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Party celebrates·
25th anniversary

TilE TIIREE SECCOMBE CHIWREN 11-r), Lori, 8, David, 4 and Kristin, 6, from
Canton, Ohio, were guests of Bob Evans at the newest Bob Evans Restaura nt , located on
Everbard Road across from the Belden Village Mall in North Canton . The 17th r estaura nt in
the Midwest chain, it opened July 30. Hours are from 6 a .m . 'til 10 p.m. on weekdays, 'til
II :30 p.m. on Fridays and Saturdays.

CHESHffiE - Mr. and former Charlene Ward) were
Mrs. Dale W. (Bill) Darst, Rt. married July 30, 1950 at the
1, Cheshire, were the guests home of her parents, Mr. and
of ~' ""O[ at a surprise party Mrs. Wesley Ward, who then
July 26 it• o...t:at:!bration of their resided on Storys Run , with
25th wedding anniversary. Re v . Charles Pomeroy
Th e festivities were planned performing the ceremony.
and prepared by their Maid of honor was Janice
children Joan, Jane, Mark (Easton) Swisher and best
and his wife Jackie, Steven
man was Donald Spires .
and Judy, and took place at
The Darsts have csided at
Joan 's hom e in Rio Grande. the same location during
The room was decorated their entire married life.
with silver streamers and
Guests attending the
white wedding be lls , ac- celebration were Mr. and
cented with pale blue . Mrs. Wesley Ward, Mrs. Tom
Displayed on the walls were Spiess and ·daughter Tammy
several large posters covered and Mr. and Mrs. Charles
with snapshots of the couple Ward and children, Chucky,
taken from ba byhood to the
Patty and Christine, all of
present time and included
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
pictures taken during their Wesley E . Ward and children,
courtship and marriage.
Cathy, Gary and Wes, Mr.
The three-tier wedding and Mrs. Keith Ward and
cake, decorated in blue and children, Brian and Duanna
while, was baked by their and Scot !Price, all of Dayton ;
daughters Joan, Jane and Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Judy, and was topped with a Schilling and daughter,
weddin g picture of their Leisa, and Rita Boster, all of
parents. The napkins of white '· Gallipolis; Mr . and Mrs .
and silver were imprinted Chuck Bradbury and Michael
with the names and the
Swisher , all of Cheshire; Mr.
wedding date of the honored and Mrs. Clovis Strausbaugh,
couple. Other refre shments
Wilkesville; and the hosts of
served included sandwiches, the event, Joan, Jane, Mark,
punch, nuts and mints.
Jackie, Steven and Judy
Mrs. Darst was presented a
Darst.
corsage of pink roses
1n keeping with tradition,
fashioned especially for her
the couple received many
by her niece, Leisa Schilling. gifts in silver.
Mr. and Mrs. Darst (the

Accidents

Mr. arid Mrs. Dale W Darst

BEND TIRE CENTER
WE'LL DEAL YOU

A WINNING COMBINATION
A78xl3

4 ·of A KIND
Full4 Ply

'79

Polv~~ter

Smokey victim of hard times
ALBUQUERQUE, N. M.
I UP I J ~ Smokey the Bear

won't be retiring to a dream
home in New Mexico afte r
all . The government can't
afford it, so Smokey will have
to spend his last yea rs in a
VVashington zoo _
The Fores t Service said
Friday building costs for the
planned retire m ent hom e

have soared at least 50 per
cent over es timates .
So instead of a quiet life in
the slate where Smokey was
found 25 years ago clinging to
a burning tree in a national
forest. he and his mate Goldie - will remain in the
National Zoo in Washington,
D. C.

Odd Couple
Archdeacon John Sprat of St.
David's Church in London 1607,
had a reputation for very dainty
eating habits . Hi s wife. on the
other hand , had a great appetite
and parishioners tried very
hard to invite the archdeacon to
dinner without her. The couple
was the inspiration fo r the
nursery rhyme , "Jack Sprat
could eat no fat .

• Federal Excise Tax
Included

E78xl4 ........................ 4 for *88.90
G78xl4 ••••••........•••....•.. 4 for '94.90
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H78xl5 ••••••. .•... .... ...... 4 for *99.90
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L78d5 ....................... 4 for *105.90 ·

mand wherein a recent inspection by senior· authorities
r esulted in his being commended personally for his
achievements and the higher
co mmand
requested
guidelines from him to pass
on to other Naval Construction Force Units.
Commander Maskell also
staled that Jim 's attention to
detail , de.votion to duly,
sin ce rity of purpose and
personal example, as well as
his encouragement of others
to excel in individual growth,
reflect great credit on him
and his command and the U.
S. Navy.
Jim is due back in the
United -States the middle of
August and when discharged
in December, he and his wife,
Katherin e, now living in
Camarillo, Calif., will move
to Rapid City, S. D. where
Jim will em·oll in the"· South
Dakota School of Mines and
Technology to obtain his
Masters degree in Geology.

Blems.

Peterson, Kant-Wet,
Portacrib and

Badg~r.

A big selection of items such
as: cribs, crib mattresses,
strollers,
high
chairs,
bassinets, training chairs,
hampers, automatic swings,
play pen pads and car seats.

Swinging Cradle

Automatic ·Swing

Singles or Pairs SOc lHtre more.

.BEND TIRE CENTER
•

enttne
NO. 83

YORKTOWN HEIGHTS,
N.Y. (UP I)- The 21-year-old
son of Edgar Bronfman,
board chairman of the
Seagram liquor company,
has telephoned his father to
report he has been kidnaped,
according to sources close to
the investigation.
The sources said Sunday
night Bronbnan's eldest son,
Samuel, called : him early
Saturday at his Yorktown
Heights estate to inform him
of the abduction.
However, there were no
immediate reports of a
ransom demand.
Asked to comm~nt on the

contents, liability protection lor

-Furniture Department, 3rd Floor

you . Many oPtional exrra s ID meet
your specifiC need!j .And of course.
you can depend o n the best
service. Call for details.

Carrol K. Snowden
24 Stale St.
Gallipolis
446-4290, Home 446-mB

All at Sale .Prices!
•.

__ ..,

..._

By United Pres~ lntei"IUitlonal

WOO~"R, OHIO
D!RECI'OR OF the Los Alamos
( N. N. ) Scientific Laboratories says enough fuel to meet all the
nation's eleclrlcal energy if nuclear experts find a way to
develop fusion to free a heavy hydrogen isotope in water. Dr.
Harold M. Agnew said scientists throughout the world are
cooperating in the research work. He said if fusion can be
developed, water flowing at the rate of 12 gallons per second
will provide enough fuel to meet all of America's electrical
energy needs.
Agnewwa
however, that other sources of new energy
must be found. "We must u all our technologies. We must not
depend on a single source of energy, and, above all, we must
overcome the present wide~read apathy on the part of the
public," he told open house visitors at the Ohio .~icultural
Research and Development Center here Sunday mght.

i

.:;

ELBERFEhDS lN .POMEROY

ST.GfE FARMGEN ERALIN SU ~ANC£ COMPANY
flnme O!!u: e·
BloommglOO, Illinois

p 7408

PORTSMOU'ffi, VA . -pOLICE SAY A massive sweep of
Wrecker services ln inv~tigation of stolen cars bas resulted
ill the arrest of four persons, including stock car driver Bonnie
R. West, who became the .first woman ln the history of
NASCAR to win a feature stock car race June 21. She was
chiu"ged with possession oJ three stolen cars, police said, and
her husband, Glenn Shirley; her brother, JamesR. Renn; and
)ames Robert Waters of Churchland also were arrested.

CAPE CANAVERAj.,,FLA. - IT COSTS $la mile I&lt;! fly to

.'

·
:
So when the first of two Viking spaceslii~s leaves Florida
-scheduledfor4:59p. m . EDT today-: for a year-long1 search
for life on the red plan~t. the meter wiD start spinning. It will
' stop at about 50S million mllea after a roundabout trip to the
•
(Co!IUIIued on page 8)
· ·
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NOTE: The car In front
of the residence where the
three persons were apparently murdered· Is
reported to have been
licensed In Mei~s County.
Authorities were checking
the owner's
Identity
Sunday night.
R. Bailey, 25, Connie S.
Hodgman, 28, and the
woman's daughter, Tracy L.
Hodgman, 7.
The Fairfield County
coroner said it appeared the
three bad been shot Friday
evening. They apparently
were kllled with a 16-guage
shotgun.
Bailey's body was found

MEMBERS OF THE CHESTER FIRE dept. and their
helpers may wear thin before the week is over operating
their food stand at the Meigs County Fair day and night.
However, representatives of the group were enthusiastic

Sunday as they pitched in to become one of the first food
stands operating on the Rock Springs fairgrounds and did
a good business, at that, in serving workers and early
spectators on the grounds.

Neglect .of mental patients charged
Ed. Note : The following article appeared in the Colwnbus
Citizen Journal today under the byline of Sylvta Brooks, staff
writer.
A public employes union has asked for a meeting with
state mental health officials over what may be instances of
medical neglect and abuse of residents at Uie Gallipolis State
Institute for the Mentally Retarded.
At the same time, Dr. Timothy Moritz, director of the Ohio
Department of Mental Health and Retardation, admitted
Sunday tbat Gallipolis is one of the worst institutions in the
state in lacking adequate medical personnel.
He said the professional staff situation statewide is

"critical."
The Gallia Chapter of the Ohio Civil Service Employes
Association (OCSEA) bas asked for the meellng.
The list of complaints by OCSEA members is long, including criticism of the institute's administrative staff, as well
Donald M. Hippensteel, assistant superintendent,
speaking on behalf of Supt. Bernard Nlehm, who was not
available for comment at 10 a.m. today, said:
''Neither Mr. Clifford nor his wHe have approached us
direcUy wllh this Information. We had no opp"ortunity to
Investigate tbe charges before the Information was given
to the news media. Our policy would be to Investigate the
charges on improper care and take Immediate action."
as allegations of patient abuse, violations of civil service bws,
violation of rights of employes, and inhumane care md
inadequate medicatiQn and treatment.
·
The letter was written by Mike Clifford, a former lnstitu.e
employe, now an OCSEA staff representative.
Seven present and past empieyes spoke with the GJ
Sunday, and not all of them are OCSEA members.
.
Many complained untrained personnel were forced to
administer medication, as ordered by superiors, or risk letting
a patient' die of neglect.
.
Dr. Moritz recognlzes the lack of proper personnel to
administer medication :
"We have .wholesale violations of the state 's Medical,
Nursing "and Pharmacy Practices Act, and under the ctirrent
staffing conditions the only alternali-.;e would be to · let the
patients die ... " Morits said.
He blamed the Ohio Legislature for "chronic neglect."
Dora Clifford, a psychiatric aide and wife of the OCSEA
(ield representative, said there are only · two licensed
physicums at the institution of 1,800 patients, and three

1\
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unlicensed ones.
One licensed physician is the clinical director, and he is
reportedly 78 years old.
She said it is hard for staff to know how to treat patients, as
the doctors constantly change each other's orders.
"We have bad several patients oversedated," she said.
"Some (instances ) have even resulted in death."
Also charging medication abuse is Nancy Moeller, a
psychiatric aide, who has worked there two years.
She tells the story of a patient who "makes sounds like a
crow. Most of the employes call him " Little Crow. " He is a crib
patient."
She said one doctor was in his room trying to talk with the
staff, when "Little Crow" began trying to communicate.
Apparently, the doctor became annoyed with the "crowlike" sounds, and ordered 75 milligrams of thorazine, a strong
tranquilizer frequently used in mental cases.
Mrs . Clifford, and most others interviewed, claim
medicine cabinets are poorly locked or easily broken Into,
sometimes simply by pounding on them with a fist.
Karla Ingles, the daughter of the institution's chaplain,
tells of a patient who had had an operation on her uterus, and
after the surgery began vomiting and developed high fever.
One non-licensed doctor was called and "ordered aspirin
suppositories." The woman died that same night. "They think
she hemorrhaged," Miss Ingles said.
Other staffers told the GJ the same doctor consistenUy
orders the same medication for everyone - aspirin suppositories and vitamin C.
Miss Ingles indicated that one patient, a 21-year-old
woman, has been in the hospital for three years after surgery .
She is now a crib patient, but Miss Ingles said the woman used
to walk and now cannot do so because her limbs are not being
used.
John Baldwin, an aide who was fired for abuse of
medication, freely admits he was "not qualified to dispense
medication.
'
· " I was never trained .. . but after you are .there 30 days or
so you must
do so.''
' · Weather
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EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Chance of showers
Tuesday or Wednesday.
Fair Thursday. Highs In
th e 80s. Lows in the 60s.

Over 170 entries have
been received by Mrs.
Lucille Leifheit, fair board
member, !tr the pretty
baby and the Little Mister
and Little Miss Meigs
County Fair contests.
Entries close Tuesday.
The contests will be staged
at the grandstand at 1 p.m.
Saturday as one of the
concluding features of the
112th annual Meigs County
Fair.

Property
loss heavy

There were no injuries, but
heavy property damage, in
three ~fi e accidents investigated by the Meigs
County Sheriff's Dept. over
the weekend .
At 4:30 p.m . Saturday the
department investigated a
one
car
accident
on
County
Road
9
in
Salem Twp. where Robert " O'Conno.':L~ Coalton,
was traveling north on Co.
Rd. 9, went to sleep. His auto
went out of control, striking a
bridge . There was light
damage to the auto.
A( 2:05 a.m. Sunday in
Salisbury Twp . Gary E.
VanMeter was pulling onto
SR 7 from a private drive and
collided with a vehicle
operated by William A. Barnhart. Pomeroy . VanMeter
said he did not see Barnhart's
vehicle approaching. There
was heavy damage to both
vehicles.
At 1:30 p.m. Sunday the
department investigated a
Cloudy, warm and ' humid single car accident hi Chester
tonight, chance of showers · township on county road 32.
and thundershowers. Highs in David R. Mills; 16, Pomeroy ,
the upper 80s. Lows in the travelling east failed to get
mid arid upper 60s. Cloudy through a curve leaving the
and wa~m Tuesday. Highs in roadway into a fence tm the
the mid 80s . . Probabilily of right, knocking down 3 fence
rain 40 per cent tonight and 20 posts . There was ~ight
per cent Tuesday.
damage to the auto.

I

Saturday night ln front of the
house near an automobile
containing liaskets of laundry. He had been shot !!everal
times in the back of the he8d.
The woman's body was
found nearby. She had' been
shot once ln the back of the
head and once in the
shoulder.
'11le body of the child, also
shot in the back of the head,
was found half hidden under a
bed in the hOUlle, where the
television was sUll playing.
Authorities believe Bailey
was cshot first. They theorize
that the woman apparenUy
came out but was gunned
down near the front steps
while trying to retreat.
The girl apparenUy was
hiding beneath the bed when
she was murdered , said
Berry.
The bodles were found by
the landlord, who had slopped
by to make a delivery.

Blood clue
turns fishy

170 babies in
fair contests

f.News • •. in Brief~

HILI.S, CALIF. - FORMER President
1 BEVERLY
Richard Nixon may talk about Watergate in a " no-holdsbarred" 90-minute television segment with English television
personality David Frost - but the broadcasts won't be aired
until after the 1976 presidential election. Frost, a former talk
show host, told reporters at a ne\vs conference Sunday Nixon
signed a 15-page contract that specifies the former president
will talk about Watergate.
"The fonner President has neither requested nor has he
received any editorial control," Frost said, "whether in terms
of the content or editing of the programs the use of newsreel
footage or by way of prior knowledge of any of the questions.
No subject, Including Watergate, has been barred."

He said marijuana plants
were being grown on a
quarter..acre plot of land 200
yards from the house .
Autopsies were perfonned
in Hamilton County on Steven

DETROIT (UPI) - What
bad looked like the most
promising lead of the FBI's
Investigation
Into
the
disappearance of former
Teamsters boss. James Hoffa
bas turned out to be nothing
but dried fish blood.
It left agents today concentrating on tips pouring ln
!rom throughout the country.
An FBI analysis of bloodstains found in a car believed
involved in the case showed
the blood was not human but
came !rom a frozen fish
carried in the vehicle the day
Hoffa disappeared, sources
clooe to the investigation
said.

• bLbe• ~ :::.·:::::=:::::::::::::::;:;;;;;:·:·:·:·:;;.;.;;:·:·:·:·:·:;:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::c:

Mars. That's one way, for robots only.

'

IIUUIANCI

.

""•

PRICE 15'

case, a · spokesman for the
FBI's New York office said ,
"We are neither confinning
or denying the reports of a
possible kidnaping. "
Yorktown Heights police
also refused comment.
However, both the New
York Daily News and the
New York Times in Monday
editions quoted an FBI
spokesman in Washington .as
saying, "At 2 a.m. on the 9th,
the $On called his father and
said he had been kidnaped by
three unknown males and
said he or they would be in
contact with his father later."

WASHINGTON - UNEMPLOYMENT IS a major cause of
urban street crime, according to several big city police chiefs.
But one of them, Edward Davis of Los Angeles, says moral,
not material, poverty is ·to. blame. He also said marital ln·
fidelity caused hy "swinging mothers" will create a future
crime wave "like we've never seen before."
Davis and five other pollee officialS appeared in an hourJong discussion of crime Sunday on NBC's "Meet the }'ress."
'Patrick Murphy, president of the Pollee Foundation, said one
' action that could help reduce criine would be "reducing the
unemployment in the central city among young men,
...Specially minorities, under age 25."
State Farm has economical coverage for your mobile home a'nd

~ONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1975

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Jumbo Bassinet

u.s. ~a in Mason, w. va.

304-773-'5881 . .
' .
Prices Effective Thru Aug. 30
Or
.

•

. .: :-m

..

No

A71x13 ..................... 4 for *95.90
171x14 .....................4 for •111.,0
P71x14.................. ;.. 4 for '117.90
H71x14 ................ :.. 4 for *126.90

opening for a five day run tomorrow. Opening ceremonies by the Meigs
County Ministerial Assn . will be at 7: 30 this evening. Family day at the
fair will be from 1 to S p.m . Wednesday when fairgoers can ride the 15
Gambill rides for the four hour period for a flat $3 rate per person.

Seagram heir
•
IS kidnaped

Famous Makers such as

STRAnON
Deluxe Steel " Belted - No
Seconds . .

County Fair Sunday as workers of the GambiU Amusement Co., Wintersville, Ohio, began assembling 15 rides which will operate during the fair

VOL. XXVII

I

•Mounted • Balanc·e d

TilE MIDWAY BEGAN to take shape for the 112th annual Meigs

LANCASTER, Ohio ( UPI )
- Fairfield County sheriff's
deputies said today " a lot of
people" had been questioned
and released without arrest
ln connection with the
shotgun slayings &lt;Jf three
persons whose bodies· were
found about seven miles
90Uth of here at their isolated
rural home.
Three area men in their
mid-20s or early 30s,
acquaintances of the victims,
w~re questioned Sunday.
Sheriff Dan Berry said he
felt drugs could play an
imporll!nt role in tracking
down the kiUer or killers.
Berry said nine small bags
of marijuana and some apparenUy stolen items were
found in the victims' home.

Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area

ON THE THIRD FlOOR

Continental Indians
Europe 's la rgest collection of
American India n artifacts is in
Wes t Germany. The costumes,
weapons a nd implements have
been displayed since '1928 in a
museum at Radebul dedicated
to Ger man author Karl May,
who wrote hi s · frontier novels
before eve r visiting the United
Stales .

tied to drugs

moderate property damage .

90

STRATTON POLY IV
WHITEWAllS

.·

POMEROY - Two ~c­
cldenls were investigated by
the Meigs · County She rif('s
Dept. in which no personal
injuries were reported .
Friday at I :03 p.m . Reed
JeHers, Rt. 2 Albany,
traveling south on SR 143 in
Scipio Township, turned to
the right when a car traveling
in the same direction driven
by Jam es Estep , -Rt . 1,
Gallipolis , was unable to s top
and struck the Jeffers car in
the rear .
At 9:55 a.m. Saturday in
Salisbury Towns hip on SR 7.
Agnes V. Sellers , Rt. 1, Portland, traveling south went to
make a tur n on to old Rt. 7
above Kin gs Arm s when
Clark lhle , Rt. 1, Racine,
tra veli ng in the same
.direction, s truck the Sellers

car in the rear. There was

Bush honored as Seabee of Month
educational programs , had
exerted sincere and personal
interest in the needs of the
men concerning their ·on-duty
education, and enrolled many
participants in the program
which !eluded the University
of
Guam
and
other
educational end~avors.
The commendation further
staled that Bush' s contributions to these program s
through long hour s of work,
new ideas and devel.opment
of new procedures in the
educational field , has contributed imme nsely to the
programs within the Com-

Triple killirig

\...

reported

ELBERFELDS .1N POMEROY
Sale! Nursery ·Furniture
and Accessories.

JAMES G. BUSH, SW-3, right, Acting Petty Officer, Seabee Battalion Four, son of Mr.
and Mrs. GUberl B. Bush, 6 State Street, Gallipolis, received the award as Seabee-of-theMonth from his Commanding Officer on Guam.

GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and
Mrs. Gilbert B. Bush, 6 State
. St., have learned from .the U.
S. Naval Mobile Con~truction
Battalion Four, stationed on
Guam, that their son, James
G. Bush, a Steelworker Third
Class with the Seabees there,
bas won an award as Seabeeof-the-Month. The award was
~sen ted by Lt. Cmdr. c. .
Maskell, Commanding Officer of Battalion Four of the
Seabees on Guam.
The commendation accompanying the award said
!;11~h, as Petty Officer~n­
Ch!ll'ge · of Jhe .battali_on.'s

I ,.

Ellmlnation of that lead, a
setback ln the 12-day-old
search for Hoffa, was thought
likely to prompt U.S. Attorney Ralph Guy Jr. to
launch a federal grand jury
probe
into
Hoffa's
whereabouts.
Guy previously received
the g(Nihead from Justice
Department officials to place
the Hoffa case before a
federal gand jury already
seated in Detroit.
The FBI scheduled its first
news briefing ln the case for
today.
Hoffa, 62-year.&lt;&gt;ld fotmer
president of the 2.2 millionmember Teamsters Union,
was fighting to regain his
former post when he
disappeared July 30.
He was last seen in the
parking lot of the Machos
(Continued on page 8)

Politics
shunned
by Ford
United Presalnternatfonal
President Ford's cWTent
western visit was the
beginning of a series of trips
that will lake him to eight
states by the middle of next
month, but his chief
spokesman says the traveling
is not part of the reelection
campaign.
A meeting" between Ford
and state political leaders in
Arkansas Sunday was "the
most nonpolitical political
meeting I have ever attended," press secretary Ron
Nesseh said.
Nessen , traveling with
Ford as the President
slopped to inspect ' a Vietnamese refugee camp ln
Arkansas on his way to Vail,
Colo., said Ford's visits to
Arkansas, Colorado, Montana, Minnesota, Wisconsin,
Dllnois, Iowa and California
are not political.
The press secretary quoted
Ford as telling the Arkansas
officials, "Between now and
the election, 1 intend to spepd
my time primarily being
President . I am going to
maximize my time on the
job."
California, which Ford will
visit next month, is a key
primary state and the home
base of potential Ford
challenger Ronald Reagan,
the former governor.
The
new · governor,
Democrat Edmund G. Brown
Jr., has declined to rule
himself out as a presidential
· candidate next year,. He told
UPI's Carl Ingram · · in
Sacramento such questions
are "speculative," but
"that's not to say that six

1

(CGntlmaed on pqe 8)

,,,
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3 - The Daily Sentinel,_Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monda y, Aug:..l h 1975

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middlepo:t-Pomeroy, 0 ., Mondav, All!( . ll , 1975

Social Security is 40 years old
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Social
security has perhaps more impsct
on the life of Americans than any
other gov~rnment program. It
cur~ently involves 100 million
contributors and 31 million
recipients.
The system sending out more than
$60 billion in old age, survivors and
disa bility benefits this year alone
celebrates its 40th anniversary this
week - still growing but struggling
to make ends meet.
Its financial problem is basically
this : Higb inflation means greater
benefits for recipients and higb
unemploy ment means smalle r
contributiOns to the system .
A government history of the socral
security system calls 11 the most
durable product of the New Deal.
The term "social security" was an

American invention , brought into
national and then international use
by authors of the legislation.
In many other nations, social
security now includes some form of
national health insurance, not just
for the elderly but for the entire
popula lion .
At 40, social security fa ces
financial problems caused in part by
heavy unemployment. When the
system was created in 1935, 11
miDion workers were unemployed.
Inflation and unemployment now
are devouring the system's
emergency reserves at a rate that
will deplete them - unless new
sources of funding are provided sometime after 1980, the administration has told Congress.
The original legislation included
unemployment com pensation,
family welfare , child welfare .

crippled chlldrens' services and
maternal and child health care .
Those services since have been
farm ~d_ out to other Health,
Education and Welfare agencies.
But new responsibilities added over
the years include Medicare health
insurance for the aged, black lung
benefits and Supplemental Security
Income .for the needy aged, blind
and disabled.
"We can never insure 100 per cent
of the populatlon against 100 per cent
of the hazards and vicissitudes of
life," President Franklin Roosevelt
said when he signed the Social
Security Act into law Aug . 14, 1935.
" But we have tried to frame a law
which will give some measure of
protection to the average citizen and
to his family against the loss of a job
and against poverty.,stricken old

age ."

Rhodes insisting
Ohio needs help

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP! ) Ohio Gov. James A. Rhodes
says the state will continue to
put advertisements critical of
the Federal Power Commission
in
national
newspapers if nothing is done
to help Ohioans get ready for
the expected winter natural
gas shortage .
Rhodes made tbe comment
when asked about a Wall
Street Journal ad implying
the commission is respon sible for current speculation
about a natural gas shortage
this winter .
''There is no real gas
shortage, but unless the
federal agency starts to
provide money for · slates to
supplement the current
supply, everyone will suffer,''
Rhodes said.
"For example, if Ohio's
industries have to close down
this winter for two or three
months because of the lack of
energy, the state's population
will go down inunediately ,"
, said Rhodes.
Rhodes said ' 'there is no
real gas shortage because in
that a governmental agency Ohio there are 500 trillion
that is physically depriving a cybfc feet of natural gas." He
citizen of his liberty must s8itl there is enough gas in
answer to a court as to why it Michigan, Indiana, Illinois
is doing so. Thus it must be and the Applachian states " to
required to keep a record of provide gas for the next 75 or
whom it is incarcerating and 100 years In 21 of the Inwhy," the brief stated.
dustrial states."
"Secrecy impinges on the .
" We have granted these
rigbt of society to know about people the rigbt to put gas
its criminal justice processes lines througb tbe state of
and also increases the risk of Ohio, and here we are with
citizens being wrongfully im- our own gas but cannot drill
prisoned. The openness of for it." Rhodes said. "We
criminal proceedings serves cannot put gas into lines that
the interest of the accused as are controlled by the Federal
well as those of society, " Power Commission, and this
added the ACLU of Ohio.
is wrong .

Supreme Court will decide whether
newsmen can see city jail register
COLUMBUS (UP[) - The
Supreme Court of Ohio has
been called on by the
American Civil Liberties
Union of Ohio to rule that
news media representatives
have a rigbt of access to city
jail registers containing the
names of persons being held
under arrest and the charges
against them.
The ACLU of Ohio, in a
friend of court brief prepared
by Ohio State University
constitutional law Prof.
Stanley Laughlin Jr. and filed
at the end of last week, said
lower courts erred io hoiJiing

that Dayton police could
refuse to make the records
available to Dayton Daily
News
and
Dayton
Newspapers, Inc., reporters.
The union 's Board of Directors voted overwhelmingly to
enter the case because of an
increasing number of complaints from persons around
the state being held secretly,
said ACLU of Ohio Executive
Direcior Benson Wolman. He
noted worldwide concern, not
only in Iron Curtain countries, but most recently in
India.
" Holding citizens incom-

mun1cado is the first sign of a
fascist regime," Wolman
said.
According to the brief, "a
city jail register is a public
record within the meaning of
Ohio law requiring such
records to be open at all
reasonable times for ins pection because such a
record is required to be ~ept
by a city by virtue of tbe due
process clauses of the United
States and Ohio Constitution
and to effectuate Ohio court
rules.
"H due process of law
means anything , it means

" Unless we are allowed to
supplement the current
sup_ply of gas, we are going to
conserve ourselves right Into
a 14 per cent unemployment
rate ," said Rhodes.

Fairview
New.s Notes
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr . and Mrs. Gary Miller
and daughter of Bellevue,
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Lswson
and son of Letart, W. Va.
spent the weekend with Mr.
and Mrs . Charles Lawson and
family . Sunday guests of the
Lswsons were Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Lawson and family ,
Mr . and Mrs. Edward
Lswson and baby, Mr. and
Mrs. Rich Morns and
Michelle of Syracuse, Mr.
and Mrs . Bill Parsons and
sons of Antiquity .
Saturday evening guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Sayre
were Mr. and Mrs. Norman
Styer of Waterford , 0 .
Tuesday visitors were Loren
and Gary Richardson of
Michigan.
Mr . and Mrs. Milo
Richardson and sons of
Michigan are visiting at their
farm.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Clark
and Kimblie, Robin Robinson
of New Bern, N. C. were
weekend guests of Mrs.
Bertha Robinson. Other
guests of Mrs. Robinson were
Brian Robinson of Fort
Rockey , Fla., Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Robinson of Norfolk, Va.
The latter are also visiting
their grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Chrisie Powell at
Racine.

Yes, many Watts could happen again
WS ANGELES ( UPI) - It
was evening, 10 years ago
today. Marquette Frye, 21,
and his step-brother Ronnie
wete driving home in their
mother's car. A highway
patrolman stopped them, a
small crowd gathered.
The trooper radioed for
t'einforcements - and from
lhat small incident mush~oomed a race riot that went
fin for six days.
: When it was over , 34 per~
I&lt;Jns were dead, 1,032 injured

••

and $40 million in property
destroyed.
That was Watts, 1965. It
was the first of the big city
holocausts. Newark and
Trenton and Detroit were to
follow ,like so many trees in a
forest fire .
Glenr
Reeder · was
astounded by what happened
to Watts, which he knew as a
.drowsy Negro section of Los
Angeles. His television set
showed him a battleground,
bodies in the streets,

SIJetty
keeps Jerry busy
•

..

• WASHINGTON (UPI) he President of the United
:!&gt;tales enjoys looking at
~etty girls, but Betty Ford
2sn 't worried "because I keep
lrlm busy ."
: Interviewed on CBS-TV's
•'60 Min,u tes" Sunday, ·Mrs.
~ord was asked about the
•pressures on a woman living
in Washington .
: .,The pressure are many, "
She replied. "And it depends
~ the family, the type of
~usband you have, whether
he's a wanderer or whether
'-'s a homebody."

Interviewer Morley Safer
asked whether she had· any
doubts about her husand
"and some of the attractions
in this city."
"I have perfect faith In my
husband. But I'm always glad
to see him enjoy a pretty girl.
And when he stops looking,
then I'm going to begin to
worry. But right now, he still
enjoys a pretty girl. And he
really doesn't have time for
outside entertainment.
"Because ·1 keep him
busy."

•

•

DR. LAMB

buildings aflame, youths
running from shattered
storefronts with looted merchandise.
Reeder since has had an
education- one that most
people still don't have. He
was chosen last year as one of
23 members of the Los
Angeles County grand jury .
Its primary function is
returning indictments in
criminal cases, but it also has
an investigative function in
looking Into the problems of
the community .
Reeder,
soft-spoken,
middle class WASP and a
retired
beer
company
distributor from the white
suburb of Rosemead, headed
a subcommittee which went
Into the black community of
Compton, next door to Watts,
and heard from residents
there.
Compton is adjacent to
Watts , a city of 78,000
population . The black area of
south central Los Angeles
stretches south from the edge
of the downtown district to
the northern fringes of Long
Beach, and Compton is one of
a dozen black neighborhoods.
What Reeder found was not
encouraging.
"Yes , I think all the
ingredients are there for
another riot," he said.
" As a matter of fact, I think

you might say conditions are
twice as bad as they were
before.
"I am very disheartened.
All they need is a little traffic
Incident . Some professional
agitators. The feeling among
the people is frustration unemployment, welfare,
crime, uncontrollable kids,
violence in schools, the
security of their homes.
"I am so doggoned sad.
Yes, I think a spark could set
it off. And if it comes it won 't
be confined to Watts."
Here are some of the things
Reeder learned:
- 68 per cent of the people
in Compton are on some kind
of welfare .
- Unemployment is an
estimated 48 per cent.
- Last year there were
4,000 burglaries in Compton.
-Its schools have a 40 to 50
per cent dropout record.
,. - Two thousand homes
have
been
abandoned
because of residents moving
out in fear or unable to keep
up the payments.
- The mortality rate at
birth is twice that of the rest
of the country.
-Youth gang.related murders in Los Angeles increased
from 111n 1971 to 291n 1972, 39
in 1973 and 66 in 1974. The
prediction for this year is
more than 100.

How to get_ daily calcium
••
•:JIY
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
• DEAR DR. LAMB - You
~en mention the necessity
for adults to drink the
lqjdvalent of a quart of milk
II day. Please tell me ·how
Collage cheese and cheddar
;Jleese COIIlpare in terms of
rmces to milk for nutritional
nlue, Also, can calcium pills
lerve ·the same purpose?
• .O,EAR READER - That
is in reference to the
'Calcium content of milk. A
~rt of whOle milk contains
t a gram of calcium.
ortlfled low fat and fortified
milk contain even more
••ctum. I think most adults
Ieee! at least a gram of
"Oal!;lGmll day. ~You call use an. equivalent
IIJDOunt of buttermilk or
,.urt to Jet the.calcitJ!". A
mjlk Is about two·
. Remember the old '
"IJ",PlDt's a (I01IId the
lcrfd arOUnd." In general a
of~; creamed or
~ cotlajle cheese,

•

remark

E

e.llf

liund
'!

• .
' 'I

cheddar cheese, Swiss cheese
or American cheese, contains
about the same amount of
calcium as a pound (pirtt) of

(half of your dally needs).
You should eat the bones in
the salmon as canned. Sardines with bones contain
milk. ·
almost twice as much
Since there are many calcium per ounce. A threestudies suggesting that too and.a.balf.ounce serving will
much saturated fat can in- meet about half of tbe daily
crease your cholesterol and one gram recommendation.
lead to heart disease, It is
Mature bean seeds are a
wise ·- to
use
fortified fairly good source. One cup
skim milk (has more coo~d and drained (about 7
calcium and protein any- ounces) contains nearly a
way than whole milk), tenth of a gram of calcium.
buttermilk or uncreamed
You don't need to drink all
cottage
cheese.
Ched- your milk to benefit from its
dar,
American
and calcium value. You can·
simil8r, cheeseS are veiy
mill!: In food preparain fat and consequently !ion.
Mille
gravy •
loaded wi~ calories. About puddings a_n&lt;!~ _even tbe
halfolthefatlssaturatedfat, milk In bread all count
so Ills not a good choice for a Wward meeting the daily
source of calcium if you want c~lcium needs. And, If you
to restrict your calories, your use the non-fat -dry milk
fat intake or, your saturated powder you can add more
fat Intake, ·
~ . · ' than the amount called for to
Another good
of reconstitute milk. The added
-alcilll!lls canned salmoil. A milk powder will incre8lll! the
seven-ounce can of salmon, calcium and protein' in the.
solids and liquids, contains prepared food
without
about a haH .grani of calcium significantly increasing fat or

hfili

source

..

...

)

use

.Y
.,

cholesteidl. Don't downgrade
desserts as all bad. It
depends on how they are
made, and they are one
vehicle that can be used for
calcium and protein.
You can get your calcium
from tablets. How many
tablets you need depends on
the type of calciwri tablet
used. Short of using calcium
tablets, milk and milk
prOilucts remain the main
source of calcium for most
people. Those who can't use
mill&lt; for any reason are really
handicapped in obtaining
thetr daily calcium needs.
Send your questions to Dr.
·Lamb,. in care of this newspaper, P. 0. Box IM1, Radio
CitY Station, New Yorl&lt;, NY
10019. For information on
da Uy dietary requirements,
·send 50 cents and a long, seff
addressed stamped envelope
and ask (or The !lealth Letter
number U, Balanced Diet,
Recommended Daily Dietary
Allowances (RDA) .'

Those are statistics. Here
are some of the other things
~er heard from more
than 100 persons who appeared before his panel :
From Larry Benjamin, a
17-year-old high school
student: "It takes me three
weeks to read a short book
and I find it hard to do." ·
Helen Mason, a nurse and
parent: "There are so many
problems ... We have a lot of
nice things but the kids don't
want them. Once the police
pick them up, they know they··
can get away with it. The kid
is ruined before he gets to be
16. Their mothers are scarfl(l

of them."
Monroe Smith, Compton
fire chief : "People put iron
bars on the windows and even
the doors of their homes, and
when they catch fire they are
death traps."
Joseph Cochee, Compton
police chief : "We need
employment to create jobs
for these kids. We need to
give people employment so
they can make a living. The
criminal's basic needs are
the same as yours and mine .
And he will satisfy these
needs one way or SllOther."
Rev. James Gayles : "They
are killing every day . We is
cheap. Everybody is carrying
a gun . Nobody is doing
anything about it. When I
leave here tonight, I don't
know whether I am going to
get home or not."
On the surface, there are
signs of some improvement
for blacks in Los Angeles .
There was, for instance, the
election of Thomas .Bradley
as mayor. Mervyn Dymally
is lieutenant governor and
Wilson Riles is state
superintendent of public
instruction.
But election of blacks to
such posts has had no
noticeable impact on the
problems of · joblessness,
crime and health.
The most evident - and
about only- benefit growing
out of the Watts riot was the
construction of the $39 million·
Martin Luther King General
Hospital with ·a $32 million
budget.
·,
Of
the
scores
of
organizations· that sprouted
to help blacks, only about a
dozen are left.
One of the few · successful
self.belp groups bas been the
Watts Labor Comlnunlty
Actiori Committee, funded by
federal state and local
governments and
also
receiving support . from the
Unit_e d
Auto · Workers,
I

)}

A Chronicle: of America

'

Summer, 7775:
John Murray Dunmore, the Royal Governor of Virginia,
writes to Lord Dartmouth, Secretary for the Colonies,
describing the growing spirit of rebellion : VIrginians
" manifest no other disposition than for resisting the
authority of government. Bodies of men .are everywhere
set on foot , arming, and disciplining with great diligence, and appearing in uniforms. His Majesty's English subjects, Indentured
servants, are compelled to
take arm• and •ubmlt themselves to all orders they shall
receive (from the rebelling
colonists]; some or these
[raithrul subjects] have escaped to the ship or war,
[Fower~. at anchor tn the
York River], theonlyprotectlon they can meet with now
[because] the Jaws have no
Dunmore
operation."

provide

admission,

free

Teamsters and .a number of
AFJ...CIO unions. It is headed
by Ted Watkins, probably the
best known citizen of Watts.
It has a $30 million annual
anti'Poverty program ineluding a giant shopping
center, a supermarkdt, auto
repair and teaching shops, its
own food stamp center ,
gardens in lots ravaged in the
riots.
But a decade later, Watts
still remains a bleak example
of how the nation has failed·to
copewithwhatmaybe its No.
! ,social problem.
Los Angeles police chief
E'dward.• Davis: "There's a
state of de~ with a lot of

P"OI!Ie.

·

':In almcist any way of
measuring, thiilgs are worse
than they were 10 years ago."

Safer led Mrs. Ford into the
topic of premarital sex
during their interview on
CBS' "60Minutes" by asking,
"Well, what if Susan Ford
came to you and said,
'Mother, I'm having an af-

fair?"'
"Well, I wouldn't be surprised,"
Mrs .
Ford
responded.
"I think she 's a perfectly
normal human being like all
young girls, if she wanted to
continue and I would certainly counsel her and advise
her on the subject, and I'd
want to know pretty much
about the young man that she
was planning to have the
alfair with - whether it was
a worthwhile encounter or
whether it was going to be one
of those"Sle's pretty young to start
affairs."

Jlaiders rip
.
Lions, 34-0

..
....•
,, ,.., 1

""
stand show and an evening'
meal for the participants. All .,
fair activities are included in ~·
the afternoon event which , "~
begins at noon.
·This year's chairman for ~·:
the Orphan's Outing is " "
Howard Kiebler, treasure&lt; ,
and board member of the
Automobile Club. Mr. Keibler ·":
l,'l the retired Portsmouth "':;
Fire Chief. Children from .. ~
orphanages and foster homes ~ - ­
in Scioto, Pike, Adams, ._.
Athens, and Gallia counties ,""
have been invited to this
"'"
year's event.
The Orphan's Outing was '"",
started in 1941 by then -Auto "':
Club Manager Clif Murfin, ··~
who now resides In Colum- '"'
bus.

..
...
rr

Safer Interjected: "Nevertheless, old enougb."
'"
" Oh, yes," said Mrs. Ford. " '1-4

"She's a big girl."

'" 1

As to her attitude toward
premarital relations in
general, Mrs. Ford said it
simply seemed to be part of
the free lifestyles of today's
young people.
"And in some cases, I'm
not sure that, perhaps, there
would he less divorce," as a
result, she said.
In response to otber questions, Mrs. Ford said she was
confidentnoneofherchildren
were regular drug users although, she said, "I'm sure
they've all probably tried
marijuana."
Sle said one of the Ford
boys had "given me the
devil" for saying that in the
past and had denied he ever
tried the drug.

