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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

•

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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

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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

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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

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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

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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

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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

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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

'

�. 2- The Daily Sent mel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., ThW'sday, Aug. 21, 1975

~'Brien

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nesday mght
Burdick said the meetmg
was requested by the FBI and
that O'Bnen fie" to Detroit
from his home tn West
Memphis, Ark , for 11
It was the second such

::.
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meetmg , Burdick said, and It
also covered the questiOn of
O'Brien 's whereabo uts tmmediate 1Y before and after
Hoffa varushed The ·f.rst

meetmg occurred, Burdick
said, about a week after
Hoffa disappeared.
mveshgators placed O'Brien
Meanwhile, a Florida man
m the area of a suburban who mailed photos of Hoffa to
Detroit parkmg lot where the DetrOit bureau of Uruled
Hoffa was last seen July 30 Press InternatiOnal and to
· O'Bnen sa1d later he was m James P Hoffa sa id Wednes, the area early July 31 only day he plans more mrulings
because he was wattlng for a - this tune to enlist the aid of
nde to work
600,000 handicapped persons
The former Team sters 10
the hunt lor Hoffa
president va mshed after
The man , C Monroe
lellmg his family he was Lerman of Orlando, told UP!
meetmg a reputed Maf1a 10 a telephone call to Detrmt
kingpm and two other men that he would apolog•ze to
for lunch The three demed Hoffa 's son, who called the
they planned to meet Hoffa ma~ling of the photo to hun a
O'Br1en 's lawyer, James &lt;~cruel JOke ''
' Burdick, sa1d Wednesday
O'Bnen would not subm1t to Road roller hit
· the test The FBI has not
The Meigs County Sheriff'sl
asked hun to take one, he
Dept mvest1gated a mmor
added.
Burd1ck reportedly has ad- accident Wednesday at I p
VIsed O'Brien not to subm1llo m on County Road 3m ScipiO
any he detector mterrogalion Township .
on grounds such tests are
Fred M Priddy, Rt I,
'~o ften mconclus1ve "
Middleport, traveling north
• The lawyer also disclosed on Coun ly Road 3, came on
two FBI agents and a stale equipment domg highway
pollee mvest1gator had repa.r as he rounded a curve
queslioned O'Bnen about the Priddy skidded mto a road
Hoffa disappearance for roller, then mto a d1tch
about f1ve hours Monday at a There was mmor damage, no
state poj1ce office at Detroit's InJuries or arrests
Metropolitan airport.
' The meetmg, Burdick said,
PLENTY BEEF
• dealt with ''very specifiC"
WASHINGTON (UP!)
• details of O'Bnen's where- Consumers w1ll fmd supplies
abouts over a three-or four- of beef, ch1cken, turkey and
day period around July 30. He eggs adequate m September
but pork stocks w11l be hghl,
refused to elaborate.
The FBI and State Pollee the Agri culture Department
declined comment Wed - says
,

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':,.. to star.
For the time bemg, the
couple w1ll use M1ss Taylor's
:" chalet in the chic Swtss resort
: - of Gstaad, Solow1cz sa1d.
:
Miss Taylor 1s known to

•••
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dislike Buroon's sunple twobedroom plus livmg room
house m the Geneva suburb of
Cehgny.
BW"ton's latest g~rlfnend,
Jean Bell, who had been
staymg at the actor's Celigny
home, has left for Califonua,
according to local residents
There have been reports
that she IS expecting Burton's
child but asked about that
before she left Tuesday, Miss
Bell sa1d merely, " Richard IS
away for a few days and
apart from that I have
nothing to say."
As long as Burton and MISS
Taylor do not remarry , the
divorce settlement of last
year remams m effect,
friends sajd. It g1ves Miss
Taylor all the items she
owned prior to and durmg the
marnage.
During that time, Burton's
most famous gift to Miss
Taylor was a $1 million
Cartier dlliJilond and the
world's most famed pearl,
" La Peregrina," both given
to her on her 37th birthday.
The Burtons' combmed
worth was said to be more
than $25 million.

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By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - Cauld
you tell me what causes gout
and what to do for it• The
doctor said I had gout m my
feet. The balls of both feet are
sore and somet~rnes my toes
bW'n and seem to draw as If I
had cramps in them . It is
very prunful .
DEAR READER- Gou~ IS
aot caused by eating nch
foods and drinking. It 1s
caused by an overproduclion
of uric acid by yoW' own body
What IS W'IC acid? It IS
closely telated to protems
and 1s a byproduct of the
formation of new body cells
When you are generating that
enormous number of new, red
blood cells, three million
~very second, you are also
fanning uric acid. 1t Is forme~ in the process of
nlanafaclW'ing the important
nllCleic acid DNA 111 the
nuclewi of IJie cell. Anything
that stimulates the break-

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down of cells or stunulates
their growth will increase the
producllon of DNA.
It follows that a person on
one of those fad diets that
promtses massive sudden
we1ght loss may have a
sudden acute attack of gout.
The diet leads to breakdown
of muscle cells and release of
excess quantities of uric ac1d.
The unc ac1d forms a salt
(sodium W'ale) that can form
crys~s and mduce a complicated process tn the Jomts
that results in red hot,
pamful , swollen joints. Th1s 1s
commonly the big toe, but
other jomls may be involved.
Deposits of the uric acid
salt m the joints lead to a
form of arthritis, called
simple gouty arthritis. It can
lead to a slow destrucllon and
deformity of the joints mvolved.
' While diet is helpful in
treatment of gout , 1l1s hot as
Important as C&lt;tnlrollmg the

I

. . · · ·:r~ Ohio energy commzttee

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

Pres~nt Jerry

NEW YORK 1UP! ) - ~f reporters had bothere&lt;l to ask Belly Ford how
often she sleeps with her husband, the First Lady says her answer would
have been " As often as possible."
Mrs Ford, who clalffiS cred1t for the nammg of the nallon 's lone present
female cabmet appomtee, also says she conveys her v1ews to the President
durmg their "pillow talk" hoW's.
In an mterv1ew with Myra MacPherson m the September ISsue of McCall's
magazme, Mrs Ford was quoted as saymg reporters have asked her
every thmg except how often she sleeps w1th her husband, and "1! they'd
asked me I would have told them "
Whe
ked h
h t sh
ld h
d sh h ba k
f
"
n I as
er w a
e wou
ave sat , e s ot c , 'As o ten as
possible," M1ss MacPherson wrote .
11 th Whi H
d
r
bed
M
"Declmmg to fo ow e
le ouse Ira 1t1on o separate
rooms, rs
Ford .. sa1d w1th amusement that she could do only so much for pohllcs."
" While she has rrot mvaded the Oval oH1ce, Mrs. Ford gets her v1ews
lk
h
across when she and the President are alone, she calls II 'pillow ta •," t e
article said
The F.rst Lady sa1d she and presidential adv1ser Robert Hartmann "don't
always Jibe ; I'm wiiltng to admit that
" I think perhaps my resentment of Bob comes from hiS trymg to run my
husband 's hfe - and yet I think he IS very valuable to my husband Perhaps
1 feel he oversteps his boundanes."
Mrs Ford sa1d she feels she has done "a great deal" for the Equal R1ghts
Amendment. President Ford, according to the arlicle, has g1ven up h1s
practiCe of jokmg about ERA
•'Asked 1f she pushes her pomt of v1ew, Mrs. Ford laughed and sa1d, 'If he
doesn't get1lm the offiCe mthe day, he gets 11 m the nbs at rught' ," the
McCall's arlicle said.
Mrs Ford takes credit for the appomtmenl of U.S Housmg and Urban
Development Secretary Carla Hills The article said she now IS "workmg on
geltmg a woman on the Supreme CaW'! as soon as possible "
She sa1d her philosophy 1s to be tolerant of the opinions and ways of life of
others, includ10g the praclice of some men and women of hvmg together
without benefit of matrunony.
At Va1l, Colo., White House press secretary Ron Nessen was asked for
Ford's reactiOn to the latest mterVIew. "His philosophy 1s that Mrs Ford can
speak her mmd," he sa1d.
Mrs Ford discussed her mastectomy operatwn openly She said she 1s
completely recovered but that the operalion "IJid Jerry so upset ; he was so
concerned for me
"But look at 11 positively Which would you rather lose - a nght arm or a
breast 7 I'd rather lose the breast," the FITs! Lady sa1d

COLUMBUS - An Independent mvesl1galion of
cond1llons at Gallipolis State
Institute was agreed to today
by a group of union employes
and Dr. Timothy B. Montz,
director of the state department of mental health and
mental retardation, and Dr.
Bernard N1ehm, superintendent
The understanding was
reached followmg a four hour
presentation by Mike Clifford, staff represenlalive of
the Ohio CiVIl Serv1ce Employees Association (OCSEA)
of alleged Irregularities at
the mental retardatiOn mstltutiOn m southeastern
Ohio, mcludmg questionable
mediCal practices wh1ch may
have led to res1dent deaths m
some Instances
"We will request a panel of
outside people to look mto
specific charges and general
adequacy of care at GSI as
well as any acts of
malpractice," Dr Moritz
announced at the conclusiOn
of the meeting.
Dr Montz said the Ohio
State Medical Assoc18hon,
the Ohio Legal Rights SerVice, Oh10 Slate Board of
Nursmg, the OhiO Pharmacy
Board and the Holzer MediCal
Center of Gallipolis would be
asked to conduct the independent investigation
The director added that the
department would take
whatever action IS necessary

followmg the mqUiry Dr
Montz
r equ es ted
the
supenntendent of the mslllute, Dr Bernard N1ehm,
to Issue a directive encouragmg employes to
provide any mformation
which may be helpful to the
mqUiry by assurmg them of
Immunity from disciplinary
action for failure to have
reported the mc1dents at the
lime

Parents will
meet tonight
RACINE Parents of
children
enlermg klfldergarten m the Southern
Local School D•slr~cl w1ll
meet at 7 30 thiS evemng m
the Racme High- School
cafetena Bus schedules and
class ass1gnments w1ll be
completed Children must be
registered before entering
kmdergarten m the fall .
Enrollment sheets will be
available · for children not
already registered
SUITS FILED
Me1gs County Common
Pleas Court has rece1ved two
sUits for d1vorce each
chargmg gross neglect of
duty and extreme cruelty
They were by Charlotte S
Wolfe, Pomeroy vs Gale
Eugene Wolfe, Pomeroy, and
Brenda Sue I;'atlerson,
Shade , vs. Charles Earl
Patterson .

Foods don't cause gout

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DR. LAMB

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Independent probe of
_institute is promised

Romance renewed
By JOHN A. CALLC(}rf
GENEVA , Switzerland
(UPI)- The embers to ashes
romance of Richard Burton
and Elizabeth Taylor that
kept the world agog for a
decade wtth gifts of million
dollar Jewels , 1s aflame
agam.
Close friends and legal
advisers of the couple said
today ' they were back
together and may remarry
" They missed each other, •'
said Maurice Solowtcz, the
Geneva
att.orney
who
arranged their settlement
when the couple divorced
June 26, 1974 after 10 ternpestuous years of mamage.
"They will live together,
they decided to be together
agam , and they may
remarry, but not tomorrow,''
he sa1d.
Miss Taylor joined Burton
today m discusSions wtth the
producers of the forthcommg
movte " Aabakarov," an
Israeli film in which Burton 1s

. . .. .

pillow talks with

=::

~:

OETROIT (U P! ) _ A
lawyer for James Hoffa's
foster son, Charles O'Bnen,
says O'Bnen Will not take a
lie detector test to_deterrmne
if he knows anythmg abo ut
the onetune Teamster umon
cza r's disappearance 23 days
ago
Hoffa's lawyer son, James
p Hoffa, has demanded
repeatedly O'Bnen take the
test _
because he kn ows.
something ..
The demand came after

..

;.:·:,.·. =·::.:~;~~· too~~~;;;;·;;;,;;;;;· ~;~~;~~

declines
ttest ab~ut Hoffa
"

.

over-production of W'ic acid acid m yoW' cells, others to
by your own body cells. The help you el~rninate excess
diet should be one, though, W'ic ac1d through the kidneys
that gradually decreases and still others to control the
excess obesity without any acute pam of a sudden,
crash effort that may cause prunful gout attack.
an acute attack as I menFor more mformallon on
honed.
the treatment and how to live
You can eat a diet com- wtth gout write to me m care
pletely free of uric acid and of this newspaper, P .0. Box
still have high uric acid levels 1551, Radio City Stalion, New
and gout A purme-free d1et York, NY 10019, send a long
used to be the big thing stamped,
self-addressed
because purines (from !issue envelope and 50 cents and ask
cells and particularly organ for The Health Letter number
meats ) are used in the for- 2·3, Gout, Uric Ac1d.
malion of uric acid. However,
As a woman you wtll be
the body can manufacture mterested to know that men
lots of ur1c acid on a diet are much more prone to gout
completely free of purmes. A than women . Many women
pW'me-free d1et Will only who have the high W'IC acid
lower the uric ac1d level levels never develop gout.
shghtly . That 1s why There seems to be an
medicines are used mostly hered1 tary tendency to
toaay rather IJian tr~ing to '' developmg gout, and it has
COotrO) the problem Wilh diet often afflicted the famous and
alOne.
, the gemuses or nea'r
There are medicines to geniuses, so you are in good
block the formation of ur1c compan y

-~

I'

The labor relatiOns meeting
was held at the request of the
Galha Chapter of OCSEA,
representmg about 400 employes at the mstitullon .
Dr Montz said, "we have
known for a long time that
GSI IS serwusly substandard
and grossly madequate in
medical and allied areas."
He sa1d that on Sept 2 he
planned to ask the state
controllmg board for a
physiCians' salary supplement for
immment
emergency conditions and
that Gallipolis State Institute
would have top priOrity He
sa1d there are two fully
licensed phys1c1ans there now
and he would like to see SIX
fully qualified physicians at
the mshlute as soon as
pOSSible
Clifford proposed a supplemental agreement to the
overall labor contract w1th
OCSEA for the purpose of
clar~fy1ng
employeemanagement relations and
procedures
Dr Niehm said the present
med1cal director 1s prepared
to resign as soon as a
replacement IS found for h1m
Dr N1ehm reported that
the incumbent medical
director had many months
ago requested to be relieved
of his supervisory duties, but
he has remained m the
position at Dr . N1ehm's
request until a replacement
could be recruited.
Clifford brought up the
charge that gnevances were
not bemg processed by the
supenntendent, saymg this
was parUy responsible for the
growmg misunderstandings
and lack of communications.
Dr Moritz prOilllSCd that the
slluahon would be corrected

•

.-.

hears recommendations •-•

Cardinals bla11k Cincinnati

.....

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
top offiCial of a major Ohio
utility has recommended to a
legislative panel that utilities
be allowed to receive higher
rates from consumer!,
subJect to refunds, while the
state is deciding whether the
mcreases are JUStified.
Robert
E
Frazer,
president of the Dayton
Power &amp; Ught Ca , made the
recommendation Wednesday
m testunooy before the Jomt
Leg•slalive Committee on
Energy.
Frazer
sa1d
Ohio's
reputat1oo of bemg among
the states wtth the greatest
regulatory lag has undermmed the confidence of
utility
mvestors
and
ullimately raised costs,
making even h1gher rates
necessary.
"I
would
strongly
recommend that rates be
allowed to be placed m effect
wtthm, say, three moofJls
from the date that an apphcal!on !OJ' an mcrease is
filed, and that such rates
become permanent nine
montJis from the date of filing
If not acted upon by the
cornrnill!rlon," Frazer told the
legislative group.
Frazef' also recommended
that Ohio law provide for a
system of ratsmg utility rates
sunilar to IJie one used by
grocery slOJ'es for prlcmg
food.
"A system IS needed that
adds penmes to the bills
periodically, similar to the
way the corner grocery store
adds a few cents now and
then to a loaf of bread or a
quart of milk," he said.
Force Large Increases
"This would be much more
acceptable to the general
public than havmg long
regulatory delays wh1ch
ultunately force abnormally

large increases in customer.'

bills.
"Consumers, especially tbe
poor and those oo fixed incomes, have difficulties With
large increases that result
from the present regulatory
praclices 1n Ohio ," said
Frazer .
Frazef' also recommended
that rate-making procedures
be changed to conSider inflationary impact on future
operating costa and construction.
He said promises of lower
utility bills from abandoning
the current reconstruction
cost new (RCN) ratHJlaking
formula " cruelly mislead the
general public" and could
actually increase rates to
consumers.
Frazer's testimony was
part of an all-&lt;&gt;Ul assault by
ulllity representatives on
attempts to change the RCN
formula
John R Jooes, a CalumbWI
attorney representing the
General Telephone &amp; Electromcs Corp., said the RCN
formula "over the years has
permitted Ohio's utlllties to
provide excellent serv&gt;ce and
support economic growth in
our state.
"Without question, I would
say that Ohio's law, properly
applied, offers the greatest
benefits to customers," Jones
said. "A mere change in the
Ohio rate base law will not
result in lower rates to
consumers. The rate OJ"der in
the end result must be
reasonable and adequate,
and changes in the rate base
undoubtedly will have to be
compensated for in other
aspects of IJie rate case."
Federal Government Blamed
Three vice presidents of
Calumbia Gas of Ohio, Inc.,
defended the current ratemaking fonnula and method
of recovering the mcreased

Dredge-fill work
creates problems
By BERNARD BRENNER sa1d they welcomed the
UP! Farm Editor
complete
exclusion
of

WASHINGTON (UPI) The Anny's Corps of
Engineers says 1ts new rules
on "dredge and fill"
operalions m navigable
waters will not interfere with
nonnal farmmg but IJie U.S.
Agriculture Department
disagrees.
The regulations "impose
IJie threat of cumbersome,
timeconsuming procedures
for farmers and ranchers

on the
£ann front
every time they clean a ditch
or build a pond," Assistant
Agriculture Secretary Robert
Long sa'id in a statement.
Army officials said regulalions requiring pemuts when
soil
IS
dumped
mto
"navigable" waters have
been drafted to specifically
exclude routine plowing,
cultivating, harvesting,
terracing and land leveling.
They added no penruts will
be reqwred fOJ' building stock
ponds oo streams with less
than a 5 cubic feet per second
flow of water.
Agriculture spokesmen

plowing and similar farm
practices but they sa1d the
Corps of Engmeers proposes
to defme ''navigable waters"
so broadly that a Wide range
of farm and conservation jobs
could be affected.
Under IJie new rules, Long
said, Corps officials "conceivably could call anything a
navigable waterway that is
capable of floating a 2-by-1().
inch plank after a rainstorm.
A 5 cubic feet per second ,
flow, another Agriculture
official sai1, could cover a
stream 18 mches deep and 1.5
feet w1de.
Long said that when farm
or conservation operations
are subject to the new controls, it may take at least four
months or longer to process
each permit application and
there will be a $100 permit fee
in cases involving the
dW'nping of 2,500 or more
' cubic yards of earth.

''These

are

needless

burdens on farmers already
burdened by too many
reports and government
paperwork," Long said. He
said the procedures also
would delay Agriculture
Department programs to

cost of fuel. They also placed
heavy blame on lbe fedet'al
government !OJ' gas shortages and said consumer
conservatiOn 1s the only
unmediate way to alleviate
the problem.
I L Briscoe said the purchased gas adjustment
(PGA) clause by which the
gas company recovers increased fuel costs "ts the only
procedure by which rates are
adjusted to reflect actual
changes in the cost of gas
supply.
"There is a rnisconceptloo
that, if PGA clauses were
eliminated, gas rates would

mm1strahon Grant to conCounty
Com- struct an Industrial Park m
Mason
missioners Tuesday night . the TNT area.
The GMDA IS a non-profit
established a countywide
Development Authority to corporahon established in the
promote indtiStrial growth. early 1960s to promote in1 ne
ueve1opment dWitrial growth in the county .
Authority, which can have a It had a major role in Panboard composed of up to 21 tasote locatmg near Pomt
members, was approved Pleasant
following
an
indepfJI
Attorney Burdett, told the
discussion
between
commission that GMDA doe~
members of the commission not qualify under law to
and a delegation represent- receive FmHA Grant money
ing -the Greater Mason and m order to secure funds
Developmental Assn.
for the Industrial Park
Robert Wingett, president ; project 11 would be necessary
Don
Rode , secretary; for the commission to
Charles Lanham, treasurer, establish a countywide
and Jack Burllett, legal Development Authority.
'fdVISOI', of GMDA requested ' It was also noted IJiat the $2
establishment
of
the m1lhon
water
system
Development Authonty in rehabilitation E conomic
order for the coWl I)' to qualify Development ,Administration
for a Farmers Home Ad- grant received by the Ci~y of

Point Plea:iant is contmgent
upon the establishment of IJie
proposed Industrial Park
Land for the proposed
!ndllStrial park is a tract of
about 70 acres beyond the
coun ty-&lt;&gt;wned property tn the
TNT. The GMDA presently
has IJie land under option
from a group of Charleston
businessmen headed by
Jerome Goldberg.
Commiss1on member
Michael Whalen, is moving to
·establish the countywide
Development
authority,
pointed out that he has been
m favor of naming such a
body for some tune. t;ommissloner William Rardin
seconded the,motlon and the
measure was approved
unanimously.
The
Devel9pment
Authority will Include

Phtladelphta 4 A tl anta 1, n
San-Otego 8 Montreal 6 n
P• ttsburg h 3 San Franc.sco 1, n
Los Ang eles at Chtcago ppd ,
ram
Thursday' s Games
(All Times E OT)
Los Angeles (Messersmith 14
11 l at Ch tcago 1R Reuschel 9
13) 2 30pm

" This is wrong. Coosumers
benefit from the PGA
because 11 enables the
company to mamtain service
at the levels the public expects."
Ralph N Mahaffey said gas
supplies are deficient
because the federal government has overregulated, and
Congress has failed to
proVIde proper wcentives for
exploratiOn and productloo.
"While I do oot doubt the
sincerity of the members of
Congress, 1! is my observation that thus far the
majority have done nothing
but study, study, investigate,
wvestigate, and talk, talk,"
he said.
Paul R . Bigley agreed that
utilities could not wait for
Congress to deregulate gas
prices, and said Columbia is
unporting liquefied gas from
overseas, plannmg on a share ,
of the supply from the transAlaska pipeline and working
with synthetic gas.
"But wbat about the next
three or four years 7 " he
asked.
"The principal
resource for ~as to ease the
stram on CW'lailed industry
and bllSiness Institutions is
the gas that can be conserved
m millions of Ohio homes."

Frtday's Gam es
Houston at Ch•cago
Cmcmnat . at PittSburgh 2 lw•

no

A tlanta at St L OU IS n
Montreat a t Los Angeles n
Phil ade lphia a t San D1ego n
New York at San FranCI Sco n
Amencan Lugue
East
w I pet 9 b
75 so 600
Boston
Ba ll•mor e
67 56 545 7
62 61 504 12
New York
Cleveland
55 66 455 18
56 69 448 19
Milwaukee
Detrot t
50 75 400 25
West
t
w 1 pet _!_b.
Oa):(.land
75 50 600
Kansas C1ty
68 5-t 557
5' '
Ch1 c ago
61 6J 492 13 1 2
)4
1 ..
Texas
61 65 484
Mmnesota
58 68 460 17 1 2
Callforn•a
58 69 457 18
Wednesday ' s Results
Oakland 2 Det ro•! 1
California 6 M1lwaukee 1
ChiCago S New York 3, n
Kansas C1ty 3 Boston 1. n
Balttmore 3 M•nnesote 2, n
Thursday's Games
(All T1mes EDT)
Ch•cago ( Kaat 17 91 at New
York (Medlch 11 131. 8 p m
Cle veland (Brown 57) at
Kam.as Cily ( Lllfell 0 0) 8 JO
pm
Oakland { Holtzman 14 10 1 at
Mtlwaukee
( Broberg
10 11 J
8 30p m
Bal t 1more ( Palmer 19 71 at
Tex as ( Perry 1315) , 9pm
Friday's Games
Cpteago at aoslon. n
Ball•more at Texas , n
Detrott at M1nnesota n
Oakland at Milwaukee, n
Cal!fornta at New York n
Cleveland at Kansas Ctly n

By BILL MADDEN
Cardinal VICtory over Cin- Cldentally mired 10 or so
UPI Sporll Wriler
cinnah It was McBride 's games behmd m the NL East.
Bake McBride is off and second homer of the game But since Aug I, McBride
runnmg ag9111 and that can " and only his foW'th this has lifted his average nearly
only mean more fuel for the season. He had SIX last year, 20 points to .290 and has
St . I..Duis Cardinals' Natiooai two of them mside the park resW'fled h1s prominent role
League East pennant drive
The wm kept the Cardin a ts m the Cardinals' g~o at" He was flymg, flat out withln 2••, games of Pitts- tack.
flymg around those bases," burgh, leaders m the
" I didn 't thmk it was gomg
said winning St. LoUis pitcher National League East
out," McBride said of his first
Ron Reed of McBride's
McBride , the 1974 rookie of homer of the night, a tw&lt;H'Un
leadoff eighth mning IIISlde- the year, was slowed by in- shot m the fifth mning that
the -park home run Wed- JUries earlier this season put Sl I..Duts ahead 3-0. As for
nesday night that sealed a ~ whtle St l .nui011; w~s roin- the second one, McBride

Browns will
cut 2 more
men today
KENT, Oh10 (UP!) - The
Cleveland Browns were to cut
two more players today to get
down to the National Football
League limit of 55 before
leavmg for an exhibition
game agamst Washmgton .
Placekicker Dave Schmmke, York, Pa ., was
released Wednesday leaving
veteran Don Cockroft and
Chris Gartner. It's believed
Cockroft w1ll be kept as the
lone hooter on the team,
getting back-up assistance
from rookie Larry Poole m
the punting department.
If the way the Cleveland
Browns have been praclicmg
lately has any influence on
their game strategy, the
players and head coach
Forrest Gregg are m for a
rude awakemng.
"That's all," Gregg told the

CINCINNATI (UPI) Takealetter took the lead at
the top of the stretch and
easily galloped to win by two
lengths the $7 ,500-added La
Scala Handicap Wednesday
at River Downs.
Second was Princeton
Pride and third was Sal
Menow as the winner
returned $4 ..W, $3.20 and $2 •.W
m rummg the SIX furlong
featured ninth race in 1:11 2r

By FRED DOWN
UPI Sporll Writer
There's really bad news for
AmeriCan League hitters
today Nolan Ryan's throwing
smoke again and is almost
" back m the groove."
Ryan, the Cahforma
Angels' three-lime AL
strikeout king and authOJ' of
four no-bitters, pitched hiS
strongest game m more than

•

wzn · Prepares for Reds
'

PITTSBURGH (UPI) Danny Murtaugh notched his
1,000 vlctb\:y' 'as manager of
the Pittsburgh Pirates
Wednesday night but the
unflappable Irishman took it
all in stnde.
What Impressed him more
was the pitching of Jim
Rooker , who gave up only
three hits through e1ght inrungs to pick up his ninth
VICtory m 18 decisiOns - wtth
team durtng an afternoon
workout Wednesday at Kent
State University. "Go on m
You'renot domg anything out
The club held a longer than
usual workout today before
leaving for Washington, D.C.,
and Friday mght's exhibition
game against the Redskins at
RFK Stadium.
"It wasn 't our day," Gregg
58ld of the offense. "We
didn't have an~ concentration.
"Their minds seem to be a
thousand miles away. If we
play like that on Friday we 'II
be whipped I hope 11 won't
happen on game day. Often
you play as you practice
You've heard that said a lot,
but it's true "

CINCINNATI (UPI) "Mr. Quarterback" meets
"The Master" here Saturday
night.
"Mr. Quarterback" is Bart
Starr, the G'&lt;!'en Bay
Packers' newhead'coach wbo
a few years ago was the
club's brilliant quarterback.
c

200 AMP W.P.
BREAKER and
METER SOCKET
M

.

.,

~

.

100 AMP W.P.
BREAKER WllH
TRAILER RECEPTICAL

4/0 ALUMINUM SERVICE
ENTRANCE
$160

CABLE

FT.

