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1'0 - The Daily Sentinel, Middlepor t-Pomeroy, o., Thursdav. Aug. 14. 1975

Notices, local
news in brief

Outgo tops income by near $4,000
Spendi ng exceeded

irlL'O IIlC

Pom e r oy. and J ean Fran ces

in Ju ly by · aboul $4,000 in
Middleport Vi lhtge accord ing

Dailey , 40, Pom eroy , have
appli ed for a marriage

to the !llon thl y rcpor l of
Clerk-TI'f' t-I SUrer Gene Gr~Jit&gt;.

John Richard Koehler, 40.

li ce nse.

A suit tor d ivorc e an d
another for money have been
filed in Me igs County Co m
man Pl eas Cour t . David

Edward

Doerr,

Rt .

1,

M i nersvil le. ask s di,.orce
from (orlinda L
Doerr ,
address unknown. c harging
gross neglec t of

duty

and

extreme cr ue lly .
Cecil
Bla ckwood
nnd
M a dg e Bl ackwood . R1. .t
Pome r oy, t i l ed su1t for mon e y
in the amount of $900 aga ins t
Cha rl es B ut cher, .RI
4,
Pomeroy , f or l oss ol cro p :;
ca used by ca tt le
The annual

fa mi l y p1Cn 1c

was se t f or 6 JO P- m. on Aug .
27 r:Jt the Po meroy Gol f Club
when
the
P om e roy
Midd l eport Lions Club m e t
Wednesday for a noon l un
c heon n l the Meig s Inn
Wil liam M id dl esw .: nt .
pres1dent, reported on lhc
hol e -in -one con test and plan s
were made for r ev1si ng th e
prese nt signs placed a t th e
entran ces of Pomeroy and
M iddlepor t by the club. A
gue s t of Bruc e Teaford tor
the lun c he on wus Greg
Hillen ·

D esce ndan I s o f Edward
an d Eliza Haymiln will hold
their an nual reunion Sunday
at For ked Run State Park . J .
0 Hayman i s pr esi d e n t
Friends and re l a t i ves d re
invited
"T: he Midd lepor t E R squad
took E l izabeth Ritchie. 12.
from t h e Rock Springs
F airg r o u nds to Veteran s
Memoria l Hospital at 8 : 47 p.
m . Wedne.sday. She was
suffering
from
h ea t
ex haus ti on . A t 10 : ttO p . m . the
sq uad took Pam Higgin s , 18,
to the hos pital wi th a poss ible
fr actured an k le.

As nf J uly :H, the v ill &lt;:~ge
had a balance of $34 ,553.29 in
expendable fund s. Heccipls
for the mon th into t he e xpendable funds a m ounted to
$12,21) 1. 13 whi le expend it ures
for the rllon th rota'l('cl
$H;,J fill 62 .
Hecei pt s
~1nd
d is bur se rne n t." from Ihe expencla ble
fw tds. respect ive ly, for the
mon th include :
general,
$3.076.45. $7.758.11, ba lance

$20,:17fi.78: cemetery, $1,040,
$!152.W, bala nce $110.9i; fire
equipmen t. $:1 50, $:1 28.75,
ba la nce

$86.67;

s wimm in g

puul, $2.44 8. 15, $3,605 .64 ,
balance $5(i l .07; fire hou se
f'ons truc li on, no r ece ipts, no
l..'xpenclit ure s, $11 .fN ba lmtce;
pl ;n m i r q~

co mmi ss ion,

no

r ece tpl s.

$10:J .60, $2:18.79
balan ce; s treet maintenanc·e,
$2,!101i.5R, $3.416.78, balance ,
$4.098.5:~; federal reve nue
s har~ng .
$2.440 . $15.58,
balance, $9,068.49.
The village counc il has
$25.818.0:1 in ob li ga ted fLmd•
kn own as the ge neral bo nd
r e ti r ement fu nd w·i th 11 0
rece ipt s ur expe nd itures fr om
that fund during the month .

The Middleport Board of
P ublic Affai rs has a to ta l of
1186,460.44 in obliga ted funds.
The rece ip ts a nd di sbur sem en ts, r es pective ly, of eac h

of I hose funds include:
sa ni lary se wer , $4 ,1 13,27,
$3,948.18, bala nce, $38,443.47;
sa nitary sewe r escrow, $750,

Ernest Hart died Wednesday
Ernes t Hart.

81. Rt. 5,
Wednesday
eve n ing
at
O'Bie n ess
M em or i al Hospi ta l. Bor n i n
Mei gs Cou nty, he was t he son
of the la t e _Se r vetus_an d E ll a
Athe n s,

di ed

MEIGS THEATRE
Augu st 11 th r u

F&amp;AM , Al hens; a pa st high

Augus t 21

pries t of Athens Chap te r No.
39, a pas t comma nd er of
Athe ns Co mm a ndr y No. 15,
and a m em ber of Athens
Coun cil No. 15, Orde r of
Eas tern Star Chap te r No . 175,
A la dd i n Sh rine, Co lu mb us.
and the Sc ottis h Ri te in
Co lumbus.
P reced ing him in d ea th
besi des h is paren ts we r e hi s
wi f e. Floss i e B. Har t, w ho
di ed in Apr il of this yea r ; one
brother, a nd one s is te r .

NOT OPEN

Friday thru Sunday
August 22 -24
THE GODFATH E R
PAR T II

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MASON DRIVE-IN
'-~

fl.

Wha l ey Hart .
He was a re fir ed m achinis t,
having been so employed 41
yea r s a t Ohio Unive r sity. A
ve ter an of World War I, he
was a me mber of Bar rac k s
No . 1619 of th e Veter an s of
WW I, an d was a l so a form er
tr us tee of the R ic hl and A rea
F ire Bri ga d e.
He aas a pas t mas ter of
Param ulhi a Lod ge No . 25,

1\

Sur vi v ors include a son,
Robe r t T. Hart, Rt . 5, Athens;
thr ee grand childr en, William
L , Calhy, a nd John Hart , all
of R t. 5, Athens; one brothe r ,

1/ .I
Nntlllly

,,.,

(oil 1ollll1

Da le V . Ha rt, Athen s, and tw o
si ster s, Mrs. M a ye Cum min s
and Mrs. Ed ward {Le ona l
.K ing. Pom er oy .
F un eral ser v ices will be
he ld at 1 p. m . Saturda y at the
Hugh es F u neral Hom e,
Ath ens, w i th the Rev. James
Groom s offici a ti ng . Bur ial
wi tt be i n t he Ale xande r

Starting Aug . 15
Open Weekend s Only

Ce mete ry.
Fri ends may ca ll at the
fun era l hom e Friday from 2
until 4 p . m . and from 7 un til9
p. m .

Swisher &amp; Lohse
-

Pharmacy

nO

$1 2:1.1J0.09: water , $6,869.66,
$8,761.60, ba la nce. $18,216.29;
wa! er

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
Back-To-School Sale-

di sb ur se m ents , $1:!,009.78.

