have the

arranging, and a background
piece, tf available.

SEEKS INDUSTRY

NEW YORK (UP! ) - An
development team including
members of the Ohio Depart·
ment of Economic and Com·
muntty Development started
seeking new or expanded
industry for the Buckeye
state in this area today.
The team, headed by Rosemary Martin, vice president
of the Columbus Area
Chamber of Commerce , will
call on about 300 industry
execullves m New York City,
northern New Jersey and
so uthern Connecticut this
week to g1ve them in·
formation needed in con·
sidering expansion to Ohio.
A similar Ohio group,
which visited w Baltimore
and Philadelphia m April,
turned up two dozen new
industrial prospects for Ohio.

eOPENe
6 DAYS
A WEEK

THURSDAY

MON. thru SAT.

A DAILY Btble school will

be held at the Dorcas Umted
Methodtst Church begmmng
June 19 through June 27 fr om
9 am to 11 :30 a m. All
children are welcome.

RUTLAND BASEBALL
League to meet at the Legion
Hall, 5:15 p m Everyone
mtersted m the community's
baseball program mvited .

Wiseman family
plans reunion
The Wiseman Family
AssociatiOn has planned 1ts
sixty-second annual reunwn
for Sunday, June 29 at the
Bob Evans shelter house on
US 35 just east of Rio Grande,
Oh10. A basket dinner at noon
w1ll be followed by a program
of music and Marco the
magician . Recreation is
being planned for · the
children.
The Wiseman Fam1ly

l:i:

D&amp;D MEAT
830 E. Main
Pomeroy, Ohio

GOSPEL MEETING
JUNE 17 THRU 22
7:30 EACH EVENING
EXCEPT SUNDAY 10 AM &amp; 6 PM

WESTSIDE CHURCH OF CHRIST
200 W. MAIN

vesper service.

POMEROY, OHIO

SPEAKER: TOMMY THOMAS
.

Betty Maynard
is honored
Mrs . Betty Haggy Maynard
was honored recently w1th a
layette shower giVen by Mrs.
Barbara McMaxon, Mrs .
Susie Beeler, Mrs. Margaret
Spencer, Mrs. Helen Fields,
Mrs. Pat Barton and Mrs .
Carol Lunsford at the home of

Mrs. Maynard 's mother,
Mrs. Madeline McClung
A mobile centered the blue
and pmk streamers wh1ch
decorated the room, and an
umbrella was suspended over
the bassinet which held the
gifts. Two baby carriages and
11 stork completed the shower

Auxiliary
make plans

decor3tions.

RACINE - A chicken
barbecue and ice cream
social was planned for July 4
when the Racine Firemen's
Amoliary met m regular
session at the firehouse
Tuesday.
Mrs. Mae Cleland presided
at the meeting and arrangements were made w solicit
donations for the 1ce cream.
The birthdays of Beulah
Autherson and Grace Roush
were celebrated with a gift
exchange and refreshments.
Games were played. Present
were Mrs. Emma ·Lyons,
daughter, Marilyn and
granddaughter, Tina, Gene
Lyons, Mrs. Grace Roush,
Mrs. Jean Cleland, Mrs. l)'lae
"1:leiand, Mrs. Mary Sloter,
and Rita ant Maxine Rose.

•

P1nk and . blue booties
decorated the cake which was
served w1th ice cream,
coffee, tea and mints. Games
were played with pnzes going
wMrs. Dave Sham and Mrs.
Brenda Haggy. The door
prize was won by Mrs. Sharon
Sm1th.
Attending besides those
mentioned were Mrs. Albert
Martin, Mrs. Lydia Hysell,
Mrs . Connie Russell and
Mandy, Mrs. Terry Lew1s,
M1ss Jeame Ebersbach, Mrs.
Roger Mowery and Colena,
Mrs. Joyce Grover and Terri,
Mrs. Bobble Collina, Mrs. Blll
Clay, Mrs. Charles Sayre,
Mrs . Myrtle Maynard,
Tracey and Jeff McMahon,
Brial Beeler and Melanie
Fields.
Others presenling gtfts to
Mrs. Maynard were Mrs.
Robert Russell, Mrs. Don
Russell, Mrs. Perry • Carpenter, Mrs. Alvin Haggy and
Mrs. Clifford Jacobs.

Hot
new source
- . .. .. ...

, I.

for gas.

One of the hotte1t new sources tor natural gas is the frozen north.
America badly needs supplies of the clean gas energy available there
to help solve the energy crisis.
Columbia has gone to the Arctic to
Natural gas p1pe\ ines from the Arctic
get this gas:
·
wdl be bu11t with prop er reg ard for
t l'lt area they cross A study group m
which Columbta partiCipate s h us
operated complex test sJtes and
cond ucted lengthy fie ld studies to
examine the impact of a gas- hne or
the land and wa terw ays and the
wildlife lhat inhabot them .
These studies a re providin~ the
data necessary to m eet growing
energy nee ds w 1t h minimum

- we're financmg drilling programs m
Alaska and Canada, including
on the far islands of the high Arcttc.
-we've golten the rights to purchase
substantial gas reserves already
discovered on Alaska's North Slope.
Once the Alaskan oil pipeline gets
started, a natural gas line can also be
built from the North Slope. We can't
produce the gas until oil production is
underway.

disturbance of t he env •ronment .

-w~'re participating
~ nvironmcntal and

in costly .
engineering
&gt;tudies on how to build gas ltnes from
the frozen north to consumers in
Columbia's se rvice area.

There's much work yet to do, but gas from
the far north will be coming along.
Columbia Gas is working hard t(}{/ay to
ncct your encr!!y needs tomorrow . '

cAu
MBIA GAP

.

Gasls pn'&lt;ious, pu..., •noriiY •.. -tc ,.ildy.

'

'

\

•

�.

. . . . .... " " . - ....
~

·f
(

4- The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Monday, June 16, 1975

Brent's

Hunter blanks .Chisox, 3-0
By FRED McMANE
UPI Sports Writer
When Jim "Catfish "
HW!ter is at his best, it
doesn't Djlltter if the Dolly
Sisters or the Kingston Tr10 is
playing in the outfield.
W1th his three regular outfielders all sidelined with
injuries.,Jrumager Bill Virdon
of the New York Yankees
started two catchers and a
rookie who had never played
a big league game in his
outfield Sunday against the
Chicago Wh1te Sox , then
turned the ball over to Hunter
and hoped for the best.
Hunter, who always seems
w pitch his best under ad' verse or pressure-packed
conditions , was simply
masterful as he allowed only
four hits in pitchmg the
Yankees wa ~ triumph . The
29-year ""ld nght-hander
struck out six and walked
only two in notching his 12th
complete game in 16 starts.
The outfield, which con·
sisted of rookie Kerry Dineen
flanked by catchers Thurman
MW!son and Rick Dempsey,
handled nine chances
flawlessly, but none were of

the diff tcull vanety. Dmeen,
recently brought up from the
mmors, recorded six of the
putouts and three tunes cut m
front of the other outfie lders
in left and right-centerfie ld to
make the catch.
" I told him to ta ke everything w1thin reason," said
Virdoh·, alludmg to the fact
that 11 was Munson's first
game ever as an outfielder
and only the third time
Dempsey had played there.
" I d1dn't want him to embarrass my other outfielders
and catch them down the foul
lines ."
All three outfielders con-

tnbuted offensively w the
Vlc!Dry. Munson drove in two
rW!S with a pair of singles,
while Dempsey and Dineen
each had a hit and scored a
rW! .

In other AL games, Boston

nipped Kansas Ctty , 8-7 ;
Minnesota edged Baltunore,
5-4 ; Cleveland beat Texas, :;..
I , and Cahfornia beat
Milwaukee ll-7 in 11 innings,
then lost 4-2. Oakland at
Detroit was ramed out. ,
Red Sox 8, Royals 7
Rico Petrocelli slapped a

lndians, Braves win in
Youth League contests
In. Middl eport You th
League actwn last week the
Ind1ans defeated the Mets 124, and the Braves downed the
Reds 12-5. Shane Smtih ptl·
ched 5 mnings for the Jndtans
fanmn g 7, walkin g 2, and
giVing up 3 h1ts. Steve Carson
finished the contest, fa nning I
and walking 1
Tony Scott and Bob Fox
each saw mound actton for
the Mets. Scott p1tched 5
innings and walked I I, fanned
6, and gave up 6 hits. Fox
pitc hed the sixth, sinking out
3, walking I and allowm g I
h1t. Thts con test was a ramed
out makeup game from
earlier in the season
Hitters for the Indians were
Sm1th wtth a grand slam
home run m the second in-

mng, April Kmg a double and
single, Carson 2 smgles, and
Scott Ptckens a smgle.
For the Mets Scott, Keith
Pummeli and Steve Powell
each had a smgle each.
For the Mtddleport Braves,
Jeff Wayland and Mtke Miller
worked on the mound and for
the Reds, Oavid Demosky
sa w mound actwn
Ge ttt ng hits for the wtnners
were Ste••e Ftfe wtth 2 home
runs and 2 doubles, Wayland
had 2 doubles and 2 smgles,
Jim Boyer I smgle, Nathan
Smt th and Rick Ebersbach
each s1ngles.
For the Reds , Kevm Mllan,
Ray Stewart. and Vern Slavm
each had a smgle, Oemoskey,
Earl Wines , and Ttm Justis
each 2 smgies

Week 's softball games
-

tte·bl·ea ktpg smgie to start a
fo ur -nm etghth mmng which
enabled the Red Sox to defeat
the Royals Bill Lee, despite
givmg up 13 hits , went 7 2-3
innmgs and rece1ved credit
for h1s nmth vicwry . Denny
Doyle had a twCH"un homer
for Boston and rookie Fred
Lynn collected two htts to
stretch his h1t1mg streak to 20
games, longest by a Red Sox
player smce Eddie Bressoud
in 1964.
fwins 5, Orioles 4
Enc Soderholm drove in
three runs with a pair of
singles and Ray Corbin scattered 11 hits to pace the Twms
to vicwry over the Orioles.
Dan Ford homered for
Minnesota, while Don Baylor
connected for Baltimore.
Indians 5, Rangers 1
Boog Powell collected a
pa1r of doubles which led to
three runs as the Indians
pound ed ext e ammat e
Gaylord Perry for 10 h1ts m
six innings enroute to
snappmg a seven-game
losing
streak.
Dennis
Eckersley, with last out reiirt''
help· froin Jackie Brown,'
gained his fourth victory
against no losses .
Angels 8-2, Brewers 7-4
Lee Stanton drove in five
rW!S with a grand slam
homer and a double to spark
the Angels' opening game
triumph . The Angels pushed
across two runs in the lith
inning on three singles and a
bases-loaded walk. Gorman
Thomas, who homered for
Milwaukee in the f1rst game,
hit a two-£un shot in the
rughtcap w give the Brewers
a split. Ellie Rodriguez had a
two-run homer for California
m the second game, while
Pedro Garcia hit a solo
homer for Milwaukee in the
opener.
Mator Leag ue L ea der s
B y Umted Press lnternat tonal
L eadmg Batter s
( Based on 125 at b a tsl
Naftonal L eague

g , ab. r.
M ad lck Ch 60 239 3J
Sm 1th St L 39 145 25
Wa l son Ho ~8 21J 28
M or g n Cn 58 198 4 1
Bow a Ph il 41 175 18
Sang ln . PI 52 185 20
Ca sh , Phd 59 245 38
Gr u bb, SO 58 22J JS
Unse r N Y 54 198 JO
Par kr , Ptt 52 195 30
Griffey Cn 51 1.:;.1 32

Car~

h. pet

86
50

64

360
345
JJJ
34J
337
335
327
323
323

6'1
48

318

7J
68
59

62
80

72

Ame n can L eague

Mn n 5~ 1; 7b 3~

7~

--..- .. Hargr v, Tx52 176 36 63
Lynn, Bas 51 l BJ 36 6J

•

Here ts the M&amp;M Men's Slo
Royal Crown vs Midwes t
Pitch Softball schedule for Steel, 8 p. m.
this week:
JUNE 19- AT LAKIN
Fitzgerald Sportmg Goods
JUNE 17-AT LAKIN
Jtm's Campers vs. Fit- vs. G.avm , 6 p. m.
zgerala Sporting Goods, 6 p.
Fruth Pharmacy vs. Royal
m.
Crown, 7 p. m .
F1ve Points vs. B1ll's Body
At Kyger - Jim's Campers
Shop, 7 p. m
vs Midwes t Steel, 6 p m.
At Kyger
Village Eh Demson Post 467 vs Ftve
Pharmacy vs Eh Demson Pmn ts, 7p m
Bill's Body Shop vs VIllage
Post 467, 6 p. m.
Gavm vs. Fruth Pharmacy, Pharmacy, 8 p. m.
7 p. m . .

FREE
GARMEN'I'
S!'ORAG
~w

you c1n · ~u~ve 111 your fall and winter
g1rments dry clunecl end stored frH of •
charge until niedld latwor.
Bring thln'lln HOW. Then pick up leter end PAy
ONLY tht cltlnlftg dlerge.

INSURED FUR STORAGE

pet

' 01
358

7J

348
338

32 66

320

29 71
25 57

315

JA

2:!
20
21
39

57
46
61

57

J 18

Hom !! Run s
Bench , C1 n
IJ , Baker ,
Atl , W ynn L A and Schm idt ,
Phd 12

L eague

Hor ton ,

Del. Bond s, N Y and Burroughs,
Tex 15
Ja ckson, Oak
1J .
Carbo , Bas 12
Runs Batt ed In
Nat 1ona l L eag ue Bench, Cm
54 . Pt:r ez. C•n 44 , L uz1nSk1,
Ph d JJ
Wa t son
Hou 42
W1n f1el d , SO 41
A m e r~ c a n
L eag ue
Hor t on ,
De t 45, Sco tt. Mtl 42, Bonds,
N Y 41. M cR ae, KC 40 , L ynn ,
Bos and Bur r oughs, Tex 39
Stolen Bases
Nat 1ona l L eag ue
Cedeno ,
Hou 27 Mor ga n , C1 n 26, Lopes,
LA 21, Br ock , St L 20 , L 1n t z
and Mangua l , M il 14
A m en can L eague
R tve r s,
Cal 3J , Ot1s , KC 29 , Wa shmg
ton , Oak 18. Pat ek , KC \7,
H 1sle, Mtnn 16
P•tchmg
( Based on most v•cfon esl
Nat 1onal L eag u e Se aver . NY
10 4, Su tt on . LA 10 5 , Messers
m 1th . LA and Jones, so 9 3.
Gullett Cln 8 3, M atl a ck , NY 8

'

A me r~ca n L eagu e
Pa lmer.
Bil l! 10 3. Ryan , Cal 10 5. Kaa L
Ch1 9 3, L ee , Bos and Blue, Oak
9 5 - Hun t er. N Y 9 6

%," ~ ,Md . (UPI )-~

Robinson's Cleaners
POMEROY

..veeck, who has tried for eiglil
months w buy the Baltimore
Orioles, said Sunday he is
considering filing suit against
Oriole board chairman Jerold
C. Hoffberger to try to make
him sell the club.
,,

'
G E f'! ERA l

REVENUE

SHA

A.l N Q PLAN N E 0 USE REP 0 R T
tt-. gcwwnmenta Thll report of vour gowrnment •
CS.CIIIon on hOW 1M
w11 ~

IIICAffTAL

RACINE VILLAGE 1371
VILLAGE CLERK
RACINE, OHIO ~571

.,
;

.-n

11

OMAHA Neb (UP! ) Ston e Wa tt
'
•
Loc ker (SJ and M•tt erw a ld WP ··The "Texas Longhorns, who
K&gt;r bv 14 Jl LP- Slone IS 11 have appeared in the NCAA
1Regul ar Gamel
World Series more than any
Cl ncy
ooo ooo 012- J 10 o other team, have ended a z:;..
Ch1 ca go
001 000 3 0 x ~ 4 13 1
Darcy . McEnaney 171, Easl yea r drought between
w •ck ( 7) and Bench , Bonha m. championships .
Kn ow les (9&gt;. Zamor a ( 9 ) an d
Hosley WP - Bonham 16 51 LP
The Longhorns, who last
Darcy 11 d\ HR - Morgan won the titl e in 1950,
{8 th )
capitahzed on arm-weary
Hous ton
100 003 004- 8 12 1 South Carolina pitcher Earl
5 1 LO IJ IS
I 12 000 O J O ~ 7 15 2
Kon •ec zn y , K
F or sc h ( SJ. Bass, the pitching of their
Gr an ger (8) , Crawfor d (8 ) J
own Richard Wortham and
N1e kro ( 8 1 an d May , Jut ze ( 8) ,
hitting of Mickey
B
For sc h.
Hra bos k y
(9) , the
Ga r man ('il l and S1m mon s W P Reichenbach for a 5-I chamJ N1 ekr o ( 2 I J L P- Ga r m an
(2 3 ) H R S· DaV IS (6th ) Sm 1fh pionship v1ctory 's aturday
( 10 th ) Jo hllSOn ( 4th )
night over the Gamecocks.
Texas and South Carolma
( 1st Gam e)
Mon tr ea l
200 000 OOD- 2 6 0 entered the title game with
San Fran
000 000 Ol o- 1 7 3
Ren ko , War th en
(8 ) and one loss each, with the
Foote Barr , M off1 1f (9) and Gamecocks losing to th e
Rad er W P - Renko (2 4) L P ~
Longhorns Thursday night
Ba r r (6 6 )
and Texas losing to Arizona
( 2nd Gamel
Mon tr ea 1 201 1oo oo1- s 14 o State last Sunday in the
San Fran
000 020 000-- 2 7 2 double-elimmation classic.
Bla 1r Scher m an ( 7) DeMol a
IB I and Foote. Ca ldwell .
Bass worked with just two
Wtll .ams 161 Moff •tl 191 and days rest following series
H ill
W P · Bla 1r (J 8)
LP Ca\dwe\1 IJ 61 HR s- Man gual victories over Sewn Hall and
15\hl, Hdl l3rdl
Arizona State that put South
Ptl t
012 120 020- e 16 1 Carolina in 1ts first chamAtl anta
100 110 JOO- 6 16 o pionship game. He threw 85
Can del an a , Moose {6 ), G 1ust•
17 1, Demery 181 and sangu d pitches in the first four inlen. Sadec k•, Bea rd lSI Sosa - ningsandhadtossed 141balls

:
':.:

S

~

·

e e e

BOOTS
by
ACME

heritage house
Your Thom MeAn Store
Mtddleoort, Ohio

( 1s1, 11 mmng s)
Ca l

005 00000 102-

Mt l

100 031001 01- 7 11 3
K1r k w ood (8 ) and El
u e z Ed R odr~ g u e z ,

R

T an an a,
o d r 1g

Mll
H assler

By Helen Bottel

MAJORmE

8 13 1

"

H ausm an k(4 ) CC ham p1o n {9) ,
Sprague ( 11) and Porter W PKi r k w ood (1 2) L P- Champ 1on

•

:S:
~

wward the plate when he was
lifted with two out in the ninth
inning, suffermg his f1rst loss
after 17 victories this 9eason .
Wortham, a lefthander, allowed four hits, struck out
eight and walked just one
batter in winning his 15th
game in 16 decisions this
season. The only run he
yielded was a 300-foot smash
over the right centerfield
fen ce by Gamecock first
baseman Hank Small In the
fourth Inning .
Reichenbach , who was
voted the outstanding player
in the series, hit a Bass
fastball in the third inning for
a 380-foot homer over the
right centerfield wall that
produced two runs for the
Longhorns. ·
Rei chenbach's 'drive
padded a one rW! lead that
was produced in the second
inning on a basesloaded walk
by Bass. Keith Moreland
drove in the Longhorns'
fourth run with a double in
the fourth and Gary Pyka
sent the fifth.orun across with
a sacrifice bunt in the eighth
inning.

POMEROY WINS
The Pomeroy Angels
defeated Cheshire 14-1 in pee
pee baseball play last week.
For the Angels, Bnan
Zerkle went the distance on
the mound and for Cheshire
Wamsley and Gilmore pitched. Getting hits for the
winners were Nicky Riggs
with a homer, Ryan Oliver a
grand slam home run and
Scott Harnson, Zerkle, and
King each had singles. The
only Cheshire hit was a single
by Cooper

r~H;}';;·:·: :·ii';}'p
.~~~~::=:!o$i*.-.: ~to~.c~:l i£Lfl l.lil ~~d~~a.~:;I ~:::~~~::J2:': II
0 10 210 oox- 4 12 1
( 3 7J and E l
Ro

FOR

ADULT MEAL
8 19 Shcl "
Reg Fre nc h F11 es
•
T u rno v er~

lf!

La rge So fl Dunk

Dear Helen :

Reg So ft Dnnk &amp;
a Sweet Treat

201 020 000- s 11 1
ooo 100 ooo- 1 6 1

Ec ker sley, Brown (9) and
E ll•s
Perr y ,
K ek• ch
{7J ,
Bacs1k (8) and Sundberg W P-

Our daughter taught for 10 years w put her husband Eckersley 14 01 LP- Perry 16
through medical school. She was never happy in her marriage, 101
and planned wleave him when he was graduated. But then she
found herself pregnant. So she stayed on.
Now she stays for security. She hates teachmg and doesn 't
like off1ce work; doesn 't want a job until the baby is of school
age. Our no-fault divorce laws would only give her child
support, so she'd have to work, and she worries that she ·
couldn't find a job she would want anyway. As she says, 1t's a
hard decision between a completely hopeless marriage and
frightening uncertamty.
'•
She is healthy, pretty, a good housekeeper, and has a
winsome personality, but no matter how hard she tries, her
husband pu'ts her down. She feels like a slave - and she's
never been able to fight.bact;. She realizes it's getting worse.
Tell me (and her) - WHAT'1&gt;RICE SECURITY

PT. PLEASANT
2325 Jack &gt;on Ave.

-

GALLIPOLIS
~503 Eastern Ave.

