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'T''h ..ee mo ..e' added' *o
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centennial committee
Two persons have been
charged and warrants have
· been issued against three
others In connection with a
breaking and entering at
Kyger Creek High School.
Gallia Co unty sheriff 's
deputy Sid Vance said
Kenneth Eugene Sowards, 20,
Rt. 1, Gallipolis, and a 17year-old juvenile were taken
into custody Tuesday night on
charges of B&amp;E. Vance said
two adults and three
juveniles were involved.
Taken from the school's
audio-visual aid room were
two Sony tape recorders, a
microphone, and a lectern .
The intruders also entered

the school's athletic equipmen! room by using a football
helmet to lireak the glass. ·
Once inside, the room was
ransack ed and football
helmets, a lripod, and piece
of copper tubing were used to
break glass. There was ex'
tensive damage to the room.
Missing were
several
basketball jerseys. The
jerseys and one tape recorder
have been recovered..
Deputies are also continuing an investigation into
·the theft of a Gravely garden
lractor valued at $2,000 taken
Sunday night from the
property of George Hout on
Rt. 160.

Colby

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PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGED - Jeffery
Hall, Point Pleasant; Sabrina
Blankenship, Leon; Hattie
Roush, New Havven; Bonnie
Devault, Leon; Mrs. Jasper
Eden, Letart ; Mrs. Homer
Whittington , Point PleaS&amp;nt;
Glen Adkins, Gallipolis ;
Eldon Vanscoy, Point
Pleasant; Mrs . Delbert
Milam, Middleport ; Orin
Hanna, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Michael Edwards, daughter,
Point Pleasant ; Mrs. Carrie
Alexandria, Gallipols; Mrs.
Leon Thompson, Point
Pleasant; Ralph Spencer,
Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs. Clyde
Tucker, Leon ; Mrs. Alvin
Whittington, Buffalo ; Mrs.
William Litchfield, Point
Pleasant, and Homer Reed,
Point Pleasant.

(Continued from page 1)
said was involved in infiltrating Cuban agents onto
the Carribean island.
"Many would have applauded," Cline said, "if one
of these anti-Castro teams
had managed to bump off
Castro. "Mter all," he added,
"a 1,600-man invasion force
was sent in 1961 to destroy
Castro in an undeclared war
at the Bay of Pigs."
Cline served as CIA deputy
director from 1962 to 1966.
In dther developments:
- Senate com mittee
sources said staff members
.failed Tuesday to reach a
satisfactory agreement with
the White House staff for
turning
over
secret
documents of the National
Security Council relating to
assassinations and papers of
a White House Special Group
relating to cove rt actions of
the CIA.
- The
Senate
panel
Tuesday
heard
testimony
TONIGHT-THURS.
from John Roselli, a reputed
NOT!)PEN
underworld figure from the
JUNE 27.29
Chicago days of AI Capone.
Walt Disney's
He was asked about one
ESCAPE TO
alleged 1961 plot to poison
WITCH MOUNTAIN
Castro, his brother Raul, and
And Also
Cuban leader Che Guevara.
Walt Di sney 's
' Roselli apparently
CHIP AND DALE
FESTIVAL
cooperated with the com..............._ _ __. mittee . Chairman Frank
Church, D-Idaho, declined to
discuss the substance of his
account.
But
Church
MASON DRIVE-IN repeated
his claim the Senate
'' •
11 \V
~ 1
panel ·has hard evidence of
; , ( 1t &lt;~o11N1ql1th
aSSassination plots in which
the CIA has been involved.
TONJGH,Tihru FRIDAY
"! find it reprehensible,"
Cburch said , " that any
" TRIP WITH
agency of the United Slates
THE TEACHER"
should ever have engaged in
Plus
an assassination attempt
"POLICEWMMEN"
against the leader of a
country with which we had
peaceful relations."

MEIGS THEATRE

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20 ~ Th4i Daily Sentinel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Jtme 25 , 1975

1

293 to win $1,675.
Green, who ranked third In
money winning with $211,709
last year, was 32nd heading
Into the Western with $Ml,647
this year. And 23 of those with
larger earninga will be In the ;
Western field of 156 proli.
Most notable absentees
By ED SAINSBURY
287 in winning the Western at Butler and will play a third · were leading money winner
UP! Sports Writer
Butler a year ago. Medinah round today in the pro-am. Jack Nlcldaus and runnerup
OAKBROOK, lli. (UPI) carries a course rating of 75.3 ." That ought to be enough," Johnny Miller. Gene Uttler,
Hubert Green prefers to play and Butler 76.2.
he said.
who is seventh In earnings,
"a difficult golf course more
Green has played Butler
Green's best round in the Graham, and Pat Fitzsimons,
than an easy one," so for the · twice and makes no com- U.S. Open was a 68 on In the top 20, alao will be
second straight week he 'll get parison of the two courses. Saturday and it lifted him missing.
that chance in the Western
" It 's like comparing a into contention, ,(ive strokes
Thus Watson, Mahaffey,
Open.
man's wife," he said, "and behind pacesetter Frank Tom Weiskopf, who tied for
The 28,-year-old pro from you don't do that unless you Beard . But Sunilay, he second a year ago, and Lee
Binningham, Ala., was In want to fight or can run fast . sagged to a 78 and finished in Trevino, were leading
contention in the U.S. Open at
"This course has some a six-way tie for 18th place at favorites.
Medinah, Ill. , last week until tough holes, and the wind is
the final day and this week going to make a difference. H
his test will come on another it' s blowing like it was
long par 71 ·course, Butler Tuesday, it'll change · the
National.
course.
(Continued .from page 1)
The $200,000 Western Open
'.'The greens are soft and
will pay the winner $40,000, holding approaches, and Motors Corp. today began offering owners of 1975 Vega, Monza
equalling the U.S. Open prize. they're a little slower than and Panel Express models an "engine guarantee" of 60,000
Perhaps the winner's score they were at Medinah, but if miles for vehicles equipped with the 140 cubic inch forwill be higher than the three- the wind dries them out, cyclinder alumlnwn engine,
southern District, at 949-4854. overpar 287 at which Lou they'll get much faster. Most
The guarantee would awly to the 1975 models equipped
with
the engine and delivered on or after June 25, according to
Graham and John Mahaffey of the effect of the winds will
R,
&gt;ert
D. Lund, vice president of GM and general manager of
tied after 72 holes in the Open be on the greens, but tbey can
to set up an lft.hole playoff affect some tee shots and Chevrolet. Lund said the guarantee was offered to aaaure
WEED PAYS
which Graham won.
approaches, too. U anybody customers of the "quality and durability" of the engine.
The engine guarantee will cost a maximum of $48 at a rate
BERKELEY, Calif. (UP!)
Tom Watson equalled the can shoot four sub-par
of
$1
for each additional 1,000 miles of coverage remaining
- Stevven Weed, former
rounds, he ought to win."
beyond
the original 12,000 mile warranty up to the 60,000 mile
fiance of Patricia Hearst, has
Green practiced both
Frame
home
paid a freelance writer
Monday . and Tuesday at limit.
$15,000 in an out of court
settlement of a legal dispute taken by fire
over a book about the Hearst
LONG BO'ITOM - Fire
kidnaping. Weed originally destroyed a two-story frame
sued writer Roger Rapoport home owned by Don
for $450,000, charging the Meadows Tuesday morning
writer was sensationalizing a on County Road 31 in
book on which the two were Lebanan Township.
collaborating about the inThe Racine Fire Departcident . Rapoport coun- ment received the call at
tersued, charging Weed had 11 :02 a.m. and was assisted
breached the contract by by the Bashan and Chester
failing to pay the writer for · Depts. The fire, of un· work done.
determined origin, began in
the kitchen area. Losses
sustained were estimated at
$12,000 on the home and $3,000
on its contents. No one was
home at the time of the fire.

RN wanted by
two districts
for next tenn

Ashbr·o ok

opposmg
·busm"g ki·d s

~~t~:~~rfulfilled any of
its supposed goals," Ashbrook said in his weekly
newsletter. " It is ulso an
example of the federal
government forcing its own
view on local school districts
which have many differing
situations and problems.
"Perhaps more people in
this country are learning that
supposed federal solutions
sometimes
make
the
problems that they were
supposed to solve even worse.
"School busing was painted
by its advocates as a cure-aU
that was going to improve
both the quality and the scope
of education," Ashbrook said.
"As numerous cities can
testify, it as done neither.
Instead, it has resulted in
more problems in education .
Costs have continued to rise
and quality has gone down."

SWEEP GOES ON
AKRON, Ohio (UPI)
F;'ederal agents and sherif's
deputies late Tuesday were
continuing their grand sweep
of drug peddlers iri Swrunit,
Wayne and Portage counties.
Twenty-seven arrests have
been made and more could be
expected.

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HOOVER
CUSTOM
UPRIGHT
Regular '69.95
Sale Price

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BAKER
FURNITURE
Middleport ·
Ohio

News •• in Briefs

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

to Jefferson Co.
George Hargraves, the first
and only superintendent. that ·
the Meigs Loca l Scho ol
District has had, res igned
Wednesday night.
Hargraves came to Meig.s
Local School District July 4,
1966, to assume duties as
superintendent of the new
school district made up of the
school districts of Pomeroy
and Middleport exempted
village sc hools, Bedford,
Salisbury and the Northwestern District.
During his administration
the new high school at Rock
Springs was constructed and
occupied on April 13, 1970. A
junir high school was se t up in
buildings at Middleport.
Hargraves has been active in
community and civic affairs
as well as busy administering
the Meigs Local District.
Hargraves has accepted
the position of superintendent
of the Jeffe rson County Joint
Vocational School. The school
still under construction, will
open in September. The new

school is located a few miles
west of Steubenville and will
serve all distri cls in Jefferson
County .
Hargraves' contract in the
new school is for two years
with the first year's salary

being $23,000 and the second
year's $24,000 . The contract
signed Tuesday night calls
for Hargraves . to begin his
new assignment on August L
He will conclude his work in
the Meigs Local District the
last day in July.
Last week the Meigs Local
Board of Education which
was ca lled ·into special
session Wednesday night to
be informed of Hargraves'
res igna ti on, emp loye d
Charles Dowler, principal of
the B idw e ll - Porter
Eleme ntary School ir\ Gallia
County,
as
assis tant

superintendent in the district.
Hargraves had performed
the work of the superintendent and the assistant
superi ntendent sin ce the
death of Larry Morrison.
A member of the Trinity
Church
in
Pomeroy ,
Hargr aves serves on the
Stale Vocational Advisory
Committees for evaluation
and for planning . He has
served as a member of the
Stale Voca tional Advisory
CounciL He is a member of
the Board of Directors of the
Appalachia
Ed ucational
(Continued on page 10)

Rhodes
vetos

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THESE young people were some of the volunteers
who .pitched in to clean up and paint at the Middleport
park Wednesday following acts of vandalism there. Picnic

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VOL. XXVII

GEORGE HARGRAVES

NO. 52

Ford will be
in Cincinnati
on July third
CINCINNATI (UP II President Ford will be in
Cincinnati July 3 to participate in a " White House
conference on dom estic
Presidential aide confirmed here today . .
Wllliam J. Baroody Jr.,
assistant to the President
for public liaison, also said
Ford will attend th e
dedication of a new en·
vironmental r,esearch
center here at noon th e
same day. After his appearances here, the
President is scheduled to
fly to Cleveland the
evening of July 3 to address
a Cuy ahoga ''County
Republican fund raising
dinner.

given approval

Parade

The Meigs County Commissioners approved the pia t
of . Clair-Mar Estates, a
subdivision proposed for
Rutland Township in their
regular meeting Tuesda y
morning.
The commissioners are
also checking prices of air
co nditioners following a
request by Robert Bowen,
county school superintendent, for air conditioning
at the Board of Education's
office . In other action, the
board acted on routine
business.

MUSEUM OPENS
The J»eigs County Museum
will be o'Pen throughout the
week to continue the Heritage
Sunday display from Regatta
Weekend.
A special attraction of· this .
year's show featured wedding gowns through the
decades. Hours will be
Thursday and Friday evvenings from 7:30 until 9 and
Saturday and Sunday afternoons from 2 to 4 p. m. Tbe
mlJ!Ieum is located on Butternut Ave., POmeroy.

Reg. $28900, ·7-Piece Set, 42" Round
Table with 2-12" Leaves,. 6 Side Chairs

Sale s239

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Weather

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Reg. $19800, 5-Piece Set, 36" Round
Table With 1-12" Leaf, 4 Side Chairs

As tempera lures climbed well above the. 90 degree
mark, area children dipped into tbe cooling waters of

::::

FumHure Depa~ment, Third Floor

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
SUMMER

Over ~00 Pairs Ladies'
·DR~SS SHOES .&amp; SANDALS
to

1250

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1·-----~~------·-----------~-~--··-· ---------

1 Group Ladies' Shoes

Dress &amp; Sandals
'
White and Colors
PR.
Reg. 9.99 to 20.9,9
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,C hapman's Shoes

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ROME - THE HEAD OF THE U. N. FOOD and
Agricultural Organization says 500 million persons "live In the
constant grip of hunger and malnutrition" around the world.
Addeke Boerma, the Dutch-born director general of FAO, said
there's little hope of the world's hungry feeding themselves
despite international efforts.
"To speak frankly, it is dear that such a transformation
cannot be brought about within the next decade," he said
Wednesday at ihe first meeting of the newly formed World
Food Council. He said the world's major grain-growing
countries will have to provide "a considerable increase in food
aid" over the next 10 years to avertwidespread famine.
NEW DELHI -_ PRIME MINISTER INDIRA Gandhi
declared a state of emergency in india today and ordered a
roundup of opposition'leaders In a crackdown against critics.
In a nationwide radio addreSs, the prime minister accused
oppastion political parties of a "widespread conspiracy" that
threatened the nation's internal security .
Political sources said polife in New Delhi arrested about
20 politicians and newspaper publishers, including popular
opposition leader Jayakprash Narayan, an advocate Of
peaceful revolution. Narayan's arrest came hours after he told
a rally of 10,000 persons that Mrs. Gandhi should resign
becaiise of ber conviction on charges of campaign corruption.

SALE STARTS THURSDAY MORNING

. 769

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By United Press International
COLUMBUS - HOUSE-APPROVED LEGISLATION
authorizing employes of local school boards to serve in the
state legislature was passed by the Ohio Senate 29 to 2 Wednesday and sent to Gov. James A. Rhodes .
The bill would permit state Sen. Oakley C. Collins, RIronton, to become superintendent of Lawrence County schools
at an annual salary of $21,000. Most debate over the. bill centered around that issue. "This is a blatant conflict of interest,"
Sen. Thomas A. Van Meter, R-Ashland, said. He pointed out
that Collins would be voting on school legislation affecting his
district.
·

Main Store, Annex and Warehouse Open Thursday 9:30 to 5

MISS AMERICA
CONNIES
Reg. 9.99 to 19.99

Middleport pool. This shows the number of swimmers at
the pool just minutes after it opened Wednesday.

. r;v;=;;,;===:=·='=' =·~·=·=·= =:··=i·;=:=:=·n;i;f;~\ Fo~d .would

Sale s159oo .

COLUMBUS -RURAL COUNTIES CONTINUED in .May

.1 GROUP LADIES'

= 1h

to record tbe highest unemployment rates In Ohio with Adams
County showing 19.5 per cent of the civllian labor force
un$1ployed compared with the statew'ide average of 8.3 per
cent, It was announced today.
The Ohio Bureau Of Employment Services said other rural
counties with high' uriemp!Qyment tales included Scioto, 15. 7.;
Hocking ~5.1; Knox, 14.8; Union 12.4; Pike, 12.2; Portage, 12.3
and BuUer, 12.
Other southeastern Ohio counties and their rates were
Athens, 6.5; Fairfield, 7.5; Gallia, 9.2; Jackson 9.4; Lawrence,
.,
(Continued on page lO)

PRICE

MAIN STRIIT
POMEROY,
. OHIO '

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Cloudy tonight and Friday ,
chance of showers. Highs
Friday mid 80s, and lows
tonight in
mid
60s .
Probability of rain 40 per cent
today, tonight and Friday .

·use nukes

By HELEN THOMAS
Kennedy had declared: "Our
UPI White House Reporter
arms will never be used to
W~HINGTON (UPI). strike the first blow in any
Prestdent Ford has dechned attack."
to rule out first use.of nuclear
The " military p os tur e ~ ·
weapons by the Umted States statements in which the
in a future conflict.
Pentagon each year asks
He told reporters that a Congress for its budget have
news conference m 91-{iegree for years described the U.S.
heat on the White House lawn arsenal of strategic nuclear
Wednesday was not the place weapons - missiles based on
to say ~hether ~e United land and in submarines, and
States mtght be ftrst to use long-range bombers - as
etther long-range strategic weapons of retaliation, and
nuclear weapons or so-called therefore of deterrence .
tactical nuclear weapons,
However, past adrninistrawhich are stored m Europe lions and the current defense
and South Korea.
secretary,
Jaines
R.
The President was more Schlesinger, have made clear
willing to discuaa domestic · that tactical nuclear weapons
problems:
might be used in response to
-:-He said Americans may massive nonnuclear attacks
have to suffer high unem- in either Europe or Korea.
ployment "for a short period
Ford left U.S. policy on
of time" to avoid another
round of inflation.
- He declared that a
threatened $2 to $4 a barre.! oil
price increase by producing
na lions next fall would be
"very disruptive and totally
unacceptable."
WASHINGTON, D. C. - In
- He said he would cona
letter
to U. S. Rep , Clarence
sider recommending an
Miller,
the Chairman of the
extension to 1976 of the tax
In
terstate
Commerce
cut for Americans if the
economy isn't moving, if the · Commission has said that
. current tax cut appears to be "an oral hearing will be held
working and if the ,lleflcit can locally in the near future " on
the C&amp;o plan to abandon
be kept in bounds.
In 1961, President John F. approximately 83 miles of
track servin g Hocking,
-Vinton, Gallia and Meigs
.':::::;:: :::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::;:::::::;:;· Counties .
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
The let ter from ICC
Saturday through Chairman George Stafford
Monday, chance of showers was in response to Miller's
Saturday and Sunday and formal protest of the line
fair Monday. Highs will be
which serves 18 rail stations
in the 60s and lows will be and commun ities in the four
in th'e 60s.
• • county area. ·
··
Miller's letter of April 30 to
.:: :':':·:':·:·:·:=:~: ':::::::;:::;:::: :::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·
the ICC underscvred the

both strategic and tactical
weapons unclear.
"ldon'tthinkitisappropriate for me to discuss in a
press conference what our
utilization will be of our
tactical
or
strategic
weapons," he said. " .. .!don't
believe under these circumstances that I should
discuss how when or what
kind of we~pons should be
used."
Asked specifically whether
he would order use of tactical
nuclear weapons if North
Korea attacked South Korea,
Ford said: "I am not either
confirming it or denying it."
Military forces will be used,
he said as national interest

warran~.

Fred Harris, former Ok(Continued on page 10)

Sound-off promised on

· t
C&amp;O rail aband0fiffiefi
importance of the line to local
economic growth and pointed
out the severe problems
which would arise if the
abandonment were permitted
in light of the possible
abandonment of local Penn
Central lines under the
Regional Rail Reorganization
Act.
· ICC ha s told Miller that iIs
environmental impact study
on the matter bas been
compl eted
with
"no
signifi cant impact" · noted.
The ICC review process now
moves· to a public hearing .
Miller has asked the ICC to
give local rail users adequate
lead time in announ cing. a
hea rin~ date.

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WASHINGTON (UP!) The government's index of
leading economic indicators
released today r~se in May
for the thtrd st ratght month,
virtually assuring that the 18month long recession has
ended.
At no time since World War
II has a three-month rise in
this closely watched index
failed to signal an end to bad
Urnes and a return to
economic prosperity.
In May, the index rose 2.1
per cent following increases
of 3 per cent and 1.1 per cent
in April and March.
The upturn ended a slump
in the index that began in
mid-1913, several months

before the economy entered
the worst of the six post-war
recessions.
Through the years, shifts in
the index has foreshadowed
similar movement in the
overall economy.
This spring, the Commerce
Department issued a revised
formai to eliminate the
distorting effects of inflation.
The redesigned index, when
applied to past business
cycles, has had a perfect
record of forecasting when a
recession is about to end.
The index is made up of 12
sensitive indicators from
various sectors of the
economy. Figures for 10 were
available for the May report

and eight of these moved up ,
the government said.
Those increasing were
building permits, new orders
for manufacturing and
co nsumer products and
materials, the money supply,
stock prices, contractors
orders for plant and equipmen!, changes in wholesale
commodity prices, change in
total liquid assets and
delivery performance by
vendors.
Two other indicators - tbe
length of the average workweek for blue collar
production workers and the
employment layo()ff rate in
manufacturing industries were unchanged from April.

Oil hit by law suits
By DONALD B. THACKREY
SAN FRANCISCO (U P!) The State of California wants
oil companies in the oil
business and gasoline compani,es selling gasoline.
The
state
a ttorney
general's office Wednesday
filed a multimilliono{iollar
antitrust damage suit against
11 major oil companies that
produce about half the
nation's gasoline.
In addition to unspecified
treble damages for the slate

and all its political subdivisions, the suit asks that the
companies be ordered to
divest themselves of their
interest in crude oil
production.
" We want to see free
market forces u;x;rate," said
Michael I. Spiegel, one of the
deputy attorneys general who
filed the suit in federal
district court. "Let the people
who drill the wells sell to
whomever they want and let
those who do the refining sell

the final product."
" The present system
doesn't pennit free market
forces to operate," he added .
Named in the suit were:
Standard Oil Company of
California, Texaco Inc.,
Union Oil Company of
California , Atlantic Richfield , Continental Douglas
Oil, Exxon, Getty Oil, Gulf
Dil, Mobil Oil Company of
(Continued on page 10)

Hole-in -one

Presbyter ·Evens

contest set

to speak Sunday

on July 28

The Rev . Hugh Bean
Evans, executive presbyter
of the Presbytery of Scioto
Valley, wi ll be guest speaker
at the !20th anniversary
celebration at the Middleport
Presbyterian Church Sunday,
June 29 at 10: 30 a.m.
Rev. Evans, a native of
Ohio, assumed his present
position Jurie I, 1974. after
servi ng five years · as
executive secretary of the
Ge neral Assembly's
Department of Ministerial
Relations . In that position he ·
served ministers and churches
of
the
United
Presbyterian Church in the
U.S.. A. by providi ng information for use in assisting
chur ches ~.electi ng and
and
calling ministers
ministers seeking relocation.
Rev.. Evans, born in
Gallipolis, grew up in Dayton.
He attended Prince ton
Un iversity and Prince ton
Theological Seminary, and
was ordained to the Christian
Ministry by the Presbytery of
Dayton. He served the Second ·
Presbyterian Church of
Philadelphia, Pa . five .years
before being called as pastor
of the Seventh Presbyteriar.

REV. HUGH EVANS
Church in Cincinnati wher£
he served nearly 23 years.
In Cincinnati, Rev. Evan~
was active in church and
community life, and since
comi ng to Colwnbus ha.s been
a part of the ministry of the
national church. He lives in
Worthington. He is married
and . the fa ther of three
children .

The an nual hole -in-one
contest wil be held the week
· of July 28, it was announced
when the Lions Club met
Wednesday at noon at the
Meigs Inn. Ralph Graves,
committee member, reported
on the club's annual fund
raising golfing contest.
Fred Blaettnar spoke to the
cluh about the progress of the
community and pointed out
obstacles confronting the
area, and its advantages.
Mr. Blaettnar displayed
dozens of pictures of floods Of
many years and Of the Meigs
Mines. On the theme,.
"Progress " he maintained
the county's economic future
is brightened by the impact of
the mines on the area. His
pictures included coal
moving on the beltiines to the
Gavin plant, of the , Sporn
Plant, and many scenes at
the coal mining operations.
Guests were Mall Tawney
of Gallipolis with member
Karl Krautter, and ·Dan
·StOdola, Mason, and Den
Berendsen, Green Bay ,
Wise., with member Paul
Stodola . Lou Osborne
'president, presided over th~
meeting.

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enttne

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Clair-Mar plat

COLUMBUS (UP! ) -A bill
to place an estimated 1,000
state employes, many of
them Democrats, under the
protection of classified ccivil
service, was vetoed Tuesday
by Gov. James A. Rhodes.
Rhodes, in a veto message,
(Continued from page I)
called the bill "a blatant
at the junior high.
attempt to give a small group
Pete Simpson , parade of state employes the protectchairman, is welcoming lion of certified civil service
entries into the parade. with no regard for their
Entries are coming In well, qualifications for
the
he reported, but more are
positions they occupy.
needed. Simpson is to be
"Many of those receiving
advised by phone, 949-4292, or
the special benefit provided
by writing Box 444 at Racine
by the bill would probably not
of participannts. All ar~
hold their present positions if
welcome.
required to take competitive
examinations ,"
said
Rhodes.
Authored ·by state Rep.
John D. Thompson Jr., DCleveland, the measure
cleared the legislature along
partisan lines. Democrats
favored it, and they can
override Rhodes' veto with a
two-thirds vote in each
chamber.
Democrats have a twothirds majority in the Senate
but fall one vote short in tbe
House.
Certain employes of the
state Lottery Commission,
Industrial Commission
.
'
Public Utilities Commission,
Industrial
Relations
Department and state
university library employes
would be placed under classified civil service by the
legislation.
Classified civil .service requires that an employe
qualify . through
an
examination score. It also
means special provisions and
rights for
promotion,
suspension, demotion, firing
and layoffs.
·
Rhodes said tbe bill would
"disregard both .the purpose
and spirit of the civil service
system" by skirting requirements for competitive
examination and
classification of skills and
locking current employes into
jobs "for which thousands of
other state employes have
been required to take competitive examinations to
prove their qualifications."
Republican legislators had
maintained the bill would
. "create a Gilligan government in exile" and be an
"unprecedented padding of
the public payroll."
Democrats said the bill
would put political appointees
"under civil service where
.we can get some control over
their political activities and
get them to be loyal to this
state rather tban to an:,o
political party."

•

THURSDAY, JUN~ 26, 1975

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

and economic affairs," a

os·rh ill

tables which had been carved up were restained and the
shelters painted. J. J . Cremeans, police chief, provided
refreshments for the young workers.

Devoted To The lntere.&lt;&gt;ts of The Meig.o;-Masnn Area

Sale! Maple Dinettes

HOOVER
SPECIAL BUY
,I'

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Hubert Green pr~fers
tough golf-- course

PETE
Pete WRONG
Simpson,
not Pete
'
Sisson, is heading lhe ,annual
.July 4th parade which is
being· revived in Racine this
year, All types of entries are
welcome anct invited, Simpson said . Anyone wishing to
The Eastern and Southern
participa te is asked to call Local School Districts are
Simpson at 949-4292 or write seeking the services of a
him at P.O. Box 444 in registered nurse for the nex t
Racine.
school year.
During the past sc hool
year. the two districts and the
Meigs Local School District
shared in the services of a
school nurse. However, the
Meigs Local District will
0
employ a full time nurse next
term. Eastern and Southern
. will combine to employ a
nurse who will divide her
lime between the tw o
WASHINGTON (UP!) _ districts. .
..
.
F
db .
f ho 1 hi!
Any regtstered nurse morce .,. usmg 0 sc 0 . c · teresled in the position may
dren ts one other liber~l apply by calling John Riebel,
pana~ea that has shown m superintendent of the Eastern
practtce to be worthless," District, 9115-4292, or Bobby
Rep. John Ashbrook, R..Ohio , Ord, superintendent of the

'

�2- The Daily Sentmel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Thw-sday June 26 19 o

3 - The Da1ly Sentmel Middleport Pomeroy 0 ThUI sday June 2ti 19754

Questions

TOM TIEDE

•

and answers

1 sor_I~L -·

By Tom Tiede
WASHINGTON - At the
time of hill appmntment to the
preSidency there were those
who hebeved Jerry Ford was
Richard N1xon s last d1rty
trick on Amenca When he
traveled to Japan 10
November as example the
new chief showed up at a
•tate dmner weanng
gad
- an ascot wmged collar and
trousers three mches up his
ankles Protocol people sa1d
they could only assume his
ta1lor was a former football
coach from the Umvers1ty of
M1ch1gan
Thmgs change mcludmg
people and att tudes Nelson
Rockefeller was saymg the
other day that one of the best
unreported stones
10
Wash10gton 1s how th1s
president has grown m of
f1ce Qwte r ght No longer
IS Ford the Emmett Kelly of
the Wh1te House tent far
from 1t he has taken charge
of hiS amazmg fate to an
extent even h1s cntics agree
IS good for the nahon
Ford IS not yet totally
comfortable behmd the seal
of the b1g eagle He was
overheard recently say ng
thiS to an a1de about Henry
Kissmger How many tmnes
do I have to tell you he IS not
the president - I am the
president Yet there IS no
longer really an&gt; doubt of
that Ford has orgamzed
himself and h1s staff - there
are more than 500 people on
the Immediate Ford staff to proJect an orgamzatwnal
a1r of confidence supremacy
and soph1sticat10n
The sophiSticatiOn may be
the least strong of these
vrrtues 1f perhaps somewhat
on pw-pose We don t want
to appear too smooth says a
Wh1te House staffer that s
not the PreSidents style If I
can speak for myself and not
for hun I have the 1m
preSSion we are trymg to
convey the dea we are
capable but human We
admit we make mistakes not too many however
The mistakes of the Ford
admmJStratwn
at least

NOTICE
Pursuan o Sec t on 307 0 of
he Oh o Rev sed Code b ds
w be ece ved by he Board

o

County Comm ss oners of

Me gs

Coun y

Pomeroy

Oh o

Oh o

un

at

9 00

0 co c k A M on he lOth day
o u y 97 5 fo he sa eo he
o l ow ng
desc bed
eal
esta e to w t
S ua ed
n
Sa sb ury
Townsh p
Me gs County
Oh o
Commenc ng a
he
n e sec on of he cen e of
M be ry Avenue and
he
cen er of Hasp a Dr ve
hence so uth 6 d eg ees 48
wes 98 fee a ong cente of
d veway o he eas
ne o
hosj)Tf'li
g ounds
thence
sou h 22 deg ees 2 eas
230
tee a ong eas
ne o an ron
p n h e ue po n of beg nn ng
fo
h s descr bed parcel a
ea es a e thenc e con nu ng
so h 22 deg ees 2 cast 120
~
fee
henc e nor h 67 deg ees
48
eas
200 tee
thence
nor h 22 deg ees 2 west 120
feet o the center o Mu be v
Avenue
hen ce sou h 67
degree s .&lt;18 wes
200 fee
o
he p ace of beg nn ng co n
tan ng 55 a c e mo e or ess
-acco d ng o su vey o
une 6
975 by Wes ey A
Bueh
Reg s e ed Su veyo Oh o No
5965
h a Cham be s
Ce k
Bo a d of Cou y
Com m ss one s of
Me gs Co unty

Ma

6

2

9 26

7 3 4

c

ORO NANCE NO 1029 75
An Ordnance to Repeat Or
d nance No 713 and Amend
Sect on No 705 01' of Chapter
705 ol the Cod f ed Ord nances
of the v age of M ddlpoert
Be
orda ned by t he
Counc
of
he V age o
M dd epo
as o o~s
Sec
T ha Ordnance No
7 3 s hereby repea ed
sec 1 Tha Sec on 705 0
ot Chapte 705 of he Cod fed
Ord nanc es of he V age of
M ddleport be amend ed
o
ead as tot ows
No owner
occupaht o
essee of any oo m o p ace of
bus ness
n
he V age
n
wh ch he play ng of b
a ds
o
poo
s perm ed sha
pe m t the p ay ng of any
game of b I a ds o
poo
except dur ng the fo
w ng
hours
Sunday
00 PM
unt
0 00 PM
Sa urdavs 5 30 A M unt
2 00 P M
All other days s 30 A. M

unt

11

oo P

M

Sec
I
The prov sons of
th s sect on sh a no be ap
pi cab e to any oom o pla ce
of bus ness at wh ch btt_e o
n ox cat ng I quo s so'd

those of an obviOus nature
hav e n fact fallen off
considerably smce the early
days of bumbling and fun
bl ng
Impr oper staff
structunng and shoddy
commumca l10ns early on
made 1t not only poss ble but
likely that Ford could mv1te a
Texas buSinessman to the
Wh1te House for an
economics dtscusswn never
scheduled and w1sh Rep
Leon or Sulhvan of M1ssow- a
happy rehrement even
though she was not retirmg
W1th h s sh1p more secure
Ford s
gaffs
have
d1m1mshed He no longer
vetoes
leg1slat on
n
d1scnmmately for one thmg
- congressiOnal Republican
leaders have dnven home to
the President the political
value of choosmg vetos that
have the best chance of bemg
sus tamed
Ford s handling of
congressiOnal affairs ac
tually accounts m large part
for hiS evolutwn m office A
child of the House hmnseU as
a fnend n that body says
he knows Congress makes a
conven ent scapegoat
Unable to force h1s own
legis lative 11 11l .QJ1 the
members - he IS not that
strong a president yet- Ford
sees to 11 that they not he be
blamed for do nothmgness
Congress cooperates m
th1s often enough by dmng
nothmg but Ford presses the
pomt by force of h1s middle
Amenca personality In less
than a year m office the
President has sold the nation
the 1dea that the domestic
policy of Congress IS to spend
and 1ts foreign policy IS to
surrender all the while h1s
own stock w1th countrymen
has been nsmg
That stock s now 51 per
cent positive accordmg to
recent opmwn poll Largely
because many Amencans
believe Ford to be although
dull as a M1ch1gan stump a
common
sense
guy
Mayaguez Vetos of b1g
spendmg bills Solid If he has
Image drawbacks says
political smenhst James

PUBL C NOT CE
Not ce ol Hear ng
of Budget of
M dd epo t Oh o
No ce she a b'r9J,.ven hat on
he t1 h day of Ju y 1975 at
JO P M a Pub c Hea ng
w
be he d on he budge
prepar ed by he V age of
M dd eport Me g s Coun y
Oh o o th e next succeed ng
F s a yea
end ng Decem be
3
976
Sun h hear ng w
be he d
a he v age 1-i a a /VI d
d epa f Oh o
Gene G a e C e k
v age of M dd epa
Oh o
6 26 1

ORDINANCE NO 1031 75
An 0 d nance to Stipulate the
Pr ces for
Open ng and
cos ng of Graves
Sale of
Lots w th Perpetual Care and
Cha ges for Ho day Bur a s
Be
orda ned by
he
Counc
o
he V lage o
M dd epo t as fo ows
Sec
That he p ce o
open ng and c os ng of g aves
n he v age Cemeter es w
be as to ows

•

p~y our family doctor who
11ns treatmg her can I apply
lor the Medicare medical
msurance payment•
A When someone who has
MediCare d es specml rules
apply to the medical n
surance payment If your
doctor accepts assignment
Medicare will pay h1m If he
won t accept ass gnment the
payment can be made to
whoever pays the bill You
w1ll need to f1le two forms and
proof of payment The forms
are Request for Med care
Payment and Statement
Regarding
Medicare
Payment for Medical Ser
v1ces to Deceased Pahent
You can get both at any soc1al
secunty office

N ew booKs added ecen y
o h e s.he ves of he Me gs
ackson v n on
Coun es
Bookmob e n ude
L o ayn e
Ha
y
The
Memo y Book
by H a ry
Lo a y e and e y Lucas
C v rr e
Pub
a on s
BMW
Se v ce Repa
Handbo ok
50 0 750
cc
mota cy e w n s
Bu e
G eo ge
D
P ay g ounds
The
Ad
m n s a on and Opera on
A brah am
S
B u ack
Popu a Pays to c ass oom
Read g
Fa m e
Ph
p
ose
Mo he
Was a Love y
Beas
We s Rosema y
Non e of
h e Above
FICT ON
Beckman Gunne
Ad
m ss on o the Feas
Benne
J ay
The
Dang ng w tn ess
Ca dwe
Tay o
Go y
and he
g h n ng
Caswe
H e en R
N eve
Wed an 0 d Man
Cornwe
D av d
ohn M
Tn ge
Tao
So d e

Spy

Defoe
Dan e
Mo
F a der an Au hor a ve
Tex
Ba kgrounds and
ou es c
c sm
Fo ma n
ames 0
Th e
L fe and Death of Ye ow
B d
Fo sy h F ede ck
The
Dogs of Wa
Gardne
E e S an ev
h e Case of he Phan om
Fa un c
Gart e d
B an Wynne
The Thrcepe son s Hun
G eene Bet e
Ph p Ha
ke s Me
Reckon Maybe
Ha
s
T ho ma s
Back
Sunday
H e e Joseph
Some h ng
Happened
Ho sk ns
Robe
The
Sh atte ed P eep e
Kazan
E a
The U n
de s udy
Logan
ane
T he V ery
Nea es R oom
McE oy
L ee
Joe
Peppe
Maye
M e rc e
F og
Goes o D nne
M che ne
ames A be t
Ce e n a
Peck
Robe
N ew on
M
e s Boy
Rubn
Haod
The

P

a e

Trach enberg
ngc
So
s ow he Dawn ng
T yon
Thoma s
Lady

One of 10
Americans
tensed up

"' G£T YOUR MAN wmtl

Want Ad
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!OCIA' '&gt;1_~..-'_"_'.r&gt;tlll . IICI filii ()ll'f~

Q I ve heard that both
parts of Medicare cover
home health care Is the
coverage the same under
both parts
A In general MediCare s
hospital msurance can r•Y
for home health care after
you have been m a pal
llc1patmg hospital for at least
3 days n a row Under
Medicare s medical m
surancc you don t have to
have a 3-&lt;lay stay m a hospital
to get home health care But
under each part home health
care IS covered only 1f certam
cond1hons are met Your
Medicare Handbook explams
home health care m detail If
you don t have a handbook
you can get one at any social
secunty office

1
1
1

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1

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Letters of opinion are welcomed Tbey should be
less thWI300 W9rds long (or be subject to reduction by
the editor~ and must be s1gned with tbe signee s ad
dress Names may be withheld upon JRibllcaUoo
However on request names will be disclosed Letters
should be In good taste addressing issues not per
sonalitles

£l

l
.Q~J..Y:~~
lI ••• ?Jtt~ Ul.UlrL:
I

By FRED DOWN
UP! Sports Writer
Greg Luzmski has muscles
everywhere but m h1s headhe knows the All-Star voting
by the fans IS JUst a
populanty contest
At the same tune the 6foot 1 225-pound outfielder
who IS hitting 304 w1th 17
homers and 56 runs batted m
for the Philadelphia Phill1es
adm1ts deep down every
player wants to get mto an
All-Star game and a World
Senes He leads the league
m homers and 1s second m
RBI
LuziiiSk ranks 12th m the
votmg for National League
outfielders and 1sn t likely to
make the squad unless there
IS a mass1ve shift m the
votmg pattern But he could
get h1s Wish to play m a World
Ser1es because the Ph1ls are
red-hot and lookmg stronger
every day

.

Don't blame the farmer

~--------------- --- ---------1

:

ATLANTA (UPI) - About
23
mJilion AmeriCans have
Boxes vaults
$25 00
nfant 28 x5 0
h1gh blood pressure or
Baby 30 x60
30 00
hypertension the preJ;Ident of
35 00
Ch d 30 x 67
65 00 $65 00 the
You h 36 x82
Amencan
Heart
S anda d
$75 00 175 00 Association S81d Wednesday
40 K96
Ove s ze
but most aren t aware of thell'
42 x98
S80 oo sao oo
conditwn
Sec
Tha
al ho day
bu as be S10 00 ex ra and
Speakmg to the 60th annual
h a any bu a s after 3 00 P
K1wan1s
Intematinal Conven
M be S 00 extra
Sec
Th a he o s n the ton Dr Elliot Rapaport sa1d
R ve v ew
Cemetery
be
one out of 10 Americans
p ced a
S2AO 00 ha
lot s
S 75 00 both o wh ch w
have high blood pressw-e
nc ude PERPETUAL CARE
That s a large number of
That the ots n the M d
Cemetery be people And half of those
d e po t H
p c ed a1 $175 00 ha f o s at
$ 40 00 both of wh ch w I don t know they have It Of
n c ude PERPETUAL CARE
the half who know half of
Sec IV Tha
he sum Of
s 00 00 de ved f om he sa e those don t rece1ve adequate
o each ot be p aced n the treatment he sa1d
PERPETUAL CARE TRUST
Rapaport sa1d the disease
FU ND and used for th s
has no symptons causes no
pu po se on y
Sec V Corner Stones a e real complamts and the only
p ced at the current p ce
ate and PERPETUAL CARE way to detect It 18 by havmg
MARKERS for each ceme e y blood pressure taken
a e pr cec:t a .,.he cu ren pr ce
He sa1d tbe disease can be
a e
Sec v
The Yeary Lot overcome through treabnent
Ca e sha be $8 00 per year
Sec VI
All 0 d nances n w1th a Wide array of effective
on c w th th s 0 d nance drugs now available
a e he eby epealed
Sec VIII Th s 0 d na n ce
Blood pressure checks con
sha
take effec and be n dueled on 4 967 delegates and
for ce from and af e June 9
975
guests attendmg the con
Passed the 9th day of June vent10n by the AHA turned up
95
524 persons w1th hyper
A es Gene Grate c erk
M L Ke y
tension
P es den of Counc
3 2t c
Of the 524 Rapaport sa1d
6 26
f1ve had such extremely high
blood pressure readmgs that
RE FOR SALE
NEW HOME 1
ac;res
3 they were taken to hospitals
Bedrooms
baths
for treatment
Sun deck Phone 992 7190
6 26 6tc

Sec IV Any es ab shmenl
wh ch v o ates th s Ord nance
shall be f ned not less than
$50 00 for ea c h hour of
vola on
Sec V Th s 0 d nance shall
take effect and be n to ce
trom and after June 23 1975
Passed the 23 d day of June
1975
FOR SALE
Attest Gene Grat Cle k
1974 HOND A Es nore MT
M L Kelly
25 $&lt;150 Phone 992 7211
Pres dent of Counc
6 26 3 c
6 26 1 3 2tc

Q My mother recently d1ed
at 69 after a long illness If I

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&lt;(Ill

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New books
at Bookmobile

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[

Phils rally, edge Pirates, 7-6

Editorial comment,
opinion, features

~~
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The growth of a president
Da' 1(1 Barber they are not
rooted m h s character
Here 1s a man so unassummg
he once got up at a rally to tell
the same bad JOke that was
told by the man who m
traduced ~1m Yet accord ng
to a1de Robert Hartman
when Ford was mformed ot
the N1xon enemy list he sa1d
m Lm colnesque language
that Any man 11 ho can t
keep h1senem1es m h1s head
has too many enenues
It may be,_ of cow-se that
those who perce ve a gro11 th
m Jerry Ford the President
are overly opbm st c that
any add! t on to zero IS
nollceable but not necessar ly
s1gn f1can t But at the least
and
md1sputably
the
Presiden t by accident has
handled himself well and
proven
agam
that
pedestrl8msm s often 1ts o11n
d gmty

! -~-n\~tll- 11

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1he other szde of Australm
ED NOTE Wendy J Carper taught (and stil11s teaching)
m Australia m close association w1th Teresa Casc1 who has
returned to the U S her tour ended The letter that follows IS
m rebuttal to statements attributed to MISS Casc1 10 a recent
mterv1ew published m The Dally Sentinel
As w1th politics one must be able to hear both s1des of the
story
This IS not my story because I have checked around at
other schools as well as the two schools that I have taught m
before making comments to be put m the paper
You could not compare a school m Europe w1th those m
America because there are sw-e to be differences Australia
has JUSt started to get 1ts educational system movmg m the last
few years But you could easily find backward schools m tbe
states Some schools JUSt have more money to put to use
In Australia they feel that the teacher should be able to
choose h1s or her own subJect and topics You are g1ven a well
wntten-out cumculum all you have to do IS find a book on that
subJect and decide what aspect you want to deal w1th The
schools libranes have plenty of books for the teachers to use
as reference although most teacha:ll have !herr own
I really can t dJSagree With Teresa Casc1 when she sa1d
that her supervisor stressed neatness more than the work
done But I can say that 1sn t true ofall schools JUSt because 1t
mJght be at that particular school The teachers stress neat
ness but even mote so the work done Any teacher w1ll tell
you that
Australia has been g1ven millions of dollars to be put mto
educatiOn At my school alone there are 22 class rooms each
w1th two teachers sharmg an overhead proJector some even
have therr own Each teacher has a rad1o to listen to
educational broadcasts There IS a televiSIOn set shared be
tween classrooms for educational shows In the library tbe
librarian at my school has taped books for the children to listen
to while followmg along w1th !herr book ThiS set enables SIX
children to listen at one time
Each school m the surrounding area (and I have asked)
has received a record player cassette player together as one
un1t valued at $1 200
I think no one thmks I leave my students out m the ram
The teachers take care of !herr own students m some schools
or like at my school the older students come m each classroom
and one teacher looks after them
There are plenty of mcknames for different thmgs m
Australia but there are In America too JUSt as there are
different accents m different parts of the country
Every Friday afternoon for an hour (only) IS mstructed
sport This IS to ensure that the students are gettmg therr
phySical education wh1ch 1s reqwred (an hour a week) even m
the states
Most of the students m the subw-bs of Sydney are from
South Amenca and vanous countries of Europe ThiS tends to
make It difficult for the teacher but 10 the states when the
people were mJgrating from Ew-ope the teachers had the
same problems
Granted the roads are bad m New South Wales but they
don t have that much money to put mto them and most of the
people use the trains If most of the people use the tram you
can see how difficult 1! would be to pass legiSlation to get more
money for better roads Even so a tnp mto town would never
take 1'h hours That would happen only if you stopped a couple
of tunes along the way
As for seemg the SJghts of Australia I have been to
Melbourne to VISit my Uncle Robert and Uncle Roy Hum
phreys and Uncle Less and Dawn Smnpofendorfer and I
VISited my grandfather who I hadn t seen since 1954
Durmg the vanous holidays smce I have been here I
VISited Tasmama and saw the Hobert Br1dge which fell mto
the Derwent River on January 5 1975 Port Arthur a rum of
where they kept priSOners from years gone by the gaol (the
]all) where they put prisoners m small rooms plus the oldest
br1dge m Australia at Richmond
Durmg the weekends my roommates and I VISited the
Jenolan Caves Hunter Valley (known for 1ts wme) and Blue
Mountams famous for liB rock formation named The Three
Sisters
While m BriSbane my roommate Law-ene ~ugent (from
California) and I stayed With my mother s fr1end Joy Holmes
who told us exacUy where to go and what were the best places
to see We were able to take m several tours which mcluded a
pmeapple plantation a sugar cane plant a koala park and
zoo Durmg the last holidays m May I viSited Canberra capital
of Australia
Durmg my stay here I met MIChael Halar who has
mJgrated from YugoslaVIa Since we were both foreign to thiS
country we have found many things to discuss This friendship
plus meeting so many friendly people here has kept Australia
from be~ a lonely strange land The people who were the
most helpfUl to Laurene and I when we f1rst came were Harry
and Rose DaviS who gave us everythmg we needed to start
housekeeping with ildvlce understanding and help to start us
on our new adventure - Wendy J Carper

Have you ever .
Dear S1r
Now that the 1975 B1g Bend Regatta 1s history I would like

