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IN-·. S .'IGHT
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DEAL ME
IN, too

Iw'\

BYKAfHYCRAIG

"Women's Lib! · Women's Lib!" That is the

"cry"~

spreadin~

like a heat wave all over.our country. But have we
even taken time to stop and think what that cry is really a ll
abo~t?
·
Some believe "Women's Lib" is the cause of the breakdown in so many marriages today. This may or may not be
true. But the important point is that it should not be true!
On the contrary, women's lib should serve as a
strengthening factor . For when men begin to realize, accept,
and wholeheartedly promote the uniqueness that women can
achieve· from being aware of her own signirica nre, then that
should make the bonds of marriage closer and even more
meaningful.
WHEN SOMEONE feels that women are trying to just
"take over" men's jooo have they considered the fact that
many women have to fulfill a " man's" role as breadwinner'?
This happens many tiines as a victim or circwnstance, and
other times by choice.
But even if the choice were hers, it still leaves her a right
to gain all that she rightfully deserves and is qualified to have.
Hone would just take a moment to glance back into our history
(and review the Constitution) one finds that our lawmakers
had to add an amendment (Woman's Suffrage) so that women
would be given the rir,ht to vote. For so long women were kept
in the home, away from a formal education.
But now women are filling almost every governmental and
political position possible. However, they have had to work
hard and against many obstacles in order to get to where they
are presently. All of Ill is work will only be worth its true value
if each woman takes it upon hersell to find her own worth and
her own application.
MANY PEOPLE FEEL THAT a liberated woman is one
who completely wants to leave her "home" duties. Again,
there are many liberated women in the homes doing the
traditional chores. However, they are liberated because lll ey
are liberated within themselves. This is where liberation
begins - your mind. You can still be a dedicated wife and
fulfill your domestic obligations .
Just because you do housework does not autMnatically
make you an "enslaved" individual. There are basic universal
"habits" that must be carried out whether you believe in
women's lib or not (example, cleaning, cooking, etc.). In order
to survive "normally," one must perform those necessary
tasks.
But it is when one fe els that she must go far beyond that
call of duty in order to satisfy her mate, and she does this
without due compensation (appreciation); then she is being
unduly subjected.
No one should ever have to feel this way - man or woman .
I feel, that a woman needs to liberate herself from that feeling
- for it is indeed "old-fashioned" and unnecessary. How she
deals with that particular situation is entirely up to her. There
are many paths to follow, but only one to take.
"You can open your own car door!!" "!am not going to give
up my seat on the bus!"
Doesn't that sound familiar , now that women want to fit
harmoniously into this "Man's World?" Don't men realize that
women are still women! We do not want to be men, we just
want to fullill our needs as women; but still be a complement
to men in our own way just as we want them to be a complement to us in their own way. Is that so hard to swallow? · Is
that so much to ask?
There are still certain qualities that make women so
delicately feminine, and there are still certain qualities in each
should be highlighted and continuously reinforced.
LET IT BE EMPHASIZED THAT these views are not a
universal feeling of all women. Some feel a lot stronger. For
example, they believe that they should keep their maiden
name and use it rather tllan to use their husband's (True, this

•

Good
NeigHBOr
Snowd~n

The
Point
Pleasant
Goodyear Plant recently
announced the new members
of their supervisions] Top
Ten Club for 1975-76. The
new members of the club to
recognize
outstanding
supervisors were annotmced
by Michael T. Bucci, plant
manager.
James
Pape,
monofilarhent
supervisor,
began his Goodyear career
in April, 1966, after serving
four years · with the U.S.
Na vy . During his first four
years at Point Pleasant,
Pape worked as a production
ope ra to r and spinning

insurance needs.

Lillo A
Good Nlighbor,

ITIITI FIIIIM

A

Still Frrm
b ThB111

For Sunday, Aug. 17,1975

feelings could result .

ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll 18) . .

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Don't let
someone dictate how and what
you should spend your money
for. Unless they share your
obligalions, they have no right
to talk .

INIIJIIANC~.

TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20)
Leave your work in the office or
shop today . Injecting business
into a social situation will spoil
your fun .

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopl. 22)
Your easygoing, fun·loving
mood makes you vulnerable to
a con job by one with selfish
motives. Careful who you
grubstake.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Take care of a family matter
that has commercial overtones
early today . This is a toppriority issue . It must be

LIBRA (Sopt. 23-0ct. 23) Ser·
vice to family above self is most
beneficial to you today, though
you'll try to fight il. You 'll be
glad you gcive into nobler instincts.

attended lo NOW.

CANCER (June 21·July .22) If
Slate Farm Insurance Companies
you come face-to-face with a
Home Offices, Bloomington, Il li nois
relative who has an old ax 10
P7302
grind, sidtrstep the Issue to- . day. It can't be settled. Hard

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 221
Suppress your more serious

In only 12 short years
your first grader will be
ready for college!

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WiUyou be ready?

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5%%

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Paid On
Passbook Accounts

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The years go by sooner than you think,
and, before you know it, that little one
ot yours is going to be ready for college. Will you? You can start saving
now. Talk to us today about a savings
plan tailo'red to your budget requirements.

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BIU..Y C11AMIIERS

Goodyear Atomic Plant at
Waverly, Ohio previous to
his employment at Point
Pleasant.
A native of Elkview, W.
Va .. , Chambers is a
graduate of Elkview High
School.
Chambers and his wife,
Florence reside at Point
Pleasant, West Virginia .
Russell Fellure joined the
Point Pleasant Goodyear
Plant in May,' l96B '· as a
chemical operator in the
production department. He
was
promoted
to
a
prod uction s upervi sor in
June, 1972.
Fellure is a graduate of
Hannan Trace High School in
Mercerville, Ohio.
Fellure and his wife, Judy ,
are residents of Gallipolis,
Ohio.
Goodyear's supervisional
Top
Ten . Club
was
established in 1969 to
recognize the contribution of
outstanding supervisors to
the success of the company.
The newly named members
will hold monthly meetings
and conduct activities such
as tourin!l. other industrial
plants, attending conferences and seminars, and
receive
training
in
management techni~ues.

POMEROY - Fair time in Meigs County is bus
yet a bit nostalgic, for me . There's still the hustle m
bustle of folks trying to be at the right place at tl
right time for the right event, and also attempting to get all_tl
children rounded up and accounted for. The red and bit
ribbons are stiU there and aU tbe displays and demonstration
Names of lost kids are still heard over the loud speaker, 811
youngsters are still to be seen after riding the first ride, eithl
nauseated or eager for the next one.
But I guess, though, that when one grows up and tflinll
seem to be in a different dimension, the big world of the fal
diminishes. For instance, the cliffs that once seemed to loor.
over the racetrack inviting the courageous to climb have 110\
simply become a big hill for me to trudge. And the races that
looked forward to so that I could watch with my grandfathe
and spend the afternoon sitting beside him in the grandstano
now seem to be hot and sweaty events to sit ttrrough.
Maybe I 'm getting cynical, but on the brighter side, till
fair is the only place where most everyone in the whole count)
eventually gathers during the five day stint.. And those will
have moved away always know to come back at fair time U
they want to see old acquaintances.
UNDA WILLIAMS AUSTIN, THE DAUGHTER of Heier
Williams and the late Pearl Williams, who used to capture al
those trophies in the horse shows, was back at tbe fair with her
son who captured a first.place ... in the bicycle race. Linda , her
husband Wayne and their four sons reside in Hopkinsville, Ky .
ANDY AND NORA CROSii AND FAMILY, Letart Falls,
took off from their duties on the farm to participate in the
county fair with everything from a 4-H display to the family
dog, Sam, entered in the pet show.
Their son Eddie and his wife, Nancy, wiU be returning to
llleir studies at Ohio State University this fall where he majors
in agronomy and she in home economics. Son Paul, who towers
over them aU at 6' 5", will be a senior this year at Southern
High School.
Sam the dog, by the way, turned out to be Samantha when
she gave birth to puppies few weeks ago.
ONE BUSY WORKER AT THE FAIR was Becky Will , a
summer employee of the county extension office, who in addition to the work at the fairgrounds, is also busy planning her
forthcoming wedding to Dan Cottrill in two weeks. Becky will
continue to commute to Ohio U. where she is majoring in home

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Devoted To The lntere.~ts of The Meigs·Mason Area
~V~O~L.~XX~V~II~N0~.~88~--~P~OM~E~RO~Y~
-M~ID~D~LE~PO~R~
T ,~O~HI~
0 ______-2
MO~N~DA~Y~,A~U~
GU~S~
T~l8~,~
19_
75__________________~~
PR_IC_E__
l5:

SATURDAY'S PRETTY BABY CONTEST at the
Meigs County Fair was a new feature for many and it was
exceptionally well received. However, for others tt ":as an
exercise in nostalgia. Such pretty baby contests were held
many years ago at !he· Meigil Fair. Pictured is the first
prize baby of the fair ~I years ago. He is Albert W. Di~hl,
then two years old. Diehl now lives in Cleveland. He Is a
brother of Mrs. Iva Powell, Laurel Cliff.

On Sale

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!News. . .zn Brzefs\.

motives today. Get in the swim
of things with friends who know
you need to let your hair down.

*REALLY
SPECIAL VAWE

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21} Don't fritter time away with
s mall talk . Let those you
nego liate w ith know you mean
business when discussing your
purse or career.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
18) Acknowledge publicly today the help of those who have
been instrumental in your
success. This will assure their
continued loyalty.

The Limited Edition
Golden Anniversary
.Beautyrest

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20·Feb. 19)
Be grateful for a favor done by
a friend . You may have expected more, but recall : She
wasn't ob l igated to d·o
anything .

A once-in-a-lifetime
opportunity to own
a world-famous
Beautyrest with
individually pocketed
coils that support
each part of your body
firmly and comfortably.

~Your

~Birthday
TWIN MATTRESS
OR FOUNDATION

Aug. 17, 1975

· A promising year Is in store for ·
you careerwise. Increased Income will make it possible for
you to get those luxury items
you ' ve previousfy denied
yourself.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN . )

MIT.UONAIRE FINALISfS
CLEVELAND (UP!) The Ohio Lottery Commission drew names Friday
of eight more persons eligibie
for the n e xt millionaire
drawing.
The latest contestants include :
Frank J . Dolesh, 23522
Delmere Dr., North Olmsted.
Thomas J. Zimmerman,.
1123 W. 29th St., Lorain.
Elvin Pargartz, 903 Turner,
· Toledo .
Bernice Olshawsky, 5145 S.
David, Tipp City.
J{uth Newman, 4~7 Milliken
St., Hamilton.
:· RAlph Matthews, Jr., 506 S.
20th St., Coshocton,
. Uoyd E , Cartwright, P.O.
Box 25, Pedro.
JIIIIles N. English, 411 High
Ave., N .W., Canton.

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By United Press International
WASHINGTON -SEVERAL KEY ECONOMIC indicator:;
come out this week - and· the news will be good and bad, ac cordmg to economic officials. There will be a real gain in till,
Gross National Product but a return to double-digit inflation ir•
consumer prices, officials say . There also will be a change, a:;
yet unknown , in previous predictions of food price rises.
Last month's preliminary report on GNP, which measun.
the value of goods and services, indicated a 0.3 per cent
decline. But data revisions to be announced Thursday will
boost the second quarter figure to the highest level in 15
months, an official said. "This is no consolation to the 7:8
million unemployed. But it is a clear sign that econom1c
prospects are improving and that unemployment will be
reduced," he said.
Also scheduled Tliursday is \he Consumer Price Index,
which measures the cost of living•for urban families . But it will
rise sharply to double-digit annual levels because of higher
food and gasoline prices, another official said.

TAMMY JOHNSON AND DANNY LEONARD hold hands after being named Li t Lie Miss
and Little Mister Meigs County Fair Saturday. A large crowd was on hand for the occas10n
despite threatening rain. Tammy is the daughter of Vera and Duane Johnson, Pomeroy, and
Danny is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Nick Leonard, Rt. 3, Pomeroy .

Pretty babies judged

By Jo Ellen Diehl
(Pictures
on Page 6
PHILADELPHIA - AN OIL REFINERY FIRE Is a
Between 700 and BOO perfearsome thing . "We thought we were in pretty .good shape,"
sons
crowded the area of the
Gulf Oil Co. refinery manager Jack Burke said. "Then it
flashed - and that:s when we lost control." Before it was over, new show ring at the Meigs '
two multiple alarm ftres ripped through the huge Gulf Oil County Fairgrounds
refinery in south Philadelphia within seven hours Sunday, Saturday afternoon to witdestroying seven storage tanks and sending balls of flame and ness the first pretty baby
contest of modern times held
smoke soaring 200 feet.
Three firemen died in the fires and three others were in conjunction willl the fair.
Emceed by Craig Ramsey
unaccoUnted for. Ten more firemen were injured in battling
an ll-alarm fire which broke out at the refinery barely seven and Jenny Turner of WMPO ,
hours after a six-alarm fire had been brought under control. the contest was divided into
Fire Commissioner Joseph Rizzo said there was a "flash of seven age categories for both
light" only hundreds of feet from him asfiremen hosed down boys and girls and also the
the rubble of the first blaze. He said "there were three ftremen Little Miss and Little Mis ter
standing about 200 feet in front of me," and he saw them go contest for children between
the ages of four and six.
down.
Elberfelds Department
COLUMBUS - DELEGATES TO AN ENERGY con- Store in Pomeroy sponsored
the event and presented
( Continued on page 10)

Cyclist hurt on rural road
TWIN SIZE

FULL SIZE

$99.95

$119.95

each piece

each p·iece

QUEEN SIZE

KING SIZE

$299.95

$449.95

2-piece set

3-piece set

First come, first served!
Hurry! Once they're gone, they're gone forever!
Open Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, 9:15 A.M. ·to 5 P.M.
.
Friday and Satuiday 9:30A.M. to 8 ·P.M. .

ELBERF'ELDs· I~N POMEROY·

department investigated a
hit-skip at the Meigs County
Fairgrounds.· A parked car
owned by Keith Wood, 18, Rt.
I, Long Bottom, was struck
by a vehicle driven by an
unidentified person. •
At 10:30 p.m. Saturday il)
Lebanon Twp., on Trouble
Creek Road, William P . Ault,
57, Middleport, was traveling
north when a dog ran into the
path of his car. To avoid the
dog he cut to .the left, then
)lack to the right, and his
right rear fender and bumper
struck ar abutment.
AI 12 :4~ p. m. Sunday in

Sheriff Robert C. Hartenbach's Dept. investigated
· five accidents over the
weekend in which one person
was hospitalized as the result
of a motorcycle accident.
Charles M. 'stearns, 21, Rt.
3 , Pomeroy, driving a
motorcycle on Sumner Road
in Chester Twp., at 2 P· m.
Sunday rounded a curve,
went off the highway on' the
left and struck an embankment. He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
by the Pomeroy E-R squad
where he was admitted.
. SaturdAy a l 9:16p. m. the

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IT'S HI AND GOOD-BYE in this week's column : Hi after
returning to the editorial side of the newspaper after having
been in advertising for two weeks, and gQOd-bye because come
Wednesday, I'll be back at Marietta College ready to start my
senior year. Thanks for reading these scribblings this SUfllmer.

Time

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FERRYING PROBLEMS - Oorsll McCoy, whose
ferry was idled over the weekend because of river conditions, said cooperation is needed with the State of Ohio
and its people if prolonged future shutdowns are to be
avoided.

economics.

1st

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" They can put people on the
moon but we can 't go a cross
the river."
Those 14 words spoken
Sunday by Raleigh Robie of
Mason pretty well s ummarized the gut feelings of
people a bout th e closed
Pomeroy-Mason bridge, and
the ferry service thrown into
the breech to take its place
for four months this year and
four more months next year .
That's fine, except that the
ferry has found it cannot
operate between Mason ad
Pomeroy during "any kind of
high water " because of the
landing· in Pomeroy.
Dorsi! McCoy, owner of the
Tri-Cities Ferry, said Sunday
he "needs llle cooperation of
the state of Ohio and people"
in order to keep the ferry in
operation during high water.

The ferry stopped at Bp.m . as well as the people," said loday the state uf West
Virginia has· agreed to repair
Saturday after the Ohio River McCoy.
rose approximately nine feet
McCoy said one solution the Clifton landing if Ohio will
would
be to open the vi~ ferry maintain the landing and
during the day due to heavy
rains. He said the water Janaing at Clifton . It would be streets in Middleport. McCoy
raised an additional ll feet easier for him to land at sald the official s he-contacted
Saturday night. He kept the Clifton and Middleport. In in Ohio except Mayor Hoffferry tied up at the Mason addition, " the wate r could be man refused to cooperate .
" I've gone as far as 1 can
up to the Ohio Hotel and we
landing Sunday.
go," said McCoy. " I've spent
McCoy closed the ferry could still run," he said.
a
Jot of money in phone calls
Mayor
Fred
Hoffman
of
because the high water made
landing difficult at Pomeroy : Middleport said today he has lhis week. ''
The ferry was still closed
" Its not feasible to land on asked Glenn Smith , Division
the Pomeroy s ide, " s aid 10 highway superintendent a Mon da y morning . McCoy
McCoy . " People are tearing week ago to inspect the said he would open operations
Middleport levy . Smith told as soon as possible. Officials
the bumpers off gars ."
McCoy said that unless Hoffman last week after the at the Racine Locl\s and Dam
something is done to relieve inspection he intended to will notify him when he can
the problem the ferry will be obtain estimates of the cost of open . "The dam has been
closed any time the river is improving the Middlepor t very cooperative, " McCoy
above pool stage or the levy.
said .
As one Mason man said
The mayor has heard
current is swift.
Saturday
morning, " They
" Minor raises are going to nothing more from Smith, but
said today he will call him can put people on the moon ,
put it out," he said.
again this evening.
. but we can't go across the
" It's costing me money
Meanwhile McCoy satd river."
just sitting here. It hurts me

FURNITURE, BEDDING AND CARPET DEPARTMENT, 3RD FLOOR

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SARAH CARSEY

over wee

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ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

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PISCES (Feb. 20-March 201 A
close associate has the reputation of being cool Under fire.
She's the person to talk to
before making any decision
you're unsure of .

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RUSSF.I.L FELLURE

performed various duties in
the production department
previous to his appointment
to supervision in December,
1966.
Kuhn graduated from
Gallia Academy High School
and a ttended Rio Grande
College previous to his
employment with Goodyear.
Kuhn is a resident of
Northup, Ohio.
Griff Cook, Jr., production
supervisor, began
his
Goodyear career in June ,
1965, as a produclion "B"
operator. Cook served in that
capacity until his promotion
to supervision in March.
1971.
Cook graduated from
Southwestern High School in
Patriot, Ohio and attended
Rio Grande College.
Cook, his wife Deanna, and
two daughters reside at Rio
Grande, Ohio.
Billy Chambers initiated
his Goodyear career in
August, 1970, as an instrument electrician . In
May, 1974, he was advanced
to his present position of
instrument-electrical
supervisor. In addition to an
extensive electrical maintenance background ,
Chambers has had seven
year's experience as a
chemical operator with the

would really simplify the records if a woman married three
times or more! 1( On the other hand, many women do not agree
with any of this at all. But the most important factor is that
each woman understands her own limits and functions ef.
fectively as a result of them. Then a nd only then may she find
peace within herself. And that, my friends, is the most
valuable possession of all.
NOTE : These views are exclusively my own and do not
necessarily reflect the opinions of others. Although all women
may not share these beliefs, I feel that most women can relate
to and identify with portions of them .

tors throw you off-course.

See him for all your family

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operator and late r performed
duties
as
a
development technician. He
was promote..) to supervision
in April, 1970. In June, 1973,
he was named supervsisor of
the monofilament department.
·
A three-time member of
the Top Ten Club, Pape is a
graduate of Racine High
School in Racine, Ohio.
P ape, his wife Judy, and
two daughters reside at
Syracuse, Ohio.
Charles Kuhn, production
supervisor, joined Goodyear
in April , 1959, as a produc·
tion serv ice operator. Kuhn

COUPLE RETURNS-Pastor and Mrs. Gerard Seton
have retuined to their home here after spending a threeweek vacation abroad. He is pastor of the Athens and
Pomeroy Seventh Day Adventist Churches. They visited
his parents and family .in England, attended the World
Conference in Vienna and traveled in France, The
Netherlands, Switzerland . Mrs. Seton is employed as an
intern on the Ohio University-Meigs Local School District
Teacher Corps Project. .

cerned today. Don't let detrac-

Gallipolis
Phone 446-4290

-.

CHARLES KUHN

Five Goodyear Supervisors Receive Recognition

Follow your instincts where
ambitious interests are" con-

24 Slate St.

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GRIFF COOK, JR .

err

· Bernice Bede Oeol

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Carrol K.

JAMESPAPE

Astro.GrapR

YOUr

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28- The Sunday Times-Sentinel,Stll1day, Aug. 17 , 197~

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Chester Twp. on County Road
26, David A. Griffith,l9, Rt. I,
Long Bottom, due to a wet
pavement, slid off the highway on the left and struck a
board fence.
At 6:14 p. m. Sunday in
Letart Twp. on Towns~ip
Road 132, Cavlin D. Pickens,
23, Rt. 2, Racine, traveling
east met another vehicle;
both cars being in middle of
the highway, Pickens to avoid
contact wen I fo the right and
rolled over and embankment
rrhere was medium lo
moderate property damage .
No c i tal ion was issued .

winners in the pretty baby
contests with $~ gift certificates and stuffed animals
for each. The Little Miss and
Mister won a $~0 gift cer·
tificate .
Tammy
Johnson,
~.
daughter of Vera and Duane
Johnson , Pomeroy, was
crowned Little Miss Meigs
County after competing in a
group of 22 other little· girls.
Danny Leonard, 6, son of
Mr . and Mrs. Nick Leonard,

Park fund
at $2,055
The Meigs county Jaycees
announced today that the
Pomeroy Park projeCt fund
has reached $2,055.
Donations have been made
by Pomeroy Village, · Mrs .
Phyllis Hennessy and The
Meigs Jaycees.
Co -chairmen
William
Young and Ralph Werry, said
a Jetter campaign to local
business establishments will
be conducted in the next
couple of weeks.
The Jaycees plan 'to construct tennis c ourts, a mini·
playground, grills and picnic
area. ·
All ' donations for the
project may be sent to any
Jaycee member or mailed to
P . 0. Box 6 0~ . Pomeroy.

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Rl. 3, Pomeroy, was chosen
as Li lLie Mister Meigs County
from 17 contestants. Both he
and Tammy were chosen by
the judges after answering
questions and lining up in
competition.
Winners in the seven
categories were:
Birth to three months,
girls: Misty Dawn Newell;
boys, Adam Lit Lie .
Three to six months, girls ,
Michelle Donovan : boys,
Michael Evans.
Six months to one year,
girls, Angela Mills; boys,
Ric hard David Car so n.
One year to 18 months,
girls, Dee Anne Cline, boys,
Scott Jas on Moore.
18 months to two years,
girls, April Tannehill, boys,
Gordon Wesley Holter .
Two to three years, girls,
Emily Johnson, boys, Danny
Robinson .
Three to four years, girls,
Alisa Rene Willford; boys,
Gary Michael Freeman .
Judges for the contest were
Mar y Wamsley, Lanna Mohr
and Sharon Beaver of the
Point
Pleasant
Juni or
Women's Club .

LOCAL TEMP
The temperature in down
town Pomeroy at ll a.m .
Monday was Bl degrees under
sunn y skies.

GRAND CHAMPION OF PET SHOW, Royal Golden Prince, owned by Mrs. Karl !Opal )
Kloes, Syracuse, was a lso best of show . The show was held Friday morning at the Metgs
County Fair.

Public found liking
Ford performance less
Fewer than half of those per cent called it negative
surveyed in today's Harris and only 2 per cent weren't
sure.
The President's highly
publicized trip to Helsinki to
sign the European security
agreement apparently did
nothing to bolster Ford at
home.
He had a 41 per cent

and Gallup polls approve of
how Prestdent Ford ts handlmg his JOb, a substantial
drop from the May gains
Ford won f~llowmg the
Mayaguez affatr.
Th G ll
ll ·d 4~
per
e a up po ~
cent of 1 ,~29 Amertca;'s surveyed approved Ford s work
in August. The Harris poll
listed only 38 per cent of 1,403
adults rating Ford's per· ."
formance as ''p ost·1tve

positive rating in the Harris
poll in July and 52 per cent
approval from the Gallup
survey the same month, the

W ealher

But there was a big difference between the two polls
on how many persons
disagreed
with
the
President.
In the Gallup poll, disapproval came from 31_per cent ·
and 18 per cent had no
opinion. In the Harris poll , 60

Chance of thundershowers
today. High in the mid 80s .
Generally clear tonight. Low
in ·lhe 60s. Moslly sunny
Tuesday. Hi gh in the low 8Qs .
Probability of rain 30 per cent
today , 20 per cent tonight and
Tuesday.

'

.

last Ford surveys for each
organtzatton.
'd
The Gallup po11 sat near1y
seven in 10 of tbose surveyed
called the economy the
t' , to roblem
na~~;d~s ~Il popula~ity deI' ed
dil from a high of
c 10 s1ea . Y
71 per cent m the Gallup po11
when he took office a year
ago to a low of ~ per cent
all t . te hen the
approv , as w~ r w
.
~no:J' s declme was . tis
Harp bo. d d m' May after .
un e
th ere
M
ized by
e ayaguez was se
Cambodians and recaptured,
but still only won approval
from slightly over hall of
those interviewed.
In the last previous polls,
Gallupsaid33i&gt;ercentdidnot
approve of Ford's performance, while Harris had
56 per cent opposed.

�•

2- The Datly Sent mel, Mtddleport-Pome•w, 0 , Monday, Aug 18, 1975

Where's my safety belt?

~

.I

.

Editorial comment,
opinion, features

RAY CROMLEY

.

3 - The Da!lv Sent mel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, Monday, Aug 18,1975

Sport Parade

Your tum again, parents

DR. LAMB
Varied treatment

heart patient

A most unfunny cartoon

;------------------------------------•

:Alfred
:Social Notes
••

t

•:

Tom Tiede
IndividUJll 's choice
for a lethal miracle
By Tom Tiede
PITTSBURGH - A year
ago doctors told the woman
she had termtnal cancer But
now, stttmg on a w1cker chair
m a cramped apartment off
City center , she's not so sure
"I found lhts doc tor who
gtves me laelnle I get tt m
shots, once a week or more,
whenever I want God, tl's
been mtraculous For the
ftrsl time m all these months
I thmk maybe I'm gomg to

hve "
Ftfty years after the
discovery of laetrile , and a
dozen years followm g tls
federal ban m thts country,
thousands of c~ncer sufferers
sltll see tl as the one brtght
hope tn thetr clouded lives
An extract from aprtcot
ptls ,
the
substance, proponents clatm,
arrests cancer by the release
of hydrogen cyamde whtch
destroys cancerous cells
Mtracle cures, they say,
are frequent The lady tn the
wicker chatr, as Illustration ,
clatms she eats better, sleeps
better and feels better
4
' I'm havmg sex agam, you
know, and I haven 't done
that, well, smce December "
Crtltcs of the compound,
however, are equally sure tl
ts nothmg but quacker}
More, tl ts rtsky quackery
The cyamde aspect of laelrtle
ts, accordmg to the U S Food
and Drug Admtmstratton ,
"Polenltally
lethal
to
humans " Thts spnng a
dtstrtcl court m Califorma
found that over-the-counter
laetrile, m the form of a "food
additive" called Apnkern,
was sufftctently dangerous to
menl market prohtbttton
The court ruled that ftve
pellets of Apnkern "could kill
a chtld,'' and thus ceased Its
manufacture
Indeed, laetrile - tls
chmcal name ts am~gdahn has lately received more than
JUst court and Federal
condemnations
In July, four maJOr cancer
cltmcs whtch had been experimenting wtth amygdalin
Issued simultaneous an-

nmm cements that all te sts
were ne ga tiv e Mtce ex·
pertments at Sloan-Kette1mg
m New York, for ms ta nce,
showed no ev 1dence that
amygdahn
InJectiOns
prevented growth or spread
of cancer Pnvately, one
expertmenter adm1tted suc h
tests are never absolutely
conclusive, but added, "If we
thought there was anythmg to
tl, anythmg at all, we 'd keep
trymg "
Sltll, behef m laetrtle ts
appareqtly as greal as ever ,
and mterest may even be
g rowmg At lea st three
nat wnal laetnle assoc1atmns
promo te tts benefits through
ma gaz tn es, sem tn ars,
s peeches a nd 01 ga m ze d
th erap y tnps to Mextco
where the substance ca n be
leg ally ad!mmstered
Beverly Ne wktrk , an offl ee r "tlh one of the
associations, the Cahforma~
based
Commtlloe
for
Freedom of Chmce m Cancer
Therapy, says at least 100
doctors prescnbe la ctnle m
secret m the U S , and
poss tbly 100,000 cancer
vtcltms lake tl regularly
Despt te arguments of the
medtcal establishment, she
says, "Laetnle works, people
know 1t works , and no laws or
laboratory c nltc tsm s are
gomg to keep people from
trymg tl for themselves "
The tssue , says Newktrk,
and most other lae h tie
c ulttsts, agree, ts fre edom of
chotce The oya mde from
amygdalin ts found tn a
nrunber of other drugs and
foods ( vtlamm B-12, bttler
almonds, etc ), th us the

culttsts dtsnuss the r isk
fa ctor The real reason for
th e laetnle ban , Newkirk
suspects ts that vested Ill·
leresis "tlhtn the Amencan
Can cer Soctely "are afraid to
adrml the tr uth " Culhsts
beheve the ACS does not want
to fmd a ca nc er cure for fear
of self destructiOn A classic
therefore
s ta ndoff has
evolved Btg people vs little
people. or the rtghts of mdtvtduals vs the optntons of
1ns lltut10ns
Lea vtng astde the slander
of the ACS, because tt ts
un true. more than a few
otherwise disinter es ted
laetnle obset vets believe the
little people should wm thts
battle Whtle there are rtsks
assoctatiOn "'lh amygdalm,
no t the least of whtch ts lhaltt
may be used by some cancer
pattents tn place of better
tl1 erap} , the ques tiOn ts really
whether these desperate
sufferers can morally be
dented a " drug" that ts
perfectly legal tn many other
naltons of the world Many
see tl as tllog tcal folly to allow
a lung cancer v1chm to
contmue smokmg ctgarettes
but forbtd hun th e ptt of a
common frwt
Not only ts tt tllogtcal
perhaps, tl may be fultle The
woman he re m the wtcker
chatr says no law on earth
could keep her from what
may only be the placebo
effect of laeb tle
' If my doctor stopped
gtvtng tt to me ,' she says,
gnm now, ' I'd buy up every
a pncot m town, grmd down
the ptls, and la ke tl that
\!.By "

Berrys World
0
0
0

The Daiij sentinel
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
Exec Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH
C1ty Ed1for
Publrshed dally except
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at Pomeroy Ohto
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adv e rtts l ng
representat •ve
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Gnffith Company , I nc
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IOC11

S'Vbscrtpt l on
rates
Del•vered by carrier where
ava•lable 75 cents per week
BY Motor Route wher e
c arrrer
service
not
available, One month , $3 ?S
By mail .n Ohro and W va
One
Year , 522 00
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Three
onths, 57 00 Elsewhere
26 00 year , Six month s
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ubscr.ptton prrce Includes
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(I) 1975 bVNEA

Inc ~

You 'll be mterested to know, a cold snap rwned much of South Amenca s coffee bean crop
and the pnce has gone up from a dime'"

.
••

BY KEN ROSENBERG

UPI Sports Writer
Who would have believed
the Cmc mnatl Reds, ahead by
By MILTON RICHMAN
121'. games at the All.Star
UPI Sports Editor
break, would be nghl m the
thtck of the lightest pennant
COOPERSTOWN, N Y t UP!) - Ralph Kiner grew up under race m the maJOr leagues?
a handicap he never felt like talking about much until now
Not too many people, right?
' Kiner 's handtcap wasn't ph ystcal It was more of an
Well, the Reds are only
- emoltonal one and two of the reasons he's talking about tl now , tt's the NatiOnal League East
first, he has outgrown tl, and second, he's bemg mducted mto race, where a scant 31'2
Baseball's Hall of Fame today
ga mes separate the top four
~ Earl Averlll, Bucky Harrts, Btlly Herman and Judy John son
ballclubs and Cincmnall 18
'.:;also are bemg enshrmed along wtth Kiner and tl never fatls , playmg \he role of spoiler
; : every lime a man has hts likeness cast m bronze for the ktnd of
Cincmnatt Manager Sparky
::;::pl.ljque they hang up m the Hall here , he always has to fight Anderson, who confidently
."::back the old lump m the throat telling how he ever got to be a announced hts pttchmg plans
· , - ballplayer m the first place
for the playoffs two weeks
' :: Ralph Kiner's handtcap was that he was an only chtld No ago, feels h18 Reds "owe tt to
: brothers, no Sisters, no father for very long
the Mets a nd Phillies to gtve
' "My dad died when I was four ," says the btg, easy natured tt all we 've got agamst Pitt•
former Pittsburgh home run slugger who now does the New sburgh and Sl LoUIS "
York Mets' games on 1V and radio " He was a haker m Santa
" We' re playmg 'em real
_ Rita , New Mextco, and tf there ever was anything to thiS loose ,'' Anderson smd after
theory about heredttv and baseball. he dtsproved tl com- watchmg Pete Rose's 2,500lh
- pletely , he couldn't play a lick He was such a bad player, they hit propel the Reds to a 3-1
.. wouldn 't let him play All they 'd let him do was hold the bats "
:; ~ Kiner 's mother, Beatrtce, moved to Alhambra , Calif, after
her hiiSband d1ed She was a registered nurse makmg about
$100a month durmg the Depression, and she used the money to
support herseH and her boy, Ralph
" I was a sports nut,' ' satd Kiner " I liked to play every sport
and when they had the Olymptc games m Los Angeles m 1932 I
was a track star and all that m my own mtnd Bastcally , I got
started m baseball becaiiSe of my next door netghbor, a fellow
named Bob Bodkin
"My mother was workmg all the lime as a nurse and this Bob
Bodkm's father was a semt-pro ballplayer who 'd p1tch to hts
son all the lime I'd shag I was aboul11 years old, and I must
CINCINNATI (UPI) - At
have shagged halls for almost a year before I ever got to hit
one end of the clubhouse sat
That really was the thmg that did tl The thrill of htttmg a Pete Rose, enctrcli!d by
baseball started becommg Important to me "
wrtters bustly scrtbbhng
Later, there was anothe r mfluence on Kiner
notes as the Reds' three-tune
" Agam It was a father s1tuahon," he remembers "Harry
hattmg champ talked of hiS
Johnston was a boy my age, we both wanted to be professional 2,500\h htl
hallplayers and hts dad had played professiOnal ball He also
Terry Crbwley watched the
was a ptlcher and he'd take us around to vacant lots and ptlch scene from the opposite end
to us "
of the room and smtled
Beatnce Kiner didn't want to know about such nonsense for
"Rose," sa1d Crowley, "ts
her only chtld Ralph She wanted him to become a doctor, amazmg He's a htttmg ma lawyer, anythmg substanltal m some "legJIIrnale professiOn " chme, that 's what he IS He
The least he could do was go out, get a JOb and earn a few loves this game hke no one
dollars
I've ever seen before.
'I got a magazme route selling Liberty Magazme at the
" The guy can be httlmg 320
time," recalls Kiner " The magazme sold for ftve cents.l'd gel and still he'll come out here
a penny a magazme and had to return four cents to the com- for extra htllmg practice on
pany I had 20 magazmes to sell a week and tt took an awful lot an off day," contmued Terry
of lime, all my afternoons after school "
" And when they moved him
"So I ftgured out that tt 'd be a lot easter tf I could make a to thtrd base, he was out here
dollar or two on the stde to pay the company for the magazmes at the stadtum on off days
and use the lime m the afternoon to play base hall I'd bury the fleldmg ground balls
magazmes m my backyard and cut a few lawns for 50 cents or
" I remember one off day I
so Tins worked out well for a while But my mother came out was here too," Crowley went
to the backyard one day and through some circumstance found on " All I dtd was stand on
out the magazmes were buried there She almost dted She ftrsl base and take h1s
thought! was gomg to rwnalton, and she sent me to mllltary throws, but I got tired as hell
school to do all the thmgs she felt I should do "
' And conftdence," added
Ralph Kiner's mother would love to be here m Cooperstown Terry " Pete talks about
today to see her son mducted mto the Hall of Fame, but that 's gettmg 200 htts a season hke
ImposSible
She's 93, she's m a nursmg home m Alhambra and she's
bltnd She sl!ll has her mental faculties, however, and ts very
proud of her 52-year old son, who has this to say about her·
" ! thmk she realizes I dtdn't go completely wrong when I
burted those magazmes m the backyard "
By FRED McMANE
UPI Sports Writer
Mter nearly three weeks m
cold storage, the Detrott
Ttgers are stzzltng But
they're not even lukewarm
compared to Balttmore's Jim
Palmer
Ma 1or L ea gu e Standmgs
The Tigers, who snapped
Amertcan L eag u e
Un1ted Pre ss lnt erna t1onal
East
thetr
19-game losmg streak
Nattonal L ea gu e
w I pet 9 b
Saturday mght when they
East
74 49 60 7
Boslon
w 1 pet g b
66 5 ~ 55 0 6 1
Ba l ltm ore
blanked the California Angels
67 5 5 549
6? 59 5 17 11
Pittsburgh
New York
8-0 behind the two.!Jtl ptlching
66
55
54
5
56 66 45 9 17'
Phila delph i a
M i lwauk ee
65 57 533 1
53 65 449 18'
$1 L OUI S
Cleveland
of Ray Bare, made tl two
63 58 57 I )I
48 ! 4 ) 9 ] 751
New York
De lrott
58
66
468
10
shutout
vtctones m a row
W es t
Ch 1cag o

decl8ton over the Pirates
Sunday for a sweep of thetr
four-game se nes
"The
Pirates are ftghtmg for thetr
hves "
Indeed they are
The loss, Pittsburgh's stxth
stratght a nd 12th m tls last 13
games, cultts lead m th e NL
East to one.!Jalf game over
Plnladelphta, two games over
Sl Louts and three and a half
games over the New York
Mets
Pira tes Ma nager Danny
Murtaugh ,
obvtously
dtsmayed by hts tea m 's
anemtc httlmg the past two
weeks, refused to use WtUte
Stargell's absence from the
lmeup wtth a l•g InJury as an
excuse
" We' re not a one~man
team , " sa1d Murtaugh
' We've got 25 men on thts
club The best tome for us
would be to have a game

where we get 12 to 15 hits and
score etght or ntne runs Only
Dave l'-drker and Manny
Sangutllen have been cons ts lenl at the plate a ll
season "
The vtctory was the
seventh tn a row for Cincmnah, whtch leads th e West
by 17'·- games Cincmnalt has
compl ete d
tts
season
schedules wtth New York and
Phtladelphta but sttll has
seven games remauung w1 th
Sl Louts and four wtlh Pitt·
~burgh

E lsewhe r e tn the NL,
Phtladelphta whtpped San
Diego 1!1-4, Sl Louts routed
Atlanta 8-1, New York
blanked San Franctsco ~.
Los Angeles shaded Montreal
5-3 and Chtcago outslugged
Houston 11-7
In the American League,
Baltunore blanked Texas 4-0,

Kansas Ctty defeated New
York 5-3, Cleveland routed
Mtnnesota 14-.5, Detrmt shut
out Califorrua 7-0 Oakland
downed Milwaukee 3-1 and
Chtcago spilt wtth Boston,
wmmng &amp;-2 and losmg 4-3 m
11 mnmgs
Phtllles 10, Padres 4
Greg lmtnskt htt hts 30th
homer of the season, tops m
the maJors as Phtladelphta,
which has lost ftve of Its last
seven ga mes, co ntmued to
ga m ground on Pittsburgh
desptte 1ts own lrulspm
'You can never tell what's
gomg to happen ," srud former Pirate Dave Cash who
lr tpled home two run s "You
play under
500 tn a
homestand and ptck up
gro und The Ptrates were due
for a bad streak after playin g
so well thts year But there's
sltll a month and a half to go,

so t here's no reason to
pa mc "
Cardmats 8, Braves I
St Louts , whtch has ptcked
up t2' , games In a month ,
pounded out
19 ht ts ,
htghltghted by Bake McBrtde s four stngles and Ken
Rettz' three rbt
To celebrate lhetr nse m
the sta ndin gs, the Cardinals
have the dub10us dtsltnctton
of hostmg Ctncmnatt m a
threegamc sertes begmrung
Monday mght
'Cincmnatt has to be really
r elaxed tight now," satd St
Louts Manager Red Schoendienst But I don "t think that
wtll make much dtfference
when we play them I can
thmk of a lot of ballclubs I'd
rather be playmg rtght now "
Mcls 3, Giani&lt; 0
New York, wht ch tratled by
1
9 games ear her this month
when Roy McMillan replaced
w

Yog t Berra as manager ,
recetved a much needed
bullpen boost from Jerry
l&lt;oosman, who saved Tom
Seaver's league~eading 17th
VICtory with hiS first relief
appea rance smce May 1972.
" We need left-handed
streng th m the bullpen,"
McMtllan S81d m explaining
Koosman 's move "We would
like to see Jerry come out of
the bullpen for the next SIX
weeks Any team would."
Dodgen 5, Expos 3
Btll Russell smgled home
two runs to climax a threerun second mrung and also
scored a run m the runth
Cubs 11, Astros 7
Btll Madlock ratsed h18
leag ue-l ead tng battmg
average to 361 wtth three
hils, Jose Cardenal had a
perfect 4-for-4 day, and Andy
Thornton drove home three
runs

Rose collects 2,500th hit, Reds
•
wzn; Gullett back, Carroll gone

Expedient humanitarianism

Proving worth of democracy again

NL East title race tighens

Toda'y's '

Can students learn
·more out of school

By Ray Cromley
WASHINGTON - One of 'W sons, flnishmg h18 freshman
~-.c&gt;..::;;o...?.:::&gt;-o-&lt;?...:::;;"&lt;:;o...c::&gt;-&lt;::&gt;-&lt;?.o-C&gt;..O...:::;;"&lt;:&gt;..:::&gt;&lt;::&gt;-&lt;:::&gt;-o-.o-.c-..:::&gt;&lt;::&gt;-&lt;:::-.o-&lt;?..C" ;ear m htgh school m June, was talked Into takmg a summer
sc1ence semmar
The county-run six-week course had the students m \he
countryside for 17 of the 30-day seSSion
The 36 students dtvtded mto SIX teams water c hemistry,
Insects, botany, geology, etc Each team developed Its own
Mter 17 ye ars of operatiOn, a JUVerule checkpotnl on the U S -Mex.tcan border at San
research methods, evolved Its own statistics, deCided tts own
Ystdro, Calif has been closed down
hypotheses and came up with its own proofs and concluSions
Established tn 1958 as a barner agatnst what officials called "the dissolute, lewd and
They wrote 40 and 50 page reports on whtch thetr grades
urunora l co ndttiOns" across the border and the mariJuana, herom and venereal diSease
depended
brought back b) voungster s, the control statiOn had stopped some 130,000 underage ) ouths,
On a recent backpackmg trip, as my son and I walked
many of them runaways as young as 12 years old Last Easter weekend, 500 teen.,agers out of
along, he could hm dly talk of anything except this type of tree
2,000" ho convened on the border were turned back
and that, why 11 grew where It did and when, thts rock outThe San Otego ctty counctl has voted to wtlhdraw tts share of the $470,000 yearly cost of the
croppmg, that type of sot! He wotdd stop repeatedly and
checkpotnt, reports the New York Times, and state offtctals say that because of this state
lecture me on one aspect or another of geology-naturesupport money ts be tng dtsconltnued
forestry-water composttlOn, - until we had to hustle on tn an
Although a 1969 Cahforma law still prohtblts the entry of youths under 18 mto Mextco unless
attempt to catch up wtth our fellow campers
they are accompamed by an adult or can produce letters of pemusston signed by their parents,
Now this son 18 no grmd.ll18 not hts IISUal practice to go on
the withdrawal of 25San Otego policemen who manned the checkpoint around the clock means
for. hours enthiiStasllcally about school subjects, but he does
that "now the border c rosstng ts wtde open to them, " says one pollee official
about thiS one
Parent-leachet associations and JUVentle authoriltes who opposed the dosmg were
I took several hours off from work the other day to attend
overpowered by economy-mtnded criltcs who called the checkpomt a "baby-llltlmg operation"
the "graduation sesston" of this group
and an o ul-&lt;~f-date waste of money " tn these limes of permissive teen .,age hfestyles "
Each team gave Its report, served sassafras, swnac and
It ts a curtous ktnd of ctrcular reasomng It says, m effect, that because of the perother wilderness survival teas. Before and after the talks we
mtsstveness of contemporary American soctely, there IS no longer any need to rests! permtlled around Every lime I asked a question I was approachmtsstveness
ed by enthustasltc teen-aged men and women ftlled wtth what
It may be true, as one San Otego, councilman argued, that 1! 18 time to "let the parents of
they'd been domg
these kids exe rt some control over them rather than leavmg 11 up to the pollee "
And thts was school My son had hated biology m the IISual
But tf parents exerted no control tn the past, they are hardly likely to start dotng so now
classroom course he'd taken last wmler
The semmar Instructor was as happy as h18 students But
he and I worried the course could spoil school for these young sters next fall and winter "I didn't have a course that gave me
th1s challenge and chance for experimenting wtth concepts I
Tite evacuation of Cambodia's larger ctties has been sefl88tionalized m the Western press
developedmyseHunttll was a graduate student m college," he
as a ''death march," says an Amertcan who left that country when the US • supported Lon Nol
said.
go vernment collapsed m Aprtl
The sermon here 18 obvloiiS I know of students who, on
It was, m fact, a Journey away from certain death by starval!on, claimS William Goodtheir own, wm gold medals for mdividual work in nature and
fellow, an associate wtth the Insl!tute for lnternallonal Polley Widespread fanune was only a
ecology, who develop experunents and carry them through
matter of weeks away, while m the countrySide there was a Sizeable surpiiiS of food
and spend months of their time studymg Insects, wildlife, sod
It may be ObJected lhaltt would have made more sense to bring this food mto the Cities
and water conservation, forests and geology But they barely
rather than to herd hundreds of thousands of men, women and children on foot mto the counpass standard modern sctence courses as taught m today's
trystde
schools
Thts wa s not possible, says Goodfellow, because of hrruted motor transport and because U
In my youth we called this standard classroom approach
S ·supplied trucks captured from the Lon Nol forces were wtthout fuel Also, additional people
" cookbook chenustry." You followed the lnstrucltons
were needed m the countrystde to help plant rtce, whtch 18 a very labor-mtenstve crop, and to
precisely, got the results the book hmted at, wrote down on
mcrease the area under cultivatiOn
exams the answers the book or teacher satd to memorize H
Moreover, he adds, "the evacual!on was politically expedient, for tt enabled the new
you did, you received an A. If you weren't Willing to do this, you
leaders to completely replace the CIVIlian Infrastructure in the cities with their own people "
got a C - tf the teacher was kind
It ts good to learn that what was politically expedient for the new leaders of Cambodia was
Now I've read the new science books and watched the new
also , happtly, a most humamtartan acl!on
sctence teachers m actiOn. I know the new concepts are supposed to challenge students and bring out thetr lrullallve. Thts
sometimes happens, but my expenence 18 that 11 does not
happen very often
Science courses aren '!the only bummers Go down the list
.. foreign languages, English, social sciences, I've sat m on
classes humming With debate, curwstty and enthu.stasm But
IllS difficult to believe that a year has passed since the greatest constitutional crisiS the
they are not the rule
nation has ever faced, save for the Civil War. It will ways and forever be known simply as
We sltll tend to think of our children as little bottles mto
" Watergate," and tl reached Its dramatic climax with the resignation of Richard Nixon from
the office of the presidency
which we wlll pour useful knowledge. We forget they have
bratns .
That the anntversary has come and gone w1th an almost total absence of observance or
My son has heard about a siX-week archeology senunar
comment cannot be due alone to the fact !hat Americans have forgotten, or want to forget, the
sordtd scandal whtch absorbed thetr attention for nearly two years.
bemg glVen next summer. He can't wait
It says somethmg about the resiliency of our political system and the abiding commitBut he dreada the next eight and a hall months of school
ment of the Amertcan people to the princrpal that ours ts a government of laws, not of men
It ts also dtfftcult to recall the passions that stirred Americans during the last days of
Watergate, and a month later when President Ford granted an untimely, or certainly controverSial, pardon to his predecessor. Despite the bitterness many felt over the forced
restgnat10n, no pro-NIXon party has gathered around the ex-president In exile - nor,lettt be
emphasized, has he attempted to encourage one - dedicated to hiS rehabilitation or some sort
of political revenge.
The same would not be true m many other countries
Not much, tits clauned, has changed in Washington m the past year. It ts stlll politics as
usual, and the record of the " reform" Congress elected last November offers little to counter
that vtew.
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
how tmporlanl tl ts
Perhaps so Perhaps 11 will always be so As Churchlll said, democracy 18 the worst system
DEAR DR LAMB In most cases the fmdlng
- except for all the others.
Almost a year ago a member means coronary artery
But somethihg else can also be satd · For all the lamentatioos one hears about the future of of my famtly had a heart disease, and lhts ts certamly
the country as tt approaches the beglnmng of Its third century, Americans have shown an attack, a left branch block
true 1f 1t occurs as a com~
amazmg capaCity to surmount crl8CS, to put as1de honest and deeply held differences and rally Does lh1s ever disappear plicalton of a heart attack In
together for the mlegrtty and safety of thiS commonality we call Amenca
through reshng and very all of these mstances the
We are more than JUSt the material envy of the world We continue to hold htgh the beacon light chores' I have been told general management of the
light of liberty under law the Founders first III so long ago
dtel tsn't tmporlanl, but I paltent should be th• same a&lt;
g1ve her very bttle salt and a that for other paltents wtth
low cholesterol dtel Am I fatty-cholesterol deposits m
w1se m dmng so?
the artenes That means
DEAR READER - Left control of blood pressure,
A Canadian cartoonist took a rather Jaundiced view of the gomgs-on at the recent 35-nation
bundle branch block means ehmmahon of obes1ty, and a
summtt meetmg in Helsmki.
the spectal nerve-like ltssue low fat , low tn saturated fat,
His cartoon, which was syndicated to a number of Amencan newspapers, showed
that carnes the sltmuiiiS to low cholesterol dtet The
PreSident Ford, Y1ce PreSident Rockefeller, Secretary of State Kissinger and Leomd Brezhnev
the left stde of the heart treatment ts for the artery
standmg on top of the globe drmkmg a champagne toast.
muscle is not conductmg, disease that caused the block,
"Here's to us," says Brezhnev, "-not one of us elected to offtce I"
IISUally because of damage not for the block alone
The Irony falls flat on a number of counts. For one thing, cabmet members have always
Thts slows the left stde of the
For more mformahon on
been appomted officials, even m Canada As for the President and VIce President (the latter
heart's contraction by about such dtets send me 50 cents
was not even at the conference), although they were not elected by direct popular vote, they dld
04 seconds, hardly enough to and a long, self.,addressed
; not attam their positions by any means other than constitutional due process They were, m a
make
any difference m the stamped envelope m care of
; · sense, " elected" by the members of Congress actmg as the representatives of the American
: people and accordmg to the provlsl0fl8 of the 25th Amendment, which 1tseH had prevtously been beatmg mechamsm of the th1s newspaper, P 0 Box
heart
1551, Radto Ctly Statton, New
: rallfted by the elected legJslatures of the several states
Its
Importance
rests
enYork, NY 10019 and ask for
:
Moreover, both men, should they run m 1976, must subnut themselves to the judgement
ltrely
wtth
what
caused
tl
I
The Health Letter number 1-3
" and verdtct of the people . The same can hardly besa1d of Soviet leader Brezhnev When he goes
have
seen
many
causes
of
left
Dtel
Prevenltng
Ath: - and there contmue to be rumors that tll health wlll soon force hiS tetirement - 11 wlll be
bundle
branch
block
tn
rather
erosclerosis
: when he , or the handful of men who rule tbe Soviet Uruon, deCide IllS tune for him togo, and not
healthy
young
men
Some
of
DEAR DR LAMB - What
: before
these,
no
doubt,
were
caused
happens when jogging right
:
A quotation from 19th century English crttic Wllllam Hazlitt would seem to sum up thiS
by mflamalton of the heart after eatmg' I do thts qwte
: particular cartoon
wt th
dtseases
dunng often because I can't fmd
•
"Comparisons are odtous, becaiiSe they are Impertinent - makmg the one thmg the
childhood In these mstances lime for Ioggmg except after
standard of anotherwhtch has no relatiOn to tl"
where the heart had no other dmner I'll stop tf there ts
Important damage, the much danger, so please
wtll be held on Sunday, Follrod recently attended ftndmg was only a sctenliftc advise me
August 24, tn the Woode Band Crescendo Camp at Rio curtoslty.
DEAR READER - In
•
Grove
Grande, Ohto
In a few cases the block will healthy people JOggmg at a
Mrs Ella Yost of Sngar
disappear when the heart senstble speed after a
Grove, Oh10, IS a patient m
Watd Swartz of Athens slows and appear when the moderate meal poses no
• S S attendance on Aug 10 the Fairfield County Hosptlal
called on Mr and Mrs Vere rate ts mcreased Thts alone hazard at all. For people wtlh
:was 45, the offermg was at Lancaster, Ohio
doesn't tell you much about heart disease, whtch may
Swartz, Sunday.
: $27 11 Worshtp servtces were
Genevteve Guthrte and her
The AHred UMW wlll hold
mclude a large number of
:held at 11 am, wtlh Mr company, the Delbert Yost
their monthly meeting, at the
m1ddle.,aged people who do
:sydenstriCker, lay-speaker famtly attended the Parker
church
next
Tuesday home from the hospital and not know they have un•from Decatur UM Church ReuniOn at Tuppers Platns,
evemng, August 19 at 8 p m domg mcely
derlymg heart disease, it IS
••speaking from I Cor 2 12-14 Sunday
Also
attendmg
lhts
wtth potluck refreshments.
•• ' 4Someone Prayed" - 'pray•
better not to load the heart
reuniOn were the Wtlber Everyone welcome
wtlh the work of digestion and
:for one another' Attendance Parker famtly of lhts area
Mr and Mrs Chas D
exerhon
at the same tune
:was 18 Offenng was $21
Clmr E Follrod IS under a Woode attended the special
Except for young, healthy
Sociable Newsgatherlng
: Pledges - $30
doctor 's care for an InJury hymn smg at North Bethel
The ftrsl newspaperwoman people, I thmk 1t is better to
; Alfred's
church resulting from a freak acChurch Saturday evening, was Madame Doublet de Per- JOg b"efore meals Remem:Homecommg wtll be held on cident when hiS nght arm AugiiSl 9
san 0677-1771 1 a wtdow of ber, senstble joggmg means
~Sept 21. Details to be an- was punctured and torn on a
Several local people at- Pans who never left her apart· JOggmg at a speed slow
•onotmced later.
storm door latch at hts home tended the Athens Cotm ly ment for 40 years but held par·
ttes da1Iy at whtch each guest enough that you can sltlllalk
: The Carr School Reunton last week
·Fa1r last week and the Meigs was requtred to gtve her a ltdbtl whtle JOggmg wtthout bemg
:was held here m Woode
The Wilham Carr's have Coun ly Fair lhts week
of news She then produced a breathless If you are
:Orave on Sunday Augitst 10, purchased a new house
Mrs. Mary Carr ts assisting handwntten newspaper - each breat~less you are overdom~
•with an attendance of, 26
trailer
at the Sed O'Brien home in tssue of whtch was wtdely ctr· tt and need to jog at a slower
The S~arlz famtly reunton
Teresa Buckley and Kathy Culumbus Mrs O'Brten IS culated for months
speed or just walk

