<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="15992" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/15992?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-25T10:55:29+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="49116">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/073755dad176f135d08f42c965afc6a6.pdf</src>
      <authentication>2c043976717b3d46cd167faec437d314</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="51192">
                  <text>.

•··

I

I.

,.L

):

I I

8 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Monda y, Aug. 4, 1975

· •• m
· B.ne
• fs
. News

(Continu ed from page ! )
by the White House to prevent the wa lkout against the nation's
seventh largest airline. "It's down," Air Line Pilots
Associationspoke8man Rob Rezanka said as a 2a .m. deadlinepassed. " We have set up pickets in Minneapo lis and St. Paul
and will establish them at selective c ities throughout the
country.''
President Ford's chief labor troublesh ooter. W. J . Usery.
flew inw the Twin Cities late Sunday in an effort to avert the
strike. But Usery 's efforts and warnings by th e National
Mediation Board that the pilots could be in violation of the
N3liorial Railway Act were in vain . " We have not asked anybody to honor our picket lines. lf the company wishes to
provide work for anybody else , we're happy about it ,"
Rezanka said .
"We ha ve no need for a show of power . We simply want the
rompany to live up to terms of the July 17 agr~ment. ''
WASHINGTON - SEN. ROBERT TAFT JR. , R-Ohio, has
recommended form er Ohio Lt. Gov. John Brown for
nomination as interior secretary .
"!know him (Brown ) to be a most capa ble, for thright and
concerned public ser vant,'' Taft said Saturday . ''He's got a lot
of concern for the a reas th e Interior Departm ent is C'?ncerned
with, the conservation areas. I think he'd be an excellent
nomine e." Brown is "very interested " in the nomination, sa id
Taft.

NEW ORLEANS 1UP! I Politicians a nd celebrit ies
appla ud ed . But some of the
ordinary taxpayers who took
their first look at the

Gov. Edwin Edwards
called it ··a living , shining
star .'" Trumpeter AI Hirt said

Louisiana

it

weren ' t convinced they got
their money's worth .

was

" an

incredible

facility."

MAS?,N ~-R~~E-IN I
.. ( .11 I "I N1utlll,

TONITE THRU TU ES.
AUG. 4&amp;5
John Wayne In

" BRANNIGAN "
PG
Plu s

Their opinions were voiced

by ma ny of the t housa nds of
persons who attended an open
house at the $163.5 million
stadium and convention complex Sunday . ll was the first
lime the still un completed
stadiwn had been opened to
the public.
"It' s like another world,"
24, a n art history student at
Tulane Un iversity who was
among the crowds of rubberneckers roaming the wide
ramps , pee kin g in to the
locker rooms and testing the
seats.
Th e crowds climbed to t he
highest seats, 140 feet above
the floor, and watched as the
gian t 22-by-26-foot television

Ra t ed R

MEIGS THEATRE

· Mondav thru Thursday
· ·
Augu st 4-7

NOT OPEN
FRI. , SAT., SUN .
Aug . 8-9-10

" Rafferty And Th e
Gold Dust Twins "
( Techn ico lor)

- Ra ted R

Peop les Choice

Monsteri zer
Melvin Magnifi cen t
Show Starts 7:00P. M.

:
I

Area Deaths

Vurvant of New Orleans
complained about the cost of
the Superdome.
"! don't think it will ever
pay. I don't think it will meet
expenses. Our children, our

grandchildren and our greatgra ndchildren will be taxed
for thi s," she sa id .

screens gav e them a c1ose-up

" Now that th e money's

color view of the speakers
and musi cians on the fi eld .
But not everyone wa s pleased .
Mr . and Mrs. Urban

invested, what can you do?"

said Vurvant, who rattled off
a list of other ways the
stadium ... money could have
been spent.

I

Wise

Notices, local
news in brief

The Pomeroy E·R squad
was ca ll ed Saturda y at 7:05 p.
m . to Ches ter for Arthur Orr,
a medical patient. who was
tak en t o Holzer Med ic a l
Center. Sunday at ll : 35a. m .
the unit was ca ll ed to Kerr St.
for Christine John s, who was
treated at the scene.

RACINE - The Racine ER
sq ua d was ca ll ed Saturda y at
3: 50 p . m . for George Cum ·
mins, Ra c ine, a medi cal
patien t. who was taken to
Hol ze r Medical Cen ter . At 1
a. m. today they were ca ll ed
to Letart Falls for Archie
Oonahew who was dead on
arrival of the squad. The
body was taken to Ewing
Funera l Home .
The M iddl eport Citizens
Recreation Committee will
meet at 8 tonight at the
M iddleport Fir e Station .
Plan s tor a Mardi Gras type
program will be di scussed .
All interested persons are
invi ted .
John and Ann Sauvage of
Sy ra cuse, recently completed
training
in
cos meti c
Columbus and Akron. They
will take additional training
in about two weeks at

Orlando. Fla .
The Middleport E R squad

meneon

Hospital.

From a Great American Bank

Pomeroy Pollee Chief Jed
Webster reported today the
Regatta Inn located on East
Main St. was entered by force
some lime after 5 a.m. today
through the front door and out
the back . Approximately $450
was taken . Herman Henry of
the BCI is assisting in the
investigation .
Pomeroy

Mayor

Dale

Smith's office said today that

beginn ing tomorrow no one
will be able to purchase bulk
water at the water station
after 3 p.m . daily .
Tickets to get on the ferry
boat may be purchased at th e
office of the
Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce for
S7.20 a book . 10 ti ckets, at a
saving of 80 cents. The office
is open from 9 a.m . to 12 noon
five days a week .
The Syracuse - Minersville
baseball boosters will meet at
7:30 p.m . Tuesday In the
Syracuse Mun icipal Building ,

by pt.• nn l ~~ l o n of THI' UrlTMANN AR L HI VI;

1775: The clash is coming.
Patri ck Henry has n ever been one to hold his tongue. Ten
years ago, he spoke o11t against the notorious Stamp Act in
the Virginia House of Burgesses. They called him a fire brand. Some accused him of treason. But he spoke until the
older, comfortable conservatives finall y got off their seats
and backed his resolution to condemn the taxes. The storm
clouds have t hickened over these ten years. By now , they're
about to explode. And Patrick Henry's words are still moving us toward the cloudburst. Today, he is not only eloquent,
but prophetic. "I know not what course others may take; but
as for me, give me liberty or give me death!" In just one
month, we'll face our first clash of arms at Lexington. Our
first fight for liberty. fi1
" A lawn or garden
thing of beauty and a
forever" ...

THE FARMERS BANK
AND SAVI~NGS CO.
.

- .

...,.

Pomeroy, Ohio

'40,000.00 Maximum Insurance
for EaCh Depositor

(

'

(

.

A FULL
SERVICE
BANI&lt;

A beautiful lawn can
marred by cracking
peeling house , paint.
" FRIENDLY ONES"
fh e Pomeroy Cement B~ckl
Co. are featuring
TERIOR PAINT this
For example:
Pro-Hide Exterior
Paiht at only S8 .3S

POMEROY CEMENT
BLOCK CO.
i

Mill e r, Middleport . Three

grandchildren and a number
of nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be
held at 2 p. m . Tuesday at the
Rawlings . Coats
Funeral
Home with the Rev . Peter
Grandatl officiating. Burial
will
be
In
River v iew
Ce metery . Friends may call
at the funeral home from 7 to
9 Monday evening .

Philomena Goodwin
Mr s. Philomena Mary
Ventre
Goodwin,
53,
Pomeroy , died Sunday at the
Cincinnati
Manor
Care
Convalescent Home following
a lingering illness.

The daughter of the late
Vito and Mary Ventre, Mrs.
Goodwin was an active
member of Sacred Heart
Ch urch and the Catholic
Women 's Guild in Pomeroy.
She is survived by her
husband, David, Pomeroy ;
three sons, Dav id Philip
Goodwin and John Vincent
Goodwin, both of Columbus,
and Eugen e Goodwin of
Pomeroy ; a daughter. Mrs.
Marlene Johnson of Bidwell :
two sisters, Carol Schare and
Angela Ventre, and two
brothers, Herman Ventre and
Anthony Ventre, all of Cin cin nati.
Funeral mass will be at 10
a. m . Wednesday at the

Sacred Hearl Church with

was called Sunday at 8: 01 a.
m . for Francis Quatt s, Rt . 7.
who was taken to Holzer
Medical Center . At 1: 02 p . m .
they
transported
Betty
Graham, .47, Happy Hollow,
to
Veterans
M emor ia l

*

(Continued from page 1)
Durkin, 39, a former state insurance ·commissioner.
The changes from the fall election campaign are·apparent.
Wyman used to carry campaign strategy in his hat.
Even minor campaign decisions were made by the 5&amp;year-&lt;&gt;ld Republican, who had 25 years experienee at
every level of New Hampshire's GOP· politics before
trying w move from a secure five-tenn congressional
seat w the Senate.
Now Wymap has the help of George Young
Associates of Los Angeles, .a political consulting finn
that has handled 12 special congressional elections and
never lost a one.
Wyman may even have Ford by his side if he can
quell the traditional, intramural bickering that
characterizes New Hampshire Republican -politics.
" I don 't know whether the President will be coming
or not," Wyman said. He and Ford served in Congress
"tugether.
Durkin, U:Jo, has the professional help and access to
the headliners he lacked before.
Joe Grandmaison, 32, an experienced political
organizer who delivered George McGovern's 1972 New
Hampshire primary triumph, heads Durkin's effort.

I

Evelyn M · Sikes

Lena McKinley, Middleport;
Garnet Potts, Syracuse .
SATURDAY
DISCHARGES Grace
Dorst, Don Betzing, Lillian
Duffy, Uoyd Williams, Carol
Coleman.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Hobart Rigg s, Rutland ;
Sandra Patterson, Racine;
Tammy Shuler, Langsville;
Alice Coleman, Albany .
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Joseph Markins, Dordy Call,
Zelma Gilmore.

He'd take Ted Kennedy

: Lottery is
buying fun
party booze

Route 2. Rac ine, residence .
Be.~sie
Mr. Oonoh@W was born Jul y
18, 1904. the son of the late
Mrs. Bess ie Wise, 80, died Sylvester ar1d Christine
Sa turday n ight at her
Dellinger Donohew . He was
re sidence on Salem St.. also preceded In death by
Rutland , f otl o.w ing a long severa l nieces ·and nephews.
illness .
Surviving are his wife,
M rs. Wise was born Feb. Beatrice Bennett Donohew,
19, 1895, in Athens County, t he · and a nephew, Robert
daughter of the late Andrew Oonohew, of Parkersburg .
and Desti e Wel ch Gi lk ey . She
Funeral ser lllces will be
Mr . and Mrs. Jimmie was married to Denver Wise he ld at 2 p . m . Wednesday at
Maynard , a
dau ght er. w ho d ied In 1943. Besides her the Ewing Funeral Home
husband and parents, she was
Pome r oy; Mr . and Mr s. preceded in death by a son, wi lh the Rev . Freeland
Norris offi c iating. Burial will
Thomas Moore, a da ughter, Mar shall Wise, on Ma y 25. be i n t he Letart Falls
Ce metery. Friends may call
J ack son ; Mr . and Mrs. John 197L and two brothers.
A homemaker all of her at the funeral hom e after 7
Stapleton, a daughter, Crown life,
Mrs. Wi se is surv ived by this eve ning .
City; Mr . a nd Mrs. James K. severa l ni eces and nephews.
Funera l se r v ices will be
Thoma s, a son, Bidwell .
held
at 10: 30 a . m . Tuesday at
Births, Aug. 3)
the Rutland Chapter of lhe
Mr . and Mrs. Willi am Walker Fu neral Hom e with
Mrs . lovely~ M. Sikes. 62,
Barnes, son, Crown City ; Mr . Re v . Cec il Wi se off iciat ing. formerly of Middleport, died
and Mrs. Marvin Cr emeans, Burial will be in We ll s Saturday evening at her
Ceme tery . Friends mar ct~ l l r es iden ce in Ja cksonville ,
a so n, Ga llipolis; Mr . ·and at the f uneral home a fer 2 Fla .
Mrs. Jeffrey Geiger , a son, today . Th e family wi ll
M rs . Sik es was born Jan .
friends
at
the
funeral
r
eceive
27.
1913 In Cedar Grove, W.
Bidwell ; Mr. a nd Mrs.
hom e from 2 to 4 and from 7 to Va ., the daughter of the late
William Gr aves, a son, 9 thi s evening .
Jarry and Ella Thompson
Dexter ; Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
Miller .
She Is survived by her
Malone , a daughter, Oak Hill .
husband,
Henry ,
of
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Ja cks onville ; a s_
on , Gordbn
Arc hie Loren Donohew, 71, Ely, of Prague, Ohi O; a
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
Mrs .
Paul
M.
died Monday morning at hi s sis te r ,
- Ronald Martin, Pomeroy ;
( Frances) Smart of MldBelvia Riggs, Langsville;
dl epor t ; a broth er . Gail

comment ed John Ferguson,

"RANCHO DELUXE "

Colorcartoons:

Holzer Medical &lt;:enter
1Births. Aug. l 1
Mr . a nd Mrs. Ker r y
Farrar, a daug h t~r , Jackson;
Mr . and Mrs. Walter Hayes, a
daughter , Circlev ille; Mr .
and Mrs. Bill Ratliff, a
daug hter. Ga llipolis; Mr. a nd
Mrs. William T. Winter , III , a
son, Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va .
1Births, Aug. 21

r- ----- -------- ---- --------~

Archie Donohew

Raves mixed
Superdome

Hospital News

burial in Beech Grove
Cemetery. Rosary services

will be held at

a

p.

m.

Tuesday at the Ewing
Funeral· Home where friends
may call after 7 thls evening.

CLE VE{,._AND (U P! ) The State Auditor's office is
investiga ting the use of Ohio
Lottery funds to pay for
liquor at parties by commtss ton
officials
and
covering up the expenditures
by falsifying records, It w11s
reported wday.
Liquor is not a legal expense for state employes, a
spokesman for the audiwr 's
office, said.
Some of the parties were
held under the guise of
"public relations and personnel training sessions,"

according w a copyright
swry in The Cleveland Press.
The dispatch a!Bo 5aid the
audiwr 's office has refused w
pay eight bills, including a
(Continued from page I )
$1,556 party bill from March 6
which included $821.80 worth
" ! also indicated that
of liquor .
flexibility was necessary if
Deputy Lottery Direcwr we were to achieve the kind of
James F . Dickerson , a results that would avoid a
Demo crati c mayoral can- potential serious developdidate , signed some of the ment, a catastrophe from the
paper work necessary w get point ofview of the world as a
money for the parties, the Whole,"
Ford
said.
newspaper said.
" Moderation and greater
And in carrying out this flexibility are absolutely
plan , lottery officials sub- essential a t the present
mitted falsified bills Maling tiine."
more than $2,800. The bills
Tlw said, " Both sides have,
disguise liquor charges of of course, expressed concern
more than $1,600 under room about the Middle East. I think
rental and hors d'oeuvres, our views are quite identical,
according w the story.
especially after I heard what
The party bills were signed President Ford said about the
by James Skelly, lottery actions the United States
public relations direcwr, or intends w take in future ."
Jo e Murphy, assistant w
He did not elaborate.
Skelly - who is helping direct
Secretary of State Henry A.
Dickerson 's mayoral cam- Kissinger, looking grim as he
paign.
walked w a car after the
Skelly, according w the meeting, was asked by
report, said he did not see reporters
about
Tito 's
anything wrong with revising statement.
the bills to hide liquor
" Our views are well
charges because it was known," he said. " We have
common practice among not changed. He was perhaps
other state agencies.
understanding our policy
David F . Leahy, chairman hetter."
of the lottery commission,
Kissinger, during the Eurosaid he knew nothing about pean swrunit in Helsinki last
lottery liquor party bills week, emphasized that the
being changed .
United States would take
prompt, decisive action
should there he an effort in
Scottish comedian Sir September w oust Israel
Ha1:ry Lauder was born Aug. from the United Nations.
4, 1870.
The meeting wit!] Tlw was
the final official round of
talks on Ford's !I)-day U:lur of
Europe . He was flying back
Washingwn shortly after
Wickline at Deerfield Beach, noon EDT. •
Florida .
Ford said he and Tlw
discussed economic and miliMr . and Mrs. Dale Ball and tary relationships between
children of St. Albans, W. Va. their two countries, and he
spent Saturday with Mr . and promised both matters would
Mrs. Kenneth Turley and son. get "my very personal atBob Fisher spent the tention because of their
weekend with his family from significance ."
his empln'" ment on the
Yugoslavia has expressed
riverboat, L. " G.
interest in a resumption of
U.S. arms cut off in the early
Mr . and Mrs . Milton 1960s when Yugoslavia
Houdashelt and daughter , patebed up old quarrels with
Beverly and Mr. and Mrs. Moscow.
Frank Krautter of Gallipolis
Tlw said the talks took
were Sunday dinner guests of place "in a very cordial and
Mrs. Margaret Houdashelt. constructive spirit.u

Ford

Racine Social Events
By Mrs. Francis Morris
Mr. Robert Cornwell, sonin-law of Mr. and Mrs . Ed
Miller suffered a heart attack
and is a patient at Holzer
Medical Center.
Mrs . Carolyn Adams
returned
home
from
Veterans Memorial Hospital
after surgery.
Mr. and Mrs . Chrisie
Powell and grandson, Mr.
and Mrs. Ike Spencer spent
the weekend on a trip to
Canada and visited Mr. and
Mrs . Hershel McNickle at
Jackson, Mich.
Mr. and Mrs. Linley Hart,
Mrs. Paula Laird and sons,
Don and Paul, went to Akron
and were joined by Mr. Henry
Roush, son Dale and his son,
David of Columbus for a
surprise 40th wedding anniversary celebration for Mr.
and Mrs . John Fisher .
En route home they all visited
at the home of David Roush in
Columbus. Mrs. Laird and·
son, Paul remained for a visit
with Mr. and Mrs. AI Clark at
Reynoldsburg.
Mr. and Mrs. Merle
Schroeder, Ron and Mae
Fern , of Columbus, spent
Sunday
with
Mrs.
Schroeder's parents; Mr. and
Mrs. Francis Morris. They.all
visited Mrs. Es\l!er ComskJck
in Kanauga and toured Our
House in Gallipolis.
Mrs. Irene Taylor of
Beaver, Pa., Mrs. George
Van Horne of Beaver Falls, ·
Pa . and Mrs. Edwin Helmleh
of New Brighwn, Pa., accompanied by Mrs. Edith .
Spencer, who had visited ·in
Pennsylvania and Mrs. Dixie
Smith of Portland were
dinner guests Saturday of
Mrs. Hazel Carnahan. Mrs.
Taylor and Mrs. Van Horne
were also overnight guests
. and Mrs. Helmt"ck was an
. overnight guest of Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Riffle.
Sunday guests of Mrs .
Ethel Wheeler and Mrs. Ada
Bays were Mr. and Mrs. A.
·covey of Belpre; Mrs. Ben

c.

Neutzling and Miss Sybil
. Ebers bach of Pomeroy, Mr.
and Mrs. Darrel Napper and
baby of Harrisonvllle.
Mr. and Mrs . Clifford
Morris visited · her sisters, .•
Mary Jewett and Grace
1I .

w

.

Prospects that students of
the Meigs County Community
School could attend classes in
Cheshire in the Gallia County
school for retarded will he
investigated th oroug hly this
week.
The Meigs County Board of
Mental Retardation Monday
night heard fir st reports on
the result of its meeting last
week with the county board of
commi ssioners.

-At that time Prosecuting
Atty. Bernard Fultz advised
the M-R hoard to look into the
possibilities of using Gallia
County fa cilities on a tempo ra ry ba sis . This was

Terrorists
(Continued from page 1)
·~emergency b,ureau' ' at its
operation center at the airport w coordinate with the
govenunent in dealing with
the situation .
The Japanese govenunent
set up a special office in
Tokyo w deal with the incident and accused the extremists of carrying out the
attack to undermine the talks
beginning in Washington
Tuesday between President
Ford and Japanese Premier
Takeo Miki ..
The Red Army group,
which has carried out such
acts of violence as the Lod
massacre that killed 26
persons at the Tel Aviv international airport in 1972,
demanded the release of
seven members of their
group and a Japanese Air
Line DC8 plane w fly them w
safety.
The terrorists threatened w
hegin shooting their hostages
by 5:20p.m. (5:50a.m. EDT)
unless the Japanese government
accepted
their
demands. Japanese officials
.were in telephone contact
with the terrorists and the
deadline passed without the
feared mass execution .
The terrorists did fire two
shots inw the street below w
emphasize their determination, hitting near a
firetruck and scattering a
dozen
reporters
and
photographers standing
nearby. They had wounded
two Malaysian guards, one
fatally, when they shot their
way into the 12-&lt;rtory building
earlier and hit another
policeman when they fired
out the windows later.
The terrorists were holding
U.S. consular official Robert
Stebbins and four other
unidentified Americans, the
Swedish Charge d'Affalres
Fredrik Bergenstrahle,
Bergenstrahle's secretary,
four Australians, a Japanese
and a nwnher of Malaysians.
In 1949, more than 6,000
persons were killed when an
earthquake leveled 50 towns
in Ecuador.

recommended

POMEROY - MASON SPAN CLOSED - Jim
DePasqua, employee of Conn Construction Co . of Pennsylvania, stands near his truck after placing Road Closed

Devoted To Th e Interests of The Meigs-Mason. Area
VOL. XXVII

NO. 79

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Both in poly-silk double knit. Black ·
Black .
s.M -L. All mac hine
wash ·dry.

•

JUNIOR
SPORTSWEAR
SECOND FLOOR

ELBERFELDS
IN

P.OMEROY
..
-1-------..--..

master's degree was in home
economics with a major in

food and nutrition. She is a
form er Highland and Meigs
County Extension Agent.
She has served on the Rio
Grande Community College
advisory committee , the
Meigs Library Board and the
pressed her concern for Community Action Executive
quality education on all levels · Board. ·rn "addition she has
- t
.
for youth of all ages. A native been active in numerous
CHESTER PACK 235 won the in!Ual M-G-M Cup a t the second annual Cub Scout
of Meigs County, she and her organizations. The family
Olympics held recently at the Gallipolis State Institute's new outdoor track. Pictured are
husband reside on a farm attends the Middleport
some of the members of the winning group: front I w r, John Hein, Todd Tripp, John
Church
of
Christ
where
Mrs
.
with their two sons, Jared,
Edwards, Rhett Milhoan ; back row , Nathan Boatright, Timmy Showalter, Bill Call , Kevin
four, and Aaron Bradford, Sheets teaches a Sunday
Venoy, Kevin Fick and Max Eichinger.
School
class.
two. Mrs. Sheets is a partFor the past two swnmers, ::::::::::::::·:::::·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::
time instructor at Rio Grande
Mr . and Mrs. Sheets have
College.
HOURS SET
She is the daughter of Mr. managed the Canters Cave 4Fair Board Secretary
and Mrs . Harold Lohse, H Camp near Jackson with
Mrs.
Muriel Bradford will
Pomeroy, who have been Mrs . Sheets serving as
be at the secretary's office
active in school affairs many treasurer, She also had wide
on
the Rock Springs Fairyears. Her father, a retired experience in financial
grounds from 10 a.m . to 4
pharmacist, is currently a matters during her years at
p.m. Thursday and Friday
member of the Meigs County Ohio State University as
to accept ope n class
Board of Education and treasurer of several large
registrations for the 112th
formerly served on the organizations.
A new one mill levy will be David Jeffers as police ofMeigs County Fair.
Mrs. Sheets was recently
Pomeroy
Board
of
placed on the November ficer effective Aug. I for
Closing lime for all open
selected ·as an " Outstanding
Education.
ballot to ke ep all of financial reasons .
class entrles will he 4 p.m.
. Mrs. Sheets received both Young Woman of Ameri ca"
Named Eddie Hayes to the
Pomeroy 's. s tree t li gh ts
on Aug. 8, Friday, with the
her bachelor and master's on the basis of personal exburning council de cided police force · for a 90-day
exception of the horse
degrees from Ohio State cellence i'n her professional.
probationary period.
Monday night.
University where she ex- and community" and civic 1 show, and the horse and
Heard a letter read froll.l.R.·
Discussion indicated that
pony pulling contests.
,.
celled academically . Her coqtribution'l...
the village has a 1.90 "current E. Weaver, Syracuse, who
:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:; expense" levy but due to the has made tentative plans w

•
I·

&gt;

I

PRICE 15'

Senior citizens'
center aSS\Jred
The Meigs County Senior mitted in the grant ap- of the s truc ture, which has
Citizens soon may have a plication, the funds would he three floors, will be used for
home of their own.
used to purchase the fonner the center. Offices will be on
According w word received Pomeroy Senior High School the second floor along with
here Monday afternoon from building from the Meigs the craft shop while laciUUes
·· IWD B \ t Tafl,.. . ' ltl!.£ 1 J!ICI'&lt;l...~1&lt;\ltca_. _
. \lie Ienior . clt\&amp;ena
Clarence Miller, the Meigs $75,000, and the balance spent programs will be on the first
County Council on Aging has on renovation of the stiuc- noor .
heen given a $160,000 federal lure .
Mrs . Thomas said she
and
Urban
Mrs . E leano r Thomas, learned Monday of the grant
Hous ing
Development (HUD ) grant. exec utive dir ector of the but has no kn owledge of when
According to plans s ub- council, said only two n oors the money will be available
so the project can move
ahead. Mrs . Thomas slated
she is expecting written instructions of the next steps to
be taken in completing the

NeW 1 mill street light levy

transaction .

will go on ballot in Pomeroy

J" =~ "o

ern

fiall elections

Seven teen residents filed
petitions of candidacy for the
fall election with the Meigs
County Board of Elections .
They are Charles Pyles for
mayor of Racine; Albert Hill
and Harry L. Willford, for
Racine Village council ;
Virgil Windon a.nd Bruce D.
Myers, both for trustee of
Chester Township. Earl J .
Wright, trustee of Salem
THE FBI IN NEWARK, N. J ., SAID TODAY that in-. Township; C. Thomas Norris,
vestigawrs questioned former New Jersey Teamster official trustee of Letart Township ;
Cleland,
clerkAnthony "Tony Pro" Provenzano in connection with James · Mae
treasurer
,
Racine
Village;
Hoffa's disappearance.
.
An FBI spokesman said it questioned Provenzano at the Eugene Thomas, for mayor
Clifton, N. J ., home of the one-time president of Local 566 in of Rutland; Eugene Phillips,
for trustee of Scipio TownUnion City, N. J .
.
"He was interviewed by New Jersey state pollee Sunday ship; Vernon L. Weber , clerkand now by ust the spokesman said. "That's all I can tell you treasurer of Rutland ; Ernest
right now-. We' have an ongoing investigation so you already Nicholson and Larry Edknow we're involved in it." The 56-year-&lt;&gt;ld Provenzano was wards, Rutland council ;
one of three men Hoffa reportedly planned w meet for lunch Donald L. Moore, trustee of
Salisbury
Township;
last week before he disappeared.
· Raympnd Wilcox, Rutland
. ISRAELI WARPLANES, LONG-RANGE artillery and Township trustee; Raymond
Boatright,
Chester
gunboats today attacked a Lebanese army post and H.
Palestinian refugee ·camps outside Lebanon's anctent Township trustee, and Larry
Baker , Olive Township
Mediterranean port city of Tyr.e today, Beirut reports said:
Arab· military sources in Beirut said the gunboats and trustee.
J'iling deadline is ~ p.m.
Iong..:ange artillery killed at least nine persons but had no
reports on effects · of , the ~irstrikes . Witnesses said Israeli Wednesday .
warplanes attacked at least one Palestinian refugee c:unp and
a nwnber of civilian areas shortly after the shelling. The
LOCAL TEMPS
Israeli command said the jet attack was aimed at a "terrorist
•
Temperature
in · downwwn
headquarters" north of the city.
·
Pomeroy 1'\tesday· at 11 a.m.
CINCINNATI- THERE WERE A LOT OF oeople cut by was 79 degrees, under cloudy
skies.
'!
.(Continuect,rnpage 1 JO.)
).

.

'

Heatstroke, most com-

monly caused by intense sun
a nd high humidity that
defeats the body's normal
cooli ng
m echanism of
sweating, begins when body
temperatures rise eight
degrees above normal.

TUESDAY, AUGUST 5, 1975

Mrs. Sheets is
'
hoard candidate
Jennifer Lohse Sheets of
near Rutland today announced her candidacy for a
seat on the Meigs Local
School District Boaard of
Education. Three members
are to he elected in the fall .
In announ cing her candidacy, Mrs. Sheets ex-

having local students - some
use the Gallla County
facility. If costa are the same,
or about the same as would be
involved in local students
(Continued on page 10)
30 -

Now You Know

ent1ne

By United Press International
WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT FORD SAYS he is "very
encouraged and optimistic" over the results of his Hklay, fivenation European trip during which he signed the controversial
Helsinki agreement promising greater respect for -)luma n
rights across East-~est borders:,__
·
"I honestly helieve the trtp ·had more plusses t~
minuses" Ford said on his return at Andrews Air Force Batt
late Mo~day night in a driving rain that prevented him from
mal(ing a formal arrival statement.
The statement, released later at the White House, said he
was pleased with the reception he received in each of the five
nations and.confident his talks with Soviet party leader Leomd
Brezhnev ' 'will lead to an accelerated disposition of some of
the differences which existed before our meetings."

with white flecks . 5·6, 15-16. Long
sleeve polyknit turtle .

Coun ly offici als in regard to
Meigs County joining the
Gallia Coun ty operation on a
temporary basis .
The local board expects to
ge t figures on th e cos ts of

•

Cloudy wnight, lows in the
lower 60s . . Sunny Wednesday , highs in upper 70s.
Probability of precipita tion
20 per cent tonight, 10 per
cent Wednesday.

~~

One good tweed deserves another ...
and Vickysport gives you two of the best •
very special sportlooks. Reglan-sleeve
zipjac , topstitched white from collar to
snap-tabbed hem . Fronf.zip pants.

struction of a new sc hool for

the mentally retarded .
It was re ported last night
that Judge Manning Webster,
chainnan of the local board
of mental retardation, has
been in contact with Gallia

w~.ather

···

Tweed and Terrific

FERRY LANDS AT POMEROY - This loaded ferry came in .Monday at the Pomeroy
Levy carrying cars from Mason . The service will he in operation while the Pomeroy-Mason
bridge is closed for repairs.

be ca us e

voters have twice turned
down a lax levy for operating
a school locally, a lthough
earlier voters did approve a
bond issue for the con-

signs on the Bridge ramp on the Ohio side, shutting the
span off to vehicular traffic until Dec. 12. 'The finn will
rebuild the bridge's roadway .

Jj1/}V;;;;''':='=·='=':'='='=·:=·i'~' ' ' Ji;i';j;~\~ ~ mfihl ~egins

I .

Gallia ·
plan is
reviewed

.

increase

in

cost

it

is

necessary to add an additional mill just to maintain
the present lights. This does
not include any more
lightin g.
.
If not passed, council
agreed it may he necessary to
remove some of the present
lights.
The levy would produce
$6,000 over a five year per iod.
In other business :
Council ag reed perso ns
remodeling property must
conform to the building code
ordinance and obtain a
building pennit from the
office of the mayor.
Accepted the r es ignation of

reading and the proposal was
dropped.
A letter was read from
Guido Girolami about a
culvert he placed on Peacock
Ave. He asked the village w
assist in solving a problem,
s tating he has spent his own
time and money in trying to

Water District .
J ed Webster, chief of
police, agreed to view the
area with Hilton Wolfe, of the
county health department,
and if necessary contact the
Tuppers . Plains Ches ter
Water District to relieve the

open a bus service in this

fix that area . The r epair is to

area. A hearing on the matter
will be held Aug. 20 with the
public transportation commission . If approved, service
would begin Dec. 8.
Heard a letter -read fr om a
realtor in Cha rl esto n in
regard to a client of the
company wanting to locate a
business in Pomeroy, which
was referred to the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce.
THE ISSUE IN REGARD
to charging $5 a month to
park on the village parking
lot located between Butternut
and Mulberry Ave., as noted
by Councilman william
Snouffer did not pass its last

a driveway going inw approximately three acres of
land.
Councilmen said the tile
placed in the area is not large
enough and additional tile is
needed to preven t water fr om
backing up on to oth er
people's property . The
matter will he referred to
Fred Crow, soliciwr .

ordinance was given
three readings which calls for
mutual easement on Fifth St .
in the village of Pomeroy.
Work on the upper parking
lot wall repair project is at a
standstill due to a labor
di s pute . The bid in th e
amount of $103,100 was let w
Allan Stone Inc. who in turn
sublet the work. ll is not
known when work will gel

Meeting with c ouncil was a

resident of Welsh town Hill in
regard w a sewer being
plugged which is considered a
health hazard. The resident
contended that il was caused
by either the gas company or
the Tuppers Plains Chester

situation .

ROAD CLOSED
' Wesley ·Buehl, county
engineer, said today County
• Road 25 past Meigs High
School w County Road 26 will
he closed for one week for
r~surfacing.

Deadline for entry inw the
Meigs County Fair's pretty
baby contest and the Little
Mr . and Miss Meigs County
Contest is Aug , 12.
An application blank for the
events is being reprinted for
the convenience

of

con-

testants who must · be
residents of Meigs County.

It is noted · that each applica t ion must be accompanied by a regis tration
fee of 50 cents for the two
contests which will get underway at 1 p .m . on Saturday, Aug . 16.
In the pretty baby contest
there will he a boy and a girl
winner in each of seven age

•
IS

injured

POINT PLEASANT - A
Mei gs County man was one of
four persons injured in a. twocar accident at 2:40 a .m.
today on Route 35 near here .
J effrey D. Boggs, 25,
Middleport, was transported
to Pleasant Valley Hospital
with lacerations of the skull
after his auto collided with a
vehicle driven by Phil S.
VanSickle, Southside. Both
underway .
Attending were Mayor Dale vehicles were destroyed .
Smith, Harry Davis, William Sheriff's Deputy K. W. Love
Snouffer, Ralph Werry, Lou . said the mishap is still under
Osborne, and J ohn Manley, investigation.
council members; Jan e :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;.
Walton, clerk , a nd Jed
EXTENDED FORECAST
Webster .
Thursday through
Saturday, fair and dry witb
slowly rising temperatures
Thursday
through
Saturday. Highs wiD he In
categories . Parents entering
the upper 70s or the lower
the event for their children
80s
on Thursday, rising to
are required to include the
tbe upper 80s or tbe lower
birth day so that the child can
90s
by Saturday. Lows wUI
be placed in the proper age
he between 55 and 60 early
category.
.
Thursday,
rising to tbe
The contesta nt s in th e
upper 80s early Saturday.
pretty baby contest ma y
range fr"om birth to four
(Conlinued on page 10)
ASK TOWED
Holly Friend, 73, Syracuse
and Mary Joan Donohue, 53,
Racine ; Mi chael Terrell
Struble, 21, Pomeroy and
Patricia Louise l hle , 21,
the same tickets prior to Ra Ci~
. ~ -·~ - .
August 15. Mter that date, all
AFrER30NLY
tickets will .go on sale .
Bulk
water may be purMeanwhile, officials at the
sehool pointed out that there chased at the Pomeroy Water
are plenty of seaspn tickets. Statiop beginning _today after
Tickets will ha held for 3 p:m . only. A notice
those fan s who call the yesterday on the same topic
was in error.
school.
.\f

Home game tickets on sale now
Season tickets for Meigs home schedule for Meigs this
Marauder home football · season
includes
Point
footbali games are on sale in Pleasant, Sept. 5; Ripley ,
the office at Meigs High Sept. 19; Waverly, Sept. 26;
Logan , Oct. 17; and !ronwn,
School.
James A. Diehl, principal, Oc't. 31 ,
said the tickets, which cost
Fans who held season
$8. 75, may be used for each of tickets last year will be given
the five ·qome games. The the opi&gt;Oi!iunity to purchase

Jeff Boggs

An

Aug. 12. deadline for two contests
CALLED TWICE
The Middleport E-R squad
was called to 659 Brownell
Ave., at 5:12p.m. Monday for
Charles Sauer who was taken
to
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital. At 10 : 13 a.m .
Monday, the squad wen t to
722 S. Second for Frances
Bearhs who s uffered a
possible broken hlp. She was
taken w the office of Dr. J. J .
Davis, then to the Holzer
Medical Center .

Some time ago the Meigs
Local Board of Education
agreed to sell the building.
The senior citize ns center is
now in the form er junior high
school structure in Pomeroy .

I

�!

•

I

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0,, Tuesday ; Aug, ~. 197~

Sport Parade

SAN FRANCISOO ( U?l) -

.Mike Ca ldwell found · out
The Cincinnati Reds are Monday night.
"We 1re a solid team," said
lethal in that last time at bat,
as San Francisco pitcher Pete Rose after the Reds

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sporn Editor

·, .
•"

~

J

~EWYORK (UP! ) - ,The New York Yankees have come up

WEDNESDAY,

, __
~

/

Saturday, August 9 , 1975

WATCH FOR OUR BIG
GRAND OPENING
COMING SOON!

eve ryone to come in and get acquainted. It's the aim of everyone to be th e friendliest store

-~

Offering friendlier service - Competitive prices - Outstanding quality meats

and produce! And don 't forget- we specialize in personaliwd m eat orders!

USDA CHOICE
'

CHUCK

"'

"

...
"'
'"

v:E

8QAS....
T ~:~~K~------

BONELESS

ENGLISH OR

E

TOP QUALITY

LB.