Special Sale At lngelsl

Dear WPS :
Assuming this marriage is as hopeless as you say, and
counseling wouldn't help, my answer is:
O(lly YQ\11" daughter knows what price (in lost self-esteem,
lost'bl;&gt;port1inities; lost happiness) she is paying for security and she may not realize this fully until late middle age when a
hard fact hits her : the time for a second chance is past !
Ask her wproject in the future, p1cture the beaten.&lt;Jown
person she may become, if drastic changes aren't made. Then
try to make ber see a needed divorce is often therapeutic and
single life can mean freedom , more than fear.
orlh~ saddest people around are those who stay
becli\tse Oiey're af~ai'd'to go- and that's not only in marriage, •
but" ih' jobs, miserable faffiily situations (mvolving grown
children who can't break away ), many areas of life that
require more guts than their dependent natures can
manufacture.
1
J'wiSh I could Wt-ap up a box of courage and send it wyour
daul!fili!~piarcel'!los\'.' Since I can't, my best advice to her is :
knoclrOf!the"!!Mf-pltji'liri'd illdecision ; find a part-time job - it
will give you confidence ; learn wfight bapk - if your husband
doesn'trespeetyoufor it (and I've an idea he may !), at least it
will bring you closer W "Independence Day."
And if divoree is inevitable, relax and enjoy it. Others
have! - H.
P.S. Read on. And take hope:
Dear Helen :
J!IISCovered in the first year of my marriage we'd made a
mistake: I was as wrong for h him as he was for me, We didn't
catch fire, it was more like a slow burn. But I was very depend·
ent, unwilling wadmit I'd made a terribly bad decision, and,
besides, a baby was on the way.
We stayed together three more miserable years before I
suddenly re,alized I was becoming a dead ringer for his
mother, a quiet neurotic who said "Yes dear" wavoid a fight
and divided her time between migraine and ulcers.
So I walked out of his life. Llke that !
Today,little Tommy and I are doing just great. I've pever
been happier. In fact, after that first week of feeling "lost"
without someone to boss me;-l: slowly blossomed into an independent, self-&amp;ufficient WOMAN. I have a fme job, a good
babysitter, (Tommy has blossomed, wo ) and a wonderful
male friend who treats me as a person. •
All wo often divorce is pictured as a traumatic experience
that leaves lasting scars. And the "poor divorcee" is pitted
right into self-pity. Believe me, it isn 't that way! Sometimes
a divorce is the best thing that can happen to two people. It
cancels out a mistake. - HAPPILY SINqLI!: AGAIN
.r
·1

r· .

ch Fnes

:f{r1se Pme

dn guez {1st 1_ _

Cleve
Texas

KIDS -

FUNMEALtM
Fun Tray,

~ and
Moor e wP- Siaton 14Ro
Bl
H Rs- T hOmas (3rd l. El

Divorce Often Therapeutic

JOB

308

NCAA baseball crown

( 8\
(6 ) , F ra ll •ng ( 7) , ,

L ee ( 9 5 ) LP - McDant el {3 I )
HR - Doy le ( 1st)

i

Longhorns capture '75

181 and Be nch Plum mer

CLEVELAND (UP! )
Trainer Jim Morgan called
him "a big boy " but Brent 's
Prince turned out to be the
"b1g winner" Sunday af.
ternoon
"We knew he would be on
the board and we thought he
could win," said Morgan , who
watched the dark brown 3year-&lt;Jld colt hang in for a
nose victory over Sylvan
Place m the $100,000 Ohio
Derby at Thistledown Race
Track.
Brent 's Prince, who had not
finished worse than second in
his last eight starts, took the
lead going inw the club house
turn imd r eelect off a 1.10.2
clocking for diStance.
"When I saw that stxfurlong time, I just hoped that
he could hang in there,"
smiled Morgan.
Bj!nit.ie Feliciano, leading
rider at ,tb.e c"urrent Thistledown meet, rode Brent's
Prince for the first time and
felt he might have a difficult !71 , Eas t erl y ( 8 ), Ho use {9) and
Corr ell WP -· Oem er y ( 3 ll L P
lime ratmg the horse,
- Sosa {Q 5 ) H Rs ~ H ebn er
"! thought I would have (61h l. Rob ert son (l st l, Ba ker
som~
trQ.uble , but. he ( 12th / , Pa r k er (9 th )
responded to my every ef- New York
000 000 105- 6 110
for1," 1Felid ano said. "When San 0 1ego 000 000 000- 0 3 5
Seave r ( 10 4 ) and Stea rn s ,
I saw -Sylvan Place come Strom , Tom lm (9 ), Gr e 1f ( 9 )
alongside nearing the 16th and Kendall L P- Strom (0 1)
pole, I used a left-banded Phtl a
100 002 010- 4 8 o
LA
200 010 ooo- J 7 o
whip and he came on."
Und er wood , Ga r ber ( 7) and
Mrs. Mary Classen, owner Boon e
Rau,
Rhod en
( 6) ,
of Brent's Prince, watched M ar sha ll (8 ) an d Y eager WP Ga r ber ( 5 3) L P Mar sh al l (2
her favorite colt collect 'il H Rs - Cash ( 2nd ) L u zlnsk1
$66,780 in covering tbe mile ( lJih )
----and one-eighth distance m
I :49.2 and return $33.60 ,
Am encan L eague
Oakland at Detro1t, ppd .• ratn
$12.20 and $7.80.
Sylvan patd $8.80 and $7.20 Ch1c ago
000 000 000- 0 4 0
001 010 lOx- 3 8 0
for second, while Canvasser New Yor k Gossage
(]) an d
Bahn sen
returned $10.00 for third.
Down •ng . Hun ter ( 9 6 ) and
Money Mark, who finished Her rma nn L P- Bahns en ( 4 6 )
13th in the Kentucky Derby, Ba lf 1m or e 000 100 210- 4 11 0
went off as the 9-5 favorite M1n nesot a 301 100 OOx - 5 10 1
Torr ez (7 A ) and D un can ,
and finished sixth after Corb 1n (3 3 ) and Borg m ann
runmng third for the ftrst SIX HR s- · For d (2nd l. Ba ylor (8 th)
furl ong_s
Bo ston
120 100 040 - 8 IJ 2
001 300 02 1- 7 15 0
The mutuel handle set • n Kan C1t y
Mor et (8 ) and Black
all-ltme high with $1 ,268,415 weLee.
ll
L eonar d . McDaniel (6 ).
going through the windows. M1ngon ( 8) and H eal y W P-

~~~

N a! Jonal Lea gue
14 L UZIOSkl, Ph il

Am er1 can

•
wznner

Sund ,,y' s Baseball Resul ts
By Un1 f ~ d Pr ess Inter natiOnal
N ah onal L eague
( Com pi of Susp Ga m e ot 6-14 '
Cmcv
OJ 1 100 150 11 14 1
Ch1cago
000 0 10 020- J 8 2
K•rbv . Nor man ( 6 / , Borb on

318

VEECK MAY SUE

For All Your Furs 'Avalloble Here

216 E. 2nd

M un sn . N Y 56 2 19
H 1S ie. Mnn 54 206
was h r~g t n Oak
59 223
Youn t, M tl 48 18 1
Cha mb l iSS, NY
49 182
Bmbr y , Bit 42 149
M ay , Ch t
56 198
Wh 1te. NY 49 185

Prince

Linescores

·ABA DRAFI'S TOl&gt;AY
""S'i'. LOUIS, Mo. (API)
Guard Gus Wllliams of tbe
University of Southern California was expected wbe the
opening-£oUJid plck of the
Spirits of St. Louis in today's
American Basketball
Association college draft.
Williams, who averaged 20
points and 5.4 assists a game
last year for USC, was a
second-£ound choice by tbe
NBA champion Golden State
Warriors in that league's
recent draft.
One problem for the Spirits
m signing a first-£ound choice
may be salary. The club lost
as much as·$! million its first
year in tbe league and Lewis,
Chaney and the rookie front
line of last season- Marvin
Barnes, Gus Gerard and
Maurice Lucas --all reportedly command slx-flgure
salaries.

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'

Ingels,:: Just~ Received
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.TRAILERLOAD

NEW l976

·-SOme

TELEVISION
,
...

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.

's Pointers:
'

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I made
the v aglc mistake of
fastenin g card s on a
mahogany-stain ed,
var nished door with cellophane
tape. I removed all the tape
but marks still remam . 1
certa1nly would like to
correct this Without having to
paint over these beautiful
doors. - ANNIE

DEAR POLLY - I want to
tell the readers how I solved
th e dirty clothes storage
problem A hamper in the
bathroom catches the towels,
shee ts, washcloths and such
things tha t ar e washed
toge ther. The rest of the
laundry IS divided in separate
hampers so no sorting 1s
needed. Each fam1ly member
knows knits and shirts go in
the gold hamper, jeans and
DEAR ANNIE - Since colored socks in the orange
no tape remains you might one, my husband 's work
try the following remedy that clothes m the green hamper
removes many spots from and dainty thmgs like lingerie
varnished wood. Rub cam· in the white hamper. Sorting
phorated oil on, following the is done for me . Such hampers
grain of the wood, and then can be placed wherever is
immediately rub it off wlth a most convement for each
dry cloth. For more severe homemaker. The hampers
damage you might rub will have to be Ia beled for a
GENTLY the area with a dry while until everyone is used
steel wool soap pad. This is to the tdea If one doesn ot
painstaking work. Do only a want the expense of buying
little at a lime and remove new hampers plasltc clothes
the powdery dust. Then go on baskets m different colors
to the next place. When spots could be used. - JOETTA.
are removed polish like the
DEAR POLLY - When a
rest of the door.
group of us were learning to
Or, It may be that your embroider, our resourceful
marks could he removed by teacher made embr oidery
the use of a stain remover hoops from the rather heavy
furniture polish just rubbed plasltc containers that
Into the stains and then whipped topping comes in.
blended out Into the rest of She cut !he center out of a
the door. I have sometimes plastic lid leaving about a %
darkened spots on dark mch rim . The inner part of
varnished floors wllh a the hoop was made by cutting
colton-tipped slick dipped In the top off the rim of the
iodine and rubbed the iodine contamer so it was about%
off Immediately after mch deep. Fabric to be
removing any that extended embrmdered is firmly held
beyond the spots. Good luck! between these two hoops and
-POLLY.
they are mce and Ugh t to
hold. - EUNICE.
DEAR POLLY - Mf Pet
DE AR POLLY - Try
Peeve is with restaurants removmg those scuff marks
that do not think babies and fr om light colored (be1ge,
small children deserve clean whtte, etc.) shoes with an
high chair trays. In many ordinary sponge eraser. I was
different places I have had to amazed at the results when I
ask the waitress to wipe off first tr1ed it and even think 1t
the tray before I would even shmes them up a btl. put my child in the chair . ELAINE.
LINDA.

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: Thumb
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Save $JOO f.o $J50
ON ALL CONSOLE_MODELS
/

ALL
THIS
WEEK

I·NGEL.S
FURNITURE
PH. 992-2635
MIDDLEPOIRT, OHIO

COLUMBUS - Six Meigs
County girls are at Capital
Umversity, Columbus, this
week to attend the 29th Annual Sess ion of Buckeye
Gtrls' State, an Americanism
project of the America n
Legion Amollary.
Goin g
to
Colum bus
Saturday, opening da y of
G1rls' State, were Molly Ann
Fisher of Racme, Southern
High School juniOr, sponsored
by Racme Unit 602; Patncia
Ann Windon, Long Bottom ,
Eas tern High School, Mid·
dleport Umt 128 and the
Cihzens Nahonal Bank;
Angela Louise S1sson,
Pomeroy, Meigs, Pomeroy
Umt 39 ; Tamra Lee Stanley,
Albany, Me1gs High, Unit 128
and Xi Gamma Mu Chapter,

Club has
picnic
GALLIPOLIS - Partners
of Gallia County Salon 612,
Eight and Forty met at the
home of lnes Marchi for a
p1cnic supper Thursday
evening. Followfng the picmc
Le Petit Chapeau Erma
Smith opened a re gular
meeting in which plans for
, the coming year were made.
It was decided that each partner w1ll be asked to pay $1
each meeting instead of
having other money raising
projects. Gifts and favors will
be omitted and the money
placed in the children and
youth fund.
A letter was read announcmg
La
Marc he
Departementale at the
Ramada Inn, Dayton, July 20
and 21. Delegates who wtll
attend are Erma Sm1lh,
Emma Wayland, Grace
Pratt, Dorothy Hecker and
Gladys Cumings. Carrie
Neulzhng and Mabel Brown
are delegates at large.
Other communications
announced candidates for
Departmental offices. Joy
Bowman, Galion , ls a candidate for La Concierge .
Marzella Huston, Cmcinnati ,
1s candidate for Chapeau
Departemental.
A report was given on
Pouvoir at Toledo in May· by
Erma Smith, Mabel Brown,
Gladys Cumings, Dorothy
Hecker and Emma Wayland.
Lelia Hunt, Lansing, Mich.,
La Chapeau National, was
guest speaker at the banquet.
Other guests were Marie
Sm1th, a candidate for
Chapeau National , Violet
Aichholz, National Children
and Youth Chairwoman and
Mary Martin , La Demi
Chapeau of Central Division.
The salon was recognized
at the Pouv01r for having
been the first salon in the
state to attain goal in ,partnership.
The next regular mee ling
of the salon will be a picnic
supper at the home of Gladys
Cummgs near Pomeroy
Aug. 7.

Bu Margaret Ella Lewis
Rutland Garden Club
Showlng Specimen Flowers in a Flower Show :
A judge determines a good individual specimen by the use
of a score card, usually as follows:
Form of flower, 15 points, nearly perfect stage, typical of
type;
'
Substance of Dower, 15 points, fresh, crisp, well.Jlilrdened;
Color of flower, 10 polnlll, brilliant, clear, typical of type;
Size of Dower, 15 points, typical for variety, but large size
Is not an indication of quality;
Foliage, 25 points, all foliage on steam should be present in
good condition, no evidence of spray or insect damage .
Stem, 20 points, good proportion to the bloom, straight and
strong with no evidence of recent disbudding.
You will note that 45 of the 100 points are assigned to the
foliage and stem of a specimen. Dower. The schedule should
always be followed in showing specimen blooms, such as how
many are to be shown, and in what kind of a container.
The score card for a spike, stalk, or multiple Dowers
SCOUTS REMAIN
is
as
follows:
Eight
Browme scouts in the
cimen
spe
Settlers unit at the Girl Scout
Spacing of Dowers, 15 points, Dowers should be regular
day camp at Camp Kiashuta,
and well spaced or arranged on the stem.
Nmnber of Dowers and buds, 15 points, with the nmnber of remained Thursday over·
·
1
ti ht buds all ·
od night at the camp. Mrs.
open Dowers or buds showmg co or, or g
m go
Ca t
"t
d
proportion presenting a balance.
Gertrude s ~· un1 1ea er,
Substance, 15 points: with the texture of all florets w a~d her assistant~ Patty
indicate good "keeping" qualities with all hardened suf- M1chael, were w1th the
ficienUy ;
scouts, Tammy Cape_h art,
Color, 10 points, should be clear and characteristic of Carolyn Casto, Amy Sisso?,
variety, clear, brllllant, no spotting or streaking ;
Annette Johnson , D1x1e
Size, 10points typical and in good proportion to the stalk;
Ebll~, Laura Lee Horsley,
Stem length and strength, 20 points, stem' should be Robm Gaspe~s, and .Sus1e
straight and strong to the very Up of the Dower head and in Pooler· The gU:Is slept m ~e
very good proportion;
lodge after havmg .a campftre
Foliage and general cultural perfection, 15 points, foliage and_ homemade . tee cream
should not be removed from the stem, but should be clean, dur1ng the evemng · Durmg
healthy, and vigorous, with no indication of disease, insect the fly up . ceremony condamage, or spray residue.
ducted Fr1day for Tammy
Capehart, Carolyn Casto,
Amy Sisson and Annette
Johnson,
Mrs .
Casto
presented overnight camper
patches w her group.
Mrs . 6scar Roush is home when the accident
recuperating at home from happened. The CW!ningham
an injury she received in an car and a truck sideswiped at
automobile accident at York- an inll;rsection. The injured
ville, Dl. last week. spe were taken to the Aurora, Dl.
suffered a vertebra fracture hospital where they were
and is required to wear a treated and then continued
neck collar mOllt of the time. home.
At Prior Lake they visited
Mrs. Roush had accompanied her son-in-law Mr. and Mrs. Merle Sayre
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. and from there went to
Cunningham
Qf Lamont, Iowa where they
Ray
Syracuse, w Prior Lake, left Ron CW!nlngham for a
Mlnn, and they were enroute swnmer visit with Mr. and
Mrs. Jim Boggs. ·

Mrs. Roush_recuperating
Big Closeout On All
'75 Models
.
.

Six attend Girls ' State
Beta Stgma Pht Soronty;
Crys tal Glaz e , Po meroy ,
t.1eigs High, Unit 128 and
Prece ptor
Beta
Beta .
-..._
Chapter, Beta Sigma Ph1
Sorori ty ; and -Melissa- Kay
Th omas , Pomeroy, Metgs
High, Unit 128.
Purpose of the eight.&lt;Jay
workshop 1s to educate young
women 1n th e dultes,
privileges, r ights and
responsibilities of American
citizenship, to give them m a
realt shc mann er an oppo rt umty to learn the
problems of government wtth
spectal emphasis upon the
conlribulton

wom en can

make to the welfare of the
city, county, state and nahon.
The enhre sess ton of
Buckeye Girls' State takes
place at Capttal University
where each girl is assigned to
one of 25 cit1es and f1ve
counttes. Wtlh the guidance
of experienced advisors and
public officials , they organize
a two-party system, campatgn for office, elect officials
m the1r cities, counltes, and
"state" and function in their
var ticular
capaciti es ,
wheth er elective or ap pomllve Each gtrl has an
offi ce.
To supplement th eir
practical experience, girls
hear speakers throughout the
week on vartous phases of
government.
The keynote address on
Saturday night was g1ven by
Hon . John W. Brown, Ohio
Lake Lands admimstrator .
Tomght the address will be
g1v en by Hon. Elizabeth
Paddoc k,
ma yor
of
Plymouth, and Tuesday the
program will be "Highway

Sa fety and You" by
Patrolmen R L Phillips and
D. R. Chne.
C. Wllham O'Netll, Ch1ef
Justtce of the Supreme Court
of Ohio, wtll participate m the
In augur ation ceremonies
Wednesday mghl with the
address to be by James A.
Duerk, Direcwr of Economic
and Communi ty Development , represenhn g Go v.
James A Rhodes.
Thursday's schedule will
include a conducted bus tour
to pomts of governmental
mterest in Columbus tn·
cludmg the state capitol. Mrs.
Nadm e Henmger Mtiler,
Legal Inter)l, will speak on
"The Educ~ted Woman and
her Roles."

On Fnday there Will be a
study of Oh1o Courts w1th the
speakers to be Hon . Alba L
Wh1teside , J udge , lOth
"Dtstrict Court of Appeals, and
the Hon . Georgene Howell,
J udge, Franklin County
Municipal Court
Tha t
evemng the program will he
the topic, "Status of Wome n
m Government" wit~, the
speakers to include M1ss
Martha Wheeler, assistant
director for ln shtu tional
Servtces, Ohio Department of
RehabilitatiOn and Correction; Ethel G. Swan beck,
Representative, Ohio's 111th
General Assembly; and Ohio
State Treasurer Gertrude W.
Donahey ..
Dr . N1cholas Nyarad1 ,
director of the Institute of
International Studies at
Bradley University , Peoria,
Ill. will gtve the address at
the Saturday night closmg
sesston of Buckeye Girls'
State.

I

Social i ·Flower arranging
Calendar course is offered

I

MONDAY
MEIGS Band Boosters,
7:30p.m., at the Metgs H1gh
School band room.
DAILY Vacati on Bible
School begms through June
20,9: 30 to noon dally, at F1rst
Southern Baptist Church, 282
Mulberry Ave All children
are welcome. ·
THE Mtddleport Bustness
and Professional Women's
Club wtil JOIO the Gailipohs
Club for a dtnner tomght 6·30
p.m. at Oscar 's For those
who need transportalton,
Miss Freddie Houdasheit or
Mrs Elmse Wtlson may be
contacted.
POMEROY Chamber of
Commerce noon at Me1gs
Inn
TUESDAY
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Woman 's AUloliary, 7:30p.m.
at the hospital. Hostesses w1ll
be Mrs Ina Massar, Mrs.
Nettie Hayes, Mrs Mildred
Mttch and Mrs. Maria Waldmg.
PTA STUDY Course on the
manual will be offered 7 to 9
p m. at the Pomeroy
Elementary School by the
Me1gs County Counc1l of
Parents and Teachers All
officers, delegates, teachers,
admmistrators, or members
of the PTA are welcome.
Manuals will be avatlable for
those who do _not have them.
GROUP II, Ftrst United
Presbyterian Church, 7 · 30
p.m. Tuesday at the home of
Mrs. Joseph Batley, w1th
Mrs. Th omas Rue" as hostess.

A
stx-week
fl ower
arrangmg course 1s betng
offe red as a par t of the
summer adult education
progr am at Metgs H1gh
School.
Arran ged by Ray Goodman, vocational educa tional
dtrector, the course will begtn
June 17 to be conducted for
stx consec utt ve Tuesdays
from I to 3 p.m. by Mrs.
James Jackson of Wellston,
well-known for her arrangement techmque. ·
The class 1s open to
begmners as well as ad·
vanced flower arrangers, and
non -garden club members as
well as club members are
ehg1ble to attend. There wtll
be a fee for the course
Further tnformatwn about
the program may be obtamed
from Mrs . Altce Thompson of
Pomeroy
.
For the fir st sesswn,
arrangers are to take a flat
tray-type contamer, a large
needle holder, seven pieces of
fresh or dned !me matenal
etther stratght or curved , fi ve
to seven round flowers, or
more tf the flowers are small,
three to fi ve lea ves such as
hosta or rhubar:~,, a hand ful of
small stones, such as gravel
or crushed marble, tools for

Assoctation was organized in
1908 by the descendants of
Isaac
W1 seman ,
a
Revolutionary War sold1er,
father of eleven sons and
daughters. They have met
every year since except for
certam war years . Isaac's

an cestry has now been traced
back to the stxteenth century
m Europe.
Anyone bearing the name
Wiseman or a descendant of a
Wiseman 1s cordiallv mv1ted.

REGULAR meeltng, Drew
Webster Post 39, American
Legion, 8 p.m. Elect1on of
officer s and nammg of
dele ga tes to depar tment
convention, July 17-19, in
Dayton.
FRI EN DLY C1 r cle of
Trtnily Chur ch, annual ptcmc
6 p m. at the Globokar R1ver
Camp. Take table service.
Mrs. W. H. Perrin to have the

arranging, and a background
piece, tf available.

SEEKS INDUSTRY

NEW YORK (UP! ) - An
development team including
members of the Ohio Depart·
ment of Economic and Com·
muntty Development started
seeking new or expanded
industry for the Buckeye
state in this area today.
The team, headed by Rosemary Martin, vice president
of the Columbus Area
Chamber of Commerce , will
call on about 300 industry
execullves m New York City,
northern New Jersey and
so uthern Connecticut this
week to g1ve them in·
formation needed in con·
sidering expansion to Ohio.
A similar Ohio group,
which visited w Baltimore
and Philadelphia m April,
turned up two dozen new
industrial prospects for Ohio.

eOPENe
6 DAYS
A WEEK

THURSDAY

MON. thru SAT.

A DAILY Btble school will

be held at the Dorcas Umted
Methodtst Church begmmng
June 19 through June 27 fr om
9 am to 11 :30 a m. All
children are welcome.

RUTLAND BASEBALL
League to meet at the Legion
Hall, 5:15 p m Everyone
mtersted m the community's
baseball program mvited .

Wiseman family
plans reunion
The Wiseman Family
AssociatiOn has planned 1ts
sixty-second annual reunwn
for Sunday, June 29 at the
Bob Evans shelter house on
US 35 just east of Rio Grande,
Oh10. A basket dinner at noon
w1ll be followed by a program
of music and Marco the
magician . Recreation is
being planned for · the
children.
The Wiseman Fam1ly

l:i:

D&amp;D MEAT
830 E. Main
Pomeroy, Ohio

GOSPEL MEETING
JUNE 17 THRU 22
7:30 EACH EVENING
EXCEPT SUNDAY 10 AM &amp; 6 PM

WESTSIDE CHURCH OF CHRIST
200 W. MAIN

vesper service.

POMEROY, OHIO

SPEAKER: TOMMY THOMAS
.

Betty Maynard
is honored
Mrs . Betty Haggy Maynard
was honored recently w1th a
layette shower giVen by Mrs.
Barbara McMaxon, Mrs .
Susie Beeler, Mrs. Margaret
Spencer, Mrs. Helen Fields,
Mrs. Pat Barton and Mrs .
Carol Lunsford at the home of

Mrs. Maynard 's mother,
Mrs. Madeline McClung
A mobile centered the blue
and pmk streamers wh1ch
decorated the room, and an
umbrella was suspended over
the bassinet which held the
gifts. Two baby carriages and
11 stork completed the shower

Auxiliary
make plans

decor3tions.

RACINE - A chicken
barbecue and ice cream
social was planned for July 4
when the Racine Firemen's
Amoliary met m regular
session at the firehouse
Tuesday.
Mrs. Mae Cleland presided
at the meeting and arrangements were made w solicit
donations for the 1ce cream.
The birthdays of Beulah
Autherson and Grace Roush
were celebrated with a gift
exchange and refreshments.
Games were played. Present
were Mrs. Emma ·Lyons,
daughter, Marilyn and
granddaughter, Tina, Gene
Lyons, Mrs. Grace Roush,
Mrs. Jean Cleland, Mrs. l)'lae
"1:leiand, Mrs. Mary Sloter,
and Rita ant Maxine Rose.

•

P1nk and . blue booties
decorated the cake which was
served w1th ice cream,
coffee, tea and mints. Games
were played with pnzes going
wMrs. Dave Sham and Mrs.
Brenda Haggy. The door
prize was won by Mrs. Sharon
Sm1th.
Attending besides those
mentioned were Mrs. Albert
Martin, Mrs. Lydia Hysell,
Mrs . Connie Russell and
Mandy, Mrs. Terry Lew1s,
M1ss Jeame Ebersbach, Mrs.
Roger Mowery and Colena,
Mrs. Joyce Grover and Terri,
Mrs. Bobble Collina, Mrs. Blll
Clay, Mrs. Charles Sayre,
Mrs . Myrtle Maynard,
Tracey and Jeff McMahon,
Brial Beeler and Melanie
Fields.
Others presenling gtfts to
Mrs. Maynard were Mrs.
Robert Russell, Mrs. Don
Russell, Mrs. Perry • Carpenter, Mrs. Alvin Haggy and
Mrs. Clifford Jacobs.

Hot
new source
- . .. .. ...

, I.

for gas.

One of the hotte1t new sources tor natural gas is the frozen north.
America badly needs supplies of the clean gas energy available there
to help solve the energy crisis.
Columbia has gone to the Arctic to
Natural gas p1pe\ ines from the Arctic
get this gas:
·
wdl be bu11t with prop er reg ard for
t l'lt area they cross A study group m
which Columbta partiCipate s h us
operated complex test sJtes and
cond ucted lengthy fie ld studies to
examine the impact of a gas- hne or
the land and wa terw ays and the
wildlife lhat inhabot them .
These studies a re providin~ the
data necessary to m eet growing
energy nee ds w 1t h minimum

- we're financmg drilling programs m
Alaska and Canada, including
on the far islands of the high Arcttc.
-we've golten the rights to purchase
substantial gas reserves already
discovered on Alaska's North Slope.
Once the Alaskan oil pipeline gets
started, a natural gas line can also be
built from the North Slope. We can't
produce the gas until oil production is
underway.

disturbance of t he env •ronment .

-w~'re participating
~ nvironmcntal and

in costly .
engineering
&gt;tudies on how to build gas ltnes from
the frozen north to consumers in
Columbia's se rvice area.

There's much work yet to do, but gas from
the far north will be coming along.
Columbia Gas is working hard t(}{/ay to
ncct your encr!!y needs tomorrow . '

cAu
MBIA GAP

.

Gasls pn'&lt;ious, pu..., •noriiY •.. -tc ,.ildy.

'

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7- ThP Dally Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday , June 16, 1975

5

·n:::=~~ddlepo~E::~~:g
o
.,:~:~y~~::
J
F
'or
Fast
Results
Use
The
s~ntinel
Classi_
fieds
Society
16

N~WS

lllr.

·and Mrs. Russ
Elhelman and son, Buddy,
llld Minnie McGrath, were at
Holzer ·Hospital Sunday
visiting Nellie Borgan, Dana
Tumer and Donald Weaver.
Mrs. Francis Alkire and
1011 Ray and Karen Gilkey
1re vaca tlonlng on a beach in
North Carolina . Sharon
Jewell is caring for the post
office.
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton of
Albany and Bob Alkire were
dinner guests of Ava Gilkey

Sunday.

PARA SOL
BoU tiQU e
an
noun ces tl'1e add •llon of a
new
operator ,
H e l en
N ew l and Ju n e Spec ial Hot
oil con d ittoner Reg S3 now
S1 so durmg 11'1 e mon t l'1 ol
Jun e Shop wtll be c losed on
Tuesday until Aug 5 Open
Wednesday tl'1ru Sa turday
Pl'1one 985 4141
6

a

r--------

your

Ull

Cosmei1CS

Of

'l\

f.

I

2 SIGN;) i.Pomero· y ·,:
-- OF

:QUALITY

FREE hay , m us t c lean f1eld
off Phone 7425113
6 15 Jtc
t-Ut&lt;

""'" .;ales
---~----~~--------------~~

M~tor

JOe's Sports and CB's a1 10

pet abov e cost and ship
p 1ng JOB Page S1 . Mid

Co. 1-d-leport

Nora Johnson re turned
home
Saturday
altern
spending two weeks with
Mrs. Helen Johnson and also
spent some time w1th Mr. and
Mrs . Larry Johnson and
family and Mr. and Mrs. J .
W. Johnson and family·.
Nora Johnson v1s1ted w1th
her son, Mr. and Mrs . Jacob
Johnson and Mona of
R11tland . Moria Johnson took
her grandri10ther ( Nora
Johnson ) to 'her home
Saturday in Grove C1 ty and
will visit her a few days.
Mr. and Mrs . Fred
Tuckennan and Mrs. James
Reeves visited Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs . Marvin Chesser
of McArthur and Mrs. Elsie
Bratton of Radcliff.
Mr. and Mrs . James
Reeves vis1ted Saturday with
his mothc;·, Mrs. Iva Reeves
and Du1. of Barnesville. He
returned Sunday to visit w1th
Mrs. Reeves while she is in
hospital.
Mr. and Mrs . Robert
Reeves of Middleport visited
Tuesday with h1s grandmother, Mrs. Iva Reeves,
Don and Mr. James Reeves
at Barnesville.
Mr . and Mrs . Guy
Tuckerman of Springfield
spent a couple of days
recently with Mr and Mrs.
Fred Tuckerman.

Apple Grove
News Notes
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mrs. Bessie Shtt, Mt.
Moriah,
Mrs .
Shirley
Simpson and Jan G111ian of
ltacine visited Mrs. Ruth
Parsons a recent Monday.
Mrs. Velma Pilko of the
bookmobile spoke at the
meeting of the UMW at the
local
church
Tuesday
evening.
Mr . and Mrs . ·R obert
Casper, Billy and Brian
Dye, Mr . and Mrs. Bill
Connally and son, Chris of
Columbus spent a weekend
with Mrs. Dolly Wolfe and
family .
Mrs. Mandie Snyder and
daughter, c;onnie and friend
of Delaware, Mrs . Irene
Rhodes and Tammy Wolfe,
Mrs. Ethel Moore, Louise
Wandling , Yvonne Phillips of
St. Albans, W. Va. spent
Wednesday with Mrs. Ruth
Parsons and Preston PII!'IICIIII .

Mrs. Edna Parsons was a

tory a 1r , tmted glass, radio, w hee l covers, good tires,
blk mtertor, sliver grey f inish Spec 1a l

Nltnk "

-Phone

1971 MATADOR

1 1 ltc

$1595

Yard Sale

1971 FORD LTO 4 DR.

S1e9s

Loca l ly owned, clean interior , s ilver grey exterior,
fa ctory air, automatic, power steering &amp; brakes, radio,
good tires.

Automobile
' .
TransmlSSlOr
RPoair

POMEROY,
OHIO
IL _ ___;__ _;;_-'~"----'-:.:
-c....:.:.
- -'I

Help Wantea

. ......__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,.
•

NEWSPAPER

I.

• • •

''

(

•

..

,

1965 GMC tr uck 15 sp A l so ,
1966 T rallm obil e w1th n ew
brakes . $4 , 500 Phon e 9B5
3984
6 12 6tc

'

I

)

'

4

~

1971 SK YLINE 12x60
99 2 5872

MASON

- ---

CONTACT

DAllY SENTINEL
992-2156

-

~-

--~

6 11 6tp

~ -

--

SELL your mob il e hom e ""for
cash 15 homes wanted , 1958
thru 1972 models
Phone
f61.4J 446 -IA 25, Ga ll•polis
3-9-7B tf

FOR -FREE
- -- ESTIMATES

FINE
family milk cow
Reg1s t ered Jersey Call 742 ~
6722 af ter 4 p m

6 12 6lp

WAi f RESs. app·ly ·,n- person
N OTI CE tram Berry M 1ller
Craw's Steak Hou se
Mobile Home Sales' Here 1S
6 11 6tc
196&lt;1 A N D older U S Co •nS
a ne w li sting of th e un 1ts we
1
Wll l pay 24 ? for d •mes , 60c
now have on our lo t due to
CO OK
Ga llia Count y
for qu arters. $1 20 for half
th e for ec lo sure of another
Children's
home
,
must
live
Ca ll Roger Wa m sl ey 742
M obil e Home Dealer
1n Ca ll f or •nlerv1ew at 446
3651
60x 12 Schult total el ectr1c ,
92 37
6 6 l21p
5-18 30tc
2 bedrm
6 13 61c
60x 12 PMri 3 bedrm
GU N S A N D AMMO Our
BU 1LDI N G l ot w 1th trees on or
60x12 E l c~a , 2 bedr m
near R1 7 between Pomeroy
summer ~ tock
IS no w
60xl2 Ti!a n , 2 bedrm
ar r•v ing Rifles , sho tguns ,
and Tuppers Pla1ns Ph one
60x12 Dar1an , 2 bedrm 2
667 374 1
pi st ols , r eloa d ing eQ UI P
baths
MOBI LE home With n 1ce lot .
6 12 6tc
scopes , ammun •f•ons .
22
60x12 Nashua , 3 bed r m
n ew house furniture and
MAG h p $3 per bo x, $27 50
60x 12
G l obemaster ,
3
pallo , gas heat , city water
per ca r1on (500 ) 22 I r h p
bedrm
OLD furn iture, ice boxes ,
Ava ilable
now
Phone
$2 10 per ~pop Gel the m
60x 12 Broadlane . 2 b edrm
brass beds, or com p lete
A lbert H1[l , Rac1ne . 949 226 1
while they last Store hours
4x 12 t rpo ut
hou se holds
Wr1te M
D _
6 11 6tc
effect•ve M ay 19 Mdnday
60x1d New Moon , 2 bedrm ,
Mil le r , Rt 4, Pomeroy ,
T hursd ay 9 a m to 6 p m •
washer ·dry er
Oh 10 Ca ll 992 7760
Friday and Sat urday 9 a m
60x
12
Val
rant,
2
bedrm
10 7·74
to 9 p m VI LL AGE G UN
60)( 12 PMC , 3 bedrm
---------- ---SH OPPE. 26 6 M1ll St ,
60)( 12 Sherwood Park, 3
Middleport
bedrm
10X55 2 BEDRM
mob.de
35)(B Gl1der
51830tc
home , furniShed , n ew carpet
J5xB Pacem aker
:X PER IE NCED •n tak1ng
and
a~r cond it ioner $3,300
Th ese are mostly all late
care of eld erl y pa t• ents
Phon e 992 7439
model s (so me nev er l1 ved
Refe r e n ces , Phon e (304 )
m) and will be l1 qui dat ed at
773 524 9
6 13 6tc
a ve ry large discount So i f
6 111 0tc
NE W3bedrm all elec 11omc.
you a r e •n terest ed 1n a
wall to wall carpet , llv •ng
Mo b• le Hom e at a hug e
rm , dining rm , k•tchen .
CARPENTER work - ce1 l1n g ,
sa v •ng . don't wait
Stop
bath , 1 car garage Grey
panel1ng
floor 1n g , e tc
today
at
Be rry M1ller
alum St dm g 10 front with
Phone 992 2759
Mob1le Home Sa l es. 705
bl ack shul1e r s Phone 992
6 10 101c
Fa
r
son
St
,
Be
lpr
e,
Oh1o
,
FURNISHED
apart me nt ,
2432 , or see R 1c k Morris
Ph J23 95 31
adults on l y m M •ddleport.
6 11 Si c
WILL take care of 2 private
6
-5-lltc
Phon e 99 2-3874 .
patients m my home P hon e
J 25 tic - -- ---- - - - - 69B 5607
1 72 ACRE S la nd . and loc ust
6 13 6tc
posts A l so . 1965 Ford LTD
TRAILER sp a ce , 1 m1le from
Phone 742 3656
REMODELING ,
P l umbmg ,
Pomeroy
Phone 992 585B
5 23 521p
1'1 eat m g and all types of
5 2 tfc
BEDD IN G plan ts, pott ed
--- - - - '
ge ner a l
repai r
Work
p lan ts , geran•u rns. azaleas , CORNER l ot at In tersec tion of
guar anteed 20 years ex
p etun•a s , porch bo xes,
MOBILE home , SU itabl e for
StateR t 7 33, and 124 About
pe r 1en ce
Pt1one 992 2409
1'1anging baskets Cl eland 's
me
n
D
epos
1t
r
eQUir
ed
JOB
117 acre s Phone 992 5786
5 1 tfc
Green hou se.
Gerald 1ne
Pag e St • Middleport Phone
6 B 12tc
Cl elan d , Ra c•ne. Oh io 45771
992 3509
5 18 tt c
NO.TICE OF
6 a lfc
1' ? ACRES, good building si1e
APPOINTMENT
Ca ll 667 3333
Case No. 21544 TWO b edroom m ob1 te home •n ADM IR AL 25" Screen color
6 15 3tc
Estate of J . Paul Grueser
T v , rad•o re co rd player
Sy racuse Depos•t required
Deceased .
com b 1n ahon
$300
New
No clllld r en or p ets Phone
Notice is hereby g1ven that
rec ord p l a ye r , S-45
Tape COR NE R br1ck budd in g in
992 2441 a ft er 5 30 p m
Bern1ce Grueser of 516 South
p layer , r a dio and speakers ,
6 10 ttc
Pom eroy Bus •ness Sectt on
4th St , M•ddteport , Oh1o , has
S50 Phone 992 7346
on a 40' x 85' lot Phone 992
been du l y appointed Ad
6 l J Jtc
5786
mi n istr a t r 1x of the Estate of J
6 10 12tc
N I CE 6 rm house , 4 rms , 1•2 - - - -- -- - --~--Paul G ru ese r deceased, la te
ba t h , larg e pan try down 1974 500CC Kawasak i , Phone
of Middleport , Meigs County,
s ta~rs .
2 rms
and bath
992 SB91
BUSINESS bldg 1n downtown
Oh10 ,
ups ta~rs
Basement , and
Pome roy Situated on 25' x
Cred 1tors are requ1red to
large closet s pace lo cate d at 6 13 JtJJ
75 ' lot , presently occupied .
file the 1r c la •ms w 1th said
269 N 3r d , Middlepor t Close - - - - - - · - - - - - - - Phon e 992 5786
f•duc1ary w1thm four m onth s
to post oft 1ce and town 2139 MUSTANG eng1ne c om
6 B 12tc
,, oated fh1s 11th day of June
Phone 99 2 33 9J aft er 6 p .m
p tete ,
factory
rebu•lt
1975
6 13 3tc
Howard Lark•ns, Portla nd, J'' ACRES m Pom eroy with
01'1 1o. Phone 843 2211
sewe ra ge, c• ty water Ph one
Mannmg 0 Webster
6 13 6tp
992 5786
MOD
ERN
6
rm
house
,
a
c
m
Common Pl eas Court.
6 8 12tc
M1ddleport
Phone
992
2676
Pro ba te D1vis1on
6 15 6tc TERRAC E Ant i QU e Shop -- - Meigs County , Ohto
HOU SE With bath ,
5 RM
16,
ret1flng from bUSiness All
161
23 .
30.
3tc IN Middlepor t -- sma ll fur
150x 10 0
lo t
Recen tl y
m erc hand 1se 10 stock wit I b e
renovated Phone 99 2 5786
n ished house , river f ro n t
sold at a large d1sc ount
6 8 l2tc
age , l arge
y ard , pa 1d
Terrace
A ntiqu es,
l OB
PUBLIC NOTICE
utilities o n Rai l road S1
Leg1on
Terrace
L ee
Not 1ce 1s hereby g1ven t ha t
Ph one 992 7494
TW O 6E DROOM hou se for
R ud iSill
on t he 7th day of July at 8
6 15-6t c
sa te Phone 98 5 4102
6 6-26t p
o ' c l ock p m a p ubl iC hear.ng --------- - ---~-­
6 10 26tc
- - ----~-------wil l be held on the bu,J:Iget ~ 2 BEDRM apartment, newly ,:----'~-;---~.......:::.:·-:.J"1 - -- ---- ------- pr epared ."b y th e BoarC, bf
Phone
1, f ¥r , carp~ted, a c
1
I
,
'
"'
Oran ge TownshiP Trustees of
94"- 9?t.:!l ;
' I ...
ora n ge Townst1 1p , Me 1g s
·
6 15 -3t c
County , for th e ne)( f s ue - -- - - - -- - - - - - - - ceeding fis ca l year ending 4 RM · FU nN
t
t
D ece mber 31. 1976
~
apar men
Suc h h earmg w111 be h eld at
Phone 992 365B
20"-llfz H P
6 1 tfc
th e home of the clerk, Nina
Robin son , Rt
2, Coolville , --- ----- - - - - -- - - Oh iO
2 B EDRM f urn1 shed mobil e
,.
· home, no p ets Call 992 7479 .
, 22 ~'.=3V2 -I:I,P .
6-4-tf c
N 1na Robinsqf'l ... ~~' ,....---.----.- -·-rCler k of -- ....L ~-1-~L - -- ---~ 1.
~~~~ Pro!Ml1,~.
Ora nge tow n shi p •c- I
,0
{6 ) 16. lfc
o~e---Du ple x apt
in Mid
- -- - --dleport. 1 house •n Pom eroy .
MIDDLEPORT - THIS