I

I

' '

I

'I

"There are so many things
a manager has to contend
wtth today thmgs hke the
Dock Ellis case I don 'l know
whether that 's for me "
Elhs, the Ptrates' co ntroversial rtghl.!Jander, was
suspended
tndeftnttely
wtthout pay Saturday for
what
Ptrales
General
Manager Joe L Brown
termed
''msubordmahon ''
Tom Carroll Opttoned
Another JOb no manager
relishes ts tellmg a youngster
he must return to the minors,
but that was Sparky An·
derson 's JOb Sunday
Mter the game, Anderson
informed ptlcher Tom Carroll
he was bemg opttoned to the
lndtanapohs farm club to
make room for the return of
Don Gullett
"Judgmg from the look I've
been gettmg from Tom , I
think he already koows he's
going ,"
Sparky
had
remarked before the game
Tom wtll return after Sept
1 when the player limit

becomes 40, but he won't be
ehgtble to ptlch tn the
playoffs or the World Sertes
unless he 's needed as a
replacement for an InJUred
pitcher
Recalled after Gullett was
disabled wtth a fractured left
thumb , Carroll comptled a 4-1
record for the Reds
Naturally , Tom was more
than a little unhappy about
the club 's dects10n, but he
managed to mamlam his selfcontrol
• I'll be back,'' he vowed,
"and the next lime tt 'll he to
stay "
Gullett wtll sta rt agatns(
the Cards m St Louts tomght
" Tomght 's game 18 one of
seven we have left wtth the
Cards," potnted out An derson " We have three left
wtth Pittsburgh We 're gomg
to throw our hesl lineups at
them m those 10 games We
owe 1tto the Phlls and Mets ,
who a re sttll very much m
Lhat Eastern Dlvtston race "

•

Tigers make it two zn row

so 69 4?0 15 1
W es l
w 1 pet
g b
Cmctnnatt
87 39 678
Lo s A n geles
65 57 533 17
Sa n Fran
6 1 67 496 ??
Sa n D1e-go
55 66 455 77
A tla n ta
55 69 .:144 '2 8 '
Houston
46 80 365 38
Saturday s Results
New Yo r k 4 Sa n Fra n c tsc o 7
Ch tcago 3 Houston 7
A tl an t a 8 51 L OUI S 7 n
C.n c nn at1 5 P ll tsbur gh 3 n
san Otego 5 Philad elphi a 1 n
Mo n lreal 3 Los Angele s ? 10
mn n
Sundays R es ults
Los A ng eles 5 Montrea l 3
N ew York 3 San F r a nc tsco 0
Ch cago 1 1 Houston 7
5 1 LOUIS 8 A tl anta 1
Phdadelphta 10 San Otego 1
C1nc.nnat• 3 Ptllsburgh 1
Today s Games
(All T1m es E OT)
Los Ange l es ( H oo t on 10 9 1
at Ch 1cago (S tone 11 5) ? JO
p m
San Otego ( Sp1iln er J 10
and Folkers A 8 1 at Montr e al
(Wart h en 54 and Fryman 8
71 ?605pm
Phtladelphta ( Carlto n 11 9 1
at Atla n ta ( N ekro 17 10 )
7 35 p m
C 1nc.nna t 1 ! Gull e lt 9 31 at
5 1 LO UIS { Forsch 11 8 ) 8 IS
pm
New Yo rk ( Tate 4 II l at
Ho uslon { Ri c hard 8 8 1 8 35
pm
Tue sday s Games
Los Ange l es al Ch 1c ago
, san o 1ego al Monl r ea l n
, c 1ncmnatt al Sr Lou1s n
• Phtladelphta at At lanta n
1 New York at Houslon n
san F ra nc 1sco a t Ptttsburgh
Montreal

w 1 pet g b
Oa kl and
7J J8 607
Kansa5 C.ty
67 53 558 6
T exas
60 63 488 14
Ch 1cago
5q 63 484 15
M tnnesota
56 67 455 18 1
Ca l 1lorn ta
55 6q 444 ?0
Saturdays Res ulh
Boston 5 Ch c age 0
Oakland 7 M d waukee 1
M1nneso t a 9 Cl evela nd 1
Texas 5 Ba l t1more I n
K ansas Clly 4 New York 3 n
O e trotl 8 Ca l1forn 1a 0 n
Sunday ' s R es ult s
{ All Ttm es eon
Sal t1m ore 4 Texas 0
Oakland J Milwaukee I
Oet r oil 7 Cal1fo rn• a 0
C leve l and 14 M1nnesota 5
K ansas Ctly 5 N ew York 3
Ch ca go 6 Boston ? l si
Basio n 4 Chtcago 3 7nd 11

Sunday when they stopped
the Angels 7-0 on rookte Vern
Ruhle's ftve.!Jtlter
The 24-year-old Ruhle, Irn·
provmg hts record to 10-9,
struck out three and walked
two m ptlchmg hts third
shutout of the year
When tl comes to shutouts,
however, Palmer IS the
master The 29-year-old
nght-hander notched hts
ntnth of the season and 35th of
his career, both club records,

Sunday m leadmg the Or10les
to a 4-0 triumph over the
Texas Rangers
Oddly, neither pitcher felt
parltcularly strong despite
their unpresstve showmgs
" ! thought my control was
much weaker than normal,"
smd Ruhle "I was fortunate
to have a good defense behind
me and I was able to throw
strikes when I got hehind "
Added Tigers ' Manager
Ralph Houk, " He's a good

Browns lose veteran safety

CLEVELAND ( UP!) You would thmk Forrest
Gregg, head coach of the
Cleveland Browns, would be
happy his ·team beat the
Phtladelphta Eagles, 14-6, m
an NFL exhtbtlton game
He wasn't
That 's because the Browns
have lost the servtces of
veteran safety Thorn Darden
•nn
Today 's Game s
for the season He tore
l All T•m cs E DT)
ligaments m h1s knee when
Texas ( Je nk 1ns 14 12 and
Ha rga n 8 6 1 al Cl eve l and
creamed by the Eagles'
i Hood 4 8 and ~a rr 1 son 54 )
Robert Roberts while trying
? 5 30 p m
Ba lt tmore (To rr ez 14 61 at
to catch a punt late m the first
M1nneso t a {Goltz 10 10 1 9
QU&amp;rter
Darden will undergo
p m
M rlwauk ee i Hausman J 5
surgery and, therefore, be
or Travers s 7 1 al Cal1 fo rn1a
lost to the club for the season
iS onger 7 ll ) 10 30 p m
D etroit !Coleman 8 14 ) at
And here 's the other reason
Oakland ( Blue 16 91 11 p m
why
Gregg wasn 't smtling
Tuesday 's Game s
De t rott at Oak la nd n
"We played good to a
T exas at Cleveland n
certam extent, but overall I
Ch1cago at New York n
Boston at Kansas C1ly n
wasn't pleased wtth our
Balt 1mor e al M nn esota n
performance," Gregg satd
Milwa ukee at Calt f orn1a n
followmg Saturday mght 's
roPS SCIOro F1ELD
game at Municipal Stadium
COLUMBUS ( UP!)
"We did capitalize on some
Sugar
Beats
came
from
m the ftrst half,
opporturutles
n
second after one.IJaH mile to but not all of them
" All-Out Effort"
NEW YORK (UPI) - Mtke score a 1%length victory over
T
..
111eron
Hanover
m
the
" We gave an all-out effort
Vat!, 23, a rt ~"t handed
featured
$9,000
nmth
pace
at
except
when we had the ball
: hittmg ou'ftelder, was purScioto
Downs
here
Saturday
less than a half-yard away for
' chased by the New York Mets
mght
a
touchdown (with 30 seconds
Sunday from their Tidewater,
Cadet
Hill
showed
remalrUilg m the half) . We
Va farm club m the InThe
wmner
was
draven
m
couldn't get the ball m the
ternattonal League
1
59
by
Mtke
Zeller
and
endzone
Then when we came
Vail was leadmg the IL m
out to play the second haH we
battmg w1th a .342 average as returnee $7.60, $4.40 and $3
Copy
Belle
and
G
D
A
forgot
we were m a football
; well as m hits, lrtples and
teamed
for
a
nightly
double
game. I dtdn't like that, not
runs batted m Vail wlll$197
20
paymg
at all'"
; replace ptlcher George Stone,
AllPndance was 7,741 and
' What Gregg was Impressed
' who ts on the 21-day disabled
the
handle
$409,811
With,
howev er , was the
list.

..

"

other guys talk about hopmg
to htl 270 or 280 And if he
doesn 't get 200 htts , he thinks
he has had a bad season "
Deserves Chance to Manage
Crowley, who was at first
hase m one of hiS rare ap·
pearances m the startmg
lmeup Sunday when the Reds
heat the Ptrates 3-1, thinks
Rose deserves a chance to
manage ooce he calls 11 qwls
as a player
" I don't think Pete could
stand 11, though,'' smd Terry
as an afterthought "If he
didn 't have a wtnntng team,
he'd probably go crazy He'd
have hts team workmg out
two and three time s a day If 11
wasn't wmrung "
The question of whether
Rose would like to manage
some day was put to Pete
" I really can't say," answered Rose, whose 2,500lh
hit came m the seventh mnmg
when he drove home the
Reds ' final run of the game to
extend the club's wmrung
streak to etghl games

Browns' passmg game, whtch
had steadily faltered smce
veteran quarterback Btll
Nelsen reltred and Mtke
Phtpps took over, atded at
times by Brtan Sipe
"I thought we threw the
ball well," Gregg satd
" Brtan and Mike both threw
the ball pretty well
" They htt on the short
passes whtch we worked on
We couldn 'l throw long all
mghl
because
of
Philadelphia's defense We
knew that But you never play
a wa1tmg game so we went
wtth the 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7-yard
passes and they worked
reasonably well "
Phipps unloaded a 32-yard
touchdown pass to rookie
wtde recetver Wtllle Miller
wtth 1 49 left m the first
quarter, cappmg a four-play,
63-yard drive that started on
the Browns' 37 after Darden
was decked by Roberts A
minute and 53 seconds later,
Hugh McKinms swept left
and hulled over from the one
to put Cleveland ahead lW
early m the second ouarter
Phipps Not Pleased
" I really wasn't pleased
w1th my own overall game,"
Phtpps smd " But tt was
better than last week's
opener at San Francisco
when we lost tt "
Don
Cockroft,
the
Cleveland kicking spectaltst,
felt the same way
" When we played the 49ers

my head was somewhere else
and I couldn't concentrate, "
he satd " But this lime I
made my mind up smce I
helped us lose on the West
Coast I had to do my best to
help us wm this time and I
did ''
Bestdes connectmg on two
extra pomts, Cockroft also
punted 10 ltmes for an
average of 45 3 yards a boot
Among them were several
well placed shots
" I wanted Don to kick off
and punt all mght for us,"
added Gregg, who plans to
keep only one kicker on final
43-man
roster
After
Cockroft's superb performance, It's assured the
etght-year veteran Will beat
out ChriS Gartner and rookie
Dave Schmmke for the JOb
Gregg played nearly every·
one on the team, trymg to fmd
out who must be cut before
the Browns' regular season
gets under way Sept 21 at
Cincmnatt
" We can 'l afford the luxury
of playmg a lot of people
thr oughout
the
enllre
exh1b1t1on season because we
have to flnd out who our
regulars wtll be," he satd

young pitcher He's had tough
luck or he would
, have won 15
by now "
Durmg the Ttgers ' losmg
streak, Ruhle satd he pitched
" fairly well "
" I lost a flve.!Jttter to
Texas, I had a three.!Jttter
and a~ lead wtth two outs tn
th e stxlh tnnmg agamsl
Baltimore and they got three
or four ground ball hits
Someone else came m and
before I knew tl " e were
behmd (h"l We've had our
good days and our bad days
thts season but we should
have never lost 19 m a row "
Palmer, who ratsed h1s
maJor league-leadmg victory
total to 19 wtth hts second
stratghl shutout, was lucky to
get through the first 11\!Ullg
Dave Moates and Cesar
Tovar, the first two Texas
halters, smgled and Palmer
later walked Toby Harrah to
load the bases hefore rettrmg
Len n) Ran dle on a groundout
"! "asn't really throwmg
well m the warmups,"
Palmer
admttted
"I
mtght've been sltff from the
last time out, I'm not really
sure The thmg you have to do
tn Baltimore when you pttch
tn warm weather after you
warm up 18 Sit down for a
mmute or two I should know
that by now But I got out of It
and that kind of thmg hap·
pens When I was gomg bad
everythmg they htl soft was
fallmg m everywhere But
when you're gomg good,
you're gomg good "
, In other AL games, Kansas
City defeated New York 5-3,
Cleveland routed Minnesota
Oakland
downed
14-5,
Milwaukee 3-l and Chtcago
beat Boston &amp;-2 before losmg
the second game 4-3 m 11
mmngs

I

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D.
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OFFICE
: 9:30 to 12, 21o 5 !CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.)-EAST COURT

Bucs Ellis on
way out?
PITISBURGH (UPI) The one-way ltckel back nere
that the Pittsburgh Pirates
gave ptlcher Dock Ellis after
hi s mdeftrute suspenston for
msurbordmahon tn Ctn ~
cmnalt Saturday may turn
out to have been his ' 'walking
papers "
At the moment , no one m
the Ptrate orgamzallon
~ ms to know-Or carewhether the rtght.!Jander will
ever rejom the team
" My postlton ts thts," Pills·
burgh General Manager Joe
Brown satd Sunday, "Dock
El\ls w\11 have to first convmce the manager that he
wants to help our ball club tn
any manner the manager
sees ftt I don't think that will
be too easy at thts pomt
" Once he sallsf!ed Danny,
he 'd have to satiSfy me and
that won't be easy etther
" I don 't know what hts
opltons are and I don 'l gtve a
damn what they are He satd
he hadn't been treated fairly
by us, but that 's not true He's
been treated very well and
very £atr "
The usually unflappable
Murtaugh seem s equally
stolid m the face of the fact
that the Ptrales cannot
replace Eilts on the 25-player
ar hvP roster while he IS on

Davis will be
okay--Bengals
WILMINGTON,
Ohto
(UP!) - Cincmnalt Bengals
halfback Charlie Davts' knee,
InJured agamst Buffalo
Fnday m ght , " IS Just
stramed
" He'll be okay," a team
spokesman sa td here Sun·
day
Davts, "'th 97 yards on 18
carncs Ia 54-yard average ).
ts among Cmc tnnalt 's leading
ball earn ers afte r three
exhtbttton games
Ed Wtlliams tops the charts
wtlh 103 yards on 16 carrtes
16 4 average) Boobte Clark
has ga med 83 yards on 19
carnes (4 4 average )

suspension , leavmg them one
ptlcher shy m the mtdst of a
bad slump and a light pennant race
" I would never completely
close my door to any player,"
Murtaugh satd. " Butt! would
be awfully hard for hun to
convmce me of any good
mtenhons I don 't know what
hts mtentlons are now He '11
have to come to us "
Brown satd, "We' re better
With 24 than we were with
25"
Ellis' SIISpenston climaxed
three days of ill-tempered
behavior Thursday night,
while the Pirates were losing
to the Reds &amp;-1, he refused to
go to the bullpen Murtaugh
smd he let that ride because
Eilts said hiS arm was sore.
But Frtday rught, when
Ellis pulled the same stunt,
Murtaugh and Ellis exchanged words hefore the
pitcher was asked to shower
and leave the stadium
Saturday morntng Murtaugh announced he had fined
Elias a ''substantial'' amount,
heheved to be $1,000
ElliS asked for a meeting
wtth Murtaugh and the other
players before Saturday
rught's game Although tl was
assumed he would apo1ogue
at that time, he threw a
temper tantrum, beratmg
Murtaugh, management and
hiS teammates
"I have never been attacked hke that,'' Murtaugh
said "I was so stunned, I
didn 't kick him out fast
enough I couldn t believe
what I was hearmg "

CLEAN YOUR

CARPETS
right in your home!
for Bf!autiful Clean
Carpets use
BLUE LUSTRE from

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
'

'

�•

2- The Datly Sent mel, Mtddleport-Pome•w, 0 , Monday, Aug 18, 1975

Where's my safety belt?

~

.I

.

Editorial comment,
opinion, features

RAY CROMLEY

.

3 - The Da!lv Sent mel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, Monday, Aug 18,1975

Sport Parade

Your tum again, parents

DR. LAMB
Varied treatment

heart patient

A most unfunny cartoon

;------------------------------------•

:Alfred
:Social Notes
••

t

•:

Tom Tiede
IndividUJll 's choice
for a lethal miracle
By Tom Tiede
PITTSBURGH - A year
ago doctors told the woman
she had termtnal cancer But
now, stttmg on a w1cker chair
m a cramped apartment off
City center , she's not so sure
"I found lhts doc tor who
gtves me laelnle I get tt m
shots, once a week or more,
whenever I want God, tl's
been mtraculous For the
ftrsl time m all these months
I thmk maybe I'm gomg to

hve "
Ftfty years after the
discovery of laetrile , and a
dozen years followm g tls
federal ban m thts country,
thousands of c~ncer sufferers
sltll see tl as the one brtght
hope tn thetr clouded lives
An extract from aprtcot
ptls ,
the
substance, proponents clatm,
arrests cancer by the release
of hydrogen cyamde whtch
destroys cancerous cells
Mtracle cures, they say,
are frequent The lady tn the
wicker chatr, as Illustration ,
clatms she eats better, sleeps
better and feels better
4
' I'm havmg sex agam, you
know, and I haven 't done
that, well, smce December "
Crtltcs of the compound,
however, are equally sure tl
ts nothmg but quacker}
More, tl ts rtsky quackery
The cyamde aspect of laelrtle
ts, accordmg to the U S Food
and Drug Admtmstratton ,
"Polenltally
lethal
to
humans " Thts spnng a
dtstrtcl court m Califorma
found that over-the-counter
laetrile, m the form of a "food
additive" called Apnkern,
was sufftctently dangerous to
menl market prohtbttton
The court ruled that ftve
pellets of Apnkern "could kill
a chtld,'' and thus ceased Its
manufacture
Indeed, laetrile - tls
chmcal name ts am~gdahn has lately received more than
JUst court and Federal
condemnations
In July, four maJOr cancer
cltmcs whtch had been experimenting wtth amygdalin
Issued simultaneous an-

nmm cements that all te sts
were ne ga tiv e Mtce ex·
pertments at Sloan-Kette1mg
m New York, for ms ta nce,
showed no ev 1dence that
amygdahn
InJectiOns
prevented growth or spread
of cancer Pnvately, one
expertmenter adm1tted suc h
tests are never absolutely
conclusive, but added, "If we
thought there was anythmg to
tl, anythmg at all, we 'd keep
trymg "
Sltll, behef m laetrtle ts
appareqtly as greal as ever ,
and mterest may even be
g rowmg At lea st three
nat wnal laetnle assoc1atmns
promo te tts benefits through
ma gaz tn es, sem tn ars,
s peeches a nd 01 ga m ze d
th erap y tnps to Mextco
where the substance ca n be
leg ally ad!mmstered
Beverly Ne wktrk , an offl ee r "tlh one of the
associations, the Cahforma~
based
Commtlloe
for
Freedom of Chmce m Cancer
Therapy, says at least 100
doctors prescnbe la ctnle m
secret m the U S , and
poss tbly 100,000 cancer
vtcltms lake tl regularly
Despt te arguments of the
medtcal establishment, she
says, "Laetnle works, people
know 1t works , and no laws or
laboratory c nltc tsm s are
gomg to keep people from
trymg tl for themselves "
The tssue , says Newktrk,
and most other lae h tie
c ulttsts, agree, ts fre edom of
chotce The oya mde from
amygdalin ts found tn a
nrunber of other drugs and
foods ( vtlamm B-12, bttler
almonds, etc ), th us the

culttsts dtsnuss the r isk
fa ctor The real reason for
th e laetnle ban , Newkirk
suspects ts that vested Ill·
leresis "tlhtn the Amencan
Can cer Soctely "are afraid to
adrml the tr uth " Culhsts
beheve the ACS does not want
to fmd a ca nc er cure for fear
of self destructiOn A classic
therefore
s ta ndoff has
evolved Btg people vs little
people. or the rtghts of mdtvtduals vs the optntons of
1ns lltut10ns
Lea vtng astde the slander
of the ACS, because tt ts
un true. more than a few
otherwise disinter es ted
laetnle obset vets believe the
little people should wm thts
battle Whtle there are rtsks
assoctatiOn "'lh amygdalm,
no t the least of whtch ts lhaltt
may be used by some cancer
pattents tn place of better
tl1 erap} , the ques tiOn ts really
whether these desperate
sufferers can morally be
dented a " drug" that ts
perfectly legal tn many other
naltons of the world Many
see tl as tllog tcal folly to allow
a lung cancer v1chm to
contmue smokmg ctgarettes
but forbtd hun th e ptt of a
common frwt
Not only ts tt tllogtcal
perhaps, tl may be fultle The
woman he re m the wtcker
chatr says no law on earth
could keep her from what
may only be the placebo
effect of laeb tle
' If my doctor stopped
gtvtng tt to me ,' she says,
gnm now, ' I'd buy up every
a pncot m town, grmd down
the ptls, and la ke tl that
\!.By "

Berrys World
0
0
0

The Daiij sentinel
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(I) 1975 bVNEA

Inc ~

You 'll be mterested to know, a cold snap rwned much of South Amenca s coffee bean crop
and the pnce has gone up from a dime'"

.
••

BY KEN ROSENBERG

UPI Sports Writer
Who would have believed
the Cmc mnatl Reds, ahead by
By MILTON RICHMAN
121'. games at the All.Star
UPI Sports Editor
break, would be nghl m the
thtck of the lightest pennant
COOPERSTOWN, N Y t UP!) - Ralph Kiner grew up under race m the maJOr leagues?
a handicap he never felt like talking about much until now
Not too many people, right?
' Kiner 's handtcap wasn't ph ystcal It was more of an
Well, the Reds are only
- emoltonal one and two of the reasons he's talking about tl now , tt's the NatiOnal League East
first, he has outgrown tl, and second, he's bemg mducted mto race, where a scant 31'2
Baseball's Hall of Fame today
ga mes separate the top four
~ Earl Averlll, Bucky Harrts, Btlly Herman and Judy John son
ballclubs and Cincmnall 18
'.:;also are bemg enshrmed along wtth Kiner and tl never fatls , playmg \he role of spoiler
; : every lime a man has hts likeness cast m bronze for the ktnd of
Cincmnatt Manager Sparky
::;::pl.ljque they hang up m the Hall here , he always has to fight Anderson, who confidently
."::back the old lump m the throat telling how he ever got to be a announced hts pttchmg plans
· , - ballplayer m the first place
for the playoffs two weeks
' :: Ralph Kiner's handtcap was that he was an only chtld No ago, feels h18 Reds "owe tt to
: brothers, no Sisters, no father for very long
the Mets a nd Phillies to gtve
' "My dad died when I was four ," says the btg, easy natured tt all we 've got agamst Pitt•
former Pittsburgh home run slugger who now does the New sburgh and Sl LoUIS "
York Mets' games on 1V and radio " He was a haker m Santa
" We' re playmg 'em real
_ Rita , New Mextco, and tf there ever was anything to thiS loose ,'' Anderson smd after
theory about heredttv and baseball. he dtsproved tl com- watchmg Pete Rose's 2,500lh
- pletely , he couldn't play a lick He was such a bad player, they hit propel the Reds to a 3-1
.. wouldn 't let him play All they 'd let him do was hold the bats "
:; ~ Kiner 's mother, Beatrtce, moved to Alhambra , Calif, after
her hiiSband d1ed She was a registered nurse makmg about
$100a month durmg the Depression, and she used the money to
support herseH and her boy, Ralph
" I was a sports nut,' ' satd Kiner " I liked to play every sport
and when they had the Olymptc games m Los Angeles m 1932 I
was a track star and all that m my own mtnd Bastcally , I got
started m baseball becaiiSe of my next door netghbor, a fellow
named Bob Bodkin
"My mother was workmg all the lime as a nurse and this Bob
Bodkm's father was a semt-pro ballplayer who 'd p1tch to hts
son all the lime I'd shag I was aboul11 years old, and I must
CINCINNATI (UPI) - At
have shagged halls for almost a year before I ever got to hit
one end of the clubhouse sat
That really was the thmg that did tl The thrill of htttmg a Pete Rose, enctrcli!d by
baseball started becommg Important to me "
wrtters bustly scrtbbhng
Later, there was anothe r mfluence on Kiner
notes as the Reds' three-tune
" Agam It was a father s1tuahon," he remembers "Harry
hattmg champ talked of hiS
Johnston was a boy my age, we both wanted to be professional 2,500\h htl
hallplayers and hts dad had played professiOnal ball He also
Terry Crbwley watched the
was a ptlcher and he'd take us around to vacant lots and ptlch scene from the opposite end
to us "
of the room and smtled
Beatnce Kiner didn't want to know about such nonsense for
"Rose," sa1d Crowley, "ts
her only chtld Ralph She wanted him to become a doctor, amazmg He's a htttmg ma lawyer, anythmg substanltal m some "legJIIrnale professiOn " chme, that 's what he IS He
The least he could do was go out, get a JOb and earn a few loves this game hke no one
dollars
I've ever seen before.
'I got a magazme route selling Liberty Magazme at the
" The guy can be httlmg 320
time," recalls Kiner " The magazme sold for ftve cents.l'd gel and still he'll come out here
a penny a magazme and had to return four cents to the com- for extra htllmg practice on
pany I had 20 magazmes to sell a week and tt took an awful lot an off day," contmued Terry
of lime, all my afternoons after school "
" And when they moved him
"So I ftgured out that tt 'd be a lot easter tf I could make a to thtrd base, he was out here
dollar or two on the stde to pay the company for the magazmes at the stadtum on off days
and use the lime m the afternoon to play base hall I'd bury the fleldmg ground balls
magazmes m my backyard and cut a few lawns for 50 cents or
" I remember one off day I
so Tins worked out well for a while But my mother came out was here too," Crowley went
to the backyard one day and through some circumstance found on " All I dtd was stand on
out the magazmes were buried there She almost dted She ftrsl base and take h1s
thought! was gomg to rwnalton, and she sent me to mllltary throws, but I got tired as hell
school to do all the thmgs she felt I should do "
' And conftdence," added
Ralph Kiner's mother would love to be here m Cooperstown Terry " Pete talks about
today to see her son mducted mto the Hall of Fame, but that 's gettmg 200 htts a season hke
ImposSible
She's 93, she's m a nursmg home m Alhambra and she's
bltnd She sl!ll has her mental faculties, however, and ts very
proud of her 52-year old son, who has this to say about her·
" ! thmk she realizes I dtdn't go completely wrong when I
burted those magazmes m the backyard "
By FRED McMANE
UPI Sports Writer
Mter nearly three weeks m
cold storage, the Detrott
Ttgers are stzzltng But
they're not even lukewarm
compared to Balttmore's Jim
Palmer
Ma 1or L ea gu e Standmgs
The Tigers, who snapped
Amertcan L eag u e
Un1ted Pre ss lnt erna t1onal
East
thetr
19-game losmg streak
Nattonal L ea gu e
w I pet 9 b
Saturday mght when they
East
74 49 60 7
Boslon
w 1 pet g b
66 5 ~ 55 0 6 1
Ba l ltm ore
blanked the California Angels
67 5 5 549
6? 59 5 17 11
Pittsburgh
New York
8-0 behind the two.!Jtl ptlching
66
55
54
5
56 66 45 9 17'
Phila delph i a
M i lwauk ee
65 57 533 1
53 65 449 18'
$1 L OUI S
Cleveland
of Ray Bare, made tl two
63 58 57 I )I
48 ! 4 ) 9 ] 751
New York
De lrott
58
66
468
10
shutout
vtctones m a row
W es t
Ch 1cag o

decl8ton over the Pirates
Sunday for a sweep of thetr
four-game se nes
"The
Pirates are ftghtmg for thetr
hves "
Indeed they are
The loss, Pittsburgh's stxth
stratght a nd 12th m tls last 13
games, cultts lead m th e NL
East to one.!Jalf game over
Plnladelphta, two games over
Sl Louts and three and a half
games over the New York
Mets
Pira tes Ma nager Danny
Murtaugh ,
obvtously
dtsmayed by hts tea m 's
anemtc httlmg the past two
weeks, refused to use WtUte
Stargell's absence from the
lmeup wtth a l•g InJury as an
excuse
" We' re not a one~man
team , " sa1d Murtaugh
' We've got 25 men on thts
club The best tome for us
would be to have a game

where we get 12 to 15 hits and
score etght or ntne runs Only
Dave l'-drker and Manny
Sangutllen have been cons ts lenl at the plate a ll
season "
The vtctory was the
seventh tn a row for Cincmnah, whtch leads th e West
by 17'·- games Cincmnalt has
compl ete d
tts
season
schedules wtth New York and
Phtladelphta but sttll has
seven games remauung w1 th
Sl Louts and four wtlh Pitt·
~burgh

E lsewhe r e tn the NL,
Phtladelphta whtpped San
Diego 1!1-4, Sl Louts routed
Atlanta 8-1, New York
blanked San Franctsco ~.
Los Angeles shaded Montreal
5-3 and Chtcago outslugged
Houston 11-7
In the American League,
Baltunore blanked Texas 4-0,

Kansas Ctty defeated New
York 5-3, Cleveland routed
Mtnnesota 14-.5, Detrmt shut
out Califorrua 7-0 Oakland
downed Milwaukee 3-1 and
Chtcago spilt wtth Boston,
wmmng &amp;-2 and losmg 4-3 m
11 mnmgs
Phtllles 10, Padres 4
Greg lmtnskt htt hts 30th
homer of the season, tops m
the maJors as Phtladelphta,
which has lost ftve of Its last
seven ga mes, co ntmued to
ga m ground on Pittsburgh
desptte 1ts own lrulspm
'You can never tell what's
gomg to happen ," srud former Pirate Dave Cash who
lr tpled home two run s "You
play under
500 tn a
homestand and ptck up
gro und The Ptrates were due
for a bad streak after playin g
so well thts year But there's
sltll a month and a half to go,

so t here's no reason to
pa mc "
Cardmats 8, Braves I
St Louts , whtch has ptcked
up t2' , games In a month ,
pounded out
19 ht ts ,
htghltghted by Bake McBrtde s four stngles and Ken
Rettz' three rbt
To celebrate lhetr nse m
the sta ndin gs, the Cardinals
have the dub10us dtsltnctton
of hostmg Ctncmnatt m a
threegamc sertes begmrung
Monday mght
'Cincmnatt has to be really
r elaxed tight now," satd St
Louts Manager Red Schoendienst But I don "t think that
wtll make much dtfference
when we play them I can
thmk of a lot of ballclubs I'd
rather be playmg rtght now "
Mcls 3, Giani&lt; 0
New York, wht ch tratled by
1
9 games ear her this month
when Roy McMillan replaced
w

Yog t Berra as manager ,
recetved a much needed
bullpen boost from Jerry
l&lt;oosman, who saved Tom
Seaver's league~eading 17th
VICtory with hiS first relief
appea rance smce May 1972.
" We need left-handed
streng th m the bullpen,"
McMtllan S81d m explaining
Koosman 's move "We would
like to see Jerry come out of
the bullpen for the next SIX
weeks Any team would."
Dodgen 5, Expos 3
Btll Russell smgled home
two runs to climax a threerun second mrung and also
scored a run m the runth
Cubs 11, Astros 7
Btll Madlock ratsed h18
leag ue-l ead tng battmg
average to 361 wtth three
hils, Jose Cardenal had a
perfect 4-for-4 day, and Andy
Thornton drove home three
runs

Rose collects 2,500th hit, Reds
•
wzn; Gullett back, Carroll gone

Expedient humanitarianism

Proving worth of democracy again

NL East title race tighens

Toda'y's '

Can students learn
·more out of school

By Ray Cromley
WASHINGTON - One of 'W sons, flnishmg h18 freshman
~-.c&gt;..::;;o...?.:::&gt;-o-&lt;?...:::;;"&lt;:;o...c::&gt;-&lt;::&gt;-&lt;?.o-C&gt;..O...:::;;"&lt;:&gt;..:::&gt;&lt;::&gt;-&lt;:::&gt;-o-.o-.c-..:::&gt;&lt;::&gt;-&lt;:::-.o-&lt;?..C" ;ear m htgh school m June, was talked Into takmg a summer
sc1ence semmar
The county-run six-week course had the students m \he
countryside for 17 of the 30-day seSSion
The 36 students dtvtded mto SIX teams water c hemistry,
Insects, botany, geology, etc Each team developed Its own
Mter 17 ye ars of operatiOn, a JUVerule checkpotnl on the U S -Mex.tcan border at San
research methods, evolved Its own statistics, deCided tts own
Ystdro, Calif has been closed down
hypotheses and came up with its own proofs and concluSions
Established tn 1958 as a barner agatnst what officials called "the dissolute, lewd and
They wrote 40 and 50 page reports on whtch thetr grades
urunora l co ndttiOns" across the border and the mariJuana, herom and venereal diSease
depended
brought back b) voungster s, the control statiOn had stopped some 130,000 underage ) ouths,
On a recent backpackmg trip, as my son and I walked
many of them runaways as young as 12 years old Last Easter weekend, 500 teen.,agers out of
along, he could hm dly talk of anything except this type of tree
2,000" ho convened on the border were turned back
and that, why 11 grew where It did and when, thts rock outThe San Otego ctty counctl has voted to wtlhdraw tts share of the $470,000 yearly cost of the
croppmg, that type of sot! He wotdd stop repeatedly and
checkpotnt, reports the New York Times, and state offtctals say that because of this state
lecture me on one aspect or another of geology-naturesupport money ts be tng dtsconltnued
forestry-water composttlOn, - until we had to hustle on tn an
Although a 1969 Cahforma law still prohtblts the entry of youths under 18 mto Mextco unless
attempt to catch up wtth our fellow campers
they are accompamed by an adult or can produce letters of pemusston signed by their parents,
Now this son 18 no grmd.ll18 not hts IISUal practice to go on
the withdrawal of 25San Otego policemen who manned the checkpoint around the clock means
for. hours enthiiStasllcally about school subjects, but he does
that "now the border c rosstng ts wtde open to them, " says one pollee official
about thiS one
Parent-leachet associations and JUVentle authoriltes who opposed the dosmg were
I took several hours off from work the other day to attend
overpowered by economy-mtnded criltcs who called the checkpomt a "baby-llltlmg operation"
the "graduation sesston" of this group
and an o ul-&lt;~f-date waste of money " tn these limes of permissive teen .,age hfestyles "
Each team gave Its report, served sassafras, swnac and
It ts a curtous ktnd of ctrcular reasomng It says, m effect, that because of the perother wilderness survival teas. Before and after the talks we
mtsstveness of contemporary American soctely, there IS no longer any need to rests! permtlled around Every lime I asked a question I was approachmtsstveness
ed by enthustasltc teen-aged men and women ftlled wtth what
It may be true, as one San Otego, councilman argued, that 1! 18 time to "let the parents of
they'd been domg
these kids exe rt some control over them rather than leavmg 11 up to the pollee "
And thts was school My son had hated biology m the IISual
But tf parents exerted no control tn the past, they are hardly likely to start dotng so now
classroom course he'd taken last wmler
The semmar Instructor was as happy as h18 students But
he and I worried the course could spoil school for these young sters next fall and winter "I didn't have a course that gave me
th1s challenge and chance for experimenting wtth concepts I
Tite evacuation of Cambodia's larger ctties has been sefl88tionalized m the Western press
developedmyseHunttll was a graduate student m college," he
as a ''death march," says an Amertcan who left that country when the US • supported Lon Nol
said.
go vernment collapsed m Aprtl
The sermon here 18 obvloiiS I know of students who, on
It was, m fact, a Journey away from certain death by starval!on, claimS William Goodtheir own, wm gold medals for mdividual work in nature and
fellow, an associate wtth the Insl!tute for lnternallonal Polley Widespread fanune was only a
ecology, who develop experunents and carry them through
matter of weeks away, while m the countrySide there was a Sizeable surpiiiS of food
and spend months of their time studymg Insects, wildlife, sod
It may be ObJected lhaltt would have made more sense to bring this food mto the Cities
and water conservation, forests and geology But they barely
rather than to herd hundreds of thousands of men, women and children on foot mto the counpass standard modern sctence courses as taught m today's
trystde
schools
Thts wa s not possible, says Goodfellow, because of hrruted motor transport and because U
In my youth we called this standard classroom approach
S ·supplied trucks captured from the Lon Nol forces were wtthout fuel Also, additional people
" cookbook chenustry." You followed the lnstrucltons
were needed m the countrystde to help plant rtce, whtch 18 a very labor-mtenstve crop, and to
precisely, got the results the book hmted at, wrote down on
mcrease the area under cultivatiOn
exams the answers the book or teacher satd to memorize H
Moreover, he adds, "the evacual!on was politically expedient, for tt enabled the new
you did, you received an A. If you weren't Willing to do this, you
leaders to completely replace the CIVIlian Infrastructure in the cities with their own people "
got a C - tf the teacher was kind
It ts good to learn that what was politically expedient for the new leaders of Cambodia was
Now I've read the new science books and watched the new
also , happtly, a most humamtartan acl!on
sctence teachers m actiOn. I know the new concepts are supposed to challenge students and bring out thetr lrullallve. Thts
sometimes happens, but my expenence 18 that 11 does not
happen very often
Science courses aren '!the only bummers Go down the list
.. foreign languages, English, social sciences, I've sat m on
classes humming With debate, curwstty and enthu.stasm But
IllS difficult to believe that a year has passed since the greatest constitutional crisiS the
they are not the rule
nation has ever faced, save for the Civil War. It will ways and forever be known simply as
We sltll tend to think of our children as little bottles mto
" Watergate," and tl reached Its dramatic climax with the resignation of Richard Nixon from
the office of the presidency
which we wlll pour useful knowledge. We forget they have
bratns .
That the anntversary has come and gone w1th an almost total absence of observance or
My son has heard about a siX-week archeology senunar
comment cannot be due alone to the fact !hat Americans have forgotten, or want to forget, the
sordtd scandal whtch absorbed thetr attention for nearly two years.
bemg glVen next summer. He can't wait
It says somethmg about the resiliency of our political system and the abiding commitBut he dreada the next eight and a hall months of school
ment of the Amertcan people to the princrpal that ours ts a government of laws, not of men
It ts also dtfftcult to recall the passions that stirred Americans during the last days of
Watergate, and a month later when President Ford granted an untimely, or certainly controverSial, pardon to his predecessor. Despite the bitterness many felt over the forced
restgnat10n, no pro-NIXon party has gathered around the ex-president In exile - nor,lettt be
emphasized, has he attempted to encourage one - dedicated to hiS rehabilitation or some sort
of political revenge.
The same would not be true m many other countries
Not much, tits clauned, has changed in Washington m the past year. It ts stlll politics as
usual, and the record of the " reform" Congress elected last November offers little to counter
that vtew.
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
how tmporlanl tl ts
Perhaps so Perhaps 11 will always be so As Churchlll said, democracy 18 the worst system
DEAR DR LAMB In most cases the fmdlng
- except for all the others.
Almost a year ago a member means coronary artery
But somethihg else can also be satd · For all the lamentatioos one hears about the future of of my famtly had a heart disease, and lhts ts certamly
the country as tt approaches the beglnmng of Its third century, Americans have shown an attack, a left branch block
true 1f 1t occurs as a com~
amazmg capaCity to surmount crl8CS, to put as1de honest and deeply held differences and rally Does lh1s ever disappear plicalton of a heart attack In
together for the mlegrtty and safety of thiS commonality we call Amenca
through reshng and very all of these mstances the
We are more than JUSt the material envy of the world We continue to hold htgh the beacon light chores' I have been told general management of the
light of liberty under law the Founders first III so long ago
dtel tsn't tmporlanl, but I paltent should be th• same a&lt;
g1ve her very bttle salt and a that for other paltents wtth
low cholesterol dtel Am I fatty-cholesterol deposits m
w1se m dmng so?
the artenes That means
DEAR READER - Left control of blood pressure,
A Canadian cartoonist took a rather Jaundiced view of the gomgs-on at the recent 35-nation
bundle branch block means ehmmahon of obes1ty, and a
summtt meetmg in Helsmki.
the spectal nerve-like ltssue low fat , low tn saturated fat,
His cartoon, which was syndicated to a number of Amencan newspapers, showed
that carnes the sltmuiiiS to low cholesterol dtet The
PreSident Ford, Y1ce PreSident Rockefeller, Secretary of State Kissinger and Leomd Brezhnev
the left stde of the heart treatment ts for the artery
standmg on top of the globe drmkmg a champagne toast.
muscle is not conductmg, disease that caused the block,
"Here's to us," says Brezhnev, "-not one of us elected to offtce I"
IISUally because of damage not for the block alone
The Irony falls flat on a number of counts. For one thing, cabmet members have always
Thts slows the left stde of the
For more mformahon on
been appomted officials, even m Canada As for the President and VIce President (the latter
heart's contraction by about such dtets send me 50 cents
was not even at the conference), although they were not elected by direct popular vote, they dld
04 seconds, hardly enough to and a long, self.,addressed
; not attam their positions by any means other than constitutional due process They were, m a
make
any difference m the stamped envelope m care of
; · sense, " elected" by the members of Congress actmg as the representatives of the American
: people and accordmg to the provlsl0fl8 of the 25th Amendment, which 1tseH had prevtously been beatmg mechamsm of the th1s newspaper, P 0 Box
heart
1551, Radto Ctly Statton, New
: rallfted by the elected legJslatures of the several states
Its
Importance
rests
enYork, NY 10019 and ask for
:
Moreover, both men, should they run m 1976, must subnut themselves to the judgement
ltrely
wtth
what
caused
tl
I
The Health Letter number 1-3
" and verdtct of the people . The same can hardly besa1d of Soviet leader Brezhnev When he goes
have
seen
many
causes
of
left
Dtel
Prevenltng
Ath: - and there contmue to be rumors that tll health wlll soon force hiS tetirement - 11 wlll be
bundle
branch
block
tn
rather
erosclerosis
: when he , or the handful of men who rule tbe Soviet Uruon, deCide IllS tune for him togo, and not
healthy
young
men
Some
of
DEAR DR LAMB - What
: before
these,
no
doubt,
were
caused
happens when jogging right
:
A quotation from 19th century English crttic Wllllam Hazlitt would seem to sum up thiS
by mflamalton of the heart after eatmg' I do thts qwte
: particular cartoon
wt th
dtseases
dunng often because I can't fmd
•
"Comparisons are odtous, becaiiSe they are Impertinent - makmg the one thmg the
childhood In these mstances lime for Ioggmg except after
standard of anotherwhtch has no relatiOn to tl"
where the heart had no other dmner I'll stop tf there ts
Important damage, the much danger, so please
wtll be held on Sunday, Follrod recently attended ftndmg was only a sctenliftc advise me
August 24, tn the Woode Band Crescendo Camp at Rio curtoslty.
DEAR READER - In
•
Grove
Grande, Ohto
In a few cases the block will healthy people JOggmg at a
Mrs Ella Yost of Sngar
disappear when the heart senstble speed after a
Grove, Oh10, IS a patient m
Watd Swartz of Athens slows and appear when the moderate meal poses no
• S S attendance on Aug 10 the Fairfield County Hosptlal
called on Mr and Mrs Vere rate ts mcreased Thts alone hazard at all. For people wtlh
:was 45, the offermg was at Lancaster, Ohio
doesn't tell you much about heart disease, whtch may
Swartz, Sunday.
: $27 11 Worshtp servtces were
Genevteve Guthrte and her
The AHred UMW wlll hold
mclude a large number of
:held at 11 am, wtlh Mr company, the Delbert Yost
their monthly meeting, at the
m1ddle.,aged people who do
:sydenstriCker, lay-speaker famtly attended the Parker
church
next
Tuesday home from the hospital and not know they have un•from Decatur UM Church ReuniOn at Tuppers Platns,
evemng, August 19 at 8 p m domg mcely
derlymg heart disease, it IS
••speaking from I Cor 2 12-14 Sunday
Also
attendmg
lhts
wtth potluck refreshments.
•• ' 4Someone Prayed" - 'pray•
better not to load the heart
reuniOn were the Wtlber Everyone welcome
wtlh the work of digestion and
:for one another' Attendance Parker famtly of lhts area
Mr and Mrs Chas D
exerhon
at the same tune
:was 18 Offenng was $21
Clmr E Follrod IS under a Woode attended the special
Except for young, healthy
Sociable Newsgatherlng
: Pledges - $30
doctor 's care for an InJury hymn smg at North Bethel
The ftrsl newspaperwoman people, I thmk 1t is better to
; Alfred's
church resulting from a freak acChurch Saturday evening, was Madame Doublet de Per- JOg b"efore meals Remem:Homecommg wtll be held on cident when hiS nght arm AugiiSl 9
san 0677-1771 1 a wtdow of ber, senstble joggmg means
~Sept 21. Details to be an- was punctured and torn on a
Several local people at- Pans who never left her apart· JOggmg at a speed slow
•onotmced later.
storm door latch at hts home tended the Athens Cotm ly ment for 40 years but held par·
ttes da1Iy at whtch each guest enough that you can sltlllalk
: The Carr School Reunton last week
·Fa1r last week and the Meigs was requtred to gtve her a ltdbtl whtle JOggmg wtthout bemg
:was held here m Woode
The Wilham Carr's have Coun ly Fair lhts week
of news She then produced a breathless If you are
:Orave on Sunday Augitst 10, purchased a new house
Mrs. Mary Carr ts assisting handwntten newspaper - each breat~less you are overdom~
•with an attendance of, 26
trailer
at the Sed O'Brien home in tssue of whtch was wtdely ctr· tt and need to jog at a slower
The S~arlz famtly reunton
Teresa Buckley and Kathy Culumbus Mrs O'Brten IS culated for months
speed or just walk