NO. 2 ALUMINUM SERVICE
=NCE

an assist from Dave Gluslito down the San, francisco
Giants 3-1 as \he Pirates won
their second strrught after six
consecutive losses.
Murtaugh, who became
only the second manager in
~~
Pirate history to manage
1,000 Or more VICtorieS, also
became one of only 25
managers who have led
teams to 1,000 or more
games. Fred Clarke was the
only other Pirate manager to
turn the trtck.
Rooker sa1d he knew 11
By MIKE RABUN
would probably be a low
UPI Sports Wriler
scortng game because of the
FORT WORTH, Tex (UP!)
p1lchmg of San Francisco 's
- Lee Trevmo grew up m the
Ed Halicki, who ret.red the
heat of Texas summers, so
first II batters and was
when he starts complaining 11
workmg on a two-hitter
mWit be somethmg more than
through seven mnmgs
warm
"The way this kid (Halicki)
" It's so hot not even the
pitches agawst us I knew 11
corn will grow/ ' ts Trevmo 's
would probably be a low
meteorological report
scormg game," Rooker sa1d.
The greatest names in golf
"And I had to bust my butt to . will combat the heal Thurstry and keep us even I
day m the first round of the
haven't pitched like I wanted
Tournament
Players
to this year and my control
Championshtp. Jack
was off tomght. But I had a
NiCklaus, enjoying the luxury
hunch we'd get to hun.
of an early, heat escaping
It was Renme Stennett's
openmg day tee time, is
two-run e1ghth mnmg smgle
favored to defend the Iitle he
that snapped a 1-1 lie for the
won at Allanla last year.
VICtory.
Golf's elite will be testmg
the tough, 7,140-yard, par-70
Calomal Country Club layout,
which for this champiOnship
has been dressed up with
narrow fairways and rough
almost as deep as tha l
usually found for aU S Open.
But the toughness of the
"The Master" lS Cincmnah course
was
tempered
Bengals coach Paul Brown, somewhat Wednesday by hot
entermg his 41st season of scores tW'ned m during the
coachmg and regarded as one pro-am by AI Ge1berger and
of pro football's greatest John Mahaffey. Geiberger
innovators .
produced a 63, wh1ch would
''It's an honor to be have lied the COW'se record
coachmg
against
him had it been shot during the
(Brown)," SI,IYS ,Starr, who tournament. And Mahaffey,
brmgs h1s Packers to town for who deadlocked Lou Graham
a pre-season game. "Here's a for the U S Open UUe thiS
man wbo obviOusly has had a year only to lose m a playoff,
great mfiuence on so many shot a 6S.
coaches in the National
"I don't think you will see
Football League
any more of these kind of
"He has contributed so rounds, " sa1d Ge1berger.
much to the game of "The pms were m the rmddle
professiOnal football, you of the greens and we didn't
have to feel priviliged to be on have any wind. I think 278
the same field wtth him And would win . There may be
I do . His contributions to the some low scores to start, but
game are countless."
by Sunday, when the nerves
Starr IS off to a good start
as a head coach-obis Packers
have won their first two

G0 ers combat
h~i!tin Texas

for Saturday exhibition

MOBILE HOME
SERVICE ENTRANCES

I

when he blanked the Brewer s complete their best home
oo two hits and raised hiS stand of the season With a 9-4
record
"on-lost record to 13-12.
In h1s fiTs! start smce Aug
" After the first inning I
slowed down my delivery ," 8, Ryan retired 19 conRyan commented after the secutive batters dW'mg one
game " At times I had amost stretch He S8ld he felt no 111
all my velocity but I still effects from the grom and leg
haven't gotten mto my mjW'!es which took him out of
the rotalion in recent weeks
groove''
Asked if he thought be but that his elbow was "a
could wm 20 games again this little sore" m the taler mseason, Ryan replied, umy rungs.
The Oakland A's defeated
record is the farthest thing
from my mmd ; I JUs! want to the Detroit Tiger 2-1, the
Ballimore Onoles beat the
get m that groove."
Adrian Garrett h1t a solo Minnesota Twms 3-2, the
homer and Mickey Rivers Kansas City Royals topped
smgled m two runs to back the Boston Red Sox 3-J, and
the combmed three-llitter by the Chicago Wh1le Sox
Ryan and Hassler. The loss downed the New York
was the Brewers' 16th in their Yankees :;.a m the other AL
last 20 games while the games.
VIctory enabled the Angels to

Packers invade Cincy

ON

The daily double combined
Prize Prmcess (12) and
Lucky Luther (4) to a $448.80
payoff.
_
Attendance was 5,869 and
the mutuel handle was
$493,052.

two months Wednesday when
he beat the Milwaukee
Brewers 6-1 Ryan allowed
three h1ts and struck out nme
10 7 2-3 innmgs With Andy
Hassler finislung up after the
Brewers scored thCII' run m
the e1ghth on consecutive
doubles by B1ll Sharp and
Robm Yount .
It was Ryan's strongest
performance smce June 6

Murtaugh gains lOOOth

- .S AVE.-

5.

srmled " I saw it hit the wall
and then I saw 1third base
coach Vern ) Benson Signal
me in,' 1 he satd. "That's all."
Reed , meanwhile, a castoff
from the Atlanta Braves,
tamed the hard·lutting Reds
on four h1ts to unprove his
record to 12-9
Elsewhere in the National
League, PittsbW"gh topped
San Francisco 3-1, Houston
upset New York 5-4.

Nolan Ryan back in the groove

here."

help rural communilies
repair flood damage and
restore land and strearriS.
Corps officials plan to 1ssue
a final version of their
regulations after receiving
public comment on the issue
through late October. I..Dng
said, however, that the
Agnculture Department
hoP"s Congress will step in to
ease the potenlial impact of
the rliles on farmers and
rw-al conservallon proJects.
What Agriculture officials
want is legislation that would
restrict the new "dredge and
fill" permit system to larger
streams and bodies of water
which f1t the traditional
concept of naVIgable water,
Long sa1d.

representatiVes of business,
labor and tndustry, and one
member is to be appointed to
represent
the
various
municipalities of the county.
Appointment of the entire
board of IJie Development
Authonty will be made at a
later meeting of Ute comIDlSSion .
In otJier activity of the
commission, presided over
by President Clarence
Adkins, two bids were opened
on the Leon Commumty
building and New Haven Fire
House projects but no action
was taken.
Both bids on the bwldlngs
were submitted by B &amp; J
Rouah Co. of New Haven. On
the Leon bwlding the company bid $56,000 and on the
New Haven building $81,471.
Other business was routine.

Mator League Standmgs
By Un i ted Press lnternattonal
Nat•onal League
east
w. I pet g b
Pittsburgh
69 55 556
Ph•ladelphla
68 56 548
I
St louts
67 58 536 21 ;
New York
64 60 516 5
Chtcago
58 68 460 12
Montreal
52 71 A2J 161 1
West
wlpctgb
Cmc 1nnat •
83 41 669
Los Ange l es
fi7 57 540 16
San Fr an ctsco 61 64 488 n• 2
San D1ego
57 68 456 26 1 1
Atl an t a
56 71 441 28 1 1
Houston
•8 8 1 372 371 1
Wednesday's Results
St Louts 4 Cmcmnatt 0 n
Hou ston S New York 4, 10 mn ,

n

not mcrease," Briscoe said.

Development Authority formed
POINT PLEASANT - The

3 - The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., 'lbW'sday, Aug. 21, 1975

69~

STAR SUPPLY
RACINE, OHIO

FT•

start to tell, I think you w1U

see them come up "
But Mahaffey d1d not
agree .
" Yes, I thmk you wtll see
some low scores," Mahaffey
58ld "If you put it m the
fa1rway and get 11 on the
green you can score and there
are a lot of guys out here
capable of do1ng that. !think
a 275 (live under) would be a
good wmmng score "
Only four tunes m the 28year history of the Coloma!
National
Tournament,
normally played m May, has
the winner shot 275 or better.
And when the toW' regulars
play m that tournament the
course IS set up eas1er than 11
will be th1s week
"If you get 11 m the rough
you are in trouble," sa1d
Mahaffey "I couldn 't use
anythmg more than a SIX 1ron
to get out of 11."
Mahaffey did not think the
temperatures - which are
expected to hover around 100
degrees most of the week would play much of a role m
the tournament
"When we played at Westchester everybody talked a
lot about how hot 11 was and
who wound up m the playoff?
Julius Boros and Gene Uttler "
Every top tour name will be
present !OJ' the second TPC
tournament w1lh the excepllon of Johnny Miller, wbo
wtthdrew ear tier m IJie week
because of a naggmg wriSt
lnjury.

QualifiCatiOn for this event
on the money
wmnmg liSt. The top 144
money wmners make the
tournament

IS based stnctly

exhibilion games-a 23-6
n~v'll Do It Euoru Tl'me
romp over Buffalo and a 13-9 r--:.--.....:........:...:2......:...~:.....::~:..:..=_::_:::..!~_:_:_:_:_:c.::___
1
declSlon over Ollcago.
Cincmnati lost twice before
picking up a win last weekend
at Buffalo-38-28.
'IQJ'I-t.. HAVE.
"We'll be trymg to
A SIG&lt;*'R
duplicate the fine effort we
OfFiCEWHEN
had at Buffalo," said Brown .
W~ MOVE.
"Our offense went well and
10 OUI&lt;! NE:.W
was equally balanced1-oc.A'ftON
passing and rushing-which
1s a good sign ."
Ken Anderson, wbo threw
two touchdown passes to
Ww.;fli~Y
Charlie Jomer last weekend,
NOM AND
IS expected to open at
WIL$UR 010
quarterback for Cincmnat1
G£1' MOR~
and veteran Essex Johnson
E.i.SON Ia)(),\·
w1ll get h1s first start of the
year at running back in a
maJOr test of hiS gunpy knee.
Several Ben~als who have
been held out recently
because of lflJW'les should be
ready to play Saturday, mcluding cornerbac~ Lemar {'l;~~~
ParriSh , defensive end Royce

Berry, t~ght end Bob Trumpy ~~~~~:;~~~~
and safety Bernard Jackson L:

•

Today's

Philadelphia downed Atlanta
4-1, San D1ego outlasted
Montreal 8-6 and Los
Angeles-Chicago were postponed by ra m
Plra1es 3, Gianls 1
Renrue Stennett•s tw~n
e1ghth mning smgle snapped
a 1-1 lie and camed the
r ev ived Pirates to their
second straight wm after s1x
consecutive losses Stennett's
game-wmnm g h1t
was
preceeded by smgles from
Richie Z1sk and Manny
Sanguillen and a double by
rook1e Craig Reynolds Jun
Rooker (9-9) gained the wm
With rebel from Dave Giusti.
Phlllies 4, Braves 1
Dave Cash delivered a pa1r
of run-scormg smgles while
Larry Christenson and Tug
McGraw combined on fourhitter, enablmg the second
place Ph1lhes to remam one
game behind Pittsburgh m
the NL East ChriStenson (74) went si x 1nnmgs while
McGraw registered hiS 11th
save. Cash accounted for the
only runs they needed with
run-scormg smgles m the
hflh and seventh mnmgs
Astros 5, Mets 4
Cliff Johnson's none-o ut
tenth mnmg double off center
f1elder Gene Clines' glove
drove home Cesar Cedeno
from first base w1th the
wmnmg run and thwarted the
Mets' m their bid to keep pace
w1th the other NL East
winners. Johnson 1 S game·
w1nnmg h1t off loser Rick
Baldwm ( 2-4 ), which dropped
the fourth place Mets five
games ba ck, callll', alter
Cedeno had opened llie:huilng
With a smgle The VIctory was
also Bill V~rdon 's first as
Astros • manager .
Padres 8, Expos 6
A three-l'un double b;;,' Enzo
Hernandez broke a 5-5 lie m
the seventh lnfl'l'g, while
Gene Locklear drove home
four other runs as San Diego
beat Montreal Hernandez'
game-wwnmg blow came
after losing pitcher Woody
Fryman ( 8-9) had loaded the
bases Locklear had a threerun homer for San Diego m
the f1fth J erry Johnson, w1th
one mnmg m relief of Randy
Jones, got the Win, his second
in three decisions

c,

Wedn esday 's Baseball Results
Bv UntteGI Press ln,ernat•onal
Nahonal Leagu£&gt;
l os An ge l es at Cht cago ppd
ra .n

Sport Parade
By MlLTON RICHMAN
UPI Sporll Editor
NEW YORK (UPI ) - Maybe 1t was his .upbrmgmg, but
Mark Donohue was always polite. His mother was a school
teacher, and althbugh she never kept tbal tight a rein on him,
the one thmg sh~ made SW'e of when he was a httie boy was
that he was cour\eous. He grew to maturity the same way,
always a gentleman
In common with most race drivers, Donohue would grow a
bit impatient hearmg oulsiders discourse on the dangers and
perils of auto racmg It upset hun sometimes tb hear them
ag1tate for the complete abolishment of, the sport, yet he'd
always liSten patiently to all the detractors, never trying to
unpress them w1th how much he knew about safety on the
track .
He knew far more than they did smce 11 was a subject which
particularly mtn gued hun. He was always searching for ways
to make caos safer, contmually experunentmg w1th unproved
safeguards, not only for himself, but fOJ' his fellow drivers. It 1s
of small consequence now, especially to his surVIvors, but II
wasn't any mecha mcal Imperfection m hiS Formula I car
whi ch led to Mark Donohue's death m Austria, 1t was an ordinary lire blowout
When the lire blew, Donohue lost control of hiS car and It hit
a metal guard rail on the course The doctors tried everything
they could, but the 38-year-old Donohue died in an Austrian
hospital Tuesday mght following surgery for the removal of a
blood clot
It is said of most race drivers they don't know when to quit
Mark Donohue heard the same thing sa1d about him and 11 used
to make hun smile.
He had been k1ckmg around the idea of qwtting for some
time. Smce shortly after wmrung
IndianapoliS 500 in 1972,
in fact . He had won the Pocono 500 the year before and the
Canadian-Amencan championship the year after. He also had
won three Trans-America titles and two other U.S . Road
Racmg Championships.
What else was there left • Nothing that essential, Donohue
concluded.
So on Feb 15, 1974, after winning the International Race of
Champions at Daytona Beach, Fla., M'ark Donohue announced
he was all through dr1vmg rac e cars. He was quitting.
Donohue had every intention of staymg retired, but then he
and Roger Penske, his friend and assoc18le and the man he has
driven for exclusively the past 11 years, got into ilomething
they never had been in before- Formula I cars.
Penske and Donohue wanted someone capable to drive their
car on the European CirCUit and they believed they had that
man In Peter Revson . But Revson was killed In South Africa
early last year Penske and Donohue kept looking for a driver,
but couldn't lmd the one they wanted.
Time was moving Donohue finally said ·
" I'll drive the car I can do 11 Just as well as they can,
anyway ''
No queslion about that at all
Mark Donohue could drive a car w1th the best of them
He was a gentleman and a smart dnver . Smart enough to get
out wh1le he was still ahead, but in auto racmg, all1t takes IS
one little mistake and Mark Donohue made it
He went back

liJe

,_________. .
1

(8 )
Bat dw1n (9 ) Md Grote .
Roberts
Sosa I 7l
Cosgrove
19 1 Gr anger ( tO)
Crawfo rd
( 10 ) and May WP - Crawford
(3 4) LP - Ba ldw ln 12 4) HRS
Jon n son ( 12th )
K ngman

(25th l

Amencan League
000 000 0\Q--- 1 3 1
031 002 0011 - 6 B 0
Ha l tCkt M0 ff 11f { B ) lavelle
Slaton
Travers
(6)
Ed
( Bl and Ht ll Rooker G•u~t1 (9 ) Rodng uez
fBl and Moore
and Sang u ti l en W P - Rooker 19 Ryan
Hassler 181 and El
9 ) LP Hal iCk i { 7 10)
Rod r tguez WP - Ryan (lJ 12 )
LP - Sl aton I II 14 ) HR Gar r ett
Phlladelpht 000 010 30D-- 4 12 1 ( .tth )
A llan ta
000000010- 1 40
Chrtsten son McGraw (71 and Detro• •
000 010 000- 1 4 1
Oates . Morton
Sadeckt 17) Oakl and
000 020 OOx - 2 50
Sosa I 7) House (9) and Corr ell
Bare Pen tz PJ and F reehan
WP Ch ri sten son !7 4)
LP S1ebert Todd (61 and T enace
Morto~ ( 15 13)
WR' - S•ebe rt {3 JJ
L P - Bare
17 8) HR Holt I 1st )
c. n c•nnalt
000 000 000- 0 4 0
S t LOUIS
000 120 Otx - 4 9 2 Ch tcag o
001 on ooo- 5 10 o
Norm an McEnaney 18) an d New York
003 000 000- 0 6 1
Bench , Reed (12 9J and s .m
Wood { IJ 161 and Oown 1ng
m on s LP- Norman fB 4 ) H~ S May Dobson ( 8 l and Munson
Me Br•de 2 (Jrd &amp; .ttn 1
LP- May
I 11 91
HR Bonds
( 23 )
San Otego
000 032 JOO- B 12 I
Montr eal
100 220 001 - 6 6 1 Boston
001 000 000- 1 6 0
Jones Johnson (6) Fr~sel la Kan sas C!ly 000 210 OOx - J 9 1
(n and Kendall. Carr 1ther s
T1ant
{ 15 121
and
F 1sk
Murra y
(6)
Fryman
(61
Leonard (9 SJ and St. nson
Sc her ma n Ill DeMola 19) and
Foote Carte r (9) WP - Johnson Bal t•m or e
100 000 101 - J 9 0
17 l l LP ~- F r yman (8 91 HR Mm nesota
100 000 001 - 2 7 3
Lock l ea r (4th J
Gr 1msley (9 171 and Duncan
Hughes Bu r gme1er 17) Camp
( 10 1nn1ngsl
bell 191 and Rool LP - Hughes
New York 000 000 30 1 0- 4 8 0
Houston
010.011 01 0 1- 5 8 1 ( 11 11) HR - Gr~ch (111hl
(Only Gam es Scheduled)
Webb Lockwood (7) Apodaca
San Franctsc 001 000 000-

P ittSburgh

000 000 03• -

I 3 0 Milwaukee
3 6 0 Calt lorn ta

me now lora

good car rnsurarce

value

STEVE
SNOWDEN
1258 Powell St

Moddleport, 0
PH 992 7lSS

Mce a good
nerghbor

•u11 IARM

State Farm
1s the re
SUII IHLiloiUIUIL lUIOWOIIll I~JU U ~CI
UW'I~l
~0 1,1 ( OII IC! ll0Qiol1~~ 1 0• Ht

P71 104 1

COLOR TV 14-16-18-19-20-21-23-25 INCHES
INCLUDES:
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2. 'Clean &amp; Adjust Tuner
3. Check All Tubes
4. Adjust TV As Needed

OHIO'S

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labor, parts &amp; picture tube. Not pro
rlted.

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NOW OPEN IN MIDDLEPORT

rUNITED
TUBE-.
SALES &amp; SERVICE
· t
87 Mill St., Middleport
I

109 Greene St., Marietta

992-6)22

'

'

�. 2- The Daily Sent mel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., ThW'sday, Aug. 21, 1975

~'Brien

~

:..
:

,

nesday mght
Burdick said the meetmg
was requested by the FBI and
that O'Bnen fie" to Detroit
from his home tn West
Memphis, Ark , for 11
It was the second such

::.
·::

meetmg , Burdick said, and It
also covered the questiOn of
O'Brien 's whereabo uts tmmediate 1Y before and after
Hoffa varushed The ·f.rst

meetmg occurred, Burdick
said, about a week after
Hoffa disappeared.
mveshgators placed O'Brien
Meanwhile, a Florida man
m the area of a suburban who mailed photos of Hoffa to
Detroit parkmg lot where the DetrOit bureau of Uruled
Hoffa was last seen July 30 Press InternatiOnal and to
· O'Bnen sa1d later he was m James P Hoffa sa id Wednes, the area early July 31 only day he plans more mrulings
because he was wattlng for a - this tune to enlist the aid of
nde to work
600,000 handicapped persons
The former Team sters 10
the hunt lor Hoffa
president va mshed after
The man , C Monroe
lellmg his family he was Lerman of Orlando, told UP!
meetmg a reputed Maf1a 10 a telephone call to Detrmt
kingpm and two other men that he would apolog•ze to
for lunch The three demed Hoffa 's son, who called the
they planned to meet Hoffa ma~ling of the photo to hun a
O'Br1en 's lawyer, James &lt;~cruel JOke ''
' Burdick, sa1d Wednesday
O'Bnen would not subm1t to Road roller hit
· the test The FBI has not
The Meigs County Sheriff'sl
asked hun to take one, he
Dept mvest1gated a mmor
added.
Burd1ck reportedly has ad- accident Wednesday at I p
VIsed O'Brien not to subm1llo m on County Road 3m ScipiO
any he detector mterrogalion Township .
on grounds such tests are
Fred M Priddy, Rt I,
'~o ften mconclus1ve "
Middleport, traveling north
• The lawyer also disclosed on Coun ly Road 3, came on
two FBI agents and a stale equipment domg highway
pollee mvest1gator had repa.r as he rounded a curve
queslioned O'Bnen about the Priddy skidded mto a road
Hoffa disappearance for roller, then mto a d1tch
about f1ve hours Monday at a There was mmor damage, no
state poj1ce office at Detroit's InJuries or arrests
Metropolitan airport.
' The meetmg, Burdick said,
PLENTY BEEF
• dealt with ''very specifiC"
WASHINGTON (UP!)
• details of O'Bnen's where- Consumers w1ll fmd supplies
abouts over a three-or four- of beef, ch1cken, turkey and
day period around July 30. He eggs adequate m September
but pork stocks w11l be hghl,
refused to elaborate.
The FBI and State Pollee the Agri culture Department
declined comment Wed - says
,

·:
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':,.. to star.
For the time bemg, the
couple w1ll use M1ss Taylor's
:" chalet in the chic Swtss resort
: - of Gstaad, Solow1cz sa1d.
:
Miss Taylor 1s known to

•••
••

dislike Buroon's sunple twobedroom plus livmg room
house m the Geneva suburb of
Cehgny.
BW"ton's latest g~rlfnend,
Jean Bell, who had been
staymg at the actor's Celigny
home, has left for Califonua,
according to local residents
There have been reports
that she IS expecting Burton's
child but asked about that
before she left Tuesday, Miss
Bell sa1d merely, " Richard IS
away for a few days and
apart from that I have
nothing to say."
As long as Burton and MISS
Taylor do not remarry , the
divorce settlement of last
year remams m effect,
friends sajd. It g1ves Miss
Taylor all the items she
owned prior to and durmg the
marnage.
During that time, Burton's
most famous gift to Miss
Taylor was a $1 million
Cartier dlliJilond and the
world's most famed pearl,
" La Peregrina," both given
to her on her 37th birthday.
The Burtons' combmed
worth was said to be more
than $25 million.

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By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - Cauld
you tell me what causes gout
and what to do for it• The
doctor said I had gout m my
feet. The balls of both feet are
sore and somet~rnes my toes
bW'n and seem to draw as If I
had cramps in them . It is
very prunful .
DEAR READER- Gou~ IS
aot caused by eating nch
foods and drinking. It 1s
caused by an overproduclion
of uric acid by yoW' own body
What IS W'IC acid? It IS
closely telated to protems
and 1s a byproduct of the
formation of new body cells
When you are generating that
enormous number of new, red
blood cells, three million
~very second, you are also
fanning uric acid. 1t Is forme~ in the process of
nlanafaclW'ing the important
nllCleic acid DNA 111 the
nuclewi of IJie cell. Anything
that stimulates the break-

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down of cells or stunulates
their growth will increase the
producllon of DNA.
It follows that a person on
one of those fad diets that
promtses massive sudden
we1ght loss may have a
sudden acute attack of gout.
The diet leads to breakdown
of muscle cells and release of
excess quantities of uric ac1d.
The unc ac1d forms a salt
(sodium W'ale) that can form
crys~s and mduce a complicated process tn the Jomts
that results in red hot,
pamful , swollen joints. Th1s 1s
commonly the big toe, but
other jomls may be involved.
Deposits of the uric acid
salt m the joints lead to a
form of arthritis, called
simple gouty arthritis. It can
lead to a slow destrucllon and
deformity of the joints mvolved.
' While diet is helpful in
treatment of gout , 1l1s hot as
Important as C&lt;tnlrollmg the

I

. . · · ·:r~ Ohio energy commzttee

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

Pres~nt Jerry

NEW YORK 1UP! ) - ~f reporters had bothere&lt;l to ask Belly Ford how
often she sleeps with her husband, the First Lady says her answer would
have been " As often as possible."
Mrs Ford, who clalffiS cred1t for the nammg of the nallon 's lone present
female cabmet appomtee, also says she conveys her v1ews to the President
durmg their "pillow talk" hoW's.
In an mterv1ew with Myra MacPherson m the September ISsue of McCall's
magazme, Mrs Ford was quoted as saymg reporters have asked her
every thmg except how often she sleeps w1th her husband, and "1! they'd
asked me I would have told them "
Whe
ked h
h t sh
ld h
d sh h ba k
f
"
n I as
er w a
e wou
ave sat , e s ot c , 'As o ten as
possible," M1ss MacPherson wrote .
11 th Whi H
d
r
bed
M
"Declmmg to fo ow e
le ouse Ira 1t1on o separate
rooms, rs
Ford .. sa1d w1th amusement that she could do only so much for pohllcs."
" While she has rrot mvaded the Oval oH1ce, Mrs. Ford gets her v1ews
lk
h
across when she and the President are alone, she calls II 'pillow ta •," t e
article said
The F.rst Lady sa1d she and presidential adv1ser Robert Hartmann "don't
always Jibe ; I'm wiiltng to admit that
" I think perhaps my resentment of Bob comes from hiS trymg to run my
husband 's hfe - and yet I think he IS very valuable to my husband Perhaps
1 feel he oversteps his boundanes."
Mrs Ford sa1d she feels she has done "a great deal" for the Equal R1ghts
Amendment. President Ford, according to the arlicle, has g1ven up h1s
practiCe of jokmg about ERA
•'Asked 1f she pushes her pomt of v1ew, Mrs. Ford laughed and sa1d, 'If he
doesn't get1lm the offiCe mthe day, he gets 11 m the nbs at rught' ," the
McCall's arlicle said.
Mrs Ford takes credit for the appomtmenl of U.S Housmg and Urban
Development Secretary Carla Hills The article said she now IS "workmg on
geltmg a woman on the Supreme CaW'! as soon as possible "
She sa1d her philosophy 1s to be tolerant of the opinions and ways of life of
others, includ10g the praclice of some men and women of hvmg together
without benefit of matrunony.
At Va1l, Colo., White House press secretary Ron Nessen was asked for
Ford's reactiOn to the latest mterVIew. "His philosophy 1s that Mrs Ford can
speak her mmd," he sa1d.
Mrs Ford discussed her mastectomy operatwn openly She said she 1s
completely recovered but that the operalion "IJid Jerry so upset ; he was so
concerned for me
"But look at 11 positively Which would you rather lose - a nght arm or a
breast 7 I'd rather lose the breast," the FITs! Lady sa1d

COLUMBUS - An Independent mvesl1galion of
cond1llons at Gallipolis State
Institute was agreed to today
by a group of union employes
and Dr. Timothy B. Montz,
director of the state department of mental health and
mental retardation, and Dr.
Bernard N1ehm, superintendent
The understanding was
reached followmg a four hour
presentation by Mike Clifford, staff represenlalive of
the Ohio CiVIl Serv1ce Employees Association (OCSEA)
of alleged Irregularities at
the mental retardatiOn mstltutiOn m southeastern
Ohio, mcludmg questionable
mediCal practices wh1ch may
have led to res1dent deaths m
some Instances
"We will request a panel of
outside people to look mto
specific charges and general
adequacy of care at GSI as
well as any acts of
malpractice," Dr Moritz
announced at the conclusiOn
of the meeting.
Dr Montz said the Ohio
State Medical Assoc18hon,
the Ohio Legal Rights SerVice, Oh10 Slate Board of
Nursmg, the OhiO Pharmacy
Board and the Holzer MediCal
Center of Gallipolis would be
asked to conduct the independent investigation
The director added that the
department would take
whatever action IS necessary

followmg the mqUiry Dr
Montz
r equ es ted
the
supenntendent of the mslllute, Dr Bernard N1ehm,
to Issue a directive encouragmg employes to
provide any mformation
which may be helpful to the
mqUiry by assurmg them of
Immunity from disciplinary
action for failure to have
reported the mc1dents at the
lime

Parents will
meet tonight
RACINE Parents of
children
enlermg klfldergarten m the Southern
Local School D•slr~cl w1ll
meet at 7 30 thiS evemng m
the Racme High- School
cafetena Bus schedules and
class ass1gnments w1ll be
completed Children must be
registered before entering
kmdergarten m the fall .
Enrollment sheets will be
available · for children not
already registered
SUITS FILED
Me1gs County Common
Pleas Court has rece1ved two
sUits for d1vorce each
chargmg gross neglect of
duty and extreme cruelty
They were by Charlotte S
Wolfe, Pomeroy vs Gale
Eugene Wolfe, Pomeroy, and
Brenda Sue I;'atlerson,
Shade , vs. Charles Earl
Patterson .