rne ter

trusl{) ,

ness

of

Middl e or t

is

$2.15,

$1,470,1fi:l.75 or $528.08 per
$:100, $6,(i70.59 .
cap i Ia. The ind e bted ness
Heeeipts in to the obligated inclu des : sw im m ing poo l,
fWl(I S of the wa ter board fur $9,472.50; fi re house $61 ,250;
~~~----"~~~~------,~~-~~,_.,_,____ ,~~-.W"wr.-.-~~~~.,~~. .~~~~~~--------~
J uly tot« led $11 ,967.!1:J with sa nitary sewer , $640,288.75
Mens and Young Mens
New Fall Selection
di s bursement:-; t o tal in g a nd waler , $759, 152.50.

OPEN FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHTS 'l.IHTIL 8
JUNIOR DRESSES

And call us! Your registered
pharmacist is dedicated ' to
serving you .. . whatever the
prescription. need .
Jot It Down

992-2955
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News •• in Briefs
(Continued from pa ge I)
when they accosted him near th e Capitol. Then, with poli ce, he
gave ch ase and th ey wer e arrested.
Proxmire disclosed Wednesday that afterwa rds he hired
them as aides in his Senate offic e for a year to work at the
minimum wage after school a t getting out the senator 's mail.
NEW DELHI, INDIA - THE GENE RAL secretary of the
pro-governme nt (Communist) party of India has advocated
th e India n constitution be ame nded to assert th e supremacy of
parliament over the nation 's courts .
In an in terview published toda y in the CPI-oriented
ne wspa per Pa triot, C. R&lt;ljeswa ra Roa called the distinction
be tween funda m ental right s and the constitution's principles
''artificial.''
He said the three ar ticles in the constitution dealing
directly with the righls of the Supreme a nd High courts should
be amended.
FA RGO, N. D. - AT LEAST TWO P E RSONS have died of
sleeping sickness and 93 others may have contracted the
disease from mosquitoes lurking in the stagnant , flood-created
pools of the Red River Valley.
Authorities Wednesda y urged valley r esidenls to rema in
indoors a fter sunset, wh en the culex tarsalis mosquitoes come
out to feed, and to wear protective clothing and use mosquito
repellants.
Officials have bombarded breeding areas in North Dakota
and western Minnesota with pesticide sprays to try to diminish
the mosquito population. But the danger is not expected to end
until a sha rp frost kills mosquito larvae.
FIDENZA, ITALY - BRUNO CAMPARI started walking
four years ago when his doctor said it would help heal his
hernia but now even Campari has had enough.
The 56-y ear .ol~ father of four left home last week telling
his wife he was walking the 115 miles south to FlorenCe, but
then he kept going.
· Eight day s after he left he telephoned to announce: " I'm in
Rome. I 'm going to see the Pope and then I will return ." But,
he sa id, he planned to ma ke the 285-mile trip home by train .

·

Vete rans Me morial Hospital

ADMITTED
Ve ra
Dre hel , Middl e port ; E lle n
Bliss, Middl e port ; Sybil
Gr ee ne, Hartford ; Glen
Bissell , Long Bottom; Ha zel
Shain , Ra cine; Edith McCoy,
Sy ra c us e; Loui se Cr islip,
Lon g
Bot tom ;
Bess ie
Weaver , Middle port; William
Tiemyer, Pomeroy.
DISCHARGE D - Minnie
Riggs.
Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, Aug.l3)
Larry Angel, Delores
Barnett, Freda Barnett,
Michael Callahan, Mrs. Paul
Chilcote and infant daughter,
Earl Clark, Noah Clark ,
Gladys Cole, Irene Cook,
Ellen Coughenour, Rebecca
English, Mary Ervin, Mrs.
Larry Farley and infant
daughter, Denver French,
Kelle y Gilmore, Hettie
Hammond, Mrs . Stephen
Henderson
and
infant
daughter, Ora Hively, Bessie
Hudson, Bridgette Johnson,
Kay King, Mary King, Brady
Knapp , Myrtle Miller,

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGED
Margar e t Slenker, Hen -

derson;

Veronica

~ blue den im . Regular price

and

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PRE;iCRIPTIONS

PH, 992 _2955

, .·
. Friendly Service
[1u,E.MAII-. _ ·
POMERO.Y, O.

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MIDDLEPORT
DEPARTMENT STORE
WRANGLER
JEANS
FOR
BACK-TO-SCHOOL
MANY STYLES

IN JUNIOR SIZES
FOR THE FAIR

MIDDLEPORT
DEPARTMENT STORE
.

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Mens and Boys

TUBE SOCKS

A fine new selection including prewashed denims. Misses sizes 8 to 20
and Junior sizes 3 to 15. Buy what you
need now during this sale,

)

Men s f its sizes 10 thru 15. Boys fits sizes 7 thru
11 . Junior Boys fits sizes 6 thru 10. White with
contrast color top.

88~

GIRLS SPORTSWEAR

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Thursda y's raCing, wh ich was r ained out, a nd Friday 's

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

pair

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Sale Prices

PRE·TEEN SPORTSWEAR

1

Sizes 3-6 through 11-14, Jeans - SlacksJackets
Blouses
Knit Tops
Sweaters - Cardigans
Skirts . An
excellent new selection .

Heavy rains struck the Meigs County F air aga in
today.
Fair Board officia ls were in conference this
morning trying to determine if they would be a ble
to stage the · horse harness racing which was
called off Thursday when ra in hit the fa irg ro und~
about 2:30 p.m . As a result of yesterd ay's cancellation, 14 races were to be held today, weather
permitting, starting at 2 p.m. and ex tending into
the evening.

BOYS FASHION JEANS
Sizes 6 thru 18 in regulars and slims.
Brushed denims and cotton twill.s.
Includes our entire stock.

Sale Prices

--· ----------

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Back-To-School Sale

Sale!

GIRLS DRESSES

BOYS BLUE DENIM JEANS

Sizes 9 months to 24 months - 2 to 6x
and 7 through 14,
Prints .- Plaids - Solids. Some long
dresses. Stock up now and save.

Regular, slim and husky sizes 8 to 18.
Blue denim in 4 ounce and 10 ounce
weights.

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Sale Prices

Sale
Prices
.",..,..."""..__ -· _.._ -· -- -----t---··. .~. . . .~....-·~---~--------------11

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Womens

Sale Prices

LEE WORK UNJEQRMS

s1.00 PANTY HOSE

Famous Lee Chetopa twill. Choice of 5
colors. Pants sizes 29 to 44 waist .
Shirts sizes 14lf2 to 17lf2.

Petite - medium - medium tall. Good
color selection. Back-toSchool Sale.

3 pairs , 2 •29

sg.98 WORK PANTS ............ SS.99
-----~---.-..-----------·---·t~-·~SS 98_WO_R_K_SH_IR:..;.T,;.;S;.......••.,·.._..;.;.··:..;.··;.;'5;.:..99;.;;.._""

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GYM SHORTS

Select Youn Now

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FLANNEL SHIRTS

REG. '1.69 BRAS .......... SALE '1.00
REG. '1.99 BRAS .......... SALE '1.25
REG. '2.59 BRAS ........... SALE '1.50

cotton - sanforized shrunk. Long shirt tails .

2 for •9.89

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See The Excellent Styles
Lee $12.49

BRTS FOR MEN AN[f BOYS

BLUE DENIM JEANS
Flare leg and straig,h t leg styles. Sizes 29 to 46
waist , Very well made. Neat fitting.

sg.aa

Just arrived 'tiOys and mens reversible belts
for $1.75 - mens and boy.s wide sport belts In
white and assorted colors $2.50. Boys hand
painted leather belts 53.00 - mens hand painted
leather belts $4.00 -mens genuine leather work
belts - brown or black $2.50. Extra wide
Garrison leather belts, black $3.00 • .

Mens and Young Mens
"Wrangler"

Back-To-School Sale
Mens Double Knit

BLUE DENIM JEANS

DRESS SLACKS

Flare leg styles in sizes 29 to 38 waist. Straight
leg Wrangler Jeans in sizes 32 to 42 waist. 14
ounce blue denim , Regular $10,95,
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Sale •9.39

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Sale
Prices
. ._,_.__..__..._.,.._~,--...."'..~':'"\7'~~~~----•~••--•ww~~....""ww"•..-.l~~-~,..,w·,_wo•-~w..-••wn•ow..,~-W-,.;.:..-.-..~~-•r---"..,_.,._.,.,..,..
~.~nnw-•w•""......~.··-t
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anti son of the late Sidney Spencer, who was a
,. . Pomeroy.
popul ar trainer and driver at the Meigs Co unty ra ir and

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num erOLL'\ other midwest race tracks. ·

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Skies clear ed Thur sday
nigh! for a large crowd lhat
came to see and hea r lhe
grandstand enter tainment by
Crys tal Gayle, Pee Wee King
and the Collins Sister s.
Tonight at 7:30 p .m. the
junior fair steer , lamb and
pig sale will be held a nd a t B
p.m . the horse pulling contesl
is s~beduled . However, _f¥in
- the absence of it, tha t is will be a determining factor

enttne
VOL. XXVII NO. 87

POMEROY MIDDLEPORT. OH IO

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PRICE 15'

FRIDAY, AUGUST 15, 1975

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Interim
•
peace IS
expected

in the la tter eve nt.
ll was indicated that lhe
hor se har ness racing may be

held Saturday if the weather
is nol satisfactory today . Also
on Sat urday a t I p.m . the
pretty baby a nd the lit tle
mi ster a nd little miss Meigs

Coun ty Contests will be held ,
a nd

Satu r day

even in g

begin ning at B: 30 the Blue
Ridge Quartet is the feat ured
gra ndstand

en ter tainment.

.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:::;:;;;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::::;::::::::::::

BLOODMOBILE MONDAY
The Blood program needs your blood.
Whatever your blood type you are the type
needed. You will be helping to pr ov ide for the
blood of the County.
The Bloodmobile will be at the Pomeroy
Elementary School from I to 6 p,m , on Monday , Aug. 18, 1975. Please donate if possible,
·::;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::

SHOWMAN AWARDS, l-r, Ma rk Mora took gra nd champion showman and Tony Carnaha n reserve cha mpio n showman a t th e Meigs Co unty
Junior Dairy Show Thursday at t he Mei gs Co unty Fa ir .

J. P ii$.W.·:::::::o:;:::::;;:;:;:;:::::::;.;::·:·:·:-:-:·:·:·:·:· :·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:::·:·:·:·:· :·:::·:::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::~:::~::

JNews . .. in Brief~t
By Unlted Press International
NEW DEUU - THE ARMED FORCES seized power in
Bangladesh today in a coup that cost the lives of Sheikh
Mujibur R&lt;lhman, two of his nephews and Prime Ministe r
Mansoor Ali. A rightist member considered to be proAmerican became president.
Bangladesh radio said Commerce Minister Khonda kar
Mushtaque Ahmed was sworn in during a ceremony at which
he received pledges of support from th e chiefs of the three
armed forces, the chief of the Bengali rifles and the acling
chief of R&lt;!hi Bahini - the sheikh's own private storm trooper
force.India, Pakistan and the Soviet Union all could find cause
for worry in the change because of Ahmed 's actions in the past .
HONG KONG - FAcrJONAL F IGHTING and other
disiurbances have broken out in the Manhc urian province of
Heilungkiang, according to reports reaching Hong Kong today .
It was the second Chinese province to report major unrest
against the Peking regime.
A provincial broadcast Wednesday, made a vailable in a
translation here today , said the troubles had "greatly
disrupted" production in Heilungkiang , one of China's riches t ·
and most productive provinces. The broadcast said " certain
actions" had been taken to solve this problem but "they have
failed." There was no indication whether the use of military
troops was being considered. But the broadcast said stern
action was necessary.

Dai ry callle judging was
completed al the !12th ann ual
Me igs Coun ty Fair Thursday .
In the Holste in division Roy
Holter, Route 3, Pome r oy·,
won a fi rst in the bull, one
year an d under two year
class with Ea rl Dean , Phillips
Rad ford, and Leland Par ker,
a ll of Route 3.

Pome r oy,

la ki ng fi rs t, second a nd third
place with the ir a nima ls in

the bull calf, under one year
a nd over four mon lhs class.
Dean took firs t in the cow ,

third. Holler look firs t in th e
cow. th ree years and und er
four c la ss with De an second

first and third in the se uior
he ifer c.a lf class . Df'an \\' as
first and third 10 the jWli ur
he ife r cct lf class cm d 1-loltf' r
wa s se cond .

and Pa r ker third. Dean won
firs t in the cow . tw(J year.s and
under three class with Holter
picking up seco nd and th ird
Hulte r scored first and
second in the se nior yearling
heifer c la ss wt t h Pa r ker
taking th ird. Holte r a lso won
fir st and second in the jun ior
yearling he ifer class a nd took

Holter wa s first and thtrd
wit h Parker s econd a nd in the
prOdUCe of f_'OW. D~ a n WaS
fi r s t, Ho lte r wt-~s seco nd a nd
Parker wa s th ird Dt&gt;on tonk
firs t in the t hree females
bred and owned by ex hibilur
c la ss wi t h Ho lt er ta kin g
s eco nd and th!rd. Holter

four years and over cl a ss
wi th Holter tak ing secon d and

In the get -tJf-si re JUlh;in g,

exh ibited the se ni or cha mpwn bull. I he jun ior champio n fermli l' &lt;.~nd the gra nd

ch.: unp!im fe male .
In 1he Gue rn sey divis ion. 1t
was almosl a c lean sweep for
young Mark Mor a of Route:!,
Pome roy . He l'xhib ited a ll
four dwmpion a nd rese r ve
ch:ou npion an im als and won
c1ght ftr.o; ts and a se r(Jnd . He
r l;_-Ked secon d to Jim C:Hr·
nah&lt;m , Haclnc. in the cow,
four and over cla ss a nd
Ca rnahan plc.l'ed sec!J nd to

CLEVELAND - THE OHIO LOTTERY Commission has
fired James Skelly as ils public relali ~ns director for alleged
spending of state funds on liquor for s taff parties, a nd named
Mrs. Landa Kovacik , his assistant, to the vacancy. effective
immediately .
·
Skelly was suspended Aug. 7 for one week pending further
investiga tion of the a llegations. The five-m ~mber commission
(Continued on page 12)

United Press International
Israel and Egypt ha ve
reportedl y agr ee d on all key
points of an interim peace
ag reement that may bring
Ame ricans to the Middle East
to man electronic spy equipment.
Diplomatic sources in Tel
Av iv said Th ursday the text
of
t he
new
m ili tary
disengage ment agr eement in
th e Sinai Desert should be
r ea dy for sign ing by Sept. 1.
The sources said Secretary
of State Henry Kissinger is
expected to start shuttling
betwee n L&lt;rael and Egypt on
Wednesday to iron out the
fi na l details of the accord.
" It is very likely that
Kissinger will r esume his
shuttle next week and there is
optimism tha t agreement can
be reached by Sept. I," one
source said . "By and la r ge,
the principles a re more or
less clear."

Dairy cattle judged at fair

YORKTOWN HE IGHTS, N. Y. - TilE F AMIL Y of Samuel
Bronfman II, breaking a two-day silence, has called upon his
kidnapers to renew contact and provide further pr oof the 21year-old heir to the Seagram liquor fortune is still alive.
A statement read by a family spokesman Thursday outside the !50-acre Bronfman estate said the family had done its
part in following the abductors' instructions and now wa nts a
response by way of a special telephone number . It was not
known , however, whether a $4 .5 million ransom reportedly
demanded has been delivered .
"We need additional evidence now that Sam is still alive
and well," family spokesman Jonathan Rinehart told newsmen gathered outside the Bronfman home in Westchester
County·• 25 miles north of New York .City
c .

100 per cent doubl,e. kp it , pDj Y,eS!~r. Sizes 29 to
42 waist. Solid colorsland sm-art new patterns.

.ELBERFElDS IN PO'MEROY

~

schedule would be followed today. Top winner in Wednesday 's racing was Don Spencer, Marietta , forme rly or

Race track hit
again by rain

Reg. $3.50 Boys and Girls
Sale 2.99
Shirts - - - - Reg . $3.95 Mens and Ladies
Shirts - - - - - - - - - - - - Sale 3.49
·-~-·---~--·- --- -·-~-... ~-;a-;;To- School Sale!

,,_

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Boys and girls sizes 6 thru 16. Young men and
ladies sizes 36 thru 44.
School name and emblem of Eastern - Meigs Wahama - Southern Schools.

Girls sizes 4 to 6x and 7 through 14. Includes
our entire stock. New fall selection.
Shirts · Slacks · Vests · Bluses - Knit Tops Jacket s.

- ·-

HARNESS RAC!Nl; - as above - al the Meigs
County Fair Wednesday was excellent as some " real hoss
races" were served up during the evenin g. Despite ra in
that was falhng a t 11 a.m. today, it was decided tha t

•

SCHOOL NAME SHIRTS

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Sale Prices!

Back-To-School Sale!

LEE 114.49 WESTERN DENIM JACKETs SALE

\

Special Sale Price

Sale Prices

•9.88

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t

'11.44

BRIEFS and BIKINIS

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Christina J effr eys, Evans ;
Okey J ordan, Henders on ;
Mrs. Johnny Pearson , Point
Womens Regular $1.25
See The New Styles
Pleasant; Mrs . Eadker
Boys and Young Mens
Russ ell , son , Leon ; Mrs.
David McCormick , Kerr;
Mab el
Marsh ,
Point
Pleasan t; James Boys ,
Sizes X small, small, medium. large and extra
Gallipolis; Minni e Clark ,
White and assorted colors . Brief sizes
large. White - solid colors and white with color
. Middleport ; Larry Rainey,
5 through 8- Bikinis sizes 4, 5, 6 and 7.
trim.
Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs.
LOST
Juanita Miller, Lakin ; Arthur
Keys in brown Higginbotham, Roberlsburg;
LOST leal her case holding about 8
Mrs . Edward Jewell, New
key s, r eward guaran teed . Haven;
1-_._.~~~----"~~~~!~-·--~--~~~--~~~-·-----i~~--~~~~r-------------.-~~--_.~·1
Los t in Middl eport _
WOMEN'S '1.69 - •1.99 and •2.59
BIRTHS - August 13, a son
Mens $5.95
Pom er oy a r ea . Please
to Mr. and Mrs. Stephen
re tw·n to The Daily Sentinel
Gre enl ee, Point Pleasant ,
Office, 111 Court St. , and August 14, a son to Mr.
"Angela" made by Bestform. Good
Pomeroy, Ohio.
and Mrs. Everett Mayes,
Excellent selection of colorful plaid patterns.
selection of sizes and styles.
B-14-6tc
Gallipolis Ferry.
Sizes small (14-14112). medium {15-15112). large
{16-16'12). extra large (17-17 112). 100 per cent

OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. TIL 8:00

I

$12.98 .

Back-to-School Sale

Sale Prices

Marilyn
Morgan,
Balakunialam Priyanaih,
Frank R&lt;ly, Eldon Ridgeway,
Alice Robinson, Mrs. Don
Rose and infant daughter,
Harry Roush, Michelle
Simmering, Anna Springer,
Linda Tatterson .
(Births)
Mr . and Mrs. Clarence
Clonc h , a son, Gallipolis
Ferry, W.Va . ; Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence Hunt, twin son and
daughter, Cottageville, W.
Va.; Mr . and Mrs. Jerry
Rhodes, a son, Cheshire ; Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Sanders, a
son , Gallipolis. '·

CLOSED THURS. AT 12:00

Kenn.eth. McCuUouQh ,. R. Ph. · Charles Riffle, R. Ph,
opefl Daily 8: 00a . m. to Y:30 p.m .
·
.
su·n day 10 : 30 to 12 :30 and 5 to 9 p.m ..
.

"'

j Sizes 34 to 46. True western styling. 14 ounce

Sale Prices
--- - .... _
MISSES AND JUNIOR JEANS

HOSPITAL NEWS

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WESTERN JACKETS

Thi s back-to-sc hool sale includes our entire
stock of Junior Dresses . Si zes 3 through 15.
So l id color s and pr ints.
Junior Pant Suits also included.

BRAS

Hand

. l!'l ...,

"Wrangler" Blue Deni.m

3 pair •2.79

Keep Our
Number On

'

.

The ·lol.al bo nded inde!Jled-

Di plom atic a na lysts in
Washington said ther e are
s tr ong in dica ti ons th a t
Ame ri ca n p art i ci p a ti on
would be pa rt of the new
troopsepa r at i o n

Mqra in I he cow, three year s
and under four cl&lt;:~ss .
agreem ent.
Car roll Wing r oye of Roule 2
Re ports on the U.S.Belpre won 12 fir sts . tw o
mediated talks have mensec oud an d exhibited all four
tioned the possible use of
c hampion an ima ls in the
Am erica n civ ilians to ma n ,
Brown Swiss cattl e judgin g
Isr ae li
e l ect r on ic
spy
Jn thf' mi lking s horth or ns,
equipment a t the Milia and
Polly A Prl:ltl uf Mec hanicsGidi mountain passes in the
burg ex. hibited all four
Sinai.
c hampion animals nnd wun 12
In Birmingham , Ala., Kissfirs t places an d one seco nd .
inger said Thursday "there is
In the i\ yr shire division
no agr eement as of now" on
Pt.~tricia Pullin s. Houte 2,
the use of Americans in the
Coolville. ex hib iteLI the se nior
desert to monitor Egyptian
charnpi un
tJrl d
~ rand
troo p m oveme nts.
c harnpi un fern~d l'S a nd won
He said the administration
fir sl~ 1n the crJ\\·, three an d
has sounded out "certa in
under fuur yea r s and the
congressional Ie3ders in a
jWlior heirer ca lf class . Polly
ge neral way abo ut the conPra tt \\-·rm a f!r st 1n the senior
cept. But we have not been
he ifer class and exhibited the ·
able to put before the m any
junior (' hmnpi&lt;Jn female.
concrete proposition."
In ,Jersey juligirr g Poll y
" ... If there is to be a n
Pra tt won fiv e fir s t places
American presence it will
and ex hibi te d t he fou r
illlder no c ircumstances be a
c hc.mpi urr a ni m al s . Dean
milita ry presence," he said.
Colwe ll , Route 1, Vmton , won
" The on ly pr ese nce that
first a nd Ms. Pratt seco nd in could possibly be consider ed
the jun io r ye arlin g he ifer
is a presence of Amer ican
class .
civilians ... "

EXTENDED FORECAST

S u n d ay

t hr o u g h

Tuesday.

c h a nce
of
Su nday
an d
Mo nday and fa ir Tuesday.

Kissinger sa id the United
States would not proceed with
the use of Am ericans to run
an electronic warning system

s ho"ers

"w ith out congressional en.
dorsem ent."

Hi ghs will he in the upper

The secreta ry of state has
said he would only resume his
on-the-spot sh uttle diplomacy
if there is a 90 per cent chan ce

70s to the m id 80s and lows
will hr in the upper 50s to
t he lower 60s.
::::::::::;:;:;:;:::::::::::::;::::: ::::::::::::::::::::;:;::.:;::::::~:: ;:

of success.

Weather

MEIGS COUNTY JUNIOR DAIRY SHOW winner s
Thursday at the Meigs County Fair were, l.r , T o n ~ Car-

na han with hj s gra:1.d rhampiun Gue rn sey and Mark Mora
with ~ he r ese rve champion Guernsey.

Rep. Morr is Udall, D-Ariz.,
met in Jerusalem Thursday
Thundersh ower s likely with Israeli Prime Minister
to ni~hl and Saturday. Hi ghs
Yitzhak Ra bi n a nd said
both days in upper 80s, lows negotiator s have " reached
ton i ~h t
in
lower
70s . that 90 per cent point, but I
Probability of rain 70 per cent think it's danger ous to
toda~· . to ni~hl and Saturday.
become too optimistic."

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2- The Datly Sent mel , Mtdtllt•pott-l'omero' 0 Fr d·
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a.\ , Au g 15. 1!)75

and ca ndidate for coun cil
(l ffl ce rn ht s co mmumty ,
agrees that employes often
mtsWlderstand the bi!J cur·
porate ptcture " But we sttll
know what's gomg on at the
local level For example,
the re ts an ordmance m m y
town r equ1rm g service
'let Them Alone':
Ry Tnm Tt cde
charged wtth makmg tllegal statio ns to p~st th e1r pn ces
David Hume. a Scottish
WASH INC TON - As a pubhc re lat tons ~ayuffs to prormne ntJy on the roads1de
" I am an
phtlosopher
$2 25 dfl hour temporar), fore1gn gove r nments, I ll · Well , over the July 4 hohday,
when
Ashland
told
us
to
American
an
my
principles ,
sum me r em ploye of As hla nd cludmg Gabon and Saudi
mcrease
our
pwnp
pr1
ce
from
and w1sh we woutd let thenl
Petr ule wn , .lim Logan does Arabia , the SEC cl.a Jm s
alone to govern or misgovern
not
hdve
m uch
co m- Ashland has over th e years 5lc to 57c, tt also told us to
take
down
OW'
roa
dside
s1gns
rhemselves, as they thmk
mw1JC.atwn w 1lh the upper fatled to dt seluse at leas t $4
proper . the atfa1r IS of no
levels of the corporatwn 's mdh on 111 overseas cas h That way motomls would not
know
the
dtfference
unttl
they
consequence,
or of little con·
I net nrc h) But what there IS tran sfer s
rece ntl}, co r·
sequence.
lo us "
of Jl, .he s~vs, IS ernb1tle11ng poratc off1Ce1shave adm1tted drov e m The Ashland action
Ht·-.:ent l y Log&lt;.tn , of North cmploy mg at least one CIA was wholly tllegal and nobody
Oltnsllea,d. Oh10, Y.as among agent whose JOb 1t v.a s to spy knows tl any better than the
th ousa nd s
ur Ash l an d 1n We ste rn E ur ope and, people who pump lhetr gas "
-By Ros! M ac k ~nEle &amp; l~tt MacNelly / ~ 197 5 Un1!etl Feature Synd rcate
Beyond the local ptcture,
I ClC IVJng ;] sli ffl)
fmally . the uri company has
J 1m
Logan
wurdcd letter from t he had sever a l legal tangles w1th moreover ,
beheves
the
fact
of
an
em- as an example of the abuse to matter What matters ts that
c omp-'l n)
warn1 ng
of F'ederal a utho r1 t1es w1th
ploye's
sta
tus
wtthtn
a wh1ch some g1ant co r . corporate Amer1 ca not be
possi bl e di sm issa l ' for res pect to retail pncmg
com,pany 1s Irr elevant to h1 s porat 10ns subsrnbe He ma y allowed to create cond1 t10ns
Hll \ o ne ca ug h t dJ sr ussJ ng
Loga n fee ls
Ashla nd
consltluttonal
n ghts Thus he be ftred for tht s aclton, he whereby ltberty ends at the
As hl.tnd matte rs w 1t h the exec utives ar e do ubtl ess
kn ows, but thal d oesn't company ga le
ne\\ s media The lette1 over shellshuc ked by now , won- passes on the Ashland Jetter
the Signat ure of Ash land V1ce derm g what news bomb w11l
PresHlcnt W H Davts, was fall next, and the letter IS an
.ftith essc d to the ·, e t ~u l effort to shore up a htlle
Indtk e lJ nJ::
s ales defense None the less, he's
o r ganlzt~twn "a lon g-wmded
un sympat heti c · The 1ntent
tde rem e to the men who of the le tter clearly ts a
ope1atf! the g~1 s stat iOn s
vw lo:th on of m y c1vtl hber'Bf'C(J. USC' of re(ent articles
ttes " As Logan un derstands
&lt;tpeed r Jng m the me d1a af- 1t. fr eedom of speech 1s
fe( t 1n g Ashl ,1 nd, · Davis prole&lt;.:tcd and not subJec t to
\HO le In mH.l-Ju]y,
Jt IS ar b1 trar} narrow mg , thus he
th ought Mi v l s t~hl c to once believes the Ashland letter to
mm e c.. a ll vour a ttentiOn to be · ndtcul ous " and councorpmate p0IH.: y \~Jtl! respect lerproducttve " People gel
to such me~tte r s and to em- angr} v. hen freedom s are
phc~slzt' the sanct wns wh1ch a bu sed ,' he adds, angry
could be mshl uled for \Hllful enough to stnke back
The government ts going to spend $147,800 to fmd out tf people would mtnd hav mg wmdvwla tw ns ·
For tts pari , Ashland says
mtlls
as netghbors
Co rporat e policy , Dav1s Logan s diSJOinted nose ts the
That's
the amount of a grant which the National Sctence Foundatwn and the Energy
expla1 ned IS to refer a ll result of · a misrepresenResearch and Development Admmistration have made to the University of lllmots' Survey
press 1nqumes relatmg to tatiOn" of th e Dav ts letter
Research
Laboratory for a year-long study of public reacltons to wmdmtlls in ftve areas ac ross
Ashland' to the company Corporate publi CISt Harry
the country , rangmg from the heavily settled East Coast to the platns of Kansas to the Paciftc
pu blic relatiO ns offi ce
Wiley sa)s that manage ment
Northwest.
F'allurc on yo ur part to "stmply feels comphcated
The wmdm1lls m quest ton are not the ptcturesque Dutch type, nor the once numerous farm
.ulhere to th1s po hev w1ll 1ssues can t be analyzed by
wmdmtlls
Modem, high-efflctency wmdmllls capable of contrtbutmg to the natton 's energy
sUb Ject ynu to dJ sc1Pimary people on the reta tl level "
budget
would
have wheels or vanes 75 to 100 feet m dtameter mounted on slender towers 100 to
.Jc twn, Incl ud ing poss ibl e Ashland 's
contr ove r s ies
Nclson\l"''l l c
the suu th 250 feet htgh For maXIlllum ef!tctency, they would have to be located m large numbers and
diSIIII SS i.ll
mvolve a mynad or laws an d
rus h: rn Oh10 rommun it\
I ogcm , 20 says he can well eve nts. Wtley adds, of whtch occupy h1ghly promment postttons.
""lw..: h e._u.: h }e.u observes th~
"Whether the pubhc will accept such modiftcatton on the landscape wtll be a maJor
und ers ta nd th e reasons the fellow at the bollom of the
Pm a de uf the Hills, agam \.,Ill
deciding
factor m whether plans for usmg the wind to generate electrtcal energy can be llnbehmd the leller Ashland has ladder ts often tgnorant ' But
hos t !lw Ohw State Chamhad mure than 1ts shar e of when WXYZ telev isiOn comes plemented, " says Prof Robert Gerber, director of the laboratory
pwnslup Old J Inll' Fiddl e r s
For a lot less than $147,800, we can tell the researchers the answer already If people get
negaltvc publtc1ty 1n the past to an Ashland slalton, the guy
Con i es! Fnda). Au g 22 ,
hungry enough for energy , they'll like wmdrmlls
few years f he com pan) has m umform IS used as a
bcgmmng c1f 8 p m lf1 t he
pleaded gmlly to making company spokesman That's
public squc11 c
Ill ega l
cam paig n
con- not good for anyone mvolved,
[n t ase of ra m tile eve nt
tnbu tlOns
to
varwu s and 1t 's what we 're trymg to
\\ Ill take place m the
Car owners are gettmg hit twtce by mflation - once when they Jay out hundreds of dollars
poiJh cians, wcludm g Richard preve nt .,
Ne lso nville-York Junmr H1 gh
more
for a current model than for comparable models a year or two ago, and agrun when they
N1xo n Th e co mpany 1s
Logan. a college student
Schuol, nea r the squ are
hit another motortst
ThiS Fiddler s cuntes t has
One major auto msurer reports that the average claun for damaged cars ts $455 this year
always a ttracted manj fane
Thts ts an mcrease of 31 per cenlover 1971 and a jump of 20per cent m the past 12 months alone.
mus1c1ans from Ohw Wes t
A recent mdustry survey showed that the cost of "crash" parts - the etght maJOr parts
Vu gtma , an d Kentucky, who
most frequently damaged m trafftc accidents - IS runrung 25 per cent higher than a year ago
m turn have ath ac ted manj
Some samples· A new fender for a Ford Galaxie 500cost $74 10m 1971 and $76 40 m 1974 but
admtr ers of old-t1me Apsurged to $93 55 m 1975
pa lac hi a n mu siC to hear
A replacement hood for a Olevrolet Impala cost $77 95 m 1971, $79 90 m 1974 and $103 80 m
them
1975
P1 10r to the contest, beA door for a Plymouth Fury III cost $120 90 m 1971, $132 18m 1974 and $178.82 m 1975
tween Gand 8 p m , there wtll
Even lhe so-called economy ears are m the btg-lllne class when 1l comes to repla cement
be old-fa s htoned squa r e
parts A fender for an AMC Gremlin has gone from $63 2Q m 1971 to $82 95 m 1974 to $99 36 m
By Ray Cromley
dan cmg tn front of the Parade
1975.
WASHINGTON - Secretary of State Henry Kissmger 's
of the Htlls stage
The reason msurance costs have remamed f81l'ly stable desptte these mcreases ts that the
troubles m the Mid-easl and Moscow may pale mto mMusiCians and other m- stgmftcance m compartson wtth lhe confrontatiOns he may
acctdent rate wo!nl down, thanks to the 55-mph lirmt and the gasoline pinch That ts, the higher
teresled persons may obtatn face at home m the Slate Department thiS commg year
cosl of each accident was offset by the lower acctdent rate.
f urt her
1nfor matJon by
All that began to change around nud-1974, however, when auto parls prtces began to zoom
The r eason John Hemenway has JUSt been elected
wrtttng to The Old-Ttme pres ident of the Amencan Foreign Servtce Association, State 's
The result, warn msurancespokesmen, IS lhal msurance prermums are gomg to have to go up,
F'1ddler 's Co nv en twn, Box 7,400member trade umon whose rolls mclude most seruor and
too
251, Route 2, Athens, Ohto, JUmor foretgn servtce officers. To my knowledge, thts ts the
45701
first ttme th ts statd body has elected a gadfly. Most AFSA
presidents have been ''proper" men who conform to the State
Department's hierachy.
The experts are keeping lhetr eyes on a dozen or so econom1c mdices to see which way the
Because charges of fraud had been made after lhe 1973 country ts gomg. But a better barometer of lhe nattonal economy than all t bese is Goodwtll
AFSA electwns, the Department of Labor supervised the Industries, clauns an offtclal of the non-prof1t organiZation
votmg
Distribution of
And the barometer is not riSmg.
Hemenway was ftred by the State Depar~ent m 1969 after
W. Sharon Florer, execuhve dnector of the Ohto Valley Goodwilllnduslrtes comes to thts
makmg charges of malfeasance m the 'agency Powerful conclusiOn by Judgmg the mtake of matenals donated lo the 156 local Goodwths around the
funds announced senators, mcludmg Wtlham Proxrrure (D-Wisc.) and Henry M. country .
Jackson (D-Wash ). Intervened m his behalf
·
.. ~'When furnt~re Isn't commg to Goodwill, people are not buymg furniture," he says
Following
stormy
sesstons,
the
Gnevance
Hearmg
en people don t donate refrtgerators, tt IS because they're not buying refngerators. They
Gertrude W Donahey,
tn
his
case
recommended
that
he
be
remCommtttee
sttlmg
are
not
donatmg etther to tLS now."
Treasurer of State. has anstaled,
promoted,
hts
legal
fees
patd,
that
he
receiVe
an
no unced
she
has
$87,638,563 49 av atlable for apology , that letters of retractiOn be sent lhose who had been
dJstnbut1on to the varwus offtctaly m1smformed about hlm and that his record be exlocal governmen ts through punge d of untruthful and derogatory matenal Except for the
letter of apology and the payment of Hemenway's legal fees,
the a ud1 tor of s tate
the Department tgnored all recommendatiOns of tl.&lt;; own
Th ese moneys have been
gnevance board
co ll ec ted under SectiO n
Hemenway then moved to the Pentagon Agam he was
5i07 03 of the Ohw Revised
ftred, thts tune afler ms1stmg on his nght to tesllfy agamst
Code an d rep r esents taxes
Kisstnger, Elhot Rtchardson and other htgh-level offtctals
levied on Fmanr1al InHemenway over the years has repeatedly tesltf1ed before
stJ tuta on s and Dealers tn
the Senate Fore1gn Relations Committee.
By Lawreoce E. Lamb, M.D.
In tan gibl es
He has called Kissmger unftt to hold offtce, challengmg hiS
DEAR DR. LAMB - I had up havmg deformtties
muntzalton agamst poho IS a
In Galha, $153,888 from
professwnaljudgment, his administrattve ability, hts selectton an uncle born m 1867 who was
Polio,
pohomyelths
and
fatlure
of the soctal sctenrw a ncia l w s ti tut iOns, and...
of offiCials and his foretgn policy.
shghtly crtppled and walked mfanttle paralysis are all lists ' area The medt~al
$419 fr om de a lers tota l
In other testunony before the Senate Foretgn Relations w1th a limp It has been satd nari)es for the same disease sctences can po wonders, but
$154,308 and m Metgs $93,213
Comrmltee he has charged thal htgh level foretgn servtce he had polto when he was 11 and the diSease ts caused by ~ then the segments of our
ft nanc 1a l, and $509 for
asstgnments have been used as pay-offs, that there is an years old . Was poho around vtrus I thmg the term m- soctety thal have the
dea lers , total $93,422
almost mcredible state of corruptwn, maladministratiOn and at that tune , and are polio fanhle paralysts 1s un- responstbthty for pubhc
wheelmg and dealing tn State personnel operations He has and mfanhle paralysis or fortunate because the dtsease educalton and encouragmg
t harged that foretgn service officers have been promoted or pohomyehhs one and the ts notlumted to mfanl.&lt;; It can public use often drop the ball
entered laterally m direct Vlolalton of regulallons. He has same disease? If not, what ts strtke down adults, too. The
It 1s t1me that the
.....:
IILIIICI
clauned lhat at least one offtcer was promoted Without felony the difference and what disease can be prevented by responsibility for many of
DEVOTED TO THE
charges agamst him bemg investigated
causes each • My uncle was •mmunization.
these health failures ts put
INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA
Hemenway did all this as a private citizen, not as a umon not paralyzed many wa)', but
I
am
sorry
to
say
that
this
where
they belong That ts
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
As
head
of
the
AFSA
uruon
you
can
ex~ct
Hemenway
offtctal.
one
leg
was
slightly
shorter
disease,
once
apparently
not
on
the
back of the busy
Exec Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH
to regularly challenge new ambassadorial and other than the other
conquered, has a chance of doctor but those segments of
Ctty Ed1tor
Prestdenllallevel appomtmenl.&lt;; m the foreign servtce, as well
Publ•shed daily eHept
DEAR READER - There resurgence. Why• Because soctety responstble for soc1al
Sat urday b y The Ohio Valley
as lower level promotwns, and refusals to promote. You can are many causes for a short brilliant medtcal advances action. And, closely related to
Pub l iShi n g compa n y , 1 1 1
Cou rt St, Pomeroy , Ohio
expect hun to urge Congress to create a tough new grievance leg and certainly not all short are not enough The public · thts IS the behavior of the
45769 Bus•nes!'- Office Phone
syst~ for the Department of State, the Agency for In99'1 2156 Ed•tor,al P hone 992
legs are caused by polio. So, I has to have enough will to use pubhc tlsell
7157
temattonal Development and the u.s: Information Agency
ean
't say if lhat was your the knowledge provided to
There has long been ample
Second cl ass postage pa1d
The present system recently went down the dram when all uncle's problem or not.
at P o m e roy , Oh 10
lhem by medtcal science. evtdence of the harmful efNat•onal
advert •s• ng
seven of the highly-&lt;jualifted public members of the foreign
But, yes, polio has been Public Indifference has led to feel.&lt;; of ctgarette smoking.
representat•ve
Ward
servtce gn evance board resigned tn protest
Gr 1fl 1th . Company,
I nc ,
around a long lime. There IS many chtldren and some The medical professton has
Bott,nelll &amp; Gallagher 0 1v ,
Hemenway Will be hitting Kissinger m hts soft underbelly, even evidence of it m old adults not bemg unmunized. done a ftrst class job m
757 Th1rd Ave , N ew York
NY 1001 7
'
for the secretary has never taken to administration or per.,. Egypttan mummtes from
From time to time I am bnnglng oul fa c ts and
Subs c r l pl t on
rates
son nel problems . He has, m the last number of years, been centurtes_ ago. And, tt can concerne.d . because many providmg the knowledge. The
Del1vered by earne r where
availab l e 75 ce n ts per we ek
extremely susptc1ous of any person who dtsagreed with hun or occur wtthout causmg any people thmk the total pubhc has been slow in usmg
By Mo)or ~ Route where
car r ie r
serv1ce
not
opposed hi s pohctes He ts noted as a loner, who rehes on his paralysts at all "Thal was one responstbility for health rests this information Is thts
a vailab l e, One month. SJ '2'S
own analyses As a rule, he pays little attentton to the advtce of of the problems m unraveling · 111ith the medtcal profession . medical care failure• CerBy mad .n Oh10 and w Va
One
Year,
S21 00 .
S1~
subordmates He ts, a's a matter of facl, extremely poor at tts cause. Many people with The truth is that many other tainly not. It ts a !allure of our
months
$11 50
Three
ptcking
assistants and worse at handling them .
months 57 00 Elsewhere
the dtsease only had a bout of groups have an equal or soctety and our means to
26 00 ye ar , So( months
It
may
be
that
Kissmger,
senstttve
to
the
pomt
of
agony,
dtgestiVe trouble or "summer greater responsibility. The mottvate people to do what
13 50 , three months , 57 50
ubscr,pt1on pr,ce mcludes
may not be able to stand up to Hemenway 's attack for more flu " Olhers can have failure to get the pubhc to use needs to be done for - their
1n da y T 1rn-es Sen t ,n el
!h;.m a ye~:;~ r or so
wtdespread paralysts and end such advantages as iin- health.

"All I had to say is 'abracadabra ' -

detente!"

TOM TIEDE

We Hold These Truths ...
A Chronicle of Amcnca

Liberty doesn't end

Sport Parade

· at the company gate

Editorial comment,
opinion, features

The answer is blowin' in the wind

New men~s styles
make sex objects
By ALINE MOSBY
PARIS (UP I) - Former
U S revoluttonary Eldndge
Clea ver staged a one-man
fasluon show today of Ius
newest re\iolutwn - m men's
pants Even he srud 1l was a
shock
"Can you stand a shock"' '
asked the one-tune Bla ck
Panther leader as he walked
around hts offtce.
He was weanng bla ck
\elvet slacks, htgh-watsted to
the nbs and" tde at the belled
bottoms At the crotch \\as
wha t he ca ll ed an appurtenance The effect was of
a nude man w 1th hts legs
covered
''The Cleavers,'' as the new
destgner ha s named hts
patented creatton, make a
sex ObJect of men m the same
way that low-cut dresses for
centunes have made sex
Objects out of women
Stnce men have enJoyed

Fiddlers will
compete in

women as sex obJects, does
C.1eavcr thtnk they wtll mtn d
bctn g sex obJects them selves ?
'•'fll ese pants will g1ve m en
a c hance to assert thelr ma scu ll rut;," Cleaver sa1d " How
ran c lothtn g s hops sel l
trousers to grr ls and exped
men to buy gtrl pants?
'The situat ion m

men's

clulhtn g IS so bortng The
cr eat 1btltty ts ntl Th ey
change the shape of the
pockets . There are some
bea ut1f ul m atenals out for
women's pants but men ca n't
wea r those They ca n m my
destgns smce there 1s no
rntsla kmg they are men 's
pants "

H1s trousers are planned m
all fabncs mcludmg denun
For the U S. Btcentenrual he
CnVlsages hts pants with an
eagle or red and whtte strtpe s
or 13 sta rs on the appur tenance

Nelsonville

Pans surpass the whole

RAY CROMLEY

Possible gadfly in

Kissinger's ointment

Mafia's Giacalone set up

The trickle effect

last luncheon for Hoffa
DEfROir iUPI)- Reputed Mafm don Anthony
" fony Jack" Giacalone set up one-t1me feamsters
boss Jam es Hoffa lor the fat eful luncheon date 16 days
ago from which Hoffa has not returned , sources close
to the investigatiOn sa1d today.
111e DetrOit Free Press, in a copyrighted report, :
said it had learned Giacalone "had definitely · ..
arranged" a meeting with Hoffa July 30.
A Michigan law enforcement source close to the
· · search conJirmed allmvest1gation indicated Giacalone
"set Jimmy up" for a luncheon date at the Maehus Red
Fox Restaurant in suburban Bloomfield Township.
" On a 1 to 10 basis It 's 7 to 8 he was set up and done
away with, " th e source said.
He added tt was possible Hoffa, lhe tough " little
fellow " of the reamsters, could hav e been persuaded
to leave the parkmg lot m front of the restaurant, even
with a gun at hts back,
"He 's tough but he's not stupid," the source said.
" He'd keep going as long as he could talk. As for
anybody seeing anything that happened In that parking
lot - nobody sees anythmg."

Dr. Lamb

Polio is an ancient disease

Berrys World

.....

" Sorry, ofltcert I guess I was speedmg 'cause 1
wasn 't paymg attentton to my C1t1zens ' Band rad1o
- I mean
"

,

•

NCAA approves grants-in-aid· cut

Today's

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor
NEW YORK ( UPI ) - Jun l'horpe ts fmally g01ng to make tt,
62years after the deed , 22yea rs after he died
That 's the feeling I get, and the feelmg keeps growmg
stronger all the tune , espeoally when the Prestdent of the
Umted Slates pleads on a personal basts wtth the lntemattonal
Olymptc Commtttee m Jun Thorpe's behalf and when so many
others endorse the Prestdent's senttnnent and derrano lo know
when jusltce ts gomg to be done
From a sentunental sta ndpomt, I can understand thts
sudden new move to "reinstate" Jun Thorpe
As a former athlete hunself, Gera ld Ford has a natural
feeling for a man hke Jun Thorpe . Sunilarly, I can apprCC!ate
the way Lord Killanm, the IOC Prestdent , feels about those two
gold medals Thorpe had to gtve back after he won the
decathlon and penthathlon tn the 1912 Olympics at Stockholm,
then was dtscovered to have played professtonal baseball m
the mmor leag ues for $60 a month.
By~aw B-1, Rule 26 of the Olymptc reg ulations says clearly
"A competitor must not be, or have been , a profesSional
athlete 1n any sport , or contracted to be so before the offtctal
closmg of the Games "
That rule was in the book the year Jun Thorpe competed m
the Olymptcs and IS sttll there today
If you read the letter Thorpe wrote to James E Sulhvan,
secretary of the Ama te ur Athletic Uruon, on Jan 26, 1913,
conflmllng lhe fa cl he was a professtonal at the tune he
competed tn the Olymptcs, tt tugs at yo ur heartstrmgs a little,
but tt leaves no room for any doubt
Thorpe wrote from Carhsle, Pa , where he had attended the
lndtan School there
"Dear Mr Sullivan," he began
"So much has appeared m the newspapers, that I went to the
school authonttes and told them JUSt what there was to the
stones.
"I played at Rocky Mount and Fayettevtlle (North Carohna)
m 1909 and 1910 under my own name On the teams I played
With were several college men from the North who were
earning money by playmg ball durmg thetr vacatton and who
were r egarded as amateurs at home
"I did not play for the money there was m tt because my
properly brmgs me m enough money to hve on, but I hked to
play ball I was not very wtse to the ways of the world and dtd
not realtze thts was wrong and tt would make me a professtonal
to (s tc ) track meets--although I learned from the other
players and for that reason I never told anyone at the school
about tt unttl today
" I have never realiZed until now what a btg miStake I made
keeptng tt a secret about my ball playmg and I am sorry I dtd
so. I hope I wtll be partly excused by the fact that I was sunply
an Indian schoolboy and dtd not know I was domg wrong I was
domg what I kn ew several other college men had done except
that they dtd not use thetr own names .. and 1 hope that the
AAU and the people wtllnot be too hard m JUdgmg me. "
It's hard for me to comprehend on what grounds the IOC can
remstate Jun Thorpe Nevertheless, I have a hunch tt wtll
Then I 'd hke to see what tt wtll have to say aboul By-law B-1,
Rule 26 of tts own reg ulahons? Probably nothing
Amateur athlettcs mterna ttonally ts a mess It's a btg JOke
" What would you do tf you were me, and you saw a promoter
of a European tra ck meet g1ve an AmeriCan champton a
thousand dollars for competmg in hts meet ?" a European
JOUrnaltst asked a
amateur track and held offtctal
"Simple," satd the offlctal " I'd report the promoter to t he
Prestdent of your parttcular Track and Fteld Federahon."
" Imposstble," the JOurnaltst srud
" Why not?"
"Because he's the Prestdent."

u·s

Ma 1or Leagu e Stand rng s
Un rt e d Pr ess lntern a l•onal
Nat•onal Le agu e
Ea st
w I pet
g b
Plltsb u r gh
67 52
563
6-t 5&lt;1
542 2'
Phi! a
6'1 56
525 .:1 1 :
51 LOUI S
60 57
513 6
N e w YO'rk
56 65
46 3 17
ChICago
Monlr ea t
48 68
41.1 17 '
West
w I pet
g b
C m c1n
79 39
669
LOS A ng
6&lt;1 55
538 15 1 ,
San Fran
60 59
SOJ 19

Sa n D1ego
Atlanta

S&lt;l 6&lt;1

Cleve l a nd (Ec k ers l ey 9 J l
at Mmn e sota (B t ylellen 11 6 1
9 p m
Det ro , t (Lo h ch 10 l ? l at
Ca l do rn , a ( Tana na 10 6 1
10 30 p m
Mil wauk ee ( Co lbo r n 7 Q ) at
Oa kland ( Blue 16 81 11 p m
Sa turday 's Gam es
Boston at Chrcago
Milwaukee a t Oak land
Cte11eland at Mmnesota
T e xas at Ba l ti m Or e n
Detroil a t Call fo rn ra n
New York at Kansas c ,ty n

458 ?5

'i4 66

45 0 16
Houston
&lt;15 78
J66 J6
Thur s day' s Resu lts

Ch1cago 5 Ho u s ton J n

Atla n t a 6 S t LOU I S I n
Cm crnnat 6 P1t1 sburgh I n
s an krancrsco 9 Montreal ? n

Fnday' s Games
All T1m es EDT
San FranciSCO (Barr 10 9
an d Hal1 ck r 6 9 ) at N ew York
( K oosman 10 10 and W e bb 4
5 1 2 5 JS p m
St
Lours (Reed 10 9 and

Ra sm ussen 1 21 at Atl anta

t Ea ste r ly 1 5 and Tho m pso n

0 3 l 7 6 OS p m
San

o,cgo (Jones 15 7l at

P hi!adelph a { Rulhven I l l B
pm
P1tl sbu r gh &lt;Rooke r 8 8 at
,.. Cmcmnat r ( Nor man 7 JJ 8 OS
pm
Los A ng eles (Sut ton 16 9J at
Montreal (Ro g e r s 8 9l 8OS
pm
Ch1cago ! Bo nh am 11 8 1 a t
H ouston (Q,~rfer 10 17 1 8 35
p m
Sa turda v.'s Game s
Ch rc a go at Houston
San Franc1sco at N ew York
Sl LOU IS a t A t lan ta n
Los A ng eles at Montreal n
Prllsburgh a t Cmcm n at1 n
Sa n o,ego at Philadelph i a n
Amerrcan L eague
Unrte d Pr ess Int e rnatiOnal
East
w I pet
9 b
71 48
597
Boston
64 s7
ss7 s• ,
Bait
61 57
5 17 9 1
N e w York
55
64
467 16
M !l wau
51 63
451 1/
Cle11e
46 73
387 75
Detrotl
w es t
w I pet
g b
Oakland
77 47
605
Kan C1ty
65 57
556 6
Texas
58 6 \
487 14
Ch rcago
58 60
467 13 1 ,
Mrnn
54 66
450 18
C al 1f
5&lt;~ 67
446 19
Thur sday 's Result s
Oaklan d 5 New York 1
Chr cago 6 C l eveland 4 n
Cal1forn ,a 5 Boston 3. n
Fnd ay's Games
All Trm es EDT
Texa s ( Hargan
B 6 and
Wr 1ght
3 4 ) al
Bal t1more
(Torr ez 1&lt;1 6 and Cue l lar 11
81 ? , 5 30 p m
N e w York (G u ra 4 4) at
Kansas C1ty ( F IIzmo rr1 s I ?
91 8 30 o m
Bosto n
(T1an1
14 Ill at
Chtcago (Vucko111Ch 0 l l
9
pm

Thur sday' s Baeball
R es ult s
Un1t e d Pre !&gt;s lnt e rnaltonal
N a tional L eague
PillS
000 000 0 10· 1 40
erne n
000 307 lOx - 6 11 0
Reuss
Tek ulve
Ul
Demery 181 and Sa n g ulllen
Nolan
McEnaney (9 ) and
Bench
WP
N ola n I 11 6-1
LP
Reuss ( 12 9 1
HR s
Sanguille n (7 th l F os t e r !71
??1st ?? nd 1
San Fran
030 411 000 9 1? 1
Montrea t
000 000 00? 2 9 ?
Barr
( l 1 91
and Rader
B la r Sche r m an (4) DeMo l a
(6 }
Murray (8) and Foo l e
Mo ral es (81
LP - B l a 1r 17
I J ) HR
Rad e r 14 th )
L OUIS
101 001 100 - 4 15 I
At lan ta
30 1 700 OOx 6 ~ 1 0
McG l o t he n
Reynolds (41
Pa r ker 16 1 Gar m a n ( 7) and
S1mmons N1 e kro Leo n (71
Sa d eck, (81 a n d Co rr e ll
WP
N 1e kro (12 10 ) LP
McG i olhen 11? 91
HR s
Da111S 15 th }
May 17 1h }
Cor r e ll I lOth) Sm 1th ( 171 h I
St

110 700 010 5 10?
C h1 cago
Hous ton
01 1 000 00 1- 3 10 0
Sto n e ( 11 51 e~ nd Sw 1she r
R 1chard
Gran ge r (8 J and
Mdf
LP - R IC h ard
(8 8)
HR
Johnson ( 10t h)
! On l y gam es sc h edule d l
Am•r,can L e agu e
New Yol-k
000 100 000- 1 5?
Oa kland
100 000 04x - 5 8 1
M a y. T r Mart1nez ( 81,
T 1drow ( 8 ). Gu1d r y 18) and
Herr mann Bosman 18 41 an d
H aney
L P
May
T en a ce
( 11 8)
Cle11e
00011 1 100 4 112
Ch ,c:a go
030 000 th. 6 8 0
Har r 1son
B r own (7) and
E llr s
Ashby
(7)
Kaa t ,
H amilton (8} and Down•ng .
varney 19) WP
Kaat I t 7 9 )
LP Har r1 so n 15 4 )
H Rs
ElliS
I flh )
Carty
II Jth ),
Ke lly (8 th ) Ste m { 3r d l
-~

Bosto n
Cal tf
Lee
Smge r

100 010 100 3 10 0
00500000)( 511
1 t 5 JJ
and
F 1sk
K1 r kwood 17 1 a nd
Hamptt:~n LP
S1nge r 17 ll l
I Only gam e s sche dul ed I

o

CHICAGO (UPI) - NCAA
co nventton
dele gates
Thursday approved rules
changes to cut cost.&lt;; m It VP
ca tegones though th ey
progressed through barely a
th1rd of m ore th a n 70
proposals to shave expenses
alhl ehc
for
collegiate
programs
In discusston prolonged by
the need to vote on more
amendment.&lt;; than ther e were
proposals, the delegates
- E hmtnated the $15 a
month meld ental cas h
beneltts and course.related
supphes fumtshed by the
schools to athletes
--Cut to 80 the number of
grants for mmor sports m
DlVlston I ( lh e larger
schools I --a 40 per cent slash
--Cut the number of grants
for mmor sport.&lt;; m DiviSion II
schools to 80--another 40 per
cent cut-and unposed luntts
of 80 grants m football and 12

m basketball for DtvtSion II
institutions
- Ott gra nts for football for
DIVlston I schools from 105 to
95 wtth a luntt of no more
than 30 eac h year
- Cti t
the
maximum
number of grants for
basketball for Dtvlston I
schools from 18 to 15 wtth no
more than stx m one year
Sttll to come was action on
r estrtclton s on rec ru1ttn g
contacts, on NCAA-control of
tenders of grants-m&lt;~td , try outs and hrmtattons on
coachmg staffs.
The cut m grantHn-atd for
Dlvlston I schools could
red uce thetr budgets a pproXtlllately $25,000 per year
for football and $7,500 m
basketball. The elunmatton
of supplies and mctdental
money could save as much as
~ per athlete
Because the cuts on the
number oJ-grants m rumor

spo rts applles to the value restncllve than one already would have reduced them to
rather than the number, the .a pproved would be con- 65 for Division I football over
slash would be about 40 per stdered, hve proposals dtd three years
not come up for discusston or
cent
" I thmk fans would go out
\'Ole
Though there were only 73
to see 65 grants-m-atd play, "
Sttl!, the convenllon went he satd , "and yo u'd still have
proposals to change the rules ,
a tot~! of 90 amendments through only 25 proposals, the reve nue and elunmate the
were h ied before t)le and Fuzak, who ran the Iorge expenses
meet mg an hour passed tts
deadlin e
" I not1ce the counctl wants
scheduled
close, announced to !unit the travelmg squads
Most of th e d1scusswn rentered on how mu ch a cut Frida y's sesston would begm to 48 and the home squads to
should be unposed on grants- an hour early
60 and I can 'l see why you
Dr
Stephen
Horn , need 95 gra nts Is thiS the raw
m-atd and on the proposals Iii
hm1t the number of grants m prestdent of Long Beac h meat for practice ?"
State
Umvers1ty
tn
mmor sports
Tv. o proposals were with- C.a hforma, charged from the
drawn one requtrmg U1at all floo r that the conv_entwn had TDs and punted for a 39 9
·a lready fa tled" by not avera ge.
atd be based on need and
Another highly regarded
another prohtbttmg coaches cutlmg the number of grants
colleg.an of a more recent
m mm or s ports fro m more than 1t dtd
Horn supports the tdea of VIntage also found hunself
recruttmg off-campus
Another proposal - to luntl sharmg the wealth from foot - out of a JOb today Davtd
fman ctal atd to room, board ball bowl recetpl.&lt;;, televtston Jaynes, heralded as one of
and th e NCAA basketball th e top passers m the nation
and twtton - was ta bled
Because NCAA Prestdent tournament among all mem- at Kansas two years ago, was
released by AUanla The
Jack Fuzak, prestdmg at the bers
Horn had suggested a cut m Falcons satd Jaynes, obsesston, rul e d th at no
proposals whtch were less the number of grants whtch tained last month from
Kansas City for wtde recetver
Tom Geredtne, had a sore
arm

auto cla1m service

wherever your drive.

STEVE SNOWDEN
t 258 Powell Street

Mrddle port,

'PH: 992-7155
l•ke a good
ne1ghbor

11AII fAIN

State Farm
tS there
.

1UII ! 111,1
U lolrU T

loiO,IIU il

l ~ l~U OI

derson was held He was one
of the glamor signees m the
pro football war of the early
1960s, rakmg in an estunated
$650,000 from Vmce Lombardi's Packers to JOm the
Nattonal Football League
While Anderson managed
to play well w1th the Packers,
he never achteved the
superstar status expected of
hun when he stgned hts
lucrattve contract He was
dealt to St Loms three years
ago and thts past sprmg was
traded to Miami for wtde

recetver Marlin Bnscoe. The
end of the hne came Thursay 1
when Anderson announced
his rehrernent at age 32
" It 's
ttm e to face
reahttes, " Anderson satd " I
didn't thmk I could contrtbute
as well as I thought I could
when I came to camp. I
suppose I could hang on but I
hke to be a frontrunner. It
would be dtsappomtmg to me
tf I was put mto a sttuatton
where I had to perform and I
didn't do tt
" When you get older , you

The A's, a s has been therr

York Yankees 5-1 , wtth Dtck
custom for the last three
Bosman pttchmg a ftve·lntte r
years, dtdn'l get mterested to grun his etghth wm
until they began to read m the
Oakland won the game wtth
papers that the Royals were a fou r-run etg hth·mmn g
threatenmg thetr dynasty
outburst durmg whtch Btll
That 's when they un - No, •}- drove m the t te doubtedl y held a clubhouse breakmg run wtth a smgle,
rumble, exchanged a few a nother run sco red on
black eyes and settled down short stop Fred Stanl ey's
to the busmess of wmnmg the error and Gene Tenace and
AL's Western title
Sal Bando also drove m runs
The A's mcreased their
Rudy May, tagged for ftve
lead over lhe tdle Kansas Ctly hits and three runs m 7 1-3
Royals to stx games Thurs- tnnings, suffered hts etghth
da y when they beat the New loss aga mst II vtctortes
Chtcago
def eate d
Cleveland 6-4 and Cahfornta
downed Boston 5-3 m the
other Amertcan League
games In the Nat10nal
Leag ue , Ctnctnnatt beat
Ptttsburgh 6-1, Atlanta
downed St Louts 6-4, San
close personal frtend of Noe 's Franctsco rtpped Montreal 9and hts action was beheved to 2and Chicago topped Houston
:&gt;-3
be m protest to Noe's fmng
Whtte Sox 6, Indians 4
If the Kentucky Derby
Jtm Kaat won hts 17th
wtnner can brmg home a
game
wtth the rehef help of
VIctory in the Travers, he w•ll
become a mtlhonaire, havmg Dave Hamtlton m Chtcago's
lost only lhree times m his !:&gt;- wm over Cleveland Pat Kelly
race career In hts last race , tted the score With hts etghth
Foohsh Pleasure tangled homer m the seventh mrung
w1th Rulhan for the un- and the While Sox took the
disputed 3-year-old crown, lead when Jorge Orla and
but the tragedy that befell the Deron Johnson followed wtth
great filly threw a pall over doubles Ronc Hamson was
the colt 's unchallenged the loser
Angels 5, Red Sox 3
VICtory
Jerry Remy doubled in two
In hts three defeats , the
What A Pleasure colt was runs and Lee Stanton smgled
second tWlce and third the m two more to lead Cahforma
other tune He has won a to tts vtclory whtch cut
Boston's lead over Balttmore
shade more than $970,000
m
the AL East to 51'.! games
But one thmg he never has
been able to accomphsh ts to F1fteen-game wmncr 8111 Lee
assert his unquesttoned suffered hts seven th loss for
supertortty over the rest of the Red Sox while Btll Smge r
his diVISIOn
He w1ll have that chance
lnt e rnaf 10na 1Leagu e
Saturday when WaJtma, a
St.1nd1ng s
Unf ed Prc~s Jnt crnaf l onal
$600,000 yearlmg purchase ,
w I pet
9 b
Forceten, who has been T1dewater
7 d AS
60 7
7'"1 5 1 58 5 ? '
extremely impresstve after Roches t er
Syracuse
65 55
5J 7 8
gettmg hts career off to a Ia te G1ar1eston 63 59 5\6 11
51 66
Jf6 3 17'
start thts past April and MemphiS
R1chmond
54 6&lt;~
JSB 18
Prmce Thou Art, who Toledo
53 70
4 31 ? 1
defeated Foohsh Pleasure m Pawt u cket J9 74 398 ?S
Thu rsday's Re !&gt; ult s
the Flonda Derby, promtse to Sy r ac u se ? Toledo 0
proVIde h1s most fornuda ble T 1d ewa1er 3 MemphiS ?
? Pawtucket o.
test lo date among 3-year-old Rochester
Charleslon at R1chmond
ppd
rarn
colts

don't heal as fast as you used
to I don 't want to be 50 and
ertppled, unable to support
my famtly or play golf or go
ftshtng But football's been
good to me. I've had a lot of
good tunes and some unfortuna te tunes ."
Anderson said he'll return
to a real estate and msurance
busmess m Dallas.
In his nme NFL seasons,
Anderson earned 1,197 tunes
for 4,696 yards and scored 41
touchdowns He caught 209
oasses for 2i 18 yards and 14

went 6 1-3 mrung s for th e wm
Reds 6, Pirates 1
George Foster hit hts 20th
and 21st homers and drove m
five rwts for Cincmnall Gary
Nolan went etght mrungs,
allowmg four htts, to wm hts
lith game agatnst stx losses
whtle Ptttsburgh 's Jerry
Reuss suff er ed hts mnth
setback aga mst 12 VICtones

Foolish Pleasure
to run Saturday
SARATOGA SPRINGS,
NY (UPI) - The New York
Racmg Association was
stunned Thursday afternoon
when LeRoy Jolley, the
tramer of Foolish Pleasure ,
announced hiS horse would
not run 1n Saturday's IOOth
runmng of the $100,000
Travers Stakes, then changed
his mmd and SaJd he would
It all started early m the
mornmg when Jolley Informed racmg secretary
Kenny Noe that Foohsh
Pleasure would not run m the
Travers, a race which
symbolizes the mtdswnmer
classtc for 3-year-old colts.
Then, sometime around
3·00 p.m , John L Greer,
Foolish Pleasure's owner ,
called the racmg secretary's
offtce to inform Noe that
"unless somethmg has
happened to htm m the last 15
mmules" his colt would be m
fme conditiOn for the race and
Jorge Velazquez would nde
hlm
Jolley's dectston lo scratch
Foolish Pleasure ts reported
to be related to announcement on Wednesday
that Noe was bemg dtsrmssed
as New York 's racmg
secretary m favor of hts
predecessor, Tommy Trotter.
Jolley considers hunself a

W1th our trade rn yotJ buy for leu m an promo
tlonat and 1pec1a!ty houHI muffle" The mufller
that came on vou• ca r was probabtv detlgned
and butlt by Af'fln to fit me manufacrurer 1 pre
Clle 1pec1frcat10nJ ArYm mulller1 are bur It wrth
out shortcuts that lowe r pnce - Trade now and

Resonators &amp; Pipes Are Not Included
YOU lL FINO THIS SUPERB VALUE A T

SATURDAY· AUGUST 16th
UNTIL 5 P.M.
FOR
11

ANNUAL OUTING"

OF
INTERNATIONAL BROTHERHOOD OF
ELECTRICAL WORKER5-LOCAL NO. 317

CAMDEN PARK
US 60 WEST-HUNTINGTON

PARTS STORES

144 W Second Stree t
Pomeroy Oh1o