I

I

' '

I

'I

"There are so many things
a manager has to contend
wtth today thmgs hke the
Dock Ellis case I don 'l know
whether that 's for me "
Elhs, the Ptrates' co ntroversial rtghl.!Jander, was
suspended
tndeftnttely
wtthout pay Saturday for
what
Ptrales
General
Manager Joe L Brown
termed
''msubordmahon ''
Tom Carroll Opttoned
Another JOb no manager
relishes ts tellmg a youngster
he must return to the minors,
but that was Sparky An·
derson 's JOb Sunday
Mter the game, Anderson
informed ptlcher Tom Carroll
he was bemg opttoned to the
lndtanapohs farm club to
make room for the return of
Don Gullett
"Judgmg from the look I've
been gettmg from Tom , I
think he already koows he's
going ,"
Sparky
had
remarked before the game
Tom wtll return after Sept
1 when the player limit

becomes 40, but he won't be
ehgtble to ptlch tn the
playoffs or the World Sertes
unless he 's needed as a
replacement for an InJUred
pitcher
Recalled after Gullett was
disabled wtth a fractured left
thumb , Carroll comptled a 4-1
record for the Reds
Naturally , Tom was more
than a little unhappy about
the club 's dects10n, but he
managed to mamlam his selfcontrol
• I'll be back,'' he vowed,
"and the next lime tt 'll he to
stay "
Gullett wtll sta rt agatns(
the Cards m St Louts tomght
" Tomght 's game 18 one of
seven we have left wtth the
Cards," potnted out An derson " We have three left
wtth Pittsburgh We 're gomg
to throw our hesl lineups at
them m those 10 games We
owe 1tto the Phlls and Mets ,
who a re sttll very much m
Lhat Eastern Dlvtston race "

•

Tigers make it two zn row

so 69 4?0 15 1
W es l
w 1 pet
g b
Cmctnnatt
87 39 678
Lo s A n geles
65 57 533 17
Sa n Fran
6 1 67 496 ??
Sa n D1e-go
55 66 455 77
A tla n ta
55 69 .:144 '2 8 '
Houston
46 80 365 38
Saturday s Results
New Yo r k 4 Sa n Fra n c tsc o 7
Ch tcago 3 Houston 7
A tl an t a 8 51 L OUI S 7 n
C.n c nn at1 5 P ll tsbur gh 3 n
san Otego 5 Philad elphi a 1 n
Mo n lreal 3 Los Angele s ? 10
mn n
Sundays R es ults
Los A ng eles 5 Montrea l 3
N ew York 3 San F r a nc tsco 0
Ch cago 1 1 Houston 7
5 1 LOUIS 8 A tl anta 1
Phdadelphta 10 San Otego 1
C1nc.nnat• 3 Ptllsburgh 1
Today s Games
(All T1m es E OT)
Los Ange l es ( H oo t on 10 9 1
at Ch 1cago (S tone 11 5) ? JO
p m
San Otego ( Sp1iln er J 10
and Folkers A 8 1 at Montr e al
(Wart h en 54 and Fryman 8
71 ?605pm
Phtladelphta ( Carlto n 11 9 1
at Atla n ta ( N ekro 17 10 )
7 35 p m
C 1nc.nna t 1 ! Gull e lt 9 31 at
5 1 LO UIS { Forsch 11 8 ) 8 IS
pm
New Yo rk ( Tate 4 II l at
Ho uslon { Ri c hard 8 8 1 8 35
pm
Tue sday s Games
Los Ange l es al Ch 1c ago
, san o 1ego al Monl r ea l n
, c 1ncmnatt al Sr Lou1s n
• Phtladelphta at At lanta n
1 New York at Houslon n
san F ra nc 1sco a t Ptttsburgh
Montreal

w 1 pet g b
Oa kl and
7J J8 607
Kansa5 C.ty
67 53 558 6
T exas
60 63 488 14
Ch 1cago
5q 63 484 15
M tnnesota
56 67 455 18 1
Ca l 1lorn ta
55 6q 444 ?0
Saturdays Res ulh
Boston 5 Ch c age 0
Oakland 7 M d waukee 1
M1nneso t a 9 Cl evela nd 1
Texas 5 Ba l t1more I n
K ansas Clly 4 New York 3 n
O e trotl 8 Ca l1forn 1a 0 n
Sunday ' s R es ult s
{ All Ttm es eon
Sal t1m ore 4 Texas 0
Oakland J Milwaukee I
Oet r oil 7 Cal1fo rn• a 0
C leve l and 14 M1nnesota 5
K ansas Ctly 5 N ew York 3
Ch ca go 6 Boston ? l si
Basio n 4 Chtcago 3 7nd 11

Sunday when they stopped
the Angels 7-0 on rookte Vern
Ruhle's ftve.!Jtlter
The 24-year-old Ruhle, Irn·
provmg hts record to 10-9,
struck out three and walked
two m ptlchmg hts third
shutout of the year
When tl comes to shutouts,
however, Palmer IS the
master The 29-year-old
nght-hander notched hts
ntnth of the season and 35th of
his career, both club records,

Sunday m leadmg the Or10les
to a 4-0 triumph over the
Texas Rangers
Oddly, neither pitcher felt
parltcularly strong despite
their unpresstve showmgs
" ! thought my control was
much weaker than normal,"
smd Ruhle "I was fortunate
to have a good defense behind
me and I was able to throw
strikes when I got hehind "
Added Tigers ' Manager
Ralph Houk, " He's a good

Browns lose veteran safety

CLEVELAND ( UP!) You would thmk Forrest
Gregg, head coach of the
Cleveland Browns, would be
happy his ·team beat the
Phtladelphta Eagles, 14-6, m
an NFL exhtbtlton game
He wasn't
That 's because the Browns
have lost the servtces of
veteran safety Thorn Darden
•nn
Today 's Game s
for the season He tore
l All T•m cs E DT)
ligaments m h1s knee when
Texas ( Je nk 1ns 14 12 and
Ha rga n 8 6 1 al Cl eve l and
creamed by the Eagles'
i Hood 4 8 and ~a rr 1 son 54 )
Robert Roberts while trying
? 5 30 p m
Ba lt tmore (To rr ez 14 61 at
to catch a punt late m the first
M1nneso t a {Goltz 10 10 1 9
QU&amp;rter
Darden will undergo
p m
M rlwauk ee i Hausman J 5
surgery and, therefore, be
or Travers s 7 1 al Cal1 fo rn1a
lost to the club for the season
iS onger 7 ll ) 10 30 p m
D etroit !Coleman 8 14 ) at
And here 's the other reason
Oakland ( Blue 16 91 11 p m
why
Gregg wasn 't smtling
Tuesday 's Game s
De t rott at Oak la nd n
"We played good to a
T exas at Cleveland n
certam extent, but overall I
Ch1cago at New York n
Boston at Kansas C1ly n
wasn't pleased wtth our
Balt 1mor e al M nn esota n
performance," Gregg satd
Milwa ukee at Calt f orn1a n
followmg Saturday mght 's
roPS SCIOro F1ELD
game at Municipal Stadium
COLUMBUS ( UP!)
"We did capitalize on some
Sugar
Beats
came
from
m the ftrst half,
opporturutles
n
second after one.IJaH mile to but not all of them
" All-Out Effort"
NEW YORK (UPI) - Mtke score a 1%length victory over
T
..
111eron
Hanover
m
the
" We gave an all-out effort
Vat!, 23, a rt ~"t handed
featured
$9,000
nmth
pace
at
except
when we had the ball
: hittmg ou'ftelder, was purScioto
Downs
here
Saturday
less than a half-yard away for
' chased by the New York Mets
mght
a
touchdown (with 30 seconds
Sunday from their Tidewater,
Cadet
Hill
showed
remalrUilg m the half) . We
Va farm club m the InThe
wmner
was
draven
m
couldn't get the ball m the
ternattonal League
1
59
by
Mtke
Zeller
and
endzone
Then when we came
Vail was leadmg the IL m
out to play the second haH we
battmg w1th a .342 average as returnee $7.60, $4.40 and $3
Copy
Belle
and
G
D
A
forgot
we were m a football
; well as m hits, lrtples and
teamed
for
a
nightly
double
game. I dtdn't like that, not
runs batted m Vail wlll$197
20
paymg
at all'"
; replace ptlcher George Stone,
AllPndance was 7,741 and
' What Gregg was Impressed
' who ts on the 21-day disabled
the
handle
$409,811
With,
howev er , was the
list.

..

"

other guys talk about hopmg
to htl 270 or 280 And if he
doesn 't get 200 htts , he thinks
he has had a bad season "
Deserves Chance to Manage
Crowley, who was at first
hase m one of hiS rare ap·
pearances m the startmg
lmeup Sunday when the Reds
heat the Ptrates 3-1, thinks
Rose deserves a chance to
manage ooce he calls 11 qwls
as a player
" I don't think Pete could
stand 11, though,'' smd Terry
as an afterthought "If he
didn 't have a wtnntng team,
he'd probably go crazy He'd
have hts team workmg out
two and three time s a day If 11
wasn't wmrung "
The question of whether
Rose would like to manage
some day was put to Pete
" I really can't say," answered Rose, whose 2,500lh
hit came m the seventh mnmg
when he drove home the
Reds ' final run of the game to
extend the club's wmrung
streak to etghl games

Browns' passmg game, whtch
had steadily faltered smce
veteran quarterback Btll
Nelsen reltred and Mtke
Phtpps took over, atded at
times by Brtan Sipe
"I thought we threw the
ball well," Gregg satd
" Brtan and Mike both threw
the ball pretty well
" They htt on the short
passes whtch we worked on
We couldn 'l throw long all
mghl
because
of
Philadelphia's defense We
knew that But you never play
a wa1tmg game so we went
wtth the 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7-yard
passes and they worked
reasonably well "
Phipps unloaded a 32-yard
touchdown pass to rookie
wtde recetver Wtllle Miller
wtth 1 49 left m the first
quarter, cappmg a four-play,
63-yard drive that started on
the Browns' 37 after Darden
was decked by Roberts A
minute and 53 seconds later,
Hugh McKinms swept left
and hulled over from the one
to put Cleveland ahead lW
early m the second ouarter
Phipps Not Pleased
" I really wasn't pleased
w1th my own overall game,"
Phtpps smd " But tt was
better than last week's
opener at San Francisco
when we lost tt "
Don
Cockroft,
the
Cleveland kicking spectaltst,
felt the same way
" When we played the 49ers

my head was somewhere else
and I couldn't concentrate, "
he satd " But this lime I
made my mind up smce I
helped us lose on the West
Coast I had to do my best to
help us wm this time and I
did ''
Bestdes connectmg on two
extra pomts, Cockroft also
punted 10 ltmes for an
average of 45 3 yards a boot
Among them were several
well placed shots
" I wanted Don to kick off
and punt all mght for us,"
added Gregg, who plans to
keep only one kicker on final
43-man
roster
After
Cockroft's superb performance, It's assured the
etght-year veteran Will beat
out ChriS Gartner and rookie
Dave Schmmke for the JOb
Gregg played nearly every·
one on the team, trymg to fmd
out who must be cut before
the Browns' regular season
gets under way Sept 21 at
Cincmnatt
" We can 'l afford the luxury
of playmg a lot of people
thr oughout
the
enllre
exh1b1t1on season because we
have to flnd out who our
regulars wtll be," he satd

young pitcher He's had tough
luck or he would
, have won 15
by now "
Durmg the Ttgers ' losmg
streak, Ruhle satd he pitched
" fairly well "
" I lost a flve.!Jttter to
Texas, I had a three.!Jttter
and a~ lead wtth two outs tn
th e stxlh tnnmg agamsl
Baltimore and they got three
or four ground ball hits
Someone else came m and
before I knew tl " e were
behmd (h"l We've had our
good days and our bad days
thts season but we should
have never lost 19 m a row "
Palmer, who ratsed h1s
maJor league-leadmg victory
total to 19 wtth hts second
stratghl shutout, was lucky to
get through the first 11\!Ullg
Dave Moates and Cesar
Tovar, the first two Texas
halters, smgled and Palmer
later walked Toby Harrah to
load the bases hefore rettrmg
Len n) Ran dle on a groundout
"! "asn't really throwmg
well m the warmups,"
Palmer
admttted
"I
mtght've been sltff from the
last time out, I'm not really
sure The thmg you have to do
tn Baltimore when you pttch
tn warm weather after you
warm up 18 Sit down for a
mmute or two I should know
that by now But I got out of It
and that kind of thmg hap·
pens When I was gomg bad
everythmg they htl soft was
fallmg m everywhere But
when you're gomg good,
you're gomg good "
, In other AL games, Kansas
City defeated New York 5-3,
Cleveland routed Minnesota
Oakland
downed
14-5,
Milwaukee 3-l and Chtcago
beat Boston &amp;-2 before losmg
the second game 4-3 m 11
mmngs

I

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D.
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OFFICE
: 9:30 to 12, 21o 5 !CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.)-EAST COURT

Bucs Ellis on
way out?
PITISBURGH (UPI) The one-way ltckel back nere
that the Pittsburgh Pirates
gave ptlcher Dock Ellis after
hi s mdeftrute suspenston for
msurbordmahon tn Ctn ~
cmnalt Saturday may turn
out to have been his ' 'walking
papers "
At the moment , no one m
the Ptrate orgamzallon
~ ms to know-Or carewhether the rtght.!Jander will
ever rejom the team
" My postlton ts thts," Pills·
burgh General Manager Joe
Brown satd Sunday, "Dock
El\ls w\11 have to first convmce the manager that he
wants to help our ball club tn
any manner the manager
sees ftt I don't think that will
be too easy at thts pomt
" Once he sallsf!ed Danny,
he 'd have to satiSfy me and
that won't be easy etther
" I don 't know what hts
opltons are and I don 'l gtve a
damn what they are He satd
he hadn't been treated fairly
by us, but that 's not true He's
been treated very well and
very £atr "
The usually unflappable
Murtaugh seem s equally
stolid m the face of the fact
that the Ptrales cannot
replace Eilts on the 25-player
ar hvP roster while he IS on

Davis will be
okay--Bengals
WILMINGTON,
Ohto
(UP!) - Cincmnalt Bengals
halfback Charlie Davts' knee,
InJured agamst Buffalo
Fnday m ght , " IS Just
stramed
" He'll be okay," a team
spokesman sa td here Sun·
day
Davts, "'th 97 yards on 18
carncs Ia 54-yard average ).
ts among Cmc tnnalt 's leading
ball earn ers afte r three
exhtbttton games
Ed Wtlliams tops the charts
wtlh 103 yards on 16 carrtes
16 4 average) Boobte Clark
has ga med 83 yards on 19
carnes (4 4 average )

suspension , leavmg them one
ptlcher shy m the mtdst of a
bad slump and a light pennant race
" I would never completely
close my door to any player,"
Murtaugh satd. " Butt! would
be awfully hard for hun to
convmce me of any good
mtenhons I don 't know what
hts mtentlons are now He '11
have to come to us "
Brown satd, "We' re better
With 24 than we were with
25"
Ellis' SIISpenston climaxed
three days of ill-tempered
behavior Thursday night,
while the Pirates were losing
to the Reds &amp;-1, he refused to
go to the bullpen Murtaugh
smd he let that ride because
Eilts said hiS arm was sore.
But Frtday rught, when
Ellis pulled the same stunt,
Murtaugh and Ellis exchanged words hefore the
pitcher was asked to shower
and leave the stadium
Saturday morntng Murtaugh announced he had fined
Elias a ''substantial'' amount,
heheved to be $1,000
ElliS asked for a meeting
wtth Murtaugh and the other
players before Saturday
rught's game Although tl was
assumed he would apo1ogue
at that time, he threw a
temper tantrum, beratmg
Murtaugh, management and
hiS teammates
"I have never been attacked hke that,'' Murtaugh
said "I was so stunned, I
didn 't kick him out fast
enough I couldn t believe
what I was hearmg "

CLEAN YOUR

CARPETS
right in your home!
for Bf!autiful Clean
Carpets use
BLUE LUSTRE from

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
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1
5 - The Daily Sentinel • Middl eport-Pomeroy,
•
0 ., Monday Aug. 18 1975

4- The Daily Sentinel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Aug. 18, 1975

Linescores

Tiny Lund killed

ASK DICK KI.EINER
..,

Recognition will

S ullll.ly ' Ll a::.t b,lll R c::. ulh
U111l t d Ptl \\ lniL' tnafton;-11

in stock car race

( .1rrorr I HI McEna n C&gt;y 191
£.,, •, •w •tk 1'i'l il nd Plum me r
WP
l• ,lf cy l 'i' Sl
LP
~

TALLADEGA, Ala (UP! )
- Buddy Baker won the Talladega 500 stock car race
Sunday, but the death of h1s
close friend , drtver Dewaync
"Tiny" Lund, took the edge
off Baker's second v1ctory m
three months
Lund, 43, "as killed m a
200-mlle-per-hour, s1x-c ar
p1Ieup on the e1ghth lap of the
race at Alabama
In ·
ternaltonal Motor Speedway
Lund once raced for Baker 's
father, former dr1ver Buck
Baker
When Baker learned of
Lund 's death, he towered h1s
head and walked qUJetly out

of

a

news

conference

followtng the race
He returned a few mmute~
later and explamed that he
did not know Lund had died
until he was asked about the
death durmg the news conference
"It shocked me, " Baker
srud. " Tiny used to race for
my father. I've been flshmg
with him He was a close,
personal frtend of mine "

Ford dnver Baker beat
R1chard Petty's Dodge to the
flmsh !me by less than three
feet, but Petty sa1d he d1d not
have a chance to beat Baker
With a surge of speed m the

was fourth m a Dodge and
OlO OlO Marlm wa s f1flh m a
Chevrolet
Wrecks and engme fatlures
caused NASCAR offlctals to
po st the cautiOn flag etght
last fey, yards
ttmes, holdin g the average
"He "as far too fa st for speed to 130 892 mph.
me," Petty satd " f guess I
The fir st caution flag went
was JUS! trymg to make 11 up after the wreck that ktlled
look good for the fans at the Lund Three other drivers
end It wasn't that close."
were sltghtl} Injured m the
Donme
Alhson ,
who ptleup
flmshed th1rd in' the Chevrolet
One of the Injured dnvers,
A J Foyt planned to dnve J .D McDuffie. satd Lund
before ram delayed the race a colltded wtlh his ca r and the
week, dropped out of con- car dnven by Terry Link . The
tentwn wtth Baker and Petty collison smashed the left stde
beca1tse of a flat tire m the door and the protective cage
!mal 10 mtles
of Lund's Dodge, c rushmg hts
" I don't know 1f I could chest
have caught Baker," Alhson
"Tiny lrted to drop back m
sa1d "I doubt 11 But I would behmd me and clipped the
hav e sure gtven Petty a run rear end of rny car," Mcfor second "
Duffie sa td. " I saw Walter
Baker won $23,790 for hts Ballard spm his car to the
VI Ctory, Petty won $13,995 for mstde and Terry Link had no
second and Alhson won $9,995 place to go. It all happened so
for thtrd place Baker won the fast and we were travehng so
Wmston 500 at the Talladega fa st there wasn 'l anythmg
track last May
anybody could do "
Pole sitter Dave Marcis

Raiders edge champs
BY JOE CARNICELLI
UP! Sports Writer
It may have been only a
preseason
game
but
whenever the
Oakland
Raiders and the Pittburgh
Steelers meet, look for the
unexpected. It happened
again Sunday.
The World Champton
Steelers and Oakland have
hooked up in some of the most
memorable
games
in
National Football League
history m recent seasons and
Sunday's 24-21 Raider vtctory

was no exception.
George Blanda , the 47year-old wonder, and Davtd
Humm, who wasn't even born
when Blanda already was an
NFL quarterback, were the
architects of the Raider

•
m
Hall-of-Fame

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Highlights of

be given board

IQ I

Mayb er ry
triumph Blanda entered the Bradshaw passed 26 yards to St,n son H R
!?9Th I
game m the second period Frank Lewts for one score
{1s t Game)
and threw a 53-yard touch- and then rambled 55 yards for
010 000 010 ? \ ? 1
down pass to Morrts Brad- another Bradshaw ran for 75 COos
h1
OJO 001 \1x 6 1 1?
shaw to tie the score at 14-14. yards and passed for 65 more
W•se Burian { 1l Scgvt ( 8 )
Fts k Fo r s ter Ha m ilT on
Hunun, a rookte left-llander before suffermg a pinched i'nd
(?)
Goss ag e
Ul l
and
from Nebraska, capped an 8(). nerve m h1s ne&lt;::k 111 the Downlllg WP Ham il ton (5
lll P
W tSe{ 16 7l
yard dnve with a one-yard second quarter
(2 nd Game
plunge to lie the game 21-21
Reserve quarterback Terry
111 mnmg~l
Ros
01 1 00 1 000 01
J 13 0
and then set up Blanda's Hanratty, playmg for the ftrsl Cht
000 300 000 00 J (, ?
game-wmmng 20-yard field time in pre-season, had four
C l e v e l and
L ee
( 81
{ 6 1 and M o nt
goal with just 11 seconds left passes tnlercepted before gWilloughby
om ery B lackwe ll {91 K flal
With a 29-yard pass to the leaving wtlh a spramed Go ss age 181 and Downtng
WP
W ill Oughby { •I 1 1 LP
Steeler one.
ankle.
G o ss Ag e 1! 7 1
HR
" He was gomg to slay in the
Evan s ( 111h )
whole drive," satd Madden of
In the only other NFL game Cleve
JA? 010 000 1&lt;1 19 0
Hunun. "This was his turn to Sunday, local boy Joe Wtlson M•nn
000 10 7"'700
5 16 0
Pelcrson
13
7) and As hby ,
play and he did a good job."
came off the bench to score Ce ro ne Butl er Jo hn son 171
Hunun ts trying to make two touchdowns and lead the Wiley t ? J D ec ker lSI
m pbell 181 a nd Rolf LP
the Raiders as a reserve New England Patriots to a 36- Ca
Bu tler ( 1 4J HR s
H e ndttck
behind Ken Stabler.
161h I Sod erh o lm ? ( 101h und
10 rout of the Mmnesola IliTh
)
Pittsburgh took a 14-{) first Vtkmgs . W1Ison, who atquarter lead when Terry tended Holy Cross, scored on D e l
0?0 307 000 7 1 I 1
Cal "
ooo ooo ooo o 5 1
runs of seven and 34 yards as E
Mdcy f\
Rodngu e z
1gveroa DP
Ca l •forn1a
the Patriots rebounded from r( 1)
LOC
D e l rO l l.
5
an early 10-6 deficit with 30 Ca l•lorn ,a 8
R uhl e 1109) and F r eehan
straight
potnts .
New
F •gu e ro a H ass l er 161 a nd E
England's defense inler- Rodr•guez L P
r tgu eroa
Verv ze r (Jrdl
cepled four passes and held 111 9 ) HR
the Viking offense wtthoul a
100 000 000 I 6 ?
0 30 000 OOx 1 3 0
touchdown as the only
Br ob erg I 10 11 l and Por
MiMesota TO came on a 7!1ler
Bah nsen L i ndblad (6 ),
and Boston Braves from 1929 yard punt return by Sam F 1nger s 19 1 and 1 en ace
H an ey 19 ) WP
B ahnsen IH
through 1941. He reached hts McCullum .
I I)
peak with a .378 average in
1936 and hatted .330 or more
Ma1or L ea gue Leaders
M1am1 downed Detroit 20in four other seasons. He also
Un•ted Press lnternalwnat
14, Atlanta rupped Baltimore
Lcadmg Batter s
is remembered as havmg hit
Naltoal League
10-3, the New York Jets edged
the lme drive which fractured
St. Louts 14-13, Cleveland Madlock, Cht9 ab r h . pet
Dtzzy Dean's toe during the
104 416 60 150 36 1
beat Phtladelphia 14-6,
1937 All .Star gatne-an in- Houston topped Washington Smmns, S l L
11 7 &lt;l71 60 1&lt;13 339
cidenl which marked the
24-13, New Orleans defeated
beginmng of the end of
Denver 24-21, Green Bay Wa ts o n H ou108 401 55 137 3?9
Dean's career
trirruned Ol1cago 13-9, Los Snglln , Pt l
Herman, 68, had a .304
Angeles shaded San Fran- Jo shu a S F 104 387 &lt;l3 1?5 377
average w1th the Ol1cago
ctsco 10-6 and the New York
100 389 60 176 324
Cubs, Brooklyn Dodgers and
Rose , C1n 1? 1 SOd 8? 16 3 1?3
Giants dumped San Diego 17- Parker P1t
Pirates from 1931 through
7 m Saturday games. Dallas
1 10 417 58 137 320
1947. He htt .330 or more four
Morgan Ctn
is at Kansas City tonight.
11 1 38 7 83 1?4 3?0
times, was a splendid hit-andEarl Morrall threw two TO Ga r~ ey LA
run batsman and a !me
passes and rookie Stan Bro ck St L 1?7 505 66 15 9 315
double play ptvotman. He
Winfrey ran 39 yards for
98 377 61 JIB 313
played in World Series wtth
Amcncan League
another as Miami beat
g
ab r
h pel
the Cubs in 1932-35-38 and Deloit. Greg Landry had two
Carew Mm
with the Dodgers m 1941 and
47-1 7 5 155 366
scoring passes for the Lions, Ly nn Bos 11)
11? 405 76 13 4 331
also managed the Red Sox
one a 77-yarder to Larry Munson NY
from 1964 through 1966.
116 4 .U 63 14'} 3?0
Walton.
Hrgrve , Tex
Harrts, 78, was baseball's
11 0 388 67 121 31 7
origmal " boy wonder"
Dave Hampton's three- Sngltn , Bal
1 17 4 38 7) 136 311
playrng manager when he led yard TO run and N1ck MikePow ell Cle 96 JlS 46 97 308
the Washmglon Senators to Mayer's 28-yard field goal in Wshngtn Ok
Amertcan League peMants the first 'quarter were all
113 449 " 138 307
McRae KC
in 1924 and 1925. A grttty, At Ianta needed to beat II'
, ., " ' 52 , 3 , 306
combative second baseman Baltimore and fourthstrmg .~,. Braun , M m
107 36? S? 110 304
who had a .274 lifetime quarterback J.J . Jones came R .ce Bas 112 443 75 133 JDO
average, Harris ts best off the bench in the final
Home Runs
Nal10nat League L uzmsk t ,
remembered for hal(jng quarter to set up Bob Gre- Phtl
3 1 Sc hm1dt Phil 76
served as manager of the sham's second TD of the Kmgman , NY 24 Bench em
73 Fos ter , Ctn ? I
Senators, Ttgers, Red Sox, game,aone~yardphmge, and
Am e r 1 can
Lea 9 u e
Mayberry KC ?9, Jackson .
Phil11es and Yankees a total lift the Jets over St. Louis.
?8 Sc ott , M d '27, Bonds
M1ke Phi pps threw a 32- Oak
of 29 years.
NY ??
Burroughs , Tex :11 '
Harris also ts remembered yard TO pass to rookie Willte
Runs Batted In
. .
Nal10nal League Luzmsk1
for having led the Yankees to Mill er an d Hug h McKinnu;
Phtl98 Bench Ctn 95 , St aub :
an unexpected American ran a yard for another score NY 8? . P er ez, em ao Wat
son Hou 78
Cl eve Ian d
League pennant and World as
stopped
Amencan League: Lynn ,
Series victory in 1947. He was Philadelphia
and
Dan Bos 86 May~erry . KC 84
fired after the Yankees Pastorini's TD passes of 47 ~~Yi . ~.Itt BBI3 R tc e, Bos 8?
finished third in 1948 and and 41 yards and Billy
Stolen Bases
I League . Lopes
replaced by Casey Stangel. Johnson's 89--yardpunt return LAN a IlOna
57
Morgan, Ctn
&lt;l7
Johnson, 74, was elected by fot a score carried Houston Broc k St L 44 Cedeno Hou
&lt;lO . Concepcton, Cin and
the §pedal committee on pa st Washington •
Mangual. Mil 7-l
black players. He played for
ArchieManningthrewa IS.
Amer•can League Rtvers
Cal 67 , washington , Oak 35 ,
Hilldale, the Homestead Yard TO pass to Frosty Ot1s,
KC JJ Remy Cal Jl.
Grays, Darby Daisies and Anderson and ran three yards N art h oak "
Pittsburgh Crawfords from for another score as New
Nalwnat~~~~"u9c Se aver
1921 through 1938. His OrleansdownedDenverWld NY 177 J ones. s o 16 7.
LA 16 10 . Morton , Att
statistical achievements are John Hadl's 12 yard TD pass Sutton
15 17 , Btlhngham . Ctn 14 5
lost in the misty records of to Barry Smith helped .Green Messersmdh . LA 14 11
.
T
A mer 1 c a n
League
those bamstorming leagues Bay pas t Ch 1cago.
ony Palmer , Bait 19 7 , Kaa t, Ch1
but he is described by Robert Baker scored the game's only 17 9 W1se , Bos 16 7 Blue,
Peterson in his book, "Only touchdownonafour~yardrun Oak 16 9 . Hunt ~ r NY 16 1?
The Ball Was White," as "one in the second quarter as Los
of the smartest players in the
Angeles downed San FranNICE, France (UP!) game with sure hands and a cisco and Craig Mor,ton hit S. East Germany Sunday swept
great arm at third base ... a of~ passes for two touch- both men's and women's
line drive hitter with fair downs i!! the first quarter as Europa Cup track and fielil
power and a batting average the Giants rolled over San finals for the second time in
usually around .300."
. Diego.
five years.

Five inducted
COOPERSTOWN, N.Y.
(UPI) - Baseball's royalty
gathers today in the tiny
village where the game was
born to pay its supreme
tribute to one of Its Ruthian
kings and four princes of
bygone eras.
Ralph Kiner, the National
League home run king a
record seven times during the
t94os and 1950s and now a TV
commentator for the New
York Mets, heads thts year 's
entries which will bring total
membership m the shrme to
151.
Entering along wtth Kiner
are Earl Averill and Billy
Herman, two stars of the
1930s and 1940s; Bucky
Harris, who managed in the
major leagues for almost
three decades; and Judy
Johnson, who spent his entire
career in ·the shadowland of
the old Negro leagues.
The five will be inducted in
ceremonies on the porch of
the
National
Baseball
Library. Commissioner
Bowie Kuhn will preside over
the- ceremonies after which
the Boston Red Sox and San
Francisco Giants will play
the annual Hall of Fame
game on Doubleday Field.
Kiner, elected in voting by
10-year members of the
Baseball Writers Association
of America, set a major
league record by leading the
National League in homers
his first seven seasons and
wound up his tO-year career
with a total of 369 bomers. His
best span was from 1947
Ulrough 1951 with the Pittsbtrgh Pirates when he had
successive season home run
tOtals of 51, 40, 54, 47 and 42
while driving in between 109
and 127 runs each season .
Kiner was traded to tbe
Otlcago Cube in 1954 and
finished his career with tbe
aeveland Indians in 1955.
Averill, Herman and
Harris, all elected by the
Veterans Committee of the
BBWAA,
also
were
Jli'ODlinj!nt alarll during their
era.
Averill, 72, had a .318
llfet~ batting average with
the Indians, Detroit Tigers '

24~21

1\011

I

Star Treks on

N ,lfiUI'oll Ll: ilQU C
roll ~

00 0 000 01 0 I 1 I
(1 11 ( 111
000 010 70&gt;&lt;
1 (, 0
~ , o; on
1\ r c l t 111 a nd Dyer
'-,a nqudh:•n (Il l
[ l,lf C y
C

For Rent

Th e Metgs l.ocal School
D1 s ln et Boa rd of Educalwn
represented by Carol Pt erce,
pres ident, wtll receive the
'Cu rnmun1ty
Serv i ce
Award " for Metgs County at
the Ohw State Fa1r on Aug
22
In nommatJng the Meags
Loca l Board 'ror the honor ,
the Me tgs County Council on
Agmg, eommented .
The Metgs County Council
on Agmg nom tna tes the
Me1gs Local School Board for
the 'Comm umt y Serv1 ce
Award ' m apprec1at10n of 1ls
~ ra n Ling the Council the use
of vacant rooms m the former
Pomeroy
Jumor
Hi gh
Bwldmg fur a Se mor Ctt1zen
Center
As there was no other space
availabl e for use as a Semor
Cente r. there could have been
few sc rv1 ces for semor
c111zen s 1n Me1g s Cou n ty
wtthoul
the
factllltes
provtded by the Metgs Local
School Board Th e board ha s
cooperated to the fullest m
g1vmg a sststance whenever
pOSSible
The forestghl of the Mct gs

Bies has
first major
golf win

By Dick Kletoer
Local Hoard 1n r ecogniZing
the needs of and providtng
DEAR DICK: Can you give me any inlormallon on tho
fac thtl es ror se r vi ces to the
elderly wa s the s timulu s "Star frek " movie com log tbis year? - DAVID ESTES,
'
needed to generate the Glencoe, Ala.
People
keep
asking
about
the
"Star
Trek"
movie
and,
as
a
cooporatwn a nd assistance of
"Star
Trek"
nut
myself,
I've
been
cunous.
Here's
tbe
latest
other or gamzat10n s and
agencies m the devel opment mformaUon . Gene Roddenberry says be's about halfway
through the scnpt for the film He expects 1t will be In
uf flu s commumty program
production
some lime m the fall, so tbe earliest it could reach
If 1s ftlhng that a form er
school butldmg be used as a the theaters would be ne•t spring. All th~ old TV cast has
means of prov tdmg further agreed, m prmc1pal, to appear in the movie. But nobody is
education to our se nior talking money yet, so there could be changes. There were
Clllzens Apprec1atmg the rumors that Robert Redford would play the captain of tbe
board's co ntribUti o n and EnterpriSe When Wtlllllm Shatner heard !bose rumors, he
co mpr e hendin g lh e rm- saJd, " I am the captam.;
por t.ance of ed ucation, the
DEAR DICK: I've heard rumors !,hal CharUe Pride Ia
semor c1hze ns, through t he
dying
of cancer and Is going to leave his eyes to Ray Charles_&amp;
Reltred Semo r Volunte er
,.
Prog ram , have contnbuted this true ? - B. K., Lucedale, Miss.
What
a
great
plot
for
a
soap
opera
that
would
be!
It
is
toward our yo uths' educatiOn
"
by demons trattn g lhetr happily , completely untrue.
knowledge and skills of the
DEAR DICK: Recently, I have beard from people that
past m today's classrooms
Allhough the education of Elvis Presley has some kind of disease and has only a short
youth IS the1r pnmar} time to live. If thts Is true, what disease does be have IUld bow
responstbthly, the board long does be have left?- KELLY JERABEK, Garwell, Neb.
Boy, the rumor kooks are out this week. Again, happily,
can take pnde m th e
kn ow ledge that through their that' s just not true Elvis has some eye problems and wa.
v1s10n a better and more down for a while with a virUS, but neither was serious. He's
meamnglul hie ha s been about to embark on another national tour.
made poss ible for hundreds
DEAR DICK : Could you please tell me what Katharlae
of older restdenls of Me1gs
Ross' real name Is? And how old is she? - S. A., Garden
County

Development
conference
August 28-29

MARIETTA - The annual
conference of the Corporation
WETHERSFIELD, Conn
for
Oh1o
i\ppalachtan
(UP! ) - After eight years on
the tour, 37-year-old Don B1es Development ICOAD) wtll be
knows the feelmg of bemg a held at the Holiday Inn,
winner. But 1t d1dn 'l come Marietta , Augus t 28-29
The conference wtll begin
easy.
Btes had to catch Hub1e Thursday wtth regtslratwn at
Green on the 18th hole to 1 00 p m wtth an afternoon
create a lie and tben defeated sess10n planned and a
Green in a two-llole, sudden- banquet at 7·00 p m The
death playoff to win the gues t speaker at the banquet
$200,000 Greater Hartford will be James A Duerk ,
Dtrecto r, DECO (DepartOpen Sunday.
H1s 10-foot birdie putt on ment of Econom1c and
16th hole at the Wethersfield Communtty Development ),
Country Club locked up the Colun1bus
The
Fnday
mormng
$40,000 first place purse for
sessiOn
will
be
devoted
to
Bies after shooting a final
round 69 for a 267 total 17 electwn of offtcers, electwn
of new COAD execullve
under par.
committee
members, and
"We all know th1s IS my
d1stnct
reports
first wm ever," he satd. " I've
Followmg the noon lunhad a great feelmg all week
Fnday, the executive
cheon
and this just climaxes it."
He admitted to thoughts commtltee wtll meet and the
"that I might never wm," eonference IS expected to
although a card from his wtfe adJourn m mtd-afternoon.
Ketlh Molihan, Executive
m Seattle satd she thought 1t
would be his week . "Maybe Dtrector of the La\\Tence
that's JUSt coincidence but it's County Communtly Action
the ftrst ttme she's ever done Agency, Ironton, IS Chatrman
of the COAD Execuhve
that."
The VICtory won't change Comnuttee.
The Corporation for Ohto
Btes' schedule.
"I'll still play 20 to 25 Appalachian Development IS
tournaments a year," sa1d a multi-purpose orgamzahon
Commumty
Action
B1es, who gained a full year's of
tourney exemption wtth the Agenctes in 28 Ohto counties
Knox, Holmes , Coshocton,
win.
Btes took a one-&lt;&gt;troke lead Muskingum, Tuscarawas,
into Sunday's !mal round Carroll, Hamson, Jefferson,
after a four-under-par 67 Guernsey, Belmont, Monroe ,
Saturday for a three-round Noble, Morgan, Washmgton,
total of 198, one-&lt;&gt;troke lead Perry, Hockmg, Athens,
Vinton,
over Green, who shared the Metgs, Galha,
lead with Bies at the midway Jackson, Lawrence, Ross,
Pike , Scwlo, Brown, Adams
point of the tournament.
Green, who eamed $22,800, and Highland counlles.
The pnme orgamzallonal
appeared content with hts
play and complimented Bies objecllve of COAD IS to work
as "a great person and a for conlmued human and
economic growth of the 28great champion.''
"The six.foot putt on the county Appalachtan regwn of
16th to win- Hubert made a Ohto, Chairman Molihan
great putt for par-all of a states
sudden looked like 15 feet, but
I got it and that's what
two other contenders behind
counts, .. Bies beamed.
Green, whose wife is ex- him.
Nelson, had a 68 and Vic
pecting tbeir first child in
Burbank, Calif., said "I've Regalado a 69 to tie for third
had such a poor year, I just place, ahead of Romero Blanfeel good about being where I cas, wbo stood alone at 270.
Johnny r,filler and Andy
am right now ."
North
each had 271.
Bies had to rally to eam h1s
Bies
responded
by
berth in the playoff after
squandering a two-stroke salvaging par on the 18th
lead with five holes to play. after missing a birdie bid.
He bogied at the 14th to give Snead had all kinds of
an opening to third place J .C. trouble, wound up in a trap,
Snead, playing in the last and eventually ended up with
foursome with Bies. Snead a bogey, playing himself out
had four birdies in a row on of the playoffs.
On the first extra hole, tbe
holes 14 through 17 as he went
one stroke ahead with a six- 15th, Bies and Green each
had par.fours. On the 16th, a
foot bird on the 16th.
Bies birdied the 17th with a par-five, Green put his third
15.footer while Snead parred shot in the trap but came out
that hole and the two were nicely and sank a 12-footer for
tied at 17-under with a bole to a par.
Bies, on the green in three,
play.
sank
a six-footer for a birdie
. Meanwhile,
tn
the
threesome ahead of them, four and victory.
During the four rounds of
Gr~n and Larry Nelson were
also making their charges. regulation play, both Bies
Both scored 16-und~r on the and Green wound up ,with
18th tee. Nelson bogied the totals of 267. For the four
fmal hole, but Green sank a days, Bies went 65-66-67~9.
15-footer for a birdie to go 17- Green's totals rea&lt;l 6EHi5-68under and put pressure on the 68.

,J

.

.

the Meigs fair

First thing to do is to read a book, "How to Get Your Song
Published and Make a Record Deal." It was written by two
entertainment lawyers, Ned Shankman and Larry Thompson.
If your local bookstore doesn't have it, write them at 9200
Sunset Blvd., Los Angeles, Calif., 90069.
DEAR DICK: On a Colgate toothpaste commercial, a man
is brushlng a killer whale's teeth. Is the whale real or synthetic?- LYNN GARDEN, Kalispell, Mont.
The whale is real, but the toothpaste is synthetic.
DEAR DICK: About the rv reruns. We are senior citizens
and love our rv. But all summer we see reruns and Ilmow I've
seen several for the third time. Everyone must economize but
why go to that extent? -MRS. HAROLD W. MILLER, Nardin,
Okla.
It's tough on all of us, senior and junior citizens, but that's
the way TV economy dictates. Lots of people - particularly
the Screen Actors' Guild - are trying to do something about it,
because it is hard on people in Hollywood as well as in
Oklahoma. But it looks like we're all stuck with the situation
for the lime bemg .
DEAR DICK: I read somewhere that Elton John bas fired
his band to live as a hermit In his $1 miiUon mansion. Please
tell me this Is not true.- ANN BOArMAN, Sontb Wllllamaport, Pa.
OK, I will. It's not true. What happened was that two
members of his band left, amicably. Dnuruner Nigel Olsson
will remain with John's Rocket Records, as a soloist. The
other, guitarist Dean Murray, was just tired of touring. As for
John living "as a hermit," again untrue. Actually, he has
expanded his group and IS still living the life of an ordinary
man - if he can ever be ordmary.

Kingsbury News Notes
The Carleton Church had
its picnic at Fort Meigs near
Rutland Sunday.
Virgil King who has been a
patient at Holzer Hosp1tal has
returned home and is improving.
Mr. and Mrs. Nev White
visited recently with Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Swearinger and
Bobbie at West Milton, Ohio
and Mr. and Mrs. David
Glenn and family at Tipp
City, Ohio.
Recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. John Dean and Mr. and
Mrs. John Walter Dean and
son were Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Ried and David, Mr.
Walter Terrell of Pataskala
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Markins, Racine, Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Paynter of Carpenter, Mr. and Mrs. Sanford
Well of Albany, Mr. and Mrs.
Floyd Ross, Brenda and
Junior and Mr. and Mrs.
Hobart Smalley of Chester.
Recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Brickles were Mrs.
Hazel Brickles and Will
Alford of Kent, Ohio, Estella
Colburn, Shade and Mrs.
Faye Pratt of Pomeroy.
Recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Floyd Ross and lamily
were Mr. and Mrs. Rick
Anderson and family of
Collll1lbus.
Recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Nev White were Mr. and
Mrs. Johnny Barker and
family, Glenn wood and
Louise and Usa Holley of
Ashton, W. Va.
,Mrs. Sally Byers who fell
recently Is a patient at
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Visiting recently with Mr.
and Mrs. Wayne Beal were

..

Mr. and Mrs. Roger Young,
Wesley and Yevete, Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Well, Mr. and
Mrs. Kirk Chevalier, Mrs.
Elizabeth Murray and Mr.
and Mrs. Gary King.
Mrs. John W. Dean and son
and Mrs. John A. Dean
visited Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
&amp;ruth rutd Mrs. Ray Roush
one evening recently. Visiting
Mr 1nd Mrs. &amp;!lith over the
weekend were Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Bates and family of
Micl: an.
IHRA WURLD RECORD
WEST SALEM, Ohio (UPI)
Raymond Beadle of
Dallas, Tex., set an International
Hot
Rod
Association world record
time of 6.25 seconds &amp;mday
in winning the funny car
division at the IHRA
Nat:.,naJs which drew 350
entries.
Bfoadle piloted Blue Max ~­
Mustang at 227.8t mph IIi · •
defeating De;:;,y Savage,
Hickory Hlll, ru., c1;:,: -1 at
8.79 seconds and 100.67 mph
while he was red lighted at
Dragway 42 here.
•
Don Nicholson, Atlanta,
drove his Mustang to victory
in the pro stock class at 9
seconds and 154.37 mph in
beating Roy Hlll, High Point~" '
N.C., timed at 9.04 second$'·
and 153.8t in a Dodge.
,
Gary Beck, Edmonton,
Can., won the \9p fuel dlvlslcxt'"''
title with a time of s.o3'v
seconds and a speed of 245.23 "'
mph in handing Don Garlits; "
Tampa, F1a., his first IHRA""
competition Iooa after five ·consecutive wins. The-·
Florida driver had tbe sam~ "··
timingS for the photo f\nish. ""

••

M h &lt;'us e 1 o r 4 bed r oo m s,
l 1v1ny room
d1nmg room
,1 n d modc-rr kil c hen , ca r
petmq ? bAths and a half
Pond l o r s w tm mtng and
f15 h111q
1 rll lie s west of
Harr. o; onvt! l e
For
ap
DO• n t mt;:ont , c all !It '/ Jl&lt;l5 be
lw('lr-n 'i a n d 8 p m
Monday
Throuqh I r•day
II 18 Sip

For Sale
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l l rH I ('m
whC'el s
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y£' ,lr o ld R eq Oua tl er H orse
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Pictures by Bob Hoenich. Katie Crow and Jo

Pay more
for milk

H1~ ~ 1W=~=~:~:~:~t:~:~:~:};~,~,~ ~ : :!~ :,;~,~;: : : : :~:~: :;: : :~: :)}: ~:~:':': : ;:;: ~:~;{:: ;: : :·:': : : :~.: }:·,: :};):}•:':})f:~ :'~':{:!:.: : : })t~

WASHINGTON (UP1) are going up for milk,
but the mcreases will guard
agatnsl shortages and higher
pnces later, accordmg to the
Nalto na l Mtlk Producers
Federation
'· A moderate pnc.e in cr ease m the weeks ahead
could help to mamtain milk
product ton , relieving
pressure for larger pnce
mcreases later m the year as
supphes grow even shorter ,"
the federation sa1d &amp;mday.
The datry group said an
mcreas e
IS
mev1table
because of declining milk
production
and
rising
productiOn costs m recent'
month s. Pnces for such
processed milk foods as
butter and cheese alreaily
have nsen in response to
dechnmg productwn, the
statement said .
Prl c&lt;~s

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A SPECIAL PRESENTATION of thts blanke t was
made Friday evemng following the harness horse racmg
program at the Me1gs County Fa1r. The blanket was
presented to the owner and driver of the horse w1th the
fastest tune durmg the three days of racmg in memory of
the late Sidney Spencer Mr Spencer, a highly regarded

horse tramer and dnver , was a former mayor of
Pomeroy. From the left are DaMy Zirkle, Btll Sm1U1,
Fred Goeglem, Btll Dowme, all fair board members; ,
Dick Elhott, drtver of " Wmdy Dawn," a pacer, who had a
tune of 2 .12 1-5 on Wednesday, and Memll Elhott,
Jackson , owner of the horse and father of the dnver

TOP HONORS IN THE Juntor Frur Sheep judgmg Thursday mghl, overweight diVISIOn
were, Todd Tnpp whose sheep was named grand champion and BtU Kautz reserve champton Shown are I~, Bill Kautz, son of Mr and Mrs. Dale Kautz, Rl. J, Pomeroy, Todd ,
slandmg, son of Mr. and Mrs. AlVIn Tnpp, Rl. 3, Pomeroy, and Debbie Windon , cousin of
Todd, who showed the antmal.

Grove, Ca.
Katharine Ross IS really Katharme Ross. And she is
somewhere around 33.
DEAR DICK: I want to beeome a singing star. I have
written two songs. How can I get them pabllsbed? -DAPHNE
JORDAN, Mobile, Ala.
To be a singing star, jUst"keep on singing. Sing anywhere
and everywhere you can. And hope somebody hears you. As for
getting your songs published, that-&lt;&gt; tough. Just
stay
away
from
the
song
sharks,
those
creeps
who
advertise
that
they
will
publish
your songs. Reputable publishers don-t advertise.