Foods don't cause gout

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DR. LAMB

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Independent probe of
_institute is promised

Romance renewed
By JOHN A. CALLC(}rf
GENEVA , Switzerland
(UPI)- The embers to ashes
romance of Richard Burton
and Elizabeth Taylor that
kept the world agog for a
decade wtth gifts of million
dollar Jewels , 1s aflame
agam.
Close friends and legal
advisers of the couple said
today ' they were back
together and may remarry
" They missed each other, •'
said Maurice Solowtcz, the
Geneva
att.orney
who
arranged their settlement
when the couple divorced
June 26, 1974 after 10 ternpestuous years of mamage.
"They will live together,
they decided to be together
agam , and they may
remarry, but not tomorrow,''
he sa1d.
Miss Taylor joined Burton
today m discusSions wtth the
producers of the forthcommg
movte " Aabakarov," an
Israeli film in which Burton 1s

. . .. .

pillow talks with

=::

~:

OETROIT (U P! ) _ A
lawyer for James Hoffa's
foster son, Charles O'Bnen,
says O'Bnen Will not take a
lie detector test to_deterrmne
if he knows anythmg abo ut
the onetune Teamster umon
cza r's disappearance 23 days
ago
Hoffa's lawyer son, James
p Hoffa, has demanded
repeatedly O'Bnen take the
test _
because he kn ows.
something ..
The demand came after

..

;.:·:,.·. =·::.:~;~~· too~~~;;;;·;;;,;;;;;· ~;~~;~~

declines
ttest ab~ut Hoffa
"

.

over-production of W'ic acid acid m yoW' cells, others to
by your own body cells. The help you el~rninate excess
diet should be one, though, W'ic ac1d through the kidneys
that gradually decreases and still others to control the
excess obesity without any acute pam of a sudden,
crash effort that may cause prunful gout attack.
an acute attack as I menFor more mformallon on
honed.
the treatment and how to live
You can eat a diet com- wtth gout write to me m care
pletely free of uric acid and of this newspaper, P .0. Box
still have high uric acid levels 1551, Radio City Stalion, New
and gout A purme-free d1et York, NY 10019, send a long
used to be the big thing stamped,
self-addressed
because purines (from !issue envelope and 50 cents and ask
cells and particularly organ for The Health Letter number
meats ) are used in the for- 2·3, Gout, Uric Ac1d.
malion of uric acid. However,
As a woman you wtll be
the body can manufacture mterested to know that men
lots of ur1c acid on a diet are much more prone to gout
completely free of purmes. A than women . Many women
pW'me-free d1et Will only who have the high W'IC acid
lower the uric ac1d level levels never develop gout.
shghtly . That 1s why There seems to be an
medicines are used mostly hered1 tary tendency to
toaay rather IJian tr~ing to '' developmg gout, and it has
COotrO) the problem Wilh diet often afflicted the famous and
alOne.
, the gemuses or nea'r
There are medicines to geniuses, so you are in good
block the formation of ur1c compan y

-~

I'

The labor relatiOns meeting
was held at the request of the
Galha Chapter of OCSEA,
representmg about 400 employes at the mstitullon .
Dr Montz said, "we have
known for a long time that
GSI IS serwusly substandard
and grossly madequate in
medical and allied areas."
He sa1d that on Sept 2 he
planned to ask the state
controllmg board for a
physiCians' salary supplement for
immment
emergency conditions and
that Gallipolis State Institute
would have top priOrity He
sa1d there are two fully
licensed phys1c1ans there now
and he would like to see SIX
fully qualified physicians at
the mshlute as soon as
pOSSible
Clifford proposed a supplemental agreement to the
overall labor contract w1th
OCSEA for the purpose of
clar~fy1ng
employeemanagement relations and
procedures
Dr Niehm said the present
med1cal director 1s prepared
to resign as soon as a
replacement IS found for h1m
Dr N1ehm reported that
the incumbent medical
director had many months
ago requested to be relieved
of his supervisory duties, but
he has remained m the
position at Dr . N1ehm's
request until a replacement
could be recruited.
Clifford brought up the
charge that gnevances were
not bemg processed by the
supenntendent, saymg this
was parUy responsible for the
growmg misunderstandings
and lack of communications.
Dr Moritz prOilllSCd that the
slluahon would be corrected

•

.-.

hears recommendations •-•

Cardinals bla11k Cincinnati

.....

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
top offiCial of a major Ohio
utility has recommended to a
legislative panel that utilities
be allowed to receive higher
rates from consumer!,
subJect to refunds, while the
state is deciding whether the
mcreases are JUStified.
Robert
E
Frazer,
president of the Dayton
Power &amp; Ught Ca , made the
recommendation Wednesday
m testunooy before the Jomt
Leg•slalive Committee on
Energy.
Frazer
sa1d
Ohio's
reputat1oo of bemg among
the states wtth the greatest
regulatory lag has undermmed the confidence of
utility
mvestors
and
ullimately raised costs,
making even h1gher rates
necessary.
"I
would
strongly
recommend that rates be
allowed to be placed m effect
wtthm, say, three moofJls
from the date that an apphcal!on !OJ' an mcrease is
filed, and that such rates
become permanent nine
montJis from the date of filing
If not acted upon by the
cornrnill!rlon," Frazer told the
legislative group.
Frazef' also recommended
that Ohio law provide for a
system of ratsmg utility rates
sunilar to IJie one used by
grocery slOJ'es for prlcmg
food.
"A system IS needed that
adds penmes to the bills
periodically, similar to the
way the corner grocery store
adds a few cents now and
then to a loaf of bread or a
quart of milk," he said.
Force Large Increases
"This would be much more
acceptable to the general
public than havmg long
regulatory delays wh1ch
ultunately force abnormally

large increases in customer.'

bills.
"Consumers, especially tbe
poor and those oo fixed incomes, have difficulties With
large increases that result
from the present regulatory
praclices 1n Ohio ," said
Frazer .
Frazef' also recommended
that rate-making procedures
be changed to conSider inflationary impact on future
operating costa and construction.
He said promises of lower
utility bills from abandoning
the current reconstruction
cost new (RCN) ratHJlaking
formula " cruelly mislead the
general public" and could
actually increase rates to
consumers.
Frazer's testimony was
part of an all-&lt;&gt;Ul assault by
ulllity representatives on
attempts to change the RCN
formula
John R Jooes, a CalumbWI
attorney representing the
General Telephone &amp; Electromcs Corp., said the RCN
formula "over the years has
permitted Ohio's utlllties to
provide excellent serv&gt;ce and
support economic growth in
our state.
"Without question, I would
say that Ohio's law, properly
applied, offers the greatest
benefits to customers," Jones
said. "A mere change in the
Ohio rate base law will not
result in lower rates to
consumers. The rate OJ"der in
the end result must be
reasonable and adequate,
and changes in the rate base
undoubtedly will have to be
compensated for in other
aspects of IJie rate case."
Federal Government Blamed
Three vice presidents of
Calumbia Gas of Ohio, Inc.,
defended the current ratemaking fonnula and method
of recovering the mcreased

Dredge-fill work
creates problems
By BERNARD BRENNER sa1d they welcomed the
UP! Farm Editor
complete
exclusion
of

WASHINGTON (UPI) The Anny's Corps of
Engineers says 1ts new rules
on "dredge and fill"
operalions m navigable
waters will not interfere with
nonnal farmmg but IJie U.S.
Agriculture Department
disagrees.
The regulations "impose
IJie threat of cumbersome,
timeconsuming procedures
for farmers and ranchers

on the
£ann front
every time they clean a ditch
or build a pond," Assistant
Agriculture Secretary Robert
Long sa'id in a statement.
Army officials said regulalions requiring pemuts when
soil
IS
dumped
mto
"navigable" waters have
been drafted to specifically
exclude routine plowing,
cultivating, harvesting,
terracing and land leveling.
They added no penruts will
be reqwred fOJ' building stock
ponds oo streams with less
than a 5 cubic feet per second
flow of water.
Agriculture spokesmen

plowing and similar farm
practices but they sa1d the
Corps of Engmeers proposes
to defme ''navigable waters"
so broadly that a Wide range
of farm and conservation jobs
could be affected.
Under IJie new rules, Long
said, Corps officials "conceivably could call anything a
navigable waterway that is
capable of floating a 2-by-1().
inch plank after a rainstorm.
A 5 cubic feet per second ,
flow, another Agriculture
official sai1, could cover a
stream 18 mches deep and 1.5
feet w1de.
Long said that when farm
or conservation operations
are subject to the new controls, it may take at least four
months or longer to process
each permit application and
there will be a $100 permit fee
in cases involving the
dW'nping of 2,500 or more
' cubic yards of earth.

''These

are

needless

burdens on farmers already
burdened by too many
reports and government
paperwork," Long said. He
said the procedures also
would delay Agriculture
Department programs to

cost of fuel. They also placed
heavy blame on lbe fedet'al
government !OJ' gas shortages and said consumer
conservatiOn 1s the only
unmediate way to alleviate
the problem.
I L Briscoe said the purchased gas adjustment
(PGA) clause by which the
gas company recovers increased fuel costs "ts the only
procedure by which rates are
adjusted to reflect actual
changes in the cost of gas
supply.
"There is a rnisconceptloo
that, if PGA clauses were
eliminated, gas rates would

mm1strahon Grant to conCounty
Com- struct an Industrial Park m
Mason
missioners Tuesday night . the TNT area.
The GMDA IS a non-profit
established a countywide
Development Authority to corporahon established in the
promote indtiStrial growth. early 1960s to promote in1 ne
ueve1opment dWitrial growth in the county .
Authority, which can have a It had a major role in Panboard composed of up to 21 tasote locatmg near Pomt
members, was approved Pleasant
following
an
indepfJI
Attorney Burdett, told the
discussion
between
commission that GMDA doe~
members of the commission not qualify under law to
and a delegation represent- receive FmHA Grant money
ing -the Greater Mason and m order to secure funds
Developmental Assn.
for the Industrial Park
Robert Wingett, president ; project 11 would be necessary
Don
Rode , secretary; for the commission to
Charles Lanham, treasurer, establish a countywide
and Jack Burllett, legal Development Authority.
'fdVISOI', of GMDA requested ' It was also noted IJiat the $2
establishment
of
the m1lhon
water
system
Development Authonty in rehabilitation E conomic
order for the coWl I)' to qualify Development ,Administration
for a Farmers Home Ad- grant received by the Ci~y of

Point Plea:iant is contmgent
upon the establishment of IJie
proposed Industrial Park
Land for the proposed
!ndllStrial park is a tract of
about 70 acres beyond the
coun ty-&lt;&gt;wned property tn the
TNT. The GMDA presently
has IJie land under option
from a group of Charleston
businessmen headed by
Jerome Goldberg.
Commiss1on member
Michael Whalen, is moving to
·establish the countywide
Development
authority,
pointed out that he has been
m favor of naming such a
body for some tune. t;ommissloner William Rardin
seconded the,motlon and the
measure was approved
unanimously.
The
Devel9pment
Authority will Include

Phtladelphta 4 A tl anta 1, n
San-Otego 8 Montreal 6 n
P• ttsburg h 3 San Franc.sco 1, n
Los Ang eles at Chtcago ppd ,
ram
Thursday' s Games
(All Times E OT)
Los Angeles (Messersmith 14
11 l at Ch tcago 1R Reuschel 9
13) 2 30pm

" This is wrong. Coosumers
benefit from the PGA
because 11 enables the
company to mamtain service
at the levels the public expects."
Ralph N Mahaffey said gas
supplies are deficient
because the federal government has overregulated, and
Congress has failed to
proVIde proper wcentives for
exploratiOn and productloo.
"While I do oot doubt the
sincerity of the members of
Congress, 1! is my observation that thus far the
majority have done nothing
but study, study, investigate,
wvestigate, and talk, talk,"
he said.
Paul R . Bigley agreed that
utilities could not wait for
Congress to deregulate gas
prices, and said Columbia is
unporting liquefied gas from
overseas, plannmg on a share ,
of the supply from the transAlaska pipeline and working
with synthetic gas.
"But wbat about the next
three or four years 7 " he
asked.
"The principal
resource for ~as to ease the
stram on CW'lailed industry
and bllSiness Institutions is
the gas that can be conserved
m millions of Ohio homes."

Frtday's Gam es
Houston at Ch•cago
Cmcmnat . at PittSburgh 2 lw•

no

A tlanta at St L OU IS n
Montreat a t Los Angeles n
Phil ade lphia a t San D1ego n
New York at San FranCI Sco n
Amencan Lugue
East
w I pet 9 b
75 so 600
Boston
Ba ll•mor e
67 56 545 7
62 61 504 12
New York
Cleveland
55 66 455 18
56 69 448 19
Milwaukee
Detrot t
50 75 400 25
West
t
w 1 pet _!_b.
Oa):(.land
75 50 600
Kansas C1ty
68 5-t 557
5' '
Ch1 c ago
61 6J 492 13 1 2
)4
1 ..
Texas
61 65 484
Mmnesota
58 68 460 17 1 2
Callforn•a
58 69 457 18
Wednesday ' s Results
Oakland 2 Det ro•! 1
California 6 M1lwaukee 1
ChiCago S New York 3, n
Kansas C1ty 3 Boston 1. n
Balttmore 3 M•nnesote 2, n
Thursday's Games
(All T1mes EDT)
Ch•cago ( Kaat 17 91 at New
York (Medlch 11 131. 8 p m
Cle veland (Brown 57) at
Kam.as Cily ( Lllfell 0 0) 8 JO
pm
Oakland { Holtzman 14 10 1 at
Mtlwaukee
( Broberg
10 11 J
8 30p m
Bal t 1more ( Palmer 19 71 at
Tex as ( Perry 1315) , 9pm
Friday's Games
Cpteago at aoslon. n
Ball•more at Texas , n
Detrott at M1nnesota n
Oakland at Milwaukee, n
Cal!fornta at New York n
Cleveland at Kansas Ctly n

By BILL MADDEN
Cardinal VICtory over Cin- Cldentally mired 10 or so
UPI Sporll Wriler
cinnah It was McBride 's games behmd m the NL East.
Bake McBride is off and second homer of the game But since Aug I, McBride
runnmg ag9111 and that can " and only his foW'th this has lifted his average nearly
only mean more fuel for the season. He had SIX last year, 20 points to .290 and has
St . I..Duis Cardinals' Natiooai two of them mside the park resW'fled h1s prominent role
League East pennant drive
The wm kept the Cardin a ts m the Cardinals' g~o at" He was flymg, flat out withln 2••, games of Pitts- tack.
flymg around those bases," burgh, leaders m the
" I didn 't thmk it was gomg
said winning St. LoUis pitcher National League East
out," McBride said of his first
Ron Reed of McBride's
McBride , the 1974 rookie of homer of the night, a tw&lt;H'Un
leadoff eighth mning IIISlde- the year, was slowed by in- shot m the fifth mning that
the -park home run Wed- JUries earlier this season put Sl I..Duts ahead 3-0. As for
nesday night that sealed a ~ whtle St l .nui011; w~s roin- the second one, McBride

Browns will
cut 2 more
men today
KENT, Oh10 (UP!) - The
Cleveland Browns were to cut
two more players today to get
down to the National Football
League limit of 55 before
leavmg for an exhibition
game agamst Washmgton .
Placekicker Dave Schmmke, York, Pa ., was
released Wednesday leaving
veteran Don Cockroft and
Chris Gartner. It's believed
Cockroft w1ll be kept as the
lone hooter on the team,
getting back-up assistance
from rookie Larry Poole m
the punting department.
If the way the Cleveland
Browns have been praclicmg
lately has any influence on
their game strategy, the
players and head coach
Forrest Gregg are m for a
rude awakemng.
"That's all," Gregg told the

CINCINNATI (UPI) Takealetter took the lead at
the top of the stretch and
easily galloped to win by two
lengths the $7 ,500-added La
Scala Handicap Wednesday
at River Downs.
Second was Princeton
Pride and third was Sal
Menow as the winner
returned $4 ..W, $3.20 and $2 •.W
m rummg the SIX furlong
featured ninth race in 1:11 2r

By FRED DOWN
UPI Sporll Writer
There's really bad news for
AmeriCan League hitters
today Nolan Ryan's throwing
smoke again and is almost
" back m the groove."
Ryan, the Cahforma
Angels' three-lime AL
strikeout king and authOJ' of
four no-bitters, pitched hiS
strongest game m more than

•

wzn · Prepares for Reds
'

PITTSBURGH (UPI) Danny Murtaugh notched his
1,000 vlctb\:y' 'as manager of
the Pittsburgh Pirates
Wednesday night but the
unflappable Irishman took it
all in stnde.
What Impressed him more
was the pitching of Jim
Rooker , who gave up only
three hits through e1ght inrungs to pick up his ninth
VICtory m 18 decisiOns - wtth
team durtng an afternoon
workout Wednesday at Kent
State University. "Go on m
You'renot domg anything out
The club held a longer than
usual workout today before
leaving for Washington, D.C.,
and Friday mght's exhibition
game against the Redskins at
RFK Stadium.
"It wasn 't our day," Gregg
58ld of the offense. "We
didn't have an~ concentration.
"Their minds seem to be a
thousand miles away. If we
play like that on Friday we 'II
be whipped I hope 11 won't
happen on game day. Often
you play as you practice
You've heard that said a lot,
but it's true "

CINCINNATI (UPI) "Mr. Quarterback" meets
"The Master" here Saturday
night.
"Mr. Quarterback" is Bart
Starr, the G'&lt;!'en Bay
Packers' newhead'coach wbo
a few years ago was the
club's brilliant quarterback.
c

200 AMP W.P.
BREAKER and
METER SOCKET
M

.

.,

~

.

100 AMP W.P.
BREAKER WllH
TRAILER RECEPTICAL

4/0 ALUMINUM SERVICE
ENTRANCE
$160

CABLE

FT.

NO. 2 ALUMINUM SERVICE
=NCE

an assist from Dave Gluslito down the San, francisco
Giants 3-1 as \he Pirates won
their second strrught after six
consecutive losses.
Murtaugh, who became
only the second manager in
~~
Pirate history to manage
1,000 Or more VICtorieS, also
became one of only 25
managers who have led
teams to 1,000 or more
games. Fred Clarke was the
only other Pirate manager to
turn the trtck.
Rooker sa1d he knew 11
By MIKE RABUN
would probably be a low
UPI Sports Wriler
scortng game because of the
FORT WORTH, Tex (UP!)
p1lchmg of San Francisco 's
- Lee Trevmo grew up m the
Ed Halicki, who ret.red the
heat of Texas summers, so
first II batters and was
when he starts complaining 11
workmg on a two-hitter
mWit be somethmg more than
through seven mnmgs
warm
"The way this kid (Halicki)
" It's so hot not even the
pitches agawst us I knew 11
corn will grow/ ' ts Trevmo 's
would probably be a low
meteorological report
scormg game," Rooker sa1d.
The greatest names in golf
"And I had to bust my butt to . will combat the heal Thurstry and keep us even I
day m the first round of the
haven't pitched like I wanted
Tournament
Players
to this year and my control
Championshtp. Jack
was off tomght. But I had a
NiCklaus, enjoying the luxury
hunch we'd get to hun.
of an early, heat escaping
It was Renme Stennett's
openmg day tee time, is
two-run e1ghth mnmg smgle
favored to defend the Iitle he
that snapped a 1-1 lie for the
won at Allanla last year.
VICtory.
Golf's elite will be testmg
the tough, 7,140-yard, par-70
Calomal Country Club layout,
which for this champiOnship
has been dressed up with
narrow fairways and rough
almost as deep as tha l
usually found for aU S Open.
But the toughness of the
"The Master" lS Cincmnah course
was
tempered
Bengals coach Paul Brown, somewhat Wednesday by hot
entermg his 41st season of scores tW'ned m during the
coachmg and regarded as one pro-am by AI Ge1berger and
of pro football's greatest John Mahaffey. Geiberger
innovators .
produced a 63, wh1ch would
''It's an honor to be have lied the COW'se record
coachmg
against
him had it been shot during the
(Brown)," SI,IYS ,Starr, who tournament. And Mahaffey,
brmgs h1s Packers to town for who deadlocked Lou Graham
a pre-season game. "Here's a for the U S Open UUe thiS
man wbo obviOusly has had a year only to lose m a playoff,
great mfiuence on so many shot a 6S.
coaches in the National
"I don't think you will see
Football League
any more of these kind of
"He has contributed so rounds, " sa1d Ge1berger.
much to the game of "The pms were m the rmddle
professiOnal football, you of the greens and we didn't
have to feel priviliged to be on have any wind. I think 278
the same field wtth him And would win . There may be
I do . His contributions to the some low scores to start, but
game are countless."
by Sunday, when the nerves
Starr IS off to a good start
as a head coach-obis Packers
have won their first two

G0 ers combat
h~i!tin Texas

for Saturday exhibition

MOBILE HOME
SERVICE ENTRANCES

I

when he blanked the Brewer s complete their best home
oo two hits and raised hiS stand of the season With a 9-4
record
"on-lost record to 13-12.
In h1s fiTs! start smce Aug
" After the first inning I
slowed down my delivery ," 8, Ryan retired 19 conRyan commented after the secutive batters dW'mg one
game " At times I had amost stretch He S8ld he felt no 111
all my velocity but I still effects from the grom and leg
haven't gotten mto my mjW'!es which took him out of
the rotalion in recent weeks
groove''
Asked if he thought be but that his elbow was "a
could wm 20 games again this little sore" m the taler mseason, Ryan replied, umy rungs.
The Oakland A's defeated
record is the farthest thing
from my mmd ; I JUs! want to the Detroit Tiger 2-1, the
Ballimore Onoles beat the
get m that groove."
Adrian Garrett h1t a solo Minnesota Twms 3-2, the
homer and Mickey Rivers Kansas City Royals topped
smgled m two runs to back the Boston Red Sox 3-J, and
the combmed three-llitter by the Chicago Wh1le Sox
Ryan and Hassler. The loss downed the New York
was the Brewers' 16th in their Yankees :;.a m the other AL
last 20 games while the games.
VIctory enabled the Angels to

Packers invade Cincy

ON

The daily double combined
Prize Prmcess (12) and
Lucky Luther (4) to a $448.80
payoff.
_
Attendance was 5,869 and
the mutuel handle was
$493,052.

two months Wednesday when
he beat the Milwaukee
Brewers 6-1 Ryan allowed
three h1ts and struck out nme
10 7 2-3 innmgs With Andy
Hassler finislung up after the
Brewers scored thCII' run m
the e1ghth on consecutive
doubles by B1ll Sharp and
Robm Yount .
It was Ryan's strongest
performance smce June 6

Murtaugh gains lOOOth

- .S AVE.-

5.

srmled " I saw it hit the wall
and then I saw 1third base
coach Vern ) Benson Signal
me in,' 1 he satd. "That's all."
Reed , meanwhile, a castoff
from the Atlanta Braves,
tamed the hard·lutting Reds
on four h1ts to unprove his
record to 12-9
Elsewhere in the National
League, PittsbW"gh topped
San Francisco 3-1, Houston
upset New York 5-4.

Nolan Ryan back in the groove

here."

help rural communilies
repair flood damage and
restore land and strearriS.
Corps officials plan to 1ssue
a final version of their
regulations after receiving
public comment on the issue
through late October. I..Dng
said, however, that the
Agnculture Department
hoP"s Congress will step in to
ease the potenlial impact of
the rliles on farmers and
rw-al conservallon proJects.
What Agriculture officials
want is legislation that would
restrict the new "dredge and
fill" permit system to larger
streams and bodies of water
which f1t the traditional
concept of naVIgable water,
Long sa1d.

representatiVes of business,
labor and tndustry, and one
member is to be appointed to
represent
the
various
municipalities of the county.
Appointment of the entire
board of IJie Development
Authonty will be made at a
later meeting of Ute comIDlSSion .
In otJier activity of the
commission, presided over
by President Clarence
Adkins, two bids were opened
on the Leon Commumty
building and New Haven Fire
House projects but no action
was taken.
Both bids on the bwldlngs
were submitted by B &amp; J
Rouah Co. of New Haven. On
the Leon bwlding the company bid $56,000 and on the
New Haven building $81,471.
Other business was routine.

Mator League Standmgs
By Un i ted Press lnternattonal
Nat•onal League
east
w. I pet g b
Pittsburgh
69 55 556
Ph•ladelphla
68 56 548
I
St louts
67 58 536 21 ;
New York
64 60 516 5
Chtcago
58 68 460 12
Montreal
52 71 A2J 161 1
West
wlpctgb
Cmc 1nnat •
83 41 669
Los Ange l es
fi7 57 540 16
San Fr an ctsco 61 64 488 n• 2
San D1ego
57 68 456 26 1 1
Atl an t a
56 71 441 28 1 1
Houston
•8 8 1 372 371 1
Wednesday's Results
St Louts 4 Cmcmnatt 0 n
Hou ston S New York 4, 10 mn ,

n

not mcrease," Briscoe said.

Development Authority formed
POINT PLEASANT - The

3 - The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., 'lbW'sday, Aug. 21, 1975

69~

STAR SUPPLY
RACINE, OHIO

FT•

start to tell, I think you w1U

see them come up "
But Mahaffey d1d not
agree .
" Yes, I thmk you wtll see
some low scores," Mahaffey
58ld "If you put it m the
fa1rway and get 11 on the
green you can score and there
are a lot of guys out here
capable of do1ng that. !think
a 275 (live under) would be a
good wmmng score "
Only four tunes m the 28year history of the Coloma!
National
Tournament,
normally played m May, has
the winner shot 275 or better.
And when the toW' regulars
play m that tournament the
course IS set up eas1er than 11
will be th1s week
"If you get 11 m the rough
you are in trouble," sa1d
Mahaffey "I couldn 't use
anythmg more than a SIX 1ron
to get out of 11."
Mahaffey did not think the
temperatures - which are
expected to hover around 100
degrees most of the week would play much of a role m
the tournament
"When we played at Westchester everybody talked a
lot about how hot 11 was and
who wound up m the playoff?
Julius Boros and Gene Uttler "
Every top tour name will be
present !OJ' the second TPC
tournament w1lh the excepllon of Johnny Miller, wbo
wtthdrew ear tier m IJie week
because of a naggmg wriSt
lnjury.

