<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="16005" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/16005?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-20T18:57:47+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="49129">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/80faab5644cd9bede4ba7bad87a47370.pdf</src>
      <authentication>a1efd678da70f7264bc753fdb8009f6a</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="51231">
                  <text>10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Aug. 19, 1975

.B ridge
(Contlnuea from page ll
repaired Manley staten. He
said Lehew had met With .
c ounc il sometim e .a go but
iwthin g ha s .~ e n done.
(;ounc1l agreed to f1x the
road.
· The F1re Dep t. was given
permission to advertise Ftre
Truck No. I for sa le provided
it use the money fr om the sa le
toward pa ym ent on the ne w
fire truck wh1 ch has been

ordered .
wa s noted that addtttonal
paint is nee ded for painting of
streets tn fron t of schools;
coun cil asked Jane Walton,
!de rk , to check on pnces and
purchase 25 gall ons
J e d We bs te r , ch te f of
pollee , said a door closer 1s

· :11

needed

on

the f ront door

leading up lo the ste ps to c1 ty
hall . Mrs. Wa llon ts also to
check on t hose prices

: Webster 's repor t for Jul y
was read by Mayor Da le
Smith , showmg the departme nt investigated 19 ac·
c1dents , made 26 arrests,
collectecl $3, 47 3. 06 fr om
parktng meters, drov e 5,110
miles, issued 1,010 parkmg
ticke ts and had th e crui se r
se rviced tw o times.
The mayor 's report for .July
in the am ount of $1,270.70 was
approved .
It was also repor ted tha t
three building permi ts has
been tssued to Jack Welker ,
Dennis Howell and Carter
and Evans.
Attendin g were Mayor
Smith , Globaker , Ralph
Werry, Manley , Lou Osborne,
Harry Davis, and William
Snouffer, council members ;
Mrs . Walton , Phyltss Hennessy , treasurer, Jed Webs ter and Henry Werry .

IN NELSONVILLE
Jack Robson and Richard
Duckworth
were
w
Nelsonville Sunday attending
Parade of the H1lls activities.
LOCAL TEMP
Temperature in downtown
Pomeroy at 11 a .m. Tuesday
was 76 degrees under cloudy
skies .

NOW YOU KNOW
MacBeth ' s wife's name
was Gruoch.

.MEIGS THEATRE
TONITE
thru AUG. 21
NOT OPEN
Friday thru Sunday
August 22·24

THE GODFATHER
PART II

News •• in Briefs

Striking cops hit by snipers
··were rolling on all emergen ~
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) cies
."
A picket line of striking police
However, ~ president of
offt cers came under sniper
the striking Police Officers
fire today .
No one was hit in the Assoctation sa1d Citizens m
s hoo ting at th e Ingleside
sta lion but two striking offi ce rs sustained minor injunes a t anoth er picket line
when a motorist ran them
By
United Press
Indown .
ternational
The pay di spute that trigWalkouts in the south•rn
ge red the strike ha s resulted
West
Virginia coalflelds were
tn most of the city's 2,000member force staying off the running at " about the same
level" today despite back-tojob.
work
orders by a U S.
Police satd about 10 shots
were fired a t the Ingleside District judge.
An estimated 10,000 miners
sta lton and " the pickets hit
stayed
out of the pits for the
the gr ound "
"The strtkm g officers went ninth day , and United Mine
back to form a nd chased after Workers Distncl 17 field
representative Dewey Wiley
th e gurunen, " a spokesman at
of
Logan said 1t looks like a
the stalton sa1d. He said three
youths were captured shortly stalemate right now.
" You might say we 've
after the shooting.
A s pokesman at pollee adopted a 'wait-&lt;~nd-see' attitude," Wiley said.
headquarte rs said
th e
" We're running at about
number of calls rece1ved
the same level and if you're
during the night was about
askmg
has it mushroomed, it
avera ge a nd a veteran
hasn ~t."
newsman reported cars
One local union leader, Sim
Howze of Logan County, has

this city of nearly 800,000 are
•'not safe m their homes or on

the streets "
The strike was only hours
old Monday night when a

Walkouts persist

Otair persons
annoWiced by
Corvette club
County c hairpersons for the
Tri-Counly Area Corvette
Club were name d at a
meetmg held recently at the
Kyger Creek Employees
Club Approxtmately 35 attended
the
second
orgamzational meeting of the
Club
The chairpersons a re Paul
Was hington, Mason County,
telephone number 882-2572;
Jackie Case, Gallia County,
:!67-7865, and Yvonne Scally,
Meigs County, 992-2661.
Plans were made for a
caravan to travel to Dover,
Aug . 23 and 24 for the Corve tt e
Star
Spangled
Weekend . The caravan w1ll
leave Saturday at 7· 30 a .m .
from the Kanauga Roadside
Park and at 6 a.m . from the
Middleport Community Park.
Week end act1vi l1es w11l
mclude a car show , a giant
flea market, a Corvette
Roadster give..away and an
auction . The group w11l
return Sunday.
Additional information and
registration materials may
be obtained by contacting the
county chairperson . Next
meetmg wi ll be held Aug. 26
at 8 p.m. at the home of
Yvonne Scally, 870 Ash St.,
Middleport . All Corvette
owners are urged to attend as
elections will be held and
plans for future activities will
be made.

for ALL your banking needs

CITIZENS NATIONAL
BANK

~·Yes"

Is Our Pet Word
On Loans. G'e t Yours.
Seldom a discouraging word
is spoken here. If we think you're
onto something good, (car, home
... any loan) wo:ll.uy our darnedP.St to "yes" vou.

WALK· UPTELLER WINDOW AND
AUTO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
FRI. EVENINGS5To7P.M-

.''THE FR IENllL l BANK"

-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
M1111ber Federal
. Deposit Insurance !;OrpCifation
.

.

.

DIPOIRSINSUREDT0•40~00

.,

,,

been jailed on a contempt of
court charge smce miners at
his local remained off the job
despite a federal court order
directing them to return to
the pits.
"It 's up to the judge and
Howze now," Wiley said . "It
looks like the judge can't
back down, and Howze

won't.' '
Fellow miners of the jailed
leader indicated they would
be willing to join their union
brother behind bars if necessary,

"They
are
tearing
democracy all to hell," an
angry miner shouted after 600
workmen met at Accoville in
Logan County and refused an
offer to end the strike in
exchange for the release of
Howze .

HOSPITAL NEWS
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED
Ava

Greenlees, Pomeroy; Connie
Musser, Pomeroy ; Sally
Sayre, Racine .
DISCHARGED Ann
Crislip, June Cre means ,
Sarah
Calaway,
Lena
McKinley , Ruth Duerr, Ellen
Bliss.

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Mary
Gilman, Gallipolis; Brady
Gay, Potnl Pleasant; Mrs.
Robert Cullins and daughter,
Pomeroy; Mrs . Richard
Fauver, Leon; Charles
Brtghl, Gallipohs, and Dame!
Rairden, Hartford.

Kelly Gilmore died Tuesday

Holzer Medical Center
1Discharges, Aug.17)
Dennis Burton Bales,
Delores Jean
Barnett,
Charles E. Bowman , Mrs.
Lewis W. Dailey and infant
son, Charles E . Faulkner,
Marguerite Gilmore , Mrs .
Woodrow Harris and infant
daughter, Mrs . Gerald Ray
Hart and Infant daughter,
Bertha M. Helm, Michael R.
King , John Henry Long , Jill
K. McCoy, William Eugene
Naas, Zella Perry, Sara
Marie Pierce, Eliza A.
Reynolds, Dorothy Emily
Saunders, Lawrence S .
Saunders, Frank Edward
He also asked to not pay
Schwanger, Grover Sheets,
any spouse support, and for
Mrs . Jeffery L. Vickers and
the court to have his wife pay
mfanl son .
all attorney fees.

Editorial comment,
opinion, features

HARTFORD'S HORNETS
clobbered the Middleport
Mets 2J.O and the Rutland
Reds defeated Middleport
City Ice and Fuel17-10 In the
Big Bend Little League
tournament Monday evening

THE
MEIGS
County
Sheriff's Dept. arrested
Kathy S1mmons, Monday

night

In

Portland

on

In ·

formation from the East

;Liverpool
~teallng .

,

Pollee for child
The child she Is

charged with 1aking was her

. "wn J.year·Oid son. who was
l:~!...b.,e&gt;C&gt;&gt;O'&lt;'"&lt;&gt;&lt;:&gt;&lt;::&gt;-o-e&gt;e&gt;&gt;O'&lt;'&gt;&lt;=&gt;&lt;&gt;&lt;::&gt;ooc::::&gt;-C&gt;C&gt;'&lt;'"&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;&lt;:&gt;o&lt;::::&gt;-o-e&gt;-o....:~~'pl aced w 1 th the we If are

--.... ~ department. The mother Is

liZ

G. wilco x,

Barbara

facial lacerations . He was
taken to Veterans Memorial

Hospital

Millon Hood, Ronald Han·
ning , Clara J . France, Sarah

· Bechtle. Eric Pearch.
RUTLAND
Rosella
Birchfield. Donna Davidson ,
M.ary E. Davidson , Leo 0
Davidson .

MINERSVILLE -

James

R. Anderson, Stacie Arnold,

Lloyd E

Hendricks, Janet

Nease.

SYRACUSE

James

Crow, Lorraine M. Cundiff,
Lawrence Ebersbach.
Arletta J . Vanover.

Sartin, Jerrr Frederick .

REEDSV LLE

Rice.

-

John

Robert Mar ·

cum, Edsel Durham.

HEMLOCK GROVE Sharon M Welker, Jack
Welker, Mark J . Werry .
LOWER SALEM - Gayle
Jeffers, Lloyd Jeffers .
KYGER CREEK - Mary
Sear ls .

BIDWELL -

THE POMEROY Women's
Bowling Assn . will meet af
7 30 p.m . Friday at the

James

L.

Groves

CLIFTON , W. Va . Dorothy Van Meter.
BEVERLY - Shirley Wise,
Susie Budd .
CHESTER - Albert Miller .

Pomeroy Bowling Lanes. All
members are asked to be

present

lodged in Gallla County Jail .

Ebony Mag ..ine several years ago did a pretty good hatchet job on Abraham Lincoln. The
Great Emancipator, argued historian and Ebony senior editor Lerone Bennett Jr ., was an outand-out racist - at least according to the standards by which we would call a man such today.
As evidence, Bennett submitted a number of Lincoln's own public statements, including
one in which he expressed doubt that whites and blacks could ever be social equals and that
being the case, he would just as soon have the latter subordinate to the former.
In the magazine's current special issue on the Bicentennial, devoted to an assessment of
200 years of black American history, another towering figure in the American pantheon is cut
down to size.
Thomas Jefferson was a mass of contradictions, writes Carlyle C. Douglas: "Here was a
man capable,on the one hand, of authoring the most eloquent and well..-easoned arguments on
behalf of the rights of men, yet equally capable, when lt suited hlm, of accepting as fact the
most outrageous of myths and superstitions in arguing against the rights of other men. At once
hero and fool, the third President of the United Slates emerges as both framer and victim of his
own times."
Not only was Jefferson an owner of slaves, as were others of the Founding Fathers, but he
went to hls death bed - 50 years to the day after the Declaration of Independence was adopted
- an owner of slaves. Whild giving Jefferson credit for the soul tortures he underwent in attempting to square the Ideals of his Declaration with the reality of slavery, Douglas indicts him
as a hypocrite who failed to practice what he preached.
Now the debunking school of history serves a useful purpose. It is better to see our heroes
as they really were, warts and all, than to pretend they are all good and all wise and something
more than human . The trouble comes in seeing nothing but the warts.
If we must insist on judging Lincoln and Jefferson in the light of the 100 and 200 years of
history and cultural change since their times, a truer perspective on their characters IS gained
by asking, what legacy did they leave? Specifically in regard to their alleged "racism," the
question should be, are black Americans today the better or the worse for these men having
lived?
For Lincoln, the answer is obvious. Whether or not he believed in social equality between
the races (who did in 1881?), he led America through Its greatest ordeal, an ordeal which
ended In the end of slavery .It was the necessary first, irrunense stride toward the racial justice
we are still trying to achieve.
Likewise for Jefferson, who foresaw the inevitable conflict over slavery -like a "fire bell
in the night." Whom do we revere- the " hypocritical" Jefferson, whose ringing phrases about
human liberty have been both a reproach and a shining guii!e to succeeding generations of
Americans, or the messianic John Brown, who was prepared to kill his fellow men to free,
others?
For another kind of perspective, Ebony might consider doing a series on the emergent
nations of black Africa. Where among the tawdry little ~yrants who rule so many of them are
there the likes of a Lincoln or a Jefferson?
The list would be brief to the point of nonexistence.
Someone might alsO do an article on the black Americans who are emigrating to Africa in
search of freedom and opportunity in these new nations and escape from discrimination.
This, too, would be brief.
We judge great men not only by what they do but,in the final analysis, by what they inspire
lesser men to do. ln our bicentennial assessments of America and its history, let us remember
thM .
.

NO AGNEW BEER
GOLDEN, Colo. ( UPI)
Former Vice President Spiro
Agnew has withdrawn hls
application to sell beer in
Houston because he feared
bad publicity might harm
chances of a license for pro
golfer Doug Sanders, the
Adolph Coors Co. said
Monday.
Earlier this month, Texas
officials said Agnew could not
qualify as a distributor in the
state because of his plea of oo

contest to income tax evasion
in Maryland.
Agnew and Sanders applied
for the franchise Aug. 4 in a
visit to marketing officials at
the brewery. Since Agnew
filed, hundreds ofletters have
been received by Coors oppased to the application.

Bunker's daughter Gloria on
the "All in the Family"
television series, ended her
contract hold-out with an
agreement allowing her to
work in other entertainment
areas for six months of the
year.
"I intend to do more flhns
and continue my night club
and stage career," Mifs
Struthers said. "I am also
lookimg forward to rejoining
the family I have missed so

BACK IN FAMILY
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)
Gloria Silvie joined the
family again Monday.
Actress Sally Struthers,. much. "
protrays
Archie
who

'

A REGULAR meeting of
Meigs County Democrats will
be held at 8 p.m Thursday at
Grace Episcopal Parish

House

In

Pomeroy

All

committeemen are requested
to attend. Vlsi1ors are
welcome

JACK KE... .

TH Spires,

Langsville, has tded suit for
divorce against Carolyn Jean
Spires, Williamsport , on

charges of gross neglect of
duty and exfreme crue lty .

THE MIDDLEPORT E·R
squad answered a call fo
Pearl Sf. at 4:44p.m Monday

Racine mrlt busy Monday
RACINE - The Racine ER squad was busy Monday
answering four calis:
At 1:30 a.m., to Route 1,
Racine, for Dawn Eynon who
was taken to Holzer Medical
Center ; at 9:45a.m ., to Long
Bottom for Emmett Stethem
who was taken to St. Joseph

Hospital in Parkersburg; at
8:15p.m. to Portland for Jack
Cornell, who had head and
shoulder injuries, and was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital, and at II p .m., to
the home of Ernett Triplett,
Racine, to give him first aid
for first degree burns.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

KIMBALL P·IANOS

"
A new selection ,!Jf, fine qua!ity

Kimball Pianos. Maple
-cherry - walnut - pecan ~inishes. Stop in on the lrd
floor. Select a Kimball piano for yourself and family-

'

SALE PRICES

ELBERFELD$

IN

'

POME

'
\

DANIEL MORRIS

.Y

cafelena lunch prices for lhe new school )'Oar which w1ll be
adju sted, if necessa ry . According to the prices, grades one
through six w1ll ha ve a 40 cents lunch rate, grades seven
through 12, 45 ce nts with a f1ve meal ltcket a vailable for $2.
Adults w1ll pay 75 cent s and milk will be six ce nts a half pint.
Charles L. Dowler, supertnlendent, announced that kindergarten will be he ld in Rutland In the mornings and at
Harnsonville in the a fternoons during the ne•l school year. He
announced thai all 1:1 school buses ha d passed mspec11on as
have five spare buses. He asked the board to eonsider a set
mileage ra te for employes and to take it up al lhe next
meeting . Meetings for the next three months were set for Sept .
II , Oct. 6 and Nov . 18.
The board discussed receiving quarterly lunchroom
reports and left to the d1scret1on of the s uperint endent whether
rhildren can attend other schools in the district instead of the
school to whic h they normally would be asstgned . The board
discussed licensing of two citizens band radios and the
assignment of one bus route w1th Leo Morris, OAPSE
representative. The board voted to pay $300 for a plastic water
hne from th e high school to the new practice football fi eld ,
although Carol Pierce cast a dissenting vole. &amp;!pl. Dowler was
asked to sec ure the overall plan for the practice field as to the
water to be used and it was agreed tha t water to ·the f1eld
should be meter ed.
Allendmg were Supt. Dowler , board members Pierce ,
Wendell Hoover, Robert Snowden, Joe Sayre and Virgil King;
Clerk L. W. McComas, Leo Morris, and Principals James
Diehl a nd Robert Morris.

.,

',["~; =·:~=::~=:= ::~:;;;:::=: :~:;;:=:[·:·

VOL XXVII

NO. 90

:=:~

;:;:

: ····.·:· :=· :: ·::· :=· :=::

By United Press International
CHICAGO - THERE WILL BE ANOTHER round of
gasoline price hikes next month, but the increases will be
modest as the nation's oil industry attempts to prove itself
mature enough to handle its own affairs, a veteran industry
observer says. The projected hike was based on the assumption the price&lt;ontrol era for gasoline will come to an end when
the Congress fails to override President Ford's veto of a
measure to extend controls beyond their Aug. 31 expiration
dale.
Herbert Hugo, senior editor of Platt's Daily Oilgram, said
gasoline prices might go up as much as 3 cents per gallon in
September. But he predicted competition and restraint by oil
companies in the face of possible public recrbnination to keep
the average hike below 3 cents. "This is a test period for the
major oil companies. They want to ' show the world they can
run their own business without goverrunent interference,"
Hugo said.

I

...

I

;: . :·: ;:;.·:: ·.;: ..:·:·:

.;:;.;:·:::·:;::::·:·::··:::·:::·:::::·:::·::;:;:;:.:;.;:;:;:;: ::;:;:;:::::::::·::: ::::.::~.

Nixon
fate tapes
By CLAY F. RICHARDS
WASHINGTON (UP!) Former President Richard
M. Nixon says he intends to
make his Watergate tapes
and documents public at a
later date, but only after they
are first "reviewed" by him
and his family.
In a 171-page deposition
made public today by
columnist Jack Anderson,
Nixon said he felt no need to
release immediately additional information about
the scandal that drove him
from office . He said he would
decide the time table for
making the material public .
Nixon said his only current
concern was cooperating with
the
special
Watergate
prosecutors.
" Then I shall determine,
but not the Congress, what
can appropriately be made
public/ ' Nixon said . " The
President should have a right
to make a determination as to
whether or not and how and
wh~rt'
should. be a
disclosure."
The lengthy deposition was
taken al San Clemente July 25
by a battery of lawyers as
part of a suit filed by Nixon to
get custody of his tapes and
presidential papers. The
material is now in govern·

then

THE MEIGS COUNTY SENIOR CITIZENS CHORUS
will be appearing at the Ohio State Fair Friday. Pictured
are, front row, I to r, Carrie Neutzling, director; Garnet
Ervine, Sara Voss, Vida Green, Lillian Napper, Teresa
Byer, Caryl Cook, Jessie Houchins, Hazel Thomson,
accompanist; second row , Marie Robinson, Freda

Welling, Rose Gmther, Ethel Stewart, Neva Seyfried ,
Elizabeth Slaven , Thora Blackwood, Vtrg1nia Gulley,
Nellie Russell ; third row , Walter Voss, Ira Wolfe, Dean
Blackwood, Ralph Kern, Bill Watson. Members not
present for the picture were Ethel Hughes , Rose McDade,
Alma Miller, Mae Weber and Clara Thomas .

Chorus keeps busy appearance schedule
the numer ous publi c a p·
pearan ces of chorus mem -

already are schedul ed to
appe ar a t a meetmg of the

be r s , all of whom are
members of the Re ttr ed
Senior Volunteer Program .
The c horus maintams an
ambitiOus s chedule and
Fnday w1ll be making an
appearance
a t the Ohto Stale
Senior Cttizens Cente r .
Programs are worked out for Fatr . In September, thev

American LegiOn Auxiliary ,

If you ' 'believe in mus1c"
lhen you're supporting the
Meigs County Senior Citizens
Chorus d1rected by talented,
Mrs. Carrie Neutzhng .
Each week members of the
chorus meet for a two hour
sesston on . Tuesday at the

SY•·~cuse
a
SYRACUSE - Official
nohflcatJOn
has
been
received here of approval of
the village of Syra cuse's
$112 , 000
Communtly
Development

discretionary

block grant to assist in
construction of a swimming
pool-lennis courts complex,
Mayor Herman London sa1d
HOUSTON- A SMALL LESION IN THE LEFT lung of today .
Mayor London reported
astronaut Donald " Dake" Slayton has been discovered so
early that Slayton probably can return to space flight status, Attorney Frank W. Porter,
according to his physician. Slayton, 51, last of the original Jr., t own soltc1tor , 1s
seven sp~ce pilots to fly, will undergo exploratory lung surgery currenlly reviewin g the
next week because of the !esion, the space agency announced procedures of tmplementing
Tuesday.
the grant program as
The National Aeronautics and Space Administration outlined in correspondence
denied the lesion was caused by the poison rocket prope\lanl from the Columbus office of
fumes Slayton, Thomas Stafford and Vance Brand breathed I he Housing and Urban
July 24 during the return from their historic flight in space Development agency 1HUD ).
with two Soviet cosmonauts last month. Dr. Arnauld
"We're hopmg to complete
Nicogossian, a space agency flight surgeon who treated the plans and specifications for
pilots after the mission, said the exposure to the poisonous lhe Junior Olympic-size pool
fumes contributed to the early discovery of the lesion.
· yel this month and of adverlismg for bids in 90 to 120
CAPE CANAVERAL, FLA. - A VIKING spacecraft was days," London said.
ready _ again - tor launch today on a twice-delayed, billionThe total cost of the project
dollar mission to look for life on Mars. Space agency officials is eshmated al $140,000 wi th
said Tuesday all systems were "go" for the 5 : ~ p.m. EDT the pool-balhhouse expected
lo cost aboul $125,000 and the
,
'll'
.
launch .
If all goes well, Viking will journey 505 m1 1on rm1es Iennis courts another $15,000.
through space and arrive in the red planet's orbit June 19,
In addtlt on lo re ce1vmg the
1976. Scientists saul there was stlll a cnance a vunng lander HUD bl ock granl , lhe lown
has an applicat ion on !he
)Continued on Page 18)

'

,.

Pos t 39, and at a mee lmg of
the Me tgs County Women's
Fellowslup of all Churches of
Chri s t 1n P omeroy . Th e
chorus makes itself available
to par ticipate in c ommunity
prog ram s upon reques t. The