Employnient Wanted

Blown into Wa lis &amp; Attic&lt; '
STORM
WINDOWS&amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING-SOFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

For Rent

Syracuse, Ohio
Ph . m . 3~93 _

mo

4 10 -1

mo

R &amp; S E xc avat mg, Back' h oe
and lig ht haulm g serv•ces
Driv eway slag delivered
Ph one (304l 773 5346 or 742
3664 day or even ingS
6 d-26tc

Merle Norman
Cosmetics

lOlA'S

For Sale

I.AY_E~i&gt;ER:

LARRY

Also Repairs On All
Riding Tractors
498 Locust St. -Middleport, Ohio
S91

SEPTIC TANK S cleane d
Mode r n Sanitaflon 992 J954
or 992 7349
9-I B tfc

HEAUTY .SALON

~

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

5-8·1 mo

'------

!POMEROY LANDM'ARK I'

I
1_;:_.,...._:.·:--------

ca se No . 21486
Estate of S1dney A Spencer
o c ce sae d.
NOtlce 1S hereby g 1ven t ha1
Donald Lee Sp ence r of Rt 7,
Ma r 1et t a, Ohio , ha s been dut y
appointed Executor of the
E sta t e of Si dn ey A Spe ncer ,
decesaed , late of Syracuse ,
Me 1gs COUflt y. Ohio
Credit ors ar e requ 1red to
ftle the 1r c la.ms with sa1d
f1dUC 1a r y W1fh1n foUr months
Dated th 1S 24 th day of May
197 5

------ - - - - - - - - - - - . . . ~ack W . Carsey, Mgr.
FURaN apt sroomsand balh , ~ - Phone•n.,,., ·
n1ce large yard , ba th and' ,,
390 So utl'1
Second
St , '"
., 11 1If 1 , ~ 1
't' •
1
1
M1dd leport, adults on ly
Phone 992 5262 even mgs
.H MO,PEf.I'J
wa
lnut
stereo
5 21 tf c
r a1diO , A 1rack tape com .
- - - --- - - - - - b i nation , am -fm
radio .
Ba lance S10J 72, or t erms .
2 BEDRM tra iler, $21 per
Ca ll 992 3965
6·4 tfc
week All utdit1 es pa 1d
Phone 992 332 4

Mann.na D. W ebster
Judge
court of tommon Pleas,
Probate DiVISIOn

KUHL'S
BARGAIN
CENTER , TUPPERS
PLAINS, OHIO
6 5 15tc

6

6 tfc

- - - -- ----------3 BEDRM
traile r
with
ut di t 1es pa 1d, partl't' fur
n1shed in trader park on Rt.
33, near Burlingham Phone
992 7751
6 1-tfc

f6l 2, 9 r 16, Jtc
COUN TR Y Mobile Ho me
Park , Rt 33, ten m11es north
of Pomeroy La rge lots w•th
concre te pat ios , sidewa l ks ,
ru nn ers and off s tr eet
pa rk i ng Phon e 992 7479
123 1 tfc

HOT WA TER heater~ 5 yrs .
old, " l 1ke new" elec or gas ,
JO gal to n an d 40 gat , 535 up

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

H &amp; N day old or started
Leghorn pullets . Both floor
or cage grown a'.'a lleb le .
Po u ltry
housin g
and
automa t ion .
Mode rn
Poultry , 399 W
Main,
Pomeroy , 992 2164

6 15-He

l 1\N D 4 ROOM furnis hed and
unfurnished
apart me nts
Phone 992 543.4
4-12tfc

CHEVR OLET 350 engtne W1fh
Ho lley d til!lrrel Phone 992

PRIVATE meet1ng room for
any organ •zat•on , phone 992

l o• ~ rr.·seff co nta .ned

3975

J

11 tic

APT l •ke new , J rooms , W1tt'1
large bat h, tabletop range ,
large closet , East Ma1n St ,
Po mero y See to appreciat e
Phonr Gall•polis duri:!!.9..da)'
446 7699 , evenings 446 9539 .
'4 10 u c

3980

6
cam p er

5905

Phone

10 5t p

truck
(304 ) 773

6 11-dtc

FO'UR 1974 Dodge 1.- .fon
P•t:lc.up wheels with new
tires, two sn ow , 2 reo Best
offer Ph one 992 7066 or 99 2

72 10

1

HOME WILL WIN YOUR
VOTE - 1sl floor has
bedroom, bath', nice kifchen w-range &amp; ref., dining
, R.. utlllfy R., large living
R., 2nd floor has 2 mce
BRs. All in 'new condttlon.
Nice l.o~at.i,on. $15,500.
POMEROY - 3 acres - 1
floor plan, 2 BR, bath,
dtnlng R.. forced atr heat,

NEW LISTING
Large 12
room older home with •. bath,
gas heat, city water anq la rge
lot near the Jones Boys in
Pom eroy .

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

0 &amp; 0 TREE: Trm~rn1ng, 2G
year s ex per•en ce In sured ,
fre e esti mates . Ca ll 992 3057,
Coolvil l e. Phone ( 1 J 667
4 30 tf c

Located In

down payment, owner will
·finance at low interest rate.

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

HOME IN Pom eroy on
Butternut Ave ., Nice kit
chen , new roof , lU St m
s1alle (,l , priced at S18,000
Seen by appointment Call
qy2 2020

6-3 121p

2

story

home .

Mod ern kitchen, br eakf ast
nook.
baseboard
hea t,
screened porch , doubl e
garage on large lot in Mid·
die port.
LONELY - 4 room house with
full basement, oak floor s,
Ohto wtth fishing and boating
nghts . Want only $10,000.00

s Acre lot, TP&amp;C water,
approved sewage, small

SEVEN ROOMS AND BA TH

bedroom

Lovely 3

ai\,Jm1num s•ding, view of the

Real Estate For Sale

Phillip ..~, Bo,les
Reai.Esfate Agent

PRESS ON, WEMBL'&lt;! I'D
AYF£, M'LORD!
I&lt;'A"Tl-IER LOS!: "TWO PIECES
'SPE'CIALlY IF 1llOSE
OF LUGGAGE -nlAN RISK A 1 "TWO B!.DK.ES 'AVE
GO Willi '1\-IOSE HIGHWA'I'MEN. SOME' CHUMS 'ID 1
OUT IN -nl' ROCKS .