•P,qrte

..., u•

SERVICE OUTLE TS SELL FOR THE SAME LOW PR ICE AND INSTA L L
THE MUFFLERS FOR A SMAL L SERV ICE CHARGE

B ailey'!&gt; As hl and Scrv,cc
Tupp er!&gt; Plain 0
Barr' !&gt; A !o h! a nd Ser... 1te
R ee d '&gt;v ill e, 0
Canon ''&gt; T ex a co Se r v •cc
Rutland 0
Cod n er!&gt; A !&gt; hland Serv1cc
Syra cu!o e, 0
Cozart s Garage
R &lt;1C in C 0
Eb cr's Gulf Serv 1ce
R ac rn c 0
Roseberry., Penn t o il
Rac1ne 0

PARK RESERVED

TH ESE ~ p~~sa AUTO

G &amp; J AUTO PARTS
THESE~

E th !o So h 10 Se r v 1c e
Be ec h &amp; Locu st
M rddl eport 0
E rw 1n s Gulf Se r v1ce
North ? nO Av e
M •d~I epo rt
0
Fr e11ch s Middl e port Sun oco
510 N orth Seco nd
M1dd l epo rt 0

L andmark Se rvrcc
544 E Ma1n St
P omeroy 0
Mlllhon e., So h 10 Se rv1c c
St,1te Rf 7
Tupper!&gt; P !illfl '&gt; 0
N ew e ll' &lt;&gt; Sunoc o Serv rce
Sta t e Rt 7
Ch o l er 0
Pom e roy Hom e &amp; A u t o
606 E M11m 51
Porn erov 0
P o m eroy Sunoco Sc11nce
18? W c !&gt;t Maul 51
P o m eroy 0
Rac,n e' '&gt; G~rag e
RaC IIl C 0
Reed!&gt; Broth er '&gt; Sun oco
R t Cth v •l! e 0
R 1denour Sup ply
St Rt 146
Ch e!otcr 0
R oo l ., Amoco scrv1C C
Coolvill e 0

Gilbert!&gt; Garage
Slat e Rt 7
Mrddlepor l , 0

RuHhel s Garr~q c
104 Wilzqall 51
Pomeroy 1 0

Roger H y!&gt;ell G a rage
51 R l 124
M1dd!epor l , 0

Welk e r ., A ~ hlnnd

Kapp! e ~ Pennzorl St o"lt 10 n
M~ 1n 51
Po m e • oy 0

Dan Thomp son Ford
461 S Thtrd St
M td dleport 0

we s t Ma1n St
Pomeroy

U UIII (I
Ill

p 7 1 109

A's bounce NY Yankees, 5-1
By FRED DOWNUP! Sports Wnter
It hasn't come out m the
papers yet bul the Oakland
A's must hav e had a
clubhouse ftght or, at least ,
burned Charlie Finley m
efftgy for the umpt ee nth
tune
It was only a week ago that
the Kansas Ctty Royals were
gomg hke gangbusters and
had cut the three-time world
champiOn A's' lead m the
Amenean League's Western
DiVISIOn almost m half.

II

l l 00YII 41 QI

"0 111 1 Ott t(l

Don Anderson quits
By JOE CARNICELLI
UPI Sports Writer
It was Jan , 12, 1966, and the
Green Bay Packers were
playmg the Kansas C1ty
Ouefs m the hrst SUper Bowl
Fred
''the
Hammer''
Wilhamson lay stretched oul
on the field, hts mmd in a log
" Donny must have htt him
wtth h1s wallet," cracked a
Packer defenstve lmeman on
the stdelmes as Williamson
was helped from the ft eld
The qutp typ1f1ed the
regard m whtch Donny An-

0

0

Offer good thru Saturday!

•
'•

�\

2- The Datly Sent mel , Mtdtllt•pott-l'omero' 0 Fr d·
~·

•

I

a.\ , Au g 15. 1!)75

and ca ndidate for coun cil
(l ffl ce rn ht s co mmumty ,
agrees that employes often
mtsWlderstand the bi!J cur·
porate ptcture " But we sttll
know what's gomg on at the
local level For example,
the re ts an ordmance m m y
town r equ1rm g service
'let Them Alone':
Ry Tnm Tt cde
charged wtth makmg tllegal statio ns to p~st th e1r pn ces
David Hume. a Scottish
WASH INC TON - As a pubhc re lat tons ~ayuffs to prormne ntJy on the roads1de
" I am an
phtlosopher
$2 25 dfl hour temporar), fore1gn gove r nments, I ll · Well , over the July 4 hohday,
when
Ashland
told
us
to
American
an
my
principles ,
sum me r em ploye of As hla nd cludmg Gabon and Saudi
mcrease
our
pwnp
pr1
ce
from
and w1sh we woutd let thenl
Petr ule wn , .lim Logan does Arabia , the SEC cl.a Jm s
alone to govern or misgovern
not
hdve
m uch
co m- Ashland has over th e years 5lc to 57c, tt also told us to
take
down
OW'
roa
dside
s1gns
rhemselves, as they thmk
mw1JC.atwn w 1lh the upper fatled to dt seluse at leas t $4
proper . the atfa1r IS of no
levels of the corporatwn 's mdh on 111 overseas cas h That way motomls would not
know
the
dtfference
unttl
they
consequence,
or of little con·
I net nrc h) But what there IS tran sfer s
rece ntl}, co r·
sequence.
lo us "
of Jl, .he s~vs, IS ernb1tle11ng poratc off1Ce1shave adm1tted drov e m The Ashland action
Ht·-.:ent l y Log&lt;.tn , of North cmploy mg at least one CIA was wholly tllegal and nobody
Oltnsllea,d. Oh10, Y.as among agent whose JOb 1t v.a s to spy knows tl any better than the
th ousa nd s
ur Ash l an d 1n We ste rn E ur ope and, people who pump lhetr gas "
-By Ros! M ac k ~nEle &amp; l~tt MacNelly / ~ 197 5 Un1!etl Feature Synd rcate
Beyond the local ptcture,
I ClC IVJng ;] sli ffl)
fmally . the uri company has
J 1m
Logan
wurdcd letter from t he had sever a l legal tangles w1th moreover ,
beheves
the
fact
of
an
em- as an example of the abuse to matter What matters ts that
c omp-'l n)
warn1 ng
of F'ederal a utho r1 t1es w1th
ploye's
sta
tus
wtthtn
a wh1ch some g1ant co r . corporate Amer1 ca not be
possi bl e di sm issa l ' for res pect to retail pncmg
com,pany 1s Irr elevant to h1 s porat 10ns subsrnbe He ma y allowed to create cond1 t10ns
Hll \ o ne ca ug h t dJ sr ussJ ng
Loga n fee ls
Ashla nd
consltluttonal
n ghts Thus he be ftred for tht s aclton, he whereby ltberty ends at the
As hl.tnd matte rs w 1t h the exec utives ar e do ubtl ess
kn ows, but thal d oesn't company ga le
ne\\ s media The lette1 over shellshuc ked by now , won- passes on the Ashland Jetter
the Signat ure of Ash land V1ce derm g what news bomb w11l
PresHlcnt W H Davts, was fall next, and the letter IS an
.ftith essc d to the ·, e t ~u l effort to shore up a htlle
Indtk e lJ nJ::
s ales defense None the less, he's
o r ganlzt~twn "a lon g-wmded
un sympat heti c · The 1ntent
tde rem e to the men who of the le tter clearly ts a
ope1atf! the g~1 s stat iOn s
vw lo:th on of m y c1vtl hber'Bf'C(J. USC' of re(ent articles
ttes " As Logan un derstands
&lt;tpeed r Jng m the me d1a af- 1t. fr eedom of speech 1s
fe( t 1n g Ashl ,1 nd, · Davis prole&lt;.:tcd and not subJec t to
\HO le In mH.l-Ju]y,
Jt IS ar b1 trar} narrow mg , thus he
th ought Mi v l s t~hl c to once believes the Ashland letter to
mm e c.. a ll vour a ttentiOn to be · ndtcul ous " and councorpmate p0IH.: y \~Jtl! respect lerproducttve " People gel
to such me~tte r s and to em- angr} v. hen freedom s are
phc~slzt' the sanct wns wh1ch a bu sed ,' he adds, angry
could be mshl uled for \Hllful enough to stnke back
The government ts going to spend $147,800 to fmd out tf people would mtnd hav mg wmdvwla tw ns ·
For tts pari , Ashland says
mtlls
as netghbors
Co rporat e policy , Dav1s Logan s diSJOinted nose ts the
That's
the amount of a grant which the National Sctence Foundatwn and the Energy
expla1 ned IS to refer a ll result of · a misrepresenResearch and Development Admmistration have made to the University of lllmots' Survey
press 1nqumes relatmg to tatiOn" of th e Dav ts letter
Research
Laboratory for a year-long study of public reacltons to wmdmtlls in ftve areas ac ross
Ashland' to the company Corporate publi CISt Harry
the country , rangmg from the heavily settled East Coast to the platns of Kansas to the Paciftc
pu blic relatiO ns offi ce
Wiley sa)s that manage ment
Northwest.
F'allurc on yo ur part to "stmply feels comphcated
The wmdm1lls m quest ton are not the ptcturesque Dutch type, nor the once numerous farm
.ulhere to th1s po hev w1ll 1ssues can t be analyzed by
wmdmtlls
Modem, high-efflctency wmdmllls capable of contrtbutmg to the natton 's energy
sUb Ject ynu to dJ sc1Pimary people on the reta tl level "
budget
would
have wheels or vanes 75 to 100 feet m dtameter mounted on slender towers 100 to
.Jc twn, Incl ud ing poss ibl e Ashland 's
contr ove r s ies
Nclson\l"''l l c
the suu th 250 feet htgh For maXIlllum ef!tctency, they would have to be located m large numbers and
diSIIII SS i.ll
mvolve a mynad or laws an d
rus h: rn Oh10 rommun it\
I ogcm , 20 says he can well eve nts. Wtley adds, of whtch occupy h1ghly promment postttons.
""lw..: h e._u.: h }e.u observes th~
"Whether the pubhc will accept such modiftcatton on the landscape wtll be a maJor
und ers ta nd th e reasons the fellow at the bollom of the
Pm a de uf the Hills, agam \.,Ill
deciding
factor m whether plans for usmg the wind to generate electrtcal energy can be llnbehmd the leller Ashland has ladder ts often tgnorant ' But
hos t !lw Ohw State Chamhad mure than 1ts shar e of when WXYZ telev isiOn comes plemented, " says Prof Robert Gerber, director of the laboratory
pwnslup Old J Inll' Fiddl e r s
For a lot less than $147,800, we can tell the researchers the answer already If people get
negaltvc publtc1ty 1n the past to an Ashland slalton, the guy
Con i es! Fnda). Au g 22 ,
hungry enough for energy , they'll like wmdrmlls
few years f he com pan) has m umform IS used as a
bcgmmng c1f 8 p m lf1 t he
pleaded gmlly to making company spokesman That's
public squc11 c
Ill ega l
cam paig n
con- not good for anyone mvolved,
[n t ase of ra m tile eve nt
tnbu tlOns
to
varwu s and 1t 's what we 're trymg to
\\ Ill take place m the
Car owners are gettmg hit twtce by mflation - once when they Jay out hundreds of dollars
poiJh cians, wcludm g Richard preve nt .,
Ne lso nville-York Junmr H1 gh
more
for a current model than for comparable models a year or two ago, and agrun when they
N1xo n Th e co mpany 1s
Logan. a college student
Schuol, nea r the squ are
hit another motortst
ThiS Fiddler s cuntes t has
One major auto msurer reports that the average claun for damaged cars ts $455 this year
always a ttracted manj fane
Thts ts an mcrease of 31 per cenlover 1971 and a jump of 20per cent m the past 12 months alone.
mus1c1ans from Ohw Wes t
A recent mdustry survey showed that the cost of "crash" parts - the etght maJOr parts
Vu gtma , an d Kentucky, who
most frequently damaged m trafftc accidents - IS runrung 25 per cent higher than a year ago
m turn have ath ac ted manj
Some samples· A new fender for a Ford Galaxie 500cost $74 10m 1971 and $76 40 m 1974 but
admtr ers of old-t1me Apsurged to $93 55 m 1975
pa lac hi a n mu siC to hear
A replacement hood for a Olevrolet Impala cost $77 95 m 1971, $79 90 m 1974 and $103 80 m
them
1975
P1 10r to the contest, beA door for a Plymouth Fury III cost $120 90 m 1971, $132 18m 1974 and $178.82 m 1975
tween Gand 8 p m , there wtll
Even lhe so-called economy ears are m the btg-lllne class when 1l comes to repla cement
be old-fa s htoned squa r e
parts A fender for an AMC Gremlin has gone from $63 2Q m 1971 to $82 95 m 1974 to $99 36 m
By Ray Cromley
dan cmg tn front of the Parade
1975.
WASHINGTON - Secretary of State Henry Kissmger 's
of the Htlls stage
The reason msurance costs have remamed f81l'ly stable desptte these mcreases ts that the
troubles m the Mid-easl and Moscow may pale mto mMusiCians and other m- stgmftcance m compartson wtth lhe confrontatiOns he may
acctdent rate wo!nl down, thanks to the 55-mph lirmt and the gasoline pinch That ts, the higher
teresled persons may obtatn face at home m the Slate Department thiS commg year
cosl of each accident was offset by the lower acctdent rate.
f urt her
1nfor matJon by
All that began to change around nud-1974, however, when auto parls prtces began to zoom
The r eason John Hemenway has JUSt been elected
wrtttng to The Old-Ttme pres ident of the Amencan Foreign Servtce Association, State 's
The result, warn msurancespokesmen, IS lhal msurance prermums are gomg to have to go up,
F'1ddler 's Co nv en twn, Box 7,400member trade umon whose rolls mclude most seruor and
too
251, Route 2, Athens, Ohto, JUmor foretgn servtce officers. To my knowledge, thts ts the
45701
first ttme th ts statd body has elected a gadfly. Most AFSA
presidents have been ''proper" men who conform to the State
Department's hierachy.
The experts are keeping lhetr eyes on a dozen or so econom1c mdices to see which way the
Because charges of fraud had been made after lhe 1973 country ts gomg. But a better barometer of lhe nattonal economy than all t bese is Goodwtll
AFSA electwns, the Department of Labor supervised the Industries, clauns an offtclal of the non-prof1t organiZation
votmg
Distribution of
And the barometer is not riSmg.
Hemenway was ftred by the State Depar~ent m 1969 after
W. Sharon Florer, execuhve dnector of the Ohto Valley Goodwilllnduslrtes comes to thts
makmg charges of malfeasance m the 'agency Powerful conclusiOn by Judgmg the mtake of matenals donated lo the 156 local Goodwths around the
funds announced senators, mcludmg Wtlham Proxrrure (D-Wisc.) and Henry M. country .
Jackson (D-Wash ). Intervened m his behalf
·
.. ~'When furnt~re Isn't commg to Goodwill, people are not buymg furniture," he says
Following
stormy
sesstons,
the
Gnevance
Hearmg
en people don t donate refrtgerators, tt IS because they're not buying refngerators. They
Gertrude W Donahey,
tn
his
case
recommended
that
he
be
remCommtttee
sttlmg
are
not
donatmg etther to tLS now."
Treasurer of State. has anstaled,
promoted,
hts
legal
fees
patd,
that
he
receiVe
an
no unced
she
has
$87,638,563 49 av atlable for apology , that letters of retractiOn be sent lhose who had been
dJstnbut1on to the varwus offtctaly m1smformed about hlm and that his record be exlocal governmen ts through punge d of untruthful and derogatory matenal Except for the
letter of apology and the payment of Hemenway's legal fees,
the a ud1 tor of s tate
the Department tgnored all recommendatiOns of tl.&lt;; own
Th ese moneys have been
gnevance board
co ll ec ted under SectiO n
Hemenway then moved to the Pentagon Agam he was
5i07 03 of the Ohw Revised
ftred, thts tune afler ms1stmg on his nght to tesllfy agamst
Code an d rep r esents taxes
Kisstnger, Elhot Rtchardson and other htgh-level offtctals
levied on Fmanr1al InHemenway over the years has repeatedly tesltf1ed before
stJ tuta on s and Dealers tn
the Senate Fore1gn Relations Committee.
By Lawreoce E. Lamb, M.D.
In tan gibl es
He has called Kissmger unftt to hold offtce, challengmg hiS
DEAR DR. LAMB - I had up havmg deformtties
muntzalton agamst poho IS a
In Galha, $153,888 from
professwnaljudgment, his administrattve ability, hts selectton an uncle born m 1867 who was
Polio,
pohomyelths
and
fatlure
of the soctal sctenrw a ncia l w s ti tut iOns, and...
of offiCials and his foretgn policy.
shghtly crtppled and walked mfanttle paralysis are all lists ' area The medt~al
$419 fr om de a lers tota l
In other testunony before the Senate Foretgn Relations w1th a limp It has been satd nari)es for the same disease sctences can po wonders, but
$154,308 and m Metgs $93,213
Comrmltee he has charged thal htgh level foretgn servtce he had polto when he was 11 and the diSease ts caused by ~ then the segments of our
ft nanc 1a l, and $509 for
asstgnments have been used as pay-offs, that there is an years old . Was poho around vtrus I thmg the term m- soctety thal have the
dea lers , total $93,422
almost mcredible state of corruptwn, maladministratiOn and at that tune , and are polio fanhle paralysts 1s un- responstbthty for pubhc
wheelmg and dealing tn State personnel operations He has and mfanhle paralysis or fortunate because the dtsease educalton and encouragmg
t harged that foretgn service officers have been promoted or pohomyehhs one and the ts notlumted to mfanl.&lt;; It can public use often drop the ball
entered laterally m direct Vlolalton of regulallons. He has same disease? If not, what ts strtke down adults, too. The
It 1s t1me that the
.....:
IILIIICI
clauned lhat at least one offtcer was promoted Without felony the difference and what disease can be prevented by responsibility for many of
DEVOTED TO THE
charges agamst him bemg investigated
causes each • My uncle was •mmunization.
these health failures ts put
INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA
Hemenway did all this as a private citizen, not as a umon not paralyzed many wa)', but
I
am
sorry
to
say
that
this
where
they belong That ts
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
As
head
of
the
AFSA
uruon
you
can
ex~ct
Hemenway
offtctal.
one
leg
was
slightly
shorter
disease,
once
apparently
not
on
the
back of the busy
Exec Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH
to regularly challenge new ambassadorial and other than the other
conquered, has a chance of doctor but those segments of
Ctty Ed1tor
Prestdenllallevel appomtmenl.&lt;; m the foreign servtce, as well
Publ•shed daily eHept
DEAR READER - There resurgence. Why• Because soctety responstble for soc1al
Sat urday b y The Ohio Valley
as lower level promotwns, and refusals to promote. You can are many causes for a short brilliant medtcal advances action. And, closely related to
Pub l iShi n g compa n y , 1 1 1
Cou rt St, Pomeroy , Ohio
expect hun to urge Congress to create a tough new grievance leg and certainly not all short are not enough The public · thts IS the behavior of the
45769 Bus•nes!'- Office Phone
syst~ for the Department of State, the Agency for In99'1 2156 Ed•tor,al P hone 992
legs are caused by polio. So, I has to have enough will to use pubhc tlsell
7157
temattonal Development and the u.s: Information Agency
ean
't say if lhat was your the knowledge provided to
There has long been ample
Second cl ass postage pa1d
The present system recently went down the dram when all uncle's problem or not.
at P o m e roy , Oh 10
lhem by medtcal science. evtdence of the harmful efNat•onal
advert •s• ng
seven of the highly-&lt;jualifted public members of the foreign
But, yes, polio has been Public Indifference has led to feel.&lt;; of ctgarette smoking.
representat•ve
Ward
servtce gn evance board resigned tn protest
Gr 1fl 1th . Company,
I nc ,
around a long lime. There IS many chtldren and some The medical professton has
Bott,nelll &amp; Gallagher 0 1v ,
Hemenway Will be hitting Kissinger m hts soft underbelly, even evidence of it m old adults not bemg unmunized. done a ftrst class job m
757 Th1rd Ave , N ew York
NY 1001 7
'
for the secretary has never taken to administration or per.,. Egypttan mummtes from
From time to time I am bnnglng oul fa c ts and
Subs c r l pl t on
rates
son nel problems . He has, m the last number of years, been centurtes_ ago. And, tt can concerne.d . because many providmg the knowledge. The
Del1vered by earne r where
availab l e 75 ce n ts per we ek
extremely susptc1ous of any person who dtsagreed with hun or occur wtthout causmg any people thmk the total pubhc has been slow in usmg
By Mo)or ~ Route where
car r ie r
serv1ce
not
opposed hi s pohctes He ts noted as a loner, who rehes on his paralysts at all "Thal was one responstbility for health rests this information Is thts
a vailab l e, One month. SJ '2'S
own analyses As a rule, he pays little attentton to the advtce of of the problems m unraveling · 111ith the medtcal profession . medical care failure• CerBy mad .n Oh10 and w Va
One
Year,
S21 00 .
S1~
subordmates He ts, a's a matter of facl, extremely poor at tts cause. Many people with The truth is that many other tainly not. It ts a !allure of our
months
$11 50
Three
ptcking
assistants and worse at handling them .
months 57 00 Elsewhere
the dtsease only had a bout of groups have an equal or soctety and our means to
26 00 ye ar , So( months
It
may
be
that
Kissmger,
senstttve
to
the
pomt
of
agony,
dtgestiVe trouble or "summer greater responsibility. The mottvate people to do what
13 50 , three months , 57 50
ubscr,pt1on pr,ce mcludes
may not be able to stand up to Hemenway 's attack for more flu " Olhers can have failure to get the pubhc to use needs to be done for - their
1n da y T 1rn-es Sen t ,n el
!h;.m a ye~:;~ r or so
wtdespread paralysts and end such advantages as iin- health.

"All I had to say is 'abracadabra ' -

detente!"

TOM TIEDE

We Hold These Truths ...
A Chronicle of Amcnca

Liberty doesn't end

Sport Parade

· at the company gate

Editorial comment,
opinion, features

The answer is blowin' in the wind

New men~s styles
make sex objects
By ALINE MOSBY
PARIS (UP I) - Former
U S revoluttonary Eldndge
Clea ver staged a one-man
fasluon show today of Ius
newest re\iolutwn - m men's
pants Even he srud 1l was a
shock
"Can you stand a shock"' '
asked the one-tune Bla ck
Panther leader as he walked
around hts offtce.
He was weanng bla ck
\elvet slacks, htgh-watsted to
the nbs and" tde at the belled
bottoms At the crotch \\as
wha t he ca ll ed an appurtenance The effect was of
a nude man w 1th hts legs
covered
''The Cleavers,'' as the new
destgner ha s named hts
patented creatton, make a
sex ObJect of men m the same
way that low-cut dresses for
centunes have made sex
Objects out of women
Stnce men have enJoyed

Fiddlers will
compete in

women as sex obJects, does
C.1eavcr thtnk they wtll mtn d
bctn g sex obJects them selves ?
'•'fll ese pants will g1ve m en
a c hance to assert thelr ma scu ll rut;," Cleaver sa1d " How
ran c lothtn g s hops sel l
trousers to grr ls and exped
men to buy gtrl pants?
'The situat ion m

men's

clulhtn g IS so bortng The
cr eat 1btltty ts ntl Th ey
change the shape of the
pockets . There are some
bea ut1f ul m atenals out for
women's pants but men ca n't
wea r those They ca n m my
destgns smce there 1s no
rntsla kmg they are men 's
pants "

H1s trousers are planned m
all fabncs mcludmg denun
For the U S. Btcentenrual he
CnVlsages hts pants with an
eagle or red and whtte strtpe s
or 13 sta rs on the appur tenance

Nelsonville

Pans surpass the whole

RAY CROMLEY

Possible gadfly in

Kissinger's ointment

Mafia's Giacalone set up

The trickle effect

last luncheon for Hoffa
DEfROir iUPI)- Reputed Mafm don Anthony
" fony Jack" Giacalone set up one-t1me feamsters
boss Jam es Hoffa lor the fat eful luncheon date 16 days
ago from which Hoffa has not returned , sources close
to the investigatiOn sa1d today.
111e DetrOit Free Press, in a copyrighted report, :
said it had learned Giacalone "had definitely · ..
arranged" a meeting with Hoffa July 30.
A Michigan law enforcement source close to the
· · search conJirmed allmvest1gation indicated Giacalone
"set Jimmy up" for a luncheon date at the Maehus Red
Fox Restaurant in suburban Bloomfield Township.
" On a 1 to 10 basis It 's 7 to 8 he was set up and done
away with, " th e source said.
He added tt was possible Hoffa, lhe tough " little
fellow " of the reamsters, could hav e been persuaded
to leave the parkmg lot m front of the restaurant, even
with a gun at hts back,
"He 's tough but he's not stupid," the source said.
" He'd keep going as long as he could talk. As for
anybody seeing anything that happened In that parking
lot - nobody sees anythmg."

Dr. Lamb

Polio is an ancient disease

Berrys World

.....

" Sorry, ofltcert I guess I was speedmg 'cause 1
wasn 't paymg attentton to my C1t1zens ' Band rad1o
- I mean
"

,

•

NCAA approves grants-in-aid· cut

Today's

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor
NEW YORK ( UPI ) - Jun l'horpe ts fmally g01ng to make tt,
62years after the deed , 22yea rs after he died
That 's the feeling I get, and the feelmg keeps growmg
stronger all the tune , espeoally when the Prestdent of the
Umted Slates pleads on a personal basts wtth the lntemattonal
Olymptc Commtttee m Jun Thorpe's behalf and when so many
others endorse the Prestdent's senttnnent and derrano lo know
when jusltce ts gomg to be done
From a sentunental sta ndpomt, I can understand thts
sudden new move to "reinstate" Jun Thorpe
As a former athlete hunself, Gera ld Ford has a natural
feeling for a man hke Jun Thorpe . Sunilarly, I can apprCC!ate
the way Lord Killanm, the IOC Prestdent , feels about those two
gold medals Thorpe had to gtve back after he won the
decathlon and penthathlon tn the 1912 Olympics at Stockholm,
then was dtscovered to have played professtonal baseball m
the mmor leag ues for $60 a month.
By~aw B-1, Rule 26 of the Olymptc reg ulations says clearly
"A competitor must not be, or have been , a profesSional
athlete 1n any sport , or contracted to be so before the offtctal
closmg of the Games "
That rule was in the book the year Jun Thorpe competed m
the Olymptcs and IS sttll there today
If you read the letter Thorpe wrote to James E Sulhvan,
secretary of the Ama te ur Athletic Uruon, on Jan 26, 1913,
conflmllng lhe fa cl he was a professtonal at the tune he
competed tn the Olymptcs, tt tugs at yo ur heartstrmgs a little,
but tt leaves no room for any doubt
Thorpe wrote from Carhsle, Pa , where he had attended the
lndtan School there
"Dear Mr Sullivan," he began
"So much has appeared m the newspapers, that I went to the
school authonttes and told them JUSt what there was to the
stones.
"I played at Rocky Mount and Fayettevtlle (North Carohna)
m 1909 and 1910 under my own name On the teams I played
With were several college men from the North who were
earning money by playmg ball durmg thetr vacatton and who
were r egarded as amateurs at home
"I did not play for the money there was m tt because my
properly brmgs me m enough money to hve on, but I hked to
play ball I was not very wtse to the ways of the world and dtd
not realtze thts was wrong and tt would make me a professtonal
to (s tc ) track meets--although I learned from the other
players and for that reason I never told anyone at the school
about tt unttl today
" I have never realiZed until now what a btg miStake I made
keeptng tt a secret about my ball playmg and I am sorry I dtd
so. I hope I wtll be partly excused by the fact that I was sunply
an Indian schoolboy and dtd not know I was domg wrong I was
domg what I kn ew several other college men had done except
that they dtd not use thetr own names .. and 1 hope that the
AAU and the people wtllnot be too hard m JUdgmg me. "
It's hard for me to comprehend on what grounds the IOC can
remstate Jun Thorpe Nevertheless, I have a hunch tt wtll
Then I 'd hke to see what tt wtll have to say aboul By-law B-1,
Rule 26 of tts own reg ulahons? Probably nothing
Amateur athlettcs mterna ttonally ts a mess It's a btg JOke
" What would you do tf you were me, and you saw a promoter
of a European tra ck meet g1ve an AmeriCan champton a
thousand dollars for competmg in hts meet ?" a European
JOUrnaltst asked a
amateur track and held offtctal
"Simple," satd the offlctal " I'd report the promoter to t he
Prestdent of your parttcular Track and Fteld Federahon."
" Imposstble," the JOurnaltst srud
" Why not?"
"Because he's the Prestdent."

u·s

Ma 1or Leagu e Stand rng s
Un rt e d Pr ess lntern a l•onal
Nat•onal Le agu e
Ea st
w I pet
g b
Plltsb u r gh
67 52
563
6-t 5&lt;1
542 2'
Phi! a
6'1 56
525 .:1 1 :
51 LOUI S
60 57
513 6
N e w YO'rk
56 65
46 3 17
ChICago
Monlr ea t
48 68
41.1 17 '
West
w I pet
g b
C m c1n
79 39
669
LOS A ng
6&lt;1 55
538 15 1 ,
San Fran
60 59
SOJ 19

Sa n D1ego
Atlanta

S&lt;l 6&lt;1

Cleve l a nd (Ec k ers l ey 9 J l
at Mmn e sota (B t ylellen 11 6 1
9 p m
Det ro , t (Lo h ch 10 l ? l at
Ca l do rn , a ( Tana na 10 6 1
10 30 p m
Mil wauk ee ( Co lbo r n 7 Q ) at
Oa kland ( Blue 16 81 11 p m
Sa turday 's Gam es
Boston at Chrcago
Milwaukee a t Oak land
Cte11eland at Mmnesota
T e xas at Ba l ti m Or e n
Detroil a t Call fo rn ra n
New York at Kansas c ,ty n

458 ?5

'i4 66

45 0 16
Houston
&lt;15 78
J66 J6
Thur s day' s Resu lts

Ch1cago 5 Ho u s ton J n

Atla n t a 6 S t LOU I S I n
Cm crnnat 6 P1t1 sburgh I n
s an krancrsco 9 Montreal ? n

Fnday' s Games
All T1m es EDT
San FranciSCO (Barr 10 9
an d Hal1 ck r 6 9 ) at N ew York
( K oosman 10 10 and W e bb 4
5 1 2 5 JS p m
St
Lours (Reed 10 9 and

Ra sm ussen 1 21 at Atl anta

t Ea ste r ly 1 5 and Tho m pso n

0 3 l 7 6 OS p m
San

o,cgo (Jones 15 7l at

P hi!adelph a { Rulhven I l l B
pm
P1tl sbu r gh &lt;Rooke r 8 8 at
,.. Cmcmnat r ( Nor man 7 JJ 8 OS
pm
Los A ng eles (Sut ton 16 9J at
Montreal (Ro g e r s 8 9l 8OS
pm
Ch1cago ! Bo nh am 11 8 1 a t
H ouston (Q,~rfer 10 17 1 8 35
p m
Sa turda v.'s Game s
Ch rc a go at Houston
San Franc1sco at N ew York
Sl LOU IS a t A t lan ta n
Los A ng eles at Montreal n
Prllsburgh a t Cmcm n at1 n
Sa n o,ego at Philadelph i a n
Amerrcan L eague
Unrte d Pr ess Int e rnatiOnal
East
w I pet
9 b
71 48
597
Boston
64 s7
ss7 s• ,
Bait
61 57
5 17 9 1
N e w York
55
64
467 16
M !l wau
51 63
451 1/
Cle11e
46 73
387 75
Detrotl
w es t
w I pet
g b
Oakland
77 47
605
Kan C1ty
65 57
556 6
Texas
58 6 \
487 14
Ch rcago
58 60
467 13 1 ,
Mrnn
54 66
450 18
C al 1f
5&lt;~ 67
446 19
Thur sday 's Result s
Oaklan d 5 New York 1
Chr cago 6 C l eveland 4 n
Cal1forn ,a 5 Boston 3. n
Fnd ay's Games
All Trm es EDT
Texa s ( Hargan
B 6 and
Wr 1ght
3 4 ) al
Bal t1more
(Torr ez 1&lt;1 6 and Cue l lar 11
81 ? , 5 30 p m
N e w York (G u ra 4 4) at
Kansas C1ty ( F IIzmo rr1 s I ?
91 8 30 o m
Bosto n
(T1an1
14 Ill at
Chtcago (Vucko111Ch 0 l l
9
pm

Thur sday' s Baeball
R es ult s
Un1t e d Pre !&gt;s lnt e rnaltonal
N a tional L eague
PillS
000 000 0 10· 1 40
erne n
000 307 lOx - 6 11 0
Reuss
Tek ulve
Ul
Demery 181 and Sa n g ulllen
Nolan
McEnaney (9 ) and
Bench
WP
N ola n I 11 6-1
LP
Reuss ( 12 9 1
HR s
Sanguille n (7 th l F os t e r !71
??1st ?? nd 1
San Fran
030 411 000 9 1? 1
Montrea t
000 000 00? 2 9 ?
Barr
( l 1 91
and Rader
B la r Sche r m an (4) DeMo l a
(6 }
Murray (8) and Foo l e
Mo ral es (81
LP - B l a 1r 17
I J ) HR
Rad e r 14 th )
L OUIS
101 001 100 - 4 15 I
At lan ta
30 1 700 OOx 6 ~ 1 0
McG l o t he n
Reynolds (41
Pa r ker 16 1 Gar m a n ( 7) and
S1mmons N1 e kro Leo n (71
Sa d eck, (81 a n d Co rr e ll
WP
N 1e kro (12 10 ) LP
McG i olhen 11? 91
HR s
Da111S 15 th }
May 17 1h }
Cor r e ll I lOth) Sm 1th ( 171 h I
St

110 700 010 5 10?
C h1 cago
Hous ton
01 1 000 00 1- 3 10 0
Sto n e ( 11 51 e~ nd Sw 1she r
R 1chard
Gran ge r (8 J and
Mdf
LP - R IC h ard
(8 8)
HR
Johnson ( 10t h)
! On l y gam es sc h edule d l
Am•r,can L e agu e
New Yol-k
000 100 000- 1 5?
Oa kland
100 000 04x - 5 8 1
M a y. T r Mart1nez ( 81,
T 1drow ( 8 ). Gu1d r y 18) and
Herr mann Bosman 18 41 an d
H aney
L P
May
T en a ce
( 11 8)
Cle11e
00011 1 100 4 112
Ch ,c:a go
030 000 th. 6 8 0
Har r 1son
B r own (7) and
E llr s
Ashby
(7)
Kaa t ,
H amilton (8} and Down•ng .
varney 19) WP
Kaat I t 7 9 )
LP Har r1 so n 15 4 )
H Rs
ElliS
I flh )
Carty
II Jth ),
Ke lly (8 th ) Ste m { 3r d l
-~

Bosto n
Cal tf
Lee
Smge r

100 010 100 3 10 0
00500000)( 511
1 t 5 JJ
and
F 1sk
K1 r kwood 17 1 a nd
Hamptt:~n LP
S1nge r 17 ll l
I Only gam e s sche dul ed I

o

CHICAGO (UPI) - NCAA
co nventton
dele gates
Thursday approved rules
changes to cut cost.&lt;; m It VP
ca tegones though th ey
progressed through barely a
th1rd of m ore th a n 70
proposals to shave expenses
alhl ehc
for
collegiate
programs
In discusston prolonged by
the need to vote on more
amendment.&lt;; than ther e were
proposals, the delegates
- E hmtnated the $15 a
month meld ental cas h
beneltts and course.related
supphes fumtshed by the
schools to athletes
--Cut to 80 the number of
grants for mmor sports m
DlVlston I ( lh e larger
schools I --a 40 per cent slash
--Cut the number of grants
for mmor sport.&lt;; m DiviSion II
schools to 80--another 40 per
cent cut-and unposed luntts
of 80 grants m football and 12

m basketball for DtvtSion II
institutions
- Ott gra nts for football for
DIVlston I schools from 105 to
95 wtth a luntt of no more
than 30 eac h year
- Cti t
the
maximum
number of grants for
basketball for Dtvlston I
schools from 18 to 15 wtth no
more than stx m one year
Sttll to come was action on
r estrtclton s on rec ru1ttn g
contacts, on NCAA-control of
tenders of grants-m&lt;~td , try outs and hrmtattons on
coachmg staffs.
The cut m grantHn-atd for
Dlvlston I schools could
red uce thetr budgets a pproXtlllately $25,000 per year
for football and $7,500 m
basketball. The elunmatton
of supplies and mctdental
money could save as much as
~ per athlete
Because the cuts on the
number oJ-grants m rumor

spo rts applles to the value restncllve than one already would have reduced them to
rather than the number, the .a pproved would be con- 65 for Division I football over
slash would be about 40 per stdered, hve proposals dtd three years
not come up for discusston or
cent
" I thmk fans would go out
\'Ole
Though there were only 73
to see 65 grants-m-atd play, "
Sttl!, the convenllon went he satd , "and yo u'd still have
proposals to change the rules ,
a tot~! of 90 amendments through only 25 proposals, the reve nue and elunmate the
were h ied before t)le and Fuzak, who ran the Iorge expenses
meet mg an hour passed tts
deadlin e
" I not1ce the counctl wants
scheduled
close, announced to !unit the travelmg squads
Most of th e d1scusswn rentered on how mu ch a cut Frida y's sesston would begm to 48 and the home squads to
should be unposed on grants- an hour early
60 and I can 'l see why you
Dr
Stephen
Horn , need 95 gra nts Is thiS the raw
m-atd and on the proposals Iii
hm1t the number of grants m prestdent of Long Beac h meat for practice ?"
State
Umvers1ty
tn
mmor sports
Tv. o proposals were with- C.a hforma, charged from the
drawn one requtrmg U1at all floo r that the conv_entwn had TDs and punted for a 39 9
·a lready fa tled" by not avera ge.
atd be based on need and
Another highly regarded
another prohtbttmg coaches cutlmg the number of grants
colleg.an of a more recent
m mm or s ports fro m more than 1t dtd
Horn supports the tdea of VIntage also found hunself
recruttmg off-campus
Another proposal - to luntl sharmg the wealth from foot - out of a JOb today Davtd
fman ctal atd to room, board ball bowl recetpl.&lt;;, televtston Jaynes, heralded as one of
and th e NCAA basketball th e top passers m the nation
and twtton - was ta bled
Because NCAA Prestdent tournament among all mem- at Kansas two years ago, was
released by AUanla The
Jack Fuzak, prestdmg at the bers
Horn had suggested a cut m Falcons satd Jaynes, obsesston, rul e d th at no
proposals whtch were less the number of grants whtch tained last month from
Kansas City for wtde recetver
Tom Geredtne, had a sore
arm

auto cla1m service

wherever your drive.

STEVE SNOWDEN
t 258 Powell Street

Mrddle port,

'PH: 992-7155
l•ke a good
ne1ghbor

11AII fAIN

State Farm
tS there
.

1UII ! 111,1
U lolrU T

loiO,IIU il

l ~ l~U OI

derson was held He was one
of the glamor signees m the
pro football war of the early
1960s, rakmg in an estunated
$650,000 from Vmce Lombardi's Packers to JOm the
Nattonal Football League
While Anderson managed
to play well w1th the Packers,
he never achteved the
superstar status expected of
hun when he stgned hts
lucrattve contract He was
dealt to St Loms three years
ago and thts past sprmg was
traded to Miami for wtde

recetver Marlin Bnscoe. The
end of the hne came Thursay 1
when Anderson announced
his rehrernent at age 32
" It 's
ttm e to face
reahttes, " Anderson satd " I
didn't thmk I could contrtbute
as well as I thought I could
when I came to camp. I
suppose I could hang on but I
hke to be a frontrunner. It
would be dtsappomtmg to me
tf I was put mto a sttuatton
where I had to perform and I
didn't do tt
" When you get older , you

The A's, a s has been therr

York Yankees 5-1 , wtth Dtck
custom for the last three
Bosman pttchmg a ftve·lntte r
years, dtdn'l get mterested to grun his etghth wm
until they began to read m the
Oakland won the game wtth
papers that the Royals were a fou r-run etg hth·mmn g
threatenmg thetr dynasty
outburst durmg whtch Btll
That 's when they un - No, •}- drove m the t te doubtedl y held a clubhouse breakmg run wtth a smgle,
rumble, exchanged a few a nother run sco red on
black eyes and settled down short stop Fred Stanl ey's
to the busmess of wmnmg the error and Gene Tenace and
AL's Western title
Sal Bando also drove m runs
The A's mcreased their
Rudy May, tagged for ftve
lead over lhe tdle Kansas Ctly hits and three runs m 7 1-3
Royals to stx games Thurs- tnnings, suffered hts etghth
da y when they beat the New loss aga mst II vtctortes
Chtcago
def eate d
Cleveland 6-4 and Cahfornta
downed Boston 5-3 m the
other Amertcan League
games In the Nat10nal
Leag ue , Ctnctnnatt beat
Ptttsburgh 6-1, Atlanta
downed St Louts 6-4, San
close personal frtend of Noe 's Franctsco rtpped Montreal 9and hts action was beheved to 2and Chicago topped Houston
:&gt;-3
be m protest to Noe's fmng
Whtte Sox 6, Indians 4
If the Kentucky Derby
Jtm Kaat won hts 17th
wtnner can brmg home a
game
wtth the rehef help of
VIctory in the Travers, he w•ll
become a mtlhonaire, havmg Dave Hamtlton m Chtcago's
lost only lhree times m his !:&gt;- wm over Cleveland Pat Kelly
race career In hts last race , tted the score With hts etghth
Foohsh Pleasure tangled homer m the seventh mrung
w1th Rulhan for the un- and the While Sox took the
disputed 3-year-old crown, lead when Jorge Orla and
but the tragedy that befell the Deron Johnson followed wtth
great filly threw a pall over doubles Ronc Hamson was
the colt 's unchallenged the loser
Angels 5, Red Sox 3
VICtory
Jerry Remy doubled in two
In hts three defeats , the
What A Pleasure colt was runs and Lee Stanton smgled
second tWlce and third the m two more to lead Cahforma
other tune He has won a to tts vtclory whtch cut
Boston's lead over Balttmore
shade more than $970,000
m
the AL East to 51'.! games
But one thmg he never has
been able to accomphsh ts to F1fteen-game wmncr 8111 Lee
assert his unquesttoned suffered hts seven th loss for
supertortty over the rest of the Red Sox while Btll Smge r
his diVISIOn
He w1ll have that chance
lnt e rnaf 10na 1Leagu e
Saturday when WaJtma, a
St.1nd1ng s
Unf ed Prc~s Jnt crnaf l onal
$600,000 yearlmg purchase ,
w I pet
9 b
Forceten, who has been T1dewater
7 d AS
60 7
7'"1 5 1 58 5 ? '
extremely impresstve after Roches t er
Syracuse
65 55
5J 7 8
gettmg hts career off to a Ia te G1ar1eston 63 59 5\6 11
51 66
Jf6 3 17'
start thts past April and MemphiS
R1chmond
54 6&lt;~
JSB 18
Prmce Thou Art, who Toledo
53 70
4 31 ? 1
defeated Foohsh Pleasure m Pawt u cket J9 74 398 ?S
Thu rsday's Re !&gt; ult s
the Flonda Derby, promtse to Sy r ac u se ? Toledo 0
proVIde h1s most fornuda ble T 1d ewa1er 3 MemphiS ?
? Pawtucket o.
test lo date among 3-year-old Rochester
Charleslon at R1chmond
ppd
rarn
colts

don't heal as fast as you used
to I don 't want to be 50 and
ertppled, unable to support
my famtly or play golf or go
ftshtng But football's been
good to me. I've had a lot of
good tunes and some unfortuna te tunes ."
Anderson said he'll return
to a real estate and msurance
busmess m Dallas.
In his nme NFL seasons,
Anderson earned 1,197 tunes
for 4,696 yards and scored 41
touchdowns He caught 209
oasses for 2i 18 yards and 14

went 6 1-3 mrung s for th e wm
Reds 6, Pirates 1
George Foster hit hts 20th
and 21st homers and drove m
five rwts for Cincmnall Gary
Nolan went etght mrungs,
allowmg four htts, to wm hts
lith game agatnst stx losses
whtle Ptttsburgh 's Jerry
Reuss suff er ed hts mnth
setback aga mst 12 VICtones

Foolish Pleasure
to run Saturday
SARATOGA SPRINGS,
NY (UPI) - The New York
Racmg Association was
stunned Thursday afternoon
when LeRoy Jolley, the
tramer of Foolish Pleasure ,
announced hiS horse would
not run 1n Saturday's IOOth
runmng of the $100,000
Travers Stakes, then changed
his mmd and SaJd he would
It all started early m the
mornmg when Jolley Informed racmg secretary
Kenny Noe that Foohsh
Pleasure would not run m the
Travers, a race which
symbolizes the mtdswnmer
classtc for 3-year-old colts.
Then, sometime around
3·00 p.m , John L Greer,
Foolish Pleasure's owner ,
called the racmg secretary's
offtce to inform Noe that
"unless somethmg has
happened to htm m the last 15
mmules" his colt would be m
fme conditiOn for the race and
Jorge Velazquez would nde
hlm
Jolley's dectston lo scratch
Foolish Pleasure ts reported
to be related to announcement on Wednesday
that Noe was bemg dtsrmssed
as New York 's racmg
secretary m favor of hts
predecessor, Tommy Trotter.
Jolley considers hunself a

W1th our trade rn yotJ buy for leu m an promo
tlonat and 1pec1a!ty houHI muffle" The mufller
that came on vou• ca r was probabtv detlgned
and butlt by Af'fln to fit me manufacrurer 1 pre
Clle 1pec1frcat10nJ ArYm mulller1 are bur It wrth
out shortcuts that lowe r pnce - Trade now and

Resonators &amp; Pipes Are Not Included
YOU lL FINO THIS SUPERB VALUE A T

SATURDAY· AUGUST 16th
UNTIL 5 P.M.
FOR
11

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SERVICE OUTLE TS SELL FOR THE SAME LOW PR ICE AND INSTA L L
THE MUFFLERS FOR A SMAL L SERV ICE CHARGE

B ailey'!&gt; As hl and Scrv,cc
Tupp er!&gt; Plain 0
Barr' !&gt; A !o h! a nd Ser... 1te
R ee d '&gt;v ill e, 0
Canon ''&gt; T ex a co Se r v •cc
Rutland 0
Cod n er!&gt; A !&gt; hland Serv1cc
Syra cu!o e, 0
Cozart s Garage
R &lt;1C in C 0
Eb cr's Gulf Serv 1ce
R ac rn c 0
Roseberry., Penn t o il
Rac1ne 0

PARK RESERVED

TH ESE ~ p~~sa AUTO

G &amp; J AUTO PARTS
THESE~

E th !o So h 10 Se r v 1c e
Be ec h &amp; Locu st
M rddl eport 0
E rw 1n s Gulf Se r v1ce
North ? nO Av e
M •d~I epo rt
0
Fr e11ch s Middl e port Sun oco
510 N orth Seco nd
M1dd l epo rt 0

L andmark Se rvrcc
544 E Ma1n St
P omeroy 0
Mlllhon e., So h 10 Se rv1c c
St,1te Rf 7
Tupper!&gt; P !illfl '&gt; 0
N ew e ll' &lt;&gt; Sunoc o Serv rce
Sta t e Rt 7
Ch o l er 0
Pom e roy Hom e &amp; A u t o
606 E M11m 51
Porn erov 0
P o m eroy Sunoco Sc11nce
18? W c !&gt;t Maul 51
P o m eroy 0
Rac,n e' '&gt; G~rag e
RaC IIl C 0
Reed!&gt; Broth er '&gt; Sun oco
R t Cth v •l! e 0
R 1denour Sup ply
St Rt 146
Ch e!otcr 0
R oo l ., Amoco scrv1C C
Coolvill e 0

Gilbert!&gt; Garage
Slat e Rt 7
Mrddlepor l , 0

RuHhel s Garr~q c
104 Wilzqall 51
Pomeroy 1 0

Roger H y!&gt;ell G a rage
51 R l 124
M1dd!epor l , 0

Welk e r ., A ~ hlnnd

Kapp! e ~ Pennzorl St o"lt 10 n
M~ 1n 51
Po m e • oy 0

Dan Thomp son Ford
461 S Thtrd St
M td dleport 0

we s t Ma1n St
Pomeroy

U UIII (I
Ill

p 7 1 109

A's bounce NY Yankees, 5-1
By FRED DOWNUP! Sports Wnter
It hasn't come out m the
papers yet bul the Oakland
A's must hav e had a
clubhouse ftght or, at least ,
burned Charlie Finley m
efftgy for the umpt ee nth
tune
It was only a week ago that
the Kansas Ctty Royals were
gomg hke gangbusters and
had cut the three-time world
champiOn A's' lead m the
Amenean League's Western
DiVISIOn almost m half.

II

l l 00YII 41 QI

"0 111 1 Ott t(l

Don Anderson quits
By JOE CARNICELLI
UPI Sports Writer
It was Jan , 12, 1966, and the
Green Bay Packers were
playmg the Kansas C1ty
Ouefs m the hrst SUper Bowl
Fred
''the
Hammer''
Wilhamson lay stretched oul
on the field, hts mmd in a log
" Donny must have htt him
wtth h1s wallet," cracked a
Packer defenstve lmeman on
the stdelmes as Williamson
was helped from the ft eld
The qutp typ1f1ed the
regard m whtch Donny An-

0

0

Offer good thru Saturday!

•
'•

�''
I

'

,.

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Au~ . 15, 1975

.

Bills host
Bengals in

Foster paces 6-1 Reds victory
CINCINNATI (UP!) ''Now ,' ' said George, "even
George Foster, just about the when I'm wearing sunglasses
hottest hitter in the majors I can hear people whisper,
today, says he's beginning to 'isn 't that so-and-&amp;&gt;'' when l
feel a little like the Lone leave a restaurant .
Ranger.
" Rem em ber the Lone ·
" It used to be I could walk Ranger television show," he
around town and go into added, grinning, "and how
restaurants without anyone it'd end with 'Who was that
recognizing me, " said masked man'' Then , you'd
Foster, whose two homers hear th at "Hi Ho, Silver.'
"Naw, I don 't wear s unaccounted for five runs in the
Reds' 6-1 victory over Pitts- glasses to look cool, " said
burgh Thursday night
Geor ge. "And I'm not tryi n~

Auto workers in
Detroit ca11back
DETROIT ( UPI) - Nearly
29,000 laid-off auto workers
will return to their jobs next
week as the industry steps up
production of 1976 models at
17 car and truck plants.
Next week also will see
initial production of the car
billed as America's answer to
small, fuel-efficient foreign
minicars : the Chevrolet
Chevette .
Chevette
production begins at General
Motors' Wilmington, DeL,
assembly plant, closed since
June 13.
Open-ended layoffs in the
industry will drop by nearly
1,300 workers as a recall of
some 2,100 workers at
Oirysler Corp. and 117 at
American Motors offset Ford
Motor Co.'s announcment it
would add about 1,000
workers to the layoff list.
Long -term layoffs, which
peaked at 212,000 during the
winte!', were trimmed to
102,510 for next week. Industry observers predict a
drop below 83,000 by midSeptember . Short-term
layoffs for the new-model
changeovers will drop from
38,275 thia week to 10,925 next

week .
The trade publication Automotive News says th e
retooling shutdowns thi s
week
dropped
auto
production to one of the
lowest points of the year 92,640 cars, about 7,000 lower
than last week .
GM plans to start '76 output
on 12 car assembly lines and
five truck lines next week and
will have 2,800 workers on
short-term layoff - all at the
South Gate, Calif., assembly
plant. Its indefinite layoffs
stand at an official 75,000, but
spokesmen said the figure is
tower and should drop below
63,000 by the end of the
month.
GM said it will pay special
unemployment benefits to
eligible idled workers for a
fifih straight week.
Ford said three assembly
plants will be closed for newmodel changeover next week,
idling 8,125 workers. Chrysler
planned to operate all eight of
its car and truck plants next
week. Two plants will close
down after Friday's shift for
new-model changeover.

Rhodes' issues ·
placed on ballot
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The government buildings, inRhodes Administration's four eluding energy, heart and
constitutional amendments cancer facilities.
have been listed tentatively
Brown, who is one of five
by the secretary of state's members of the Ballot Board,
office as second, third, said explanations of the
fourth, and fifth on the Nov. 4 constitutional amendments
general election ballot.
have been prepared and
The designation was made would
be
distributed
Thursday after a meeting statewide "in the near
earlier this week of the Ohio future."
Ballot Board, in which ballot
The other amendments, all
language and official ex- generated by tbe General
planations were prepared for Assembly which will follow
nine amendments. Five are the Rhodes' amendments ,
from the General Assembly would:
and four from the governor.
-Require the General AsNo. 1 on the ballot will be , sembly to provide methods to
the legislature's amendment rotate each candidate's name
to
permit
outdoor on the ballot.
recreational lands to be
- Require deleg'!tes to
valued for tax purposes at each major party's national
their current recreational convention to be chosen by
value.
the voters in a manner yet to
Rhodes presented his peti- be determined.
lions to Brown earlier this
- Permit the state to
month, cllalming he had about provide various tax ad60 per cent more signatures vantages to local comthan required to authorize the munities, and to loan Amtrak amendments' placement- on funds to reorganize the rail
the ballot.
transportation system in the
Required to place an state, and.
amendment on the ballot are 1 - Allow the
General
307,201 valid ' signatures of Assembly to authorize and
Ohio voters. A final check .in regulate the operation of
six counties showed that bingo games conducted by
Rhodes' petitions carried .. churches
and
other
well over 95 per cent valid charitable organizations.
signatures.
The Rhodes amendment to
create and preserve jobs
Save 100 per cent on gas through Industrial expansion ride the bus.
tax incentives will be second
on the list of nine amendmenta.
The broad highway improvement
and
transportation
amendment,
SANTA FE, N.M. (UPI) which would authorize a $1 .75 To find a bargain in Indian
billion bond issue from the arts and crafts by avoiding
levy of an additional nine- the middle man usually in-•
tentha of a cent · per gallon volves a bone-jarring ride
gasoline tax, will be third on over a desolate back road on
the llat of amendments a reservation - just to deal
pre~ented to the voters.
directly with the craftsman.
Fourth, will be be Rhodes'
There Is a way to a\toid it.
proposal
to
provide
Once a year, Indians from
as8tatance for housing, throughout the West load up
· nuratng, extended care and their pickup trucks to bring
othl!l' health C$'0 facilities. their crafts to the customers
F'lfth on the ballot Will be In a two.()ay open-air market
the capital improvements in historic downtown Santa
~n~elllfnlent, 1:0 authorize
Fe .
. itluance df"·$2.15 ·-billion., )n . The ,annual Indian Market
bondJI to·be retli-ed through a · this year opens s8tw:day, for
ieYen-tenth.l of. a · cent sales . the 54th time.
llld use )ax.
Promoters are expecting
- The fiiDd8 piierated with
thlm' 400 craftsmen
the extra sales tax Would _go from a variety of Indian
toward construction of . · tribes and pueblos to -display ·

to disguise myself.
"Actu ally, it's a gr eat
feeling to be recognized out of
uniform, " he continued . "Before no one knew who I was
unlit I turned my back and
they saw my name and
uniform nUmber ."
Foster's homers boosted
his season total to 21 and his
hitting strea k to 12 games.
Over t he spa n he's batting at
a .431 pace.
The homers also enabled

Gary Nolan to pick up his 11th · Gary 's bid for a shutout.
victory aga inst six losses.
"Gary was tired ... that 's
" Nolan's
record
is why I took him out after eight
amazing," said Red pitching innings/' said Red manager
coach Larry Shepard, "when Sparky Anderson . " I think he
you think what he has done changed uniforms twice he
after a two year layoff and got so soaking wet out there. "
shoulder surgery."
The first change came after
Manny Sanguillen 's leadoff Nolan tripled down the right
single in the sixth inning was field line in the third inning .
th e first hit off Nolan. And it
"! don 't know whether
wa s Sa nguillen's seventh Gary slid into fhirrl or just
homer of th e season in the
eighth inning that spoiled

more
.

'

'

collapsed'" quipped Sparky.
Rellefer Will McEnaney
mowed the Pirates down in
order in the ninth.
" Will hadn't worked in ftve
days and f think the rest did
him good," said Anderson .
Fredie Norman will work
tonight for the Reds tonight
against Ken Rooker in second
game of a four-game series.

Major L e t~gu e L ea der s
U n i fed Pre u lnl e rnilional

l ea ding Bait e rs
National L eagu e
g . ab r . h . pet .
Mdlck , Ch i

ST. PAUL, Minn. (UPI) -

PT . PLEASANT - The aul opsy is to be conducted
sl&lt;lbbi ng dea th of a Mason today at Cabell Hun tington
Count y
hu nter
whose Hos pital in Huntin gton .
mutilated body was found
Both the corner and Rice
near here early yesterday said there was no evidence of
remained
shr oud e d
i n a struggle . Grubb sa id this
mystery last night.
was the firs t murd er he knew
The body of Danny Richard of in the county sin ce he
Co rn ell , 24, of Glenwood Rl. 2, became coroner in 1968.
wa s found in an isolated
Authori ties said last nigh t
wooded a rea some five miles th ey had not ye t determined
south of his home at about whether the attack look place
1:30 a.m., authorilles said. at the site where the body was
Dr. J ohn Gr ubb, Mason found or another place. The
County coroner, said the man sheriff said the body was fuiiy
had bee n sla bbed at least IB clothes . Eight spent rifle
times in the ches t, s tomach casin gs were round in Corand upper back.
neil 's poc ket and six unused
Slate police and Mason rounds were round nearby,
Co unt y sheriff' s deputi es Rice said .
were co n tinuin g house -toRi ce and Grubb said
house questionin g of persons Corneii apparently was "well
in the area la te last night, but thought of" and had no known
officials said no clues had enemies . " He never used
been found . "
alcoh ol
or
profane
Th e murder
weapon, la nguage," Grubb noted .
kn own only to have been a Ri ce sa id-he was a regular
sha rp instrum ent, was churchgoer and was wellmi ssing, as was Cornell 's liked.
.222-&lt;:aliber rifle . Deputies
Corneii 's body is to be
said no one was in custody taken to Heck Funeral Home
and there were no suspects. fn Mil ton today . He is surThe motive for the slaying vived by his widow, Jean
also rema ined in qUestion. Edmonds Corn ell , and a son,
Deputy Sheriff Rupert Rice Daniel Cornell, about three
sa id , however, " We have not years old . Also surviving is
ruled out theft as a possible hi s m o th er, Mrs. Lyd ia
motive. " Authorities said Co r nell of Glenwood, six
Cornell had been hun ting for brothers and four sisters.
groundhogs.
The brothers are Charles of
Besides the gun , nothing Glenwood,
Mi chael
of
was found mi ss in g fr om Frazier's Bottom in Putnam
Cornell 's body or his car, County, Leonard of Point
officials said . Mason County Pleasa nt, Warren of ChapSheriff Elvin "Pe te" Wedge manville in Logan County,
said, "We found his pocke t- J erry of Cleveland, Ohio, and
book about 40 feet on down Thomas in Pennsylvania. His
from the body . It was empty sisters are Mrs. Ada Rose
but his wife said he never Chandler of Chesapeake,
carried more than two or Ohio, Mrs. Lydia Ann Arthur
three dollars."
of Huntington, Mrs. Phyllis
Other relatives ··confirmed Jean Friend of Charleston
that the man never carr.ied and Mrs. Betty Alford of
more than that amount, Rice Cleveland.
said, but they al so told
deputies that Cornell had just
received $128 in food stamps.
R was not known whether
Cornell, who had been laid off
from his job at the West
Virginia Maiieable Iron Co.
plan l in Point Pieasan t three
weeks ago, had the stamps
HOUSTON (UP!) - U.
wi th him when he went Phil Boggs won the threehunting.
meter springboard event
Cornell left home about Thursday in tbe National
6:30p.m. Wednesday, Wedge AAU Senior Men 's and
said. Rice said the family Women's Outdoor Chamfeared he might have been pionships and earned a spot
bitten by a snake and called on the U.S. diving team going
about midnight to report him to the Pan AmeriCBR Games.
missing.
Cynthia Mcingvale of
The family knew where to Houston , who had already
look because he always went qualified for the Pan
hun ling in the same place, an American team with a threearea some seven miles off W. meter victory, won the oneVa. 2 "and another mile up a meter springboard comdir t road that nobody lives petition. ·
on," Grubb said.
Boggs, an Air Force ofThe body was found by a ficer , compiled 619 points to
deputy sheriff and a relative easily win the three-meter
of Cornell 's about 30 feet from over Tim Moore, Cincinnati,
the dead man 's parked car who had 605.
which had the keys in it, Rice
Moore clinched a spot on
said . It appeared to have the Pan American team by
bee n pushed over a 28-foot moving up one place Thursembankment, officials said. day when Mike Finneran of
IJ'he coroner placed the Worthington, Ohio, slipped to
time of death at about 7:30 or eighth place after qualifying
8:30 p.m. Wedn esday. An second on Wednesday.

Boggs captures
diving event

A fresh and confident Ken
Norton scored a fifth round
technical knockout over
Venezuelan hea vyweight
champion Jose Garcia
Thursday night, apparently
putting himself in line for a
shot at the winner of the
Muhammad Ali-Joe Frazier
fight next month in Manila .
Norton's win at the St. Paul
Civic Center avenged a previous toss to Garcia five years
ago, one of only three in the
fighter's career.
Before the fight Ali's
manager predicted a bad
night
for
Norton,
a
Jacksonville, Ill., native ,
citing the small ring and
Garcia's power. But Norton
scored knockdowns in the
third and fourth rounds and
finished the tired and dazed
Garcia at 1:52 of the fifih.
Norton, who weighed in at
218 pounds Wednesday, was
in complete control, scoring
almost at will . as he moved
Garcia around the rtng.
Garcia relied on the ropes for
support but finally went down
for the last time under a
devastating barrage of
punches.
Prior to the fight , Garcia
had a record of 26 victories,

one zn
WETHERSFIELD, Conn.
( UPI) - Denny Meyer isn't
. too excited but be may decide
to wear the rug out in his
motel room to keep sharp his
putting that gave him an
eight birdie, first round lead
of seven under par 64 in the
Greater Hartford Open.
Meyer, 31, who took the
lead Thursday one stroke
ahead of Austin Straub and
Don Bies, said his performance was not hia biggest
thrill and didn't compare to
playing with Arnold Palmer
in last week's PGA.
Meyer, The Palm Springs,
Calif., clul!• pro not officially
listed on the tour, said of
Palmer: "Playing with Arnie
was the highlight of my
career. Not even leading here
can compare with it. Nothing
can make me nervous now."
Meyer said he spent six
hours pulling in hia motel
Wednesday night and he used
just 26 of them to put together
hia round. He scored birdies
on the second, fifth and sixth
holes for a 32 at the halfway
mark .
On the back nine, Meyer
birdied the lOth, 12th, 14th,
16th ·and 17th holes but
bogeyed the 15th. He
fashioned the last birdie with
a well placed 40-foot shot .
Meyer said he went ''back
and forth, back and forth," on
hia motel rug, and "during

jewelry, pottery, weaving,
paintings, basket work and
wood carving in boothS set. up
around the Santa Fe Plaza,
center of this 36l&gt;-year-old
city . They estimate the event
will attract up to 50,000
onlookers and buyers.
"The thing that makes this
market worth coming to is
that there's no middle man
involved," said John Lensse n , market chairman.
"You can bargain directly
with the Indians.
'
"If you talk to tbe right guy
at the right time, you may get
a super buy."
The market is sponsored by
the Southwest Association on
Indian Affairs, a private,
nonprofit corporation

originally created to help
Pueblo Indians fight a
proposal in Congress to take
away 60,000 acres of their
land and water rights.
The. arts and crafts at the
market will be dominated by
the Indians of the Southwest,
Navajos, Zunis and Pueblos,
whose best crafts are
jewelry ,
pottery
and.
weaving.
All items are screened to
make sure they are _genuine.
None can be placed on sale if
the craftsman who made
them is not .participating In
!lie market.
"The Indians think of this

r

All arts and crafts entered
in the fair are judged. A
ribbon at t11e Santa Fe Indian
market is considered a
prestigious award and it also
can double the 'price of the
craftsman's work, Lenssen
said.
Usually, the best work Is
snatched up at the opening of
the market, often before it Is
placed on
sale ,
But
sometimes, bargains may be
found at near the ll)arket
close when Indians are
anxious to sell their last few
items and get home early.
1
' 1f
you're a real con·
nolsseur, get here early,"
as 8 premiere market ," · Lennsen suggested. " If
Lenssen said. " Many save up you're looking for bargains,
their · best crafts for the come late ."
event." .

•

seven defeats and one draw,
with 19 career knockouts .
Both fighters started
strong , with Norton forcing
Garcia into a corner and
racking up point. with
combination lefts and rights.
In the second round, Garcia
landed a few haymaker
rights but they didn't seem to
bother Norton, who scored
heavily in the last half of the
round.
Norion kept Garcia on the
ropes in the third round,
although the Venezuelan
champ came back briefly
with one solid left jab to
Norton's head and a flurry of
blows to the body. Shortly
before the bell, Norton
dropped Garcia with a solid
left to the abdomen.
Garcia scored again with
his right in the fourth round
but a few seconds late!' was
back against the ropes .
Norton's left dazed Garcia
and a combination put him on
his knees again. The round
ended
with
Garcia
desperately trying to avoid
Norton's punches.
In a preliminary bout, Scott
Ledoux of Minneapolis fought
to a lkound draw with Scrap
Iron Johnson of New York.

GHO
every commercial and dull
soap opera I was up putting."
Straub, 32, who joined the
tour in March and won the
Connecticut Open last year,
came home at 33-32 for 65
totals. "This course is suited
to my game. I'm not a long
ball hitter," he said.
The veteran Bies, 43,
finished well in the afternoon
heat.
"When you've got things
going, the heat is one of the
last things on your mind," he
said.
A total of 55 of the 142
players broke the 71 par at
the Wethersfield Country
Club course.
Mike Hill, Hubie Green,
Dave Glenz, Andy North and
J.C. Snead all scored 66, one
stroke ahead of U.S. ()pen