No one can deny that food pr1ces have gone up They have- by about 64 per cent between
1953 and 1973 But durmg the same periOd wages mcreased more than l42per cent food than
Moreover Americans are spendmg a smaller percentage of !bell' mcomes on
they d1d a couple of decades ago In 1953 food took about 22 per cent~~~~:~;
8
1973 11 was down to 16 per cent and the Department of Commerce
cent m 1974 despite the fact that the consumer price mdex - the cost of everything - rose
of In
e s nt on food
nearly 12 per cent
Thi81S less than many other country Worldwide the percentage
com pe
nms between 30 and 60 per cent
h
According to a report' by The Conference Board a New York based economic researc
organ1zat1on total conswner spending (after Inflation IS subtracted) rose $350 billion or 75fr
cent m the Umted States between 1960 and 1973 And while 9 per cent that mcreased spen mg
went for food this compares w1th 14 5 per cent more spent on luxunes and 15 per cent more
h
spent on automobiles
Nevertheless everyone thmks food pnces are too high and that somebody IS getting nc
because of 11
Well 11 s not the fanner according to one source While fann mcome has gone up m recent
years 1t IS still low says F L Wooten VICe president of KaiSer Agncultural Cherrucals
In 1971 median mcome for all U S fSfillies was $10 285 he says but for farm families
(and 98 per cent of all farms are family operations) 11 was $5 712 In 1973 fanners earned appromnately $3 300 per person but national per cap1ta mcome was $5 000
Then where IS the food dollar going•
The farmer receiVes less than half tbemoney spent for food says Wooten In 1973 he got 46
per cent of eachfooddollar m 1974 42 per cent All md1cations are that 11 will be even less thiS
year The remrunder goes for transportation processmg and retailing
AmeriCa s fanners remam the worlds most productive feedmg more than a quarter of the
earth s population They have played a large part m unprovlng the nation s balance of
payments situation and are constantly workmg to ach1eve greater eff1c1ency
For example m 1960 there were 7 9 million farm workers each supplying enough food for
25 other persons In 1974 there were only 4 3 million farm workers but each proVIded enough
food for hunself and 50 additional people
None of these statistics may do much to ease tl\e pam one expenences while strolling down
the supermarket aisle but at least they may help to put things m better perspective

Another example of the federal government s r~ght hand working at cross purposes to Us
left IS the case of the surplus whale oil
According to Rep Charles A Mosher R.Ohio this government IS paymg $38 500 a year to
store millions of pounds of whale oil It was put mtothe national strategic stockpile -some of It
as long as 25 years ago-because 1t was an mgredient of lubncants used by heavy industry
Substitutes have smce been developed and nobody m the government wants the whale ml
any longer But they can t dispose of 1t because that would be m VIOiabon of the Endangered
Species Act
Mosher has mtroduced legiSlatiOn that would make an exception to the law and allow the
General Services AdministraUon to sell tbe oil to U S flrlliS
ThiS country no longer permits the hunting of whales or the sale of whale products It is
tragiC that this step was not taken before an unknown number of the animals were killed for the
benefit of the strategic stockpile
But even envrronmentalists should agree that the waste IS only compounded each day the
government 18 required to continue stormg the whale oil already harvested to no good purpose
and at wholly unnecessary cost to the taxpayer

Urine is not a medicine!
salt and water balance If you
drmk water that contains too
much salt 1t Will make yowthrrst worse and lead to
death That IS why ship
wrecked sailors can t sunply
drmksea water wh1ch m
c1dentaily contams about the
same coneentratwn of salt
that 1s m your blood Urme
partiCularly m the thrrsty
mdiVIdual may be much
more salty
That pregnant w-me even
from horses contam an
Important
hormone
ehm10ated to mamtam
hormone balance It IS useful
m certam medical conditions
reqmrmg such hormone
treatment It has no value 10
treatmg mfectwns any more
than other hormones do So
while I Will agree that urme IS
stenle the Idea that thiS
chenucal wastes 1s a magical
ew-e-all 1s a bit far out
Send your questions to Dr
Lamb m care of th1s
newspaper P 0 Box 1551
RadiO C1ty Station New
York NY 10019 For m
formation on gall stones ask
for The Health Letter number
4-9 Gall Stones and Gall
Baldder Disease Send a long
stamped
self addressed
envelope and 50 cents for
ma1hng and costs

1

"Tb:E~,-E -~-,f~-fi-:!'_E___,._,
.
INTERES'T OF
MEIGS MASON AREA
,CHESTER L TANNEHILL

Exec Ed
•
City Editor
Publ shed dally e.cept
R()BERT HOEFLICH

to say that there are a few who are unhappy about the parade
It was reported thattherewereover IOOuntts m the parade
tbl8 year and I would like to know just why our (the Soutbern
High School) band was the very las! unit of this parilde This ls
the third year ma row tbat the Southern band has been the last
band m the lineup Arid this year they had to follow after all of
the horses which IS a very unpleasant experience
Have you ever walked (marcbed) behind a horse with all
the foul odor and stepped In the mess1 (Each band member
was Instructed not to break step or rank)
Now each parent is proud of IllS bandsman and puts a lot
of money time am effort Into getting them to a performance
And I feel that they lhould receive a liWe more COIISideratlon
than this when they are a RUest group
I m a parent of one of these band members (having had a
member of my family In tbls band for nearly tbe past fifteen
•·'"Iey
years )
- Mrs Robert D ""''

Saturday by The Oh o Valley j
Publshng Company 11'

Court St Pomeroy Oh o
45769 Business Oft ce Phone
2 21S6 Ed torlal Pho~e 9U-

~

S7
Second class pos+age pa tl
Pomeroy Ohio
N11t onal
advertiS
represer tat ve
ward
Gr tf th Company Inc
Bo tlnelll &amp; Gallilllher Dlv
751 Th rd Ave ff"ew York
N y
0017

nr

Subscript an

rate:.~

Oel vered by carrier w"ert
ava I able 75 cents per week
By Motor Route wher~
,:arr er
service
no

llva lablt One month S3 2
]Bv ma 1In Ohio end W v5•1•
ne
Year $22 OJI
onths s1 1 so
,T.hr••~
$7 00 EIStwh r•
l26onths
oo yeer Six month~
~13 so three monthS S7 s•.
ubscrlpt on pr ce lnclud•

~

undav Time$ Sentinel

rex as 2 Oakland 7 Minnesota
I and Kansas C1ty 6
Ca hforma 2 n 12 mmngs
Reds 2 Braves 0
rom Carroll called up
Iron Ind ana pol s when Don
Gullett was InJured p tched
three h1t ball for eigh t mrungs
to wm his seco nd game for
Cmcmnatl Sacnf1ce flies b)
Joe Mor-gan and Da\e Con
cepc10n drove m both Reds
runs C'.arl Morton lost h1s
e1ghth game for Atlanta
Astros 5 Dodgers 4
Roger Metzger s s ngle and
Cesar Cedeno s triple m the
seventh snapped a 4-4 tie and
enabled Houston to beat Los

Angeles Don Sutton for the
f1rst time m 10 games Wayne
Granger shul out the Dodgers
for the last 3 2-3 nn ngs fo r
the wm The loss was Sutton s
seventh agamst 11 w ns
Expos 12 Cubs 6
Pepe Mangual s three run
hom er ca pped a 10 run
seve nthmn ng rally wh ch
bfted Montreal over the Cubs
M1ke Jorgensen and Jose
Morales each drove n two
runs m the mrung wh1ch set a
club mark Denms Bla r went
seven mmngs for h s fifth
VIctory while Rick Reuschel
was the loser
Mcts 2 Cardmals 1
Rust) Staub s two run

tnple m the seventh mmng
enabled the Mets to beat St
Lou s and Tom Seaver to
ra se h1s record to ll-4
mat chmg his v1ctory total for
tlle 1974 season Seaver got
mto trouble m the n nth but
R1ck Baldwm relieved and
earned h1s third save Bob
Forsch was the loser
Padres 6 G1ants 2
R ch Folkers p tched an
e1ght-h tter to w n his th rd
game for San D1ego wh cb
handed San Francisco s M ke
Caldwell his seventh defeat
Bobby Tolan Dave Winfield
W1l11e McCovey and M1ke
Iv1e had two hits each for the
Padres

Team spirit key to Reds' success

ATLANTA UP!) -Sparky cmnatl
offensively or around the farm system for
Anderson thmks the Cm defensively
someone you can brmg up
cmnatl Reds are un1que
Anderson feels the Reds
Bench 1s m a class by
No other clubhouse IS like himself as a catcher Morgan have four of the top five
ours sa1d the C ncmnatl and ConcepciOn have to be players m the Natwnal
manager
Bench
Rose
the top second short com League
Where else can you fmd bmatwn around and (Cesar) Morgan and ConcepciOn) but
f1ve stars like Pete Rose Geronmno m centerfield can he pomts out that Cmcmnatl
Johnny Bench Joe Morgan get after that ball and he can has 1ts off days JUSt like
Tony Perez and Dave Con hit
anyhody else
cepc10n who also are fine
You ought to see th1s team
The general concensus
human bemgs?
seems to be that the Reds on an off day sa1d An
Usually when you fmd a would be JUSt ahout un derson We ve stunk up a
team w1th that many stars heatable if they had a little few ball parks We re like
llJ MILlON RICHMAN
you
also fmd at least one who more p1tchmg
anyhody else We have mghts
'
p Jrt5 Ed1tor
1s pretty hard to take off the
Gomg mlo Wednesday when we don t play
NEW YORK (UP!) -Some things sunply can not be put mto f1eld
That may be But the Reds
mght s game m Atlanta they
words How can you posSibly convey to anyone else the
And Anderson believes th1s were playmg 620 ball and after a slow for them start
throbbmg ache IIISide that almost unendurable oppressive
has a lot to do w1th the con leading the Natwnal League have been playmg like cham
ness across the chest or the total emptmess that gr1ps the tmued success of the Reds West by three games even pwns of late
whole body and soul •
Were a team not a group though !herr top p tcher Don
Through Tuesday mght s
Aaron Ladner doesn t even try
of mdiVIduals he sa1d It s Gullett (9 3) 1s on the disabled game Morgan was h1ttlng
He sa man w1th a heart condition and he should be thmking a group that any manager liSt
354 w1th 48 RBis and 10 home
about hmnself now but he can t
would like workmg w1th
Gullett broke his hand last nms Rose was hlttmg 318
All he can do mstead IS think about his youngest son Wen
Atlanta Manag~r Clyde week when he !ned to make a Bench was h1ttmg 304 w1th 61
dell a b1g good lookmg 26-year-old fornard w1th the New Kmg disagrees w1th An bare handed stab at a !me RB!s and 15 home runs
York Nets a young man w1th an army of fnends and w1th derson m part
dr e " the bat of Atlanta Geronuno was hitting 301
everythmg to hve for who was killed m Tuesday s tragic plane
Kmg feels that the Reds shortstop ....._ vel! Blanks
Perez had 49 RB!s and he and
crash here
have so much talent that
We don t have any dea George Foster both had 10
He meant everything to me says Aaron Ladner He was they d be wmners even if when he ll be back sa1d home runs
my whole life
every member of the club Anderson
When Ken Griffey ( 328) 1s
I m not even
Crushed completely by the sudden loss of his son Wendell was a pam n the neck
th nkmg about 1t You cant m the outfield the Reds
Ladner s father JUSt s1ts m the livmg room of his home m
You Judge a baseball worry about something hke start10g lineup exclud ng the
Neca1se Crossmg M1ss (population 499) Without eatmg at all team by 1ts strength down the that You have to go w th the pitcher 1s h1ttmg r1ght at 300
or saymg very much Occaswnally he looks at some of the m1ddle sa1d K ng There people available If you are as a umt
basketball trophies h1s boy was awarded or walks a few steps have been few teams shorthanded you have to look
We don t need as good
outside the house where a backboard stands m the front yard stronger there than Cm
p1tchmg as some of the other
Wendell used to like to shoot baskets he says He d use
that backboard everytime he was home
Aaron Ladner was home watching TV Tuesday afternoon
when the regularly scheduled program was mterrupted for a
spec1al news bulletin
•
It was about four o clock he remembers They sa1d
ATLANTA
(UP!)Take
1! broken thumb He had been 4 sa1d Anderson We sunply
there had been a plane crash outside Kennedy Airport and that
a nwnber of people had been killed They d1dn t mentwn from Cmcmnat Manager 3 w1th the Reds last year after didn !have a place for hmn on
JOmmg them late n the our roster He couldn t
Wendell s name but they gave the flight number Eastern 66 Sparky Anderson
The
other
fowteams
m
the
season
and had revolted when relieve and we didn t have an
and I knew he was on 1t because my daughter Shirley had
Nallonal
League
West
m1ght
he was sent back to In openmg for another starter
taken hmn to the alrJRirt and put him on the plane I saw hun
as
well
start
making
plans
for
d1anapol
s after spnng
The Reds held to fiVe hits
that mornmg before he left around e1ght or mne He kissed h1s
next
season
smce
this
year
s
trammg
m
Tuesday mght s 3-0 v1ctory
mother goodbye and sa1d see you later Pop He sa1d he d be
diVISIOn
race
1s
stnctly
which
Joe Morgan won w1th a
It wasn t that we thought
back m two weeks
After Aaron Ladner heard the frrst report he knew he had to between the Reds and the Los he wasn t a good pitcher
tell h1s wife But how• She was Ill and had a heart conditwn Angeles Dodgers
Sparky doesn t want any of
also
the
other four teams to get
I dldn t tell her right then but after awhile I told her there
had been a plane crash m New York and I was pretty sw-e upset w1th hmn But he sunply
Wendell was on the plane She JUSt couldn t bear the thought of doesn t see any of them
11 I had to take her to the hospital and shes there now She still catchmg the Reds or
Amer can League Stand ngs
Dodgers
By Un ted Pr ess Inter nat onat
doesn t know
w
pet g b
East
Were on top now (by four
( nc a
4 'l
625
The Ladners raiSe cotton m Necaise Cross10g They have
w
pet 9 b
o Ange es
2 32 568
games)
and
we
11 try to stay
40 29 580
f1ve other children and an older son Bernell now IS looking
San D ego
35 3
86
0
3 29 56
there
sa1d
Anderson
Sa n F an sco 33 39
58
2
after hiS father at the house
3 32 536 3
Aaa
292085
But we re not kidding
30
37
8 9
Daddy IS taking 1t very hard he says He s holdmg back
Hou s on
2
8 360 9
28 39
8
ourselves Pitchmg 1s gmng
Wednesday s Resu fs
everything he can and he has to otherwise he d wmd up m the
26 40
9
2
Ph ade ph a
P sbu gh 6
to be the key to the whole
W es t
nn ngs n gh
hospital too We all loved Wendell He was a good boy thmg and we know they (the
w
pet g b
C n nna 2 A a a 0 n gh
Everybody who ever knew him hked hun He never met a
Oa k an d
45 26 634
New York 2 S
ou s
n gh
Dodgers)
have
p1tchmg
Kan
as
C
y
40
3
563
5
stranger He d know you f1ve mmutes and you d like hun
Mon ea 2 C cag o 6
gh
34 36 A86 0
They ve got two horses (Andy Tex as
Hous on 5 Los Ange es
g
tiJo
neso a
3 35
70
1
San D eqo 6 San F a
Messersm lh 11-3 and Don M
Ca o n a
3 39
66
2
gh
Wendell Ladner s body was Identified by an ABA champiOn Sutton 11 7)
Ch ago
30 38
4
3
Thu sday s Games
ship rmg he was wearmg on his finger He had a New York
Results
All T mcs EDT
I don t see us pulling away C e e Wednesdays
and 8 Bos ton 5
S
Lou s
G bson
6
a
Nets travelmg bag w1th hmn also and when that first was from them he added It s C ago
5 T ex as 2 n g h
Man ea
F ma n 6
8 OS
shown on teleVISIOn the Nets received phone calls from people gomg to be a two-team race M waukee De ro 6 n gh
p m
New Yo k 2 Ba mo e
gh
Ch ago S o e 5 2 o Zahn 2
askmg them if one of their players had been on the plane
Oak
and
M
nn
eso
ta
g
h
nght down to the w1re
a P sbu gh E s 4
35
An added touch of rrony took place Tuesday evenmg at the
sas c y 6 Ca o n a 2
2 p
The Reds have been gettmg Ka
gh t
A an a Odom 0 4 a H ous on
New York ProfessiOnal Football Wnters dinner Franco some pretty good p1tchmg of nn n Thu
sday s Games
R ha d tl 3 8 35 p m
HarriS of the Pittsburgh Steelers among those bemg honored late themselves Young Tom
A T mes EDT)
os Ange es M esse sm h 1 3
Tex as
enk ns B 7 a C cage a San F anc s o Fa cone 6 5
was late gettmg there HJS plane whiCh also arrived at Ken Carroll ( 2 0) gave up only Wood 4
2 5p m
05 p
nedy was delayed due to the activity around the Bll'port three hits 111 e1ght mnmgs C eve and E ckc s ey 4
a
M waukee Co bO n 2 s 2 30
because of the crash After he was introduced the master of Wedneoday rught and the pm
ceremomes smd
ew Yo k
Dobson 8 5
a
Reds heat Atlanta 2-ll for NBoston
an
10
6
7
30
p
m
T
And I ~been told we have a professional basketball player the1r second shutout m a row De o t Lo h 7 5 a Sal
w1th us tomght also-Wendell Ladner
mo e Cue a 55 7 30 p m
NTERNATIONAL LEAGUE
to sweep a three-game senes Kansas
C fy F zmo s 8 4 a
By Un ted P ess Internal ona
Everyone walled for hun to stand up and take a bow but from tbe Braves
Ca o
a F gue oa 6 3
0 30
w I pet gb
there was no Wendell Ladner The M C had to confess he had
S y ac '-! SC
44 29 59
The Reds best known for p
Ro hes er
42 3 5 5 2
been given some miSinformation
the1r hittmg also played
T dewa er
4
569 2
Wendell Ladner owned one of those carefree easy~oes 1t sparkling defense gettmg
Cha es on
40 32 556 3
Nat ona League Stand ng s
R chm ond
32 JS 457 0
life-styles The s1x 'oot five 220-pound MISSISSIPPian had some f1ve double plays Wednesday
By Un ed P ess nternat on a
oedo
32 d d38 12
East
of Bw-t Reynolds ways about hun even looked like him only rught and 11 m the series
Memph s
JO 3 41 14
w l p c t g b Paw u ke
28 4 J89 15
better and bemg smgle always had beautiful women flocking
P
sl;lu
qh
Carroll 22 was called up Ph de p h a 39 28 582
Wedn es day s Resu ts
40 3
563
around him
To edo 2 Roches e
from IndianapoliS last week N ew Yor K
34 32 515
T d ew a e 4 Cha es on 2
He played w1th MemphiS Carolina and Kentucky before when Don Gullett ( 9 3) went Ch cago
SJ.d 50
5
M e n ph s 5 R c hmond o
St
Lou
s
32 35 4 8
bemg traded to the N~ts In January of 1974 and when the on the disabled liSt w1th a
Sy acuse J Paw u cke 2
Mon ea
2J1 35 453 8
Colonels let hun go their telephone switchboard was swamped
w1th calls from protesting women
On the court Ladner had absolutely no fear He was an
enforcer They tell the story of one game th1s past season m
which Utah s Moses Malone was domg a )Ob on B1lly Paultz of
the Nets Kevin Loughery the Nets coach mstructed Ladner
to go m there and put the clamps on Malone
SATURDAY-JUNE 28th
Ladner rushed out on the court He knocked down Malone
once twice three times but Utah s rookie sensation still
EMPLOYEES OUTING_
managed to score 12pomts IIISide of three rrunutes
Jeez I put you In there to stop him Loughery smd to
OF
Ladner durmg a time-QUt You re knocking him down but
ENTUCKY WEST VIRGINIA GAS CO
he s still scormg Isn t there some way you can possibly stop
AND
him?
KENTUCKY HYDROCARBON CO
Ladner couldn t walt to get out there and go against Moses
Malone agam
OPEN TO PUBLIC ATS PM
Glmme a gun Ill kjll him he sa1d to h1s coach Ill do
anythmg you want
That was the way Wendell Ladner played basketball When
word was relayed to some of the Nets that the plane Ladner
was on might have been struck by lightning one of them
remarked too bad he cowdn t have gotten out and fought the
CLOSED EVERY MONDAY EXCEPT LABOI? DAY
llghtnmg For sure Wendell would ve won

clubs noted Bench Were
capable of breakmg loose for
f1ve or SIX runs m an mrung
Th1s has to be a comfortmg
thought for our p tchers
especially when they get
behmd
Don t forget we can pia)
a little defense too added
Morgan We had two Golden
Glovers on th1s team last
year and we ve got a couple
of ether contenders this
time
It s like I was telling
people last Winter
sa1d
Kmg Cmc nnall doesn t
have to have a lot of pitching
to be a wmner When that
bunch 1s h1tt ng the way
everyone knows 1t can the
Reds are hard to beat
If the Reds do wm the
National League West this
season 1! 11 ll be the fourth
tmne m the SIX years that
~derson has been their
lllilmlger Last year they
played 653 ball wmnmg 98
games but f mshed second
four games behmd the
Dodgers
Maybe sa1d Kmg With a
sm1le 1t s lime someone
started a break up-the Reds
campaign

Reds hike lead to 4 games

.LAMB

sorts of miraculous cures It
state that
urme extolled
by many of the ancients but
misunderstood by the sem1
moderns now appears m the
light of a wonderful reservoir
- a piltre of preemment
value It contams m pure and
often undreamt of quantity
products of a v1tal nature
I m Slife the drug companies
would reJect th1s but 1f 1t IS
true 11 would be a m1racle for
the deshtute who cannot
afford these somehmes
harmful prescription
mediCmes
DEAR READER - AI the
nsk of offending you I II have
to say your letter IS good
example of a little knowledge
hemg a dangerous thing
Urme from a healthy
person who no mfecllon of the
kidney or bladder IS sterile It
1s literally a siphoned or
filtered out part of our blood
Blood contains no bacteria
Bemg stenle or germ free
does not mean 11 1s a won
derful healthy thmg It can
be stenle but contam harmful
chemicals The urme 1s a
vehicle to r1d the body of
excess unwanted chenucals
such as the mtrogen
contammg urea made from
the excess protem that so
many people eat The urme
can be concentrated 1f you
need to conserve water and
diluted if you need to
ellmmate excess water The
kidney plays a maJor role 10
controllmg your chenucal

the last nn ng after Tug
McGraw s ftve one hit m
nm gs of rel ef rece ved
c ed1t for the v ctory while
G1ust1 was the loser Homers
by RIChie Hebner and Richie
Z sk had helped the Pirates
bUild therr early 6-0 n argm
Cmcmnatl defeated Atlanta
2 0 Houston edged I os
Angeles 5-4 Montreal npped
the Chicago Cubs 12-U the
New York Mets shaded St
Lou s 2-1 and San D1ego beat
San Francisco 6-2 m other
Nat onal League games
In the Amer can League 11
was New York 2 Baltimore 1
Cleveland 8 Boston 5 M1l
waukee 7 Detro t R rh cam 5

Sport Parade

A whale of a lot of oil

By Lawrence E Lamb M D
DEAR DR LAMB - In one
of your columns you stated
that w-me IS pure as 11 comes
from the stenle blood I have
been cur1ous about th1s for
qwte a long tune but as urme
IS considered d1rty
I
wouldn t have broached the
subJect It was mterestmg to
hear that 11 s clean and that
makes me wonder even more
about people s a,vers1on to 11
We have JUst seen a
documentary on the sad
plight of the people m the
drought area m Afr1ca They
were plodding hundreds of
m1les w1th their children and
livestock through endless
dust Surely they must
recycle very drop of I qwd
and not let 11 seep mto the
sand while they pensh from
th1rst
I drmk lots of water and
people have sa1d I m1ght
wash out too many mmerals
from my body Sounds
reasonable But 1f urme
contams these valuable
mmerals why should 11 be
discarded•
When I was pregnant I had
a shot for morning sickness
and heard 1t was made from
the urme of a pregnant
woman Shockmg Then I ve
heard that some shots are
made from a horse s urme If
th1s 1s true there must he
some curative quaht1es
there
I recently read a book
advocatmg USing urme for all

They rallied trom a SIX run
deflc1t to score a 7-U 13 mung
triUmph over Pittsburgh
Wednesday mght and move to
Wlthm one gan e of the first
place P1rates n the Nl East
They have won five straight
games and created such
mterest m Phlladelph a that
they have dra11n more than
25 000 fans m each of the1r
last n ne home dates
It s JUSt a populantv
thmg commented Phil! es
Manager Danny Ozark when
asked about the All Star
votmg Luzmsk1 certamly
belongs m the game He s
def1mtely among the top f ve
outfielders m the league
Luzmsk1 h1t a two run
homer m the seventh mmng
Wednesday rught to be the
score at tM&gt; and the Phils won
m the 13th when reliever
Dave Gmstl walked M1ke
Schmidt w1th the bases filled
Ron Schueler who p1tched

A

three run homer had onl) SIX
hits Wednesday mght and
scored both of their runs on
sacrifice flys the f1rst by
Morgan and the other by hiS
double play partner Dave
ConcepciOn
Anllerson pomted out that
while everyone talks about
the Dodgers IOJUrles we ve
had qmte a se1ge ourselves
(Pitchers Gullett and
(Clay) K rby are out now We
had (Ton) ) Perez out for a
week and a half John
Bench maJor league RBI
leader w1th 61) couldn t swmg
a bat for SIX weeks after
hurtmg h1s back Morgan
(National League battmg
leader at 355) had 14 st tches
m h s leg And (Ken) Griffey
( 321) was out 10 days w1th a
bad hand
Add that all up and you
have to f gure how tough thiS
club 1s when everyone IS
well
The Reds were dle today

By Mel Cremeans
!be 1975 B g Bend Regatta has come and gone and we at
The Da1ly Sentmel are returmng our lives to normal I can
never remember so many pictures bemg taken Our news staff
was everywhere dur10g the weekend w1th e1tber a camera or
notebook or both
Since I am the sports wr1ter I had the patrwllc chore of
cover ng the boat races My trusty s1dek1ck (g rlfr1end) and
myself spent a Sunday afternoon together s1thng on the
parkmg lot wall snappmg p cture after p1cture of the
speedhoats as they bounced across the water m front of us By
a rough count we snapped some 30 p ctures of various Regatta
related activities such as the races h1gh flymg helicopters
and crowds of onlookers Brenda and I sat from 1 p m until 7
p m getting acllon shots and waiting to get the wumers 10 all
their glory
After wa1tmg all that tmne we were lucky to get pictures of
the wmners Many of the entr1es bemg from far away were
head ng home unmediately after they got therr priZes Like us
they were not overJoyed to hang around after hemg baked all
day m the hot sun We fmally managed to get the necessary
shots It was not the most pleasant Sunday afternoon Brenda
and I have spent together but after all t was all10 a day s
11ork and besides a swun m the Oh1o later helped to cool us off
THE MEIGS LEGION team remamed playmg 500
baseball over the weekend as they dropped a twmb11l to an
Ashland Ky squad on Saturday at Syracuse but came back
to sweep two games from Wellston on Sunday By the way the
second game at Wellston was won by Me1gs by the score of 3-2
mstead of 5-4 as was reported The error was a IDISifl
terpretat10n of figures on my part
INDEPENDENT BASEBALL slats show that Syracuse IS
at the top of the loop w1th a 6-2 slate Tuppers Plains follows at
5-2 Portland IS at 4-4 Letart IS at 3-5 MmersVIlle 2-4 and
Pomeroy 1s m the cellar With a 2-5 league slate
THIS SEASON THERE are 9 teams m action on the
diamonds at the M ddleport Park m the Middleport Youth
League Th1s 1s a record number for th1s little league loop
The Sports Desk decided to mqu re as to the difficulties m
handlmg the expanded program
In talkmg w1th Milford Hysell who 1s v1ce president I
asked about problems encountered Milford mfonned me that
m the begmnmg they hoped to get 10 teams to enter but came
up w1th only 9
League games are played on Tuesday and Thw-sday mght
w1th one team gettmg a rest each rught Thus far there have
been no problems other than ramouts Milford smd
SCIOfO DOWNS
COLUMBUS (UPI )
Steady Darling came on
strong n the stretch to 11m by
a neck over Fnendly Bye Bye
m the featured eighth race at
Sc oto Downs Wednesday
n ght Direct Dottle was
th1rd
The wmner who trotted the

mlem205 pald$760 $420
and $4 00 Friendly Bye Bye
returned $9 40 and $8 80 to
place and D1rect Dotlle pa1d
$4 00 to show
The 4-5 mghtly double of
Speed Trail and Steady
Airbeau was worth $33 20
A crowd of 4 144 wage ed
$220 106

Entries to be
m Saturday for
hantess racmg
S1x harness races offermg
l11o hea ts per race w1ll be
held Sunday July 6 at the
Was h ngton
County
Fa 1grounds n Manetta
beg nn ng at I p m
D VIS ons mclude the two
year trot two year pace
three year trot -three year
pace cond1t oned trot and
co nd1 t10ned pace Charted
nes w1ll be used for the

the ttme
to call me for the best
car msurance value anywhere
IS

Steve Snowden
1258 Powell St

Middleport 0
PH 992 7155

races

Entr es should be called m
by noon th s Saturday to 604
374 7464
fhe races are sponsored by
he Washmgton County
Harne ss
Horsem a n s
Association
Grandstand
adm1ss on w1ll be $1 w th
ch ldren under 12 admitted
free

ke a good
ne ghbo
State Fa m
s there

SAEFAII.M

~iii\

~
NSUIIANCt

'U OIAOB

p 7

OR

MISSES POLYESTER AND
COTTON PULL ON
JAMAICAS
Sizes

10 18

'3'•

Sleeveless Blouses
Polyester and Cotton

~Ordinating
In

Red
Navy
Lt Blue
Yellow
Wh1te
Open

Fnday and
Saturday
Til 8 00

$4.49
$5.49

S1zes 32 38
S1ze 40 up

~s

•

N

" - -' --

100

MIDDLEPORT DEPARTMENT STORE

PARK RESERVED

CAMDEN PARK-HUNTINGTON

Sports
Desk

�2- The Daily Sentmel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Thw-sday June 26 19 o

3 - The Da1ly Sentmel Middleport Pomeroy 0 ThUI sday June 2ti 19754

Questions

TOM TIEDE

•

and answers

1 sor_I~L -·

By Tom Tiede
WASHINGTON - At the
time of hill appmntment to the
preSidency there were those
who hebeved Jerry Ford was
Richard N1xon s last d1rty
trick on Amenca When he
traveled to Japan 10
November as example the
new chief showed up at a
•tate dmner weanng
gad
- an ascot wmged collar and
trousers three mches up his
ankles Protocol people sa1d
they could only assume his
ta1lor was a former football
coach from the Umvers1ty of
M1ch1gan
Thmgs change mcludmg
people and att tudes Nelson
Rockefeller was saymg the
other day that one of the best
unreported stones
10
Wash10gton 1s how th1s
president has grown m of
f1ce Qwte r ght No longer
IS Ford the Emmett Kelly of
the Wh1te House tent far
from 1t he has taken charge
of hiS amazmg fate to an
extent even h1s cntics agree
IS good for the nahon
Ford IS not yet totally
comfortable behmd the seal
of the b1g eagle He was
overheard recently say ng
thiS to an a1de about Henry
Kissmger How many tmnes
do I have to tell you he IS not
the president - I am the
president Yet there IS no
longer really an&gt; doubt of
that Ford has orgamzed
himself and h1s staff - there
are more than 500 people on
the Immediate Ford staff to proJect an orgamzatwnal
a1r of confidence supremacy
and soph1sticat10n
The sophiSticatiOn may be
the least strong of these
vrrtues 1f perhaps somewhat
on pw-pose We don t want
to appear too smooth says a
Wh1te House staffer that s
not the PreSidents style If I
can speak for myself and not
for hun I have the 1m
preSSion we are trymg to
convey the dea we are
capable but human We
admit we make mistakes not too many however
The mistakes of the Ford
admmJStratwn
at least

NOTICE
Pursuan o Sec t on 307 0 of
he Oh o Rev sed Code b ds
w be ece ved by he Board

o

County Comm ss oners of

Me gs

Coun y

Pomeroy

Oh o

Oh o

un

at

9 00

0 co c k A M on he lOth day
o u y 97 5 fo he sa eo he
o l ow ng
desc bed
eal
esta e to w t
S ua ed
n
Sa sb ury
Townsh p
Me gs County
Oh o
Commenc ng a
he
n e sec on of he cen e of
M be ry Avenue and
he
cen er of Hasp a Dr ve
hence so uth 6 d eg ees 48
wes 98 fee a ong cente of
d veway o he eas
ne o
hosj)Tf'li
g ounds
thence
sou h 22 deg ees 2 eas
230
tee a ong eas
ne o an ron
p n h e ue po n of beg nn ng
fo
h s descr bed parcel a
ea es a e thenc e con nu ng
so h 22 deg ees 2 cast 120
~
fee
henc e nor h 67 deg ees
48
eas
200 tee
thence
nor h 22 deg ees 2 west 120
feet o the center o Mu be v
Avenue
hen ce sou h 67
degree s .&lt;18 wes
200 fee
o
he p ace of beg nn ng co n
tan ng 55 a c e mo e or ess
-acco d ng o su vey o
une 6
975 by Wes ey A
Bueh
Reg s e ed Su veyo Oh o No
5965
h a Cham be s
Ce k
Bo a d of Cou y
Com m ss one s of
Me gs Co unty

Ma

6

2

9 26

7 3 4

c

ORO NANCE NO 1029 75
An Ordnance to Repeat Or
d nance No 713 and Amend
Sect on No 705 01' of Chapter
705 ol the Cod f ed Ord nances
of the v age of M ddlpoert
Be
orda ned by t he
Counc
of
he V age o
M dd epo
as o o~s
Sec
T ha Ordnance No
7 3 s hereby repea ed
sec 1 Tha Sec on 705 0
ot Chapte 705 of he Cod fed
Ord nanc es of he V age of
M ddleport be amend ed
o
ead as tot ows
No owner
occupaht o
essee of any oo m o p ace of
bus ness
n
he V age
n
wh ch he play ng of b
a ds
o
poo
s perm ed sha
pe m t the p ay ng of any
game of b I a ds o
poo
except dur ng the fo
w ng
hours
Sunday
00 PM
unt
0 00 PM
Sa urdavs 5 30 A M unt
2 00 P M
All other days s 30 A. M

unt

11

oo P

M

Sec
I
The prov sons of
th s sect on sh a no be ap
pi cab e to any oom o pla ce
of bus ness at wh ch btt_e o
n ox cat ng I quo s so'd

those of an obviOus nature
hav e n fact fallen off
considerably smce the early
days of bumbling and fun
bl ng
Impr oper staff
structunng and shoddy
commumca l10ns early on
made 1t not only poss ble but
likely that Ford could mv1te a
Texas buSinessman to the
Wh1te House for an
economics dtscusswn never
scheduled and w1sh Rep
Leon or Sulhvan of M1ssow- a
happy rehrement even
though she was not retirmg
W1th h s sh1p more secure
Ford s
gaffs
have
d1m1mshed He no longer
vetoes
leg1slat on
n
d1scnmmately for one thmg
- congressiOnal Republican
leaders have dnven home to
the President the political
value of choosmg vetos that
have the best chance of bemg
sus tamed
Ford s handling of
congressiOnal affairs ac
tually accounts m large part
for hiS evolutwn m office A
child of the House hmnseU as
a fnend n that body says
he knows Congress makes a
conven ent scapegoat
Unable to force h1s own
legis lative 11 11l .QJ1 the
members - he IS not that
strong a president yet- Ford
sees to 11 that they not he be
blamed for do nothmgness
Congress cooperates m
th1s often enough by dmng
nothmg but Ford presses the
pomt by force of h1s middle
Amenca personality In less
than a year m office the
President has sold the nation
the 1dea that the domestic
policy of Congress IS to spend
and 1ts foreign policy IS to
surrender all the while h1s
own stock w1th countrymen
has been nsmg
That stock s now 51 per
cent positive accordmg to
recent opmwn poll Largely
because many Amencans
believe Ford to be although
dull as a M1ch1gan stump a
common
sense
guy
Mayaguez Vetos of b1g
spendmg bills Solid If he has
Image drawbacks says
political smenhst James

PUBL C NOT CE
Not ce ol Hear ng
of Budget of
M dd epo t Oh o
No ce she a b'r9J,.ven hat on
he t1 h day of Ju y 1975 at
JO P M a Pub c Hea ng
w
be he d on he budge
prepar ed by he V age of
M dd eport Me g s Coun y
Oh o o th e next succeed ng
F s a yea
end ng Decem be
3
976
Sun h hear ng w
be he d
a he v age 1-i a a /VI d
d epa f Oh o
Gene G a e C e k
v age of M dd epa
Oh o
6 26 1

ORDINANCE NO 1031 75
An 0 d nance to Stipulate the
Pr ces for
Open ng and
cos ng of Graves
Sale of
Lots w th Perpetual Care and
Cha ges for Ho day Bur a s
Be
orda ned by
he
Counc
o
he V lage o
M dd epo t as fo ows
Sec
That he p ce o
open ng and c os ng of g aves
n he v age Cemeter es w
be as to ows

•

p~y our family doctor who
11ns treatmg her can I apply
lor the Medicare medical
msurance payment•
A When someone who has
MediCare d es specml rules
apply to the medical n
surance payment If your
doctor accepts assignment
Medicare will pay h1m If he
won t accept ass gnment the
payment can be made to
whoever pays the bill You
w1ll need to f1le two forms and
proof of payment The forms
are Request for Med care
Payment and Statement
Regarding
Medicare
Payment for Medical Ser
v1ces to Deceased Pahent
You can get both at any soc1al
secunty office

N ew booKs added ecen y
o h e s.he ves of he Me gs
ackson v n on
Coun es
Bookmob e n ude
L o ayn e
Ha
y
The
Memo y Book
by H a ry
Lo a y e and e y Lucas
C v rr e
Pub
a on s
BMW
Se v ce Repa
Handbo ok
50 0 750
cc
mota cy e w n s
Bu e
G eo ge
D
P ay g ounds
The
Ad
m n s a on and Opera on
A brah am
S
B u ack
Popu a Pays to c ass oom
Read g
Fa m e
Ph
p
ose
Mo he
Was a Love y
Beas
We s Rosema y
Non e of
h e Above
FICT ON
Beckman Gunne
Ad
m ss on o the Feas
Benne
J ay
The
Dang ng w tn ess
Ca dwe
Tay o
Go y
and he
g h n ng
Caswe
H e en R
N eve
Wed an 0 d Man
Cornwe
D av d
ohn M
Tn ge
Tao
So d e

Spy

Defoe
Dan e
Mo
F a der an Au hor a ve
Tex
Ba kgrounds and
ou es c
c sm
Fo ma n
ames 0
Th e
L fe and Death of Ye ow
B d
Fo sy h F ede ck
The
Dogs of Wa
Gardne
E e S an ev
h e Case of he Phan om
Fa un c
Gart e d
B an Wynne
The Thrcepe son s Hun
G eene Bet e
Ph p Ha
ke s Me
Reckon Maybe
Ha
s
T ho ma s
Back
Sunday
H e e Joseph
Some h ng
Happened
Ho sk ns
Robe
The
Sh atte ed P eep e
Kazan
E a
The U n
de s udy
Logan
ane
T he V ery
Nea es R oom
McE oy
L ee
Joe
Peppe
Maye
M e rc e
F og
Goes o D nne
M che ne
ames A be t
Ce e n a
Peck
Robe
N ew on
M
e s Boy
Rubn
Haod
The

P

a e

Trach enberg
ngc
So
s ow he Dawn ng
T yon
Thoma s
Lady

One of 10
Americans
tensed up

"' G£T YOUR MAN wmtl

Want Ad
'

I .-.

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/

o~.-&gt;CL

--.-&lt;'"

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!OCIA' '&gt;1_~..-'_"_'.r&gt;tlll . IICI filii ()ll'f~

Q I ve heard that both
parts of Medicare cover
home health care Is the
coverage the same under
both parts
A In general MediCare s
hospital msurance can r•Y
for home health care after
you have been m a pal
llc1patmg hospital for at least
3 days n a row Under
Medicare s medical m
surancc you don t have to
have a 3-&lt;lay stay m a hospital
to get home health care But
under each part home health
care IS covered only 1f certam
cond1hons are met Your
Medicare Handbook explams
home health care m detail If
you don t have a handbook
you can get one at any social
secunty office

1
1
1

1
1

I

Letters of opinion are welcomed Tbey should be
less thWI300 W9rds long (or be subject to reduction by
the editor~ and must be s1gned with tbe signee s ad
dress Names may be withheld upon JRibllcaUoo
However on request names will be disclosed Letters
should be In good taste addressing issues not per
sonalitles

£l

l
.Q~J..Y:~~
lI ••• ?Jtt~ Ul.UlrL:
I

By FRED DOWN
UP! Sports Writer
Greg Luzmski has muscles
everywhere but m h1s headhe knows the All-Star voting
by the fans IS JUst a
populanty contest
At the same tune the 6foot 1 225-pound outfielder
who IS hitting 304 w1th 17
homers and 56 runs batted m
for the Philadelphia Phill1es
adm1ts deep down every
player wants to get mto an
All-Star game and a World
Senes He leads the league
m homers and 1s second m
RBI
LuziiiSk ranks 12th m the
votmg for National League
outfielders and 1sn t likely to
make the squad unless there
IS a mass1ve shift m the
votmg pattern But he could
get h1s Wish to play m a World
Ser1es because the Ph1ls are
red-hot and lookmg stronger
every day

.

Don't blame the farmer

~--------------- --- ---------1

:

ATLANTA (UPI) - About
23
mJilion AmeriCans have
Boxes vaults
$25 00
nfant 28 x5 0
h1gh blood pressure or
Baby 30 x60
30 00
hypertension the preJ;Ident of
35 00
Ch d 30 x 67
65 00 $65 00 the
You h 36 x82
Amencan
Heart
S anda d
$75 00 175 00 Association S81d Wednesday
40 K96
Ove s ze
but most aren t aware of thell'
42 x98
S80 oo sao oo
conditwn
Sec
Tha
al ho day
bu as be S10 00 ex ra and
Speakmg to the 60th annual
h a any bu a s after 3 00 P
K1wan1s
Intematinal Conven
M be S 00 extra
Sec
Th a he o s n the ton Dr Elliot Rapaport sa1d
R ve v ew
Cemetery
be
one out of 10 Americans
p ced a
S2AO 00 ha
lot s
S 75 00 both o wh ch w
have high blood pressw-e
nc ude PERPETUAL CARE
That s a large number of
That the ots n the M d
Cemetery be people And half of those
d e po t H
p c ed a1 $175 00 ha f o s at
$ 40 00 both of wh ch w I don t know they have It Of
n c ude PERPETUAL CARE
the half who know half of
Sec IV Tha
he sum Of
s 00 00 de ved f om he sa e those don t rece1ve adequate
o each ot be p aced n the treatment he sa1d
PERPETUAL CARE TRUST
Rapaport sa1d the disease
FU ND and used for th s
has no symptons causes no
pu po se on y
Sec V Corner Stones a e real complamts and the only
p ced at the current p ce
ate and PERPETUAL CARE way to detect It 18 by havmg
MARKERS for each ceme e y blood pressure taken
a e pr cec:t a .,.he cu ren pr ce
He sa1d tbe disease can be
a e
Sec v
The Yeary Lot overcome through treabnent
Ca e sha be $8 00 per year
Sec VI
All 0 d nances n w1th a Wide array of effective
on c w th th s 0 d nance drugs now available
a e he eby epealed
Sec VIII Th s 0 d na n ce
Blood pressure checks con
sha
take effec and be n dueled on 4 967 delegates and
for ce from and af e June 9
975
guests attendmg the con
Passed the 9th day of June vent10n by the AHA turned up
95
524 persons w1th hyper
A es Gene Grate c erk
M L Ke y
tension
P es den of Counc
3 2t c
Of the 524 Rapaport sa1d
6 26
f1ve had such extremely high
blood pressure readmgs that
RE FOR SALE
NEW HOME 1
ac;res
3 they were taken to hospitals
Bedrooms
baths
for treatment
Sun deck Phone 992 7190
6 26 6tc

Sec IV Any es ab shmenl
wh ch v o ates th s Ord nance
shall be f ned not less than
$50 00 for ea c h hour of
vola on
Sec V Th s 0 d nance shall
take effect and be n to ce
trom and after June 23 1975
Passed the 23 d day of June
1975
FOR SALE
Attest Gene Grat Cle k
1974 HOND A Es nore MT
M L Kelly
25 $&lt;150 Phone 992 7211
Pres dent of Counc
6 26 3 c
6 26 1 3 2tc

Q My mother recently d1ed
at 69 after a long illness If I

. •

&lt;(Ill

I

New books
at Bookmobile

-

[

Phils rally, edge Pirates, 7-6

Editorial comment,
opinion, features

~~
-;- - ; gs·
. -; .6'i-4''0
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The growth of a president
Da' 1(1 Barber they are not
rooted m h s character
Here 1s a man so unassummg
he once got up at a rally to tell
the same bad JOke that was
told by the man who m
traduced ~1m Yet accord ng
to a1de Robert Hartman
when Ford was mformed ot
the N1xon enemy list he sa1d
m Lm colnesque language
that Any man 11 ho can t
keep h1senem1es m h1s head
has too many enenues
It may be,_ of cow-se that
those who perce ve a gro11 th
m Jerry Ford the President
are overly opbm st c that
any add! t on to zero IS
nollceable but not necessar ly
s1gn f1can t But at the least
and
md1sputably
the
Presiden t by accident has
handled himself well and
proven
agam
that
pedestrl8msm s often 1ts o11n
d gmty

! -~-n\~tll- 11

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1he other szde of Australm
ED NOTE Wendy J Carper taught (and stil11s teaching)
m Australia m close association w1th Teresa Casc1 who has
returned to the U S her tour ended The letter that follows IS
m rebuttal to statements attributed to MISS Casc1 10 a recent
mterv1ew published m The Dally Sentinel
As w1th politics one must be able to hear both s1des of the
story
This IS not my story because I have checked around at
other schools as well as the two schools that I have taught m
before making comments to be put m the paper
You could not compare a school m Europe w1th those m
America because there are sw-e to be differences Australia
has JUSt started to get 1ts educational system movmg m the last
few years But you could easily find backward schools m tbe
states Some schools JUSt have more money to put to use
In Australia they feel that the teacher should be able to
choose h1s or her own subJect and topics You are g1ven a well
wntten-out cumculum all you have to do IS find a book on that
subJect and decide what aspect you want to deal w1th The
schools libranes have plenty of books for the teachers to use
as reference although most teacha:ll have !herr own
I really can t dJSagree With Teresa Casc1 when she sa1d
that her supervisor stressed neatness more than the work
done But I can say that 1sn t true ofall schools JUSt because 1t
mJght be at that particular school The teachers stress neat
ness but even mote so the work done Any teacher w1ll tell
you that
Australia has been g1ven millions of dollars to be put mto
educatiOn At my school alone there are 22 class rooms each
w1th two teachers sharmg an overhead proJector some even
have therr own Each teacher has a rad1o to listen to
educational broadcasts There IS a televiSIOn set shared be
tween classrooms for educational shows In the library tbe
librarian at my school has taped books for the children to listen
to while followmg along w1th !herr book ThiS set enables SIX
children to listen at one time
Each school m the surrounding area (and I have asked)
has received a record player cassette player together as one
un1t valued at $1 200
I think no one thmks I leave my students out m the ram
The teachers take care of !herr own students m some schools
or like at my school the older students come m each classroom
and one teacher looks after them
There are plenty of mcknames for different thmgs m
Australia but there are In America too JUSt as there are
different accents m different parts of the country
Every Friday afternoon for an hour (only) IS mstructed
sport This IS to ensure that the students are gettmg therr
phySical education wh1ch 1s reqwred (an hour a week) even m
the states
Most of the students m the subw-bs of Sydney are from
South Amenca and vanous countries of Europe ThiS tends to
make It difficult for the teacher but 10 the states when the
people were mJgrating from Ew-ope the teachers had the
same problems
Granted the roads are bad m New South Wales but they
don t have that much money to put mto them and most of the
people use the trains If most of the people use the tram you
can see how difficult 1! would be to pass legiSlation to get more
money for better roads Even so a tnp mto town would never
take 1'h hours That would happen only if you stopped a couple
of tunes along the way
As for seemg the SJghts of Australia I have been to
Melbourne to VISit my Uncle Robert and Uncle Roy Hum
phreys and Uncle Less and Dawn Smnpofendorfer and I
VISited my grandfather who I hadn t seen since 1954
Durmg the vanous holidays smce I have been here I
VISited Tasmama and saw the Hobert Br1dge which fell mto
the Derwent River on January 5 1975 Port Arthur a rum of
where they kept priSOners from years gone by the gaol (the
]all) where they put prisoners m small rooms plus the oldest
br1dge m Australia at Richmond
Durmg the weekends my roommates and I VISited the
Jenolan Caves Hunter Valley (known for 1ts wme) and Blue
Mountams famous for liB rock formation named The Three
Sisters
While m BriSbane my roommate Law-ene ~ugent (from
California) and I stayed With my mother s fr1end Joy Holmes
who told us exacUy where to go and what were the best places
to see We were able to take m several tours which mcluded a
pmeapple plantation a sugar cane plant a koala park and
zoo Durmg the last holidays m May I viSited Canberra capital
of Australia
Durmg my stay here I met MIChael Halar who has
mJgrated from YugoslaVIa Since we were both foreign to thiS
country we have found many things to discuss This friendship
plus meeting so many friendly people here has kept Australia
from be~ a lonely strange land The people who were the
most helpfUl to Laurene and I when we f1rst came were Harry
and Rose DaviS who gave us everythmg we needed to start
housekeeping with ildvlce understanding and help to start us
on our new adventure - Wendy J Carper