.. .. ,

,-,

..,

n1

.. ,

"'
.. ,
""

Reeds,ville News Notes '"'
By Mrs. L. Balderson
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. '" '
Crystal Hall of Coolville Oscar Weber and family. The "'
Rd., and Mrs. Opal Randolph occasion was to celebrate the
recently took a trip on the birthday of Mrs . Denver '"
Blue Ridge Parkway. They Weber.
also visited with Mr. and Mrs.
Dinner guests of Mr. and ""
Johnny Hayes at Laurel Mrs. Walren Pickens were
•v
Fork, Va. and spent a day in Mr . and Mrs. Bill Williams of
North Carolina.
Athens, Ga., Mrs. Kathiyn
Spendillg a day with Mrs. Dietz, Belpre; Bill Dietz of
Bess Larkins were Mrs. Osa Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. R.
Bailey of Bradenton, Fla., E . Williams and Mrs. Lyle
and Mrs. Georgia Autherson Balderson and Kay.
of Newark.
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Walker ,,
Word of the death of Ray of Pomeroy visited with Mr . •. ,
Gilkerson of Marlette, and Mrs. C. Ed Humphrey ..
Michigan was received. His and Robin Sunday.
wife is the former Louise
Mrs. Bernice Randolph has .
Coleman, daughter of Mrs. returned home after visiting
Elizabeth Coleman and the with her daughter, Mrs. Betty ..
late Howard Coleman.
Ruble and family at Vienna, -~
Kay Balderson recently
celebrated her 14th birthday
with a family cookout and
DEVOTED TOT HE
I ': J
homemade ice cream and
INTERESTOF
MEIGS-MASON
AREA
ca ke were served. Guests
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL
included Mr . and Mrs .
iloaai'+"~l~ioLICH
Warren Pickens and Mrs.
City Editor
.
. •- t th. W'lli
' Published dally except -3
Ka thryn D1e
... a e 1 amSaturday by The Ohio Valley
Balderson home.
·
Publishing company 111
Court S't , Pomeroy ' Ohio 1 1 1
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Ruth
•5769. ·auslnoss Office Phone
traveled by plane to Hudson,
;~F 156 · Editorial Phone 992. ~ ·
Mass. to visit Mr. and Mrs.
tsPecond class postage paid ~.
a
omeroy, Ohio .
, ,.
George Rut h and family.
National
advtrtlslnlil ·'Dohrman Reed is a patient
rGeP11resentatlve
Wordr fith Company
Inc
-4"
at the St. Joseph Hospital, ?s"'t1ne111 &amp; Gotl~her o1v ' ,,,
Parkersburg, W. Va.
' N.'(,. T~~~ 7 _Ave., ew York:
The Don Coleman family . 0 Subscrlption rates··
from Columbus visited with I_ave~W:brel d7b5y carrier where ,,,
f
cents per week.
8
Mrs. Helen Arche~ . .. ,
1 clrr )':~1or Route where r.a
•
• service
not ~
Mr . an d Mrs. Ch ares
I . a8~• 11 •~le,
One month $3,25
Swogger and Ricky have .
.Y moll ; n Ohio and W va ·
m':.~thr••rlll$5202_.00;
. SIX
moved to Edon, Ohio, where
onth • • . . Three
he has employment.
26 00 s, ' 7-00 . Elsewhere
13 ·50 Year ; Six month's
Mr . and Mrs. Denver
· 1 three months S7 50
0
ubscrlptlon price trictudeS
Weber and · family were
unday Times -Sentinel. 1

.

...

I '' ·

·,.

team can still catch Clncinnati, ia hopiJI8 Sutton, a
streak pitcher, will help
propel the Dodgers into
contention during the next
few weeks.
"Sutton 's a good steady
pitcher," said Alston. " H
we're goirtg to get back In the
race, be 'II have to continue to
pitch the way he has been ."
The 2-1 victory, keyed by
rookie John Hale 's sixth
home run and Steve Yeager's
runscoring single, is helping
Alston keep his faith.
"We'renoloutofityet,"he
said. "The last thing I'd do is
giveup. Whatwehavetodols
play better."
l':lsewhere in tile National

l.eague.-CII)_c~t! r(p~
Bttlblit&amp;b

I

Sport Par.ade
-"
Ill.,._

Car insurance?

•

State Farm still
g1vesyoua
good value.

enga l s
dron 7-3

JJIII!Ii'i l la ,1·}'

Steve Snowden

PH. 992-7155

deczs" n

A

1

\'/

49ers rally, top
Browns, 17-13

!\

•••

I
\•

•

...

attend Scioto Co. fajr

rides, tickets to the grand-

"

)

"' •Aiitos 5, Pirates 3
CIN CINN ATI (UPI) - Tbe fourth inniJI8 and four in the
Montreal ,li.li, HouatOn . Skip Jutze's two-run single
Reds are .keeping fifth, three of them unearned.
downed
w;¢1ju llllhlighted a four .run first A m cr.c&lt;tn L ea gue Standrng s aCincinnati
reign on their 151\:- Three hits, one a double by
F r a n e i'a 1: ll
to u t .t tf ~ INiing and Houston went on to Un•ted Pre !.!.Ea!.lntt e rnt~tionat gasteady
me lead over Los Angeles Ken Griffey, and an error by
·
1-.1, St. l,!lllls hand Pittsbur gh its fifth
w 1. pet 9 b .
in the National League West Larry Parrish did the
10 45 609
shaded
~ In IO-"' flnlght loss behind the " os&gt;o n
6 7 5 1 549 l
heading into tonigbt 's game damaii".
poUndat Jkdlin8 of James Rodney ~~~'o;g;;
&gt;9 55 5 18 10 1
Joe 'Morgan, Bench and
here agamst the Olicago
'i &lt;l 6'1 4M 16 1
Atlanta 8-f..
., '
~and Mike Cosgrove. Mdwaukoo
Perez coupled singles with
51 61 HS If' .
Cubs.
· Reds U ; E1f. ' l
.; lldlard yielded just one hit g~·.~~:~ nd
J6 !0 ] 9 1 '1 4 '
Parrish's second error of the
~ Jack Billingham, 12-5, will
w(''&gt; t
George Foster illllTlllltll a in six innings, but walked 10
w 1 pet . g b
be on the Cincinnati moWld game to give Cincinnati two
three-run loner, his Ulll. batters before Cosgrove Oakl &lt;md
! 0 •I S 609
tonight while the Dodgers' more runs In tbe sixth.
and Johnlif .Btl• b and Tlil)y came on .to preserve KansasCoty 6J 51) S61 S'
A triple by Morgan, a single
ChtCrlC)O
S6 S9 481 14
Andy Messersmith, 13-11,
Perez comblni!d to drlY!I' in Richard 's eighth victory.
T e)la s
55 61 d!J IS ' ,
fa ces the
Phillie s m by Bench, a double by Perez
Monncsota
57 6'i 444 19
four runa, he1pin&amp; Clnclnri"-1
Gltats 8, Phillles I
and Foster's 19th homer gave
Ca td orn ta
'il 66 436 '/0
Philadelphia.
mainlain Ita 15'h game
Gary Matthews clouted a
Sa tu rday'!&gt; R es ult s
The Reds' George Foster the Reds their final four runs
Mrnne so ta 1 Detrort 0
lead over Los An(e· pair of homers to drive in four
Texas ,, Milwaukee 7
belted a three.run home run in the eighth off Chuck
les wJth .. 16 - lltt , ~and propel San FranBos ton 1 O ak l and 7
Sunday and Johnny Bench Taylor.
Kans a s (o ty 6 Clevela nd J
attack . 'blli~..; Easl~' dsco past Philadelphia. By ntght
and Tony Perez combined for
gained'*_l2ili!iWfein
~.the Phillies lost a
Ba l lt mor e 17 Ch rc aqo 6
four runs hatted irt with three RIVER RESULI'S
of Fred'Not ......lilbo picked Chance to p1ck up a game on nrght
C.1l1forn ra A N ew York 1
hils apiece in 8 16-h.it, ]1-3
CINCINNATI (UPI)
up his ae~telitll viclllry. ; -:'
Pittsburgh and thus remam
n
rQhl
Sunday
'~
R
es
ult
s
ancinnati
vtctory
over
Mon~
Palacity
Jet led all .tbe way ,
•·
· two games behind the NL
Mrnne!.ot a 4 Oetrott 0
lreal.
at times by as much as five
East leaders. Jim Barr we nt
Mrlwaukee ' T.c•as J
Fred Norman, who bowed lengths, in winning the f7 ,500
the distance for the Gtants to
Boston s Oak land 3
K rlnsa s Crt y s C l eve lan cl 1 out with one away in the fiftll
Vivacious Handicap at River
gain his lOth vtclory .
Chrc ago J Bal trm o r e 'I
mning, picked up his seventh Downs here Sunday by two
Cal rl orn •a 1 New Y ork 0
Cards 3, Padres 2
•
Today •-, Games
win in 10 decisions . Reliever lengths over Red Top Beauty.
Ken Reitz tied the game
' JOE CARNICELLI
(All Trm cs E OT )
Rolli ~ t . k
. ed h'
IW
and the Raiders had 20 first
Victory Meadow was third.
Tc)las I Perry 11 151 at
e 1!..85 WlC gam
15
· "lth a one-out homer in the
UPI Sports Wrller
Detroit
!L
aGrow
7
1
1
)
,
8
p
m
12th
save
.
downs compared to only six
Palacity Jet ran the mlle
bottom of the lOth and Lou
Kansas City I Busby 15 BJ at
Loser Don Carrithers was and 70 yards in 1:43 1-5 and
The Oakland Raiders com- for Detroit.
Brock singled in Mike Tyson Oatt rmore ! Cue l lar 10 8 ,, l J C
piled the best record in the
• tapped ror one run in the
Lawrence went out in the
returned $5, $3.40 and $2.80.
with the winning run p m
Milwa u kee {S laton 11 11 1 at
National Football League last third quarter with a knee
lllCIIIlellts later to spark St. Mrnnesota I Butl er 1 J J. 9
season and from the looks of inJurY and he won't know how
1A&gt;uis over San Diego. Tito p mNew York !Dobso n 9 Il l at
By MILTON RICIDUN ;,'·
their 1975 pre-6e&amp;son opener, severe itis until Tuesday. But
UPI Sports Editor
·#- ·
FUente~ had given the Padres C&lt;tl1forn1a { Tanana 9 6 J. 10 30
they could be even stronger he was pleased with his
.i. -t . ~- • 2-1 lead in the top of the pm
Boston
I Moret
8 1 t al
this year.
performance.
NEW YORK ( UPI) - Walt Alston lite ln. lbe lll8lUIIM"I -\nnlng wben he slammed his Oakland I B l ue 1S 8 J. 11 p m
The Raiders, who won 12 of
" The experience I got last chair tbe same way he always has. Hiil e&amp;jil nlion seldom third homer of the season off
Nal•onalleaqut&gt; Standmg'!&gt;
14 regular season games and year has made me a more changes. He sits WI'th h'IS baCk s1r81'ght -•~ the chair and AI ·Hrabosky, who benefitted
Un&gt;t
od Press lnler nat•onal
ousted defending Super Bowl confident player this year," with his eyes taking In everything arod' blll\'t ·
from the outburst by gaimng
Ea st
champ Miami in, the playoffs he said. " I know what I'm
Thingshaven 'tbeengolngthatwellforhlmgenerally,~ hlllOth victory.
P•ll sburqh
.~ ·.,1 9 ° ~~ 4 g . b
before -being bounced them- doing when I go into the thougb his Los Angeles Dodgers have,''!!'lllllll~ lalrt ~ , "Cabi 9, Braves 1
Phda
64 5I 551 '
selves by Pittsburgh in the game.''
straigbt, but he is far from being defeated. QJillle contrary, be
Bill Bonham pitched a five- ~·• .:;·:~~'
~: ~: ~~~ ;: ~
•
American Conference title
Starter Ken Stabler , who looks like a winner.
',
,_ · ......
littler and Rick Monday Chicago
55 6 3 466 , . ,
1
.._~
~
.u.
Montrea
l
48
64
&lt;~?9
16
game, overwhelmed the hit 3-of-4 passes in running
I Dodgers have,,...,.u
Sofar,hisLosAngees
!""' :fliPPed out three hits inw es t
Detroit Uons Sunday. With only two series, threw a 37- this season. National League champs IJiit.
, they trill · eluding a three-run double to
w. I. oct • b
· Reds'm th e NLWIItb
'
l$-lhglnles
Cmcmna t•
76 39 661
reserve quarterback Lsrry yard touchdown pass to Cliff Cincinnati's dlsappearmg
.
Y
• Jllee Olicago past Atlanta . Los Angoles 61 ss 516 15' ,
Lawrence going almost all Branch and Lawrence threw now with less than eight weeks left, but the f.iu1llest thOQibt Bonham, who aided his own san F ran
56 59 . 461 'n
You get t hat f ast , f r1end ly service we're
· i ·
San D•ego
53 67 J 6 I I~
the way, Oakland blasted the a H&gt;-y ard TD pass to Morris from Walt Alston's mind IS
g vmg up.
_.,..)'lo
caUie by driving in lwo runs, Atla nta
5 , 6 s 440 75' ,
famous for. An agent close by wherever
Uons 34-0.
Bradshaw. Pete Banaszak
"That'd be tbe lalrt thin3 you ever do," be liB)III. "We~~- ·- ltOD his lith game and didn 't Houston
" 15 370 3J
you're dr ivmg And the world's largest car
Lawrence is only in his ran one yard and rookie Louis outofityet . Whatwehavetodoisplaybett«:·J~V1!notg1Vtll allow a hit until Earl
Los'~~~~~.',", ~~~~ ~'ork 0
tnsu rance compa ny on your stde .
second NFL season but he carter eight for two more up and the first ballplayer on this club who gives me tile' lm-, Williams led off the fifth with
c.nc•nnal• • Mon!rea l 1.
Sound good 7 Come 10 or call
has two years of Canadian TDS.
pression he has, his butt will be out of •
•• llif, he Wllll't i single . •
ni~,",'1 a nl a 6 Ch•cago
for all the details.
football and a year of taxi
In
other
Sunday know what hit him."
....--: r
'w.;;
,
suspended game
squad experience behind exhibitions, lhe New York
AJston,63, is comp'leting hls 22ndconseCUtiveyear
Chicago B AII a n&gt; a 1 ·
""'
r eg ular game
him. He completed 9-of-11 Giants
defeated
New the Dodgers. When it comes to uninter~ llfvice With OM ~
Ph dade lph ia
11
Sa n
passes for 101 yards and a England 28-14 and San club,noothermanageraroundcantouch tpi~ Hebassut!i~ ..
.
F rsat c~s~~rs.'~ ' 6n'~:~ o,ego 1 ,
1258 Powell St., Middleport, 0.
Francisco downed Cleveland a trans-continental move, a couple of ~If!~--·"·•
touchdown.
n•g h'
And while LaWrence 17-p. In Saturday night evenacoupleofe~uak~san?ls~leK..,oflosin.hla
n • ~ho,uS!on s P•ttsburgh o.
directed the offense, the action, Philadelphia upset jobnowthanwhenhewasfirsthiredtn )95(,
_
·
Sund ay's Res ult '
Naturally, Alston saw that four major ~managers ]ost
J:'
Crncrnnali 11 Mont r eal J
Raider defense shut off Pittsburgh 17-14, the Nevi
Ch rc ago 9 Atlanta 1
Detroit completely. The York Jets stunned Minnnsota their jobs within the past three weeks, and turally he felt
San
Franc •sc o
6
SU.U IAlM
Uons were able to gain only :ID-15, Green Bay whipped badly for each of them. Mostly for Yogi Berta because he was
w·
Phsr,lat~'~,~~~ ~a n - O t ego '} 10
44 total yards In the first baH Buffalo 23-6, Los Angeles a bit closer to him than the other three.
•nn.ngs
••rvealwayslikedYogi," saysAlston. 11 We 'vebeenbuddles,
Houston 5 Ptttsbu r gh J
and 115 overall and entered dumped Dallas 35-7, Miami
Today 's Gam es
INIURANC~.
Oakland territory only once. downed Cincinnati 7-3, St. except on the field ."
, ·
MIAMI (UPI ) - It took
1 All T&lt;m e. EDT )
"That's an awesome array Louis topped Kansas City I~
Alston reaches into his locker for his Dodflt"'", putait .on v..eteran quarterback Earl at ct/~~~~~~ ~~ ~~~~~C:h~r::
STAT[ fARM MUTUAl AUTOMOIIL[ INSUfltANCE COMPANY
of talent," said Uons Coach 3, Houston beat New Orleans and lask him If he was ever worried about ~g.ftred. • •, J((I'Tallless than six minutes s 1 a os p m
Home Ofl rc e Bt oom•n ston. tllrno rr.
lolle it good .,eoghbo• S lale ftrm os !here
~~Funny as it may sound, I never gave it. ~rehoughl,n l*t to engineer a 58-yard victory
San F r anc IS C O ( H a l o(k I s 9 )
Rick Forzano. "Everything 13-7, Chicago crushed San
¥~
at Montreal (Roge r s 8 8) .
they did seemed to work and Diego 22-0 and Baltimore says. "When Ifirst got the job, I was so thankful,-finade up my drive for the Miami Dolphins 6 os 0 m
p 1184.2
_ no control Saturday night.
San D.ego !Jones 15 61 al
nothirtg w.e did worked."
edged Denver 23-20 in mindlwasn'tgolngtoworryaboutsomethingihad
N ew York !Ma tla ck 1J 81
Oakland piled up 311 yards . overtime .
over. It's been that way all my life. I'vt!· been 111tough some
Morrall came off the bench 6 os 0 m
the fourth quarter,
Los Angeles
I Messorsm •lh
good and some bad years, but even In the bad years, if I did,all to "'•rt
D'loO
IJ 11 1
at
Phrladel ph ra
Ifelt I could, I didn't worry about what Wlll _J!O!Dg to happen." .. with the Dolphins trailing the 1Chml enson 6 3 l. 6 15 p m
The Dodgers have more good young talt!riCIIuln most cluba. Cincinnati Bengals 3-11, and
••"sbu rgn 'candelaroa s n
..1•• _
at Atlanta ! Easter ly 1 4 or
One of Alston's biggest problems is deteJ'IDIDing which.....-~· lfy 1:41 had taken Miami 58 Tho mpson o 31. 1 35 p m
touseandwhichtokeeponthebenchonanyljnnday.
yards downfield and con- H ;~stoLno~'b , e~~~~''i 1 ~)~l 8 ~;
"Sometimes it's a little tough on a club like tills one where nected with Nat Moore on a 0 m
the guy on the bench is just as good as ~ falla;,Piaying;'' ~ ,lbuc.'hdown pass.
lliiSfLE WINNER
says. "It's not like the old Brooklyn clubill:it(fli!l know IIUYI • The 41-year-old Morrall,
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
througb for the winning score like Robinson, Campy, Hodges, F'Urillo, Pa Wee, SniderJilit ·;Jlldt-up to quarterback Bob (UPI ) - Ice House Mel, with
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) Gilliam will play every day."
;.; '· ~ :•
.,__ ·,trlese, hit Melvin Baker for Bennte Feliciano in the irons,
Coach Dick Nolan is "quite early in the final period.
privaul
office,
eenterfieldor
nine yards to open the Miami scored a four~ength victory
While
Alston
is
talking
in
his
Rookie receivers Willie
pleased with the first time
out" for his San Francisco Miller and Oscar Roan Jim Wynn is teasiJ\g rightfielde~ Willie q:awfor&lt;! in tht, ~b. drive and kept it going with a over Idaho Territory in Sun49ers this season but middle caught scoring passes for the house, trying to get a rise out of him. Wynil ~thit lefthllndier · 17-yard strike to Moore on the day 's featured Starter Allowlinebacker Frank Nunley Browns, with Roan on the end Jerry Koosman is starting for the Mets .galillt the DIM!IIers. 11. The touchdown pass came ance at Thistledown.
thinks the club is just keeping of a 47-yarder from Brian Crawford, a lefthanded hitter, isq't in the lineup, so wynn two plays later.
The winner covered the
Cincinnati, which took its mile and 40 yards in I: 42 4~
things going from last year . Sipe to give the Browns a 13- decides to agitate him about it.
"Yeah, yeah, you can't play against left-banders anymore, second pre-season loss, and paid $8, $3.60 and $2.80.
The 49ers offense sputtered 10 lead midway in the third
jive turkey !" Wynn shouts at Crawford,even.Ytough he's le• scored on a 23-yard field goal Sassy Vtxen showed.
but the defense looked solid stanz.
than
two feet from him. "H you have ally ·kilts, you'll go.in by Dave Green in the third
meet
Los
The
49ers,
who
as a rock Sunday as San
First Burst and He's a
· · .•- •.,.urter .
Francisco beat old rival Angeles Saturday night, got there and tell Alston you wanna play eepl4il:tielll;"
Clown returned $53.80 in the
Crawford says he'll do it. Wynn says ht~l$.1lelieve htm,
Griese, who staried for the 7-7 daily double .
Cleveland 17-13 in the good rushing from Del Wilmarches
directly
into
Dolphins,
managed to move
whereupon
Crawford
gets
up
and
exhibition opener for both liams, who had 77 yards on 15
There were 887 winrung
Alston's office.
- ··the offense but had two of his tickets sold on the 12-2~
teams. Since San Francisco carries.
"I wanna play centerfield today," he says to the Dodger drives stopped by pass inter- trifecta in the lOth race, each
Williams, slowed last
did not win an exhibition
game last season, the 49ers season with a broken wrist, is manager, the high pitch in his voice automatically giving-him ceptions by veteran cor- paymg $78.60.
..
nerhack Ken Riley.
are already off to an im- getting a long look this time away.
The crowd of 6,920 wagered
he's
being
Ilia.
'
·,
Walt
Alston
knows
when
around since Wilbur Jackson
proved start.
$678,589.
"Sure, go ahead," be says. "I want e~ to be
It was a thriller all the way is is hurt .
Willie Crawford can't hold back anymon..Jtia eyes light,., ,_,,~
"I feel much better about
as the Browns had a first
TH URSDAY. August 28
THU RS DAY AuguSt 21
down on tbe II with 58 this year/' said the second and he starts laughing .
Mule Haggard Show
Mac
Da"ls
"See, jive turkey," he hollers out the door to jllll Wynn. "I ,
seconds to go and couldn't year back. "There is nothing
FRiDAY, August 29
FR I DAY August 2l
holding me hack· so I know told you I'd do it!"
scor.e .
Earth, Wind &amp;. Fire
M~c Davis
Nunley, a standout all day, what I can do. Last year, I
SATURDAY.
AuguSt 30
SATU RDAY . AuguSI 23
Bo
Donaldson
&amp;. The
recalled that San Francisco was really always thinking
Roger Miller: Ca.pt.tln &amp;..
Heywoods
Tennille
won four of its last five games about the writst. I had a cast
..... .::: '
(Afternoon Show )
SUN DAY AuguSI 24
on
most
of
the
time
and
was
In !974.
Bob
Hope &amp;. La Costa
Roy Roger~ &amp;... Dale
"We're playing now like we self-conscious about holding
(N
1
g
ht
Show )
- Thomas Edwards for providing us a field for our
Evans
finished last year. We were on to the ball.
August 3 1
SUNDAY.
games at Minersville.
Roy Du~ty Rogers , Jr. &amp;..
really tough at the end but we
8
AM
~
5
rM,
Ohio St•te
-Gene Thompson, Frank . Seth, Chortle and Brian
Sons of the rloneen
just ran out of games."
Fair
Gospel
Singing
Hamilton for your help at the Championship Gamn.
MONDAY . AuguSI 25
Prtchtng
Contest
-Datly Sentinel and WMPO Radio for your line
The 49er linebacker corps
( Ba se d on mo !&gt; l vtctor. esl
r"ul Anki'l
Nattonal
L
eag
u
f:
Sullon
,
coverage.
·"
'
Bob Hope &amp;. La Costa
was supposed to be a question L A 16 9 , Jo n es, SO 15 6 .
TUESDAY. August 26
I
Night Show )
Sponsors
league
Officers
.:..
Umpires
.
The
r"'t Boone &amp;... The "r'oung
mark this season since Dave Seave r , NY 15 7. Morton. All
Managers
Coaches
~
Parents
and
F•ns,.
,.,.
••
MONDAY
( LABOR DAY ),
1&lt;1 17 . Mat la c k . NY 13 8 .
Americans
Wilcox retired and Willie Messersmtth
, LA 13 11
September
I
- And especially the Girls for - -~fay
WEDNESDAY. August 27
Harper is hurt. But Skip
Amer.can
League :
sportsmanship in making this an outst'•iililng ......
The
Osmonds
&amp;. Mun&lt;h
Tanya Tuc.ker &amp;.. The
Palm er , Ba it 17 7, Kaa t , Ch r
Vanderbundt, playing for 16
DAILY
9 , Lee and Wrse . Bos 15 6 .
Young Americi'lns
Meigs Jr. &amp; Sr.
Wilcox, made a key in- Busby , KC a nd Blue. Oak 15
Mark Wilson's Mas,lc:
Show
terception
and
newly- 8 . Hu n t er. NY 15 · 11
acquired Dave Washington
Admtssion $2 00 fo r Adu lts. SOe for Chtldren 12 and
played so well at the other
under FREE ro Ch1ldren 12 ~nd under weekdays until
side that he was given the ·
Noon
• Anheuser -Busch Clydesdales
game ball.
• Oh1o Village (fatr W!thtn A Fi\t r, ctrca I 850)
Tom Owen, considered by
• Srtle of Chc.mp1ons L1ves tock Aucnon
"
Nolan as the No. 1 quar• C1rcu s
terback until either Norm
• H.uness Rc.cmg
Snead or Steve Spl!'Tier can
• Pett 1n g Zoo
FOR KIDS ·ADUlT MEAL
wirt the job from him, had a
FUNMEA.L1•
5
•
Hor se Pullmg
Brg Shef ·
Fun Tray,
shaky start but ~ .::urned in
• Class A Trocwr Pu ll
.
''1..- 11~
Reg. Fren ch Frres.
Funburg~r ·
Tu rno.,e r &amp;
lnternattonal Hot Air Balloon Race
the second half to direct the
Reg Frer~ ch Frres.
Urge SoH Drink
•
NattOnC\1 Am"teur Boxing TournC\ment
Surprrse Pr.ze
49ers to thetr key touchdown.
Reg So lt Dnnk &amp;
•
Worlds
Largest Youth Mu sic Progroi\m
Owen, replaced by Snead in
a Sweet Trea t
• Worlds Largest Stene f tm f me Arts Exhtbtt
the first baH, took over on the
FOR
• World 's LC\rgest Sti\te f..w Horse Show
last play of tbe third period·
• World 's LMgest L1v estock E.xhtbttton
and got the 49ers moving with
• World 's Lugest Jumor Fa1r
• Colum bus. Oh1o on 1-7 I ., 17 th Ave Easy to f1nd
a 22-yard pass to Bob H#.e s.,
. . plenty of na •••n••
A pass interference call&lt;
', . ASHLA
GALLI POLIS
,~itT.
PLEASANT
cornerback Lonnie Hepburn
~503 Eastern Ave .
, 2325 Jack.on .Ave.
in the end zone gave the
"' Conw r11l lll 1 ':17 ~ B urger Cht'l S v~re"'~ \n(
8 first down on the one and
·, Sam~y Johnson burst
\

Iii.:

"

, ,.

Parentless children to

II

/,

"

- By Ros1 Mackenr:le 1: Jeff Mac Nelly / &amp;~1975, Unlted Featur~ Syndicate

sh~uldn't

.

.

have too much
trouble looking at himself in
:WOOn your team trails tbe the mirror when the season
~~ond leader by I~ \\: games ends.
-August, it can some" It feels fine to be tbe
, take a good deal of wlnningest for right now but
••lnliJearching to be satisfied it's just a stepping stone to
w~h you r performan ce something else," said Sutton .
... :unless you're Don Sutton.
That something else might
~tton .
well be the Cy Young Award,
&amp;ltton, who became tbe for which Sutton is one of the
N~tional League's winningest leading candidates, with San
Pilcher Sunday afternoon Diego's Randy Jones and the
when he pitched a three - Mots' Tom Seaver.
hO.ter against the New York
Walt Alston , the Dodger
Mets for his 16th victory, manager who believes his

~~ Sports Writer

Ford women liberated
WASHINGTON (UPI) Betty Ford says she is a
liberated woman and It would
not faze her if daughter
Susan, 18, ·were to tell her,
"Mother, I'm having an
affair."
"Sle's a big girl," the First
Lady said.
Furthermore, Mrs. Ford
said in a televised Interview
Sunday night premarital
relations among the right
partners migbt even reduce
the divorce rate.
Describing herself as "a
liberated
woman"
although, she said, she
wouldn't "burn my bra or do
something .like that" - Mrs.
Ford also said she assumes
all her children have tried
marijuana out of curiosity
and added she might have
tried it herself had It been
popular when she was a girl.
(Susan Ford, guesi of honor
at a backyard barbecue at the
governor's . mansion in
Topeka, Kan., said, "She
really sounded like a
liberated woman," after
watching her mother's interview.
The
President's
daugbter also talked to ber
parents by telephone from
the mansion.)
In Ft. Smith, Ark., a White
House spokesman traveling
with President and Mrs .
Ford's vacation party said
Sunday, "The President has
long since ceased to be
perturbed or surprised by his
wife's remarks." Later the
spokesman added, "The.
President has said before
that she is free to speak her
mind, and she does."
Correspondent
Morley

'

iv KEN ROSENBERG

PORTSMOUTH - More
than 250 parentless children
from six Southern Ohio
counties wiD be treated to a
day at the Scioto County Fair
on Thursday, August 14. Tbe
34th Annual Orphan's Outing
is
sponsored - by
the
Automobile Club of Southern
Ohio.
"For many of these kids it
wiU be their first day at a
county fair," said AAA
Executive Vice President,
John P . lrwirt. Each year we
get letters for weeks from the
kids telling us how much they
enjoy this event."
The Automobile Club wiD

Billingham to face .
Chicubs
this
evening
BASEBALL

Sutton notches 16tH';

Wc: Hold These:, Tr~ths-. ··

Aug.zt-Sept. t

Your ticket to fun!
World's largest free .
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hiPPY."

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THANK

TUESDAY,

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O~EN ' UNTIL P~ ·!~

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ol •

EVENING RESlRIED

SECONO
. ''Al4't~UAL

..

•,'- .

I

.,

�' I

I'

'

I

3 - The Daily Sentinel,_Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monda y, Aug:..l h 1975

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middlepo:t-Pomeroy, 0 ., Mondav, All!( . ll , 1975

Social Security is 40 years old
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Social
security has perhaps more impsct
on the life of Americans than any
other gov~rnment program. It
cur~ently involves 100 million
contributors and 31 million
recipients.
The system sending out more than
$60 billion in old age, survivors and
disa bility benefits this year alone
celebrates its 40th anniversary this
week - still growing but struggling
to make ends meet.
Its financial problem is basically
this : Higb inflation means greater
benefits for recipients and higb
unemploy ment means smalle r
contributiOns to the system .
A government history of the socral
security system calls 11 the most
durable product of the New Deal.
The term "social security" was an

American invention , brought into
national and then international use
by authors of the legislation.
In many other nations, social
security now includes some form of
national health insurance, not just
for the elderly but for the entire
popula lion .
At 40, social security fa ces
financial problems caused in part by
heavy unemployment. When the
system was created in 1935, 11
miDion workers were unemployed.
Inflation and unemployment now
are devouring the system's
emergency reserves at a rate that
will deplete them - unless new
sources of funding are provided sometime after 1980, the administration has told Congress.
The original legislation included
unemployment com pensation,
family welfare , child welfare .

crippled chlldrens' services and
maternal and child health care .
Those services since have been
farm ~d_ out to other Health,
Education and Welfare agencies.
But new responsibilities added over
the years include Medicare health
insurance for the aged, black lung
benefits and Supplemental Security
Income .for the needy aged, blind
and disabled.
"We can never insure 100 per cent
of the populatlon against 100 per cent
of the hazards and vicissitudes of
life," President Franklin Roosevelt
said when he signed the Social
Security Act into law Aug . 14, 1935.
" But we have tried to frame a law
which will give some measure of
protection to the average citizen and
to his family against the loss of a job
and against poverty.,stricken old

age ."

Rhodes insisting
Ohio needs help

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP! ) Ohio Gov. James A. Rhodes
says the state will continue to
put advertisements critical of
the Federal Power Commission
in
national
newspapers if nothing is done
to help Ohioans get ready for
the expected winter natural
gas shortage .
Rhodes made tbe comment
when asked about a Wall
Street Journal ad implying
the commission is respon sible for current speculation
about a natural gas shortage
this winter .
''There is no real gas
shortage, but unless the
federal agency starts to
provide money for · slates to
supplement the current
supply, everyone will suffer,''
Rhodes said.
"For example, if Ohio's
industries have to close down
this winter for two or three
months because of the lack of
energy, the state's population
will go down inunediately ,"
, said Rhodes.
Rhodes said ' 'there is no
real gas shortage because in
that a governmental agency Ohio there are 500 trillion
that is physically depriving a cybfc feet of natural gas." He
citizen of his liberty must s8itl there is enough gas in
answer to a court as to why it Michigan, Indiana, Illinois
is doing so. Thus it must be and the Applachian states " to
required to keep a record of provide gas for the next 75 or
whom it is incarcerating and 100 years In 21 of the Inwhy," the brief stated.
dustrial states."
"Secrecy impinges on the .
" We have granted these
rigbt of society to know about people the rigbt to put gas
its criminal justice processes lines througb tbe state of
and also increases the risk of Ohio, and here we are with
citizens being wrongfully im- our own gas but cannot drill
prisoned. The openness of for it." Rhodes said. "We
criminal proceedings serves cannot put gas into lines that
the interest of the accused as are controlled by the Federal
well as those of society, " Power Commission, and this
added the ACLU of Ohio.
is wrong .

Supreme Court will decide whether
newsmen can see city jail register
COLUMBUS (UP[) - The
Supreme Court of Ohio has
been called on by the
American Civil Liberties
Union of Ohio to rule that
news media representatives
have a rigbt of access to city
jail registers containing the
names of persons being held
under arrest and the charges
against them.
The ACLU of Ohio, in a
friend of court brief prepared
by Ohio State University
constitutional law Prof.
Stanley Laughlin Jr. and filed
at the end of last week, said
lower courts erred io hoiJiing

that Dayton police could
refuse to make the records
available to Dayton Daily
News
and
Dayton
Newspapers, Inc., reporters.
The union 's Board of Directors voted overwhelmingly to
enter the case because of an
increasing number of complaints from persons around
the state being held secretly,
said ACLU of Ohio Executive
Direcior Benson Wolman. He
noted worldwide concern, not
only in Iron Curtain countries, but most recently in
India.
" Holding citizens incom-

mun1cado is the first sign of a
fascist regime," Wolman
said.
According to the brief, "a
city jail register is a public
record within the meaning of
Ohio law requiring such
records to be open at all
reasonable times for ins pection because such a
record is required to be ~ept
by a city by virtue of tbe due
process clauses of the United
States and Ohio Constitution
and to effectuate Ohio court
rules.
"H due process of law
means anything , it means

" Unless we are allowed to
supplement the current
sup_ply of gas, we are going to
conserve ourselves right Into
a 14 per cent unemployment
rate ," said Rhodes.

Fairview
New.s Notes
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr . and Mrs. Gary Miller
and daughter of Bellevue,
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Lswson
and son of Letart, W. Va.
spent the weekend with Mr.
and Mrs . Charles Lawson and
family . Sunday guests of the
Lswsons were Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Lawson and family ,
Mr . and Mrs. Edward
Lswson and baby, Mr. and
Mrs. Rich Morns and
Michelle of Syracuse, Mr.
and Mrs . Bill Parsons and
sons of Antiquity .
Saturday evening guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Sayre
were Mr. and Mrs. Norman
Styer of Waterford , 0 .
Tuesday visitors were Loren
and Gary Richardson of
Michigan.
Mr . and Mrs. Milo
Richardson and sons of
Michigan are visiting at their
farm.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Clark
and Kimblie, Robin Robinson
of New Bern, N. C. were
weekend guests of Mrs.
Bertha Robinson. Other
guests of Mrs. Robinson were
Brian Robinson of Fort
Rockey , Fla., Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Robinson of Norfolk, Va.
The latter are also visiting
their grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Chrisie Powell at
Racine.

Yes, many Watts could happen again
WS ANGELES ( UPI) - It
was evening, 10 years ago
today. Marquette Frye, 21,
and his step-brother Ronnie
wete driving home in their
mother's car. A highway
patrolman stopped them, a
small crowd gathered.
The trooper radioed for
t'einforcements - and from
lhat small incident mush~oomed a race riot that went
fin for six days.
: When it was over , 34 per~
I&lt;Jns were dead, 1,032 injured

••

and $40 million in property
destroyed.
That was Watts, 1965. It
was the first of the big city
holocausts. Newark and
Trenton and Detroit were to
follow ,like so many trees in a
forest fire .
Glenr
Reeder · was
astounded by what happened
to Watts, which he knew as a
.drowsy Negro section of Los
Angeles. His television set
showed him a battleground,
bodies in the streets,

SIJetty
keeps Jerry busy
•

..

• WASHINGTON (UPI) he President of the United
:!&gt;tales enjoys looking at
~etty girls, but Betty Ford
2sn 't worried "because I keep
lrlm busy ."
: Interviewed on CBS-TV's
•'60 Min,u tes" Sunday, ·Mrs.
~ord was asked about the
•pressures on a woman living
in Washington .
: .,The pressure are many, "
She replied. "And it depends
~ the family, the type of
~usband you have, whether
he's a wanderer or whether
'-'s a homebody."

Interviewer Morley Safer
asked whether she had· any
doubts about her husand
"and some of the attractions
in this city."
"I have perfect faith In my
husband. But I'm always glad
to see him enjoy a pretty girl.
And when he stops looking,
then I'm going to begin to
worry. But right now, he still
enjoys a pretty girl. And he
really doesn't have time for
outside entertainment.
"Because ·1 keep him
busy."

•

•

DR. LAMB

buildings aflame, youths
running from shattered
storefronts with looted merchandise.
Reeder since has had an
education- one that most
people still don't have. He
was chosen last year as one of
23 members of the Los
Angeles County grand jury .
Its primary function is
returning indictments in
criminal cases, but it also has
an investigative function in
looking Into the problems of
the community .
Reeder,
soft-spoken,
middle class WASP and a
retired
beer
company
distributor from the white
suburb of Rosemead, headed
a subcommittee which went
Into the black community of
Compton, next door to Watts,
and heard from residents
there.
Compton is adjacent to
Watts , a city of 78,000
population . The black area of
south central Los Angeles
stretches south from the edge
of the downtown district to
the northern fringes of Long
Beach, and Compton is one of
a dozen black neighborhoods.
What Reeder found was not
encouraging.
"Yes , I think all the
ingredients are there for
another riot," he said.
" As a matter of fact, I think

you might say conditions are
twice as bad as they were
before.
"I am very disheartened.
All they need is a little traffic
Incident . Some professional
agitators. The feeling among
the people is frustration unemployment, welfare,
crime, uncontrollable kids,
violence in schools, the
security of their homes.
"I am so doggoned sad.
Yes, I think a spark could set
it off. And if it comes it won 't
be confined to Watts."
Here are some of the things
Reeder learned:
- 68 per cent of the people
in Compton are on some kind
of welfare .
- Unemployment is an
estimated 48 per cent.
- Last year there were
4,000 burglaries in Compton.
-Its schools have a 40 to 50
per cent dropout record.
,. - Two thousand homes
have
been
abandoned
because of residents moving
out in fear or unable to keep
up the payments.
- The mortality rate at
birth is twice that of the rest
of the country.
-Youth gang.related murders in Los Angeles increased
from 111n 1971 to 291n 1972, 39
in 1973 and 66 in 1974. The
prediction for this year is
more than 100.

How to get_ daily calcium
••
•:JIY
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
• DEAR DR. LAMB - You
~en mention the necessity
for adults to drink the
lqjdvalent of a quart of milk
II day. Please tell me ·how
Collage cheese and cheddar
;Jleese COIIlpare in terms of
rmces to milk for nutritional
nlue, Also, can calcium pills
lerve ·the same purpose?
• .O,EAR READER - That
is in reference to the
'Calcium content of milk. A
~rt of whOle milk contains
t a gram of calcium.
ortlfled low fat and fortified
milk contain even more
••ctum. I think most adults
Ieee! at least a gram of
"Oal!;lGmll day. ~You call use an. equivalent
IIJDOunt of buttermilk or
,.urt to Jet the.calcitJ!". A
mjlk Is about two·
. Remember the old '
"IJ",PlDt's a (I01IId the
lcrfd arOUnd." In general a
of~; creamed or
~ cotlajle cheese,

•

remark

E

e.llf

liund
'!

• .
' 'I

cheddar cheese, Swiss cheese
or American cheese, contains
about the same amount of
calcium as a pound (pirtt) of

(half of your dally needs).
You should eat the bones in
the salmon as canned. Sardines with bones contain
milk. ·
almost twice as much
Since there are many calcium per ounce. A threestudies suggesting that too and.a.balf.ounce serving will
much saturated fat can in- meet about half of tbe daily
crease your cholesterol and one gram recommendation.
lead to heart disease, It is
Mature bean seeds are a
wise ·- to
use
fortified fairly good source. One cup
skim milk (has more coo~d and drained (about 7
calcium and protein any- ounces) contains nearly a
way than whole milk), tenth of a gram of calcium.
buttermilk or uncreamed
You don't need to drink all
cottage
cheese.
Ched- your milk to benefit from its
dar,
American
and calcium value. You can·
simil8r, cheeseS are veiy
mill!: In food preparain fat and consequently !ion.
Mille
gravy •
loaded wi~ calories. About puddings a_n&lt;!~ _even tbe
halfolthefatlssaturatedfat, milk In bread all count
so Ills not a good choice for a Wward meeting the daily
source of calcium if you want c~lcium needs. And, If you
to restrict your calories, your use the non-fat -dry milk
fat intake or, your saturated powder you can add more
fat Intake, ·
~ . · ' than the amount called for to
Another good
of reconstitute milk. The added
-alcilll!lls canned salmoil. A milk powder will incre8lll! the
seven-ounce can of salmon, calcium and protein' in the.
solids and liquids, contains prepared food
without
about a haH .grani of calcium significantly increasing fat or

hfili

source

..

...

)

use

.Y
.,

cholesteidl. Don't downgrade
desserts as all bad. It
depends on how they are
made, and they are one
vehicle that can be used for
calcium and protein.
You can get your calcium
from tablets. How many
tablets you need depends on
the type of calciwri tablet
used. Short of using calcium
tablets, milk and milk
prOilucts remain the main
source of calcium for most
people. Those who can't use
mill&lt; for any reason are really
handicapped in obtaining
thetr daily calcium needs.
Send your questions to Dr.
·Lamb,. in care of this newspaper, P. 0. Box IM1, Radio
CitY Station, New Yorl&lt;, NY
10019. For information on
da Uy dietary requirements,
·send 50 cents and a long, seff
addressed stamped envelope
and ask (or The !lealth Letter
number U, Balanced Diet,
Recommended Daily Dietary
Allowances (RDA) .'