Pwtl . Cle

.319
pet .
.367

.335
.3 16

.3 15

.3 17

.309
93 303 47 97 .304

Rice , Bos
110 433 75 131 .303
Snglln, Bat 113 An 68 117 .301
Orta , Chi
100 3811 48 116 .799
Hom e Run s
National League: Luz insk i ,
Phil '19 : Sch mid!, Phil 75;
Kingman . NY 7.4, Bench. Cin
n: Fos ter , Cin 7 1
Am e rican
L e agu e:
Jac k son , Oak 78 ; Mayberry .
KC ?6. Sco lt , Mi l 25 ; Bonds ,
N Y '1? : Burroughs , Tex '11.
Runs Batl ed In
National League : Luzinski.
Ph il95; Ben ch. Ci n 93; Perez ,
Ci n . Watson. H ou and Sta ub.
NY 18
Am e rican League : Lynn .
Bos 85 : Rice , Bos 87 ; May.
BaN and Mayberry . KC 81:
Sco t! , Mi l n
Stolen Bas es
National League : L opes.
LA 52 ; Morgan . Cin
.4 6 :
Brock , St .L AJ ; Cedeno, Hou
.40 ; Co n ce p cion. C in and
Ma ngual . M il 'ZA .
American League : R ive r s ,
Cal 6 1; Wash ington , Oak 35:
Otis, KC 3? ; Remy , Ca l 31 ;
North , Oak 77
Pitching
Nationa l League : Seaver ,
NY 16 ·1: Sutton . LA 16. 9 ;
Jo nes . S O 15 ·1; Morton . All
15 l~ ; Messers m it h , L A 14 · 11 .
American
League :
Palm er . Ball JB .J; Kaat, Ch i
17 9 . Wise , Bos · 16 ·6 : Blue .
Oak 16 ·8 : Hunter , NY 16 · 11 .

WEDNESDAY

AFTERNOON

Augu s t 13 , 1975
Team standings
Merry Go Round
Cracker Jacks
Gi lbert &amp; Terry G ro .

Ding .A . Lings

W

L

48 e
36 20
30 2'6
26 30
16 40

We "J"
Slow Poke s
14 .t'Z
H i gh individual J .games ~
Se lby
Manley -.460 , B e t ty
Wri t esei ·A56 .
·
High ind ivi dual game Pa t
Bentz 194 ,
Jackie
Hoover 183 .

-

5 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleoort-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Au~ . 15. 1975

'

I

I

Highlights of
the Meigs fair

ORCHARD PARK, N.Y.
(UP! ) .:. When the Buffalo
Bills take the field tonight
against the Cincinnati
Bengals in their first home
exhibition game of the ,
season, they 'II be missing two '
starters.
J .D. Hill, Buffalo's leading
ground gaine!' among wide
receivers last season, will
miss the game with a deep
thigh bruise . His place in the
starting lineup will be taken
by Bob Oiandler.
Also on the Bills side~a
will be Buffalo 's most
valuable playe!' last season, :
free safety Tony Greene.
Greene suffered a broken
collarbone in an exhibition
loss to Green Bay last week
and Is expected to be out of
action for about six weeks.
Greene's position will be
handled by Neal Craig and
rookie Glenn Loti will start at
Craig's oormal strong safe tv •
post.
.
•
Both the Bills and the Bengals are winless in
exhibition play so far .
•
In a related development~
Thursday, a trade in which the Bills acquired tight end •
Mike Hancock .from the *
Washington Redsklns was •
voided when Hancock flunked
the
Bills'
physical
examination,
a
Bills ' '
,.,
spokesman said.
Buffalo acquired Hancock • •
Tuesday in a trade for an ;:.
undisclosed draft choice.

:-:·:-:

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: .',',',. ·............... .·.·,·,·,·.·,·..

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

JESSAUSTlN,SONOFMr. and Mrs. Wayne Austin t the former Linda Williams) of
Hopkinsville, Ky ., won first place in a division of speed bikes in the bicycle r aces al the
Meigs County Fair.

Women :

D ia na

PORTSMOUTH, Ohio
(UP!) - A fire and series of
explosions ripped through a
chemical plant in this
Southern Ohio river city of
27,600 today , forcin g the
evacuation of the immediate
area. There were no reports
of injuries.
Pollee said the area was
evacuated because of fumes
escaping from tbe CenturyLast Co., which manufactures solvents.
Sgt. Howard Thompson , the
dispatcher at the city police
deparbnent, said four pump
trucks and a hook and ladder
truck were at the scene in a
residential-industrial area .
Thompson said 20 members
of the police department were
sent to the scene to direct
traffic and help in the
evacuation.
"It's' a bad fire," sailThompson. " There is som'
kind of gas escaping. We ar1
evacuating the immedia~ :
area. I don't know how man~ ·
people we are getting out o.

In

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Whitt .476,

11
Ruby Hupp .4-48 .
Hi ga m e ,
me n : M os e 1•1
Norm an . 216 and 202.
Women : Diana Whllt -168, • t
Judi Pocklington . J68 .

N.,;w YORK (UPI)

"

Sandy Mayer has been •
named !he most valuable _
player of the New York Sets 1,

of World Team Tennis, it was ~
announced Thursday.
Mayer finished ahead of :
"
Wunbledon champion Billie •
Jean King and VIrginia "

Defending champion Dave
Stockton carne in at 69, along
with 14 others, including Wade, the third leading
Johnny Miller, who failed to .. winpe!' of the women's pro
make the PGA cut last tour, in the fan balloting.
week.
"I'm only five strokes
SAN DIEGO (UP!) - The
hack," said Stockton. "That's San otego Oiargers waived
about as well as I've done in place kicker Benny Ricardo ,
recent weeks. I'm in good a free agent from San Diego
position ."
State, and traded linebacker
Miller said he felt ready to Bruce Bannon to the New
play "some good golf now. I York Giants for an unguess I had to miss a cut or disclosed future draft choice,
two to shape me up."
the club reported Thursday .
A tw0-8troke slow play
A spokesman also said
penalty, which is rarely quarterback Jesse Freitas,
called In tournament play, along with wide receivers
was assessed against Tom Dwight McDonald and Gary
Purtzer after it took the first Garrison, will start for the
threesome more than four Oiargers against the Giants
hours to finish .
Saturday.

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THURSDAY WAS SENIOR CITIZENS DAY at the
Meigs County Fair and the seniors had a ball . Carol and
Darell Taylor and Tracy Tackett, above, entertain a lar ge
crowd of senior citizens. Others entertaining during the
day were Nellie Tracy and Dessie Patterson , readings;
Frances Andrews, Bill Thurston, William Hazelton and ·

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Hazel Thomson with music. Refreshments were served .
Guests of the fair board and the Gambill Amusement Co .
Thursday also were residents of the co unty infirmary and
participants of the Meigs County Personal Advocacy)
Program .

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"The fire was discovered
by a beat officer," sai&lt;l
Thompson . "About the timt•
he called it in there was that
first explosion . And it was •
dandy because I heard over
hia cruiser radio."

f

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ATTRACTIVE QUEENS were on hand al Jun ior Fair night activ ities at the Meigs
County Fair Wednesday nigh t and posed for a picture. From left are Pam Holcomb , 1975
Meigs Co unty Fa ir Queen; Barbara Jo rclan,l91~ Fa ir Queen, Deb bie Windon, Meigs County
Beef Queen, and Ann' Colwell, Meigs County Dairy Princess .

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CRYSTAL ERWIN
Crystal Erwin, who has
recently graduated from
Ohio State School of
Cosmetology tn Columbus,
is the daughter of Mr. and ·
Mrs. Leonard F. Erwin, Rt.
3 Pomeroy. She plans to
work In the Athens area.

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PRETTY CHERYL LARKI NS took many a dip into cold water Thursday afternoo n as
she served as target al the dilly dun ker of the Meigs County Jayc ees. Cheryl is a
cheerl eader of Southern Hi gh School and t he gals will receive a part of the proceeds for their
work at the co ncession.

there.''

director in the Oak Hill
Kyger Creek - James L.
School system.
· French, Wayne Palmer and
Supt. Bradbury reported Sara Summers.
that two other vacancies had
North Galtia '-- Carl
been filled prior to last Mefford, Phyllis Mulholand,
night's meeting, but both Billy Hale and Ivan Mayo.
teachers decided not to take
Selection was made on the
the jobs.
board's policy regarding
The county system still has promotion of non-&lt;:ertificated
vacancies in the junior high personnel. Criteria .Is based
at Kyger Creek; upper upon seniority, performance,
grades at Hannan Trace and experience,
qualifications,
an EMR position at South- competency, length of serwestern.
vice, and other relevant
Supplemental coaching factors.
contracts were awarded to
Margaret Hively was hired :
Ron Janey of North Gallia as a parttime C()()k at Bidwell- ~
and Mike Mulford at Kyger Porter . Substitute cooks '
Creek. They will serve as employed were Marilyn Half- '
assistant football coaches. hill, Sharon Harris, Carolyn ,
Regular bus drivers. em- Elkins; Bonnie Stepp, Ruby "
ployed were Erwin Arrow- H. Crislip, Barbara D. ;
wood and Mary Cox. Sub- Knapp . Lucille Mulford, ;
stitute drivers hired were Bessie E. Saxon and Dorothy ~
Peggy
Roush,
Haske! Beaver.
Saunders, Henry Myers and
Lunchroom rates approved •
Donna Blake.
for the 1975-76 school term •
Supplemental contracts were students, 40 cents, an v
were approved for the increase of five cen!s; adults, "
following bus drivers for the 65 cents, an increase of a · .;
kindergarten and vocational dime; adult extra milk, 20 "
school routes : .
cents; student extra milk, ·~
Hannan Trace - Howard seven, cents; student extra •
Fulks, Mary Waugh and sandWich, '20 cents and adult '
Frank Brumfield.
extra sandwich, 30 cents.
.,
Southwestern - Leonard
Carl Wtniers, Rio ·Grande, "
Newberry, Merrill Hively, was awarded a contract to ,
Ervin Arrowood, and William furnish lump coat at tal per ,
- Marks.
ton and stoker coal $35 a t~n. .;

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1N THE FfRST -EVER BICYCLE races held in
conjunction with the Meigs County Jr . Fair , Nata lie
Lambert, 9, won the 300ft. race on the fairgrounds ' race
track Thursday morning in the "stock bike" di vision ages
6-9. She is the daughter of Mr . and Mrs. Cla rence Lambert, Rt. 2, Pomeroy.

KC teachers employed
Employment of personnel
highlighted a special meeting
of the Gallia County Local
Board of Education Thursday
night.
Five teachers, two of whom
taught last year in the school
system, were hired during
the four hour session.
Re-employed as certified
EMR instructors were Laur~
Jean Williams of Addison af&gt;
Centerville
and
Joyce
Thompson, Rt. I, Gallipolis,
at Bidwell-Porter.
New teachers given oneyear contracts were Chris
Hahne!, Rt. 4, Athens, a
graduate of Ohio University,
for assignment at Kyger
Creek Jurilor High and Nand
Gail Day, Rt. 2, Bidwell, an
Ohio University grad for
Vinton Elementary.
Cindy Gail Thompson,
Grove City, Ohio, li graduate
of Capital Unlvefslty, was
employed as an instrumental
music Instructor. She has
also attended Ohio State
University.
Miss Thompson
was
a8signed today .by Gallia
County School Superintendent C. Comer Bradbury
to the Kyger Creek area. She
replac.es' David T, Phillips .
who resigned to become ban~

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Plant
goes up
_in hang

•

FRIDAY NITE MIXED
August B. 1975
Team standings :
W L
C rew's Steak House
.44 12
Spen cer's Spares
32 24
W .M .P .O .
28 28
Grueser &amp; Son Plumb .
26 30
Ellis &amp; So ns Sohio
16 30
Team No . 5
l 'Z 4A
Hi series , men : Mose
Norman .S89 , Edd ie Whit1 ·569 .

l'ielur·o·s hv llnh llndli&lt;'h . Kalit• l'row and Jo
l·:ttt-n llkhL

·.·.·.·
···.·

champion Lou Graham. Also
at four under par were Je!'ry
Heard, Ray Floyd, Bob
Zenden, John Wells, Homero
Blancos and former GHO
winner Bob Goalby.
Ten playe!'s registered 686
in the $40,000 first prize tournament.

•

exhibition

Local Bowling

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4 1&gt;1 58 141 .34 1
401 55 137 .379
374 4) 117 3:'6
37 1 60 17 1 . 376
,f'il-4 81 160 . 374
380 871?3 . 3'14
399 58 178 . 311
49 3 66 158 . 310

95 364 59 116
Am erican L eagu e
g . ab r . h .
Carew , Min 11 0 4 17 77 lS I
Lynn . Bas
108 394 14 lJ?
Munson ,
NY
11 5 43 3 60 137
Wsh ngtn , Ok
110 4)8 67 1)8
Hrgr ve , Tx 106 ]75 63 lH
M c Rato . KC 109 418 50 179

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115
108
10 1
96
118
109
107
119

Brock. S t L

Meyer up by
•

10 1 405 57 14-4 . 356

Smmns.
51 l
' wtsn , Ho u
Snglln . Pif
Joshua , SF
Rose , Ci n
Mrgn , C in
Prker , P it
Grvy , LA

Norton
wzns
Stabbing death
•
remains mystery by TKO zn 5th

Sante Fe.sale features Indian arts, crafts

t'*

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PHILADELPffiA (UPI ) Beth Norton of Fairfield,
.Conn. .;pset second-seeded
Lynn Epstein, of Miami, 2-6,
7~ 6-2 in the quarterfinal
ro~d ofthe U.S. Girls 18-andunde!' Grass Court Tennis
Championship Thursday at
the Philadelphia Cricket
Club.
l
Top-seeded Barbara
Jordan of King of Prussta,
Pa. played at top form and
won by a ·suprisi..,; margin of
&amp;-1 6-1 over Cherri Acker, of
Kaiamazoo Mich., and thirdseeded Le~ fultonopolis, of
Glendora, Calif. was also in
top form , defeating Barbara
Hallquist, the 1974 runnerup
from Arcadia, Calif., 6-3, &amp;-2.
Fourth-seeded Zenda Liess,
of Daytona Beach, Fl~ . , .
defeated sixth-seeded She.la
Mcinerney ofRonie , N.Y. 75, 6-2~

RECOGNIZED AT THE GRANDSTAND Wednesday
iught were these winners in the 4-H Shops a nd Crops and
Engineering interviews. Winners were, first and s~cond,
small animals Bety Perrin and Roger Riebel ;
engineering, Le~ter Jeffers and Rodney Kelle~; first aid,
Chad Williams and Jim Quillen ; conservatiOn, Marco
Jeffers, Randy Keller and Johnny Riebel; com·
munications , P.a m Kautz and Ray Werryo:; gun safety,

•I

David Rigg s and Steve Stout ; engineerin g, Lester J effers
and Patty Dyer; Ohio birds, Pam Reibel and Paula
Hysell· vegetable gardening, Bill Kautz and Bryan
Jorda~ ; flower gardening, Terri Pullins and Vicky
DeBoard ; rabbi ts , showm a nsh ip gra nd champi on,
Rhonda Haning; best of show , Nicky Leonard ; po,ultry,
showmanship grand champion , Brian White, ~ nd best of
show, Floyd Holliday.

BECKY WINDON CAPTURED two top honors durin g Jr . Fair Beef judgmg Wed·
nesday at the fair. She wun bot h grand c: harnp iun showman an d gra nd champion steer.
Beck y, 14 , had been reserve champion the past four years.

Oeveland woman
winner of $300,000

ROYALTY OF THE 1974 AND 1975 Meigs County
Fairs were prese nted on stage al the grandstand before
leading the Jr . Fair Par.ade which began Jr . Fair Night

activities. From left to right are Randy J uhnson, 1975
King, hi s J:Jrother Grant Johnson, 1974 King , Pam
Holcomb, 1975_.Quqpn and Barbara .Jordan, 1974 Queen.

CLEVELAND i UP ! I
Mrs. Doro thy M. Wlice,
Clevela nd , wo n $300,000
Thursday in the Buckeye 300
Lottery draw in g 3 ll d Dan
Tr ent. Cinci nna ti, wa s
awarded $30,000.
Winners of $15,000 each
were Richard RouH of
Chiiiicot he.
Harold E ,
Zimmerman of Sunman . lml ,
Steiia- ll. Ma11uel of r- tanctta
·'

and Gerda G. Sax of Akron .
Lottte ry Chairman David
Leahv and new Di rector
Ho be~·t M . Chia ramon te
sl iced a birthd ay cake in
cele brat ion of the fi r~t year of
Lottery operation, and Leahy
said that the first year 's
ticket sa les lopped $108
million.
Of tha t SWTJ. mo re than $~3
milli on went into the stale's
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general fund .
Th is week's

. .
wwm ng

numbers in the Ohio tottery:
Number 000 I zero-zerozero ) in a ny box on t icket
wins $20.
Numbers 039 {zero-threeni,o) and 025 lzero-lwo-five)
in green and blue wins $500.
Num bers 039and 025 in blue
boxes wins $1,000.
Numbers 039 and 025 in
gree n boxes elig ible for •
drawing
and •
$300,000
automatically wins $15,000. o
Lucky Buck Wirihing Numbers: 555 (five five five) and :
648642 1six four eight six four ·
two).

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4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Au~ . 15, 1975

.

Bills host
Bengals in

Foster paces 6-1 Reds victory
CINCINNATI (UP!) ''Now ,' ' said George, "even
George Foster, just about the when I'm wearing sunglasses
hottest hitter in the majors I can hear people whisper,
today, says he's beginning to 'isn 't that so-and-&amp;&gt;'' when l
feel a little like the Lone leave a restaurant .
Ranger.
" Rem em ber the Lone ·
" It used to be I could walk Ranger television show," he
around town and go into added, grinning, "and how
restaurants without anyone it'd end with 'Who was that
recognizing me, " said masked man'' Then , you'd
Foster, whose two homers hear th at "Hi Ho, Silver.'
"Naw, I don 't wear s unaccounted for five runs in the
Reds' 6-1 victory over Pitts- glasses to look cool, " said
burgh Thursday night
Geor ge. "And I'm not tryi n~

Auto workers in
Detroit ca11back
DETROIT ( UPI) - Nearly
29,000 laid-off auto workers
will return to their jobs next
week as the industry steps up
production of 1976 models at
17 car and truck plants.
Next week also will see
initial production of the car
billed as America's answer to
small, fuel-efficient foreign
minicars : the Chevrolet
Chevette .
Chevette
production begins at General
Motors' Wilmington, DeL,
assembly plant, closed since
June 13.
Open-ended layoffs in the
industry will drop by nearly
1,300 workers as a recall of
some 2,100 workers at
Oirysler Corp. and 117 at
American Motors offset Ford
Motor Co.'s announcment it
would add about 1,000
workers to the layoff list.
Long -term layoffs, which
peaked at 212,000 during the
winte!', were trimmed to
102,510 for next week. Industry observers predict a
drop below 83,000 by midSeptember . Short-term
layoffs for the new-model
changeovers will drop from
38,275 thia week to 10,925 next

week .
The trade publication Automotive News says th e
retooling shutdowns thi s
week
dropped
auto
production to one of the
lowest points of the year 92,640 cars, about 7,000 lower
than last week .
GM plans to start '76 output
on 12 car assembly lines and
five truck lines next week and
will have 2,800 workers on
short-term layoff - all at the
South Gate, Calif., assembly
plant. Its indefinite layoffs
stand at an official 75,000, but
spokesmen said the figure is
tower and should drop below
63,000 by the end of the
month.
GM said it will pay special
unemployment benefits to
eligible idled workers for a
fifih straight week.
Ford said three assembly
plants will be closed for newmodel changeover next week,
idling 8,125 workers. Chrysler
planned to operate all eight of
its car and truck plants next
week. Two plants will close
down after Friday's shift for
new-model changeover.

Rhodes' issues ·
placed on ballot
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The government buildings, inRhodes Administration's four eluding energy, heart and
constitutional amendments cancer facilities.
have been listed tentatively
Brown, who is one of five
by the secretary of state's members of the Ballot Board,
office as second, third, said explanations of the
fourth, and fifth on the Nov. 4 constitutional amendments
general election ballot.
have been prepared and
The designation was made would
be
distributed
Thursday after a meeting statewide "in the near
earlier this week of the Ohio future."
Ballot Board, in which ballot
The other amendments, all
language and official ex- generated by tbe General
planations were prepared for Assembly which will follow
nine amendments. Five are the Rhodes' amendments ,
from the General Assembly would:
and four from the governor.
-Require the General AsNo. 1 on the ballot will be , sembly to provide methods to
the legislature's amendment rotate each candidate's name
to
permit
outdoor on the ballot.
recreational lands to be
- Require deleg'!tes to
valued for tax purposes at each major party's national
their current recreational convention to be chosen by
value.
the voters in a manner yet to
Rhodes presented his peti- be determined.
lions to Brown earlier this
- Permit the state to
month, cllalming he had about provide various tax ad60 per cent more signatures vantages to local comthan required to authorize the munities, and to loan Amtrak amendments' placement- on funds to reorganize the rail
the ballot.
transportation system in the
Required to place an state, and.
amendment on the ballot are 1 - Allow the
General
307,201 valid ' signatures of Assembly to authorize and
Ohio voters. A final check .in regulate the operation of
six counties showed that bingo games conducted by
Rhodes' petitions carried .. churches
and
other
well over 95 per cent valid charitable organizations.
signatures.
The Rhodes amendment to
create and preserve jobs
Save 100 per cent on gas through Industrial expansion ride the bus.
tax incentives will be second
on the list of nine amendmenta.
The broad highway improvement
and
transportation
amendment,
SANTA FE, N.M. (UPI) which would authorize a $1 .75 To find a bargain in Indian
billion bond issue from the arts and crafts by avoiding
levy of an additional nine- the middle man usually in-•
tentha of a cent · per gallon volves a bone-jarring ride
gasoline tax, will be third on over a desolate back road on
the llat of amendments a reservation - just to deal
pre~ented to the voters.
directly with the craftsman.
Fourth, will be be Rhodes'
There Is a way to a\toid it.
proposal
to
provide
Once a year, Indians from
as8tatance for housing, throughout the West load up
· nuratng, extended care and their pickup trucks to bring
othl!l' health C$'0 facilities. their crafts to the customers
F'lfth on the ballot Will be In a two.()ay open-air market
the capital improvements in historic downtown Santa
~n~elllfnlent, 1:0 authorize
Fe .
. itluance df"·$2.15 ·-billion., )n . The ,annual Indian Market
bondJI to·be retli-ed through a · this year opens s8tw:day, for
ieYen-tenth.l of. a · cent sales . the 54th time.
llld use )ax.
Promoters are expecting
- The fiiDd8 piierated with
thlm' 400 craftsmen
the extra sales tax Would _go from a variety of Indian
toward construction of . · tribes and pueblos to -display ·

to disguise myself.
"Actu ally, it's a gr eat
feeling to be recognized out of
uniform, " he continued . "Before no one knew who I was
unlit I turned my back and
they saw my name and
uniform nUmber ."
Foster's homers boosted
his season total to 21 and his
hitting strea k to 12 games.
Over t he spa n he's batting at
a .431 pace.
The homers also enabled

Gary Nolan to pick up his 11th · Gary 's bid for a shutout.
victory aga inst six losses.
"Gary was tired ... that 's
" Nolan's
record
is why I took him out after eight
amazing," said Red pitching innings/' said Red manager
coach Larry Shepard, "when Sparky Anderson . " I think he
you think what he has done changed uniforms twice he
after a two year layoff and got so soaking wet out there. "
shoulder surgery."
The first change came after
Manny Sanguillen 's leadoff Nolan tripled down the right
single in the sixth inning was field line in the third inning .
th e first hit off Nolan. And it
"! don 't know whether
wa s Sa nguillen's seventh Gary slid into fhirrl or just
homer of th e season in the
eighth inning that spoiled

more
.

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collapsed'" quipped Sparky.
Rellefer Will McEnaney
mowed the Pirates down in
order in the ninth.
" Will hadn't worked in ftve
days and f think the rest did
him good," said Anderson .
Fredie Norman will work
tonight for the Reds tonight
against Ken Rooker in second
game of a four-game series.

Major L e t~gu e L ea der s
U n i fed Pre u lnl e rnilional

l ea ding Bait e rs
National L eagu e
g . ab r . h . pet .
Mdlck , Ch i

ST. PAUL, Minn. (UPI) -

PT . PLEASANT - The aul opsy is to be conducted
sl&lt;lbbi ng dea th of a Mason today at Cabell Hun tington
Count y
hu nter
whose Hos pital in Huntin gton .
mutilated body was found
Both the corner and Rice
near here early yesterday said there was no evidence of
remained
shr oud e d
i n a struggle . Grubb sa id this
mystery last night.
was the firs t murd er he knew
The body of Danny Richard of in the county sin ce he
Co rn ell , 24, of Glenwood Rl. 2, became coroner in 1968.
wa s found in an isolated
Authori ties said last nigh t
wooded a rea some five miles th ey had not ye t determined
south of his home at about whether the attack look place
1:30 a.m., authorilles said. at the site where the body was
Dr. J ohn Gr ubb, Mason found or another place. The
County coroner, said the man sheriff said the body was fuiiy
had bee n sla bbed at least IB clothes . Eight spent rifle
times in the ches t, s tomach casin gs were round in Corand upper back.
neil 's poc ket and six unused
Slate police and Mason rounds were round nearby,
Co unt y sheriff' s deputi es Rice said .
were co n tinuin g house -toRi ce and Grubb said
house questionin g of persons Corneii apparently was "well
in the area la te last night, but thought of" and had no known
officials said no clues had enemies . " He never used
been found . "
alcoh ol
or
profane
Th e murder
weapon, la nguage," Grubb noted .
kn own only to have been a Ri ce sa id-he was a regular
sha rp instrum ent, was churchgoer and was wellmi ssing, as was Cornell 's liked.
.222-&lt;:aliber rifle . Deputies
Corneii 's body is to be
said no one was in custody taken to Heck Funeral Home
and there were no suspects. fn Mil ton today . He is surThe motive for the slaying vived by his widow, Jean
also rema ined in qUestion. Edmonds Corn ell , and a son,
Deputy Sheriff Rupert Rice Daniel Cornell, about three
sa id , however, " We have not years old . Also surviving is
ruled out theft as a possible hi s m o th er, Mrs. Lyd ia
motive. " Authorities said Co r nell of Glenwood, six
Cornell had been hun ting for brothers and four sisters.
groundhogs.
The brothers are Charles of
Besides the gun , nothing Glenwood,
Mi chael
of
was found mi ss in g fr om Frazier's Bottom in Putnam
Cornell 's body or his car, County, Leonard of Point
officials said . Mason County Pleasa nt, Warren of ChapSheriff Elvin "Pe te" Wedge manville in Logan County,
said, "We found his pocke t- J erry of Cleveland, Ohio, and
book about 40 feet on down Thomas in Pennsylvania. His
from the body . It was empty sisters are Mrs. Ada Rose
but his wife said he never Chandler of Chesapeake,
carried more than two or Ohio, Mrs. Lydia Ann Arthur
three dollars."
of Huntington, Mrs. Phyllis
Other relatives ··confirmed Jean Friend of Charleston
that the man never carr.ied and Mrs. Betty Alford of
more than that amount, Rice Cleveland.
said, but they al so told
deputies that Cornell had just
received $128 in food stamps.
R was not known whether
Cornell, who had been laid off
from his job at the West
Virginia Maiieable Iron Co.
plan l in Point Pieasan t three
weeks ago, had the stamps
HOUSTON (UP!) - U.
wi th him when he went Phil Boggs won the threehunting.
meter springboard event
Cornell left home about Thursday in tbe National
6:30p.m. Wednesday, Wedge AAU Senior Men 's and
said. Rice said the family Women's Outdoor Chamfeared he might have been pionships and earned a spot
bitten by a snake and called on the U.S. diving team going
about midnight to report him to the Pan AmeriCBR Games.
missing.
Cynthia Mcingvale of
The family knew where to Houston , who had already
look because he always went qualified for the Pan
hun ling in the same place, an American team with a threearea some seven miles off W. meter victory, won the oneVa. 2 "and another mile up a meter springboard comdir t road that nobody lives petition. ·
on," Grubb said.
Boggs, an Air Force ofThe body was found by a ficer , compiled 619 points to
deputy sheriff and a relative easily win the three-meter
of Cornell 's about 30 feet from over Tim Moore, Cincinnati,
the dead man 's parked car who had 605.
which had the keys in it, Rice
Moore clinched a spot on
said . It appeared to have the Pan American team by
bee n pushed over a 28-foot moving up one place Thursembankment, officials said. day when Mike Finneran of
IJ'he coroner placed the Worthington, Ohio, slipped to
time of death at about 7:30 or eighth place after qualifying
8:30 p.m. Wedn esday. An second on Wednesday.

Boggs captures
diving event

A fresh and confident Ken
Norton scored a fifth round
technical knockout over
Venezuelan hea vyweight
champion Jose Garcia
Thursday night, apparently
putting himself in line for a
shot at the winner of the
Muhammad Ali-Joe Frazier
fight next month in Manila .
Norton's win at the St. Paul
Civic Center avenged a previous toss to Garcia five years
ago, one of only three in the
fighter's career.
Before the fight Ali's
manager predicted a bad
night
for
Norton,
a
Jacksonville, Ill., native ,
citing the small ring and
Garcia's power. But Norton
scored knockdowns in the
third and fourth rounds and
finished the tired and dazed
Garcia at 1:52 of the fifih.
Norton, who weighed in at
218 pounds Wednesday, was
in complete control, scoring
almost at will . as he moved
Garcia around the rtng.
Garcia relied on the ropes for
support but finally went down
for the last time under a
devastating barrage of
punches.
Prior to the fight , Garcia
had a record of 26 victories,

one zn
WETHERSFIELD, Conn.
( UPI) - Denny Meyer isn't
. too excited but be may decide
to wear the rug out in his
motel room to keep sharp his
putting that gave him an
eight birdie, first round lead
of seven under par 64 in the
Greater Hartford Open.
Meyer, 31, who took the
lead Thursday one stroke
ahead of Austin Straub and
Don Bies, said his performance was not hia biggest
thrill and didn't compare to
playing with Arnold Palmer
in last week's PGA.
Meyer, The Palm Springs,
Calif., clul!• pro not officially
listed on the tour, said of
Palmer: "Playing with Arnie
was the highlight of my
career. Not even leading here
can compare with it. Nothing
can make me nervous now."
Meyer said he spent six
hours pulling in hia motel
Wednesday night and he used
just 26 of them to put together
hia round. He scored birdies
on the second, fifth and sixth
holes for a 32 at the halfway
mark .
On the back nine, Meyer
birdied the lOth, 12th, 14th,
16th ·and 17th holes but
bogeyed the 15th. He
fashioned the last birdie with
a well placed 40-foot shot .
Meyer said he went ''back
and forth, back and forth," on
hia motel rug, and "during

jewelry, pottery, weaving,
paintings, basket work and
wood carving in boothS set. up
around the Santa Fe Plaza,
center of this 36l&gt;-year-old
city . They estimate the event
will attract up to 50,000
onlookers and buyers.
"The thing that makes this
market worth coming to is
that there's no middle man
involved," said John Lensse n , market chairman.
"You can bargain directly
with the Indians.
'
"If you talk to tbe right guy
at the right time, you may get
a super buy."
The market is sponsored by
the Southwest Association on
Indian Affairs, a private,
nonprofit corporation

originally created to help
Pueblo Indians fight a
proposal in Congress to take
away 60,000 acres of their
land and water rights.
The. arts and crafts at the
market will be dominated by
the Indians of the Southwest,
Navajos, Zunis and Pueblos,
whose best crafts are
jewelry ,
pottery
and.
weaving.
All items are screened to
make sure they are _genuine.
None can be placed on sale if
the craftsman who made
them is not .participating In
!lie market.
"The Indians think of this

r

All arts and crafts entered
in the fair are judged. A
ribbon at t11e Santa Fe Indian
market is considered a
prestigious award and it also
can double the 'price of the
craftsman's work, Lenssen
said.
Usually, the best work Is
snatched up at the opening of
the market, often before it Is
placed on
sale ,
But
sometimes, bargains may be
found at near the ll)arket
close when Indians are
anxious to sell their last few
items and get home early.
1
' 1f
you're a real con·
nolsseur, get here early,"
as 8 premiere market ," · Lennsen suggested. " If
Lenssen said. " Many save up you're looking for bargains,
their · best crafts for the come late ."
event." .

•

seven defeats and one draw,
with 19 career knockouts .
Both fighters started
strong , with Norton forcing
Garcia into a corner and
racking up point. with
combination lefts and rights.
In the second round, Garcia
landed a few haymaker
rights but they didn't seem to
bother Norton, who scored
heavily in the last half of the
round.
Norion kept Garcia on the
ropes in the third round,
although the Venezuelan
champ came back briefly
with one solid left jab to
Norton's head and a flurry of
blows to the body. Shortly
before the bell, Norton
dropped Garcia with a solid
left to the abdomen.
Garcia scored again with
his right in the fourth round
but a few seconds late!' was
back against the ropes .
Norton's left dazed Garcia
and a combination put him on
his knees again. The round
ended
with
Garcia
desperately trying to avoid
Norton's punches.
In a preliminary bout, Scott
Ledoux of Minneapolis fought
to a lkound draw with Scrap
Iron Johnson of New York.

GHO
every commercial and dull
soap opera I was up putting."
Straub, 32, who joined the
tour in March and won the
Connecticut Open last year,
came home at 33-32 for 65
totals. "This course is suited
to my game. I'm not a long
ball hitter," he said.
The veteran Bies, 43,
finished well in the afternoon
heat.
"When you've got things
going, the heat is one of the
last things on your mind," he
said.
A total of 55 of the 142
players broke the 71 par at
the Wethersfield Country
Club course.
Mike Hill, Hubie Green,
Dave Glenz, Andy North and
J.C. Snead all scored 66, one
stroke ahead of U.S. ()pen

Pwtl . Cle

.319
pet .
.367

.335
.3 16

.3 15

.3 17

.309
93 303 47 97 .304

Rice , Bos
110 433 75 131 .303
Snglln, Bat 113 An 68 117 .301
Orta , Chi
100 3811 48 116 .799
Hom e Run s
National League: Luz insk i ,
Phil '19 : Sch mid!, Phil 75;
Kingman . NY 7.4, Bench. Cin
n: Fos ter , Cin 7 1
Am e rican
L e agu e:
Jac k son , Oak 78 ; Mayberry .
KC ?6. Sco lt , Mi l 25 ; Bonds ,
N Y '1? : Burroughs , Tex '11.
Runs Batl ed In
National League : Luzinski.
Ph il95; Ben ch. Ci n 93; Perez ,
Ci n . Watson. H ou and Sta ub.
NY 18
Am e rican League : Lynn .
Bos 85 : Rice , Bos 87 ; May.
BaN and Mayberry . KC 81:
Sco t! , Mi l n
Stolen Bas es
National League : L opes.
LA 52 ; Morgan . Cin
.4 6 :
Brock , St .L AJ ; Cedeno, Hou
.40 ; Co n ce p cion. C in and
Ma ngual . M il 'ZA .
American League : R ive r s ,
Cal 6 1; Wash ington , Oak 35:
Otis, KC 3? ; Remy , Ca l 31 ;
North , Oak 77
Pitching
Nationa l League : Seaver ,
NY 16 ·1: Sutton . LA 16. 9 ;
Jo nes . S O 15 ·1; Morton . All
15 l~ ; Messers m it h , L A 14 · 11 .
American
League :
Palm er . Ball JB .J; Kaat, Ch i
17 9 . Wise , Bos · 16 ·6 : Blue .
Oak 16 ·8 : Hunter , NY 16 · 11 .

WEDNESDAY

AFTERNOON

Augu s t 13 , 1975
Team standings
Merry Go Round
Cracker Jacks
Gi lbert &amp; Terry G ro .

Ding .A . Lings

W

L

48 e
36 20
30 2'6
26 30
16 40

We "J"
Slow Poke s
14 .t'Z
H i gh individual J .games ~
Se lby
Manley -.460 , B e t ty
Wri t esei ·A56 .
·
High ind ivi dual game Pa t
Bentz 194 ,
Jackie
Hoover 183 .

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5 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleoort-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Au~ . 15. 1975

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Highlights of
the Meigs fair

ORCHARD PARK, N.Y.
(UP! ) .:. When the Buffalo
Bills take the field tonight
against the Cincinnati
Bengals in their first home
exhibition game of the ,
season, they 'II be missing two '
starters.
J .D. Hill, Buffalo's leading
ground gaine!' among wide
receivers last season, will
miss the game with a deep
thigh bruise . His place in the
starting lineup will be taken
by Bob Oiandler.
Also on the Bills side~a
will be Buffalo 's most
valuable playe!' last season, :
free safety Tony Greene.
Greene suffered a broken
collarbone in an exhibition
loss to Green Bay last week
and Is expected to be out of
action for about six weeks.
Greene's position will be
handled by Neal Craig and
rookie Glenn Loti will start at
Craig's oormal strong safe tv •
post.
.
•
Both the Bills and the Bengals are winless in
exhibition play so far .
•
In a related development~
Thursday, a trade in which the Bills acquired tight end •
Mike Hancock .from the *
Washington Redsklns was •
voided when Hancock flunked
the
Bills'
physical
examination,
a
Bills ' '
,.,
spokesman said.
Buffalo acquired Hancock • •
Tuesday in a trade for an ;:.
undisclosed draft choice.

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JESSAUSTlN,SONOFMr. and Mrs. Wayne Austin t the former Linda Williams) of
Hopkinsville, Ky ., won first place in a division of speed bikes in the bicycle r aces al the
Meigs County Fair.

Women :

D ia na

PORTSMOUTH, Ohio
(UP!) - A fire and series of
explosions ripped through a
chemical plant in this
Southern Ohio river city of
27,600 today , forcin g the
evacuation of the immediate
area. There were no reports
of injuries.
Pollee said the area was
evacuated because of fumes
escaping from tbe CenturyLast Co., which manufactures solvents.
Sgt. Howard Thompson , the
dispatcher at the city police
deparbnent, said four pump
trucks and a hook and ladder
truck were at the scene in a
residential-industrial area .
Thompson said 20 members
of the police department were
sent to the scene to direct
traffic and help in the
evacuation.
"It's' a bad fire," sailThompson. " There is som'
kind of gas escaping. We ar1
evacuating the immedia~ :
area. I don't know how man~ ·
people we are getting out o.

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Whitt .476,

11
Ruby Hupp .4-48 .
Hi ga m e ,
me n : M os e 1•1
Norm an . 216 and 202.
Women : Diana Whllt -168, • t
Judi Pocklington . J68 .

N.,;w YORK (UPI)

"

Sandy Mayer has been •
named !he most valuable _
player of the New York Sets 1,

of World Team Tennis, it was ~
announced Thursday.
Mayer finished ahead of :
"
Wunbledon champion Billie •
Jean King and VIrginia "

Defending champion Dave
Stockton carne in at 69, along
with 14 others, including Wade, the third leading
Johnny Miller, who failed to .. winpe!' of the women's pro
make the PGA cut last tour, in the fan balloting.
week.
"I'm only five strokes
SAN DIEGO (UP!) - The
hack," said Stockton. "That's San otego Oiargers waived
about as well as I've done in place kicker Benny Ricardo ,
recent weeks. I'm in good a free agent from San Diego
position ."
State, and traded linebacker
Miller said he felt ready to Bruce Bannon to the New
play "some good golf now. I York Giants for an unguess I had to miss a cut or disclosed future draft choice,
two to shape me up."
the club reported Thursday .
A tw0-8troke slow play
A spokesman also said
penalty, which is rarely quarterback Jesse Freitas,
called In tournament play, along with wide receivers
was assessed against Tom Dwight McDonald and Gary
Purtzer after it took the first Garrison, will start for the
threesome more than four Oiargers against the Giants
hours to finish .
Saturday.

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THURSDAY WAS SENIOR CITIZENS DAY at the
Meigs County Fair and the seniors had a ball . Carol and
Darell Taylor and Tracy Tackett, above, entertain a lar ge
crowd of senior citizens. Others entertaining during the
day were Nellie Tracy and Dessie Patterson , readings;
Frances Andrews, Bill Thurston, William Hazelton and ·

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Hazel Thomson with music. Refreshments were served .
Guests of the fair board and the Gambill Amusement Co .
Thursday also were residents of the co unty infirmary and
participants of the Meigs County Personal Advocacy)
Program .

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"The fire was discovered
by a beat officer," sai&lt;l
Thompson . "About the timt•
he called it in there was that
first explosion . And it was •
dandy because I heard over
hia cruiser radio."

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ATTRACTIVE QUEENS were on hand al Jun ior Fair night activ ities at the Meigs
County Fair Wednesday nigh t and posed for a picture. From left are Pam Holcomb , 1975
Meigs Co unty Fa ir Queen; Barbara Jo rclan,l91~ Fa ir Queen, Deb bie Windon, Meigs County
Beef Queen, and Ann' Colwell, Meigs County Dairy Princess .

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CRYSTAL ERWIN
Crystal Erwin, who has
recently graduated from
Ohio State School of
Cosmetology tn Columbus,
is the daughter of Mr. and ·
Mrs. Leonard F. Erwin, Rt.
3 Pomeroy. She plans to
work In the Athens area.

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PRETTY CHERYL LARKI NS took many a dip into cold water Thursday afternoo n as
she served as target al the dilly dun ker of the Meigs County Jayc ees. Cheryl is a
cheerl eader of Southern Hi gh School and t he gals will receive a part of the proceeds for their
work at the co ncession.

there.''

director in the Oak Hill
Kyger Creek - James L.
School system.
· French, Wayne Palmer and
Supt. Bradbury reported Sara Summers.
that two other vacancies had
North Galtia '-- Carl
been filled prior to last Mefford, Phyllis Mulholand,
night's meeting, but both Billy Hale and Ivan Mayo.
teachers decided not to take
Selection was made on the
the jobs.
board's policy regarding
The county system still has promotion of non-&lt;:ertificated
vacancies in the junior high personnel. Criteria .Is based
at Kyger Creek; upper upon seniority, performance,
grades at Hannan Trace and experience,
qualifications,
an EMR position at South- competency, length of serwestern.
vice, and other relevant
Supplemental coaching factors.
contracts were awarded to
Margaret Hively was hired :
Ron Janey of North Gallia as a parttime C()()k at Bidwell- ~
and Mike Mulford at Kyger Porter . Substitute cooks '
Creek. They will serve as employed were Marilyn Half- '
assistant football coaches. hill, Sharon Harris, Carolyn ,
Regular bus drivers. em- Elkins; Bonnie Stepp, Ruby "
ployed were Erwin Arrow- H. Crislip, Barbara D. ;
wood and Mary Cox. Sub- Knapp . Lucille Mulford, ;
stitute drivers hired were Bessie E. Saxon and Dorothy ~
Peggy
Roush,
Haske! Beaver.
Saunders, Henry Myers and
Lunchroom rates approved •
Donna Blake.
for the 1975-76 school term •
Supplemental contracts were students, 40 cents, an v
were approved for the increase of five cen!s; adults, "
following bus drivers for the 65 cents, an increase of a · .;
kindergarten and vocational dime; adult extra milk, 20 "
school routes : .
cents; student extra milk, ·~
Hannan Trace - Howard seven, cents; student extra •
Fulks, Mary Waugh and sandWich, '20 cents and adult '
Frank Brumfield.
extra sandwich, 30 cents.
.,
Southwestern - Leonard
Carl Wtniers, Rio ·Grande, "
Newberry, Merrill Hively, was awarded a contract to ,
Ervin Arrowood, and William furnish lump coat at tal per ,
- Marks.
ton and stoker coal $35 a t~n. .;

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1N THE FfRST -EVER BICYCLE races held in
conjunction with the Meigs County Jr . Fair , Nata lie
Lambert, 9, won the 300ft. race on the fairgrounds ' race
track Thursday morning in the "stock bike" di vision ages
6-9. She is the daughter of Mr . and Mrs. Cla rence Lambert, Rt. 2, Pomeroy.

KC teachers employed
Employment of personnel
highlighted a special meeting
of the Gallia County Local
Board of Education Thursday
night.
Five teachers, two of whom
taught last year in the school
system, were hired during
the four hour session.
Re-employed as certified
EMR instructors were Laur~
Jean Williams of Addison af&gt;
Centerville
and
Joyce
Thompson, Rt. I, Gallipolis,
at Bidwell-Porter.
New teachers given oneyear contracts were Chris
Hahne!, Rt. 4, Athens, a
graduate of Ohio University,
for assignment at Kyger
Creek Jurilor High and Nand
Gail Day, Rt. 2, Bidwell, an
Ohio University grad for
Vinton Elementary.
Cindy Gail Thompson,
Grove City, Ohio, li graduate
of Capital Unlvefslty, was
employed as an instrumental
music Instructor. She has
also attended Ohio State
University.
Miss Thompson
was
a8signed today .by Gallia
County School Superintendent C. Comer Bradbury
to the Kyger Creek area. She
replac.es' David T, Phillips .
who resigned to become ban~

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Plant
goes up
_in hang

•

FRIDAY NITE MIXED
August B. 1975
Team standings :
W L
C rew's Steak House
.44 12
Spen cer's Spares
32 24
W .M .P .O .
28 28
Grueser &amp; Son Plumb .
26 30
Ellis &amp; So ns Sohio
16 30
Team No . 5
l 'Z 4A
Hi series , men : Mose
Norman .S89 , Edd ie Whit1 ·569 .

l'ielur·o·s hv llnh llndli&lt;'h . Kalit• l'row and Jo
l·:ttt-n llkhL

·.·.·.·
···.·

champion Lou Graham. Also
at four under par were Je!'ry
Heard, Ray Floyd, Bob
Zenden, John Wells, Homero
Blancos and former GHO
winner Bob Goalby.
Ten playe!'s registered 686
in the $40,000 first prize tournament.

•

exhibition

Local Bowling

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4 1&gt;1 58 141 .34 1
401 55 137 .379
374 4) 117 3:'6
37 1 60 17 1 . 376
,f'il-4 81 160 . 374
380 871?3 . 3'14
399 58 178 . 311
49 3 66 158 . 310

95 364 59 116
Am erican L eagu e
g . ab r . h .
Carew , Min 11 0 4 17 77 lS I
Lynn . Bas
108 394 14 lJ?
Munson ,
NY
11 5 43 3 60 137
Wsh ngtn , Ok
110 4)8 67 1)8
Hrgr ve , Tx 106 ]75 63 lH
M c Rato . KC 109 418 50 179

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115
108
10 1
96
118
109
107
119

Brock. S t L

Meyer up by
•

10 1 405 57 14-4 . 356

Smmns.
51 l
' wtsn , Ho u
Snglln . Pif
Joshua , SF
Rose , Ci n
Mrgn , C in
Prker , P it
Grvy , LA

Norton
wzns
Stabbing death
•
remains mystery by TKO zn 5th

Sante Fe.sale features Indian arts, crafts

t'*

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PHILADELPffiA (UPI ) Beth Norton of Fairfield,
.Conn. .;pset second-seeded
Lynn Epstein, of Miami, 2-6,
7~ 6-2 in the quarterfinal
ro~d ofthe U.S. Girls 18-andunde!' Grass Court Tennis
Championship Thursday at
the Philadelphia Cricket
Club.
l
Top-seeded Barbara
Jordan of King of Prussta,
Pa. played at top form and
won by a ·suprisi..,; margin of
&amp;-1 6-1 over Cherri Acker, of
Kaiamazoo Mich., and thirdseeded Le~ fultonopolis, of
Glendora, Calif. was also in
top form , defeating Barbara
Hallquist, the 1974 runnerup
from Arcadia, Calif., 6-3, &amp;-2.
Fourth-seeded Zenda Liess,
of Daytona Beach, Fl~ . , .
defeated sixth-seeded She.la
Mcinerney ofRonie , N.Y. 75, 6-2~

RECOGNIZED AT THE GRANDSTAND Wednesday
iught were these winners in the 4-H Shops a nd Crops and
Engineering interviews. Winners were, first and s~cond,
small animals Bety Perrin and Roger Riebel ;
engineering, Le~ter Jeffers and Rodney Kelle~; first aid,
Chad Williams and Jim Quillen ; conservatiOn, Marco
Jeffers, Randy Keller and Johnny Riebel; com·
munications , P.a m Kautz and Ray Werryo:; gun safety,

•I

David Rigg s and Steve Stout ; engineerin g, Lester J effers
and Patty Dyer; Ohio birds, Pam Reibel and Paula
Hysell· vegetable gardening, Bill Kautz and Bryan
Jorda~ ; flower gardening, Terri Pullins and Vicky
DeBoard ; rabbi ts , showm a nsh ip gra nd champi on,
Rhonda Haning; best of show , Nicky Leonard ; po,ultry,
showmanship grand champion , Brian White, ~ nd best of
show, Floyd Holliday.

BECKY WINDON CAPTURED two top honors durin g Jr . Fair Beef judgmg Wed·
nesday at the fair. She wun bot h grand c: harnp iun showman an d gra nd champion steer.
Beck y, 14 , had been reserve champion the past four years.

Oeveland woman
winner of $300,000

ROYALTY OF THE 1974 AND 1975 Meigs County
Fairs were prese nted on stage al the grandstand before
leading the Jr . Fair Par.ade which began Jr . Fair Night

activities. From left to right are Randy J uhnson, 1975
King, hi s J:Jrother Grant Johnson, 1974 King , Pam
Holcomb, 1975_.Quqpn and Barbara .Jordan, 1974 Queen.

CLEVELAND i UP ! I
Mrs. Doro thy M. Wlice,
Clevela nd , wo n $300,000
Thursday in the Buckeye 300
Lottery draw in g 3 ll d Dan
Tr ent. Cinci nna ti, wa s
awarded $30,000.
Winners of $15,000 each
were Richard RouH of
Chiiiicot he.
Harold E ,
Zimmerman of Sunman . lml ,
Steiia- ll. Ma11uel of r- tanctta
·'

and Gerda G. Sax of Akron .
Lottte ry Chairman David
Leahv and new Di rector
Ho be~·t M . Chia ramon te
sl iced a birthd ay cake in
cele brat ion of the fi r~t year of
Lottery operation, and Leahy
said that the first year 's
ticket sa les lopped $108
million.
Of tha t SWTJ. mo re than $~3
milli on went into the stale's
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general fund .
Th is week's

. .
wwm ng

numbers in the Ohio tottery:
Number 000 I zero-zerozero ) in a ny box on t icket
wins $20.
Numbers 039 {zero-threeni,o) and 025 lzero-lwo-five)
in green and blue wins $500.
Num bers 039and 025 in blue
boxes wins $1,000.
Numbers 039 and 025 in
gree n boxes elig ible for •
drawing
and •
$300,000
automatically wins $15,000. o
Lucky Buck Wirihing Numbers: 555 (five five five) and :
648642 1six four eight six four ·
two).

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7 - TbeDaUy Se ntmel,Mtddleport-Pome.-oy,
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O., Friday, Aug . l5, 1975

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' rwu Love At First Fight

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' By Helen Bottel

DEAR HELEN :
I'm a New York City girl ma rried to a farm er. We met
fighting (over a taxicab that we both ended up takmg), and I
hked the way he wouldn't let a city g1rl put him down. But the
fights since aren 't a s happy!
We're overrun by relatives . Deke's sisters married far mers from this area , so I'm th e only outstdcr . They all belong
to a very fundamentalist church. Deke isn't that religious, but
)1e goes along w keep peace. The women 's mterests revo lve
aroundcookingandgossip. I 'm "strange" because 1 enjoy art,
reading , mustc, etc. And I mi ss my work - it could have led to
a career in designing. Incide nta lly, my job ts waitmg , tf 1 wunt
w go back .
•
Deke is a different person when he's not around his fa mtl y,
· which is seldom! He loves the farm . I couldn't take htm away
from it. But I'm slowly dying here. I beg him to see my stdc
and we end up battling. Strange how he always gives m to his
parents, but never w me . (It's their farm ')
Don't mention a marriage counselor or psychialnst. The
family considers their mimster its only counselor, and he
advises women to stay in -their places and keep quiet.
There's a girl here who should have been Deke's wife. 1
can feel her waiting for the breakup. Should I concede defeat
and let her have him ? -CITY GIRL
DEAR ClfY GIRL:
Why not a six months' trial separa tion'! By the cod of that
time you 'll both know whether the marriage was a mistake or
worth working for ...
Have you and Deke considered selling out his Interest In
the family farm and buying another property where he can be
an independent Iarmer -perhaps near a city where you might
bave a part-time career? Or Is being together worth that much
effort?- H.

+++

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Miss Debrah Hahn
. I':NGAGED - Mr . and Mrs. Wtllla m Hahn, 601 East
Mam St., Centervtlle, Ind ., announce the engagement a nd
approachmg marna ge of th eir daughter , Debrah, to John
E. Rtdgway , Jr. , son of J ohn H. Ridgway, Sr., of Pomeroy,
and Mrs. Charles Smith, New Ha ven . 11re wedding will
take place Sept. 8, m New Have n. Mi ss Ha hn is a 1973
graduate of CenterVJlle High School and Mr . Ridgway is
wtth the U. S . Alr Fo rce, stattoned at Loring AFB ,
Canbou, Me. ,

DEAR HELEN :
Are.State Highway Patrolmen citation-happy as some of
your readers iru;ist? Here's one who wasn 't:
!was driving along the highway when I saw that red light
flashmg me down. Remembering I had my driver's hcense in
my other purse at home, I turned on the charm and said, "Oh,
you must have stopped me to buy tickets to the policeman's
ball .. ."
The man gave me a dour look and said gruffly, " Lady , I'm
STATE police and state police don 't have ba ... , er, ah ... " He
turned bright red and left without writing a ticket or askm g for
my license, just a mumbled warning about the 55 mph speed
limit. - WILL NEVER KNOW
NFW
HAV EN
DEAR HELEN:
A woman I know thinks of almost nothing or no one but Nehacltma Garden Clu b
herself. Yet she is always complaining that her children are - memb ers held lh etr a nnual
mean to her, and friends are two-faced, etc . She gives no one progressive dmn er Aug 4
creditfor trying to be nice. so they give up.
w1 th the Appeltzer Course at
!feel sorry for her , so 1 stop by, take her shopping, etc. but Ihe home of Marl ene Carnpdolgetcredit?Jheardtheotherdaythatshe 's tellingpeoplei be ll wh e r e the Hawa lla n
must want something _ maybe one of her "antiques" (which I heme was curned out for I he
aren't really) - so she's being careful abo ut me. What's with refreshments and decoratton
Mrs. Howard Stevens and
people like this • _SORRY FOR HER
DEAR SPH:
daugh ters, Juha and Joyce,
provided the ent ertainment
'lbe more selfish and self~entered a person becomes, the
The invocalion was g ive n by
more sbe tor he) assumes others are exactly like her, Acting
Brenda Mcn·it .
on this belle!, her attitude drives people away - which only
The Mam Course was al the
reinforces her opinion that everyone is either hateful or "after
home or Lois Blmlgardner
somelhlng". A vicious circle, right?
She presented flowers she
Isn't It a pity that someone can't make her see herself as
she Is? But, unlike you, most take the easy way -they simply had made lo ea e h member.
The Dessert Cour se was at
avoid her.
the home of Orpha Fields. II
How about a large dose of straight talk? It might be the
short business m eetwg was
ldndest thing you ever did for this miserable woman. -H.
conducted by the prcst dcn t,
Sally Clark.
She announced the club

MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT BPW , 7&lt;!0
p .m ., Columbia Gas Co,
Members to take guests.

MOBILE HOME
SALES; INC.
PH. 992-7777
POMEROY
eGovemor
eKi~ood

WILLOUGHBY HILL

Birthday is
celebrated

• Vemco Add-ARooms .
• Crestridge

Sectional Homes
LONG BOTTOM - The
fow·th bi1· thday of Wtllougl1by
Keith Hill , sn n of Larry and
Josephine Hill, Rt . 1, Long
Bottom, was celebrated
rec ently with a birthday
dinner. Following the dinner
a cake decorated with a train
and traek replica was served
Wtth a:e cream
Guests
were
Bruce

FINANCING
AVAILABLE
Open Sunday
1:00 Til6:00

Mon.- Fri. 9-8
Saturday 9-6
ext door to The
ones Boys.

NEW HAVE"J - Missions
day was observed at the
Church of God State Camp
Ground at Cross Lan es
Augu s t 7. Dr Tom A. Smtth
was the guest spea ker He IS
secretary of the Departmen t
of
Hom e
Mis s ion sEvangelism Board Chw·ch
Extenswn 1n Anderson, Indiana .
Orpha F1eids , State WCG
President , presided
as
Worship Chairm an for the
morning
service.
Sh e
presented the New Haven
local WIth a Standard or
Achtevement Gold Sea l
Award fo r thetr past year's
wo rk ,
the
ht ghest
achievement fur a loca l.

HARRISONVILLE Sentor
Ctltzens' Club , at the school
house 9-3. Will qm!t.

Couple wed
zn Virginia
•

Kat h} Lou Fortney and
Donald Rtchard Ba rn hart
were married in a sing le ring
ceremony at Fredricksburg,
Va . al I ::10 p.m. July 28.
The bride ts the daughter of
Kenneth P . and Betty L.
Fortney, Vincent, and the
brtdegroom is the son of Carl
L and Velma ·B. Barnhart,
Reedsvtlle . The Rev. Bernard
Jackson offictated . at the
weddmg. The c ouple took a
weddin g trip to Co lonial
Beach, Va . and now reside at
634' , Ltberty St., Parkersburg, W. Va.
The bride is a 1972 graduate
of Warren High School at
Vmcent and is emp loyed as a
key punch operator at the
Bureau of Public Debt. Barnhart is a 1970 graduate of
Eastern High Sc hool.

The New Haven Local also
r ece ived first place honor on
its hi s tory book . Bonnie
F1elds se rves as the local
hts lon an of the WCG. II
htghh ghl of lhe day was lhe
Pre sid ents' Co uncil Luncheon a t the Kmg 's Table
Res ta urant tn Dunbar. Orpha
Fields attended. In the af.
ternoon service, the Unified
State Projec t Offerin g was
presented. Th e theme was,
BOOSTERS TO MEET
"New Honzons, Because We
The Southern Athletic
Care"
Rena
Johnson Boosters will meet Tuesday
present ed $100 from the New at 7:30 p.m. at the high
Haven WCG.
school.
Attending from New Haven
\\ ere Pansy Fr y, Orpha
Fields, Rena John son, Bonnie
No games, No glmmlcs
Ftclds, llngte Ftclds, Alice
Kern s , M &lt;.~ rc e Sladcwski and
1\eba Mull ins.

Just Highest

McKelvey a nd h1s grandparents, Will oughby F Hill ,
Rog e r and Betty Tonev
Sending gtfls were Mr. a~d
Mrs . Charles LaDeaux and
Chris, Mr . and Mrs. BtU Cash
and April, Mr . and Mr s.
Eskey Hill, Mrs. Ruby Burke,
Mr . and Mrs. Ca rl Morris and
sons, J1m, .John and ·Mark.

Interest Rates
In The Area
514%

fiERE FOR VISIT

Mrs. Ruth Stacc of Wmterll ;wen. Fla IS. here for an
e xtended \ ' Jslt w1th h er sonin-la w and daughtet·, Mr. and
Mrs . Gerald Powell, Uncoln
Hill , Pomeroy .

-

.......

Mr. and Mrs. .Jimmie
Maynard. Pomeroy. the
former Betty Haggy, an·
nounce the birth of their
first child, a 6 lb. , 12 oz.
daughter, Me1issa Deanna
Maynard. The baby was
born Aug . 2 at the Holzer
Medical Center. Maternal
grandmother is Mrs.
Madeline
McClung,
Pomeroy, ~md the paternal
grandmother is Mrs.
Myrtle Maynard, Mason,
W. Va. Mrs. Ivy Grim·
mctte, Hampton, W. Va. Is
a great-grandmother .

$2395

BAUM'S TRUE
VAlUE STORE
Chc·st• ·r . Oh11J
981

' '

' '

DOUBLE &amp; SINGLE

KNITS
Ideal For

SUMMER
CLEARANCE

Children's Wear.

1976 MODELS
NOW ARRIVI"G

399 WIST' MAIN STREIT 992·2164 POMI@OY, OHIO
TH! STORE WITH ""II Klat11 ef 8Uiff"
fOil I'ITS- STAIIJS- LARGE AND SMALl: ANIMALS
LAWNS- GARDIN$

TV -Appliance
Gas Service
985 -3307

S11e
R 78 l l
C78 14
U / 8 14

Ttreatone CHAMPION ''
'

• 14.. 5

IIIIIU c••ptan

Sup-R-Belt •

6 00 1l Bl• ckwall
F'lus &gt;1441o 1 6 0
F E' T

~nd

E7 R 14
r7 8 14

Old l"e

G78 14
H 70 14

The Athens County
Savings &amp; Loan Co.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

$

All Accounts Insured
$40 ,000 by FSLIC.

AS

LOW

Ph . 992 -5781

AS

G7 H 1!}
H 78 1!}

a&amp; S 60 15 Bla ckw•ll

A~~.;,

fall 74 LESS

1 \"f-o
:~

,.,_

2

"

IA~~:~4

f'lus ' 1691o ' 1 79
1 f£Ta nduld 1" "

'

-.

•

'

'"

J!i .25 $18.95
4 • • 20 .96
21 95
22.95
3 60 24.95
375 25.95
405 27 95
300 26. 95

.

2()4

,'"

380

32 75

2

Front End
Alignment

\

·'

'

...'

'

606 E. Main

'-

,,

oo

227

2&lt;0
,,.
277

260
283

28 95

95
A78 -13
"alaclo.wall
Plu s &gt;1 77
F 10 t a "d
old 1""'

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I am 1n
the process of reflm s hmg a
used desk After removm g
some of the fini sh and dirt I
found several tnk spots in the
wood Do you have any tdeas
for removing these stains'} ~
DAVID.
DF:AR DAVID - If the
wood is a closed grained hard
wood tht•n chances are the Ink
may not have penetrated too
deeply. If so, il might be
sanded off with first coar;c
and the fine sandpaper. If this
partially removes the stains
the
slight
remaining
discoloration might be
bleached - ask your local
paint store for the proper sort
of bleach for your kind of
"ood. You will probably have
to bleach the entire top or you
"ould have light spots instead of the dark ones you
no'A have. As a last resort you
could always remove the top
1being Ink stains I presume
they are ori the top and take it
to a planing mill to he put
under the planer or electric
sander. The the entire wp
would be smooth and of a
uniform color. - POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - My Pel
Peeve is that now we are so

40TH HONORED
SHADE - Mr. and Mrs.
Howard M. Swindell, were
honored Saturday mght on
the occasion of their 40th
weddmg anniversary with a
family dinner at The Meigs
Inn. Mr. and Mrs. Swmdell
1Clara Mae Perry ) were
marned August 5, 1935, in
Pomeroy . They are the
parents of five livin g
ch ildr en; their daughter.
Linda, died in 1943. Children
and thetr families attending
were Mr . and Mrs . Robert
I Glorta 1 Mcintosh and
Allison, Athens; Mr. and Mrs.
Ned Swindell and Cam ille,
Paula, and Monte, Shade ;
Mr. and Mrs. Phil Swmdell
and Kristen, Athens , Mr. and
Mrs. Alan Swindell, Athens,
and Mr. and Mrs. Garry
I Bec ky 1 Hunter , Marietta .

60" WIDE

RETURNED HOME
Mr . and Mrs. Rance
Watkins have returned to
thelf home m Leesburg , Fla.