Have you ever .
Dear S1r
Now that the 1975 B1g Bend Regatta 1s history I would like

No one can deny that food pr1ces have gone up They have- by about 64 per cent between
1953 and 1973 But durmg the same periOd wages mcreased more than l42per cent food than
Moreover Americans are spendmg a smaller percentage of !bell' mcomes on
they d1d a couple of decades ago In 1953 food took about 22 per cent~~~~:~;
8
1973 11 was down to 16 per cent and the Department of Commerce
cent m 1974 despite the fact that the consumer price mdex - the cost of everything - rose
of In
e s nt on food
nearly 12 per cent
Thi81S less than many other country Worldwide the percentage
com pe
nms between 30 and 60 per cent
h
According to a report' by The Conference Board a New York based economic researc
organ1zat1on total conswner spending (after Inflation IS subtracted) rose $350 billion or 75fr
cent m the Umted States between 1960 and 1973 And while 9 per cent that mcreased spen mg
went for food this compares w1th 14 5 per cent more spent on luxunes and 15 per cent more
h
spent on automobiles
Nevertheless everyone thmks food pnces are too high and that somebody IS getting nc
because of 11
Well 11 s not the fanner according to one source While fann mcome has gone up m recent
years 1t IS still low says F L Wooten VICe president of KaiSer Agncultural Cherrucals
In 1971 median mcome for all U S fSfillies was $10 285 he says but for farm families
(and 98 per cent of all farms are family operations) 11 was $5 712 In 1973 fanners earned appromnately $3 300 per person but national per cap1ta mcome was $5 000
Then where IS the food dollar going•
The farmer receiVes less than half tbemoney spent for food says Wooten In 1973 he got 46
per cent of eachfooddollar m 1974 42 per cent All md1cations are that 11 will be even less thiS
year The remrunder goes for transportation processmg and retailing
AmeriCa s fanners remam the worlds most productive feedmg more than a quarter of the
earth s population They have played a large part m unprovlng the nation s balance of
payments situation and are constantly workmg to ach1eve greater eff1c1ency
For example m 1960 there were 7 9 million farm workers each supplying enough food for
25 other persons In 1974 there were only 4 3 million farm workers but each proVIded enough
food for hunself and 50 additional people
None of these statistics may do much to ease tl\e pam one expenences while strolling down
the supermarket aisle but at least they may help to put things m better perspective

Another example of the federal government s r~ght hand working at cross purposes to Us
left IS the case of the surplus whale oil
According to Rep Charles A Mosher R.Ohio this government IS paymg $38 500 a year to
store millions of pounds of whale oil It was put mtothe national strategic stockpile -some of It
as long as 25 years ago-because 1t was an mgredient of lubncants used by heavy industry
Substitutes have smce been developed and nobody m the government wants the whale ml
any longer But they can t dispose of 1t because that would be m VIOiabon of the Endangered
Species Act
Mosher has mtroduced legiSlatiOn that would make an exception to the law and allow the
General Services AdministraUon to sell tbe oil to U S flrlliS
ThiS country no longer permits the hunting of whales or the sale of whale products It is
tragiC that this step was not taken before an unknown number of the animals were killed for the
benefit of the strategic stockpile
But even envrronmentalists should agree that the waste IS only compounded each day the
government 18 required to continue stormg the whale oil already harvested to no good purpose
and at wholly unnecessary cost to the taxpayer

Urine is not a medicine!
salt and water balance If you
drmk water that contains too
much salt 1t Will make yowthrrst worse and lead to
death That IS why ship
wrecked sailors can t sunply
drmksea water wh1ch m
c1dentaily contams about the
same coneentratwn of salt
that 1s m your blood Urme
partiCularly m the thrrsty
mdiVIdual may be much
more salty
That pregnant w-me even
from horses contam an
Important
hormone
ehm10ated to mamtam
hormone balance It IS useful
m certam medical conditions
reqmrmg such hormone
treatment It has no value 10
treatmg mfectwns any more
than other hormones do So
while I Will agree that urme IS
stenle the Idea that thiS
chenucal wastes 1s a magical
ew-e-all 1s a bit far out
Send your questions to Dr
Lamb m care of th1s
newspaper P 0 Box 1551
RadiO C1ty Station New
York NY 10019 For m
formation on gall stones ask
for The Health Letter number
4-9 Gall Stones and Gall
Baldder Disease Send a long
stamped
self addressed
envelope and 50 cents for
ma1hng and costs

1

"Tb:E~,-E -~-,f~-fi-:!'_E___,._,
.
INTERES'T OF
MEIGS MASON AREA
,CHESTER L TANNEHILL

Exec Ed
•
City Editor
Publ shed dally e.cept
R()BERT HOEFLICH

to say that there are a few who are unhappy about the parade
It was reported thattherewereover IOOuntts m the parade
tbl8 year and I would like to know just why our (the Soutbern
High School) band was the very las! unit of this parilde This ls
the third year ma row tbat the Southern band has been the last
band m the lineup Arid this year they had to follow after all of
the horses which IS a very unpleasant experience
Have you ever walked (marcbed) behind a horse with all
the foul odor and stepped In the mess1 (Each band member
was Instructed not to break step or rank)
Now each parent is proud of IllS bandsman and puts a lot
of money time am effort Into getting them to a performance
And I feel that they lhould receive a liWe more COIISideratlon
than this when they are a RUest group
I m a parent of one of these band members (having had a
member of my family In tbls band for nearly tbe past fifteen
•·'"Iey
years )
- Mrs Robert D ""''

Saturday by The Oh o Valley j
Publshng Company 11'

Court St Pomeroy Oh o
45769 Business Oft ce Phone
2 21S6 Ed torlal Pho~e 9U-

~

S7
Second class pos+age pa tl
Pomeroy Ohio
N11t onal
advertiS
represer tat ve
ward
Gr tf th Company Inc
Bo tlnelll &amp; Gallilllher Dlv
751 Th rd Ave ff"ew York
N y
0017

nr

Subscript an

rate:.~

Oel vered by carrier w"ert
ava I able 75 cents per week
By Motor Route wher~
,:arr er
service
no

llva lablt One month S3 2
]Bv ma 1In Ohio end W v5•1•
ne
Year $22 OJI
onths s1 1 so
,T.hr••~
$7 00 EIStwh r•
l26onths
oo yeer Six month~
~13 so three monthS S7 s•.
ubscrlpt on pr ce lnclud•

~

undav Time$ Sentinel

rex as 2 Oakland 7 Minnesota
I and Kansas C1ty 6
Ca hforma 2 n 12 mmngs
Reds 2 Braves 0
rom Carroll called up
Iron Ind ana pol s when Don
Gullett was InJured p tched
three h1t ball for eigh t mrungs
to wm his seco nd game for
Cmcmnatl Sacnf1ce flies b)
Joe Mor-gan and Da\e Con
cepc10n drove m both Reds
runs C'.arl Morton lost h1s
e1ghth game for Atlanta
Astros 5 Dodgers 4
Roger Metzger s s ngle and
Cesar Cedeno s triple m the
seventh snapped a 4-4 tie and
enabled Houston to beat Los

Angeles Don Sutton for the
f1rst time m 10 games Wayne
Granger shul out the Dodgers
for the last 3 2-3 nn ngs fo r
the wm The loss was Sutton s
seventh agamst 11 w ns
Expos 12 Cubs 6
Pepe Mangual s three run
hom er ca pped a 10 run
seve nthmn ng rally wh ch
bfted Montreal over the Cubs
M1ke Jorgensen and Jose
Morales each drove n two
runs m the mrung wh1ch set a
club mark Denms Bla r went
seven mmngs for h s fifth
VIctory while Rick Reuschel
was the loser
Mcts 2 Cardmals 1
Rust) Staub s two run

tnple m the seventh mmng
enabled the Mets to beat St
Lou s and Tom Seaver to
ra se h1s record to ll-4
mat chmg his v1ctory total for
tlle 1974 season Seaver got
mto trouble m the n nth but
R1ck Baldwm relieved and
earned h1s third save Bob
Forsch was the loser
Padres 6 G1ants 2
R ch Folkers p tched an
e1ght-h tter to w n his th rd
game for San D1ego wh cb
handed San Francisco s M ke
Caldwell his seventh defeat
Bobby Tolan Dave Winfield
W1l11e McCovey and M1ke
Iv1e had two hits each for the
Padres

Team spirit key to Reds' success

ATLANTA UP!) -Sparky cmnatl
offensively or around the farm system for
Anderson thmks the Cm defensively
someone you can brmg up
cmnatl Reds are un1que
Anderson feels the Reds
Bench 1s m a class by
No other clubhouse IS like himself as a catcher Morgan have four of the top five
ours sa1d the C ncmnatl and ConcepciOn have to be players m the Natwnal
manager
Bench
Rose
the top second short com League
Where else can you fmd bmatwn around and (Cesar) Morgan and ConcepciOn) but
f1ve stars like Pete Rose Geronmno m centerfield can he pomts out that Cmcmnatl
Johnny Bench Joe Morgan get after that ball and he can has 1ts off days JUSt like
Tony Perez and Dave Con hit
anyhody else
cepc10n who also are fine
You ought to see th1s team
The general concensus
human bemgs?
seems to be that the Reds on an off day sa1d An
Usually when you fmd a would be JUSt ahout un derson We ve stunk up a
team w1th that many stars heatable if they had a little few ball parks We re like
llJ MILlON RICHMAN
you
also fmd at least one who more p1tchmg
anyhody else We have mghts
'
p Jrt5 Ed1tor
1s pretty hard to take off the
Gomg mlo Wednesday when we don t play
NEW YORK (UP!) -Some things sunply can not be put mto f1eld
That may be But the Reds
mght s game m Atlanta they
words How can you posSibly convey to anyone else the
And Anderson believes th1s were playmg 620 ball and after a slow for them start
throbbmg ache IIISide that almost unendurable oppressive
has a lot to do w1th the con leading the Natwnal League have been playmg like cham
ness across the chest or the total emptmess that gr1ps the tmued success of the Reds West by three games even pwns of late
whole body and soul •
Were a team not a group though !herr top p tcher Don
Through Tuesday mght s
Aaron Ladner doesn t even try
of mdiVIduals he sa1d It s Gullett (9 3) 1s on the disabled game Morgan was h1ttlng
He sa man w1th a heart condition and he should be thmking a group that any manager liSt
354 w1th 48 RBis and 10 home
about hmnself now but he can t
would like workmg w1th
Gullett broke his hand last nms Rose was hlttmg 318
All he can do mstead IS think about his youngest son Wen
Atlanta Manag~r Clyde week when he !ned to make a Bench was h1ttmg 304 w1th 61
dell a b1g good lookmg 26-year-old fornard w1th the New Kmg disagrees w1th An bare handed stab at a !me RB!s and 15 home runs
York Nets a young man w1th an army of fnends and w1th derson m part
dr e " the bat of Atlanta Geronuno was hitting 301
everythmg to hve for who was killed m Tuesday s tragic plane
Kmg feels that the Reds shortstop ....._ vel! Blanks
Perez had 49 RB!s and he and
crash here
have so much talent that
We don t have any dea George Foster both had 10
He meant everything to me says Aaron Ladner He was they d be wmners even if when he ll be back sa1d home runs
my whole life
every member of the club Anderson
When Ken Griffey ( 328) 1s
I m not even
Crushed completely by the sudden loss of his son Wendell was a pam n the neck
th nkmg about 1t You cant m the outfield the Reds
Ladner s father JUSt s1ts m the livmg room of his home m
You Judge a baseball worry about something hke start10g lineup exclud ng the
Neca1se Crossmg M1ss (population 499) Without eatmg at all team by 1ts strength down the that You have to go w th the pitcher 1s h1ttmg r1ght at 300
or saymg very much Occaswnally he looks at some of the m1ddle sa1d K ng There people available If you are as a umt
basketball trophies h1s boy was awarded or walks a few steps have been few teams shorthanded you have to look
We don t need as good
outside the house where a backboard stands m the front yard stronger there than Cm
p1tchmg as some of the other
Wendell used to like to shoot baskets he says He d use
that backboard everytime he was home
Aaron Ladner was home watching TV Tuesday afternoon
when the regularly scheduled program was mterrupted for a
spec1al news bulletin
•
It was about four o clock he remembers They sa1d
ATLANTA
(UP!)Take
1! broken thumb He had been 4 sa1d Anderson We sunply
there had been a plane crash outside Kennedy Airport and that
a nwnber of people had been killed They d1dn t mentwn from Cmcmnat Manager 3 w1th the Reds last year after didn !have a place for hmn on
JOmmg them late n the our roster He couldn t
Wendell s name but they gave the flight number Eastern 66 Sparky Anderson
The
other
fowteams
m
the
season
and had revolted when relieve and we didn t have an
and I knew he was on 1t because my daughter Shirley had
Nallonal
League
West
m1ght
he was sent back to In openmg for another starter
taken hmn to the alrJRirt and put him on the plane I saw hun
as
well
start
making
plans
for
d1anapol
s after spnng
The Reds held to fiVe hits
that mornmg before he left around e1ght or mne He kissed h1s
next
season
smce
this
year
s
trammg
m
Tuesday mght s 3-0 v1ctory
mother goodbye and sa1d see you later Pop He sa1d he d be
diVISIOn
race
1s
stnctly
which
Joe Morgan won w1th a
It wasn t that we thought
back m two weeks
After Aaron Ladner heard the frrst report he knew he had to between the Reds and the Los he wasn t a good pitcher
tell h1s wife But how• She was Ill and had a heart conditwn Angeles Dodgers
Sparky doesn t want any of
also
the
other four teams to get
I dldn t tell her right then but after awhile I told her there
had been a plane crash m New York and I was pretty sw-e upset w1th hmn But he sunply
Wendell was on the plane She JUSt couldn t bear the thought of doesn t see any of them
11 I had to take her to the hospital and shes there now She still catchmg the Reds or
Amer can League Stand ngs
Dodgers
By Un ted Pr ess Inter nat onat
doesn t know
w
pet g b
East
Were on top now (by four
( nc a
4 'l
625
The Ladners raiSe cotton m Necaise Cross10g They have
w
pet 9 b
o Ange es
2 32 568
games)
and
we
11 try to stay
40 29 580
f1ve other children and an older son Bernell now IS looking
San D ego
35 3
86
0
3 29 56
there
sa1d
Anderson
Sa n F an sco 33 39
58
2
after hiS father at the house
3 32 536 3
Aaa
292085
But we re not kidding
30
37
8 9
Daddy IS taking 1t very hard he says He s holdmg back
Hou s on
2
8 360 9
28 39
8
ourselves Pitchmg 1s gmng
Wednesday s Resu fs
everything he can and he has to otherwise he d wmd up m the
26 40
9
2
Ph ade ph a
P sbu gh 6
to be the key to the whole
W es t
nn ngs n gh
hospital too We all loved Wendell He was a good boy thmg and we know they (the
w
pet g b
C n nna 2 A a a 0 n gh
Everybody who ever knew him hked hun He never met a
Oa k an d
45 26 634
New York 2 S
ou s
n gh
Dodgers)
have
p1tchmg
Kan
as
C
y
40
3
563
5
stranger He d know you f1ve mmutes and you d like hun
Mon ea 2 C cag o 6
gh
34 36 A86 0
They ve got two horses (Andy Tex as
Hous on 5 Los Ange es
g
tiJo
neso a
3 35
70
1
San D eqo 6 San F a
Messersm lh 11-3 and Don M
Ca o n a
3 39
66
2
gh
Wendell Ladner s body was Identified by an ABA champiOn Sutton 11 7)
Ch ago
30 38
4
3
Thu sday s Games
ship rmg he was wearmg on his finger He had a New York
Results
All T mcs EDT
I don t see us pulling away C e e Wednesdays
and 8 Bos ton 5
S
Lou s
G bson
6
a
Nets travelmg bag w1th hmn also and when that first was from them he added It s C ago
5 T ex as 2 n g h
Man ea
F ma n 6
8 OS
shown on teleVISIOn the Nets received phone calls from people gomg to be a two-team race M waukee De ro 6 n gh
p m
New Yo k 2 Ba mo e
gh
Ch ago S o e 5 2 o Zahn 2
askmg them if one of their players had been on the plane
Oak
and
M
nn
eso
ta
g
h
nght down to the w1re
a P sbu gh E s 4
35
An added touch of rrony took place Tuesday evenmg at the
sas c y 6 Ca o n a 2
2 p
The Reds have been gettmg Ka
gh t
A an a Odom 0 4 a H ous on
New York ProfessiOnal Football Wnters dinner Franco some pretty good p1tchmg of nn n Thu
sday s Games
R ha d tl 3 8 35 p m
HarriS of the Pittsburgh Steelers among those bemg honored late themselves Young Tom
A T mes EDT)
os Ange es M esse sm h 1 3
Tex as
enk ns B 7 a C cage a San F anc s o Fa cone 6 5
was late gettmg there HJS plane whiCh also arrived at Ken Carroll ( 2 0) gave up only Wood 4
2 5p m
05 p
nedy was delayed due to the activity around the Bll'port three hits 111 e1ght mnmgs C eve and E ckc s ey 4
a
M waukee Co bO n 2 s 2 30
because of the crash After he was introduced the master of Wedneoday rught and the pm
ceremomes smd
ew Yo k
Dobson 8 5
a
Reds heat Atlanta 2-ll for NBoston
an
10
6
7
30
p
m
T
And I ~been told we have a professional basketball player the1r second shutout m a row De o t Lo h 7 5 a Sal
w1th us tomght also-Wendell Ladner
mo e Cue a 55 7 30 p m
NTERNATIONAL LEAGUE
to sweep a three-game senes Kansas
C fy F zmo s 8 4 a
By Un ted P ess Internal ona
Everyone walled for hun to stand up and take a bow but from tbe Braves
Ca o
a F gue oa 6 3
0 30
w I pet gb
there was no Wendell Ladner The M C had to confess he had
S y ac '-! SC
44 29 59
The Reds best known for p
Ro hes er
42 3 5 5 2
been given some miSinformation
the1r hittmg also played
T dewa er
4
569 2
Wendell Ladner owned one of those carefree easy~oes 1t sparkling defense gettmg
Cha es on
40 32 556 3
Nat ona League Stand ng s
R chm ond
32 JS 457 0
life-styles The s1x 'oot five 220-pound MISSISSIPPian had some f1ve double plays Wednesday
By Un ed P ess nternat on a
oedo
32 d d38 12
East
of Bw-t Reynolds ways about hun even looked like him only rught and 11 m the series
Memph s
JO 3 41 14
w l p c t g b Paw u ke
28 4 J89 15
better and bemg smgle always had beautiful women flocking
P
sl;lu
qh
Carroll 22 was called up Ph de p h a 39 28 582
Wedn es day s Resu ts
40 3
563
around him
To edo 2 Roches e
from IndianapoliS last week N ew Yor K
34 32 515
T d ew a e 4 Cha es on 2
He played w1th MemphiS Carolina and Kentucky before when Don Gullett ( 9 3) went Ch cago
SJ.d 50
5
M e n ph s 5 R c hmond o
St
Lou
s
32 35 4 8
bemg traded to the N~ts In January of 1974 and when the on the disabled liSt w1th a
Sy acuse J Paw u cke 2
Mon ea
2J1 35 453 8
Colonels let hun go their telephone switchboard was swamped
w1th calls from protesting women
On the court Ladner had absolutely no fear He was an
enforcer They tell the story of one game th1s past season m
which Utah s Moses Malone was domg a )Ob on B1lly Paultz of
the Nets Kevin Loughery the Nets coach mstructed Ladner
to go m there and put the clamps on Malone
SATURDAY-JUNE 28th
Ladner rushed out on the court He knocked down Malone
once twice three times but Utah s rookie sensation still
EMPLOYEES OUTING_
managed to score 12pomts IIISide of three rrunutes
Jeez I put you In there to stop him Loughery smd to
OF
Ladner durmg a time-QUt You re knocking him down but
ENTUCKY WEST VIRGINIA GAS CO
he s still scormg Isn t there some way you can possibly stop
AND
him?
KENTUCKY HYDROCARBON CO
Ladner couldn t walt to get out there and go against Moses
Malone agam
OPEN TO PUBLIC ATS PM
Glmme a gun Ill kjll him he sa1d to h1s coach Ill do
anythmg you want
That was the way Wendell Ladner played basketball When
word was relayed to some of the Nets that the plane Ladner
was on might have been struck by lightning one of them
remarked too bad he cowdn t have gotten out and fought the
CLOSED EVERY MONDAY EXCEPT LABOI? DAY
llghtnmg For sure Wendell would ve won

clubs noted Bench Were
capable of breakmg loose for
f1ve or SIX runs m an mrung
Th1s has to be a comfortmg
thought for our p tchers
especially when they get
behmd
Don t forget we can pia)
a little defense too added
Morgan We had two Golden
Glovers on th1s team last
year and we ve got a couple
of ether contenders this
time
It s like I was telling
people last Winter
sa1d
Kmg Cmc nnall doesn t
have to have a lot of pitching
to be a wmner When that
bunch 1s h1tt ng the way
everyone knows 1t can the
Reds are hard to beat
If the Reds do wm the
National League West this
season 1! 11 ll be the fourth
tmne m the SIX years that
~derson has been their
lllilmlger Last year they
played 653 ball wmnmg 98
games but f mshed second
four games behmd the
Dodgers
Maybe sa1d Kmg With a
sm1le 1t s lime someone
started a break up-the Reds
campaign

Reds hike lead to 4 games

.LAMB

sorts of miraculous cures It
state that
urme extolled
by many of the ancients but
misunderstood by the sem1
moderns now appears m the
light of a wonderful reservoir
- a piltre of preemment
value It contams m pure and
often undreamt of quantity
products of a v1tal nature
I m Slife the drug companies
would reJect th1s but 1f 1t IS
true 11 would be a m1racle for
the deshtute who cannot
afford these somehmes
harmful prescription
mediCmes
DEAR READER - AI the
nsk of offending you I II have
to say your letter IS good
example of a little knowledge
hemg a dangerous thing
Urme from a healthy
person who no mfecllon of the
kidney or bladder IS sterile It
1s literally a siphoned or
filtered out part of our blood
Blood contains no bacteria
Bemg stenle or germ free
does not mean 11 1s a won
derful healthy thmg It can
be stenle but contam harmful
chemicals The urme 1s a
vehicle to r1d the body of
excess unwanted chenucals
such as the mtrogen
contammg urea made from
the excess protem that so
many people eat The urme
can be concentrated 1f you
need to conserve water and
diluted if you need to
ellmmate excess water The
kidney plays a maJor role 10
controllmg your chenucal

the last nn ng after Tug
McGraw s ftve one hit m
nm gs of rel ef rece ved
c ed1t for the v ctory while
G1ust1 was the loser Homers
by RIChie Hebner and Richie
Z sk had helped the Pirates
bUild therr early 6-0 n argm
Cmcmnatl defeated Atlanta
2 0 Houston edged I os
Angeles 5-4 Montreal npped
the Chicago Cubs 12-U the
New York Mets shaded St
Lou s 2-1 and San D1ego beat
San Francisco 6-2 m other
Nat onal League games
In the Amer can League 11
was New York 2 Baltimore 1
Cleveland 8 Boston 5 M1l
waukee 7 Detro t R rh cam 5

Sport Parade

A whale of a lot of oil

By Lawrence E Lamb M D
DEAR DR LAMB - In one
of your columns you stated
that w-me IS pure as 11 comes
from the stenle blood I have
been cur1ous about th1s for
qwte a long tune but as urme
IS considered d1rty
I
wouldn t have broached the
subJect It was mterestmg to
hear that 11 s clean and that
makes me wonder even more
about people s a,vers1on to 11
We have JUst seen a
documentary on the sad
plight of the people m the
drought area m Afr1ca They
were plodding hundreds of
m1les w1th their children and
livestock through endless
dust Surely they must
recycle very drop of I qwd
and not let 11 seep mto the
sand while they pensh from
th1rst
I drmk lots of water and
people have sa1d I m1ght
wash out too many mmerals
from my body Sounds
reasonable But 1f urme
contams these valuable
mmerals why should 11 be
discarded•
When I was pregnant I had
a shot for morning sickness
and heard 1t was made from
the urme of a pregnant
woman Shockmg Then I ve
heard that some shots are
made from a horse s urme If
th1s 1s true there must he
some curative quaht1es
there
I recently read a book
advocatmg USing urme for all

They rallied trom a SIX run
deflc1t to score a 7-U 13 mung
triUmph over Pittsburgh
Wednesday mght and move to
Wlthm one gan e of the first
place P1rates n the Nl East
They have won five straight
games and created such
mterest m Phlladelph a that
they have dra11n more than
25 000 fans m each of the1r
last n ne home dates
It s JUSt a populantv
thmg commented Phil! es
Manager Danny Ozark when
asked about the All Star
votmg Luzmsk1 certamly
belongs m the game He s
def1mtely among the top f ve
outfielders m the league
Luzmsk1 h1t a two run
homer m the seventh mmng
Wednesday rught to be the
score at tM&gt; and the Phils won
m the 13th when reliever
Dave Gmstl walked M1ke
Schmidt w1th the bases filled
Ron Schueler who p1tched

A

three run homer had onl) SIX
hits Wednesday mght and
scored both of their runs on
sacrifice flys the f1rst by
Morgan and the other by hiS
double play partner Dave
ConcepciOn
Anllerson pomted out that
while everyone talks about
the Dodgers IOJUrles we ve
had qmte a se1ge ourselves
(Pitchers Gullett and
(Clay) K rby are out now We
had (Ton) ) Perez out for a
week and a half John
Bench maJor league RBI
leader w1th 61) couldn t swmg
a bat for SIX weeks after
hurtmg h1s back Morgan
(National League battmg
leader at 355) had 14 st tches
m h s leg And (Ken) Griffey
( 321) was out 10 days w1th a
bad hand
Add that all up and you
have to f gure how tough thiS
club 1s when everyone IS
well
The Reds were dle today

By Mel Cremeans
!be 1975 B g Bend Regatta has come and gone and we at
The Da1ly Sentmel are returmng our lives to normal I can
never remember so many pictures bemg taken Our news staff
was everywhere dur10g the weekend w1th e1tber a camera or
notebook or both
Since I am the sports wr1ter I had the patrwllc chore of
cover ng the boat races My trusty s1dek1ck (g rlfr1end) and
myself spent a Sunday afternoon together s1thng on the
parkmg lot wall snappmg p cture after p1cture of the
speedhoats as they bounced across the water m front of us By
a rough count we snapped some 30 p ctures of various Regatta
related activities such as the races h1gh flymg helicopters
and crowds of onlookers Brenda and I sat from 1 p m until 7
p m getting acllon shots and waiting to get the wumers 10 all
their glory
After wa1tmg all that tmne we were lucky to get pictures of
the wmners Many of the entr1es bemg from far away were
head ng home unmediately after they got therr priZes Like us
they were not overJoyed to hang around after hemg baked all
day m the hot sun We fmally managed to get the necessary
shots It was not the most pleasant Sunday afternoon Brenda
and I have spent together but after all t was all10 a day s
11ork and besides a swun m the Oh1o later helped to cool us off
THE MEIGS LEGION team remamed playmg 500
baseball over the weekend as they dropped a twmb11l to an
Ashland Ky squad on Saturday at Syracuse but came back
to sweep two games from Wellston on Sunday By the way the
second game at Wellston was won by Me1gs by the score of 3-2
mstead of 5-4 as was reported The error was a IDISifl
terpretat10n of figures on my part
INDEPENDENT BASEBALL slats show that Syracuse IS
at the top of the loop w1th a 6-2 slate Tuppers Plains follows at
5-2 Portland IS at 4-4 Letart IS at 3-5 MmersVIlle 2-4 and
Pomeroy 1s m the cellar With a 2-5 league slate
THIS SEASON THERE are 9 teams m action on the
diamonds at the M ddleport Park m the Middleport Youth
League Th1s 1s a record number for th1s little league loop
The Sports Desk decided to mqu re as to the difficulties m
handlmg the expanded program
In talkmg w1th Milford Hysell who 1s v1ce president I
asked about problems encountered Milford mfonned me that
m the begmnmg they hoped to get 10 teams to enter but came
up w1th only 9
League games are played on Tuesday and Thw-sday mght
w1th one team gettmg a rest each rught Thus far there have
been no problems other than ramouts Milford smd
SCIOfO DOWNS
COLUMBUS (UPI )
Steady Darling came on
strong n the stretch to 11m by
a neck over Fnendly Bye Bye
m the featured eighth race at
Sc oto Downs Wednesday
n ght Direct Dottle was
th1rd
The wmner who trotted the

mlem205 pald$760 $420
and $4 00 Friendly Bye Bye
returned $9 40 and $8 80 to
place and D1rect Dotlle pa1d
$4 00 to show
The 4-5 mghtly double of
Speed Trail and Steady
Airbeau was worth $33 20
A crowd of 4 144 wage ed
$220 106

Entries to be
m Saturday for
hantess racmg
S1x harness races offermg
l11o hea ts per race w1ll be
held Sunday July 6 at the
Was h ngton
County
Fa 1grounds n Manetta
beg nn ng at I p m
D VIS ons mclude the two
year trot two year pace
three year trot -three year
pace cond1t oned trot and
co nd1 t10ned pace Charted
nes w1ll be used for the

the ttme
to call me for the best
car msurance value anywhere
IS

Steve Snowden
1258 Powell St

Middleport 0
PH 992 7155

races

Entr es should be called m
by noon th s Saturday to 604
374 7464
fhe races are sponsored by
he Washmgton County
Harne ss
Horsem a n s
Association
Grandstand
adm1ss on w1ll be $1 w th
ch ldren under 12 admitted
free

ke a good
ne ghbo
State Fa m
s there

SAEFAII.M

~iii\

~
NSUIIANCt

'U OIAOB

p 7

OR

MISSES POLYESTER AND
COTTON PULL ON
JAMAICAS
Sizes

10 18

'3'•

Sleeveless Blouses
Polyester and Cotton

~Ordinating
In

Red
Navy
Lt Blue
Yellow
Wh1te
Open

Fnday and
Saturday
Til 8 00

$4.49
$5.49

S1zes 32 38
S1ze 40 up

~s

•

N

" - -' --

100

MIDDLEPORT DEPARTMENT STORE

PARK RESERVED

CAMDEN PARK-HUNTINGTON

Sports
Desk

�'I

-

.
Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Ju ne 26. 1975

SYRACUSE - The Meigs
Amei'ican Legion baseball
tea m overcame an early
Athens lead to defeat the
Athenians by the score fo 1310 Wednesday evening here.
The relief pitcher. He was the pitcher of record once the Athens scored 6 runs in the
score was tied again at 9-9, taking the starter off the book.
third after Meigs had scored
Q. How can a soccer team afford to pay the great single run s in the first an d
Brazilian star, Pele, $4.7 million, as the New York Cosmos
have done?- H. r., Eliza beth, N. J .
Because he isn't be ing paid all those millions just to play Wc dn es dil y' s Bu se ba ll Re s ult s
By United Pr ess In ternati ona l
soccer. The soccer team is part of the Warners conglomerate,
Am erica n L eague
130 004 OOQ-- 8 10 0
and the deal is supposed to include a movie on his life (as well Clc vot a nd
s to n '
200 000 003 - 5 6 2
as promotional work ) on which they hope to recoup most of the BoHarr
iso n, B us k ey ( 9) an d
money.
Ash b y-: P.ol e , Morel {6) , Se gui
(S l ,1nd F is k WP Harri son ( 1
Q. U Mike Marshall is the great expert on physical con- 7) L PPol e ( 1 4) H RA shby
ditioning that he claims to be, why was he out to so long with a (2nd i
rib injury? - R. H., Cincinnati, 0.
New Y ork
000 000 1~1 - 2 4 0
100 000 000- 1 6 D
Doctors· sometimes make the worst pa tients. And the Ba ltim ore
Ma y . Tidrow, L y le (8) a n d
kinesiology professor from Michigan State - also the ace M un son . Pa l m er ( 12.11 ) and
reliever of the Los Ange les Dodgers - is the first to admit that Dun can . H endr i ck s ( 9l . WP
Ly le {2 51
he loused himself up after injuring his rib cage by not heeding
020 011 101 - 6 10 I
the doctors' advice. He tried to come back too fast, having such Det,.o it
M i lwa uk ee
OO J 2HI 10 •- 7 10 o
implicit faith in his own physique, tha t instead of being out
Ruh le, Br ooken s (4) an d
three weeks, his recuperative period was extended to most of Fr eeh an ; Br o b erg . Ha usman ,
6 , A us tin (9 ), Sp raq ue (9 ) an d
six weeks.
Por t er . W P B r ober g (8 ·7l. LP ·
Q. Are any of the original New York Mets still active In R uh le ( 4.7) HR s . Sc ott 2 Cl2th ,
major league baseball as players ?- J.P., Jamestown, N. Y. 13th ), F r ee ha n (5th ).
000 001 ooo--1 7 2
And then there were none. There is one player who played M i nnesot a
kl and
020 400 10)(- 7 8 0
on the New York Mets in 1962, first baseman Ed Kranepool, OaCorbin
, Butl er (5 ) and Bo rg
who is still with them and holds the distinctive record of having mann , Ho ltzman (7 -ll and
played with the Mets in every year of their existence. But Ed, a F oss e. L P -Cor b in ( d .d) .
bonus baby, started that first '62 season in the minors and only T exas
010 000 01 o- 2 9 2
100 010 30 x-5 9 o
came up briefly at the end of the campaign. Ca tcher Chris Chicago
Ba csi k . Fouca u l t ( 7) and
Cannizzaro, who went to spring training with the San Diego Sundberg ; Ka a l. Upshaw ( 8 ).
Ha m il ton (8 1 and Downing .
Padres this year but has since been sent down , also was an W
P Kaat {11 .4 ). L P Ba csik (0
original Met draftee wh!l played in 1962 after starting the year I I
in the minors.
11 2 in ning s)

Aaron: Atlanta done him wrong

Q. Whafis Henry Aaron 's beef against Atlanta? It seems
that every time he has a chance, he raps the city where he
broke the home run record. - J . G., Macon, Ga .
· Atlanta sources tell me that activists such as the Rev.
Jesse Jackson have convinced Henry that he got a bum deal
when the Braves dldn 't consider him for the managerial post
Of a high administrative job at 150 grand a year. Henry was
offered a promotions spot by the Braves at $50,000 per, same
that Willie Mays gets from the New York Mets - and·$10,000
more than the salary drawn by present manager Clyde King
and general manager Eddie Robinson. He turned it down to go
to Mllwa ukee.
Q. Is Deacon Jones definitely through with pro football ? I
always thought he was one of the great players of all lime and
can't understand why he Isn't given a chance to coach. -Ron
G., Oceanside, CaiU.
Deacon retired as a player beca,use it was getting too tough
to stay in shape - though he has recently lost 40 pounds . He
shunned coaching because he says he would only consider a job
as the head man. Currently, he's doing public celations work
for a southern California hospital group. " Of course," he says,
"if the WFL offered me a million dollars ... " At any rate, in
five years, you can expect Deacon's name to be entered in the
Pro Football Hall-of Fame - that's the mandatory time wait.
Q. With the scored tied 6-6 and the bases loaded, the
starting pitcher is taken out and the relief pitcher giVf!S up
three nms, making the score~- His team comes back to tie, 9- PARTING SHOf:
9. In the nextlnoiDg, the relief pitcher gives up a run and his
I don't care how much money they spend - soccer still
team loses 1().9. Who gets the loss, tbe starting pitcher or the isn't going to make it as a major attraction in this country
rellef pitcher? - Chuck Ojeda, Alameda, Calif.
because it just doesn 't have enough sustained excitement.

K anss Cty 000 000 200 00 4 ~ 6 17 2
Californ i a 100 100 000 OOD-- 2 12 0
B usb y { 11-5) and M ar tinez ,
Stinson ( 9 ) ; T ana na , Qu intana
I IOJ and Rod r iguez. LP .Qu in ·
fana ( Q.2 ) HR s.c owens { 2nd ),
Whi t e (3r d ) .

third , to lead 6-2. Meigs than
started whittling away at the
lead and in the sixth inning
erupted for 6 tallies to go
ahead 9-7 . Athens scored 3
more times but Meigs twice
more plated a couple of runs
and won the game 13-10.
Jim Pe rry · went the
N at ional L eague
Cin cinna ti
000 001 001- 2 6 o
Atla nta
000 000 OOQ- 0 3 0
T Ca r ro l l, M c En aney (9 ) an d
Plumm er : Mort on (7 -8) and
Cor r e ll . WP T. Ca rro ll (2 -0) .

C hic a g o
100 003 021)-- 6 8 2
Mont re l 001 010 j IO}O x- 12 14 3
Reuschel, Knowl es ( 7), Zamo ra
(7) ,
Dettor e
( 8)
and
Swisher ,· Bl a ir , M urray fe J and
Car t er , Foot e ( 8) . W P -Bi a ir ( 5
lO . L P Reusc h el
{57)
HRMangual (7 t h) .

Orioles are the club they
must beat to finish first in the
American League East.
Last year it also came
down to these two teams. The
· Orioles came into New York,
swept a three-game series
from the Yankees in late
Se.ptember and finished two
games ahead of them.
In re cent seasons that was
what usually happened when
the Yankees played the
Orioles.
But Wednesday night, New
York defeated Jim Palmer 21 to complete a three-game
series sweep at Baltimore,
moving I ¥, games ahead of
second place Boston and nine
in front of Baltimore, which is
in fourth place.
Walt Williams, who was
just breaking into pro ball the
last time the Yankees swept
the Orioles in 1963, tripled to
start the ninth inning and
scored the wmning run on a
'=or the Lowest sacrifice fly by Thurman
Munson.
It was New York 's 19th
Tire Prices
victory in 24 games this
month , including 14 wins in
In the Area
its last 15 road games.
"I'm not surprised,, said
It's
Williams, who has hit safely
in nine straight games. "This
team has the most talent of
any club I've been on or
played against. There are
Mason, W. Va. guys in this clubhouse who
have delivered clutch per-

-

BEND
TIRE CENTER
773-5881

GENERAL
DELUXE

formanc es many time s Montreal 12 Chicago 6, New
before and there are guys on York 2 St. Louis I, Houston 5
this team who should be Los Angeles 4, San Diego 6
playing regularly, but you San Francisco 2 a nd
can't play everyone."
Philadelphia 7 Pittsburgh 6 in
Elsewhere in the American 13 innings.
League , Cleveland defeated
Indians 8, Red Sox 5
boston 8-5, the Chicago White
Alan Ashby hit a two-run
Sox topped Texas 5-2, Mil- . homer and Duane Kuiper
waukee edged Detroit 7-6, drove in two runs and scored
Oakland ripped Minnesota 7-1 another to help Cleveland
and Kansas City beat complete a three-game sweep
California 6-2 in 12 innings. of Boston . Frank Duffy , who
National League scores had three hits, was 8-for-12 in
were : Cincinnati 2 Atlanta 0, the series, scored five runs

Crandall takes first
round lead in NCAA
COLUMBUS, Ohio,(UPI ) Todd Crandall learned
several years ago how Ohio
State 's rugged 7,000-yard
Scarlet golf course must be
played.
·
Crandall, of Florida State
and a native of Ashtabula,
Ohio, first played Scarlet
during his sophomore year in
high school. His experience
paid off handsomely Wednesday with a three under par
69, giving him the first round
lead in the 78th annual NCAA
Golf Championships.
"Just try to make your pars
and take your bogeys," is the
philosophy Crandall learned
to use when playing the OSU
layout. "Don't try to make
any miracle shots."
Crandall's 70 was one shot
better than Bob Byman of
team leading Wake Forest,
Craig Carson of host Ohio
State , Vance Heafner of
North Carolina State and
Lindy Miller of Oklahoma
State.
All those scores were shot
in the morning wave before
the rains came during the
late afternoon.
Thundershowers forced an
hour
and
45-minute
suspension of play and
eventually caused the first
round to be called with seven
groups still out on the course.
Those who failed to finish
were to resume play today at
the spot they were when
darkness came and then go
right into their regular
second round tee times.
Wake Forest, tbe defending
champion, put three sub pat
rounds on the board in the
morning, with Walker·
Cuppers Jay Haas and Curtis
Strange adding one under 71s
to Byman's score.
That paced the Deacons to
a total of 286, six shots better .
than runnerup Oklahoma
State and nine better than
Florida, figured to battle with
Wake Forest for the title.
Texas was in fourth place
at 296, followed by Ohio State, ·
297; .SMU, Stanford and Indiana at 299; LSU, 300;
Alabama and Arizona State,
301; Houston, 302; San Diego
State, 303; and Michigan
State and San Jose State, 304.
Crandall , a 21-year-old
;;eni0r inade...lhe turn in even

par 36, playing the back side
first and went one over when
he picked up his third straight
bogey on No. I.
But he birdied four of the
final six holes he played,
getting the streak started on
the 520-yard fourth hole with
a 35-foot putt.
Haas and Strange, two of
four Walker Cup players in
the tournament , were
overshadowed by Byman 's
two under 70, but turned in
· so lid one under performances.
" I was really fired up to
play today and got off to a
good start," said Haas, low
amateur in the 1973 U.S. Open
and tied for the honor last
week at Medinah, Ill. "I can't
complain. It was a solid

round."
Strange, who won the individual title by a stroke last
year as a freshman, said,
"I'm pretty satisifed with my
score since I didn't drive it
well. It's hard to get it close
out of the rough." Strange hit
only four fairways.
There were six other 7ls
turned in besides those by
Haas and Strange. They
belonged to Lee Mickles of
Arizona State, Mark Lye of
San Jose State, Peter
Jacobsen of Oregon, Stan Lee
of LSU, Mike Reid of
Brigh.am Young, and. Bill
Mitchell of Georgia Southern.
All but Mitchell's came in the
morning .
Even par 72s were carded
by Mark Witt of Oklahoma,
Bob Ackerman of Indiana,
Mike Peck Stanford, Mark
DeBolt of SMU, and Mike
Brannan of Brigham Young.

RIVER DOWNS
CINCINNATI (UPI)
Paddy Jay moved up with the
leaders going into the stretch
and · took the ·Jead coming
home for a two-length victory
over Cat Creek in the
featured
$3,000
ninth
claiming race at River
Downs here Wednesday.
Proven Moven showed.
The winner, ridden ·by
Owen Headley, covered tbe
mile in 1:39 Z.S ()n the tuif and
paid $19.80, $9.40 and $4.
The 2-1 . daily double
combination of Pau Rosa and
Steamin''Sun returned $16.60.
A crowd of 4,678 wagered
$412,793.

LOSE UGLY FAT
Starr lo si ng we ight today or
m o ne y b ack . MONADEX i s a
tin y t a blet and eas y to tak e.
MON A OEX will h elp curb
yo ur d eo;,i r e fo r eK ces s food .
Eat 1eo;, s w e igh l ess. Con·
t a in s no dangerou s d r ug s and
w ill n ot m a k e y o u n er- vou s. No
st re nu o us eKc rci se . Chang e
y our li fe . . . start tod a y.
MON A D EX c os t $3.0 0 for a 20
d ay sup p ly . l a rg e economy
s ize
i s SS .OO.
Al so
try
AOUATAB S: th ey work ge nHy
·t o he lp you l ose wate r - bloat.
AQUATAB S - a " water pill "
th a t work 5 $3 .00 . Both
gua ra nt ee d a nd sold by :
S WISH E R
&amp;
LOHS E
PHARMACY , 112 E . Ma in .
Pom er oy
and
DUTTON
DRUG STORE, M i ddlp e ort._ ~·
Ma il O r d e r s Filled .

( 13 innings)
Pittsburgh
321 000 000 000 D-6 10 1
Phil ad elphia

001 030 200 000 1- 7 16 0
M oose, Dem e.ry (5) , Giust i
( 81 and Dy er ,· Lon borg , H oern .
er ( 2 ), H i lg edorf {5 ) , McGraw
{8/ , Sc hu eler ( 13) and Oat es .
W P Sc hu el er
2-1).
LP -Gi us ti
12 -3). H R S-Hebner {8 th ), Z lsk
{5 th ), Lozi nski c 17th l.
Los Ang eles 003 001 OOo-4 8 0
H ouslon
120 001 I OK- S 10 0
Su tton , Mar sha ll
( 8)
and
Yeag er ; Koniecz n y , Gran ger
(6) a nd May . W P -Gr anger (1 .
1) . LP ·Su t&gt;on (11 .71 . HR S.Wyn n
( 13th I . Ce d e no (6t h I .
Sa n Franci sc 001 000 001 - 2 8 2
San Diego
210 100 20x- 6 11 0
. Cal dwe ll , Hea v er lo (8) an d
Fo l ke r s
( 3.4)
a nd
Sadek ;
Ken da l l. LP .Cald we lt {4 .7) _
(end nat !g )

Major L eagu e Leaders
By United Pre ss Inter national
and drove in seven.
Leading B atters
White Sox 5, Rangers 2
(based on 150 at bats&gt;
National League
Jorge Orta, who now has hit
g ab r
h pet.
safely in 10 straight games, M r g n . Cn 67 231 48 82 .355
doubled, tripled, scored two Mdl ck. Ch 70 284 dl 100 .352
Wat son , H 67 249 31
85 .34 1
runs and drove in two to help Cash . P h il 71 298 .49 101 .339
Olicago win its fourth game Sng l ln, ~ , 61 217 23 72 .332
Bowa, Ph i 45 193 23
63 .326
in a row. Jim Kaat ran his Gri ff y, Cn 59 184 40 59 .321
·record to 11-4 while Mike Sm it h, SI .L
47 169 27 54 .320
Bacsik of Texas lost his first Rose . Ci n 72 298 47 95 .319
Gr vy , L A 74 311 42 99 .318
major league start.
American Lea gu e
Brewers 7, Tigers 6
g ab r
h pet.
George Scott hit two bases . Carw . Mn 62 226 39 85 .376
M n sn , NY 66 257 41
88 .342
empty homers and Pedro Lyn n, Bos 61 223 46 76 .3&lt;11
Garcia had three hits and Hrg r v . T &gt;&lt; 61 210 39 7 1 .3 38
H isle, M in 60 220 34 69
.31 4
stole three bases to help M e R a . KC 70 270 3d 83 .307
Milwaukee hand Detroit its M ddx , NY 55 218 36 67 .307
Br an . Mn 53 173 20 53 .306
sixth straight loss. Scott's Whi
le , NY 59 217 d4 66 . 304
homers produced the last two W ash ing ton, Oak
71 274 37 83 .303
Brewer runs and raised his Yount , M I 59
22B 32 69 .303
H om e Runs
season RBI total to 50.
N at iona l Lea g ue : L uzinsk i ,
A's 7, Twins 1
P hi l 17; Bencr1, Cin 15; Bak er .
Ken Holtzman, pitchting a A l l, Wy nn , L A , Sc hmidt , Phil
Park er , Pi tt....t3.
seven-hitter to even his and
A m eri ca n Lea gu e : Bonds , N Y
record at 7-7, beat Minnesota and J ack son , Oak 16 ; Horton.
et and Burroug hs, Tex 15 ;
for the seventh time in his LDyn
n , Bas and Hendr i c k, .Ciev
last eight decisions and give 14 .
Run s Batted In
streaking Oakland its lOth
N at ional Leagu e : Ben ch , Cin
victory in 11 games. A two- 6 1; L uzi nsk i , Phil S6 ; M organ,
Ci n and Simmons , St. L .49;
run double by Phil Garner Per
ez, Cin and W at son . Hou 48.
and a two-run single by Ray
Amer i ca n L ea gu e : Lynn, Bos
Nett les, N Y 51; Scott , Mit
Fosse were the key hits for and
SO ; Horlo n . D el 49 ; H endri ck ,
the A's, who lead second- •Ci ev and Mc Rae, K C 45.
Stolen Ba ses
place Kansas aty by five
N a tional Leagu e : Morg an ,
games in the West.
Ci n and Ceden o, Hou 31; L opes,
LA 26 ; Brock , St . L 25 ; Lint z,
Royals 6, Angels 2
M il 17 .
Frank White, inserted by
A m er ica n L ea g ue : Ri ver s,
Cal 39 ; Ot is. KC 29 ; Wa shing .
Kansas City in the loth inning ton
, Oa k 26; R emy , Cal· 20 ;
for defensive help, snapped a Pat ek , KC and North , Oa k 19.