STEW BEEF

"'

Montefusco in the seventh,
hoping tO boost the 2-1 lead
with a pinch-hitter.
•
" We might have had
another chance to score so we
had to lake that one,"
Westrum said. Reliever
Randy Moffitt was on hand to
yield Foster's grand slam in
the eighth but San Francisco
tied it in Its half of the Inning
on a single by Willie Montanez, an error by Rose, a
si ngle by pinch-hitler Glenn
Adams, a pinch-hit single by
Dave Rader and a · sacrifice
fly by pinch-hitter Gary
Thomasson.

wtth a a good deal they 're willing to make with the Texas. Rangers. They'll let the Rangers have Alex Johnson back for
Cesar Tovar.
Texas isn'tgoingfor it. They don'tthink it's that good .
The Rangers have a proposal of their own.
edged California 4-2 and hand Detroit its eighth slapped a single to score AI
By BILL MADDEN
How about Elliott Maddox' He isn't doing anything for the UPI Sports Write.r
Kansas Ciity shaded Min- straight loss. Rookie Dennis Cowens from second base
Eckersley ( 9-3 ) went ~ 1-3 with lhe winnin g run against
Yankees now. He's freah off the disabled list. The Rangers
If not the fountain of youth, nesota &amp;-:;.
innings
to win.
Minnesota. It was Patek's
would be more than happy to take him back. They 'd· even Brooks Robinson has at least
In National League aclioo
5econd
RBI of the game and
Wblle Sox 4, Angels 2
throw another body in along with Cesar Tovar.
discovered that age-old it was Montreal over New
Brian Downing's two-run gave lhe victory to Doug Bird Morgan said of the victory :
"We'd be interested In bringing Maddox back to Texas," American League remedy for York 4-3, St. Louis eddging
sixth
inning triple sent Wilbur (7-4). the fourth Royals' "We have depth and can win
says Rangers• owner Brad Corbett.
batting s lumps : Fenway Pittsburgh 5-4, HoustOn atop
even when the stars ca n't
There's little chance ofthis one being made either.
San Diego 5-3, Los Angeles Wood to his sixth straight pitcher.
Park.
play ."
victory
and
halted
a
lourBilly Martin likes Cesar Tovar, but not that much.
Arriving in Boston for the over Atlanta 9-1 and Cin·
·:::;:::::;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::::;:::::::::::::::;:::::::::
He was talking about the
:-fie has no intention of getting rid of Elliott Maddox, even start of a crucial two;lame cinnatl besting San Francisco game Chicago losing streak.
PLAN TOURNEY
absence of Johnny Bench and
Downing's game-winning hit
;:;:mgh he and Maddox haven't exactly been buddy-buddy the series with the Red Sox, 7-:i.
The
V·Mlllhone
Trucking
Tony Perez, out with injuries .
came
after
a
walk
to
Jerry
t two years or so.
Robinson, the Baltimore Qri·
Co. is sponsoring a slo pitch
Ex-G iant George Foster
Hairston and a single by
: Billy Martin doesn't work lhat way . He can hate your in- oles' ironman third baseman,
Yanll.ees %, Brewers 1
stepped
in to fill the breech in
softball
tournament
to
be
Wood
(
12-13
)
Bucky
Dent.
;:)ides, but If he thinks you can ~lp him win a ball game, he was showing the ravages of
Thurman Munson, who
held
Aug.
9
and
10
at
lhe
eighlh
. The Reds were
::)vants you wearing the same uniform as him. Besides, as far as his 38 years as witnessed by a drove In only 60 runs all of needed three innings of relief
trailing 2-1 before Foster
·Eastern High School. The
:2Jf's concerned there was never anything personal between .'lffl batting average.
last season, delivered a from Rich Gossage.
ripped
his lhlrd career granct
entry
fee
will
be
$45
and
2
12,
A's
0
Rangers
-rum and Elliott Maddox. Maybe Maddox can't believe that, but But the cozy walls of gamewlnning eighth inning
balls. Teams wishing to slam home run . Foster said
Len Randle scored a Texas
~e way Martin plays baseball, it's true.
Fenway can do wonders lor single against Milwaukee for
·should contact Bob all he was trying to do was hit
enter
club
record
lour
runs
and
: Maddox feels he never got a chance with the Rangers after even the oldsters of lhe game, his 68th RBI as the Yankees
Ritchie at 992-7362 or Jim lhe ball hard enough to score
:Martin took over near the end of the 1973 season . He was and as the Orioles celebrated rallied to their third win in Ferguson Jenkins coasted ori
menowfora ·
Amsbary at 992·73~ by a run, "but it just kept going.
"'thded to the Yankees in March of 1974, becoming their regular their arriv~l with 16 hits (five four games under new six-hitter for his 13th win
!P(ld car tnsurcn:e
San Francisco had gone
Wednesday.
,11111\er fielder and batting .303 for them, but his resentment by Don Baylor) , it was manager Billy Martin. a gainst 12 losses
in
wtue
:11')\'ard Marlin kept smoldering because he was sure his old Robinson who sent them off to Munson's single drove home the Rangers ' cakewalk ·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:::-:-::;::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;;.:·:· ah ead before the big hit on a
seventh.jnning error by Mormanager thought he,jllas a hot dog and was ordering the Texas . a IU victory over the AL Fred Stanley from secood to over Oakland Mike HarSTEVE
NEW
YORK
(
UPI
)
gan .
pitchers to throw at him last year. Some of the statements Eastleadlng Re(l Sox wjth a break up a 1-1 tie and give grove also drove home
"Maybe that woke us up,"
SNOWDEN
Maddox made about Marlin were published, Martin read key three ... un homer in the Rudy May his lith win after a three runs as Texas scored WiUie Horton of the Detroit
hit
.
4~
last
week
with
Tigers
the
Cincy
second
baseman
them, and they nearly resulted in a confrontation between seventh inning.
three in the fourth and four in
route-going seven-hitter .
1258 Powell St .
Martin and Bill Virdon and a full scale brawl between Ranger
the seventh in embarrassing lour home runs to win the said.
"This is a heckuva park to
l.odlans 6, ngen 4
Middleport, 0 .
American League Player of
Then Giant manager Wes
and Yankee players during an exhibition game this past · hit in," said ·Robinson, who
PH . 992.-7155
Charlie Spikes, in a season· the world champions.
lhe
Week
award
.
Westrum
lifted
starter
John
spring.
Royals 6, fwlns 5
broke up a 6-6 tie in the long batting slump with just
Horton went l:i-for-33 with
If the Yankees have even a prayer of overtaking the Red Sox seventh with his homer of 20 RBis, drove home four Kansas City, which had to
like a good HATI UIM
RBI and raised his
eight
this year, Elliott Maddox has to be part of that prayer . He loser Jim Willoughby after runs with a twe&gt;run homer rally three times, finally put
ne,ghbor.
lciows that, and so does Billy Martin. Maddox was hitting .307 Baylor singled and Bobby and a single to help Cleveland lhe game away in the lOth average 16 points to .280. He
Siale Farm
for the Yankees when they placed him on the disabled list June Grich doubled. "I'd rather
INIUIIIHCI
inning when Fred Patek now has 20 homers and 72
is rhere .
RBI
on
the
season.
14 .because of torn ligaments in his right knee . He has been play the Red .Sox up here than
rUW WUIU• l · ~IOW OIILIIU ~ IUt(
taking therapy for the knee and working out with the club and at home anyday."
• lUll
U W' U ' • " OWl Ol lltl I LUV.-t!D • . 11\,
is due to return to the lineup sometime later this month.
Grich, who was ·3-for-4
One of the first things Martin did after he signed his new including a three-run homer
P71 · I)L1
manager's contract with the Yankees last Saturday morning in the fourth, agreed. "This is
was talk with Maddox. Martin did everything he could to the best hitting park in the
The third and final round of
convince him that whatever happened between them before league," he said. "I wish I
This Week 's Special
the Meigs-Mason Men's Slo
.,
was aU over now.
could play here aU the time ."
Pitch
S&lt;&gt;ftball
League
begins
"Look, if I had any idea you were gonna be as good as you've
Ken Singleton added
NATIONAL LEAGUE
tonight wilh three games
(East)
been with this ball club, do you think I'd ever have let you get another homer in the seventh
The Rutland Dodgers have hits, 4 •uns and fanned 6.Paul scheduled at Kyger Creek.
w. I. pet. gb
out of Texas?"
after Robinson's three-run P i t1sburgh
65 44 .596
captured the second half .McElhaney went I inning,
Roy a1 Crown and Fruth
Maddox listened and didn't say much.
blast and Baylor, who earlier Ph il adelph ia 61 49 . 554 4 1'2 championship in the Mid- giving up 4 hits and I rWJ .
Pharmacy tied lor lir~t place
N ew Yor k
56 51 .523 8
He has not said yet whether Martin won him over to his side collected four singles, capped St. L ouis
56 5J . 5 14 0
Getting hits for the in the fir st round and Five
USED CARS
dleport Youth Baseball
51 60 . 459 15
or not, so he may be interested to hear another side, Bob lhe Orioles' scoring in the Ch icago
Dodgers
were
Paul
champion
League
by
defeating
the
Points took lhe second round.
45 60 .429 18
. Short's, not Billy Marlin's, over why the Rangers traded him a eighth with a two..-un homer, Montreal c Wesn
Middleport Reds 5-I Going Michael with a home run and
Tonight at 6 p.m . Eli
w . I. pet. g . b .
year-and-a-hall ago.
his 17th.
a
double,
Troy
Brooks
2
into
the
contest,
the
Reds
and
Denison Post 467 goes against
Cin cinna t i
72 38 .655
"Ted Williams liked Maddox for awhile over (Del) Unser, "
The Red Sox, who saw their Los
57 54 5 14 151 7 Dodgers were tied lor first
Ange l es
doubles, Duane Berger a Village Pharmacy, at 7 p.m.
55 55 .500 17
says Short. "We traded Unser to keep Maddox. Then Williams lead over Baltimore sliced to San Fran .
double , Andy Pocklington 2 Midwest Steel meets Royal
place with 7-j) records.
_D i ego
5 1 59 464 21
soured on Maddox because of the way he loped after a ball in 8'h games, did most of their San
Atla nta
48 61 440 13 1 7
and ge tting a single Crown, and at 8 p.m. Fruth
singles,
The Dodgers also took the
40 73 . 354 J3 11
the outfield and because he just didn't hit well In Texas. When scoring early with five runs in Ho u sto n
V -8 motor , auto . trans .,
first half crown, giving them each were Andy Cross and Pharmacy meets Gavin.
Whitey Herzog became manager at the start of 1973, it was lhe second, the highlights
P. 5., blue with blue Int.
Dave
Spangler.
lhe outright championship on
Thursday
night
at
Lakin,
it
is
Monday
'
s
pretty much the same thing. Herzog liked Maddox for awhil~ . being Jim Rice's two-run
For the runnerup Reds, Royal Crown at Fruth
the league this season .
then he got to feel the same way as Williams did about him.
single and Carlton Fisk's Montreai4New York 3, night .
Overall, the Dodgers are Ray Stewart had a triple and Pharmacy at 6 p.m ., and at 7
: "Marlin took over the club in September of 1973 and Maddox Ulree-run hol)ler. Rice, who St. Louls '&amp; Pittsburgh 4, 1!&gt;-1 with ove&lt;all records of1. Paul McElhaney, K . Mllan, p.m . lt's Gavln ·va. , Flt·
dtdn't play much because I believe he was hurl. The following had four of .the Boston's u
and Jeff Bauglunan ea'ch a zgerald's Sporting 'Goods. .
night.
'
\
1 In the ftrst half and~ l11'the
Spring, we had made up our minds to send him to Spokane hits, also stroked
solo Chicago 3 Philadelphia 2, second round. The Reds single.
Thursday at Kyger Creek,
where, to aU Intents and purposes, he would've become merely homer in the second, his 18th. night. Houston S San Diego 3, finished the second half at 7·1.
In olher recent games the Midwest Steel P.iays Jim 's
another $2S,OOO ballplayer subject to the winter draft. But the
Elsewhere In the American night. ·
For the Dodgers , Guy Dodgers have played they Campers a t 6 p.m . Five
You ' ll Like Our Quality
day before he was to have been sent out, Gabe Paul offered us League, New York edged Los Angeles 9 Atlanta I, Schuler went the distance on have defea ted Salem Center
Way
of Doing Business .
Points meets Eli Denison
$35,000 for him. We took it, figuring $35,000 is better than Milwaukee 2·1, Cleveland night.
GMAC
FINANCING
the mound Ianning 8, walking 18·8, Cheshire 15-3, and Pos t 467 at 7 p.m. and at 6
$2S,OOO. What has happened now is that Elliott Maddox has topped Detroit 8-4, Texas Cincinnati 7 San Francisco 5, I, allowing 4 hi is and I run . blanke d the Harrisonville
992·5342
Pomeroy
p.m. Village Pharmacy takes
Open
Evenings
' til 6: 00
gone from.a $35,000 ballplayer to a $500,000 one."
routed Oakla:td 1~. Chicago night.
Dave Oemoskey went 4 in- Bobcats !Hl.
on Bill 's Body Shop.
Til 5 p. m. Sal.
tuesday's Games
nings for the Reds giving up 6
(All l'lmes EDf)
Montreal (Blair 6-12 and
Carrithers ().()) at New York
WHEN YOU SEE ME,
(Koosman 1()..8 and Hall 4-2),
DON'T THINK OF
2, 5:35p.m.
Chicago (Bonham 10.7) at
INSURANCE ... BUT
Philadelphia (Ruthven ().()),
WHEN YOU THINK OF
" We didn ' t expect a
7:35p.m.
KENT, Ohio (UP!) INSURANCE, SEE MEl
Pittsburgh (Rooker 7-7) at St . Three Cleveland Browns polished, finished product,"
Louis (Rasmussen 1-1), 8:30 rookies were released from said Gregg. "There is no way
p.m.
the team's Kent State in the world you're going to
Here i s a conve r sa t ion I
re call. between m y mother
Atlanta (Niekro 11-3) at Los University summer training get it this early. But we know
and a fr ien d
" My fam il y?
Angeles (Sutton 14-9), 10:30 camp here Monday, reducing a lot of things now that we
Oh , ! here 's m y daughte r
Eileen , my two so n s . Fred ,
didn't know before.
p.m.
the roster to 67 players.
and uh what '!l h i s n ame th e
"
We
didn
't
expect
the
ofHouston (Dierker 9-11) at San
Placed on waivers were
insurance man ? H ey Ralph ,
what' s my· son , the insurance
Diego (Johnson 1-j)), 10 :30 defensive end Tom Gay from fense to look as it did the
man ' s nam e? Uh . tel
see ,
"p.m.
Arkansas AM&amp;N, defensive week before," Gregg said."lf
Charlie? N o , Tyrone , uh
"
Anyway , t say . when you see
Cincinnati (Billingham II· tackle Tom Marinelli of it had, we would have been
me, don't th ink of insurance,
5) at San Francisco (Halicki Boston College and guard Joe very disappointed in the
but when you think of in ·
s uran c e, see m e
5-ll), 11:05 p.m.
Pearson from Virginia State . defense. The defense is right
Commenting
on
the where it shol!)d be now.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
"The defense should be
Brown's lackluster offensive
CE.ntl
~ William D. Childs
w. 1. pet . g . b . showing Saturday in a ahead of the offense. It takes
66
43
.606
..
Bosto n
longer to gel to the point
56 50 528 8 1 1 scrimmage at Cleveland
Baltimore
where you can move the
56 52 .519 9 1/2 Municipal Stadium, Browns'
New York
53 57 .482 13 111
Milwaukee
fo
otball consistently," he
48 58 . 453 16 1 '2 head coach Forrest Gregg
C l eveland
46 63 ,422 20
Detroi t
said his team is ' 'where it added.
MtDOLEPORl . OHIO ·
(West)
Mick Childs
w . 1. pet . g . b . should be at this time."

BASEBALL

99~.

CUBES

!heir last ti me at bat and
!heir 33rd come.from·behind
triumph th is season.
Caldwell , lhe fourth Giants
pitcher, was working on a a-5
tie going into lhe top of the
ninth. Rose doubled with one
out and another double by
Ken Gr iffey brought him
home wilh what proved to be
the decisive run .
An error !hen scored J oe
Morgan, who had singled .

A

round of slo

$ 29

ANOTHER
GREAT

CHUCK STEAK

while, but not aU of us."
It was the 161h time the
highflying Reds had won in

Third, final

LEAN

SHOULDER
ROAST

pulled out a 7-:i win over the
Giants with back-to-bac k
doubles in the ninth. "You
can stop some of us lor a

Orioles turn back Bosox, 12-8

-,.·•

AUGUST 6th
m the area-

,

Reds Come from behind, win, 7-5

Today's

OPENING
"'"'·'

..

I '

•

i

..
~~~
.... _ ,

'

play opening

'70 atEV.

·-·
'

BUY

Rutland Dodgers
summer champs

Monte Carlo
•2295

a

GOLDEN ISLE
GRAPE • PUNCH OR

OLEOMARGARINE

461
·oRANGE DRINK CANS

3

•

POUND
CTNS.

'1 00

Karr &amp; Van lanett

Browns release three
rookies, 67 on roster

JOU .can't trust.

' - ear aclne
.
,-rust us.for moaer.tofll-lt.-

KRAFT SALAD DRESSING

SEEDLESS

WHITE GRAPES

49C:

MIRACLE WHIP

~

CALIFORNIA GOLDEN

QUART JAR

CARROTS

•

. LIQUID

GOLDEN ISLE
KING

APPLESAUCE

GOLl&gt;EN ISLE
15 oz. ..
'f.ANS •

,

PKGS.

CALIFORNIA P

CLING PEACHES

When you can't trust things to go right. trust us for
the money to help make them right. When you
need it, With no hassl,es. People trust their
savings with City Loon. SO you k!'lOW we hove. Ia
. b&amp; solid people to® b\.l.slness with. City Loan
&amp; Savings. What makes us a different kind of.
(IOmpany makes us a better kind of loan company.

01 Y
.rm ·

125

E.' Main

,,
'

...

'·'

-

"'

C.·

,. -r •

'

I

". A 'fllo..T
~-,
o;

·&amp;SAVINGS

·HALVES

I

•

'

~-

•'

..... _

~.

·.J

Chicago

67 41 _620
59 49 . 546 8
52 56 . 481 15

Texa s
Minnesota
California

49 62 . 441 19' '"
48 62 ; 436 20

O akl and
Kansas Ci ty

$
7 oz.

Macaroni &amp;Cheese

32 oz.

GOLDEN ISLE

. OOWNING-OULDS
lGENCY. INC.

,..

Pomeroy,O:

992-2171

·- .

sa

.468 16' "

Monday's Results
Texas 12 Oakland 0, night
Kansas City 6 Minnesota 5, 10
innings, night
Chicago 4 California 2, night
New York 2 Milwaukee I,
night
Cleveland 6 Detroit 4, night
Baltimore 12 Boston 8, night
Tuesday's Games
(All rtmes EDf)
Oakland (Bosman 6-3 and
Siebert 2-1) at Texas (Wright
2-4 and Umbarger 4-1), 2, 7:00
p.m .
California (Figueroa 8-8 and
Singer 6-10) at Chicago
(Jefferson
2~
and
Gogol'ewski ().()), 2, 6:30 p.m.
Minnesota (Goltz 8·5) at
Kansas City (Fitzmorris 10.
9), 8:30p.m ..
New York (Hunter 14-10) at
Milwaukee (Champion 6-6) ,
8:30p.m. ·
Detroit (Bare 6·5) at
Cleveland (Raich 5-6), 7:30
p.m.
Baltimore (PalrOer 14-7) at
Boston (Tiant 13-10), 7:30
p.m.

Summer Special For New Homes
'

IN MIDDLEPORT
CONTACT
DONNA STEWART
992-2145

IN POINT PLEASANT
CONTACT
HARLEY HENDRICKS
675-2460

AND NEW CENTRAL HEATING SYSTEMS
AND SPACE HEATERS

CIT-Y ICE &amp; FUEL CO •

.Middleport, Ohio

Point Pleasant, W. Va.
~:

'

•,

.. -

·'

51

I,

'

.

1

�!

•

I

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0,, Tuesday ; Aug, ~. 197~

Sport Parade

SAN FRANCISOO ( U?l) -

.Mike Ca ldwell found · out
The Cincinnati Reds are Monday night.
"We 1re a solid team," said
lethal in that last time at bat,
as San Francisco pitcher Pete Rose after the Reds

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sporn Editor

·, .
•"

~

J

~EWYORK (UP! ) - ,The New York Yankees have come up

WEDNESDAY,

, __
~

/

Saturday, August 9 , 1975

WATCH FOR OUR BIG
GRAND OPENING
COMING SOON!

eve ryone to come in and get acquainted. It's the aim of everyone to be th e friendliest store

-~

Offering friendlier service - Competitive prices - Outstanding quality meats

and produce! And don 't forget- we specialize in personaliwd m eat orders!

USDA CHOICE
'

CHUCK

"'

"

...
"'
'"

v:E

8QAS....
T ~:~~K~------

BONELESS

ENGLISH OR

E

TOP QUALITY

LB.

STEW BEEF

"'

Montefusco in the seventh,
hoping tO boost the 2-1 lead
with a pinch-hitter.
•
" We might have had
another chance to score so we
had to lake that one,"
Westrum said. Reliever
Randy Moffitt was on hand to
yield Foster's grand slam in
the eighth but San Francisco
tied it in Its half of the Inning
on a single by Willie Montanez, an error by Rose, a
si ngle by pinch-hitler Glenn
Adams, a pinch-hit single by
Dave Rader and a · sacrifice
fly by pinch-hitter Gary
Thomasson.

wtth a a good deal they 're willing to make with the Texas. Rangers. They'll let the Rangers have Alex Johnson back for
Cesar Tovar.
Texas isn'tgoingfor it. They don'tthink it's that good .
The Rangers have a proposal of their own.
edged California 4-2 and hand Detroit its eighth slapped a single to score AI
By BILL MADDEN
How about Elliott Maddox' He isn't doing anything for the UPI Sports Write.r
Kansas Ciity shaded Min- straight loss. Rookie Dennis Cowens from second base
Eckersley ( 9-3 ) went ~ 1-3 with lhe winnin g run against
Yankees now. He's freah off the disabled list. The Rangers
If not the fountain of youth, nesota &amp;-:;.
innings
to win.
Minnesota. It was Patek's
would be more than happy to take him back. They 'd· even Brooks Robinson has at least
In National League aclioo
5econd
RBI of the game and
Wblle Sox 4, Angels 2
throw another body in along with Cesar Tovar.
discovered that age-old it was Montreal over New
Brian Downing's two-run gave lhe victory to Doug Bird Morgan said of the victory :
"We'd be interested In bringing Maddox back to Texas," American League remedy for York 4-3, St. Louis eddging
sixth
inning triple sent Wilbur (7-4). the fourth Royals' "We have depth and can win
says Rangers• owner Brad Corbett.
batting s lumps : Fenway Pittsburgh 5-4, HoustOn atop
even when the stars ca n't
There's little chance ofthis one being made either.
San Diego 5-3, Los Angeles Wood to his sixth straight pitcher.
Park.
play ."
victory
and
halted
a
lourBilly Martin likes Cesar Tovar, but not that much.
Arriving in Boston for the over Atlanta 9-1 and Cin·
·:::;:::::;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::::;:::::::::::::::;:::::::::
He was talking about the
:-fie has no intention of getting rid of Elliott Maddox, even start of a crucial two;lame cinnatl besting San Francisco game Chicago losing streak.
PLAN TOURNEY
absence of Johnny Bench and
Downing's game-winning hit
;:;:mgh he and Maddox haven't exactly been buddy-buddy the series with the Red Sox, 7-:i.
The
V·Mlllhone
Trucking
Tony Perez, out with injuries .
came
after
a
walk
to
Jerry
t two years or so.
Robinson, the Baltimore Qri·
Co. is sponsoring a slo pitch
Ex-G iant George Foster
Hairston and a single by
: Billy Martin doesn't work lhat way . He can hate your in- oles' ironman third baseman,
Yanll.ees %, Brewers 1
stepped
in to fill the breech in
softball
tournament
to
be
Wood
(
12-13
)
Bucky
Dent.
;:)ides, but If he thinks you can ~lp him win a ball game, he was showing the ravages of
Thurman Munson, who
held
Aug.
9
and
10
at
lhe
eighlh
. The Reds were
::)vants you wearing the same uniform as him. Besides, as far as his 38 years as witnessed by a drove In only 60 runs all of needed three innings of relief
trailing 2-1 before Foster
·Eastern High School. The
:2Jf's concerned there was never anything personal between .'lffl batting average.
last season, delivered a from Rich Gossage.
ripped
his lhlrd career granct
entry
fee
will
be
$45
and
2
12,
A's
0
Rangers
-rum and Elliott Maddox. Maybe Maddox can't believe that, but But the cozy walls of gamewlnning eighth inning
balls. Teams wishing to slam home run . Foster said
Len Randle scored a Texas
~e way Martin plays baseball, it's true.
Fenway can do wonders lor single against Milwaukee for
·should contact Bob all he was trying to do was hit
enter
club
record
lour
runs
and
: Maddox feels he never got a chance with the Rangers after even the oldsters of lhe game, his 68th RBI as the Yankees
Ritchie at 992-7362 or Jim lhe ball hard enough to score
:Martin took over near the end of the 1973 season . He was and as the Orioles celebrated rallied to their third win in Ferguson Jenkins coasted ori
menowfora ·
Amsbary at 992·73~ by a run, "but it just kept going.
"'thded to the Yankees in March of 1974, becoming their regular their arriv~l with 16 hits (five four games under new six-hitter for his 13th win
!P(ld car tnsurcn:e
San Francisco had gone
Wednesday.
,11111\er fielder and batting .303 for them, but his resentment by Don Baylor) , it was manager Billy Martin. a gainst 12 losses
in
wtue
:11')\'ard Marlin kept smoldering because he was sure his old Robinson who sent them off to Munson's single drove home the Rangers ' cakewalk ·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:::-:-::;::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;;.:·:· ah ead before the big hit on a
seventh.jnning error by Mormanager thought he,jllas a hot dog and was ordering the Texas . a IU victory over the AL Fred Stanley from secood to over Oakland Mike HarSTEVE
NEW
YORK
(
UPI
)
gan .
pitchers to throw at him last year. Some of the statements Eastleadlng Re(l Sox wjth a break up a 1-1 tie and give grove also drove home
"Maybe that woke us up,"
SNOWDEN
Maddox made about Marlin were published, Martin read key three ... un homer in the Rudy May his lith win after a three runs as Texas scored WiUie Horton of the Detroit
hit
.
4~
last
week
with
Tigers
the
Cincy
second
baseman
them, and they nearly resulted in a confrontation between seventh inning.
three in the fourth and four in
route-going seven-hitter .
1258 Powell St .
Martin and Bill Virdon and a full scale brawl between Ranger
the seventh in embarrassing lour home runs to win the said.
"This is a heckuva park to
l.odlans 6, ngen 4
Middleport, 0 .
American League Player of
Then Giant manager Wes
and Yankee players during an exhibition game this past · hit in," said ·Robinson, who
PH . 992.-7155
Charlie Spikes, in a season· the world champions.
lhe
Week
award
.
Westrum
lifted
starter
John
spring.
Royals 6, fwlns 5
broke up a 6-6 tie in the long batting slump with just
Horton went l:i-for-33 with
If the Yankees have even a prayer of overtaking the Red Sox seventh with his homer of 20 RBis, drove home four Kansas City, which had to
like a good HATI UIM
RBI and raised his
eight
this year, Elliott Maddox has to be part of that prayer . He loser Jim Willoughby after runs with a twe&gt;run homer rally three times, finally put
ne,ghbor.
lciows that, and so does Billy Martin. Maddox was hitting .307 Baylor singled and Bobby and a single to help Cleveland lhe game away in the lOth average 16 points to .280. He
Siale Farm
for the Yankees when they placed him on the disabled list June Grich doubled. "I'd rather
INIUIIIHCI
inning when Fred Patek now has 20 homers and 72
is rhere .
RBI
on
the
season.
14 .because of torn ligaments in his right knee . He has been play the Red .Sox up here than
rUW WUIU• l · ~IOW OIILIIU ~ IUt(
taking therapy for the knee and working out with the club and at home anyday."
• lUll
U W' U ' • " OWl Ol lltl I LUV.-t!D • . 11\,
is due to return to the lineup sometime later this month.
Grich, who was ·3-for-4
One of the first things Martin did after he signed his new including a three-run homer
P71 · I)L1
manager's contract with the Yankees last Saturday morning in the fourth, agreed. "This is
was talk with Maddox. Martin did everything he could to the best hitting park in the
The third and final round of
convince him that whatever happened between them before league," he said. "I wish I
This Week 's Special
the Meigs-Mason Men's Slo
.,
was aU over now.
could play here aU the time ."
Pitch
S&lt;&gt;ftball
League
begins
"Look, if I had any idea you were gonna be as good as you've
Ken Singleton added
NATIONAL LEAGUE
tonight wilh three games
(East)
been with this ball club, do you think I'd ever have let you get another homer in the seventh
The Rutland Dodgers have hits, 4 •uns and fanned 6.Paul scheduled at Kyger Creek.
w. I. pet. gb
out of Texas?"
after Robinson's three-run P i t1sburgh
65 44 .596
captured the second half .McElhaney went I inning,
Roy a1 Crown and Fruth
Maddox listened and didn't say much.
blast and Baylor, who earlier Ph il adelph ia 61 49 . 554 4 1'2 championship in the Mid- giving up 4 hits and I rWJ .
Pharmacy tied lor lir~t place
N ew Yor k
56 51 .523 8
He has not said yet whether Martin won him over to his side collected four singles, capped St. L ouis
56 5J . 5 14 0
Getting hits for the in the fir st round and Five
USED CARS
dleport Youth Baseball
51 60 . 459 15
or not, so he may be interested to hear another side, Bob lhe Orioles' scoring in the Ch icago
Dodgers
were
Paul
champion
League
by
defeating
the
Points took lhe second round.
45 60 .429 18
. Short's, not Billy Marlin's, over why the Rangers traded him a eighth with a two..-un homer, Montreal c Wesn
Middleport Reds 5-I Going Michael with a home run and
Tonight at 6 p.m . Eli
w . I. pet. g . b .
year-and-a-hall ago.
his 17th.
a
double,
Troy
Brooks
2
into
the
contest,
the
Reds
and
Denison Post 467 goes against
Cin cinna t i
72 38 .655
"Ted Williams liked Maddox for awhile over (Del) Unser, "
The Red Sox, who saw their Los
57 54 5 14 151 7 Dodgers were tied lor first
Ange l es
doubles, Duane Berger a Village Pharmacy, at 7 p.m.
55 55 .500 17
says Short. "We traded Unser to keep Maddox. Then Williams lead over Baltimore sliced to San Fran .
double , Andy Pocklington 2 Midwest Steel meets Royal
place with 7-j) records.
_D i ego
5 1 59 464 21
soured on Maddox because of the way he loped after a ball in 8'h games, did most of their San
Atla nta
48 61 440 13 1 7
and ge tting a single Crown, and at 8 p.m. Fruth
singles,
The Dodgers also took the
40 73 . 354 J3 11
the outfield and because he just didn't hit well In Texas. When scoring early with five runs in Ho u sto n
V -8 motor , auto . trans .,
first half crown, giving them each were Andy Cross and Pharmacy meets Gavin.
Whitey Herzog became manager at the start of 1973, it was lhe second, the highlights
P. 5., blue with blue Int.
Dave
Spangler.
lhe outright championship on
Thursday
night
at
Lakin,
it
is
Monday
'
s
pretty much the same thing. Herzog liked Maddox for awhil~ . being Jim Rice's two-run
For the runnerup Reds, Royal Crown at Fruth
the league this season .
then he got to feel the same way as Williams did about him.
single and Carlton Fisk's Montreai4New York 3, night .
Overall, the Dodgers are Ray Stewart had a triple and Pharmacy at 6 p.m ., and at 7
: "Marlin took over the club in September of 1973 and Maddox Ulree-run hol)ler. Rice, who St. Louls '&amp; Pittsburgh 4, 1!&gt;-1 with ove&lt;all records of1. Paul McElhaney, K . Mllan, p.m . lt's Gavln ·va. , Flt·
dtdn't play much because I believe he was hurl. The following had four of .the Boston's u
and Jeff Bauglunan ea'ch a zgerald's Sporting 'Goods. .
night.
'
\
1 In the ftrst half and~ l11'the
Spring, we had made up our minds to send him to Spokane hits, also stroked
solo Chicago 3 Philadelphia 2, second round. The Reds single.
Thursday at Kyger Creek,
where, to aU Intents and purposes, he would've become merely homer in the second, his 18th. night. Houston S San Diego 3, finished the second half at 7·1.
In olher recent games the Midwest Steel P.iays Jim 's
another $2S,OOO ballplayer subject to the winter draft. But the
Elsewhere In the American night. ·
For the Dodgers , Guy Dodgers have played they Campers a t 6 p.m . Five
You ' ll Like Our Quality
day before he was to have been sent out, Gabe Paul offered us League, New York edged Los Angeles 9 Atlanta I, Schuler went the distance on have defea ted Salem Center
Way
of Doing Business .
Points meets Eli Denison
$35,000 for him. We took it, figuring $35,000 is better than Milwaukee 2·1, Cleveland night.
GMAC
FINANCING
the mound Ianning 8, walking 18·8, Cheshire 15-3, and Pos t 467 at 7 p.m. and at 6
$2S,OOO. What has happened now is that Elliott Maddox has topped Detroit 8-4, Texas Cincinnati 7 San Francisco 5, I, allowing 4 hi is and I run . blanke d the Harrisonville
992·5342
Pomeroy
p.m. Village Pharmacy takes
Open
Evenings
' til 6: 00
gone from.a $35,000 ballplayer to a $500,000 one."
routed Oakla:td 1~. Chicago night.
Dave Oemoskey went 4 in- Bobcats !Hl.
on Bill 's Body Shop.
Til 5 p. m. Sal.
tuesday's Games
nings for the Reds giving up 6
(All l'lmes EDf)
Montreal (Blair 6-12 and
Carrithers ().()) at New York
WHEN YOU SEE ME,
(Koosman 1()..8 and Hall 4-2),
DON'T THINK OF
2, 5:35p.m.
Chicago (Bonham 10.7) at
INSURANCE ... BUT
Philadelphia (Ruthven ().()),
WHEN YOU THINK OF
" We didn ' t expect a
7:35p.m.
KENT, Ohio (UP!) INSURANCE, SEE MEl
Pittsburgh (Rooker 7-7) at St . Three Cleveland Browns polished, finished product,"
Louis (Rasmussen 1-1), 8:30 rookies were released from said Gregg. "There is no way
p.m.
the team's Kent State in the world you're going to
Here i s a conve r sa t ion I
re call. between m y mother
Atlanta (Niekro 11-3) at Los University summer training get it this early. But we know
and a fr ien d
" My fam il y?
Angeles (Sutton 14-9), 10:30 camp here Monday, reducing a lot of things now that we
Oh , ! here 's m y daughte r
Eileen , my two so n s . Fred ,
didn't know before.
p.m.
the roster to 67 players.
and uh what '!l h i s n ame th e
"
We
didn
't
expect
the
ofHouston (Dierker 9-11) at San
Placed on waivers were
insurance man ? H ey Ralph ,
what' s my· son , the insurance
Diego (Johnson 1-j)), 10 :30 defensive end Tom Gay from fense to look as it did the
man ' s nam e? Uh . tel
see ,
"p.m.
Arkansas AM&amp;N, defensive week before," Gregg said."lf
Charlie? N o , Tyrone , uh
"
Anyway , t say . when you see
Cincinnati (Billingham II· tackle Tom Marinelli of it had, we would have been
me, don't th ink of insurance,
5) at San Francisco (Halicki Boston College and guard Joe very disappointed in the
but when you think of in ·
s uran c e, see m e
5-ll), 11:05 p.m.
Pearson from Virginia State . defense. The defense is right
Commenting
on
the where it shol!)d be now.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
"The defense should be
Brown's lackluster offensive
CE.ntl
~ William D. Childs
w. 1. pet . g . b . showing Saturday in a ahead of the offense. It takes
66
43
.606
..
Bosto n
longer to gel to the point
56 50 528 8 1 1 scrimmage at Cleveland
Baltimore
where you can move the
56 52 .519 9 1/2 Municipal Stadium, Browns'
New York
53 57 .482 13 111
Milwaukee
fo
otball consistently," he
48 58 . 453 16 1 '2 head coach Forrest Gregg
C l eveland
46 63 ,422 20
Detroi t
said his team is ' 'where it added.
MtDOLEPORl . OHIO ·
(West)
Mick Childs
w . 1. pet . g . b . should be at this time."

BASEBALL

99~.

CUBES

!heir last ti me at bat and
!heir 33rd come.from·behind
triumph th is season.
Caldwell , lhe fourth Giants
pitcher, was working on a a-5
tie going into lhe top of the
ninth. Rose doubled with one
out and another double by
Ken Gr iffey brought him
home wilh what proved to be
the decisive run .
An error !hen scored J oe
Morgan, who had singled .

A

round of slo

$ 29

ANOTHER
GREAT

CHUCK STEAK

while, but not aU of us."
It was the 161h time the
highflying Reds had won in

Third, final

LEAN

SHOULDER
ROAST

pulled out a 7-:i win over the
Giants with back-to-bac k
doubles in the ninth. "You
can stop some of us lor a

Orioles turn back Bosox, 12-8

-,.·•

AUGUST 6th
m the area-

,

Reds Come from behind, win, 7-5

Today's

OPENING
"'"'·'

..

I '

•

i

..
~~~
.... _ ,

'

play opening

'70 atEV.

·-·
'

BUY

Rutland Dodgers
summer champs

Monte Carlo
•2295

a

GOLDEN ISLE
GRAPE • PUNCH OR

OLEOMARGARINE

461
·oRANGE DRINK CANS

3

•

POUND
CTNS.

'1 00

Karr &amp; Van lanett

Browns release three
rookies, 67 on roster

JOU .can't trust.

' - ear aclne
.
,-rust us.for moaer.tofll-lt.-

KRAFT SALAD DRESSING

SEEDLESS

WHITE GRAPES

49C:

MIRACLE WHIP

~

CALIFORNIA GOLDEN

QUART JAR

CARROTS

•

. LIQUID

GOLDEN ISLE
KING

APPLESAUCE

GOLl&gt;EN ISLE
15 oz. ..
'f.ANS •

,

PKGS.

CALIFORNIA P

CLING PEACHES

When you can't trust things to go right. trust us for
the money to help make them right. When you
need it, With no hassl,es. People trust their
savings with City Loon. SO you k!'lOW we hove. Ia
. b&amp; solid people to® b\.l.slness with. City Loan
&amp; Savings. What makes us a different kind of.
(IOmpany makes us a better kind of loan company.

01 Y
.rm ·

125

E.' Main

,,
'

...

'·'

-

"'

C.·

,. -r •

'

I

". A 'fllo..T
~-,
o;

·&amp;SAVINGS

·HALVES

I

•

'

~-

•'

..... _

~.

·.J

Chicago

67 41 _620
59 49 . 546 8
52 56 . 481 15

Texa s
Minnesota
California

49 62 . 441 19' '"
48 62 ; 436 20

O akl and
Kansas Ci ty

$
7 oz.

Macaroni &amp;Cheese

32 oz.

GOLDEN ISLE

. OOWNING-OULDS
lGENCY. INC.

,..

Pomeroy,O:

992-2171

·- .

sa

.468 16' "

Monday's Results
Texas 12 Oakland 0, night
Kansas City 6 Minnesota 5, 10
innings, night
Chicago 4 California 2, night
New York 2 Milwaukee I,
night
Cleveland 6 Detroit 4, night
Baltimore 12 Boston 8, night
Tuesday's Games
(All rtmes EDf)
Oakland (Bosman 6-3 and
Siebert 2-1) at Texas (Wright
2-4 and Umbarger 4-1), 2, 7:00
p.m .
California (Figueroa 8-8 and
Singer 6-10) at Chicago
(Jefferson
2~
and
Gogol'ewski ().()), 2, 6:30 p.m.
Minnesota (Goltz 8·5) at
Kansas City (Fitzmorris 10.
9), 8:30p.m ..
New York (Hunter 14-10) at
Milwaukee (Champion 6-6) ,
8:30p.m. ·
Detroit (Bare 6·5) at
Cleveland (Raich 5-6), 7:30
p.m.
Baltimore (PalrOer 14-7) at
Boston (Tiant 13-10), 7:30
p.m.

Summer Special For New Homes
'

IN MIDDLEPORT
CONTACT
DONNA STEWART
992-2145

IN POINT PLEASANT
CONTACT
HARLEY HENDRICKS
675-2460

AND NEW CENTRAL HEATING SYSTEMS
AND SPACE HEATERS

CIT-Y ICE &amp; FUEL CO •

.Middleport, Ohio

Point Pleasant, W. Va.
~:

'

•,

.. -

·'

51

I,

'

.

1

�..

'

.

;

4 - The Daily ~ntinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Aug. 5,"!975

o

f'G=;r7.ti::R;;-'l Fair flower shows
~

By Helen and
Will

fhl~GUt

~ut' Bottd

!if

Rap:
My brothers and sisters, all into successful careers, want
to buy Mom a face lift. As a married college student who can't
contribute much, I shouldn't criticize, but I'd like your opinion.
Dad died last year. Mom has been turned down for several
good jobs. Her qualifications are fine, but younger-appearing
women get first choice. She has mentioned a face lift, but I
thought she was kidding. She looks okay to me; my sister says
I'm · blind.
I think a trip to Europe would do her more good. Afterwards, she could settle into being a grandmother, as she has
enough money to get by. She doesn't need a new face for that .
But she's got this thing about wanting to "achieve." At 52, why
bother •
Cosmetic surgery is for vain females, not my mother. Isn't
a month in Europe helt.er' - YOUNGEST SON
son:
Not in MY book it isn't 1
Look, kid : "52" is a prime of life for a woman who wants to
achieve. Cosmetic surgery is not exclusively for "vain
females." And a son who tells his mother she should settle for
grandmotherhood must be bucking for a free babysitter.
Aface lift is a great gift; don't knock it I - HELEN

'

Polly'S

have new feature

+-I +

Son:
Why not let the person most involved do the choosing?
Perhaps she 'd rather pay for her own cosmetic surgery, then
lake the family gift- a European tour. And with the optimism
that comes with good experiences - maybe even a proposal or
two - she'll be in a mood to find the job that suits here. - SUE
P.S. Anyway, she'll search harder because she 'II have
made a $2,~lus investment in her future!

+++

the same judge has been used

state competition points are
deducted from the show ~core
if there is an inadequate

for both shows.
On Wednesday, Aug. 13,
Mrs . Allen Grossman will

number of entries. The 1974
Meigs County Fair flower
show received the first place

judge. Mrs . Grossma n is an

award in Ohio in county fair

expertenced judge , belonging
to the
Judges Guild of
Regions 8, 9, 10 and II.
Although she has never

flower shows.
Classes drawn by the clubs
are as follows:
BEND 0' THE RIVER :

judged a show in this area,

classes 7. " Fra nkenstein'' ; a.

she has given a Holiday

"Pic ni c" ; 58 . "Breakfas t at
Tiffany 's": 52 . "The Days of

demonstration at the regional
m eeting in Nelsonv ille , as

Wine and Roses."
CHESTER : c la sses

well as in other parts of the
stale. Mrs . Grossman is
currently serving as stale
chairwoman of State and
County Fair Flower Shows
ror the Ohio Association of
Garden Clu bs. ·Sh e an d her
ramily reside in Orient, Ohio,
where she is active in the
garden club and other civic

affairs.
Friday's judge will be Mrs.
·Robert Scherer, who came to
Mel.gs County several years
ago to judge a Christmas
Flower Show. She is also a
member of the Judges Guild
of Regions 8, 9, 10 and 11 and
has presented programs to

"Jezebe l ";

7.

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR ·POLLY - I would
like some information concerning painting walls with a
roller . Shoud I use a brush
around door and window
frames' Would a good grade
latex paint go on over oil base
paint that is now on the
walls' - TILLIE.

\

. ~..A.

·) I -:

....

DEAR fiLLIE - Last
question first - II flat
oil

3.

"Franken -

s tein": 53. "Jesus Christ,
Superstar," 56. "Sayona ra ."
MIDDLEPORT: classes 1.

"B irth Of a Nation" ; 5. "Send
Me No Fl owers" ; 53. "Jesus
Christ. Su perstar ," 56.
"Savonara ."

MIDDLE EPORT
TEUR : classes 1.

AMA
" Birth

Of a Nation" ; 6. "Gone With

The Wind"; 51. "F rom Here
To Eternity" ; 58 . "Breakfast

At Tiffany' s."
POMEROY : c la sses 1.
" Birth ot a Nation " : 6. " Gone
With The Wind": 51. " Fro m
Here

To Eternity"; 52 . "Days

of Wine and Roses ."

·

· Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Nicely

Couple married in
candlelight service

RUTLAND : classes 3
Dear Helen and Sue:
" JeLebe l" ; 4. "The Good, The
CLIFTON , W. Va. - The accessories. She is a 1975
Bad and The U~ly"; 5. "Send Clifton U. M. Church was the graduate of Wahama High
About "Thank-you" notes for wedding and shower gifts.
Me No Flowers'; 54. "200 1 A
Society says we must write them (and so do you, Helen), or
Space Odysse y. "
setting for the March 21 School. The groom is a 1973
we're stereotyped as careless and ungrateful hippie types. But
RUTLAND FRIENDLY : candlelight wedding of Miss graduate of Point Pleasant
what's a card, anyway ? I thanked my fri~nds when they gave various groups. Mrs. Scherer clas~es 7. " Frankenstein " ; Sherry Ann J efferie s to High School.
53. "Jesus Christ, Super me their gifts, and again after opening them. Mom insisted I received degree in Home star
Mr . and Mrs. Nicely left
"; 54 . "2001: A Space Clarence Wesley Nicely. The
also send out Utank-you notes, hut I don't think this is Economics from the Ohio Odyssey" ; 56. "Sayonara ." Rev. Rader M. Ogden, immediately for Houston,
d
'd
STAR: classes 1. " Birth of
·
·t
necessary as I felt they already knew I really appreciated their Sta t e Umversl
y, an resl es a Nation ": 6. "Gone with the Stonewood, W. Va. , per- · Tex., where they are making
presents.
in Circleville with her family. Wind"; 51. "From Here To for med the double-ring their home. He is an emTimes are changing, and I think a more relaxed way to
To assure that the artistic Eternity" ; 52. " Days of Wine ceremony .
ploy·e e of Ca meron Steel
express appreciation is overdue. - BRIDE
arrangement classes of both and Roses ."
The bride is the foster Corp., Houston .
. WILDWOOD : c lasses 1.
Out-of-.town guests atshows are filled , the Meigs " Birth of a Nation" : 5. "Send daughter of Mr . and Mrs.
Dear Helen and Sue :
.
County Garden Club again Me No Flowers"; 52 . "Days Joseph Posey, Clifton, and tending the wedding included
I was surprised to see your reply to " Irritated Relative "
this year drew for classes. of Wine and Roses; 55. " The the groom is the son of Mr . Mr . and Mrs . Earl W.
Inferno."
about the necessity of sending out thank-you notes for shower Each club is responsible for Towering
WINDING TRAIL: 4 . " The and Mrs. Lloyd Nicely, Robinson, Cheryl, Nick and
gifts.
furnishing al least one Good, The Bad and The Houston, Tex., and grandson David, Gallipolis ; Mrs. Ruth
l don't know about you, but I was brought up thinking that I
arrangement for each of the Ugly" : 7. " Frankenstein"; of Mrs. Eulah Workman, Miller, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard
should give for the pleasure of giving, and expect nothing in
four classes drawn, although 53 · "Jesus Ch ri s t, Super~ Point Pleasant.
T. Noble, Mrs . Lester
s tar" ; 58 . "Break fast At
return. - M. E .
clubs are ur ged to enter as Tiffany 's."
The bride chose an off- Johnson, Mrs. Eulah Workwhite satin and lace gown man and Mr . and Mrs. Tim
Dear·M. :
with chapel train , full sleeves Lewis, Point Pleasant;
And I was brought up to think if a friend cares enough to
and a victorian styled neck· Wesley Nicely, Huntington;
buy me a gift, I should care enough to send her a thank-you
line. A wide ruffle around the Mr. and Mrs. John C. Roush,
note. - SUE
The annual Singer Family Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Hollon, botom of the gown and tiny Carolyn Roush and Mr. and
+++
reunion was held Sunday at Mrs . Opal·Hollon and Rick, lace covered buttons ac- Mrs. Curtis Roush, West
Dear M.: (Also " Bride" )
Royal Oak Park with a basket Mr. and Mrs . Roger Bissell, cented the gown. She carried Columbia.
And I'm Ute one who brought Sue up Uta! way. Sorry, you
Bob Titus, Mr. 'IIJ!l- Mrs .
dinner at noon.
Alisha, Roger . Lorena, a nosegay of blue and white
two haven't convinced us differently . - HELEN
Alfred
Ruschell, 1\f.lry and
Gifts were presented to Christina, and Amanda, carnations . She wore gold
Anita,
Pomeroy;
Rev. Don
the oldest, the youngest boy Chester; Mr . and Mrs. - cross earrings, a gift of the
and girl there and the one Robert Bissell,
Danny groom. Her headpiece was a Cole, Mr. and Mrs. Joe
who traveled the farthest. Bissell, Mr. and Mrs . Charles satin bow fea turing lace Chapman and Linda Lou; Mr.
and Mrs. John Harrison and
The Bissell families, Sandra Bissell, Long Bottom ; Mr. overlay.
Mrs . Don Erwin en- Stewart, Mrs. Dale Hysell,
Long • and children and and Mrs . Gerald Hollon,
The church was decorated daughte r; Mr. and Mrs .
tertained Ute teachers of the Mrs. Carl Roach and Mrs. Sammy Rayburn provided Tammy
and
Scottie, with lighted ca ndles and George Lester, Lisa Nash,
Primary Department of Ute Stewart's mother Mrs. Donna
the entertainment. The Galloway; Mr. and Mrs. baskets of white lilies. The Mrs. Joe Turner, Mrs. Lewis
Mrs.
Raymond
Middleport Church of Christ Glaze .
reuni011 was scheduled for the Sterling Rayburn , Sterling, family pews were marked Ellis,
Walburn, Mrs . Gertie Kloes
wiUt a party at her home
Sending gifts were Mrs. Art last Sunday in July, .1976 at Jr ., and Samuel, Syracuse; with blue and white bows.
and
Mrs. Eulah Francis,
recently. The Erwin family Hess and Mrs. Mike Gerlach. the Park.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Riffle,
The bride 's maid-&lt;Jf-honor
will be moving in Ute near Amy Erwin assisted her
Attending were James Bruce , Pam, Betsy, Brenda was Charlene Oldaker, Hart- Middleport.
Bob Posey and Cathy, Joe
future to Winfield, W. Va .
mother in serving refresh- Kimes,
Dee
Roach, and Julie, Mr. and Mrs : ford, and the flower girl was
Bonnett and daughter,
Games were played and a ments.
Cleveland; Tammy and Tad Douglas Bisssell and family, Melissa Kearns, Clift~on.
Vienna;
Fred Knapp, Mrs. ·
surprise layette shower was
Kimes, Norwalk; Mrs. Lona Tuppers Plains; Mr . and
The
attendant
wore
held for Mrs. Mike Stewart.
POTLUCK PLANNED
Hollon and Shannon, Vienna; Mrs . Davij) Grate and son, identical blue and white floral Willis Martin, Mr. and Mrs .
Attending were Mrs. Stewart,
Plans have been made by Mr. and Mrs. Robert Parker, Rutland; Mr. and Mrs. David gowns and white velvet head George Ocheltree, Mrs.
Mildred GriffiUt, Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Baker, Mrs. Earl the Women's Auxiliary of Bobby and Kelly, Marietta; Riggins, Mr. and Mrs . Uoyd pieces.
.
Mrs
. Tammy Frazier and
McKinley, Mrs. Art Stobart; Veterans Memorial ·Hospital Mrs. Mattie Lawrence and Lipps, Toni and Chuck, Little
Roses were presented by
Mrs. Denver Rice, Mrs. Mack for a potluck dinner at the Bonnie, Clint Birch and Leola Hocking; Mr. and Mrs. Joe the brtde to her mother, the daughters, Dee Dee ·and
home of Mrs. Leona Karr on Birch, Portland; Mr. and Lipps , Gail and Terry , groom's grandmother and Celeste and Mr. and Mrs .
Dolphe Posey, Stonewood, W.
Tuesday, Aug. 19. At Uta! Mrs. Dwight Bissell, Jeff and Vincent; Mr. and Mrs . Bruce Mrs. Evelyn Nicholson .
time also a silent auction will Sherri, Reedsville; Mr. and Enlow, Newport; Mr. and
The bride was escorted to Va.
BIRTHDAY HONORED
be held by Ute ways and Mrs. Frank Holter, Racine ; Mrs. Elson Long "and family , the altar by her foster father.
Mrs
. David Huddleston
means committee. The Mrs. Ethel Cooper, Parkers- Letart, W. Va. ; and Angela Bob Titus, Pomeroy, served
dinner will he at 6:30p.m.
burg ; Mrs. Ada Van Meter. Navarini, Clarksburg, W.Va. as best man. Ushers were entertained Friday with a
, - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . , Kendell Clendennin and Fred surprise birthday party
Nibert, Point Pleasant.
honoring her mother, Mrs.
Selections were played on Grace Holter.
the piano by Miss Theresa
Assisting Mrs . Huddleston
Ellis, Middleport.
Songs were Mrs. Cora Mae Joachim
Included "Theme
From and Mrs. Edith Calvert. Cake
Love
Story"
and
"The was served with homemade
So you did a baugup
Lord's Prayer" sung by Fred ice cream, nuts, mints and
Knapp, Stonewood .
coffee. A gift was presented
· Andnowyou're
The bride's foster moUter to Mrs . Holter. Guests were
wore a blue gown, with white Mrs. Virginia Wyatt, Mrs.
trouble making
Jean Kloes, Miss Eleanor
accessories.
light of your troU~
A reception was held in the Robson, Mrs. Genevieve
Well,tbere'eaiiOlu·
social room of the church. Schneider, Miss Myrtis Kay
The bride's table featured a Parker, Mrs. Norma Parker,
ticlu·. Hurry on down
wedding cake trimmed in Mrs. Emma ClatworUty and
toa~troUble·
blue and white, topped with Mrs. Addalou Lewis.
your indethe tradi tiona! bride and
BOND SALES NOTED
pendent inlurancP
groom.
June 197~ sales of Series E
Serving the punch was Mrs. &amp; H United States Savings
apnt.
Earl W. Robinson, Gallipolis, Bonds in Ohio were $34.8
· We~ ent.you.
assisted by Mrs. John C. million. At Ute end of June,
· tint. And we
to
Roush, West Columbia. Mrs. the slate attained 50.4 percent
Meigs Tire Center will pay your ferry fee
Alfred Ruse held, Pomeroy, of its 1975 sales goal.
expedite a fast, fair
one way .
·
served
the cake. Lamela Theodore T. Reed, Jr., Meigs
IIBttlement
of yow
.
Sisk, New Haven, registered County Volunteer Savings
clainll;
the guests.
Borids Chairman, reported
For her wedding trip, Mrs. June sales of Savings Bonds
Meigs Tire Center will pay your ferry fee
Nicely
wore a blue and white in Ute county were $23,596,
both ways.
check pantsuit with navy 37.5 percent of its annual
This Includes car, truck, farm tire repairs, re-caps and new tires,
sales goal.