chor us pr ovt de s 1Ls own
ffi USIC

Mr s

Hazel Thomson ts

~~~~;.;~:ni~~:"'trt:e ~~~~:
pres ident ; Jess ue Houchms,
sec r e ta ry ,
and
Freda
Welling , who records !he
volun leer hours of members.

•
•
p•
d
flun d zng lS con zrme

same project pendin g wi th
the U. S. Bureau of Outdoor
Recrea t io n Program s ad-

ministered on the s tate level
m Ohio by the Department of
Natural Resources.
The latter appltca t1on was
submit ted m 1974 by Council
Pres ident Robert Wmge tl,
bul has not been acted upon
by lhe offi Cials adminis tering
BOR funds. The HUD grant
applicahon was prepared by
Wingett, upon authorization
or c ouncil, earlier this year.
Mayor London revealed the
amoun t now bemg sought on
the s wimming pool-t ennis
cow· ts project fr om !;!OR
sources has been reduced to
$14,000 This is the maximum
BOR grant that can now be
oblatned on the project in
view of lhe block gran t apphcal ion fundin g.
" If lhe BOR grant is approv ed ~

and we have rea son

a l Ihis potnt to thmk it will lhe comple te local fund
outlay un lh e $140 ,000
developme nt, wtll be only
$14,000, " London Sllid .
Eerlier this year the village
of Syrac use recet ved a 50-50
m a tc hmg ~ rant from BOR

funds to fe nce and hgh l the
muntctpal park ball ft eld,
pave a pa rkmg lot and move
necessary dtrl. At lhb poi nt,
the town 1s a bout 60 per cent
fini shed w1th lhe $1 2, 500

Teeth lost in
wreck of auto
The Me igs County Sheriff 's
Dept . 1nves l!gated a single
car aecident Monday at 6
p m. m Sc1p10 Township on
County Road 17. Thomas E .
Whal en, 24 , Mohena , Ill.,
traveling east, went off the
road to lhe left into a d1tch
and struck an embankment .
Whal e n was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
by lhe Pomeroy E-R squad
sufferin g the loss of several
1celh and a broken nose.
Th ere "as heavy property
damage

No

citation was

ISSUed.
LOCAL TEMPS

project Mai n work left to be
done m connec tiOn w1th th1s
grant IS to e r ec t the poles and
li ghts on the ball field which
we re r ecently purc hased and

have been delivered

:,=
.=:·,'.=:·.·,\' .

1&gt;e1Jartment
nigh
ways for completing
the
first
phase ofofthe
construction
is December
l .'i this yl'ar .

=-··
:::

pact distorted

r;;;;:":J:B~

~',\ :.,\

Meanwhile , the economies on both sides
ol the Ohio Hiver continued to suffer. it
would seem altogether unnecessarily .
\
Contractural date with the State =:::

:;·.
::::

(')

(

rt•t•la c t• lhl' bridge's floor was the . emplacement of "Bridge closed" signs at the
Ohio ami We st Virg inia entrances .
:=::

;!=!
·=··

PRICE 15'

'j....~ .....
'1

~\:~~111; t~~:::e~;r~~~~:~ ~~!d~~!~:C~n!~ '·=! :·,'~=_.

\

Egyptians say
United Press International
was incomplete and distorEgypt said today Israeli ted," Bashir said.
disclosures of key parts of a
Yitzhak Navon, chainnan
tentative new three-year of Israel's Foreign Affairs
disengagement pact in the and Defense Committee,
Sinai Desert were " in- described crucial elements of
complete and distorted" and the proposed accord Tuesday
further negotiations were m a national television innecessary.
lerview from Tel Aviv.
Presidential
spokesman
Navon said the agreement
Tahsin Bashir said in Cairo included a nonbelligerency
that Egypt hoped to c.onclude clause in which Israel and
an interbn agreement with · ~Egypf would reject the use~of
Israel after the arrival of force in settiing the Middle
Secretary of State Henry East conflict.
Kissinger in Jerusalem
"We will not wage war or
Thursday and Alexandria hostile acts as long as Israel
Friday. Kissinger leaves does not wage war or hostile
tonight for the Middle East. acts," Bashir said.
~~we don't consider an
, "When the agreement
agreement is an agreement comes to pass, it will be
until it is signed and sealed balanced,
integrated
and implemented," Bashir document. You caruiot talk
said. " .. .The Egyptian mood about one third ofit and say it
is hopeful. We have offered is an agreement."
reasonable solutions that any
He said there were still
reasonable man would ac- "many highly explosive
cept."
risks" involved. "But we
But, he cautioned, "we're must
accentuate
the
not playing a game of positive," he added.
He said if the Israelis delay
releasing documents. We will
do our negotiating with the in either negotiations or imbest interests through Dr. plementation of the accord,
Kissinger."
"the responsibility squarely
"What was said (in Israel) and totally lies upon them."

l!l!
Almos t two and a half weeks after ::::

·.: · '·:. ·:

enttne
Devoted To The Interests of 1'he Meigs·M11son Are11
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 20, 1975

across the River Ohio

::1:
:;:,

•

Me

Durham , Joyce Bartrum,
Margaret McDanieL Joe
Chapman, Roqer Pickens,
Leafy Chasteen. John Kerr
Jr ., Sarah J Fowler, Edward
W. Durst , Mary Bacon,

VINTON -

THE POMEROY E-R
squad went to county roead 17
at 8: 46 a .m . Tuesday and
Thomas Wayland who had

f

Mahan , Ted Riley Jr. ,
Martha J Hackett, Freda M.

George Pickens. Richard

Center.

A graduate of Pomeroy High School, Morris receiv ed his
BS Degree at Ohio University and his Master 's Degree a t the
University of Cincinnati. He tOOk a second Master 's Degree at
the University of Oklahoma where he was awarded a
fellowship. He has almost completed work for his Ph . D. a t
Ohio Uni versity .
Now serving as an assistant professor at Ma rshall
University, Morris formerly taught at Concord College,
Athens, W. Va., and was once a secondary school superv1sor in
Meigs County. He has taught at Parma and at North College
Hill in Cincinnati.
He is the son of Robert Morns , Sr ., Pomeroy. His w1fe is
the former Judy Hoyt, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Hoyt ,
of Pomeroy .
Morris will begtn his new job as soon as he IS re leased
from h1s present position . Salary for the assista nt superintendent's post is $18,400.
The board last night appointed Lee Burnem to a post of
combination district trash-hauler and part time custodian, and
named Cora Loftis as driver for a bus route . The board a pproved the attendance of Martha Vennar1 at an Articulation
Workshop at Rio Grande College on Sept. 17 and of Dorothy
Ohver to a girls volleyball coaches clinic at Ohio State
Umversity on Sept. 6.
The criteria for free lunches was established as well as

TUPPERS PLAINS Mlma H Walker .
MIDDLEPORT - Norma

Barlon, Howard E. Parker,

for Kelly Gilmore who was
taken to Holzer Medical

Danny Morris, a native or Pomeroy. wa ~ named assista nt
superintendent of the Meigs Local School Dis trict in a recessed
Fion of the Meigs Local Board of Education Tuesday night.

Harry
Shain ,
Mart 1n
wllcoxen , Harold Hager

LONG BOTTOM - Oris
Smith, Henry Bahr, Macel

Notices, local news in brief

'

f.

Give blood

AIRMAN PAULEY
Airman Roger B. Pauley,
son of retired Air Force
Technical Sergeant and Mrs.
Oscar B. Pauley of 2221
Washington Ave ., Point
Pleasant, has been selected
for technical training in the
U. S. Air Force munitions and
weapons maintenance field at
Kelly Gilmore , 75, Pearl all of Middleport; two sisters,
Lowry AFB, Colo. Airman St ., Middleport, died Tuesday Mrs . Millie Stace and Mrs.
Pauley is a 1973 graduate of morning in the Holzer Eunice Moore , both of
Point Pleasant High School. Medical Center following a Columbus; a brother, Harley,
Pomeroy; eight grandlingering Illness .
children,
and four greatMr. Gilmore was born April
11, 1900 in Pomeroy, the son grandchildren.
MARRIAGE ENDS
Funeral service will be held
of the late John and Myrtie
HOLLYWOOD ( UPI)
at
2 p.m . Thursday at the,
Terry Melcher, the son of Sapp Gilmore . He was also
Rawlings-Coats
Funerat
actress Doris Day, filed suit preceded m death by his wife, Home w1th the Rev. Pete
Monday to end his 18-month Hazel Call Gilmore; a
Grandall officiating .
marriage with Melissa grandson, Michael Lee
Mr. Gilmore attended the
Brown, a British interior Brewer ; two brothers and
Middleport First Baptist
two sisters.
decorator.
Church
.
Surviving
are
three
Melcher, 33, asked the
Burial will be in Riverview
court to grant him "all 1aughlers, Mrs. Ted (Clal'1l
Cemetery.
Friends may call
property except certain Bell) Riley, Jr., Mrs. James
at
the
funeral
home from 2 to
personal
effects
and (Mary "Poochie") Brewer,
and Miss Betty Lou Gilmore, 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Wednesday.
household belongings."

,,
.,

,.

(Continued from page I)
( Cmtinued from page I)
Clerical
worK- was perbacked military government there.
In an address prepared for the American Legion naUonal formed by Jean Nease, M~y
convention here, Ford defended American warmth toward the Nease, Juwllta Sayre , Jean
Soviet government but said the United States must be No. I in Sayre , Lulabell Hampton,
military might. The President arrived in Minneapolis last Beulah 'Strauss, Mace!
night m an exuberant mood after a day of campaig~~-&lt;~tyle Barton, Helen Pickens,
Freda Durham, Mildred
appearances in Des Moines, Iowa.
He winds up a two-day tour today and resumes hts in· Betzing , Eloise White, Undo
terrupted vacation at Vall, Colo., after speech-making stops in Hamm, Erma Roush , Vernon
Nease, Janette Lawren ce,
Pekin and Peoria, Ill.
Jean
Braun , Alice Struble,
....
CLEVELAND - DOG OWNERS TIRED of curbing their Margaret Eskew . Donations
pets can seek relief from a new invention by William L . Sch- were by Quality Print Shop,
mieler, 70, Shaker Hei1· •ts, Ohio : a dog potty. Schmieler was Meigs Local School, WMPO
inspired by his city's ordinance requiring dog owners to clean Radio Station, The Dally
Sentinel, Athens Messenger ,
up after their pets.
His invention, to be marketed here later this month, Pomeroy Emergency Squad
consists of a steel shaft with a flashlight handgrip for night use. and Veteran s Memorial
On the business end is a plastic container shaped like a Hospital .
fireplug.
POMEROY Jesse P.
Rodman , Lois J . Wyant.
Debbie Buck, Leo Vaughn ,
WASIDNGTON - THE U.S. CUSTOMS SERVICE says it Erma
Smith , David D.
accidentally stumbled across a smuggler's hideaway that may Campbell , Jon P. Karschnels ,
contain the largest marijuana haul in history , a 41)-ton Carolyn Charles , Paulette
"mountain" of pot valued at $2~ million. The crew of a Butcher , Delores Gaus,
Margaret Eskew, Homer,
Customs Service helicopter ]ooked down in surprise Saturday Smith. William Radford ,
as they flew over the eastern tip of Grand Bahamas Island, a Robert Vaughan , Richard A.
Shuler. William L. Buckley,
smuggler's haven and before that a private center.
Harry lee Bailey, Wallace P.
The pilots recognized " bits and pieces" of a familiar Hatfield,
Jacqueline D.
substance that weren't under cover, a spokesman said Monday Brlckles, Jodeena Sauvage,
Mart1n ,
Rupa
in announcing the haul. "These guys have been looking at Ida M
Goradla,
Don
Betzing
,
Darla
marijuana for years. They knew they 'd found something."
Thomas, VIrgil K. Windon ,
An official said a stack of bricked marijuana was about 70 Sheila Taylor , Marvin E
feet long, 13 feet wide and 7 feet high. He said it "may be the TayiOI' .
RACINE - Roy F Vao··
largest marijuana se1zure in history" and called 1t a
meter , Bertha J Garnes
" mountain."
Dorothy Sayre, Kay Ryan ,

motorist ran over officer
Walter Pinosky and struck
officer Dennis Kamilatos at
the Mission station. Police
said Pinosky had asked the
man to stop blowing his auto
·horn. The two officers were
treated for minor injuries and
released.

.
Morris has No • 2 post In Meigs Local

menl custody .
"I intend to provide for
making first, of course, for
proper review of the tapes,
which can only be undertaken
by me and membel'll of my
family because of the private
and personal considerations
that are there and for making
them public as soon as those
reviews are completed,"
Nixon said .
" Do you expect it to be
longer than five yeal'll?" a
lawyer asked him.
"I can 't tell you until! see
how big the task Is," Nixon
replied.
'!'he deposition made no
new disclosures on the
Watergate scandal but
represented the first time
Nixon spoke on the record
since his resignation last
August .
Nixon said the White House
taping system was Installed
on the advice of President
Lyndon B . Johnson. The
advi"'! was relayed by a
mutuill !Tiend, 'Pepsi-Cola
chief executive Don Kendall,
to Nixon's chief of staff H.R
Haldeman .
Nixon said that when he
became President be had
taping devices mstalled by
Johnson removed from the
White House.

lir·== ==·a:;;;·=::::,,;;:J:=:=£~;==;====&lt;1;
!:0

contempt by Judge Bacon : :

;.·

(
:;·:
:;·:
:;::
::::

CLEVELAND (UP! ) -A woman juror was cited for
contempt of court Tuesday when a mistrial was
declared because a note she signed said she was unable
to decide on the guilt of the two defendants due to her
religious beliefs.

}
,.::

·=:=

::;..:.
l':

?

:.:.:.:·.
Visiting Judge John C. Bacon of Meigs County
.
sentenced Mamie Daniels, 56, Cleveland, a cleaning :=·:
:::: lady, to ten days in jail, but later released her on $1,000 \\::

pe~n~~~~d~aid

:·::
Mrs. Daniels should have said }
:::: something about her beliefs as a member of the ·.·.
\
Pentecostal faith, which says Its members cannot take )
=:·: part in the affairs of state, before laking an oath to ;.:'
'} "well and truly try the defendants."
··..' ~.~.
Lamont Gaines, 21, and Daniel Boone, 21, both of
Cleveland, w1ll get a new trial on their charges of ;::
:=:· robbery, kidnaping, felonious assault and auto theft. }
::::::·=.
Mrs.Damels saidthejudgedidnotgiveherachance )
to explain that the note was written by another juror .:::
~=''· ·.' who to1ld her 1the only hreason she was holding out )
agams conv1c wn was er re 1igious beliefs. She said :=:=
{ she signed the note to the judge because she was :~:~
foreman of the jury .
'.:.:• ,:=..

.

:= :=

=:=:
·=•.

Exposition agency's
hoo~e bill uncovered

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio Exposition Commission
purchased $214.00 worth of
alcoholic beverages for commission members and staff
personnel in connection with

a fa1r managers ' meeting
here last January and
disguised the bills as room
payments, state Auditor
Thomas E. Ferguson said
today.
Ferguson said the liquor
charges were billed through
Marcus Advertising of Cleveland , holder of a publicity and
advertising contract from the

commission .

Te mpe ra ture 1n duwntown
Fetguson said he has held
Pomeroy a l II a.m . Wed - up payment of a total of
nesda y was 77 degrees. under $3,441.32 to the adverltsing
cloudy -ski es
firm "until we clear up this

matter. "
" The state, m no mstance,

will knowingly pay fo~ the
purchase of alcoholic beverages," he said.
Ferguson said the liquor
charges were disguised under
a $580.66 room charge during
the meeting at the SheratonColumbus Hotel here Jan. 811.
He said the liquor charges
were included with room
rental and meal costs and
were billed as ~~expenses for

meeting rooms a nd refreshments for Ohio Exposition
Commission members and
staff" in connection with lhe
meeting.
" Upon inquiry at the hotel
we found that scotch, hour·

bon, gin, vodka , vermouth
and beer had been purchased
during the fair managers'
meeting," Ferguson said .
"However, when the hotel
billed Marcus Advertising
there was only the room
charge noted and the room
was in the name ofT . Rizzo,
an exposition commission
employe.
"Our examiner also found
liquor bills charged and
signed for by Rizzo and
former fair Manager V1c
Lucas." he said. " Lucas

signed· a bill for $29.71 for a
case of beer while Rizzo
signed for bills for Bloody
Mary mix ($8.05 and $3.05)
and whiskey ($38.00) ."

..

\

,

':.:·'~.

)
Mrs . Daniels said she had talked with her pastor
.::: before serving on the Jury and he did not object to her
} taking part in the trial.
..
··:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·: :·:;' ;.;.;:;.;:;:;:;:;.;:;:;:;.;:::::::; :::::::::::·:::;.:.: . ;:::::;. · :::·:::·.;:·:·:::·:::::::·:·::::::::::::.· :;.;. :.:·:~ :·

�I'

7

I

3- The Daily Se~tinel, Micldleport-P&lt;&gt;me'fOY, 0 ., Wednesday, Aug , 20,197S

&lt;

2 - The Da1Jy Sent me l, Middleport-Pomeroy, U., Wc'&lt;lnesday , Au~

\\

2Q. ·1975
., r

Grain boycott

~

'

.... ..-...........

'

Auguff 23, 1775:

Umt ed Prrss Internatumal
The AFL-&lt;:"10 boycott of
Ru ss tan-boun d Amen c an
j.!ram on up ted Prest dent
Ford's at ti'ntwn today ll also
v.as uppermost m the mmds

of Amen can brmrrs and tn a
C\lttrttoom tn Gdlvt&gt;ston
TPx
A g r alll tndustty SU UI ('t:'
send Ford \HIS to llll'Ct toda~
\\ tlh Kermeth Km dnl k d.Ild

Irv

Ft w he

repr e sPn ltn g

G t cat Plams Whe&lt;.t t ;:~nd
Wpste r n Wht&gt;dt AssoCiates,

two companies that promote
overseas sales of U S gram
'f hc source smd the Industry ts angn met tlw lon gsho t cmcn's IX1yLott becaU5e
the gri:iln bu.stness the\ arc
thr eatenm~ to halt ' t s our
hvelthood ond \\£' ha\ P to
have tt ·
Ford, \dlO so=ud Tuesda} · tt
\\OtJld l&gt;r tragtc and un fnrturldlt · tf" \\d\ cantwt be

found to so!vc this satu auon
th at ha s been &lt;.:1 ea ted, 'sa1d
he would meet w1th Labor
Secretary J ohn Dunlop when
he retu rn ~ to Washm gton
next week &lt;tlltl rev 1ew the
possibility
of
takmg
executive act1on to get the
sh1ps loaded
Dockworkers m Houston
stopped load mg gra m on two
ships Tuesday But a federal
court m Galveston ordered
two umon loca ls workmg on
one of them back to work as
of 8 a m E DT today
Judge J ames Noel Tuesday
rught Issu ed a temporary
restra mmg order that would
fo rce Int er nati onal Longshoremen's Assocu1t10n local
1273 and local 872 to c ontm!'"
the
load m g gr am on
Yugoslavian ship Bosanka ,
bound for Russia
The order rl1d not cover the
Italian ve ss ~l . the lvanfrancesco , hit by the work
stoppage Tuesday because of
reports the gram was
destmed for the Soviet Union
and not Germany as a gra m
company offlcial sa1d
Noel scheduled another
hearmg today on the back-to-

\\Ork orde r requested by
gnun shippers and freighter
.1gents

Gram farmer s and the1r
sfXlkesmen wen~ outraged at
the stoppage and the prospect
of plummctmg pnces AFL( IO
Preside nt Ge or ge
Mea ny . "h o backed the
manttme un1ons' thr eat to
stop the gr a 1n , \\as the target
of \'rtd es pr ca d v1lthca twn
Tuesday that p1tted farmer
versus laborer
Texas Farm Burea u head
l ar~ol 01a!oupka sa1d the
umon s are eo ncerned more
about forcmg exporters to use
A:menca n sh1ps and satlors
than about the effect of the
gram .sale on consumers
·'TIH' tr patnollsm stops al th~
pocketbook "
At a White House con·
fe rence on domestic poltcy m
Peon
Ill ,
Tuesday,
Agncult ure Secretary Earl
But1. sa1d " If the uruons are
rea lly concerned w1th food
pnces. the} ca n stop some of
the fea therbedding practlees
of those very un10ns that jack
up the pnees When I hear the
loose talk around here about
how we have to shut off the
sh1pments to Russia, I ge t a
httle t1cked off."
J Robert Wade, pres1dent
of the Kentucky Farm
Bureau Federahon, said the
boycott amounts to l'an attempt by labor to steal farmers' profits "
Wade accused Meany of
m1sstatmg the facts when he
sa1d the boycott was for the
beneflt of conswners and not
for any personal gam for
longshoremen
" Hogwash," Wade sa1d
" When these same umon
bosses met With American
Farm Bureau leaders three
weeks ago, they were mueh
more candid They srud, m
elf ect, 'we 're not gomg to
load that gram until you
support congressiOnal action
to reqmre more cargo
preference subsidies , for
unwmzed ships to haul gram
overseas '''

fort of diverse w1cked and
our

•• '
THESE ARE THE TWO TOP TEAMS of the Baby
Sitters Summer Bowling League who received troph1es
Tuesday afternoon at a potluck dmner and carmval
bowhng held at the Pomeroy Bowling Lanes From the
left are Betty Hamm, Dons Halfhlll, fltSt plaee team , and

Sally Erwm and Donna Nease, second plaee team . Individual trophies went to Joyee R1l.ch1e , Lynn Crow,
Karen Goms, Jmna Arnott and Sharon Stark. H1gh
average went to Maw-isha Nelson, 128; h1gh game, Doris
Halfhill, 237, and h1gh senes, Becky Anderson, 403. Bette
Jean Krawsczyn was the most unproved bowler .

The

Kmg's

proclamation havmg been
published, Penn 1s permuted on Seplember 1 to
present the ongmal draft of
lhe Olive Branch Petition
to Dartmouth A few days
later. pressmg for the King's
answer to the pettuon, Penn
IS mformed by Dartmouth
"that as 1l [has not been]
rece1ved on the throne, no
answer (will] be glven "

Federated's
profits set
all-time mark
j

~· ;

'

J

FOURTEEN SYRACUSE emergency medical
technicians have received certificates for completing 60
how-s of Instruction m emergency medical serVIce skills
and techmques. lndlVldual cards were presented tQ each.
An organizatiOn certificate was presented to Chiel Ralph
Lavender by Joe Struble, E.M.I . Instructor. The certificates and cards, as well as the liiStruct.ion, were
authorized and made available by the Trade and Industrlal VocatiOnal EducatiOn SerVIce of the State
Department of Educat10n, m cooperallon w1tb Southern
Local School District. The mstructor, Joe Struble, prl\lSed
the members of the claSll f9t the1r commUf\ity spirij m
improVIng their eff1ciency• as emer~ency" medical

H1s testunony that plamtiff
Scott
MacKenZie
was
probably shot w1th a highpowered weapon challenged
that of defense w1tness Dr.
Norman R!Ch of Walter Reed
Army
Hosp1tal
m
Washington, who sa1d tt
appeared to be from a low
velocity misslle.
The defense attacked ,Helpern's operation as medtcal
exammer m 1971 when the
head from the body of a" New
Jersey woman, found dead in
the East River m New York,
was kept on hand for nearly
three weeks before 1t was
determmed she was killed by

a gunshot.
After the flnal w1tness,
plamtiffs' attorneys and lawyers for Gov. James Rho'des,
former KSU president Robe'rt
White and 27 former Guard
offieers and men will discuss
privately w1th U.S. District
Judge Don J. Young the
strucbons he'll g1ve tlie jury.
When that is settled, e~~l;ll
side will have 2., hoqrs ,.to
giVe 1ts closmg argwnents.
The plaintiffs are to lead
but may reserve plirt of their
tune to use after the d~n­
dants ma)&lt;e their Sl!ffilll!l,tion.
Then the JUdge will charge
the jury, an instruction on

'm-

off

Fatigue plagues emphysema victims
By La\\ renee E Lamb, M.D
he Will nol!ce IS that he cause breathlessness should
DEAR DR LAMB - What does n "t have !he same hm1t the type of exerc1se to
levels that avoid breathlessand how much can a persm1 exerctse capacity he used to
with emphysema do'&gt; Mus t have He may have plenty of ness Th1s IS a good rule for
they s1t aroun d and do oxygec for resltng energy everyone, but breathlessness
~othmg all day ' Can they do
needs. but not enoug h to run a may occw- sooner for the
As t he disease person w1th emphysema.
housework for themselves? Is mil e
Unless the emphysema 1s
1t good for them to stt and progresses and less and less
watch TV all day or should oxygen IS delivered , he severe, some form of hght
they have some dmly exer- reaches the stage where he IS cahsUlemcs, exerctses that
c1se'
hred even s1ttmg and finally stretch the muscles and
DEAR READER - One of must have oxygen therapy to tendons and help to mamtain
muscle tone are useful. A few
the early symptoms m some support hfe
cases of emphysema IS
The exercise itself or wor}( hght exercises, even a slow
fatigue Why ' Because the will not hurt the lungs or walk, are better than s1ttmg
lung damage prevents the make the emphysema worse. all day
Of cow-se, there ts a pomt
dehvery of adequate amounts It m1ght even help 11 if the
where
the d1sease gets so bad
of oxygen. The oxygen is person 1s sllll able to exercise
needed to me tabOlize the food some A· person with em- that the problem 1s supyou eat to release the food physema should not un- portmg life even at rest.
energy so you ca n use 1l I[ dertake a vigorous exercise Sittmg or watchmg TV all day
m these cases IS not good, but
there 1s not enough oxygen, program without h1s doctor 's
regardless -Of how much you permission But, 1f he sill! has !here ts no other chmce
eat , there will not be enough enough lung funchon to mF r!" mformahon abOut the
energy, hence fat1gue
crease h1s oxygen supply lungs wn te to me m care of
How much a person can ,do w~n ~e , mcreases h1s ac- th1s newspaper, P 0 . Box
1551 , Radio City Statwn, New
with emphysema deperrds • tivity, then walking and even
entirely on hoW much lung ·· m1la spo rt s w1thm h1 s York , NY 10019, send a long,
stamped
damage has oecw-red. In the eapacity are helpful to h1m as ' self-addressed,
envelope and 50 cents and ask
early .stages of the d1sease tb'lo ' lllfy are for healtby people
for The Healt h Letter nwnbir
ind1v1dua1 may have few or
I l~mk lh e person w1•h
no symptoms The f1rst thing emphysema !Jad enough to 2-4,J&lt;eepmg Your Lw r~:s Fit

•

CINCINNATI (UP!) - Record earrungs were reported
Tuesday by Federated
Department Stores, Inc., one
of the natwn 's largest
department store chams.
Federated ofhc1als sa id
earrungs per share for the
second quarter of 1975 were a
record 62 eents, compared
w1th 44 eents for the same
penod a year ago, an mcrease of 40 per eent
Earnmgs per share for the
first SIX months of the fiscal
year ended Aug. 2 were a
record $1.17, compared w1th
94centsm 1974,anmcrease of
24 per cent.
Federated , wh1ch operates
19 stores across tile country
such as Bloommgdale's m
techniCians Struble commended the men and women for
New York, Bullock's m Los
the1r mterest m the training and for the cooperallon he
Angeles and Lazarus m
reee1ved He pomted out that many emergency med1cal
Columbus, also disclosed new
servtces were requestmg trammg and that mteresl m
h1ghs
m both sales and
emergency medical serv1ee protectwn 1s gi-owmg
earnmgs for the second
throughout the state. Persons who rece1ved eerbflcates
quarter and first s1x montbs.
were, front, 1-&lt;, Harold DaVIs, Howard Black, Eber
Sales for the second
Pickens, Oris Hubbard, Ralph Lavender, Harold Black;
quarter
of 1975 were $839
back row, Mar1e Rizer, Vtck1 R1zer, Mary P1ekens, Joe
milhon,
compared
w1th $744
Struble, Elizabeth R1ce, and Naom1 London. Absent were
m11lion a year ago, a 13 per
Patricia Roush, Bob Lemley ~nd Mona Black To date m
eent
jump. Sales for the f1rst
the four volunteer emerilJ'ncy squads at Racme,
half of the year were $1.6
Syracuse , Middleport and Pomeroy, 86 persons have
m1ll10n,
compared With $1 44
completed emergency t rammg
million m 1974, an mcrease of
II per eent
Second quarter earnings
were $27.6 mlllion, compared
With last year's $19.5 million,
a 41 per cent hike. First half
earmngs were $51.8 million,
up $10 million or 24 per eent.
"We expeet that this strong
sales performance w1ll
continue through the balance
In the seventh game of tillS s1de.
of 1975," sa1d bOard cha1rman
year's little League TourThe Astros came up With Ralph Lazarus
nament co.,sponsored by The three h1ts, Perry Sm1th 's two
Da1ly Sentinel and Dan s1ngles and Terry McThompson Ford the defen- Nlckle s
a
smg le
ding champwn Middleport
Hemer's Braves Tuesday
The Braves scored in every
evemng
defeated
the
frame behind the batting of
Syracuse Astros 1()..() m 4
Steve F!fe, a double and two
CANBERRA, Australia
IIIDmgs.
smgles, Terry Wayland, two ( UP!) - The Australian
The Astros came m second
singles, Rick Ebersbach a Labor government Tuesday
m last year's tournament.
smgle, and M1ke M11ier had mtroduced 1ts 1975-76 budget
Dave Nance started for the
stx RBls on a two run homer whlCh contams a radically
Astros and went 3 mmngs,
m the first inmng and a grand new me orne tax system whtch
g~vmg up nine runs on seven
slammer m the th1rd
w1ll exempt 500,000 low inhits. Nance had four
By shuttmg out the Astros come workers from paymg
strikeouts and 6 walks. Nanee
the Braves have had nine any tax at all
was relieved in the tbird by
scoreless IIIDtngs by their
The budget aimed at easmg
John Will1ams who fanned
opponents, t1ed With the Hart- effects of the recession called
three batters, walked two,
ford Hornets. The Hornets for wide ranging cuts m Inand allowed one run Nanee
and
Braves pa1r off m come and company taxes, but
was the losmg p1tcher .
Wednesday 's game at 6:30 mcreases m excLse taxes on
Jeff Wayland picked up his
p .m
beer, spLnts, tobacco and
, firs\ wm in todmament play,
The Rutland Reds w11l gasoline
giving up one walk, allowing
tangle w1th the Rutland
Treasw-er W1lham Hayden
no runs, and three hlts. Terry
Dodgers m the f1rst game
told
the
House
of
Wayland came on m a fme
Wednesday at 5. The Dodgers Represental!ves !hat co rrelief job to walk only two
advaneed kl meet the Reds porate taxes had been
batters and strike out the
because of a forfe1t by the
reduced 2.5 per cent to 42 5
Olesh1re Tigers, 1).(1. The
per cent to help stimulate
consolatiOn game Will be
busmess confidence. He
what law applies to the case played at 5 p.m. Friday and
doubled rates of deprec1ation
expected to run as long as the championship game will on all new plants as an added
15,000 words because of tbe he played at 6·30 (tunes are
mcenhve to boost production
complexity of the matter. Tbe approximate)
and mvestment in the a1ling
case• may reach the jury
Line Score
Australian economy.
Thw-sday at the earliest. Mtddleport Brave
Judge Young has not clarif1ed
234 1- 10 8 1
Syracuse Astros
the probable timing.
CORRECI'ION
At that point, it lS the
0000--032
' Services were contracted
responsibility of the six men
from the Gallia County 168
and six women who have
Board to allow a training
BOARD MEETS
heard testunony from nearly
program for the mentally
Meeting w1th the Me1gs
100 Witnesses to sift it in tbe1r
retarded of Meigs County
commiss ioners
collective memory and W!th Co u nty
and
not 648 Board as stated
Tuesday
was
Edward
Mcthe aid of hundreds of
Tuesday.
exh1bits introduced, to Connell of the Ohw Histoncal
The 169
Board is
Soc1ety
to
discuss
and
explam
determine whether the
responsible
for
training
defe11dants are liable for how the society wants to
programs
In
menial
mventory all county records
damages to the plaintiffs.
retardation
while
tbe 648
and keep those of histone
Sh~uld the jury find for tbe
Board's responsibility is
plaintiffs, there is expected to value Attending w~re Henry
funding
and planning
be a brief reeess ~fore a Wells, Warden Ow-s, and
comprehensive menta}
G1lkey,
comsecond hearmg is convened kl Bernard
health programs.
determine
and
award mJsswners, and Martha
. :: ·:·::::·.···.·:·.. ·:·:==·:··===:·::::r.=:::= ~·==:=:== ·==·
Chambers, clerk
damages.

Braves win 10-0

DR. LAMB

.."
am

DEAR DR. LAMB .:_, I
wondenng about a 45-yearold woman who 1s an
alcohoLic and has been for a
long hme. Her feet and
ankles swelled and turned a
bnght red color. She went to a
doctor , and he gave her water
pills and now the swelling has
gone down Is th1s a s1gn tl1at
her kidneys are gomg bad
from drmking?
DEAR
READER
Swollen ankles means an
aceumulallon of excess fluid,
and 1t can be caused from
several thmgs. It can mean
kidney disease , but it can also
mean hear! failure a nd hver
fa1lure I would suspect e1ther
of these first - livet damage
1s a common comphcahon of
akohohsm , and 1t lS a· factor
m Ihe reddenmg of the skm
you noted.
Severe vancose vems in:.
vol vmg 1he deep vems · can
lead to swelhng, but smce the
doetor use d1w-etics I would
be less mchned to thmk that
1s the cause

over Syracuse

Aussies offer
new tax plans

I•

J

realm "

Penn

-By Ross Mackenzre &amp; Jeff MacNclly /fl !97S Unned Feature Syndrcale

Confusion grows in Kent testimony

I

NEW YORK ( UPI) - Football players take some fumy
bounees. What would you say if Larry Csonka boWlced right
back With the M1anu Dolphins froru the Memphis Southmen?
I'd say there's better than a 50-50 clianee that'll happen based
on the World Football League's dismal attendance figures so
far .. .Csonka's "reumon" with the DolphlllS in M1am1 last
Saturday mght strikes me as if 1t could be a case of commg
events casting ttieir shadow before them. The former Mianu
fullback caught a plane from Memphis, then watched his old
teammates beat the Detroit lions, 26-14, m the Orange Bowl.
He spent the whole game on the sidelines hob-nobbing with the
Dolphins and was inv1ted into the dressing room at halftime by
coaeh Don Shula. It was just like old times .. " I'm not down
here to evaluate tbe team," said Csonka. "I'm just down here
to visit my buddies." The same rught aU this was happerung,
the WFL was averagmg 11,000 for 1ts five games. Only 3,470
showed up in Olicago
From tile way the fans are turning out, the WFL Will have
trouble fmishing the season, even With its new sure.fire plan.
Salaries atld bills still ~ave t.o be prud, and Without people m
the stands, you can't pay them It's that simple. Csonka, Paul
Warfield and Jim Kilck are putting m their f1rst season in the
WFL after having rece1ved $.1.5 million t.o jump from the NFL.
If the WFL should go under, Memphis owner John Bassett
certainly would look to make some kind of settlement on
Csonka's personal services' contract. Part of that settlement
very likely would result m Csonka 's bemg free to return to the
Dolphins. He looks as 1f he'd be happy kl go and they eertainly
would be tickled kl have him Stranger thmgs than that have
happened, and lately, too ...
Speakmg qf sw1t.ches, Preston Gomez showed his customary
class making way for Bill Virdon m Houston. Notif1ed he was
&gt;eing relleved of his duties Tuesday morning, he accepted the
news without a murmur. "The record is all there in black-andwhite and that's baseball," he S3ld, makmg it a little easier for
them kl swing the axe on him Gomez spent an hour filling in
V1rdon on some of the things he felt the ex-Yankee manager
should know abOut the Astros, and when Virdon, top drawer
himself, told Gomez how much he sympathized with him over
losing h1s job, Gomez nodded understandingly and said, "I
know you do because you were in this same position only three
weeks ago." ...Gomez didn't have to show up at the Astrodome
for Virdon's hirmg, but he did and he didn't nm out in a hurry
either. He stayed around more than two how-s waiting to say
goodbye to his players .Don't worry about Preston Gomez.
He'll have anotber job soon ...
Joe Frazier has no use for Muhammad Ali at aU, but that
feeling is one·&lt;nded as far as Ali lS coneerned even though he
rurf&gt; down Frazier regularly. "Nothin' personal, I just wanna
beat htm kl keep my title," be says abOut &amp;nokin' Joe. "I lose
to him, and I lose a $10 million fight with Foreman right after
that." ... And after George Foreman again, it'll be Ken Norton
agam, making the whole business sound like a re-&lt;un of some
round-&lt;obin you've seen a couple of times before ...
Box:1ng buffs are sw-e to be delighted w1th on A Pictorial
H1story of Box:1ng, eontammg some of the most fascmatmg
boxing photos I've seen. Ong1nally put klgetber by Sam Andre
and the late Nat Fleischer, the book bas an added sectlon on
"The New Champ1ons" compiled by Andre and Nat Loubet,
president and editor of The Ring Magazine. At the prepubhcatwn pr1ee of $16.95 until Aug. 31, it's an exeeUent addihon to any bOxing library ...

desperate persons within

a.

By ROBERr PENICK
week of defense witness Joy
CLEVELAND 1UPI)
Bishop, who said seconds
Teshmony m the $46 m1IIIon before Guardsmen f1red she
Kent State CIVIl sun appeared saw a nearby c1vihan frre a
ready to end today am1d a pistol mto the mr
swirl of procedw-al confuswn
Two other rebuttal wltas the masstve combmed nesses, Bruee Phill1ps of
lawsuit reached the midpomt Colwnbus, Ohio, and Patricia
of 1ts 14th week. Frank R1vera , suburban
Attorneys for the nme stu- North Olmsted, said they
dent s wounded by Nat10nal were w1th Mrs. B1shop and
Guard gunf1re on the KSU saw no one m the area in
campus May 4, 19'10, and for which she placed the ClVIlian.
the families of the four slam,
The other rebuttal w1tness
sa1d Tuesday they had one called for the plamtiffs was
more wttness to call m Dr. M11ton Helpern, eh1ef
rebuttal
med1cal exammer for New
The "1tness was to York C1ty until he rel!red two
challe nge the test imony last years ago.

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sporta Editor

Carrying Congress' Olive Branch Petition of July 5,
Richard Penn reaches London on the 14th and submits a
copy of the petition to Lord Dartmoutb-Secretaryol State
for the Colonies-on the 21st On the 23l:l!.,the King Issues
a proclamation declaring the colonies to be In open rebellion "There Is reason to apprehend," the proclamation says , "that such rebellion hath been much
promoted and encouraged
by the traitorous correspondence, counsels, and com-

from shippers

.

Sport Parade

A Chronicle: of America

Linescores
Matorleague R esu lt s
Unrted Pres s InternatiOnal
Na110nall ea9 ue
Lo s. Ang
000 000 110 - 1 5 0
Ch1cag o
000 100 000 - I ? 1
Sutto n Marshall C9 J and
Y~ager
Bonham , Knowl es
l9l
and
Hosley
WP Marshatl
( 9 12 )
LP Bo nham I 11 10 )

Sa n Fran
Pil lS

000 000 000 - a 3 I
002 00 1 l Ox 4 10 2
Barr
Wrll1ams. 18) and
Hil l
Reuss
113 9 )
and
Sa ngu rllen LP - Barr (II 10 )
HRs Zrsk (13th/
Olrver
( 14th )
Sa n Dr ego 000 000 000 0
Montreal
300 010 Olx - 5
Mcintosh Tonolrn ( 7)
Oavrs
Rog ers 11 0 9 )
Foote LP Mcintosh 18
HR Ma c kanm (8 th )

10 J
4 1
and
and
17 1

Ph ria
103 000 ooo - 4 10 0
Atla nta
003 010 007 - 6 8 1
Ruthven
Sch u eler 131 .
Garber
IB J and Oates
Thompson
Leon 13 1 and
Correll
W P - L eon 17 I)
L P Garber 19 BJ H R May
{ 8th )
C1n
100000000·- 1 40
Sf Lours
200 000 OOx - 7 I? I
Nolan C Carroll (81 and
Benc h M cG lothe n ( 13 9) and
Som mo ns LP - No lan (1 1 7)
New York

00 1 110 030 6 II 0
000 000 003 - 3 9 1
Matlack L ockwo od ( 9) ,
K oosman
19 ) and Grole
D re rker Cosgrove (7 I So sa
18 1 Granger 19 1 and Jutze
WP Ma t lack
( 14 8 )
LP 0 1erker ( 111 31 HRs - Unser
( 6th )
Garr e ll (6th), Cedno
{ 7th)
Jo hnson lllt h l

Houston

A mencan league
Texas
100 000 100- 7 50
Cle ve
000 000 100- 1 7 0
Umbarger
Foucau lt
(7)
and Sunnberg Eckersley (9
SJ
and
Ashby
VP Umbarger
15 5 1
HR Spencer I 10th I

Boston
00 1 00? 700- 5 9 7
K an Crty
000 000 000- 0 4 I
Lee ( 16 7) and Frsk Filz
morrrs . Pattm (7 ), McDanrel
(9 )
and Marlrnez
LP Frlzmor rr s 117 10 )
HR Lynn !lOt h )

Bait
000 0?0 000- 'l 5 2
Mtnn
?00 300 oox ....:. 57 1
Cuellar Gar l and (4) and
Hendrrcks
Blyleven 113 6J
and Roof LP Cuellar ( 1'2 9 )
C11 tnntngs)
_
Chrcago 011 100 300 01 - 7 11 J
NY
20'2 110000 00- 6110
Jefferson
Hrn t on
(-!).
Upshaw (8), Ham 11ton (9)
and Varney , Gura , Lyle (7)
and Munson WP - Hamtlton
16 1l LP - Lyle(] 61 HRsVarney (lstl Nelll es ( 16 t h )
Den t (3 rd )
000 0?0 001 - 3 6 0
000 001 000- 1 9 0
( 11 13)
and
F re e han
Bosman
F rngers
( 9J and Tenace LP - Bosman

Del
Oak
Lolrc h

18 SJ
t 15 mnmgsl
Milwaukee
100 001 200 000 000- 4 12 3
Caltfo rnta
700 100 100 000 001 - 5 12 0
Colborn Aust tn ( 121 and
Por ter
Tanana , Scott ( 13 )
and Rodrrguez Hampton (91
WP Scolt ( 4 1) LP - Austr n
17 71
HRs - Sta nton I 17th),
Mr tc hell (7th) Miley (3rdl

Six fined in

Rutland for
excess speed
RUTLAND - Six defendants were fmed $10 and costs
each m the cow-t of Rutland
Mayor Eugene Thompson
Monday night on speeding
charges.
They are Charles J.
Howard, Gallipolis; Mark
Coughenhour , Langsville;
Jack Pnddy, Lockborne;
Yvonnia Garten , Racine;
Nancy Sexson, Pomeroy, and
James Searles, Rutland.
Forfeitmg bonds were
Ronald G. Shepard, Rutland,
$20 ; Denny L. Carroll, Cincinnati, $25, and Patrick B.
Davtson , Gallipolis, $25, all
on speeding charges. Cecil
Fry, Rutland, was fined $25
and costs on a second offense
or squeahng tires and was
placed on probation for six
monllis.' All of the arrests
were made by Richard
l_lysell, new Ru:land poliee
officer.

.

Cincinnati, 2-1
By DONALD BERNS
ST. LOUIS (UP!) - Lynn
McGlothen let the Oncinnatl
Reds scratch out a run in tbe
first inning Tuesday night,
then p1tched what he called
his fmest game in Busch
Stadium for the St. Louis
cardinals.
He si!UI out the heavyhitting Reds the rest of tbe
way and finished W!th a fourhitter, helping the cardinals
keep pace m major league
baseball's tightest race with
a 2-1 VICtory .
The Reds' Pete Rose led off
the game by rapping a double
down the left field line on
wbat McGlothen called a
"changeup curve." Then Ken

Griffey beat out a bunt and
Rose went to third.
"1 walll'l elq)eCUng the
bunt," McGlothen said. "I
was begiming to worry."
Joe Mtrgan drove In Rllee
witb a sacrifice fly, but after
that, the Reds were mostly
spectators of McGlothen's
pitching prowess.
"It was the best ball &amp;arne
I've pitched in this perll:i'
McGlothen said. "I had good
control, I mlsed up my pllcbes and moved the baD
around the plate."
McGlothen struck out 10
and laced ooly 32 men in the
game, which lasted leu than
two hours. He railed his
record to 1:1-f and now bas

beaten each of the II other
teams In the National League
at least once Ibis season.
The Cardinals banged out
12 hits but cooverled them
into only two runs. Four of the
12 Wen! by Willie Davis, who
broke back Into the lineup
after an absence of four days
spent straightening out his
alimony setUement with his
former wife. Davis had a
lriple, double and two singles
but dlm'l figure in eitber of
the runs.
Botb St. Louis runs came in
tile first. Bake McBride
lllnsled, Davis doubled and
Ted Slmmma single horne
McBride, but Davis was out
at the plate. Ted Sizemore

singled home Simmons.
The Cardinals remained
2~, games behind the Eastern
Divislon~eadmg Pittsbw-gh
Pirates.
"'lbe raee 1S tightenmg up ,
and there are going to be

some real tense games,"
Sizemore sald.
The Cardinals are looking
forward to the montb of
September, when they will
exclusively ploy teams m
lheir own division.
"The ballparks w11I be
filled," Slnunons said. "It
ought to be mterestlng."
The two teams meet again
tonight w1th Fred Norman, 83, pitching for the Reds.

•

Lynn paces Boston wzn
By FRED McMANE
UPI Sporll Writer
The unpact of rookie Fred
Lym on the Boston Red Sox
Ibis season can be easily
sununed up in three lettersMVP.
In the history of baseball
there has never been a firstyear player who has won the
Most Valuable Player Award
m either major league, but
the 23-year-old outfielder of
the Boston Red Sox continues
to Pfl"{orm in a way that will
be diffiCult to overlook when
the American League MVP
voters cast their ballots at the
end of tbe regular season.
"He's the best young allaround player to come
through this league in a long,
long time," Manager Whitey
Herzog of Kansas City said of
Lynn' Tuesday night after
watehing tile Red Sox' rookie
lead Boston kl a ~ victory
over the Royals. The triwnph
boosted Boston's lead to eight
games over Baltlrilore, which
lost to Minnesota :&gt;-2, in the
AL East.
"Really, he rerrnnds me a
lot of (Carl) Yastrzemski
when he came up," adds

Herzog. "He's an aggreuive
hitter, a Rood oulftelder and a
fine baserunner just ll!le Yaz
was. There's reaDy no llhof the game he's llhort ln."
Lynn llhowed off his hiWng
and running ability against
the Royals Tuesday nfaht. He
doubled In the sixth Inning
and, after taking off ftr lhinl
base on Jim Rice's grounder
to Utird, scored when first
baseman John Maybert"y's
return throw to third went
wild.
In the sevenlb, after Yastrzemski walked, Lynn
blasted his 20th homer to give
the Red Sox a couple of
valuable insurance runs.
Supported by Lynn's beavy
hilling, southpaw Bill Lee
went the distance, aDowlng
only four hits, lo gain hil16tl1
victory against seven losses.
Lynn's overall balling
credentials are unmatched
by any player In lhe AL this
year. He stands first In the
~gue in runs baited in with
aa, first In runs acored with
78, second In balling avenge
with .333, second In doubles
wltb 31, Ia tied lor lourtb In
triples witb six and lied for

victory over New York. The
White Sox lied the score at 6-6
in tbe seventh oo Bucky
Dent's three-run homer. Pete
Varney had his first major
league homer for O!icago
while Graig Nettles homered
inninp.
for New York.
l'"tr8 5, Orioles
rigen 3, A'I 1
Bert Blyleven tossed a fiveAw-eUo Rodriguez and Ron
hitter as Minnesota slopped LeFlore singled home runs in
BaiUmore for tbe second the fifth inning kl spark
straight night, Blyleven Detroit over Oakland for its
retired the first 13 batters in fourtb consecutive victory
order and finished with eight after a 19-game losing streak.
!lrikeouts to raise his record Mickey Lolich scattered nine
to 13-6. Jerry Terrell had hits in going the distance for
three hits and scored twiee kl his lith win.
pace tbe Twins' attack.
Angels 5, Brewen t
Rangen Z, Jadla!W 1
Mike Miley led off the
Jim Spencer's solo homer botklm of the ISth inning with
in the sevenlb inning and the his third home run of the year
hitleu relief pitching of Steve to lift California over
Foucault sparked Texas over Milwaukee. Miley, a rookie,
Cleveland. Spencer's loth hit Rick Austin's first pitch
homer was only one of five over the left field wall kl end
hila the Rangers got off the low- hour and two minute
rookie Dennis Eckersley. marathon.
Foucault pitched 2 2-3 innings
of h!Uess relief kl protect Jim
Umbarger's sixth victory.
A thought for the day:
White Sox 7, Ylllll!ees t
American writer Edgar
Jorge Orta llinllled horne Watson said, "What people
the winning run in the lltb say behind your back Is your
inning kl give Chicago Ita standing m lbe conunun
sixth in homers.
In other AL games, Texas
nipped Oeveland :1.-1, Otlcago
edged New York H in II
innings, Detroit defeated
Oaldand s.1 and cautornia
nipped Milwaukee ~ in 15

z

Pirates snap losing streak, 4-0
,

Bengals trim
roster to 54
.

We Hold These Truths :..

,,

·d rawing fire
Ry SARA F RirZ

Today's

. .

' ,.

By BILL MADDEN
UPI Sports Writer
That rumble heard 'round
the National League East
Tuesday rught was the Pirate
batsmen retw-ning home.
Horue to Pittsburgh and
home to undisputed first
place.
"Anthmg we d1d before
tomght had no bearing on how
I p1tched," said Jerry Reuss,
who in hw-ling the Pirates
back to a one-jlame lead in
the NL East w1th a ~ shutout
over the San Franctsco
G1ants, snapped a personal
three-game losmg streak.
"Tomght we got h1ts and
these are the Pirates that I
know
"We must have left the real
Pirates at home when we
went on the road "
The Pirates, returning

Ma1or L eag u e Stand•ngS&gt;
Un1ted Pres s lnternattonal
Nntronalleagu e
E as I
w I pet
9 b
68 55
553
Prtl s
67 56
54 5 1
Phrla
53'} 3' I
66 58
St LOUI S
64 59
570 4
N ew York
460 111 1
58 68
Ch tC iJQO
5? 70 4?6 \51 J
Mont
West
w I pet
g b
Crn
83 40 6 75
Los Ang
67 57
540 16 1 ,
San Fra n
61 63
497 22 1 ,
San Dr ego
56 68
452 27 1 J
A t lanla
56 70
444 28 1 ,
Housto n
47 81
367 38 1 ,
Tuesday 's Result5.
Los Angeles 2 Ch rca go 1
Montreal 5 San D 1ego 0
St Lours 2 C.ncrnnal t 1
Atlanla 6 Phdadelphra 4
New York 6 Houston 3
P rttsb urgh 4 s an Francrsco 0
Wednesday's Gam es
(All Ttmes EDTJ
Lo s Angeles {Messersmtth
l·l 1 1 J
at
Ch•cago
IR
Reuschel 9 13l 'l 30 p m
Crnc rn natr ( Norman 8 31 at
S f LOUtS ( Reed 119 1 830

pm

N ~w

vorl&lt;: I Webb 5 5 1 at
Houston ( Rober ts 7 14 ), 8 35
p m
'
Philad elphia &lt;C ttrrstenson
6 ·11 a t Atlan t a !Morton 15
171 7 35 p m
San Or ego (Jo n es. 16 7l at
Montr e al carrrlher s I I J B 05

pm

san F rancr sco fHalrckr 7 9 )
al PrtJsburgh ( Rooker 8 9 1.
7 35 p m

Thur sday' s Games
(No gam es sc heduled l

home after a disastrous 2-12
road trip, rapped out 10 hits
agamst the Giants including
solo homers by AI Oliver and
Riehie Zisk. Reuss, meanwhile, }'lelded only three hits
as the "stopper" of Pittsburgh's six-game losing
streak.
Sportmg a 1!1-day beard,
Reuss struck out six and
unproved h!S record kl 13-9.
He got all the runs he needed
m the third when Rennie
Stennett singled and came
home on a double by Oliver.
Ohver later scored on Dave
Parker's single.
"I didn't grow tile beard for
luck or anything," Reuss
said, "but I guess now I'll let
1t grow a while longer."
Sa1d Oliver, who was 3-for-4
witb two RBis: "My teammates have been waiting for

Amertcan League
East

w 1 pet
g b
75 49
605
66 56
541 8
6( 60
508 17
56 68
457 19
55 66
455 181
50 74
403 25
West
w 1 pet
g b
Oakland
74 50
597
Ka n Crfy
67 54
554 5 1 ,
Chrcago
60 63
488 13 1 t
Texas
61 65
48 4 14
Mrnn
58 67
46.4 16 1 ~
Cal1f
57 69
45 2 18
Tuesday's Results
Boston 5 Kansas Crty 0
Mrnnesota 5 Ballrmore 1
Texas ? Cleveland 1
Chrcago 7 New York 6 , 11
onnrngs
Detroil 3 Oakland 1
Cqlrfornra 5 Mrlwaukee 4 15
rnn1ngs
Wednesday's Games
j All T1mes EOTJ
De t ror t
{ Bare
7 7)
at
Oakland (S rebert 1 3 l 4 JO

Boston
Ba i t
New York
Milwaukee
Cleve
Oe t rorl

pm
Milwaukee ( Slaton 11 13 ) at

Calrtornra (Ryan 11 J? ), 4 00

pm
Ball!more (G r rms ley 8 J;l )
al Mrnnesota 1Hughes II 10 ),
9 00 p m
Boston !Trant
IS Il l
at
Kansas Clly (Leonard 8 SJ.
8 30 p m
Chrcago ( Wood 12 16 ) at
N ew York (May II 8 ), 8 00

pm

Thursday' s Games
Bal t rmor e at Te xas
Cleveland at Ka nsas Crty
Ortklilnd .) I M rlwavkee
ChiCBQO at New Yo rk

me to hit and I think I'm on
my way now. (Pirate
manager Damy) Murtaugh
and I had short session in
Cincmnati. He hollered in the
clubhouse that Parker and I
were leavmg men on base.
"There's no hard feelings
though. He spoke his mind
and I spoke mine. I've been
criticized all my Ufe so I know
how to handle it."
Elsewhere in the National
League Tuesday, Atlanta
upset Philadelphia 6-4, New

York put away Houston 6-3, RBI, his 99th, for the Phlla,
St. Louis edged CincinnaU 2- who blew an early ~ lead.
1, Montreal blanked San Max Leon gained the victory
Diego lMI and Los Angeles with 6 1-3 innings of shutout
relief.
shaded Chicago 2-1.
C8rdlnals Z, Reds 1
Braves I, Pldlllel t
Ted Simmons and Ted
Pinch-hitter Dave May
Sizemore
eaeh singled home
belted a twoo()ut two-run
homer In the nintb inning off a run and Lynn McGlotben
reliever Gene Garber as yielded just four hits in
Atlanta knocked Philadelphia helping St. Louis snap a nineout of tie with Pittsburgh for game Cincinnati winning
first in the NL East. Gng streak. The tbird place
Luzlnksi had four hits and an cardinals, still 2., games
baclt In the NL East, also got
a big night from Willie Davis.
40
Concepc1on, Ctn ana
Mangual. Mtl 14
Davis, having cleared up his
Amertcan League· Rtvers.
alimony problems, was 4-forCal 6?, Washtngton , Oak 35,
OI1S. KC 33, Remy, Cal 31,
t upon returning to the lineup.
Carew, Mmn and North Oak
Meta I, Alllros 3
'
Ptfchtnl
Del Unser and Wayne
I B.ued on most victor•es,
Garrell
stroked homers and
Nahonal league: Seaver,
NY 177 , Jones, SO 167 ,
New York, keeping pace in
Sutton, LA 16 10 , Morton. Afl
the
tightened up NL East,
15 17, Brllrngham, Cln 14 s,
Matlack. NY lA 8 Messer
spoiled
the
Houston
smrlh , LA 1&lt;1 11
managerial
debut
of Bill
Amer•can
League:
Palmer , Ball 19 7, Keet , (h 1
Vlrdon. Vlrdon was named to
17 9 Lee and Wtse, Bos 16 1,
replace Preston Gomez as
Blue Oak 16 10 , Hunter, NY
16 I 1
Astros' manager shortly

"

Ma1or League Leaden.
Unrfed Press tnternatronal
Leadrng Batters
I based on 300 at bats)
Natrona! League
g ab r h pet
Mdlk , Ct'lr
106 424 61 153 361
Smmns,
St L
119 430 67 146 340
Wtsn Hov 109 407 55 13? 3?8
Sng tln , Pot 105 386 43 176 316
Rose Crn
123 513 83 166 374
Mrgn Crn 113 393 84 177 373
Jsha SF
101 393 60 176 371
Prkr, P tl
Ill 415 58 133 320
Grvy LA
124 513 66 161 314
Lznskr Phd
17 3 456 73 147 311
Brock , St L
100 386 61 170 311
Amer•can League
g. ab r h pet .
Crew Mrnn 115 479 77 158 368
Lynn Bos 113 408 78 136 333
Mnsn , NY 119 449 6J 143 3 18
Hrgrv , Tex 11? 396 67 1?4 313
wash, Oak 114 457 6"J 1-10 3 10
Pwlt , Clev
9? 371 48 99 308
Sn gltn , Bait
119 446 73 137 307
McRae, KC 113 431 57 137 306
Braun Mrnn
109 368 53 111 307
Rrce Bos
113 447 75 133 198
Orta Ch•
105 406 50 1?1 798
Hrrh , Tex
115 403 64 1?0 ?98

Home Runs
Nat10na1 League Lv z rnsk1 ,
Phrl 3 1 Schm rdt Phrl 78
K 1ngman NY ?o~ Bench, Ctn
73 Fosler , Ctn ? 1
Arnerrcan
Leagu-e
Mayt)erry , KC 29 . Jackson .
Oak ?8, Scott, Mrl 77, Bonds.
NY 7?
Burroughs , Tex 11
Run 5o Baited In
Natrona! League Luzmskr,
Phtl 99 Bench , Con 95 , St aub.
NY 87 Perez, Cin 81 Wat

son. Hou 78

Amencan League: Lynn,
Bos as
Mayberry , KC 84
May Ball 83 , R1ce , Bos 81
Scott Mrl 81
Stolen Ba!te5.
Natrona! Leaque
Lopes,
LA 'i?
Morgan , Cin 48,
Bro c k •1 L It Ced eno , Hou

before
gamellme.
Jon
Matlack, making h!S first
start since Aug. 2 because of
injuries suffered m an
automiblle accident, went 8 23 innings for the victory.
Dodgers 2, Cubo I
Rookie
John
Hale's
sacrifice fly brought home
Lee Lacy, who had tripled,
with the winnmg nm m the
eighth inning kl g!Ve Los
Angeles its ninth Will in 11
games. Mike MarshaD, witb
three innmgs in relief of Don
Sutton, gained the win, his
ninth against 12 losses.
Expos 5, Padres 0
Rookie Larry Parrish
doubled home two nms in the
first mnmg and Steve Rogers
scattered 10 hits kl glve
Montreal its shutout wm over
San Diego. Rogers, 10-9,
struck out e1ght in hurling his
ninth complete game. Pete
Mackanin also had a solo
bomer for the Expos m the
eighth.

Hornets, Mets advance
In the fifth game of the
second annual Big Bend
little League Tow-nament
the Hartford Hornets Monday
mght defeated the Middleport
Mets 23 to 0. On the mound of
the winners was Shawn
Fields who went the distanee,
striking out fow- batters,
walked three and gave up no
hits.
For the Mets, Tony Seotl
started on the moWld and was
relieved by Bob Foy. The two
pitchers struck out one
batter, walked 7 and gave up
23 runs on 10 hits.
For the winners, Greg
Kearns led the hitting with a
triple, single and homerWI.
H1s homer Is the first of the
tourney. Lee Roach and
Shawn Fields each had a
double, David McDaniel had
Iwo singles, Shawn Paugh,
Ke1th Anderson and Jeff
Rouch each a single.
The Hornets w1ll now

prepare to meet tne wmner of
the Syracuse Astros and
Middleport Braves game.
In the sixth game of the
tourney the Rutland Reds
defeated the Middleport Reds
17 to 10.
Dave Demoskey started for
Middleport gomg two mnings
givmg up 11 runs and 7 hits
He also had 4 strike outs and
walked 7. Ray Stewart went
tn with two outs and two on
and struck out John VanMeter to end the mning.
Stewart finished on the
111 ound walking two and
strikmg out one. Demoskey
was •he !using pitcher.
For the winners, John Van
Meter went the distance with
five strike outs, walked five
and gave up 10 runs and f1ve
hits.
The M1ddleport Reds m the
first Inning of play got six big
runs but Rutland came back

\

I

w1th 10 runs to take the lead
When the dust had settled the
Rutland Reds had scored 17
runs on 13 hits and the
M1ddleporet team had 10 runs
on five hits There were nine
errors in the game Twenty
seven runs m one game lS a
tournament record
Getting hits for Middleport
were Ray Stewart w1th two
smgles, Tim Justis, Ke1th
Slaven and Kevm Milam each
a single.
For Rutland M1ke Willford
had two doubles and a single,
John VanMeter and Todd
Snowden each a double and
two smgles, Craig Bolin two
doubles and Dave Vance two
smgles
The Rutland Reds wtll play
the winner of the Cheshire
Tigers and Rutland Dodger
game. A total of 50 runs·were
scored in the two games
Monday evening.

WILMINGTON,
Ohio
(UP I) - The Cincinnati
Bengals' roster today was
down to 54, not including the
three rookies who played In
the College AlBar Game,
after Lofell Williams and
Rollen ~ Smitb were cut
Tuesday .
Wilhams, a wide receiver

SCIOTO RESULTS
COLUMBUS lUPI )
Torero Hanover, no better
than sixth at the half-m1le
pole, came on very strong m
the stretch to reg1ster a 1 ~;,
length victory over Jerry
MacPherson m the featw-ed
$1 ,600 e1ghth paee at Seioto
Downs here Tuesday mght
Janway showed
The winner, dnven by
Terry Holton, was clocked at
2 03 2-.'i and retw-ned $8.80, $3
and $3.20.
Pandora Polly ( 7) and
Mardel Express ( 3) teamed
for a $13 nightly double .
A crowd of 4,999 bet
$232,056.

and a native of Cincinnati,
had been the J;lengals' ninth
round draft choice out of
VIrginia Union, where he had
been most valuable player
the last two seasons.
Smith, a native of YoWlgstown, Ohio, was a sixth
round selection from the
University of Arkansas and
the first defensive back
picked by Cincy In this year 's
draft. He was an AllSouthwestern Conference
ehmee the past two years.
Williams said being cut was
"a shock and a surprlSe"
" I'm going to try to play
w1th some other club," he
decided .
&amp;n1th, cleanmg out h1s
room, told a reporter, "If you
don't mind, I'd ratber not say
anyth1ng "
The Bengals, 1-2 so far m
pre-~Jeason .games, play the
Green Bay Packers m Cincmnati Satw-day night. It will be
the first of only two home
exhib11ion games this year
for the Bengals .
Green Bay, under new head
coaeh Bart Starr, has won 1ts
first two pre-reason games.

SAN JOSE, calif. (UPI)The Portland Timbers, who
posted the best reeord of aU
teams during the regular
season North American
Soccer League dw-ing the
regular season with 138
points, arrive in San Jose
Wednesday to put the
finlshing touches on their
preparations lor Sunday's
title game against the Tampa
Bay Rowdies.
The Rowdies are not scheduled to arrive here until
Thursday. The two clubs will
alternate workouts Wltll their
meeting on SWlday, whieh
wiD be televised nationally
and for the first time feature
two firstyear teams fighting
for the ~hampionship.

Great buy
for your
favorite.
guy

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEJGS·MASON AREA
CHESTER l. TANNEHILL
Ex•c. Ed

ROBERT HOEFLICH
City Editor
Published dally except
Saturdl!ly by The Ohio Valley
PubllsJ'IIng company , 111
Court St .• Pome-roy, Ohio
15769 Buslnestt Office Phone
992 2156 Edltor1al Phone 992
2157
Second ctns postage paid
at Pomeroy, Ohio
Netronad
advertising
represenrattve
Ward
Griffith Company, Inc
Bottfnelll &amp; Gallagher Drv ;
757 Thrrd Ave , New York
N V 10017
'
S\lbscrlpt10n
rates
Delivered by carrier where
available 75 cents per week
By Motor Route where
carrier
servrce
not
available , One month, $3 2'5
By marl rn Oh10 and W Va ,
One Year ,
522 00,
Srx
months,
S11 50,
Three:
onths, S7 00 Elsewhere
76 00 vear, Srx months
lJ 50 , three months, S7 so
ubscrlption prrce includes
unday Trmes -Sentlnel

Ad,..lral, U !f!}
Duplex•
f;{{ffJ:ly

freezer I
refrigerator

It S a preCISI On
jeweled watch
Water and sh ock
resistant Styled m
gleamtng c hrome and
statnless sleel W1th a
swee p second hand. Full
numeral dial Black
leather slrap And a
Bulova guarantee

21 Bcu tt
only 33 wtde

.,

• New Energy -Saver desrgn cuts power usage
by el1m1natrng
anlr
sweat' h catrng clements
• Ad1ustable refngera tor shelves - move up or
down
•7-Day Fr1g1d Meat
Keeper drawer wrth
cold control keeps meat ~
fresh er longer
• Convement rce serv1ce 1
wuh Ea sy Cube rc:e buc ·
ket and twr st e ject
cube trays

$659

95

NO
DEFROSTING

EVER'

Tool up

with Admiral
forS~.88

When you purchase
Admiral's Best Buys.
Buy an Admtral
appliance• dunng
Admiral Best Buys
and you can get
the choice of a
Rockwell cordless
power dnll,

vanable speed
)lgsaw, edgertnmmer or
hedge tnmmer
for only $S.88.
So hurry while
supp ly las!s

.. (except an co ndtltone rsl

BAKER ·FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT,, OHIO

�I'

7

I

3- The Daily Se~tinel, Micldleport-P&lt;&gt;me'fOY, 0 ., Wednesday, Aug , 20,197S

&lt;

2 - The Da1Jy Sent me l, Middleport-Pomeroy, U., Wc'&lt;lnesday , Au~

\\

2Q. ·1975
., r

Grain boycott

~

'

.... ..-...........

'

Auguff 23, 1775:

Umt ed Prrss Internatumal
The AFL-&lt;:"10 boycott of
Ru ss tan-boun d Amen c an
j.!ram on up ted Prest dent
Ford's at ti'ntwn today ll also
v.as uppermost m the mmds

of Amen can brmrrs and tn a
C\lttrttoom tn Gdlvt&gt;ston
TPx
A g r alll tndustty SU UI ('t:'
send Ford \HIS to llll'Ct toda~
\\ tlh Kermeth Km dnl k d.Ild

Irv

Ft w he

repr e sPn ltn g

G t cat Plams Whe&lt;.t t ;:~nd
Wpste r n Wht&gt;dt AssoCiates,

two companies that promote
overseas sales of U S gram
'f hc source smd the Industry ts angn met tlw lon gsho t cmcn's IX1yLott becaU5e
the gri:iln bu.stness the\ arc
thr eatenm~ to halt ' t s our
hvelthood ond \\£' ha\ P to
have tt ·
Ford, \dlO so=ud Tuesda} · tt
\\OtJld l&gt;r tragtc and un fnrturldlt · tf" \\d\ cantwt be

found to so!vc this satu auon
th at ha s been &lt;.:1 ea ted, 'sa1d
he would meet w1th Labor
Secretary J ohn Dunlop when
he retu rn ~ to Washm gton
next week &lt;tlltl rev 1ew the
possibility
of
takmg
executive act1on to get the
sh1ps loaded
Dockworkers m Houston
stopped load mg gra m on two
ships Tuesday But a federal
court m Galveston ordered
two umon loca ls workmg on
one of them back to work as
of 8 a m E DT today
Judge J ames Noel Tuesday
rught Issu ed a temporary
restra mmg order that would
fo rce Int er nati onal Longshoremen's Assocu1t10n local
1273 and local 872 to c ontm!'"
the
load m g gr am on
Yugoslavian ship Bosanka ,
bound for Russia
The order rl1d not cover the
Italian ve ss ~l . the lvanfrancesco , hit by the work
stoppage Tuesday because of
reports the gram was
destmed for the Soviet Union
and not Germany as a gra m
company offlcial sa1d
Noel scheduled another
hearmg today on the back-to-

\\Ork orde r requested by
gnun shippers and freighter
.1gents

Gram farmer s and the1r
sfXlkesmen wen~ outraged at
the stoppage and the prospect
of plummctmg pnces AFL( IO
Preside nt Ge or ge
Mea ny . "h o backed the
manttme un1ons' thr eat to
stop the gr a 1n , \\as the target
of \'rtd es pr ca d v1lthca twn
Tuesday that p1tted farmer
versus laborer
Texas Farm Burea u head
l ar~ol 01a!oupka sa1d the
umon s are eo ncerned more
about forcmg exporters to use
A:menca n sh1ps and satlors
than about the effect of the
gram .sale on consumers
·'TIH' tr patnollsm stops al th~
pocketbook "
At a White House con·
fe rence on domestic poltcy m
Peon
Ill ,
Tuesday,
Agncult ure Secretary Earl
But1. sa1d " If the uruons are
rea lly concerned w1th food
pnces. the} ca n stop some of
the fea therbedding practlees
of those very un10ns that jack
up the pnees When I hear the
loose talk around here about
how we have to shut off the
sh1pments to Russia, I ge t a
httle t1cked off."
J Robert Wade, pres1dent
of the Kentucky Farm
Bureau Federahon, said the
boycott amounts to l'an attempt by labor to steal farmers' profits "
Wade accused Meany of
m1sstatmg the facts when he
sa1d the boycott was for the
beneflt of conswners and not
for any personal gam for
longshoremen
" Hogwash," Wade sa1d
" When these same umon
bosses met With American
Farm Bureau leaders three
weeks ago, they were mueh
more candid They srud, m
elf ect, 'we 're not gomg to
load that gram until you
support congressiOnal action
to reqmre more cargo
preference subsidies , for
unwmzed ships to haul gram
overseas '''

fort of diverse w1cked and
our

•• '
THESE ARE THE TWO TOP TEAMS of the Baby
Sitters Summer Bowling League who received troph1es
Tuesday afternoon at a potluck dmner and carmval
bowhng held at the Pomeroy Bowling Lanes From the
left are Betty Hamm, Dons Halfhlll, fltSt plaee team , and

Sally Erwm and Donna Nease, second plaee team . Individual trophies went to Joyee R1l.ch1e , Lynn Crow,
Karen Goms, Jmna Arnott and Sharon Stark. H1gh
average went to Maw-isha Nelson, 128; h1gh game, Doris
Halfhill, 237, and h1gh senes, Becky Anderson, 403. Bette
Jean Krawsczyn was the most unproved bowler .

The

Kmg's

proclamation havmg been
published, Penn 1s permuted on Seplember 1 to
present the ongmal draft of
lhe Olive Branch Petition
to Dartmouth A few days
later. pressmg for the King's
answer to the pettuon, Penn
IS mformed by Dartmouth
"that as 1l [has not been]
rece1ved on the throne, no
answer (will] be glven "

Federated's
profits set
all-time mark
j

~· ;

'

J

FOURTEEN SYRACUSE emergency medical
technicians have received certificates for completing 60
how-s of Instruction m emergency medical serVIce skills
and techmques. lndlVldual cards were presented tQ each.
An organizatiOn certificate was presented to Chiel Ralph
Lavender by Joe Struble, E.M.I . Instructor. The certificates and cards, as well as the liiStruct.ion, were
authorized and made available by the Trade and Industrlal VocatiOnal EducatiOn SerVIce of the State
Department of Educat10n, m cooperallon w1tb Southern
Local School District. The mstructor, Joe Struble, prl\lSed
the members of the claSll f9t the1r commUf\ity spirij m
improVIng their eff1ciency• as emer~ency" medical

H1s testunony that plamtiff
Scott
MacKenZie
was
probably shot w1th a highpowered weapon challenged
that of defense w1tness Dr.
Norman R!Ch of Walter Reed
Army
Hosp1tal
m
Washington, who sa1d tt
appeared to be from a low
velocity misslle.
The defense attacked ,Helpern's operation as medtcal
exammer m 1971 when the
head from the body of a" New
Jersey woman, found dead in
the East River m New York,
was kept on hand for nearly
three weeks before 1t was
determmed she was killed by

a gunshot.
After the flnal w1tness,
plamtiffs' attorneys and lawyers for Gov. James Rho'des,
former KSU president Robe'rt
White and 27 former Guard
offieers and men will discuss
privately w1th U.S. District
Judge Don J. Young the
strucbons he'll g1ve tlie jury.
When that is settled, e~~l;ll
side will have 2., hoqrs ,.to
giVe 1ts closmg argwnents.
The plaintiffs are to lead
but may reserve plirt of their
tune to use after the d~n­
dants ma)&lt;e their Sl!ffilll!l,tion.
Then the JUdge will charge
the jury, an instruction on

'm-

off

Fatigue plagues emphysema victims
By La\\ renee E Lamb, M.D
he Will nol!ce IS that he cause breathlessness should
DEAR DR LAMB - What does n "t have !he same hm1t the type of exerc1se to
levels that avoid breathlessand how much can a persm1 exerctse capacity he used to
with emphysema do'&gt; Mus t have He may have plenty of ness Th1s IS a good rule for
they s1t aroun d and do oxygec for resltng energy everyone, but breathlessness
~othmg all day ' Can they do
needs. but not enoug h to run a may occw- sooner for the
As t he disease person w1th emphysema.
housework for themselves? Is mil e
Unless the emphysema 1s
1t good for them to stt and progresses and less and less
watch TV all day or should oxygen IS delivered , he severe, some form of hght
they have some dmly exer- reaches the stage where he IS cahsUlemcs, exerctses that
c1se'
hred even s1ttmg and finally stretch the muscles and
DEAR READER - One of must have oxygen therapy to tendons and help to mamtain
muscle tone are useful. A few
the early symptoms m some support hfe
cases of emphysema IS
The exercise itself or wor}( hght exercises, even a slow
fatigue Why ' Because the will not hurt the lungs or walk, are better than s1ttmg
lung damage prevents the make the emphysema worse. all day
Of cow-se, there ts a pomt
dehvery of adequate amounts It m1ght even help 11 if the
where
the d1sease gets so bad
of oxygen. The oxygen is person 1s sllll able to exercise
needed to me tabOlize the food some A· person with em- that the problem 1s supyou eat to release the food physema should not un- portmg life even at rest.
energy so you ca n use 1l I[ dertake a vigorous exercise Sittmg or watchmg TV all day
m these cases IS not good, but
there 1s not enough oxygen, program without h1s doctor 's
regardless -Of how much you permission But, 1f he sill! has !here ts no other chmce
eat , there will not be enough enough lung funchon to mF r!" mformahon abOut the
energy, hence fat1gue
crease h1s oxygen supply lungs wn te to me m care of
How much a person can ,do w~n ~e , mcreases h1s ac- th1s newspaper, P 0 . Box
1551 , Radio City Statwn, New
with emphysema deperrds • tivity, then walking and even
entirely on hoW much lung ·· m1la spo rt s w1thm h1 s York , NY 10019, send a long,
stamped
damage has oecw-red. In the eapacity are helpful to h1m as ' self-addressed,
envelope and 50 cents and ask
early .stages of the d1sease tb'lo ' lllfy are for healtby people
for The Healt h Letter nwnbir
ind1v1dua1 may have few or
I l~mk lh e person w1•h
no symptoms The f1rst thing emphysema !Jad enough to 2-4,J&lt;eepmg Your Lw r~:s Fit

•

CINCINNATI (UP!) - Record earrungs were reported
Tuesday by Federated
Department Stores, Inc., one
of the natwn 's largest
department store chams.
Federated ofhc1als sa id
earrungs per share for the
second quarter of 1975 were a
record 62 eents, compared
w1th 44 eents for the same
penod a year ago, an mcrease of 40 per eent
Earnmgs per share for the
first SIX months of the fiscal
year ended Aug. 2 were a
record $1.17, compared w1th
94centsm 1974,anmcrease of
24 per cent.
Federated , wh1ch operates
19 stores across tile country
such as Bloommgdale's m
techniCians Struble commended the men and women for
New York, Bullock's m Los
the1r mterest m the training and for the cooperallon he
Angeles and Lazarus m
reee1ved He pomted out that many emergency med1cal
Columbus, also disclosed new
servtces were requestmg trammg and that mteresl m
h1ghs
m both sales and
emergency medical serv1ee protectwn 1s gi-owmg
earnmgs for the second
throughout the state. Persons who rece1ved eerbflcates
quarter and first s1x montbs.
were, front, 1-&lt;, Harold DaVIs, Howard Black, Eber
Sales for the second
Pickens, Oris Hubbard, Ralph Lavender, Harold Black;
quarter
of 1975 were $839
back row, Mar1e Rizer, Vtck1 R1zer, Mary P1ekens, Joe
milhon,
compared
w1th $744
Struble, Elizabeth R1ce, and Naom1 London. Absent were
m11lion a year ago, a 13 per
Patricia Roush, Bob Lemley ~nd Mona Black To date m
eent
jump. Sales for the f1rst
the four volunteer emerilJ'ncy squads at Racme,
half of the year were $1.6
Syracuse , Middleport and Pomeroy, 86 persons have
m1ll10n,
compared With $1 44
completed emergency t rammg
million m 1974, an mcrease of
II per eent
Second quarter earnings
were $27.6 mlllion, compared
With last year's $19.5 million,
a 41 per cent hike. First half
earmngs were $51.8 million,
up $10 million or 24 per eent.
"We expeet that this strong
sales performance w1ll
continue through the balance
In the seventh game of tillS s1de.
of 1975," sa1d bOard cha1rman
year's little League TourThe Astros came up With Ralph Lazarus
nament co.,sponsored by The three h1ts, Perry Sm1th 's two
Da1ly Sentinel and Dan s1ngles and Terry McThompson Ford the defen- Nlckle s
a
smg le
ding champwn Middleport
Hemer's Braves Tuesday
The Braves scored in every
evemng
defeated
the
frame behind the batting of
Syracuse Astros 1()..() m 4
Steve F!fe, a double and two
CANBERRA, Australia
IIIDmgs.
smgles, Terry Wayland, two ( UP!) - The Australian
The Astros came m second
singles, Rick Ebersbach a Labor government Tuesday
m last year's tournament.
smgle, and M1ke M11ier had mtroduced 1ts 1975-76 budget
Dave Nance started for the
stx RBls on a two run homer whlCh contams a radically
Astros and went 3 mmngs,
m the first inmng and a grand new me orne tax system whtch
g~vmg up nine runs on seven
slammer m the th1rd
w1ll exempt 500,000 low inhits. Nance had four
By shuttmg out the Astros come workers from paymg
strikeouts and 6 walks. Nanee
the Braves have had nine any tax at all
was relieved in the tbird by
scoreless IIIDtngs by their
The budget aimed at easmg
John Will1ams who fanned
opponents, t1ed With the Hart- effects of the recession called
three batters, walked two,
ford Hornets. The Hornets for wide ranging cuts m Inand allowed one run Nanee
and
Braves pa1r off m come and company taxes, but
was the losmg p1tcher .
Wednesday 's game at 6:30 mcreases m excLse taxes on
Jeff Wayland picked up his
p .m
beer, spLnts, tobacco and
, firs\ wm in todmament play,
The Rutland Reds w11l gasoline
giving up one walk, allowing
tangle w1th the Rutland
Treasw-er W1lham Hayden
no runs, and three hlts. Terry
Dodgers m the f1rst game
told
the
House
of
Wayland came on m a fme
Wednesday at 5. The Dodgers Represental!ves !hat co rrelief job to walk only two
advaneed kl meet the Reds porate taxes had been
batters and strike out the
because of a forfe1t by the
reduced 2.5 per cent to 42 5
Olesh1re Tigers, 1).(1. The
per cent to help stimulate
consolatiOn game Will be
busmess confidence. He
what law applies to the case played at 5 p.m. Friday and
doubled rates of deprec1ation
expected to run as long as the championship game will on all new plants as an added
15,000 words because of tbe he played at 6·30 (tunes are
mcenhve to boost production
complexity of the matter. Tbe approximate)
and mvestment in the a1ling
case• may reach the jury
Line Score
Australian economy.
Thw-sday at the earliest. Mtddleport Brave
Judge Young has not clarif1ed
234 1- 10 8 1
Syracuse Astros
the probable timing.
CORRECI'ION
At that point, it lS the
0000--032
' Services were contracted
responsibility of the six men
from the Gallia County 168
and six women who have
Board to allow a training
BOARD MEETS
heard testunony from nearly
program for the mentally
Meeting w1th the Me1gs
100 Witnesses to sift it in tbe1r
retarded of Meigs County
commiss ioners
collective memory and W!th Co u nty
and
not 648 Board as stated
Tuesday
was
Edward
Mcthe aid of hundreds of
Tuesday.
exh1bits introduced, to Connell of the Ohw Histoncal
The 169
Board is
Soc1ety
to
discuss
and
explam
determine whether the
responsible
for
training
defe11dants are liable for how the society wants to
programs
In
menial
mventory all county records
damages to the plaintiffs.
retardation
while
tbe 648
and keep those of histone
Sh~uld the jury find for tbe
Board's responsibility is
plaintiffs, there is expected to value Attending w~re Henry
funding
and planning
be a brief reeess ~fore a Wells, Warden Ow-s, and
comprehensive menta}
G1lkey,
comsecond hearmg is convened kl Bernard
health programs.
determine
and
award mJsswners, and Martha
. :: ·:·::::·.···.·:·.. ·:·:==·:··===:·::::r.=:::= ~·==:=:== ·==·
Chambers, clerk
damages.

Braves win 10-0

DR. LAMB

.."
am

DEAR DR. LAMB .:_, I
wondenng about a 45-yearold woman who 1s an
alcohoLic and has been for a
long hme. Her feet and
ankles swelled and turned a
bnght red color. She went to a
doctor , and he gave her water
pills and now the swelling has
gone down Is th1s a s1gn tl1at
her kidneys are gomg bad
from drmking?
DEAR
READER
Swollen ankles means an
aceumulallon of excess fluid,
and 1t can be caused from
several thmgs. It can mean
kidney disease , but it can also
mean hear! failure a nd hver
fa1lure I would suspect e1ther
of these first - livet damage
1s a common comphcahon of
akohohsm , and 1t lS a· factor
m Ihe reddenmg of the skm
you noted.
Severe vancose vems in:.
vol vmg 1he deep vems · can
lead to swelhng, but smce the
doetor use d1w-etics I would
be less mchned to thmk that
1s the cause

over Syracuse

Aussies offer
new tax plans

I•

J

realm "

Penn

-By Ross Mackenzre &amp; Jeff MacNclly /fl !97S Unned Feature Syndrcale

Confusion grows in Kent testimony

I

NEW YORK ( UPI) - Football players take some fumy
bounees. What would you say if Larry Csonka boWlced right
back With the M1anu Dolphins froru the Memphis Southmen?
I'd say there's better than a 50-50 clianee that'll happen based
on the World Football League's dismal attendance figures so
far .. .Csonka's "reumon" with the DolphlllS in M1am1 last
Saturday mght strikes me as if 1t could be a case of commg
events casting ttieir shadow before them. The former Mianu
fullback caught a plane from Memphis, then watched his old
teammates beat the Detroit lions, 26-14, m the Orange Bowl.
He spent the whole game on the sidelines hob-nobbing with the
Dolphins and was inv1ted into the dressing room at halftime by
coaeh Don Shula. It was just like old times .. " I'm not down
here to evaluate tbe team," said Csonka. "I'm just down here
to visit my buddies." The same rught aU this was happerung,
the WFL was averagmg 11,000 for 1ts five games. Only 3,470
showed up in Olicago
From tile way the fans are turning out, the WFL Will have
trouble fmishing the season, even With its new sure.fire plan.
Salaries atld bills still ~ave t.o be prud, and Without people m
the stands, you can't pay them It's that simple. Csonka, Paul
Warfield and Jim Kilck are putting m their f1rst season in the
WFL after having rece1ved $.1.5 million t.o jump from the NFL.
If the WFL should go under, Memphis owner John Bassett
certainly would look to make some kind of settlement on
Csonka's personal services' contract. Part of that settlement
very likely would result m Csonka 's bemg free to return to the
Dolphins. He looks as 1f he'd be happy kl go and they eertainly
would be tickled kl have him Stranger thmgs than that have
happened, and lately, too ...
Speakmg qf sw1t.ches, Preston Gomez showed his customary
class making way for Bill Virdon m Houston. Notif1ed he was
&gt;eing relleved of his duties Tuesday morning, he accepted the
news without a murmur. "The record is all there in black-andwhite and that's baseball," he S3ld, makmg it a little easier for
them kl swing the axe on him Gomez spent an hour filling in
V1rdon on some of the things he felt the ex-Yankee manager
should know abOut the Astros, and when Virdon, top drawer
himself, told Gomez how much he sympathized with him over
losing h1s job, Gomez nodded understandingly and said, "I
know you do because you were in this same position only three
weeks ago." ...Gomez didn't have to show up at the Astrodome
for Virdon's hirmg, but he did and he didn't nm out in a hurry
either. He stayed around more than two how-s waiting to say
goodbye to his players .Don't worry about Preston Gomez.
He'll have anotber job soon ...
Joe Frazier has no use for Muhammad Ali at aU, but that
feeling is one·&lt;nded as far as Ali lS coneerned even though he
rurf&gt; down Frazier regularly. "Nothin' personal, I just wanna
beat htm kl keep my title," be says abOut &amp;nokin' Joe. "I lose
to him, and I lose a $10 million fight with Foreman right after
that." ... And after George Foreman again, it'll be Ken Norton
agam, making the whole business sound like a re-&lt;un of some
round-&lt;obin you've seen a couple of times before ...
Box:1ng buffs are sw-e to be delighted w1th on A Pictorial
H1story of Box:1ng, eontammg some of the most fascmatmg
boxing photos I've seen. Ong1nally put klgetber by Sam Andre
and the late Nat Fleischer, the book bas an added sectlon on
"The New Champ1ons" compiled by Andre and Nat Loubet,
president and editor of The Ring Magazine. At the prepubhcatwn pr1ee of $16.95 until Aug. 31, it's an exeeUent addihon to any bOxing library ...

desperate persons within

a.

By ROBERr PENICK
week of defense witness Joy
CLEVELAND 1UPI)
Bishop, who said seconds
Teshmony m the $46 m1IIIon before Guardsmen f1red she
Kent State CIVIl sun appeared saw a nearby c1vihan frre a
ready to end today am1d a pistol mto the mr
swirl of procedw-al confuswn
Two other rebuttal wltas the masstve combmed nesses, Bruee Phill1ps of
lawsuit reached the midpomt Colwnbus, Ohio, and Patricia
of 1ts 14th week. Frank R1vera , suburban
Attorneys for the nme stu- North Olmsted, said they
dent s wounded by Nat10nal were w1th Mrs. B1shop and
Guard gunf1re on the KSU saw no one m the area in
campus May 4, 19'10, and for which she placed the ClVIlian.
the families of the four slam,
The other rebuttal w1tness
sa1d Tuesday they had one called for the plamtiffs was
more wttness to call m Dr. M11ton Helpern, eh1ef
rebuttal
med1cal exammer for New
The "1tness was to York C1ty until he rel!red two
challe nge the test imony last years ago.

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sporta Editor

Carrying Congress' Olive Branch Petition of July 5,
Richard Penn reaches London on the 14th and submits a
copy of the petition to Lord Dartmoutb-Secretaryol State
for the Colonies-on the 21st On the 23l:l!.,the King Issues
a proclamation declaring the colonies to be In open rebellion "There Is reason to apprehend," the proclamation says , "that such rebellion hath been much
promoted and encouraged
by the traitorous correspondence, counsels, and com-

from shippers

.

Sport Parade

A Chronicle: of America

Linescores
Matorleague R esu lt s
Unrted Pres s InternatiOnal
Na110nall ea9 ue
Lo s. Ang
000 000 110 - 1 5 0
Ch1cag o
000 100 000 - I ? 1
Sutto n Marshall C9 J and
Y~ager
Bonham , Knowl es
l9l
and
Hosley
WP Marshatl
( 9 12 )
LP Bo nham I 11 10 )

Sa n Fran
Pil lS

000 000 000 - a 3 I
002 00 1 l Ox 4 10 2
Barr
Wrll1ams. 18) and
Hil l
Reuss
113 9 )
and
Sa ngu rllen LP - Barr (II 10 )
HRs Zrsk (13th/
Olrver
( 14th )
Sa n Dr ego 000 000 000 0
Montreal
300 010 Olx - 5
Mcintosh Tonolrn ( 7)
Oavrs
Rog ers 11 0 9 )
Foote LP Mcintosh 18
HR Ma c kanm (8 th )

10 J
4 1
and
and
17 1

Ph ria
103 000 ooo - 4 10 0
Atla nta
003 010 007 - 6 8 1
Ruthven
Sch u eler 131 .
Garber
IB J and Oates
Thompson
Leon 13 1 and
Correll
W P - L eon 17 I)
L P Garber 19 BJ H R May
{ 8th )
C1n
100000000·- 1 40
Sf Lours
200 000 OOx - 7 I? I
Nolan C Carroll (81 and
Benc h M cG lothe n ( 13 9) and
Som mo ns LP - No lan (1 1 7)
New York

00 1 110 030 6 II 0
000 000 003 - 3 9 1
Matlack L ockwo od ( 9) ,
K oosman
19 ) and Grole
D re rker Cosgrove (7 I So sa
18 1 Granger 19 1 and Jutze
WP Ma t lack
( 14 8 )
LP 0 1erker ( 111 31 HRs - Unser
( 6th )
Garr e ll (6th), Cedno
{ 7th)
Jo hnson lllt h l

Houston

A mencan league
Texas
100 000 100- 7 50
Cle ve
000 000 100- 1 7 0
Umbarger
Foucau lt
(7)
and Sunnberg Eckersley (9
SJ
and
Ashby
VP Umbarger
15 5 1
HR Spencer I 10th I

Boston
00 1 00? 700- 5 9 7
K an Crty
000 000 000- 0 4 I
Lee ( 16 7) and Frsk Filz
morrrs . Pattm (7 ), McDanrel
(9 )
and Marlrnez
LP Frlzmor rr s 117 10 )
HR Lynn !lOt h )

Bait
000 0?0 000- 'l 5 2
Mtnn
?00 300 oox ....:. 57 1
Cuellar Gar l and (4) and
Hendrrcks
Blyleven 113 6J
and Roof LP Cuellar ( 1'2 9 )
C11 tnntngs)
_
Chrcago 011 100 300 01 - 7 11 J
NY
20'2 110000 00- 6110
Jefferson
Hrn t on
(-!).
Upshaw (8), Ham 11ton (9)
and Varney , Gura , Lyle (7)
and Munson WP - Hamtlton
16 1l LP - Lyle(] 61 HRsVarney (lstl Nelll es ( 16 t h )
Den t (3 rd )
000 0?0 001 - 3 6 0
000 001 000- 1 9 0
( 11 13)
and
F re e han
Bosman
F rngers
( 9J and Tenace LP - Bosman

Del
Oak
Lolrc h

18 SJ
t 15 mnmgsl
Milwaukee
100 001 200 000 000- 4 12 3
Caltfo rnta
700 100 100 000 001 - 5 12 0
Colborn Aust tn ( 121 and
Por ter
Tanana , Scott ( 13 )
and Rodrrguez Hampton (91
WP Scolt ( 4 1) LP - Austr n
17 71
HRs - Sta nton I 17th),
Mr tc hell (7th) Miley (3rdl

Six fined in

Rutland for
excess speed
RUTLAND - Six defendants were fmed $10 and costs
each m the cow-t of Rutland
Mayor Eugene Thompson
Monday night on speeding
charges.
They are Charles J.
Howard, Gallipolis; Mark
Coughenhour , Langsville;
Jack Pnddy, Lockborne;
Yvonnia Garten , Racine;
Nancy Sexson, Pomeroy, and
James Searles, Rutland.
Forfeitmg bonds were
Ronald G. Shepard, Rutland,
$20 ; Denny L. Carroll, Cincinnati, $25, and Patrick B.
Davtson , Gallipolis, $25, all
on speeding charges. Cecil
Fry, Rutland, was fined $25
and costs on a second offense
or squeahng tires and was
placed on probation for six
monllis.' All of the arrests
were made by Richard
l_lysell, new Ru:land poliee
officer.

.

Cincinnati, 2-1
By DONALD BERNS
ST. LOUIS (UP!) - Lynn
McGlothen let the Oncinnatl
Reds scratch out a run in tbe
first inning Tuesday night,
then p1tched what he called
his fmest game in Busch
Stadium for the St. Louis
cardinals.
He si!UI out the heavyhitting Reds the rest of tbe
way and finished W!th a fourhitter, helping the cardinals
keep pace m major league
baseball's tightest race with
a 2-1 VICtory .
The Reds' Pete Rose led off
the game by rapping a double
down the left field line on
wbat McGlothen called a
"changeup curve." Then Ken

Griffey beat out a bunt and
Rose went to third.
"1 walll'l elq)eCUng the
bunt," McGlothen said. "I
was begiming to worry."
Joe Mtrgan drove In Rllee
witb a sacrifice fly, but after
that, the Reds were mostly
spectators of McGlothen's
pitching prowess.
"It was the best ball &amp;arne
I've pitched in this perll:i'
McGlothen said. "I had good
control, I mlsed up my pllcbes and moved the baD
around the plate."
McGlothen struck out 10
and laced ooly 32 men in the
game, which lasted leu than
two hours. He railed his
record to 1:1-f and now bas

beaten each of the II other
teams In the National League
at least once Ibis season.
The Cardinals banged out
12 hits but cooverled them
into only two runs. Four of the
12 Wen! by Willie Davis, who
broke back Into the lineup
after an absence of four days
spent straightening out his
alimony setUement with his
former wife. Davis had a
lriple, double and two singles
but dlm'l figure in eitber of
the runs.
Botb St. Louis runs came in
tile first. Bake McBride
lllnsled, Davis doubled and
Ted Slmmma single horne
McBride, but Davis was out
at the plate. Ted Sizemore

singled home Simmons.
The Cardinals remained
2~, games behind the Eastern
Divislon~eadmg Pittsbw-gh
Pirates.
"'lbe raee 1S tightenmg up ,
and there are going to be

some real tense games,"
Sizemore sald.
The Cardinals are looking
forward to the montb of
September, when they will
exclusively ploy teams m
lheir own division.
"The ballparks w11I be
filled," Slnunons said. "It
ought to be mterestlng."
The two teams meet again
tonight w1th Fred Norman, 83, pitching for the Reds.

•

Lynn paces Boston wzn
By FRED McMANE
UPI Sporll Writer
The unpact of rookie Fred
Lym on the Boston Red Sox
Ibis season can be easily
sununed up in three lettersMVP.
In the history of baseball
there has never been a firstyear player who has won the
Most Valuable Player Award
m either major league, but
the 23-year-old outfielder of
the Boston Red Sox continues
to Pfl"{orm in a way that will
be diffiCult to overlook when
the American League MVP
voters cast their ballots at the
end of tbe regular season.
"He's the best young allaround player to come
through this league in a long,
long time," Manager Whitey
Herzog of Kansas City said of
Lynn' Tuesday night after
watehing tile Red Sox' rookie
lead Boston kl a ~ victory
over the Royals. The triwnph
boosted Boston's lead to eight
games over Baltlrilore, which
lost to Minnesota :&gt;-2, in the
AL East.
"Really, he rerrnnds me a
lot of (Carl) Yastrzemski
when he came up," adds

Herzog. "He's an aggreuive
hitter, a Rood oulftelder and a
fine baserunner just ll!le Yaz
was. There's reaDy no llhof the game he's llhort ln."
Lynn llhowed off his hiWng
and running ability against
the Royals Tuesday nfaht. He
doubled In the sixth Inning
and, after taking off ftr lhinl
base on Jim Rice's grounder
to Utird, scored when first
baseman John Maybert"y's
return throw to third went
wild.
In the sevenlb, after Yastrzemski walked, Lynn
blasted his 20th homer to give
the Red Sox a couple of
valuable insurance runs.
Supported by Lynn's beavy
hilling, southpaw Bill Lee
went the distance, aDowlng
only four hits, lo gain hil16tl1
victory against seven losses.
Lynn's overall balling
credentials are unmatched
by any player In lhe AL this
year. He stands first In the
~gue in runs baited in with
aa, first In runs acored with
78, second In balling avenge
with .333, second In doubles
wltb 31, Ia tied lor lourtb In
triples witb six and lied for

victory over New York. The
White Sox lied the score at 6-6
in tbe seventh oo Bucky
Dent's three-run homer. Pete
Varney had his first major
league homer for O!icago
while Graig Nettles homered
inninp.
for New York.
l'"tr8 5, Orioles
rigen 3, A'I 1
Bert Blyleven tossed a fiveAw-eUo Rodriguez and Ron
hitter as Minnesota slopped LeFlore singled home runs in
BaiUmore for tbe second the fifth inning kl spark
straight night, Blyleven Detroit over Oakland for its
retired the first 13 batters in fourtb consecutive victory
order and finished with eight after a 19-game losing streak.
!lrikeouts to raise his record Mickey Lolich scattered nine
to 13-6. Jerry Terrell had hits in going the distance for
three hits and scored twiee kl his lith win.
pace tbe Twins' attack.
Angels 5, Brewen t
Rangen Z, Jadla!W 1
Mike Miley led off the
Jim Spencer's solo homer botklm of the ISth inning with
in the sevenlb inning and the his third home run of the year
hitleu relief pitching of Steve to lift California over
Foucault sparked Texas over Milwaukee. Miley, a rookie,
Cleveland. Spencer's loth hit Rick Austin's first pitch
homer was only one of five over the left field wall kl end
hila the Rangers got off the low- hour and two minute
rookie Dennis Eckersley. marathon.
Foucault pitched 2 2-3 innings
of h!Uess relief kl protect Jim
Umbarger's sixth victory.
A thought for the day:
White Sox 7, Ylllll!ees t
American writer Edgar
Jorge Orta llinllled horne Watson said, "What people
the winning run in the lltb say behind your back Is your
inning kl give Chicago Ita standing m lbe conunun
sixth in homers.
In other AL games, Texas
nipped Oeveland :1.-1, Otlcago
edged New York H in II
innings, Detroit defeated
Oaldand s.1 and cautornia
nipped Milwaukee ~ in 15

z

Pirates snap losing streak, 4-0
,

Bengals trim
roster to 54
.

We Hold These Truths :..

,,

·d rawing fire
Ry SARA F RirZ

Today's

. .

' ,.

By BILL MADDEN
UPI Sports Writer
That rumble heard 'round
the National League East
Tuesday rught was the Pirate
batsmen retw-ning home.
Horue to Pittsburgh and
home to undisputed first
place.
"Anthmg we d1d before
tomght had no bearing on how
I p1tched," said Jerry Reuss,
who in hw-ling the Pirates
back to a one-jlame lead in
the NL East w1th a ~ shutout
over the San Franctsco
G1ants, snapped a personal
three-game losmg streak.
"Tomght we got h1ts and
these are the Pirates that I
know
"We must have left the real
Pirates at home when we
went on the road "
The Pirates, returning

Ma1or L eag u e Stand•ngS&gt;
Un1ted Pres s lnternattonal
Nntronalleagu e
E as I
w I pet
9 b
68 55
553
Prtl s
67 56
54 5 1
Phrla
53'} 3' I
66 58
St LOUI S
64 59
570 4
N ew York
460 111 1
58 68
Ch tC iJQO
5? 70 4?6 \51 J
Mont
West
w I pet
g b
Crn
83 40 6 75
Los Ang
67 57
540 16 1 ,
San Fra n
61 63
497 22 1 ,
San Dr ego
56 68
452 27 1 J
A t lanla
56 70
444 28 1 ,
Housto n
47 81
367 38 1 ,
Tuesday 's Result5.
Los Angeles 2 Ch rca go 1
Montreal 5 San D 1ego 0
St Lours 2 C.ncrnnal t 1
Atlanla 6 Phdadelphra 4
New York 6 Houston 3
P rttsb urgh 4 s an Francrsco 0
Wednesday's Gam es
(All Ttmes EDTJ
Lo s Angeles {Messersmtth
l·l 1 1 J
at
Ch•cago
IR
Reuschel 9 13l 'l 30 p m
Crnc rn natr ( Norman 8 31 at
S f LOUtS ( Reed 119 1 830

pm

N ~w

vorl&lt;: I Webb 5 5 1 at
Houston ( Rober ts 7 14 ), 8 35
p m
'
Philad elphia &lt;C ttrrstenson
6 ·11 a t Atlan t a !Morton 15
171 7 35 p m
San Or ego (Jo n es. 16 7l at
Montr e al carrrlher s I I J B 05

pm

san F rancr sco fHalrckr 7 9 )
al PrtJsburgh ( Rooker 8 9 1.
7 35 p m

Thur sday' s Games
(No gam es sc heduled l

home after a disastrous 2-12
road trip, rapped out 10 hits
agamst the Giants including
solo homers by AI Oliver and
Riehie Zisk. Reuss, meanwhile, }'lelded only three hits
as the "stopper" of Pittsburgh's six-game losing
streak.
Sportmg a 1!1-day beard,
Reuss struck out six and
unproved h!S record kl 13-9.
He got all the runs he needed
m the third when Rennie
Stennett singled and came
home on a double by Oliver.
Ohver later scored on Dave
Parker's single.
"I didn't grow tile beard for
luck or anything," Reuss
said, "but I guess now I'll let
1t grow a while longer."
Sa1d Oliver, who was 3-for-4
witb two RBis: "My teammates have been waiting for

Amertcan League
East

w 1 pet
g b
75 49
605
66 56
541 8
6( 60
508 17
56 68
457 19
55 66
455 181
50 74
403 25
West
w 1 pet
g b
Oakland
74 50
597
Ka n Crfy
67 54
554 5 1 ,
Chrcago
60 63
488 13 1 t
Texas
61 65
48 4 14
Mrnn
58 67
46.4 16 1 ~
Cal1f
57 69
45 2 18
Tuesday's Results
Boston 5 Kansas Crty 0
Mrnnesota 5 Ballrmore 1
Texas ? Cleveland 1
Chrcago 7 New York 6 , 11
onnrngs
Detroil 3 Oakland 1
Cqlrfornra 5 Mrlwaukee 4 15
rnn1ngs
Wednesday's Games
j All T1mes EOTJ
De t ror t
{ Bare
7 7)
at
Oakland (S rebert 1 3 l 4 JO

Boston
Ba i t
New York
Milwaukee