Those are statistics. Here
are some of the other things
~er heard from more
than 100 persons who appeared before his panel :
From Larry Benjamin, a
17-year-old high school
student: "It takes me three
weeks to read a short book
and I find it hard to do." ·
Helen Mason, a nurse and
parent: "There are so many
problems ... We have a lot of
nice things but the kids don't
want them. Once the police
pick them up, they know they··
can get away with it. The kid
is ruined before he gets to be
16. Their mothers are scarfl(l

of them."
Monroe Smith, Compton
fire chief : "People put iron
bars on the windows and even
the doors of their homes, and
when they catch fire they are
death traps."
Joseph Cochee, Compton
police chief : "We need
employment to create jobs
for these kids. We need to
give people employment so
they can make a living. The
criminal's basic needs are
the same as yours and mine .
And he will satisfy these
needs one way or SllOther."
Rev. James Gayles : "They
are killing every day . We is
cheap. Everybody is carrying
a gun . Nobody is doing
anything about it. When I
leave here tonight, I don't
know whether I am going to
get home or not."
On the surface, there are
signs of some improvement
for blacks in Los Angeles .
There was, for instance, the
election of Thomas .Bradley
as mayor. Mervyn Dymally
is lieutenant governor and
Wilson Riles is state
superintendent of public
instruction.
But election of blacks to
such posts has had no
noticeable impact on the
problems of · joblessness,
crime and health.
The most evident - and
about only- benefit growing
out of the Watts riot was the
construction of the $39 million·
Martin Luther King General
Hospital with ·a $32 million
budget.
·,
Of
the
scores
of
organizations· that sprouted
to help blacks, only about a
dozen are left.
One of the few · successful
self.belp groups bas been the
Watts Labor Comlnunlty
Actiori Committee, funded by
federal state and local
governments and
also
receiving support . from the
Unit_e d
Auto · Workers,
I

)}

A Chronicle: of America

'

Summer, 7775:
John Murray Dunmore, the Royal Governor of Virginia,
writes to Lord Dartmouth, Secretary for the Colonies,
describing the growing spirit of rebellion : VIrginians
" manifest no other disposition than for resisting the
authority of government. Bodies of men .are everywhere
set on foot , arming, and disciplining with great diligence, and appearing in uniforms. His Majesty's English subjects, Indentured
servants, are compelled to
take arm• and •ubmlt themselves to all orders they shall
receive (from the rebelling
colonists]; some or these
[raithrul subjects] have escaped to the ship or war,
[Fower~. at anchor tn the
York River], theonlyprotectlon they can meet with now
[because] the Jaws have no
Dunmore
operation."

provide

admission,

free

Teamsters and .a number of
AFJ...CIO unions. It is headed
by Ted Watkins, probably the
best known citizen of Watts.
It has a $30 million annual
anti'Poverty program ineluding a giant shopping
center, a supermarkdt, auto
repair and teaching shops, its
own food stamp center ,
gardens in lots ravaged in the
riots.
But a decade later, Watts
still remains a bleak example
of how the nation has failed·to
copewithwhatmaybe its No.
! ,social problem.
Los Angeles police chief
E'dward.• Davis: "There's a
state of de~ with a lot of

P"OI!Ie.

·

':In almcist any way of
measuring, thiilgs are worse
than they were 10 years ago."

Safer led Mrs. Ford into the
topic of premarital sex
during their interview on
CBS' "60Minutes" by asking,
"Well, what if Susan Ford
came to you and said,
'Mother, I'm having an af-

fair?"'
"Well, I wouldn't be surprised,"
Mrs .
Ford
responded.
"I think she 's a perfectly
normal human being like all
young girls, if she wanted to
continue and I would certainly counsel her and advise
her on the subject, and I'd
want to know pretty much
about the young man that she
was planning to have the
alfair with - whether it was
a worthwhile encounter or
whether it was going to be one
of those"Sle's pretty young to start
affairs."

Jlaiders rip
.
Lions, 34-0

..
....•
,, ,.., 1

""
stand show and an evening'
meal for the participants. All .,
fair activities are included in ~·
the afternoon event which , "~
begins at noon.
·This year's chairman for ~·:
the Orphan's Outing is " "
Howard Kiebler, treasure&lt; ,
and board member of the
Automobile Club. Mr. Keibler ·":
l,'l the retired Portsmouth "':;
Fire Chief. Children from .. ~
orphanages and foster homes ~ - ­
in Scioto, Pike, Adams, ._.
Athens, and Gallia counties ,""
have been invited to this
"'"
year's event.
The Orphan's Outing was '"",
started in 1941 by then -Auto "':
Club Manager Clif Murfin, ··~
who now resides In Colum- '"'
bus.

..
...
rr

Safer Interjected: "Nevertheless, old enougb."
'"
" Oh, yes," said Mrs. Ford. " '1-4

"She's a big girl."

'" 1

As to her attitude toward
premarital relations in
general, Mrs. Ford said it
simply seemed to be part of
the free lifestyles of today's
young people.
"And in some cases, I'm
not sure that, perhaps, there
would he less divorce," as a
result, she said.
In response to otber questions, Mrs. Ford said she was
confidentnoneofherchildren
were regular drug users although, she said, "I'm sure
they've all probably tried
marijuana."
Sle said one of the Ford
boys had "given me the
devil" for saying that in the
past and had denied he ever
tried the drug.

.. .. ,

,-,

..,

n1

.. ,

"'
.. ,
""

Reeds,ville News Notes '"'
By Mrs. L. Balderson
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. '" '
Crystal Hall of Coolville Oscar Weber and family. The "'
Rd., and Mrs. Opal Randolph occasion was to celebrate the
recently took a trip on the birthday of Mrs . Denver '"
Blue Ridge Parkway. They Weber.
also visited with Mr. and Mrs.
Dinner guests of Mr. and ""
Johnny Hayes at Laurel Mrs. Walren Pickens were
•v
Fork, Va. and spent a day in Mr . and Mrs. Bill Williams of
North Carolina.
Athens, Ga., Mrs. Kathiyn
Spendillg a day with Mrs. Dietz, Belpre; Bill Dietz of
Bess Larkins were Mrs. Osa Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. R.
Bailey of Bradenton, Fla., E . Williams and Mrs. Lyle
and Mrs. Georgia Autherson Balderson and Kay.
of Newark.
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Walker ,,
Word of the death of Ray of Pomeroy visited with Mr . •. ,
Gilkerson of Marlette, and Mrs. C. Ed Humphrey ..
Michigan was received. His and Robin Sunday.
wife is the former Louise
Mrs. Bernice Randolph has .
Coleman, daughter of Mrs. returned home after visiting
Elizabeth Coleman and the with her daughter, Mrs. Betty ..
late Howard Coleman.
Ruble and family at Vienna, -~
Kay Balderson recently
celebrated her 14th birthday
with a family cookout and
DEVOTED TOT HE
I ': J
homemade ice cream and
INTERESTOF
MEIGS-MASON
AREA
ca ke were served. Guests
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL
included Mr . and Mrs .
iloaai'+"~l~ioLICH
Warren Pickens and Mrs.
City Editor
.
. •- t th. W'lli
' Published dally except -3
Ka thryn D1e
... a e 1 amSaturday by The Ohio Valley
Balderson home.
·
Publishing company 111
Court S't , Pomeroy ' Ohio 1 1 1
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Ruth
•5769. ·auslnoss Office Phone
traveled by plane to Hudson,
;~F 156 · Editorial Phone 992. ~ ·
Mass. to visit Mr. and Mrs.
tsPecond class postage paid ~.
a
omeroy, Ohio .
, ,.
George Rut h and family.
National
advtrtlslnlil ·'Dohrman Reed is a patient
rGeP11resentatlve
Wordr fith Company
Inc
-4"
at the St. Joseph Hospital, ?s"'t1ne111 &amp; Gotl~her o1v ' ,,,
Parkersburg, W. Va.
' N.'(,. T~~~ 7 _Ave., ew York:
The Don Coleman family . 0 Subscrlption rates··
from Columbus visited with I_ave~W:brel d7b5y carrier where ,,,
f
cents per week.
8
Mrs. Helen Arche~ . .. ,
1 clrr )':~1or Route where r.a
•
• service
not ~
Mr . an d Mrs. Ch ares
I . a8~• 11 •~le,
One month $3,25
Swogger and Ricky have .
.Y moll ; n Ohio and W va ·
m':.~thr••rlll$5202_.00;
. SIX
moved to Edon, Ohio, where
onth • • . . Three
he has employment.
26 00 s, ' 7-00 . Elsewhere
13 ·50 Year ; Six month's
Mr . and Mrs. Denver
· 1 three months S7 50
0
ubscrlptlon price trictudeS
Weber and · family were
unday Times -Sentinel. 1

.

...

I '' ·

·,.

team can still catch Clncinnati, ia hopiJI8 Sutton, a
streak pitcher, will help
propel the Dodgers into
contention during the next
few weeks.
"Sutton 's a good steady
pitcher," said Alston. " H
we're goirtg to get back In the
race, be 'II have to continue to
pitch the way he has been ."
The 2-1 victory, keyed by
rookie John Hale 's sixth
home run and Steve Yeager's
runscoring single, is helping
Alston keep his faith.
"We'renoloutofityet,"he
said. "The last thing I'd do is
giveup. Whatwehavetodols
play better."
l':lsewhere in tile National

l.eague.-CII)_c~t! r(p~
Bttlblit&amp;b

I

Sport Par.ade
-"
Ill.,._

Car insurance?

•

State Farm still
g1vesyoua
good value.

enga l s
dron 7-3

JJIII!Ii'i l la ,1·}'

Steve Snowden

PH. 992-7155

deczs" n

A

1

\'/

49ers rally, top
Browns, 17-13

!\

•••

I
\•

•

...

attend Scioto Co. fajr

rides, tickets to the grand-

"

)

"' •Aiitos 5, Pirates 3
CIN CINN ATI (UPI) - Tbe fourth inniJI8 and four in the
Montreal ,li.li, HouatOn . Skip Jutze's two-run single
Reds are .keeping fifth, three of them unearned.
downed
w;¢1ju llllhlighted a four .run first A m cr.c&lt;tn L ea gue Standrng s aCincinnati
reign on their 151\:- Three hits, one a double by
F r a n e i'a 1: ll
to u t .t tf ~ INiing and Houston went on to Un•ted Pre !.!.Ea!.lntt e rnt~tionat gasteady
me lead over Los Angeles Ken Griffey, and an error by
·
1-.1, St. l,!lllls hand Pittsbur gh its fifth
w 1. pet 9 b .
in the National League West Larry Parrish did the
10 45 609
shaded
~ In IO-"' flnlght loss behind the " os&gt;o n
6 7 5 1 549 l
heading into tonigbt 's game damaii".
poUndat Jkdlin8 of James Rodney ~~~'o;g;;
&gt;9 55 5 18 10 1
Joe 'Morgan, Bench and
here agamst the Olicago
'i &lt;l 6'1 4M 16 1
Atlanta 8-f..
., '
~and Mike Cosgrove. Mdwaukoo
Perez coupled singles with
51 61 HS If' .
Cubs.
· Reds U ; E1f. ' l
.; lldlard yielded just one hit g~·.~~:~ nd
J6 !0 ] 9 1 '1 4 '
Parrish's second error of the
~ Jack Billingham, 12-5, will
w(''&gt; t
George Foster illllTlllltll a in six innings, but walked 10
w 1 pet . g b
be on the Cincinnati moWld game to give Cincinnati two
three-run loner, his Ulll. batters before Cosgrove Oakl &lt;md
! 0 •I S 609
tonight while the Dodgers' more runs In tbe sixth.
and Johnlif .Btl• b and Tlil)y came on .to preserve KansasCoty 6J 51) S61 S'
A triple by Morgan, a single
ChtCrlC)O
S6 S9 481 14
Andy Messersmith, 13-11,
Perez comblni!d to drlY!I' in Richard 's eighth victory.
T e)la s
55 61 d!J IS ' ,
fa ces the
Phillie s m by Bench, a double by Perez
Monncsota
57 6'i 444 19
four runa, he1pin&amp; Clnclnri"-1
Gltats 8, Phillles I
and Foster's 19th homer gave
Ca td orn ta
'il 66 436 '/0
Philadelphia.
mainlain Ita 15'h game
Gary Matthews clouted a
Sa tu rday'!&gt; R es ult s
The Reds' George Foster the Reds their final four runs
Mrnne so ta 1 Detrort 0
lead over Los An(e· pair of homers to drive in four
Texas ,, Milwaukee 7
belted a three.run home run in the eighth off Chuck
les wJth .. 16 - lltt , ~and propel San FranBos ton 1 O ak l and 7
Sunday and Johnny Bench Taylor.
Kans a s (o ty 6 Clevela nd J
attack . 'blli~..; Easl~' dsco past Philadelphia. By ntght
and Tony Perez combined for
gained'*_l2ili!iWfein
~.the Phillies lost a
Ba l lt mor e 17 Ch rc aqo 6
four runs hatted irt with three RIVER RESULI'S
of Fred'Not ......lilbo picked Chance to p1ck up a game on nrght
C.1l1forn ra A N ew York 1
hils apiece in 8 16-h.it, ]1-3
CINCINNATI (UPI)
up his ae~telitll viclllry. ; -:'
Pittsburgh and thus remam
n
rQhl
Sunday
'~
R
es
ult
s
ancinnati
vtctory
over
Mon~
Palacity
Jet led all .tbe way ,
•·
· two games behind the NL
Mrnne!.ot a 4 Oetrott 0
lreal.
at times by as much as five
East leaders. Jim Barr we nt
Mrlwaukee ' T.c•as J
Fred Norman, who bowed lengths, in winning the f7 ,500
the distance for the Gtants to
Boston s Oak land 3
K rlnsa s Crt y s C l eve lan cl 1 out with one away in the fiftll
Vivacious Handicap at River
gain his lOth vtclory .
Chrc ago J Bal trm o r e 'I
mning, picked up his seventh Downs here Sunday by two
Cal rl orn •a 1 New Y ork 0
Cards 3, Padres 2
•
Today •-, Games
win in 10 decisions . Reliever lengths over Red Top Beauty.
Ken Reitz tied the game
' JOE CARNICELLI
(All Trm cs E OT )
Rolli ~ t . k
. ed h'
IW
and the Raiders had 20 first
Victory Meadow was third.
Tc)las I Perry 11 151 at
e 1!..85 WlC gam
15
· "lth a one-out homer in the
UPI Sports Wrller
Detroit
!L
aGrow
7
1
1
)
,
8
p
m
12th
save
.
downs compared to only six
Palacity Jet ran the mlle
bottom of the lOth and Lou
Kansas City I Busby 15 BJ at
Loser Don Carrithers was and 70 yards in 1:43 1-5 and
The Oakland Raiders com- for Detroit.
Brock singled in Mike Tyson Oatt rmore ! Cue l lar 10 8 ,, l J C
piled the best record in the
• tapped ror one run in the
Lawrence went out in the
returned $5, $3.40 and $2.80.
with the winning run p m
Milwa u kee {S laton 11 11 1 at
National Football League last third quarter with a knee
lllCIIIlellts later to spark St. Mrnnesota I Butl er 1 J J. 9
season and from the looks of inJurY and he won't know how
1A&gt;uis over San Diego. Tito p mNew York !Dobso n 9 Il l at
By MILTON RICIDUN ;,'·
their 1975 pre-6e&amp;son opener, severe itis until Tuesday. But
UPI Sports Editor
·#- ·
FUente~ had given the Padres C&lt;tl1forn1a { Tanana 9 6 J. 10 30
they could be even stronger he was pleased with his
.i. -t . ~- • 2-1 lead in the top of the pm
Boston
I Moret
8 1 t al
this year.
performance.
NEW YORK ( UPI) - Walt Alston lite ln. lbe lll8lUIIM"I -\nnlng wben he slammed his Oakland I B l ue 1S 8 J. 11 p m
The Raiders, who won 12 of
" The experience I got last chair tbe same way he always has. Hiil e&amp;jil nlion seldom third homer of the season off
Nal•onalleaqut&gt; Standmg'!&gt;
14 regular season games and year has made me a more changes. He sits WI'th h'IS baCk s1r81'ght -•~ the chair and AI ·Hrabosky, who benefitted
Un&gt;t
od Press lnler nat•onal
ousted defending Super Bowl confident player this year," with his eyes taking In everything arod' blll\'t ·
from the outburst by gaimng
Ea st
champ Miami in, the playoffs he said. " I know what I'm
Thingshaven 'tbeengolngthatwellforhlmgenerally,~ hlllOth victory.
P•ll sburqh
.~ ·.,1 9 ° ~~ 4 g . b
before -being bounced them- doing when I go into the thougb his Los Angeles Dodgers have,''!!'lllllll~ lalrt ~ , "Cabi 9, Braves 1
Phda
64 5I 551 '
selves by Pittsburgh in the game.''
straigbt, but he is far from being defeated. QJillle contrary, be
Bill Bonham pitched a five- ~·• .:;·:~~'
~: ~: ~~~ ;: ~
•
American Conference title
Starter Ken Stabler , who looks like a winner.
',
,_ · ......
littler and Rick Monday Chicago
55 6 3 466 , . ,
1
.._~
~
.u.
Montrea
l
48
64
&lt;~?9
16
game, overwhelmed the hit 3-of-4 passes in running
I Dodgers have,,...,.u
Sofar,hisLosAngees
!""' :fliPPed out three hits inw es t
Detroit Uons Sunday. With only two series, threw a 37- this season. National League champs IJiit.
, they trill · eluding a three-run double to
w. I. oct • b
· Reds'm th e NLWIItb
'
l$-lhglnles
Cmcmna t•
76 39 661
reserve quarterback Lsrry yard touchdown pass to Cliff Cincinnati's dlsappearmg
.
Y
• Jllee Olicago past Atlanta . Los Angoles 61 ss 516 15' ,
Lawrence going almost all Branch and Lawrence threw now with less than eight weeks left, but the f.iu1llest thOQibt Bonham, who aided his own san F ran
56 59 . 461 'n
You get t hat f ast , f r1end ly service we're
· i ·
San D•ego
53 67 J 6 I I~
the way, Oakland blasted the a H&gt;-y ard TD pass to Morris from Walt Alston's mind IS
g vmg up.
_.,..)'lo
caUie by driving in lwo runs, Atla nta
5 , 6 s 440 75' ,
famous for. An agent close by wherever
Uons 34-0.
Bradshaw. Pete Banaszak
"That'd be tbe lalrt thin3 you ever do," be liB)III. "We~~- ·- ltOD his lith game and didn 't Houston
" 15 370 3J
you're dr ivmg And the world's largest car
Lawrence is only in his ran one yard and rookie Louis outofityet . Whatwehavetodoisplaybett«:·J~V1!notg1Vtll allow a hit until Earl
Los'~~~~~.',", ~~~~ ~'ork 0
tnsu rance compa ny on your stde .
second NFL season but he carter eight for two more up and the first ballplayer on this club who gives me tile' lm-, Williams led off the fifth with
c.nc•nnal• • Mon!rea l 1.
Sound good 7 Come 10 or call
has two years of Canadian TDS.
pression he has, his butt will be out of •
•• llif, he Wllll't i single . •
ni~,",'1 a nl a 6 Ch•cago
for all the details.
football and a year of taxi
In
other
Sunday know what hit him."
....--: r
'w.;;
,
suspended game
squad experience behind exhibitions, lhe New York
AJston,63, is comp'leting hls 22ndconseCUtiveyear
Chicago B AII a n&gt; a 1 ·
""'
r eg ular game
him. He completed 9-of-11 Giants
defeated
New the Dodgers. When it comes to uninter~ llfvice With OM ~
Ph dade lph ia
11
Sa n
passes for 101 yards and a England 28-14 and San club,noothermanageraroundcantouch tpi~ Hebassut!i~ ..
.
F rsat c~s~~rs.'~ ' 6n'~:~ o,ego 1 ,
1258 Powell St., Middleport, 0.
Francisco downed Cleveland a trans-continental move, a couple of ~If!~--·"·•
touchdown.
n•g h'
And while LaWrence 17-p. In Saturday night evenacoupleofe~uak~san?ls~leK..,oflosin.hla
n • ~ho,uS!on s P•ttsburgh o.
directed the offense, the action, Philadelphia upset jobnowthanwhenhewasfirsthiredtn )95(,
_
·
Sund ay's Res ult '
Naturally, Alston saw that four major ~managers ]ost
J:'
Crncrnnali 11 Mont r eal J
Raider defense shut off Pittsburgh 17-14, the Nevi
Ch rc ago 9 Atlanta 1
Detroit completely. The York Jets stunned Minnnsota their jobs within the past three weeks, and turally he felt
San
Franc •sc o
6
SU.U IAlM
Uons were able to gain only :ID-15, Green Bay whipped badly for each of them. Mostly for Yogi Berta because he was
w·
Phsr,lat~'~,~~~ ~a n - O t ego '} 10
44 total yards In the first baH Buffalo 23-6, Los Angeles a bit closer to him than the other three.
•nn.ngs
••rvealwayslikedYogi," saysAlston. 11 We 'vebeenbuddles,
Houston 5 Ptttsbu r gh J
and 115 overall and entered dumped Dallas 35-7, Miami
Today 's Gam es
INIURANC~.
Oakland territory only once. downed Cincinnati 7-3, St. except on the field ."
, ·
MIAMI (UPI ) - It took
1 All T&lt;m e. EDT )
"That's an awesome array Louis topped Kansas City I~
Alston reaches into his locker for his Dodflt"'", putait .on v..eteran quarterback Earl at ct/~~~~~~ ~~ ~~~~~C:h~r::
STAT[ fARM MUTUAl AUTOMOIIL[ INSUfltANCE COMPANY
of talent," said Uons Coach 3, Houston beat New Orleans and lask him If he was ever worried about ~g.ftred. • •, J((I'Tallless than six minutes s 1 a os p m
Home Ofl rc e Bt oom•n ston. tllrno rr.
lolle it good .,eoghbo• S lale ftrm os !here
~~Funny as it may sound, I never gave it. ~rehoughl,n l*t to engineer a 58-yard victory
San F r anc IS C O ( H a l o(k I s 9 )
Rick Forzano. "Everything 13-7, Chicago crushed San
¥~
at Montreal (Roge r s 8 8) .
they did seemed to work and Diego 22-0 and Baltimore says. "When Ifirst got the job, I was so thankful,-finade up my drive for the Miami Dolphins 6 os 0 m
p 1184.2
_ no control Saturday night.
San D.ego !Jones 15 61 al
nothirtg w.e did worked."
edged Denver 23-20 in mindlwasn'tgolngtoworryaboutsomethingihad
N ew York !Ma tla ck 1J 81
Oakland piled up 311 yards . overtime .
over. It's been that way all my life. I'vt!· been 111tough some
Morrall came off the bench 6 os 0 m
the fourth quarter,
Los Angeles
I Messorsm •lh
good and some bad years, but even In the bad years, if I did,all to "'•rt
D'loO
IJ 11 1
at
Phrladel ph ra
Ifelt I could, I didn't worry about what Wlll _J!O!Dg to happen." .. with the Dolphins trailing the 1Chml enson 6 3 l. 6 15 p m
The Dodgers have more good young talt!riCIIuln most cluba. Cincinnati Bengals 3-11, and
••"sbu rgn 'candelaroa s n
..1•• _
at Atlanta ! Easter ly 1 4 or
One of Alston's biggest problems is deteJ'IDIDing which.....-~· lfy 1:41 had taken Miami 58 Tho mpson o 31. 1 35 p m
touseandwhichtokeeponthebenchonanyljnnday.
yards downfield and con- H ;~stoLno~'b , e~~~~''i 1 ~)~l 8 ~;
"Sometimes it's a little tough on a club like tills one where nected with Nat Moore on a 0 m
the guy on the bench is just as good as ~ falla;,Piaying;'' ~ ,lbuc.'hdown pass.
lliiSfLE WINNER
says. "It's not like the old Brooklyn clubill:it(fli!l know IIUYI • The 41-year-old Morrall,
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
througb for the winning score like Robinson, Campy, Hodges, F'Urillo, Pa Wee, SniderJilit ·;Jlldt-up to quarterback Bob (UPI ) - Ice House Mel, with
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) Gilliam will play every day."
;.; '· ~ :•
.,__ ·,trlese, hit Melvin Baker for Bennte Feliciano in the irons,
Coach Dick Nolan is "quite early in the final period.
privaul
office,
eenterfieldor
nine yards to open the Miami scored a four~ength victory
While
Alston
is
talking
in
his
Rookie receivers Willie
pleased with the first time
out" for his San Francisco Miller and Oscar Roan Jim Wynn is teasiJ\g rightfielde~ Willie q:awfor&lt;! in tht, ~b. drive and kept it going with a over Idaho Territory in Sun49ers this season but middle caught scoring passes for the house, trying to get a rise out of him. Wynil ~thit lefthllndier · 17-yard strike to Moore on the day 's featured Starter Allowlinebacker Frank Nunley Browns, with Roan on the end Jerry Koosman is starting for the Mets .galillt the DIM!IIers. 11. The touchdown pass came ance at Thistledown.
thinks the club is just keeping of a 47-yarder from Brian Crawford, a lefthanded hitter, isq't in the lineup, so wynn two plays later.
The winner covered the
Cincinnati, which took its mile and 40 yards in I: 42 4~
things going from last year . Sipe to give the Browns a 13- decides to agitate him about it.
"Yeah, yeah, you can't play against left-banders anymore, second pre-season loss, and paid $8, $3.60 and $2.80.
The 49ers offense sputtered 10 lead midway in the third
jive turkey !" Wynn shouts at Crawford,even.Ytough he's le• scored on a 23-yard field goal Sassy Vtxen showed.
but the defense looked solid stanz.
than
two feet from him. "H you have ally ·kilts, you'll go.in by Dave Green in the third
meet
Los
The
49ers,
who
as a rock Sunday as San
First Burst and He's a
· · .•- •.,.urter .
Francisco beat old rival Angeles Saturday night, got there and tell Alston you wanna play eepl4il:tielll;"
Clown returned $53.80 in the
Crawford says he'll do it. Wynn says ht~l$.1lelieve htm,
Griese, who staried for the 7-7 daily double .
Cleveland 17-13 in the good rushing from Del Wilmarches
directly
into
Dolphins,
managed to move
whereupon
Crawford
gets
up
and
exhibition opener for both liams, who had 77 yards on 15
There were 887 winrung
Alston's office.
- ··the offense but had two of his tickets sold on the 12-2~
teams. Since San Francisco carries.
"I wanna play centerfield today," he says to the Dodger drives stopped by pass inter- trifecta in the lOth race, each
Williams, slowed last
did not win an exhibition
game last season, the 49ers season with a broken wrist, is manager, the high pitch in his voice automatically giving-him ceptions by veteran cor- paymg $78.60.
..
nerhack Ken Riley.
are already off to an im- getting a long look this time away.
The crowd of 6,920 wagered
he's
being
Ilia.
'
·,
Walt
Alston
knows
when
around since Wilbur Jackson
proved start.
$678,589.
"Sure, go ahead," be says. "I want e~ to be
It was a thriller all the way is is hurt .
Willie Crawford can't hold back anymon..Jtia eyes light,., ,_,,~
"I feel much better about
as the Browns had a first
TH URSDAY. August 28
THU RS DAY AuguSt 21
down on tbe II with 58 this year/' said the second and he starts laughing .
Mule Haggard Show
Mac
Da"ls
"See, jive turkey," he hollers out the door to jllll Wynn. "I ,
seconds to go and couldn't year back. "There is nothing
FRiDAY, August 29
FR I DAY August 2l
holding me hack· so I know told you I'd do it!"
scor.e .
Earth, Wind &amp;. Fire
M~c Davis
Nunley, a standout all day, what I can do. Last year, I
SATURDAY.
AuguSt 30
SATU RDAY . AuguSI 23
Bo
Donaldson
&amp;. The
recalled that San Francisco was really always thinking
Roger Miller: Ca.pt.tln &amp;..
Heywoods
Tennille
won four of its last five games about the writst. I had a cast
..... .::: '
(Afternoon Show )
SUN DAY AuguSI 24
on
most
of
the
time
and
was
In !974.
Bob
Hope &amp;. La Costa
Roy Roger~ &amp;... Dale
"We're playing now like we self-conscious about holding
(N
1
g
ht
Show )
- Thomas Edwards for providing us a field for our
Evans
finished last year. We were on to the ball.
August 3 1
SUNDAY.
games at Minersville.
Roy Du~ty Rogers , Jr. &amp;..
really tough at the end but we
8
AM
~
5
rM,
Ohio St•te
-Gene Thompson, Frank . Seth, Chortle and Brian
Sons of the rloneen
just ran out of games."
Fair
Gospel
Singing
Hamilton for your help at the Championship Gamn.
MONDAY . AuguSI 25
Prtchtng
Contest
-Datly Sentinel and WMPO Radio for your line
The 49er linebacker corps
( Ba se d on mo !&gt; l vtctor. esl
r"ul Anki'l
Nattonal
L
eag
u
f:
Sullon
,
coverage.
·"
'
Bob Hope &amp;. La Costa
was supposed to be a question L A 16 9 , Jo n es, SO 15 6 .
TUESDAY. August 26
I
Night Show )
Sponsors
league
Officers
.:..
Umpires
.
The
r"'t Boone &amp;... The "r'oung
mark this season since Dave Seave r , NY 15 7. Morton. All
Managers
Coaches
~
Parents
and
F•ns,.
,.,.
••
MONDAY
( LABOR DAY ),
1&lt;1 17 . Mat la c k . NY 13 8 .
Americans
Wilcox retired and Willie Messersmtth
, LA 13 11
September
I
- And especially the Girls for - -~fay
WEDNESDAY. August 27
Harper is hurt. But Skip
Amer.can
League :
sportsmanship in making this an outst'•iililng ......
The
Osmonds
&amp;. Mun&lt;h
Tanya Tuc.ker &amp;.. The
Palm er , Ba it 17 7, Kaa t , Ch r
Vanderbundt, playing for 16
DAILY
9 , Lee and Wrse . Bos 15 6 .
Young Americi'lns
Meigs Jr. &amp; Sr.
Wilcox, made a key in- Busby , KC a nd Blue. Oak 15
Mark Wilson's Mas,lc:
Show
terception
and
newly- 8 . Hu n t er. NY 15 · 11
acquired Dave Washington
Admtssion $2 00 fo r Adu lts. SOe for Chtldren 12 and
played so well at the other
under FREE ro Ch1ldren 12 ~nd under weekdays until
side that he was given the ·
Noon
• Anheuser -Busch Clydesdales
game ball.
• Oh1o Village (fatr W!thtn A Fi\t r, ctrca I 850)
Tom Owen, considered by
• Srtle of Chc.mp1ons L1ves tock Aucnon
"
Nolan as the No. 1 quar• C1rcu s
terback until either Norm
• H.uness Rc.cmg
Snead or Steve Spl!'Tier can
• Pett 1n g Zoo
FOR KIDS ·ADUlT MEAL
wirt the job from him, had a
FUNMEA.L1•
5
•
Hor se Pullmg
Brg Shef ·
Fun Tray,
shaky start but ~ .::urned in
• Class A Trocwr Pu ll
.
''1..- 11~
Reg. Fren ch Frres.
Funburg~r ·
Tu rno.,e r &amp;
lnternattonal Hot Air Balloon Race
the second half to direct the
Reg Frer~ ch Frres.
Urge SoH Drink
•
NattOnC\1 Am"teur Boxing TournC\ment
Surprrse Pr.ze
49ers to thetr key touchdown.
Reg So lt Dnnk &amp;
•
Worlds
Largest Youth Mu sic Progroi\m
Owen, replaced by Snead in
a Sweet Trea t
• Worlds Largest Stene f tm f me Arts Exhtbtt
the first baH, took over on the
FOR
• World 's LC\rgest Sti\te f..w Horse Show
last play of tbe third period·
• World 's LMgest L1v estock E.xhtbttton
and got the 49ers moving with
• World 's Lugest Jumor Fa1r
• Colum bus. Oh1o on 1-7 I ., 17 th Ave Easy to f1nd
a 22-yard pass to Bob H#.e s.,
. . plenty of na •••n••
A pass interference call&lt;
', . ASHLA
GALLI POLIS
,~itT.
PLEASANT
cornerback Lonnie Hepburn
~503 Eastern Ave .
, 2325 Jack.on .Ave.
in the end zone gave the
"' Conw r11l lll 1 ':17 ~ B urger Cht'l S v~re"'~ \n(
8 first down on the one and
·, Sam~y Johnson burst
\

Iii.:

"

, ,.

Parentless children to

II

/,

"

- By Ros1 Mackenr:le 1: Jeff Mac Nelly / &amp;~1975, Unlted Featur~ Syndicate

sh~uldn't

.

.

have too much
trouble looking at himself in
:WOOn your team trails tbe the mirror when the season
~~ond leader by I~ \\: games ends.
-August, it can some" It feels fine to be tbe
, take a good deal of wlnningest for right now but
••lnliJearching to be satisfied it's just a stepping stone to
w~h you r performan ce something else," said Sutton .
... :unless you're Don Sutton.
That something else might
~tton .
well be the Cy Young Award,
&amp;ltton, who became tbe for which Sutton is one of the
N~tional League's winningest leading candidates, with San
Pilcher Sunday afternoon Diego's Randy Jones and the
when he pitched a three - Mots' Tom Seaver.
hO.ter against the New York
Walt Alston , the Dodger
Mets for his 16th victory, manager who believes his

~~ Sports Writer

Ford women liberated
WASHINGTON (UPI) Betty Ford says she is a
liberated woman and It would
not faze her if daughter
Susan, 18, ·were to tell her,
"Mother, I'm having an
affair."
"Sle's a big girl," the First
Lady said.
Furthermore, Mrs. Ford
said in a televised Interview
Sunday night premarital
relations among the right
partners migbt even reduce
the divorce rate.
Describing herself as "a
liberated
woman"
although, she said, she
wouldn't "burn my bra or do
something .like that" - Mrs.
Ford also said she assumes
all her children have tried
marijuana out of curiosity
and added she might have
tried it herself had It been
popular when she was a girl.
(Susan Ford, guesi of honor
at a backyard barbecue at the
governor's . mansion in
Topeka, Kan., said, "She
really sounded like a
liberated woman," after
watching her mother's interview.
The
President's
daugbter also talked to ber
parents by telephone from
the mansion.)
In Ft. Smith, Ark., a White
House spokesman traveling
with President and Mrs .
Ford's vacation party said
Sunday, "The President has
long since ceased to be
perturbed or surprised by his
wife's remarks." Later the
spokesman added, "The.
President has said before
that she is free to speak her
mind, and she does."
Correspondent
Morley

'

iv KEN ROSENBERG

PORTSMOUTH - More
than 250 parentless children
from six Southern Ohio
counties wiD be treated to a
day at the Scioto County Fair
on Thursday, August 14. Tbe
34th Annual Orphan's Outing
is
sponsored - by
the
Automobile Club of Southern
Ohio.
"For many of these kids it
wiU be their first day at a
county fair," said AAA
Executive Vice President,
John P . lrwirt. Each year we
get letters for weeks from the
kids telling us how much they
enjoy this event."
The Automobile Club wiD

Billingham to face .
Chicubs
this
evening
BASEBALL

Sutton notches 16tH';

Wc: Hold These:, Tr~ths-. ··

Aug.zt-Sept. t

Your ticket to fun!
World's largest free .
entertainment program

hiPPY."

-..

THANK

TUESDAY,

CAMDEN PARK
O~EN ' UNTIL P~ ·!~

.

ol •

EVENING RESlRIED

SECONO
. ''Al4't~UAL

..

•,'- .

I

.,

�•

I,
' I

'

,

4 - The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pom~royc 0 , Monday, Au~ 11, 1975

Southland tour is into Ohio history
PORTSMOUTH - A piC· toor
lure of Oh1o's past m SouthCHILLICOTHE
Central Ohio, mcludm g ,
( 11) Adena. western end of
Chillicothe, Bambndge and Allen Avenue. off SR 104
Greenfield, make up th1s Slone mansiOn of Georgian
week 's suggested AAA arch itecture. naY. a state
OHIO'S SOUTHLAND tour
memonat Bmlt m 1806-()7 by
There Is much history to Thomas Worthmgton, s1xlh
explore
1n
OHIO'S governor of Ohw Des1gned
SOUTHLAND and not all of 1t by Benjamm I.Mrobe, wh o
IS locked away m museums
directed construch on of the
Th1s week 's tnp mcludes the Na taon s Capitol In keepm g
outdoor htstortcal drama, w1th V1rg1ma Plantatwn
TECUMSEH , the mo s t theme, a ten an l house, bar n
Widely acclaimed pageant m and spnnghouse have been
the mtdwest We w111 also sec constructed on the s 1tes of the
the country's first dental ongmal blllldmgs Overlook
school and Ohio's f1rst prov1des breathtakmg v1ew
capital
of the hills reproduced on the
W1th
gasoline pnces Great Sea l of Oh10 Adskyrocketmg, it pays to be a rnlsswn c harge
"GAS WATCHER" One way
I 21 Chilli cothe Gazette, 50
to cut the cost of dn vmg 1s to West Mam Street Oldest
mv1te a fnend or neighbor on co nti nuous ly published newsyour weekend dnves and spli t papel west of the Atleghemes
the cost of f1llmg the tank
I 1800 I Housed m r ephca of
Allow enough lime on your Ohio s f1rs t cap1tol blllldmg
trip to observe the 55 mph Closed Sunday and maJOr
speed llm1t You w1ll dnve ho lid ays
Open Monday
more safely and see more,

lh1 ough Fnday, 8 lO to 5,
Saturday to noon
1'l 1 Ross County H1stoncal
Society Muse um , 45 West 5th
Street Features exh1b1ts of
p10neer criclfts, hrearms
fw mtm e, roy s, c;ostwnes and
In dian room and Oh1o' s
ConstJiu tw u Table
AdlnlSSIOn charge
i 4 l Tct:wn seh
An outdo OJ
h1 stonca l
dr etrna
presented from June through
early Scptcm be1 at Sugarludd Muuntam Amphltheat
located near Chilh t:othe
IIAINBRIDGF:
t51 State Parks
Three
exce ll ent state parks are m
the are&lt;:~ ~ Rocky Fork, near
Hill sbo ro , P1ke, sou th of
Ba wbr~d ge. Sew to Trail,
sout h of Chillic othe They are
differ enl m cha r acter and
offer a w1de array of outdoor
f::tcllilics

16)

Dental
Museum,
located west on Mam St1ee t
m a 1m} bUJidmg wh1ch from

Royals pull within 5%
games of Oakland
By BILL MADDEN
UPI Sports Writer
John Mayberry IS making a
prophet out of two Kansas t
City Royal managers
"in order for thiS club to be
a pennant contender, we've
gotta have a big year from
John Mayberry," SB!d ex.
Royals' manager Jack
McKeon in spring trammg
"This Is a helluva hall club
and there's no reason why we
can't start winning ," sa1d
Whitey Herzog upon succeeding McKeon last month
Thanks to Mayberry, who
has now hit safely m 14
straight games, the Royals
have started winning agam
and with Sunday's 5-1 victory
over the Cleveland Indians,

Linescores
Sunday's Baseball Result s
Un1fed Press International
Na1•onal League
SF
001 130 300- 8 13 0
Phd
000 010 000 I 8 1
Barr ( 10 9J and Rader
Ruth-ven , Hilgendorf (51.
Sc hueler (6), Gerber (7)
Twttchell 181 and Oates LP
Ruthven (1 II
H RS
Matthews 1 (5th and 6th l

ooo

100 ooo ~ 1 1 o
000 100 000-- I 3 0
Sullen I 16 9 1 and Yeager
Webb , Baldwm 16 ). Sander s
( 81 , Lockwood
181
and
Ste arns LR Webb (4 51
HR - Hale (61hl

LA
NY

( 10 inn•ngsl

SO
000 000 100 I ~ 1 7 1
ST L
000 000 100 '1 - 3 10 1
Mcintosh, Fr •sella (7)
Gre•f ( 9 1 and Kendall Reed
Hrabosky (9 ) and S1 mmon s
WP - Hrabosky (10 ]) LP
Gre•f 1 (3 4l 1 HRS - Fa•rly
(6th ), Fuentes !Jrdl Redz
(4th)

' '

Mont
000 OOJ 000
3 11 3
C1n
000 147 04x II 16 I
carr!lhers
Fryman (5),
Murray (6) Tay lor J8J and
Foote , Norman Eastw, ck 161
and Bench WP - Nor man {7
3I L P
Carnthers ( I 1 l
HRS Foote {6thl. Fos t er

••

(19th)