QualifiCatiOn for this event
on the money
wmnmg liSt. The top 144
money wmners make the
tournament

IS based stnctly

exhibilion games-a 23-6
n~v'll Do It Euoru Tl'me
romp over Buffalo and a 13-9 r--:.--.....:........:...:2......:...~:.....::~:..:..=_::_:::..!~_:_:_:_:_:c.::___
1
declSlon over Ollcago.
Cincmnati lost twice before
picking up a win last weekend
at Buffalo-38-28.
'IQJ'I-t.. HAVE.
"We'll be trymg to
A SIG&lt;*'R
duplicate the fine effort we
OfFiCEWHEN
had at Buffalo," said Brown .
W~ MOVE.
"Our offense went well and
10 OUI&lt;! NE:.W
was equally balanced1-oc.A'ftON
passing and rushing-which
1s a good sign ."
Ken Anderson, wbo threw
two touchdown passes to
Ww.;fli~Y
Charlie Jomer last weekend,
NOM AND
IS expected to open at
WIL$UR 010
quarterback for Cincmnat1
G£1' MOR~
and veteran Essex Johnson
E.i.SON Ia)(),\·
w1ll get h1s first start of the
year at running back in a
maJOr test of hiS gunpy knee.
Several Ben~als who have
been held out recently
because of lflJW'les should be
ready to play Saturday, mcluding cornerbac~ Lemar {'l;~~~
ParriSh , defensive end Royce

Berry, t~ght end Bob Trumpy ~~~~~:;~~~~
and safety Bernard Jackson L:

•

Today's

Philadelphia downed Atlanta
4-1, San D1ego outlasted
Montreal 8-6 and Los
Angeles-Chicago were postponed by ra m
Plra1es 3, Gianls 1
Renrue Stennett•s tw~n
e1ghth mning smgle snapped
a 1-1 lie and camed the
r ev ived Pirates to their
second straight wm after s1x
consecutive losses Stennett's
game-wmnm g h1t
was
preceeded by smgles from
Richie Z1sk and Manny
Sanguillen and a double by
rook1e Craig Reynolds Jun
Rooker (9-9) gained the wm
With rebel from Dave Giusti.
Phlllies 4, Braves 1
Dave Cash delivered a pa1r
of run-scormg smgles while
Larry Christenson and Tug
McGraw combined on fourhitter, enablmg the second
place Ph1lhes to remam one
game behind Pittsburgh m
the NL East ChriStenson (74) went si x 1nnmgs while
McGraw registered hiS 11th
save. Cash accounted for the
only runs they needed with
run-scormg smgles m the
hflh and seventh mnmgs
Astros 5, Mets 4
Cliff Johnson's none-o ut
tenth mnmg double off center
f1elder Gene Clines' glove
drove home Cesar Cedeno
from first base w1th the
wmnmg run and thwarted the
Mets' m their bid to keep pace
w1th the other NL East
winners. Johnson 1 S game·
w1nnmg h1t off loser Rick
Baldwm ( 2-4 ), which dropped
the fourth place Mets five
games ba ck, callll', alter
Cedeno had opened llie:huilng
With a smgle The VIctory was
also Bill V~rdon 's first as
Astros • manager .
Padres 8, Expos 6
A three-l'un double b;;,' Enzo
Hernandez broke a 5-5 lie m
the seventh lnfl'l'g, while
Gene Locklear drove home
four other runs as San Diego
beat Montreal Hernandez'
game-wwnmg blow came
after losing pitcher Woody
Fryman ( 8-9) had loaded the
bases Locklear had a threerun homer for San Diego m
the f1fth J erry Johnson, w1th
one mnmg m relief of Randy
Jones, got the Win, his second
in three decisions

c,

Wedn esday 's Baseball Results
Bv UntteGI Press ln,ernat•onal
Nahonal Leagu£&gt;
l os An ge l es at Cht cago ppd
ra .n

Sport Parade
By MlLTON RICHMAN
UPI Sporll Editor
NEW YORK (UPI ) - Maybe 1t was his .upbrmgmg, but
Mark Donohue was always polite. His mother was a school
teacher, and althbugh she never kept tbal tight a rein on him,
the one thmg sh~ made SW'e of when he was a httie boy was
that he was cour\eous. He grew to maturity the same way,
always a gentleman
In common with most race drivers, Donohue would grow a
bit impatient hearmg oulsiders discourse on the dangers and
perils of auto racmg It upset hun sometimes tb hear them
ag1tate for the complete abolishment of, the sport, yet he'd
always liSten patiently to all the detractors, never trying to
unpress them w1th how much he knew about safety on the
track .
He knew far more than they did smce 11 was a subject which
particularly mtn gued hun. He was always searching for ways
to make caos safer, contmually experunentmg w1th unproved
safeguards, not only for himself, but fOJ' his fellow drivers. It 1s
of small consequence now, especially to his surVIvors, but II
wasn't any mecha mcal Imperfection m hiS Formula I car
whi ch led to Mark Donohue's death m Austria, 1t was an ordinary lire blowout
When the lire blew, Donohue lost control of hiS car and It hit
a metal guard rail on the course The doctors tried everything
they could, but the 38-year-old Donohue died in an Austrian
hospital Tuesday mght following surgery for the removal of a
blood clot
It is said of most race drivers they don't know when to quit
Mark Donohue heard the same thing sa1d about him and 11 used
to make hun smile.
He had been k1ckmg around the idea of qwtting for some
time. Smce shortly after wmrung
IndianapoliS 500 in 1972,
in fact . He had won the Pocono 500 the year before and the
Canadian-Amencan championship the year after. He also had
won three Trans-America titles and two other U.S . Road
Racmg Championships.
What else was there left • Nothing that essential, Donohue
concluded.
So on Feb 15, 1974, after winning the International Race of
Champions at Daytona Beach, Fla., M'ark Donohue announced
he was all through dr1vmg rac e cars. He was quitting.
Donohue had every intention of staymg retired, but then he
and Roger Penske, his friend and assoc18le and the man he has
driven for exclusively the past 11 years, got into ilomething
they never had been in before- Formula I cars.
Penske and Donohue wanted someone capable to drive their
car on the European CirCUit and they believed they had that
man In Peter Revson . But Revson was killed In South Africa
early last year Penske and Donohue kept looking for a driver,
but couldn't lmd the one they wanted.
Time was moving Donohue finally said ·
" I'll drive the car I can do 11 Just as well as they can,
anyway ''
No queslion about that at all
Mark Donohue could drive a car w1th the best of them
He was a gentleman and a smart dnver . Smart enough to get
out wh1le he was still ahead, but in auto racmg, all1t takes IS
one little mistake and Mark Donohue made it
He went back

liJe

,_________. .
1

(8 )
Bat dw1n (9 ) Md Grote .
Roberts
Sosa I 7l
Cosgrove
19 1 Gr anger ( tO)
Crawfo rd
( 10 ) and May WP - Crawford
(3 4) LP - Ba ldw ln 12 4) HRS
Jon n son ( 12th )
K ngman

(25th l

Amencan League
000 000 0\Q--- 1 3 1
031 002 0011 - 6 B 0
Ha l tCkt M0 ff 11f { B ) lavelle
Slaton
Travers
(6)
Ed
( Bl and Ht ll Rooker G•u~t1 (9 ) Rodng uez
fBl and Moore
and Sang u ti l en W P - Rooker 19 Ryan
Hassler 181 and El
9 ) LP Hal iCk i { 7 10)
Rod r tguez WP - Ryan (lJ 12 )
LP - Sl aton I II 14 ) HR Gar r ett
Phlladelpht 000 010 30D-- 4 12 1 ( .tth )
A llan ta
000000010- 1 40
Chrtsten son McGraw (71 and Detro• •
000 010 000- 1 4 1
Oates . Morton
Sadeckt 17) Oakl and
000 020 OOx - 2 50
Sosa I 7) House (9) and Corr ell
Bare Pen tz PJ and F reehan
WP Ch ri sten son !7 4)
LP S1ebert Todd (61 and T enace
Morto~ ( 15 13)
WR' - S•ebe rt {3 JJ
L P - Bare
17 8) HR Holt I 1st )
c. n c•nnalt
000 000 000- 0 4 0
S t LOUIS
000 120 Otx - 4 9 2 Ch tcag o
001 on ooo- 5 10 o
Norm an McEnaney 18) an d New York
003 000 000- 0 6 1
Bench , Reed (12 9J and s .m
Wood { IJ 161 and Oown 1ng
m on s LP- Norman fB 4 ) H~ S May Dobson ( 8 l and Munson
Me Br•de 2 (Jrd &amp; .ttn 1
LP- May
I 11 91
HR Bonds
( 23 )
San Otego
000 032 JOO- B 12 I
Montr eal
100 220 001 - 6 6 1 Boston
001 000 000- 1 6 0
Jones Johnson (6) Fr~sel la Kan sas C!ly 000 210 OOx - J 9 1
(n and Kendall. Carr 1ther s
T1ant
{ 15 121
and
F 1sk
Murra y
(6)
Fryman
(61
Leonard (9 SJ and St. nson
Sc her ma n Ill DeMola 19) and
Foote Carte r (9) WP - Johnson Bal t•m or e
100 000 101 - J 9 0
17 l l LP ~- F r yman (8 91 HR Mm nesota
100 000 001 - 2 7 3
Lock l ea r (4th J
Gr 1msley (9 171 and Duncan
Hughes Bu r gme1er 17) Camp
( 10 1nn1ngsl
bell 191 and Rool LP - Hughes
New York 000 000 30 1 0- 4 8 0
Houston
010.011 01 0 1- 5 8 1 ( 11 11) HR - Gr~ch (111hl
(Only Gam es Scheduled)
Webb Lockwood (7) Apodaca
San Franctsc 001 000 000-

P ittSburgh

000 000 03• -

I 3 0 Milwaukee
3 6 0 Calt lorn ta

me now lora

good car rnsurarce

value

STEVE
SNOWDEN
1258 Powell St

Moddleport, 0
PH 992 7lSS

Mce a good
nerghbor

•u11 IARM

State Farm
1s the re
SUII IHLiloiUIUIL lUIOWOIIll I~JU U ~CI
UW'I~l
~0 1,1 ( OII IC! ll0Qiol1~~ 1 0• Ht

P71 104 1

COLOR TV 14-16-18-19-20-21-23-25 INCHES
INCLUDES:
1. Clean Complete TV
2. 'Clean &amp; Adjust Tuner
3. Check All Tubes
4. Adjust TV As Needed

OHIO'S

PICTURE

n"''' v

FACTORY

IF YOU THINK OUR PICTURE
TUBE PRICES ARE GREAT YOU'll GO WilD OVER OUR
NEW AND USED TV SET
PRICES UP TO 160 00 TRADE
IN ON PURCHASE OF NEW 'TV

JY TUNER SPECIALISTS
FREE
ESTIMATES
ON REPAIR WORK
ON ANY TV
SET YOU BS:ING
INTO OUR SHOP

Guaron;eed
I yr. .. ... .....

CURTIS MATHES
GUARANTEE

c,\) "TI8 .....

+...........
tt._
•
""*'
"'I
A;

Nc:tfon!Cpw11Mt -

•

4 yr. cuarantee on
labor, parts &amp; picture tube. Not pro
rlted.

IMe\l.ltt IIICW 0t
CSreu6t ........, _

e&lt;weft

O

C

.,.

~~

Cunlt....,....tM~il

Fr• 'ofFovr Yurt Vou per
,,...,.. Pfocnting an.::~

on~

..,VIet

•

E

Cft11911 IO JOWl

....... kt the pwll 11011 I

..... cott

~ 1 dime tor tour ~

...

fOUl'._. I"•

AM
IOflvlleletltill

)'MrS

't (llttT.O &lt;t/1

NOW OPEN IN MIDDLEPORT

rUNITED
TUBE-.
SALES &amp; SERVICE
· t
87 Mill St., Middleport
I

109 Greene St., Marietta

992-6)22

'

'

�.....
....-.
-

I

I

-•

i

I

I.

,.

~

'I

4- The Daily Sentinel, M!_ddle£Prt-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Au~. 21, 1975

~:::::::--::Sc:-o-u-.ti~n-g-1

Campers first in
state fair gates ·

I,

•

I)AIIvRe••tinel, Mit!1leport-Pomeroy, 0., :_rhwsday, Aug . 21, 1975

,
'
and sn nu• wllu wlrl'k al nlghl · ur IIIP f't ' . Thi s wnrkcll fur uw 1ht•t'(' is
ctf!,•r all clst• hcuJ fail ed ,
bn•ak;Jgc. Suth carli,ns an.'
iJI't' just ·J.:uing In bed ~nd
IJO'i'Y
.
! ··yin~ ic1 sleep . The ridC'r ·
nlso ~ n!.al It&gt; ·Usc fttr storing
DEAH POJ.!.V - Hcnntly nt h •r lhiu~s while nn a trailer
knuws the car is &lt;'IJIIlin g ami
tuuld bt.• wal&lt;:hing and gu vul. we spcn! a short vacal iun vacatitm . -- ~ O' K.

in any week since November JOBLESS RA fE DOWN
COLUMBUS •(UP! ) - The 1974.
Ohio Bureau of Employment . The number of claims :;
Services said Wednesday the 16,443, represented a dec ·
number of jobless workers in of 34.2 per cent oyer U..:
Ohio filing Initial claims for previous week, said the"'
...
benefits through the week bureau.
ending Aug . 16 was the lowest

.;y POLLY CRAMER

..~

Slipping slijJcover·
,stopped with pins

~

marking the
opening of the annual event.
Among a number of events
at the fair today, were the
Mar ching Band Festival, fea turing nearly 50 lop Ohio high ·
school bands , the 4-H horse
show , and the 4-H general
livestock and dairy cattle
judging.
A new fair feature this year
was the 1850s. " Fair within a
Fair," which openfd at the
Ohio Village. located just
north
of
t·he
main
fa irgrounds . The 1850s fair
featured 19th Century farm
Implement displays and
various craft s demon¢e r ~monies

COLUMBUS ( UP!l
Three Columbus youths, who
have camped near an Ohio
State fairgrounds gale since
July 31, were the first to enter
the grounds toda y as the
122nd State Fair opened.
Twins Harry and Larry
Ar ter, 15, and James
Jameson, 12, were given free
ride tickets and giant stuffed
· animal prizes for being the
first persons to attend this

year's fair .
Gov. James A. Rhodes cut
the ribbon at 6 a.m. in

D&amp;J's

strat ions.
Popular singer-composer
Mac Davis was se t for two

House of Fabrics

Weekend Special!

shows today and Friday in
the fair's continuing program
of free grandstand en-

7/a"

No Roll
ELASTIC

Reg . 44&lt;

tertainment.
Meanwhile,

29c yd.

or 4

Yard s Sl.OO

11 ·1 " Reg . 59c

J9c yd .

motorists

bound for the fair were being
aided by electronic messages
posted at three key Interstate
71 interchanges here.

Ph . 992 ·2810

Mile South ol
Middleport on Rt. 7
I

------~- -

Back-To-School

APPLAUSE!
Camp
Arrowhead Summer Camp
1975.has come to an end and
the M-G -M District was well
represented. Over 100 Boy
Scouts from nine different

troops participated . Taking
pari in this year 's camp were

Troops 242, 257, 200, 230, 208,
l 49, l05. 251. and 259.
Was it worth it' Just ask
any seoul who atl&lt;! nded and
that will be tes timony
enough. Next year's BiCenten nia l Camp l oom~ even
greater. Let's all get the
Spirit of '76 '
SPEAK ING OF CAMP, the
Na~ional

Counci l cam p in-

s pec tors visited
Camp
Arrowhead on .July 16 and
conducted their annual inspection. For the first time in
many years, Arrowhead's
camping

BE
WARM
THIS
WINTER

•
•

STILL CAMPING - Just
linish summer camp and it's
lime to start planning for the
M-G-M Fall Camporee . With
a theme of Pioneering and
Ca mping Skills , the Fall
Camporee at Camp Kiashuta
near Chester will be held
from Friday , October 24
through Sunday, Oc tober 26.
Highli ghts will include
classes in scouting skills,
s pe cial com petiti on for
troops. and an M-G-M Fall

AlSO SEE.OUR
' -·
FUU UNE Of
FIREPLACE
ACC£SSORIES!

•
•

and

facilities
received
the
coveted " A" rating. Of
course, the Tri.State Area
Council is proud of this
achievement, but it is only
the beginning . '76 Summer
Camp will be even more
se nsationa l. Pictures ac·compa nyi ng this article
suggest the fun and adventure or camp life .

MAJESTIC 36" HEAT
CIRCULATING FIRI!PL,A.CE

•

prog rams

Camporee

SPECIAL

the dislri ct are invited to

attend and all Wehel os will he
a llowed to stay overnight.
Additional details will be
released in a special bulletin
to all troops and packs.
A NEW HOME' The TriState Area Co un cil has
purchased property in
Huntington which will be
renovated to become the new

Seoul Service Cenwr. The
present Center, also located
in Huntington, has been the
rented home of the Counci l
offices seve ral years.
The new property , which
ha s a large b uildin g. will
to meet the needs for the
mo re than 2,000 adult
volunteers in the Council
area. Everyone will be asked
.to lend-a~hand by supplying
labor , materials. an d money
to keep our Council on the

Science ,
Mammals ,
Leatherwork ,
Canoeing ,

First Aid, Citizenship in the
Co mmunit y,
Wilderness

COLUMBUS (UP!)
Wednesday defended the
Three vice presidents of current utility rate-making
Columbia Gas of Ohio, Inc ., formula and me thod of
recovering the increased cost
ATHLETE'S FOOT GERM
HOW TO KILL IT .
IN ONE HOUR .
Slrong, quick -d rying T -4,- L
checks i tch and burning or
your S9c ba c k at any drug
cou nt er
Then , i n 3 -5 days
watch i nfe cted skin slough off .
Watch HEAL THY Ski n ap pear! NOW at

PICKENS HARDWARE CO.
•

1-5:30 MON,THURS.
8 ..:30 FRI,SA T.

MASON,

•

NELSON DRUG STORE

•

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SAL~ FRIDAY, AUG. 22 THRU ~ATURDAY, AUG. 30

LADIES'

MEN'S

1 Rack
PANT SUITS, DRESSES.
SLACKS. BLOUSES AND
BODY SUITS.

Short Sleeve

•

•

by Arrow &amp;· Career Club

REDUCED 20%
SPORT SHIRTS, KNIT SHIRTS
&amp; BANLON SHIRTS

. KNIT DRESSES

REDUCED 40%
'.

By Puritan. Arrow and Jockey .

PANTSUITS ·
by Jantzen, Catalina, Coddington and Lori Lynn in
polyester knit.

REDUCED 40%
:·• •

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'..••

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·'••
••
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ment for gas shortages and
said consumer conservation

was the only immediate way
to alleviate the problem.
Testifying before a joint
legislative committee on fuel
supplies and costs were I.L.
Briscoe, Paul R. Bigley and
Ralph N. Mahaffey.
Briscoe said the purchased
gas adjustment (PGA) clause
by which the gas company
recovers increased fuel costs
"is the only procedure by
which rates are adjusted to
reflect actual changes in the
cost or gas s~ply."

Troops are welcome to camp

ove r

the

weekend,

but

reservations for camPing

must be made at the Scout
Service Center. Participating
units or boys must complete
the reservation form in the
August issue of the Tri-state
Area Council Trefoil and
submi t it prior to arrival at
camp.

REDUCED 20%
1 Rack

·REDUCED

'

Right on the make, a runaway winner ... the
bouncy crepe .soled two-tone build for solid
comfort, good looks and durability. Also fit,
suppqrt, roominess. He's sold ... Mother approves as well!

three or four years?" he

asked.
"The
principal
resource for gas to ease the
strain on curtailed industry
and business ·institutions is
the gas that can be conserved
in millions of Ohio homes."

not increase," Briscoe said.
" This is wrong."

. Mahaffey said gas supplies
are deficient because the
federal government has overregulated, and Congress has
failed to provide proper incentive for exploration and
production.
" While I do not doubt the
sincerity of the members of

heritage house
....

MIDDLEPORT, Ohio

•
""

SEND ALONG THE
THE DAILY SENTINEL
AND SUNDAY TIMES SENTINEL

ROBERT HOEFLICH

City Editor
Pub I is hed daily except
Saturday by The Oh io Vallev.
Publishing co mpany , 111
Court St ., Pomeroy , Ohio
45769 . Bus i nes~1 Office Phone
992 -2156. Editol"i al Phone 992 2157.
Second class postage pa id
at Po~eroy , Ohio .
Ne t ronal
advertising
repre !.en ta tlve
Ward
Griffith Company
I nc
Bottfnelli &amp; Gallagher Oiv "
757 Third Ave, New York'
N .Y . 10017 .
.
'
S)Jbsc r i pt io n
rates ·
Delivered by ca rrier where
available 75 cents per week
By .Moto r Route where
ca rrrer ·
se rvice
not
avada~l~ , One month, SJ.15.
By mall 1n Ohio lind w. va
One
Year.
522 . 00 ; · SiiC
months ,
$11 . 50 ;
Three
onths , $7 .00 . Elsewher e
26 . 00 year ; Six months
13 SO ; three months, S7 . SO
4bscrrptron pr ice mcludes
unday Times Sent rnel

..

COLLEGE BOUND .
·
.
.
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SUITS, SPORT COATS

SPECIAL $fr.
SHORTS, SKIRTS, KNIT
. · TOPS, BLOUSES

·REDUCED 30%
1 Piece

1h ·PRICE .
COATS
M .

••

EXPIRES

we 'II go to any
lengths to make ·
you fashionable

\REDUCED 20%

.

Fashion 's newest by-word:
diamonds:.by-tha-yard.
Quallty diamonds set in 14 Kt.

gold chains. choose the
length of chain ... the number

and size of diamonds thai
match your moOd, befit your

REDUCED 20% _

15" chci in' with 1,
2, J diamonds. All

'·•
'•
;.'

special

others

budget. All diamond ch ains
. . . or diamonds matched with
rubies, emeralds, or sapphires.

•

order .

Open Ti18 Friday-Close

Sat.

..,.• •
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At

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I.
- '-

DEMOCRATS WILL meet
at · Grace Episcopal Parish
House, 8 p.ni.; all committeemen requested to be
present
and
visitors
welcome .
FRIDAY
POMEROY
WOMEN'.S
Bowling Assn. meeting, 7:30
p.m. at Pomeroy Bowling
Lanes ; all members urged to
attend.
GOSPEL SING LcJturing
' the Homeward Bound and the
Stew~t Family from .Hun·.
tington, W. Va. at 7:30p.m. at
the Mason Assembly of God
Church, Dudding Lane,
Mason , W. Va . Chester
Tennant, pastor ,
SATURDAY
BUFFET
SUPPER,
Pythian Sisters Temple, .
Wilkesville, serving 4 to 8
p.m. Public invited, charge,
$2.50 for adults, $1.50 for
children.
MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
alumni meeting, 6
,
Middleport Municipal Park .
All graduates welcome.

· gg~

With
Coupon

0

0

CHECK

MON£Y ORDER

AMT..,. __ _

'

'

I

I

'

.
.

AEROSAL
PWNGER

WINDEX
. 8 oz.
With Sprayer

With
Coupon
Expires a-31-75

79~

Reg.

GULF
CHAROOAL
STARTER

RENUZIT
SOLID AIR
FRESHENER

49~

•

With
Coupon
Expires 8-31 -75

Reg.
7f!

oz . .

7
Good Only at Nelson's ·

59'

With
Coupon
res 8-31-75

I

PRINGLES
TWIN
PAK

SUGAR
TWIN
GRANULATED

49~'