after vistting here with his
brothers, Mr. and Mrs . C. K
Watkins of Point Pleasant, W.
Va., and Mr. and Mrs . Ora
Watkms, Middleport, Rt. I,
and sisters, Mr . and Mrs. Btl!
Pugh Jr., Middlep ort , Rt. I,
and Mrs. Norma McCarty of
Middleport,
and
other
relat ives . Pete Brooks of
Winston Salem, N.C. ha s also
been here visttmg hi s
parenl,, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Pugh, Jr . and niece, Tma
Mane East, along with other
relahves, Mr . and Mrs . C. K
Watkins, Mr. and Mrs. Ora
Watki ns and Norma Me·
Carty

HYMN SING

It All!

RUTlAND FREEWILL
BAPTIST CHURCH

4 Guys From Williamstown, W. Va. ·

Middleport

Hubby Housh of Middleport,
Ls cunfllll'd to St Jost·p h

Parkers burg. W.
Va , Houm 4:15, fur med1ca l
treatment She expecl'i to be
then• severa l day :-~
H ~p 1 tal.

You get a Super Shel. a Brg -Shel,
a Ch eeseburger, a Ha mhurger
and Four Order s of
Regular French Fr ies.

of four for only
1Big Shef"

and 1Order
French Fnes

1Cheeseburger
and 1Order
French Fnes

And

SUMMER
ARTIFICIAL
ARRANGEMENTS

(all day)

OFF
1Hamburger
and 1 Order
French Fnes

~ff~ llf.!A,,,

,,

....

~ ~~

.P

1 Super Shef"'
and 1Order
French Fries

Feed a family

Buv Today and Save

Play

ROYAL CROWN
BOmiNG COMPANY

IIOSI'ITA I.IZF.D
l.un Hous h, 11 -y car -old
daugh ter of Mr . and Mr s

SPRING

Y2

They

"INSURED SOUND"

ecology-minded and trying to
save all resources. even to
cut tmg down on- TV watchmg,
I wonder why the news papers
do nut expand thetr radw
program schedules as a
publtc se rvtce . Radto costs
less than TV lo operate . Myrtle .
DEAR MYRTLE - I do not
know "'here you obtained
your flgures but you are n'nl
saving a ny mone y to speak of
by listening to radio rather
than "atching television. I
discussed this with a
spokesman for" a big utility
company.
After
going
through all the figures lor the
wattage used and cost of
such, based on an average
among 1.000 families, the
difference Is minima l.
POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - I am
answermg L E.D who tlas
trouble wmding yarn that
comes in afghan kits. I have
made e ight afghans and find
the following method a good
solutton to the tangled yarn
problem· Remove yarn from
cardboard and slip skein over
the back of a chair before
opemng. Wtnd mto a ball
afler cllpptn g the threat that
ts around the skein. She could
even use two chairs, back lo
back, putting the sketn over
both and putting the chairs as
far apart as the skein all ows.
Chp yarn where 1t is tled and
start lo wmd . - MRS. E .
DEAR POLLY - When I
had trouble with tangled yarn
I was !old to take an old totlel
paper luhe or center and push
Ihe e nd of the yarn through it
and then wind the yarn on the
lube. When finished carefull y
pull the tube out and start
knitting with the end you
have m the ce nter or the
pulled throu gh end.
MARGE.

.• n CarRtflij: r and Jay, Mr.
.rd Mr~ 1ferbert Parker,
.;, Nancy Adams, Lori and
Ntck , Mr . and Mrs . Wilber
Parker. April and Arron
Parker. and Homer Parker,
all ur Meigs County. Mr and
Mr s . Rupe r t Schrader,
Frankfort. Ky ., Willis,
l{usscll, Rodney, and Brenda
Parker , Parkersburg, Mrs .
Marttra Poole and Will, AFB,
Ulatr. and Mr. and Mrs.
Hobert Parker . Bobby and
Kclh , Marie lla.
Afternoon ca llers were Mr .
an d Mrs . Btl! Pierce,
Ne wark. a nd Mr . and Mrs.
Earl
Summerfield,
Murra)SVtllc, Pa

-

59 N. Second St.

Pt. Pleasant
2375

J~1 c k so n

Av e.

Gallipolis
1'1 Sl)3 Ea s tern Ave .

Middleport, Ohio

I've just got
to tell you •..•
about the bargains

I got at
Baker Furniture!

SUNDAY, AUG. 17
AT 2 P.M.
All Singers and Public
Are Invited

WHITlW•ULS ADD '3.00 P'EIIIIIIE.

•

'8.60 tO Sl4.50 Off· ~
Bi.ACKWALLS

s.,.

Junl!l

Amount

P"te

""

A7 ij 13
B7B 14

,, 30

C/6 14
0614
r 16 14

•••

G76 14
H76 14

r 1a
G7B
H76
J76

1!&gt;
15

L 70

1~

·
•Your Complete Tire Center
PH. 992-2094

Refinishing wood
reveals ink stains

The August meetmg of the held Aug 18 in order to set up
Young Adult Class of the a new bus route for the
Bradford Church of Chr ist church. A cookout is planned
was held recently in the Sept. 1 at Fort Meigs at 6 p.m .
with devottons to be given by
church basement.
Clifford Smith, minister, Madehne Pamter
gave the devotions using
quotes from the scriptures
from Ecles. and 2nd Timothy
with the topic "Glass."
By PHIL PA.STORET
During
the
business
I R S stand s for · In sta nt
meeting, a hayride for the
Retnbutwn
System ...
church was planned, and it
Add to your collection of
was suggested to hold a film
collective
nouns: A shirk or
festival. The group discussed
loaders.
helping the youth revival
Nov. 21).23, and it was announced that John and Sylvia
Blake will work with the
youth.
Special
prayer
was
requested for Lonnie Le
If they let you cry on their
Master. A meeting will be
shoulder , their s utts are per·

FEY,,
8~~~1110
~r1c11
ll!lath)

1!)

11&gt;

"'"
•••
9 .10
10.55
1010

•••

10 !iS
10"'
1160

11 80

'"
•23.95
2fdll5
2895
27.95
30. 95

202
210
2 32
247

31.95

262

34.15
31 .15

1 77

2 84

32 .15

255
2 69

35.95
38.95
31.95

2 92
J 09

TONIGHT and SATURDAY
10 TIL 2:00
OUR NEW HOURS WIU BE

The Meigs Inn
PHONE 992-3629

7:00 A.M. TIL MIDNIGHT
DAILY

POMEROY. OHIO

CHOW'S STEAK· HOUSE

J 21

LOAD RANGE 8

-.oo IJ 00 1'111 Tllll

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO

'.

YD•

metallic blue dial. Go modern ;
wear a Caravella Dlgltron.

DOUBLE-BELTED

If you trav el extensively you 'll want the
long l1r e m1leage ot belted construction
D ouble hberglass bells 1n th1 s 1915
NEW CAR TIRE hold !read l1rm f o r long
wea r and e)(cel!en t lraclton Smooth
riding polyester cord body

OFFICE H
9:30 to 12,2 to 5 I CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.l-EAST COURT

"G r ow In Gra ce". The
pr og ram began with the
members smging "Amazing
Grace". Mrs . Taylor read
scripture fr om Luke 10:38-42
and then led in prayer. She
also led a responsive reading
"This Is the Day Which the
Lord Ha lh Made ." The
members wrote prayer
requests on slips of paper and
burned them, ~n act to
symbolize the relinquishtng
of worries. and givmg them to
God. The program concluded
with c1rcle prayer led by '
Orpha Fields.
llttendwg were Rena
Johnson, Orpha Ftelds,
Becky Reed, Delores Taylor,
Grace Cunningham, Bonnie
Ftelds, Sue Erwin, Eleanor
Davis, Sarah Gibbs , Fay
Carpe nt er, and Roberta
Maynard.

The descendants of Alice
and Samuel Stancarl held
thetr reunion at the lwme of
Mr . and Mr s. Howard
Parker The group enJOyed a
basket d1nner at 12 :30
Present were Mr . and Mr s

IIY POLLY CRAMER

Young adults meet

.·

WHITIWALU

. :·

NEW HAVEN - The New
Haven Women of the Church
of God held their annual
prayer retreat at the Racine
Dam and Locks Recreahon
Park . The members enjoyed
a' covered dish dinner and a
short business meeting was
conducted by the president,
Orpha Fields .
Flower fund chairman,
Bonnie Fields reported
flowers had been sent to
hospitalized members, Susie
Bess, Dora Wood and
Roberta
Maynard.
An
execuhve committee meeting
will be held Aug. 26 in the
Missionary Building
beginning al 7:30 p .m .
Hostesses for the September
meeting will be Dora Wood
and Susie Bess .
Alter the meeting , Delores
Taylor
presented
the
program . The theme was

BLACKWALLS

'

' '·

Park is setting
for annual retreat

First Time

N.

The
chapter
voted
Wlamm ous un the prvpusCd
am endments to the by-laws
whtch increases the imtialion
fee and the dues A donation
was made to the ed ucational
loan fund . Plans were made
to present 25 a nd 40 year ptns
at the next meeting and on
thai same night past matrons
and . past patrons will be
honored
Mr s . Mabel Goeg lein
re ported on cards senl to
shut -ins. Pro terns at the
mee ttng were Mrs Mabel
Moure , conductress: Fr~da
Grueser, Ruth , and Bill
Wa tson, sentinel. Georgia
and Btll Watson and Fred and
Margaret Blaettnar served
refreshments with Mrs
Adrian Hubbard as a conlnbuting hostess.

tpolly' s Poin

Barbs

shaped case , stainless steel
. link band and handsome

Deluxe Champion"

For All Occasions

Sunday, Aug. 17, Hrs. 8:00-2:00
Weekdays 6:00-8:30 ..
3rd St.
Ph. 949-3551 Racine, Ohio

98~

A friends ni ght observance
wilh a reception )lonoring
Mrs . Dorothy Woodard ,
grand page, was planned for
Sept. 19 when Pomeroy
Chapter 186. Order of the
Eastern Star , mel at the
Masonic Temple .
Mrs . Florence Well ,worthy
matron , and Dale Smhh,
worthy patron , presided at
the meeting during which
time three peti lions for
honorary membership were
presented The district party
to be held Oct 4 at Middleport
wa s announced with Mrs
Maryln Wilc ox, dtstrict
prestdent, to be advised of
those planntn g to attend by
Sept. 25 A hobo convention
theme will be carried out and
there will be a potluck dinner .

HI

FLOWERS

Ph. 992 -2 039

Never mind what the big and
little hands have to say. The
Caravella Digit ron watch
says it al l with the greatest of
ease. The clearly evident t1me
panels tell the hour, minute
and second at a g lance. With
17 jewel precision. Shield-

$47.50

Wk a .....u.

Pomeroy Flower Shop

..

MODERN SUPPLY

RIDENOUR
Chester , Oh10

assignment
of
responsibilities for the conference
Middleport was asked to hav~
the program . Logan will
handle door prizes. Gallipolis
the name tags , Athens, the
registration , Nelsonville, the
ri tualist tc opemng .
At the meetmg there will be
brief comments by Eleanor
Mmster on the Florence Allen
scholarship; Lola Mae Suiter
legislative activities; Mrs:
Martin, the WRAP program,
and Connie Wells, the young
careerist program . The
meeting will begin at 10 a .m.
with the luncheon to cost $6.
The proposed budget for
the year was presented by the
committee of Lucy Earwood,
Mtss Houdashelt, and Loretta
Jones. Mrs. Woods noted her
schedule for visitation including Nov . 17 for Mid·
dleport .
Mrs .
Helen
Morrison, legislattve
chairperson, will be guest
speaker at the Oct . 20
meeting of the Middleport
Club.
It was noted that BPW
International Weekend is m
February in Ontano, Canada
and the possibility of chartering a bus was discussed.
BPW Week was announced
for Oct. 19 to 25. Members
were asked to continue
collecting cigarette coupons
and trading stamps.

SCHOOL
SPECIAL

660 1381a c~ wall
F'h.os • 1 751o . 1 77

992-2039

the new
Caravelle®
Digital Watch
byBulova

to observe
friends night

BACK TO

ON PASSBOOK
SAVINGS

We Wire Flowers
Everywhere

JJ(j]

Plans for the annual picmc
were made when the Eastern
Homemakers Club met
Fnday at the home of Mrs.
.loan Smith, Tuppers Plains.
The picmc wtll be Aug . 23 at
lhc Parkersburg Ctty Park.
Mrs. Bea Douglas. prinCipal of Tuppers Plains
l':lementary Sc hool, was a
· guest a l the meeting. Mrs.
Gaynell McAbee of West
Co lumbi a, W. Va . was the
winner. of a cann is ter give n as
a d oor pnze.

Mrs. Millard Van Me1er

Coconut Cream , Apple. Pea ch .

5 GAL CAN

Homemakers

.lg

VEGETABLES - Green Beans, Creamed
Corn, Noodles, . Potatoes (baked, home
fries. mashed)

PIE -

ROOF
COAT

F£ T &amp;flduld ll'c

MEAT - Chicken &amp; Dressin.g , Roast Beef,
Flounder Fish, Hamburger Steak, Ham .

Miss Freddie Houdashelt
president, and Mrs . Mar;
Martin, vice president, of the
Middleport Business and
Professional Women's Club
were tn Jackson Wednesday
night to attend a D1strict 15
meeting where plaris for the
197~76 year were outlined.
A dinner at the Colonial Inn
at Jackson preceded the
meeting . Mrs . Fred Woods,
district president, had charge
of the meeting with Mtss
Houdashelt being appointed
to the district nominating
committee, a nd Mrs. Martin
betng named the district
WRAP (Women's Responsibility
for
Accident
Prevention) chairperson .
Plans were made for the
fall district conference to be
held Oct. 12 at Lake Hope
with the BPW state president
to be the featured speaker.
McArthur will be the host
club, and each club in the
district is asked to provide a
gift of $20 value for a fund
raising project. In the

For Back-to- Schoolers!

STEAMBOAT INN

SALAD - Cottage Cheese. Slaw. Tossed,
Apple Sauce, Peaches .

FIBERED

Descendants held reunion

Chap~er

District meet
plans for
•
comzng year

ALUMINUM

to hold picnic

-TUESDAY

:-;ponsonng l. uu Ellen Rou sh
of New Haven fo r a candidate
of the Mctson County Fmr
Queen Th e Flower Show was
al su di scussed II will be held
at 1he Ma sor1 County F'a11·.
Attending
were
Enid
Adams. Sa ll y Clark, Rrenrla
Mcrnl. E li nor Lay ne, Belly
Bun 1s. Em11 ge ne Crow.
Orp h~1 F1elds. K~y Weaver.
Eva .Jean Ho us h . Pauhne
Mil ler, Carolyn Thorne.
J oyce Moxley, Shelma Jom•s ,
L01s Bu m gardner, D1an&lt;:~
H&lt;.~rbour. Ch at lotte \oVrcn,
Marl ene Campbell, Tana
Simonton. Manon Batey,
Marj on e Huffman , Sarah
Gibbs, Ma x111e M1ller and
Shirley Roush, members, and
guests, Mrs. Howa rd Stevens
and daug hters, Julia and
Joyce.

Mission Day observed

LARRY'S

Mary
Marlin,
Pomeroy, d em 1 chape au
nationale, Centra l Div1swn
Etg hl and Forty, and Mrs:
Myrlle Walker , Hacine, Ohto,
dcpa r1 ementa l official, were
tn Indianapolis, lnd over the
weekend to attend the In-

REVIVAL at the Ch W" ch of
Chnst In Chnst1a n Unwn
Pearl Sl., Middleport, 7&lt;!0
eHc h evening fur a week,
sta rtin g Sunday.
COUNTY-WIDE PHAYER
meeling, 2 p.m "t Middleport
ChwTh of Chn st 111 Chnsttan
Unwn, Pearl S l. C icn Btssell
class leader
'
C: G8TH ANNUAL reumon of
the descendants of Hoit and
Mary Foster Curtis at Forked
Hurt State Park; basket
dinn er at noon .
GRATE FAMILY reunion
al
F ore st Acres
park
beguunng at 12 noon. Those
attendmg take p1 cmc lunch.
Camping area s available for
those wishing to come for
weekend.
HYMN SING at Rutland
Freewill Baptis t Church, 2
p .m ; al l stngers, publi c
tnvtted

diana Ia marche held a t
Stauffers Inn !here
Mr s. Martm was a s Peaker
al the cunv en ll on on the
c ht!dren an d yout h program
or Eight and Forty and gave a
reswne of her recent visit to
lhe Nat tonal .Jew tsh Hospital
m Denver, Co lo., a treatment
and r esea r c h cente r for
c hildren with res piratory
diseases. She congratula ted
lhe lndt ana Salon on havtng
raised money for endowmg
two heds at the hospttal at a
cos ! of $2.000. for making
an other donat1on of $500, for
conlrtbuling $t,640 toward
the
nati ona l
nur ses
scholarship fund .
Mr s. Mart e Ma kt els kt,
depurt e m enta l
chapeau,
welc omed the guests and
1ntroduced the officers.
Re ports were given. a

Mr s

SUNDAY
HYM N S ING , Rutland
Freewtll Bapltst Chur ch , 2
p 111
All sm gers and the
public 111 vited to altend
HOMF:COMING , Guysvtlle
Com mun1 ty
Ch ur c h .
Prcfich1n g, Jl a .m., by James
Fee, McArthur Afternoon
serv 1ces at 2 p.m . Musi c by
the M1racleaircs . Rev I .ee \
H ~nnm ond.
Portsmouth,
arlernnon spea ker. Basket
dinn er at noon at Wll son
Park, ncar Guysville J ohn
E lswt ck, pastor.
"

'

Progressive dinner
enjoyed by club

.

Social Women. travel to
Calendar Indiana convention

memorial service held and
a wards presented at a
banquet.
Mrs. Marlin has visited
Salons in West Virginia
Kansa s, Illinois,
Ohio:
Missouri and Indiana , in the
pas! few weeks . Several gifts
were presented to her at the
Indiana meeting .

Wheel
Balancing

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
..

Po mer~~

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7 - TbeDaUy Se ntmel,Mtddleport-Pome.-oy,
·
·
O., Friday, Aug . l5, 1975

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:S:

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• •

•.•.

' rwu Love At First Fight

j

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I

' By Helen Bottel

DEAR HELEN :
I'm a New York City girl ma rried to a farm er. We met
fighting (over a taxicab that we both ended up takmg), and I
hked the way he wouldn't let a city g1rl put him down. But the
fights since aren 't a s happy!
We're overrun by relatives . Deke's sisters married far mers from this area , so I'm th e only outstdcr . They all belong
to a very fundamentalist church. Deke isn't that religious, but
)1e goes along w keep peace. The women 's mterests revo lve
aroundcookingandgossip. I 'm "strange" because 1 enjoy art,
reading , mustc, etc. And I mi ss my work - it could have led to
a career in designing. Incide nta lly, my job ts waitmg , tf 1 wunt
w go back .
•
Deke is a different person when he's not around his fa mtl y,
· which is seldom! He loves the farm . I couldn't take htm away
from it. But I'm slowly dying here. I beg him to see my stdc
and we end up battling. Strange how he always gives m to his
parents, but never w me . (It's their farm ')
Don't mention a marriage counselor or psychialnst. The
family considers their mimster its only counselor, and he
advises women to stay in -their places and keep quiet.
There's a girl here who should have been Deke's wife. 1
can feel her waiting for the breakup. Should I concede defeat
and let her have him ? -CITY GIRL
DEAR ClfY GIRL:
Why not a six months' trial separa tion'! By the cod of that
time you 'll both know whether the marriage was a mistake or
worth working for ...
Have you and Deke considered selling out his Interest In
the family farm and buying another property where he can be
an independent Iarmer -perhaps near a city where you might
bave a part-time career? Or Is being together worth that much
effort?- H.

+++

'

Miss Debrah Hahn
. I':NGAGED - Mr . and Mrs. Wtllla m Hahn, 601 East
Mam St., Centervtlle, Ind ., announce the engagement a nd
approachmg marna ge of th eir daughter , Debrah, to John
E. Rtdgway , Jr. , son of J ohn H. Ridgway, Sr., of Pomeroy,
and Mrs. Charles Smith, New Ha ven . 11re wedding will
take place Sept. 8, m New Have n. Mi ss Ha hn is a 1973
graduate of CenterVJlle High School and Mr . Ridgway is
wtth the U. S . Alr Fo rce, stattoned at Loring AFB ,
Canbou, Me. ,

DEAR HELEN :
Are.State Highway Patrolmen citation-happy as some of
your readers iru;ist? Here's one who wasn 't:
!was driving along the highway when I saw that red light
flashmg me down. Remembering I had my driver's hcense in
my other purse at home, I turned on the charm and said, "Oh,
you must have stopped me to buy tickets to the policeman's
ball .. ."
The man gave me a dour look and said gruffly, " Lady , I'm
STATE police and state police don 't have ba ... , er, ah ... " He
turned bright red and left without writing a ticket or askm g for
my license, just a mumbled warning about the 55 mph speed
limit. - WILL NEVER KNOW
NFW
HAV EN
DEAR HELEN:
A woman I know thinks of almost nothing or no one but Nehacltma Garden Clu b
herself. Yet she is always complaining that her children are - memb ers held lh etr a nnual
mean to her, and friends are two-faced, etc . She gives no one progressive dmn er Aug 4
creditfor trying to be nice. so they give up.
w1 th the Appeltzer Course at
!feel sorry for her , so 1 stop by, take her shopping, etc. but Ihe home of Marl ene Carnpdolgetcredit?Jheardtheotherdaythatshe 's tellingpeoplei be ll wh e r e the Hawa lla n
must want something _ maybe one of her "antiques" (which I heme was curned out for I he
aren't really) - so she's being careful abo ut me. What's with refreshments and decoratton
Mrs. Howard Stevens and
people like this • _SORRY FOR HER
DEAR SPH:
daugh ters, Juha and Joyce,
provided the ent ertainment
'lbe more selfish and self~entered a person becomes, the
The invocalion was g ive n by
more sbe tor he) assumes others are exactly like her, Acting
Brenda Mcn·it .
on this belle!, her attitude drives people away - which only
The Mam Course was al the
reinforces her opinion that everyone is either hateful or "after
home or Lois Blmlgardner
somelhlng". A vicious circle, right?
She presented flowers she
Isn't It a pity that someone can't make her see herself as
she Is? But, unlike you, most take the easy way -they simply had made lo ea e h member.
The Dessert Cour se was at
avoid her.
the home of Orpha Fields. II
How about a large dose of straight talk? It might be the
short business m eetwg was
ldndest thing you ever did for this miserable woman. -H.
conducted by the prcst dcn t,
Sally Clark.
She announced the club

MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT BPW , 7&lt;!0
p .m ., Columbia Gas Co,
Members to take guests.

MOBILE HOME
SALES; INC.
PH. 992-7777
POMEROY
eGovemor
eKi~ood

WILLOUGHBY HILL

Birthday is
celebrated

• Vemco Add-ARooms .
• Crestridge

Sectional Homes
LONG BOTTOM - The
fow·th bi1· thday of Wtllougl1by
Keith Hill , sn n of Larry and
Josephine Hill, Rt . 1, Long
Bottom, was celebrated
rec ently with a birthday
dinner. Following the dinner
a cake decorated with a train
and traek replica was served
Wtth a:e cream
Guests
were
Bruce

FINANCING
AVAILABLE
Open Sunday
1:00 Til6:00

Mon.- Fri. 9-8
Saturday 9-6
ext door to The
ones Boys.

NEW HAVE"J - Missions
day was observed at the
Church of God State Camp
Ground at Cross Lan es
Augu s t 7. Dr Tom A. Smtth
was the guest spea ker He IS
secretary of the Departmen t
of
Hom e
Mis s ion sEvangelism Board Chw·ch
Extenswn 1n Anderson, Indiana .
Orpha F1eids , State WCG
President , presided
as
Worship Chairm an for the
morning
service.
Sh e
presented the New Haven
local WIth a Standard or
Achtevement Gold Sea l
Award fo r thetr past year's
wo rk ,
the
ht ghest
achievement fur a loca l.

HARRISONVILLE Sentor
Ctltzens' Club , at the school
house 9-3. Will qm!t.

Couple wed
zn Virginia
•

Kat h} Lou Fortney and
Donald Rtchard Ba rn hart
were married in a sing le ring
ceremony at Fredricksburg,
Va . al I ::10 p.m. July 28.
The bride ts the daughter of
Kenneth P . and Betty L.
Fortney, Vincent, and the
brtdegroom is the son of Carl
L and Velma ·B. Barnhart,
Reedsvtlle . The Rev. Bernard
Jackson offictated . at the
weddmg. The c ouple took a
weddin g trip to Co lonial
Beach, Va . and now reside at
634' , Ltberty St., Parkersburg, W. Va.
The bride is a 1972 graduate
of Warren High School at
Vmcent and is emp loyed as a
key punch operator at the
Bureau of Public Debt. Barnhart is a 1970 graduate of
Eastern High Sc hool.

The New Haven Local also
r ece ived first place honor on
its hi s tory book . Bonnie
F1elds se rves as the local
hts lon an of the WCG. II
htghh ghl of lhe day was lhe
Pre sid ents' Co uncil Luncheon a t the Kmg 's Table
Res ta urant tn Dunbar. Orpha
Fields attended. In the af.
ternoon service, the Unified
State Projec t Offerin g was
presented. Th e theme was,
BOOSTERS TO MEET
"New Honzons, Because We
The Southern Athletic
Care"
Rena
Johnson Boosters will meet Tuesday
present ed $100 from the New at 7:30 p.m. at the high
Haven WCG.
school.
Attending from New Haven
\\ ere Pansy Fr y, Orpha
Fields, Rena John son, Bonnie
No games, No glmmlcs
Ftclds, llngte Ftclds, Alice
Kern s , M &lt;.~ rc e Sladcwski and
1\eba Mull ins.

Just Highest

McKelvey a nd h1s grandparents, Will oughby F Hill ,
Rog e r and Betty Tonev
Sending gtfls were Mr. a~d
Mrs . Charles LaDeaux and
Chris, Mr . and Mrs. BtU Cash
and April, Mr . and Mr s.
Eskey Hill, Mrs. Ruby Burke,
Mr . and Mrs. Ca rl Morris and
sons, J1m, .John and ·Mark.

Interest Rates
In The Area
514%

fiERE FOR VISIT

Mrs. Ruth Stacc of Wmterll ;wen. Fla IS. here for an
e xtended \ ' Jslt w1th h er sonin-la w and daughtet·, Mr. and
Mrs . Gerald Powell, Uncoln
Hill , Pomeroy .

-

.......

Mr. and Mrs. .Jimmie
Maynard. Pomeroy. the
former Betty Haggy, an·
nounce the birth of their
first child, a 6 lb. , 12 oz.
daughter, Me1issa Deanna
Maynard. The baby was
born Aug . 2 at the Holzer
Medical Center. Maternal
grandmother is Mrs.
Madeline
McClung,
Pomeroy, ~md the paternal
grandmother is Mrs.
Myrtle Maynard, Mason,
W. Va. Mrs. Ivy Grim·
mctte, Hampton, W. Va. Is
a great-grandmother .

$2395

BAUM'S TRUE
VAlUE STORE
Chc·st• ·r . Oh11J
981

' '

' '

DOUBLE &amp; SINGLE

KNITS
Ideal For

SUMMER
CLEARANCE

Children's Wear.

1976 MODELS
NOW ARRIVI"G

399 WIST' MAIN STREIT 992·2164 POMI@OY, OHIO
TH! STORE WITH ""II Klat11 ef 8Uiff"
fOil I'ITS- STAIIJS- LARGE AND SMALl: ANIMALS
LAWNS- GARDIN$

TV -Appliance
Gas Service
985 -3307

S11e
R 78 l l
C78 14
U / 8 14

Ttreatone CHAMPION ''
'

• 14.. 5

IIIIIU c••ptan

Sup-R-Belt •

6 00 1l Bl• ckwall
F'lus &gt;1441o 1 6 0
F E' T

~nd

E7 R 14
r7 8 14

Old l"e

G78 14
H 70 14

The Athens County
Savings &amp; Loan Co.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

$

All Accounts Insured
$40 ,000 by FSLIC.

AS

LOW

Ph . 992 -5781

AS

G7 H 1!}
H 78 1!}

a&amp; S 60 15 Bla ckw•ll

A~~.;,

fall 74 LESS

1 \"f-o
:~

,.,_

2

"

IA~~:~4

f'lus ' 1691o ' 1 79
1 f£Ta nduld 1" "

'

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•

'

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J!i .25 $18.95
4 • • 20 .96
21 95
22.95
3 60 24.95
375 25.95
405 27 95
300 26. 95

.

2()4

,'"

380

32 75

2

Front End
Alignment

\

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...'

'

606 E. Main

'-

,,

oo

227

2&lt;0
,,.
277

260
283

28 95

95
A78 -13
"alaclo.wall
Plu s &gt;1 77
F 10 t a "d
old 1""'

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I am 1n
the process of reflm s hmg a
used desk After removm g
some of the fini sh and dirt I
found several tnk spots in the
wood Do you have any tdeas
for removing these stains'} ~
DAVID.
DF:AR DAVID - If the
wood is a closed grained hard
wood tht•n chances are the Ink
may not have penetrated too
deeply. If so, il might be
sanded off with first coar;c
and the fine sandpaper. If this
partially removes the stains
the
slight
remaining
discoloration might be
bleached - ask your local
paint store for the proper sort
of bleach for your kind of
"ood. You will probably have
to bleach the entire top or you
"ould have light spots instead of the dark ones you
no'A have. As a last resort you
could always remove the top
1being Ink stains I presume
they are ori the top and take it
to a planing mill to he put
under the planer or electric
sander. The the entire wp
would be smooth and of a
uniform color. - POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - My Pel
Peeve is that now we are so

40TH HONORED
SHADE - Mr. and Mrs.
Howard M. Swindell, were
honored Saturday mght on
the occasion of their 40th
weddmg anniversary with a
family dinner at The Meigs
Inn. Mr. and Mrs. Swmdell
1Clara Mae Perry ) were
marned August 5, 1935, in
Pomeroy . They are the
parents of five livin g
ch ildr en; their daughter.
Linda, died in 1943. Children
and thetr families attending
were Mr . and Mrs . Robert
I Glorta 1 Mcintosh and
Allison, Athens; Mr. and Mrs.
Ned Swindell and Cam ille,
Paula, and Monte, Shade ;
Mr. and Mrs. Phil Swmdell
and Kristen, Athens , Mr. and
Mrs. Alan Swindell, Athens,
and Mr. and Mrs. Garry
I Bec ky 1 Hunter , Marietta .

60" WIDE

RETURNED HOME
Mr . and Mrs. Rance
Watkins have returned to
thelf home m Leesburg , Fla.
after vistting here with his
brothers, Mr. and Mrs . C. K
Watkins of Point Pleasant, W.
Va., and Mr. and Mrs . Ora
Watkms, Middleport, Rt. I,
and sisters, Mr . and Mrs. Btl!
Pugh Jr., Middlep ort , Rt. I,
and Mrs. Norma McCarty of
Middleport,
and
other
relat ives . Pete Brooks of
Winston Salem, N.C. ha s also
been here visttmg hi s
parenl,, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Pugh, Jr . and niece, Tma
Mane East, along with other
relahves, Mr . and Mrs . C. K
Watkins, Mr. and Mrs. Ora
Watki ns and Norma Me·
Carty

HYMN SING

It All!

RUTlAND FREEWILL
BAPTIST CHURCH

4 Guys From Williamstown, W. Va. ·

Middleport

Hubby Housh of Middleport,
Ls cunfllll'd to St Jost·p h

Parkers burg. W.
Va , Houm 4:15, fur med1ca l
treatment She expecl'i to be
then• severa l day :-~
H ~p 1 tal.

You get a Super Shel. a Brg -Shel,
a Ch eeseburger, a Ha mhurger
and Four Order s of
Regular French Fr ies.

of four for only
1Big Shef"

and 1Order
French Fnes

1Cheeseburger
and 1Order
French Fnes

And

SUMMER
ARTIFICIAL
ARRANGEMENTS

(all day)

OFF
1Hamburger
and 1 Order
French Fnes

~ff~ llf.!A,,,

,,

....

~ ~~

.P

1 Super Shef"'
and 1Order
French Fries

Feed a family

Buv Today and Save

Play

ROYAL CROWN
BOmiNG COMPANY

IIOSI'ITA I.IZF.D
l.un Hous h, 11 -y car -old
daugh ter of Mr . and Mr s

SPRING

Y2

They

"INSURED SOUND"

ecology-minded and trying to
save all resources. even to
cut tmg down on- TV watchmg,
I wonder why the news papers
do nut expand thetr radw
program schedules as a
publtc se rvtce . Radto costs
less than TV lo operate . Myrtle .
DEAR MYRTLE - I do not
know "'here you obtained
your flgures but you are n'nl
saving a ny mone y to speak of
by listening to radio rather
than "atching television. I
discussed this with a
spokesman for" a big utility
company.
After
going
through all the figures lor the
wattage used and cost of
such, based on an average
among 1.000 families, the
difference Is minima l.
POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - I am
answermg L E.D who tlas
trouble wmding yarn that
comes in afghan kits. I have
made e ight afghans and find
the following method a good
solutton to the tangled yarn
problem· Remove yarn from
cardboard and slip skein over
the back of a chair before
opemng. Wtnd mto a ball
afler cllpptn g the threat that
ts around the skein. She could
even use two chairs, back lo
back, putting the sketn over
both and putting the chairs as
far apart as the skein all ows.
Chp yarn where 1t is tled and
start lo wmd . - MRS. E .
DEAR POLLY - When I
had trouble with tangled yarn
I was !old to take an old totlel
paper luhe or center and push
Ihe e nd of the yarn through it
and then wind the yarn on the
lube. When finished carefull y
pull the tube out and start
knitting with the end you
have m the ce nter or the
pulled throu gh end.
MARGE.

.• n CarRtflij: r and Jay, Mr.
.rd Mr~ 1ferbert Parker,
.;, Nancy Adams, Lori and
Ntck , Mr . and Mrs . Wilber
Parker. April and Arron
Parker. and Homer Parker,
all ur Meigs County. Mr and
Mr s . Rupe r t Schrader,
Frankfort. Ky ., Willis,
l{usscll, Rodney, and Brenda
Parker , Parkersburg, Mrs .
Marttra Poole and Will, AFB,
Ulatr. and Mr. and Mrs.
Hobert Parker . Bobby and
Kclh , Marie lla.
Afternoon ca llers were Mr .
an d Mrs . Btl! Pierce,
Ne wark. a nd Mr . and Mrs.
Earl
Summerfield,
Murra)SVtllc, Pa

-

59 N. Second St.

Pt. Pleasant
2375

J~1 c k so n

Av e.

Gallipolis
1'1 Sl)3 Ea s tern Ave .

Middleport, Ohio

I've just got
to tell you •..•
about the bargains

I got at
Baker Furniture!

SUNDAY, AUG. 17
AT 2 P.M.
All Singers and Public
Are Invited

WHITlW•ULS ADD '3.00 P'EIIIIIIE.

•

'8.60 tO Sl4.50 Off· ~
Bi.ACKWALLS

s.,.

Junl!l

Amount

P"te

""

A7 ij 13
B7B 14

,, 30

C/6 14
0614
r 16 14

•••

G76 14
H76 14

r 1a
G7B
H76
J76

1!&gt;
15

L 70

1~

·
•Your Complete Tire Center
PH. 992-2094

Refinishing wood
reveals ink stains

The August meetmg of the held Aug 18 in order to set up
Young Adult Class of the a new bus route for the
Bradford Church of Chr ist church. A cookout is planned
was held recently in the Sept. 1 at Fort Meigs at 6 p.m .
with devottons to be given by
church basement.
Clifford Smith, minister, Madehne Pamter
gave the devotions using
quotes from the scriptures
from Ecles. and 2nd Timothy
with the topic "Glass."
By PHIL PA.STORET
During
the
business
I R S stand s for · In sta nt
meeting, a hayride for the
Retnbutwn
System ...
church was planned, and it
Add to your collection of
was suggested to hold a film
collective
nouns: A shirk or
festival. The group discussed
loaders.
helping the youth revival
Nov. 21).23, and it was announced that John and Sylvia
Blake will work with the
youth.
Special
prayer
was
requested for Lonnie Le
If they let you cry on their
Master. A meeting will be
shoulder , their s utts are per·

FEY,,
8~~~1110
~r1c11
ll!lath)

1!)

11&gt;

"'"
•••
9 .10
10.55
1010

•••

10 !iS
10"'
1160

11 80

'"
•23.95
2fdll5
2895
27.95
30. 95

202
210
2 32
247

31.95

262

34.15
31 .15

1 77

2 84

32 .15

255
2 69

35.95
38.95
31.95

2 92
J 09

TONIGHT and SATURDAY
10 TIL 2:00
OUR NEW HOURS WIU BE

The Meigs Inn
PHONE 992-3629

7:00 A.M. TIL MIDNIGHT
DAILY

POMEROY. OHIO

CHOW'S STEAK· HOUSE

J 21

LOAD RANGE 8

-.oo IJ 00 1'111 Tllll

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO

'.

YD•

metallic blue dial. Go modern ;
wear a Caravella Dlgltron.

DOUBLE-BELTED

If you trav el extensively you 'll want the
long l1r e m1leage ot belted construction
D ouble hberglass bells 1n th1 s 1915
NEW CAR TIRE hold !read l1rm f o r long
wea r and e)(cel!en t lraclton Smooth
riding polyester cord body

OFFICE H
9:30 to 12,2 to 5 I CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.l-EAST COURT

"G r ow In Gra ce". The
pr og ram began with the
members smging "Amazing
Grace". Mrs . Taylor read
scripture fr om Luke 10:38-42
and then led in prayer. She
also led a responsive reading
"This Is the Day Which the
Lord Ha lh Made ." The
members wrote prayer
requests on slips of paper and
burned them, ~n act to
symbolize the relinquishtng
of worries. and givmg them to
God. The program concluded
with c1rcle prayer led by '
Orpha Fields.
llttendwg were Rena
Johnson, Orpha Ftelds,
Becky Reed, Delores Taylor,
Grace Cunningham, Bonnie
Ftelds, Sue Erwin, Eleanor
Davis, Sarah Gibbs , Fay
Carpe nt er, and Roberta
Maynard.

The descendants of Alice
and Samuel Stancarl held
thetr reunion at the lwme of
Mr . and Mr s. Howard
Parker The group enJOyed a
basket d1nner at 12 :30
Present were Mr . and Mr s

IIY POLLY CRAMER

Young adults meet

.·

WHITIWALU

. :·

NEW HAVEN - The New
Haven Women of the Church
of God held their annual
prayer retreat at the Racine
Dam and Locks Recreahon
Park . The members enjoyed
a' covered dish dinner and a
short business meeting was
conducted by the president,
Orpha Fields .
Flower fund chairman,
Bonnie Fields reported
flowers had been sent to
hospitalized members, Susie
Bess, Dora Wood and
Roberta
Maynard.
An
execuhve committee meeting
will be held Aug. 26 in the
Missionary Building
beginning al 7:30 p .m .
Hostesses for the September
meeting will be Dora Wood
and Susie Bess .
Alter the meeting , Delores
Taylor
presented
the
program . The theme was

BLACKWALLS

'

' '·

Park is setting
for annual retreat

First Time

N.

The
chapter
voted
Wlamm ous un the prvpusCd
am endments to the by-laws
whtch increases the imtialion
fee and the dues A donation
was made to the ed ucational
loan fund . Plans were made
to present 25 a nd 40 year ptns
at the next meeting and on
thai same night past matrons
and . past patrons will be
honored
Mr s . Mabel Goeg lein
re ported on cards senl to
shut -ins. Pro terns at the
mee ttng were Mrs Mabel
Moure , conductress: Fr~da
Grueser, Ruth , and Bill
Wa tson, sentinel. Georgia
and Btll Watson and Fred and
Margaret Blaettnar served
refreshments with Mrs
Adrian Hubbard as a conlnbuting hostess.

tpolly' s Poin

Barbs

shaped case , stainless steel
. link band and handsome

Deluxe Champion"

For All Occasions

Sunday, Aug. 17, Hrs. 8:00-2:00
Weekdays 6:00-8:30 ..
3rd St.
Ph. 949-3551 Racine, Ohio

98~

A friends ni ght observance
wilh a reception )lonoring
Mrs . Dorothy Woodard ,
grand page, was planned for
Sept. 19 when Pomeroy
Chapter 186. Order of the
Eastern Star , mel at the
Masonic Temple .
Mrs . Florence Well ,worthy
matron , and Dale Smhh,
worthy patron , presided at
the meeting during which
time three peti lions for
honorary membership were
presented The district party
to be held Oct 4 at Middleport
wa s announced with Mrs
Maryln Wilc ox, dtstrict
prestdent, to be advised of
those planntn g to attend by
Sept. 25 A hobo convention
theme will be carried out and
there will be a potluck dinner .

HI

FLOWERS

Ph. 992 -2 039

Never mind what the big and
little hands have to say. The
Caravella Digit ron watch
says it al l with the greatest of
ease. The clearly evident t1me
panels tell the hour, minute
and second at a g lance. With
17 jewel precision. Shield-

$47.50

Wk a .....u.

Pomeroy Flower Shop

..

MODERN SUPPLY

RIDENOUR
Chester , Oh10

assignment
of
responsibilities for the conference
Middleport was asked to hav~
the program . Logan will
handle door prizes. Gallipolis
the name tags , Athens, the
registration , Nelsonville, the
ri tualist tc opemng .
At the meetmg there will be
brief comments by Eleanor
Mmster on the Florence Allen
scholarship; Lola Mae Suiter
legislative activities; Mrs:
Martin, the WRAP program,
and Connie Wells, the young
careerist program . The
meeting will begin at 10 a .m.
with the luncheon to cost $6.
The proposed budget for
the year was presented by the
committee of Lucy Earwood,
Mtss Houdashelt, and Loretta
Jones. Mrs. Woods noted her
schedule for visitation including Nov . 17 for Mid·
dleport .
Mrs .
Helen
Morrison, legislattve
chairperson, will be guest
speaker at the Oct . 20
meeting of the Middleport
Club.
It was noted that BPW
International Weekend is m
February in Ontano, Canada
and the possibility of chartering a bus was discussed.
BPW Week was announced
for Oct. 19 to 25. Members
were asked to continue
collecting cigarette coupons
and trading stamps.

SCHOOL
SPECIAL

660 1381a c~ wall
F'h.os • 1 751o . 1 77

992-2039

the new
Caravelle®
Digital Watch
byBulova

to observe
friends night

BACK TO

ON PASSBOOK
SAVINGS

We Wire Flowers
Everywhere

JJ(j]

Plans for the annual picmc
were made when the Eastern
Homemakers Club met
Fnday at the home of Mrs.
.loan Smith, Tuppers Plains.
The picmc wtll be Aug . 23 at
lhc Parkersburg Ctty Park.
Mrs. Bea Douglas. prinCipal of Tuppers Plains
l':lementary Sc hool, was a
· guest a l the meeting. Mrs.
Gaynell McAbee of West
Co lumbi a, W. Va . was the
winner. of a cann is ter give n as
a d oor pnze.

Mrs. Millard Van Me1er

Coconut Cream , Apple. Pea ch .

5 GAL CAN

Homemakers

.lg

VEGETABLES - Green Beans, Creamed
Corn, Noodles, . Potatoes (baked, home
fries. mashed)

PIE -

ROOF
COAT

F£ T &amp;flduld ll'c

MEAT - Chicken &amp; Dressin.g , Roast Beef,
Flounder Fish, Hamburger Steak, Ham .

Miss Freddie Houdashelt
president, and Mrs . Mar;
Martin, vice president, of the
Middleport Business and
Professional Women's Club
were tn Jackson Wednesday
night to attend a D1strict 15
meeting where plaris for the
197~76 year were outlined.
A dinner at the Colonial Inn
at Jackson preceded the
meeting . Mrs . Fred Woods,
district president, had charge
of the meeting with Mtss
Houdashelt being appointed
to the district nominating
committee, a nd Mrs. Martin
betng named the district
WRAP (Women's Responsibility
for
Accident
Prevention) chairperson .
Plans were made for the
fall district conference to be
held Oct. 12 at Lake Hope
with the BPW state president
to be the featured speaker.
McArthur will be the host
club, and each club in the
district is asked to provide a
gift of $20 value for a fund
raising project. In the

For Back-to- Schoolers!

STEAMBOAT INN

SALAD - Cottage Cheese. Slaw. Tossed,
Apple Sauce, Peaches .

FIBERED

Descendants held reunion

Chap~er

District meet
plans for
•
comzng year

ALUMINUM

to hold picnic

-TUESDAY

:-;ponsonng l. uu Ellen Rou sh
of New Haven fo r a candidate
of the Mctson County Fmr
Queen Th e Flower Show was
al su di scussed II will be held
at 1he Ma sor1 County F'a11·.
Attending
were
Enid
Adams. Sa ll y Clark, Rrenrla
Mcrnl. E li nor Lay ne, Belly
Bun 1s. Em11 ge ne Crow.
Orp h~1 F1elds. K~y Weaver.
Eva .Jean Ho us h . Pauhne
Mil ler, Carolyn Thorne.
J oyce Moxley, Shelma Jom•s ,
L01s Bu m gardner, D1an&lt;:~
H&lt;.~rbour. Ch at lotte \oVrcn,
Marl ene Campbell, Tana
Simonton. Manon Batey,
Marj on e Huffman , Sarah
Gibbs, Ma x111e M1ller and
Shirley Roush, members, and
guests, Mrs. Howa rd Stevens
and daug hters, Julia and
Joyce.

Mission Day observed

LARRY'S

Mary
Marlin,
Pomeroy, d em 1 chape au
nationale, Centra l Div1swn
Etg hl and Forty, and Mrs:
Myrlle Walker , Hacine, Ohto,
dcpa r1 ementa l official, were
tn Indianapolis, lnd over the
weekend to attend the In-

REVIVAL at the Ch W" ch of
Chnst In Chnst1a n Unwn
Pearl Sl., Middleport, 7&lt;!0
eHc h evening fur a week,
sta rtin g Sunday.
COUNTY-WIDE PHAYER
meeling, 2 p.m "t Middleport
ChwTh of Chn st 111 Chnsttan
Unwn, Pearl S l. C icn Btssell
class leader
'
C: G8TH ANNUAL reumon of
the descendants of Hoit and
Mary Foster Curtis at Forked
Hurt State Park; basket
dinn er at noon .
GRATE FAMILY reunion
al
F ore st Acres
park
beguunng at 12 noon. Those
attendmg take p1 cmc lunch.
Camping area s available for
those wishing to come for
weekend.
HYMN SING at Rutland
Freewill Baptis t Church, 2
p .m ; al l stngers, publi c
tnvtted

diana Ia marche held a t
Stauffers Inn !here
Mr s. Martm was a s Peaker
al the cunv en ll on on the
c ht!dren an d yout h program
or Eight and Forty and gave a
reswne of her recent visit to
lhe Nat tonal .Jew tsh Hospital
m Denver, Co lo., a treatment
and r esea r c h cente r for
c hildren with res piratory
diseases. She congratula ted
lhe lndt ana Salon on havtng
raised money for endowmg
two heds at the hospttal at a
cos ! of $2.000. for making
an other donat1on of $500, for
conlrtbuling $t,640 toward
the
nati ona l
nur ses
scholarship fund .
Mr s. Mart e Ma kt els kt,
depurt e m enta l
chapeau,
welc omed the guests and
1ntroduced the officers.
Re ports were given. a

Mr s

SUNDAY
HYM N S ING , Rutland
Freewtll Bapltst Chur ch , 2
p 111
All sm gers and the
public 111 vited to altend
HOMF:COMING , Guysvtlle
Com mun1 ty
Ch ur c h .
Prcfich1n g, Jl a .m., by James
Fee, McArthur Afternoon
serv 1ces at 2 p.m . Musi c by
the M1racleaircs . Rev I .ee \
H ~nnm ond.
Portsmouth,
arlernnon spea ker. Basket
dinn er at noon at Wll son
Park, ncar Guysville J ohn
E lswt ck, pastor.
"

'

Progressive dinner
enjoyed by club

.

Social Women. travel to
Calendar Indiana convention

memorial service held and
a wards presented at a
banquet.
Mrs. Marlin has visited
Salons in West Virginia
Kansa s, Illinois,
Ohio:
Missouri and Indiana , in the
pas! few weeks . Several gifts
were presented to her at the
Indiana meeting .

Wheel
Balancing

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
..

Po mer~~

,
'

'

�, I

POM

L EVA N

P OMERO Y

RINIT Y

Rev
W H
Pernn pastor
Roy Mayer
Sunday school
supt
Chur c h school , 9 15
a m , worshtp serv ~ce 10 24
a rn
Youth cho• r re hea r sal
Mondiiy
3 30 p m
under
d trect ton Of Mary Sktnner
sen tor cho tr rehearsa l 7 30
p m Thursday wtth Mr s Paul
Nease d trector

P OM E ROY

CHURC H OF

TH E NA ZA R E NE Corn er
Unton and M u lber ry
Rf!v
Clyde V Henderson pa stor
Sunday school 9 30 am Glen

McCl u ng

s upt

RCH

-

morn tn g

wo r s h•P
se r vtce

10 30 am
e ven tn g
7 30
rn •d w ee k
servtce Wedne s day 7 30 p m
G RAC E E P ISC OP AL - The
Rev
Haro l d Deeth
re c tor
Church ser .... •ces 10 30 am
H o l y commu nton ft r s t Sunday
of month church school 10 JO
a m for nur sery t h r ough 11

POMERO Y CHUR CH OF

Harrtsonville
R c~o~
0 De ll
Manley Pastor H en ry Ebl1n
Sunday Sc hool Sup! Sunday
Schoo l 9 30 am
Evcn1ng
worShip! 30p m
Pray er and
Pra1seser\11 Ce Thursday 7 ]0

pm

S Y RACUSE
F IR S T
Rev
C HU RC H OF GO D George Oiler pas tor Sunday
sch Ool
9 JS a rn
morn1ng
preach1nq
II
am
evangCIIShc serv1ce 7 30 p m
Prayer meet1ng
Th ur sday
7 10 p m
PO M ER O Y
WESTS ID E
C HU RC H O F C HRI ST , 200 w
Ma 1n St
Jerry Paul
m 1rust e r
p hone 992 7666
C onservat 1 ve
non
1n strum en1 at
Sunday wor
sht p 10 am
B1ble s tudy 11
a m
wor shrp 6 p m Wed
nesday B1ble s t u dy 7 p m
MIDWAY
COMM U NI T Y
N on de
C HU RC H

CHRIST - T errel l G r ontnqer nom1n&lt;1t anal
l_ angsvlllc
pastor
B t b l e school
9 30 Ou(lcr
Road
Th e r on
a m
wor s htp
10 30 a m
Durh,lm
pas. t or
&lt;; unday
10 a m
evcn 1n q
a d ult worsh •P se rv tee and &lt;;rh ool
young peoples rneet1ng 7 30 worShip
1 30 p m
pr&lt;tyc r
P m
Co mb 1ned B1b l e s t udy !llC'L'II rlll lu es d &lt;ty J 30 p m
and praye r meet 1ng
W ed youth qrou p I r1day 7 30 p m
n esday 7 30 p m
F REE WI LL
R U TLA ND
THE SALV A TION AR MY BA PTI ST Roger Turn e r
Envoy Ray W Wm1ng off ce r pastor
Su nday school
10
am
Sunday even m g se r v ce
1n c har ge Su nday 10 a m
Hoi mess mee t 1ng 10 30 a rn
7 JO Wednesday B1b l e s t udy
Sunday
Sc hool
Young 7 JO p m
P e o p l e s Leg10n
7 p m
OLD
D EX T E R
BIBL E
Lad1es CH..R I ST IA N C HUR CH - Rev
T h ur sday 1 to 3 p m
H o m e L eague 7 p m
Pr ep Ron
r erry
pi'l s lo r
Su n day
sc hoo l 10 a m
M r s Wor l ey
c l asses
ST
PAUL
lU T H E RAN Francs
super1n l ende nt
CHURCH ,
Corne r
of Morn1 n g worshtp
II am
Sycamo r e an d Seco n d Sts, Sun day eve n 1ng se rviCe 7 30
P ome r oy The Rev W 1llt am
G RAHAM
UNIT E D
M1d dl eswar t h P asto r Sunday METHODI ST Preach1 n g
Sc h ool a t 9 45 a m
and 9 30 a m
f1r st and seco n d
Chu r ch Serv1ces 11 am
Sundays o f each month th1 rd
a n d f ourth Su ndays each
SACRED HEART Rev
F a t h er
P a ul
D
We lt o n
m on t h , wo r sh1 p servrce a t 7 30
Pho ne
99 2 2825
p m Wed n es d a y even in g s a t
p as tor
Sa t u r da y even 1n g Mass , 7 30
7 30 Prayer an d B ib le Stu d y
SEV E NTH DAY
AD
Sun da y M ass 8 an d 10 a m
Conf ess1 on
Sa tu rday
7 7 30 VENTIST , M ulber ry H e1gh ts
pm
Roa d
P ome r oy
Se t on , Sa b
POMEROY FIRST
BAP · Pas t or,Ge r ar d
TIST - Rob er t K uh n p a sto r
bat h Sc h oo l Supermten d ent
Will1a m
Wa t son ,
Sunday Rrta W h1t e Sabba th School
Satu rd ay af t ernoon a t 2 00 ,
sch oo l su p! Sund ay sc h oo l
9 30 a m
B YF,6 c m
B1 bi P w it h
w or s h 1p
se r v1ce
f o ll o wt ng a t 3 I S
Sf UCiy, Y~lo'diiE'.:. U dy, 7 0 m ,
F t RST
SOUTHERN
cho1r p r ac t 1ce, Wednes d ay
8 30 p m
BAPTIST 281 Mu lb erry

the sermonette
Do you believe that God 1s real' Most people believe there
is a God. What do you believe about God'
U a person thinks of God as Ute man upstairs or some mce
fellowwho.gives us everything we want, that person 's thmking
about God Is much too small. Because of this God will not have
an important place m his life. Instead he will give God a polite
nod from lime to tune, and then live as though God d1d not

exist. '
We need to see, as best as Ute hwnan mind can, the great ness of God . When we take God lightly churches are empty and
morals decay .
God is our creator . We did not make ourselves God ma de
us. God is holy. He does not take our sin and d~bed1ence
lightly.
does not laugh 11 off. God is love ' He became a man
.~ChristHeJesus
to die for our sin, to suffer our punishment. He
IS worthy of our highest thoughts and praiSe.
To take God seriously means to recognize the fact He 1s
God, that your life belongs to Him and to come to Him by
putting your faith and trust m Christ Jesus. It means to follow
His teachings and love Him in a greater way Ulan you love
neighbor or self.
The Lord your God is God of gods, and Lord of lords, a
great God .. . Deuteronomy 10:17. - Peter Granda! Mmister
First Baptist, Middleport .
'
'

Harrisonville
Society News
Mr. and Mrs. Theodore
Koenig and son Ted Jr. of
East liverpool, Ohio, visited
Ava Gilkey one p.m . this
week. Mrs. Koenig is the
former Lucy Laudaker and
the son Ted is a music
director at a sch ool w
Charleston .

..

visited Sunday by her son
James and wife of Lancaster.
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Borgan
and Mr . and Mrs. Michael
Borgan and Mr. and Mrs.
Alan Borgan and Mrs.
Rosella Birchfield and her
grandchildren.
Ray Allure attended his
sister-m-laws sister Barbara
Reed's wedding Saturday
night m Columbus, Ohio. He
went especially to see his 2
year old niece Robin Gibson
act as flower gu-1
Mr. and Mrs. Robt. Alkire
attended a western dance at
Marietta Saturday evening .
Vern Blizzard 89 years old
is hospitalized having his
pace-maker replaced with a 4
year old one in Denver Colo .
The Blizzards are expected
here Sept. 15.

Tiunara and Perry Clark of
Chester stayed overn ight
wiUt Ute Robert Clarks and
accompanied !bern to the
Athens County Fair.
Mr. and Mrs. Bailey of the
B&amp;K Construchon Co. have
purchased Ute former Dale
Williams home from Mr .
Mullen and moved in last
week.
Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Gilkey
The Almanac
In·
and son Joey Jay of By
United
Press
Co1wnbus, Ohio were dinner teruatlonal
guests of his mother, Ava
Today 1s Friday , Aug. 15,
Gilkey and while here they the 227th day of 1975 with 138
called on Mrs. Bernice Winn to follow .
and attended Ute 85Ut birThe moon 1s between its
lhday dinner of Ric hard first quarter and full phase .
Heilman.
The morning stars ar e
Harold Graham spent Mars, Jupiter and Saturn.
Saturday evenmg with Ava
The evenmg stars are MerGilkey.
cury and Venus.
Mr. and Mrs . Doug Bishop
Those born on this date are
and family vis1 ted Mrs. under the sign of Leo.
Bishops sister in Zanesville,
American novelist Edna
Ohio Sunday.
Ferber was born Aug . 15,
The Dalton sisters had a
1887
very successful yard sale in
()Jl this day in history:
Mrs. Minnie McGraUts yard ,
In 1914, an American sh1p
4 days Utls week.
passed from the Atlantic to
Mrs. &amp;le King also had a Ute Pac1flc Ocean, officially
yard sale.
opening the Panama Canal.
Mr . and Mrs. Darold
In 1935, American humorist
Graham and three children Will Rogers and pilot Wiley
spent the weekend with Post were killed when their
Bessie Graham and 'the Joe plane crashed m Alaska .
Carseys.
In 1971, President Nixon
Mr. and Mrs. F . 0 . Whaley ordered a 91klay wage-pricehave bought a new trailer and rent freeze and announced
placed it on a lot in Florida imposition of a 10 per cent
where they expect to spend 5 surcharge on foreign 1mmonths this wj111er.
.. ports.
Mr. and Ml!&amp;. Larry Clark • , In 1974, Greece announced
and children visited the Bob it would not go to war against
Clarka SIUiday. ,
Turkish troops a pparently
Mr.
Mrs. M. A. Epple
bent on seizing Nort!lern
spent the weekend in
Cyprus, becaus e of the
Zanesville and Dayton wiUt remoteness of the island and
their children,
1
the military advantage of the
MrS! lJellie &amp;;ian was Turks.
·•

and

Ave Pom eroy atllhat c d w.th .1 m
'• l1 C
t hC Rev
Bradh: y
P0HlLA N D
Wor .:,h 1p
pas t or
Troy I Ill 1J 111
Chor e '' Sc hool 9 :w
SpC'nc c r
Zwdltnrl ~u n day school supl
,1 n 1
~ S unda y
school , 9 JO '' rn
SUTTON
Worsh1p , 11
morn on q
wo r s h 1p
10 30
,, 111
&lt;· very · und.,y
c hurch
Sun&lt;lay cvanqc l \~11c m cct1 n q
'i (IIOOI 10 ,, 111
7 30 p m
P ray er mf'CT1ng
t-.ORT H EAST C LU ST t=.R
Wed n es d ay 7 30 p 111
f.l 1·v Robt· rl M.ccce
M ID D L E P ORT
Pa~ l or
MT M ORI A H BAPTIST Ocn n lsCrccqo.Cor n er Fourth and Ma 111
A &lt;,s octil f c M ltl l:!. l er
M •dd l e por' Rev Henry Key
Jr
pastor
Sunday School
JOPPA - Worst11p 10 a rn
9 J O am
Mr s
Erv 1n Chur c h &lt;;ch ool 9 am
Prayer
BaumtJMdn e r su p! Morn 1nq J\'l' c lm q Wednes day 8 p m
worShip 10 45 am
LO N G BOTTOM -- Ch urch
J E HOV A H 'S
WI T N ESSES scr v Cf'~
9
am
Sunday
- Larry Ca rnahan p r e-s 1d 1 ng
•C h ou l 9 J"&gt; a rn
P.tble &lt;:. 'udy
m1n• Ste-r
Sunday
Bible every Th ur sd ay 7 30 p 111
le c l ure
9 30 am
Walch
NORT H
BETHEL
to w er s tudy
10 30 am
Wor •:d l•P 11 am
Chur c h
Tuesday
B1ble s ludy
7 30 \c h oo l 10 J m
p m
Thurs day
mrn 1stry
ALFRED - r. unday sch ool
sch ool
7 JO p m
se rv 1ce 9 -1 5 a m
eac h
Sund a y
meetmg R 30 p m
pr c achmg at 11 am
each
MI D DL E P O RT
C HUR ':: H Su nd ay Prayer m cet1ng 7 &lt;1 5
OF C H R I ST IN C H R I STIAN P m
Wednesday
W SCS
A
UN IO N - La wren c e Manley
P m
on lh1rd Tuesde+y each
pa stor Mrs Russ e ll Young
m o nlh
Su nday School Su pt Sunday
REE D SVI LL E Su nday
School 9 30 am
Eve n 1ng sc hoo l 9 JO am
prea c h ng
worsh 1p
7 30
Wednesday 7 30 P m
Sunday
prayer
prayer mce l 1ng 7 30 p m
meet.ng 7 30 p m T u esday
MT M O RI A H CHUR CH O F W~C S
7 30 f 1rSf Thur sda y
GO O Racme Roule 2 th e eac h month
Rr&gt;v
James
M
Muncy
SI L V ER RID GE - W or Ship
pastor
Sun day sc hoo l 9 45 10 a m
Ch ur ch Sch oo l 9 a m
.1m
mornrng worsh 1p
11
T U PPE R S
P L A IN S
am
even 1ng wor sh 1p 7 30
Wor s ll 1p 9 am
Ch urch
Pray er rn ee ! 1ng
Tuesday
School 10 am
7 JO p m
Young people 's
KE N O
C HU RC H
OF
C H R 1ST - Geo r ge Freder 1c k
mee- tmg 7 JO p m Thu r sday
FIR S T sup!
Ser v 1ce w ee kly
9 30
M I D D LEPOR T
B AP TI ST - Corne r Sp: th and am on Sunday
Prl•a c hmg
Pa lme r
th e Rev
Cleo y
ftr s t a nd th 1rd Sundeys .J f
Boyd pastor Dan n y Thomp
month by Cl1 ffo r d Sm1th 9 30
SO i1
Sunday sc h oo l sup!
am
WMPO rad 1o prog r am
7 4s
HOB SON
C HRI S TIAN
a m
Sunday sc h oo l. 9 I S .UNION Darre ll Doddrill
am
morn 1ng worsh 1p , 10 15 pas. l or
Sunday School
9 30
a rn
You t h actrv 1t 1es and a m
Le onard G ilmo r e first
f e llowsh 1p for 1u n 1o r a n d e l der
even1ng se r v1 ce. 7 30
sen•o r h1gh st udents 6 p m
P m
Wedne sd ay
prayer
Su nd a y Eve n tng Worshrp at
m ee tmg 7 30 p m
M1d week prayer ser
M T MO R I A H C HUR CH OF
7 JO
v1ce
Wed n esday , 7 JO p rn
GO O Ra c m e Route 2 The
C HURCH
OF
C H R IST ,
Rev
Ch ar l es Hand pa s tor
Sun day school
Midd l ep o rt
5th an d Ma 1n
9 45 am
George
G l azem 1n 1 ster
morn 1ng worShiP
11
am
Ja mes
Sheets,
super 1n
Eve n mg serv1ces
Tuesday
te n dent
B t &amp;le school
9 JO and F r 1day 7 30 p m
am, m o r nm g worsh 1p 10 30
BEAR W A LLOW
R ID GE
am , even mg wo r Sh i p, 1 JO
C HUR C H O F C H R I ST - Doug
p r ayer se r v 1ce. 7 p m Wed
Se a man
m 1n t s. t e r
B1ble
nesday
, sludy
9 JO am
morn1 n g
MIDDL E PORT
Chur c h worsh i p 10 30 am
evenmg
Of
Th e
N a za r e n e wo r sh1p 8 p m
Wed n esday
Rev
Don Co l e
pas
n1qh t B1b l e study 8 p m
l or
Mrs
Mary
Lalhey,
MT
OliV E CHURCH Sunday Schoo l sup t Sunday
L ong Bo tt om Su nday Sc hoo l
schoo l 9 30 a m
morn m g
10 a m w1 t h Wr ll ard P1gott,
worshr p
11 am
Sunday
su p t
Evangei1S I 1c message
evangel1sttc mee t 1n g. 7 30
each Sun d ay even mg 7 30 by
p m
praye r
meet 1 n g ,
E l der Russell Clrne m1n1ster
of !he ApostoliC F a11h B1b l e
' Wed n esday, 7 30 p m
T H E
U N I T E D
Study We d nesday 7 JO p m
PR E SBYT E RI A N
MIN
S TIVERSVILLE
CO MIST R Y
OF
MEIG S M UNITY CHURCH - Sun day
COUNTY , Dw1ght L Zav i fZ.
School serv1ce,
10 am
Pastor D rrec to r
Prayer mee t mg Thu r sday 7
P m
Sun day even rng serv1ce
H A R R 1 S 0 NV I l l E
Sunday Ch ur c h Sch ool . 9 30
7 P m
am M r s H o m er Lee, Su p t
Z ION C HURCH OF C HRIST
Mo rn mg W o rs htp 10 JO
Pomeroy
H a r r tsonvrlle
MIDDLEPORT Sund ay
Road M1ke G1rton
pastor
Ch ur ch Sc h oo l , 9 30 am
St even Sta nl ey Sun day schoo l
supt
Su nday schoo l
9 30
J o h n F F u ltz Su pt , Mo r n tn g
Wo r sh rp 10 JO
a rn
mo r n 1ng w ors h1 p and
SYRA C USE Morn 1ng
commun10n
10 30
am
Wors h 1p , 9 a m , Sun d ay
Sunday
even1ng
youth
Church Sch ool 10 am
Mrs
Chri SI1an en deav or 6 30 p m
Sam p son H a i L Su ot
worSh iP servtee
7 30 p m
RUTLAND CHUR CH OF
We d nesday even 1n g p r .:~yer
G OO 0.:1v1 d L
H enson
meetmg an d B1b l e stu d y 7 30
pasTor ,
446 9471
Sunday
P m
mor n 1ng worsh rp 9 JO 10 30
ST
J OHN
lUTHER A N
10 301 1 30
CHUR C H . P+n e G r ove
The
Sunday sc h oo l
Sunday evenmg serv 1ce. 5
Rev
W lllt am M1d d leswa r th
P m
t am lly worsh1p Th u rs
Pas t or Churc-tor-S.e r v1ces 9 30
day 7 30 p m
a m Sunday Sch ool 10 30 a m
H AZEL
COMMUNITY
BRADBUR Y CHURCH OF
CHURCH
N ear
Lo n g CHRI ST - Br bt e Sc h oo l 9 30
Bofl om E d se l H a rt p asl or
a m • m orn tng wo r sht p 10 30
Sunday sc h oo l
10 a m
a rn
Sunday even 1ng worsh 1p
Ch urch, 7 30 p m , pr a yer sen" 1ce 7 p m , cho 1r pract 1Ce
mee ft n g , 1 30 p m T h ur sd ay
Wed n esday 7 p m Rev Je ff
MIDDLEPORT
PEN · Ranso n Pas tor
ANTIQUITY BAPTI ST T E CO STAl - T h 1r d Ave, th e
Rev Wttl 1am Kn rtte l. p astor
Rev F ree l and N or r1s pasto r
Ro na ld D ugan Sunday Sch ool
Su nday
schoo l
10 a m
Supt Cl asses for all ag es
Church
serv1ce
7 p m
eve ntng se rv tce, 7 30 , Btb !e We d nesday B i b le Stu d y
7
s t udy,
We d nes a day
7 JO P m
RACINE CHURCH OF THE
p m , you th servrces, F r1da y,
7 30 p m
NAZARENE - Rev Wrl l 1am
FREEWILL BAPTIST Ba r t h olomew, p as tor Su n d a y
Corn er Ash an d Pl um , M 1d
schoo l
9 30 a m
Gera ld
dl e p o rt
N oe l
H er rm a n , Wells su p t . m orn m g wor
p a sto r
Sat urd ay eve n 1n g Sh i p 10 30 am
We d nesday
se rv 1c e. 7 p m Sun d ay sch ool serv+Ce. 7 p m
10 am
Sund ay even 1ng
RAC I NE FIRST BAPTI ST
-Wa ll er P B rk acsan p asto r
w o rS h i P , 7 p m
MEIGS
Ron nt e Salser. Sund ay sch oo l
COOPERATIVE
supr
Su nday scho ol
9 30
PAR I SH
a rn m o rn m g w or sh tp 10 .10
THE UNITED
Sund ay evenrn g w ors htp , 7 30 .
METHODIST CHURCH
We dn es d ay eve nrng B 1b l e
Rob e rt T Bumg a rn er
study , 7 30
Dtr ector
DANVILLE WESLEYAN POMEROY CLUSTER
Rev l el on G l asure pasto r
R e v CartE H 1ck s.
Sunday Sc hoo L 9 JO a m ,
R e v D Wm Syd enslrtcke .you th and 1un1or y o uth se r
CHE STER W or Sh i p 9 15 VICe
6 45 P m
eve n 1ng
am , Chu rch Sc h ool 10 am
w o rShi p , 7 JO P m
prayer
ENTERPRtSE Wo r Shi p
and p r a1se. Wed n esday, 7 30
9a m
Chur ch School 10 a m
P m
FLATWOODS W orsh 1p ,
SILVER
RUN
FREE
11 am
Chu rch Sc h ool
10 BAPTIST - Rev Ral p h D ea n ,
a m
pa s to r
Sund ay Sc h oo l
10
POMEROY wo r sh 1p , am
Le on M t ller. su p t
10 30 a m
Chu r c h Sc h oo l 9 15 Eve ntn g se r v tce 7 30 p m
am , UM YF 6 30 p m
P ra yer m ee tm g, Th u r sd ay
ROCK SPRINGS - Wo rsh1 p 7 30 P m
l Oam
Ch ur c h Sch oo l 9a m
CHE S TER CHURCH OF
UMYF 6 30 p m
GOO R ev
Dan Aye r s,
MIDDLEPORT CLU STER
p as t or
Sund ay sc h oo l
9 30
R ev Rob ert Bumgarner
a m
w o r s h1p se r v 1ce, 11
HEATH Worsh 1p 10 30 a m , evenm g se r v tce 7 30
am
Chu rch Sch o ol 9 30 y ou th se r v1ce We dn es da y,
am
UMYF7pm
730pm
RUTLAND - Wor sh 1p 9 15
lAN G SVILLE CHRISTIAN
am
Ch ur c h Sc h oo l 10 a m
CHURCH
Ted
Jo n es
u My F 7 p m
p as to r
Sunday sc h oo l
9 30
SALEM
CENTER
a m
Roy S1 gm a n
supt
W or sh 1p 9 am , Church morn rng
wo r shi p .
10 30
Sund ay eve n1ng se r v1ce, 7 30
Sc h ool 10 am , U MYF T h ur s
d ay 7 p m
m 1d week
se r v 1ce
We d
SYRACUSE C LUSTER
n esd ay 7 JO P m
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF
R e v. R IC hard E Jarvt s
A SBURY Wo r sh 1p
11 THE
NAZARENE -Rev
am
Chu r c h Sc h o ol 9 s o H owa rd C B la ck, p a st o r B ob
am, WSCS. 1st T u esday
Moo re Sund a y Sc h oo l Su pt
~OR E ST RUN - wo r s h 1p 9 Sund ay Sc h oo l c l asses fo r a ll
am
Chu rch School 10 am
ages
9 30 am . morn 1ng
WSCS. 3rd Wed n es d ay 7 30 wo r sh1p 10 45 N Y P S Sund ay
p m
6 30 p m
eva n gei 1Sf 1c se r
MINERSVIlLE - W Or Ship VI Ce Sunday , 7 30 p m M1 d
lOam, Chu r c h School 9 a m
w e e k p ray e r mee tmg , Wed
WSCS 3rd Mo n day , 7 30 p m
n esd ay 7 30 p m
M tss ton ar y
Churc h m ee t i n g, sec on d We dn esd ay
SYRACU SE Sch oo l
9 30 am
wors h 1p 7 30 P m
se r v 1ce 7 30 p m
UNITED
FAITH
NON
SOUTHERN ClUSTER
DENOMINATIONAL Rev
R e v Ste v en Wtl son
R o bert Sm tt h pas t or Sund ay
R ev Howard Sh 1ve te y
sc ho ol, 9 30 a m
class
BET H A N Y
( D orcas)
l e ad er , Leo H1 l l
wo r s h 1p
Worsh1 p , 9 30 a m , ch u rc h se r v 1ce, 10 30 a m , chu r c h
schoo l 10 30 9 r'n
7 30 P m
C ARMEL - Wors hi P I 0 1S
ED E N
UNITED
am e v er y Sun d ay
ch urc h BRETHREN IN CHUR I ST sch oo l 10 3.Q_ am
Eld en
R
B l ake, pas t or
J APPLE GROVE Sun day Sunda y
Sc h oo l
10 a m
Sc hoo l 9 30 a m, w o r sh 1 p, Ho wa r d
McCoy,
s upt
frr st and th 1rd Sundays, 7 30 M o rnt n g ser m on, ll am ,
Su nd ay
n1g h t
se r vtces
p m
p rayer
mee t tng , C h rtS I 1a n
E nde a vor
7 JO
We dnes day ,
7 30
p m
Fellows h iP
s up pe r ,
t 1rs l P m
Song se rv 1ce, 8 p m ,
Sa t urday , 6 p m
u M
Preac hmg 8 30 p m
M1 d
sec on d T uesd a y 7 30 p m
Wee k
P ra y er
mee t1 n g ,
EA ST LETART _ Sunday We d nes da y, 7 p m , Ray
schoo l. 9 30 a m
w o r Shi p , A d am s l a y l ea d er
sec on d an d fo ur th s un da ys,
CHURCH
OF
J E SUS
730 p m
pr ayer meetmg , CHRIST
Loc at e d
at
Wednes d ay ,
7 30
P m
R u t l an d on N ew Ltma Roa d ,
U M W f 1r s t Wed n esday 7 30 n ext to Fores t Ac r e P a r k
Rev
Ra y R o use, pa stor ,
p m
WESL E YAN (Racm e J
Ro b ertMusse r ,S und aySc hool
Sunday sc h oo l
10 a m
, s upt
Sund ay sc h oo l. 10 30
worsh 1p , 11 a m
Bible stu dy, a m
wor s hiP 7 30 p m B tb le
Thursday
7 p m..
chorr s t udy Wed n es d ay 7 30 p m