Singer family reunites

Party entertains group

,)

Attention WEST VIRGINIA People!

The Ferry

eboOter:

used ·• on

the walls lattx will go
~n over it just line. If enamel
was used or there is any shine
or gloss, the walls will have to
be sanded first as latex must
be applied to a dull surface.
Start wiUt the ceiling. Paint
from side to side, that is
across the width of the room,
allowing one strip to overlap
another. Brush paint on walls
next to all trim - doors,
baseboards, windows, etc.
and in the corners before
rolling it on the walls. When
painting walls with a roller
get paint onto the wall
working surface first and
Uten spread it out, evenly
moving roller back and forth
to spread and smooUt . POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - I made a
hanger for plants in pots out
of old nylon hose and rings
from pull-top beverage cans.
Following Ute design of Ute
popular commercial hangers
made with knotted cord or
string I used the rings instead
of knots. Six stockings were
used for one hanger . I first
knotted all the toes together
before starting wiUt the rings
at the bottom. The hems of
the hose were opened to give
more length and less bulk. I

Teachers
hold picnic
Teachers of the Primary
Department of the Middleport Church of Christ held
a picnic recently for Ute
children at the Community
Park.
Games were played and
pictures were taken. Children
attending were Matthew
Erwin , Chris Stewart, Tala
Morris, Clinton Glaze ,
Jennifer McKinley, Kathy
Thomas, Sammy Hall, Patty
Ward , Kelly Neff, Trey
Glaze, Melanie Arnold, Jeff
Arnold, Terri Sprouse, Darin
Roach, Darin Wolfe, John
Arnold, Carol Bailey, Scott
McKinley, Amy Erwin, Belli·
Wolfe, Danny Thomas, Jody
Miller, Sherrie Arnold, Tim
Miller, Cheryl Riffle, Tonya
Stobart, Tammy Stobart,
Debbie Holland and Tammy
Welsh.
Adults were Mr. and Mrs.
George Glaze, Mr . and Mrs.
Mike Stewart, Mr. and Mrs.
Earl McKinley, Mr. and Mrs.
Don Erwin, Mr. and Mr:i.
Dale Hysell, Mr. and Mrs.
Mack Stewart, Mrs . Art Hess,
Mrs. Jack Neff, Mrs. Art
Stobart and Mrs. Carl Roach.

Wide Selection

LOVES YOU!

Summer Shoes

From

I

was

Meigs Tire Center

Drive Over

havq

paint

West .Virginia

At
Clearance Prices

Pv.u..u.'-.L

nJESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Masonic
Lodge 363 meeting, 7:30p.m.
All Master Masons invted.
POMEROY CHAPTER 186,
O.E.S., 7 : 4~ p.m. at the
Pomeroy Mason Temple.
WINDING TRAIL Garden
Club, 6:30p.m., at Ute river
camp of Mr . and Mrs .
Charles Hayes . Covered dish
picnic with workshop on
Meigs County fair flow er
show. Everyone to meet at
Ute parking lot for the trip on
Ute ferry.
RocK SPRINGS Grange, 8
p.m. at the hall to vacate Ute
building for Ute Meigs County
Fair.

fini shed the top and bottorq
by wrapping wiUt colored
yarn, put a colored ball at Ute
bottom and secured a ring for
hanging in the top. This made
an altractive, attractive,
adjustable . hanger.
ELLEN.
DEAR ELLEN- This Ide
was quile Intriguing to me :
and I wish Ellen had been a •
bit more detailed about it. •
The way I figured It out ls ;
that the tied-together-toes :
made a "cradle" at Ute '
bottom to hold the pot, the :
can rings were slipped along
at intervals to hold each •
stocking Into a tighter length :
and the six bose were ;
securely fastened together ill '
the top (remember the pot Is :
going to be a bit heavy) :
before wrapping with Ute
wool. The ring at the top for ·
hanging surely must he a .
stronger one than a can top ·
ring he cause of the weight. :
Just the suggestion of using,
those ring tops and the old :
•
bose opens up all sorts of·
possibilities and I feel sure ·
many of you will start with
Utat Idea and use your own·
imaglonations. - POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - I always;
carry a heavy bath towel Ill:
the car and spread it over Ute~
steering wheel when I Jl&amp;rl!:':'
the car in the host sun. This
keeps the wheel from getting·
so hot it burns my harids. EDNA.

Middleport, Ohio

teady
fot &amp;c.hool
.· and •••

PRICED

UNDER
$35

~
'

.

Rtuter-Brotat:l

INSURANCE
fill. f9W1M

I'

,.

_...,

. lfweciait -

motor oil and anti freeze. To qualify you must have West ,Virginia
li'cense on your car. This offer good while bridge is closed this year.
.

Now Featuring

.

"Something Special For The Loved Ones"

' .

FRESH PEACH

SPECIAL VALVOLIN E ANTI-FREEZE
BOTH FOR OHIOANDW. VA.

AND MILX SHAKES

PER G.A LLON. 3.65

hllpyau,lllbody,

Umited 2 Per Person.

.

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

Jus! Fot Month of. August
.

Adolph's Dairy._
Vallev·..

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

,MEIGS TIRE CENTER
700 E. Main ·

SlJJI!~~ES .

·John .P . Fultz, OWner ·

Pomeroy,

o.

Hrs,: 10:00 A.M. Tilll :00 P.M. .Sun.- Thur.
10:00 A.M. Til12:00 P.M. ·Frl.&amp; Sat.
oo?-2556
W: MAIN
POMEROY,O.
. '.,I

PHONE 992-3480
we reserve the right to limit quantities.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

USDA Choice Fresh &amp; lean

GROUND BEEF

WE;E~ERS ................. ~k:~· 79~
SUPERIORS ALL MEAT

BOLOGNA ............... •b.

lb.

89~

WIENERS................. ~k;~· 89

~

SUPERIORS ALL BEEF

FRESH AND LEAN

HAM SALAD.: ....... lb.

99

,

GROUND ROUND

1.09

lb.

•1.19

lb.

1

SATURD A Y
ONLY
•

FAVORITE

Scot Lad
Saltines

Coke &amp; Sprite

BREAD

1~b.

4

box

lvs.

MIX OR MATCH

for

64

SPECIAL

Fluffo
3-lb. can
Shortening

oz.

Throw Away
U.S. GRADE A SMALL

. Bottle

FROZEN FOODS
Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Dabo
have returned from a week's
vacation. They visited
relatives and friends in
Columbus and Uten went to
CWnberland Gap and Middlesboro, Ky. for a few days.
Mrs. Sadie Thuener,
Syracuse, and grandson,
John Lehew, Pomeroy, spent
several days in Cincinnati
and attended Ute Cincinnati
Reds' ball game.
Mrs . Harry Davis, Spring
Ave., Pomeroy, entered
University
Hospital,
Columbus, Saturday for
observation and treatment.

We're offering this watch
two ways . It's an excellent
value . Precis ion ieweled .
Classic in style . Wit h
textured goldtone case,
sweep second, full numeral
dlal a·nd unbreakable
mainspring . Water and
shock resistant . Bulova
guaranteed. And very

BIRTH ANNOUNCED
Mr. and Mrs. Allan Harris,
Rt. . 3, Pomeroy, are announcing Ute birth of a seven
lb., 14 oz. daughter, Sarah
Jane, on July 31 at Ute Holzer
Medical Center. Mrs. K. A.
Grueser of Pomeroy is the
grandmoUter. Mr. and Mrs.
Harris also have a son, Don
Aflan.

modestlv oriced. ·

JEWELRY STORE
. Court St., Pomeroy

COMPLETES TRAINING
Rick Hollon, son of Mrs.
Opal Hollon, recently completed auto diesel mechanic
training in Nashville, Tenn.
arid today began employment
at the A. R. Huffman and
Sons, Marietta.

.•.

.,

. We SHOW &amp; TELL
THE STORY BEHIND

"
...
.·.•.

PROVIDED MUSIC
Mrs. · Clarice Erwin,
organist, played a half hour
of nuptial music at· the
wedding of Drema Arlene
Ward and Raymond Henry
Roach June 28 at the Middleport Church of Christ. Her
selections included "The
Lord's Prayer.'' · "Love

.,
•,•

FINE FURNITURE
AND·APPLIANCES

..",

.
..

\

.BAKER .FURNITURE

Story," uo, Perfect. Love,"
"0 Promise Me.'' ~~sweetest
Story

.,.

Ever

Told"

PARTY ICE
10 lb.

PRINCE

MACARONI and
CHEESE DINNERS

4
boxes

Facial
Tissues

2 boxes

"

16 oz. bois.

R£G. 11.39

16 ounce
container

Friday Only

-··scoT LAD FRENCH FRIED

DIET RITE
FLAVORS

POTATOES

SURE
JELL
TENDER
VITTLES
9 LIVES
CAT FOOD

. bxs.

bxs.

5 lb.
bag

$
$

89~

NOODLES .................~~:..

.

ICE MILK BARS..........~~..~~~ .

$

BROUGHTON'S

Swiss Sundae

YOGURT..........~~~ ........ :.4 for

and

Plus Oep.

ALL WEEK LONG ·

g~

$

1

2
8
9~
CHOC. MILK., ... .. ..... .... qts.
BROUGHTON'S

Erwin'.s name .was unin-

for

Dad's Root Beer

Diet Rite Cola

8 pak f39 ·

8 pak 1.19

.'
~

I

'\

I

,.

'

'

.

$} 00

8

NORTll STAR

cans

4

qts.

8 oz. 39~

REAM'S EGG

"

"

RC

STRAWBERRIES

' I

"

-

FROZEN

lentlonally omi!ted from the
wedding account.

'

On~y

Thursday

bag

KLEENEX

••AQoramus te Christe.'' Mrs. '

.

Mldcllepert, 01110

~

I

FRESH AND LEAN

GROUND CHUCK

~

HOME MADE

c

Any
Amount

·--~--~~------~

(

lb.

Specially
Priced

lugust Is Sandwich Month!

FRIDAY
REVIVAL nolv in progress
at French City Baptist
Church, Burlingham, Utrough
Sunday. Evangelist is Dennis
Robertson. Services 7:30p.m.
nightly.
SQUARE DANCE, Senior
Citizens Center, Bo30 to 11 :30
p.m. Bob Pickett, caller;
Drifters providing Ute music.
Cake walka, refreshments.
Admission $1, children under
12 free.
SUNDAY
DISTRICT 13 Past Councilors Association, Daughters
of America, I :30 p.m. picnic
at Ute Wilson Park near Coolville.

Buy '30.00 or More of·Merchandise

~~

Corner Mill and Second Sts.

THURSDAY
ANNUAL PICNIC Catholic
Women's Club.. at Middleport
Community Park, 7 p.m.
Members take cqvered dish
and.own table service .

q~t

We prepare these steaks dally
from USDA Choice Superiors
beef. Guaranteed fr es h &amp;
tender. Four to 6 In package.

We Accept Federal Food Stamps

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY Lodge [64, F.
and A.M. regular meeting,
7:30p.m. All master masons
invited.
THURSDAY
TWIN CITY Shrinettes, 8
p.m., at Ute home of Mrs.
Lora Byers, Rt. 2, Gallipolis.
Members urged to attend.
EVANGELINE
Chapter
172, O.E.S., 7:30 p.m. at the
Middleport Masonic Temple.
Twenty-five year pin to he
presented. SUent auction with
proceeds to go Into the
educational loan fund and Ute
fire safety code fund. Sunshine collection for ESTARL.

Buy '15.00 or More of Merchandise

Work

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

DREW WEBSTER Post 39,
American Legion, regular
meeting, 8 p.m . at post home ;
important discussion to be
held.

GOESSLER'S

heritage house

Unbelievably Delicious!
Featured At Mark V

Social
Calendar

Rolkr painting
sans·pain

man y artistic classes and
County Fair flower shows for , horticullure classes as
this year has been an- possible .
nounced . A different judge
Mrs. Carpenter stressed
will be used for each day of that horticulture entries are
the judging, Mrs . James especially needed since in
Carpenter , chairwoman,
reports. In previous years,

5- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy~,0~···Tu:e~sd~a~y~,A~ug:-~5••1~9~75~••111!1•••••••••••••~••••

11 y I'ULL Y CKAMt:lt

A new feature of the Meigs

Bring a LUI?

'.

..

.....
'

'

..

�..

'

.

;

4 - The Daily ~ntinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Aug. 5,"!975

o

f'G=;r7.ti::R;;-'l Fair flower shows
~

By Helen and
Will

fhl~GUt

~ut' Bottd

!if

Rap:
My brothers and sisters, all into successful careers, want
to buy Mom a face lift. As a married college student who can't
contribute much, I shouldn't criticize, but I'd like your opinion.
Dad died last year. Mom has been turned down for several
good jobs. Her qualifications are fine, but younger-appearing
women get first choice. She has mentioned a face lift, but I
thought she was kidding. She looks okay to me; my sister says
I'm · blind.
I think a trip to Europe would do her more good. Afterwards, she could settle into being a grandmother, as she has
enough money to get by. She doesn't need a new face for that .
But she's got this thing about wanting to "achieve." At 52, why
bother •
Cosmetic surgery is for vain females, not my mother. Isn't
a month in Europe helt.er' - YOUNGEST SON
son:
Not in MY book it isn't 1
Look, kid : "52" is a prime of life for a woman who wants to
achieve. Cosmetic surgery is not exclusively for "vain
females." And a son who tells his mother she should settle for
grandmotherhood must be bucking for a free babysitter.
Aface lift is a great gift; don't knock it I - HELEN

'

Polly'S

have new feature

+-I +

Son:
Why not let the person most involved do the choosing?
Perhaps she 'd rather pay for her own cosmetic surgery, then
lake the family gift- a European tour. And with the optimism
that comes with good experiences - maybe even a proposal or
two - she'll be in a mood to find the job that suits here. - SUE
P.S. Anyway, she'll search harder because she 'II have
made a $2,~lus investment in her future!

+++

the same judge has been used

state competition points are
deducted from the show ~core
if there is an inadequate

for both shows.
On Wednesday, Aug. 13,
Mrs . Allen Grossman will

number of entries. The 1974
Meigs County Fair flower
show received the first place

judge. Mrs . Grossma n is an

award in Ohio in county fair

expertenced judge , belonging
to the
Judges Guild of
Regions 8, 9, 10 and II.
Although she has never

flower shows.
Classes drawn by the clubs
are as follows:
BEND 0' THE RIVER :

judged a show in this area,

classes 7. " Fra nkenstein'' ; a.

she has given a Holiday

"Pic ni c" ; 58 . "Breakfas t at
Tiffany 's": 52 . "The Days of

demonstration at the regional
m eeting in Nelsonv ille , as

Wine and Roses."
CHESTER : c la sses

well as in other parts of the
stale. Mrs . Grossman is
currently serving as stale
chairwoman of State and
County Fair Flower Shows
ror the Ohio Association of
Garden Clu bs. ·Sh e an d her
ramily reside in Orient, Ohio,
where she is active in the
garden club and other civic

affairs.
Friday's judge will be Mrs.
·Robert Scherer, who came to
Mel.gs County several years
ago to judge a Christmas
Flower Show. She is also a
member of the Judges Guild
of Regions 8, 9, 10 and 11 and
has presented programs to

"Jezebe l ";

7.

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR ·POLLY - I would
like some information concerning painting walls with a
roller . Shoud I use a brush
around door and window
frames' Would a good grade
latex paint go on over oil base
paint that is now on the
walls' - TILLIE.

\

. ~..A.

·) I -:

....

DEAR fiLLIE - Last
question first - II flat
oil

3.

"Franken -

s tein": 53. "Jesus Christ,
Superstar," 56. "Sayona ra ."
MIDDLEPORT: classes 1.

"B irth Of a Nation" ; 5. "Send
Me No Fl owers" ; 53. "Jesus
Christ. Su perstar ," 56.
"Savonara ."

MIDDLE EPORT
TEUR : classes 1.

AMA
" Birth

Of a Nation" ; 6. "Gone With

The Wind"; 51. "F rom Here
To Eternity" ; 58 . "Breakfast

At Tiffany' s."
POMEROY : c la sses 1.
" Birth ot a Nation " : 6. " Gone
With The Wind": 51. " Fro m
Here

To Eternity"; 52 . "Days

of Wine and Roses ."

·

· Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Nicely

Couple married in
candlelight service

RUTLAND : classes 3
Dear Helen and Sue:
" JeLebe l" ; 4. "The Good, The
CLIFTON , W. Va. - The accessories. She is a 1975
Bad and The U~ly"; 5. "Send Clifton U. M. Church was the graduate of Wahama High
About "Thank-you" notes for wedding and shower gifts.
Me No Flowers'; 54. "200 1 A
Society says we must write them (and so do you, Helen), or
Space Odysse y. "
setting for the March 21 School. The groom is a 1973
we're stereotyped as careless and ungrateful hippie types. But
RUTLAND FRIENDLY : candlelight wedding of Miss graduate of Point Pleasant
what's a card, anyway ? I thanked my fri~nds when they gave various groups. Mrs. Scherer clas~es 7. " Frankenstein " ; Sherry Ann J efferie s to High School.
53. "Jesus Christ, Super me their gifts, and again after opening them. Mom insisted I received degree in Home star
Mr . and Mrs. Nicely left
"; 54 . "2001: A Space Clarence Wesley Nicely. The
also send out Utank-you notes, hut I don't think this is Economics from the Ohio Odyssey" ; 56. "Sayonara ." Rev. Rader M. Ogden, immediately for Houston,
d
'd
STAR: classes 1. " Birth of
·
·t
necessary as I felt they already knew I really appreciated their Sta t e Umversl
y, an resl es a Nation ": 6. "Gone with the Stonewood, W. Va. , per- · Tex., where they are making
presents.
in Circleville with her family. Wind"; 51. "From Here To for med the double-ring their home. He is an emTimes are changing, and I think a more relaxed way to
To assure that the artistic Eternity" ; 52. " Days of Wine ceremony .
ploy·e e of Ca meron Steel
express appreciation is overdue. - BRIDE
arrangement classes of both and Roses ."
The bride is the foster Corp., Houston .
. WILDWOOD : c lasses 1.
Out-of-.town guests atshows are filled , the Meigs " Birth of a Nation" : 5. "Send daughter of Mr . and Mrs.
Dear Helen and Sue :
.
County Garden Club again Me No Flowers"; 52 . "Days Joseph Posey, Clifton, and tending the wedding included
I was surprised to see your reply to " Irritated Relative "
this year drew for classes. of Wine and Roses; 55. " The the groom is the son of Mr . Mr . and Mrs . Earl W.
Inferno."
about the necessity of sending out thank-you notes for shower Each club is responsible for Towering
WINDING TRAIL: 4 . " The and Mrs. Lloyd Nicely, Robinson, Cheryl, Nick and
gifts.
furnishing al least one Good, The Bad and The Houston, Tex., and grandson David, Gallipolis ; Mrs. Ruth
l don't know about you, but I was brought up thinking that I
arrangement for each of the Ugly" : 7. " Frankenstein"; of Mrs. Eulah Workman, Miller, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard
should give for the pleasure of giving, and expect nothing in
four classes drawn, although 53 · "Jesus Ch ri s t, Super~ Point Pleasant.
T. Noble, Mrs . Lester
s tar" ; 58 . "Break fast At
return. - M. E .
clubs are ur ged to enter as Tiffany 's."
The bride chose an off- Johnson, Mrs. Eulah Workwhite satin and lace gown man and Mr . and Mrs. Tim
Dear·M. :
with chapel train , full sleeves Lewis, Point Pleasant;
And I was brought up to think if a friend cares enough to
and a victorian styled neck· Wesley Nicely, Huntington;
buy me a gift, I should care enough to send her a thank-you
line. A wide ruffle around the Mr. and Mrs. John C. Roush,
note. - SUE
The annual Singer Family Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Hollon, botom of the gown and tiny Carolyn Roush and Mr. and
+++
reunion was held Sunday at Mrs . Opal·Hollon and Rick, lace covered buttons ac- Mrs. Curtis Roush, West
Dear M.: (Also " Bride" )
Royal Oak Park with a basket Mr. and Mrs . Roger Bissell, cented the gown. She carried Columbia.
And I'm Ute one who brought Sue up Uta! way. Sorry, you
Bob Titus, Mr. 'IIJ!l- Mrs .
dinner at noon.
Alisha, Roger . Lorena, a nosegay of blue and white
two haven't convinced us differently . - HELEN
Alfred
Ruschell, 1\f.lry and
Gifts were presented to Christina, and Amanda, carnations . She wore gold
Anita,
Pomeroy;
Rev. Don
the oldest, the youngest boy Chester; Mr . and Mrs. - cross earrings, a gift of the
and girl there and the one Robert Bissell,
Danny groom. Her headpiece was a Cole, Mr. and Mrs. Joe
who traveled the farthest. Bissell, Mr. and Mrs . Charles satin bow fea turing lace Chapman and Linda Lou; Mr.
and Mrs. John Harrison and
The Bissell families, Sandra Bissell, Long Bottom ; Mr. overlay.
Mrs . Don Erwin en- Stewart, Mrs. Dale Hysell,
Long • and children and and Mrs . Gerald Hollon,
The church was decorated daughte r; Mr. and Mrs .
tertained Ute teachers of the Mrs. Carl Roach and Mrs. Sammy Rayburn provided Tammy
and
Scottie, with lighted ca ndles and George Lester, Lisa Nash,
Primary Department of Ute Stewart's mother Mrs. Donna
the entertainment. The Galloway; Mr. and Mrs. baskets of white lilies. The Mrs. Joe Turner, Mrs. Lewis
Mrs.
Raymond
Middleport Church of Christ Glaze .
reuni011 was scheduled for the Sterling Rayburn , Sterling, family pews were marked Ellis,
Walburn, Mrs . Gertie Kloes
wiUt a party at her home
Sending gifts were Mrs. Art last Sunday in July, .1976 at Jr ., and Samuel, Syracuse; with blue and white bows.
and
Mrs. Eulah Francis,
recently. The Erwin family Hess and Mrs. Mike Gerlach. the Park.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Riffle,
The bride 's maid-&lt;Jf-honor
will be moving in Ute near Amy Erwin assisted her
Attending were James Bruce , Pam, Betsy, Brenda was Charlene Oldaker, Hart- Middleport.
Bob Posey and Cathy, Joe
future to Winfield, W. Va .
mother in serving refresh- Kimes,
Dee
Roach, and Julie, Mr. and Mrs : ford, and the flower girl was
Bonnett and daughter,
Games were played and a ments.
Cleveland; Tammy and Tad Douglas Bisssell and family, Melissa Kearns, Clift~on.
Vienna;
Fred Knapp, Mrs. ·
surprise layette shower was
Kimes, Norwalk; Mrs. Lona Tuppers Plains; Mr . and
The
attendant
wore
held for Mrs. Mike Stewart.
POTLUCK PLANNED
Hollon and Shannon, Vienna; Mrs . Davij) Grate and son, identical blue and white floral Willis Martin, Mr. and Mrs .
Attending were Mrs. Stewart,
Plans have been made by Mr. and Mrs. Robert Parker, Rutland; Mr. and Mrs. David gowns and white velvet head George Ocheltree, Mrs.
Mildred GriffiUt, Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Baker, Mrs. Earl the Women's Auxiliary of Bobby and Kelly, Marietta; Riggins, Mr. and Mrs . Uoyd pieces.
.
Mrs
. Tammy Frazier and
McKinley, Mrs. Art Stobart; Veterans Memorial ·Hospital Mrs. Mattie Lawrence and Lipps, Toni and Chuck, Little
Roses were presented by
Mrs. Denver Rice, Mrs. Mack for a potluck dinner at the Bonnie, Clint Birch and Leola Hocking; Mr. and Mrs. Joe the brtde to her mother, the daughters, Dee Dee ·and
home of Mrs. Leona Karr on Birch, Portland; Mr. and Lipps , Gail and Terry , groom's grandmother and Celeste and Mr. and Mrs .
Dolphe Posey, Stonewood, W.
Tuesday, Aug. 19. At Uta! Mrs. Dwight Bissell, Jeff and Vincent; Mr. and Mrs . Bruce Mrs. Evelyn Nicholson .
time also a silent auction will Sherri, Reedsville; Mr. and Enlow, Newport; Mr. and
The bride was escorted to Va.
BIRTHDAY HONORED
be held by Ute ways and Mrs. Frank Holter, Racine ; Mrs. Elson Long "and family , the altar by her foster father.
Mrs
. David Huddleston
means committee. The Mrs. Ethel Cooper, Parkers- Letart, W. Va. ; and Angela Bob Titus, Pomeroy, served
dinner will he at 6:30p.m.
burg ; Mrs. Ada Van Meter. Navarini, Clarksburg, W.Va. as best man. Ushers were entertained Friday with a
, - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . , Kendell Clendennin and Fred surprise birthday party
Nibert, Point Pleasant.
honoring her mother, Mrs.
Selections were played on Grace Holter.
the piano by Miss Theresa
Assisting Mrs . Huddleston
Ellis, Middleport.
Songs were Mrs. Cora Mae Joachim
Included "Theme
From and Mrs. Edith Calvert. Cake
Love
Story"
and
"The was served with homemade
So you did a baugup
Lord's Prayer" sung by Fred ice cream, nuts, mints and
Knapp, Stonewood .
coffee. A gift was presented
· Andnowyou're
The bride's foster moUter to Mrs . Holter. Guests were
wore a blue gown, with white Mrs. Virginia Wyatt, Mrs.
trouble making
Jean Kloes, Miss Eleanor
accessories.
light of your troU~
A reception was held in the Robson, Mrs. Genevieve
Well,tbere'eaiiOlu·
social room of the church. Schneider, Miss Myrtis Kay
The bride's table featured a Parker, Mrs. Norma Parker,
ticlu·. Hurry on down
wedding cake trimmed in Mrs. Emma ClatworUty and
toa~troUble·
blue and white, topped with Mrs. Addalou Lewis.
your indethe tradi tiona! bride and
BOND SALES NOTED
pendent inlurancP
groom.
June 197~ sales of Series E
Serving the punch was Mrs. &amp; H United States Savings
apnt.
Earl W. Robinson, Gallipolis, Bonds in Ohio were $34.8
· We~ ent.you.
assisted by Mrs. John C. million. At Ute end of June,
· tint. And we
to
Roush, West Columbia. Mrs. the slate attained 50.4 percent
Meigs Tire Center will pay your ferry fee
Alfred Ruse held, Pomeroy, of its 1975 sales goal.
expedite a fast, fair
one way .
·
served
the cake. Lamela Theodore T. Reed, Jr., Meigs
IIBttlement
of yow
.
Sisk, New Haven, registered County Volunteer Savings
clainll;
the guests.
Borids Chairman, reported
For her wedding trip, Mrs. June sales of Savings Bonds
Meigs Tire Center will pay your ferry fee
Nicely
wore a blue and white in Ute county were $23,596,
both ways.
check pantsuit with navy 37.5 percent of its annual
This Includes car, truck, farm tire repairs, re-caps and new tires,
sales goal.

Singer family reunites

Party entertains group

,)

Attention WEST VIRGINIA People!

The Ferry

eboOter:

used ·• on

the walls lattx will go
~n over it just line. If enamel
was used or there is any shine
or gloss, the walls will have to
be sanded first as latex must
be applied to a dull surface.
Start wiUt the ceiling. Paint
from side to side, that is
across the width of the room,
allowing one strip to overlap
another. Brush paint on walls
next to all trim - doors,
baseboards, windows, etc.
and in the corners before
rolling it on the walls. When
painting walls with a roller
get paint onto the wall
working surface first and
Uten spread it out, evenly
moving roller back and forth
to spread and smooUt . POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - I made a
hanger for plants in pots out
of old nylon hose and rings
from pull-top beverage cans.
Following Ute design of Ute
popular commercial hangers
made with knotted cord or
string I used the rings instead
of knots. Six stockings were
used for one hanger . I first
knotted all the toes together
before starting wiUt the rings
at the bottom. The hems of
the hose were opened to give
more length and less bulk. I

Teachers
hold picnic
Teachers of the Primary
Department of the Middleport Church of Christ held
a picnic recently for Ute
children at the Community
Park.
Games were played and
pictures were taken. Children
attending were Matthew
Erwin , Chris Stewart, Tala
Morris, Clinton Glaze ,
Jennifer McKinley, Kathy
Thomas, Sammy Hall, Patty
Ward , Kelly Neff, Trey
Glaze, Melanie Arnold, Jeff
Arnold, Terri Sprouse, Darin
Roach, Darin Wolfe, John
Arnold, Carol Bailey, Scott
McKinley, Amy Erwin, Belli·
Wolfe, Danny Thomas, Jody
Miller, Sherrie Arnold, Tim
Miller, Cheryl Riffle, Tonya
Stobart, Tammy Stobart,
Debbie Holland and Tammy
Welsh.
Adults were Mr. and Mrs.
George Glaze, Mr . and Mrs.
Mike Stewart, Mr. and Mrs.
Earl McKinley, Mr. and Mrs.
Don Erwin, Mr. and Mr:i.
Dale Hysell, Mr. and Mrs.
Mack Stewart, Mrs . Art Hess,
Mrs. Jack Neff, Mrs. Art
Stobart and Mrs. Carl Roach.

Wide Selection

LOVES YOU!

Summer Shoes

From

I

was

Meigs Tire Center

Drive Over

havq

paint

West .Virginia

At
Clearance Prices

Pv.u..u.'-.L

nJESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Masonic
Lodge 363 meeting, 7:30p.m.
All Master Masons invted.
POMEROY CHAPTER 186,
O.E.S., 7 : 4~ p.m. at the
Pomeroy Mason Temple.
WINDING TRAIL Garden
Club, 6:30p.m., at Ute river
camp of Mr . and Mrs .
Charles Hayes . Covered dish
picnic with workshop on
Meigs County fair flow er
show. Everyone to meet at
Ute parking lot for the trip on
Ute ferry.
RocK SPRINGS Grange, 8
p.m. at the hall to vacate Ute
building for Ute Meigs County
Fair.

fini shed the top and bottorq
by wrapping wiUt colored
yarn, put a colored ball at Ute
bottom and secured a ring for
hanging in the top. This made
an altractive, attractive,
adjustable . hanger.
ELLEN.
DEAR ELLEN- This Ide
was quile Intriguing to me :
and I wish Ellen had been a •
bit more detailed about it. •
The way I figured It out ls ;
that the tied-together-toes :
made a "cradle" at Ute '
bottom to hold the pot, the :
can rings were slipped along
at intervals to hold each •
stocking Into a tighter length :
and the six bose were ;
securely fastened together ill '
the top (remember the pot Is :
going to be a bit heavy) :
before wrapping with Ute
wool. The ring at the top for ·
hanging surely must he a .
stronger one than a can top ·
ring he cause of the weight. :
Just the suggestion of using,
those ring tops and the old :
•
bose opens up all sorts of·
possibilities and I feel sure ·
many of you will start with
Utat Idea and use your own·
imaglonations. - POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - I always;
carry a heavy bath towel Ill:
the car and spread it over Ute~
steering wheel when I Jl&amp;rl!:':'
the car in the host sun. This
keeps the wheel from getting·
so hot it burns my harids. EDNA.

Middleport, Ohio

teady
fot &amp;c.hool
.· and •••

PRICED

UNDER
$35

~
'

.

Rtuter-Brotat:l

INSURANCE
fill. f9W1M

I'

,.

_...,

. lfweciait -

motor oil and anti freeze. To qualify you must have West ,Virginia
li'cense on your car. This offer good while bridge is closed this year.
.

Now Featuring

.

"Something Special For The Loved Ones"

' .

FRESH PEACH

SPECIAL VALVOLIN E ANTI-FREEZE
BOTH FOR OHIOANDW. VA.

AND MILX SHAKES

PER G.A LLON. 3.65

hllpyau,lllbody,

Umited 2 Per Person.

.

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

Jus! Fot Month of. August
.

Adolph's Dairy._
Vallev·..

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

,MEIGS TIRE CENTER
700 E. Main ·

SlJJI!~~ES .

·John .P . Fultz, OWner ·

Pomeroy,

o.

Hrs,: 10:00 A.M. Tilll :00 P.M. .Sun.- Thur.
10:00 A.M. Til12:00 P.M. ·Frl.&amp; Sat.
oo?-2556
W: MAIN
POMEROY,O.
. '.,I

PHONE 992-3480
we reserve the right to limit quantities.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

USDA Choice Fresh &amp; lean

GROUND BEEF

WE;E~ERS ................. ~k:~· 79~
SUPERIORS ALL MEAT

BOLOGNA ............... •b.

lb.

89~

WIENERS................. ~k;~· 89

~

SUPERIORS ALL BEEF

FRESH AND LEAN

HAM SALAD.: ....... lb.

99

,

GROUND ROUND

1.09

lb.

•1.19

lb.

1

SATURD A Y
ONLY
•

FAVORITE

Scot Lad
Saltines

Coke &amp; Sprite

BREAD

1~b.

4

box

lvs.

MIX OR MATCH

for

64

SPECIAL

Fluffo
3-lb. can
Shortening

oz.

Throw Away
U.S. GRADE A SMALL

. Bottle

FROZEN FOODS
Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Dabo
have returned from a week's
vacation. They visited
relatives and friends in
Columbus and Uten went to
CWnberland Gap and Middlesboro, Ky. for a few days.
Mrs. Sadie Thuener,
Syracuse, and grandson,
John Lehew, Pomeroy, spent
several days in Cincinnati
and attended Ute Cincinnati
Reds' ball game.
Mrs . Harry Davis, Spring
Ave., Pomeroy, entered
University
Hospital,
Columbus, Saturday for
observation and treatment.

We're offering this watch
two ways . It's an excellent
value . Precis ion ieweled .
Classic in style . Wit h
textured goldtone case,
sweep second, full numeral
dlal a·nd unbreakable
mainspring . Water and
shock resistant . Bulova
guaranteed. And very

BIRTH ANNOUNCED
Mr. and Mrs. Allan Harris,
Rt. . 3, Pomeroy, are announcing Ute birth of a seven
lb., 14 oz. daughter, Sarah
Jane, on July 31 at Ute Holzer
Medical Center. Mrs. K. A.
Grueser of Pomeroy is the
grandmoUter. Mr. and Mrs.
Harris also have a son, Don
Aflan.

modestlv oriced. ·

JEWELRY STORE
. Court St., Pomeroy

COMPLETES TRAINING
Rick Hollon, son of Mrs.
Opal Hollon, recently completed auto diesel mechanic
training in Nashville, Tenn.
arid today began employment
at the A. R. Huffman and
Sons, Marietta.

.•.

.,

. We SHOW &amp; TELL
THE STORY BEHIND

"
...
.·.•.

PROVIDED MUSIC
Mrs. · Clarice Erwin,
organist, played a half hour
of nuptial music at· the
wedding of Drema Arlene
Ward and Raymond Henry
Roach June 28 at the Middleport Church of Christ. Her
selections included "The
Lord's Prayer.'' · "Love

.,
•,•

FINE FURNITURE
AND·APPLIANCES

..",

.
..

\

.BAKER .FURNITURE

Story," uo, Perfect. Love,"
"0 Promise Me.'' ~~sweetest
Story

.,.

Ever

Told"

PARTY ICE
10 lb.

PRINCE

MACARONI and
CHEESE DINNERS

4
boxes

Facial
Tissues

2 boxes

"

16 oz. bois.

R£G. 11.39

16 ounce
container

Friday Only

-··scoT LAD FRENCH FRIED

DIET RITE
FLAVORS

POTATOES

SURE
JELL
TENDER
VITTLES
9 LIVES
CAT FOOD

. bxs.

bxs.

5 lb.
bag

$
$

89~

NOODLES .................~~:..

.

ICE MILK BARS..........~~..~~~ .

$

BROUGHTON'S

Swiss Sundae

YOGURT..........~~~ ........ :.4 for

and

Plus Oep.

ALL WEEK LONG ·

g~

$

1

2
8
9~
CHOC. MILK., ... .. ..... .... qts.
BROUGHTON'S

Erwin'.s name .was unin-

for

Dad's Root Beer

Diet Rite Cola

8 pak f39 ·

8 pak 1.19

.'
~

I

'\

I

,.

'

'

.

$} 00

8

NORTll STAR

cans

4

qts.

8 oz. 39~

REAM'S EGG

"

"

RC

STRAWBERRIES

' I

"

-

FROZEN

lentlonally omi!ted from the
wedding account.

'

On~y

Thursday

bag

KLEENEX

••AQoramus te Christe.'' Mrs. '

.

Mldcllepert, 01110

~

I

FRESH AND LEAN

GROUND CHUCK

~

HOME MADE

c

Any
Amount

·--~--~~------~

(

lb.

Specially
Priced

lugust Is Sandwich Month!

FRIDAY
REVIVAL nolv in progress
at French City Baptist
Church, Burlingham, Utrough
Sunday. Evangelist is Dennis
Robertson. Services 7:30p.m.
nightly.
SQUARE DANCE, Senior
Citizens Center, Bo30 to 11 :30
p.m. Bob Pickett, caller;
Drifters providing Ute music.
Cake walka, refreshments.
Admission $1, children under
12 free.
SUNDAY
DISTRICT 13 Past Councilors Association, Daughters
of America, I :30 p.m. picnic
at Ute Wilson Park near Coolville.

Buy '30.00 or More of·Merchandise

~~

Corner Mill and Second Sts.

THURSDAY
ANNUAL PICNIC Catholic
Women's Club.. at Middleport
Community Park, 7 p.m.
Members take cqvered dish
and.own table service .

q~t

We prepare these steaks dally
from USDA Choice Superiors
beef. Guaranteed fr es h &amp;
tender. Four to 6 In package.

We Accept Federal Food Stamps

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY Lodge [64, F.
and A.M. regular meeting,
7:30p.m. All master masons
invited.
THURSDAY
TWIN CITY Shrinettes, 8
p.m., at Ute home of Mrs.
Lora Byers, Rt. 2, Gallipolis.
Members urged to attend.
EVANGELINE
Chapter
172, O.E.S., 7:30 p.m. at the
Middleport Masonic Temple.
Twenty-five year pin to he
presented. SUent auction with
proceeds to go Into the
educational loan fund and Ute
fire safety code fund. Sunshine collection for ESTARL.

Buy '15.00 or More of Merchandise

Work

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

DREW WEBSTER Post 39,
American Legion, regular
meeting, 8 p.m . at post home ;
important discussion to be
held.

GOESSLER'S

heritage house

Unbelievably Delicious!
Featured At Mark V

Social
Calendar

Rolkr painting
sans·pain

man y artistic classes and
County Fair flower shows for , horticullure classes as
this year has been an- possible .
nounced . A different judge
Mrs. Carpenter stressed
will be used for each day of that horticulture entries are
the judging, Mrs . James especially needed since in
Carpenter , chairwoman,
reports. In previous years,

5- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy~,0~···Tu:e~sd~a~y~,A~ug:-~5••1~9~75~••111!1•••••••••••••~••••

11 y I'ULL Y CKAMt:lt

A new feature of the Meigs

Bring a LUI?

'.

..