With
Equivalent to 2 lb. sugar Coupon
Good Onl at Nelson's Expi

Reg. '2.19

LILT

~~~:~ $129

AEROSOL

s

SORRY NO REFUND
I

SELSUN BWE
SHAMPOO

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

.

Court St., Pomeroy
.

The Daily sentinel, Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
NAME
ADDRESS---------------- ·
CITY____________ ______ _ --------------·
STATL ______________ ZIP CODE------------·

------------·

r
Goessler Jewelry Store
'

CLIP AND MAIL

___________j_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

UGHJWEIGHT JACKETS

YARDI.IY
Reg.
OLD ENGLISH 47' 431• 39~
LAVENDAR
oz.
SOAP
Good Only at Nelson's
With

$}19

LILT
SPECIAL

ANNUAL picnic of the
Bradbury _Church of Christ
will lie held at the Forest
. Acres Park immediately
following church. Ham will
be provided. Those attending
are to take their own table
service and beverage .

SEPT. 30, 19 75

SUITS AND SPORT OOATS

REDUCED 20%

SWIM SUITS

by Jantzen aild Catalina

'',...
,.''..
••

-

&amp; Hubbard

Reg. '1.12

~II/

TRI..COUNTY Area Corvette Club members to travel
to Dover for the Corvette Star
Spangled Weekend. Leave
7:30a.m. from the Kanauga
Roadside P~k. 8 a.m. from
the Middleport Community
Park . Next meeting Aug. 26, 8 ·
p.m. at the home of Mr..s.
Yvonne Scally, 870 Ash St.,
•
Middleport.
~UN DAY
ANNUAL SWARTZ family
reunion, Woode Grove,
Alfred, basket dinner at noon.

OFFER

.Great Selection of

by Haggard

6-12 PWS•
INSECT
REPEUANT SPRAY

1,1SC 11{ rcrliHzcr,

•

and drinks will be available.
At 8 p.m. public squ~e dance
plus special rock and vocal
numbers and a squ~e dance
demonstration.

ANY COLlEGE IN THE UNITED STATES.

DRESS &amp; CASUAL PANTS

With
Coupon

tlirm.··

1

cream , sandwiches, pie, cake

OFFER GOOD AT

40% ~

Values to $12. 9S

63

~

12's

PUBLIC ICE cream social,
6 p.m: at the archery building
of Royal Oak Park by Bashan
Fire
Department
and
Auxili~y to raise funds for
converting an oil tanker into
a fire truck. Besides ice

FOR ONLY
'18.50
THEY WILl RECEIVE 9 MONTHS OF
THEIR HOMETOWN NEWSPAPER
BY MAIL

Regular $35 to S9q

COnON DRESSES

,•
,

,

Congress, it is my observation that thus far the
majority have done nothing
but study, study, investigate,
investigate, and talk, talk ,"
he said .
Bigley agreed that utilities
could not wait for Congress to
deregulate gas prices, and
said Columbia is importing
liquefied gas from overseas,
planning on a share of the
supply from the trans-Alaska
pipeline and working with
synthetic gas.
"But what about the next

Exec . Ed.

that if PGA clauses were
eliminated, gas rates would

·

LAUREL Cliff Health Club
at the home of Nellie Tracy,
7:30p.m.
SPECIAL Meeting , Shade
Valley Lodge 453 at hall in
Chester, 7:30 p.m. Work in
Master Mason degree.
RO~ SPRINGS Grange, 8
p.m . at the hall .

bring form . The Trading Post
will be closed and the boys
should bring their bag lun ch.

Survival , Basketry, Nature,
Archery , Cooking, Camping,
Weather, Ind ia n Lore and
Fishing.
Skill awards will also be
available .
Each Salurday registration
will be from 8:3().9:15 a. m.
and the sessions will run from
9:30a.m. to 5:30p.m. Scouts
should have their merit
badge application sig ned by
his Scoutmaster . Boys
completing partials should

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS· MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL

is a misconception

and keep it there for a month

mstruct.iuns,

DEAH POLLY -· If a lamp hut s tUff it with old nylo
Ole., curd is , lfJO long wrap tl :hose, press the air (mt, screw
Sh nt~thing gets throWn away arhund ynur brourn handle . ·in the stopper and have a fine
by mistake . We always know for a day or &gt;wo. This will kneelingpadforgardening. [£
jusl where In lc1uk for any cause the cord to spira l Hnd ' can be washed in a jiffy. Ol' AR . POLLY - My net.&gt;;lcd instructions. - MHS. thu s be shortened .
MRS. N. T.
•
daughter
gave me
a M. C.
If a bell ha s holes with out
UEAR MRS. M. C. - This me tal eyes or s tit c hin g
discolored plastic hose holder
You will receive a dollar It
&gt;hnt was in ~ood shape except alsn would be u great id~a to arowtd them apply clear nail Polly uses your favorit e;
for the color . I hun g this on a usc· indoors' for all t~osc polish around the cd~es of the homemaking Idea, Pel
wall in our garage and ils six directions thai come with holes on both sides . Repclll Peeve, Polly' s Problem or
poekels hold the insl.ructions small a ppliances and even when necessary .
solution to a problem. Write'
laundry · directions
lor
ffw everylhin!-: we· use in our
Do not loss away that old Polly In care of this newsgarden and yard such as lawn do thing. - P()LI.Y.
hot water bottle that lea ks, paper.

lit~ns f•,r

THUitSDAY
MAGNOLIA Club,' 7:30 p.
m . at the home of Mrs. Ellen
Couch .

SUMMER SLACKS

••
'

the lighter side

~~There

DRESS SHIRTS

Y2 PRICE

of fuel.
They also placed heavy
blame on the federal govern-

refrigerator tu e liminat e
persistent od ors . When it
evaporales add more vanilla

fri·enrls in their TIC"\\~
I wa s quite in~
lcrcsh·d in huw they kept
their " Happy l-luur" goodies
frum jigl,!lin~ aroWld ~hilc i11
trm •sll . They cui the tops off
' "''' quart milk carlonS and a
bo lllc was slipped into each
carton . They pac k well and
\ "i:llll llC' L

111 o ~·cr

Social
Calendar

move upward .

MERIT BADGES - Any
Scout is welcome to work on
merit badges at Camp
Arrowhead on Saturdays,
Sepl&lt;!mber 20, October 25,
and November 15, 1975. There
will be NO c harge . Each
Scout should bring the proper
merit badge pamphlet and
any special materials he will
need.
Co un selors
will
be
available for the following
merit badges: Rowing, Rifle
and Shotgun Shooting,
Pioneering, Environmental

LISA .
,
DEAR POLLY - Place "
small o pe n co nlaincr or
vanilla ext ra&lt;"! in your

DEAR POLLy - My Pet
Peeve is with those people
who pick up riders at 5:30 in
the morning and blow the
horn when they drive up to

require extensive remodeling

~\·iJh

wh en the car dri ves up . -

STAY FREE

Rate forntula defended by 3 GasCo executives
•

POLLY'S PROBLEM
the hou se . This wakes
DEAR POLLY .:._ Help! 1 everyone in the nei ghbbrhood
bought a new quilted stretch
slipcover for a sofa bed and it
fits fine but I can't keep it in
place where the sofa opens
up . What do l do for this? _
HELEN.
DEAR HELEN - Why not
pull the strip up.to its proper
position. pin to sola to hold it
In place until you can fasten
with long stitches made witb
heavy thread. These stitches
would be very easy to remove
and lben replace when cover
Is cleaned. Masking tape also
might do the job. -POLLY.

Commemorative

Patch. And on Saturday,
October 25. all Cub Scouts of

.-

With
Coupon

'4.5 oz.

VISITED HERE
· The Rev. and Mrs. David
Wiseman and children, Jana,
Evan, and pwen of Woods-•
field spent several days
visiting their p~ents and
grandparents, Mr. an'd Mrs .
Earl Starkey, carpenter; Mr .
and Mrs . Roy Wiseman ,
Harrisonville , ·· and Mrs .
Margaret Parsons, Rutland,

Good Only at Nelson

BRIMMS
DENTURE
BATH

·CRAYOLA
CRAYONS
16 CT. BOX

49~

49'

29~

Expires 8-31 -75

,_
•

'·

•

••

~

I

'

~;~. ~-.L..·.~

''

·•

I'

,'

~.

..

.H 76

.,

,_

•

]

�.....
....-.
-

I

I

-•

i

I

I.

,.

~

'I

4- The Daily Sentinel, M!_ddle£Prt-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Au~. 21, 1975

~:::::::--::Sc:-o-u-.ti~n-g-1

Campers first in
state fair gates ·

I,

•

I)AIIvRe••tinel, Mit!1leport-Pomeroy, 0., :_rhwsday, Aug . 21, 1975

,
'
and sn nu• wllu wlrl'k al nlghl · ur IIIP f't ' . Thi s wnrkcll fur uw 1ht•t'(' is
ctf!,•r all clst• hcuJ fail ed ,
bn•ak;Jgc. Suth carli,ns an.'
iJI't' just ·J.:uing In bed ~nd
IJO'i'Y
.
! ··yin~ ic1 sleep . The ridC'r ·
nlso ~ n!.al It&gt; ·Usc fttr storing
DEAH POJ.!.V - Hcnntly nt h •r lhiu~s while nn a trailer
knuws the car is &lt;'IJIIlin g ami
tuuld bt.• wal&lt;:hing and gu vul. we spcn! a short vacal iun vacatitm . -- ~ O' K.

in any week since November JOBLESS RA fE DOWN
COLUMBUS •(UP! ) - The 1974.
Ohio Bureau of Employment . The number of claims :;
Services said Wednesday the 16,443, represented a dec ·
number of jobless workers in of 34.2 per cent oyer U..:
Ohio filing Initial claims for previous week, said the"'
...
benefits through the week bureau.
ending Aug . 16 was the lowest

.;y POLLY CRAMER

..~

Slipping slijJcover·
,stopped with pins

~

marking the
opening of the annual event.
Among a number of events
at the fair today, were the
Mar ching Band Festival, fea turing nearly 50 lop Ohio high ·
school bands , the 4-H horse
show , and the 4-H general
livestock and dairy cattle
judging.
A new fair feature this year
was the 1850s. " Fair within a
Fair," which openfd at the
Ohio Village. located just
north
of
t·he
main
fa irgrounds . The 1850s fair
featured 19th Century farm
Implement displays and
various craft s demon¢e r ~monies

COLUMBUS ( UP!l
Three Columbus youths, who
have camped near an Ohio
State fairgrounds gale since
July 31, were the first to enter
the grounds toda y as the
122nd State Fair opened.
Twins Harry and Larry
Ar ter, 15, and James
Jameson, 12, were given free
ride tickets and giant stuffed
· animal prizes for being the
first persons to attend this

year's fair .
Gov. James A. Rhodes cut
the ribbon at 6 a.m. in

D&amp;J's

strat ions.
Popular singer-composer
Mac Davis was se t for two

House of Fabrics

Weekend Special!

shows today and Friday in
the fair's continuing program
of free grandstand en-

7/a"

No Roll
ELASTIC

Reg . 44&lt;

tertainment.
Meanwhile,

29c yd.

or 4

Yard s Sl.OO

11 ·1 " Reg . 59c

J9c yd .

motorists

bound for the fair were being
aided by electronic messages
posted at three key Interstate
71 interchanges here.

Ph . 992 ·2810

Mile South ol
Middleport on Rt. 7
I

------~- -

Back-To-School

APPLAUSE!
Camp
Arrowhead Summer Camp
1975.has come to an end and
the M-G -M District was well
represented. Over 100 Boy
Scouts from nine different

troops participated . Taking
pari in this year 's camp were

Troops 242, 257, 200, 230, 208,
l 49, l05. 251. and 259.
Was it worth it' Just ask
any seoul who atl&lt;! nded and
that will be tes timony
enough. Next year's BiCenten nia l Camp l oom~ even
greater. Let's all get the
Spirit of '76 '
SPEAK ING OF CAMP, the
Na~ional

Counci l cam p in-

s pec tors visited
Camp
Arrowhead on .July 16 and
conducted their annual inspection. For the first time in
many years, Arrowhead's
camping

BE
WARM
THIS
WINTER

•
•

STILL CAMPING - Just
linish summer camp and it's
lime to start planning for the
M-G-M Fall Camporee . With
a theme of Pioneering and
Ca mping Skills , the Fall
Camporee at Camp Kiashuta
near Chester will be held
from Friday , October 24
through Sunday, Oc tober 26.
Highli ghts will include
classes in scouting skills,
s pe cial com petiti on for
troops. and an M-G-M Fall

AlSO SEE.OUR
' -·
FUU UNE Of
FIREPLACE
ACC£SSORIES!

•
•

and

facilities
received
the
coveted " A" rating. Of
course, the Tri.State Area
Council is proud of this
achievement, but it is only
the beginning . '76 Summer
Camp will be even more
se nsationa l. Pictures ac·compa nyi ng this article
suggest the fun and adventure or camp life .

MAJESTIC 36" HEAT
CIRCULATING FIRI!PL,A.CE

•

prog rams

Camporee

SPECIAL

the dislri ct are invited to

attend and all Wehel os will he
a llowed to stay overnight.
Additional details will be
released in a special bulletin
to all troops and packs.
A NEW HOME' The TriState Area Co un cil has
purchased property in
Huntington which will be
renovated to become the new

Seoul Service Cenwr. The
present Center, also located
in Huntington, has been the
rented home of the Counci l
offices seve ral years.
The new property , which
ha s a large b uildin g. will
to meet the needs for the
mo re than 2,000 adult
volunteers in the Council
area. Everyone will be asked
.to lend-a~hand by supplying
labor , materials. an d money
to keep our Council on the

Science ,
Mammals ,
Leatherwork ,
Canoeing ,

First Aid, Citizenship in the
Co mmunit y,
Wilderness

COLUMBUS (UP!)
Wednesday defended the
Three vice presidents of current utility rate-making
Columbia Gas of Ohio, Inc ., formula and me thod of
recovering the increased cost
ATHLETE'S FOOT GERM
HOW TO KILL IT .
IN ONE HOUR .
Slrong, quick -d rying T -4,- L
checks i tch and burning or
your S9c ba c k at any drug
cou nt er
Then , i n 3 -5 days
watch i nfe cted skin slough off .
Watch HEAL THY Ski n ap pear! NOW at

PICKENS HARDWARE CO.
•

1-5:30 MON,THURS.
8 ..:30 FRI,SA T.

MASON,

•

NELSON DRUG STORE

•

...
'
'

'.

..,..'

....
.'
•

•

SAL~ FRIDAY, AUG. 22 THRU ~ATURDAY, AUG. 30

LADIES'

MEN'S

1 Rack
PANT SUITS, DRESSES.
SLACKS. BLOUSES AND
BODY SUITS.

Short Sleeve

•

•

by Arrow &amp;· Career Club

REDUCED 20%
SPORT SHIRTS, KNIT SHIRTS
&amp; BANLON SHIRTS

. KNIT DRESSES

REDUCED 40%
'.

By Puritan. Arrow and Jockey .

PANTSUITS ·
by Jantzen, Catalina, Coddington and Lori Lynn in
polyester knit.

REDUCED 40%
:·• •

•'' .
''
•
'
r -

.

.' .
'..••

'.~!
•

•

·'••
••
,.••
,.r'
••••

ment for gas shortages and
said consumer conservation

was the only immediate way
to alleviate the problem.
Testifying before a joint
legislative committee on fuel
supplies and costs were I.L.
Briscoe, Paul R. Bigley and
Ralph N. Mahaffey.
Briscoe said the purchased
gas adjustment (PGA) clause
by which the gas company
recovers increased fuel costs
"is the only procedure by
which rates are adjusted to
reflect actual changes in the
cost or gas s~ply."

Troops are welcome to camp

ove r

the

weekend,

but

reservations for camPing

must be made at the Scout
Service Center. Participating
units or boys must complete
the reservation form in the
August issue of the Tri-state
Area Council Trefoil and
submi t it prior to arrival at
camp.

REDUCED 20%
1 Rack

·REDUCED

'

Right on the make, a runaway winner ... the
bouncy crepe .soled two-tone build for solid
comfort, good looks and durability. Also fit,
suppqrt, roominess. He's sold ... Mother approves as well!

three or four years?" he

asked.
"The
principal
resource for gas to ease the
strain on curtailed industry
and business ·institutions is
the gas that can be conserved
in millions of Ohio homes."

not increase," Briscoe said.
" This is wrong."

. Mahaffey said gas supplies
are deficient because the
federal government has overregulated, and Congress has
failed to provide proper incentive for exploration and
production.
" While I do not doubt the
sincerity of the members of

heritage house
....

MIDDLEPORT, Ohio

•
""

SEND ALONG THE
THE DAILY SENTINEL
AND SUNDAY TIMES SENTINEL

ROBERT HOEFLICH

City Editor
Pub I is hed daily except
Saturday by The Oh io Vallev.
Publishing co mpany , 111
Court St ., Pomeroy , Ohio
45769 . Bus i nes~1 Office Phone
992 -2156. Editol"i al Phone 992 2157.
Second class postage pa id
at Po~eroy , Ohio .
Ne t ronal
advertising
repre !.en ta tlve
Ward
Griffith Company
I nc
Bottfnelli &amp; Gallagher Oiv "
757 Third Ave, New York'
N .Y . 10017 .
.
'
S)Jbsc r i pt io n
rates ·
Delivered by ca rrier where
available 75 cents per week
By .Moto r Route where
ca rrrer ·
se rvice
not
avada~l~ , One month, SJ.15.
By mall 1n Ohio lind w. va
One
Year.
522 . 00 ; · SiiC
months ,
$11 . 50 ;
Three
onths , $7 .00 . Elsewher e
26 . 00 year ; Six months
13 SO ; three months, S7 . SO
4bscrrptron pr ice mcludes
unday Times Sent rnel

..

COLLEGE BOUND .
·
.
.
'

.

SUITS, SPORT COATS

SPECIAL $fr.
SHORTS, SKIRTS, KNIT
. · TOPS, BLOUSES

·REDUCED 30%
1 Piece

1h ·PRICE .
COATS
M .

••

EXPIRES

we 'II go to any
lengths to make ·
you fashionable

\REDUCED 20%

.

Fashion 's newest by-word:
diamonds:.by-tha-yard.
Quallty diamonds set in 14 Kt.

gold chains. choose the
length of chain ... the number

and size of diamonds thai
match your moOd, befit your

REDUCED 20% _

15" chci in' with 1,
2, J diamonds. All

'·•
'•
;.'

special

others

budget. All diamond ch ains
. . . or diamonds matched with
rubies, emeralds, or sapphires.

•

order .

Open Ti18 Friday-Close

Sat.

..,.• •
~

'

'

'.••

At

/.'

.

"

•.

,, ':::,

•.

I.
- '-

DEMOCRATS WILL meet
at · Grace Episcopal Parish
House, 8 p.ni.; all committeemen requested to be
present
and
visitors
welcome .
FRIDAY
POMEROY
WOMEN'.S
Bowling Assn. meeting, 7:30
p.m. at Pomeroy Bowling
Lanes ; all members urged to
attend.
GOSPEL SING LcJturing
' the Homeward Bound and the
Stew~t Family from .Hun·.
tington, W. Va. at 7:30p.m. at
the Mason Assembly of God
Church, Dudding Lane,
Mason , W. Va . Chester
Tennant, pastor ,
SATURDAY
BUFFET
SUPPER,
Pythian Sisters Temple, .
Wilkesville, serving 4 to 8
p.m. Public invited, charge,
$2.50 for adults, $1.50 for
children.
MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
alumni meeting, 6
,
Middleport Municipal Park .
All graduates welcome.

· gg~

With
Coupon

0

0

CHECK

MON£Y ORDER

AMT..,. __ _

'

'

I

I

'

.
.

AEROSAL
PWNGER

WINDEX
. 8 oz.
With Sprayer

With
Coupon
Expires a-31-75

79~

Reg.

GULF
CHAROOAL
STARTER

RENUZIT
SOLID AIR
FRESHENER

49~

•

With
Coupon
Expires 8-31 -75

Reg.
7f!

oz . .

7
Good Only at Nelson's ·

59'

With
Coupon
res 8-31-75

I

PRINGLES
TWIN
PAK

SUGAR
TWIN
GRANULATED

49~'

With
Equivalent to 2 lb. sugar Coupon
Good Onl at Nelson's Expi

Reg. '2.19

LILT

~~~:~ $129

AEROSOL

s

SORRY NO REFUND
I

SELSUN BWE
SHAMPOO

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

.

Court St., Pomeroy
.

The Daily sentinel, Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
NAME
ADDRESS---------------- ·
CITY____________ ______ _ --------------·
STATL ______________ ZIP CODE------------·

------------·

r
Goessler Jewelry Store
'

CLIP AND MAIL

___________j_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

UGHJWEIGHT JACKETS

YARDI.IY
Reg.
OLD ENGLISH 47' 431• 39~
LAVENDAR
oz.
SOAP
Good Only at Nelson's
With

$}19

LILT
SPECIAL

ANNUAL picnic of the
Bradbury _Church of Christ
will lie held at the Forest
. Acres Park immediately
following church. Ham will
be provided. Those attending
are to take their own table
service and beverage .

SEPT. 30, 19 75

SUITS AND SPORT OOATS

REDUCED 20%

SWIM SUITS

by Jantzen aild Catalina

'',...
,.''..
••

-

&amp; Hubbard

Reg. '1.12

~II/

TRI..COUNTY Area Corvette Club members to travel
to Dover for the Corvette Star
Spangled Weekend. Leave
7:30a.m. from the Kanauga
Roadside P~k. 8 a.m. from
the Middleport Community
Park . Next meeting Aug. 26, 8 ·
p.m. at the home of Mr..s.
Yvonne Scally, 870 Ash St.,
•
Middleport.
~UN DAY
ANNUAL SWARTZ family
reunion, Woode Grove,
Alfred, basket dinner at noon.

OFFER

.Great Selection of

by Haggard

6-12 PWS•
INSECT
REPEUANT SPRAY

1,1SC 11{ rcrliHzcr,

•

and drinks will be available.
At 8 p.m. public squ~e dance
plus special rock and vocal
numbers and a squ~e dance
demonstration.

ANY COLlEGE IN THE UNITED STATES.

DRESS &amp; CASUAL PANTS

With
Coupon

tlirm.··

1

cream , sandwiches, pie, cake

OFFER GOOD AT

40% ~

Values to $12. 9S

63

~

12's

PUBLIC ICE cream social,
6 p.m: at the archery building
of Royal Oak Park by Bashan
Fire
Department
and
Auxili~y to raise funds for
converting an oil tanker into
a fire truck. Besides ice

FOR ONLY
'18.50
THEY WILl RECEIVE 9 MONTHS OF
THEIR HOMETOWN NEWSPAPER
BY MAIL

Regular $35 to S9q

COnON DRESSES

,•
,

,

Congress, it is my observation that thus far the
majority have done nothing
but study, study, investigate,
investigate, and talk, talk ,"
he said .
Bigley agreed that utilities
could not wait for Congress to
deregulate gas prices, and
said Columbia is importing
liquefied gas from overseas,
planning on a share of the
supply from the trans-Alaska
pipeline and working with
synthetic gas.
"But what about the next

Exec . Ed.

that if PGA clauses were
eliminated, gas rates would

·

LAUREL Cliff Health Club
at the home of Nellie Tracy,
7:30p.m.
SPECIAL Meeting , Shade
Valley Lodge 453 at hall in
Chester, 7:30 p.m. Work in
Master Mason degree.
RO~ SPRINGS Grange, 8
p.m . at the hall .

bring form . The Trading Post
will be closed and the boys
should bring their bag lun ch.

Survival , Basketry, Nature,
Archery , Cooking, Camping,
Weather, Ind ia n Lore and
Fishing.
Skill awards will also be
available .
Each Salurday registration
will be from 8:3().9:15 a. m.
and the sessions will run from
9:30a.m. to 5:30p.m. Scouts
should have their merit
badge application sig ned by
his Scoutmaster . Boys
completing partials should

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS· MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL

is a misconception

and keep it there for a month

mstruct.iuns,

DEAH POLLY -· If a lamp hut s tUff it with old nylo
Ole., curd is , lfJO long wrap tl :hose, press the air (mt, screw
Sh nt~thing gets throWn away arhund ynur brourn handle . ·in the stopper and have a fine
by mistake . We always know for a day or &gt;wo. This will kneelingpadforgardening. [£
jusl where In lc1uk for any cause the cord to spira l Hnd ' can be washed in a jiffy. Ol' AR . POLLY - My net.&gt;;lcd instructions. - MHS. thu s be shortened .
MRS. N. T.
•
daughter
gave me
a M. C.
If a bell ha s holes with out
UEAR MRS. M. C. - This me tal eyes or s tit c hin g
discolored plastic hose holder
You will receive a dollar It
&gt;hnt was in ~ood shape except alsn would be u great id~a to arowtd them apply clear nail Polly uses your favorit e;
for the color . I hun g this on a usc· indoors' for all t~osc polish around the cd~es of the homemaking Idea, Pel
wall in our garage and ils six directions thai come with holes on both sides . Repclll Peeve, Polly' s Problem or
poekels hold the insl.ructions small a ppliances and even when necessary .
solution to a problem. Write'
laundry · directions
lor
ffw everylhin!-: we· use in our
Do not loss away that old Polly In care of this newsgarden and yard such as lawn do thing. - P()LI.Y.
hot water bottle that lea ks, paper.

lit~ns f•,r

THUitSDAY
MAGNOLIA Club,' 7:30 p.
m . at the home of Mrs. Ellen
Couch .

SUMMER SLACKS

••
'

the lighter side

~~There

DRESS SHIRTS

Y2 PRICE

of fuel.
They also placed heavy
blame on the federal govern-

refrigerator tu e liminat e
persistent od ors . When it
evaporales add more vanilla

fri·enrls in their TIC"\\~
I wa s quite in~
lcrcsh·d in huw they kept
their " Happy l-luur" goodies
frum jigl,!lin~ aroWld ~hilc i11
trm •sll . They cui the tops off
' "''' quart milk carlonS and a
bo lllc was slipped into each
carton . They pac k well and
\ "i:llll llC' L

111 o ~·cr

Social
Calendar

move upward .

MERIT BADGES - Any
Scout is welcome to work on
merit badges at Camp
Arrowhead on Saturdays,
Sepl&lt;!mber 20, October 25,
and November 15, 1975. There
will be NO c harge . Each
Scout should bring the proper
merit badge pamphlet and
any special materials he will
need.
Co un selors
will
be
available for the following
merit badges: Rowing, Rifle
and Shotgun Shooting,
Pioneering, Environmental

LISA .
,
DEAR POLLY - Place "
small o pe n co nlaincr or
vanilla ext ra&lt;"! in your

DEAR POLLy - My Pet
Peeve is with those people
who pick up riders at 5:30 in
the morning and blow the
horn when they drive up to

require extensive remodeling

~\·iJh

wh en the car dri ves up . -

STAY FREE

Rate forntula defended by 3 GasCo executives
•

POLLY'S PROBLEM
the hou se . This wakes
DEAR POLLY .:._ Help! 1 everyone in the nei ghbbrhood
bought a new quilted stretch
slipcover for a sofa bed and it
fits fine but I can't keep it in
place where the sofa opens
up . What do l do for this? _
HELEN.
DEAR HELEN - Why not
pull the strip up.to its proper
position. pin to sola to hold it
In place until you can fasten
with long stitches made witb
heavy thread. These stitches
would be very easy to remove
and lben replace when cover
Is cleaned. Masking tape also
might do the job. -POLLY.

Commemorative

Patch. And on Saturday,
October 25. all Cub Scouts of

.-

With
Coupon

'4.5 oz.

VISITED HERE
· The Rev. and Mrs. David
Wiseman and children, Jana,
Evan, and pwen of Woods-•
field spent several days
visiting their p~ents and
grandparents, Mr. an'd Mrs .
Earl Starkey, carpenter; Mr .
and Mrs . Roy Wiseman ,
Harrisonville , ·· and Mrs .
Margaret Parsons, Rutland,

Good Only at Nelson

BRIMMS
DENTURE
BATH

·CRAYOLA
CRAYONS
16 CT. BOX

49~

49'

29~

Expires 8-31 -75

,_
•

'·

•

••

~

I

'

~;~. ~-.L..·.~

''

·•

I'

,'

~.

..

.H 76

.,

,_

•

]

�I .

I

'
&gt;

Wellsville is :scene of
Barber family 's reunion

By Charlene Hoeflich
While eating her sack lunch at a recent fl ower arranging
course, the. instructor, Mrs. James Jackson, began talking
about her favorite foods and bouncing recipes around while
several of us scrambled for pencils to gel it all on paper. Mrs.
Jackson pulls no punches about the fa ct th. ,t she considers
herself an expert of fast' meals, as well as flower arranging.
As yet we haven't tried the recipes but we pass t hem along
to you. The first one is called "Galushka", a Hungarian dish.
Chop a ·small head of cabbage and fry it tn one sttck ot oteo
until it's tender. While the cabbage is cooking cook one-half
package of wide noodles unW done, and then mix the two and
sunmer for a few minutes . Mrs. JacksOn says she has the time
yet to see any leftovers of this.
The second rO!'ipe is one which is economical, nutritiQ)IS as
well as fast, she says, and has no name since it 's an original.
Mrs. Jackson says to cook one-half package of wide
; noodles, add cubes of'spam, put in four one-half inch slices of
: Velvelta cheese cut into cubes, and one-half cup of flour mixed
• in'·' cup of water. Stir, season, and serve. Mrs. Jackson says
; that hot noodles warm the spam, melt the cheese, and thicken
: the flour mixture without further cooking.
At our house everyone loves cookies and we 're always
: anxious to add a new kind to our many favorites . Yesterda)'',
: Carrie Neutzling passed along a recipe for "Easy Cookies."
She tasted some made by a sister senior citizen and thinks they
: are just about the best cOokie she's eaten.
The recipe is simple a nd versatile.
Just take a cake mix, flavor of your own choice, add two
: eggs and a small carton of cool whip , mix thoroughly, th en
, drop by teaspoonsful mto powdered sugar a nd form into a ball .
: Bake these balls for tO minutes at 350degrees.
That's it!

;

What a difference · ~egetables fresh from the garden make

• inameal.
;
The tomatoes, the corn , the cucumbers the lima beans
: enjoy tbem now and remember that for the v~ry best in flavor'
; corn should be eaten as soon as possible after it's been picked:

Final plans complete
Final plans have been
for the marriage of
: Paula Elizabeth Morris ,
; daughter of Mr. and Mrs .
; Robert B. Morris, Rt. I,
, Middleport, and Dale Blake
: Whitt, son of Mr. and Mrs.
; Basil Whitt, Gallipolis.
• The open church ceremony
:will take place at the
; Pomerov Urlite~ MethOdist

i made

Novettys, Gifts,

flowers, etc.
Smalley's Gift Shop
Chester, Ohio
Phone 985-3537

EDEN - The Barber
Family reunion was held al
/he Hammon park in Wellsville las I Sur day .
A ll c ndin~
were
Mrs .
Marlha Holsinger, Mr. and
Mrs . Sol Bigley , Mr . and Mrs.
Ruberl
Webb,
Aleshia
Holsinger, Mr . and Mrs .
Ronald
Buchanan
and
family, Dorelia M., Martin,
Lonny , Sleven and Regina
Travis; Lois, John and Ricky
Young: Allie Mack, Mr . and
Mrs. Ray Cooper and family,

JOR ALL
YOUR BUILDING
NEEDS

LUMBER . .( S0fPLY CO.
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

-

BEND
TIRE CENTER

Project work was planned
durmg meetings of the three
c1~cles or the B. H. Sanborn
MISSionary Society of the
Middleport First Baptist
Church Tuesday night.
The Circles received home
and foreign missionary
asstgnments and throughout
th e next year will be sending
g tfts for birthdays a nd
hohdays. Remembrances for
sh utms ~uring the past month
were reported and the circles'
began a study program 00

' CANDY
BARS

Prices Effective

lHURSDAY
FRIDAY
SATURDAY
SUNDAY

Mr. and Mrs. Okey Pullins
CELEBRAT ION PLANNED ~ A celebration
honoring Mr. and Mrs. Okey Pullins will be held Sunday
from I to 4 p.m . at their home, Rt . 2, Coolville . Hosting the
observance will be their children . Relatives and friends
are invited to call during the open house hours. The family
requests gifts be om itted.

·.·.

.::::

It fits a family-size
washer and dryer in a
single slim cabinet just
2 feet wide.
Modtl LC·2

WITH OUR BETTER BUYS-

Mrs . E . P . Crispin, Glenna
Mi lh oan, Long Botton; Mr.
and Mrs. Hobart Newell ,
Chester; Mr. and Mrs .
Charl es Curtis, Chri s and
An drew , Mr. and Mrs . Paul
Cur tis, Gary , Donna and
Alban Ray, Mr. a nd Mrs .
David Seals, Mr. and Mrs.
Warren Rathburn, Ricky,
Sandra, Drema, James and
Diana, Dayto n ; San dra
Curtis. Van Cleve, Ky .;
Virgin ia Reynolds and Steve,
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Stalnaker,
Parkersburg, W. Va.; Mr .
and Mrs. Douglas Bissell ,
Brian. Mike , Royce, Brent,
and Timot hy, Mr. and Mrs.
Ted Sedgwic k, Tup pers
Plains; Hazel M. Curtis, Mr .
and Mrs . Perry Curtis, Mr .
and Mrs. John Brewer,
Reedsville .

•43995
BAKER
FURNITURE
Middleport

PAMPERS

tiny tab let and easy to take .
MONADEX wi ll help curb
your desire for excess food .
Eat tess - weigh tess . Con ·
tain s no dangerous drugs and

ONLY

280's

POLAROID
POLACOLOR 2-TYPE 108
. FILM Reg. •5.99
ONLY

$ 99

will not make yo u ner vous . No
stre nuous exercise . Change
your
l i f e . . . sta rt today .

MONA DEX cost SJ .OO for a 20
day su pply

Large econ omy

size
is
S5 .00 . Also
try
AQUATABS . they work gently
to he lp you lose water bloa t .
AQ UA TABS - a ·•water pill "
that works 53 .00 . Both
auaranteed and sold bv :
Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy

112 E Ma in Street
Dutton Drug Stor e
Middleport
Mail Order s F i ll ed

·

14 oz., Reg. '1.85

.RIGHT GUARD

THE KIDDIE SHOP

$ 19

DEODORANT

Middleport, Ohio

,------

ONLY

8 oz., Reg. •1.99

.Right

B-D FEVER
tHERMOMETER

Reserved

To limit

984
ONLY

Reg~ 2.00
1

Quantities.

5 gr., 100 tabs
Reg. 11.37 Only

I

I

774

POMEROY

in young footwear for
campus . casual or
dress wear: See our
new · selection for all
back-to-schoolers .