6 15 Jtp

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

HOUSE and r oof pa int1ng and
repa1rs For tr ee estimates .
ca l l 992 6 190 or 992 5837
PLUMB I NG , heatmg , re pair
apd mstallat1on . el ec tr .ca l.
wat er pump repa1r , r oof ing,
roof and ~o u se painting ,
-g enera l r ep air Reaso nabl e
r at es, free es t1m at es
15
year
expe ri en ce
Ca ll
Charles S1nclair , 98 5 4121 or
992 222 1

6-5-lltc

WANTED - 100 acre farm tn
west end of county of 124 and
wat er line for hou si ng com -

ple x.

0

Phone 742 6092.
'
--5 2-52tp

and backhoe work, sep tic
tanks
I ns t a ll ed ,
du mp
trucks an d to boys for h1re ,
w ilt haul f il l dirt , top so1 1, •
l •mesto ne and gra ... el. Ca ll
Bob or Roger Jeffers , day
phon e 992 7089, n ig ht phone

992 3525 or 992 5232

AS INDUSTRY BUYS LAND,
THE MORE IT ' WILL. COST
YOU TO BUY. MAKE YOUR
INVESTMENT NOW AND
CASH IN TOMORROW.

CE I L IN G S, p ane ltn g, and
pamt•ng If you wan t your
r emodeli n g don e r ig ht, at
r ates you can afford , call AI
at 742 50 8 1

12 tf c

GE N E ~AL

Repa1r, 1...1ean up
and
hau lin g,
cu ttin g,
weld1ng,
ca rp e ntry ,
pl um bin g, e tec ma so nry
and general r emod el in g(.
Call Skd -Pool 99 2 512 6.
'I

IJL ABNER

EV/L-E.YG ILt:::=L·t;/
FO' TH'
FUSI
TIME
IN
YORE

-I I YE.A.RS OLD, IS HE 2- HM!!- A
.SINet..c VVI-iAMMY OLGHTA 51/FF~N
HIM FOR THE NE:'XT HUNDRED
YE'Af&lt;S- AND GIVr:= HIM
INCURABLE HALITOSiS r:-

YORE EVIL

r=:YE KIN DO

50-VIE GOOD

KOHEN
LIFE-

5 13 26tc

MACHINE,

Repairs , service, all ma ke s
992 2284 The Fabr1c Shop,
Pome r oy . Au t hor .ze d Sing er ,
Sa l es and Se rvi ce
We •
sharpen SciSSors .
3·29-ttc '

WINNIE

1

ACCDr1011'JG 1lJ iHI5 ExcLU5!VE''FIMNCH I5E
AGREEMENT ')()lJ 516NED WITH All-iENA
FA5HION5,1HE ONLY WAY 11-iEY
CAN 510P 5ELLING TO YOU IB .•.

.

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

DOZER work, lllnd dear ing
.by the ac r e, hourly or ,
c on t rac t.
Farm pond s,.
roads , etc Larg e dozer li nd
op erator with over 20 years I
ex peri e n ce . P\ltlins EK'- l
cavatmg, Pom eroy , Oh10 .
Phone 992 2478

u.s.

history
2 Cossack
leader
3 Escaping
t3 wds.)
4 - shirt
5 City on
the Red
River
6 Likew1se
7 Broadcasting 14 wds.)
8 Win one's
heart
9 Goad
II Bogged
down

Yeslerday'sAoswer
15 H1lls of
Z6 Cloyed
Shropshire. 27 Descendan1

BY eo/Ne OlJT
OF Bl/8/N£85.'

•1M

,;,71;,
!~

'~'''
•1m
(f/Ji..
~ Klll

I&gt;{

-.Ii&gt;-d
.(i G·lJ

!~

•!z.JI
.~&gt;((

ltf

,,,.

LOOK';' WHAT I CAN MAKE

25 Mrs.
Bloomer

L,-+--il-+--i--+-1

-

J. L ARG E lots; rural water
available Hard road, l '
miles from by -J)BSS on.
Leading Creek Road Phone

742·3108

\'

•

\J

,•

I

'".
1.:.;2
"~ ~

·~K
-,.(of!

b
I Q
II
t
I I
II
t
II ) II

I SJVAT

'PHARME

""J

WHAT PEOPLE WWO
A~E

5HOIU MI&amp;HT
HAVE TO DO.

_..11

IORRBEK
.
-

Salunl.,'•

IJumblo" PROVE

'

Now arrante the circled letters ,,

'&amp;

~:::'te!t~;~~~~~''t7'

( I I IX }"
.-,?

1-&lt;{k
9'

(Aalwert toiiiOIT'O•) -

•

!\

SAUTE NATUR'E BUCKET
.

An 1 wtr: Could be floored after bemg beaten- A CARPET
You're a t you r best to day
where yo ur creat 1v1ty IS
challenged Put your 1mag ma ~
tton to pr ofi table use

38 /1,'nn,lu•t
n Child of
3% Conceal
34 - Tanguay
35 Girl 's nameb-+--+-36 Australian
-1-,:,'-4'-'---l--'-"-1---+-r+-

For Tuesday, Juno 17, 1975
ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll 191

1-.-+- +--1

Take one step to com prom1se
w1th tho se yo u have dealmgs

=+-+--1--:--i

prof1t or return you re
lookmg for tod ay for your efforts may be slow m commg

·wtlh loday an d you 'll ftnd lhey II
1---1--t---i l ake ;l,\lijl'~leps m return
(April 20-May 20)

_ _.__..___. ;-;'
7

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE =-Here's how to work it :
•

1

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•

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., ,··

1'

"'

j\

!

'

'

1

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Y. !;\ -):. 'B A A X R

' " II", L 0 N•G •·F E L L 0 W

Keep pluggtng
GEMINI (May 21-Juno 201
Olhers loday wtll be very
favorably 1m pressed by the
way you handle yo urself 1n
several dehcate s•tuat tons

CANCER (dune 21-July 221
one leiter simply •lands for another. In this sample A is The means wtll be avatlable tor
used for the three L"s, X for the two O" s. etc. Single letters, those small creattve changes
apostrophes. the lenglh and formation of the words are all to br1ghte n thmgs up a b1t
hints Each day the code letters are dill'erent.
around the house
LEO (July 23 -Aug. 221 AttenCRYPTOQUOTE
,

'

r

I

c

TM J A Q H

TMJAQHI

UHVUSH

TMJAQH

Y MF A Q I .

d•ng a gathe~mg th•s after~
noon? Take e)(tra pam s to took
your best You 'll want someone

UHVUSH, there lo nolice you
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 221
Your matenal prospec ts are
YMFAQI. espec1ally
good today For

f1

make real progress If you keep
what you 're do•ng to !yoursetf.
There w• l! be lime to talk later.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec.
2'1, You re ve ry good to day at
p1 ckmg up partial •deas from
o the rs and ta1lormg them 1nto
som efh1ng useful for yo urself ,

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jen. ' .""'
19) Focus your attention com-

"

,BJ

ptetely at th1s t•me upon your
most amb•Uous a•ms You'll
come up w1th an 1ngemous
plan to ac ... ance your mterests .

"( 0

,.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 111

.. !'P.

You 'll do somethmg t houghtful
for a fnend tod ay and teel it
wasn t fully apprecta led. Later.

"!.

you'll be repat d twofold
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)

In
any busmess Involvements you
have today don't JUmp at the
l 1r st pr1 c e offered
It's

(l)YOUr
8 • hd

profttable lo haggle a bll.

.lrt

June ·n,

ay

1175

There are some quite unex-

1

,;;'11
.IB
t&lt;to.'f(
lS"'

' ""~
'~

~ U8

·

some unusual reason you may

Pee led tun thmgs tn olore lor ' tll;}

not be fully aware of 1t Be alert
- OHJA
OHCYHX
tor htdden opport unttV
Yesterday's Cryptoquole: NEWS IS IDSTORY SHOT ON THE
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 231
WING. -GENE FOWLER

you thiS xear You'll form two '
new last~ng fnendsh lps. One 132
of these persons you'll meet on · ~'1)

~

Phon e 742 3615

..
"

~, ,

~~=~;:;~~~~~~T~=;
~::--r;-0-r.:---.:- r
Prillte SIIIIISUIISWIIm
I

6000&amp;&lt;E; SlG MOTHE«!
HCAAWE A NICE ~E ANAT,
MP....... IF wv C . •

NEED A new home built on
your lot? Con tact Milo B
Hut c h ison , Rutla nd , Ohio

.. 'r.r

.

r--------------, 1"~~---------o::::"j

OOT OF THIS CLOTHES
HANGER, PAW- --

1/.•

SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 221
The ,nexl couple. ~··vs you'll

.J A 0

a .. OKII:R

of
Levi
28 Euphoric
JO German
river
33 Ceremony
36 Pref1x for

Eng.
20 '"D1amond
"
21 Bottom·
less 23 Bare
24 Forsake

r;;

u i}&lt; J H H X 0 V H I A • Y

AFFOLTER REALTY

--

,]

Marine

-U X J R H X

5·8 tic

.ruB

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

'

TWO NEW J bedroom homes
w1th 1 car garage , ca rp ete d ,
F H A or bank financ ing .
Phonj:! 142 3615 pr see Milo
Hutchin son, Rutland

ttcr.ib

1ti1~1Ml~1l ~-lkJAc.. di..J.-J,-. :~
.... "\.

DOWN

15 Did a
Sinatra
16 Palhd
17 Wahine's
garland
18 Gas
measure
1abbr. )
19 - for
I soughll
%1 Examine
steadily
%2 Allegiance
23 " - and
Bill"
Z4 Arlene 26 Resolve

1 , I 1

'Jiii:jt-~
MI:M·K"