A ~

Tension, fear
was too much
DETROIT (UP!) - After
18 days, the tension and fear
became too much for
Josephine Hoffa. The ailing
wife of missing Teamsters
leader James Hoffa collapsed
&amp;mday and was hospitalized.
Mrs. Hoffa, devoted to the
former Teamsters president
wbo disappeared July 30,
broke down in her suburban
Lake Orion, Mich., home
"from the strain and the
stress ... She IS exhausted,
physically and emottonally ,"
her son, James P. Hoffa, 34,
said.
The scores of federal, state
and city police searching for
Hoffa were just as frustrated ,
if infinitely less emotionally
involved.
Michigan State Police
Director George Halverson
said, "We don•t even know
what crime we are investigating. All we know IS
that we have got a mtssing
person.
"But I think there w1ll be a
break. They've got some
excellent investigators on
this case and I think there
will be a break eventually."
For Josephine Hoffa,
suffering from a heart
ailment and facing cataract
surgery when her condition
permits it, the breaking point
came &amp;mday morning while
prayers were being said for
her husband's safety in
nearby St. Joseph's Roman
Catholic parish church.
She had met her tough,
scrappy husband on a picket
line in the JIE, lived wtth hun
through countless battles on
his way to the top of the
Teamsters, endured the 58
months he spent in prison on
mail fraud and jury tampermg charges, and was
backing him in his fight,
before his disappearance, to
regain control of the union
from Teamsters President
Frank Fitzsinunons.
l:loffa, 62, has not been seen
since shortly after he left
Lake Orion, 40 mtles from
Detroit, for what he thought
was a date with reputed
Detroit Mafia don Anthony
"Tony Jack" Giacalone, East
Coast Teamsters boss Anthony "Tony Pro" provenzano, and Detro)! labor
consultant Leonard Schultz.
All three have denied making
such an appointment.
"
Mrs. Hoffa was taken to
Northwest Grace Hospital on
the outskirts of Detroit.
The hospital denied she was
there, but the FBI, her son
and her doctor, George
Mogill confirmed she was.
Mogm called her condition
today "stable," but put an
"absolute
block"
on
telephone calls or visits from
anyone out~ide h~r Immediate family.
"It •s remarkable she hasn 'I

folded before," Mog11l said.
"She 1s a remarkable
woman''
She had ' 'folded" before ~
Aug. 4 when she fainted under
the strain of her husband 's
absence, and six years ago
when she famted m court
while Hoffa was fighting to
overturn his conviction.
Halverson srud, "There ts
nothing new . People are
asking, 'What IS the dommant
theory?' There 1s none. "
He commented on the
disappearance of another key
man in the case - G1acalone.
Halverson and other law
enforcement offictals say
they lost his tratl after he said
he was leavtng for Miami,
Fla.

GRAND AND RESERVE CHAMPIONS m the 4-H rabbit showmanship L-r, Hhonaa
Hanm g with her reserve champiOn and Nickey L.conard wlth the g rand champion m
showmanship

RESERVE CHAMPION BULL- Taking reserve champiOn honors at the Me1gs County
Fatr thts year was Jim, owned by Hugh Leifheit. Showmg the pnze wmnmg antmal 1s
Wayne Leifheit.

f
Bron man
NEW YORK (UP!) Eight days of pressure apparently were too much for
Dommtck Byrne. Wracked by
conscience, he led offtcers to
a dimly-Itt Brooklyn apartment where they freed ktdnaped whisky hetr Samuel
Bronfman II and captured
the second of his alleged
abductors.
''It was over in two
seconds," said Det. Thomas
Cerbone, who broke intn the
one-bedroom
apartment
Sunday with poltce and FBI
agents.
Officers grabbed a surpriSed Mel Patrick Lynch, 37,
who was guardmg young
Bronfman.
Samuel - unshaven - sat
bound and blindfolded on a
couch against the wall.
"Thank God," he said as
officers removed adhesive
tape from his eyes. Unharmed, he was taken by
limousine to his father 's Fifth
Avenue apartment.
The FBI satd the $2.3
m1ll1on ransom paid by the
youth's
father,
Edgar
Bronfman, chairman of the
board of Seagram's Ltd., was
recovered in the home of an
elderly friend of Byrne's.
Byrne, 53, the owner of a
limousine service, and
Lynch, a city fireman, were
charged with extortion by
matl. The FBI satd they
believed the two men acted
alone. Officers said the
elderly friend was an mnocenl victim of tbe scheme.
If convicted, the two could
face terms of up to $5,000 in
fmes and 20 years in prison.
Federal agents tndicated
, they may be charged wtth
kidnaping later .
Young flNln!man and hts
father le!t" lhe city Sunday
afternoon for seclusion and
rest . The family sa1d there

Full-sized Values in
'round-the-clock luxury
'

captors taken

would be no statements.
But a spokesman added,
"Sam ts m really fine shape
Hts spmts are great "
For Cerbone, and other
officers, 1t was the end of a
frustratmg week of searching
and tense negotiations.
Samuel, 21, was abducted
early last Saturday after
leavmg hts father's treeshrouded estate m Yorktown
Hetghts, N.Y. HIS car, wtth
the keys still m the tgrutton,
was found in the driveway of
his divorced mother 's home
rn Purhcase , N Y.
Cerbone satd Byrne, who
gave offtcers the key to the
apartment where the youth
was found, had " pangs of
conscience" about the affatr.
"He's a deeply religwus
man. He must have said
'Jesus Christ' and apologtzed
to me five ltmes for saymg
1!," the detecttve said.
Byrne, apparently alarmed
by mcreasmg FBI survelllance in the area near the
Lynch apartment, allegedly
sent a young gtrl to a netghborhood pohce statton wtth a
note saying he knew where
the Bronfman youth was

bemg held.
Cerbone and h1s partner,
James Schry, went to hts
house at m1dmght Byrne
appeared relieved as he told
them about Bronfman 's
location
But apparently authorilles
already were closing m on the
pair .
J. Wallace La Prade,
asststanl director of the FBI

m charge of the New York
offtce, satd agents dectded to
move in on the abductors
after they fa1led to release
the youth - desp1te the
payment of the ransom early
Saturday
Authonltes already had
traced the license plate of the
car used for the "pickup" to
Lynch

- =~-

FOR THE
PROTECTION

_

---

........

YOU NEED-:Play it safe and' sure
It may be time to
have your present

~-

~l
•

dI

t

_. ;j l

Your
Choice

$249

H ere a r e l 1ve gre at way s to
s lr (;'tch
your
houset1o ld
budge t' Each o f th es e e x
Ctltn q so l a s le e per ~ can be
th e s tar t of a truly e l egant
l•v.nq room plus g 1vc you
extra
sleep •n g
s pa ce
when e ver vou need .r on a
su per bly com fortab l e f ul l
S •le
be d
Choose elegant
Tradil• o n a l
c har m 1nq
Co lont a l IU )(Ur tou s Tran
s ,t, o nal or on(' o f two bold
Con tem p o r ar 1 es

- -}(....
'

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policy updated.

Let's .Talk Soon

DALE C. WARNER
992 2143
102 W Mam

click in the

Pomeroy

Yellow .
Pages

FURNITURE
'992-2635

"'
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MIDDLEPORT

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5 - The Daily Sentinel • Middl eport-Pomeroy,
•
0 ., Monday Aug. 18 1975

4- The Daily Sentinel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Aug. 18, 1975

Linescores

Tiny Lund killed

ASK DICK KI.EINER
..,

Recognition will

S ullll.ly ' Ll a::.t b,lll R c::. ulh
U111l t d Ptl \\ lniL' tnafton;-11

in stock car race

( .1rrorr I HI McEna n C&gt;y 191
£.,, •, •w •tk 1'i'l il nd Plum me r
WP
l• ,lf cy l 'i' Sl
LP
~

TALLADEGA, Ala (UP! )
- Buddy Baker won the Talladega 500 stock car race
Sunday, but the death of h1s
close friend , drtver Dewaync
"Tiny" Lund, took the edge
off Baker's second v1ctory m
three months
Lund, 43, "as killed m a
200-mlle-per-hour, s1x-c ar
p1Ieup on the e1ghth lap of the
race at Alabama
In ·
ternaltonal Motor Speedway
Lund once raced for Baker 's
father, former dr1ver Buck
Baker
When Baker learned of
Lund 's death, he towered h1s
head and walked qUJetly out

of

a

news

conference

followtng the race
He returned a few mmute~
later and explamed that he
did not know Lund had died
until he was asked about the
death durmg the news conference
"It shocked me, " Baker
srud. " Tiny used to race for
my father. I've been flshmg
with him He was a close,
personal frtend of mine "

Ford dnver Baker beat
R1chard Petty's Dodge to the
flmsh !me by less than three
feet, but Petty sa1d he d1d not
have a chance to beat Baker
With a surge of speed m the

was fourth m a Dodge and
OlO OlO Marlm wa s f1flh m a
Chevrolet
Wrecks and engme fatlures
caused NASCAR offlctals to
po st the cautiOn flag etght
last fey, yards
ttmes, holdin g the average
"He "as far too fa st for speed to 130 892 mph.
me," Petty satd " f guess I
The fir st caution flag went
was JUS! trymg to make 11 up after the wreck that ktlled
look good for the fans at the Lund Three other drivers
end It wasn't that close."
were sltghtl} Injured m the
Donme
Alhson ,
who ptleup
flmshed th1rd in' the Chevrolet
One of the Injured dnvers,
A J Foyt planned to dnve J .D McDuffie. satd Lund
before ram delayed the race a colltded wtlh his ca r and the
week, dropped out of con- car dnven by Terry Link . The
tentwn wtth Baker and Petty collison smashed the left stde
beca1tse of a flat tire m the door and the protective cage
!mal 10 mtles
of Lund's Dodge, c rushmg hts
" I don't know 1f I could chest
have caught Baker," Alhson
"Tiny lrted to drop back m
sa1d "I doubt 11 But I would behmd me and clipped the
hav e sure gtven Petty a run rear end of rny car," Mcfor second "
Duffie sa td. " I saw Walter
Baker won $23,790 for hts Ballard spm his car to the
VI Ctory, Petty won $13,995 for mstde and Terry Link had no
second and Alhson won $9,995 place to go. It all happened so
for thtrd place Baker won the fast and we were travehng so
Wmston 500 at the Talladega fa st there wasn 'l anythmg
track last May
anybody could do "
Pole sitter Dave Marcis

Raiders edge champs
BY JOE CARNICELLI
UP! Sports Writer
It may have been only a
preseason
game
but
whenever the
Oakland
Raiders and the Pittburgh
Steelers meet, look for the
unexpected. It happened
again Sunday.
The World Champton
Steelers and Oakland have
hooked up in some of the most
memorable
games
in
National Football League
history m recent seasons and
Sunday's 24-21 Raider vtctory

was no exception.
George Blanda , the 47year-old wonder, and Davtd
Humm, who wasn't even born
when Blanda already was an
NFL quarterback, were the
architects of the Raider

•
m
Hall-of-Fame

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Highlights of

be given board

IQ I

Mayb er ry
triumph Blanda entered the Bradshaw passed 26 yards to St,n son H R
!?9Th I
game m the second period Frank Lewts for one score
{1s t Game)
and threw a 53-yard touch- and then rambled 55 yards for
010 000 010 ? \ ? 1
down pass to Morrts Brad- another Bradshaw ran for 75 COos
h1
OJO 001 \1x 6 1 1?
shaw to tie the score at 14-14. yards and passed for 65 more
W•se Burian { 1l Scgvt ( 8 )
Fts k Fo r s ter Ha m ilT on
Hunun, a rookte left-llander before suffermg a pinched i'nd
(?)
Goss ag e
Ul l
and
from Nebraska, capped an 8(). nerve m h1s ne&lt;::k 111 the Downlllg WP Ham il ton (5
lll P
W tSe{ 16 7l
yard dnve with a one-yard second quarter
(2 nd Game
plunge to lie the game 21-21
Reserve quarterback Terry
111 mnmg~l
Ros
01 1 00 1 000 01
J 13 0
and then set up Blanda's Hanratty, playmg for the ftrsl Cht
000 300 000 00 J (, ?
game-wmmng 20-yard field time in pre-season, had four
C l e v e l and
L ee
( 81
{ 6 1 and M o nt
goal with just 11 seconds left passes tnlercepted before gWilloughby
om ery B lackwe ll {91 K flal
With a 29-yard pass to the leaving wtlh a spramed Go ss age 181 and Downtng
WP
W ill Oughby { •I 1 1 LP
Steeler one.
ankle.
G o ss Ag e 1! 7 1
HR
" He was gomg to slay in the
Evan s ( 111h )
whole drive," satd Madden of
In the only other NFL game Cleve
JA? 010 000 1&lt;1 19 0
Hunun. "This was his turn to Sunday, local boy Joe Wtlson M•nn
000 10 7"'700
5 16 0
Pelcrson
13
7) and As hby ,
play and he did a good job."
came off the bench to score Ce ro ne Butl er Jo hn son 171
Hunun ts trying to make two touchdowns and lead the Wiley t ? J D ec ker lSI
m pbell 181 a nd Rolf LP
the Raiders as a reserve New England Patriots to a 36- Ca
Bu tler ( 1 4J HR s
H e ndttck
behind Ken Stabler.
161h I Sod erh o lm ? ( 101h und
10 rout of the Mmnesola IliTh
)
Pittsburgh took a 14-{) first Vtkmgs . W1Ison, who atquarter lead when Terry tended Holy Cross, scored on D e l
0?0 307 000 7 1 I 1
Cal "
ooo ooo ooo o 5 1
runs of seven and 34 yards as E
Mdcy f\
Rodngu e z
1gveroa DP
Ca l •forn1a
the Patriots rebounded from r( 1)
LOC
D e l rO l l.
5
an early 10-6 deficit with 30 Ca l•lorn ,a 8
R uhl e 1109) and F r eehan
straight
potnts .
New
F •gu e ro a H ass l er 161 a nd E
England's defense inler- Rodr•guez L P
r tgu eroa
Verv ze r (Jrdl
cepled four passes and held 111 9 ) HR
the Viking offense wtthoul a
100 000 000 I 6 ?
0 30 000 OOx 1 3 0
touchdown as the only
Br ob erg I 10 11 l and Por
MiMesota TO came on a 7!1ler
Bah nsen L i ndblad (6 ),
and Boston Braves from 1929 yard punt return by Sam F 1nger s 19 1 and 1 en ace
H an ey 19 ) WP
B ahnsen IH
through 1941. He reached hts McCullum .
I I)
peak with a .378 average in
1936 and hatted .330 or more
Ma1or L ea gue Leaders
M1am1 downed Detroit 20in four other seasons. He also
Un•ted Press lnternalwnat
14, Atlanta rupped Baltimore
Lcadmg Batter s
is remembered as havmg hit
Naltoal League
10-3, the New York Jets edged
the lme drive which fractured
St. Louts 14-13, Cleveland Madlock, Cht9 ab r h . pet
Dtzzy Dean's toe during the
104 416 60 150 36 1
beat Phtladelphia 14-6,
1937 All .Star gatne-an in- Houston topped Washington Smmns, S l L
11 7 &lt;l71 60 1&lt;13 339
cidenl which marked the
24-13, New Orleans defeated
beginmng of the end of
Denver 24-21, Green Bay Wa ts o n H ou108 401 55 137 3?9
Dean's career
trirruned Ol1cago 13-9, Los Snglln , Pt l
Herman, 68, had a .304
Angeles shaded San Fran- Jo shu a S F 104 387 &lt;l3 1?5 377
average w1th the Ol1cago
ctsco 10-6 and the New York
100 389 60 176 324
Cubs, Brooklyn Dodgers and
Rose , C1n 1? 1 SOd 8? 16 3 1?3
Giants dumped San Diego 17- Parker P1t
Pirates from 1931 through
7 m Saturday games. Dallas
1 10 417 58 137 320
1947. He htt .330 or more four
Morgan Ctn
is at Kansas City tonight.
11 1 38 7 83 1?4 3?0
times, was a splendid hit-andEarl Morrall threw two TO Ga r~ ey LA
run batsman and a !me
passes and rookie Stan Bro ck St L 1?7 505 66 15 9 315
double play ptvotman. He
Winfrey ran 39 yards for
98 377 61 JIB 313
played in World Series wtth
Amcncan League
another as Miami beat
g
ab r
h pel
the Cubs in 1932-35-38 and Deloit. Greg Landry had two
Carew Mm
with the Dodgers m 1941 and
47-1 7 5 155 366
scoring passes for the Lions, Ly nn Bos 11)
11? 405 76 13 4 331
also managed the Red Sox
one a 77-yarder to Larry Munson NY
from 1964 through 1966.
116 4 .U 63 14'} 3?0
Walton.
Hrgrve , Tex
Harrts, 78, was baseball's
11 0 388 67 121 31 7
origmal " boy wonder"
Dave Hampton's three- Sngltn , Bal
1 17 4 38 7) 136 311
playrng manager when he led yard TO run and N1ck MikePow ell Cle 96 JlS 46 97 308
the Washmglon Senators to Mayer's 28-yard field goal in Wshngtn Ok
Amertcan League peMants the first 'quarter were all
113 449 " 138 307
McRae KC
in 1924 and 1925. A grttty, At Ianta needed to beat II'
, ., " ' 52 , 3 , 306
combative second baseman Baltimore and fourthstrmg .~,. Braun , M m
107 36? S? 110 304
who had a .274 lifetime quarterback J.J . Jones came R .ce Bas 112 443 75 133 JDO
average, Harris ts best off the bench in the final
Home Runs
Nal10nat League L uzmsk t ,
remembered for hal(jng quarter to set up Bob Gre- Phtl
3 1 Sc hm1dt Phil 76
served as manager of the sham's second TD of the Kmgman , NY 24 Bench em
73 Fos ter , Ctn ? I
Senators, Ttgers, Red Sox, game,aone~yardphmge, and
Am e r 1 can
Lea 9 u e
Mayberry KC ?9, Jackson .
Phil11es and Yankees a total lift the Jets over St. Louis.
?8 Sc ott , M d '27, Bonds
M1ke Phi pps threw a 32- Oak
of 29 years.
NY ??
Burroughs , Tex :11 '
Harris also ts remembered yard TO pass to rookie Willte
Runs Batted In
. .
Nal10nal League Luzmsk1
for having led the Yankees to Mill er an d Hug h McKinnu;
Phtl98 Bench Ctn 95 , St aub :
an unexpected American ran a yard for another score NY 8? . P er ez, em ao Wat
son Hou 78
Cl eve Ian d
League pennant and World as
stopped
Amencan League: Lynn ,
Series victory in 1947. He was Philadelphia
and
Dan Bos 86 May~erry . KC 84
fired after the Yankees Pastorini's TD passes of 47 ~~Yi . ~.Itt BBI3 R tc e, Bos 8?
finished third in 1948 and and 41 yards and Billy
Stolen Bases
I League . Lopes
replaced by Casey Stangel. Johnson's 89--yardpunt return LAN a IlOna
57
Morgan, Ctn
&lt;l7
Johnson, 74, was elected by fot a score carried Houston Broc k St L 44 Cedeno Hou
&lt;lO . Concepcton, Cin and
the §pedal committee on pa st Washington •
Mangual. Mil 7-l
black players. He played for
ArchieManningthrewa IS.
Amer•can League Rtvers
Cal 67 , washington , Oak 35 ,
Hilldale, the Homestead Yard TO pass to Frosty Ot1s,
KC JJ Remy Cal Jl.
Grays, Darby Daisies and Anderson and ran three yards N art h oak "
Pittsburgh Crawfords from for another score as New
Nalwnat~~~~"u9c Se aver
1921 through 1938. His OrleansdownedDenverWld NY 177 J ones. s o 16 7.
LA 16 10 . Morton , Att
statistical achievements are John Hadl's 12 yard TD pass Sutton
15 17 , Btlhngham . Ctn 14 5
lost in the misty records of to Barry Smith helped .Green Messersmdh . LA 14 11
.
T
A mer 1 c a n
League
those bamstorming leagues Bay pas t Ch 1cago.
ony Palmer , Bait 19 7 , Kaa t, Ch1
but he is described by Robert Baker scored the game's only 17 9 W1se , Bos 16 7 Blue,
Peterson in his book, "Only touchdownonafour~yardrun Oak 16 9 . Hunt ~ r NY 16 1?
The Ball Was White," as "one in the second quarter as Los
of the smartest players in the
Angeles downed San FranNICE, France (UP!) game with sure hands and a cisco and Craig Mor,ton hit S. East Germany Sunday swept
great arm at third base ... a of~ passes for two touch- both men's and women's
line drive hitter with fair downs i!! the first quarter as Europa Cup track and fielil
power and a batting average the Giants rolled over San finals for the second time in
usually around .300."
. Diego.
five years.

Five inducted
COOPERSTOWN, N.Y.
(UPI) - Baseball's royalty
gathers today in the tiny
village where the game was
born to pay its supreme
tribute to one of Its Ruthian
kings and four princes of
bygone eras.
Ralph Kiner, the National
League home run king a
record seven times during the
t94os and 1950s and now a TV
commentator for the New
York Mets, heads thts year 's
entries which will bring total
membership m the shrme to
151.
Entering along wtth Kiner
are Earl Averill and Billy
Herman, two stars of the
1930s and 1940s; Bucky
Harris, who managed in the
major leagues for almost
three decades; and Judy
Johnson, who spent his entire
career in ·the shadowland of
the old Negro leagues.
The five will be inducted in
ceremonies on the porch of
the
National
Baseball
Library. Commissioner
Bowie Kuhn will preside over
the- ceremonies after which
the Boston Red Sox and San
Francisco Giants will play
the annual Hall of Fame
game on Doubleday Field.
Kiner, elected in voting by
10-year members of the
Baseball Writers Association
of America, set a major
league record by leading the
National League in homers
his first seven seasons and
wound up his tO-year career
with a total of 369 bomers. His
best span was from 1947
Ulrough 1951 with the Pittsbtrgh Pirates when he had
successive season home run
tOtals of 51, 40, 54, 47 and 42
while driving in between 109
and 127 runs each season .
Kiner was traded to tbe
Otlcago Cube in 1954 and
finished his career with tbe
aeveland Indians in 1955.
Averill, Herman and
Harris, all elected by the
Veterans Committee of the
BBWAA,
also
were
Jli'ODlinj!nt alarll during their
era.
Averill, 72, had a .318
llfet~ batting average with
the Indians, Detroit Tigers '

24~21

1\011

I

Star Treks on

N ,lfiUI'oll Ll: ilQU C
roll ~

00 0 000 01 0 I 1 I
(1 11 ( 111
000 010 70&gt;&lt;
1 (, 0
~ , o; on
1\ r c l t 111 a nd Dyer
'-,a nqudh:•n (Il l
[ l,lf C y
C

For Rent

Th e Metgs l.ocal School
D1 s ln et Boa rd of Educalwn
represented by Carol Pt erce,
pres ident, wtll receive the
'Cu rnmun1ty
Serv i ce
Award " for Metgs County at
the Ohw State Fa1r on Aug
22
In nommatJng the Meags
Loca l Board 'ror the honor ,
the Me tgs County Council on
Agmg, eommented .
The Metgs County Council
on Agmg nom tna tes the
Me1gs Local School Board for
the 'Comm umt y Serv1 ce
Award ' m apprec1at10n of 1ls
~ ra n Ling the Council the use
of vacant rooms m the former
Pomeroy
Jumor
Hi gh
Bwldmg fur a Se mor Ctt1zen
Center
As there was no other space
availabl e for use as a Semor
Cente r. there could have been
few sc rv1 ces for semor
c111zen s 1n Me1g s Cou n ty
wtthoul
the
factllltes
provtded by the Metgs Local
School Board Th e board ha s
cooperated to the fullest m
g1vmg a sststance whenever
pOSSible
The forestghl of the Mct gs

Bies has
first major
golf win

By Dick Kletoer
Local Hoard 1n r ecogniZing
the needs of and providtng
DEAR DICK: Can you give me any inlormallon on tho
fac thtl es ror se r vi ces to the
elderly wa s the s timulu s "Star frek " movie com log tbis year? - DAVID ESTES,
'
needed to generate the Glencoe, Ala.
People
keep
asking
about
the
"Star
Trek"
movie
and,
as
a
cooporatwn a nd assistance of
"Star
Trek"
nut
myself,
I've
been
cunous.
Here's
tbe
latest
other or gamzat10n s and
agencies m the devel opment mformaUon . Gene Roddenberry says be's about halfway
through the scnpt for the film He expects 1t will be In
uf flu s commumty program
production
some lime m the fall, so tbe earliest it could reach
If 1s ftlhng that a form er
school butldmg be used as a the theaters would be ne•t spring. All th~ old TV cast has
means of prov tdmg further agreed, m prmc1pal, to appear in the movie. But nobody is
education to our se nior talking money yet, so there could be changes. There were
Clllzens Apprec1atmg the rumors that Robert Redford would play the captain of tbe
board's co ntribUti o n and EnterpriSe When Wtlllllm Shatner heard !bose rumors, he
co mpr e hendin g lh e rm- saJd, " I am the captam.;
por t.ance of ed ucation, the
DEAR DICK: I've heard rumors !,hal CharUe Pride Ia
semor c1hze ns, through t he
dying
of cancer and Is going to leave his eyes to Ray Charles_&amp;
Reltred Semo r Volunte er
,.
Prog ram , have contnbuted this true ? - B. K., Lucedale, Miss.
What
a
great
plot
for
a
soap
opera
that
would
be!
It
is
toward our yo uths' educatiOn
"
by demons trattn g lhetr happily , completely untrue.
knowledge and skills of the
DEAR DICK: Recently, I have beard from people that
past m today's classrooms
Allhough the education of Elvis Presley has some kind of disease and has only a short
youth IS the1r pnmar} time to live. If thts Is true, what disease does be have IUld bow
responstbthly, the board long does be have left?- KELLY JERABEK, Garwell, Neb.
Boy, the rumor kooks are out this week. Again, happily,
can take pnde m th e
kn ow ledge that through their that' s just not true Elvis has some eye problems and wa.
v1s10n a better and more down for a while with a virUS, but neither was serious. He's
meamnglul hie ha s been about to embark on another national tour.
made poss ible for hundreds
DEAR DICK : Could you please tell me what Katharlae
of older restdenls of Me1gs
Ross' real name Is? And how old is she? - S. A., Garden
County

Development
conference
August 28-29

MARIETTA - The annual
conference of the Corporation
WETHERSFIELD, Conn
for
Oh1o
i\ppalachtan
(UP! ) - After eight years on
the tour, 37-year-old Don B1es Development ICOAD) wtll be
knows the feelmg of bemg a held at the Holiday Inn,
winner. But 1t d1dn 'l come Marietta , Augus t 28-29
The conference wtll begin
easy.
Btes had to catch Hub1e Thursday wtth regtslratwn at
Green on the 18th hole to 1 00 p m wtth an afternoon
create a lie and tben defeated sess10n planned and a
Green in a two-llole, sudden- banquet at 7·00 p m The
death playoff to win the gues t speaker at the banquet
$200,000 Greater Hartford will be James A Duerk ,
Dtrecto r, DECO (DepartOpen Sunday.
H1s 10-foot birdie putt on ment of Econom1c and
16th hole at the Wethersfield Communtty Development ),
Country Club locked up the Colun1bus
The
Fnday
mormng
$40,000 first place purse for
sessiOn
will
be
devoted
to
Bies after shooting a final
round 69 for a 267 total 17 electwn of offtcers, electwn
of new COAD execullve
under par.
committee
members, and
"We all know th1s IS my
d1stnct
reports
first wm ever," he satd. " I've
Followmg the noon lunhad a great feelmg all week
Fnday, the executive
cheon
and this just climaxes it."
He admitted to thoughts commtltee wtll meet and the
"that I might never wm," eonference IS expected to
although a card from his wtfe adJourn m mtd-afternoon.
Ketlh Molihan, Executive
m Seattle satd she thought 1t
would be his week . "Maybe Dtrector of the La\\Tence
that's JUSt coincidence but it's County Communtly Action
the ftrst ttme she's ever done Agency, Ironton, IS Chatrman
of the COAD Execuhve
that."
The VICtory won't change Comnuttee.
The Corporation for Ohto
Btes' schedule.
"I'll still play 20 to 25 Appalachian Development IS
tournaments a year," sa1d a multi-purpose orgamzahon
Commumty
Action
B1es, who gained a full year's of
tourney exemption wtth the Agenctes in 28 Ohto counties
Knox, Holmes , Coshocton,
win.
Btes took a one-&lt;&gt;troke lead Muskingum, Tuscarawas,
into Sunday's !mal round Carroll, Hamson, Jefferson,
after a four-under-par 67 Guernsey, Belmont, Monroe ,
Saturday for a three-round Noble, Morgan, Washmgton,
total of 198, one-&lt;&gt;troke lead Perry, Hockmg, Athens,
Vinton,
over Green, who shared the Metgs, Galha,
lead with Bies at the midway Jackson, Lawrence, Ross,
Pike , Scwlo, Brown, Adams
point of the tournament.
Green, who eamed $22,800, and Highland counlles.
The pnme orgamzallonal
appeared content with hts
play and complimented Bies objecllve of COAD IS to work
as "a great person and a for conlmued human and
economic growth of the 28great champion.''
"The six.foot putt on the county Appalachtan regwn of
16th to win- Hubert made a Ohto, Chairman Molihan
great putt for par-all of a states
sudden looked like 15 feet, but
I got it and that's what
two other contenders behind
counts, .. Bies beamed.
Green, whose wife is ex- him.
Nelson, had a 68 and Vic
pecting tbeir first child in
Burbank, Calif., said "I've Regalado a 69 to tie for third
had such a poor year, I just place, ahead of Romero Blanfeel good about being where I cas, wbo stood alone at 270.
Johnny r,filler and Andy
am right now ."
North
each had 271.
Bies had to rally to eam h1s
Bies
responded
by
berth in the playoff after
squandering a two-stroke salvaging par on the 18th
lead with five holes to play. after missing a birdie bid.
He bogied at the 14th to give Snead had all kinds of
an opening to third place J .C. trouble, wound up in a trap,
Snead, playing in the last and eventually ended up with
foursome with Bies. Snead a bogey, playing himself out
had four birdies in a row on of the playoffs.
On the first extra hole, tbe
holes 14 through 17 as he went
one stroke ahead with a six- 15th, Bies and Green each
had par.fours. On the 16th, a
foot bird on the 16th.
Bies birdied the 17th with a par-five, Green put his third
15.footer while Snead parred shot in the trap but came out
that hole and the two were nicely and sank a 12-footer for
tied at 17-under with a bole to a par.
Bies, on the green in three,
play.
sank
a six-footer for a birdie
. Meanwhile,
tn
the
threesome ahead of them, four and victory.
During the four rounds of
Gr~n and Larry Nelson were
also making their charges. regulation play, both Bies
Both scored 16-und~r on the and Green wound up ,with
18th tee. Nelson bogied the totals of 267. For the four
fmal hole, but Green sank a days, Bies went 65-66-67~9.
15-footer for a birdie to go 17- Green's totals rea&lt;l 6EHi5-68under and put pressure on the 68.

,J

.

.

the Meigs fair

First thing to do is to read a book, "How to Get Your Song
Published and Make a Record Deal." It was written by two
entertainment lawyers, Ned Shankman and Larry Thompson.
If your local bookstore doesn't have it, write them at 9200
Sunset Blvd., Los Angeles, Calif., 90069.
DEAR DICK: On a Colgate toothpaste commercial, a man
is brushlng a killer whale's teeth. Is the whale real or synthetic?- LYNN GARDEN, Kalispell, Mont.
The whale is real, but the toothpaste is synthetic.
DEAR DICK: About the rv reruns. We are senior citizens
and love our rv. But all summer we see reruns and Ilmow I've
seen several for the third time. Everyone must economize but
why go to that extent? -MRS. HAROLD W. MILLER, Nardin,
Okla.
It's tough on all of us, senior and junior citizens, but that's
the way TV economy dictates. Lots of people - particularly
the Screen Actors' Guild - are trying to do something about it,
because it is hard on people in Hollywood as well as in
Oklahoma. But it looks like we're all stuck with the situation
for the lime bemg .
DEAR DICK: I read somewhere that Elton John bas fired
his band to live as a hermit In his $1 miiUon mansion. Please
tell me this Is not true.- ANN BOArMAN, Sontb Wllllamaport, Pa.
OK, I will. It's not true. What happened was that two
members of his band left, amicably. Dnuruner Nigel Olsson
will remain with John's Rocket Records, as a soloist. The
other, guitarist Dean Murray, was just tired of touring. As for
John living "as a hermit," again untrue. Actually, he has
expanded his group and IS still living the life of an ordinary
man - if he can ever be ordmary.

Kingsbury News Notes
The Carleton Church had
its picnic at Fort Meigs near
Rutland Sunday.
Virgil King who has been a
patient at Holzer Hosp1tal has
returned home and is improving.
Mr. and Mrs. Nev White
visited recently with Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Swearinger and
Bobbie at West Milton, Ohio
and Mr. and Mrs. David
Glenn and family at Tipp
City, Ohio.
Recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. John Dean and Mr. and
Mrs. John Walter Dean and
son were Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Ried and David, Mr.
Walter Terrell of Pataskala
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Markins, Racine, Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Paynter of Carpenter, Mr. and Mrs. Sanford
Well of Albany, Mr. and Mrs.
Floyd Ross, Brenda and
Junior and Mr. and Mrs.
Hobart Smalley of Chester.
Recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Brickles were Mrs.
Hazel Brickles and Will
Alford of Kent, Ohio, Estella
Colburn, Shade and Mrs.
Faye Pratt of Pomeroy.
Recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Floyd Ross and lamily
were Mr. and Mrs. Rick
Anderson and family of
Collll1lbus.
Recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Nev White were Mr. and
Mrs. Johnny Barker and
family, Glenn wood and
Louise and Usa Holley of
Ashton, W. Va.
,Mrs. Sally Byers who fell
recently Is a patient at
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Visiting recently with Mr.
and Mrs. Wayne Beal were

..

Mr. and Mrs. Roger Young,
Wesley and Yevete, Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Well, Mr. and
Mrs. Kirk Chevalier, Mrs.
Elizabeth Murray and Mr.
and Mrs. Gary King.
Mrs. John W. Dean and son
and Mrs. John A. Dean
visited Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
&amp;ruth rutd Mrs. Ray Roush
one evening recently. Visiting
Mr 1nd Mrs. &amp;!lith over the
weekend were Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Bates and family of
Micl: an.
IHRA WURLD RECORD
WEST SALEM, Ohio (UPI)
Raymond Beadle of
Dallas, Tex., set an International
Hot
Rod
Association world record
time of 6.25 seconds &amp;mday
in winning the funny car
division at the IHRA
Nat:.,naJs which drew 350
entries.
Bfoadle piloted Blue Max ~­
Mustang at 227.8t mph IIi · •
defeating De;:;,y Savage,
Hickory Hlll, ru., c1;:,: -1 at
8.79 seconds and 100.67 mph
while he was red lighted at
Dragway 42 here.
•
Don Nicholson, Atlanta,
drove his Mustang to victory
in the pro stock class at 9
seconds and 154.37 mph in
beating Roy Hlll, High Point~" '
N.C., timed at 9.04 second$'·
and 153.8t in a Dodge.
,
Gary Beck, Edmonton,
Can., won the \9p fuel dlvlslcxt'"''
title with a time of s.o3'v
seconds and a speed of 245.23 "'
mph in handing Don Garlits; "
Tampa, F1a., his first IHRA""
competition Iooa after five ·consecutive wins. The-·
Florida driver had tbe sam~ "··
timingS for the photo f\nish. ""

••

M h &lt;'us e 1 o r 4 bed r oo m s,
l 1v1ny room
d1nmg room
,1 n d modc-rr kil c hen , ca r
petmq ? bAths and a half
Pond l o r s w tm mtng and
f15 h111q
1 rll lie s west of
Harr. o; onvt! l e
For
ap
DO• n t mt;:ont , c all !It '/ Jl&lt;l5 be
lw('lr-n 'i a n d 8 p m
Monday
Throuqh I r•day
II 18 Sip

For Sale
l WO H O J.l &lt;, E Johnson tra ile r .
l l rH I ('m
whC'el s
/\ISO
?1 ;
y£' ,lr o ld R eq Oua tl er H orse
.,tu d co tt
Phon e 997 77 51
8 18 ]IC

Pictures by Bob Hoenich. Katie Crow and Jo

Pay more
for milk

H1~ ~ 1W=~=~:~:~:~t:~:~:~:};~,~,~ ~ : :!~ :,;~,~;: : : : :~:~: :;: : :~: :)}: ~:~:':': : ;:;: ~:~;{:: ;: : :·:': : : :~.: }:·,: :};):}•:':})f:~ :'~':{:!:.: : : })t~

WASHINGTON (UP1) are going up for milk,
but the mcreases will guard
agatnsl shortages and higher
pnces later, accordmg to the
Nalto na l Mtlk Producers
Federation
'· A moderate pnc.e in cr ease m the weeks ahead
could help to mamtain milk
product ton , relieving
pressure for larger pnce
mcreases later m the year as
supphes grow even shorter ,"
the federation sa1d &amp;mday.
The datry group said an
mcreas e
IS
mev1table
because of declining milk
production
and
rising
productiOn costs m recent'
month s. Pnces for such
processed milk foods as
butter and cheese alreaily
have nsen in response to
dechnmg productwn, the
statement said .
Prl c&lt;~s

.. ,...

...

-"'-

·-~

.;...

..

.
A SPECIAL PRESENTATION of thts blanke t was
made Friday evemng following the harness horse racmg
program at the Me1gs County Fa1r. The blanket was
presented to the owner and driver of the horse w1th the
fastest tune durmg the three days of racmg in memory of
the late Sidney Spencer Mr Spencer, a highly regarded

horse tramer and dnver , was a former mayor of
Pomeroy. From the left are DaMy Zirkle, Btll Sm1U1,
Fred Goeglem, Btll Dowme, all fair board members; ,
Dick Elhott, drtver of " Wmdy Dawn," a pacer, who had a
tune of 2 .12 1-5 on Wednesday, and Memll Elhott,
Jackson , owner of the horse and father of the dnver

TOP HONORS IN THE Juntor Frur Sheep judgmg Thursday mghl, overweight diVISIOn
were, Todd Tnpp whose sheep was named grand champion and BtU Kautz reserve champton Shown are I~, Bill Kautz, son of Mr and Mrs. Dale Kautz, Rl. J, Pomeroy, Todd ,
slandmg, son of Mr. and Mrs. AlVIn Tnpp, Rl. 3, Pomeroy, and Debbie Windon , cousin of
Todd, who showed the antmal.

Grove, Ca.
Katharine Ross IS really Katharme Ross. And she is
somewhere around 33.
DEAR DICK: I want to beeome a singing star. I have
written two songs. How can I get them pabllsbed? -DAPHNE
JORDAN, Mobile, Ala.
To be a singing star, jUst"keep on singing. Sing anywhere
and everywhere you can. And hope somebody hears you. As for
getting your songs published, that-&lt;&gt; tough. Just
stay
away
from
the
song
sharks,
those
creeps
who
advertise
that
they
will
publish
your songs. Reputable publishers don-t advertise.

A ~

Tension, fear
was too much
DETROIT (UP!) - After
18 days, the tension and fear
became too much for
Josephine Hoffa. The ailing
wife of missing Teamsters
leader James Hoffa collapsed
&amp;mday and was hospitalized.
Mrs. Hoffa, devoted to the
former Teamsters president
wbo disappeared July 30,
broke down in her suburban
Lake Orion, Mich., home
"from the strain and the
stress ... She IS exhausted,
physically and emottonally ,"
her son, James P. Hoffa, 34,
said.
The scores of federal, state
and city police searching for
Hoffa were just as frustrated ,
if infinitely less emotionally
involved.
Michigan State Police
Director George Halverson
said, "We don•t even know
what crime we are investigating. All we know IS
that we have got a mtssing
person.
"But I think there w1ll be a
break. They've got some
excellent investigators on
this case and I think there
will be a break eventually."
For Josephine Hoffa,
suffering from a heart
ailment and facing cataract
surgery when her condition
permits it, the breaking point
came &amp;mday morning while
prayers were being said for
her husband's safety in
nearby St. Joseph's Roman
Catholic parish church.
She had met her tough,
scrappy husband on a picket
line in the JIE, lived wtth hun
through countless battles on
his way to the top of the
Teamsters, endured the 58
months he spent in prison on
mail fraud and jury tampermg charges, and was
backing him in his fight,
before his disappearance, to
regain control of the union
from Teamsters President
Frank Fitzsinunons.
l:loffa, 62, has not been seen
since shortly after he left
Lake Orion, 40 mtles from
Detroit, for what he thought
was a date with reputed
Detroit Mafia don Anthony
"Tony Jack" Giacalone, East
Coast Teamsters boss Anthony "Tony Pro" provenzano, and Detro)! labor
consultant Leonard Schultz.
All three have denied making
such an appointment.
"
Mrs. Hoffa was taken to
Northwest Grace Hospital on
the outskirts of Detroit.
The hospital denied she was
there, but the FBI, her son
and her doctor, George
Mogill confirmed she was.
Mogm called her condition
today "stable," but put an
"absolute
block"
on
telephone calls or visits from
anyone out~ide h~r Immediate family.
"It •s remarkable she hasn 'I

folded before," Mog11l said.
"She 1s a remarkable
woman''
She had ' 'folded" before ~
Aug. 4 when she fainted under
the strain of her husband 's
absence, and six years ago
when she famted m court
while Hoffa was fighting to
overturn his conviction.
Halverson srud, "There ts
nothing new . People are
asking, 'What IS the dommant
theory?' There 1s none. "
He commented on the
disappearance of another key
man in the case - G1acalone.
Halverson and other law
enforcement offictals say
they lost his tratl after he said
he was leavtng for Miami,
Fla.

GRAND AND RESERVE CHAMPIONS m the 4-H rabbit showmanship L-r, Hhonaa
Hanm g with her reserve champiOn and Nickey L.conard wlth the g rand champion m
showmanship

RESERVE CHAMPION BULL- Taking reserve champiOn honors at the Me1gs County
Fatr thts year was Jim, owned by Hugh Leifheit. Showmg the pnze wmnmg antmal 1s
Wayne Leifheit.

f
Bron man
NEW YORK (UP!) Eight days of pressure apparently were too much for
Dommtck Byrne. Wracked by
conscience, he led offtcers to
a dimly-Itt Brooklyn apartment where they freed ktdnaped whisky hetr Samuel
Bronfman II and captured
the second of his alleged
abductors.
''It was over in two
seconds," said Det. Thomas
Cerbone, who broke intn the
one-bedroom
apartment
Sunday with poltce and FBI
agents.
Officers grabbed a surpriSed Mel Patrick Lynch, 37,
who was guardmg young
Bronfman.
Samuel - unshaven - sat
bound and blindfolded on a
couch against the wall.
"Thank God," he said as
officers removed adhesive
tape from his eyes. Unharmed, he was taken by
limousine to his father 's Fifth
Avenue apartment.
The FBI satd the $2.3
m1ll1on ransom paid by the
youth's
father,
Edgar
Bronfman, chairman of the
board of Seagram's Ltd., was
recovered in the home of an
elderly friend of Byrne's.
Byrne, 53, the owner of a
limousine service, and
Lynch, a city fireman, were
charged with extortion by
matl. The FBI satd they
believed the two men acted
alone. Officers said the
elderly friend was an mnocenl victim of tbe scheme.
If convicted, the two could
face terms of up to $5,000 in
fmes and 20 years in prison.
Federal agents tndicated
, they may be charged wtth
kidnaping later .
Young flNln!man and hts
father le!t" lhe city Sunday
afternoon for seclusion and
rest . The family sa1d there

Full-sized Values in
'round-the-clock luxury
'

captors taken

would be no statements.
But a spokesman added,
"Sam ts m really fine shape
Hts spmts are great "
For Cerbone, and other
officers, 1t was the end of a
frustratmg week of searching
and tense negotiations.
Samuel, 21, was abducted
early last Saturday after
leavmg hts father's treeshrouded estate m Yorktown
Hetghts, N.Y. HIS car, wtth
the keys still m the tgrutton,
was found in the driveway of
his divorced mother 's home
rn Purhcase , N Y.
Cerbone satd Byrne, who
gave offtcers the key to the
apartment where the youth
was found, had " pangs of
conscience" about the affatr.
"He's a deeply religwus
man. He must have said
'Jesus Christ' and apologtzed
to me five ltmes for saymg
1!," the detecttve said.
Byrne, apparently alarmed
by mcreasmg FBI survelllance in the area near the
Lynch apartment, allegedly
sent a young gtrl to a netghborhood pohce statton wtth a
note saying he knew where
the Bronfman youth was

bemg held.
Cerbone and h1s partner,
James Schry, went to hts
house at m1dmght Byrne
appeared relieved as he told
them about Bronfman 's
location
But apparently authorilles
already were closing m on the
pair .
J. Wallace La Prade,
asststanl director of the FBI

m charge of the New York
offtce, satd agents dectded to
move in on the abductors
after they fa1led to release
the youth - desp1te the
payment of the ransom early
Saturday
Authonltes already had
traced the license plate of the
car used for the "pickup" to
Lynch

- =~-

FOR THE
PROTECTION

_

---

........

YOU NEED-:Play it safe and' sure
It may be time to
have your present

~-

~l
•

dI

t

_. ;j l

Your
Choice

$249

H ere a r e l 1ve gre at way s to
s lr (;'tch
your
houset1o ld
budge t' Each o f th es e e x
Ctltn q so l a s le e per ~ can be
th e s tar t of a truly e l egant
l•v.nq room plus g 1vc you
extra
sleep •n g
s pa ce
when e ver vou need .r on a
su per bly com fortab l e f ul l
S •le
be d
Choose elegant
Tradil• o n a l
c har m 1nq
Co lont a l IU )(Ur tou s Tran
s ,t, o nal or on(' o f two bold
Con tem p o r ar 1 es

- -}(....
'

~

,_

~

~

policy updated.

Let's .Talk Soon

DALE C. WARNER
992 2143
102 W Mam

click in the

Pomeroy

Yellow .
Pages

FURNITURE
'992-2635

"'
. '

\

'

MIDDLEPORT

�)

.,

6- The DaUv Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Monday, Aug . 18, 1975

•

North writhing m ·own
desegregation battle

I''· ' ,
·'

WINNERS IN THE PRETTY BABY CONTEST are pictured here with their mothers
following jul\ging at the Meigs County Fair Saturday afternoon . From left are Scott Jason
Moore, son of Mr. and Mrs. Freddie L. Moore, Rt. 2, Cheshire; Ada m Perry Little , son of
Mr. and Mrs . Michael Little, Rt. t, Middleport ; Ri chard Da vid Carson, son of Mr. a nd Mrs.
Charles Carson, Rt. 4, Pomeroy and Gordon Wesley Holter , son of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon
Holter, Rt . 1, Reedsville.

'

.'
...: . '...1

By DONALD A. DAVIS
children to deseg regated
United Press International
schools. This year. all five
" Mrs. Peabody came down members of the school board
here to help us integrate in · in Pasadena, Calif., owe their
Alabama," said Dr . Erskine positions to an anti-busing
Murray , an assistant slate stand .
superintendent of education
Boston now is in the
in Montgomery. " Somebody spotlight. The first year of
told her she might have been desegregation was ac·
able to find something to do at complished amid violence .
home if she 'd only looked for On Sept . 8, the second phase
it. "
begins with some 26,000 stu ~
Mrs. Mary Peabody, dents to be bused under court
moth e r
of
former orders and the watchful eyes
Massachusetts Gov. Endicott of thousands of police .
Peabody, was among the civil
Already the city is tense .
rights activists of the 1961ls Fiv e-thousand blacks and
who streamed in from nor~ white s tossed r ocks and
thern slates to help blacks in bottles at each other during a
Dixie achieve equality in South
Boston
bea c h
schools, cafeterias and voting demonstration last week.
booths ...
"It has nothing to do with
Now the wheel has racism," said police Capt .
reversed .
John Kenneally, standing
Hays Mizell , of the with 800 other policemen
American Friends Service bet ween the mobs . " The
Committee, said that in South whole thing was caused by
Carolina the dual school forced busing."
system has been "effectively
''Busing," as it is now
dismantled." He now flies to called, began with the filing
Boston occasionally to coach 10 years ago of a lawsuit
civil rights leaders on school against the Board of
desegregation.
Education in CharlotteThe desegregation of class- Mecklenburg, N.C. In 1971,
rooms no longer is a problem the U.S. Supreme Court ruled
for a geographical area of the school busing could be used to
nation, but rather one of the bring about classroom racial
many problems facing urban balance. Last year, 46,000
areas.
students were bused to class
For instance, former Gov . there .
Linwood Holton of Virginia
" Busing is a form of
defused the opening of transportation, that's all it is.
schools under a busing edict Schools in the past were set
in 1970 by sending his

Richmonl\, Va. "Most of the
concern in the South now is on
education issues, involving
quality of education ."
To the north , a black
newsman received an award
recently for coverage of the
violent opening last fall of
Boston 's schools. He said that
although racism is denied by
the white community, he fell
that was actually the case .
"The signs painted on those
fence s don't say 'Buses go
home,"' he said . " They say,
"Niggers go home."

at the almost all-black Boise
School in Portland, Ore .
" When my children were
taken to a white school, they
got no more than they would
have gotten at Boise."
"I don't think busing kids
around from school to school
creates desegregation. It ere·

ates racial isolation because

up to perpetuate the
separation of races. We now
have to end this situation and
if the only way to accomplish
this is to transport students,
then people are going lo have
to be transported ," said Fred
Banks, a Ja ckson, Miss .,
black attorney.
"Busing is just a code word
for fhose opposed to in·
tegration in any fonn, and
this is true everywhere.''
In Little Rock, Ark., scene
of racial turbulence two
decades ago, 10,500 in aU
grades will be bused this faU.
&lt;~ We've
been extremely
pleased with it. No racial
problems whatsoever," said
Jim Pale, Little Rock's
school transportation
director.
" It is not going to work too
weU," said Karl Karp, school
superintendent
in
In·
dianapolis. Twenty-thousand
students are being bused
within the city under a court
plan.

those who can afford to, run,"
said Bet(y Deacon, a city

council

candidate

in

Baltimore.
Her attitude sums up. one
fear of educators - white
fli ght from the schools which
will receive black students.
Federal judges have not been
able to bring suburbs into the
city busing situation . In Rich·
mood, Va ., city schools are 75
per
cent
black .
In
Wilmington, Del., 83 per cent.
In AUanta, it's 85 per cent.
· In ' addition, metropolitan

areas

Give your kids

ajUfTIP
on life.
Ttlil llfl inlilf81M:I ~or )IOVf
cnlld 1wmp11n vlllltl- tlwl
JHim i u~~ don't! Alii! 1
Nllionwlde -a•nlltiOU\ thl
Jw.,.nill E11•11 8utJC141r

are running into

financial problems because
of inflation and parents
fleeing to the suburbs .
Buses in Duval County,
F1a., (Jacksonville) hauled
23,000 of the 54,000 students a
total 47,298 miles per day.
The cost was $4.5 million last
year.
:'In most places in the
South, the issue has died
down and the public
recognizes it's no longer a
political issue," said black
attorney Henry March, in

policy '

P. J. PAULEY
JOT Spring AYtt., Pomo,...,

MOTHERS AND BABIES POSED for pictures of winners of the 1975 pretty baby contest
Saturday. The children and their parents' names are front , I;, Emily Johnson, Mr. and
Mrs. Alan Duane Johnson, 122 Union Ave ., Pomeroy, and Dee Anne Cline, Mr. and Mrs.
John .W. Cline, Reedsville; back row , April Tannehill, Mr. and Mrs. Mark Tannehill
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy; Angela Mills, Mr. and Mrs. Homer Mills Jr ., Syracuse; Mist;
Dawn Newell, Mr. and Mrs. John Newell, Rt.l, Long Bottom, and Michelle Rene Donovan
Mr. and Mrs. George Donovan, Rt. 2, Coolville.
'

Rabin defends
interim peace
Israeli Prime Minister
Yitzhak Rabin went before a
special session of parliament
today and defended the
proposed interim peace
agreement with Egypt
against angry charges from
the right-wing Likud party
that the United Stales was
forcing it down Israel's
throat.
While the Likud was
demanding
Rabin's
resignation,

some 50 women

gathered outside the Knesset
building in Jerusalem and
demonstrated against the
government's policies. They
carried signs reading "No

Munich here," 8.nd "We are
not dogs to jump through
Kissinger's hoop."
A few of the women
paraded about the plaza
wearing dog collars and
leashes. They were led by a
woman carrying an effigy of
Secretary of Stale Henry A.
Kissinger.
Kissinger, after talks with
MORE WINNERS IN THE 14 GROUPS of children competing .in the pretty baby
President Ford in Vail, Colo .,
contest at.the fair Saturday were AJisa Willford, daughter of. Gary and Joann Willford,
said he was optimistic about
Racine; Michael Evans, son of Linda and Denny Evans, Racine ; and Danny Robinson, son
the resumption of hia Middle
of Danny and Susie Robinson , Rl. 2, Pomeroy.
East shuttle mission. He
arrives in Israel Thursday
and Egyptian reports said he
would meet President Anwar
.
Sadal in Alexandria on
Cash awatdli were made 1o
7,000 out of field', Nancy Hoffman, Rober! Brown and Friday.
winners of a tractor pull Carnahan, · Tony Carnahan , Dane Wa tson
The Israeli parliamentary
· Saturday at the 112th annual Robert Wright, Larry Slinka
5,0GO m odified , Ronnie session was one of the
Meigs County Fair:
Youn g, Roy Brooks, Harold angriest sessions in memory
and Max Williams.
Cash prizes of $80, $61), $30,
Ford
, Jim J ohnson and Jim and jeers and catcalls
9,000 out of field , Huck
$20 and $10 to the top five Wagner, Curl Battrell, Ron Codner .
frequently
interrupted
' winners i~ each class (in that
Rabin's half-hour preorder) as reported by' the
CHURCHES GUARDED
·
h~ldups and assaults. Two sentation .
Meigs County Fair · Board,
CLEVELAND (UP! ) "Kissinger's arrival does
churches were robbed and a
were:
Thirty-six extra policemen minister and his family not mean that there is a
5,000 out of field, Dale were on duty in areas of · beaten two weeks ago. No finished pact at Jiand, and It
Perry, Blll Clifton , Eric Cleveland with large num - se rious incide nts we re does not give final approval'
BrODt,, Rodney. Chevalier bers of churches Sunda y repor ted Sunday.
.to an agreement · which is
llld Ken SJmpion . '.
' becaUse of recent rhurr h
already achieved ," R11bin
I
I
'
I,

Money awarded winners in tractor pull

~

,.