"I

for relief ofslous
headache a_1:-d congestion.

30 TabletS

S469
ONLY
·

Reg. $2.69

Chloraseptlc
'
Mouthwasl} &amp; Gargle
'

'

97~

6 Ol. with 'Sprayer
Reg. $1.7l : ONLY ,
c

DGUE

·.

.

.

Band-Aids
30 Plastic or Sheer Strips
'
1inch Wide
Reg. $1.19
~
.
·
ONLY - ..

I ,

I'

II

77

"

.!

EVERYTHING FOR

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

BE.N,FRAN
KLII)I
PHONE
200-202 EAST MAIN STREET

._?92-3498 ·

·

POMEROY OHIO

NOW
WITH OUR
OUTSIDE WHIT£
...,.

PAINT
BUY!
0

0

EXTERIOR HOUSE PAINT
• HIGH GlOSS
• IIEADY·MIXED
• MUlTIPlE PIGMENT

'

' -I

'·\

'\
••

Quality

•

Assorted colors

.,

704

~

To

Ebersbach Ha{d.ware·

$} !JI
MIDDLEPORT

·---~1...--D-EP_A_RT_M-EN_T_S_l_O_R_E_

·---·------

~.

Ll~

.

TUBE SOX

. '··~· 0.
I'

Middleport

SCHOOL SALE

1sf

I

The tough one. With
tough leather. Thick
grip hiker sQie. Have
your boy tie up to a pair.
. We'll fit him perfectly.

BEN FRANKLIN

In
Blue- Red - Gold
White: Black
or Maroon

FASHION FOO TWEA R

______SCHOO__l OPENS AUG. 26
.
....

THE
SHOE BOX

I

No irregulars

· Klnn'slomer

4 '

RE;TURN WEST
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bales
and Mrs. Anna Lowdenbach
have returned to Yakima,
Wash. after spending several
days in Pome roy visiting Mr.
and Mrs. Orval Wiles and
family.

POMEROY

BASKETBALL
SHOES

. - $169

ONLY

Mrs . Henry Hensley and
family , Mrs. Robert Hensley
and family, Diana and John
Evans, Mr. and Mrs. John
Hensley and Dick, Mrs.
Perry Carpenter, Mr . . and
Mrs. Tony Liter and Richard ,
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Carpenter and sons, and Leona
Hensley, all of Long Bottom . .
Guests were Mrs. Ethel
Carter and Douglas Tate,
Long Bottom, and Mr. and
Mrs . David Carter a nd
family, Pomeroy .

VISIT YOUR

MEN'S &amp; BOYS
CONVERSE
All STAR

Fashion
Wedgies
.:'

High Potency
VItamin
,
'
formula W~tlth Minerals
30 free with 100

.
Reg. '7 .89

BErn OHLINGER
102 E. MAIN

SINUTABS

THERAGRAN, .M
Wheel Chairs
Walkers ·
Crutches and Canes
Back Braces
Bedside Commodes
· Support Stockings
Trusses
Traction Equipment
. Elastic Supports
Surgical Dressings

1

BAYER
ASPIRIN

Rap:
When Mom got her new job, it means me coming home
from school to cook supper. Now that school is out , I've got the
res~si~ty of the whole house ~ cleaning, cooking,
washmg, rronmg, and at 16, I'm not ready. to be a complete
housewife.
My sisters and brothers don't help a bit . A concert is
coming up and Mom said I couldn't go because I'm not old
enough. But I'm old enough to take over a whole house. Please
.. help! ~ NEEDS MORE PRIVILEGES

DAUGHTER BORN
S Sgt. and Mrs. Roger S.
Alkire, the former Charldine
King, of 1301 Bailey No. 1,
Edwards Air Force Base,
Calif., announce the birth of a
daughter, Deborah Ann, Aug .
16. Maternal grandparents
are Mr . and Mrs. Charles C.
King, Rl. I, Rutland, and
paternal grandparents are
Mr . and Mrs . Felix Alkire,
Rt. 4, Pomeroy. Greatgrandparents are Mrs . Mary
Diehl and Mr . and Mrs.
Charles Ca pteina Sr ., of
Pomeroy.

PORTLAND ~ The annual
rcuniorr of the descendants of
Mr . and Mrs. H. A. Hensley
was(held at the Portland Park
Sunday with 63 in attendance .
Grace by Anna Liter
preceded the portluck dinner.
It was decided to have the
1976 reunion on the first
Saturday in August. Mrs.
Leona Hensley conducted a
short program . Gifts an~
recognition were given to
Geo r ge, John, Beverly,
Chuckie and Paul Hensley,
David and Cathy Carter, and
Tommy : Haley, all having
birthdays in August; Tony
Liter, the oldest man attending; Mrs. Ethel Ca rter
and Anna Liter, the oldest
women; a nd Brian Long, the
you nge st mem ber of the
family at the reunion . Roger
Carpe nter won the door prize.
A memoria l service was
held for Mary Lou Evans who
died in June , and a ll deceased
members of the Anna Liter
and Leona Hensley families .
A social lime was hel.d during
the afternoon with games of
horseshoe and softball .
Present were Mr. and Mrs .
Charles H. Murray and Mr .
and Mrs . Wilbur Rowley Jr.
and family, Ironton; Mr. and
Mrs . Charles Murray, Canal
Winchester ; Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Simms ahd family,
Ga llipolis; Mr . and Mrs.
Rodney Spencer and family,
Columbus ; Debbie, Tammy,
Kim and Christie Haley ,
Gallipolis; George and
Delores Hensley and family ,
Mr. and Mrs. Max Long and
Brian, Mrs. J ohn C. Hensley
and sons, Tuppers Plains;
George 0. Hensley, Mr. a nd

---·-·-------,

II Marguerite's Shoes

SEETHE REDS
EDEN ~ Mr . and Mrs. Sol
Bigley and Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Webb attended the
Reds' baseball game tn
Cincinnati Thursday .

Dear Back :
You may be right . The more we learn about body
language, the more likely we are to put it in code. But consider
this: since you've been practicing the " loose sit," the "forward
lean," the "eyecatching look," etc. , haven't you felt a difference in your personality? And in the way people accept you
- whi~, of course, affects the way you feel about yourself?
If It works, don 't knock it ~ even if at first you force body
language to lie about the real yo u. ~ HELEN AND SUE

The Meigs County youth
rally for area Churches of
Christ was held recently at
the Ohio Valley Christia n
Assembly campgrounds at
Darwin with the Bradbury
Church of Christ winning both
the altendance and per·
ce nta ge banners .
The New Creations of the
Bradbury Church presented a
skit on the beheading of John
the Baptist. Wilma Davidson ,
pres ident , conducted roll call
with Bradbury having 15 in
attendance; · Zion, II; and
Bradford, one .
Sharon Bing who will be
attending Kentucky Christian
College !his fall resigned as
treasurer . Tammy Sta nley
was appointed to fill the office . Plans were made for
another youth retreat at the
camp, a swimming party, ic~
and roller skating this fall .
Kathy Girton of the Zion
Church led in group singing or
choruses wi th Mrs. Maryln
Wilcox as pianist.
The next meeting will be
. held at the Zion Church of
ChristSepll4 at 1 p.m . with a
potluck dinner .

. Club enjoys annual picnic

LAY-A-WAY NOW!

ONLY

But maybe others are getting like me. I know aU the body
language signs now, like crossed arms and legs mean you're
·:closed off," and leaning forward means acceptance, etc. So
I ve training myself to sit loose, arxllook people straight in the
eye, and not cock my head sideways (skepticism, supposedly ),
and lean toward the person I'm talking to. But I'm still scared
underneath.
And I'm wondering if very vulnerable persons aren't
practicing the " crossed arm" look lor protection.
IBn 't this a case of when everyone is taught the •'laugnage"
it can't really read any more? ~ BACK TO WORDS AGAIN
MAYBE
'

·

Dear Mother of NMP:
Daughters who are turned into full-time housekeepers
.soon stop being daughters. Wise up before you lose your child !
The New Creations of the - HELEN AND SUE
Bradbury Church of Christ
presented a program Sunday
at the Logan First Church of
Christ.
The annual family picnic of Chester and Tuppers Plains
Mike Miller had the
scripture ; John Blake the the Young Wives Club of was held r ecently at Royal
Oak Park .
sermonette; and music was
Bailey, June Hutton, Desi
presented by the group.
Jeffers,
Sharon Bing, Lisa
Attending were Larry and
Accompanying the youth
Rous
h,
Mike
Mlller,
Kevin
Sara
Bailey and Brian;
were Jeanette and Jeremy
Sherri
Barnbart,
John
King,
Es ther Mays, Jeff and Dean;
Ranson, Mrs. Maryln Wilcox
Blake,
Randy
Haynes
and
Lila
and Don VanMeter and
and Mrs. Sharon Kuhn.
David
Cole.
A! vena; Sheila and Bob
Youth going were Beverly
The
Logan
youth
e
nWhal
ey, Arron' · and Amy;
and Brian Wilcox, Mary Ann
tertained
with
a
wiener
roast
Elmer a nd Karen Young,
Tripp, Tammy and Christy
following
the
program
.
Gerry
and Mike ; Marilyn
~ta n ley, Rita__ ~'!d Rodney
Spencer, Trisha a nd Donnie;
SEE DRAMA
Danny and Linda F linner,
Nineteen junior and se nior
Frank and Doug; Jayne and
high school students of the
Roger Coates; Darrel a nd
Middleport Fi r st Baptist
Norma Hawthorne, Laura,
Church a nd their g ue sts
Tim and David; Lois and Don
traveled by church bus to
Kerr .
Chillicothe Tuesday evening
to see the outdoor drama,
The next meeting will be a
"Tecumseh". Accompanying products party at the Chester
the young people were Bob Fire Hall . All interested
Parker, the Rev. and Mrs . persons are welcome to atPeter Granda! and Mrs . lend.
Marjorie Walburn .

Large Selection
Of Carter's Palamas
and Gowns

$ 09

BABY POWDER

+++

Dear Helen and Sue:
, When I read my first book oit hody language 1 thought,
Wow , now I can read people, even if they doli"! always say
their real feelings."
·

Program is
presented

SIZES INFANT TO 14

JOHNSON'S

+++

Tick:
Either that or hit him with a blunt instrument ~ like your
foot or your fist ~ when he gets aggressive. Sometimes the
knowledge that a girl can dish out as good as she gets will stop
a guy's clowning around. ~ SUE

LOVE JOY CJRCLE
During the Love Joy Circle
at the home of Mrs. Mary
Hughes , Mrs. Lillie Hubbard
announced that Richard
Kane of Cincinnati, a student
at Judson College, will be the
scholarship student to be
assisted during the year. It
was also noted that the
foreign missionaries to be
remembered during tbe year
are Mr. and Mrs. &lt;llarles
Huff . Arrangements were
made for the circle to provide
refreshments for the October
Sanhorn Society meeting .
Mrs .
Katie
Anthony
presided at the meeting with
Mrs. Mary Hughes giving
devotions. Mrs _ June Kloes
had the program on the
theme, " Affrming Our
Faith" . Others attending
were Miss Rhoda Hall, Mrs.
Sarah Owen , Mrs. Eva
Hartley and Mrs. Oeida
Chase .

Park is.setting of
Hensley reunion · •

· rally
held

Rap:
. My boyfriend, 18, has always been an aggressive, ;~lrnost
vtolentlype. I've known him most of my life, and while he's
usuaUy gentle with me, be'~ a ftghter.
Recently he's done some things that worry me . One night
as ·we were watching TV, he grabbed me and tied my hands
behind my back, seemingly as a joke. He then took off my
boots arxl stockings and started tick)ing my feet until ! .got
hysterical, even though I begged him to stop. He seemed to
enjoy hearing me beg .
Now, he's come up with a new game. He starts boxing with
me, and actually tries to land a punch, sometimes. And he
won 'l stop when I tell him it hurts.
Is he some kind of sadist, or just normally teasing ? TICKUSH
\
TICKLISH :
I'd say it's more than normal teasing, but less than sadism
t which means sexual cruelty) . Make it plain to him that this
kind of treatment will make him an Ex-B.F ., and if he keeps on
bullying, follow through ! ~ HELEN

money back . MONADEX is a

With
Fashions By
• Health-Tex
• Carter's
• Cinderella
e Billy The Kid

FACIAL TISSUES

All in li'un -ur Sadism?

DORCAS CIRCLE
Hosting
the Dorcas Circle
ELECfA CIRCLE
meeting
was
Mrs. Elizabeth
Meeting at the home of
Mrs. Roma Hawkins, the Gardher. Mrs . Elizabeth
l': lecta Circle members were Slavin, chairwoman, gave tbe
asked to collect newspaper prayer and announced a
items on Nicaragua, the shower honoring_ . Teresa
co untry
where
their Granda! Casto, daughter ~f
the Rev. and Mrs. Peter
missionary serves.
Granda!.
It was noted that a plate of
Cards were sent to Mrs.
cookies had been taken to
Dana
Hamm,
Arcadia
Mrs. Florence Hannay , a
Nursing Home, Coolville ,
shutin member. Yearbooks
were distributed and a bir- who will also be remembered
with a gift. Round robin cards
thday poem was read for
those celebrating birthdays were signed for Mrs. Frances
this month . Mrs . John Bearhs, a patient at the
Werner presided arxl also Holzer Medical Center, and
presented the program on the for Mrs. Irene Cross who
topic " Affirin the Faith and remains ill . The foreign
missionary to be rememAct Responsively. "
bered during the year is
Ice cream and cake were
Elwyn Duane Gibbs.
Sllfved to Mrs. Werner, Mrs.
Mrs. Paul Smart gave the
Louise Davis, Pearl Hoffman, Mrs. Gwinnie White, program on faith using three
Mrs. Beulah White, Mrs. topics, "Past and Present",
Freda Hood, Mrs. Clara Mae "Where to Put Your Roots"
Darst, Mrs. Eloise Wilson and "Becoming Strong and
Mrs. Isabelle Winebrenner: Vigorous" . A discussion
Mrs. Edith Sauer and Miss followed. Others attending
were Mrs. Florence Rhodes,
Dorothy Reynolds.
Mrs. Pauline Hoffman, Mrs.
Freda Edwards, Mrs. Sarah
LOSE UGLY FAT Fowler and a guest, Michl
Start losing weight today or King .

NOW ONLY

PUFFS

By Helen and Sue Bottel

faith .

$ 94

DAYTIME 30's

Bob Wilson, Wellsv ille ;
Howard Johnson, Mr. and ::::::::::::::::::·:·:·:::·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:::·:::::::·:::·::::::::::;.:;:::::::
Mrs. Don Griffith and David,
Degree Day for Meigs
Gra nvill e; Ina Sanford,
County Granges is planned
Johnstown; Mr . and Mrs .
at
Racine Grange Sept. 21
John Muska, Mr. and Mrs.
All granges in the county
Joe Ball, Mr. and Mrs.
ca n participate. All four
Gordon Seese, Co lumbus;
degrees will be exe mMr . and Mrs. Brian Br adford
plified. El'eryone is to
and Barry, Wooster.
bring food for a potluck
Lottie Bradford , Mr . and
suppe r to follow . CanMrs . Clarence Bradford, Mr .
didates will be a ble to get
and Mrs . Robert Ashley ,
the fifth degree at the
Keith and Heidi, Racine ; Mr.
Nol'ember m eeti ng of
a nd Mrs. Bruce Smith,
Meigs County Pomona
Athens; Edith L. Cur ti s,
Grange. The State Grange
Akron; Anita Raines, Dan
and:·· Lori , Clint on; Mary . degree along with the
National Gra nge degree
Pierce, Mr. and ·Mrs. Dennis
Long and Billie Jo, Mr. and . will be conferred at the
time of National Grange
Mrs . John Newell, J eff,
Session in Co lumbus Nov.
Scotty and Misty, Mr. and
15. Gra nges are urged to
secure candid ates for all
degrees.

Short Sleeve Shirts
Casual Slacks
Jeans·
Tube Sock~
Hose &amp; Underw'ear
Gym Shorts
J Athletic Supporters
Footbiill Jerseys

35~ ,

--------

held at park

Youngstown i Mr. and Mrs.

FOR

I.

68th reunt•0 n

School

House

.

15. Number uf persons who" ...~-~~~"""!--attended worship services
the Lowest
was 122. Offering was $110.48.
Mr. and Mrs . Sidney
Tire Prices
Leifheit, g randdaughter,
CCJ lum bus, attended morning
I n the Area
service al lhe local church.
It's
Coen,
Mr .
and
Mrs .
Raymond Amos and family,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Buchanan and family , Mr .
and Mrs. Dick Green and
family , Mr. and Mrs. Ron
Mason, W. Va .
713-S881
Barber and family and Ivan
Barber. ~ ~:~rtha Holsinger . ~

Project work planned.
by missionary circles

ALL 15*

For ·

Naw York
.Clothing

BY Jlt:RTHA PARKER
Rev. David Wiseman and
Sabbath Sehoul attendance family, Woodsfteld, attended
Au~ . 17 al the Free Methodist murning services. They also
was 100. Choir members were · san~ 1wo special nwnbers .

j

SELECTION
&amp; SAVINGS .

i'

Mr . and Mrs .. Robert Kyle,
and Bobbie, Amy Thomas,
Michele and Jennifer; lccie
Cooper, Mabel Moore, Bob,
Jidgc and Tom Barber John
and . Edith Barber, Debbie
and John Barber, Mr. and.
Mrs. Robert Mack and
family , Mr. and Mrs. James
Paar, Mr. and Mrs: Dennis
Manbeck and Todd, Mr. and
Mrs. Alfred Reinagle, Mr.
and Mrs . Harry D. McClure
and family, Mrs . Hazel
Buchanan, Mrs . Maxine

Laurel ruff News Notes . ·

..._;'

Church, Sunday at 2:30 p.m. 1
The 68th annual reunion of
with the Rev. Robert Hayden
the descenda nts of Hoit of
officia tin g. Prior to the
ceremony music will be Mary Foster Curtis was held
Aug. 17 at Forked Run Slate
played by Mrs . Carrie
Park.
. Neutzling.
One hundred relat ives and
Matron of honor will be
friends were present to enjO)'
Mrs. Jyl Ze rkle, maid of
the day and a dinner. A
honor, Miss Maureen Henp,rayer was given by Douglas
nessy ; and bridesmaid , Bissell .
Amilda Noll. Ray Weiher will
Present we re Molly Pul be best man , and the ushers
lins, E lmer Swank,Mr. ·· an d
will be David Gerard and
Mrs
. Wade Moreland, Mr.
Keith Edmonds. Registering
and Mrs . harold DeWolf,
guests will be Mindy Young .
Newark; Mr . and Mrs.
A reception will follow in
Hubert John son, Mr . and
the church social room .
Mrs . Kermit Anderson,
Robert a nd Cllristopher,
NO MEETING
Alexandria;
Curtis Palmer,
The August meeting of the
American Legion Auxiliary Mr. and Mrs. Bill Powell.
Ralph Wagers and Cindy
of Racine Post 602 has been
cancelled. The September Plunkett, East Liverpool;
meeting at the hall will Mr. and Mrs . John Palmer,
feature a picnic preceding the
meeting at 6:30 p. m .

••

7 - The DaUy Sentinel, Midtlteport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Aug . i1, 1975

I
6 ~ The Daily Sent'lnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., 'fl1ursday, Au~. 2J. m

. •

OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. TILB :OO

"EverythiRil, In Hardware"
110 W. MAIN

_,

POMEROY

''

•
·'

·'

�I .

I

'
&gt;

Wellsville is :scene of
Barber family 's reunion

By Charlene Hoeflich
While eating her sack lunch at a recent fl ower arranging
course, the. instructor, Mrs. James Jackson, began talking
about her favorite foods and bouncing recipes around while
several of us scrambled for pencils to gel it all on paper. Mrs.
Jackson pulls no punches about the fa ct th. ,t she considers
herself an expert of fast' meals, as well as flower arranging.
As yet we haven't tried the recipes but we pass t hem along
to you. The first one is called "Galushka", a Hungarian dish.
Chop a ·small head of cabbage and fry it tn one sttck ot oteo
until it's tender. While the cabbage is cooking cook one-half
package of wide noodles unW done, and then mix the two and
sunmer for a few minutes . Mrs. JacksOn says she has the time
yet to see any leftovers of this.
The second rO!'ipe is one which is economical, nutritiQ)IS as
well as fast, she says, and has no name since it 's an original.
Mrs. Jackson says to cook one-half package of wide
; noodles, add cubes of'spam, put in four one-half inch slices of
: Velvelta cheese cut into cubes, and one-half cup of flour mixed
• in'·' cup of water. Stir, season, and serve. Mrs. Jackson says
; that hot noodles warm the spam, melt the cheese, and thicken
: the flour mixture without further cooking.
At our house everyone loves cookies and we 're always
: anxious to add a new kind to our many favorites . Yesterda)'',
: Carrie Neutzling passed along a recipe for "Easy Cookies."
She tasted some made by a sister senior citizen and thinks they
: are just about the best cOokie she's eaten.
The recipe is simple a nd versatile.
Just take a cake mix, flavor of your own choice, add two
: eggs and a small carton of cool whip , mix thoroughly, th en
, drop by teaspoonsful mto powdered sugar a nd form into a ball .
: Bake these balls for tO minutes at 350degrees.
That's it!

;

What a difference · ~egetables fresh from the garden make

• inameal.
;
The tomatoes, the corn , the cucumbers the lima beans
: enjoy tbem now and remember that for the v~ry best in flavor'
; corn should be eaten as soon as possible after it's been picked:

Final plans complete
Final plans have been
for the marriage of
: Paula Elizabeth Morris ,
; daughter of Mr. and Mrs .
; Robert B. Morris, Rt. I,
, Middleport, and Dale Blake
: Whitt, son of Mr. and Mrs.
; Basil Whitt, Gallipolis.
• The open church ceremony
:will take place at the
; Pomerov Urlite~ MethOdist

i made

Novettys, Gifts,

flowers, etc.
Smalley's Gift Shop
Chester, Ohio
Phone 985-3537

EDEN - The Barber
Family reunion was held al
/he Hammon park in Wellsville las I Sur day .
A ll c ndin~
were
Mrs .
Marlha Holsinger, Mr. and
Mrs . Sol Bigley , Mr . and Mrs.
Ruberl
Webb,
Aleshia
Holsinger, Mr . and Mrs .
Ronald
Buchanan
and
family, Dorelia M., Martin,
Lonny , Sleven and Regina
Travis; Lois, John and Ricky
Young: Allie Mack, Mr . and
Mrs. Ray Cooper and family,

JOR ALL
YOUR BUILDING
NEEDS

LUMBER . .( S0fPLY CO.
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

-

BEND
TIRE CENTER

Project work was planned
durmg meetings of the three
c1~cles or the B. H. Sanborn
MISSionary Society of the
Middleport First Baptist
Church Tuesday night.
The Circles received home
and foreign missionary
asstgnments and throughout
th e next year will be sending
g tfts for birthdays a nd
hohdays. Remembrances for
sh utms ~uring the past month
were reported and the circles'
began a study program 00

' CANDY
BARS

Prices Effective

lHURSDAY
FRIDAY
SATURDAY
SUNDAY

Mr. and Mrs. Okey Pullins
CELEBRAT ION PLANNED ~ A celebration
honoring Mr. and Mrs. Okey Pullins will be held Sunday
from I to 4 p.m . at their home, Rt . 2, Coolville . Hosting the
observance will be their children . Relatives and friends
are invited to call during the open house hours. The family
requests gifts be om itted.

·.·.

.::::

It fits a family-size
washer and dryer in a
single slim cabinet just
2 feet wide.
Modtl LC·2

WITH OUR BETTER BUYS-

Mrs . E . P . Crispin, Glenna
Mi lh oan, Long Botton; Mr.
and Mrs. Hobart Newell ,
Chester; Mr. and Mrs .
Charl es Curtis, Chri s and
An drew , Mr. and Mrs . Paul
Cur tis, Gary , Donna and
Alban Ray, Mr. a nd Mrs .
David Seals, Mr. and Mrs.
Warren Rathburn, Ricky,
Sandra, Drema, James and
Diana, Dayto n ; San dra
Curtis. Van Cleve, Ky .;
Virgin ia Reynolds and Steve,
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Stalnaker,
Parkersburg, W. Va.; Mr .
and Mrs. Douglas Bissell ,
Brian. Mike , Royce, Brent,
and Timot hy, Mr. and Mrs.
Ted Sedgwic k, Tup pers
Plains; Hazel M. Curtis, Mr .
and Mrs . Perry Curtis, Mr .
and Mrs. John Brewer,
Reedsville .

•43995
BAKER
FURNITURE
Middleport

PAMPERS

tiny tab let and easy to take .
MONADEX wi ll help curb
your desire for excess food .
Eat tess - weigh tess . Con ·
tain s no dangerous drugs and

ONLY

280's

POLAROID
POLACOLOR 2-TYPE 108
. FILM Reg. •5.99
ONLY

$ 99

will not make yo u ner vous . No
stre nuous exercise . Change
your
l i f e . . . sta rt today .

MONA DEX cost SJ .OO for a 20
day su pply

Large econ omy

size
is
S5 .00 . Also
try
AQUATABS . they work gently
to he lp you lose water bloa t .
AQ UA TABS - a ·•water pill "
that works 53 .00 . Both
auaranteed and sold bv :
Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy

112 E Ma in Street
Dutton Drug Stor e
Middleport
Mail Order s F i ll ed

·

14 oz., Reg. '1.85

.RIGHT GUARD

THE KIDDIE SHOP

$ 19

DEODORANT

Middleport, Ohio

,------

ONLY

8 oz., Reg. •1.99

.Right

B-D FEVER
tHERMOMETER

Reserved

To limit

984
ONLY

Reg~ 2.00
1

Quantities.

5 gr., 100 tabs
Reg. 11.37 Only

I

I

774

POMEROY

in young footwear for
campus . casual or
dress wear: See our
new · selection for all
back-to-schoolers .

"I

for relief ofslous
headache a_1:-d congestion.

30 TabletS

S469
ONLY
·

Reg. $2.69

Chloraseptlc
'
Mouthwasl} &amp; Gargle
'

'

97~

6 Ol. with 'Sprayer
Reg. $1.7l : ONLY ,
c

DGUE

·.

.

.

Band-Aids
30 Plastic or Sheer Strips
'
1inch Wide
Reg. $1.19
~
.
·
ONLY - ..

I ,

I'

II

77

"

.!

EVERYTHING FOR

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

BE.N,FRAN
KLII)I
PHONE
200-202 EAST MAIN STREET

._?92-3498 ·

·

POMEROY OHIO

NOW
WITH OUR
OUTSIDE WHIT£
...,.

PAINT
BUY!
0

0

EXTERIOR HOUSE PAINT
• HIGH GlOSS
• IIEADY·MIXED
• MUlTIPlE PIGMENT

'

' -I

'·\

'\
••

Quality

•

Assorted colors

.,

704

~

To

Ebersbach Ha{d.ware·

$} !JI
MIDDLEPORT

·---~1...--D-EP_A_RT_M-EN_T_S_l_O_R_E_

·---·------

~.

Ll~

.

TUBE SOX

. '··~· 0.
I'

Middleport

SCHOOL SALE

1sf

I

The tough one. With
tough leather. Thick
grip hiker sQie. Have
your boy tie up to a pair.
. We'll fit him perfectly.

BEN FRANKLIN

In
Blue- Red - Gold
White: Black
or Maroon

FASHION FOO TWEA R

______SCHOO__l OPENS AUG. 26
.
....

THE
SHOE BOX

I

No irregulars

· Klnn'slomer

4 '

RE;TURN WEST
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bales
and Mrs. Anna Lowdenbach
have returned to Yakima,
Wash. after spending several
days in Pome roy visiting Mr.
and Mrs. Orval Wiles and
family.

POMEROY

BASKETBALL
SHOES

. - $169

ONLY

Mrs . Henry Hensley and
family , Mrs. Robert Hensley
and family, Diana and John
Evans, Mr. and Mrs. John
Hensley and Dick, Mrs.
Perry Carpenter, Mr . . and
Mrs. Tony Liter and Richard ,
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Carpenter and sons, and Leona
Hensley, all of Long Bottom . .
Guests were Mrs. Ethel
Carter and Douglas Tate,
Long Bottom, and Mr. and
Mrs . David Carter a nd
family, Pomeroy .