P11fS
000 001 101 ~ 3 6 J
Hous
400 010 OOx - 5 1 0
Rooker,
Tekulve
(71
Demery 19) and Sanguillen
R•chard. Cosgrove 178 1 and
Ju tze WP - R• char d 18 8 1
LP
Rooker (8 81
Ch•
001 111 050- 9 11 0
All
000 000 010- I 5 3
Bonham (11 8) and Hosley
Odom, Sadeckt 17), Beard 191
and Pocoroba LP
Odom
II 51 HR - Lum {5th)
~
Amertcan league
Mmn
000 000 702 - 4 9 0
Oet
000 000 000 - 0 4 '2
Blyleven Ill 6) and Borg
mann, Root
!7 J
Ba r e
Reynolds (8) and F r ee han
LP - Bare (6 7) H R
Roof
I '2nd l

they stand only 51', games
behmd the Oakland A's m the
American League west
pennant
race
'
Mayberry drove home four
runs, three w1th h1s 26th
homer of the year, and, w1th
81 RB!s , IS now headed for h1s
best season ever. The Royals,
meanwhile, have won 14 of 18
games under Herzog
"There's a lot more talent
here than I thought," Herzog
sa1d "Even though I d1dn't
thmk we'd be 14-4 at thiS
point , 1f we had some healthy
lefthanders m the bullpen, we
could have been 17-1 "
Mayberry , who IS hillmg
.453 m his last 18 games,
credits his hat revtval to
better concentratiOn
Elsewhere m the AmeriCan
League, Boston downed Oakland 7-4, Cahforrua blanked
New York 1-(), Milwaukee
upended Texas 7-4, Ch1cago
shaded Baltimore 3-2 and
Mmnesota
whitewashed
Detroit W
Red Sox 5, A's 3
Cecil Cooper and Jun R1ce
e;~ch slugged two..-un homers
as the Red Sox mcreased
their lead over Baltunore m
the AL East to 7 games.
Cooper's lOth homer of the
year followed Bernie Carbo's
single In the first Inning,
while Rice's 19th followed a
walk to Cooper m the fourth
Luis Tiant (13-11) was the
winner w1th help from two
relievers.
White Sox 3, Orioles 2
Jorge Orta's game-wmrung
double climaxed a three..-un
ninth mrung upr1smg by the
White Sox, who had been
handcuffed on four hits lly
Orioles' starter M1ke Torrez
up to that point Prior to
Orta's h1t, which scored Pat
Kelly from first base, Bnan
Downing tied the score with a
two..-un homer off reliever
Grant Jackson Ken Singleton
hit a solo homer for
Baltimore in the e1ghth.
rwins 4, Tigers ()
Minnesota's Bert Blyleven
hurled a four-h1tter to send
the reeling Tigers down to
their 15th stratght loss, extending the1r own club record
for futility. Jerry Terrell
doubled and Rod Carew hit a

t82b to 11!:!1 housed the f1rst
!-it huol m Lhe coun try
Foundc1 Dr John Harns,
numbc 1ed
a mung
h1 s
stud ents two men who later
es ta bli shed the first two
dental colleges, Baltimore
a nd Cmcwnat1 On d1spla)
are dental 1nstrumenls and
equipm e nt used dur~ng
pwneermg days of dental
sw gc1y Free
r i 1 Fo 1t
Hilt State
Mcmonal, 1,186 acres about
m1les southwest off SR 41
r eh 1stonc eart hw or k
bell •ved to have been built by
lh Hopel'e ll Jn d1a ns Encl smg 48 acre s the Y.alls ar e
about 8,500 feel along, 10 to 20
feet h1 gh and 30 to 40 feet
th1ck A museum rcatures
d1splays on geo logy, plant
and &lt;:~mmal life and on the
Hopewe ll lnd1ans
18) Pa1nt Valley Skyline
Dn ves
Start m g
from
Bambiidge, four loop routes,
varymg fr om 9 to :m miles,
traverse lhe va ll ey to Lhe
surnm1ts of some of Ohio's
most spectacular hill s
( 91 Se1p Mount State
Memonal, 10 acres, 3 m1les
eas t on US 50, contams a
great central mound, 250 feet
lon g, 150 feet "'de, 30 feel
h1gh, of the Se1p group ThiS
complex ongmally conSisted
of sevenll mounds and a
senes of earthen e mbankments
A pavilion
denial

pmch-h1t sacnf1ce fly m the
seventh for Twms' hrst two
rtms. Detrmt has not scored a
run m 1ts last' 20 mnrngs and
has only one m its last 28
Blyleven {11-6) struck out SIX.
Angels I, Yankees 0
AKRON , OhiO (UP! ) Lee Stanton doubled home
Tom Weiskopf sa1d 11 and
Tommy Harper w1th one out Jack Nicklaus agrees
m the bottom of the nmth for
"I'm sure Ja ck · w1ll look
the game's only run and
hack at this year as the year
p1tchers Bill Smger and
he gave the grand slam
M1ckey Scott combmed on a
away,'' said Weiskopf.
four-h1tter in the Angels '
" Yes ," sa 1d Nicklaus
VIctory Stanton, the Angels'
followmg his fourth PGA lltle
leading RBI man w1th 53,
and 16th maJor tournament
stroked h1s garne-w1nnmg hit
wm Sunday at the Ftrestone
off Rudy May
Country Club, " I suppose of
Brewers 7, Rangers 4
the four maJor tournaments,
George Scott drove home
I had a better chance to wm
three runs w1th four hits them this year than ever
( mcludmg a solo homer) m
before ''
helpmg the Brewers snap a
"The Open I had and gave
s1x-ga me losmg streak Scott
tt away," he sa1d, "and the
smgled m the first, stroked
Bntish was almost g1ven lo
RBI singles m the th1rd and
me''
fourth and belted hiS 24th
N1cklaus, whose wmrungs
homer m the sixth Pete
th1s year total $248,599,
Broberg {10-10) was the
hmshed two shots behind
wirmer
playoff wmner Lou Graham
M&lt;qor L eag ue L ea d er~
and John Mahaffey m the
Un1t ed Pr ess lnternat•ona t
Qpen and was only one shot
L C' ad.ng Bt'lltcr ~
(base d on 275 at bats)
behind Jack Newton and
Nat•onal L ea que
w1nner
Tom \'Iatson who
9 ab r h pel
Mdlock. Ch 98 393 51 \36 346
played off for the British.
Nickl a us, however, left
S• mmons S t L
little chance for error m
111 399 50 135 338
Watsn H 106 399 55 137 33 1 Sunday's fmal round. He shot
Joshu, SF 95 368 10 1? 1 3?'i'
a one over 71 for a 72-hole
Brck St L 91 3&lt;17 59 114 3?.9
score of 276, four under par.
Sangudlcn Pill
97 359 4 1 117 3'}5
He went mto the day w1th a
Rose Cn 115 483 70 157 3?5
four shot edge over Bruce
Grvy LA 116 480 OJ 156 375
Prkr Pll 103 J83 57 liB 3?1
Crampton .and after the first
Mrgn Cn 106 369 76 I 18 3?0
three holes , two of wh1ch be
Amencan L eague
Q
01 b r h pc1
bogeyed, played like a fmely
Carew M1nn
tuned
engme until he had 1t
107 400 7 1 148 370
Lynn Bs 10&lt;1 378 7'l 116 333
wrapped up.
Hargrove TcX
Crampton, who hung m
103 364 6 1 I Ill J IY
Wash m g ton Oak
gamely through 14 holes,
106 4?? 60 133 315
fmtshed
w1th a 69 and a 278
Munson NY
Ill 417 5'i' 13 1 3 14
total, one better than
MeR KC 10! &lt;1\1 SO 1?8 311
Weiskopf
who had a closmg 69
R tce Bs.
100 4? 1 71 127 JO:&gt;
Powll Clv 90 :&gt;95 4? 88 ?98 and 279
Mannmg Clcv
Andy North, w1th the fmal
75 306 45 9 1 791
Orta Ch 1 97 375 47 111 796 round's best score, a hve
Hom e Run s
under 65, finished fourth a
Nat1onat L eag ue L u zm sk1
Ph1l ?8
Schm1dt P h1l 75
281, wh1le Hale Irwm, w1th a
K •ngman NY 74 Bench , Cm
fmal round 73, and B1lly
?? Stargelt , P.tt ?0
Amer1can
League
Casper, who had a 70,
Jackson Oak ?8 Mayberry ,
fimshed at 283.
K C 70 Scott. M d ?d Bonds
NY ??
Burroughs Tex ?1
Nicklaus, who sa1d he
Runs Batted In
the best four roWids
played
Nat1onal Leagu e
L uzm s k1 ,
Phd 94
Bench , C•n 92
he had ever played m one
Watson Hou 78 Slaub NY
tournament
at Firestone,
and Montanez SF 74
Am encan League
Lynn
bogeyed the first hole, birdied
Bos 81 Mayberry KC 81
the
second and bogeyed the
May Ba ll and R •ce, Bos 80
Hort on
Det and Jackson
third in a rather erratic start.
Oak 75
But he settled down and

'· -'=== .

d1s pl ay mg graphlt: material
related to the mound complex
IS free P 1cm( kmg Open
durmg daylight hours
t 10 1 Seven Caves, 4 m1les
west and 1 m1le south of US
50 F.ach cavern IS electncally 1llummated and has
cement walks Entrances are
found at mtervats a long three
d iffe ren t foot trails traverSing the scemc lOG-acre park
P1cmc a1eas available.
Admi SSIOn charge
CIRCLEVILLE
1111 Circleville Canal, one
m1 te south of US 22, west of
Circleville. Si te of a fiv e-mile
portion of the Ohw-Ene
Canal Good fl shmg, h1king.
1121 Logan E lm , f1 ve m1les
sout h of C~rctev1lle, one m1le
east of US 2.1 on SR 361
Legendary Site of Ch 1ef
Logan s
s peec h,
177 4
Daylight hours P1cmckmg
I 1.1 1 A W Manon State
Park
Offers facilities for
campm g, boahng, f1shmg and
pi CniCk in g
GREENFIELD
t 141 Paml Creek Lake
New 1,200acre take located m
H1 gh land an d Ross co un lies
near Greenfield Pamt Creek,
the longes t cr eek m the
Umted States, and the lake
are a U S Army Corps of
Engmeers project for flo()(j
control , w1th provisions made
for boatmg, flshmg, h1kmg,
campmg and S\!.Immmg

•

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•
"

quarters or a century
thousands of people have
adm~red the beaulllul murals
on the comdor walls . It was
not unt1l August 1956
that 1dent1ty of the artist who
pamted them, Archibald M
Willard, who also pamted the
famous patnohc picture

and beautiful drapes, flowers
and garlands ln the alcove
around the 36 by 30 It
corrtdor on the second floor,
wh1ch was opened in May,

" Sptnt of
'76," was
established through efforts of
the Fayette County Htstor~cal
Soc1ety In additiOn to three
large murals on the Side walls
of the corridor, there are
numerous hfe-stze ftgures

areas.

1885
AAA urges you to drive
carefully The Map shows
suggested routes to tour

yolil[

life insUtJ • lie

pay.h

mortgage?
.,.lhi,.

Perhllllll
~,..
M mueft left tor~
ltmtty 1 llwil'l lllplll!la.
NatJ!)mft6t " • • .
.,.,.,.,
. ..
...,,.
ptan that c.n twlp, ofW

Nicklaus wins 16th big tournament
from the third hole to the
18th, wh1 c h he double
bogeyed after dnvmg under
an evergreen tree , he was
near perfect.
"I srud to myself 'you make
a four at 17 and go to 18and do
anythmg you want.' And I
did ," he laughed .
But Crampton, who m1ssed
a 10-foot birdie putt at 17
which could have truruned
the fmal spread to JUS! one
shot, said he felt Nicklaus
wouldn 't have taken a SIX at
18. Nicklaus agreed
N1cklaus, who now has four
PGA hUes , can tie Walter
Hagen for the most PGA wms
next year at Congressional m
Washmgton, D C "I'd like to
be able to tiC that record ," he
•
said
Although Sunday's v1ctory
was h1s 16th maJor VIctory,
Nicklaus said he savored it as
much as the rC$1, except
possibly the hrst.
"Each one adds 1ts own
dimensiOn," sa1d the Golden
Bear " Anytune I whip a
tough golf course and a field
like
th1s,
it 's
pretty
satisfying "
Crampton, who has now
f1mshed second to Ntcklaus In
four maJor tournaments In
the past four years, the 1972
Masters and U.S. Open and
the 1973 PGA, said he felt he
played well and 1s "proud to
finish second to Jack any

•
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WASHJNGTONC H.
I 15 )
Fayette
County
HIStorical Center, Museum ,
located east end of Court
Street. five blocks east of
Courthouse on US 22, 62 Bwlt
m 1875, 1ts Mid-VI ctorian
archttecture wtth 1ron sptral
sta 1rway, extendtng £rom
second to th1rd floors and
w1th 1ts gold colored steps,
as the "Golden
known
Stairs "
116 ) Archibald M Willard
Murals
In Fayette County
Courthouse For nearly three

tune I play "
Crampton, who had fallen
four shots off the pace
Saturday after leading by
four going mto the third
round, trailed by only two
shots until he bogyed the 15th.
Nicklaus, playmg m the next
threesome, knocked m a 20footer for a bird and a four

shot margrn
After that, it was only a
matter of playing out the
holes.
"At that stage, I was just
trymg to stay ahead of Tom
(Weiskopf)
and
flmsh
second,'' Crampton sa1d
"After Jack h1t 1! over the
water on 16, that's about all
there was left for me."

I lftOtltett. H ,... ... Clll

REVENUE

$16,990

POMEROY VILLAGE 690
VILLAGE CLERK
POMEROY, OHIO 45769

10 EOUCAliON

I

1 B•l•nc:en ol June JO 1~14

•-~-~~-

2 11-nu• Shtunv Fulld1
16,990
Rtceved lram Jul~ 1 1114\hr~JuneJO 11175 ' --~--3 lnlt~e•l Rletiwod

'::======

Crtdlled 1.1111~ l 19l4 rhru J u~ 30 19151
4 Fund• AIIIIMCI lrom Oboh~..,,.
I

Ot

II Funda Rerurntd

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POMEROY VILLAGE

5 Sumolh..al 2 3

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11.. •Kt•....t G•ne•• Rev...... Shlrino
ur,...nlllotlhng

I \ SOCIAL
OtVHQ,IOIEHl

l

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ACTUAL USE REPORT

SHARING

''r

• Nation ld1 ,......._,,

GENEAAL

'*

·-~~-~­

1oORS

·-~~---

1 l01811'undl ·~lillbl&lt;l

·-~~~--

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I am the
proud owner of an old trunk
dated 1904 It is very sturdy
and well built but the paint on
the putstde 1s qu1te scratched
and metal remforcements on
the corners are dull looking
The ms1de has three drawers
and the ongmal cloth llmng
Is there any way I can re store
th1s to 1ts or~ginal look ' MRS TV
DEAR MRS. T.V. - There
is such as thing as over-.
restoring and trying to give a
brand new look to something
one is treasuring because of
its age or sentimental attachments. Many In the know
consider it disastrous to see
every spot and blemish
removed from an old piece as
the disappearance of such
service marks remove its
real character.
Why not use matching color
liquid shoe polish to remove
some of the scratches and
dinginess on the outside?
Then it would not look too new
as 11 might after being
painted. If the metal comers
on your trunk are just dull,
not rusty, try using a good
metal polish to brighten them
- maybe a floe steel wool
pad could be used first to
wash and clean them. They
could always be painted
FLAT black If all else failed.
If the trunk Is to be put to
some practical storage use it
would
be
easier
to
"\\allpaper" the entire Interior \lith adhesive-backed
paper rather than to glue on
new fabrle. Let some of those
battle scars remain - you
are not working with a true
antique so can enjoy more
freedom. - POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Peeve IS w1th the poor qual1ty
thread used for stitchmg
children 's winter jackets and
snow sw ts. Mter just a few
weanngs they so often spht m
the seams
Unht
!he
manufacturers correct this
my own solutiOn for mendmg
such seams 1s to use a smgle
strand of phentex yarn and a
large needle and then pull the
needle through w1 th the

•
Independent
Wealth.
Itdidrit
come EASY.
Basictlly. we were
hom &amp;roke.
So Americans got
together and loaned
their new govemment
over $27.000.000
on faith alone.
Eventually, at was
that faith Ihat won the
war and oar freedom.
Today. that faath is
still alive.
Over 9~ millaon
modern Americans
bay United States
Savings Bonds
regularlgtkoa@a the
Payroll Savings Plan
••• aliCI othen where
they l&gt;aak.
And while their
savings grow. they're
helpiag t•eir cowntry
grow, too.
Independently.

PUBLIC NOTICE
Oh1o s Proposed Comprehensive Annual Serv1ces Plan (CASP) -

T 1tle XX

SUPPLEMENTAL INFORMATION

Add1t1onal mform at1on IS now available to Oh10' s Title XX CASP and/o r Detailed Summary as md1cated
below
1 Method of del1very of serv1ces (d~rect, purchase public or pnvate). Estimated numbers of
persons and est1mated expenditures by Serv1ce .
Geograph1cal Area . categones of e i1Q1ble
persons (CASP reference pp 13-17)
2 Organ1zat1onal structure of the State Agency- ODPW (Exh1b1t 3 - CASP)
3 Add1t1onal components related to Serv1ce Defm1t1ons (GASP pp 1 8-24)
4 Resources (money) Federal, State, Local (GASP p 12 and Detailed Summary p 7)

Salt
000 000 0 1\ -.- 2 7 I
Ch1
000 000 003 - 3 6 'J
Torrez.
Jackson
(9),
Gnmsley (9) and Duncan
Kaat, Gossage
(9 ) and
Oown•ng WP -- Gossage (6
61 LP- Jackson !3 31 HRS
- Smgleton I 13th). Oownmg

ACTUAL USE REPORT

5 Display Advertisement add1t1on (telephone local welfare department to request Deta 11ed Summary or to purchase complete Proposed CASP
Public Review and Comment

(7th l

KC
Cleve

ooo 001 ooo ~ 1 8 o
Fitzmorr1s. Briles {61 and
Martmez . Ra 1ch Wa1ts {71
and Elhs WP - F•tzmorr•s
(119 ) LP - · Ra1ch (6 7l H R
- Mavberry {261hl

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,.-;c;,;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;~r-----f-----j

Calif

36..] 053 005

' "
2 lltvenue Sl\111119 f ur&gt;c11

May (11 7) and Herrm ann,
S1nger , Scott (9) and Hamp
ton WP - Scott (3 11

fttcervedffomJ~Iyt li7411'1111June30 1915

3 lm""' Aectl¥td

1~7·

Or er.dot•d W11ly I
tllru June
4 f11nda R1l~ fr~~m Obhgarlona

Bos
200 100 001 - 5 II 0
Oak
ooo 200 001 · 3 7 o
:r.ant.
BUrton
{8),
W1lloughb\l (91 and Fisk,
Bosman , ioss (4) Lmdblad
01 , Fmgers (9) and Tenace
WP - T1ant llA 111 LP
Bosman U 4) HRs - Cooper
(lOth}, ~ Rice (19th), Tenac ~
fl81hl

I

dum'ljthllperood rromJuty 1 1974th•u Jun•30 1975

Public Review and Copies

SYRACUSE VILLAGE 6f!
VILLAGE CLERK
SYRACUSE, bHIO &lt;5779

000 000 000· 0 4 0
000 1 000 001 1 4 l

NY

$2,165
./ACCOUN T NO

Tex
103 ooo 000- 4 8 1
Mdw
014 101 OOx - 7 11 "J
Hands. Moore 13}. Um
barger (3). Thomas (7) and
Sundberg, Colborn , Currence
(3), Broberg 14 ), Murphv !91
and Porter W P - Broberg
00 10~ LP -· Hands (6 7J
HR - 'Scott (24th)

'

The Supplemental mformat1on IS for public rev1ew and comment.
from August 11th 1975 to September 25th, 1975

003 000 002- 5 8 0

30

ViSit your loqal ~ounty Welfare Department to

v1ew the Supplemental mformat1on 1n CASP
Telephone your local County Welfare Department to request a deta1ted summary w1thout
cost or to arrange for purchase of the complete
proposed CASP for $5

ATTENTION

••--.:''2'£'616"
3""'8-'"""~::::
tvl-

Meigs County Welfare Department

$. _ __:c•=~"'~"---

175 Race Street. Box 191
Middleport
Phone: 992-2117

34,803,&amp;

1 ~151 S==

~~==

5 Sum ollone• I 2 J 4

S
s

II l'undi iiiM"-ii toORS

•--'-:-7:;.,-,.,...~

1 T01et Fund• Avllillblt

'' "~:...:;S.o
'·"'800="""--

~

James A Rhodes
Governor

State of Oh1o

~

I

.

Comments and Copies
Wntten comments on the supplemental mformatlon may be made to your County Welfare Department or to the DIVISion of Soc1al Serv1ces
Oh1o Department of Publ1c Welfare Wntte~
comments and requests for cop1es may be ad·
dressed to
Mrs Mildred Madry, Ch1ef
DIVISion of Soctal Serv1ces

Oh1o Department of Public Welfare
30th Floor, 30 East Broad Street
Co lumbus, Oh1o 43215
Raymond F McKenna
'D1rector
·~
Oh1o Qepartment of Public Welfare

'

I'ULL Y CRAMER

pliers Seams flxed thiS way
have never ripped open agam
but usually a split appears
somewher e
else
SHERRY
DEAR READERS - The
yarn Sherry refers to is a
synthetic type often used to
make rugs. It's very tough
and hard to break but a bit on
the heavy side. - POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - A reader
wrote that s he could not
remove grease spots from
her mdoor-outdoor kitchen
carpet so I want to pass on to
her the way I clean both wool
and man-made fiber rugs It
IS really an updatmg of an
old, old method Clean as
much grease as possible off
w1th your usual meth&lt;&gt;&lt;l and
then pile cornmeal on the
spot so 1t IS from one..etghtll to
one-fourth mc h th1ck Rub '"
thoroughly w1th the fmgers
and leave 1t Walk on 11 when
need be and after 24 hours
vacuwn 1t Repeal several
times The cornmeal absorbs
the remammg grease I have
used th1s to clean off heavy
transmtsswn grease from
farm machmery that was
madvertently tracked m and
ground mto a synthetic fiber
rug It took patience but
worked - VIRGINIA
You will receive a dollar If
Polly uses your favorite
homemaking Idea, Pet
Peeve, Polly's Problem or
solution to a problem. Write
Polly in care of this newspaper.

Family
gathers
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Roush,
Rt 4, Pomeroy, hosted a
fam1ly gathermg last Sunday
at the1r home
Attending were Gerry
Kessmger, K1m and L01s
Ann, Kevin and Christy
Smith, Becky and Kenny
Roush, Pomeroy; Mrs. Joan
Penestin, Jeff, Curtis and
Cynthia and Greg Warpole,
Jacksonville, N. C.; Mr. and
Mrs
Larry
Flowers,
Columbus; Mr and Mrs
Dale Roush, Sherrie and
Dav1d, St Albans, W Va ;
Mr and Mrs Roger Roush
and son, Doug, Pataskala,
Mr and Mrs. Leonard Miller ,
Melissa and Joe, Leon, W
Va.
Mrs Penes tin and children
spent a week here w1th her
parents Last Monday Mrs
Penestm and Cindy jomed
Mrs Albert Roush and
Chnsty Sm1th for a trip to
Columbus to see Mrs Kathy
Sm1th, a patient for the past
17 weeks at Mount Carmel
West Hospital
On Sunday afternoon a
surpnse fam1ly party was
held m observance of the
birthdays of K1m and L01s
Ann, grandchildren of Mrs.
Kessmger
Other weekend VISitors of
Mr and Mrs. Roush were Mr.
and Mrs
Roy M1ller,
Columbus, Mrs. Garnet
Herdman
and
Bonme
Matheny and son, Doug, of
Leon, W Va.

Fairview
News Notes
Mr. and Mrs Ronald
Russell, Mike and Mandy of
Wolf Pen, Mrs. Gladys
Sluelds, granddaughter, Mrs.
Debbie Hagen and son VISited
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roush
and children.
Ronald Russell of the Anny
Reserves was stationed m
Wisconsin for two weeks.
Mrs. Russell and children
viSited Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Roush from Sunday till
Thursday durmg h1s absence.

RETURN FROM TRIP
TUPPERS PLAINS - Mr,
and Mrs. Dale Welsh, Dale,
Jr., and Mildred B1ssell have
returned from a two week
tnp through the western
Umted States. They traveled
through 16 states, VISiting the
Grand Canyon, Oral Roberts
Umvers1ty in Tulsa, Okla.,
Las Vegas and numerous
A fl'lbllc HMCe ol 111• putlolleMIOfl
h
f
-"-----' ot er pomts o mterest.
l!~;:::.:"";,.';:~:,:-::;.:.....;'".'"""

5CYI1J ANNIVERSARY APPROACHES - Mr and Mrs Curtis D. Johnson, Rt 1,
Racme, will celebrate their 50th wedding anmversary Aug. 18 The couple w111 hold an open
house Aug . 17 from 2-Sp.m m celebration of the event

Church entitled "The Day the
Kloes, Cathy Moore, Oma
Wtnebrenner, Lilhe Starcher.
Lord Came to Town," w1th
Vernon Nease presentmg a
Sadte Brown, Mr a nd Mrs
g1ft from that c hurch
Car l Weese, Judy, Jackie and
Jcme Ann W1Lhams, J ohn
Both the m1mster and h1 s
w1fe responded w1lh remarks
Tucker, Mr and Mrs J ohn
of apprec1at10n to the church
Lisle and sons, Scott a nd
Todd, Robert Flanaga n, Mr
congregatiOns Mrs Kloes,
and Mrs Carroll Norns, Mr
Mrs Jenkms and Don Harden
sang "Sweet, Sweet Spmt,"
and Mrs Don Harden and D
J , Elea nor Robson, Mr and
and the Rev Mr JarviS
closed with prayer
Mrs Paul Kloes and Mi chae l.
Attending the re ce pt1 on
Mrs. Dorothy Harden, [\Irs
were Mr. and Mrs B1ll
Gladys Robson, Mr and Mrs
Wmebrenner , Mr and Mrs
Franklin Rizer , Beth and
K1m Ewmg, Icy M1ller,
Richard Ash, Mr and Mrs
Nettle Moor e, Norma Baker,
Vernon Nease, and Stanley,
Mr and Mrs
Richard
Ricky, Angle and Nancy
Thomas, Mr and Mr s
W1lliam Ru sse ll , Alfred
Yeauger, June Sayre, Marcia
Karr , Etleen Clark, Donna
S1mms, Thelma Hawley ,
Soma Ash, Tonia Ash, Mr
and Mrs Mtllard Van Meter,
Elva Datley , Knstm Paper,
DARWIN - The 51s t anAnn Sauvage, Mr and Mrs
nual Hayes . Young . Holiday
Roy Jenkms and Kimberly ,
Mtck Ash, Donna and Bob School Reun1on wa s held Aug
3 on the old Holiday School
Sm1th, Margaret E1chmger,
ground near Darwm
Helen Teaford
A bas ket dmner was e n·
Mr and Mrs Donald Lisle,
JOyed at noon w1th Albert
Mrs Anna Hildore, Kathleen
F nend askmg the blessmg
Scott, Ann Watson, Marybelle
The afternoon program
Warner, Brad and Helen
was opened by Hollie V
Maag, Stella Grueser, Ed·
Ha}
es Pnnc1pal speaker
mood Grueser , Kenneth
was Rev Frank Cheese brev.
W1ggms, Opal and Karl
of Sl1awnee, OhiO His top1c
... , ......... , .................·.·.;,...-........, ·····x.:o:.:.._~ was
"Chns lian
In 111-~~m:&lt;i~-..-...--;•:...~·
··~ • • .-w.•,.,.,•,•,•.•••w.•.:.:-:-:-:-:-:·:•:•,•.·,•,·.·.•, ••,.,.,.,·,•,•,•,•, ,•,···" ••....,
debtedness "
~~ Hollie V Hayes was re.:·:
:~ elected president and Mrs
Jack Jordan was elected
'
secretary -I reasurer
By Helen Bottel ~: Olhers taking part m the
,, program were
·=-~
Readmg of the mmutes by
Ma nda Eastman;
Fern
Open Letter ro Parents
Cheesebrew presented a
Dear Helen:
As manager of a small busmess, may I wr1te an open letter poem. " The Qmet Hour s,"
" It's Fme Today," read by
to parents:
Audra Hayes
Please, parents, do not send small children to the store
Charles and Helen Woode
alone. It IS ne1ther fair to the child or to the merchant. It puts
temptation m the way of the kids, and shoplifting has become a sang an msp1ratwnal song
w1th
Co lleen
Douga n
major problem for all ages.

A reception honormg the
Rev Ric hard Jarvis, pastor
of four Umted MethodiSt
Churches m Me1g s County ,
and h1s family was held
Thursday mght m the SOCial
room of the Asbury Church,
Syracuse
A covered d1sh dmner wsa
served Mrs. Ann Sauvage
extended the welcome and
spec1al mus1c was presented
by the pnmary children of
the Asbury Church under the
directio.PAf-Mrs Rose Ann
Jenkffi's, Sunday school
teacher. A tnbute to the
pastor was g1ven by Miss
Marcia Karr, and the combined choirs of the churches
presented a program of
mustc
Speaking m tnbute to the
Rev. Mr. J arv1s from the
Syracuse Church were Mrs
E1leen Clark, Mrs Donna
Stmms, Mrs Dorothy Harden, Mrs. Thelma Hawley ,
Mrs Icy Miller and Mrs
Nelt1e Moore Mrs Clark
presented h1m w1th a gift
Mrs Helen Maag made the
presentahon of a gift from the
Mmersv1lle Church, and Mrs
Opal Kloes presented the g1ft
from the Asbury Church
There was a tr1bute by Ann
Watson from the Forest Run

.

Helen Help

Us •••

Dear OWLCWTPT: .
I wonder 1f any supermarket manager has yet had the
nerve to post a notice: "Children under 10 must be accomparued by an adult." Would be interesting to learn whether
thiS rule would save merchandise - or lose adult customers. -

+++

Dear Helen:
"Not Emotionally Inolved" stated that she was sharmg an
apartment wtth a man on a roommate basis only (no sex) and
wanted to know how she should mtroduce hun. I refer ber to
''The Uberated Man," a book by Warren Farrell, Ph .D. in
Sociology. In 1t, he mtroduces what he calls "The Hmnan
Vocabulary." His words and defimtions Include·
" Attache": A person with whom one has a deep emotional
mvolvement, be it spouse, lover, heterosexual, homosexual,
bisexual or asexuaL Emotional relationship IS its only
distinguishing quality.
"Uving frtend" : A person w1th whom one IS livmg ; used
wben one does not wish to categorize the relationship as sexual
or deeply emot1onaL For example, elderly persons cohabiting
to save money, college roommates, or persons sharing an
apartment may or may not be sharmg sex. ThiS term seems to
fit NEI's case.
Farrell also came up with the ''Htunan Pronoun,'' wh1ch lS
to be used when referrtng to a htunan in generaL The pronouns

are:
Te (pronounced ''tea")- he or she (nominative)
Tes -his or hers (possessive)
Tir (rhymes with "her") -him or her (ObJective)
So the sentence, "A person get what he deserves" becomes
"A person gets what TE deserves." Statements having to do
with a specific sex remain the same.
Also thanks to the woman who wrote •about ''The Three
·'
Me's-feminine,
female; and feminist me." I have never seen
anything that came so close to my own feelings before. It's nice
to know that I'm not alone In the way I react. - A READER
Dear Reader:
Warren Farrell's three new words - te, tes and tir should get hearty approval from members of my profession.
Only a writer understands how much of TES time is wasted
trying to avoid those awkward ''he or She," ''his or hers," etc.
phrases. (And, of course, TE knows they're musts with the MS.
set.) - H

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Above all, please do not send children mto a store "to look "
while you are shopping In another store . Sma!l busmesses have
a tough enough tune wtthout being used as habys1tters.
And don't think that shoplifting IS confmed to any particular race, creed or standard of livmg. It covers all areas. ONE WHO LOVES CHILDREN AND WANTS TO PROTECT
THEM

H

Cool, S1stersv1lle, W. Va ,
Mrs . Clifford Schools. Pomt
Pleasant, W Va , Mr. and
Mrs Strawford Oh li nger,
Ray , Wayne, David, Ralph,
Ml Alto, W Va
Dale Roach , Mrs BesSie
Ohh n ~er,
Mrs
Jamce
Stan lev. Mr a nd Mrs Robert
Mathe.ny, Jumor, Mr and
Mrs David Frye. Joann.
Jason and Kevm Kmght, New
Ha ven W Va · Mrs Joyce
Zerkle, Stewart, James, Mrs
Amelia Roach, Hartford, W
Va , Mr and Mrs .James
Lavender, Randy, Ron me,
Estel, Ray, Rust}, Ricky,
Angela, Mrs Larry Gnmm,
Stacie, l.arr) Ray, Mrs
Donna Gnnstead, Demse,
Cmdy Brett, M1 s Raymond

contnbuted to the program
Har old Hayes had a message
for the people
The presentatiOn of g1fts
was to Guy Lee, the eldest
person prese nt, Mr . and Mrs
Homer Blackwood, traveled
the greates t diStan ce, and
Jason Jordan, the youngest
person pre se nt
Takm g part '" group
smgmg were Wilbur Ba1ley,
Guy Lee , Charles and Helen
Woode, Manda Eastman and
Audra Hayes
The rest of the afternoon
was spent m VISltmg and
playmg games
Atte nding
we r e
Mrs
Manda Eastman, Mr and
Mrs Ernest Wood , Mr and
Mrs Pearl G1lkey, Mr and
Mrs Wilbur Ba~ley, W1lhe
Qwvey , Guy W Lee, Mr and
Mrs Leroy Saulers, Mark ,
Timothy, Joy a nd Chern
Sauters, Melvm Morns, all of
Pomeroy; Mr and Mrs Jack
Jordan and Jason, Harry
Sm1th, Albany , Chnton
Douglas, Pomeroy, Ethe l
Blackwood, Albany ,
Florence Sloane, Mrs Lyd1a
Cam, Mrs Julia Graham,
Guy Gilkey, Carl Bnckles,
Luc1le Holden, Mrs Grace
Richard son, Mr s Edna 0
Hawk, all of Athens; Mrs
Mary K
Dearmg and
daughters, Linda and Kara,
Albany
Mr and Mr s Harold
Douglas, Albany, Mr. and
Mt;s Charles D Woode ,
Coolville; George Gilkey,
New Marshfield, Albert
Fnend, Loram, Debbie
Woolever, Betty Woolever,
Esther Sharp, Mr and Mrs
Harold Hayes, Charle s
Karns ,
Flora
Yates,
Rtcky Karns , Mr
and
Mrs Herman Woolever , Lo-

Stewart,
Nancy
and
Raymond. Mason, W, Va .;
Mr and Mrs Sunny Gibbs,
Rex . Mr and Mrs Ottie
Roach, Ahce M Roach, Mr .
a nd Mrs Richard K. John son, Mrs Stella Johnson,
Mrs Lmda lhle , Donna and
Debbie, Mrs Mona G1bbs,
Cha rles R R1ggs, Mr. and
Mrs. Don Zerkle, Mr. and
Mrs Robert Ohlinger, John,
Ta mm y, Roberta, Jeff,
Bobby Joe, Letart, W. Va.

Social
Calendar

Langsville
Mr and Mrs C E Denny
Wtlkesvllle , Ohio were
Sunday guest s of their
daughter and fam1ly , Mr and
Mrs Bruce Morr1s a nd
VISited w1th their granddaughter, Mrs Betty Wnght
and family
Mr and Mrs Michael Barr
spe nt a week '" Nil es ,
Michigan VISiting Mr and
Mrs George Brawley . They
went to Poteskey, M1ch1gan
and spent s ome time flshmg
Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Janey
and fam1ly returned home
after a week of vacatwnmg m
the southern states
of

51st school reunion
is held near Darwin

H a child MUST go to tbe store alone, please send a note prov1dmg accordiOn music
Manda E astman also
stating what he or she is to buy and how much should be spent.

I

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NEW HAV EN, W Va. The descendants of John and
Amanda Aumiller Roach and
Strauther and Nancy G1bbs
Edwards held their annual
reun1on at the New Haven
Park Saturday. Aug 2
Attending
were
Mrs
Manrord Hutton , June Ann
and Jummc, Middleport. Mr
and Mrs Edward Spears,
Cheshire, Mrs Nettle Hemsley. Mrs
Ruby Sm1th ,
Syra c use; Mr and Mrs
Harold Jeffers, Mrs W1lma
Williams, Crooksv ille, Mrs
E lmer Graves, Zanesville.
Mr and Mrs Paul Spears,
R1cky, Sheila Ervm Paul
Cremea ns. Rosev ille , Mr
a nd Mrs Ralph Roach,
":olhe rs, W Va . Lon Ann

Church reception honors pastor

t·

'I'

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l,

,;:,. '
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Don 't over-restore
that old trunk

-

Chillicothe

New Haven park is
setting of annual reunion

and
Mrs
Frank A
Cheese brew .
Shawnee. Clifford R Hayes,
Mr and Mrs Gregory Hayes,
Middleport , L o u zetta
Dunlap , Columbus, D L
Bnckles. Mr and Mrs
Ronald Dougan , Mr and Mrs
Ned Swmdell , Camille, Paula
and Monte Swmdell, Crai g
Dougan, Tam1 Dougan, K1m
Stevers, Mrs Grace Hayes.
Mr and Mrs James Boy d,
Mr and Mrs Garold Ha yes,
Mr and Mrs Hollie W
Hayes , all of Shade, Mr and
Mrs Homer Blackwood.
Montgomery , Texas, Robbie
Estep, Athens; Greg James,
Logan
ga n,

Rev

MONDAY
RACINE ER Squad, 8 p m
at the f1re house All members and persons completing
the vital s1gns class are urged
to be at the f1re house at 7.30
p m to have pictures taken

Mr and Mrs Mtchael Barr
a nd Mrs
Alpha Barr
returned home after spendmg
a 1\eek at the home of Mr and
Mrs Blair Cadwallader and
sons of Seaman, Oh10
Mrs Alpha Barr was called
to Oak H1ll, OhiO by the death
of Henry Marlin, father of
Mrs Duane Barr.

Apple Grove
Mr . and Mrs. Wilham
W1ckllne and sons, Scott and
Kyle, Mrs Kathryn Hunt
were shoppmg at the K-Mart
at Parkersburg Saturdsy.
Mr and Mrs LoUie Pickett,
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Roush
assisted Mr. and Mrs .
Charles Michael With their
moving to their mobile home
Saturday
Mrs Robert Moms and
daughters are v1sihng
relatives in Cleveland .

TUESDAY
RACINE Masomc Lodge
461 at 7 30 p m Work m first
degree
DISABLF:D Amencan
Veterans regular August
meetmg ha s been cancelled,
but mstead a p1cnic for
members and wtves wtll be
held at Forest Acres Park,~
New L1ma Road, Rutland"
Mem bers are to meet at the
hall m Pomeroy at 5·30 p m.
e nrou te lo the p1cmc Those ·
attending are to take a covered d1sh
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY Masomc Lodge
164, 7 30 p m . Work m EA
degree All master mason s
invited

Play it oare an.t l!1lR
It may be time to
have your preaenl-i
policy updated.
•

Let's rarlc Soon

DALE C. WARNER
992 -2143
102 W Ma1n

Pomeroy

*Woolly Bear sez-

"Don't get caught with your
winter heating bills up!'
I

'

cD®~ou ®!!ll?