. .,, /•

said .
"We will sign an interim
agreement only if we will be
convinced that it will be to the
betterment of Israel's
needs," Rabin said.
"The anticipated visit in
Israel and Egypt is accepted
because of our clear wili to
reach an interim agreement
with benefits for Israel and
Egypt as a step in the
progress towards peace."
, Rabin added, "I can now
say with forcefulness that our
position in the process of
negotiations to reach an
·interim agreement is better
now than it was in March."
Opposition
leader
Menachem Begin opened the
special Knesset session with
an appeal to the Rabin
government to resign.
"This is an example not of
an agreement in stages, but a
surrender in stages," Begin
said.

"The interim agreement is
endangering the security of
Israel and therefore ·it is bad
in its roots and its foundations
and we oppose it," he said.
Begin said the three-year
term of the agreement would
be "an lrivitation to additional pressures and concessiOnS without peace."
In his reply Rabin said
"any attempt to characterize
our position as a catastrophe
must . be seen as an
irresponsible characterization, one which doesn't
fit the reality."
Today's session was forced
,by the Likud which gathered
the requilled 30 signatures to
force · a special session .
Howe:ver a formal debate was
postpon~ unil' later.

'

FOR KIDS-

FUNMEALlM

Big S he! ~
Reg . Fr enc h Fri es.

Fun Tra y.
Funburger · .
~ eg. Fr em: ll Fries.
Su rpri se Pr i.ze.
Reg. Soft Dr ink &amp;
a Sweet Tr ea t

Turnover &amp;
Large SoU Dr ink

GALLIPOLIS
~503

Eastern, Ave.

":' Copyu\l ltl 1975 Burg er Ch cl SystEms . Inc .

*Woolly Bear sez-

"Don't get caught with your
winter heating bills up!'
~ ./

~CrDo

cD®nUD ®l!II

~Cf@ilix7 \301J~[[o ~~
~"Improve your attic insulation.

""' Hav.e your gas furnace checked.
""' Join Columbia's Budget Payment Plan.
The Budget Payment Plan spreads your yearly heating bills over twelve
mo~thly payments. It· doesn't eliminate the chill of winter weather,

but tl sure takes the shtver out of winter heating bills.
Over the course of the year you still pay the same total amount for
gas. But co~e January and 'February when you're getting those big
Christmas brlls. you won't be getting those big heating bills too .

How the Budget Payment Plan worksYour Budget Payment account
will be reviewed and adj.usted, if
necessary, in April : In July you
will be billed the amount neces..:
sary to settle your account. The
example shown illustrates the

Aug .

•

way the plan works (naturally,
the amounts in yo~r own apcount

witt be different).
The Budget Payment Plan year
begins in August.

.
See your Budget Payment
amount on your August gas bill.
• Tne woolly bea•- tha l Juzzy. black and bro wn
C&lt;tlerpillar of the tiger moth- is. according
to rura l tra(ht.on. a re liable fore Caster ot
wmu: r weEither. The narrower the reddish
Drown banCI around his mid cfl e. the colder
the wrni (H The more blac~ . the mo•e bleak.

Amount
Billed ·

Morll h

·-

$

BUdget Am ount
You Pay

6.36

$ 27.00

Sept

8 .73

27.00

Oct.

21.88

27.00

Nov.

26.92

27.00

Dec.

44.02

27.00

J.an.

49.36

27.00

Feb.

52.86

2roo

Mar.

45.21

27.00

April

28 .62

27.00

May

13.17

27.00

June

10.95

27.00

July

8.76

19.64

$3t6.64

$31.1;.64

Helen Help

,

·-~

~

Hutton reunion
..

v.

Us •••

By Helen Bottel

.I held at park

Where the Money Goes ...
'1
Dear Helen:
So _the gover:nment is spending $44,000 to study best ways of
removmg graffiti from public walls (as mentioned in one Of
your recent columns) . So what else is new?
A South Carolina newspaperman went through the
CongressiOnal Record and came up with much more unusual
expenditures than this.
Congr ess has apportioned:
$375,000 for the Pentagon to study the frisbee.
$121 ,000 to find out why people say " ain't."
$68,000 for the Queen of England for not planting cotton on
her plantation in Mississippi.
$6,000 to study Polish bisexual frogs.
$71,000 to compile the history of comic books.
$50,000 for the analysis of violin varnish .

The annual Hutton reunion
was held Aug. 10 at Forest
Acres Park with ~7 attending .
A basket dinner was served
at noon .
Prizes were awarded to
Henry Hutton, Columbus, the
oldest attending ; Vera
Hutton,
Dexter ,
the
youngest ; Marlene and
George Rich, Columbus ,
traveling the farthest; and
David Hutton, Albany, the
door prize .
Attending were Mr. and
$5,500 for the genius who wrote the poem "Ughght." Mrs . Henry Hutton, Mr . and
(That 's not the title of the poem, it is the whole p&lt;)em - which Mrs . He nry Hutton, Jr ., Mr .
and Mrs. George 1Marlene
me ans $785.71 for each Jetter. ))
$19,300 to the Health, Eoocalion and Welfare Department Hutton ) Rfch, Mrs . Alma
Hutton, Davidson Sue Cox,
to determine why children fall off tricycles.
Mrs . Barbara Hutton Mar$2,458 to train 18 Good Humor peddlers.
cum
, Yvonne and Alta
$70,000 to study the smell of perspiration given off by
Marcum, Rhonda Rich
Australian a borigines.
Gabbert
, Mr. and Mrs .
$428,361 for an odor-measuring machine for above project.
Not to speak of some $150,000 for new furnishings for Kenneth Hutton , Cindy,
Laurie and Gary Hutton,
Speaker of the House Carl Albert's government offices.
Robert Brancher, John Rich,
The list goes·on and on. - AVID READER

Richard
Leasure, Jim
Hammons, Paula Barrett;
Jim Barrett and Desi,
Columbus.
Mr . and Mrs. Robert
Barrett and Cassie, Roseville; Mr . and Mrs. Leroy
Hutton, Nelsonville ; Mr . and
Mrs . Don Hutton , Mr. and
Mrs . Roy (Shirley Hutton )
Jeffers; Athens ; Mr. and
Mrs . Lee 1Pat Hutton)
Hoisington , Mr . and Mrs .
Everett Hutton, David and
· Gary Hutton , Albany ; Mr .
and Mrs . Stanley Hutton and
Vera Hutton, Dexter; Mr.
and Mrs . Charles (Florence
Hutton ) Barrett, Marlene ,
Darlene
and
Patricia
Barrett, John Gilliam, Mr .
and Mrs . Charlie Barrett, Jr.,
Robin, Charlie Ill, Jennifer
Barrett, Hurley Hutton, Mr .
and Mrs. Wesley ( Merle
Hutton) Young, Rutland , and
Manford Hutton , Middleport.

Ice cream social planned
An ice cream social will be -available by the dip. Take
held at Royal Oak Park in the home orders wiU be filled for
archery building Saturday those who provide their own
evening sponsored by the containers.
In addition to the ice
Bashan Volunteer Fire
Department and .the Ladies cream, sandwiches , pie,
Auxiliary. Serving will begin cake, coffee and soft drinks
at 6 p.m. Four flavors will be will be sold . At 8 p .m . a
square dance will be held
along with rock music and
vocal selections. The local
square dance club will
present western swing . For
the dance there will be a
small charge at the door .

Mason Area
News Notes

By Elsie Roach
Rev . and Mrs. Stan Craig
Dear Helen :
and children, Jonathan and
I'm 2l , my husband 23, and we've been married a year. He Christi of Greenville, South
says he's tired of sex, and if once a month isn'lenoughfor me, I Carolina, and Rev . Walter
should find someone else to do me a favor. That's against my Cloud were dinner guests of
morals, although I could easily attract other men - as I've Miss Alice Roach of Letart
discovered.
Route I, Fairview, last
Which should I choose: To Jive without sex and be guilt· Tuesday .
free but deprived, or have an affair and feel guilty but
Mr . and Mrs. Burton R.
satisfied " Tim loves me, but he'd rather sit all evening and Webb of Mansfield, Ohio
drink himself to sleep. - UPSET AND LONELY
visited ·Saturday night with
Mr . and Mrs. Paul Randolph,
Dear U and L:
Stella and Stacie Krebbs.
There's a third and better choice: Get your husband to a They also attended the Wolfe
therapi st before he becomes an impotent alcohollc. - H.
Reunion last Sunday .
BUSINESS
8 ll
ioiiM
Mr. and Mrs. Norman
Shoaf, Teresa, David and
'iOt)'~E \l\l&amp;T ~
Sherri of Palatine, lll. visited
1141U' 8Ec.A 1Xe 400~ I
with Mrs. Shoaf's parents,
i-llll.IE t'W'T He~ee;?r.
Mr. and Mrs. T. R. Davis for
several days. Mr. and Mrs.
Davis's granddaughter, Kim
Johnson of Westerville, Ohio,
also visited Tuesday thru
Thursday.
The Oak Grove United
Methodist Church held. its
Sunday school picnic in July
at the Racine Lock and Darn
A Public Servi ce of This Newspaper &amp; The Advertising Council
' picnic area. Rev. Bobby
-~
Woods, church pastor, spoke
after the noon hour . Those
present were Clarence and
ErceU Adkins, Virgil and
Louise Adkins and Julia,
Lester and Rellie Adkins,
Bill, Lucy, Johnny, Bill, Jack
and Terry Cullen. Ray, Pat,
Mark and Mike Friend;
Ma~tha,
Raymond and
Norman Friend: Stella and
Stade Krebbs; Glen, Sue,
Allen and Amy Icenhower:
Paul and Alice Randolph and
Eddie
Woods .
Several
families were absent due to
illness.
Rev. Bobby Woods of the
Union United Methodist
Charge had a baptismal
service recently in the Ohio
river at the site of Cross's
Store at Letart, W. Va.
Baptized were from Oak
Grove, Vernon and Union
Churches and from New
'
Haven.
'
Vacation Bible School was
held at Oak Grove United
Methodist church July 28
through\ August I. Martha
Friend
was director, Stella
'
Krebbs was pianist and Alice
Randolph was in charge of
the puppet Story.
Mr. C. M. Wolfe is still at
patient at Pleasant Valley
Hospital. He had been put in

•

m
..

.

tou

cAuMBIAGAS

.'

:;

reporter Bill McDonald of the Columbia (S. C. ) State newspaper .
$14,000 for Ford Motor Co., for not planting wheat.
$2 million for Yugoslavia's Marshal Tito for the purchase
of a yacht.
$80,000for a zero-gravity toilet for the space program, and
$23,000 for environmental testing of same.
$20,000 to study the blood groups of Polish Zlotnika pigs.
$5,000 to tabulate the difference between native American
and Indian whistling ducks.
$5,000 to learn about Yugoslavian intertidal hermit crabs.
I wonder if Congress would consider a grant of $10,000 (I'm
not greedy·) for the study of my pet research project : Why
hu sbands a re constitutionally incapable of neatly rehanging
their used towels on bathroom racks. - H.

ADULT MEAL

PT, PLEASANT

..,.,.,.,.,.,.,...,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,......w:·.········""~- ..

Here are a few more prize expenditures, as compiled by

winter,

2325 Jack!;Jon Ave.

~

And so do our taxes'

The situation is confusing
at best. Courts have not
followed patterns in deciding
the cases. Some blacks and
whites favor busing while
others vehemently oppose it.
"Parents don't realize what
they're doing when they let
their children be bused out,"
said Mrs. Dorothy Hardy, a
black former PTA president

were trimmed to and hopes government fuel
102,310 this week. Industry economy ratings will put it
observers predicted a drop around 40 miles per gallon on
below 83,000 by mid· the highway.
The Chevette will be
September. Short-term
layoffs for the new-model powered by an 85-horsepower
changeovers dropped from four-cylinder engine based on
38,275 last week to 10,925 this a GM design used In the
Brazilian .and
English
week .
Ford will close three Chevette models.
Its overall length is almost
assembly
plants
for
20
inches shorter than the'
changeover this week and
GM wi!i have one closed. Chevrolet Vega 's 175.4 in·
Chrysler begins retooling ches, now one of \he shortest
operations at week's end and · U .S.-built cars. Its weight i.S
American Motors, smallest of almost 500 pounds less than
the U.S. auto companies, has the Vega.
GM's Chevette is basically
been building its largely unchanged '76 models since late . the same car the firm has
been building overseas for
July.
several
years. But its apThe Chevelle is the car that
likely will draw the most pearance has been changed
attention during the 1971). to meet U.S. safety and
model year. GM has been emission standards as well as
pushing to get the car ready the demands of American
buyers.

~-:;::;::······· . . ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . ,..."".... "-'~'.'!U. ...

Dear Reader :

Chevette first off lines
DETROIT ( UPI) - The
U.S. auto industry is ready
with its first response to fuel•
efficient foreign minicars. Its
name is the Chevrolet
Chevette.
The first of the under-2,001).
pound Chevettes cars was
scheduled off a General
Motors assem~ly line at the
firm's Wilmington, Del.,
plant shortly after noon
today. The four.,..at car will
debut about Oct. 2 with h
price tag expected to be
around $2,850.
The Wilmington plant,
closed for retooling since
June 13, was among 17 car
and assembly lines beginning
1976-model production today
to drop industry layoffs by
nearly 29,000 workers.
Long-term layoffs, which
peaked at 212,000 during the

7 -:- The D~ily Sentinel, Middleport·Pomeroy,_O., Monday, Aug. 18, ~975.

Recent ·trip .enjoyed.

Polly's Pointer

J uanita Justis, Middleport, went in to the 21-stor y tower to
took her g randmother , Mr s . view the J;!reater par t or
BY POLLY CRAMER
Et hel Sarson , Rac in e, to • Ka nsas City. One evening
Gra nd \•ie w , Mo. for a week 's they saw Edd ie Fisher a nd
vis it with he r oldest so n and De lla Reese in person a t the
daug hter-in -law Mr . a nd Mr s . Starli ght Theatre.
A Sllrprise pa rty was held
Whee ler Sa rson, Jr . where
bed unmadt! when airing the her 75 t·h bi rthday an · for Mrs. Sarson with a
POLLY'S I'ROllLt:M
chicke n din ner foll owed by
DEAR POLLY - I li ve in a room. Uurn a small eh•rtric niversa r y was t:e l e br ated
icc cream and cake. Atba seme nt 1ga rd en le vel ) ligh\ bulb In your closet but Aug. 8.
The tr ip lo Mis!louri lendi ng were Mr. and Mrs.
apartme nt and have a musty be s ure it not too do ~e to
odor in my bedroom. The clothe s~ Take eve rything out mar ked th e first plane ride Wheele r Sa rson, J r .. Mr . a nd
Mrs . Ga il Sisson, Sha wn a nd
other rooms a r e fine and this of the r loset and off the bed fo r bn lh .J Uan i ta and Mrs.
Shelly.
Mr . an d Mrs. Ric ha rd
may be because they are and che&lt;·k for mild ew. 11 an)' Sar son. Hig hli ght5 of the ir
Vcm
Buskirk
, Darliel a nd
healed and this dries them spots are seen wipe off witb a time in Missour i inc luded
out. My clothes and the bed cloth slightly dampened with visits tu Trwnan 's Librar y. Kat hleen. J uanita and the
honored gues t. Pictures we re
clothes hav e a te rrible musty denatur e d al c ohol. Turn his grave s ite an d his hom e .
odor. The a par tment is also mattre ss and spring s ove r 'l11ey s pe nt tim e at Ind e pe nd~ ta k e n as t he ca ke wa s
presented a nd t he gifts
near a lake. Do you ha ve a ny and be sure th crc is no ence Shopping Mall whi ch is
mildew lurking on th(' bot- three levels hig h , a nd ope ned. It was the firsl time
ideas for me? - D. W.
Mr s . Sarson had seen four or
DEAR D. W. - Every mail tom. Look O\'Cr shot•s, purses,
her
gr eat-g r a ndchildren.
has letters from readers with etc. . in the elosd since It
Juanita and he r g r a nd lhese problems so they arc oftt·n s hows up on S Ul' h
olht'r were taken lo and
rn
quite prevalent all over the thing s. Spray rlosct with a
me l at the a irport by Mr. and
country. A musty odor Is a good di s infectant bdon·
Mrs. Jmnes t Br enda J Pe tti t
clothes
and
sign of dampn ess and repla e ing
a
nd J a mi e, and Mr. and Mrs.
"mildew Is the superficial perhaps wash it down with a
Willi am J ustis. Juanita ha s
growth, usually white. that Is good dis infe ctant in the water
now returne d to her: e tnprodu c ed
on
organi c but l&lt;•t it dry thoroughly
ployme nt at Th e Ohi o Palle t
materials by fungi. " The before replacing c ontents. A
Co.
calf.se must be found and then dehumidifier would also be a
cured before attacking the great help.
If the apartment Is rented it
odor since any cure, otherwise only would be tern· would be well to dis cuss the
porary. Have you cheeked the problem with the landlord
walls to see If there is any who might supply these or at
least help with the •·usL The
sign of dampness there?
Since the other rooms are air must be dried out. Whe n a
April Wi se, 14, Middleport,
odorless and heated and this £irm foundation is laid then
forme rly of Sidne)'• Ohio Is
one Is not tt stands to reason work on the odor. Burning pktured holding the trophy
that heat would do a lot. A vanilla candles is a wonderful
she recei ved for finishing
portable elec tric heater odor remover. Also bowls of fifth in a Rolle r·Skallng
certainly would add to the vinegar c an be Se t around in rontost held In May at Sidney
room 's comfort and doubtless unseen spots. These could be
to raise money fo.r Muscular
help dry out the air If used used in addition to any room Dystrophy. Miss Wise skated
enough. Open the windows on odor spray you like . 50 miles and raised $150 for
dry breezy days. Leave the POLLY.
the fund .

Dry out damp room
to end musty odor

DEAR

POLLY

-

My

RETURNED HOME
Mrs. Myrta Wilson has
ret urned to Columbus after

Point e r conce rn s cookin g
corn on the cob. I had no pan

reall y large enough to cook

Social
Calendar
MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT Business
and Professional Women's
Club, 7:30 p .. m. at the
Columbia Gas Co. Members
to take guests. Fund raising
project to be carried out at
the meeting.
MIDDLEPORT BPW~ 7:30
p.m., Columbia Gas1 Co .,
Members to take guests.
MEIGS Band Boosters,
7:30p.m., in the band room at
the high school. Band parents
urged to attend.
TUESDAY
HARRISONVILLE Senior
Citi2ens' Club, at the school
house 9·3. Will quilt.
FRIENDLY CIRCLE,
Trinity Church, 7:30 p.m.
Mrs . Roy Mayer, leader.
THURSDAY
MAGNOLIA Club, 7:30 p.
m. at the home of Mrs. Ellen
Couch.

spen ding time her e with Mrs .

enough corn £or a meal so I
starte d usin g my round
r oa s te r for thi s. It is wide bu t
not so deep so t he corn has
room t o s prea d a round whUc

Helen J ohn son, Wolf Pe n and
he r

vill e . a nd Mr s.

You will rer eiv e a dollar i(
Poll y uses your fa\'Orit e

Mr s. Wilson a ttend ed the
fun eral of Pa ul Winn, and
the n the Smith reunion Aug. 3

idea,

P et

ROBERT BROOKS

Birthday
celebrated

His

i
i

Ac r es

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

is

mate rnal

TH URS DAY, August 28
Merle Haggard Show
FRIDAY. August 29
Earth, Wind II.. Fire
SATURDAY,August30
Bo Donaldson II.. The Heywoods
(Afternoon Show )
Bob Hope II.. La Costa ( Ntght
Show)
SUNDAY. August 31
8 AM - 5 rM Ohio State Fair
Gospel Singing Contest

THU RSD AY. August 2 t
Mac Davis
FRIDAY, AuguSI 22
Mac Davis
SArtfRD AY. August 2 3
Roger Miller: Captain II.. Tenn1lle
SUND AY. Au gus t 24
Roy Rogers II.. Dale Evans
Roy Dusty Rogers, Jr. II..
Sons of the rloneers
MONDAY. Augus t 25
raul Anka
TUt.SDAY. Au g us t 26
rat Boone II.. The Young

grandparents are Mrs. Hazel
Carsey and Marvey Carsey of
Columbus . Cake and ice
cream were served after the

HERE FOR FAIR
Mr . and Mrs . James
Hawley, Scott, Shawn and Jyl wiener roast. Robert's
of Tecumseh, Mich., spent day was Aug . 4.
fiar week here with their
grandmother, Mrs. Grace
,,,,w~· ··
., ..
Hawley and Mrs. Robert :-..,... .. ~.
Allensworth, Middleport.

F or est

Aug.21-Sept.1

Robert's pa ternal grand ·
mother .

Park ,
Rut lct11 d . ShC' returned hom e
Sunday afler attend in g th e
J ohnson ramily reunion at
Kac he lm ac he r Pa rk , Logan.

at

OHIO

Robert Uoyd Brooks, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd Brooks of
Alfred, celebrated his ei ghth
birthday at his home with a
wienec roast and party .
Attending the celebration
were Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Hughe~ and daughters, Kim
and Michelle , Kevin , Jim and
Debbie Brooks, Mrs. Mildred
Brooks, Janet and Kei th .
Mrs . Mildred Brooks of
Plain s

Vir g inia

cookin g. - .JOAN .

Peeve, Polly's Probll'm or
solution to a problem. Write
Polly in carr of this news·
papt:r.

Tuppers

Ma rvin

Morri s, Langs-

.J ohnson who is a pat ie nt a t
Vete ra ns Memorial Hospital.

hom e making

near

cou sins. Mrs.

1 Mildr ed )

birth~

Pomeroy
Personal Notes

Wolfpen

Mr . and Mrs . Charles Bing,
Pinellas Park, Fla., were
guests
several days last week
Mr. and Mrs. Carl McElroy
of
Mr.
and Mrs. Vincent
of Columbus were weekend
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Dabo, Pomeroy , and Mr. and
McElroy and Mr. and Mrs . Mrs. Tom Kelly and family,
Bill McElroy, Jeff and Joey. Middleport .
Mr . and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
Haning and family visited Lochary and children,
Mrs. Elsie Bratton of Rad· and Robert, left' Sunday
cUff. Mrs . Bratton returned their home near Chicago,
home with them to visit her after an extended visit
with their parents , Mr . and
sister. Mr. and· Mrs. Fred
Mrs . Patrick Lochary and
Tuckerman.
Charles Knapp spent last Mr . and Mrs . Leo Story.
Pvt. James Lochary. Jr.
week with his grndmolher,
left
Sunday for Fort Meade,
Mrs . Lena Knapp, of
intensive care.
Md . after visi ling here wi lh · •
Sherman Blessing of Letart Langsville.
his grandparents, Mf. and ;t&gt;.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Sum·
is also a patient at Pleasant
Mrs. Patrick Lochary . Mr. ''.:.,,
merfield
and daughter of
Vall~y.
and Mrs . James Lochary ,
Holly Boyer of Mason is a Illinois are visiting her Susie, Patty and Chris of Glen
. heart patient at Holzer parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert · Ridge, N. J., who had also
Medical Center. He has been Russell and Mr. and Mrs. been visiting here, went from
a patient for several weeks Donald Russell, Mr . and Mrs. here to Florida to visit Mrs.
and. will be there for several Steve Haggy and Stephanie
and Mr . and Mrs. Ronald Lochary 's paren ts.
more.
Russell, Mandy and Michael.
VISITED
Mr. and Mrs. William
Mr. and Mrs . John
Russell of Minersivlle were
Stone Toll. f f th Sunday afternoon VISitors
· ·
f
Allen
sworth, Kristin and
o
f h
Th etomsoc1eso
b
e
• Courtney, Mt. Gilead, have
Tribe in Dankali, Mrica . Bertha Russell.
.
were· once constructed by piling Mrs. Chnton Gtlkey of been here visiting ··Mr. and
branches in the form of a hut. Albany was a recent v1s1tor of Mrs. Millard Wildermuth and
Mrs. Robert Allensworth ,
The number of stones lining the Mr. Lincoln Russell.
Murphy
and Middleport. While here they
path leading to its entrance Carmel
revealed the number of DemarisAsharevacationing attended the Meigs County
F a ir .
enemies the chief had killed. in Illinois.

Bol&gt; Hope&amp;. La Costa ( Ni.":',ht
ShOW )

MONDAY I LABOR DAY i.
September 1

Americans

WEDNES DAY. Augus t 2 7
Tanya Tucker &amp;. The Young
Americans

The Osmond&lt; II.. Munch
DA ILY
Mark Wilson 's Magk Show

•

Admissio n $2 .00 for Adults: 50t for Chi ldren 12 oncl under. FREE to
Child ren 12 ond und er wee ltcl ays until Noon
• World's L.1rgest You th Music
• Anh euser- Busch Clycl esdales
Progro m
• Ohi o Vil lage (Fai r With in A Fair,
•
Wo
rld's Lorgest Stoce Fair Fin e
ci rco\- 185 0 )
Art s Exhibi t
• Sol e o f Chompio ns Livestock
•

Au ction
• Ci rcus
• Hnrness Racin_rs

•
•
•
•

World 's Letrges t State fair Horse

Show
• Wolid' L,1rgeS\ Lt vestock
Exhibiti o n

Pet ting Zoo
Horse Pull ing
Class A Troc tor Pull
lnte rnotio nol Hot Ai r Bal loon
Roce

• World's Lorgesr Junior Foir
• Colu m bus. O hio on 1-71 at 17th
Ave. Easy to li nd . .. plenty o f
par lting

.,

.

,.
. I

'

'

I

�)

.,

6- The DaUv Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Monday, Aug . 18, 1975

•

North writhing m ·own
desegregation battle

I''· ' ,
·'

WINNERS IN THE PRETTY BABY CONTEST are pictured here with their mothers
following jul\ging at the Meigs County Fair Saturday afternoon . From left are Scott Jason
Moore, son of Mr. and Mrs. Freddie L. Moore, Rt. 2, Cheshire; Ada m Perry Little , son of
Mr. and Mrs . Michael Little, Rt. t, Middleport ; Ri chard Da vid Carson, son of Mr. a nd Mrs.
Charles Carson, Rt. 4, Pomeroy and Gordon Wesley Holter , son of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon
Holter, Rt . 1, Reedsville.

'

.'
...: . '...1

By DONALD A. DAVIS
children to deseg regated
United Press International
schools. This year. all five
" Mrs. Peabody came down members of the school board
here to help us integrate in · in Pasadena, Calif., owe their
Alabama," said Dr . Erskine positions to an anti-busing
Murray , an assistant slate stand .
superintendent of education
Boston now is in the
in Montgomery. " Somebody spotlight. The first year of
told her she might have been desegregation was ac·
able to find something to do at complished amid violence .
home if she 'd only looked for On Sept . 8, the second phase
it. "
begins with some 26,000 stu ~
Mrs. Mary Peabody, dents to be bused under court
moth e r
of
former orders and the watchful eyes
Massachusetts Gov. Endicott of thousands of police .
Peabody, was among the civil
Already the city is tense .
rights activists of the 1961ls Fiv e-thousand blacks and
who streamed in from nor~ white s tossed r ocks and
thern slates to help blacks in bottles at each other during a
Dixie achieve equality in South
Boston
bea c h
schools, cafeterias and voting demonstration last week.
booths ...
"It has nothing to do with
Now the wheel has racism," said police Capt .
reversed .
John Kenneally, standing
Hays Mizell , of the with 800 other policemen
American Friends Service bet ween the mobs . " The
Committee, said that in South whole thing was caused by
Carolina the dual school forced busing."
system has been "effectively
''Busing," as it is now
dismantled." He now flies to called, began with the filing
Boston occasionally to coach 10 years ago of a lawsuit
civil rights leaders on school against the Board of
desegregation.
Education in CharlotteThe desegregation of class- Mecklenburg, N.C. In 1971,
rooms no longer is a problem the U.S. Supreme Court ruled
for a geographical area of the school busing could be used to
nation, but rather one of the bring about classroom racial
many problems facing urban balance. Last year, 46,000
areas.
students were bused to class
For instance, former Gov . there .
Linwood Holton of Virginia
" Busing is a form of
defused the opening of transportation, that's all it is.
schools under a busing edict Schools in the past were set
in 1970 by sending his

Richmonl\, Va. "Most of the
concern in the South now is on
education issues, involving
quality of education ."
To the north , a black
newsman received an award
recently for coverage of the
violent opening last fall of
Boston 's schools. He said that
although racism is denied by
the white community, he fell
that was actually the case .
"The signs painted on those
fence s don't say 'Buses go
home,"' he said . " They say,
"Niggers go home."

at the almost all-black Boise
School in Portland, Ore .
" When my children were
taken to a white school, they
got no more than they would
have gotten at Boise."
"I don't think busing kids
around from school to school
creates desegregation. It ere·

ates racial isolation because

up to perpetuate the
separation of races. We now
have to end this situation and
if the only way to accomplish
this is to transport students,
then people are going lo have
to be transported ," said Fred
Banks, a Ja ckson, Miss .,
black attorney.
"Busing is just a code word
for fhose opposed to in·
tegration in any fonn, and
this is true everywhere.''
In Little Rock, Ark., scene
of racial turbulence two
decades ago, 10,500 in aU
grades will be bused this faU.
&lt;~ We've
been extremely
pleased with it. No racial
problems whatsoever," said
Jim Pale, Little Rock's
school transportation
director.
" It is not going to work too
weU," said Karl Karp, school
superintendent
in
In·
dianapolis. Twenty-thousand
students are being bused
within the city under a court
plan.

those who can afford to, run,"
said Bet(y Deacon, a city

council

candidate

in

Baltimore.
Her attitude sums up. one
fear of educators - white
fli ght from the schools which
will receive black students.
Federal judges have not been
able to bring suburbs into the
city busing situation . In Rich·
mood, Va ., city schools are 75
per
cent
black .
In
Wilmington, Del., 83 per cent.
In AUanta, it's 85 per cent.
· In ' addition, metropolitan

areas

Give your kids

ajUfTIP
on life.
Ttlil llfl inlilf81M:I ~or )IOVf
cnlld 1wmp11n vlllltl- tlwl
JHim i u~~ don't! Alii! 1
Nllionwlde -a•nlltiOU\ thl
Jw.,.nill E11•11 8utJC141r

are running into

financial problems because
of inflation and parents
fleeing to the suburbs .
Buses in Duval County,
F1a., (Jacksonville) hauled
23,000 of the 54,000 students a
total 47,298 miles per day.
The cost was $4.5 million last
year.
:'In most places in the
South, the issue has died
down and the public
recognizes it's no longer a
political issue," said black
attorney Henry March, in

policy '

P. J. PAULEY
JOT Spring AYtt., Pomo,...,

MOTHERS AND BABIES POSED for pictures of winners of the 1975 pretty baby contest
Saturday. The children and their parents' names are front , I;, Emily Johnson, Mr. and
Mrs. Alan Duane Johnson, 122 Union Ave ., Pomeroy, and Dee Anne Cline, Mr. and Mrs.
John .W. Cline, Reedsville; back row , April Tannehill, Mr. and Mrs. Mark Tannehill
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy; Angela Mills, Mr. and Mrs. Homer Mills Jr ., Syracuse; Mist;
Dawn Newell, Mr. and Mrs. John Newell, Rt.l, Long Bottom, and Michelle Rene Donovan
Mr. and Mrs. George Donovan, Rt. 2, Coolville.
'

Rabin defends
interim peace
Israeli Prime Minister
Yitzhak Rabin went before a
special session of parliament
today and defended the
proposed interim peace
agreement with Egypt
against angry charges from
the right-wing Likud party
that the United Stales was
forcing it down Israel's
throat.
While the Likud was
demanding
Rabin's
resignation,

some 50 women

gathered outside the Knesset
building in Jerusalem and
demonstrated against the
government's policies. They
carried signs reading "No

Munich here," 8.nd "We are
not dogs to jump through
Kissinger's hoop."
A few of the women
paraded about the plaza
wearing dog collars and
leashes. They were led by a
woman carrying an effigy of
Secretary of Stale Henry A.
Kissinger.
Kissinger, after talks with
MORE WINNERS IN THE 14 GROUPS of children competing .in the pretty baby
President Ford in Vail, Colo .,
contest at.the fair Saturday were AJisa Willford, daughter of. Gary and Joann Willford,
said he was optimistic about
Racine; Michael Evans, son of Linda and Denny Evans, Racine ; and Danny Robinson, son
the resumption of hia Middle
of Danny and Susie Robinson , Rl. 2, Pomeroy.
East shuttle mission. He
arrives in Israel Thursday
and Egyptian reports said he
would meet President Anwar
.
Sadal in Alexandria on
Cash awatdli were made 1o
7,000 out of field', Nancy Hoffman, Rober! Brown and Friday.
winners of a tractor pull Carnahan, · Tony Carnahan , Dane Wa tson
The Israeli parliamentary
· Saturday at the 112th annual Robert Wright, Larry Slinka
5,0GO m odified , Ronnie session was one of the
Meigs County Fair:
Youn g, Roy Brooks, Harold angriest sessions in memory
and Max Williams.
Cash prizes of $80, $61), $30,
Ford
, Jim J ohnson and Jim and jeers and catcalls
9,000 out of field , Huck
$20 and $10 to the top five Wagner, Curl Battrell, Ron Codner .
frequently
interrupted
' winners i~ each class (in that
Rabin's half-hour preorder) as reported by' the
CHURCHES GUARDED
·
h~ldups and assaults. Two sentation .
Meigs County Fair · Board,
CLEVELAND (UP! ) "Kissinger's arrival does
churches were robbed and a
were:
Thirty-six extra policemen minister and his family not mean that there is a
5,000 out of field, Dale were on duty in areas of · beaten two weeks ago. No finished pact at Jiand, and It
Perry, Blll Clifton , Eric Cleveland with large num - se rious incide nts we re does not give final approval'
BrODt,, Rodney. Chevalier bers of churches Sunda y repor ted Sunday.
.to an agreement · which is
llld Ken SJmpion . '.
' becaUse of recent rhurr h
already achieved ," R11bin
I
I
'
I,

Money awarded winners in tractor pull

~

,.

. .,, /•

said .
"We will sign an interim
agreement only if we will be
convinced that it will be to the
betterment of Israel's
needs," Rabin said.
"The anticipated visit in
Israel and Egypt is accepted
because of our clear wili to
reach an interim agreement
with benefits for Israel and
Egypt as a step in the
progress towards peace."
, Rabin added, "I can now
say with forcefulness that our
position in the process of
negotiations to reach an
·interim agreement is better
now than it was in March."
Opposition
leader
Menachem Begin opened the
special Knesset session with
an appeal to the Rabin
government to resign.
"This is an example not of
an agreement in stages, but a
surrender in stages," Begin
said.

"The interim agreement is
endangering the security of
Israel and therefore ·it is bad
in its roots and its foundations
and we oppose it," he said.
Begin said the three-year
term of the agreement would
be "an lrivitation to additional pressures and concessiOnS without peace."
In his reply Rabin said
"any attempt to characterize
our position as a catastrophe
must . be seen as an
irresponsible characterization, one which doesn't
fit the reality."
Today's session was forced
,by the Likud which gathered
the requilled 30 signatures to
force · a special session .
Howe:ver a formal debate was
postpon~ unil' later.

'

FOR KIDS-

FUNMEALlM

Big S he! ~
Reg . Fr enc h Fri es.

Fun Tra y.
Funburger · .
~ eg. Fr em: ll Fries.
Su rpri se Pr i.ze.
Reg. Soft Dr ink &amp;
a Sweet Tr ea t

Turnover &amp;
Large SoU Dr ink

GALLIPOLIS
~503

Eastern, Ave.

":' Copyu\l ltl 1975 Burg er Ch cl SystEms . Inc .

*Woolly Bear sez-

"Don't get caught with your
winter heating bills up!'
~ ./

~CrDo

cD®nUD ®l!II

~Cf@ilix7 \301J~[[o ~~
~"Improve your attic insulation.

""' Hav.e your gas furnace checked.
""' Join Columbia's Budget Payment Plan.
The Budget Payment Plan spreads your yearly heating bills over twelve
mo~thly payments. It· doesn't eliminate the chill of winter weather,

but tl sure takes the shtver out of winter heating bills.
Over the course of the year you still pay the same total amount for
gas. But co~e January and 'February when you're getting those big
Christmas brlls. you won't be getting those big heating bills too .

How the Budget Payment Plan worksYour Budget Payment account
will be reviewed and adj.usted, if
necessary, in April : In July you
will be billed the amount neces..:
sary to settle your account. The
example shown illustrates the

Aug .

•

way the plan works (naturally,
the amounts in yo~r own apcount

witt be different).
The Budget Payment Plan year
begins in August.

.
See your Budget Payment
amount on your August gas bill.
• Tne woolly bea•- tha l Juzzy. black and bro wn
C&lt;tlerpillar of the tiger moth- is. according
to rura l tra(ht.on. a re liable fore Caster ot
wmu: r weEither. The narrower the reddish
Drown banCI around his mid cfl e. the colder
the wrni (H The more blac~ . the mo•e bleak.

Amount
Billed ·

Morll h

·-

$

BUdget Am ount
You Pay

6.36

$ 27.00

Sept

8 .73

27.00

Oct.

21.88

27.00

Nov.

26.92

27.00

Dec.

44.02

27.00

J.an.

49.36

27.00

Feb.

52.86

2roo

Mar.

45.21

27.00

April

28 .62

27.00

May

13.17

27.00

June

10.95

27.00

July

8.76

19.64

$3t6.64

$31.1;.64

Helen Help

,

·-~

~

Hutton reunion
..

v.

Us •••

By Helen Bottel

.I held at park

Where the Money Goes ...
'1
Dear Helen:
So _the gover:nment is spending $44,000 to study best ways of
removmg graffiti from public walls (as mentioned in one Of
your recent columns) . So what else is new?
A South Carolina newspaperman went through the
CongressiOnal Record and came up with much more unusual
expenditures than this.
Congr ess has apportioned:
$375,000 for the Pentagon to study the frisbee.
$121 ,000 to find out why people say " ain't."
$68,000 for the Queen of England for not planting cotton on
her plantation in Mississippi.
$6,000 to study Polish bisexual frogs.
$71,000 to compile the history of comic books.
$50,000 for the analysis of violin varnish .

The annual Hutton reunion
was held Aug. 10 at Forest
Acres Park with ~7 attending .
A basket dinner was served
at noon .
Prizes were awarded to
Henry Hutton, Columbus, the
oldest attending ; Vera
Hutton,
Dexter ,
the
youngest ; Marlene and
George Rich, Columbus ,
traveling the farthest; and
David Hutton, Albany, the
door prize .
Attending were Mr. and
$5,500 for the genius who wrote the poem "Ughght." Mrs . Henry Hutton, Mr . and
(That 's not the title of the poem, it is the whole p&lt;)em - which Mrs . He nry Hutton, Jr ., Mr .
and Mrs. George 1Marlene
me ans $785.71 for each Jetter. ))
$19,300 to the Health, Eoocalion and Welfare Department Hutton ) Rfch, Mrs . Alma
Hutton, Davidson Sue Cox,
to determine why children fall off tricycles.
Mrs . Barbara Hutton Mar$2,458 to train 18 Good Humor peddlers.
cum
, Yvonne and Alta
$70,000 to study the smell of perspiration given off by
Marcum, Rhonda Rich
Australian a borigines.
Gabbert
, Mr. and Mrs .
$428,361 for an odor-measuring machine for above project.
Not to speak of some $150,000 for new furnishings for Kenneth Hutton , Cindy,
Laurie and Gary Hutton,
Speaker of the House Carl Albert's government offices.
Robert Brancher, John Rich,
The list goes·on and on. - AVID READER

Richard
Leasure, Jim
Hammons, Paula Barrett;
Jim Barrett and Desi,
Columbus.
Mr . and Mrs. Robert
Barrett and Cassie, Roseville; Mr . and Mrs. Leroy
Hutton, Nelsonville ; Mr . and
Mrs . Don Hutton , Mr. and
Mrs . Roy (Shirley Hutton )
Jeffers; Athens ; Mr. and
Mrs . Lee 1Pat Hutton)
Hoisington , Mr . and Mrs .
Everett Hutton, David and
· Gary Hutton , Albany ; Mr .
and Mrs . Stanley Hutton and
Vera Hutton, Dexter; Mr.
and Mrs . Charles (Florence
Hutton ) Barrett, Marlene ,
Darlene
and
Patricia
Barrett, John Gilliam, Mr .
and Mrs . Charlie Barrett, Jr.,
Robin, Charlie Ill, Jennifer
Barrett, Hurley Hutton, Mr .
and Mrs. Wesley ( Merle
Hutton) Young, Rutland , and
Manford Hutton , Middleport.

Ice cream social planned
An ice cream social will be -available by the dip. Take
held at Royal Oak Park in the home orders wiU be filled for
archery building Saturday those who provide their own
evening sponsored by the containers.
In addition to the ice
Bashan Volunteer Fire
Department and .the Ladies cream, sandwiches , pie,
Auxiliary. Serving will begin cake, coffee and soft drinks
at 6 p.m. Four flavors will be will be sold . At 8 p .m . a
square dance will be held
along with rock music and
vocal selections. The local
square dance club will
present western swing . For
the dance there will be a
small charge at the door .

Mason Area
News Notes

By Elsie Roach
Rev . and Mrs. Stan Craig
Dear Helen :
and children, Jonathan and
I'm 2l , my husband 23, and we've been married a year. He Christi of Greenville, South
says he's tired of sex, and if once a month isn'lenoughfor me, I Carolina, and Rev . Walter
should find someone else to do me a favor. That's against my Cloud were dinner guests of
morals, although I could easily attract other men - as I've Miss Alice Roach of Letart
discovered.
Route I, Fairview, last
Which should I choose: To Jive without sex and be guilt· Tuesday .
free but deprived, or have an affair and feel guilty but
Mr . and Mrs. Burton R.
satisfied " Tim loves me, but he'd rather sit all evening and Webb of Mansfield, Ohio
drink himself to sleep. - UPSET AND LONELY
visited ·Saturday night with
Mr . and Mrs. Paul Randolph,
Dear U and L:
Stella and Stacie Krebbs.
There's a third and better choice: Get your husband to a They also attended the Wolfe
therapi st before he becomes an impotent alcohollc. - H.
Reunion last Sunday .
BUSINESS
8 ll
ioiiM
Mr. and Mrs. Norman
Shoaf, Teresa, David and
'iOt)'~E \l\l&amp;T ~
Sherri of Palatine, lll. visited
1141U' 8Ec.A 1Xe 400~ I
with Mrs. Shoaf's parents,
i-llll.IE t'W'T He~ee;?r.
Mr. and Mrs. T. R. Davis for
several days. Mr. and Mrs.
Davis's granddaughter, Kim
Johnson of Westerville, Ohio,
also visited Tuesday thru
Thursday.
The Oak Grove United
Methodist Church held. its
Sunday school picnic in July
at the Racine Lock and Darn
A Public Servi ce of This Newspaper &amp; The Advertising Council
' picnic area. Rev. Bobby
-~
Woods, church pastor, spoke
after the noon hour . Those
present were Clarence and
ErceU Adkins, Virgil and
Louise Adkins and Julia,
Lester and Rellie Adkins,
Bill, Lucy, Johnny, Bill, Jack
and Terry Cullen. Ray, Pat,
Mark and Mike Friend;
Ma~tha,
Raymond and
Norman Friend: Stella and
Stade Krebbs; Glen, Sue,
Allen and Amy Icenhower:
Paul and Alice Randolph and
Eddie
Woods .
Several
families were absent due to
illness.
Rev. Bobby Woods of the
Union United Methodist
Charge had a baptismal
service recently in the Ohio
river at the site of Cross's
Store at Letart, W. Va.
Baptized were from Oak
Grove, Vernon and Union
Churches and from New
'
Haven.
'
Vacation Bible School was
held at Oak Grove United
Methodist church July 28
through\ August I. Martha
Friend
was director, Stella
'
Krebbs was pianist and Alice
Randolph was in charge of
the puppet Story.
Mr. C. M. Wolfe is still at
patient at Pleasant Valley
Hospital. He had been put in

•

m
..

.

tou

cAuMBIAGAS

.'

:;

reporter Bill McDonald of the Columbia (S. C. ) State newspaper .
$14,000 for Ford Motor Co., for not planting wheat.
$2 million for Yugoslavia's Marshal Tito for the purchase
of a yacht.
$80,000for a zero-gravity toilet for the space program, and
$23,000 for environmental testing of same.
$20,000 to study the blood groups of Polish Zlotnika pigs.
$5,000 to tabulate the difference between native American
and Indian whistling ducks.
$5,000 to learn about Yugoslavian intertidal hermit crabs.
I wonder if Congress would consider a grant of $10,000 (I'm
not greedy·) for the study of my pet research project : Why
hu sbands a re constitutionally incapable of neatly rehanging
their used towels on bathroom racks. - H.

ADULT MEAL

PT, PLEASANT

..,.,.,.,.,.,.,...,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,......w:·.········""~- ..

Here are a few more prize expenditures, as compiled by

winter,

2325 Jack!;Jon Ave.

~

And so do our taxes'

The situation is confusing
at best. Courts have not
followed patterns in deciding
the cases. Some blacks and
whites favor busing while
others vehemently oppose it.
"Parents don't realize what
they're doing when they let
their children be bused out,"
said Mrs. Dorothy Hardy, a
black former PTA president

were trimmed to and hopes government fuel
102,310 this week. Industry economy ratings will put it
observers predicted a drop around 40 miles per gallon on
below 83,000 by mid· the highway.
The Chevette will be
September. Short-term
layoffs for the new-model powered by an 85-horsepower
changeovers dropped from four-cylinder engine based on
38,275 last week to 10,925 this a GM design used In the
Brazilian .and
English
week .
Ford will close three Chevette models.
Its overall length is almost
assembly
plants
for
20
inches shorter than the'
changeover this week and
GM wi!i have one closed. Chevrolet Vega 's 175.4 in·
Chrysler begins retooling ches, now one of \he shortest
operations at week's end and · U .S.-built cars. Its weight i.S
American Motors, smallest of almost 500 pounds less than
the U.S. auto companies, has the Vega.
GM's Chevette is basically
been building its largely unchanged '76 models since late . the same car the firm has
been building overseas for
July.
several
years. But its apThe Chevelle is the car that
likely will draw the most pearance has been changed
attention during the 1971). to meet U.S. safety and
model year. GM has been emission standards as well as
pushing to get the car ready the demands of American
buyers.

~-:;::;::······· . . ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . ,..."".... "-'~'.'!U. ...

Dear Reader :

Chevette first off lines
DETROIT ( UPI) - The
U.S. auto industry is ready
with its first response to fuel•
efficient foreign minicars. Its
name is the Chevrolet
Chevette.
The first of the under-2,001).
pound Chevettes cars was
scheduled off a General
Motors assem~ly line at the
firm's Wilmington, Del.,
plant shortly after noon
today. The four.,..at car will
debut about Oct. 2 with h
price tag expected to be
around $2,850.
The Wilmington plant,
closed for retooling since
June 13, was among 17 car
and assembly lines beginning
1976-model production today
to drop industry layoffs by
nearly 29,000 workers.
Long-term layoffs, which
peaked at 212,000 during the

7 -:- The D~ily Sentinel, Middleport·Pomeroy,_O., Monday, Aug. 18, ~975.