2-2 tie with a grand slam
home run in the 12th to
provide Steve Bushy, who
went the distance, with his
11th victory in 16 decisions.
Fran Healy opened the rally
with a single before AI
Co wens and Bob Stinson
walked.

For Athens Wooten started
and worked 'the game fanning
5 and walking 4.
Leading Meigs hitters were
Brett Wilson who went 4-5
collecting 4 singles. Others
getting Meigs hits were Perk
Ault a dou bl e, Mick
Davenport a single, Mike
Nesselroad a double, Jim
Niday had a single and a
double, and Brian Hamilton 2
singles and a double.
Athens leaders at the plate
we re Ken Cartmill who went
3-3 getting a double and 2
singles, Arnie Chonko had a 22 ni ght, getting a single and a

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Yankees sweep Orioles,up division lead·
American League Roundup
By IRA MILLER
UPI Sports Writer
In the old days, when the
New York Yankees ruled
baseball, the formula they
used to stay on top was
simple.
They would just wait until
someone tried to challenge
them and then they 'd usually
beat the stuffings out of the
· upstarts , head-to-head.
· It was easy, especially
since the · Yankees usually
had the best players.
New York's last pennant
· came 11 seasons ago but it
• looks as if the Yankees are
• trying to revive their old
- successful method to win·
again this time.
Although the Boston Red
Sox are closest to them in the
• current standings, the
Yankees feel the Baltimore

Syracuse is

·Meigs defeats Athens

ALL YOU GOT TO DO IS ASK

The quest for a new stadium by the Los Ange les Rams
ahnost led to the purchase of the LA Dodgers by owner Carroll
Rosenbloom a couple of years ago. Wal t~:[ O'Malley even
initiated informal talks but then backed down. Now the Rams
will be satisfied by plans to lower the floor of their home fi eld,
the Coliseum, to eliminate the running track and add 20,000
seats while also closing in the open end of ,he Stadium.

'"double. Other Athens hitters
1 getting si ngles were Daily ,
Abele , Wright and Pitts.
Athens
006100 1:1.-10118
Meigs
·
101 306 20-1312 5
distan ce. on the mound for
Wooten 811d Abele. Perry
Meigs, pitching a fine game
striking out 7 and walkmg B. and.Hamilton .

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Cubs lather
sc by 22-11

PAINT

FOR ALL
YOUR BUILDING

VALLEY

In little league action the
Racine A-s defeated the
Syracuse Braves 26-7. The As pounded out their 26 runs on
25 hits while the Braves had
their 7 runs on 10 hits. Zane
Beegle had 2 hQ.mer~s . a
double and 2 singles for the
A-s. Other hitters for Racine
were Wayne Lyons with ·a
homerun , doubl e and 2
singles, and Paul Cardone
and Kent Wolfe each had a
homerun .
For the Braves, C. T.
Chapman had a home run and
2 singles. Kent Wolfe was the
winning pitcher for Racine.
C. T. Chapman was the loser.
The A-s are now 7-0. The A-s
meet the Astros on Monday,
June 30, at Racine while the
Braves host Racine B on the
same date .

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find out more abou t an Amana heat pump.
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POMEROY

By ROBERf MUSEL
WIMBLEDON, England
(UP!) - Ilie Nastase is a
sadder, but not necessarily a
wiser, man after his upset
defeat by big, bearded Sherwood Stewart of Goose Creek,
Tex., at the Wimbledon
Tennis champ ionships
Wednesday.
There is a broad streak of
the showman in the makeup
of the flashy Romanian that
has always kept him from
reaching the heights and now,
with his 29th birthday three
weeks away, it may be too
late.
Big money tennis is a
serious business. One of the
American players, a well
brought up young man by all
accounts, exploded with a few
four-letter words when he •
misplayed a shot, heedless of
the crowds in the stands,
Wednesday.
Some of the lady players,
too, did not learn the
language they sometimes use
in finishing school.
But Nastase is what he is a fun-loving fellow who
refuses to consider the game
a matter of life and death. So
on Center Court, carrying the
prestige of the number five
seed, he went down · to
Stewart, ranked only 15th in
.the United States.
"In his prime I would never
have beaten the guy, like a
couple of years ago," Stewart
said of his 8-6, 6-11, 6-2, 1-6, 6-3
win.
Nastase apparently hasn't
learned a lesson becoming
more obvious with every
tournament
in
the
professional ·tennis of today
-there are any number of
players who can beat any
seed on a good day. Nastase ,
some of the experts felt ,
played to the crowd once or
twice too often against

The second an nual M.C -M
Distric's Cub Olympics will
Stewart, perhaps in th e belief · be held Saturday , June 28.
he could always pull off a
brilliant recovery.
Top seeded Jin\my Connors
of Belleville, Ill ., has a
completely different attitude
and probably the right one for
champions - he fights for
every point no matter how far
ahead he is and is ready to
argue any decision he thinks
In Meigs Jr . League Girls
borderline. He took up some
Softball
League action th e
of the calls with the umpire in
Pantherettes
conti nued their
beating Vijay Amritraj of
winning
streak
by defeating
India 9-.'1, 6-0, !Hi.
"Vijay is dangerous for me Pomeroy 16-6. Ge tting hits for
every time I play him," Pomeroy were Nancy Smith ,
2 singles, Peggy Girolami a
Connors explained later.
Five men's seeds have triple, Susan Wright a single
fallen in tlie first three days and a double , Kim Seth a
of the championships, all of double, Joni Murray a single
and a double , Sandi Miller
them upsets.
In addition to Nastase, the and Cathy Blaettnar each a
men's singles Wednesday lost double.
For the Pa nth erettes,
John Alexander of Australia,
the lOth seed, and Jan Kodes Missy Cale had 2 singles, and
of Czechoslovakia, the 12th a tr ipl e, Terri Wilson 2
seed. Stan Smith and Vitas single s, a double and a
Gerulaitis, the seventh and tripl e, Peggy John son 2
14th seeds , respectively , single s, Glenda Brown a
sin gle and a double, Tracy
departed earlier.
There was an all-time Burdette a home run and a
record crowd of 37,081 on the single, Jo McKinney 2
grounds Wednesday and the singles, and a double ; Megan
gates were closed for the first Miller 3 singles, Marcia Cale
time since 1949 when an early 2 singles, Vicki Ebersbach a
match between Gardnar sin gle, and Brenda Brown 2
Mulloy and Ted Schroeder singles.
The Pantherettes are now
drew over 33,000. ,
Wimbledon used to be part 8-0 and Pomeroy is 6-2.
of the social as well as the
athletic calendar . One
debutante, who obviously
hadn't heard that the masses
had taken over, stepped out of
a chauffered car in a long silk
dress, her blonde hair
elaborately coiffured.
She saw the solid wall of
rHISfLEDOWN
humanity, mu ch of it in jeans
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
and windbreakers or shirt- (UP!) - John Vaughn rode
sleeves, look around as Sa Am to victory in the
though she could hardly featured ninth ra ce at
believe her eyes and got ha ck Thistledown here Wedinto the car and was whisked nesday , coverin g th e six
away·.
furlongs in I : 11 3-5.
The winner returned $8, $4
and $2.80. Bold Brave Miss
was second and Pettibons
King third.
The ~ daily double of
Jesse Brown and Queen of the
Deck paid $121.20, and the
lOth-race trifecta of Tapped
Une (10), Triptique (8) and
In late li ttle league action
Fighting Fleet (6) was worth
the Harrisonville Bobcats
$3,296.20.
defeated the Cheshire Tigers
6-5 with Reggie Arn old ge tNORrHFIELD
ting the victory.
NORTHFIELD , Ohio
Arnold went the distan ce,
fanning 7 and walking 6, (UPI) - Canny Belle rolled
giving up 5 hits . For the to her first win of the season
Tigers Rusty Lane started Wednesday night before 4,815
and struck out 1, allowed · I at Northfield Park, trotting to
hi t, and gave up 2 runs before a 2'h length victory in 2:09 J..5
he was relieved by Mark in the featured $1 ,500 ninth
Gilmore who fanned 2, race.
Billy Black pushed Canny
allowed 2 hits, and 1 run .
Be
lie to victory, and she
Hitters for the winners
were Jeff Branham with a returned $4 .20, $3.60 and
double and 2 singles, Arnold $2. 40. Breeze Mir was second
had 2 ·singles, and Kevin and Dago Victory third.
The Johnny Appl~seed
Jones had a single.
For Cheshire, Rusy Lane Stakes series for 2-yearoQid
had a triple , Jim Fife a pacers will open tonight at
double and a single , Tim Northfield, with two $2,250
Price a single, and Filmore a divisions of seven freshman
pacers. The series will be
single.
Harrisonville is now at 5-1 raced on .four successive
in the league and 6-1 overall . Thursdays, with the top
Harrisonville is managed by horses of the first three legs
·Bob Williams and Clieshire eligible for the estimated
by Bill Metzner.

Pantherettes
stay sharp

in junior play

Racing
results

Bobcats upend

in 26-7 victory Cheshire 6-5

PA\t~T UP
..

ousted by
Stewart

Racine A-s

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Phone 992-5321

at 6-2 now

In Pee Wee action this week
the Middleport Cubs downed
Salem Center 22-11 . Tim
Wamsley was the winning
pitcher for the Cubs as he
fanned 5 and walked 6 in his 2
innings of action . Wamsley
was relieved by Ronme
Denny who finished, striking
out 5 and walking 6. For
s&amp;lem Center, J. Longstreth.
started and fanned 2 and
walked 10. Hicks relieved him
in the third and walked 5, and
fanned none. '
Getting hits for the Cubs
were Nick Bush with a single,
Steve Crow 2 singles, , T.
·wamsley 2 singles, Denny a
triple and a grand slam
homerun., Wavy Follrod 2
singles and . a homerun.• and
Tony Welch 2 simdes.
·
For Salem Center Hicks
had a double and Longs\reth
a single .
POPCORN FOR SALE
RACINE - The Racine
Emergency Squad will
operate a popcorn sta nd
beginning at 9 a . m. on July 3
In Racine. The squad will
accept donations for its
ll'easury in exchange f?r the
popcorn .

In a la te independent
baseball league action report
Syracuse who is leading the
Independent loop upped its
record to 6-2 by defeating
Letar t 4-3 behi nd the strong
pitching of starter Pa t Arnold
and relief man Rick VanMatre. Letar t is now 3-5.
Pat Arnold star ted on the
mound and did a fi ne job,
givin g up only !. run and I hit,
that be ing a first inning line
drive single by David Hupp .
Van Matre cam e on in relief
of Arnold in the fourth inning
and fin is hed the contest
striking out 11 dur ing the rest
of the game . SyracuSe 's' Jim
Hubbard had 3 hits in 4 at
bats to jump his average to
.560 with 14 hits in 25 at bats.

star ti ng at 10 a. m. at the
Ga llipolis State Institute's
new outdoor tr ack.
Over 140 Cub Scouts from
throughout the district are
expected to pa rticipate this
year compared to only 68 in
1974 .
Th e Olymp iad will consist
of 10 events, incl uding nine
in divid ual events. and one
relay. The competition will ·
al so be on an individ ual basis
as well as a Pack basis.
AMIGHTY LEAP - A judge gets ready to mark the landing spot for this Cub as he sails
The events are the 50-yard
dash, 100-yard dash , softball th rough the air competing in the running broad jump. Over 140 Cub Scouts are expected to
throw, javelin (broom stick), enter the M.C-M District's second Olympiad.
runni ng broad jump, standin g br oad jump, hi gh jump,
modified si t-up s , modified
ON DEAN'S LIST
push-ups, and a lour-man
Donn a
R.
Francis,
runnin g relay .
daughter of Mr s. Ruth
Six trophie s will be
Francis, Pomeroy, ha s been
aw arded to this year 's
named by Academic Dean
Chester, Ohio
win ne rs. There will be first,
Roy Tur ley to the spri ~ g
second an d third plac e
dean's lis t of Otte rb ein
Phone 985-3537
trophies in Pack competition
College.
and individual trophies for
the outstanding B, 9 and 10yea r-olds.
This year 's winn ing pack
will also receive the first MG-M Cup, donated by Jo-Mar
Trophy
Compa ny
of
Gall ipolis, Which will be a
travelin g tr oph y to be .
retained by the winning pack
I, An
be beautiful I,
for one year. The first pack to
and will always be as valuable as the day you bought
win three years in a row will
I
.,.,_
it. At any time in the fu ture , we
retire the cup and keep it
•
.,..,, •'·1
will apply th e then current retail
perman ently .
!
' ""-~'f..
price of your ArtCarved di amond 1
All participan ts should be
I! ~
, z., '
toward the purchase of a more expensive ArtCarved diamond 1
at Gallipolis State Institute
ring. See our complete \
prior to the 10 a. m. starting
~"
colle ctio n soon.
time. They should bring sack
lunches; however, the Insti tute's commissary will be
open. The RC Bottling
Company of Middleport will
provide soft drinks.
ONE, TWO, THREE - Here C.'ubs strain through the
The Cub Olympics is free to
modified situps, just one of the ten events at Saturday's
the public. Come out and
Cub Olymp ics at Gallipolis Sta te Institu te.
chee r your favori te Cub on to
victory.

Noveltys, Gifts,

Rowers, etc.

Smalley's Gift Shop

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Church page
•
18th
receives
Freedom award

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" Di s t ing uishe d Se r vice
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Ke is ter series .

Th e Keister ser ies is
nati onally regarded as firs t in
th e fi eld of mod er n ch urch j
advertising. Its success of
VALLEY FORGE, PA. The church page currently over :lO years is due to ils I
appearing in this newspaper appea l to the unchurched
features the Keister "Support thr oug h human- in t er es t
·the Church" series, whi ch illustrations and texts which
has received an 18th award e ncour·ages chur ch mem.
fr om the Freedoms Foun- bership and attendance.
The Freedoms Foundati on
hon ors those people ·and
$25,000 finale July 17.
organizations that fw·ther the I
The !Oth.race Big Triple America n wa y of life. ·
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This newspape1· takes great
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Guy R. Rouse , Middleport,
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againsi May R. Rouse,
Lakeland, · Fla., in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court,
~so, Carole J . Tanthorey
was granted a divorce from
Robert Tanthorey . Her
maiden name of Carole Jean
Bush was restored. Rouse
charged gross neglect of duty
and extreme cruelty.

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.
Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Ju ne 26. 1975

SYRACUSE - The Meigs
Amei'ican Legion baseball
tea m overcame an early
Athens lead to defeat the
Athenians by the score fo 1310 Wednesday evening here.
The relief pitcher. He was the pitcher of record once the Athens scored 6 runs in the
score was tied again at 9-9, taking the starter off the book.
third after Meigs had scored
Q. How can a soccer team afford to pay the great single run s in the first an d
Brazilian star, Pele, $4.7 million, as the New York Cosmos
have done?- H. r., Eliza beth, N. J .
Because he isn't be ing paid all those millions just to play Wc dn es dil y' s Bu se ba ll Re s ult s
By United Pr ess In ternati ona l
soccer. The soccer team is part of the Warners conglomerate,
Am erica n L eague
130 004 OOQ-- 8 10 0
and the deal is supposed to include a movie on his life (as well Clc vot a nd
s to n '
200 000 003 - 5 6 2
as promotional work ) on which they hope to recoup most of the BoHarr
iso n, B us k ey ( 9) an d
money.
Ash b y-: P.ol e , Morel {6) , Se gui
(S l ,1nd F is k WP Harri son ( 1
Q. U Mike Marshall is the great expert on physical con- 7) L PPol e ( 1 4) H RA shby
ditioning that he claims to be, why was he out to so long with a (2nd i
rib injury? - R. H., Cincinnati, 0.
New Y ork
000 000 1~1 - 2 4 0
100 000 000- 1 6 D
Doctors· sometimes make the worst pa tients. And the Ba ltim ore
Ma y . Tidrow, L y le (8) a n d
kinesiology professor from Michigan State - also the ace M un son . Pa l m er ( 12.11 ) and
reliever of the Los Ange les Dodgers - is the first to admit that Dun can . H endr i ck s ( 9l . WP
Ly le {2 51
he loused himself up after injuring his rib cage by not heeding
020 011 101 - 6 10 I
the doctors' advice. He tried to come back too fast, having such Det,.o it
M i lwa uk ee
OO J 2HI 10 •- 7 10 o
implicit faith in his own physique, tha t instead of being out
Ruh le, Br ooken s (4) an d
three weeks, his recuperative period was extended to most of Fr eeh an ; Br o b erg . Ha usman ,
6 , A us tin (9 ), Sp raq ue (9 ) an d
six weeks.
Por t er . W P B r ober g (8 ·7l. LP ·
Q. Are any of the original New York Mets still active In R uh le ( 4.7) HR s . Sc ott 2 Cl2th ,
major league baseball as players ?- J.P., Jamestown, N. Y. 13th ), F r ee ha n (5th ).
000 001 ooo--1 7 2
And then there were none. There is one player who played M i nnesot a
kl and
020 400 10)(- 7 8 0
on the New York Mets in 1962, first baseman Ed Kranepool, OaCorbin
, Butl er (5 ) and Bo rg
who is still with them and holds the distinctive record of having mann , Ho ltzman (7 -ll and
played with the Mets in every year of their existence. But Ed, a F oss e. L P -Cor b in ( d .d) .
bonus baby, started that first '62 season in the minors and only T exas
010 000 01 o- 2 9 2
100 010 30 x-5 9 o
came up briefly at the end of the campaign. Ca tcher Chris Chicago
Ba csi k . Fouca u l t ( 7) and
Cannizzaro, who went to spring training with the San Diego Sundberg ; Ka a l. Upshaw ( 8 ).
Ha m il ton (8 1 and Downing .
Padres this year but has since been sent down , also was an W
P Kaat {11 .4 ). L P Ba csik (0
original Met draftee wh!l played in 1962 after starting the year I I
in the minors.
11 2 in ning s)

Aaron: Atlanta done him wrong

Q. Whafis Henry Aaron 's beef against Atlanta? It seems
that every time he has a chance, he raps the city where he
broke the home run record. - J . G., Macon, Ga .
· Atlanta sources tell me that activists such as the Rev.
Jesse Jackson have convinced Henry that he got a bum deal
when the Braves dldn 't consider him for the managerial post
Of a high administrative job at 150 grand a year. Henry was
offered a promotions spot by the Braves at $50,000 per, same
that Willie Mays gets from the New York Mets - and·$10,000
more than the salary drawn by present manager Clyde King
and general manager Eddie Robinson. He turned it down to go
to Mllwa ukee.
Q. Is Deacon Jones definitely through with pro football ? I
always thought he was one of the great players of all lime and
can't understand why he Isn't given a chance to coach. -Ron
G., Oceanside, CaiU.
Deacon retired as a player beca,use it was getting too tough
to stay in shape - though he has recently lost 40 pounds . He
shunned coaching because he says he would only consider a job
as the head man. Currently, he's doing public celations work
for a southern California hospital group. " Of course," he says,
"if the WFL offered me a million dollars ... " At any rate, in
five years, you can expect Deacon's name to be entered in the
Pro Football Hall-of Fame - that's the mandatory time wait.
Q. With the scored tied 6-6 and the bases loaded, the
starting pitcher is taken out and the relief pitcher giVf!S up
three nms, making the score~- His team comes back to tie, 9- PARTING SHOf:
9. In the nextlnoiDg, the relief pitcher gives up a run and his
I don't care how much money they spend - soccer still
team loses 1().9. Who gets the loss, tbe starting pitcher or the isn't going to make it as a major attraction in this country
rellef pitcher? - Chuck Ojeda, Alameda, Calif.
because it just doesn 't have enough sustained excitement.

K anss Cty 000 000 200 00 4 ~ 6 17 2
Californ i a 100 100 000 OOD-- 2 12 0
B usb y { 11-5) and M ar tinez ,
Stinson ( 9 ) ; T ana na , Qu intana
I IOJ and Rod r iguez. LP .Qu in ·
fana ( Q.2 ) HR s.c owens { 2nd ),
Whi t e (3r d ) .

third , to lead 6-2. Meigs than
started whittling away at the
lead and in the sixth inning
erupted for 6 tallies to go
ahead 9-7 . Athens scored 3
more times but Meigs twice
more plated a couple of runs
and won the game 13-10.
Jim Pe rry · went the
N at ional L eague
Cin cinna ti
000 001 001- 2 6 o
Atla nta
000 000 OOQ- 0 3 0
T Ca r ro l l, M c En aney (9 ) an d
Plumm er : Mort on (7 -8) and
Cor r e ll . WP T. Ca rro ll (2 -0) .

C hic a g o
100 003 021)-- 6 8 2
Mont re l 001 010 j IO}O x- 12 14 3
Reuschel, Knowl es ( 7), Zamo ra
(7) ,
Dettor e
( 8)
and
Swisher ,· Bl a ir , M urray fe J and
Car t er , Foot e ( 8) . W P -Bi a ir ( 5
lO . L P Reusc h el
{57)
HRMangual (7 t h) .

Orioles are the club they
must beat to finish first in the
American League East.
Last year it also came
down to these two teams. The
· Orioles came into New York,
swept a three-game series
from the Yankees in late
Se.ptember and finished two
games ahead of them.
In re cent seasons that was
what usually happened when
the Yankees played the
Orioles.
But Wednesday night, New
York defeated Jim Palmer 21 to complete a three-game
series sweep at Baltimore,
moving I ¥, games ahead of
second place Boston and nine
in front of Baltimore, which is
in fourth place.
Walt Williams, who was
just breaking into pro ball the
last time the Yankees swept
the Orioles in 1963, tripled to
start the ninth inning and
scored the wmning run on a
'=or the Lowest sacrifice fly by Thurman
Munson.
It was New York 's 19th
Tire Prices
victory in 24 games this
month , including 14 wins in
In the Area
its last 15 road games.
"I'm not surprised,, said
It's
Williams, who has hit safely
in nine straight games. "This
team has the most talent of
any club I've been on or
played against. There are
Mason, W. Va. guys in this clubhouse who
have delivered clutch per-

-

BEND
TIRE CENTER
773-5881

GENERAL
DELUXE

formanc es many time s Montreal 12 Chicago 6, New
before and there are guys on York 2 St. Louis I, Houston 5
this team who should be Los Angeles 4, San Diego 6
playing regularly, but you San Francisco 2 a nd
can't play everyone."
Philadelphia 7 Pittsburgh 6 in
Elsewhere in the American 13 innings.
League , Cleveland defeated
Indians 8, Red Sox 5
boston 8-5, the Chicago White
Alan Ashby hit a two-run
Sox topped Texas 5-2, Mil- . homer and Duane Kuiper
waukee edged Detroit 7-6, drove in two runs and scored
Oakland ripped Minnesota 7-1 another to help Cleveland
and Kansas City beat complete a three-game sweep
California 6-2 in 12 innings. of Boston . Frank Duffy , who
National League scores had three hits, was 8-for-12 in
were : Cincinnati 2 Atlanta 0, the series, scored five runs

Crandall takes first
round lead in NCAA
COLUMBUS, Ohio,(UPI ) Todd Crandall learned
several years ago how Ohio
State 's rugged 7,000-yard
Scarlet golf course must be
played.
·
Crandall, of Florida State
and a native of Ashtabula,
Ohio, first played Scarlet
during his sophomore year in
high school. His experience
paid off handsomely Wednesday with a three under par
69, giving him the first round
lead in the 78th annual NCAA
Golf Championships.
"Just try to make your pars
and take your bogeys," is the
philosophy Crandall learned
to use when playing the OSU
layout. "Don't try to make
any miracle shots."
Crandall's 70 was one shot
better than Bob Byman of
team leading Wake Forest,
Craig Carson of host Ohio
State , Vance Heafner of
North Carolina State and
Lindy Miller of Oklahoma
State.
All those scores were shot
in the morning wave before
the rains came during the
late afternoon.
Thundershowers forced an
hour
and
45-minute
suspension of play and
eventually caused the first
round to be called with seven
groups still out on the course.
Those who failed to finish
were to resume play today at
the spot they were when
darkness came and then go
right into their regular
second round tee times.
Wake Forest, tbe defending
champion, put three sub pat
rounds on the board in the
morning, with Walker·
Cuppers Jay Haas and Curtis
Strange adding one under 71s
to Byman's score.
That paced the Deacons to
a total of 286, six shots better .
than runnerup Oklahoma
State and nine better than
Florida, figured to battle with
Wake Forest for the title.
Texas was in fourth place
at 296, followed by Ohio State, ·
297; .SMU, Stanford and Indiana at 299; LSU, 300;
Alabama and Arizona State,
301; Houston, 302; San Diego
State, 303; and Michigan
State and San Jose State, 304.
Crandall , a 21-year-old
;;eni0r inade...lhe turn in even

par 36, playing the back side
first and went one over when
he picked up his third straight
bogey on No. I.
But he birdied four of the
final six holes he played,
getting the streak started on
the 520-yard fourth hole with
a 35-foot putt.
Haas and Strange, two of
four Walker Cup players in
the tournament , were
overshadowed by Byman 's
two under 70, but turned in
· so lid one under performances.
" I was really fired up to
play today and got off to a
good start," said Haas, low
amateur in the 1973 U.S. Open
and tied for the honor last
week at Medinah, Ill. "I can't
complain. It was a solid

round."
Strange, who won the individual title by a stroke last
year as a freshman, said,
"I'm pretty satisifed with my
score since I didn't drive it
well. It's hard to get it close
out of the rough." Strange hit
only four fairways.
There were six other 7ls
turned in besides those by
Haas and Strange. They
belonged to Lee Mickles of
Arizona State, Mark Lye of
San Jose State, Peter
Jacobsen of Oregon, Stan Lee
of LSU, Mike Reid of
Brigh.am Young, and. Bill
Mitchell of Georgia Southern.
All but Mitchell's came in the
morning .
Even par 72s were carded
by Mark Witt of Oklahoma,
Bob Ackerman of Indiana,
Mike Peck Stanford, Mark
DeBolt of SMU, and Mike
Brannan of Brigham Young.

RIVER DOWNS
CINCINNATI (UPI)
Paddy Jay moved up with the
leaders going into the stretch
and · took the ·Jead coming
home for a two-length victory
over Cat Creek in the
featured
$3,000
ninth
claiming race at River
Downs here Wednesday.
Proven Moven showed.
The winner, ridden ·by
Owen Headley, covered tbe
mile in 1:39 Z.S ()n the tuif and
paid $19.80, $9.40 and $4.
The 2-1 . daily double
combination of Pau Rosa and
Steamin''Sun returned $16.60.
A crowd of 4,678 wagered
$412,793.

LOSE UGLY FAT
Starr lo si ng we ight today or
m o ne y b ack . MONADEX i s a
tin y t a blet and eas y to tak e.
MON A OEX will h elp curb
yo ur d eo;,i r e fo r eK ces s food .
Eat 1eo;, s w e igh l ess. Con·
t a in s no dangerou s d r ug s and
w ill n ot m a k e y o u n er- vou s. No
st re nu o us eKc rci se . Chang e
y our li fe . . . start tod a y.
MON A D EX c os t $3.0 0 for a 20
d ay sup p ly . l a rg e economy
s ize
i s SS .OO.
Al so
try
AOUATAB S: th ey work ge nHy
·t o he lp you l ose wate r - bloat.
AQUATAB S - a " water pill "
th a t work 5 $3 .00 . Both
gua ra nt ee d a nd sold by :
S WISH E R
&amp;
LOHS E
PHARMACY , 112 E . Ma in .
Pom er oy
and
DUTTON
DRUG STORE, M i ddlp e ort._ ~·
Ma il O r d e r s Filled .

( 13 innings)
Pittsburgh
321 000 000 000 D-6 10 1
Phil ad elphia

001 030 200 000 1- 7 16 0
M oose, Dem e.ry (5) , Giust i
( 81 and Dy er ,· Lon borg , H oern .
er ( 2 ), H i lg edorf {5 ) , McGraw
{8/ , Sc hu eler ( 13) and Oat es .
W P Sc hu el er
2-1).
LP -Gi us ti
12 -3). H R S-Hebner {8 th ), Z lsk
{5 th ), Lozi nski c 17th l.
Los Ang eles 003 001 OOo-4 8 0
H ouslon
120 001 I OK- S 10 0
Su tton , Mar sha ll
( 8)
and
Yeag er ; Koniecz n y , Gran ger
(6) a nd May . W P -Gr anger (1 .
1) . LP ·Su t&gt;on (11 .71 . HR S.Wyn n
( 13th I . Ce d e no (6t h I .
Sa n Franci sc 001 000 001 - 2 8 2
San Diego
210 100 20x- 6 11 0
. Cal dwe ll , Hea v er lo (8) an d
Fo l ke r s
( 3.4)
a nd
Sadek ;
Ken da l l. LP .Cald we lt {4 .7) _
(end nat !g )

Major L eagu e Leaders
By United Pre ss Inter national
and drove in seven.
Leading B atters
White Sox 5, Rangers 2
(based on 150 at bats&gt;
National League
Jorge Orta, who now has hit
g ab r
h pet.
safely in 10 straight games, M r g n . Cn 67 231 48 82 .355
doubled, tripled, scored two Mdl ck. Ch 70 284 dl 100 .352
Wat son , H 67 249 31
85 .34 1
runs and drove in two to help Cash . P h il 71 298 .49 101 .339
Olicago win its fourth game Sng l ln, ~ , 61 217 23 72 .332
Bowa, Ph i 45 193 23
63 .326
in a row. Jim Kaat ran his Gri ff y, Cn 59 184 40 59 .321
·record to 11-4 while Mike Sm it h, SI .L
47 169 27 54 .320
Bacsik of Texas lost his first Rose . Ci n 72 298 47 95 .319
Gr vy , L A 74 311 42 99 .318
major league start.
American Lea gu e
Brewers 7, Tigers 6
g ab r
h pet.
George Scott hit two bases . Carw . Mn 62 226 39 85 .376
M n sn , NY 66 257 41
88 .342
empty homers and Pedro Lyn n, Bos 61 223 46 76 .3&lt;11
Garcia had three hits and Hrg r v . T &gt;&lt; 61 210 39 7 1 .3 38
H isle, M in 60 220 34 69
.31 4
stole three bases to help M e R a . KC 70 270 3d 83 .307
Milwaukee hand Detroit its M ddx , NY 55 218 36 67 .307
Br an . Mn 53 173 20 53 .306
sixth straight loss. Scott's Whi
le , NY 59 217 d4 66 . 304
homers produced the last two W ash ing ton, Oak
71 274 37 83 .303
Brewer runs and raised his Yount , M I 59
22B 32 69 .303
H om e Runs
season RBI total to 50.
N at iona l Lea g ue : L uzinsk i ,
A's 7, Twins 1
P hi l 17; Bencr1, Cin 15; Bak er .
Ken Holtzman, pitchting a A l l, Wy nn , L A , Sc hmidt , Phil
Park er , Pi tt....t3.
seven-hitter to even his and
A m eri ca n Lea gu e : Bonds , N Y
record at 7-7, beat Minnesota and J ack son , Oak 16 ; Horton.
et and Burroug hs, Tex 15 ;
for the seventh time in his LDyn
n , Bas and Hendr i c k, .Ciev
last eight decisions and give 14 .
Run s Batted In
streaking Oakland its lOth
N at ional Leagu e : Ben ch , Cin
victory in 11 games. A two- 6 1; L uzi nsk i , Phil S6 ; M organ,
Ci n and Simmons , St. L .49;
run double by Phil Garner Per
ez, Cin and W at son . Hou 48.
and a two-run single by Ray
Amer i ca n L ea gu e : Lynn, Bos
Nett les, N Y 51; Scott , Mit
Fosse were the key hits for and
SO ; Horlo n . D el 49 ; H endri ck ,
the A's, who lead second- •Ci ev and Mc Rae, K C 45.
Stolen Ba ses
place Kansas aty by five
N a tional Leagu e : Morg an ,
games in the West.
Ci n and Ceden o, Hou 31; L opes,
LA 26 ; Brock , St . L 25 ; Lint z,
Royals 6, Angels 2
M il 17 .
Frank White, inserted by
A m er ica n L ea g ue : Ri ver s,
Cal 39 ; Ot is. KC 29 ; Wa shing .
Kansas City in the loth inning ton
, Oa k 26; R emy , Cal· 20 ;
for defensive help, snapped a Pat ek , KC and North , Oa k 19.

2-2 tie with a grand slam
home run in the 12th to
provide Steve Bushy, who
went the distance, with his
11th victory in 16 decisions.
Fran Healy opened the rally
with a single before AI
Co wens and Bob Stinson
walked.

For Athens Wooten started
and worked 'the game fanning
5 and walking 4.
Leading Meigs hitters were
Brett Wilson who went 4-5
collecting 4 singles. Others
getting Meigs hits were Perk
Ault a dou bl e, Mick
Davenport a single, Mike
Nesselroad a double, Jim
Niday had a single and a
double, and Brian Hamilton 2
singles and a double.
Athens leaders at the plate
we re Ken Cartmill who went
3-3 getting a double and 2
singles, Arnie Chonko had a 22 ni ght, getting a single and a

St . Lou is
000 000 001 - 1 s 2
N ew Yo r k
000 000 20x-2 4 0
For sc h, Garman
{8 1 and
Sim mons ; Sea ver , Ba ldwin (9)
and · Gr ote . WP . Seave r { 1J .4).
LP For sc h ( 7.6) .

Yankees sweep Orioles,up division lead·
American League Roundup
By IRA MILLER
UPI Sports Writer
In the old days, when the
New York Yankees ruled
baseball, the formula they
used to stay on top was
simple.
They would just wait until
someone tried to challenge
them and then they 'd usually
beat the stuffings out of the
· upstarts , head-to-head.
· It was easy, especially
since the · Yankees usually
had the best players.
New York's last pennant
· came 11 seasons ago but it
• looks as if the Yankees are
• trying to revive their old
- successful method to win·
again this time.
Although the Boston Red
Sox are closest to them in the
• current standings, the
Yankees feel the Baltimore

Syracuse is

·Meigs defeats Athens

ALL YOU GOT TO DO IS ASK

The quest for a new stadium by the Los Ange les Rams
ahnost led to the purchase of the LA Dodgers by owner Carroll
Rosenbloom a couple of years ago. Wal t~:[ O'Malley even
initiated informal talks but then backed down. Now the Rams
will be satisfied by plans to lower the floor of their home fi eld,
the Coliseum, to eliminate the running track and add 20,000
seats while also closing in the open end of ,he Stadium.

'"double. Other Athens hitters
1 getting si ngles were Daily ,
Abele , Wright and Pitts.
Athens
006100 1:1.-10118
Meigs
·
101 306 20-1312 5
distan ce. on the mound for
Wooten 811d Abele. Perry
Meigs, pitching a fine game
striking out 7 and walkmg B. and.Hamilton .

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Cubs lather
sc by 22-11

PAINT

FOR ALL
YOUR BUILDING

VALLEY

In little league action the
Racine A-s defeated the
Syracuse Braves 26-7. The As pounded out their 26 runs on
25 hits while the Braves had
their 7 runs on 10 hits. Zane
Beegle had 2 hQ.mer~s . a
double and 2 singles for the
A-s. Other hitters for Racine
were Wayne Lyons with ·a
homerun , doubl e and 2
singles, and Paul Cardone
and Kent Wolfe each had a
homerun .
For the Braves, C. T.
Chapman had a home run and
2 singles. Kent Wolfe was the
winning pitcher for Racine.
C. T. Chapman was the loser.
The A-s are now 7-0. The A-s
meet the Astros on Monday,
June 30, at Racine while the
Braves host Racine B on the
same date .

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find out more abou t an Amana heat pump.
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f 10 w; MAIN

POMEROY

By ROBERf MUSEL
WIMBLEDON, England
(UP!) - Ilie Nastase is a
sadder, but not necessarily a
wiser, man after his upset
defeat by big, bearded Sherwood Stewart of Goose Creek,
Tex., at the Wimbledon
Tennis champ ionships
Wednesday.
There is a broad streak of
the showman in the makeup
of the flashy Romanian that
has always kept him from
reaching the heights and now,
with his 29th birthday three
weeks away, it may be too
late.
Big money tennis is a
serious business. One of the
American players, a well
brought up young man by all
accounts, exploded with a few
four-letter words when he •
misplayed a shot, heedless of
the crowds in the stands,
Wednesday.
Some of the lady players,
too, did not learn the
language they sometimes use
in finishing school.
But Nastase is what he is a fun-loving fellow who
refuses to consider the game
a matter of life and death. So
on Center Court, carrying the
prestige of the number five
seed, he went down · to
Stewart, ranked only 15th in
.the United States.
"In his prime I would never
have beaten the guy, like a
couple of years ago," Stewart
said of his 8-6, 6-11, 6-2, 1-6, 6-3
win.
Nastase apparently hasn't
learned a lesson becoming
more obvious with every
tournament
in
the
professional ·tennis of today
-there are any number of
players who can beat any
seed on a good day. Nastase ,
some of the experts felt ,
played to the crowd once or
twice too often against

The second an nual M.C -M
Distric's Cub Olympics will
Stewart, perhaps in th e belief · be held Saturday , June 28.
he could always pull off a
brilliant recovery.
Top seeded Jin\my Connors
of Belleville, Ill ., has a
completely different attitude
and probably the right one for
champions - he fights for
every point no matter how far
ahead he is and is ready to
argue any decision he thinks
In Meigs Jr . League Girls
borderline. He took up some
Softball
League action th e
of the calls with the umpire in
Pantherettes
conti nued their
beating Vijay Amritraj of
winning
streak
by defeating
India 9-.'1, 6-0, !Hi.
"Vijay is dangerous for me Pomeroy 16-6. Ge tting hits for
every time I play him," Pomeroy were Nancy Smith ,
2 singles, Peggy Girolami a
Connors explained later.
Five men's seeds have triple, Susan Wright a single
fallen in tlie first three days and a double , Kim Seth a
of the championships, all of double, Joni Murray a single
and a double , Sandi Miller
them upsets.
In addition to Nastase, the and Cathy Blaettnar each a
men's singles Wednesday lost double.
For the Pa nth erettes,
John Alexander of Australia,
the lOth seed, and Jan Kodes Missy Cale had 2 singles, and
of Czechoslovakia, the 12th a tr ipl e, Terri Wilson 2
seed. Stan Smith and Vitas single s, a double and a
Gerulaitis, the seventh and tripl e, Peggy John son 2
14th seeds , respectively , single s, Glenda Brown a
sin gle and a double, Tracy
departed earlier.
There was an all-time Burdette a home run and a
record crowd of 37,081 on the single, Jo McKinney 2
grounds Wednesday and the singles, and a double ; Megan
gates were closed for the first Miller 3 singles, Marcia Cale
time since 1949 when an early 2 singles, Vicki Ebersbach a
match between Gardnar sin gle, and Brenda Brown 2
Mulloy and Ted Schroeder singles.
The Pantherettes are now
drew over 33,000. ,
Wimbledon used to be part 8-0 and Pomeroy is 6-2.
of the social as well as the
athletic calendar . One
debutante, who obviously
hadn't heard that the masses
had taken over, stepped out of
a chauffered car in a long silk
dress, her blonde hair
elaborately coiffured.
She saw the solid wall of
rHISfLEDOWN
humanity, mu ch of it in jeans
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
and windbreakers or shirt- (UP!) - John Vaughn rode
sleeves, look around as Sa Am to victory in the
though she could hardly featured ninth ra ce at
believe her eyes and got ha ck Thistledown here Wedinto the car and was whisked nesday , coverin g th e six
away·.
furlongs in I : 11 3-5.
The winner returned $8, $4
and $2.80. Bold Brave Miss
was second and Pettibons
King third.
The ~ daily double of
Jesse Brown and Queen of the
Deck paid $121.20, and the
lOth-race trifecta of Tapped
Une (10), Triptique (8) and
In late li ttle league action
Fighting Fleet (6) was worth
the Harrisonville Bobcats
$3,296.20.
defeated the Cheshire Tigers
6-5 with Reggie Arn old ge tNORrHFIELD
ting the victory.
NORTHFIELD , Ohio
Arnold went the distan ce,
fanning 7 and walking 6, (UPI) - Canny Belle rolled
giving up 5 hits . For the to her first win of the season
Tigers Rusty Lane started Wednesday night before 4,815
and struck out 1, allowed · I at Northfield Park, trotting to
hi t, and gave up 2 runs before a 2'h length victory in 2:09 J..5
he was relieved by Mark in the featured $1 ,500 ninth
Gilmore who fanned 2, race.
Billy Black pushed Canny
allowed 2 hits, and 1 run .
Be
lie to victory, and she
Hitters for the winners
were Jeff Branham with a returned $4 .20, $3.60 and
double and 2 singles, Arnold $2. 40. Breeze Mir was second
had 2 ·singles, and Kevin and Dago Victory third.
The Johnny Appl~seed
Jones had a single.
For Cheshire, Rusy Lane Stakes series for 2-yearoQid
had a triple , Jim Fife a pacers will open tonight at
double and a single , Tim Northfield, with two $2,250
Price a single, and Filmore a divisions of seven freshman
pacers. The series will be
single.
Harrisonville is now at 5-1 raced on .four successive
in the league and 6-1 overall . Thursdays, with the top
Harrisonville is managed by horses of the first three legs
·Bob Williams and Clieshire eligible for the estimated
by Bill Metzner.

Pantherettes
stay sharp

in junior play

Racing
results

Bobcats upend

in 26-7 victory Cheshire 6-5

PA\t~T UP
..

ousted by
Stewart

Racine A-s

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at 6-2 now

In Pee Wee action this week
the Middleport Cubs downed
Salem Center 22-11 . Tim
Wamsley was the winning
pitcher for the Cubs as he
fanned 5 and walked 6 in his 2
innings of action . Wamsley
was relieved by Ronme
Denny who finished, striking
out 5 and walking 6. For
s&amp;lem Center, J. Longstreth.
started and fanned 2 and
walked 10. Hicks relieved him
in the third and walked 5, and
fanned none. '
Getting hits for the Cubs
were Nick Bush with a single,
Steve Crow 2 singles, , T.
·wamsley 2 singles, Denny a
triple and a grand slam
homerun., Wavy Follrod 2
singles and . a homerun.• and
Tony Welch 2 simdes.
·
For Salem Center Hicks
had a double and Longs\reth
a single .
POPCORN FOR SALE
RACINE - The Racine
Emergency Squad will
operate a popcorn sta nd
beginning at 9 a . m. on July 3
In Racine. The squad will
accept donations for its
ll'easury in exchange f?r the
popcorn .

In a la te independent
baseball league action report
Syracuse who is leading the
Independent loop upped its
record to 6-2 by defeating
Letar t 4-3 behi nd the strong
pitching of starter Pa t Arnold
and relief man Rick VanMatre. Letar t is now 3-5.
Pat Arnold star ted on the
mound and did a fi ne job,
givin g up only !. run and I hit,
that be ing a first inning line
drive single by David Hupp .
Van Matre cam e on in relief
of Arnold in the fourth inning
and fin is hed the contest
striking out 11 dur ing the rest
of the game . SyracuSe 's' Jim
Hubbard had 3 hits in 4 at
bats to jump his average to
.560 with 14 hits in 25 at bats.

star ti ng at 10 a. m. at the
Ga llipolis State Institute's
new outdoor tr ack.
Over 140 Cub Scouts from
throughout the district are
expected to pa rticipate this
year compared to only 68 in
1974 .
Th e Olymp iad will consist
of 10 events, incl uding nine
in divid ual events. and one
relay. The competition will ·
al so be on an individ ual basis
as well as a Pack basis.
AMIGHTY LEAP - A judge gets ready to mark the landing spot for this Cub as he sails
The events are the 50-yard
dash, 100-yard dash , softball th rough the air competing in the running broad jump. Over 140 Cub Scouts are expected to
throw, javelin (broom stick), enter the M.C-M District's second Olympiad.
runni ng broad jump, standin g br oad jump, hi gh jump,
modified si t-up s , modified
ON DEAN'S LIST
push-ups, and a lour-man
Donn a
R.
Francis,
runnin g relay .
daughter of Mr s. Ruth
Six trophie s will be
Francis, Pomeroy, ha s been
aw arded to this year 's
named by Academic Dean
Chester, Ohio
win ne rs. There will be first,
Roy Tur ley to the spri ~ g
second an d third plac e
dean's lis t of Otte rb ein
Phone 985-3537
trophies in Pack competition
College.
and individual trophies for
the outstanding B, 9 and 10yea r-olds.
This year 's winn ing pack
will also receive the first MG-M Cup, donated by Jo-Mar
Trophy
Compa ny
of
Gall ipolis, Which will be a
travelin g tr oph y to be .
retained by the winning pack
I, An
be beautiful I,
for one year. The first pack to
and will always be as valuable as the day you bought
win three years in a row will
I
.,.,_
it. At any time in the fu ture , we
retire the cup and keep it
•
.,..,, •'·1
will apply th e then current retail
perman ently .
!
' ""-~'f..
price of your ArtCarved di amond 1
All participan ts should be
I! ~
, z., '
toward the purchase of a more expensive ArtCarved diamond 1
at Gallipolis State Institute
ring. See our complete \
prior to the 10 a. m. starting
~"
colle ctio n soon.
time. They should bring sack
lunches; however, the Insti tute's commissary will be
open. The RC Bottling
Company of Middleport will
provide soft drinks.
ONE, TWO, THREE - Here C.'ubs strain through the
The Cub Olympics is free to
modified situps, just one of the ten events at Saturday's
the public. Come out and
Cub Olymp ics at Gallipolis Sta te Institu te.
chee r your favori te Cub on to
victory.

Noveltys, Gifts,

Rowers, etc.

Smalley's Gift Shop

r··- ·-· -o-·-·-·-·-·- . -·- -·- ----,

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ArtCarve~i~~ r~~~~a~

.

.OPENe
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6 DAYS
A WEEK

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&lt;:Art Carved
Goessler Jewelry Store

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Church page
•
18th
receives
Freedom award

- - -----,

r---·
·- - - ·- ·- --------!

dation. Thts is the 7t h
" Di s t ing uishe d Se r vice
Award" bestowed upon the

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l

I Kerm
I
I Slashes

Ke is ter series .

Th e Keister ser ies is
nati onally regarded as firs t in
th e fi eld of mod er n ch urch j
advertising. Its success of
VALLEY FORGE, PA. The church page currently over :lO years is due to ils I
appearing in this newspaper appea l to the unchurched
features the Keister "Support thr oug h human- in t er es t
·the Church" series, whi ch illustrations and texts which
has received an 18th award e ncour·ages chur ch mem.
fr om the Freedoms Foun- bership and attendance.
The Freedoms Foundati on
hon ors those people ·and
$25,000 finale July 17.
organizations that fw·ther the I
The !Oth.race Big Triple America n wa y of life. ·
i
combination of 7-3-1 returned
This newspape1· takes great
$1 ,326.60. The mutuel handle pride in br inging this superb
was $352,083.
feature to you, our readers.

I

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r··-,- ·- · - ·- ·- -··- ·-·- ·- -··- ·-·- ·-·- ·-·- !·1i
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HUFFY

II

20 to 22 inch cut

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3 and 31/z hp. models

'I
I PICKENS
I HARDWARE CO.
I

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PUSH LAWN MOWERS

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FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
JUNE 27 AND 28

i

!

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II

8 . 5 : 30Mon . Thurs .

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8 8 00 Fr i. &amp; Sa l .

L-~~:. ~~.:..~~~ -..--..-·-·-"- -..-·- ·- · ~ I
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LADIES
DIVORCE ASKED
Guy R. Rouse , Middleport,
has filed suit for divorce
againsi May R. Rouse,
Lakeland, · Fla., in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court,
~so, Carole J . Tanthorey
was granted a divorce from
Robert Tanthorey . Her
maiden name of Carole Jean
Bush was restored. Rouse
charged gross neglect of duty
and extreme cruelty.