Cleve
Oe t rorl

pm
Milwaukee ( Slaton 11 13 ) at

Calrtornra (Ryan 11 J? ), 4 00

pm
Ball!more (G r rms ley 8 J;l )
al Mrnnesota 1Hughes II 10 ),
9 00 p m
Boston !Trant
IS Il l
at
Kansas Clly (Leonard 8 SJ.
8 30 p m
Chrcago ( Wood 12 16 ) at
N ew York (May II 8 ), 8 00

pm

Thursday' s Games
Bal t rmor e at Te xas
Cleveland at Ka nsas Crty
Ortklilnd .) I M rlwavkee
ChiCBQO at New Yo rk

me to hit and I think I'm on
my way now. (Pirate
manager Damy) Murtaugh
and I had short session in
Cincmnati. He hollered in the
clubhouse that Parker and I
were leavmg men on base.
"There's no hard feelings
though. He spoke his mind
and I spoke mine. I've been
criticized all my Ufe so I know
how to handle it."
Elsewhere in the National
League Tuesday, Atlanta
upset Philadelphia 6-4, New

York put away Houston 6-3, RBI, his 99th, for the Phlla,
St. Louis edged CincinnaU 2- who blew an early ~ lead.
1, Montreal blanked San Max Leon gained the victory
Diego lMI and Los Angeles with 6 1-3 innings of shutout
relief.
shaded Chicago 2-1.
C8rdlnals Z, Reds 1
Braves I, Pldlllel t
Ted Simmons and Ted
Pinch-hitter Dave May
Sizemore
eaeh singled home
belted a twoo()ut two-run
homer In the nintb inning off a run and Lynn McGlotben
reliever Gene Garber as yielded just four hits in
Atlanta knocked Philadelphia helping St. Louis snap a nineout of tie with Pittsburgh for game Cincinnati winning
first in the NL East. Gng streak. The tbird place
Luzlnksi had four hits and an cardinals, still 2., games
baclt In the NL East, also got
a big night from Willie Davis.
40
Concepc1on, Ctn ana
Mangual. Mtl 14
Davis, having cleared up his
Amertcan League· Rtvers.
alimony problems, was 4-forCal 6?, Washtngton , Oak 35,
OI1S. KC 33, Remy, Cal 31,
t upon returning to the lineup.
Carew, Mmn and North Oak
Meta I, Alllros 3
'
Ptfchtnl
Del Unser and Wayne
I B.ued on most victor•es,
Garrell
stroked homers and
Nahonal league: Seaver,
NY 177 , Jones, SO 167 ,
New York, keeping pace in
Sutton, LA 16 10 , Morton. Afl
the
tightened up NL East,
15 17, Brllrngham, Cln 14 s,
Matlack. NY lA 8 Messer
spoiled
the
Houston
smrlh , LA 1&lt;1 11
managerial
debut
of Bill
Amer•can
League:
Palmer , Ball 19 7, Keet , (h 1
Vlrdon. Vlrdon was named to
17 9 Lee and Wtse, Bos 16 1,
replace Preston Gomez as
Blue Oak 16 10 , Hunter, NY
16 I 1
Astros' manager shortly

"

Ma1or League Leaden.
Unrfed Press tnternatronal
Leadrng Batters
I based on 300 at bats)
Natrona! League
g ab r h pet
Mdlk , Ct'lr
106 424 61 153 361
Smmns,
St L
119 430 67 146 340
Wtsn Hov 109 407 55 13? 3?8
Sng tln , Pot 105 386 43 176 316
Rose Crn
123 513 83 166 374
Mrgn Crn 113 393 84 177 373
Jsha SF
101 393 60 176 371
Prkr, P tl
Ill 415 58 133 320
Grvy LA
124 513 66 161 314
Lznskr Phd
17 3 456 73 147 311
Brock , St L
100 386 61 170 311
Amer•can League
g. ab r h pet .
Crew Mrnn 115 479 77 158 368
Lynn Bos 113 408 78 136 333
Mnsn , NY 119 449 6J 143 3 18
Hrgrv , Tex 11? 396 67 1?4 313
wash, Oak 114 457 6"J 1-10 3 10
Pwlt , Clev
9? 371 48 99 308
Sn gltn , Bait
119 446 73 137 307
McRae, KC 113 431 57 137 306
Braun Mrnn
109 368 53 111 307
Rrce Bos
113 447 75 133 198
Orta Ch•
105 406 50 1?1 798
Hrrh , Tex
115 403 64 1?0 ?98

Home Runs
Nat10na1 League Lv z rnsk1 ,
Phrl 3 1 Schm rdt Phrl 78
K 1ngman NY ?o~ Bench, Ctn
73 Fosler , Ctn ? 1
Arnerrcan
Leagu-e
Mayt)erry , KC 29 . Jackson .
Oak ?8, Scott, Mrl 77, Bonds.
NY 7?
Burroughs , Tex 11
Run 5o Baited In
Natrona! League Luzmskr,
Phtl 99 Bench , Con 95 , St aub.
NY 87 Perez, Cin 81 Wat

son. Hou 78

Amencan League: Lynn,
Bos as
Mayberry , KC 84
May Ball 83 , R1ce , Bos 81
Scott Mrl 81
Stolen Ba!te5.
Natrona! Leaque
Lopes,
LA 'i?
Morgan , Cin 48,
Bro c k •1 L It Ced eno , Hou

before
gamellme.
Jon
Matlack, making h!S first
start since Aug. 2 because of
injuries suffered m an
automiblle accident, went 8 23 innings for the victory.
Dodgers 2, Cubo I
Rookie
John
Hale's
sacrifice fly brought home
Lee Lacy, who had tripled,
with the winnmg nm m the
eighth inning kl g!Ve Los
Angeles its ninth Will in 11
games. Mike MarshaD, witb
three innmgs in relief of Don
Sutton, gained the win, his
ninth against 12 losses.
Expos 5, Padres 0
Rookie Larry Parrish
doubled home two nms in the
first mnmg and Steve Rogers
scattered 10 hits kl glve
Montreal its shutout wm over
San Diego. Rogers, 10-9,
struck out e1ght in hurling his
ninth complete game. Pete
Mackanin also had a solo
bomer for the Expos m the
eighth.

Hornets, Mets advance
In the fifth game of the
second annual Big Bend
little League Tow-nament
the Hartford Hornets Monday
mght defeated the Middleport
Mets 23 to 0. On the mound of
the winners was Shawn
Fields who went the distanee,
striking out fow- batters,
walked three and gave up no
hits.
For the Mets, Tony Seotl
started on the moWld and was
relieved by Bob Foy. The two
pitchers struck out one
batter, walked 7 and gave up
23 runs on 10 hits.
For the winners, Greg
Kearns led the hitting with a
triple, single and homerWI.
H1s homer Is the first of the
tourney. Lee Roach and
Shawn Fields each had a
double, David McDaniel had
Iwo singles, Shawn Paugh,
Ke1th Anderson and Jeff
Rouch each a single.
The Hornets w1ll now

prepare to meet tne wmner of
the Syracuse Astros and
Middleport Braves game.
In the sixth game of the
tourney the Rutland Reds
defeated the Middleport Reds
17 to 10.
Dave Demoskey started for
Middleport gomg two mnings
givmg up 11 runs and 7 hits
He also had 4 strike outs and
walked 7. Ray Stewart went
tn with two outs and two on
and struck out John VanMeter to end the mning.
Stewart finished on the
111 ound walking two and
strikmg out one. Demoskey
was •he !using pitcher.
For the winners, John Van
Meter went the distance with
five strike outs, walked five
and gave up 10 runs and f1ve
hits.
The M1ddleport Reds m the
first Inning of play got six big
runs but Rutland came back

\

I

w1th 10 runs to take the lead
When the dust had settled the
Rutland Reds had scored 17
runs on 13 hits and the
M1ddleporet team had 10 runs
on five hits There were nine
errors in the game Twenty
seven runs m one game lS a
tournament record
Getting hits for Middleport
were Ray Stewart w1th two
smgles, Tim Justis, Ke1th
Slaven and Kevm Milam each
a single.
For Rutland M1ke Willford
had two doubles and a single,
John VanMeter and Todd
Snowden each a double and
two smgles, Craig Bolin two
doubles and Dave Vance two
smgles
The Rutland Reds wtll play
the winner of the Cheshire
Tigers and Rutland Dodger
game. A total of 50 runs·were
scored in the two games
Monday evening.

WILMINGTON,
Ohio
(UP I) - The Cincinnati
Bengals' roster today was
down to 54, not including the
three rookies who played In
the College AlBar Game,
after Lofell Williams and
Rollen ~ Smitb were cut
Tuesday .
Wilhams, a wide receiver

SCIOTO RESULTS
COLUMBUS lUPI )
Torero Hanover, no better
than sixth at the half-m1le
pole, came on very strong m
the stretch to reg1ster a 1 ~;,
length victory over Jerry
MacPherson m the featw-ed
$1 ,600 e1ghth paee at Seioto
Downs here Tuesday mght
Janway showed
The winner, dnven by
Terry Holton, was clocked at
2 03 2-.'i and retw-ned $8.80, $3
and $3.20.
Pandora Polly ( 7) and
Mardel Express ( 3) teamed
for a $13 nightly double .
A crowd of 4,999 bet
$232,056.

and a native of Cincinnati,
had been the J;lengals' ninth
round draft choice out of
VIrginia Union, where he had
been most valuable player
the last two seasons.
Smith, a native of YoWlgstown, Ohio, was a sixth
round selection from the
University of Arkansas and
the first defensive back
picked by Cincy In this year 's
draft. He was an AllSouthwestern Conference
ehmee the past two years.
Williams said being cut was
"a shock and a surprlSe"
" I'm going to try to play
w1th some other club," he
decided .
&amp;n1th, cleanmg out h1s
room, told a reporter, "If you
don't mind, I'd ratber not say
anyth1ng "
The Bengals, 1-2 so far m
pre-~Jeason .games, play the
Green Bay Packers m Cincmnati Satw-day night. It will be
the first of only two home
exhib11ion games this year
for the Bengals .
Green Bay, under new head
coaeh Bart Starr, has won 1ts
first two pre-reason games.

SAN JOSE, calif. (UPI)The Portland Timbers, who
posted the best reeord of aU
teams during the regular
season North American
Soccer League dw-ing the
regular season with 138
points, arrive in San Jose
Wednesday to put the
finlshing touches on their
preparations lor Sunday's
title game against the Tampa
Bay Rowdies.
The Rowdies are not scheduled to arrive here until
Thursday. The two clubs will
alternate workouts Wltll their
meeting on SWlday, whieh
wiD be televised nationally
and for the first time feature
two firstyear teams fighting
for the ~hampionship.

Great buy
for your
favorite.
guy

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEJGS·MASON AREA
CHESTER l. TANNEHILL
Ex•c. Ed

ROBERT HOEFLICH
City Editor
Published dally except
Saturdl!ly by The Ohio Valley
PubllsJ'IIng company , 111
Court St .• Pome-roy, Ohio
15769 Buslnestt Office Phone
992 2156 Edltor1al Phone 992
2157
Second ctns postage paid
at Pomeroy, Ohio
Netronad
advertising
represenrattve
Ward
Griffith Company, Inc
Bottfnelll &amp; Gallagher Drv ;
757 Thrrd Ave , New York
N V 10017
'
S\lbscrlpt10n
rates
Delivered by carrier where
available 75 cents per week
By Motor Route where
carrier
servrce
not
available , One month, $3 2'5
By marl rn Oh10 and W Va ,
One Year ,
522 00,
Srx
months,
S11 50,
Three:
onths, S7 00 Elsewhere
76 00 vear, Srx months
lJ 50 , three months, S7 so
ubscrlption prrce includes
unday Trmes -Sentlnel

Ad,..lral, U !f!}
Duplex•
f;{{ffJ:ly

freezer I
refrigerator

It S a preCISI On
jeweled watch
Water and sh ock
resistant Styled m
gleamtng c hrome and
statnless sleel W1th a
swee p second hand. Full
numeral dial Black
leather slrap And a
Bulova guarantee

21 Bcu tt
only 33 wtde

.,

• New Energy -Saver desrgn cuts power usage
by el1m1natrng
anlr
sweat' h catrng clements
• Ad1ustable refngera tor shelves - move up or
down
•7-Day Fr1g1d Meat
Keeper drawer wrth
cold control keeps meat ~
fresh er longer
• Convement rce serv1ce 1
wuh Ea sy Cube rc:e buc ·
ket and twr st e ject
cube trays

$659

95

NO
DEFROSTING

EVER'

Tool up

with Admiral
forS~.88

When you purchase
Admiral's Best Buys.
Buy an Admtral
appliance• dunng
Admiral Best Buys
and you can get
the choice of a
Rockwell cordless
power dnll,

vanable speed
)lgsaw, edgertnmmer or
hedge tnmmer
for only $S.88.
So hurry while
supp ly las!s

.. (except an co ndtltone rsl

BAKER ·FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT,, OHIO

�"

I

I
'

'

• "•'"'"[-'"""-"f••,o .......,.•

'

defeated Bob ll a iley of
Columbus in a 36-hole playoff
last year . Also entered is 1973
wiMer Dick Plummer of
Cincinnati .
Charles Sifford, who
recently retired from the
PGA tour and is now a pro at
a Cleveland club, is expected
to compete. The field also
includes Herman Keiser of
Akron , who won this tourney

back in 1951.
The Ohio Open is the
longes t continuing golf

fi eld will be cut to the top 60
professionals
and
15
amateurs after the seeond
tournament in the state, round .
dating back to 1928. It has
Amateurs with a handicap
been played every yea r ex- of JO or less were invited to
cept 1943.
enter . The tourney is being
This year 's eve nt will be sponsored by the Southern
staged at the Weatherwax Ohio PGA section and the
Golf Course and ali four of the Southwestern Ohio District of
ninehole layouts will be used Sertoma Olarities.
for the 72-hole event The

Petrocelli on disabled list
some balance problems
creal&lt;!d in the middle ear,"
Red Sox s pokesman Bill
Crowley said Tuesday. " It 's
probably a holdover from the
time he was hit last Sept. 15."
Petrocelli was placed on
the 15-day disabled list
Tuesday . He has complained
at various times this season
of headach~s and dizziness.

Petrocelli
and
Ca rl
Yastrzemski are the only
players left with Boston from
the Red Sox team which won
the Ame rican League . Jl':nnant in 1967. This year,
Boston is in first place in the
American League East.
Th e Red Sox recalled
retired
infielder
Dick
McAuliffe, 35, manager of the
club's Bristol, Conn., Eastern
League farm team, to fill ut
at third base.
Petrocelli did not tell
Manager Darrell Johnson he
was leaving before a game in
Chicago Sunday but Red Sox
General Manager Dick
O'Connell said Tuesday
By GARY L. rAYLOR
Vlrdonsaid, " but I'm going to disciplinary action probably
UP! Sports Writer
evalual&lt;! the talent first and wouldn 't be taken.
HOUSTON (UP!) - Should look toward 1976."
" We don't feel he has done
the
Houston
Astros
win
the
Jon
Matlack
,
the
New
York
anything wrong . He probably
.. .. I
World Series in the near Mets' lefty who defeated should have spoken to the
. :··P.&lt;r future, historians no doubt Houston in Virdon's debut, manager before he left
will mark the walk Tal Smith had a word for the Astros' Sunday. But he spoke to the
SOFTBALL CHAMPIONS
Members of Pt.
made across Bill Virdon 's players.
manager the day before, so
PleasaRt's 3664th Maintenance Co. ( FDS) West Virginia
backyard as the turning
"He doesn't take anything he probably figured he had
Army National Guard softball team captured top honors
anybody," Matlack said. told him what he had to,"
point
.
off
during recent sununer camp activities at Ft. Pickett, Va .
The
Houston
team,
as
"Heisoneofthefairestmen
1 O'Connell said.
Front row, left to right are: SP5 Michael Lambert,
newly annointed Astros have ever met and the best
McAullife, who retired at
Ashton ; SP4 Leo Layne, Racine ; SFC William Spears
Smith
and
Virdon
know,
is
manager
I've
ever
been
the
end of 1974, replaced
(team ca ptain ), Pl. Pleasant ; SP4 Ed Baer, Middleport;
Petrocelli briefly near the
nowhere near pennant associated with."
SP4 Gary Woll, Pomeroy; SP4 Charles Saunders,
material.
But
both
men
like
Virdon
got
his
first
end
of last season after
Ga llipolis. Second row, I to r SP4 Phil Roberts,
to think it soon could be. And managerial job with the Petrocelli was struck in the
Gallipolis; SP5 Rog er Garrett, Gallipolis; SP4 Danny
in
any case the fate of the Pirates, a team he played head by a pitch thrown by
Taylor, Pt. Pleasant; SP4 Keith Drummond, Cheshire;
team
is in the hands of the · with for nine years. He Jim Slaton of the Brewers in
SP4 William Fletcher, Wintersville; Cpl. William
two after Smith, the new managed the 1972 Buc team
Hockenberry, Pt . Pleasant; SP4 Charles Reed, Mason and
general
manager, Tuesday to a pennant, but was fired
SP5 Joe Smith, Pt. Pleasant.
named Virdon his field late the next year with PittsWILLIAMSPORT,
Pa.
manager.
burgh three games out of (UP! ) - The Little League
The two were in similar first place.
championships opened here
He left the Yankees this Tuesda)' with ail foreign
roles with the New York
Yankees the past two years season with the team 10 teams excluded from the
when Smith was executive games out after leading them competition for the first time
vice president and Virdon to a second place finish his since 1956.
was manager. The two were first year.
League officials voted last
"Obviously, I think he was year to ban foreign teams
also neighbors in a wooded
KENT, Ohio (UPI) - One ball, was hit and came down section of Oyster Bay, Long the most qualified and the from the series after teams
best candidate to direct tbe from Nationalist Chinese had
of the Cleveland Browns'
with the ball hitting his chest. Island.
"I know now what Texans . Astros in the future," Smith won the Little League World
most promising rookies is
"A lot of these injuries
expected !9 miss Friday happen in training camp mean when they say damn said . "Bill has been a winner Series five of the last six
night 's exhibition against because players are going all yankees," Virdon joked after as a player, he's been a years. Officials also changed
Washington because of an out to make the team. Later the announcement that he winner as a manager amd the name of the competition
injury suffered in practice on, they get the feeling when would replace Preston I'm confident in the future he to the Little League ChamTuesday.
to pull off and avoid such Gomez. He recalled his will be able to direct a winner pionship Series.
unexpected visit from Smith. here in Houston."
Tight end Oscar Roan , contact in practice."
"I really didn't expect to
second among the team's
Roan was hit by Van Green
get
a call from Tal," said
receivers with three catches and Eddie Brown as he
Virdon,
"but wben I saw him
for 66. yards and one touch- caught the ball. The IMi, 214down, has a slight separation pounder from Southern coming across the lawn
of the rib cage.
Methodist was immediately . (Monday afternoon), I had a
good feelirig."
"You have to do it in taken for x..-ays.
It dldn 't take Vtrdon long to
practice or you don 't learn,:•
Veteran defensive back
EXTRA
sa id Coach Forest Gregg . Thorn Darden had knee decide he would accept
SPICIA'Smith's offer of a conb'act
" He simply went up for the surgery Tuesday at the
through 1976.
Cleveland Clinic and the
"I said, 'Let's go,"' Virdon
ANY SIZEHN/'iE.M
doctors called the operation a
said.
success. However, Darden, a
He became the seventh
standout last season, will
(RIB TfiEAD)
manager
of a team which has
miss the entire 1975 camnever won a pennant and
paign.
which
is on the skids toward
A possible replacement ,
Tu
the worst season ever.
27c to 17c
Eldridge Short, arrived in
Houston lost No. 81 Tuesday
camp Tuesday in a deal with
night in Virdon 's debut and
the New York Giants.
With
are 33 left - 11 with
there
"We can't tell much about
Cincinnati and Los Angeles.
FREE MOUNTING •
Recappable Casih&amp;
him (Short) yet," said Gregg.
"We're
going
to
try
to
be
a
"A player learning a new
GRAZ, Austria (UPI ) spoiler the rest of the way,""
Loner Mark Donohue, his system looks half a step
loyalty to Roger Penske and a behind for a while."
· mile handicap road race here
compulsion to win pushing
this Sunday.
t.. 1. "'--n St.
him into Grand Prix racing
· Posey replaced Hans Stuck
POMEROY,
OHIO
after he already had quit the
of
West
Gennany
on
tbe
rt2
·2101
sport, died Tuesday night of
BMW team with Redman.
complications that arose
Stuck suffered a concussion
following an operation to
in the same Austrian Grand
remove a blood clot from his
In Meigs County In- Prix race that led to the death
brain .
Donohue, 38, in search of dependent Tournament of Mark Donohue last
weekend. He wQ!!'t be able to
his first Grand Prix victory a c tion Sunday, Tuppers
after a career of 57 triwnphs Plains picked up its third win drive for three weeks.
on the North American cir, by defeating Portland the
GEIIIIEAAL
' IIIVENUI
cui', crashed Sunday during a second time. Jack Rood,
IH.&amp;"ING
ACTUAL USE REPORT
practice run for the Austrian going all the way for Tuppers
Grand Prix and was hospital- Plains, fanned 10 and walked
• ized after complaining of 4. Leading hitters for Tuppers
Plain• were Tom Karr and
headaches at the track .
• x..-ays taken at Landes Steve Cowdrey with a single
Grankenhaus
Hospital and a double each and Jerry
revealed a blood clot which · Burke with two singles and
lO. 1975
' ·'
~ .. CCOU IH ~Q.
36 l_0~3 oo:z
dictated immediate surgery. two'RB!s.
Rick Blake, starting for
Donohue remained unCHESTER TOWNSHIP 695
TWP. ClERK
conscious and in serious Portland, went 4 1-3 innings
MEIGS COUNTY
condition following the striking out 2 and walking 2
LONG
BOTTOM. OHIO ~5743
•
surgery and died at about 7 giving up 9 hits. Ron Bachtel
: p.m . Tuesday - less than 12 carne in to finish the game
hours after veteran stock car . fanning 2 and giving up 1 hit.
'
. ' ·'driver Dewayne "Tiny" Lund Hitters for Portland were Bill
, was buried following fatal Knapp with two singles, Red
~ injuries· Sunda¥ in a six-car Walbrown with a double, and
;,:
: crash at the Talladega 500. R. Roach with a single.
A third racing-related
0•
• death occurred earlier
•
"0
, tuesday when Manfred · ELKHART LAKE, Wis.
l
;.. Schaller,a b'~ck official who ' (UPI) - Formula 5,000
•
was hurt. when Dimohtie 1s champion Brian Redlhan of
vehicle . bie,.; a tire and England and Sam Posey were
' crashed Into
meial glll!fd !llriong, , lh:e drivers '_IBmed
:; rail, died from internal in- 'l'uesday to cOmpete m the
• juries.
' $60,000' Road America 252BOSTON (UP!) - Rico
Petrocelli, who returned to
Boston Sunday without
notifying the Boston Red Sox
mana gement, has been
placed on the disabled list
because of an ear problem.
" Petrocelli was examined
today by Dr. Allred E. Weiss
of the Massachusetts Eye &amp;
Ear Infirmary who found

Virdon named
Astros manager

Milwaukee.
Petrocelli, who was hitting
.254 before leaving the team,
was fitt ed with g lasses
earlier this season after
having trouble keeping his
eye on the ball at the plate.
He wore them for batting
practice and in a few games,
but th ey awarenUy did not
solve his difficulties.
McAuliffe, a .250 lifetime
hitter, played with the Tigers
from 1961-73 before being
acquired by the Red Sox last
season.
Crowley said McAuliffe ,
who has. not played since
retirin g, had been taking
batting and fielding practice
for the past two days in
possible preparation for
being recalled.
"There's been a lot of
speculation about who we
might get to replace
Petrocelli, " said Crowley.
" But I don't think anybody
thought
it
would
be
McAuliffe,
including
McAuliffe."

GO,OD-YEAR

Donohue
claimed

PASSENGER TIRE

·:'x~"'

$1 095

by death

MEIGS TlkE CENTER

Tuppers PJains
gets third win
in tournament

•

..

a

Buying A Bomber
LOS ANGELES (UPI ) - A
four-engine bomber that may
be the only World War II B24
still flyable will be flown to
Southern California to join a
fleet of other vintage aircraft
being restored to lllp condition .
David
Tallichet
Jr. ,
preside nt of the Specialty
Restaurants Corp., said he
learned that the Indian Air
Force planned to retire the
plane and secured it from the
Indian government.
He flew the plane from
India to England, where it is
stored for the winter at the
former Royal Air Force
· Duxford Base near Cambridge. Tallichet said he will
take off next Monday on a
flight to the United States via
Greenland.
The B24 and nearly 100
other single and multi-engine
war planes will be used for
ny-in demonstrations at
restaurants around the nation
designed to reflect a World
War I atmosphere.

Sta_ndings

Tidewater
RochesTer
Syracuse
Charles ton
R ichmo nd

.603
.591 1 1 '~
.540 8
.510 10 1 ~
66 .A63 17 1 ·~
Mem phi~
69 .457 18 1 1~
TO I!=!dO
55 7'l .433 7llt?
Pawlucke-1
50 77 .394 16 1 ·~
Tu esday 's R es ultl
Tidewater 5 Cha rl esto n .t
R ic hmond 'J Mem ph is 1
RochesTe r 6 Sy r acuse A

76
75
61
66
57
58

SO
57
57
61

Paw t uckeT 1 To ledo 0

Sarnphan. There also were
indications that the health of
Communist Party Chairman
Ma o Tse-tung may have
deteriorated as well, Chinese
watchers said.
'

\:

On Celtificates
Of Depmit
s1,000 Minimum
30 Mo. Tenn
Ninety d•y lntereot pe1111ty

if
withdrawn
maturity date.

•

before

Mail' Co. Branch

JEANIFS

BEAUTY SALON
In Middleoort

August Special
The Athens County
. Savings &amp; loan Co•
296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

UN I-PERM Reg. s20
FOR $15
Whole Month of
August
For appt. call Jeanie,
Brenda, or .Diane
"At "92-3667

'·

'·

-

I

The teachers completed
special courses this summer
at Mary Manse College in
1 Cincinnati, Miami University
and Kent State University .
Department officials
r•
decided the time was ri"ht
for
I~
6''
• this course in light of the
increasing
number '' of
motorcycles because of the
: economic conditions and the
~
price of gasoline, and also the
!. soaring number of motorcy, . cle fatalities .
•· • "H someone had come to
1!. me with this program ten
: years ago when I was an
, administrator in Akron, I
would have asked him what
he wanted to talk about
next, " said State School
Superintendent Dr. Martin
• Essex. "But now the time is

298 Second St.
POMEROY, OHIO
I

PRICES GOOD THRU AUG. 23
NO SALES TO DEALERS
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

YOU'RE ALWAYS FIRST!

t

f.

:.. right."

i'"'•'"'m;=-.-:,

Krispy Serve

.
LB $179
BACON .......•.••••. ;...
Eckrich 8 Varieties

LUNCH MEATS••••• ~.~••

..

School officials are asking
for the course.
"What we tried to sell ten
years ago, they're asking for
now I" said Sell.
"They look into the parking
lot and see the number of cars
and motorcycles, and realize
" there must be some kind of
program to teach the young
motorcyclists the proper use
of the vehicle," said Bill Sell,
chief of the department's
driver education section.
"The black leather jacket
image is disappearing and
people are having more
respect for the motorcyclist,"
Sell said. " And there is more
concern for safety.
"We're trying to incorporate awareness into this
~ course and also the regular
driver education course," he
added. "We've got to make
all motorists aware of the
motorcycle.
"Then, too, this motorcycle
course can be considered as a
defensive driving courseriding to survive," he said.
Department officials aren 't
too sure yet how this experimental course will be accepted in the schools and
communities.
"Some parents aren't too
happy that their youngsters
want to get a motorcycle ,"
Sell said.
The course will be conducted according to weather,
but will include 25 to 35 hours
of training. This will be
divided into 14 hours of
classroom work with the
remaining hours to be spent
in riding.
Motorcycles for the course
are being donated by
motorcycle dealers , who
along with the American
Motorcycle Association
headquartered at nearby
Westerville, are supporting
the program 100 per cent.
The motorcycles will be 125
cc, the maximum recommended for both hoys and
girls who opt for the course.
Students may provide their
own motorcycles if the instructor approves it, Sell
said.
One prerequisite for the
course will be the completion
of a driver education course.
Riding will be conducted on
whatever facilities are
available at the school, and
· some riding will be done on
roadways.
Students will also have to
be properly equipped with
boots, heavy pants, long
sleeve shirts or jackets,
helmets with a face shield
and-or goggles and gloves,
Sell said.
Dave Campbell of the State
Department of Education
went through the MSF
training course to instruct the
teachers.
" They were really enthusiastic about it," he said .
''Some of them have their
own motorcycles and the
motorcycle endorsement on
their driver's license .
· "Others were about r~ady
to purchase their own
motorcy¢1es when they
completed Ule course'' I he
added.

Fresh &amp; Lean

..
~·

GROUND
BEEF

79~LB.

CUBE STEAK.. .~~:!.]

39

tl~~~GS..........m.\\.•~..1

19

79e
Valley Bell
. .
e
COTTAGE CHEESE...•~!.~ ..89
Shedd's
e
WHIPPED MARGARINE~...49
.
.
R&amp;R
ORANGE DRINK.••..•.~!·.....

lb.

CHECKER'S 1~:e
SOFT DRINKS•....••.6199
· .
.

HEAD LETTUCE ..... ~....2 9 e
TICKOS ON SALE·

OPEN
9 til 7

Mon.-Sat.
'

t •

Pri.cl!o· effective
Thursday thru Saturday .

Reserve Right To limit Qua'ntity
(

..

3

LB. OR MORE

GROUND 'BEEF••••••• ~·.
BABY BEEF

CHUCK ROAST•.'!!~ 7
BABY ·aEEF
$
ROUND STEAK.~~ •••

29
1

BABY BEEF · . . $
129
CUBE STEAK ...•. ~~ •.•
U. S. NO. 1 WHITF.
10

LB.

POTATOES ...... ~~-

9

VALVOLINE 10W40
MOTOR OIL ....• ~~.

POTATO CHIPS
PARKAY

MARGARINE .......':":. 4
DEL MONTE
- .
160Z.
SPI.·N ACH ••••.••••••••.

DEL MONTE
N.EW ·POTATOES•••• -~~~:~

9 oz.

PRING LES, .......s~~E••

4

KING TASTE
3 LB. $ '
29
SHORTENING •••••••~~-... ·
ARMOUR'S
POTTED MEAT

.,

\
·•

c

;

FRESH LEAN

HERE

By SANDI LA riMER
COLUMBUS (UP!) - A
new course in some Ohio
schools this fall-not .all- will
be motorcycle safety .
The State Depalllment of
Education, in cooperation
with the Motorcycle Safety
Foundation, has about 60
specially trained driver
education teachers scattered
throughout Ohio to teach the

course.

INTE.REST

I

•

.

J'

PREMIER NOT WELL
HONG KONG (UP! ) Chinese Premier Chou En-la''ll'
is " not in the best of health ,"
according to Cambodian
Deputy Prime Minister Khieu

NOW

Schools
teaching
cycle
safety

United Pren International
w . I. pet. g . b .

949-5772

·.

I

1nternatio·nt~ I Leilgue

WAID CROSS SONS
STORE Racine, Ohio
I Pearl St.

Roan out with
rib cage injury

'

''

Afl Set for 47th Ohio Open
MIDDLETOWN , Ohi o
Some
200
I UP!)
professionals and amateurs
are expected to compete in
the 47th annual Ohio Open
Go lf Tournament which
opens here Thursday and
winds up Sunday.
The field is headed by
defending champion Dean
Good of Alliance, who

BOWUNG CHAMPIONS Members of Pt.
Pleasant's 3664\h Maintenance Co. rFDS) l)owling team
captured top honors during recent swnmer camp activities at Ft. Pickett, Va . Left to right are : SSG Raymond
Cundiff , Mason ; SSG Jack Paugh, Letart; SSG Charles
Henson. Pt. Pleasant; SP5 Charles Rhodes, Pt. Pleasant,
an d SP5 James Steinbeck, Gallipolis.

'

\

-3

oz.

$

�"

I

I
'

'

• "•'"'"[-'"""-"f••,o .......,.•

'

defeated Bob ll a iley of
Columbus in a 36-hole playoff
last year . Also entered is 1973
wiMer Dick Plummer of
Cincinnati .
Charles Sifford, who
recently retired from the
PGA tour and is now a pro at
a Cleveland club, is expected
to compete. The field also
includes Herman Keiser of
Akron , who won this tourney

back in 1951.
The Ohio Open is the
longes t continuing golf

fi eld will be cut to the top 60
professionals
and
15
amateurs after the seeond
tournament in the state, round .
dating back to 1928. It has
Amateurs with a handicap
been played every yea r ex- of JO or less were invited to
cept 1943.
enter . The tourney is being
This year 's eve nt will be sponsored by the Southern
staged at the Weatherwax Ohio PGA section and the
Golf Course and ali four of the Southwestern Ohio District of
ninehole layouts will be used Sertoma Olarities.
for the 72-hole event The

Petrocelli on disabled list
some balance problems
creal&lt;!d in the middle ear,"
Red Sox s pokesman Bill
Crowley said Tuesday. " It 's
probably a holdover from the
time he was hit last Sept. 15."
Petrocelli was placed on
the 15-day disabled list
Tuesday . He has complained
at various times this season
of headach~s and dizziness.

Petrocelli
and
Ca rl
Yastrzemski are the only
players left with Boston from
the Red Sox team which won
the Ame rican League . Jl':nnant in 1967. This year,
Boston is in first place in the
American League East.
Th e Red Sox recalled
retired
infielder
Dick
McAuliffe, 35, manager of the
club's Bristol, Conn., Eastern
League farm team, to fill ut
at third base.
Petrocelli did not tell
Manager Darrell Johnson he
was leaving before a game in
Chicago Sunday but Red Sox
General Manager Dick
O'Connell said Tuesday
By GARY L. rAYLOR
Vlrdonsaid, " but I'm going to disciplinary action probably
UP! Sports Writer
evalual&lt;! the talent first and wouldn 't be taken.
HOUSTON (UP!) - Should look toward 1976."
" We don't feel he has done
the
Houston
Astros
win
the
Jon
Matlack
,
the
New
York
anything wrong . He probably
.. .. I
World Series in the near Mets' lefty who defeated should have spoken to the
. :··P.&lt;r future, historians no doubt Houston in Virdon's debut, manager before he left
will mark the walk Tal Smith had a word for the Astros' Sunday. But he spoke to the
SOFTBALL CHAMPIONS
Members of Pt.
made across Bill Virdon 's players.
manager the day before, so
PleasaRt's 3664th Maintenance Co. ( FDS) West Virginia
backyard as the turning
"He doesn't take anything he probably figured he had
Army National Guard softball team captured top honors
anybody," Matlack said. told him what he had to,"
point
.
off
during recent sununer camp activities at Ft. Pickett, Va .
The
Houston
team,
as
"Heisoneofthefairestmen
1 O'Connell said.
Front row, left to right are: SP5 Michael Lambert,
newly annointed Astros have ever met and the best
McAullife, who retired at
Ashton ; SP4 Leo Layne, Racine ; SFC William Spears
Smith
and
Virdon
know,
is
manager
I've
ever
been
the
end of 1974, replaced
(team ca ptain ), Pl. Pleasant ; SP4 Ed Baer, Middleport;
Petrocelli briefly near the
nowhere near pennant associated with."
SP4 Gary Woll, Pomeroy; SP4 Charles Saunders,
material.
But
both
men
like
Virdon
got
his
first
end
of last season after
Ga llipolis. Second row, I to r SP4 Phil Roberts,
to think it soon could be. And managerial job with the Petrocelli was struck in the
Gallipolis; SP5 Rog er Garrett, Gallipolis; SP4 Danny
in
any case the fate of the Pirates, a team he played head by a pitch thrown by
Taylor, Pt. Pleasant; SP4 Keith Drummond, Cheshire;
team
is in the hands of the · with for nine years. He Jim Slaton of the Brewers in
SP4 William Fletcher, Wintersville; Cpl. William
two after Smith, the new managed the 1972 Buc team
Hockenberry, Pt . Pleasant; SP4 Charles Reed, Mason and
general
manager, Tuesday to a pennant, but was fired
SP5 Joe Smith, Pt. Pleasant.
named Virdon his field late the next year with PittsWILLIAMSPORT,
Pa.
manager.
burgh three games out of (UP! ) - The Little League
The two were in similar first place.
championships opened here
He left the Yankees this Tuesda)' with ail foreign
roles with the New York
Yankees the past two years season with the team 10 teams excluded from the
when Smith was executive games out after leading them competition for the first time
vice president and Virdon to a second place finish his since 1956.
was manager. The two were first year.
League officials voted last
"Obviously, I think he was year to ban foreign teams
also neighbors in a wooded
KENT, Ohio (UPI) - One ball, was hit and came down section of Oyster Bay, Long the most qualified and the from the series after teams
best candidate to direct tbe from Nationalist Chinese had
of the Cleveland Browns'
with the ball hitting his chest. Island.
"I know now what Texans . Astros in the future," Smith won the Little League World
most promising rookies is
"A lot of these injuries
expected !9 miss Friday happen in training camp mean when they say damn said . "Bill has been a winner Series five of the last six
night 's exhibition against because players are going all yankees," Virdon joked after as a player, he's been a years. Officials also changed
Washington because of an out to make the team. Later the announcement that he winner as a manager amd the name of the competition
injury suffered in practice on, they get the feeling when would replace Preston I'm confident in the future he to the Little League ChamTuesday.
to pull off and avoid such Gomez. He recalled his will be able to direct a winner pionship Series.
unexpected visit from Smith. here in Houston."
Tight end Oscar Roan , contact in practice."
"I really didn't expect to
second among the team's
Roan was hit by Van Green
get
a call from Tal," said
receivers with three catches and Eddie Brown as he
Virdon,
"but wben I saw him
for 66. yards and one touch- caught the ball. The IMi, 214down, has a slight separation pounder from Southern coming across the lawn
of the rib cage.
Methodist was immediately . (Monday afternoon), I had a
good feelirig."
"You have to do it in taken for x..-ays.
It dldn 't take Vtrdon long to
practice or you don 't learn,:•
Veteran defensive back
EXTRA
sa id Coach Forest Gregg . Thorn Darden had knee decide he would accept
SPICIA'Smith's offer of a conb'act
" He simply went up for the surgery Tuesday at the
through 1976.
Cleveland Clinic and the
"I said, 'Let's go,"' Virdon
ANY SIZEHN/'iE.M
doctors called the operation a
said.
success. However, Darden, a
He became the seventh
standout last season, will
(RIB TfiEAD)
manager
of a team which has
miss the entire 1975 camnever won a pennant and
paign.
which
is on the skids toward
A possible replacement ,
Tu
the worst season ever.
27c to 17c
Eldridge Short, arrived in
Houston lost No. 81 Tuesday
camp Tuesday in a deal with
night in Virdon 's debut and
the New York Giants.
With
are 33 left - 11 with
there
"We can't tell much about
Cincinnati and Los Angeles.
FREE MOUNTING •
Recappable Casih&amp;
him (Short) yet," said Gregg.
"We're
going
to
try
to
be
a
"A player learning a new
GRAZ, Austria (UPI ) spoiler the rest of the way,""
Loner Mark Donohue, his system looks half a step
loyalty to Roger Penske and a behind for a while."
· mile handicap road race here
compulsion to win pushing
this Sunday.
t.. 1. "'--n St.
him into Grand Prix racing
· Posey replaced Hans Stuck
POMEROY,
OHIO
after he already had quit the
of
West
Gennany
on
tbe
rt2
·2101
sport, died Tuesday night of
BMW team with Redman.
complications that arose
Stuck suffered a concussion
following an operation to
in the same Austrian Grand
remove a blood clot from his
In Meigs County In- Prix race that led to the death
brain .
Donohue, 38, in search of dependent Tournament of Mark Donohue last
weekend. He wQ!!'t be able to
his first Grand Prix victory a c tion Sunday, Tuppers
after a career of 57 triwnphs Plains picked up its third win drive for three weeks.
on the North American cir, by defeating Portland the
GEIIIIEAAL
' IIIVENUI
cui', crashed Sunday during a second time. Jack Rood,
IH.&amp;"ING
ACTUAL USE REPORT
practice run for the Austrian going all the way for Tuppers
Grand Prix and was hospital- Plains, fanned 10 and walked
• ized after complaining of 4. Leading hitters for Tuppers
Plain• were Tom Karr and
headaches at the track .
• x..-ays taken at Landes Steve Cowdrey with a single
Grankenhaus
Hospital and a double each and Jerry
revealed a blood clot which · Burke with two singles and
lO. 1975
' ·'
~ .. CCOU IH ~Q.
36 l_0~3 oo:z
dictated immediate surgery. two'RB!s.
Rick Blake, starting for
Donohue remained unCHESTER TOWNSHIP 695
TWP. ClERK
conscious and in serious Portland, went 4 1-3 innings
MEIGS COUNTY
condition following the striking out 2 and walking 2
LONG
BOTTOM. OHIO ~5743
•
surgery and died at about 7 giving up 9 hits. Ron Bachtel
: p.m . Tuesday - less than 12 carne in to finish the game
hours after veteran stock car . fanning 2 and giving up 1 hit.
'
. ' ·'driver Dewayne "Tiny" Lund Hitters for Portland were Bill
, was buried following fatal Knapp with two singles, Red
~ injuries· Sunda¥ in a six-car Walbrown with a double, and
;,:
: crash at the Talladega 500. R. Roach with a single.
A third racing-related
0•
• death occurred earlier
•
"0
, tuesday when Manfred · ELKHART LAKE, Wis.
l
;.. Schaller,a b'~ck official who ' (UPI) - Formula 5,000
•
was hurt. when Dimohtie 1s champion Brian Redlhan of
vehicle . bie,.; a tire and England and Sam Posey were
' crashed Into
meial glll!fd !llriong, , lh:e drivers '_IBmed
:; rail, died from internal in- 'l'uesday to cOmpete m the
• juries.
' $60,000' Road America 252BOSTON (UP!) - Rico
Petrocelli, who returned to
Boston Sunday without
notifying the Boston Red Sox
mana gement, has been
placed on the disabled list
because of an ear problem.
" Petrocelli was examined
today by Dr. Allred E. Weiss
of the Massachusetts Eye &amp;
Ear Infirmary who found

Virdon named
Astros manager

Milwaukee.
Petrocelli, who was hitting
.254 before leaving the team,
was fitt ed with g lasses
earlier this season after
having trouble keeping his
eye on the ball at the plate.
He wore them for batting
practice and in a few games,
but th ey awarenUy did not
solve his difficulties.
McAuliffe, a .250 lifetime
hitter, played with the Tigers
from 1961-73 before being
acquired by the Red Sox last
season.
Crowley said McAuliffe ,
who has. not played since
retirin g, had been taking
batting and fielding practice
for the past two days in
possible preparation for
being recalled.
"There's been a lot of
speculation about who we
might get to replace
Petrocelli, " said Crowley.
" But I don't think anybody
thought
it
would
be
McAuliffe,
including
McAuliffe."

GO,OD-YEAR

Donohue
claimed

PASSENGER TIRE

·:'x~"'

$1 095

by death

MEIGS TlkE CENTER

Tuppers PJains
gets third win
in tournament

•

..

a

Buying A Bomber
LOS ANGELES (UPI ) - A
four-engine bomber that may
be the only World War II B24
still flyable will be flown to
Southern California to join a
fleet of other vintage aircraft
being restored to lllp condition .
David
Tallichet
Jr. ,
preside nt of the Specialty
Restaurants Corp., said he
learned that the Indian Air
Force planned to retire the
plane and secured it from the
Indian government.
He flew the plane from
India to England, where it is
stored for the winter at the
former Royal Air Force
· Duxford Base near Cambridge. Tallichet said he will
take off next Monday on a
flight to the United States via
Greenland.
The B24 and nearly 100
other single and multi-engine
war planes will be used for
ny-in demonstrations at
restaurants around the nation
designed to reflect a World
War I atmosphere.

Sta_ndings

Tidewater
RochesTer
Syracuse
Charles ton
R ichmo nd

.603
.591 1 1 '~
.540 8
.510 10 1 ~
66 .A63 17 1 ·~
Mem phi~
69 .457 18 1 1~
TO I!=!dO
55 7'l .433 7llt?
Pawlucke-1
50 77 .394 16 1 ·~
Tu esday 's R es ultl
Tidewater 5 Cha rl esto n .t
R ic hmond 'J Mem ph is 1
RochesTe r 6 Sy r acuse A

76
75
61
66
57
58

SO
57
57
61

Paw t uckeT 1 To ledo 0

Sarnphan. There also were
indications that the health of
Communist Party Chairman
Ma o Tse-tung may have
deteriorated as well, Chinese
watchers said.
'

\:

On Celtificates
Of Depmit
s1,000 Minimum
30 Mo. Tenn
Ninety d•y lntereot pe1111ty

if
withdrawn
maturity date.

•

before

Mail' Co. Branch

JEANIFS

BEAUTY SALON
In Middleoort

August Special
The Athens County
. Savings &amp; loan Co•
296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

UN I-PERM Reg. s20
FOR $15
Whole Month of
August
For appt. call Jeanie,
Brenda, or .Diane
"At "92-3667

'·

'·

-

I

The teachers completed
special courses this summer
at Mary Manse College in
1 Cincinnati, Miami University
and Kent State University .
Department officials
r•
decided the time was ri"ht
for
I~
6''
• this course in light of the
increasing
number '' of
motorcycles because of the
: economic conditions and the
~
price of gasoline, and also the
!. soaring number of motorcy, . cle fatalities .
•· • "H someone had come to
1!. me with this program ten
: years ago when I was an
, administrator in Akron, I
would have asked him what
he wanted to talk about
next, " said State School
Superintendent Dr. Martin
• Essex. "But now the time is

298 Second St.
POMEROY, OHIO
I

PRICES GOOD THRU AUG. 23
NO SALES TO DEALERS
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

YOU'RE ALWAYS FIRST!

t

f.

:.. right."

i'"'•'"'m;=-.-:,

Krispy Serve

.
LB $179
BACON .......•.••••. ;...
Eckrich 8 Varieties

LUNCH MEATS••••• ~.~••

..

School officials are asking
for the course.
"What we tried to sell ten
years ago, they're asking for
now I" said Sell.
"They look into the parking
lot and see the number of cars
and motorcycles, and realize
" there must be some kind of
program to teach the young
motorcyclists the proper use
of the vehicle," said Bill Sell,
chief of the department's
driver education section.
"The black leather jacket
image is disappearing and
people are having more
respect for the motorcyclist,"
Sell said. " And there is more
concern for safety.
"We're trying to incorporate awareness into this
~ course and also the regular
driver education course," he
added. "We've got to make
all motorists aware of the
motorcycle.
"Then, too, this motorcycle
course can be considered as a
defensive driving courseriding to survive," he said.
Department officials aren 't
too sure yet how this experimental course will be accepted in the schools and
communities.
"Some parents aren't too
happy that their youngsters
want to get a motorcycle ,"
Sell said.
The course will be conducted according to weather,
but will include 25 to 35 hours
of training. This will be
divided into 14 hours of
classroom work with the
remaining hours to be spent
in riding.
Motorcycles for the course
are being donated by
motorcycle dealers , who
along with the American
Motorcycle Association
headquartered at nearby
Westerville, are supporting
the program 100 per cent.
The motorcycles will be 125
cc, the maximum recommended for both hoys and
girls who opt for the course.
Students may provide their
own motorcycles if the instructor approves it, Sell
said.
One prerequisite for the
course will be the completion
of a driver education course.
Riding will be conducted on
whatever facilities are
available at the school, and
· some riding will be done on
roadways.
Students will also have to
be properly equipped with
boots, heavy pants, long
sleeve shirts or jackets,
helmets with a face shield
and-or goggles and gloves,
Sell said.
Dave Campbell of the State
Department of Education
went through the MSF
training course to instruct the
teachers.
" They were really enthusiastic about it," he said .
''Some of them have their
own motorcycles and the
motorcycle endorsement on
their driver's license .
· "Others were about r~ady
to purchase their own
motorcy¢1es when they
completed Ule course'' I he
added.

Fresh &amp; Lean

..
~·

GROUND
BEEF

79~LB.

CUBE STEAK.. .~~:!.]

39

tl~~~GS..........m.\\.•~..1

19

79e
Valley Bell
. .
e
COTTAGE CHEESE...•~!.~ ..89
Shedd's
e
WHIPPED MARGARINE~...49
.
.
R&amp;R
ORANGE DRINK.••..•.~!·.....

lb.

CHECKER'S 1~:e
SOFT DRINKS•....••.6199
· .
.

HEAD LETTUCE ..... ~....2 9 e
TICKOS ON SALE·

OPEN
9 til 7

Mon.-Sat.
'

t •

Pri.cl!o· effective
Thursday thru Saturday .

Reserve Right To limit Qua'ntity
(

..

3

LB. OR MORE

GROUND 'BEEF••••••• ~·.
BABY BEEF

CHUCK ROAST•.'!!~ 7
BABY ·aEEF
$
ROUND STEAK.~~ •••

29
1

BABY BEEF · . . $
129
CUBE STEAK ...•. ~~ •.•
U. S. NO. 1 WHITF.
10

LB.

POTATOES ...... ~~-

9

VALVOLINE 10W40
MOTOR OIL ....• ~~.

POTATO CHIPS
PARKAY

MARGARINE .......':":. 4
DEL MONTE
- .
160Z.
SPI.·N ACH ••••.••••••••.

DEL MONTE
N.EW ·POTATOES•••• -~~~:~

9 oz.

PRING LES, .......s~~E••

4

KING TASTE
3 LB. $ '
29
SHORTENING •••••••~~-... ·
ARMOUR'S
POTTED MEAT

.,

\
·•

c

;

FRESH LEAN

HERE

By SANDI LA riMER
COLUMBUS (UP!) - A
new course in some Ohio
schools this fall-not .all- will
be motorcycle safety .
The State Depalllment of
Education, in cooperation
with the Motorcycle Safety
Foundation, has about 60
specially trained driver
education teachers scattered
throughout Ohio to teach the

course.

INTE.REST

I

•

.

J'

PREMIER NOT WELL
HONG KONG (UP! ) Chinese Premier Chou En-la''ll'
is " not in the best of health ,"
according to Cambodian
Deputy Prime Minister Khieu

NOW

Schools
teaching
cycle
safety

United Pren International
w . I. pet. g . b .

949-5772

·.

I

1nternatio·nt~ I Leilgue

WAID CROSS SONS
STORE Racine, Ohio
I Pearl St.

Roan out with
rib cage injury

'

''

Afl Set for 47th Ohio Open
MIDDLETOWN , Ohi o
Some
200
I UP!)
professionals and amateurs
are expected to compete in
the 47th annual Ohio Open
Go lf Tournament which
opens here Thursday and
winds up Sunday.
The field is headed by
defending champion Dean
Good of Alliance, who

BOWUNG CHAMPIONS Members of Pt.
Pleasant's 3664\h Maintenance Co. rFDS) l)owling team
captured top honors during recent swnmer camp activities at Ft. Pickett, Va . Left to right are : SSG Raymond
Cundiff , Mason ; SSG Jack Paugh, Letart; SSG Charles
Henson. Pt. Pleasant; SP5 Charles Rhodes, Pt. Pleasant,
an d SP5 James Steinbeck, Gallipolis.

'

\

-3

oz.

$

�• I

I
I

Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday. Au~.• -_.20..,, 1,
97_.5..,....,.."-d.....S...,...._..,..

6_ The

41

oily's Poin+r.. . . .
'" POLLY t.:KMIER

Polyester filling
peeks out of quilt
POLLY'S PRORI.EM
DEAR POLLY - I own
seve r a l qu ill ed garments
. made of bo th cotton and slicksur faced materi als and t he
· po lyt:slt;&gt;r fibe r fi ll s tufrin g
always works its way !(1 lilt·
outs1de uf the

a pp ra r s
t h re&lt;~ds.

g~:~ rment

and

as white wispy
Any s uggest ions fur

. remedy in g or preyent in g thts

· con dit ion'! - MA RY S.
· llE ·\R MARY S.-Ha n· you
br-f•n

l:wnclt•rin g your gar-

. m ent s

al'&lt;'o rdint.:

to

in-

~ tru (' tion s'.'

This is a must
· unusu a l probll'm . If any nf
you r radrrs han• had il and
found a rt'lnl'd} du ll't us
knflw. - POLLY .

DEAR POLLY
Please
: te ll Dl•bbit.• wh o has rt 1\'F:W
house wtth plaste r on th e
· batht ub and marblr wind ow
: si ll s to STO P try i n~ tu
' rem ove it flo not to uch tht s
If the hou.'ic ts a rt'nt al the
landl ord should ta ke ce~re of it
sinrP s he should not hilVC' to
take the respo nsib il ity of
per haps dam&lt;'lgi ng the fix·
lures. If she is buyin g the
house the builde r should be
: respons ible and r epair or
· replace the t ub and sills if the
plas te r ca nn o t be s uc cessfully removed. Debbi e is
p3y in g for new ones th at a re
· • 1n good shape and sho uld ge t
. · them. - JACQUELINE .
' • DEAR POLLY - I found
· · a nes t of hor nets in s ide a
po r ch li g ht !hat ha s a
· coveri ng over the bulb . I used
. . a dome-shaped strain er held
. up a gai ns t t he bottom of t ht:
·: cover a nd s prayed inse ct
' killer up thr oug h it. t Polly's
nnle: Ev idently the sfnt dt• is

open etl the bot!utn.l In a few
seco nds all the horne ts
droppt.•d irl! o the st rai rtl' r &lt;:~nd
a few nwrr sprays marle sure
thf'y we re i ll! dea d. I hope th is
will help someone else faced
wi t h this cUlll Oyin g prnb)('Jil
- STELLA .
DEi\f\ POI.I.Y - Durtng
thesl' day.s of uur distressed
f'eon omy nws t are trying to
praf't icc th rift whe r e ver
pos~iblt• . I U!':it' m ot h ca kes in
my ch1se ts ;1nd when I buy a
new t~n~ I brea k it in to twu
scrt
, iuns and place ei:lch half
in a ham~cr ho lder. Th ese
J wn~ f'rs usually l'Otn e wit h
t ill' cake :-; whe n purchased.
The n tu nbled pur tion s of r::J'
cakes t-~re also sa ved to g&lt;J in
such lt a n ~e r s . The ext ra
hol dL•rs nredPd can be easily
mmlc . To makr them save
tllp round snap-on cove rs t hat
c urnc on ae rosol cans. Heat
an icc pi c k point on the stove
bur ne r a nd then ~:a r ef ull y
punch a hole near the edge of
the tid . P unch another hole
d1 r cct ly opposite a nd insert a
fine wire throu~h them to
ll.Jng it by. Fill cap with a s
much m oth r epellent a s
desired and hang in the
duset . So the crystals do not
eva pMa te too rapi dly ta pe on
the cap . a piece of waxed
pape r or ev en plain paper
wi th a fe w perforati ons made
in 11 . - MARYBF.LLE .
DEAR POLLY - A slee ve
boanf is great to use for
press in g sea m s in c hildren 's
slacks ,yo u ma y be making. Ir
yo u do not have one beg.
bo rrow or buy one at a gara ge
s ale or flei::l marke t.
EU GENIE.

10' by 10' plot ·
located like in
a bank, maybe:'
l'OI.UMilUS 1UP II Members of the slate
Controlling Board l'X·
pn·sst~ d astonishment
MHnday when the stat£'
Transportation Depart·
mcnt requested Sl.410 for
the purrhase of 103 square
feel of land from the rily of
Cincinnati to inerease tl1l'
turning radius at an in·

h.•rsc(·tio n.
Se n. Harry Meshel, [).
Youngstown. a board
mt•mber. figured the cost
of the land at $470,000 an
3C'TC,

" Where is it'!" h(' asked.
"lnsidl•
a
bank?"
Thf" board. assured that
thr lond was properly
appraised . approvl·d the
l'Xpenditure.

Jack Humphreys , Bruce
Hysell . David Hysell , Mary
Hysell , Penny Jacks, Usa
Jones, Joyce · Lambert ,
Cherie lightfoot, Lanny
Longstreth, Billy McMil lion ,
Paul Matsln , Lonnie Mayes ,
Sandra Miller, John Mitchell ,
Randy
Mitchell.
Billy
Morqan , Herbie Noel. Randy
Oliver, Wesley Perkins ,
Debbie
Seelbach ,
Van
Williford , Chris Woods .
Homeroom 402 Rick
Adkins, Ben Coteril!, Ralph
Cundiff. Angela Dailey,
Kevin Ferrell. N\ary Fitch·
·patrick. Tim Fry, Carolyn
Gilmore, John Harper. Henry
Hart, Di ck Herman , Jerry
Howard , Steve Hysell, Kay
Jacks, Linda Jacks, Ivan
Lane , Steve Manley , Ed
Nottingham , Tom Owens ,
Linda Partlow , Darlene
Robinson , Brenda Ross ,
Jeanie Roush , Pam Stobart,
John
Sturgeon,
Pavl
~~~~~~ Sturg eon , David Watkins ,
Lucille Wise , Tim Workman .
Homeroom 503 - Trena
Barrett , Ricky Birchfield.
Henry Cade, Debbie Falcone,
~~~ Tim Herdman , Mark Hood,

Hard to believe?.
school is ·here!
'

.

seems hard tu believe ,
but schuol i:s here once again
" 11

-- and rhat means that every
motorist is faced with a safe
clri ving' responsi bilit y. "
That was Jam es H. Conr oy
s p c .;~kin g.
He is Sa fet y
Direc tor nf the Automobile
Club of Soulhern Ohi o, who
annual
int r oduced_ Lh e
School's Open lraffic safely
ca mpai gn.
Conroy explained th~t the
poste r desig n r see in se t 1 for
this yea r 's campaign wi11
soon be a common sight lo
dr ivers.
" Yow1g sters going lo and
from sc hool. \\'alking, run·
ning and playing , are a
con s tant reminder that we
must exercise caution in our·
driving habit s."

.

Th e AAA s pokesman
pointed oul many youngsters'
lack of experience in traffic
sit uations, as well as their
impul siveness a nd occasional
lack of attention to their
SUrTOWidin~ s.

"These fac tors should be
cnou~h lo help us remember
safe driving practices such as
slowin g down in the vici nity
of sc hools, being particularly
aler1 where warning signs
and na shin g signals are in
effe ct. ob serving
safe
procedures in sc hool bus
loadin ~ areas , and obeying
lhe signals of schoo l Safely
Patrols and Adult Crossing
Guards."
Conroy concluded :
"Operating ~ motor vehicle
requires a sense of personal

~

DRIVE CAREFULLY

R lck Icenhower~ Robert
Klein. Randy Lawson, Floyd
McClellan, David Manley,
Danny Norman , Joe Qulvey,
John Russell. Tammy Shuler,
Larry
Snyder.
Jimmy
Spangler , David Stewart,
Sean Will. Mary Wise .

1-

FIGHfiNG CRIME
. NORFOLK, VA . (UPI) FBI Director Clarence KeUey
told a Norfolk Chamber of
Commerc·e audience Mon.
day, "We are losing the fight
against c rime."
"We are asking citizens to
stop taking the easy way out
- to stop tolerating crime
merely because to resist it
involves some personal
sacrifice ,
some
involvement," he said.
"Unfortunately," he said,
"many Americans have ab-dicated this responsibility.

I

YOUR CHOICE

Porch, Floor &amp; Deck Enamel

$ 99·

Our GOOD quality Floor Finish

INTERIOR-EXTERIOR

Pair

7.99 gallon

CORONET

lKING SIZE .

$bud
PLASTIC POLYURETHANE
Unbelievably rugged-dries rapidly to an extra tnoonho I
scuff resistant finish that holds up FAR ·better th~;~l
conventional floor enamels! -

8.99
gallon

most durable
Several Colors

Shop Our Complete Paint Dept.

- IACl-TI-SCMOOL SPECIAL-

SPECIAL SALE SELECTION
CHILDREN'S

BOY'S PLAIN AND FANCY
LONG SLEEVE

SPORT SHIR

Boy's permanent press long sleeve:'l'
sport shirts in · assorted

Every school child needs a sturdy
coat, to ward off winter's icy blast.
These will keep them in coJnfc,ft,,,-,
no matter what the weather.

MOORE'S

~

99
- IACK-TO-SCMDOL SPECIAL-

- BACl-TO-SCHOOL

T-SHIRTS QR BRIEFS
MEN'S FRUIT-OF-LOOM

GIRL'S NAME B
BLACK AND

•,,.

Carolina

P·l.29

Peaches
Hallles
2'11 can
..'

i

.$·139

BES I&gt;AK

49'

~hnctn
I'

THIRSTY

ONIONS
2 lb. 59*
·RADISHES

jumbo 49~

.

FLAVORS
·
6
cans S1 00
C n· 1a. -_ASSORTED
. -_.-.. -.. ~- .......... ~...

ur

for

TEE
SHIRTS
KNIT
BRIEFS

JEANS

' s 14 ounce blue
derli'tm jeans in regular,
western and flare styles .

Pair
- liCK-TO-SCHOOL SPECIAL-

FAMOUS SANDY McGEE
YOUNG MEN'S

ORDS-LOAFER

New Sandy McGee oxfords and loafers
;,-, a wide choice of dashing styles.
Economy prieed at Stiffler's to save
a wee bit m:Jre. Back to School r

I

.

.

..,

I

I

c

Each

19C

Special sale selection of
men's Campus long
sleeve sport shirts.

$50E~h

9
$8 ~air

Each
- SPECIAL-

- SPECIAL-

MEN'S CAMPUS
DOlfBLEK NIT

MEN'S &amp; BOY'S
ORLON DRESS

SLACKS

SOCKS

Men 's Campus brand
doubleknit s lacks in
assorted fashion colors.

Back to School Special !
Large group of men 's and

$1·099_
Pan

- IACl-TO-SCMOOL-

-SPECIAL-

~···sa~.;.
- SPECIAL-

GIRI:!S NAVY
BLUE DENIM

LAOIES' CHARM STEP
FALL AND WINTER

SAlE GROUP
16 INCH VINYL

JEANS

FOOTWEAR

GYM BAGS

Back to School Special!
Girl's navy blue denim
flare jeans. Save!

It' s back to coUege fvr the gals!
Come to ·Stiffler's 'for new fall
footwear at economy prices from
Charm Step.

$1099 ~~D

999

TO

' ll.aek to school special.
Sixteen inch size vinyl
gym bags. Assorted
colors.

SIX DIFFERENT STYLES!
SPECIAL GROUP LADIES'

DENIM HANDBAGS
Head for class with our smart pace-setter denim
handbags lor fall. Six styles to choose from . Regular
$3.99values. You'll find bundles of bargains lor back to
school at Stiffler's.

99

$

REGULAR
'3"
VALUES

Each

- UCl-TO-SCHOOL SPECIAL-

SPECIAL GROUP LADIES'
POLYESTER AND NYLON

SPORT TOPS

Special sale ·group of ladie~-- ,
polyester and nylon sport tops in
''·, :~ ·
assorted fancy floral patterns.
il&lt; .
Regular values to $4.99 each.
?J; :

$

99

Each

- IACl-TO-SCMOOL SPECIAL-

SPECIAL GROUP LADIES'
DOUBLEKNIT POLYESTER

FLARE SLACKS
Special sale group of ladies ' new !aU
doubleknit polyester flare slacks.
Choose from oome of the seasons best
fashion colors. Back to ~hool Special!

$244Each
.

!• .•

&gt;
,·;,

Special sale group of boy's Fruitof-The-Loom Tee Shirts and briefs.
"u""&gt; and save at Stiffler's.

SHIRTS

,·;-.

UNDERWEAR

$100

MEN'S CAMPUS
FALL SPORT

MEN'S 14 OUNCE
BLUE DENIM

I

'S FRUIT-OF-LOOM

s.

- SPECIAL---~--

FRENCH CITY

303
cans

a

- SPECIAL-

I
I

r:::.-;?71-n T-SHIRTS or BRIEFS

Talk about savings! Fruit of the wom
Underwear now reduced lor
b~!:~~I;.va~;lue! Tee shirts or briefs. Save

9

$

- BACl-TO-SCHOOL SPECIU-

UNDERWEAR

'/l;.:'speclal sale group nfll,irl'• name brand
and white
oxfords. Savings
center for ali your
to scbool neteds._j
The popular style sizes 12'h to 4.

.

WJ:':'\

Sale.

Each

POMEROY

wee e .a s.......................
8.
J um b0 Towe Is......•.......•..••. ~o~ •••
~:gc.t. 79~
B
Trash ags ..•....••...•..•.•..-•••••.•..
KLEENEX THICK

~*~~: makers.
and styles from some of
Stiffler's Back

$

AMERICAN HARDWARE
992-2181

- UCK:TO-SCHOOL SPECIAL-

FALL COATS

48_oz.

·

$

FLOOR ENAMEL

.,.

GREEN GIANT

Special back to school
group of boys blue denim
or twill jeans. Regular and
slim styles. Sizes 8 to 18.
Matching twill jackets
available.

Pretty new dresses for faU
back to school wear. Made
easy care fabrics in a
choice of colors and pattertJ
Sizes 3 to SX and 7 to

gal-

·

JEANS

DRESSES

!ak

TAKE YOUR

CLOSED SUNDAYS

~MILK

.

EASY MONDAY

9:00 to 7:00
Saturday 9 to 9
Valley Bell.

.

'

SPECIAL GROUP BOYS'
BLUE DENIM OR TWILL

GIRL'S PERM PRESS
BACK-TO-SCHOOL

TASTEE BRAND

Monday Thru Friday

•

4601

.

- STIFFLER'S lACK-TO-SCHOOL SPECIAL-

- BACK-TO-SCHOOL SPECIAL-

Fast, low-cost way to brighten and
beautify floors, decks, walks, stairs
and other surfaces. Sets up dust tree
in about 2 hours ; provides a rich,
glossy finish that is easy to keep
clean . Apply with brush or roller .
For wood, metal, concrete and most
linoleums.

lb-

MUSSELMAN'S

·'

l4c

LAID PINTS

M .a rgar1ne...
•
49~
....••.......•..•.......•...
. Longhorn Cheese.!b~.
55~
$119
Tom a to J U •ICe•••••••••••••••••••••c:~ •••
•
FRANKS
••••••••
!b~ •••
Tol• let T····· ue•••••••••••.•.••••••••••••••$.,19
.
$149
' ..•...•........... :~ ...79~ BOLOGNA •••••• · }~~l.. .
Fabr •lc so ft ener
e
.d
.
'129
Ivory 0~ Joy L•qui
.•~H.o~c•E••••••:~-••• ..
.
d
~ing
9
0 xy 0 ••••••••••.• •••••••••••••.••••• !'~e···
-~
3·
'1 00
S
t .p .
MRS. FILBE_RT's-1f4s

b- ..._ .

Pair

Pairs$
For

Special sale group of girl's fancy
bright plaid woven pants. Extra
special values. Assorted colors to
choose from. Back to School.

OLD FASHIONED

·:i~· ·Prices Effective Aug. 20.27

PANTY HOSE

Ladies' better stretch nylon panty
hose In tbe seasons best shades.
First
One size fits aU.

group of striped white Assortment of men's color stri.ped
0011 on tube so.c ks. Sa VI! now lor •••rn' &lt;e cotton tube socks. Fits stZ&lt;es ~
to School. Fits 6'h to 9.
14. Back to School Sale.

SPECIAL SALE GROUP
GIRL'S WOVEN
FANCY BRIGHT

.'

~

LADIES' BETTER
STRETCH NYLON

Ready Your Home For Winter Now

AL.L. CUTS REASONABLY PRICED STARTING SATURDAY, AUG. 23

·~ ~~

MEN'S STRIPED
WHITE COTTON

Each

GOOD GRAIN FED BEEF RAISED BY LOCAL YOUNG MEN AND WOMEN.

· i~ W!! Gladly Accept Fed. Food Stamp!

BOY'S STRIPED
WHITE COTTON

$ 99

MEIGS COUNTY FAIR BEEF

;•:. . Right Reserved to Limit Quantities
". . .

GIRL'S COTTON
KNIT PRINT
Girl's short sleeve cotton knit
tops with fancy· prints. AssortE1d
colors. Sizes 7 to 14.

SADDLE OX

'The Store With A Heart
You, WE LIKE"

- UCI• TO-SCMOOL-

TEE SHIRTs · .... BE SOCKS . TUBE SOCKS

•

•

- lACK-TO-SCMOOL-

r----------.. .

1

and PEARL STS., RACINE

- lACl;TO-SCMOOL-

- UCKCTO-SCMODl SPECIAL-

: 4, 600 scouters Come
to Mt'amt' u ra·mpus ~-~~~~g~'!~~~~at~e~~~~~~

~~· 5th

- IICI-TI-SCMOGL-

responsibility. You can do
much towards keeping OUI
youngsters sale by driving
carefully. Remember
School 's Open."

.Jeff Weaver. new principal Herald , J ayne Hoeflich, Tom McDaniel. Randy ·Might', Robert Parker,. Donald
of the Meigs J un ior Hi~h Hoope r , David Kennedy , J u li e Richards , Tammi Payne, Barbara Peyton ,
Randy Ke nnedy , Brian King ,
Leslie Whittington, Brenda Pickens, Gail Pierce,
School, has ann ounced 1975-76 Anita Lee, Becky Long, Carol Stobart,
Andy
Wi I son ,
Michael Jon Prater, Gay Pull ins, Tina
jw1ior hi gh sc hool homer oom Morr is. Steve Ohl inger , Beth Zeigler .
Randolph, Darlene Reeves,
Perrin , Andy Pocklington ,
Homeroom 208 Pearl Brenda Richards, Ricky
ass ignments.
Andrea
Riggs , Cami lle Althouse ,
Paula
Cun . Rider , Shellv Roush . KviP
Ncxl Tuesda y. all seven th Sw
Rupe, OoU_9 Sattler_, Jamey
indell , Barbara Thomas, ningham , Rhavana Goradia,
a nd e igh tl1 graders of the Nan c y Wallac e, Jena Welker , Randy Hall. Ricky Hall , Scally, Randy Searlee, Tim
Me1 gs Local School District Bryan Wilcox , Darla Wilcox,
Kenneth Hann ing, Ronald Shamblin , Connie Smith ,
Darla
Will
iamson
.
Haning
, Tamara Harden, Terry Smith, Rhonda Snider.
are to r e port to t he
Homeroom 206 ·_ Richard J immy Hayes. Phillip Hood , Todd Snowden , Don Snyder,
a uditorium for an assembly Baker , Kenneth Barnett, June Hutton, Joe Jeffers , larry Tucker, Bobby Wears .
Homeroom 401 Usa
Brian Bauer. Bruce Brickles, Don na
at 8:45 a .m .
Little ,
Debb ie
Bricktes,
Patty Morrison , Cl ifford Murray , Becker, Cletvs Bego, leroy
We ath e r permittin g, no De nise
Cremeans, Marianne Darst, Debbie Parsons , Joe Powell. Burghett, Pamela Conlin, Bill
s ludenl s will be allowed to Delmar Dav is, Britt Dodson , Billy Ross . Becky Rowe, Guy
Cremeans . Chris Darst ,
e nter the building before 8:30 Walter Ellis , Chris Judge , Sc huler , James Smith, Darlene Dunn, Joy Edwards,
Ellis ,
Marty
a. m. on the first day Wlless Ric k Kauff , Tammy Kunath, Nathan Smith. John Staats. George
Anita lewis, Mary Matson,
Roy Stewart, Ronnie Swan, Facemeyer, Frank Haggy,
th ey ar e n e w s tudents J eff Moore , Deena Neece, Greg Taylor , Mark Tyree, Jeff Haning , Keith Herdman,
wishing to r egis ter and are Angela Payne , Dreama
Harvey Whitlatch, Ruth Frankl in Jewe ll , June Justis,
Carle Kautf , Greg King,
accompanied by a pa rent or Ric hards. Carta Rife , An · Wilson.
nette Romine , Kim Roush,
Homeroom 503 - Bernice Denise Lambert, Janel
legal guardian .
Tony Scott, Marty Sea rles .
Barre1t. Chris Capehart, Lambert, Carness Leedy ,
The student s and their Denise Shu ler , Vern Slaven , Carolyn Gould, Greg Knapp, Jim Morton, Keith Musser,
Lunsford,
Terry Darlen e Priddy, Karen
homeroom assi g nme n ts Kev in Smith, Mike Smith, Ric ky
Judy Well , Kenneth Goborik. Mayes, Guy Norris , Mark Smith. Wesley Smith, Doug
include:
Homeroom 204 - Regan
Rathburn , . Terry Rowley , Starcher, Larry Stewart,
Arnold , T imothy Basham, Cathie Shaddeau, Teresa Betty Zempelton, Belinda
7TH GRADE
Homeroom
201 - Angelia Duane Berger, Diana Bruno, Smith , Charles Stewart .
Whittington.
Homer _o om
8 - 1
Baker, CleQ Bego, Jan Aet. Larry Byer. Debbie Cadle,
BTH GRADE
zling , . Kelly Brown, Billy Steve Carson, Kristy Clonch,
Homeroom 115 - David (Auditorium) - Kevin Angel.
Arnett,
Carrie
Browning, Brenda Chap· Andv Crose, David Demoskv, Barnhouse , Robert Chap · Cheryl
Black,
pel ear, Patti Dugan , Robert Ric hard DeMoss, Bobby pel ear , Yvonne Core, Ron Bearhs , Brynda
Evans, Bruce Gheen , Bryan Duckworth , Todd Eads, Cullums, Tim Faulk, Steven lynda Black , Larry Brickles,
Walter
Garnes.
Kellee Fife, Charlene Goeglein, John Byer, Ruth Carsey,
Griffith , Katrena Hale , Sally Richard Hill , Vicki Hood, Mark Casfo , Mark Clay,
L,;t
L•nda Kovalchrk , Robbre Hayman , Floyd Halliday , Gary Howard, Tracey Jef . Melinda Demosky, Regina
Landers, Kathy Lee, .E dward Donna HyselL Chris Ingels , fers , Jenell Kelly , fv\aria Dorst, Robin Dugan, Rena
\.~
Lester, Joy Majors , Patty Stoney Johnson, Tom Kelly , Legar , Tammy McDaniel. Lefebre , Margo Martin, Lyle
McDonald,
Oede Moon, Todd Morrison, Anita
..:.~ OXFORD Ohi
UPl)
·
1 1 d'
d
. Mitchell, Connie Mossman, Paul McElhaney , Mike Mike
'•...
'
o t
natlOna
n lan
a nee
Tim
Sauters.
Paulet1a Miller, Steve Pullins, Carla McEwen , Mike McGuire , f Musser , ~ay Patterson , Eric
.·:~_. The
60th
anniver sary co mpetition and various
Sig man , Savannah Smith, Smith, Shari Stewart, Dwight Scott McKinney·, Barbara Scites. Kim Seth, Jamie
Murphy. Craig Niclnsky , Sisson, Tina Smith, J immie
"" national conference of the demons t rat ian s
and
Shauna Tackett, Tony a Sue Sturgeon, Mary Priddy .
Homeroom
205
James
Patty Parker , Kathy Quivey , Snider , Robin Southern,
. Boy Scouts' Order of the exhibitions
Taylor .
Kelly
Thomas ,
.
·
.
PhilliP Thompson , Kathy tl.sh , Duane Barley , Jeffrey
Mark Riggs, linda Rosen · Susan Sprague, Kelly Thoma , ·
.. :,. Arrow has attracted some Conferees also put out theLr
Wh itlatch , Lorra Wisecup , Branham, Robert Bush, Rod bavm, Vicki Sheets, Gena Cindy Thompson , Anna
Carmi c hael , Kev in Gibbs , Snowden, Charlie Stone, Dan Wile s, Susan Zirkle, Roxanne
•&gt; ; 4,600 scouters to the Miami own daily newspaper.
Deborah Woodyard .
; . University campus her e this
H~meroom 202 - Tammy Brad Gi bson, Tim Gore , Thomas , David Thornton , Grande!.
Homeroom
8 - 5
· •
·
Adkms, Ruthann Blake , Barry Grueser , Mike Har · Greg Walker, Kim Warner ,
Nathan
Tammy Blake, Kenda Braun , mon, Terry Jewet t, Todd Carla
; week .
Whaley,
Ri c ky (Auditorium) Arnold, William Barley ,
' The session opened Monday
Leslie Cole. Becky Dorst, Johnson, Franklin King, Will iamson, Terri Yeager .
Angie - Barton, Beth Bar tum ,
Dwaine
McDaniel,
Chris
110
Debbie
Homeroom
· and
continues
throu gh
Ellora Faulkner , Sandra
Richard
.
.
Herdman , Cathy Hess , John McKinney, Jeff McKnight, Adkins, Sonya Ash, Tonia Scott Barh/m,
Morr is,
Nelson Ash , Raymond Barnhart. Basham , Mike
Bowles ,
. . Fr1day.
Hoffman, Sheila Horky , Jean John
·
The con ferees represent
WHITES SUE
.,t~
Horton, Angela Houchins, Morr ison, Dale Riffle , Tom Julie Biron, Rick Btaettnar , Sandra Brunem , Steve Call,
~-:, the 200 000 members of the
CLE VELAND ! UP!)
Sherri Hysell. Joyce Janey. Sc hnoover , Steve Shaw, Jeff Melissa Cate, Roger Carson, Jack Carder, Jack Coleman,
'"' S co is •
h0n0 ra r
The U. S. Postal Service has Cheryl Johnson . April King, Smith, Shane Smith, Dave Dannie Carman , Alan Cum . Wihliam Collins, Sharon
'"
~
.
Y
Kat1e Lew1s , M.ndy Long, Spangler. Gerald Spencer, mings, Sara Diddle, Linda Covert, David Davis, Robert
orgamzat10n that promotes bee n
charged
with Mary Miller. Laura Ohlinger, Ron Starcher,
Richard Donohue, James F is h, Bruce DeMoss , Christine Ebers ·
camping and service.
discrimination against whites
Jf7ff
Peckham , . Ma~y Swanson , Kelly Tyree, Jeff Fisher, Christine Fry, Vicki bach, Tim Hysell. Clifford
... . The scouts are attending
in a s ui t fil ed in U. S . District
R!dgway, . Angela Stncl~tr, Wayland , Bobby Williams . Garnes, Paul Goeglein , Janet Kennedy , Steve Kinzel, Greg
Lee, David Lewis, lee Lewis,
Homeroom 103 Joey Horky, Don Icenhower, Johl'l
·~ ~'
·
·
C
1 h
b Ed
d J
Cmdy Sm tth . Jeffrey Smtth ,
::: classes ·on such top1cs as
our
e re Y
war
· Rhonda Southern , Todd Anderson, Ricky Ashburn, Jacobs, Gary Jones, Lori
Kellie
Rought ,
Debra
~~ " Indian U&gt;re ," " High AdvenSmith , Cleveland, a white
Tha cker, John Van Meter , Patricia Barrett, Tim Bishop, Kloes, Angela Martin, Karen Shockey, Dee Simms, Curtis
~= ture"
and
" Beyond postal cle rk . The class action
Linda Wi II iams , Hobart Dean Colwell, Ben Davidson, Mould, Ri"cky Nitz, Jack ie Spencer, Minnie Thompson,
Keith Doss . Troy Edwards .
Connie Romine, Andrea Tweraser, Jill Well ,
. ·.scouting. "
sui t was filed for Smith by
Te~~~~00~· m 504 _ Connie Kimberly Facemyer , Bobby Ohlinger,
Debbie Smith, Jill Smith; Terri Wilson.
Special guests include Miss
Richard B. Kay of the Ohio
Bailey, Joyce Baker. Jerry Fox , Max Geary, Mike lisa
Homeroom
8 · 6
•
Thomas,
Cheryl
(Auditorium) ~ Natalie
1: Teenage America and Miss Ju st ice Foundation and Burchett, Robert Davts , Graham , Mike Haning, Terry Laudermitt.
Homeroom 404 - Medina Clark , David Dillard. Debra
~...; ·
d'
·
I ·m to repres nt on1e
William Oyer , linda Eason , Hutton, Ricky Jeffers, Velvet
•: ~n 1an Amenca. ~vents
c 31 s
e
s
Sheila Fetty , Teresa Fetty , Justis, Mary Kauff, Tim
Bryan , Ray Mowery , Carol Doerfer, Gwen Folmer, Betty
• . mclude stage productions , a
3,000 employes.
Jerry Fields , Kim Glass , Kautf, Vickie King , Hoby Neutzling, Sterling Neville. Gearheart, Genia Grover ,
Landers , Chris Lemley, Troy Vicki Nifz, Jennifer Ohlinger, Cindy Haggy , David Harper ,
~...
Robert Harmon , Robin

,

...

'·

•

�• I

I
I

Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday. Au~.• -_.20..,, 1,
97_.5..,....,.."-d.....S...,...._..,..

6_ The

41

oily's Poin+r.. . . .
'" POLLY t.:KMIER

Polyester filling
peeks out of quilt
POLLY'S PRORI.EM
DEAR POLLY - I own
seve r a l qu ill ed garments
. made of bo th cotton and slicksur faced materi als and t he
· po lyt:slt;&gt;r fibe r fi ll s tufrin g
always works its way !(1 lilt·
outs1de uf the

a pp ra r s
t h re&lt;~ds.

g~:~ rment

and

as white wispy
Any s uggest ions fur

. remedy in g or preyent in g thts

· con dit ion'! - MA RY S.
· llE ·\R MARY S.-Ha n· you
br-f•n

l:wnclt•rin g your gar-

. m ent s

al'&lt;'o rdint.:

to

in-

~ tru (' tion s'.'

This is a must
· unusu a l probll'm . If any nf
you r radrrs han• had il and
found a rt'lnl'd} du ll't us
knflw. - POLLY .

DEAR POLLY
Please
: te ll Dl•bbit.• wh o has rt 1\'F:W
house wtth plaste r on th e
· batht ub and marblr wind ow
: si ll s to STO P try i n~ tu
' rem ove it flo not to uch tht s
If the hou.'ic ts a rt'nt al the
landl ord should ta ke ce~re of it
sinrP s he should not hilVC' to
take the respo nsib il ity of
per haps dam&lt;'lgi ng the fix·
lures. If she is buyin g the
house the builde r should be
: respons ible and r epair or
· replace the t ub and sills if the
plas te r ca nn o t be s uc cessfully removed. Debbi e is
p3y in g for new ones th at a re
· • 1n good shape and sho uld ge t
. · them. - JACQUELINE .
' • DEAR POLLY - I found
· · a nes t of hor nets in s ide a
po r ch li g ht !hat ha s a
· coveri ng over the bulb . I used
. . a dome-shaped strain er held
. up a gai ns t t he bottom of t ht:
·: cover a nd s prayed inse ct
' killer up thr oug h it. t Polly's
nnle: Ev idently the sfnt dt• is

open etl the bot!utn.l In a few
seco nds all the horne ts
droppt.•d irl! o the st rai rtl' r &lt;:~nd
a few nwrr sprays marle sure
thf'y we re i ll! dea d. I hope th is
will help someone else faced
wi t h this cUlll Oyin g prnb)('Jil
- STELLA .
DEi\f\ POI.I.Y - Durtng
thesl' day.s of uur distressed
f'eon omy nws t are trying to
praf't icc th rift whe r e ver
pos~iblt• . I U!':it' m ot h ca kes in
my ch1se ts ;1nd when I buy a
new t~n~ I brea k it in to twu
scrt
, iuns and place ei:lch half
in a ham~cr ho lder. Th ese
J wn~ f'rs usually l'Otn e wit h
t ill' cake :-; whe n purchased.
The n tu nbled pur tion s of r::J'
cakes t-~re also sa ved to g&lt;J in
such lt a n ~e r s . The ext ra
hol dL•rs nredPd can be easily
mmlc . To makr them save
tllp round snap-on cove rs t hat
c urnc on ae rosol cans. Heat
an icc pi c k point on the stove
bur ne r a nd then ~:a r ef ull y
punch a hole near the edge of
the tid . P unch another hole
d1 r cct ly opposite a nd insert a
fine wire throu~h them to
ll.Jng it by. Fill cap with a s
much m oth r epellent a s
desired and hang in the
duset . So the crystals do not
eva pMa te too rapi dly ta pe on
the cap . a piece of waxed
pape r or ev en plain paper
wi th a fe w perforati ons made
in 11 . - MARYBF.LLE .
DEAR POLLY - A slee ve
boanf is great to use for
press in g sea m s in c hildren 's
slacks ,yo u ma y be making. Ir
yo u do not have one beg.
bo rrow or buy one at a gara ge
s ale or flei::l marke t.
EU GENIE.

10' by 10' plot ·
located like in
a bank, maybe:'
l'OI.UMilUS 1UP II Members of the slate
Controlling Board l'X·
pn·sst~ d astonishment
MHnday when the stat£'
Transportation Depart·
mcnt requested Sl.410 for
the purrhase of 103 square
feel of land from the rily of
Cincinnati to inerease tl1l'
turning radius at an in·

h.•rsc(·tio n.
Se n. Harry Meshel, [).
Youngstown. a board
mt•mber. figured the cost
of the land at $470,000 an
3C'TC,

" Where is it'!" h(' asked.
"lnsidl•
a
bank?"
Thf" board. assured that
thr lond was properly
appraised . approvl·d the
l'Xpenditure.

Jack Humphreys , Bruce
Hysell . David Hysell , Mary
Hysell , Penny Jacks, Usa
Jones, Joyce · Lambert ,
Cherie lightfoot, Lanny
Longstreth, Billy McMil lion ,
Paul Matsln , Lonnie Mayes ,
Sandra Miller, John Mitchell ,
Randy
Mitchell.
Billy
Morqan , Herbie Noel. Randy
Oliver, Wesley Perkins ,
Debbie
Seelbach ,
Van
Williford , Chris Woods .
Homeroom 402 Rick
Adkins, Ben Coteril!, Ralph
Cundiff. Angela Dailey,
Kevin Ferrell. N\ary Fitch·
·patrick. Tim Fry, Carolyn
Gilmore, John Harper. Henry
Hart, Di ck Herman , Jerry
Howard , Steve Hysell, Kay
Jacks, Linda Jacks, Ivan
Lane , Steve Manley , Ed
Nottingham , Tom Owens ,
Linda Partlow , Darlene
Robinson , Brenda Ross ,
Jeanie Roush , Pam Stobart,
John
Sturgeon,
Pavl
~~~~~~ Sturg eon , David Watkins ,
Lucille Wise , Tim Workman .
Homeroom 503 - Trena
Barrett , Ricky Birchfield.
Henry Cade, Debbie Falcone,
~~~ Tim Herdman , Mark Hood,

Hard to believe?.
school is ·here!
'

.

seems hard tu believe ,
but schuol i:s here once again
" 11

-- and rhat means that every
motorist is faced with a safe
clri ving' responsi bilit y. "
That was Jam es H. Conr oy
s p c .;~kin g.
He is Sa fet y
Direc tor nf the Automobile
Club of Soulhern Ohi o, who
annual
int r oduced_ Lh e
School's Open lraffic safely
ca mpai gn.
Conroy explained th~t the
poste r desig n r see in se t 1 for
this yea r 's campaign wi11
soon be a common sight lo
dr ivers.
" Yow1g sters going lo and
from sc hool. \\'alking, run·
ning and playing , are a
con s tant reminder that we
must exercise caution in our·
driving habit s."

.

Th e AAA s pokesman
pointed oul many youngsters'
lack of experience in traffic
sit uations, as well as their
impul siveness a nd occasional
lack of attention to their
SUrTOWidin~ s.

"These fac tors should be
cnou~h lo help us remember
safe driving practices such as
slowin g down in the vici nity
of sc hools, being particularly
aler1 where warning signs
and na shin g signals are in
effe ct. ob serving
safe
procedures in sc hool bus
loadin ~ areas , and obeying
lhe signals of schoo l Safely
Patrols and Adult Crossing
Guards."
Conroy concluded :
"Operating ~ motor vehicle
requires a sense of personal

~

DRIVE CAREFULLY

R lck Icenhower~ Robert
Klein. Randy Lawson, Floyd
McClellan, David Manley,
Danny Norman , Joe Qulvey,
John Russell. Tammy Shuler,
Larry
Snyder.
Jimmy
Spangler , David Stewart,
Sean Will. Mary Wise .

1-

FIGHfiNG CRIME
. NORFOLK, VA . (UPI) FBI Director Clarence KeUey
told a Norfolk Chamber of
Commerc·e audience Mon.
day, "We are losing the fight
against c rime."
"We are asking citizens to
stop taking the easy way out
- to stop tolerating crime
merely because to resist it
involves some personal
sacrifice ,
some
involvement," he said.
"Unfortunately," he said,
"many Americans have ab-dicated this responsibility.

I

YOUR CHOICE

Porch, Floor &amp; Deck Enamel

$ 99·

Our GOOD quality Floor Finish

INTERIOR-EXTERIOR

Pair

7.99 gallon

CORONET

lKING SIZE .

$bud
PLASTIC POLYURETHANE
Unbelievably rugged-dries rapidly to an extra tnoonho I
scuff resistant finish that holds up FAR ·better th~;~l
conventional floor enamels! -

8.99
gallon

most durable
Several Colors

Shop Our Complete Paint Dept.

- IACl-TI-SCMOOL SPECIAL-

SPECIAL SALE SELECTION
CHILDREN'S

BOY'S PLAIN AND FANCY
LONG SLEEVE

SPORT SHIR

Boy's permanent press long sleeve:'l'
sport shirts in · assorted

Every school child needs a sturdy
coat, to ward off winter's icy blast.
These will keep them in coJnfc,ft,,,-,
no matter what the weather.

MOORE'S

~

99
- IACK-TO-SCMDOL SPECIAL-

- BACl-TO-SCHOOL

T-SHIRTS QR BRIEFS
MEN'S FRUIT-OF-LOOM

GIRL'S NAME B
BLACK AND

•,,.

Carolina

P·l.29

Peaches
Hallles
2'11 can
..'

i

.$·139

BES I&gt;AK

49'

~hnctn
I'

THIRSTY

ONIONS
2 lb. 59*
·RADISHES

jumbo 49~

.

FLAVORS
·
6
cans S1 00
C n· 1a. -_ASSORTED
. -_.-.. -.. ~- .......... ~...

ur

for

TEE
SHIRTS
KNIT
BRIEFS

JEANS

' s 14 ounce blue
derli'tm jeans in regular,
western and flare styles .

Pair
- liCK-TO-SCHOOL SPECIAL-

FAMOUS SANDY McGEE
YOUNG MEN'S

ORDS-LOAFER

New Sandy McGee oxfords and loafers
;,-, a wide choice of dashing styles.
Economy prieed at Stiffler's to save
a wee bit m:Jre. Back to School r

I

.

.

..,

I

I

c

Each

19C

Special sale selection of
men's Campus long
sleeve sport shirts.

$50E~h

9
$8 ~air

Each
- SPECIAL-

- SPECIAL-

MEN'S CAMPUS
DOlfBLEK NIT

MEN'S &amp; BOY'S
ORLON DRESS

SLACKS

SOCKS

Men 's Campus brand
doubleknit s lacks in
assorted fashion colors.

Back to School Special !
Large group of men 's and

$1·099_
Pan

- IACl-TO-SCMOOL-

-SPECIAL-

~···sa~.;.
- SPECIAL-

GIRI:!S NAVY
BLUE DENIM

LAOIES' CHARM STEP
FALL AND WINTER

SAlE GROUP
16 INCH VINYL

JEANS

FOOTWEAR

GYM BAGS

Back to School Special!
Girl's navy blue denim
flare jeans. Save!

It' s back to coUege fvr the gals!
Come to ·Stiffler's 'for new fall
footwear at economy prices from
Charm Step.

$1099 ~~D

999

TO

' ll.aek to school special.
Sixteen inch size vinyl
gym bags. Assorted
colors.

SIX DIFFERENT STYLES!
SPECIAL GROUP LADIES'

DENIM HANDBAGS
Head for class with our smart pace-setter denim
handbags lor fall. Six styles to choose from . Regular
$3.99values. You'll find bundles of bargains lor back to
school at Stiffler's.

99

$

REGULAR
'3"
VALUES

Each

- UCl-TO-SCHOOL SPECIAL-

SPECIAL GROUP LADIES'
POLYESTER AND NYLON

SPORT TOPS

Special sale ·group of ladie~-- ,
polyester and nylon sport tops in
''·, :~ ·
assorted fancy floral patterns.
il&lt; .
Regular values to $4.99 each.
?J; :

$

99

Each

- IACl-TO-SCMOOL SPECIAL-

SPECIAL GROUP LADIES'
DOUBLEKNIT POLYESTER

FLARE SLACKS
Special sale group of ladies ' new !aU
doubleknit polyester flare slacks.
Choose from oome of the seasons best
fashion colors. Back to ~hool Special!

$244Each
.

!• .•

&gt;
,·;,

Special sale group of boy's Fruitof-The-Loom Tee Shirts and briefs.
"u""&gt; and save at Stiffler's.

SHIRTS

,·;-.

UNDERWEAR

$100

MEN'S CAMPUS
FALL SPORT

MEN'S 14 OUNCE
BLUE DENIM

I

'S FRUIT-OF-LOOM

s.

- SPECIAL---~--

FRENCH CITY

303
cans

a

- SPECIAL-

I
I

r:::.-;?71-n T-SHIRTS or BRIEFS

Talk about savings! Fruit of the wom
Underwear now reduced lor
b~!:~~I;.va~;lue! Tee shirts or briefs. Save

9

$

- BACl-TO-SCHOOL SPECIU-

UNDERWEAR

'/l;.:'speclal sale group nfll,irl'• name brand
and white
oxfords. Savings
center for ali your
to scbool neteds._j
The popular style sizes 12'h to 4.

.

WJ:':'\

Sale.

Each

POMEROY

wee e .a s.......................
8.
J um b0 Towe Is......•.......•..••. ~o~ •••
~:gc.t. 79~
B
Trash ags ..•....••...•..•.•..-•••••.•..
KLEENEX THICK

~*~~: makers.
and styles from some of
Stiffler's Back

$

AMERICAN HARDWARE
992-2181

- UCK:TO-SCHOOL SPECIAL-

FALL COATS

48_oz.

·

$

FLOOR ENAMEL

.,.

GREEN GIANT

Special back to school
group of boys blue denim
or twill jeans. Regular and
slim styles. Sizes 8 to 18.
Matching twill jackets
available.

Pretty new dresses for faU
back to school wear. Made
easy care fabrics in a
choice of colors and pattertJ
Sizes 3 to SX and 7 to

gal-

·

JEANS

DRESSES

!ak

TAKE YOUR

CLOSED SUNDAYS

~MILK

.

EASY MONDAY

9:00 to 7:00
Saturday 9 to 9
Valley Bell.

.

'

SPECIAL GROUP BOYS'
BLUE DENIM OR TWILL

GIRL'S PERM PRESS
BACK-TO-SCHOOL

TASTEE BRAND

Monday Thru Friday

•

4601

.

- STIFFLER'S lACK-TO-SCHOOL SPECIAL-

- BACK-TO-SCHOOL SPECIAL-

Fast, low-cost way to brighten and
beautify floors, decks, walks, stairs
and other surfaces. Sets up dust tree
in about 2 hours ; provides a rich,
glossy finish that is easy to keep
clean . Apply with brush or roller .
For wood, metal, concrete and most
linoleums.

lb-

MUSSELMAN'S

·'

l4c

LAID PINTS

M .a rgar1ne...
•
49~
....••.......•..•.......•...
. Longhorn Cheese.!b~.
55~
$119
Tom a to J U •ICe•••••••••••••••••••••c:~ •••
•
FRANKS
••••••••
!b~ •••
Tol• let T····· ue•••••••••••.•.••••••••••••••$.,19
.
$149
' ..•...•........... :~ ...79~ BOLOGNA •••••• · }~~l.. .
Fabr •lc so ft ener
e
.d
.
'129
Ivory 0~ Joy L•qui
.•~H.o~c•E••••••:~-••• ..
.
d
~ing
9
0 xy 0 ••••••••••.• •••••••••••••.••••• !'~e···
-~
3·
'1 00
S
t .p .
MRS. FILBE_RT's-1f4s

b- ..._ .

Pair

Pairs$
For

Special sale group of girl's fancy
bright plaid woven pants. Extra
special values. Assorted colors to
choose from. Back to School.

OLD FASHIONED

·:i~· ·Prices Effective Aug. 20.27

PANTY HOSE

Ladies' better stretch nylon panty
hose In tbe seasons best shades.
First
One size fits aU.

group of striped white Assortment of men's color stri.ped
0011 on tube so.c ks. Sa VI! now lor •••rn' &lt;e cotton tube socks. Fits stZ&lt;es ~
to School. Fits 6'h to 9.
14. Back to School Sale.

SPECIAL SALE GROUP
GIRL'S WOVEN
FANCY BRIGHT

.'

~

LADIES' BETTER
STRETCH NYLON

Ready Your Home For Winter Now

AL.L. CUTS REASONABLY PRICED STARTING SATURDAY, AUG. 23

·~ ~~

MEN'S STRIPED
WHITE COTTON

Each

GOOD GRAIN FED BEEF RAISED BY LOCAL YOUNG MEN AND WOMEN.

· i~ W!! Gladly Accept Fed. Food Stamp!

BOY'S STRIPED
WHITE COTTON

$ 99

MEIGS COUNTY FAIR BEEF

;•:. . Right Reserved to Limit Quantities
". . .

GIRL'S COTTON
KNIT PRINT
Girl's short sleeve cotton knit
tops with fancy· prints. AssortE1d
colors. Sizes 7 to 14.

SADDLE OX

'The Store With A Heart
You, WE LIKE"

- UCI• TO-SCMOOL-

TEE SHIRTs · .... BE SOCKS . TUBE SOCKS

•

•

- lACK-TO-SCMOOL-

r----------.. .

1

and PEARL STS., RACINE

- lACl;TO-SCMOOL-

- UCKCTO-SCMODl SPECIAL-

: 4, 600 scouters Come
to Mt'amt' u ra·mpus ~-~~~~g~'!~~~~at~e~~~~~~

~~· 5th

- IICI-TI-SCMOGL-

responsibility. You can do
much towards keeping OUI
youngsters sale by driving
carefully. Remember
School 's Open."

.Jeff Weaver. new principal Herald , J ayne Hoeflich, Tom McDaniel. Randy ·Might', Robert Parker,. Donald
of the Meigs J un ior Hi~h Hoope r , David Kennedy , J u li e Richards , Tammi Payne, Barbara Peyton ,
Randy Ke nnedy , Brian King ,
Leslie Whittington, Brenda Pickens, Gail Pierce,
School, has ann ounced 1975-76 Anita Lee, Becky Long, Carol Stobart,
Andy
Wi I son ,
Michael Jon Prater, Gay Pull ins, Tina
jw1ior hi gh sc hool homer oom Morr is. Steve Ohl inger , Beth Zeigler .
Randolph, Darlene Reeves,
Perrin , Andy Pocklington ,
Homeroom 208 Pearl Brenda Richards, Ricky
ass ignments.
Andrea
Riggs , Cami lle Althouse ,
Paula
Cun . Rider , Shellv Roush . KviP
Ncxl Tuesda y. all seven th Sw
Rupe, OoU_9 Sattler_, Jamey
indell , Barbara Thomas, ningham , Rhavana Goradia,
a nd e igh tl1 graders of the Nan c y Wallac e, Jena Welker , Randy Hall. Ricky Hall , Scally, Randy Searlee, Tim
Me1 gs Local School District Bryan Wilcox , Darla Wilcox,
Kenneth Hann ing, Ronald Shamblin , Connie Smith ,
Darla
Will
iamson
.
Haning
, Tamara Harden, Terry Smith, Rhonda Snider.
are to r e port to t he
Homeroom 206 ·_ Richard J immy Hayes. Phillip Hood , Todd Snowden , Don Snyder,
a uditorium for an assembly Baker , Kenneth Barnett, June Hutton, Joe Jeffers , larry Tucker, Bobby Wears .
Homeroom 401 Usa
Brian Bauer. Bruce Brickles, Don na
at 8:45 a .m .
Little ,
Debb ie
Bricktes,
Patty Morrison , Cl ifford Murray , Becker, Cletvs Bego, leroy
We ath e r permittin g, no De nise
Cremeans, Marianne Darst, Debbie Parsons , Joe Powell. Burghett, Pamela Conlin, Bill
s ludenl s will be allowed to Delmar Dav is, Britt Dodson , Billy Ross . Becky Rowe, Guy
Cremeans . Chris Darst ,
e nter the building before 8:30 Walter Ellis , Chris Judge , Sc huler , James Smith, Darlene Dunn, Joy Edwards,
Ellis ,
Marty
a. m. on the first day Wlless Ric k Kauff , Tammy Kunath, Nathan Smith. John Staats. George
Anita lewis, Mary Matson,
Roy Stewart, Ronnie Swan, Facemeyer, Frank Haggy,
th ey ar e n e w s tudents J eff Moore , Deena Neece, Greg Taylor , Mark Tyree, Jeff Haning , Keith Herdman,
wishing to r egis ter and are Angela Payne , Dreama
Harvey Whitlatch, Ruth Frankl in Jewe ll , June Justis,
Carle Kautf , Greg King,
accompanied by a pa rent or Ric hards. Carta Rife , An · Wilson.
nette Romine , Kim Roush,
Homeroom 503 - Bernice Denise Lambert, Janel
legal guardian .
Tony Scott, Marty Sea rles .
Barre1t. Chris Capehart, Lambert, Carness Leedy ,
The student s and their Denise Shu ler , Vern Slaven , Carolyn Gould, Greg Knapp, Jim Morton, Keith Musser,
Lunsford,
Terry Darlen e Priddy, Karen
homeroom assi g nme n ts Kev in Smith, Mike Smith, Ric ky
Judy Well , Kenneth Goborik. Mayes, Guy Norris , Mark Smith. Wesley Smith, Doug
include:
Homeroom 204 - Regan
Rathburn , . Terry Rowley , Starcher, Larry Stewart,
Arnold , T imothy Basham, Cathie Shaddeau, Teresa Betty Zempelton, Belinda
7TH GRADE
Homeroom
201 - Angelia Duane Berger, Diana Bruno, Smith , Charles Stewart .
Whittington.
Homer _o om
8 - 1
Baker, CleQ Bego, Jan Aet. Larry Byer. Debbie Cadle,
BTH GRADE
zling , . Kelly Brown, Billy Steve Carson, Kristy Clonch,
Homeroom 115 - David (Auditorium) - Kevin Angel.
Arnett,
Carrie
Browning, Brenda Chap· Andv Crose, David Demoskv, Barnhouse , Robert Chap · Cheryl
Black,
pel ear, Patti Dugan , Robert Ric hard DeMoss, Bobby pel ear , Yvonne Core, Ron Bearhs , Brynda
Evans, Bruce Gheen , Bryan Duckworth , Todd Eads, Cullums, Tim Faulk, Steven lynda Black , Larry Brickles,
Walter
Garnes.
Kellee Fife, Charlene Goeglein, John Byer, Ruth Carsey,
Griffith , Katrena Hale , Sally Richard Hill , Vicki Hood, Mark Casfo , Mark Clay,
L,;t
L•nda Kovalchrk , Robbre Hayman , Floyd Halliday , Gary Howard, Tracey Jef . Melinda Demosky, Regina
Landers, Kathy Lee, .E dward Donna HyselL Chris Ingels , fers , Jenell Kelly , fv\aria Dorst, Robin Dugan, Rena
\.~
Lester, Joy Majors , Patty Stoney Johnson, Tom Kelly , Legar , Tammy McDaniel. Lefebre , Margo Martin, Lyle
McDonald,
Oede Moon, Todd Morrison, Anita
..:.~ OXFORD Ohi
UPl)
·
1 1 d'
d
. Mitchell, Connie Mossman, Paul McElhaney , Mike Mike
'•...
'
o t
natlOna
n lan
a nee
Tim
Sauters.
Paulet1a Miller, Steve Pullins, Carla McEwen , Mike McGuire , f Musser , ~ay Patterson , Eric
.·:~_. The
60th
anniver sary co mpetition and various
Sig man , Savannah Smith, Smith, Shari Stewart, Dwight Scott McKinney·, Barbara Scites. Kim Seth, Jamie
Murphy. Craig Niclnsky , Sisson, Tina Smith, J immie
"" national conference of the demons t rat ian s
and
Shauna Tackett, Tony a Sue Sturgeon, Mary Priddy .
Homeroom
205
James
Patty Parker , Kathy Quivey , Snider , Robin Southern,
. Boy Scouts' Order of the exhibitions
Taylor .
Kelly
Thomas ,
.
·
.
PhilliP Thompson , Kathy tl.sh , Duane Barley , Jeffrey
Mark Riggs, linda Rosen · Susan Sprague, Kelly Thoma , ·
.. :,. Arrow has attracted some Conferees also put out theLr
Wh itlatch , Lorra Wisecup , Branham, Robert Bush, Rod bavm, Vicki Sheets, Gena Cindy Thompson , Anna
Carmi c hael , Kev in Gibbs , Snowden, Charlie Stone, Dan Wile s, Susan Zirkle, Roxanne
•&gt; ; 4,600 scouters to the Miami own daily newspaper.
Deborah Woodyard .
; . University campus her e this
H~meroom 202 - Tammy Brad Gi bson, Tim Gore , Thomas , David Thornton , Grande!.
Homeroom
8 - 5
· •
·
Adkms, Ruthann Blake , Barry Grueser , Mike Har · Greg Walker, Kim Warner ,
Nathan
Tammy Blake, Kenda Braun , mon, Terry Jewet t, Todd Carla
; week .
Whaley,
Ri c ky (Auditorium) Arnold, William Barley ,
' The session opened Monday
Leslie Cole. Becky Dorst, Johnson, Franklin King, Will iamson, Terri Yeager .
Angie - Barton, Beth Bar tum ,
Dwaine
McDaniel,
Chris
110
Debbie
Homeroom
· and
continues
throu gh
Ellora Faulkner , Sandra
Richard
.
.
Herdman , Cathy Hess , John McKinney, Jeff McKnight, Adkins, Sonya Ash, Tonia Scott Barh/m,
Morr is,
Nelson Ash , Raymond Barnhart. Basham , Mike
Bowles ,
. . Fr1day.
Hoffman, Sheila Horky , Jean John
·
The con ferees represent
WHITES SUE
.,t~
Horton, Angela Houchins, Morr ison, Dale Riffle , Tom Julie Biron, Rick Btaettnar , Sandra Brunem , Steve Call,
~-:, the 200 000 members of the
CLE VELAND ! UP!)
Sherri Hysell. Joyce Janey. Sc hnoover , Steve Shaw, Jeff Melissa Cate, Roger Carson, Jack Carder, Jack Coleman,
'"' S co is •
h0n0 ra r
The U. S. Postal Service has Cheryl Johnson . April King, Smith, Shane Smith, Dave Dannie Carman , Alan Cum . Wihliam Collins, Sharon
'"
~
.
Y
Kat1e Lew1s , M.ndy Long, Spangler. Gerald Spencer, mings, Sara Diddle, Linda Covert, David Davis, Robert
orgamzat10n that promotes bee n
charged
with Mary Miller. Laura Ohlinger, Ron Starcher,
Richard Donohue, James F is h, Bruce DeMoss , Christine Ebers ·
camping and service.
discrimination against whites
Jf7ff
Peckham , . Ma~y Swanson , Kelly Tyree, Jeff Fisher, Christine Fry, Vicki bach, Tim Hysell. Clifford
... . The scouts are attending
in a s ui t fil ed in U. S . District
R!dgway, . Angela Stncl~tr, Wayland , Bobby Williams . Garnes, Paul Goeglein , Janet Kennedy , Steve Kinzel, Greg
Lee, David Lewis, lee Lewis,
Homeroom 103 Joey Horky, Don Icenhower, Johl'l
·~ ~'
·
·
C
1 h
b Ed
d J
Cmdy Sm tth . Jeffrey Smtth ,
::: classes ·on such top1cs as
our
e re Y
war
· Rhonda Southern , Todd Anderson, Ricky Ashburn, Jacobs, Gary Jones, Lori
Kellie
Rought ,
Debra
~~ " Indian U&gt;re ," " High AdvenSmith , Cleveland, a white
Tha cker, John Van Meter , Patricia Barrett, Tim Bishop, Kloes, Angela Martin, Karen Shockey, Dee Simms, Curtis
~= ture"
and
" Beyond postal cle rk . The class action
Linda Wi II iams , Hobart Dean Colwell, Ben Davidson, Mould, Ri"cky Nitz, Jack ie Spencer, Minnie Thompson,
Keith Doss . Troy Edwards .
Connie Romine, Andrea Tweraser, Jill Well ,
. ·.scouting. "
sui t was filed for Smith by
Te~~~~00~· m 504 _ Connie Kimberly Facemyer , Bobby Ohlinger,
Debbie Smith, Jill Smith; Terri Wilson.
Special guests include Miss
Richard B. Kay of the Ohio
Bailey, Joyce Baker. Jerry Fox , Max Geary, Mike lisa
Homeroom
8 · 6
•
Thomas,
Cheryl
(Auditorium) ~ Natalie
1: Teenage America and Miss Ju st ice Foundation and Burchett, Robert Davts , Graham , Mike Haning, Terry Laudermitt.
Homeroom 404 - Medina Clark , David Dillard. Debra
~...; ·
d'
·
I ·m to repres nt on1e
William Oyer , linda Eason , Hutton, Ricky Jeffers, Velvet
•: ~n 1an Amenca. ~vents
c 31 s
e
s
Sheila Fetty , Teresa Fetty , Justis, Mary Kauff, Tim
Bryan , Ray Mowery , Carol Doerfer, Gwen Folmer, Betty
• . mclude stage productions , a
3,000 employes.
Jerry Fields , Kim Glass , Kautf, Vickie King , Hoby Neutzling, Sterling Neville. Gearheart, Genia Grover ,
Landers , Chris Lemley, Troy Vicki Nifz, Jennifer Ohlinger, Cindy Haggy , David Harper ,
~...
Robert Harmon , Robin

,

...

'·

•

�.,

.I

,

I

'

•..•

I

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Aug. 2fl. .107&lt;
~~~":i:~::::::::::~::::::::::::::~::::;:;:::::::;;:::::;::::::;:::::~::;;;;;::;:::::~..._