~Cilb

~[J@ ilifl dOOl?o [;(]~
,.Improve "four attic insulation.
,. Have your gas furnace checked.
,. Join Columbia's Budget Payment Plan.
The Budget Payment Plan spreads your yearly heat1ng bills over twelve
monthly paymenls II doesn I el1mmate the ch1tl of w.nter weather,
but •t sure takes th e sh1ver out of w •nter heat 1ng bills

Over the course of the yae r you st 11 1 pay the same to tal amount for
gas But come January and February when you re ge llmg those b•g
Chns lmas bills you wont be gettmg those b•g hea l •ng bills too

How the Budget Payment Plan worksYour Budgel Payment accounl
will be revrewed and adjusted •f
necessary m Apnl In July you
w111 be btlled the amoun l nec essiry to settle your accounl The
exam ple shown il lustrates the
way the plan works (naturally
the amou nt s 1n your own account
w1lt be d•llerent)
The Budget Paymen t Plan year
bigms m_Au,gus l
See your Budget Payment
amount on yo ur Aug ust gas bi ll

Amount
Boiled

M onth

Aug

0 The WOI&gt;II y uelr

th.lllully IJIJCO ar d tlfOw l
CJ'f'•C Uar o1 1toe 1 ger motn
~ t! Ccor :J ng
" n.: •a Had•l on 1 ,chab ~ 'o•cca 1 o'
w 'l I' ,yeal h"'' Tn;; na rr ower il"'"' '1!\lC•J".r
or own hand aruu11 d h•s modr!l(' Inc cold(;
'""' w n c ~ .., ,... -.o re ::r ac • , e more tJII'a •

t

6 36

Budget Amount
You Pay

s

27 00

Sept

8 73

27 00

Oc l

21 68

27 00

No'

26.92

2700

Dec

4402

2700

Jan

49.36

27.00

Feb

52 86

27.00

Ma'

45 21

27.00

April

28.62

27 00

May

13.17

27 00

June

10 95

27 00

July

8.76

19 64

$31664

$316 64

~LUMBIAGAS
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4 - The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pom~royc 0 , Monday, Au~ 11, 1975

Southland tour is into Ohio history
PORTSMOUTH - A piC· toor
lure of Oh1o's past m SouthCHILLICOTHE
Central Ohio, mcludm g ,
( 11) Adena. western end of
Chillicothe, Bambndge and Allen Avenue. off SR 104
Greenfield, make up th1s Slone mansiOn of Georgian
week 's suggested AAA arch itecture. naY. a state
OHIO'S SOUTHLAND tour
memonat Bmlt m 1806-()7 by
There Is much history to Thomas Worthmgton, s1xlh
explore
1n
OHIO'S governor of Ohw Des1gned
SOUTHLAND and not all of 1t by Benjamm I.Mrobe, wh o
IS locked away m museums
directed construch on of the
Th1s week 's tnp mcludes the Na taon s Capitol In keepm g
outdoor htstortcal drama, w1th V1rg1ma Plantatwn
TECUMSEH , the mo s t theme, a ten an l house, bar n
Widely acclaimed pageant m and spnnghouse have been
the mtdwest We w111 also sec constructed on the s 1tes of the
the country's first dental ongmal blllldmgs Overlook
school and Ohio's f1rst prov1des breathtakmg v1ew
capital
of the hills reproduced on the
W1th
gasoline pnces Great Sea l of Oh10 Adskyrocketmg, it pays to be a rnlsswn c harge
"GAS WATCHER" One way
I 21 Chilli cothe Gazette, 50
to cut the cost of dn vmg 1s to West Mam Street Oldest
mv1te a fnend or neighbor on co nti nuous ly published newsyour weekend dnves and spli t papel west of the Atleghemes
the cost of f1llmg the tank
I 1800 I Housed m r ephca of
Allow enough lime on your Ohio s f1rs t cap1tol blllldmg
trip to observe the 55 mph Closed Sunday and maJOr
speed llm1t You w1ll dnve ho lid ays
Open Monday
more safely and see more,

lh1 ough Fnday, 8 lO to 5,
Saturday to noon
1'l 1 Ross County H1stoncal
Society Muse um , 45 West 5th
Street Features exh1b1ts of
p10neer criclfts, hrearms
fw mtm e, roy s, c;ostwnes and
In dian room and Oh1o' s
ConstJiu tw u Table
AdlnlSSIOn charge
i 4 l Tct:wn seh
An outdo OJ
h1 stonca l
dr etrna
presented from June through
early Scptcm be1 at Sugarludd Muuntam Amphltheat
located near Chilh t:othe
IIAINBRIDGF:
t51 State Parks
Three
exce ll ent state parks are m
the are&lt;:~ ~ Rocky Fork, near
Hill sbo ro , P1ke, sou th of
Ba wbr~d ge. Sew to Trail,
sout h of Chillic othe They are
differ enl m cha r acter and
offer a w1de array of outdoor
f::tcllilics

16)

Dental
Museum,
located west on Mam St1ee t
m a 1m} bUJidmg wh1ch from

Royals pull within 5%
games of Oakland
By BILL MADDEN
UPI Sports Writer
John Mayberry IS making a
prophet out of two Kansas t
City Royal managers
"in order for thiS club to be
a pennant contender, we've
gotta have a big year from
John Mayberry," SB!d ex.
Royals' manager Jack
McKeon in spring trammg
"This Is a helluva hall club
and there's no reason why we
can't start winning ," sa1d
Whitey Herzog upon succeeding McKeon last month
Thanks to Mayberry, who
has now hit safely m 14
straight games, the Royals
have started winning agam
and with Sunday's 5-1 victory
over the Cleveland Indians,

Linescores
Sunday's Baseball Result s
Un1fed Press International
Na1•onal League
SF
001 130 300- 8 13 0
Phd
000 010 000 I 8 1
Barr ( 10 9J and Rader
Ruth-ven , Hilgendorf (51.
Sc hueler (6), Gerber (7)
Twttchell 181 and Oates LP
Ruthven (1 II
H RS
Matthews 1 (5th and 6th l

ooo

100 ooo ~ 1 1 o
000 100 000-- I 3 0
Sullen I 16 9 1 and Yeager
Webb , Baldwm 16 ). Sander s
( 81 , Lockwood
181
and
Ste arns LR Webb (4 51
HR - Hale (61hl

LA
NY

( 10 inn•ngsl

SO
000 000 100 I ~ 1 7 1
ST L
000 000 100 '1 - 3 10 1
Mcintosh, Fr •sella (7)
Gre•f ( 9 1 and Kendall Reed
Hrabosky (9 ) and S1 mmon s
WP - Hrabosky (10 ]) LP
Gre•f 1 (3 4l 1 HRS - Fa•rly
(6th ), Fuentes !Jrdl Redz
(4th)

' '

Mont
000 OOJ 000
3 11 3
C1n
000 147 04x II 16 I
carr!lhers
Fryman (5),
Murray (6) Tay lor J8J and
Foote , Norman Eastw, ck 161
and Bench WP - Nor man {7
3I L P
Carnthers ( I 1 l
HRS Foote {6thl. Fos t er

••

(19th)

P11fS
000 001 101 ~ 3 6 J
Hous
400 010 OOx - 5 1 0
Rooker,
Tekulve
(71
Demery 19) and Sanguillen
R•chard. Cosgrove 178 1 and
Ju tze WP - R• char d 18 8 1
LP
Rooker (8 81
Ch•
001 111 050- 9 11 0
All
000 000 010- I 5 3
Bonham (11 8) and Hosley
Odom, Sadeckt 17), Beard 191
and Pocoroba LP
Odom
II 51 HR - Lum {5th)
~
Amertcan league
Mmn
000 000 702 - 4 9 0
Oet
000 000 000 - 0 4 '2
Blyleven Ill 6) and Borg
mann, Root
!7 J
Ba r e
Reynolds (8) and F r ee han
LP - Bare (6 7) H R
Roof
I '2nd l

they stand only 51', games
behmd the Oakland A's m the
American League west
pennant
race
'
Mayberry drove home four
runs, three w1th h1s 26th
homer of the year, and, w1th
81 RB!s , IS now headed for h1s
best season ever. The Royals,
meanwhile, have won 14 of 18
games under Herzog
"There's a lot more talent
here than I thought," Herzog
sa1d "Even though I d1dn't
thmk we'd be 14-4 at thiS
point , 1f we had some healthy
lefthanders m the bullpen, we
could have been 17-1 "
Mayberry , who IS hillmg
.453 m his last 18 games,
credits his hat revtval to
better concentratiOn
Elsewhere m the AmeriCan
League, Boston downed Oakland 7-4, Cahforrua blanked
New York 1-(), Milwaukee
upended Texas 7-4, Ch1cago
shaded Baltimore 3-2 and
Mmnesota
whitewashed
Detroit W
Red Sox 5, A's 3
Cecil Cooper and Jun R1ce
e;~ch slugged two..-un homers
as the Red Sox mcreased
their lead over Baltunore m
the AL East to 7 games.
Cooper's lOth homer of the
year followed Bernie Carbo's
single In the first Inning,
while Rice's 19th followed a
walk to Cooper m the fourth
Luis Tiant (13-11) was the
winner w1th help from two
relievers.
White Sox 3, Orioles 2
Jorge Orta's game-wmrung
double climaxed a three..-un
ninth mrung upr1smg by the
White Sox, who had been
handcuffed on four hits lly
Orioles' starter M1ke Torrez
up to that point Prior to
Orta's h1t, which scored Pat
Kelly from first base, Bnan
Downing tied the score with a
two..-un homer off reliever
Grant Jackson Ken Singleton
hit a solo homer for
Baltimore in the e1ghth.
rwins 4, Tigers ()
Minnesota's Bert Blyleven
hurled a four-h1tter to send
the reeling Tigers down to
their 15th stratght loss, extending the1r own club record
for futility. Jerry Terrell
doubled and Rod Carew hit a

t82b to 11!:!1 housed the f1rst
!-it huol m Lhe coun try
Foundc1 Dr John Harns,
numbc 1ed
a mung
h1 s
stud ents two men who later
es ta bli shed the first two
dental colleges, Baltimore
a nd Cmcwnat1 On d1spla)
are dental 1nstrumenls and
equipm e nt used dur~ng
pwneermg days of dental
sw gc1y Free
r i 1 Fo 1t
Hilt State
Mcmonal, 1,186 acres about
m1les southwest off SR 41
r eh 1stonc eart hw or k
bell •ved to have been built by
lh Hopel'e ll Jn d1a ns Encl smg 48 acre s the Y.alls ar e
about 8,500 feel along, 10 to 20
feet h1 gh and 30 to 40 feet
th1ck A museum rcatures
d1splays on geo logy, plant
and &lt;:~mmal life and on the
Hopewe ll lnd1ans
18) Pa1nt Valley Skyline
Dn ves
Start m g
from
Bambiidge, four loop routes,
varymg fr om 9 to :m miles,
traverse lhe va ll ey to Lhe
surnm1ts of some of Ohio's
most spectacular hill s
( 91 Se1p Mount State
Memonal, 10 acres, 3 m1les
eas t on US 50, contams a
great central mound, 250 feet
lon g, 150 feet "'de, 30 feel
h1gh, of the Se1p group ThiS
complex ongmally conSisted
of sevenll mounds and a
senes of earthen e mbankments
A pavilion
denial

pmch-h1t sacnf1ce fly m the
seventh for Twms' hrst two
rtms. Detrmt has not scored a
run m 1ts last' 20 mnrngs and
has only one m its last 28
Blyleven {11-6) struck out SIX.
Angels I, Yankees 0
AKRON , OhiO (UP! ) Lee Stanton doubled home
Tom Weiskopf sa1d 11 and
Tommy Harper w1th one out Jack Nicklaus agrees
m the bottom of the nmth for
"I'm sure Ja ck · w1ll look
the game's only run and
hack at this year as the year
p1tchers Bill Smger and
he gave the grand slam
M1ckey Scott combmed on a
away,'' said Weiskopf.
four-h1tter in the Angels '
" Yes ," sa 1d Nicklaus
VIctory Stanton, the Angels'
followmg his fourth PGA lltle
leading RBI man w1th 53,
and 16th maJor tournament
stroked h1s garne-w1nnmg hit
wm Sunday at the Ftrestone
off Rudy May
Country Club, " I suppose of
Brewers 7, Rangers 4
the four maJor tournaments,
George Scott drove home
I had a better chance to wm
three runs w1th four hits them this year than ever
( mcludmg a solo homer) m
before ''
helpmg the Brewers snap a
"The Open I had and gave
s1x-ga me losmg streak Scott
tt away," he sa1d, "and the
smgled m the first, stroked
Bntish was almost g1ven lo
RBI singles m the th1rd and
me''
fourth and belted hiS 24th
N1cklaus, whose wmrungs
homer m the sixth Pete
th1s year total $248,599,
Broberg {10-10) was the
hmshed two shots behind
wirmer
playoff wmner Lou Graham
M&lt;qor L eag ue L ea d er~
and John Mahaffey m the
Un1t ed Pr ess lnternat•ona t
Qpen and was only one shot
L C' ad.ng Bt'lltcr ~
(base d on 275 at bats)
behind Jack Newton and
Nat•onal L ea que
w1nner
Tom \'Iatson who
9 ab r h pel
Mdlock. Ch 98 393 51 \36 346
played off for the British.
Nickl a us, however, left
S• mmons S t L
little chance for error m
111 399 50 135 338
Watsn H 106 399 55 137 33 1 Sunday's fmal round. He shot
Joshu, SF 95 368 10 1? 1 3?'i'
a one over 71 for a 72-hole
Brck St L 91 3&lt;17 59 114 3?.9
score of 276, four under par.
Sangudlcn Pill
97 359 4 1 117 3'}5
He went mto the day w1th a
Rose Cn 115 483 70 157 3?5
four shot edge over Bruce
Grvy LA 116 480 OJ 156 375
Prkr Pll 103 J83 57 liB 3?1
Crampton .and after the first
Mrgn Cn 106 369 76 I 18 3?0
three holes , two of wh1ch be
Amencan L eague
Q
01 b r h pc1
bogeyed, played like a fmely
Carew M1nn
tuned
engme until he had 1t
107 400 7 1 148 370
Lynn Bs 10&lt;1 378 7'l 116 333
wrapped up.
Hargrove TcX
Crampton, who hung m
103 364 6 1 I Ill J IY
Wash m g ton Oak
gamely through 14 holes,
106 4?? 60 133 315
fmtshed
w1th a 69 and a 278
Munson NY
Ill 417 5'i' 13 1 3 14
total, one better than
MeR KC 10! &lt;1\1 SO 1?8 311
Weiskopf
who had a closmg 69
R tce Bs.
100 4? 1 71 127 JO:&gt;
Powll Clv 90 :&gt;95 4? 88 ?98 and 279
Mannmg Clcv
Andy North, w1th the fmal
75 306 45 9 1 791
Orta Ch 1 97 375 47 111 796 round's best score, a hve
Hom e Run s
under 65, finished fourth a
Nat1onat L eag ue L u zm sk1
Ph1l ?8
Schm1dt P h1l 75
281, wh1le Hale Irwm, w1th a
K •ngman NY 74 Bench , Cm
fmal round 73, and B1lly
?? Stargelt , P.tt ?0
Amer1can
League
Casper, who had a 70,
Jackson Oak ?8 Mayberry ,
fimshed at 283.
K C 70 Scott. M d ?d Bonds
NY ??
Burroughs Tex ?1
Nicklaus, who sa1d he
Runs Batted In
the best four roWids
played
Nat1onal Leagu e
L uzm s k1 ,
Phd 94
Bench , C•n 92
he had ever played m one
Watson Hou 78 Slaub NY
tournament
at Firestone,
and Montanez SF 74
Am encan League
Lynn
bogeyed the first hole, birdied
Bos 81 Mayberry KC 81
the
second and bogeyed the
May Ba ll and R •ce, Bos 80
Hort on
Det and Jackson
third in a rather erratic start.
Oak 75
But he settled down and

'· -'=== .

d1s pl ay mg graphlt: material
related to the mound complex
IS free P 1cm( kmg Open
durmg daylight hours
t 10 1 Seven Caves, 4 m1les
west and 1 m1le south of US
50 F.ach cavern IS electncally 1llummated and has
cement walks Entrances are
found at mtervats a long three
d iffe ren t foot trails traverSing the scemc lOG-acre park
P1cmc a1eas available.
Admi SSIOn charge
CIRCLEVILLE
1111 Circleville Canal, one
m1 te south of US 22, west of
Circleville. Si te of a fiv e-mile
portion of the Ohw-Ene
Canal Good fl shmg, h1king.
1121 Logan E lm , f1 ve m1les
sout h of C~rctev1lle, one m1le
east of US 2.1 on SR 361
Legendary Site of Ch 1ef
Logan s
s peec h,
177 4
Daylight hours P1cmckmg
I 1.1 1 A W Manon State
Park
Offers facilities for
campm g, boahng, f1shmg and
pi CniCk in g
GREENFIELD
t 141 Paml Creek Lake
New 1,200acre take located m
H1 gh land an d Ross co un lies
near Greenfield Pamt Creek,
the longes t cr eek m the
Umted States, and the lake
are a U S Army Corps of
Engmeers project for flo()(j
control , w1th provisions made
for boatmg, flshmg, h1kmg,
campmg and S\!.Immmg

•

~

,
•
•
••
•
••

•
"

quarters or a century
thousands of people have
adm~red the beaulllul murals
on the comdor walls . It was
not unt1l August 1956
that 1dent1ty of the artist who
pamted them, Archibald M
Willard, who also pamted the
famous patnohc picture

and beautiful drapes, flowers
and garlands ln the alcove
around the 36 by 30 It
corrtdor on the second floor,
wh1ch was opened in May,

" Sptnt of
'76," was
established through efforts of
the Fayette County Htstor~cal
Soc1ety In additiOn to three
large murals on the Side walls
of the corridor, there are
numerous hfe-stze ftgures

areas.

1885
AAA urges you to drive
carefully The Map shows
suggested routes to tour

yolil[

life insUtJ • lie

pay.h

mortgage?
.,.lhi,.

Perhllllll
~,..
M mueft left tor~
ltmtty 1 llwil'l lllplll!la.
NatJ!)mft6t " • • .
.,.,.,.,
. ..
...,,.
ptan that c.n twlp, ofW

Nicklaus wins 16th big tournament
from the third hole to the
18th, wh1 c h he double
bogeyed after dnvmg under
an evergreen tree , he was
near perfect.
"I srud to myself 'you make
a four at 17 and go to 18and do
anythmg you want.' And I
did ," he laughed .
But Crampton, who m1ssed
a 10-foot birdie putt at 17
which could have truruned
the fmal spread to JUS! one
shot, said he felt Nicklaus
wouldn 't have taken a SIX at
18. Nicklaus agreed
N1cklaus, who now has four
PGA hUes , can tie Walter
Hagen for the most PGA wms
next year at Congressional m
Washmgton, D C "I'd like to
be able to tiC that record ," he
•
said
Although Sunday's v1ctory
was h1s 16th maJor VIctory,
Nicklaus said he savored it as
much as the rC$1, except
possibly the hrst.
"Each one adds 1ts own
dimensiOn," sa1d the Golden
Bear " Anytune I whip a
tough golf course and a field
like
th1s,
it 's
pretty
satisfying "
Crampton, who has now
f1mshed second to Ntcklaus In
four maJor tournaments In
the past four years, the 1972
Masters and U.S. Open and
the 1973 PGA, said he felt he
played well and 1s "proud to
finish second to Jack any

•
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WASHJNGTONC H.
I 15 )
Fayette
County
HIStorical Center, Museum ,
located east end of Court
Street. five blocks east of
Courthouse on US 22, 62 Bwlt
m 1875, 1ts Mid-VI ctorian
archttecture wtth 1ron sptral
sta 1rway, extendtng £rom
second to th1rd floors and
w1th 1ts gold colored steps,
as the "Golden
known
Stairs "
116 ) Archibald M Willard
Murals
In Fayette County
Courthouse For nearly three

tune I play "
Crampton, who had fallen
four shots off the pace
Saturday after leading by
four going mto the third
round, trailed by only two
shots until he bogyed the 15th.
Nicklaus, playmg m the next
threesome, knocked m a 20footer for a bird and a four

shot margrn
After that, it was only a
matter of playing out the
holes.
"At that stage, I was just
trymg to stay ahead of Tom
(Weiskopf)
and
flmsh
second,'' Crampton sa1d
"After Jack h1t 1! over the
water on 16, that's about all
there was left for me."

I lftOtltett. H ,... ... Clll

REVENUE

$16,990

POMEROY VILLAGE 690
VILLAGE CLERK
POMEROY, OHIO 45769

10 EOUCAliON

I

1 B•l•nc:en ol June JO 1~14

•-~-~~-

2 11-nu• Shtunv Fulld1
16,990
Rtceved lram Jul~ 1 1114\hr~JuneJO 11175 ' --~--3 lnlt~e•l Rletiwod

'::======

Crtdlled 1.1111~ l 19l4 rhru J u~ 30 19151
4 Fund• AIIIIMCI lrom Oboh~..,,.
I

Ot

II Funda Rerurntd

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POMEROY VILLAGE

5 Sumolh..al 2 3

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11.. •Kt•....t G•ne•• Rev...... Shlrino
ur,...nlllotlhng

I \ SOCIAL
OtVHQ,IOIEHl

l

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ACTUAL USE REPORT

SHARING

''r

• Nation ld1 ,......._,,

GENEAAL

'*

·-~~-~­

1oORS

·-~~---

1 l01811'undl ·~lillbl&lt;l

·-~~~--

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I am the
proud owner of an old trunk
dated 1904 It is very sturdy
and well built but the paint on
the putstde 1s qu1te scratched
and metal remforcements on
the corners are dull looking
The ms1de has three drawers
and the ongmal cloth llmng
Is there any way I can re store
th1s to 1ts or~ginal look ' MRS TV
DEAR MRS. T.V. - There
is such as thing as over-.
restoring and trying to give a
brand new look to something
one is treasuring because of
its age or sentimental attachments. Many In the know
consider it disastrous to see
every spot and blemish
removed from an old piece as
the disappearance of such
service marks remove its
real character.
Why not use matching color
liquid shoe polish to remove
some of the scratches and
dinginess on the outside?
Then it would not look too new
as 11 might after being
painted. If the metal comers
on your trunk are just dull,
not rusty, try using a good
metal polish to brighten them
- maybe a floe steel wool
pad could be used first to
wash and clean them. They
could always be painted
FLAT black If all else failed.
If the trunk Is to be put to
some practical storage use it
would
be
easier
to
"\\allpaper" the entire Interior \lith adhesive-backed
paper rather than to glue on
new fabrle. Let some of those
battle scars remain - you
are not working with a true
antique so can enjoy more
freedom. - POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Peeve IS w1th the poor qual1ty
thread used for stitchmg
children 's winter jackets and
snow sw ts. Mter just a few
weanngs they so often spht m
the seams
Unht
!he
manufacturers correct this
my own solutiOn for mendmg
such seams 1s to use a smgle
strand of phentex yarn and a
large needle and then pull the
needle through w1 th the

•
Independent
Wealth.
Itdidrit
come EASY.
Basictlly. we were
hom &amp;roke.
So Americans got
together and loaned
their new govemment
over $27.000.000
on faith alone.
Eventually, at was
that faith Ihat won the
war and oar freedom.
Today. that faath is
still alive.
Over 9~ millaon
modern Americans
bay United States
Savings Bonds
regularlgtkoa@a the
Payroll Savings Plan
••• aliCI othen where
they l&gt;aak.
And while their
savings grow. they're
helpiag t•eir cowntry
grow, too.
Independently.

PUBLIC NOTICE
Oh1o s Proposed Comprehensive Annual Serv1ces Plan (CASP) -

T 1tle XX

SUPPLEMENTAL INFORMATION

Add1t1onal mform at1on IS now available to Oh10' s Title XX CASP and/o r Detailed Summary as md1cated
below
1 Method of del1very of serv1ces (d~rect, purchase public or pnvate). Estimated numbers of
persons and est1mated expenditures by Serv1ce .
Geograph1cal Area . categones of e i1Q1ble
persons (CASP reference pp 13-17)
2 Organ1zat1onal structure of the State Agency- ODPW (Exh1b1t 3 - CASP)
3 Add1t1onal components related to Serv1ce Defm1t1ons (GASP pp 1 8-24)
4 Resources (money) Federal, State, Local (GASP p 12 and Detailed Summary p 7)

Salt
000 000 0 1\ -.- 2 7 I
Ch1
000 000 003 - 3 6 'J
Torrez.
Jackson
(9),
Gnmsley (9) and Duncan
Kaat, Gossage
(9 ) and
Oown•ng WP -- Gossage (6
61 LP- Jackson !3 31 HRS
- Smgleton I 13th). Oownmg

ACTUAL USE REPORT

5 Display Advertisement add1t1on (telephone local welfare department to request Deta 11ed Summary or to purchase complete Proposed CASP
Public Review and Comment

(7th l

KC
Cleve

ooo 001 ooo ~ 1 8 o
Fitzmorr1s. Briles {61 and
Martmez . Ra 1ch Wa1ts {71
and Elhs WP - F•tzmorr•s
(119 ) LP - · Ra1ch (6 7l H R
- Mavberry {261hl

,.

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,.-;c;,;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;~r-----f-----j

Calif

36..] 053 005

' "
2 lltvenue Sl\111119 f ur&gt;c11

May (11 7) and Herrm ann,
S1nger , Scott (9) and Hamp
ton WP - Scott (3 11

fttcervedffomJ~Iyt li7411'1111June30 1915

3 lm""' Aectl¥td

1~7·

Or er.dot•d W11ly I
tllru June
4 f11nda R1l~ fr~~m Obhgarlona

Bos
200 100 001 - 5 II 0
Oak
ooo 200 001 · 3 7 o
:r.ant.
BUrton
{8),
W1lloughb\l (91 and Fisk,
Bosman , ioss (4) Lmdblad
01 , Fmgers (9) and Tenace
WP - T1ant llA 111 LP
Bosman U 4) HRs - Cooper
(lOth}, ~ Rice (19th), Tenac ~
fl81hl

I

dum'ljthllperood rromJuty 1 1974th•u Jun•30 1975

Public Review and Copies

SYRACUSE VILLAGE 6f!
VILLAGE CLERK
SYRACUSE, bHIO &lt;5779

000 000 000· 0 4 0
000 1 000 001 1 4 l

NY

$2,165
./ACCOUN T NO

Tex
103 ooo 000- 4 8 1
Mdw
014 101 OOx - 7 11 "J
Hands. Moore 13}. Um
barger (3). Thomas (7) and
Sundberg, Colborn , Currence
(3), Broberg 14 ), Murphv !91
and Porter W P - Broberg
00 10~ LP -· Hands (6 7J
HR - 'Scott (24th)

'

The Supplemental mformat1on IS for public rev1ew and comment.
from August 11th 1975 to September 25th, 1975

003 000 002- 5 8 0

30

ViSit your loqal ~ounty Welfare Department to

v1ew the Supplemental mformat1on 1n CASP
Telephone your local County Welfare Department to request a deta1ted summary w1thout
cost or to arrange for purchase of the complete
proposed CASP for $5

ATTENTION

••--.:''2'£'616"
3""'8-'"""~::::
tvl-

Meigs County Welfare Department

$. _ __:c•=~"'~"---

175 Race Street. Box 191
Middleport
Phone: 992-2117

34,803,&amp;

1 ~151 S==

~~==

5 Sum ollone• I 2 J 4

S
s

II l'undi iiiM"-ii toORS

•--'-:-7:;.,-,.,...~

1 T01et Fund• Avllillblt

'' "~:...:;S.o
'·"'800="""--

~

James A Rhodes
Governor

State of Oh1o

~

I

.

Comments and Copies
Wntten comments on the supplemental mformatlon may be made to your County Welfare Department or to the DIVISion of Soc1al Serv1ces
Oh1o Department of Publ1c Welfare Wntte~
comments and requests for cop1es may be ad·
dressed to
Mrs Mildred Madry, Ch1ef
DIVISion of Soctal Serv1ces

Oh1o Department of Public Welfare
30th Floor, 30 East Broad Street
Co lumbus, Oh1o 43215
Raymond F McKenna
'D1rector
·~
Oh1o Qepartment of Public Welfare

'

I'ULL Y CRAMER

pliers Seams flxed thiS way
have never ripped open agam
but usually a split appears
somewher e
else
SHERRY
DEAR READERS - The
yarn Sherry refers to is a
synthetic type often used to
make rugs. It's very tough
and hard to break but a bit on
the heavy side. - POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - A reader
wrote that s he could not
remove grease spots from
her mdoor-outdoor kitchen
carpet so I want to pass on to
her the way I clean both wool
and man-made fiber rugs It
IS really an updatmg of an
old, old method Clean as
much grease as possible off
w1th your usual meth&lt;&gt;&lt;l and
then pile cornmeal on the
spot so 1t IS from one..etghtll to
one-fourth mc h th1ck Rub '"
thoroughly w1th the fmgers
and leave 1t Walk on 11 when
need be and after 24 hours
vacuwn 1t Repeal several
times The cornmeal absorbs
the remammg grease I have
used th1s to clean off heavy
transmtsswn grease from
farm machmery that was
madvertently tracked m and
ground mto a synthetic fiber
rug It took patience but
worked - VIRGINIA
You will receive a dollar If
Polly uses your favorite
homemaking Idea, Pet
Peeve, Polly's Problem or
solution to a problem. Write
Polly in care of this newspaper.

Family
gathers
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Roush,
Rt 4, Pomeroy, hosted a
fam1ly gathermg last Sunday
at the1r home
Attending were Gerry
Kessmger, K1m and L01s
Ann, Kevin and Christy
Smith, Becky and Kenny
Roush, Pomeroy; Mrs. Joan
Penestin, Jeff, Curtis and
Cynthia and Greg Warpole,
Jacksonville, N. C.; Mr. and
Mrs
Larry
Flowers,
Columbus; Mr and Mrs
Dale Roush, Sherrie and
Dav1d, St Albans, W Va ;
Mr and Mrs Roger Roush
and son, Doug, Pataskala,
Mr and Mrs. Leonard Miller ,
Melissa and Joe, Leon, W
Va.
Mrs Penes tin and children
spent a week here w1th her
parents Last Monday Mrs
Penestm and Cindy jomed
Mrs Albert Roush and
Chnsty Sm1th for a trip to
Columbus to see Mrs Kathy
Sm1th, a patient for the past
17 weeks at Mount Carmel
West Hospital
On Sunday afternoon a
surpnse fam1ly party was
held m observance of the
birthdays of K1m and L01s
Ann, grandchildren of Mrs.
Kessmger
Other weekend VISitors of
Mr and Mrs. Roush were Mr.
and Mrs
Roy M1ller,
Columbus, Mrs. Garnet
Herdman
and
Bonme
Matheny and son, Doug, of
Leon, W Va.

Fairview
News Notes
Mr. and Mrs Ronald
Russell, Mike and Mandy of
Wolf Pen, Mrs. Gladys
Sluelds, granddaughter, Mrs.
Debbie Hagen and son VISited
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roush
and children.
Ronald Russell of the Anny
Reserves was stationed m
Wisconsin for two weeks.
Mrs. Russell and children
viSited Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Roush from Sunday till
Thursday durmg h1s absence.

RETURN FROM TRIP
TUPPERS PLAINS - Mr,
and Mrs. Dale Welsh, Dale,
Jr., and Mildred B1ssell have
returned from a two week
tnp through the western
Umted States. They traveled
through 16 states, VISiting the
Grand Canyon, Oral Roberts
Umvers1ty in Tulsa, Okla.,
Las Vegas and numerous
A fl'lbllc HMCe ol 111• putlolleMIOfl
h
f
-"-----' ot er pomts o mterest.
l!~;:::.:"";,.';:~:,:-::;.:.....;'".'"""

5CYI1J ANNIVERSARY APPROACHES - Mr and Mrs Curtis D. Johnson, Rt 1,
Racme, will celebrate their 50th wedding anmversary Aug. 18 The couple w111 hold an open
house Aug . 17 from 2-Sp.m m celebration of the event

Church entitled "The Day the
Kloes, Cathy Moore, Oma
Wtnebrenner, Lilhe Starcher.
Lord Came to Town," w1th
Vernon Nease presentmg a
Sadte Brown, Mr a nd Mrs
g1ft from that c hurch
Car l Weese, Judy, Jackie and
Jcme Ann W1Lhams, J ohn
Both the m1mster and h1 s
w1fe responded w1lh remarks
Tucker, Mr and Mrs J ohn
of apprec1at10n to the church
Lisle and sons, Scott a nd
Todd, Robert Flanaga n, Mr
congregatiOns Mrs Kloes,
and Mrs Carroll Norns, Mr
Mrs Jenkms and Don Harden
sang "Sweet, Sweet Spmt,"
and Mrs Don Harden and D
J , Elea nor Robson, Mr and
and the Rev Mr JarviS
closed with prayer
Mrs Paul Kloes and Mi chae l.
Attending the re ce pt1 on
Mrs. Dorothy Harden, [\Irs
were Mr. and Mrs B1ll
Gladys Robson, Mr and Mrs
Wmebrenner , Mr and Mrs
Franklin Rizer , Beth and
K1m Ewmg, Icy M1ller,
Richard Ash, Mr and Mrs
Nettle Moor e, Norma Baker,
Vernon Nease, and Stanley,
Mr and Mrs
Richard
Ricky, Angle and Nancy
Thomas, Mr and Mr s
W1lliam Ru sse ll , Alfred
Yeauger, June Sayre, Marcia
Karr , Etleen Clark, Donna
S1mms, Thelma Hawley ,
Soma Ash, Tonia Ash, Mr
and Mrs Mtllard Van Meter,
Elva Datley , Knstm Paper,
DARWIN - The 51s t anAnn Sauvage, Mr and Mrs
nual Hayes . Young . Holiday
Roy Jenkms and Kimberly ,
Mtck Ash, Donna and Bob School Reun1on wa s held Aug
3 on the old Holiday School
Sm1th, Margaret E1chmger,
ground near Darwm
Helen Teaford
A bas ket dmner was e n·
Mr and Mrs Donald Lisle,
JOyed at noon w1th Albert
Mrs Anna Hildore, Kathleen
F nend askmg the blessmg
Scott, Ann Watson, Marybelle
The afternoon program
Warner, Brad and Helen
was opened by Hollie V
Maag, Stella Grueser, Ed·
Ha}
es Pnnc1pal speaker
mood Grueser , Kenneth
was Rev Frank Cheese brev.
W1ggms, Opal and Karl
of Sl1awnee, OhiO His top1c
... , ......... , .................·.·.;,...-........, ·····x.:o:.:.._~ was
"Chns lian
In 111-~~m:&lt;i~-..-...--;•:...~·
··~ • • .-w.•,.,.,•,•,•.•••w.•.:.:-:-:-:-:-:·:•:•,•.·,•,·.·.•, ••,.,.,.,·,•,•,•,•, ,•,···" ••....,
debtedness "
~~ Hollie V Hayes was re.:·:
:~ elected president and Mrs
Jack Jordan was elected
'
secretary -I reasurer
By Helen Bottel ~: Olhers taking part m the
,, program were
·=-~
Readmg of the mmutes by
Ma nda Eastman;
Fern
Open Letter ro Parents
Cheesebrew presented a
Dear Helen:
As manager of a small busmess, may I wr1te an open letter poem. " The Qmet Hour s,"
" It's Fme Today," read by
to parents:
Audra Hayes
Please, parents, do not send small children to the store
Charles and Helen Woode
alone. It IS ne1ther fair to the child or to the merchant. It puts
temptation m the way of the kids, and shoplifting has become a sang an msp1ratwnal song
w1th
Co lleen
Douga n
major problem for all ages.

A reception honormg the
Rev Ric hard Jarvis, pastor
of four Umted MethodiSt
Churches m Me1g s County ,
and h1s family was held
Thursday mght m the SOCial
room of the Asbury Church,
Syracuse
A covered d1sh dmner wsa
served Mrs. Ann Sauvage
extended the welcome and
spec1al mus1c was presented
by the pnmary children of
the Asbury Church under the
directio.PAf-Mrs Rose Ann
Jenkffi's, Sunday school
teacher. A tnbute to the
pastor was g1ven by Miss
Marcia Karr, and the combined choirs of the churches
presented a program of
mustc
Speaking m tnbute to the
Rev. Mr. J arv1s from the
Syracuse Church were Mrs
E1leen Clark, Mrs Donna
Stmms, Mrs Dorothy Harden, Mrs. Thelma Hawley ,
Mrs Icy Miller and Mrs
Nelt1e Moore Mrs Clark
presented h1m w1th a gift
Mrs Helen Maag made the
presentahon of a gift from the
Mmersv1lle Church, and Mrs
Opal Kloes presented the g1ft
from the Asbury Church
There was a tr1bute by Ann
Watson from the Forest Run

.

Helen Help

Us •••

Dear OWLCWTPT: .
I wonder 1f any supermarket manager has yet had the
nerve to post a notice: "Children under 10 must be accomparued by an adult." Would be interesting to learn whether
thiS rule would save merchandise - or lose adult customers. -

+++

Dear Helen:
"Not Emotionally Inolved" stated that she was sharmg an
apartment wtth a man on a roommate basis only (no sex) and
wanted to know how she should mtroduce hun. I refer ber to
''The Uberated Man," a book by Warren Farrell, Ph .D. in
Sociology. In 1t, he mtroduces what he calls "The Hmnan
Vocabulary." His words and defimtions Include·
" Attache": A person with whom one has a deep emotional
mvolvement, be it spouse, lover, heterosexual, homosexual,
bisexual or asexuaL Emotional relationship IS its only
distinguishing quality.
"Uving frtend" : A person w1th whom one IS livmg ; used
wben one does not wish to categorize the relationship as sexual
or deeply emot1onaL For example, elderly persons cohabiting
to save money, college roommates, or persons sharing an
apartment may or may not be sharmg sex. ThiS term seems to
fit NEI's case.
Farrell also came up with the ''Htunan Pronoun,'' wh1ch lS
to be used when referrtng to a htunan in generaL The pronouns

are:
Te (pronounced ''tea")- he or she (nominative)
Tes -his or hers (possessive)
Tir (rhymes with "her") -him or her (ObJective)
So the sentence, "A person get what he deserves" becomes
"A person gets what TE deserves." Statements having to do
with a specific sex remain the same.
Also thanks to the woman who wrote •about ''The Three
·'
Me's-feminine,
female; and feminist me." I have never seen
anything that came so close to my own feelings before. It's nice
to know that I'm not alone In the way I react. - A READER
Dear Reader:
Warren Farrell's three new words - te, tes and tir should get hearty approval from members of my profession.
Only a writer understands how much of TES time is wasted
trying to avoid those awkward ''he or She," ''his or hers," etc.
phrases. (And, of course, TE knows they're musts with the MS.
set.) - H

•

'

.'

'

I

'

~

Above all, please do not send children mto a store "to look "
while you are shopping In another store . Sma!l busmesses have
a tough enough tune wtthout being used as habys1tters.
And don't think that shoplifting IS confmed to any particular race, creed or standard of livmg. It covers all areas. ONE WHO LOVES CHILDREN AND WANTS TO PROTECT
THEM

H

Cool, S1stersv1lle, W. Va ,
Mrs . Clifford Schools. Pomt
Pleasant, W Va , Mr. and
Mrs Strawford Oh li nger,
Ray , Wayne, David, Ralph,
Ml Alto, W Va
Dale Roach , Mrs BesSie
Ohh n ~er,
Mrs
Jamce
Stan lev. Mr a nd Mrs Robert
Mathe.ny, Jumor, Mr and
Mrs David Frye. Joann.
Jason and Kevm Kmght, New
Ha ven W Va · Mrs Joyce
Zerkle, Stewart, James, Mrs
Amelia Roach, Hartford, W
Va , Mr and Mrs .James
Lavender, Randy, Ron me,
Estel, Ray, Rust}, Ricky,
Angela, Mrs Larry Gnmm,
Stacie, l.arr) Ray, Mrs
Donna Gnnstead, Demse,
Cmdy Brett, M1 s Raymond

contnbuted to the program
Har old Hayes had a message
for the people
The presentatiOn of g1fts
was to Guy Lee, the eldest
person prese nt, Mr . and Mrs
Homer Blackwood, traveled
the greates t diStan ce, and
Jason Jordan, the youngest
person pre se nt
Takm g part '" group
smgmg were Wilbur Ba1ley,
Guy Lee , Charles and Helen
Woode, Manda Eastman and
Audra Hayes
The rest of the afternoon
was spent m VISltmg and
playmg games
Atte nding
we r e
Mrs
Manda Eastman, Mr and
Mrs Ernest Wood , Mr and
Mrs Pearl G1lkey, Mr and
Mrs Wilbur Ba~ley, W1lhe
Qwvey , Guy W Lee, Mr and
Mrs Leroy Saulers, Mark ,
Timothy, Joy a nd Chern
Sauters, Melvm Morns, all of
Pomeroy; Mr and Mrs Jack
Jordan and Jason, Harry
Sm1th, Albany , Chnton
Douglas, Pomeroy, Ethe l
Blackwood, Albany ,
Florence Sloane, Mrs Lyd1a
Cam, Mrs Julia Graham,
Guy Gilkey, Carl Bnckles,
Luc1le Holden, Mrs Grace
Richard son, Mr s Edna 0
Hawk, all of Athens; Mrs
Mary K
Dearmg and
daughters, Linda and Kara,
Albany
Mr and Mr s Harold
Douglas, Albany, Mr. and
Mt;s Charles D Woode ,
Coolville; George Gilkey,
New Marshfield, Albert
Fnend, Loram, Debbie
Woolever, Betty Woolever,
Esther Sharp, Mr and Mrs
Harold Hayes, Charle s
Karns ,
Flora
Yates,
Rtcky Karns , Mr
and
Mrs Herman Woolever , Lo-

Stewart,
Nancy
and
Raymond. Mason, W, Va .;
Mr and Mrs Sunny Gibbs,
Rex . Mr and Mrs Ottie
Roach, Ahce M Roach, Mr .
a nd Mrs Richard K. John son, Mrs Stella Johnson,
Mrs Lmda lhle , Donna and
Debbie, Mrs Mona G1bbs,
Cha rles R R1ggs, Mr. and
Mrs. Don Zerkle, Mr. and
Mrs Robert Ohlinger, John,
Ta mm y, Roberta, Jeff,
Bobby Joe, Letart, W. Va.

Social
Calendar

Langsville
Mr and Mrs C E Denny
Wtlkesvllle , Ohio were
Sunday guest s of their
daughter and fam1ly , Mr and
Mrs Bruce Morr1s a nd
VISited w1th their granddaughter, Mrs Betty Wnght
and family
Mr and Mrs Michael Barr
spe nt a week '" Nil es ,
Michigan VISiting Mr and
Mrs George Brawley . They
went to Poteskey, M1ch1gan
and spent s ome time flshmg
Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Janey
and fam1ly returned home
after a week of vacatwnmg m
the southern states
of

51st school reunion
is held near Darwin

H a child MUST go to tbe store alone, please send a note prov1dmg accordiOn music
Manda E astman also
stating what he or she is to buy and how much should be spent.

I

__ ...,......_

NEW HAV EN, W Va. The descendants of John and
Amanda Aumiller Roach and
Strauther and Nancy G1bbs
Edwards held their annual
reun1on at the New Haven
Park Saturday. Aug 2
Attending
were
Mrs
Manrord Hutton , June Ann
and Jummc, Middleport. Mr
and Mrs Edward Spears,
Cheshire, Mrs Nettle Hemsley. Mrs
Ruby Sm1th ,
Syra c use; Mr and Mrs
Harold Jeffers, Mrs W1lma
Williams, Crooksv ille, Mrs
E lmer Graves, Zanesville.
Mr and Mrs Paul Spears,
R1cky, Sheila Ervm Paul
Cremea ns. Rosev ille , Mr
a nd Mrs Ralph Roach,
":olhe rs, W Va . Lon Ann

Church reception honors pastor

t·

'I'

I
l,

,;:,. '
•

Don 't over-restore
that old trunk

-

Chillicothe

New Haven park is
setting of annual reunion

and
Mrs
Frank A
Cheese brew .
Shawnee. Clifford R Hayes,
Mr and Mrs Gregory Hayes,
Middleport , L o u zetta
Dunlap , Columbus, D L
Bnckles. Mr and Mrs
Ronald Dougan , Mr and Mrs
Ned Swmdell , Camille, Paula
and Monte Swmdell, Crai g
Dougan, Tam1 Dougan, K1m
Stevers, Mrs Grace Hayes.
Mr and Mrs James Boy d,
Mr and Mrs Garold Ha yes,
Mr and Mrs Hollie W
Hayes , all of Shade, Mr and
Mrs Homer Blackwood.
Montgomery , Texas, Robbie
Estep, Athens; Greg James,
Logan
ga n,

Rev

MONDAY
RACINE ER Squad, 8 p m
at the f1re house All members and persons completing
the vital s1gns class are urged
to be at the f1re house at 7.30
p m to have pictures taken

Mr and Mrs Mtchael Barr
a nd Mrs
Alpha Barr
returned home after spendmg
a 1\eek at the home of Mr and
Mrs Blair Cadwallader and
sons of Seaman, Oh10
Mrs Alpha Barr was called
to Oak H1ll, OhiO by the death
of Henry Marlin, father of
Mrs Duane Barr.

Apple Grove
Mr . and Mrs. Wilham
W1ckllne and sons, Scott and
Kyle, Mrs Kathryn Hunt
were shoppmg at the K-Mart
at Parkersburg Saturdsy.
Mr and Mrs LoUie Pickett,
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Roush
assisted Mr. and Mrs .
Charles Michael With their
moving to their mobile home
Saturday
Mrs Robert Moms and
daughters are v1sihng
relatives in Cleveland .

TUESDAY
RACINE Masomc Lodge
461 at 7 30 p m Work m first
degree
DISABLF:D Amencan
Veterans regular August
meetmg ha s been cancelled,
but mstead a p1cnic for
members and wtves wtll be
held at Forest Acres Park,~
New L1ma Road, Rutland"
Mem bers are to meet at the
hall m Pomeroy at 5·30 p m.
e nrou te lo the p1cmc Those ·
attending are to take a covered d1sh
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY Masomc Lodge
164, 7 30 p m . Work m EA
degree All master mason s
invited

Play it oare an.t l!1lR
It may be time to
have your preaenl-i
policy updated.
•

Let's rarlc Soon

DALE C. WARNER
992 -2143
102 W Ma1n

Pomeroy

*Woolly Bear sez-

"Don't get caught with your
winter heating bills up!'
I

'

cD®~ou ®!!ll?

~Cilb

~[J@ ilifl dOOl?o [;(]~
,.Improve "four attic insulation.
,. Have your gas furnace checked.
,. Join Columbia's Budget Payment Plan.
The Budget Payment Plan spreads your yearly heat1ng bills over twelve
monthly paymenls II doesn I el1mmate the ch1tl of w.nter weather,
but •t sure takes th e sh1ver out of w •nter heat 1ng bills

Over the course of the yae r you st 11 1 pay the same to tal amount for
gas But come January and February when you re ge llmg those b•g
Chns lmas bills you wont be gettmg those b•g hea l •ng bills too

How the Budget Payment Plan worksYour Budgel Payment accounl
will be revrewed and adjusted •f
necessary m Apnl In July you
w111 be btlled the amoun l nec essiry to settle your accounl The
exam ple shown il lustrates the
way the plan works (naturally
the amou nt s 1n your own account
w1lt be d•llerent)
The Budget Paymen t Plan year
bigms m_Au,gus l
See your Budget Payment
amount on yo ur Aug ust gas bi ll

Amount
Boiled

M onth

Aug

0 The WOI&gt;II y uelr

th.lllully IJIJCO ar d tlfOw l
CJ'f'•C Uar o1 1toe 1 ger motn
~ t! Ccor :J ng
" n.: •a Had•l on 1 ,chab ~ 'o•cca 1 o'
w 'l I' ,yeal h"'' Tn;; na rr ower il"'"' '1!\lC•J".r
or own hand aruu11 d h•s modr!l(' Inc cold(;
'""' w n c ~ .., ,... -.o re ::r ac • , e more tJII'a •

t

6 36

Budget Amount
You Pay

s

27 00

Sept

8 73

27 00

Oc l

21 68

27 00

No'

26.92

2700

Dec

4402

2700

Jan

49.36

27.00

Feb

52 86

27.00

Ma'

45 21

27.00

April

28.62

27 00

May

13.17

27 00

June

10 95

27 00

July

8.76

19 64

$31664

$316 64

~LUMBIAGAS
I

'

�, I

7- The Dai)y.§entinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday , Au~: II . 1975
DI~TRACY
·

6- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday , Aug . II, 1975

'Wanted

....._.,.._r_
...........
._

I WPOR

r,.,~

models at

II
SAGYS

0

2 SIGNS

I

rENEELt
J

t

I

fuN]CALl

Pomeroy
OF
..
OUAUTY 'Moto.i:_.Co

[J

J

1975 MONTE CARLO LANDAU

[j

I [X J

Dark red, whtte vinyl top, loaded with extr~s Including
atr cond , tilt wheel. Cruise Control, custoni Interior,

TIME WHEN YOU
WER'E A e&gt;AB'Y.

power &amp; reclining seat, AM radio-tape, radial w -!!. -W
tires, less than 4.500 miles by local owner . SAVE.