VISIT YOUR

MEN'S &amp; BOYS
CONVERSE
All STAR

Fashion
Wedgies
.:'

High Potency
VItamin
,
'
formula W~tlth Minerals
30 free with 100

.
Reg. '7 .89

BErn OHLINGER
102 E. MAIN

SINUTABS

THERAGRAN, .M
Wheel Chairs
Walkers ·
Crutches and Canes
Back Braces
Bedside Commodes
· Support Stockings
Trusses
Traction Equipment
. Elastic Supports
Surgical Dressings

1

BAYER
ASPIRIN

Rap:
When Mom got her new job, it means me coming home
from school to cook supper. Now that school is out , I've got the
res~si~ty of the whole house ~ cleaning, cooking,
washmg, rronmg, and at 16, I'm not ready. to be a complete
housewife.
My sisters and brothers don't help a bit . A concert is
coming up and Mom said I couldn't go because I'm not old
enough. But I'm old enough to take over a whole house. Please
.. help! ~ NEEDS MORE PRIVILEGES

DAUGHTER BORN
S Sgt. and Mrs. Roger S.
Alkire, the former Charldine
King, of 1301 Bailey No. 1,
Edwards Air Force Base,
Calif., announce the birth of a
daughter, Deborah Ann, Aug .
16. Maternal grandparents
are Mr . and Mrs. Charles C.
King, Rl. I, Rutland, and
paternal grandparents are
Mr . and Mrs . Felix Alkire,
Rt. 4, Pomeroy. Greatgrandparents are Mrs . Mary
Diehl and Mr . and Mrs.
Charles Ca pteina Sr ., of
Pomeroy.

PORTLAND ~ The annual
rcuniorr of the descendants of
Mr . and Mrs. H. A. Hensley
was(held at the Portland Park
Sunday with 63 in attendance .
Grace by Anna Liter
preceded the portluck dinner.
It was decided to have the
1976 reunion on the first
Saturday in August. Mrs.
Leona Hensley conducted a
short program . Gifts an~
recognition were given to
Geo r ge, John, Beverly,
Chuckie and Paul Hensley,
David and Cathy Carter, and
Tommy : Haley, all having
birthdays in August; Tony
Liter, the oldest man attending; Mrs. Ethel Ca rter
and Anna Liter, the oldest
women; a nd Brian Long, the
you nge st mem ber of the
family at the reunion . Roger
Carpe nter won the door prize.
A memoria l service was
held for Mary Lou Evans who
died in June , and a ll deceased
members of the Anna Liter
and Leona Hensley families .
A social lime was hel.d during
the afternoon with games of
horseshoe and softball .
Present were Mr. and Mrs .
Charles H. Murray and Mr .
and Mrs . Wilbur Rowley Jr.
and family, Ironton; Mr. and
Mrs . Charles Murray, Canal
Winchester ; Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Simms ahd family,
Ga llipolis; Mr . and Mrs.
Rodney Spencer and family,
Columbus ; Debbie, Tammy,
Kim and Christie Haley ,
Gallipolis; George and
Delores Hensley and family ,
Mr. and Mrs. Max Long and
Brian, Mrs. J ohn C. Hensley
and sons, Tuppers Plains;
George 0. Hensley, Mr. a nd

---·-·-------,

II Marguerite's Shoes

SEETHE REDS
EDEN ~ Mr . and Mrs. Sol
Bigley and Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Webb attended the
Reds' baseball game tn
Cincinnati Thursday .

Dear Back :
You may be right . The more we learn about body
language, the more likely we are to put it in code. But consider
this: since you've been practicing the " loose sit," the "forward
lean," the "eyecatching look," etc. , haven't you felt a difference in your personality? And in the way people accept you
- whi~, of course, affects the way you feel about yourself?
If It works, don 't knock it ~ even if at first you force body
language to lie about the real yo u. ~ HELEN AND SUE

The Meigs County youth
rally for area Churches of
Christ was held recently at
the Ohio Valley Christia n
Assembly campgrounds at
Darwin with the Bradbury
Church of Christ winning both
the altendance and per·
ce nta ge banners .
The New Creations of the
Bradbury Church presented a
skit on the beheading of John
the Baptist. Wilma Davidson ,
pres ident , conducted roll call
with Bradbury having 15 in
attendance; · Zion, II; and
Bradford, one .
Sharon Bing who will be
attending Kentucky Christian
College !his fall resigned as
treasurer . Tammy Sta nley
was appointed to fill the office . Plans were made for
another youth retreat at the
camp, a swimming party, ic~
and roller skating this fall .
Kathy Girton of the Zion
Church led in group singing or
choruses wi th Mrs. Maryln
Wilcox as pianist.
The next meeting will be
. held at the Zion Church of
ChristSepll4 at 1 p.m . with a
potluck dinner .

. Club enjoys annual picnic

LAY-A-WAY NOW!

ONLY

But maybe others are getting like me. I know aU the body
language signs now, like crossed arms and legs mean you're
·:closed off," and leaning forward means acceptance, etc. So
I ve training myself to sit loose, arxllook people straight in the
eye, and not cock my head sideways (skepticism, supposedly ),
and lean toward the person I'm talking to. But I'm still scared
underneath.
And I'm wondering if very vulnerable persons aren't
practicing the " crossed arm" look lor protection.
IBn 't this a case of when everyone is taught the •'laugnage"
it can't really read any more? ~ BACK TO WORDS AGAIN
MAYBE
'

·

Dear Mother of NMP:
Daughters who are turned into full-time housekeepers
.soon stop being daughters. Wise up before you lose your child !
The New Creations of the - HELEN AND SUE
Bradbury Church of Christ
presented a program Sunday
at the Logan First Church of
Christ.
The annual family picnic of Chester and Tuppers Plains
Mike Miller had the
scripture ; John Blake the the Young Wives Club of was held r ecently at Royal
Oak Park .
sermonette; and music was
Bailey, June Hutton, Desi
presented by the group.
Jeffers,
Sharon Bing, Lisa
Attending were Larry and
Accompanying the youth
Rous
h,
Mike
Mlller,
Kevin
Sara
Bailey and Brian;
were Jeanette and Jeremy
Sherri
Barnbart,
John
King,
Es ther Mays, Jeff and Dean;
Ranson, Mrs. Maryln Wilcox
Blake,
Randy
Haynes
and
Lila
and Don VanMeter and
and Mrs. Sharon Kuhn.
David
Cole.
A! vena; Sheila and Bob
Youth going were Beverly
The
Logan
youth
e
nWhal
ey, Arron' · and Amy;
and Brian Wilcox, Mary Ann
tertained
with
a
wiener
roast
Elmer a nd Karen Young,
Tripp, Tammy and Christy
following
the
program
.
Gerry
and Mike ; Marilyn
~ta n ley, Rita__ ~'!d Rodney
Spencer, Trisha a nd Donnie;
SEE DRAMA
Danny and Linda F linner,
Nineteen junior and se nior
Frank and Doug; Jayne and
high school students of the
Roger Coates; Darrel a nd
Middleport Fi r st Baptist
Norma Hawthorne, Laura,
Church a nd their g ue sts
Tim and David; Lois and Don
traveled by church bus to
Kerr .
Chillicothe Tuesday evening
to see the outdoor drama,
The next meeting will be a
"Tecumseh". Accompanying products party at the Chester
the young people were Bob Fire Hall . All interested
Parker, the Rev. and Mrs . persons are welcome to atPeter Granda! and Mrs . lend.
Marjorie Walburn .

Large Selection
Of Carter's Palamas
and Gowns

$ 09

BABY POWDER

+++

Dear Helen and Sue:
, When I read my first book oit hody language 1 thought,
Wow , now I can read people, even if they doli"! always say
their real feelings."
·

Program is
presented

SIZES INFANT TO 14

JOHNSON'S

+++

Tick:
Either that or hit him with a blunt instrument ~ like your
foot or your fist ~ when he gets aggressive. Sometimes the
knowledge that a girl can dish out as good as she gets will stop
a guy's clowning around. ~ SUE

LOVE JOY CJRCLE
During the Love Joy Circle
at the home of Mrs. Mary
Hughes , Mrs. Lillie Hubbard
announced that Richard
Kane of Cincinnati, a student
at Judson College, will be the
scholarship student to be
assisted during the year. It
was also noted that the
foreign missionaries to be
remembered during tbe year
are Mr. and Mrs. &lt;llarles
Huff . Arrangements were
made for the circle to provide
refreshments for the October
Sanhorn Society meeting .
Mrs .
Katie
Anthony
presided at the meeting with
Mrs. Mary Hughes giving
devotions. Mrs _ June Kloes
had the program on the
theme, " Affrming Our
Faith" . Others attending
were Miss Rhoda Hall, Mrs.
Sarah Owen , Mrs. Eva
Hartley and Mrs. Oeida
Chase .

Park is.setting of
Hensley reunion · •

· rally
held

Rap:
. My boyfriend, 18, has always been an aggressive, ;~lrnost
vtolentlype. I've known him most of my life, and while he's
usuaUy gentle with me, be'~ a ftghter.
Recently he's done some things that worry me . One night
as ·we were watching TV, he grabbed me and tied my hands
behind my back, seemingly as a joke. He then took off my
boots arxl stockings and started tick)ing my feet until ! .got
hysterical, even though I begged him to stop. He seemed to
enjoy hearing me beg .
Now, he's come up with a new game. He starts boxing with
me, and actually tries to land a punch, sometimes. And he
won 'l stop when I tell him it hurts.
Is he some kind of sadist, or just normally teasing ? TICKUSH
\
TICKLISH :
I'd say it's more than normal teasing, but less than sadism
t which means sexual cruelty) . Make it plain to him that this
kind of treatment will make him an Ex-B.F ., and if he keeps on
bullying, follow through ! ~ HELEN

money back . MONADEX is a

With
Fashions By
• Health-Tex
• Carter's
• Cinderella
e Billy The Kid

FACIAL TISSUES

All in li'un -ur Sadism?

DORCAS CIRCLE
Hosting
the Dorcas Circle
ELECfA CIRCLE
meeting
was
Mrs. Elizabeth
Meeting at the home of
Mrs. Roma Hawkins, the Gardher. Mrs . Elizabeth
l': lecta Circle members were Slavin, chairwoman, gave tbe
asked to collect newspaper prayer and announced a
items on Nicaragua, the shower honoring_ . Teresa
co untry
where
their Granda! Casto, daughter ~f
the Rev. and Mrs. Peter
missionary serves.
Granda!.
It was noted that a plate of
Cards were sent to Mrs.
cookies had been taken to
Dana
Hamm,
Arcadia
Mrs. Florence Hannay , a
Nursing Home, Coolville ,
shutin member. Yearbooks
were distributed and a bir- who will also be remembered
with a gift. Round robin cards
thday poem was read for
those celebrating birthdays were signed for Mrs. Frances
this month . Mrs . John Bearhs, a patient at the
Werner presided arxl also Holzer Medical Center, and
presented the program on the for Mrs. Irene Cross who
topic " Affirin the Faith and remains ill . The foreign
missionary to be rememAct Responsively. "
bered during the year is
Ice cream and cake were
Elwyn Duane Gibbs.
Sllfved to Mrs. Werner, Mrs.
Mrs. Paul Smart gave the
Louise Davis, Pearl Hoffman, Mrs. Gwinnie White, program on faith using three
Mrs. Beulah White, Mrs. topics, "Past and Present",
Freda Hood, Mrs. Clara Mae "Where to Put Your Roots"
Darst, Mrs. Eloise Wilson and "Becoming Strong and
Mrs. Isabelle Winebrenner: Vigorous" . A discussion
Mrs. Edith Sauer and Miss followed. Others attending
were Mrs. Florence Rhodes,
Dorothy Reynolds.
Mrs. Pauline Hoffman, Mrs.
Freda Edwards, Mrs. Sarah
LOSE UGLY FAT Fowler and a guest, Michl
Start losing weight today or King .

NOW ONLY

PUFFS

By Helen and Sue Bottel

faith .

$ 94

DAYTIME 30's

Bob Wilson, Wellsv ille ;
Howard Johnson, Mr. and ::::::::::::::::::·:·:·:::·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:::·:::::::·:::·::::::::::;.:;:::::::
Mrs. Don Griffith and David,
Degree Day for Meigs
Gra nvill e; Ina Sanford,
County Granges is planned
Johnstown; Mr . and Mrs .
at
Racine Grange Sept. 21
John Muska, Mr. and Mrs.
All granges in the county
Joe Ball, Mr. and Mrs.
ca n participate. All four
Gordon Seese, Co lumbus;
degrees will be exe mMr . and Mrs. Brian Br adford
plified. El'eryone is to
and Barry, Wooster.
bring food for a potluck
Lottie Bradford , Mr . and
suppe r to follow . CanMrs . Clarence Bradford, Mr .
didates will be a ble to get
and Mrs . Robert Ashley ,
the fifth degree at the
Keith and Heidi, Racine ; Mr.
Nol'ember m eeti ng of
a nd Mrs. Bruce Smith,
Meigs County Pomona
Athens; Edith L. Cur ti s,
Grange. The State Grange
Akron; Anita Raines, Dan
and:·· Lori , Clint on; Mary . degree along with the
National Gra nge degree
Pierce, Mr. and ·Mrs. Dennis
Long and Billie Jo, Mr. and . will be conferred at the
time of National Grange
Mrs . John Newell, J eff,
Session in Co lumbus Nov.
Scotty and Misty, Mr. and
15. Gra nges are urged to
secure candid ates for all
degrees.

Short Sleeve Shirts
Casual Slacks
Jeans·
Tube Sock~
Hose &amp; Underw'ear
Gym Shorts
J Athletic Supporters
Footbiill Jerseys

35~ ,

--------

held at park

Youngstown i Mr. and Mrs.

FOR

I.

68th reunt•0 n

School

House

.

15. Number uf persons who" ...~-~~~"""!--attended worship services
the Lowest
was 122. Offering was $110.48.
Mr. and Mrs . Sidney
Tire Prices
Leifheit, g randdaughter,
CCJ lum bus, attended morning
I n the Area
service al lhe local church.
It's
Coen,
Mr .
and
Mrs .
Raymond Amos and family,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Buchanan and family , Mr .
and Mrs. Dick Green and
family , Mr. and Mrs. Ron
Mason, W. Va .
713-S881
Barber and family and Ivan
Barber. ~ ~:~rtha Holsinger . ~

Project work planned.
by missionary circles

ALL 15*

For ·

Naw York
.Clothing

BY Jlt:RTHA PARKER
Rev. David Wiseman and
Sabbath Sehoul attendance family, Woodsfteld, attended
Au~ . 17 al the Free Methodist murning services. They also
was 100. Choir members were · san~ 1wo special nwnbers .

j

SELECTION
&amp; SAVINGS .

i'

Mr . and Mrs .. Robert Kyle,
and Bobbie, Amy Thomas,
Michele and Jennifer; lccie
Cooper, Mabel Moore, Bob,
Jidgc and Tom Barber John
and . Edith Barber, Debbie
and John Barber, Mr. and.
Mrs. Robert Mack and
family , Mr. and Mrs. James
Paar, Mr. and Mrs: Dennis
Manbeck and Todd, Mr. and
Mrs. Alfred Reinagle, Mr.
and Mrs . Harry D. McClure
and family, Mrs . Hazel
Buchanan, Mrs . Maxine

Laurel ruff News Notes . ·

..._;'

Church, Sunday at 2:30 p.m. 1
The 68th annual reunion of
with the Rev. Robert Hayden
the descenda nts of Hoit of
officia tin g. Prior to the
ceremony music will be Mary Foster Curtis was held
Aug. 17 at Forked Run Slate
played by Mrs . Carrie
Park.
. Neutzling.
One hundred relat ives and
Matron of honor will be
friends were present to enjO)'
Mrs. Jyl Ze rkle, maid of
the day and a dinner. A
honor, Miss Maureen Henp,rayer was given by Douglas
nessy ; and bridesmaid , Bissell .
Amilda Noll. Ray Weiher will
Present we re Molly Pul be best man , and the ushers
lins, E lmer Swank,Mr. ·· an d
will be David Gerard and
Mrs
. Wade Moreland, Mr.
Keith Edmonds. Registering
and Mrs . harold DeWolf,
guests will be Mindy Young .
Newark; Mr . and Mrs.
A reception will follow in
Hubert John son, Mr . and
the church social room .
Mrs . Kermit Anderson,
Robert a nd Cllristopher,
NO MEETING
Alexandria;
Curtis Palmer,
The August meeting of the
American Legion Auxiliary Mr. and Mrs. Bill Powell.
Ralph Wagers and Cindy
of Racine Post 602 has been
cancelled. The September Plunkett, East Liverpool;
meeting at the hall will Mr. and Mrs . John Palmer,
feature a picnic preceding the
meeting at 6:30 p. m .

••

7 - The DaUy Sentinel, Midtlteport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Aug . i1, 1975

I
6 ~ The Daily Sent'lnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., 'fl1ursday, Au~. 2J. m

. •

OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. TILB :OO

"EverythiRil, In Hardware"
110 W. MAIN

_,

POMEROY

''

•
·'

·'

�(

8 ~ The Daily Senlinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Aug. 21, I1175

,

r~l!11W00~®1-'oi"-HJ-J~ For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds
~Unanamble these four JurnblH.

I

. one letter to each square, to

~orm four ordinary words.

. ... .. ,·-

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. ..
, .,._,

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I K
ICASSEC

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MAY 'f&gt;AY TH I'f&gt;
WiTH S0Mc"THIN6
L-IKE A SMILE.

j

BETHJI..

Now arranre the circlod letters
V" ~
to fonn the surprise answer, aa
~=~==~~~:;h~~J~=:_;suggested by the above cartoon.

I

PriiiiiiSIMIIUISWIIIIIIre

"(

l 1 XI X]"

(Aiuwert tomorrowJ

Jumhl~•· QUILT

_,

FAVOR

INBORN

PAUPER

Racine
Social
Events

For Sale or Trade

By Mrs. Francis Morris
The Booster Sunday School
Class of First Baptist Church
met in the church basement
Friday evening, Aug. 15.
Potluck refreshments were
served preceding the meeting
which opened with a
devotional program by Mrs.
Wanda Powell. The hymn,
"Win Them One by One" was
sung . Scripture reading Ps.
91 and prayer , Readings by
members were: "If I were

Young Again" "Reach Out
A
New
Beginning"
"Reminiscing" "Faithful is
He Who Promised" "Sufficient Grace" "At Peace
11

11

-

with God" " The Golden
Rule " " A New Day is a Gift"
"Lord Grant Me Faith" "A
Prayer Away" ''Our Part in

Prayer" "Passing Years"
"He Stands by Me" Mrs.
Powell read "On the Wings of
Prayer" to close devotions.
The business session was in
charge of Mrs. Helen Simpson. Get well cards were
signed and the hymn, "Thy
Word Have I Hid in My

Heart" was sung.

,,

and V •ne R a c 1ne
I hu rs
d ay Fr1day and Saturday
Pho n e 9~\l 260 7
8 21 21 c

11 1 ACRE IOI In Pomeroy. '120
11 fro ntag e on Rr 7. water.
sewer and elect n c \3000 or
wou lel rake sma ll c ar . truc k ,
or boat tor t r ade . Pho ne
! 104 ) 77 3 5975
8 21 ) I p
PUBLIC NOTI CE
To
CO R L IND A l~ DOERR
A ddress Un known
IN THE COMMON PLEA S
COURT O F ME I G S COUN TY
OH IO
DAV I D EDWARD DOEf.!R.
S.l 9 Fo r est Run Road
Rau l e 1
M• n ersvil l e Oh• o
Plamtlf l

vs

POM~p~~!vM.9,!0R
POMEROY, OHIO

L ARPEN1 RY
fl oo r1 ng
c c il1n q dnd pa n e lm ~ Phon t•
99 ~

Y/\RD S/\LE a t 371 So ut h
Se cond Mtdd l eport M en 's
women 's and Ch i ld ren's
.;t r r,c l es
F riday
and
Sat urd ay
a 21 2tc

YARD
SALE
Th ur sd ay. WI L L do odd lOb S, mowmg .
Fr1day and Saturday A l bert
haut .ng , pamfing o r roof in g
Hill t ra iler cour t, Mam St ,
Phone 99 7 7.409
Rac rn e Ph on e 949 599 1
7 29 26 1c;:
8 21 2tc
G A R AGE &lt;., ALE /\ ug 18 ?7 , 9
ro 5 p m , lo ca t ed on Rr
t -13 sou t h o f Jac k 's Club o ft
R I I by p ii SS Guns, pocke t
k n tv es , b1 cyc le to o l s new
pa •n t,ng s u ppl• es . baby
l u r n •t ure. new born an d
adult c toth1ng and m 1Sc
8 11 51p

REMODELING.
P lumbi ng .
h ea trng and a ll t y pes ol
genNal
reparl"
Work.
guaranle ed
20 years ex
pe r• ence
Phon e 992 2A 09
5 1 1f r

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

are

. !ZAN$vn.LE:,'OHI0)

SUNDAY, AUGUST24 AT 10 O'CLOCK
~

A_.M

I

'

54SPUTNAMAVE .. ZANESVILLE, OHIO

ANTIQUE FURNITURE, CHINA, GLASSWARE,
POTTERY, GUNS, AND MANY OLD ITEMS. This wi ll
be an extra good sale lasting all day . Will start se lling

'

"' antiques at 10' o' clock . Bring your lawn c hair . Having
purchased the old WholeSale hardware building a nd
other buildings built in 1854 which cont a ined many of
these unusual antiques and collecti bles such as old
' miners
lamps, ant. f~rniture, turkey feather dusters.
child'S sled, churns, pocket watchesN ron and copper
kettles, brass cuspidors·; beautiful :old picture frames,
c locks, buggy wl"'ip w · Sterling hal1dles , glass, china,
many boxes of glass &amp; china anCt' other i tem s in .thf
attic that have ne11er been unpacked, and a large
personal collection of many ant iques. Some of these
came from the Odd Fellows Hall. Come early and plan
to stay late., ~omething for e)leryone
Lunch on
premises.
Clip thl~ ad for time and directions for sale Sunday,

August 24 ·at' 10 A.M. :
s.. the Clll~mbus DlopaJch or' Zanesville Times
Recorder Sunday, Aug : 17 for complete listing.
fositive I D.

'

'

Terms-Ca'sh Day of Sate
'f Not responsible for' accidents.

·

OWNER-MR. LARRY PARKE!l
Auctioneer-Bill Janes- Phone 962 -43~7 or 557·3411

1959 FO RO 3 ~ ton flatbed
•r uck , 3 sp tran s , 8 p l y
trr es. good r unnin g con
d •t• on . Sl 75 Phon e 949 36 90
8 2 t )I C
19 11 SUPER Beetl e V W , \995
Phon (' 9tl9 56 45
8 17 Ol e

For Rent

or·

PUBLIC AUCTION

1966 F ALCO N 289 engi n e.
standa rd , 80,000 m lies S.tSO
Al so . 1970 Maver tc k , 6 cyl
automat'" S800 Phone 992
5 190
8 21 31 p

Wanted
CAS H p'a rd for al l makes and
mode l s of mob rte homes .
Phon e area code 614 423
'9531
4· 13-tf c

Help Wanted

1917 GMC ' !on ptckup !ruck .
sharp and 1n ver y good
condi t ron P r i ce S/ ,::150 Ca ll
997 ?91 7 or see Steve Our ton
81 7 l?tp

AI· C R cCJ P' ek1nges e puppi es
':. 1 '&gt; Ph on e Pt . Pl easant . 6 15
SOJU
8 19 1'tc
~ TlJ[l

Service ,
AKC
Registe red wh1 t e p oo dl e
I o r appomtm ent. call 99(
r wo .r
a 11 !fc

13 EDRM house . large k1t
c h en . central a• r
large
kllchen wa l l to wa l l car
pet 1n g
rHA
ap pro vC' d
Pho n e 99 ? 7030
8 15 6tp

~

DELIC I O U S home grown
p eac hes. whit e and ye!low
Mason Peac:h
O rch ard
Phone {]04) 773 5559
a a lfc ,

WHEAT pen n t es 85c roll
s rt ver cer tifi ca te s, \1 75
eac h . s? brl l s S3 30 eac h
l' u ffa lo n •ckels , S6 ro l l.
sliv er d ollars , \4 40 eac h ,
L•bertyn rc k els . $ 11 ro ll Ca ll
Roger Wamsley . Phon e 7-t ?
1651
8 15 I ?t c

LA UREL A N D AP ART MENT ,
6th and George St s , New
Hav en
W
Va
IM
MEDIATE
OCCU PAN CY
~elect
y ou r
? bedrm
low n ho use . Beaut iful new
apt
com pl ex
A ppliances
turn rs h ed ,
com ple t e l y
carpeted , Rent S178 and up
includ •ng utilit res
Ca l l
r est d en t r:n ana ge r. Sam o r
Becky Longanac r e, I 304
88? 7567
8 19 17 tc
BE D ROOM t ratler , $?!
w ee k /\1 1 u t rl rt• es pa id
Phone 99 ? ]:1?4
8 17 tf c

COU N1 RY
Mobile H Om e
Pa r k, Rt 33. ten mrl es north
of Pom eroy La r ge lots wr th
conc ret e p atros. sidewa l ks ,
runn e r s and off s tr ee t
~ a r k m g Phone 99 2 7479
12 :ll lfc '
apartment ,
"FURNI SHED
adults anlv ln M iddleport
Phone 992 -387.4 .
3 25 tfc
4 ROOM furnished apartment
Call 997 3658
8 17 tic
BEDRM
m ob1IE' home ,
d e p osd
a nd
re f ere nc es
r eq uir ed
Phon e 99? 34? 9
8 I S 6tp

Mobile Homes for Sale

Pets For Sale

Real Estate For Sale

ACRE lot on F l atwoods Rd
ne a r F 1ve Por nts
Sep t ic
•ank , wa t er Ta p Phone 98 5
170?
a 19 3l p
HO US E fo r sa l e in Portl and, 5
r ms an d bath . good w ei!. 2
acres o f grou nd Phon e 843
2292
8 21 61C
COUN TR Y home. 4 acres,
dr~ll ed wel L over l ooking
Ohto R rve r Phon e 247 2247
8 2 1 Jt~

For Sale

4 ROOM S and bath apt rn
Rutland area
Phone 99 2
5858
7 27 tf c

65 )( 17 F T , 19 10 Winsto n
mobil e
home ,
two
be drooms , und erp inn ed.
front porch added . stora ge
bu"ildt ng,
and air con
di lrontng, Good locat ion, 1 •
mile off R t 7 and I m rle
squt h of Tupp er s Plains,
Oht o Ca ll 161 4) 66 7 62 7!
8 19 61p
GREE NW OO D 64 x 1?
mo bil e hom e. no f u rnrture
exce pt fe frig e rator and
!itove , all elect ric , 14,000
Phone 997 5606
8' 19 6tc
'
.
lOxJ O T~AILER , 3 br . with 1~'
porch lo caled rn Hertford,
W Va , 500 feet from r i ver ,
50xl00 lot Phone (3041 882
1247
a 21 6tc

19 1'}

BOA T Motors , Reparrs
491!
Locust S t , M•d dtepo r l ,
Oh• o Phon e 992109 '
7 n 26t c

lost

OU/\LIF I ED comme r c ial and
dom es t •c r e tr tgeration and
applian ce serv•ce m an
WANTED
Ga ll1a 19'5 t R EEDOM mobi le home ,
1ake ou t pay ment s. Call
Relrtgeration co Phone 446
161-1 J 44 6 39? 1
-10 66
8 1? 171c
8 19 5tc
T OP NOT CH. mainten an ce or
rn d l wrrght man To p ,wages
pard
s la ggere d
hour s
Ca pable o f marnl e nance
supervrs1 on , on l y qual•f u;·d
maintenaf"lce m en apply
Plea se contac t 1n pe r son ,
Pom eroy r orest Prod uc t s,
Oa tley Run Road. Pomero y
a 15 6tc

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

Pinto
Phon e 19 1-t 70
GOO SENECK
SIOck trailer wilh 19 14 Chevy
8 19 .tt c
dua l whe e l. I ton P• Ckup
( ,ln b e bo u g h t tog e th er or
se parate C a ll l J / ) ? ti l
B 10 lf c
W I L L the per so n w h o f ou nd CAN NING peaches now th ru
th e tong playmg Co u n tr y
S(' pt ernbe r 10 U S No 1
we sl ern record s on Sunday ,
gra de ye ll ow Frees tone F or
Augus t 17 Pl ea se ca ll 99 7
can n rng or fre ezi n g S6 49
5978
8 ?0 )IC
bus hel. $3 .19 ' bushe l. s 1 99
peck
PLE A S E
BRI N G
YOUR
OW N
CO N
T A! N ER S Peache s a r e our
TWO H ORSE John so n t railer .
sp ec •alty
Tw o co n venient
l andem w h ee l s A l so 7'
locatrons Bo b 's Markel ,
yea r ol d Reg Qua r te r Ho rse
Mason . W va Phon e (30.1 )
s•ud co l! Ph one 99 7 715 7
I l l 517 1
a nd
M1 d way
8 18 Jtc
Ma rk el
Pom e ro y
Ohro
( 6 1J ) 99* ?5 8?
BICYC L E Repair s , Sa le s and
8 10 ?7 tc
Serv rce, A98 Locu s t Sl ,
Mid d l eport , Ohio Phon e
99 7 3C92
7 21 26 t c

a10 ,,,c

?