Recent ·trip .enjoyed.

Polly's Pointer

J uanita Justis, Middleport, went in to the 21-stor y tower to
took her g randmother , Mr s . view the J;!reater par t or
BY POLLY CRAMER
Et hel Sarson , Rac in e, to • Ka nsas City. One evening
Gra nd \•ie w , Mo. for a week 's they saw Edd ie Fisher a nd
vis it with he r oldest so n and De lla Reese in person a t the
daug hter-in -law Mr . a nd Mr s . Starli ght Theatre.
A Sllrprise pa rty was held
Whee ler Sa rson, Jr . where
bed unmadt! when airing the her 75 t·h bi rthday an · for Mrs. Sarson with a
POLLY'S I'ROllLt:M
chicke n din ner foll owed by
DEAR POLLY - I li ve in a room. Uurn a small eh•rtric niversa r y was t:e l e br ated
icc cream and cake. Atba seme nt 1ga rd en le vel ) ligh\ bulb In your closet but Aug. 8.
The tr ip lo Mis!louri lendi ng were Mr. and Mrs.
apartme nt and have a musty be s ure it not too do ~e to
odor in my bedroom. The clothe s~ Take eve rything out mar ked th e first plane ride Wheele r Sa rson, J r .. Mr . a nd
Mrs . Ga il Sisson, Sha wn a nd
other rooms a r e fine and this of the r loset and off the bed fo r bn lh .J Uan i ta and Mrs.
Shelly.
Mr . an d Mrs. Ric ha rd
may be because they are and che&lt;·k for mild ew. 11 an)' Sar son. Hig hli ght5 of the ir
Vcm
Buskirk
, Darliel a nd
healed and this dries them spots are seen wipe off witb a time in Missour i inc luded
out. My clothes and the bed cloth slightly dampened with visits tu Trwnan 's Librar y. Kat hleen. J uanita and the
honored gues t. Pictures we re
clothes hav e a te rrible musty denatur e d al c ohol. Turn his grave s ite an d his hom e .
odor. The a par tment is also mattre ss and spring s ove r 'l11ey s pe nt tim e at Ind e pe nd~ ta k e n as t he ca ke wa s
presented a nd t he gifts
near a lake. Do you ha ve a ny and be sure th crc is no ence Shopping Mall whi ch is
mildew lurking on th(' bot- three levels hig h , a nd ope ned. It was the firsl time
ideas for me? - D. W.
Mr s . Sarson had seen four or
DEAR D. W. - Every mail tom. Look O\'Cr shot•s, purses,
her
gr eat-g r a ndchildren.
has letters from readers with etc. . in the elosd since It
Juanita and he r g r a nd lhese problems so they arc oftt·n s hows up on S Ul' h
olht'r were taken lo and
rn
quite prevalent all over the thing s. Spray rlosct with a
me l at the a irport by Mr. and
country. A musty odor Is a good di s infectant bdon·
Mrs. Jmnes t Br enda J Pe tti t
clothes
and
sign of dampn ess and repla e ing
a
nd J a mi e, and Mr. and Mrs.
"mildew Is the superficial perhaps wash it down with a
Willi am J ustis. Juanita ha s
growth, usually white. that Is good dis infe ctant in the water
now returne d to her: e tnprodu c ed
on
organi c but l&lt;•t it dry thoroughly
ployme nt at Th e Ohi o Palle t
materials by fungi. " The before replacing c ontents. A
Co.
calf.se must be found and then dehumidifier would also be a
cured before attacking the great help.
If the apartment Is rented it
odor since any cure, otherwise only would be tern· would be well to dis cuss the
porary. Have you cheeked the problem with the landlord
walls to see If there is any who might supply these or at
least help with the •·usL The
sign of dampness there?
Since the other rooms are air must be dried out. Whe n a
April Wi se, 14, Middleport,
odorless and heated and this £irm foundation is laid then
forme rly of Sidne)'• Ohio Is
one Is not tt stands to reason work on the odor. Burning pktured holding the trophy
that heat would do a lot. A vanilla candles is a wonderful
she recei ved for finishing
portable elec tric heater odor remover. Also bowls of fifth in a Rolle r·Skallng
certainly would add to the vinegar c an be Se t around in rontost held In May at Sidney
room 's comfort and doubtless unseen spots. These could be
to raise money fo.r Muscular
help dry out the air If used used in addition to any room Dystrophy. Miss Wise skated
enough. Open the windows on odor spray you like . 50 miles and raised $150 for
dry breezy days. Leave the POLLY.
the fund .

Dry out damp room
to end musty odor

DEAR

POLLY

-

My

RETURNED HOME
Mrs. Myrta Wilson has
ret urned to Columbus after

Point e r conce rn s cookin g
corn on the cob. I had no pan

reall y large enough to cook

Social
Calendar
MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT Business
and Professional Women's
Club, 7:30 p .. m. at the
Columbia Gas Co. Members
to take guests. Fund raising
project to be carried out at
the meeting.
MIDDLEPORT BPW~ 7:30
p.m., Columbia Gas1 Co .,
Members to take guests.
MEIGS Band Boosters,
7:30p.m., in the band room at
the high school. Band parents
urged to attend.
TUESDAY
HARRISONVILLE Senior
Citi2ens' Club, at the school
house 9·3. Will quilt.
FRIENDLY CIRCLE,
Trinity Church, 7:30 p.m.
Mrs . Roy Mayer, leader.
THURSDAY
MAGNOLIA Club, 7:30 p.
m. at the home of Mrs. Ellen
Couch.

spen ding time her e with Mrs .

enough corn £or a meal so I
starte d usin g my round
r oa s te r for thi s. It is wide bu t
not so deep so t he corn has
room t o s prea d a round whUc

Helen J ohn son, Wolf Pe n and
he r

vill e . a nd Mr s.

You will rer eiv e a dollar i(
Poll y uses your fa\'Orit e

Mr s. Wilson a ttend ed the
fun eral of Pa ul Winn, and
the n the Smith reunion Aug. 3

idea,

P et

ROBERT BROOKS

Birthday
celebrated

His

i
i

Ac r es

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

is

mate rnal

TH URS DAY, August 28
Merle Haggard Show
FRIDAY. August 29
Earth, Wind II.. Fire
SATURDAY,August30
Bo Donaldson II.. The Heywoods
(Afternoon Show )
Bob Hope II.. La Costa ( Ntght
Show)
SUNDAY. August 31
8 AM - 5 rM Ohio State Fair
Gospel Singing Contest

THU RSD AY. August 2 t
Mac Davis
FRIDAY, AuguSI 22
Mac Davis
SArtfRD AY. August 2 3
Roger Miller: Captain II.. Tenn1lle
SUND AY. Au gus t 24
Roy Rogers II.. Dale Evans
Roy Dusty Rogers, Jr. II..
Sons of the rloneers
MONDAY. Augus t 25
raul Anka
TUt.SDAY. Au g us t 26
rat Boone II.. The Young

grandparents are Mrs. Hazel
Carsey and Marvey Carsey of
Columbus . Cake and ice
cream were served after the

HERE FOR FAIR
Mr . and Mrs . James
Hawley, Scott, Shawn and Jyl wiener roast. Robert's
of Tecumseh, Mich., spent day was Aug . 4.
fiar week here with their
grandmother, Mrs. Grace
,,,,w~· ··
., ..
Hawley and Mrs. Robert :-..,... .. ~.
Allensworth, Middleport.

F or est

Aug.21-Sept.1

Robert's pa ternal grand ·
mother .

Park ,
Rut lct11 d . ShC' returned hom e
Sunday afler attend in g th e
J ohnson ramily reunion at
Kac he lm ac he r Pa rk , Logan.

at

OHIO

Robert Uoyd Brooks, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd Brooks of
Alfred, celebrated his ei ghth
birthday at his home with a
wienec roast and party .
Attending the celebration
were Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Hughe~ and daughters, Kim
and Michelle , Kevin , Jim and
Debbie Brooks, Mrs. Mildred
Brooks, Janet and Kei th .
Mrs . Mildred Brooks of
Plain s

Vir g inia

cookin g. - .JOAN .

Peeve, Polly's Probll'm or
solution to a problem. Write
Polly in carr of this news·
papt:r.

Tuppers

Ma rvin

Morri s, Langs-

.J ohnson who is a pat ie nt a t
Vete ra ns Memorial Hospital.

hom e making

near

cou sins. Mrs.

1 Mildr ed )

birth~

Pomeroy
Personal Notes

Wolfpen

Mr . and Mrs . Charles Bing,
Pinellas Park, Fla., were
guests
several days last week
Mr. and Mrs. Carl McElroy
of
Mr.
and Mrs. Vincent
of Columbus were weekend
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Dabo, Pomeroy , and Mr. and
McElroy and Mr. and Mrs . Mrs. Tom Kelly and family,
Bill McElroy, Jeff and Joey. Middleport .
Mr . and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
Haning and family visited Lochary and children,
Mrs. Elsie Bratton of Rad· and Robert, left' Sunday
cUff. Mrs . Bratton returned their home near Chicago,
home with them to visit her after an extended visit
with their parents , Mr . and
sister. Mr. and· Mrs. Fred
Mrs . Patrick Lochary and
Tuckerman.
Charles Knapp spent last Mr . and Mrs . Leo Story.
Pvt. James Lochary. Jr.
week with his grndmolher,
left
Sunday for Fort Meade,
Mrs . Lena Knapp, of
intensive care.
Md . after visi ling here wi lh · •
Sherman Blessing of Letart Langsville.
his grandparents, Mf. and ;t&gt;.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Sum·
is also a patient at Pleasant
Mrs. Patrick Lochary . Mr. ''.:.,,
merfield
and daughter of
Vall~y.
and Mrs . James Lochary ,
Holly Boyer of Mason is a Illinois are visiting her Susie, Patty and Chris of Glen
. heart patient at Holzer parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert · Ridge, N. J., who had also
Medical Center. He has been Russell and Mr. and Mrs. been visiting here, went from
a patient for several weeks Donald Russell, Mr . and Mrs. here to Florida to visit Mrs.
and. will be there for several Steve Haggy and Stephanie
and Mr . and Mrs. Ronald Lochary 's paren ts.
more.
Russell, Mandy and Michael.
VISITED
Mr. and Mrs. William
Mr. and Mrs . John
Russell of Minersivlle were
Stone Toll. f f th Sunday afternoon VISitors
· ·
f
Allen
sworth, Kristin and
o
f h
Th etomsoc1eso
b
e
• Courtney, Mt. Gilead, have
Tribe in Dankali, Mrica . Bertha Russell.
.
were· once constructed by piling Mrs. Chnton Gtlkey of been here visiting ··Mr. and
branches in the form of a hut. Albany was a recent v1s1tor of Mrs. Millard Wildermuth and
Mrs. Robert Allensworth ,
The number of stones lining the Mr. Lincoln Russell.
Murphy
and Middleport. While here they
path leading to its entrance Carmel
revealed the number of DemarisAsharevacationing attended the Meigs County
F a ir .
enemies the chief had killed. in Illinois.

Bol&gt; Hope&amp;. La Costa ( Ni.":',ht
ShOW )

MONDAY I LABOR DAY i.
September 1

Americans

WEDNES DAY. Augus t 2 7
Tanya Tucker &amp;. The Young
Americans

The Osmond&lt; II.. Munch
DA ILY
Mark Wilson 's Magk Show

•

Admissio n $2 .00 for Adults: 50t for Chi ldren 12 oncl under. FREE to
Child ren 12 ond und er wee ltcl ays until Noon
• World's L.1rgest You th Music
• Anh euser- Busch Clycl esdales
Progro m
• Ohi o Vil lage (Fai r With in A Fair,
•
Wo
rld's Lorgest Stoce Fair Fin e
ci rco\- 185 0 )
Art s Exhibi t
• Sol e o f Chompio ns Livestock
•

Au ction
• Ci rcus
• Hnrness Racin_rs

•
•
•
•

World 's Letrges t State fair Horse

Show
• Wolid' L,1rgeS\ Lt vestock
Exhibiti o n

Pet ting Zoo
Horse Pull ing
Class A Troc tor Pull
lnte rnotio nol Hot Ai r Bal loon
Roce

• World's Lorgesr Junior Foir
• Colu m bus. O hio on 1-71 at 17th
Ave. Easy to li nd . .. plenty o f
par lting

.,

.

,.
. I

'

'

I

�I

8 - - The Dally Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Monday, Aug 18, 1975

~&amp;W®!1~®~4c·a·uJ-.~~ For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds

DICit TRACY

I

FIND A BIG
AND HIDE

Utt"eramble these four Jumbles.

br. letter to each square, to
form four ordmary words.

Notice

I KALJi'E

A TTENTI O N
MEIGJ
SE NIO~ "&gt; ' &lt;; en or Por! r arts
wIt b£ ;Jken T uCSlltlY 1\u Q
t9 lhrouqh 1\ uq lt &lt;)t Mcrgs
H Ql &lt;; ctl OO I MI\KE YOUR
APPOI NTM E NT by call nq
V1CI&lt; e /\ !)bOll ell Q9 '"&gt; " 0rl L ( 10
il 1
lrll L p 11 l Apqusl lith
111r11
Alh
H 10 Ate

a
rWHOL!

WHERE: THE
PAPE:R'HAN6EI\ S

WIFE S.ENT HI \;1

lTELEEBt
I I IIJ

Now arrange the c1rcled letlen

to rorm the surpr1se anawer, as
suggested by the above cartoon.

!......... -"" I "ITJ KI I J [ X I I J"
(A.ruwt&gt;n lomorrow}

Jumhlr~ VIGIL

Satur-day'•

BROOD

PAUNCH

UNLIKE

"itwh a ftrm aunt mt 11/tlr ftmlf l tl NmllldH UH
lh /Jugh 11 Jw x H/1 11/ fJ~ nllmhrd - BINDING

tv t n c rpa llly rs rn u rr ea r s rn
payrntnl for sc r v ccs rcn
or shall !h e Company
AN
ORDINANCE
10 de-r ed
bf' r cqu red ro
nslall mo r e
PROV ID E
FOR
FUR
SIX
(6) st r eet l rqht s
N ISHING OPE RAT lNG I\ NO lhnn
MAINTAININ G A LIGHT I NG du rulCI I he t,v; t y£&gt;ar wh ch t h rS
SYSTEM T O I I GHT THE Ord n.tn ce •S 1n f'fl £&gt;c t
SEC110N 'i H c Ccnnp&lt;)llY
STREETS
ALLEYS /\NO
rs ow n £&gt;xpcnse sh"ll
PUBLIC PLACES I N TH E c~t
t::o.crc1se reasonab l e d l•q£&gt;nc£&gt;
V ILLAG E
OF
MID
to ,nc;urc that the l 1ghtr nq
OLEPORT
MEIG S COUN
systc r1 rs rn good order ancl
TY OH 10
th at ,111 srreer l•qhts u c
and s h a ll mak~e
BE IT ORDAINED BY THE burn nq
COUNCI L O F THE VI L LAGE repln ccrne nt s ets so on as
OF
MIDDLEPORT STATE po ss b t ~.: ta llow ng n ot11iCM•O n
by 1h e custom er o t the n eed
OF O HIO
for such ".f'rv c12
but rt e
SECTION 1 Thai Columbus Company sha l l n ot b e reQ u r ed
pcr l or n
an y
su c h
and So uth e rn Oh10 Elec rr ,c to
Company 1IS successor s .:~nd rf'pln ce mf:'nt or rnarnt en anct
assrgns
(here m ca lled the e&gt;&lt;cept durrnQ regu lar wor lunq
Company J rs hereby vested ho urs
SECT IO N 10 Th£&gt; Co mpany
w1th the rrght to lrght wrth
electrrc ty the streets alleys shall sav e the Munrc rpa l ty
and other public places n th e h-"l r rn tess t rorn any and all
hab .t dy occas•oned by the so l e
munrcrpa lr ly o f Middleport
Ohro
(herern called th e n~q lrg e n ce of th e Company 111
Mun rcrpa l rty )
and
the the co n str uct o n n arntenance
Company shall have th e r rg ht and ope ratr on o f rts stree1
sys t em
rn
the
to charge and rece rve from the lrghlrng
Munrcrpatrty pay ment lor sa rd Mun rc pal ty
SE C T ION I I
T t i c to a ll
serv rces rn accordance wrth
the schedule of rates set forth wrre po le s l amps and up
below All fixtures shall be purt e n an ce s u sed by the
mounted on wood poles unless Comp any rn !urn st1•ng t he
o t herw rse
state d
and serv•cc contempla t ('d n thrs
energ r zed
by
overhead Ord•nanc e s a nd s ha l l be rn
I he
Company
d1Str1but on
SEC TI ON 17 A tl the r 1ghts
facrlrtles
Numb er t89
Srze
In Lumens 6000 Typc
OB S and pr1vrle ges gran ted lo and
Mercury Vapor
Rate Per the ob lrgalron rm p osed upon
the sard Company as re c te d
Lamp Per Month S4 00
lhr s
Co ntra c t
shntl
Srze In Lum en s 13000 Type 10
OBS Mercury Vapor New re spect rvely rnure to t he
Pole
Rate Per Lamp Per benefrl o f and b e brn drng up on
rts successors and ass rqns
Month S4 75
SECTION 13 That a ll or
Number
t4
Svze
In
or
L umens 75000 Type
Glass drnance s or r esolu trons
th a • are
n
Enclosed Rate Per Lamp Per par Is ther eat
consrs t en t or rn co nfl rct
Month S6 50
Srze In Lumens ?5000 Type he r ew1lh be and th e sam e a r e
h er eby rep eal e d
G lass Enclosed New Pol e
SECTION 1&lt;1
That thr s
Ra te Per Lam p Per Month
Ordnance sha ll take eff ec t
S6 75
SECT ION 7 The amou nt of and b e rn fo rce fr om and af t e r
energy used by each lamp rs thrrty days fr om t s passuge ol
calculated on t he basr s o f all the earl 1es t per o d allo w £&gt;d by
n1ghl burn ing every day of the taw and shall r ema rn rn effect
year or approxrmatel y 4000 for a per rod of I v e 15) ye a r s
hours per year (an average o f from rls passage subtec t to
re r m natron
as
))] 3 hours per month J In prror
provrded
n
addtlton to th e ch arges se t h e re1nafter
and provrded
forth rn Sectron I above t he Se ctron 15
turther that rt shalt have been
Compllny wrll each month
accepled by !he Company by
apply the tollowrng tuet ad
lustment to the total average wrrllen acceptance ttled m I h e
KWH per monrh for all the Of fr ce of th e C l erk of the
tamps brlled durrng
the Mun r c 1p~f1ly
SECTION
15
Thai the
perrod
Munrc rpalrty by legrslat r ve
The energy charge ap
plrcable to a !I krlowall ho urs actron or the Com pan y shal l
of energy c onsumed shall be hav e the r ght to termrnafe as
rncreased or decreased 0011 c of th e effect ve date of thrs
Ordrnance
of any year
per KWH per each full one
tenth ce nt 1 lc l rncrease or &lt;:omm encrn g ' " 19 77 and en
drng rn 1980 thrs Ordmance
decrease above or below forty
one cents (41c) rn the average and th e ra te schedule c on
cost per mrllron I I 000 000 ) ta ned rn sec tron 1 of thrs
BTU of tuel consumed at the Ord•nan ce upo n wr rtten notiCe
Compa ny s genera t rn g f l ed W1lt1 other party hereto at
stat1ons d urrn g the most least lhrrly [10) days pr ror to
re cent month precedrng the such te r m rnat ron dale
Passe d th rs 111h day ol
brlhng date for whrch fuel
August 197 5
costs have been determ rned
SECTION J
Payment tor
the
se r vrce
turn1 s h ed ATTE ST
hereunder shalt be made Gene Gra t e
month ly rn accordance wrlh Clerk
APPROVED A ugust 11 19 75
brlls rendered therefor by t he
Fred Hoff man
Company at the end of each
Mayor
perrod each payment to be
due wrthrn lS days of the
subm rss1onof the br llth eretor
overdue payments to bear (81 18 75 7tc
1nterest at the rat e of 6 per cent
per annum until pad Shou ld
the Mun1c rpalr ly default rn
PUBLIC NOTICE
tour (41 successrve payments
The
Tup p ers
Pta ns
the Company may at any lime
d1scontrnue serv ce here under C h es t e r Waler D rs trrct rs
brd s
for
con
w rthout notrce so long as any acce pt. ng
s
tructron
of
n
c
o
m
brna
t ro n
default
ex 1s ts
provrded
however that no cha r ge shall o flrc e a nd g&lt;J rage bu ldr ng to
be made by the Company t or b e lo cat ed a t the unctro n of
servrce hereunder dur ng any S R 1 and Orange Towns h1p
perrod rn whrch se rv ce rs so f.ld ?flO Me gs County
Sea t ed b d s are to be sub
drscontrnued In the eve nt of
nr
li ed
Pla ns
Cl nd
such default the Compa ny
upon wrrtten not 1ce to the sp ec rf •c at o n s and ns tru ctrons
Munrc rpalrty may lerm rnate tor b 1dd ers wrth all n ecessary
F armers
Hom e
Ad
thrs agreement
co ntr act
SECTION 4 The Company m• n s tr o ! o n
agrees durmg the term hereof d ocu ments a r e avar lab! e and
to rnstall addrtronal s t reet may be prc ke d up n th e offr&lt;;e
Otrro
Mur l rng
lrghts of the type and srze a • Ch este r
specrfled
above
when 1\ddr ess IJox 1 C heste r The
authorrzed
to do so by rrght s r eserved to retec l a ny
or al l b rds
resolut ron o f the Councrt
[1 ds wrtl be opened Aug 76
Provrded how ever that the
new street lr ghts shall be at I p m
located w rthm 750 feet of a
drstrrb u t ron cr r curl of the ( R\ I I IB 75 ]t&lt;::
Company
and
prov rd ed
further that no addrtronal
rncandescent st re et lrgh ts
shall be rnsla ll ed
SECTION 5 The m rnrmum
number of street lights shall
be not less than the sum of the
total number speCified above
and whenever
addrtrona t
By Bertha Parker
lrghts are 1nstall ed
the
mrnrmum number of lights
Sabbath school attendance
shall
be
rnc reased
ac
Aug 10 at the Free Methodist
cordmgty
SECTION 6 II 1S f urth er Church was 70. Offermg was
agreed that fhe Company shall
$'14 13 Number of persons
move street 11-Jhts to new
locations or change the type attendmg worship serv1ce
of fixtur es to another type was 107.
specrf red abOve as reQuested
The gospel concert w1th the
by the Council by r esolutron
prov1ded however that the Singmg Hymnals which was
actual cost to the Company m
makrng such retocat 1on s or hl!ld at the local church
changes rn the fr)(tures s hall Saturday everung was well
be
pard
lor
by
the
attended
Mun,c lpalrty
SECT ION 7 The Company
Mrs
Roger
Mowery
shall make e"Very effort to
keep the street t1ght1ng recently called on Mrs
system contracted for rn Nonnan Schaefer.
operalron durrng the t rme
Mrs . Stella
Grueser,
provrded If for any reason
the Company fads to do so for Middleport, her son Edwm,
more than an aggregate of
four(4) hour s m any one Csllforma recently called on
month
and upon wrrften Mr
and Mrs
Norman
nohce of such aggrega te
. - outage furniShed
to
the Schaefer and Bertha Parker
Company by the Mun1clpatrty
Cedric Parker, sons Er1c
wrihtn ten ( 10) days of the end
of such month, there shall be a and DaVId, Bertha Parker,
pro rata reductiOn from the called on Mrs Nancy Walker
bill to cover such outages No
lleblllty shllll attach to the and Frank Dill
, 10 Company for any outage
Mr and Mrs Charles
tu
SECTION 8 The Company
(Dick)
Karr will celebrate
u shell not be requtred to IOStall
•" eddltlonill street lrght s or the1r 50th wedding
an.,
" malntam or replace lam ps rn
niversary,
Aug
31,
from
2
to
5
the
event
that
the
ORDINANCE NO 1032 7 S

2 SIGNS

Pomeroy
Of
QUALITY Motor Co.
1974 FORD a· PICKUP

WILL ca P fo r e lderly woman
•n "IY 1 o rne Tra IICLI rr •d
E"linN enccd
(11
'i'i , 13 11
H I " 6t c

1970 CHEV CAMARO

a

Yard Sale

1 rAM tL Y Yard c ales A ug u s t
19 and ~0
T ucsday and
Wedne sd ay &lt;t l M r s Mrke
Ev,ln S Co Rd J I
m ric
from D ur s t ':&gt; lor e 9 &lt;1 m trll
p n

4 13 lf c

Help Wanted

8 1' J t c

PORCH Sale on l"" rf! h St
R ae ne Lo ts of boys g .rts
wom e n s
and
me n s
c tot hrn g a l l n gooll co n
d tr o n Other m sc
t ems
SJa rtr n q fr om
Mon d ay
Augu s t If! through A ugu~ t
?5 9 d m till dark Do bbrn
P1ow ett s res• den ce
R 17 Jtc

Wanted To Buy
B UY SEL L or t r ade any U S
co rn s or cu rrf:'n cy Wr l\ pay
\7 60 l o r \I tu cc 1964 and
old e r drmes Quetrt e r s and
halves
Ca I R u tl and 7 1?
J6.J I R oger Wamsley
8 15 Pte

and bar
na d
Tall T•mbcr s Nrghl c lub
Pt1one 99 ) 9913
Cl 17 61 c

1970 RAMBLER ( R e bel) 4 dr
p s
301 v a auto
trans
m•ssron Phone 99 7 ?101
8 14 blp

N EEDE D so m eone to l rve rn
ilnd take care o f elder ly
lady Call 949 779 1 for more
1nlo r rnatr on
B I J 6tc
TO P N OTC H m arn tenan ce o r
m ill wrrght man Top wages
pard
s tag g ered
hO ur s
Capabl e of ma ntenance
supcrvrsron on l y quat rf1ed
mar.!lt enance men apply
Pl eas e con t ac t rn person
P ome roy Forest Products
Ba rl ey Run Road Po me roy
8 15 6tc

Empkr;ment Wanted

W I LL do odd tabs mow rng
hautrng pa1nt rng or rootrng
Phon e 99 7 7409
7 19 26tc
~E:MODELING

By Mrs Lyle Balderson
Recent v1s1tors of Mrs
Bess Larkms ~,~,oere Mrs Os1e
Bailey of Bradenton , Fla
Mrs Donnell of Parkersburg,
W Va , Mrs Margaret
Brown, Mrs Marg1e Brewer
a nd Mrs Gladys Williams
Mr and Mrs Raymond
Emertck of Lancaster v1s1ted
\\lth Mr and Mrs R E
Williams
Mr and Mrs
Ernest
Wh1tehead and daughters,
Jane and Juh have returned
home after vacatwmng at
Myrtle
Beach,
South
Carolina
Mr and Mrs Dale Smith,
Teresa , Mark and Jodi, are
campmg at Wolfs Run Park
near Cambndge
Beth Berkh1mer spen t a
few days with her grand·
parent.s, Mr and Mrs Ro)
Berkheimer at Fnendly, W
Va
V1s1tmg w1th the Williams·
Balderson fam1lles Sunday
were Mrs Hazel Balderson
and Mrs Ov1e Sutherland and
fam1ly of V1enna, W Va Mrs
Sutherland and family also
' attended
the
Connolly
: reuinon held at the Reeds' vllle·Bellevllle Dam Park
1 Mrs Charles Neuman of
~ syracuse 1s v1s11Ing with Mr
and Mrs Chester Buckley
'
and family
Mr and Mrs Terry Hoff.
man and daughter of
Morehead, Ky, v1s1ted
recently w1th _9er parent.s,
Mr and Mrs John Hetzer

at the1r home Open house
w11l be held
Mr and Mrs
Cedr1c

Ertc and Davtd,

Bertha Parker and Katy
Parker attended the Athens
County Fair Thursday

LAFF- A- DAY

Mp
"!".

Plumbing
heat rng and all types of
gene ra l
repa rr
Work
gua r ant eed
20 years ex
per ren c e
Phone 992 2&lt;~09
5 1 If ~

19 77 GMC
to n prck up truck
sh arp and rn very good
cond Iron Pr c e S? 600 Call
99 7 7917 or see St eve Burton
B 17 l?lp

197? fORD Ranchero
1967
Ford Ranchero both rn very
good sha pe Phone 985 3545
8 17 7tp
19 71 F ORD Supe r Van
307
auto c hrome wheels Phone
(6 14] 667 6185
8 17 )tc
197 1 SU PER Beetle VW

S99 5

Phone 949 5645

8 17 6tc
19 !0 P LYMOUTH
-:183 automatrc
Phone 74 7 3718

Baracuda
t or 5600
8 17 Jtc

For Sale
CANNING tomatoes
green
beans
sweet
peppers
cucumbers
G@ra l drne
Cl ela nd Racrne Phone 9&lt;19
4 I7I
8 17 tt c
1917 SPORTSTER
chopped
l ots of c hro me Good con
drt ron Phone 949 4113
8 17 Jtp
S T ARCRAF T camper for
sate s teeps 8 Phone 997
)707

For Rent

Pomeroy

8 17 6tp

3 A ND 4 R OO M f u rnrshed and CANNING to matoes
p ICk
vnturn rs h ed
apartments
your own
Andrew Cross
Phone 997 5414
Letart Fa \Is 01'\ ro Phone
4 I? lf c
?11 ?65?
8 17 6tc
PRI VATE meetrng roo m for
any organrzatron phon e 997
?? W I LDCAT S 57 90 BriCk
] 9 15
Double
A
Wads SJ per
3 11 trc
750
A ll Bear Bows and
Arrows /5 pet off lrst Ma)(r
APT l rke new 3 rooms wr!h
Mags SJ
77 Mrn1 Mags
l a rge bath ta bletop range
\7 79
Save Wampum at
larg e closet East Mam St
lndran Jo&amp; s 308 Page St
Pomero y See to apprecrate
8 15 Jtp
Phone Gall rpolrs durrng day
446 1699 even1ngs 446 9539
1977 CAMPER
partly self
4 10 t fc
co nta rned
must see to
apprec rate
\1 695.. Phone
NEWL Y lurnr she d 7 bedrm
997 7738
apt wall to wall carpe t rng
l3 15 9tc
a c no pets or chrldren Call
949 ]78 3
ONE large coal furnace 70 000
8 17 Jtc
BTU Phone 997 51~1
8 15 )lp
AND 7 bedroom apts
Avar labl e soon Phone 991 WHEAT penn 1es 85c roll
3?73
S1lver certrf1cates
51 15
8 17 )IC
each
s? b lis 53 30 each
Bu ff a l o nickels $6 rol l
sr tver dollars
\4 40 each
-4 ROOMS and bath apt
rn
L 1b erty nrckels $11 roll Ca ll
Ru!iand area
Phone 991
Roger Wamsley Phone 747
5858
3651
7 27 ftc
8 15 17tc
Tw g bedroom mob le home
1977 ARROW Campt;r phone
w r th
arr
con d1t onrng
997 5468
Racrne area
Phone 99 '1
8 15 26tp
5R'i8
8 17 lfc
LUMBER for sate
doors
wrndows and all krnds Call
$77
1 B EDROOM trailer
after 5 p m 997 365 6
week
All ut lrtr es pad
Pflo ne 997 33?4
B 1J 61C
8 11 lfc
17 GAUGE sh ell reloader '$15
Super 8 Cassette Movre
COUN TRY
MObile
Home
protector and camera SIOO
Park R t 33 ten m lies north
1 44 acre land TP water
of Pomeroy Large lot s wrth
ava l able
R-hone 667 3]33
c on cret e pat10s srdewa lk s
Tuppers Plarns Ohro
runners and off s tr ee t
8 1J 5tc
park ng Phone 992 7479
12 31 lfc
HUNTING Lrcense
Nrght
crawlers
meat worms
TACKLE
guns
ammo
apartment
""'=URNISHED
bows
arrows
camp rng
adults only rn Middleport
equrp CBs and accessory
Phone 992 3874
lnd ran Joe s 308 Page Si 'l
3 25 He
streels past Mrddleport
Swrmm rng Pool
MOBILE home f or rent
9 1) 76tp
Adulls on ly Phone 99 2 5535
8 10 lfc
1975 GT 380 Suzuk r
5 000
mrtes sf rll under warranty
O NE lar ge tra ile r lot gas
Mrnt condrlron wrth e)(tras
Phone 997 2041
water
elec
available rn
Middleport Phone 99 2 2864
8 lJ 6tc
8 11 Jtc
19 74 10 FT
GOOSE NECK
4 ROOM lurn rs hed aparlment
stock trailer wrth 19 74 Chevy
Call 991 3658
duat wheel
1 ton prckup
8 17 tfc
Can be bougl'\1 toget h er or
separate Call 747 3'267
7 BEDRM furn rshed apt Call
9 10 tfc
997 54 )4
8 17 Jtc CANNI NG peaches now thru
Septem ber 10 u s No 1
grade yellow Freestone For
J BEDRM
trailer
country
cannrng or freezrng S6 49
toc at ron
$100 month plus
bushel SJ 49 1 , bl/Shel Sl 99
depos 1t Phone 997 3388
peck
PLEASE
BRING
8 14 6tp
YOUR
OWN
CON
TAINERS Peaches are our
7 B E: UI&lt;M
mobrle home
specralty Two conventent
deposrt
and
references
lo cat1ons Bobs Markel
requ ,red
Phone 99 7 3479
Mason W Va Phone (304)
B 15 6tp
773 5771
and
Mtdway
Market
Pomeroy
Ohro
(6 14 ) 997 2582
8 10 271c

For Sale

Cut

L &amp;wv" M ;e•e

1

PIG \ for sa le

.t-~.........
•' ......

I w1sh you d tell me what
you rc gettmg me fQr my birth
da~ :;;n I can start lookmg lor
soml•thmg to f'xchangc Jt

for'"

Phon~

747 3747
B 17 61c

VDU P:e; R:lGHT

5WE~To4SAR'T~

T

IT WON T BE SC
'\
HARD- K.I..I OWip.JG
TH4T ONCE WE

I'IJt.""~ &amp;..('\

c

THE ['.l,'yo:; PA"-..., IG"LL.IC~LLY rO R
u ~ l '-":~'.'&lt;':&gt;';

CIV!LI2ATIO.IJ -

VOU LL BE MINE'

Oh1oR:oute1 NorthEa s tof
Tupper Plarns
Cooi"Vrlle, Ohro
Phone 667 3608
Open
Monday
thru
Saturday 1 00 to 8 00
NOW OPEN
Larry and Vtvtan Hopps
Owners

SEPTI C TANKS c leaned
Moder n san .ta t on 997 3954
or 99 2 73J 9
9 16 t ic

GENERAL Repa1r clean up
and
haulrng
cu lt rng
w e ld r ng
c arp e ntry
ptumb1 ng e tec masonry
and gen e ral r e model rng
Cal l Sk I Pool
Phone 992
5126
617tfc

SEPTIC fANKS CLEANED
R easonabte 1o1 AT E S Phon e
146 &lt;1 782 Ga f pai rs
J ohn
R ussctt owne r
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR
4 9 lf c,.
Swee p ers to aste r s rro n'!.
a ll small apptrances L awn
mower n e)(J to Stat e Hrgh
BOAT Motors
Reparrs 498
way Garage on Route 7
Locust St
Mrddleporl
Ohro Phone 992 3092
Phone 985 3815
4 16 tf c
1 22 7.6tc

CU S TOM
PICT U RE
F RAMING
OR IGIN AL
SEASCA PE AND LAND
SC APE PAINTING S E
JOYCE M I L LER 99 7 76BO
8 tO 7&lt;1 tp

Real Estate For Sale
BEAUT I FUL
new
three
bedroom home extra large
to! wonderful to ca t ron all
electrr c Gt approved Call
V"e tma Zuspan
(304) 771
5150
8 17 6tc

MOBILE Cra ne servrce and
dozer work Pho ne 997 546B
8 7 26 1p

9 RM HOU SE bath carpel
1
basement a lu m srdrng
storm wrndows
rnsutated
rrver v ew large tot double
carpor t wrth shop reduced
Qurck sa le R1chard Weaver
99 ? 7066
8 1 t f&lt;:

S EWING
MACHINE
Repft rs se rvr c e all makes
99 7. 2264 The F abrr~ Shop
Pomeroy Autho'r hecf Srn ge r
Sates and Se rvte e
w e
sh arpen Sc rssors
J 79 tf c

3 BEDRM house large krl
c hen
ce ntral a1r
large
krtchen wa ll to wall car
petrng
F HA approved
Phone f/97 70 30
8 15 6tp

HOUSE at
Pome r oy
for m a t 1on

128

Laurel

For further

NEWLY reburlf 1950 Ferguso n
trac tor $1450 00 4 It brush
hog S'l95 00
6 ft grader
blade
1160 OD
I
row
cultrvator S110 00 6 tt drag
t ype tam den drsk S60 00
trar ler S60 00 boom pole,
'535 00 or w rll take SIOOO 00
tor whole works Phone 843
2561
8 14 6tc

MODERN Walnut stereo
radro c on sole am fm radiO
J speed changer
Balance
$101 77 or terms Call 99? DAVIS 300 trencher w1lh blade
3965
and trailer Phont! 985 3373
8 17 lfc
a 14 6tc

~,1\1/&gt;..1-~

UTTI..E Lf1131.M-

I

~

St
rn

ca II 992 3868
8 14 6tc

Pels For Sale
STUD
Serv rce
AKC
Regrst ered whr te poodle
For appornfment can 997
3904
8 l7 tfc
DACH SHUND puppres Phone
7 4:&lt;' 509?
8 15 31&lt;:
AKC
German
Shepherd
puppres good blood lm es
Phone 99? 5673
8 15 4tc

Mobile Homes for Sale
ONE 10 x 50 2 bedrm Peerless
housetr arler
Phone 997
517 1
8 15 Jtp

W1th

OUT OF TOWN -

UTTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

LITTLE

ORPHAN

HtARD ll SA ID
CR AI'f PfOPtE
HAVE SOLVED
THE PROBI[M
o r FINDING

5 rooms

NEEDED- 100 ACRES Oft
MORE ON HARD ROAD
WITH WATER CALL 992
3325

19 75 FREEDO M mob le home
take out payments
Ca ll
(614 ) 446 3971
8 11 t ?tc
1969 PMC 12x5? mobile horne
w rth large porch
$3 500
Phone 985 3504 rl no answer
99? 5596
a 17 J tc
MOBILE Home
I? )( 60 7
bedroom central atr con
drlronrng
commercra l
underprnn1ng
ut r lrty
burldrrg Phone 887 2567
8 I? 6tp
1? x 60 NEW Moon trader two
lots or lUSt buy l ots Tuppers
Plarns
Oh o
Phone 667
)47 5

8 12 6tc

For Sale

CLOSEOUT I
ALL

REAL ESTATE SALE BY
UNITED
S TATE S
OF
AMERICA
(FARMERS
HOME
ADMINIS
TRAT I ONJ 1 Frve room
one
story
hous e
ap
proxrmately 50 years old
on 5 acres of land located
one m lie Northwest o f
Pomeroy on the east srde of
State Route 14] l nspect ron
Please c ontact the off rc e of
Farmers
Home
Ad
m n rstratron
771
west
Second St r eet Pomeroy
Oh o 45769 Telep h one 992
7603 Terms of sale 1 Cash
7 Te,.ms availab le to an
rnelrgrble applrca n t are not
less than 10 percent cash
down and not to exceed 10
amort rzed payments for
balance of purchase prrcE;B rds to be accepted at
Pomeroy Offrce unlr l 2 00
PM August 29 at whrch trme
brds will be opened
The
Gover nm en t reserves th e
rrghl to retecf any and all
brds
a 17 5tc

I

E.

n

HO
'

J

n r11 l

II

1 ~fl

)

11

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'

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PE or I[

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r

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,

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is saved!

c

~

'

J

MIDDLE PORT Out
1 floor plan 2
or 3 BR bath lovely k1t
chen full basement New
perma pane alum wm
dows new carpet mg , new
panel1ng, new hot water
tank
new carport N G
forced a1r heat On quret

- l l ovely acre Bnck &amp;
Frame
3 large BR, 1 1
baths
utrllty R
lovely
kttchen
27 ft cabtnets
range &amp; oven Front porch
rear patro large garage
w1th storage space Car

r

-I'M GOING TO

r 11-_

DON 'T THROW YOUR
MONEY AWAY- ~ET US
APPRAISE
THE
PROPERTY
BEFORE
YOU BUY OR SELL
PHONE- 992 2259

;\ 1..-. ~r
.

J

V/L

TO KICK YOUR Br=LLY OUT
OFMY DOOR~!- I WAS
"TRAINED IN TOKYO-

I

!=::I HAL

/1
I
)

I 1

I -

1

- J

~~

'

'\

L
WINNIE
YOU'RS NOT
E!AB,~RRA&amp;&amp;ED

®HOW CONVENIENT

BY HER EFFORTS.
ARE YOU?

OFWENDYID
BE 11BUSY 11 lDDAY50WE
COULD BE
ALDNE

I

~ l

&lt;r"'

BR
bath, ntce kttchen,
uttltty R s torm wt hdows &amp;
doors, s1de porch carport
&amp;
larg e
garage
full
basement wlih prrvate
water supply (c1ty tap
pard), 2 trailer hookups

acres, home has 3 B R
Bath, mce kitchen, por
c hes Storage bldg Ask1ng
only $7 900

11 OQ-News 3,4,6,8 10 13,15 ABC News 33
11 3()-Johnny Carson 3 4 156, W1de Worl~ Mystery 13

TUESDAY . AUGUST 19 1975

were

6 JG-F rve Minut es to Live By 4 NE'ws 6

un

(Do you have a question lor

the Jacobys? Wr1te 'Ask the

Jaco 1bys
care of th1s
newspaper The most Jn·
terestmg questtons w111 be
used m thts column and
wnters wt/1 receive cop1es of
JACOBY MODERN)

6 4$--Mornlng R eport 3 Farm t1me 10
6 55-News 13
7 00- Today 3 4 15 A M Am e r 1ca 6 13

e. 10

10

'"~E

r

I

f

"

~
lr.

8 00-Lucy Show6 Capt ain Kangar oo 8 Schoolles 10
Sesame Street 33
8 3Q-Big Valley 6 Popeye 10

a 55-Chuck

While Reports 10
9 00-A M 3 Phil Donahue 4 15 Murtel Ste vens
Captain

Kangaroo 10

LIKE THIS THAT I'M
THANKFUL I GOT ME
A CLOTHES DR'IER

13

Galloping

Gourmet 8, New Zoo Revue l3 Biography 33

10 OQ-Celebrltv Sweepstakes 3 4 1S Sp~n Olt 8 8 10
Mike Douglas 13 Lil ias Yoga an d You 33
10 30-Wheel Of Fortun e 3d 15

P rrce Is Rtghl 810

The Romagnolls Table 33
11 OQ-High Rollers 3 4 15 One L1 le lo Live 6 Gambll
8.10, F1lm 33
11 JG-Hollywood Squares 3 6 15 Bra dy Bunch 13
Midday 4, Lo v~ ol Life 8 10
11 55- Take Kerr B Dan I mel s World 10
12 00-Magnlflcl ent Marf:jle Ma cht ne 3 15 Showoff s
13, Bob Brauns 50 SO Club 4 N ews 6 B 10 Mister
3~Jackpotl J 15 All My Ch tldr en 6 lJ
Tomorrow 8, 10 E lectnc Company JJ

Sea r ch For

12 5s-NBC New s 3 15
1 ()()-News 3

Ryan s Hope 6 13 Phil Donahue 8
Young and The Restles s 10 Not For Women Only

15, VIlla Alegre 33
3D-Days Of Our L1ves 3d 15 Le t s Make A Deal
6,13, As The World Turns 8 10 Eprsode Action 33
2 110-S\0,000 Pyramid 6 13 Gu1dlng Light 8 10
Rachlmanlnoff F efstival

33

2 30-Doctors 3,4 , 15 Rhym e and ReRson 6, 13 Edge 01

Nlaht 8,10
3 OQ-Another World 3 4, 15 Gene ral Hosp i tal 6, 13,
Match Game 8 10
3 JG-One Life to Live 13, Bewllched 6 Tattlelales
8,10. The Romag nol1s' Tabl e 70 To Be Annou n ced

33
4 00-Mr Cartoon 3 I D ream Of J ea nnie d Somerset
15, Mickey Mouse C l ub 6 M us rcal Chat r s 8

Sesame Street 20 33
Movie
Feeling" 10 Dinah' 13
4 3()-Bewltched 3 Mer v Grill n 4
Mickey Mouse Club

a

Tha i

Certa in

Mod Squa d 6

IS
MISter Roge rs

Bonanza

5 OQ-FBI 3, Lucy Show

8

Ne igh

borhood 20.33

5

30-News 6 Andy Grlfllth 8 Hogan s Heroes 13
Smart 15 E lectrl c Co mpany 20 33

Get

CBS News 8,10 L11ias Yoga and You 33
6, What's My L rne? B N ews 10 Name That Tune
13, To Be Announ ce d IS An l1ques. 20 Jean
Shepherd's Americ a 3J
7 30-Hollywood Squares 3 Ho llywood Squares 4
Let's Deal wtth tt 6
Buck Owens B Evening
Edition w1th Mart in Agr onsk y 2f0 New P r i ce Is
Righi 10 To Tell The Truth 13 Scene One Take o ne

33

Yesterday's Answer

9 Fonner

27 Scowled

( hyph wd 1
10 Sh1p
16 Mood
19 Construct
22 Tra1pse
23 Heap
( 2 wds 1
24 Bullish
25 Type of soil

:!9 Mountam
crest
30 Italian
lady's IItle
31 Golfer,
Lee 3li Egyptian
cotton
:rl Ovme cry

6 00---Adam 12 J 4,15 H a ppy Days 6 13 Good Ttmcs
8, 10, When Televi sion was 11vc 1 23 33
8 JG-Movte ' The Law 3 4 15 Movre Every Men
Needs One ' 6 IJ MA S H B 10 Co n sumer Su rv tv al

Kit 20,33
9 00-Hawall Five 0 8 10 N ova 20
Man 33
Sammy Davis Jr

10

New 20

Proud Ones

10

Ja nak1 JJ

12 3Q-Wide World My s t.,-y 6

rr • nt c t one you II be meetr ng
-- oc rfl llt Get 10 know lh rs per
son h •llur You 11 have m uch to
:,I! HU

SCO RP IO (Oct 24 Nov 22)

For

Tuelda~.