1972 COMET2 DOOR

Now IUTanr• the &lt;ircled letters

$1850

6 cyl , std. trans., radio, like new w -w tires , blue finish

to form the aurpriee anawer, as

ni c e car with good economy.

'

1971 MATAOOR

DAINTY

4-door , local car, air conditioned, full -equipment.

NOBODY

PIAN O Tunrng , Lan e Da n re ls
Now lis ted wh rt e pages
Phon e 992 208 7
7 30 12tc
P o lr ce Chief s
F und dr Pt e ha s no con
n ec t ro n wrt h th e F rat ernal
Ord er of P eirce Country
Wes t er n show
8 10 Jt c

T HE

Mrs. Bermce McKmght ,
Sharon
and
Chnsty .
Columbus, were guests of Mr .
and Mrs . D. 0 . McKn1ght and
called on other relatives m
the area

O HI O

AT TE NTIO N
MEI GS
SE NIOR S 1 Sen ror P ortra rt s
wrll b e ta k en T u es day , Aug

19 thr ough A ug 7J at Metg s
Hrgh School MAKE Y O UR
A PP O INTMENT by call rng
Vr ck re Ab bott a t 99 ? ?06 4 110
a m til l 4 p m 1 Augu s t 11th
thr u 16th
a 10 8 tc

J ?67

Notice

1966 r oRD Mu s tang ?89
ROOM
AND
BOARD
engm e P s , a uto tran s Call
Prrvate a tr c onditioned
99 ? ?3 86
roo m , phone , TV. all
8 10 4tc
meals , laundry plos many
extras Write Mrs M
J 1966 CHEVROLET 1 , I on
Mrll er , 8o)( 105, Pomeroy ,
p rckup
Pho ne
Elden
Ohro
Welburn . 99 ? ?80 5
8 1 26tp
8 10 lf c

---·--------

HYMN SING at Rutland
F reewill Bapt)st C hurch ,
Sunday , Aug 17, 2 p m All
singers and the publrc are
welcome
8 1 14tc

INTERNATIONAL
1966
p1c kup , heavy duty sprrng s
for camper , he-avy
dul y
bumper hil c h f o r horse
trader Can be seen a1 Bob
Wrllram s . Harrisonv rlle Rd
Phone 9n 70 17
• B 10 3tp

s
s·' ervtces.
•

Pho ne / 42

1 J I I lc

AKC Reg Poodl es, 1 b la c k , 1
chocolate , 1 apr1 cot Ph on e
(304 ) 88 2 3205

RE li LJ(E: sa tl-iind tus t wrrh
GOf"('S e Tab l e ts ilnd E Vilp

wa •er pt ll s ' Nel son D rug
B II l rp
STERE O RADIO
mod e rn
de SrQn 8 tra c k com bmat •On
am fm
r a dro
Balan ce
SlO 'L 54 or te r ms Call 992
396 5
8 5 lf c

Miles

On Sl. Rl . 124
Off Rl . 7 By-Pass

and lOi s o f ext r as, Sl 69/
1968 Dune Bu ggy
S l 300
P ho n e 997 561 1
fl 10 )IC
T D 9 D O ZE R Phon e 99 7 7042
a 10 Jtc
N O W se ll rng Sarah Cov ('nt r y

Phon e 99? 530 1
-

al051c

196! B SA Ch oppe r 10 good
condt lton , m us t se ll Pho ne
99? 356 1

MECHANICAL
WORK

Ph."H"l

410lmo .

Call,2-7537 81 -75

Emergency
t4f-2211 or 992 -5700
Complete air conditlonrng
sates end ser\' lce . heating ,
plumbing , root 1ng and
general sheet metal work
Free Estimo~tes
7 II 1 mo

DIP l EVER.
WANT TO Ji:UIIJ AWAY FROM YOU;

.JUST RS!&gt;CUED

tloi'CAU~E'

LISA FR'OM A
LEOPARD A"'P
CARRIED HE'R
l!o&lt;\CK TO CAMP,
A"'D- - IHSLL,IN
Ttll5 MOMSIIJT OF
~IJ:;H

StRIPPING

• Q4
•KJ876

WEST
• Q86
.87652
• 9 63 -

r;u, IM

I MAtgus,..,Coll

WOOD-META\.- I' LAST IC
ANTIQUES
MODERN CHEMICALS

Ohio Route7, North·Eutof
Tupper

.

Pltln~ .

Coolville, Ohio
Phone: "7·3601
Open
Mond•v
thru
Saturd•y 1: 00 to 8 : 00.

NOW OPEN

Easl Main
Pom81'oy
Ph. ft2 -t791
7·2~·1 mo.

Larry and Vivutn Hopps

.BORN LOSER
THIS f1..Rr~ IS f'R!;TI'I ()I)LL,H~'i

.. ,lllAAT SAl/ ~ HAVE: 01JE W1CJRC

C+l,l1M~,T
'!1\ru;ffi lj()U ~l?e

~AS$ Cf l'\JN()1 ,1\1!itJ~AKOJTI

Ml/ W!F6!

Owners

••o

l'U.. BeT 'iOU DID,

'iOV M!St;RABLI'
t..ITTL.I' WVI&lt;.M •,

~LI/,

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-SHIP OY! OY!

~~~

~~~~

'IOU ORPERED!

Hold the baq
a sec', Ja4!

~~:; 19n ~ot•

..... ~ ......

DO
-~."!-

~---.,._

BUSJNESS

PROPERtY

ALL

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

'

~

SO WENDY ~ROUGHT
HOME A MAN SHE
'THOUGHT )'0£/
MIGHT LIKE?

~

'.

' .

Boone Daniel£&gt;' XBC
Television Network!

Pass

terestmg quest,ons wm be

us ed m thts column and
wnters will recewe coptes ol
JACOBY MODERN.)

~1--+--

3s Informed
(2 wds.)
36 "Wh&lt;&gt;ppers"(
(2 wds. )
41 Alaskan
natives
42New
8
Haven
school
43 Derby
winner's
wreath
44 Oklahoma
city

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

N F TJ ,
CS

FB

MVA

H

T F IV M

T F IV M

ex

ZFMVCPM

11 :3Q-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Wide World Mystery 13;
FBI 6; Movie "Night Must Fall" 8; Movie "The
Angry Hills" 10; Janak! 33
12:3Q-Wide World Mystery 6.
1·00-Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.

AstroGrapt-l

His

BRUSH IN IDS OWN SOUL, AND PAINTS IDS OWN NA'l'IJRS
INTO THE PICI'URES. -HENRY W. BEECHER

1
profit tn somethmg you thought
had nothmg of value, provided ·
you take the time to look

SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22)
You tend to do things on 1m·
pulse today . but they'll
somehow work out Stay loose
Keep an opt1m1sttc attitude

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.

You'll do your best thmkmg today If you 're under pressure or
put on the spot, especially tn
relatton to your work.

21) A small but thoughtful act
you'll perform for one Jess for- •
tunate wm not go unobserved .
It wt/1 make you look big In their

TAURUS (April 20·Moy 20)

eyes
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon. ,
11) Someone who lives a conSiderable drstance from you
w rll be getting In touch unex·
pectedly to tell of some un.
usual news

AQUARIUS (J.,. 20-Feb. 11) ,

a good day to work on
something you constder more
of a hobby than a chore. The
results wrll please you, and
others, too

By usrng yo ur head loday 1n
bus rness ventures you can '
eas1ly outdistance competitors
Think carefully before acting

CANCER (June 2t·JUIJ 221

PISCES (Fob. 20·Morch 20)

You'll be very vibrant today and
others will lind you pleasant
company Get out and spread
some sunshtne

You have the ab1llty to grasp
facts qurckly !hat o thers may •
overlook . In partnership ,
matters , lake a hand rn
decision- mak ing

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You're a
prudent shopper for household
and famtly needs today Those
pennies will have a surpnsing
way of adding up

.VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopl. 22) You
can find a buyer today for a
possession you no longer

BMHS . - GCTXPGFPB

. Yealenla,y'l Cryptoqaote: EVERY .ARTIST DIPS

LEETLE

11:00-News 3,.4,6,8,10,13,15; ABC News 33.

GEMINI (Moy 21-June 20) ll's

FITCSHTGA

AN'TH'

7· 3Q-Hollywood Squares 3; ,4; Let's Deal With It 6;
Baseball 15; Buck Owens 8; Evening Edition with
Martin Agronsky 20; To Tell the Truth 13; New
Price Is RlghfiO; Scene One, Take One33.
8 DO--Adam-12 3,4; Happy Days 6, 13; Good Times 8, 10;
When Television Was Live 20,33
8· 3Q-Movle "Death Among Friends" 3,4,; Movie " The
Great Ice Rip.Qtf" 6, 13; Mash 8,10; Consumer
Survival Kit 20,33;
9:DO--Hawall Flve.Q 8,10; Nova 20; Saga of Western
Man 33
10:0()-Pollce Story 3,4,15; Marcus Welby, ·M.D. 6,13;
Barnaby Jones 8, 10; News 20. Interface 33.
10 :3Q-Woman 20; Monty Python's Flying Circus 33.

rBVISB a deCISIOn.

letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for th~ two D's, etc Sin gle leiters.
apostrophes, the length and formati?n of the "Aords are all
hints. Each day the code letters are d1fferent.
CRYPTOQUOTES

TH' BIG
ONES BELONG
TO MELISSV••

America 33

Somt' lnterestrng rntormatlon
w111 be passed on to you today
throUgh a chance soctal en·
counter it will cause you to

is

NCCT

12 .DO--Magnlflcent Marble Machine 3,15; Showotfs
13; Bob B•aun's 50·50 Club 4; News 6,8, 10; 'Miste•
Rogen 33.
12 :3Q-Jackpot 3,15; All My Children 6,13; Sea•ch for
Tomorrow 8, 10; Elec Co. 33.
12:S,S-NBC News 3,15.
! ·DO-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Phil uonilllue 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only IS;
VIlla Aleq•e 33
1 3Q-Days of Our Lives 3,4, 15; · Let's Make a Deal
6, 13; As the World Turns 8,10; Episode Action 33.
2:D0--$10,000 Pyramid 4,6, 13; Guiding Light 8,10;
Rachmaninoff Festival 33 .
2·3Q-Doctors 3,4,1S; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,13; Edge of
Nlghl 8,10.
3·DO--Another World 3,4,1S; General Hospital 6,13;
Price Is Right 8, 10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
3:30-&lt;lne Life to Live 13; Bewitched 6; Match Game
8,10; The Romagolls' Table 20; To Be Announced
33 .
4:DO--Mr. Cartoon 3; I Dream of Jeannie 4; Somerset
lS; Mickey Mouse C lub 6; Musical Chairs 8;
Sesame St. 20,33; Movie "The Stooge" 10; Dlnah ·13.
4 JG-Bewtlcho:d 3; Merv Griffin 4; Mod Squad 6;
Mickey Mouse Club 8; Bonanza 15.
5 DO-FBI 3; [ucy Show 8; Mister Rogers' Neigh.
borhood 20,33.
.
5:3Q-News 6; Andy Griffith 8; Hogan 's Hroes 13; Get
Smart IS; E lee. Co. 20,33.
6 · DO--New~ 3,4,8, 10,13, 15; ABC News 6; Sesame St. 20;
Catch·33 33.
6.3Q-NBC News 3,4, 15, ABC lllews 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33.
7:DO--Truth or Cons. 3,4; Bowling for Dollars 6; What's
My Line 8; News 10; Name That Tune 13 ; To Be
Announced I 5;; Antiques 20; Jean Shepherd's

Semlee Sedl Oaol
ForTuoodoy,Aug.12,1175
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19)

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:

MVA

7 :DO-Today 3,4, 15. A.M America 6, 13; CBS News 8,10.
8:DO--Lucy Show 6; Captain Kangaroo 8; Schoolles 10;
Sesame S. 33 .
B 3Q-Big Valley 6; Popeye 10.
8 55-Chuck While Reports 10 10.
9.DO--A M. 3, Phil Donahue4 ; Phil Donahue 15; Muriel
Stevens 8; Capt Kangaroo 10; Morning wllh D J .
13; Operation Noah 33.
9 3Q-IIlot For Women Only 3; Dinah 6; Galloping
Gorurmet 8; New Zoo REvue 13; B lography 33.
10 QO-Celebrlly Sweepstakes 3, ~. 15; Spln-011 8.10;
Mike Douglas 13; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33.
I0 ·3Q-Wheel of Fortune 3,4, 15; Gambit 8, 10; The
Romagnolls' Table 33.
11 :DO-High Rollers 3,4,15, One Life to Live 6; Tal·
tletales 8,10; Film 33.
11 :3Q-Hollywood Squares 3, IS; Brady Bunch 13;
Midday 4; Love of Life 8, 10.
11 :S.s-Take Kerr 8; Dan Imel 's World 10.

(Do you have a question for
the Jacobys? Wnte "Ask the
Jacobys " care of th•s
newspaper The most in-

4 Handel's
Yesterday's Aaswer
birthplace
18 Varnish
31 Relieves
5 Answer
32 Sttcky
mgredient
6 Ninny
19 Picasso as
stuff
7 City tn
33 Way to
a boy?
Idaho
23 - Rosewall
order ham
8 In full VOICe 24 Dah and
( 2 wds.)
9 Watch over
Picasso
34 Remote
II Offspring
25 Vase
37 Vietnamese
21 Last
13 Fam1ly
26 Pasture
City
Spanish
member
27 Girl's
38 - Fleming
queen
16 Nervous
nickname
39 Samuel's
22 Symbols of
twitch
30 Van Dine's
teacher
a tall tale
Vance
40 But (Lat.)
17 Taro root
28 Flock,
~-r,-;.~,;,
to a
Cockney
29 Portuguese
coin
bo-t--+--i--~
30 Having
five
corners
34 ":riumph,anql b

~.

6 55-News 13

queen and dummy four to the
jack 10. I led low from dummy.
Should I have finessed after second hand played low?
Ttie answer is a decided,
" Yes" W1thout going tnto all
the complicated rnathernallcs
involved we can assure you that
the finesse will succeed about
three ttmes for every time you
drop the singleton ktng.

tin or mor

Rev. Cleophus

6 ot_S-Mornlng Report 3; Farmtlme 10.

This question is from Oregon

DOWN
I U.comotive
part
2 American
Railway
Union
( abbr.)
3 Ending for

ACROSS
I Country
singer
5 Moroccan
city
10 Region
II Filet(2 wds. 1
12 Gabfest
(2 wds. )
14 Speech
defect
IS South (II.)
16 Condensed
or
shortened
20 Crete's
mountain

a. Concerns &amp; Comments 10;

Robinson 13.
6 35-Columbus Today

" I held s1x trumps to the ace-

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Oswald "Test Your Br~dge"
by VIctor Mollo IS a paperback
concerned with fatrly Simple
problems m play He doesn 't
tell you how to bid the hands,
which is just as well, because
his British-type bidding is not
easy to understand tn this country. Thus, we will try to bid Vic·
tor's contracts in an American
way "
Jim: "Vtctor has two
questiOns on the play of the
hand. H,e says, 'You go after
trumps .How do you play
them? ' The answer is that you

cry

swers

Pass

Pass

One

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

'• .•fl'. ~·· ' •

'

-,.,.,

.. c•~ •~&lt;'""'"'"

I

tor Sale

.~

Pass

play the ace or trumps hrst to
guard agamst the chance that
all three trumps are held by
West. "
Oswald " He then asks if you
can be sure of your contract
once you lmd there is no trump
loser ··
Jim : •'The answer to that one
IS an unqualified affirmative.
You s1mply drop the enemy 's
last trump, cash the high hearts
and lead a d1amond The opponents take two diamonds and
then must either lead a spade or
give you a ruff and discard. II
they lead a spade they finesse
themselves "

by THOMAS JOSEPH

"THREE· SESE SPECIALS

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

__________ ___ _

3.••

6 : 00-Sunrlse Seminar .4 ; Summer Semester 10.

6·2.s-Farm Report 13 .
6 3Q-Five Minutes to Live By 4; News 6; Bible An·

~tiiiVJtaf

HOLD ON, MISTER!
YOU CNIE ME FIVE
DOLlARS !'OR "THEM

----- ----

Air
Conditioners
'139.95

Pass
Pass

Soutb

I.JTTLE ORPHAN ANNIE;

for

CLOSEOUT I

East

Opcmng lead - 8•

-- -----------'Real Estate for Sale

Buy

Nortb

'.

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

---- ·~&lt;

Wttt

Pass

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

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

tA87 5 2
•Q9

North -South vulnerable

(

...

Lost

.43

SQUTH 101

'IOU

LIKE Hf'R!

Real Estate

• 97 54

"K J 9
• J 10
• A5432

!;;V~ SOUND

7 17 1 mo

EAST

• AJ 3

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

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

II

t i1 Q 10

Cl 111§ lrt

TUESDAY, AUGUST 12, 1975

End play locks up contract

SMOTIOI\J ..,

-- ¥ ---~- ---- -

..

WIN AT BRIDGE

Freeze

SERviCE

7. DO-Truth or Cons. 3, ~; Bowling for Dollan 6; What's
My Line 8; News 10; New Candid Caml'a 13;
Wally's Workshop 15; Making II Counnt 20; To Be
Announced 33.
7·3Q-Thai Good Ole Nashville Music 3; Masquerade
· Party 4; Pollee Su•geon 6; $25,000 Pyramid 8;
Evening Edition wllh Ma•lln Agronsky 20;
Municipal Cou•llO, To Tell the Truth 13; Untamed
World IS; Episode Acllon 33
8:DO--Joe Garaglola 3,4, 15; Rookies 6, 13; Gunsmoke
8, 10; Rachmann lnoff Festival 33; Tennis 20.
8: 1.s-Baseball 3,4,15;

t

DIDN'T REALIZE'
TILL NOW JU5T
HOIH PRECIOU?
YOU ARE!

.,~M"-~

6:DO--News 3,4,8, 10,13,15; Sesame Sl. 20; Jeane Wolf
With ... 3; ABC N~ws 6.
6 3Q-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News13; Andy Grlffllh 6 ;
CBS News 8,10; Jody's Body Shop 33.

3·JO.-...One Life to Live 13; ; Bewllched 6; Match Gam~
8, 10; Consumer Survival Kit 20; Man Builds, Man
Destroys 33.

NORTH

Mr . and Mrs Dolph us
28FT T RAVEL t railerO wilh
Burke and children vistted
ELWOOD BOWEfdREPAiR
For Sale
Yard
new parn t 10b . prr ced to se ll
Swe-epers. toasters , lronio,
frtends m Bucyrus
Phon e 74? 665 3
all smalf -ftppllanc:es Lawn
H
OUS
E
,
3
bedroom,
large
8 10 3t c
Mr. and Mrs . Dale Stansmower , ne-xt to State High
Irv ing room , bath kll chen ,
3 FAMILY Yard Sale at 197) CAMARO , V 8, auto , p s,
way Garage on Route 7
1 baseme n t, garage and
bury spent a day wtth her
1974
VanCooney Residence , 5??
20
FT
GOO
SENEC
K
p b
a1r , trlt wheel , front
Phone 985 3825
p
a
tro
P
hon
e
99
?
75
42
Grant St , August 11 and I ?
and rear spotters , 19 ,700
s tock trailer w rt h 1 ~1 4 Ch e vy
stster, Mrs. Marion McClure,
4 16·tfc
from 10 am till 5 p m . If
a 10 6t c - - - ---·------m d es
$3 ,295 Phone 949
dual whe el 1 t on ptck u p
PUBLIC NOTICE
Dexter.
ram
,
will
be
held
m
garage
?
181
Can b e bought togelher or
Offers wil l be rec er v ed at
From the largest T.-uck or
3 1 A CRE S o f land rn the D &amp; o TREE lrimmtno .' 20
8 10 7tc
separat e Call 74? 3267
8 10 3tc
Mr . and Mrs. Glen t h e offi c e s of Fultz and
,Bulldozer
R:ediator to the
countr y, good bulldmg stte.
ye~a~, experience. Insured.
8 10 He
Knrght , rn t he Pomeroy
Srpallest Heater Core .
w
a
ter
and
gas
Phone
985
Gassaway , Powell, were Nat
3
FAMILY
yard
sale
,
Monday
,.·~·
uilmalu.
GJIII
99~
l~$7
,
TRUCK
for·
sale.
•
,
t
on
rona!
Bank
Buddrng ,
4?45
and Tuesday , lllh and l?th
Coolville'. Phone ( 1 1 • 661 ·
pr ckup. 196.3 Dodge, 6 cyt
CANNIN G pea ches now lhru
Nttho~n Biggs
weekend guests of the1r son- Pomeroy , Ohro . on behalf of
3041.
735 S
41h, Mld(11eport'
8 10 3tc
fatr condrtlon
Call New
Se ptember 10 U S No 1
Radi•tor Specialist
the owner . until Friday ,
in-law and daughter, Mr. and August 15, 19 75, at 10 o'cloc k
•
Plenty
of
' children ' s
Haven , 887 3?65
4-30 -lfc
grad e y e ll ow Fr ees tone- 'For
c: loth rng , t rres . and mise
--..:...~---- .............. can nrng or fr eez mg S6 49
8 10 6tc
Mrs. William Miller and AM , for t he sale of the
SMITH NELSON
8 10 ?tc
b ushe l SJ 49 r bu sh eL Sl 99
lollowmg
·
EXtAV A TING , dozer , loader
daughters .
pe
ck
P
LEAS
E
BRING
1948 WILL Y S Jeep w i th 1964
and backhoe work . septrc
i One tavern completely
MOTORS, INC.
SA LE 2 weeks
YO U R
OWN
CO N
engrne and new paint Also ,
Relatives here attended the equ rpped , wllh 0 1 and 0 2 YARD
tanks
installed ,
dump
Ceramics , gun cab rnet ,
TA INER S P eac h es ar e our
Ph. n:z-:Z\74
Pomeroy
1969
Camara
~hone 992
trucks- and to boys for hire,
weddmg
of
Mtchael Lrquor Lrcenses , srtuated at
many more tlems
Two
spec ra lty
Two tonventent
5301
will haul fill dirt, top sOli,
116
west
Marn
Street ,
m des up Leadmg Creek
lo c atron s Bo b's M a rket .
Baumgardner, son of Mr. and Pomer oy , Ohio
8 6 Stc
llmEtstone end gravel.: Call
Phone 742 3267
M ason , w Va P ho ne (3 04 )
WOULD YOU BELIEVE'&gt;
Bob or Roger Jeffers. day
3 T he real estat e, consrshng
Mrs. Chester Bawngardner,
8 8 6tc
773 517 1
an d
Midwa y
Build an all steel building at
phone
992
'1089,
nigh't
phone·
the bu s rnes s buildmg o c
1969 OLDSMOBILE Cutlass S
Marke t. Pom er oy , Ohro
Pole Barn pr1ces? Golden
Coshocton, OhiO and Bobi of
992
3515
or
992
-5232
c upred by the- t avern re-ferred
Sports
Coupe
,
dark
blue
1614 ) 992 ?5 8?
HUGE Garage Sale held at 454
Gf.!int All Steel Buildrngs,
, ~
2 11 tfc:
wrlh black vinyl top and
Thompson of Buffalo, New to rn llem 2, consrst rng of
8 10 77 t c
South Thrrd Avenue , Mrd
Rt 4, Box 148, Waverly,
~
_
'
-------..
room approxrmately
black vinyl i nterior, 350 v 8
dleport Monday , Tuesday
Ohio Phone 947 2296
York, which was held m busrness
25 fl fron t age x 55 feet .
engtne
with
automatrc
and
Wednesday
Something
7 24 tfc
MIDDLEPORT
Lovely
The
owner
re-serves
the
Coshocton . Both are teachers
transmission and power 19 70 6 50 B SA m o tor c y c l e
tor everyone , 10 tdl 7 p m
rrght t o r e je c t any and all
home 1st floor has lovely
s teerrng , AM rad ro tape
Phon e 99 2 5898
BACKHOE for rent , hour or
8 10 3tc
near CoshOcton . It was a ·hill- offers
player
Contact · Tanya
kitchen range &amp; ref , dining
8
10
3tp
con1racr. reg . or excavatory
F or rn fo r matr on , phone 99 2
top wedding with buffet
Keebaugh 9 10 Sat 992 3629 ,
type Septic tanks Installed
R.. 1 BR. bath. 2nd, 2 nice
.49 .tfc
2186
evenrngs 985 391 3
THR E E mrlk goa t s, 7 part
Bill Pullins. phone 992 2478
served at the Bawngardner
For Rent
BRs.
Very
little
grass
to
8 7 6tp
Nub a rn Call a ll er Su nday
7 24 26lc
home.
Mrs.
Chester 18) 4 , 5, 7, 11 , 12 . 14, 61 C
cut
Storage
bldg.
NG
heat
.
- ---- - ----TWO trader lot s on river bank
BOAT Motors. Repairs . 498
14? Jltl5
at Clrfton , W va . 1 gas , 1 1970 C HEV Y Wa g on , V 8 ,
Lo~ust St • M1ddlepor1 ,
$15,500 00 .
B 10 Si c
Baumgardner was the forOh10 Phone 992 3092
e! ec Phone {304 } 77 2 5502
EXCAVATING,
backhoe.
power
s
leer.n
g
and
POMEROY
Large
NOTICE ON FILING
mer Lucy Jo Dye of this
8
8
6tp
a
utomat•c
S700
Phone
843
19
75
HON
DA
C
B
75
0
,
rm
7
22
26tc
dozer
and
drtcher
Gas,
OF INVENTORY
home . In good condition
- -·- ----- - - - - - ~ 459
electric and water line
ma culat e
J month s o ld
--- --- --- ---~ conununity. Relatives who
AND APPRAISEMENT
Could have 2 apartments, 5
bur i al. basements , footers,
E x tra s
Prtced to sell
8 10 4tp
WALL
paper
htmging,
The State of Ohio, Mergs 4 ROOMS and bath apt in
attended were his grand- Counly
septic
systems and brush
Pho
n
e
99
2
72
10
ev
enmgs
R
urrand
area
.
Phone
992
BR
,
2
baths,
new
F.A.
painting,
and
pane111ng
, Court of Common
5858
cleantng . Will haul fill dirt ,
8 10 41 C
father, Dale Dye, along with Pleas, Probate DIVISIOn
Phone 742 5081
furnace ,
porches ,
out
top soil , sand and graveL
7 27 tfc
The the Ex e cutor of the
7-27 · 12tc
cellar. THE LOW PRICE
Mr. and Mrs. Thad Dye and estate
limestone
for driveways and
to such of the followrng
1971 CAMPER , 16 It Le ts ur e
OF 510,000.
roads . Phone Charles R
Charity, and Mrs. Madge as are residents of the State of TRAILER lot rn Mrddleport
T1m e Lo Boy , refrtgerator,
S EW I N G
-MAC H I N E ,
Hatfield. Backhoe Service,
Call 992 5434
Ohro, vrz
the survrvmg
MIDDLEPORT - Very
furnac e Phone 992 7738
Repairs, service. all makes
Blackwood and Lesa Dye . spouse
Rt. 1, Rutland. Ohio, 742
FEMALE Sramese cat rn
, the next of k. rn , the
nice 3 BR home, L R. has
7 16 26fc
B 5 6tc
992 228-4 The Fabrtt; Shop,
6092
Hemlock Grove area la s t
Also attending from this part benefrciaries under the wrll , - ----------Pomeroy
Autho'r{ze&lt;f
Smger
frreplace, nrce kitchen,
believed seen north of
7- 11 90tc
to the attorney or at
5 RM apt. furnished, utllrt1es
Sales and Serv1ce
We
of the state were Mrs. Clyde and
FURNITURE , repair , car
Tuppers
Plarns
area
.
Phone
bath,
full
basement
with
torney s represen t rng any of
pard, l child accepted No
Sharpen SCISSOrs
pentry . Richard Russell
99 2 5749 SSO Reward
Walker, Jimmie and Carrie the atorementroned persons
·~ utility , N.G furnace, frutt
drunks John Sheets , 3m lies
3 29 tft
Phone
992
7178
8 7 Stc
Ella
F
Anderson ,
south of Mrddleport on Rt. 7
nice
yard .
A --. - - - --------of Thurman.
8 5 81p .. trees ,
Deceased , R ulland , Ohro ,
8 5 61p
.READY MIX CONCf.tETE HOUSE for sa'te on 2 acres of
BARGAIN AT 514,800.
Abbie Graves, cousin of Rutland Townshrp , No 21552
deltvered r,ght to your
land near Vinton , Ohro, on
1950
FERGU
SON
tractor
,
WE HAVE A COUPLE OF
are hereby not rfied that 2 BE DRM mobile home , 11 ''
Dale 'Dye, accompamed him theYou Inventory
protect Fast and easy Free
Mt
Tabor Rd , 3 bedrooms ,
newly rebuilt wrt h TO JS
and
Ap
bath , S40 week and depos rt
FARMS AND
SOME
estimates Phone 992 3284,
and batfl , frreplace, good
power pa.:k engm e . brush
from Colwnbus here and prarsement of the estate of the
Mobile
Homes
Sale
Pay own utilities Phone 992
Goegle1n Ready Mtx Co ,
ACREAGE 135 A. and 138
well, outbufldings Call 388
hog grader blade and other
deceased.
3509
visited in Pagetown, her aforementroned.
Mtddleport, Oh10
8879
3
pt
hitch
equrpment
Phone
A
vacant
ground
tor
sale.
late o't sard County, was filetl
12xirO
NEW
MOON
trader
and
8 s 6tc
6 3o ttC
843 2561
former home . She returned to rn this Cour t Sard Inventory two lots , or lust buy lots,
8 8 6tc
WE ALSO HAVE SOME
- - - --.....
- --:- -r-- ~- -8 7 61 c
and
Appraisement
will
be
for
Tuppers
Plains
.
Ohio
Phone
MOBILE
HOMES.
Columbus with Mrs. Dons hearing before thrs Cour t on TWO bedrm mobrle home.
667 3475
Gi::NERAL' Repa1r . , ·lean -up ,
deposrt requ 1red Phone 992
Angle, Colwnbus, Mrs. Patsy the 18th day of August , 1975, at
lind
hauling,
cutfln"Q,
8 6 6ttp DOUBLE neck steel gurtar ,
3429
mult r chord S250 S rdn ey
\0
00 o' clock A M
welding,
carpentry
GOOD
HOMES
ARE
Butts, Chicago, m., and Mrs.
7 JO 12tp MU ST sell 1975 travel trailer,
Hayman , 99'2 773 3
Any person des 1rrng to file
plumbing, elec masonrY
SELLING FAST- LET US
8 7 Btp
and ·general remodeling '.
Bobby Dye, Indianapolis, exceptrons thereto must frle --- -- ~- ----- - -18 fl
carpeted , air con
SELL
YOURS
TODAY.
at least five days prior to 3 AN 0 4 ROOM furnished and
Call Skit Pool Phone 992· '
dr l roned , manv extras Will
Indiana, who were here to them
the date set for hearmg
5126
6·17 .tfc
unfurn•shed
apartments
take trade 1n , Johnson's BICYCLE Repa ,rs , Sales and
visit New Carpenter and
Grven under my hand and
Phone 992 5434
---------:------Tra•ler Park , R t 7 across
Serv1ce
,
498
Locus
t
St
,
seal of sard Court , lhrs Jist day
HOUSE for sa l e on 2 acres of S EP.T t(: iANt&lt;S cl·~
4 12 tfc
from BluE- Fountain Motet ,
daughter, Martha Mays , of
Middleport, Ohio Phone
July 1975
land near Vrnton , Ohio on
Gall ipolis
992 3092
MOdern Senrtiitlon
local, and Mildred Carpenter,
Mt Tabor Rd , 3 bedrooms,
PRIVATE meeting room tor
I! 10 6tc
or 992 7J49
7
22
26tc
Manning D Webster
and
bath
,
frreplace
,
good
anyorgan1zatron
.
phone
992
Albany.
------------9 l8 .tfc
.
·
of
Judge
J975
':
well,
outbu
i
ldings
Call
388
1911
K I RKWOOD
Mobile
- - - -- ·-------- - nver, 3 bedrooms, closets, 1112
By
8879
Family members gathered
Ge l ding
Home , 17 x 60 wrth bay THOROUGHBRED
3 ll lfc
HAND LETTERED siGN$ baths, gas fired hot water
8 8 6tc
for sale Gentle, Wrll work
wrndows
Prrce
S4,500
at Ash Cave recenliy to Ann B watson Deputy Clerk APT lrke new. 3 rooms , wrth
around cattle . Has been
ANtD POSTERS FREE heat, full basement, and
Phone 992 7331
celebrate the 74th birthday of ( 8J 4, 11. 2tc
ES !MATES CALL
M C: ~rage. Very n1ce
·
1ocat1on
·
large bath, tabletop range ,
e 10 3tp wormed 10 years of age JACRESoflandwrth 2mobile CRAWFORD,
992 . 7680 ,
targe closet East Marn St,
Phone 696 1084 till 3 30 p m
homes tn 1 A 1 condition
Dale Stansbury. Those
8 . 7. 26 tp near stores.
Pomeroy See to apprecrate
7 31 l2tc
Excellent well with new
- - - -- -- - - - - - - present were Mr . and Mrs.
-------'-- NEW LISTING- 26 acres of
Phone Gallrpofis dur i ng day
PUBLIC NOTICE
· deep well water pump
446 7M9 , evenrn,gs 4-16 9539
Emplofment Wanted
The
Tuppers
P l atns
FOR SALE OR TRADE MOBILE trane service and rolling land, 3 bedroom home,
Many extras Seen by appt
Dale Stansbury, Mr . and Mrs.
Chester Wa t er D •strrct is
4 10 tfc
Harley Dav rdson Chopper
only For more information ,
dozer work . Phone 99'2 -5468 bath, drilled well, 2 farm
Harold Oxley, and Mr. and accepting brds for con
Phone 99 2 5663
call 949 -4917 Priced r1ght ---~----- --_!:!_:26tp ponds (stocked). 2 car ga•age,
WILL do odd iobs , mowmg,
for quick sate
8 8 61p
hauling, p~Jntrng or roofrng
Mrs. Jerry Stansbury and s!ructron of a combrnatron COUNTRY Mobde Home
Olt•ce and ga r age burldlng to
Phone 992 7409
PICTURE barn and 2 hen houses.
8 5 12tc CUST~M
Park , Rt J J, len miles north
children, all local; Mr. and be located at the 1unctron of
FRAMING,
OR IGINAL NEEDS NEWOWNER- New
7-29 26tc TWO prece l1vrng room suite , - - - - - --- - - - of
Pomeroy
Large
lots
wrth
recliner that beats and
-·----------SEASCAPES
AND
LAND 5 bedroom home, 3 baths,
Mrs. Larry Stansbury and S R 7 and Orange Townsh ip
concrete patros, srdewalks ,
Rd ?80 , Mergs County
vtbrates , breakfast table
SCAPI'S PAINTING E central air and heat, fam1ly
runners
and
off
street
sons, Reynoldsburg; Mr. "'! &lt;j
'R EMOOELI N-G ,
Ptumtnng
Sealed brds are to be sub
W1th 4 cha1rs , odd couch ,
JOYCE MILLER . 991-7680.
parkrng Phone 99-2 7479
heating and all types of
Plans
and
carpet , RCA TV. Other odds
room, nice kitchen with dishMrs. Clair Dale Stansbury · mrlled
1
. ..'
6·10Wp
CANNING
tomatoes
,
green
12
31
ttc
__
__
_
_
general
repair
Work
specif1catrons and instructrons
and ends Phone 992 7791
washer,
stove, refrigerator
beans ,
swee't
peppers,
and family, Mr. and Mrs. Bob for bidders with all necessary
guarant~d. 20 years ex '
8 8 31c
cucumbers
.
Geraldine
and
bar.
2 car garage and
apartment ,
penence
Phone 992 2409 .
H o me
Ad "FURNISHED
Barton and Mr. and Mrs. F armers
Cleland
,
Racrne
Phone
949
Iorge
y~rd.
adults only ln Middleport
m 1n1Siratron
co ntra c t
BOAT
,
motor
and
tra
rler
,
35
'
5 1 tfc
4121
Dale Eugene Turner, all of docum ent s ar e ava ila ble and
Phone 992-3874
----- -----------h p Evinrude motor , 14 ft
WILl TALK - On this a 2
7 25 tfc
J 25 tfc
St arcrest boat , new ltres on
Groveport; Tina Mar1e and may be p JC ked u p rn the office
,---:----'---'=::....-,
bedroom
home with bath, and
--- ------a • Ches ter , Ohro Marlrng
trarler , all for $700 Also.
Robm Schmidt, Canonsburg, Address , Box 1, Chester The
gas
forced
air furnace. Asking
Wanted
To
1968 Chevrolet Corvatr, good
2 BEDROOM lratJer , very
$10,000.00.
r1ght
rs
r
eserved
to
re1ect
any
condition,
SJOO
Phone
992
Pa.;
Mae
Tewksbury,
U S COINS and Currency.
good Phone 992 3324
6154 For sale or trade
or all b1ds
f . - t - ' ...
A GOOD BUY- 5 •ooms, one
1964 aQcf " o'IC:fei-, dimes,
Maxine Butler and Gladys
8 8 6tp
Brds will b e Opened Aug ?6 ' ---- ~------- _!::_lfc
quarters,
hat:ves
.
Silver
floor
plan In Mlddlepo•t w•fh •
Tewksbury, Colwnbus, and at 1 p m
dollars Buy , sell , or trade . BEAR Kodiac Magnum 45 lb
LAURELAND
Apartments,
bath
and 2 porches near
Call Roger Wamsley, 742
6th &amp; George , Sfs ., New
Faye Kitzmiller, Mtllersport. {8 J 11 18 ?5, 31c
bow wrth
bow qurver ,
schools,
for only 57,500.00.
&lt;•
Haven, W
'Va . Available
3651
'
camoufl~qe ,
cover
Mr . and Mrs. Larry
August 15 Brand new 2
8 8 3tc
E~ti•ely Remodeled
·RIVER FRONTAGE - 7
sights ,
new
string',
bedroom townhouses. ap
Rutherford, Elizabeth,
MIDDLEPORT
rooms, l 1/ 2 baths , family
fiberglass
arrows,
S6 5
pliances furnish-ed.
fully TIMBER . Pomeroy Forest
Mr
.
and
Mrs.
Ralph
Phone 985 3335 .
Jennifer. and Caroline ,
Busln-s Space
room, nat. gas heat and 2
Products, pay top prices for
carpeted Renting $128 up
8 8·3lc
Frazier,
Gallipolis,
visited
o;;a
corner lots.
standing
timber
and
tim
including
utllrties
.
For
more
Springfield, called on his
2,000 sq. ft. ( !A.socl)
ROUTE 33- Little 2 bedroom
berland
Call 614 -99'2 -5965 DELICIOUS home grown
her mother, Goldie Gillogly
•nformatfon, call 1 (304) 882
uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs.
2567
days or 614 446 8570 nights .
2
Apartmenls
renovated
home with bath,
peaches. white and yellow
..:..., --~
8 ?.7tc
8 8 6tc
Mendal Jordan on Sunday and called on other relatives
CompJetely
Fu•nlsllocl
~all.to-wall
ca•petlng. Front
Mason
Peach Orchard
one day.
J\
AS LOW AS
Phone (304) 773 5559 .
afternoon . They were enroute
APP\IIntment Only
po•ch and nice level lot.
a 8 tfc
Among those visiting Ney M"OBILE horite -f.Or.. reht ~LD furttlture , Ice boxes,
POMEROY LANDMARK
·' ~-.7!119o~J92-5320
WE
HAVE
OVER
so
to the Point Rock area to visit
Adults only Phone 997 5535
brasa beqS, or complete
Carpenter
and
daughter,
DOuBLe
-o-;;;;
~
~as
ranoe.
··-~ack
W. carsey, Mgr.
L__..:.;._.:__-,.--;-::...:.:1
' ' _PROPERTIES FOR , YOU TO
a 10 tfc
households
Write M. o,..
his grandparents, Mr. and
Nor.9e
Refrigerator
a:&amp;_ Phone992-2181
- - - - - - · - - - - · . ··
Miller, Rt . .4, Pomeroy,
Martha Mays were Roberta
· CHOOSE FROM. DROP ' IN
Mrs. J. D. Canode.
4• aEORM . home for rent or
Ohio Call ~92-7760.
freezer,
breakf8st
set,
and
'----'-------:.__J
Parker,
Bolivar,
Mrs.
Betty
.
mise
Movmg
,
Wtll
not
need
sale by owner tn vrnton . 1
· :
let--7 74
Mr . and Mrs . George
~ Phone 388 8483 or 1·471 · 141'2 .' _______ _... ____ _ _
these appliances
Can be
Columbus;
her
McKnight, Rebecca and Cox,
seen at 947 Ash At , M1d · REG.. Quarter Horse and
8 10 4t c
daughter, Mrs. Patien.ce
DISCARDED ' laWn moweh
- --~-- -- - -dlepor:t .
Terry, Columbus, visited his
Pamt colt Phone 742 -3267
- llllers, riding rilowers ... ett:'
8 8 Jtc
Bernard
and
son,
Mark,
Salt
7 31 tfc
· P~on~ 742 - 307 ~, ......
;,,.,'' . ·'
··
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Lake
City,
Utah,
and
Mr.
and
~ •
,
1
, • ·&lt;~ 'i ~1&amp; 26tc
Wanted To Buy
D. 0. McKnight and Mrs.
Mrs. Hilbert Cox, Albany.
'
Goldie Gillogly.
Mr,
and
Mrs.
Roger
Escue
Guests of Mrs. Hazel Burke
were chlldnen and families, (Carol Fraley) are an·
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Burke, noWlcing the birth of a son,
Brien, Karen, James, Timmy Aaron Roger, on July 28 at
and Bruce, Cincinnati; Mr. O'Bieness Memorial Hospital
and Mrs. Hebron Burke and in Athens. Grandparents are '
family, Hurricane, W. Va., Mr. and Mrs. Clarence·
and Mr. and Mrs. Larry• Fraley, local, and Mr. and
McKinley and daughter, Vera Mrs. Nye Escue, Albany. The
little one has a brother,
Birke, from Kentucky.
. Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Gillogly Travis Michael.
visited her brother-irfaw and l,a Scala, short. for :'T~!i~o ,I
mter, Mr. and Mrs. Harley alia Scala ," the great
house or Milan. Italy, 'is so
Hanins, Pomeroy.
'
Elsie Bratton spent a day ed because tt was erected, , in
1778 at the s•te of the church of
recently with Mr. and Mrs. Santa Mana alia Scala :_ St.
Mendll Jordan.
Ma~y's by th~ Stairs
~;:-----:::-.,--:-y';:-:;;;::-~:-::-:-:-'----::-~-r-1

Sill___ _____ _

•

_..