Helen Help~-- ·

· u·S

•

•

•

By Helen Hottel

I
i

I::::

Needs Workable Answer
Dear Helen :
I started to work again (college math and statistics in structor) when our children were both in schooL 1 love my
work, 'a nd also my husband and family.
We agreed when we decided to have children that 1 would
stay home until the youngest went to kindergarten. Since I'm
home during the summers, they aren 't deprived of Mother .
Our problem is that my husband refuses to help with the
housework or cooking and complains if everything isn't absolutely in top form, yet he won't allow "a stranger " in the
house, which,prevents regular domestic help . His argument is
that I do not have to work - we 're financially secure on HIS
salary - so I work only for myself, therefore it's my job to see
that all else is done also. Come September, I'll again be run
ragged, but unwilling to give up my career.
How did the household work get to be "my job," and
"making money" HIS job? Is working just a frivolous whim,
as he says, when you are a darn good statistician,
mathematician and computer analyst?
FOR
REDISTRIBUTION OF CHORES
Dear For: •
Your husband needs a crash course on Personhood 1 Since
he might flunk it, then the next best solution is a part-time
housekeeper, and if he howls about a "stranger" underfoot,
point out she'll be gone before he arrives home from the daily
bread winning.
J.sn't it a shame that some men still can 't realize a
woman's brains are also to be nurtured? - H.
P.S. - Fair's fair: Following is a letter from a woman
your husband may feel he SHOULD have married :

WEDNESDAY
RF:CREATION
Evening
for all team s in the Syracuse·
Min e rsvi ii C'' Booster
Association at 5:30 p.m . at
Syracuse b~ll park. Refreshments.
THURSDAY
MAGNOLIA Club, 7:30 p.
m . at I he hume of Mrs. Ellen
Couch .

Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. ]effeers
ANNIVERSARY APPROACHES - An open house in
observance of the 30th wedding anniversary of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert F . Jeffers will be held Sunday at their
residence on Third St. in Syracuse. The celebration is
being hosted by their children. Mr. and Mrs. Jeffers were
married Aug . 23, 1945. They have five children and six
grandchildren. Relatives and friends of the co~ple are
invit.Jd to attend the open house between the hours of 2 and
4 p.m .

+++
Dear Helen :
Where do people get the idea lately that being a housewife
i:;;; not being "true to yourself?"
"FUlfilled and complete" to me is not working all day at a
dull job, but creating happy and whole (ieople out of the two
sons my husband and I have produced, and making a warm
and comfortable home for my husband where he can relax
after work.
~'m free during the day to do the things that interest me :
go to art fairs, take the kids to the park, etc. And I can get all
the housework out of the way so my evenings are free for my

man.
My children only have one "careerist to look up to," but
they'renot shuttled off each day to a baby-sitter. Anyway, kids
don't tend to be impressed by their mother's scholastic or
monetary aChievements . They just want her there when
they need her.
I didn't have to win my husband with my brains or skills
and I KNOW he's boss, so there's no conflict. Time slips by fast
and what we do today will soon be memories. I want my
memories to be of happy times spent with my family, not of
day after endless day rushing from job to home a nd not doing
justice to either. The things I want to give my family can' t. lJ&lt;;
bought with money I'd earn .
When someone asks me if! work, I don't say, "No, I'm just
a housewife." I say, "Yes, while my husband works making
our money, I work making our home." - HAPPY
HOMEMAKER

Dear All:
· And so it goes: homemakers vs. careerists. Why don't we
consider there's room in the world for both, and both types are
much needed; much happier doing what they do best. BUTThey should be very careful to marry men who like their
type ! Why is it that so often they don't? - H.

•

Eblin reunzon held
The annual Eblin reunion
was held Aug. 10 at Forest
Acres Pa rk.
The birthdays uf Juanita
Blankenship , Henry Eblin
Jr. , Jim Farley, Janey Eblin
and Kenneth Eblin were
celebrated. Recognized as
the oldes t member of the
family in attendance was
Donald Eblin . Youngest
member wa s Michael J .
Eblin . Grace preceding the
dinner was given by Mrs.
Arthur Eblen .
Allending were Ira Eblin,
Edit h Barton, Brian Denny ,
Deann Denny, Hope Ebli n,
Roger Ebli n, Jane Eblin,
Harley Belin, Sr., Harley
Eblm, Jr ., Brian Eblin,
Sandra Ne igler, Steven
Eblin,
Wanda
Eblin,
Rebecca Eblin, Greg Eblin,
james Farley, Paulette
Farley, David A. Leach ,
James H. Leach, Dori s
McDonald , Mike McDonald,
Jimmy McDonald , Jerry
Colmer, Barbara Colmer,
Shari Colmer, Mike Hindy,
Billy Colmer .
Timmy Colmer,
Bill
Stephenson,
Mamie
Stephenson, Randy Snider,
Jimmie Snider, Tammy
Snider, David Johnson, Carl
DeLong, Genevieve DeLong,

Class holds
wiener roast

•

•'
'

•
'

BIRTHDAY CELEBRATED - Kevin Clay Arnott,
son of John and Jlnna Abbott, Syracuse, and Jason Arnott,
son of William and Stephanie Arnott of Chillicothe,
recently celebrated their first birthdays. The youngsters'
fathers are brothers. Jason's birthday was July 31 and
Kevin Clay's birthday was Aug. 6. ~e celebrations took
place in Syracuse.

Troop visits Marietta
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Brownie · Troop 01254 took a
trip to Marietta recently.
They visited Campus Martius
Museum, The Ohio River
Museum, and took a tour on
the W. P. Snyder boat.
They took sack lunches
·which they ate at a roadside
park. Following lunch they
went to Williamstown , W.
Va., where they toured t,lle
Fento~ Glass Factory.
Taking the trip were

•
'

Tal)'lmi
Adkins,
Becky
Adkins, Janie Amberger,
Christina Arnold, Becky
Arnold, Jenny Bentley,
Melinda
Hill,
Julie
Houdashelt, Melissa Hubbard,
Debbie Michael,
Angela Pratt, Teres•a Pratt,
Becky Roush , Sherri Sisson ,
Lori · Stewart,
Paula
Winebrenner, leader; Joyce
Sisson, assistant leader; Kay
Hill, Jinna Arnott, Barbara
Pratt, Lori Moore and
Monaca Hill.

A wiener roast was held by
the Homebuilders Class of the
Middleport Church of Christ
for 47 patients at the Athens
Mental
Health
Center
Tuesday night.
Hotdogs with sa uce, potato
chips, Kool-Aid , bananas and
candy bars were provided for
the patients and each one
received a small gift. Going
over for the party were Mrs.
Coleen Van Met.lr, Mrs. Flo
Grueser, Ed Evans, Mrs.
Dorothy Roach, Mrs. Rev'l
Beach,
Mrs .
Dorothy
Yeauger and Mrs. Nora Rice .

RETURNED HOME
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Wolfe , Wendy and
Tricia, have returned from a
week in Ci ncinnati. Their
daughter, Megan, remained
in Middleport with her
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Bradbury.

J eff DeLong, Cathy De!nng ,
Juanita Blankensh ip, Don
Eblin, Elva Grueser, Donna
Eblin, Tony Eblin, John
Ebli n, Jimmy Eblin , Janie
Ebl in , Kevin Hudson, Pat
Phillips , Virgil Phillips,
Tabitha Phillips, Shirley
Jeffers.
Donald Jeffer s, Ricky
Jeffers, Arthur Eblen, Adria
Eblen , Roger
Weaver,
Darlene Weave r, Bryan
Weaver , Barbara Eblin,
Lawr ence Eblin, Leona
Mar tin, Henry Eblin Jr.,
Hesler Eblin, Ronnfe Eblin ,
Drema Eblin , Darlene Eblin,
Michael Eblin, Hylha Eblin
and Robert Eblin .

RUTLAND - The annual
Young reunion was held
Sunday at the hom e of Mr .
and Mrs . Frank Young,
Rutland.
Officers elected for the
year were Pauline Buck,
president; Frank Young, vice
president; and Susan Hibbs,
secretary .
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs . Wi"lliam Buck, Sr.,
Rutland; Mrs. William Buck,
Jr., Cheshire; Mr. and Mrs.
William Buck III, Jason and
Mehssa, Addison ; Mr . and
Mrs. Pat Hager, Gallipolis;
Rick Buck, Ches hire ; Mrs.

The 80th birthday anniversary of Ralph Gibbs Sr.,
New Haven, was observed
r ecen tly with a family
galheri ng at the Racine
Locks and Dam.
Atte nding were Mr . and
Mrs. Jake Gibbs, Lori Beth
and David, Columbus; Mr.
and Mrs . Charles Werry,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Werry, Mr. and Mrs. Steven
Price and Stephanie, Middleport; Mr . and Mrs. Uoyd
Moore , Steve and Scottie,
Vienna, W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs .
Doug Goff, Eric and Erin,
Milton, W.Va . ; Mr. and Mrs.
Tum Statts a nd Tommy,
Point Pleasant; Mrs. James
Stalls,
Mrs .
Mabel
Gerlach and Johnnie a nd ·
Mary, Point Pleasant; Mr .
and Mrs. Ralph Gibbs Jr.,
Mrs. Doug Van Meter, Mrs.
Marcella Waid, Susan and
Mark; Mrs. Imogene Walker,

'~
1·

:
I

J
:
'

•
'
'

'f'

•

'•
/

r

RECUPERATING
Mrs. Louise Harbrecht,
recuperating from a hip and
arm injury, is now at the
home of her son, Dr . Phil
Harbrechl and family ,1 at 7404
Glen Arbor Road, Louisville,
Ky . 40222. She would appreciate hearing from her
friends here.

ATTEND GAME
- ~YRACUSE- Mrs. Sadie
Thuener and grandson, Ted
Lehew, Pomeroy, spent
Yea1111. . wereMr. and Mrs. · several days in' Cincinnati
Rice, Mrs. Yeauger's mother -with relatives and attended
Mrs. Reva Beach, BiiJy Rice, )he (:incin nati Reds· ball
and Mrs. Eula Rice.
l{ilffie. ·

..

will be the largest in
'recent history, about IH
million bushels, or 7.3 billion
P\)unds, up more than 12 per
cent from a year ago. Corey,
director
of
market
development, said 1973 and
1974 apple crops had been
substandard.
" I would assume that
prices
will
moderate
downward (at retail)," he
said. Corey added that inventories of processed apple
products, including sauce,
juice, cider and pie fillings,
are larger than in the past
two years, which should help
lower prices.

Shawn and P. J. Gibbs,
Tammy
Kimes,
Betsy
Knight, Mr. and Mrs. Pete
Grinstead, New Haven, W.
Va .

SIMILAR

lllUS;~.ioN

WID~ SELEctiON
OF
Back·T~School .

heritage bouse

At the annual marketing
clinic of the International
Apple Institute in Olicago,
Fred Corey said this year's

Your Thom MeAn Store
Middleport,'Ohio

BACK TO SCHOOL

..'

l•

-t

tlOTNIIIC DEPT.

LADIES'
ALL-WEATHER

~•

OATS

I

•~
.·•

.,•
•

LADIES'
""-.
BIKINI ~ANTIES

·.'

For.the Little Miss navy
smoo th leather wi t h
crepe so le and wedge
heel.
Sizes 811:2 to a.

ti.OTNIIIC
DEPT.

Civ (· yo ur toes a treat in this
so fl :-;.upp l e brushed pigskin
Hu sh PuppiesK shoe o n a thick
sli ce of crepe sole.
S t ~l' l shank suppo rt .

Clothing Dept•

KNIT SLACKS

TCNl"a ·long sla(ki of rac~way kn it lo
ma1cr1 111e log · a ·long laps . 5,1t&gt;l
2·3 ·4-5-6 ·6-X .

CHOICE

$300
EACH

Boys' Sizes
4 to 6

Line of

HECK'S REG. $4 .3 8

ti.DTNIIIC DEPT.

Men's,

GIRLS

Children's .

LADIES'
See 1-oow tl-oese ever· popular shirts loo k
for 1-oome, school or ofke . Button Iran i
stl irt with collar and si"lo rt sl~ eve s in
as~o rted prinl s lo r you to cl-o oos.e from.
Si z e~ 34·.40.

CHOICE

$1

!c?

70Z.

PANTS

CHOICE

CHOICE

S]~A~

$]~!

HECK'SREG.
$4.88

CI.OTNI/IC DEPT.

NAIL POLISH

HECKSREG.
$5.88 EACH

BAYER
ASPIRIN

Q_19(

200'5

HECK'S
REG.

$128

36'

COSMR/t
DEPT.

FOR

'3 00

Heck's Reg . $1.99 EA.
Clothing Dept.

Shirts

E

BATES
RED LABEL
DACRON

8-18

$2"

PILLOWS

:.r.(t.l:

· ~s.~~.Gt :;(I AI! i!"

CI.OTHIIIC
DEI'T.

99(

HECK'S REG. $1.58

HECK'S REG.
$1.38

toSMETit DEPT.

tOSMET/t DEPT.

(4/12
P.ltch)

r-

FOR$

5° 0

HECK'S REG. $3.99

ti.OTiiiiiC DEI'T.

60Z.
•

EXCEDRIN
100'S

2

HECK'S REG.
$3 .99

CI.OTHIIIC
DEI'T.

1-1".

REMOVER

2

With wh ite perma nen t
press cover . 21"x27 "
long. Extra p!ump .

Excedrin

2.5 oz.
DURA GLOSS

"1
'

'=;~

CHOICE

MASON• .,• VA.

I

Set includes long
s leeve cor duroy
fop with boxer
pants. Assorted
color s. S ize ~ 4 -7.

IUCK'SREG.
.99 EACH

,.,. ..,~ '"'"' " Si•••8•o 11

DELIVERY SERVICE MAINTAINED'JD\ OHIO

I

SET

2 FORssoo
Sport

CORDUROY

Casual poly-cotton pantsels
with assorted appliques is what
she' ll like . Sizes 3-6X .

G1 rl s
I
I neck top s 111
pat1e rns and so lidi . w,,l-o con1ros 1
slil&lt;tling G reo1 loll go-1oge1he!l. Sue 1
2·3 ·4-!i-6 , and 6X .

24x45
REVERSIBlE
RUGS

Boys Lorig Sleeve

BOYS'
2 PIECE

PANT
SETS

fc t ''"'' f,jl foMy ....,.., 1'1&lt;11 tat,. "P"" "' 1wo ol
polyn,., •~•• &lt;lo&lt;b . W• l&gt;o•• o compLo1e &gt;oiiW~o~
of,...;.:~, o".J jaquord pr;,u &gt;&gt;yled with &lt;&lt;&gt;..,fo.,abLo

knit top styles ttlo t
&lt;o .,fo•l•&gt;&gt;~• Like the se! Full
uew , and novel1y ne ck
sleeve. S i1e~ S·M·L

ti.OTNI/IC DEI'T.

24 inches

'23.80

KNIT
TOPS

POLYESTER

CI.OTHIIIC DEPT.

·Overfta1g

28I foot

LADIES'

HECK'S REG. $4.88

WITHOUT GREASE

26 fOot

LADIES'

HECK'S REG . $2.88

VITAL IS
· GROOMS HAIR

DELIVERED TO JOB S1~TE .

•i

Heck's Reg. '6.99

HECK'S REG. 88'

773-5554

.,

'

5-7

v
I'

Throw sty le. full bed size beds pread.
Polyester tufted designs on cotton
sheeting . Choose from 6 brtght
colors .

ti.OTHI/IC
DEPT.

.H OGG &amp; 'Z USPAN

..,.,

BEDSPREAD

Nylon · satin
panties . In
assorted
prints, sizes

'22.10

..

CI.OTHIIIC DEPT.

CHOICE

'

COSMET/t
DEPT.

POMEROY OHIO

HECK'S REG. $10.99

ti.OTIII*" IIIPT.

H.ECK'S REG.
$30.99 EACH

.. "

SCHOOL SALE

.l

sass

HECK'S REG.
TO $6.99

EACH

.

Br ig hl a nd colorful printed sleeping
bogs for kid' of all og~ . Excellent for
P-?i omo partie s- TV; watching- or on
extra gve,t.

$4''

$2488

.
•

BEN FRANKLIN

..

SLUMBER BAGS

'" "&gt;a"

HECK'S
REG.
$1.28

E!:.~r'*F~~-!~~~~!;;~ 1)1

BEDSPREAD

~oomd out your loll wardrobe wi
versat ile , all -weather coats . Oxford
in Bolmacaon , Trench or sing le
' t""'"'''d style s, wjth zip-out lining. In
sizes 6-20.

"~
•
-"•"

P1ofeWonal
Engineering
Service

.

PRINT

CERTIFICATES
WELCOME

~

I·

PLAID WOVEN
Bright colorful plaid spread in
fu ll o r twin bed !.ize . Easy to
clean -machine washable .

CLOTHING

HECK'S REG. $24.99 EACH

POM~ROY

.

BACK TO SCHOOL

~

Pre-Fabricated Trusses

SPECIALS THROUGHOUT THE STORE
FOR SCHOOL OPENING .DURING THIS SALE
AND SAVE, SAVE, SAVE

DEPT. OF WELFARE

~

Women's · and

24 foot

PANT
SUITS

~

in-law and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs . Kenneth Newhouse,
Greenville, S. C.; Mr. and
Mrs. Darold Graham and
family of Newark; and
Harold Graham and family,
Columbus; and Mr. and Mrs.
Middle of Upper Block, Pomeroy
Charles Newhouse, Pomeroy.
Open All Day Thursdays-Friday Til8
A wiener roast and hayride '
were enjoyed by the group.

VISIT HERE
Recent gues ts of Mrs.
Bessie Graham, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, have been her son-

WESl VIRGINIA

CHOICE

KNIT SHIRTS

BACK FROM VACATION
Mr. and Mrs. Denver Rice
and son, Billy, Middleport,
returned recently from a
three week vacation. They
visited the Norman Yeaugers
in Florida, Mr, and Mrs.
Chester Rice at Atlanta, Ga.,
and Mr. and Mrs. George
Chambers and son, Oint at
East Point, Ga . While in
Florida they spent a day a t
Disney World and visited
briefly Mr. ant! Mrs. Bob
Taylor and family .

LADIES'

Great way to fa shion o compv s wardrobe .
. . . our newest foil pont sets, choose from o
speciol group mode of krinkle cloth, prewashed and brush denim . In Mines and
Junia sizes.

SHOES

average.

Complete

and Mrs. Charles Bradbury,
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Wolf, .
Wendy, Tricia and Megan,
Racine; Mr. and Mrs. Asa
Bradbury, Nikki and Jeff,
Circleville; and Mr, and \"'rs.
, Patrick O'Brien, Pomeroy.

9- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Aug. 20, 1975

1crop

canned fish combined with
salad vegetables or fruit .
A fiv"'i&gt;Ound bag of flour
was 99 cents or less in 13
cities. The high of $1.19 in a
midManhattan supermarket
in New York City was down 10
cents from the previous
week, compared with an
average of $1 during the base
week .
A five-pound bag of a
national brand of sugar was
$1.37 to $1 .39 in seven cities :
San Diego, Los Angeles, Raleigh, Pittsburgh, Hartford,
Birmingham, Ala. , and
Cincinnati. Even the $1.83
high in Honolulu was well
below the $2.26 average in
March.
Prices began to drop on
apples as the new summer
crop came to market to
augment storage supplies. A
three-pound bag of eating
apples sold for only 69 cents
in a San Francisco market, 21
cents below last March's

ice cream and cake were
served to C. P. Bradbury, Mr.

80th birthday celebrated

'

.

••

Young family gathers

VISIT YOUR
BACK HOME
Mr . and Mrs. Norman
Yeauger and son, Kevin,
have ~eturned to Melbourne,
Fla. after spending two
weeks he~e visitln~ friends
and .relatives. Durmg thetr
Visit the former residents
· were entertaine4 by Mr. and
Mrs. Denver Rice and. son,
BUJy, on !several occasions
IDcludlrig a night out in
Marletl,a. Mr. ahd Mts. Lewis
· . Harris entertained at their
· Minersville hom'e with a
dinner one evening, and
attendl~~g · be.stdes
the

•
•'

Chicken is goO~ buy
according to survey

By JEANNE LESEM
UPI Food Ed Itor
Broiler-fryer
chickens
were comparatively good
buys this week in 10 cities on
!JPI's regular survey of food
(llices in the United States ...
Whole chickens were 47 and
4S cents a pound in Chicago
anl Buffalo, and 55 to 59 cents
LAUREL Cliff Health Dub in •ighl other cities in widely
at the home of Nellie Tracy, scatered areas, com,.Pared
7:30 p.ni .
with 58 cent average during
SPECIAL Mee ting , Shade the )lase week last March.
Valley Lodge 453 at hall in The week's high, 83 cents,
Chester, 7:30 p.m. Work in was n Honolulu.
Master Mason degree.
Grate A large eggs .also
ROCK SPRINGS Grange, 8 were ~rgains in five cities:
p.m . at the half
53 to 51 cents in Jacksonville,
•
Ill&gt;
Fla.,
Us Angeles, Cincinnati,
DEMOCRATS WILL meet
Dallas
and Little Rock.
at Grace Episcopa l Parish
House , 8 p.m .; all com- That's •Jess than nickel
mitteemen reques ted to be apiece, well below the
pre se nt
and
visitors average of 77 cents a dozen
during the base week .
welcome.
The biggest bargains,
FRIDAY
however,
were in produce
POMEROY
WOMEN'S
Bowling Assn . meeting, 7:30 departments. A consumer
p.m. at Pomeroy Bowling planning to freeze or can for
Lan es; all members urged to the winter could find elberta
peaches on sale for $3.99 to
attend.
$4.99 for a 15-!o 17-pound bag,
GOSPEL SING featuring
and nectarines for 39 cents a
the Homeward Bound and the
pound in Minneapolis;
Slewart Family from HunIn Los Angeles, carrots
lington , W. Va . at 7:30p .m. at
were a mere 10 to 12 cents a
the Mason Assembly of God
pound, iceberg lettuce, 19 to
Chur c h, Dudding Lane,
29 cents a head, and russel
Mason , W. Va . Chesler
potatoes, 69 to 9t cents for a
Tennant , pastor .
!~und bag.
SATURDAY
Local sweet corn in Boston
BUFFET
SUPPER, brought 79 to 89 cents lor a
Pylhian Sisters Temple, dozen ears, plums and
Wilkesville, servi ng 4 to a peaches were three pounds
p.m. Public invited, charge, for $1, and zucchini and
$2.50 for ad ul ts, $1.50 for summer squash were 19 cents
childre n.
a pound. Thinly sliced, unMEIGS HIGH SCHOOL peeled zucchini mpkes a
alum ni ,;.eeting, 6 p.m., delicious substitute for
Middleport Municipal Park . cucumbers in salads; it is
All gradua tes welcome.
also good as a low-calorie
SUNDAY
snack, cut in chunks or :sticks
ANNUAL SWARTZ family and served with seasoned salt
reuni o n, Woode Grove, or a lowcalorie dip.
Alfred, basket dinner at noon .
Beef continued high, said
the weekly market report
the
Consumer
from
Education department of
Cornell University's Extension Service. Specials
Nancy Pope, Toni and Tracy, were mostly on chuck cut~,
Grant and Vickie Blanken- but UPI's survey showed
ship, Middleport; Mrs . scarcely any on ground
Lurene
Kennedy
and chuck. The low of 66 cents a
Clarence Edwards, Galena; pound was in Los Angeles, the
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Young high of $1.49, _in Jacksonville,
'l
and Mindy, Middleport; Mrs. Fla .
Lamb
supplies
also
were
Susan Hibbs, Greg and Mary,
Pomeroy ; Mr. and Mrs . J . A. short, the Extension Service \
Young, Camb ridge; Mrs. said, and government reports i
DanielL. Bentz and Amanda, indicate this will continue. '
Bedford , Ind.; Mr. and Mrs. For budget stretchers , it
hard-boiled
Joe Youn g, Pomeroy; Mrs. recommended
Dorothy Young, Middleport; eggs, cheese and some
Mr. and Mrs . Frank Young,
BIRTHUA Y HONORED
Rutland ; Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
The birthday anniversary
Dark, Bobby and Ritchie,
of
Mrs. C. P. Bradbury was
New Haven, W. Va.
celebrated with a backyard
party recently. Homemade

['

·aRIGHT
SIDE
SHAMPOO

39(
HECK'S
REG.
94'

COSMETit .
DEPT.

ALBERTO

vos

HAIR
DRESSING

79(

HECK'S REG. $1.-18

COSMf!lt IIIPT.

"Mont i cello" ... soft com lor table

Cannon blank et in your choice of
eye c a tch ing pr i n ts . Co tor! ul
bindi ng at bol h ends . S1 z
12")(90 "

'4.66
Heck's Reg . $5.99
Clothing Dept.