!

Lasting beauty

SWIMWEAR

and
by
Jantzen
and
Catalina
Uothr~.~

Dress Styles Not Included

Men's &amp; Boys'

II

SUMMER
PA.NT SUITS

WALKING
SHORTS

I
I
I

Now Reduced

·30%

Men's &amp; Boys'

I

~IM

I

Keep Your "f.ool" Thi.~ Summ er
ln

KNIT SHIRTS

II
I
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Our
Entire Stock
of

LADIES

PORTSWEAR

Men's &amp; Boys'

I
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Her e~ s your chance to choose famous maker sport-

D&amp;D MEAT

BAHR CLOTHIERS

830 E. Main
Pomeroy, Ohio

MIDDLEPOR.T, OHIO

'

swear at One -Third off before the Ju ly 4th holtday.
Buy what you need now. Shop early tomorrow from
our large selection .
·

From

MON. thru SAT.

WEAR

New York ·clothing House

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POMEROY. OHIO
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�7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thu rsday, June 26, 1975

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, June 26, 1~75

Regatta queens have luncheon

'

i''Vicaraguan earthquake recalled
By GAY PAULEY
UPI Women's Editor
NEW YORK (UPI ) - "1
can't remember ever bei ng
so cared,"
, said Dale M. Humphrey . "I would rather be
shot at."
Humphrey was describing
some of the terror Jn
Managua , Nicaragua, when
two days before Christmas in
1972 a quake devastated the
capital city and took an
estimated 10,000 lives.
.Humphrey, of Grosse lie,
Mich ., wa s a CARE fi eld
representative.
" It is hard to be precise on
the death toll, " he said,
"because many lock their
relatives to their rural homes
to bury them."
Whatever, the quake was
one of the worst of modern
times.
Mrs. Humphrey , 23, who is
Nicaraguan , remembers
details like the pendulum of a
clock swinging crazily before
the quake hit. And once
outside the house, of sittmg
with her parents in a car that
rocked continuously.
Managua had a series of
tremors before the big one hit
and Mrs. Humphrey recalled
that it was a hot, stuffy day,
somehow full of foreboding.
"The noise of a quake is
incredible, a rumble and roar
you can't describe," said
Humphrey. "You can feel it
coming and you're helpless to
stop it. You feel there's no
earth beneath you ... Mother
Earth betrays us only in an
earthquake."
I had sat down with the
couple to talk about their
work with CARE, the int ernational relief
organizatiOn . Then the
subject of the quake came up.
Nicaragua is about the size
of Illinois, he said. The nation
has a · population of two
million, about one-fourth of it
m Managua .
Managua has 11 active
volcanoes in a 50 mile stretch,
said Mrs. Humphrey. "Can
you imagine Illinois with 11
live volcanoes'"
Humphrey , a graduate of
Adrian rMich.) College, went
to the Central American
country more than five years
ago, first as a Peace Corps
volunteer, then as field

representative for CARE.
You could say the quake
brought the Humphreys together . Manlena GLlrcta-Prieto,

who holds a bachelor's
degree from Marymoun t
College, in S.1nta Barbara,
Calif., was con .ir.uing studies
at the Universit) of Central
America in Managua.
The quake devasted the
school, but CA RE. expanding
its operations during the
emergency,
needed a
secretary. She was hired.
She and Humphrey were
mamed in March, 1974.
Now they 're off to Sierra
Leone, a small country on
Africa's West Coast where he
also will serve as a CARE
field representall ve, concentrating on getting health
care facilities into the interior .
In Nicaragua, Humphrey's
special interest was in
building schools with native
help in a land where 80 per
cent of the rural population is
illiterate. After the quake, it
was a matter of rebuilding
and new building. Humphrey
proudly shows pictures of the
new 20-building National
Institute of Vocational
Training .
Humphrey recalled that
after the quake, with
Managua on fire, its elec·
tricity out, its people who
survived dazed, its bridges
popping up beca use of
pressure, its buildings folding
like accordions , he still
managed to get his jeep to the
CARE offices.
He and others of the agency
were able to get a te_legram
sent through the U.S. embassy resident (the embassy
office was levelled) to
CA RE 's in te rnational
headquarters.
Neighboring countries in
which the agency operates Costa Rica , Panama, Honduras and Guatemala began immediate dispatch of
food and medical supplies.
Nicaragua's president had
asked for aid for at least
130,000 victims.
"I neve r went back to live
in my house," Humphrey
said. "There wasn 't anything
to salvage." His future wife's
home, at another side of
town , was not severely

damaged
although
everything was shaken out of
place.
Lots of stories grew from
the di saster . One they
recalled was of the Catholicopera ted reform school with
about 600 pupils.

The head priest, reading
the signs \"dogs howl, no
birds in the sky"), was further warned by the school's
pet monkey "going ape", said
Humphrey . The priest
removed the children. The
quake leveled the buildings.

Peiformance
is scheduled
Wntten, dire cted and
performed in the legitimate
style of the late 19th cen tury,
" Dirty Work at the
Crossroads" , opens the 25th
season of the .Ohio Valley
Summer Theater at 8:30p .m.
on Wednesday, July 2 at the
Patio Theater in Kantner hall
in Athens. One of the most
famous melodramas of the
century, " Tempted, Tried
and True," the alternate title,
will be presented with music
and song.
Jennifer
Reck
and
Elizabeth Behnke of Athens
have the unique task of
building
musical
accompaniment to the action on
piano and violin. The bare
motif for the music has been
provided by the director,
John Robinson of Kalamazoo,
Michigan. "Melodramas
need the right sound - the
plaintive and mellow notes of
violin and piano to augment
the action" claims Robinson ,

JEANNIE WELSH

an old hand at melodramas.
Using a few basic melodies,
Robinson has his instrumentalists improvising
)lackground music. In some
:instances, as in the solos
handled by the lead per·
formers, the music takes
front stage with the action.
All in all, "Dirty Work at
the Crossroads" will provide
an evening of jovial en·
tertainment for those who
like theater and music.
"Dirty Work" plays July 2
through 6 and July 9 through
13 at 8:30p.m. in the Patio
Theater.
For ticket information call
614-594-5010 from 2 p.m to 9
p.m . Wednesday through
Sunday at 2 p.m. to 5 p.m.
Monday and Tuesday.

Club has
potluck
Social is
planned

REEDSVILLE - An ice
cream social was planned for
July 5 at a recent meeting of
the Ladies Auxiliary of the
Olive Fire Department.
The social will be held at
the firehouse from 1 p.m.
until dark. Delores Foster
presided at the meeting with
Charlotta Reed giving the
treasurer 's report. Others
a ttendin g were Lucille
Kimes, Sandra Cowdery, Liz
Upton and Mary Harris.

HARRISONVILLE - A
potluck supper and birthday
party was held by the
Harrisonville Golden Circle
Club at Forest Acres Park
Tuesday .
· Of the six celebrating birth·
days, Mrs. Peg Douglas, the
oldest, received a rose corsage. Mrs. Francis Barnhart
won a quilt awarded at the
supper. Prayer was by
Norman Will. There were 13
members and three guests,
Rosella Birchfield and
daughter, Debbie, and
Margaret Province, at the
outing.

Open baptism set
Her Pounds Weigh Him Down
DEAR RAP :
This girl has been married six months to a good-looking
guy. She was a little "round" to begin with and now she's a tub.
Has gained about 40 pounds.
He begs her to go on a diet, but all she wants to do is eat. He
won 't go any place because he's ashamed of her, and she
wouldn 't go anyway because she doesn 't want to get that far
away from food .
I'm afraid he'll be going out on her soon if she doesn't
improve. Please give some advice before it's too tate .
WORRIED
DEAR WORRIED : .
This girl should see a doctor ! A gain of 40 pounds in six
months could mean either a psychological or physical problem
that requires professional help. - HELEN

REEDSVILLE - There
will be an open baptismal in
the Ohio River, Sunday, at 2
p. m. at the old ferry landing
in Reedsville for boys and
girls who· accepted Christ at

the Riverview Community
Vacation Bible School.
Anyone else wishing may be
baptized during the service.
Re. Robert Neece will Of·
ficiate.

To observe anniversary
LONG BOITOM - Mr. and
Mrs. Sammy Rairden, Long
Bottom, will observe their
6lst wedding anniversary on

July 1. Due to ill health there
will be no celebration but
friends are welcome to stop
by the home or send cards.

Coffee to be served

DE-AR WORRIED :
Or she figures she's got her man so she can now indulge
A coffee break station will
her appitite. (And tnat's a psychological problem, too.) - be in operation on July 4 at
SUE.
· the Route 33 Roadside Park
P. S. Just for the record , are you her husband ?
by the Big Bend Citizen Band
Radio Club.
Plans for the station were
RAP :
This was my senior year in high school, and I'd looked made during a family picnic
forward to graduating with my class. Then after I had ordered and meeting held Tuesday
my cap and gown and invitations, they told me I couldn't night at the Park. Guy Hysell,
graduate . My grades were too low.
president, presented the club
with
the trophy won at the
You can't imagine how heartbroken I was. I tried to o.d.
. on drugs, and I've gone back to drinking and dope. It's so Gallia County Jamboree .
hard to live with my family and friends. Graduation was the Next meeting was announced
for July 1, 8:30p.m. at the
only thing I wanted .
I can't go to summer school because of my job. I can't Rock Springs Grange hall.
Final plans for operating the
afford to quit.
How can I ever live with r.1yse1f? -,-T.K.
T.:
VISITED
Look : You've got a job, you've still got your friends, your
Albert
Hendricks of
family doesn't hate you (but they'll be pretty sick if you get
Claymont,
pela,
and son,
back into booze and dope). So what actually have you lost Mike,
Bluefield,
Va.,
were
except the chance to march on stage and pick up a diploma,
then get tanked at the all-flight graduation party afterwards? weekend guests of Mrs. Eva
If you're sjncere about wanting to finish your high school Dessauer, Pomeroy .
education, you can ! Night school and home study courses are
available, and they won't interfere with your job.
A thought for the day :
Talk to your former principal. You'll be surprised how Author Pearl Buck said, " ... If
helpful he can be. - HELEN AND SUE
there is no other life, then this
one has been enough to make
DEAR RAP :
it worth being born, myself a
I read Mrs. J . P.'s letter about finding an old Playboy hwnan being."
magazine underneath tbe spare tire in the car trunk. I had to
think twice if I had written that letter because exactly the
THE
same thing happened to me.
DAY NURSERY
I was also very. hurt and didn't ~k my husband for a long
time. When I did , he explained that a few guys at work
Open 7 a.m. -•6 p.m .
colle(:(ed them and he was the middleman for trading issues.
Personnel with
He.stopped when he saw I was upset. Tell Mrs. P. to forget
Medical Training
ibout it. I'm sure her husband is as loyal and dependable as
Any age child, infant or
mine Is. - MRS. R. A.
pre.school .
REASONABLE RATES
DEAR MRS. A.:
Lunch and 2 snacks are
And I still ask, what's so ''unloyal" about reading a girlie
provided .
magazine ? Outside of depicting women as unreal, vapid and
By hour, day or week
brainless (but •otherwise well endowed ) there's no lasting
PH. 992-7608
Weekends, 7~2 ·4902
b8l'm in them. And they certainly don't threaten a good
marrlagel-Hio~I..EN

coffee break station on the
holiday weekend will be
made then.
Forty members of the club
and !0 guests were at the
picnic.

Birthday
observed
'

Jean nie Welsh, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Denzil Welsh,
Leading Creek Road, Middlepor t, observed her ninth
birthday Saturday with a
.
party at her home.
Games were played and
refreshments of cake, ice
cream, chips and lemonade
were served. Attending were
Mr. and Mrs. Blaine Carter,
Jr ., Theresa and Joey, and
Juanita Clark, New Haven,
W.Va.; Tarttmy Offenberger,
Diana Bruno, Kim Greene,
J an Rife, Cathy Tyree,
Lann y, Jr. and Jenny ,
Middle port, and Jimmy
Welsh, Columbus.

Regatta favor bags and
door prjzes w.ere awarded at
the Regatta queen's luncheon
last Friday presided over by
Miss Donna Boyd.
Present were the visi ling
queens, their attendants and
the 1975 Regatta quee n
candidates. Providing items
for the favor bags were
Village Gun Shop, Quality
Pnnt Shop, Dan Thompson
Ford dealer , Royal Crown
Bottling Co., Weste rn Auto
Associate Store, Rail's Ben
Franklin, Middleport Book
Sto re, All-Weather Hardware, LaSalle Hotel, Citizens
NatiOnal Bank, Columbia Gas
of OhiO, Inc., Downing-Childs

Insurance, H. and R.
firestone, Holsum and Betsy
Ross Bakery, King Builder
Supply, Dudley's Florists,
Mark V Store, Spencer's
Mark e.t , Middleport
Department Store, State
Farm In suran ce, Steve
Snowden , M. and R.
Foodhner, Stale Automobile
Mutual Insurance Co. , Karr
an d Van Zandt Motor Sales ,
Pomeroy Flower Shop ,
Farmers Bank and Savings
Co., Fabric Shop , Athens
County Savings and Loan,
Davis Insurance, Pomeroy
Nattonal Bank, Mullen's
Insurance Agency, Robinsons
Laundry and Dry Cleaning,

Birth announced
Mr. and Mrs. James P.
Lambert, Route 2, Pomeroy,
are announcing the birth of
their son, Kevin Andrew,
June 17 at Holzer Medical
Center.
The baby weighed seven
lbs., 11 ozs. Mr. and Mrs.
Lambert also have a

daug hter, Karen DeAnn, 2.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Otho Jarvis,
Route 2, Albany, and paternal
grandparents are Mr.' and
Mrs . Drexel A. Lambert, Rt.
1, Rutland. A greatgrandfather is Fred Dilcher
of Columbus.

REEDSVILLE - The
Riverview Community
Vacation Bible School closed
last Friday with a program at
the Riverview school.
Following the program
cookies and punch were
served.
The Bible School, which ran
from Jun 9-20, had an attendance of 113. During the
two weeks an offering of
$90.90 was taken up for a
sharing project. Mrs . Delores
Frank , pr og ram dire ctor,
said the money was used to

purchase bath towels and
washcloths for the Meigs
County Infirmary , and
stuffed toys and coloring
books, were purchased for
the chidren at Veterans
Memorial Hos pital. The
balance of the money was
donated to the Salvation
Army.

AND

CANVAS FOOTWEAR
FOR
....

ALL THE FAMIIoY-

THE SHOE BOX
Middleport, Ohio

AND SlfRGICAL

Support Center

PAY
YOUR

TELEPHONE
BILLS

AT
DUnON'S

Drug Co.
"Your
Prescription
Drug Store"

992-3106
M 1 iddlfw._o~tt.

Q.

'•

When In Doubt •..
Consult With Us
For Expert Advice

Young
wzves
meet

SA.NDALS

PRESCRIPTION

DUTTON .

Bible school closes

THURSDAY
FREE Clothing day will be
held fr om 10 a.m. until noon
at the Salvation Army
Headquarters, Butternut
Ave ., Pomeroy. Ali area
residents in need of clothing
invited.
.
ROCK Springs Grange, 8
p.m. Thursday at the hall.
MIDDLEPORT Child
Conservation League picnic,
•
members an d families,
Roadside Park on Route 33, 7
p.m. Meat and pop furnished .
EXECUTIVE Committee,
Meigs County Regional
Planning Commission
meeting, 3 p.m. ASCS conference room, Farmer's
Bank Building.
CHESTER - The Young
WILDWOOD Garden Club,
Wives
Club met recently at
8 p.m. · at home of Mrs.
the home of Mrs. Norman
Dorothy Smith.
Hawthorne
for a layette
FREE Clothing day for low
shower
honoring
Sheila
income persons, 9 a.m. to 3
p.m . at old high school Whaley.
Attending were Susie
building in Cheshire by
Beeler,
Avice Spencer,
Gallia-Meigs Community
Es
ther
Mays,
Karen Young,
Action Agency.
WILDWOOD Garden Club, · Jane Coates, Sara Bailey,
8 p.m. home of Mrs. Dorothy . Linda Flinner, Lila Van
Smith.
Meter, Lois Kerr, Linda Well,
FRIDAy
and Sheila Whaley, memPAST Matrons, Evangeline bers , and Barbara Knight, a
Chapter, O.E.S., 6 p.m., visitor.
Arrangements were made
potluck, Masonic Temple.
to order cards to sell at the
AUCTION, St. Joseph's next mee ting. A wedding
Parish Hall, Mason, 7 p.m. shower was planned for the
Refreshments , everyone July meeting to honor Susie
welcome.
Beeler. Barbara Knight won
SATURDAY
the door prize. Refreshments
CAR Wash, 10 to 4 p.m. at were served by Mr's.
the Old Rutland High School , Hawthorne and Mrs. Coates.
sponsored by the Rutland
United Methodist Youth
Fellowship,
SUNDAY
REVIVAL Service, Sunday
SUNDAY
through July 6, 7:30 each
REUNION , family of
evening at Guysville Com- Lorena Keyes Sloter and
munityChurchwith Rev. Roy
William Marion Slater, 10
Deeter, evangelist.
'
a.m., ,Burr Oak State Park,
HYMN Sing, Maplewood
picnic and swimming area.
Lake, 1 p.m . featuring
Take covered dish.
"Evangelairs " of Huntington; Rev. 0. G. McKinney, Charleston, speaker.

REUNION PLANNED
PORTLAND - The Fiteh
family reunion will be held at
the Portland., Park Sunday
with a picnic lunch at noon.
THE RACINE First Baptist
All relatives are invited to Church Sunday School and
Bible school picnic will be
attend.
Sunday at the Shrine Park at
!2:30p.m. All members of the
CARDSREQUEST~D
REEDSVILLE - Mrs. church and children who
Metta Benedum of Reeds- attended Bible school and
ville,
a shut-in,
will parents are invited to attend.
celebrate her 85th birthday Table service will be
Sunday. A shower of cards is provided.
being planned by friends.

Hartley Shoes, New York
Clothi ng House, Chapman
Shoes, Marguerite Shoe Shop,
Dale C. Warner Insuran ce,
Meigs Inn, Smith-Nelson
Motors , Landmark, Ga ul's
Shake Haven, Craw's Steak
House, Powell's Super-Valu.
Providing the door prizes
were Nelson Drugs, Stiffler's
Store, Bahr C[othiers, K. and
C. Jewelry, Village Pharmacy and Goessler · Jewelry
Store.

Just
Call

Auxiliary install officers
1975-76 officers were installed, committees for the
year were named, and
projects we re outlined at the
Tuesday night meeting o! the
American Le gion Auxiliary
of Drew Webster Post 39 at
the hall .
Installing officer was Mrs.
Arnold Riclulls, District 8
president, assisted by Mrs.
Car rie Neutzh ng, chaplain.
The new officers are Mrs.
Grace Pratt, president; Mrs.
Marjorie Reuter, first vice
president; Mrs. Iva Powell,
second vice president' Mrs.
Gladys Cumings, secretary;
Mrs. Catherine Welsh,
treasurer ; Miss Erma Smith,
historian, and Mrs. Ed ith
Sauer, chaplain .
Co mmittees appointed
were executive,
Faye
Wildermuth, Mrs. Rhoda
Hacke tt and Mrs. Mary
Martin ; budget, Mrs. Norma
Jewell, Miss Smith, Mrs .
Veda Davis, Mrs . Welsh and
Mrs . Pratt ; by-laws , Mrs.
Isabelle Couch, Mrs. Neutzling and Mrs. Martin.
Chairpersons named were
Mrs . Neutzling, music,
pianist, veterans affairs and
rehabilitation and public
relations; Mrs. Marjorie
Goe tt, Americanism; Mrs.
Wildermuth, community
service; Mrs. Ruth Powers,
children and youth; Mrs.
Gemma Casci, national
defense; Mrs. Davis, with
Mrs. Goett and Mrs. Couch,
junior activities; Mrs. Couch,
education and scholarship ;
Mrs. Rhooa Hackett, civil
defense ; Mr. Ellen Couch,
cards and flowers; Miss
Smith, foreign relati ons;
Mrs. Reuter, poppy chairwoman.
During the meeting the unit
voted to "adopt" again this
year a boys cottage at the
Xenia Home with Mrs.
Powers to be in charge of
handling activities there.
The birthday party at the
Chillicothe Veterans Hospital
was announced for July 10
and Mrs. Neutzling was
named to purchase 50 towels
which will be made into bibs
and taken to the hospital.
Homemade cakes and candies are also needed and Mrs.
Ne utzling has said that
anyone, whether active in the

auxiliary or not, in invited to presented the program .which
contribute and are asked to 11pencd wi th "Story of Our
contact her. Among those Fla~" by Robin Campbell, a
who will be going to the party skit; "Ow· Flag" by Cheryl
are Mrs. Neutzling, Mrs. Lewhew, Pam Powers, Lori
Hackett, Mrs. Pratt and Mrs. Wood, Shert Marshall, Paula
Wildermuth .
Kines and Rhonda Reuter,
Purchase of another air and concluding with group
conditioner for the hall was singing of "You're a Grand
approved.' and the post will be Old Flag" . With Mrs .
contacted for approval and Neutzlin g at the ptano, the
assistance. It was noted that members sa ng "He Leadeth
th e grave markers have Me " and · "Keep the Home
arrived and wiil be placed on Fires Burning."
the graves of deceased
Taking part in the ri tualistic
members soon. Cards of · opening of the meeting were
thanks were read from Joan Cheryl Lehew, sergeant at
Vaughan and Mrs. Davis.
arms; Paula Kloes and Pam
Reporting on the junior Powers, colorbearers. Mrs.
department conference held Cumm gs asststed m serving
at Marion recen tly were t h e . r e freshm e nt s.
Cheryl Lehew, Pam Powers Homemade ice cream, punch
and Tracey Jeffers. Pam was and assorted cookies were
installed as Eighth District se rved from a table centered
president at the conference, with a fla g replica and
an d the juniors received decorated in red , white and
awards including first places blue . Favors were mint cups
in the foreign relations with flags.
scrapbook prepared by
Hostesses for the July
Debbi e Lehew, the doll meeting will be Mrs. Reuter
dressing contest by Tracey and Mrs. Vau ghan. The
Jeffers, the conference cover program will be by the
by Cheryl Lehew, th e Buckeye
Girls
State
tivities scrapbook prepared represe ntative .
by Cheryl Lehew, and the
foreign relations essay
prepared by
Charlotte
Lehew. First place awards go
into national competition.
COLUMBUS - Denver L.
Second place awards were
White,
director of the Ohio
in children and youth
narrative r ep ort , Departmen t of Public
Americamsm narrative Welfare announced today
re port, the Dorothy Mc- that Ohio's proposed Plan for
Cullough Am ericanism Social Services has been
program, the history of compl ete d and is being
juniors written by Cheryl dtstributed for public review .
Coptes of the complete plan
Lehew, the membership
renewals by Paula Kloes , will be available for review at
conference cover, Class 3, all county welfare departprepared by Tracey Jeffers; ments. Detailed summaries
junior activities narrative of the plan may be obtained
prepared by Mrs. Davls, by writin g to the Social
handwork contest 1, class A Services Division, Ohio
tm ent of Public
and B, and con test 2, class A Depar
Welfare,
30 East Broad
and B. A third place award
was received on the foreign Street, Columbus, Ohio 43215.
The plan has been
relations essay and the book
developed
in accordan ce with
of prayers and devotions
prepared by Cheryl Lehew. Titl e XX of the Social
The juniors also received Security Act, effective Oc·
honorable mention on the Iober 1, 1975. It will be open
foreign relations scrapbook for review and comments for
and the veterans affairs and 45 days, July 1 to August 15,
before final adoption.
rehabilitatiOn.
Title XX has the potential
Mrs. Ellen Couch gave a
report on cards and flowers. of bringing $127 million in
The juniors under the federal funds mto Ohio for
leadership of Mrs. Goett soc ial se rvice program s

Polly's Poin
BY POLLY CRAMER

Kenneth Mi':Cullough, R. Ph. Charles Riffle, R. Ph.
Open Dally 8:00a .m. to 9:30p.m.
Su~day 10:30to 12 :30 and s to 9 p.m.

PRESCRIPTIONS

PH. 992-2955

Friendly Service

112 E. MAIN

POMEROY, 0.

SUMMER . CLEARANCE
1
TO l
oFF

4

2

ON ALL

SUMMER MERDiANDISE
BATHING .SUITS,
SHORTS. SUN SUITS.
DRESSES, ETC.
Infant To Size 14

THE KIDDIE SHOPPE
MID

RT, OHIO

DEAR POLLY - While
doing volunteer work in a
hospital gift shop I
discovered how filthy money
really is - hence my Pet
Peeve. At many lunch
counters , and one where I
often eat, the girl who makes
my sandwich also pick up
dirty bills, gives me the
change and then goes on to.
make another sandwich.• It
seems there should be a law
governing them. A cashier
should always make change
and the girls who handle food
· should never be allowed to
touch Oil£ dirty money. -'
MAE.
DEAR POLLY - My first
Pointer is the me.thod 1 found
helpful in teaching my young
son the differen t , .colors, I
)

In 1948, the United States
began operation of th e
"Berlin Airlift" to bypass a
Soviet road and rail blockade
of the divided German city .

.

ByUPI
Today is Thursday, June
26, the !nth day of 1975 with
188 to follow.
The moon is between Its full
phase and last quarter.
'file morning stars are
Mercury, Mars and Jupiter.
The evening stars are
Venus and Saturn.
Those born on thi s date are
under the sign of Cancer.
American novelist Pearl
Buck was born June 26, 1892.
On this day in history :
In 1900, Dr. Walter Reed led
a medical team formed to
wipe out yellow fever in- the
Panama Canal Zone.
In 1917, first troops of the
American Expeditionary
Force reached France for
action in World War I.
In 1944, Cherbourg, the
third largest port in France,
was liberated from Nazi
OCC!!Pation in World War ll.

save the many bright-colored
caps from spray cans to use
for ihis. Holes can be punched
in the tops so they can be
strung together and always
be at hand with none lost. A
piece of tape with the color
name written on it can be
stuck on the inside So they
also can learn to identify the
word with the color.
My other Pointer is for
plant lovers. Many of the
plant foods on the market
have to be dissolved in water
and call for a large amount of
water - more than needed by
the person with just a few
plants. I thoroughly wash an
empty dish detergent bottle
and' put the mixed plant food
in it so it is ready for later use
in a handy watering can.
This keeps the mixture at
room temperature which is
better for many plants than
the shocR of cold water. No
waste either. -DEBRA
DEAR POLLY - We know
all about the pictures we put
in our photo albums, but in
future years our grandchildren
and
great·
grandchildren would be
grateful if we write names,
places, dates and the
relationship of the people
shown on the photos. Pictures
mean more to each succeeding generation and much
more if they know such in· :
formation . ·If your album is
filled with unmarked pictures
sit down on a rainy day,
reminisce and then fill in the
pertinent information .
MRS. C, B.S.

PITI'SBURGH (UPI) Thorofare Markets Inc.,
which has complained of
financial problems since a
132-ilay strike in 1973, has
asked employes in its 77 area
stores to take an immediate
11 per cent cut in pay, it was
reported' today.
The Youngstown, Ohiobased food chain also askll,d
the employes, members of
Retail Store Employes Local
1407 and Amalgamated Meat
Cutters Local 424, to waive a
$HJ.a-week salary increase
due in September.
Thorofare officials
reportedly indicated in letters to emp\oyes the 77 stores
may be shut down if the pay
reduction is not approved by
July 1.
Neither Thorofare nor
union officials were im·
mediately available for
comment.
According to reports, both
unions, which represent
about 2,500 workers, already

PRACTICE CHANGED
Practice for the Senior
Citizens Chorus will be held ·
on Wednesday instead of
Tuesday, Mrs. Carrie
Neu tzling, director , an·
nounces. the change was
necessitated because piC·
lures of the choir and tapes
will be made that day . All
chorus members are urged to
attend.

·-

.,

~

CHEERLEADERS AITEND CAMP- Sheila Sargent, Denise Marshall (top), Paige
Smith, Cathy Blaettnar, Stephanie Rought (bottom), and Sally Walters, Meigs High
Reserve Cheerleaders for the 1975-76 season attended cheer leading camp June 16-19 at West
Virginia Wesleyan College, Buckhannon, W.Va. The girls earned the money to attend camp
by holding a car wash and tag day. The girls, evaluated at the camp with other squads,
received two excellent ratings. The girls thank eve ryone who helped make it possible for
them to attend the camp.

annually, based on the
availability of at least $42
million in state and local
matchin g funds.
The proposed plan calls for
an estimated annual expend! ture of $73,687 ,000,
based on . currently identifiabl e state and local
matching funds of $18,340,000.
This can be amplified as
more matching funds are
idenltfied and available, Mr .
White said .
Purpose of the plan, he
explained, is to provide Ohio
wtth social services that will
help re sidents to restore,
maintain and improve their
capabilities for self-support,
self-care, independent living,
to strengthen family life, and
where necessary to provide
institutional livmg.
Services in the plan include
foster care for chidren, day
care for children, family
planning , informati on and
referral, adoption services,
training and employment

11% wage cut asked of
Thorofare's employes

Nail polish
removal tips
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - Would
you please tell me how to get
nail polish out of my 100 per
cent Forte! polyester jacket?
- MRS. A. H.
DEAR MRS. A.H. - Take
your pick of the following
Pointers. A Department of
Agriculture bulletin says nail
polish remover may be used
for this on any fabrics except
acetate, Arne!, Dyne! or
Verel - but ALWAYS test
first.
A chart from a well-known
soap and detergent maker
says the same. Place stain
face down on paper towels
and sponge the back with the
polish remover until stain
disappears, then launder.
During the stain rem~val
process change towels
frequently.
A leading washing machine
manufacturer says NOT to
use the remover but to sponge
with pure amyl acetate,
launder. If stain persists
sponge with rubbing alcohol
to which a few drops of
ammonia have been added.
Take your pick but no matter
what you try test on your
fabric first. - POLLY.

f

rhe Almanac

Ohio Welfare Services plan ready for review

992-2955

Your registered
pharmacists are
always ready to
help you select
the best product for your needs, Get
acquainted with us. We're well -known
for friendliness, courtesy, caring.

Dtvistun nl Social Services,
Ohio neparlmenl of Public
Welfare, :10 East Broad
Street, Colum bus, Ohio,
43215.
Mrs. Madry pointed out
that m addtl1on to the overall
state plan lor social services,
eac h county will have its own
plan open for review and
comment. . _
.
Mrs. Madry also noted that
a large num ber of indtviduals
and organi zati ons hav e
assisted in the preparation of
the state plan. More than
5,000 que stionna ires were
sent out, and more th an 3,000
returned, in an assessment of
the state's needs for social
servtces, she said. These
were utilized m deveoping the
state plan .

have refused to take the pay
cuts.
Thorofare reported a loss of
$479,903 for the fiscal quarter
ending last April, and a
company official said at that
time employes would be
asked to take pay reductions.
Thorofare's financial problems apparently began with a
132-ilay strike by Teamsters
Local 249 that ended Feb. 10,
1973.
Since then, Loc;;il 249 has
been
dissolved
and
Thorofare's headquarters
and warehouse facilities were
moved from suburban
Murrysville to Youngstown,
idling Local249 members and
many other 9ffice and
warehouse employes.
Thorofare employes due a
wage hike in October 1973
waived the raise at company
urging until the following
April, when they received
half of the increase. They
received the rest of the pay
boost last August.

services, comprehensive
care for adults, comprehendsive pr otecti ve care for '
childr en, guardianship
services,
health-rela ted
servtces, counseling services,
and certain other optional
services that counties may
elect to offer where there is a
need and where resources are
available.
Those eligible for the
services would include: 11)
Recip ie nt s of · Aid for
Dependent Children; (2 )
Recipients of Supplemental

''

Security
In come ;
13)
Medicat d 1Title
XIX (
,·ecipienls; (4) Persons in
immed_iate danger , needing
social protective · servtces;
15 ) Low in come families
(Example· Family of four
with not over $5,500); and 16)
Other eligtbles to be determined as mat chin g funds
become available.
Written comm ents on the
plan ma y be made to the·
county welfare departments.
or may be sent to Mrs.
Mildr ed Madry , Dtre ctor ,

ON ANY TV SET YOU BRING INTO OUR SHOP.
OR WE WIU PICK UP AND DEliVER YOUR iV
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f····· wmmrr
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Chilled Water Dispenser
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Waist-h igh Frig •d Meat
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Large See-Through
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Adjustable tempered
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Pick-off Egg Trays save
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SUMMER
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In one year that cCJ uid
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�7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thu rsday, June 26, 1975

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, June 26, 1~75

Regatta queens have luncheon

'

i''Vicaraguan earthquake recalled
By GAY PAULEY
UPI Women's Editor
NEW YORK (UPI ) - "1
can't remember ever bei ng
so cared,"
, said Dale M. Humphrey . "I would rather be
shot at."
Humphrey was describing
some of the terror Jn
Managua , Nicaragua, when
two days before Christmas in
1972 a quake devastated the
capital city and took an
estimated 10,000 lives.
.Humphrey, of Grosse lie,
Mich ., wa s a CARE fi eld
representative.
" It is hard to be precise on
the death toll, " he said,
"because many lock their
relatives to their rural homes
to bury them."
Whatever, the quake was
one of the worst of modern
times.
Mrs. Humphrey , 23, who is
Nicaraguan , remembers
details like the pendulum of a
clock swinging crazily before
the quake hit. And once
outside the house, of sittmg
with her parents in a car that
rocked continuously.
Managua had a series of
tremors before the big one hit
and Mrs. Humphrey recalled
that it was a hot, stuffy day,
somehow full of foreboding.
"The noise of a quake is
incredible, a rumble and roar
you can't describe," said
Humphrey. "You can feel it
coming and you're helpless to
stop it. You feel there's no
earth beneath you ... Mother
Earth betrays us only in an
earthquake."
I had sat down with the
couple to talk about their
work with CARE, the int ernational relief
organizatiOn . Then the
subject of the quake came up.
Nicaragua is about the size
of Illinois, he said. The nation
has a · population of two
million, about one-fourth of it
m Managua .
Managua has 11 active
volcanoes in a 50 mile stretch,
said Mrs. Humphrey. "Can
you imagine Illinois with 11
live volcanoes'"
Humphrey , a graduate of
Adrian rMich.) College, went
to the Central American
country more than five years
ago, first as a Peace Corps
volunteer, then as field

representative for CARE.
You could say the quake
brought the Humphreys together . Manlena GLlrcta-Prieto,

who holds a bachelor's
degree from Marymoun t
College, in S.1nta Barbara,
Calif., was con .ir.uing studies
at the Universit) of Central
America in Managua.
The quake devasted the
school, but CA RE. expanding
its operations during the
emergency,
needed a
secretary. She was hired.
She and Humphrey were
mamed in March, 1974.
Now they 're off to Sierra
Leone, a small country on
Africa's West Coast where he
also will serve as a CARE
field representall ve, concentrating on getting health
care facilities into the interior .
In Nicaragua, Humphrey's
special interest was in
building schools with native
help in a land where 80 per
cent of the rural population is
illiterate. After the quake, it
was a matter of rebuilding
and new building. Humphrey
proudly shows pictures of the
new 20-building National
Institute of Vocational
Training .
Humphrey recalled that
after the quake, with
Managua on fire, its elec·
tricity out, its people who
survived dazed, its bridges
popping up beca use of
pressure, its buildings folding
like accordions , he still
managed to get his jeep to the
CARE offices.
He and others of the agency
were able to get a te_legram
sent through the U.S. embassy resident (the embassy
office was levelled) to
CA RE 's in te rnational
headquarters.
Neighboring countries in
which the agency operates Costa Rica , Panama, Honduras and Guatemala began immediate dispatch of
food and medical supplies.
Nicaragua's president had
asked for aid for at least
130,000 victims.
"I neve r went back to live
in my house," Humphrey
said. "There wasn 't anything
to salvage." His future wife's
home, at another side of
town , was not severely

damaged
although
everything was shaken out of
place.
Lots of stories grew from
the di saster . One they
recalled was of the Catholicopera ted reform school with
about 600 pupils.

The head priest, reading
the signs \"dogs howl, no
birds in the sky"), was further warned by the school's
pet monkey "going ape", said
Humphrey . The priest
removed the children. The
quake leveled the buildings.

Peiformance
is scheduled
Wntten, dire cted and
performed in the legitimate
style of the late 19th cen tury,
" Dirty Work at the
Crossroads" , opens the 25th
season of the .Ohio Valley
Summer Theater at 8:30p .m.
on Wednesday, July 2 at the
Patio Theater in Kantner hall
in Athens. One of the most
famous melodramas of the
century, " Tempted, Tried
and True," the alternate title,
will be presented with music
and song.
Jennifer
Reck
and
Elizabeth Behnke of Athens
have the unique task of
building
musical
accompaniment to the action on
piano and violin. The bare
motif for the music has been
provided by the director,
John Robinson of Kalamazoo,
Michigan. "Melodramas
need the right sound - the
plaintive and mellow notes of
violin and piano to augment
the action" claims Robinson ,

JEANNIE WELSH

an old hand at melodramas.
Using a few basic melodies,
Robinson has his instrumentalists improvising
)lackground music. In some
:instances, as in the solos
handled by the lead per·
formers, the music takes
front stage with the action.
All in all, "Dirty Work at
the Crossroads" will provide
an evening of jovial en·
tertainment for those who
like theater and music.
"Dirty Work" plays July 2
through 6 and July 9 through
13 at 8:30p.m. in the Patio
Theater.
For ticket information call
614-594-5010 from 2 p.m to 9
p.m . Wednesday through
Sunday at 2 p.m. to 5 p.m.
Monday and Tuesday.

Club has
potluck
Social is
planned

REEDSVILLE - An ice
cream social was planned for
July 5 at a recent meeting of
the Ladies Auxiliary of the
Olive Fire Department.
The social will be held at
the firehouse from 1 p.m.
until dark. Delores Foster
presided at the meeting with
Charlotta Reed giving the
treasurer 's report. Others
a ttendin g were Lucille
Kimes, Sandra Cowdery, Liz
Upton and Mary Harris.

HARRISONVILLE - A
potluck supper and birthday
party was held by the
Harrisonville Golden Circle
Club at Forest Acres Park
Tuesday .
· Of the six celebrating birth·
days, Mrs. Peg Douglas, the
oldest, received a rose corsage. Mrs. Francis Barnhart
won a quilt awarded at the
supper. Prayer was by
Norman Will. There were 13
members and three guests,
Rosella Birchfield and
daughter, Debbie, and
Margaret Province, at the
outing.

Open baptism set
Her Pounds Weigh Him Down
DEAR RAP :
This girl has been married six months to a good-looking
guy. She was a little "round" to begin with and now she's a tub.
Has gained about 40 pounds.
He begs her to go on a diet, but all she wants to do is eat. He
won 't go any place because he's ashamed of her, and she
wouldn 't go anyway because she doesn 't want to get that far
away from food .
I'm afraid he'll be going out on her soon if she doesn't
improve. Please give some advice before it's too tate .
WORRIED
DEAR WORRIED : .
This girl should see a doctor ! A gain of 40 pounds in six
months could mean either a psychological or physical problem
that requires professional help. - HELEN

REEDSVILLE - There
will be an open baptismal in
the Ohio River, Sunday, at 2
p. m. at the old ferry landing
in Reedsville for boys and
girls who· accepted Christ at

the Riverview Community
Vacation Bible School.
Anyone else wishing may be
baptized during the service.
Re. Robert Neece will Of·
ficiate.

To observe anniversary
LONG BOITOM - Mr. and
Mrs. Sammy Rairden, Long
Bottom, will observe their
6lst wedding anniversary on

July 1. Due to ill health there
will be no celebration but
friends are welcome to stop
by the home or send cards.

Coffee to be served

DE-AR WORRIED :
Or she figures she's got her man so she can now indulge
A coffee break station will
her appitite. (And tnat's a psychological problem, too.) - be in operation on July 4 at
SUE.
· the Route 33 Roadside Park
P. S. Just for the record , are you her husband ?
by the Big Bend Citizen Band
Radio Club.
Plans for the station were
RAP :
This was my senior year in high school, and I'd looked made during a family picnic
forward to graduating with my class. Then after I had ordered and meeting held Tuesday
my cap and gown and invitations, they told me I couldn't night at the Park. Guy Hysell,
graduate . My grades were too low.
president, presented the club
with
the trophy won at the
You can't imagine how heartbroken I was. I tried to o.d.
. on drugs, and I've gone back to drinking and dope. It's so Gallia County Jamboree .
hard to live with my family and friends. Graduation was the Next meeting was announced
for July 1, 8:30p.m. at the
only thing I wanted .
I can't go to summer school because of my job. I can't Rock Springs Grange hall.
Final plans for operating the
afford to quit.
How can I ever live with r.1yse1f? -,-T.K.
T.:
VISITED
Look : You've got a job, you've still got your friends, your
Albert
Hendricks of
family doesn't hate you (but they'll be pretty sick if you get
Claymont,
pela,
and son,
back into booze and dope). So what actually have you lost Mike,
Bluefield,
Va.,
were
except the chance to march on stage and pick up a diploma,
then get tanked at the all-flight graduation party afterwards? weekend guests of Mrs. Eva
If you're sjncere about wanting to finish your high school Dessauer, Pomeroy .
education, you can ! Night school and home study courses are
available, and they won't interfere with your job.
A thought for the day :
Talk to your former principal. You'll be surprised how Author Pearl Buck said, " ... If
helpful he can be. - HELEN AND SUE
there is no other life, then this
one has been enough to make
DEAR RAP :
it worth being born, myself a
I read Mrs. J . P.'s letter about finding an old Playboy hwnan being."
magazine underneath tbe spare tire in the car trunk. I had to
think twice if I had written that letter because exactly the
THE
same thing happened to me.
DAY NURSERY
I was also very. hurt and didn't ~k my husband for a long
time. When I did , he explained that a few guys at work
Open 7 a.m. -•6 p.m .
colle(:(ed them and he was the middleman for trading issues.
Personnel with
He.stopped when he saw I was upset. Tell Mrs. P. to forget
Medical Training
ibout it. I'm sure her husband is as loyal and dependable as
Any age child, infant or
mine Is. - MRS. R. A.
pre.school .
REASONABLE RATES
DEAR MRS. A.:
Lunch and 2 snacks are
And I still ask, what's so ''unloyal" about reading a girlie
provided .
magazine ? Outside of depicting women as unreal, vapid and
By hour, day or week
brainless (but •otherwise well endowed ) there's no lasting
PH. 992-7608
Weekends, 7~2 ·4902
b8l'm in them. And they certainly don't threaten a good
marrlagel-Hio~I..EN

coffee break station on the
holiday weekend will be
made then.
Forty members of the club
and !0 guests were at the
picnic.

Birthday
observed
'

Jean nie Welsh, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Denzil Welsh,
Leading Creek Road, Middlepor t, observed her ninth
birthday Saturday with a
.
party at her home.
Games were played and
refreshments of cake, ice
cream, chips and lemonade
were served. Attending were
Mr. and Mrs. Blaine Carter,
Jr ., Theresa and Joey, and
Juanita Clark, New Haven,
W.Va.; Tarttmy Offenberger,
Diana Bruno, Kim Greene,
J an Rife, Cathy Tyree,
Lann y, Jr. and Jenny ,
Middle port, and Jimmy
Welsh, Columbus.

Regatta favor bags and
door prjzes w.ere awarded at
the Regatta queen's luncheon
last Friday presided over by
Miss Donna Boyd.
Present were the visi ling
queens, their attendants and
the 1975 Regatta quee n
candidates. Providing items
for the favor bags were
Village Gun Shop, Quality
Pnnt Shop, Dan Thompson
Ford dealer , Royal Crown
Bottling Co., Weste rn Auto
Associate Store, Rail's Ben
Franklin, Middleport Book
Sto re, All-Weather Hardware, LaSalle Hotel, Citizens
NatiOnal Bank, Columbia Gas
of OhiO, Inc., Downing-Childs

Insurance, H. and R.
firestone, Holsum and Betsy
Ross Bakery, King Builder
Supply, Dudley's Florists,
Mark V Store, Spencer's
Mark e.t , Middleport
Department Store, State
Farm In suran ce, Steve
Snowden , M. and R.
Foodhner, Stale Automobile
Mutual Insurance Co. , Karr
an d Van Zandt Motor Sales ,
Pomeroy Flower Shop ,
Farmers Bank and Savings
Co., Fabric Shop , Athens
County Savings and Loan,
Davis Insurance, Pomeroy
Nattonal Bank, Mullen's
Insurance Agency, Robinsons
Laundry and Dry Cleaning,

Birth announced
Mr. and Mrs. James P.
Lambert, Route 2, Pomeroy,
are announcing the birth of
their son, Kevin Andrew,
June 17 at Holzer Medical
Center.
The baby weighed seven
lbs., 11 ozs. Mr. and Mrs.
Lambert also have a

daug hter, Karen DeAnn, 2.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Otho Jarvis,
Route 2, Albany, and paternal
grandparents are Mr.' and
Mrs . Drexel A. Lambert, Rt.
1, Rutland. A greatgrandfather is Fred Dilcher
of Columbus.

REEDSVILLE - The
Riverview Community
Vacation Bible School closed
last Friday with a program at
the Riverview school.
Following the program
cookies and punch were
served.
The Bible School, which ran
from Jun 9-20, had an attendance of 113. During the
two weeks an offering of
$90.90 was taken up for a
sharing project. Mrs . Delores
Frank , pr og ram dire ctor,
said the money was used to

purchase bath towels and
washcloths for the Meigs
County Infirmary , and
stuffed toys and coloring
books, were purchased for
the chidren at Veterans
Memorial Hos pital. The
balance of the money was
donated to the Salvation
Army.

AND

CANVAS FOOTWEAR
FOR
....

ALL THE FAMIIoY-

THE SHOE BOX
Middleport, Ohio

AND SlfRGICAL

Support Center

PAY
YOUR

TELEPHONE
BILLS

AT
DUnON'S

Drug Co.
"Your
Prescription
Drug Store"

992-3106
M 1 iddlfw._o~tt.

Q.

'•

When In Doubt •..
Consult With Us
For Expert Advice

Young
wzves
meet

SA.NDALS

PRESCRIPTION

DUTTON .

Bible school closes

THURSDAY
FREE Clothing day will be
held fr om 10 a.m. until noon
at the Salvation Army
Headquarters, Butternut
Ave ., Pomeroy. Ali area
residents in need of clothing
invited.
.
ROCK Springs Grange, 8
p.m. Thursday at the hall.
MIDDLEPORT Child
Conservation League picnic,
•
members an d families,
Roadside Park on Route 33, 7
p.m. Meat and pop furnished .
EXECUTIVE Committee,
Meigs County Regional
Planning Commission
meeting, 3 p.m. ASCS conference room, Farmer's
Bank Building.
CHESTER - The Young
WILDWOOD Garden Club,
Wives
Club met recently at
8 p.m. · at home of Mrs.
the home of Mrs. Norman
Dorothy Smith.
Hawthorne
for a layette
FREE Clothing day for low
shower
honoring
Sheila
income persons, 9 a.m. to 3
p.m . at old high school Whaley.
Attending were Susie
building in Cheshire by
Beeler,
Avice Spencer,
Gallia-Meigs Community
Es
ther
Mays,
Karen Young,
Action Agency.
WILDWOOD Garden Club, · Jane Coates, Sara Bailey,
8 p.m. home of Mrs. Dorothy . Linda Flinner, Lila Van
Smith.
Meter, Lois Kerr, Linda Well,
FRIDAy
and Sheila Whaley, memPAST Matrons, Evangeline bers , and Barbara Knight, a
Chapter, O.E.S., 6 p.m., visitor.
Arrangements were made
potluck, Masonic Temple.
to order cards to sell at the
AUCTION, St. Joseph's next mee ting. A wedding
Parish Hall, Mason, 7 p.m. shower was planned for the
Refreshments , everyone July meeting to honor Susie
welcome.
Beeler. Barbara Knight won
SATURDAY
the door prize. Refreshments
CAR Wash, 10 to 4 p.m. at were served by Mr's.
the Old Rutland High School , Hawthorne and Mrs. Coates.
sponsored by the Rutland
United Methodist Youth
Fellowship,
SUNDAY
REVIVAL Service, Sunday
SUNDAY
through July 6, 7:30 each
REUNION , family of
evening at Guysville Com- Lorena Keyes Sloter and
munityChurchwith Rev. Roy
William Marion Slater, 10
Deeter, evangelist.
'
a.m., ,Burr Oak State Park,
HYMN Sing, Maplewood
picnic and swimming area.
Lake, 1 p.m . featuring
Take covered dish.
"Evangelairs " of Huntington; Rev. 0. G. McKinney, Charleston, speaker.