·~

&lt;13!.1.

~~~~®
Unscramble these four Jumble&amp;,

37 Ran
38 Baptism,
e.g.
311 Candle
40 Incensed

W 1L L DO house and r oof
Pa• n tmg , free estima t es.
Cal l 992 7008
6· 5-12tc

SEWI NG

!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I

1 Atoll In

" fnend' '

~;!field,
G7 1.ha~l~t1an~
10

-------·

I

by THOMAS JOSEPH

::....;=='-"'-==.::;:...;..::..:::==

Dozer

6

,nltl

!

'

~a1Mwd'

ACROSS
1 27th U.S.
President
5 Golf immortal
Walter 10 Tamarisk
"'-'"'""""
salt tree
:;;;..;~~~ II Dorothy 12 Martha 13 John Gun_.-------,-._.------,-ther word
14 Delon 's

6 1 ~ 26tc

12.19.tfc '

667-3829

l

W IL L do p a.nt.ng Houses a•d
roofs by h our or by 10b .
Contact Ga r y Snouffer , 992 ·
5524 or Chuck Bartels, 992
3917

2-111fc

"NEW LISTING

SUBDIVISION

JUST SlD.900.
A CHARMING NEW
HOME -- Close in 2 BR ,
bath, kitchen · includes
range &amp; ref . Full basement
with Rec. R. Carport &amp;
storage R. 1 Acre. Below
Markel Value . S22,700.
ON RT. 681 - 135 Acres at
just 51,23 per acre ,
Minerals, · close
to.
recreation . City water
available.
THIS YOU MUST SEE
FOR NEW ADVENTURE
- SEE - THEN OWN
ONE
OF
THESE
PROPERTIES
TODAY.
CAll 992·2259

'

CONC~ETE

304 1.

EXP E RIENCED 1n l er1 0r and
ex 1e r ro r ho use painting
Root t a r r 1ng Phone Roger ,
992 7009 , or Randy , 992 7054
6 15-6tp

t XC-AV·A-TI NG·,dQZei--;- iUav~,

In Ra c m e.

RIGGSCREST
MANOR

own water system, barn .

6 15 41p

4 9 fk

--------

WO N t!nepa rd Contiaet mg and
Remodeling Serv •ce Whole
ho us e
remodel1ng ,
k i tch en and
Specialt1es bath Phone (3 04) 773 5346 or
742 366.t d ay or even ing.
6 4 26tc

5-30-1 mo .

NCW LISTING - Modern new ·
ktf chen, dlntng. utility, 3
bedrooms, bath, and large lot. -

''"~

4.

Backhoe , dttcher wat e~
lm es, foot ers, dram's r oads
ind brush clean ing 'No iob
boaod sm~~l, no weather too

de l •vere d r1 gh t to your
pro 1ect F a-st and easy F re e
es t 1ma t es Phone 99'1 3284 ,
Goeg lem Ready M•x Co ,
_ M •ddleport , Ohio
6 30 -tfc'

-· -

'TURF TRIM"
MOWER

Ca ll 1304 1 88 2 2050, collect
5·22 ·tfc

--

... - -·READY MIX

LI'ITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

'tllddleport

EXCAVA TIN G,

..&gt; c:PliC TANK S CLEAI ~ ~ D .,
Reasonable RATE S Phone
-146 4782 Ga l l•polis John,
Ru sse ll , own er

--

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

Real Estate for Sale

- _..

·,oJII

I

LEE 'S Car Wash on Rt 124 at
the crossroads $3 ins1de and
ou t , wax lObs, $15 Phone
992 -3180 F ree pickup and
delivery serv ic e
6 3 12t c

- Sweepers, toast ers, 1ron s,
al l sma ll ap plia nces Lawn
m owe r , n ex t to s tate H 1gh
way Ga r age on Route 7
Phone 985 3825
4 16 rtc

-

327 N. 2nd

.,...
'B)II

6.0D-Sunrlse Seminar 4; Summer Semester 10.
6.25-Farm Repport 13
6 3D-F ive Minutes to Live By 4; Nerws 6, Bible An swers e; Concerns &amp; Comments 10; Rev . Cleophus
Robinson 13
6:35--Columbus Today 4.
6:45-Mornlng Report 3; Farmflme 10.
7·()0-Today 3,4, IS; A.M. America 6, 13; CBS News e,lO.
e·oo-Lassle 6 ; Capt. Kangaroo 8; Schoolles 10;
Sesame St. 33.
9 oo-A.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4,15; Lucy Show 8; Capt.
Kangaroo 10; Morning with D.J 13.
9:30-Not For Women Only 3; Dinah 6; Galloping
Gourmet e; ~lew Zoo Revue 13.
lO:OD-Celebrlfy Sweepstakes 3,4,15; Spin-Off e,lO;
Dinah 13; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33.
10:3D-Wheel of Fortune, 3,4,15, Gambit 8,10; The
Romag nolls' Table 33.
ll ·OD-High Rollers 3,4, IS ; One Life to Live 6; Tat.
tletales 8, 10.
11 :30-Hollywood Squares 3,6,15; Blankefy Blanks 13;
News 4; Love of Life 8,10.
11 :55-Graham Kerr e; Dan Imel ' s World 10.12 :00Jackpot 3, IS; Password 6, 13; Bob Braun's S0-50
Club 4, News e, 10; Mister Rogers 33.

16

H

Free Estimates
PH. 992-2550

s 18 26tc

ELWOOD "OWERS RE PAIR

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

'104.9S(KDl '

WiLL trm1 or ... ut trees and
sh rubb e r y,
c l ea r
o ut
basements , att1cs , e t c
Phon e 949 322 1 or 742 4441

John St., Next To
Grade School
992-2549 Syracuse, o.

BORN LOSER

.:oH
'!!l'~

JUSt a tnlle and give it one
more d1amond and one less club
and the grand slam would be a
cmch."
12·3D-Blank Check 3, 15, Split Second 6, 13; Search for
" • 54
,· asrald: "South ai¥J .thqught
Tomorrow e,10; Elec. ,Co. 33.
• 73
" " " " ··abou the possibility1~~t:-'even
12·55- ~IBC News 3,15.
...
,
WEST ( d) .
EAST
SIX would he a trifle t.QO,. [l)UCh.
1
:OD-All
My
Children
6,
13;
Phil
Donahue
e; Young and
• 9
• J
Fmally, South calife~t6' th'e conthe Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15; Zoom 33.
• I o8 4
• J 953
cluswn that there was no way to
l·JO-Oays of Our Lives 3,4, IS; Let' s Make a Dea16, 13;
t K J 96 3
t Q 10 7 2
investigate and s1mply JUmped
As the World Turns 8, 10; Episode Action 33.
• Q J 10 S
· -K e6 4
to l lX "
2:0D-SIO.OOO
Pyramid 6.13; Guiding Light e,lO; A
SOUTH
J1m : " T.te guess was a good
of
J
ustlce 33.
Matter
• A Q 7 6 54
one. Playmg at s1x, So~lh' drew
trumps. d1sca rdep _.IIi~\, ,imall- , 2.3D-Doctors 3,4,15; Big Showdown 6,13; Edge of
•1 K J
Night e,lO
-..
. /
t A 8· ' , ,
diamond on the qoem.llli~alti I
3·oo-Another World 3,4,15; General Hospital 6,13;
• A9 2
and wrapped the slam up with
Price Is Righi e, 10; Lilias Yoga and Yd\J 20; One f a
no
fanfare
at
all
·•
Both vulnerable
Kind 33.
·
3 JD-One Life fo Live 13; Lucy Show 6, 13; Match
Game e, 10; The Romagnolls' Table 20 ; Folk Guitar
West
North Easl
South
33.
4 OD-Mr. Cartoon 3; I Dream of Jeannie 4; Somerset
Pass
Pass
Pass
The bidding has been . 16
Pass
IS; Gilligan 's Island 6; Mus ical &lt;;hairs e; Sesame
Pass
Pass
St. 20,33; Movie "F ive Weeks in a Balloon" 10"
Pass
Pass
West
Mike Douglas 13.
"
North East
South
Opemng lead- Q•
4 3D-Bewitched 3; Merv Griffin 4; Mod Squad 6;
?
Mickey Mouse Club e, Bonan za 15.
5: 0D-FBI 3; Andy Griffith 8; Mister Rogers' Neigh.
You. South . hold
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
borhood 20,33; Iron side 13.
. 2 ¥ KJ975 t AKQJI.A 4
:; 3D-News 6; Beverly Hillbillies e; Hodgepodge Lodge
J 1m · " Let"s talk about the What IS your opemng btd '
20; Get Smart 15; Villa Alegre 33.
pnnc1ple of limits 10 bidding A - One heart. You aren'l slrong
6.0D-News 3,4, e,10,13,15; ABC News 6 ; Elec. Co. 20;
You were the ftrst man to enun- enough for a forcing bid.
Catch-33 33.
ciate It weren't you ?"
TODAY"S QUESTION
6·JD-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Bewitched 6;
Oswald : " Probably so Th1s Your partn er responds one
CBS N ~ws 8, 10; Zoom 20,33.
prmc1p!e IS qUite Simple and notrump What do you do now'
7:()0-Truth
or Cons. 3,4; Bowling for Dollars 6; What's
Answer Tomorrow
merely states that each bid or
My Line 8, News 10; Name That Tune 13;
pass places certam hm1ts on
American Lite Style 15; Antiques 20; Lilias Yoga &amp;
the strength of your hand ."
-----------~----Jim "South thought about Send St .. to; JACOBY .~ODERN
You 33.
grand slam possibilities when book to: Wrn at Bridge, (clo th•s
7:3D-Hollywood Squares J,4; Lei's Make a Deal 6 ;
his partner JUmped to the spade newspaper). P 0 Box 489. Radto
Buck Owens e; New Price Is Righi 10, To Tell the
ga me Change the North hand City Statton. Naw York. NY 70019.
Truth 13; Car and Track 15, They Shall Take Up
Serpents 20; Car Care 33.
NORTH
• K 10 e 3 2
• A Q7 6

Construction
and Plumbing

Blown
Insulation Services

Precisi
Ground

-~

a/Ill

.1-\1:

TUESDAY, JUNE 17,1975

Jacoby pushed _bidding limits

ALL-WEAllfF.R
ROOFING

I

FREE ESTIMATES _

tl•i
Chain

.

.,je:;]

'"11fl"

~1t}~RIIJ(i.
g0 ! '
•..,._,....;&gt;

WIN

Does your home
require ~ny of t:;ese
services?

.,.s. J m..; .

992-3092

Mobile Homes for Sale

Real Estate For Sale

......,._

Sales &amp; Service

I

4 2-75

I

RooM AdditiiiiS

WILKINSON
SMALL ENG

I

AS MA!IRIAGE·MfNOEO
AS THE IIIEM FEMALE'!

IN FACT, I 5 HA "L LJIIIDERTAKE TO MAKE YOU FALL
MAOLY IN LOVE I f-~ A
MER E /0 OAYS!

WE DO:
Siding
Roofing
Home
Complete
Maintena" '"a

Heme Bvlkll'lt

V. V. JOHNSON
AND SON, INC.

For Rent or Sale

Free Estimates
Phone 949-5961
Emergency 949-2211
or 992-5700

laul·linLII ·

On alum•num replacement
w1ndows , s •d•ng , storm
doors and windows, 1"ail1ng,
phone
Charles
Lisle,
Syracuse ,
Ohio.
Carl
Jacob , Sales Represen filti'Je .

1974 SEARS 10 h p 36" r.d mg
mower , perfect cond it •on
Has w h ee l we 1ghts Phone ·
992 2257 after 5 30 p m
6 12 Jt c
- - - ·- -- - -- --~---L-CB's An t ennas , f ish1ng ba1t,
fi shin g s upplies , gun s and
am mo ln d 1an J oe's Sports
and CB's
J08 Page St ,
M1dd lepor t

----'iEIL

::J -7- 1 mo .

6 6-1 mo.

op

Air condi11oning, plum btn9, heat1ng , roof1ng , 1
spouting, general sheet
metal work .
···

Call Before 7:30A.M.
Or Afler6:00 P.M.
949-3604

992-2478

truck t1r es, A 1 co n
d1110n 8 ply 750x 16, $50
A l so ,
a l u m 1n um
truck
topper fits 8 tt bed . S IO O
Phone 992 5035
6 12 3tc

Phon e

Racine, Otlib

EXCAVATING

I lf-ITEf-ID TO
PROVE YOU'RE ACTVA"LY
V/~0~6!

Racine Plumbing
&amp;Heating

We Build Hie Best and
Repair the Rest .
-Cabinels lnslalfed-

PUWNS

6 13 Jtc TWO

GUARANTEE D

NEIGLER
Buildi~g Supply_
.

For Renl by Hour or
Conlracl Work.
Regular and
Excavator Type
Seotir Tanltco lnsta lied

dr

SMITH NUSON
MOTORS, IN~

plliH'Ir es &amp; new turnitnrll'
s w ed . through sun
Open 9·
Ph . 667 -385 8 ·
\ 1 ~ \ mo

'"

Elec Co. 20.

Assignment Amer• ca 33.

" BARGA IN S
are our
middle n ame" in c lean ,
use !d ~ f urnitur e,

---

~J ews 6,

11:3D-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Wide World Mystery 13;
FBI 6; Movie " The Woman Who Wouldn't Ole" e;
Movie " Trial" 10; Janak! 33.
12 3D-Wide World Mystery 6.
1:OD-Tomorrow 3,4; ~lews 13.

6 3D-NBC News 3,4, 15, ABC News 13, Bew lfched 6;
CBS News e. 10, Zoom 20,33.
7 0(}-TruthorCons 3.4, Bowling for Dollars 6; What's
My Line e; ~lews 10;; ~lew Candid Camera 13;
Wally's Workshop 15. Making It Coun t 20; Lilias,
Yoga and You 33.
7:3(}-Thaf Good Ole Nashville Music 3; Masquerade
Party 4 ; Pollee Surgeon 6; $25,000 Pyramid e,
Patsy Awards 10;; To Tell the Truth 13, Unta med
World 15, , Washington Straight Talk 20, Episode
Action 33
8 DO-Joe Garagiola 3,4.15; Rookies 6,13; Gunsmoke
8, 10; A Matter of Justi ce 20,33.
8 !~Baseball 3,4, 15.
9.DO-SWAT 6,13; Maude e.lO; Levi &amp; the Law 20,33.
9 3(}-Rhoda e,lO
10 OD-Carlbe 6, 13, CBS News Special e. 10; News 20.
Washington Straight Talk 33
10 : 3D-Spotlight On 33.
11 : OD-News 3,4,6,e, 10, 13, 15; AB C News 33.

,. At cau11on Light"
R t. 7, Tupper~ Plain!. o.

Pomeroy

JUNE 16, 1975

6·0D-News 3,4,e,lO,l3,15; ABC

CEN~R_!

~~

Television log for easy viewing

j

MOND~Y .

F r om the larg est Tr uck or
Bulldozer Radiator to thr
smallest Heater Cor e
'
Nathan Biggs
Rad1a1or Specialist

Ph. 992-2174

BACKHOES

TWO p1anos , 1 player Will
also se ll som e p 1ano ro l ls
Ca ll 74'1 6352
6 15 3tc

Mobile Homes For Sale

IN

I

jj -

~

197 0 CH EV
Im pala
Phon e 949 36 65

:. , ,.CA.RRIER
., . .,... ( " I
WANTED

Tlf'E

••

, Phone 992 5682 or
992-7121
5-14 1 mo.

FARM EQuipment N ew
Ho l land
404 Hay Co n
d1t1oner , SSSO~sed F ord 5 fl
3 pt rotary mower $225 2
used rakes $450 ea ., new 1
row c ulfl '.'a tor SlOO , Massey
so t rac t or $2,350. J oh n
Deer e 60 tractor $1,550 ,
Ford 9N tractor SBSO. new
6 1~ ft disk 1i335 , new 6ft 3
pt
blade $150
E rmel
Luckett , Albany Phone 69B
JOJ2 or 698 788 1
6 15 3tc

,' li

,P.OMEROY
_
MOTOR·
.
CO!
OPEN EVES. B:OO P~.

BARGAIN

&lt;~ntl

UPRIGHT
fr eezer,
1963
F al con , ForO tru c k pa rt s
Good bla ck rec l1 ner Phone
7 42 33 03
6 1s 3t p

4 door , loca l ca r , air cond it ioned, full equipment

MUG SHOTS LATER!

KUHL'S_

Garage

BROWN ' S 9925113

pest Friday of Mrs. Maggie
Gibnore at Racine .
Clifford Hill, Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Herbert Roush, Sunday
Herbert Roush, Mr. and Mrs. afternoon they all visited
Charles Lawson, Wilda, Mrs. Mrs. Estle Roush at PortLucille Lawson, Cathy and land.
Mrs. Nancy Chapman of
Debbie, at tended a hymn sing
at the MI. Moriah Church a Albany called on Mr. and
Mrs. Bert Hunt Sunday.
rece111 Saturday. evening.
Mr. and Mrs. David Hayes
. Mr. and Mrs. Roger Roush;
Slwon and Cjndy Roush and c hildren of Pontiac,
rpenl 8al1rday night Wlth Mich., visited . the latter 's
Mr.llld Mrs. Walter McDade sister, Mrs. James Hunt and
at Troy, Ohio and Sunday family.
Francis Webb is a medical
they visited Kings bland.
• Mrs. E:lna Roush of Racine patient at Holzer Medical
rpent Sunday with Mr. and Center.
l I

.'

Roger Hysell's

5 18 Jotc

16 CU fl upnght freeze r s,
I f eat ur e packed Cut $6 1,
tal\e hom e pn ce $274 8B
Montgomery
Ward ,
· Pome r oy and Gallipo l is ,
Ohi O
6 12 6tc

1974 CHEVELLE
SJ095
Malibu HT Cpe., 350 v .e engine, power s1eenng, fac-

I

2 I-lOURS AND 1,200

Business Service!il

Ok LIER any Lo ~rom lnd1an

Wanted To Buy

Wolfpen
News Notes

I

For Sale

12t c

It is reported that Mr. and
Mrs. Junior Gibson have sold
their nice herd of cows.
Lead1ng Cr eek Road , 3
Mrs. Golda Epple entered
m lies
off
by pass ,
V
V 1tatoe
res1dence
Phon e
Veterans Memorial Hospital
742 3108 If ra1n mg, Will be
for observation and has Helen
later
6 15 6tc
Alkire Pickens as a roommate.
3 FA MILY Yard Sales , 308
Pag e St • Middleport
Mrs. Margaret Allen is
6 15 6 tc
back In veterans Memorial
H06pital.
YARD SALE Tnurs . ntoay .
and Sat
8 miles no rth of
Mrs. Sue Payne and Mrs.
Chester Oh1o on Co Rd 36
or Sum ner Ro ad Mrs Carl
Kathryn Weaver visited Mr.
F •ndl•ng
Weaver at Holzer recently.
6 15 3tp
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Clark
were dinner guests of Louise
Dixon Sunday and helped Lost
bi llfOld Con tents .nside
celelrate the "birthday of RED
needed Phone 992 3422
Robert Dixon.
6 a lfc
Mr. and Mrs. Bud Douglas
are expected home after a Wanted
two weeks stay w•th the Don CASH pa td tor a l l makes and
r'nodels of mobile homes
Gibsons in Rockville, Md.
P hon e area code 614 -423
Brenda and Beverly Bishop
9531
4 13 ttc
were recent guests of Ava
Gilkey. Dale Whaley was also
M111Pr

SEND IN
''VACi'' FILES
ON 44273.

Producls, phone 9~Y{ifc

LARGE YARD sale, June 19
thru 21
4 f amily , Avon.
furn1ture . good c loth mg . etc
Also a metal corn cr1b

a

r-·._..__._...._._..._~-·-----·------------------~--

._,
. . . . . . . . _.__.,. ____....,t

I'M SURE 6LAD
I'M NOT GOIN6...

:&gt;

a shor1 trtp

r-,.----------..,..-, ·J•!J
1~

�-........,...,_.-..,-. .. .. ..

~

...

·.. ' . ·... ·... ·-

• ••

~ ....

- &gt; •

•

1

•
7- ThP Dally Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday , June 16, 1975

5

·n:::=~~ddlepo~E::~~:g
o
.,:~:~y~~::
J
F
'or
Fast
Results
Use
The
s~ntinel
Classi_
fieds
Society
16

N~WS

lllr.

·and Mrs. Russ
Elhelman and son, Buddy,
llld Minnie McGrath, were at
Holzer ·Hospital Sunday
visiting Nellie Borgan, Dana
Tumer and Donald Weaver.
Mrs. Francis Alkire and
1011 Ray and Karen Gilkey
1re vaca tlonlng on a beach in
North Carolina . Sharon
Jewell is caring for the post
office.
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton of
Albany and Bob Alkire were
dinner guests of Ava Gilkey

Sunday.

PARA SOL
BoU tiQU e
an
noun ces tl'1e add •llon of a
new
operator ,
H e l en
N ew l and Ju n e Spec ial Hot
oil con d ittoner Reg S3 now
S1 so durmg 11'1 e mon t l'1 ol
Jun e Shop wtll be c losed on
Tuesday until Aug 5 Open
Wednesday tl'1ru Sa turday
Pl'1one 985 4141
6

a

r--------

your

Ull

Cosmei1CS

Of

'l\

f.

I

2 SIGN;) i.Pomero· y ·,:
-- OF

:QUALITY

FREE hay , m us t c lean f1eld
off Phone 7425113
6 15 Jtc
t-Ut&lt;

""'" .;ales
---~----~~--------------~~

M~tor

JOe's Sports and CB's a1 10

pet abov e cost and ship
p 1ng JOB Page S1 . Mid

Co. 1-d-leport

Nora Johnson re turned
home
Saturday
altern
spending two weeks with
Mrs. Helen Johnson and also
spent some time w1th Mr. and
Mrs . Larry Johnson and
family and Mr. and Mrs. J .
W. Johnson and family·.
Nora Johnson v1s1ted w1th
her son, Mr. and Mrs . Jacob
Johnson and Mona of
R11tland . Moria Johnson took
her grandri10ther ( Nora
Johnson ) to 'her home
Saturday in Grove C1 ty and
will visit her a few days.
Mr. and Mrs . Fred
Tuckennan and Mrs. James
Reeves visited Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs . Marvin Chesser
of McArthur and Mrs. Elsie
Bratton of Radcliff.
Mr. and Mrs . James
Reeves vis1ted Saturday with
his mothc;·, Mrs. Iva Reeves
and Du1. of Barnesville. He
returned Sunday to visit w1th
Mrs. Reeves while she is in
hospital.
Mr. and Mrs . Robert
Reeves of Middleport visited
Tuesday with h1s grandmother, Mrs. Iva Reeves,
Don and Mr. James Reeves
at Barnesville.
Mr . and Mrs . Guy
Tuckerman of Springfield
spent a couple of days
recently with Mr and Mrs.
Fred Tuckerman.

Apple Grove
News Notes
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mrs. Bessie Shtt, Mt.
Moriah,
Mrs .
Shirley
Simpson and Jan G111ian of
ltacine visited Mrs. Ruth
Parsons a recent Monday.
Mrs. Velma Pilko of the
bookmobile spoke at the
meeting of the UMW at the
local
church
Tuesday
evening.
Mr . and Mrs . ·R obert
Casper, Billy and Brian
Dye, Mr . and Mrs. Bill
Connally and son, Chris of
Columbus spent a weekend
with Mrs. Dolly Wolfe and
family .
Mrs. Mandie Snyder and
daughter, c;onnie and friend
of Delaware, Mrs . Irene
Rhodes and Tammy Wolfe,
Mrs. Ethel Moore, Louise
Wandling , Yvonne Phillips of
St. Albans, W. Va. spent
Wednesday with Mrs. Ruth
Parsons and Preston PII!'IICIIII .

Mrs. Edna Parsons was a

tory a 1r , tmted glass, radio, w hee l covers, good tires,
blk mtertor, sliver grey f inish Spec 1a l

Nltnk "

-Phone

1971 MATADOR

1 1 ltc

$1595

Yard Sale

1971 FORD LTO 4 DR.

S1e9s

Loca l ly owned, clean interior , s ilver grey exterior,
fa ctory air, automatic, power steering &amp; brakes, radio,
good tires.

Automobile
' .
TransmlSSlOr
RPoair

POMEROY,
OHIO
IL _ ___;__ _;;_-'~"----'-:.:
-c....:.:.
- -'I

Help Wantea

. ......__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,.
•

NEWSPAPER

I.

• • •

''

(

•

..

,

1965 GMC tr uck 15 sp A l so ,
1966 T rallm obil e w1th n ew
brakes . $4 , 500 Phon e 9B5
3984
6 12 6tc

'

I

)

'

4

~

1971 SK YLINE 12x60
99 2 5872

MASON

- ---

CONTACT

DAllY SENTINEL
992-2156

-

~-

--~

6 11 6tp

~ -

--

SELL your mob il e hom e ""for
cash 15 homes wanted , 1958
thru 1972 models
Phone
f61.4J 446 -IA 25, Ga ll•polis
3-9-7B tf

FOR -FREE
- -- ESTIMATES

FINE
family milk cow
Reg1s t ered Jersey Call 742 ~
6722 af ter 4 p m

6 12 6lp

WAi f RESs. app·ly ·,n- person
N OTI CE tram Berry M 1ller
Craw's Steak Hou se
Mobile Home Sales' Here 1S
6 11 6tc
196&lt;1 A N D older U S Co •nS
a ne w li sting of th e un 1ts we
1
Wll l pay 24 ? for d •mes , 60c
now have on our lo t due to
CO OK
Ga llia Count y
for qu arters. $1 20 for half
th e for ec lo sure of another
Children's
home
,
must
live
Ca ll Roger Wa m sl ey 742
M obil e Home Dealer
1n Ca ll f or •nlerv1ew at 446
3651
60x 12 Schult total el ectr1c ,
92 37
6 6 l21p
5-18 30tc
2 bedrm
6 13 61c
60x 12 PMri 3 bedrm
GU N S A N D AMMO Our
BU 1LDI N G l ot w 1th trees on or
60x12 E l c~a , 2 bedr m
near R1 7 between Pomeroy
summer ~ tock
IS no w
60xl2 Ti!a n , 2 bedrm
ar r•v ing Rifles , sho tguns ,
and Tuppers Pla1ns Ph one
60x12 Dar1an , 2 bedrm 2
667 374 1
pi st ols , r eloa d ing eQ UI P
baths
MOBI LE home With n 1ce lot .
6 12 6tc
scopes , ammun •f•ons .
22
60x12 Nashua , 3 bed r m
n ew house furniture and
MAG h p $3 per bo x, $27 50
60x 12
G l obemaster ,
3
pallo , gas heat , city water
per ca r1on (500 ) 22 I r h p
bedrm
OLD furn iture, ice boxes ,
Ava ilable
now
Phone
$2 10 per ~pop Gel the m
60x 12 Broadlane . 2 b edrm
brass beds, or com p lete
A lbert H1[l , Rac1ne . 949 226 1
while they last Store hours
4x 12 t rpo ut
hou se holds
Wr1te M
D _
6 11 6tc
effect•ve M ay 19 Mdnday
60x1d New Moon , 2 bedrm ,
Mil le r , Rt 4, Pomeroy ,
T hursd ay 9 a m to 6 p m •
washer ·dry er
Oh 10 Ca ll 992 7760
Friday and Sat urday 9 a m
60x
12
Val
rant,
2
bedrm
10 7·74
to 9 p m VI LL AGE G UN
60)( 12 PMC , 3 bedrm
---------- ---SH OPPE. 26 6 M1ll St ,
60)( 12 Sherwood Park, 3
Middleport
bedrm
10X55 2 BEDRM
mob.de
35)(B Gl1der
51830tc
home , furniShed , n ew carpet
J5xB Pacem aker
:X PER IE NCED •n tak1ng
and
a~r cond it ioner $3,300
Th ese are mostly all late
care of eld erl y pa t• ents
Phon e 992 7439
model s (so me nev er l1 ved
Refe r e n ces , Phon e (304 )
m) and will be l1 qui dat ed at
773 524 9
6 13 6tc
a ve ry large discount So i f
6 111 0tc
NE W3bedrm all elec 11omc.
you a r e •n terest ed 1n a
wall to wall carpet , llv •ng
Mo b• le Hom e at a hug e
rm , dining rm , k•tchen .
CARPENTER work - ce1 l1n g ,
sa v •ng . don't wait
Stop
bath , 1 car garage Grey
panel1ng
floor 1n g , e tc
today
at
Be rry M1ller
alum St dm g 10 front with
Phone 992 2759
Mob1le Home Sa l es. 705
bl ack shul1e r s Phone 992
6 10 101c
Fa
r
son
St
,
Be
lpr
e,
Oh1o
,
FURNISHED
apart me nt ,
2432 , or see R 1c k Morris
Ph J23 95 31
adults on l y m M •ddleport.
6 11 Si c
WILL take care of 2 private
6
-5-lltc
Phon e 99 2-3874 .
patients m my home P hon e
J 25 tic - -- ---- - - - - 69B 5607
1 72 ACRE S la nd . and loc ust
6 13 6tc
posts A l so . 1965 Ford LTD
TRAILER sp a ce , 1 m1le from
Phone 742 3656
REMODELING ,
P l umbmg ,
Pomeroy
Phone 992 585B
5 23 521p
1'1 eat m g and all types of
5 2 tfc
BEDD IN G plan ts, pott ed
--- - - - '
ge ner a l
repai r
Work
p lan ts , geran•u rns. azaleas , CORNER l ot at In tersec tion of
guar anteed 20 years ex
p etun•a s , porch bo xes,
MOBILE home , SU itabl e for
StateR t 7 33, and 124 About
pe r 1en ce
Pt1one 992 2409
1'1anging baskets Cl eland 's
me
n
D
epos
1t
r
eQUir
ed
JOB
117 acre s Phone 992 5786
5 1 tfc
Green hou se.
Gerald 1ne
Pag e St • Middleport Phone
6 B 12tc
Cl elan d , Ra c•ne. Oh io 45771
992 3509
5 18 tt c
NO.TICE OF
6 a lfc
1' ? ACRES, good building si1e
APPOINTMENT
Ca ll 667 3333
Case No. 21544 TWO b edroom m ob1 te home •n ADM IR AL 25" Screen color
6 15 3tc
Estate of J . Paul Grueser
T v , rad•o re co rd player
Sy racuse Depos•t required
Deceased .
com b 1n ahon
$300
New
No clllld r en or p ets Phone
Notice is hereby g1ven that
rec ord p l a ye r , S-45
Tape COR NE R br1ck budd in g in
992 2441 a ft er 5 30 p m
Bern1ce Grueser of 516 South
p layer , r a dio and speakers ,
6 10 ttc
Pom eroy Bus •ness Sectt on
4th St , M•ddteport , Oh1o , has
S50 Phone 992 7346
on a 40' x 85' lot Phone 992
been du l y appointed Ad
6 l J Jtc
5786
mi n istr a t r 1x of the Estate of J
6 10 12tc
N I CE 6 rm house , 4 rms , 1•2 - - - -- -- - --~--Paul G ru ese r deceased, la te
ba t h , larg e pan try down 1974 500CC Kawasak i , Phone
of Middleport , Meigs County,
s ta~rs .
2 rms
and bath
992 SB91
BUSINESS bldg 1n downtown
Oh10 ,
ups ta~rs
Basement , and
Pome roy Situated on 25' x
Cred 1tors are requ1red to
large closet s pace lo cate d at 6 13 JtJJ
75 ' lot , presently occupied .
file the 1r c la •ms w 1th said
269 N 3r d , Middlepor t Close - - - - - - · - - - - - - - Phon e 992 5786
f•duc1ary w1thm four m onth s
to post oft 1ce and town 2139 MUSTANG eng1ne c om
6 B 12tc
,, oated fh1s 11th day of June
Phone 99 2 33 9J aft er 6 p .m
p tete ,
factory
rebu•lt
1975
6 13 3tc
Howard Lark•ns, Portla nd, J'' ACRES m Pom eroy with
01'1 1o. Phone 843 2211
sewe ra ge, c• ty water Ph one
Mannmg 0 Webster
6 13 6tp
992 5786
MOD
ERN
6
rm
house
,
a
c
m
Common Pl eas Court.
6 8 12tc
M1ddleport
Phone
992
2676
Pro ba te D1vis1on
6 15 6tc TERRAC E Ant i QU e Shop -- - Meigs County , Ohto
HOU SE With bath ,
5 RM
16,
ret1flng from bUSiness All
161
23 .
30.
3tc IN Middlepor t -- sma ll fur
150x 10 0
lo t
Recen tl y
m erc hand 1se 10 stock wit I b e
renovated Phone 99 2 5786
n ished house , river f ro n t
sold at a large d1sc ount
6 8 l2tc
age , l arge
y ard , pa 1d
Terrace
A ntiqu es,
l OB
PUBLIC NOTICE
utilities o n Rai l road S1
Leg1on
Terrace
L ee
Not 1ce 1s hereby g1ven t ha t
Ph one 992 7494
TW O 6E DROOM hou se for
R ud iSill
on t he 7th day of July at 8
6 15-6t c
sa te Phone 98 5 4102
6 6-26t p
o ' c l ock p m a p ubl iC hear.ng --------- - ---~-­
6 10 26tc
- - ----~-------wil l be held on the bu,J:Iget ~ 2 BEDRM apartment, newly ,:----'~-;---~.......:::.:·-:.J"1 - -- ---- ------- pr epared ."b y th e BoarC, bf
Phone
1, f ¥r , carp~ted, a c
1
I
,
'
"'
Oran ge TownshiP Trustees of
94"- 9?t.:!l ;
' I ...
ora n ge Townst1 1p , Me 1g s
·
6 15 -3t c
County , for th e ne)( f s ue - -- - - - -- - - - - - - - ceeding fis ca l year ending 4 RM · FU nN
t
t
D ece mber 31. 1976
~
apar men
Suc h h earmg w111 be h eld at
Phone 992 365B
20"-llfz H P
6 1 tfc
th e home of the clerk, Nina
Robin son , Rt
2, Coolville , --- ----- - - - - -- - - Oh iO
2 B EDRM f urn1 shed mobil e
,.
· home, no p ets Call 992 7479 .
, 22 ~'.=3V2 -I:I,P .
6-4-tf c
N 1na Robinsqf'l ... ~~' ,....---.----.- -·-rCler k of -- ....L ~-1-~L - -- ---~ 1.
~~~~ Pro!Ml1,~.
Ora nge tow n shi p •c- I
,0
{6 ) 16. lfc
o~e---Du ple x apt
in Mid
- -- - --dleport. 1 house •n Pom eroy .
MIDDLEPORT - THIS

Employnient Wanted

Blown into Wa lis &amp; Attic&lt; '
STORM
WINDOWS&amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING-SOFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

For Rent

Syracuse, Ohio
Ph . m . 3~93 _

mo

4 10 -1

mo

R &amp; S E xc avat mg, Back' h oe
and lig ht haulm g serv•ces
Driv eway slag delivered
Ph one (304l 773 5346 or 742
3664 day or even ingS
6 d-26tc

Merle Norman
Cosmetics

lOlA'S

For Sale

I.AY_E~i&gt;ER:

LARRY

Also Repairs On All
Riding Tractors
498 Locust St. -Middleport, Ohio
S91

SEPTIC TANK S cleane d
Mode r n Sanitaflon 992 J954
or 992 7349
9-I B tfc

HEAUTY .SALON

~

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

5-8·1 mo

'------

!POMEROY LANDM'ARK I'

I
1_;:_.,...._:.·:--------

ca se No . 21486
Estate of S1dney A Spencer
o c ce sae d.
NOtlce 1S hereby g 1ven t ha1
Donald Lee Sp ence r of Rt 7,
Ma r 1et t a, Ohio , ha s been dut y
appointed Executor of the
E sta t e of Si dn ey A Spe ncer ,
decesaed , late of Syracuse ,
Me 1gs COUflt y. Ohio
Credit ors ar e requ 1red to
ftle the 1r c la.ms with sa1d
f1dUC 1a r y W1fh1n foUr months
Dated th 1S 24 th day of May
197 5

------ - - - - - - - - - - - . . . ~ack W . Carsey, Mgr.
FURaN apt sroomsand balh , ~ - Phone•n.,,., ·
n1ce large yard , ba th and' ,,
390 So utl'1
Second
St , '"
., 11 1If 1 , ~ 1
't' •
1
1
M1dd leport, adults on ly
Phone 992 5262 even mgs
.H MO,PEf.I'J
wa
lnut
stereo
5 21 tf c
r a1diO , A 1rack tape com .
- - - --- - - - - - b i nation , am -fm
radio .
Ba lance S10J 72, or t erms .
2 BEDRM tra iler, $21 per
Ca ll 992 3965
6·4 tfc
week All utdit1 es pa 1d
Phone 992 332 4

Mann.na D. W ebster
Judge
court of tommon Pleas,
Probate DiVISIOn

KUHL'S
BARGAIN
CENTER , TUPPERS
PLAINS, OHIO
6 5 15tc

6

6 tfc

- - - -- ----------3 BEDRM
traile r
with
ut di t 1es pa 1d, partl't' fur
n1shed in trader park on Rt.
33, near Burlingham Phone
992 7751
6 1-tfc

f6l 2, 9 r 16, Jtc
COUN TR Y Mobile Ho me
Park , Rt 33, ten m11es north
of Pomeroy La rge lots w•th
concre te pat ios , sidewa l ks ,
ru nn ers and off s tr eet
pa rk i ng Phon e 992 7479
123 1 tfc

HOT WA TER heater~ 5 yrs .
old, " l 1ke new" elec or gas ,
JO gal to n an d 40 gat , 535 up

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

H &amp; N day old or started
Leghorn pullets . Both floor
or cage grown a'.'a lleb le .
Po u ltry
housin g
and
automa t ion .
Mode rn
Poultry , 399 W
Main,
Pomeroy , 992 2164

6 15-He

l 1\N D 4 ROOM furnis hed and
unfurnished
apart me nts
Phone 992 543.4
4-12tfc

CHEVR OLET 350 engtne W1fh
Ho lley d til!lrrel Phone 992

PRIVATE meet1ng room for
any organ •zat•on , phone 992

l o• ~ rr.·seff co nta .ned

3975

J

11 tic

APT l •ke new , J rooms , W1tt'1
large bat h, tabletop range ,
large closet , East Ma1n St ,
Po mero y See to appreciat e
Phonr Gall•polis duri:!!.9..da)'
446 7699 , evenings 446 9539 .
'4 10 u c

3980

6
cam p er

5905

Phone

10 5t p

truck
(304 ) 773

6 11-dtc

FO'UR 1974 Dodge 1.- .fon
P•t:lc.up wheels with new
tires, two sn ow , 2 reo Best
offer Ph one 992 7066 or 99 2

72 10

1

HOME WILL WIN YOUR
VOTE - 1sl floor has
bedroom, bath', nice kifchen w-range &amp; ref., dining
, R.. utlllfy R., large living
R., 2nd floor has 2 mce
BRs. All in 'new condttlon.
Nice l.o~at.i,on. $15,500.
POMEROY - 3 acres - 1
floor plan, 2 BR, bath,
dtnlng R.. forced atr heat,

NEW LISTING
Large 12
room older home with •. bath,
gas heat, city water anq la rge
lot near the Jones Boys in
Pom eroy .