.....
'

'

..

�7- The Daoly Sentmel, Moddleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Tuesday, Aug 5, 1975

6 - The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 . Tuesdav Au g 5, 1975
- ~c~
.· ~~~~~~~~?&lt;-~
' ~-2&gt;~~
11111111

-

~~~~~~c&gt;&lt;?~~i ·
-

We never close

- - - - - -

Editorial comment,
• •
opznzon, features

RAY CROMJ.EY

Jury partly hung up

Stacking the deck

T~PA,

via obfuscation

)l.

Oil spills are a double debt
Despote the publlcoty that mev1tably surrounds such spectacular 01! spoils as the well
blowout on Santa Barbara Channel on 1966 or the breakup of the tanker Torrey Canyon off the
coast of England m 1967, ot os not these fortunately rare accodents that pose the greatest threat '
to the world 's marone ec ology
Rather , 1t ts the dehberate , routme, day-m, day-&lt;&gt;ul use of the oceans as a dwnpmg ground
for ool wastes The practoce of flushong out tanker holds at sea after unloading thetr cargoes
ashore controbu tes far more to pollutiOn than all the spectacular spoils put together
Normally, lhts practice goes unnoticed, except by the coastal dwellers , human a nd
otherwose, dorectly affected The tarry blobs of congealed ool that swept ashore on a 25-m ole
front along the lower F loroda Keys JUSt recently were an excep hon only because of theor
magmtude . In th os mstance, a n estunated 85,000 lo 120,000 ga llons of crude had been dumped
by some urudenlifoed tanker
There are laws aga inst this sort of thmg The trouble os that on the heavtly traveled shopplllg lanes ot os ahnost unpoSSible to connect any particular ool slick woth any particular vessel
Shop owners and shop captams know this, and thus they contonue to use the ocean a s a converuent sewer
If the laws agaonst ool dumpong cannot be enforced, then some way has to be found to make
11 more converuent - and profotable- for tankers to dispose of the resodual ool on theor hold s on
port. There is supp6sed to be an energy shortage, a fter all And woth foreogn crude sellmg for
more than $13 barrel a barrel, the thousands and thousa nd s and thousands of barrels of 1t bemg
wasted in this manner must amount to a considerable swn
In the m eantune, ot IS a little oromc that the resodents of some eastern states remaon
adamantly opposed to drollmg of theor coasts, whole the se same coasts are daoly subjected to !;'\,4i
pollullon by oollhal was pumped from fields thousands of nules away

The real Gerald Ford
Presodent Ford carne up woth plenty of egg on hos face because of hos oll-advosed decosoon
not to meet woth Alexander Solzherutsyn when the diSSident Russoan wroter forst came to thos
country a few weeks ago The later extensoon of an open whole House onvota toon to Solzhenotsyn,
which the Nobel laureate turned down, did little to repaor the damage.
But if it is meet and proper to chastoze the Presodent, as a raft of commenlators dod , when
he makes a stinkeroo of a blunder, ot is JUSt as mandatory to praJSe hun when he puts astde
affaors of state and "cons ideratoons of policy" "and does the decent, human thing
Thos he did in the case of the famoly of Dr Frank Olson, a government scoentost who , ot has
only now been revealed was admmostered LSD wothout hos knowledge by the CIA back on 1953
when Uoe agency was testong the effects of this and other hallucogenoc drugs on human gwnea
By Torn Tiede
pigs. As a consequenceofthe dosage , Olson "mysteriously" commotted suocode.
ST
LOUIS,
Mo - Teddy
All this happened 22 years ago, when Gerald Ford was a little-known congressman from
Michigan. Nevertheless, as President of the United States, he mvlted the Olsons to the White · Nadler lives m th1s town You
remember h1m . Nmeteen
House, where he personally apologozed to them on behalf of the government and promosed to
flflo
es? Televosoon quoz
make available to them all informatoon on the case and to ask the attorney general to doscuss a
shows 1
fmancial settlement woth theor legal representatoves
Nadler was the man of a
"You can't conceive of how movmg ot was to hear hun say how outraged he was at thos
molllon facts, an Army depot
travesty of American hostory, " satd a son, Ntis Olson, after the meetong woth the President
lahorer who among other
"We were aU very much amazed at how genu me and smcere he was at extendong his sympathy
and concern ~"
thongs knew the name of
every island in the world In a
This, we believe was the real Gerald Ford, not the Ford of the unfortuna te Solzherutsyn
day when game show conaffaor
testants were natton al
celebritoes, he won a record
$264,000, and woth little
emollon. One recalls the chap
The importance of Jightmg m the nation's consumption of energy was dramatically un- coppmg thousands of dollars
derscored - and, say some critics, ridiculously overemphastzed - a couple years ago
each week woth qUiet
Remember the blackout of outdoor Chrostmas decoratiOns in the wake of the ml embargo a nd acknowledgement ,
never
the adoption Qf daylightsavong tune on the moddle of wmter?
more than composed dognity
But whtle lighting accounts for only about 5 per cent of all the prunary energy the country
Tempus fug tt - Today
uses, it is true Uoat It IS probably the greatest single consumer of elect roc power
daytome qwz programs are
In New York Coty, about 40 per cent of Consolidated EdiSOn's annual productwn of elec- structured more to physocal
tricity goes for light. Nationwide, the figure is about 25 per cent, adding up to some $7 bolhon on than mental dexteroty Teddy
electric bills each year.
Nadlers are not welcome
A 50 per cent reduction m lightmg levels could save consumers $3.5 annually, as well as Contestants wmmng $300
reducing the threat of Intermittent " brownouts" that have plagued many areas.
washmg machines are
Is such a goal realistic? It os, according to one expert, Howard Brandston, prestdent of requested to lose poundage on
Lighting Design, Inc., of New York Cioty.
stage
on
extroverted
" We are an overllt soctety that uses far more light than IS necessary for eye comfort or gratotude Not that many
efflcoent task performance," he says.
have to be coaxed; a Sl Louos
One reason we are an overlit society os that varoous segments of the lightmg mdustry ao e resident who used to be
working diligently to perpetuate Uoe myth that low light equals bad sight." Brandston claoms, assocoated with Truth or
despite all kins of medical evidence to the contracy. One company, for example, offers con- Consequen ces recalls the
, sumers a choice between a standard bulb and an "eye-savmg" bull - yet the higher-proced time one wmner became so
bulb actually delivers less light output than the standard kmd.
exctted "she took a deep
In thos country, the Illummating Engrneering Society (IES) publis hes guodes for recom- breath and her pantoes
, mended light levels for a broad variety of settings and tasks. These standards have become a dropped to the floor. "
kind of lighting law of the land.
Underwear drops are one
"
Based on Uoem, New York City requores 70 footcandles of light for all areas of a public
library, regardless of function. By contrast, in Great Britam, which also has an IES, hbrary
lighting os broken down Into nine district functions, with a maxunum recommended intensoty o!
46.5 footcandles.
Again In New York, office buildmg corrodors use nearly 150 footcandles, but the BroUsh IES
recommends only nme, and there is no greater incidence of sight hnpairment in Great Britain
than m the Unoted Slates.
The people who are promoting light have been making themselves heard, says Brandston.
"We need to hear loudly and clearly from the design and medical professoonals concerned woth
sight that there is no relationship between eye damage and rational lighting levels "

TOM TIEDE

By Ray Cromley
WASIUNGTON - There are limes when congressmen
must deliberately word bills they sponsor to msure their defeat
m a floor vote or veto by Presodent Ford. This is the "':'ly
possoble explanatlon for the nitpicking phraseology m a senes
of proposals whoch would requore all rruddle- and higherechelon government offocoals and military men and women
and members of Congress to report their fmancial dealings
.
and contacts woth lobbyists.
The objectives expressed m these bills are of the hoghest.
Exposure of influence peddling and conflicts of interest m the
government os long overdue, both on Capitol Hill and in those
departments and agencoes which deal m multibollions of
dollars of public money, whoch regulate the airlme~, railroads,
trucking forms a nd drug manufacturers, or whoch enforce
product and employment safety, pollution and anti-trust
reguiations.
we, all of us, most certamly need to know who or wh~t
outside for ces mfluence our offocoals and lawmakers It IS
essentia'l to he aware of those mvestments and other provale
connections which could effect the voting of congressmen and
the actions of admmostratoon officwls
Because the voters demand ot, there 's a plethora of bills
thts sesston on lobbying and conflict of mterest fmancial
disclosure. These sound like the answer to a citizen's prayer
until you read the !me prmt.
The catch is that the sponsors and other backers of these
bills requore such a mass of trivoa and demand reporting so
lime consummg that middle and higher grade government
offiCials would be spendmg an mordinale amount of their lime
sending m mformation on trrelevant delails. Numnbers of
senators and representatlves would be caught In the same box.
Take this dandy phrase from one House bill- HR. 15 ·
All offlcwls and employes of the executive branch in GS
grade I~ and above - roughly $30,000 up - and all others
responsible for making or recommending decisiOns affecting
policymaking " shall prepare a record of each oral or wrotten
communication receoved dorectly or by referral from outside
parties expressing an opinion or conlainong infonnation woth
respect to the policymakmg process."
That phraseology os so sweeping that a government official , to keep hlmseH clean, would have to report almost every
conversation he had wtth his neoghbors, or at parties, or at the
ball game - which m any way affected government policy.
And most conversallons do, sooner or later,ln Washmgton.
By another proVISion, the unhappy official would be
producers often select from requored to record all Jetlers from outsiders - and people
crowds of hopefuls outsode wrote into the government by the thousands, usually comthe studoo lot; the potentials plainmg about this policy or that.
shout and wave and make
Then take the reporting on investments, as proposed. What
funny sounds and random we really need to know is whether someone on a congressoonal
selections are made from the banking committee, or an admmistrallon official workmg in
mob
bank regulation, for example, has a significant personal
Once selec ted, contestants financial interest In banks, direct or mdirect. But a major bill
are told to " Jump up and now being considered in Congress, H. R 324!1, would requore
down on stage, shout, squeal" that every member of the Senate and House, every govern·
•- anything to electrify the ment officoal GS grade 15 and above and every armed forces
envtronment On one recent officer, colonel or Navy captam and above, disclose any Inprogram , accordmgly, a vestments worth $1,000 that he and his wife hold, or any buying
woman dressed on a football or selling of more than $1,000 m securotoes, commodolles or
unoform hecan to cry even other real property in a year.
before she won $769 worth of '
Now you can't buy a hundred shares of most stocks for
1aW1dry machmes A woman $1,000 - and if we are going to hold investments of this soze up
followong, who won $1,000 as possible confliCts of interest we have lost all sense of
worth of electronocs eqwp- proportion This reporting would clutter up the works and
ment, kissed host Monty Hall make the law a rodiculous monstrosity.
before , dunng and after
skills, and winnmgs are the quarter-million he won in the
(twice) her turn. "There is
joy m Joy Thompson," satd product of acctdent Thus the 1950s, the government took 60
Hall to the kissmg contestant, football uniforms, kisses, etc. percent fur 20 years and lives
who, by the way, was dressed Wtthout •them milltons of now
in
obscurity
and
as a raolroad engineer.
housewtves would turn to The depression.
There are, of course, Secret Storm or an a fternoon
That's show btz
commercoal explanations matmee.
behmd every squeal on And if profit explams the
today's quoz programs
producing sode of quiz show ' r-...::-::-'-o !:9:::-c===---i'
Lackmg the mtellectual exaggeratoons, 1t probably
DEVOTED TD THE
suspense of earlier game defines as well motivation
INTER EST DF
shows, and offermg far less on of most contestants. Greed 1s
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL
the way of potential fmancoal the stunulus. If one has to
Exec. Ed
reward,
contemporary play the foot for the odds so
ROBERT HOEFLICH
C•tv Edttor
Pf.QIIucers rely on bombast to be it. Would-he contes~ts
Publ •s hed da 1rv ex ce pt
fa'fl'en audoence ratings and .., for Let's Make A Deal often Saturday by The Oh tO Va ll e"t
Publtshmg company 111
lure sponsors Contestants on elbow each other savagely to Court St, Pomeroy 'Ohio
Let's Make A Deal use no catch the producer's eye. 45769 Bus mess Off 1ce' Phon e
992 2156 Ed•tonal Phone 99 2
Arguments, even fights 2157
ond class postage pa 1d
haveerupted
between at Sec
Pomeroy , Oh 1o
Nat•onal
advert•s 1ng
competitors Says the ABC representat
Ward
1ve
executive
mentioned Grtff•th Company In c
Bott•nell• &amp; GaHagfler 0 , 11 •
be! or~. "It's queer, really 757
Third Ave. New York'
'
wliat people woll do for a new N Y 10017
Subscr~phon
ra t es
refrogerator. Some of the Delivered
by carr 1er where
people connected with our available 75 cents per week
By Mo tor Route where
quoz show have been earner
serv 1 ce
not
One month SJ 2'5
propositioned by women available,
By mall m Oh •o and W va
wantong a chance. It gives One Year, $22 00
5 •
nutritional value from tl
months
$11 so,
'rhr~~
What IS the truth about thos ? you pause. Is a refrogerator months, $7 00 Elsewhere
26 00 year
s •x months
Is there anythmg at all wrong really that Important?
13 50 three months, $7 50
'-" ubscrtpl •on pr, ce •ncludes
with drmking water with your
Teddy Nadler can answer r: unday Ttmes Sentmel
meals?
DEAR READER - The the last question. Of the
little rumor is just one more
btl
of
mosmformation
provided to the public.
Your food os going to be
diluted with water anyway.
The digestive juices in the
stomach and those from the
pancreas and small intestine
are mostly water . The extra
water content in your food is
qmckly absorbed mto the
bloodstream, leavmg what
you need to keep the food at
the right consistency for
digestion.
Dtd you know that food
can't even leave the stomach
until it has been liquified of
at least converted into a
slush-like consistency?
The water may help to fill
you up at first and give you a
more satisfied feeling . This is
helpful m people who tend to
overeat anyway.
Then there is lots of water
on your food Lean round
steak is 70 per cent water,
milk 87 per cent, bread about
25 per cent and juice is mosUy
water . Finally, breaking
down such dry foods as table
" Yoo-hoo, W1l/.r' Two men from the federal
sugar for energy liberates
government are llere to see you Somethmg
carbon diOJOde and water.
about can mng lids "

AIRMAN ASHWORTH
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. Airman Charles D. Ashworth, son of Mrs. Dorothy
M. P aul, Clairsville, Ohio,
has been selected for
technical training In the U.
S. Air Force accounting
and finan ce fi eld at
Sheppard AFB, Tex. He is
a 1974 graduate of Point
Pleasant High School. His
fath er, retired Air Force
Senior Master Sergeant
Allred H. Ash,.orth, lives
In Ne.l Haven.

Fla (U PII - The
JUry says it is " unanunously
and emp hato c ally"
deadlocked on some counts m
the broberyconspiracy troal of
former U S. Sen Edward
Gurney and three assocoales.
The judge says that's not
good enough
" Thi s IS an Important
case," satd U S District
Judge Ben Krentzman , who
sent the JUrors back for more
deliberations today " ThiS
lrtal has been expenstve in
lime a nd effort and money,
both to the defendants and to
the prosecutoon
" I am going to ask that you
go back to the JUry room and
gove further consoderatoon to

the remammg matters," he
satd Monday
The jury, whoch began
deliberatoons none days ago m
the love-month trial, handed
Krentzman a sealed envelope
Monday contammg several
verdicts, but saJd they were

deadlocked on some of the
charges
" After long and careful
de liberation s on all charges
and all the defendants, we
have been able to come to
verdicts on some defendants
and some charges on others,
but not all ," sa od one note the
Jury sent to the JUdge
" We,lhe JUry, unanunously
and emphalocally agree that
we ha ve reached all verdocts
that can possobly be reached ,
of
further
r ega rdless
dellberatoons, and we feel
that on consoderatoon of all
concerned, we should make
the court aware of this," the
note added
Krentzman mvoted the
Jurors mto the courtroom and
asked the foreman to seal the
verdi.cts m an envelope
Krentzman reciled the soca lled " Allen Charge," sometimes called the "shotgun
charge," urgong those on the
mmor1ly to gtve more

Too mtich light on the subject

emotwns are reachmg the
pomt where "we worry about
some of these people - not
JUSt about them physi cally
but emotoonally Some of
them are so wound up by the
tome they get on the aor,
anythmg could happen. I
don ' t know of any case where
a loser has hit a host, but ot
could happen l've seen some
of these people after they lost
a btg proze and they are just
desolate One minute they are
Jumpong up and down on
an tocopallon, the next mmute
they are desolated by defeat
There os some rosk here, I
thmk. "
Risks or no, none of the
dozen major qwz shows of the
day has any trouble enticmg
contestants. Even Let's Make
A Deal, the show where
contestants are required to be
extroverts, turns away
hundreds of would-be players
daoly
Accordmg to program

producers, contestants are
selected on the basts of
kookiness alone " We want
lively people, outgomg
people, people woth mfectious
enthusoasm." To get them

DR. LAMB

Carbohydrates fit in nonnal diet

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I have
a book on carbohydrates, and
ot says that all you need os 55
to 60 grams of carbohydrate a
~
There must be money in oil. Standard Oil of Ohio ( Sohoo ), whtch ranks only 12th among U
day It says that of you don't
, S. petroleum producers, has just completed arrangements to borrow a whoppmg $1 75 billoon consume any more than that
. the most money ever borrowed at one time by any Amerocan corpora lion - to finance the
you won't have to count
, trans-Alaska pipeline.
calories and that you'll never
The massive debenture, sold to 76 Insurance companies, pension funds and bank trust
gam weight Is thos true ~ If
, departments, comes on top of another $1.5 billion the company has borrowed smce 1973 to pay
ot's not, what os the proper
.'.'for the devefopment of its Prudhoe Bay oil field.
amount of carbohydrate you
"We saw people coming mto Uoos offering with money on volumes htgher than they ' ve
should have a day?
: ever conumtted to one deal before," says Paul D. Phillips, a Sohio senior vice presodent.
DEAR READER - It ts
The reason is not hard to discern. Sohio owns haH of an estimated five billion barrels of ool
half true You need a
.,In Alaska and figures that, after subtracting drilling and transportation costs, 11 woll net about
mmhnum of 50 grams of
$6 a barrel when Uoe oil starts flowmg m 1977. That's at today 's prtces.
carboyhdrate (about 400
"
And while Uoe President and the Congress contmue to wrangle over what tomorrow's ool
caloroes 1 a day to prevent
~'price will be, one Uting is certam, and Uoat is that it will not be lower In 1977than 11 os on 1975.
abnormal chemical changes
,,
m the body causmg a confhe Almanac
dillon we call ketosos and
United Press International
other undesirable effects on
In 1962, actress Marilyn
• Today is TueSday, Aug. ~. M;mroe died of an overdose of
the body.
Uoe 217th day of 1975, with 148 barbiturates.
But, you also need enough
to follow.
carbyhydrate
- contamong
In 1963, Uoe United Slates,
~· The moon is approaching Jlritsin and Russia signed a
foods to provode needed
•Its new phase.
vitamins , mmerals and
treaty outlawing nuclear
~ ·, The morning stars are tests m the earth's atespecoally bulk for a normal
..Mars, Jupiter and Saturn.
healthy diet That requires
mosphere, In space or under
; , The evening stars are Mer- the sea.
more carbohydrate a day .
cury and Venus.
Cereal
bulk os particularly
In 1974, President Nixon
Those born on Ulis date are admitted ordering a halt to _
...._ omportan t to your body for
o:lllldeF the sign of Leo.
normal function.
Uoe Watergate mvestlgation
• French I!Ov'elist Guy de six days after the break-in.
And, you need to know that
. Maupuaant was born Aug. ~.
your body will take any
;,JJ50,
protein you don't use for
A thought for the day :
: . On Ulis day in history:
Spanish novelist Miguel De "It dodn't end like thos in the builamg 1 and convert tl to
~ , In 11181, the U.S. govern- Cervantes said,
either fat or carbohydrate.
"Great recipe
t1Jiellt lmpoied Ute first in· persons are able to do great
The calories of fat or carcame tu. All incomes over kindnesses.••
bohydrate denved from
protem 'a re just as fattening
• were taxed 3 """ cent.

_Sohio brings in a gusher

\NI

,,

.

.

'

{

~I

as any other c alories
Calories are energy unlts and
do count, just as kilowatts of
energy and do count on your
ele c tnc boll Too many
colones of any kind, protein,
fat , carbohydrate, or alcohol,
can lead to obesoty.
The !rock IS that many
protem foods are low m
calones. Lean meat os 70 per
cent water The end result is
that you can eat a lot of real
low fat, prolem foods and not
consume many calories.
Anythong that results on
Juno ling the on take of calories
!units the obesity proglem,
but the calories do count.
To better understand the
role of carbohyi!rates m the
dtet and avoid being misled
by all those diet gunmicks
based on low carbohydrates,
send me 50 cents and
stamped,
self-addressed
envelope m care of Uois newspaper, P. 0. Box 1551, Radio
City Station, New York, NY
10019, and ask for The Health
Letter number 2-2 on Low
Carbohydrate Diet Fads .
Send a long, stamped selfaddressed envelope and 50
cents for mailing and costs
DEAR DR. LAMB - I
would Joke to know if drinking
water wtlh your meal can
hmder you m any way. I have
heard that ot do lutes your food'
and you don't get as much

Berrys World

I

' '

tl'lought to 1he1r poslllOOS.

The judge saod the verdocls
would he kept m a vault unto!
the jW')' has completed ols
work
Krentzman dod not say how
long he would keep the Jurors
at work. But last week he said
he would not consider two
week s of deliberations excesSIVe

1

There was no indication
whether the jury was hung on
counts mvolvmg Gurney or
his assocoales
Gurney IS charged with
consporacy m a $400,000 onfluence peddlmg scheme Involving the Federal Housing
Administration, bribery,
receivmg unlawful com pensation and four counts of
makmg false slatements to a
grand jury
Hts codefendants are
former aode Joseph Bastoen,
charged woth consporacy and
receivmg unlawful compensatoon, and suspended
FHA ofhcoals Ralph Koontz
and K Wayne Swoger, each
charged woth consporacy

Redskins reduce
RAY WEIHER JR

THOMAS CROSSEN

RAY WEAVER

Three promoted at OVEC
Three men have recetved
promotwns m the Operatwns
Department at Ohto Valley
Electroc Corpora tiOn's Kyger
Creek Statoon, accordmg to
P lant Manager LOUIS R
Ford , Jr
Thomas L Crossen IS bemg
promoted to the posttlon of
Short Operatong Engoneer
Raymond C Weoher, Jr woll

replace Crossen as Assistant
Shoft Operatmg Engmeer and
Raymond E Weaver wtll
become a Unit Foreman
Crosse n jooned OVEC m
1954 as a control operator and
m 1956 he was promoted to
Assostant Shtft Operatong
Engoneer A natove of At hens
County, Crossen graduated
from Albany Htgh School and
os a veteran of the U S Navy

Crossen is married and
resodes on Jackson Poke
Gallipolis, Ohoo woth hos wofe
Nancy, daug hter Stephanoe
and son Davod
Weoher jomed OVEC m 1953
as a plant guard, transferrong
to the Operatoons Departmen t 10 1955
We oher
graduated from Roo Grande
High School where he was an
outstandong athlete
He
served four years m the U S
Air Force pnor to JOIDmg
OVEC Weoher restdes at
Rodney woth hts wtfe Doana
and theor three choldren,
Raymond Ill, Tamo and Ten.
Weaver became assoctated
woth OVEC m 1955 and was
asstgned to the Maon tenance
Department In 1956 he
transferred to the Operatoons

Department
and
has
progressed through the ranks
unhl ht s m ost r ece nt
assognmen t on thos supervisory posttwn Weaver IS a
1952 graduate of Wahama

High School He and hos wtfe
Marilyn resode on New
Haven , W Va woth their two
daughters,
Cathy
and
Pamela

Grid star hurt
in cycle crash
Bruce 0 Scarberry , 17, Rt
I , Thurman , semor fullback,
linebacker and kock return
specialist for the Gallipolis
Blue Devols, will he out lor at
le ast three weeks and

posstbly longer recovenng
from InJuries suffered on a
motorcycle..,ar accident at
8 35 p m Monday on Rt . 588
The Galha-Meogs Post
State Highwa y Patrol saod
Scarberry, traveling west
attempted to pass a truck and
hos motorcycle collided head
on woth a small car operated
by Barry V Johnson, 16, Rt
2, Bodwell
Scarberry was thrown hogh
on the a tr and s truck the
pavement He s uffered a
fracture of the mtddle fmger
on hos left hand and multiple
abrasoons and conluswn s of
the left foot He was rus hed to
the hospotal by the SEOEMS
ambulance, treated and
released
Also taken to the hospotal
for treatment were Johnson

and a passenger on hos car, 16year old Jerry L Wade of
Galllpolos There was severe
damage to both ve hocles
Scarberry, son of former
Moddleport footba ll great,
Alfred &amp;arberry Jr , prmc opal al Bodwell- Vmton
Elementary School, was
charged wt th passong wothout
the assured clear dtstance
A second accoden t occurred
at 6 15 p m Monday on Rt 7,
seven ten ths of a mol e south of
Gallipolis where a vehocle
driven by George A Hout, 49,
Gallipolis, struck a tractor
driven by Homer A Baker,
84, Eureka Star Rt Hout told
the patrol that hos vosion was
blocked by another vehocle
A fonal moshap was mves togated on Rl 160, one and
seven tenths moles north of
Rt 35 Offocers saod a vehocle
droven by Wolham R Nutter,
34, Rt. I, Reedsvolle, flipped a
stone onto the wondshoeld of a
car dro ven by Henry K
Swock, 60, of Rt I, Bidwell.

roster to 82

I

CHESTER - The Shade
Rover Bells and Beaus woll
have a square dance
workshop Thursday from
7 30 lo 10 30 p m on lh e
blackt op at Royal Oak Park
All club members a nd guests
are m v1ted The dance wtll

feature Cecil Sayre as the
caller Homemade tee cream
and cake woll be served
None couples of the club
recently tra ve led to Coalton
to retrteve their attendance
banner Only eoght couples
were reqwred to attrend
Goong from th e club were Roy
and Pat Holter , Bob and Judy
Gtbbs, Dave and Judy Flagg,
John and Juamta Grueser,
Norm and Jo Ann Baum, Art
and Mary Skonner, Bob and
Frances Alkore , Mock and
Frances Wtlhams and Ron

Reaves looks
sharp in debut
WILMINGTON,
Ohoo
IUPI ) - There have been a
lot of backup quarterbacks m
the broef eoght-year hostory of
the Cincmnato Sengals, but
coach Paul Brown says John
Reaves os the best.

placed on charge of SIU's County, a cradle of French
archaeologocal collectoon by colomal occupancy In Illlnms
John Allen, then curator of Terrotory, and believes the
ar ea around Pratne du
the Uruverstty Museum.
In 1951, Peolhmann discov - Rocher, Ft de Chartres and
ered the Modoc Roc k Shelter, Kaskaskia could become a
where explorations by SIU "Wolliamsburg of the West
Peothmann has lived woth
and the lllinots State Museum
several
lndtan tnbes on y oelded human s kele to ns
almost 11,00.0 years old, eluding the Semonoles, and
among his seven books os a
Petthmann saod
" I won't he s urprosed if his tory, "The Unconquered
someda y someone fonds on Semmole Indians of Flonda,' '
southern lllm oos somewhere whtch has sold a half molloon
along the MossiSStppo Rtver coptes
He served the Semonoles as
evtdence of cultures datmg
consulta
nt m establishmen t
bac k 20,000 years," saod
of a memoroal to the famed
Pe othmann
The
The :llodoc Rock , Shelter warrtor, Osceola
sole later was ~ught by the Se mmoles called hom "Man
st a te and designated a of Ylany Pipes" because of
registered na twnal htslonc hos co llection of briars
" But I 've ~tven up
landmark
He also has been mvolved smr,kmg," saod Peothmann .
tn t xpl rJra tlons 1n Randolph " It really 1sn't tha t hanl "

.

•

Workshop
planned

Luzms ko ,
Phol '1:1; Kingman , NY 24,
Bench , Cm 22, S&lt;:hnudl, P hol
21 ; Slargell, Pill 20.
Am e n can L eag u e
Ja ckson , Oak 27 , Mayberry:
KC 23; Scott, Mol and Bonds,
NY 21 ; Horton, !let a nd
Burroughs, Tex 20
Runs Balled In
National League Luzmsko,
Phol 90 , Benc h, Co n 87 ,
Watson , Hou 76, Staub, NY
72 , Sommons, Sl L 71
Amerocan League Lynn,
Bos 80 , Roce, Bos and May,
Bait 76, Horton , Del and
Jackson , Oak 74
Stolen Bases
National League Lopes,
LA 47; Morgan, Cm 44 ,
Brock, Sl L 42 , Cedeno , Hou
36 , Card enal, Cho, Co ncepcio n, Con and Mangual ,
Mtl 23
Amencan League R1vers,
Cal 56; Washongton, Oak 35,
Remy, Cal and Otis, KC 31,
North, Oak 26
Pitching
(Based on most victories 1
National League Jones,
SD IH, Seaver, NY 14-7 ,
Sutton, LA 14-9 ; Matlack, NY
I~ ; Messersmith, LA 13-10.
Amer1can
Le ague
Palmer, Bait 15-7, Kaal, Cho
15-9; Lee and Wose, Bos !H.
Busby, KC and Blue, Oak 148; Hunler, NY 14-10

nip Mets, 4~3
By FRED McMANE
UPI Sports Writer
There seems to be two stdes
to Randy Tate.
Tate, a 22-yea r-old rookoe
roght-hander, at
tomes

demonstrates

fantasllc

ab1hty that makes hos employers, the New York Mels,

gnn from ear-toear

Yet,

Tate also has an uncanny
knack for undoing all the
good things he does by govin g
up bases on balls and long
home runs at most mop-

portune moments.
The peaks and valleys of
tho s ex traordonary lalent
were never more apparent
than on Monday ought's game
agaonst the Montreal Expos.
For seven mnlngs agaonst
Montreal, Tale resembled
Nolan Ryan ( wtth Sandy
Koufax' control I as he held
the Expos hotless and struck
out 11 whole walking only
three. Showmg off a blazmg,
risong fastball and a sharp
curve, Tale was on tolal
command and had bee n
slaked to a 3-0 lead
Then , suddenly , after Tate
struck out Jose Morales to
sla rt the eoghth, pmch~utter
J1m Lyttle rumed the no-hot
Tuppers Plains
btd woth a songle and Tate
then walked Pepe Mangual
wins another
Mels Manager Yogo Berra
In Sunday Inde pe ndent went to the mound to calm the
baseball tournament actoon youngster and he seemed to
Tuppers Plams pocked up have succeeded when Tate
the or second won by defeato ng fanned Jom Dwyer for
Portland 6-1 on a damp Port- strikeout No 13.
But Gary Ca rter, th e
land foeld Portland dropped
lo 1-1 on the double leading ca ndidate for NL
ehmmatton tourney
The Tuppers Plams defense
made only one error, and
woth the excellent potchmg of
Jack Rood, held off Portland
for the won Rood fanned 12
and walked 3, facong only 31
batters For Portland Ron
Bachtel fanned 14 and walked
4, facong 43 batters Actoon
continues next Sunday .
OXFORD, Ohio (UPII lndovodual competotoo n
hegm&amp;...here today m the
nattonal target tournament of
the
Natoona l
Archery
Association
Mr and Mrs Millard Van
Gomg for hls third conMeter and grandson, Tony, scecutlve Individual tiUe at
Mr and Mrs Melvon Van Mo am o Unoversoty's Coo k
Meter and family, Pomeroy, Foeld here IS the current
Mr and Mrs. Hobart Newell world cha mpoon, Darr ell
and son, Elmer, Chester, Mr
Pace, 18, Reddmg, Ohoo
and Mrs John Newell and
Pace and teammate Doug
famoly , Chester , Dave Brothers, 21, Forrest Park,
Co peland , Long Bottom, Ohoo, led lheor Cmcmnalo
Darlene Ju s lts, Ractne, Archers Monday to the tea m
Forrest Van Meter, daughter , IItle woth scores of 2,220
Joan and grandson, Alien , pomts out of a total of 2,400
Racme, Mr s Laura Byers,
Brothers totaled 576 out of
Racme, Mr and Mrs Roy 600 pomts, whole Pace added
Van Meter, Racme , Mrs 575
IndiVIdua l competotoon woll
Susoe Cooley, Lewos Cooley ,
be spr ead over the rest of the
Steuhenvolle , Mr and Mrs
Rochard Van Meter, Beverly , week
Tuesday, haH of an offocoal
Mr and Mrs Donald Brewer
and son, Mrs Mary Pierce, Olympoc Round , sanctioned
Reedsvolle, Mr. and Mrs by the Federa tiOn InDelbert Bossell and famoly, lernatoonale de Tor AL 'Arc
Columbus, Mochell e Van (FITAI wtll be held . The
Meier, Monersvolle , Mr. and second half woll be held on
Mrs. Moke Fotch of the stale Wednesday, followed by
complete 900 rounds on
of Washmgton
Thursda y and Fnday

{

f

I

" The best by far ," emphas tzes Brown
Alt hough Reaves IS new to
the team, he had a pretty
good outmg on hos forst game
as a Bengal
The 25-year-old htt 13 of 20
passes thl.'l past weekend 10 a
pre-&lt;&gt;eason game agaonsl the
Washtngton Redskons and
wasn't reluctant lo lake
charge of the team
In fa ct, Reaves had a be tier
day tloan regular quarterba ck
Ken Anderson .
Although Anderson breezed
through the fors t senes of
plays - hittmg six of seven
passes and throwtng for a
touchdown - he turned sour
the rest of the game and only
completed three of hos !mal 16
passes.
Anderson, of course , lS sllll
the No 1 quarterback, but
Brown os happy he oblaoned
Reavesearber thos year from
the PholadelphiB Eagles
' (We 're ve ry sa ttshed wtth
th e trade," sao\1 Brown, who
had to gove up three players
tl) get Reaves " He gtves us
the maturtty we've never had
on a backup quarterback "
Reaves was a bnlhant
co lleg oa te qua r te rba ck at
F1oroda and was the Eagles'
t&lt;Jp &lt;Jraft pock on 1972 But the
6-3, 210-pound native of Anmston, Ala wa&lt;&gt; rarely used
1n Pholarlelphoa a nd he
relished the thrmce t£1 ('flm e
~, th&lt; Bengals

.

Rookoe of the Year honors,
Singled to rum the shutout
attempt and a moment later,
Tale lost the game 113 well
when
Moke
Jorgensen
homered to gove the Expos a ,
4-3 VICtory ,
The loss was the lOth on 14
decosoons for Tate, but the
Mets still are hoping to
harness that great potential
as they once troed (but failed)
to do woth Ryan . Ryan never
reached his peak until he was
traded to the California
Angels The Mets will send
Tale to Puerto Rico thiS
wmter on hopes of gettlng him
straightened out.
"He 's going to pitch for
Santurce in Puerto Rico,"
says General Manager Joe
McDonald. "The manager
there was going to be Whitey
Herzog But then Whitey got
th e Kansas City job. Whitey
was one of the reasons we
wanted Randy to ptlch m
Puerto Rico "
In other National League
games, Los Angeles whipped
Atlanta !1-1, St. Low edged
Pittsburgh 5-4, Houston beat
San Dtego 5-3, Chocago topped
Pluladelphoa 3-2 and Cinconnati downed San Francosco 7-r.
Baltimore outslugged
Boston 12-6 , Cleveland
downed Detroot&amp;-1, New York
edged
Milwaukee
2· 1,
Chicago defeated California
4-2, Kansas City nipped Mmnesota 6-5 In 10 mnings and
Texas blanked Oakland I~
on ~merican League games .

Archery tourney

opens at Oxford

Family reunion enjoyed

70-year-old collegian wmner
of university service award
CommiSSIOn to t he Ftve CtvoJozed Indoan Trobes m Indian
Temtory from 1899 to 1903 ..
Peothmann has been coted
by the Illmms Archaeologtcal
Soctety, the !llmois General
Assembly and the Natoonal
Hall of Fame for Famous
American lndoans. He IS an
honorary . member of the
Semmole lndtans and the
Chocasa" !'alton
Pe othmann says he fintshed
two year s on hogh school
thr oug h a corre ponden ce
course from a school lil
Chocago that no longer exosts
He \\as JOI&gt;-hunt mg durong
the Dep ression when he
landed a postloon at SIU m
1931 as manager of the
Unoverstty fann,
In hos spa re tome he
roamed southern IllinOis
lookmg for Ind1an rJccupC:It l'Jfl
sotes In 1g49 Pcnbrnann -.as

DIANA LYNN LEWIS,
Pomeroy, granddaughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Jacobs,
is associated with Fashion
Beauty Salon, Second St,
Pomeroy .
She
is
a
cosmetology graduate of
Meigs High School. She
resides with her grandparents on Mulberry Heights.

CARLISLE, Pa (UPI) The Washmgton Redskins of
the NatiOnal Football League
have reduced thetr roster to
82 by cuttmg four defenstve and Ann Browmng
players, according to club
offtcoals
Released Monday were line backer Bill Overmyer, 213, a
two-year pro veteran from
Ashland College; tackle
Bruce Crafl 1 24, a one-year
veteran
from
Geneva
PORTLAND - The annual
College i safety Morrts Van Meter £amtly reumon
McKie, 26, a rookie from was he ld recently at the PortNorth Carolina A&amp;T, and land Park
cornerback Dan Searer, 24,a
Recogmzed and goven gofts
rookie from Shoppensburg were Mrs Laura Bye rs, the
State College
oldest ,
Dawn
Hysell,
yo un gest, Mo c h ael Fotch,
travelong the farthest, and
Mrs Ina Van Meter, most
choldren present
Attendmg were Mrs Ada
lnlernal•onal League
Van Meter , Mr and Mrs
Sland•ng s
Un•led Pre ss tnt e rnal•anal
Moke Evans, Mr and Mrs
w 1 pet g b
T odewater
67 45 598
Charles Fotch, Mr and Mrs
Roc h ester
6J 46 57!1 2 1 ~
Blame Oatley and famtly,
Syra c use
6 2 48 56 4 li
C h arleston
59 54 522 8' "
Portland , Mrs In a Van
Memphos
53 60 469 lot ' ,
Meter and lam oiy, ReedsR tchmond
46 57 447 16',
voile, Mr and Mrs James
Toledo
48 63 d)2 18 1 ,
Ray Lawrence, Racme, Mr
Pawtucket
dd 69 )89 13' ,
Monday 's Re s ult !&gt;
and Mrs Melvon Lawrence
Ttdewater 7 Pawtu cket 6
and son, Portland, Broan and
Char leston 1 Ro c h este r 2
Sy ra cuse 6 M~mphtS 5
Brenda Lawrence. Portland,

•

CARBONDALE, ru. ruPil
- lrvm Peothmann's formal
education never extended
beyond two years m high
school, but he dtdn 't let that
stop him - or hos curoosoty
about thongs archaeologocal
Thursday , he receoves
Southern !Umoos Unoversoty's
hoghest honor
the
Distmguoshed Servoce Award
- at commencemer.t exer·
ctses
Petthmann, 70, who retored
m 1973 after 42 years of
servtce at SIU, IS a farm boy,
the son of a Ge nnan father
and ScotsCherokee mother
who ha s made his mark m
archaeology a s an expert on
ea rly Indians and as an
author.
Hos father, 99, IS llvmg m a
nursmg home a nd was a
member of the US Da"es

Expos rally,

Nalwn.~ Lea~uc

GOLF TRYOUTS
All Meigs High School
s tudents Interested in
trying out for the golf team
should attend a meeting
with the new coach, Robert
Oliver, on Tuesday, August
12 at 10 a. m. at the
Pomeroy Golf Course.
Candidates should brtng
clubs as practice will
follow the meeting.

' I

"

Hnme Run s

:·.::·:··::···: .: :·: ·:: .·::·:.· ·:·: ...... :

The squeal's the thing
thong, coronary possobilltoes
are another An ABC-TV
exec uti ve 1n New York
co ncede s that quo z s how

Leaders

A FITA round COIISISts of
144 arrows shot at each of
four metroc distances. The

900 rounds are 90 arrows at
each of three doslances m
yards.
The women's archery team
competition Monday was won
by the Pheasdale Archers of
Alllentown , Pa , woth 2,066
Points, traoled by the Phoenix
Hon -Dah Archers, woth 1,987
and the Greene, NY., Archers, woth 1,822 pomts
Fofteen yea r-old Jodo Crowl
scored 536 pomts, one point
above Olympoc veteran Linda
Myers, 28, to lea d the Pheasdale team Both are from
York , Pa
Darrell Pace's 15 year-old
brother, Kevan, scored 548 to
lead the Cmconnall Juruor
Olympoans to voctory on the
Inter medo ate Boy's Club
shoot
Theor 2, 125 total mcludes
Richard Smoth's ~'1:1. Bolly
Blaze's 526, and Bnan
l':lloott's 524. The York, Pa. ,
Archers were second woth
2,06.1 poonts

Sometimes, it's hard to
learn how to win-Watson
AKRON, Ohoo IUPI) Last
February,
Ja c k
Nocklaus blew the Jackie
Gleason-Inverrary go lf
tournament when he hot a ball
out of bounds on the 12th hole
of the fmal round.
"I had the tournament on
my hop pocket," Nocklaus
said 11 [ threw 1t away "
In March and Aprol he blew
stx and five-stroke leads on
tournaments, although both
t1mes he came back to wtn.
AI the U S Open m June,
Nicklaus bogeyed the last
three holes when a par-jlarpar fmish would have won
him the champoonshop--and
kept alive hiS Grand Slam
ambo lions
None days ago, m the
Canadoan Open, Ntcklaus
blew a stroke lead on the 7?nd
hole when he drove hiS lee
shot mto a lake. Then he lost a
sudd endeath playoff to Tom
Weoskopf
The pomt of thts os not that
.Jack Nocklaus os over the holl
Hardly And not that he
chokes a lot, eother But
sometomes ot 's necessary to
remember tha t Tom Watson
ts n't the only man who ever
threw a"ay a ~olf tournament and nlJW
-- that h'e has

.

won the Brotish Open, he's
hopong no one ~ver asks a gam
a bout the ones that got away .
"SometLmes," Watson was
say on g
Monda y
before
practocong for Thursday 's
sla rt of the PGA Champoonshtp, "ot's hard to learn
how lo wm"
Watson should know
Nobody even !honks any
more about the Hawaiian
Open or the World Open he
threw away m 1973 before
wtnnmg for the forst lime on
the tour. Those tournaments
mean nothtng compared to
the two U S Opens he led
before blowong up, and some
people even talk about the
two balls he hit onto the water
on the 70th hole at the
Masters last sprmg although
on that case, he had no chance
to wm, anyway
Those dark days, Watson
be loeves, are all in the past
Thos yea r , only Watson,
Ntckla us and Hale Irwm have
fmoshed among the top 10 on
a ll three maJor c ham poonshops
The 25-year-&lt;&gt;ld, frecklefaced redhead lied Australian
.Jack Newlon m th e Bntosh
Open hy makm~ a long,
bord1e putt on the 72nd hole

and then beat hom m the
playoff - helped by a chip-on
eagle at a crucoal pomt on the
back none after Newton had
knocked his approach shot for
a lap-on bordoe on the same
hole.
" I played good, solid golf
when the chtps were down ,"
Watson saod "It made me
realize I can do it.- that I can
wm major championshops."
He also became only the
thord player in more than two
decades- Ben Hoga n m 1953
and Tony Lema on 1964 were
the others- to wm the Brollsh
Open, a tournament that
takes a good deal of adJUstment for an Amerocan, on
theor forst try
One man who knows a thing
or two about wonnong major
"ties believes Walson 's probk ms m the past ma y even
have controbuted to that
VICtory
" He let the u:s Open sllp
ou t of hos hands twice," Gary
Player saod "The adversity
he went through dod him a lot
of good. Now that he's got
that forst one under his belt, I
thmk he 'II won more. He's got

a tremendous future."

�7- The Daoly Sentmel, Moddleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Tuesday, Aug 5, 1975

6 - The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 . Tuesdav Au g 5, 1975
- ~c~
.· ~~~~~~~~?&lt;-~
' ~-2&gt;~~
11111111

-

~~~~~~c&gt;&lt;?~~i ·
-

We never close

- - - - - -

Editorial comment,
• •
opznzon, features

RAY CROMJ.EY

Jury partly hung up

Stacking the deck

T~PA,

via obfuscation

)l.