.

MONDAY,AUGUST 11, 1Y7S

15; Mickey Mouse Club 6; Sesame St 20,33; Movie
"Swordsman of Siena" 10, Dinah 13.
4· 3Q-Bewltched 3; Merv Gr iffin 4, Mod Squad 6;
Mickey Mouse Club B; Bonanza 15.
5:DO--FBI 3; Lucy Show 8; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33.
5.3Q-News6; Andy Gr iffllh 8; Hogan's Heroes 13; Get
Smarl 15; Elec. Co 20,33

0~. 6A~Y~ ... WHY

EASY HA5

..

.._,__..~-~~Mw-•-•~w.--•~---~---·-~·-----:-~--"'

Televisio~ log for easy' viewing_:

• K 10 2

KUHL CAKE DEOOR
Flatwoods, Oh1o
Pomeroy, Oh1o
Stop In Or

Your Hetl D~~ter
Third St.
Racine, Ohro
Ph. 94f· S" I

,_.._.._.._.._._..___.___

..- : 00--Mr . Cartoon 3; I Dream of Jeannie 4; Somerset

Racine Plumbing
&amp; Heating

PAINT

CAKE BAKING
WANTED
K1tchen State Ins-pected
Licensed
B-aker
and
Decorator
Homemade
Noodles also featured .

MONEYf

.

Sy•acuse, Ohio

'

FATHER,YOU'RE
TAKING
GANGSTER

'

LARRY IA.VE{tDER.

Phone 992 -5682
or 992-7121
7-8-1 mo.

'

Blown
II!~UI•tion Services .
Blown Info Wall•&amp; Atlil;l ·
STORM .
WI~DOWS&amp; DOORS
REPLAtEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING-SOFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

ALL

For Sale

"

FUE EStiMATES .

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE
2
West

I KNOW!

e

.

19! .\ HO N D A !50 wrth h ea de r s

Notice

Carpenter
Personals

4 13 lf c

Pets For Sale

R EG' Toy PoOdie,

·

usmes
~

area code ' " &lt;23

$1495

(An•wrn lomorrow)

JOKER

e

SAVE-SAVE

1..... - -... 1A t I X·XXXJ t XXI )
ALIVE

:~~~"·

I COULDN'T
FIGURE IT AT
FIRST, BUT
NOVV•

--'---B
- -------------.---;.;_-:-----'---- ----'--,

mobil e homes

SAY E '

5UIIJ&amp; 11\J '!i:OCK "

~==========~~~~~~~s~u;r:r•~•;ted:;b;y~thtabovec~n.

Jumhlf' ~:

f

·CA SH paid f or al l m a ke s an tt

l'

~_...._.._..,.

need Offer fair price. The sale
will be wrapped up quickly.
LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0cl. 23)
You'll dfscover a small h1dden

~Your
~Birthday :
Aug. 12, 1875
An opportunity to Increase
your resources w rll be offered
to you this year through a family contact No large profits, but '
you could make a tidy sum. ~

I THINK HE RAN THE

HA~ fiOIIS€ M

THERE

ONES TO
HER

DOLlV

..'

'I

�, I

7- The Dai)y.§entinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday , Au~: II . 1975
DI~TRACY
·

6- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday , Aug . II, 1975

'Wanted

....._.,.._r_
...........
._

I WPOR

r,.,~

models at

II
SAGYS

0

2 SIGNS

I

rENEELt
J

t

I

fuN]CALl

Pomeroy
OF
..
OUAUTY 'Moto.i:_.Co

[J

J

1975 MONTE CARLO LANDAU

[j

I [X J

Dark red, whtte vinyl top, loaded with extr~s Including
atr cond , tilt wheel. Cruise Control, custoni Interior,

TIME WHEN YOU
WER'E A e&gt;AB'Y.

power &amp; reclining seat, AM radio-tape, radial w -!!. -W
tires, less than 4.500 miles by local owner . SAVE.

1972 COMET2 DOOR

Now IUTanr• the &lt;ircled letters

$1850

6 cyl , std. trans., radio, like new w -w tires , blue finish

to form the aurpriee anawer, as

ni c e car with good economy.

'

1971 MATAOOR

DAINTY

4-door , local car, air conditioned, full -equipment.

NOBODY

PIAN O Tunrng , Lan e Da n re ls
Now lis ted wh rt e pages
Phon e 992 208 7
7 30 12tc
P o lr ce Chief s
F und dr Pt e ha s no con
n ec t ro n wrt h th e F rat ernal
Ord er of P eirce Country
Wes t er n show
8 10 Jt c

T HE

Mrs. Bermce McKmght ,
Sharon
and
Chnsty .
Columbus, were guests of Mr .
and Mrs . D. 0 . McKn1ght and
called on other relatives m
the area

O HI O

AT TE NTIO N
MEI GS
SE NIOR S 1 Sen ror P ortra rt s
wrll b e ta k en T u es day , Aug

19 thr ough A ug 7J at Metg s
Hrgh School MAKE Y O UR
A PP O INTMENT by call rng
Vr ck re Ab bott a t 99 ? ?06 4 110
a m til l 4 p m 1 Augu s t 11th
thr u 16th
a 10 8 tc

J ?67

Notice

1966 r oRD Mu s tang ?89
ROOM
AND
BOARD
engm e P s , a uto tran s Call
Prrvate a tr c onditioned
99 ? ?3 86
roo m , phone , TV. all
8 10 4tc
meals , laundry plos many
extras Write Mrs M
J 1966 CHEVROLET 1 , I on
Mrll er , 8o)( 105, Pomeroy ,
p rckup
Pho ne
Elden
Ohro
Welburn . 99 ? ?80 5
8 1 26tp
8 10 lf c

---·--------

HYMN SING at Rutland
F reewill Bapt)st C hurch ,
Sunday , Aug 17, 2 p m All
singers and the publrc are
welcome
8 1 14tc

INTERNATIONAL
1966
p1c kup , heavy duty sprrng s
for camper , he-avy
dul y
bumper hil c h f o r horse
trader Can be seen a1 Bob
Wrllram s . Harrisonv rlle Rd
Phone 9n 70 17
• B 10 3tp

s
s·' ervtces.
•

Pho ne / 42

1 J I I lc

AKC Reg Poodl es, 1 b la c k , 1
chocolate , 1 apr1 cot Ph on e
(304 ) 88 2 3205

RE li LJ(E: sa tl-iind tus t wrrh
GOf"('S e Tab l e ts ilnd E Vilp

wa •er pt ll s ' Nel son D rug
B II l rp
STERE O RADIO
mod e rn
de SrQn 8 tra c k com bmat •On
am fm
r a dro
Balan ce
SlO 'L 54 or te r ms Call 992
396 5
8 5 lf c

Miles

On Sl. Rl . 124
Off Rl . 7 By-Pass

and lOi s o f ext r as, Sl 69/
1968 Dune Bu ggy
S l 300
P ho n e 997 561 1
fl 10 )IC
T D 9 D O ZE R Phon e 99 7 7042
a 10 Jtc
N O W se ll rng Sarah Cov ('nt r y

Phon e 99? 530 1
-

al051c

196! B SA Ch oppe r 10 good
condt lton , m us t se ll Pho ne
99? 356 1

MECHANICAL
WORK

Ph."H"l

410lmo .

Call,2-7537 81 -75

Emergency
t4f-2211 or 992 -5700
Complete air conditlonrng
sates end ser\' lce . heating ,
plumbing , root 1ng and
general sheet metal work
Free Estimo~tes
7 II 1 mo

DIP l EVER.
WANT TO Ji:UIIJ AWAY FROM YOU;

.JUST RS!&gt;CUED

tloi'CAU~E'

LISA FR'OM A
LEOPARD A"'P
CARRIED HE'R
l!o&lt;\CK TO CAMP,
A"'D- - IHSLL,IN
Ttll5 MOMSIIJT OF
~IJ:;H

StRIPPING

• Q4
•KJ876

WEST
• Q86
.87652
• 9 63 -

r;u, IM

I MAtgus,..,Coll

WOOD-META\.- I' LAST IC
ANTIQUES
MODERN CHEMICALS

Ohio Route7, North·Eutof
Tupper

.

Pltln~ .

Coolville, Ohio
Phone: "7·3601
Open
Mond•v
thru
Saturd•y 1: 00 to 8 : 00.

NOW OPEN

Easl Main
Pom81'oy
Ph. ft2 -t791
7·2~·1 mo.

Larry and Vivutn Hopps

.BORN LOSER
THIS f1..Rr~ IS f'R!;TI'I ()I)LL,H~'i

.. ,lllAAT SAl/ ~ HAVE: 01JE W1CJRC

C+l,l1M~,T
'!1\ru;ffi lj()U ~l?e

~AS$ Cf l'\JN()1 ,1\1!itJ~AKOJTI

Ml/ W!F6!

Owners

••o

l'U.. BeT 'iOU DID,

'iOV M!St;RABLI'
t..ITTL.I' WVI&lt;.M •,

~LI/,

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-SHIP OY! OY!

~~~

~~~~

'IOU ORPERED!

Hold the baq
a sec', Ja4!

~~:; 19n ~ot•

..... ~ ......

DO
-~."!-

~---.,._

BUSJNESS

PROPERtY

ALL

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

'

~

SO WENDY ~ROUGHT
HOME A MAN SHE
'THOUGHT )'0£/
MIGHT LIKE?

~

'.

' .

Boone Daniel£&gt;' XBC
Television Network!

Pass

terestmg quest,ons wm be

us ed m thts column and
wnters will recewe coptes ol
JACOBY MODERN.)

~1--+--

3s Informed
(2 wds.)
36 "Wh&lt;&gt;ppers"(
(2 wds. )
41 Alaskan
natives
42New
8
Haven
school
43 Derby
winner's
wreath
44 Oklahoma
city

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

N F TJ ,
CS

FB

MVA

H

T F IV M

T F IV M

ex

ZFMVCPM

11 :3Q-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Wide World Mystery 13;
FBI 6; Movie "Night Must Fall" 8; Movie "The
Angry Hills" 10; Janak! 33
12:3Q-Wide World Mystery 6.
1·00-Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.

AstroGrapt-l

His

BRUSH IN IDS OWN SOUL, AND PAINTS IDS OWN NA'l'IJRS
INTO THE PICI'URES. -HENRY W. BEECHER

1
profit tn somethmg you thought
had nothmg of value, provided ·
you take the time to look

SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22)
You tend to do things on 1m·
pulse today . but they'll
somehow work out Stay loose
Keep an opt1m1sttc attitude

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.

You'll do your best thmkmg today If you 're under pressure or
put on the spot, especially tn
relatton to your work.

21) A small but thoughtful act
you'll perform for one Jess for- •
tunate wm not go unobserved .
It wt/1 make you look big In their

TAURUS (April 20·Moy 20)

eyes
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon. ,
11) Someone who lives a conSiderable drstance from you
w rll be getting In touch unex·
pectedly to tell of some un.
usual news

AQUARIUS (J.,. 20-Feb. 11) ,

a good day to work on
something you constder more
of a hobby than a chore. The
results wrll please you, and
others, too

By usrng yo ur head loday 1n
bus rness ventures you can '
eas1ly outdistance competitors
Think carefully before acting

CANCER (June 2t·JUIJ 221

PISCES (Fob. 20·Morch 20)

You'll be very vibrant today and
others will lind you pleasant
company Get out and spread
some sunshtne

You have the ab1llty to grasp
facts qurckly !hat o thers may •
overlook . In partnership ,
matters , lake a hand rn
decision- mak ing

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You're a
prudent shopper for household
and famtly needs today Those
pennies will have a surpnsing
way of adding up

.VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopl. 22) You
can find a buyer today for a
possession you no longer

BMHS . - GCTXPGFPB

. Yealenla,y'l Cryptoqaote: EVERY .ARTIST DIPS

LEETLE

11:00-News 3,.4,6,8,10,13,15; ABC News 33.

GEMINI (Moy 21-June 20) ll's

FITCSHTGA

AN'TH'

7· 3Q-Hollywood Squares 3; ,4; Let's Deal With It 6;
Baseball 15; Buck Owens 8; Evening Edition with
Martin Agronsky 20; To Tell the Truth 13; New
Price Is RlghfiO; Scene One, Take One33.
8 DO--Adam-12 3,4; Happy Days 6, 13; Good Times 8, 10;
When Television Was Live 20,33
8· 3Q-Movle "Death Among Friends" 3,4,; Movie " The
Great Ice Rip.Qtf" 6, 13; Mash 8,10; Consumer
Survival Kit 20,33;
9:DO--Hawall Flve.Q 8,10; Nova 20; Saga of Western
Man 33
10:0()-Pollce Story 3,4,15; Marcus Welby, ·M.D. 6,13;
Barnaby Jones 8, 10; News 20. Interface 33.
10 :3Q-Woman 20; Monty Python's Flying Circus 33.

rBVISB a deCISIOn.

letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for th~ two D's, etc Sin gle leiters.
apostrophes, the length and formati?n of the "Aords are all
hints. Each day the code letters are d1fferent.
CRYPTOQUOTES

TH' BIG
ONES BELONG
TO MELISSV••

America 33

Somt' lnterestrng rntormatlon
w111 be passed on to you today
throUgh a chance soctal en·
counter it will cause you to

is

NCCT

12 .DO--Magnlflcent Marble Machine 3,15; Showotfs
13; Bob B•aun's 50·50 Club 4; News 6,8, 10; 'Miste•
Rogen 33.
12 :3Q-Jackpot 3,15; All My Children 6,13; Sea•ch for
Tomorrow 8, 10; Elec Co. 33.
12:S,S-NBC News 3,15.
! ·DO-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Phil uonilllue 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only IS;
VIlla Aleq•e 33
1 3Q-Days of Our Lives 3,4, 15; · Let's Make a Deal
6, 13; As the World Turns 8,10; Episode Action 33.
2:D0--$10,000 Pyramid 4,6, 13; Guiding Light 8,10;
Rachmaninoff Festival 33 .
2·3Q-Doctors 3,4,1S; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,13; Edge of
Nlghl 8,10.
3·DO--Another World 3,4,1S; General Hospital 6,13;
Price Is Right 8, 10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
3:30-&lt;lne Life to Live 13; Bewitched 6; Match Game
8,10; The Romagolls' Table 20; To Be Announced
33 .
4:DO--Mr. Cartoon 3; I Dream of Jeannie 4; Somerset
lS; Mickey Mouse C lub 6; Musical Chairs 8;
Sesame St. 20,33; Movie "The Stooge" 10; Dlnah ·13.
4 JG-Bewtlcho:d 3; Merv Griffin 4; Mod Squad 6;
Mickey Mouse Club 8; Bonanza 15.
5 DO-FBI 3; [ucy Show 8; Mister Rogers' Neigh.
borhood 20,33.
.
5:3Q-News 6; Andy Griffith 8; Hogan 's Hroes 13; Get
Smart IS; E lee. Co. 20,33.
6 · DO--New~ 3,4,8, 10,13, 15; ABC News 6; Sesame St. 20;
Catch·33 33.
6.3Q-NBC News 3,4, 15, ABC lllews 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33.
7:DO--Truth or Cons. 3,4; Bowling for Dollars 6; What's
My Line 8; News 10; Name That Tune 13 ; To Be
Announced I 5;; Antiques 20; Jean Shepherd's

Semlee Sedl Oaol
ForTuoodoy,Aug.12,1175
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19)

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:

MVA

7 :DO-Today 3,4, 15. A.M America 6, 13; CBS News 8,10.
8:DO--Lucy Show 6; Captain Kangaroo 8; Schoolles 10;
Sesame S. 33 .
B 3Q-Big Valley 6; Popeye 10.
8 55-Chuck While Reports 10 10.
9.DO--A M. 3, Phil Donahue4 ; Phil Donahue 15; Muriel
Stevens 8; Capt Kangaroo 10; Morning wllh D J .
13; Operation Noah 33.
9 3Q-IIlot For Women Only 3; Dinah 6; Galloping
Gorurmet 8; New Zoo REvue 13; B lography 33.
10 QO-Celebrlly Sweepstakes 3, ~. 15; Spln-011 8.10;
Mike Douglas 13; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33.
I0 ·3Q-Wheel of Fortune 3,4, 15; Gambit 8, 10; The
Romagnolls' Table 33.
11 :DO-High Rollers 3,4,15, One Life to Live 6; Tal·
tletales 8,10; Film 33.
11 :3Q-Hollywood Squares 3, IS; Brady Bunch 13;
Midday 4; Love of Life 8, 10.
11 :S.s-Take Kerr 8; Dan Imel 's World 10.

(Do you have a question for
the Jacobys? Wnte "Ask the
Jacobys " care of th•s
newspaper The most in-

4 Handel's
Yesterday's Aaswer
birthplace
18 Varnish
31 Relieves
5 Answer
32 Sttcky
mgredient
6 Ninny
19 Picasso as
stuff
7 City tn
33 Way to
a boy?
Idaho
23 - Rosewall
order ham
8 In full VOICe 24 Dah and
( 2 wds.)
9 Watch over
Picasso
34 Remote
II Offspring
25 Vase
37 Vietnamese
21 Last
13 Fam1ly
26 Pasture
City
Spanish
member
27 Girl's
38 - Fleming
queen
16 Nervous
nickname
39 Samuel's
22 Symbols of
twitch
30 Van Dine's
teacher
a tall tale
Vance
40 But (Lat.)
17 Taro root
28 Flock,
~-r,-;.~,;,
to a
Cockney
29 Portuguese
coin
bo-t--+--i--~
30 Having
five
corners
34 ":riumph,anql b

~.

6 55-News 13

queen and dummy four to the
jack 10. I led low from dummy.
Should I have finessed after second hand played low?
Ttie answer is a decided,
" Yes" W1thout going tnto all
the complicated rnathernallcs
involved we can assure you that
the finesse will succeed about
three ttmes for every time you
drop the singleton ktng.

tin or mor

Rev. Cleophus

6 ot_S-Mornlng Report 3; Farmtlme 10.

This question is from Oregon

DOWN
I U.comotive
part
2 American
Railway
Union
( abbr.)
3 Ending for

ACROSS
I Country
singer
5 Moroccan
city
10 Region
II Filet(2 wds. 1
12 Gabfest
(2 wds. )
14 Speech
defect
IS South (II.)
16 Condensed
or
shortened
20 Crete's
mountain

a. Concerns &amp; Comments 10;

Robinson 13.
6 35-Columbus Today

" I held s1x trumps to the ace-

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Oswald "Test Your Br~dge"
by VIctor Mollo IS a paperback
concerned with fatrly Simple
problems m play He doesn 't
tell you how to bid the hands,
which is just as well, because
his British-type bidding is not
easy to understand tn this country. Thus, we will try to bid Vic·
tor's contracts in an American
way "
Jim: "Vtctor has two
questiOns on the play of the
hand. H,e says, 'You go after
trumps .How do you play
them? ' The answer is that you

cry

swers

Pass

Pass

One

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

'• .•fl'. ~·· ' •

'

-,.,.,

.. c•~ •~&lt;'""'"'"

I

tor Sale

.~

Pass

play the ace or trumps hrst to
guard agamst the chance that
all three trumps are held by
West. "
Oswald " He then asks if you
can be sure of your contract
once you lmd there is no trump
loser ··
Jim : •'The answer to that one
IS an unqualified affirmative.
You s1mply drop the enemy 's
last trump, cash the high hearts
and lead a d1amond The opponents take two diamonds and
then must either lead a spade or
give you a ruff and discard. II
they lead a spade they finesse
themselves "

by THOMAS JOSEPH

"THREE· SESE SPECIALS

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

__________ ___ _

3.••

6 : 00-Sunrlse Seminar .4 ; Summer Semester 10.

6·2.s-Farm Report 13 .
6 3Q-Five Minutes to Live By 4; News 6; Bible An·

~tiiiVJtaf

HOLD ON, MISTER!
YOU CNIE ME FIVE
DOLlARS !'OR "THEM

----- ----

Air
Conditioners
'139.95

Pass
Pass

Soutb

I.JTTLE ORPHAN ANNIE;

for

CLOSEOUT I

East

Opcmng lead - 8•

-- -----------'Real Estate for Sale

Buy

Nortb

'.

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

---- ·~&lt;

Wttt

Pass

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

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

tA87 5 2
•Q9

North -South vulnerable

(

...

Lost

.43

SQUTH 101

'IOU

LIKE Hf'R!

Real Estate

• 97 54

"K J 9
• J 10
• A5432

!;;V~ SOUND

7 17 1 mo

EAST

• AJ 3

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

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

II

t i1 Q 10

Cl 111§ lrt

TUESDAY, AUGUST 12, 1975

End play locks up contract

SMOTIOI\J ..,

-- ¥ ---~- ---- -

..

WIN AT BRIDGE

Freeze

SERviCE

7. DO-Truth or Cons. 3, ~; Bowling for Dollan 6; What's
My Line 8; News 10; New Candid Caml'a 13;
Wally's Workshop 15; Making II Counnt 20; To Be
Announced 33.
7·3Q-Thai Good Ole Nashville Music 3; Masquerade
· Party 4; Pollee Su•geon 6; $25,000 Pyramid 8;
Evening Edition wllh Ma•lln Agronsky 20;
Municipal Cou•llO, To Tell the Truth 13; Untamed
World IS; Episode Acllon 33
8:DO--Joe Garaglola 3,4, 15; Rookies 6, 13; Gunsmoke
8, 10; Rachmann lnoff Festival 33; Tennis 20.
8: 1.s-Baseball 3,4,15;

t

DIDN'T REALIZE'
TILL NOW JU5T
HOIH PRECIOU?
YOU ARE!

.,~M"-~

6:DO--News 3,4,8, 10,13,15; Sesame Sl. 20; Jeane Wolf
With ... 3; ABC N~ws 6.
6 3Q-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News13; Andy Grlffllh 6 ;
CBS News 8,10; Jody's Body Shop 33.

3·JO.-...One Life to Live 13; ; Bewllched 6; Match Gam~
8, 10; Consumer Survival Kit 20; Man Builds, Man
Destroys 33.

NORTH

Mr . and Mrs Dolph us
28FT T RAVEL t railerO wilh
Burke and children vistted
ELWOOD BOWEfdREPAiR
For Sale
Yard
new parn t 10b . prr ced to se ll
Swe-epers. toasters , lronio,
frtends m Bucyrus
Phon e 74? 665 3
all smalf -ftppllanc:es Lawn
H
OUS
E
,
3
bedroom,
large
8 10 3t c
Mr. and Mrs . Dale Stansmower , ne-xt to State High
Irv ing room , bath kll chen ,
3 FAMILY Yard Sale at 197) CAMARO , V 8, auto , p s,
way Garage on Route 7
1 baseme n t, garage and
bury spent a day wtth her
1974
VanCooney Residence , 5??
20
FT
GOO
SENEC
K
p b
a1r , trlt wheel , front
Phone 985 3825
p
a
tro
P
hon
e
99
?
75
42
Grant St , August 11 and I ?
and rear spotters , 19 ,700
s tock trailer w rt h 1 ~1 4 Ch e vy
stster, Mrs. Marion McClure,
4 16·tfc
from 10 am till 5 p m . If
a 10 6t c - - - ---·------m d es
$3 ,295 Phone 949
dual whe el 1 t on ptck u p
PUBLIC NOTICE
Dexter.
ram
,
will
be
held
m
garage
?
181
Can b e bought togelher or
Offers wil l be rec er v ed at
From the largest T.-uck or
3 1 A CRE S o f land rn the D &amp; o TREE lrimmtno .' 20
8 10 7tc
separat e Call 74? 3267
8 10 3tc
Mr . and Mrs. Glen t h e offi c e s of Fultz and
,Bulldozer
R:ediator to the
countr y, good bulldmg stte.
ye~a~, experience. Insured.
8 10 He
Knrght , rn t he Pomeroy
Srpallest Heater Core .
w
a
ter
and
gas
Phone
985
Gassaway , Powell, were Nat
3
FAMILY
yard
sale
,
Monday
,.·~·
uilmalu.
GJIII
99~
l~$7
,
TRUCK
for·
sale.
•
,
t
on
rona!
Bank
Buddrng ,
4?45
and Tuesday , lllh and l?th
Coolville'. Phone ( 1 1 • 661 ·
pr ckup. 196.3 Dodge, 6 cyt
CANNIN G pea ches now lhru
Nttho~n Biggs
weekend guests of the1r son- Pomeroy , Ohro . on behalf of
3041.
735 S
41h, Mld(11eport'
8 10 3tc
fatr condrtlon
Call New
Se ptember 10 U S No 1
Radi•tor Specialist
the owner . until Friday ,
in-law and daughter, Mr. and August 15, 19 75, at 10 o'cloc k
•
Plenty
of
' children ' s
Haven , 887 3?65
4-30 -lfc
grad e y e ll ow Fr ees tone- 'For
c: loth rng , t rres . and mise
--..:...~---- .............. can nrng or fr eez mg S6 49
8 10 6tc
Mrs. William Miller and AM , for t he sale of the
SMITH NELSON
8 10 ?tc
b ushe l SJ 49 r bu sh eL Sl 99
lollowmg
·
EXtAV A TING , dozer , loader
daughters .
pe
ck
P
LEAS
E
BRING
1948 WILL Y S Jeep w i th 1964
and backhoe work . septrc
i One tavern completely
MOTORS, INC.
SA LE 2 weeks
YO U R
OWN
CO N
engrne and new paint Also ,
Relatives here attended the equ rpped , wllh 0 1 and 0 2 YARD
tanks
installed ,
dump
Ceramics , gun cab rnet ,
TA INER S P eac h es ar e our
Ph. n:z-:Z\74
Pomeroy
1969
Camara
~hone 992
trucks- and to boys for hire,
weddmg
of
Mtchael Lrquor Lrcenses , srtuated at
many more tlems
Two
spec ra lty
Two tonventent
5301
will haul fill dirt, top sOli,
116
west
Marn
Street ,
m des up Leadmg Creek
lo c atron s Bo b's M a rket .
Baumgardner, son of Mr. and Pomer oy , Ohio
8 6 Stc
llmEtstone end gravel.: Call
Phone 742 3267
M ason , w Va P ho ne (3 04 )
WOULD YOU BELIEVE'&gt;
Bob or Roger Jeffers. day
3 T he real estat e, consrshng
Mrs. Chester Bawngardner,
8 8 6tc
773 517 1
an d
Midwa y
Build an all steel building at
phone
992
'1089,
nigh't
phone·
the bu s rnes s buildmg o c
1969 OLDSMOBILE Cutlass S
Marke t. Pom er oy , Ohro
Pole Barn pr1ces? Golden
Coshocton, OhiO and Bobi of
992
3515
or
992
-5232
c upred by the- t avern re-ferred
Sports
Coupe
,
dark
blue
1614 ) 992 ?5 8?
HUGE Garage Sale held at 454
Gf.!int All Steel Buildrngs,
, ~
2 11 tfc:
wrlh black vinyl top and
Thompson of Buffalo, New to rn llem 2, consrst rng of
8 10 77 t c
South Thrrd Avenue , Mrd
Rt 4, Box 148, Waverly,
~
_
'
-------..
room approxrmately
black vinyl i nterior, 350 v 8
dleport Monday , Tuesday
Ohio Phone 947 2296
York, which was held m busrness
25 fl fron t age x 55 feet .
engtne
with
automatrc
and
Wednesday
Something
7 24 tfc
MIDDLEPORT
Lovely
The
owner
re-serves
the
Coshocton . Both are teachers
transmission and power 19 70 6 50 B SA m o tor c y c l e
tor everyone , 10 tdl 7 p m
rrght t o r e je c t any and all
home 1st floor has lovely
s teerrng , AM rad ro tape
Phon e 99 2 5898
BACKHOE for rent , hour or
8 10 3tc
near CoshOcton . It was a ·hill- offers
player
Contact · Tanya
kitchen range &amp; ref , dining
8
10
3tp
con1racr. reg . or excavatory
F or rn fo r matr on , phone 99 2
top wedding with buffet
Keebaugh 9 10 Sat 992 3629 ,
type Septic tanks Installed
R.. 1 BR. bath. 2nd, 2 nice
.49 .tfc
2186
evenrngs 985 391 3
THR E E mrlk goa t s, 7 part
Bill Pullins. phone 992 2478
served at the Bawngardner
For Rent
BRs.
Very
little
grass
to
8 7 6tp
Nub a rn Call a ll er Su nday
7 24 26lc
home.
Mrs.
Chester 18) 4 , 5, 7, 11 , 12 . 14, 61 C
cut
Storage
bldg.
NG
heat
.
- ---- - ----TWO trader lot s on river bank
BOAT Motors. Repairs . 498
14? Jltl5
at Clrfton , W va . 1 gas , 1 1970 C HEV Y Wa g on , V 8 ,
Lo~ust St • M1ddlepor1 ,
$15,500 00 .
B 10 Si c
Baumgardner was the forOh10 Phone 992 3092
e! ec Phone {304 } 77 2 5502
EXCAVATING,
backhoe.
power
s
leer.n
g
and
POMEROY
Large
NOTICE ON FILING
mer Lucy Jo Dye of this
8
8
6tp
a
utomat•c
S700
Phone
843
19
75
HON
DA
C
B
75
0
,
rm
7
22
26tc
dozer
and
drtcher
Gas,
OF INVENTORY
home . In good condition
- -·- ----- - - - - - ~ 459
electric and water line
ma culat e
J month s o ld
--- --- --- ---~ conununity. Relatives who
AND APPRAISEMENT
Could have 2 apartments, 5
bur i al. basements , footers,
E x tra s
Prtced to sell
8 10 4tp
WALL
paper
htmging,
The State of Ohio, Mergs 4 ROOMS and bath apt in
attended were his grand- Counly
septic
systems and brush
Pho
n
e
99
2
72
10
ev
enmgs
R
urrand
area
.
Phone
992
BR
,
2
baths,
new
F.A.
painting,
and
pane111ng
, Court of Common
5858
cleantng . Will haul fill dirt ,
8 10 41 C
father, Dale Dye, along with Pleas, Probate DIVISIOn
Phone 742 5081
furnace ,
porches ,
out
top soil , sand and graveL
7 27 tfc
The the Ex e cutor of the
7-27 · 12tc
cellar. THE LOW PRICE
Mr. and Mrs. Thad Dye and estate
limestone
for driveways and
to such of the followrng
1971 CAMPER , 16 It Le ts ur e
OF 510,000.
roads . Phone Charles R
Charity, and Mrs. Madge as are residents of the State of TRAILER lot rn Mrddleport
T1m e Lo Boy , refrtgerator,
S EW I N G
-MAC H I N E ,
Hatfield. Backhoe Service,
Call 992 5434
Ohro, vrz
the survrvmg
MIDDLEPORT - Very
furnac e Phone 992 7738
Repairs, service. all makes
Blackwood and Lesa Dye . spouse
Rt. 1, Rutland. Ohio, 742
FEMALE Sramese cat rn
, the next of k. rn , the
nice 3 BR home, L R. has
7 16 26fc
B 5 6tc
992 228-4 The Fabrtt; Shop,
6092
Hemlock Grove area la s t
Also attending from this part benefrciaries under the wrll , - ----------Pomeroy
Autho'r{ze&lt;f
Smger
frreplace, nrce kitchen,
believed seen north of
7- 11 90tc
to the attorney or at
5 RM apt. furnished, utllrt1es
Sales and Serv1ce
We
of the state were Mrs. Clyde and
FURNITURE , repair , car
Tuppers
Plarns
area
.
Phone
bath,
full
basement
with
torney s represen t rng any of
pard, l child accepted No
Sharpen SCISSOrs
pentry . Richard Russell
99 2 5749 SSO Reward
Walker, Jimmie and Carrie the atorementroned persons
·~ utility , N.G furnace, frutt
drunks John Sheets , 3m lies
3 29 tft
Phone
992
7178
8 7 Stc
Ella
F
Anderson ,
south of Mrddleport on Rt. 7
nice
yard .
A --. - - - --------of Thurman.
8 5 81p .. trees ,
Deceased , R ulland , Ohro ,
8 5 61p
.READY MIX CONCf.tETE HOUSE for sa'te on 2 acres of
BARGAIN AT 514,800.
Abbie Graves, cousin of Rutland Townshrp , No 21552
deltvered r,ght to your
land near Vinton , Ohro, on
1950
FERGU
SON
tractor
,
WE HAVE A COUPLE OF
are hereby not rfied that 2 BE DRM mobile home , 11 ''
Dale 'Dye, accompamed him theYou Inventory
protect Fast and easy Free
Mt
Tabor Rd , 3 bedrooms ,
newly rebuilt wrt h TO JS
and
Ap
bath , S40 week and depos rt
FARMS AND
SOME
estimates Phone 992 3284,
and batfl , frreplace, good
power pa.:k engm e . brush
from Colwnbus here and prarsement of the estate of the
Mobile
Homes
Sale
Pay own utilities Phone 992
Goegle1n Ready Mtx Co ,
ACREAGE 135 A. and 138
well, outbufldings Call 388
hog grader blade and other
deceased.
3509
visited in Pagetown, her aforementroned.
Mtddleport, Oh10
8879
3
pt
hitch
equrpment
Phone
A
vacant
ground
tor
sale.
late o't sard County, was filetl
12xirO
NEW
MOON
trader
and
8 s 6tc
6 3o ttC
843 2561
former home . She returned to rn this Cour t Sard Inventory two lots , or lust buy lots,
8 8 6tc
WE ALSO HAVE SOME
- - - --.....
- --:- -r-- ~- -8 7 61 c
and
Appraisement
will
be
for
Tuppers
Plains
.
Ohio
Phone
MOBILE
HOMES.
Columbus with Mrs. Dons hearing before thrs Cour t on TWO bedrm mobrle home.
667 3475
Gi::NERAL' Repa1r . , ·lean -up ,
deposrt requ 1red Phone 992
Angle, Colwnbus, Mrs. Patsy the 18th day of August , 1975, at
lind
hauling,
cutfln"Q,
8 6 6ttp DOUBLE neck steel gurtar ,
3429
mult r chord S250 S rdn ey
\0
00 o' clock A M
welding,
carpentry
GOOD
HOMES
ARE
Butts, Chicago, m., and Mrs.
7 JO 12tp MU ST sell 1975 travel trailer,
Hayman , 99'2 773 3
Any person des 1rrng to file
plumbing, elec masonrY
SELLING FAST- LET US
8 7 Btp
and ·general remodeling '.
Bobby Dye, Indianapolis, exceptrons thereto must frle --- -- ~- ----- - -18 fl
carpeted , air con
SELL
YOURS
TODAY.
at least five days prior to 3 AN 0 4 ROOM furnished and
Call Skit Pool Phone 992· '
dr l roned , manv extras Will
Indiana, who were here to them
the date set for hearmg
5126
6·17 .tfc
unfurn•shed
apartments
take trade 1n , Johnson's BICYCLE Repa ,rs , Sales and
visit New Carpenter and
Grven under my hand and
Phone 992 5434
---------:------Tra•ler Park , R t 7 across
Serv1ce
,
498
Locus
t
St
,
seal of sard Court , lhrs Jist day
HOUSE for sa l e on 2 acres of S EP.T t(: iANt&lt;S cl·~
4 12 tfc
from BluE- Fountain Motet ,
daughter, Martha Mays , of
Middleport, Ohio Phone
July 1975
land near Vrnton , Ohio on
Gall ipolis
992 3092
MOdern Senrtiitlon
local, and Mildred Carpenter,
Mt Tabor Rd , 3 bedrooms,
PRIVATE meeting room tor
I! 10 6tc
or 992 7J49
7
22
26tc
Manning D Webster
and
bath
,
frreplace
,
good
anyorgan1zatron
.
phone
992
Albany.
------------9 l8 .tfc
.
·
of
Judge
J975
':
well,
outbu
i
ldings
Call
388
1911
K I RKWOOD
Mobile
- - - -- ·-------- - nver, 3 bedrooms, closets, 1112
By
8879
Family members gathered
Ge l ding
Home , 17 x 60 wrth bay THOROUGHBRED
3 ll lfc
HAND LETTERED siGN$ baths, gas fired hot water
8 8 6tc
for sale Gentle, Wrll work
wrndows
Prrce
S4,500
at Ash Cave recenliy to Ann B watson Deputy Clerk APT lrke new. 3 rooms , wrth
around cattle . Has been
ANtD POSTERS FREE heat, full basement, and
Phone 992 7331
celebrate the 74th birthday of ( 8J 4, 11. 2tc
ES !MATES CALL
M C: ~rage. Very n1ce
·
1ocat1on
·
large bath, tabletop range ,
e 10 3tp wormed 10 years of age JACRESoflandwrth 2mobile CRAWFORD,
992 . 7680 ,
targe closet East Marn St,
Phone 696 1084 till 3 30 p m
homes tn 1 A 1 condition
Dale Stansbury. Those
8 . 7. 26 tp near stores.
Pomeroy See to apprecrate
7 31 l2tc
Excellent well with new
- - - -- -- - - - - - - present were Mr . and Mrs.
-------'-- NEW LISTING- 26 acres of
Phone Gallrpofis dur i ng day
PUBLIC NOTICE
· deep well water pump
446 7M9 , evenrn,gs 4-16 9539
Emplofment Wanted
The
Tuppers
P l atns
FOR SALE OR TRADE MOBILE trane service and rolling land, 3 bedroom home,
Many extras Seen by appt
Dale Stansbury, Mr . and Mrs.
Chester Wa t er D •strrct is
4 10 tfc
Harley Dav rdson Chopper
only For more information ,
dozer work . Phone 99'2 -5468 bath, drilled well, 2 farm
Harold Oxley, and Mr. and accepting brds for con
Phone 99 2 5663
call 949 -4917 Priced r1ght ---~----- --_!:!_:26tp ponds (stocked). 2 car ga•age,
WILL do odd iobs , mowmg,
for quick sate
8 8 61p
hauling, p~Jntrng or roofrng
Mrs. Jerry Stansbury and s!ructron of a combrnatron COUNTRY Mobde Home
Olt•ce and ga r age burldlng to
Phone 992 7409
PICTURE barn and 2 hen houses.
8 5 12tc CUST~M
Park , Rt J J, len miles north
children, all local; Mr. and be located at the 1unctron of
FRAMING,
OR IGINAL NEEDS NEWOWNER- New
7-29 26tc TWO prece l1vrng room suite , - - - - - --- - - - of
Pomeroy
Large
lots
wrth
recliner that beats and
-·----------SEASCAPES
AND
LAND 5 bedroom home, 3 baths,
Mrs. Larry Stansbury and S R 7 and Orange Townsh ip
concrete patros, srdewalks ,
Rd ?80 , Mergs County
vtbrates , breakfast table
SCAPI'S PAINTING E central air and heat, fam1ly
runners
and
off
street
sons, Reynoldsburg; Mr. "'! &lt;j
'R EMOOELI N-G ,
Ptumtnng
Sealed brds are to be sub
W1th 4 cha1rs , odd couch ,
JOYCE MILLER . 991-7680.
parkrng Phone 99-2 7479
heating and all types of
Plans
and
carpet , RCA TV. Other odds
room, nice kitchen with dishMrs. Clair Dale Stansbury · mrlled
1
. ..'
6·10Wp
CANNING
tomatoes
,
green
12
31
ttc
__
__
_
_
general
repair
Work
specif1catrons and instructrons
and ends Phone 992 7791
washer,
stove, refrigerator
beans ,
swee't
peppers,
and family, Mr. and Mrs. Bob for bidders with all necessary
guarant~d. 20 years ex '
8 8 31c
cucumbers
.
Geraldine
and
bar.
2 car garage and
apartment ,
penence
Phone 992 2409 .
H o me
Ad "FURNISHED
Barton and Mr. and Mrs. F armers
Cleland
,
Racrne
Phone
949
Iorge
y~rd.
adults only ln Middleport
m 1n1Siratron
co ntra c t
BOAT
,
motor
and
tra
rler
,
35
'
5 1 tfc
4121
Dale Eugene Turner, all of docum ent s ar e ava ila ble and
Phone 992-3874
----- -----------h p Evinrude motor , 14 ft
WILl TALK - On this a 2
7 25 tfc
J 25 tfc
St arcrest boat , new ltres on
Groveport; Tina Mar1e and may be p JC ked u p rn the office
,---:----'---'=::....-,
bedroom
home with bath, and
--- ------a • Ches ter , Ohro Marlrng
trarler , all for $700 Also.
Robm Schmidt, Canonsburg, Address , Box 1, Chester The
gas
forced
air furnace. Asking
Wanted
To
1968 Chevrolet Corvatr, good
2 BEDROOM lratJer , very
$10,000.00.
r1ght
rs
r
eserved
to
re1ect
any
condition,
SJOO
Phone
992
Pa.;
Mae
Tewksbury,
U S COINS and Currency.
good Phone 992 3324
6154 For sale or trade
or all b1ds
f . - t - ' ...
A GOOD BUY- 5 •ooms, one
1964 aQcf " o'IC:fei-, dimes,
Maxine Butler and Gladys
8 8 6tp
Brds will b e Opened Aug ?6 ' ---- ~------- _!::_lfc
quarters,
hat:ves
.
Silver
floor
plan In Mlddlepo•t w•fh •
Tewksbury, Colwnbus, and at 1 p m
dollars Buy , sell , or trade . BEAR Kodiac Magnum 45 lb
LAURELAND
Apartments,
bath
and 2 porches near
Call Roger Wamsley, 742
6th &amp; George , Sfs ., New
Faye Kitzmiller, Mtllersport. {8 J 11 18 ?5, 31c
bow wrth
bow qurver ,
schools,
for only 57,500.00.
&lt;•
Haven, W
'Va . Available
3651
'
camoufl~qe ,
cover
Mr . and Mrs. Larry
August 15 Brand new 2
8 8 3tc
E~ti•ely Remodeled
·RIVER FRONTAGE - 7
sights ,
new
string',
bedroom townhouses. ap
Rutherford, Elizabeth,
MIDDLEPORT
rooms, l 1/ 2 baths , family
fiberglass
arrows,
S6 5
pliances furnish-ed.
fully TIMBER . Pomeroy Forest
Mr
.
and
Mrs.
Ralph
Phone 985 3335 .
Jennifer. and Caroline ,
Busln-s Space
room, nat. gas heat and 2
Products, pay top prices for
carpeted Renting $128 up
8 8·3lc
Frazier,
Gallipolis,
visited
o;;a
corner lots.
standing
timber
and
tim
including
utllrties
.
For
more
Springfield, called on his
2,000 sq. ft. ( !A.socl)
ROUTE 33- Little 2 bedroom
berland
Call 614 -99'2 -5965 DELICIOUS home grown
her mother, Goldie Gillogly
•nformatfon, call 1 (304) 882
uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs.
2567
days or 614 446 8570 nights .
2
Apartmenls
renovated
home with bath,
peaches. white and yellow
..:..., --~
8 ?.7tc
8 8 6tc
Mendal Jordan on Sunday and called on other relatives
CompJetely
Fu•nlsllocl
~all.to-wall
ca•petlng. Front
Mason
Peach Orchard
one day.
J\
AS LOW AS
Phone (304) 773 5559 .
afternoon . They were enroute
APP\IIntment Only
po•ch and nice level lot.
a 8 tfc
Among those visiting Ney M"OBILE horite -f.Or.. reht ~LD furttlture , Ice boxes,
POMEROY LANDMARK
·' ~-.7!119o~J92-5320
WE
HAVE
OVER
so
to the Point Rock area to visit
Adults only Phone 997 5535
brasa beqS, or complete
Carpenter
and
daughter,
DOuBLe
-o-;;;;
~
~as
ranoe.
··-~ack
W. carsey, Mgr.
L__..:.;._.:__-,.--;-::...:.:1
' ' _PROPERTIES FOR , YOU TO
a 10 tfc
households
Write M. o,..
his grandparents, Mr. and
Nor.9e
Refrigerator
a:&amp;_ Phone992-2181
- - - - - - · - - - - · . ··
Miller, Rt . .4, Pomeroy,
Martha Mays were Roberta
· CHOOSE FROM. DROP ' IN
Mrs. J. D. Canode.
4• aEORM . home for rent or
Ohio Call ~92-7760.
freezer,
breakf8st
set,
and
'----'-------:.__J
Parker,
Bolivar,
Mrs.
Betty
.
mise
Movmg
,
Wtll
not
need
sale by owner tn vrnton . 1
· :
let--7 74
Mr . and Mrs . George
~ Phone 388 8483 or 1·471 · 141'2 .' _______ _... ____ _ _
these appliances
Can be
Columbus;
her
McKnight, Rebecca and Cox,
seen at 947 Ash At , M1d · REG.. Quarter Horse and
8 10 4t c
daughter, Mrs. Patien.ce
DISCARDED ' laWn moweh
- --~-- -- - -dlepor:t .
Terry, Columbus, visited his
Pamt colt Phone 742 -3267
- llllers, riding rilowers ... ett:'
8 8 Jtc
Bernard
and
son,
Mark,
Salt
7 31 tfc
· P~on~ 742 - 307 ~, ......
;,,.,'' . ·'
··
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Lake
City,
Utah,
and
Mr.
and
~ •
,
1
, • ·&lt;~ 'i ~1&amp; 26tc
Wanted To Buy
D. 0. McKnight and Mrs.
Mrs. Hilbert Cox, Albany.
'
Goldie Gillogly.
Mr,
and
Mrs.
Roger
Escue
Guests of Mrs. Hazel Burke
were chlldnen and families, (Carol Fraley) are an·
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Burke, noWlcing the birth of a son,
Brien, Karen, James, Timmy Aaron Roger, on July 28 at
and Bruce, Cincinnati; Mr. O'Bieness Memorial Hospital
and Mrs. Hebron Burke and in Athens. Grandparents are '
family, Hurricane, W. Va., Mr. and Mrs. Clarence·
and Mr. and Mrs. Larry• Fraley, local, and Mr. and
McKinley and daughter, Vera Mrs. Nye Escue, Albany. The
little one has a brother,
Birke, from Kentucky.
. Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Gillogly Travis Michael.
visited her brother-irfaw and l,a Scala, short. for :'T~!i~o ,I
mter, Mr. and Mrs. Harley alia Scala ," the great
house or Milan. Italy, 'is so
Hanins, Pomeroy.
'
Elsie Bratton spent a day ed because tt was erected, , in
1778 at the s•te of the church of
recently with Mr. and Mrs. Santa Mana alia Scala :_ St.
Mendll Jordan.
Ma~y's by th~ Stairs
~;:-----:::-.,--:-y';:-:;;;::-~:-::-:-:-'----::-~-r-1

Sill___ _____ _

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.