�.,

.I

,

I

'

•..•

I

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Aug. 2fl. .107&lt;
~~~":i:~::::::::::~::::::::::::::~::::;:;:::::::;;:::::;::::::;:::::~::;;;;;::;:::::~..._

Helen Help~-- ·

· u·S

•

•

•

By Helen Hottel

I
i

I::::

Needs Workable Answer
Dear Helen :
I started to work again (college math and statistics in structor) when our children were both in schooL 1 love my
work, 'a nd also my husband and family.
We agreed when we decided to have children that 1 would
stay home until the youngest went to kindergarten. Since I'm
home during the summers, they aren 't deprived of Mother .
Our problem is that my husband refuses to help with the
housework or cooking and complains if everything isn't absolutely in top form, yet he won't allow "a stranger " in the
house, which,prevents regular domestic help . His argument is
that I do not have to work - we 're financially secure on HIS
salary - so I work only for myself, therefore it's my job to see
that all else is done also. Come September, I'll again be run
ragged, but unwilling to give up my career.
How did the household work get to be "my job," and
"making money" HIS job? Is working just a frivolous whim,
as he says, when you are a darn good statistician,
mathematician and computer analyst?
FOR
REDISTRIBUTION OF CHORES
Dear For: •
Your husband needs a crash course on Personhood 1 Since
he might flunk it, then the next best solution is a part-time
housekeeper, and if he howls about a "stranger" underfoot,
point out she'll be gone before he arrives home from the daily
bread winning.
J.sn't it a shame that some men still can 't realize a
woman's brains are also to be nurtured? - H.
P.S. - Fair's fair: Following is a letter from a woman
your husband may feel he SHOULD have married :

WEDNESDAY
RF:CREATION
Evening
for all team s in the Syracuse·
Min e rsvi ii C'' Booster
Association at 5:30 p.m . at
Syracuse b~ll park. Refreshments.
THURSDAY
MAGNOLIA Club, 7:30 p.
m . at I he hume of Mrs. Ellen
Couch .

Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. ]effeers
ANNIVERSARY APPROACHES - An open house in
observance of the 30th wedding anniversary of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert F . Jeffers will be held Sunday at their
residence on Third St. in Syracuse. The celebration is
being hosted by their children. Mr. and Mrs. Jeffers were
married Aug . 23, 1945. They have five children and six
grandchildren. Relatives and friends of the co~ple are
invit.Jd to attend the open house between the hours of 2 and
4 p.m .

+++
Dear Helen :
Where do people get the idea lately that being a housewife
i:;;; not being "true to yourself?"
"FUlfilled and complete" to me is not working all day at a
dull job, but creating happy and whole (ieople out of the two
sons my husband and I have produced, and making a warm
and comfortable home for my husband where he can relax
after work.
~'m free during the day to do the things that interest me :
go to art fairs, take the kids to the park, etc. And I can get all
the housework out of the way so my evenings are free for my

man.
My children only have one "careerist to look up to," but
they'renot shuttled off each day to a baby-sitter. Anyway, kids
don't tend to be impressed by their mother's scholastic or
monetary aChievements . They just want her there when
they need her.
I didn't have to win my husband with my brains or skills
and I KNOW he's boss, so there's no conflict. Time slips by fast
and what we do today will soon be memories. I want my
memories to be of happy times spent with my family, not of
day after endless day rushing from job to home a nd not doing
justice to either. The things I want to give my family can' t. lJ&lt;;
bought with money I'd earn .
When someone asks me if! work, I don't say, "No, I'm just
a housewife." I say, "Yes, while my husband works making
our money, I work making our home." - HAPPY
HOMEMAKER

Dear All:
· And so it goes: homemakers vs. careerists. Why don't we
consider there's room in the world for both, and both types are
much needed; much happier doing what they do best. BUTThey should be very careful to marry men who like their
type ! Why is it that so often they don't? - H.

•

Eblin reunzon held
The annual Eblin reunion
was held Aug. 10 at Forest
Acres Pa rk.
The birthdays uf Juanita
Blankenship , Henry Eblin
Jr. , Jim Farley, Janey Eblin
and Kenneth Eblin were
celebrated. Recognized as
the oldes t member of the
family in attendance was
Donald Eblin . Youngest
member wa s Michael J .
Eblin . Grace preceding the
dinner was given by Mrs.
Arthur Eblen .
Allending were Ira Eblin,
Edit h Barton, Brian Denny ,
Deann Denny, Hope Ebli n,
Roger Ebli n, Jane Eblin,
Harley Belin, Sr., Harley
Eblm, Jr ., Brian Eblin,
Sandra Ne igler, Steven
Eblin,
Wanda
Eblin,
Rebecca Eblin, Greg Eblin,
james Farley, Paulette
Farley, David A. Leach ,
James H. Leach, Dori s
McDonald , Mike McDonald,
Jimmy McDonald , Jerry
Colmer, Barbara Colmer,
Shari Colmer, Mike Hindy,
Billy Colmer .
Timmy Colmer,
Bill
Stephenson,
Mamie
Stephenson, Randy Snider,
Jimmie Snider, Tammy
Snider, David Johnson, Carl
DeLong, Genevieve DeLong,

Class holds
wiener roast

•

•'
'

•
'

BIRTHDAY CELEBRATED - Kevin Clay Arnott,
son of John and Jlnna Abbott, Syracuse, and Jason Arnott,
son of William and Stephanie Arnott of Chillicothe,
recently celebrated their first birthdays. The youngsters'
fathers are brothers. Jason's birthday was July 31 and
Kevin Clay's birthday was Aug. 6. ~e celebrations took
place in Syracuse.

Troop visits Marietta
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Brownie · Troop 01254 took a
trip to Marietta recently.
They visited Campus Martius
Museum, The Ohio River
Museum, and took a tour on
the W. P. Snyder boat.
They took sack lunches
·which they ate at a roadside
park. Following lunch they
went to Williamstown , W.
Va., where they toured t,lle
Fento~ Glass Factory.
Taking the trip were

•
'

Tal)'lmi
Adkins,
Becky
Adkins, Janie Amberger,
Christina Arnold, Becky
Arnold, Jenny Bentley,
Melinda
Hill,
Julie
Houdashelt, Melissa Hubbard,
Debbie Michael,
Angela Pratt, Teres•a Pratt,
Becky Roush , Sherri Sisson ,
Lori · Stewart,
Paula
Winebrenner, leader; Joyce
Sisson, assistant leader; Kay
Hill, Jinna Arnott, Barbara
Pratt, Lori Moore and
Monaca Hill.

A wiener roast was held by
the Homebuilders Class of the
Middleport Church of Christ
for 47 patients at the Athens
Mental
Health
Center
Tuesday night.
Hotdogs with sa uce, potato
chips, Kool-Aid , bananas and
candy bars were provided for
the patients and each one
received a small gift. Going
over for the party were Mrs.
Coleen Van Met.lr, Mrs. Flo
Grueser, Ed Evans, Mrs.
Dorothy Roach, Mrs. Rev'l
Beach,
Mrs .
Dorothy
Yeauger and Mrs. Nora Rice .

RETURNED HOME
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Wolfe , Wendy and
Tricia, have returned from a
week in Ci ncinnati. Their
daughter, Megan, remained
in Middleport with her
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Bradbury.

J eff DeLong, Cathy De!nng ,
Juanita Blankensh ip, Don
Eblin, Elva Grueser, Donna
Eblin, Tony Eblin, John
Ebli n, Jimmy Eblin , Janie
Ebl in , Kevin Hudson, Pat
Phillips , Virgil Phillips,
Tabitha Phillips, Shirley
Jeffers.
Donald Jeffer s, Ricky
Jeffers, Arthur Eblen, Adria
Eblen , Roger
Weaver,
Darlene Weave r, Bryan
Weaver , Barbara Eblin,
Lawr ence Eblin, Leona
Mar tin, Henry Eblin Jr.,
Hesler Eblin, Ronnfe Eblin ,
Drema Eblin , Darlene Eblin,
Michael Eblin, Hylha Eblin
and Robert Eblin .

RUTLAND - The annual
Young reunion was held
Sunday at the hom e of Mr .
and Mrs . Frank Young,
Rutland.
Officers elected for the
year were Pauline Buck,
president; Frank Young, vice
president; and Susan Hibbs,
secretary .
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs . Wi"lliam Buck, Sr.,
Rutland; Mrs. William Buck,
Jr., Cheshire; Mr. and Mrs.
William Buck III, Jason and
Mehssa, Addison ; Mr . and
Mrs. Pat Hager, Gallipolis;
Rick Buck, Ches hire ; Mrs.

The 80th birthday anniversary of Ralph Gibbs Sr.,
New Haven, was observed
r ecen tly with a family
galheri ng at the Racine
Locks and Dam.
Atte nding were Mr . and
Mrs. Jake Gibbs, Lori Beth
and David, Columbus; Mr.
and Mrs . Charles Werry,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Werry, Mr. and Mrs. Steven
Price and Stephanie, Middleport; Mr . and Mrs. Uoyd
Moore , Steve and Scottie,
Vienna, W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs .
Doug Goff, Eric and Erin,
Milton, W.Va . ; Mr. and Mrs.
Tum Statts a nd Tommy,
Point Pleasant; Mrs. James
Stalls,
Mrs .
Mabel
Gerlach and Johnnie a nd ·
Mary, Point Pleasant; Mr .
and Mrs. Ralph Gibbs Jr.,
Mrs. Doug Van Meter, Mrs.
Marcella Waid, Susan and
Mark; Mrs. Imogene Walker,

'~
1·

:
I

J
:
'

•
'
'

'f'

•

'•
/

r

RECUPERATING
Mrs. Louise Harbrecht,
recuperating from a hip and
arm injury, is now at the
home of her son, Dr . Phil
Harbrechl and family ,1 at 7404
Glen Arbor Road, Louisville,
Ky . 40222. She would appreciate hearing from her
friends here.

ATTEND GAME
- ~YRACUSE- Mrs. Sadie
Thuener and grandson, Ted
Lehew, Pomeroy, spent
Yea1111. . wereMr. and Mrs. · several days in' Cincinnati
Rice, Mrs. Yeauger's mother -with relatives and attended
Mrs. Reva Beach, BiiJy Rice, )he (:incin nati Reds· ball
and Mrs. Eula Rice.
l{ilffie. ·

..

will be the largest in
'recent history, about IH
million bushels, or 7.3 billion
P\)unds, up more than 12 per
cent from a year ago. Corey,
director
of
market
development, said 1973 and
1974 apple crops had been
substandard.
" I would assume that
prices
will
moderate
downward (at retail)," he
said. Corey added that inventories of processed apple
products, including sauce,
juice, cider and pie fillings,
are larger than in the past
two years, which should help
lower prices.

Shawn and P. J. Gibbs,
Tammy
Kimes,
Betsy
Knight, Mr. and Mrs. Pete
Grinstead, New Haven, W.
Va .

SIMILAR

lllUS;~.ioN

WID~ SELEctiON
OF
Back·T~School .

heritage bouse

At the annual marketing
clinic of the International
Apple Institute in Olicago,
Fred Corey said this year's

Your Thom MeAn Store
Middleport,'Ohio

BACK TO SCHOOL

..'

l•

-t

tlOTNIIIC DEPT.

LADIES'
ALL-WEATHER

~•

OATS

I

•~
.·•

.,•
•

LADIES'
""-.
BIKINI ~ANTIES

·.'

For.the Little Miss navy
smoo th leather wi t h
crepe so le and wedge
heel.
Sizes 811:2 to a.

ti.OTNIIIC
DEPT.

Civ (· yo ur toes a treat in this
so fl :-;.upp l e brushed pigskin
Hu sh PuppiesK shoe o n a thick
sli ce of crepe sole.
S t ~l' l shank suppo rt .

Clothing Dept•

KNIT SLACKS

TCNl"a ·long sla(ki of rac~way kn it lo
ma1cr1 111e log · a ·long laps . 5,1t&gt;l
2·3 ·4-5-6 ·6-X .

CHOICE

$300
EACH

Boys' Sizes
4 to 6

Line of

HECK'S REG. $4 .3 8

ti.DTNIIIC DEPT.

Men's,

GIRLS

Children's .

LADIES'
See 1-oow tl-oese ever· popular shirts loo k
for 1-oome, school or ofke . Button Iran i
stl irt with collar and si"lo rt sl~ eve s in
as~o rted prinl s lo r you to cl-o oos.e from.
Si z e~ 34·.40.

CHOICE

$1

!c?

70Z.

PANTS

CHOICE

CHOICE

S]~A~

$]~!

HECK'SREG.
$4.88

CI.OTNI/IC DEPT.

NAIL POLISH

HECKSREG.
$5.88 EACH

BAYER
ASPIRIN

Q_19(

200'5

HECK'S
REG.

$128

36'

COSMR/t
DEPT.

FOR

'3 00

Heck's Reg . $1.99 EA.
Clothing Dept.

Shirts

E

BATES
RED LABEL
DACRON

8-18

$2"

PILLOWS

:.r.(t.l:

· ~s.~~.Gt :;(I AI! i!"

CI.OTHIIIC
DEI'T.

99(

HECK'S REG. $1.58

HECK'S REG.
$1.38

toSMETit DEPT.

tOSMET/t DEPT.

(4/12
P.ltch)

r-

FOR$

5° 0

HECK'S REG. $3.99

ti.OTiiiiiC DEI'T.

60Z.
•

EXCEDRIN
100'S

2

HECK'S REG.
$3 .99

CI.OTHIIIC
DEI'T.

1-1".

REMOVER

2

With wh ite perma nen t
press cover . 21"x27 "
long. Extra p!ump .

Excedrin

2.5 oz.
DURA GLOSS

"1
'

'=;~

CHOICE

MASON• .,• VA.

I

Set includes long
s leeve cor duroy
fop with boxer
pants. Assorted
color s. S ize ~ 4 -7.

IUCK'SREG.
.99 EACH

,.,. ..,~ '"'"' " Si•••8•o 11

DELIVERY SERVICE MAINTAINED'JD\ OHIO

I

SET

2 FORssoo
Sport

CORDUROY

Casual poly-cotton pantsels
with assorted appliques is what
she' ll like . Sizes 3-6X .

G1 rl s
I
I neck top s 111
pat1e rns and so lidi . w,,l-o con1ros 1
slil&lt;tling G reo1 loll go-1oge1he!l. Sue 1
2·3 ·4-!i-6 , and 6X .

24x45
REVERSIBlE
RUGS

Boys Lorig Sleeve

BOYS'
2 PIECE

PANT
SETS

fc t ''"'' f,jl foMy ....,.., 1'1&lt;11 tat,. "P"" "' 1wo ol
polyn,., •~•• &lt;lo&lt;b . W• l&gt;o•• o compLo1e &gt;oiiW~o~
of,...;.:~, o".J jaquord pr;,u &gt;&gt;yled with &lt;&lt;&gt;..,fo.,abLo

knit top styles ttlo t
&lt;o .,fo•l•&gt;&gt;~• Like the se! Full
uew , and novel1y ne ck
sleeve. S i1e~ S·M·L

ti.OTNI/IC DEI'T.

24 inches

'23.80

KNIT
TOPS

POLYESTER

CI.OTHIIIC DEPT.

·Overfta1g

28I foot

LADIES'

HECK'S REG. $4.88

WITHOUT GREASE

26 fOot

LADIES'

HECK'S REG . $2.88

VITAL IS
· GROOMS HAIR

DELIVERED TO JOB S1~TE .

•i

Heck's Reg. '6.99

HECK'S REG. 88'

773-5554

.,

'

5-7

v
I'

Throw sty le. full bed size beds pread.
Polyester tufted designs on cotton
sheeting . Choose from 6 brtght
colors .

ti.OTHI/IC
DEPT.

.H OGG &amp; 'Z USPAN

..,.,

BEDSPREAD

Nylon · satin
panties . In
assorted
prints, sizes

'22.10

..

CI.OTHIIIC DEPT.

CHOICE

'

COSMET/t
DEPT.

POMEROY OHIO

HECK'S REG. $10.99

ti.OTIII*" IIIPT.

H.ECK'S REG.
$30.99 EACH

.. "

SCHOOL SALE

.l

sass

HECK'S REG.
TO $6.99

EACH

.

Br ig hl a nd colorful printed sleeping
bogs for kid' of all og~ . Excellent for
P-?i omo partie s- TV; watching- or on
extra gve,t.

$4''

$2488

.
•

BEN FRANKLIN

..

SLUMBER BAGS

'" "&gt;a"

HECK'S
REG.
$1.28

E!:.~r'*F~~-!~~~~!;;~ 1)1

BEDSPREAD

~oomd out your loll wardrobe wi
versat ile , all -weather coats . Oxford
in Bolmacaon , Trench or sing le
' t""'"'''d style s, wjth zip-out lining. In
sizes 6-20.

"~
•
-"•"

P1ofeWonal
Engineering
Service

.

PRINT

CERTIFICATES
WELCOME

~

I·

PLAID WOVEN
Bright colorful plaid spread in
fu ll o r twin bed !.ize . Easy to
clean -machine washable .

CLOTHING

HECK'S REG. $24.99 EACH

POM~ROY

.

BACK TO SCHOOL

~

Pre-Fabricated Trusses

SPECIALS THROUGHOUT THE STORE
FOR SCHOOL OPENING .DURING THIS SALE
AND SAVE, SAVE, SAVE

DEPT. OF WELFARE

~

Women's · and

24 foot

PANT
SUITS

~

in-law and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs . Kenneth Newhouse,
Greenville, S. C.; Mr. and
Mrs. Darold Graham and
family of Newark; and
Harold Graham and family,
Columbus; and Mr. and Mrs.
Middle of Upper Block, Pomeroy
Charles Newhouse, Pomeroy.
Open All Day Thursdays-Friday Til8
A wiener roast and hayride '
were enjoyed by the group.

VISIT HERE
Recent gues ts of Mrs.
Bessie Graham, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, have been her son-

WESl VIRGINIA

CHOICE

KNIT SHIRTS

BACK FROM VACATION
Mr. and Mrs. Denver Rice
and son, Billy, Middleport,
returned recently from a
three week vacation. They
visited the Norman Yeaugers
in Florida, Mr, and Mrs.
Chester Rice at Atlanta, Ga.,
and Mr. and Mrs. George
Chambers and son, Oint at
East Point, Ga . While in
Florida they spent a day a t
Disney World and visited
briefly Mr. ant! Mrs. Bob
Taylor and family .

LADIES'

Great way to fa shion o compv s wardrobe .
. . . our newest foil pont sets, choose from o
speciol group mode of krinkle cloth, prewashed and brush denim . In Mines and
Junia sizes.

SHOES

average.

Complete

and Mrs. Charles Bradbury,
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Wolf, .
Wendy, Tricia and Megan,
Racine; Mr. and Mrs. Asa
Bradbury, Nikki and Jeff,
Circleville; and Mr, and \"'rs.
, Patrick O'Brien, Pomeroy.

9- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Aug. 20, 1975

1crop

canned fish combined with
salad vegetables or fruit .
A fiv"'i&gt;Ound bag of flour
was 99 cents or less in 13
cities. The high of $1.19 in a
midManhattan supermarket
in New York City was down 10
cents from the previous
week, compared with an
average of $1 during the base
week .
A five-pound bag of a
national brand of sugar was
$1.37 to $1 .39 in seven cities :
San Diego, Los Angeles, Raleigh, Pittsburgh, Hartford,
Birmingham, Ala. , and
Cincinnati. Even the $1.83
high in Honolulu was well
below the $2.26 average in
March.
Prices began to drop on
apples as the new summer
crop came to market to
augment storage supplies. A
three-pound bag of eating
apples sold for only 69 cents
in a San Francisco market, 21
cents below last March's

ice cream and cake were
served to C. P. Bradbury, Mr.

80th birthday celebrated

'

.

••

Young family gathers

VISIT YOUR
BACK HOME
Mr . and Mrs. Norman
Yeauger and son, Kevin,
have ~eturned to Melbourne,
Fla. after spending two
weeks he~e visitln~ friends
and .relatives. Durmg thetr
Visit the former residents
· were entertaine4 by Mr. and
Mrs. Denver Rice and. son,
BUJy, on !several occasions
IDcludlrig a night out in
Marletl,a. Mr. ahd Mts. Lewis
· . Harris entertained at their
· Minersville hom'e with a
dinner one evening, and
attendl~~g · be.stdes
the

•
•'

Chicken is goO~ buy
according to survey

By JEANNE LESEM
UPI Food Ed Itor
Broiler-fryer
chickens
were comparatively good
buys this week in 10 cities on
!JPI's regular survey of food
(llices in the United States ...
Whole chickens were 47 and
4S cents a pound in Chicago
anl Buffalo, and 55 to 59 cents
LAUREL Cliff Health Dub in •ighl other cities in widely
at the home of Nellie Tracy, scatered areas, com,.Pared
7:30 p.ni .
with 58 cent average during
SPECIAL Mee ting , Shade the )lase week last March.
Valley Lodge 453 at hall in The week's high, 83 cents,
Chester, 7:30 p.m. Work in was n Honolulu.
Master Mason degree.
Grate A large eggs .also
ROCK SPRINGS Grange, 8 were ~rgains in five cities:
p.m . at the half
53 to 51 cents in Jacksonville,
•
Ill&gt;
Fla.,
Us Angeles, Cincinnati,
DEMOCRATS WILL meet
Dallas
and Little Rock.
at Grace Episcopa l Parish
House , 8 p.m .; all com- That's •Jess than nickel
mitteemen reques ted to be apiece, well below the
pre se nt
and
visitors average of 77 cents a dozen
during the base week .
welcome.
The biggest bargains,
FRIDAY
however,
were in produce
POMEROY
WOMEN'S
Bowling Assn . meeting, 7:30 departments. A consumer
p.m. at Pomeroy Bowling planning to freeze or can for
Lan es; all members urged to the winter could find elberta
peaches on sale for $3.99 to
attend.
$4.99 for a 15-!o 17-pound bag,
GOSPEL SING featuring
and nectarines for 39 cents a
the Homeward Bound and the
pound in Minneapolis;
Slewart Family from HunIn Los Angeles, carrots
lington , W. Va . at 7:30p .m. at
were a mere 10 to 12 cents a
the Mason Assembly of God
pound, iceberg lettuce, 19 to
Chur c h, Dudding Lane,
29 cents a head, and russel
Mason , W. Va . Chesler
potatoes, 69 to 9t cents for a
Tennant , pastor .
!~und bag.
SATURDAY
Local sweet corn in Boston
BUFFET
SUPPER, brought 79 to 89 cents lor a
Pylhian Sisters Temple, dozen ears, plums and
Wilkesville, servi ng 4 to a peaches were three pounds
p.m. Public invited, charge, for $1, and zucchini and
$2.50 for ad ul ts, $1.50 for summer squash were 19 cents
childre n.
a pound. Thinly sliced, unMEIGS HIGH SCHOOL peeled zucchini mpkes a
alum ni ,;.eeting, 6 p.m., delicious substitute for
Middleport Municipal Park . cucumbers in salads; it is
All gradua tes welcome.
also good as a low-calorie
SUNDAY
snack, cut in chunks or :sticks
ANNUAL SWARTZ family and served with seasoned salt
reuni o n, Woode Grove, or a lowcalorie dip.
Alfred, basket dinner at noon .
Beef continued high, said
the weekly market report
the
Consumer
from
Education department of
Cornell University's Extension Service. Specials
Nancy Pope, Toni and Tracy, were mostly on chuck cut~,
Grant and Vickie Blanken- but UPI's survey showed
ship, Middleport; Mrs . scarcely any on ground
Lurene
Kennedy
and chuck. The low of 66 cents a
Clarence Edwards, Galena; pound was in Los Angeles, the
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Young high of $1.49, _in Jacksonville,
'l
and Mindy, Middleport; Mrs. Fla .
Lamb
supplies
also
were
Susan Hibbs, Greg and Mary,
Pomeroy ; Mr. and Mrs . J . A. short, the Extension Service \
Young, Camb ridge; Mrs. said, and government reports i
DanielL. Bentz and Amanda, indicate this will continue. '
Bedford , Ind.; Mr. and Mrs. For budget stretchers , it
hard-boiled
Joe Youn g, Pomeroy; Mrs. recommended
Dorothy Young, Middleport; eggs, cheese and some
Mr. and Mrs . Frank Young,
BIRTHUA Y HONORED
Rutland ; Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
The birthday anniversary
Dark, Bobby and Ritchie,
of
Mrs. C. P. Bradbury was
New Haven, W. Va.
celebrated with a backyard
party recently. Homemade

['

·aRIGHT
SIDE
SHAMPOO

39(
HECK'S
REG.
94'

COSMETit .
DEPT.

ALBERTO

vos

HAIR
DRESSING

79(

HECK'S REG. $1.-18

COSMf!lt IIIPT.

"Mont i cello" ... soft com lor table

Cannon blank et in your choice of
eye c a tch ing pr i n ts . Co tor! ul
bindi ng at bol h ends . S1 z
12")(90 "

'4.66
Heck's Reg . $5.99
Clothing Dept.

�'.
. I

I

.I

1

. I

·IZ_- The Gallipolis, 0 ., DaUyTi-ibune, Wednesday, ~ilg. 20, lll'lli .

II - The l;laUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wi:&lt;llll',sday_,Aug. 20, 1975

..•..•,

PLENTY

OPEl lAlLY
10 TO 9

I

. OF FREE

10 TO 9

OF FREE

PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH SUNDAY AUG. 24,

~-

G. E.

MR.C€Mff1L

WAFFLE-BAKER-GRILL

DRIP-0-LATOR

" Twin Size" Revero;i b le G rids- Bakes 2 Big Wo lfle s- Grilh, Toasts, Sandwiches, tool Has adjustable
thermostat contro l and sig nal light. All ch rome P ia~ ·
tic trim . Teflon coated.

$26

HECK'S
REG.

$31.56

Water-Intake opening
screen . Self-cleaning
. metal tonk and exclu"speed-heoting"
element. ,CoHee brew ing funnel with starter
supply of 25 disposablt! filters. Never-mar
fini sh . Shatter-proof
polypropyl ene construction. No moving
parts to wear or replace.

99
G44T

IIWBRY DEPT.

G. E.

HOT LATHER DISPENSER

Us!H any leoding

~tondord

aerosol \ha\o'e creom. 21 oz . o r 6 or . con. Hot,

moi~t ,hov ~ cream fo r ~ rnoo t her . more comlo r!alt&gt; shavl'&gt;

Pre · regulated
shaving ueom tempe rotue 1 plus o heo lr"g I Jill em thot1hu l1 off ou lomoticully

CB.SOOII

Completely waterproof dt&gt;019r1. Brudo.r t for well movn ll ng plv~ omple cord

storage

HECK'S REG.

$15.96

3na

COMP

$2

TEFLON

e

PAN

Use vena ti l~ly lo r fon due roo5ting, fry ing , ttewing. pon _bro il·
ir1g, bak ing , bun warming ondcorn popping Higtl dome tilt-top
lid .
Oeo&lt;rotor colored lids .
Snap-away leg end handle
lmmenible skillet body ond lid.
Tip- toe leu lli o1
sectio n.
down to tilt ~illet fo r boding or drain in g . Pulhbut1on probe
ejector re leaiet temperature &lt;on tr ol.

e

$25 99

HECK'SREG.
$26.96 '

HECKD'S REG. $33.96

99

HECK'S
RIG.

DIAL BATH SOAP .

$33.96

0

IARS$1
(2 PKGS.)

•

4''
HICK'S
REG.

..,

$8.99

SK27AVT

MOIISIWAIIE

WHITE OR GREEN

MAN'S SHAVER

SUNBEAM

LADIES' SHAVER

No nicks, cuts. or scratches with
this Remington shave r for men .
This electric shaver is just right
for a dose shave.

Twin-Heed shaving lu-.ury - o ne head
for leg1, one heod lor underarms. Po p ·
up heed re leci1e bu ll on lor ea sy
channging, quick cleaning . SMoped to
lit femi nine hand }, co nlou red for th e
righ t shoving ang le. "Full-viE"W" l1ght.
Smooth , ql.liet , long- life mo t or.
OnDOH sw itch Removable co1d, gi ft

$14''

( 0 $('.

$1499
HECK'SREG.

HECK"SREG. $17.96

16.88

JEWElRY DIP T.

PORTABLE
MIXER

4Vz QT. SLOW CROCK

Compo&lt;; !! Seoutilul styling! lor , lull
size bea ten give Iauer, better :su h1.
Thumb-tip '(hpeed con tr ol ond oo.c fl
~wile h. Beeler eje&lt; tc r automatically re ·
leases beaters.

COOKER

$1599

sa••

Heck's Reg. 119.99

CLAIROL

$·1599
HECK'S REG. $19.96

IEWB.IIYIIPT.

HECK'S REG. $10.96

Jewell} Dept.

I

SLICE

TOASTER
20- 13

. VW7CO

Stop-A-Matic stops w hen lid is
open . Clean-A-Matic permit s
easy r emoval to clean cutting
unit. Cord storage, bottle
opener .

'5

HECK'S REG.

5

$14.96

JEWs.•r
D9T.

11''

16

10W40 MULTI-G

MOTOR OIL
LIMIT 5 QTS.

54(
QUART

'"

-~ ,;

'" . . . .

'777

Heck's Reg. 511.96

SIT-ON
HAMPER

DOLL
LAMP

ss••

.

$9.97

e

•r.

DECORAnVE

WALL CLOCK
Thi~ beautiful ensemble co11~i~ll of a

I T ' toll Ba ttery Operated Clod: or'ld
Two Mulching 9" toll Sconces with
Four Co n d ie~. Cloc k &amp; Sconces have
exqui~ it e Antique Go ld tone t ini~h . Thi~
lovely ~el is not only useful but will odd
beauty lo ony home. A real valve at
this fonla5 tic price!

STEREO
NEEDLES

RADIO

e

e

. HOIISIWA/IIn.T.

SJ ·I ''

$2!!
HECK'S REG .

$4.88

JEWn•r-, ...,.

2399

5
.

COFFEE MUGS

HOIISIWA.IDPT.

99e

.'$1'' SJOO
HECK'SREG .

1.48

BLECHE
WITE

e Wllln WAU CI.WIB

77c

TRAVEL
BAGS

/.1

e DRESSES
e SUITS

DOOR
MIRROR
e

14" x.5011

HOIISIWA/11
DEPT.

Mfii/SIWAIIE
/JII'T.

RELISH SERVER

'

HANGING STONEWARE PLANTERS

HECK'S
REG.
$6 .66

IHJIISIWAIII . .T.

HECK'S REG .

CHEESE BOARD

$3.29

HOIJSIWA/11 DEPT.

. he cheese boord ho~ o 6" Jl 3" &lt;eromic tile dec:oro ted
i a dain ty florol design, 1e1 in a hardwood boo rd.
Also induded is o stainless ~!eel cheese il ni fe chained
to the boa rd . Comes wi th 4 rubber fee-l for odded
5tob il ity .

$

399

INFANTS

HECK' S RIG. $5.99

DRESSERETTE
• WHITE ONLY

HOIISIWA/11 DEPT.

can move in any direction on smooth rollir1g
jcasters. Also features hand guard, seat, and beads .

Our new. compoct, fo lding Dre\~oe r eHe 'onto in~
sue~ mom -plem•r1g features a~ a full-perimeter,
anti -roll " ~eo::l.lr~ty gucrd ' !ho t keeps baby ~ole,
snug ond se&lt;ure . Also feolured in o neow melded
..-olettroy to re tain spillage with " Hi-Boy" ' chrome

MEASURING
SET
OR
NUT BOWL SERVING SET

HICK' S RIG. $.12.99

NNSIWA/If III'T.

$1644

•o~oEC~;S•I bo•.
REG.

$ 25 •88 NOIISIWA.IDEPT.

&lt;1 , • ..,...;. ,.....,,;"9 cup• horoe ,,...,., u hur'*':'....d ,.,&lt;),, 11,.
hg~ I, lo. \~ urtd 1-. ul u '""" u~~,. and bt-c&gt;&lt;Jty

leur &lt;Yp&gt;

c-.b;neG

$

$429

CHOICE
EACH
HECK'S RIG. $7.44 EACH

AUIOD9T.

DURO
SUPER
GLUE-3

MOIISIWAIII

$4.99

3 cera mic bowl1 des ign fit on o hardwood rock . The
roc k has recesses thol fit the base of bowh 10 they
cannot ~lip out. Stand a lso has a co nvenient carrying
han dle.

HOOLA COUPE Ill

Loads 3 ways: cartridge, bulk or grease filler. Powerful 10,000 pound operating press.~re .

20"
LUG
WRENCH

..,

NOIISIWA/11

HECK 'S REG.
$3.99 EACH

HOIISIWAN •r.

CHilDREN'S

GREASE GUN

40Z.

..,

HICK'S RIG. $2.8.3

HECK'S
REG.

$522

HECK'S
REG.

$822

DEGREASER

'1''

HECK'S REG. $7.04

CHOICE

HECK'S REG. $32.88

At/TDD9T.

IEWil/IY 1/PT,

NOIISIWA/11
IIUT.

THERMOS
Bonu

$]99

4 ceramic mugs ore set conveniently in a har~
wood rock that stands or hangs. The rock it
knock dow n for compcx:t pocking.

PLAYARD

$34.99

HECK'S REG. $4.96

$429

HECK'S
IIG.
$6.99

Rig id. Safe. New _ovoc~o fro~e with c_hrome pletlld
hardware . Revers1ble v111yl pcrj 1n beau t1ful flo ral pal·
tern. Fully braced mo!IOnite floor with center leg for
comp lete support.

HECK'S REG.

$)77

SPICE RACK

Thi$ beau tifully d«:oroted sp ice rodt mdtu o ro ... ely woll
decoro tio n. Twelve a po th«:o ry bon les ond 7-4 blue mea·
dow ~pice labels included.

DELUXE

Converts any AM radio into both on FM and AM recetver .
Illuminated dial with log !icale, 3 made switch ANI , FM , AFC.
Solid State lC Circ uitry . For .a ll cars, trucks, boots.

New design AM pocket radio
featues throttle type tuner . Op·
erates o n 9 volt battery. Ear·
phone induded .

I 1/2 PIIT
VACUUM
lOmE

PINT

WITH

3 PIECE

FIT MOST 5111105

CHOICE

llfH/SIWAlii DIPT.

e

sa''

F. M. CONVERTER

VACUUM
BOTTLE
HECK'S RIG. $4.31

HICK"S RIG. $5.33

$7.99

· WARMING DISH
e.

LUKH liT

$244

S)29

IHJIISIWA.I D9T.

BABY FOOD

JIWs.•r
AMICO
POCKET PORTABLE

..,

•01/SIWUE

SWISS-DOT

$299

·--- ~"?···

---- --

Thi!. rolling pin style holder hat o handy ~hell to .be
uied for whatever de1ired. Hold1 all stonda rd m~ e
poptr towel rolls. Towel roll not included

SJ22

32 QUART

G. E.

$11.96

DIAMOND

efANCY
HICK' S
REG .
$3.39

HECK'S
REG.

DUPONT
ENGINE CLEANER

~==~----~k~u~t:o~D~ept.........

1699

IEWBIYIJ/PT.

~

HKK'SREG.

/EWBIIYDB'T.

Reg. •1.45

•·.

188

PAPER TOWEL HOLDER

THERMOS
WIDEMOU1M

2Tia

HECK' S REG. $19 .96

IIWBIIYDIPT.

e

HECK'S REG. $17.99

Heck's

5

$

$2.61

way-easi lv, q\olickty, effett ively, su~
beom Self-C iear~ m-g Shot of Steam
Iron feature keeps iron cleaner to
stea m beHer, la ~t longer .

99

· HECK'S REG. $19 .96

Dept.

Now enjoy sell-cleaning the Sunbeam

HECK"S
REG.

Heck's Reg. 99'
Houseware_Dept.

Houseware

IRON

ORGANIZER
eVINYL

77~

Heck's Reg. 80'

111-0S

1HI

One Step preporation heats baby' s dinner to serving tern·
perature.
Eliminates funing with hot water-:- no. ex~ra con·
tainers needed .
Suction bQttom helps ovotd hpptng .
Immersible, easy cleaning.
Detachable cord.
Available
in yellow.

3PIKE

GULF

I

D-!l

Popular Avocado finish with contrast ing block end pa~els ,
looks beautiful and dean s easily. Easy to set con trol for destred
shade of bornwess . Snap down crumb troy for easy deoning .
leg hold toaster up from counter. Built-in carrying ha ndles .
Wide toast wells.

DEPr.

IIOIISIWAIIIII9 T.

CASE

49~

J

SELF.CL~IIICi

Portable ProfeuionOI Ha ir
Dryer! For fast hair fashion at
home. Professionally styled
hood raises and lowers eaJily.
lightweight, compoc:t and easi·
ly stored .

VANWYCK
CAN OPENER .

TWO

/INSIWA/11

,..SIWAft. .T.

HECK"S
REG.
$4 .66

PLASTIC
PENCIL

THE

'1'

SUIIUM
"SHOT-OF-STEAM"

STYLE
HAIR DRYER

IEWB.RYIIPT.

SUNBEAM

HOUSIWAIE

O.Corativt compact holder lorb ~ h ond le ne r1. 4 brou
f inished hooil1 for key' o re oddtd leotvre!..

QASSIALER
PRO·

Mirror sw ive ls from regu lar to
magnifying . Adjustable mirror
can be locked into place.

.•,.

•

HECK'S RIG. 99'

$8.44

I

Ci. E.

MAKE-UP
MIRROR
America' s all ·time best seller.

52c

LOTER HOLDER

SUNBEAM

MUNSEY

Hade's Reg .

2 SECTION

HD-51

REMINGTON

EAOH

53c

HECK'S REG.$ 5 2 2

$22''

11-94

~;;~~~~7~6-27

c·

TRASH BAGS

A beautiful combination of ceramic and ha ~d­
wood go-togttther in this salt shaker and pepper
mill set.

I

PM300

10COUNT
. 20GALLON

SALTSHAKER
PEPPER MILL SET

JIWs.•r

JIWBRYDPT.

STIIIO
NOTIBOOK .

DESIGN PAITRYWARE

receptacle on one side.

~.....-PKG. OF2

e
e

e

e

UTI Lin
TABLE
Three-tiered table with a

Solid-state com.lriJdion with il\tegrat•d circuit o~ier./1"
booksheH·ttyM" tpeabrt with pluw-in spder ~;;~~­
eo~ly woH -mounttid, Heavy-duty, chrome-ploted turntable.
long-life Ktpphire needle. Separate volume control' lor each
d ereo cha nl'lt'l. lniiOrll play bath 33 ond -4 5 rpm 'tereo,.
monaural, or~d the new quadraphon ic retord~. -4 5 rpm adap·
tor includltd.

TUBE
. OF ..·
GREASE

PICTURE
FRAMES
• 5" 7''

CLUI
FOG

39c

SIZE
x 10" SIZE
X

~4" X

8"
· CHOICE
e

,, LIGHTS
:'

PLASTIC

CHOICE

37c

5 4 41~CH

EACH
HICK'S lEG. 441 EACH

M,.SIWMII.T.

48"

PICTURES
HECK'S . $ 4 2 2
REG.

$7.99

11011$1WAIII D9T.

BABY BATH
YELLOW
WHITE OR

$2''
HECK'S REG. $4.22

IIDIJSIWA·I-T.

·. .i ..

'

J

t'

'•

•,

.\
,I

I

,

I,

":"

•" ·

I

�'.
. I

I

.I

1

. I

·IZ_- The Gallipolis, 0 ., DaUyTi-ibune, Wednesday, ~ilg. 20, lll'lli .

II - The l;laUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wi:&lt;llll',sday_,Aug. 20, 1975

..•..•,

PLENTY

OPEl lAlLY
10 TO 9

I

. OF FREE

10 TO 9

OF FREE

PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH SUNDAY AUG. 24,

~-

G. E.

MR.C€Mff1L

WAFFLE-BAKER-GRILL

DRIP-0-LATOR

" Twin Size" Revero;i b le G rids- Bakes 2 Big Wo lfle s- Grilh, Toasts, Sandwiches, tool Has adjustable
thermostat contro l and sig nal light. All ch rome P ia~ ·
tic trim . Teflon coated.

$26

HECK'S
REG.

$31.56

Water-Intake opening
screen . Self-cleaning
. metal tonk and exclu"speed-heoting"
element. ,CoHee brew ing funnel with starter
supply of 25 disposablt! filters. Never-mar
fini sh . Shatter-proof
polypropyl ene construction. No moving
parts to wear or replace.

99
G44T

IIWBRY DEPT.

G. E.

HOT LATHER DISPENSER

Us!H any leoding

~tondord

aerosol \ha\o'e creom. 21 oz . o r 6 or . con. Hot,

moi~t ,hov ~ cream fo r ~ rnoo t her . more comlo r!alt&gt; shavl'&gt;

Pre · regulated
shaving ueom tempe rotue 1 plus o heo lr"g I Jill em thot1hu l1 off ou lomoticully

CB.SOOII

Completely waterproof dt&gt;019r1. Brudo.r t for well movn ll ng plv~ omple cord

storage

HECK'S REG.

$15.96

3na

COMP

$2

TEFLON

e

PAN

Use vena ti l~ly lo r fon due roo5ting, fry ing , ttewing. pon _bro il·
ir1g, bak ing , bun warming ondcorn popping Higtl dome tilt-top
lid .
Oeo&lt;rotor colored lids .
Snap-away leg end handle
lmmenible skillet body ond lid.
Tip- toe leu lli o1
sectio n.
down to tilt ~illet fo r boding or drain in g . Pulhbut1on probe
ejector re leaiet temperature &lt;on tr ol.

e

$25 99

HECK'SREG.
$26.96 '

HECKD'S REG. $33.96

99

HECK'S
RIG.

DIAL BATH SOAP .

$33.96

0

IARS$1
(2 PKGS.)

•

4''
HICK'S
REG.

..,

$8.99

SK27AVT

MOIISIWAIIE

WHITE OR GREEN

MAN'S SHAVER

SUNBEAM

LADIES' SHAVER

No nicks, cuts. or scratches with
this Remington shave r for men .
This electric shaver is just right
for a dose shave.

Twin-Heed shaving lu-.ury - o ne head
for leg1, one heod lor underarms. Po p ·
up heed re leci1e bu ll on lor ea sy
channging, quick cleaning . SMoped to
lit femi nine hand }, co nlou red for th e
righ t shoving ang le. "Full-viE"W" l1ght.
Smooth , ql.liet , long- life mo t or.
OnDOH sw itch Removable co1d, gi ft

$14''

( 0 $('.

$1499
HECK'SREG.

HECK"SREG. $17.96

16.88

JEWElRY DIP T.

PORTABLE
MIXER

4Vz QT. SLOW CROCK

Compo&lt;; !! Seoutilul styling! lor , lull
size bea ten give Iauer, better :su h1.
Thumb-tip '(hpeed con tr ol ond oo.c fl
~wile h. Beeler eje&lt; tc r automatically re ·
leases beaters.

COOKER

$1599

sa••

Heck's Reg. 119.99

CLAIROL

$·1599
HECK'S REG. $19.96

IEWB.IIYIIPT.

HECK'S REG. $10.96

Jewell} Dept.

I

SLICE

TOASTER
20- 13

. VW7CO

Stop-A-Matic stops w hen lid is
open . Clean-A-Matic permit s
easy r emoval to clean cutting
unit. Cord storage, bottle
opener .

'5

HECK'S REG.

5

$14.96

JEWs.•r
D9T.

11''

16

10W40 MULTI-G

MOTOR OIL
LIMIT 5 QTS.

54(
QUART

'"

-~ ,;

'" . . . .

'777

Heck's Reg. 511.96

SIT-ON
HAMPER

DOLL
LAMP

ss••

.

$9.97

e

•r.

DECORAnVE

WALL CLOCK
Thi~ beautiful ensemble co11~i~ll of a

I T ' toll Ba ttery Operated Clod: or'ld
Two Mulching 9" toll Sconces with
Four Co n d ie~. Cloc k &amp; Sconces have
exqui~ it e Antique Go ld tone t ini~h . Thi~
lovely ~el is not only useful but will odd
beauty lo ony home. A real valve at
this fonla5 tic price!

STEREO
NEEDLES

RADIO

e

e

. HOIISIWA/IIn.T.

SJ ·I ''

$2!!
HECK'S REG .

$4.88

JEWn•r-, ...,.

2399

5
.

COFFEE MUGS

HOIISIWA.IDPT.

99e

.'$1'' SJOO
HECK'SREG .

1.48

BLECHE
WITE

e Wllln WAU CI.WIB

77c

TRAVEL
BAGS

/.1

e DRESSES
e SUITS

DOOR
MIRROR
e

14" x.5011

HOIISIWA/11
DEPT.

Mfii/SIWAIIE
/JII'T.

RELISH SERVER

'

HANGING STONEWARE PLANTERS

HECK'S
REG.
$6 .66

IHJIISIWAIII . .T.

HECK'S REG .

CHEESE BOARD

$3.29

HOIJSIWA/11 DEPT.

. he cheese boord ho~ o 6" Jl 3" &lt;eromic tile dec:oro ted
i a dain ty florol design, 1e1 in a hardwood boo rd.
Also induded is o stainless ~!eel cheese il ni fe chained
to the boa rd . Comes wi th 4 rubber fee-l for odded
5tob il ity .

$

399

INFANTS

HECK' S RIG. $5.99

DRESSERETTE
• WHITE ONLY

HOIISIWA/11 DEPT.

can move in any direction on smooth rollir1g
jcasters. Also features hand guard, seat, and beads .

Our new. compoct, fo lding Dre\~oe r eHe 'onto in~
sue~ mom -plem•r1g features a~ a full-perimeter,
anti -roll " ~eo::l.lr~ty gucrd ' !ho t keeps baby ~ole,
snug ond se&lt;ure . Also feolured in o neow melded
..-olettroy to re tain spillage with " Hi-Boy" ' chrome

MEASURING
SET
OR
NUT BOWL SERVING SET

HICK' S RIG. $.12.99

NNSIWA/If III'T.

$1644

•o~oEC~;S•I bo•.
REG.

$ 25 •88 NOIISIWA.IDEPT.

&lt;1 , • ..,...;. ,.....,,;"9 cup• horoe ,,...,., u hur'*':'....d ,.,&lt;),, 11,.
hg~ I, lo. \~ urtd 1-. ul u '""" u~~,. and bt-c&gt;&lt;Jty

leur &lt;Yp&gt;

c-.b;neG

$

$429

CHOICE
EACH
HECK'S RIG. $7.44 EACH

AUIOD9T.

DURO
SUPER
GLUE-3

MOIISIWAIII

$4.99

3 cera mic bowl1 des ign fit on o hardwood rock . The
roc k has recesses thol fit the base of bowh 10 they
cannot ~lip out. Stand a lso has a co nvenient carrying
han dle.

HOOLA COUPE Ill

Loads 3 ways: cartridge, bulk or grease filler. Powerful 10,000 pound operating press.~re .

20"
LUG
WRENCH

..,

NOIISIWA/11

HECK 'S REG.
$3.99 EACH

HOIISIWAN •r.

CHilDREN'S

GREASE GUN

40Z.

..,

HICK'S RIG. $2.8.3

HECK'S
REG.

$522

HECK'S
REG.

$822

DEGREASER

'1''

HECK'S REG. $7.04

CHOICE

HECK'S REG. $32.88

At/TDD9T.

IEWil/IY 1/PT,

NOIISIWA/11
IIUT.

THERMOS
Bonu

$]99

4 ceramic mugs ore set conveniently in a har~
wood rock that stands or hangs. The rock it
knock dow n for compcx:t pocking.

PLAYARD

$34.99

HECK'S REG. $4.96

$429

HECK'S
IIG.
$6.99

Rig id. Safe. New _ovoc~o fro~e with c_hrome pletlld
hardware . Revers1ble v111yl pcrj 1n beau t1ful flo ral pal·
tern. Fully braced mo!IOnite floor with center leg for
comp lete support.

HECK'S REG.

$)77

SPICE RACK

Thi$ beau tifully d«:oroted sp ice rodt mdtu o ro ... ely woll
decoro tio n. Twelve a po th«:o ry bon les ond 7-4 blue mea·
dow ~pice labels included.

DELUXE

Converts any AM radio into both on FM and AM recetver .
Illuminated dial with log !icale, 3 made switch ANI , FM , AFC.
Solid State lC Circ uitry . For .a ll cars, trucks, boots.

New design AM pocket radio
featues throttle type tuner . Op·
erates o n 9 volt battery. Ear·
phone induded .

I 1/2 PIIT
VACUUM
lOmE

PINT

WITH

3 PIECE

FIT MOST 5111105

CHOICE

llfH/SIWAlii DIPT.

e

sa''

F. M. CONVERTER

VACUUM
BOTTLE
HECK'S RIG. $4.31

HICK"S RIG. $5.33

$7.99

· WARMING DISH
e.

LUKH liT

$244

S)29

IHJIISIWA.I D9T.

BABY FOOD

JIWs.•r
AMICO
POCKET PORTABLE

..,

•01/SIWUE

SWISS-DOT

$299

·--- ~"?···

---- --

Thi!. rolling pin style holder hat o handy ~hell to .be
uied for whatever de1ired. Hold1 all stonda rd m~ e
poptr towel rolls. Towel roll not included

SJ22

32 QUART

G. E.

$11.96

DIAMOND

efANCY
HICK' S
REG .
$3.39

HECK'S
REG.

DUPONT
ENGINE CLEANER

~==~----~k~u~t:o~D~ept.........

1699

IEWBIYIJ/PT.

~

HKK'SREG.

/EWBIIYDB'T.

Reg. •1.45

•·.

188

PAPER TOWEL HOLDER

THERMOS
WIDEMOU1M

2Tia

HECK' S REG. $19 .96

IIWBIIYDIPT.

e

HECK'S REG. $17.99

Heck's

5

$

$2.61

way-easi lv, q\olickty, effett ively, su~
beom Self-C iear~ m-g Shot of Steam
Iron feature keeps iron cleaner to
stea m beHer, la ~t longer .

99

· HECK'S REG. $19 .96

Dept.

Now enjoy sell-cleaning the Sunbeam

HECK"S
REG.

Heck's Reg. 99'
Houseware_Dept.

Houseware

IRON

ORGANIZER
eVINYL

77~

Heck's Reg. 80'

111-0S

1HI

One Step preporation heats baby' s dinner to serving tern·
perature.
Eliminates funing with hot water-:- no. ex~ra con·
tainers needed .
Suction bQttom helps ovotd hpptng .
Immersible, easy cleaning.
Detachable cord.
Available
in yellow.

3PIKE

GULF

I

D-!l

Popular Avocado finish with contrast ing block end pa~els ,
looks beautiful and dean s easily. Easy to set con trol for destred
shade of bornwess . Snap down crumb troy for easy deoning .
leg hold toaster up from counter. Built-in carrying ha ndles .
Wide toast wells.

DEPr.

IIOIISIWAIIIII9 T.

CASE

49~

J

SELF.CL~IIICi

Portable ProfeuionOI Ha ir
Dryer! For fast hair fashion at
home. Professionally styled
hood raises and lowers eaJily.
lightweight, compoc:t and easi·
ly stored .

VANWYCK
CAN OPENER .

TWO

/INSIWA/11

,..SIWAft. .T.

HECK"S
REG.
$4 .66

PLASTIC
PENCIL

THE

'1'

SUIIUM
"SHOT-OF-STEAM"

STYLE
HAIR DRYER

IEWB.RYIIPT.

SUNBEAM

HOUSIWAIE

O.Corativt compact holder lorb ~ h ond le ne r1. 4 brou
f inished hooil1 for key' o re oddtd leotvre!..

QASSIALER
PRO·

Mirror sw ive ls from regu lar to
magnifying . Adjustable mirror
can be locked into place.

.•,.

•

HECK'S RIG. 99'

$8.44

I

Ci. E.

MAKE-UP
MIRROR
America' s all ·time best seller.

52c

LOTER HOLDER

SUNBEAM

MUNSEY

Hade's Reg .

2 SECTION

HD-51

REMINGTON

EAOH

53c

HECK'S REG.$ 5 2 2

$22''

11-94

~;;~~~~7~6-27

c·

TRASH BAGS

A beautiful combination of ceramic and ha ~d­
wood go-togttther in this salt shaker and pepper
mill set.

I

PM300

10COUNT
. 20GALLON

SALTSHAKER
PEPPER MILL SET

JIWs.•r

JIWBRYDPT.

STIIIO
NOTIBOOK .

DESIGN PAITRYWARE

receptacle on one side.

~.....-PKG. OF2

e
e

e

e

UTI Lin
TABLE
Three-tiered table with a

Solid-state com.lriJdion with il\tegrat•d circuit o~ier./1"
booksheH·ttyM" tpeabrt with pluw-in spder ~;;~~­
eo~ly woH -mounttid, Heavy-duty, chrome-ploted turntable.
long-life Ktpphire needle. Separate volume control' lor each
d ereo cha nl'lt'l. lniiOrll play bath 33 ond -4 5 rpm 'tereo,.
monaural, or~d the new quadraphon ic retord~. -4 5 rpm adap·
tor includltd.

TUBE
. OF ..·
GREASE

PICTURE
FRAMES
• 5" 7''

CLUI
FOG

39c

SIZE
x 10" SIZE
X

~4" X

8"
· CHOICE
e

,, LIGHTS
:'

PLASTIC

CHOICE

37c

5 4 41~CH

EACH
HICK'S lEG. 441 EACH

M,.SIWMII.T.

48"

PICTURES
HECK'S . $ 4 2 2
REG.

$7.99

11011$1WAIII D9T.

BABY BATH
YELLOW
WHITE OR

$2''
HECK'S REG. $4.22

IIDIJSIWA·I-T.

·. .i ..

'

J

t'

'•

•,

.\
,I

I

,

I,

":"

•" ·

I

�~

.

~

.

.

~

.

-..:

...

.

•

' '

,,

'-

~

.

...

.

"

'•

•

t

•

'

'

'

'

I ,

'

'

'

,'

1

.

.

'

.

'

', 'I

.

13 - The DaUy lientJnel, Mtarueport:t'omeroy, U., Wednesdiiy, Aug. 20, 1975

,_ ' , .

.

RIGEL .,SPECIAL TRIM"
SMOKED ····

,.

.

'

OPEl DAlLY
10 TO 9

PARK I

PRICES IN EFFECT .NOW THROUGH SUNDAY AUG. 24,

~ ...

HECK'S REG.
$32.88

'*'" ... _
-=-.......

.... .. ..,.,.,_
)ottupto._.
_
,...._
- ....
lloo '"""

HERE

1116

SPOIITS DlPT.

' 1 5 99

hald.-two ...

of hMf " . ..... for 10
to 12
lrrwo

IS

HECK'S
REG. •18.99

VINYL

~To • r• lc ~\ ~ tco • l boll bt&gt;miny\. Prf'c o\ian.
heavy d&lt;&gt; ly &lt;JC O t~. Doc &lt;..0~ 1 body ana lO w l. Pho1

woth ba ke d on fini1h. S to o nlc 1~ '.! eel bo.l
orrn w1 th hard chr omed ro ller gUide . Se ll contouled do;c drag ly'&gt;lem S(· le&lt;r,.,.e on h-H'''er;e.
Alvmirwmalloy handle. fol d., lor cam po( ! 11oroge

photiHH (

Con\ier l ~ t o n ght or left ha nd r etroeve rn 1e&lt;:ond 1

~ l ash

110 LB.

SPOITS DEPT.

HECK'S REG. '13.99
SPORTS DEPT.
JOHNSON

HECK'S REG. $2 .99

BARBELL SET

Mo~!

HECK'S
REG. '26.99

GOAL &amp; NET

•4••

HECK'S REG.

SHOWER
CLOGS

PLUMR

00

sac

HECK'S REG. $2.99

2

il),

. &lt;;,:·';.:;,'/'
. :;f: _itj_ittll"''~{;'t'

OR

WHITE

OFFICIAL SIZE

BASEBALL
$
HICK'S

$':.~;

HECK'S
· W

REG. '18.99

FLOUR

RED

FRESH
GREEN

STOVE

Jll

SPOIITS
DB'T.

CAULKING
COMPOUND
r··

-.

39c

1l:" X 18" •

20c

STEEL

1"x18"

]Oc

LAWN
RAKE

• • • • • • •
HECK'S REG. 32'

HECK~s

i1G: 48

f

2"x18"•••••••••

HECK'S REG. 97'

Eleclros lolicolly applied ename l fin ish, baked on
f~r du rabil ity and beauty. Featu re s stro ng p lastic
hm ges, reinforced with integro lly mo lded metal
pos ts. Strip proof metal n'-!ls, o ...oi lob le in whi te
and a~~ort ed colors.

Ft.

4

$277

50t.

HECK'S REG. TO $5.44

HAHWA/11 DIPT.

NARDWA/11 DIPT.

$144
HECK'S REG.
$1.99

HECK'S REG. 59'

TOILET SEATS

':

ALL

RAID AND
BLACK FLAG
INSECTICIDES

HARDWARE DB'T.

SCREW
DRIVERS
CHOICE

4 $1·

00

HICK'S REG.
31' EACH

HARDWARE DB'T.

STOW
RACK
10 ONLY
HECK'S

HECK'S REG. PRICE

REG. '17.99

YELLO-W
ONIONS

.

FRESH GREEN

ORANGE
DRINK
32 oz.

CABBAGE

FAMILY PACK

.

.

•..

.
n

• '•

l

~

LB.

()

R

IGA

CRISP
GREEN

.

26 oz.

CELERY

''

BOX

STALK

"'

•

'• . '

~

•,,

. I

'.'

'

''

'f • \
j

~
. ------------

MORTON T.V. DINNERS
BEEF
SALISBURY
EA.
STEAK

SALT

,
.

15lh oz.

LB. SALMON can
WAGNER

23~

.$ 99

250Jo OFF

ONLY

-

LIMIT 4 BOXES

;·r

Enriched Rour
,

•

NAIIDWAIIE DIPT.

IIAHWUIII97.

BAG

'

CHUM

CENTURY

10 ONLY

1

...-... . ..... ...

~

Whitney

•

HARDWARE DEPT.

5LB.

.. . - -. . -

GRAPES

Cucumbers

&lt;Gol~
.
\ MEDAL :'

.

SPORTS

FOAM - BY- THE- FOOT

HEADS

EXTRA FANCY

"t"'''_tf.i&gt;··

HECK 'S REG. $21.88

FOI

LB.aae

HECK'S REG. '1.66

HAMMOCK

ASSORTED

A lb. STICKS

COLEMAN 2-BURND

HECK'S

Pf&lt;G. OF

GOLD MEDAL

$1599

LIQUID
DRAIN OPENER

:i' I ;
.,;

1

SPORTS DEPT.

LIQUID , • -,

HEAD LETTUCE

_.,........ ·

~

SPORTS DEPT.
QUART

..

.i:" .

28 QUART

(RODS &amp; REELS fi!OT INCLUDED)

PLASTIC

I'

10.99

With Molded Handle.

SPORTSDB'T.

$

·,;~·

·BUTTER

FOAM COOLER

HECK'S REG. PRICE

HECK'S REG. '6.99

·-

LAND OF LAKE

.s799

-ALLFISHING TACKLE
1
33 /l o OFF

FRESH SOLID

. .~/t.,:·::_;l:l~:!/~~;;,.

gea·n . l1letime Service Gvorantee.

BASKETBALL

~ .

LB.

CENTURY
SPIN CAST
REEL

popular closed- foce fishing reel eve r model Select-Dial drag ... Dual on t i - reve r ~e. flash -h a rdened

SPORTS
DEPT.

9

GROUND
BEEF

Asst. Colors and Sizes

199

$

Full length rai ncoa t
with
pocke ts
and full fmnl z;pper.
Co lor: Smoke.

FRESH LEAN

ATHLETIC SHOES

RAINCOAT

"Sna,ro tf' spool " onodo&lt;cd olvmonurn.

. ,,411!11!1$
.......
.
.'

LB.

~

Snoooth.

SPORTS DEPT.

&lt;11220

COACH COLORED CONVERSE

ZEBCO

•1 5 66

.'

SPORTS DEPT.

SPINNING REEL

.

DOUBLE MANTLE

w...,,...;.._....

SEASON

""•'

CRY.O.VAC
WRAP..

LE QUANTITIES L'AST

COLEMAN LANTERN

FOOTBALL

I

.PICNIC HAMS·

FREE

'

I

'
'

'

'\
I

'

'

'

. ,

I

' '

\

.,

'

,,

·

�~

.

~

.

.

~

.

-..:

...

.

•

' '

,,

'-

~

.

...

.

"

'•

•

t

•

'

'

'

'

I ,

'

'

'

,'

1

.

.

'

.

'

', 'I

.

13 - The DaUy lientJnel, Mtarueport:t'omeroy, U., Wednesdiiy, Aug. 20, 1975

,_ ' , .

.

RIGEL .,SPECIAL TRIM"
SMOKED ····

,.

.

'

OPEl DAlLY
10 TO 9

PARK I

PRICES IN EFFECT .NOW THROUGH SUNDAY AUG. 24,

~ ...

HECK'S REG.
$32.88

'*'" ... _
-=-.......

.... .. ..,.,.,_
)ottupto._.
_
,...._
- ....
lloo '"""

HERE

1116

SPOIITS DlPT.

' 1 5 99

hald.-two ...

of hMf " . ..... for 10
to 12
lrrwo

IS

HECK'S
REG. •18.99

VINYL

~To • r• lc ~\ ~ tco • l boll bt&gt;miny\. Prf'c o\ian.
heavy d&lt;&gt; ly &lt;JC O t~. Doc &lt;..0~ 1 body ana lO w l. Pho1

woth ba ke d on fini1h. S to o nlc 1~ '.! eel bo.l
orrn w1 th hard chr omed ro ller gUide . Se ll contouled do;c drag ly'&gt;lem S(· le&lt;r,.,.e on h-H'''er;e.
Alvmirwmalloy handle. fol d., lor cam po( ! 11oroge

photiHH (

Con\ier l ~ t o n ght or left ha nd r etroeve rn 1e&lt;:ond 1

~ l ash

110 LB.

SPOITS DEPT.

HECK'S REG. '13.99
SPORTS DEPT.
JOHNSON

HECK'S REG. $2 .99

BARBELL SET

Mo~!

HECK'S
REG. '26.99

GOAL &amp; NET

•4••

HECK'S REG.

SHOWER
CLOGS

PLUMR

00

sac

HECK'S REG. $2.99

2

il),

. &lt;;,:·';.:;,'/'
. :;f: _itj_ittll"''~{;'t'

OR

WHITE

OFFICIAL SIZE

BASEBALL
$
HICK'S

$':.~;

HECK'S
· W

REG. '18.99

FLOUR

RED

FRESH
GREEN

STOVE

Jll

SPOIITS
DB'T.

CAULKING
COMPOUND
r··

-.

39c

1l:" X 18" •

20c

STEEL

1"x18"

]Oc

LAWN
RAKE

• • • • • • •
HECK'S REG. 32'

HECK~s

i1G: 48

f

2"x18"•••••••••

HECK'S REG. 97'

Eleclros lolicolly applied ename l fin ish, baked on
f~r du rabil ity and beauty. Featu re s stro ng p lastic
hm ges, reinforced with integro lly mo lded metal
pos ts. Strip proof metal n'-!ls, o ...oi lob le in whi te
and a~~ort ed colors.

Ft.

4

$277

50t.

HECK'S REG. TO $5.44

HAHWA/11 DIPT.

NARDWA/11 DIPT.

$144
HECK'S REG.
$1.99

HECK'S REG. 59'

TOILET SEATS

':

ALL

RAID AND
BLACK FLAG
INSECTICIDES

HARDWARE DB'T.

SCREW
DRIVERS
CHOICE

4 $1·

00

HICK'S REG.
31' EACH

HARDWARE DB'T.

STOW
RACK
10 ONLY
HECK'S

HECK'S REG. PRICE

REG. '17.99

YELLO-W
ONIONS

.

FRESH GREEN

ORANGE
DRINK
32 oz.

CABBAGE

FAMILY PACK

.

.

•..

.
n

• '•

l

~

LB.

()

R

IGA

CRISP
GREEN

.

26 oz.

CELERY

''

BOX

STALK

"'

•

'• . '

~

•,,

. I

'.'

'

''

'f • \
j

~
. ------------

MORTON T.V. DINNERS
BEEF
SALISBURY
EA.
STEAK

SALT

,
.

15lh oz.

LB. SALMON can
WAGNER

23~

.$ 99

250Jo OFF

ONLY

-

LIMIT 4 BOXES

;·r

Enriched Rour
,

•

NAIIDWAIIE DIPT.

IIAHWUIII97.

BAG

'

CHUM

CENTURY

10 ONLY

1

...-... . ..... ...

~

Whitney

•

HARDWARE DEPT.

5LB.

.. . - -. . -

GRAPES

Cucumbers

&lt;Gol~
.
\ MEDAL :'

.

SPORTS

FOAM - BY- THE- FOOT

HEADS

EXTRA FANCY

"t"'''_tf.i&gt;··

HECK 'S REG. $21.88

FOI

LB.aae

HECK'S REG. '1.66

HAMMOCK

ASSORTED

A lb. STICKS

COLEMAN 2-BURND

HECK'S

Pf&lt;G. OF

GOLD MEDAL

$1599

LIQUID
DRAIN OPENER

:i' I ;
.,;

1

SPORTS DEPT.

LIQUID , • -,

HEAD LETTUCE

_.,........ ·

~

SPORTS DEPT.
QUART

..

.i:" .

28 QUART

(RODS &amp; REELS fi!OT INCLUDED)

PLASTIC

I'

10.99

With Molded Handle.

SPORTSDB'T.

$

·,;~·

·BUTTER

FOAM COOLER

HECK'S REG. PRICE

HECK'S REG. '6.99

·-

LAND OF LAKE

.s799

-ALLFISHING TACKLE
1
33 /l o OFF

FRESH SOLID

. .~/t.,:·::_;l:l~:!/~~;;,.

gea·n . l1letime Service Gvorantee.

BASKETBALL

~ .

LB.

CENTURY
SPIN CAST
REEL

popular closed- foce fishing reel eve r model Select-Dial drag ... Dual on t i - reve r ~e. flash -h a rdened

SPORTS
DEPT.

9

GROUND
BEEF

Asst. Colors and Sizes

199

$

Full length rai ncoa t
with
pocke ts
and full fmnl z;pper.
Co lor: Smoke.

FRESH LEAN

ATHLETIC SHOES

RAINCOAT

"Sna,ro tf' spool " onodo&lt;cd olvmonurn.

. ,,411!11!1$
.......
.
.'

LB.

~

Snoooth.

SPORTS DEPT.

&lt;11220

COACH COLORED CONVERSE

ZEBCO

•1 5 66

.'

SPORTS DEPT.

SPINNING REEL

.

DOUBLE MANTLE

w...,,...;.._....

SEASON

""•'

CRY.O.VAC
WRAP..

LE QUANTITIES L'AST

COLEMAN LANTERN

FOOTBALL

I

.PICNIC HAMS·

FREE

'

I

'
'

'

'\
I

'

'

'

. ,

I

' '

\

.,

'

,,

·

�I

:I

'

....
.

""'•·
'

:

h

.

\
~a&amp; ...

.........

J ..__ •• ~ . ..... . ,

••n ............ tJVll-... vuJt:l

uy, v .,

.,.

.... '
~

•••
'

.....
.-.
...
....
~

~ "'

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

. ..

wron~ soay ,

.

J\llg .lU,

HONG KONG (UP!) - The
Sino-Soviet struggle for influ·
ence in Indochina is intersifying.
Almost every report from
visitors to the region gives
this indication. So does
Peking's propaganda war
with Moscow.
Most of these reports also
indicate that China seems to
be trailing the Soviet Union in
the struggle where it really
counts, in both vletnams.
This is cause for great
concern to Chinese leaders.
It was a subject very much
on the mind of Teng Hsiaoping, the man occupying the
main power seat in Peking at
the moment, when he spoke
last week to visiting cam.
bodian leaders.
The successes of Com·
munist-backed forces in
South Vietnam, Cambo-

opening delayed
.•

.

•
......

... .

Clarence
Thompso n,
Superintendent
of
th e
Buckeye Hills Career Center
for Gallia, Jackson and
Vinton Counties, announced
today the school's opening
has been delayed at least one
week.
Classes in
the new
vocational school were slated
to begin Tuesday, Aug . 26, but
have been postponed until
Tuesday, Sept. 2 to permit the
State Department of Health's
final inspection of the
school's sewer and water

systems.
State inspectors will be at
the school Monday , Aug. 27,
but school officials felt it was
be s t not to open next
Tuesday . Thompson said all
vocalional sludenLs who have
registered are to remain at
home . They will not report to
their parent schools until the
morning of Sept. 2.
Supt. Thomspon said over
460 students have enrolled for
first year classes at the
vocational school.

' .
..
.• .• Ohio school plans to

.....

reduce ·class boredom

•

'

••
,.

••

'·•

.•

.

•'.
'•
•,

'

~

•'•
•'

•••
.'~

;,."'

'

••

. •'

•'

•
'
;.

•.
'
.
'.
'·
.~.
.~.

'•I'

•
&lt;pi

•
'•

-·'·.•

"' 4: '

•,

..

:·

'•

;

•"
•
•

.
.,,,.
•~

I

';
•
"

.
••

'

'I

!'

.;

••..
'·~

.••'
.I

,.•
••' I

•''r~ t

.,.,
e'

\•
••
'

;

l

'

dia and Laos wer&amp; a
cause for · rej oicin g , he

said. But other developments
taking place now are a cause
for concern and wariness .
He left no doubt that he was
talking about Soviet encroachment in the region .
Teng did not mention Viet·
nam specifically and did not
spell out what was so wor·
risome to China. But the
Gambodiaris, and other Indochina leaders, got the point,
which he has been more blunt
about in some of his private
talks.
Teng has indicated in
conversations with a number
of visitors that China is
particularly concerned about
the possibility of Soviet
military forces moving into
places American troops have
left.
The most likely place for

By SANDI LATIMER
kids. This way it takes away
NEW
PHILADELPHIA, some of the boredom."
Ohio (UP!) - Going back to
" You 've got to teach acschool may prove excitiog for cording to the children's body
the 263 students in grades as well as the mind ." he said.
nine
through
12
at "You've got to catch them
.. Tuscarawas Central Catholic when they're alert. You can't
High School this fall.
make them a slave to the
Beginning the. first day of system."
classes - Sept. 3 - class
Kunkler says he foresees no
periods will be rotated on a problems, but admits the
· rotation isn't really designed
six-&lt;lay basis.
The idea is to keep the for a large school.
classes and teachers from
"The big reason why some
getting bored, and also to ·schools don't go in for it is
provide a better education. that you have to have fullAccording to Principal time teachers - no part-time
Father David Kunkler, the teachers who come in at
rotation will work this way: different times," he said.
Monday of the first week "We have 25 people on our
classes will nm periods one faculty and have them all full
through eight.
time.''
Tuesday classes will be
He also sees a better
periods eight, one through ed ucati on system coming
seven.
from this plan .
Wednesday classes will be
" When
the
schedule
period.s seven, . eight, one rotates, we can offer more
courses by opening up more
through six.
Thursday classes will be periods," he said. "That way
periods six, seven, eight, one the children get a better
through five.
education, they have more to
Friday classes will be choose from , and courses are
periods five, six, seven, eight, geared more to their
one through four.
potential than to ours."
Monday of the second week
classes will run periods four .
five, six, seven, eight, one
through three.
Tuesday of the second week
will recycle to the top one
through eight.
·
·The class rotation was
Kunkler's idea, after he
experienced a similar set-up
while teaching at Cardinal
Hayes High School in South
Bronx a couple of years ago.
"! taught one' year in New
York .and they had it," he
WASHINGTON (UP!) said. " I also learned about it Aluminum wiring poses a
at Columbia, and it was new greater fire threat in mobile
then. It was my idea to do it . homes than in conventional
here."
housing, according to ihe
" There will be some . Consumer Product Safety
variety to education so the Commiasion.
Declaring the wire an
kids don't have the last period
of the day all the time," he unreasonable risk, the
said. "The worst periods are corrunlssion said it planned a
the last of the day and the one heating on possible repair or
I replacement
for
the
rlght.before lunch ."
· ,Reaction to the new estimated 3 million con·
~chedule· is varied, . said
ventional homes equipped
Kunkler, st;u'ting his third with aluminum wiring.
year at the S!!hool.
In a letter· to the Depart"The kids think they'll get ment of Housing and Urban
lost," he said. "It took the Development, which is
stu&lt;lenls in New York about drawing up safety rules for
two days to get used to it and m&amp;blle homes, the com·
the teachers about one mission said "the hazard
week."
rresented by the use of
Kunkler . said the 25 aluminum wire in mobUe.
,teachers here voted for it.
homes is greater than in
"They all' ·wanied It,'.' he buildings of· conventional
Bald. ''They: wanted . to d!r construction."
their tieltt.and didn't want !o ' Cm'nmissioner Lawrence
f~ the l&amp;lllt kids the last Kushner told a . briefing
period ol the day.
,
· Monday that HUD proposed
· "They 8el as bore&lt;! as the construction and safety rules

A}

•

Wllffiurn

•
Wire
poses·

problems

t

.
,

this to occur is in South
Vietnam, where the United
States left many bases that
could easily be utilized by the
Soviet Union.
It is widely believed in
diplomatic circles - but
never conrirmed - Ulat the
Soviet Union already has
made formal moves to
establi~ naval base faciliti es
in South Vietnam.
·
One. of the places men·
lioned most frequently is
Gam Ranh Bay, once a

sprawling logistics base for
U.S. Forces in central South
Vietnam .
Such plans as this is what
Teng was talking about when
he said it was necessary to
"frustrate all schemes of
superpower aggression and
expansion'' in the region.
Non..alignment is the key to
maintaining
independence
and sovereignty . This is the
principle China is preaching
to forestall Soviet military
advances in the region .

I .

'-···~ .....41

:'-

~

•t· ' ' ' ·

..

For $30,000 and an ancient jalopy,
you could join race around the world
t 'LEVI•:LAND ( UPI 1- A C leveland ~roup is aUempting to stage a
n•pla .v of the l!lOK Paris to New York automobile race, subject of the
nwvit" "The (ireat l{ace," in honor of the nation's bicentennial .
.Ia mrs .J ..Jaworski, :14, Berea, Ohio, head of Around the World Auto
ltan. said response to the plan has been overwbemling and the State
"''Jtat·tment is handling negotiations with the governments which
would he involved.
Fifteen pre-World War I autos would leave Paris May 28, 1976 and
race through the capitals of Europe, then through Russia and Siberia.
Tht• cars would be flown to Japan, Hawaii and the continental U. S.
They wnuld rac e through major U. S. cities, winding up in New York

.J ul.v 2:-i.
Points would he awarded under the sports car rally system to
dl'lermine the winner.
The 22.1100-mile race would cost each entrant about S30,000,
.Jaworski estimated . Cleveland Industrial Tool Co.'s board chairman,
.JoseJth Locey .Jr., said he would enter a 1912 Alco, one of his collection
, or :;u a nli&lt;JUe cars, and drive it with Jaworski.

Parties fussing over spending
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
state budget for fiscal197&amp;-77
is less than two months old,
but already the Republican
administration of Gov. James
A. Rhodes and majority
Democrats on the state
Controlli ng Board are
quarreling over major
allocations.
The board, dominated by
Democratic state legislators,
was told Monday by
spokesmen for the Rhodes
administration that the
budget failed to provide for
increased welfare and nur·
sing home payments as well
as a state employe pay range

reclassificalion.
The latter omission, said
Richard L. Krabach, director
of the Department of Ad·
ministrative Services, could
result in a lack of legal
authority for the state · to
grant pay raises to half its
80,000 employes next Janua·
ry.
Democratic board members retorted that they were
"sick and tired" of hearing
the administration call for
budget cuts and then ask the
Controlling Board for additional money .
When the board meeting
ended, the Democrats had :
- Delayed until next week a
decision on a request by the

Department of
Public
Welfare for an extra $130
million, mainly for nursing
home payments and aid to
families with dependent
children.
- Put off until next week
action on a request of $903,934
from the Department of Ad·
ministrative Services for a
consulting firm to revamp
state employe pay grades in
preparation for wage hikes
next January.
Raymond F. McKenna,
public welfare director, told
the board an $11.28 increase
in ADC payments for each
recipient would cost the state
$75.8 million this year, and
reimbursement for nursing

home care would require an
extra $30 million .
McKenna said if the money
were not approved by the
Controlling Board, the
department would be forced
to trim all its programs,
including public asssistance,
by 3 per cent, to maintain the
nursing home program.
The Controlling Board
asked for more time to study
the request and get additional
information .
Krabach said that while the
General Assembly ap·
propriated $56 million last
June for state employe pay
increases, it failed to provide
the $900,000 needed to im·
plement the recorrunenda·
tions of a commission
assigned to overhllul the civil
service pay classifications.
Krabach said that unless
the classifications are
chl!llged, half the 80,000 state
Gainer, Dr. R. R. Pickens ; · employes will not legally be
Randy Johnson, Vinton able to receive a wage boost
County. Bank, Wilkesville; when due next Jan . 4.
Noah Hysell , Pomeroy
Krabach warned that each
National Bank ; Paula Hysell, week of delay by the ControllSwisher-Lohse
Pharmacy; ing Board would make the job
Dave Roush, Racine Food tougher, and said " 80,000
Markel: Herbie Ervin, state employes would be up in
French City Meat; Jim arms next January" if the
Bable, Larry Laudermilt; reclassification is not comDavid Thornton, Farmers pleted and the pay raises
Bank and Savings Co.; Bob granted.
Avis, Modern Supply; James
·The board voted 4-2 to table
Smith , Jones Boys; Julie Krabach's request until anJohnson, Veterans Merriorial
Hospital ; Grant Johnson,
Diamond Stone Co.; Don
Schaffer, Racine Home·
National Bank; Greg Davis,
John Hancock Insurance Co.;
Rocky Pitzer, Landmark ;
Sonia Carr , Farmers Bank
and Savings Co.; Teresa
Carr, Leland Parker; Stan
Davis, Citizens National
Bank.
Some eight or 10 of the
animals were return ed for
resale during the auction with
the additional sales money
KRAFT AMER''-"'"
going to the building fund of
the junior fair for the most
part.

Livestock purchases listed
Nwnerous business houses
and individuals purchased
lives tock at the annual ·
livestock sale of the Meigs
County Junior Fair Friday
night .
The sale is held annually to
provide a sales area for
Meigs County young people
who have raised livestock as
a project during the year.
Following are the consignee and the purchaser,
respectively, in each of the
livestock areas :
Hogs - Dennis Thornton,
Jones Boys; Rick Jordan,
Wesley
Buehl;
Diane
Thornton , Pomeroy National
Bank ; Ralph Jordan, French
City Meat; Darlene Thornton, Jones Boys; Jim Riffle,
Jackson Production Credit
Assn.; Lester Parker, Ray
Riggs Used Cars; Shirley
McDonald, West Virginia
Whole Hog Sausage; Jim
Riffle, Farmers Bank. and
Savings Co.; David Car.
nahan, Jones Boys.
Lambs - Todd Tripp,
Carter and Evans Construction Co.; Bill Kautz,
Farmers Bank and Savings
Co.; Bill Kautz, Boggs Sales
and Service; Dan Dailey,
Vinton County Bank, Wilkes·
ville; Dan Dailey.Riggs Used
Cars; Wayne Satterfield,
Racine Home-National Bank;
Nick Leonard, Citizens
National Bank; Pam Kautz,
Farmers Bank and Savings
Co.; Rodney Tripp, Oakley
Collins ; Kelly Taylor, Carroll
Norris Dodge; Todd Tripp;
Riggs Used Cars; J. F.
Young, Five Points Grill;
Dan Dailey, Diamond Stone,
Albany ; Nick Leonard, Riggs
Used Cars; Scott Bearhs,
Citizens National Bank; Scott
Bearhs, Marion Riggs Ford;
Pam· Kautz, Wesley Buehl1
Kelly Taylor, Racine HomeNational Bank; J. F. Young,
Ed Hupp Hog F&amp;rm; Rodney

Tripp, Marion Riggs Ford;
Denise Dean, Wesley Buehl;
Dean,
Jackson
Denise
Production Credit Assn .; Jeff
Newell, Gaul's Market; Scott
Bearhs, Pickens Farms ;
Nick Leonard, Riggs Used
Cars .
Steers - Becky Windon,
Jones Boys; Pam Miller,
Pomeroy National Bank;
Paula Miller , Elberfelds;
Rogie Gaul, Citizens National
Bank; Rick Findley, .Sugar
Run Mill; Debbie Boatright,
Jones
Boys;
Nathan
Boatright, Pomeroy National
Bank; Donna Thornton ,
Farmers Bank and Savings
Co . ;
Mark
Richmond ,
Jackson Prod~ction Credit;
Blair Windon , Marion Riggs
Ford; Debbie Windon , South·
eastern Equipment Co.;
Brian Windon, Farmers Bank
and Savings Co.; Tom Avis,
Gordon Page Chevrolet; Don
Jackson , Fulton Thompson
Tractor Sales; Kim Bickers,
Jones Boys; Mandie Rose,
Racine Home-National Bank ;
Joe Brown, Racine Home.
Na tiona! Bank; Jennifer

Clearance
FROM STOCI&lt;

Children's SHOE Sale
65 Pairs Boys' Stride
Rite and Peclwln
81 Pain Girls' Stride
Rite and Robin Hood
CLOSEOUT PRICES

for mobile homes that are the
same as the prevailing in·
dustry code- whic-h the
.commission has already
declared inadequate.
The commission moved
against the wire after an IS.
month investigation turned
up reports of fires in homes
equipped 'with it. The
problem, officials have said,
appears to involve the. ten.
dency of the softer metal to
become loose at connecting
points, causing hot spots in
walls and resulting in fires.
The wire came into wide·
spread use in the past' decade
because of a copper shortage,
Filling aluminum to wiring
devices intended to receive
cbpper wire was blamed for
1
the problem .

7.69 to 12.50

1 Group Women's

·sHOES
At Closeout Prices

CHAPMAN'S
SHOES

swers are furnished to questions posed by Democratic
members.
The Democrats also killed
a request by the Deparbnent
of Natural Resources for
$50,000 for a joint study with
the Ohio Energy Emergency
Commission on how to
recover coal adjacent to
abandoned strip mine lands.
Sen. Harry Meshel, D·
Youngstown, said the study
could be made by the new
Ohio Energy Resources and
Development Agency when it
is fanned .
"! think this is a
misdirected spending of
$50,000," said Meshel, author
of the legislation which
established ERDA. "! would
like to see the money go
toward furnishing coal or
opening new gas wells."
Items approved by the