REUNION PLANNED
PORTLAND - The Fiteh
family reunion will be held at
the Portland., Park Sunday
with a picnic lunch at noon.
THE RACINE First Baptist
All relatives are invited to Church Sunday School and
Bible school picnic will be
attend.
Sunday at the Shrine Park at
!2:30p.m. All members of the
CARDSREQUEST~D
REEDSVILLE - Mrs. church and children who
Metta Benedum of Reeds- attended Bible school and
ville,
a shut-in,
will parents are invited to attend.
celebrate her 85th birthday Table service will be
Sunday. A shower of cards is provided.
being planned by friends.

Hartley Shoes, New York
Clothi ng House, Chapman
Shoes, Marguerite Shoe Shop,
Dale C. Warner Insuran ce,
Meigs Inn, Smith-Nelson
Motors , Landmark, Ga ul's
Shake Haven, Craw's Steak
House, Powell's Super-Valu.
Providing the door prizes
were Nelson Drugs, Stiffler's
Store, Bahr C[othiers, K. and
C. Jewelry, Village Pharmacy and Goessler · Jewelry
Store.

Just
Call

Auxiliary install officers
1975-76 officers were installed, committees for the
year were named, and
projects we re outlined at the
Tuesday night meeting o! the
American Le gion Auxiliary
of Drew Webster Post 39 at
the hall .
Installing officer was Mrs.
Arnold Riclulls, District 8
president, assisted by Mrs.
Car rie Neutzh ng, chaplain.
The new officers are Mrs.
Grace Pratt, president; Mrs.
Marjorie Reuter, first vice
president; Mrs. Iva Powell,
second vice president' Mrs.
Gladys Cumings, secretary;
Mrs. Catherine Welsh,
treasurer ; Miss Erma Smith,
historian, and Mrs. Ed ith
Sauer, chaplain .
Co mmittees appointed
were executive,
Faye
Wildermuth, Mrs. Rhoda
Hacke tt and Mrs. Mary
Martin ; budget, Mrs. Norma
Jewell, Miss Smith, Mrs .
Veda Davis, Mrs . Welsh and
Mrs . Pratt ; by-laws , Mrs.
Isabelle Couch, Mrs. Neutzling and Mrs. Martin.
Chairpersons named were
Mrs . Neutzling, music,
pianist, veterans affairs and
rehabilitation and public
relations; Mrs. Marjorie
Goe tt, Americanism; Mrs.
Wildermuth, community
service; Mrs. Ruth Powers,
children and youth; Mrs.
Gemma Casci, national
defense; Mrs. Davis, with
Mrs. Goett and Mrs. Couch,
junior activities; Mrs. Couch,
education and scholarship ;
Mrs. Rhooa Hackett, civil
defense ; Mr. Ellen Couch,
cards and flowers; Miss
Smith, foreign relati ons;
Mrs. Reuter, poppy chairwoman.
During the meeting the unit
voted to "adopt" again this
year a boys cottage at the
Xenia Home with Mrs.
Powers to be in charge of
handling activities there.
The birthday party at the
Chillicothe Veterans Hospital
was announced for July 10
and Mrs. Neutzling was
named to purchase 50 towels
which will be made into bibs
and taken to the hospital.
Homemade cakes and candies are also needed and Mrs.
Ne utzling has said that
anyone, whether active in the

auxiliary or not, in invited to presented the program .which
contribute and are asked to 11pencd wi th "Story of Our
contact her. Among those Fla~" by Robin Campbell, a
who will be going to the party skit; "Ow· Flag" by Cheryl
are Mrs. Neutzling, Mrs. Lewhew, Pam Powers, Lori
Hackett, Mrs. Pratt and Mrs. Wood, Shert Marshall, Paula
Wildermuth .
Kines and Rhonda Reuter,
Purchase of another air and concluding with group
conditioner for the hall was singing of "You're a Grand
approved.' and the post will be Old Flag" . With Mrs .
contacted for approval and Neutzlin g at the ptano, the
assistance. It was noted that members sa ng "He Leadeth
th e grave markers have Me " and · "Keep the Home
arrived and wiil be placed on Fires Burning."
the graves of deceased
Taking part in the ri tualistic
members soon. Cards of · opening of the meeting were
thanks were read from Joan Cheryl Lehew, sergeant at
Vaughan and Mrs. Davis.
arms; Paula Kloes and Pam
Reporting on the junior Powers, colorbearers. Mrs.
department conference held Cumm gs asststed m serving
at Marion recen tly were t h e . r e freshm e nt s.
Cheryl Lehew, Pam Powers Homemade ice cream, punch
and Tracey Jeffers. Pam was and assorted cookies were
installed as Eighth District se rved from a table centered
president at the conference, with a fla g replica and
an d the juniors received decorated in red , white and
awards including first places blue . Favors were mint cups
in the foreign relations with flags.
scrapbook prepared by
Hostesses for the July
Debbi e Lehew, the doll meeting will be Mrs. Reuter
dressing contest by Tracey and Mrs. Vau ghan. The
Jeffers, the conference cover program will be by the
by Cheryl Lehew, th e Buckeye
Girls
State
tivities scrapbook prepared represe ntative .
by Cheryl Lehew, and the
foreign relations essay
prepared by
Charlotte
Lehew. First place awards go
into national competition.
COLUMBUS - Denver L.
Second place awards were
White,
director of the Ohio
in children and youth
narrative r ep ort , Departmen t of Public
Americamsm narrative Welfare announced today
re port, the Dorothy Mc- that Ohio's proposed Plan for
Cullough Am ericanism Social Services has been
program, the history of compl ete d and is being
juniors written by Cheryl dtstributed for public review .
Coptes of the complete plan
Lehew, the membership
renewals by Paula Kloes , will be available for review at
conference cover, Class 3, all county welfare departprepared by Tracey Jeffers; ments. Detailed summaries
junior activities narrative of the plan may be obtained
prepared by Mrs. Davls, by writin g to the Social
handwork contest 1, class A Services Division, Ohio
tm ent of Public
and B, and con test 2, class A Depar
Welfare,
30 East Broad
and B. A third place award
was received on the foreign Street, Columbus, Ohio 43215.
The plan has been
relations essay and the book
developed
in accordan ce with
of prayers and devotions
prepared by Cheryl Lehew. Titl e XX of the Social
The juniors also received Security Act, effective Oc·
honorable mention on the Iober 1, 1975. It will be open
foreign relations scrapbook for review and comments for
and the veterans affairs and 45 days, July 1 to August 15,
before final adoption.
rehabilitatiOn.
Title XX has the potential
Mrs. Ellen Couch gave a
report on cards and flowers. of bringing $127 million in
The juniors under the federal funds mto Ohio for
leadership of Mrs. Goett soc ial se rvice program s

Polly's Poin
BY POLLY CRAMER

Kenneth Mi':Cullough, R. Ph. Charles Riffle, R. Ph.
Open Dally 8:00a .m. to 9:30p.m.
Su~day 10:30to 12 :30 and s to 9 p.m.

PRESCRIPTIONS

PH. 992-2955

Friendly Service

112 E. MAIN

POMEROY, 0.

SUMMER . CLEARANCE
1
TO l
oFF

4

2

ON ALL

SUMMER MERDiANDISE
BATHING .SUITS,
SHORTS. SUN SUITS.
DRESSES, ETC.
Infant To Size 14

THE KIDDIE SHOPPE
MID

RT, OHIO

DEAR POLLY - While
doing volunteer work in a
hospital gift shop I
discovered how filthy money
really is - hence my Pet
Peeve. At many lunch
counters , and one where I
often eat, the girl who makes
my sandwich also pick up
dirty bills, gives me the
change and then goes on to.
make another sandwich.• It
seems there should be a law
governing them. A cashier
should always make change
and the girls who handle food
· should never be allowed to
touch Oil£ dirty money. -'
MAE.
DEAR POLLY - My first
Pointer is the me.thod 1 found
helpful in teaching my young
son the differen t , .colors, I
)

In 1948, the United States
began operation of th e
"Berlin Airlift" to bypass a
Soviet road and rail blockade
of the divided German city .

.

ByUPI
Today is Thursday, June
26, the !nth day of 1975 with
188 to follow.
The moon is between Its full
phase and last quarter.
'file morning stars are
Mercury, Mars and Jupiter.
The evening stars are
Venus and Saturn.
Those born on thi s date are
under the sign of Cancer.
American novelist Pearl
Buck was born June 26, 1892.
On this day in history :
In 1900, Dr. Walter Reed led
a medical team formed to
wipe out yellow fever in- the
Panama Canal Zone.
In 1917, first troops of the
American Expeditionary
Force reached France for
action in World War I.
In 1944, Cherbourg, the
third largest port in France,
was liberated from Nazi
OCC!!Pation in World War ll.

save the many bright-colored
caps from spray cans to use
for ihis. Holes can be punched
in the tops so they can be
strung together and always
be at hand with none lost. A
piece of tape with the color
name written on it can be
stuck on the inside So they
also can learn to identify the
word with the color.
My other Pointer is for
plant lovers. Many of the
plant foods on the market
have to be dissolved in water
and call for a large amount of
water - more than needed by
the person with just a few
plants. I thoroughly wash an
empty dish detergent bottle
and' put the mixed plant food
in it so it is ready for later use
in a handy watering can.
This keeps the mixture at
room temperature which is
better for many plants than
the shocR of cold water. No
waste either. -DEBRA
DEAR POLLY - We know
all about the pictures we put
in our photo albums, but in
future years our grandchildren
and
great·
grandchildren would be
grateful if we write names,
places, dates and the
relationship of the people
shown on the photos. Pictures
mean more to each succeeding generation and much
more if they know such in· :
formation . ·If your album is
filled with unmarked pictures
sit down on a rainy day,
reminisce and then fill in the
pertinent information .
MRS. C, B.S.

PITI'SBURGH (UPI) Thorofare Markets Inc.,
which has complained of
financial problems since a
132-ilay strike in 1973, has
asked employes in its 77 area
stores to take an immediate
11 per cent cut in pay, it was
reported' today.
The Youngstown, Ohiobased food chain also askll,d
the employes, members of
Retail Store Employes Local
1407 and Amalgamated Meat
Cutters Local 424, to waive a
$HJ.a-week salary increase
due in September.
Thorofare officials
reportedly indicated in letters to emp\oyes the 77 stores
may be shut down if the pay
reduction is not approved by
July 1.
Neither Thorofare nor
union officials were im·
mediately available for
comment.
According to reports, both
unions, which represent
about 2,500 workers, already

PRACTICE CHANGED
Practice for the Senior
Citizens Chorus will be held ·
on Wednesday instead of
Tuesday, Mrs. Carrie
Neu tzling, director , an·
nounces. the change was
necessitated because piC·
lures of the choir and tapes
will be made that day . All
chorus members are urged to
attend.

·-

.,

~

CHEERLEADERS AITEND CAMP- Sheila Sargent, Denise Marshall (top), Paige
Smith, Cathy Blaettnar, Stephanie Rought (bottom), and Sally Walters, Meigs High
Reserve Cheerleaders for the 1975-76 season attended cheer leading camp June 16-19 at West
Virginia Wesleyan College, Buckhannon, W.Va. The girls earned the money to attend camp
by holding a car wash and tag day. The girls, evaluated at the camp with other squads,
received two excellent ratings. The girls thank eve ryone who helped make it possible for
them to attend the camp.

annually, based on the
availability of at least $42
million in state and local
matchin g funds.
The proposed plan calls for
an estimated annual expend! ture of $73,687 ,000,
based on . currently identifiabl e state and local
matching funds of $18,340,000.
This can be amplified as
more matching funds are
idenltfied and available, Mr .
White said .
Purpose of the plan, he
explained, is to provide Ohio
wtth social services that will
help re sidents to restore,
maintain and improve their
capabilities for self-support,
self-care, independent living,
to strengthen family life, and
where necessary to provide
institutional livmg.
Services in the plan include
foster care for chidren, day
care for children, family
planning , informati on and
referral, adoption services,
training and employment

11% wage cut asked of
Thorofare's employes

Nail polish
removal tips
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - Would
you please tell me how to get
nail polish out of my 100 per
cent Forte! polyester jacket?
- MRS. A. H.
DEAR MRS. A.H. - Take
your pick of the following
Pointers. A Department of
Agriculture bulletin says nail
polish remover may be used
for this on any fabrics except
acetate, Arne!, Dyne! or
Verel - but ALWAYS test
first.
A chart from a well-known
soap and detergent maker
says the same. Place stain
face down on paper towels
and sponge the back with the
polish remover until stain
disappears, then launder.
During the stain rem~val
process change towels
frequently.
A leading washing machine
manufacturer says NOT to
use the remover but to sponge
with pure amyl acetate,
launder. If stain persists
sponge with rubbing alcohol
to which a few drops of
ammonia have been added.
Take your pick but no matter
what you try test on your
fabric first. - POLLY.

f

rhe Almanac

Ohio Welfare Services plan ready for review

992-2955

Your registered
pharmacists are
always ready to
help you select
the best product for your needs, Get
acquainted with us. We're well -known
for friendliness, courtesy, caring.

Dtvistun nl Social Services,
Ohio neparlmenl of Public
Welfare, :10 East Broad
Street, Colum bus, Ohio,
43215.
Mrs. Madry pointed out
that m addtl1on to the overall
state plan lor social services,
eac h county will have its own
plan open for review and
comment. . _
.
Mrs. Madry also noted that
a large num ber of indtviduals
and organi zati ons hav e
assisted in the preparation of
the state plan. More than
5,000 que stionna ires were
sent out, and more th an 3,000
returned, in an assessment of
the state's needs for social
servtces, she said. These
were utilized m deveoping the
state plan .

have refused to take the pay
cuts.
Thorofare reported a loss of
$479,903 for the fiscal quarter
ending last April, and a
company official said at that
time employes would be
asked to take pay reductions.
Thorofare's financial problems apparently began with a
132-ilay strike by Teamsters
Local 249 that ended Feb. 10,
1973.
Since then, Loc;;il 249 has
been
dissolved
and
Thorofare's headquarters
and warehouse facilities were
moved from suburban
Murrysville to Youngstown,
idling Local249 members and
many other 9ffice and
warehouse employes.
Thorofare employes due a
wage hike in October 1973
waived the raise at company
urging until the following
April, when they received
half of the increase. They
received the rest of the pay
boost last August.

services, comprehensive
care for adults, comprehendsive pr otecti ve care for '
childr en, guardianship
services,
health-rela ted
servtces, counseling services,
and certain other optional
services that counties may
elect to offer where there is a
need and where resources are
available.
Those eligible for the
services would include: 11)
Recip ie nt s of · Aid for
Dependent Children; (2 )
Recipients of Supplemental

''

Security
In come ;
13)
Medicat d 1Title
XIX (
,·ecipienls; (4) Persons in
immed_iate danger , needing
social protective · servtces;
15 ) Low in come families
(Example· Family of four
with not over $5,500); and 16)
Other eligtbles to be determined as mat chin g funds
become available.
Written comm ents on the
plan ma y be made to the·
county welfare departments.
or may be sent to Mrs.
Mildr ed Madry , Dtre ctor ,

ON ANY TV SET YOU BRING INTO OUR SHOP.
OR WE WIU PICK UP AND DEliVER YOUR iV
·'

v

Admiral's 3-door refrigerator
gives you all these conveniences.
f····· wmmrr
li

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:'t'

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"

; · -''_~~.A!~ ·._
1..

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of lood

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keeping space in th 1s

slim-l1~e des ign.

Third door for easy
access to the frozen

foods you use most often.

.

Automatic Ice Maker

keeps you slocked up

with

ic e.

Chilled Water Dispenser
puts cold water at your
lingertips.

·.·
.·.
·.•.

Waist-h igh Frig •d Meat
Keeper keeps meallresh
and moist longer. .

Large See-Through
Vegetable Crisper keeps
vegelables crispy rresh.

Adjustable tempered
g lass shelves end messy

drip-l hroug h spi lls.

Pick-off Egg Trays save
space and give you
extra convenience.

ROCKWELL TOOL
WITH PURCHASE OF ANY
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ADMIRAL APPLIANCE
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• • • • •- -

Al l these conveniences

plus one hidden benelit.

EDGE
TRIMMER

by

JIG SAW

ROCKWELL

Regulaily
.,

~1hcAn..

SUMMER
.
FOOTWEAR
.

-.

Fun Time Wedging
Just look at what's happenin' in th~ wide
world of wedges! Great look in' leather high
on a block of rich-grained wood that's
opened -up fore, aft and in·between. It 's fun
fashion with fun ky-lookin' socks or i ust your
own · bare feet! Brown leather .

heritage

ho~se

Your Thorn McAn-5-tore
Middleport
·Ohio

'.

''

Now you can
I
1!JJ~
enjoy all the
.'
conveniences
'
of a deluxe
refrigerator and st1ll enjoy
low operating costs. Because
compared to previous
'models, this '75 Admiral
refrigerator uses up to 30%
less electricity.
In one year that cCJ uid
add up to enough energy
saved to light ltw average
home for 8 months!* We've

=

re-engineered the 3-door
Admiral with a built-in Energy
Saving System. There are no
switches or buttons to
remember. The Admiral
Energy Saving System automatically lowers operating
costs fo r you .
If you're looking for J
re fri gerator bu ilt for today's
l1vinQ ar rJ todA·/s cu ncern for
energy, look at lt1e :3-door
Admiral. It's just one of our
full line of quality-built .

refr i gerator~.

Admiral quality
. .. it deserves a closer look
for your home.
·Appliance Division,
Admiral Group,
Rockwell InternationaL

"

•Adm iral refrigerator Model #INC ~259 sa~n ·
uo to 900 kwh per year. {Average home uses

1300 kwh for ligh ting a year. Sou rce: Better
L.ight Beuor Sight In stitute.)

,•

.'
,.
•

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIU

"
"
',,

'

.,

.. ..

�I

.,

•

.

'
I_

8-

The Daily Sentinel, Middleport·Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, June 26, 1975

Q-

~!~~®~·k···"·I.-J,_ For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds

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

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~

2 SIGNS :P omeroy
OF
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4 13 lfc

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WEI/DI~&amp;

GUE:::;TS

DO WHAT l HE
TRAI~6EAI&lt;'E~S

SURD/A)
-

MU •• V- J

Now arranre the dr&lt;led totten

v-- ~ to form the aurpriee anawer,
I r
~=~:=~t-,~~~~::::':t-,::',A:_~•uneoted

u

by the above cartoon.

'

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(.buwe" lomort'ow J

Yc1tetday'•

Jumblr" YOKEL GROUP TURKEY BUTLER

IAntwer:

It's olin!

.1./0itrH

at tltt' *'"d·- TRULY

Yard Sale

Card of Thanks
WE WISH to than k our fr iends
and ne ig hbors fo r their
kindn ess . food and flowers
dur ing the illn ess and deat h
of our dear brother , William
Martin
Siste rs , brot hers and
re lat ives
626 -ll c

NotiCe

YARD SA LE , J une 26 a nd 27
at, La ur el Cliff , next to !h e
old Lau r e l Cliff sch ooL some
an tiques . In c ase of r a in ,
wi ll be he ld the next da y.
·
6 24 -3tc

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

DOG HOU SE . LM ge, cheap
Phone 992 38 04
6 25 3/p

TWO 2 be droom mobi le
hom es, 1 fu r ni Shed , 1 un
furn is hed Harrison vi ll e
Phone 742 3123
6·24.6/ p

for Sale

- --~

TRA IL ER s pa ce, 1 m tle from
Pom eroy Phon e 992 5558 .
5 2 tfc

friday and Saturday
Good Buys

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

I am moving to Pl.
Pleasant. I wish to extend
my
appreciation
and
thanks to all of my many
customers.

-Worthy Rogers

Help Wanted
WE HAVE a man retiring and
m ust have a repla ce ment
tor him lf yo u ca n talk to
peop le and are ca pab le of
se ll ing , we have the lob you
have bee n wa iting tor . Th1 s
loc al , no overn igh t trav el.
Must o:-vn _a car , sa lar y plus
co m m ISS1ons
an d
c ar
all owan ces . at l fringe
benefits , Se nd r esume to box
672, Pomeroy, Ohio.
6 24-Jtp

STEREO
radio ,
m odern
d es ign, S tra c k tape , AM . FM

in , farm home . If inte r ested ,
w rit e to Mr
Ho ll ie -E .
Starc her , Rt . l. Box 114.
Port land , Ohio 45770.
6-25 -12tp

WAITRE SS, a pply in pe rSon ,
Craw 's 5teak House.
6 22 61(

-- --- - --·- ------- - - -

EDUCAT IONAL represen
tati ve. mat ure aggressive
individual to repr ese nt
School by interviewing
p rosp ec t ive
s tud en t s,
salari ed posi t io n . Gallipolis
Business Coll ege, Phone 4464367 after I p .m For in terview~ Ask tor Mrs . Ea ton.
6-20 lfc

PA IR of half -fr am e g rasses in
Middleport Rewa rd . Phone
99 2-3133 .
YARD SALE on Larkin 's Sf
6-24 -6tc
Rutland , Ohio . Thursday , . - - - - - - - - - - - --- - Friday and Saturday , 10'
s peed bik e , $20 ; Speed ..
Qu een
washer ,
$1 0 ;
Frigida ir e,
S25 .
Lawn
cha irs , dishes, elec . guitar WILL fa ke ca re of 2 privat e
and amplifier . Call 742 -4964
patient s in my home . P hot1e
698 5607·
6· 2.5-ltc
6-26.6tc
5 FA MILY Yard Sale at Ar - - ~ - -~ - -----------chie Jarre ll in Le tart Fa lls CARPENTRY
WORK
( Bucktown l Wedn esday and
Ceiling , pan e ling , floor ing,
Thursday , June 25 and 26
e lc . Phone ~9 2 - 2759
from 8a .1 n . till4p . m . Lots
6-24-27tc
of barga in s .
6-25 -ltc WILL DO odd job s, pa int ing ,
r oof i,ng ,
ha ul in g
and
YARD SA LE , every Thurs .
mow ing. Call 992 7409.
c;taY ,, Friday _ and Satu r day ,
6-25 6tc
q uarter
m ile
from
Langsv itle off Dex ter Roac;L
Ptumbi0g ,·
Fo llow the si gn s . Phone 742 - REMODEL ING,
hea t ing and al l types of
6273 .
gene r a l
r e pair .
Work
6-25 -tfc
gua rant eed : 20 yea r s ex perience . P.hone 992 -2409 .
5 1-tfc
YARD SALE , Wednes day ,
Thursday and Frida y on 630
South Third Aven ue; Mid WILL pa in t hous ~;s and roofs
r ree e~ tim a tes . Phone 992
dle port .
3970
6-25 -3tc
6-197 tp

Yard Sale

Employment Wanted

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

WANTED I

CHIPWOOD
r.

l

Poles, maximum dia. 10" on
largest ,end ...... '7 .00 per ton
Bundled Slabs .. ~6.00 per ton
DELIVERED

TO:

OHIO PALLET CO.
Ph.

..

Sal~s &amp; Service

992-3092

con dition .
6 26 ·3/p

992-2689

1968 DODGE Charger . pt)one
985 3335 . Pa rk e d across
fr om Chester Ga lt Cour se
6-26 .31c

LARRY

Racine Plumbing
&amp; Heating

26' Camper
Trailer
All Aluminum, with air
conditioning ,
private
bedroom
with
Sealy
mattress &amp; box springs ,
nice front room with Sealy
sofa &amp; shag carpeting, fold out dinette, lots of mirrors ,
all self contained.

Call Rutland Furniture
742 -4211 or
Arnold Grate 7425501.

APT . like new , 3 room s, with
la r ge ba th, tabletop r ange ,
large closet Eas t Main ~.t ,
Pomeroy . See to ap pre c iat e
P hon.e Ga ll ipoli s duri ng day ,
446 7699 . evening s 446-9539.
.. 10 tf c
M IN I MAG S. $2.25 bO)(. 22
- ------ - . --- 22 Mil
)I I
Mags, $3 box 30 30
F' U R N. a pt . 5 rooms and bath .
Wtnc h, $5 .25 bOX 22 Re m .
nice large yard , bath and 1.,
S·1.50 box . 22 250 Re m . S5
no s out h Second St ..
box . Buy your s hotgun she lls
Mid dl e port, a du lt s o nl y .
before th e price increase .
Phone 992 ·5262 evenings
lnd1an Joe's, JOB P aqe St .,
5 21 lfc
M 1dd le por t .
6 19 7tc

SEL L yo ur mobi le home for
· ca sh . 15 hom es wa nt ed , 1958
th ru 1972 mod els. Phone
(6ld l .4 116 -1425, Ga ll ipolis .
3-9-7811

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

Real Estate for Sale
BR ICK hou se on Second St .,
Pom eroy, dow n tow n
Suitabl e for li vi ng quarters
up sta ir s. sma ll b usiness
down , off iceor home . Within
wa l k ing d ista n ce of a ll
stores . Ca ll 992 3.48 9.
6·26 Jtc
TWO BEDROOM house tor
sa le . Phon e 9B5 -·n02.
6-10 26t c

WE DO:

~oofing
Complete
Maintenance

ALL-WEATHER
ROOFING
Construction
and Plumbing
Free Estimates
PH. 992 -2550
327 N. 2nd

·-

Middleport
5-30 -1 mo.

YOU FEED
ME ... AN[:&gt;

WHYr

Hour

KNOW~

WEST
EAST
.9 75
.106
•K QI05
• I\ J84
t8 3
tK 106 2
• J 1076
.K 93
SOUTH lUI

DID '(00 J\)ST

•
•
•
•

t..I~T

Ali~RST~

.......
Chtsltr, Ohio

U'ITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

Room AdclltloM

o-5-1 mo.

EXPERIENCED ,

Radiato
Service

. ..

'
•

·SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC,
Ph . 992-1174

.,.VOU SAID

Merle Norman
Cosmetics

WILL 6E A IREASURE

'·

GASOilNE ALLEY
'- ""'' ~

West

0H1ce 1

29-

I.

p------~;-:::;:~

HOLD ON TO Mr;; IN CASE

I

THERE'S A BACKLASHr!-HERE

8 :oo:-sanford and Son 3,4; Night Stalker 13; WTVN
Television Forum 6; Movie " Captain Nemo and the
Underwater City" 8; Washington Week In Review
2033; Oral Roberts 10.
8: 30-Chlco &amp; the Man 3,4,15; Wall Street Week 20,33.
9 :QO-Rockford Flies 3,15; Odd Couple 13; Movie
"Coogan's Bluff" 4; Leroy Jenkins 6; Masterpiece
Theatre 20; Movie " An American Dream" 10;
Consumer Survival Kit 33.
'
9 :30-PIIol 13; Movie "Shaft" 8; Assignment America
33.
10 :00-Pollce Woman 3,15; ABC News Closeup 6,13;; ,
News 20; Paul Nuchlm~ 33 ..
11 :00-News 3,4,6,8,1 0, 13,15; ABC News 33.
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Wide World Mystery 13;
Sammy &amp; Company 6 ; Movie "The Last Rebel" 8;
Movie " Search" 10; Janakl 33 ..
1 ·OO-Midnlghl Special 3,4, 15; Wide World Mystery 6;
· Wide World Mystery 6; Movie "Biuebeard" 10;
News 11.
2: 30-Star Trek 4.
3:30-Movle "Nightmare" 4
:;: 30-Movle "40 Pounds of Trouble" 4.
pie you meet in a fun environ·
ment aWay from the pressures
of busin ess are your most
beneficial sources today.

44 InclinaUon
-45 Principle

ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll 19)
You 'll make all the right moves
today . whether directing a
group or launching a bold
enterprise of considerable 1m~
portance .

address

(abbr.)

z Reagan, to
some

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's
II
INA FEW DAYS

WE CAN CLOSE
DOWN THIS ·

IN AWAY
l'MGOIN6'

YES" IT WA5 FUN
\\01&lt;KING- SO ClOSE

lDMI&amp;S
THIS
PLACE.

TOOE1Hffi roR·A
COMio/0:-J GOAL. •

how to work

it:

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

. One letter simply stands for another. In lhi1 sample A II
used for the three L's, X for the two O's. etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, tiN! lenath and formotion of the . words are all
h1nts. Eoch day the code letters are dlllerent.

YOU KNOW? WEVE GOT
A PRETlY GOOD IXJNCH
OF. PEOPLE AT
BONNAZI

EVERYBCVY

C'&amp;YPTOQUOTES

. 01tPPED IN!

,,
HOW

OWFKH

QO

QT

AJ YHO

JP

HOW · PJJR

JP

··---- - -- - ? - - - -

DURN 'lORE HIDE,RUFUS !!
STOP CUTTIN' ACROST M'-1
DADBURN PRQJ'JTT'-1 !!

!

AFT

QO QT OQO

..

CANCER (Juno 21-July 22) PISCES (Fob. 20-Morch 20)
You'll profit today from an inCi· The time is ripe loday to nail
dent where you place another's down that financial transacUon
benefit a bove your Ow n, You 'll that you previously did · t~
share -i n the gains.
. spadework fo r.

pnse.

i

-I

HOW ARE WE 601N6 1D FIND
OIJR IA.It\1( FROM RIVER~I DE,

WE'LL VSE A MAP!WWAT

DID I{OV

"0-IINK

IIIE'D DO ?

•

••
,,

A

.

.
\

Your

~Birthday
June 27,-1175

,

LIBRA (&amp;opt. 23·0cl. 23) Peo-

IJOIIWE FALLS,
MICH16AN, IIIIIEN IIJE Fl.I( IN
~PUFF DERBit'?

••

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 11)
A positive auitude will make
you a tough person to beat today . If you strongly feel you'll
be a wmner, you will be.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopl. 22) A
job well done Is worth more to
you loday than· you 'll anticipate. The reward will be an
unexpected and welcome sur·

VQOW

CAUFORNIA,TO

•••

GEMINI (Moy 21-June 20) If
you have a platform or
program you want to sell your
group. step up. Sound off. This
is lhe day thetll buy it.

OJ'(KXW
YTSTJVT
Yesterday ' s Crypt04juote: MEDICINE: THE ONLY
PROFESSION THAT LABORS INCESSANTLY TO DESTROY
THE REASON FOR ITS OWN EXISTENCE. - JAMES BRYCE
(0 UU Kina l'eoturts Syndlato, Inc.)

HOW

HOW

!

•

'
••

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jon.
19) An au ra of opportunity Is
around yo u today . The means
10 obta in something wanted for
t h e home may become
available.

OWFKH .

AJYHO, . CYH

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
2t) Good news to lighten your
s pirits comes your way today. It
co uld be regar ding a recent In·
vestment you've made.

TAURUS (April 20-.Moy 20)
Lad y Luck s till has he' eye on
you . She's going to pull a few
r.abbits out the hat. just when
you need them most.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Though
the idea will be yours. let lhe
party you·re associated with
take the bows . He needs a few
pats on the back .

OQO

-

•

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
You'll be stim ulated to do a
bett er JOb today if you bear in
mi nd that your labo rs are not
for you . but tor those you love.

For Friday, June 27, 1175

l Military

•.••

f .

1:-::--t-t----t-t--

DQWN

You're ·Missing Gr·e at

WMPO 1390 RADIO

Send $1 lor JACOBY MODERN
boolc to: "Win at Btl., " '(clo this
newspaper), P.O. So• 489, Radio.
City Sltflon, New Yorl&lt;, N.Y. 10019.

nickname)

•--.-r

'•

7 to 10 A.M.

Answer Tomorrow

.Z Foreign
-43- State
(Hawaii's

GOE:6lH' WOILDS MOST"
WGAPON!r-

To Dave Strang

Radio

TQUAY'S QUESTION
You bid rour notrwnp and your
partner bids five hearts to show two
aces. What do you do now?

(2 Wds.)

UL ABNER

MASON .FURNITURE
773-5592
MASON, W. VA.

s-ot-tiay---

Pass
2•
Pass
3t
Pass
4•
Pass
'
You. South . hold :
• 2 • K J 9 7 5 t A K QJ 4 • A 4
What do you do now'
A - Bid lour notrUIJ!P· Yoar
parlner has shown a maximum
raise . He may not have an ace so
)&lt;IU wanlto check.

6:00-Sunrlse Seminar 4; Summer Semester 10.
6:25-Farm Report 13.
6 : 30-Ftve Minutes to Live By 4; News 6; Bible An- swers 8; Public Affairs 10; Blue Ridge Quartet 13 .
6 :35---{;olumbus Today 4.
6 :45-Mornlng Report 3; Farmllme 10.
7:00-Today 3,4,15; A.M . Amerlca13,6; CBS News 8,10.
8 :00-Lassle 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8; Schoolles 10;
Sesame St. 33.
8 :30-Big Valley 6; Popeye 10 .
8:55---{;huck White Reports 10.
9 : 00-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 8; New Zoo Revue 13 .
lO :oo-&lt;:elebrlty Sweepstakes 3,4, 15; Spin-Off 8, 10;
Jody's Body Shop 33; Dinah 13 .
10:30-Wheel of Fortune 3,4, IS;; Gambit 8, 10;
Designing Women 33 .
.
11:00-High Rollers 3,4,15; One Life to Live 6; Tattletales 8, 10.
11 : 30-Hollywood Squares 3,6, 15; Blankety Blanks 13;
News 4; Love of Life 8, 10.
11 :55-Take Kerr 8; Dan lmel' s World 10.
12 :00-Jackpot3,15; Password6,13; Bob Braun's 5(1.5(1
Club 4; News 8, 10; Mister Rogers 33 .
12 :30-Biank Check 3, 15; Spill Second 6, 13; Search for
Tomorrow 8,10; Elec . Co. 33.
12:55-NBC News 3,15.
1:00-News 3; All My Children 6,13; Phil Donahue 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15;
Jody' s Body Shop 33 .
1: J(h.Days of Our Lives 3,4, 15; Let's Make a Deal 6, 13;
As the World Turns 8,10; Folk Gulfar 33.
2 :00-$10,000 Pyramid 6, 13; Guiding Light 8, 10;
Woman 33 .
2:30-Doclors 3,4,15;; Big Showdown 6,13; Edge of
Night 8, 10; Hollywood Television Theatre 33.
3:00-Anolher World 3,4 ,15: General Hospital 6,13;
Price Is Right 8, 10; Interface 20.
3:3()--.{)ne Life to Live 13; Lucy Show 6; Match Game
8,1 0; Renoir 20; Magic of Oil Painting 33.
4 :00-Mr . Cartoon 3; I Dream of Jeannie 4; Somerset
15; Gilligan's Is. 6; Musical Chairs 8; Sesame St.
20,33 ; Movie "The File on Thelma Jordan" 10;
Mike Douglas 13 .
4:30-Bewltched 3; Merv Griffin 4; Mod Squad 6;
Mickey Mouse Club 8; Bonanza 15.
5:00-FBI 3; Andy Grlfflfh 8; Mister Roge"t's' Neighborhood 20,33 ; Ironside 13,
5:30-News 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Get Smart 15;
Elec . Co. 20,33 .
6:00-News 3,4,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 6; Sesame St. 20;
Concerts on the Lawn 33. ·
6 :30-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Bewitched 6;,
CBS News 8,10; Zoom 33.
7:00-Truth or Cons. 3,4; Bowling for Dollars 6 ; WCHSTV Report 8; Aviation Weather 20,33; News 10;
Jimmy Dean 13; To Be a Molorcross Champion . . 15.
7:30-Porter Wagoner 3; Pop Goes the Country 4; New
Candid Camera 6: Oral Roberts 15; Pop Goes the
Country 8; Ballack Perspective on the News:
Treasure Hunt 10; To Tell the Truth 13.

34
Ward off~ IO t . ! n " l l r
36 Type
of kl1

AnmversaiY
c,Mattress

If You're Not Listening

South

kitchen
30 Weddingnotice word
31 Mrs. HiUet
33 Vietnamese
holiday

SEALY

Sale Now
In Progress
Al.

East

3 Roscoe
4 Publisher
Adolph
5 Greek letter
6 Parts of
swimsuits
7 " - Town"
. 8 Singular
9 In medias 11 "- and
Perlmutter"
13 Start anew
(2 wds. )
15 Egyptian

%8 Italian
boy's name

The 3rd Annual
Meigs High Alumni
Will Be Held
Ju~ 5, 1975

iS--,-RE;P;-1

Nort~

rr

.
.
,
qOI!lCJ 1nto Docs

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

'·

Pass

26

The bidding has been :

6 Ill-mannered. one
10 Trespass
11 Bluenose
12 Before an
audience
( 3 wds.)
Yesterday's ADIIwer·-..
14 Lets stand,
in printing
Z8 Occur
34 Encourage
15 Lil Abner's
afterward
35 Floor·
son
21 Skilled
covering
18 Moslem VIP
23 Poem
36 Designate
19 Kind of ·
dam
zs Spanish
Island (Fr.)
biscuit
16 Richard or
article
38 60 sees.
22 Fly alone
Pat
27 Football
39 Cargo
Nantucket, 17 Eulogy
number
weight
Mass.' eg. 19 F t
32
Buddhist
40
Guevara
26 "Gift" lor
or unesaint
41
Trilby; e .g .
Troy(2wds:
teller's cards

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

for Sale or Trade

I

Pass

I Jargon

lOLA'S ·
BEAUTY SAUJN

ELAND •-'4
REALJY
· .-;;.;;:;,;.;,..111

RO U

3.

Pass
Pass

ACROSS

10 US, DIDN'T
YOU?

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

---------

I t

by THOMAS JOSEPH

CLAIMS 10 HAVE', ~N

li COULDeE
IMR:&gt;RTANT

Real Estate for Sale
''

Pass
Pass
Pass

~R~tcJn

South

~~f(H:d'

PomeroY

.

E

East

b
By Oswald &amp; J ames J aco y
Bac k in the '30s a certain
soap was advertised as 99 .44
per cent pure. Ely Culbertson
' applied that and said some bidS
· were 99 .44 per cept forcmg.
About that time the best
pl ayers , including young
Oswald Jacoby, started to play
the jump raise to three as an
absolute force.
It took 30 years to get the experts to change the ir minds . Toda~ almost all experts use limit
ra1ses . The raise from one to
two shows support for partner
~nd not .much of a hand . !he
JUmp r a 1se to game says, As

ANNIE-NOTHING
.
.

LITTLE

,anciGMMIM

Nathan Biggs
Radiator Specialist

-----------

North

Opening lead - K •

Home lulldlni.

" BARGA IN S are
our
middl e nam e" tn cle an ,
us e d
furn i tur e ,
ap·
G U A R A N.T E E 0
pliances P.. ""'W __ f_llrn .Lt.ug ·
Op e n 9-S VYeo. u.rough Sun . .
Ph .: 667 -3858 .
5 _15 1 mo.

s hrubb e ry and paint roofs .
P hone 949 -J221 or 742-.4d41.
6-2d -26tp

The game contract is not one
for South to be proud of, but
with the club finesse working
and trumP.s breaking 3-2 it
makes eas1ly .

Ph. 915-4~ 02

From the largest Tr uck or
Bulldozer Rad ia tor to the
smallest Heater Core .

to.LJUI-IN G,
S pout1ng ,
a lu mi nu m and viny l Sid ing,
complete
re m odel ing .
P hone 742 -6273.

West

far as I am concerned we want
to be in game." The jump from
one to three says , " I want to be
in game unless your hand is a
rea I horro r ."
South ' s hand is almost a
minimum . Take away that jack
of diamonds and many people
would pass it. But with that
ja ck of diamonds , South should
bid the spa de game after
North's strong, but limit, jump

raise.

AQ84
932
J 5
AQ85

Both vulnerable

Cansbuttian to.
1

2li

• 76
t AQ974
• 42

or

" At caution Lig ht"
Rt . 7, TuCJp ers Plains, o.

J WiLL -TRiM-o-;~;tre~~nd

Limited raise replaces force
NORTH
• K J 32

EXCAVA T r"NG, d02 e r , load er
- ---- -· - ---a nd bac kho e work ; sep ti c s EwING
. , A c HIN E'
FOR SAL E by ow ner , above ' tan ks 1n sta ll ed ;
dump
Repairs , ser v ice. a ll mak es .
aver age hom e and gara ge
tr uc ks and lo .boys for hire:
99 2 2284. Th e Fabric Shop ,
near mines on Rt . 124, w es t
w tll haut fill dirt. top soil ,
John St., Next To
Pomeroy . Authorized Singer
of R utland . Phon e 742 -3794
limes ton e and gravel. Call
Sales and Serv ice . We
Grade Schoo l
6-24 -tltc
Bob or Roge r Jeffers ~ day
s J"ta r pen Sc issors.
phone 992 7089, nigh t phon e
3-29 lie
992-2S49
Syracuse, 0.
992 3525 o r 992 5232
I 72 ACRES land , a nd loc ust
2-11-tfc DOZER work , 1 1and c learing·
pos ts . Also. 1965 Ford LTD
5-B-1 mo.
Phone 742 3656
by th e a c r e, hourly o r · .':':::-:-:-::-::--:-::--------1
D &amp; 0 · rR EE- -T ,"i~-~ i~g~ ~o
5 23 52to
contrac t
Farm po nds , WOULD YOU BELIEVE ?
years ex peri ence. In s ur ed ,
ro a ds , e tc . Large dozer and
Bu ild an a ll stee l building af
fr e e es tima tes . Call 992-3057 ,
oper ator with over 20 years
Pole Barn pri ces? Gold en
Coolvi lle Phone [1) 667 ex perien ce . P u ll in s E x G ian t All -Steel Building s,
30 41
cavat ing , P omeroy , Oh io .
Rt. 4, Box 148, waverly
4 30-tfc
Phon e 992 -2478 .
Oh io . Ph one 9.4 7-2296.
·
12
-19
-lf
c
6-24-26tc
.
REA
DY
M
I
X
CONCRETE
U ~ ED Guns at Sav ing s 20
de liv ered rig ht to your
ga s ingle barr e l, $29 .95 J , C.
projec t Fa-st an d eas y . Fr ee EXCA -VA TING ,- Dozer ,
PORTA-COOL"'
Hi9g ms. 16 ga . bolt , $25 ;
Backho e, dit che r , water
es timates . "Phon e 992-328 4,
Savage .n o-22 over an d
lines , footers, drains , roads
ROOM-to-ROOM
Goeg lein Ready Mix Co .,
un der , $59 .95 , R em . 66
and br ush cl ean ing . No job
Middlepor t. Ohio.
Ny lon , $38 50,· Savag e 22
too s mall , no weather too
6
30-tt
c'
Boll. $29.95, Marltn 22 Bo lt ,
bad . Phone Charles R .
$30. Mossberg 12 ga bolt ,
ON ,
Hatf ield, Rt . 1, Rutland,
.NEED A new hOme built on
S27 so We won't sca lp ytJu at
Oh io. Phon e 742 -6092.
you r lo t ? Conta ct MHo B.
CORNER LOT IN
Indian Joe's. Only your
'
5 2-52tp
Hut ch ison , -Rutland, Ohio .
wam pu m
Indian
Jo e's
POMEROY
Phone
742
-3615
.
Sport s , 308 Page St . 99 2 3509.
5-8-tf c HoM ER;P-;i7.S er-;i-;-e~G ot
Business Section
6 20 -7/c
probl e m s wi th your home?
Want if r epai r ed fast . Cal l
=-tiaN~sn;p~rd c~tra'CtinQ--an d
Phone 992-3975 or
F ISHING LICe nse. Canad ian
AI the house doc tor . Phone
Remodeli ng· Service . Whole
992-5786
N tte Crawl er s, .50 dz . Dug
742-5081.
h
ouse
r
e
mode
l
in
g,
.
!P~MI!ROY
LAN.DNfAU:
At The
worms , 3 do z. $1. Other bai t.
6-17 -12tc
Spec ialties - kitchen and
'l'. cJ•c-W.Corsoy,Mer. '
ta ck le. gums , a m mo , cb 's,
Meigs
High School
bath Ph one (3 04 1 773-5346 or
Indian ·Joe's Sports . 30 8 ...-:. . Phonotf2-2111 . .
GENERAL Re pai r , c lea n -up
742 3664 da y or even ing .
Pag e Sf., Phon e 992 -35 09.
There will be a dinner
and
hauling ,
cutting ,
6-4-26tc
6 20 -6tc LI F ET I ME
starting al6:30 and a dance
welding ,
carpent ry ,
CONCRET E
-sE p;~: r-A'N'Ks CLEANED . plumb inQ , etec . masonry
a_t 8:00. It is very important
F ENCE PO STS . A Con cr ete
NEW Guns at Used Pri ces, 870
Reasonab le RATE S. Phone
and general remodeling .
pos1
wil
l
la
s
t
a
lifet
im
e
an
d
·!hal you purchase banquet
Rcm1ngto n F ull 30" VR ...
Call Skit -Pool. Phone 992 446 -4782 Ga ll ipo lis .Joh n,
wilt not ru st or be nd like a
tickets before June 28 at
'S t49 .95 ; 120 0 Wi n ches ter
Russe ll, owner .
6-17 -tfc
5126.
steel post and wilt not rot
F ull 20" VR , $139. 95 ; 11 00
New York Clothing House
4-9.tfc .
like a wooden post . Phon e
Remin g to n Auto ., $189 .95 ; 37
l wool) [\o\'i E
R
in Pomeroy, or Village
992 3844.
Wi nchester 12 ga. $47 .95;
-· Sweepers . toasters, irons,
Pharmacy in Middleport.
6·22-5/p
Savage 410 Singl e, $44 .95 ;
all sma ll appliances . Lawn
If
unable to purchase
Re m ing to n 788 ,243 w scope,
NEW LISTING -Neal 2
mower , next to State High
$139.95 ; Sa vage 222, $99.95,
tickets before June ~8 call
way Ga rag e on Rout e 7·:
bedroom
modern
home,
new
Wi ncheste r 94 Le ve r 30 30,
l992· 7009 for reservations.
Ph one 985-3825 .
kitchen with stove and
S99 95 ; Titan 38 Spec ial 21"J ",
$49 95 ; Hopk 1ns and All en ,-----------~ , refrigerator, bath , basement,
Cap and Bal l Target , $29.95 :
gas furnace, and nice concrete
Spanish 32 20 Dou b le Ac tion .
front porch .
As is. $32.50 ; Ra ve n 25 Auto
- - -·
NEAR
STORES
3
Ni c_kle , $34 .95 ; RG 66
22
R B. s r: .~~.c.: avd1 11•~· ..:.ack hoe
bedrooms,
bath
,
base
ment,
and 22 Mas ., S59 .95 ; plu s lots
and light haulin g services.
paneling, car peling , 2 porches
of oth e r new guns at Tee pe e
Driv eway slag delivered .
1
Sa vings a t Indian J oe 's
Phone {304) 773 -5346 or' 742 and fenced yard.
.
ii~iiijiioo...
Sports , 308 Page St.. Phone
3664 day or evenings.
608 E
REASONABLE- 2 bedroom
99') 3509
6-4-26tc
hpme, bath, dining, porch,
_ _ ...• _ _ __ ___ --- ~~~ t c
MA!N ., . .
basement, new gas furnace
CHE Ck our fJ1 1 Ct'~! New steel :.
• - ' ~- t.'OMERQY, 0
near stores , .
to e work boots , leat h er .J''Ji ' !1..1.
NICE - 3 bedrooms, 2 bafhs,
1
upper 1 16.95 · 119.95, sizes 7
1 LEVEL ACRE _ . ,;,ilh
modern kit., dining room , nat. BROWNtN"G t:agle l:t:s ud'se
f
2
h
d
sta tion for Sale or trade for
to 14. New reg . to e wor-k • · N''
boots , lea th er upper 115 _95 .
"'W HOME . 3 bedrooms, gas urnace,
pore .es an
motorcy Cle . Phone 992-53.48 .
517 .95, s ize s 6 to 14. Men 's
colored bath, nice kitchen, . block garage .
·
6-26-6tc
used work c lothes . sh irts
utility R, fully carpeted In
CABIN- Large lot at Forked
99c ; pants , $1 .09. New, stor e
your choice o.f colors ,
Run Lake. Water a'nd e lec.
hours , 9 :00 to 5: 00. Mond ay
garage financed to right trlclty available .
through Saturday . Closed
'
RESTAURANT
W ld
Thursday and Sunday 11
party . $20,000.
ou you
years in th is loc ation ,
· nke self employment with a
Bai ley's Bar.9 ain Store ,
THE
UPSTAIRS
IS reasonable income . D-1-2-3-5
soon,
Middt .e port.
DOWNSTAIRS This· 'licenses . .
.
course
in
upl,ol!;ter ing and fur 6 · 26 ·MP
ran ch style will end all thai
MIDDLEPORT- 2· bedroom
repair . This is B
-- ------- - - - - - - - - - - -climbing. 2 BR , bath ,
holne, 2 baths , family room
Skill that can be a very
1973 KAWASAKI , 350 Bighorn
utili ty R, nice ki tc hen, part .ind nice view of river.
enjoyable hobby and
Engine in top shape , goo d
basement, 1 level acre.
NEW LISTING - 12 acres of
save you hundreds of
rub ber , and 3 b ike trailer
JUST $13,500.
land, good 3 bedroom home,
dollars by rebuilding,
Ca ll 992 -7110 .
·
re -uphol s tering
and
carpeting, paneled and tiled.
6
repairing your ·o wn
6
- · -- --- -- ---- ------ _ }~ t c
12x60 MOBILE HOME - 3
Nat . gas furnace, ceramic tile
furniture . Class Will be
BR, bath, Expando living
bath.
conducted one evening
TR I UMPH 650 motorb ik~ for
room , air con d., washer &amp;
NEW LISTING -5 acres, half
each week for a period
sa te . Ph one 992-36.47 ·
of ten weeks by R. E .
fenced , 2 bedroom, . 14x68
6-25 ·4/c · dryer, in good condition .
Knotts . a .professional
ASKING $4,500. .
mobile home, drilled ·well,
upho
lste rer for .more
WA.L.NUT desk- "in- ~;d- ~;;.
st oc ked pond and small barn .
than twenty years. For
d 1t1on , S35. Phone 992 -280 7
625 5tp
.
RUTLAND ·- 2 BR, bath,
reservations to attend a
S H O.f' I?..LN,G
C.E NT E R
c lass ,
dem onstr ation
living has firepla ce, ca r N-6 -,: BALE
~
wh ic h Will be tree - of
LOCATION OF FOUR ACRES
peted , tiled, paneled, All in
fi el d .. 70c pe r bale . Also ,
charge and wi t hout
AVAILABLE , ON ANY OF
good condition . ASKING
obligation
, write at once
g lass canning jars. Phone
THE ABOVE CALL m -3325.
$9 ,~00.
MUST
SELL .
949 -3718.
to Knotts Upholstering ,
MAKE US AN OFFER .
1163
Secon d
Ave .,
6-24 -ltc
Gall ipol is , Ohio 45631 or
FOR
GOOD
HOMES
cal! 446-2917. At the
ALMO ST NEW a h .p . riding
demonstration sess ion
PRICED RIGHT SEE US
lawn mower , 32" cu t . Call
we will answer all of
TODAY .
992 5&lt;l J'l after 5 p. m .
yo u r questions and
6 2A Jtc
CALL 992-2259
ex p!ain the details .