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

0 &amp; 0 TREE: Trm~rn1ng, 2G
year s ex per•en ce In sured ,
fre e esti mates . Ca ll 992 3057,
Coolvil l e. Phone ( 1 J 667
4 30 tf c

Located In

down payment, owner will
·finance at low interest rate.

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

HOME IN Pom eroy on
Butternut Ave ., Nice kit
chen , new roof , lU St m
s1alle (,l , priced at S18,000
Seen by appointment Call
qy2 2020

6-3 121p

2

story

home .

Mod ern kitchen, br eakf ast
nook.
baseboard
hea t,
screened porch , doubl e
garage on large lot in Mid·
die port.
LONELY - 4 room house with
full basement, oak floor s,
Ohto wtth fishing and boating
nghts . Want only $10,000.00

s Acre lot, TP&amp;C water,
approved sewage, small

SEVEN ROOMS AND BA TH

bedroom

Lovely 3

ai\,Jm1num s•ding, view of the

Real Estate For Sale

Phillip ..~, Bo,les
Reai.Esfate Agent

PRESS ON, WEMBL'&lt;! I'D
AYF£, M'LORD!
I&lt;'A"Tl-IER LOS!: "TWO PIECES
'SPE'CIALlY IF 1llOSE
OF LUGGAGE -nlAN RISK A 1 "TWO B!.DK.ES 'AVE
GO Willi '1\-IOSE HIGHWA'I'MEN. SOME' CHUMS 'ID 1
OUT IN -nl' ROCKS .

6 15 Jtp

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

HOUSE and r oof pa int1ng and
repa1rs For tr ee estimates .
ca l l 992 6 190 or 992 5837
PLUMB I NG , heatmg , re pair
apd mstallat1on . el ec tr .ca l.
wat er pump repa1r , r oof ing,
roof and ~o u se painting ,
-g enera l r ep air Reaso nabl e
r at es, free es t1m at es
15
year
expe ri en ce
Ca ll
Charles S1nclair , 98 5 4121 or
992 222 1

6-5-lltc

WANTED - 100 acre farm tn
west end of county of 124 and
wat er line for hou si ng com -

ple x.

0

Phone 742 6092.
'
--5 2-52tp

and backhoe work, sep tic
tanks
I ns t a ll ed ,
du mp
trucks an d to boys for h1re ,
w ilt haul f il l dirt , top so1 1, •
l •mesto ne and gra ... el. Ca ll
Bob or Roger Jeffers , day
phon e 992 7089, n ig ht phone

992 3525 or 992 5232

AS INDUSTRY BUYS LAND,
THE MORE IT ' WILL. COST
YOU TO BUY. MAKE YOUR
INVESTMENT NOW AND
CASH IN TOMORROW.

CE I L IN G S, p ane ltn g, and
pamt•ng If you wan t your
r emodeli n g don e r ig ht, at
r ates you can afford , call AI
at 742 50 8 1

12 tf c

GE N E ~AL

Repa1r, 1...1ean up
and
hau lin g,
cu ttin g,
weld1ng,
ca rp e ntry ,
pl um bin g, e tec ma so nry
and general r emod el in g(.
Call Skd -Pool 99 2 512 6.
'I

IJL ABNER

EV/L-E.YG ILt:::=L·t;/
FO' TH'
FUSI
TIME
IN
YORE

-I I YE.A.RS OLD, IS HE 2- HM!!- A
.SINet..c VVI-iAMMY OLGHTA 51/FF~N
HIM FOR THE NE:'XT HUNDRED
YE'Af&lt;S- AND GIVr:= HIM
INCURABLE HALITOSiS r:-

YORE EVIL

r=:YE KIN DO

50-VIE GOOD

KOHEN
LIFE-

5 13 26tc

MACHINE,

Repairs , service, all ma ke s
992 2284 The Fabr1c Shop,
Pome r oy . Au t hor .ze d Sing er ,
Sa l es and Se rvi ce
We •
sharpen SciSSors .
3·29-ttc '

WINNIE

1

ACCDr1011'JG 1lJ iHI5 ExcLU5!VE''FIMNCH I5E
AGREEMENT ')()lJ 516NED WITH All-iENA
FA5HION5,1HE ONLY WAY 11-iEY
CAN 510P 5ELLING TO YOU IB .•.

.

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

DOZER work, lllnd dear ing
.by the ac r e, hourly or ,
c on t rac t.
Farm pond s,.
roads , etc Larg e dozer li nd
op erator with over 20 years I
ex peri e n ce . P\ltlins EK'- l
cavatmg, Pom eroy , Oh10 .
Phone 992 2478

u.s.

history
2 Cossack
leader
3 Escaping
t3 wds.)
4 - shirt
5 City on
the Red
River
6 Likew1se
7 Broadcasting 14 wds.)
8 Win one's
heart
9 Goad
II Bogged
down

Yeslerday'sAoswer
15 H1lls of
Z6 Cloyed
Shropshire. 27 Descendan1

BY eo/Ne OlJT
OF Bl/8/N£85.'

•1M

,;,71;,
!~

'~'''
•1m
(f/Ji..
~ Klll

I&gt;{

-.Ii&gt;-d
.(i G·lJ

!~

•!z.JI
.~&gt;((

ltf

,,,.

LOOK';' WHAT I CAN MAKE

25 Mrs.
Bloomer

L,-+--il-+--i--+-1

-

J. L ARG E lots; rural water
available Hard road, l '
miles from by -J)BSS on.
Leading Creek Road Phone

742·3108

\'

•

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,•

I

'".
1.:.;2
"~ ~

·~K
-,.(of!

b
I Q
II
t
I I
II
t
II ) II

I SJVAT

'PHARME

""J

WHAT PEOPLE WWO
A~E

5HOIU MI&amp;HT
HAVE TO DO.

_..11

IORRBEK
.
-

Salunl.,'•

IJumblo" PROVE

'

Now arrante the circled letters ,,

'&amp;

~:::'te!t~;~~~~~''t7'

( I I IX }"
.-,?

1-&lt;{k
9'

(Aalwert toiiiOIT'O•) -

•

!\

SAUTE NATUR'E BUCKET
.

An 1 wtr: Could be floored after bemg beaten- A CARPET
You're a t you r best to day
where yo ur creat 1v1ty IS
challenged Put your 1mag ma ~
tton to pr ofi table use

38 /1,'nn,lu•t
n Child of
3% Conceal
34 - Tanguay
35 Girl 's nameb-+--+-36 Australian
-1-,:,'-4'-'---l--'-"-1---+-r+-

For Tuesday, Juno 17, 1975
ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll 191

1-.-+- +--1

Take one step to com prom1se
w1th tho se yo u have dealmgs

=+-+--1--:--i

prof1t or return you re
lookmg for tod ay for your efforts may be slow m commg

·wtlh loday an d you 'll ftnd lhey II
1---1--t---i l ake ;l,\lijl'~leps m return
(April 20-May 20)

_ _.__..___. ;-;'
7

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE =-Here's how to work it :
•

1

: "

•

I

., ,··

1'

"'

j\

!

'

'

1

l "' "~

Y. !;\ -):. 'B A A X R

' " II", L 0 N•G •·F E L L 0 W

Keep pluggtng
GEMINI (May 21-Juno 201
Olhers loday wtll be very
favorably 1m pressed by the
way you handle yo urself 1n
several dehcate s•tuat tons

CANCER (dune 21-July 221
one leiter simply •lands for another. In this sample A is The means wtll be avatlable tor
used for the three L"s, X for the two O" s. etc. Single letters, those small creattve changes
apostrophes. the lenglh and formation of the words are all to br1ghte n thmgs up a b1t
hints Each day the code letters are dill'erent.
around the house
LEO (July 23 -Aug. 221 AttenCRYPTOQUOTE
,

'

r

I

c

TM J A Q H

TMJAQHI

UHVUSH

TMJAQH

Y MF A Q I .

d•ng a gathe~mg th•s after~
noon? Take e)(tra pam s to took
your best You 'll want someone

UHVUSH, there lo nolice you
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 221
Your matenal prospec ts are
YMFAQI. espec1ally
good today For

f1

make real progress If you keep
what you 're do•ng to !yoursetf.
There w• l! be lime to talk later.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec.
2'1, You re ve ry good to day at
p1 ckmg up partial •deas from
o the rs and ta1lormg them 1nto
som efh1ng useful for yo urself ,

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jen. ' .""'
19) Focus your attention com-

"

,BJ

ptetely at th1s t•me upon your
most amb•Uous a•ms You'll
come up w1th an 1ngemous
plan to ac ... ance your mterests .

"( 0

,.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 111

.. !'P.

You 'll do somethmg t houghtful
for a fnend tod ay and teel it
wasn t fully apprecta led. Later.

"!.

you'll be repat d twofold
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)

In
any busmess Involvements you
have today don't JUmp at the
l 1r st pr1 c e offered
It's

(l)YOUr
8 • hd

profttable lo haggle a bll.

.lrt

June ·n,

ay

1175

There are some quite unex-

1

,;;'11
.IB
t&lt;to.'f(
lS"'

' ""~
'~

~ U8

·

some unusual reason you may

Pee led tun thmgs tn olore lor ' tll;}

not be fully aware of 1t Be alert
- OHJA
OHCYHX
tor htdden opport unttV
Yesterday's Cryptoquole: NEWS IS IDSTORY SHOT ON THE
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 231
WING. -GENE FOWLER

you thiS xear You'll form two '
new last~ng fnendsh lps. One 132
of these persons you'll meet on · ~'1)

~

Phon e 742 3615

..
"

~, ,

~~=~;:;~~~~~~T~=;
~::--r;-0-r.:---.:- r
Prillte SIIIIISUIISWIIm
I

6000&amp;&lt;E; SlG MOTHE«!
HCAAWE A NICE ~E ANAT,
MP....... IF wv C . •

NEED A new home built on
your lot? Con tact Milo B
Hut c h ison , Rutla nd , Ohio

.. 'r.r

.

r--------------, 1"~~---------o::::"j

OOT OF THIS CLOTHES
HANGER, PAW- --

1/.•

SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 221
The ,nexl couple. ~··vs you'll

.J A 0

a .. OKII:R

of
Levi
28 Euphoric
JO German
river
33 Ceremony
36 Pref1x for

Eng.
20 '"D1amond
"
21 Bottom·
less 23 Bare
24 Forsake

r;;

u i}&lt; J H H X 0 V H I A • Y

AFFOLTER REALTY

--

,]

Marine

-U X J R H X

5·8 tic

.ruB

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

'

TWO NEW J bedroom homes
w1th 1 car garage , ca rp ete d ,
F H A or bank financ ing .
Phonj:! 142 3615 pr see Milo
Hutchin son, Rutland

ttcr.ib

1ti1~1Ml~1l ~-lkJAc.. di..J.-J,-. :~
.... "\.

DOWN

15 Did a
Sinatra
16 Palhd
17 Wahine's
garland
18 Gas
measure
1abbr. )
19 - for
I soughll
%1 Examine
steadily
%2 Allegiance
23 " - and
Bill"
Z4 Arlene 26 Resolve

1 , I 1

'Jiii:jt-~
MI:M·K"