board included :
-$2.4 million for r"'Jledial
programs
for
poorly·
prepared students at state·
assisted uni~ersities. .
- $53.9 million as the
state's school foundation
payment for · August, and
another $987,000 for the
purchase of 117 school buses.
-Authorization for the
Public Utilities Conunissiion
to contract with the Toledo
Edison Co. and the Dayton
Power &amp; light Co. for a two·
year federally-funded
demonstration project to
develop electrical storage
and use control techniques
and rate-making criteria.

fhe Almanac
By United Preas
In·
tematlooal
Today is Wednesday, Aug.
20, the 231ltd day of 1975 'with
133 to follow .
The moon Is approaching
its full phase.
The morning stars are
Mars, Jupiter and Saturn.
The evening stars are Mercury and Venus.
Those born on this date are
'under the sign of Leo.
Benjamin Harrison, 23rd
president of the United
States, was born Aug. 20,
1833. American actress
Shirley Booth was born on
this date in 1907.
On this day in history :
In 1741, Danish navigator
Vitus
Jonas
Bering
discovered what is now
Alaska.
In 1955, flying a superSabre jet, Colonel Horace
Hanes reached an altitude of
40,000 feet and a speed of 822
miles per hour.

Hearing Aid

SeJVice Center
Mr. Paul Walters
Will Be AI
Meigs Inn
Pomeroy. Ohio
On
Thursday, Aug. 21
From
9 A.M. to 12 Noon
To repair and service
hearing aids.
Batteries and sup·
plies for all makes for
sale .

,.,.
.

,

.•

,.

BELTONE
Hearing Aid Center
601 Sixth Ave.
Huntington, W.Va.
Phone 525-7221

r---------,- -

MAXWEll

()FF) •••••••••••••

Mfr.ARo'NIRt4D

14 oz.

67

~

Rutland
Department Store
Expires Sat. Aug. 23

atEESE DINNER ••••••• ~~:•••
-----------GLAD TRASH BAGS •••••••••••••••••••• !:.c.".'~. 79~
ARMOUR (5e Off)
rsy2 oz
~
CORN BEEF HASH ••••••••••••••••••••••• •. ;. 6 9
MEAT

~t:~c:.~M

.....................~}~; t

129

SUPERIOR
·
·
~
FRAN.KIE WEINERS•••••••••• ~~.CI!;P."f 94
...OME MADE
lb 99~
HAM SALAD••••••••••••••••••••••••• ; ·
·PRODUCE

!~.~~~~~~. 69~

39
'
~
. 16 oz. 2 pkgs.... ...
. ~
CARROTS ·

FROZEN

49'

fR()SJY ACRES ;
()RANGE JUICE.~z~ • .
2

69~

3 lb~ bag.......... .

By Tom Tiede
WASHINGTON - When
former Attorney General
William Saxbe was in·
traduced to a California·
based FBI agent last autumn
the first thing he said, even
before he said hello, was :
"Where's Patty?"
Today he and the rest of the
nation continue to wonder.
Eighteen months after the
kidnapping of Patty Hearst,
the rich lass since gone
wrong, the case remains
enigmatic; "we don't know
where she is," the searchers
say, "and in fact the only
thing we do know, and we
know it all too well, is where
she isn ' t."
•
Not that searchers haven 't
been trying. Charles Bates,
the FBI special agent who
directs the hunt, says at least
three dozen federal officers
have been on the case full
time in California alone.
Hundreds of other law enforcement people have
contributed time and effort
throughout the United States
and in neighboring countries.
And of course the full
. resources of the overall FBI
have been employed, including many of the 18,500
employees, some of the 50
million index information
cards and a few of .the 160
fingerprints. Federal
• millio~
authorities
say the total cost
'
of the investigation has been
sizeable, even excessive,
"millions and millions." Yet
no P~tty . ·
.
·,
Wh~? The question is being
·• , asked more and more by
~ . · Americ!ms confused by the
~odds. As one angry citizen
~

I

.'

i

.
Despite the long delaying action on important
1ssues such as a . national energy policy, the
majority
in
Congress a,cted in
an
un·
characteristically speedy fashion two weeks ago
in passing a pay raise for themselves and other
top government officials.
While I voted against this measure, it passed
the House by a single vote, 214·213 . Beneficiaries
of the action include 17,028 members and top of·
ficials of Congress, the executive and judicial
branches , plus· 600 high-ranking military officers .
President Ford's salary will not be affected, but
Vice-President Rockefeller ' s wilL Assuming that
the President and Congress approve a 8 per cent
pay raise, the total cost will be approximately $50
million this year. President Ford has indicated
that he may recommend a 5 per cent limit on these
cost-of-living raises, in which case the cost would
be $34 million .
My opposition to this permanent cost-of-living
pay increase centered around two points . First,
based on its performance durin~ the first eight
months of this year, I don'tfeel Congress deserves
a pay raise . While a great deal of rhetoric has
come from Capitol Hill, very little in the way of
positive accomplishments has been recorded by
the Congress. Undoubtedly there are certain
members of the executive and judicial branches
who deserve such an increase. Many of our most
qualified judges and exeeutives have left govern·
ment service simply because the salaries which
their talents command in the private sector far
exceed present government pay levels. In order to
retain these personnel in government service
salaries should be made commensurate with their
private counterparts. But this does not justify a
salary increase for Congress. An attempt was
made to separate the two categories when the hill
passed the Senate, allowing only the executive
and judicial increase. You can probably guess the
result : the amendment was defeated 61·25 .
My second strong objection to the bill was the
manner in which it was considered. Congress has
debated eight months on energy - and still has
come to no agreement on a national policy . The
pay raise zipped through in a mere five days .
Looking back on the whole procedure it is obvious
that a great deal of behind-the-scenes planning
went into the bill in order to keep it as secret as
possible. Supporters and drafters of the bill knew
that if they allowed full House and Senate com· ·
mittee hearings and then a separate vote on a
salary bill in each chamber that they would be
defeated. Instead they chose to attach it to a bill
on the Senate floor . The first time most House
Members heard of the proposal was when an
unrelated bill for a job safety program for p&lt;istal
workers came back to the House with the pay
increase rider attached. This secret backdoor
technique should not have been tolerated on such
an important issue.
The Congress is supposEl&lt;f to be working on
solving the two largest inter-related problems of
the country: energy and the economy. Instead, at
a time when most Americans are fighting higher
price and unemployment, the Con~ress chose to
grant itself a pay increase .and add further to the
problem of high federal spending.

' .

RAY CROMLEY

------

Public .Jhe loser in
Ford-Co~.ss

battle

By Ray t:rum!ey

wASHiNGTON - The game of chicken President Ford
and Congress are playing over petroleum taxes, t1eeontrol ot
oil rcices and assorted regulations is a cont~ of Twid4le Dee
Dee and Twiddle De Dum.
Mrr Ford's approach i~ that of a man with a meat axe ;
aiming to force rcices so high we'U all be forced to cut back,
willy nllly, somehow or other. The Congressional approach is
wishy-washy cowardice, born of fear the voters will reject
them in November, 1976, if they impose hardships of any sort,
ki!ld or description.
Neither approach makes sense.
Both Mr. Ford and Congress would do better spending
these crucial months on the future botUenecks most likely to
seriously delay the expansion of our domestic energy
production to make us reasonably secure from for eign
boycotts, exorbitant price Increases and intolerable pressures
on American. foreign policy.
An Administration study largely ignored both by Mr . Ford
and tbe Congress predicts :
The United States must up its reliable water supply by 50
per cent in the next 10 years, with much of the increase needed
to meet expanded energy production requirements.
The delivery of coal to electrical utilities, to industrial
boilers and to synthetic fuel plants may necessitate a four.fold
increase in rolling stock by the end of the century.
The energy industry's shares of total domestic consumption of aluminum may rise from a current 3 per cent to 10
per cent and steel may go from 7 per cent today to 10 per cent,
creating severe future problems in the availability of
aluminum, cbromium and alloying elements for steel, for
which the U. S.ls almost entirely dependent on imports.
Architect-engineers and operators, pipe steam filters and
a range of other skilled operatives will most certainly be in
short supply.
An array of industrial equipment may \~ell be in seriously
short supply - drill rigs for the exploration and production of
oil, gas and uranium, fixed and mobile drilling platforms for
offshore oil exploration, drag lines for the surface mining of
coal and uranium. There may well be periodic shortages of
steel pipe and tubular goods.
New energy capital investments for the next 10 years may
range from $450 to $600 million - and, for the next quarter
century the investments per unit of energy for the combined
energy system may range from 50 to 70 per cent greater than
today's investment per unit of energy.
These higher costs may make tbe raising of capital much
more difficult in the 197f&gt;.76 period, investors having already
become somewhat leery of the energy industry.
Neither Cotigress nor the White House is seriously at·
tacking these problems, which could, in the next 10 to 15 years,
give us even more problems than excessive automobile driving
causes today .
But our major difficulty seems to be that we use energy
inefficienUy .
New studies show we could save. a third of the energy we
use - roughly equivalent to what we now import - by
designing more efficient ships, planes, truCks, autos, trains,
pipelines, power systems, industrial processes for fabrication,
forming and the conversion of industrial and agricultural
products, and household appliances and TVs, heating, cooling
and ventilating systems which use less energy, and by the
rcoper design and insulation of homes and buildings.
Only a small portion of these problems is being attacked
either by Mr. Ford or by Congress. It is difficult to understand
why this is so.

--=

for that matter (only 20 per
cent of reported crimes are
cleared by arrest ).
To get public cooperation
police m.ust first have public
confidence. And they won't
get either by reverting back,
as Clarence Kelley wishes, to
times when cops outwitted
crooks by being even more
crooked,
Where 's Patty? She's
harbored i~(t a large segment
of the Ar'-erican society ·
which · b&lt;#ieves that if
authority Jtcomes abusive i.t
is to be r'sisted . ::&gt;ity '" "'·e
FBI agentS arenotlhere also.

12..1·
Pk&amp;·
(With Coupon)
Ll10h O.o Whh c..,.o &amp; SIO or Mon Por&lt;hto11

81111ili:;iiiliii:ilili'i:iilll

·.--•
------

Ct,riCIIl 1175-TIIt l rottr Ct . lt,t llll 111111 Prtttl 1111 Aq . IJ 111111 II ... U II
111 wut Vitlilil llrtt:tr ~~~~ uce,t il "' Nertllert Pllllltlllt tf Wut Vi'l illt

IIIII MtDIWIII llllll Mmtr CIIII(IU . WI IUIRII tilt filllt tt li•it 'UitltitL

NONE SOLI TO DUUIS .

~

-----

....

Holly farms

.

Max.,ell
House

8

3

:

(With Coupon)

-

Umh Ono Whh Ceopon I. $10 or More Purchoso

GJ......·rjiiiiiiii~:.~;·iii·i••

Chicleens

.~

.

----

----

Hollly Fa..,., U.S.D.A.
ln·po:IN, Gi h "A"

Whole

California,

ftwatQIOft

Seeclless
White Grapes

College singers
appear Thursday
Wallen, alto . Included on the
program will be these
selections:
" Eternal Life," "A Better
World, ' ' "How Come,''
"Danny Boy," " What Kind of
Food Am 1, " "De~ Heart,"
" Americana," "Abraham,
Martin and John," "This is
My Country," "Pledge,"
"Morn ing Side of the
Mountain," "Annie's Song,"
"Song Suns Blue," " Har·
mony ," and ~'Because I
Love Ohio.u
Members of the Com·
munity Area Choir are:
Sopranos Jean Blakeman,
Vivian Bevins, Judy Burdell,
Cheryl Enyart, Margaret
Fadley, Georgiana Jenkins,
Melinda Leedy, Steffi Ross,
Jo Reese, Phyllis Rankin ,
Gladys Trainer, and Libby
Willis .
Altos - Hope Keller, Ann
Mills, Lani Ross , .Linda
Warner and Barbara Wallen.
Tenors - Gale Douthitt,
Harry Erwin, Don Leedy,
Tim McGhee.
Basses - Mark Bevins,
James Enyart, Howard
McDaniels, Greg Leschishin,
Scott Keller, and Vinton
Rankin.
Accompanying the choir
will be Greg Bane on piano,
Millie Thompson on electric
piano, Mark Bevins and Scott
Keller on guitar. The concert
is free and open to the public.

llwick ··Krisp
Sliced Bacon

-

...

RIO GRANDE - The Rio
Grande College-Rio Grande
Community College Community Area choir performed
Tuesday in Jackson and will
appear Thursday, August 21,
in Gallipolis .
Merlyn Ross , Assistant
Director of Music at the
college and choir director,
said the Gallipolis performance will be on the riverfront
at the City Park beginning at
has put it in a letter to FBI 7:30p.m.
Director Clarence Kelley:
Soloists will be Gale
"How is it th~t your agency, • Douthitt, tenor , and Barbara
which has a $450 million
budget, plus what you say
are the best gumshoes in the
world, can't locate one tiny old investigative techniques
woman?" FBI insiders say - such as secreuy opening
there have been hundreds of people's mail - but the
similar public inquiries over public bas even denied its
the months. "Each time we cooperadon. "To date," he
announce that the crime rate says, " we've interviewed
has gone up ," says~ agent, over 27,000 people concerning
"we get letters about Patty Patty Hearst. Many have
Hearst. People obviously cooperated, but others have
wonder what we can do about not. If we had the cooperation
big crime when we can't do of all, if some of them who
knew things would have
much about her."
Apparently, the public ~helped us, .we'd have solved
inquiries are beginning to the case long ago."
No .doubt both Kelley and
sting. FBI agents, at Director
Kelley's lead, are responding Bates have points . Public
to criticism with some cooperation · with law en.
criticism of their own . Kelley forcement agencies isn 't a
set the new tone in a recent shadow of what it was, say,
speech (n which he suggested when Congress and the
that criminal investigations ·Justice Department would
have of late been sorely look the other way as J .
hams !rung by changing Edgar Hoover ordered
attitudes toward police ac· burglaries in the name of
tivity. He said the restrictions domestic security. Today a
put on many old and reliable good deal of public sentiment,
police methods have blunted perhaps too much, . parallels
enforcement effectiveness. that of Jack Scott, thought to
He called, essentially, for a have lines of commWlication
return of such measures as with Patty Hearst, yet for •
wiretapping without en- reasons of conscience op·
qiimbering coul't approvals, posed to any idea of assisting
noting: "We must be willing U. S. authority. Reasons of
to surrender a small measure conscience? Scott's view is
of our liberties to preserve that law breakers in America
today are morally preferable
the great bulk of them."
Picking up on this, Kelley's to the law enforcers.
But if Scott's opinion of the
: agents have expanded the
way
things are is clearly
theme. Bates, for. one, says
that changing attitudes myopic. the" fact he is not
toward the police have ac- alone in his thinking is
tually prevented him from perhaps the ultimate reason
findir.g fugitive Hearst. Not police can'l catch Patty
only is he not allowed some Hrarsl , or many other crooks

the elite gumshoes

COUPON

MIRAa.E WHIPPED
32 oz. 99~
· HOUSE
SALAD DRESSING •••••••J:!••••
COFFEE
Reg., Drip or
3 oz. $}39
Electro Perk. ·
INSTANT NESTEA ••••••• ~:~ •••
$239
JUMBO BOUNTY . 2 for $}00 ~\~.;Coupon

LODI APPLES

Washington
,By Oarence
Report Miller

BELTONE

Mr. Watters will be
glad to give you a free
hearing test with the
latest
Bellone
Electronic
equip ·
ment.

;,;.N.•••v··~

TOM TIEDE
How Patty stumps

~l~Pr ~Ee~~~ .........~~!'~ ..97~

llJVVE]JS (3r

.....v._..
'4';.&lt;i,v.•.•.J".•
••-.•,-.
•

..'

'.

: I

1~ - The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy 0 . Wednesday
;.·.-.·.·.;-;y.-... .....
,.•.•.•·•·.· . ,.
, ~·~8381!!1811. .
•,·,·,·.•.•,•,•.•:·~.·:•!o::···:•:•:•'O:•Y.-.)"..'1'~..·.-.-.·.-.vsJ .......Y,~.
. ... .. J . , ,.o;: .•
.. .v..-·:o,v.
,

(

Old ·enemies inteJ.Isify contest
for influence over Indochina

Voc-ed school's

...
. ..

)

1~10

il

I

All Purpose

'•·•Jae
.·. . ...2 ~'"'·$1

Wesson
Cooking Oil
T-Rich

Hunt's

Ketch..

3 ••· $1

T.....ipened, Fresh

HL
• • • Ill.

Freestone
Peaches • • • . • • ·
fresh Kropf

Grade A
Lar• Eggs
Tendar

Kroger

uce

Del Monte
Green Peas

.....
$
ea..

l-Ib.$

ea..

All Kroger Stores
,

wOpen
ou
a Dav

~lln~l~estorAn.), Gassoway, Hinton, Ironton (514 S. 3nl),

�I

:I

'

....
.

""'•·
'

:

h

.

\
~a&amp; ...

.........

J ..__ •• ~ . ..... . ,

••n ............ tJVll-... vuJt:l

uy, v .,

.,.

.... '
~

•••
'

.....
.-.
...
....
~

~ "'

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

. ..

wron~ soay ,

.

J\llg .lU,

HONG KONG (UP!) - The
Sino-Soviet struggle for influ·
ence in Indochina is intersifying.
Almost every report from
visitors to the region gives
this indication. So does
Peking's propaganda war
with Moscow.
Most of these reports also
indicate that China seems to
be trailing the Soviet Union in
the struggle where it really
counts, in both vletnams.
This is cause for great
concern to Chinese leaders.
It was a subject very much
on the mind of Teng Hsiaoping, the man occupying the
main power seat in Peking at
the moment, when he spoke
last week to visiting cam.
bodian leaders.
The successes of Com·
munist-backed forces in
South Vietnam, Cambo-

opening delayed
.•

.

•
......

... .

Clarence
Thompso n,
Superintendent
of
th e
Buckeye Hills Career Center
for Gallia, Jackson and
Vinton Counties, announced
today the school's opening
has been delayed at least one
week.
Classes in
the new
vocational school were slated
to begin Tuesday, Aug . 26, but
have been postponed until
Tuesday, Sept. 2 to permit the
State Department of Health's
final inspection of the
school's sewer and water

systems.
State inspectors will be at
the school Monday , Aug. 27,
but school officials felt it was
be s t not to open next
Tuesday . Thompson said all
vocalional sludenLs who have
registered are to remain at
home . They will not report to
their parent schools until the
morning of Sept. 2.
Supt. Thomspon said over
460 students have enrolled for
first year classes at the
vocational school.

' .
..
.• .• Ohio school plans to

.....

reduce ·class boredom

•

'

••
,.

••

'·•

.•

.

•'.
'•
•,

'

~

•'•
•'

•••
.'~

;,."'

'

••

. •'

•'

•
'
;.

•.
'
.
'.
'·
.~.
.~.

'•I'

•
&lt;pi

•
'•

-·'·.•

"' 4: '

•,

..

:·

'•

;

•"
•
•

.
.,,,.
•~

I

';
•
"

.
••

'

'I

!'

.;

••..
'·~

.••'
.I

,.•
••' I

•''r~ t

.,.,
e'

\•
••
'

;

l

'

dia and Laos wer&amp; a
cause for · rej oicin g , he

said. But other developments
taking place now are a cause
for concern and wariness .
He left no doubt that he was
talking about Soviet encroachment in the region .
Teng did not mention Viet·
nam specifically and did not
spell out what was so wor·
risome to China. But the
Gambodiaris, and other Indochina leaders, got the point,
which he has been more blunt
about in some of his private
talks.
Teng has indicated in
conversations with a number
of visitors that China is
particularly concerned about
the possibility of Soviet
military forces moving into
places American troops have
left.
The most likely place for

By SANDI LATIMER
kids. This way it takes away
NEW
PHILADELPHIA, some of the boredom."
Ohio (UP!) - Going back to
" You 've got to teach acschool may prove excitiog for cording to the children's body
the 263 students in grades as well as the mind ." he said.
nine
through
12
at "You've got to catch them
.. Tuscarawas Central Catholic when they're alert. You can't
High School this fall.
make them a slave to the
Beginning the. first day of system."
classes - Sept. 3 - class
Kunkler says he foresees no
periods will be rotated on a problems, but admits the
· rotation isn't really designed
six-&lt;lay basis.
The idea is to keep the for a large school.
classes and teachers from
"The big reason why some
getting bored, and also to ·schools don't go in for it is
provide a better education. that you have to have fullAccording to Principal time teachers - no part-time
Father David Kunkler, the teachers who come in at
rotation will work this way: different times," he said.
Monday of the first week "We have 25 people on our
classes will nm periods one faculty and have them all full
through eight.
time.''
Tuesday classes will be
He also sees a better
periods eight, one through ed ucati on system coming
seven.
from this plan .
Wednesday classes will be
" When
the
schedule
period.s seven, . eight, one rotates, we can offer more
courses by opening up more
through six.
Thursday classes will be periods," he said. "That way
periods six, seven, eight, one the children get a better
through five.
education, they have more to
Friday classes will be choose from , and courses are
periods five, six, seven, eight, geared more to their
one through four.
potential than to ours."
Monday of the second week
classes will run periods four .
five, six, seven, eight, one
through three.
Tuesday of the second week
will recycle to the top one
through eight.
·
·The class rotation was
Kunkler's idea, after he
experienced a similar set-up
while teaching at Cardinal
Hayes High School in South
Bronx a couple of years ago.
"! taught one' year in New
York .and they had it," he
WASHINGTON (UP!) said. " I also learned about it Aluminum wiring poses a
at Columbia, and it was new greater fire threat in mobile
then. It was my idea to do it . homes than in conventional
here."
housing, according to ihe
" There will be some . Consumer Product Safety
variety to education so the Commiasion.
Declaring the wire an
kids don't have the last period
of the day all the time," he unreasonable risk, the
said. "The worst periods are corrunlssion said it planned a
the last of the day and the one heating on possible repair or
I replacement
for
the
rlght.before lunch ."
· ,Reaction to the new estimated 3 million con·
~chedule· is varied, . said
ventional homes equipped
Kunkler, st;u'ting his third with aluminum wiring.
year at the S!!hool.
In a letter· to the Depart"The kids think they'll get ment of Housing and Urban
lost," he said. "It took the Development, which is
stu&lt;lenls in New York about drawing up safety rules for
two days to get used to it and m&amp;blle homes, the com·
the teachers about one mission said "the hazard
week."
rresented by the use of
Kunkler . said the 25 aluminum wire in mobUe.
,teachers here voted for it.
homes is greater than in
"They all' ·wanied It,'.' he buildings of· conventional
Bald. ''They: wanted . to d!r construction."
their tieltt.and didn't want !o ' Cm'nmissioner Lawrence
f~ the l&amp;lllt kids the last Kushner told a . briefing
period ol the day.
,
· Monday that HUD proposed
· "They 8el as bore&lt;! as the construction and safety rules

A}

•

Wllffiurn

•
Wire
poses·

problems

t

.
,

this to occur is in South
Vietnam, where the United
States left many bases that
could easily be utilized by the
Soviet Union.
It is widely believed in
diplomatic circles - but
never conrirmed - Ulat the
Soviet Union already has
made formal moves to
establi~ naval base faciliti es
in South Vietnam.
·
One. of the places men·
lioned most frequently is
Gam Ranh Bay, once a

sprawling logistics base for
U.S. Forces in central South
Vietnam .
Such plans as this is what
Teng was talking about when
he said it was necessary to
"frustrate all schemes of
superpower aggression and
expansion'' in the region.
Non..alignment is the key to
maintaining
independence
and sovereignty . This is the
principle China is preaching
to forestall Soviet military
advances in the region .

I .

'-···~ .....41

:'-

~

•t· ' ' ' ·

..

For $30,000 and an ancient jalopy,
you could join race around the world
t 'LEVI•:LAND ( UPI 1- A C leveland ~roup is aUempting to stage a
n•pla .v of the l!lOK Paris to New York automobile race, subject of the
nwvit" "The (ireat l{ace," in honor of the nation's bicentennial .
.Ia mrs .J ..Jaworski, :14, Berea, Ohio, head of Around the World Auto
ltan. said response to the plan has been overwbemling and the State
"''Jtat·tment is handling negotiations with the governments which
would he involved.
Fifteen pre-World War I autos would leave Paris May 28, 1976 and
race through the capitals of Europe, then through Russia and Siberia.
Tht• cars would be flown to Japan, Hawaii and the continental U. S.
They wnuld rac e through major U. S. cities, winding up in New York

.J ul.v 2:-i.
Points would he awarded under the sports car rally system to
dl'lermine the winner.
The 22.1100-mile race would cost each entrant about S30,000,
.Jaworski estimated . Cleveland Industrial Tool Co.'s board chairman,
.JoseJth Locey .Jr., said he would enter a 1912 Alco, one of his collection
, or :;u a nli&lt;JUe cars, and drive it with Jaworski.

Parties fussing over spending
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
state budget for fiscal197&amp;-77
is less than two months old,
but already the Republican
administration of Gov. James
A. Rhodes and majority
Democrats on the state
Controlli ng Board are
quarreling over major
allocations.
The board, dominated by
Democratic state legislators,
was told Monday by
spokesmen for the Rhodes
administration that the
budget failed to provide for
increased welfare and nur·
sing home payments as well
as a state employe pay range

reclassificalion.
The latter omission, said
Richard L. Krabach, director
of the Department of Ad·
ministrative Services, could
result in a lack of legal
authority for the state · to
grant pay raises to half its
80,000 employes next Janua·
ry.
Democratic board members retorted that they were
"sick and tired" of hearing
the administration call for
budget cuts and then ask the
Controlling Board for additional money .
When the board meeting
ended, the Democrats had :
- Delayed until next week a
decision on a request by the

Department of
Public
Welfare for an extra $130
million, mainly for nursing
home payments and aid to
families with dependent
children.
- Put off until next week
action on a request of $903,934
from the Department of Ad·
ministrative Services for a
consulting firm to revamp
state employe pay grades in
preparation for wage hikes
next January.
Raymond F. McKenna,
public welfare director, told
the board an $11.28 increase
in ADC payments for each
recipient would cost the state
$75.8 million this year, and
reimbursement for nursing

home care would require an
extra $30 million .
McKenna said if the money
were not approved by the
Controlling Board, the
department would be forced
to trim all its programs,
including public asssistance,
by 3 per cent, to maintain the
nursing home program.
The Controlling Board
asked for more time to study
the request and get additional
information .
Krabach said that while the
General Assembly ap·
propriated $56 million last
June for state employe pay
increases, it failed to provide
the $900,000 needed to im·
plement the recorrunenda·
tions of a commission
assigned to overhllul the civil
service pay classifications.
Krabach said that unless
the classifications are
chl!llged, half the 80,000 state
Gainer, Dr. R. R. Pickens ; · employes will not legally be
Randy Johnson, Vinton able to receive a wage boost
County. Bank, Wilkesville; when due next Jan . 4.
Noah Hysell , Pomeroy
Krabach warned that each
National Bank ; Paula Hysell, week of delay by the ControllSwisher-Lohse
Pharmacy; ing Board would make the job
Dave Roush, Racine Food tougher, and said " 80,000
Markel: Herbie Ervin, state employes would be up in
French City Meat; Jim arms next January" if the
Bable, Larry Laudermilt; reclassification is not comDavid Thornton, Farmers pleted and the pay raises
Bank and Savings Co.; Bob granted.
Avis, Modern Supply; James
·The board voted 4-2 to table
Smith , Jones Boys; Julie Krabach's request until anJohnson, Veterans Merriorial
Hospital ; Grant Johnson,
Diamond Stone Co.; Don
Schaffer, Racine Home·
National Bank; Greg Davis,
John Hancock Insurance Co.;
Rocky Pitzer, Landmark ;
Sonia Carr , Farmers Bank
and Savings Co.; Teresa
Carr, Leland Parker; Stan
Davis, Citizens National
Bank.
Some eight or 10 of the
animals were return ed for
resale during the auction with
the additional sales money
KRAFT AMER''-"'"
going to the building fund of
the junior fair for the most
part.

Livestock purchases listed
Nwnerous business houses
and individuals purchased
lives tock at the annual ·
livestock sale of the Meigs
County Junior Fair Friday
night .
The sale is held annually to
provide a sales area for
Meigs County young people
who have raised livestock as
a project during the year.
Following are the consignee and the purchaser,
respectively, in each of the
livestock areas :
Hogs - Dennis Thornton,
Jones Boys; Rick Jordan,
Wesley
Buehl;
Diane
Thornton , Pomeroy National
Bank ; Ralph Jordan, French
City Meat; Darlene Thornton, Jones Boys; Jim Riffle,
Jackson Production Credit
Assn.; Lester Parker, Ray
Riggs Used Cars; Shirley
McDonald, West Virginia
Whole Hog Sausage; Jim
Riffle, Farmers Bank. and
Savings Co.; David Car.
nahan, Jones Boys.
Lambs - Todd Tripp,
Carter and Evans Construction Co.; Bill Kautz,
Farmers Bank and Savings
Co.; Bill Kautz, Boggs Sales
and Service; Dan Dailey,
Vinton County Bank, Wilkes·
ville; Dan Dailey.Riggs Used
Cars; Wayne Satterfield,
Racine Home-National Bank;
Nick Leonard, Citizens
National Bank; Pam Kautz,
Farmers Bank and Savings
Co.; Rodney Tripp, Oakley
Collins ; Kelly Taylor, Carroll
Norris Dodge; Todd Tripp;
Riggs Used Cars; J. F.
Young, Five Points Grill;
Dan Dailey, Diamond Stone,
Albany ; Nick Leonard, Riggs
Used Cars; Scott Bearhs,
Citizens National Bank; Scott
Bearhs, Marion Riggs Ford;
Pam· Kautz, Wesley Buehl1
Kelly Taylor, Racine HomeNational Bank; J. F. Young,
Ed Hupp Hog F&amp;rm; Rodney

Tripp, Marion Riggs Ford;
Denise Dean, Wesley Buehl;
Dean,
Jackson
Denise
Production Credit Assn .; Jeff
Newell, Gaul's Market; Scott
Bearhs, Pickens Farms ;
Nick Leonard, Riggs Used
Cars .
Steers - Becky Windon,
Jones Boys; Pam Miller,
Pomeroy National Bank;
Paula Miller , Elberfelds;
Rogie Gaul, Citizens National
Bank; Rick Findley, .Sugar
Run Mill; Debbie Boatright,
Jones
Boys;
Nathan
Boatright, Pomeroy National
Bank; Donna Thornton ,
Farmers Bank and Savings
Co . ;
Mark
Richmond ,
Jackson Prod~ction Credit;
Blair Windon , Marion Riggs
Ford; Debbie Windon , South·
eastern Equipment Co.;
Brian Windon, Farmers Bank
and Savings Co.; Tom Avis,
Gordon Page Chevrolet; Don
Jackson , Fulton Thompson
Tractor Sales; Kim Bickers,
Jones Boys; Mandie Rose,
Racine Home-National Bank ;
Joe Brown, Racine Home.
Na tiona! Bank; Jennifer

Clearance
FROM STOCI&lt;

Children's SHOE Sale
65 Pairs Boys' Stride
Rite and Peclwln
81 Pain Girls' Stride
Rite and Robin Hood
CLOSEOUT PRICES

for mobile homes that are the
same as the prevailing in·
dustry code- whic-h the
.commission has already
declared inadequate.
The commission moved
against the wire after an IS.
month investigation turned
up reports of fires in homes
equipped 'with it. The
problem, officials have said,
appears to involve the. ten.
dency of the softer metal to
become loose at connecting
points, causing hot spots in
walls and resulting in fires.
The wire came into wide·
spread use in the past' decade
because of a copper shortage,
Filling aluminum to wiring
devices intended to receive
cbpper wire was blamed for
1
the problem .

7.69 to 12.50

1 Group Women's

·sHOES
At Closeout Prices

CHAPMAN'S
SHOES

swers are furnished to questions posed by Democratic
members.
The Democrats also killed
a request by the Deparbnent
of Natural Resources for
$50,000 for a joint study with
the Ohio Energy Emergency
Commission on how to
recover coal adjacent to
abandoned strip mine lands.
Sen. Harry Meshel, D·
Youngstown, said the study
could be made by the new
Ohio Energy Resources and
Development Agency when it
is fanned .
"! think this is a
misdirected spending of
$50,000," said Meshel, author
of the legislation which
established ERDA. "! would
like to see the money go
toward furnishing coal or
opening new gas wells."
Items approved by the
board included :
-$2.4 million for r"'Jledial
programs
for
poorly·
prepared students at state·
assisted uni~ersities. .
- $53.9 million as the
state's school foundation
payment for · August, and
another $987,000 for the
purchase of 117 school buses.
-Authorization for the
Public Utilities Conunissiion
to contract with the Toledo
Edison Co. and the Dayton
Power &amp; light Co. for a two·
year federally-funded
demonstration project to
develop electrical storage
and use control techniques
and rate-making criteria.

fhe Almanac
By United Preas
In·
tematlooal
Today is Wednesday, Aug.
20, the 231ltd day of 1975 'with
133 to follow .
The moon Is approaching
its full phase.
The morning stars are
Mars, Jupiter and Saturn.
The evening stars are Mercury and Venus.
Those born on this date are
'under the sign of Leo.
Benjamin Harrison, 23rd
president of the United
States, was born Aug. 20,
1833. American actress
Shirley Booth was born on
this date in 1907.
On this day in history :
In 1741, Danish navigator
Vitus
Jonas
Bering
discovered what is now
Alaska.
In 1955, flying a superSabre jet, Colonel Horace
Hanes reached an altitude of
40,000 feet and a speed of 822
miles per hour.

Hearing Aid

SeJVice Center
Mr. Paul Walters
Will Be AI
Meigs Inn
Pomeroy. Ohio
On
Thursday, Aug. 21
From
9 A.M. to 12 Noon
To repair and service
hearing aids.
Batteries and sup·
plies for all makes for
sale .

,.,.
.

,

.•

,.

BELTONE
Hearing Aid Center
601 Sixth Ave.
Huntington, W.Va.
Phone 525-7221

r---------,- -

MAXWEll

()FF) •••••••••••••

Mfr.ARo'NIRt4D

14 oz.

67

~

Rutland
Department Store
Expires Sat. Aug. 23

atEESE DINNER ••••••• ~~:•••
-----------GLAD TRASH BAGS •••••••••••••••••••• !:.c.".'~. 79~
ARMOUR (5e Off)
rsy2 oz
~
CORN BEEF HASH ••••••••••••••••••••••• •. ;. 6 9
MEAT

~t:~c:.~M

.....................~}~; t

129

SUPERIOR
·
·
~
FRAN.KIE WEINERS•••••••••• ~~.CI!;P."f 94
...OME MADE
lb 99~
HAM SALAD••••••••••••••••••••••••• ; ·
·PRODUCE

!~.~~~~~~. 69~

39
'
~
. 16 oz. 2 pkgs.... ...
. ~
CARROTS ·

FROZEN

49'

fR()SJY ACRES ;
()RANGE JUICE.~z~ • .
2

69~

3 lb~ bag.......... .

By Tom Tiede
WASHINGTON - When
former Attorney General
William Saxbe was in·
traduced to a California·
based FBI agent last autumn
the first thing he said, even
before he said hello, was :
"Where's Patty?"
Today he and the rest of the
nation continue to wonder.
Eighteen months after the
kidnapping of Patty Hearst,
the rich lass since gone
wrong, the case remains
enigmatic; "we don't know
where she is," the searchers
say, "and in fact the only
thing we do know, and we
know it all too well, is where
she isn ' t."
•
Not that searchers haven 't
been trying. Charles Bates,
the FBI special agent who
directs the hunt, says at least
three dozen federal officers
have been on the case full
time in California alone.
Hundreds of other law enforcement people have
contributed time and effort
throughout the United States
and in neighboring countries.
And of course the full
. resources of the overall FBI
have been employed, including many of the 18,500
employees, some of the 50
million index information
cards and a few of .the 160
fingerprints. Federal
• millio~
authorities
say the total cost
'
of the investigation has been
sizeable, even excessive,
"millions and millions." Yet
no P~tty . ·
.
·,
Wh~? The question is being
·• , asked more and more by
~ . · Americ!ms confused by the
~odds. As one angry citizen
~

I

.'

i

.
Despite the long delaying action on important
1ssues such as a . national energy policy, the
majority
in
Congress a,cted in
an
un·
characteristically speedy fashion two weeks ago
in passing a pay raise for themselves and other
top government officials.
While I voted against this measure, it passed
the House by a single vote, 214·213 . Beneficiaries
of the action include 17,028 members and top of·
ficials of Congress, the executive and judicial
branches , plus· 600 high-ranking military officers .
President Ford's salary will not be affected, but
Vice-President Rockefeller ' s wilL Assuming that
the President and Congress approve a 8 per cent
pay raise, the total cost will be approximately $50
million this year. President Ford has indicated
that he may recommend a 5 per cent limit on these
cost-of-living raises, in which case the cost would
be $34 million .
My opposition to this permanent cost-of-living
pay increase centered around two points . First,
based on its performance durin~ the first eight
months of this year, I don'tfeel Congress deserves
a pay raise . While a great deal of rhetoric has
come from Capitol Hill, very little in the way of
positive accomplishments has been recorded by
the Congress. Undoubtedly there are certain
members of the executive and judicial branches
who deserve such an increase. Many of our most
qualified judges and exeeutives have left govern·
ment service simply because the salaries which
their talents command in the private sector far
exceed present government pay levels. In order to
retain these personnel in government service
salaries should be made commensurate with their
private counterparts. But this does not justify a
salary increase for Congress. An attempt was
made to separate the two categories when the hill
passed the Senate, allowing only the executive
and judicial increase. You can probably guess the
result : the amendment was defeated 61·25 .
My second strong objection to the bill was the
manner in which it was considered. Congress has
debated eight months on energy - and still has
come to no agreement on a national policy . The
pay raise zipped through in a mere five days .
Looking back on the whole procedure it is obvious
that a great deal of behind-the-scenes planning
went into the bill in order to keep it as secret as
possible. Supporters and drafters of the bill knew
that if they allowed full House and Senate com· ·
mittee hearings and then a separate vote on a
salary bill in each chamber that they would be
defeated. Instead they chose to attach it to a bill
on the Senate floor . The first time most House
Members heard of the proposal was when an
unrelated bill for a job safety program for p&lt;istal
workers came back to the House with the pay
increase rider attached. This secret backdoor
technique should not have been tolerated on such
an important issue.
The Congress is supposEl&lt;f to be working on
solving the two largest inter-related problems of
the country: energy and the economy. Instead, at
a time when most Americans are fighting higher
price and unemployment, the Con~ress chose to
grant itself a pay increase .and add further to the
problem of high federal spending.

' .

RAY CROMLEY

------

Public .Jhe loser in
Ford-Co~.ss

battle

By Ray t:rum!ey

wASHiNGTON - The game of chicken President Ford
and Congress are playing over petroleum taxes, t1eeontrol ot
oil rcices and assorted regulations is a cont~ of Twid4le Dee
Dee and Twiddle De Dum.
Mrr Ford's approach i~ that of a man with a meat axe ;
aiming to force rcices so high we'U all be forced to cut back,
willy nllly, somehow or other. The Congressional approach is
wishy-washy cowardice, born of fear the voters will reject
them in November, 1976, if they impose hardships of any sort,
ki!ld or description.
Neither approach makes sense.
Both Mr. Ford and Congress would do better spending
these crucial months on the future botUenecks most likely to
seriously delay the expansion of our domestic energy
production to make us reasonably secure from for eign
boycotts, exorbitant price Increases and intolerable pressures
on American. foreign policy.
An Administration study largely ignored both by Mr . Ford
and tbe Congress predicts :
The United States must up its reliable water supply by 50
per cent in the next 10 years, with much of the increase needed
to meet expanded energy production requirements.
The delivery of coal to electrical utilities, to industrial
boilers and to synthetic fuel plants may necessitate a four.fold
increase in rolling stock by the end of the century.
The energy industry's shares of total domestic consumption of aluminum may rise from a current 3 per cent to 10
per cent and steel may go from 7 per cent today to 10 per cent,
creating severe future problems in the availability of
aluminum, cbromium and alloying elements for steel, for
which the U. S.ls almost entirely dependent on imports.
Architect-engineers and operators, pipe steam filters and
a range of other skilled operatives will most certainly be in
short supply.
An array of industrial equipment may \~ell be in seriously
short supply - drill rigs for the exploration and production of
oil, gas and uranium, fixed and mobile drilling platforms for
offshore oil exploration, drag lines for the surface mining of
coal and uranium. There may well be periodic shortages of
steel pipe and tubular goods.
New energy capital investments for the next 10 years may
range from $450 to $600 million - and, for the next quarter
century the investments per unit of energy for the combined
energy system may range from 50 to 70 per cent greater than
today's investment per unit of energy.
These higher costs may make tbe raising of capital much
more difficult in the 197f&gt;.76 period, investors having already
become somewhat leery of the energy industry.
Neither Cotigress nor the White House is seriously at·
tacking these problems, which could, in the next 10 to 15 years,
give us even more problems than excessive automobile driving
causes today .
But our major difficulty seems to be that we use energy
inefficienUy .
New studies show we could save. a third of the energy we
use - roughly equivalent to what we now import - by
designing more efficient ships, planes, truCks, autos, trains,
pipelines, power systems, industrial processes for fabrication,
forming and the conversion of industrial and agricultural
products, and household appliances and TVs, heating, cooling
and ventilating systems which use less energy, and by the
rcoper design and insulation of homes and buildings.
Only a small portion of these problems is being attacked
either by Mr. Ford or by Congress. It is difficult to understand
why this is so.

--=

for that matter (only 20 per
cent of reported crimes are
cleared by arrest ).
To get public cooperation
police m.ust first have public
confidence. And they won't
get either by reverting back,
as Clarence Kelley wishes, to
times when cops outwitted
crooks by being even more
crooked,
Where 's Patty? She's
harbored i~(t a large segment
of the Ar'-erican society ·
which · b&lt;#ieves that if
authority Jtcomes abusive i.t
is to be r'sisted . ::&gt;ity '" "'·e
FBI agentS arenotlhere also.

12..1·
Pk&amp;·
(With Coupon)
Ll10h O.o Whh c..,.o &amp; SIO or Mon Por&lt;hto11

81111ili:;iiiliii:ilili'i:iilll

·.--•
------

Ct,riCIIl 1175-TIIt l rottr Ct . lt,t llll 111111 Prtttl 1111 Aq . IJ 111111 II ... U II
111 wut Vitlilil llrtt:tr ~~~~ uce,t il "' Nertllert Pllllltlllt tf Wut Vi'l illt

IIIII MtDIWIII llllll Mmtr CIIII(IU . WI IUIRII tilt filllt tt li•it 'UitltitL

NONE SOLI TO DUUIS .

~

-----

....

Holly farms

.

Max.,ell
House

8

3

:

(With Coupon)

-

Umh Ono Whh Ceopon I. $10 or More Purchoso

GJ......·rjiiiiiiii~:.~;·iii·i••

Chicleens

.~

.

----

----

Hollly Fa..,., U.S.D.A.
ln·po:IN, Gi h "A"

Whole

California,

ftwatQIOft

Seeclless
White Grapes

College singers
appear Thursday
Wallen, alto . Included on the
program will be these
selections:
" Eternal Life," "A Better
World, ' ' "How Come,''
"Danny Boy," " What Kind of
Food Am 1, " "De~ Heart,"
" Americana," "Abraham,
Martin and John," "This is
My Country," "Pledge,"
"Morn ing Side of the
Mountain," "Annie's Song,"
"Song Suns Blue," " Har·
mony ," and ~'Because I
Love Ohio.u
Members of the Com·
munity Area Choir are:
Sopranos Jean Blakeman,
Vivian Bevins, Judy Burdell,
Cheryl Enyart, Margaret
Fadley, Georgiana Jenkins,
Melinda Leedy, Steffi Ross,
Jo Reese, Phyllis Rankin ,
Gladys Trainer, and Libby
Willis .
Altos - Hope Keller, Ann
Mills, Lani Ross , .Linda
Warner and Barbara Wallen.
Tenors - Gale Douthitt,
Harry Erwin, Don Leedy,
Tim McGhee.
Basses - Mark Bevins,
James Enyart, Howard
McDaniels, Greg Leschishin,
Scott Keller, and Vinton
Rankin.
Accompanying the choir
will be Greg Bane on piano,
Millie Thompson on electric
piano, Mark Bevins and Scott
Keller on guitar. The concert
is free and open to the public.

llwick ··Krisp
Sliced Bacon

-

...

RIO GRANDE - The Rio
Grande College-Rio Grande
Community College Community Area choir performed
Tuesday in Jackson and will
appear Thursday, August 21,
in Gallipolis .
Merlyn Ross , Assistant
Director of Music at the
college and choir director,
said the Gallipolis performance will be on the riverfront
at the City Park beginning at
has put it in a letter to FBI 7:30p.m.
Director Clarence Kelley:
Soloists will be Gale
"How is it th~t your agency, • Douthitt, tenor , and Barbara
which has a $450 million
budget, plus what you say
are the best gumshoes in the
world, can't locate one tiny old investigative techniques
woman?" FBI insiders say - such as secreuy opening
there have been hundreds of people's mail - but the
similar public inquiries over public bas even denied its
the months. "Each time we cooperadon. "To date," he
announce that the crime rate says, " we've interviewed
has gone up ," says~ agent, over 27,000 people concerning
"we get letters about Patty Patty Hearst. Many have
Hearst. People obviously cooperated, but others have
wonder what we can do about not. If we had the cooperation
big crime when we can't do of all, if some of them who
knew things would have
much about her."
Apparently, the public ~helped us, .we'd have solved
inquiries are beginning to the case long ago."
No .doubt both Kelley and
sting. FBI agents, at Director
Kelley's lead, are responding Bates have points . Public
to criticism with some cooperation · with law en.
criticism of their own . Kelley forcement agencies isn 't a
set the new tone in a recent shadow of what it was, say,
speech (n which he suggested when Congress and the
that criminal investigations ·Justice Department would
have of late been sorely look the other way as J .
hams !rung by changing Edgar Hoover ordered
attitudes toward police ac· burglaries in the name of
tivity. He said the restrictions domestic security. Today a
put on many old and reliable good deal of public sentiment,
police methods have blunted perhaps too much, . parallels
enforcement effectiveness. that of Jack Scott, thought to
He called, essentially, for a have lines of commWlication
return of such measures as with Patty Hearst, yet for •
wiretapping without en- reasons of conscience op·
qiimbering coul't approvals, posed to any idea of assisting
noting: "We must be willing U. S. authority. Reasons of
to surrender a small measure conscience? Scott's view is
of our liberties to preserve that law breakers in America
today are morally preferable
the great bulk of them."
Picking up on this, Kelley's to the law enforcers.
But if Scott's opinion of the
: agents have expanded the
way
things are is clearly
theme. Bates, for. one, says
that changing attitudes myopic. the" fact he is not
toward the police have ac- alone in his thinking is
tually prevented him from perhaps the ultimate reason
findir.g fugitive Hearst. Not police can'l catch Patty
only is he not allowed some Hrarsl , or many other crooks

the elite gumshoes

COUPON

MIRAa.E WHIPPED
32 oz. 99~
· HOUSE
SALAD DRESSING •••••••J:!••••
COFFEE
Reg., Drip or
3 oz. $}39
Electro Perk. ·
INSTANT NESTEA ••••••• ~:~ •••
$239
JUMBO BOUNTY . 2 for $}00 ~\~.;Coupon

LODI APPLES

Washington
,By Oarence
Report Miller

BELTONE

Mr. Watters will be
glad to give you a free
hearing test with the
latest
Bellone
Electronic
equip ·
ment.

;,;.N.•••v··~

TOM TIEDE
How Patty stumps

~l~Pr ~Ee~~~ .........~~!'~ ..97~

llJVVE]JS (3r

.....v._..
'4';.&lt;i,v.•.•.J".•
••-.•,-.
•

..'

'.

: I

1~ - The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy 0 . Wednesday
;.·.-.·.·.;-;y.-... .....
,.•.•.•·•·.· . ,.
, ~·~8381!!1811. .
•,·,·,·.•.•,•,•.•:·~.·:•!o::···:•:•:•'O:•Y.-.)"..'1'~..·.-.-.·.-.vsJ .......Y,~.
. ... .. J . , ,.o;: .•
.. .v..-·:o,v.
,

(

Old ·enemies inteJ.Isify contest
for influence over Indochina

Voc-ed school's

...
. ..

)

1~10

il

I

All Purpose

'•·•Jae
.·. . ...2 ~'"'·$1

Wesson
Cooking Oil
T-Rich

Hunt's

Ketch..

3 ••· $1

T.....ipened, Fresh

HL
• • • Ill.

Freestone
Peaches • • • . • • ·
fresh Kropf

Grade A
Lar• Eggs
Tendar

Kroger

uce

Del Monte
Green Peas

.....
$
ea..

l-Ib.$

ea..

All Kroger Stores
,

wOpen
ou
a Dav

~lln~l~estorAn.), Gassoway, Hinton, Ironton (514 S. 3nl),

�.,
'

.~.u -

.1. '"'-

vau1 ...,..,u ~.~.u~.~.. IUJ.UWt:iJUtl-rUiu~ruy ,

u ., Wednesaay, Aug . 20, 1975

For. Fast R~sults Use The Sentinel Class~fieds

Notice

Auto Sales

ROOM A ND BO/\RO
Pr rv at c air , con dctroned
r oo m
ph one
1 v . all
r 11c~--. 1 s, lau ndr y pl us m any
(')( tra s Wrr te Mrs M J
Mrltcr , Bo)( 105 Pomero y
Oh ro
8 1 161p

AN IMFI&lt;OP~~ USE'
OF THE PEN ,MioHI
RESULI IN IHIS.

'\RUl'PEA~
V
1 ~
~ .A

," •

.,.~l8

Lost-

AFTER

1 '

lon g

play 1ng

~ ALE Aug
18 ?? 9
ro 5 p m . loc at ed on Rt
Il l sou th o f Jack's Club o ff ' H'/\ LL 'S Sa lvage on old R t 33,
R t 1 by pass Guns poc k e t
tu s t a c r oss from Gru e!'.e r 's
kn r" es brcyc le to ols, new
Ch tpp e r will buy JUnk autos
pil rn r,nq s upplrC 5 baby
w rlho ut motor s '£16 10 $?0,
l ur n1t ur e
newborn and
w•th m o lor s 'li l8 to $?3
udu lt c loth in g a n d mr sc
Co tnple te S? O I O $75 Th is
8 1! Stp
does n I 1nclude compact and
fore1 gn car s motor s a n d
5 FAM ILY Garage Su le at 45 -1
tr an s mrSS 1ons not c leaned .
Soulh Th rr d - Ave
Mrd
s 1 so a tnm dr e d Sc rap No 7
d teport
thr s Th ur s d ay
long ~ m etal . $1 a hundre:d .
I rtday and Sa tu r day 10 il m '
No I lo nq m e tal Sl 50 per
trll dark
h un dre&lt;J - c tean c ast $?
8 ?o 3tc
h undre d Trn , 40c per hund
r e d Any mater.al bro ugh t
J rAMILY
Yard Sale ·at
rtllo 1u n k yard no t sor ted
Rust tc H il ls. S yra c u se.
will be grade d acc ord rn g ly
Frrday
and
Saturd ay .
Pr.ces sub 1ec t to cha n ge
Augus t ?7 and 7J An lrque s.
ho ur s from 8 a m to :1 p m
c lot hm g , drshes, fur n rtur e.
Monday 'h ro ugh F r rday. 8
baby rtem s. a c hi ld's sa nd
a n1 lo I? noon Saturdays
bo•
Writ p1 cku p old au tos , ""do
8 70 Jtc
have so m e parts for au ros
Phone 985 J 797
GARAGE Sa te , Thur sda y and
Fr 1da y, Aug us t 71 and 77 at
109 Spr ing Avenue. 9 a m .
till 5 p m P omeroy, Oh10
.I •
.
8 ?0 ?tp
c t s H paid tor all ma kes and
mode ls of mobile hom es
YA R D S&lt;~ l e off R!. 174 Rt 7
Phpne area code 614 423
" by pass on Rt 143 up behrnd
'9531
Jac k 's Club ClothE'S c hea p ,
t L
·.
4 13 tfc
throug h Fr1 day
'
a 20 J lch ~r- - :.;mlT' &lt;r - .,----- - - - - - -

Coun t ry

Aug ust

17

Please ca ll 99 ?

5~? 8 .• t•~•(!~ t-l·

8;.7 0 Jtc

· oRR~~\Illil.tlr N0 .' 1o'J :·

o R-0 J.N.IiiNt i!i'~'p R o\1'ti)\1NG
F OR MW!IJIAlll i

EAS&gt;I;M'EN~

ON FIFTH STREET IN THE:
VILLAGE
OF
POMERl[lY.
O HIO
.

. .,. 110 nlq~
~
w'HEREA~(Fi.iHh 3-t t:qt!t
1

.in

SiJ IQ. v1~' ~· tt'om er o y h as

b een • atl!
law , 9nd• I );:

l''~oriJ•n&lt;j, to .

fl ·

Wi-IEREAS . on e half of
Fifth ~S\.'iF~fl(frtO.Wn e l:t ~t!V1 ' the
V• 11 age Of l'Om et ,oy , QhJo , .and
one hal l by Ctt~r'les E Sayre ,

Ma ry ~ .~ s· andf • MMtfi~
J Drenner , and
~
.

the Vii~AQe ,Of.
Pomero., aojj, Char~• ~ '
Sa yre , Mlli~CW Roger' tifld
WHEREAS

Mar tha

M

tlrfdl.ner d

•re' 101

resurfa ce part of F 1f th Street
an~ to e~~~~te1 .an • •sM&gt;•rt

me mber
I

t

t

Th

•

1

o.

cd n~"rr ir g .

a 1d VI llag e of

Po m er oy 1S author.zed to
e n te r '~if!J Jl qs&gt;nt ra~ t&gt;-. with

1\PT lrke new . 3 rooms. wtlh
lar ge balh . tabletop range ,
larg e close t Easl Ma1n St ,
Po m f.;! rov Se e to appreciate
P~one C.a ll!po t's dur1ng day
1.16 l h99 , even1 ngs 446 9539
4 to rtc
RM house . 3 or J bedrooms ,
Irving room, drnrng room
and modern ktt c hen. ca r
pet mg 7 bath s and a ha lf
Pond for s wrmming and
'rr 1 , 1 •~ 11rng
.t miles w es t of
,l l l'lr ri so nv!lle
Fo r
ap
· p&lt;11 ntm en t , ca ll 7 4? 3745 be
tw e en 5 and 8 p rn , Monday
throtJgh Frrday
a 18 stp
1 !\

'fl~tHLI:;:R
·Rlf
l AJ

for rent , r., mile ofl
on Kingsbury Rd
E 1t her furnished or un
furnished Phone 747 3173
6 70 lite

MOB I LE home for rent
Phone Albert H!ll , 949 7161
B 20 l ?tc

RUMM AGE SA LE S, Ma sonrc
Te mpl e, Mrddleport . August
QUA LI F IED com merc1al and
? 1 n. and 73 , Thur sday ,
dom es ti c r e frigera t ro n and
Frr day
and
Sa t ur d ay
a pp i 1BOCF' se 'rvrce ma n
Spo n so red by the F 1r s t
WANTED
Ga ll ia
Chur ch of God, Sy ra c use 9
thesa1d palJf!d ppf iiOn of Fdlh, ,
am till4pmdally
'
Rc fr1gcrut ro n Co Phon e 446
S tre~ ,sriaUqW'! use6•~ ...
a
1066
8 20 3tc
means &lt;\f .-I\9:'$S anctr;~gl"ess.
8 19 Stc
for CliarleS ..~ Sayre. Mary R
PORC H SA LE and
Rogers ~nd
Martha
1 BACK
Y.ud Sal e at ?74 Condor St , TOP NOTC H marntcnance or
Drelintr·•'Affi:l l alf pers Ons for
Pomeroy
, OhiO F rrda y and
n11ll wr 1ght man Top wa g es
th e ' bene l r.f'Cif-t'tt!lem to us e ,sard
Sa turday from 10 a m II II 5
pard
s tagge r ed h ou r s
pa v ed p l' i JO f said Fifth
p m Eve r- yth1ng m u st go
Cap able o f ma 1nt e nanc e
Street' a .
~
· ps of ·J!lg r ess. .
from Sc to $1
su p ~ rv rsi on . onlv qualt fred
and e gre
h Tr prOP.er tr~~
a 70 3tp
nl am tena n ce men apply
3. i'l hW
1 V r ii'.J'cj e ' ,~ f ·
Please co ntact in per s on ,
Po meroy and al l pe r so ns fo r
Rbmer.oy f or est P r oduct s.
the . ben~[,i,l,.i&gt;h.Jhe Vlll~~ ~ -pf 6 FAM I LY yard sal e Tuesday
Ba1 ley Run Road Pome roy
Pomerof~ff~t r '"il'fso ha '('eJb~,
and We dn esda y
8 10 S
rrght to use the paved l'd(W6'n ·
Sec ond , Mrddleport Lo t of
a 15 6tc
' '
of s;;ua F~ Sttr~t as a rMi:Nn s.
ant rque drs h es and nHS&lt;:
of rng r ess an d eg r ess to othe r
Cal l 99 ? 3538
a 19 1 1c
adjacent 1 pr"p.~[{¥ owne_~bVI •tt 11 t
the Sa-rd Vl lf.lrge· bt Porrf~ro yt Y ~R D -Sa les at 879 Sout h
LOCA L. coup le needs country
OhiO .
'
T
A
M
hrrd
ve nue .
rdd.lep or t
4 J.h~ti! 11A.. - &lt;!May q t , ~ ilnd
home1~ in Chester Pomeroy
Villac]'e tre~k a~e authorrzed
Tuesday t hrough T.twr sday
~. a r ea Phon e 985 3937 . or 985
to exec ul ft a c ontrac t per
Augus t ?0 and ?1
•l9M . Chesler
ta r[li!W''1iltCIV 'fbe ~ 'ril tlf&gt;O'dr'l ' · ' · • r
8 . 1-9 ?lc
. "
8 19 6tc
en'~ment and re surf~j:iln!1 of
a ·por) r91J .if f i,f~b St r e~f rin \he YAR D Sate all th rs wee~:~, Gas
oJJIIitde Of"P6rl} ·'r'~ y , oHioV.'! " · fur n"!ce g as heater. small
' That.fWIIii~r.:d n~ncestrlWflr,~ .t
a.pp lran cE!'s, ch u bbY grrl s
i · eff ec t from and after the
c lo th es 4th St . Racrn e
RPENTRY
fl o Ori ng ,
larliest perfod allowed by law
.
8 19 J tc (1\'
ce rJmg•and panetinq Ph on e
99 ? ?!59
~asseit ~A olu~f\~t'l 97 9.' r1 0 ;, t&gt; ~ 't':ARD Sale at 5?8 Syc am or e .
8 1? ?6 1c
' I~ li'T a rbate 13'; --nh'--i ~,' A'ug ?0 and 11 fr om 9 a m
r,Ma-~.; 1 • till 6 p m
8 19 ?tc WILL do roof pa1nting ,
Attest
t:
s hrng ltng 1 remodel mterior.
Jane wan
'f
e tc Call 949 591 3
· Gie.'
' ( ':
e 20 6tc
181 6.•P· iQ·ttM,·••
WILL dO odd jObS, mowtng ,
ORpiNWJQiillf&lt;O iGl.,T5
haul rng , pain trng or roofing
Phone 992 7A09
~nu :;.·~·~ftf..£," r 6~'
7 29 ·26tc
NOTICE
VACATION TIMI.~
~· '

4 ROOM S and bath apt in
Rutland area Phon e 992
68 58
7 27 tfc

a.a

LAURELA ND APARTMENT,
6th and Ge orge Sts, New
Haven
w
va
IM
MEDIATE OCC UPANCY
Se lect your 7 bec;lrm
tow nho use Beaut rful new
ap t c ompte~':
Applrances
fu r: nl ~ hed ,
· completely
ca rp e ted . Renl $1 ?8 and up
1n c'tUd1!"g . ultl ilie s
Call
resrde nt manager , Sam or
Becky Longana c re . 1 304
88 7 ?5 67
8 19 1'Jtc

.

7

Wanted To Rent

·'

- - -- - "'FU RNI SHED

r; •J ',I •

. •

Be 11 ord arne d by the
Cou n c il of the Vil (age,l o,t

To- the Unkn"Own Heirs and

'

,,, -. -

apartment.
adults only rn Middleport
Phone 992 ·387 4
3 25 ttc
_:_____,_ :....,

__________ _

_

•fr&lt;l "'

ac,;

AE DRO O M trailer , $ ?1
week A ll utrltfie s pard
P hone 99 ? Jl?J
8 17 lie

CO I! NTRY Mobile Home
Pnrk , Rt 3J . len miles north
of Pom e roy La rg e lots wrlh
concrete pat10S , SldE!W(tlks ,
runne r s an d off street
park1 n q Ph one 99 7 7J79
1
12 31 tfc

Employment Wanted

MOB I LE hom e tor ren t
Adu lt s only Phone 99 ? 5535
8 1o lfc
.:l

.. '
REMODELING.

7

ROOM turnrshed apartment
Call 997 3658
8 17 lfc
~ 1 EDkM

mobile home ,
deposrt and references
r equired
Phone 997 34?9
8 15 61p

Plumbl ny,
Devisees of W. E . Swearmgen ,
h eatr ng and a 11 1ypes o t
deceased :
w or..,•
Mid dl e porJ , !'j_l.p~ows ~
general
r eparr
sec. : J.~IiW\Q~iJ'ch rlit (' rlme
. .
guarant eed 20 years ex
emp iOv.ee' .sieft! ,-..orth · 1h ~· Or
You are he r eby notrfled t hat
perren ce
Phone 992 2409
•
you have been nam ed def e nd
5 1 tf,...'
C!~Je
1 b
drnanc
ent~o\ led\
__ -· -· ---- - - -· ------ -~r
.
..Jill
ent
rtlede toNoacc1017
umul74ateshal
unus ede' an ts in a legal ac t ion _.
d~
ldred
Chapm
anltffs
anu·
' 19 i1 1 .R EEOOM mobil e home
Vacat ion time for a maxrm UIT) Mi
Swear
,ngen
. pla in
, v'S ftrehe - '
C ,
of e cghl years
E m ployee!. Unknown Heirs and Devisees 1
take ou t pay ment s
a 11
shall fo r ter t vacatron l1me of
W.
E
S weann~ ,
'T
~
~ 161:1 ) •IJ639? 1
8 l? l'Jtc
Serv1ce ,
AKC :
a c cumulated ,ne-,.;cesso f c, gh t deCi:E'ased . Tha t th r~· casf~( S! ST U D
Y~. -1 p~P'j
&lt;~
..,; re tlr'• rn~n t been assigned Case No7~'f5·m J ,i Regrste r ed whr t e poodle : M )( ·17 F T 1970 Winsron
,
and 1S pend1ng in the Comr:ton ·
F'o r appointment ca ll 99 ? 1
eift~'ir i? TJ\i&gt;
hall be pa ,id Pleas Cou r t of Mergs Cou n ty.
mobile
home ,
two
3904
for an-yHt. •u d and ac ~
•p
Oh 10 45769 •
tfc l
b ec;l riOom s. u n derpinned,
17
8
1 n 1H/,W, ..,,P-l l.~
hid
, ect
front' porch added, storage
c~ ulat ~~ CQ.!l
h'~ ' ob
~ ~ to partrtion th e·
1 omeroy,
1fW!1
ccum vrated follow,ng r ea l es ta te·
bulld1ng, and eir con
U'li* r Set IIJlt~ t e ra te 'of pity
Situated rn the Township of 1\KC Reg Pekingese pupp~~~
~rt ionmg , Good toca11on. 1 ,
qnn.&amp;iGaQta ~ lft'!!ii ltle
tol.f1"11e', of 0 1.
th C
\7 5 Ph on e Pt Pleasant ,
l'l"' il e off Rt 7 and 1 mile
1 ot Me 105
r?~e, me~~•tcq
X ' f 1.
rve , rnof eOhio
oun
Y
503 0
~,
State
. and
r mor e'
B 19 l 7tc.: - south of Tuppers Plains,
•
'fil, Ill
U~fJ1ploye e. , !oi!.nlh par tf cu larly bounded an d
Dh1o Call 16 14 1 667 6 1 71
e' i or
~-vears of se rv1ce desc r ,bed as follows
·• , ,
8 19 6tp
~ ~ ,t:~ ~~ ld , , V TU~&amp;
FIRST TRACT The East 40
19 17 GREENWOOD M x 17
~~ !Tl~
U ·u-.wJ, 5 perqtqt \ p1 a c res. more or less. of the
mul' ~. ,t, n unu sed s ck South half of No rth wes t
J AND 4 ROOM fur nished and . mobil e home , no turn,ture
l~'e
h:: n '' ~s a f.:c r u~ d quarter of Section 18, Town 4 ,
excep t refrrgerator and
u rl!ll!'l'~' ttnpiC~~:t\lrt,on s 1 ()( 'ldr
Range 11 , Ollve Township ,
unl ur nrs hed
apart m ents
stove . all e lec tr, c. S4,000
di~ce lltd:' *l~1i';J74 d ; '· .
Me ig S County , Oh iO, know n as
Phone 99? -54 34
... \'ho ne 99? 5606
4 17 tf c
sec IV Th is QJ.I"-tna n c.e .Shi' ll the PAULK LOT
.
,
8 19 6tc
ta ke eff ect and be In forc e ,'. SECOND TRACT S1tuWte 1n ,
fr~~il""ctalttl(lt.ugOst t jfl fJII-5,1 the Town ship of Oltve~ Coun ty
5sedru~w,;t 11h day { Of of Me 1gs and Sta te of Oh io ,
A
st IY1 ~~ · · '( DI\
•. ·
'\ ,· Se ction 18 Begrnn rng a t th e
,
,
..... . "
•
Northeast corner of the Nor th
1 t
At.~t · ~.e ~[_:t.'e
. , , west
quarter of sa id Sec tion r Twentv-second in a senes of montY-~ving service Co\.tions.
"-l tt'r....
18, th ence West 87 rod S ,d nd 5
•
.,.,.
lt~ ...'\l!!.Jv' lin ks loa s tak e : then &lt;:~ South
L "I:'H 1, 84 rods and 10 lrnk s , to th e
' ;';':.':~~:~~nl of ( ouncrl ce nter ol the line of sai d
~
'~r "' · ' Nor th west quart e r of sa id
Section. th e nce East 87 rods
'· and 5 links to the center line of
said Section , the nce· North 84
rod s and tO lrnk s to the plac e
i" j~·~~~-i~i. of beginnrng. containi ng ' 46
v
acres , more or less EX
COMPLETE CHASSIS LUBE
CEPTING therefrom aboot
ng 3' ' acres out of the Nor1heast
'ot ' corner th e reof h e retofQre
A-COIL FILT.ER
l deeded to Do uglasS Mll ts /' also
5
QT. OIL ONLY
E XCE PTIN G a church lot and
7 x 9 rods ad !Omrng same
longing to Delber t M
··~ '" ""w land ,
and also · EX
PLU5-FREE BRAKE I~SPECTION
' ·'"' :• r EPTING about one acre .
more or less . be long i n ~r 1 Jo
FREE CAR WASH WITH USE OF COUPON
J-ohn Mitis , thrs conveya li ce
conta ining 401 7 acres;mare or
less·.
You are r eq urred to answ e r
wilhrn twenty eight days after
f
the ice.
la sonce
t publication
·'
•not
each week of
for this
six A ·Good Running Car Will:
wpp' f~ ted .s uccess ive weeks . The lasJ
last longer, perform better, and' give better ·
Inventory p Ublicat ron will b e on Sep
will-':tie for tember 3r:d, 1975 , and the gas mileage.
Cou r t on twenly e rgh l days wrll cam
&lt;~,p~:iJ:\i~r m.ence on tha t date .
..
'
:-:
" I "M Case of your failure to
'.answer , or otherw iSe· respo nd ,
~a
II for an appointment. or stop by t oday . 1\eep watching for
\a s rJ!Qulred by the OhiO Rul e's • mon ey -sav tng coupons that he,p; yoU."
· 1 :
r~~~~:;t, '"' '"" 'o f ·Procedu r e , tudgment by
' .
'A
'de taurt will be rt-ndered
a9ain't you for the re lief of
DO BUSINESS WHH A LEJ;\DE"R
dt!n'lands in this c laim ~

Mob1"le Homes for

Pl!fs For "·le

rrr-a·"""""'..,.,..

For Rent

LUBE SPECIAL

•'

~j~~~~~~t~~~;~~"~~;~,~~ ·

.

l~;ul~,~ - ' 975 ~arrysp.~c.r. SMITH NELSQN,iMOTORS, INt
f , ....,

.-,

·

l,jo

1

••

''

'

,

Cleric of Courts ,
Meigs,.c;ount~

1

~~!~lf~rrJ~~!;;, 7

l.

•

Co mmon Pleas Court
'; "":.. I

,

.
''1
' 5l)\J E. Matn St.
'

l JO {8 ) 6, 13 ,20 1 '/~, (9/ 3, 6ft- '

'

• •

'

·so·rvlcehrs.:

1

I

•,.
1 ,

~h. 992~2174 1

,

..,.,.

1

'"" I

1
,

•

,

~merqy ,1 0hio

we-r'
a' Tii.::IO~SaJ:t11112-'!:'
'
·'
_I , ,j
I

East Main
Pomeroy
Ph . 992.2798
7 24 I mo

t9 ~ 0'R AMBLE R
p s. 304 v 8

PRIV ATE mee ttng room for
a ny orq a n tzatiotr. phone 991
19 !'j
J 11 tfc

Help Wanted

Char les
.s.a.n ~· M~r,y R
J
Ro g e r s ' rflP' Marlfia
. Ore nne ~ f r~ti1 We re -sllrfa c mg
of a portion of F iflh S treet '"
the •Y illf'rii!ll ot:fo9m ero.y , Qh 10 ,
2 • Th-a'f ' m' atfdlfion thereto

DICK SEYLER

?95 AMPe le c tr~ c weld e r . t rke
new , 51 75 Phon e 99 7 17S9
8 70 41C

For Rent

Wanted

tor t'he u!ei'M'"Sa'l't:l Fif tJ1 S i.c~et
NOW , T HE REF ORE . b~ If
orda 1ned by the Coun c il of the
V illa~ e (! ~~ o y , Q.h i9 ~ all

ANTIQUES

MODERN CHEMICALS

For Sale

IHJY SELL or lr a d ean y U ~
co rn s or cu rr e ncy Wtll p a y
s-1 60 for S t face 1964 and
o ld er d1m es quarte r s, and
h&lt;Jiv es Ca ll Ru tland l -1;•
36 51 Roge r Wam s ley
8 1'i 17tc

Yard Sale

WOOD -METAL · PLASTIC

197t MATADOR
S1495
4 door, local car , a•r conditioned, full equipment .

tu rnttu re, rce bo xes . ,
brass b ed s. or c omplete
ho use hol ds Write M D ,
M d le r , Rt 4, Pomeroy ,
Oh ro Call 99/ 7760
10 ., 74

Blown
Insulation Services
Blown'"~;.~~~ &amp; Atftcs

STR IPPING
SERVICE

1912 COMET 2 DOOR
S1150
6 c yl s td . trahs ., radio, like new w w tires, blue finish.
nice ca'l-- with good economy

.JLD

FECUND

t~,~/rs'~n who' (ou~d GARf•GE

Wes terll r eco r ds. on Sunday

f

LAXITY

FREE ESTIMATES

r I

0.. Wednesday, Aug. 20, 1975

4R ebet J 4dr ,
auto , trans
m rssron Phone 997 1701 .
6 14 blp

LARRY I,AVEt'DER

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

S EWING
M/1CHINE
Rcptl rrs. serv 1ce all mak es
992 :nB.I Th e r abrrc; ',h op .
P omeroy /\u t ha'rtlcd ~ rn ger
\ .-"liP S an d ~ e r vrce
We
sh.lr p en Sc 1Ssors
1 79 !l c

MODERN W"i, ln u t ste r eo
radto console , am fm r adra ,
4 speed c hang e r Balan ce '-. E.Pri C l fi N K~ c lea nC'd
fl.~odc r n Sanrtatron
'19? 395.1
5101 77 or term s Cal l 99?
or 'il9"! 7149
39 65
9 1a t fr
a 17 tic

REASON WH¥ WE
HAV&amp;N'T &amp;EEN
PICI&lt;IOD UP!

''T"'"'""

WANTED

WEST

9Q86 2
9Kl04
t Q J 10
t A 8 7! 2
69842
.8!!
SOUTH 10)
6AKQ92
9AH

Kitchen State In s p ec ted
Lt ce n se d
Ba k er
and
De co rator
Horn e ma~e
Noodl es a lso featured

t65
•KQJ

~IFIL! IF 'IOU~

North -South vulnerable

~ R~,I.E,A.~ ~

fORCH UI41T 0N 1

West

-

Pass
Pass

&gt;

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-IN A G EM, AGAIN!

,oc:=:=t=.'"""'==::u:::n o=:::n:&gt;?==:===:::::Jil
v:::JI:::lC:::::=::t:t:"'S:=:"'-=="~
~~~~;:::ill(~~0~n'::.
he
... YEAH7 --- WELL, HOW
AND SUPPOS~ I REFUSE TO II
EH? OH, ' spadE$ .