Oil spills are a double debt
Despote the publlcoty that mev1tably surrounds such spectacular 01! spoils as the well
blowout on Santa Barbara Channel on 1966 or the breakup of the tanker Torrey Canyon off the
coast of England m 1967, ot os not these fortunately rare accodents that pose the greatest threat '
to the world 's marone ec ology
Rather , 1t ts the dehberate , routme, day-m, day-&lt;&gt;ul use of the oceans as a dwnpmg ground
for ool wastes The practoce of flushong out tanker holds at sea after unloading thetr cargoes
ashore controbu tes far more to pollutiOn than all the spectacular spoils put together
Normally, lhts practice goes unnoticed, except by the coastal dwellers , human a nd
otherwose, dorectly affected The tarry blobs of congealed ool that swept ashore on a 25-m ole
front along the lower F loroda Keys JUSt recently were an excep hon only because of theor
magmtude . In th os mstance, a n estunated 85,000 lo 120,000 ga llons of crude had been dumped
by some urudenlifoed tanker
There are laws aga inst this sort of thmg The trouble os that on the heavtly traveled shopplllg lanes ot os ahnost unpoSSible to connect any particular ool slick woth any particular vessel
Shop owners and shop captams know this, and thus they contonue to use the ocean a s a converuent sewer
If the laws agaonst ool dumpong cannot be enforced, then some way has to be found to make
11 more converuent - and profotable- for tankers to dispose of the resodual ool on theor hold s on
port. There is supp6sed to be an energy shortage, a fter all And woth foreogn crude sellmg for
more than $13 barrel a barrel, the thousands and thousa nd s and thousands of barrels of 1t bemg
wasted in this manner must amount to a considerable swn
In the m eantune, ot IS a little oromc that the resodents of some eastern states remaon
adamantly opposed to drollmg of theor coasts, whole the se same coasts are daoly subjected to !;'\,4i
pollullon by oollhal was pumped from fields thousands of nules away

The real Gerald Ford
Presodent Ford carne up woth plenty of egg on hos face because of hos oll-advosed decosoon
not to meet woth Alexander Solzherutsyn when the diSSident Russoan wroter forst came to thos
country a few weeks ago The later extensoon of an open whole House onvota toon to Solzhenotsyn,
which the Nobel laureate turned down, did little to repaor the damage.
But if it is meet and proper to chastoze the Presodent, as a raft of commenlators dod , when
he makes a stinkeroo of a blunder, ot is JUSt as mandatory to praJSe hun when he puts astde
affaors of state and "cons ideratoons of policy" "and does the decent, human thing
Thos he did in the case of the famoly of Dr Frank Olson, a government scoentost who , ot has
only now been revealed was admmostered LSD wothout hos knowledge by the CIA back on 1953
when Uoe agency was testong the effects of this and other hallucogenoc drugs on human gwnea
By Torn Tiede
pigs. As a consequenceofthe dosage , Olson "mysteriously" commotted suocode.
ST
LOUIS,
Mo - Teddy
All this happened 22 years ago, when Gerald Ford was a little-known congressman from
Michigan. Nevertheless, as President of the United States, he mvlted the Olsons to the White · Nadler lives m th1s town You
remember h1m . Nmeteen
House, where he personally apologozed to them on behalf of the government and promosed to
flflo
es? Televosoon quoz
make available to them all informatoon on the case and to ask the attorney general to doscuss a
shows 1
fmancial settlement woth theor legal representatoves
Nadler was the man of a
"You can't conceive of how movmg ot was to hear hun say how outraged he was at thos
molllon facts, an Army depot
travesty of American hostory, " satd a son, Ntis Olson, after the meetong woth the President
lahorer who among other
"We were aU very much amazed at how genu me and smcere he was at extendong his sympathy
and concern ~"
thongs knew the name of
every island in the world In a
This, we believe was the real Gerald Ford, not the Ford of the unfortuna te Solzherutsyn
day when game show conaffaor
testants were natton al
celebritoes, he won a record
$264,000, and woth little
emollon. One recalls the chap
The importance of Jightmg m the nation's consumption of energy was dramatically un- coppmg thousands of dollars
derscored - and, say some critics, ridiculously overemphastzed - a couple years ago
each week woth qUiet
Remember the blackout of outdoor Chrostmas decoratiOns in the wake of the ml embargo a nd acknowledgement ,
never
the adoption Qf daylightsavong tune on the moddle of wmter?
more than composed dognity
But whtle lighting accounts for only about 5 per cent of all the prunary energy the country
Tempus fug tt - Today
uses, it is true Uoat It IS probably the greatest single consumer of elect roc power
daytome qwz programs are
In New York Coty, about 40 per cent of Consolidated EdiSOn's annual productwn of elec- structured more to physocal
tricity goes for light. Nationwide, the figure is about 25 per cent, adding up to some $7 bolhon on than mental dexteroty Teddy
electric bills each year.
Nadlers are not welcome
A 50 per cent reduction m lightmg levels could save consumers $3.5 annually, as well as Contestants wmmng $300
reducing the threat of Intermittent " brownouts" that have plagued many areas.
washmg machines are
Is such a goal realistic? It os, according to one expert, Howard Brandston, prestdent of requested to lose poundage on
Lighting Design, Inc., of New York Cioty.
stage
on
extroverted
" We are an overllt soctety that uses far more light than IS necessary for eye comfort or gratotude Not that many
efflcoent task performance," he says.
have to be coaxed; a Sl Louos
One reason we are an overlit society os that varoous segments of the lightmg mdustry ao e resident who used to be
working diligently to perpetuate Uoe myth that low light equals bad sight." Brandston claoms, assocoated with Truth or
despite all kins of medical evidence to the contracy. One company, for example, offers con- Consequen ces recalls the
, sumers a choice between a standard bulb and an "eye-savmg" bull - yet the higher-proced time one wmner became so
bulb actually delivers less light output than the standard kmd.
exctted "she took a deep
In thos country, the Illummating Engrneering Society (IES) publis hes guodes for recom- breath and her pantoes
, mended light levels for a broad variety of settings and tasks. These standards have become a dropped to the floor. "
kind of lighting law of the land.
Underwear drops are one
"
Based on Uoem, New York City requores 70 footcandles of light for all areas of a public
library, regardless of function. By contrast, in Great Britam, which also has an IES, hbrary
lighting os broken down Into nine district functions, with a maxunum recommended intensoty o!
46.5 footcandles.
Again In New York, office buildmg corrodors use nearly 150 footcandles, but the BroUsh IES
recommends only nme, and there is no greater incidence of sight hnpairment in Great Britain
than m the Unoted Slates.
The people who are promoting light have been making themselves heard, says Brandston.
"We need to hear loudly and clearly from the design and medical professoonals concerned woth
sight that there is no relationship between eye damage and rational lighting levels "

TOM TIEDE

By Ray Cromley
WASIUNGTON - There are limes when congressmen
must deliberately word bills they sponsor to msure their defeat
m a floor vote or veto by Presodent Ford. This is the "':'ly
possoble explanatlon for the nitpicking phraseology m a senes
of proposals whoch would requore all rruddle- and higherechelon government offocoals and military men and women
and members of Congress to report their fmancial dealings
.
and contacts woth lobbyists.
The objectives expressed m these bills are of the hoghest.
Exposure of influence peddling and conflicts of interest m the
government os long overdue, both on Capitol Hill and in those
departments and agencoes which deal m multibollions of
dollars of public money, whoch regulate the airlme~, railroads,
trucking forms a nd drug manufacturers, or whoch enforce
product and employment safety, pollution and anti-trust
reguiations.
we, all of us, most certamly need to know who or wh~t
outside for ces mfluence our offocoals and lawmakers It IS
essentia'l to he aware of those mvestments and other provale
connections which could effect the voting of congressmen and
the actions of admmostratoon officwls
Because the voters demand ot, there 's a plethora of bills
thts sesston on lobbying and conflict of mterest fmancial
disclosure. These sound like the answer to a citizen's prayer
until you read the !me prmt.
The catch is that the sponsors and other backers of these
bills requore such a mass of trivoa and demand reporting so
lime consummg that middle and higher grade government
offiCials would be spendmg an mordinale amount of their lime
sending m mformation on trrelevant delails. Numnbers of
senators and representatlves would be caught In the same box.
Take this dandy phrase from one House bill- HR. 15 ·
All offlcwls and employes of the executive branch in GS
grade I~ and above - roughly $30,000 up - and all others
responsible for making or recommending decisiOns affecting
policymaking " shall prepare a record of each oral or wrotten
communication receoved dorectly or by referral from outside
parties expressing an opinion or conlainong infonnation woth
respect to the policymakmg process."
That phraseology os so sweeping that a government official , to keep hlmseH clean, would have to report almost every
conversation he had wtth his neoghbors, or at parties, or at the
ball game - which m any way affected government policy.
And most conversallons do, sooner or later,ln Washmgton.
By another proVISion, the unhappy official would be
producers often select from requored to record all Jetlers from outsiders - and people
crowds of hopefuls outsode wrote into the government by the thousands, usually comthe studoo lot; the potentials plainmg about this policy or that.
shout and wave and make
Then take the reporting on investments, as proposed. What
funny sounds and random we really need to know is whether someone on a congressoonal
selections are made from the banking committee, or an admmistrallon official workmg in
mob
bank regulation, for example, has a significant personal
Once selec ted, contestants financial interest In banks, direct or mdirect. But a major bill
are told to " Jump up and now being considered in Congress, H. R 324!1, would requore
down on stage, shout, squeal" that every member of the Senate and House, every govern·
•- anything to electrify the ment officoal GS grade 15 and above and every armed forces
envtronment On one recent officer, colonel or Navy captam and above, disclose any Inprogram , accordmgly, a vestments worth $1,000 that he and his wife hold, or any buying
woman dressed on a football or selling of more than $1,000 m securotoes, commodolles or
unoform hecan to cry even other real property in a year.
before she won $769 worth of '
Now you can't buy a hundred shares of most stocks for
1aW1dry machmes A woman $1,000 - and if we are going to hold investments of this soze up
followong, who won $1,000 as possible confliCts of interest we have lost all sense of
worth of electronocs eqwp- proportion This reporting would clutter up the works and
ment, kissed host Monty Hall make the law a rodiculous monstrosity.
before , dunng and after
skills, and winnmgs are the quarter-million he won in the
(twice) her turn. "There is
joy m Joy Thompson," satd product of acctdent Thus the 1950s, the government took 60
Hall to the kissmg contestant, football uniforms, kisses, etc. percent fur 20 years and lives
who, by the way, was dressed Wtthout •them milltons of now
in
obscurity
and
as a raolroad engineer.
housewtves would turn to The depression.
There are, of course, Secret Storm or an a fternoon
That's show btz
commercoal explanations matmee.
behmd every squeal on And if profit explams the
today's quoz programs
producing sode of quiz show ' r-...::-::-'-o !:9:::-c===---i'
Lackmg the mtellectual exaggeratoons, 1t probably
DEVOTED TD THE
suspense of earlier game defines as well motivation
INTER EST DF
shows, and offermg far less on of most contestants. Greed 1s
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL
the way of potential fmancoal the stunulus. If one has to
Exec. Ed
reward,
contemporary play the foot for the odds so
ROBERT HOEFLICH
C•tv Edttor
Pf.QIIucers rely on bombast to be it. Would-he contes~ts
Publ •s hed da 1rv ex ce pt
fa'fl'en audoence ratings and .., for Let's Make A Deal often Saturday by The Oh tO Va ll e"t
Publtshmg company 111
lure sponsors Contestants on elbow each other savagely to Court St, Pomeroy 'Ohio
Let's Make A Deal use no catch the producer's eye. 45769 Bus mess Off 1ce' Phon e
992 2156 Ed•tonal Phone 99 2
Arguments, even fights 2157
ond class postage pa 1d
haveerupted
between at Sec
Pomeroy , Oh 1o
Nat•onal
advert•s 1ng
competitors Says the ABC representat
Ward
1ve
executive
mentioned Grtff•th Company In c
Bott•nell• &amp; GaHagfler 0 , 11 •
be! or~. "It's queer, really 757
Third Ave. New York'
'
wliat people woll do for a new N Y 10017
Subscr~phon
ra t es
refrogerator. Some of the Delivered
by carr 1er where
people connected with our available 75 cents per week
By Mo tor Route where
quoz show have been earner
serv 1 ce
not
One month SJ 2'5
propositioned by women available,
By mall m Oh •o and W va
wantong a chance. It gives One Year, $22 00
5 •
nutritional value from tl
months
$11 so,
'rhr~~
What IS the truth about thos ? you pause. Is a refrogerator months, $7 00 Elsewhere
26 00 year
s •x months
Is there anythmg at all wrong really that Important?
13 50 three months, $7 50
'-" ubscrtpl •on pr, ce •ncludes
with drmking water with your
Teddy Nadler can answer r: unday Ttmes Sentmel
meals?
DEAR READER - The the last question. Of the
little rumor is just one more
btl
of
mosmformation
provided to the public.
Your food os going to be
diluted with water anyway.
The digestive juices in the
stomach and those from the
pancreas and small intestine
are mostly water . The extra
water content in your food is
qmckly absorbed mto the
bloodstream, leavmg what
you need to keep the food at
the right consistency for
digestion.
Dtd you know that food
can't even leave the stomach
until it has been liquified of
at least converted into a
slush-like consistency?
The water may help to fill
you up at first and give you a
more satisfied feeling . This is
helpful m people who tend to
overeat anyway.
Then there is lots of water
on your food Lean round
steak is 70 per cent water,
milk 87 per cent, bread about
25 per cent and juice is mosUy
water . Finally, breaking
down such dry foods as table
" Yoo-hoo, W1l/.r' Two men from the federal
sugar for energy liberates
government are llere to see you Somethmg
carbon diOJOde and water.
about can mng lids "

AIRMAN ASHWORTH
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. Airman Charles D. Ashworth, son of Mrs. Dorothy
M. P aul, Clairsville, Ohio,
has been selected for
technical training In the U.
S. Air Force accounting
and finan ce fi eld at
Sheppard AFB, Tex. He is
a 1974 graduate of Point
Pleasant High School. His
fath er, retired Air Force
Senior Master Sergeant
Allred H. Ash,.orth, lives
In Ne.l Haven.

Fla (U PII - The
JUry says it is " unanunously
and emp hato c ally"
deadlocked on some counts m
the broberyconspiracy troal of
former U S. Sen Edward
Gurney and three assocoales.
The judge says that's not
good enough
" Thi s IS an Important
case," satd U S District
Judge Ben Krentzman , who
sent the JUrors back for more
deliberations today " ThiS
lrtal has been expenstve in
lime a nd effort and money,
both to the defendants and to
the prosecutoon
" I am going to ask that you
go back to the JUry room and
gove further consoderatoon to

the remammg matters," he
satd Monday
The jury, whoch began
deliberatoons none days ago m
the love-month trial, handed
Krentzman a sealed envelope
Monday contammg several
verdicts, but saJd they were

deadlocked on some of the
charges
" After long and careful
de liberation s on all charges
and all the defendants, we
have been able to come to
verdicts on some defendants
and some charges on others,
but not all ," sa od one note the
Jury sent to the JUdge
" We,lhe JUry, unanunously
and emphalocally agree that
we ha ve reached all verdocts
that can possobly be reached ,
of
further
r ega rdless
dellberatoons, and we feel
that on consoderatoon of all
concerned, we should make
the court aware of this," the
note added
Krentzman mvoted the
Jurors mto the courtroom and
asked the foreman to seal the
verdi.cts m an envelope
Krentzman reciled the soca lled " Allen Charge," sometimes called the "shotgun
charge," urgong those on the
mmor1ly to gtve more

Too mtich light on the subject

emotwns are reachmg the
pomt where "we worry about
some of these people - not
JUSt about them physi cally
but emotoonally Some of
them are so wound up by the
tome they get on the aor,
anythmg could happen. I
don ' t know of any case where
a loser has hit a host, but ot
could happen l've seen some
of these people after they lost
a btg proze and they are just
desolate One minute they are
Jumpong up and down on
an tocopallon, the next mmute
they are desolated by defeat
There os some rosk here, I
thmk. "
Risks or no, none of the
dozen major qwz shows of the
day has any trouble enticmg
contestants. Even Let's Make
A Deal, the show where
contestants are required to be
extroverts, turns away
hundreds of would-be players
daoly
Accordmg to program

producers, contestants are
selected on the basts of
kookiness alone " We want
lively people, outgomg
people, people woth mfectious
enthusoasm." To get them

DR. LAMB

Carbohydrates fit in nonnal diet

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I have
a book on carbohydrates, and
ot says that all you need os 55
to 60 grams of carbohydrate a
~
There must be money in oil. Standard Oil of Ohio ( Sohoo ), whtch ranks only 12th among U
day It says that of you don't
, S. petroleum producers, has just completed arrangements to borrow a whoppmg $1 75 billoon consume any more than that
. the most money ever borrowed at one time by any Amerocan corpora lion - to finance the
you won't have to count
, trans-Alaska pipeline.
calories and that you'll never
The massive debenture, sold to 76 Insurance companies, pension funds and bank trust
gam weight Is thos true ~ If
, departments, comes on top of another $1.5 billion the company has borrowed smce 1973 to pay
ot's not, what os the proper
.'.'for the devefopment of its Prudhoe Bay oil field.
amount of carbohydrate you
"We saw people coming mto Uoos offering with money on volumes htgher than they ' ve
should have a day?
: ever conumtted to one deal before," says Paul D. Phillips, a Sohio senior vice presodent.
DEAR READER - It ts
The reason is not hard to discern. Sohio owns haH of an estimated five billion barrels of ool
half true You need a
.,In Alaska and figures that, after subtracting drilling and transportation costs, 11 woll net about
mmhnum of 50 grams of
$6 a barrel when Uoe oil starts flowmg m 1977. That's at today 's prtces.
carboyhdrate (about 400
"
And while Uoe President and the Congress contmue to wrangle over what tomorrow's ool
caloroes 1 a day to prevent
~'price will be, one Uting is certam, and Uoat is that it will not be lower In 1977than 11 os on 1975.
abnormal chemical changes
,,
m the body causmg a confhe Almanac
dillon we call ketosos and
United Press International
other undesirable effects on
In 1962, actress Marilyn
• Today is TueSday, Aug. ~. M;mroe died of an overdose of
the body.
Uoe 217th day of 1975, with 148 barbiturates.
But, you also need enough
to follow.
carbyhydrate
- contamong
In 1963, Uoe United Slates,
~· The moon is approaching Jlritsin and Russia signed a
foods to provode needed
•Its new phase.
vitamins , mmerals and
treaty outlawing nuclear
~ ·, The morning stars are tests m the earth's atespecoally bulk for a normal
..Mars, Jupiter and Saturn.
healthy diet That requires
mosphere, In space or under
; , The evening stars are Mer- the sea.
more carbohydrate a day .
cury and Venus.
Cereal
bulk os particularly
In 1974, President Nixon
Those born on Ulis date are admitted ordering a halt to _
...._ omportan t to your body for
o:lllldeF the sign of Leo.
normal function.
Uoe Watergate mvestlgation
• French I!Ov'elist Guy de six days after the break-in.
And, you need to know that
. Maupuaant was born Aug. ~.
your body will take any
;,JJ50,
protein you don't use for
A thought for the day :
: . On Ulis day in history:
Spanish novelist Miguel De "It dodn't end like thos in the builamg 1 and convert tl to
~ , In 11181, the U.S. govern- Cervantes said,
either fat or carbohydrate.
"Great recipe
t1Jiellt lmpoied Ute first in· persons are able to do great
The calories of fat or carcame tu. All incomes over kindnesses.••
bohydrate denved from
protem 'a re just as fattening
• were taxed 3 """ cent.

_Sohio brings in a gusher

\NI

,,

.

.

'

{

~I

as any other c alories
Calories are energy unlts and
do count, just as kilowatts of
energy and do count on your
ele c tnc boll Too many
colones of any kind, protein,
fat , carbohydrate, or alcohol,
can lead to obesoty.
The !rock IS that many
protem foods are low m
calones. Lean meat os 70 per
cent water The end result is
that you can eat a lot of real
low fat, prolem foods and not
consume many calories.
Anythong that results on
Juno ling the on take of calories
!units the obesity proglem,
but the calories do count.
To better understand the
role of carbohyi!rates m the
dtet and avoid being misled
by all those diet gunmicks
based on low carbohydrates,
send me 50 cents and
stamped,
self-addressed
envelope m care of Uois newspaper, P. 0. Box 1551, Radio
City Station, New York, NY
10019, and ask for The Health
Letter number 2-2 on Low
Carbohydrate Diet Fads .
Send a long, stamped selfaddressed envelope and 50
cents for mailing and costs
DEAR DR. LAMB - I
would Joke to know if drinking
water wtlh your meal can
hmder you m any way. I have
heard that ot do lutes your food'
and you don't get as much

Berrys World

I

' '

tl'lought to 1he1r poslllOOS.

The judge saod the verdocls
would he kept m a vault unto!
the jW')' has completed ols
work
Krentzman dod not say how
long he would keep the Jurors
at work. But last week he said
he would not consider two
week s of deliberations excesSIVe

1

There was no indication
whether the jury was hung on
counts mvolvmg Gurney or
his assocoales
Gurney IS charged with
consporacy m a $400,000 onfluence peddlmg scheme Involving the Federal Housing
Administration, bribery,
receivmg unlawful com pensation and four counts of
makmg false slatements to a
grand jury
Hts codefendants are
former aode Joseph Bastoen,
charged woth consporacy and
receivmg unlawful compensatoon, and suspended
FHA ofhcoals Ralph Koontz
and K Wayne Swoger, each
charged woth consporacy

Redskins reduce
RAY WEIHER JR

THOMAS CROSSEN

RAY WEAVER

Three promoted at OVEC
Three men have recetved
promotwns m the Operatwns
Department at Ohto Valley
Electroc Corpora tiOn's Kyger
Creek Statoon, accordmg to
P lant Manager LOUIS R
Ford , Jr
Thomas L Crossen IS bemg
promoted to the posttlon of
Short Operatong Engoneer
Raymond C Weoher, Jr woll

replace Crossen as Assistant
Shoft Operatmg Engmeer and
Raymond E Weaver wtll
become a Unit Foreman
Crosse n jooned OVEC m
1954 as a control operator and
m 1956 he was promoted to
Assostant Shtft Operatong
Engoneer A natove of At hens
County, Crossen graduated
from Albany Htgh School and
os a veteran of the U S Navy

Crossen is married and
resodes on Jackson Poke
Gallipolis, Ohoo woth hos wofe
Nancy, daug hter Stephanoe
and son Davod
Weoher jomed OVEC m 1953
as a plant guard, transferrong
to the Operatoons Departmen t 10 1955
We oher
graduated from Roo Grande
High School where he was an
outstandong athlete
He
served four years m the U S
Air Force pnor to JOIDmg
OVEC Weoher restdes at
Rodney woth hts wtfe Doana
and theor three choldren,
Raymond Ill, Tamo and Ten.
Weaver became assoctated
woth OVEC m 1955 and was
asstgned to the Maon tenance
Department In 1956 he
transferred to the Operatoons

Department
and
has
progressed through the ranks
unhl ht s m ost r ece nt
assognmen t on thos supervisory posttwn Weaver IS a
1952 graduate of Wahama

High School He and hos wtfe
Marilyn resode on New
Haven , W Va woth their two
daughters,
Cathy
and
Pamela

Grid star hurt
in cycle crash
Bruce 0 Scarberry , 17, Rt
I , Thurman , semor fullback,
linebacker and kock return
specialist for the Gallipolis
Blue Devols, will he out lor at
le ast three weeks and

posstbly longer recovenng
from InJuries suffered on a
motorcycle..,ar accident at
8 35 p m Monday on Rt . 588
The Galha-Meogs Post
State Highwa y Patrol saod
Scarberry, traveling west
attempted to pass a truck and
hos motorcycle collided head
on woth a small car operated
by Barry V Johnson, 16, Rt
2, Bodwell
Scarberry was thrown hogh
on the a tr and s truck the
pavement He s uffered a
fracture of the mtddle fmger
on hos left hand and multiple
abrasoons and conluswn s of
the left foot He was rus hed to
the hospotal by the SEOEMS
ambulance, treated and
released
Also taken to the hospotal
for treatment were Johnson

and a passenger on hos car, 16year old Jerry L Wade of
Galllpolos There was severe
damage to both ve hocles
Scarberry, son of former
Moddleport footba ll great,
Alfred &amp;arberry Jr , prmc opal al Bodwell- Vmton
Elementary School, was
charged wt th passong wothout
the assured clear dtstance
A second accoden t occurred
at 6 15 p m Monday on Rt 7,
seven ten ths of a mol e south of
Gallipolis where a vehocle
driven by George A Hout, 49,
Gallipolis, struck a tractor
driven by Homer A Baker,
84, Eureka Star Rt Hout told
the patrol that hos vosion was
blocked by another vehocle
A fonal moshap was mves togated on Rl 160, one and
seven tenths moles north of
Rt 35 Offocers saod a vehocle
droven by Wolham R Nutter,
34, Rt. I, Reedsvolle, flipped a
stone onto the wondshoeld of a
car dro ven by Henry K
Swock, 60, of Rt I, Bidwell.

roster to 82

I

CHESTER - The Shade
Rover Bells and Beaus woll
have a square dance
workshop Thursday from
7 30 lo 10 30 p m on lh e
blackt op at Royal Oak Park
All club members a nd guests
are m v1ted The dance wtll

feature Cecil Sayre as the
caller Homemade tee cream
and cake woll be served
None couples of the club
recently tra ve led to Coalton
to retrteve their attendance
banner Only eoght couples
were reqwred to attrend
Goong from th e club were Roy
and Pat Holter , Bob and Judy
Gtbbs, Dave and Judy Flagg,
John and Juamta Grueser,
Norm and Jo Ann Baum, Art
and Mary Skonner, Bob and
Frances Alkore , Mock and
Frances Wtlhams and Ron

Reaves looks
sharp in debut
WILMINGTON,
Ohoo
IUPI ) - There have been a
lot of backup quarterbacks m
the broef eoght-year hostory of
the Cincmnato Sengals, but
coach Paul Brown says John
Reaves os the best.

placed on charge of SIU's County, a cradle of French
archaeologocal collectoon by colomal occupancy In Illlnms
John Allen, then curator of Terrotory, and believes the
ar ea around Pratne du
the Uruverstty Museum.
In 1951, Peolhmann discov - Rocher, Ft de Chartres and
ered the Modoc Roc k Shelter, Kaskaskia could become a
where explorations by SIU "Wolliamsburg of the West
Peothmann has lived woth
and the lllinots State Museum
several
lndtan tnbes on y oelded human s kele to ns
almost 11,00.0 years old, eluding the Semonoles, and
among his seven books os a
Petthmann saod
" I won't he s urprosed if his tory, "The Unconquered
someda y someone fonds on Semmole Indians of Flonda,' '
southern lllm oos somewhere whtch has sold a half molloon
along the MossiSStppo Rtver coptes
He served the Semonoles as
evtdence of cultures datmg
consulta
nt m establishmen t
bac k 20,000 years," saod
of a memoroal to the famed
Pe othmann
The
The :llodoc Rock , Shelter warrtor, Osceola
sole later was ~ught by the Se mmoles called hom "Man
st a te and designated a of Ylany Pipes" because of
registered na twnal htslonc hos co llection of briars
" But I 've ~tven up
landmark
He also has been mvolved smr,kmg," saod Peothmann .
tn t xpl rJra tlons 1n Randolph " It really 1sn't tha t hanl "

.

•

Workshop
planned

Luzms ko ,
Phol '1:1; Kingman , NY 24,
Bench , Cm 22, S&lt;:hnudl, P hol
21 ; Slargell, Pill 20.
Am e n can L eag u e
Ja ckson , Oak 27 , Mayberry:
KC 23; Scott, Mol and Bonds,
NY 21 ; Horton, !let a nd
Burroughs, Tex 20
Runs Balled In
National League Luzmsko,
Phol 90 , Benc h, Co n 87 ,
Watson , Hou 76, Staub, NY
72 , Sommons, Sl L 71
Amerocan League Lynn,
Bos 80 , Roce, Bos and May,
Bait 76, Horton , Del and
Jackson , Oak 74
Stolen Bases
National League Lopes,
LA 47; Morgan, Cm 44 ,
Brock, Sl L 42 , Cedeno , Hou
36 , Card enal, Cho, Co ncepcio n, Con and Mangual ,
Mtl 23
Amencan League R1vers,
Cal 56; Washongton, Oak 35,
Remy, Cal and Otis, KC 31,
North, Oak 26
Pitching
(Based on most victories 1
National League Jones,
SD IH, Seaver, NY 14-7 ,
Sutton, LA 14-9 ; Matlack, NY
I~ ; Messersmith, LA 13-10.
Amer1can
Le ague
Palmer, Bait 15-7, Kaal, Cho
15-9; Lee and Wose, Bos !H.
Busby, KC and Blue, Oak 148; Hunler, NY 14-10

nip Mets, 4~3
By FRED McMANE
UPI Sports Writer
There seems to be two stdes
to Randy Tate.
Tate, a 22-yea r-old rookoe
roght-hander, at
tomes

demonstrates

fantasllc

ab1hty that makes hos employers, the New York Mels,

gnn from ear-toear

Yet,

Tate also has an uncanny
knack for undoing all the
good things he does by govin g
up bases on balls and long
home runs at most mop-

portune moments.
The peaks and valleys of
tho s ex traordonary lalent
were never more apparent
than on Monday ought's game
agaonst the Montreal Expos.
For seven mnlngs agaonst
Montreal, Tale resembled
Nolan Ryan ( wtth Sandy
Koufax' control I as he held
the Expos hotless and struck
out 11 whole walking only
three. Showmg off a blazmg,
risong fastball and a sharp
curve, Tale was on tolal
command and had bee n
slaked to a 3-0 lead
Then , suddenly , after Tate
struck out Jose Morales to
sla rt the eoghth, pmch~utter
J1m Lyttle rumed the no-hot
Tuppers Plains
btd woth a songle and Tate
then walked Pepe Mangual
wins another
Mels Manager Yogo Berra
In Sunday Inde pe ndent went to the mound to calm the
baseball tournament actoon youngster and he seemed to
Tuppers Plams pocked up have succeeded when Tate
the or second won by defeato ng fanned Jom Dwyer for
Portland 6-1 on a damp Port- strikeout No 13.
But Gary Ca rter, th e
land foeld Portland dropped
lo 1-1 on the double leading ca ndidate for NL
ehmmatton tourney
The Tuppers Plams defense
made only one error, and
woth the excellent potchmg of
Jack Rood, held off Portland
for the won Rood fanned 12
and walked 3, facong only 31
batters For Portland Ron
Bachtel fanned 14 and walked
4, facong 43 batters Actoon
continues next Sunday .
OXFORD, Ohio (UPII lndovodual competotoo n
hegm&amp;...here today m the
nattonal target tournament of
the
Natoona l
Archery
Association
Mr and Mrs Millard Van
Gomg for hls third conMeter and grandson, Tony, scecutlve Individual tiUe at
Mr and Mrs Melvon Van Mo am o Unoversoty's Coo k
Meter and family, Pomeroy, Foeld here IS the current
Mr and Mrs. Hobart Newell world cha mpoon, Darr ell
and son, Elmer, Chester, Mr
Pace, 18, Reddmg, Ohoo
and Mrs John Newell and
Pace and teammate Doug
famoly , Chester , Dave Brothers, 21, Forrest Park,
Co peland , Long Bottom, Ohoo, led lheor Cmcmnalo
Darlene Ju s lts, Ractne, Archers Monday to the tea m
Forrest Van Meter, daughter , IItle woth scores of 2,220
Joan and grandson, Alien , pomts out of a total of 2,400
Racme, Mr s Laura Byers,
Brothers totaled 576 out of
Racme, Mr and Mrs Roy 600 pomts, whole Pace added
Van Meter, Racme , Mrs 575
IndiVIdua l competotoon woll
Susoe Cooley, Lewos Cooley ,
be spr ead over the rest of the
Steuhenvolle , Mr and Mrs
Rochard Van Meter, Beverly , week
Tuesday, haH of an offocoal
Mr and Mrs Donald Brewer
and son, Mrs Mary Pierce, Olympoc Round , sanctioned
Reedsvolle, Mr. and Mrs by the Federa tiOn InDelbert Bossell and famoly, lernatoonale de Tor AL 'Arc
Columbus, Mochell e Van (FITAI wtll be held . The
Meier, Monersvolle , Mr. and second half woll be held on
Mrs. Moke Fotch of the stale Wednesday, followed by
complete 900 rounds on
of Washmgton
Thursda y and Fnday

{

f

I

" The best by far ," emphas tzes Brown
Alt hough Reaves IS new to
the team, he had a pretty
good outmg on hos forst game
as a Bengal
The 25-year-old htt 13 of 20
passes thl.'l past weekend 10 a
pre-&lt;&gt;eason game agaonsl the
Washtngton Redskons and
wasn't reluctant lo lake
charge of the team
In fa ct, Reaves had a be tier
day tloan regular quarterba ck
Ken Anderson .
Although Anderson breezed
through the fors t senes of
plays - hittmg six of seven
passes and throwtng for a
touchdown - he turned sour
the rest of the game and only
completed three of hos !mal 16
passes.
Anderson, of course , lS sllll
the No 1 quarterback, but
Brown os happy he oblaoned
Reavesearber thos year from
the PholadelphiB Eagles
' (We 're ve ry sa ttshed wtth
th e trade," sao\1 Brown, who
had to gove up three players
tl) get Reaves " He gtves us
the maturtty we've never had
on a backup quarterback "
Reaves was a bnlhant
co lleg oa te qua r te rba ck at
F1oroda and was the Eagles'
t&lt;Jp &lt;Jraft pock on 1972 But the
6-3, 210-pound native of Anmston, Ala wa&lt;&gt; rarely used
1n Pholarlelphoa a nd he
relished the thrmce t£1 ('flm e
~, th&lt; Bengals

.

Rookoe of the Year honors,
Singled to rum the shutout
attempt and a moment later,
Tale lost the game 113 well
when
Moke
Jorgensen
homered to gove the Expos a ,
4-3 VICtory ,
The loss was the lOth on 14
decosoons for Tate, but the
Mets still are hoping to
harness that great potential
as they once troed (but failed)
to do woth Ryan . Ryan never
reached his peak until he was
traded to the California
Angels The Mets will send
Tale to Puerto Rico thiS
wmter on hopes of gettlng him
straightened out.
"He 's going to pitch for
Santurce in Puerto Rico,"
says General Manager Joe
McDonald. "The manager
there was going to be Whitey
Herzog But then Whitey got
th e Kansas City job. Whitey
was one of the reasons we
wanted Randy to ptlch m
Puerto Rico "
In other National League
games, Los Angeles whipped
Atlanta !1-1, St. Low edged
Pittsburgh 5-4, Houston beat
San Dtego 5-3, Chocago topped
Pluladelphoa 3-2 and Cinconnati downed San Francosco 7-r.
Baltimore outslugged
Boston 12-6 , Cleveland
downed Detroot&amp;-1, New York
edged
Milwaukee
2· 1,
Chicago defeated California
4-2, Kansas City nipped Mmnesota 6-5 In 10 mnings and
Texas blanked Oakland I~
on ~merican League games .

Archery tourney

opens at Oxford

Family reunion enjoyed

70-year-old collegian wmner
of university service award
CommiSSIOn to t he Ftve CtvoJozed Indoan Trobes m Indian
Temtory from 1899 to 1903 ..
Peothmann has been coted
by the Illmms Archaeologtcal
Soctety, the !llmois General
Assembly and the Natoonal
Hall of Fame for Famous
American lndoans. He IS an
honorary . member of the
Semmole lndtans and the
Chocasa" !'alton
Pe othmann says he fintshed
two year s on hogh school
thr oug h a corre ponden ce
course from a school lil
Chocago that no longer exosts
He \\as JOI&gt;-hunt mg durong
the Dep ression when he
landed a postloon at SIU m
1931 as manager of the
Unoverstty fann,
In hos spa re tome he
roamed southern IllinOis
lookmg for Ind1an rJccupC:It l'Jfl
sotes In 1g49 Pcnbrnann -.as

DIANA LYNN LEWIS,
Pomeroy, granddaughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Jacobs,
is associated with Fashion
Beauty Salon, Second St,
Pomeroy .
She
is
a
cosmetology graduate of
Meigs High School. She
resides with her grandparents on Mulberry Heights.

CARLISLE, Pa (UPI) The Washmgton Redskins of
the NatiOnal Football League
have reduced thetr roster to
82 by cuttmg four defenstve and Ann Browmng
players, according to club
offtcoals
Released Monday were line backer Bill Overmyer, 213, a
two-year pro veteran from
Ashland College; tackle
Bruce Crafl 1 24, a one-year
veteran
from
Geneva
PORTLAND - The annual
College i safety Morrts Van Meter £amtly reumon
McKie, 26, a rookie from was he ld recently at the PortNorth Carolina A&amp;T, and land Park
cornerback Dan Searer, 24,a
Recogmzed and goven gofts
rookie from Shoppensburg were Mrs Laura Bye rs, the
State College
oldest ,
Dawn
Hysell,
yo un gest, Mo c h ael Fotch,
travelong the farthest, and
Mrs Ina Van Meter, most
choldren present
Attendmg were Mrs Ada
lnlernal•onal League
Van Meter , Mr and Mrs
Sland•ng s
Un•led Pre ss tnt e rnal•anal
Moke Evans, Mr and Mrs
w 1 pet g b
T odewater
67 45 598
Charles Fotch, Mr and Mrs
Roc h ester
6J 46 57!1 2 1 ~
Blame Oatley and famtly,
Syra c use
6 2 48 56 4 li
C h arleston
59 54 522 8' "
Portland , Mrs In a Van
Memphos
53 60 469 lot ' ,
Meter and lam oiy, ReedsR tchmond
46 57 447 16',
voile, Mr and Mrs James
Toledo
48 63 d)2 18 1 ,
Ray Lawrence, Racme, Mr
Pawtucket
dd 69 )89 13' ,
Monday 's Re s ult !&gt;
and Mrs Melvon Lawrence
Ttdewater 7 Pawtu cket 6
and son, Portland, Broan and
Char leston 1 Ro c h este r 2
Sy ra cuse 6 M~mphtS 5
Brenda Lawrence. Portland,

•

CARBONDALE, ru. ruPil
- lrvm Peothmann's formal
education never extended
beyond two years m high
school, but he dtdn 't let that
stop him - or hos curoosoty
about thongs archaeologocal
Thursday , he receoves
Southern !Umoos Unoversoty's
hoghest honor
the
Distmguoshed Servoce Award
- at commencemer.t exer·
ctses
Petthmann, 70, who retored
m 1973 after 42 years of
servtce at SIU, IS a farm boy,
the son of a Ge nnan father
and ScotsCherokee mother
who ha s made his mark m
archaeology a s an expert on
ea rly Indians and as an
author.
Hos father, 99, IS llvmg m a
nursmg home a nd was a
member of the US Da"es

Expos rally,

Nalwn.~ Lea~uc

GOLF TRYOUTS
All Meigs High School
s tudents Interested in
trying out for the golf team
should attend a meeting
with the new coach, Robert
Oliver, on Tuesday, August
12 at 10 a. m. at the
Pomeroy Golf Course.
Candidates should brtng
clubs as practice will
follow the meeting.

' I

"

Hnme Run s

:·.::·:··::···: .: :·: ·:: .·::·:.· ·:·: ...... :

The squeal's the thing
thong, coronary possobilltoes
are another An ABC-TV
exec uti ve 1n New York
co ncede s that quo z s how

Leaders

A FITA round COIISISts of
144 arrows shot at each of
four metroc distances. The

900 rounds are 90 arrows at
each of three doslances m
yards.
The women's archery team
competition Monday was won
by the Pheasdale Archers of
Alllentown , Pa , woth 2,066
Points, traoled by the Phoenix
Hon -Dah Archers, woth 1,987
and the Greene, NY., Archers, woth 1,822 pomts
Fofteen yea r-old Jodo Crowl
scored 536 pomts, one point
above Olympoc veteran Linda
Myers, 28, to lea d the Pheasdale team Both are from
York , Pa
Darrell Pace's 15 year-old
brother, Kevan, scored 548 to
lead the Cmconnall Juruor
Olympoans to voctory on the
Inter medo ate Boy's Club
shoot
Theor 2, 125 total mcludes
Richard Smoth's ~'1:1. Bolly
Blaze's 526, and Bnan
l':lloott's 524. The York, Pa. ,
Archers were second woth
2,06.1 poonts

Sometimes, it's hard to
learn how to win-Watson
AKRON, Ohoo IUPI) Last
February,
Ja c k
Nocklaus blew the Jackie
Gleason-Inverrary go lf
tournament when he hot a ball
out of bounds on the 12th hole
of the fmal round.
"I had the tournament on
my hop pocket," Nocklaus
said 11 [ threw 1t away "
In March and Aprol he blew
stx and five-stroke leads on
tournaments, although both
t1mes he came back to wtn.
AI the U S Open m June,
Nicklaus bogeyed the last
three holes when a par-jlarpar fmish would have won
him the champoonshop--and
kept alive hiS Grand Slam
ambo lions
None days ago, m the
Canadoan Open, Ntcklaus
blew a stroke lead on the 7?nd
hole when he drove hiS lee
shot mto a lake. Then he lost a
sudd endeath playoff to Tom
Weoskopf
The pomt of thts os not that
.Jack Nocklaus os over the holl
Hardly And not that he
chokes a lot, eother But
sometomes ot 's necessary to
remember tha t Tom Watson
ts n't the only man who ever
threw a"ay a ~olf tournament and nlJW
-- that h'e has

.

won the Brotish Open, he's
hopong no one ~ver asks a gam
a bout the ones that got away .
"SometLmes," Watson was
say on g
Monda y
before
practocong for Thursday 's
sla rt of the PGA Champoonshtp, "ot's hard to learn
how lo wm"
Watson should know
Nobody even !honks any
more about the Hawaiian
Open or the World Open he
threw away m 1973 before
wtnnmg for the forst lime on
the tour. Those tournaments
mean nothtng compared to
the two U S Opens he led
before blowong up, and some
people even talk about the
two balls he hit onto the water
on the 70th hole at the
Masters last sprmg although
on that case, he had no chance
to wm, anyway
Those dark days, Watson
be loeves, are all in the past
Thos yea r , only Watson,
Ntckla us and Hale Irwm have
fmoshed among the top 10 on
a ll three maJor c ham poonshops
The 25-year-&lt;&gt;ld, frecklefaced redhead lied Australian
.Jack Newlon m th e Bntosh
Open hy makm~ a long,
bord1e putt on the 72nd hole

and then beat hom m the
playoff - helped by a chip-on
eagle at a crucoal pomt on the
back none after Newton had
knocked his approach shot for
a lap-on bordoe on the same
hole.
" I played good, solid golf
when the chtps were down ,"
Watson saod "It made me
realize I can do it.- that I can
wm major championshops."
He also became only the
thord player in more than two
decades- Ben Hoga n m 1953
and Tony Lema on 1964 were
the others- to wm the Brollsh
Open, a tournament that
takes a good deal of adJUstment for an Amerocan, on
theor forst try
One man who knows a thing
or two about wonnong major
"ties believes Walson 's probk ms m the past ma y even
have controbuted to that
VICtory
" He let the u:s Open sllp
ou t of hos hands twice," Gary
Player saod "The adversity
he went through dod him a lot
of good. Now that he's got
that forst one under his belt, I
thmk he 'II won more. He's got

a tremendous future."