Aug 19 19/ lj

ARIES !March 21 April 19)
Though you re o ft en more
comfortabl e act rn g
n
dependently t behooves yo u
tod ay to be a team pi &lt;:J , cr The
rrght assoc1 a te can cHh J
your rntere st

note
35 Puss, rn"'" •I
37 Ian
t.c.-t-+-Flemmg
hero
38 Eastern

TAURUS (Apoll 20 May 20)
=-t--+-+-~11

Success may not come-o0n II ~
ltrst fry today If yo u re pnro:: s
tent and h a ng rn ttmr[! rt 111 011 t
elude you for too long

ntc

GEMINI (May 21 Jun e 20)

Chnst1an

Prompt act ron o n you r purl 1)
day can turn a specu il
Sltualton around to whPre t
benelrt rather th an a lr ubrl ty

Is

OR

BOJ

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

CANCER (June 21 July 22) A

EJRF

BMLO

BJHNRF

matter you re very corccrnr d
about becaus e 11 Allects other s
as well as yourselll ooks I k l
II
work out nrcely

LEO (July 23·Aug 22) You an
!IC Jpate more oppos rtr on on an
ISSue lhan you w II act ually get
Don I Jet your self do u bts hold
you back from try tng
VIRGO (Aug

BM HH
MFO

I ntcrface 33

10 3()...-Woman 20 Monty P y l hon s F!y tng Ctrcus 33
11 OQ-News 3 4 6 8 10 13 15 ABC Nows 33
11 30-Johnny Carson 3 4 15 W1de W o r ld Mystery 13
FBI 6, Mov ie
The Hor semen
8 Mov1e The
1 OQ- Tomorrow 3 4 r~ ew~ T3

27 Rummant
28 Old Dutch
liqu1d
measure
29 Menu term
(3 wds I
32 Vmeyard
1Fr I
oJ Crash mto
.14 MusiCal

I

S~ga of W este rn

10 ()()-Marcus Welby MD 6 13 Badrna by Jones 8

HRPWT

LJ

0 J B H

-FVPT-

VWJNRWU

Y L'Sterday's Cryptoquote: A ClllLD CAN ASK A THOUSAND
QCJESTIONS THAT THE WISEST MAN CANNOT ANSWER.JACOB ABBOIT

23 Sept

221

Stand up lor your rrg!rts toda y
where work or car eer rs co r
earned If you fee l en trtled tu
addit iona l co mpensatr on
speak o ut

LIBRA (Sept 23-Dcl 23) Don I
make a hasty negf:lt1ve as se s"

Yo11 rn 1y have to step n today
tr) r r nt c. t tne rn lerests of one
vou lnf I re spons b !e l or when
yc •• !'&gt;' 1• hrrn gettrng a bum
'"'lllat~.e

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23 Dec.
21) A ch_,s( fr,r&gt;nd and yoursel f
l'f
&gt;\ r;

yJ

1

rp r 1t ng on th e same
t ~... Jllh tlR !h er will thrnk
1 ~ t ThtJ ~aps bet ween
1
s ;&gt; e n t wrde

C APRICO A N (Dec 22 Jan
19) i u rrrRte rra prospec ts
.: I t r n Jlllen nq IJut retu rn s
r &lt;~ t nc t IJe
rnme d ate
H 1'- &lt; \d • tt-&gt;r&gt;y II bP there w hen
rj(_ J
fi OUAf\IU S ( J an 20 Feb 19)
t&gt;r 1 1 u t1ore to r eal ze rn th e
tr )' j l 1\ rc N ll be SILQh tf y
ll •nw d 1 he alleratron wrll
pr p , r ~c 1d c1al

PISCES (Feb 20·March 20)
Y • r chances at succeedr ng 1n
1 r 1-.- portnnt endeavor wrll be
..t\ t p rHnrsrrlg the nex t co uple
o JV" Do what needs to be
dunr-~ llU ctty

~~~~Your

\~ Birthday
~.

'r m 1 writ form lwo totally un
H tPd
advan tageous
ao:;socJatlons lh1s year One w11!
b(;nefrt JOU socrally the o1her
v I b.., 1 f:'lpfut careerwrse
P

LOWEEN
...OA.• fluiiC I"''- ' Po-

II•I""QH- - &lt;h''IW\9
..,.,.,.,.. ..,._. •l"lll

-0101--G--~
-~ 10 ~ 10'11 '""- , Zlrlr:

Wl!..t llnl ••~ ott ., 1o

..,..,..,1.,..,

"

I

~

Aug 19 197S

• l'wmon""o Prtu RP9 U&lt; "'

fout11 .C:tr!oc

J

7 oo-Truth or Conseque nces 3 A B owltng F o r Dollars

One letter s1mply slands for another In this sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formallon of the words are all
htnts Each day the code letters are dtfferent

---

Dinah 1 6

0

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
39 Well-known
I Kill
prmcess
5 Sappho's
40- at
1sla nd
(nagged)
II Path
41 Seaweed
12 Quantity
denvat1ve
13 Fore·
DOWN
shadow
I
Lazy
man's
14 Acaderruc
sm
reward
2 Keats'
15 Aunt ( Sp )
poem
16 Old French
3 What an
shootmg
opera-goer
match
has
(4 wds)
17 Depot
4 Longmg
(abbr I
5
Bill of 18 Agreement
6
AbrasiVe
20 Young
7 Soak
Cratchlt
8 Smg
21 Serpent's
(3 wds )
tooth
22 Frost
23 Feed a hre 1::--+-+--+25 Chap sans
churns
26 We1ght

I

I

Morn i ng wlth

Operation Noah 33
9 3Q-Not For Women Only 3

a

6 oo-News 3 4,8 10 13 15 AB C News 6 Ca tch 33 33
6 3()-NBC News 3 4 1S ABC News 13 Andy Grlfl lth 6,

CRYPTOQUOTE

~

CBS News

~::U;-+'4•/
~vee

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work 1l:

'

B 1ble An
Rev Cleophus

Robinson 13
6 35-Columbus Today •

12

A L TrL[ ":l.U/

5HEW &gt;--f'..r I 1),...
Lf:NGlt-&lt;S&gt; ,..U ...~

'

Rogers 33

Pass

an d ktng of clubs

''

''

6 oo-Sunrlse Seminar 4 Summer Semes ter 10
6 25--Farm Report 13

swers 8 , Con cern s &amp; Commen t s 10

play fast

•

FBI 6, Movie ' A Walk W1lh Love and Death" 8
Movie "Mr Skefllnglon 10 Janakl 33
12 3()-Wide World Mysle r y 6
1 00- Tomorrow 3 4 N ews 13

allowance

UL ABNER

pefed $25 900
NEAR RUTLAND - 2 77
acres 1 floor plan, 3 lovely

THIS YOU MUST SEE
$28,000
POMEROY
Close 5

Pass

IVJ IIab le to he lp South while
thev would be sure tncks
&lt;~ga tn st any East West contract
J11n East played the queen
of d1amonds on hts partners
k111g and West conlmued w1th a

standtng buy

street JUST $13 000
NEAR HARRISONVILLE

Soulh

a,

a,

Today •s artiCle was msplred
by a l-etter from Illln01s The
wnter wanted to know hhw
B) Os\\a ld &amp; James Jacoby
Eas t and West could have discarded better
J '"'
Trad1honally, a four
The hrst part of our answer IS
l eve l , vulnerable preempttve
that
East and West have our
b•d should be made w1th an
sympathy
However after the
e1g htln c k hand that has little
th~rd
spade
lead West would
01 no defense agamst any other
that
South
had e1ght
know
' u' t So uth s preempt had
spades
and
would
be
sure of h1s
ano ther fea ture He thought he
contract
1f
he
held
a club
m igh t ma ke 1t even If partner
Hence,
West
m1ght
have
lhrown
he ld ve ry httle
his
c
lubs
nght
then
and
there
Oswald 'When South looked
whereupon
the
swmdle
play
1t dummy thmgs didn ' t appear
develop
would
not
tu be sa tisfactory Dummy's
ctc ~

The Embo4d

IT'S ON RAIN'! DAI./5

PER SO NAL e tectrrc washer,
General Electrr c swrve l
type sweepe r
used very
ltttl e paddec;;t rronrng board'
on stand
large
~
e l ectnc floor fan With
controls Phone 99 ? ?JSB
8 17 6tc

!.( (

~r &lt;~fCURl1 Y - ""'

WELL WHEN 11-!AT St&gt;.M
GLN -n;t1ED TO MAl$
~UEILE FOR US 8 ~
&gt;N THE" SAI.OON f1E
HAD TWO PAII:TNIORS 1

AS'139.95

--------

f...

l'
1 (1f

old house'

M_AIN
POME

POMEROY LANDMARK
'W..:J_•ck W Carsey, Mgr.
Ai&amp; Phone 992 2181

-- --

~

( l llf }

\

Conditioners

DELICIOUS home grown
peaches wh rte and yellow
Mason
Peach Orchard
Phone (304) 773 5559
8 8 ffc 1

;~
''f ~ ~

Wfll

_

c, ll

Air
AS LOW

FIGGf:R WHil I
HAPPINE SS 1-=
WH Al l)P &gt;If- S
MAti r Fen v.:.,
LOOiiEY

rlAP PIHE55 -

S"1r, I wtsh to donate
Haifa
million half of ml.l mone4 to
dollars! 1'----, th1s beaut1ful

wtth bath, modern krtchen
nat gas heat and basement on
good street
ACREAGE 97 acres of
pnvacy 15 or more of bottom
A Dantel Boone resort

TH1i1 S Wt! Af
"Hil S S10RY
TALKS ABOU ! 1
I RVIN TO

O H I DON T
KHCNI - I'VE

SUCCESS!

IS

8 18

bath nat gas and large lot
Lots of posstbtl !ttes for ren

die port
NEW LISTING -

ANNIE-BUT WHA T

B 17 3tp

12 rooms

East

l"or th

R oma nce of a Hor

9 30-Rhoda
10 Board House 33
10 oo-Medlcal C enter B 10 To Be Announced 33

Up&lt;; mng I coli - K t

NEAR STORES -

busmess room to let 1n M1d

lloth vu lne r able

j

5 acres bat h
Clonch
Brad

On good

4 apartments and

,-;7

j J

'{ ' "

8 ts-Baseball 3 4 15, Movi e
seth let" 6, 13 Maude 8 10

Agronsky

4A

GASOUNE ALLEY_

INCOME -

~

Ouubie Pass

paved road Mobile home has
3 bedrooms and L C water
Nat gas furnace

tals

,,

\\ {''&lt;i\

th 2 mob il e
homes rn A 1 condd1on
Excellent well wrth new
deep well water pump
Many ext ras Seen by appt
only F or more rnformatron
cal 1 949 4917 Prrced rrght
for qurck sate
B 5 12tc

A

&gt;I

' '

EXCAVATING dozer l oad er
an d backhoe work
sep tr c
tanks
.nslalled
dump
tru cks and to boys for hrre
will haul frll d rrt lop so I
ttmest one and gravel_.. Call
Bob or Roger Jeffers day
phone 992 7089 nrght phone
991 J52S or 99 2 523 2
2 lllfc

Wrll1am
bury

.·-*"

- rrr''A

D &amp; 0 TREE Tr rmmrng 20
years experren ce Insured
fr ee eslrmates Cal! 992 3057
Coo lvrll e
Phone ( 1l 667
] 041
4 JO fie

4 ROOM ho use

¥ K Q 10

KQ86542
• 86 5 4

':;

3 ACRES of land w

MODERN KITCHEN -

.. 109

t \ K42
• Q J 10 6
.. Q J~
.. 10872
SOU rll IDI

c;oc~~

t:.XCAVATING
backhoe
dozer and d1tcher
Gas
eteclrrc and water l rne
bu r ral basements tooters
septrc syste m s and brush
clean rng W 11 haul fill drrt
top sort sand and gravel
lrm estone for drrveways and
roads
Phone Charles R
Halfr e ld Backhoe Serv1ce
Rt 1 Rutland Oh ro 74'l
609'l
7 11 90tc
READY MIX CONC~ETE
del r.ve red rrght t o your
p r otec t Fast and easy Free
esttmates Phone 992 3264
Goe g l crn Ready Mrx Co
M111ifd l epo rt Oh o
6 JO ttC

INFL.Uft-!TIAL.

Real Estate For Sale

stove and refrigerator car
pet 1ng rn ltvtng &amp; k1tchen
Nt ce bath
2 bedrooms
Natural gas furnace and
large lot

7

J

• A932

VJHO all.'/ Of&lt;O\'B
IT ON SU~DA.YS,
1'7UPPOSE 2

PUFF IJ.II6 o~o ~ A

Real Estate for Sale

BEDROOM garage apa r t
men I rn Pomeroy on R t 33
near school and church
Good nerghborhood
a rr
con d rl ronrng
gas
he at
alum rnum srdrng
burtt rn
krtchen cab nets new roof
lar ge bath 7 large c losets
sma l l
lot
econo m1cal
ulrlr t res Call 747 4147 early
or after 6 p m
8 15 ]tp

\\ l- ST

• 98 7 3
olo AK6543
E:AST

•

Syracuse, Oh1o

mo

18

r\ORTH

LARRY LAVENDER
4 10 I

Mertln

low d1amoiid South rulfed and
dec1ded the best line of play
would be to run off trumps
quickly and hope that hiS opponents would hang on to
clubs '
Oswald "'Tbe play worked
beautifully As each add1t10nal
spade was led , the diScardmg
by East and West got more and
more pamful But all these
pamful discards were red
cards Eventually, alter the
eighth trump was led, East did
discard a club, but 11 d1dn I
matter West was down to the
ace of hearts and three clubs A
heart threw h1m m and he had
to give South h1s contract '

.. 3
• J7

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

7 17 1 mo

with

Once die is cast -

Blown
Insulation Serv1ces

Ph 992·3993

Edition

WIN AT BRIDGE

FOREVEI'l '

Blown mto Walls &amp; Atltcs

Processing

BACKHOE for rent hour or
co n trac t reg or excavat ory
type Septte tanks rns talled
Brll Pullrns phone 99'2 2478
7 '2 4 26 tc

Pollee Surdgeon 6 $25,000 Pyramid

B 00---Joe Garaglola 3,4, IS, Rookies 6,13, Gunsmoke
8, 10 Rachmaninoff Festival JJ, Tennis 20

DO GET SACK TO

FEELII&gt;JIS&lt;$~

4

20,
Municipal Court 10 To Tell The Truth 13 , Untamed
World 1S E plsode Action 33

FREE ESTIMATES

--'~

BICYCLE Repa rrs Sa l es and
Serv rce
498 Locus! St
Mrddleport Ohro
Phone
992 3092
7 22 26tc

YOt.J R:e
IF W&amp; REALLY
A,l&lt;ING M~ LOVf rACM OTNE'R:.,
TO WAIT&lt;'
WAITING WOI.J'T
CH.WGr OUR.

Ph 992 2798
7·24 I mo

8 1 75

CUSTOM SLAUGHTER

L ETTERED SIGN S '
19 10 FORD Maver rc k ? dr 6 H A ND
AND POSTER S
FREE
cy l automn l rc \800 or bes t
EST IMATE S CALL M C
off er Phone 997 5190
CRAWFORD 99 2 7680
l3 15 Jtp
8 7 261p

W/\ IT RE:~S

.:&gt;LD turn1lure
ce boxes
brass beds
or c omplete
households
Wrrte M
0. .
..... A RP E N T RY
floorrng
Mrller
Rt
4 Pomeroy
ce drng and panel rng Phone
Ohro Ca ll 99 2 7760
'i&lt;J ? 7759
10 7 74
8 17 76tc

Reedsville
News Notes

WOULD YOU BELIEVE?
Build an all steel bu ldrng at
Pol e Barn pnc es? Golden
Grant All Sle el Buildrngs
R t 4 Box t4 8 Waverly
Oh ro Phone 947 'l796
7 'lA Tic

POMEROY, OHIO

~53 1

Ma•n

Parly

E vening

I tres

POMEROY
MOTOR
CO.
OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M
Wanted

7 3()-That Good Ole Nashville Music 3, Masquerade

CAPTAIN EASY

Black

top

CASH pad tor all makes and
mod e ls af mobile homes
Phone Mea co de 614 423

East

Stop In Or
Call992 7SJ7

Ca mera 13 Wally s Workshop lS, ~aklng It count
20 To Be announced 33

DICK SEYlfR

Flalwoods Oh1o
Pomeroy Ohto

Pomeroy

Ph 992 2174

MONDAY, AUGUST 1l 1t7•
5 3()- News 6 Andy Griffith 8 Hogan's Heroes 13, Get
Smart 15 Electric Company 20,33
6 OQ-News 3.4 8110 13.15. ABC News 6, Se.ame Street
20 Jeanne Wolf With 33
6 3()-NBC News 3,4, 15, ABC News 13, Andy Griffith 6
ACBS news 8, 11), Jody's Body Shop 33
7 oo- Truth or Consequences 3 4, Bowling tbr Dollars
6 What s My Line? 8 News 10, New Candid

WOOD METAL PLASTIC
ANTIQUES
MODERN CHEMICALS

KUHL CAKE DECOR

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

11295

Vmyl roof grey f1n tsh h1gh mileage good
au tomati c power steermg radro, st lver fmish

Laurel Oiff News Notes

'

Nathan Btggs
Radrator Spectallst

$2095

1970 NOVA V 8 CPE

GAR/• C E 'iALE fl.u q HI 'J'J 9
to • p 1l
oc&lt;l t ed on Rl
1 11 sou rh o f Jacks Club o ft
1-i:t 1 tly p&lt;r&lt;i"&gt; Gu11s pockel
kn vcs br c ycl c too l s new
pa 111 n q supp l res
baby
!urn lur e
n[wborn u nd
'tdu l t c lothrn q 'lnct n •SC
R 11 Srp

Parker 1 sons

From the largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radrator 10 the
s~allest Heater Core

automatte trans power ste ertng and brakes
dark green frntsh , vmyl ro of saddle bucket sea ts
console ra d1o !tke new w w ftres
350 V

Kttchen Slate Inspected
Ltcensed
Baker
and
Decorator
Homemade
Noodles also featured

· - - - - - - - - , - - . . . , . . . . - -. . . ; . . _ . . , . . _ . . , . _ . , . _ . _ . , _ _ .. _

I

PAINT
STRIPPING
SERVICE

CAKE BAKING
WANTED

$3495

Ranger Pkg Beautrful 2 tone green w1th tnm o ptton s
sl 1d1ng back glass automat1c tran s power steerrng
radto Less than 9 000 miles Chrome front bumper
rear st ep bumper

AND OOAR D
ROOM
Prrvatc a1 r con dil •o nc d
phone
T V
all
room
m C'il Is laundry plus m any
Wr 1e Mr s M
J
cx lr ~)s
M1 le r Box tOJ Pomeroy
Ohro
8 I 76 tp

Monday and
Y Af&lt; D ":.A LE
Tues da y N ew Lr m a Road
ill! typ~ s o f c tort nq
8 17 7tc

Business Services

l

.

"

{------------------------------~

Auto Sales

Au.to Sales

y--·-------------·-..
lI Television log for easy viewing

9 - The Daily Sent mel, M1ddlepor1-Pom er oy, 0, Monday 1\u;:. 18, 1075

•

•

�I

8 - - The Dally Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Monday, Aug 18, 1975

~&amp;W®!1~®~4c·a·uJ-.~~ For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds

DICit TRACY

I

FIND A BIG
AND HIDE

Utt"eramble these four Jumbles.

br. letter to each square, to
form four ordmary words.

Notice

I KALJi'E

A TTENTI O N
MEIGJ
SE NIO~ "&gt; ' &lt;; en or Por! r arts
wIt b£ ;Jken T uCSlltlY 1\u Q
t9 lhrouqh 1\ uq lt &lt;)t Mcrgs
H Ql &lt;; ctl OO I MI\KE YOUR
APPOI NTM E NT by call nq
V1CI&lt; e /\ !)bOll ell Q9 '"&gt; " 0rl L ( 10
il 1
lrll L p 11 l Apqusl lith
111r11
Alh
H 10 Ate

a
rWHOL!

WHERE: THE
PAPE:R'HAN6EI\ S

WIFE S.ENT HI \;1

lTELEEBt
I I IIJ

Now arrange the c1rcled letlen

to rorm the surpr1se anawer, as
suggested by the above cartoon.

!......... -"" I "ITJ KI I J [ X I I J"
(A.ruwt&gt;n lomorrow}

Jumhlr~ VIGIL

Satur-day'•

BROOD

PAUNCH

UNLIKE

"itwh a ftrm aunt mt 11/tlr ftmlf l tl NmllldH UH
lh /Jugh 11 Jw x H/1 11/ fJ~ nllmhrd - BINDING

tv t n c rpa llly rs rn u rr ea r s rn
payrntnl for sc r v ccs rcn
or shall !h e Company
AN
ORDINANCE
10 de-r ed
bf' r cqu red ro
nslall mo r e
PROV ID E
FOR
FUR
SIX
(6) st r eet l rqht s
N ISHING OPE RAT lNG I\ NO lhnn
MAINTAININ G A LIGHT I NG du rulCI I he t,v; t y£&gt;ar wh ch t h rS
SYSTEM T O I I GHT THE Ord n.tn ce •S 1n f'fl £&gt;c t
SEC110N 'i H c Ccnnp&lt;)llY
STREETS
ALLEYS /\NO
rs ow n £&gt;xpcnse sh"ll
PUBLIC PLACES I N TH E c~t
t::o.crc1se reasonab l e d l•q£&gt;nc£&gt;
V ILLAG E
OF
MID
to ,nc;urc that the l 1ghtr nq
OLEPORT
MEIG S COUN
systc r1 rs rn good order ancl
TY OH 10
th at ,111 srreer l•qhts u c
and s h a ll mak~e
BE IT ORDAINED BY THE burn nq
COUNCI L O F THE VI L LAGE repln ccrne nt s ets so on as
OF
MIDDLEPORT STATE po ss b t ~.: ta llow ng n ot11iCM•O n
by 1h e custom er o t the n eed
OF O HIO
for such ".f'rv c12
but rt e
SECTION 1 Thai Columbus Company sha l l n ot b e reQ u r ed
pcr l or n
an y
su c h
and So uth e rn Oh10 Elec rr ,c to
Company 1IS successor s .:~nd rf'pln ce mf:'nt or rnarnt en anct
assrgns
(here m ca lled the e&gt;&lt;cept durrnQ regu lar wor lunq
Company J rs hereby vested ho urs
SECT IO N 10 Th£&gt; Co mpany
w1th the rrght to lrght wrth
electrrc ty the streets alleys shall sav e the Munrc rpa l ty
and other public places n th e h-"l r rn tess t rorn any and all
hab .t dy occas•oned by the so l e
munrcrpa lr ly o f Middleport
Ohro
(herern called th e n~q lrg e n ce of th e Company 111
Mun rcrpa l rty )
and
the the co n str uct o n n arntenance
Company shall have th e r rg ht and ope ratr on o f rts stree1
sys t em
rn
the
to charge and rece rve from the lrghlrng
Munrcrpatrty pay ment lor sa rd Mun rc pal ty
SE C T ION I I
T t i c to a ll
serv rces rn accordance wrth
the schedule of rates set forth wrre po le s l amps and up
below All fixtures shall be purt e n an ce s u sed by the
mounted on wood poles unless Comp any rn !urn st1•ng t he
o t herw rse
state d
and serv•cc contempla t ('d n thrs
energ r zed
by
overhead Ord•nanc e s a nd s ha l l be rn
I he
Company
d1Str1but on
SEC TI ON 17 A tl the r 1ghts
facrlrtles
Numb er t89
Srze
In Lumens 6000 Typc
OB S and pr1vrle ges gran ted lo and
Mercury Vapor
Rate Per the ob lrgalron rm p osed upon
the sard Company as re c te d
Lamp Per Month S4 00
lhr s
Co ntra c t
shntl
Srze In Lum en s 13000 Type 10
OBS Mercury Vapor New re spect rvely rnure to t he
Pole
Rate Per Lamp Per benefrl o f and b e brn drng up on
rts successors and ass rqns
Month S4 75
SECTION 13 That a ll or
Number
t4
Svze
In
or
L umens 75000 Type
Glass drnance s or r esolu trons
th a • are
n
Enclosed Rate Per Lamp Per par Is ther eat
consrs t en t or rn co nfl rct
Month S6 50
Srze In Lumens ?5000 Type he r ew1lh be and th e sam e a r e
h er eby rep eal e d
G lass Enclosed New Pol e
SECTION 1&lt;1
That thr s
Ra te Per Lam p Per Month
Ordnance sha ll take eff ec t
S6 75
SECT ION 7 The amou nt of and b e rn fo rce fr om and af t e r
energy used by each lamp rs thrrty days fr om t s passuge ol
calculated on t he basr s o f all the earl 1es t per o d allo w £&gt;d by
n1ghl burn ing every day of the taw and shall r ema rn rn effect
year or approxrmatel y 4000 for a per rod of I v e 15) ye a r s
hours per year (an average o f from rls passage subtec t to
re r m natron
as
))] 3 hours per month J In prror
provrded
n
addtlton to th e ch arges se t h e re1nafter
and provrded
forth rn Sectron I above t he Se ctron 15
turther that rt shalt have been
Compllny wrll each month
accepled by !he Company by
apply the tollowrng tuet ad
lustment to the total average wrrllen acceptance ttled m I h e
KWH per monrh for all the Of fr ce of th e C l erk of the
tamps brlled durrng
the Mun r c 1p~f1ly
SECTION
15
Thai the
perrod
Munrc rpalrty by legrslat r ve
The energy charge ap
plrcable to a !I krlowall ho urs actron or the Com pan y shal l
of energy c onsumed shall be hav e the r ght to termrnafe as
rncreased or decreased 0011 c of th e effect ve date of thrs
Ordrnance
of any year
per KWH per each full one
tenth ce nt 1 lc l rncrease or &lt;:omm encrn g ' " 19 77 and en
drng rn 1980 thrs Ordmance
decrease above or below forty
one cents (41c) rn the average and th e ra te schedule c on
cost per mrllron I I 000 000 ) ta ned rn sec tron 1 of thrs
BTU of tuel consumed at the Ord•nan ce upo n wr rtten notiCe
Compa ny s genera t rn g f l ed W1lt1 other party hereto at
stat1ons d urrn g the most least lhrrly [10) days pr ror to
re cent month precedrng the such te r m rnat ron dale
Passe d th rs 111h day ol
brlhng date for whrch fuel
August 197 5
costs have been determ rned
SECTION J
Payment tor
the
se r vrce
turn1 s h ed ATTE ST
hereunder shalt be made Gene Gra t e
month ly rn accordance wrlh Clerk
APPROVED A ugust 11 19 75
brlls rendered therefor by t he
Fred Hoff man
Company at the end of each
Mayor
perrod each payment to be
due wrthrn lS days of the
subm rss1onof the br llth eretor
overdue payments to bear (81 18 75 7tc
1nterest at the rat e of 6 per cent
per annum until pad Shou ld
the Mun1c rpalr ly default rn
PUBLIC NOTICE
tour (41 successrve payments
The
Tup p ers
Pta ns
the Company may at any lime
d1scontrnue serv ce here under C h es t e r Waler D rs trrct rs
brd s
for
con
w rthout notrce so long as any acce pt. ng
s
tructron
of
n
c
o
m
brna
t ro n
default
ex 1s ts
provrded
however that no cha r ge shall o flrc e a nd g&lt;J rage bu ldr ng to
be made by the Company t or b e lo cat ed a t the unctro n of
servrce hereunder dur ng any S R 1 and Orange Towns h1p
perrod rn whrch se rv ce rs so f.ld ?flO Me gs County
Sea t ed b d s are to be sub
drscontrnued In the eve nt of
nr
li ed
Pla ns
Cl nd
such default the Compa ny
upon wrrtten not 1ce to the sp ec rf •c at o n s and ns tru ctrons
Munrc rpalrty may lerm rnate tor b 1dd ers wrth all n ecessary
F armers
Hom e
Ad
thrs agreement
co ntr act
SECTION 4 The Company m• n s tr o ! o n
agrees durmg the term hereof d ocu ments a r e avar lab! e and
to rnstall addrtronal s t reet may be prc ke d up n th e offr&lt;;e
Otrro
Mur l rng
lrghts of the type and srze a • Ch este r
specrfled
above
when 1\ddr ess IJox 1 C heste r The
authorrzed
to do so by rrght s r eserved to retec l a ny
or al l b rds
resolut ron o f the Councrt
[1 ds wrtl be opened Aug 76
Provrded how ever that the
new street lr ghts shall be at I p m
located w rthm 750 feet of a
drstrrb u t ron cr r curl of the ( R\ I I IB 75 ]t&lt;::
Company
and
prov rd ed
further that no addrtronal
rncandescent st re et lrgh ts
shall be rnsla ll ed
SECTION 5 The m rnrmum
number of street lights shall
be not less than the sum of the
total number speCified above
and whenever
addrtrona t
By Bertha Parker
lrghts are 1nstall ed
the
mrnrmum number of lights
Sabbath school attendance
shall
be
rnc reased
ac
Aug 10 at the Free Methodist
cordmgty
SECTION 6 II 1S f urth er Church was 70. Offermg was
agreed that fhe Company shall
$'14 13 Number of persons
move street 11-Jhts to new
locations or change the type attendmg worship serv1ce
of fixtur es to another type was 107.
specrf red abOve as reQuested
The gospel concert w1th the
by the Council by r esolutron
prov1ded however that the Singmg Hymnals which was
actual cost to the Company m
makrng such retocat 1on s or hl!ld at the local church
changes rn the fr)(tures s hall Saturday everung was well
be
pard
lor
by
the
attended
Mun,c lpalrty
SECT ION 7 The Company
Mrs
Roger
Mowery
shall make e"Very effort to
keep the street t1ght1ng recently called on Mrs
system contracted for rn Nonnan Schaefer.
operalron durrng the t rme
Mrs . Stella
Grueser,
provrded If for any reason
the Company fads to do so for Middleport, her son Edwm,
more than an aggregate of
four(4) hour s m any one Csllforma recently called on
month
and upon wrrften Mr
and Mrs
Norman
nohce of such aggrega te
. - outage furniShed
to
the Schaefer and Bertha Parker
Company by the Mun1clpatrty
Cedric Parker, sons Er1c
wrihtn ten ( 10) days of the end
of such month, there shall be a and DaVId, Bertha Parker,
pro rata reductiOn from the called on Mrs Nancy Walker
bill to cover such outages No
lleblllty shllll attach to the and Frank Dill
, 10 Company for any outage
Mr and Mrs Charles
tu
SECTION 8 The Company
(Dick)
Karr will celebrate
u shell not be requtred to IOStall
•" eddltlonill street lrght s or the1r 50th wedding
an.,
" malntam or replace lam ps rn
niversary,
Aug
31,
from
2
to
5
the
event
that
the
ORDINANCE NO 1032 7 S

2 SIGNS

Pomeroy
Of
QUALITY Motor Co.
1974 FORD a· PICKUP

WILL ca P fo r e lderly woman
•n "IY 1 o rne Tra IICLI rr •d
E"linN enccd
(11
'i'i , 13 11
H I " 6t c

1970 CHEV CAMARO

a

Yard Sale

1 rAM tL Y Yard c ales A ug u s t
19 and ~0
T ucsday and
Wedne sd ay &lt;t l M r s Mrke
Ev,ln S Co Rd J I
m ric
from D ur s t ':&gt; lor e 9 &lt;1 m trll
p n

4 13 lf c

Help Wanted

8 1' J t c

PORCH Sale on l"" rf! h St
R ae ne Lo ts of boys g .rts
wom e n s
and
me n s
c tot hrn g a l l n gooll co n
d tr o n Other m sc
t ems
SJa rtr n q fr om
Mon d ay
Augu s t If! through A ugu~ t
?5 9 d m till dark Do bbrn
P1ow ett s res• den ce
R 17 Jtc

Wanted To Buy
B UY SEL L or t r ade any U S
co rn s or cu rrf:'n cy Wr l\ pay
\7 60 l o r \I tu cc 1964 and
old e r drmes Quetrt e r s and
halves
Ca I R u tl and 7 1?
J6.J I R oger Wamsley
8 15 Pte

and bar
na d
Tall T•mbcr s Nrghl c lub
Pt1one 99 ) 9913
Cl 17 61 c

1970 RAMBLER ( R e bel) 4 dr
p s
301 v a auto
trans
m•ssron Phone 99 7 ?101
8 14 blp

N EEDE D so m eone to l rve rn
ilnd take care o f elder ly
lady Call 949 779 1 for more
1nlo r rnatr on
B I J 6tc
TO P N OTC H m arn tenan ce o r
m ill wrrght man Top wages
pard
s tag g ered
hO ur s
Capabl e of ma ntenance
supcrvrsron on l y quat rf1ed
mar.!lt enance men apply
Pl eas e con t ac t rn person
P ome roy Forest Products
Ba rl ey Run Road Po me roy
8 15 6tc

Empkr;ment Wanted

W I LL do odd tabs mow rng
hautrng pa1nt rng or rootrng
Phon e 99 7 7409
7 19 26tc
~E:MODELING

By Mrs Lyle Balderson
Recent v1s1tors of Mrs
Bess Larkms ~,~,oere Mrs Os1e
Bailey of Bradenton , Fla
Mrs Donnell of Parkersburg,
W Va , Mrs Margaret
Brown, Mrs Marg1e Brewer
a nd Mrs Gladys Williams
Mr and Mrs Raymond
Emertck of Lancaster v1s1ted
\\lth Mr and Mrs R E
Williams
Mr and Mrs
Ernest
Wh1tehead and daughters,
Jane and Juh have returned
home after vacatwmng at
Myrtle
Beach,
South
Carolina
Mr and Mrs Dale Smith,
Teresa , Mark and Jodi, are
campmg at Wolfs Run Park
near Cambndge
Beth Berkh1mer spen t a
few days with her grand·
parent.s, Mr and Mrs Ro)
Berkheimer at Fnendly, W
Va
V1s1tmg w1th the Williams·
Balderson fam1lles Sunday
were Mrs Hazel Balderson
and Mrs Ov1e Sutherland and
fam1ly of V1enna, W Va Mrs
Sutherland and family also
' attended
the
Connolly
: reuinon held at the Reeds' vllle·Bellevllle Dam Park
1 Mrs Charles Neuman of
~ syracuse 1s v1s11Ing with Mr
and Mrs Chester Buckley
'
and family
Mr and Mrs Terry Hoff.
man and daughter of
Morehead, Ky, v1s1ted
recently w1th _9er parent.s,
Mr and Mrs John Hetzer

at the1r home Open house
w11l be held
Mr and Mrs
Cedr1c

Ertc and Davtd,

Bertha Parker and Katy
Parker attended the Athens
County Fair Thursday

LAFF- A- DAY

Mp
"!".

Plumbing
heat rng and all types of
gene ra l
repa rr
Work
gua r ant eed
20 years ex
per ren c e
Phone 992 2&lt;~09
5 1 If ~

19 77 GMC
to n prck up truck
sh arp and rn very good
cond Iron Pr c e S? 600 Call
99 7 7917 or see St eve Burton
B 17 l?lp

197? fORD Ranchero
1967
Ford Ranchero both rn very
good sha pe Phone 985 3545
8 17 7tp
19 71 F ORD Supe r Van
307
auto c hrome wheels Phone
(6 14] 667 6185
8 17 )tc
197 1 SU PER Beetle VW

S99 5

Phone 949 5645

8 17 6tc
19 !0 P LYMOUTH
-:183 automatrc
Phone 74 7 3718

Baracuda
t or 5600
8 17 Jtc

For Sale
CANNING tomatoes
green
beans
sweet
peppers
cucumbers
G@ra l drne
Cl ela nd Racrne Phone 9&lt;19
4 I7I
8 17 tt c
1917 SPORTSTER
chopped
l ots of c hro me Good con
drt ron Phone 949 4113
8 17 Jtp
S T ARCRAF T camper for
sate s teeps 8 Phone 997
)707

For Rent

Pomeroy

8 17 6tp

3 A ND 4 R OO M f u rnrshed and CANNING to matoes
p ICk
vnturn rs h ed
apartments
your own
Andrew Cross
Phone 997 5414
Letart Fa \Is 01'\ ro Phone
4 I? lf c
?11 ?65?
8 17 6tc
PRI VATE meetrng roo m for
any organrzatron phon e 997
?? W I LDCAT S 57 90 BriCk
] 9 15
Double
A
Wads SJ per
3 11 trc
750
A ll Bear Bows and
Arrows /5 pet off lrst Ma)(r
APT l rke new 3 rooms wr!h
Mags SJ
77 Mrn1 Mags
l a rge bath ta bletop range
\7 79
Save Wampum at
larg e closet East Mam St
lndran Jo&amp; s 308 Page St
Pomero y See to apprecrate
8 15 Jtp
Phone Gall rpolrs durrng day
446 1699 even1ngs 446 9539
1977 CAMPER
partly self
4 10 t fc
co nta rned
must see to
apprec rate
\1 695.. Phone
NEWL Y lurnr she d 7 bedrm
997 7738
apt wall to wall carpe t rng
l3 15 9tc
a c no pets or chrldren Call
949 ]78 3
ONE large coal furnace 70 000
8 17 Jtc
BTU Phone 997 51~1
8 15 )lp
AND 7 bedroom apts
Avar labl e soon Phone 991 WHEAT penn 1es 85c roll
3?73
S1lver certrf1cates
51 15
8 17 )IC
each
s? b lis 53 30 each
Bu ff a l o nickels $6 rol l
sr tver dollars
\4 40 each
-4 ROOMS and bath apt
rn
L 1b erty nrckels $11 roll Ca ll
Ru!iand area
Phone 991
Roger Wamsley Phone 747
5858
3651
7 27 ftc
8 15 17tc
Tw g bedroom mob le home
1977 ARROW Campt;r phone
w r th
arr
con d1t onrng
997 5468
Racrne area
Phone 99 '1
8 15 26tp
5R'i8
8 17 lfc
LUMBER for sate
doors
wrndows and all krnds Call
$77
1 B EDROOM trailer
after 5 p m 997 365 6
week
All ut lrtr es pad
Pflo ne 997 33?4
B 1J 61C
8 11 lfc
17 GAUGE sh ell reloader '$15
Super 8 Cassette Movre
COUN TRY
MObile
Home
protector and camera SIOO
Park R t 33 ten m lies north
1 44 acre land TP water
of Pomeroy Large lot s wrth
ava l able
R-hone 667 3]33
c on cret e pat10s srdewa lk s
Tuppers Plarns Ohro
runners and off s tr ee t
8 1J 5tc
park ng Phone 992 7479
12 31 lfc
HUNTING Lrcense
Nrght
crawlers
meat worms
TACKLE
guns
ammo
apartment
""'=URNISHED
bows
arrows
camp rng
adults only rn Middleport
equrp CBs and accessory
Phone 992 3874
lnd ran Joe s 308 Page Si 'l
3 25 He
streels past Mrddleport
Swrmm rng Pool
MOBILE home f or rent
9 1) 76tp
Adulls on ly Phone 99 2 5535
8 10 lfc
1975 GT 380 Suzuk r
5 000
mrtes sf rll under warranty
O NE lar ge tra ile r lot gas
Mrnt condrlron wrth e)(tras
Phone 997 2041
water
elec
available rn
Middleport Phone 99 2 2864
8 lJ 6tc
8 11 Jtc
19 74 10 FT
GOOSE NECK
4 ROOM lurn rs hed aparlment
stock trailer wrth 19 74 Chevy
Call 991 3658
duat wheel
1 ton prckup
8 17 tfc
Can be bougl'\1 toget h er or
separate Call 747 3'267
7 BEDRM furn rshed apt Call
9 10 tfc
997 54 )4
8 17 Jtc CANNI NG peaches now thru
Septem ber 10 u s No 1
grade yellow Freestone For
J BEDRM
trailer
country
cannrng or freezrng S6 49
toc at ron
$100 month plus
bushel SJ 49 1 , bl/Shel Sl 99
depos 1t Phone 997 3388
peck
PLEASE
BRING
8 14 6tp
YOUR
OWN
CON
TAINERS Peaches are our
7 B E: UI&lt;M
mobrle home
specralty Two conventent
deposrt
and
references
lo cat1ons Bobs Markel
requ ,red
Phone 99 7 3479
Mason W Va Phone (304)
B 15 6tp
773 5771
and
Mtdway
Market
Pomeroy
Ohro
(6 14 ) 997 2582
8 10 271c

For Sale

Cut

L &amp;wv" M ;e•e

1

PIG \ for sa le

.t-~.........
•' ......

I w1sh you d tell me what
you rc gettmg me fQr my birth
da~ :;;n I can start lookmg lor
soml•thmg to f'xchangc Jt

for'"

Phon~

747 3747
B 17 61c

VDU P:e; R:lGHT

5WE~To4SAR'T~

T

IT WON T BE SC
'\
HARD- K.I..I OWip.JG
TH4T ONCE WE

I'IJt.""~ &amp;..('\

c

THE ['.l,'yo:; PA"-..., IG"LL.IC~LLY rO R
u ~ l '-":~'.'&lt;':&gt;';

CIV!LI2ATIO.IJ -

VOU LL BE MINE'

Oh1oR:oute1 NorthEa s tof
Tupper Plarns
Cooi"Vrlle, Ohro
Phone 667 3608
Open
Monday
thru
Saturday 1 00 to 8 00
NOW OPEN
Larry and Vtvtan Hopps
Owners

SEPTI C TANKS c leaned
Moder n san .ta t on 997 3954
or 99 2 73J 9
9 16 t ic

GENERAL Repa1r clean up
and
haulrng
cu lt rng
w e ld r ng
c arp e ntry
ptumb1 ng e tec masonry
and gen e ral r e model rng
Cal l Sk I Pool
Phone 992
5126
617tfc

SEPTIC fANKS CLEANED
R easonabte 1o1 AT E S Phon e
146 &lt;1 782 Ga f pai rs
J ohn
R ussctt owne r
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR
4 9 lf c,.
Swee p ers to aste r s rro n'!.
a ll small apptrances L awn
mower n e)(J to Stat e Hrgh
BOAT Motors
Reparrs 498
way Garage on Route 7
Locust St
Mrddleporl
Ohro Phone 992 3092
Phone 985 3815
4 16 tf c
1 22 7.6tc

CU S TOM
PICT U RE
F RAMING
OR IGIN AL
SEASCA PE AND LAND
SC APE PAINTING S E
JOYCE M I L LER 99 7 76BO
8 tO 7&lt;1 tp

Real Estate For Sale
BEAUT I FUL
new
three
bedroom home extra large
to! wonderful to ca t ron all
electrr c Gt approved Call
V"e tma Zuspan
(304) 771
5150
8 17 6tc

MOBILE Cra ne servrce and
dozer work Pho ne 997 546B
8 7 26 1p

9 RM HOU SE bath carpel
1
basement a lu m srdrng
storm wrndows
rnsutated
rrver v ew large tot double
carpor t wrth shop reduced
Qurck sa le R1chard Weaver
99 ? 7066
8 1 t f&lt;:

S EWING
MACHINE
Repft rs se rvr c e all makes
99 7. 2264 The F abrr~ Shop
Pomeroy Autho'r hecf Srn ge r
Sates and Se rvte e
w e
sh arpen Sc rssors
J 79 tf c

3 BEDRM house large krl
c hen
ce ntral a1r
large
krtchen wa ll to wall car
petrng
F HA approved
Phone f/97 70 30
8 15 6tp

HOUSE at
Pome r oy
for m a t 1on

128

Laurel

For further

NEWLY reburlf 1950 Ferguso n
trac tor $1450 00 4 It brush
hog S'l95 00
6 ft grader
blade
1160 OD
I
row
cultrvator S110 00 6 tt drag
t ype tam den drsk S60 00
trar ler S60 00 boom pole,
'535 00 or w rll take SIOOO 00
tor whole works Phone 843
2561
8 14 6tc

MODERN Walnut stereo
radro c on sole am fm radiO
J speed changer
Balance
$101 77 or terms Call 99? DAVIS 300 trencher w1lh blade
3965
and trailer Phont! 985 3373
8 17 lfc
a 14 6tc

~,1\1/&gt;..1-~

UTTI..E Lf1131.M-

I

~

St
rn

ca II 992 3868
8 14 6tc

Pels For Sale
STUD
Serv rce
AKC
Regrst ered whr te poodle
For appornfment can 997
3904
8 l7 tfc
DACH SHUND puppres Phone
7 4:&lt;' 509?
8 15 31&lt;:
AKC
German
Shepherd
puppres good blood lm es
Phone 99? 5673
8 15 4tc

Mobile Homes for Sale
ONE 10 x 50 2 bedrm Peerless
housetr arler
Phone 997
517 1
8 15 Jtp

W1th

OUT OF TOWN -

UTTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

LITTLE

ORPHAN

HtARD ll SA ID
CR AI'f PfOPtE
HAVE SOLVED
THE PROBI[M
o r FINDING

5 rooms

NEEDED- 100 ACRES Oft
MORE ON HARD ROAD
WITH WATER CALL 992
3325

19 75 FREEDO M mob le home
take out payments
Ca ll
(614 ) 446 3971
8 11 t ?tc
1969 PMC 12x5? mobile horne
w rth large porch
$3 500
Phone 985 3504 rl no answer
99? 5596
a 17 J tc
MOBILE Home
I? )( 60 7
bedroom central atr con
drlronrng
commercra l
underprnn1ng
ut r lrty
burldrrg Phone 887 2567
8 I? 6tp
1? x 60 NEW Moon trader two
lots or lUSt buy l ots Tuppers
Plarns
Oh o
Phone 667
)47 5

8 12 6tc

For Sale

CLOSEOUT I
ALL

REAL ESTATE SALE BY
UNITED
S TATE S
OF
AMERICA
(FARMERS
HOME
ADMINIS
TRAT I ONJ 1 Frve room
one
story
hous e
ap
proxrmately 50 years old
on 5 acres of land located
one m lie Northwest o f
Pomeroy on the east srde of
State Route 14] l nspect ron
Please c ontact the off rc e of
Farmers
Home
Ad
m n rstratron
771
west
Second St r eet Pomeroy
Oh o 45769 Telep h one 992
7603 Terms of sale 1 Cash
7 Te,.ms availab le to an
rnelrgrble applrca n t are not
less than 10 percent cash
down and not to exceed 10
amort rzed payments for
balance of purchase prrcE;B rds to be accepted at
Pomeroy Offrce unlr l 2 00
PM August 29 at whrch trme
brds will be opened
The
Gover nm en t reserves th e
rrghl to retecf any and all
brds
a 17 5tc

I

E.

n

HO
'

J

n r11 l

II

1 ~fl

)

11

"'"
'

)

PE or I[

1

1

Kt-IOW

"If'''

'1-UCCt~S t &gt;~; r 1 ' ' ~
r

~

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1 wAN

POS F

r

f 1-'H J-'l f

t

~

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Jt

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r~t['?

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f\1

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,

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M uf

I

I

,n j

"""'"'
,

s)
,,

' ''J p 1

is saved!

c

~

'

J

MIDDLE PORT Out
1 floor plan 2
or 3 BR bath lovely k1t
chen full basement New
perma pane alum wm
dows new carpet mg , new
panel1ng, new hot water
tank
new carport N G
forced a1r heat On quret

- l l ovely acre Bnck &amp;
Frame
3 large BR, 1 1
baths
utrllty R
lovely
kttchen
27 ft cabtnets
range &amp; oven Front porch
rear patro large garage
w1th storage space Car

r

-I'M GOING TO

r 11-_

DON 'T THROW YOUR
MONEY AWAY- ~ET US
APPRAISE
THE
PROPERTY
BEFORE
YOU BUY OR SELL
PHONE- 992 2259

;\ 1..-. ~r
.

J

V/L

TO KICK YOUR Br=LLY OUT
OFMY DOOR~!- I WAS
"TRAINED IN TOKYO-

I

!=::I HAL

/1
I
)

I 1

I -

1

- J

~~

'

'\

L
WINNIE
YOU'RS NOT
E!AB,~RRA&amp;&amp;ED

®HOW CONVENIENT

BY HER EFFORTS.
ARE YOU?

OFWENDYID
BE 11BUSY 11 lDDAY50WE
COULD BE
ALDNE

I

~ l

&lt;r"'

BR
bath, ntce kttchen,
uttltty R s torm wt hdows &amp;
doors, s1de porch carport
&amp;
larg e
garage
full
basement wlih prrvate
water supply (c1ty tap
pard), 2 trailer hookups

acres, home has 3 B R
Bath, mce kitchen, por
c hes Storage bldg Ask1ng
only $7 900

11 OQ-News 3,4,6,8 10 13,15 ABC News 33
11 3()-Johnny Carson 3 4 156, W1de Worl~ Mystery 13

TUESDAY . AUGUST 19 1975

were

6 JG-F rve Minut es to Live By 4 NE'ws 6

un

(Do you have a question lor

the Jacobys? Wr1te 'Ask the

Jaco 1bys
care of th1s
newspaper The most Jn·
terestmg questtons w111 be
used m thts column and
wnters wt/1 receive cop1es of
JACOBY MODERN)

6 4$--Mornlng R eport 3 Farm t1me 10
6 55-News 13
7 00- Today 3 4 15 A M Am e r 1ca 6 13

e. 10

10

'"~E

r

I

f

"

~
lr.

8 00-Lucy Show6 Capt ain Kangar oo 8 Schoolles 10
Sesame Street 33
8 3Q-Big Valley 6 Popeye 10

a 55-Chuck

While Reports 10
9 00-A M 3 Phil Donahue 4 15 Murtel Ste vens
Captain

Kangaroo 10

LIKE THIS THAT I'M
THANKFUL I GOT ME
A CLOTHES DR'IER

13

Galloping

Gourmet 8, New Zoo Revue l3 Biography 33

10 OQ-Celebrltv Sweepstakes 3 4 1S Sp~n Olt 8 8 10
Mike Douglas 13 Lil ias Yoga an d You 33
10 30-Wheel Of Fortun e 3d 15

P rrce Is Rtghl 810

The Romagnolls Table 33
11 OQ-High Rollers 3 4 15 One L1 le lo Live 6 Gambll
8.10, F1lm 33
11 JG-Hollywood Squares 3 6 15 Bra dy Bunch 13
Midday 4, Lo v~ ol Life 8 10
11 55- Take Kerr B Dan I mel s World 10
12 00-Magnlflcl ent Marf:jle Ma cht ne 3 15 Showoff s
13, Bob Brauns 50 SO Club 4 N ews 6 B 10 Mister
3~Jackpotl J 15 All My Ch tldr en 6 lJ
Tomorrow 8, 10 E lectnc Company JJ

Sea r ch For

12 5s-NBC New s 3 15
1 ()()-News 3

Ryan s Hope 6 13 Phil Donahue 8
Young and The Restles s 10 Not For Women Only

15, VIlla Alegre 33
3D-Days Of Our L1ves 3d 15 Le t s Make A Deal
6,13, As The World Turns 8 10 Eprsode Action 33
2 110-S\0,000 Pyramid 6 13 Gu1dlng Light 8 10
Rachlmanlnoff F efstival

33

2 30-Doctors 3,4 , 15 Rhym e and ReRson 6, 13 Edge 01

Nlaht 8,10
3 OQ-Another World 3 4, 15 Gene ral Hosp i tal 6, 13,
Match Game 8 10
3 JG-One Life to Live 13, Bewllched 6 Tattlelales
8,10. The Romag nol1s' Tabl e 70 To Be Annou n ced

33
4 00-Mr Cartoon 3 I D ream Of J ea nnie d Somerset
15, Mickey Mouse C l ub 6 M us rcal Chat r s 8

Sesame Street 20 33
Movie
Feeling" 10 Dinah' 13
4 3()-Bewltched 3 Mer v Grill n 4
Mickey Mouse Club

a

Tha i

Certa in

Mod Squa d 6

IS
MISter Roge rs

Bonanza

5 OQ-FBI 3, Lucy Show

8

Ne igh

borhood 20.33

5

30-News 6 Andy Grlfllth 8 Hogan s Heroes 13
Smart 15 E lectrl c Co mpany 20 33

Get

CBS News 8,10 L11ias Yoga and You 33
6, What's My L rne? B N ews 10 Name That Tune
13, To Be Announ ce d IS An l1ques. 20 Jean
Shepherd's Americ a 3J
7 30-Hollywood Squares 3 Ho llywood Squares 4
Let's Deal wtth tt 6
Buck Owens B Evening
Edition w1th Mart in Agr onsk y 2f0 New P r i ce Is
Righi 10 To Tell The Truth 13 Scene One Take o ne

33

Yesterday's Answer

9 Fonner

27 Scowled

( hyph wd 1
10 Sh1p
16 Mood
19 Construct
22 Tra1pse
23 Heap
( 2 wds 1
24 Bullish
25 Type of soil

:!9 Mountam
crest
30 Italian
lady's IItle
31 Golfer,
Lee 3li Egyptian
cotton
:rl Ovme cry

6 00---Adam 12 J 4,15 H a ppy Days 6 13 Good Ttmcs
8, 10, When Televi sion was 11vc 1 23 33
8 JG-Movte ' The Law 3 4 15 Movre Every Men
Needs One ' 6 IJ MA S H B 10 Co n sumer Su rv tv al

Kit 20,33
9 00-Hawall Five 0 8 10 N ova 20
Man 33
Sammy Davis Jr

10

New 20

Proud Ones

10

Ja nak1 JJ

12 3Q-Wide World My s t.,-y 6

rr • nt c t one you II be meetr ng
-- oc rfl llt Get 10 know lh rs per
son h •llur You 11 have m uch to
:,I! HU

SCO RP IO (Oct 24 Nov 22)

For

Tuelda~.

Aug 19 19/ lj

ARIES !March 21 April 19)
Though you re o ft en more
comfortabl e act rn g
n
dependently t behooves yo u
tod ay to be a team pi &lt;:J , cr The
rrght assoc1 a te can cHh J
your rntere st

note
35 Puss, rn"'" •I
37 Ian
t.c.-t-+-Flemmg
hero
38 Eastern

TAURUS (Apoll 20 May 20)
=-t--+-+-~11

Success may not come-o0n II ~
ltrst fry today If yo u re pnro:: s
tent and h a ng rn ttmr[! rt 111 011 t
elude you for too long

ntc

GEMINI (May 21 Jun e 20)

Chnst1an

Prompt act ron o n you r purl 1)
day can turn a specu il
Sltualton around to whPre t
benelrt rather th an a lr ubrl ty

Is

OR

BOJ

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

CANCER (June 21 July 22) A

EJRF

BMLO

BJHNRF

matter you re very corccrnr d
about becaus e 11 Allects other s
as well as yourselll ooks I k l
II
work out nrcely

LEO (July 23·Aug 22) You an
!IC Jpate more oppos rtr on on an
ISSue lhan you w II act ually get
Don I Jet your self do u bts hold
you back from try tng
VIRGO (Aug

BM HH
MFO

I ntcrface 33

10 3()...-Woman 20 Monty P y l hon s F!y tng Ctrcus 33
11 OQ-News 3 4 6 8 10 13 15 ABC Nows 33
11 30-Johnny Carson 3 4 15 W1de W o r ld Mystery 13
FBI 6, Mov ie
The Hor semen
8 Mov1e The
1 OQ- Tomorrow 3 4 r~ ew~ T3

27 Rummant
28 Old Dutch
liqu1d
measure
29 Menu term
(3 wds I
32 Vmeyard
1Fr I
oJ Crash mto
.14 MusiCal

I

S~ga of W este rn

10 ()()-Marcus Welby MD 6 13 Badrna by Jones 8

HRPWT

LJ

0 J B H

-FVPT-

VWJNRWU

Y L'Sterday's Cryptoquote: A ClllLD CAN ASK A THOUSAND
QCJESTIONS THAT THE WISEST MAN CANNOT ANSWER.JACOB ABBOIT

23 Sept

221

Stand up lor your rrg!rts toda y
where work or car eer rs co r
earned If you fee l en trtled tu
addit iona l co mpensatr on
speak o ut

LIBRA (Sept 23-Dcl 23) Don I
make a hasty negf:lt1ve as se s"

Yo11 rn 1y have to step n today
tr) r r nt c. t tne rn lerests of one
vou lnf I re spons b !e l or when
yc •• !'&gt;' 1• hrrn gettrng a bum
'"'lllat~.e

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23 Dec.
21) A ch_,s( fr,r&gt;nd and yoursel f
l'f
&gt;\ r;

yJ

1

rp r 1t ng on th e same
t ~... Jllh tlR !h er will thrnk
1 ~ t ThtJ ~aps bet ween
1
s ;&gt; e n t wrde

C APRICO A N (Dec 22 Jan
19) i u rrrRte rra prospec ts
.: I t r n Jlllen nq IJut retu rn s
r &lt;~ t nc t IJe
rnme d ate
H 1'- &lt; \d • tt-&gt;r&gt;y II bP there w hen
rj(_ J
fi OUAf\IU S ( J an 20 Feb 19)
t&gt;r 1 1 u t1ore to r eal ze rn th e
tr )' j l 1\ rc N ll be SILQh tf y
ll •nw d 1 he alleratron wrll
pr p , r ~c 1d c1al

PISCES (Feb 20·March 20)
Y • r chances at succeedr ng 1n
1 r 1-.- portnnt endeavor wrll be
..t\ t p rHnrsrrlg the nex t co uple
o JV" Do what needs to be
dunr-~ llU ctty

~~~~Your

\~ Birthday
~.