Sa t ur d ay n tg ht pr ayer se r
p r actrce. Th u r sday. 8 p m
re 11 owsh1p
sup p er
f trst VICe 7 30 P m
.
Wednesday . 6 JO
pm ,
H E MLOCK
GROVE
u M w fourth Mon d ay , 8 P m
C HRISTIAN - Roger Watso n ,
G REAT BEND _ Wo r Sh i p p asto r
Ray Wha l ey, su p! ,
11 am 2n d and &lt;l lh Sundays, Morn1ng worsh 1p 9 30 am
Church School , I O am
Church scho? l · 10 30 am
L E TA R T F AL LS .,... Wo r
young peop l es mee lt ng , 6 JO
sh1p 10 am , Chu r ch school , 9 P m
even mg wo r Sh ip , 7 30
am , Brble study, 7 30 p m
P m B1b l e Stud y, We dnesday,
every Tuesday
! 30 P m

w

MORNING ST AR -

WO" • ~ T

UNION

BAPTI ST -

Shrp 9 30 am
Church Schoo l Rev
Cec11
Cox,
pastor
10 30ci' m
M1d Wee"- Se rvrce . Sun day School supl , Joe
Wednesday a p m
Sayre . Sunday school , 9 4S
M OR S.E
C H A P EL
am
Su nday evcnmg w or
'-1/or '&gt; l l p 1 1 ,, 11 1
fst and 3rd Sh1p , 7 30 Wetln~sday prayer
' ' unda '{ S Churrh ~C hoO L 10 and 61ble study . 7 '- 30 p m

'

I

TUPI'ERS
PLA IN S
C H URC H
t HRISl i AN
p.1 ~.r or
l U{I f'nt \Jnll (' rwood
H ow •• rc.J c ,, lc.Jwcll J
' u n d.1y
'c. h oo l 'u p I
'u rrdLJy Sc h oo l
•i ll\ d ro 1
Mo rn 1n Q Serrnon
10 ~IJ ,1 II'
' und.ly e ven1ng
'I rv1 c1 1 n 111
LE T ART FALLS UN I TED
PUET H J.l[N
R t;v
1 r • 1 lrlrr d Norr1'!&gt;
pa!&gt;lo r
t loy cl f'lorr s c. upl
'l unday
!&gt;t hool
9 30 am
morn1nq
~cr mon
10 30 am
Prayer
se rv 1C€' Wed n es day . 7 30 p m
C H ES HI RE CH URC H OF
GOO OF PROP H ECY - G P
'&gt; n1 1l h pa s lor Sunday School
10 &lt;l m
A rthur H enso n
'l u pl
Mcrn+ng Wors.h 1p
II
~l n1
You nQ P eo pl e s se r&gt;.·1 ce
7 p m
E ven+ng scrv 1ce 7 30
p rn
W edne-sday M1d Week
PrayP r &lt;., uv 1c e
7 30 p m
Yo uth m ct: l1n g
6 30 p m
Evcn1ng worsh 1p
7 30 p m
C H ES T ER C H URC H OF
T H E N AZARE N E R(&gt;v
Herbert
G r ate
pastor
WorShip SNVtCe I I a m and
7 30 p m
Sun day
Sunday
Sc hool
9 JO a m
R 1ChMd
Ba rton supt Prayer meellng
W e dne sday 7 30 p m
BRA D F O R D C HU RC H OF
C H R I ST Clifford Sm1th
mm1 s l er Sunday School 9 30
a m
mo r n 1ng church 10 30
am
Sunday even1ng serv •cl'
l JO p m Wedn esda y serv •ce
!I P m

L A U RE L C LI FF FREE
MET H O DI ST - R e v Floyd~
~ h ook
pas t or L loyd Wr1gh t
•, unday sc hoo l sup t Sunday
sc hoo l 9 JO a m
Mornrng
wor Ship 10 30 am
even1ng
"'ors h 1p
7 30 p m
Wed
ne!&gt;day ,
Chrtst1an
Youth
Cr u sa de
6 30 p m
Cho1r
prac t 1ce Thu r s da y 7 p m
D EXTER
C HU RC H
0~
CH R I ST Ct1ar 1es Ru sse ll
~r
mrn1st er Norman C W dl
supl
Sunday school
9 30
wor shtp se r vtce 10 30
a 111
am
B1ble study T ue sday
7 30 p m
R E OR GA NI ZE D C HU RC H
OF
JES U S C HRI ST
OF
L AT T ER DA Y SA INT S Po r tland
Racr n e Road
W1ll 1am Ro u sh pastor Den ny
Ev a ns
Su nday
Sc hoo l
D 1re c t or Sunday Sc hool . 9 30
a m
Mo r n mg wor sh rp 10 JO
am
Sunday even1 n g se r v1ce
7 p rn
We dnesday even 1ng
prayer se r v 1ce s, l 30 p m

or---..-....- ...
1 '

•••
•••
••

WE'LL GO TO TMETOP
rr TAKES ALL NICiHT! I

•

Mu n usod to l"'in k tha t h 1s b rai n , his
c!eve1 ness hi!&gt; fr~gh t en m g weapons
made h1m a cinch for su rvtva l Naw w e
trt!k st"rmu sly about mans h ope of

••

•
'

CAPl'AIN EASY

No wonde r the dmosa ur has become
fascma lmg Poor fe llow - so big and
powl•rfu l and uxtm c t Surely tf h e 'd ha d
ouc lnte l iT~fmc.e and our nuclear w ar -

Sunday
• Mntlht&gt;w
15 2l-2H

pil e he d

have

mac..l e

111

ce rtamty - maybe tl I Hkes so mething
c!sc 1
Come to church and you II be ru bbmg
shu u ldflrs w ith peop le who ore sure II

Tuesday
• Psa lm s
27 .J 5

dol's For thP.m
t h e srz.e o f the

m;wkmd
l

rea lure

9

OH, EA5Y! WHA T
DO YOU NI'ED
A TEMPTATI ON ... &amp;U T TO A? K . Lt55A
0 0 VOU REALL v
DEAR~ .. THE
WAN T TO'i
QU6STI ON 15 ..
DO VOU
WAN T
TO?

But there s al ways that gnawi n g un-

Mo n doy
• Luke
18 HJ- 14

' RUTLAN-D

CHUR~H

OF

CHR I ST
Rod
Kasler,
pastor V H Br aley Sund a y
school supt
Sunday sch oo l ,
w o rsh 1p serv 1ce
9 30 a m
and commun1 o n 10 30 am
yo u th meet rn g 6p m , Sund ay
evenrng se rv 1ce, 7
regu l a r
board mee t tng
th 1rd Satu r
d ay 7 p m
RUT L AND
COMMUNITY
C HURCH-S und ay
Sc h oo l
9 30 a m
Wo r shtp se r v 1ce, II
a m
Wedn easdy
pr ayer
mee t 1n g , 7 JO p m
Su n day
n 1ght worshr p , 7 30 p m
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
THE NAZARENE Re v
Llo yd D Grrmm J r , pa stor
Sun day sc hoo l
9 30 am
worS hip se r v1ce
10 30 a m
b r o a dcas t li ve ove r W MP O
yo ung peop l e's ser v rce. 6 45
evan gel tst1 c se r v 1ce 7 30 p m
Praye r mee t1ng Wed n esd ay ,
p m ,
Mrss1o n a r y
7 JO
meef1 n g
7 30 p m
f 1r s t
Wed n esd ay of m onth
MASON COUNTY
THE
HILAND CHAPEL
George Casto. p asto r Sund ay
Sc h ool
9 30 am , even m g
wo r Shi p ,
7 30
Thur s d a y
even1n g p r ayer se r v 1ce, 7 30

pm

MA SON f:IRST BAPTIST Secon d an d P o m ero y St s,
St an Crai'g, p asto r
Sund a y
sch ool , 9 &lt;l S a m
w orsh1 p
11 a m , trar n tn g
se r v1ce.
un ton
6 30 p m , eve n tn g
worsh 1p se rv tce
7 30 p m
M t d week pr aye r se r vtce,
Wedn esday , 7 30 p m
MASON
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST, P 0 Box 487, M ill e r
St
Mason , W
Va Sund ay
B1 b le St ud y 10 a m , W or sh1 p
11 am an d 7 p m B1b l e Stu dy
We d nesday 7 p m , Voca l
mUSIC
FIR S T
SOUTHERN
BAPTI ST - Co r n er of Seco n d
a n d A n derson M ason Pa sto r ,
Wa lt er Cloud Su n day sch oo l.
9 45 am , wo r Shi P servrce. II
a m an d 7 30 p m
Week i y
Or b le stu d y, Wed n esd a y , 7 JO

pm
MASON ASSEMBLY OF

GOD, O ud d tng L a n e , Mason ,
V a , C he s t er T ennant,
W
Pasto r
Sunda y Sc h ool 9 45
a m , Childr e n 's Chur c h 6 45
p m , Young P eop l e's Ser v tce
6 45
p m
Evange l 1s t rc
Se r v1ce 7 JO p m , W om en 's
M ISSI Onar y C oun c il 10 am
f 1r s t and th tr d T u es d ays
P r ayer a nd Bt bl e Stu d y,
We d nesd a y , 7 30 p m
HARTFORD CHV~CH OF
CHRIST m Chr1 st ran U n10n T he R ev Wlll tam Campbe lL ,
pasto r
Sunda y School. 9 30
a m
James Hughes, su p! ,
even1ng servrce, 7 JO p m
Wednesd a y evenmg pr a yer
meef1 n g
7 30 p m
Y OU\ h
prayer serv tcc eac h T u es d aY
FAIRVIEW
BIBLE
C HURCH , Le t art, W V a 1 Rt
1 Rev
George H os cha r.
pastor
Sunday Sch ool 9 ~o
am Prayer and Brb l e s t udy
7 JO p m
Co ll age Pr ayer
Servrce Tueosday , 10 am
Worsti1p ~ervTCe
Thu r Sd ay.
7 JO p n1

nov nced 33

Movie " The Heroes of T elemark" 10

OHMJ60SH! J ·J· J UST I!Y
Sf6Nilol6 OUR NAME5 TO
THIS PIECE OF PAPER:,
WE &amp;ECOME LEGALLY-

YOU KNOW I DO! MORE THAN
ANYTHING ELS E IN TH ~ WORLD. ..

l0'1JO'i-ABC News CfOS!M)R ;t31 News 20!' Pauf
,}&gt;1 J \~0
· . N'uchl ms 33
.,
YO
"-.. 10 .3()-To Be Announ ced IS
11 oo-News 3.4,6,8, 10.13,15; AB C News 33
11 ·3()-Johnny Carson 3.4. 151 Wfde Wor ld Special 13;
Sa m m y and Compa ny 6: Mov ie " Duef Qf the
Titans" 8. Movie " Graveyard of Horror"

BE TTE~

...

OD-Movfe " The Underground Ma n" 3,4, The Cities
Un cfe Sa m . Can You Spare a Dime 20; To Be An

SATURDAY, AUGUST 16, 1975
6 oo-Summer Semester 10

WIN AT BRIDGE

T RY

TO THINK THI, OUT
RATION A LLY!

Rule of 11 favors East more
; . . . - - - - - - - - - - - T b e en mchned to play dummy's
NORTH
15 mne raUter tha n Ule Jack
• J 92
After this decision, East sees
Ulat 1! Soo th 's other spade IS the
• KQ 5
• A J 85
k1ng there IS a way to hold
. 10 9 2
SouUt to JU St one spade tnck
WEST
E AST
Then East plays hi s e1ght o!
• Q B6 1
• A 7 53
spa des. not Ute queen
• J92
• 10 7 6 3
Alter this play Ute !allure o!
2
.K6
both mmor sui I I messes IS gomg
• 6; 4 3
"" K 8
1o leave Sooth just one tnck
SOUTH (D)
short o! the mne he needs to
• K 10
score ga me and r ubber
• Aa4

s hope Is n ot In
b u t m h1 s

soul

Wndne sda y
• Hl:brcws
12 .3 6

.14

Th ursday
• Ptullppwn s

1\llS IS lt£

2 J2-13

~I FTH

I'M "tAD IT'S

Dl..~

lHIS W~l" f&lt;
THAT I'Ve HAD

Fnday
• lercmtah
23 23 24

b

f.RfDA'I

•Ql09 3
.A QJ 7

Pl!t-JfSH

A reader !rom Mame wants
to know why South has all Ute
fun o! playmg Ute hands wh1le
West
Nor th East
South
all North can do 1s to sit a nd
watch h1m o perate He wa nts to
I NT
know
If this Isn' t rank dis3
N
T
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
crimmatwn agamst the Nor th
The a nswe r IS t hat !rom the
Openmg lead - 3 •
time bndge columns f1rst ca me
8- 15'
M Jlo US Po!
1 - - - - - - - - - - - J imto bemg Utere was a tacit un·
derstandmg tha t m order to
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
make things easy or as easy as
South apphes the rule of 11 possible for the readers the
THE MAN!
and sees that East will hold bottom ha nd would be' th e
YES · HE'S BEEN
four cards higher than the .three declarer He was called "Z" 50
AI!OUHD- HE ADAPTS
6E
of spades II one of those IS the yea rs a go, North was ca fled
1
HIMSELF TO Tl ME
AND PLACE - HE
~ · queen , SouUt wants to get Ea~t " Y " a nd the defense was hand!·
K NOWS AlL THE
SAID to play It So he plays dummy s ed by " A " and " B "
AH6 L'E S - NO ROUGH
11- )ack of hea r ts
EPG,ES TO AM - 11ES
II East has a lso been applymg
SI0001H "'-"'BER·
Ute rule of 11 he knows that (Do yo u have a quas11on lor
SouUt has exactly two spades the Jacobys? Wrr te "Ask the
andlllatbothare higherthanJ acobys ' ca r e o f Jh1 s
the three spot II East 1s rea fly ne wspape r The mos l tn ·
on his toes he Will come to the Jeres tmg ques 11on s Wi ll be
conclusiOn Utat one of those two used 1n th1s co l u mn an d
spade s I S the 10 sp o t wrrlers wrll rece rv e cop1es of
OUterwise. South would have JACO B Y M ODERN)

• R oma n ~

14 7-10

()1'1

UTI1.E ORPHAN ANNIE

ITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-DO CLO THE I
VES ·

AM

CE~TAlNl'f

tS A F1HE

UPSTANOINi':,
FIGURE OF
A MAN -

Copyrig ht 1975 Keister Adver! lslnQ SerYICEI Inc

S&lt;:: r1p!llres U ol ec!ed

$I r asbu rg Vlrg1nla

b)' The Amerlc•n Bll:tT• Soc lel}

With the hope it will, in some measure. foster and help sustain that
which is good in family and community life, this feature is sponsored by
' the business firms and organizations whose names appear below.
FRESH PRODUCE &amp; PLANTS
2 Conven1ent Locat1ons

MIDWAY MARKET Pomeroy Ph.992 ·2582
BOB'S MARKET Mason, Ph. 773-5721

Pomeroy

the

Lou1s W. Osborne

Ph . 992 -3486

220 I' Matn

Pomeroy

Pomeroy

Ph . 992-2178

corner 1

.

BETSY ROSS BAKERY

K ee psake Diamond Rmg s

Bakers of Gay 90 Bread
M1ddfeport
Ph . 992-3030

Ph . 992-3785

RUTH'S MARKET

Middleport , Oh10

..

.
MEIGS TIRE CENTER

RACINE PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

700 E Main

FOR
~

S LINKY
WEt\'SE:L e

~

1\¥, SURE: HE WOULDN'T'
BEGRUDGE ME A
MCRSEL OF HIS
C HICKEN

Pomeroy

Ph . 949-5961

Third St .

McCLURE'S DAIRY ISLE

RACINE FOOD MARKET

F 1ne Food &amp; Service

Middleport

SL

Racine

Olal992 ·5248

Yesterday 's Answer
IS Steed
18 Steed
19 Ultimate
21 Winme's
actress
da ughter
22 California
c1ty
23 Took
wmg

ROSEBERRY'S SERVICE STATION

Sales-Quasar-Service

Ph. 949-9591

Ractne

Ph. 949-3151

1

28 Role
29 Done m
31 Say " no"
to
33 loma n gulf
35 Prm ce of
Ule com1cs,
for short
36 AbJec t
fear

"The Friendly Folks"
Pomeroy , Ohio .

D1af 992-3284

111 Court 51 .

M&amp;R SHOPPING CENTER
IGA FOODUNER

Pomeroy, Ohio

Middleport, OhiO

ARIES (March 21 -Aprff 19) A
SOCIBI IOIJIIBIIOO l ur ns OUt t o be
nror e fu n th an you an tt crpated
Yo u ' ll h ave good v1 b es w rt h
someo n e yo u meet unex·
pec te d ly

TAURUS (Aprff 20-May 20) It's

how to work It:

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

.

KINGSBURY HOME SALES
&amp; SERVICE, INC.
The Finest in Mobife Homes
1100 E Main
Pomeroy
Ph. 992-7034

Pomeroy

p ressed w1th your wa rmth a s a
host or hoste ss

sto r ybook day, w tth lot s o f ,
fr1en d s by you r stde, goo d
conversatton 1nterest mg d iverSIOns and even a surpr~se en~

IPT OTU

E L T IO Y . -QEV D J

CANCER (J..,. 21-July 22)

LEO (Jufy 23-Aug. 22) Be
pre pared for m a ny u nex p e cted
d ro p -I n s or te lepho ne calls to d ay It w on I upset yo u Eac h
w 111a lter som et hmg mte r estmg

EJJDUU
Som ethmg exp e n s1ve yo u ' ve
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: THE ONLY LIMIT TO OUR wa nted for your h o m e can be
, RE:ALIZATION OF TOMORROW WILL BE OUR DOUBTS OF obt a 1ned tod ay T he means ar e
surpns1ngly ava tlatlle
- - TODAY.- F. D. ROOSEVELT '
(@ 1975 Kin&amp; Featwes Syndta llte,lne.)
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) An

LOOK AT TATER
I

Ph. 992-3863

GAUL'S MARKET
'

U AO

CLIMB, PAW !!
HE CAN SHfNNV UP
A TREE QUfCKER'N A
FOX SQUIRREL

THIG D06
NEEDS'rtl £IE
FATTENED UP!

fF IT'S ALL Rf6HT WITH ~OU,

CHARLIE !!ROLIN, I'll TAKE
HIM HOME, AND DO J(}5T

21) You ' ll be m eet1ng so m eone
new who w 1ll h ave It In thei r
p o w e r to o p e n a whole new
soci al world for you Much
h a p pmess lies ahead

GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) A

~$:;j

THE ATHENS COUNTY SAVINGS
&amp; LOAN CO.
29{&gt; W. Second

U A D RTELZ

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec.

tai n at home All will be Im -

You re go1ng to be happ y today
over a new acqu1stt1on you ve
wanted fo r a lo ng time It w1 !1
also surpn se and please the
fam1IY

E

Recog nitton and rewards fo r a
10 b well d o n e com e your way
tod a y
Inw a rdly , yo u II be
b u r sting w ith pnd e

endeavor

apostrophes, the length and fo rmatio n o( th e wo rds a r e all

ET H

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)

11) An excellent day to enter-

dmg

CRYPTOQUOTES

e n joyabl e d ay w 1th frie nds
e n gaged m yo ur kind of int eres t s
Y our l e ad e rsh i p
qu a11t1es are so outstanding
they' ll even ama ze YOU I

not JUSt your lmag lnat ton Th1s
JS o ne of th ose tr uly g reat days
w he n th 1n gs go n g ht m any

One letter stmply stands for anothe r In t h 1s sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the tw o O's, et c S m gle letters

VE L

•'

3 3Q-Movle " The Young and the Brave" 10
4 oo-Movle " War Hunt" 4

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22)

Me1gs County Branch

Middleport, Ohio

10 oo-Lawrence We lk 15, Dick Cavell 10, Handfuls of
Ashes 33
10 3()-Monty Phylhon's Fiyl~g Ci rcus 33.
11 OQ-AB C News 6, Ne ws 10.1 3. Don Kirshner's Rock
Concert 15: Janak! 33
11 1s-Mov fe 6,
11 31}- News 3.4; Movfe " The Ye llow Rolfs- Royce" 10,
Movfe "The Leech Woman" 13
12 oo-Movle "McHale 's Navy Jofns the Air Force" 3;
Mov1e " The Pfnk Panther 4, News 8

For S•turday, Aug. 18, 1975

VELLD U

.

RALL'S BEN FRANKUN STORE

8 oo-Emergency ! 3,4, Night Stalker 6,13, Afl fn The
Fa mily 8, JO; Philade lph ia Fof k Festival 33
a 31}-PIIol a 10
9 oo-"The Ma nchuri an Candidate" 3,4; S.W A. T
6.13. NF L Football a, Mary Tyfer Moore 10, No Honestl y 33
9 3()-Bob Newhart 10

1 3Q-Movle " The Brothers Karamazov" 10

U AE U

THE DAILY SENTINEL

oo- fl Takes A Thfef 4; Today Is Ours B,10, Speaking
Wffh Your Hands 15; Commanders 33.
3()-Car and Track 3; Souf Tra in 6, Other Peopfe,
Ofher Pfakes 13, To Be Announced 15.
2 ro-Basebaff Warm.Up 3,4,15; Vlewpo lnf 8; Death
Va lfey Da ys 10 ; Bil l Da nce Outdoors 13. Film 33 .
2 1s-Basebafl 3,4,15
2 3()-Fisherman 6: Motorcyc le Class ic 8; Death
Valley Days 10; Movfe "One Eyed J acks" 13.
Val iant Years 33
3 oo-Mfn fafure Goff 6. Ebony Affair 8, 1975 Summernall onafs 10; Famlfy At War 33
3 3()-Celebrlly Tenn is a
4 OQ-Wild Wffd Wesf 6, To Be Announced 8. Car and
Track 10. Women's Pro Tennis 13. Making Thfngs
Grow 33
4 31}-Goll 8,10, Let's Grow A Garden 33
5 oo-Bonanza J; Wfde Worfd of Sports 6, 13 ; Bonanza
4, Wreslflng 15. The Romagnolls' Tabfe 33
5 31}-To Be Announced 33
6 oo- News 3,4,10 . Lawr ence Wefk 8, God Has The
An swer 15. Catch ·33 33
6 3()-NB C News 3,4, 15 . ABAC News 13, News 6, CBS
Ne ws 10. Lilias. Yoga and You 33.

Bem1ce Bede Osol

V APMZ

Middleport .

11 oo- Pfnk Panth er 3,4,15, Super Friends 6,131 Va lfey
of the Dinosaurs 8, 10 . Sesame Street 20.
11 Jsi}-S tar Trek 3,4, 15; Hudson Brothers Razzle 8,10.
12 oo-J etsons 3,4, 15. These Are Th e Days 6,1 3;
Ha rlem Globetrotters Popcorn Mac hine B,10;
Mlsler Rogers 20
12 31}-Soul Trai n 3. American Ba ndstand 6.13, Go 15,
Fa t Al bert a,10.

Graph

- --1

GOEGLEIN READY MIX

Mls1er

R o g e r s 20

Astra-

is

Shazsam 1 8,10,

2 oo-Movle "X · 15" 4

hmts. Each day the code letl ers are d1ffere nt

POWELL'S SUPER VALU

6, 13,

12 JI}-Movle "Behold a Pale Horse" a

26 Rooter 's
word
27 By - of
28 C1ty Colum
bus sailed
from
30 Greek
resiStance
group
31 " Zlp-adEH!()- - "
32 Endmg for 1
form or
"'
spat
34 Dutch
penny
36 Seaweed
extra ct

SHE'S S UPER t
WE:NDY ... REALLY
5U PER f

Ran ger s

1 oo-Oon Kirshner's Roc k 6 , Mov ie '' The Raven " 13.

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

'RAY'S T.V. &amp; HOME
ENTERTAINMENT tENTER
Rae me

The Store w1lh A Heart
Ph. 949-3342

10 ro- La nd of the Lost 3,4, 15; Devfln 13: Jab·
berwocky 6, Scooby Doo. Whe re Are You• 8,10,
E feclrlc Company 20.
10 J()-Sfgmund a nd the Sea Monsters 3.4.15 ; Lassie's

10; Newsm aker ' 75 13
7 3()-Jeopardy 3. An imal World 10; Secret Agent
ppulh 13

,.,+-+-

Diaf 992 2101

D ealer

1

6.8. Baseball 15; F iring Line 33 . S25,000 Pyram id

25

'2.'2-_

Favorite M a rt i ans 8; P loeve 10

a JI}-Whee ife a nd fhe Chopper Bunch 3,• .15. Bugs
tlunny 6,13. ~peed Bugg y a: Mf sler Rogers' Nefgh·
bor hood 20
9 oo-Emergency Plus 4 3.•. 15, Hong Kong Phooey
6,13 . J eannie 8.1 0. Sesame Street 20 .
9 3()-Run, J oe. Run 3,4, 15, Adventures of Glflfgan 13 ;
Bfg Blue Marbf e6 Pebbles a nd Bamm Ba mm B,10

7·oo-Tr easure Hun1 3, Lawrence Welk 4, Hee Haw

COOKIN '
AIN'T SO
MD, AFTER
"&lt;LL!

MARK V STORE

( Formerly Sad1e 's M arket)
Syracu se
Ph. 992·3986

Locu~t

commq 1
door. NBC 1s out
fron-b and CBS JS
turnmq
tS

SEAR'S CATALOG MERCHANT

BLUE &amp; GRAY RESTAURANT

"Hell "

GASOLINE ALLEY

W e FIll All Doctors Prescriptions

992-295S

Ph . 992 -SlJO

211 E Mam Sf , Pomeroy

Middleport, 0 .
Gaffipohs, 0 .

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE PHARMACY

Pomeroy

K&amp;C JEWELERS·

7

Two Locations

S9 N Second 51
46 Court 51

P 1 Mt;BBE
MDUY 'S

by THOMAS JOSEPH
HIM
ACROSS
37 Occupant
I Scoff
38 Iota
5 The Tm
39 Smgulariy
Man por40 Sic ily' s
trayer
volcano
10 On a voyage
DOWN
ll Actress
l Bad cut
Dorothy
2 Cay or holm
12 Strip of
3
Rememberwood
mg
(3 wds. )
13 Hebrew
4 Gobble
prophet
5 Stop
L--"'-""'-"'"":''-"=""-'='-' 14 " Leave to Heaven" 6 - MacGra w
7 E ngrossed
15 Run 's
( 3 wds.)
How much
partner
8
He1ghten
16 Gob
do we have
9
Longed ( fo r )
l7 Indonesian
in the
II Israeli
Island
baq ,
states19 Twam
JaLl,
woman
character
babL.j?
20 And not
21 Subsequently
22 Sorcerer
24 - up
'THAT 141T

ANY'J'!.IING, ALLEY.'

DUDLEY'S

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE
SERVICES

100 E Main

YOUR 8fSCUIT

Ga:lD FOR MUCH OF

Huntmgton, W. Va .

Gro cenes &amp; General M er chandi se
Ph. 949 5772
Racine

----

WASTf.\AT

MOLLY'S 815CUI'IS ARE

Bakers of Good Bread

WAID CROSS SONS STORE

107 Sycamore St.

I DON'T 'THINK SWEET

HEINER'S BAKERY

6·31}-TV FC fassroom B; Treehouse Cfub 10, Alma nac
13
7 oo-saturday Report 3. Fun For Everyone 6.
Tr eehouse Cfub a. U S Fa rm Reporf 10. Kentucky
Afle fd 13
7 )()-J a bberwock y 3. Fa rm Front 4, Eddfe Saunders
6, Abbott and Coste ffo a. Man From C. 0 S.f. 10.
Korg · 70,000 B C 13, Sesame Street 20
a ®-Addam s F'a m lf y 3,4,15; Yogi ' s Gang 6.13, My

Rescue

North -Sou th vulnera ble

'/Ol}l

Sat urday

101

Ja nak! 33
1·oo-M idnfght Specfa f 3,4,1 5. Wfde Worf • Speclaf 6;
Movie "The 4D Ma n" 10; News 13.
2·30-Siar Trek 4
J 30-Movle "Toys In the Allie" •
5 3G-Movle "The Re lentless Four" ~

&amp; &amp;BUT Fi RST WEe .,.
WE'D

__,.

9 30-Movfe " The Bfue Knight" B.

F.RfDAY, AUGUST 15, 1975
7:oo-Truth or Consequences 3,4, e owffng lor Doffars
6; WCHS-T TV Repor t B; Avfallon Weather 20,33,
News 10; Jfmmy Dean 13, Phil Donahue 15
1 3()-Por ter Wagoner 3. Pop ! Goes the Countr y 4, B.
New Candfd Ca mera 6, Even fng Edlfl on wflh
Mar lf n Agronsky 20; Treasure Hunt 10, To Te fl The
Truth 13: Bfa ck Perspective on the News 33
B oo-Sanford and Son 3; Movfe " Bor n Free" 6, 13 .
Probe 4: Basebafl 15, Movfe " The Game s" 8.
Washington Week In Review 20,33; Cha nne l 10
Reports 10.
8 30-Chlco and the Man 3,4; Wa ff Street Week 20.33.

BETHL E HEM BAP TIST -

Rev
Ear l Shule r
pas t or
WorShip serv1ce , 9 JO am
Sun d ay school
10 30 am
B1ble
st u dy
and
p r ayer
serv rc U h u r sday, 7 30 p m
CA RLETON CHURCH K 1ngsbur y Road Gary K 1ng,
pas tor Sun day schoo l
9 30
am
eve n 1ng worsh 1p , 7 JO
p m
Prayer mee t 1n g
Wed
nesday 7 30 p m
LONG
BOTTOM
C HRI STIAN Mr
Ro b er t
Wya ll pastor Su nday Schoo l
su p t , Rona l d Osbor n e B ib le
Sc hool 9 30 a m
p r each 1ng
10 AS am
Even m g serv1ces,
7 30 o m
HYS E LL
RUN
FREE
ME THODI ST CHUR C H Rev
Pau l Nev tll e
p astor
Su nday Sc hool 9 30 a m ,
Mo rnr ng serv •ce 10 30 a m ,
vou l h serv 1ce. 6 AS p m
Eva n gelrst1c serv1ce 7 30 p m
Praye r meet1 n g
Thursday
7 30 p m
FREEDOM
GOSPEL
MISSION at Ba ld Kno b Rev
E J G r 1ff 1th supt o f ch urch
Rev
L
R
G l uesencamp
pas tor , Roge r W lll fred, Sr
Sunday Sch oo l sup! Sunday
schoo l 9 30 a m
prayer
meet1 n g Tuesday . 7 30 p m ,
you t h me-ell n g 6 p m Sunday ,
leaders A d a Va n Mete r an d
Gretta Sullie Sunday even1 n g
wors h 1p
7 p m
t h r ou gh
w1nter mo n ths
MT
HERMON
CHURCH
O F THE UNITED BRETH
REN IN C HRIST R o bert
Shook p as tor Sunday sc h ool
9 30 a m
Russe ll Spen cer
sup l
wo r sh1p servtee 10 45
a m
even •n g
w or sh 1p
a 11 e r na t1 ng w1th C E a t 7 30
p m
on Su nd ay
P rayer
meet1ng, 7 30 p m
Wed
nes.day
Al f red
Wo lf e, l ay
l eader
WHITE' S
CHAP E L
Coo t v d le
RD
Rev
Roy
Dee t er . p astor Sunday scho o l,
9 30 am
wo r sht p serv1ce,
10 30 am
B1b l e stu d y and
pr aye r se rv1 ce. Wed n es d ay,
7 30 p m
RUTLAND

!

•

~ urv t va l

'

! Television log for: easy viewing

•
••
No doubt the d inosaur t h ouu ht - l f
dmusHurs t houJ,l hl at all - tha t he w as
h1s,: cnou).lh powerful e nuuKh to surv ive
omythm).( But the dinosau r 1s extmc t

I

I

•--:o-----~---------_.,__,._.,._r~•-r-•~--·--·••--~-----_..__..,

.~PIKE ~ URE

LOOK$ 11-IIN,

DOE'3N'T HE ? I HoPE THIS
MAKEG 1(011 APP~ECfATE THE
600D LIFE '(OU'v'E HAD..

CAPRfCOIIN (Doo. 22-Jon.

AQUARIUS (JM . 20-Feb. 11)
Thts d ay 1s m a d e fo r y ou . sinc e
you ca n m ix wllh lo t s of new
pecmle One you meet will be
espec1aU y fo rt unate f or y ou

PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 20)
You are truly lu cky In rece1v lng
fav ors today O thers you've
helped w i ll s how you how
m u ch they care about yo u

~Your
·
WBirthday
Aug. 11, 1175
A n e xtre mely fortunat e year,
wt th muc h tra vel and a gllttertng SOCIBI whirl. B e prepared to
visit unusual places which pre-sent unexp ected o pportunities. ,

I NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN l

I WA'3

WONDERING

HOW

LON6 IT WOULD £IE~
50MEONE &lt;GAtD 'THAT...

Chester, Ohio

.

WILKINSON'S

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

Smaff Engine Safes &amp; se rvice
Ph. 992-3092
• 498 Locust St. M1ddfeporl
,.
.
'·
\

'

.

.

.
"

Nat ionwide Insura nce Co. of Columbus, 0 .
307 Spring Ave.
Pomeroy
Olaf 991-2318 ·.
' .

'

..

(

,

••

�, I

POM

L EVA N

P OMERO Y

RINIT Y

Rev
W H
Pernn pastor
Roy Mayer
Sunday school
supt
Chur c h school , 9 15
a m , worshtp serv ~ce 10 24
a rn
Youth cho• r re hea r sal
Mondiiy
3 30 p m
under
d trect ton Of Mary Sktnner
sen tor cho tr rehearsa l 7 30
p m Thursday wtth Mr s Paul
Nease d trector

P OM E ROY

CHURC H OF

TH E NA ZA R E NE Corn er
Unton and M u lber ry
Rf!v
Clyde V Henderson pa stor
Sunday school 9 30 am Glen

McCl u ng

s upt

RCH

-

morn tn g

wo r s h•P
se r vtce

10 30 am
e ven tn g
7 30
rn •d w ee k
servtce Wedne s day 7 30 p m
G RAC E E P ISC OP AL - The
Rev
Haro l d Deeth
re c tor
Church ser .... •ces 10 30 am
H o l y commu nton ft r s t Sunday
of month church school 10 JO
a m for nur sery t h r ough 11

POMERO Y CHUR CH OF

Harrtsonville
R c~o~
0 De ll
Manley Pastor H en ry Ebl1n
Sunday Sc hool Sup! Sunday
Schoo l 9 30 am
Evcn1ng
worShip! 30p m
Pray er and
Pra1seser\11 Ce Thursday 7 ]0

pm

S Y RACUSE
F IR S T
Rev
C HU RC H OF GO D George Oiler pas tor Sunday
sch Ool
9 JS a rn
morn1ng
preach1nq
II
am
evangCIIShc serv1ce 7 30 p m
Prayer meet1ng
Th ur sday
7 10 p m
PO M ER O Y
WESTS ID E
C HU RC H O F C HRI ST , 200 w
Ma 1n St
Jerry Paul
m 1rust e r
p hone 992 7666
C onservat 1 ve
non
1n strum en1 at
Sunday wor
sht p 10 am
B1ble s tudy 11
a m
wor shrp 6 p m Wed
nesday B1ble s t u dy 7 p m
MIDWAY
COMM U NI T Y
N on de
C HU RC H

CHRIST - T errel l G r ontnqer nom1n&lt;1t anal
l_ angsvlllc
pastor
B t b l e school
9 30 Ou(lcr
Road
Th e r on
a m
wor s htp
10 30 a m
Durh,lm
pas. t or
&lt;; unday
10 a m
evcn 1n q
a d ult worsh •P se rv tee and &lt;;rh ool
young peoples rneet1ng 7 30 worShip
1 30 p m
pr&lt;tyc r
P m
Co mb 1ned B1b l e s t udy !llC'L'II rlll lu es d &lt;ty J 30 p m
and praye r meet 1ng
W ed youth qrou p I r1day 7 30 p m
n esday 7 30 p m
F REE WI LL
R U TLA ND
THE SALV A TION AR MY BA PTI ST Roger Turn e r
Envoy Ray W Wm1ng off ce r pastor
Su nday school
10
am
Sunday even m g se r v ce
1n c har ge Su nday 10 a m
Hoi mess mee t 1ng 10 30 a rn
7 JO Wednesday B1b l e s t udy
Sunday
Sc hool
Young 7 JO p m
P e o p l e s Leg10n
7 p m
OLD
D EX T E R
BIBL E
Lad1es CH..R I ST IA N C HUR CH - Rev
T h ur sday 1 to 3 p m
H o m e L eague 7 p m
Pr ep Ron
r erry
pi'l s lo r
Su n day
sc hoo l 10 a m
M r s Wor l ey
c l asses
ST
PAUL
lU T H E RAN Francs
super1n l ende nt
CHURCH ,
Corne r
of Morn1 n g worshtp
II am
Sycamo r e an d Seco n d Sts, Sun day eve n 1ng se rviCe 7 30
P ome r oy The Rev W 1llt am
G RAHAM
UNIT E D
M1d dl eswar t h P asto r Sunday METHODI ST Preach1 n g
Sc h ool a t 9 45 a m
and 9 30 a m
f1r st and seco n d
Chu r ch Serv1ces 11 am
Sundays o f each month th1 rd
a n d f ourth Su ndays each
SACRED HEART Rev
F a t h er
P a ul
D
We lt o n
m on t h , wo r sh1 p servrce a t 7 30
Pho ne
99 2 2825
p m Wed n es d a y even in g s a t
p as tor
Sa t u r da y even 1n g Mass , 7 30
7 30 Prayer an d B ib le Stu d y
SEV E NTH DAY
AD
Sun da y M ass 8 an d 10 a m
Conf ess1 on
Sa tu rday
7 7 30 VENTIST , M ulber ry H e1gh ts
pm
Roa d
P ome r oy
Se t on , Sa b
POMEROY FIRST
BAP · Pas t or,Ge r ar d
TIST - Rob er t K uh n p a sto r
bat h Sc h oo l Supermten d ent
Will1a m
Wa t son ,
Sunday Rrta W h1t e Sabba th School
Satu rd ay af t ernoon a t 2 00 ,
sch oo l su p! Sund ay sc h oo l
9 30 a m
B YF,6 c m
B1 bi P w it h
w or s h 1p
se r v1ce
f o ll o wt ng a t 3 I S
Sf UCiy, Y~lo'diiE'.:. U dy, 7 0 m ,
F t RST
SOUTHERN
cho1r p r ac t 1ce, Wednes d ay
8 30 p m
BAPTIST 281 Mu lb erry

the sermonette
Do you believe that God 1s real' Most people believe there
is a God. What do you believe about God'
U a person thinks of God as Ute man upstairs or some mce
fellowwho.gives us everything we want, that person 's thmking
about God Is much too small. Because of this God will not have
an important place m his life. Instead he will give God a polite
nod from lime to tune, and then live as though God d1d not

exist. '
We need to see, as best as Ute hwnan mind can, the great ness of God . When we take God lightly churches are empty and
morals decay .
God is our creator . We did not make ourselves God ma de
us. God is holy. He does not take our sin and d~bed1ence
lightly.
does not laugh 11 off. God is love ' He became a man
.~ChristHeJesus
to die for our sin, to suffer our punishment. He
IS worthy of our highest thoughts and praiSe.
To take God seriously means to recognize the fact He 1s
God, that your life belongs to Him and to come to Him by
putting your faith and trust m Christ Jesus. It means to follow
His teachings and love Him in a greater way Ulan you love
neighbor or self.
The Lord your God is God of gods, and Lord of lords, a
great God .. . Deuteronomy 10:17. - Peter Granda! Mmister
First Baptist, Middleport .
'
'

Harrisonville
Society News
Mr. and Mrs. Theodore
Koenig and son Ted Jr. of
East liverpool, Ohio, visited
Ava Gilkey one p.m . this
week. Mrs. Koenig is the
former Lucy Laudaker and
the son Ted is a music
director at a sch ool w
Charleston .

..

visited Sunday by her son
James and wife of Lancaster.
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Borgan
and Mr . and Mrs. Michael
Borgan and Mr. and Mrs.
Alan Borgan and Mrs.
Rosella Birchfield and her
grandchildren.
Ray Allure attended his
sister-m-laws sister Barbara
Reed's wedding Saturday
night m Columbus, Ohio. He
went especially to see his 2
year old niece Robin Gibson
act as flower gu-1
Mr. and Mrs. Robt. Alkire
attended a western dance at
Marietta Saturday evening .
Vern Blizzard 89 years old
is hospitalized having his
pace-maker replaced with a 4
year old one in Denver Colo .
The Blizzards are expected
here Sept. 15.

Tiunara and Perry Clark of
Chester stayed overn ight
wiUt Ute Robert Clarks and
accompanied !bern to the
Athens County Fair.
Mr. and Mrs. Bailey of the
B&amp;K Construchon Co. have
purchased Ute former Dale
Williams home from Mr .
Mullen and moved in last
week.
Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Gilkey
The Almanac
In·
and son Joey Jay of By
United
Press
Co1wnbus, Ohio were dinner teruatlonal
guests of his mother, Ava
Today 1s Friday , Aug. 15,
Gilkey and while here they the 227th day of 1975 with 138
called on Mrs. Bernice Winn to follow .
and attended Ute 85Ut birThe moon 1s between its
lhday dinner of Ric hard first quarter and full phase .
Heilman.
The morning stars ar e
Harold Graham spent Mars, Jupiter and Saturn.
Saturday evenmg with Ava
The evenmg stars are MerGilkey.
cury and Venus.
Mr. and Mrs . Doug Bishop
Those born on this date are
and family vis1 ted Mrs. under the sign of Leo.
Bishops sister in Zanesville,
American novelist Edna
Ohio Sunday.
Ferber was born Aug . 15,
The Dalton sisters had a
1887
very successful yard sale in
()Jl this day in history:
Mrs. Minnie McGraUts yard ,
In 1914, an American sh1p
4 days Utls week.
passed from the Atlantic to
Mrs. &amp;le King also had a Ute Pac1flc Ocean, officially
yard sale.
opening the Panama Canal.
Mr . and Mrs. Darold
In 1935, American humorist
Graham and three children Will Rogers and pilot Wiley
spent the weekend with Post were killed when their
Bessie Graham and 'the Joe plane crashed m Alaska .
Carseys.
In 1971, President Nixon
Mr. and Mrs. F . 0 . Whaley ordered a 91klay wage-pricehave bought a new trailer and rent freeze and announced
placed it on a lot in Florida imposition of a 10 per cent
where they expect to spend 5 surcharge on foreign 1mmonths this wj111er.
.. ports.
Mr. and Ml!&amp;. Larry Clark • , In 1974, Greece announced
and children visited the Bob it would not go to war against
Clarka SIUiday. ,
Turkish troops a pparently
Mr.
Mrs. M. A. Epple
bent on seizing Nort!lern
spent the weekend in
Cyprus, becaus e of the
Zanesville and Dayton wiUt remoteness of the island and
their children,
1
the military advantage of the
MrS! lJellie &amp;;ian was Turks.
·•

and

Ave Pom eroy atllhat c d w.th .1 m
'• l1 C
t hC Rev
Bradh: y
P0HlLA N D
Wor .:,h 1p
pas t or
Troy I Ill 1J 111
Chor e '' Sc hool 9 :w
SpC'nc c r
Zwdltnrl ~u n day school supl
,1 n 1
~ S unda y
school , 9 JO '' rn
SUTTON
Worsh1p , 11
morn on q
wo r s h 1p
10 30
,, 111
&lt;· very · und.,y
c hurch
Sun&lt;lay cvanqc l \~11c m cct1 n q
'i (IIOOI 10 ,, 111
7 30 p m
P ray er mf'CT1ng
t-.ORT H EAST C LU ST t=.R
Wed n es d ay 7 30 p 111
f.l 1·v Robt· rl M.ccce
M ID D L E P ORT
Pa~ l or
MT M ORI A H BAPTIST Ocn n lsCrccqo.Cor n er Fourth and Ma 111
A &lt;,s octil f c M ltl l:!. l er
M •dd l e por' Rev Henry Key
Jr
pastor
Sunday School
JOPPA - Worst11p 10 a rn
9 J O am
Mr s
Erv 1n Chur c h &lt;;ch ool 9 am
Prayer
BaumtJMdn e r su p! Morn 1nq J\'l' c lm q Wednes day 8 p m
worShip 10 45 am
LO N G BOTTOM -- Ch urch
J E HOV A H 'S
WI T N ESSES scr v Cf'~
9
am
Sunday
- Larry Ca rnahan p r e-s 1d 1 ng
•C h ou l 9 J"&gt; a rn
P.tble &lt;:. 'udy
m1n• Ste-r
Sunday
Bible every Th ur sd ay 7 30 p 111
le c l ure
9 30 am
Walch
NORT H
BETHEL
to w er s tudy
10 30 am
Wor •:d l•P 11 am
Chur c h
Tuesday
B1ble s ludy
7 30 \c h oo l 10 J m
p m
Thurs day
mrn 1stry
ALFRED - r. unday sch ool
sch ool
7 JO p m
se rv 1ce 9 -1 5 a m
eac h
Sund a y
meetmg R 30 p m
pr c achmg at 11 am
each
MI D DL E P O RT
C HUR ':: H Su nd ay Prayer m cet1ng 7 &lt;1 5
OF C H R I ST IN C H R I STIAN P m
Wednesday
W SCS
A
UN IO N - La wren c e Manley
P m
on lh1rd Tuesde+y each
pa stor Mrs Russ e ll Young
m o nlh
Su nday School Su pt Sunday
REE D SVI LL E Su nday
School 9 30 am
Eve n 1ng sc hoo l 9 JO am
prea c h ng
worsh 1p
7 30
Wednesday 7 30 P m
Sunday
prayer
prayer mce l 1ng 7 30 p m
meet.ng 7 30 p m T u esday
MT M O RI A H CHUR CH O F W~C S
7 30 f 1rSf Thur sda y
GO O Racme Roule 2 th e eac h month
Rr&gt;v
James
M
Muncy
SI L V ER RID GE - W or Ship
pastor
Sun day sc hoo l 9 45 10 a m
Ch ur ch Sch oo l 9 a m
.1m
mornrng worsh 1p
11
T U PPE R S
P L A IN S
am
even 1ng wor sh 1p 7 30
Wor s ll 1p 9 am
Ch urch
Pray er rn ee ! 1ng
Tuesday
School 10 am
7 JO p m
Young people 's
KE N O
C HU RC H
OF
C H R 1ST - Geo r ge Freder 1c k
mee- tmg 7 JO p m Thu r sday
FIR S T sup!
Ser v 1ce w ee kly
9 30
M I D D LEPOR T
B AP TI ST - Corne r Sp: th and am on Sunday
Prl•a c hmg
Pa lme r
th e Rev
Cleo y
ftr s t a nd th 1rd Sundeys .J f
Boyd pastor Dan n y Thomp
month by Cl1 ffo r d Sm1th 9 30
SO i1
Sunday sc h oo l sup!
am
WMPO rad 1o prog r am
7 4s
HOB SON
C HRI S TIAN
a m
Sunday sc h oo l. 9 I S .UNION Darre ll Doddrill
am
morn 1ng worsh 1p , 10 15 pas. l or
Sunday School
9 30
a rn
You t h actrv 1t 1es and a m
Le onard G ilmo r e first
f e llowsh 1p for 1u n 1o r a n d e l der
even1ng se r v1 ce. 7 30
sen•o r h1gh st udents 6 p m
P m
Wedne sd ay
prayer
Su nd a y Eve n tng Worshrp at
m ee tmg 7 30 p m
M1d week prayer ser
M T MO R I A H C HUR CH OF
7 JO
v1ce
Wed n esday , 7 JO p rn
GO O Ra c m e Route 2 The
C HURCH
OF
C H R IST ,
Rev
Ch ar l es Hand pa s tor
Sun day school
Midd l ep o rt
5th an d Ma 1n
9 45 am
George
G l azem 1n 1 ster
morn 1ng worShiP
11
am
Ja mes
Sheets,
super 1n
Eve n mg serv1ces
Tuesday
te n dent
B t &amp;le school
9 JO and F r 1day 7 30 p m
am, m o r nm g worsh 1p 10 30
BEAR W A LLOW
R ID GE
am , even mg wo r Sh i p, 1 JO
C HUR C H O F C H R I ST - Doug
p r ayer se r v 1ce. 7 p m Wed
Se a man
m 1n t s. t e r
B1ble
nesday
, sludy
9 JO am
morn1 n g
MIDDL E PORT
Chur c h worsh i p 10 30 am
evenmg
Of
Th e
N a za r e n e wo r sh1p 8 p m
Wed n esday
Rev
Don Co l e
pas
n1qh t B1b l e study 8 p m
l or
Mrs
Mary
Lalhey,
MT
OliV E CHURCH Sunday Schoo l sup t Sunday
L ong Bo tt om Su nday Sc hoo l
schoo l 9 30 a m
morn m g
10 a m w1 t h Wr ll ard P1gott,
worshr p
11 am
Sunday
su p t
Evangei1S I 1c message
evangel1sttc mee t 1n g. 7 30
each Sun d ay even mg 7 30 by
p m
praye r
meet 1 n g ,
E l der Russell Clrne m1n1ster
of !he ApostoliC F a11h B1b l e
' Wed n esday, 7 30 p m
T H E
U N I T E D
Study We d nesday 7 JO p m
PR E SBYT E RI A N
MIN
S TIVERSVILLE
CO MIST R Y
OF
MEIG S M UNITY CHURCH - Sun day
COUNTY , Dw1ght L Zav i fZ.
School serv1ce,
10 am
Pastor D rrec to r
Prayer mee t mg Thu r sday 7
P m
Sun day even rng serv1ce
H A R R 1 S 0 NV I l l E
Sunday Ch ur c h Sch ool . 9 30
7 P m
am M r s H o m er Lee, Su p t
Z ION C HURCH OF C HRIST
Mo rn mg W o rs htp 10 JO
Pomeroy
H a r r tsonvrlle
MIDDLEPORT Sund ay
Road M1ke G1rton
pastor
Ch ur ch Sc h oo l , 9 30 am
St even Sta nl ey Sun day schoo l
supt
Su nday schoo l
9 30
J o h n F F u ltz Su pt , Mo r n tn g
Wo r sh rp 10 JO
a rn
mo r n 1ng w ors h1 p and
SYRA C USE Morn 1ng
commun10n
10 30
am
Wors h 1p , 9 a m , Sun d ay
Sunday
even1ng
youth
Church Sch ool 10 am
Mrs
Chri SI1an en deav or 6 30 p m
Sam p son H a i L Su ot
worSh iP servtee
7 30 p m
RUTLAND CHUR CH OF
We d nesday even 1n g p r .:~yer
G OO 0.:1v1 d L
H enson
meetmg an d B1b l e stu d y 7 30
pasTor ,
446 9471
Sunday
P m
mor n 1ng worsh rp 9 JO 10 30
ST
J OHN
lUTHER A N
10 301 1 30
CHUR C H . P+n e G r ove
The
Sunday sc h oo l
Sunday evenmg serv 1ce. 5
Rev
W lllt am M1d d leswa r th
P m
t am lly worsh1p Th u rs
Pas t or Churc-tor-S.e r v1ces 9 30
day 7 30 p m
a m Sunday Sch ool 10 30 a m
H AZEL
COMMUNITY
BRADBUR Y CHURCH OF
CHURCH
N ear
Lo n g CHRI ST - Br bt e Sc h oo l 9 30
Bofl om E d se l H a rt p asl or
a m • m orn tng wo r sht p 10 30
Sunday sc h oo l
10 a m
a rn
Sunday even 1ng worsh 1p
Ch urch, 7 30 p m , pr a yer sen" 1ce 7 p m , cho 1r pract 1Ce
mee ft n g , 1 30 p m T h ur sd ay
Wed n esday 7 p m Rev Je ff
MIDDLEPORT
PEN · Ranso n Pas tor
ANTIQUITY BAPTI ST T E CO STAl - T h 1r d Ave, th e
Rev Wttl 1am Kn rtte l. p astor
Rev F ree l and N or r1s pasto r
Ro na ld D ugan Sunday Sch ool
Su nday
schoo l
10 a m
Supt Cl asses for all ag es
Church
serv1ce
7 p m
eve ntng se rv tce, 7 30 , Btb !e We d nesday B i b le Stu d y
7
s t udy,
We d nes a day
7 JO P m
RACINE CHURCH OF THE
p m , you th servrces, F r1da y,
7 30 p m
NAZARENE - Rev Wrl l 1am
FREEWILL BAPTIST Ba r t h olomew, p as tor Su n d a y
Corn er Ash an d Pl um , M 1d
schoo l
9 30 a m
Gera ld
dl e p o rt
N oe l
H er rm a n , Wells su p t . m orn m g wor
p a sto r
Sat urd ay eve n 1n g Sh i p 10 30 am
We d nesday
se rv 1c e. 7 p m Sun d ay sch ool serv+Ce. 7 p m
10 am
Sund ay even 1ng
RAC I NE FIRST BAPTI ST
-Wa ll er P B rk acsan p asto r
w o rS h i P , 7 p m
MEIGS
Ron nt e Salser. Sund ay sch oo l
COOPERATIVE
supr
Su nday scho ol
9 30
PAR I SH
a rn m o rn m g w or sh tp 10 .10
THE UNITED
Sund ay evenrn g w ors htp , 7 30 .
METHODIST CHURCH
We dn es d ay eve nrng B 1b l e
Rob e rt T Bumg a rn er
study , 7 30
Dtr ector
DANVILLE WESLEYAN POMEROY CLUSTER
Rev l el on G l asure pasto r
R e v CartE H 1ck s.
Sunday Sc hoo L 9 JO a m ,
R e v D Wm Syd enslrtcke .you th and 1un1or y o uth se r
CHE STER W or Sh i p 9 15 VICe
6 45 P m
eve n 1ng
am , Chu rch Sc h ool 10 am
w o rShi p , 7 JO P m
prayer
ENTERPRtSE Wo r Shi p
and p r a1se. Wed n esday, 7 30
9a m
Chur ch School 10 a m
P m
FLATWOODS W orsh 1p ,
SILVER
RUN
FREE
11 am
Chu rch Sc h ool
10 BAPTIST - Rev Ral p h D ea n ,
a m
pa s to r
Sund ay Sc h oo l
10
POMEROY wo r sh 1p , am
Le on M t ller. su p t
10 30 a m
Chu r c h Sc h oo l 9 15 Eve ntn g se r v tce 7 30 p m
am , UM YF 6 30 p m
P ra yer m ee tm g, Th u r sd ay
ROCK SPRINGS - Wo rsh1 p 7 30 P m
l Oam
Ch ur c h Sch oo l 9a m
CHE S TER CHURCH OF
UMYF 6 30 p m
GOO R ev
Dan Aye r s,
MIDDLEPORT CLU STER
p as t or
Sund ay sc h oo l
9 30
R ev Rob ert Bumgarner
a m
w o r s h1p se r v 1ce, 11
HEATH Worsh 1p 10 30 a m , evenm g se r v tce 7 30
am
Chu rch Sch o ol 9 30 y ou th se r v1ce We dn es da y,
am
UMYF7pm
730pm
RUTLAND - Wor sh 1p 9 15
lAN G SVILLE CHRISTIAN
am
Ch ur c h Sc h oo l 10 a m
CHURCH
Ted
Jo n es
u My F 7 p m
p as to r
Sunday sc h oo l
9 30
SALEM
CENTER
a m
Roy S1 gm a n
supt
W or sh 1p 9 am , Church morn rng
wo r shi p .
10 30
Sund ay eve n1ng se r v1ce, 7 30
Sc h ool 10 am , U MYF T h ur s
d ay 7 p m
m 1d week
se r v 1ce
We d
SYRACUSE C LUSTER
n esd ay 7 JO P m
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF
R e v. R IC hard E Jarvt s
A SBURY Wo r sh 1p
11 THE
NAZARENE -Rev
am
Chu r c h Sc h o ol 9 s o H owa rd C B la ck, p a st o r B ob
am, WSCS. 1st T u esday
Moo re Sund a y Sc h oo l Su pt
~OR E ST RUN - wo r s h 1p 9 Sund ay Sc h oo l c l asses fo r a ll
am
Chu rch School 10 am
ages
9 30 am . morn 1ng
WSCS. 3rd Wed n es d ay 7 30 wo r sh1p 10 45 N Y P S Sund ay
p m
6 30 p m
eva n gei 1Sf 1c se r
MINERSVIlLE - W Or Ship VI Ce Sunday , 7 30 p m M1 d
lOam, Chu r c h School 9 a m
w e e k p ray e r mee tmg , Wed
WSCS 3rd Mo n day , 7 30 p m
n esd ay 7 30 p m
M tss ton ar y
Churc h m ee t i n g, sec on d We dn esd ay
SYRACU SE Sch oo l
9 30 am
wors h 1p 7 30 P m
se r v 1ce 7 30 p m
UNITED
FAITH
NON
SOUTHERN ClUSTER
DENOMINATIONAL Rev
R e v Ste v en Wtl son
R o bert Sm tt h pas t or Sund ay
R ev Howard Sh 1ve te y
sc ho ol, 9 30 a m
class
BET H A N Y
( D orcas)
l e ad er , Leo H1 l l
wo r s h 1p
Worsh1 p , 9 30 a m , ch u rc h se r v 1ce, 10 30 a m , chu r c h
schoo l 10 30 9 r'n
7 30 P m
C ARMEL - Wors hi P I 0 1S
ED E N
UNITED
am e v er y Sun d ay
ch urc h BRETHREN IN CHUR I ST sch oo l 10 3.Q_ am
Eld en
R
B l ake, pas t or
J APPLE GROVE Sun day Sunda y
Sc h oo l
10 a m
Sc hoo l 9 30 a m, w o r sh 1 p, Ho wa r d
McCoy,
s upt
frr st and th 1rd Sundays, 7 30 M o rnt n g ser m on, ll am ,
Su nd ay
n1g h t
se r vtces
p m
p rayer
mee t tng , C h rtS I 1a n
E nde a vor
7 JO
We dnes day ,
7 30
p m
Fellows h iP
s up pe r ,
t 1rs l P m
Song se rv 1ce, 8 p m ,
Sa t urday , 6 p m
u M
Preac hmg 8 30 p m
M1 d
sec on d T uesd a y 7 30 p m
Wee k
P ra y er
mee t1 n g ,
EA ST LETART _ Sunday We d nes da y, 7 p m , Ray
schoo l. 9 30 a m
w o r Shi p , A d am s l a y l ea d er
sec on d an d fo ur th s un da ys,
CHURCH
OF
J E SUS
730 p m
pr ayer meetmg , CHRIST
Loc at e d
at
Wednes d ay ,
7 30
P m
R u t l an d on N ew Ltma Roa d ,
U M W f 1r s t Wed n esday 7 30 n ext to Fores t Ac r e P a r k
Rev
Ra y R o use, pa stor ,
p m
WESL E YAN (Racm e J
Ro b ertMusse r ,S und aySc hool
Sunday sc h oo l
10 a m
, s upt
Sund ay sc h oo l. 10 30
worsh 1p , 11 a m
Bible stu dy, a m
wor s hiP 7 30 p m B tb le
Thursday
7 p m..
chorr s t udy Wed n es d ay 7 30 p m
Sa t ur d ay n tg ht pr ayer se r
p r actrce. Th u r sday. 8 p m
re 11 owsh1p
sup p er
f trst VICe 7 30 P m
.
Wednesday . 6 JO
pm ,
H E MLOCK
GROVE
u M w fourth Mon d ay , 8 P m
C HRISTIAN - Roger Watso n ,
G REAT BEND _ Wo r Sh i p p asto r
Ray Wha l ey, su p! ,
11 am 2n d and &lt;l lh Sundays, Morn1ng worsh 1p 9 30 am
Church School , I O am
Church scho? l · 10 30 am
L E TA R T F AL LS .,... Wo r
young peop l es mee lt ng , 6 JO
sh1p 10 am , Chu r ch school , 9 P m
even mg wo r Sh ip , 7 30
am , Brble study, 7 30 p m
P m B1b l e Stud y, We dnesday,
every Tuesday
! 30 P m

w

MORNING ST AR -

WO" • ~ T

UNION

BAPTI ST -

Shrp 9 30 am
Church Schoo l Rev
Cec11
Cox,
pastor
10 30ci' m
M1d Wee"- Se rvrce . Sun day School supl , Joe
Wednesday a p m
Sayre . Sunday school , 9 4S
M OR S.E
C H A P EL
am
Su nday evcnmg w or
'-1/or '&gt; l l p 1 1 ,, 11 1
fst and 3rd Sh1p , 7 30 Wetln~sday prayer
' ' unda '{ S Churrh ~C hoO L 10 and 61ble study . 7 '- 30 p m

'

I

TUPI'ERS
PLA IN S
C H URC H
t HRISl i AN
p.1 ~.r or
l U{I f'nt \Jnll (' rwood
H ow •• rc.J c ,, lc.Jwcll J
' u n d.1y
'c. h oo l 'u p I
'u rrdLJy Sc h oo l
•i ll\ d ro 1
Mo rn 1n Q Serrnon
10 ~IJ ,1 II'
' und.ly e ven1ng
'I rv1 c1 1 n 111
LE T ART FALLS UN I TED
PUET H J.l[N
R t;v
1 r • 1 lrlrr d Norr1'!&gt;
pa!&gt;lo r
t loy cl f'lorr s c. upl
'l unday
!&gt;t hool
9 30 am
morn1nq
~cr mon
10 30 am
Prayer
se rv 1C€' Wed n es day . 7 30 p m
C H ES HI RE CH URC H OF
GOO OF PROP H ECY - G P
'&gt; n1 1l h pa s lor Sunday School
10 &lt;l m
A rthur H enso n
'l u pl
Mcrn+ng Wors.h 1p
II
~l n1
You nQ P eo pl e s se r&gt;.·1 ce
7 p m
E ven+ng scrv 1ce 7 30
p rn
W edne-sday M1d Week
PrayP r &lt;., uv 1c e
7 30 p m
Yo uth m ct: l1n g
6 30 p m
Evcn1ng worsh 1p
7 30 p m
C H ES T ER C H URC H OF
T H E N AZARE N E R(&gt;v
Herbert
G r ate
pastor
WorShip SNVtCe I I a m and
7 30 p m
Sun day
Sunday
Sc hool
9 JO a m
R 1ChMd
Ba rton supt Prayer meellng
W e dne sday 7 30 p m
BRA D F O R D C HU RC H OF
C H R I ST Clifford Sm1th
mm1 s l er Sunday School 9 30
a m
mo r n 1ng church 10 30
am
Sunday even1ng serv •cl'
l JO p m Wedn esda y serv •ce
!I P m

L A U RE L C LI FF FREE
MET H O DI ST - R e v Floyd~
~ h ook
pas t or L loyd Wr1gh t
•, unday sc hoo l sup t Sunday
sc hoo l 9 JO a m
Mornrng
wor Ship 10 30 am
even1ng
"'ors h 1p
7 30 p m
Wed
ne!&gt;day ,
Chrtst1an
Youth
Cr u sa de
6 30 p m
Cho1r
prac t 1ce Thu r s da y 7 p m
D EXTER
C HU RC H
0~
CH R I ST Ct1ar 1es Ru sse ll
~r
mrn1st er Norman C W dl
supl
Sunday school
9 30
wor shtp se r vtce 10 30
a 111
am
B1ble study T ue sday
7 30 p m
R E OR GA NI ZE D C HU RC H
OF
JES U S C HRI ST
OF
L AT T ER DA Y SA INT S Po r tland
Racr n e Road
W1ll 1am Ro u sh pastor Den ny
Ev a ns
Su nday
Sc hoo l
D 1re c t or Sunday Sc hool . 9 30
a m
Mo r n mg wor sh rp 10 JO
am
Sunday even1 n g se r v1ce
7 p rn
We dnesday even 1ng
prayer se r v 1ce s, l 30 p m

or---..-....- ...
1 '

•••
•••
••

WE'LL GO TO TMETOP
rr TAKES ALL NICiHT! I

•

Mu n usod to l"'in k tha t h 1s b rai n , his
c!eve1 ness hi!&gt; fr~gh t en m g weapons
made h1m a cinch for su rvtva l Naw w e
trt!k st"rmu sly about mans h ope of

••

•
'

CAPl'AIN EASY

No wonde r the dmosa ur has become
fascma lmg Poor fe llow - so big and
powl•rfu l and uxtm c t Surely tf h e 'd ha d
ouc lnte l iT~fmc.e and our nuclear w ar -

Sunday
• Mntlht&gt;w
15 2l-2H

pil e he d

have

mac..l e

111

ce rtamty - maybe tl I Hkes so mething
c!sc 1
Come to church and you II be ru bbmg
shu u ldflrs w ith peop le who ore sure II

Tuesday
• Psa lm s
27 .J 5

dol's For thP.m
t h e srz.e o f the

m;wkmd
l

rea lure

9

OH, EA5Y! WHA T
DO YOU NI'ED
A TEMPTATI ON ... &amp;U T TO A? K . Lt55A
0 0 VOU REALL v
DEAR~ .. THE
WAN T TO'i
QU6STI ON 15 ..
DO VOU
WAN T
TO?

But there s al ways that gnawi n g un-

Mo n doy
• Luke
18 HJ- 14

' RUTLAN-D

CHUR~H

OF

CHR I ST
Rod
Kasler,
pastor V H Br aley Sund a y
school supt
Sunday sch oo l ,
w o rsh 1p serv 1ce
9 30 a m
and commun1 o n 10 30 am
yo u th meet rn g 6p m , Sund ay
evenrng se rv 1ce, 7
regu l a r
board mee t tng
th 1rd Satu r
d ay 7 p m
RUT L AND
COMMUNITY
C HURCH-S und ay
Sc h oo l
9 30 a m
Wo r shtp se r v 1ce, II
a m
Wedn easdy
pr ayer
mee t 1n g , 7 JO p m
Su n day
n 1ght worshr p , 7 30 p m
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
THE NAZARENE Re v
Llo yd D Grrmm J r , pa stor
Sun day sc hoo l
9 30 am
worS hip se r v1ce
10 30 a m
b r o a dcas t li ve ove r W MP O
yo ung peop l e's ser v rce. 6 45
evan gel tst1 c se r v 1ce 7 30 p m
Praye r mee t1ng Wed n esd ay ,
p m ,
Mrss1o n a r y
7 JO
meef1 n g
7 30 p m
f 1r s t
Wed n esd ay of m onth
MASON COUNTY
THE
HILAND CHAPEL
George Casto. p asto r Sund ay
Sc h ool
9 30 am , even m g
wo r Shi p ,
7 30
Thur s d a y
even1n g p r ayer se r v 1ce, 7 30

pm

MA SON f:IRST BAPTIST Secon d an d P o m ero y St s,
St an Crai'g, p asto r
Sund a y
sch ool , 9 &lt;l S a m
w orsh1 p
11 a m , trar n tn g
se r v1ce.
un ton
6 30 p m , eve n tn g
worsh 1p se rv tce
7 30 p m
M t d week pr aye r se r vtce,
Wedn esday , 7 30 p m
MASON
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST, P 0 Box 487, M ill e r
St
Mason , W
Va Sund ay
B1 b le St ud y 10 a m , W or sh1 p
11 am an d 7 p m B1b l e Stu dy
We d nesday 7 p m , Voca l
mUSIC
FIR S T
SOUTHERN
BAPTI ST - Co r n er of Seco n d
a n d A n derson M ason Pa sto r ,
Wa lt er Cloud Su n day sch oo l.
9 45 am , wo r Shi P servrce. II
a m an d 7 30 p m
Week i y
Or b le stu d y, Wed n esd a y , 7 JO

pm
MASON ASSEMBLY OF

GOD, O ud d tng L a n e , Mason ,
V a , C he s t er T ennant,
W
Pasto r
Sunda y Sc h ool 9 45
a m , Childr e n 's Chur c h 6 45
p m , Young P eop l e's Ser v tce
6 45
p m
Evange l 1s t rc
Se r v1ce 7 JO p m , W om en 's
M ISSI Onar y C oun c il 10 am
f 1r s t and th tr d T u es d ays
P r ayer a nd Bt bl e Stu d y,
We d nesd a y , 7 30 p m
HARTFORD CHV~CH OF
CHRIST m Chr1 st ran U n10n T he R ev Wlll tam Campbe lL ,
pasto r
Sunda y School. 9 30
a m
James Hughes, su p! ,
even1ng servrce, 7 JO p m
Wednesd a y evenmg pr a yer
meef1 n g
7 30 p m
Y OU\ h
prayer serv tcc eac h T u es d aY
FAIRVIEW
BIBLE
C HURCH , Le t art, W V a 1 Rt
1 Rev
George H os cha r.
pastor
Sunday Sch ool 9 ~o
am Prayer and Brb l e s t udy
7 JO p m
Co ll age Pr ayer
Servrce Tueosday , 10 am
Worsti1p ~ervTCe
Thu r Sd ay.
7 JO p n1

nov nced 33

Movie " The Heroes of T elemark" 10

OHMJ60SH! J ·J· J UST I!Y
Sf6Nilol6 OUR NAME5 TO
THIS PIECE OF PAPER:,
WE &amp;ECOME LEGALLY-

YOU KNOW I DO! MORE THAN
ANYTHING ELS E IN TH ~ WORLD. ..

l0'1JO'i-ABC News CfOS!M)R ;t31 News 20!' Pauf
,}&gt;1 J \~0
· . N'uchl ms 33
.,
YO
"-.. 10 .3()-To Be Announ ced IS
11 oo-News 3.4,6,8, 10.13,15; AB C News 33
11 ·3()-Johnny Carson 3.4. 151 Wfde Wor ld Special 13;
Sa m m y and Compa ny 6: Mov ie " Duef Qf the
Titans" 8. Movie " Graveyard of Horror"

BE TTE~

...

OD-Movfe " The Underground Ma n" 3,4, The Cities
Un cfe Sa m . Can You Spare a Dime 20; To Be An

SATURDAY, AUGUST 16, 1975
6 oo-Summer Semester 10

WIN AT BRIDGE

T RY

TO THINK THI, OUT
RATION A LLY!

Rule of 11 favors East more
; . . . - - - - - - - - - - - T b e en mchned to play dummy's
NORTH
15 mne raUter tha n Ule Jack
• J 92
After this decision, East sees
Ulat 1! Soo th 's other spade IS the
• KQ 5
• A J 85
k1ng there IS a way to hold
. 10 9 2
SouUt to JU St one spade tnck
WEST
E AST
Then East plays hi s e1ght o!
• Q B6 1
• A 7 53
spa des. not Ute queen
• J92
• 10 7 6 3
Alter this play Ute !allure o!
2
.K6
both mmor sui I I messes IS gomg
• 6; 4 3
"" K 8
1o leave Sooth just one tnck
SOUTH (D)
short o! the mne he needs to
• K 10
score ga me and r ubber
• Aa4

s hope Is n ot In
b u t m h1 s

soul

Wndne sda y
• Hl:brcws
12 .3 6

.14

Th ursday
• Ptullppwn s

1\llS IS lt£

2 J2-13

~I FTH

I'M "tAD IT'S

Dl..~

lHIS W~l" f&lt;
THAT I'Ve HAD

Fnday
• lercmtah
23 23 24

b

f.RfDA'I

•Ql09 3
.A QJ 7

Pl!t-JfSH

A reader !rom Mame wants
to know why South has all Ute
fun o! playmg Ute hands wh1le
West
Nor th East
South
all North can do 1s to sit a nd
watch h1m o perate He wa nts to
I NT
know
If this Isn' t rank dis3
N
T
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
crimmatwn agamst the Nor th
The a nswe r IS t hat !rom the
Openmg lead - 3 •
time bndge columns f1rst ca me
8- 15'
M Jlo US Po!
1 - - - - - - - - - - - J imto bemg Utere was a tacit un·
derstandmg tha t m order to
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
make things easy or as easy as
South apphes the rule of 11 possible for the readers the
THE MAN!
and sees that East will hold bottom ha nd would be' th e
YES · HE'S BEEN
four cards higher than the .three declarer He was called "Z" 50
AI!OUHD- HE ADAPTS
6E
of spades II one of those IS the yea rs a go, North was ca fled
1
HIMSELF TO Tl ME
AND PLACE - HE
~ · queen , SouUt wants to get Ea~t " Y " a nd the defense was hand!·
K NOWS AlL THE
SAID to play It So he plays dummy s ed by " A " and " B "
AH6 L'E S - NO ROUGH
11- )ack of hea r ts
EPG,ES TO AM - 11ES
II East has a lso been applymg
SI0001H "'-"'BER·
Ute rule of 11 he knows that (Do yo u have a quas11on lor
SouUt has exactly two spades the Jacobys? Wrr te "Ask the
andlllatbothare higherthanJ acobys ' ca r e o f Jh1 s
the three spot II East 1s rea fly ne wspape r The mos l tn ·
on his toes he Will come to the Jeres tmg ques 11on s Wi ll be
conclusiOn Utat one of those two used 1n th1s co l u mn an d
spade s I S the 10 sp o t wrrlers wrll rece rv e cop1es of
OUterwise. South would have JACO B Y M ODERN)

• R oma n ~

14 7-10

()1'1

UTI1.E ORPHAN ANNIE

ITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-DO CLO THE I
VES ·

AM

CE~TAlNl'f

tS A F1HE

UPSTANOINi':,
FIGURE OF
A MAN -

Copyrig ht 1975 Keister Adver! lslnQ SerYICEI Inc

S&lt;:: r1p!llres U ol ec!ed

$I r asbu rg Vlrg1nla

b)' The Amerlc•n Bll:tT• Soc lel}

With the hope it will, in some measure. foster and help sustain that
which is good in family and community life, this feature is sponsored by
' the business firms and organizations whose names appear below.
FRESH PRODUCE &amp; PLANTS
2 Conven1ent Locat1ons

MIDWAY MARKET Pomeroy Ph.992 ·2582
BOB'S MARKET Mason, Ph. 773-5721

Pomeroy

the

Lou1s W. Osborne

Ph . 992 -3486

220 I' Matn

Pomeroy

Pomeroy

Ph . 992-2178

corner 1

.

BETSY ROSS BAKERY

K ee psake Diamond Rmg s

Bakers of Gay 90 Bread
M1ddfeport
Ph . 992-3030

Ph . 992-3785

RUTH'S MARKET

Middleport , Oh10

..

.
MEIGS TIRE CENTER

RACINE PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

700 E Main

FOR
~

S LINKY
WEt\'SE:L e

~

1\¥, SURE: HE WOULDN'T'
BEGRUDGE ME A
MCRSEL OF HIS
C HICKEN

Pomeroy

Ph . 949-5961

Third St .

McCLURE'S DAIRY ISLE

RACINE FOOD MARKET

F 1ne Food &amp; Service

Middleport

SL

Racine

Olal992 ·5248

Yesterday 's Answer
IS Steed
18 Steed
19 Ultimate
21 Winme's
actress
da ughter
22 California
c1ty
23 Took
wmg

ROSEBERRY'S SERVICE STATION

Sales-Quasar-Service

Ph. 949-9591

Ractne

Ph. 949-3151

1

28 Role
29 Done m
31 Say " no"
to
33 loma n gulf
35 Prm ce of
Ule com1cs,
for short
36 AbJec t
fear

"The Friendly Folks"
Pomeroy , Ohio .

D1af 992-3284

111 Court 51 .

M&amp;R SHOPPING CENTER
IGA FOODUNER

Pomeroy, Ohio

Middleport, OhiO

ARIES (March 21 -Aprff 19) A
SOCIBI IOIJIIBIIOO l ur ns OUt t o be
nror e fu n th an you an tt crpated
Yo u ' ll h ave good v1 b es w rt h
someo n e yo u meet unex·
pec te d ly

TAURUS (Aprff 20-May 20) It's

how to work It:

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

.

KINGSBURY HOME SALES
&amp; SERVICE, INC.
The Finest in Mobife Homes
1100 E Main
Pomeroy
Ph. 992-7034

Pomeroy

p ressed w1th your wa rmth a s a
host or hoste ss

sto r ybook day, w tth lot s o f ,
fr1en d s by you r stde, goo d
conversatton 1nterest mg d iverSIOns and even a surpr~se en~

IPT OTU

E L T IO Y . -QEV D J

CANCER (J..,. 21-July 22)

LEO (Jufy 23-Aug. 22) Be
pre pared for m a ny u nex p e cted
d ro p -I n s or te lepho ne calls to d ay It w on I upset yo u Eac h
w 111a lter som et hmg mte r estmg

EJJDUU
Som ethmg exp e n s1ve yo u ' ve
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: THE ONLY LIMIT TO OUR wa nted for your h o m e can be
, RE:ALIZATION OF TOMORROW WILL BE OUR DOUBTS OF obt a 1ned tod ay T he means ar e
surpns1ngly ava tlatlle
- - TODAY.- F. D. ROOSEVELT '
(@ 1975 Kin&amp; Featwes Syndta llte,lne.)
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) An

LOOK AT TATER
I

Ph. 992-3863

GAUL'S MARKET
'

U AO

CLIMB, PAW !!
HE CAN SHfNNV UP
A TREE QUfCKER'N A
FOX SQUIRREL

THIG D06
NEEDS'rtl £IE
FATTENED UP!

fF IT'S ALL Rf6HT WITH ~OU,

CHARLIE !!ROLIN, I'll TAKE
HIM HOME, AND DO J(}5T

21) You ' ll be m eet1ng so m eone
new who w 1ll h ave It In thei r
p o w e r to o p e n a whole new
soci al world for you Much
h a p pmess lies ahead

GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) A

~$:;j

THE ATHENS COUNTY SAVINGS
&amp; LOAN CO.
29{&gt; W. Second

U A D RTELZ

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec.

tai n at home All will be Im -

You re go1ng to be happ y today
over a new acqu1stt1on you ve
wanted fo r a lo ng time It w1 !1
also surpn se and please the
fam1IY

E

Recog nitton and rewards fo r a
10 b well d o n e com e your way
tod a y
Inw a rdly , yo u II be
b u r sting w ith pnd e

endeavor

apostrophes, the length and fo rmatio n o( th e wo rds a r e all

ET H

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)

11) An excellent day to enter-

dmg

CRYPTOQUOTES

e n joyabl e d ay w 1th frie nds
e n gaged m yo ur kind of int eres t s
Y our l e ad e rsh i p
qu a11t1es are so outstanding
they' ll even ama ze YOU I

not JUSt your lmag lnat ton Th1s
JS o ne of th ose tr uly g reat days
w he n th 1n gs go n g ht m any

One letter stmply stands for anothe r In t h 1s sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the tw o O's, et c S m gle letters

VE L

•'

3 3Q-Movle " The Young and the Brave" 10
4 oo-Movle " War Hunt" 4

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22)

Me1gs County Branch

Middleport, Ohio

10 oo-Lawrence We lk 15, Dick Cavell 10, Handfuls of
Ashes 33
10 3()-Monty Phylhon's Fiyl~g Ci rcus 33.
11 OQ-AB C News 6, Ne ws 10.1 3. Don Kirshner's Rock
Concert 15: Janak! 33
11 1s-Mov fe 6,
11 31}- News 3.4; Movfe " The Ye llow Rolfs- Royce" 10,
Movfe "The Leech Woman" 13
12 oo-Movle "McHale 's Navy Jofns the Air Force" 3;
Mov1e " The Pfnk Panther 4, News 8

For S•turday, Aug. 18, 1975

VELLD U

.

RALL'S BEN FRANKUN STORE

8 oo-Emergency ! 3,4, Night Stalker 6,13, Afl fn The
Fa mily 8, JO; Philade lph ia Fof k Festival 33
a 31}-PIIol a 10
9 oo-"The Ma nchuri an Candidate" 3,4; S.W A. T
6.13. NF L Football a, Mary Tyfer Moore 10, No Honestl y 33
9 3()-Bob Newhart 10

1 3Q-Movle " The Brothers Karamazov" 10

U AE U

THE DAILY SENTINEL

oo- fl Takes A Thfef 4; Today Is Ours B,10, Speaking
Wffh Your Hands 15; Commanders 33.
3()-Car and Track 3; Souf Tra in 6, Other Peopfe,
Ofher Pfakes 13, To Be Announced 15.
2 ro-Basebaff Warm.Up 3,4,15; Vlewpo lnf 8; Death
Va lfey Da ys 10 ; Bil l Da nce Outdoors 13. Film 33 .
2 1s-Basebafl 3,4,15
2 3()-Fisherman 6: Motorcyc le Class ic 8; Death
Valley Days 10; Movfe "One Eyed J acks" 13.
Val iant Years 33
3 oo-Mfn fafure Goff 6. Ebony Affair 8, 1975 Summernall onafs 10; Famlfy At War 33
3 3()-Celebrlly Tenn is a
4 OQ-Wild Wffd Wesf 6, To Be Announced 8. Car and
Track 10. Women's Pro Tennis 13. Making Thfngs
Grow 33
4 31}-Goll 8,10, Let's Grow A Garden 33
5 oo-Bonanza J; Wfde Worfd of Sports 6, 13 ; Bonanza
4, Wreslflng 15. The Romagnolls' Tabfe 33
5 31}-To Be Announced 33
6 oo- News 3,4,10 . Lawr ence Wefk 8, God Has The
An swer 15. Catch ·33 33
6 3()-NB C News 3,4, 15 . ABAC News 13, News 6, CBS
Ne ws 10. Lilias. Yoga and You 33.

Bem1ce Bede Osol

V APMZ

Middleport .

11 oo- Pfnk Panth er 3,4,15, Super Friends 6,131 Va lfey
of the Dinosaurs 8, 10 . Sesame Street 20.
11 Jsi}-S tar Trek 3,4, 15; Hudson Brothers Razzle 8,10.
12 oo-J etsons 3,4, 15. These Are Th e Days 6,1 3;
Ha rlem Globetrotters Popcorn Mac hine B,10;
Mlsler Rogers 20
12 31}-Soul Trai n 3. American Ba ndstand 6.13, Go 15,
Fa t Al bert a,10.

Graph

- --1

GOEGLEIN READY MIX

Mls1er

R o g e r s 20

Astra-

is

Shazsam 1 8,10,

2 oo-Movle "X · 15" 4

hmts. Each day the code letl ers are d1ffere nt

POWELL'S SUPER VALU

6, 13,

12 JI}-Movle "Behold a Pale Horse" a

26 Rooter 's
word
27 By - of
28 C1ty Colum
bus sailed
from
30 Greek
resiStance
group
31 " Zlp-adEH!()- - "
32 Endmg for 1
form or
"'
spat
34 Dutch
penny
36 Seaweed
extra ct

SHE'S S UPER t
WE:NDY ... REALLY
5U PER f

Ran ger s

1 oo-Oon Kirshner's Roc k 6 , Mov ie '' The Raven " 13.

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

'RAY'S T.V. &amp; HOME
ENTERTAINMENT tENTER
Rae me

The Store w1lh A Heart
Ph. 949-3342

10 ro- La nd of the Lost 3,4, 15; Devfln 13: Jab·
berwocky 6, Scooby Doo. Whe re Are You• 8,10,
E feclrlc Company 20.
10 J()-Sfgmund a nd the Sea Monsters 3.4.15 ; Lassie's

10; Newsm aker ' 75 13
7 3()-Jeopardy 3. An imal World 10; Secret Agent
ppulh 13

,.,+-+-

Diaf 992 2101

D ealer

1

6.8. Baseball 15; F iring Line 33 . S25,000 Pyram id

25

'2.'2-_

Favorite M a rt i ans 8; P loeve 10

a JI}-Whee ife a nd fhe Chopper Bunch 3,• .15. Bugs
tlunny 6,13. ~peed Bugg y a: Mf sler Rogers' Nefgh·
bor hood 20
9 oo-Emergency Plus 4 3.•. 15, Hong Kong Phooey
6,13 . J eannie 8.1 0. Sesame Street 20 .
9 3()-Run, J oe. Run 3,4, 15, Adventures of Glflfgan 13 ;
Bfg Blue Marbf e6 Pebbles a nd Bamm Ba mm B,10

7·oo-Tr easure Hun1 3, Lawrence Welk 4, Hee Haw

COOKIN '
AIN'T SO
MD, AFTER
"&lt;LL!

MARK V STORE

( Formerly Sad1e 's M arket)
Syracu se
Ph. 992·3986

Locu~t

commq 1
door. NBC 1s out
fron-b and CBS JS
turnmq
tS

SEAR'S CATALOG MERCHANT

BLUE &amp; GRAY RESTAURANT

"Hell "

GASOLINE ALLEY

W e FIll All Doctors Prescriptions

992-295S

Ph . 992 -SlJO

211 E Mam Sf , Pomeroy

Middleport, 0 .
Gaffipohs, 0 .

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE PHARMACY

Pomeroy

K&amp;C JEWELERS·

7

Two Locations

S9 N Second 51
46 Court 51

P 1 Mt;BBE
MDUY 'S

by THOMAS JOSEPH
HIM
ACROSS
37 Occupant
I Scoff
38 Iota
5 The Tm
39 Smgulariy
Man por40 Sic ily' s
trayer
volcano
10 On a voyage
DOWN
ll Actress
l Bad cut
Dorothy
2 Cay or holm
12 Strip of
3
Rememberwood
mg
(3 wds. )
13 Hebrew
4 Gobble
prophet
5 Stop
L--"'-""'-"'"":''-"=""-'='-' 14 " Leave to Heaven" 6 - MacGra w
7 E ngrossed
15 Run 's
( 3 wds.)
How much
partner
8
He1ghten
16 Gob
do we have
9
Longed ( fo r )
l7 Indonesian
in the
II Israeli
Island
baq ,
states19 Twam
JaLl,
woman
character
babL.j?
20 And not
21 Subsequently
22 Sorcerer
24 - up
'THAT 141T

ANY'J'!.IING, ALLEY.'

DUDLEY'S

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE
SERVICES

100 E Main

YOUR 8fSCUIT