�•
•

'

I'

~iJjii@\Yi:·::::;:;;,"=;:·por Fast Results Use The Sentinel Clas·sifieds

(JnKramble then four Jumbles.,
Pne letter to each square, to
f'orm tour ordinary words.

You lou ~ led

CHALT

,

Notice

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

..................

r

I

N ow listed whil e
Ph on e 991 ?08 7

paqes

2 SIGNS .Pomeroy

I JO 121c

A ND
BOARD
Pr1v a 1e a1r con dli10n e d
r oom
pho n e
T V
all
n1 ca ts l aundry plus many
('ICi rit S Wrd(' Mrs M
J
Mill er IJox 195 , Pome roy
0 ,110
8 I 76tp

OF

t
I I J

I

WH!:Il:E 5Q\.IE PEDF'LE
WHO SUFFE!l: ll:EVERSES
Afi:E TAKEN.

IENJUKT

t

Now BJTanr• the &lt;irclod letters

~

!~==·====·====~~~====~~:_~·=u~gr~•:•:tod~
I I
bytheabovec~oon.
1
pr.u. SURPRISE AHSW!IIIlele
J
ta form the aurpriae answer, aa

r x xx x

fAntwt:n 1omorro,..)

Jumblet l BEIGE

SHEEP

AUTUMN

7'/u•JI q(•/ l tlQl lht 1 fM a

Antwrr~

PUBLIC NOTICE
Sealed b•ds wilt be rece1ved
by the Eastern Local School
Dlslr1ct Board of Educat1on at
the H •9h School Building unti l

7 30 p m , August 12 . 1975 for
bakery goods, milk, gasoltne.
fuel otl and bus insurance
The Eastern Local School
o,str1ct Board of Education
reserves the r1ght to reje ct
any and all bidS

Eastern Local
Sc hool D1stnct
Board of Educat1on
Elo1se Boston ,
Clerk

rn 29 18J 5. 12. 3tc
DRAWING JURORS
Office of CommiSSioners of
Jurors. Me1gs Coun1y, Ohto
July 21, 1975
To All Whom It May Concern ·
On Saturday , the 16th day of
August 1975. at 10 00 o'clock,
A M , at the office of the Clerk
of Common Pleas , Court,
Meigs County, Ohto, Jurors
wilt be publ1cly drawn for the
September
Term
of the
Cmomon Pleas Court of sa1d
County

lrtl~ ·-

DILUTE

TEETH

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT,
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF SET ·
TLEMENT OF ACCOUNTS,
PROBATE COURT, MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
•
Ac:counts and vouchers of
lhe
followmg
nameCI
flduc:tarres hav e been filed rn
the Probate Co url Mergs
County. Oh10, for approval
and sett le me nt '
CASE NO 17.86 1 S111teenth
and F 1nal Account of Marton
Jea n Warner , Guard •an of the
Guardranshtp Estate of Jet
tr ey Jay warner , a mmor
CASE NO ?0,779 Ftrst and
F 1nal Acc ount of Roy Lemley
Guard1an of the Person and
Estate of Car l Lem ley , an
Incompetent Person
CASE NO
11 , 010 F 1rst ,
F1nal and D1str•bulive Ac
count of Robert E
Buck,
AdminiStrator of the Estate of
Ray Cook, Deceased
CASE NO 21.2 19 F•rst and
Fmal Account of Jo Ann
Wh •te , Adminrstratr1x wtth
the Will Annexed of the Estate
of
Ldl1an
J
Tr.pletf ,
Oeceas~d

&lt;:. lNG at Rutland
I r cf' wdl Or1p i1S t C~c h
&lt;; unday A ug I J '} p m A ll
s1nQN S ~nd th e publrc are
Wf'I(O riH'
B 1 l lltc

HY MN

WAN1ED

TO

RENT

3

b C'd room ho m ~ or lar ger 111
Tupp er s P l am s area Ca ll
Par t.,cr sbu rg . Co ll ect
1
(3 0 11 &lt;177 3180
7 31 6t c
EBLIN Reun1on to be he ld at
Fo rt Me 1gs Sunday Aug
10 begrn n1ng at 17 noon A ll
r ela l1v es 1nV 1I ed
8 J 61p
SYRACUSE Coon
H unte rs '
AS.SOC1B I1 0n Will hold a
spec 1al meeti ng F r1day , 7
p m

8 5 41&lt;:

Yard Sale
CA R PORT sa l e, 918 So 3r,d ,
Middlepor t, Aug
5th and
6th
9 30 til A )0, Avon.
furniture , clolh1ng
an d
m 1SC
B 3 3tc
YARD sa l e 879 So 3rd Ave,
M•ddleport , 4th, 5th and 6th
B

YARD
Hysell ,
dleport
6th 9 a

J

]IC

Sale,
Rosemary
Laurel 51
M1d
Aug 4th, 5t h and
m Ill 4 p m
B 3 31 c

7 FAMILY YARD Sa le on
Fo urth St , Rac.ne , Monday
through Frrday, Aug
.:1
through Aug 8 from 10 a
m ldl 4 p m
8 3 6fc

CASE NO
21. 309 F1rst
and F1nal Account of Duane F
GARAGE Sale, Thurs day and
Stan l ey , Adm1 n 1slra to r of the
F r•day start 1ng at ~ am
Estate of Wtlltam C Stanley,
next to the lr e•g ht depot •n
1
Freeland S Norr1s Decea sed
Pomeroy
Lauren E Hoffman
CASE NO 21.3AO F1rst and
8 5 2tc
CommISSIOners Final Account of Mrchael
of Jurors Epple, Guardtan of Al1ce
J FAM IL,)' Yard Sa le Aug 9
Epple Dav1s , an incompetent
18 1 5. ltc
10 on Eagle R 1dge Bash an
person
Road
turn off T R 7 from
Unless excepttons are tiled
Pomeroy on Road 32 By
thereto, Sa•d accoun ts will be
Meigs Memory Gardens, go
PUBLIC NOTICE
for h ear1ng before sa1d Court
6
m de s
Antiques,
Offers wil l be rece1ved at on the 3rd day of September ,
deprcss•on
glass
,
guns and
the off•ces of Ful tz and
1975 at whrch t1me said ac
other rtems Phone 949 319ol
Knig h t. in
the Pomeroy counts will be constdt&gt;red and
B 5 Alp
Nat •o nal
Bank
Bui!d1ng , contmued from day to day
Pomeroy, Ohto. on behalf of until ftnally d1sposed of
YARD Sale , very nice g1rl's
the owner, until Fr,tday ,
Any person mterested may
and boy ' s school cloth ing, a
August 15, 1975, at 10 o clock tile wntten except 1ons to sa1d
baby bed, playpen, good
AM., for the sale of the accounts or to ma t ters per
toys , diShes and m tsc Aug 7
followmg :
taining to the exec:utlon of the
and 8, 9 5 Res of lrts Payne ,
1. A 1974 Maver1ck 4 door trust. not less than ftve days
660 Beech Sl , M •ddleport
sedan, 6 cyl automat1c trans
pnor to the date set for
B 5 3tp•
mlss•on. deluxe tnter.or
hearing
2 One tavern completely
1 FAMILY Yard Sale, Aug 6
equipped , with 0 . 1 and 0 '2
MANNIN G D WEBSTER
and 7 All good 1tems
L 1quor Licenses . S1fUated at
JUDGE
Charles Baker r es•de nce,
1l6
west
MBin
Street,
COMMON PLEAS COURT.
Rl 3, Racme Phone 9A9
Pomeroy , Ohio
PROBATE OIV I S ION
27'13
'3 The reel estate, conslstmg
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
8 5 2tc
of tt')e buslnes.s. bulldlng oc
(S ) S, ~tc;
cu'l)\td bV the ta\lern re.terred
YAR 0 Sa l e, Wednesday and
to In lt~m 2, conslstmg of
Thursday from 9 a m
business room approximately
Watch for sign at WMPO
25 ft frontage x 55 teet
rad10 stat1on, Bradbury
The owner reserves the
NOTICE ON FILING
8 5 21p
right to retect eny and all
OF INVENTORY
offers
AND APPRAISEMENT
For rnformalton , phone 992
The State of Oh10, Metgs YARD Sale, Wednesday and
Thursday Aug 6 and 7 at
7186
County, Couri of Common
317 Lmc:oln St , Middleport
Pleas, Probate DIVISIOn
8 5 2tc
(8) 4, 5, 1, 11, 12. 14, 6tc
To the E)(ecutnx of the
estate, to such of the followmg
as are residents of the State of
Ohio , viz . the surv111109
spouse. the next of kin, the
benef•c•aries under the wlll , MUST sell 1975 travel trailer,
28 ft
w1th t 1p out room ,
and to the attorney or af .
carpeted,
air c:onditioned,
torneys representmg any of
many extras
W1ll take
the aforementioned persons
trade rn Johnson's Tra•ler
Wllllam B . Witte, Deceased,
Park , R t 7, across from
Pomeroy, Oh10, R 0 3, No
B lu e
Fountain
Motel,
21563
GalliPOliS
Mrs. Caroline Miller, Mr.
You are her eby notlfted that
7 30 6tc
and Mrs. Ernest Bush, Peggy the lnventortes and Ap
praisements of the estate of
GREAT
LAKES
Bush and Terry Manuel spent the
eforementio ne d, 1969
Housetratler , 8 x 45, may be
deceased
,
late
ol
said
County.
Saturday in Parkersburg
seen any f 1m c at Cla1r Boso
were filed 1n th 1S Court Said
residence, G real Bend
shopping.
Inventories
and
Ap
Phone 843 2494
Mr. and Mrs. Sheridan praisements will be for
B s.3tc
hear.ng before thts Court on
RUSBell, Jr., and Paula of the 19th day of August, 1975, at
1969 12 x 52 PMC mobile home
Mason, W. Va. were recent 10 : 00 o' clock A .M
with large porch, S3,500 Cal!
Any person des•ring to f!le
985 3504, 1f no answer. call
vlaltors of Mr. and Mrs. exceptions thereto must ftle
991 5596
them at least f ive days pnor to
Kenneth Turley.
B 5 6tc
the date set for hearing
" Mr. and Mrs. Bud Simpson
G111en under mv hand and
Seymour, Ind. spent a see! of said Court , this lsi day
of Augusf 1975
"Weekend with his mother,
R-E G - Toy Poodle, Phone 74'.2
Mannmg D Webster
3161
'Mrs. Gretta Simpson, who
Judge
7 31 tfc
accompanied them home and
By Ann B Watson
Deputy Clerk PRO FESS IONAL
Poodle
\1Pent a week.
.;
IBJ 5, 12, 2tc
groom 1ng , $5 W1lh bath, $6
&gt; • Mr. and Mrs. William
W1ll do most breeds of dogs
Call
667 39 15 ' for
ap
Hayman visited their son,
porntment
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Hayman
7 '31 Sic
.nd .childr~n at Dunkirk,
WILL give away 3 mS~ I e black
Ohlo.
k1ttens and blue female
::. Mrs.
Helen Simpson
Phone 9&lt;19 A603
8 5 3tp
returned from a visit of three

Mobile Homes for Sale

Racine
Events

:ot

Pets ForSale

Harrisonville
Society News

weeks with her son and
family and her brothers and
families.
., Mr. and Mrs . Samuel
'Andrew and son of Weirton,
W. Va. visited their aWlt,
lllrs. James Swart.
: Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Crow
and Becky, Mr. and Mrs.
Rook Crow, Mr. and Mrs.
David Crow and Mr. and Mrs.
Steve Winebrenner have
returned horne from ·a
vacation at Myrtle Beach, S.

c. .

.

Kenneth Swart of Akron
spent a few days With his
mother, Mrs. James Swart.

Clrittlne Schultz and

MAIN rAINED DURING
CLOSING POMEROY-MASON BRIDGE

Phone 773-5592

From the largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radtator to the
sma llest Heater Core

1970 NOVA V-8 CPE .

SI29S

Vinyl - oaf , grey ftnt sh, htgh mileage, good tires,
automatic, power steertng, rad1o, stlver ftnl sh Black

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC •.

6 00-News 3,4,8, 10, 13, 15. ABC News 6; Sesame Street

20, Catch-33 33
6 30-I'IBC News 3,4,15 ; ABC News 13; Bewitched 6;
CBS News 8. 10: Lilias. Yoga and You 33 .
7 oo-- Truth or Consequences 3,4. Bowlmg for Dollars
6 . What ' s My Line? 8. News 10, Name That Tune
13 , To Be Announced 1S; Antiques 20; Jean
Shepherd' s Amer~ca 33

Noodles also featured .

FOR PETE'S SAKE, i!&gt;E SE.,Sii!&gt;LE:
YOU CA'-l'T JU!:&gt;T TRAIPSe OFF 1'-ITO
THe ..JU"GLE!

Flalwoods, Oh1o
Pomeroy , Oh1o
Stop In Or

Caii992-7SJ7

Agronsky 20. New Price Is Right 10. To Tell The
Trulh 13. Car and Track IS; Spotlight On 33.

CAP!' AIN EASY

KUHL CAKE DECOR

Ph. 992-7608

8-1-75

8 DO-Movie 3,4 , H appy Days 6, 13 . Good Times 8, 10, .
Wh e n Televi ston Was Live 20,3J ; To Be Announced

6"AT5! .. &gt;JO WO.,DE&lt;fl.
SHE ClfARt;D OUn OTHERWISE 5Ht;'D HAVE TO EAT
THE!:Oe CHA!l:ll:ED FISH

FillETS!'

top

15
8 3()-Movie " The Daughters of Joshua Cabe," 6,13.
Baseball IS , MASH 8, 10; Consumer Survival Kit

20.33.

IF Wt; Wt;I1:E!

9 OO- Hawa11 F •ve 0 8, 10; Nova 20 , Saga ot We'itern
Man 33

PR.OMBLV HAVE

:POMEROY
MOTOR
CO.
OPEN EVES.8:00 P.M.
POMEROY, OHIO
1960 CJS JEEP, l•k e new, good
lrre s n ew pam!. top. rebu11t
engrn e Phone 7A? 37A5
B 3 6tc

For Sale

66 F ORD Mustang , 789 engine,
power stee r 1ng
Ca ll 992
1386
8 3 4tc

STEREO RADIO
modern
de S•Q n , 8 track combma lion ,
am l m
rad10
Ba la nc:e
$102 54 or terms Call 99'.2
J965
8 5 lfc

19 65 DODGE m good runnmg
co nd1110n Contact Howard
E n gi 1S.h 99 7 5470

19 7A KAWASAKI Fll 250CC
E n duro , 5 weeks o ld Under
8 1 SI C
warranty until Chr•stmas
Showroom condr t•on , not a
1966
IN TER NATION AL
scralc:h
New fork brace.
p1ckup . heavy duly spr 1ngs
knobb •e s
$1 , 100 mvested ,
to r camper, heavy duty
will sell for 59'25 Phon e 99'.2
bumper h 1t ch for horse
]&lt;:64
trailer Can be seen at Bob
8 5 4tp
Will1ams , Harri sonv ill e Rd
Phone 997 7017
ONE Ben Pearson 45 lb pull
13 5 3tc:
huntmg bow
Phone 99'.2
- =----- --..,. ---=-=---~
3090
a 5 3tc

------- --

8 ] 31p

----

Emplovment Wanted

WILL do oaa tob s, mow1ng ,
haulrng , paintmg or ro o f 1ng
Phone 992 7A09
7 19 26tc
"REMODE L IN G
Plumtiing ,
h ealing and all types of
general
repatr
Work
gua ranteed
20 years. ex
p er1e nce
Phon e 992 2409
5 I tlr

Help Wanted
SO MEONE n~eaed to 11ve m
or come m durmg the day to
fiiC
meals
and
gtve
medtcat •on to Mr and Mrs
Owen W(itson
P hone 949
4053 , Racme
a J Jlc
PART T IME HELP - Apply
•n person. Rac 1ne Food
Market Ask for Phebe
_ _r. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _8
_'3_ 3tc

Wanted
CASH patd tor all makes and
models of mobtle homes
Phone area code 614 423
9531
4 13 tfc

Wanted To Buy
PROPERTY on land qmtract
wilh or wdhout house
Phone 7A'2 3074
7 29 26 1c:

FU RNITURE. repa 1r , car
penlry , Rrchard Russell
Phone 992 7 178
8 5 Btp
SWEET corn lor fre ezer,
wh1le and yellow Thomas
Say re . 843 2A91
B 5 2tc
1964 JEEP Wagoneer, Out
board motor
5 h p
'.243
caliber r1fle Call 378 ·6203
B 5 6t c

5933.

8 3 5fc

4 ROOMS and ba th apt •n
Rul!and area
Phone 992
5858
7 '.27 He
TRAILER lot
Cal l 992 5.434

1n

1964 AVALON 16 FT
self
conta1ned camper, gas and
e le c
t1ghts
Roy Ellis ,
Rutland, Ohio Phone 742
334&lt;1
8 3 3tp

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

STORE bldgs, Rt 7, Tuppers
Plarns , Phone 667 3858
7 27 7tp

S RM apt furnished. uttlil1es
pa1d , 1 child accepted No
drunks John Sheets, 3 miles
south ol Middleport on Rt 7
.
8 5 6tp
2 BEDRM mobile home, 1'12
bath , S40 week and deposit
Pay own utdit1eS Phone 992
3509
8 5 6tc

USED once . 10' x 14' Sears'
Tent, 2 cots, folding t8bl e,
camp stove. sleeptng bag,
fan. girl's b1ke with baby
seat, oppos•te Chester Golf
Course Ffhone 985 3335
'
B·3·31p
1974 750 HONDA , lot of extras,
Sl.700 Phone 992 ·567 1
B 3 3tp
3

MILK GOATS, 2 part
Nubtan Phone 74'2 3745
8 3 6tc

D6 CATERF'ILLAR dozer,
John Deere delsel rubber
ttred loader backhoe, 4
wheel drl11e truck wtth flat
dump bed. 2 ton Chevrolet
w1th hydrocrane ; 1969 Ford
pickup,
ntce
Harold
Brewer , Long Bottom, Ohio
8·3 tfc

around cattle
Has be..en
wormed 10 years or age
Phone6961084ti113 30p m .
7 31 · 12tc

-·- ---- --- -------POR'fA·COOL'"
ROOM-to-ROOM

PRIVATE rneet1ng room to·
any organ 1za t 10n , phone 9Y '
397 5
J 11 tfr

Syracuse, Ohio
Ph . 90"-3993
·4 10 1 mo

Wrap

11

7-8-1 mo .

EXCAVATING,
backhoe ,
dozer and ditcher
Gas,
electric and water l 1ne
bunat, basements. toofers ,
sept1c systems and brush
clean•ng Will haul fill dirt,
top soil, sand and gravel,
l1mestone for dr•veways and
roads
Phone Charles R
BACKHOE tor rent , hour or
Hatf ie ld , Backhoe Serv1ce,
contract , reg or exc:avatory
Rt 1, Rutland . Oh10 , 742 ·
type Septte tanks mstalled .
6092
B 1ll Pullrns , phone 992 1478
71190tc
7 24 26tc

WOULD YOU BELIEVE"
Build an all steel buitd .ng at
Pole Barn pr1c:es ? Golden
G1ant A ll Steel Bulld1ngs,
R t A Box 148 . Waver I y,
Oh10 Phone 9A7 2296
7 2.4 He

S EWING
MACHINE
Repe•rs , serv 1ce. all makes
992 228.4 Tne Fabrtc Shop ,
Pomeroy Aulho'rizecf Sm ger
Sa les and ServiCe
We
s harpen SciSSo r s
3 29 tfc
WALL
paper
pa1nt1ng , and
Phone 7.42 5081

BORN

Norch
.. 7 6
• 10 4

vHOW 01.0 A~ '4Cll ~ ~/&gt;J;:HS-;

hangmg,
paneH1ng
7 27 12tc

MIX CONC~ET-E
rtght to your
protect Fast and easy Free
es t1mates PhOne 992 3284
Goeglem Ready Mrx Co ,
M •ddlepo r f, Oh10
6 30 If(

Real Estate for Sale

.. AKQJB 5 4

¥8 3
• AJ
'-A 2

t
i

Both Vuln erable

•

€

.

West

B~FORE

Pomeroy

lHEY ltlSI5TED

otl OPENII'U.i lHAT &amp;c!&gt;IC!
1&gt;1£'( W.R£ CUHNIN4,
Cf&lt;llfl AMD .-.JRDfRDUS
E'FASlS - HCN1 lOOK AT

Ph. 992-2798
7-24-1 mo .

Th1s new home 1s loca ted
on Rt 143 not too far out.
It 's built on a housewife
savtngs plan. 2 love ly BRs.

5 RM HOUSE wtth 11!1 acres
on Rt 1. Rutland off Co Rd

bath. nice

10. Porch enclosed Phone
day , 141 .4681 or evenmgs,
7.42 3381.
8 5 3fc

DON'T FENCE ME IN Want a home with lots of
ground . Tuppers Plains on
Rt. 7 . 2112 acres. Home has
2 BR, bath, part basement,
own water &amp; city water,
new steel siding. $10,500

3 ACRES ot land wilh 2 mobile
homes 1n A 1 cond•fion
Exc:ellent well with new
deep well water pump
Many extras. seen by eppt
only For more lnformaflon,
call 949 4911 Pnced right
for qutck sate
8 5 12tc

SCIPIO TWSP.

wtth TV room , utility R ,
large concrete patio, large

yard. $9,500.

REG
Quarter -Horse and
Pamt colt. Phone 742 3267, 1
1 31 tfc

FT.

CABIN

Thompson

hull.

phone 992-2815.

cruiser,
trailer,

7-23 12tc
u

CLOSE IN - Nice 1'h acre
. Mobile home with kitchen,
utility and garage added,
own and city water supp ly
Excellent condition $8,900.

IN
COPPERTONE
Fng,da•re electnc range.
self ·cleaning oven Call 949
3953
7 31 6fc

20

GOOD USED HOMES ARE
BEING ' TAKEN
UP
RAPIDLY
CAL
TODAY.
PHONE 992--2259
HOUSE for sale on 2 acres of
tand near Vmton , Oh10 on
Mt Tabor Rd , 3 bedrooms ,
and bath, fireplace, good
welt. outbutldmgs. Ca ll 388
8879
1 21 12tc:

s
COINS. wheat back
pennies sSe roll, silver
cerfificates, S1.25 each.
Indian pennies 45C each, blg
pennies dated at least 125
years old 54 each. si111er
dollars , $4 50 each, set of
Lincoln pennies 41 to 750, no
DO or 60 P s D . in folders ,
S4 . 50
each
Jefferson ·
nickels , 38 to 74 (50 Dis BU}
S24 set, Indian penn ie s 1895
to 1909 P mint only $7 50 set
W i ll allow 1n trade S'2 80 for
$1 face 64 and older coins . '
Celt 742 3651, Roger Warns
ley .
8 3 Jtc

BLACK &amp; Decker electric
mower for sale . Best offer
Phone 247 .2162
8·3 3tc

I
\

138

POMEROY - Hom e has 3
BR, bath, lull basement

CANN IN G tomatoes for sa te
Harold Roush, Portland ,
Oh10 Phone 843 ·2255.
1·30 6tc

USED p1ckup camper cover ,
sell or trade for farm
. equipment Phone 843 '.2095
alter 6 30 p m
8 4 .41c

-

rolling, wooded ac r es
Close toRt 143 Has an old
house &amp; well. About $174 00
per acre

for Sale

40

kitchen, . full

baseme nt
w1th
large
recreation room, carport &amp;
storage, one acre . $22 .700.

East

Pass

Souch

Pa ss

1¥

Double

2.

2¥

4 ..

Pa ss

Pass

Opcmng lead -

2¥

'l&gt;lfM - FRIEHD\.Y, PlAYFUL

EXCAVATING doz er load er
and backhoe , work , sept1c
tanks.
ms.talled ,
dump
trucks and lo boys for h1re
will haul f1ll dtrt . top sod.
l 1mesto ne and gravel Ca ll
Bob or Roger Jeffers. day
phone 992 7089, n1ght phone
99 2 3575 or 992 523'2
2 11 lfc

AHD 51MPl.E APfS-

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

Most squeeze s are rather
s1mple All you need to have a
squeeze poss1b1ilty , IS all but
one of th e tricks tn the form of
hagh-ca rd wmners and potential
low-card

-- , ------- '

D &amp; D TREE Trr mmmg, 20
years e)(perience Insured ,
free esflm ales Call 992 3057 ,
P ho ne ( 1J 667
Coo l ville
)041
4 30 tfc
.'
- ____ ._

__________

ALI..EY OOP

INELL BO'V'SI
I

ELWOOD BOWERS"'REPA IR
Sweepers , toasters, •ron'S,
all sma ll app l1 ances Lawn
mower , next to State H1gh
way Garage on Route 7·
Phone 985 3B25
4 16 tic

tncks

tn two

smts

Then . whether or not you
know how to count a hand tf you
JUSt run off all your high-card
wmners you may fmd that one
of your low cards has become
high
East starts off the defen se by
cashmg two hearts Then he
s h1fts to the kmg of d1amonds .
South takes hts ace and IS

WI-IAI'LL
IT BE?

61~.,cP~t·

~Q~~
An Alabama tournament
player asks , " We play weak
two-b1ds w1th 7-11 h1gh-card
fXllnlS and a good SIX-card SUI(
My partner cnt1c1zed me for
open1ng
two
spades
w1lh • A Q J 9 7 6 ¥ A 3 2
t 8 4 "'9 5 What do you say?"
We agree With our correspondent's partner Thts hand
should be opened one spade and
not With a weak two-b1d It 1s
too good for that preemptive
actton
(Do you have a questton for
the Jaco /J ys? Wflle "Ask the
Jaco h ys " care of thts
newspa per The most ,nterestmg questiOns Will be
used tn thiS column and
'Wnters w1/l recetve cop1es ol
.JACOBY MODERN i

NEW LISTING -

ACROSS
1 Volcano
remnant
4 Persian or
Manx

8 Hamper for
documents
12 Pitcher's
concern
(abbr.)
13 Etch
14 Swerve
16 Aries
17 "Witch
of -"
18 Kyushu 's
volcano
l-9 Frankness
21 Blue-penc1l
Novehst,
Michael -

bedroom mobile home , 71hl4
wtth pullout. Ph baths, patio
and 6 acres.

TWO FAMILY HOME 12 ACRES -

4

gas,

Several building

lots and a J bedroom renovated
home City uttltties.
ON RT. 33 - 2 bedroom home
wi th bath and 2 porches . T. P
water.

CABIN -

OHIO

Wonderful view,
home. and one
ftshtng rtghts

RIVER
2 bedroom
acre, with

STORAGE BUILDING -

Or

-SEE THIS Rt:::CORD?
"HOW MUCH IS THAT

FATSON
KNOWS HOW
IODEALWITH

YOUR

DOG61E

I~N~T~H~E~~~~

WE'LL SEE HOW CUTE SHe TI-l INKS IT 15
AFTER WE'VE LOCKED HER IN AND SHES
HEARD IT 8 OF&lt; 10 HOURS
OVER AND OVER

(2 wds I
9 A Milton
classic
( 2 wds.)

AGAIN!!-

WE
HAVE
A
LARGE
SELECTION OF PROPER·
TIES FOR YOU TO SEE.
VISIT OR CALL US AT 992
NO,MOM,

Yesterday's Aoswer
10 Sly; shifty 23 Reproached
JJ More
25 Rang
aloof
27 Steeple
15 - hnger
ornament
19 Waterfall
30 Pitcher
20 Craftsman 31 Gainsay
21 African
33 Fat
anwlope
person

WEEKDAYS ON WMPO AM
6:00 A.M. TIL

~8:30

P.M.

8,10

..

8 oo---Lassle 6. Capt . Kangaroo 8; Schoolles 10;
Sesame St 33
a 33-Biq Vlley 6, Popeye 10
8 5~Chuck While Reports 10
9·()()---A .M 3; Phil Donahue 4,15. Muriel Stevens 8;
Capt Kangaroo 10; Morning with D. J 13;
Operation Noah 33
9 30-Not For Women Only 3. Dinah 6; Galloping
Gourmet 8; Cartoons 12 .

New

Zoo Revue 13;

Biography 33.
10 oo---Celebrltv Sweeoslakes 3.4. 15; Spin-Off 8,10;
Mike Dov9las 13; Jody's Body Shop 33
10 · 30-Wheel of Fortune 3,4, 15; Gambll 8, 10; French
Chef 33.
11 oo---High Rollers 3.4. 15; One Life lo Live 6; Ttlc
I let ales 8, 10. - Film 33
11 ·30-Hollywood Squares 3,15; Brady Bunch 13,
Midday 4; Love of Life 8.10
11 : 5~ Take Kerr 8; Dan Imel's World 10.
12 oo---Magnlllcenl Marble Machine 3,1 S; Showofls 13;
Bob Braun's 50-50 Club 4; News 6,8,10; Mister
Rogers 33.
12 · 30-Jackpot 3,15; All My Children 6,13; Search for
Tomorrow 8,10; Elec. Co. 33
12 : 5~NBC News 3.
1.()()---News 3; Ryan's Hope 6,13; Phil Donahue 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15;
Villa Alegre 33 .
1 :30-Days of Our Lives 3.4.1S; Let's Make a Deal6,13;
As the World Turns 8,10; Folk Guitar 33.
2:()()---SIO,OOO Pyramid 6, 13; When Television Was Live
33.
2: 3D-Doctors 3,4,15. Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,13; Edge of
Night 8,10; Evening al Pops 33.
3·()()---Another World 3,4,15; General Hospital 6,13;
Price Is Right 8.10. Caught In the Act 20.
3:~ne Lite to Live 13; Lucy Show 6. Match Game
8,1 0; Jeanne Wolf with 20; Erica 33 .
3 : 4~ Theonle· 33
4:()()---Baseball3,4; Somerset 15; Mickey Mouse Clut
6; Musical Chairs 8; Sesame St. 20,33; Movie
"Under Ten Flags" 10.

4 . 30- Movle
"Angels
over
Broadway
• 4; Mod Squad 6; Mickey Mouse Club 8; Bonanza 15.
s · ~Lucy Show 8; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood
20.33
"
5. 30-News6; Andy Griffith 8; Hogan's Heroesl3; Gel
Smart 15; Elec. Co. 20,33.
6:~News 4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Elec. Co. 9;
Sesame St. 20; You Owe II To Yourself 33.
6 30-NBC News 3,6,15; ABC News 13; To Be An nounced 4; CBS News 8, 10; Combat 9; Jody's Body ' '
Shoo 33
Bowlin~

for Dollar• 6

.

Builds, Man
Festival 20

Destroys .33 ;

Philadelphia

Folk ,

9 : QO-Zoo Gang J,4; Cannon 8, 10; Masterpiece Theatre

33.
9·30-Jean Shepherd's America 20.
10:~Jim Stallard 6,13; Mannix 8,10, News 20;
Family at War 33
11 :()()---News 3.4.6.8 ,10,13,15, ABC News 33 .
11 : 3D-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Wide World Special 13;
FBI 6; Movie "Gunn" 8; Movie "The VIsit" 10;
Janakl 33.
12:3()-Wide World Special 6.

:oo-Tomorrow

3,4; News 13

"

SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22)

!1

length and formation of the
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTE

apostrophes the

WSUBD

TD

LSUHER

BTFF

21) Ac t '" accord Wllh you,
hrg he st 1deal s today. even
tho ugh you may feel one you 'll
b e deal•ng w•th tsn 1

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.

0 RI 0

words are a11

Unusual condlttons are brew•ng that could spe ll prof•! for
you fmanctally Scurry around
a btl for opportuM•es

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You'll
LSUHER

I FBI CD

NRTSLDL

Make 1! a pornl to be as polite
and taclful as posstble w•th
everyone today A pleasant
surpnse •s 1n store 1f you do

CANCER (June 21 -July 22)

simply stands ror another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's. X for the two O's, etc. Single letters.

BRU

Yo u'l l handle yourself today 1n
a manner others w1ll f1nd attract tve and tnsp•ratt onal It will be
easy to rally all • ~s to your
cause

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

RL

For Wednesday, Aug. 6, 1975
ARIES (March 21 -Apnl 19)

You know bes 1 what your
pnorrt1es are now. and the type
o f return s you want Keep yolK
plans to yourself

Now ts a good ttme to get un der way w1!h creat1ve c hanges
you ve been wantrng to make
for your res •dence

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

LSUHER . -

R I ML

GRTFUD-

UGRC

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: IT IS THE BOAST OF MODERN

MAN TO DO AT MOST THE LEAST HE CAN. - PIE'l' 1-JEIN
~E'S SNOOPI{'S OLDE~

Blc:OTHER .. HE'S COMIN6 TO
VISIT FOR A .EEW·C/AI{S

I

6. 55---News 1,.
7 oo---Today 3,4,15. A M America 13,6. CBS News

Severa l persons of 1nlluenca
you know on a lnend ly bas\S
w•ll fr gu re promrnenlly tn your
atta rrs the next few days

One Jetter

Dave Beningo and Jay HiU.

3~Columbus

.,

24 River in
Hades
25 Drink after
the drink
26 "El -"
27 Beam
28- rule

MIGHT 6E!

Hear David Strang,

swers 8; School Scene 10. The Story 13
Today 4 .
6 45-Mornlng RepJrt J; Fa.rmtlme 10

6

LIBRA (Sopt. 23-0ct. 23)

~OPINI5YOU

IrS A· SUPER SUMMER
AT WMPO RADIO

6 3()-Five Minutes to Live By 4, News 6; Bible An·

1

6UT I WA5

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

6 ·oo-Sunrlse Seminar 4. Summer Semester 10.

"Something tor a Lonely Man" 6; Baseball 15; Man

29 Dawdled
32 Soap opera
period
34 Have a debt
35 Guaranteed h.+-t36 Tower of
Texas, e.g.
(abbr.)
37 FoWJdation
38 Prosecuw

NEW LISTING - 3 yearHid, 3

_,'

,

6 25-Farm Report 13 .

Eyes"

(2 wds.)

bedroom, 2 baths, ail electric
home. Family room, full
basement and 2 car garage.

BEDROOM home, large
kifchen. central air, wall to
wall ca rp et mg Phone 992 ·
7030
8·3·6tc

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST6, 1975

India''

good for woodworktng, auto
pa1nt1ng,
contrac tor ,
refinishmg of furmture, etc

3

1·oo-- Tomorrow 3,.4 , News 11

"-of

Next to Forked Run

State Park, water and e lectnc
available

NEAR

mark
( 2 wds.)
4 " Banjo
6 Coal byproduct
8 Descriptive
of a
collision

I

t.li

- What's My Line 8; News 10; Country Music Jubilee
13; To Be Announced IS; Book Beat 20; The
Romagnolls' Table 33.
7:3G-Pollce Surgeon 3; Name Thai Tune 4; Let's
Make a Deal 6; Wilburn Brothers 8; Evening
Edition with Marlin Agronsky 20; The Judge 10; To
Tell the Truth 13; Episode Action 33.
8 : ~Litlle House on the Prairie 3,4; Thai's My Mama
6,13. Tony Orlando &amp; Dawn 8, 10; Felellng Good
20,33; To Be Announced 15.
8 3G-Movle "The Stranger Within" 13; Movie ,

one's re-

s Wrath

.

FBI 6; Mov ie "Man on a String" 8; Movie "The
Barretls ol Wlmpole Street" 10; Janak! 33.
12: 3D-Wide World Myslery 6.

7:QO-Truth or Cons. 3,.4:

DOWN
I Grew old •
2 Withered
3 Surprised

7whillikers!

Large 3

bedrooms. 2 baths, ,nat
possess1on soon

11 · Jo-Johnny Carson 3,4,15, Wide Worla Mysr~1 1

•

by THOMAS JOSEPH
HOME Improvement and
Repair serv1ce
Anythmg
f1xed around the home from
roof to basement You' tll 1ke
our work and rates Phone
7425081
7 17 tfc

HOUSE,
8 RM
17 basement,

CUTE AS A BUTTON -

Nor1h

:::.._..::...::'--.:;;....--' 8 L...-.....;

Real Estate For Sale

"'"'· 0

East On the last trump East
w1ll have the cho1ce of chuckmg
hi s queen of dtamonds or unguardmg hi s queen of clubs
Note that the squeeze only occurs if South cashes h1s last
trump Remember, that as an
esse ntial Ia all squeezes . you
mus t cash all your s1de-sU1t
wtnners to develop your
threats

South

Real Estate for Sale .
bath, carpet,
alum S1d1ng,
storm w.ndows, tnsulated ,
nver v1ew, large lot. double
carport w1th shop , reduced ,
qu1ck sale R 1ch ard Weaver,
992 ·7066
B 1 He

m dummy he 1s gomg to squeeze

• J 52

READY

del1~o~ered

¥JQ 2

• Q8 6

l ll9 j

&gt;

DICK SEYLER
Eas1 Main

• 9 763

• 10 9 7

Wes t
•

•.l

The lith may

East I Dl
.. 2
¥ AKQ976

AK

A.L.Om'i'!

PAINT
STRIPPING
SERVICE

sure lnck s

+10 854
!&gt;4 3

... IT'S 'TBRRIBl-E
\0 ~OI..D

I

Jookmg at a ptanola He has 10

5

materaal1ze by means of a
successful club finesse , but
South tsn t gomg to nsk h1s contract that way
On the other hand , 1f he JUSt
runs off all h1 s trumps wh1le
d1scardtng down to three clubs

LOSER

7 17 1 mo

At Caution light"

Rt. 7, Tuppers Plains. 0.
Shop Us Last &amp; Save
Open 9-5 Wed. lhrough Sun ,
Ph. 667-3858
7-7 -l mo

Phone 992-5682
or 992-7121

Cash all winners for squeeze

WOOD· METAL- PLASTIC
ANTIQUES
MODERN CHEMICALS

BARGAIN CENTER

MECHANICAL
WORK

WIN AT BRIDGE

Oh10 Route7, North-East of
Tupper Platns .
Coolville, Ohio
Phone: 667-3601
Open
Monday
thru
Saturday 8 DO to 8 : 00 .
NOW OPEN
Larry and Vivian Hopps
Owners

Guaranteed
appliances,
used furntture at

KUHL'S

OF CA'-15~

Freeze

L&amp;VMeat
Processing

CASH 'N CARRY
SAVES U S's on

ALL

Middleport
7 16 26 tc

!.AVE~DER

lARRY

On St. Rl . 124
Off Rl. 1 By-Pass

FARM Equ1pment Two
New Idea No 7 one row corn
ptckers , S650 Th ree used GENERAL Repa 1r , clean up
Gravity beds and wagons ,
and
ha u l tng.
cu ttmg ,
$475
each
Two
corn
welding ,
car pentry ,
ele\lators , $140 each Ford 9
plumb 1ng. elec masonry
N Tra cto r , $99 5 New lm co4
and general remode l 1ng
fl
5' 3 pt rotary mowers ,
Call Sk il Pool
Phone 992
$375 5395
Ermel Luckett ,
5126
6 17 lfc
Albany Phone 698 3032 or
698 7881
8531c SE PTIC TANK S c lean ed
- - - - - - - - - - - -- Modern San Jial•on 992 3954
~~7'.2 TRAVEL Trailer, 16 ft
or 992 7349
Leisure
T lme
Lo Boy ,
9 18 tt c
refr1gerator,
furnace
F'hone 992 7738
CARPET installatiOn , $1 25
8 5 6tc
per yard
Call
R• c hard
West phone 843 7667
BAR LEY seed lor cover crop,
7 2 26t p
clean straw, large bales , BOO - - - - ------- - - -lb
Hereford bulls , Ken
BOAT Motors , Repa•rs
498
nebec and Cobbler potatoes
Locust S t , Mictd l eport.
Paul Sayre , Portland , Oh10,
Oh 10 . Phone 992 3092
Rt 338, 1 mile be low ferry
7 22 76tc
Phone 843 2'.286
a 5 3tc - - -- - -- - - - - - - - SEP TIC fANK S CLEANEL'
Reasonable RATES Phon •
2 PLATFORM rockers , 10ft
J46 4782 GallipOliS
JO hl
cu in refrigerator, all like
Russell. owner
new Phone 992 3457
4 9 lfc
B 3 Jtc

DISCARDED lawn mowers ,
tillers, r1dtng mowers, elc
Phone 7A1 307A
7 16 26tc SHASTA c:amper. 18ft sleeps
------------·
6 Phone 9A9 5161
.OLD tun1•ture , ICe boxes,
_J_!IC
brass beds, or complete ~ -- -- -- -- ---~_
households
Wr.te M
D , G I BSON hollow body electrit
Miller , Rt
4, Pomeroy,
guitar, model 330. Excellent
Ohio Call 992 7760
cond•tion. cherry grain
10 7 7A
f1n1sh Price $350 Ca ll 992

For Rent

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

ROGER HYSELl'S
GARAGE
2 Miles West

DOUBLE oven , gas range ,
Norge Refrrgerator freezer ,
breakfast set. and m1SC
Movmg , w1ll not need these
appl•ances Can be seen . at
947 Ash Sl , Mtdd l eporf
8 5 3tc

Cut

Blown into Walls &amp; Att1cs

Emergency
949· 221 1 or 992·S700
Complete a1r cond•tton•ng
sates and serv•ce , healing ,
plumb1ng, roo fing and
general sheet metal work
Free Estimates
7 II 1 mo

For Rent or Sale

TRAVELING
Rent a
camper Codner's Cam per s,
Rainbow
R •dge,
Long
Bottom Sales and renta l
Phone 843 2621

Blown
Insulation Services

Your HtHI Dealer
Th~rd St.
R actne, Oh1o
Ph . 949 .5961

ME EATIN(5 OUT

CUSTOM SLAUGHTER

FREE ESTIMATES

Racine Plumbing
&amp; Heating

10 oo---Pollce Slory 3,4; Marcus Welby, M.D. 6,13;
Barnaby Jones 8.10. · News 20; Interlace 33.
10 3D-Woman 20; Monty Python's Flying Circus 33 .
11 oo---News 3,4,6,8, 10,13,15; ABC News 33

7 30- Hollywood 5quares 3, 4; Let ~ uea1 Wuh I I 6.
Buck Owens 8, Evening
Edttion with Martm

Homemade

MARRieD, SHE'D

HAY for sale , roun~ bales in
field, soc bale . Phone 992
25'.24
1 '3 Jtc

•

Decorator.

Evenings 742 -4902
77 . 1m,

Pomeroy

Ph 992 ·2114

TUESDAY , AUGUSTS, 1975

Kitchen State Inspected
Llcenied
Baker
and

Vinyl siding, alummum
siding, pat 10 co'llers, storm
windows.
kllchen s,
bathrooms and garages
We Carry
llabtlity Insurance

Nathan B1ggs
Radiator Specialist

II

CAKE BAKING
WANTED

JOHNSON
REMODELING

Service

- ---- ---~ -- --- ·

(
~

350 V-8 automattc trans, power steering and brakes,
dark green ftn1sh, vmyl roof, saddle bucket seats,
console, rad•o, ltke new w w ftres

HERMAN GRATE
W.VA.

and James Goodrich

'

52095

MASON FURNITURE

Jllrdng tile otheril.

.. .