FOR SALE!
40x85
Brick Building

DR:OP::O DID

6-6-1 mo.

KUHL'S
BARGAIN CENTER

Siding
Hom~:;

KNOCKOUT

992-2478

V. V. JOHNSON
AND SON, INC.

.

6U Y~

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

mo .

On aluminum replacement
window s, siding , storm
doors and windows, railing,
phon e
Charles
Lisle,
Syracuse , Ohio .
Carl
Jacob, Sales Represen tative .

tc

BRID6E-W0RK, W L5~

WIN AT BRIDGE

YOUR QUE5TION5
WILL BE AN5WE-RE-D
.IN DUE COURSE. CAPTAIN
EASY!. .. MEANWHILE I
THI~k THERE'S SOME·
THING YOU SHOULD

Regular and
Excavator Type
Septic Tanks Installed ..

FOR FREE
ESTIMATES

HElL

... WE-LL EI\IOUGH TO "V WHAT
C05T YOU $0ME- NE W
KIND OF

5-14-1 mo.

For Rent by
Contract Work.

UIY.E~DER_

- , .•o.1

F~H INo QUIT~ WE-LL
AGAIN, ARE YOLI , S IR. '!'

BACKHOES

Syracuse, Ohio
Ph . ?92 -3993

--------

Mobile Homes for ·Sale

.

lllV.

Blown
Insulation Services
Blown into Walls &amp; AHics'
STORM
WINDOWS&amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING-SDFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

Also Repairs On All
r a dio com bmation . Ba lance
Riding Tractors
'S lOi 99 or te rm s Ca ll 992
498 Locust St. - 3965 .
Middleport, Ohio
5-9-1 m o
6 25 tf c _1959 FORD J , flatbed 8 ply
- -- -t ir es in go od running con
d ilion . Good tru c k · t or
TWO WHITE F a ce cows, 3
ha uling c hipwood . Ca ll 949 a nd 4 years Old Two bulls ,
3690
Whtt e F ace an d 'Cha r otai s, 1
'
and 2 years old . Two bulls ,
.~ ,
Wh1te Face and 1i.l
Charolais, one 3 mon ths old 1969V W. wit h BA J A kit , w1d e
!ir es . Good co nd 1110n Ph one
and one 3 weeks old . One
992 566 3
Bull, Whi te F a ce and Angus ,
1 year Old . Phone 949-4724 .
Air conditioning, plum 6-2&lt;-J ip
bing , heating, roofing ,
-- ---- - - - - - - - - - - - 19 67 ~ut-&lt;0 4 dr . VB st a . s pouting, general sheet
$300 Good work ca r . Phone metal work.
M IDLAND 23 Chann e l CB
992.2776 .
ba se, $140 , and a Fr igidai r e
Free Estimates
a ll
t empe ra tur e
larg e
capac ity dryer , $75. Phone
Phone 949-5961 .
1968 CHEVROLET If ., t o n
99].7897.
Emergency
949-2211
pi ck up , new pain I. phone
6-24 -Jtc
742 -4848 or cont act Jo e N.
----- -- - -- - - - - - - - or 992-5700
Sayre , Rt . 1, Rutland ..
TERR~CE
Antiq ue Shop
r e tiring from bu s in ess . All
___ ___ _ _ _ __ __ _6 :_2_5-3 L---------'''-'·2:..·:.:75'--J
m e r c hand ise in s to ck wi ll be
so ld at a lar ge d iscoun t . 19 66 CAD ILL AC, $495 .00 , ai r I
.,
condi t ioned , goo d t ir es.
Ter r ace
Antiques ,
108
68.000
mi
les
Phone
992
:5949
.
Legio n
Terrace .
Lee
Does
your
home
6-25 -&lt;tp
Rudisill .
I require any of these
6-6 26tp
I services?

-HOUSEKEEPER
-------------for Sale
, must live

Lost

i'

10. e)lce llen t
Phone 992-7387

.)-/- J

CAPTAIN EASY

or
.!'hone99)992-5682
-7121

FREE ESTIMATES

-73 CHEVY :1, ton tru ck c us tom

YARD SALE

The 7-33
Market
.Is Closing The End Of This Month

WILKINSON
'
SMALL
ENu111n:
.

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

~

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

For
Rabies, Distemper ln noculations . Dr . Paul
Shoc~ev, ·veterinarian.
Saturday, June 28
1 To4 P.M.
County Garage
Meigs Fairgrounds
Sponsored by
Meigs Co. Humane Society

.

...

.

7: 00-Truth or Cons 3,4; Bowling for Dollars 6; What's
My Line 8; News 10; Lers Make a Deal 13; Jimmy
Dean 15; Making It Counnt 20; Nova 33.
7: 30-Hollywood Squares 3; ,4; Ohio Lottery 6 ; New
Price Is Right 8; Consumer Survival Kit 20; Wild
Kingdom 10; To Tell the Truth 13; American
Outdoorsman 15.

Automobile
Transmission
Repair

We Build the Best and
Repair the Rest.
- Cabinets Installed-

6-18-1 mo.

Ul":

OPEN EVES. 8: 00 POMEROY, OHIO;

I

and

Racine. Ohio

.
992-3313

POM~~OY MOTOR CO•.@):.

TWO BR Mob ile Hom e .
De pOSi t req uir ed Phone 992
3429.
6 24 61 p

8 :00-Movle ·" The Specialists" 3,4,15; Barney Miller·
·
6, 13; The Waltons 8, 10; In Search of a Maestro 20;
Evefllng at Symphony 33 .
8 :30-Texas Wheelers .6.13.
9 :00-Sireets ol San Francisco 6, 13; Movie " Commanche Station" 8; Hollywood Television Theatre
20,33; Movie "The McKenzie Break" 10.
9 :31&gt;-Movle "Target Rfsk" 3,4, 15.
10:00-Aarry 0 6,13; News 20;; News 20; Woman 33.
10:30-Horace Marshall 33 .
11 :00-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC· News 33.
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Wide World Special 13;
FBI 6; Movie "The McKenzie Break" 8; Movie .
"The Lusty Men" 10; Janakl 33 .
12:30-Wide World Special 6.
1: 00-Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.
FRIDAY,JUNE~7, 1975

6 :00--News 3,4,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 6; Sesame St. 20;
One of a Kind 33.
6:30-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Bewitched 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Zoom 33.

Roger Hysell's
Garage

NEIGLER
Building SUpp~--

Pho_~_e

1969 CHEVY NOVA4 DR.
$1195
6 cyl., automatic trans ., c lea n in terior, good fires ,
radio. New paint.

fRA ILE R tot Phone 992 7897
6 18 t fc

AUC TION -- Sat ., J une 28 at GA R AG E SA LE . 1 mil e fr om
11: 00 A. M. at th e Curt is
Bash an on Co . Rd 32 to ward
Wo lf re s1de nc e, 1., m1 1e N of
124 New and use d clothing
Chester , Ohto
(F ollow
and othe r m1 sc items . June TRA IL ER SP ACE on S. R. 124,
auctio n signs from St . Rt .
25th th ru J ul y 2.
5 mi nutes fro m Meigs Mine
248 ) A NT IQU E S, Cla w foo t
6-26 6/p
No . I Ca ll 742 5986 .
chai r . straig ht. and plat
6 26 3tc
for m rockers , m ilk cans , YA RD SAL E , 409 .W. Main SL
wooden bar rel, 2 buffe ts ,
Pomer oy right ac ross fr om 3 RM F ur nis hed apt . fo r 1 or 2
books .
H OUSEH "O LD.
Monkey Run . Thursday ,
p ersons m Middleport . Call
Livi ng room suite , dm1n g
Fr idaY and Sat urday tr om 9
992 -J 129 or 992-5d34.
table and cha 1rs , t wo end
till 5 p .m . wOme n 's, men's
6 26 Jtc
tables . coffee tab le , head and chi ldren-'s cloth ing and
--- - -------- --- - - - board , dresser , vanity , desk
odds and ends.
an d c hair , la mps . dishes ,
F URNI SHED apartm e n t in
gas c irc ulat ing heat e r , cast
Middleport . Phone 99 2-nos
iron heating stove , ca rpet YARD SAL E , F r iday a nd
betw een 9 a . m and 6 p . m .
re m nan ts
an d
rug s
J us t
past
Sa lurday
6 26 -3tc
MI SCE L LA NEO US a
Syrac use Tra iler Park on
horsepow e r riding la wn
right . Per fec t condition
m ower , stor m and screen
infan t items. excel lent boy s , J RM ap t. wtth" wa ll -to wa ll
door s and windows Wh iz
ca rp el, 104 Spring Ave.,
gi rl s. ::t 7. toy s, s troll e r and
chain saw , gun r ack, large
Pom e roy . Cal l 992 -590 8.
hou se hold .
p1 c ture
window ,
6 22 ti c
wheelbarrow , t abl e saw ,
socket se ts and m iSc tools , P AG E V I L LE , Thursday TWO houses in Pomeroy , 210
25 Wh ite Rock 1ay ing hens .
through Sa turday . F ur
and 217 Condor St. Ca ll 99 2
Norweg ian Elkhound puppy
niture , som e antiques .
2659.
and many other 1tems too
bo ttles , co llec tor items .
6-18 l21p
m en tio n .
n ume rou s to
QU tiiS , maf e r ial . m1sc . and
Lunc h
se r ved
Don n a
jun k Calt 698-5433
VanMeter ,
an d
Na ra
6-26 -2tc COUNTRY Mo bil e Home
Har t ma n , owners . I. 0 .
Par k, Rt. 33, ten mile s no rth
"Mac" McCo y, Auctioneer .
o t Pomeroy La rg e lots w it h
P hone 985 -394 4.
c onc r ete patios, si dewa lk s ,
6 26 -2tc
run ne r s a nd off s tr ee l
parking Phone 99 7 7.t7 9
SHOO TING Match ." Horn er
12 31 If c
Hill Gun Club , Sunday , J une
29, 1 p . m Factory choked
Bett Dawson going to
TWO bedrO om mob ile hom e 1n
guns only .
Florida, having yard
Sy racu se . Deposi t req uir ed
6-26 3/c
No c h ildren or pets Phon e
sale.
992 24 41 afte r 5 JO p .m
1 ~ UW
SC 11111g F u ller Brush
6 10 -tfc
P rodu cts , pho ne 992-3410.
1-2&lt;1 ffc
3 /\ ND J ROOM furni shed and
-;:&lt;"" " un furni shed
apartmen ts .
FOR your " Oil S.f. - Mink"
· Phone 992 5&lt;134 .
Cosmet i cs .
Phone
4 12 tf c
BROWN'S 992-5113.
1-7-tfc
PRIV ATE meeting room for
Wippel Rd. , Five Points
any or ganizalion : phon e 99 2
397 5.
3 11 tfc

Small Animal
Q.INIC

. ,,

.,

W1!5her &amp; Dryer
and
Small APpliance
·Repair

1968 CHEV . IMPALA CPE .
$895
Blk . vinyl top, red finish , V-8, automatic, power
steer ing &amp; brakes.

For Rent

YARD SA LE , Jun e 26 and 27
Thurs day and
Fr iday, ---- ----- -·-·
Horton Str ee t , Mason , W. 12 )( 12 2 f\ED RM . trai le r . rea l
Va . Close to B&amp; .B Ma rk et .
nice Phon e 992 3324 .
6 26 2tp
{) 19 tfc
I

•

1970 NOVA V-8 CPE.
Sll95
Vinyl roof, grey fini sh , hig h mi leage, good tires,
automat ic, power steer ing, radio, si lver finish . Black
top .

OLD fur ni tu r e, ice bo)les,
bra ss beds , or com plet e
ho useholds . Wr ite M . D . .
Mil ler, Rt . &lt;1, Pomer oy,
Ohto . Call 992 7760 .
10 ] 74

FUR NI SHED
a pa rtm ent,
adu lts only in M iddlepor t .
Phone 992 -3874 .
3 25 -ff c

..

QUALITY Motor Co.

Wanted To Buy

Business Services

__........__.___.-

Television log for easy viewing

l-

l't\AXXY, WHAT
. YOU SAID!

_____ .._

·- ··- ·-

. THURSDAY, JUNE 26,1975

r--------

CAS H pa1d tor all m a~es a nd
mode l s of mobi le homes .
Ph on e area code 6 14 42J .
Y5 J 1.

OUSIP , .

DICK TRACY

Auto S_aii)S

Wanted

I•""' ,.. COl.,
_..... f...,.,

r-·-.-.-·-·-·-·-·---·-·- ·:- ·- - ·--- - - -

The T.laily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., '111~sday, June 26, 1975

Starl setting aside a little
money . You may be offered an
outstanding business oppor.
tunity. Check it out with experts
before you jump in .
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

�I

.,

•

.

'
I_

8-

The Daily Sentinel, Middleport·Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, June 26, 1975

Q-

~!~~®~·k···"·I.-J,_ For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds

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

.,

(JfJSUR .

&lt;I'

.. ........
~

2 SIGNS :P omeroy
OF
·

4 13 lfc

I I

10

..,.
TH E:

J ()/
·

WEI/DI~&amp;

GUE:::;TS

DO WHAT l HE
TRAI~6EAI&lt;'E~S

SURD/A)
-

MU •• V- J

Now arranre the dr&lt;led totten

v-- ~ to form the aurpriee anawer,
I r
~=~:=~t-,~~~~::::':t-,::',A:_~•uneoted

u

by the above cartoon.

'

=
.. =su•=IISI:.::AIISWIII=IIen=--r a xr xJrn

-=-Prill=·

L
'
-

(.buwe" lomort'ow J

Yc1tetday'•

Jumblr" YOKEL GROUP TURKEY BUTLER

IAntwer:

It's olin!

.1./0itrH

at tltt' *'"d·- TRULY

Yard Sale

Card of Thanks
WE WISH to than k our fr iends
and ne ig hbors fo r their
kindn ess . food and flowers
dur ing the illn ess and deat h
of our dear brother , William
Martin
Siste rs , brot hers and
re lat ives
626 -ll c

NotiCe

YARD SA LE , J une 26 a nd 27
at, La ur el Cliff , next to !h e
old Lau r e l Cliff sch ooL some
an tiques . In c ase of r a in ,
wi ll be he ld the next da y.
·
6 24 -3tc

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

DOG HOU SE . LM ge, cheap
Phone 992 38 04
6 25 3/p

TWO 2 be droom mobi le
hom es, 1 fu r ni Shed , 1 un
furn is hed Harrison vi ll e
Phone 742 3123
6·24.6/ p

for Sale

- --~

TRA IL ER s pa ce, 1 m tle from
Pom eroy Phon e 992 5558 .
5 2 tfc

friday and Saturday
Good Buys

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

I am moving to Pl.
Pleasant. I wish to extend
my
appreciation
and
thanks to all of my many
customers.

-Worthy Rogers

Help Wanted
WE HAVE a man retiring and
m ust have a repla ce ment
tor him lf yo u ca n talk to
peop le and are ca pab le of
se ll ing , we have the lob you
have bee n wa iting tor . Th1 s
loc al , no overn igh t trav el.
Must o:-vn _a car , sa lar y plus
co m m ISS1ons
an d
c ar
all owan ces . at l fringe
benefits , Se nd r esume to box
672, Pomeroy, Ohio.
6 24-Jtp

STEREO
radio ,
m odern
d es ign, S tra c k tape , AM . FM

in , farm home . If inte r ested ,
w rit e to Mr
Ho ll ie -E .
Starc her , Rt . l. Box 114.
Port land , Ohio 45770.
6-25 -12tp

WAITRE SS, a pply in pe rSon ,
Craw 's 5teak House.
6 22 61(

-- --- - --·- ------- - - -

EDUCAT IONAL represen
tati ve. mat ure aggressive
individual to repr ese nt
School by interviewing
p rosp ec t ive
s tud en t s,
salari ed posi t io n . Gallipolis
Business Coll ege, Phone 4464367 after I p .m For in terview~ Ask tor Mrs . Ea ton.
6-20 lfc

PA IR of half -fr am e g rasses in
Middleport Rewa rd . Phone
99 2-3133 .
YARD SALE on Larkin 's Sf
6-24 -6tc
Rutland , Ohio . Thursday , . - - - - - - - - - - - --- - Friday and Saturday , 10'
s peed bik e , $20 ; Speed ..
Qu een
washer ,
$1 0 ;
Frigida ir e,
S25 .
Lawn
cha irs , dishes, elec . guitar WILL fa ke ca re of 2 privat e
and amplifier . Call 742 -4964
patient s in my home . P hot1e
698 5607·
6· 2.5-ltc
6-26.6tc
5 FA MILY Yard Sale at Ar - - ~ - -~ - -----------chie Jarre ll in Le tart Fa lls CARPENTRY
WORK
( Bucktown l Wedn esday and
Ceiling , pan e ling , floor ing,
Thursday , June 25 and 26
e lc . Phone ~9 2 - 2759
from 8a .1 n . till4p . m . Lots
6-24-27tc
of barga in s .
6-25 -ltc WILL DO odd job s, pa int ing ,
r oof i,ng ,
ha ul in g
and
YARD SA LE , every Thurs .
mow ing. Call 992 7409.
c;taY ,, Friday _ and Satu r day ,
6-25 6tc
q uarter
m ile
from
Langsv itle off Dex ter Roac;L
Ptumbi0g ,·
Fo llow the si gn s . Phone 742 - REMODEL ING,
hea t ing and al l types of
6273 .
gene r a l
r e pair .
Work
6-25 -tfc
gua rant eed : 20 yea r s ex perience . P.hone 992 -2409 .
5 1-tfc
YARD SALE , Wednes day ,
Thursday and Frida y on 630
South Third Aven ue; Mid WILL pa in t hous ~;s and roofs
r ree e~ tim a tes . Phone 992
dle port .
3970
6-25 -3tc
6-197 tp

Yard Sale

Employment Wanted

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

WANTED I

CHIPWOOD
r.

l

Poles, maximum dia. 10" on
largest ,end ...... '7 .00 per ton
Bundled Slabs .. ~6.00 per ton
DELIVERED

TO:

OHIO PALLET CO.
Ph.

..

Sal~s &amp; Service

992-3092

con dition .
6 26 ·3/p

992-2689

1968 DODGE Charger . pt)one
985 3335 . Pa rk e d across
fr om Chester Ga lt Cour se
6-26 .31c

LARRY

Racine Plumbing
&amp; Heating

26' Camper
Trailer
All Aluminum, with air
conditioning ,
private
bedroom
with
Sealy
mattress &amp; box springs ,
nice front room with Sealy
sofa &amp; shag carpeting, fold out dinette, lots of mirrors ,
all self contained.

Call Rutland Furniture
742 -4211 or
Arnold Grate 7425501.

APT . like new , 3 room s, with
la r ge ba th, tabletop r ange ,
large closet Eas t Main ~.t ,
Pomeroy . See to ap pre c iat e
P hon.e Ga ll ipoli s duri ng day ,
446 7699 . evening s 446-9539.
.. 10 tf c
M IN I MAG S. $2.25 bO)(. 22
- ------ - . --- 22 Mil
)I I
Mags, $3 box 30 30
F' U R N. a pt . 5 rooms and bath .
Wtnc h, $5 .25 bOX 22 Re m .
nice large yard , bath and 1.,
S·1.50 box . 22 250 Re m . S5
no s out h Second St ..
box . Buy your s hotgun she lls
Mid dl e port, a du lt s o nl y .
before th e price increase .
Phone 992 ·5262 evenings
lnd1an Joe's, JOB P aqe St .,
5 21 lfc
M 1dd le por t .
6 19 7tc

SEL L yo ur mobi le home for
· ca sh . 15 hom es wa nt ed , 1958
th ru 1972 mod els. Phone
(6ld l .4 116 -1425, Ga ll ipolis .
3-9-7811

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

Real Estate for Sale
BR ICK hou se on Second St .,
Pom eroy, dow n tow n
Suitabl e for li vi ng quarters
up sta ir s. sma ll b usiness
down , off iceor home . Within
wa l k ing d ista n ce of a ll
stores . Ca ll 992 3.48 9.
6·26 Jtc
TWO BEDROOM house tor
sa le . Phon e 9B5 -·n02.
6-10 26t c

WE DO:

~oofing
Complete
Maintenance

ALL-WEATHER
ROOFING
Construction
and Plumbing
Free Estimates
PH. 992 -2550
327 N. 2nd

·-

Middleport
5-30 -1 mo.

YOU FEED
ME ... AN[:&gt;

WHYr

Hour

KNOW~

WEST
EAST
.9 75
.106
•K QI05
• I\ J84
t8 3
tK 106 2
• J 1076
.K 93
SOUTH lUI

DID '(00 J\)ST

•
•
•
•

t..I~T

Ali~RST~

.......
Chtsltr, Ohio

U'ITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

Room AdclltloM

o-5-1 mo.

EXPERIENCED ,

Radiato
Service

. ..

'
•

·SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC,
Ph . 992-1174

.,.VOU SAID

Merle Norman
Cosmetics

WILL 6E A IREASURE

'·

GASOilNE ALLEY
'- ""'' ~

West

0H1ce 1

29-

I.

p------~;-:::;:~

HOLD ON TO Mr;; IN CASE

I

THERE'S A BACKLASHr!-HERE

8 :oo:-sanford and Son 3,4; Night Stalker 13; WTVN
Television Forum 6; Movie " Captain Nemo and the
Underwater City" 8; Washington Week In Review
2033; Oral Roberts 10.
8: 30-Chlco &amp; the Man 3,4,15; Wall Street Week 20,33.
9 :QO-Rockford Flies 3,15; Odd Couple 13; Movie
"Coogan's Bluff" 4; Leroy Jenkins 6; Masterpiece
Theatre 20; Movie " An American Dream" 10;
Consumer Survival Kit 33.
'
9 :30-PIIol 13; Movie "Shaft" 8; Assignment America
33.
10 :00-Pollce Woman 3,15; ABC News Closeup 6,13;; ,
News 20; Paul Nuchlm~ 33 ..
11 :00-News 3,4,6,8,1 0, 13,15; ABC News 33.
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Wide World Mystery 13;
Sammy &amp; Company 6 ; Movie "The Last Rebel" 8;
Movie " Search" 10; Janakl 33 ..
1 ·OO-Midnlghl Special 3,4, 15; Wide World Mystery 6;
· Wide World Mystery 6; Movie "Biuebeard" 10;
News 11.
2: 30-Star Trek 4.
3:30-Movle "Nightmare" 4
:;: 30-Movle "40 Pounds of Trouble" 4.
pie you meet in a fun environ·
ment aWay from the pressures
of busin ess are your most
beneficial sources today.

44 InclinaUon
-45 Principle

ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll 19)
You 'll make all the right moves
today . whether directing a
group or launching a bold
enterprise of considerable 1m~
portance .

address

(abbr.)

z Reagan, to
some

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's
II
INA FEW DAYS

WE CAN CLOSE
DOWN THIS ·

IN AWAY
l'MGOIN6'

YES" IT WA5 FUN
\\01&lt;KING- SO ClOSE

lDMI&amp;S
THIS
PLACE.

TOOE1Hffi roR·A
COMio/0:-J GOAL. •

how to work

it:

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

. One letter simply stands for another. In lhi1 sample A II
used for the three L's, X for the two O's. etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, tiN! lenath and formotion of the . words are all
h1nts. Eoch day the code letters are dlllerent.

YOU KNOW? WEVE GOT
A PRETlY GOOD IXJNCH
OF. PEOPLE AT
BONNAZI

EVERYBCVY

C'&amp;YPTOQUOTES

. 01tPPED IN!

,,
HOW

OWFKH

QO

QT

AJ YHO

JP

HOW · PJJR

JP

··---- - -- - ? - - - -

DURN 'lORE HIDE,RUFUS !!
STOP CUTTIN' ACROST M'-1
DADBURN PRQJ'JTT'-1 !!

!

AFT

QO QT OQO

..

CANCER (Juno 21-July 22) PISCES (Fob. 20-Morch 20)
You'll profit today from an inCi· The time is ripe loday to nail
dent where you place another's down that financial transacUon
benefit a bove your Ow n, You 'll that you previously did · t~
share -i n the gains.
. spadework fo r.

pnse.

i

-I

HOW ARE WE 601N6 1D FIND
OIJR IA.It\1( FROM RIVER~I DE,

WE'LL VSE A MAP!WWAT

DID I{OV

"0-IINK

IIIE'D DO ?

•

••
,,

A

.

.
\

Your

~Birthday
June 27,-1175

,

LIBRA (&amp;opt. 23·0cl. 23) Peo-

IJOIIWE FALLS,
MICH16AN, IIIIIEN IIJE Fl.I( IN
~PUFF DERBit'?

••

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 11)
A positive auitude will make
you a tough person to beat today . If you strongly feel you'll
be a wmner, you will be.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopl. 22) A
job well done Is worth more to
you loday than· you 'll anticipate. The reward will be an
unexpected and welcome sur·

VQOW

CAUFORNIA,TO

•••

GEMINI (Moy 21-June 20) If
you have a platform or
program you want to sell your
group. step up. Sound off. This
is lhe day thetll buy it.

OJ'(KXW
YTSTJVT
Yesterday ' s Crypt04juote: MEDICINE: THE ONLY
PROFESSION THAT LABORS INCESSANTLY TO DESTROY
THE REASON FOR ITS OWN EXISTENCE. - JAMES BRYCE
(0 UU Kina l'eoturts Syndlato, Inc.)

HOW

HOW

!

•

'
••

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jon.
19) An au ra of opportunity Is
around yo u today . The means
10 obta in something wanted for
t h e home may become
available.

OWFKH .

AJYHO, . CYH

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
2t) Good news to lighten your
s pirits comes your way today. It
co uld be regar ding a recent In·
vestment you've made.

TAURUS (April 20-.Moy 20)
Lad y Luck s till has he' eye on
you . She's going to pull a few
r.abbits out the hat. just when
you need them most.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Though
the idea will be yours. let lhe
party you·re associated with
take the bows . He needs a few
pats on the back .

OQO

-

•

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
You'll be stim ulated to do a
bett er JOb today if you bear in
mi nd that your labo rs are not
for you . but tor those you love.

For Friday, June 27, 1175

l Military

•.••

f .

1:-::--t-t----t-t--

DQWN

You're ·Missing Gr·e at

WMPO 1390 RADIO

Send $1 lor JACOBY MODERN
boolc to: "Win at Btl., " '(clo this
newspaper), P.O. So• 489, Radio.
City Sltflon, New Yorl&lt;, N.Y. 10019.

nickname)

•--.-r

'•

7 to 10 A.M.

Answer Tomorrow

.Z Foreign
-43- State
(Hawaii's

GOE:6lH' WOILDS MOST"
WGAPON!r-

To Dave Strang

Radio

TQUAY'S QUESTION
You bid rour notrwnp and your
partner bids five hearts to show two
aces. What do you do now?

(2 Wds.)

UL ABNER

MASON .FURNITURE
773-5592
MASON, W. VA.

s-ot-tiay---

Pass
2•
Pass
3t
Pass
4•
Pass
'
You. South . hold :
• 2 • K J 9 7 5 t A K QJ 4 • A 4
What do you do now'
A - Bid lour notrUIJ!P· Yoar
parlner has shown a maximum
raise . He may not have an ace so
)&lt;IU wanlto check.

6:00-Sunrlse Seminar 4; Summer Semester 10.
6:25-Farm Report 13.
6 : 30-Ftve Minutes to Live By 4; News 6; Bible An- swers 8; Public Affairs 10; Blue Ridge Quartet 13 .
6 :35---{;olumbus Today 4.
6 :45-Mornlng Report 3; Farmllme 10.
7:00-Today 3,4,15; A.M . Amerlca13,6; CBS News 8,10.
8 :00-Lassle 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8; Schoolles 10;
Sesame St. 33.
8 :30-Big Valley 6; Popeye 10 .
8:55---{;huck White Reports 10.
9 : 00-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 8; New Zoo Revue 13 .
lO :oo-&lt;:elebrlty Sweepstakes 3,4, 15; Spin-Off 8, 10;
Jody's Body Shop 33; Dinah 13 .
10:30-Wheel of Fortune 3,4, IS;; Gambit 8, 10;
Designing Women 33 .
.
11:00-High Rollers 3,4,15; One Life to Live 6; Tattletales 8, 10.
11 : 30-Hollywood Squares 3,6, 15; Blankety Blanks 13;
News 4; Love of Life 8, 10.
11 :55-Take Kerr 8; Dan lmel' s World 10.
12 :00-Jackpot3,15; Password6,13; Bob Braun's 5(1.5(1
Club 4; News 8, 10; Mister Rogers 33 .
12 :30-Biank Check 3, 15; Spill Second 6, 13; Search for
Tomorrow 8,10; Elec . Co. 33.
12:55-NBC News 3,15.
1:00-News 3; All My Children 6,13; Phil Donahue 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15;
Jody' s Body Shop 33 .
1: J(h.Days of Our Lives 3,4, 15; Let's Make a Deal 6, 13;
As the World Turns 8,10; Folk Gulfar 33.
2 :00-$10,000 Pyramid 6, 13; Guiding Light 8, 10;
Woman 33 .
2:30-Doclors 3,4,15;; Big Showdown 6,13; Edge of
Night 8, 10; Hollywood Television Theatre 33.
3:00-Anolher World 3,4 ,15: General Hospital 6,13;
Price Is Right 8, 10; Interface 20.
3:3()--.{)ne Life to Live 13; Lucy Show 6; Match Game
8,1 0; Renoir 20; Magic of Oil Painting 33.
4 :00-Mr . Cartoon 3; I Dream of Jeannie 4; Somerset
15; Gilligan's Is. 6; Musical Chairs 8; Sesame St.
20,33 ; Movie "The File on Thelma Jordan" 10;
Mike Douglas 13 .
4:30-Bewltched 3; Merv Griffin 4; Mod Squad 6;
Mickey Mouse Club 8; Bonanza 15.
5:00-FBI 3; Andy Grlfflfh 8; Mister Roge"t's' Neighborhood 20,33 ; Ironside 13,
5:30-News 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Get Smart 15;
Elec . Co. 20,33 .
6:00-News 3,4,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 6; Sesame St. 20;
Concerts on the Lawn 33. ·
6 :30-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Bewitched 6;,
CBS News 8,10; Zoom 33.
7:00-Truth or Cons. 3,4; Bowling for Dollars 6 ; WCHSTV Report 8; Aviation Weather 20,33; News 10;
Jimmy Dean 13; To Be a Molorcross Champion . . 15.
7:30-Porter Wagoner 3; Pop Goes the Country 4; New
Candid Camera 6: Oral Roberts 15; Pop Goes the
Country 8; Ballack Perspective on the News:
Treasure Hunt 10; To Tell the Truth 13.

34
Ward off~ IO t . ! n " l l r
36 Type
of kl1

AnmversaiY
c,Mattress

If You're Not Listening

South

kitchen
30 Weddingnotice word
31 Mrs. HiUet
33 Vietnamese
holiday

SEALY

Sale Now
In Progress
Al.

East

3 Roscoe
4 Publisher
Adolph
5 Greek letter
6 Parts of
swimsuits
7 " - Town"
. 8 Singular
9 In medias 11 "- and
Perlmutter"
13 Start anew
(2 wds. )
15 Egyptian

%8 Italian
boy's name

The 3rd Annual
Meigs High Alumni
Will Be Held
Ju~ 5, 1975

iS--,-RE;P;-1

Nort~

rr

.
.
,
qOI!lCJ 1nto Docs

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

'·

Pass

26

The bidding has been :

6 Ill-mannered. one
10 Trespass
11 Bluenose
12 Before an
audience
( 3 wds.)
Yesterday's ADIIwer·-..
14 Lets stand,
in printing
Z8 Occur
34 Encourage
15 Lil Abner's
afterward
35 Floor·
son
21 Skilled
covering
18 Moslem VIP
23 Poem
36 Designate
19 Kind of ·
dam
zs Spanish
Island (Fr.)
biscuit
16 Richard or
article
38 60 sees.
22 Fly alone
Pat
27 Football
39 Cargo
Nantucket, 17 Eulogy
number
weight
Mass.' eg. 19 F t
32
Buddhist
40
Guevara
26 "Gift" lor
or unesaint
41
Trilby; e .g .
Troy(2wds:
teller's cards

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

for Sale or Trade

I

Pass

I Jargon

lOLA'S ·
BEAUTY SAUJN

ELAND •-'4
REALJY
· .-;;.;;:;,;.;,..111

RO U

3.

Pass
Pass

ACROSS

10 US, DIDN'T
YOU?

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

---------

I t

by THOMAS JOSEPH

CLAIMS 10 HAVE', ~N

li COULDeE
IMR:&gt;RTANT

Real Estate for Sale
''

Pass
Pass
Pass

~R~tcJn

South

~~f(H:d'

PomeroY

.

E

East

b
By Oswald &amp; J ames J aco y
Bac k in the '30s a certain
soap was advertised as 99 .44
per cent pure. Ely Culbertson
' applied that and said some bidS
· were 99 .44 per cept forcmg.
About that time the best
pl ayers , including young
Oswald Jacoby, started to play
the jump raise to three as an
absolute force.
It took 30 years to get the experts to change the ir minds . Toda~ almost all experts use limit
ra1ses . The raise from one to
two shows support for partner
~nd not .much of a hand . !he
JUmp r a 1se to game says, As

ANNIE-NOTHING
.
.

LITTLE

,anciGMMIM

Nathan Biggs
Radiator Specialist

-----------

North

Opening lead - K •

Home lulldlni.

" BARGA IN S are
our
middl e nam e" tn cle an ,
us e d
furn i tur e ,
ap·
G U A R A N.T E E 0
pliances P.. ""'W __ f_llrn .Lt.ug ·
Op e n 9-S VYeo. u.rough Sun . .
Ph .: 667 -3858 .
5 _15 1 mo.

s hrubb e ry and paint roofs .
P hone 949 -J221 or 742-.4d41.
6-2d -26tp

The game contract is not one
for South to be proud of, but
with the club finesse working
and trumP.s breaking 3-2 it
makes eas1ly .

Ph. 915-4~ 02

From the largest Tr uck or
Bulldozer Rad ia tor to the
smallest Heater Core .

to.LJUI-IN G,
S pout1ng ,
a lu mi nu m and viny l Sid ing,
complete
re m odel ing .
P hone 742 -6273.

West

far as I am concerned we want
to be in game." The jump from
one to three says , " I want to be
in game unless your hand is a
rea I horro r ."
South ' s hand is almost a
minimum . Take away that jack
of diamonds and many people
would pass it. But with that
ja ck of diamonds , South should
bid the spa de game after
North's strong, but limit, jump

raise.

AQ84
932
J 5
AQ85

Both vulnerable

Cansbuttian to.
1

2li

• 76
t AQ974
• 42

or

" At caution Lig ht"
Rt . 7, TuCJp ers Plains, o.

J WiLL -TRiM-o-;~;tre~~nd

Limited raise replaces force
NORTH
• K J 32

EXCAVA T r"NG, d02 e r , load er
- ---- -· - ---a nd bac kho e work ; sep ti c s EwING
. , A c HIN E'
FOR SAL E by ow ner , above ' tan ks 1n sta ll ed ;
dump
Repairs , ser v ice. a ll mak es .
aver age hom e and gara ge
tr uc ks and lo .boys for hire:
99 2 2284. Th e Fabric Shop ,
near mines on Rt . 124, w es t
w tll haut fill dirt. top soil ,
John St., Next To
Pomeroy . Authorized Singer
of R utland . Phon e 742 -3794
limes ton e and gravel. Call
Sales and Serv ice . We
Grade Schoo l
6-24 -tltc
Bob or Roge r Jeffers ~ day
s J"ta r pen Sc issors.
phone 992 7089, nigh t phon e
3-29 lie
992-2S49
Syracuse, 0.
992 3525 o r 992 5232
I 72 ACRES land , a nd loc ust
2-11-tfc DOZER work , 1 1and c learing·
pos ts . Also. 1965 Ford LTD
5-B-1 mo.
Phone 742 3656
by th e a c r e, hourly o r · .':':::-:-:-::-::--:-::--------1
D &amp; 0 · rR EE- -T ,"i~-~ i~g~ ~o
5 23 52to
contrac t
Farm po nds , WOULD YOU BELIEVE ?
years ex peri ence. In s ur ed ,
ro a ds , e tc . Large dozer and
Bu ild an a ll stee l building af
fr e e es tima tes . Call 992-3057 ,
oper ator with over 20 years
Pole Barn pri ces? Gold en
Coolvi lle Phone [1) 667 ex perien ce . P u ll in s E x G ian t All -Steel Building s,
30 41
cavat ing , P omeroy , Oh io .
Rt. 4, Box 148, waverly
4 30-tfc
Phon e 992 -2478 .
Oh io . Ph one 9.4 7-2296.
·
12
-19
-lf
c
6-24-26tc
.
REA
DY
M
I
X
CONCRETE
U ~ ED Guns at Sav ing s 20
de liv ered rig ht to your
ga s ingle barr e l, $29 .95 J , C.
projec t Fa-st an d eas y . Fr ee EXCA -VA TING ,- Dozer ,
PORTA-COOL"'
Hi9g ms. 16 ga . bolt , $25 ;
Backho e, dit che r , water
es timates . "Phon e 992-328 4,
Savage .n o-22 over an d
lines , footers, drains , roads
ROOM-to-ROOM
Goeg lein Ready Mix Co .,
un der , $59 .95 , R em . 66
and br ush cl ean ing . No job
Middlepor t. Ohio.
Ny lon , $38 50,· Savag e 22
too s mall , no weather too
6
30-tt
c'
Boll. $29.95, Marltn 22 Bo lt ,
bad . Phone Charles R .
$30. Mossberg 12 ga bolt ,
ON ,
Hatf ield, Rt . 1, Rutland,
.NEED A new hOme built on
S27 so We won't sca lp ytJu at
Oh io. Phon e 742 -6092.
you r lo t ? Conta ct MHo B.
CORNER LOT IN
Indian Joe's. Only your
'
5 2-52tp
Hut ch ison , -Rutland, Ohio .
wam pu m
Indian
Jo e's
POMEROY
Phone
742
-3615
.
Sport s , 308 Page St . 99 2 3509.
5-8-tf c HoM ER;P-;i7.S er-;i-;-e~G ot
Business Section
6 20 -7/c
probl e m s wi th your home?
Want if r epai r ed fast . Cal l
=-tiaN~sn;p~rd c~tra'CtinQ--an d
Phone 992-3975 or
F ISHING LICe nse. Canad ian
AI the house doc tor . Phone
Remodeli ng· Service . Whole
992-5786
N tte Crawl er s, .50 dz . Dug
742-5081.
h
ouse
r
e
mode
l
in
g,
.
!P~MI!ROY
LAN.DNfAU:
At The
worms , 3 do z. $1. Other bai t.
6-17 -12tc
Spec ialties - kitchen and
'l'. cJ•c-W.Corsoy,Mer. '
ta ck le. gums , a m mo , cb 's,
Meigs
High School
bath Ph one (3 04 1 773-5346 or
Indian ·Joe's Sports . 30 8 ...-:. . Phonotf2-2111 . .
GENERAL Re pai r , c lea n -up
742 3664 da y or even ing .
Pag e Sf., Phon e 992 -35 09.
There will be a dinner
and
hauling ,
cutting ,
6-4-26tc
6 20 -6tc LI F ET I ME
starting al6:30 and a dance
welding ,
carpent ry ,
CONCRET E
-sE p;~: r-A'N'Ks CLEANED . plumb inQ , etec . masonry
a_t 8:00. It is very important
F ENCE PO STS . A Con cr ete
NEW Guns at Used Pri ces, 870
Reasonab le RATE S. Phone
and general remodeling .
pos1
wil
l
la
s
t
a
lifet
im
e
an
d
·!hal you purchase banquet
Rcm1ngto n F ull 30" VR ...
Call Skit -Pool. Phone 992 446 -4782 Ga ll ipo lis .Joh n,
wilt not ru st or be nd like a
tickets before June 28 at
'S t49 .95 ; 120 0 Wi n ches ter
Russe ll, owner .
6-17 -tfc
5126.
steel post and wilt not rot
F ull 20" VR , $139. 95 ; 11 00
New York Clothing House
4-9.tfc .
like a wooden post . Phon e
Remin g to n Auto ., $189 .95 ; 37
l wool) [\o\'i E
R
in Pomeroy, or Village
992 3844.
Wi nchester 12 ga. $47 .95;
-· Sweepers . toasters, irons,
Pharmacy in Middleport.
6·22-5/p
Savage 410 Singl e, $44 .95 ;
all sma ll appliances . Lawn
If
unable to purchase
Re m ing to n 788 ,243 w scope,
NEW LISTING -Neal 2
mower , next to State High
$139.95 ; Sa vage 222, $99.95,
tickets before June ~8 call
way Ga rag e on Rout e 7·:
bedroom
modern
home,
new
Wi ncheste r 94 Le ve r 30 30,
l992· 7009 for reservations.
Ph one 985-3825 .
kitchen with stove and
S99 95 ; Titan 38 Spec ial 21"J ",
$49 95 ; Hopk 1ns and All en ,-----------~ , refrigerator, bath , basement,
Cap and Bal l Target , $29.95 :
gas furnace, and nice concrete
Spanish 32 20 Dou b le Ac tion .
front porch .
As is. $32.50 ; Ra ve n 25 Auto
- - -·
NEAR
STORES
3
Ni c_kle , $34 .95 ; RG 66
22
R B. s r: .~~.c.: avd1 11•~· ..:.ack hoe
bedrooms,
bath
,
base
ment,
and 22 Mas ., S59 .95 ; plu s lots
and light haulin g services.
paneling, car peling , 2 porches
of oth e r new guns at Tee pe e
Driv eway slag delivered .
1
Sa vings a t Indian J oe 's
Phone {304) 773 -5346 or' 742 and fenced yard.
.
ii~iiijiioo...
Sports , 308 Page St.. Phone
3664 day or evenings.
608 E
REASONABLE- 2 bedroom
99') 3509
6-4-26tc
hpme, bath, dining, porch,
_ _ ...• _ _ __ ___ --- ~~~ t c
MA!N ., . .
basement, new gas furnace
CHE Ck our fJ1 1 Ct'~! New steel :.
• - ' ~- t.'OMERQY, 0
near stores , .
to e work boots , leat h er .J''Ji ' !1..1.
NICE - 3 bedrooms, 2 bafhs,
1
upper 1 16.95 · 119.95, sizes 7
1 LEVEL ACRE _ . ,;,ilh
modern kit., dining room , nat. BROWNtN"G t:agle l:t:s ud'se
f
2
h
d
sta tion for Sale or trade for
to 14. New reg . to e wor-k • · N''
boots , lea th er upper 115 _95 .
"'W HOME . 3 bedrooms, gas urnace,
pore .es an
motorcy Cle . Phone 992-53.48 .
517 .95, s ize s 6 to 14. Men 's
colored bath, nice kitchen, . block garage .
·
6-26-6tc
used work c lothes . sh irts
utility R, fully carpeted In
CABIN- Large lot at Forked
99c ; pants , $1 .09. New, stor e
your choice o.f colors ,
Run Lake. Water a'nd e lec.
hours , 9 :00 to 5: 00. Mond ay
garage financed to right trlclty available .
through Saturday . Closed
'
RESTAURANT
W ld
Thursday and Sunday 11
party . $20,000.
ou you
years in th is loc ation ,
· nke self employment with a
Bai ley's Bar.9 ain Store ,
THE
UPSTAIRS
IS reasonable income . D-1-2-3-5
soon,
Middt .e port.
DOWNSTAIRS This· 'licenses . .
.
course
in
upl,ol!;ter ing and fur 6 · 26 ·MP
ran ch style will end all thai
MIDDLEPORT- 2· bedroom
repair . This is B
-- ------- - - - - - - - - - - -climbing. 2 BR , bath ,
holne, 2 baths , family room
Skill that can be a very
1973 KAWASAKI , 350 Bighorn
utili ty R, nice ki tc hen, part .ind nice view of river.
enjoyable hobby and
Engine in top shape , goo d
basement, 1 level acre.
NEW LISTING - 12 acres of
save you hundreds of
rub ber , and 3 b ike trailer
JUST $13,500.
land, good 3 bedroom home,
dollars by rebuilding,
Ca ll 992 -7110 .
·
re -uphol s tering
and
carpeting, paneled and tiled.
6
repairing your ·o wn
6
- · -- --- -- ---- ------ _ }~ t c
12x60 MOBILE HOME - 3
Nat . gas furnace, ceramic tile
furniture . Class Will be
BR, bath, Expando living
bath.
conducted one evening
TR I UMPH 650 motorb ik~ for
room , air con d., washer &amp;
NEW LISTING -5 acres, half
each week for a period
sa te . Ph one 992-36.47 ·
of ten weeks by R. E .
fenced , 2 bedroom, . 14x68
6-25 ·4/c · dryer, in good condition .
Knotts . a .professional
ASKING $4,500. .
mobile home, drilled ·well,
upho
lste rer for .more
WA.L.NUT desk- "in- ~;d- ~;;.
st oc ked pond and small barn .
than twenty years. For
d 1t1on , S35. Phone 992 -280 7
625 5tp
.
RUTLAND ·- 2 BR, bath,
reservations to attend a
S H O.f' I?..LN,G
C.E NT E R
c lass ,
dem onstr ation
living has firepla ce, ca r N-6 -,: BALE
~
wh ic h Will be tree - of
LOCATION OF FOUR ACRES
peted , tiled, paneled, All in
fi el d .. 70c pe r bale . Also ,
charge and wi t hout
AVAILABLE , ON ANY OF
good condition . ASKING
obligation
, write at once
g lass canning jars. Phone
THE ABOVE CALL m -3325.
$9 ,~00.
MUST
SELL .
949 -3718.
to Knotts Upholstering ,
MAKE US AN OFFER .
1163
Secon d
Ave .,
6-24 -ltc
Gall ipol is , Ohio 45631 or
FOR
GOOD
HOMES
cal! 446-2917. At the
ALMO ST NEW a h .p . riding
demonstration sess ion
PRICED RIGHT SEE US
lawn mower , 32" cu t . Call
we will answer all of
TODAY .
992 5&lt;l J'l after 5 p. m .
yo u r questions and
6 2A Jtc
CALL 992-2259
ex p!ain the details .