MONDAY,AUGUST 11, 1Y7S

15; Mickey Mouse Club 6; Sesame St 20,33; Movie
"Swordsman of Siena" 10, Dinah 13.
4· 3Q-Bewltched 3; Merv Gr iffin 4, Mod Squad 6;
Mickey Mouse Club B; Bonanza 15.
5:DO--FBI 3; Lucy Show 8; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33.
5.3Q-News6; Andy Gr iffllh 8; Hogan's Heroes 13; Get
Smarl 15; Elec. Co 20,33

0~. 6A~Y~ ... WHY

EASY HA5

..

.._,__..~-~~Mw-•-•~w.--•~---~---·-~·-----:-~--"'

Televisio~ log for easy' viewing_:

• K 10 2

KUHL CAKE DEOOR
Flatwoods, Oh1o
Pomeroy, Oh1o
Stop In Or

Your Hetl D~~ter
Third St.
Racine, Ohro
Ph. 94f· S" I

,_.._.._.._.._._..___.___

..- : 00--Mr . Cartoon 3; I Dream of Jeannie 4; Somerset

Racine Plumbing
&amp; Heating

PAINT

CAKE BAKING
WANTED
K1tchen State Ins-pected
Licensed
B-aker
and
Decorator
Homemade
Noodles also featured .

MONEYf

.

Sy•acuse, Ohio

'

FATHER,YOU'RE
TAKING
GANGSTER

'

LARRY IA.VE{tDER.

Phone 992 -5682
or 992-7121
7-8-1 mo.

'

Blown
II!~UI•tion Services .
Blown Info Wall•&amp; Atlil;l ·
STORM .
WI~DOWS&amp; DOORS
REPLAtEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING-SOFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

ALL

For Sale

"

FUE EStiMATES .

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE
2
West

I KNOW!

e

.

19! .\ HO N D A !50 wrth h ea de r s

Notice

Carpenter
Personals

4 13 lf c

Pets For Sale

R EG' Toy PoOdie,

·

usmes
~

area code ' " &lt;23

$1495

(An•wrn lomorrow)

JOKER

e

SAVE-SAVE

1..... - -... 1A t I X·XXXJ t XXI )
ALIVE

:~~~"·

I COULDN'T
FIGURE IT AT
FIRST, BUT
NOVV•

--'---B
- -------------.---;.;_-:-----'---- ----'--,

mobil e homes

SAY E '

5UIIJ&amp; 11\J '!i:OCK "

~==========~~~~~~~s~u;r:r•~•;ted:;b;y~thtabovec~n.

Jumhlf' ~:

f

·CA SH paid f or al l m a ke s an tt

l'

~_...._.._..,.

need Offer fair price. The sale
will be wrapped up quickly.
LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0cl. 23)
You'll dfscover a small h1dden

~Your
~Birthday :
Aug. 12, 1875
An opportunity to Increase
your resources w rll be offered
to you this year through a family contact No large profits, but '
you could make a tidy sum. ~

I THINK HE RAN THE

HA~ fiOIIS€ M

THERE

ONES TO
HER

DOLlV

..'

'I

�I .

'
8- The Dail¥ Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 , Mon&lt;!" y, Aug. 11 , 1975
POUriCAL LAYOFF
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio
House Speake r Vernal Riffe
. (Continued from page 1)
Jr., D-Ne w Boston, said
months from now l might see
Sunday the reported layoff of
it differently." He said "the
3,000 state workers because
Democratic party and the
of budgetary cuts was strictly
country seem to be moving
political.
along quit.e nicely without my
Riffe said the legislature
services a'nd advice."
a ppropriated money for the
A definite Democratic
workers and Gov. James A.
contender, Rep. Morris K.
Rhodes vetoed those section
Udall, D-Ariz., is making
in the stale budget .
plans to run for president
Riffe said the legislature
next year at the same time he
did not make any cuts in state
seeks re-&lt;!lection to his House
agencies in the budget, but
seat.
the governor ordefed each
"1 haven't made a decision .
department to make a 2 per
I'm just floa ting the idea to cent cul.
gel public reaction," Udall
"It seems to me the pursaid in an interview.
pose of the layoffs is to get rid
Udall said the Arizona of the Democrats," Riffe
attorney general gave a said. "They're strictly
tentative opinion that nothing playing politics with the
in state law would prevent lay offs , and the legislature
him from being a candidate · provided the funds the
for both offices al the same departments requested.''
lime.
Riffe said an additional $5
The A.rizona deadline for million was budget.ed for the
filing for Congress is July 12, sta le Controlling Board for
1976, and before that dale the Department of Taxation
Udall will know the results of and the Department of
presidential primaries in Natural Resources, but those
New
Hampshire, sections were vetoed
Massachusetts, New York
and Wisconsin - all of which
he plans to enter.
ln an airport news confer e nce in Detroit Saturday,
Sen. Birch Bayh, D-lnd ., said
he int.ends to sample opinion
to see if he cQV.ld become a
"credible candldat.e" for his
The annual Weber Family
par•ty's presidential reunion was held Sunday,
nomination.
Aug . 3, at Roya l Oak Park
'Last week, a Bayh for with 47 prese nt .
President Committee was anA basket dinn er was
nounced in Washington.
preceded by the blessing
campaign backers of Sen. given by Summers Haught.
Hubert H. Humphrey's 1972
Barbara Sargent presented
presidential bid owe $900,000, a beautiful cake inscribed,
but
the
Minnesota " Weber Reunion. "
Democrat's 1976 Senate reGifts were presented to the
election campaign chest is oldest, Dorothy Kimes ; to the
$6,800 in the black.
youngest, Bonnie Koenig ; to
The Minneapolis Tribune lhe one with th e most
reported Humphrey camchildren present, Elsie Hawk .
paign committees recently
Other gifts were presented
raised $22,550 in New York to to Mrs. Wilbur Weber ,
help retire the $903,968 debt
Johnny We ber, Wilbur
for his 1972 presidential bid.
Weber, Dorothy Myers a nd
Most of the money is owed to
Jackie Case. Games were
wealthy individuals.
enjoyed during the afternoon.
The July report of the
Marcia Keller was elected
Committee to Re-Elect
president lor 1976 and Clarice
Senator Hubert H. Humphrey
Allen.
sec retary
and
showed receipts of $6,869
treasurer. The 1976 reunion
since opening for business.
will be held the first Sunday
The reports were filed with
in Augus t at Royal Oak Park.
the Federal Election ComPresent were Mr. and Mrs.
mission .
Ralph Keller , Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Keller , Rodney , Rusty,
Mr . and Mrs. Roger Gaul,
NOW YOU KNOW
Ice cream cones were Rogie, Lea Ann, R.D.,
Pomer oy; Mr. and Mrs.
patented in 1903.
Summers Haught, Cuyahoga
Falls; Mrs . Elsie Hawk ,
Nannette, Cheryl, Pam and
Kenny and Chuck Went ,
Man s field; Mrs. Cecilia
Murphy, Pam , Tuppers
Plains; Mr. and Mrs. Francis
August 11 thru
Case, Pomeroy; Mrs . Thelma
August!!
Farnsworth , R.D., Long
NOT OPEN
Bottom; Mr . and Mrs. Wilbur
Weber, McKees Rocks, Pa.;
Frid.lv·thru S~nday
Mr . and Mrs . Johnny Weber,
August22·24
John , Coropolis, Pa .; Mr. and
THE GODFATHER
Mrs . Clayton Allen, Chester;
PART II
Mrs. Judy Weber, Jimmy ,
Mr . and Mrs. Norman Weber,
Vi.). : · Tuppers
Plains;

PoliticS'

Annual Weber
reunion held

at Royal Oak

MEIGS THEATRE

- · ----

MASON DRIVE-IN
'

--

'

'J, ,r I•,

•

Starting Aug . 15
Open Weekends Only

~~

Junior Koenig ,

Leonard,

H 08pl'tal NeWS
Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
- Linda Haley , Middleport;
Glady.s Shields, Racine;
Margaret Allen , Pomeroy .
DISCHARGES - Ronald
Martin, Merlin Tracy , Jr .,
Warre n D. Reeves, Dorothy
Brewer,' Okey Kiser , Sr .,
Ricky Mc Cle llan, Lydia
Ebersbach.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Edna Dorst, Pomeroy ; Lena
McKi nlye . Middleport:
Kath y Hoo d , Middleport;
Mark Hal ey. Pomeroy .
DISCHARGES Lena
Heilman. Della Curtis,
Ronald Bachtel.
PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES Gay
Kin g. New Haven ; Mrs . John
Bigilow, Middleport; Thomas
Barnette, Millwood; Mrs.
Stephen Marlin. Gallipolis
Ferry ; Jeffery Cremeans,
Coo lville; Leslie Weaver,
Point Pleasant; Elma Woods,
Point Pleasant; Winthrop
Butcher, Point Pleasant;
Mrs .
Hobart
Stanley,
Southside; Mrs . Raleigh
Robery, Ma son, Mrs. Allen
Cox. Gallipolis; Karen
Brown, Parkersburg; Mrs.
Daniel Boles, son, Point
Pleasa nt ; Sally Byers,
Pomeroy ; Samuel Stone,
Leon; Mrs. Leonard Wray,
Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs. Jack
Kerwood , Henderson; Mrs.
Melvin Rollins, Leon; Mrs.
Okey Keefer, Polnl Pleasant;
Oarence Sturgeon , Vinton;
Oden
Pearson,
Point
Pleasant; Harold Clark,
Point Pleasant, and Elma
McGinnis, Point Pleasant.
Holzer Medical Center
(Births, Aug. 8)
Mr . and Mrs . Charles
Adkins, a son, Oak Hill; Mr.
and Mrs. Randy Boggs, a son,
Oak Hill; Mr. and Mrs. Gary
Casto, a son, Gallipolis; Mr.
and Mrs. William Cox, a son,
Gallipolis; Mr . and Mrs.
Richard Zinn, a daughter,

Vinton .
(Births, Aug. 9)
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Chilcot.e,
a daughter, Jackson; Mr . and
Mrs . Larry Farley, a
daughter, Long Bottom; Mr.
and Mrs. James Hayes, a son,
Wellston ; Mr . and Mrs.
Stephen
Henderson,
a
daughter, Middleport; Mr.
and . Mrs. Don Rose, a
daughter, Racine.
(Births, Aug. 10)
Mr. and Mrs. Max Houston,
a son, Hamden.

!

RUFUS MEADOWS

Rufus Jack Meadows, 75,

Rt. 2, Coolviile. died Sunday
a·t St. Joseph Hospital.
Parkersburg , following a
brief illness.
Mr . Meadows was born in
West Virginia the son of the
late Robert and Sarah Lilly
Nleadows. He was preceded..
also in death by his wife,
Elizabeth, in June of this
year, a foster son, Johnny
Cox ; two brother s. and two
sisters.
Mr . Meadows, owner and
operator of a sawmill in Troy
twp., AIhen s County, had
been a resident of Coolville
the past 17 years .
He Is survived by a
daughter , Doloris Casto,
Huntington ; two foster sons,
Bi lly Pauley and Harvey Noe,
both of Huntington ; a
brother, Leonard Meadows,
Layland, W. Va. ; five sisters,
Mrs . Olie Pres ley, Hinton , W.
Va .; Mrs . Mildred Brummit,
Elkton. Md.;' Mrs. Virginia
Brumm it, Tampa , Fla . ; Mrs .
Ocie Patrick and Mrs . Lottie
Bolin, both of Hicks, W . Va .,
and two grandchildren .
Funeral services will be
held Wednesday at 1 p.m . at
the White Funeral Home in

Blood clue
(Continued from page 1)
Red Fox, a suburban
restaurant where Hoffa was
to meet with reputed Mafia
leader Anthony "Tony Jack"
Giacalone and two other men.
The restaurant is halfway
between Hoffa's Lake Orion
home and Detroit.
Charles
" Chuckle"
O'Brien, Hoffa's foster son
and a key figure in the investigation, told the FBI he
borrowed a car from
Giacalone's son, Joe , to
deliver frozen salmon to the
wife of Detroit Teamsters
offlcal Robert Holmes the
morning Hoffa disappeared.
FBI agents seized young
Giacalone's
1975
car
Saturday after they learned
of bloodstains in the front
seat. But both O'Brien and
Giacalone told the FBI the
stains were dried fish blood
and called the FBI's action
harassment.
"U everybody would get
over this Ellery Queen stuff
and gel serious about finding
the man who is missing we
would all be better off,"
O'Brien said.
O'Brien, believed by
Hoffa's family to be connected with Hoffa's disappearance, has
ignored
requests he take a lie detector
test.

News .. in Briefs

days later, wlll follow the same route.
The tab for American taxpayers will be $1 billion. ls this
trip necessary? Yes, says Dr. Gerald Soften, project scientist
for the Viking mission which has been seven years in the
making.
"If we fmd any form of life, it will ca~se an explosion about
thoughts about ourselves, our importance in the cosmos, and
accelerate all space programs, including eventual manned
landings on planets," Soften said.

YOU'LL BE GLAD YOU

'fr.u~i&lt;Toad Purchases To,Gi~e You The Ver.y Best Value!

.,

:

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'

'

F

•

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•

son .
Mr . Brown was a member
the Naomia Baptist
Church, Pomeroy ~ where he
served as trustee and a
member
of
Gallipolis
Mason ic Bodies .
He is survived by the
following children, Helen
Lee, Louisvill e, Ky .; Elisha
Brown , Detroit ; ldra Trout,
Gentl e Br ow n. Jr ., Viola
English, Charles Brown , and
Charlene Peck , ali of
Columbus ; two step·children,
Henry Wright , Columbus ,
and Jacob Wright , New
Jersey; a brother, Robert
Brown, Pomeroy ; one sister,
Leah Johnson, Boston, Ma:is .,
19 grandchildren , and one
great.grandchild .
Funeral services will be
held Tuesday at 2 p.m . at the
NaOmia Baptist Church with
of

the Rev . Eddie Bufflnglon
officiating . Burial will be in
Beech Grove Cemetery .
Friends may call at Ewing
Funeral Home after 3 p.m .

today.

HELENA BAKER

Mrs. Helena Beaver Baker,
67, Middleport, Fourth Ave ..
died Sunday evening at the
Holzer
Medical
Center
following a lingering illness .
Mrs . Baker was born Aug.
25, 1907, in Cheshire, the

daughter of the late William
H . . and Gertrude Yeauger
Beaver . She was also
preceded in death by her
husband, Ernest A. Baker in
1949, and two brothers,

YOUR OIOICE
'30 VAWES

Michael Shawn and Mathew
Shane; three brothers-in-law,
two
sisters ·in -law,
and
several nieces and nephews.
Mrs . Baker was a member

of the

Middleport

held at 2 p.m . Wednesday at
the Rawlmgs -Coats Funeral
Home with the Rev . Peter
Grandall officiating . Burial
will be in Cheshire Gravel
Hill Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home from
2 to 4 and from 7· to 9 p.m .
Tuesday.

•

r

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Austerity was the prevailing mood in Middleport Monday
night when town council voted unanimously to close the
Middleport swinuning pool Wednesday and turned down a
lease on the Middleport marina .
Officials agreed it "is a shame" to close the pool at this lime
but on the other hand, they contended that they have bee~
hard.pressect for funds to operate the village. They said that
continuatton of the pool until Aug. 24 when the closing was
plilnned would only put the village farther in the red.
The pool came up for discussion when Oerk-Treasurer
Gene Grate '!laid there is not enough money in the pool fund to
pay its current bills. Officials examined available finances and
found no way they could come up with enough money to keep
the pool open until Aug . 24. It was decided to give refunds to
~ople who have paid for swimming lessons for the last two
weeks of the planned pool operations and to transfer some
money from the mayor's fund to pay outstanding bills.

Pictures will be taken at
Meigs High on Aug . 10
through Aug . 23.

COUNTY ROAD 3 from
Rutland to Harrisonville will
be closed this week for
paving, Wesley Buehl county
engineer, said today .
M.L , PARENTS
OF
seventh and eighth grade
pupils new to the Meigs Local
School District are to register
their children at the Meigs

Tho cood ole days dono In brlcht, new ways.
Crinkle cotton muslin has a field da,y picking
wildflowers for its ribbon-banded yoke,
waistband back-sash, swingy border hem. By
Vicky Vaughn, of course. Machine wash-dry .
Natural with Wine

Closed all day Thur.sday,
August 14th for the Meigs
County Fair.

---.a

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
ABOUT 400 WORKS 1:1Y STUDENTS of Meigs County schools will be on display in the
senior fair building at the Meigs County Fair. Under the supervision of Supt. Robert Bowen,
the school exhibit section has grown steadily over the years. The work of each student in
· the fields of science and arts and crafts is judged on an individual basis with premiums and
ribbons being awarded. Pictured working on the exhibit Monday are I to r, Mrs. Mary
Bacon, Mrs. Nellie Vale, seated, and Mrs. Grella Suttle. Mrs. Vale and Mrs. Bacon are
volunteer workers with the exhibit and Mrs. Suttle is a county school supervisor. Mrs.
Bacon holds an unusual sea shell picture created by Nicki Dawn VanMeter.

*

m~nean
From a Great American Bank

•

• •

.ln

By United Press International
COLUMBUS STATE AUDITOR THOMAS F .
Ferguson has called for a legislative inquiry into the planned
layoff of some 3,000 state employes for budgetary reasons "to
see if they are justifiable economically or whether indeed the
layoffs are politically motivated."
"I think the legislature should look into the possible
violation of state civil service laws as well as the sufficiency of
funds," Ferguson said. "They should check all the rotary
accounts of each executive department to see if any funds are
being hidden. "
The Democratic state auditor noted that the Republican
Gov. James A. Rhodes administration has hired more than
7,000 state workers since taking office Jan. 13, so the total on
the payroll was 58,587 by June 10. " If the governor is attempllng to justify the layoffs for economy reasons, why is he
maintaining a better than 2 to I hiring ratio," he asked.
HOUSTON - SCOTT NELSON WAS NOMINATED 11
months ago as the Ku Klux Klan vice-presidential candidate.
He's been waiting for the campaign funds to pour in, but so far
he hasn't received a nickel. Nelson said Monday he was withdrawing froQ1the race because of the lack of contributions.
"I have become very discouraged and dissatisfied with the
conservative people in this country - a lot of talk and no action," said Nelson, the Imperial Wizard of the Texas Fiery
Knights of the KKK . Nelson said he had not notified KKK
presidential nominee Dale Reusch of Lodi, Ohio.
"He called me a few days ago and invit.ed me to a meeting
in Charleston, W.Va ., this weekend but I don't know if I will

go," Nelson said. "I don't have the money."

We've warned ·George III. We've marshaled our troops.
Today, May lOth, the second Continental Congress meets in
Philadelphia. We're ready for achton. Up north, eighty-three
of us head out of the woods. Our commander: Colonel Ethan
Allen. Our name: the Green Mountain Boys. Our mission: to
get Fort Ticonderoga and its military stores. Because we're
backwoods boys, we take the British garrison by surprise.
And we take the fort, in Allen's words, "in the name of the
great Jehovah and the Continental Congress." We'll go
down in history, including one of our privates name of
·
Benedict Arnold.

VAIL, COLO. - PRESIDENT . FORD HAS SIGNED
legislation that will increase the· pay of congressmen, cabinet
members, Supreme Court justices and Vice President Nelson
A. RockefeUer. Other high-level government officials are
included in the pay increase Congress passed just before
taking its August recess.
The bill gives the government's top officers, whose pay has
been frozen since 1969, the same percentage increases app-oved for civil service employes. The amount · of the increases is still to be settled. The Bureau of Labor Standards
told Ford it would take an 8.6 per cent increase to provide civil
service employes with salaries comparable to those in the
private sector. .
The estimated cost of an 8.6 per cent increase is $52 million.

THE_FARMERS BANK
AND ·SAVINGS CO.
Pomeroy, Ohio

-'

40,000-00 Maxi!Jium .Insurance
for Eich'· Depositor
'

1

'

1

'

Mozzarella c heese, a
favori t.e of pizza lovers, was
originally made from the
milk of the water buffalo.

TUESDAY, AUGUST 12, 1975

PRICE 15'

112th fair
in business

•

]

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WINS DIVORCE
Fred Miller has been
granted a divorce in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
from Donna Bush Miller.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

·I

reading was given to the new street ilgbllng ordinance and the
second and third readings were given an ordinance to grant
vacation lime to Chase who is planning to retire.
Mayor Hoffman reported that the chief of police had expressed interest in establishment of a police department
auxiliary. However, it was reported that the matter had come
up before council some lime ago and an investigation had
disclosed that such an organization involves too much liability
on the part or the villilge.
The discussion on the marina indicated that some years,
the Middleport Chamber of Commerce has given the village
$300 to help with the maintenance . However, records showed
that the amount was not enough to cover the expenditures the
village has experienced in maintaining the marina.
Also attending last night' s meeting were council candida t.es Lowell Price and David Gerard .

Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area

Monday through Friday next
week from 9 a.m. to 12 noon
and l p.m. to J p.m .

1775: The mountain boys make good.

I.

as the village depository for the next two years. A third

en tine

Junior High School. S. Third
St.. Middleport , Monday
through Friday this week and

CALLED TWICE
The Middleport E-R squad
was . called to the home of
Delmar Hawley, Rt. 1,
Middleport, at 12:15 p.m .
Sunday. Hawley was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The squad was also called at
1:54 p.m . Sunday to the home
of Lillian Zerkle where
lightning had struck. There
was no damage.

'

martna

Now You Know

VOL. XXVII NO. 84

by permiss ion o t THE RETT MA NN ARLH I VE

there Is.

00

Both Mayor Fred Hoffman and mamt.enance supervisor mowing which led to council again voting unanimously against
Harold Chase said it was a mistake to close the pool. They entering the proposed lease.
expect yol!llg people may start swimming in the Ohio River
Any money spent should be for a purpose to benefit more
and that a drowning easily may result. However, council Middleport people than those owning boats. They contended
stated that they could not continue the pool operations when · that the marina serves on a minority .
there is no money to pay the bills which would be incurred until
Mayor Hoffman said the marina will probably be closed
Aug. 24,
since councll voted against the lease. He had pointed out
Council members present who voted In favor of the pool earlier that funds for irnprovinR the marina are available from
closing included Mrs. Jean Craig, Carl Horky, Marvin Kelly , two government sources on a cost sharing basis.
Williams Walters and James Brewer .
Mayor Hoffman reported that a representative of the JenMayor Hoffman report.ed that the Marina on Railroad St. nings Consultant Firm in Columbus which is doing a housing
has been turned back to the U. S. Corps of Engineers by the study in Middleport will meet with council members in regard
Department of Natural Resources. He said that the Middleport to their feelings on housing on Aug . 28. A cont.est to
Village Planning Commission had recommended that the decor~t.e fire hydrants was discussed and no objections to it
were expressed.
village take a 50 year lease on the marina from the Corps.
Council approved the mayor 's report for July showing
However, discussion on that matter made it clear that
some money is expended at the marina in maintenance and receipts of $1,752.80 and app-oved the Citizens National Bank

Cloudy tonig ht and Wednesday, chance or thundershowers Wednesday. Lows in
the lower 70s, and highs
Wednesday in the mid 80s.
Probability of rain is 10 per
cent today, 20 per cent toni ght
and 50 per cent Wed nesday.

member of St. Brig it Catholic

the
POMEROY
EM&gt;ENIT B~OCK CO., you
bank on It being the

Its

•

Wt&gt;_.ather

between Aug . II through the
18th.

Church and' the International
Association of Machinists,
and a veteran of W . W. II who
served in the Army Air
Force.
He is survived by a
daughter, .Mrs. Karen Lee
Moore, Huntington; two
sisters, Mrs. Margaret E.
Click , Lexington, Ky ., and
Mary Lou Lavance, Salem,
Oregon ; one brother, James
E . Souders, Miami , and three
grandchildren .
Funeral services will be
held Tuesday at 10 a.m . at the
K of C Hall in Xenia with
burial
in
Maplewood
Cemetery at 2 p.m. at New
Lexington. Friends may call
at the McColaugh Funeral
Home from 7 to 9 this
evening . WaKe ·Services wHI
be held at the funeral home at
a p.m . this evening.

kitchen custom designed

••

usterit

A reminder to Meigs High
Seniors that appointments for
having pictures taken must
be made this week by calling
Vick ie Abbott at 992 ·206• .
Appointments must be made
between 10 a .m . and .a p.m .

1072 Parnell Drive, Xenia,
died Saturday morning at
Green Memorial Hospital.
Formerly of Pomeroy, he
had lived in Xenia the past 25
years. He was born in Mid -

dleport AprilS, 1917 the son of

places on Wednesday and
'fim' places the remainder of
the week until 4 p.m. on
Saturday.

Notices, local
news in brief

GEORGE SOUDERS
George V. Souders, 58, of

BAKER FURN:ITURE
'

First

Baptist Church and was
employed at the Robinson's
Dry Cleaning firm several
years .
Funeral services will be

PERSONALITY
DESIGNED KITCHEN In
IV&lt;Jur home. When you have

•a••

entered in the 1975 Conservation Poster contest.
Third plilce winners will be
displayed on Tuesday, second

LOCAL 1'EMPS
Temperature in downtown
Pomeroy Monday at 11 a.m.
Clifford and William K.
Surviving are a son, Larry, was 73 degrees under rainy
Middleport ; two grandsons, skies.

don ' t have to be
wealthy to have a new

WITH THE' PURCHASE OF ANY MAJOR ADMIRAL APPLIANCE

'

and Molly Page Brown . He
was also preceded in death by
his wife, Beatri ce Sophia
Brown, two daughters, and a

AKRON YOUTH DEAD
CHELYAN, W.Va. (UP!)
- Keith A. Foster of Akron,
Ohio, was crusbed to death
Saturday after he fell from
his stepfather's pickup truck
and was crushed beneath the
rear wheels.
Police said Oay Ingram,
47, was driving the truck with
the child and slx of his
brothers and staters In the
back when the accident oc.
curred.

-SPECIAl. OFFER-

S&amp;WCD will sponsor hay show at fair ,

The Meigs Soil and Water
.
I Conservation District will
again sponsor the hay show at
Coolville with the Rev .
the Meigs County Fair
Wesley Thakher officiating .
Burial will be in Weatherby
Tuesday morning.
Cem'e tery . Friends may caiJ
A trophy will be awarded in
at the funeral home after
each
of three c ategories, best
noon on Tues.day .
all grass, best 50 percent and
GENTLE BROWN
over legumes and best 49
Gentle Giant Brown , 73, 104
percent and under legwn~s.
~w Street, died Saturday at
lroctor 's North Hospital,
A new feature of the district
Columbus.
exhibit
this year will be the
Mr. Brown was born Jan . 4,
display of the winning posters
1902. the son of the late Jack

the late William and Eleanor
·- Wessa Souders.
An electrician, he was at
(Continued from page 1)
Wright Patterson Air Force
planet 230 million miles away. A second Viking, leaving 10 Base for 20 years . He was a

AUGUST .SPECIALS

.:CORDLESS ELEC. DRILL
• ·VARIABLE SPEED JIGSAW
•LAWN EDGER-TRIM.MER

!

Area Deaths

MOSCOW
SOVIET COMPOSER DMITIW
Shostakovich, whose controversial career rose and fell at the
whim of the Kremlin, has died of a heart attack at the age o( 68.
Shostakovich's family said the composer died at his Moscow
home Saturday night after a decade-long struggle with the
debilitating effects of heart disease.
Shostakovich, whose work often provoked controversy at
home and abroad, was judged by most critics to be one of the
outstanding compOS&lt;:,r.Lll!_ the~~ century.
MACON, GA. - THE UNITED KLANS of America,
seeking "100 per cent pure American men," says a stagnant
economy has boosted membership in the "invisible empire."
Imperial Wizard Robert Shelton pointed to a cross-burning
rally in South Georgia Saturday night as an example of
renewed interest in the Klan.
Shelton said Klan membership rose as the economy
declined because whiles are afraid of losing jobs to blacks, or
having foreign competition wipe out American jobs. "We've
reactivated seven old units in Bibb and Jones Counties," said
Shelton, packing up his Bible and American flag in the trailer
that converts into a stage for Klan rallies.

Sheilia, Bonnie, R . D. ,
Pomeroy ; Mrs. Dorothy
Myers, Leonard Alvin,
Bruce; Mrs . Joyce Baker , Mrs. Barbara Sargent, all of Chester; Mrs.
Norina Chapman, Mrs .
Dorothy
Kimes,
Mrs.
Glendora Swatzel, Pomeroy;
Mrs. Olive Weber, R.D., Long
Bottom, and Doris Koenig ,
Tuppers Plains.

OFFICE
: 9:30 to 12,2 to 5 (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.)-EAST COU.RT

..

,-------~--- - ------------~-,

r

''

The 112th annual Meigs fair exhibits must be in place.
G&lt;Junty Fair opened for its
Tonightal 7:30 p.m ., the
first full day of activities annual open class horse show
today under sunny skies.
will be held in the centerfield
Members of Ohio Eta Phi of the race track and the
Chapter and Xi Gamma Mu grandstand event will be the
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi pony pulling cont.esl starling
Sorority are handling the al the same hour . See more
ticket gates at the fair and pictures on page 2 tOday.
Drew Webster Pos·t 39,
A grandstand audience
American Legion, members estimated at 75 persons atare in charge of parking .
tended the first service of this
The first judging got un- year's fair Monday evening
derway this morning in the at 7 :30 sponsored by the
Domestic Arts and the Art Meigs County Ministerial
Show . A hay show was also Association .
being staged this morning
The Rev . Carl Hicks or
under the sponsorship of the Belpre offered the sermon
Meigs County Soil and Water and a choir of 18 voices made
Conservation District. ..
up of several churches of the
Weigh-ins were being county d'irected by Ben
conducted of livestock in Philson sang two anthems
preparation for upcoming and open and closing numbenefits . At 6 this evening all bers.

DAN MEADOWS, RIGHT, HANDED over the keys to the Village Pharmacy to Gary
Wolfe and Dennis Newland,l-r , Monday as the business changed ownership .

Walkout erupts Meigs natives ·take over
Jeffers is
•
Village
Pharmacy
business
coal
fields
fined $500 m

John Jeffers, RD Pomeroy,
charged recently in the
breaking and entering at the
home of Ruth Ellen Story at
Burlingham in 1973, appeared
before Judge John C. Bacon
Saturday.
Jeffers was fined $500,
sentenced to six months to

five years in the penitentiary,
which was suspended, placed
on probation for five years,
and was ordered to make
restituation.

Also appearing was Lonnie
Black, Rutland, who was not
sentenced, but will appear
before Judge Bacon on Oct. 4.
Taken lrom the Story home

LOGAN, W. Va. &lt;UPI) - Coal operators
were optimistic today that the backbone of a
strike that flared amid strained relations between United Mine Workers President Arnold
Miller and his rank-and-file would be broken.
Nearly half of Logan County 's 33 coal mines
were idled when picket lines were thrown up
Monday by dissenting workmen.
Sporadic mine closings - including one in
Mason County - erupted in the aftermath of
Miller's heated run-in Sunday with irate coal
miners, upset over the failure to set up a 10meml:!er arbitration panel specified in last
year's pact with the industry.
•

0

UMW District 17 President
Jack Perry conceded the
confrontation possibly "had
some influence" in the
were several valuable items
strikes, but Melvin Triolo,
including antiques.
head of the Logan County
:::::::::::::c:::::::::::::::::::::::::e::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: Coal Operators Association,
EXTENDED FORECAST
felt a number of the mines
Thursday through
were closed because of the
Saturday,
~hance of firing of a workman.
showers Thursday and
Triolo said he believed
Saturday and fair Friday.
miners would begin returning
Highs wlll be In the 80s and
to their jobs.
·
lows will be in the 60s.
So intense was Miller's

It became official Monday:
The Village Pharmacy in
Middleport is under n ew
ownership.;md management.
Dan Meadows, who opened
the store in October of I967,
gave the keys to pharmac ists

Gary Wolfe and Dennis
Newland.
Meadows will retire to hi s
farm nea r here and where he
plans to raise bee f cattle.
Both Wolfe and Newland
are graduates of Ohio State
University 's pharmaceutical
·:::::::::·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;::::::::::::::::::
school. Wolfe formerly was
PICKET IN PLACE
employed with Rite Aid in
Members ol the Tri-State
Gallipolis, and New land at
Building and Construction
Dutton 's Drug s in MidTrades Council have set up dleport. They plan to operate
an " informaUonal p1cket"
the pharmacy " bas ically the
at the construction site of same" continuing the wide
the new Doctors office
se lection of gilt items.
complex
at Veterans
meeting at Mamie! that some
The on ly major change wi ll
Memorial
Hospital.
be that the s tore will now be
miners walked out as he was
The union, according to
open on Sunday from 11 a.m .
speaking, and others talked
Henry Perry, spokesman,
of bringing impeachment
until 5 p.m. Other hours are
contends
that the board of
proceedings against the
everr day from 8:30 a.m .
directors of the hoplstal
UMW leader.
un til 8 p.m . except Wedhad no competitive bids for
"I'm sure the district panel
nesday, 8 ::10 a.m. until6 p.m .
the construction work.
has something to do with it,
Wolfe and his wife Pat live
Carter
and Evans of
but not to the extent the
in Ches ter and have one
Gallipolis were contracted
discharge has," Perry said of
dau g hte r. Susan, age .1 .
to build the complex.
reasons for the mushrooming
Newland and his wife, Helen ,
Carter and Evans does not
walkouts by miners.
resid e in Tuppers Pla ins wi th
employ union members.
The district chief referred
their one year old son, Mike .
The
new
Middleport
(Ointlaued
10)
:·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::

on Pele

busin essm
men
are
graduates of Eastern High
School, Newland the son of
Mr . and Mrs. E. 0. Newland,
Tuppers Plains, and Wolfe
the son of Mr . and Mrs .
George Wolfe. Chesler.

FAULTY BUSES
COLUMBUS I UP!)
Twelve ol 45 church-&lt;Jperated
bu ses chec ked at Kings
Island Amusement Park near
Ci nci nnati
had
sa fely
violat ions, sa id the Public
Utili ties Comm iss ion of Ohio
1 PUCO ) Monday. in ail, 75
buses were checked during a
su rpri se

in spect i on

la st

Thursday,
Frida y . and
Saturday at the amusement
park .
LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature in downtown
Pomeroy Tuesday at 11 a .m .
was 82 degrees under sunny
skies.

McElroy boys like one
The McElroy brothers,
Kermit, Dayton and Eugene,
will receive the Meigs County
Senior Volunteer AjVard for
services lo the county's
senior citizens.
The brothers will be
honored at the Ohio State
Fair on Aug. 22. The Meigs
County Council on Aging filed
the following report in
recommending the brothers
for lhe award : ·
The name, "The McElroy

JACKSONVILLE, FLA. - " IT IS AN u unfortunate
situation . My calculiltionsofthe economy were wrong. lf you'd
told me two years ago this would happen I would have laughed
in your face." Isaac L. Levy filed the largest bankruptcy
petition in the''history of Florida Monday, listing debts 1n excess of $98 billion.
Levy, 36, a Jacksonville attorney, said he apparently made Boys," has become a
pll the wrong moves in his business ventures, most of which household word in the Senior
involved Investment transactions and were of a speculative Citizens Circle ol Meigs
nature. "These were the wrong times," he explained simply. County.
Their teamwork is apLevy's petition listed unsecured claims against him
totaling $95,081,328.68 and secured claims at $3,362,000 for a parent to everyone who calls
them as ONE for assistance,
total of $98,935,328.68.
·ana tndiVIdually , as dear and
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y . -o N_OJ!TH AND South Vie'fam . respected persons. Pooling
~
I (Cantlmied OD Pille 10)

their knowledge to undertake
new projects and combining
their efforts for successful
completion, these three
brothers work as one.
After a combined total of 50
years '·in public work they
retired to their ancestral
home to care for iheir elderly
mother . The congenial ease
with which these brothers
live and work together is
demonstrated in their daily
living, sharing the chores and
responsibilities of their home.
Their parents' dedicated
trainin·g instilled in each child
the responsible stewardship
lo God and country. These
returning sons have added a
bulwark of streng.th to their
rural Eagle Ridg ~ Co mmunity Church. Fellow

a

'"

parishioners note with pride,

" The Boys" active

par ~

licipation and faithful attendance in · church affairs.
All brothers hold five year
Certificates from Civil
Defense in Southwestern
Ohio. They were members of
the Emergency Police in
Warren County for five years.
In retirement they project
an image of " life is living for

others."
The devotion shov.;n to their
mother until her death in 1973
was subsequently transferred
to other Senior Citizens in
need of assistance. Active
volun leers in the Retired
Senior Volunteer Program,
there is no job , too large, no

place too far., and no roof too
high for these men to
volunteer lheir ass istan ce

KERMIT

DAYTON

EUGENE

when . necessary.
Each
Monday afternool\. they come
to the Senior Citizens Center
to gel their instruc tion for
Tuesda y's work. Sincere and
conscientious in sensi ng the
needs of others, they do not
limit themselves to 'the

Their ge ntle , homespun Ohio River bank in lronl of
humor and optimistic outlook the Senior Citizens Center has
provide a stimulating visit to become a continuous spot of
the. Senior Cittzen whose adm iration and pride for the
home they encounter. As . whole community .
While eac h brother is
descendants of a pioneer
fam ily which settled in 1\:leigs eligible to qualify for this
County, they have worked volunteer award on his own
minim.wn work~·detail!
with great pride on several merit, we submit with great
·The firewood is stacked as historic landmarks to re store pride the names of Dayton,
lhe logs are cui .
Kermit and Gene McElroy as
the bea uty of these sites.
The s lr.ps are repaired
Through thei,6.' efforts, a "one " ~ receive ~ this
before t~ porch is painted. beautification pl'bject on the des...-ving award.

•'

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