1970 CHEV. CAMARO

4 I-lOOM furntshed and
unfurni shed
apartments
Phone 992 5A 3A
4 \'life

.-fM~ WBI held With Mary

ho-u

$3495

Ranger Pkg Beaultful 2 tone green w1th tnm optl?ns,
slldt ng back glass, automati c trans , power steermg ,
r:tdto Less than 9,000 mtles Chrome front bumper.
rear step bumper

J P. l'I.J

=

1

1974 FORDS' PICKUP

,COU NTRY
Mobile Home
Park. Rt Jl, ten miles nbrth
of Pomeroy Large lot s w1th
conc rete patios. srdewalks,
runners and off street
parkmg Phone 992 7479
1
12 31 lfc

attending.
r Prwc:edlng the meeting a ,
Donna K. Hysell, Unda

'

Mr. and Mrs. Clio ton ONE femal e Border Collie. B
Gilkey and Mr. and Mrs. Dale
months old, One female
mobile home,
Norwegian elkhound
Six TWO bedrm
Whaley camped three days at
deposit requ.red Phone 992
1/2 Norweg1an
pupp1es 3429
Yawks Nest, W. Va. On the
E lk hound, t, , Border Coll•e
7 30 12tp
All
good
with
c
h
i
ldr
en,
way they visiwd Mr. and
make good
watchdogs . ------t-------Mrs. Raleigh Gregory at
Phone 992 3090
B·5 3tc
Webster Springs. Gregory
FURN apf 5 rooms and bath, CANNING tomatoes, green
beans ,
sweet
peppers.
n1ce large yard. bath and',,
sent word hello to all his
cucumbers
Gera ld•n e
39~
South
Seco nd
St ,
Cleland , Ra c1 ne Phone 949
friends and expects to spend
Mtddleporl
adults only
4171
Pr'lone 992 5'262 eve n1ngs
mother, .ellie Borgan and
a week here in August.
7 25 tfc
5 21 lfc
Mr~. Joe Carsey visiwd the attended the fWJeral of their
BICYCLE Repa irs, Sales and
niece, Patricia Tolley.
JWlior Paynes Saturday.
Serv•ce, 498 Locus! St,
Mr . and Mrs. F . 0 . Whaley
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Borgan,
Middleport , Ohto. Phone
"FURNISHED
apartment,
99 2 3092
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Borgan and grandchilpren, Chipand
adults on ly in Middleport
7 22 26tc
Phone 99l-·3874
and Mr. and Mrs. James · Ann Whaley visited Ava
3 25 tfc
Gilkey and the Robert
B~rgan and Mr. and Mrs.
THOROUGHBRED
Ge lding
bl\en Borgan visiwd their Alkires.
for sale Gentle . will work

MEETING HELD
· " A meeting of the Board of
~ton of the Big Bend
. Radio ' Club was held
Saturday night at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie
with Guy Hysell,
balrman, BW Schultz and

ROberta Robinaon, Ruby

QUALITY

I EX-PERIENCED
.
Motor Co
·
'
...
. - I Radlato
..

..------ ·--:r-------1 Television log ·for easy yiewing

I NEVER SAW

THIS 'HEAD
TAKEN APART
BEFORE!

Business Services

I

r-·----..------------·---------..--~··w~~--~---.--- ---·--~

J SWfAR

I HAVE NC1Tlt1NG TO HIDE.

f---------------------------~

PIAN O Tuning, L ane danre l s
I

I K

Ynter••r'•

ABOUT ME.

Auto Sales

R OOM

WMBAG

- Th• ""''1y Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday. Aug. 5 1975
TRI'.CY

1ewel

,

l

the

..

•'

'
I

...

I

be rnak •ng some major
changes m plans over the nexl
few days
They II prov e
beneficia l Let your tnstght
gu•de you

SAG ITT AAIUS (Nov. 23-Doo.

19) A commerc 1al s•tuatton
you II be mvolved tn wtll halli&amp;
some fnn ge benefits not ap pa rent at f•rst Explore the~
carefu ll y before actmg

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 11)
One wtth whom you II be c losely assoc•ated today has some
rather soun d • deas tot
som elh 1ng you can do as e.
team G1ve them a lry

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) H
you 're gomg to make any •mi
po rta nl mo11es careerw1Se,
umetng rs now m your !avo(
Cool Judgment is a must.

~Your

:

~Birthday"

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 22)

Aug. 6, 1975

Mu c h of the st1ng w111 soon go
from a sttuat1on that has been a
ba rb m your s•de la tely Its
negat1ve effects begm to lessen
toda y

Its very likely lhts year you'll
make a return lnp to a p lace,
you've found pleasurable. A
heavy soc1al calendar •s also tn'
the olfmg
.-.

00 I 6r!'E 1-lER a-.1 l'kE ~co .J
NOW, OR DO I wt&gt;.IT liNT!~
6ETS HERE AND
LET HIM 61TE'HER?

SPIKE

�•
•

'

I'

~iJjii@\Yi:·::::;:;;,"=;:·por Fast Results Use The Sentinel Clas·sifieds

(JnKramble then four Jumbles.,
Pne letter to each square, to
f'orm tour ordinary words.

You lou ~ led

CHALT

,

Notice

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

..................

r

I

N ow listed whil e
Ph on e 991 ?08 7

paqes

2 SIGNS .Pomeroy

I JO 121c

A ND
BOARD
Pr1v a 1e a1r con dli10n e d
r oom
pho n e
T V
all
n1 ca ts l aundry plus many
('ICi rit S Wrd(' Mrs M
J
Mill er IJox 195 , Pome roy
0 ,110
8 I 76tp

OF

t
I I J

I

WH!:Il:E 5Q\.IE PEDF'LE
WHO SUFFE!l: ll:EVERSES
Afi:E TAKEN.

IENJUKT

t

Now BJTanr• the &lt;irclod letters

~

!~==·====·====~~~====~~:_~·=u~gr~•:•:tod~
I I
bytheabovec~oon.
1
pr.u. SURPRISE AHSW!IIIlele
J
ta form the aurpriae answer, aa

r x xx x

fAntwt:n 1omorro,..)

Jumblet l BEIGE

SHEEP

AUTUMN

7'/u•JI q(•/ l tlQl lht 1 fM a

Antwrr~

PUBLIC NOTICE
Sealed b•ds wilt be rece1ved
by the Eastern Local School
Dlslr1ct Board of Educat1on at
the H •9h School Building unti l

7 30 p m , August 12 . 1975 for
bakery goods, milk, gasoltne.
fuel otl and bus insurance
The Eastern Local School
o,str1ct Board of Education
reserves the r1ght to reje ct
any and all bidS

Eastern Local
Sc hool D1stnct
Board of Educat1on
Elo1se Boston ,
Clerk

rn 29 18J 5. 12. 3tc
DRAWING JURORS
Office of CommiSSioners of
Jurors. Me1gs Coun1y, Ohto
July 21, 1975
To All Whom It May Concern ·
On Saturday , the 16th day of
August 1975. at 10 00 o'clock,
A M , at the office of the Clerk
of Common Pleas , Court,
Meigs County, Ohto, Jurors
wilt be publ1cly drawn for the
September
Term
of the
Cmomon Pleas Court of sa1d
County

lrtl~ ·-

DILUTE

TEETH

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT,
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF SET ·
TLEMENT OF ACCOUNTS,
PROBATE COURT, MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
•
Ac:counts and vouchers of
lhe
followmg
nameCI
flduc:tarres hav e been filed rn
the Probate Co url Mergs
County. Oh10, for approval
and sett le me nt '
CASE NO 17.86 1 S111teenth
and F 1nal Account of Marton
Jea n Warner , Guard •an of the
Guardranshtp Estate of Jet
tr ey Jay warner , a mmor
CASE NO ?0,779 Ftrst and
F 1nal Acc ount of Roy Lemley
Guard1an of the Person and
Estate of Car l Lem ley , an
Incompetent Person
CASE NO
11 , 010 F 1rst ,
F1nal and D1str•bulive Ac
count of Robert E
Buck,
AdminiStrator of the Estate of
Ray Cook, Deceased
CASE NO 21.2 19 F•rst and
Fmal Account of Jo Ann
Wh •te , Adminrstratr1x wtth
the Will Annexed of the Estate
of
Ldl1an
J
Tr.pletf ,
Oeceas~d

&lt;:. lNG at Rutland
I r cf' wdl Or1p i1S t C~c h
&lt;; unday A ug I J '} p m A ll
s1nQN S ~nd th e publrc are
Wf'I(O riH'
B 1 l lltc

HY MN

WAN1ED

TO

RENT

3

b C'd room ho m ~ or lar ger 111
Tupp er s P l am s area Ca ll
Par t.,cr sbu rg . Co ll ect
1
(3 0 11 &lt;177 3180
7 31 6t c
EBLIN Reun1on to be he ld at
Fo rt Me 1gs Sunday Aug
10 begrn n1ng at 17 noon A ll
r ela l1v es 1nV 1I ed
8 J 61p
SYRACUSE Coon
H unte rs '
AS.SOC1B I1 0n Will hold a
spec 1al meeti ng F r1day , 7
p m

8 5 41&lt;:

Yard Sale
CA R PORT sa l e, 918 So 3r,d ,
Middlepor t, Aug
5th and
6th
9 30 til A )0, Avon.
furniture , clolh1ng
an d
m 1SC
B 3 3tc
YARD sa l e 879 So 3rd Ave,
M•ddleport , 4th, 5th and 6th
B

YARD
Hysell ,
dleport
6th 9 a

J

]IC

Sale,
Rosemary
Laurel 51
M1d
Aug 4th, 5t h and
m Ill 4 p m
B 3 31 c

7 FAMILY YARD Sa le on
Fo urth St , Rac.ne , Monday
through Frrday, Aug
.:1
through Aug 8 from 10 a
m ldl 4 p m
8 3 6fc

CASE NO
21. 309 F1rst
and F1nal Account of Duane F
GARAGE Sale, Thurs day and
Stan l ey , Adm1 n 1slra to r of the
F r•day start 1ng at ~ am
Estate of Wtlltam C Stanley,
next to the lr e•g ht depot •n
1
Freeland S Norr1s Decea sed
Pomeroy
Lauren E Hoffman
CASE NO 21.3AO F1rst and
8 5 2tc
CommISSIOners Final Account of Mrchael
of Jurors Epple, Guardtan of Al1ce
J FAM IL,)' Yard Sa le Aug 9
Epple Dav1s , an incompetent
18 1 5. ltc
10 on Eagle R 1dge Bash an
person
Road
turn off T R 7 from
Unless excepttons are tiled
Pomeroy on Road 32 By
thereto, Sa•d accoun ts will be
Meigs Memory Gardens, go
PUBLIC NOTICE
for h ear1ng before sa1d Court
6
m de s
Antiques,
Offers wil l be rece1ved at on the 3rd day of September ,
deprcss•on
glass
,
guns and
the off•ces of Ful tz and
1975 at whrch t1me said ac
other rtems Phone 949 319ol
Knig h t. in
the Pomeroy counts will be constdt&gt;red and
B 5 Alp
Nat •o nal
Bank
Bui!d1ng , contmued from day to day
Pomeroy, Ohto. on behalf of until ftnally d1sposed of
YARD Sale , very nice g1rl's
the owner, until Fr,tday ,
Any person mterested may
and boy ' s school cloth ing, a
August 15, 1975, at 10 o clock tile wntten except 1ons to sa1d
baby bed, playpen, good
AM., for the sale of the accounts or to ma t ters per
toys , diShes and m tsc Aug 7
followmg :
taining to the exec:utlon of the
and 8, 9 5 Res of lrts Payne ,
1. A 1974 Maver1ck 4 door trust. not less than ftve days
660 Beech Sl , M •ddleport
sedan, 6 cyl automat1c trans
pnor to the date set for
B 5 3tp•
mlss•on. deluxe tnter.or
hearing
2 One tavern completely
1 FAMILY Yard Sale, Aug 6
equipped , with 0 . 1 and 0 '2
MANNIN G D WEBSTER
and 7 All good 1tems
L 1quor Licenses . S1fUated at
JUDGE
Charles Baker r es•de nce,
1l6
west
MBin
Street,
COMMON PLEAS COURT.
Rl 3, Racme Phone 9A9
Pomeroy , Ohio
PROBATE OIV I S ION
27'13
'3 The reel estate, conslstmg
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
8 5 2tc
of tt')e buslnes.s. bulldlng oc
(S ) S, ~tc;
cu'l)\td bV the ta\lern re.terred
YAR 0 Sa l e, Wednesday and
to In lt~m 2, conslstmg of
Thursday from 9 a m
business room approximately
Watch for sign at WMPO
25 ft frontage x 55 teet
rad10 stat1on, Bradbury
The owner reserves the
NOTICE ON FILING
8 5 21p
right to retect eny and all
OF INVENTORY
offers
AND APPRAISEMENT
For rnformalton , phone 992
The State of Oh10, Metgs YARD Sale, Wednesday and
Thursday Aug 6 and 7 at
7186
County, Couri of Common
317 Lmc:oln St , Middleport
Pleas, Probate DIVISIOn
8 5 2tc
(8) 4, 5, 1, 11, 12. 14, 6tc
To the E)(ecutnx of the
estate, to such of the followmg
as are residents of the State of
Ohio , viz . the surv111109
spouse. the next of kin, the
benef•c•aries under the wlll , MUST sell 1975 travel trailer,
28 ft
w1th t 1p out room ,
and to the attorney or af .
carpeted,
air c:onditioned,
torneys representmg any of
many extras
W1ll take
the aforementioned persons
trade rn Johnson's Tra•ler
Wllllam B . Witte, Deceased,
Park , R t 7, across from
Pomeroy, Oh10, R 0 3, No
B lu e
Fountain
Motel,
21563
GalliPOliS
Mrs. Caroline Miller, Mr.
You are her eby notlfted that
7 30 6tc
and Mrs. Ernest Bush, Peggy the lnventortes and Ap
praisements of the estate of
GREAT
LAKES
Bush and Terry Manuel spent the
eforementio ne d, 1969
Housetratler , 8 x 45, may be
deceased
,
late
ol
said
County.
Saturday in Parkersburg
seen any f 1m c at Cla1r Boso
were filed 1n th 1S Court Said
residence, G real Bend
shopping.
Inventories
and
Ap
Phone 843 2494
Mr. and Mrs. Sheridan praisements will be for
B s.3tc
hear.ng before thts Court on
RUSBell, Jr., and Paula of the 19th day of August, 1975, at
1969 12 x 52 PMC mobile home
Mason, W. Va. were recent 10 : 00 o' clock A .M
with large porch, S3,500 Cal!
Any person des•ring to f!le
985 3504, 1f no answer. call
vlaltors of Mr. and Mrs. exceptions thereto must ftle
991 5596
them at least f ive days pnor to
Kenneth Turley.
B 5 6tc
the date set for hearing
" Mr. and Mrs. Bud Simpson
G111en under mv hand and
Seymour, Ind. spent a see! of said Court , this lsi day
of Augusf 1975
"Weekend with his mother,
R-E G - Toy Poodle, Phone 74'.2
Mannmg D Webster
3161
'Mrs. Gretta Simpson, who
Judge
7 31 tfc
accompanied them home and
By Ann B Watson
Deputy Clerk PRO FESS IONAL
Poodle
\1Pent a week.
.;
IBJ 5, 12, 2tc
groom 1ng , $5 W1lh bath, $6
&gt; • Mr. and Mrs. William
W1ll do most breeds of dogs
Call
667 39 15 ' for
ap
Hayman visited their son,
porntment
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Hayman
7 '31 Sic
.nd .childr~n at Dunkirk,
WILL give away 3 mS~ I e black
Ohlo.
k1ttens and blue female
::. Mrs.
Helen Simpson
Phone 9&lt;19 A603
8 5 3tp
returned from a visit of three

Mobile Homes for Sale

Racine
Events

:ot

Pets ForSale

Harrisonville
Society News

weeks with her son and
family and her brothers and
families.
., Mr. and Mrs . Samuel
'Andrew and son of Weirton,
W. Va. visited their aWlt,
lllrs. James Swart.
: Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Crow
and Becky, Mr. and Mrs.
Rook Crow, Mr. and Mrs.
David Crow and Mr. and Mrs.
Steve Winebrenner have
returned horne from ·a
vacation at Myrtle Beach, S.

c. .

.

Kenneth Swart of Akron
spent a few days With his
mother, Mrs. James Swart.

Clrittlne Schultz and

MAIN rAINED DURING
CLOSING POMEROY-MASON BRIDGE

Phone 773-5592

From the largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radtator to the
sma llest Heater Core

1970 NOVA V-8 CPE .

SI29S

Vinyl - oaf , grey ftnt sh, htgh mileage, good tires,
automatic, power steertng, rad1o, stlver ftnl sh Black

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC •.

6 00-News 3,4,8, 10, 13, 15. ABC News 6; Sesame Street

20, Catch-33 33
6 30-I'IBC News 3,4,15 ; ABC News 13; Bewitched 6;
CBS News 8. 10: Lilias. Yoga and You 33 .
7 oo-- Truth or Consequences 3,4. Bowlmg for Dollars
6 . What ' s My Line? 8. News 10, Name That Tune
13 , To Be Announced 1S; Antiques 20; Jean
Shepherd' s Amer~ca 33

Noodles also featured .

FOR PETE'S SAKE, i!&gt;E SE.,Sii!&gt;LE:
YOU CA'-l'T JU!:&gt;T TRAIPSe OFF 1'-ITO
THe ..JU"GLE!

Flalwoods, Oh1o
Pomeroy , Oh1o
Stop In Or

Caii992-7SJ7

Agronsky 20. New Price Is Right 10. To Tell The
Trulh 13. Car and Track IS; Spotlight On 33.

CAP!' AIN EASY

KUHL CAKE DECOR

Ph. 992-7608

8-1-75

8 DO-Movie 3,4 , H appy Days 6, 13 . Good Times 8, 10, .
Wh e n Televi ston Was Live 20,3J ; To Be Announced

6"AT5! .. &gt;JO WO.,DE&lt;fl.
SHE ClfARt;D OUn OTHERWISE 5Ht;'D HAVE TO EAT
THE!:Oe CHA!l:ll:ED FISH

FillETS!'

top

15
8 3()-Movie " The Daughters of Joshua Cabe," 6,13.
Baseball IS , MASH 8, 10; Consumer Survival Kit

20.33.

IF Wt; Wt;I1:E!

9 OO- Hawa11 F •ve 0 8, 10; Nova 20 , Saga ot We'itern
Man 33

PR.OMBLV HAVE

:POMEROY
MOTOR
CO.
OPEN EVES.8:00 P.M.
POMEROY, OHIO
1960 CJS JEEP, l•k e new, good
lrre s n ew pam!. top. rebu11t
engrn e Phone 7A? 37A5
B 3 6tc

For Sale

66 F ORD Mustang , 789 engine,
power stee r 1ng
Ca ll 992
1386
8 3 4tc

STEREO RADIO
modern
de S•Q n , 8 track combma lion ,
am l m
rad10
Ba la nc:e
$102 54 or terms Call 99'.2
J965
8 5 lfc

19 65 DODGE m good runnmg
co nd1110n Contact Howard
E n gi 1S.h 99 7 5470

19 7A KAWASAKI Fll 250CC
E n duro , 5 weeks o ld Under
8 1 SI C
warranty until Chr•stmas
Showroom condr t•on , not a
1966
IN TER NATION AL
scralc:h
New fork brace.
p1ckup . heavy duly spr 1ngs
knobb •e s
$1 , 100 mvested ,
to r camper, heavy duty
will sell for 59'25 Phon e 99'.2
bumper h 1t ch for horse
]&lt;:64
trailer Can be seen at Bob
8 5 4tp
Will1ams , Harri sonv ill e Rd
Phone 997 7017
ONE Ben Pearson 45 lb pull
13 5 3tc:
huntmg bow
Phone 99'.2
- =----- --..,. ---=-=---~
3090
a 5 3tc

------- --

8 ] 31p

----

Emplovment Wanted

WILL do oaa tob s, mow1ng ,
haulrng , paintmg or ro o f 1ng
Phone 992 7A09
7 19 26tc
"REMODE L IN G
Plumtiing ,
h ealing and all types of
general
repatr
Work
gua ranteed
20 years. ex
p er1e nce
Phon e 992 2409
5 I tlr

Help Wanted
SO MEONE n~eaed to 11ve m
or come m durmg the day to
fiiC
meals
and
gtve
medtcat •on to Mr and Mrs
Owen W(itson
P hone 949
4053 , Racme
a J Jlc
PART T IME HELP - Apply
•n person. Rac 1ne Food
Market Ask for Phebe
_ _r. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _8
_'3_ 3tc

Wanted
CASH patd tor all makes and
models of mobtle homes
Phone area code 614 423
9531
4 13 tfc

Wanted To Buy
PROPERTY on land qmtract
wilh or wdhout house
Phone 7A'2 3074
7 29 26 1c:

FU RNITURE. repa 1r , car
penlry , Rrchard Russell
Phone 992 7 178
8 5 Btp
SWEET corn lor fre ezer,
wh1le and yellow Thomas
Say re . 843 2A91
B 5 2tc
1964 JEEP Wagoneer, Out
board motor
5 h p
'.243
caliber r1fle Call 378 ·6203
B 5 6t c

5933.

8 3 5fc

4 ROOMS and ba th apt •n
Rul!and area
Phone 992
5858
7 '.27 He
TRAILER lot
Cal l 992 5.434

1n

1964 AVALON 16 FT
self
conta1ned camper, gas and
e le c
t1ghts
Roy Ellis ,
Rutland, Ohio Phone 742
334&lt;1
8 3 3tp

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

STORE bldgs, Rt 7, Tuppers
Plarns , Phone 667 3858
7 27 7tp

S RM apt furnished. uttlil1es
pa1d , 1 child accepted No
drunks John Sheets, 3 miles
south ol Middleport on Rt 7
.
8 5 6tp
2 BEDRM mobile home, 1'12
bath , S40 week and deposit
Pay own utdit1eS Phone 992
3509
8 5 6tc

USED once . 10' x 14' Sears'
Tent, 2 cots, folding t8bl e,
camp stove. sleeptng bag,
fan. girl's b1ke with baby
seat, oppos•te Chester Golf
Course Ffhone 985 3335
'
B·3·31p
1974 750 HONDA , lot of extras,
Sl.700 Phone 992 ·567 1
B 3 3tp
3

MILK GOATS, 2 part
Nubtan Phone 74'2 3745
8 3 6tc

D6 CATERF'ILLAR dozer,
John Deere delsel rubber
ttred loader backhoe, 4
wheel drl11e truck wtth flat
dump bed. 2 ton Chevrolet
w1th hydrocrane ; 1969 Ford
pickup,
ntce
Harold
Brewer , Long Bottom, Ohio
8·3 tfc

around cattle
Has be..en
wormed 10 years or age
Phone6961084ti113 30p m .
7 31 · 12tc

-·- ---- --- -------POR'fA·COOL'"
ROOM-to-ROOM

PRIVATE rneet1ng room to·
any organ 1za t 10n , phone 9Y '
397 5
J 11 tfr

Syracuse, Ohio
Ph . 90"-3993
·4 10 1 mo

Wrap

11

7-8-1 mo .

EXCAVATING,
backhoe ,
dozer and ditcher
Gas,
electric and water l 1ne
bunat, basements. toofers ,
sept1c systems and brush
clean•ng Will haul fill dirt,
top soil, sand and gravel,
l1mestone for dr•veways and
roads
Phone Charles R
BACKHOE tor rent , hour or
Hatf ie ld , Backhoe Serv1ce,
contract , reg or exc:avatory
Rt 1, Rutland . Oh10 , 742 ·
type Septte tanks mstalled .
6092
B 1ll Pullrns , phone 992 1478
71190tc
7 24 26tc

WOULD YOU BELIEVE"
Build an all steel buitd .ng at
Pole Barn pr1c:es ? Golden
G1ant A ll Steel Bulld1ngs,
R t A Box 148 . Waver I y,
Oh10 Phone 9A7 2296
7 2.4 He

S EWING
MACHINE
Repe•rs , serv 1ce. all makes
992 228.4 Tne Fabrtc Shop ,
Pomeroy Aulho'rizecf Sm ger
Sa les and ServiCe
We
s harpen SciSSo r s
3 29 tfc
WALL
paper
pa1nt1ng , and
Phone 7.42 5081

BORN

Norch
.. 7 6
• 10 4

vHOW 01.0 A~ '4Cll ~ ~/&gt;J;:HS-;

hangmg,
paneH1ng
7 27 12tc

MIX CONC~ET-E
rtght to your
protect Fast and easy Free
es t1mates PhOne 992 3284
Goeglem Ready Mrx Co ,
M •ddlepo r f, Oh10
6 30 If(

Real Estate for Sale

.. AKQJB 5 4

¥8 3
• AJ
'-A 2

t
i

Both Vuln erable

•

€

.

West

B~FORE

Pomeroy

lHEY ltlSI5TED

otl OPENII'U.i lHAT &amp;c!&gt;IC!
1&gt;1£'( W.R£ CUHNIN4,
Cf&lt;llfl AMD .-.JRDfRDUS
E'FASlS - HCN1 lOOK AT

Ph. 992-2798
7-24-1 mo .

Th1s new home 1s loca ted
on Rt 143 not too far out.
It 's built on a housewife
savtngs plan. 2 love ly BRs.

5 RM HOUSE wtth 11!1 acres
on Rt 1. Rutland off Co Rd

bath. nice

10. Porch enclosed Phone
day , 141 .4681 or evenmgs,
7.42 3381.
8 5 3fc

DON'T FENCE ME IN Want a home with lots of
ground . Tuppers Plains on
Rt. 7 . 2112 acres. Home has
2 BR, bath, part basement,
own water &amp; city water,
new steel siding. $10,500

3 ACRES ot land wilh 2 mobile
homes 1n A 1 cond•fion
Exc:ellent well with new
deep well water pump
Many extras. seen by eppt
only For more lnformaflon,
call 949 4911 Pnced right
for qutck sate
8 5 12tc

SCIPIO TWSP.

wtth TV room , utility R ,
large concrete patio, large

yard. $9,500.

REG
Quarter -Horse and
Pamt colt. Phone 742 3267, 1
1 31 tfc

FT.

CABIN

Thompson

hull.

phone 992-2815.

cruiser,
trailer,

7-23 12tc
u

CLOSE IN - Nice 1'h acre
. Mobile home with kitchen,
utility and garage added,
own and city water supp ly
Excellent condition $8,900.

IN
COPPERTONE
Fng,da•re electnc range.
self ·cleaning oven Call 949
3953
7 31 6fc

20

GOOD USED HOMES ARE
BEING ' TAKEN
UP
RAPIDLY
CAL
TODAY.
PHONE 992--2259
HOUSE for sale on 2 acres of
tand near Vmton , Oh10 on
Mt Tabor Rd , 3 bedrooms ,
and bath, fireplace, good
welt. outbutldmgs. Ca ll 388
8879
1 21 12tc:

s
COINS. wheat back
pennies sSe roll, silver
cerfificates, S1.25 each.
Indian pennies 45C each, blg
pennies dated at least 125
years old 54 each. si111er
dollars , $4 50 each, set of
Lincoln pennies 41 to 750, no
DO or 60 P s D . in folders ,
S4 . 50
each
Jefferson ·
nickels , 38 to 74 (50 Dis BU}
S24 set, Indian penn ie s 1895
to 1909 P mint only $7 50 set
W i ll allow 1n trade S'2 80 for
$1 face 64 and older coins . '
Celt 742 3651, Roger Warns
ley .
8 3 Jtc

BLACK &amp; Decker electric
mower for sale . Best offer
Phone 247 .2162
8·3 3tc

I
\

138

POMEROY - Hom e has 3
BR, bath, lull basement

CANN IN G tomatoes for sa te
Harold Roush, Portland ,
Oh10 Phone 843 ·2255.
1·30 6tc

USED p1ckup camper cover ,
sell or trade for farm
. equipment Phone 843 '.2095
alter 6 30 p m
8 4 .41c

-

rolling, wooded ac r es
Close toRt 143 Has an old
house &amp; well. About $174 00
per acre

for Sale

40

kitchen, . full

baseme nt
w1th
large
recreation room, carport &amp;
storage, one acre . $22 .700.

East

Pass

Souch

Pa ss

1¥

Double

2.

2¥

4 ..

Pa ss

Pass

Opcmng lead -

2¥

'l&gt;lfM - FRIEHD\.Y, PlAYFUL

EXCAVATING doz er load er
and backhoe , work , sept1c
tanks.
ms.talled ,
dump
trucks and lo boys for h1re
will haul f1ll dtrt . top sod.
l 1mesto ne and gravel Ca ll
Bob or Roger Jeffers. day
phone 992 7089, n1ght phone
99 2 3575 or 992 523'2
2 11 lfc

AHD 51MPl.E APfS-

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

Most squeeze s are rather
s1mple All you need to have a
squeeze poss1b1ilty , IS all but
one of th e tricks tn the form of
hagh-ca rd wmners and potential
low-card

-- , ------- '

D &amp; D TREE Trr mmmg, 20
years e)(perience Insured ,
free esflm ales Call 992 3057 ,
P ho ne ( 1J 667
Coo l ville
)041
4 30 tfc
.'
- ____ ._

__________

ALI..EY OOP

INELL BO'V'SI
I

ELWOOD BOWERS"'REPA IR
Sweepers , toasters, •ron'S,
all sma ll app l1 ances Lawn
mower , next to State H1gh
way Garage on Route 7·
Phone 985 3B25
4 16 tic

tncks

tn two

smts

Then . whether or not you
know how to count a hand tf you
JUSt run off all your high-card
wmners you may fmd that one
of your low cards has become
high
East starts off the defen se by
cashmg two hearts Then he
s h1fts to the kmg of d1amonds .
South takes hts ace and IS

WI-IAI'LL
IT BE?

61~.,cP~t·

~Q~~
An Alabama tournament
player asks , " We play weak
two-b1ds w1th 7-11 h1gh-card
fXllnlS and a good SIX-card SUI(
My partner cnt1c1zed me for
open1ng
two
spades
w1lh • A Q J 9 7 6 ¥ A 3 2
t 8 4 "'9 5 What do you say?"
We agree With our correspondent's partner Thts hand
should be opened one spade and
not With a weak two-b1d It 1s
too good for that preemptive
actton
(Do you have a questton for
the Jaco /J ys? Wflle "Ask the
Jaco h ys " care of thts
newspa per The most ,nterestmg questiOns Will be
used tn thiS column and
'Wnters w1/l recetve cop1es ol
.JACOBY MODERN i

NEW LISTING -

ACROSS
1 Volcano
remnant
4 Persian or
Manx

8 Hamper for
documents
12 Pitcher's
concern
(abbr.)
13 Etch
14 Swerve
16 Aries
17 "Witch
of -"
18 Kyushu 's
volcano
l-9 Frankness
21 Blue-penc1l
Novehst,
Michael -

bedroom mobile home , 71hl4
wtth pullout. Ph baths, patio
and 6 acres.

TWO FAMILY HOME 12 ACRES -

4

gas,

Several building

lots and a J bedroom renovated
home City uttltties.
ON RT. 33 - 2 bedroom home
wi th bath and 2 porches . T. P
water.

CABIN -

OHIO

Wonderful view,
home. and one
ftshtng rtghts

RIVER
2 bedroom
acre, with

STORAGE BUILDING -

Or

-SEE THIS Rt:::CORD?
"HOW MUCH IS THAT

FATSON
KNOWS HOW
IODEALWITH

YOUR

DOG61E

I~N~T~H~E~~~~

WE'LL SEE HOW CUTE SHe TI-l INKS IT 15
AFTER WE'VE LOCKED HER IN AND SHES
HEARD IT 8 OF&lt; 10 HOURS
OVER AND OVER

(2 wds I
9 A Milton
classic
( 2 wds.)

AGAIN!!-

WE
HAVE
A
LARGE
SELECTION OF PROPER·
TIES FOR YOU TO SEE.
VISIT OR CALL US AT 992
NO,MOM,

Yesterday's Aoswer
10 Sly; shifty 23 Reproached
JJ More
25 Rang
aloof
27 Steeple
15 - hnger
ornament
19 Waterfall
30 Pitcher
20 Craftsman 31 Gainsay
21 African
33 Fat
anwlope
person

WEEKDAYS ON WMPO AM
6:00 A.M. TIL

~8:30

P.M.

8,10

..

8 oo---Lassle 6. Capt . Kangaroo 8; Schoolles 10;
Sesame St 33
a 33-Biq Vlley 6, Popeye 10
8 5~Chuck While Reports 10
9·()()---A .M 3; Phil Donahue 4,15. Muriel Stevens 8;
Capt Kangaroo 10; Morning with D. J 13;
Operation Noah 33
9 30-Not For Women Only 3. Dinah 6; Galloping
Gourmet 8; Cartoons 12 .

New

Zoo Revue 13;

Biography 33.
10 oo---Celebrltv Sweeoslakes 3.4. 15; Spin-Off 8,10;
Mike Dov9las 13; Jody's Body Shop 33
10 · 30-Wheel of Fortune 3,4, 15; Gambll 8, 10; French
Chef 33.
11 oo---High Rollers 3.4. 15; One Life lo Live 6; Ttlc
I let ales 8, 10. - Film 33
11 ·30-Hollywood Squares 3,15; Brady Bunch 13,
Midday 4; Love of Life 8.10
11 : 5~ Take Kerr 8; Dan Imel's World 10.
12 oo---Magnlllcenl Marble Machine 3,1 S; Showofls 13;
Bob Braun's 50-50 Club 4; News 6,8,10; Mister
Rogers 33.
12 · 30-Jackpot 3,15; All My Children 6,13; Search for
Tomorrow 8,10; Elec. Co. 33
12 : 5~NBC News 3.
1.()()---News 3; Ryan's Hope 6,13; Phil Donahue 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15;
Villa Alegre 33 .
1 :30-Days of Our Lives 3.4.1S; Let's Make a Deal6,13;
As the World Turns 8,10; Folk Guitar 33.
2:()()---SIO,OOO Pyramid 6, 13; When Television Was Live
33.
2: 3D-Doctors 3,4,15. Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,13; Edge of
Night 8,10; Evening al Pops 33.
3·()()---Another World 3,4,15; General Hospital 6,13;
Price Is Right 8.10. Caught In the Act 20.
3:~ne Lite to Live 13; Lucy Show 6. Match Game
8,1 0; Jeanne Wolf with 20; Erica 33 .
3 : 4~ Theonle· 33
4:()()---Baseball3,4; Somerset 15; Mickey Mouse Clut
6; Musical Chairs 8; Sesame St. 20,33; Movie
"Under Ten Flags" 10.

4 . 30- Movle
"Angels
over
Broadway
• 4; Mod Squad 6; Mickey Mouse Club 8; Bonanza 15.
s · ~Lucy Show 8; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood
20.33
"
5. 30-News6; Andy Griffith 8; Hogan's Heroesl3; Gel
Smart 15; Elec. Co. 20,33.
6:~News 4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Elec. Co. 9;
Sesame St. 20; You Owe II To Yourself 33.
6 30-NBC News 3,6,15; ABC News 13; To Be An nounced 4; CBS News 8, 10; Combat 9; Jody's Body ' '
Shoo 33
Bowlin~

for Dollar• 6

.

Builds, Man
Festival 20

Destroys .33 ;

Philadelphia

Folk ,

9 : QO-Zoo Gang J,4; Cannon 8, 10; Masterpiece Theatre

33.
9·30-Jean Shepherd's America 20.
10:~Jim Stallard 6,13; Mannix 8,10, News 20;
Family at War 33
11 :()()---News 3.4.6.8 ,10,13,15, ABC News 33 .
11 : 3D-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Wide World Special 13;
FBI 6; Movie "Gunn" 8; Movie "The VIsit" 10;
Janakl 33.
12:3()-Wide World Special 6.

:oo-Tomorrow

3,4; News 13

"

SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22)

!1

length and formation of the
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTE

apostrophes the

WSUBD

TD

LSUHER

BTFF

21) Ac t '" accord Wllh you,
hrg he st 1deal s today. even
tho ugh you may feel one you 'll
b e deal•ng w•th tsn 1

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.

0 RI 0

words are a11

Unusual condlttons are brew•ng that could spe ll prof•! for
you fmanctally Scurry around
a btl for opportuM•es

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You'll
LSUHER

I FBI CD

NRTSLDL

Make 1! a pornl to be as polite
and taclful as posstble w•th
everyone today A pleasant
surpnse •s 1n store 1f you do

CANCER (June 21 -July 22)

simply stands ror another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's. X for the two O's, etc. Single letters.

BRU

Yo u'l l handle yourself today 1n
a manner others w1ll f1nd attract tve and tnsp•ratt onal It will be
easy to rally all • ~s to your
cause

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

RL

For Wednesday, Aug. 6, 1975
ARIES (March 21 -Apnl 19)

You know bes 1 what your
pnorrt1es are now. and the type
o f return s you want Keep yolK
plans to yourself

Now ts a good ttme to get un der way w1!h creat1ve c hanges
you ve been wantrng to make
for your res •dence

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

LSUHER . -

R I ML

GRTFUD-

UGRC

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: IT IS THE BOAST OF MODERN

MAN TO DO AT MOST THE LEAST HE CAN. - PIE'l' 1-JEIN
~E'S SNOOPI{'S OLDE~

Blc:OTHER .. HE'S COMIN6 TO
VISIT FOR A .EEW·C/AI{S

I

6. 55---News 1,.
7 oo---Today 3,4,15. A M America 13,6. CBS News

Severa l persons of 1nlluenca
you know on a lnend ly bas\S
w•ll fr gu re promrnenlly tn your
atta rrs the next few days

One Jetter

Dave Beningo and Jay HiU.

3~Columbus

.,

24 River in
Hades
25 Drink after
the drink
26 "El -"
27 Beam
28- rule

MIGHT 6E!

Hear David Strang,

swers 8; School Scene 10. The Story 13
Today 4 .
6 45-Mornlng RepJrt J; Fa.rmtlme 10

6

LIBRA (Sopt. 23-0ct. 23)

~OPINI5YOU

IrS A· SUPER SUMMER
AT WMPO RADIO

6 3()-Five Minutes to Live By 4, News 6; Bible An·

1

6UT I WA5

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

6 ·oo-Sunrlse Seminar 4. Summer Semester 10.

"Something tor a Lonely Man" 6; Baseball 15; Man

29 Dawdled
32 Soap opera
period
34 Have a debt
35 Guaranteed h.+-t36 Tower of
Texas, e.g.
(abbr.)
37 FoWJdation
38 Prosecuw

NEW LISTING - 3 yearHid, 3

_,'

,

6 25-Farm Report 13 .

Eyes"

(2 wds.)

bedroom, 2 baths, ail electric
home. Family room, full
basement and 2 car garage.

BEDROOM home, large
kifchen. central air, wall to
wall ca rp et mg Phone 992 ·
7030
8·3·6tc

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST6, 1975

India''

good for woodworktng, auto
pa1nt1ng,
contrac tor ,
refinishmg of furmture, etc

3

1·oo-- Tomorrow 3,.4 , News 11

"-of

Next to Forked Run

State Park, water and e lectnc
available

NEAR

mark
( 2 wds.)
4 " Banjo
6 Coal byproduct
8 Descriptive
of a
collision

I

t.li

- What's My Line 8; News 10; Country Music Jubilee
13; To Be Announced IS; Book Beat 20; The
Romagnolls' Table 33.
7:3G-Pollce Surgeon 3; Name Thai Tune 4; Let's
Make a Deal 6; Wilburn Brothers 8; Evening
Edition with Marlin Agronsky 20; The Judge 10; To
Tell the Truth 13; Episode Action 33.
8 : ~Litlle House on the Prairie 3,4; Thai's My Mama
6,13. Tony Orlando &amp; Dawn 8, 10; Felellng Good
20,33; To Be Announced 15.
8 3G-Movle "The Stranger Within" 13; Movie ,

one's re-

s Wrath

.

FBI 6; Mov ie "Man on a String" 8; Movie "The
Barretls ol Wlmpole Street" 10; Janak! 33.
12: 3D-Wide World Myslery 6.

7:QO-Truth or Cons. 3,.4:

DOWN
I Grew old •
2 Withered
3 Surprised

7whillikers!

Large 3

bedrooms. 2 baths, ,nat
possess1on soon

11 · Jo-Johnny Carson 3,4,15, Wide Worla Mysr~1 1

•

by THOMAS JOSEPH
HOME Improvement and
Repair serv1ce
Anythmg
f1xed around the home from
roof to basement You' tll 1ke
our work and rates Phone
7425081
7 17 tfc

HOUSE,
8 RM
17 basement,

CUTE AS A BUTTON -

Nor1h

:::.._..::...::'--.:;;....--' 8 L...-.....;

Real Estate For Sale

"'"'· 0

East On the last trump East
w1ll have the cho1ce of chuckmg
hi s queen of dtamonds or unguardmg hi s queen of clubs
Note that the squeeze only occurs if South cashes h1s last
trump Remember, that as an
esse ntial Ia all squeezes . you
mus t cash all your s1de-sU1t
wtnners to develop your
threats

South

Real Estate for Sale .
bath, carpet,
alum S1d1ng,
storm w.ndows, tnsulated ,
nver v1ew, large lot. double
carport w1th shop , reduced ,
qu1ck sale R 1ch ard Weaver,
992 ·7066
B 1 He

m dummy he 1s gomg to squeeze

• J 52

READY

del1~o~ered

¥JQ 2

• Q8 6

l ll9 j

&gt;

DICK SEYLER
Eas1 Main

• 9 763

• 10 9 7

Wes t
•

•.l

The lith may

East I Dl
.. 2
¥ AKQ976

AK

A.L.Om'i'!

PAINT
STRIPPING
SERVICE

sure lnck s

+10 854
!&gt;4 3

... IT'S 'TBRRIBl-E
\0 ~OI..D

I

Jookmg at a ptanola He has 10

5

materaal1ze by means of a
successful club finesse , but
South tsn t gomg to nsk h1s contract that way
On the other hand , 1f he JUSt
runs off all h1 s trumps wh1le
d1scardtng down to three clubs

LOSER

7 17 1 mo

At Caution light"

Rt. 7, Tuppers Plains. 0.
Shop Us Last &amp; Save
Open 9-5 Wed. lhrough Sun ,
Ph. 667-3858
7-7 -l mo

Phone 992-5682
or 992-7121

Cash all winners for squeeze

WOOD· METAL- PLASTIC
ANTIQUES
MODERN CHEMICALS

BARGAIN CENTER

MECHANICAL
WORK

WIN AT BRIDGE

Oh10 Route7, North-East of
Tupper Platns .
Coolville, Ohio
Phone: 667-3601
Open
Monday
thru
Saturday 8 DO to 8 : 00 .
NOW OPEN
Larry and Vivian Hopps
Owners

Guaranteed
appliances,
used furntture at

KUHL'S

OF CA'-15~

Freeze

L&amp;VMeat
Processing

CASH 'N CARRY
SAVES U S's on

ALL

Middleport
7 16 26 tc

!.AVE~DER

lARRY

On St. Rl . 124
Off Rl. 1 By-Pass

FARM Equ1pment Two
New Idea No 7 one row corn
ptckers , S650 Th ree used GENERAL Repa 1r , clean up
Gravity beds and wagons ,
and
ha u l tng.
cu ttmg ,
$475
each
Two
corn
welding ,
car pentry ,
ele\lators , $140 each Ford 9
plumb 1ng. elec masonry
N Tra cto r , $99 5 New lm co4
and general remode l 1ng
fl
5' 3 pt rotary mowers ,
Call Sk il Pool
Phone 992
$375 5395
Ermel Luckett ,
5126
6 17 lfc
Albany Phone 698 3032 or
698 7881
8531c SE PTIC TANK S c lean ed
- - - - - - - - - - - -- Modern San Jial•on 992 3954
~~7'.2 TRAVEL Trailer, 16 ft
or 992 7349
Leisure
T lme
Lo Boy ,
9 18 tt c
refr1gerator,
furnace
F'hone 992 7738
CARPET installatiOn , $1 25
8 5 6tc
per yard
Call
R• c hard
West phone 843 7667
BAR LEY seed lor cover crop,
7 2 26t p
clean straw, large bales , BOO - - - - ------- - - -lb
Hereford bulls , Ken
BOAT Motors , Repa•rs
498
nebec and Cobbler potatoes
Locust S t , Mictd l eport.
Paul Sayre , Portland , Oh10,
Oh 10 . Phone 992 3092
Rt 338, 1 mile be low ferry
7 22 76tc
Phone 843 2'.286
a 5 3tc - - -- - -- - - - - - - - SEP TIC fANK S CLEANEL'
Reasonable RATES Phon •
2 PLATFORM rockers , 10ft
J46 4782 GallipOliS
JO hl
cu in refrigerator, all like
Russell. owner
new Phone 992 3457
4 9 lfc
B 3 Jtc

DISCARDED lawn mowers ,
tillers, r1dtng mowers, elc
Phone 7A1 307A
7 16 26tc SHASTA c:amper. 18ft sleeps
------------·
6 Phone 9A9 5161
.OLD tun1•ture , ICe boxes,
_J_!IC
brass beds, or complete ~ -- -- -- -- ---~_
households
Wr.te M
D , G I BSON hollow body electrit
Miller , Rt
4, Pomeroy,
guitar, model 330. Excellent
Ohio Call 992 7760
cond•tion. cherry grain
10 7 7A
f1n1sh Price $350 Ca ll 992

For Rent

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

ROGER HYSELl'S
GARAGE
2 Miles West

DOUBLE oven , gas range ,
Norge Refrrgerator freezer ,
breakfast set. and m1SC
Movmg , w1ll not need these
appl•ances Can be seen . at
947 Ash Sl , Mtdd l eporf
8 5 3tc

Cut

Blown into Walls &amp; Att1cs

Emergency
949· 221 1 or 992·S700
Complete a1r cond•tton•ng
sates and serv•ce , healing ,
plumb1ng, roo fing and
general sheet metal work
Free Estimates
7 II 1 mo

For Rent or Sale

TRAVELING
Rent a
camper Codner's Cam per s,
Rainbow
R •dge,
Long
Bottom Sales and renta l
Phone 843 2621

Blown
Insulation Services

Your HtHI Dealer
Th~rd St.
R actne, Oh1o
Ph . 949 .5961

ME EATIN(5 OUT

CUSTOM SLAUGHTER

FREE ESTIMATES

Racine Plumbing
&amp; Heating

10 oo---Pollce Slory 3,4; Marcus Welby, M.D. 6,13;
Barnaby Jones 8.10. · News 20; Interlace 33.
10 3D-Woman 20; Monty Python's Flying Circus 33 .
11 oo---News 3,4,6,8, 10,13,15; ABC News 33

7 30- Hollywood 5quares 3, 4; Let ~ uea1 Wuh I I 6.
Buck Owens 8, Evening
Edttion with Martm

Homemade

MARRieD, SHE'D

HAY for sale , roun~ bales in
field, soc bale . Phone 992
25'.24
1 '3 Jtc

•

Decorator.