FOR SALE!
40x85
Brick Building

DR:OP::O DID

6-6-1 mo.

KUHL'S
BARGAIN CENTER

Siding
Hom~:;

KNOCKOUT

992-2478

V. V. JOHNSON
AND SON, INC.

.

6U Y~

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

mo .

On aluminum replacement
window s, siding , storm
doors and windows, railing,
phon e
Charles
Lisle,
Syracuse , Ohio .
Carl
Jacob, Sales Represen tative .

tc

BRID6E-W0RK, W L5~

WIN AT BRIDGE

YOUR QUE5TION5
WILL BE AN5WE-RE-D
.IN DUE COURSE. CAPTAIN
EASY!. .. MEANWHILE I
THI~k THERE'S SOME·
THING YOU SHOULD

Regular and
Excavator Type
Septic Tanks Installed ..

FOR FREE
ESTIMATES

HElL

... WE-LL EI\IOUGH TO "V WHAT
C05T YOU $0ME- NE W
KIND OF

5-14-1 mo.

For Rent by
Contract Work.

UIY.E~DER_

- , .•o.1

F~H INo QUIT~ WE-LL
AGAIN, ARE YOLI , S IR. '!'

BACKHOES

Syracuse, Ohio
Ph . ?92 -3993

--------

Mobile Homes for ·Sale

.

lllV.

Blown
Insulation Services
Blown into Walls &amp; AHics'
STORM
WINDOWS&amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING-SDFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

Also Repairs On All
r a dio com bmation . Ba lance
Riding Tractors
'S lOi 99 or te rm s Ca ll 992
498 Locust St. - 3965 .
Middleport, Ohio
5-9-1 m o
6 25 tf c _1959 FORD J , flatbed 8 ply
- -- -t ir es in go od running con
d ilion . Good tru c k · t or
TWO WHITE F a ce cows, 3
ha uling c hipwood . Ca ll 949 a nd 4 years Old Two bulls ,
3690
Whtt e F ace an d 'Cha r otai s, 1
'
and 2 years old . Two bulls ,
.~ ,
Wh1te Face and 1i.l
Charolais, one 3 mon ths old 1969V W. wit h BA J A kit , w1d e
!ir es . Good co nd 1110n Ph one
and one 3 weeks old . One
992 566 3
Bull, Whi te F a ce and Angus ,
1 year Old . Phone 949-4724 .
Air conditioning, plum 6-2&lt;-J ip
bing , heating, roofing ,
-- ---- - - - - - - - - - - - 19 67 ~ut-&lt;0 4 dr . VB st a . s pouting, general sheet
$300 Good work ca r . Phone metal work.
M IDLAND 23 Chann e l CB
992.2776 .
ba se, $140 , and a Fr igidai r e
Free Estimates
a ll
t empe ra tur e
larg e
capac ity dryer , $75. Phone
Phone 949-5961 .
1968 CHEVROLET If ., t o n
99].7897.
Emergency
949-2211
pi ck up , new pain I. phone
6-24 -Jtc
742 -4848 or cont act Jo e N.
----- -- - -- - - - - - - - or 992-5700
Sayre , Rt . 1, Rutland ..
TERR~CE
Antiq ue Shop
r e tiring from bu s in ess . All
___ ___ _ _ _ __ __ _6 :_2_5-3 L---------'''-'·2:..·:.:75'--J
m e r c hand ise in s to ck wi ll be
so ld at a lar ge d iscoun t . 19 66 CAD ILL AC, $495 .00 , ai r I
.,
condi t ioned , goo d t ir es.
Ter r ace
Antiques ,
108
68.000
mi
les
Phone
992
:5949
.
Legio n
Terrace .
Lee
Does
your
home
6-25 -&lt;tp
Rudisill .
I require any of these
6-6 26tp
I services?

-HOUSEKEEPER
-------------for Sale
, must live

Lost

i'

10. e)lce llen t
Phone 992-7387

.)-/- J

CAPTAIN EASY

or
.!'hone99)992-5682
-7121

FREE ESTIMATES

-73 CHEVY :1, ton tru ck c us tom

YARD SALE

The 7-33
Market
.Is Closing The End Of This Month

WILKINSON
'
SMALL
ENu111n:
.

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

~

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

For
Rabies, Distemper ln noculations . Dr . Paul
Shoc~ev, ·veterinarian.
Saturday, June 28
1 To4 P.M.
County Garage
Meigs Fairgrounds
Sponsored by
Meigs Co. Humane Society

.

...

.

7: 00-Truth or Cons 3,4; Bowling for Dollars 6; What's
My Line 8; News 10; Lers Make a Deal 13; Jimmy
Dean 15; Making It Counnt 20; Nova 33.
7: 30-Hollywood Squares 3; ,4; Ohio Lottery 6 ; New
Price Is Right 8; Consumer Survival Kit 20; Wild
Kingdom 10; To Tell the Truth 13; American
Outdoorsman 15.

Automobile
Transmission
Repair

We Build the Best and
Repair the Rest.
- Cabinets Installed-

6-18-1 mo.

Ul":

OPEN EVES. 8: 00 POMEROY, OHIO;

I

and

Racine. Ohio

.
992-3313

POM~~OY MOTOR CO•.@):.

TWO BR Mob ile Hom e .
De pOSi t req uir ed Phone 992
3429.
6 24 61 p

8 :00-Movle ·" The Specialists" 3,4,15; Barney Miller·
·
6, 13; The Waltons 8, 10; In Search of a Maestro 20;
Evefllng at Symphony 33 .
8 :30-Texas Wheelers .6.13.
9 :00-Sireets ol San Francisco 6, 13; Movie " Commanche Station" 8; Hollywood Television Theatre
20,33; Movie "The McKenzie Break" 10.
9 :31&gt;-Movle "Target Rfsk" 3,4, 15.
10:00-Aarry 0 6,13; News 20;; News 20; Woman 33.
10:30-Horace Marshall 33 .
11 :00-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC· News 33.
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Wide World Special 13;
FBI 6; Movie "The McKenzie Break" 8; Movie .
"The Lusty Men" 10; Janakl 33 .
12:30-Wide World Special 6.
1: 00-Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.
FRIDAY,JUNE~7, 1975

6 :00--News 3,4,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 6; Sesame St. 20;
One of a Kind 33.
6:30-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Bewitched 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Zoom 33.

Roger Hysell's
Garage

NEIGLER
Building SUpp~--

Pho_~_e

1969 CHEVY NOVA4 DR.
$1195
6 cyl., automatic trans ., c lea n in terior, good fires ,
radio. New paint.

fRA ILE R tot Phone 992 7897
6 18 t fc

AUC TION -- Sat ., J une 28 at GA R AG E SA LE . 1 mil e fr om
11: 00 A. M. at th e Curt is
Bash an on Co . Rd 32 to ward
Wo lf re s1de nc e, 1., m1 1e N of
124 New and use d clothing
Chester , Ohto
(F ollow
and othe r m1 sc items . June TRA IL ER SP ACE on S. R. 124,
auctio n signs from St . Rt .
25th th ru J ul y 2.
5 mi nutes fro m Meigs Mine
248 ) A NT IQU E S, Cla w foo t
6-26 6/p
No . I Ca ll 742 5986 .
chai r . straig ht. and plat
6 26 3tc
for m rockers , m ilk cans , YA RD SAL E , 409 .W. Main SL
wooden bar rel, 2 buffe ts ,
Pomer oy right ac ross fr om 3 RM F ur nis hed apt . fo r 1 or 2
books .
H OUSEH "O LD.
Monkey Run . Thursday ,
p ersons m Middleport . Call
Livi ng room suite , dm1n g
Fr idaY and Sat urday tr om 9
992 -J 129 or 992-5d34.
table and cha 1rs , t wo end
till 5 p .m . wOme n 's, men's
6 26 Jtc
tables . coffee tab le , head and chi ldren-'s cloth ing and
--- - -------- --- - - - board , dresser , vanity , desk
odds and ends.
an d c hair , la mps . dishes ,
F URNI SHED apartm e n t in
gas c irc ulat ing heat e r , cast
Middleport . Phone 99 2-nos
iron heating stove , ca rpet YARD SAL E , F r iday a nd
betw een 9 a . m and 6 p . m .
re m nan ts
an d
rug s
J us t
past
Sa lurday
6 26 -3tc
MI SCE L LA NEO US a
Syrac use Tra iler Park on
horsepow e r riding la wn
right . Per fec t condition
m ower , stor m and screen
infan t items. excel lent boy s , J RM ap t. wtth" wa ll -to wa ll
door s and windows Wh iz
ca rp el, 104 Spring Ave.,
gi rl s. ::t 7. toy s, s troll e r and
chain saw , gun r ack, large
Pom e roy . Cal l 992 -590 8.
hou se hold .
p1 c ture
window ,
6 22 ti c
wheelbarrow , t abl e saw ,
socket se ts and m iSc tools , P AG E V I L LE , Thursday TWO houses in Pomeroy , 210
25 Wh ite Rock 1ay ing hens .
through Sa turday . F ur
and 217 Condor St. Ca ll 99 2
Norweg ian Elkhound puppy
niture , som e antiques .
2659.
and many other 1tems too
bo ttles , co llec tor items .
6-18 l21p
m en tio n .
n ume rou s to
QU tiiS , maf e r ial . m1sc . and
Lunc h
se r ved
Don n a
jun k Calt 698-5433
VanMeter ,
an d
Na ra
6-26 -2tc COUNTRY Mo bil e Home
Har t ma n , owners . I. 0 .
Par k, Rt. 33, ten mile s no rth
"Mac" McCo y, Auctioneer .
o t Pomeroy La rg e lots w it h
P hone 985 -394 4.
c onc r ete patios, si dewa lk s ,
6 26 -2tc
run ne r s a nd off s tr ee l
parking Phone 99 7 7.t7 9
SHOO TING Match ." Horn er
12 31 If c
Hill Gun Club , Sunday , J une
29, 1 p . m Factory choked
Bett Dawson going to
TWO bedrO om mob ile hom e 1n
guns only .
Florida, having yard
Sy racu se . Deposi t req uir ed
6-26 3/c
No c h ildren or pets Phon e
sale.
992 24 41 afte r 5 JO p .m
1 ~ UW
SC 11111g F u ller Brush
6 10 -tfc
P rodu cts , pho ne 992-3410.
1-2&lt;1 ffc
3 /\ ND J ROOM furni shed and
-;:&lt;"" " un furni shed
apartmen ts .
FOR your " Oil S.f. - Mink"
· Phone 992 5&lt;134 .
Cosmet i cs .
Phone
4 12 tf c
BROWN'S 992-5113.
1-7-tfc
PRIV ATE meeting room for
Wippel Rd. , Five Points
any or ganizalion : phon e 99 2
397 5.
3 11 tfc

Small Animal
Q.INIC

. ,,

.,

W1!5her &amp; Dryer
and
Small APpliance
·Repair

1968 CHEV . IMPALA CPE .
$895
Blk . vinyl top, red finish , V-8, automatic, power
steer ing &amp; brakes.

For Rent

YARD SA LE , Jun e 26 and 27
Thurs day and
Fr iday, ---- ----- -·-·
Horton Str ee t , Mason , W. 12 )( 12 2 f\ED RM . trai le r . rea l
Va . Close to B&amp; .B Ma rk et .
nice Phon e 992 3324 .
6 26 2tp
{) 19 tfc
I

•

1970 NOVA V-8 CPE.
Sll95
Vinyl roof, grey fini sh , hig h mi leage, good tires,
automat ic, power steer ing, radio, si lver finish . Black
top .

OLD fur ni tu r e, ice bo)les,
bra ss beds , or com plet e
ho useholds . Wr ite M . D . .
Mil ler, Rt . &lt;1, Pomer oy,
Ohto . Call 992 7760 .
10 ] 74

FUR NI SHED
a pa rtm ent,
adu lts only in M iddlepor t .
Phone 992 -3874 .
3 25 -ff c

..

QUALITY Motor Co.

Wanted To Buy

Business Services

__........__.___.-

Television log for easy viewing

l-

l't\AXXY, WHAT
. YOU SAID!

_____ .._

·- ··- ·-

. THURSDAY, JUNE 26,1975

r--------

CAS H pa1d tor all m a~es a nd
mode l s of mobi le homes .
Ph on e area code 6 14 42J .
Y5 J 1.

OUSIP , .

DICK TRACY

Auto S_aii)S

Wanted

I•""' ,.. COl.,
_..... f...,.,

r-·-.-.-·-·-·-·-·---·-·- ·:- ·- - ·--- - - -

The T.laily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., '111~sday, June 26, 1975

Starl setting aside a little
money . You may be offered an
outstanding business oppor.
tunity. Check it out with experts
before you jump in .
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

�Alma Vance, 90,

News •• in ·Briefs

died Wednesday

(Continued from page 1)
· U; Meigs 5.7; Vinton, 9.3, and Washington, 9.9.

LITTLE HO&lt;;KING - Mrs.
Alma Vance,· 90, of Rt. I,
Little Hocking, died Wednesday morning at Christian
Anchorage Nursing Home in
Marietta following an ex·
tended illness.
Born in Minnesota, she was
the daughter of the . late
Havens and Christina
Johnson Newman.
She was a member of the
Bethel United Methodi~t
Church and had attended the
Decatur Methodist Church.
A resident of the CoolvilleLittle Hocking area the
greater part of her life, she
was preceded in death by. her
husband, William A. Vance in
1928 and several brothers.
Survivors include
a
daughter , Mrs . .Leonard
(Gladys) Massey, Little
Hocking, and a grandson ,
Marvin Massey , Little
Hocking.
FWleral services will be
Saturday at 11 a.m. at the
White · Funeral Home,
Coolville, with the Rev .
Wesley Thatcher officiating.
Burial will follow in the
Coolville Cemetery. Friends
may call at the fWleral home
after noon on Friday.

ROCK FOREST, QUE. - THE AILING WIFE of a
wealthy Quebec businessman has been abducted by kidnapers
wljo have threatened to kill her Wlless they are paid a $1
million ransom. ·
~ebec Provincial Police revealed" Wednesiliif ''tena
Blanchette, 63, was taken from her home in this. affluent
suburb Tuesday. The police reimposed an earlier news
blackout later in the day and said they would make no further
conunent until the drama ends. A police spokesman said the
woman's relatives are concerned for her health, since
medicine needed daily to treat a heart condition was not taken
when she was abducted.
DETROIT - AUTOMAKERS REVIEWING the latest new
car sales figures said todsy they think an industry upturn has
arrived, although latest figures show sales still at a 12-year
low. "There's every indication that we've turned the corner,"
said William Benton, vice president of Ford Motor Co.
.
His company, the last to report mid-June sales, sa1d
Wednesday it sold 57,724 new cars. The figure was up from a
month earlier, but stllllagged at a 12-year low and was 22 per
cent behind sales for the same period last year. Combined with
earlier reports from General Motors Corp., Chrysler Corp. and
American Motors Corp., it meant overall sales in mid .June hit
213,750, compared with 257,022 for the
period one year
earlier. That was down 17 per cent from nud.JW!e last year.
However, the four companies' sales ran 5 per cent ahead of
mid-May and for the first 20days of this month, sales were up 8
per cent from the first 20 days of May.

sam:

WASH!NGTON- PRESIDENT FORD SAYS a threatened
major oil price increase by producing nations would cause
serious economic problems for much of the world and would be
"iotally Wlacceptable."
T!le President's·warning at a news conference Wednesday
followed predictions by some officials of the Organiza lion of
Petroleum Exporting CoWltries that oil prices might be raised
by $2 to $4 above the current level of about $12 per barrel when
an OPEC price freeze expires at the end of September. "Any
increase in foreign oil would be, in my judgment, very
disruptivJ:..and__ totally unac~ptable," Ford said.
But he gave no direct answer when asked whether he was
trying to persuade the oil producers not to increase their prices
and, if so, whether he was having any success.

E. W. Davidson
died Wednesday
Ernest William (Rink)
Davidson, 83, Pomeroy, died
Wednesday at the VA
Hospital in Chillicothe. He
was preceded in death by his
parents, Lewis and Jersey
Belle Anderson, and his wife,
Clara Ebersbach Davidson.
Surviving are one son,
Roger, and a daughter •
Geraldine·
Graveside services will be
conducted by the Rev. Edward Griffith Saturday at 10
'a.m . at the Chester
Cemetery. There will be no
VISltallon or flowers, as
requested by the deceased. ·

mE COMMUNIST GOVERNMENT OF South Vietnam
has agreed to accept all refugees who want to return, it was
reported today. Horhesick Vietnamese predicted ma,ny
countrymen would go back if the first arrivals are well treated
by the victors.
The Los Angeles Times, quoting United Nations sources,
said the Saigon government had assured the U. N. high
commissioner for refugees that repatriation can begin "within
several weeks." The Provisional Revolutionary Government
in Saigon not only agreed to accept the returnees, but also
actively sought such a program, the U. "N. spokesman was
quoted as saying.

Hosplrr l"..t.L
NEWS

WASHINGTON
THE SENATE, IN HUMBLE
recognition of President Ford's influence in Congress, is about
to pass a housing bill tailored to his specifica lions.
Sending up the flag of compromise, Sen. Wiliarn Proxmire,
principal sponsor of the $1.35 billion housing bill Ford vetoed
Tuesday, offered the new measure on Wednesday. It would
have passed on the spot, but Republicans wanted a roll call so
they could be recorded as voting for the bill.
PAHUTE MESA, NEV. -

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, June25)
Kathy Albright, Judy Bain,
Margaret Blane, Ella Burris, ·
Christopher Burton, Jessie
Clagg, Irene Cook, Michelle
Coughenour , Clifford
Cuckler, Mrs. Alan Cunningham
and
infant
daughter, Lena Day, Harry
Denison, Helen Denney, Mrs.
Timothy Drake and infant
son, Robert Eagle, Joyce
Grimmette, Freida Hawk,
Betty Hemphill, Ricky
Higgins, Donna Huffman ,
Alice Kuhn, Mrs. Daniel
Lawrence
and
infant
daughter, Mamie Lewis,
Eleanor
Mills,
Ervin
Morrison, Shelba Murphy,
Mrs. Darrell Mynes and
infant daughter, Chad NW!n,
Sharo.!l Qlder, Kathy Oxier,
Mrs. Stanley Payne and
infant son, Ernest Riffle,
Joseph Rose, Michelle Roy,
Woodrow SaWlders, Nellie
Sayre, Bud Shaffer, Arnold
Sharp, Uoyd Short, Sara
Summers, Carrie VanBibber,
Barbara Walters , Earl
Willfong, Rebecca Willis,
Howard Yerian.

THE MOST POWERFUL

nuclear explosion in the United States in two years erupted in

the Nevada desert today, sending shock waves as far a:w_ay as
Las Vegas, Nev.
Federal scientists said the weather was clear and the
mucti..delayed blast went.off on schedule at 5:30 a. m. PDT.
There were no radiation leaks, sclentists ac!ded. The explosion
rocked high rise buildings in Las Vegas, 120 miles away from
~~explosion site, and was felt less than one minute after the
'fst.
.
SERVICE ON AIR
PWP TO MEET
ATHENS- WOUB FM 91.3
Parents Without Partners will provide live broadcast of
win hold a general program the United Mine Workers 85th
meeting at 8 p.m. at St. A n n i v e r s a r y
Com Peter's Episcopal Church, memoration to be held in
541 Second Ave., Gallipolis. Athens on SWlday, June 29
Speaker for the program will from noon Wltil 2 p.m. Major
be Gallipolis Attorney speakers for the event ·will
Thomas S. Moullen on the include UMW President
topic "Wills and Taxes". Arnold Miller and John
Members are asked to bring Owens, a Wlion officer from
friends and all their questions 1927-1972 and former adon the topic.
ministrative assistant to John
L. Lewis. The Appalachian
Parks Project,
a
MASON DRIVE-IN · Green
musical touring company
.
.
headquartered at Ohio
(
I ,
',
tl t ,
University, will entertain
during the program which
TONIGHTTHRU FRI .
commemorates the foWlding
Double Feature
of the ·miner's W!ion.
·
f j

"MESSAGE PARLOR"
Also
"SEX CLINIC"
" Rated R"

j

Gel ready for July 4th
weekend with fun. lime

I

: - -.. the thrifty place to shop.

values from our store. It's

I

FENCING AND' CORNERS

1S in . .:36 in . x ~a" Fence

B7c

10 !n.w18 in.x'le" Corners, Reg. S1.17

Special 9&amp;c

PICNI C

.I. .

supplies
napkins, plates, cups. table
cloths , forks, spoons.
SUMMER toys - Toy
lawnmoWers, sand pails,
sand toys , garden sets,
sprinkling cans.

DECORATIONS

For The Kids!

Duck
8.
ducklings,
roosters.
flamingos •.
eqrets, wild · geese . .

Wading Pools
to Cool 'Em Off!

We Have Folding
Aluminum Chairs

;;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ::::::::::::::::::::&lt;:::::::::::::::::::·:::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:::::;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::,:,:,: .

Make Pollleroy Your Shopping Center

BHO.NEN~tt~s~i~¥..
P.992-3498
•
·
I,OMEROY, OHIO

Mr. and Mrs. Roy Carpenter, a daughter; Wellston;
Mr. and Mrs. James Hickman, a daughter, Jackaon;
Mr. and Mrs. Carl MWlcy, a
daughter, Jackson.

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I
t
I
I
I
I

VeteraD!I Memorial Hospital
ADMI!)SIONS - James
Reynolds, Middleport;
Colleen Dougan, Shade;
Harold Fetty Jr., Langsville;
Walter Ellis, Pomeroy;
Raymond ,HarUey, Racine;
Thomas Sarver, Pomeroy.
DISCHARGES - Molly
Johnson, Samson Hall, Ralph
Wells, Mildred Wl!l"d, Leola
Keck, James Barton, Velma
Stobart, Mary Kauff.

Columbia Gas of Ohio 1sn't
just asking its customers to
lake steps to conserve
natural gas and other forms
of energy. The gas company
is practicing what it has been
preaching.
J. M. Koebel , Mnnagrr for

Columbia Gas of Ohio in the
Gallia-Meigs area, reports
that statewide duril)g 1974 the
gas company reduced its own
natural gas usage by 32.9 per
cent, or 102,114,000 cubic feet.
In addition, el~tric usage

in cUITent Kawasakie
Motorcycles were virtually
ignored when unleaded
gasoline was introduced to
help combat air pollution, but
they have turned out to be one
of the major beneficiaries of
the new fuel. ' '
'
According to resea~chers
at Kawasaki Motors· Corp.,
unleaded gas is the recommended f'l_el for all current
models of Kawasaki cycles
sold for public use. Charles
W. Crawford of Kawasaki's
Technical Center reported,
"in addition to substantially
helping to reduce exhaust
emissions, Wlleaded gas can
save the average motorcyclist up to 20 percent per
year on maintenance costs."
"Use of Wlleaded gas can
prolong sparkplug life,
reduce crankcase oil conlamination , and extend
engine life when used in

was cut 15.9 per cent 'lind by seiling back thermostats gasoline consumption. ·
"With industries served by
gasoline consumption by in offices, garages and
warehouses,
and
by
im,
Columbia
facing even greater
216,270 gallons, a reduction of
'proving insulation. .
reductions in gas deliveries·
9.3 per cent.
Koebel said gas lights ~lave ·this coming winter," the
Energy savings were made
been extinguished and manager said, "conservation
electric lighting has been of ·natural gas by everyone
reduced both inside and will be more important than
outside wherever possible. ever. We continue to urge all
The company is emphasizing our customers to conserve
vehicle maintenance, and all natural gas In onler to have
(Continued from page 1)
but the most essential travel additional supplies of energy
California Ltd., Phillips Oil, has been eliminated to reduce available to industry·"
and SheD Oil.
Koebel said that pamphlets
Attorney General Evelle
offering tips on --1!nergy
Younger said the suit was the U
.
conservation are available at
result of a two-year In- . uarfYr._
'lJVeS
any Columbia office and that
vestigatlon by his office into
~ • .'
anyone that has a question on
pricing and marketing
(Continued from page 1) · how to conserve can have lt
practices of ihe oil industry in Laboratory and has served imswered by calling the local
California.
four years as a member of the gas ·company conservation
The complaint accused the executive committee of the consultant.
11 companies of conspiring to State Superintendents'
eliminate competition in the organization.
production of crude oil, to fix
He is afflllated with a
artificially the price at which number of other educ,8,~9"al
crude oU is purchased and organizations.
•·
(Continued from page 1)
sold, to eliminate competition
Hargraves was assistant lahoma senator now a Demoin the sale of refined products surerinlendent of the East era tic presidential candidate,
and to fix their price ar- U\ rpool City Schools when said Ford's refusalto rule out
tificially and to allocate he resigned to come to the ftrst use of nuclear weapons
customers lor refined oil
Meigs Local School District was "the most dangerous
products.
in 1966.
military declaion that has
A spokesman for Standard
Mr s .
H a r g r a v e s been made by our governOil Company of California (Josephine) is a registered ment in at least 20 years."
denied aU the charges. •·
nurse who has worked in
Ford confirmed that one
"The vague and general
·
f
hospitals in the area rom change in U.S. nuclear policy
charges of the complaint time to time during the was made a year and a half
have no foWldatlon. They are Hargraves' residency. All ago. Previously the policy
just a rehash of stale and
discredited allegatioos which three of the Hargraves called either for all-out
children (all now married) nuclear war with the Soviet
the federal goveminent after graduated from Meigs High Union or no such war. Now It
nine years of litigation was School. They are Michael, includes the ~·•bllity that
unable to substantiate some
""""'
years ago," the spokesman now a teacher in Lorain; ·Russia arxl the United Slates
said. "There was no evidence David, an engineer with NCR · might fight a llmlted nuclear .
to support them then· and in Dayton, and Carol war with each other -ach
thereissimplynoevidenceto Hargr~ves Methe, Colum- firing only a few strategic
support them now."
bus, a registered nurse.
weapons at selected targets.

.,

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1 .MEIGS lliEATRE
TONIGHT
1

1

NOT OPEN

I.

J uN E 27-29

l

Wall Disney's
ESCAPE TO

WtTC~~~!TAIN

Cloudy today and tonight,
chance of showers or thWldershowers this evening.
Lows tonight mi~ 60s. Mostly
sunny. a littl e warin er
- Saturday, highs in the low
90s. Probability of rain 30 per
cent tonight, 20 per cent
Saturday.
·

VOL. XXVII NO. 53

Oil hit

Unleaded gas preferred
Kawasaki motorcycles,"
Crawford said.
For
these
reasons,
Kawasaki will specify
unleaded gasoline in its
Owner's Manuals, beginning
with late 1975 models .
Meanwhile, owners of older
models can also enjoy the
benefits of unleaded gas.
Kawasaki researchers
reported that all 1966-'15 twostroke models, except
competition motocross and
road racing machines, not
only can, but s,hould use
Wlleaded fuel.
Furthermore, since 1973,
Kawasaki's four-stroke
models, including the popular
KZ-400 commuter motorcycle, have been equipped
with a special material in the
' engine valve seats. This
material allows the fourstrokes to accept Wlleaded
gas just as readily as twostroke models. Only earlier
Martha L. Rose
foljl"-stroke models (1972 and
before) must use leaded
of Portland dies ,gasoline to protect engine
PORTLAND - Martha L. valves and valve seats.
Rose, 75, died Wednesday
evening at her Route 1,
Portland, residence.
A member of the Carmel
United Methodist Church,
Mrs. Rase was preceded in
death by her parents, David
and Harriett Cox Conger; her
husband, Theodore; five
sisters, and an infant brother.
Surviving are two sons,
Warren, of Racine, and Guy
of Portland; three daughters,
Mrs. Thelma
Walton ,
Racine;
Mrs . Tommy
(Evelyn) Holter, Racine, and
Mrs. Dean (Grace) Earich,
Westerville; a sister, Mrs.
John Somerville, Winter
Gardens, Fla.; 15 grandchildren,
22
greatgrandchildren, and several
nieces and nephews.
FW!eral services will be
held at 1 p.m. Saturday at the
Carmel United ' Methodist
Church with Rev. Freeland
Norris officiating . Burial will
be in the Sutton Methodist '
Church Cemetery. Friends
may call at the Ewing
FW!eral Home anytime after
noon Friday Wllil 11 a.m.
Saturday when the body will
be taken to the church.

Ford. would

FIREMEN CALLED
RACINE - All members of
the
Racine Volunteer
Emergency Squad are asked
to be at the firehouse at 6 p.
m. on July,2andJuly 3 to help
prepare a float for the July
4th parade.
.r

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FUND UP MORE

::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:::::;:::::::::::::::,:::;:;:;:;:;:

. WASHINGTON (UP1) FBI agents today arrested
two men on charges of
spying In this country for
By Bob HoeOich
the Soviet Union, the .
REEDSVILLE
Meigs
Countians
are fortunate to have at their fingertips, beautiful
Justice Department anForked
Run
Stale
Park
near
here.
nounced.
Undoubtedly, the picturesque park is one of the most attractive nature spots in Meigs
FBI Director Clarence
County.
M. Kelley said Sarkis 0.
Under the supervision of Park Manager Doyle Smales, the grounds are well maintained. A
Paskallan, 36, was arrested
of "in" recreational activities- swinuning, nature hikes, boating, fishing - are ofvariety
in New York City and
fered to casual visitors, or the campers who choose the park for a vacation.
Sahag K. Dedeyan, 41, was
Oddly, the park at limes this week has been practically deserted. It 's amazing that more
arrested In Rockville, Md.
people
don't PoP a picni.c basket into the car to enjoy a bit of leisure midst this wonderland of
A criminal complaint
nature.
and an FBI agent's afSwimming is free and camping place chargeS are minimal. Boats - rowboats, outboard
fidavit filed with a federal
and even canoes - are available at small charges. Too, there is no charge for
motorboats
judge In New York charged
fishing
in
the
102 acre lake . A concession building offers refreshments to visitors and
Paskallan .with conspiracy
necessities to campers. Large beds of bright colored yellow and orange marigolds dot the park
to gather classified
grounds
to enhance the beauty.
national defense InSo
if you're anxious to "get away from it all" even for a few hours, hop into the car and
formation to aid a foreign
head
for
Forked
Run. It's really a change of pace. You'll be glad you did!
country.

r;v;;;;: : :t;;''Bri;j~ No ordinary rock

The public fund drive for
Ryan jeffers, 3, altholj8h
officiall~ closed has reached
$4,671.99. Latest contributors
include $200 from the Eastern
High SChool student body and
$30 from' the Chesler YoW!g
Wives Club. YoWlg Jeffers!
received a severe foot injury
in a power mower accident
several weeks ago.

.·.

,
Price

Mrs. William
McCoy,
Eleanor, and Edith Buckley,
HW!tington.
BIRTH, · .,June 25, a
daughter to Mr. and Mrs.
Karry Myers, Gallipolis
Ferry.

,,

UPHOLSTERY
SQUARES
.2 For $1.00 ..
.

'

White with Stripe Top
'

June. White Sale
Featuring Cannon Royal
, Family.

sale·88' Pair

'

.

Home Furnishings· Annex
'
'

'

'

KROEHLER and BERKLINE CHAIR SALE
Special Group of Occasional Chairs and Rockers. Velvets, Prints, Vinyls,
Matalesse.

REGUlAR '.139.00 to '169.00

Sale
'

Free Customer Parking on Se.c ond Street at the Mechanic StrHt Warehouse.

~e!p~:;'e

The
in
Wall Disney's
downtown p
t
omeroy a 11
CHIPANOOALE
a.m. Thursday was 83
li.FiiiEiiST
. III•A.iL
. ......._ _ _. . . degrees Wider SWlny skies.

w

up from the Ohio

FINAL DAYS

.

ELBERFELDS IN P MEROY

PRICE 15'

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

area. From Parkersburg, the family has been vacationing there this week
and frequent the park on weekends often. Regardless of the heat, th~ family
always enjoys a campfire. "Without a campfire, it just isn't camping," Mrs.
Lowther comm~nted. &lt;See mo~e pictures on page 10 today)

mrs FAMILY FROM Parkersburg prepares for a boat outing on Forked RWl Lake at the boat rental docks.

'

Our entire stock of
this famous maker's
summer
active
sportswear collection
is included.

TUBE SOCKS

FRIDAY, JUNE 27, 1975

Housing
survey
offered

v

Men's and Boys'

POM EROY·M IDDLEPORT, OHIO

FORKED RUN PARK CAMPING sites number 198 and many were
unoccupied this week. Here, I to r, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Lowther and
children, Shelia, 6; Trudy; 4, and Jariei, 12, watch the "boiling pot" over
their campfire. Lowther says Forked Run Park is one of the best spots in the

1

Sale

REG. 69c

Devoted To The Interests oj"The Meigs-Mason Area

.. -

Forked Run Lake beautiful

Summer
Sportswear

enttne

Arattlesnake shakes Its taU
about 48 times per second.

'

FAMOUS MAKER

Sale

at y

•

"\'1:

Shop Friday and Saturday 9:30 to 8 PM

CALLS ANSWERED
RACINE - The Racine ER squad answered a call in
Racine at 5:47 p.m. Wednesday for Raymond Hartley
who was having difficulty
breathing. He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 7:25p.m. the squad went to
Route I, Racine, for Martha
Rose who was dead upon the
squad's arrival. ·The body
was taken to the Ewing
FW!eral Home.

•

Now You Know

..

ELBERFELDS ·IN POMEROY

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Wilber
Jor·daln. Gallipolis Ferry;

J.

OPEN FRIDAY~~~~:::..~--

Columbia Gas pra·cticing what it is preaching

(Births)

NOW YOU KNOW
Burma traditionally
records more deaths from
snake bites each year than
any other country.

r-------------·
- . . --·-·-,1
1 Summer fun Time Is Herel

I

w~ather

....,

10- The Daily Sentin~i. Mlddleport-Poineroy. 0 ., Thursday, June 26, 1975

By United Press Interruitponal
NEW DELHI - PRIME MINISTER INDIRA Gandhi has
assumed virtually absolute power in India, jailing hundreds of
HUNTINGTON, W. Va.
political opponents and imposing press censorship in the (UP!) -The jaws of a crane
world's largest democracy. Government spokesmen said 676 dug into the base of the Ohio
persons were arrested in. the lightning-fast crackdown but River, clenched onto a 1,000
opposition leaders put the figure as high as 3,500.
pound rock, pulled it out of
MFs. Gandhi,. who declared a two-month state of the water and dumped it in a
emergency across India Thursday, said the arrests were pile of debris offshore.
necessary to combat a "widespread conspirac( that
But the sandy-rolored rock
threatened the nation's internal security. Most of those jailed creid for attention by standhad led demands for Mrs. Gandhi's resignation following her ing up like a tombstone,
conviction two weeks ago ,on charges of corrupt campaign showing off its markinga and
practices.
inscriptions. A closer Inspection revealed that it was
SACRAMENTO, CAUF- IF GOV. EDMUND BROWN no ordinary rock.
signs the legislature's new marijuana bill, Californians caught
Geologist Joseph W. Alderwith an OW!ce of pot after n~xt year would pay only a small man of the U.S. Corps Ql
fine . The bill, narrowly approved Thursday by the Senate, Engineers said it was a
would soften heavy criminal penalties for possession of small prehistoric stone, probably
amounts of marijuana and substitute a maximum $100fine.
dating back to more than
Brown, who supports the concept of reducing marijul!lla 2,000 years ago when the
sanctions, has 12 days after receiving the legislation to act on
Adena-Woodland Indian tribe
it. H approved by the governor, the measure would take effect located here.
Jan. 1. But supporters predict police unofficially will quit
Drawn on the flat stone,
making marijuana "busts" the day the governor endorses it. whicli' contained
iron
discolorations, were three
WASIDNGTON - KENNEm DONALDSON lost 15 years birds, a horse and rider and
out of his life. As a result major changes inay now be made in other markings which were
America's system of caring for the mentally ill. The Supreme not so easily distinguishable.
Court ruled Thursday that Donaldson, 67, was · unThe unusual find was
constitutionally confined in a Florida mental institution for 15
years, even through he was not considered dangerous, and
without any treaiment. He r.eceived only custodial care.
Firemen called
His lawyer, Bruce Ennis of the Mental Health Law Project
and the New York Civil Liberties Union, said the court's twice Thursday
unanimous ruling is likely to resnlt in the release of thousands
of other mental patients around the country foWld in hospital
Damage was estimated at
reviews to be not dangerous and who ate receiving only $40 ,in a fire at .7:50 p.m.
custodial care .
Thursday at the home of Mr.
. "The mental health hospital system as we know it can no. and Mrs. Carrol E. Waugh
longer exist in this countrv." Ennis said . "They can no longer located at 348 Main St. Plants
continue as custodial warehouses." Donaldson now a resident Subdivision.
of York, Pa., had been diagnosed as a paranoid 'SChizophrenic
According to the Gallipolis
in 1957 and was confined in the Floridll State Hospital at Fire Department, ·. the · blaze
Oiattahooche until 1971.
was caused by a heating coil
in an electric cooking oven.
WASH!NGTON- CONGRESS HAS APPROVED and sent Three men and · one truck
to President Ford emergency legislation designed to save responded to the ~Oth alarm
about 250,000persons from losing unemployment benefits June of the year.
30. The 'Senate and Houae Thursday voted to extend a law
Earlier in the day , firemen
providing jobless workers wi.th up to 65 weeks of benefits. were called to the Holzer
President Ford was expected to sign the bill.
Medical Center where a
The current law expires June 30. Unless the extension is malfWlction in the alarm
approved, workers would be eligible to collect compensation . system on the fifth noor
for only 52 weeks of joblessness. The bill passed by voice vote soWlded the alarm . There
(Continued on page 10)
was no fire .

discovered by workers of the
Maxon Corp. who were excavating below the river at
Ceredo near here to construct
mooring cells of a barge dock
for the Oglebay Norton Co .
The rock was found six to
eight feet below the bottom of
the 25-foot deep river, some
40feet from the West Virginia
shore. It was pulled out by the
teeth of the crane's clamshell
and routinely. dumped in a
pile of other debris lifted
from the bottom of the river.
It was not until one of the
workers went over for a
closer inspection of the
Wlusual stone that the inscriptions were noted and
subsequently geologists were ·
asked to take a look.
John Bertram, district ·
geologist for the corps of
engineers, termed the inscriptions ptroglyphs and
said the rock appeared to be a
keyhole. He said it was in
"excellent condition."
Company officials, who
have placed the prehistoric
stone on a lot behind Oglebay
Norton's plant here , said they
would be willing to donate the
find to a museum.

.

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EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Sunday through
Tuesday, fair Sunday ·and
Monday and a chance of
showers Tuesday. Highs
wur be in the 80s and lows
will be In tbe 60s.
c=:::::::::::::::::::::::=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=::::::::::::::

STUDY PLANNED
WASHINGTON (UP() Albert Rees, director of the
CoWlcil on Wage and Price
Stability, said today his panel
would Wldertake a study of
pricing patterns in the coal
industry in an effort to learn
· why the price of soft coal has
risen so much.

The services of the John
Jennings firm, Columbus,
employed by the Meigs
CoWlly Regional Planning
Commission, will be offered
to the village of Middleport
for a housing survey, according to plans when the
commission met Thursday at
the Farmers Bank Building
in Pomeroy.
The Commission learned
that Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman has conferred with
the Buckeye Hills - Hocking
Valley Regional Commission
in reference to a housing
study. It was agreed to offer
the service of the Jennings
firm which has been employed to make a housing
survey in Meigs CoWlty by
the commission to the
Buckeye Hills group and
Mayor Hoffman.
It was also agreed
yesterday to have minutes of
each session duplicated and
sent to members so time of
meetings will not have to be
used in rejlding them.
The COITjmission approved
the Wilkesville area sewage
planning which will include a
part of Meigs County but will
cost the coWlty nothing. The
commission approved the
$360,000 West Shade River
Sand Abatement Project in
which there is no local money•
involved, and the Buckeye
Hills-Hocking Valley
organization as the clearing
house for federal and state
projects.
The -Tri-State Material
Corp., which asked about
regulations in effect controlling land usage in Meigs
County, will be advi'seu by C.
E. Blakeslee, executive
director of the commission,
that there are none .
Blakeslee indicated
however ,
indicated
may have to come in the
future.
The commission discussed
obtaining additional copies of
the comprehensive plan for
Meigs CoW!ty and it was
(Continued on page 10)

KYGER CREEK IDGH SCHOOL secretary Mrs. Diane Bittinger points to a glass in the
door of the school's athletic equipment room which was broken into and entered. Several
track and basketball jerseys were taken. The door behind Mrs. Bittinger was heavily
damaged. Most of the property taken has been recovered by the Gallia CoWlly Sheriff's
Department.

Warrants thrown out
Due to an error in using the
"wrong section" of the law
and
failure
of
the
prosecutor's office to "state a
cause of action," warrants
charging Roger McClelland,
18, Rt. 1, Gallipolis, and
Kenneth Eugene Sowards alis
Gene Gels, 20, of Gallipolis,
with breaking and entering
Kyger Creek High School
were dismissed this morning
in Gallipolis MW!icipal Court.
Accordin g to Acting
Municipal Court Judge
Thomas s: 'Moulton the pair
was charged Wider the wrong
section of the law . The
request for · dismissal was
made by Warren F. Sheets
attorney for McClelland.
Prosecuting Attorney Gene

Wetherholt and h1s assistant
were out of town attending a
prosecutor's convention and
were not available to prepare
the state's case.
Gallia CoWlty Sheriff Oscar
Baird said he believes further
action will be taken .
. A fifth person , Jerry Bias,
17, of Addison, was arrested
by the sheriff's department
this morning.
Deputy Sheriff Sid Vance
reported recovering a second
tape recorder and several
jerseys. The department has
now recovered most of the
loot taken in the school
breaking and entering last
weekend.
Also arrested along with
Bias, McClelland and Geis
were Martm Sowards, 17, Rt.

Museum show
Trustees of the Meigs
County
Pioneer
and
Historical Society, meeting at
the Museum Thursday night,
summed up their annual
Heritage Sunday observance
as an "outstanding success" .
Showings of·the display set up
for last SWlday will continue
this evening from 7:30 to 9
and on Saturday and Sunday
from 2 to 4 p. m.
Many
people
were
responsible for the success of
the observance held in
conjunction with the Big
Bend Regatta . Trustees
expressed their appreciation
to those mentioned earlier
and others.
In charge of the entire
presentation was Elizabeth
Hilferty, museum director.
She was assisted in planning
and coordination by Becky
Glaze , assistant director ;

I, Gallipolis, and Darrell

Boggess, 17, Gallipolis.
The sheriff's department
today arrested Richard Allen
Burdette, 17, Gallipolis, in
connection with a breaking
and entering at Webb's
Grocery at Centenary.
Earlier, Bob Nibert, 17, of
Northup, was charged in the
same case.
Afugiti ve warrant has been
file~ by the Gallia CoWlty
Sheriff's Department with
the Mason CoWlty Sheriff's
Office for Mark Schopis, 19,
of 452 Hedgewood Dr .,
Gallipolis, charging B&amp;E at ·
Webb's Grocery.
Shopis is in the Mason
CoWlty Jail facing a B&amp;E
charge in that coW!ty.

a success

Susan Oliver, Wilma ,Reece
and
Gerard
Hilferty,
museum designer, who
handled mechanical and sign
details, and was in charge of
the many historical pictures
br ought to the musuem .
Regina Wright wrote the
ri cture identifications.
Mike Gerlach, Margaret
Parker and Jan Judge
assisted in setting up
displays. Glass cases for the
small exhibits were trucked
from Maysville, Ky ., last
week by Charles Hayes,
Keith Ashley and Fred
Rayburn in trucks furnished
by Hayes and the Ewing
FWleral Home. The fWleral
home also provided chairs
Sunday. Helping in the
Wlloading were Melvin Van
Meter, Gerald Powell and
Gerard Hilferty.
The groW!ds cleanup crew,

largely senior citizens from
the RSVP program, included
Frank Clark,
Linious
Johnson, Gene McElroy.,
Kermit McElroy, Dayton
McElroy, Clarence McNeal,
R. S. Turner, Pat Lochary,
Tree Moore and David Fox.
Hostesses Sunday, with
Wilma Reece, chairperson,
included Susan Oliver,
Connie Bailey , Trudy Roach,
Cathy Erwin and Lucille
Leifheit.
The muzzle loading glin
display was served by David
and Donna Chadwell and
Robert Tewksbary. Others
providing gWls were Ray ·and
Susan Oliver, Roy Holler,
Melvin Van Meter and
Stephen Baldwin .
Organ tapes provided by
Gerald Hoffner were used as
backgroWld music in the
(Continued on page·ro)

Coal mining going big time
WASHINGTON (UP!) The·bituminous coal industry
intends to expand present
mines or open new ones to
boost new mining capacity
577.8million tons.annually by
1985.
The plans- were unveiled
Thursday in a study
presented by the National
Olal Association to the
Federal
Energy
Administration.
John Corcoran, chairman
of the FEA's Coal Advisory
Conunittee, presented results
:of the study showing that new
or expanded llllnes already
under development will have
a capacity of 43.79 million
tons of coal when completed.
. Corcoran, chairman of the
board of Consolidation Coal
Co., the natlon's second
largest coal producer, said
further expansion of present
mines, plus new mines under

construction, planned or
announced, will provide an
additional '534.01 mlllion tons
of capacity by the end·of 1985.
He said plans for new
mining capacity show the
coal i(idustry, which mined
601 million tons last year and
is now producing at the rate
of 640 million tons in 1975, is
laying detailed ·plans for
meeting the national goal of
doubling coal output by 1985.
Much of the planned increase
will come· before the end of
1980, he said.
Corcoran said lhe plans are
founded on "six basic
assumptions which involve
removal of present ob$acles
to expansion." He said these
· assumptions are that the
Clean Air Act amendments
proposed by the administration will be enacted;
capital will be avilable for the
massive investment

required ;
and
no
unreasonable surface mining
legislation will be enactted.
Also, the study preswnes
that a viable federal c~al
Jeasinll program will allow
development of coal ih the
West; realistic means of
complying with the National
Environmental Policy Act
will allow coal development
without undue delay or
restraint; and adequate
transportation will be
available.
"H the e~nsion planned
by the coal industry actually
is to take place, these .
assumptions will have to
transformed
into
accomplishments as soon as
posaible," Corcoran said,
State by state figures
showed the
following
ultiinate capacity of mine
additions, including work
already
in
progress:
'

'

Alabama, 19.55 million tons;
Dlinois, 40.60 million tons;
Indiana, 11 ·million tons;
eastern Kentucky, 24.80
million; western Kentucky,
44.40 million; Ohio, 14.20;
Pennsylvania, 31.50 million;
Tennessee , 4.85 million;
Virginia, 13.70 million;
northern West Virginia,
13.20;
southern
West
Virginia, 57.80 million;
making the sub-total for
eastern mines 275.40 million
tons.
For the West, the study
showed Arlzolla, 27.0 mllltm
tons; Colorado, 2.90 million;
Montana, JUO million; New
Mexico, 13.80 mWion; North
Dakota, 21.90mllllon; Tau,
16.70 million; tn.h, •·•
million; Wuhington, U adJ.
lion; and Wyoming , liUO
million, for 1 wetltein tGtal al
302.40 million tona.

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