e
ALLEY

"TELL WHERE I GOT THE"'-- ·
OH --· THEY WOULD KEEP
"THE WHOtE TEH BilLIOti,
SUT NOT DO AHYTHINCj
TO ME--- TH~T'S NICE..
MAYBE MY SECRET IS
WORTH 1EH Sill ION TO hiE-

YES - WHY,
I HAVEN 'T

~RJCLILDYED

v•

"-..-

"

SHERIFF!

c L 450

HQnda , crash bars ,

1 helmets , i!lnd windshield ,

... WE I'IERI&lt;
JUST HAVtN '

A LITTl.E
~ERIFF

5695 Phone 747 3713

8 19 Jtc

LET us service vovr ~ Volks
wagen , reasonable rates
Middlepol"t Pennzoil North
Second Street, Middleport REALE: STATE SA LE BY
UNITED
STAT ES
OF
Phone 997 9973
AMERICA
{FARMERS
8· 19 26tc
HOME
ADMINI S
TRATIONJ 1 Five room ,
19 75S UZUKI ?50, $850 See Joe
one story
house,
ap
Imboden, Welchtown Hill in
proximat e ly 50 years oiQ
Mrnersvitte
on 5 acres ot tand , located
8 19 61p
one mrle Northw es t of
Pomeroy on the eas t sr de of
13
NICE white Leghorn
State Route 143 tnspectron
hens Phone 949 3661 .
Please conta c t the offrce of
a 19 Jtc Farmers
Ho me
Ad
ministrah on, 17 1 W est
CANNING tomatoes , green
Second St reet , Pomer oy ,
and red peppers . Cleland
Ohco 45769 Teleph on e 99'}
Farms. Geraldine Cleland .
JbOJ . Terms of sa le L Ca'sh .
Racine Phone 949 4121 .
7 Terms available to an
8 19 lfc
ineligrble applicant ar e no t
less than 10 p erce nt cas h
ST EREO RADIO - 8 track
down and no1 to exceed 10
1ape . am tm . 4 speed
amortized paym en t s tor
changer
combination
balanc e of purcha se prr ce
Phone\ IOJ M. or terms Call
Bids to be accepted at
997 3965
Pomeroy Offrce until ? 00
8 19 tfc
PM August ?9, al whrch time
bids will be opened Th e
MOVING. must sell. One solid
Government reserves th e
maple , 4 piece bedroom
nghl
lo reject any and a ll
suite , I 9 piece antique
bids
dinrng rm . suite, 1 Gibson
8 17 Stc
srde by side refrigerator
freezer combination. har
vest gold , one Magic Chef HOUSE at 128 Laure l St ,
gas stove, harvest gold , One
Pomeroy For furth e r rn
brown leather rocker , one
format ron, call 99 7 3868
green living room chair.
a. J4 6tc
brown antique chair om am.
I wooden rocker , 1 la'wn
sweeper ; bicycle , decoy$ ACRE lo t on F la twoods Rd
near Frve Pornts Septic
tor hun ling , clolhlng and
tank. water tap Pho ne 98 5
mise 581 South Fourth St
4?0?
Phone 991 1911
B 19 3tp
8 19 Jtc

Real Estate for Sale

PUBLIC AUCTION
Saturday afternoon, Aug. 23 at 2:00 O'clock.
Rain or Shine.
This Is a stock r•duction sale of many good u sed
motorcycles. No reasonable bids will be rejected
Offered for sale at public auction will be various sizes,
models and makes, Including trail bikes , touring bikes
and others which have been used as demonstrators,
and possibly some that have been repossessed .
Financing may be ~rranged for if applied for in
advance. After each sale there will be a drawing for
free gilts which may be used .by jlny bike rider
On day of sale the Items may be viewed from 12
noon until s-ale time. To make room for new stock
which is on order we are also making special deals on
new bikes whiCh are now on display in our showroom
Suzuki of Gallipolis, M&lt;Jtor Cycle Sales and Service . Located 4 miles up river from Gallipolis. on Rl. 7,
just above the ·silver Bridge at Kanauga .

COl R. E. knotts and Son~ Dave, Auctioneers

Auction..,s remark!l: This Is not a junk sale. Many' of
these bikes llr'·

11

1c.e new.

CU ST OM
PI C IU RE
F RAM IN G
ORIG IN AL
SEAS CAPI;: AND LAN .J
SCA PE PA IN TINGS E
JOYCE MILLER 99 ? 7680
B 10 7 tt p

CLELAND ··
608 E.
.REALTY
MftiN

-::_l'oM ~ R~q"Y. o

Ml DOLE PORT Oul ·
standing buy . l floor plan 2
or J BR, bath , lo vely k1t
c hen. fu ll ba se men t. New
perma . pane alum w in
dows, new carpet in g . new
paneling , new hot water
tan k, new carport. N.G
forced a1r he at On q utet
street. J UST $13 .000
NEAR HARRISONVILLE
- 1 lo vely ac r e. Bn c k &amp;
Frame - 3 large BR. Jt t
baths, utrlity R , lovel y
kttchen , 27 ft
cabrnels,
rang e &amp; oven F r ont porch,
rear patio, la r ge garage
with storage sPace Ca r peted . $25,900
NEAR RUTLAND - 2 77
a cres, 1 floor p lan, 3 lovely
BR .. bath, n1 ce k1tc hen,
ut ility R , s torm wihdows &amp;
doors , s1 de por c h, carpo rt
&amp;
larg e garag« , full
basement w it h p r 1vate
water supply (city tap
paid) , 2 trailer hooku ps
THIS YOU MU ST SEE .
$28,000.
POMEROY Close. 5
acres, hom e has 3 BR
~ath . n rce k tlche n, par
c hes Storag e b ldg. Askmg
on ly $7.900 .
DON ' T THROW YOUR
MONEY AWAY - LET US
APPRAI SE
THE
PROPERTY
BEFORE
YOU BUY OR SELL.
PHONE - 992-2259

-

YOU BEL IEVE?
Burld an all steel buil dr ng a t
Po le 13t~rn pr ices"&gt; Go lden
Gran t All Ste el Burldtngs .
Rt •I Bol&lt; 148, Waverly ,
Oh ro P hone 9·11 ?796
7 24 1fc

WOULD

BACK HOE lor ren t, hour or
contract. r eg or e)(ca ... a tory
type Se pttc tanks rnstal!ed .
Brl l Pul lm s, phone 99? 2478

I'm read4 an4
time 40u are.

The~'re

qoinqto
televise
Papoand
Nell from
hPt·"'

(2 wds.)

'les.Doc'
This is
the first
rehearsal!

40 Was
situated

41 PeachyDOWN .

1 Harry or

Henry
Z Spanish
city
3 Dare say
(3 wds. )

study
5 The abject

(2 wds. )

Young

7 14 26 tc

IT~

Movie " Adventures of the Queen" I;
Not tor Me" 10; Janaol 33.
12 :Jo-Wide Worl!l Special 6.
1 :GO-Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.

!,-+-+-1--

AstroGrapM

LADY WINO IN A
FLJR COAT-

Spnlll IJI
Meull "lut
'

•

with one or two pupil ~ OW."C
let It gr..., tmo a - - or
your fun wtN be ftua ... ·

4

.

RUBBER BACK

/Jl

CALL14 2-421 l
TALK T O WENDELL
GRATE ,
CARPET CONSUlTA NT

"'

,.1M_

99 Square
Yard

We hoJve hun dre d s'
carpet val ues Yo ur 10b c er
b e ca nr !Jieted rn 1 to
weeks Nv lo ng war ting1
p errod Our In Stal ler hil s 28
years ex p er ren ce
Expe rt
1nstal lalro n You ' ll l1k e
'Wh at you q e l

GEMINI (Moy 21·June 20) It's A0UAIIIU8 (.Ia •

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:

WINNIE

®THAT WAB A WONDERFULOUTINGLI\ND YOLI
REALLY KNUVV HOW
ID HANDLE A BOAT!

ALTHOUGH MY
5HIPo ARE
UBUALLY A
BIT LARGER
lHAN THAT
ONE.

ME ... WHATIO IT
LJKE: ... BPENDINGONE(S LlFE: AT &amp;EA 1
I MEAN?

•

Ia

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands 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 formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letten are different.

CRYPI'OQUOTE

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

ZRSFRVP

EUSQF

UQPZPE.

Ruttana

QW

FCJF

J
QE

FCBR·
EPIVP·

IJFQBW . -SQSSQJW
EHQFC
·
Yel!terday's Cryploquole: THE MAN WHO IS TOO OLD TO
LEARN WAS PROBABLY M.WAYS TOO OLD TO LEARN. HENRYS. HASKINS
•
&lt;C&gt; 197&amp; Kin1
S)'ndtcate. Inc. )

f••'""'

I 'D AST 'IE TO STA'I
FER SUPPER,

BUT ALL I GOT IS
LEFTOVERS -··

1'1 \,1

I~

ANOTHER:
MII.K51W(E FOil
SPIKE?

•

..

•

ICOIIPIO (0&amp; II II ' ...
Much work can· •• ac ..
.. Btmlce B- Oeol compllahed e1 ' - !Oci!IY. W
don't look lor pelion---For Thwodey, Aug. 2t,.1t75
Forget tt. Yau - · • IIICitail.
ARIES (Mori:h 21-Aprll 11)
You' re fortunate tn doing BAGITTAJIIW 0.. • 1~1
things alone today Shun large 211 Donl be ctrattin 1n10 . _
dlscuaslona about "*liit IUCII .
group s or soctal lunct1ons
poUtica Of nllglon ......
because you'll meet opposi- as
Keep tile rop ..
fllltl
tion
Avoid btn.--.
·
.
.
TAURUS (April :!O·MOJ 20) CAPIIICOIUI (11M. II ••
You'll upse t fam11y members 1f 11) Y~X.t'll be temp ..cl ID bur
you let a secret sltp out today something tod~. but Chltctl.
Luck Is on your srde as long as with the family ffrat. Otl• al ..
you keep ttrrngs to yourself .
you could UPHf them.

501 NYLON

742 -421 1

,

•

t1 : 3o-Johnny Corson 3,4, IS; Wide Worlel

?-'?--TI-JARS A

Carpeting

.•
6 :4S-Mornlng Report 3; Farmtlme tt.
6 : 5~Newo 13.
7 : 0G-Today3.~, 1S ; A.M. America 13,61 CIS_Io..
8 :00-Lucy Show 6; Capt. Kangaroo t.10; SteMM lt.
33.

- Calhoun
Flying loy
Cubic

!

•1

insect

HA-N Olf:: TT ERED SIG N S
AND POS T ERS
F R EE
ESTIMATES CA LL M C
CRAWFORD. 99 2 7680
R 7 76 tp

Llj:T US DO

s.,,,...W

6 :GO-Sunrlse Seminar 4; Summtr
10.
6 : 2~Farm Report 13.
6 : 3()--Five Minutes to LIYe By
""'"61 . . . . M
swers 8; School Sc- tO ; Patleme ter Llvllll II.
6 : 35-&lt;:olumbus Today~; . ·

s.-

chief

8 Perhaps

manner

THURSDAY, AUGUST 11, 19JI

=~

4 University

7 Moslem

pudent

.

'

11 :DO-News 3.~.6.8,10,13.15; ABC""'" A. .,
.' ,,
11 :»-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Wiele Wllrllll' 1 clll Ill ·
FBI 6; Movie "F irehouM" I I Mllvie ' ..,.. . ..
Cassidy" 10; Janakl 33.
·
12 :»-Wide World Special 6 ..
I :oo-Tomorrow 3,_.; News 13.

0

6 Foeman

18 In an im-

•

». ;.,

way

Dreamer''

qentlemen!

at

to make four

lee.

17 "-

't'Car

.

•

r

He started by playing dum·
• k'
of dl
nds Ma be
w~~ :,'!~ unci~!. the

a handbag
11 Contend
12 Italian
boy'S in&amp;me
13 Mterdinner
candy
14 A coral of
Florida
(2 wds.)
15 Young pig
16 Egyptian
solar god

,. "

MOBILE Crane se rv1c e a nd
dorer work Phone 99 ? 5468
a 1 26tp

going

8 :»-Movle "T~ Trial of CMplaln Ju
" '·""
Baseball ~ ; Movie "Congratuteiiii!J" " Mllli
Builds, Man Destroya 33; Phlllltl!~Na ,...
Festival 20.
.
• . .
9 :()0--,Lucas Tanner 3.15; C - 1,101 Mlll1111'1!' .~
Theatre 33.
1
9 : »-Jean Shepherd's America 20.
·• ·· :1 ~
IO :oo-Petrocelll 3,15; Jim Stafford 61 Mai:Jtlll 1.111 J
Focus on Abortion ll; Family at
Jl.
:·

».

by THOMAS JOSfi'H
ACROSS
11 Colored
1 Coffee
38 Guarantee
5 Orna·
3t Talented
mented, as

ALL

197?

46

~-stUt1JU1f&gt;td'

OOP

CLOSEOUT I

POMEROY LANDMARK
··-~ack W. Carsey, Mgr.
. ; . ~hone 992 -2181

Pass
Pass

j~~~a-YwE]T,AHHIE West hadn't and the defense
[played a second and third dla·
monel. South ruffed the third
diamond and played two top
At that point be eould
ace of hearts, cash the
and lead a second heart.
eiUher opponent had started
king· small or queen-small,

IM•Y"'•-•••
Al i A &gt; I j " ' O -

2o -rs

-·- ---

AS LOW AS '139.95

Pau

So•••
16

South looked over dummy and
thought, " Too bad N'o rth didn't
respond one notrump . I would
have/ut him in three which he
woul have wrapped up ."
Then South gol down lo the
really important problem . How

0

·-- -

26

Eaat

By Oswald &amp; James Jaeoby

MUCH WOULD THAT COST?
1 GUESS 1 COULD PAY rT ·'·
OH- 1 SEE- ~T TO PROVE
TITLE - TELL WHERE I GOT
THE JEWELS, EH=&gt; HM· ,., ···

&lt; _;,

8 : »-Big Volley 6.
9 :00-A .M . J; Phil Donahue ~.15: Muriel SIIU I II
.Schoolies 10; Mornlno with D. J . 13; ....,..., ~ • ••
9 : »-Not For Women Only J; Ro..,... • - 61. llltilll,
6: Galloping Gourmet 8; P~ 11; New %..
Revue 13 ; Travel 33.
9 : 55-&lt;: huck White Report&amp; 10.
,
lO .DO-Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3,•,151 Sjlln,OII ~Mt
Mike Douglas 13; Lilias Yoga 1o You A; · • ' •
A Florida reader eomplal~.
10 :»-Wheel of Fortune J.~. 15: &amp;v..... let Celvlll-'
"I opened one club in · fourth
Evans 4; Price Is Right I; Bendt!an41 Itt Z.,.
Cooking School 33.
·
seat. My opponents proceeded ·
11 :GO-High Rollers J, ~.IS; Frlondllo No,..11'141 O.W. "
lo bid and make lour spades .
Lite to Live 6; Gambit 8, 10; Film
My partner says I should have
11 :»-Hollywood Squares 3.4,15; BrHr lund\ 4,1*1 "
passed the hand out since my
Midday 4; LoYe of Lilt 8, 10.
hand :
11
:55--Take
Kerr 8; Farmtlme 10.
•xx•A•x•Kxx .• AQx
12:oo-Magnlflcent Marble Machine :1.15J Sllawelho 111
XX
Bob Braun's .!0-.!0 Club 4; ""'" 6.1. Ill Ml I
had Ill defense against spades .
Rogers 33. .• ,
~\
The answer lo our reader is
12:»-Jackpot 3,15; All My Children .. 131 s.ti'CIIter ·
that his hand qualifies as an
Tomorrow 8,10; Elec. Co. 33.
"
opening bid In any and all
12:55--NBC News 3,15.
i
systems. All opening bids don' t
1 :GO-News 3.~.4.13; Phil Donahue 6; Yl!lftt . .. .
lead 1o a profit. All be need
Restless 10; Not For Women Only 1S1 \'!Ita A ......
know that year in and year out
33.
;
'
he will gain by operung that
1 :Jo-Days of our Lives J.~, 15; LefsMelleA o.l"l"
hand in any position, vulnerable
As the World Turns 8,10; Episode Actlll'l Jl.
or not.
2: 00-$10,000 Pyramid 6,13; Guiding Lllh! I.MI
Family at War 33.
.' . • ·
(Do you h&amp;ve 8 question lor
2:»-Doctors
3,4,15;
Rhyme
l
o
R
"1Jrl.
of
the JBCobys? Write "'Ask the
Night
8,10.
Jacobys' care ol thts
J :GO-Another World 3,4, 15; General Haljlltal ""I
newspaper. The most InMatch Game 8, 10; Lilias Yoga &amp; v., a : ~ ·
teresting questions wilt be
Chess
JJ.
·
·, •
used m this column and
J
:J()-.()ne
Life
to
Live
13;
Bewitched''
1'elllslal
..
writers w111 receive copies ol
8,10;
Feelino
G&lt;ICid
20;
To
Be
AMatjftC
.
.
JACOBY MODERN.)
4 :00-Mr. Cartoon 3; I Dream of JMftftle 41 ·UR•IIf
15; Mickey Mouse Club 6; Musical """' II '
Sesame St. 20,33; Movie "Prlnceu of 11M lllle''. It: .
Dinah 13.
'
4:3o-Bewltched J; Merv Grllfln ~; , _ . IWM 41
Mickey Mouse Club 8; Bonanza 15.
5 :GO-FBI J; Lucy 'Show 8; Mlater R.,..n' ltlltil!
borhood 20,33.
·
· .,A
5 :»-News6; Andy Griffith 8; H-'slletwt1JI .Gil
Smart 15; E lee. Co! 20,33.
.,.
·
6:GO-NewsJ,4,8,10,1J,15; ABC News6; Se&amp;MieSl• •
Book Beat 33.
· '
" . . .·
6 : »-NBCNewsJ,4,15; ABCNows13: AftcllrGr~61 ;..,
CBS News 8,10; Lilias Yooa &amp; You 33.
,
;' , ·
7:00-Trulll or Cons. 3.~; Bowling lor Dollarl 61 ~ ~ ·~
Yesterdlty's Aaswer
10: Let' s Make o Deal 13: Jimmy DHn 151 Meklnf ., f
It Count 20; Nova 33.
..
!: •
t Citizen of 2t " - Must
~ t'
Su.sa
Be a
. '• '
7: »-Hollywood Squares 3,4; Ohio Loll• r tt ' lteli.. ·
10 Contributed
Way"
Price Is Right 8; Wild Klngclom 10; To Tell' llle' '
18 Fatigue
3t White
Truth 13; American Outdoonman 15. ' '
8 · oo-Ben Vereen 3,4,15; Almost AnylhJnt 0.. .. 1:1.1
It Maize
31
The Waltons 8,10; Evening At Pope A: I.HI of
:!Z Jean or
with
Leonardo Do VInci 20.
Deborah
cargo
9 :GO-Movle "The Last Day" 3,4,15; SltM!t of 1M
Z3 Ski wear
Francisco l3;; Movie "We're · Not Merrlltf' t;
36 Egyptian
24 Earthly
Movie "Rio Conchos" 10; Flrl,. LIM M;
king
Philadelphia Folk Festival 33.
25 Hold a
11
lO:OCJ-Harry
0 6, 13; News 20; Women A.
session
'
Z7 Joined in
t1 :GO-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 15; ABC News 33.

Openmg lead - Q +

For Sale

-

EAST
6 H

610~

KUHL CAKE DECOR

Air
Condltionen

he would have been end played .
That didn't appeal. The hand
looked like one with all suits
breaking quite evenly . so South
tried another line.
He cashed the clubs, sloppmg
in dummy Then he led a low
heart. His plan was lo finesse
his nine and it would have work·
ed except lor one thing . East
had been thinking while the
play went on . When that heart
was led , East hopped up with
his king.
This unusual second-hand high play lelt South with no way
1o make his contract

NORTH
6 643 2
.. 7 53
t K 94
6 A 10 7

Real Estate For Sale

BALER TWINE. 1.000 ft. 375
lbs
ts
FARM
FER
TILIZER , Specral prices .
Ball Brothers Farms , S R
143 and Co Rd 10 Phone
698 4571
8 -19 61p

-

. .

Easts play gets high-handed

CAKE BAKING

HUNTIN G Li cense. Nrg ht BOAT Motor s . R e pa1r s 49 8
craw lers , m ea l worm s.
Loc u s t St , Mrddlcport
TACKLE
guns , am m o.
Oh 10 Ph one 99 7 3097
Flatwood s. Ohio
1911 SUPER Beetle VW , 5995
bow s, arrows , c amp1ng
1 77 ?61 c
Pomeroy. Ohto
Phone 949 5645 .
equip CB's a nd acce ssory
Stop In Or
8 11 6tc
Indian Joe's , JOB Pag e s t . 'J
Call992
7537 a ~I
streets pa s t Middl e p ort
19 77 GMC • . ton ptckup truck,
Swrmm ing Pool
s harp and rn very good
8 l3 76tp
AR lE
T 0 1l. E1
condrtion Price 'S1 , JSO Call
.,
--- J BEDRM ho use larg e kr t PORI
RENTAl
Co n&lt;.truc!•O il
99 7 ?91 7 or see Steve Burton .
GOOSENEC K
c hen , central ,1 1r . rarqr
O u tdoor even!~
Phon,c
8 17 111p
krlchen . wu ll to wu11 cur
s tock tra ile r w ith 19 /4 Chevy
al!
r
p
o
i
•S
!.16 t / 8, ,
G
pc
t1ng
I
H
I\
a
pp
r
oved
dual wheel. 1 ton p rc kup
R u&lt;."&gt;eii'S Plurnbonq .1 nd
Pinto
19ll
GREEN
Phone 99 7 7030
Can be bought togethe r or
Phone
He alrrr Q
auto matic. \1.300
B 15 61p
s eparat e Ca ll 147 J? 67
8 19 IlL
99 ? 7387
s 10 11c
8 19 41C
EXCAVATI -N G .
backhoe.
CANNING peaches now thru
dozer and d rt cher
Gus ,
Se ptemb e r 10 . U S No 1
Te afo r d Re alty
elec tr1c a nd wate r l1ne
grade vell ow Freestone For
bu rral , b usements fo oter s.
BICYCLE Repairs , Sales and
can ning or freez tng S6 .:19
Vr r qtl B .. ~r. , Brok~&gt;t
sept•C sys te m s cmd brush
Se rvice , 498 Locust St. ,
busheL 53 49' bushe l, S l 99
c lean rny Wil l hau l frl l drrt.
Mrddleport . Ohio Phone
pec k
PLE ASE BR IN G
top sort sand and g r ave l.
Mo •c /r,Jfllf \ I
YOUR
OWN
CO N
992 _3092
\1rnestone tor drrv ewavs a n d
7 22 26tc
l'• ·llll ' r .ly , Olrr• J
TA INER S P eac he s are our
roads Pho ne Cha rles R
s pec talty Tw o co n venient
Hatfi e ld , Backhoe Ser vic e,
lo ca tions . Bob ' s Markel.
1971 CAMPER. partly self
Rt I , Rutlan d. Ohro, 747
Mason
.
W
Va
Phone
CJO.t
l
MODERN
KITCHEN
With
co nta t ned . must s ee to
6092
a ppr ec1B te Sl .695 Phone
773 577 t
and
Mrdway ~st ove and r e frige r ator. car
' II 901 c
Market , P ome roy , Oh to
. .
k 1h
99? PJB .
1614 1 997 ?587
petrng 1n h v tng &amp;
I c en
a 15 9tc
~/l-OY M I X c0N C ~ E TE
B 10 i7 tc Nice
bath , 2 bedrooms
dc l rvr:&gt;r ed r rght to you r
Natural
gas
furna
ce.
and
p r o1ect r n~t &lt;tnd ea s y f rrc
STARCRAFT camper for
DELICIOU S hom e grown lar g e lot
sa le , sleeps 8 Phone 992
es trmates Phon e 9&lt;1 2 171:1 L
peaches , whrt e and yel low OUT OF TOWN - On good
370?
Goe ql e m R cady Mtx Co .
Mason Peach O r cha rd
d M b 1 h
h s
8 17 61p
M• ~d lc port , Oh10
Phone 1304 J 773 5559
pav ed roa . o 1 e o m e t1
6 JO If(
8 e ttc , 3 bedroom s a nd L C water
CA NNING tomatoes . pick
--- - - - ---Na t. gas furna ce
o &amp; o---rREE Tr " nn~mQ-2o
your own Andrew Cross.
Letart Falls , Ohio Phone NEWLY rebuilt 1950 Ferguson NEAR STORES -- 12 rooms,
year s e xp errence In s ur ed .
747 7857
tr ee esl 1m ates Cc"l! t 992 3057 ,
tractor . 51450 00. 4ft. bru s h bath, na t gas a nd large lot
Coo lvill e Phone ( 1) M7
8 11 61C
hog . 5185 00 6 ft gra d er
blade , $160 00
1 r ow Lots of possibili ti eS for r en
3041
TWO HOR S E Johnson trailer.
c ultivator SilO 00 . 6 If drag tal s.
4 30 ti C
land em wheels Also. 71
type tam den disk , S60 00 . INCOME _ 4 apar t men ts and
vear old Reg Quaf"ter Horse
trailer, S60 00 . boom p ole. bu so ness room to le t in M 1d . E Xcr1vr. l i NG--:- dol,_. r loa d elS35 00 . or wrll take $7000 00
s lud colt Phone 997 1757
.lnd bo1 c kho e wa r " "&gt;C' p t rc
a 18 Jtc
tor whol e work s Phon e 843 dleport .
lank ~
rnsta lled
dump
t ruck~ a nd lo bovs ta r tu r c
?561
NEW LISTING - 5 room s
8 14 6 tc with bath , modern k 1lchen .
wr ll ha1..'l till d1 r t lop sor L
WHEAT pennres 85c roll,
l rmr::sto ne and qr a~,.-.1 .. Cal l
s ilver ce rttricates . S1 75 DAVI S JOOtren ch e r wrth blad e nat gas hea t and basement on
Bob or Roqer J e ff ers day
each : S? bills , SJ JO each
and trader Phon e 98 5 337 3 good street
phone 992 70 89 , n•Qhl ph one
Buffalo ntckels . ~ S6 roll.
99'} 357~ or 992 52 3?
8 14 6tc ACREAGE - 97 acres ol
s ilver dollars. S4 .-40 each .
2 II li e
Lrbertynickels, 511 roll Call r::c-::---·- ·_· -·--=---=-~ pnvacy , IS or more of botlom
Roger Wamsley , Phone 74?
~
~
A Dan1e l Boone res ort
·
E LWOOD
BOW ER~, REPAIR
1651
NEEDED
100
ACRES
OR
Sweepe r s to as ters 1ron'S.
8 15 12tc
al l smal l appl ra nc es Lawn
MORE ON HARD ROAD
1917 ARROW Camper , phone
IIIOW €r . ne:-: 1 IO Stat e Hrqh
WITH WATER . CALL 992
9~? 5468
\'.'C!y Garage on
Rou te 1
8 15 76tp
Pho ne 98 5 J87"i
1 16 tt c

-

WIN AT BRIDGE

CAPTAIN EASY
tCAN THINK

01' ONE PO~&gt;SI8LE ""..

Pomer OY

Ph 99'2 · 2114

.

6 »-NBC News 3,4, IS; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Jody's Body Shop JJ.
7 :oo-Truth or Cons. 3,ol;; Bowling for Dollars 6;
,..
What's My llne8; News 10; Country Music Jubilee
IJ; To Be Announced 15; Book Beat 20; T~
Romaganolls Table 33.
7:»-Pollce Surgeon 3; Name That Tune 4; Let's
Make A Deal6; Wilburn Brothers 8; Movie " Bullet
1
In the Flesh" 9; T~ Judge 10; To Tell the Truth IJ ;
Episode Action 33.
8 :00-LIIIIe House on the Prairie 3, 15;; That's My
. . Moma~~ :j;_~edsce! oe '75 ~ ; Tony Orlando &amp; Dawn

.

From the largest Tr uck or
Bu ll dozer Rad1a1or to the
s n:~ a!lest 1-tcater Core
Na1h.1n Bagg s
Radralor 5pec tah !ol.

Syracu se, Ohto
Ph . 992 -3993
A 10 I mo

-

:.

WINDOWS&amp; DOOR S
REPLACEMENT
WINDOW S
ALUMINUM
SIDtNG-SOF·FITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

:.

r T~~~:~.~?:.mlog for .~~!. ."!ewiJJ8:_:~ ,

~EXPER_IEN(;ED
..... ..
adiato
.
' Service

• I
I

~~=..B=
u=s=
in
~
e
~
s
~
s~
S~
e
r
~
v
~i~
c
~
e
~
s
~
PAINT'

1972 NOVA S· S CPE .
S209S
350 V -8 au tomat1 c trans, power brakes, good GR70-15
ri!ldial l1res, dark brown finish. blk . 'ltflnyl Interior,
radio

Wanted To Buy

(An•w~l'l tomorrow)

v

' Vd li})

w rLl
t h f'

·

~

furJfY...: clbvE'

Jl1 i i

'"&gt;WEE PER
and
Se w rng
Mach 1ncs R e pa rr , Pa rts ,
a nd
Suppl ie s
Dav1s
Vac uu m Clean e r ,' m rle up
Geo rg e's Cr eek Rd off Stat e
F&lt; oute 1 P ho n e .t•l6 0194
B ?0 ltc

Now arrange the drcltd !etten

I·.. I · 1_··-.~ I_ toformthesurpriseanswer,u
suggested by the above cartoon.
;:
1~1\1lli~,~~'ii~PRISI~AHswlR~hm==~l D KI 11 )

2SIGNS 'Pomeroy
OF
Motor Co.·
.QUALITY

17 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,

.

a waste of ttme to travel or run Your

~

t ....

one-t~ dllliili .._

errands today. Since nothmg assoclatea collfd be unfor..
can be accomplished . Bask in tunate tod.,. Why nac ~.out
the sun by the pool.
and meet ,.... and .,.... ...
CANCER (June 21·July 22) P&lt;I&lt;&gt;Pie?
Avoid s pendmg money today PIICia (,.._ • • • • •
You'll buy all the wrong lhmgs Play your hunchet .,.,....,..
You can be creat1ve Without but at work todar- ,,. • ·
needless expense
castlccommencaot~
LED (Ju4J 23-Aug. 22) Olhers could !hr..., you oll·bala,...,
won't see eye.fo.eye with you (0~
today It you could lls(eo to
"'
thetr side ot the story and y1eld,
•
tt would brmg you happiness
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 22)
=
.·
You'll have an mchnatron to
• .... It, 1M ~
·
make changes at work today
You may not pottlia e1 . .
There 'll be no problems unless money in the wortd ttU
you try to use unlamihar tools year 11 you go on 1..,. 01--.t on the project.
trips and mHt ,... liiDII''
LIBRA (Sopl. 23-Dcl. 23) You much !Iappin--;.;.,.
ca n have a good t1 rhe today (NEWSPJ\PER £NTDPIIDE ~-l

y our
·
Blrthdl)'
OOI'N.,.

�.,
'

.~.u -

.1. '"'-

vau1 ...,..,u ~.~.u~.~.. IUJ.UWt:iJUtl-rUiu~ruy ,

u ., Wednesaay, Aug . 20, 1975

For. Fast R~sults Use The Sentinel Class~fieds

Notice

Auto Sales

ROOM A ND BO/\RO
Pr rv at c air , con dctroned
r oo m
ph one
1 v . all
r 11c~--. 1 s, lau ndr y pl us m any
(')( tra s Wrr te Mrs M J
Mrltcr , Bo)( 105 Pomero y
Oh ro
8 1 161p

AN IMFI&lt;OP~~ USE'
OF THE PEN ,MioHI
RESULI IN IHIS.

'\RUl'PEA~
V
1 ~
~ .A

," •

.,.~l8

Lost-

AFTER

1 '

lon g

play 1ng

~ ALE Aug
18 ?? 9
ro 5 p m . loc at ed on Rt
Il l sou th o f Jack's Club o ff ' H'/\ LL 'S Sa lvage on old R t 33,
R t 1 by pass Guns poc k e t
tu s t a c r oss from Gru e!'.e r 's
kn r" es brcyc le to ols, new
Ch tpp e r will buy JUnk autos
pil rn r,nq s upplrC 5 baby
w rlho ut motor s '£16 10 $?0,
l ur n1t ur e
newborn and
w•th m o lor s 'li l8 to $?3
udu lt c loth in g a n d mr sc
Co tnple te S? O I O $75 Th is
8 1! Stp
does n I 1nclude compact and
fore1 gn car s motor s a n d
5 FAM ILY Garage Su le at 45 -1
tr an s mrSS 1ons not c leaned .
Soulh Th rr d - Ave
Mrd
s 1 so a tnm dr e d Sc rap No 7
d teport
thr s Th ur s d ay
long ~ m etal . $1 a hundre:d .
I rtday and Sa tu r day 10 il m '
No I lo nq m e tal Sl 50 per
trll dark
h un dre&lt;J - c tean c ast $?
8 ?o 3tc
h undre d Trn , 40c per hund
r e d Any mater.al bro ugh t
J rAMILY
Yard Sale ·at
rtllo 1u n k yard no t sor ted
Rust tc H il ls. S yra c u se.
will be grade d acc ord rn g ly
Frrday
and
Saturd ay .
Pr.ces sub 1ec t to cha n ge
Augus t ?7 and 7J An lrque s.
ho ur s from 8 a m to :1 p m
c lot hm g , drshes, fur n rtur e.
Monday 'h ro ugh F r rday. 8
baby rtem s. a c hi ld's sa nd
a n1 lo I? noon Saturdays
bo•
Writ p1 cku p old au tos , ""do
8 70 Jtc
have so m e parts for au ros
Phone 985 J 797
GARAGE Sa te , Thur sda y and
Fr 1da y, Aug us t 71 and 77 at
109 Spr ing Avenue. 9 a m .
till 5 p m P omeroy, Oh10
.I •
.
8 ?0 ?tp
c t s H paid tor all ma kes and
mode ls of mobile hom es
YA R D S&lt;~ l e off R!. 174 Rt 7
Phpne area code 614 423
" by pass on Rt 143 up behrnd
'9531
Jac k 's Club ClothE'S c hea p ,
t L
·.
4 13 tfc
throug h Fr1 day
'
a 20 J lch ~r- - :.;mlT' &lt;r - .,----- - - - - - -

Coun t ry

Aug ust

17

Please ca ll 99 ?

5~? 8 .• t•~•(!~ t-l·

8;.7 0 Jtc

· oRR~~\Illil.tlr N0 .' 1o'J :·

o R-0 J.N.IiiNt i!i'~'p R o\1'ti)\1NG
F OR MW!IJIAlll i

EAS&gt;I;M'EN~

ON FIFTH STREET IN THE:
VILLAGE
OF
POMERl[lY.
O HIO
.

. .,. 110 nlq~
~
w'HEREA~(Fi.iHh 3-t t:qt!t
1

.in

SiJ IQ. v1~' ~· tt'om er o y h as

b een • atl!
law , 9nd• I );:

l''~oriJ•n&lt;j, to .

fl ·

Wi-IEREAS . on e half of
Fifth ~S\.'iF~fl(frtO.Wn e l:t ~t!V1 ' the
V• 11 age Of l'Om et ,oy , QhJo , .and
one hal l by Ctt~r'les E Sayre ,

Ma ry ~ .~ s· andf • MMtfi~
J Drenner , and
~
.

the Vii~AQe ,Of.
Pomero., aojj, Char~• ~ '
Sa yre , Mlli~CW Roger' tifld
WHEREAS

Mar tha

M

tlrfdl.ner d

•re' 101

resurfa ce part of F 1f th Street
an~ to e~~~~te1 .an • •sM&gt;•rt

me mber
I

t

t

Th

•

1

o.

cd n~"rr ir g .

a 1d VI llag e of

Po m er oy 1S author.zed to
e n te r '~if!J Jl qs&gt;nt ra~ t&gt;-. with

1\PT lrke new . 3 rooms. wtlh
lar ge balh . tabletop range ,
larg e close t Easl Ma1n St ,
Po m f.;! rov Se e to appreciate
P~one C.a ll!po t's dur1ng day
1.16 l h99 , even1 ngs 446 9539
4 to rtc
RM house . 3 or J bedrooms ,
Irving room, drnrng room
and modern ktt c hen. ca r
pet mg 7 bath s and a ha lf
Pond for s wrmming and
'rr 1 , 1 •~ 11rng
.t miles w es t of
,l l l'lr ri so nv!lle
Fo r
ap
· p&lt;11 ntm en t , ca ll 7 4? 3745 be
tw e en 5 and 8 p rn , Monday
throtJgh Frrday
a 18 stp
1 !\

'fl~tHLI:;:R
·Rlf
l AJ

for rent , r., mile ofl
on Kingsbury Rd
E 1t her furnished or un
furnished Phone 747 3173
6 70 lite

MOB I LE home for rent
Phone Albert H!ll , 949 7161
B 20 l ?tc

RUMM AGE SA LE S, Ma sonrc
Te mpl e, Mrddleport . August
QUA LI F IED com merc1al and
? 1 n. and 73 , Thur sday ,
dom es ti c r e frigera t ro n and
Frr day
and
Sa t ur d ay
a pp i 1BOCF' se 'rvrce ma n
Spo n so red by the F 1r s t
WANTED
Ga ll ia
Chur ch of God, Sy ra c use 9
thesa1d palJf!d ppf iiOn of Fdlh, ,
am till4pmdally
'
Rc fr1gcrut ro n Co Phon e 446
S tre~ ,sriaUqW'! use6•~ ...
a
1066
8 20 3tc
means &lt;\f .-I\9:'$S anctr;~gl"ess.
8 19 Stc
for CliarleS ..~ Sayre. Mary R
PORC H SA LE and
Rogers ~nd
Martha
1 BACK
Y.ud Sal e at ?74 Condor St , TOP NOTC H marntcnance or
Drelintr·•'Affi:l l alf pers Ons for
Pomeroy
, OhiO F rrda y and
n11ll wr 1ght man Top wa g es
th e ' bene l r.f'Cif-t'tt!lem to us e ,sard
Sa turday from 10 a m II II 5
pard
s tagge r ed h ou r s
pa v ed p l' i JO f said Fifth
p m Eve r- yth1ng m u st go
Cap able o f ma 1nt e nanc e
Street' a .
~
· ps of ·J!lg r ess. .
from Sc to $1
su p ~ rv rsi on . onlv qualt fred
and e gre
h Tr prOP.er tr~~
a 70 3tp
nl am tena n ce men apply
3. i'l hW
1 V r ii'.J'cj e ' ,~ f ·
Please co ntact in per s on ,
Po meroy and al l pe r so ns fo r
Rbmer.oy f or est P r oduct s.
the . ben~[,i,l,.i&gt;h.Jhe Vlll~~ ~ -pf 6 FAM I LY yard sal e Tuesday
Ba1 ley Run Road Pome roy
Pomerof~ff~t r '"il'fso ha '('eJb~,
and We dn esda y
8 10 S
rrght to use the paved l'd(W6'n ·
Sec ond , Mrddleport Lo t of
a 15 6tc
' '
of s;;ua F~ Sttr~t as a rMi:Nn s.
ant rque drs h es and nHS&lt;:
of rng r ess an d eg r ess to othe r
Cal l 99 ? 3538
a 19 1 1c
adjacent 1 pr"p.~[{¥ owne_~bVI •tt 11 t
the Sa-rd Vl lf.lrge· bt Porrf~ro yt Y ~R D -Sa les at 879 Sout h
LOCA L. coup le needs country
OhiO .
'
T
A
M
hrrd
ve nue .
rdd.lep or t
4 J.h~ti! 11A.. - &lt;!May q t , ~ ilnd
home1~ in Chester Pomeroy
Villac]'e tre~k a~e authorrzed
Tuesday t hrough T.twr sday
~. a r ea Phon e 985 3937 . or 985
to exec ul ft a c ontrac t per
Augus t ?0 and ?1
•l9M . Chesler
ta r[li!W''1iltCIV 'fbe ~ 'ril tlf&gt;O'dr'l ' · ' · • r
8 . 1-9 ?lc
. "
8 19 6tc
en'~ment and re surf~j:iln!1 of
a ·por) r91J .if f i,f~b St r e~f rin \he YAR D Sate all th rs wee~:~, Gas
oJJIIitde Of"P6rl} ·'r'~ y , oHioV.'! " · fur n"!ce g as heater. small
' That.fWIIii~r.:d n~ncestrlWflr,~ .t
a.pp lran cE!'s, ch u bbY grrl s
i · eff ec t from and after the
c lo th es 4th St . Racrn e
RPENTRY
fl o Ori ng ,
larliest perfod allowed by law
.
8 19 J tc (1\'
ce rJmg•and panetinq Ph on e
99 ? ?!59
~asseit ~A olu~f\~t'l 97 9.' r1 0 ;, t&gt; ~ 't':ARD Sale at 5?8 Syc am or e .
8 1? ?6 1c
' I~ li'T a rbate 13'; --nh'--i ~,' A'ug ?0 and 11 fr om 9 a m
r,Ma-~.; 1 • till 6 p m
8 19 ?tc WILL do roof pa1nting ,
Attest
t:
s hrng ltng 1 remodel mterior.
Jane wan
'f
e tc Call 949 591 3
· Gie.'
' ( ':
e 20 6tc
181 6.•P· iQ·ttM,·••
WILL dO odd jObS, mowtng ,
ORpiNWJQiillf&lt;O iGl.,T5
haul rng , pain trng or roofing
Phone 992 7A09
~nu :;.·~·~ftf..£," r 6~'
7 29 ·26tc
NOTICE
VACATION TIMI.~
~· '

4 ROOM S and bath apt in
Rutland area Phon e 992
68 58
7 27 tfc

a.a

LAURELA ND APARTMENT,
6th and Ge orge Sts, New
Haven
w
va
IM
MEDIATE OCC UPANCY
Se lect your 7 bec;lrm
tow nho use Beaut rful new
ap t c ompte~':
Applrances
fu r: nl ~ hed ,
· completely
ca rp e ted . Renl $1 ?8 and up
1n c'tUd1!"g . ultl ilie s
Call
resrde nt manager , Sam or
Becky Longana c re . 1 304
88 7 ?5 67
8 19 1'Jtc

.

7

Wanted To Rent

·'

- - -- - "'FU RNI SHED

r; •J ',I •

. •

Be 11 ord arne d by the
Cou n c il of the Vil (age,l o,t

To- the Unkn"Own Heirs and

'

,,, -. -

apartment.
adults only rn Middleport
Phone 992 ·387 4
3 25 ttc
_:_____,_ :....,

__________ _

_

•fr&lt;l "'

ac,;

AE DRO O M trailer , $ ?1
week A ll utrltfie s pard
P hone 99 ? Jl?J
8 17 lie

CO I! NTRY Mobile Home
Pnrk , Rt 3J . len miles north
of Pom e roy La rg e lots wrlh
concrete pat10S , SldE!W(tlks ,
runne r s an d off street
park1 n q Ph one 99 7 7J79
1
12 31 tfc

Employment Wanted

MOB I LE hom e tor ren t
Adu lt s only Phone 99 ? 5535
8 1o lfc
.:l

.. '
REMODELING.

7

ROOM turnrshed apartment
Call 997 3658
8 17 lfc
~ 1 EDkM

mobile home ,
deposrt and references
r equired
Phone 997 34?9
8 15 61p

Plumbl ny,
Devisees of W. E . Swearmgen ,
h eatr ng and a 11 1ypes o t
deceased :
w or..,•
Mid dl e porJ , !'j_l.p~ows ~
general
r eparr
sec. : J.~IiW\Q~iJ'ch rlit (' rlme
. .
guarant eed 20 years ex
emp iOv.ee' .sieft! ,-..orth · 1h ~· Or
You are he r eby notrfled t hat
perren ce
Phone 992 2409
•
you have been nam ed def e nd
5 1 tf,...'
C!~Je
1 b
drnanc
ent~o\ led\
__ -· -· ---- - - -· ------ -~r
.
..Jill
ent
rtlede toNoacc1017
umul74ateshal
unus ede' an ts in a legal ac t ion _.
d~
ldred
Chapm
anltffs
anu·
' 19 i1 1 .R EEOOM mobil e home
Vacat ion time for a maxrm UIT) Mi
Swear
,ngen
. pla in
, v'S ftrehe - '
C ,
of e cghl years
E m ployee!. Unknown Heirs and Devisees 1
take ou t pay ment s
a 11
shall fo r ter t vacatron l1me of
W.
E
S weann~ ,
'T
~
~ 161:1 ) •IJ639? 1
8 l? l'Jtc
Serv1ce ,
AKC :
a c cumulated ,ne-,.;cesso f c, gh t deCi:E'ased . Tha t th r~· casf~( S! ST U D
Y~. -1 p~P'j
&lt;~
..,; re tlr'• rn~n t been assigned Case No7~'f5·m J ,i Regrste r ed whr t e poodle : M )( ·17 F T 1970 Winsron
,
and 1S pend1ng in the Comr:ton ·
F'o r appointment ca ll 99 ? 1
eift~'ir i? TJ\i&gt;
hall be pa ,id Pleas Cou r t of Mergs Cou n ty.
mobile
home ,
two
3904
for an-yHt. •u d and ac ~
•p
Oh 10 45769 •
tfc l
b ec;l riOom s. u n derpinned,
17
8
1 n 1H/,W, ..,,P-l l.~
hid
, ect
front' porch added, storage
c~ ulat ~~ CQ.!l
h'~ ' ob
~ ~ to partrtion th e·
1 omeroy,
1fW!1
ccum vrated follow,ng r ea l es ta te·
bulld1ng, and eir con
U'li* r Set IIJlt~ t e ra te 'of pity
Situated rn the Township of 1\KC Reg Pekingese pupp~~~
~rt ionmg , Good toca11on. 1 ,
qnn.&amp;iGaQta ~ lft'!!ii ltle
tol.f1"11e', of 0 1.
th C
\7 5 Ph on e Pt Pleasant ,
l'l"' il e off Rt 7 and 1 mile
1 ot Me 105
r?~e, me~~•tcq
X ' f 1.
rve , rnof eOhio
oun
Y
503 0
~,
State
. and
r mor e'
B 19 l 7tc.: - south of Tuppers Plains,
•
'fil, Ill
U~fJ1ploye e. , !oi!.nlh par tf cu larly bounded an d
Dh1o Call 16 14 1 667 6 1 71
e' i or
~-vears of se rv1ce desc r ,bed as follows
·• , ,
8 19 6tp
~ ~ ,t:~ ~~ ld , , V TU~&amp;
FIRST TRACT The East 40
19 17 GREENWOOD M x 17
~~ !Tl~
U ·u-.wJ, 5 perqtqt \ p1 a c res. more or less. of the
mul' ~. ,t, n unu sed s ck South half of No rth wes t
J AND 4 ROOM fur nished and . mobil e home , no turn,ture
l~'e
h:: n '' ~s a f.:c r u~ d quarter of Section 18, Town 4 ,
excep t refrrgerator and
u rl!ll!'l'~' ttnpiC~~:t\lrt,on s 1 ()( 'ldr
Range 11 , Ollve Township ,
unl ur nrs hed
apart m ents
stove . all e lec tr, c. S4,000
di~ce lltd:' *l~1i';J74 d ; '· .
Me ig S County , Oh iO, know n as
Phone 99? -54 34
... \'ho ne 99? 5606
4 17 tf c
sec IV Th is QJ.I"-tna n c.e .Shi' ll the PAULK LOT
.
,
8 19 6tc
ta ke eff ect and be In forc e ,'. SECOND TRACT S1tuWte 1n ,
fr~~il""ctalttl(lt.ugOst t jfl fJII-5,1 the Town ship of Oltve~ Coun ty
5sedru~w,;t 11h day { Of of Me 1gs and Sta te of Oh io ,
A
st IY1 ~~ · · '( DI\
•. ·
'\ ,· Se ction 18 Begrnn rng a t th e
,
,
..... . "
•
Northeast corner of the Nor th
1 t
At.~t · ~.e ~[_:t.'e
. , , west
quarter of sa id Sec tion r Twentv-second in a senes of montY-~ving service Co\.tions.
"-l tt'r....
18, th ence West 87 rod S ,d nd 5
•
.,.,.
lt~ ...'\l!!.Jv' lin ks loa s tak e : then &lt;:~ South
L "I:'H 1, 84 rods and 10 lrnk s , to th e
' ;';':.':~~:~~nl of ( ouncrl ce nter ol the line of sai d
~
'~r "' · ' Nor th west quart e r of sa id
Section. th e nce East 87 rods
'· and 5 links to the center line of
said Section , the nce· North 84
rod s and tO lrnk s to the plac e
i" j~·~~~-i~i. of beginnrng. containi ng ' 46
v
acres , more or less EX
COMPLETE CHASSIS LUBE
CEPTING therefrom aboot
ng 3' ' acres out of the Nor1heast
'ot ' corner th e reof h e retofQre
A-COIL FILT.ER
l deeded to Do uglasS Mll ts /' also
5
QT. OIL ONLY
E XCE PTIN G a church lot and
7 x 9 rods ad !Omrng same
longing to Delber t M
··~ '" ""w land ,
and also · EX
PLU5-FREE BRAKE I~SPECTION
' ·'"' :• r EPTING about one acre .
more or less . be long i n ~r 1 Jo
FREE CAR WASH WITH USE OF COUPON
J-ohn Mitis , thrs conveya li ce
conta ining 401 7 acres;mare or
less·.
You are r eq urred to answ e r
wilhrn twenty eight days after
f
the ice.
la sonce
t publication
·'
•not
each week of
for this
six A ·Good Running Car Will:
wpp' f~ ted .s uccess ive weeks . The lasJ
last longer, perform better, and' give better ·
Inventory p Ublicat ron will b e on Sep
will-':tie for tember 3r:d, 1975 , and the gas mileage.
Cou r t on twenly e rgh l days wrll cam
&lt;~,p~:iJ:\i~r m.ence on tha t date .
..
'
:-:
" I "M Case of your failure to
'.answer , or otherw iSe· respo nd ,
~a
II for an appointment. or stop by t oday . 1\eep watching for
\a s rJ!Qulred by the OhiO Rul e's • mon ey -sav tng coupons that he,p; yoU."
· 1 :
r~~~~:;t, '"' '"" 'o f ·Procedu r e , tudgment by
' .
'A
'de taurt will be rt-ndered
a9ain't you for the re lief of
DO BUSINESS WHH A LEJ;\DE"R
dt!n'lands in this c laim ~

Mob1"le Homes for

Pl!fs For "·le

rrr-a·"""""'..,.,..

For Rent

LUBE SPECIAL

•'

~j~~~~~~t~~~;~~"~~;~,~~ ·

.

l~;ul~,~ - ' 975 ~arrysp.~c.r. SMITH NELSQN,iMOTORS, INt
f , ....,

.-,

·

l,jo

1

••

''

'

,

Cleric of Courts ,
Meigs,.c;ount~

1

~~!~lf~rrJ~~!;;, 7

l.

•

Co mmon Pleas Court
'; "":.. I

,

.
''1
' 5l)\J E. Matn St.
'

l JO {8 ) 6, 13 ,20 1 '/~, (9/ 3, 6ft- '

'

• •

'

·so·rvlcehrs.:

1

I

•,.
1 ,

~h. 992~2174 1

,

..,.,.

1

'"" I

1
,

•

,

~merqy ,1 0hio

we-r'
a' Tii.::IO~SaJ:t11112-'!:'
'
·'
_I , ,j
I

East Main
Pomeroy
Ph . 992.2798
7 24 I mo

t9 ~ 0'R AMBLE R
p s. 304 v 8

PRIV ATE mee ttng room for
a ny orq a n tzatiotr. phone 991
19 !'j
J 11 tfc

Help Wanted

Char les
.s.a.n ~· M~r,y R
J
Ro g e r s ' rflP' Marlfia
. Ore nne ~ f r~ti1 We re -sllrfa c mg
of a portion of F iflh S treet '"
the •Y illf'rii!ll ot:fo9m ero.y , Qh 10 ,
2 • Th-a'f ' m' atfdlfion thereto

DICK SEYLER

?95 AMPe le c tr~ c weld e r . t rke
new , 51 75 Phon e 99 7 17S9
8 70 41C

For Rent

Wanted

tor t'he u!ei'M'"Sa'l't:l Fif tJ1 S i.c~et
NOW , T HE REF ORE . b~ If
orda 1ned by the Coun c il of the
V illa~ e (! ~~ o y , Q.h i9 ~ all

ANTIQUES

MODERN CHEMICALS

For Sale

IHJY SELL or lr a d ean y U ~
co rn s or cu rr e ncy Wtll p a y
s-1 60 for S t face 1964 and
o ld er d1m es quarte r s, and
h&lt;Jiv es Ca ll Ru tland l -1;•
36 51 Roge r Wam s ley
8 1'i 17tc

Yard Sale

WOOD -METAL · PLASTIC

197t MATADOR
S1495
4 door, local car , a•r conditioned, full equipment .

tu rnttu re, rce bo xes . ,
brass b ed s. or c omplete
ho use hol ds Write M D ,
M d le r , Rt 4, Pomeroy ,
Oh ro Call 99/ 7760
10 ., 74

Blown
Insulation Services
Blown'"~;.~~~ &amp; Atftcs

STR IPPING
SERVICE

1912 COMET 2 DOOR
S1150
6 c yl s td . trahs ., radio, like new w w tires, blue finish.
nice ca'l-- with good economy

.JLD

FECUND

t~,~/rs'~n who' (ou~d GARf•GE

Wes terll r eco r ds. on Sunday

f

LAXITY

FREE ESTIMATES

r I

0.. Wednesday, Aug. 20, 1975

4R ebet J 4dr ,
auto , trans
m rssron Phone 997 1701 .
6 14 blp

LARRY I,AVEt'DER

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

S EWING
M/1CHINE
Rcptl rrs. serv 1ce all mak es
992 :nB.I Th e r abrrc; ',h op .
P omeroy /\u t ha'rtlcd ~ rn ger
\ .-"liP S an d ~ e r vrce
We
sh.lr p en Sc 1Ssors
1 79 !l c

MODERN W"i, ln u t ste r eo
radto console , am fm r adra ,
4 speed c hang e r Balan ce '-. E.Pri C l fi N K~ c lea nC'd
fl.~odc r n Sanrtatron
'19? 395.1
5101 77 or term s Cal l 99?
or 'il9"! 7149
39 65
9 1a t fr
a 17 tic

REASON WH¥ WE
HAV&amp;N'T &amp;EEN
PICI&lt;IOD UP!

''T"'"'""

WANTED

WEST

9Q86 2
9Kl04
t Q J 10
t A 8 7! 2
69842
.8!!
SOUTH 10)
6AKQ92
9AH

Kitchen State In s p ec ted
Lt ce n se d
Ba k er
and
De co rator
Horn e ma~e
Noodl es a lso featured

t65
•KQJ

~IFIL! IF 'IOU~

North -South vulnerable

~ R~,I.E,A.~ ~

fORCH UI41T 0N 1

West

-

Pass
Pass

&gt;

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-IN A G EM, AGAIN!