·~

&lt;13!.1.

~~~~®
Unscramble these four Jumble&amp;,

37 Ran
38 Baptism,
e.g.
311 Candle
40 Incensed

W 1L L DO house and r oof
Pa• n tmg , free estima t es.
Cal l 992 7008
6· 5-12tc

SEWI NG

!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I

1 Atoll In

" fnend' '

~;!field,
G7 1.ha~l~t1an~
10

-------·

I

by THOMAS JOSEPH

::....;=='-"'-==.::;:...;..::..:::==

Dozer

6

,nltl

!

'

~a1Mwd'

ACROSS
1 27th U.S.
President
5 Golf immortal
Walter 10 Tamarisk
"'-'"'""""
salt tree
:;;;..;~~~ II Dorothy 12 Martha 13 John Gun_.-------,-._.------,-ther word
14 Delon 's

6 1 ~ 26tc

12.19.tfc '

667-3829

l

W IL L do p a.nt.ng Houses a•d
roofs by h our or by 10b .
Contact Ga r y Snouffer , 992 ·
5524 or Chuck Bartels, 992
3917

2-111fc

"NEW LISTING

SUBDIVISION

JUST SlD.900.
A CHARMING NEW
HOME -- Close in 2 BR ,
bath, kitchen · includes
range &amp; ref . Full basement
with Rec. R. Carport &amp;
storage R. 1 Acre. Below
Markel Value . S22,700.
ON RT. 681 - 135 Acres at
just 51,23 per acre ,
Minerals, · close
to.
recreation . City water
available.
THIS YOU MUST SEE
FOR NEW ADVENTURE
- SEE - THEN OWN
ONE
OF
THESE
PROPERTIES
TODAY.
CAll 992·2259

'

CONC~ETE

304 1.

EXP E RIENCED 1n l er1 0r and
ex 1e r ro r ho use painting
Root t a r r 1ng Phone Roger ,
992 7009 , or Randy , 992 7054
6 15-6tp

t XC-AV·A-TI NG·,dQZei--;- iUav~,

In Ra c m e.

RIGGSCREST
MANOR

own water system, barn .

6 15 41p

4 9 fk

--------

WO N t!nepa rd Contiaet mg and
Remodeling Serv •ce Whole
ho us e
remodel1ng ,
k i tch en and
Specialt1es bath Phone (3 04) 773 5346 or
742 366.t d ay or even ing.
6 4 26tc

5-30-1 mo .

NCW LISTING - Modern new ·
ktf chen, dlntng. utility, 3
bedrooms, bath, and large lot. -

''"~

4.

Backhoe , dttcher wat e~
lm es, foot ers, dram's r oads
ind brush clean ing 'No iob
boaod sm~~l, no weather too

de l •vere d r1 gh t to your
pro 1ect F a-st and easy F re e
es t 1ma t es Phone 99'1 3284 ,
Goeg lem Ready M•x Co ,
_ M •ddleport , Ohio
6 30 -tfc'

-· -

'TURF TRIM"
MOWER

Ca ll 1304 1 88 2 2050, collect
5·22 ·tfc

--

... - -·READY MIX

LI'ITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

'tllddleport

EXCAVA TIN G,

..&gt; c:PliC TANK S CLEAI ~ ~ D .,
Reasonable RATE S Phone
-146 4782 Ga l l•polis John,
Ru sse ll , own er

--

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

Real Estate for Sale

- _..

·,oJII

I

LEE 'S Car Wash on Rt 124 at
the crossroads $3 ins1de and
ou t , wax lObs, $15 Phone
992 -3180 F ree pickup and
delivery serv ic e
6 3 12t c

- Sweepers, toast ers, 1ron s,
al l sma ll ap plia nces Lawn
m owe r , n ex t to s tate H 1gh
way Ga r age on Route 7
Phone 985 3825
4 16 rtc

-

327 N. 2nd

.,...
'B)II

6.0D-Sunrlse Seminar 4; Summer Semester 10.
6.25-Farm Repport 13
6 3D-F ive Minutes to Live By 4; Nerws 6, Bible An swers e; Concerns &amp; Comments 10; Rev . Cleophus
Robinson 13
6:35--Columbus Today 4.
6:45-Mornlng Report 3; Farmflme 10.
7·()0-Today 3,4, IS; A.M. America 6, 13; CBS News e,lO.
e·oo-Lassle 6 ; Capt. Kangaroo 8; Schoolles 10;
Sesame St. 33.
9 oo-A.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4,15; Lucy Show 8; Capt.
Kangaroo 10; Morning with D.J 13.
9:30-Not For Women Only 3; Dinah 6; Galloping
Gourmet e; ~lew Zoo Revue 13.
lO:OD-Celebrlfy Sweepstakes 3,4,15; Spin-Off e,lO;
Dinah 13; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33.
10:3D-Wheel of Fortune, 3,4,15, Gambit 8,10; The
Romag nolls' Table 33.
ll ·OD-High Rollers 3,4, IS ; One Life to Live 6; Tat.
tletales 8, 10.
11 :30-Hollywood Squares 3,6,15; Blankefy Blanks 13;
News 4; Love of Life 8,10.
11 :55-Graham Kerr e; Dan Imel ' s World 10.12 :00Jackpot 3, IS; Password 6, 13; Bob Braun's S0-50
Club 4, News e, 10; Mister Rogers 33.

16

H

Free Estimates
PH. 992-2550

s 18 26tc

ELWOOD "OWERS RE PAIR

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

'104.9S(KDl '

WiLL trm1 or ... ut trees and
sh rubb e r y,
c l ea r
o ut
basements , att1cs , e t c
Phon e 949 322 1 or 742 4441

John St., Next To
Grade School
992-2549 Syracuse, o.

BORN LOSER

.:oH
'!!l'~

JUSt a tnlle and give it one
more d1amond and one less club
and the grand slam would be a
cmch."
12·3D-Blank Check 3, 15, Split Second 6, 13; Search for
" • 54
,· asrald: "South ai¥J .thqught
Tomorrow e,10; Elec. ,Co. 33.
• 73
" " " " ··abou the possibility1~~t:-'even
12·55- ~IBC News 3,15.
...
,
WEST ( d) .
EAST
SIX would he a trifle t.QO,. [l)UCh.
1
:OD-All
My
Children
6,
13;
Phil
Donahue
e; Young and
• 9
• J
Fmally, South calife~t6' th'e conthe Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15; Zoom 33.
• I o8 4
• J 953
cluswn that there was no way to
l·JO-Oays of Our Lives 3,4, IS; Let' s Make a Dea16, 13;
t K J 96 3
t Q 10 7 2
investigate and s1mply JUmped
As the World Turns 8, 10; Episode Action 33.
• Q J 10 S
· -K e6 4
to l lX "
2:0D-SIO.OOO
Pyramid 6.13; Guiding Light e,lO; A
SOUTH
J1m : " T.te guess was a good
of
J
ustlce 33.
Matter
• A Q 7 6 54
one. Playmg at s1x, So~lh' drew
trumps. d1sca rdep _.IIi~\, ,imall- , 2.3D-Doctors 3,4,15; Big Showdown 6,13; Edge of
•1 K J
Night e,lO
-..
. /
t A 8· ' , ,
diamond on the qoem.llli~alti I
3·oo-Another World 3,4,15; General Hospital 6,13;
• A9 2
and wrapped the slam up with
Price Is Righi e, 10; Lilias Yoga and Yd\J 20; One f a
no
fanfare
at
all
·•
Both vulnerable
Kind 33.
·
3 JD-One Life fo Live 13; Lucy Show 6, 13; Match
Game e, 10; The Romagnolls' Table 20 ; Folk Guitar
West
North Easl
South
33.
4 OD-Mr. Cartoon 3; I Dream of Jeannie 4; Somerset
Pass
Pass
Pass
The bidding has been . 16
Pass
IS; Gilligan 's Island 6; Mus ical &lt;;hairs e; Sesame
Pass
Pass
St. 20,33; Movie "F ive Weeks in a Balloon" 10"
Pass
Pass
West
Mike Douglas 13.
"
North East
South
Opemng lead- Q•
4 3D-Bewitched 3; Merv Griffin 4; Mod Squad 6;
?
Mickey Mouse Club e, Bonan za 15.
5: 0D-FBI 3; Andy Griffith 8; Mister Rogers' Neigh.
You. South . hold
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
borhood 20,33; Iron side 13.
. 2 ¥ KJ975 t AKQJI.A 4
:; 3D-News 6; Beverly Hillbillies e; Hodgepodge Lodge
J 1m · " Let"s talk about the What IS your opemng btd '
20; Get Smart 15; Villa Alegre 33.
pnnc1ple of limits 10 bidding A - One heart. You aren'l slrong
6.0D-News 3,4, e,10,13,15; ABC News 6 ; Elec. Co. 20;
You were the ftrst man to enun- enough for a forcing bid.
Catch-33 33.
ciate It weren't you ?"
TODAY"S QUESTION
6·JD-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Bewitched 6;
Oswald : " Probably so Th1s Your partn er responds one
CBS N ~ws 8, 10; Zoom 20,33.
prmc1p!e IS qUite Simple and notrump What do you do now'
7:()0-Truth
or Cons. 3,4; Bowling for Dollars 6; What's
Answer Tomorrow
merely states that each bid or
My Line 8, News 10; Name That Tune 13;
pass places certam hm1ts on
American Lite Style 15; Antiques 20; Lilias Yoga &amp;
the strength of your hand ."
-----------~----Jim "South thought about Send St .. to; JACOBY .~ODERN
You 33.
grand slam possibilities when book to: Wrn at Bridge, (clo th•s
7:3D-Hollywood Squares J,4; Lei's Make a Deal 6 ;
his partner JUmped to the spade newspaper). P 0 Box 489. Radto
Buck Owens e; New Price Is Righi 10, To Tell the
ga me Change the North hand City Statton. Naw York. NY 70019.
Truth 13; Car and Track 15, They Shall Take Up
Serpents 20; Car Care 33.
NORTH
• K 10 e 3 2
• A Q7 6

Construction
and Plumbing

Blown
Insulation Services

Precisi
Ground

-~

a/Ill

.1-\1:

TUESDAY, JUNE 17,1975

Jacoby pushed _bidding limits

ALL-WEAllfF.R
ROOFING

I

FREE ESTIMATES _

tl•i
Chain

.

.,je:;]

'"11fl"

~1t}~RIIJ(i.
g0 ! '
•..,._,....;&gt;

WIN

Does your home
require ~ny of t:;ese
services?

.,.s. J m..; .

992-3092

Mobile Homes for Sale

Real Estate For Sale

......,._

Sales &amp; Service

I

4 2-75

I

RooM AdditiiiiS

WILKINSON
SMALL ENG

I

AS MA!IRIAGE·MfNOEO
AS THE IIIEM FEMALE'!

IN FACT, I 5 HA "L LJIIIDERTAKE TO MAKE YOU FALL
MAOLY IN LOVE I f-~ A
MER E /0 OAYS!

WE DO:
Siding
Roofing
Home
Complete
Maintena" '"a

Heme Bvlkll'lt

V. V. JOHNSON
AND SON, INC.

For Rent or Sale

Free Estimates
Phone 949-5961
Emergency 949-2211
or 992-5700

laul·linLII ·

On alum•num replacement
w1ndows , s •d•ng , storm
doors and windows, 1"ail1ng,
phone
Charles
Lisle,
Syracuse ,
Ohio.
Carl
Jacob , Sales Represen filti'Je .

1974 SEARS 10 h p 36" r.d mg
mower , perfect cond it •on
Has w h ee l we 1ghts Phone ·
992 2257 after 5 30 p m
6 12 Jt c
- - - ·- -- - -- --~---L-CB's An t ennas , f ish1ng ba1t,
fi shin g s upplies , gun s and
am mo ln d 1an J oe's Sports
and CB's
J08 Page St ,
M1dd lepor t

----'iEIL

::J -7- 1 mo .

6 6-1 mo.

op

Air condi11oning, plum btn9, heat1ng , roof1ng , 1
spouting, general sheet
metal work .
···

Call Before 7:30A.M.
Or Afler6:00 P.M.
949-3604

992-2478

truck t1r es, A 1 co n
d1110n 8 ply 750x 16, $50
A l so ,
a l u m 1n um
truck
topper fits 8 tt bed . S IO O
Phone 992 5035
6 12 3tc

Phon e

Racine, Otlib

EXCAVATING

I lf-ITEf-ID TO
PROVE YOU'RE ACTVA"LY
V/~0~6!

Racine Plumbing
&amp;Heating

We Build Hie Best and
Repair the Rest .
-Cabinels lnslalfed-

PUWNS

6 13 Jtc TWO

GUARANTEE D

NEIGLER
Buildi~g Supply_
.

For Renl by Hour or
Conlracl Work.
Regular and
Excavator Type
Seotir Tanltco lnsta lied

dr

SMITH NUSON
MOTORS, IN~

plliH'Ir es &amp; new turnitnrll'
s w ed . through sun
Open 9·
Ph . 667 -385 8 ·
\ 1 ~ \ mo

'"

Elec Co. 20.

Assignment Amer• ca 33.

" BARGA IN S
are our
middle n ame" in c lean ,
use !d ~ f urnitur e,

---

~J ews 6,

11:3D-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Wide World Mystery 13;
FBI 6; Movie " The Woman Who Wouldn't Ole" e;
Movie " Trial" 10; Janak! 33.
12 3D-Wide World Mystery 6.
1:OD-Tomorrow 3,4; ~lews 13.

6 3D-NBC News 3,4, 15, ABC News 13, Bew lfched 6;
CBS News e. 10, Zoom 20,33.
7 0(}-TruthorCons 3.4, Bowling for Dollars 6; What's
My Line e; ~lews 10;; ~lew Candid Camera 13;
Wally's Workshop 15. Making It Coun t 20; Lilias,
Yoga and You 33.
7:3(}-Thaf Good Ole Nashville Music 3; Masquerade
Party 4 ; Pollee Surgeon 6; $25,000 Pyramid e,
Patsy Awards 10;; To Tell the Truth 13, Unta med
World 15, , Washington Straight Talk 20, Episode
Action 33
8 DO-Joe Garagiola 3,4.15; Rookies 6,13; Gunsmoke
8, 10; A Matter of Justi ce 20,33.
8 !~Baseball 3,4, 15.
9.DO-SWAT 6,13; Maude e.lO; Levi &amp; the Law 20,33.
9 3(}-Rhoda e,lO
10 OD-Carlbe 6, 13, CBS News Special e. 10; News 20.
Washington Straight Talk 33
10 : 3D-Spotlight On 33.
11 : OD-News 3,4,6,e, 10, 13, 15; AB C News 33.

,. At cau11on Light"
R t. 7, Tupper~ Plain!. o.

Pomeroy

JUNE 16, 1975

6·0D-News 3,4,e,lO,l3,15; ABC

CEN~R_!

~~

Television log for easy viewing

j

MOND~Y .

F r om the larg est Tr uck or
Bulldozer Radiator to thr
smallest Heater Cor e
'
Nathan Biggs
Rad1a1or Specialist

Ph. 992-2174

BACKHOES

TWO p1anos , 1 player Will
also se ll som e p 1ano ro l ls
Ca ll 74'1 6352
6 15 3tc

Mobile Homes For Sale

IN

I

jj -

~

197 0 CH EV
Im pala
Phon e 949 36 65

:. , ,.CA.RRIER
., . .,... ( " I
WANTED

Tlf'E

••

, Phone 992 5682 or
992-7121
5-14 1 mo.

FARM EQuipment N ew
Ho l land
404 Hay Co n
d1t1oner , SSSO~sed F ord 5 fl
3 pt rotary mower $225 2
used rakes $450 ea ., new 1
row c ulfl '.'a tor SlOO , Massey
so t rac t or $2,350. J oh n
Deer e 60 tractor $1,550 ,
Ford 9N tractor SBSO. new
6 1~ ft disk 1i335 , new 6ft 3
pt
blade $150
E rmel
Luckett , Albany Phone 69B
JOJ2 or 698 788 1
6 15 3tc

,' li

,P.OMEROY
_
MOTOR·
.
CO!
OPEN EVES. B:OO P~.

BARGAIN

&lt;~ntl

UPRIGHT
fr eezer,
1963
F al con , ForO tru c k pa rt s
Good bla ck rec l1 ner Phone
7 42 33 03
6 1s 3t p

4 door , loca l ca r , air cond it ioned, full equipment

MUG SHOTS LATER!

KUHL'S_

Garage

BROWN ' S 9925113

pest Friday of Mrs. Maggie
Gibnore at Racine .
Clifford Hill, Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Herbert Roush, Sunday
Herbert Roush, Mr. and Mrs. afternoon they all visited
Charles Lawson, Wilda, Mrs. Mrs. Estle Roush at PortLucille Lawson, Cathy and land.
Mrs. Nancy Chapman of
Debbie, at tended a hymn sing
at the MI. Moriah Church a Albany called on Mr. and
Mrs. Bert Hunt Sunday.
rece111 Saturday. evening.
Mr. and Mrs. David Hayes
. Mr. and Mrs. Roger Roush;
Slwon and Cjndy Roush and c hildren of Pontiac,
rpenl 8al1rday night Wlth Mich., visited . the latter 's
Mr.llld Mrs. Walter McDade sister, Mrs. James Hunt and
at Troy, Ohio and Sunday family.
Francis Webb is a medical
they visited Kings bland.
• Mrs. E:lna Roush of Racine patient at Holzer Medical
rpent Sunday with Mr. and Center.
l I

.'

Roger Hysell's

5 18 Jotc

16 CU fl upnght freeze r s,
I f eat ur e packed Cut $6 1,
tal\e hom e pn ce $274 8B
Montgomery
Ward ,
· Pome r oy and Gallipo l is ,
Ohi O
6 12 6tc

1974 CHEVELLE
SJ095
Malibu HT Cpe., 350 v .e engine, power s1eenng, fac-

I

2 I-lOURS AND 1,200

Business Service!il

Ok LIER any Lo ~rom lnd1an

Wanted To Buy

Wolfpen
News Notes

I

For Sale

12t c

It is reported that Mr. and
Mrs. Junior Gibson have sold
their nice herd of cows.
Lead1ng Cr eek Road , 3
Mrs. Golda Epple entered
m lies
off
by pass ,
V
V 1tatoe
res1dence
Phon e
Veterans Memorial Hospital
742 3108 If ra1n mg, Will be
for observation and has Helen
later
6 15 6tc
Alkire Pickens as a roommate.
3 FA MILY Yard Sales , 308
Pag e St • Middleport
Mrs. Margaret Allen is
6 15 6 tc
back In veterans Memorial
H06pital.
YARD SALE Tnurs . ntoay .
and Sat
8 miles no rth of
Mrs. Sue Payne and Mrs.
Chester Oh1o on Co Rd 36
or Sum ner Ro ad Mrs Carl
Kathryn Weaver visited Mr.
F •ndl•ng
Weaver at Holzer recently.
6 15 3tp
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Clark
were dinner guests of Louise
Dixon Sunday and helped Lost
bi llfOld Con tents .nside
celelrate the "birthday of RED
needed Phone 992 3422
Robert Dixon.
6 a lfc
Mr. and Mrs. Bud Douglas
are expected home after a Wanted
two weeks stay w•th the Don CASH pa td tor a l l makes and
r'nodels of mobile homes
Gibsons in Rockville, Md.
P hon e area code 614 -423
Brenda and Beverly Bishop
9531
4 13 ttc
were recent guests of Ava
Gilkey. Dale Whaley was also
M111Pr

SEND IN
''VACi'' FILES
ON 44273.

Producls, phone 9~Y{ifc

LARGE YARD sale, June 19
thru 21
4 f amily , Avon.
furn1ture . good c loth mg . etc
Also a metal corn cr1b

a

r-·._..__._...._._..._~-·-----·------------------~--

._,
. . . . . . . . _.__.,. ____....,t

I'M SURE 6LAD
I'M NOT GOIN6...

:&gt;

a shor1 trtp

r-,.----------..,..-, ·J•!J
1~

�,.'

8_ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, June 16,1975

' -

Miss Ohio is crowned Saturday
MANSFIELD, Ohio (UP!)
- Susan Kay Banks, 2(
Ravenna, won over the other
23 young ladi.es in tthe M1ss
Ohio Pageant Saturday night
and was crowned Miss Ohio .
She will represen t the
Buckeye State in the Miss
America Pageant at Atlantic
City, N..
· Sep tem be r.
J m
Miss Banks competed as
Miss Warren . She was a
preliminary talent winner
Friday night when she sang
an operatic aria from La
Traviata by Verdi .
"I practiced that song
every day for three years, "
said the brunette graduate of
Kent State UruvefSlty.
Miss Banks, who has sung
with Fred Waring and his
Pennsylvanians for two

seaons, ha s a graduate
ass1stantsh1p 10 music theory
at KSU 10 the fall .
She srud her goalm life is to
be happy "and make others
happy through my mus1c "
She said the thtng she liked
most about herself was her
smile "which took 14 years of
orthodomc work ."
Karen Marlene Haus ,
competing as M1ss Nor theastern Oh1o, and at 28 the
oldest of the competitors, was
first runnerup this year. This
pageant was her fourth lry at
winning the coveted crown.

they

remember

w1th

I

them a long on a II our

In Meigs Independent
Baseball League action
Sunday Tuppers Plams and
Syracuse
split
a
doubleheader played on the
Eastern H•gh School field .
In the first game, Tuppers
Plams scored the winrung run
in the seventh inning to wm :&gt;2. J . Rood and Jim Hubbard
were deadlocked in a 2-2 tie
when Gary Durst hit a
sacrifice fly to score the
winning run . Durst and Rood
had two hits to lead Tuppers
Plains at the plate . The loss
was the ftrst setback of the
year for Hubbard.
In the second game, Jeff
Hubbard went the distance on
the mound for Syracuse,
downing the Tuppers Plains
squad 1-1. Big hitters for
Syracuse were Jim Hubbard
with a 4-4 afternoon, Jun
Hemsley went 3-5 and Virg1l
D1ll and Steve Stewart each
were 2-3.
Next Sunday, Tuppers
Plains plays a doubleheader

p1cnics ."
It 's oo prcn rc when you

tack le a do rt you rs el f
proiect wrthout the proper
tools and materrals See the
" FRIEND L Y
ONES "
before you begrn and let us
help you plan the tob
(You'll be glad you did ' I

Last call made from
Sundance Saloon

Hospital News

Legion

Veterans Memorial Hospital
.l
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
- Sandra Carl, Albany;
Ethyl Reed, Coolville;
Lew1s, Pomeroy;
Charles
VIRGINIA CifY, Nev. (t,JPI) .- When ![old and
Harry Smith, Middleport.
silver were discovered here a century ago and miners
DISCHARGES - Karen
needed to communicate with the surface, Alexander
Haggy, Linda Batley, Judy
The Meigs Americasn
Graham Bell's hand~ranked magneto system - the
Gwnther, Imogene Crooks, Legion baseball learn took 3
telephone -came to town. And there It stayed, until this
Rebecca Roach, Amanda out of 5 games played
weekend.
Hawk, Carl Fulton, Paul Thursday, Saturday and
It is no more. Virginia City's oldest resident, Kale
Mako, Daniel DeWitt
Sunday.
rannehtll, 84, made the final call on the hand~ranked
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Thursday, Meigs went to
instrument. Kate, who worked as an operator on the
Freda
Middleswart,
PortParkersburg and was downed
system in i906, w&amp;S In the Sundance Saloon. She cranked
land; SaUy Owen, Pomeroy; 12-2 by a powerful Parkersup her friend Alice Byrnes at the Pipers Opera House
Mary Pierce, Long Bottom; burg North team. Six Meias
four blocks away.
Leonard
Cremeans , errors contributed to the loss
Asimple ceremony followed- five women in black,
Coolville; Frank Lance,
On Saturday afternoon
humming the funeral march, placed flowers on the
Reedsville; Mary Kauff, Meigs fared much better at
antique phone. Officials of Nevada Bell flicked a switch,
Pomeroy; Don Stevenson, Logan , sweeping a twinbtll
and some 325 customers in tbe area got a dial tone. More
Middleport.
there. The victory m the first
efficient, perhaps- but somehow just not the same.
DISCHARGES
George
game marked the 100th wm
There was free champagne at the Sundance Saloon,
Condee, Flora Murphy.
for Legion Field Manager
( . one of many along main street in this town which is lined
George Nesselroad Meigs
with souvenir shopo and depends on tourist trade for
Holzer
Medical
Center
look the double header by
much of its economic survival.
Births June 13 - Mr , scores of 1-0 and 3-2 m two
The system was the last of its kind in the country, a
and Mrs. Rickie Boggs, a very close contests.
telephone company spokesman said. There is l!_ crank
son,
Oak Hill; Mr. and Mrs.
Yesterday, Meigs returned
phone system in operation between Calaline Island and
Michael
Bl~ckburn
,
a
son,
to
Syracuse to take on Lowell,
Los Angeles, "but it's not magneto and not near as old as
Coalton;
Mr
.
and
Mrs
.
w· oing the first game 5-0 but
Virginia City's," the telephone company spokesman
Stephen Haley, a son, 1n the second, Lowell
said.
Jackson.
returned the favor, blanking
The magneto system has a "flap" that goes down on
June
15
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Meigs 3-0.
a switchboard to alert the operator to the call. "The
James W. Shane, a son,
In the Meigs-Parkersburg
newer systems use noise," the telephone company
Galhpohs. Mr. and Mrs. North game Meigs was led at
spokesman said.
Danny Underwood, a son, the plate by losmg pitcher
"We older people will miss it," Kate said.
Pleasant,
W. Va.
Perk Ault who went 2-4 wtlh 2
She said emergency pollee and fire service were
singles, Pat Soulsby had a
summoned by cranking the dial and yelling for help. And
double in a pinch hitting role,
making a leisurely .call meant a chat with the local
Bobcats
blank
and Mick Davenport got a
operator.
single.
Local businessmen who deal with merchants in
Rutland Reds
For North, Powell led at the
Carson City and Reno, say the new dial-tlireet system
plate,
smacking a double and
will allow them to call direct at no additional cost. But
In a make-up game last
the monthly telephone bill for Kate and those who called
week rained out earlier the a single. The winning pi~her
only their old friends in Virginia City will go up a couple
Harrisonville
Bobcats was Parrish.
of dollars.
Against Logan, Saturday,
blanked the Rutland Reds 11J1m
Perry handed Coach
0. Wilhe. Donohue went the
distance, pitchmg a 3-hitter Nesselroad his lOOth vtctory
APPEAR IN COURT
for the Bobcats. John by firing a fme one hitter.
SPRINGFIELD, Ohio Jacobs was the losing pit-· Perry had a no-hitter going
(UPI) - The 40 persons cher for the Keas.
when a Logan batter
smacked
a ball in the gap in
arrested in Greene, Clark and
Gelling
hits
for
Montgomery counlles Friday Harnsonv1lle were Dwayne left center in the ftfth inning.
and Saturday in what was Jones with a double, Brian Centerfielder Ault make a
called one of the largest drug Haning and Jeff Branham diving try for the ball in an
roundups in area history had 2 singles each, Tim attempt to save the no-hitter
were to appear in court this Shamblin had 3 singles, and but missed the liner which
week for hearings. The 40 had Danny Riggs , Donohue and went for a single and a 2-base
been named on secret in- Ronnie Haning each had a error.
WASHINGTON (UPI) dictment
returned a week
The hero of the game for
The Supreme Court today
single. Getting the 3 Rutland
ago.
struck down slate laws forhils were Greg Taylor w1th 2 Meigs was Mick Davenport
Undercover
state
agents,
bidding newspapers to
singles and Billy Willis a who drove in the wmning run
sheriff's
deputies
and
police
with a solid double to left
publish adverllsements for
single.
officers
from
etght
Greene
center
driving in a run. The
legal abortion services.
County
communities
started
losing pitcher for Logan was
In the 7-2 decision, Justice
Ada
Deeter,
65,
making
the
arrests
Friday
Young.
Harry A. Blackmun said the
noon.
Arrests
were
also
made
In the second game Metgs
First Amendment 1s violated
Friday
died
.on
m
Clark
and
Montgomery
gave "Ness" hts IOlst win.
by a Virginia law -1&gt;mce
counties.
Getting
hits for Meigs over
Mrs
.
Ada
Deeter,
65,
c hanged
-barring
the
afternoon
were Ault with
Rosewell, N. M., died Friday
publications, lectures and
two
singles,
Brent
Johnson
following an extended illness.
advertisements tl!al-might
ALSO SURVIVES
prompt or encourage aborAmong the survivors of She 1s formerly of Coolville. had a double and a single,
Born in Hockingport, she Perry had 2 smgles, Mike
tions.
Walter Hudson, Chester
The ruling reversed the Road, who died at his home was the daughter of the late
conviction of Jeffrey C. Bige- Saturday, and not previously Wilham and Emma Snyder
low, former editor of an listed, is a brother, Emory. Chute She attended the
"underground" newspaper
Ireland Congregational
published in Charlottesville,
Church and was a restdent of
SUITS FILED
Va.
Dons J. McDonald, Rl. 4, the Coolvtlle area the greater
Bigelow's paper, which no Pomeroy, and Harley E. part Jf her life.
longer exists, published an McDonald, Glouster, have
Preceding her in death
advertisement for a New filed for dissolution of were her husband, Gail, one
York City abortion clin1c in marriage in Meigs County brother, and three sisters.
1971 and Bigelow was Common Pleas Court. Joyce
Surviv;Jrs include three
prosecuted under the state Melany Hall, Middleport, has sons, Wtlliam. of Dallas.
law.
flied suit for divorce agamst Tex.: Kenneth,. RoseweU, N.
The state supreme court Ralph
Eugene
Hall, M., and Benny Joe, Columaffirmed h1s conviction, Pomeroy, charging gross bus; II grandchildren, two
holding that advertising is not neglect of duty and extreme brothers ,
Burl Cbute,
entitled to First Amendment cruelty.
Coolvtlle, and Thomas Chute,
protection.
Burbank, Calif., and four
Blackmun said previous
COUNCIL TO MEET
sisters, Ruth Deeter, Lowell,
high Court decisions have \ Chester Council 323, DUV Ohio; Edna Blusiewity,
made it clear thaI "speech is will meet Tuesday, June 17, Baltimore, Md., and Hazel
not stripped of First al8 p. m Quarterly btrlhdays McCloud and Alice Clark,
Amendment protection" w1ll be observed and potluck both of Middleport.
merely because it appears as relreshments w1ll be served
Funeral services will be
paid advertising, although
held Wednesday at I p. m. at
purely commercial speeches
the White Funeral Home,
CLUB TO MEET
such as handbilllng can be
Coolville,
with Rev . Roy
RACINE - A regular
reasonably regulated in
meeting of the Twin City Deeter officiating. Burial will
limited circumstances.
Shrme Club will be held at be in the Stewart Cemetery,
7:30 p., m. Thursday in Hockingport. Fnends may
BAND TO PRAC:riCE
Racine. All nobles are invited call after npon Tuesday at the
EASTERN - The Eastern and refreshments will be funeral home.
High School Band Will served. A fish fry set for June
TO HOLD REVIVAL
rehearse at the sch,ool from 7 28 has been postponed until
CARPENTER - A youth
to 9 p.m. both Tuesday and later.
revival will be held Wed·
Thursday evemngs, Director
nesday through Friday at 8
Charles Wills has announced .
LADIES TO MEET
each
evening at the MI. Union
RUTLAND - The Rutland
MRS. SANTEE DIES
Firemen's Auxiliary will Bapt1st Church in Carpenter.
Mrs. Earl (Joste) Santee, meet Tuesday at 7· 30 p. m. at Evangelist Ron Dalton of
Mariellij, d.ted Friday the Rutland Fire House.
Dayton wtll be the speaker.
following a long illness in
Selby General Hospital. She
was formerly of Syracuse.
Funeral services were held
Sunday al 'McClure's Funeral
Home, Marietta. Attendmg
from this area were Mrs .
Neva Grimm, Pomeroy;
Mrs.
Minnie Johnson,
Athens; Mr. and Mrs
Franklin Imboden, Racine ,
J
and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Imboden and Eddie, Middleport.