Ga:lD FOR MUCH OF

Huntmgton, W. Va .

Gro cenes &amp; General M er chandi se
Ph. 949 5772
Racine

----

WASTf.\AT

MOLLY'S 815CUI'IS ARE

Bakers of Good Bread

WAID CROSS SONS STORE

107 Sycamore St.

I DON'T 'THINK SWEET

HEINER'S BAKERY

6·31}-TV FC fassroom B; Treehouse Cfub 10, Alma nac
13
7 oo-saturday Report 3. Fun For Everyone 6.
Tr eehouse Cfub a. U S Fa rm Reporf 10. Kentucky
Afle fd 13
7 )()-J a bberwock y 3. Fa rm Front 4, Eddfe Saunders
6, Abbott and Coste ffo a. Man From C. 0 S.f. 10.
Korg · 70,000 B C 13, Sesame Street 20
a ®-Addam s F'a m lf y 3,4,15; Yogi ' s Gang 6.13, My

Rescue

North -Sou th vulnera ble

'/Ol}l

Sat urday

101

Ja nak! 33
1·oo-M idnfght Specfa f 3,4,1 5. Wfde Worf • Speclaf 6;
Movie "The 4D Ma n" 10; News 13.
2·30-Siar Trek 4
J 30-Movle "Toys In the Allie" •
5 3G-Movle "The Re lentless Four" ~

&amp; &amp;BUT Fi RST WEe .,.
WE'D

__,.

9 30-Movfe " The Bfue Knight" B.

F.RfDAY, AUGUST 15, 1975
7:oo-Truth or Consequences 3,4, e owffng lor Doffars
6; WCHS-T TV Repor t B; Avfallon Weather 20,33,
News 10; Jfmmy Dean 13, Phil Donahue 15
1 3()-Por ter Wagoner 3. Pop ! Goes the Countr y 4, B.
New Candfd Ca mera 6, Even fng Edlfl on wflh
Mar lf n Agronsky 20; Treasure Hunt 10, To Te fl The
Truth 13: Bfa ck Perspective on the News 33
B oo-Sanford and Son 3; Movfe " Bor n Free" 6, 13 .
Probe 4: Basebafl 15, Movfe " The Game s" 8.
Washington Week In Review 20,33; Cha nne l 10
Reports 10.
8 30-Chlco and the Man 3,4; Wa ff Street Week 20.33.

BETHL E HEM BAP TIST -

Rev
Ear l Shule r
pas t or
WorShip serv1ce , 9 JO am
Sun d ay school
10 30 am
B1ble
st u dy
and
p r ayer
serv rc U h u r sday, 7 30 p m
CA RLETON CHURCH K 1ngsbur y Road Gary K 1ng,
pas tor Sun day schoo l
9 30
am
eve n 1ng worsh 1p , 7 JO
p m
Prayer mee t 1n g
Wed
nesday 7 30 p m
LONG
BOTTOM
C HRI STIAN Mr
Ro b er t
Wya ll pastor Su nday Schoo l
su p t , Rona l d Osbor n e B ib le
Sc hool 9 30 a m
p r each 1ng
10 AS am
Even m g serv1ces,
7 30 o m
HYS E LL
RUN
FREE
ME THODI ST CHUR C H Rev
Pau l Nev tll e
p astor
Su nday Sc hool 9 30 a m ,
Mo rnr ng serv •ce 10 30 a m ,
vou l h serv 1ce. 6 AS p m
Eva n gelrst1c serv1ce 7 30 p m
Praye r meet1 n g
Thursday
7 30 p m
FREEDOM
GOSPEL
MISSION at Ba ld Kno b Rev
E J G r 1ff 1th supt o f ch urch
Rev
L
R
G l uesencamp
pas tor , Roge r W lll fred, Sr
Sunday Sch oo l sup! Sunday
schoo l 9 30 a m
prayer
meet1 n g Tuesday . 7 30 p m ,
you t h me-ell n g 6 p m Sunday ,
leaders A d a Va n Mete r an d
Gretta Sullie Sunday even1 n g
wors h 1p
7 p m
t h r ou gh
w1nter mo n ths
MT
HERMON
CHURCH
O F THE UNITED BRETH
REN IN C HRIST R o bert
Shook p as tor Sunday sc h ool
9 30 a m
Russe ll Spen cer
sup l
wo r sh1p servtee 10 45
a m
even •n g
w or sh 1p
a 11 e r na t1 ng w1th C E a t 7 30
p m
on Su nd ay
P rayer
meet1ng, 7 30 p m
Wed
nes.day
Al f red
Wo lf e, l ay
l eader
WHITE' S
CHAP E L
Coo t v d le
RD
Rev
Roy
Dee t er . p astor Sunday scho o l,
9 30 am
wo r sht p serv1ce,
10 30 am
B1b l e stu d y and
pr aye r se rv1 ce. Wed n es d ay,
7 30 p m
RUTLAND

!

•

~ urv t va l

'

! Television log for: easy viewing

•
••
No doubt the d inosaur t h ouu ht - l f
dmusHurs t houJ,l hl at all - tha t he w as
h1s,: cnou).lh powerful e nuuKh to surv ive
omythm).( But the dinosau r 1s extmc t

I

I

•--:o-----~---------_.,__,._.,._r~•-r-•~--·--·••--~-----_..__..,

.~PIKE ~ URE

LOOK$ 11-IIN,

DOE'3N'T HE ? I HoPE THIS
MAKEG 1(011 APP~ECfATE THE
600D LIFE '(OU'v'E HAD..

CAPRfCOIIN (Doo. 22-Jon.

AQUARIUS (JM . 20-Feb. 11)
Thts d ay 1s m a d e fo r y ou . sinc e
you ca n m ix wllh lo t s of new
pecmle One you meet will be
espec1aU y fo rt unate f or y ou

PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 20)
You are truly lu cky In rece1v lng
fav ors today O thers you've
helped w i ll s how you how
m u ch they care about yo u

~Your
·
WBirthday
Aug. 11, 1175
A n e xtre mely fortunat e year,
wt th muc h tra vel and a gllttertng SOCIBI whirl. B e prepared to
visit unusual places which pre-sent unexp ected o pportunities. ,

I NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN l

I WA'3

WONDERING

HOW

LON6 IT WOULD £IE~
50MEONE &lt;GAtD 'THAT...

Chester, Ohio

.

WILKINSON'S

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

Smaff Engine Safes &amp; se rvice
Ph. 992-3092
• 498 Locust St. M1ddfeporl
,.
.
'·
\

'

.

.

.
"

Nat ionwide Insura nce Co. of Columbus, 0 .
307 Spring Ave.
Pomeroy
Olaf 991-2318 ·.
' .

'

..

(

,

••

�I I
'

11 - The Daily Sentmel, Middle port-Pomeroy ' 0c·• Friday Aug 15 1975

10 - The Daily Sentmel , Middleport-Pom er oy, 0 , Friday, Aug 15, 1975

~l]J~M ® tk.J kl•w&amp;IJ ..-/ ~

For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds
.

Unscrambl e these four Jumbles.
one letter to each squa re , to
form four ord1n a ry words.

Pets For Sale

Phone

II JY "&gt;E l l Or1radecmyU ' •
co.ns or currency Will pay
'!.7 60 tor ~ t face 19M ilnd
o lder d11ncs quarters and
halves
Cil ll ~ulland 11 ~
36 1 ~o y e r Wamsley
A 1s 1? I c

B IS 3rc
G('rm&lt;ln
'he ph erd
PlliJP•C'S qood blOOd ll nC' S
P t10nc 99 / S6r 1
B 1'. !I C

/\ I&lt; (

I ()

Employment Wanted

WURCEFI.
~ 'J
I

r!

•

I

""

N o w arrange the crrcled lettns
to form the surprise ans-.er, as

~

Jumblr• WHEAT

CO VEY

MEDL EY

l o m o rro w)

B EC OME

Auto Safes

of

L1nda

No words

•on

E I don

loved

ones

however k 1nd

Ca n truly ease the qr1evmq

Sa dl y m1 ssed by Fa mil y

a

15 Hp

IN MEMORY o f Adelbert 0
Lee who de p a r ted th1s I de
17 years ago August l S

T oo fa r away for s1g ht o r
speec h
Bu t not t oo f ar away for
t h ou ght to reach
Swee t to r emembe r h •m w h o
o n ce was here
Sadly m •xxed by W1fe
Vaz 1e Lee
8 15 l ip

? dr 6
c yl r1utomn rrc \800 or best
o ff er Ph one 997 5 190
8 15 3t p

A T T ENTION
ME I G ~
SEN OR S 1 Sen •or Por l ra11S
w II be l.tken T u esday 1\uq
IQ through /l.uq 7J a1 Mc rqs
H qh Sc hool MAKE YOUR
AP PO IN TMEN T by ca l l mg
V•clue Abbott a! 99? /0 61 11 0
n 111 111 1 1 p n l Auqust l l f h
Thru IBih
8 10 81C

pa ss

hearts
O t th ose lh €y l eave beh 1n d
But memory •s the treasure
h ouse
0 1 happy thoughts t hey say
An d ha p py th oughts of those
we love
W ill never pass away

B 10 li e
IQ /0 I ORO Maver 1c k

Lou

StewQrt who pass ed away
Jwo yea r s ago August 16

away

1'161 C HEVROLET
P•ckup
Pho n e
V'. i'! l bur n 99'1 ?805

Notice

In MemOIJ
Whenever

B 1., ?61 c

Plumb 1n g
11ea t ng and all types of
qenera l
repa r
Wor k
quaran teed
70 years ex
Phone 992 240?
p e •• ence
5 1 Ifr

.\newer· It upp earH lhrR mart .11 mafl u m h oJd
hH• drmk - V-ALE-T

MEMORY

'.9

~EMOOELI N G

~ -~
~
-*-~-~-~~·~
-m~
hm~IK IIIII I]
(Aa ew ~ n

':t

WI L L d o od d tabs mow nq
haul ng pa rnt•nQ or roofing
Pl10n e ?9? !&lt;109
7 79 'l6tc

;::~~·~-::;_:h~J~=.:==:'::h:::~=='::::::,A::'_-,sugge!iled by the abovec artoon.

IN

f or s alE&gt;
lon
p1 ckup 196 3 Dodqe 6 (y l
ta1 r
condt11on
Call
N ew
H,l\len 88? 376~
8 10 61(

T~UCK

19 15 VEGA E s la t e wogon
10 000 miles
t ake ove r
payme n ts.
Phone 949 ?655
alter S 30
a 13 4t c

WILL car e l or elderly woman
10 my horne
Tram cd ,1r d
Exper,enced Call 991 13 11
8 17 61C
ROOM
AND
BOARD
Pr1 va t e a •r condlf,o n ed
room
pho n e
T V
ull
mea l s lau n dry pl u s many
extras Wrrte Mrs M
J
M 1ll er Box 105 Po m e r oy
OhtO
8 I 26 tp

1968
INT ER N AT I ONAL
Scout 1 wht&gt;el dn ... e good
c ond •l •on P hone 9!15 3505 or
91:15 3886 n ear Ches ter Oh1o
8 14 Jt c
1970 RA M B L E R (Re b e l! d dr
p s
304 V B auto
tr ans
m I SS I On P h on e 99'} :i'?O J
B 14 6t p

H YM N SING a l R u t l a n d
f=ree w lll Bapt•s l Church
Sun d ay Aug 17 2 p m All
s1 n ge r s an d the p ub l iC a r e
we l co m e
a 1 1&lt;ttc

1?10 SUP E R Spo r t Cheve l le
396 350 h p .:1 speed $90 0 m
good cond •t •on P h on e 747
6701
8 l A 3t c

Mobile Homes for Sale

Lost

1973 CHEV R O L E T Capr ce
Es t at e 9 p asse n ge r wagon
\? 900 Powe r st eer mg w 1th
t il t s tee r. n g w h eel po wer
brakes powe r bac k doo r
a nd w• nd ow
fa c t ory a ~r
c ond tt rontn g lug g ag e r ac k
ne w T1r es
A M J= M rad to
l1 g ht green With VInyl WO Od
gr a1 n Std•n g ot B 000 m li es
n tce ca r See a t 177 Un1on
Ave PomE&gt;roy Oh10 Ph o n e
99? 56 19
8 14 31 p

KEYS m br ow n le ath er case 19 71 SC H ULTZ mo b 1)e h ome 7
bed r oo ms
f u ll y carp et ed
hol d 1ng
a bo u t
a keys
exce ll en t con drli on
Phone
R e ward guara nt ee d L ost •n
99'} )774
P omeroy M1 d dle porr a r ea
B 15 ?1c
Pl ease retu rn to the Da•IY
Sent m el off• ce 111 Cou rt St
ONE 10 x 50 7 bed rm Peer l ess
Po m e ro y
housct r a l er
Ph one 99 7
8 1.:1 61c
51? I
B 15 Jlp

Yard Sale

19 / .'i FREEDOM mob il e home
GARAG E SA LE F r tda y and
lake ou t p ayme n ts
Call
Saturda y Ch es t er t O till 8
(6 11) t 46 3?? 1
Beds
d r esse r
chest of
s 17 1?t c
draw e r s b1 cyc l es mo w e r s
c lo the s f ab r• c
1969 P M C 1?x:,7 mobile h o m e
8 14 ?t p
wlih la rge porc h
55500
Ph one 985 350.1 d no answer
YA R O ~AL E 576 Syca m o r e
?9? 5596
S t ree t
M iddl e p or t
9 3
B 14 31c
August 15 16
a 13 3t c MUST se ll 1975 rr ave l tr ailer
78 11
ca rp eted
a1 r con
Y ARD Sa l e m Le t art F all s
dil1 0ned manv exlr a s Will
O ht O ( B uc k town 1
Th urs
t ake •r ade •n
Jo h nson s
day F r•da y a nd Sa t ur da y
Tr a1ler Park R t 7 across
Au g u s l 14 15 a n d 16 P earl
fr om Bl ue Fou nt a n Mo t el
W lll•s home
Ga lliPOl iS
8 13 3tc
8 10 6tc
YA RD a nd h o m e sale Th u r s
d a y F r tda y and Sa tu rday
Start s at 9 a m Con t ents of
hou s e
a.r
c onditione r
wa s h e r
ltbrary
tabl e
wr1hng t ab l e b ed s sh ot gu n
anltq ues c olor TV
m •sc
Rt 124 El m St , Rac m e
Phone 949 302 3
8 13 3tc

;-a,e-

Y A RD
at 3t-O Mech an •c
St Thur s d a y a n d Fr~day
So m e d epr eSS ion glass o ld
w ash board
e l ec
ap
pl t a n ces
a nd
tot s
of
cloth mg
8 13 3tc

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Case No 21581
Estate of Frank E
Lance ,
Deceased
Not•ce 1s hereb y g1v en t hat
Joe Lantz of Rout e 1 Reeds
vtlle
Oh to
ha s been duly
appomted E x ecutor of th e
Estate of Frank E
Lance
deceased
late o f
Me 1g s
County , Oh 1o
Cred•tors are r equ.re d to
f de the1r cla rms w1th s a1d
fud1&lt;:1ary W1thm four mon t h s
Dated th1s 28th day of July

1975

Man n mg D W eb st er
Co u rt of Common Pleas ,
Probate D IV I SIOn
( 8 1 t , 8 15 3t c

MOB IL E H ome 1? x 60 ?
b ed r oom ce ntr al a 1r con
d t•on 1ng
co mm erc 1a l
und e rp. nn •ng
u lil•ly
b u ild•ng Ph on e 887 1567
8 I ? 6tp
1?

60 NE W Moo n tr ader tw o
l ots o r tu ~ t b u y lots Tupp e r s
P la m ~
Oh m
Ph o ne 661
3Jl5
8 1? 6t c
&gt;&lt;

Help Wanted

For Rent
J

L AU RE L AND A pl s
Op en
Sat
Aug 16 Choos e your
new 2 bedroom l ownhou se
appl ianc es fu rn •shed fu ll y
c:a rpeted run s $ 1'18 up 1n
c lu d1 n g utllllte s
Bea ~l 1 f u l
n ew a pt co mpl ex •n N ew
Hav en W
V a S•x th and
George St s
See resrd ent
m a n ager
Sam o r Be ck y
Longa n ac1 e at th e1r a p t 8 4
o r c a ll ( 304 ) 887 75 67
8 13 3tc
4

-

R OOM S and bath apt m
Rutland area
Phone 99 2
585 8
7 27 tt c

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

TW O t r a iler lot s on rt ver bank
at C l1 fton W Va
1 ga s, 1
e l ec Phone 004) 77 2 5502
e e 61p
TRAILER lo t m Middleport
Call 99 2 5434
7 16 26t c

5B5B

8 1? r f c
?

2

NEEDS
MANAGEMENT TRAINEES
Heck's needs Managers &amp; Assistant
Man.agers. We are expandmg and
lookmg for qualified personnel to fill
store management positions.
Must Be Able to Relocate
Excellent Starting Salary
Numberous Fringe Benefits
Send your resume with photo to :

PERSONNEL DIREOOR
BOX 2762
c;:HARLESTON, W. VA.
ALL REPUES CONFIDENnAL •.
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EM,PLOYER

W I LDCA T S S790 8r1ck
Do u b le
A
Wa d s \ 3 per
750
/\II Bear Bo w s and
Arrows 75 p CI Oil liS! MaXI
Mr1gs \J
n M1n1 Mags
'l7 ?Y
"&gt;a ve Wampum
at
l nd an Joe s 108 Page S t
e t s J tp

B ED R O O M !railer
$77
w eek
A ll u lll t •es pa•d
Ph one 997 33?4
8 1? 1f c
BEDRO OM Tra il er
good P h one 992 332 4

very

a7

t

fc

'CO UNTRY
Mo b il e
Hom e
Park R t 33 ten m11 es north
Of Po m eroy Large lot s w1th
c oncre t e pat iOS' Sid ewalks
runn e r s and o ff st r eet
par k .n g Ph one 9?2 7479
12 3 1 lfc '
1=URN1 SHEO
ap a rtment
a dults onl y •n M 1cldleport
Phone 99 2 3874
3 25 tfc
- -~-~- -- -- -

MOB IL E h o m e for r e n t
A d u lt s onl y Ph o n e 99? 5535
B 10 tf c

Wanted

I•'''"

POMEROY LANDMARK
... ~ack W Carsey , Mgr
6it Phone 992 2181
THREE mdk goats ? part
Nuba1n Call after Sunday
J 1? 31 ....
tl 10 Stc

1917 CAMPER
pa r t!y self
con ta•ne d
must see to
app r ec ate
\ t 69 S
Pho n e
99 ? /!]8

Bl59 t c CA NNIN G to m a t oes.
g r een
beans
sweet
pe p pe r s
ONE l arge coa l lur n ace 70 000
Gera l d•ne
c ucumbe r s
B T U Phone 997 5171
Cl eland Rac•ne P hone 9.19
B 15 Jt p
II 71
7 25 l fc
W H Et\T p e nn •es 85c r o l l
sliver cer til •cales
1 1 ?S BICYC L E Repa 1rs Sa l es an d
each
S'J b ill s tJ 30 eac h
Serv •ce
.:19!! Locust St
Bu lt a to n ckels
$ 6 roll
M dd l epo r t Oh•o
Pho n e
silver d o ll a r s \.1 40 E&gt;ach
997 3092
L•be r tyntcke l s $11 r oll Call
7 77 26tc
~oge r Wamsley P h on e 74?
365 t
DOUB L E n eck s t ee l gu ta r
8 15 1? Tc
mu lt • chord $250 S td ney
H a y ma n 997 7713
19 1? ARROW Camper ph one
B 7 8tp
99? 5.lt'll:l
8 15 161 p
DE LI C I OUS home g r ow n
peac h es while an d ye ll ow
a N FORD Tra c to r to r sale
Maso n
P eac h O r cha r d
Call 110.:11 88 7 ?O i l
Ph one (3041 773 5559
8 14 3t c
B 8 I fc
N E WLY r e bu ilt 1950 Fe rgu son
lrac to r $1 450 00 4ft bru sh
6 fl gr ad er
h og S?8S 00
bla de
5 160 00
1 row
c u 111 vator 1 110 00 6 fl drag
ty pe t a m d en d ts k
S60 00
tr a1 1er 560 00 boo m p o le
$35 00 or will t a k e S?OO O 00
fo r wh ole w or ks Ph one a4 3
?56 \
B 14 6t c

sEAu TI F UL
new
t h ree
bedr oom h ome e,.; t ra la r ge
l ot wonderfu l tocat ton a ll
e lcctr c Gl ap p ro ... ed Ca ll
Ve lma Zuspan
(30.1)
173
5!50
B I'"~ 61C

3 ACR E S o f l a nd w th 2 m obil e
ho m es 10 A 1 cond il •o n
Ex c e ll en t w ell w 1th n ew
d e e p w e ll wat e r pump
MODE RN
Walnul ste re o
Many e •t ras Se en b y appt
ra d• o conso le am f m r ad• o
only Fo r m ore •n fo r matmn ,
4 sp eed ch a n ge r
Ba l ance
call 949 491 7 Pr tce d r• ght
$101 77 or te r ms Ca ll 997
fo r Qu tc k s al e
3965
8 5 12tc
8 1? I IC

H EREFO R O b u ll ? y ea r s o l d
P tro n e 99'} 5758 o r see Brad y
Kn o lls o n P e ac hfor k Rd
a 13 J tc

8 RM H OUS E bath ca r pe t
' ba semen t al um S1d1n g
storm wm do w s m sul ate d
n ver v1e w la r ge lo t d ou b le
carp or t wtth sh o p r ed uced
1
q u• ck s al e R tc ha r d W eaver
997 7066
B 1 t fc

LUMBE R fo r sa l e
d oors
w•nd ow s an d all k 1nds Call
a ft e r 5 p rn 99 ? 3658
a l3 6tc

HUN T ING L1cen s e
Nigh t
crawl e r s
m e al wor.m s
TAC KL E
gun s
amm o
bo w s
a rrow s
camp 1ng
equ 1p
C B s and ac c es sory
lndtan Joe s 308 Page St 2
st re e t s past M tddtepo rt
Sw •mmt ng Pool
8 13 26tp
1? 75 GT 3aO Su zu k1
5 000
m •l es s hll und er warranty
M1 n t con dll ron w •t h ex tra s
Ph on e 9?? 70 4 1
a 13 6tc

l OOx?OO LOT 1n f=nte P o1n1s
area Phon e 991 3576
8 15 21c
3 BE DR M h ou se large k ll
c h en
cen tr a l a tr
l a rge
k.• l c h en wall to wa ll ca r
p e 11ng
FHA
ap pr oved
P hon e 99 7 7030
8 15 61p
'J

BEDR OOM ga r ag e a p art
men t •n P ome r oy on R 1 33
nea r sc h oo l a n d c h ur c h
Go o d n e •ghb o r ho od
a ,,co nd lf •Onlng
g as
hea l
alum num s• dmg
b u d! Ill
ktl c he n cab n ets n ew roof
la rg e b ath ? l ar ge cl o se t s
sm all
lot
eco n o m• ca l
utd•Tr es Ca ll 74? 4 147 ea rly
o r a fl e r 6p m
B IS 31p

INTERNATIONAL TRUCK
Cab and
Chass1s.
Looks Good
Good
Mechanical
Cond.
Good tires.

Bustness Space

2.000 sq II (Leased)
Completely Furnished
Appotntment Only

PnM'hoY.o
Lovely

home 1st floor has lovely
kitchen range &amp; ret , dtntng
R , I BR , bath 2nd , 2 n1 c e
BR s Very litt le grass t o

c ut Storage bldg NG heal
$15,500 00
POMEROY
Large
home In good c ondtfton
Could have 2 apartments , 5

2 baths , new

F A

porches,

out

cellar THE LOW PRICE
OF $10,000
MIDDLEPORT - Very
ntc e 3 BR home
ftreplace , ntce

L R ha s
ktfchen

balh , full basement w1th
u t tllty , N G furnace , fru tt

ntce

tree s ,

Ktt c hen State In s pected
Lice n s ed
Baker
and
Decorator
Homemade
Noodles a I so featured

Nathan B1ggs
Rad1ator Spe c •ahst

KUHL CAKE DECOR

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Flatwoods, Ohto
Pomeroy, Oh10

Slop In Or
Call992 7537

Pomeroy

E XCAVA T ING
ua{: Kno e
dO.le r
and d •t cher
Gas
e t ect r •c and wa t er l 1n e
burt al b as em ent s footer s
sept1 c sys t ems and bru sh
cle an m g Wdl ha ul fill d1rt
to p so •l sand and g r a v e l
l•m es l on e to r dr ivew a ys a nd
r oad s
P h o ne Charle s R
Ha t f1 eld B ac k hoe Se r v•ce
R t I Rut l and Oh10 , 742
6092
7 11 90 tc
I::LWOOLJ bVWEk' ~ RE P A I R
Sweeper s toaste r s tron's
all sm all ap p l1 a n ces L awn
m ow er n ex t to St ate H1 g h
way Ga ra g e on Route 7
Phon e ?85 3825
1 16 lfc

MIDDLEPORT -

furnace

CAKE BAKING
WANTED

F r om th e la r g es t Tru c k or
Bu ll doze r Ra d ta t or t o th e
spa l lest H ea ter Co r e

Ph 992 2174

Li1 ure t St
Fo r t urth er tn
call 99? 38 68
a 14 6tc

608 E .
MAIN

BR

EXPERIENCED
I Radlato
Service

4 101 mo

178

H OUSE
3 b ed ro om
l ar ge
ll v •n g r oom b a th k tl chen
basement g a ra ge and
1Ja110 Phone 9?? 7547
a 10 61c

yard

A

LXCAVAT IN G d ozer l oad er
and bac kh oe wo rk
sep t 1c
t a nk s
•n s t a ll ed
dump
t ru cks an d lo boys lor h tre
wil l hau l f II d• r t top so •l ,
t .mestone and grave l Ca ll
Bob o r Rog er Je ff e r s day
p h on e 992 70R9 n• ght pho n e
997 3525 or 992 S2J2
2 11 lf c

---

~

~t:W IN G

MAC HtN E
serv tce a ll ma k es
992 22a.1 The Fa br •c; Sh op
P omero y A u th o'r heO Sm ge r
Sa t es a nd Se r v •ce
We
sharpe n Sc 1ssor s
3 29 lfc
Re pb~r s

H A N D LET TERED
SIG N S
A ND PO STERS
J=REE
E ST I M A T ES CA L L M C
CR A W J=OR D ?92 768 0
8 7 26t p

8 I 7&lt;

D &amp; D T R EE Tr 1m m 10g

READY

M I X CONC f&lt;
de l • -~t~ered
r rght to
protect Fas l and easy
esll m ates P hone 992
Goegle.n Ready M•x
M ~d lepor l Oh •o

ET E
y o ur
f= r ee
328 4
Co ,

6 30 HC
G ENE RAL R e pa1 r c l ean up
an d
haul t ng
c utl 1ng
we id t n g
ca rp e nlry
plu m b•ng e!ec maso nry
and general remo d e l•ng
Call Sk tl Poo l
Ph one 99 2
5126
6 17 tfc
Cv~I U M,

P I L I U F&lt;E
O RI G IN A L
F R AM IN G
SEASCA PE
A ND L A ND
SCAPE P A INTIN GS
E
JOYCE MIL L ER 997 768 0
a 10 ?4 tp

MOB ILE Cran e se r vtce and
d oze r wor k Ph one 992 54 68
8 1 26tp

-

---~-

~ - --

---

WOUL LJ
r u U BELIEVE?
Build an a ll s teel b ulld 1ng at
Pole B a rn p r •ces? Golden
G• a n t All St eel Butld tn gs
Rt
.1
B ox 148 W a ve rly
Oh 10 Ph on e 947 22 96
7 24 t fc

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

BA CKH O E for r ent , h o ur or
c o nt ract r eg or exca vatory
t yp e Se plt c la nks tn st alled
B1ll Pu llt n s phon e ?9 2 2478
7 24 26t c

A vacant ground for sale

WE ALSO HAVE SOME
MOBILE HOMES
GOOD
HOMES
ARE
SELLING FAST- LET US
SELL YOURS TODAY
PHONE 992-2259

Strout Realty

has

busmess

50 a , more or

older home,

4 MORE LOADS
Good Used Furniture Just Arrived!

heal, $38,000 00

NEW LISTING -

of

nver , J bedrooms, closets, 111:2
baths, gas ftred hot water
heat
full basemenf, and
garage
Very ntce locat10n
near stores

NEW LISTING -

26 acres of

rolling land , 3 bedroom home,

bath , drolled well . 2 farm
ponds (stocked), 2 car garage,
barn and 2 hen houses
NEEDS NEW OWNER - New
5 bedroom home. 3 baths,
central atr and heat, fam 1l y
room, ntce ktfchen with dish
washer , stove, refngerator
and bar 2 car garage and

large yard
WILL TALK -

On th1s a 2

bedroom home wtth bath, and
gas forced a tr furnace Ask tng

$10 ,000 00
A GOOD BUY - 5 rooms , one
lloor plan 10 Middleport w1th
and

2

porches

near

schools, for only $7,500 00.
RIVER FRONTAGE -

7

'

Present Inventory Has Been Reduced 1

paid for, 10 m &lt;les from
Pomeroy $6 ,400 00

INVENTORY
CLEARANCE SALE

307 Spring Ave.
Pomeroy
992-2298
CONTACT:
Lo1s Pauley

L~T US DO IT! !

4

RUBBER BACK
e have hundreds ~ .,.o~
carpet values Your lOb ca
be completed in 1 to
weeks
No long walt•no
period Our •nstaller has 2
years exper•ence
Expert
•nstallat,on
You'll like
What YOU get

CALL 742 4211
TALK TO WENDELL
GRATE,

W•l

T he lollow •ng r eal estate
s. t uate d •n th e V• ll age of
M d d fep or t Coun t y o f Me1gs
a nd S t ate of
Oh 1o
and
bo und ed and d escr~ bed as
fo llo w s
Be•ng 1n Pal me r s Ad d •l•on t o
s.a 1d V ill ag e and mo r e par
l•cula rf y
de ltn eated
as
fo llo w s Begm n m g at a po•nt
on S1xth St r ee t 50 f eet so ulh of
t h e so uth wes t co r ne r o f
H oo k e r an d Stx l h St r ee t
then ce r unn. n g 1n a sou t he rl y
d •r ect• o n a lo n g t h e west S1de
of S!x lh Str ee t f or a d ts l an ce of
SO fe e l to the n or theast corner
o f a par ce l of la n d own ed b y
E l• za b eth Sa nford ( EI• zabe lh
Har ll n g er befo r e m a r rt a gel
th e nce runntng tn a wes t erl y
d •r ectt on alon g the I me of sa •d
Sa nf o rd l ot t o t h e east li ne of
Lo w e r Po me r oy ( n ow a pa r t of
M1 ddl e po r t l
t he n ce m a
n orth erly d •r ec t•on a lon g t he
e a s t lt ne o f sa 1d Lo wer
Pomero y for a d1 sl ance half
w a y to Hoo ke r S tr ee l t h ence
•n an easte rl y d•r ec t 1on on a
d•rect l m e ro the place of
b eg1nn1n g II •S t he p urp ose of
lh 1S d eed t o c on vey a parcel of
la n d 50 f ee t o n S•x th Stree t an d
runnmg w es t erl y at th at w• dl h
to th e east l •n e o f Lower
Pom er oy T h e above 1S a p ar t
of the s am e p r em tses con
ve y ed from S1d P Co e an d
Dan S L ew1 s Jr
to M agg1e
F tsher b y dee d d a t ed Sep t 4
1901 and rec o r d ed m Vo l ume
as P ages 369 and 370 of the
r ec o r d o f D eed s o f Me1gs
Coun l y Oh 10
D eed R efer ence
V o lu me
127 Page 391 Me gs Cou nt y
De ed R eco rd s
~ A
churc h p a r son ag e •s
.stt u ate d upon th e f oreg om g
des c:nb ed r eal es t a te
' Sa•d Co mp laml and c au se
w tll b e h eard on I h e 30t h d ay of
,A ugu st 19 75 at 10 00 o 'c l oc k
A M or a s so on t herea ft er as.
t he Courl ma y de l er m m e
Be u l ah Whtte
John Werner
Pau l Smart
Ge r a ld A nlho ny
To n y Fow l er
F r eda H oo d
Lo u• se Th om p so n
Ted Ril ey
R Ob ert L eW IS
; ( 8) 1 B 15 Jl c
NOTICE ON FILING
OF INVENTORY AND
APPRAISEMENT
Stal e of Oh10, Me1g s
~ County
Court of Common
~~ P'Iea~ Probate DPn s ton
To the E xecu t or of lh e
es t at e to su&lt;: h o f the fo ll ow .n g
as ar e r es 1d ents o f th e Sta t e of
OhiO VI Z
t h e SU r VIVI n g
spou se the nex t of k n th e
ben ef rc1a n es und er !h e w ill
and to th e a ll o rney or a t
tor n e ys re p re sen t1 ng any o f
th e aforemenflo n ed p ersons
F rank E La nce Deceased
Ree d svill e, O h1 0 R 0 1 Ol1ve
T o wn shtp N o ?15 81
Y ou ar e h e r eb y n o t lf •ed that
th e
In ve n tory
a nd
Ap
pr a1seme n t of the est a te of th e
deceased
afore menlt o ned
late of s a 1d Co u nty w a s til ed
m th1 s Cour t Satd lnOJ entory
and Ap p r a •seme nt wdl be fo r
hean n g b efo re t h ts Co ur t on
th e ?9th d ay o f A ugust 1975 at
10 oo o c l oc k A M
AnY p er so n d es•r•ng l o Ide
ex c e p t to n s fh e r e t o must f1l e
the m at l eas t f v e da y s pnor to
t h e d ate se t f or hear. n g
G •v en un de r my han d a n d
sea t ot sa •d Co urt tht s 13 t h
day of Augus t 1975
Mannm g D We b ste r
J u dge
B y A nn B Wa t so n
De p ut y Cler k
\Sl 15 ?7 2tc

NOTICE OF

lhe Feny al

Square
Yard

LEGAL NOTICE
Not ce •S her eby g•ven to t he
off •cer s a nd members of the
t= .rst
Bapt1s l
Church of
Mi d d l ep or t Oh•O and to al l
ot h ers w h om II may c:o n cern
that on the 30 t h d ay of J ul y
1975 th e t ru s t ees o f the J= rsl
Bap t s t Chur ch o l Mtddlepo r t
Oh• o fil ed •n th e Cou r t of
Commo n P leas of Me gs
Coun t y
Oh1 o
tn Case N o
15 865 a cer ta 1n Compla1nl
dema ndm g the Cou r t for an
ord er g•v mg them a uth o r lly t o
sell and c o nvey tn l ee s1mp te
the fo l low m g d escr bed real
estate s• t ua t ed m th e County
of Me gs Sl ate o l Oh 10 and .n
the Vill a ge of Mt d d l eport to

If you !ravel

Branch Manager

•

&lt;::

POMEROY •
Cotne
Rutland

1\

~

..::

on
over,
Furmture

111

Bargam Center wtll

pay

your
charge .

ferry

•

Delivery
Service
to W. Va st1ll the
same wh1le bndge at
Pomeroy IS closed

742-4211

Rutland . 0.

See Herb. Dave or Mike Grate.
Also Gene Smith

••

APPOINTMENT
c ase No 21579
Estate of Charles B ennett,
Deceased
No t iC e 1S h er e b y g .ven th at
Warren
B enn e ll
of
381
Loveman Ave nu e
Wo rth
•ngton O h1 0 has b een dul y
appo 1nted a s E xec utor o f t h e
Estate of Charl es B enn ett .
decea s ed
tat e of Me1gs
County O h1 0
Cr edttor s ar e re QUi r ed to
f1le the 1r c latm s wllh sar d
f1dU c 1ary w th •n fo ur monlh s
D at ed lh1 s 25th da y of Ju l y
1975

Aug

Rutland Furniture

CARPETCONSULTA~~

RUTLAND
FURNITURE
742-4211
Ru on

Ph. 992-2689

PLUS•••

NO. 139 - 4 a on matn
htghway, water tap tn and

Carpeting
-501 NYLON
99

20

ye ar s exper •ence Insu r ed
fr ee es t .m ales Ca ll 992 305 7.
Coolv ill e
P h one ( I I 66 7
30 41
4 30 tf c

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

BARGAIN AT $14 ,800
WE HAVE A COUPLE OF
FARMS AND
SOME
ACREAGE 135 A and 138

less, 3 BR

OHIO PALLET CO.
'

Real Estale for Sale

'

I

downsta~rs
completely
remodeled, 2 car gar ,
barn , farm pond, free gas

ROUTE 33 - Lillie 2 bedroom
renovated home w1th bath,
wall-to wall carpeting Front
porch and hlce level lot
HAVE
OVER
SO
, WE
PROPERTIES FOR YOU TO
CHOOSE FROM DROP IN
• OR

Rt. 2 Pomeroy

BOA T Mot or s Rep a •r s 498
L ocus t St
M •d dl epo rt
Oh 10 P h on e 992 3091
7 22 ?6tc

NO. 130 -

Poles, maximum dia. 10" on

TO:

SEPT I C TA NK S CLEANED
Reason a bl e RATES Ph on e
116 1782 Galltpolts
J ohn
R usse-11 owner
J ? lfc

7 17 1 m o

lease for 3 yrs , $18,500 00

CHIPWOOD
DELIVERED

EPT I C T/\NK S clea ned
11/lodern Sanlla t •on 997 )9S.:t
or 99 ? lJ -19
9 18 t f c

downstatrs

992-7889 or 992 5320

' rooms
Ph
baths, family
room, nat gas heat and 2
corner lots

Bundled Slabs .. !6.00 per ton

7 24 I mo

NO. 127 - Bus iness bldg
20x18 on Matn St •n town
S1x room apt upstatrs,

2 Apartments

bath

largest end ..... *6.70 per ton

Ph 992 2798

LA~r~c~e~~~~~ER
!&gt;y~h 992 3993

Iron! lot plus wooded lot
behind Water tap pa1d tor
but not &lt;nstalled. $5,000.00.

19 7J ?0 FT
G O O SENEC K
s toc k trad er wdh 19 74 Chevy
du al wh ee l
t ton pt c kup
Ca n b e bought togeth er or
separat e Call 747 3767
8 10 tfc

WANTED I

Pomeroy

NO 125 - 1 8 a , more or
less, vacant ground, ntce

Remodeled
MIDDLEPORT

Ph. 992-2176

&lt;..: A SH patd for all makes a .. a
models of mobile homes
Phone area cod e 61 4 423
'95 31
4 13 tfc

Oh10 R oute? . North E ast of
T uppe r Platns
Cool v ill e, Ohto
Phone 667 3608
Open
Monday
thru
Sa turday 8 00 to 8 oo
NOW OPEN
L a rry and Vtvtan Hopps
Ownefs

.

..

M annmg D Webster
J udg e
Co urt of Co mm on Plea s
Probat e D IV ISIO n
M e tg S Co un ty O h 10
1, tl , 15 3tc

NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
case No 21583
Estate of Manon McClur e,
Deceased
Not1ce •S here b y g1ve n th at
J= l ora M c C lu r e of D ext er
Ohto has be en dul y appomt ed
Admmtstralr•x o f th e Esl ate
of Manon Mcclur e d ece a se d
l~t e Of Me1g S Cou nl y O hi O
Cr ed1t or s a r e requ •r ed to
lite th e 1r c l cum s wit h sa• d
f1dUc 1ar y wllht n to ur month s
D a t ed th1 s ?9t h day of J ul y
19 ' 5
M a nn.nq 0 W e b st e r Judg e
~ BI

1

8

1 Sltc

.-

2 Or

H T Sha r p

1

1974 V. W. BUG

3195

Local Owner

'2895

USED CARS

73 CHEV. MONTE CARLO 1973 Olds Delta Roval
Real Clean

•3995

•3395

l1k e New

1973 PLYMOUTH DUSTER 1972 Ford Grand Torino
2 Dr H T N1 ce

2695

1

1

2 Dr H T

2695

Open Evenmg Tlll7 P . M . &amp; Sat . T1l S P . M.
We honor Bank Amen card Master Charge &amp; Soh10 Credit Card .

NOTICE OF
APP O INTMENT
C ase N o ll5St
Es t ate of L ea lh a M Knnk e
Deceased
Not• ce •s here b y g ven that
E Jeanne Braun of Pome r oy
Oh•o has been duly ap pomted
Execuhr•x of the Esta t e of
Leatha M K r•nke d eceased
late o f Me gs County Oh 0
Credito r s a r e req u 1re d 10
f ile the. r cta1ms wilh sad
f •duc .ary w •thtn fou r months
Dated lh1S 78th day of July
1975

(8)

I

75s are EXTRA GOOD BUY because :
l - 76's will be much higher
2- Yours w1ll be older and worth less .
3- Dan's "Lowest possible price, highest
trade -m, but with highest value . Buy
now wh1le select1on is good and prices
are lowest!"

1972 OPEL 4 CYL ............... ...... 1695
1

ENJOY THE
112th ANNUAL
MEIGS COUNTY

Manntng D Webste r
Court ot Common Pleas
Probate o,..,,s ,on
a 15 Jtc

2 Dr

Shows tender ca r e

Economy ill best

1972 PONTIAC 400 -.................... '2195

Mr and Mrs. Larry Bll'ehfield r ecently spent a
vaeatwn w1th relatives m
Florida and then JOurneyed to
lllin01s and VISited relative s
there
Mr and Mrs Wilham
Culwell we re m Kentucky on
Saturday and Sunday where
th ey were g uests of thel!'
brother s ,
Sisters,
and
famil1es
Those v1s1tmg With Murl
Gallaway were Mrs Maxme
Hamilton, Oak Hill , W Va
and Abby Graves, Columbus
Mr
and Mr s
David
U eweleyn and Jemy have
returned from a vacation tr1p
to Flor1da
Nancy Struth and hance,
Reece Prather, Columbus,
were gues ts of her parents,
Mr and Mrs Lewis Sm1th on
Saturday
Mr and Mrs Bob Jones
and family, Dayton, spent
several days at their !ann
here and v1s ited the1r
brother-In-law and sisters,
Mr. and Mrs Vtctor Perry
and Ellen Fac emyre
Mr and Mrs. Lavern
Jordan , Betty, Jeme Sue,
and Damy vacationed in New
Boston , Illm01s w1th Mrs
Jordan 's brothers and s1ster
and families, Mr and Mrs
Lee Jeffers , Mr . and Mrs
John Dunham and family and
Mr and Mrs R1chard Jeffers
and ch1ldren all of the New
Boston area
Mr and Mrs John Cordray, Fullerton, cahforma
are spending a vacation m
thts area and vtsttmg h1s
mother, Mrs Beulah Cordray, his brother-m-law and
stster Mr and Mrs Re ed
Jeffers and other relative s
Columbia Grange No 2435
held their regular meetmg A
rught gown c ontest was held ,
and crocheted entries were
shown Plans were d1scussed
for an Albany Fall' exh1b1t
Usmg "vacation" as the
theme,
an
mterestmg
program wa s presented by
the lecturer, Arthur Crabtr e e
Seve ral members
participated
Mr and Mrs Lee Jeffers
and foster daughter, Ann,
New Boston, lllmots, spent a
few days wtth h1s parents,
Mr . and Mrs . Reed Jeffers
and other relatives here On
Sunday a famtly gathering
was held at the Jeffers home
wtth the followmg present
Mr . and Mrs Lee Jeffers and
Ann , Mr and Mrs Gene
Jeffers, Lester, Marco and
Robert , Mr . and Mrs M1ke
Lawson; Mr
and Mrs
Lavern Jordan , Danny, Betty
and Jerne ; Mr. and Mrs.
Larry
Birchfield
and
children ; Mr and Mrs Dav1d
Uewelyn and Jenny , Mr . and
Mrs. Jack Jordan and Jason;
Donrue Quesenberry ; Kim
Allman and Mrs. Leola
Cordray , the host and hostess
and her mother, Mrs Beulah
Cordray
Mr and Mrs Albert Walsh,
Jr , Mark, Teresa and Beth
enJoyed a 10 day vacation
trip
They
flew J rom
Columbus to Yellowstone
National Park, rented a car
and motored to Denver,
Colorado, then returned
home by plane
Mrs Pat Jones at tended
the wedding of her s1ster-m-

•

So l d new for over ~MOO Ful l power arr ster eo V roof ,
1 500 m il es New Cadillac 'rade

75 Olds. Cut. Sup. Sedan, air ......... .. .'4795
74 Olds Salon Coupe, ·
. I roof ... .. ...... ...... .'4595
power, air. an d vtny
73 Olds Roy. S&amp;HT Cpe., air .... .. .... . '3295

1973 PLYMOUTH 31B ................. 12795

73 Olds 98 LS Sed., v-roof, air....... ... '4395

v a2 dr

sedan V 8 gol d d us ter doub le Mrre!l sharp 316 V

73 Nova 2 Dr., V-8 auto., P.S. .. .. ...... 12895

8 fully opera t ed con so l e a uto t ra n s

1973 FORD GRAN TORINO .......... 12795
4 Dr

Sed an , one ca r efu l loca l owner
lrans power brakes

72 Ford Pinto Wagon, auto., radio ....... '1895

power st cenng auto

72 Chev. Imp., 4 door, power, air ... .... 12295

1971 OLDS VB CUTlASS S...........12195

Carpenter
Personals

/4 Cadiffac S. DeVille, rad. ltres, air..... '6500
74 Cadillac C. DeVille, full power, air- .. '6700
73 Cadillac Cpe. DeVtfle, pow., atr.... ... '5100
75 Chev. Caprtce 4 door ..... ....... ..... '5~95

(d t alma 2 d r h a rd l o p atr con d llt oned beautifu l dark green
fm•sh wrth white l op ful l y eq u1pped

72 Dodge Swinger Cpe., V-8 auto ... -... . 12095

2 D r hard t op, Ex tr a n•c e, a1r condtt1oned f u ll y e qu•pped

THIS WEEKEND

1971 FORD VB TORINO ........... ,... 1495
1

THERE'S SOMETHING
FOR EVERYONE!

1973 CHEVROLET 314 TON ...... ....... 13995
Four w h eel drtve p •ckup The very best care by one local
owner , 350 V 8 power s tee r 1n q , ex tra good M &amp;S I t r es

1972 CHEV. 6 CYL. ...................... 12195

RIGGS USED CARS
98~100

Located on St. Rt. 7

11 Ton P• ckup Shows most tender care by one local me r
chan t Low mileage

196B CHEV. VB IMPALA ................. '795
2 Dr

hardtop

Chester, 0.

W or t h much m ore

Ry Mrs. Francis Morns
R e v How a rd Shive ley
r e lurn e d Au g u s l 8 fr om
G a rr et t E van ge li c al
Th eol og ical Se minary where
he comple ted h1s fifth year m
s um me r sc hool a nd was
g r a du a t e d
We dn es d ay,
Aug us t 6 Wh1le a t Garre tt he
served a s v1ce pr es ident of
the stude nl coun c1l of the
sc h oo l atte nd e d b y 100
pasto rs from 13 s ta tes Rev
Sht veley Y.tll con tmue as coordinator for the Southern
Clus ter of Umted Me thod iSt
Churc hes and will se rve th1 s
year a s T own and Country
repre se ntative on the Athen s
Dtslnc t
Coun c il
on
Mm1stn es He wtll r eceive
a ssoc iate m ember s hip 1n the
Wes t OhiO Conference durmg
annual c onference next June
Sixteen m e mber s of the
Be rtha M ,a yre M1ss10na r y
Soc 1ely we n t to the Me1gs
Count y
H ome
Monda y
eve mng , Aug ust 11 to honor
th e patients hvmg th er e, also
the birthday of one was observed w1th a g1fl Mrs Ma ry
Yost was m cha r ge of a short
progr a m t1tl e d , ' Th e Intim acy of He ave n " and
sc11plure from Revela tiOn 22
" as read and prayer by Mr s
Nondus He ndncks All JOin ed
m s mgmg hymn s Re fr eshme n!.'; of 1ce c re am, cupcakes
and punch we re served
Mrs Maym e Mallory " a s
lak e n to H olze r Me d1 ca l
Center Fnd ay eve nm g ,
August 8
Mrs Gladys Shie lds suffered a broke n a nkle at he r
home and 1s a t Vete ra ns
Me monal Hosp1 ta l
Mr
and Mr s
Robert
Cornwell of Galhpohs v1s1ted
her paren ts, Mr a nd Mrs
Ed M11le r Mr Cornwe ll IS
c onvelescmg after bem g In
Holze r Medic al Center fr om a
heart attac k
Earl Hart , Mr a nd Mrs
Linley Hart and Mr and Mr s
Charles P y les attended the
Hart Reumon at the Racm e
Loc ks Park Sunday
Mrs Hel e n H or ner of
Akron v1s1ted recently w1th
Mr and Mrs Elza Birch
Mrs Paula La1rd and sons
have returned to lhe1r hom e
a t La Mesa , Cahfor ma a fte r a
mon ths v1s1l w1th Mr and
Mrs Lmley Hart and other

law, Brenda Jones m Mason
City , West Vtrgmia
Mr and Mrs Norman
Shan er , Athens Route, VISited
w1lh Mr and Mrs Waller
~ ordan a nd son
Mr and Mrs Lawrenc e
Tacke tt, Flatwoods, Ke n tucky, were overnight guests
of his brotheNn-law and
s1ster , Mr and Mrs W1lha m
Culwell

rela l1 ves Mrs P ete Sm1 lh of
P om er oy accompa med Mrs
Harl to tak e th e m to
Rey noldsburg lo accompan)
Mr and Mr s AI Cla rk to
Cahforma
Mr
a nd
Mr s
Hank
Alve r son of r.a Cr ensa,
Ca hforma a nd Mrs Edna
Hanpnc ht of T oled o spe nt
Sunday w1th Mrs Edi son
Brace
Mr an d Mrs El za B1rc h
v1s1led h1 s sis ter, Mrs Ea rl
Powe ll a t St J oseph Hos p1tal
Parke rsburg
Mr a nd Mrs R oy Riffl e
spe nt Thur sda y, Aug ust 7
w1 t h Mr and Mr s B ill
Mc Ke nZie a t Ga lhpohs
Mr a nd Mr s E rnest Bush
v1s1led Mr a nd Mrs Ed
Mille r r ecently
Mr s No ndu s H e ndr~ c k s
and son Steve s pe n t Sund a y 1n
Logan VISitin g Mr and Mrs
Roy He ndnck s and ch1ldren
and Mr and M1 s W1lha m
Wagner

01 .

THURS SAT Til \ . On

M1ddleport, OhiO

2 SIGNS

Pomeroy
OF
QUALITY Motor Co.
1975 MONTE CARLO LANDAU

SAVE

Dark red whtte vmyl top loa ded w tth extras tn clu d tng
ru r con d tilt wheel Cru •se Conlro l custom m tenor
powe r &amp; recl1 n tng seat AM rad•o tape rad1al w s w
t•res l ess th a n 4 500 mt les by l ocal ow n e r SAVE

SAVE SAVE
1972 COMET 2 DOOR

s 1850

6 cyl s td t rans

rad1o l1ke new w w II r es b lue lm 1sh
n1 ce car w 1th good economy

1971 MATADOR
loca l ca r

Sl491
a•r con d•t•oned

full e q utpmen l

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
OPEN EVES. 8:00PM.
POMEROY. OHIO

Chester
News Notes S.
livers ville News Notes
B) Clance Ailen
The Ladles AuXIlia ry of the
f1re d epartmen t met Wed n es d ay ev emn g at t he
fir e h ouse, w1lh pr esi de nt
Clarice Allen pres1dmg The
meeting opene d w1th Th e
Lord 's
P r a ye r
Th e
sec r e tary's r e port was r ead
by E rma Cleland a nd the
treas ur er's report by Opal
Wic kham Reports of comm1ltees we re g1ve n K1rk
Cheva li er , pres id ent of the
fir emen , me l w1th th e la dles
to a sk the ir help a t the food
booth a t the Me 1gs Coun ty
fair, also for don a tiOns of p1es
an d cakes Plans for servmg
food at a sale wer e discussed
and 1t was decided to have the
Wa ys and Means Commi ttee
lo work out the de ta1ls Roll
call was a n swe r ed by Betty
Ne we ll , Clance Allen, J ean
Sexs on, Marcia Keller, Gaye
Smalley, Joy Clark, She1la
Taylor , Erma Cleland, Opal
Hollon, Margar e t Christy ,
Carla
Ch ev a lier,
Opal
W1ckh am and Inzy Newell
Mr and Mrs V1rg1l Wood,
Sprmgfleld , were recent '
v1s1tors of Mr s Letha Wood
Mr and Mrs R oy Chr1s ty
attended the football game a t
Ca n t on
between
th e
Washmgton Redskm s and the
Cm cmnah Beng les
Ta mara and P e nny Clark
v1 s1led their grandparenl'; ,
Mr and Mrs Robert Clark
and attended t he Ath e ns
Counly F a 1r
Spe ndmg several days w1th
Mr and Mrs Roscoe Holl on
\\ere J a m es Ktmes, Tad afi.dl
Ta mm y, a nd Sha r on R oach ,

Rudy Durst local, Mr and
Mrs Tim Wllkm so n and

all of Clevela nd
Cha rles Spe nce r , Belpr e
called on Mr an d Mrs F red
R1ce Fnday
Geo r ge Ge nhe 1m er un de rwe nt surger y at Cam den
Clark Hospital , Par ker s burg
Arthur Orr IS a pat1ent a t
Sl
J ose ph
Hos pita l ,
Pa rke rsburg
Mr an d Mr s Da le Ha rt!a u g,
Sandus ky,
were
weekend guesl'; of Mr a nd
Mr s Roscoe H oll on
Mrs Elma Reute1 a nd
Geor ge, Akr on , spe nt a week
w1tl1 M1 ss Luc 1lle Sm1 th
Mr a nd Mrs Roy Chnsly
spe nt a r ecen t weekend m
Wooste r w1th Mr and Mrs

E rnes t

F 1she r

Mr
a nd
Mr s
Do n
W1lha m s, Da vid a nd Deana ,
Columbus, r ece ntly spent a
few days " 1th Mr a nd Mrs
Ra lph Keller
M1ss Suza nnah E 1c hmger ,
Columbus, s pe nt a week w1lh
Mrs Opal E 1chmge r a nd
fam1ly
R ecen t v is it or s a t the
Ar thur Orr h ome have bee n
Mr a nd Mrs Ira H1ll , New
Wa te rford , Mr and Mr s E d
Neuman 1 Jane an d Davtd,
Gallon , and Ca r l Lee
Ri c h a rd
K o bl e n tz,
Columbus s pe nt a recent
weeke nd with DavHj Koblen lz
a nd v1s1led h1s gr andfather
Geo r ge
Gen h c1me1
al
Cam d en Clark Hosp1la l

71 Ford Country Squire, air ...... .. ....... '1995
70 Chev. Monte Carlo Coupe ... . __ __ ,.... '2295
70 Dodge Monaco 4 Dr., air......... --- -· '1595

68 Olds Cut. S. Cpe., power, air. ..... ,.. '1195
68 Chev. Imp. Custom Coupe ............. 1595

461 S. Thud St.

Phone 992 2196

4 door

71 Olds C.S. HT Cpe., v-roof, air .......... '2595

70 Chev. Ef Camino, V-8 auto., P.S ...... 1i895

DAN THOMPSON FORD
OPFN FVFS TIL/

71 Rambler Sta. Wag., 6 auto., P.S...... '1695

70 Chevelle Wag., V-8, auto., P.S.. ......... 1895

See : Fred Blaettnar. Darrell Dodrill
or Dan Thompson

Racine Social Events

72 Ponliac Cat. Cpe., pOw., air .. .. ...... 1 2695
72 Olds 98 HT Sed. v-roof, power, a1r.... '2895

2 Dr Sedan V 8 Nothmg w r ong except st d sh•ft

Sh a wu and Mr and 1\lrs Pal
W1lkm son, Colu m bus attended a R e ds-Padres game
at R1verfront StadiUm m
Cincmnatl r ecently
Mrs. Ruth Blac kwe ll,
Charleston, W Va , Mrs
J ohn Evans and Donna Sue,
V1enna , W Va, Mr and Mr s
R1 chard Ables, Long Bottom
wer e c allers a t the home of
Mr and Mrs Louts De Luz ,
r ecently
Mr s Myrtle Lew1s and
Bre nda , Plymouth, W Va
ha ve r eturned home after a
VIsit w11h her daughter, Mr
and Mrs Bill Bryant and
family
Mrs Leshe Northway and
fa mily, Grand Rapids , M1ch ,
Mrs M1ke E vans and family
and Leota Bll'ch, local were
v1s 1t1ng Mr s
Ada Van
Meter over the weekend
Mr
and Mrs
Mont y
Proffitt and daughters have
returned from a vacation Ill
Texas and Mex1co
Mtss Pam Cole and mother,
Tuppers Plams and M1ke
M1ddleswart spent a week at
V1rgmia Beach, Blue R1dge
Natwnal Park and other
pomts of mter est on the
E astern seaboard , ~centl y
T om Durs t and VIe tor
Durst,' The Plams attended
auto races at Lexm gton , Ohio
over the weekend
Mrs Melvm La\VI'ence 1s
•h e n ew s ub stitute m a ll
ea rner on th e P ortl a nd Rac me r out e
Mr an d Mrs Sa m Le hew
cmd Elame \\C I e Ravens-

\

~

•I

1973 PONTIAC CAT.

•

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

' '

'

Your Friend[ Dealership

'

Blown
Insulation Services
Blown 1nto Wa lis &amp; AHtcs

Processing

DICK SEYLER

HOUSE at
Pome r oy
lorm alton

F r e eze

L&amp;VMeat

WOOD METAL PLASTIC
ANTIQUES
MODERN CHEMICALS

Ea st Mam

Wrap

on $35,000 00

Enl~rely

MEIGS
EQUIPMENT CO.

Wanted

Cut

ranch type on 10 a
of
vVooded land Good terms

BUSINESS
PROPERTY

Axle

TW O wOod ed build ing lots
w ilh wat e r tap m Bran ch
w o od Ad d •lt on
c lose to
Me .g s H 1gh Sc hool Phon e
99 ? 54? 1
8 I ? 5tc

PAINT
STRIPPING
SERVICE

N o 71476 Ma n on Jean Wa r
ner Pomeroy Oho Sa l •sbur
Townsh lp
You are her eby nottlted tha I
the
lnve nl o r y
and
Ap
pra 1seme nt o f t he esta t e of th
al or eme nt to n ed
deceased
tate of Sa• d Co u n t y was f iled;
n ! h iS Cou rt Sa1d l nvenlor v
and A p p r a tsemen t wil l be fo r
hea r •ng be f ore thrs Court on
the ??n d day of August ,.,. 75.
a t 10 00 o clock A M
A n y pe(son d es.rmg to file
cxcepttons th ereto must f le
I hem at l east f rve days Prtor to
the da t e set for hea r •ng
G•ven under my hand and
s.!:"al o f sa•d Court th s 6th day
of August 19!5
Ma n n.ng D WeQster
Judge
By An n B Watson
Deputy Clerk.
15 7tc

FREE ESTIMATES

NO 124 - Be f&lt;rst lo live 10
th1s 3 BR lull basement

1969 F1800 Tandem

C A NNIN G pea c he s n ow thru
Se pt ember 10 U S No t
grade y ell ow F re eston e For
c a n n• ng or fr e ezmg S6 49
b u sh e l $3 49 1 ; bus he S1 99
pec k
P L EA S E
BRING
YOUR
OWN
CON
T A I NER S Peach es a r e our
spec:•ally
Tw o co n v en1ent
l o &lt;: al tons
Bob s Market
Mason W Va Phone (304 )
n3 57? 1
and
M•dway
M ark et
Pome ro y
Oh•o
(61 4) 99 ? ?58 7
8 tO ?7 tc

CUSTOM SLAUGHTER

Real Estate For Sale

DAV I S JOO trenche r W1 lh b la d e
a nd trader Ph on e 985 3373
8 14 6tc

3 A N D 4 R O OM furn shed a nd
un fu r n• sh ed
ap a rt m ents
Ph one ?9? 5434
4 17 !fc

A PT l1 k e n ew 3 r oO m s w ilh
lar ge bath t a bl etop ra n g e
l ar ge clo set Ea s t Ma •n St
P o meroy Se e to appr ec•at e
Ph on e Gall.pol• s d urmg d a y
44 6 7699
e ... enmg s 446 953 ?
4 I 0 lfc

1/&lt;t'l
k , ., 6 1(

Air
Conditioners
AS WW AS 1 139.95

Jt c

p ro ,ec t or an d ca m e ra $1 00
1 4.:l acr e land
T P wat e r
av ail a bl e
Phon e 667 33 33
T uppe r s P l a• n s O h 1o
8 13 Stc

NEED E D so meon e t o l1ve 1n
and take ca r e of e ld e rl y
l ady Cal! 949 7791 fo r m o r e
tnf o rm a t ro n
8 13 6t c

T O P N OTC H ma tnte na nce or
mill w r 1ght ma n To p wage s
pa 1d
s t a gg e r e d
hour s
Cap able o f ma mt enan ce
sup erv 1s ron , o nly qua l1 f 1ed
ma•ll te nan ce m e n a ppl y
Pl ease c ont a ct m per son
Po m er oy F or es t P rod u c t s
Ba tl ey Ru n Road Po m e r o y
a 15 6t c

8 1&lt;1

Business Services

1 I '~

ALL

195KAWA SAKIKZ400 1)00
rn lc s
ma n y ex t ras. must
sell PhonP 99 ? 7066

7"

for '&gt; ill c Phone-

PER '10 N AL c te cl r• c WilShcr
GC' ncr ;-.1 Etect r 1c sw•vet
type sweeper
u sed ..,cry
pi'ldd ed 1r on nq boa r d
on &lt;;, t,l nd
l;)rqe '"~ '} )1: .,?
cle c tr• c tto o r l an wll h
con• r or s Phone 99 ., 'JJ 5R
!I 1? 6tc

For Sale

I'J GAUGE shell r e lo ad er s 1s
Sup e r B Ca sse tt e Mov• e

PRIV AT E m ee tmg room for
any o rgan1zatron phon e 997
39 75
3 1 1 tf c

P IG ~

CLOSEOUT I

BEDRM
m ob il e h ome
d e p OSit
and
r e f e r ences
re Qu •red
P hon e 9?? 3tl?9
8 15 61p

7

WAI TRE SS a nd b ar m a•d
Ta ll T•m be r s Night club
P hone 997 99tl3
8 I ? 6tc

B AB Y SI TT E R to wo r k
tn
h om e fr o m 8 a m 1111 4p m ,
.:1 1 days a w e ek Ca ll 99?
35a O afte r 4 30 p m
a 14 31c

B E DRM !r ail er
c o un tr y
$ 100 mont h p l us
toc ar. on
depos ll Ph one 997 33a8
8 1.1 61p

TWO b edr oom m o btl e h o m e
atr
con dil1onmg
w th
Rac m e ar ea
Phone ?9 ?

\

JLD tu r n •tu r e
tee boxes
br ilss b eds
o r co m ple te
h ou sehol d s
Wr1 t e M
0.
M ill er
Rt
4 P ome r oy
Oh •o Call 992 7760
10 7 7 4

.., 1\ f..!PEN T f.c'Y
ll oo r• nq
(( d nq Or d panC I IIHj PI10il ('

LANGUAGE SPOKEN AT
A 6ARDEN PAI&lt;TY.

For Sale

Wanted To Buy

P AC H..., H \INU pupp•es
j !I 509'1

rFRI.WAF,

·SIX BIG USED CAR BUYS
AT SMITH N£LSON MOTORS INC.
'

NOTICE OF FILIIJ G

OF INVENTOR Y AND
APPRAISEM E NT
Ttt e Sta t e of Oh i o, M e 1 gs
c ountv Court of Comm o n
Pl ea5&gt;, Probate 0t'ti'ISIOn
To the Execut r~ x of the
es rat e to such ol the followmg
il~ are res •d ent s o f !he St ale 0 f
Qh 10 VIZ
!he SUrV 1v 1ng
spouse t he next o r k1n the
benef•c•a r~ es under the w 111
and to the attorney or at
1orneys rep r esE'nltng any ol
rh e afo r ementtoned persons

I

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
" You ' ll L1k e Our Qua lif y Way
of Domg Bu smess"
992 -5342
GMC FINANCING
Pomeroy
Open Evemngs Untii6·00-T1I Sp m Sal.

PTA schedules
leader workshop
T he
Oh10
PT A
h as
sc he dul ed a umver s1ly work
shop fm le adership development at Ohw Unt vers tty ,
Se pt 17, Mr s Charles Goegle .n, preside nt of the Me1gs
Cuun ty Coun c il of Par enls
and T eac he r s, an n ounced
tod ay
The v. orkshnp, one of five to
be he ld m Ohw next m onth IS
des1gned lo be he lpful to a ll
PTA m embers 1n devel opmg
leadership skill s a nd ga m.ng
tnforma t10 n for Impr oved
pr ogr a m m .ng II will offer
tra nnn g tn m et h ods of
pre pm tng for an d lea dmg
pa rent educatiOn a ell,_ ttles
a nd ac q ua 1n l local PT A
leade r s wi t h commumty
r esour ce
peo pl e
an d
coo p e r ati n g age n c t es
ava ilable a nd wtlh ng to assts t
such p &lt;:~ l e nt ed ut atwn ac~
tlvlt Jes
Mrs Goeglem I s re ques ti ng
tha t a lleasl lwo pe r sons fr om
each un 1t atte nd the Mrk-

s hop and adv ises that the
expenses of part1c1panl'; 1n
th e Y. orks hop a re a leg itimate
e xpendilure of PTA funds
She adv ises tha t the Y.Or k
shop will be of most benefit to
p rog ram c ha irmen , parent
ed u cat 1o n
cha i rmen,
presiden t, vice p resident and
o th e1 offic e rs and v.ould he
1:l dv:m Lctgenus tn all mem-

bers
The "ork shop wil l be he ld
al
Morlon
Ha ll
w1th
regiS i rdll on and coffee a l 9 10
lo 10 am F r om 10 a tn to
n no n

there

p rese n t.atwn

be

a

sehoul-PTA

co m m u nity Jn l eract Jon
l'olloww g a b uffet luncheon,
a sessiOn on d eve lopm!4 a

local plan" tth group scsswns
on ld cntt f) mg tcchm qucs for
specific slt uatwns will be
he ld
T he s pea ker \\ Ill be Dr
Jam es Brunm g cha tr ma n of

the

Departme nt

PsH h olng}

Un1vers 1ty
wood , W Va vtsitu rs one
day last week
Mr . a nd Mrs T hom as
Birch and son , Wa terford ,
VI Sited Clmt Bll'ch a nd Leo ta
on Sunday
Mrs Fanme Durs t, Mr and
Mrs Jun M1ddleswart , Janet
and M1ke and M1ss Pam Cole,
Tupper s Plams we re guests
of Mrs Nell M1ddleswart
r ecently
Th e Brewer a nd Wolfe
Reumo ns w e r e h e ld at
Portland Park on Sunday
Mr . and Mrs. VIctor Durst
and sons, The Plams and
Mrs M1ke Evans and fam1lv .
loc al , "ere recent call e rs of
Mr and Mrs R R Durst
Mrs Ruby Bryant, Debra
a nd David , Mr s Myrtle
LewiS and Brenda , S W
Durst , Da nny Black, Duke
Dailey, Paul Evans , and Paul
Dean, Philip Pickens, Lams
De Luz , Larry Gluesencamp ,
Mr and Mrs Rudy Durst ,
Harry Richard, Gene carpenter, Jack Co rnell, Mrs
Mar y Gr e er , Leota Brrch ,

v.tll
tHl

al

of
Oh1 o

He has been

soc1al psycho l og ist and
teacher for 13 )ears IS the
author of two book s and
lllUllerous a r t1cles an d \\.3 5
tw i ce elected by Oh •o
Umvers ity
stu dents as
Outs tan dmg Profe ssor "
Reg1str a t10n fee IS $6 wh1ch
cover s the cost of lhe lu ncheon and the morm ng coffee
break Reg1stra ll on m ust be
rece1ve&lt;l and pa1d by Sept 12,
w1lh c hecks made payable lo
Oh10 Umvers1ly and ma1 led
to PTA Wor kshop , 301 fupper
Ha ll ,
Oh iO
Un1 vers 1t).
AIhens

Butlons Allen , Mr a nd Mrs
R R Durst, Carol Carter and
Mr and M rs Robert Wlnte
were vts 1tor s at the E . H
('..ar~nter's durmg ·the past
week
Ta mmy Cozart, Tuppers
Plams, was a n overmght
guest of N1ck1 Da wn Van
Meter recently

�I I
'

11 - The Daily Sentmel, Middle port-Pomeroy ' 0c·• Friday Aug 15 1975

10 - The Daily Sentmel , Middleport-Pom er oy, 0 , Friday, Aug 15, 1975

~l]J~M ® tk.J kl•w&amp;IJ ..-/ ~

For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds
.

Unscrambl e these four Jumbles.
one letter to each squa re , to
form four ord1n a ry words.

Pets For Sale

Phone

II JY "&gt;E l l Or1radecmyU ' •
co.ns or currency Will pay
'!.7 60 tor ~ t face 19M ilnd
o lder d11ncs quarters and
halves
Cil ll ~ulland 11 ~
36 1 ~o y e r Wamsley
A 1s 1? I c

B IS 3rc
G('rm&lt;ln
'he ph erd
PlliJP•C'S qood blOOd ll nC' S
P t10nc 99 / S6r 1
B 1'. !I C

/\ I&lt; (

I ()

Employment Wanted

WURCEFI.
~ 'J
I

r!

•

I

""

N o w arrange the crrcled lettns
to form the surprise ans-.er, as

~

Jumblr• WHEAT

CO VEY

MEDL EY

l o m o rro w)

B EC OME

Auto Safes

of

L1nda

No words

•on

E I don

loved

ones

however k 1nd

Ca n truly ease the qr1evmq

Sa dl y m1 ssed by Fa mil y

a

15 Hp

IN MEMORY o f Adelbert 0
Lee who de p a r ted th1s I de
17 years ago August l S

T oo fa r away for s1g ht o r
speec h
Bu t not t oo f ar away for
t h ou ght to reach
Swee t to r emembe r h •m w h o
o n ce was here
Sadly m •xxed by W1fe
Vaz 1e Lee
8 15 l ip

? dr 6
c yl r1utomn rrc \800 or best
o ff er Ph one 997 5 190
8 15 3t p

A T T ENTION
ME I G ~
SEN OR S 1 Sen •or Por l ra11S
w II be l.tken T u esday 1\uq
IQ through /l.uq 7J a1 Mc rqs
H qh Sc hool MAKE YOUR
AP PO IN TMEN T by ca l l mg
V•clue Abbott a! 99? /0 61 11 0
n 111 111 1 1 p n l Auqust l l f h
Thru IBih
8 10 81C

pa ss

hearts
O t th ose lh €y l eave beh 1n d
But memory •s the treasure
h ouse
0 1 happy thoughts t hey say
An d ha p py th oughts of those
we love
W ill never pass away

B 10 li e
IQ /0 I ORO Maver 1c k

Lou

StewQrt who pass ed away
Jwo yea r s ago August 16

away

1'161 C HEVROLET
P•ckup
Pho n e
V'. i'! l bur n 99'1 ?805

Notice

In MemOIJ
Whenever

B 1., ?61 c

Plumb 1n g
11ea t ng and all types of
qenera l
repa r
Wor k
quaran teed
70 years ex
Phone 992 240?
p e •• ence
5 1 Ifr

.\newer· It upp earH lhrR mart .11 mafl u m h oJd
hH• drmk - V-ALE-T

MEMORY

'.9

~EMOOELI N G

~ -~
~
-*-~-~-~~·~
-m~
hm~IK IIIII I]
(Aa ew ~ n

':t

WI L L d o od d tabs mow nq
haul ng pa rnt•nQ or roofing
Pl10n e ?9? !&lt;109
7 79 'l6tc

;::~~·~-::;_:h~J~=.:==:'::h:::~=='::::::,A::'_-,sugge!iled by the abovec artoon.

IN

f or s alE&gt;
lon
p1 ckup 196 3 Dodqe 6 (y l
ta1 r
condt11on
Call
N ew
H,l\len 88? 376~
8 10 61(

T~UCK

19 15 VEGA E s la t e wogon
10 000 miles
t ake ove r
payme n ts.
Phone 949 ?655
alter S 30
a 13 4t c

WILL car e l or elderly woman
10 my horne
Tram cd ,1r d
Exper,enced Call 991 13 11
8 17 61C
ROOM
AND
BOARD
Pr1 va t e a •r condlf,o n ed
room
pho n e
T V
ull
mea l s lau n dry pl u s many
extras Wrrte Mrs M
J
M 1ll er Box 105 Po m e r oy
OhtO
8 I 26 tp

1968
INT ER N AT I ONAL
Scout 1 wht&gt;el dn ... e good
c ond •l •on P hone 9!15 3505 or
91:15 3886 n ear Ches ter Oh1o
8 14 Jt c
1970 RA M B L E R (Re b e l! d dr
p s
304 V B auto
tr ans
m I SS I On P h on e 99'} :i'?O J
B 14 6t p

H YM N SING a l R u t l a n d
f=ree w lll Bapt•s l Church
Sun d ay Aug 17 2 p m All
s1 n ge r s an d the p ub l iC a r e
we l co m e
a 1 1&lt;ttc

1?10 SUP E R Spo r t Cheve l le
396 350 h p .:1 speed $90 0 m
good cond •t •on P h on e 747
6701
8 l A 3t c

Mobile Homes for Sale

Lost

1973 CHEV R O L E T Capr ce
Es t at e 9 p asse n ge r wagon
\? 900 Powe r st eer mg w 1th
t il t s tee r. n g w h eel po wer
brakes powe r bac k doo r
a nd w• nd ow
fa c t ory a ~r
c ond tt rontn g lug g ag e r ac k
ne w T1r es
A M J= M rad to
l1 g ht green With VInyl WO Od
gr a1 n Std•n g ot B 000 m li es
n tce ca r See a t 177 Un1on
Ave PomE&gt;roy Oh10 Ph o n e
99? 56 19
8 14 31 p

KEYS m br ow n le ath er case 19 71 SC H ULTZ mo b 1)e h ome 7
bed r oo ms
f u ll y carp et ed
hol d 1ng
a bo u t
a keys
exce ll en t con drli on
Phone
R e ward guara nt ee d L ost •n
99'} )774
P omeroy M1 d dle porr a r ea
B 15 ?1c
Pl ease retu rn to the Da•IY
Sent m el off• ce 111 Cou rt St
ONE 10 x 50 7 bed rm Peer l ess
Po m e ro y
housct r a l er
Ph one 99 7
8 1.:1 61c
51? I
B 15 Jlp

Yard Sale

19 / .'i FREEDOM mob il e home
GARAG E SA LE F r tda y and
lake ou t p ayme n ts
Call
Saturda y Ch es t er t O till 8
(6 11) t 46 3?? 1
Beds
d r esse r
chest of
s 17 1?t c
draw e r s b1 cyc l es mo w e r s
c lo the s f ab r• c
1969 P M C 1?x:,7 mobile h o m e
8 14 ?t p
wlih la rge porc h
55500
Ph one 985 350.1 d no answer
YA R O ~AL E 576 Syca m o r e
?9? 5596
S t ree t
M iddl e p or t
9 3
B 14 31c
August 15 16
a 13 3t c MUST se ll 1975 rr ave l tr ailer
78 11
ca rp eted
a1 r con
Y ARD Sa l e m Le t art F all s
dil1 0ned manv exlr a s Will
O ht O ( B uc k town 1
Th urs
t ake •r ade •n
Jo h nson s
day F r•da y a nd Sa t ur da y
Tr a1ler Park R t 7 across
Au g u s l 14 15 a n d 16 P earl
fr om Bl ue Fou nt a n Mo t el
W lll•s home
Ga lliPOl iS
8 13 3tc
8 10 6tc
YA RD a nd h o m e sale Th u r s
d a y F r tda y and Sa tu rday
Start s at 9 a m Con t ents of
hou s e
a.r
c onditione r
wa s h e r
ltbrary
tabl e
wr1hng t ab l e b ed s sh ot gu n
anltq ues c olor TV
m •sc
Rt 124 El m St , Rac m e
Phone 949 302 3
8 13 3tc

;-a,e-

Y A RD
at 3t-O Mech an •c
St Thur s d a y a n d Fr~day
So m e d epr eSS ion glass o ld
w ash board
e l ec
ap
pl t a n ces
a nd
tot s
of
cloth mg
8 13 3tc

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Case No 21581
Estate of Frank E
Lance ,
Deceased
Not•ce 1s hereb y g1v en t hat
Joe Lantz of Rout e 1 Reeds
vtlle
Oh to
ha s been duly
appomted E x ecutor of th e
Estate of Frank E
Lance
deceased
late o f
Me 1g s
County , Oh 1o
Cred•tors are r equ.re d to
f de the1r cla rms w1th s a1d
fud1&lt;:1ary W1thm four mon t h s
Dated th1s 28th day of July

1975

Man n mg D W eb st er
Co u rt of Common Pleas ,
Probate D IV I SIOn
( 8 1 t , 8 15 3t c

MOB IL E H ome 1? x 60 ?
b ed r oom ce ntr al a 1r con
d t•on 1ng
co mm erc 1a l
und e rp. nn •ng
u lil•ly
b u ild•ng Ph on e 887 1567
8 I ? 6tp
1?

60 NE W Moo n tr ader tw o
l ots o r tu ~ t b u y lots Tupp e r s
P la m ~
Oh m
Ph o ne 661
3Jl5
8 1? 6t c
&gt;&lt;

Help Wanted

For Rent
J

L AU RE L AND A pl s
Op en
Sat
Aug 16 Choos e your
new 2 bedroom l ownhou se
appl ianc es fu rn •shed fu ll y
c:a rpeted run s $ 1'18 up 1n
c lu d1 n g utllllte s
Bea ~l 1 f u l
n ew a pt co mpl ex •n N ew
Hav en W
V a S•x th and
George St s
See resrd ent
m a n ager
Sam o r Be ck y
Longa n ac1 e at th e1r a p t 8 4
o r c a ll ( 304 ) 887 75 67
8 13 3tc
4

-

R OOM S and bath apt m
Rutland area
Phone 99 2
585 8
7 27 tt c

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

TW O t r a iler lot s on rt ver bank
at C l1 fton W Va
1 ga s, 1
e l ec Phone 004) 77 2 5502
e e 61p
TRAILER lo t m Middleport
Call 99 2 5434
7 16 26t c

5B5B

8 1? r f c
?

2

NEEDS
MANAGEMENT TRAINEES
Heck's needs Managers &amp; Assistant
Man.agers. We are expandmg and
lookmg for qualified personnel to fill
store management positions.
Must Be Able to Relocate
Excellent Starting Salary
Numberous Fringe Benefits
Send your resume with photo to :

PERSONNEL DIREOOR
BOX 2762
c;:HARLESTON, W. VA.
ALL REPUES CONFIDENnAL •.
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EM,PLOYER

W I LDCA T S S790 8r1ck
Do u b le
A
Wa d s \ 3 per
750
/\II Bear Bo w s and
Arrows 75 p CI Oil liS! MaXI
Mr1gs \J
n M1n1 Mags
'l7 ?Y
"&gt;a ve Wampum
at
l nd an Joe s 108 Page S t
e t s J tp

B ED R O O M !railer
$77
w eek
A ll u lll t •es pa•d
Ph one 997 33?4
8 1? 1f c
BEDRO OM Tra il er
good P h one 992 332 4

very

a7

t

fc

'CO UNTRY
Mo b il e
Hom e
Park R t 33 ten m11 es north
Of Po m eroy Large lot s w1th
c oncre t e pat iOS' Sid ewalks
runn e r s and o ff st r eet
par k .n g Ph one 9?2 7479
12 3 1 lfc '
1=URN1 SHEO
ap a rtment
a dults onl y •n M 1cldleport
Phone 99 2 3874
3 25 tfc
- -~-~- -- -- -

MOB IL E h o m e for r e n t
A d u lt s onl y Ph o n e 99? 5535
B 10 tf c

Wanted

I•'''"

POMEROY LANDMARK
... ~ack W Carsey , Mgr
6it Phone 992 2181
THREE mdk goats ? part
Nuba1n Call after Sunday
J 1? 31 ....
tl 10 Stc

1917 CAMPER
pa r t!y self
con ta•ne d
must see to
app r ec ate
\ t 69 S
Pho n e
99 ? /!]8

Bl59 t c CA NNIN G to m a t oes.
g r een
beans
sweet
pe p pe r s
ONE l arge coa l lur n ace 70 000
Gera l d•ne
c ucumbe r s
B T U Phone 997 5171
Cl eland Rac•ne P hone 9.19
B 15 Jt p
II 71
7 25 l fc
W H Et\T p e nn •es 85c r o l l
sliver cer til •cales
1 1 ?S BICYC L E Repa 1rs Sa l es an d
each
S'J b ill s tJ 30 eac h
Serv •ce
.:19!! Locust St
Bu lt a to n ckels
$ 6 roll
M dd l epo r t Oh•o
Pho n e
silver d o ll a r s \.1 40 E&gt;ach
997 3092
L•be r tyntcke l s $11 r oll Call
7 77 26tc
~oge r Wamsley P h on e 74?
365 t
DOUB L E n eck s t ee l gu ta r
8 15 1? Tc
mu lt • chord $250 S td ney
H a y ma n 997 7713
19 1? ARROW Camper ph one
B 7 8tp
99? 5.lt'll:l
8 15 161 p
DE LI C I OUS home g r ow n
peac h es while an d ye ll ow
a N FORD Tra c to r to r sale
Maso n
P eac h O r cha r d
Call 110.:11 88 7 ?O i l
Ph one (3041 773 5559
8 14 3t c
B 8 I fc
N E WLY r e bu ilt 1950 Fe rgu son
lrac to r $1 450 00 4ft bru sh
6 fl gr ad er
h og S?8S 00
bla de
5 160 00
1 row
c u 111 vator 1 110 00 6 fl drag
ty pe t a m d en d ts k
S60 00
tr a1 1er 560 00 boo m p o le
$35 00 or will t a k e S?OO O 00
fo r wh ole w or ks Ph one a4 3
?56 \
B 14 6t c

sEAu TI F UL
new
t h ree
bedr oom h ome e,.; t ra la r ge
l ot wonderfu l tocat ton a ll
e lcctr c Gl ap p ro ... ed Ca ll
Ve lma Zuspan
(30.1)
173
5!50
B I'"~ 61C

3 ACR E S o f l a nd w th 2 m obil e
ho m es 10 A 1 cond il •o n
Ex c e ll en t w ell w 1th n ew
d e e p w e ll wat e r pump
MODE RN
Walnul ste re o
Many e •t ras Se en b y appt
ra d• o conso le am f m r ad• o
only Fo r m ore •n fo r matmn ,
4 sp eed ch a n ge r
Ba l ance
call 949 491 7 Pr tce d r• ght
$101 77 or te r ms Ca ll 997
fo r Qu tc k s al e
3965
8 5 12tc
8 1? I IC

H EREFO R O b u ll ? y ea r s o l d
P tro n e 99'} 5758 o r see Brad y
Kn o lls o n P e ac hfor k Rd
a 13 J tc

8 RM H OUS E bath ca r pe t
' ba semen t al um S1d1n g
storm wm do w s m sul ate d
n ver v1e w la r ge lo t d ou b le
carp or t wtth sh o p r ed uced
1
q u• ck s al e R tc ha r d W eaver
997 7066
B 1 t fc

LUMBE R fo r sa l e
d oors
w•nd ow s an d all k 1nds Call
a ft e r 5 p rn 99 ? 3658
a l3 6tc

HUN T ING L1cen s e
Nigh t
crawl e r s
m e al wor.m s
TAC KL E
gun s
amm o
bo w s
a rrow s
camp 1ng
equ 1p
C B s and ac c es sory
lndtan Joe s 308 Page St 2
st re e t s past M tddtepo rt
Sw •mmt ng Pool
8 13 26tp
1? 75 GT 3aO Su zu k1
5 000
m •l es s hll und er warranty
M1 n t con dll ron w •t h ex tra s
Ph on e 9?? 70 4 1
a 13 6tc

l OOx?OO LOT 1n f=nte P o1n1s
area Phon e 991 3576
8 15 21c
3 BE DR M h ou se large k ll
c h en
cen tr a l a tr
l a rge
k.• l c h en wall to wa ll ca r
p e 11ng
FHA
ap pr oved
P hon e 99 7 7030
8 15 61p
'J

BEDR OOM ga r ag e a p art
men t •n P ome r oy on R 1 33
nea r sc h oo l a n d c h ur c h
Go o d n e •ghb o r ho od
a ,,co nd lf •Onlng
g as
hea l
alum num s• dmg
b u d! Ill
ktl c he n cab n ets n ew roof