Evenings 742 -4902
77 . 1m,

Pomeroy

Ph 992 ·2114

TUESDAY , AUGUSTS, 1975

Kitchen State Inspected
Llcenied
Baker
and

Vinyl siding, alummum
siding, pat 10 co'llers, storm
windows.
kllchen s,
bathrooms and garages
We Carry
llabtlity Insurance

Nathan B1ggs
Radiator Specialist

II

CAKE BAKING
WANTED

JOHNSON
REMODELING

Service

- ---- ---~ -- --- ·

(
~

350 V-8 automattc trans, power steering and brakes,
dark green ftn1sh, vmyl roof, saddle bucket seats,
console, rad•o, ltke new w w ftres

HERMAN GRATE
W.VA.

and James Goodrich

'

52095

MASON FURNITURE

Jllrdng tile otheril.

.. .

1970 CHEV. CAMARO

4 I-lOOM furntshed and
unfurni shed
apartments
Phone 992 5A 3A
4 \'life

.-fM~ WBI held With Mary

ho-u

$3495

Ranger Pkg Beaultful 2 tone green w1th tnm optl?ns,
slldt ng back glass, automati c trans , power steermg ,
r:tdto Less than 9,000 mtles Chrome front bumper.
rear step bumper

J P. l'I.J

=

1

1974 FORDS' PICKUP

,COU NTRY
Mobile Home
Park. Rt Jl, ten miles nbrth
of Pomeroy Large lot s w1th
conc rete patios. srdewalks,
runners and off street
parkmg Phone 992 7479
1
12 31 lfc

attending.
r Prwc:edlng the meeting a ,
Donna K. Hysell, Unda

'

Mr. and Mrs. Clio ton ONE femal e Border Collie. B
Gilkey and Mr. and Mrs. Dale
months old, One female
mobile home,
Norwegian elkhound
Six TWO bedrm
Whaley camped three days at
deposit requ.red Phone 992
1/2 Norweg1an
pupp1es 3429
Yawks Nest, W. Va. On the
E lk hound, t, , Border Coll•e
7 30 12tp
All
good
with
c
h
i
ldr
en,
way they visiwd Mr. and
make good
watchdogs . ------t-------Mrs. Raleigh Gregory at
Phone 992 3090
B·5 3tc
Webster Springs. Gregory
FURN apf 5 rooms and bath, CANNING tomatoes, green
beans ,
sweet
peppers.
n1ce large yard. bath and',,
sent word hello to all his
cucumbers
Gera ld•n e
39~
South
Seco nd
St ,
Cleland , Ra c1 ne Phone 949
friends and expects to spend
Mtddleporl
adults only
4171
Pr'lone 992 5'262 eve n1ngs
mother, .ellie Borgan and
a week here in August.
7 25 tfc
5 21 lfc
Mr~. Joe Carsey visiwd the attended the fWJeral of their
BICYCLE Repa irs, Sales and
niece, Patricia Tolley.
JWlior Paynes Saturday.
Serv•ce, 498 Locus! St,
Mr . and Mrs. F . 0 . Whaley
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Borgan,
Middleport , Ohto. Phone
"FURNISHED
apartment,
99 2 3092
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Borgan and grandchilpren, Chipand
adults on ly in Middleport
7 22 26tc
Phone 99l-·3874
and Mr. and Mrs. James · Ann Whaley visited Ava
3 25 tfc
Gilkey and the Robert
B~rgan and Mr. and Mrs.
THOROUGHBRED
Ge lding
bl\en Borgan visiwd their Alkires.
for sale Gentle . will work

MEETING HELD
· " A meeting of the Board of
~ton of the Big Bend
. Radio ' Club was held
Saturday night at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie
with Guy Hysell,
balrman, BW Schultz and

ROberta Robinaon, Ruby

QUALITY

I EX-PERIENCED
.
Motor Co
·
'
...
. - I Radlato
..

..------ ·--:r-------1 Television log ·for easy yiewing

I NEVER SAW

THIS 'HEAD
TAKEN APART
BEFORE!

Business Services

I

r-·----..------------·---------..--~··w~~--~---.--- ---·--~

J SWfAR

I HAVE NC1Tlt1NG TO HIDE.

f---------------------------~

PIAN O Tuning, L ane danre l s
I

I K

Ynter••r'•

ABOUT ME.

Auto Sales

R OOM

WMBAG

- Th• ""''1y Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday. Aug. 5 1975
TRI'.CY

1ewel

,

l

the

..

•'

'
I

...

I

be rnak •ng some major
changes m plans over the nexl
few days
They II prov e
beneficia l Let your tnstght
gu•de you

SAG ITT AAIUS (Nov. 23-Doo.

19) A commerc 1al s•tuatton
you II be mvolved tn wtll halli&amp;
some fnn ge benefits not ap pa rent at f•rst Explore the~
carefu ll y before actmg

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 11)
One wtth whom you II be c losely assoc•ated today has some
rather soun d • deas tot
som elh 1ng you can do as e.
team G1ve them a lry

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) H
you 're gomg to make any •mi
po rta nl mo11es careerw1Se,
umetng rs now m your !avo(
Cool Judgment is a must.

~Your

:

~Birthday"

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 22)

Aug. 6, 1975

Mu c h of the st1ng w111 soon go
from a sttuat1on that has been a
ba rb m your s•de la tely Its
negat1ve effects begm to lessen
toda y

Its very likely lhts year you'll
make a return lnp to a p lace,
you've found pleasurable. A
heavy soc1al calendar •s also tn'
the olfmg
.-.

00 I 6r!'E 1-lER a-.1 l'kE ~co .J
NOW, OR DO I wt&gt;.IT liNT!~
6ETS HERE AND
LET HIM 61TE'HER?

SPIKE

�,

'I,
.

10 - The Daily Sentinel , Middleport,Pomeror,

.
REQUESf MADE

WASHINGTON (UP!) - A
public investigation has been
asked by Rep. James V.
Stanton, 1J'.Qhio , into the
recent grain sale to the Soviet
Union becau se of conflictin g
remarks by Fo rd ad ministration off ic ia ls on
whether the t ran saction will '
in crea se

f ood

CO IJ SUmer

prices.

•·Ouf

experience in 1972
was that it drove up food
prices 15 to 20 per cent, the
largest part of which was
believed to ha ve been ca used
by the sal e of grain to
Russia, " th e Clevela nd
Democrat said .
"There are six or seven
large grain speculators who
control the market place and
who do a disservice lo the
consumer as well as to the
fa rmer. Of the unreg ulat ed,

we have not examined them
publicly and I call for a public
investigation into the profits
and sale of grain to Russia ."

.
.

o.: Tuesday, Aug. 5, 1975

•

•

•

commission to resign
COLUMBUS !UP! ) - Gov .
J ames A. Rh odes tod a y
called fo r the immedia te

The Cle veland Press, in a have tak en adva nta ge of this
cop.frighled article Monday, loophole to inject themselves
reported the lottery is under into day -to-da y lottery
res ignat ion of a ll fi ve investigation for s pending opera tion s, with the result the
members of th e Ohio Lottery nearly $10,000 for liquor at lottery has too many chiefs,
Commiss ion .
parties and falsifyin g records and no clear lines of
" TI1e Ohio lottery needs a to cover it up.
authority.
fresh start, " said Rhodes.
"Ohio's lottery must be
"As soon a s the riv e
''Whe n it began operations a a bove r eproac h," ·said c ommi s sion e r s have
year ago, it wa s treated as a Rhodes in a statement. " All resigned,
the
original
ha ven for poli t ic a l jo b· fi ve lottery commi ssioners legislative s ponsors of the
seekers.
should r esign immediately . lotte ry should revi se the
"Ohioans are now seein g
"TI1 ey, and the lotte ry·, are statute along the lines of
th e r esult s in t e r ms of victims of a n unworkabl e law proper
and
sound
qu es ti ona b le Io' tt ery in whic h a director is named management practice," said
procedures , and bla t a ntly . as chief administrative of· Rhode s.
political activity by some fi cer of the lottery, but is not
" Only that way will Ohio's
lottery s taff members.
given a uthority to carry out lottery, which
handl es
" News coverage of these his duties. He is powerless to millions of dollars annually,
ac tivities is undermining the stop bad practices .
be worth of the trust of Ohio
confidence of Ohioans in the
'' Lottery
commiss ioners citizens," said Rhodes.
lottery ," said Rhod es.

Five Japanese radicals in

MEIGS
THEATRE
Tonight thru Thursday
August S-7

NOT OPEN
FRI. , SAT ., SUN .
Aug . 8·9-10
"Rafferty And The
Gold Oust Twin s"
(Tec hni co l or)
Colo r car t oa n s:
Rated R
Peoples Choice
Mon ster izer
M elvi n Magnif icen t

Show Starts 7:00P. M.

MASON DRIVE-IN
' I

I

,&gt;, (. ·"

" I'

!durl

,

'I!

/ ,I

NnJ!dh

TONIGHT ONLY
John Wa yne In

"BRANNIGAN "

PG
Plu s
"RANCHO DELUXE"
Rated R

WED., THURS., FRI.
" STATELINE
MOTEL"

(Color )
I Rated Ri
Plus

"TEENAGE
HITCHHIKERS
( Rated Rl

Kuala Lumpur for hostages
KUALA
LUMPUR,
Malaysia (UP!) - A Japan
Air Line DC8 arrived today
from Tokyo with five
Japanese radicals freed from
Tokyo jails in hopes a band of
Japanese Red Army commandos would free 50 U.S.
Embassy hostages they have
threatened to kill.
Four gunmen of the ultra
radical Japanese Red Army
shot their way into the embassy Monday and seized
U.S. Consul General . Robert
Stebbins, 42, Swedish Charge
d ' Affair e s Fredrick ·
Bergenstrahle, 48, and an
· estimated 48 other persons.
The commandos were armed
with explosives and said they
would blow up the building
with the hostages if their
demands were not met
Delicate negotiations remained before the four Red
Army men leave the 12-&lt;!tory

It's never tQo
early and it's
never too late

Ameri ca n lnte rn a tional
Assurance Building - home
of the 9th floor U.S . Embassy
- and joined the five fanatics
brought here from Japan for
a flight to an undisclosed
haven, probably Kuwait. The
Red Army had demanded
release of seven of their
associates but two refused to
fly here. Whether that would
snag the negotiations was not
known .
The JAL DC8landed at the
closed and sealed off Subang
airport 15 miles outside town .
at 7:44p.m. ' 8:14 a.m.EDT)
and began taxiing up to a
floodlit parking apron about
11)0 yards from the main
terminal.
Japan ese Amba ssador Michiaki Suma and several of
his aides stood by at the
airport along with Malaysian
officials as the plane came in.
Diplomatic sources In To]!.YO
said both the United SUites
and Sweden had applied
pressure on Japan to accede
to the terrorists wishes and
free . the hostages before
President Ford met Japanese
Premier Takeo Miki in
Washington today. The State
Department has denied U.S.

pressure..
Final negotiations for exchanging the prisoners for
the hostages and transporting
the Red Army terrorists from
the embassy to the airport
were getting underway
immediately,
with
technicians connecting a
telephone to the DC8 for talks
with Japanese and Malaysian
officials.
Malaysian Prime Minister
Tun Abdul Raxak told a news
conference earlier today that
the gunmen had refused to
discuss the final steps for
ending the tense drama until
the Japan Air Lines plane
carrying their comrades was
actually on the ground here.
A force of several hundred
special branch officers,
paramilitary field force
police and regular police
were spread out all over the
airport terminal and grounds
as the plane arrived.
The main approach road to
the airport was sealed off to
traffic at about the same time
the airport was closed to
normal commercial air
traffic . Parking aprons and
hangar areas were cleared of
all aircraft.

Mrs. Warth of Hartford dies

To save for the future.
If you have li t tl e ones. start th e m o ff n ght by
open ing a savin gs account 1n eac h o f t heir
name s. A nd. if for one reaso n o r a n o th e r .
you've been putt 1ng off a savt ngs p lan f or yo urself. cons ider t he fac t th at it's time to sta rt
saving fo r t he fut ure now Reg ul ar an d steady
depo si t s build u p fast a nd earn ma XI mu m
interest 1n a passbook or savings cer td 1ca te
acc oun t at our ba nk.

Mrs. Hilda E. Warth, 68, of Funeral Home in Mason. The
Hartford, who died Monday Rev. William Campbell will
in
Veterans
Mem·o rial officiate. Burial will follow in
Hospital in Pomeroy, was the Graham Cemetery .
born in Ravenswood, Aug. 25, Friends will be received at
1906, a daughter of Ezra and the funeral home from 2 to 4
Addie Linscott Anderson .
anjl 7 to 9 p.m . today.
A member of the Hartford
Church of Christ in Christian
Union, her husband died in
1928.
DIVORCE GRANTED
. Surviving are a daughter,
Meigs Co~nly common
Mrs . lola Conner, New pleas court has granted a
Haven; a son, Charles Warth divorce to Dennis BoothE&gt;
of Hartford; two sisters, Miss from Irma Boothe .
Louise Anderson and Mrs.
Lillie Stevens, New Haven; a
INCOME UP
brother, ·carl Anderson,
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Hartford; eight grand- Ohio Stale University Center
children, and nine great- for Business . and Economic
grandchildren .
Research said today Ohio's
Funeral services will be personal income rate in June
conducted Wednesday at 1:30 was up 5 per cent from June
p.m. from the Foglesong of 1974.

~.

••

RETREAD$

••

oJ

~

$11395

All
PASSENGER
SIZES

&gt;

.. WALK-UP TELLER WINDOW AND
AUTO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
FRI. EVENINGSS To 7 P.M.

PLUS RECAPABLE
CASING

MIDDLEPORT
VETERINARY CLINIC

"THE FRJENlJLl BANK" .

·~15 NORTH SECOND ST., MIDDLEPORT, 0.

ANNOUNCES ITS

MI~PORT,

GRAND OPENING
OHIO

.·Mem~er F~eral Deposit Insurance t;orporation
DEPOSITS INSURED TO · •40,000

tHURSDAY, AUGUST 71 1975
QFFICE HOURS 6-8 PM
PHONE ('304) 675-2441
'·
'
'

't

'.

~.

r

..

1

' 'I ,

,I

I

Ga11ia
(Continued from page 1)
using a local fa cility such as
th e Rutland gymnasium,
then, in view of opposition by
parents and others to taking
s tudent.s out of the county, the
commissioners would be
asked to provide that amount
of money for operation of the
school in a local building.
A meeting is expected to 1M,
held with Gallia County official s on the problem facing
the Meigs County Board of
Retardation.
These problems include: 1
- Wha t would be the status of
the fa culty of the Meigs
Community School if Meigs
sludent.s join Gallia students
at the Cheshire facility ?
2 - The bus drivers of the
local community school also
have served as aides and
would they continue in that
capa city in Gallia County?
3 - What will be the cost
per student if Meigs students
are accepted at the Gallia
County facility ?
The local board of mental
retardation , at the insistence
of interested perSons, also
want s
some
written
statement to the effect that
should Meigs students go to
the Gallia facility , it would
only be temporary .
Another problem is that
taxes from a bond issue
passed by voters have not
been collected as yet, and
therefore the interest which
could be accumulated on the
income from the issue is not
being earned .
Mrs . Margaret Ella Lewis,
director of the Community
School here, will meet with
the director of the Gallia
County school to provide such
information on the number of
local students who would be
involved in the Gallia County
facility in addition to the
abilities of the various local
students. Three age groups
are required in operations of
schools for the retarded at
present.
A commi !tee composed of
Grace Weber, the Rev . W. H.
Perrin and Rick Crow was
named from the local board
to look into the costs of transporting local students to
Cheshire.
I,
Attending were Bill Carr,
Mrs. Weber, Crow, Richard
Chambers, Rev. Perrin,
Judge Webster, and Mrs.
Wiima Parker.

Hospital News
PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES Mrs.
Steven Price and daughter,
Middleport;
William
Capehart, Middleport; Mrs.
Larry Rainey and daughter,
Gallipolis Ferry;
Mrs.
Charles Newell, Southside;
William Kearns, Logan,
Ohio; Mrs. Ed Wheeler, Point
Pleasant; Mrs . Kenneth
Roush, New Haven; Bernard
Scarberry , Mason; Lidia
McKinnley, Point Pleasant;
Levena Neal, Middleport;
Jean Moore, Henderson; Gus
Scalin, Lakin; John Gardner,
Point Pleasant; Mrs. David
Pierce, Point Pleasant;
·Robert Strange , Letart;
Clarence
Walls,
Point
Pleasant; Jennifer Rhodes,
. Cottageville; aoseph Smith,
Leon; Mrs. John McDaniel,
Clifton; Mrs. Harry Lipscomb, Point Pleasant, and
Mrs. Billy Hawkins, Clifton.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS
Earl
Griffith, Reedsville; Ricky
McClellan, Langsville; Okey
Kizer, Sr., Racine; Alma
Donna Hayman, Pomeroy;
Russell Freeland, Marietta;
Charles Sauer, Middleport.
DISCHARGES
Josephine Justice, Esther
Sylvester, RutH Delong,
Randall Friend, David
Spurlock, Charles Neece,
Gertrude Neece, Irene Cross,
~ie N.u tter; Joseph Roush,
Bradley Pooler.
RECEIVE YEAR
COLUMBUS (UPI)- Ohio
nursing homes will get an
extra year in which to instaU
automatic sprinkler systems
under one of two bills signed
into law Monday by Gov.
James .A. Rhodes.
The other measure he
signed will set up a slllte
chiropractic examining
board. It will have authority
to examine and license
chiropractors and to apJX;Ove
their training schOOls.
Nurl!ing homes ·will have
' until next Jan. 1 to install tbe
fire protection systems,
which previously were
supposed to have been in
operatitrt last Jan . 1.

-

PRETTY BABY

-

· MALE

-

en tine

~omeroy Library offering

_Um.E MR. &amp; MISS

exhibit of 'rubbings'

FEMALE

Payment of 50 cents must accompany each entry.

CHILD'S NAME _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.,--_ _
PARENTS NAME _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ __
ADDRESS _ _ _ __ _ __ _ _ _ __ _
CHILD'S AGE-

- - - - - - BIRTHDATE _ __
:;:;:
'{
.}
·;:;:
{
;:;:;

PLEASE SEND ENTRY NO LATER THAN
AUG. 12 TO:

:f

PRETTY BABY OR LimE MR. &amp; MISS CONTEST

:;;:
:;::

f

P. 0. BOX 227

\
::;:
;:;:
)

POMEROY, OHIO 45769

I

•

· ~

.Governor·asks lottery

'

Making copies of architectural details, tombstone
l118crlptions and patterns by the method of rubbing has
been one~· 1 ~e most Interesting craft ideas to become
popular re"'ntiy.
An nhlbit of rubbings at the Pomeroy Library
shows why ,
11te ease with which elegant and artistic designs
may be captured Is seen In the display of rubbings of
coal-bolec-uvers taken I rom the streets of l.A&gt;ulsvllle, Ky.
During the 19th Century competing Louisville Iron
foundries made even the round Uds for sidewalk coal
shutes beautiful by casting designs into them. 11tese coal :;:
designs have been copied lor ahiblt by the rubblnR ~;:
method, done by spreading paper over the cover, . ;:;
weighting the corners of the paper, and carefully rub- :;:·
bing the surface with a heel ball (a mt.ture of wax and ':::
lampblack formerly used for polishing shoes ).
:;::
n.e results are striking and can be used at artwork
on their own or used as patterns in other crafts.
:;:;
A current woman's magazine suggests using rub- ;:::
bing designs as a basis lor historic and lovely }
needlework. rhe eoal-bole cover exhibit wiU be onj ;:'
display at the Pomeroy Library for the next two weekll :::;
during Its regular hours of opening, 10:30 to 5:00slx ~ys :;::
aweekandfrom2to4:30onSunday.
\

r

~ ~ ~: : : : : : : ;: : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : ::}~:

VOL. XXVII

NO. 80

IJevotCll 'J'o 'J'h t'
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

llllt•rt&gt;.~l.~

of 'I'll e

M_(•ig.~-M il.~ort

A rl'il
WEDNtSUAY, AUGU ST 6, 197.5

PRICE 15'

Hostages' freedom delayed
K U ALA
LUMPUR,
Mala ysia (UP! ) - Release of
th e las t 15 r e mamm g
hosta ges held a b1'8rd a plane
by five Ja panese Red Army
terrorists was delayed toda y
by the relucta nce of Arab
countries to grant asylum to
the radicals who seized the
U.S. Embassy Monday and
forced Ja pan to rree five of
their cohorts from jail.
Earlier today th e Red
Army fanatics - including
one woman - released 38 of
the 53 hostages they had held
under death threat in the

American Embassy since
Monday a nd were driven to
the airport in a red and white
tourist bus with 15 others
including the U.S. consul
general, the Swedish charge
d' a ffair es and a Texas
businessman.
The five Red Army men
freed from Japanese jails and
nown here aboard a Japan
Air Line DC8 waited in an
airport lounge under guard
while the the Malaysian
Government tried to find an
Arab country that would
accept all 10 Red Army

gu errillas and permit the 15
hos tages to go free.
The government sclid it wa s
canvassing a nwnber of Ara b
countries trying to find one
whi c h will acce pt t he
terrori s ts
plus
thr ee
Malaysian a nd two Japanese
officials sent along to insure
safe conduc t. It appeared
that ea rlier hopes that Libya
would accept the terrorists
were based on a misunder·
standing.
" It is not known when the
Japan Air Lin e aircraft that
is supposed to take members

of th e ope ra tion un it of the
Ja panese Re d Army can
depart since the qu es tion of
its final destlna tion has not
.bee n
r eso lved
ye t,"
Ma lays ian In fo rmati on
Directo r Gene ral Ahm ad
Nordin told newsmen .
" The Ja panese guerrillas
ha ve asked to be flown to an
Ara b country . Mala ysia has
a pproached se ve ral like ly
Arab countries tha t might be
persuaded to accept them .
" A lew have replied that
th ey are not prepared to
accept them . We ar e now

awaiting replies from the
oth ers.
" ln the meantime the other
qu estions s uch as hosta ges
and the arms a rxi weapons
ca rr ied by th e m 1 the
te r ro ri s ts)
a re
bein g
ne gotia ted," Ahmad said.
In response to questions
Ahmad said Libya " is one of
the countries we are waiting
for a reply from. "
An American· official said
that apparently there had
been some confusion about a
reply Libya sent which was
mi s int erpreted lo cally to

mea n U bya would accept the
Japanese rad icals.
A Ma laysia n official said
th e JAI. pilot has now told
a ut hor iti es he wa s not
prepa red to fl y the terrorists
out at night .
The source said there were
growing doubts whether the
jetliner would leave before
Thursda y morning - and a
gro w i n g M a laysian
dis satisfa c tion with the
slowness of official Japanese
reponses to th e situation .

August deadline
(Continued from page I)
- - - ·years old by the date of the
contest. The boy and girl in
each of the seven age
categories will receive a $5
gift certificate.

Contestants for the Little
Miss and Mr . Contest are to
be between the ages of four
and seven. They must be four
by the date of the contest and
no older than seven . One boy

News •• in Briefs
(Continued from page 1)
flying glass bottles, some arrests and a few drug overdoses,
but the overall assessment of the weekend's big outdoor rock
festival here was fairly good.
Officials estimated between 35,000 and 50,000 young people
jarruned insfde the 25,000-seat University of Cincinnati football
stadium for the 12-hour show that wound up shortly before
midnight Sunday. "Only 5 per cent caused any trouble," said
Police Sgt. Harold Mills. "Ninety-five per cent of them were
orderly."
CLEVELAND - A FILM EXPERT SAYS movies show
Kent State University students were only 85 feet from Ohio
National Guardsmen but "not rushing" them, when the
soldiers opened fire May 4, 1970, killing four students and
wounding nine others.
Robert A. Johnson gave the testimony Monday to a U. S.
District Court jury here hearing a $46 million civil damage
trial. The civil suit was filed by the parents of the killed
students and by the wounded persons.
CINCINNATI - W. TED OSBORNE, COUNSEL for the
Cincinnati Cooperative Milk Sales Association, said Monday
night he expecls a four-&lt;:ent hike in the cost of milk by Labor
Day.
"Milk is going to start costing more pretty shortly," said
Osborne during a broadcast interview here. " I would say about
the first of September ... I would suggest it will move up about
a penny a quart, two-cents a gallon and four cent;; a gallon. A
realistic price you can look for is as much as $1.40 a gallon, but
it depends upon the pressures."
UNIT CALLED
The Pomeroy ER squad
was called Monday at 10:27
a.m. to Enterprise for Mrs.
Waid who was takep to
Veteran" l'l!emorial Hospital
and adm.

Carpenter
Personals
Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Gillogly, Vicky and Bruce,
accompanied by his sister,
Bernice
McKnight
of
Columbus have returned
from a vacation trip which
took them to Oregon and
California. They visited
many points of interest
enroute and while there they
viewed sights at the Redwood
Na tiona! Park, Sequoia
National Park and King's
Canyon National Park.
Mr. and Mrs. Max McCallie, Ann Arbor, Michigan
and grandchildren, Debbie
and Scott Wilson, Chelsea,
Michigan, visites). here with
her brothers, Mendal, Clay,
Dorsey and Lavern Jordan
and their families, and her
aunt, Ida Dennison. A sister,
Mrs. Francis Queen and
husband from McConnelsville also came here to see
her.
·
.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Frazier, Gallipolis, called on
her mother, Goldie Gillogly,
and other relatives here on
Sunday.
Mrs. Ral(mond Nelson,
Mrs. T. L. Brookhart, Mrs.
Cora Moore, Mrs . Susie
Booth, Rayma Sue and
Mathew, went to Canton to
attend a weddiing shower for
Bill Moore, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Leland Moore, whose
wedding will be held in the
near future.

REPOR'I'S DIVIDEND
CINCINNATI, Ohio (UPI)
- Cincinnati Bell Telephone
Co. Monday reported its 394th
dividend in the firm's history
and said the 40 cents per
common stock share would
be payable Oct. 1.
Eligible for the dividend
will be stockholders of record
at the close of busines Sept. 3.

and one girl will be selected
as winners and each will
receive a $50 gift certificate.
Both contests are sponsored by Elberfelds.

Meigs
Property
Transfers
Michael Corrado, Gail A.
Corrado to Charles W. Bolin,
50.469 acres, Bedford.
Marjorie A. Durst to
Richard Weaver, Margaret
Weaver, 100 Acre lot 290,
·.!2 Acre, Syracuse.
Crow's Steak House, Inc . to
Benjamin F . Newsome , Jo
Ann Newsome, Lot 10,
Thomas Crow Sub., Chester.
Joseph D. Glenn, Janice
Glenn to Albert Hill, Jr., Ora
" E. Hill, Parcel, Sutton.
Lucille 0. Leifheit to Bruce
R. Zirkle, Jacqueline Zirkle,
17 acre, Salisbury.
Effie S. Kennedy dec'd. to ··
Leroy J . Kennedy , Cert. of ..
Ti-ans., Olive.
,
Effie S. Kennedy, dec'd. to .'
William S. Kennedy, Cert. of
Trans., Chester.
Effie S. Kennedy, dec'd. to .,
Clifford S. Kennedy , Cert. of:
Trans., Chester.
•
Eber . Pickens , Goldie ~­
Pickens to Hazel J . Sellers, :
Paul E. Sellers, 30 Acres,;;
Lebanon.
Eber Pickens, Goldie .
Pickens to Eber I. Pickens, ,
Helen Pickens, 161&gt; acres, 21
acres, Lebanon.
Eber Pickens, Goldie
Pickens to Effie E. Pickens, 4.
acres, 1 acre, Lebanon.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
Men's Department, First Floor

See The
New Selection

MEN'S

LEISURE

SUITS
In sizes small , medium,
large and extra large.

l:;)ressy styles - western
suits and casual looks.

. Stop in right away, try
··-····- on one or· two. Ta'ke
advantage of the early

selection.

New Selection
Men's Dt-5 &amp; Sport

SHIRTS
All sizes from U lf2 to
17112 · Solid colors, smart
patterns. euy what you
need now.

SHOP EVERYWEEK'DAY9:30T.oSP M
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 9130JI.M, lo9. P.'M.

Elberfelds In .Pomeroy

,.

Pomeroy, top to toe, Beth Riebel, Long Bottom, jumper ;
lleth Perrin, Pomeroy, clothing complement, and Lisa
Collins, Tuppers Plains; topping your outfit.

r;v;;;;:,~: ':i~-Jiri";{~ Art show
By United Press International
NEW YORK - THE FATHER OF SPORTS ac tivist Jack
Scott says FBI agents offered his son $200,000 in cash and
lnununity from prosecution if he would cooperate in the Patty
Hearst case, but were refused. The FBI denied it.
John Scott, 66, said Tuesday agents made the offer " on a t
least two occasions" in his home in Las Vegas, Nev. An FBI
spokesman denied any money had been offered.
Classes in oils and acrylics,
Miss Hearst, daughter of newspaper ,publisher Randolph
water color s, drawings with
Hearst, was kidnaped in Februury, 1974, by the so-&lt;:alled
c har coal or pastels, and
Symbionese Liberation Army. She later apparenlil::_ became a
modern art are includes in
convert to her captors' cause. She has been missing since.
the Meigs Couinty Fair
amateur paintin g departBOSTON - ALGER HISS CAN NOW RESUME the law
me nt again this year headed
career interrupted 23 years ago when he was convicted for
by William J . Mayer,
perjury in the " Pumpkin Papers" case - the incident that
Pomeroy artist.
initially propelled Richard Nixon into the national spotlight .
Rules of the show specify
Hiss was disbarred August, 1952, shortly after the conthat the entry fee is a
viction that landed him in prison for 44 months in the most
membership ticket except for
celebrated Communist spy case of the turbulent Joe McCarthy
children under 12. All entries
era. He always has maintained his innocence. The
must be made with the Meigs
Massachusetts Supreme Court Tuesday ordered that Hiss be
County Fair secretary before
readmitted to practice law in the state.
4 p .m . on Friday, Aug. 8.
Hiss, now 69, sells stationery supplies for a New York
Exhibits , mu s t r emain in
company. He applied for reinstatement to the bar in
place until 4 p.m. on SaturNovember.
day , Aug. 16, and an ything
WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT FORD HAS assurej
Japanese Prime Minister Takeo Miki ihe United States will removed prio r to that time
will forfeit \he premium .
stand by its allies in Asia despite the recent Indochina setback.
No paintings will be acHe said security is the keystone of U. S. - Japanese relations.
cepted without a way to hang
White House press secretary Ron Nessen said following
the Ford-Miki meeting Tuesday: "The President assured the them.
The categories are :
prime minister that the Indo-China setback has not altered the
Oil or Acrylic Painting:
U. S. intention to continue to play a major. role in the mainlandscape from natur e ,
tenance of peace and stability in Asia . "The President stressed
that the U, S. would stand by its allies and friends in Asia and portrai t from life, still life,
marine .s tudy and flower
'
elsewhere."
study.
Wa ter Color : lands cape
NEW YORK - MILLIONS OF AMERICANS know the
from nature, portrait from
low columned structure that xprawls amid skyscrapers. It
life, still life, marine study,
w.,; here, in Grand Central Station, they said tearful farewells
flower s tudy and animal
and kissed joyous greetings through two world wars , Korea
study.
and Vietnam, and in times of peace.
Drawing , Charcoal or
Now Penn Central Railroad wants to cover up Grand
Pastel
: landscape from
Central Station - the proper name is Terminal - with a :iSnature, port rait from life,
story office building. It wants to bring
rent money for its
still life , marine study, nower
alling finances. But a celebrily-&lt;!tudded grou_P. o~ New Yorkers
_ with show business stars, writers, pohbcians and such stuyd, and animal study.
Modern Art.
names as Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis on their letterhead Premiums in each class
have opened a campaign headquarters to carry their fight to
will
be awarded to the first
preserve the building to the Ira velers passing through .
and second place ranging in
WASHINGTON- SEN. HOWARD BAKER, R-Tenn., says amount fr om $2 to 75 cents.
Judging will take place at
be is baffled as to why anyone would break into his home and
rot take anYthing. But the FB~ said it entered the burglary 10 a .m . on Tuesday, and .all
investigation Tuesday to see if government property or entries must be in for judging
betw~en 8:30 and 10 a.m.
documenui were ta.ken.
' Baker a member of the Senate conunittee investigating Anything arri ving after that
' a member of the' now-defunct Wal.l'rgate com- time will be marked for
the CIA and
mittee, said he bpd no classified papers at his Was hin gton displ a y only . The rules
specify that no more than. one
Iiome anci that nothing appear!'(! to have been taken.
entl-y will be accepted from
'
CONCORD, N . H. - THE SUMMER RERUN FOR the th e same per son in the same
class .
(Continued on page 16)

offers 6
classes

in

·I

Mr. and' Mrs. Gene Lani~
bert and Charlotte, Pomeroy,
were guellts of their brotherin-law and sister, Mr. and
Mrs . Cecil Gillogly and
family.
'

HERE ARE FIVE OF THE GRAND champions in the
annual Meigs 4-H Style Revue: from the left, Becky
EiChinger, Pomeroy, total look category; Dixie Eblin,

)

:::::::::::·:::::::::::::::;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::·:-:·:•_

EXTENDED FORECAST
Friday through Sunday,
fair weather Friday with a
chance
or
showers
Saturday and Sunday .
Highs will be In the lower
80s on Friday and In the
mid or upper 80s on
Saturday and · Sunday.
Lows will be in the upper
50s early Frid.ay and in the
middle 60s by early Sunday.
:: :;;~; ; ;::::::: :::: ::: ; ;: :~:: : ~::::: :; .;: ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:::;:;:: :;:::

Rig put in
jackknife
Th e
Meigs
County
sheriff's Dept. inves tigated
two accidents Tuesday, the
first occurring al8:50 a.m . at
the junction of SR 7 and SR
124. thomas Tractor, Jr ., of
Summerfield, Ohio driving a
tractor trailer rig on Rt. 7,
went to turn onto SR 124 when
his tra,ctor skidded on the wet.
pavement sending his rig
toward two autos on SR
124.
To
avoid
hitting the two vehicles,
Tractor allowed his trail er to
jackknife. There were no
injw-ies or no citations.
At 9: o5 p .m., Richard P .
. Dugan , 33, Racine, traveling
south on Twp . Rd . 46 lost
control ofhis auto, going off
the roadway into the ditch on
the left side, into an em. bankment, then across th e
road into the ditch on the
other side of the r oad,ay .
There was moderate damage
to the Dugan vehicle and the
driver sustained a sligh t cut
to the mouth.

Weather
Cloudy, cooler tonight, lows
between' 55 and 60. Sun ny,
mild Thursday, highs in the
upper 70s. Probability d
precipitation 20 per c~ n t
tonight, 10 per cent Thursday.

GRAND CHAMPIONS AMONG THE OLDER girls
taking part in the annual 4-il Style Revue were, I to r ,
Mandie Rose , LA&gt;ng Bottom, coats or jackets; Betsy
Amsbary, Pomeroy, form al wea r ; Barbara Dou glas,

Burlin~m. soort clothes: Bonita Johnston, Langsville,

dress-up dress; Mary Mora, Pomeroy, lounging garments, and camille Swindell, Burlingham , clothes for
school.

Champs named
Tw e nty -t w o
g rand
c ha mpion s a nd reser ve
champions in g arm e nt
cons truction and modeling
were selec ted Tuesday night
in the annual Meigs County 4H Style Revu e a t Meigs High
·
School.
The revue is staged an·
nually in preparation for the
Meigs Coun ty Fair, and the
juni or fair whi ch is s taged in
conjw1etion with the se nior
event. Twen ty -five percent of
the girls modelin g - well
over \60 - were selec ted to
model their garments during
Youth Night a t the coun ty fair

next Wednesday.
Jud ge!:i for las t . ni gh t's
r e vu e we r e Sus ie Mill er ,
Pomeroy , Dia na Ebers, Betty
Reese, both of Athens, and
Be tty Clark of Gallipolis.
Judging procedures were
explained by Pa tty Kelly, 4-H
pr og ram a ss is ta nt , a nd
Marla Guilkey , coun ty exte ns ion
age nt,
hom e
economics, presided over the
e vent which carri ed out tlw
theme, " All Ameri can Gir l'
wllh stage setti ngs ca rrying
out a red, whi te and blue
theme.
Narra tors, introduced by

Ing ri d Haw le y a nd J an
Holter, desc ribed each of the
outfits modeled durin g th e
two hour revue.
F.scorts for lt1e mod els
included Paul Cross, Ca rl
Gheen, Les ter J effers, Marco
J effe r s, Ra ndy J ohn so n ,
Keith Kra utter , Mark Mora
and Bria n Windon . Making up
the s tyle rev ue committee
were Teresa Carr, chair·
pe rs on; Tamm y Debord,
Barbara Dou glas , Ni ese!
Duvall, Pam Holcomb ,
Virginia J ordan, Pam Ka utz,
Che ryl La wso n , Mandi e
(Continued on page 12)

Bus drivers certified
The Meigs County Board of
Edu cation acce pt ed t wo
resignations and certified 61
bus drivers Tuesda y night.
The board accepted th e
res ig nation ot Ca ndace
Rogers as speech therapi st
and employed Sandra Gumpf
to replace her . Sharon Birch
resigned as county school
nur se and will be employed
as nurse for Meigs Local
Distri ct only. A second nurse
will be employed to work in
the other two distric ts of the

Four fined
Four defendants were fined
and two others forf eited
bonds in Pomeroy Ma yor
Fred
Hoffman 's
cour t
Tuesday night.
Fined were Preston Par sons, 63, Racine, $o a nd
costs; failure to yield right of
way; Richard E . Swan, 19,
Pom e roy, $10 a nd cos ts,
spinning tires ; Otto J ohnson,
71, Pomeroy, $20 and costs,
disorderly manner , $10 and
cos ts , disorderl y m a nn er;
Mark A. Tillis, 25, Rutland,
$50 a nd co sts, r ec kle ss
operation.
Fo rf eitin g bond s we re
Joseph Allen VanMeter , West
Col umbia, $50 bond , reckless
opera tion ; J err y J . Hall,. 25,
Cheshire; $25, spee din g.

co uhty, Robe r t Bowen ,
s up e r inte nd en t , s a id . The
boa rd also h ire d J a mes
Roge r s
as
schoo l
psychologis t.
Bus certificates went to
Gordon Proffitt, Mars hall
Adam s , Larry Smith, Charles
Co rn ell, Delber t Smit h,
Rom a in e · Fred e rick , Ray
Proffitt , Charles Wolfe, Pa ul
Sellers, Charles Lawrence ,
Don Smith and Dan Smith, all
of Southern Local.
Jimmie Kin g, Roger Dillon,
Darlene Reed , Vi olet Satterfield , Helen Blake , Pa ul
Bae r, Sandr a Cowde r y,
Alfred Wolfe , Archie Rose.
Ma r y
Ro se,
Th eo dor e
Pullin s,
Bill
Hannum ,
Francis Benedum and 0 . J .
. Pennington , all of Eastern
District.
Roge r Blac k , Te re sa

LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature in down town
Pomeroy Wedn esday at 11
a. m . was ,1 4 deg rees under
cloudy skies.

Stale Auditor Thomas
Ferguson has announ ced th e appointment of Mary A. Martin
as a state examiner for
count y
audits
In
southern Ohio.
Mrs. Martin Is an
active member In the
Legion
Am e ri c an
Women 's Auxiliary and
the 8 and 40. She belongs
to
th e
Middleport
Bu s in ess
and
Professional Women's
Club and se rves on the
board ol the Athens
Mental Health Center
Auxlliary. Mrs. Martin
was last employed by
th e
Enfor c ement
Division
o£
the
Department of Highway.
Saiety. She and her
husband, Os by, reside In
Poml' roy.
E.

1

Cremea ns, Es ther Bl ac k ,
Naomi Floyd , Linda Jett,
Mar y King, Fa ye Manley,
Cha rl ot t e Marrin er , Ca rl
Morri s, Alice Sayre, Pauline
Snowd en, Ve rnon Webe r .
Ern est
Wood,.
Ali ce
Globakar , Willi am Ratliff ,
Ann ette Kni ght , Donna
Dani els , Bea Wood , Cor a
Lufli s, Be tt y Longs tr e th,
Virgil Carl, Ralph MacomF.leve n candid a tes fil ed
ber, Harry Leland Parker ,
Leo Morris , Linda Morri s, pe ti tions of candidac y for
Norma n Wood , Jean Wood , pos t in the fall election with
Co rdeli a Br own, Letha the Me igs County Board of
Cotterill , Raymond Co tterill, Electio ns Tuesda y. Filing
Mont Vance, Minnie Thorn· deadline is 4 p.m. today .
The new candida tes are
ton, Carroll White, Mei gs
Douglas L ..Johnson, board of
Local Dis tric t.
Attending we re Harold publi c a ffai r s, Racine ;
Lo hse, Bob Burdette, Gordon Robert G. Davis, member of
Collin s , Geor ge Perry , Easter n Loca l School Board ;
F.
Neutzling ,
Har old
R ous h ,
boa rd Edwi n
Syra cuse Vill ag e Council ;
members, and Bowen.
David A . Smith, Douglas M.
Bissell , b ot h for E a stern
Local Board of Education ;
Every second, the Amazon Clare nce G. La wrence, clerk
River dumps an es timated 21 of Le ba non Township ;
times as much water into the Je rmifer Lohse Sheets, for
ocean as fl ows over Niagra Mei gs . Loc al Board of
Falls during th e same period. Education ; Delbert A. Smith,
for trus tee oi Sutton Township ; Dallas Hill and David
U. Nease, both ·for Southern
ASK TOWED
Local Sc hool District Board
Bernard Earl McKee, 29,
of, Educa tion, and Edgar J .
a nd Billie J o Phelps, 26, both
Pullins, for trustee of Orange
of Delaw are, Ohio.
Tow nship .'

- - - - - -- Now You Know
CLOSING FRIDAY
Cr oss Ha r d war e Stor e,
Middlepor t, will iie closed all
day Friday due to the death of
Emerson Heighton, fath er of
the owner .

Mary Martin
named ·examiner

II filed
Tuesday

•

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="767">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11167">
                <text>08. August</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="51194">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="51193">
              <text>August 5, 1975</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="418">
      <name>warth</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