,oc:=:=t=.'"""'==::u:::n o=:::n:&gt;?==:===:::::Jil
v:::JI:::lC:::::=::t:t:"'S:=:"'-=="~
~~~~;:::ill(~~0~n'::.
he
... YEAH7 --- WELL, HOW
AND SUPPOS~ I REFUSE TO II
EH? OH, ' spadE$ .

e
ALLEY

"TELL WHERE I GOT THE"'-- ·
OH --· THEY WOULD KEEP
"THE WHOtE TEH BilLIOti,
SUT NOT DO AHYTHINCj
TO ME--- TH~T'S NICE..
MAYBE MY SECRET IS
WORTH 1EH Sill ION TO hiE-

YES - WHY,
I HAVEN 'T

~RJCLILDYED

v•

"-..-

"

SHERIFF!

c L 450

HQnda , crash bars ,

1 helmets , i!lnd windshield ,

... WE I'IERI&lt;
JUST HAVtN '

A LITTl.E
~ERIFF

5695 Phone 747 3713

8 19 Jtc

LET us service vovr ~ Volks
wagen , reasonable rates
Middlepol"t Pennzoil North
Second Street, Middleport REALE: STATE SA LE BY
UNITED
STAT ES
OF
Phone 997 9973
AMERICA
{FARMERS
8· 19 26tc
HOME
ADMINI S
TRATIONJ 1 Five room ,
19 75S UZUKI ?50, $850 See Joe
one story
house,
ap
Imboden, Welchtown Hill in
proximat e ly 50 years oiQ
Mrnersvitte
on 5 acres ot tand , located
8 19 61p
one mrle Northw es t of
Pomeroy on the eas t sr de of
13
NICE white Leghorn
State Route 143 tnspectron
hens Phone 949 3661 .
Please conta c t the offrce of
a 19 Jtc Farmers
Ho me
Ad
ministrah on, 17 1 W est
CANNING tomatoes , green
Second St reet , Pomer oy ,
and red peppers . Cleland
Ohco 45769 Teleph on e 99'}
Farms. Geraldine Cleland .
JbOJ . Terms of sa le L Ca'sh .
Racine Phone 949 4121 .
7 Terms available to an
8 19 lfc
ineligrble applicant ar e no t
less than 10 p erce nt cas h
ST EREO RADIO - 8 track
down and no1 to exceed 10
1ape . am tm . 4 speed
amortized paym en t s tor
changer
combination
balanc e of purcha se prr ce
Phone\ IOJ M. or terms Call
Bids to be accepted at
997 3965
Pomeroy Offrce until ? 00
8 19 tfc
PM August ?9, al whrch time
bids will be opened Th e
MOVING. must sell. One solid
Government reserves th e
maple , 4 piece bedroom
nghl
lo reject any and a ll
suite , I 9 piece antique
bids
dinrng rm . suite, 1 Gibson
8 17 Stc
srde by side refrigerator
freezer combination. har
vest gold , one Magic Chef HOUSE at 128 Laure l St ,
gas stove, harvest gold , One
Pomeroy For furth e r rn
brown leather rocker , one
format ron, call 99 7 3868
green living room chair.
a. J4 6tc
brown antique chair om am.
I wooden rocker , 1 la'wn
sweeper ; bicycle , decoy$ ACRE lo t on F la twoods Rd
near Frve Pornts Septic
tor hun ling , clolhlng and
tank. water tap Pho ne 98 5
mise 581 South Fourth St
4?0?
Phone 991 1911
B 19 3tp
8 19 Jtc

Real Estate for Sale

PUBLIC AUCTION
Saturday afternoon, Aug. 23 at 2:00 O'clock.
Rain or Shine.
This Is a stock r•duction sale of many good u sed
motorcycles. No reasonable bids will be rejected
Offered for sale at public auction will be various sizes,
models and makes, Including trail bikes , touring bikes
and others which have been used as demonstrators,
and possibly some that have been repossessed .
Financing may be ~rranged for if applied for in
advance. After each sale there will be a drawing for
free gilts which may be used .by jlny bike rider
On day of sale the Items may be viewed from 12
noon until s-ale time. To make room for new stock
which is on order we are also making special deals on
new bikes whiCh are now on display in our showroom
Suzuki of Gallipolis, M&lt;Jtor Cycle Sales and Service . Located 4 miles up river from Gallipolis. on Rl. 7,
just above the ·silver Bridge at Kanauga .

COl R. E. knotts and Son~ Dave, Auctioneers

Auction..,s remark!l: This Is not a junk sale. Many' of
these bikes llr'·

11

1c.e new.

CU ST OM
PI C IU RE
F RAM IN G
ORIG IN AL
SEAS CAPI;: AND LAN .J
SCA PE PA IN TINGS E
JOYCE MILLER 99 ? 7680
B 10 7 tt p

CLELAND ··
608 E.
.REALTY
MftiN

-::_l'oM ~ R~q"Y. o

Ml DOLE PORT Oul ·
standing buy . l floor plan 2
or J BR, bath , lo vely k1t
c hen. fu ll ba se men t. New
perma . pane alum w in
dows, new carpet in g . new
paneling , new hot water
tan k, new carport. N.G
forced a1r he at On q utet
street. J UST $13 .000
NEAR HARRISONVILLE
- 1 lo vely ac r e. Bn c k &amp;
Frame - 3 large BR. Jt t
baths, utrlity R , lovel y
kttchen , 27 ft
cabrnels,
rang e &amp; oven F r ont porch,
rear patio, la r ge garage
with storage sPace Ca r peted . $25,900
NEAR RUTLAND - 2 77
a cres, 1 floor p lan, 3 lovely
BR .. bath, n1 ce k1tc hen,
ut ility R , s torm wihdows &amp;
doors , s1 de por c h, carpo rt
&amp;
larg e garag« , full
basement w it h p r 1vate
water supply (city tap
paid) , 2 trailer hooku ps
THIS YOU MU ST SEE .
$28,000.
POMEROY Close. 5
acres, hom e has 3 BR
~ath . n rce k tlche n, par
c hes Storag e b ldg. Askmg
on ly $7.900 .
DON ' T THROW YOUR
MONEY AWAY - LET US
APPRAI SE
THE
PROPERTY
BEFORE
YOU BUY OR SELL.
PHONE - 992-2259

-

YOU BEL IEVE?
Burld an all steel buil dr ng a t
Po le 13t~rn pr ices"&gt; Go lden
Gran t All Ste el Burldtngs .
Rt •I Bol&lt; 148, Waverly ,
Oh ro P hone 9·11 ?796
7 24 1fc

WOULD

BACK HOE lor ren t, hour or
contract. r eg or e)(ca ... a tory
type Se pttc tanks rnstal!ed .
Brl l Pul lm s, phone 99? 2478

I'm read4 an4
time 40u are.

The~'re

qoinqto
televise
Papoand
Nell from
hPt·"'

(2 wds.)

'les.Doc'
This is
the first
rehearsal!

40 Was
situated

41 PeachyDOWN .

1 Harry or

Henry
Z Spanish
city
3 Dare say
(3 wds. )

study
5 The abject

(2 wds. )

Young

7 14 26 tc

IT~

Movie " Adventures of the Queen" I;
Not tor Me" 10; Janaol 33.
12 :Jo-Wide Worl!l Special 6.
1 :GO-Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.

!,-+-+-1--

AstroGrapM

LADY WINO IN A
FLJR COAT-

Spnlll IJI
Meull "lut
'

•

with one or two pupil ~ OW."C
let It gr..., tmo a - - or
your fun wtN be ftua ... ·

4

.

RUBBER BACK

/Jl

CALL14 2-421 l
TALK T O WENDELL
GRATE ,
CARPET CONSUlTA NT

"'

,.1M_

99 Square
Yard

We hoJve hun dre d s'
carpet val ues Yo ur 10b c er
b e ca nr !Jieted rn 1 to
weeks Nv lo ng war ting1
p errod Our In Stal ler hil s 28
years ex p er ren ce
Expe rt
1nstal lalro n You ' ll l1k e
'Wh at you q e l

GEMINI (Moy 21·June 20) It's A0UAIIIU8 (.Ia •

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:

WINNIE

®THAT WAB A WONDERFULOUTINGLI\ND YOLI
REALLY KNUVV HOW
ID HANDLE A BOAT!

ALTHOUGH MY
5HIPo ARE
UBUALLY A
BIT LARGER
lHAN THAT
ONE.

ME ... WHATIO IT
LJKE: ... BPENDINGONE(S LlFE: AT &amp;EA 1
I MEAN?

•

Ia

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands 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 formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letten are different.

CRYPI'OQUOTE

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

ZRSFRVP

EUSQF

UQPZPE.

Ruttana

QW

FCJF

J
QE

FCBR·
EPIVP·

IJFQBW . -SQSSQJW
EHQFC
·
Yel!terday's Cryploquole: THE MAN WHO IS TOO OLD TO
LEARN WAS PROBABLY M.WAYS TOO OLD TO LEARN. HENRYS. HASKINS
•
&lt;C&gt; 197&amp; Kin1
S)'ndtcate. Inc. )

f••'""'

I 'D AST 'IE TO STA'I
FER SUPPER,

BUT ALL I GOT IS
LEFTOVERS -··

1'1 \,1

I~

ANOTHER:
MII.K51W(E FOil
SPIKE?

•

..

•

ICOIIPIO (0&amp; II II ' ...
Much work can· •• ac ..
.. Btmlce B- Oeol compllahed e1 ' - !Oci!IY. W
don't look lor pelion---For Thwodey, Aug. 2t,.1t75
Forget tt. Yau - · • IIICitail.
ARIES (Mori:h 21-Aprll 11)
You' re fortunate tn doing BAGITTAJIIW 0.. • 1~1
things alone today Shun large 211 Donl be ctrattin 1n10 . _
dlscuaslona about "*liit IUCII .
group s or soctal lunct1ons
poUtica Of nllglon ......
because you'll meet opposi- as
Keep tile rop ..
fllltl
tion
Avoid btn.--.
·
.
.
TAURUS (April :!O·MOJ 20) CAPIIICOIUI (11M. II ••
You'll upse t fam11y members 1f 11) Y~X.t'll be temp ..cl ID bur
you let a secret sltp out today something tod~. but Chltctl.
Luck Is on your srde as long as with the family ffrat. Otl• al ..
you keep ttrrngs to yourself .
you could UPHf them.

501 NYLON

742 -421 1

,

•

t1 : 3o-Johnny Corson 3,4, IS; Wide Worlel

?-'?--TI-JARS A

Carpeting

.•
6 :4S-Mornlng Report 3; Farmtlme tt.
6 : 5~Newo 13.
7 : 0G-Today3.~, 1S ; A.M. America 13,61 CIS_Io..
8 :00-Lucy Show 6; Capt. Kangaroo t.10; SteMM lt.
33.

- Calhoun
Flying loy
Cubic

!

•1

insect

HA-N Olf:: TT ERED SIG N S
AND POS T ERS
F R EE
ESTIMATES CA LL M C
CRAWFORD. 99 2 7680
R 7 76 tp

Llj:T US DO

s.,,,...W

6 :GO-Sunrlse Seminar 4; Summtr
10.
6 : 2~Farm Report 13.
6 : 3()--Five Minutes to LIYe By
""'"61 . . . . M
swers 8; School Sc- tO ; Patleme ter Llvllll II.
6 : 35-&lt;:olumbus Today~; . ·

s.-

chief

8 Perhaps

manner

THURSDAY, AUGUST 11, 19JI

=~

4 University

7 Moslem

pudent

.

'

11 :DO-News 3.~.6.8,10,13.15; ABC""'" A. .,
.' ,,
11 :»-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Wiele Wllrllll' 1 clll Ill ·
FBI 6; Movie "F irehouM" I I Mllvie ' ..,.. . ..
Cassidy" 10; Janakl 33.
·
12 :»-Wide World Special 6 ..
I :oo-Tomorrow 3,_.; News 13.

0

6 Foeman

18 In an im-

•

». ;.,

way

Dreamer''

qentlemen!

at

to make four

lee.

17 "-

't'Car

.

•

r

He started by playing dum·
• k'
of dl
nds Ma be
w~~ :,'!~ unci~!. the

a handbag
11 Contend
12 Italian
boy'S in&amp;me
13 Mterdinner
candy
14 A coral of
Florida
(2 wds.)
15 Young pig
16 Egyptian
solar god

,. "

MOBILE Crane se rv1c e a nd
dorer work Phone 99 ? 5468
a 1 26tp

going

8 :»-Movle "T~ Trial of CMplaln Ju
" '·""
Baseball ~ ; Movie "Congratuteiiii!J" " Mllli
Builds, Man Destroya 33; Phlllltl!~Na ,...
Festival 20.
.
• . .
9 :()0--,Lucas Tanner 3.15; C - 1,101 Mlll1111'1!' .~
Theatre 33.
1
9 : »-Jean Shepherd's America 20.
·• ·· :1 ~
IO :oo-Petrocelll 3,15; Jim Stafford 61 Mai:Jtlll 1.111 J
Focus on Abortion ll; Family at
Jl.
:·

».

by THOMAS JOSfi'H
ACROSS
11 Colored
1 Coffee
38 Guarantee
5 Orna·
3t Talented
mented, as

ALL

197?

46

~-stUt1JU1f&gt;td'

OOP

CLOSEOUT I

POMEROY LANDMARK
··-~ack W. Carsey, Mgr.
. ; . ~hone 992 -2181

Pass
Pass

j~~~a-YwE]T,AHHIE West hadn't and the defense
[played a second and third dla·
monel. South ruffed the third
diamond and played two top
At that point be eould
ace of hearts, cash the
and lead a second heart.
eiUher opponent had started
king· small or queen-small,

IM•Y"'•-•••
Al i A &gt; I j " ' O -

2o -rs

-·- ---

AS LOW AS '139.95

Pau

So•••
16

South looked over dummy and
thought, " Too bad N'o rth didn't
respond one notrump . I would
have/ut him in three which he
woul have wrapped up ."
Then South gol down lo the
really important problem . How

0

·-- -

26

Eaat

By Oswald &amp; James Jaeoby

MUCH WOULD THAT COST?
1 GUESS 1 COULD PAY rT ·'·
OH- 1 SEE- ~T TO PROVE
TITLE - TELL WHERE I GOT
THE JEWELS, EH=&gt; HM· ,., ···

&lt; _;,

8 : »-Big Volley 6.
9 :00-A .M . J; Phil Donahue ~.15: Muriel SIIU I II
.Schoolies 10; Mornlno with D. J . 13; ....,..., ~ • ••
9 : »-Not For Women Only J; Ro..,... • - 61. llltilll,
6: Galloping Gourmet 8; P~ 11; New %..
Revue 13 ; Travel 33.
9 : 55-&lt;: huck White Report&amp; 10.
,
lO .DO-Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3,•,151 Sjlln,OII ~Mt
Mike Douglas 13; Lilias Yoga 1o You A; · • ' •
A Florida reader eomplal~.
10 :»-Wheel of Fortune J.~. 15: &amp;v..... let Celvlll-'
"I opened one club in · fourth
Evans 4; Price Is Right I; Bendt!an41 Itt Z.,.
Cooking School 33.
·
seat. My opponents proceeded ·
11 :GO-High Rollers J, ~.IS; Frlondllo No,..11'141 O.W. "
lo bid and make lour spades .
Lite to Live 6; Gambit 8, 10; Film
My partner says I should have
11 :»-Hollywood Squares 3.4,15; BrHr lund\ 4,1*1 "
passed the hand out since my
Midday 4; LoYe of Lilt 8, 10.
hand :
11
:55--Take
Kerr 8; Farmtlme 10.
•xx•A•x•Kxx .• AQx
12:oo-Magnlflcent Marble Machine :1.15J Sllawelho 111
XX
Bob Braun's .!0-.!0 Club 4; ""'" 6.1. Ill Ml I
had Ill defense against spades .
Rogers 33. .• ,
~\
The answer lo our reader is
12:»-Jackpot 3,15; All My Children .. 131 s.ti'CIIter ·
that his hand qualifies as an
Tomorrow 8,10; Elec. Co. 33.
"
opening bid In any and all
12:55--NBC News 3,15.
i
systems. All opening bids don' t
1 :GO-News 3.~.4.13; Phil Donahue 6; Yl!lftt . .. .
lead 1o a profit. All be need
Restless 10; Not For Women Only 1S1 \'!Ita A ......
know that year in and year out
33.
;
'
he will gain by operung that
1 :Jo-Days of our Lives J.~, 15; LefsMelleA o.l"l"
hand in any position, vulnerable
As the World Turns 8,10; Episode Actlll'l Jl.
or not.
2: 00-$10,000 Pyramid 6,13; Guiding Lllh! I.MI
Family at War 33.
.' . • ·
(Do you h&amp;ve 8 question lor
2:»-Doctors
3,4,15;
Rhyme
l
o
R
"1Jrl.
of
the JBCobys? Write "'Ask the
Night
8,10.
Jacobys' care ol thts
J :GO-Another World 3,4, 15; General Haljlltal ""I
newspaper. The most InMatch Game 8, 10; Lilias Yoga &amp; v., a : ~ ·
teresting questions wilt be
Chess
JJ.
·
·, •
used m this column and
J
:J()-.()ne
Life
to
Live
13;
Bewitched''
1'elllslal
..
writers w111 receive copies ol
8,10;
Feelino
G&lt;ICid
20;
To
Be
AMatjftC
.
.
JACOBY MODERN.)
4 :00-Mr. Cartoon 3; I Dream of JMftftle 41 ·UR•IIf
15; Mickey Mouse Club 6; Musical """' II '
Sesame St. 20,33; Movie "Prlnceu of 11M lllle''. It: .
Dinah 13.
'
4:3o-Bewltched J; Merv Grllfln ~; , _ . IWM 41
Mickey Mouse Club 8; Bonanza 15.
5 :GO-FBI J; Lucy 'Show 8; Mlater R.,..n' ltlltil!
borhood 20,33.
·
· .,A
5 :»-News6; Andy Griffith 8; H-'slletwt1JI .Gil
Smart 15; E lee. Co! 20,33.
.,.
·
6:GO-NewsJ,4,8,10,1J,15; ABC News6; Se&amp;MieSl• •
Book Beat 33.
· '
" . . .·
6 : »-NBCNewsJ,4,15; ABCNows13: AftcllrGr~61 ;..,
CBS News 8,10; Lilias Yooa &amp; You 33.
,
;' , ·
7:00-Trulll or Cons. 3.~; Bowling lor Dollarl 61 ~ ~ ·~
Yesterdlty's Aaswer
10: Let' s Make o Deal 13: Jimmy DHn 151 Meklnf ., f
It Count 20; Nova 33.
..
!: •
t Citizen of 2t " - Must
~ t'
Su.sa
Be a
. '• '
7: »-Hollywood Squares 3,4; Ohio Loll• r tt ' lteli.. ·
10 Contributed
Way"
Price Is Right 8; Wild Klngclom 10; To Tell' llle' '
18 Fatigue
3t White
Truth 13; American Outdoonman 15. ' '
8 · oo-Ben Vereen 3,4,15; Almost AnylhJnt 0.. .. 1:1.1
It Maize
31
The Waltons 8,10; Evening At Pope A: I.HI of
:!Z Jean or
with
Leonardo Do VInci 20.
Deborah
cargo
9 :GO-Movle "The Last Day" 3,4,15; SltM!t of 1M
Z3 Ski wear
Francisco l3;; Movie "We're · Not Merrlltf' t;
36 Egyptian
24 Earthly
Movie "Rio Conchos" 10; Flrl,. LIM M;
king
Philadelphia Folk Festival 33.
25 Hold a
11
lO:OCJ-Harry
0 6, 13; News 20; Women A.
session
'
Z7 Joined in
t1 :GO-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 15; ABC News 33.

Openmg lead - Q +

For Sale

-

EAST
6 H

610~

KUHL CAKE DECOR

Air
Condltionen

he would have been end played .
That didn't appeal. The hand
looked like one with all suits
breaking quite evenly . so South
tried another line.
He cashed the clubs, sloppmg
in dummy Then he led a low
heart. His plan was lo finesse
his nine and it would have work·
ed except lor one thing . East
had been thinking while the
play went on . When that heart
was led , East hopped up with
his king.
This unusual second-hand high play lelt South with no way
1o make his contract

NORTH
6 643 2
.. 7 53
t K 94
6 A 10 7

Real Estate For Sale

BALER TWINE. 1.000 ft. 375
lbs
ts
FARM
FER
TILIZER , Specral prices .
Ball Brothers Farms , S R
143 and Co Rd 10 Phone
698 4571
8 -19 61p

-

. .

Easts play gets high-handed

CAKE BAKING

HUNTIN G Li cense. Nrg ht BOAT Motor s . R e pa1r s 49 8
craw lers , m ea l worm s.
Loc u s t St , Mrddlcport
TACKLE
guns , am m o.
Oh 10 Ph one 99 7 3097
Flatwood s. Ohio
1911 SUPER Beetle VW , 5995
bow s, arrows , c amp1ng
1 77 ?61 c
Pomeroy. Ohto
Phone 949 5645 .
equip CB's a nd acce ssory
Stop In Or
8 11 6tc
Indian Joe's , JOB Pag e s t . 'J
Call992
7537 a ~I
streets pa s t Middl e p ort
19 77 GMC • . ton ptckup truck,
Swrmm ing Pool
s harp and rn very good
8 l3 76tp
AR lE
T 0 1l. E1
condrtion Price 'S1 , JSO Call
.,
--- J BEDRM ho use larg e kr t PORI
RENTAl
Co n&lt;.truc!•O il
99 7 ?91 7 or see Steve Burton .
GOOSENEC K
c hen , central ,1 1r . rarqr
O u tdoor even!~
Phon,c
8 17 111p
krlchen . wu ll to wu11 cur
s tock tra ile r w ith 19 /4 Chevy
al!
r
p
o
i
•S
!.16 t / 8, ,
G
pc
t1ng
I
H
I\
a
pp
r
oved
dual wheel. 1 ton p rc kup
R u&lt;."&gt;eii'S Plurnbonq .1 nd
Pinto
19ll
GREEN
Phone 99 7 7030
Can be bought togethe r or
Phone
He alrrr Q
auto matic. \1.300
B 15 61p
s eparat e Ca ll 147 J? 67
8 19 IlL
99 ? 7387
s 10 11c
8 19 41C
EXCAVATI -N G .
backhoe.
CANNING peaches now thru
dozer and d rt cher
Gus ,
Se ptemb e r 10 . U S No 1
Te afo r d Re alty
elec tr1c a nd wate r l1ne
grade vell ow Freestone For
bu rral , b usements fo oter s.
BICYCLE Repairs , Sales and
can ning or freez tng S6 .:19
Vr r qtl B .. ~r. , Brok~&gt;t
sept•C sys te m s cmd brush
Se rvice , 498 Locust St. ,
busheL 53 49' bushe l, S l 99
c lean rny Wil l hau l frl l drrt.
Mrddleport . Ohio Phone
pec k
PLE ASE BR IN G
top sort sand and g r ave l.
Mo •c /r,Jfllf \ I
YOUR
OWN
CO N
992 _3092
\1rnestone tor drrv ewavs a n d
7 22 26tc
l'• ·llll ' r .ly , Olrr• J
TA INER S P eac he s are our
roads Pho ne Cha rles R
s pec talty Tw o co n venient
Hatfi e ld , Backhoe Ser vic e,
lo ca tions . Bob ' s Markel.
1971 CAMPER. partly self
Rt I , Rutlan d. Ohro, 747
Mason
.
W
Va
Phone
CJO.t
l
MODERN
KITCHEN
With
co nta t ned . must s ee to
6092
a ppr ec1B te Sl .695 Phone
773 577 t
and
Mrdway ~st ove and r e frige r ator. car
' II 901 c
Market , P ome roy , Oh to
. .
k 1h
99? PJB .
1614 1 997 ?587
petrng 1n h v tng &amp;
I c en
a 15 9tc
~/l-OY M I X c0N C ~ E TE
B 10 i7 tc Nice
bath , 2 bedrooms
dc l rvr:&gt;r ed r rght to you r
Natural
gas
furna
ce.
and
p r o1ect r n~t &lt;tnd ea s y f rrc
STARCRAFT camper for
DELICIOU S hom e grown lar g e lot
sa le , sleeps 8 Phone 992
es trmates Phon e 9&lt;1 2 171:1 L
peaches , whrt e and yel low OUT OF TOWN - On good
370?
Goe ql e m R cady Mtx Co .
Mason Peach O r cha rd
d M b 1 h
h s
8 17 61p
M• ~d lc port , Oh10
Phone 1304 J 773 5559
pav ed roa . o 1 e o m e t1
6 JO If(
8 e ttc , 3 bedroom s a nd L C water
CA NNING tomatoes . pick
--- - - - ---Na t. gas furna ce
o &amp; o---rREE Tr " nn~mQ-2o
your own Andrew Cross.
Letart Falls , Ohio Phone NEWLY rebuilt 1950 Ferguson NEAR STORES -- 12 rooms,
year s e xp errence In s ur ed .
747 7857
tr ee esl 1m ates Cc"l! t 992 3057 ,
tractor . 51450 00. 4ft. bru s h bath, na t gas a nd large lot
Coo lvill e Phone ( 1) M7
8 11 61C
hog . 5185 00 6 ft gra d er
blade , $160 00
1 r ow Lots of possibili ti eS for r en
3041
TWO HOR S E Johnson trailer.
c ultivator SilO 00 . 6 If drag tal s.
4 30 ti C
land em wheels Also. 71
type tam den disk , S60 00 . INCOME _ 4 apar t men ts and
vear old Reg Quaf"ter Horse
trailer, S60 00 . boom p ole. bu so ness room to le t in M 1d . E Xcr1vr. l i NG--:- dol,_. r loa d elS35 00 . or wrll take $7000 00
s lud colt Phone 997 1757
.lnd bo1 c kho e wa r " "&gt;C' p t rc
a 18 Jtc
tor whol e work s Phon e 843 dleport .
lank ~
rnsta lled
dump
t ruck~ a nd lo bovs ta r tu r c
?561
NEW LISTING - 5 room s
8 14 6 tc with bath , modern k 1lchen .
wr ll ha1..'l till d1 r t lop sor L
WHEAT pennres 85c roll,
l rmr::sto ne and qr a~,.-.1 .. Cal l
s ilver ce rttricates . S1 75 DAVI S JOOtren ch e r wrth blad e nat gas hea t and basement on
Bob or Roqer J e ff ers day
each : S? bills , SJ JO each
and trader Phon e 98 5 337 3 good street
phone 992 70 89 , n•Qhl ph one
Buffalo ntckels . ~ S6 roll.
99'} 357~ or 992 52 3?
8 14 6tc ACREAGE - 97 acres ol
s ilver dollars. S4 .-40 each .
2 II li e
Lrbertynickels, 511 roll Call r::c-::---·- ·_· -·--=---=-~ pnvacy , IS or more of botlom
Roger Wamsley , Phone 74?
~
~
A Dan1e l Boone res ort
·
E LWOOD
BOW ER~, REPAIR
1651
NEEDED
100
ACRES
OR
Sweepe r s to as ters 1ron'S.
8 15 12tc
al l smal l appl ra nc es Lawn
MORE ON HARD ROAD
1917 ARROW Camper , phone
IIIOW €r . ne:-: 1 IO Stat e Hrqh
WITH WATER . CALL 992
9~? 5468
\'.'C!y Garage on
Rou te 1
8 15 76tp
Pho ne 98 5 J87"i
1 16 tt c

-

WIN AT BRIDGE

CAPTAIN EASY
tCAN THINK

01' ONE PO~&gt;SI8LE ""..

Pomer OY

Ph 99'2 · 2114

.

6 »-NBC News 3,4, IS; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Jody's Body Shop JJ.
7 :oo-Truth or Cons. 3,ol;; Bowling for Dollars 6;
,..
What's My llne8; News 10; Country Music Jubilee
IJ; To Be Announced 15; Book Beat 20; T~
Romaganolls Table 33.
7:»-Pollce Surgeon 3; Name That Tune 4; Let's
Make A Deal6; Wilburn Brothers 8; Movie " Bullet
1
In the Flesh" 9; T~ Judge 10; To Tell the Truth IJ ;
Episode Action 33.
8 :00-LIIIIe House on the Prairie 3, 15;; That's My
. . Moma~~ :j;_~edsce! oe '75 ~ ; Tony Orlando &amp; Dawn

.

From the largest Tr uck or
Bu ll dozer Rad1a1or to the
s n:~ a!lest 1-tcater Core
Na1h.1n Bagg s
Radralor 5pec tah !ol.

Syracu se, Ohto
Ph . 992 -3993
A 10 I mo

-

:.

WINDOWS&amp; DOOR S
REPLACEMENT
WINDOW S
ALUMINUM
SIDtNG-SOF·FITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

:.

r T~~~:~.~?:.mlog for .~~!. ."!ewiJJ8:_:~ ,

~EXPER_IEN(;ED
..... ..
adiato
.
' Service

• I
I

~~=..B=
u=s=
in
~
e
~
s
~
s~
S~
e
r
~
v
~i~
c
~
e
~
s
~
PAINT'

1972 NOVA S· S CPE .
S209S
350 V -8 au tomat1 c trans, power brakes, good GR70-15
ri!ldial l1res, dark brown finish. blk . 'ltflnyl Interior,
radio

Wanted To Buy

(An•w~l'l tomorrow)

v

' Vd li})

w rLl
t h f'

·

~

furJfY...: clbvE'

Jl1 i i

'"&gt;WEE PER
and
Se w rng
Mach 1ncs R e pa rr , Pa rts ,
a nd
Suppl ie s
Dav1s
Vac uu m Clean e r ,' m rle up
Geo rg e's Cr eek Rd off Stat e
F&lt; oute 1 P ho n e .t•l6 0194
B ?0 ltc

Now arrange the drcltd !etten

I·.. I · 1_··-.~ I_ toformthesurpriseanswer,u
suggested by the above cartoon.
;:
1~1\1lli~,~~'ii~PRISI~AHswlR~hm==~l D KI 11 )

2SIGNS 'Pomeroy
OF
Motor Co.·
.QUALITY

17 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,

.

a waste of ttme to travel or run Your

~

t ....

one-t~ dllliili .._

errands today. Since nothmg assoclatea collfd be unfor..
can be accomplished . Bask in tunate tod.,. Why nac ~.out
the sun by the pool.
and meet ,.... and .,.... ...
CANCER (June 21·July 22) P&lt;I&lt;&gt;Pie?
Avoid s pendmg money today PIICia (,.._ • • • • •
You'll buy all the wrong lhmgs Play your hunchet .,.,....,..
You can be creat1ve Without but at work todar- ,,. • ·
needless expense
castlccommencaot~
LED (Ju4J 23-Aug. 22) Olhers could !hr..., you oll·bala,...,
won't see eye.fo.eye with you (0~
today It you could lls(eo to
"'
thetr side ot the story and y1eld,
•
tt would brmg you happiness
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 22)
=
.·
You'll have an mchnatron to
• .... It, 1M ~
·
make changes at work today
You may not pottlia e1 . .
There 'll be no problems unless money in the wortd ttU
you try to use unlamihar tools year 11 you go on 1..,. 01--.t on the project.
trips and mHt ,... liiDII''
LIBRA (Sopl. 23-Dcl. 23) You much !Iappin--;.;.,.
ca n have a good t1 rhe today (NEWSPJ\PER £NTDPIIDE ~-l

y our
·
Blrthdl)'
OOI'N.,.

�I

'

I

.

18 - The Daily Sentinel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday , Aug. 20, 1975

News •• in Briefs
(Continued from page I)
would touch down on the Martian surface on the nal1on 's
bicentennial. A second Viking spacecraft IS scheduled to ta ke
off on an identical Mars mission Sept. 1. " We feel C'Onfldent
that all systems are in a ready position for launch," V1king
Project Manager James Martm said Tuesday .
DAMASCUS, SYRIA - A CZECHOSLOVAKIAN Airlines
jetliner carrying 128 passengers and crew crashed in a desert
outside Damascus early today killing 125 persons , a government spokesman announced A woman and two children, all
Syrians, were the only surviVors among the 117 Arab , Czech
and Iranian passengers and 11 crew members
The overmght flight was enroute from Prague to
Damascus. From there, it v.as scheduled to fly to Baghdad,
Iraq and Tehran, Iran. The spokesman sa td the Sovtet-bwlt
Dyushin 62 jet crashed in a desert area 13 miles east of
Damascus Airport shortly after 3 p.m. 18 p rn . EDT 1 Tuesday
while on tts landing approach The cause of the crash \o,.as not
lnomediately known, he sa id.

\

USBON , PORTUGAL - AN ANGRY MOB RANSACKED
the headquart ers of the pro-Commums t Portuguese
Democratic Movement m the northern mdus tn al ctty of Porto
early today and turned 1ts contents mto a g1ant bonfire
ln the Azores ).&lt;;lands, the m1htary governor ordered
several Commuruslleaders deported for their own sa fety The
action was taken after crowds sacked and burned the offkes of
the Communists and other lefl-wmg groups m Angra do
HeroiSIOO and Ponla Delgada. The formal evacuation of the
Communist leaders represented a senou.s sethack for both the
Communist party and the ce ntral government in the midAtlantiC islands, which have been operatmg as vu·tually an
autonomous state for the past month
CHARLESTON , W VA - SOUTHERN WESI' V1rg1ma 's
coal mme strike was in 1\s lOth day today w1lh an est imated
20,000 workers idled and no end of the walkout in sight
Desptte the jailing of one Urn ted Mme Workers official and
stifi fines against several umon locals, about 16,000 miners
were 'off the job Tuesday in District 17 and another 4,000
refused to work m neighboring Dislnct 29
The two d1strtcts are the largest in the UMW. Jack Perry,
president of Oistricll7 based here. srud he had been urged by
the union 's internattonal leadershtp to "do everything that I
could" to end the work stoppage. Perry, however, wasn't
optimistic.
BANGKOCK, THAILAND - A MOB OF "law-and-&lt;~rder "
demonstrators, many of them believed to be off.&lt;Juty police ,
broke Into the home of Prune Mm1ster Kukrit PramoJ today
and looted the restdence. About 2,000 persons marched across
the Thai capital to Kukrit 's home Tuesday mght to protest
government leniency toward militant st udents and farmers .
The j~rlng crowd threw stones at the house for two hours
and then broke into the building after midnight as riot police
fired bullets into the air _At the time of the mc1dent, the prime
minister was talking to representatives of the demonstrators
at a police station a haH-mile away.
Kukrit then drove to Government House for a two-hour ,
early morning meeting with members of hts cabmet and
National Police Chief Pole Bekanand.

• Two Automatic Cold
Controls-one in
freezer and one m

refngerator
• Refngerator wtthin
a refrigerator just
1or fresh meat
• Exclusive Convertible Fresh FrUit Bin
• Exclustve HI·Humidlty Compartment
• Amana Stor-Mor"

HOSPITAL NEWS

Finalists
announced

\'i•lt·rans Mcmurlal Un!-ipital

ADM1'1"1'1•:D - - Fn•d H1ll,
:\ lhan y. Evelyn Young,
Mwcrsvtlle. Monte Wolfe,
Syracuse ; Mary Hackney,

CLEVEL AND I UP I)
E:hgtble winners · m Thursday 's Ohw Lottery drawmg
here;
Robm
E rrn g,
West
Lafayette; Toy Mitchell,
Columbus ; Howard H. Mead ,
Rock Cree k; James Russell,
Akron ; Rosemary Glovitch
or Joe Glovitch, Mentor ;
Thomas RlL~sell, Cinc10nati;
Harry J . Jones, Mtddletown;
and Ruth Honegger, Lima
Thursday's drawing will
also mclude the selection 10
Lucky Buck fmahsts . Those
fmalists wtll be drawn from
the names of 227 persons who
quahfled by havtng Lucky
Buck bonus stub nwnhers
ptcked during a previous
drawmg

G

Eden News

SR12 Has8.2 Cu. Ft Freezer- 14 Cu. F1 Refrigera1or

'

$100

00 TRADE-IN

0

THIS OFFER APPLIES TO ANY
··WORKING REFRIGERATOR
.. WHILE SUPPLY LASTS

•

'

'

.

Market Report

FINED, JAILED
Fined $150 and costs and
given three day jail sentences
on charges of dnving while
mtoxicatcd when they appeared Tuesday night in the
court of Mtddleport Mayor
Fred Hoffman were Robert
C. Rawlings, 27, Middleport
and Ricky D Watson, 21,
Racme.
DIVORCE ASKED
A suit for divorce has been
flied in Me1gs County Common Pleas Court by Cynthia
L. smith, Racine, against
Thomas E. Smtlh, Syracuse,
on charges of gross neglect of
duty and extreme cruelty.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
Aug.l6, 1975
SALES REPORT OF
Ohio Valley Livestock Co.
STOCKER CATTLE STEERS - 250 to 300 lbs. 20
to 28 ; 300 to 400 lbs. 19 to
26.50; 400 to 500 lbs. 18 to
27.50; 500 to 600 lbs. 19 to
29.75; 600 to 700 lbs. 18 to
32.50; 700 lbs. and over 17 to
33.75
HEIFER CALVES- 250 to
300 lbs. 15 to 20; 300 to 400 lbs.
15 to 22; 400 to 500 lbs. 15 to
23.5Q; 500 to 600 Ibs. 17 to
22.50; 600 to 700 lbs. 18 to 25;
700 lbs. and over 18 to 30.
STOCK COWS &amp; BULLS
1By The Head) -Stock Cows
100 to 140; Stock cows and
Calves 120 to 197.50; Stock
Bulls 100 to 185; Baby Calves
5 to 30; (By the Pounjl) Canners &amp; Cutters Cows 15 to
19; Holstein Cows 18-23.50;
Commercial Bulls ( 1,000 lbs.
and over) 20 to 25.50.
VEAL CALVES- Tops 220
lbs.to 250 42 to 47.50; Medtum
200lbs. to30034lo 40; Culls 28
Down .
SHOATS - 17.50 to 35.

NOW YOU KNOW
New York City's police
force 1s larger than the
armies of 95 per cent of the
countries in the United
Nations.

open, and more and more
authors are turning out howto best&lt;l&lt;!Uers.
"Creation of this vast
market Inevitably caused a
steep rise In the itch for
writing. You hear authors of
both sexes talking about
cacoethes scribendi as freely
as they might discuss nonspecific
urethritis,
trichomoniasis or genital
herpes,"
I said, "Is it highly conlagious?"
"Extemely so. You can get
writer's itch just by rubbing
elbows with an unpublished
novelist at a cocktail party."
"What is being done to
bring it under control? I've
heard that bad reviews will
stop it."
"That's an old wives tale.
The only sure cure for
writer's itch Is a strong series
of rejection slips."
"Well, they say it's no
worse than a common cold
anyhow."
"Don't you believe it.
Writing can easily get In your
blood, and then you're incurable."

to washington, Nessen

thing that forced busing to
achieve racial balance is the
proper way to get qualit:•
education. There must be a
better way' \O do it." But he
promised t6 carry out the
law.
On unemployment: "We're
doing the best we can. You
can't turn a spigot and get a
healthy economy. It takes
time to win the battle against
inflation
and
unemployment."
The President also packed
two policy speeches into his
schedule. At the Iowa State
Fair in Des Moines, he
promiaed farmers that grain
sales to the Soviet Union
would continue. ·
And In Minneapolis Ford
described
the
longshoremen's refusal to
load grain shipmen,ts to
Russia as "tragic and unfortunate" and he said he
hoped the problem could be
resolved
through
negotiations.
Ford was reported to be
meeting
today
with
representatives of two
western wheat organizations
that have overseas markets
and want to protest the work
stoppage affecting grain
shipments to Russia.

Mens and Boys Department, 1st Floor

GRANT MADE
ATHENS- A $28,000 grant
has been awarded hy the Ohw
Board of Regents to Charles
Carlson
and
Gordon
Wtseman, faculty members
of the Oh10 University School
of
Interpersonal
CommuniCation . Pat of the Title I
H1gher Education Grants for
Commumty Service and
Conhnumg Education, the
a ward will be used for a
communicatJon skills
program currently being
planned for soc1al agency
personnel in Southeast Ohi".
The year-long project will
mclude a conference Sept. 17,
mim-seminars and In-service
workshops.

oWest
With
Lee Riders~
Born of the land.
Raised in the du5t
of the Plain Country.
Jeans that roll small
a pack.
Low slung. Cut tight.
Nothing fancy.
Just right.
Back to the earth?
Lee Riders live there!

PATIENTS GET OUT
SAGAMORE HILLS, Ohio
(UP I) - Between 250 and 360
patients will be released from
Hawthornden State Hospital
within the next month or two
because of budget cuts,
Hospital Supermtendenl Or.
Barry I. Ftreman confirmed
Tuesday night.
'

w,. \dve a treda plan designed t 0 f II your budget

~

A•M&gt;O • ( D II!fGU O( A l' ~

1£~. !:f!~tl~ly §~~p:
SINGER SALES&amp; SERVICE
992·2214
Pomeroy, Ohio

ns W. Second

•A Trademark of THE SINGER COM PANY

l

513

-

Sale Prices Now on Entire · Selection Men's
and Young Men's Lee Rider Blue Denim
Jeans and Matching Jackets.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

I

'

,· '

I

'

average 0.5 per cent.
If the cost of retail prices
continuetortseforthenext 12
months at the July pace, the
inflation rate as measured by
the CPI would equal 14.4 per
cent , solidly within the
" double digit" range that
plagued the nation in 1973 and
1974. In 1974 the rate was 12.2
per cent.
"Price increases for meat,
poultry, fresh frutts and
vegetables, gasoline, and
used cars accounted for about
three fourths of the July
mcrease," the department
SBJd.
With the impact of higher
prices for gram, steel,

•

en tine

VOL. XXVII

NO. 91

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

THURSDAY, AUGUST 21. 1975

PRICE 15'

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

Kissinger under iron -tight security
By MA,rH!S CHAZANOV
TEL AVIV (UP!)- Israel
mounted
the
greatest
security precautwns in tts
peacetime history today to
protect Secretary of Slate
Henry A. Kissinger from
threatened demonstrations
protesting a new IsraeliEgyptian peace agreement
as a new " Munich .
Kissinger was returning tonight to the scene of his
failure last March, hopeful

that this time he C'Ould bring
off the new agreement. As he
did there were increasing
signs that both sides had
made major concessions to
win the agreement for at
least a three-year period of
non-aggression .
Four
right-wing
organizations announced
they would hold protest
demonstratons m Jerusalem
to coincide w1th Kissinger's
arrival expected about 7 p.m.

( 11 a.m. EDT.) . Israel took
precautions which surpassed
even those accorded to former President Richard M.
Nixon during his two.&lt;Jay
visit to Israel in June, 1974.
On Wednesday there were

A lion's Jerusalem .
Demonstrators
denounced
Pnme Minister Yltzhak
Rabin as a "traitor " and
demanded his resignation.
They carried big "Kissinger
Is Not We1come " signs.
wi~spread
~nti-Kisslnger
15raeli army units virtually
and
anti·government sealed off the borders with
demonstrations in Jerusalem neighbormg Arab states
and rightwing youths in- following an mctdent Wedcensed at the proposed nesday 1n whach Israeli
agreement
broke
into patrols
killed
three
Foreign Mini ster Y1gal Palestlman mfiltrators who
slipped off the border into
).&lt;;rae! to try to disrupt the
Kissinger
visit.
Israel
retaliated with an atr raid
against refugee camps wh1ch
a Lebanese communique said
this
bookkeep10g killed 12 persons and
from historical data, the five But
will wounded 28.
quarters of declme m 1974-75 acknowledgement
The tight security went mto
have not been officially de- probably be made withm the
effect
as diplomallc sources
clared a recessionary period. next year or two.

•

GNP up 1.6% m July

WASHINGTON (UPI) The real Gross National
Product rose 1.6 per cent In
the second quarter of 1975 for
the first mcrease in the GNP
since the beginnmg of the
current recession,
the
Commerce Department said
today.
The ftrst three month increase m the GNP in 18
Gallia Academy High teams; Ironton w1ll not have
months corresponded with
School Prmcipal James N M. volleyball, tennis or softball;
the traditional economic
Dav1s was elected 1975-76 Jackson will not have
theory that a rise 10 the GNP
president of the Southeastern gymnastics or tennis; Logan
after several declines meant
Ohw AthletiC League during w1ll not have tennis or softan end to a recession.
Wednesday mght's annual ball; Meigs will not have
Commerce also said m- fall meeting held at Jackson tennis or softball; Waverly
w1ll not have gymnastiCS,
nation dropped to 5 per cent
H1gh School.
In the second quarter to mark
Superintendents,
prin - tenms or softball and
lts lowest level since the end
cipals, athletic directors and Wellston w11l not have
coaches from all eight con- basketball, track-&lt;&gt;r lenms.
of 1972, when it was 4.1 per
Most schools are conference
schools
were
cent.
sidenng admission fees for
The growlh in the April- represented .
June quarter In the GNP was
A survey of admisswn gtrls sporting events.
The 1974-75 All-Sports
the h1ghest since a 14.4 per prices for SEOAL games
cent rise In the first quarter revealed all schools with the Trophy will be presented
exceptwn of Ironton will sell Galha Academy High School
of 1971, Commerce said.
Thelncreasefolloweda 11.4 tickets at the gate (students, during the Meigs-Galhpolts
per cent decline in first $1, and adults $1.50). Ironton grid game on Friday. Oct. 10.
quarter of the year . With w11l sell advance student
Jackson will host the 1975
inflation Included the GNP tickets (75 cents ) wh1le all cross country league match
was estimated at $1.44lrillion tickets at the Tiger gate wtll on Oct. 14. There Will be no
up 6.7 per cent from the be $1.50.
league golf tournament th1s
previous quarter.
In other matters, it was fall. The 1975 golf champiOn
The report today was a reported Waverly will not
revision of the preliminary play league schools in eighth
GNP which had shown an 0.3 grade football. Ironton will
per cent decline In the second parltctpate only in varsity
quarter. Today's report was football and varsity and
considered more accurate reserve basketball.
because more complete data
It was announced that
was available than One IJIOnth wreslhng and tennis will not
ago.
be considered m the AilApproximately I ,200 men
Commerce said the five Sports trophy point total this are off lhetr jobs at Meigs
quarters of decline In the year . A survey revealed Mines Nos. I, 2 and 3, David
GNP In 1974-75 was the Jackson , Waverly
and Baker, personnel supervisor
longest since the end of World Gallipolis do not have for the Southern OhiO Coal
War II.
wresthng teams. Athens, Co., said today.
The 7.8 per cent decline Meigs and Waverly have no
No specific reason was
from the peak of 1973 was also tenms teams
given for the s toppage ,
the worst in the post war era.
Another survey pertammg although it was generally
The previous worse was 3.9 to g1rls sports revealed understood the walkout was
per cent decline In the 1957-li8 Athens has no girls softball "in sympathy" w1lh West
recession·
team; GAHS w1ll not field Virgtma miners presently on
Because economists work _ gymnastics, tenms or softball a wildcat strike to demon'!IPMMim~~:::::=:::::;~:=:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::x~~ strate opposition to the
courts' free use of the mjunction and jail sentences to
enforce mine labor polictes .
Baker said Mme No. I was
scheduled to meet at noon
By United Press International
today, Mine 2 at I p .m. today,
CINClNNATI- Is the Ferguson Act constitutional? The and Mine 3 tomorrow
act, Ohio's controversial law that prohibits strikes by public
. II was reported the min es
employes, will soon be judged for its constitutionality by three
have been idle s1nce Monday
federal judges here.
mghl.
U. S. District Court Judge Tlnoothy S. Hogan, currently
hearing a case in which the legality of the act is challenged,
ROAD OPENED
has ordered a three-judge panel to study and rule on the state
. County Engineer, Wesley
law. Hogan said t]tere Is a "substantial" federal question
Buehl
said today county
raised by the act.
road 3 from Rutland to
Hogan wants the constitutionality decision to help him
Harrisonville
Is now open
decide the case of 18 Lebanon, Ohio city workers who were
after having been closed
fired last year, under the Ferguson Act. The city employes
for repair
went on strike Nov. 18 to demonstrate their demands to
Beginning today county ·
unionize and were fired by Lebanon City manager Charles
road 34 to SR 124
Guard Dec. 16. Early this year the angry wor~er$ picketed and
1Bowmans Run) a distance
urged a boyCott of city stores to try to gain support.
of two miles is, closed for
Both the city and 'workers, represented by the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Union, have ' repair.
(Continued on page 10)

alumimum and many raw
materials stlll to be felt at the
retall level, hopes for a
prolonged period of price
stability appear to be
lessenmg .
The index has now risen
nearly 10 per cent since July,
1974 and stands at 162.3. This
me&lt;lns that an assortment of
retall goods and services that
cost $10m the 1967 base year
had risen 10 pr1ce to $16.23
last month.
Breaking the mdex into
separate categories, food
prtces rose 1.7 per cent in
July, the biggest nse 10 11
months . Prtces of nonfood
commodittes rose 0.9 per
cent , the htghest m 10 months
and the cost of servtces was
up 0.5 per cent somewhat less
than In June.
ln the food area, fresh
vegetables and poultry prices
rose "considerably more"
than m June, the department
said. Prices of dairy products
rose for the first time this
year and egg prices moved up
after a two month decline .
Pork prices pushed up fast
and beef prices also rose but
less rapidly than in May and
June. Beef, pork and poultry
prices has now risen nearly 20

per cent since April.
However, sugar prices continued to fall in July from
their recent high levels and
many processed foods also
fell.
The stiff rise in nonfood
commodities prices was
fueled by a round of gasoline
price Increases in early July
of 3 to 4 cents a gallon. Since
March, gasoline and motor
oil pnces have jumped nearly
9 per cent, a reflection of
President Ford's l"'ilosophy
that higher prices IS one way
to achieve energy conservation .
Used car prices continued
to rise sharply in July, but
new car prices fell for the
second time in the last three
months. Clothing and apparel, which moved down
slightly smce January,
rebounded 0.7 per cent last
month.
The services index showed
a sharp 1.1 per cent rise In the
cost of medical care, much
more than the previous
monthly increases this
spring. Rents were up 0.3 !'"'
cent, transportation 0.5 per
cent and other services 0.4
per cent4hout In line with
recent monthly increases.

said Egypt has agreed to let early, parking areas closed
15rael hold the eastern slopes and green-bereted border
of the two strategic Sinal police posted on the terminal
mountrun passes and to man roof and patrolling nearby
its major spy post in one of roads.
Armed regular troops pathem 10 a three-year pact
trolled
Jerusalem streets.
complete but for some
The street m front of the King
mihtary aspects.
Tins was a major con- David Hotel, Kissinger 's
cession by Egypt and was headqarters in•Israel, will be
off
even
to
accompanied by major sealed
concessions by the Uruted pedestrians . The street opStates- an agreement to posite was lmed with navy
supply Israel with nearly $3 blue iron police barricades.
Sixty additional American
btllion In atd, to provide
Wlanned civilian tectuucians Secret Service men arrived
to help man an early warning from U S. embassies In
system In the Sinal and a Rome, Athens, J.&lt;;tanbul and
guarantee to make up oil lost Tehran following the antiwhen Israel returns the Abu Ktssinger demonstrations m
Jerusalem Wednesday . Two
Rude1s oiH1elds to Egypt.
Ben-Gurion Airport was black buUetproof limousines
virtually shutting down for were sent in, but one wiU be
Kissmger's arnval, with used when Kisalnger travels
workers being sent home to the Arab capitals.

Davis of Gallia heads athletic league
wtll be determined on a
regular season play bas1s
Th1s was determmed during
the league 's June 18 meeting
The next league meeting is

scheduled Nov. 19, at
Jackson , begmmng at 7 p. m
at the h1gh school.
Representin g Gallipolts
Wednesday were James N.

M. Davts, Ed Stewart, Roger
Brumfield and Donald
Staggs.
Representmg Meigs was
James Diehl.

THIS 66 - PASSENGER BUS will be used for the first time Sunday to pick up and
return to their homes residents who wish to attend Sunday mormng services at the Mld ·dleport Church of Christ. Among active partiCipants m the program, I to r , are Mack
Stewart, Edward Evans, George Glaze, pastor, and Mike Stewart.

•

Otnrch begins bus service
In
co ntrast
to
ou r
forefathers, folks these days
jusl don't "cotton" to much
walkmg, espectally
to
church.
Apparently aclmg on this
theory, the congregallon of
the Mtddleporl Church of
Chnst has purchased a 56passenger bus which will be
put into actwn for the ftrst
lime Sunday morning to
provide transportation for
people of the commumty who
would hke to attend Sunday
school and church .
The bus was purchased
from Edwm Davis and Son,
Langsville, and has been
painted and put mto good
operation for the church. It IS
a 1968 International. Driver
of lhe bus whtch will operate
at first JUst on Sunday
mormngs will be Earl
McKmely; Mike Stewart will
later operate the bus each
Wednesday eve mn g to pick

up youngsters mvolved m the
weekly youth program of the
church
The kickoff for funds with
which to purchase the bus
was on Aug. 3 when Lavon
Koerner, a minister at a
Church of Chrtst tn Xema,
came to Middleport as a
guest speaker. The Middleport Church had sent help
to the Xema Church of Chnst
when Xenia was hit by a
destructtve tornado On the
evemng that Mr Koerner
appeared, $1300 was raised
for the bus project with the
result bemg the congregation
pa1d cash for the bus
A committee composed of
Coleen VanMeter, Edwa,rd
Evans, M1ke Gerlach and
Paul Cunmngham w11l be
working each Saturday in the
community, vasi ting homes to
mquire 1f residen ts would hke
lo be picked up by the bus

wh1ch wtll not run an
established route, as such.
The bus will make pickups
and then return riders to their
homes following the Sunday
mormng worship.
If a stop mvolves only small
chtldren, members of the
congregation w1ll go as far as
gomg to the door and
knocking to let the- fam1ly
know the bus has arrived.
When the small children are
returned to thetr homes,
agam a knock of the door wtll
come so that children can be
safely placed ms1de their
homes .
Heading the program to
secure the bus and carry out
th e operatiOn has been
George Glaze, pastor, who
h1 ghly
co mmends
the
congregalton for 1ts qmck
aclion and 1ts support in
geltmg the busmg operatwn
underway

.,

•

WEAPON FOUND - Mason County Sheriff Elvin E.
I Pete) Wedge, right , prepares to place the .222 rifle of
stabbing victim Danny Richard Cornell, 26, Glenwood, m
a plastic bag after the gun was found Wednesday afternoon m weeds along Guyan Creek Road. The gun,
which Cornell had with him when he went groundhog
huntmg last Wednesday evening, was a m1ssing link in the
mvest1gation by Mason County law enforcement officials
of Cornell's murder. The gun was found about two-tenths
of a mile from the murder scene in the Glenwood area. A
14-year-&lt;~ld Glenwood Road youth IS charged with first
degree murder m the killing. At left IS deputy sheriff Paul
Maynard.

EXTENDED FORECAST
Saturday
through
Monday, generally fair and
..arm with highs Saturday
from the upper 70s to the
upper 80s, warming by
Monday to the upper 80s
and lower 90s. Lows "lll be
in the upper 50s and 60s
early Saturday and in the
60s and lo,.er 70s early
Mo•1ay.

Mines
idled

''
I

By GENE CARU&gt;ON
WASHINGTON I UP!)
Consumer prices in July
Increased at an ann ual rate of
14.4 per cent, the Labor
Department satd today 10 a
report that may stgnal the
beginning of anot her inflationary surge·
The government's Conswner Price Index jumped
· 1.2 per cent last month,
seasonally adjusted. the
steepest monthly rtse since
last September.
The sharp July nse comes
on the heels of a 0.8 per cent
mcrease 10 June For the
prevtous five months of 1975,
consumer prtces had risen an

Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area

\

I

at

ews. • . in· Briefsl

'--, , exclusive Singe_r • front drop-in bobbtn, built-in
bu·ttonh&lt;Jier, built·in fashion, zig-zag. blind·hem,
stretch stitches. Carrying case or cabtnet extra

TONiTE
lhru THURS.
NOT OPEN

•

- ~

Orig. 5199.95, now reduced to 5139.&lt;'5 :

MEIGS THEATRE

small, but the attitude is good," Berkheimer told The
Sentinel Tuesday. Left to nght, Tlno Kuhn, defensive end;
Dave Hannum, tackle; Berkheimer, Dave Watson , a
guard, and Don Eichinger , halfback

e

our environment."
On race relations: "I don't

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

"It's definitely the result of
changing public attitudes toward sex manuals," Hackpulp replied. "It wasn't many
years ago that bedroom
advice simply wasn't men-

ta
__ ,

EAGLE SENIORS - Eastern High football coach
Spike Berkheimer (center ) has these four sen1or athletes
around whom his 1975 team will be built. "We will be

1n Peoria, Ford was hit
with questions on energy,
school busing, unemployment
and whether he regards maU
service as a public service.
On energy: "I know we can
have a responlble energy
program without destroying

writer's itch.

SAv,60

!

.. j ;

By DICK WESf
WASHINGTON ( UPI) Public health officials
recently warned that three
types of venereal disease
heretofore fairly rare are
rap1dly increasing.
They said the growmg
prevalence of the diseases,
identified as nonspecific
urethritis, trtchomoniasts
and gemtal herpes, probably
was caused by changing
patterns of sexual behavior .
But no need to dwell on that
here.
Rather, let us simply note
that off-beat strams of VD
aren't the only once obscure
maladies that now nourish
because of sociological
changes.
Another prime example is
cacoethes scribendi, an affliction defined by Webster as
"the itch for writing."
To give you an idea of how
widespread it has become, a
hook Industry trade paper
reports that 14,998 new titles
were published in the first
half of this year. That
compares with 14,775 new
hooks in the first six months
of 1974, which was somewhat
staggering ilseH.
Looking at the problem
from
another
angle,
Bowker's "Books in Print"
contained 163,000 titles in
1963. Ten years later the total
had jumped 144 per cent, to
398,000, and last year
Bowker's listed 435,000 hooks
In prmt.
Clearly, cacoethes
scribendi has reached
epidemic proportions and is
now raging out of control.
I asked Or. Sugmund Hackpulp,
an
international
authority
on
literary
pruritus, how he accounted
for the appalling spread of

lioned In polite society. If you
bought it, you tried to keep
your friends and neighbors
from knowing about it. Often,
this Involved sneaking hooks
home in plain brown wrappers.
"Nowadays, of course, the
stigma once associated with
recessive knees, premarital
virginity and other sexual
hangups has largely disappeared. It's all out in the

7

tinue ."

The news conference
fonnat was Ford's idea . He
plans to repeat it when he
appears at a slnoilar White
conference
in
House
Milwaukee Monday en route

.

''

Peorta, Ill ., enthralled
Ford, according e~ Wh~
House press secrF:lf d
N"""':n, w~ sal~he floo~~a
questions o~
challenge and ,'t gave hlno a,n
idea of what s on people s
mindil
"H . th
ht the questions
ef1 e do~~ concerns of the
r ecte.
ea .. Nessen·
people mHthe ar t' to on
c •
added · " e wan s

STYLIST" STRETCH-STITCH MACHINE Model

THE GODFATHER
PART 11

I

fere~e on Oom,';sttc Polley'::

CLOSEOUT!

Augusl22·24

1

time

Cloudy, chance of thundershowers tomghl and
Thursday. Lows tonight will
be 65 to 70 and highs Thursday wtll be in the upper 80s.
Probability of rain 20 per cent
today, 40 per cent tomght and
Thursday.

Frjday thru Sunday

l

Mrs Bertha E. Stiles, 95,
formerly of Tuppers I:'lains,
dted early Tuesday at Case
Nursmg Home at Piketon,
OhiO, follow mg an extended
1llness
Mrs Stales was born m
Olive Twp . tn Meigs County,
the daughter of the late
Ob1dah and Ehzabeth Marlm
Turben
She was also
preceded tn death by her llrst
hus band, Albert Keller, and
her late husband, John Stiles
in 1948; by one son, Glenn;
three brothers, and two
saslers.
She was a member of the
Success Untied Brethren
Church and a resident of
Meigs County the greater
pari of her life. She is surVIVed by a son, Ralph Keller ,
Rl. 3, Pomeroy, and three
grandchildren
Funeral servtces will be
Thursday at 2 p.m at the
Wh1le Funeral Home m
Coolville with the Rev Roy
Deeter officiating. Burial w1ll
be 'm Sandhill Cemetery,
Long Bottom. Friends may
call at the funeral home any

Weather

four states - Colorado, Iowa,
Minnesota and IDinois - and
everywhere warm, friendly
crowds lined up to shake his
hand.
"It was a very productive,
very constructive and a very
worthwhile trip," said Ford,
who appeared tired but
buoyed as he stewed from
his helicopter at this Rocky
Mountain retreat .
The White House Con-

Is there an editor in
the House? The Lighter Side':t~k

died Tuesday

Jam es T Taylor, 47,
Sycamore St., ' Middleport,
d1ed Tuesday afternoon at
Coshoclon of a heart attack
Born Jan . 7, 1928, 10
Dotham , Ala ., Mr . Taylor had
been employed at the Gavm
Plant and more recently m
Coshocton. He was a
boilermaker. Mr Taylor was
a veteran of Lhe Korean
Conflict having served m the
Infantry . He was preceded in
death by his father , Casey
Taylur
Surv1v111g are hts wtfe,
Donna May 1 Luce) Taylor;
has mother, Mrs. Jeams (Ann
Harrison) Taylor of Doth am;
two daughters, Mrs. Stephen
(Kathleen Loutse) Foulkrod
of Montendon, Pa., and M1ss
Debra Taylor, at home; three
sons, Daniel Eugene and
Brian Michael, both at home ,
and James Thomas Taylor,
Dover, Fla.; a sister, Mrs.
Ben (Patricia) Givens, and
two brothers, Leon and B1lly
Taylor, of Dolham .
Services
are
being
arranged at the Rawhngs
Coats Funeral Home in
Middleport

WANTS SHIPS
CLEVELAND ( UP!)
Cleveland City Council
unantmously voted Tuesday
night lo pledge $3 million to
lease three cruise ships as
floating hotels should the city
be chosen Io host the 1976
Republican National Convention .

By HELEN rHOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
VAIL, Colo. (UPI ) - "I'm
ready to go again tomorrow,"
PreSident Ford said after his
two.&lt;Jay barnstormmg swing
through the Middle West. " It
was grea't."
Ford returned here to
resume his vacation - but he
soon will be on the road agam
to boost his presidential
candidacy.
He made 10 appearances in

Bertha Stiles

.d ied Tuesday

Joppa News

Patsy F

Moore, S(J ndra K Parsons,
Alha Rayburn, Elizabeth
Riebel, Glenda L. Ross,
Gluna J Sheets, Babette B.
Siewert, Ltlhnn Ma n e Srmth ,
DICIC Dexter Stewart
1Births)
Mr and Mrs Robert
Miller. a daughter, Oak Hill;
Mr and Mrs Delbert K
daughter ,
G1lberl,
a
Galhpohs; Mr . and Mrs .
Rodney L R1ggs, a daughter,
Pomeroy; Mr . and Mrs
Daniel R. McCloud. a son,
Middleport

James Taylor

klt

..

Fannmc Miller,

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGF:S Mrs.
Russell Cundiff, Mason; Mrs.
Glen A
Sayre, Pomt
PleaSC:~nl: Jam es Stokes, Rto
Grande ; Mrs David Sulhvan,
I ..eon , Charles Roberts, Potnl
Pleasan I: Cha rles Rogers ,
PI Pleasanl; Mrs Howard
Mack. Hw1hngton; Natahe
Brueslle , Pt. Pleasant; Anita
PI
Pleasant;
R1ggs,
Chnslopher Staats, Racme;
Chrtsly Dunn, Oak Hill: Enc
Ferguso n, Phny; Mary
N1berl, Gallipolis Ferry,
Harry
Machtr,
Powt
Pleasant , Clara 'Duff, Pmnt
Pleasant; Mrs Gary Gregory
and son, West Colwnbia;
Mrs Alan Waugh, Pliny:
Mrs Orville Ellis, Pt .
Plea san I; Mrs Leon Putz,
Pl. Pleasan l, Davtd Ebert,
Gallipolis Ferry, and Howard
Holley, Galhpolis

for hospital

Adams

Melba I Brown , Mrs James
Clevin ger
and
Infant
d•ughlcr, Fred Deer Jr.,
Sarah E Dunn, Nma M.
Eubanks , Jean Faulkner,
Mam1c M. Gwwn, Brwn T.
Hal slead, Karl Maynard
Harder, Mrs . Dav1d Lee
Marli n and mfanl son, Harry
Leo Me Dermott, Mary Ann
McCarley. Kelly Ann McGee,

IJISCHARGED - Lura
!Inboden, Carl Campbell,
Amanda Morris, Leola
r.1lmore , BeL.sy Weaver,
Char les S!earns, Rochelle
Ward

to help pay

Slcphen E

Ford loving to barnstorm

and wfilnl daughter, Hattie
L Asbury. Agnes L. Boggess,

Bul l oln

Mrs. Sharon Coleman and
daughter Tina of Fredericksburg , Virginia spent two
weeks with her parents , Mr .
and Mrs. Clarence Baker and
Larry. Others visiting were
Refrigerator And Mr. and Mrs. Vern Ray
Free ze r Doors
Cas tle and famtly of Guys• Amana Power Sav~ ville and Mr. and Mrs . Roger
er Swttch-energy
Baker and son, Coolville. Mr.
saver
and Mrs. Baker and Larry
• Amana Add On Automatic lc~ Maker accompanied thetr daughter
home and spent a day at
(at extra cost)
Convert to Decorator Busch Gardens at Williams, model w1 th extra buy burg, V1rgmia and toured
ophon Amana tnm
The Budwieser Brewery.

'THIS OFFER ALSO APPLIES
TO SR-25
Qnly JSJ/4' Wide
9.4 Cu. Ft. Freezer-16 Cu. Ft. Refrigerator

Mrs

RfjC!IIe . Allee Dodson , Lung

Fnnd at $692

A public fund drive for SIXyear-o ld r .on me LeMaster,
Route 2, Pomeroy, bram
surge ry palienl at St. Joseph
Hospital in Parkersburg,
reached $692.04 today. The
fund IS bc!ng raised to assist
lhe
famliy
wtlh
hos pi t al1za Lion
expenses
hemg incurred at the hospital
where Lonnie has been
confined smce mtd-July.
More brain surgery 1s
expected to be necessary.
Lonnie IS the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Ed LeMaster
Con In butwns to the fund
are lobe se nt to Mtss Eleanor
Robson,
Me1gs County
Recorder, at the courthouse
10 Pomeroy or may be left at
her office, payable to the
"L onnie
LeMaster
HospitalizatiOn Fund.''
Lalesl contributors to the
fund are Mr. and Mrs . Lorain
Slerretl, Pomeroy ; Mr. and
Mrs. Avery Goeglein, Route
2, Pomeroy; Bob's Gulf
Slallon, Pomeroy; Mr. and
Mrs. Phil Ohlinger. Route 3,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Grueser, near Pomeroy ;
Blue and Grey Container,
Pomeroy; Steve Smith , near
Pomeroy ; Mr and Mrs
Edgar Abbott and Mr. and
Mrs Elwood Bowers, all of
Route 3, Pomeroy; Garnet
Roush, Galhpohs; Mr and
Mrs . Dale Kesterson, Route
3, Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Russell, Route 2,
Racine; Mr. and Mrs.
Wendell Hoover, Jr., Route 2,
Pomeroy; Cradles to College
Mothers League of Bidwell;
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
Wildermul h, Pomeroy; Mr .
and Mrs . Harry K. Clark,
Route I, Mmersville; Mr. and
Mrs. Detyl E . Well, Tuppers
Plains: Mrs William A
Morgan, Route 3, Pomeroy;
Mr and Mrs. Paul Scott,
Middleport, and Mr. and Mrs .
John W. DaviS, Syracuse.

llnlur i\1t•dwal Ct· ntcr
( Uis(•hi.er~rs, Au~ . 19)

No radar
•
•
m crmser
Motonsts speedmg m
Pomeroy may get a btl of
repraeve from prosecuhon
The radar equipment used
by the Pomeroy Pohce Dept
to catch speeders was stoken
from the crwser Wednesday
mght.
Capt Henry Werry of the
department was called to a
West Main St. cafe Wednesday night. Relurmng to
the crwser after completing
the business at hand in the
cafe, Capt. Werry discovered
that someone had hfted the
radar out of the crwser.
The eqwpment had not
been loca ted Thursday
mornmg. The radar IS valued
at more than $1,000. A check
was to he made this morning
to detennme if insurance
coverage is provided on the
eqwpment.
NOW YOU KNOW
The g1an t clam of the East
Indian Coral reefs can grow
up to 500-pound, four-fo ot
size.

Classes
begin
Tuesday
Vacalton for teachers of the
Local School D1slnct
w1ll end Monday at meetmgs
m preparatio n for Tuesday's
opemng of classes
At 9 a m Monday , pn~­
Cipals "ill meet at the Junior
h1 gh school
wtth adnums lrators, Supt Charles
L Dowler and Asst. Supt.
Danny Morns At 10 a rn .
there w11l he a general staff
meeting at the Junior h1gh
sc hool AI 1 p m follov.mg
lunch teachers will meet at
thetr respe c ltve bulid1ngs
w1lh their pnnc1pal
Classes wtll beg1n Tuesday
wllh starling and d1sm1ssal
times for the several schools
bemg, Salem Center, 8·203· 30; Harrt sonv tlle, 8 153·30; Bradburgy, 8-2 30;
Saltsbury,
8·25-3 . 25;
Rutland, 8·30-3 ·30; Middleport, 8·30-J·30; Pomeroy,
8·3().2 :45;
Me1gs
Junior
High, 8·25-3 : 25; and Me1gs
Senior H1gh School, 8:35-3 15.
Me~gs

Weather
Chance of evening thundershowers. Low tomght near
75. Cloudy, warm Friday,
chance of afternoon thunqershowers. H1ghs will be
near 90. Probability of rain 30
per cent today, tonight and
Frtday

'

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="767">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11167">
                <text>08. August</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="51233">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="51232">
              <text>August 20, 1975</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="2482">
      <name>stiles</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="75">
      <name>taylor</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