MEIGS THEAT8E
'

Monday thru Thursday
JUNE 16-26
NOT OPEN
JUNE 27 -29

Walt Otsney ' s
ESCAPE TO
WITCH MOUNTAIN
And Also
Walt Otsney's
CHIP AND DALE
FESTIVAL

at Portland begmmng at I p.
m. Pomeroy plays Minersville at Syracuse at I p. m.
and Letart plays Syracuse at
Syracuse at 3 p. m
Revised Standings
W. L.

Syracuse
Portland
Tuppers Plams
Letart
Pomeroy
Minersville

5
4
3
3
2
1

2
2
2
4
4
4

SQUAD CALLED
RACINE - The Racine
Emergency Squad was called
to assist Ruth Dailey, Portland at 6:55 p. m. Sunday.
She was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where she
was treated and released.
WIENERS VISIT
REEDSVILLE- Guests of
Mrs . Inez Pooler, Reedsville,
this past week were Ray and
Manlyn Wiener, Fairborn
The W1eners came here after
bemg m Canton to attend the
high school graduatiOn of
Manlyn 's son, Mickey, who
has enlisted m the U. S. Navy
and leaves for basic training
at Great Lakes , Ill., June 24.
Friday they were entertained with a barbecue
dinner prepared by Lena
Belle Pullins , daugh ter of
Mrs Pooler and sister to
Manlyn Wiener. Others
attending were Doug Pulhns,
and daughters, Diana and
Kathy .

w~ner

of 3 out of 5

Teams s:plit pair Sunday

"When the jMSects take
over the world , let's hope ,
gratitude how we took

Miss Haus of Chagrin Fails,
a Plu Beta Kappa from the
College of Wooster, was a
prelimmary swimsuit wmner
Thursday night She sang a
medley of tunes for her
talent.
Pamela. Hopton of- Fairfield, 21, Miss Bowl10g Green
Stale University , was named
second runnerup Jamce
Elame Cooley, 19, Portsmouth, Miss M1am1 Valley,
was third runnerup and
Marva Rae Mosier , 18,
Cehna, Miss Southwestern
Ohio, was fourth runnerup.

;{:·:·:·.·:·:·:·: :·:: ,.,:-: ''::·;.''·:-:-~-:: ..:::·:·:-: : :·:·:·:·:: ... ;.;. -: ;. -: ,...,.,,,.,.,...,.·.:·····:-:-·-:-:.. ·:·:··: ,..., :,: :· . :-... ·. ·: ,..., ,... , •, .. •... .,. -:· .,.,..., ..... :- .,,,...,... : ,.... •.·.: '·:·: ·: :···:&lt;· : '·. ;.;.;.:.:_: :· ·: :: :: ,.. ,, :·:·:·.;.

~ .

Abortion

ads found

to he legal

Larkins had 3 singles and a
double, Soulsby a single,
Hamilton a single, and
Davenport, the game winning
double
Steve Baird picked up the
win for Meigs, and Lanning
was charged with the loss.
Sunday afternoon against
Lowell, Meigs in the first of
the two, Mike Nesselroad led
the way w1th the hot bat,
smacking out 2 singles in 3
attempts.
For Lowell, Rucker had 2
singles to lead his club. Ault
picked up the win and Newton
was credited with the loss. In
the second game Lowell did a
job on Meigs like Meigs did on
them in the opener by
shuthng his opposition out 30. Brent Johnson, Mike
Larkins and Mike Nesselroad
each had a single for Meigs.
For LoweU, Beebee had a
smgle and a double and
Brooks had a 3-3 game, aU
singles. Jim Ntday was
charged with the loss and
Rtce was the winmng pitcher:

A FULL
SERVICE

BANK

40,000.00 Maximum Insurance
for Each Depositor

1

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M! .,.bl~
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DlPOSIT

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Regular sagso

COMBINATION FOR ONLY

-

.

THE FACTS!

behind fine home
furnishings and
appliances

C OII~ATION

----

LOWE$T
Tonight . Tuesday
Double Feature
"TIMBER TRAMP"
Plus
" TWILIGHT PEOPLE"

---- - -

POSSIIlf
PRICEI

I

BAKER FURNITURE

~

DIAL·A·NAP8

H11 hHingl ta
cl,.n ftom low

ltfltto ..........

Powerized to clean on the floor
or above tho floor with fewer
strokes. Huge dllposable dustbag has 560 cu. ln. usable
capacity. Lifetime .lubricated
motor never needs oiling,

Housewares Dept., First Floor
.

.

"'

ELBERFELD$

:,.
\
:::
·::
:::

~-ablerleiaedvye los~~~h~y t~:

11

::
:::;
·::
·::
·::
}
:::
:::
:·
::.
:::
:::
:::
:::
':
:;:
::
:::
:;
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.: ·: .· .·: :·.·. :-.·:·::.·: :·.·:·:•.,:·:·.·:·:·:·:·:·.·:-:·::•.•:·:·
!•:XTENDED OUTLOOK

Thursday through
Saturday, chance of
shcmcrs Thursday and
Saturday and fair Friday .
Highs will be in the 80s and
low 90s and lows will be in
the 60s.

Weather
Partly clo udy tonight,
Wednesday, thundershowers
likely Lows tonight m the
upper 60s. Wednesday m the
80s. Probability of rain 20 per
cent today, 60 per cent tonight
and Wednesday

MEET TONIGHT
A special meeting of the
Meigs County Assn. for
::: Retarded Citizens Wl.ll be held
::: at the Meigs Community
::. Health Center in Pomeroy at
.:: 7.30 p.m. this evening to
:;: complete fmal arrangements
::· for the regatta booth .

:~

Regatta ready
Everythmg is "go" for .
Weekend June 20, 21
and · 22, the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce was
informed Monday at noon at
the Meigs Inn by chairmen of
the several departments.
Earl Ingels, parade
chairman, confirmed that the
parade will form on Middleport's South Second Ave.,
promptly at 5:30 p.m.
Judging will be done prior to
the parade and winners will
be announced from th e
balcony of the Metgs Inn.
Ingels also announced that
in place of the ski show there
w1ll be sky diving. The divers,
known as the Mountaineers,
are Gary Westmoreland and
J1m Crisp. They w1ll dtve
Saturday at I :30 p.m. and
Sunday at I p m. They will
Regat.~

::;·::·:·:·:·.·:·:·.·: :·:·.·=·=· ·:·:·.·. :·.·:.:·.·.·,· ·: .·:: .·: :·.: :·.·. : .·: :·. :: ·: :· ·. :·&gt;: :.... ;.,.; :·:: ·::. :: ·:: : :· .; ;..; ;..; ;..;.;. : :···: :· ···:···:··· :.·-;.;.•; ;.·.:·::··:·:· ·:-:· ·:·:· ·: :· ·&gt;.·..·.-: :-.·:·:·.·: :-.·: :·.·: :·.·: :-:·: :·.·:·:·.·: :-.·:·.·::

•

enttne

VOL. XXVII

NO. 45

Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area
lUt::SDAY, JUNE 17, 1~75
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

land near the Mason Levee .
The pilot of the plane will be
Jack Crisp of Rutland.
P1ckup boats are needed
for the boat races and those
who are willing to use their
boats are to contact Jack
Carsey . The boat races will
be on Sunday only. There will
also be open class for local
boaters. Entry fee is $20.
Helicopter rides will start
Wednesday at 4 p.m. across
from the tenms court above
the Pomeroy Junior High
BUilding on the nver bank
side. Rides are $5 per person .
Youngsters will be charged a
lesser amount, according to
age, Ingels said.
Chamber members
reported that no parking will
be allowed on the upper
parking lot after 5:30p.m. on
Thursday as displays will be
placed there Thursday
evening

•

at

All school bus drivers
transporting band personnel
are asked to park behmd
Francts Florist. Buses must
be kept off the streets.
In other business, ballots
bave been mailed to chamber
members to vote for s1x
'
persons to serve on the board
of directors.
Ted Reed, presiden l, who
presided, reported that he
and Pomeroy Mayor Dale

.

PRICE 15'

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

S!m th were to be in Marietta

today to meet w1 th contractors and State Highway
offictals in regard to the
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
repair.
C. E. Blakeslee reported
that the Chester Fir~ Department will have a l110ch stand
at Heritage Sunday and all
persons who attend will be
g1ven wooden mckels.
Fred Crow displayed a
proposed "Flag" for Meigs
County made by Helen and
Lewi s Sauer. He al so
displayed small Flag pennants that will be on sale
Regatta Weekend.
It was also pointed out that
on the large placards that
have been placed throughout
Meigs County states that the
pme for first place in the frog
races is $500 which is incorrect. It is $50.
First place prizes in the
jumptng co ntest, se mor
division Is $500 and $100 for
first place in junior division .
Atlendmg were Reed,
Ingels, Mrs Millard VanMeter, Dale Warner , Virgil
Teaford, N. W. Compton,
Wendell
Hoover,
B1ll
Grueser, Bob Jacobs, Crow,
Jack Carsey, Don Thomas,Blakeslee, John Koebel ,
Becky Mallory and Katie
(Continued on page 8)

Small business
promised relief
WASHINGTON (UPI) President Ford, assserting
his strong belief in the free
enterprise system, promised
today to release small
business "from the shackles
of federal red tape" and
unfair regulations.
In a speech prepared for
the National Federation of
Independent Business conference, Ford also declared
"the worst recession smce
the 1930s is coming to an
end. 11
"Some indtcators will
continue depressed for a few
months because they record
only what is past," he said.
"But I am confident that we

ONE OF THE MOST ELABORATE promotions for a daily vacation Bible School w~s
carried out Saiiii'd!!,r_bf th~ C3!eshlre United ~etho?ist Church w~en a_~arade was s!3ged m
town. Led by pollee, the parade featured this IDim-float carrymg gu-ls m Holly Hobble
costurnlng. The school will be June 23-28 from 7 to 9 each evening at the church. I11s open to
children from four to high school age.

turns
to reds

By United Press International
ATHENS, OHIO - THE 1975 AMERICAN Legionsponsored Buckeye Boys State government this week wiU have
a split party leadership. Harold Massey, 17, Wickliffe,
defeated Stuart Mykrantz of Wooster for the governor's post at
Monday night's election. Massey ran on the Federalist party
ticket, while Mykrantz headed the National party ballot.
Victor Stewart, 17, of Cincinnati, running on the National
party ticket, won the lieutenant governor's office. The record
ROME (UP!) - Thousands
1,373 youths at the American Legion-sponsored self governof jubilant Communists
ment program picked state and county officials. They will be
waved red flags m downtown
inducted tonight at ceremonies where Ohio Supreme Court
Rome today to celebrate
Chief Justice C. William O'NeiU is to give the main talk.
stunnmg elechon gams that
threatened to brmg down the
LONDON - FORMER U. S. ATTORNEY GENERAL
government and give the
Elliot L. Richardson, whose resignation in the "Saturday
Communists a role m runnmg
Night Massacure" helped lead to President Richard Nixon's
the country
downfall, says President Ford's decision to run for a fuU term
The Communists, carrying
has ruled out a Richardson presidential candidacy in 1976.
banners
emblazoned with
Instead, he says, he will offer Ford any help he can give.
"In the circumstances I see no realistic prospect that I would hammers and sickles, sang
the "International" durmg
be playing any active role on my own behalf in 1976," he said in
a UPI interview in the U. S. Embassy Office he occupies as nighllong demonstrations
that choked traffic in the
American ambassador to the Court of St. James.
heart of the city for hours.
"The Communist party is
UVERMORE, CAUF.- DR. EDWARD TEU..ER is tbe
more
than ever mdtspensable
so-called "Father of the H-Bomb" -a label tie hates. But from
the pedestal of that fame, he has over the years involved for the salvation and rebirth
himself in controversy over the pace - and direction - of of the country," Communist
science in the United Stales vs. Russia. Monday, the 67-year- leader Enrico Berlinguer told
old bushy-browed researcher retired, and made It clear a cheering crowd outside
nothing has changed. He said RUssia "will control the future" party headquarters.
He said the regional
if America's youth abandons Its interest in science.
elections,
which saw the
Teller stepped down from the University of California and
the Lawrence research ~acility, a leader in world nuclear Communists come close to
th e
ruling
research. But he left no doubt he will continue his controversial outpolling
Chnstian
Democrats,
"inand outspoken opinions. This lime, he said the quality of young
dicates
the
will
of
the
people
scientists "has declined to a catastrophic degree,
,
"What young man wants to go today into a field that is for a change of policies,
considered irrelevant by so many people?" he continued. "The ineihods and direellon in the
turning away of public sentiment against scientists, . par- life of the country. "
With nearly 99 per cent of
ticularly among the young, cannot belp to have an effect on the
the
ballots counted, the
ultimate product."
Communists won 33.5 per
BOSTON - SEN. EDWARD KENNEDY said it was cent of the vote, an mcrease
"utterly irresonpatble" for Vice Presldel)t Nelson Rockefeller of nearly s1x per cent. The
to hint the Kennedy brothers might have been involved in CIA Chmtian Democrats polled
assassination plota. "&amp;lch comments come with especiaUy 35.2 per cent, a drop of nearly
, bad grace from the vice president, whose own CIA conunission lhree per cent.
Italians voted Sunday and
:avoided the question of assassination and passed the buck to
Monday
for 15 of Italy's 20
Congress," Kennedy said Monday.
regional
assemblies, ad Rockefeller, whoee conunl&amp;slon report on the CIW was
released Iaiii week, . hinted Sunday the conunisslon visory councils in 86 of 94
may have obtained information President Kennedy and his provinces and municipal
lrother, former Attorney General Robert Kennedy, were councils in 6,300 of 8,000
involved in the allged plots, But he emphasized none of the ciltes.
secret in!omlation could support conclusions of guilt.
"For hlm now to indulge in these innuendos is utterly
Irresponsible. Given biB own !allure to fuHill his duty on the
LOCAL TEMPS
Issue 1hope he'U have the decency to maintain his sUence now
The
temperature
in
while'the Senate investigating conunittee and others do the job
downtown
Pomeroy
at
II
that he should have done," Kennedy said.
'
a.m. Tuesday was 80 degrees
(Continued 011 pace I)
under sunny skies.

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CLEANS SHAGS I

Middleport. Ohio

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outlaw - the nation's political partdietsh.
the
The Communists have supporte e moves o1
military rulers against Portugal's Socialist party,
which won the most votes in last April's national
election to no avail. The left-wing miUtary government
also gave the Communlsts control Monday of Repulica,
one of Portugal's last non-Communlst newspapers.
u.,s. offitchiatlsparrte
kgnaolwnis
wrong y a o u
,
alliance despite aHirmations of loyalty. On NAIO s
eastern flank, furkey and Greece, NAIO allies but
historic enemies are at odds over the Cyprus crisis.
furkcy invaded Cyprus . last summer after
Greece's armed forces touched oH a coup that raised
the fears of the island's furkCoeish Cypridot ::n;:i~d
Last February, the U. S. ngress e
e ministration's wishes and cut off mllih'ta~d :i~ t~o
furkey. The Senate has voted to restore I e ai u e
House has not. furkey,dathetohnlyUniNtAedroStc~IID:I!:i
dering Russia, said Moo Y e
a es
its bilateral agreement byinshAunkatling ofalfdtheruarmsrkey. has
Government sources
ra s
apparently decided to start shutting down at least
some of the 25 American bases in return. The Cold War
has been replaced by equilibrium and detente. But the
events in Jtraly, Portugal and Turkey weaken the
Atlantic Alliance and threaten lo till the balance.

are at the bottom of the
economic slide and we will
soon be on our way up."
Ford said he is determined
to reVIew every proposed
government action "in light
of what it will do to free
competition and individual
liberty."
"I want small business
released from the shackles of
federal red tape," he said. "I
want to end unnecessary,
unfair
and
unclear
regulations -and needless
paperwork."
At last count, more than
5,000 federal forms were
being sent out from
Washington, Ford said:

Mason site at
Point nushed

&gt;=·
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Cleaning Tools

AT THE

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ByWilburG.Landrey,UPIForelgnEdltor
Developments In Italy, Portugal and furkey this
week reflect the crumbling political and military '
position of tbe North Atlantic l'reaty Organization.
The events along Europe's Mediterranean coast
have dealt serious setbacks to an alliance palnstakingly built up by the Unlted States since World War 11.
In Italy, the Communists made majhornladvatnhcels
Monday in regional elections, strengt e ng e r
demands for a role in mooing the economically
troubled nation. Italy is a'key member of NAro, the
delense organization lormed at the beginning of the
Cold War to defend Western Europe against Communist takeovers.
But Italy's Communist party, the strongest in the
West, has proved its electoral muscle by getting a third
of the vote and pnlting to within two per cent of the
ruling Christian Democrats. Although the voting does
not directly affect the national government, the results
stepped up pressure for giving the Communists a role
in the coalition.
d
Few pretend that Communlst participation woul
make Italy a more reliable NATO ally. It would be a
blow to a southern flank already weakened by events In
Portugal. The Revolutionary Council of Portugal's
ruling Armed Forces Movement has been meeting for
four days to consider whether to restrict - or even

w;;;;~~;;&amp;:i;iJI Italy

Above-The-Floor

*QUALITY

:.:_:
:

LOCAL TEMPS
• The
temperature
m
downtown Pomeroy at II a.
m. Monday was 75 degrees
under sunny skies.

Reg. SS995 Upright
With Reg.S1SS5

THE FARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS
CO.
Pomerov, Oh1o

:&gt;

LoweU
000 000-0 4 3
Me1gs
000 021-5 8 5
Newton and Beebee. Ault
and Hamilton .
LoweU
on 000 1-.'l 7 0
Meigs
000 000 ().-0 3 0
Rice and Beebee. Niday
and Johnson .
SQUAD CALLED
The Middleport E-R squad
was called at 6:02 p. 111.
Sunday to assist Sherry
Clark, 18, RD Middleport. She
was taken to Holzer Medical
Center.

.

After a century of wars , Britain ha s bills to pa y. She
feels we ben~fited from the wars and we should help
pay the price. Taxes are imposed on us. Tax after tax.
On sugar. On coffee. On wines. On all kinds of imports.
Finally, the Stamp Act. Now , we're forced to bu~ a
stamp to put on nea rly every piece of printed maten al
we use eve ry day. Newspapers, magazines, calendars,
receipts, deeds, insurance papers. They figure we'll
take it lying down . We don't. ' The day the sta,mps
arrive in Boston , we toll our church bells, fire a mourning gun salute, fly our flags at half-ma st. After all,
we're payiqg a tax, but we hav ~ no represe~tat1ve Ill
Parliarnent.lfwe res1st, we don t even get a Jury tnal.
We resist a nyway. We organ1ze the Sons of Liberty to
persuade most tax collectors to resign. The Br1tish repeal the Stamp Act. We 've already tolerated too much .

:::
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· :::
:::

. NATO position crumbling visibly

Metgs
000 001 {)-I 5 3
Logan
000000{)-0 1 2
Perry (WP) and Hamilton.
Young ( LP) and Tucker.
Meigs
020 022 {).-3 8 4
Logan
0000002-2 2 5
Baird and Hamtllon .
Lanning and McDaniel.

EUREKA

1765: The Stamp of tyranny.

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Meigs
000 Ooo ~ 2 4 6
North
400 040 22x-12 8 2
Ault (LP) and Hamilton .
Parrish and Powell.

Elberfelds In

From a Great American Bank

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PT. PLEASANT - While
no definite word has come out
of Gov. Moore's office, it now
appears that one of two
proposed sites . will be
pfesented to Coalcon in hope
6!-::- .attaining the coal
liquification demonstration
plant in Mason County.
At this point, the Gallipolis
Ferry site is believed out of
the running, while the
governor's office will continue to push the North Point
Pleasant site, along with
three other possible locations
in the state.
to
Point
According
Pleasant Mayor
Jolin
Musgrave today, in communications he had with Col.
WiUiarn Albertassi, head of
the
State
Commerce
Department, all six original
sites in West Virginia will be
proposed including the
Gallipolis Ferry site and the
Wood County site which, as
speculation has it, is also now
out of th~ rnnning.
An Associated Press report
today said stiU m the running
, are 700 acres on the Ohio
River bordering · the Kaiser
Aluminum Corporation plant
in Jackson County; a location
alopg the Ohio River ~t Ben's
Run In Tyler County, a
Monongahela River site near

Morgantown and one Mason
County location.
Mayor Musgrave said the
apparent reason why the
Gallipolis Ferry site is
rwnored not viable, is that
there is not enough flat land
to locate the facility there.
The North Point Pleasant
site contains approximately
1700 acres. The Coalcon plant
will need anywhere from 700
to 1000 acres
According to the AP report
Wood County, the original
participant in the project
planning, was eliminated
because that site Qn the Ohio
River near Bellville is highly
flood prone.
While several states will be
competing for the demonstration plant, it is generaUy
believed that the main
competitors will be West
Virginia and Ohio.
West Virginia will present
its proposed sites to Coalcon
on June 28.
Earlier this month an Ohio
delegation meeting oin New
York presented five locations
in that state. Four of those
sites were on the Ohio River
between Steubenvtlle and
Marietta. A fifth site is
between Portsmouth and
Ironton.

Frog earth good for prizes
Staffs at Pomeroy and Mtddlepoli Ubrarles Invite
lbe public to come in durliig 1!-egatta Weekend as tbere
will be 50 prizes waiting for hol~rs of "Jacky number
···· frog cards."
):)
Frog cards are avallable in tbe libraries and
:-: around town. Holden may come In on Jhunday,
:=
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__:
·_.:

.

!::!r
~a~':.~,':~:":n~~ :~~:! ::~
-_~,:.
pet, or one of lbe other 50 prizes donated
local
by

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"America is being buried by
an avalanche of paper."
The President said he has
"started a process of
regulation reform" to restore
a healthy business climate,
including these steps:
- Appointment today of
members to the new Federal
Paperwork
Commission
created by Congress to
reduce the flow of federal
forms and documents.
- Ameeting next week with
congressmen
to
set
legislative priorities on
eliminating business
regulations. Ford also will
meet conunissioners of 10
independent regulatory agencies on the need to improve
regulation and procedures.
-Establishment of a White
House group to work with
Congress and the agencies in
this area.
-Continued use of veto
powers "to stem the
of
federal
escalation
programs and agencies."
The remarks were Ford's
strongest on record on curtailing federal authority over
(Continued on page B)

Cast removed from leg
THREE-YEAR-OLD RYAN JEFFERS was in
Huntington, W.Va. Monday where he was scheduled to
have a cast removed from his foot and leg at St. Mary's
Hospital.
Ryan was injured about six weeks ago in a power
mower accident and was hospitalized at both Veterans
Memorial Hospital and at St. Mary's Hospital. The public
has contributed $4,316.99 to pay his hospital btll.
Latest contributors were Fraternal Order of Police
Chapters 57 at Cleveland, $25 ; 114 at Lake Shore, $25, and
14 at Cleveland Heights, $I32. The police organizations
have contributed to the fund at the request of Ray Manley,
secretary-treasurer of the Gallia-Meigs Chapter.
Ryan is the son of Mr. and Mrs. David Jeffers. Jeffers
is a member of the Pomeroy Police Department.

Blood offered Monday
Stxly-nine pints of blood
were accepted from 87
persons offering themselves
at the bloodmObile Monday
afternoon at Pomeroy
Elementary School. Twentysix pmts
six
pints
were
in
replacement of blood used
by families or friends.
Thirteen were first time
donors.
Ariella Vanover became a
three-gallon donor.
Nurses serving were
Ferndora Story, RN; Lelah
Weatherby, LPN, and
Deborah
Wood,
RN.

Narcotics
are stolen
Middleport pollee are investigating two breaking and
entering incidents in the
communlty.
At the ViUage Pharmacy for the second lime in recent
weeks - a thief or thieves
stole some $740 worth of
narcotics from a cabinet. The
lock was broken off the
cabinet after entrance was
gained through the adjoining
quarters of Dr. Richard
Slack.
The second incident was
discovered when the King
Builders opened Monday.
About $10 in change was
taken from the register but
rolled money in the regi.lter
was overlooked. The BCI has
been called in for assistance
in both cases.

Physicians attending were L. was performed by Jean
D. Telle, M.D.; John Ridg- Nease, Lulabelle Hampton,
-way, DO; Sehm Blazewicz, Beulah Strauss, Martha Lou
M.D., and Rankin R. Pickens, Beegle, Joyce Hoback, Mace!
00.
Barton, Jeanette Lawrence,
The canteen was served by Freda Durham, Mildred
ladies of the Heath United Belzing, Margaret Eskew,
Methodtsl Church, Mrs. Jack ElOise White, Linda Hamm,
Bechtel, chairwoman.
Vernon Nease, Erma Roush,
Loading and unloading was Jean Braun, Ahce Struble,
done by volunteer Senior Dick Karr, Dorothy Will,
Citizens, Boy Scout Troop No . Trudv Andrews and Alma
249, Henry Cleland, Scout(Continued on page 8)
master and clerical work
'

Critique shows
excellent work
Good overall reports were
given when heads of participating units in last Thursday's mock tornad&lt;Hiisaster
met Monday at Holzer
Medical Center to discuss
problems and good points
brought out in the operation.
Representatives were from
agencies in Gallia, Meigs,
and Mason Counties which
took part.
Scott Lucas, administrator
of Veterans Memol'lal
Hospital, reported on the
activities in Meigs County:
"I was very pleased with
the drill," he said, noting that
it taok 22 minutes to receive
the first "victim" from the
time the alarm was sounded.
Wtthin one hour, 25 patients
were taken cal'e of and the ·an
clear signal was given.
Lucas said the only

(:.

.~

•

' ,

problem
at
Veterans
Memorial was that changing
victims from the carts in the
emergency vehicles was too
slow for the squads to return.
"Victims" m Meigs County
were in Middleport Park, the
Senior Citizens' Center, and
Royal Oak Park.
Lucas said that Meigs
County is "very fortunate,"
for it has so many volunteer
emergency squads which are
ready to go immediately.
Dick Grinstead of the
Mason County Ctvil Defense,
who coordinated the event in
Mason
County,
was
especially pleased with the
Mason County Emergency
Operating System which
included all phases of, communication. Citizens band_
radios and walkie-talkles(Contlnued 011 s-&amp;e I)

..

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