la rg e b ath ? l ar ge cl o se t s
sm all
lot
eco n o m• ca l
utd•Tr es Ca ll 74? 4 147 ea rly
o r a fl e r 6p m
B IS 31p

INTERNATIONAL TRUCK
Cab and
Chass1s.
Looks Good
Good
Mechanical
Cond.
Good tires.

Bustness Space

2.000 sq II (Leased)
Completely Furnished
Appotntment Only

PnM'hoY.o
Lovely

home 1st floor has lovely
kitchen range &amp; ret , dtntng
R , I BR , bath 2nd , 2 n1 c e
BR s Very litt le grass t o

c ut Storage bldg NG heal
$15,500 00
POMEROY
Large
home In good c ondtfton
Could have 2 apartments , 5

2 baths , new

F A

porches,

out

cellar THE LOW PRICE
OF $10,000
MIDDLEPORT - Very
ntc e 3 BR home
ftreplace , ntce

L R ha s
ktfchen

balh , full basement w1th
u t tllty , N G furnace , fru tt

ntce

tree s ,

Ktt c hen State In s pected
Lice n s ed
Baker
and
Decorator
Homemade
Noodles a I so featured

Nathan B1ggs
Rad1ator Spe c •ahst

KUHL CAKE DECOR

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Flatwoods, Ohto
Pomeroy, Oh10

Slop In Or
Call992 7537

Pomeroy

E XCAVA T ING
ua{: Kno e
dO.le r
and d •t cher
Gas
e t ect r •c and wa t er l 1n e
burt al b as em ent s footer s
sept1 c sys t ems and bru sh
cle an m g Wdl ha ul fill d1rt
to p so •l sand and g r a v e l
l•m es l on e to r dr ivew a ys a nd
r oad s
P h o ne Charle s R
Ha t f1 eld B ac k hoe Se r v•ce
R t I Rut l and Oh10 , 742
6092
7 11 90 tc
I::LWOOLJ bVWEk' ~ RE P A I R
Sweeper s toaste r s tron's
all sm all ap p l1 a n ces L awn
m ow er n ex t to St ate H1 g h
way Ga ra g e on Route 7
Phon e ?85 3825
1 16 lfc

MIDDLEPORT -

furnace

CAKE BAKING
WANTED

F r om th e la r g es t Tru c k or
Bu ll doze r Ra d ta t or t o th e
spa l lest H ea ter Co r e

Ph 992 2174

Li1 ure t St
Fo r t urth er tn
call 99? 38 68
a 14 6tc

608 E .
MAIN

BR

EXPERIENCED
I Radlato
Service

4 101 mo

178

H OUSE
3 b ed ro om
l ar ge
ll v •n g r oom b a th k tl chen
basement g a ra ge and
1Ja110 Phone 9?? 7547
a 10 61c

yard

A

LXCAVAT IN G d ozer l oad er
and bac kh oe wo rk
sep t 1c
t a nk s
•n s t a ll ed
dump
t ru cks an d lo boys lor h tre
wil l hau l f II d• r t top so •l ,
t .mestone and grave l Ca ll
Bob o r Rog er Je ff e r s day
p h on e 992 70R9 n• ght pho n e
997 3525 or 992 S2J2
2 11 lf c

---

~

~t:W IN G

MAC HtN E
serv tce a ll ma k es
992 22a.1 The Fa br •c; Sh op
P omero y A u th o'r heO Sm ge r
Sa t es a nd Se r v •ce
We
sharpe n Sc 1ssor s
3 29 lfc
Re pb~r s

H A N D LET TERED
SIG N S
A ND PO STERS
J=REE
E ST I M A T ES CA L L M C
CR A W J=OR D ?92 768 0
8 7 26t p

8 I 7&lt;

D &amp; D T R EE Tr 1m m 10g

READY

M I X CONC f&lt;
de l • -~t~ered
r rght to
protect Fas l and easy
esll m ates P hone 992
Goegle.n Ready M•x
M ~d lepor l Oh •o

ET E
y o ur
f= r ee
328 4
Co ,

6 30 HC
G ENE RAL R e pa1 r c l ean up
an d
haul t ng
c utl 1ng
we id t n g
ca rp e nlry
plu m b•ng e!ec maso nry
and general remo d e l•ng
Call Sk tl Poo l
Ph one 99 2
5126
6 17 tfc
Cv~I U M,

P I L I U F&lt;E
O RI G IN A L
F R AM IN G
SEASCA PE
A ND L A ND
SCAPE P A INTIN GS
E
JOYCE MIL L ER 997 768 0
a 10 ?4 tp

MOB ILE Cran e se r vtce and
d oze r wor k Ph one 992 54 68
8 1 26tp

-

---~-

~ - --

---

WOUL LJ
r u U BELIEVE?
Build an a ll s teel b ulld 1ng at
Pole B a rn p r •ces? Golden
G• a n t All St eel Butld tn gs
Rt
.1
B ox 148 W a ve rly
Oh 10 Ph on e 947 22 96
7 24 t fc

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

BA CKH O E for r ent , h o ur or
c o nt ract r eg or exca vatory
t yp e Se plt c la nks tn st alled
B1ll Pu llt n s phon e ?9 2 2478
7 24 26t c

A vacant ground for sale

WE ALSO HAVE SOME
MOBILE HOMES
GOOD
HOMES
ARE
SELLING FAST- LET US
SELL YOURS TODAY
PHONE 992-2259

Strout Realty

has

busmess

50 a , more or

older home,

4 MORE LOADS
Good Used Furniture Just Arrived!

heal, $38,000 00

NEW LISTING -

of

nver , J bedrooms, closets, 111:2
baths, gas ftred hot water
heat
full basemenf, and
garage
Very ntce locat10n
near stores

NEW LISTING -

26 acres of

rolling land , 3 bedroom home,

bath , drolled well . 2 farm
ponds (stocked), 2 car garage,
barn and 2 hen houses
NEEDS NEW OWNER - New
5 bedroom home. 3 baths,
central atr and heat, fam 1l y
room, ntce ktfchen with dish
washer , stove, refngerator
and bar 2 car garage and

large yard
WILL TALK -

On th1s a 2

bedroom home wtth bath, and
gas forced a tr furnace Ask tng

$10 ,000 00
A GOOD BUY - 5 rooms , one
lloor plan 10 Middleport w1th
and

2

porches

near

schools, for only $7,500 00.
RIVER FRONTAGE -

7

'

Present Inventory Has Been Reduced 1

paid for, 10 m &lt;les from
Pomeroy $6 ,400 00

INVENTORY
CLEARANCE SALE

307 Spring Ave.
Pomeroy
992-2298
CONTACT:
Lo1s Pauley

L~T US DO IT! !

4

RUBBER BACK
e have hundreds ~ .,.o~
carpet values Your lOb ca
be completed in 1 to
weeks
No long walt•no
period Our •nstaller has 2
years exper•ence
Expert
•nstallat,on
You'll like
What YOU get

CALL 742 4211
TALK TO WENDELL
GRATE,

W•l

T he lollow •ng r eal estate
s. t uate d •n th e V• ll age of
M d d fep or t Coun t y o f Me1gs
a nd S t ate of
Oh 1o
and
bo und ed and d escr~ bed as
fo llo w s
Be•ng 1n Pal me r s Ad d •l•on t o
s.a 1d V ill ag e and mo r e par
l•cula rf y
de ltn eated
as
fo llo w s Begm n m g at a po•nt
on S1xth St r ee t 50 f eet so ulh of
t h e so uth wes t co r ne r o f
H oo k e r an d Stx l h St r ee t
then ce r unn. n g 1n a sou t he rl y
d •r ect• o n a lo n g t h e west S1de
of S!x lh Str ee t f or a d ts l an ce of
SO fe e l to the n or theast corner
o f a par ce l of la n d own ed b y
E l• za b eth Sa nford ( EI• zabe lh
Har ll n g er befo r e m a r rt a gel
th e nce runntng tn a wes t erl y
d •r ectt on alon g the I me of sa •d
Sa nf o rd l ot t o t h e east li ne of
Lo w e r Po me r oy ( n ow a pa r t of
M1 ddl e po r t l
t he n ce m a
n orth erly d •r ec t•on a lon g t he
e a s t lt ne o f sa 1d Lo wer
Pomero y for a d1 sl ance half
w a y to Hoo ke r S tr ee l t h ence
•n an easte rl y d•r ec t 1on on a
d•rect l m e ro the place of
b eg1nn1n g II •S t he p urp ose of
lh 1S d eed t o c on vey a parcel of
la n d 50 f ee t o n S•x th Stree t an d
runnmg w es t erl y at th at w• dl h
to th e east l •n e o f Lower
Pom er oy T h e above 1S a p ar t
of the s am e p r em tses con
ve y ed from S1d P Co e an d
Dan S L ew1 s Jr
to M agg1e
F tsher b y dee d d a t ed Sep t 4
1901 and rec o r d ed m Vo l ume
as P ages 369 and 370 of the
r ec o r d o f D eed s o f Me1gs
Coun l y Oh 10
D eed R efer ence
V o lu me
127 Page 391 Me gs Cou nt y
De ed R eco rd s
~ A
churc h p a r son ag e •s
.stt u ate d upon th e f oreg om g
des c:nb ed r eal es t a te
' Sa•d Co mp laml and c au se
w tll b e h eard on I h e 30t h d ay of
,A ugu st 19 75 at 10 00 o 'c l oc k
A M or a s so on t herea ft er as.
t he Courl ma y de l er m m e
Be u l ah Whtte
John Werner
Pau l Smart
Ge r a ld A nlho ny
To n y Fow l er
F r eda H oo d
Lo u• se Th om p so n
Ted Ril ey
R Ob ert L eW IS
; ( 8) 1 B 15 Jl c
NOTICE ON FILING
OF INVENTORY AND
APPRAISEMENT
Stal e of Oh10, Me1g s
~ County
Court of Common
~~ P'Iea~ Probate DPn s ton
To the E xecu t or of lh e
es t at e to su&lt;: h o f the fo ll ow .n g
as ar e r es 1d ents o f th e Sta t e of
OhiO VI Z
t h e SU r VIVI n g
spou se the nex t of k n th e
ben ef rc1a n es und er !h e w ill
and to th e a ll o rney or a t
tor n e ys re p re sen t1 ng any o f
th e aforemenflo n ed p ersons
F rank E La nce Deceased
Ree d svill e, O h1 0 R 0 1 Ol1ve
T o wn shtp N o ?15 81
Y ou ar e h e r eb y n o t lf •ed that
th e
In ve n tory
a nd
Ap
pr a1seme n t of the est a te of th e
deceased
afore menlt o ned
late of s a 1d Co u nty w a s til ed
m th1 s Cour t Satd lnOJ entory
and Ap p r a •seme nt wdl be fo r
hean n g b efo re t h ts Co ur t on
th e ?9th d ay o f A ugust 1975 at
10 oo o c l oc k A M
AnY p er so n d es•r•ng l o Ide
ex c e p t to n s fh e r e t o must f1l e
the m at l eas t f v e da y s pnor to
t h e d ate se t f or hear. n g
G •v en un de r my han d a n d
sea t ot sa •d Co urt tht s 13 t h
day of Augus t 1975
Mannm g D We b ste r
J u dge
B y A nn B Wa t so n
De p ut y Cler k
\Sl 15 ?7 2tc

NOTICE OF

lhe Feny al

Square
Yard

LEGAL NOTICE
Not ce •S her eby g•ven to t he
off •cer s a nd members of the
t= .rst
Bapt1s l
Church of
Mi d d l ep or t Oh•O and to al l
ot h ers w h om II may c:o n cern
that on the 30 t h d ay of J ul y
1975 th e t ru s t ees o f the J= rsl
Bap t s t Chur ch o l Mtddlepo r t
Oh• o fil ed •n th e Cou r t of
Commo n P leas of Me gs
Coun t y
Oh1 o
tn Case N o
15 865 a cer ta 1n Compla1nl
dema ndm g the Cou r t for an
ord er g•v mg them a uth o r lly t o
sell and c o nvey tn l ee s1mp te
the fo l low m g d escr bed real
estate s• t ua t ed m th e County
of Me gs Sl ate o l Oh 10 and .n
the Vill a ge of Mt d d l eport to

If you !ravel

Branch Manager

•

&lt;::

POMEROY •
Cotne
Rutland

1\

~

..::

on
over,
Furmture

111

Bargam Center wtll

pay

your
charge .

ferry

•

Delivery
Service
to W. Va st1ll the
same wh1le bndge at
Pomeroy IS closed

742-4211

Rutland . 0.

See Herb. Dave or Mike Grate.
Also Gene Smith

••

APPOINTMENT
c ase No 21579
Estate of Charles B ennett,
Deceased
No t iC e 1S h er e b y g .ven th at
Warren
B enn e ll
of
381
Loveman Ave nu e
Wo rth
•ngton O h1 0 has b een dul y
appo 1nted a s E xec utor o f t h e
Estate of Charl es B enn ett .
decea s ed
tat e of Me1gs
County O h1 0
Cr edttor s ar e re QUi r ed to
f1le the 1r c latm s wllh sar d
f1dU c 1ary w th •n fo ur monlh s
D at ed lh1 s 25th da y of Ju l y
1975

Aug

Rutland Furniture

CARPETCONSULTA~~

RUTLAND
FURNITURE
742-4211
Ru on

Ph. 992-2689

PLUS•••

NO. 139 - 4 a on matn
htghway, water tap tn and

Carpeting
-501 NYLON
99

20

ye ar s exper •ence Insu r ed
fr ee es t .m ales Ca ll 992 305 7.
Coolv ill e
P h one ( I I 66 7
30 41
4 30 tf c

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

BARGAIN AT $14 ,800
WE HAVE A COUPLE OF
FARMS AND
SOME
ACREAGE 135 A and 138

less, 3 BR

OHIO PALLET CO.
'

Real Estale for Sale

'

I

downsta~rs
completely
remodeled, 2 car gar ,
barn , farm pond, free gas

ROUTE 33 - Lillie 2 bedroom
renovated home w1th bath,
wall-to wall carpeting Front
porch and hlce level lot
HAVE
OVER
SO
, WE
PROPERTIES FOR YOU TO
CHOOSE FROM DROP IN
• OR

Rt. 2 Pomeroy

BOA T Mot or s Rep a •r s 498
L ocus t St
M •d dl epo rt
Oh 10 P h on e 992 3091
7 22 ?6tc

NO. 130 -

Poles, maximum dia. 10" on

TO:

SEPT I C TA NK S CLEANED
Reason a bl e RATES Ph on e
116 1782 Galltpolts
J ohn
R usse-11 owner
J ? lfc

7 17 1 m o

lease for 3 yrs , $18,500 00

CHIPWOOD
DELIVERED

EPT I C T/\NK S clea ned
11/lodern Sanlla t •on 997 )9S.:t
or 99 ? lJ -19
9 18 t f c

downstatrs

992-7889 or 992 5320

' rooms
Ph
baths, family
room, nat gas heat and 2
corner lots

Bundled Slabs .. !6.00 per ton

7 24 I mo

NO. 127 - Bus iness bldg
20x18 on Matn St •n town
S1x room apt upstatrs,

2 Apartments

bath

largest end ..... *6.70 per ton

Ph 992 2798

LA~r~c~e~~~~~ER
!&gt;y~h 992 3993

Iron! lot plus wooded lot
behind Water tap pa1d tor
but not &lt;nstalled. $5,000.00.

19 7J ?0 FT
G O O SENEC K
s toc k trad er wdh 19 74 Chevy
du al wh ee l
t ton pt c kup
Ca n b e bought togeth er or
separat e Call 747 3767
8 10 tfc

WANTED I

Pomeroy

NO 125 - 1 8 a , more or
less, vacant ground, ntce

Remodeled
MIDDLEPORT

Ph. 992-2176

&lt;..: A SH patd for all makes a .. a
models of mobile homes
Phone area cod e 61 4 423
'95 31
4 13 tfc

Oh10 R oute? . North E ast of
T uppe r Platns
Cool v ill e, Ohto
Phone 667 3608
Open
Monday
thru
Sa turday 8 00 to 8 oo
NOW OPEN
L a rry and Vtvtan Hopps
Ownefs

.

..

M annmg D Webster
J udg e
Co urt of Co mm on Plea s
Probat e D IV ISIO n
M e tg S Co un ty O h 10
1, tl , 15 3tc

NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
case No 21583
Estate of Manon McClur e,
Deceased
Not1ce •S here b y g1ve n th at
J= l ora M c C lu r e of D ext er
Ohto has be en dul y appomt ed
Admmtstralr•x o f th e Esl ate
of Manon Mcclur e d ece a se d
l~t e Of Me1g S Cou nl y O hi O
Cr ed1t or s a r e requ •r ed to
lite th e 1r c l cum s wit h sa• d
f1dUc 1ar y wllht n to ur month s
D a t ed th1 s ?9t h day of J ul y
19 ' 5
M a nn.nq 0 W e b st e r Judg e
~ BI

1

8

1 Sltc

.-

2 Or

H T Sha r p

1

1974 V. W. BUG

3195

Local Owner

'2895

USED CARS

73 CHEV. MONTE CARLO 1973 Olds Delta Roval
Real Clean

•3995

•3395

l1k e New

1973 PLYMOUTH DUSTER 1972 Ford Grand Torino
2 Dr H T N1 ce

2695

1

1

2 Dr H T

2695

Open Evenmg Tlll7 P . M . &amp; Sat . T1l S P . M.
We honor Bank Amen card Master Charge &amp; Soh10 Credit Card .

NOTICE OF
APP O INTMENT
C ase N o ll5St
Es t ate of L ea lh a M Knnk e
Deceased
Not• ce •s here b y g ven that
E Jeanne Braun of Pome r oy
Oh•o has been duly ap pomted
Execuhr•x of the Esta t e of
Leatha M K r•nke d eceased
late o f Me gs County Oh 0
Credito r s a r e req u 1re d 10
f ile the. r cta1ms wilh sad
f •duc .ary w •thtn fou r months
Dated lh1S 78th day of July
1975

(8)

I

75s are EXTRA GOOD BUY because :
l - 76's will be much higher
2- Yours w1ll be older and worth less .
3- Dan's "Lowest possible price, highest
trade -m, but with highest value . Buy
now wh1le select1on is good and prices
are lowest!"

1972 OPEL 4 CYL ............... ...... 1695
1

ENJOY THE
112th ANNUAL
MEIGS COUNTY

Manntng D Webste r
Court ot Common Pleas
Probate o,..,,s ,on
a 15 Jtc

2 Dr

Shows tender ca r e

Economy ill best

1972 PONTIAC 400 -.................... '2195

Mr and Mrs. Larry Bll'ehfield r ecently spent a
vaeatwn w1th relatives m
Florida and then JOurneyed to
lllin01s and VISited relative s
there
Mr and Mrs Wilham
Culwell we re m Kentucky on
Saturday and Sunday where
th ey were g uests of thel!'
brother s ,
Sisters,
and
famil1es
Those v1s1tmg With Murl
Gallaway were Mrs Maxme
Hamilton, Oak Hill , W Va
and Abby Graves, Columbus
Mr
and Mr s
David
U eweleyn and Jemy have
returned from a vacation tr1p
to Flor1da
Nancy Struth and hance,
Reece Prather, Columbus,
were gues ts of her parents,
Mr and Mrs Lewis Sm1th on
Saturday
Mr and Mrs Bob Jones
and family, Dayton, spent
several days at their !ann
here and v1s ited the1r
brother-In-law and sisters,
Mr. and Mrs Vtctor Perry
and Ellen Fac emyre
Mr and Mrs. Lavern
Jordan , Betty, Jeme Sue,
and Damy vacationed in New
Boston , Illm01s w1th Mrs
Jordan 's brothers and s1ster
and families, Mr and Mrs
Lee Jeffers , Mr . and Mrs
John Dunham and family and
Mr and Mrs R1chard Jeffers
and ch1ldren all of the New
Boston area
Mr and Mrs John Cordray, Fullerton, cahforma
are spending a vacation m
thts area and vtsttmg h1s
mother, Mrs Beulah Cordray, his brother-m-law and
stster Mr and Mrs Re ed
Jeffers and other relative s
Columbia Grange No 2435
held their regular meetmg A
rught gown c ontest was held ,
and crocheted entries were
shown Plans were d1scussed
for an Albany Fall' exh1b1t
Usmg "vacation" as the
theme,
an
mterestmg
program wa s presented by
the lecturer, Arthur Crabtr e e
Seve ral members
participated
Mr and Mrs Lee Jeffers
and foster daughter, Ann,
New Boston, lllmots, spent a
few days wtth h1s parents,
Mr . and Mrs . Reed Jeffers
and other relatives here On
Sunday a famtly gathering
was held at the Jeffers home
wtth the followmg present
Mr . and Mrs Lee Jeffers and
Ann , Mr and Mrs Gene
Jeffers, Lester, Marco and
Robert , Mr . and Mrs M1ke
Lawson; Mr
and Mrs
Lavern Jordan , Danny, Betty
and Jerne ; Mr. and Mrs.
Larry
Birchfield
and
children ; Mr and Mrs Dav1d
Uewelyn and Jenny , Mr . and
Mrs. Jack Jordan and Jason;
Donrue Quesenberry ; Kim
Allman and Mrs. Leola
Cordray , the host and hostess
and her mother, Mrs Beulah
Cordray
Mr and Mrs Albert Walsh,
Jr , Mark, Teresa and Beth
enJoyed a 10 day vacation
trip
They
flew J rom
Columbus to Yellowstone
National Park, rented a car
and motored to Denver,
Colorado, then returned
home by plane
Mrs Pat Jones at tended
the wedding of her s1ster-m-

•

So l d new for over ~MOO Ful l power arr ster eo V roof ,
1 500 m il es New Cadillac 'rade

75 Olds. Cut. Sup. Sedan, air ......... .. .'4795
74 Olds Salon Coupe, ·
. I roof ... .. ...... ...... .'4595
power, air. an d vtny
73 Olds Roy. S&amp;HT Cpe., air .... .. .... . '3295

1973 PLYMOUTH 31B ................. 12795

73 Olds 98 LS Sed., v-roof, air....... ... '4395

v a2 dr

sedan V 8 gol d d us ter doub le Mrre!l sharp 316 V

73 Nova 2 Dr., V-8 auto., P.S. .. .. ...... 12895

8 fully opera t ed con so l e a uto t ra n s

1973 FORD GRAN TORINO .......... 12795
4 Dr

Sed an , one ca r efu l loca l owner
lrans power brakes

72 Ford Pinto Wagon, auto., radio ....... '1895

power st cenng auto

72 Chev. Imp., 4 door, power, air ... .... 12295

1971 OLDS VB CUTlASS S...........12195

Carpenter
Personals

/4 Cadiffac S. DeVille, rad. ltres, air..... '6500
74 Cadillac C. DeVille, full power, air- .. '6700
73 Cadillac Cpe. DeVtfle, pow., atr.... ... '5100
75 Chev. Caprtce 4 door ..... ....... ..... '5~95

(d t alma 2 d r h a rd l o p atr con d llt oned beautifu l dark green
fm•sh wrth white l op ful l y eq u1pped

72 Dodge Swinger Cpe., V-8 auto ... -... . 12095

2 D r hard t op, Ex tr a n•c e, a1r condtt1oned f u ll y e qu•pped

THIS WEEKEND

1971 FORD VB TORINO ........... ,... 1495
1

THERE'S SOMETHING
FOR EVERYONE!

1973 CHEVROLET 314 TON ...... ....... 13995
Four w h eel drtve p •ckup The very best care by one local
owner , 350 V 8 power s tee r 1n q , ex tra good M &amp;S I t r es

1972 CHEV. 6 CYL. ...................... 12195

RIGGS USED CARS
98~100

Located on St. Rt. 7

11 Ton P• ckup Shows most tender care by one local me r
chan t Low mileage

196B CHEV. VB IMPALA ................. '795
2 Dr

hardtop

Chester, 0.

W or t h much m ore

Ry Mrs. Francis Morns
R e v How a rd Shive ley
r e lurn e d Au g u s l 8 fr om
G a rr et t E van ge li c al
Th eol og ical Se minary where
he comple ted h1s fifth year m
s um me r sc hool a nd was
g r a du a t e d
We dn es d ay,
Aug us t 6 Wh1le a t Garre tt he
served a s v1ce pr es ident of
the stude nl coun c1l of the
sc h oo l atte nd e d b y 100
pasto rs from 13 s ta tes Rev
Sht veley Y.tll con tmue as coordinator for the Southern
Clus ter of Umted Me thod iSt
Churc hes and will se rve th1 s
year a s T own and Country
repre se ntative on the Athen s
Dtslnc t
Coun c il
on
Mm1stn es He wtll r eceive
a ssoc iate m ember s hip 1n the
Wes t OhiO Conference durmg
annual c onference next June
Sixteen m e mber s of the
Be rtha M ,a yre M1ss10na r y
Soc 1ely we n t to the Me1gs
Count y
H ome
Monda y
eve mng , Aug ust 11 to honor
th e patients hvmg th er e, also
the birthday of one was observed w1th a g1fl Mrs Ma ry
Yost was m cha r ge of a short
progr a m t1tl e d , ' Th e Intim acy of He ave n " and
sc11plure from Revela tiOn 22
" as read and prayer by Mr s
Nondus He ndncks All JOin ed
m s mgmg hymn s Re fr eshme n!.'; of 1ce c re am, cupcakes
and punch we re served
Mrs Maym e Mallory " a s
lak e n to H olze r Me d1 ca l
Center Fnd ay eve nm g ,
August 8
Mrs Gladys Shie lds suffered a broke n a nkle at he r
home and 1s a t Vete ra ns
Me monal Hosp1 ta l
Mr
and Mr s
Robert
Cornwell of Galhpohs v1s1ted
her paren ts, Mr a nd Mrs
Ed M11le r Mr Cornwe ll IS
c onvelescmg after bem g In
Holze r Medic al Center fr om a
heart attac k
Earl Hart , Mr a nd Mrs
Linley Hart and Mr and Mr s
Charles P y les attended the
Hart Reumon at the Racm e
Loc ks Park Sunday
Mrs Hel e n H or ner of
Akron v1s1ted recently w1th
Mr and Mrs Elza Birch
Mrs Paula La1rd and sons
have returned to lhe1r hom e
a t La Mesa , Cahfor ma a fte r a
mon ths v1s1l w1th Mr and
Mrs Lmley Hart and other

law, Brenda Jones m Mason
City , West Vtrgmia
Mr and Mrs Norman
Shan er , Athens Route, VISited
w1lh Mr and Mrs Waller
~ ordan a nd son
Mr and Mrs Lawrenc e
Tacke tt, Flatwoods, Ke n tucky, were overnight guests
of his brotheNn-law and
s1ster , Mr and Mrs W1lha m
Culwell

rela l1 ves Mrs P ete Sm1 lh of
P om er oy accompa med Mrs
Harl to tak e th e m to
Rey noldsburg lo accompan)
Mr and Mr s AI Cla rk to
Cahforma
Mr
a nd
Mr s
Hank
Alve r son of r.a Cr ensa,
Ca hforma a nd Mrs Edna
Hanpnc ht of T oled o spe nt
Sunday w1th Mrs Edi son
Brace
Mr an d Mrs El za B1rc h
v1s1led h1 s sis ter, Mrs Ea rl
Powe ll a t St J oseph Hos p1tal
Parke rsburg
Mr a nd Mrs R oy Riffl e
spe nt Thur sda y, Aug ust 7
w1 t h Mr and Mr s B ill
Mc Ke nZie a t Ga lhpohs
Mr a nd Mr s E rnest Bush
v1s1led Mr a nd Mrs Ed
Mille r r ecently
Mr s No ndu s H e ndr~ c k s
and son Steve s pe n t Sund a y 1n
Logan VISitin g Mr and Mrs
Roy He ndnck s and ch1ldren
and Mr and M1 s W1lha m
Wagner

01 .

THURS SAT Til \ . On

M1ddleport, OhiO

2 SIGNS

Pomeroy
OF
QUALITY Motor Co.
1975 MONTE CARLO LANDAU

SAVE

Dark red whtte vmyl top loa ded w tth extras tn clu d tng
ru r con d tilt wheel Cru •se Conlro l custom m tenor
powe r &amp; recl1 n tng seat AM rad•o tape rad1al w s w
t•res l ess th a n 4 500 mt les by l ocal ow n e r SAVE

SAVE SAVE
1972 COMET 2 DOOR

s 1850

6 cyl s td t rans

rad1o l1ke new w w II r es b lue lm 1sh
n1 ce car w 1th good economy

1971 MATADOR
loca l ca r

Sl491
a•r con d•t•oned

full e q utpmen l

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
OPEN EVES. 8:00PM.
POMEROY. OHIO

Chester
News Notes S.
livers ville News Notes
B) Clance Ailen
The Ladles AuXIlia ry of the
f1re d epartmen t met Wed n es d ay ev emn g at t he
fir e h ouse, w1lh pr esi de nt
Clarice Allen pres1dmg The
meeting opene d w1th Th e
Lord 's
P r a ye r
Th e
sec r e tary's r e port was r ead
by E rma Cleland a nd the
treas ur er's report by Opal
Wic kham Reports of comm1ltees we re g1ve n K1rk
Cheva li er , pres id ent of the
fir emen , me l w1th th e la dles
to a sk the ir help a t the food
booth a t the Me 1gs Coun ty
fair, also for don a tiOns of p1es
an d cakes Plans for servmg
food at a sale wer e discussed
and 1t was decided to have the
Wa ys and Means Commi ttee
lo work out the de ta1ls Roll
call was a n swe r ed by Betty
Ne we ll , Clance Allen, J ean
Sexs on, Marcia Keller, Gaye
Smalley, Joy Clark, She1la
Taylor , Erma Cleland, Opal
Hollon, Margar e t Christy ,
Carla
Ch ev a lier,
Opal
W1ckh am and Inzy Newell
Mr and Mrs V1rg1l Wood,
Sprmgfleld , were recent '
v1s1tors of Mr s Letha Wood
Mr and Mrs R oy Chr1s ty
attended the football game a t
Ca n t on
between
th e
Washmgton Redskm s and the
Cm cmnah Beng les
Ta mara and P e nny Clark
v1 s1led their grandparenl'; ,
Mr and Mrs Robert Clark
and attended t he Ath e ns
Counly F a 1r
Spe ndmg several days w1th
Mr and Mrs Roscoe Holl on
\\ere J a m es Ktmes, Tad afi.dl
Ta mm y, a nd Sha r on R oach ,

Rudy Durst local, Mr and
Mrs Tim Wllkm so n and

all of Clevela nd
Cha rles Spe nce r , Belpr e
called on Mr an d Mrs F red
R1ce Fnday
Geo r ge Ge nhe 1m er un de rwe nt surger y at Cam den
Clark Hospital , Par ker s burg
Arthur Orr IS a pat1ent a t
Sl
J ose ph
Hos pita l ,
Pa rke rsburg
Mr an d Mr s Da le Ha rt!a u g,
Sandus ky,
were
weekend guesl'; of Mr a nd
Mr s Roscoe H oll on
Mrs Elma Reute1 a nd
Geor ge, Akr on , spe nt a week
w1tl1 M1 ss Luc 1lle Sm1 th
Mr a nd Mrs Roy Chnsly
spe nt a r ecen t weekend m
Wooste r w1th Mr and Mrs

E rnes t

F 1she r

Mr
a nd
Mr s
Do n
W1lha m s, Da vid a nd Deana ,
Columbus, r ece ntly spent a
few days " 1th Mr a nd Mrs
Ra lph Keller
M1ss Suza nnah E 1c hmger ,
Columbus, s pe nt a week w1lh
Mrs Opal E 1chmge r a nd
fam1ly
R ecen t v is it or s a t the
Ar thur Orr h ome have bee n
Mr a nd Mrs Ira H1ll , New
Wa te rford , Mr and Mr s E d
Neuman 1 Jane an d Davtd,
Gallon , and Ca r l Lee
Ri c h a rd
K o bl e n tz,
Columbus s pe nt a recent
weeke nd with DavHj Koblen lz
a nd v1s1led h1s gr andfather
Geo r ge
Gen h c1me1
al
Cam d en Clark Hosp1la l

71 Ford Country Squire, air ...... .. ....... '1995
70 Chev. Monte Carlo Coupe ... . __ __ ,.... '2295
70 Dodge Monaco 4 Dr., air......... --- -· '1595

68 Olds Cut. S. Cpe., power, air. ..... ,.. '1195
68 Chev. Imp. Custom Coupe ............. 1595

461 S. Thud St.

Phone 992 2196

4 door

71 Olds C.S. HT Cpe., v-roof, air .......... '2595

70 Chev. Ef Camino, V-8 auto., P.S ...... 1i895

DAN THOMPSON FORD
OPFN FVFS TIL/

71 Rambler Sta. Wag., 6 auto., P.S...... '1695

70 Chevelle Wag., V-8, auto., P.S.. ......... 1895

See : Fred Blaettnar. Darrell Dodrill
or Dan Thompson

Racine Social Events

72 Ponliac Cat. Cpe., pOw., air .. .. ...... 1 2695
72 Olds 98 HT Sed. v-roof, power, a1r.... '2895

2 Dr Sedan V 8 Nothmg w r ong except st d sh•ft

Sh a wu and Mr and 1\lrs Pal
W1lkm son, Colu m bus attended a R e ds-Padres game
at R1verfront StadiUm m
Cincmnatl r ecently
Mrs. Ruth Blac kwe ll,
Charleston, W Va , Mrs
J ohn Evans and Donna Sue,
V1enna , W Va, Mr and Mr s
R1 chard Ables, Long Bottom
wer e c allers a t the home of
Mr and Mrs Louts De Luz ,
r ecently
Mr s Myrtle Lew1s and
Bre nda , Plymouth, W Va
ha ve r eturned home after a
VIsit w11h her daughter, Mr
and Mrs Bill Bryant and
family
Mrs Leshe Northway and
fa mily, Grand Rapids , M1ch ,
Mrs M1ke E vans and family
and Leota Bll'ch, local were
v1s 1t1ng Mr s
Ada Van
Meter over the weekend
Mr
and Mrs
Mont y
Proffitt and daughters have
returned from a vacation Ill
Texas and Mex1co
Mtss Pam Cole and mother,
Tuppers Plams and M1ke
M1ddleswart spent a week at
V1rgmia Beach, Blue R1dge
Natwnal Park and other
pomts of mter est on the
E astern seaboard , ~centl y
T om Durs t and VIe tor
Durst,' The Plams attended
auto races at Lexm gton , Ohio
over the weekend
Mrs Melvm La\VI'ence 1s
•h e n ew s ub stitute m a ll
ea rner on th e P ortl a nd Rac me r out e
Mr an d Mrs Sa m Le hew
cmd Elame \\C I e Ravens-

\

~

•I

1973 PONTIAC CAT.

•

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

' '

'

Your Friend[ Dealership

'

Blown
Insulation Services
Blown 1nto Wa lis &amp; AHtcs

Processing

DICK SEYLER

HOUSE at
Pome r oy
lorm alton

F r e eze

L&amp;VMeat

WOOD METAL PLASTIC
ANTIQUES
MODERN CHEMICALS

Ea st Mam

Wrap

on $35,000 00

Enl~rely

MEIGS
EQUIPMENT CO.

Wanted

Cut

ranch type on 10 a
of
vVooded land Good terms

BUSINESS
PROPERTY

Axle

TW O wOod ed build ing lots
w ilh wat e r tap m Bran ch
w o od Ad d •lt on
c lose to
Me .g s H 1gh Sc hool Phon e
99 ? 54? 1
8 I ? 5tc

PAINT
STRIPPING
SERVICE

N o 71476 Ma n on Jean Wa r
ner Pomeroy Oho Sa l •sbur
Townsh lp
You are her eby nottlted tha I
the
lnve nl o r y
and
Ap
pra 1seme nt o f t he esta t e of th
al or eme nt to n ed
deceased
tate of Sa• d Co u n t y was f iled;
n ! h iS Cou rt Sa1d l nvenlor v
and A p p r a tsemen t wil l be fo r
hea r •ng be f ore thrs Court on
the ??n d day of August ,.,. 75.
a t 10 00 o clock A M
A n y pe(son d es.rmg to file
cxcepttons th ereto must f le
I hem at l east f rve days Prtor to
the da t e set for hea r •ng
G•ven under my hand and
s.!:"al o f sa•d Court th s 6th day
of August 19!5
Ma n n.ng D WeQster
Judge
By An n B Watson
Deputy Clerk.
15 7tc

FREE ESTIMATES

NO 124 - Be f&lt;rst lo live 10
th1s 3 BR lull basement

1969 F1800 Tandem

C A NNIN G pea c he s n ow thru
Se pt ember 10 U S No t
grade y ell ow F re eston e For
c a n n• ng or fr e ezmg S6 49
b u sh e l $3 49 1 ; bus he S1 99
pec k
P L EA S E
BRING
YOUR
OWN
CON
T A I NER S Peach es a r e our
spec:•ally
Tw o co n v en1ent
l o &lt;: al tons
Bob s Market
Mason W Va Phone (304 )
n3 57? 1
and
M•dway
M ark et
Pome ro y
Oh•o
(61 4) 99 ? ?58 7
8 tO ?7 tc

CUSTOM SLAUGHTER

Real Estate For Sale

DAV I S JOO trenche r W1 lh b la d e
a nd trader Ph on e 985 3373
8 14 6tc

3 A N D 4 R O OM furn shed a nd
un fu r n• sh ed
ap a rt m ents
Ph one ?9? 5434
4 17 !fc

A PT l1 k e n ew 3 r oO m s w ilh
lar ge bath t a bl etop ra n g e
l ar ge clo set Ea s t Ma •n St
P o meroy Se e to appr ec•at e
Ph on e Gall.pol• s d urmg d a y
44 6 7699
e ... enmg s 446 953 ?
4 I 0 lfc

1/&lt;t'l
k , ., 6 1(

Air
Conditioners
AS WW AS 1 139.95

Jt c

p ro ,ec t or an d ca m e ra $1 00
1 4.:l acr e land
T P wat e r
av ail a bl e
Phon e 667 33 33
T uppe r s P l a• n s O h 1o
8 13 Stc

NEED E D so meon e t o l1ve 1n
and take ca r e of e ld e rl y
l ady Cal! 949 7791 fo r m o r e
tnf o rm a t ro n
8 13 6t c

T O P N OTC H ma tnte na nce or
mill w r 1ght ma n To p wage s
pa 1d
s t a gg e r e d
hour s
Cap able o f ma mt enan ce
sup erv 1s ron , o nly qua l1 f 1ed
ma•ll te nan ce m e n a ppl y
Pl ease c ont a ct m per son
Po m er oy F or es t P rod u c t s
Ba tl ey Ru n Road Po m e r o y
a 15 6t c

8 1&lt;1

Business Services

1 I '~

ALL

195KAWA SAKIKZ400 1)00
rn lc s
ma n y ex t ras. must
sell PhonP 99 ? 7066

7"

for '&gt; ill c Phone-

PER '10 N AL c te cl r• c WilShcr
GC' ncr ;-.1 Etect r 1c sw•vet
type sweeper
u sed ..,cry
pi'ldd ed 1r on nq boa r d
on &lt;;, t,l nd
l;)rqe '"~ '} )1: .,?
cle c tr• c tto o r l an wll h
con• r or s Phone 99 ., 'JJ 5R
!I 1? 6tc

For Sale

I'J GAUGE shell r e lo ad er s 1s
Sup e r B Ca sse tt e Mov• e

PRIV AT E m ee tmg room for
any o rgan1zatron phon e 997
39 75
3 1 1 tf c

P IG ~

CLOSEOUT I

BEDRM
m ob il e h ome
d e p OSit
and
r e f e r ences
re Qu •red
P hon e 9?? 3tl?9
8 15 61p

7

WAI TRE SS a nd b ar m a•d
Ta ll T•m be r s Night club
P hone 997 99tl3
8 I ? 6tc

B AB Y SI TT E R to wo r k
tn
h om e fr o m 8 a m 1111 4p m ,
.:1 1 days a w e ek Ca ll 99?
35a O afte r 4 30 p m
a 14 31c

B E DRM !r ail er
c o un tr y
$ 100 mont h p l us
toc ar. on
depos ll Ph one 997 33a8
8 1.1 61p

TWO b edr oom m o btl e h o m e
atr
con dil1onmg
w th
Rac m e ar ea
Phone ?9 ?

\

JLD tu r n •tu r e
tee boxes
br ilss b eds
o r co m ple te
h ou sehol d s
Wr1 t e M
0.
M ill er
Rt
4 P ome r oy
Oh •o Call 992 7760
10 7 7 4

.., 1\ f..!PEN T f.c'Y
ll oo r• nq
(( d nq Or d panC I IIHj PI10il ('

LANGUAGE SPOKEN AT
A 6ARDEN PAI&lt;TY.

For Sale

Wanted To Buy

P AC H..., H \INU pupp•es
j !I 509'1

rFRI.WAF,

·SIX BIG USED CAR BUYS
AT SMITH N£LSON MOTORS INC.
'

NOTICE OF FILIIJ G

OF INVENTOR Y AND
APPRAISEM E NT
Ttt e Sta t e of Oh i o, M e 1 gs
c ountv Court of Comm o n
Pl ea5&gt;, Probate 0t'ti'ISIOn
To the Execut r~ x of the
es rat e to such ol the followmg
il~ are res •d ent s o f !he St ale 0 f
Qh 10 VIZ
!he SUrV 1v 1ng
spouse t he next o r k1n the
benef•c•a r~ es under the w 111
and to the attorney or at
1orneys rep r esE'nltng any ol
rh e afo r ementtoned persons

I

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
" You ' ll L1k e Our Qua lif y Way
of Domg Bu smess"
992 -5342
GMC FINANCING
Pomeroy
Open Evemngs Untii6·00-T1I Sp m Sal.

PTA schedules
leader workshop
T he
Oh10
PT A
h as
sc he dul ed a umver s1ly work
shop fm le adership development at Ohw Unt vers tty ,
Se pt 17, Mr s Charles Goegle .n, preside nt of the Me1gs
Cuun ty Coun c il of Par enls
and T eac he r s, an n ounced
tod ay
The v. orkshnp, one of five to
be he ld m Ohw next m onth IS
des1gned lo be he lpful to a ll
PTA m embers 1n devel opmg
leadership skill s a nd ga m.ng
tnforma t10 n for Impr oved
pr ogr a m m .ng II will offer
tra nnn g tn m et h ods of
pre pm tng for an d lea dmg
pa rent educatiOn a ell,_ ttles
a nd ac q ua 1n l local PT A
leade r s wi t h commumty
r esour ce
peo pl e
an d
coo p e r ati n g age n c t es
ava ilable a nd wtlh ng to assts t
such p &lt;:~ l e nt ed ut atwn ac~
tlvlt Jes
Mrs Goeglem I s re ques ti ng
tha t a lleasl lwo pe r sons fr om
each un 1t atte nd the Mrk-

s hop and adv ises that the
expenses of part1c1panl'; 1n
th e Y. orks hop a re a leg itimate
e xpendilure of PTA funds
She adv ises tha t the Y.Or k
shop will be of most benefit to
p rog ram c ha irmen , parent
ed u cat 1o n
cha i rmen,
presiden t, vice p resident and
o th e1 offic e rs and v.ould he
1:l dv:m Lctgenus tn all mem-

bers
The "ork shop wil l be he ld
al
Morlon
Ha ll
w1th
regiS i rdll on and coffee a l 9 10
lo 10 am F r om 10 a tn to
n no n

there

p rese n t.atwn

be

a

sehoul-PTA

co m m u nity Jn l eract Jon
l'olloww g a b uffet luncheon,
a sessiOn on d eve lopm!4 a

local plan" tth group scsswns
on ld cntt f) mg tcchm qucs for
specific slt uatwns will be
he ld
T he s pea ker \\ Ill be Dr
Jam es Brunm g cha tr ma n of

the

Departme nt

PsH h olng}

Un1vers 1ty
wood , W Va vtsitu rs one
day last week
Mr . a nd Mrs T hom as
Birch and son , Wa terford ,
VI Sited Clmt Bll'ch a nd Leo ta
on Sunday
Mrs Fanme Durs t, Mr and
Mrs Jun M1ddleswart , Janet
and M1ke and M1ss Pam Cole,
Tupper s Plams we re guests
of Mrs Nell M1ddleswart
r ecently
Th e Brewer a nd Wolfe
Reumo ns w e r e h e ld at
Portland Park on Sunday
Mr . and Mrs. VIctor Durst
and sons, The Plams and
Mrs M1ke Evans and fam1lv .
loc al , "ere recent call e rs of
Mr and Mrs R R Durst
Mrs Ruby Bryant, Debra
a nd David , Mr s Myrtle
LewiS and Brenda , S W
Durst , Da nny Black, Duke
Dailey, Paul Evans , and Paul
Dean, Philip Pickens, Lams
De Luz , Larry Gluesencamp ,
Mr and Mrs Rudy Durst ,
Harry Richard, Gene carpenter, Jack Co rnell, Mrs
Mar y Gr e er , Leota Brrch ,

v.tll
tHl

al

of
Oh1 o

He has been

soc1al psycho l og ist and
teacher for 13 )ears IS the
author of two book s and
lllUllerous a r t1cles an d \\.3 5
tw i ce elected by Oh •o
Umvers ity
stu dents as
Outs tan dmg Profe ssor "
Reg1str a t10n fee IS $6 wh1ch
cover s the cost of lhe lu ncheon and the morm ng coffee
break Reg1stra ll on m ust be
rece1ve&lt;l and pa1d by Sept 12,
w1lh c hecks made payable lo
Oh10 Umvers1ly and ma1 led
to PTA Wor kshop , 301 fupper
Ha ll ,
Oh iO
Un1 vers 1t).
AIhens

Butlons Allen , Mr a nd Mrs
R R Durst, Carol Carter and
Mr and M rs Robert Wlnte
were vts 1tor s at the E . H
('..ar~nter's durmg ·the past
week
Ta mmy Cozart, Tuppers
Plams, was a n overmght
guest of N1ck1 Da wn Van
Meter recently

�.

·~·

'I

Vinton man victim of
f·

='&lt; ";;;::';:;;;;;;;;~;=;=~;::K== = =

Weather ·

VAIL. Culto. I UP II

•

•

•

•

cramps m swunmmg
•

VINTON - Galli a County
Corone r Oonald R. Wa r eh im r
has r uled tha t .J acki C' Way ne
F arley. 20, Rl 2. V1nt un. died
of i.I Cr id e ntal dr O\\·n in g
Thursda y eve nin g in Haccoon
Cree k neetr the Vinl4 m Dam .
Accord ing to the f :all ia
County Sheriff's Depa r tna• nt ,
Far ley was swinmn ng with
La r ry Vance ~wd his brotl1er .
At! en Fa riPy . wht•n lw a~ ·
pa re r1 tly s uff ere d nam ps ami
wen t un de r . Far ley w as
pulled fr om the cr ee k bv hts
swirm ntng p~t r l n er s bu t 1heir
effor ts lo r cvJ\'C him f.oti led .
He was h1ir n in Wells ton on
i\pr il 1!1. 1 !'1~5. son of Haze l
. Far ley Pe r ry. Hi&gt; \V ( I S 0::1
lumlwrman i11 the Gal lia
Co un ty art"·: t
In ;.tdditi \l n to hi s 11 1uther he
ts sur viv ed U.v his s!ep-fnthc r ,
Ht• n nan Pl' rry. Ht. 2, Vin ton:
hi.~ \\·ife, Onnu a Spen c(• r
F'1rlt::y. whom ht• m a rri ed
.T w1c 1, l!J/5: 1/m,•e brothers,
Tr rry . . J ; m a· ~. anJ Robert
F'a rlev. HI . :!. Vinton : fi ve

ha lf-sist e r s . Mrs. Cha rl es
W~· a nt . .l&lt;tcksun : Doris , E v;t .
Con nit• ;mel Gle nna Per r ~' . all
a t home; l \,.: o half-hruthe rs,
F:d and K en Per ry, bot h at
hmrw : hi s lllalc r nal Jo: l'a ndnw tller . Mrs . Evelyn Mc·Coy.
uf .J ackson , a mi his patern a l
gra 11 dfa ti1Pr. I .l oy d F ar ll'y.
F mw ra l st• r vi n •s will be
held 1 p .lll . Sund Hy in .the
M l'c~~y -M n ore F un era l lf or nc
with He v. EmC'r Ci cs 1~r o fficiat ing . Bun;ll wi ll IJ e tn
Br ush Ce m('l er y.
l'r iend s ma y ca ll at the
funl'n-d ho n l(' IJel wl'l' ll :1and 5
p.m . a nd 7-9 p.m. Sat urd ay

l'rl"s idl'nt Ford said toda y
ht.• will vl'lu a six-month
t·xtt.•n s ion of controls on
donu: stie oil pric·t·s and will
n ·movc the $2 a barrel
ta riH nn imporh·d oil if th t·
\'l' tu is upht.·ld ..
Ford said tht.• nt.·l t•Hett of
th e imnn·di:lll' dt.•t.·outrul
and n •moval of import fet•s
\\ ill nw:m an innrast• of a
fe" &lt;·t.•nts a g&lt;tllon in the
prin·
of
pdrolt•um
pn1tluc ·ts.
Hi s t' Xpt·rtot have sa id
h1t.•l prududs will incr ea .'i t.'
uo mon.· th:.m 6 t'('nts a
gallun a s a result of
dt•t·ontrol.
But
th n ·
t·stimat ed dc&lt;' ontrnl, along
with n :mo val of th&lt;" imp·o r t
ft•t•s, would raist• th e price.•
of gasolin e onl y 2 ur :1 n•nls
a
ga llon .

" Ttu: on-again. off-again
I'IRF:M E N CALLE!)
T ht• M1ddlepur l Fire Dcpl.

was ca lled at 11 : 01 a. m .
Thur sda y lo ~xt i ng ui s h a
bla ze in a car owned bv
Wendell L Pr iee on J{ace
Thl're wa s m inor da ma ge to
!tl(' ve hicle .

si.

Wish book.

A Savings Acco unt makes wi shes come true.
A Checking Account keeps money in line.
Open both accounts today.
A nd start wi shing .

c·ongn •ssional approarh to
crwrg y is hH w rdnu s, e"pcnsivc :.u1d frightt·njn g."
F ord s:dd in r e mark s
Jlfl' JHin·d fur dl•livcry
tod ny at th e \'ail Sympos ium nn Frwrgy.

TWO ARF. FI NF.D
Two defe nd an ts were rined
and one for feited bond in
P om e r oy Ma yor' s Co urt
Thursday . Th urn as McCa y,
Columbus, was fi ned $10 a nd
cust.s for intoxica ti on, and
Rruce Ha rris, 24 , Middleport,
was fin ed $10 an d costs fur
fai llU'e to keep his ca r unde r
co nt r ol. Jam es Nea l, :J 4,
Ches hire, forfeited a $24.70
bond for speedin g.

FOG RLAMED
The Meigs County Sheriff's
De pt. blam ed fog fo r a minor
acciden t Fnda y at :1 :45 a .m .
on U. S. Rt . 3.1 in Salisbury
Twp . when Ralph H. Werry ,
30, Pomeroy, trav eling south ,
went orr the road to the left in
a cur ve . The re was minor
proper ly damage.

MEIGS THEATRE
TONITE

thru AUG . 21
NOT OPEN

Friday thru Sunday
August 22·24
THE GODFATHER
PART II

PGIMfot
rutland

pomeror

G:'n-rnal

the bank of
the century
eetablllhed 1872
All Accounts Insured to $40,000.00 by the
Federal Deposit Insurance -:orporation.

.

-

Starting Aug . IS
Open Weekends Only

bwnextdoorneighbor.

C. R. McGinness,
59, dies today
Clo " o·le•
R.
I Ma c I
McG inn ess, 59, a reside nt of
449 F'irs l Ave., Ga llipoli s,
&lt;li ed un ex pectedl y a round 6
1-1 .m . today a t his home .
A ve tera n in surance agent,
Mr . McGin ness ca m e tu
(;;11lipoli s in 1945 as an agent
for the Oh io State Life Insw·an ce Cu. The firm la ter
developed inl o the C. " Ma c"
M cG inn es s In su ran ce
Agency . Th e firm conti nues
u11der !he name of McG in ne .ss -S!a rd e y I ns ur anc e
Agency.
Mr . McG inness wa s a
me mb e r
of
t he
Fir s t
Pr esbyt er ian Ch urc h a nd '
serv ed on the c hur c h's boa rd
of dea cons.
He wa s a m e mbe r of
Mornin g Da wn Ma so nic
Lodge , Sco tti sh Ri te, Alladin
Sh rine , Ga llipoli s Shrine
Club , Elks, VFW , a past
president of the Gallipoli s
Area Chambe r of Commerce ,
a member or the Gallia
Cnun ty Can cer Socie ty . and
lhe Ga lli a Cou nty He ar t
F w1d .
Mr . M cG inness al.so serv ed
on the Gallia County Junior
Fairboa rd a ilwnber of yea r s,
wa s an ac tive m ember of
Galhpolis Ro ta ry Club, Blue
Devil Boos ter~ Club, and the
Gallipolis Boa t Club .
He was a World War II
Na vy ve te ran .

Mr . Mcti 1nn ess wa s a
graduate of Sha ker Heights
High School , Cleveland, and
a llended Hiram College .
Mr . McG inn ess was born
Marc h 20, 1916, in Clevela nd,
so n of lhe Ia le George a nd
Kalherine Mi chae l McGin ness.
He m a rri ed Be tty Bea n on
Feb. 18, 1942, in Ga llipolis .
She s urvives, a long with a
son. Jack , Gallipolis, a nd a
da ughl e r , Mr s. PO:t tri cia
Mills, a lso of Gallipolis, and
fiv e gr a ndc hildre n.
One brother preceded him
in deat h .
Me mori al se r v ice s are
sc heduled 3 p .m. Sunday at
Firs l Presbyterian Church
with Re v. Frank Hayes offi cial in g. Th e body will be
c re m ated Sa turday and inte nn e nt of r e main s will
Mound Hill
foll ow ' in
Ce m e t e r y
followi ng
mem orial services on Sunda y.
There will be nu calli~ g
hours.
Services are under the
direction of Wa ugh-Ha lleyWood Funeral Home.
In lie u of flowers, the
family r equests contributi ons
to the Gallia County · Can ce r
Soc iety, Ga lli a County Heart
Fund or Memorial Fund at
th e Firs t Pres byterian
Churc h.

Hospital News

Horse fun show

Veterans Memorial Hospital
was really fun
ADMISSIONS ~ Donald
Morri son, South Point ; Ricky
The 4-H Horse Fun Show
McCl e lland ,
Lan gsvill e;
was held Wednesday night in
Clyde Bayles, Middlepor t;
lhe ce nter ring during Meigs
Gurn ey Mi c ha e l , Miners - Counly Jr . Fair Night acvill e;
Ronald
Bac ht e l ,
tivilies with 12 sets of winners
Pomeroy ; Amanda Dars t, in various gam es.
Ches hir e; How a rd Roush,
Winners were first and
Racine .
second place r espectively,
DISCHARGES - Mark
pi ckup - Greg Cole and
Hal e y , Timothy Ohling er,
Marcia Dillard ; drunkard 's
Ricky McClelland .
1 paradise - Debbie Woodyard
and Tammy Ward , and
Holzer Medical Centers
Brenda Williams and Belinda
1 Discharges, Aug 14)
Whittington; egg and spoon
Mrs. Dona ld Bailes and
- Pam Nottingham and Faye
infant son , Ronald Bos tic, Reibel ; barrel race - Marcia
Be rnice
Brown ,
Tara Dillard and ·Mark Frost ;
Ch e vali e r . Walter Coll ey, s take - Marcia Dillard and
Mary Cath erine Davis, Tony Kennedy ; potato race Bre nda Dunn , Kimbe rly Debbie Woodyard and Faye
Durs t, Alice Edwards, An- Reibel ; boot race - Faye
drea Flesher, Elizabeth Reibel and Melanie Dillard;
Goble, Jam es M. Gray ll. ride 'n run - Melissa lhle and
Keith Hawley , Lois Hawley, Tammy Ervin ; flag race,
Ruth Holt, Mrs. Max Hus ton Brett Jones, both first and
aild infant son, Phillip King , second ; trophy dash - Tony
Garnet Mace, Donna Mc- Kennedy and Marcia Dillard ;
Cloud, Vickie Might, Beatrice apple bob - Robin Ritchie
Mulhern, Charles Ridge, and Belinda Whittington; and
Gwynn Sanders, Lisa Shane, figure eight - Tony Kennedy
Marsha Walker , Bertha and Marcia Dillard.
Washburn .
i Births)
Mr. and Mrs . Woodrow
BALANCF. BETTER
Harris, a daughter, Rutland ;
Mr. and Mrs. David Howell, a
WASHINGTON (UP!)
daughter , Oak Hill.
The nation 's balance of
payments showed a $1.23
BOOSTF.RS TO MEET
billion surplu's in the second
Meigs Local Band Boosters quarter and provided the
will meet at 7:30 p.m. United States with its first
Monday in the band room at six-month surplus since such
the high school. All band records were kept, the
parent&gt;; are asked to attend Commerce Department said
as plans will be made for the today.
s chool
year,
co ming
especially for working at
football games .
COOPER HOME BURNS
ASK TOWED
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)
John Goddard Foster 40
Rock singer Alice Cooper's
Pomeroy, and Kathe'rin~ home in the Hollywood Hills
Gobel, 31, Lancaster .
burned to the ground in a predawn fire Thursday.
, Cooper recently had purchased the $150,000 home in
SHIPMENT
Benedict Canyon, but was not
yet llving there and had not
OF
moved in his furnishings . But
a spokesman said Cooper ~d
transferred several trophies
and other mem~rabllia to the
house, which were lost in the
blaze.
The cause of the fire in the
Your Thorn MeAn Store
wood frame home has not
Middleport, Ohio
been determined.

NEW FAU

DINGO BOOTS

•

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

Par tl y . cloudy thr ough
Sunday mght. Highs ·near 80
and in the mid 80S south
r.o~s in the low a nd mid
Fa~r Monday. Hi ghs in the
80s.

RACF.S CANCF.LLF.D
A downpour of rain at the
Rock Spririgs Fairground•
ab&lt;out 2: 30 p.m. Thursday
cancelled nut the horse
harness rat ing program
which had been scheduled
for 4 p. m. Th er e were eight
races called oil by the rain
which created a . muddy ,·
tra ck. The eight races were
to be· made up beginning at
2 p.m. today followed by
the regular Friday evening
rac·e schedule.

...

.·

!"
12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Aug. 15, 1975

~.

tmts

60s:

Devoted To 1'he Greater Middle Uhio Valley
VOL. 10

NO. 29

GALLIPOUS-PQINT PLEASANT

SUNDAY, AUGUST 17, 1975

died on Friday

!5

Lemaster fund
standing at
$449today
A public fund drive for

Lonnie Lemaster, 6, son of
Mr. and Mrs. F.dward
Lemaster, a brain surgery
patient at St. Joseph Hospital
reached $449 today.
The fund drive to help the
family with hospitalization
expenses which are expected
to be extremely high got
underway only Monday.
Lonnie, hospitalized since
July -16, has undergone one
brain operation and had
surgery for stomach ulcers.
He is expected to undergo
another brain operation.
Receiving the ,.. r.ntributions
to the fund is M,_ F.leanor
Robson , Meigs
County
Recorder .
Contributions
made out to the Lonnie
Lemaster Hospitalization
Fund are to be sent to Miss
Robson at the courthouse in
Pomeroy .
Latest contributors were by
Johnnie
Cundiff ,
near
Pomeroy; Clarence and
Bonnie Lightfoot, Route 4,
Pomeroy; Asa A. Hoskins,
Route 2, !'omeroy; F.lmo F .
Smith, Route 2, Pomeroy,
and Ruth Tucker, Racine.
LOCAL TEMPS
The
temperature
in
downtown Pomeroy at 11
a.m. Friday was 78 degrees
under cloudy skies.

I

1
F1RSI' PLACE WINNERS IN the bibycle races at the
fair Thursday morning took home with them $5 of first
place prize money . Here, Bobby Williams rested after
winning a speed bike division race. He is the son of Bob
and Pat Williams, Harrisonville .

•&gt;
.,
•

-•.

News •• in Briefs
(Continued from page I)
unanimously approved a dismissal motion presented by Louis
Goldman, Dayton, at the Thursday meeting.
After voting to fire Skelly, the commission agreed to hire
two retired Ohio Hwy. Patrol officers to assist Oliaramonte
in daily lottery operations. Former Maj. Saul McCoy was
named director at an annual salary of $25,667. McCoy retired
from the patrol eight years ago after serving 28 years. Asistlng
McCoy will be former Lt. Paul Wolf, wl:o will be paid $18,221.
He worked 24 years for the patrol .

51'ATE AND LOCAL OFFICIALS TOOK PART in
groundbreaklng ceremonies for the new Dining Pavilion at
the Galllpolis State Institute Friday afternoon. Seated on the
bulldozer, upper left, is Dr. Timothy Moritz, Director of the
Ohio Department &lt;Jf Mental Health and Mental Retardation.
With Dr. Moritz, left to right, are GSI Superintendent Dr.
Bernard Niehm, State Rep. Ron James, George Olristy, a
resident at the institute ; Dr. Nonnan Niesen, Commissioner

OOLUMBUS - HOWARD CALLAWAY, chainnan of
President Ford's campaign committee, has indicated the
President probably would wait unW next swruner's national
Republican convention before picking a running mate.
Calloway, here to talk to Ohio party officials, said Thursday
that Ford plans to " keep his options open" on the running mate
question and Vice President Nelson A. Rockefeller agreed the
President should keep an "open mind."
Callaway said fonner California Gov. Ronald A. Reagan
loomed now as Ford's major opponent. "Reagen is the only one
on the horizon to challenge Ford's presidency but I really do
not feel he can be a substantial threat," the campaign leader
said.

of the Division of Mental Retardation and Developmental
Disabllitles ; State Sen. Oakley Collins, and Henry Wilson,
architect of the pavilion. liefore the official ceremonies, Dr.
Moritz held a press conference (upper right) to discuss
recent charges related to GSI. Sen. Collins, len, attended the
conference. At left, Dr. Niehm is introducing featured
speakers at tbe groundbreaking Dr. Moritz and Dr . Niesen.

New era begun at GSI says Moritz
BY SARAH CARSEY
GALLIPOLIS - Dr. Timothy B.
Moriu, Director of the Ohio Department of
Mental Health and Mental Retardation,
S&lt;Jid here Friday construction of a dining
'pavilion at the Gallipolis State Institute is
the beginning of a " new era ."
Dr. Moritz was the principal speaker
at groundbreaking ceremonies for the new
facility with other state and local officials
. on hand including GSI Superintendent
Bernard Niehm, Dr. Norman Niesen,
Commissioner of the Division of Mental
Retardation ; State Sen . Oakley Collins and
State Rep . Ron James.
Moriu, the featured speaker, called

LOS ANGELES THE ROBERT KENNEDY
assassination case of 1968 has been ordered reopened to
determine whether there may have been a second gurunan in
the Ambassador Hotel pantry where he was killed.
Superior Court Judge Robert Wenke approved a suit
Thursday calling for refiring of the pistol which was wrested
from the haoo of Sirhan Sirhan after a dozen eyewitnesses saw
him firing bullets into the senator's body. There have been
claims that bullets removed from Kennedy's body did not
match one removed from a bystander wounded in the shooting.

MANCHE51'ER, N. H. - DEMOCRAT . JOHN Durkin,
!'Wining for the lone seat still vacant in the U. S. Senate, is
telling labor representatives that if elected he will work for tbe ·
working man and end "corporate socialism."
"I'm going down there and rock the boat and not get
seasick when it starts to roll," Durkin told a tabor rally in the .
state'~ largest city Thursday night. Now, Durkin said, "it's
free enterprise for the poor and the sick, but welfare for tbe oil
companies.''
WASHINGTON
PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES
dreaming
of
millions
of
dollars
in
federal
campaign funds may be rudely awakened by the
federal campaign funds may be. rudely awakened by the
Federal Election Commission. The FEC Thursday considered
a proosal that in many cases would sharply reduce or
elln_linate matching federal funds for preSidential candidates.
Action on the plan was delayed until next week.
·~•?'
The proposal says that before a candidate can qualify
federal matching ftu1ds he first must deduct from his own
money the amount it took to raise it. The gross amount that
Gov. George Wallace of Alabama has raised, for iiistance is ·
about $4 million. But he has spent $3 million in fund..-aising ~d
under the proposal only the net difference of $1 million would
be matched.
WASHINGTON - UNEMPLOYMENT AND factory
productton will show major improvement in the next four
m?nths, says Assistant Commerce Secretary James Pate, " I
think the economic recovery is ahead of schedule both in
terins of timing 3!1d in terms of magnitude," Pate told' UPI.
Pate. said key statistical measures of the nation's economy
~e contmumg to show "surprising" improvement. Business
mventortes- warehouse supplies -are one of these economic
barometers. When business has more goods than it can sell it
slows production and lays off workers. But as Inventories
decline, production resumes and workers are rehired.
After four months of inventory reductions, the Commerce
Department reported Thursday, retail and wholesale
busmesses increased backroom supplies in June.

t·

...

the constructi on "a major and important

step forward for this ins titution ."
The pavilion is the first part of an eight
year plan designed ti improve the quality
of life a t GSI. ProjectS planned for the
institution include construction of 'n ew
facilitie s and renovation of various
buildings. Moritz es timated the total cos t
of all construc tion a t $18,700,000.
Three ot her pr ojec ts a re a lso
currently under construction at GSI. They
are the certiFication cons truc tion of the
medi cal and surgical building to bri ng it
up to Medicare s tandard~.. improvements
in the water distribution system and
renovation of the dining rooms in the

cottages.
Moritz said the construc tion at GSI
will benefit the local area as well as the
ins titution . The projec ts will provide
" additional jobs for Gallia and nearby
counties. 1t will be a boom to your
economy ;' ' the director said .
Dr. Niesen , in his remarks to the
a udience , said the pav ilion is " the firs t ·
significant building in 20 yea rs."
Niese n sa id that Friday 's ac tivities
re prese nted the s larl of "a concre te way to
improve the quality or life in this ins titution ."
The dining pavilion. beinc cons truc ted
(Continued on page 2)

SALE

GRAND CHAMPION LAMB owned by Todd Tripp brought $5.90 a pound from
Merrill Evans for Carter and Evans. Shown are, front, Debbie Windon, who
showed the animal, Todd; back row, Mr. Evans, Junior Fair King and Queen
Randy Johnson and Pam Holcomb. The lamb was given to the Junior Fair and
resold to Pomeroy National Bank for $4 pound.

GRAND CHAMPION HEREFORD - Grand champion bull in the Hereford
class overall was Klondike, a bull owned by Mr. and Mrs. Ben Bickers. l\1r. and
Mrs. Bickers are the owners and operators or the Double B Hereford Farm on
Bashan Road in Racine. This is the second year they have won the grand champion
award. Their daughter, Kim, is active in 4-H and shows steers and breeding stock.

"

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Decorator ticking on the outside.
Bemi:o's exclusive Unifused•
Construction and Coil Guard*
inside for gentle, ll~xible support
where
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INGELS .FURNITU E
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NOW
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BOOK .STORE
MIDDLE

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Save now on what you need for school days so very near
Mens and Boys Jeans - Shirts - Slacks - Socks _ Girls and
Pre Teen Dresses - Sportswear - Underwear.
It pays to take advantage of the sales at Elberfelds.

OPEN FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHT TIL 8 P.M.

•

CHAMPION 51'EER, owned by Becky WIIJdon , was sold for $1.37 a pound to
Merrill Evans, representing Jones Boys. Shown 1-r Debbie Windon , Evans, King
and Queen, Randy Johnson and Pam Holcomb and Becky Windon. The reserve
champion steer sold for 81 cents a pound and was purchased by Warren Pickens,
representing the Pomeroy National Bank . Owner of the reser ve steer was Pam
Miller.

'

berfe.lds In Pome

I

GRAND ~MPION STE:EH in the Junior Fair dairy division was won by
Eddie Holter's entry. Eddie is Uieson ofMr; a/ld Mrs: RoyHolt~r.
·

{

.. ·-

Dr . Moritz recognizes the lack or
proper personnel
to
administer
medication .
He said, " We have wholesale
violations of the state 's Medical, Nursing
and Pharmacy Practices Act."
He said he did not blame the present
legislature for the " chronic neglect"
because it is a combination of circ wnstances in volving several legislatures
and administrations. There is a !;evere

POMEROY - Sherry lndesta t ,
Pomeroy, Frida y became the first woman
ever to receive a trophy blanke t a s the
driver and owner of a race horse durin g
the Meigs County Fair horse harness
racing program .
Miss Indestad drove her 41 Miss Mixi t" to
a first place win in the ninth race for
pacers, non-winners Of $1 ,500 and came
back in the 12th race with "Miss Mixit" to
capture second place.
First place winner in the 12th was " Ben
Quest," owned ' by Merrill F.. Ellictt of
Jackson and driven by Richard F.lliott, his
s on .
Second in the ninth r ace was "Fr~ end

"..,

PER
PIECE,
TWIN
SIZE

mental institutions.

physician s hortage and the salar ies are
grossly non&lt;ompetitive, he said.
The state is less than fi ve pet. below ·
the a verage na tiona l r ate tor physical
the rapists. In order to improve the staff,
the stat e must have a n adequate pay scale
for its doctors and nurses.
" The State Legislature has come up
with more finan ces for next year , but they
have al so tied our hands by preventing us
from adding people now," Dr. Moritz
concluded.
The Ga llipolis State Institution is
c urre nlly over -populated , and un derstaffed.
In conclusion, Dr . Moritz said he was
in Gallipolis for the groundbreJking
ceremonies for the new $1 .9 million Dinin g
Pavilion and other future developments to
improve facilities at GS!.
Meanwhile , Re pr ese nt a tive Ron
Jam es or Proctorville look issue to Dr .
Moritz ' s remark s
re gardin g
the
legislature 's failure to provide adequate
finan cing.
James said , "Gallipolis State Institute
has been very much in the news ·recently
r e garding charges or unders taffing ,
patient abuse and over sedation of
patients.
" I cannot comment on the various
charges of pa tient abuse until the r esults of·
the current investigations are released.
" However , I can comment on the
problem of understaffing at the GSI. I reel
that GSI is currently understaffed with
qualified, trained personnel. Dr . Timothy
Moritz and oilier persons have made
s tatements that seem to place the blame
on the tilth General Assembly. These
kinds of statements are simply not true.
" The Division of Mental Retardati on
1of which GSI is a part ) requested that it
be appropriated funds tor the biennium.
The General Assembly took a close
look at the amount they requested and
(Continued on page 2)

Miss lndestad
makes history

'

SITS o

By Dale Rothgeb, Jr.
GALLIPOLIS - Dr . Timothy B.
Moritz, M.D., Director of the Ohio Departm en! of Mental Health and Mental
Reta rda ti on in a press conference her e
Friday blamed rece" t legislatures or Ohio
for understaffing and niggardly pay scales
in its s tate Institutions .
Ron J am es, democrat represe ntative
of Proctorville, said , "Not true. The last
legislature took what the Department or
Mental Health and Mental Retardation
asked for its biennium budget, and upped
it $3.7 million."
Said Rep. James In a statement Issued
at the conference.: " If there is &lt;bJame it
does not belong with the 111th General
Assembly."
Dr. Moritz took the occasion of the
conference to announce plan s for a
complete investigation into allegations or
patient abuse and other faults made this
past week by members of the Ohio Civil
Service Employes Assn.
"Thus far, we have not round any
evidence of patient abuse or ins tances of
patient neglect at the GS!. Once we receive
information on what is going on, the type of
investigation needed will be de termined ,"
Dr. Moritz told a press conference at the
GSI .
Dr. Moritz, who appeared before the
Ohio Legislature in April , recalled his
tes timony tha t there has been public
neglect and an overall neglect in general of

.

'

lberfelds In Pomeroy ·.
BACK-TO~SCHOOL

PRICE 25 CENTS
•

i:,rpp.ion animals, highlights of activities at Meigs C(iunty Fair

.{ , ~ ~ •;;~•-

heritage house

-LADIE~S­

MIDDLEPORT-PQM EROY

Legislature is
innocent--James

Arthur Carnahan
LON G BOTTOM - Arthur
D. Carnahan, 7:!, Route 1,
Long Bottom , d1 ed Friday
m ornin g a t the Arcadia
Nur s ing Home.
He wa s the son of the late
Arthur Carnahan and Mrs .
De lla Wolfe Carnahan , who
s w-v ives . Also preceding him
in dea th was a sister , Betty
Carna han .
Surviving are hi s wife,
Hilda Baum Carna han ; three
sons. Maurice, in Columbus ;
Robert , of Mentor, and Larry
I Pe te 1 Carnahan, Route 1,
Lon g Bottom ; two daughters,
Mrs . Dale I Jeanne ) Murray,
Louisv ille, Ky ., and Mrs.
Ja c k I Delores 1 Province,
Route I, Long Bottom; his
m o th e r, Della Carnahan
Route I , Long Bottom;
grand c hildren , two greatgrand c hildren , a brother,
Ray , of Bucyrus ; a sister,
Kathryn Ellis, Cottageville,
W. Va. , and several nieces
and nephews .
Mr. Carnahan attended the
Middleport Congregation of
J ehovah 's Witnesses.
Funeral services will be at
3 p.m. Sunday at the Ewing
Fun eral Home with Allan B.
Fos ter officiating. Burial will
be in the Chester Ce metery .
Friends may call at the
fun e ral home anytim e.

Your Invited Guest
Reaching More
Than 12,000
Families

'

r.

..
'

;.

GRAND CHAMPION HOG sold for $2.04 a pound at tbe Junior Fair Markel
Steer, Lamb and Pig Sale Friday night at the Meigs County Fair. Bu yer of the
champion animal was Merrill Evans for Jones Boys. Shown with th e prize anima l
·
is Evans and the owner Dennis Thornton.

More pictures oL fair activities .on Page 2 'and elsewhe re.

.,

1

•

I

'

Jimmie ," owned by Jam es Leasure and
Ralph MalletLof Woodsfield and Marietta
and driven by Ralph Calvert, Jr., or
Pomeroy. Miss lndestad had the shortest
time for he r firs t place win and so was
awarded the trophy blanke t donated by
Radio WMPO.
However, the presentation was not
without some problem as "Miss Mlxit"
reared and Miss lndestad was thrown to
the ground .She was , however, unhurt. One
of the few wom en harn ess horse rac ing
drivers, ,Miss Indestad was given a n excellen-t reception by racing fans during her
Friday appearance .
Friday's race program was made up of
13 races sinCe Thursday's program was
rained out and wa s made up on Friday
aflernoon .
Fans also were delighted again with
Don Spencer; form erly of Pomeroy, now of
Mari e tta , as he drove "Moon F~sh ion "
owned by Leonard Mil1slaugle and Shirley
(Continued on page 2)
y

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