'r m 1 writ form lwo totally un
H tPd
advan tageous
ao:;socJatlons lh1s year One w11!
b(;nefrt JOU socrally the o1her
v I b.., 1 f:'lpfut careerwrse
P

LOWEEN
...OA.• fluiiC I"''- ' Po-

II•I""QH- - &lt;h''IW\9
..,.,.,.,.. ..,._. •l"lll

-0101--G--~
-~ 10 ~ 10'11 '""- , Zlrlr:

Wl!..t llnl ••~ ott ., 1o

..,..,..,1.,..,

"

I

~

Aug 19 197S

• l'wmon""o Prtu RP9 U&lt; "'

fout11 .C:tr!oc

J

7 oo-Truth or Conseque nces 3 A B owltng F o r Dollars

One letter s1mply slands for another In this sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formallon of the words are all
htnts Each day the code letters are dtfferent

---

Dinah 1 6

0

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
39 Well-known
I Kill
prmcess
5 Sappho's
40- at
1sla nd
(nagged)
II Path
41 Seaweed
12 Quantity
denvat1ve
13 Fore·
DOWN
shadow
I
Lazy
man's
14 Acaderruc
sm
reward
2 Keats'
15 Aunt ( Sp )
poem
16 Old French
3 What an
shootmg
opera-goer
match
has
(4 wds)
17 Depot
4 Longmg
(abbr I
5
Bill of 18 Agreement
6
AbrasiVe
20 Young
7 Soak
Cratchlt
8 Smg
21 Serpent's
(3 wds )
tooth
22 Frost
23 Feed a hre 1::--+-+--+25 Chap sans
churns
26 We1ght

I

I

Morn i ng wlth

Operation Noah 33
9 3Q-Not For Women Only 3

a

6 oo-News 3 4,8 10 13 15 AB C News 6 Ca tch 33 33
6 3()-NBC News 3 4 1S ABC News 13 Andy Grlfl lth 6,

CRYPTOQUOTE

~

CBS News

~::U;-+'4•/
~vee

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work 1l:

'

B 1ble An
Rev Cleophus

Robinson 13
6 35-Columbus Today •

12

A L TrL[ ":l.U/

5HEW &gt;--f'..r I 1),...
Lf:NGlt-&lt;S&gt; ,..U ...~

'

Rogers 33

Pass

an d ktng of clubs

''

''

6 oo-Sunrlse Seminar 4 Summer Semes ter 10
6 25--Farm Report 13

swers 8 , Con cern s &amp; Commen t s 10

play fast

•

FBI 6, Movie ' A Walk W1lh Love and Death" 8
Movie "Mr Skefllnglon 10 Janakl 33
12 3()-Wide World Mysle r y 6
1 00- Tomorrow 3 4 N ews 13

allowance

UL ABNER

pefed $25 900
NEAR RUTLAND - 2 77
acres 1 floor plan, 3 lovely

THIS YOU MUST SEE
$28,000
POMEROY
Close 5

Pass

IVJ IIab le to he lp South while
thev would be sure tncks
&lt;~ga tn st any East West contract
J11n East played the queen
of d1amonds on hts partners
k111g and West conlmued w1th a

standtng buy

street JUST $13 000
NEAR HARRISONVILLE

Soulh

a,

a,

Today •s artiCle was msplred
by a l-etter from Illln01s The
wnter wanted to know hhw
B) Os\\a ld &amp; James Jacoby
Eas t and West could have discarded better
J '"'
Trad1honally, a four
The hrst part of our answer IS
l eve l , vulnerable preempttve
that
East and West have our
b•d should be made w1th an
sympathy
However after the
e1g htln c k hand that has little
th~rd
spade
lead West would
01 no defense agamst any other
that
South
had e1ght
know
' u' t So uth s preempt had
spades
and
would
be
sure of h1s
ano ther fea ture He thought he
contract
1f
he
held
a club
m igh t ma ke 1t even If partner
Hence,
West
m1ght
have
lhrown
he ld ve ry httle
his
c
lubs
nght
then
and
there
Oswald 'When South looked
whereupon
the
swmdle
play
1t dummy thmgs didn ' t appear
develop
would
not
tu be sa tisfactory Dummy's
ctc ~

The Embo4d

IT'S ON RAIN'! DAI./5

PER SO NAL e tectrrc washer,
General Electrr c swrve l
type sweepe r
used very
ltttl e paddec;;t rronrng board'
on stand
large
~
e l ectnc floor fan With
controls Phone 99 ? ?JSB
8 17 6tc

!.( (

~r &lt;~fCURl1 Y - ""'

WELL WHEN 11-!AT St&gt;.M
GLN -n;t1ED TO MAl$
~UEILE FOR US 8 ~
&gt;N THE" SAI.OON f1E
HAD TWO PAII:TNIORS 1

AS'139.95

--------

f...

l'
1 (1f

old house'

M_AIN
POME

POMEROY LANDMARK
'W..:J_•ck W Carsey, Mgr.
Ai&amp; Phone 992 2181

-- --

~

( l llf }

\

Conditioners

DELICIOUS home grown
peaches wh rte and yellow
Mason
Peach Orchard
Phone (304) 773 5559
8 8 ffc 1

;~
''f ~ ~

Wfll

_

c, ll

Air
AS LOW

FIGGf:R WHil I
HAPPINE SS 1-=
WH Al l)P &gt;If- S
MAti r Fen v.:.,
LOOiiEY

rlAP PIHE55 -

S"1r, I wtsh to donate
Haifa
million half of ml.l mone4 to
dollars! 1'----, th1s beaut1ful

wtth bath, modern krtchen
nat gas heat and basement on
good street
ACREAGE 97 acres of
pnvacy 15 or more of bottom
A Dantel Boone resort

TH1i1 S Wt! Af
"Hil S S10RY
TALKS ABOU ! 1
I RVIN TO

O H I DON T
KHCNI - I'VE

SUCCESS!

IS

8 18

bath nat gas and large lot
Lots of posstbtl !ttes for ren

die port
NEW LISTING -

ANNIE-BUT WHA T

B 17 3tp

12 rooms

East

l"or th

R oma nce of a Hor

9 30-Rhoda
10 Board House 33
10 oo-Medlcal C enter B 10 To Be Announced 33

Up&lt;; mng I coli - K t

NEAR STORES -

busmess room to let 1n M1d

lloth vu lne r able

j

5 acres bat h
Clonch
Brad

On good

4 apartments and

,-;7

j J

'{ ' "

8 ts-Baseball 3 4 15, Movi e
seth let" 6, 13 Maude 8 10

Agronsky

4A

GASOUNE ALLEY_

INCOME -

~

Ouubie Pass

paved road Mobile home has
3 bedrooms and L C water
Nat gas furnace

tals

,,

\\ {''&lt;i\

th 2 mob il e
homes rn A 1 condd1on
Excellent well wrth new
deep well water pump
Many ext ras Seen by appt
only F or more rnformatron
cal 1 949 4917 Prrced rrght
for qurck sate
B 5 12tc

A

&gt;I

' '

EXCAVATING dozer l oad er
an d backhoe work
sep tr c
tanks
.nslalled
dump
tru cks and to boys for hrre
will haul frll d rrt lop so I
ttmest one and gravel_.. Call
Bob or Roger Jeffers day
phone 992 7089 nrght phone
991 J52S or 99 2 523 2
2 lllfc

Wrll1am
bury

.·-*"

- rrr''A

D &amp; 0 TREE Tr rmmrng 20
years experren ce Insured
fr ee eslrmates Cal! 992 3057
Coo lvrll e
Phone ( 1l 667
] 041
4 JO fie

4 ROOM ho use

¥ K Q 10

KQ86542
• 86 5 4

':;

3 ACRES of land w

MODERN KITCHEN -

.. 109

t \ K42
• Q J 10 6
.. Q J~
.. 10872
SOU rll IDI

c;oc~~

t:.XCAVATING
backhoe
dozer and d1tcher
Gas
eteclrrc and water l rne
bu r ral basements tooters
septrc syste m s and brush
clean rng W 11 haul fill drrt
top sort sand and gravel
lrm estone for drrveways and
roads
Phone Charles R
Halfr e ld Backhoe Serv1ce
Rt 1 Rutland Oh ro 74'l
609'l
7 11 90tc
READY MIX CONC~ETE
del r.ve red rrght t o your
p r otec t Fast and easy Free
esttmates Phone 992 3264
Goe g l crn Ready Mrx Co
M111ifd l epo rt Oh o
6 JO ttC

INFL.Uft-!TIAL.

Real Estate For Sale

stove and refrigerator car
pet 1ng rn ltvtng &amp; k1tchen
Nt ce bath
2 bedrooms
Natural gas furnace and
large lot

7

J

• A932

VJHO all.'/ Of&lt;O\'B
IT ON SU~DA.YS,
1'7UPPOSE 2

PUFF IJ.II6 o~o ~ A

Real Estate for Sale

BEDROOM garage apa r t
men I rn Pomeroy on R t 33
near school and church
Good nerghborhood
a rr
con d rl ronrng
gas
he at
alum rnum srdrng
burtt rn
krtchen cab nets new roof
lar ge bath 7 large c losets
sma l l
lot
econo m1cal
ulrlr t res Call 747 4147 early
or after 6 p m
8 15 ]tp

\\ l- ST

• 98 7 3
olo AK6543
E:AST

•

Syracuse, Oh1o

mo

18

r\ORTH

LARRY LAVENDER
4 10 I

Mertln

low d1amoiid South rulfed and
dec1ded the best line of play
would be to run off trumps
quickly and hope that hiS opponents would hang on to
clubs '
Oswald "'Tbe play worked
beautifully As each add1t10nal
spade was led , the diScardmg
by East and West got more and
more pamful But all these
pamful discards were red
cards Eventually, alter the
eighth trump was led, East did
discard a club, but 11 d1dn I
matter West was down to the
ace of hearts and three clubs A
heart threw h1m m and he had
to give South h1s contract '

.. 3
• J7

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

7 17 1 mo

with

Once die is cast -

Blown
Insulation Serv1ces

Ph 992·3993

Edition

WIN AT BRIDGE

FOREVEI'l '

Blown mto Walls &amp; Atltcs

Processing

BACKHOE for rent hour or
co n trac t reg or excavat ory
type Septte tanks rns talled
Brll Pullrns phone 99'2 2478
7 '2 4 26 tc

Pollee Surdgeon 6 $25,000 Pyramid

B 00---Joe Garaglola 3,4, IS, Rookies 6,13, Gunsmoke
8, 10 Rachmaninoff Festival JJ, Tennis 20

DO GET SACK TO

FEELII&gt;JIS&lt;$~

4

20,
Municipal Court 10 To Tell The Truth 13 , Untamed
World 1S E plsode Action 33

FREE ESTIMATES

--'~

BICYCLE Repa rrs Sa l es and
Serv rce
498 Locus! St
Mrddleport Ohro
Phone
992 3092
7 22 26tc

YOt.J R:e
IF W&amp; REALLY
A,l&lt;ING M~ LOVf rACM OTNE'R:.,
TO WAIT&lt;'
WAITING WOI.J'T
CH.WGr OUR.

Ph 992 2798
7·24 I mo

8 1 75

CUSTOM SLAUGHTER

L ETTERED SIGN S '
19 10 FORD Maver rc k ? dr 6 H A ND
AND POSTER S
FREE
cy l automn l rc \800 or bes t
EST IMATE S CALL M C
off er Phone 997 5190
CRAWFORD 99 2 7680
l3 15 Jtp
8 7 261p

W/\ IT RE:~S

.:&gt;LD turn1lure
ce boxes
brass beds
or c omplete
households
Wrrte M
0. .
..... A RP E N T RY
floorrng
Mrller
Rt
4 Pomeroy
ce drng and panel rng Phone
Ohro Ca ll 99 2 7760
'i&lt;J ? 7759
10 7 74
8 17 76tc

Reedsville
News Notes

WOULD YOU BELIEVE?
Build an all steel bu ldrng at
Pol e Barn pnc es? Golden
Grant All Sle el Buildrngs
R t 4 Box t4 8 Waverly
Oh ro Phone 947 'l796
7 'lA Tic

POMEROY, OHIO

~53 1

Ma•n

Parly

E vening

I tres

POMEROY
MOTOR
CO.
OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M
Wanted

7 3()-That Good Ole Nashville Music 3, Masquerade

CAPTAIN EASY

Black

top

CASH pad tor all makes and
mod e ls af mobile homes
Phone Mea co de 614 423

East

Stop In Or
Call992 7SJ7

Ca mera 13 Wally s Workshop lS, ~aklng It count
20 To Be announced 33

DICK SEYlfR

Flalwoods Oh1o
Pomeroy Ohto

Pomeroy

Ph 992 2174

MONDAY, AUGUST 1l 1t7•
5 3()- News 6 Andy Griffith 8 Hogan's Heroes 13, Get
Smart 15 Electric Company 20,33
6 OQ-News 3.4 8110 13.15. ABC News 6, Se.ame Street
20 Jeanne Wolf With 33
6 3()-NBC News 3,4, 15, ABC News 13, Andy Griffith 6
ACBS news 8, 11), Jody's Body Shop 33
7 oo- Truth or Consequences 3 4, Bowling tbr Dollars
6 What s My Line? 8 News 10, New Candid

WOOD METAL PLASTIC
ANTIQUES
MODERN CHEMICALS

KUHL CAKE DECOR

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

11295

Vmyl roof grey f1n tsh h1gh mileage good
au tomati c power steermg radro, st lver fmish

Laurel Oiff News Notes

'

Nathan Btggs
Radrator Spectallst

$2095

1970 NOVA V 8 CPE

GAR/• C E 'iALE fl.u q HI 'J'J 9
to • p 1l
oc&lt;l t ed on Rl
1 11 sou rh o f Jacks Club o ft
1-i:t 1 tly p&lt;r&lt;i"&gt; Gu11s pockel
kn vcs br c ycl c too l s new
pa 111 n q supp l res
baby
!urn lur e
n[wborn u nd
'tdu l t c lothrn q 'lnct n •SC
R 11 Srp

Parker 1 sons

From the largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radrator 10 the
s~allest Heater Core

automatte trans power ste ertng and brakes
dark green frntsh , vmyl ro of saddle bucket sea ts
console ra d1o !tke new w w ftres
350 V

Kttchen Slate Inspected
Ltcensed
Baker
and
Decorator
Homemade
Noodles also featured

· - - - - - - - - , - - . . . , . . . . - -. . . ; . . _ . . , . . _ . . , . _ . , . _ . _ . , _ _ .. _

I

PAINT
STRIPPING
SERVICE

CAKE BAKING
WANTED

$3495

Ranger Pkg Beautrful 2 tone green w1th tnm o ptton s
sl 1d1ng back glass automat1c tran s power steerrng
radto Less than 9 000 miles Chrome front bumper
rear st ep bumper

AND OOAR D
ROOM
Prrvatc a1 r con dil •o nc d
phone
T V
all
room
m C'il Is laundry plus m any
Wr 1e Mr s M
J
cx lr ~)s
M1 le r Box tOJ Pomeroy
Ohro
8 I 76 tp

Monday and
Y Af&lt; D ":.A LE
Tues da y N ew Lr m a Road
ill! typ~ s o f c tort nq
8 17 7tc

Business Services

l

.

"

{------------------------------~

Auto Sales

Au.to Sales

y--·-------------·-..
lI Television log for easy viewing

9 - The Daily Sent mel, M1ddlepor1-Pom er oy, 0, Monday 1\u;:. 18, 1075

•

•

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-

..-

--~

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..

.,

\

10 ,- The Daily Sent~el,Middleport-Pqmeroy, 0., Monday, Aug. 18, 1975

News •• in

HOSPITAL NEWS
Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
- Mila Hudson, Syracuse;
Robert Barton, Pome~oy.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES - Sybil Green, Edna
Dorst, Glenn Bissell, Ronda
Dempsey , Beulah Rickman,

a son. Mc Arthur; Mr . and
Mrs . Kevin Stapen, a son,
Thurman ; Mr. and Mrs.

Forerest . Thomas &lt;"'..Ji!-.S.~n .
Ripley, W. Va .
t Births, Aug. Iii
Mr . and Mrs. Phill ip
Saunders, a daughter , Hio
Grande.

Donna Davis, Dora Roush,
&gt;'"

Gladys Shields.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Ruth Mulford , Pomeroy:
Juanita Gibbs, Coolvill e;
Charles Stearns, Pomeroy.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Margaret Allen , Ronald
Bachtel.
Holzer Medical Centr
(Births, Aug.l5)
Mr. and Mrs . Stephen
Adams. a daughter, Vinton:
Mr . and Mrs . Paul Casto, a
daughter, Point Plea san t:
Mr. and Mrs . Jetmes
Clevinger, a daughter.
Coalton; Mr. and Mr s. James
W.

a sun,

Cunningham,

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGE S - Mrs. S.
Greenlee and son, Point
Pleasant ;
Mr s.
Dav i d
Rutherford , Apple Gro ve:
Mr s. Ed Wheel e r , Point
Pleasant ; Chery l Cole , Point

Pleasant :

Hartf ord : Luc ille Ram sey,
Cheshire . Mrs . Mont H i ll ,
Leon ; Richard Are, Point
Plea san t : Aaron McDermitt,
Pain Plea san t ; Mrs . Robert
Langdon, Milton : Billie Jo
· ·Maynard , Ash ton : Mr s Ja c k
Walter s. Vinton ; Gerald
Wayan ,
A s ht on .
L eroy
Mayes, Henderson , Dalla s
Varian . Ma son: William
Bail s. Leon ;· Mrs. Wilbu r
Leifheil, Rac i ne ; Mrs . Randy
Northup . Point Pl eas ant ;
Joh n Fowl er , Jr ., P l i ny :
Thorria s
Bak er,
Po i n t

Plesant : Mr s. Everett Mayes

Gallipolis; Mr . and Mr s. ·
Lewis
Dailey , a
so n,
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mr s.
David L. Martin , a son,
Crown City; Mr. and Mrs.
Michael
McCormill,
a
daughter, Huntington , W. Va .
1Births, Aug. 161
Mr . and Mrs. Robert Kight,

Tournamen t,

Friday thru Sunday
Augu st 22-24

THE GODFATHER
PART II

-

MASON
DRIVE-I
N
.
.
"
,,

''

•

Daniels. Gallipolis ; Dess ie
Burdette. Point Pl easant ;
Mae Messick, Point Pleasant .
BIRTH - son to Mr . and
Mr s. Gary Gregory of West
Columbia .

SYRACUSE - Syracuse,
the host learn in the Independent Baseball League ,

TONITE
thru AUG. 21
NOT OPEN

Itt

and son, Gallipolis Ferry;
Mr s. Dan Smith , daughter ,
Ga l lipolis Fe rry ; Kenneth
Bl ack , New Haven: Thomas

Hosts put it
to Minersville

MEIGS THEATRE

:, l

Ben Ander son.

I

N,,,,, II ,

Starting Aug . lS
Open Weekend s Only

dumped

Minersv ille, 22 to I, Sunday at
Syracuse.
Jeff Hubbard and Hick
VanMatre combined on the
mound to run their record to
seven wins and no losses for
the season for Syracuse.
For
Syracuse, Steve
Stewart had a triple , Mick
Ash had fiv e hits in six trips ,
Jeff Hubbard was three for
four , and George Glaze, Greg
Roush and Rick VanMatre
each had two hits.
For Minersville, Ron
Clonch was 3 for 5 and J.
Haggy was 2 for 4. On the
mound Hendricks and Ron
Clonch each gave up 10 hits.
Sunday Aug. 24, Tuppers
Plain s will go against

Bri~fs

(Continued from page I)
Ference sponso red by the Ohio AFL·CIO have adopted a sevenpoint pos ition paper calling for nationa l fue l allocation and
oppos ing removal of price con)ro ls on natura l gas at the wellheads .
.
Ohio AFL-C!O Secretary-Treasurer Warren J . Smith said
delegates here Sunday concluded that the only thing to save
Ohio industry is some form of allocation "that would a ll ow us
to get more gas from Southwestern fi elds. " Wh en you know
there's capped gas wells s ilting around, it 's a little like blackmail, '' said Smith in reference to the opposition to controls.
WASHINGTON - THREE MARITIME UNIONS
threatened to boycott U. S. gra in shipments to Russia are
demanding proof the grain sales won-t inflate domestic food
prices and are pushing for higher shipping rates.
The union leaders planned to meet today with AFUJO
President George Meany, who has endorsed the threatened
boyc ott. The session was called by Thomas Gleason, head of
th e Inter nation al Longshoremen's Association, who se

members have refused to load ships with Russian-bound grain.
Also endorsing the move and expected to attend today 's
meet ing are Paul Hall , head of the Seafarers union and Jesse
i:alhoon of the Marine Engineers union . Gleaso n says the grain
will not m ove unless the administration comes up with
e~idence the sales will not inflate domestic food prices .
COLUMBUS - THE FLOOD OF WHAT OFFICIAL.S hope
to be a record 2.25 million visitors will begin pouring into the
Ohio Expositions Center 6 a.m. here Thursday when Gov.
James A. Rhodes officially opens )he 122nd Ohio Stale Fair .
Grandstand attractions this year include Mac Davis, Roger
Miller, the Captain and Tennille, Roy Rogers and Dale Evans,
Pau l Anka, the Pat Boone Family, the Young Americans,
Tanya Tucker, Merle Haggard, Earth, Wind and Fire, Bo
Donaldson and the Heywoods, Bob Hope and La Costa .
New in 1975 is an 1850s fair, recreated at nearby Ohio
Vill age, featuring farm implement di splays and gu nsmiths,
blacksmiths, printers and cabinetmakers demonstrating their
s kills. The four-day harness racing program has drawn some
572horses . Major races will be the $28,000 Buckeye State Pace,
$27,000 Ohio State Trot, $25,000 Director of Agriculture Pace
and $25,000 Governor's Cup Trot.
~~~
UNlfCALLED
The Middleport E-R squa d
MEDSCHOOLSEf
went
to North ~·ront St . at
COLUMBUS iUPI) 2:44 p . m . Sunday lor Viola
Gov. James A. Rhodes
Edwards
who was having
today signed legislation
chest
pains.
She was taken to
establis hin g a n Ohio
Holzer Medical Center. At
College of Osteopathic
I : 18p. m. Saturday the squad
Medicine to be located at
went to Vine St. for four-yearOhio
University
in
old
Nicky Whitlatch who had
Athens .
received a neck in jury. He
11le legislation, effective
was taken to Veterans
No. 17, will set up a 10Memorial
Hospital.
member advisory commission with a budget of
$670,000 to plan for th e
opening of the new college.
~~~~~~~

Syracuse, each with a 3-0
record in tournament action .
Syracuse won the league
championship earlier .

Bill Hubbard is manager
for Syracuse and Rich Arnold
for Minersville.

*

merteon
From a Great American Bank

l

THE FARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS CO.
· Pomeroy, Ohio

'

-'
I•

I.

t.r,t~/,1

---

D l f l',I T
,1)4 'iiU.JlANlf
--~-.

-.

The Pomeroy E. R squad
was ca lled to Brown 's Trai ler
Court in Minersville at 12 : 06
a . m . M,onday for Belva
Miller who was ill. She was
taken to the Hoi ze r Medical
Center . At 2: 10 p . m . Sunday
the squad was call ed to near
Pomeroy for Charles Stearn s,
injured in an auto accident .
He was taken to Veteran s
Memorial Hospi tal where he
was admitted At 5: 21 p . m .,
the squad went to Wright St.
for Mrs. Herb Moore who had
fallen . She was taken to
Holzer Medica l Center .

The Syracuse -Minersvi lle
Ba seba ll Boosters Assn. will
hold an evening of recreation
for all
teams
in
the
organization Wedn esday,
Aug . 20, at 5: 30 p . m . at the
Sy rac use Ball Park. Refresh ·
ments will be served.
A specia l meeting of Shade
River Lodge 453. Chester, wi ll
be held at the hall at 7: 30 p .
m. Thursay with work to be in
the Ma ster Ma son Deg ree .
A ll parents of seven th and
eigh th grade studen ts new in
the M eigs Local School
Dis tric t are to register their
child at the junior high
school , S. Third Ave ., M id ·
dl epo rf. Monday through
Friday , thi s week from 9 a.
m. to noon and from 1 p . m . to
3 p . m .. Jeffrey W. Weaver ,
principal. announced.
The Laure~I~ Ci iff Health
Club wil l meet Th ursday,
Aug. 2 1, a t the home of Nellie
Tracy at 7: 30 p. m .
A rummage sa le will be
held at the Middleport
Masonic Temple Thursday ,
Friday and Sa turday , Aug .
21. 22, and 23 from 9 a. m. to 4
p. m . sponsored by the First
Church of God, Syracuse.
A picnic and sil ent auction
will be he ld at 6 p. m .
Tuesday at the home of Mrs .
Leona Karr by the Wom en's
of
Ve terans
Au x il ia ry
M emorial Hospi tal.

ET HEL CROSS
RACINE - Mrs. Elhel May
Cr oss, 70, died Sunday at her
resi dence in Racine .
Mrs. Cross was preceded in
death by her parents, William
and Sadie Corn Foss. and by a
brother, William .
Surviving are her husband,
D ill on ; a daughter , Mrs .
Mary Roush . Ra cine ; a son.
William , Racine ; six grand c hildren ,
th ree
great .
grandchildren ; two brothers,
N orman
Fos s,
Point
Pl easan t, and George Foss of
Athens, and three sis ters,
Mrs . Vida Arnold and Mrs .
Florence Dav is, both of St .
Petersburg . Fla ., and Mrs.
Freda Milch, Middleport.
Funeral services w ill be
held at l:JOp . m. Wednesday

Benn looking for something
spec ial? Chances are you'll

be able to lind It at th e
"FR IENDLY
O NES ."
Being member s of HWI,
th ey give you the benefit of
over
35,000
item s
warehou se d
for
your
convf!nience.

POMEROY CEMENT
BLOCK CO .
.

.

.'

at the Ew ing Funeral Home
with the Rev . Freeland
Norris officiati ng . Burial w ill
be in Greenwood Cemetery .
Friend s may ca ll at the
funeral home after 7 this
evening . The family requests
that fl owers be om itted.

FLODA VINEYARD
REEDSVILLE Miss
Floda Vineyard, 66, Tucson,
Ariz .. died Sunda y morn ing
at the St. f'.Aary Hospi tal
there .
Mi ss Vineyard was born in
Roane County,W. V~ .•. the

daughter ol the late

A FULL
SERVICE

[3ANK

tOJIP.Of.:ATION

7:00 A.M. TIL MIDNIGHT
DAILY

CROW'S STEAK HOUSE

---·.

cerned and determined to
take action on getting the
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
opened much earlier than the
date set, Dec. 15.
Phil Globakar, councilman ,
the first to speak up Monday
night in the regular meeting
in regard to what the brid ge
is doing to business in
Pomeroy, Middleport. and
Maso n, suggested that
petitions and letters be sent to
Sen . Oakley Collins, Cong.
Clarence Miller and Rep . Ron
James. He a lso suggested a
meeting be held with town
officials of all towns in the
county . Globakar fell that, iF
necessary, officials should
meet with Governor Rhodes .
Councilmen approved to
hope to expedite the repair .
They contended the work can
be done in less time than has
been designated. 11 was

SPECIAL SALE
WAREHOUSE ON MECHANIC"ST.
---------------- --- ~--------------------1
Reg. $299.95 Utton
Sale! Whirlpo~l
I

MICRO WAVE OVEN :: AIRReg.CONDITIONERS
5259.95 8,000 BTU
Portable · 14 minute timer .
Ceramic interior . oven light.
Just One to Sell

Sale •207.00

1

•2 49•00

[

Reg. $249.95 6,000 BTU

:

Sale '199.00

1
1

Reg . $209.95 5,000 BTU

Save $50.00 On Any

I

l

Whirlpool ·
Refrigerator

Sale applies only to
models in stock. Good
selection of models with
ice makers _ adjustable

TIME TO BUY A

f

WHIRLPOOL

1

FOOD FREEZER.

1 Select a chest or upright model.
1 Be ready no~ lor freezing your

shelv~s--------------~-~~m-~er fr~~s-a~d ~egetable~I 'pedal Sale prices now

on~411 RCA

DISHWASHERS !
1 only regular $349.95 Portable, l
Sale •324.00

1 Only regular $339.95, . 4 cycle
portable - white.

Sale •314.00

;. •.

Television Sets.

1

s cycle-2 speed. Harvest gold
color.

·

I
I Sale
I
1

Stale like' pbn lo repaU ·
ferry landing at Middleport

.,.,
~

Color

Prices on Whirlpool

~
::::
:·,:.',:,\
:
}
,:,:
:;::

The Ohio Highway Department is "looking
favorably" upon the proposed immediate repair of the
levee in Middleport.
Glenn Smith, Marietta, Division 10 director, State
Department of Highways, told Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman Monday he would be in Middleport today to

---------------------L------------------Warehouse - Annex and Main Store open Monday through Thursday
9:30A.M.to5 P.M.- Friday and Saturday9:30 A. M.toS P.M.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

VOL. XXVII

on!

At your Ford Dealers.

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Prices start at S2769*
SeeYour
Ford Deater
•sticker price, lllcludlng tao, taxes, title,
..... .!IIi nation charges and dealer prep.

by mud at Clifton, directly .a cross .the river from {
Micfdleport, be-•esurrected and improved oy tbe State · :;::
of West Virginia, and the ferry operllled there when
water is too high to permit operations lietween Mason :~::
and Pomeroy .
:;::
Or, according to Dorsi! McCoy, who operates the ~:~:
service, he could put a second ferry into operation to (
make full use of the four levees.
\
McCoy Monday told Mayor Hoffman he would give :}
his fullest cooperation, keeping the ferry unning as :::;
long as the safety of passengers was not jeopardized. :;:;
He said he has been assured by West Virginia {
Highway Department officials the levee at Clifton }
would be repaired immediately upon receipt of a letter ;:;:

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By United Press International
WASIDNGTON - A 49 PER CENT SURGE in construction of condominiwns, townhouses and other multifamily
dwellings in July has pushed housing starts to their highest
level in a year, government and industry officials say. Housing
Secretary Carla Hills said the figures reported Monday were
"encouraging, particularly with regard to multifamily starts.
This trend seems to indicate a continued recovery fat the
housing industry."
Construction of condominiwns, townhouses and apartment buildings jumped from a n adjusted-annual rate of 209,000
units in June- the worst in 29 years - to 311,000 units in July .
Despite improvement from an extremely poor base, the rise
was indicative of a trend developing among home builders to
meet public demand for moderate&lt;ost housing after the price
of the average new home swelled to $40,600 this year.

new life coming
The Pomeroy Hi gh School,
though ils doors a nd windows
are boarded up , will be
bursting with activity soon as
a sepior citizens ce ntef.
The brick structure , built in
1914, and vacated by the
Meigs Local School District,
was last occupied by the
Pomeroy Post Office . A
rOckslide behind the post
office damaged the building
on Dec. 3, 1971 and in
December, 1972, a year later
the Pomeroy Post Office was
vacated while repairs we r e
made to the building a nd a nd
cliffs . The post office
operated out of the Pomeroy
High School until October,
1973; the building has since
been vacant.
Two weeks ago it was

MINNEAPOLIS - PRESIDENT FORD said today he will
ask Congr_e ss for an additional $2 to $3 billion for nuclear
weapons unless tif Soviet Union helps shape a strategic arms
agreement. Ford also said the Russians could endanger
detente by interfei-Jn&amp; _in Por_tl!gal to support the Communist( Continued on page 10)

Oleerleaders asking for
caps and bottles Saturday
lbe Meigs High cheerleaders will conduct a pop
bottle drive on Saturday, Aug. 23 beginning at 9 a.m.
intending to cover Pomeroy, Middleport and Rutland.
They also will be glad to have RC, Nehl and Upper 10
bottle cap~ to turn in for credit. Public supporl will be
greatly appreciated as money is needed for uoilorrns
and equipment.
Residents may leave pop bottles or bottle capo or
both on their porch, walk or yard where they can tHo
seen. Persons may call one of the girls to let them know
they have bottles or caps to ~ntribute, as a
cheerleader will be sure to come, For the Middleport
area, phone Pam North at 99UMO; for Pomeroy phone
Cathy Blaettnar at 992-5127; for tbe Rutland area,
phone Sheila sargent at 742-2844, and for the.Route ~
Hemloek Grove area, Denise Marshall at 992-7448.
Jeannie raylor' cheerleader advisor' said help in
the fonn · of trucks, drivers and helpers will be

•·

·'

GHOST BRIDGE - Work on the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge no sooner got underway when
it was stopped Monday due to La ck of stee l. Over the weekend the ferry was not able to
operate due to the high water and sttong current. It was indicated to Pomeroy Council last
night steel would not arrive un\U on or about Aug. 28. Obviously, the only apparent progress
made in the repair sinee being ceased two weeks ago is moving the equipment above onto
the bridge , and erecting blocks at both its ends.

f

79 give
Eigh ty-e ight per sons offered themselves to the '
bloodmobile Monday at
Pomeroy Elementary School ,
79 being permitted to donate
a pint of blood of which 38
were in replacement. There
were 21 first time donors.
Multiple donor marks were
achieved by Milton Hood and
Henry Barr, five gallon;
Sharon Welker . Rosella
Birchfield and Albert Martin ,
two gallon, and Virgil Windon
and Mina Walker , nne gallon.

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PRICE 15'

Contract signed
for Meigs' MR
going to Gallia

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Your Car will never be worth more!

NO. 89

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Devoted To The Interests of 1'he Meigs-Mason Area
TUESDAY, AUGUST 19, 1975
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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.river level) . Smith indicated his object would be to
obtain an accurate estimate of the costs involved.
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Washers and Dryers.

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ACCOMPLISHED, SO FAR - Since Aug . 4 when the
block above was erected at the Ohio entrance to the
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge, exactly nothing has been accomplished toward repair of the bridge . Closing it has
bisected " The Bend", cutting to a trickle social and
economic intercourse, and reducing travel between the
states to that absolutely necessary by people getting to
jobs or businesses.

NOW IS AN EXCELLENT

I

Sale! Whirpool $349.95

and James should be sent to
the
Ca pito l
Building,
Columbus , and letters to
Miller to Washington, D. C.
In other business 1 council
accepted the resignation or
street commissioner Don
McKen zie who has accepted
employment with the Salety
and Hygiene Department,
St&lt;1,1e of Ohio. in Columbus .
Counci l named
Jack
Krautter
to
replace
Mc Kenzie on a 90-day
probat ionary period, and Don
Ward, who is prese ntly
workin g with the street
department, to assist janitor
duties at city ha ll .
John Man ley, council
member, reported that
"something has to be done"
abo ut the road on Breezy
Heig hls up to the Bill Lehew
pr operty . Ditches need
c leanin g and the r oad
(Continued on page 10)

disclosed there are on ly six
men working a one eight hour
shift, and needed steel - it is
understood - will not arrive
until Aug . 28.
Giobakar contended that
three shifls could be put to
work . If not three, two could
easily be put on the job, he
said.
Council members observed
thai people in business are
""really hurting " due to the
closing of the brid ge . If they
are fee ling the effect now,
what will i t be like in ·a monlh
fr om now ?, they asked.
Giobakar said it is time to
pick up the ball and get
some thing done.
Globakar suggested that a ll
persons in Ohio employed at
plan ls in West Virginia that
have to use either the ferry or
walk the bridge write letters
to the above elected officials.
Lette rs to Senator Collins

Sale •167.00

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ex!reme cruelty .

EFFECTIVE IMMEDIATELY

Pomeroy Council is .con-

-.~

FOUR DIVORCED
Meigs County Common
Pleas Court has granted
divorces to Charlene Barton
from"~&gt; WiJliam B. Barton on
grounds of gross neglect of
duty and extreme cruelty;
and to Jean Armstrong from
Gerald L. Armstrong lor

FROSH 1'0 MEET
All freshman athletes interested in playing football in
the Meigs Local District
program are asked to meet at
7 p. m . Tuesday in the gym of
Meigs High School. All
parents also are invited.

Bridge _closing hurting area,
•
•
Pomeroy council zs actzng

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
.

B.

Delaney and Florence Smith
Vineyard . She was a l so
preceded in death by a
brother and a s ister . A
member of th e Hillcrest
Bap tis t Church in Columbus,
she had worked as a practica l
nurse in Columbus many
years.
Sur vivi ng ar e five brothers ,
Hobart, of Reedsville; James
Dale of
B. of Tor ch;
Tallmadg e; Raymond G., of
Columbus, and Harold G. of
Brookvill e; four siste rs, Mr s.
Helen Damewood, Syracuse ;
Mr s. Mildred Coll ins, Can·
ton ; Mrs . Lila Richardson,
Crooksvi ll e, and Mrs. Rosa l ie
Week ley , Columbus, and
several nieces and neph ews .
Funeral se r vices will be
held at 2 p. m . Wednesday at
the White Funeral Home in
Coolville wit h the Rev .
Walter Cross offic ia ti ng .
Burial will be in the Success
Church of Chr ist Cemetery .
Friends may ca ll at the
fun eral hom e anytime after
noon Tuesday.

OUR NEW HOURS Will BE

$40,000.00 Maximum Insurance
for Each Depositor
"'"I ·

, The Er~stern Band Boosters
will meet a t 7:JO thi s evening
in the band r oom at the high
sc hool .

I

" The parad ise which most
people are looking for is not
a locality - it is merely a
state of mind ."

We can no longer take the quartering of British troops.
We can no longer reason with the rulers. We've stashed
our supplies in Concord and are preparing for war. Now,
we learn the British are on their way to destroy our
supply base. It's the night of April 18th. We send Paul
Revere and William Dawes on a gallop toward Le~ington
to warn our farmers to form ranks. We meet t he British
early the next morning on the village green. We are
ordered to disperse. There are only dozens of us, but we
refuse. A shot is fired. Then , a volley that kills eight of
our men and wounds ten. We will not give up . We will
fightfrom behind stone walls and apple trees to save our
ammunition. From now on we will be ready to fight at a
minute's notice. We are the Minute Men. ~

Fund standing at $556

,--------------------------1
! Area Deaths !

by . ra.·rm·~~ i on nl THE BI'.TTMt\ 1'-:N AIH HIV I·

1775: The long ride into battle.

Notices, local
news in brief

Pomeroy. He will not be"able
to return to his classes at the .
Salisbury school when school
resumes next week.
A public fund drive for six- 2, Pomeroy ; Mr · and Mrs.
Contribution checks are to
year~ld Lonnie LeMaster,
Howard Logan, Pomeroy; be made out to the Lonnie
brain surgery patient 111 St. Mr. and Mrs. · Charles
LeMaster Hospitalization
Joseph Hospital in Parkers- Strauss, Pomeroy; Gladys Fund a nd sent to Miss
burg rea c hed $558 this Burson 1 Route 1, Shade; Eleanor Robson, Meigs
Holstein ,
E• mmogene
morning .
County Recorder , at the
The family said Lonnie Syra c use; Mr. an d Mrs .
t
th
·
• . coun y
cour ouse
m
1 E' · Riff) e, Route .,..,,,
ended 20 days in the intensive 01ares
Pomeroy or they may be left
care unit at the hospital · Pomeroy; Pomeroy Church at her offtce .
Sunday . His room number is o{ the Nazarene; Kimerly
443 and he is now pennitted a . Ami Smith, Wooster ; Mr. and
NOW YOU KNOW
moderate amount of visitors. Mrs. David Gloeckner, Route
The framework of four
However, m ore brain surgery 2, Racine, and Pearl and Bill steel supports for the Statue
is projected .
Randolph, Route 2, Coolville. of lJberty was designed by
Lonnie is the son of Mr. and Guslave Eiffei, creator of the
Latest contributors are Mr.
and Mrs. Virgil King, Route Mrs . Ed LeMaster, Route 2, Eiffel Tower .

anuuunced the Meigs County
Commiss ioners wiU receive

received on procedures

a

to be

followed in establis hing the
$160 ,000 grant from the senior citizens center in the
Housing and Urban Develop- building. Even so, there are
ment Agency to purchase the expecled to be no co m building - known as the plications developing .
sen ior high school - and to
More " paper work " may
renovate it. The com- have lo be completed and the
missioners are responsible commissioners will have the
for the gran t as the receiving respons ibility of a pproving
t he_ i m provements to the
agents.
Earlier, the Meigs Coun ty str uctur e.
Coun cil on Aging agreed to
According to presen t plans,
purc hase the aba ndoned only two floors of the building
building fr om the Meigs will be used . Offices will be on
Loca l School District for the second floor a long with
$75,000. This will leave a the craft s hop while facilities
ba lance of $85 ,000 for for the senior citize ns acremodeling.
tivities will be on the first
The commissioners have floor . Senior citize ns now use
not been " officia ll y" notified the Pomeroy Junior High
of the grant. Neither have School for a center.
any written instruction~ been ;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::·
EXTENDED' FORECAST
Thursday
through
Saturday,
c hanc e of
s how ers Thursday and
Nurses serving were Mrs . Friday and fair Saturday.
Highs will be in the upper
Vern Story, RN , and Lelah
Weather , LPN. Physicians 70s north and the lower 80s
south. Lows will be from
present wer e Drs. L. D. Tell
the upper 50s to the mid
M.D.; John Ridgway, DO;
Selim J . Blazewicz M.D., and 60s.
Raymond Boice, M.D. The
cantee n was se rved by
Chest~r United Methodist
Cloud~ tonig~t and WedCh ur c h .
Loading
a nd
unloading was performed by nesday , lows tonight in lower
Retired Volunteer Sen ior 60s. Highs Wednesday in the
Cilize ns and Boy Scout Troop mid 80s . Probability of rain 10
per cent loday and tonight
' 249.
and 20 per cent Wednesday .,
(Continued on page 10)

blo~d

Weather

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Gallia and Meigs County
Commissione rs
Monday
signed a n agreement to
permit a training program
for the menially retarded of
Meigs County at the Guiding
Hand School in Ches hire.
The contra ct runs from
Sept. 1, 1975 through Aug . 31 ,
1976 and is non-re newable .
Meigs County will pay the
cost for training of their
students as on a tuition basis.
The agreement followed
joint discussions of the Gailia
County and Meigs County
Board s of Menta l Retardation. Ser vices were contracted from the Gallia
County 648 Board to allow a
training program £or the
mentally relarded of Meigs
County.
The Meigs County Board of
Mental Retardation, through
the Meigs County Commissioners , ,;'g reed to pay the
Gallia Co unty Board of
Menial Relardation $36,000
per year, $14,000 must be paid
on or before Sept. I with the
remaining at the rate of
$2,000 per mon th from Oct . 1Aug. I , 1976.
Meigs County's Board of
Mental Retardation mu st
furni sh transportation of its
31 students and must pay ali
transportatio n expenses . 1t
was agreed that if the board
accepts more t han 31

Dirt piles
are blamed
The Meigs Coun ty Sheriff's
Dept. investigated two traffic
accidenls Monday. ·
A' 2:!10 p.m. in Letart Twp.,
Twp . Road 131, Thelma L.
Faudree, 51, Rt . 2, Racine ,
was traveling north beside
large piles of dirt in the
ce nter of the road made by a
gr ader. Her car slid over the
embankment to the right, the
car landing on ils top . The
driver had visible injuries but
was not immediately treated.
There
was
moderate
damage .
.At 8 p.m. in Sutton Twp.
Twp. Road .] 09, Ricky Lee
Deeter, 58, Rt. 2, Racine,
traveling south , pulled into
the path of Donald B. Allen ,
40, Rt. 2, Hacine, traveling
west . There .were no injuries,
no c itation,s , a nd only
moderate damage .

st ud ents, any additional
students will cost an additional $100 per s tudent per
mon th.
·
The board must a lso submit
a quarterly report on the
pro gres s towar d
Meigs
Co unly fa c ility for the
training of its own menta lly
retarded persons .
The agreement was signed
by R. William Jenkins , Gailia
County Probate and Juvenile
Cour t Judge and Ann Bowers
of the Galiia Co unty Board of
Health and Mental Relardation .
In other commission activity, Carte r and Evans o£

Gallipolis was the low bidder
for excavation work for the
l· onstruction o£ a new mental
oealth center. The building
will be built on land across
from the Holzer Med ica l
Cen ter . The bid totaled

$79,850. It was taken under
advise men t pe ndin g state
approval.
Prese nt for the bid opening
were Maxine Pl umm e r ,
executive director for the 648
Mental
Hea lth
Board;
Malcolm Oreba ugh her administrat ive assistant and
Earl Hayes , architect.
Engi neer Paul Stull was
gran ted permission to attend
an Engineer's Seminar Sept.
24-28 in Columb us and the
re sig nati on of William
Eachus as a member of the
SEOEMS Board of Direc tors
was accepted .
Commissioner s approVed

a

resolution that all county
departm ental heads must
secure pur chase orders from
the commission before any
pur chase of equipment or
offi ce fixtures is approved.

Longshoremen
called pirates
WASH!NGTON ( UP! ) ..,..
President Ford pred icted
more U.S. grain sales to the
Soviet Union Monday amid
charges by farm officials that
a threatened loading boycott
by union dockworkers "is
nothing short of piracy."
Ford told a cheering crowd
in the heart of the grain belt
at Des Moines, Iowa, that
forecasters are still calling
for a record American
harvest this year.
"A great deal of interest
has been aroused by Soviet
purchases of American
grain" totaling 9.8 million
tons so far in 1975, he said.
The President noted that
Agriculture Secretary Earl
Bul2 last week asked U.S.
exporters to temporarily
delay further sales to Russia,
adding , " and I emphasize
temporarily." Bul2 has said
such sales will have little
effect on bread and beef
prices in supermarkets.
" Looking ahead, and l ·use
these . words advisedly' we .
anticipate further purchases
of grain by the Soviet l:Tnion,"
Ford said.
AFUIO President George
Meany said Monday that

dockworkers will not load any
new Russ ia n-bought grain
until administration officials
assure him the deal will not
hurt American shippers or
conswners.
In other gra in developments Monday :
- President Willian\ Kuhfu ss of the American Farm
Bureau Federation said in
Chicago it was time for
Co ngress to take action
against the threatened
loa ding boycott. He said it
was " nothing short of piracy
in the ports."
- Kansas Gov. Robert
Bennet suggested dockworkers cu t wages for
unloading ships with foreign
imports if they are concerned
about lowering consumer
prices. He said bread price,
for example, are influenced
40 per cent by wages and only
10 per cent by grain prices.
- Tony Dechant, president
of the National Farm Union,
called for a meeting of
consumer, labor and !ann
leaders to discuss the
situation. He said a boycott
"w ill not really solve
anything."

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