East Matn

19 1 1
G RE EN
a u to ma t• c. Sl. JOO
997 ?3 8?

MO B I LE ho m e f or r ent
Phone A lberl Hill , 949 776 1

'l

DICK SEYLER

M O DERN Wal n ut s te r eo
rad• o con sol e . am f m rad•o .
1 ~ p ee d changer
Balanc e
S10 1 77 or t erm s Ca l l 99 ?
1Y6 S
8 17 I f c
H UNT I NG L rc c n se, N1ght
c r awl er s
m e a l worm s ,
TAC K LE , guns , ammo .
bows
ar r ows . camp ing
equtp . CO 's and ac cesso ry
lnd• an Joe' s. 308 Pag e 5 1 ?
s tr eets p as t M •ddl ep ort
~ wrmm • ntJ P oo l
8 p 76 t p

CLOSEOUT I

All
Air
Conditioners
AS LOW AS *139.95

19 17 ARROW Cam p er , p hon e
99? S·T68
8 I S / 61 p

POMEROY LANDMARK
HO NDA
~c ramb t e r
1970
motor cyc l e Ph on e H7 2573
8 21 31 p
WHITEROCK and Ba b coc k.
hens , $2 50 each Ph one 992 7407
8 21 ] I &lt;

. . .~a~k W . Carsey, Mgr .

Ai.a 'Phone 992-2181

Real Estate for Sale

USED refrtgerator and sta ve
tn goo d condition Phon e 992 -

5302

8 21 Jt c

WHITE and y ell ow sw eet co rn
for freezrn g and can n rng
Order mus t be called •n th e
night befor e A l so, red and
whtte potatoe s. Ph one 247
2755 o r 247 2082 v Roush &amp;
Son . Letart F a ll s
8 21 Jtc

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

STAR CRAFT cam per f or
sale . stee p s 8 Phone 99?
310?
I! 11 61p
CANN IN G to m a t oes. prck
your own
And r ew Cross,
L e tart Fa ll s, O hi o Phone
? 4 1 ?85?
8 17 6tc
BALER TWI NE . 1.000 f l 375
lbS
IS
FA RM
FER
T I LI ZER , Specia l pn ces
Ba l l Br oth e r s Fa rm s. S R
143 and Co Rd 10 Phon e
698 45?1
8 19 Otp

REAL E STA TE SALE BY
U NITED
STA TE S
OF
AME R ICA
(FARMER S
HOME
AO MINI S
TRA TI ON ) 1 Ftve room.
on e
s t ory
ho use .
ap
pr o)(tma t el y 50 yea r s o ld
on 5 acres o t land . lo cated
one mrle N o r thwest o f
Pomer oy on th e east s tde of
Stat e R out e 143 l nspect•on
P l ea se c on tact t h e off• ce of
F armers
Home ·
Ad
m .n .s lra t ion .
171
Wes t
Se cond Stre et, Po me roy ,
Oh 10 457 69 Te l eph one 991
1603 Te rm s of sa l e . 1 Cash
7 Terms availabl e to an
•n(' lt g •b le applicant ar e not
less lh an 10 percent ca sh
down and not to excee d 10
a mortized pa y m ent s l o r
b alan ce of p urchase prr ce
B •d s to be acce pt ed a t
Pomeroy O ff ic e unl it ?. 00
PM August ,9, at whi ch l 1me
b td s wil l be op en ed The
Go ver nme nt r eserves lhe
rtght to re 1ect any and a ll
b1 dS
8 17 5tc

197? CL 450 Honda, cr ashbars ,
7 helmet s, and wmdshreld ,
$695 Phone 74? 3??::1
a 19 Jtc
LET u s se r v ice your Volks
wa gen , reasonabl e r.ates.
M1dd l eport Pennzorl No r th
Second Str ee t , Middleport
MODERN KITCHEN - With
Phone 997 99 7::1
8 19 ?6 t c stove and refrigerator , ca'r ·
peting in living &amp; k itchen .
19 15 suz u K 1 ?50, 5850 See Joe
Imbod en , Welchtown Hill in Nice bath , 2 bedrooms .
M inersville
Natural ga s furnace , and
8 19 61p large lot .

iJ

NI CE while Leghorn
hens Phon e 949 366 1
a 19 3tc

CAN N lN G 1oma 1oes . green
and r ed peppers Cleland
Far ms. Geraldine Cl eland .
Ra c me Phon e 949 41?1
8 19 lfc
STEREO RADIO •
8 !rack
•ape , am fm
4 speed
changer
comb i nation
Phone $ 103.66 . or ter ms Ca l l
99 ? ]965
.
8 19 He
MOV 1N G mu st se ll : One soli d
ma pl e. .1 p•ece bedroom
s ui!e . 1 9 piece antrque
drnmg r m . sur te : 1 Gibso n
stde by S1de r efr 1ge rator
freezer combtnalron. har
vest gold . one Mag\&lt; Chef
gas st ove . harvest go ld , One
brown leather rocke r ,. 'on e
green l iving r oom chair ,
brown anliq u ~ chair om am ,
1 wooden ro c ker , 1 lawn
sweeper , bicycl e , d eco y s
(or huntrng , c lolhi ng an d
nHSC . ';A I South Fou r th St
Pho n r 99? ?97 1
·
8 19 :11c

KUHL CAKE DECOR

OUT OF TOWN - On good '
paved road . Mobile home has
3 bedroom s and L. C. water .

CLELAND

'REALIY

MAIN
PO~R6Y,o
MIDDLEPORT -

GOOD GRIEF!
HOW ~HOULD I
KNOW~ ... DOE5

I~IIIORIT&amp;P A
FEW MILLIOIJ!
SO WHATr

Pomeroy , Ohto

Stop In Or

IT

Ca11992 ·1531 8-115

Cui -

standing buy . 1 fl oor plan . 2
or 3 BR . ba th , lovely krt ·
chen , fu ll basement. New
perma - pane a l u m win
dows, new carpe tin g, new
paneling , new h ot water
tank , new carport, N G .
forced atr heat . On quret

street . JU ST $13 .000
NEAR HARRISONVILLE
- 1 lo vely acre. Brr ck &amp;
Frame . 3 large BR , 1'h
bath s, utility R ., lovely
kttchen , 27 ft . cabtnets,
range &amp; oven Front porch ,
rear patio, la r ge garage
with stor age sPace Ca r -

peted $25,900
NEAR RUTLAND - 2.77
ac r es. 1 floor plan, 3 lovely
BR .. bath, nroe krtchen ,
utility R , storm wihdows &amp;
doors , si de porch, carpo rt
&amp;
la rge
ga rage.
f ull
basement w i t h prrvate
water supp ly (cr ty tap
paid), 2 trailer hookups

THIS YOU MUST SEE
$28.000.
POMEROY - Close 5
ac r es, home has 3 B R .
Bath , nrce kitchen. por c hes Storage bldg . Asking

only $7,900.
DON'T THROW YOUR
MONEY AWAY - LET US
APPRAISE
THE
PROPERTY
BEFORE
YOU BUY OR SELL
PHONE - 992-2259

¥10 8 J

.KQ J53
4K 62

¥ Q6H

¥ KJ
t A 10 71
• J 98 3

PORT A BLE
T O ILET
REN TAL .
Cons l r uCitOn
O u t door
events
Ph one
Ga l lipo l iS .
446 478, ,
Ru s sell's Plumbt ng a n d
H eat •ng
8 19 r fc

SOUTH ID J
.AKQ
• A 972

t86
4 A 7 51
North ·Soulh vulnerable

EXCAVAT ·IN&amp; .
bacr~-noe ,
dozer and d•t che r
Gas .
e l ec lri c a nd water line
bur 1at , base m ents, footers ,
septic sys l ems and brush
c: lean.ng Wi ll hau l fill dirl ,
to p sorl , sand and gravel,
l 1mestone for dri11eways and
road s. Phone Charles R
Hatl re ld , Bac khoe Service.
R t 1, Rulland , Oh ro. 742
6092
7 11-9otc

count

UTILE ORPHAN_ ANNIE

LITTLE ORPHAN
HM-M
I'M NOT 50
SURE JUST

START THAT

West

North

Pass
Pass

2 N T. Pass
Pass
Pa ss

It 1s a cinch to lind a way to

and rtse w1th an honor
Easl will hold back his ace
Later on South will have no way
to collect more than one extra
- -d1iam1ond tnck.
South 'Will comp lain that su its
r c=::r1ever break lor him . but hrs
co mplaint should fall on deal

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

EXCAVA TIN G, doze r , lo ader
and backhoe w or k se ptr c
tank s
i n s t a ll ed ,
d ump
trucks and lo boy s for htre.
wil l hau l 1111 dirt . to p sod ,
lim es to ne an d gra ve l . Cal l
Oo b or Roger Jeff e r s. day
ph on e 992 70a9, nr gh t phone
Q9 '2 35 25 o r 992 5232
2 11 lfc

ears
DON'T MEN110N

If South stops to thmk after
taking that first spade he will

rT!

AFTER ALL , rT:S M'JOIJ
i'I&lt;EI:P fOI.ECATS LII&lt;E
"TI-4EiM ~~IN'
MION!

8 - 21

MOBI LE Crane serv ice and
doz er work Ph one 99 2-5468
8 -7-261p

Get a
load of
th1S

Poor well-meanin'
little tt~ke' She
never learned to
statJ out ,..,-vof Papo·s
thinqs'

The kid!
Where's

WOU L D YOU BELIEVE ?
Build an all steel burldrng at
Po le Barn prtces"' Golden
Grant Atl St eel Buildings,
Rt
4. eox 148, waverly ,
Oh10 Phone 9A7 2296
7 2.4 t fc

the

kid?

little

move~

'Y'!S

BACKHOE for rent , hour or
contract , r eg or exc avatory
t ype Sept tc ta nks tnstalled .
B ill Pullins , phone 992 2478 .
7 24 26tc
H A ND LET TERED SIGNS
A ND PO STE RS
FREE
E ST I MAT ES CALL M . C
C R AWFO RD , 992 7680
8 7 26t p

sanitatre

engraver

13 Dwell
14 Arrow
poison
15 Anne Ja, k-

S Of the magical arts
6 Makeup
1tem
? Hockey
great
10 Famous
3 Down
(3 wds.)
11 The East
12 Nullify

son's mate
16 Excavated
17 Outfit
18 Store
fodder
20 Actress
Arthur
21 Fall guy
22 " Peer -"
23 Nut
25 List of
candidates
26 Drooping

I&lt;IGHT!!-

$201000!r

A ._ iV'rLJ

ACIG

MODERN)

'

Time" 10.

Yesterday's Answer
16 Call to
reveiUe
19 - opera
22 Merriment
23 Comedian's
specialty
24 Arthurian
lady
25 Religious
body

27 Bolt a
party
29 Speed
merchant
30 Unearthly
34 Cross out
38 Wrng ·
(Lat. )
:n Windy City,
for short

8: 3o-(hlco &amp; the Man 3,4; Wall Street Week 33.
9:oo-Rockford Flies 3,4.1 5; Kup's Show 9; Movie " The
Men" 9; Conversation with Leon Jaworski 20;
Washington Debates 33 .
9:»--Movle "'The Night Strangler" 6.13. Movie "The
People Next Door" 10.
10:~Pollce

SEPTIC T ANKS c l ea n ed
Mod ern Sanilat ton 992 3954
o r 992 73A 9
9 18 ttc

JJ .
11 :oo-News 3,4,6.8.10.13; ABC News 33.

11

:J~Johnny

V•I'

®WHAT MADE
YOU DECIDE 10
LIFE AT SEA~
AN lwl:FATE:D
ROMANCE?

NOTATALL.I
COME FROM AMIDWESTERN STATE:.
RAN AWAY ABA
TEENAGER

WHEN I FIRST &amp;AW
THE OCEAN I WAo

CAPTIVATEO BY
IT. I WAN1EO TO
SEE EVERYTI-!INGONTHEOTHER
BIDE OF IT ,I

10; Janakl 33.
1:()()-Midnight Special 3.4; Movie " Doomwatch"' 10.
2:»--Star Trek 4; News 13.

AstroGrapt-1
Bernice Bede Oaol
For Frkllry, Aug. 22, 1175
ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll 1t) A
c o-worker upsets you and
makes you moody today
Cheer up . Eventng brings a
refreshing socral ltme
TAU~US

amused"
Arrow
porson

f----+-+-1

REALLY

E LVI NEll GOT
FUST PRIZE

AN' 'IOU COME

CGL

HFHA'M

MSJGLXS
RAG I

CGL

5f'IKE SURE 15 THIN ... I
HEARD THAT HE'S 6EEN
·LIVING IN THE DESERT
WITH THE CO'IOTES...

I(\) SECONT

CONTEST,

. MAINTAINED DURING
CLOSING POMEROY-MASON BRIDGE

HGGJ

FA

You erroneously feel you must
tmpress others Sattsfaction
comes from being yourself

VIAOO (Aug. 23-S.pt. 22) In·
sistlng upon having your way
only resu lts rn upsetting you.
The famil y will let you know
qu1ckly lhat they don't like it.

B DT M
G W D A .' - Z GSA
Q N J J C KG J D
Yesterday's Ctyptoquote : A CULTURE SPUT IN A
THOUSAND PIECES. THAT IS SEGREGATION. - ULUAN UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) You
lend to be a dreamer today
SMITH

BARNEY ·

HOLLER QUILTIN'

1 ..-+-1f--+-1 GEMINI (M01 21 -June 20)
r;
You'll feet that family members

NOT QUITE , BUT I 'LL
KEEP TRYING.AS LONGDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's
AS I'M OUT -mERE AT
CANCER (June 21-July 22) H's
5EA 1I FE EL FREE ...
AXYDLBAAXR
not
a day to take chances . Lady
Is LONGFELLOW
FREE!
Luck' has deserted your corner
One letter simply stands for an other In th1s sample A is Your good fortune comes from
used for the three L 's, X for the tw o O's, etc Single letters, a fam ily member's surprrse In
apostrophes , the length and formation of the words are all the evening
hints Each day th e code l e tters are di fferen t
LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 You
tend to be extravagant today
CRVPTOQUOTE

N

I JEST FOUND OUT
WHO WON TH' HOOTIN'

b:-1-4-+--i

(April 20-Moy 20)

Even though It's Fr iday n rght ,
you'll have a be«er ttme with
fam1ly than w1th friends Don't
feel obhgated to go out

or even your best pal won 't u nL......J.-...L-..1.,....,..11 derstand you today Don't fret ,
neetrng someone new can
how to work it: : hase boredom .

VADNRV

5 rooms

Carson 3,4, 15; Wide World Mystery

6,13 ; Movie " Onlonhead" B; Movie " Horror Hotel"

3 :30-Movle "Never on Sundav" 41.

~~~::~:::==:::::=:::::::=-~==::~::~~~~~--------_:~--------~~~~~~· 40 "We - not~r+--t--t--t--t--

l

Woman 3,4, 15; News 20; Paul Nuchlms

5:3G-Movle "Nearly a Nasty Accident'" 4.

letter
29 Draw back
31 Bit of
advice
32 Perform
33 Producer
Harris
:15 Twine
37 Nucleus
38 Whirled
39 Greet

~'"'~~"'' niNG~~-BUT NOT-C
Lr;u_
?HRt~!!- THIS MINK WAT !!-

'

MASO~

ne wspaper The most in ~
teresrmg quest1ons will be
used m the column and writers
w111 rece1ve cop1es ol JACOBY

6:25-Farm Report 13.
6:»--Five Minutes to Live By 4 ; News 6; Public Af.
fairs 10; Bible Answers 8; Blue Ridge Quartet 13.
6:Js--columbus Today 4.
6:45-Mornlng Report J ; Farmtlme 10.
6:55-News 13.
7:oo-Today 3.4.15 ; A.M. America 6, 13, CBS News 8, 10.
8:oo-Lucy Show 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8.10; SeS&lt;lme St.
33.
8:»--Big Valley 6;
9.()()-A.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4, 15; Muriel Stevens 8;
Sc~oolles 10; Morning with D. J . 13; Consumer's
World 33 .
9·»--Not For Women Only J; Dinah 6 ; Galloping
Gourmet 8; Popeye 10; New Zoo Revue 13;
Biography 33.
9 : ~ huck White Reports 10.
10:0G-Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3,4, 15; Spin-Oft 8, 10;
Mike Douglas 13; Jodv's Body Shop 33.
10 :31&gt;-Wheel of Fortune 3.4, 15; Spirit of 1/lctory 4;
Price Is Right 8; Bandstand 10; Designing Women
33.
I 1·oo-High Rollers 3.4, 15; One Lite lo Live 6; Gambit
8.10; Film JJ.
11 : »-Hollywood Squares 3,6, 15; Brady Bunch 13;
Midday 4 ; Love of Life 8.10.
11 : 55--Take Kerr 8; Farmtlme 10.
12:oo-Magnlflcent Marble Machine 3, 15; Showoffs 13;
Bob Braun's 50 -50 Club 4; News 6,8, 10; Mister
R09ers 33.
•
12 :»--Jackpot 3.15; All My Children 6,13; Search for
Tomorrow 8.10; Elec. Co. 33 .
12 :55-- NBC News 3,15; Ryan's Hope 6.13; Magnificent
Marble Machine 12; Phil Donahue 8; Young &amp; the
Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15; VIlla Alagre
33.
1:»--Daysof Our Llves3,4, 15; Let's Make a Deal6,13;
As the World Turns8.10; To Be Announced 33.
2:()()-$10,000 Pyramid 6,13; Guiding Light 8,1 0;
Woman 33.
2 : 3~Doctors 3,4,15; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,13; Edge of
Night 8.10; Masterpiece Theatre 33.
3:()()-Another World 3,4, 15; General Hospital 6.13 ;
Match Game 8,10; Interface 20.
J : JO--One Life to Live 13; Bewitched 6; Tattletales
8,10; Boarding House 20; Spotlight On 33 .
4:oo-Mr. Cartoon J; I Dream of Jeannie 4; Somerset "
15; Mickey Mouse Club 6; Musical Chairs 8;
Sesame St . 33; Movie " Handford's Point" 10;
Dinah 13.
4:31&gt;-Bewltched J; Merv Griffin 4; Mod Squad 6;
Mickey Mouse Club 8; Bonanza 15.
s :oo-FBI 3; Lucy Show 8; Mister Rogers' Neigh borhood 33.
5:J~News6 ; Andy Griffith 8; Hogan's Heroes 13; Get
Smart '15; Elec. Co. 20.33.
6:oo-News 3,4,16,8,10,13.15; ABC Nws 6; Sesame St.
20; Jean Shepherd' s America 33.
6:»--NBC News 3,4, 15; News 13; Andy Griffith 6; CBS
News 8, 10; Jody's Body Shop 33.
7:()()-Truth or Cons. 3,4; Bowling tor Dollars 6;
WCHS-TV Report 8; News 10; Jimmy Dean 13;
Phil Donahue 15.
7:3~PorterWagoner 3; Pop Goes the Country 4; New
Candid Camera 6; ; Pop Goes! he Country 8; Movie
" Old Mother Riley In Society" 9; Treasure Hunt 10;
To Tell the Truth 13; Black Perspective o~ the
News 33.
8:oo-Sanford &amp; Soo J, ; Movie " The Mark ot,;z.orro"
6. 13; Preobe 4 ; NFL Soffball 8; Movie "One More

27
.,:u~L:_:AB~N~ETR~----~~:---;,..AiJ::J=::::-7Y(ij":jlf:iiiTktAiO~~O\i::ieu(T::I
Espied
f
YaJ THINK NO...JEY CAN BUY
28 Greek

S EW I NG
MA C HINE .
R e p~rrs. se r viCe. a ll mak es
992 228 4 The F abrr c; Shop ,
P om eroy Aut h o'rf zed Singer
~a l es
and Serv•c e
We
sh ar p en s c .ssors
3 29 II C

Phone

(Vo you ha ve a quest1on lor
the Jacobys? Write '"Ask the
Jacobys"' care ol th1s

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
1 Seaweed
1 Cabbagelike
5 Mountain
plant
( comb.
2 Rousseau
form)
work
8 Chinese
3 Ideal mates
island
( 2 wds )
9 Bleu or
4 Famous

EL!WOC D SOWER S REPAII'
Swee pers, loa sters , iron'S,
a ll sma ll CIPPI•a n ces Law n
mower, n ex t to State Htgh
way Garag e on Route 7
Phon e 985 38?5
4 16 tf c
CUS TOM
P I CTUR E
F RAM IN G
OR I G IN AL
SE ASCA PI;: AND LAND
SCAPE P AI NTING S E
JOYCE MILLER, 99? 7680
8 10 ' .tip

tXIII

•Axx .
The answer is that we would
like to know all the bidding but
that in general with this sort of
hand our best chance to ~at the
slam is to plunk down the ace
and hope. At least the opponents aren"tlikely to make a
grand slam .

~N41~

OUR LOCAL SUSINESS-

6:00 A.M. TIL 8:30 P.M.

/

A Kansas reader wants to
know 1f we would lead the ace
of clubs against six spades. Our
whole hand is given as :

By Oswa ld &amp; James Jacoby

WEEKDAYS ON WMPO AM

I

INT
3NT

6XX . X I I I

D &amp; D tt&lt; l=.t:. Tnmming , 10
yea r s expe rr enc:e. Insured,
tree est rm a l es . Call 99 2 1057,
Coolville
Phon e { 1l 667
JO.t l
A 30 tf c

Dave Beningo and Jay Hill.

NEEOED - 100 ACRES OR
MORE ON HA~D ROAO
WITH WATER. CALL 992·

~ m~~

set al three notrump. All
has to do is to lead a diatowa rd dummy at tnck

5PENDYOUR

wi th bath , modern kitchen,
nat gBs heal and basement on
good str eet .
ACREAGE 97 a cre s of
privacy, 15 or more of b Ottom .
A Dante! Boone re sort

South

East

Opemng lead - J •

1\ELLO ,
. YOU SURE
MADE A FAST TRIP -·EVERYTHIIICO WENT FINE,
EH? HOW DID YOU FINO
THINGS THERE 7

\'ltiEN I' ll

Kt:: A DY M I X CO N C ~ETE
de l . ve r ed rr g ht t o your
pr o1e c l Fas t an d easy Fre e
es llm ates Phone 992 3284.
Go eglein Ready Mi x Co
M • ~dleport , Oh10
o 30 trC

WORLD

tals .
,
INCOME - 4 apartments and
business room to let in Mid-

dleport .
NEW LISTING -

EAST
• 61 J

+ 92

Hear David Strang,

NEAR STORES - 12 rooms ,
bitth, nat. gas and large lot.
Lots of ~ossibllities for ren -

WEST
. JI0812
4Q 10

IrS A SUPER SUMMER
AT WMPO RADIO

Nat . gas furnace .

see that three diamond tricks
will be enough to give him his
contract He will remember
that diamonds do break ~2
more often than 3-3. and he will
find the safety play to take care
of that ~2 break.
When he leads that diamond
he will play low from dummy .
East won 't be able to do better
than to Lake his 10 Later on
South will play one of the diamond honors to knock out the
ace and w111 use dummy's king
of clubs as an entry for the rest•
of Lhe diamond sw t.
Simple , when you stop to

• 95

service
Volkswagens. a nd other
foretgn cars .
Wilbur Ward,
Mgr &amp; Mechanic
8-21 -1 mo .

a I so

MAW --

77~5592

.,

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

Safety play brings home 3 N. T.

Systems .

1

FRIDAY, AUGUST 22,1975

New

WIN AT BRIDGE

21

20;
'

Movie " Adventures of the Queen" 8; Movie "But
Not for Me" 10; Janakl 33.
12 :»--Wide World Special 6.
1:oo-TQmorrow 3.4; News 13.

8:oo-Ben Vereen 3.4. 15; Almost Anything Goes 6, 13 ;
The Waltoos 8,10. Evening At Pops 33; Life of

NORTH

Married" 8;

Not

11 :oo-News 3.4.6,8, 10, IS; ABC News 33.
11 J~Johnny Carsoo 3.4. 15; Wide World Special 13;

Truth 13; Amer ican Outdoorsman 15.

MATTER~

13; ; Movie "We're

••'·

.
Streets of San

Movie " Rio Conchas" 10; Firing Line
Phllad&lt;ilphla Folk Festival 33.
IO·oo-Harry 0 6,13; News 20; Woman 33 .

Price is R1ght 8; Wild KingdOm 10; To Tell the

Phone 992-9913
North 2nd Street
Tune - Ups - Batteries
Shock Absorbers . Tires
Muffler-Tatlptpes · Cooling

---

608 E .

7: 3G-Hollywood Squares 3,41 ; Ohio Lottery 6;

!&gt;LIRE, I

F !at woods, Ohto

We

, Francisco

it Count 20, Nova 33

MIDDLEPORT
PENNZOIL

WOOD METAL - PLASTIC
ANTIQUES
MODERN CHEMICALS

1974 SILVER Caprr for sa l e ?9'. A M P el ectrr c welde r l•k c
car t 667 6 18 5
new . \11 5 et'r'lon e 99 ? 7759
8 21 61p
8 70 41(

WILL
do
roof
pa1n l•n g
shmgtm g , r emod el .nt error
C I C Call 949 591 3
8 ?0 6tc

Mr. and Mrs. Jake Lee are .
n,
in Colwnbus. Mr. Lee will '
undergo orthopedic knee
surgery in a Columbus
bospital on Monday, Aug. 18.
S. Sgt. Stephen Wagner,
going to Korea, has moved
his family here.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert K.
Swift of Columbus visited her
parents, Mr . and Mrs .
Francis Morris to celebcate
her
fathers
birthday
Saturday, Aug. 16.
Mr. - and
Mrs .
Bill
McKenzie, Phil, Jeff and
In 1951, the United States
Jozie, of Gallipolis were ordeted construction '
the
dinner guests Sunday of Mr. world's first atomic sub- .JLD furn1tur e. tee boxes,
brass beds , or comp lete
and Mrs. Roy Riffle. MrS'. marine.
house holds
Write M
D- •
MiH.~r. Rt
4, Pomeroy ,
Marvin Chaffin of Colwnbus
Ohio Call 992 7760
visited with them in the af10 7 74
.,,-, , and-Mrs. Phil Miller of Anna, - -- .......
ternoon.
BUY~, ~ E L. L.or lrad eany U S
Mr . and Mrs. Marvin , . Ohio .Were weekend guests of
cotn~ o r cu rr en cy Will pay
'5 ? 60 lor Sl fa c e, 1964 and
Olaffin of Colwnbus spen~ their parents, Mr. and Mrs.
olde r dtm es, qua rt e r s, and
the weekend with Mr. and Gedrge Neigler.
halves Ca ll Rutland 1&lt;1~
. Mrs. Jerry Powell.
M,r. and Mrs. Arthur T . 365 1, Ro ger Wams ley
8 15 l?tc
, : Mrs . Lillian Wood of .Baiills of Jeffersontown, Ky.
Colwnbus and Mrs. Rachel
here visiting with her HALL' S Salvage on o ld Rt 33.
IVS' ac ro ss fr o m Grueser's
,McBride of Syracuse visited mother, Mrs . Clara Roush.
, Chipper. will buy 1unk autos
wtlhout motors $16 to \,0,
:Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Badgley
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
wtth moto r s, SIB to S73 .
•Monday afternoon.
Turley and Kenny spent
Co mplete S/0 to S75 This
d oesn't m c lude compact and
~ Mr. and Ml's. Ed Mlller Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
fore•gn cars, motors. and
' visited Mr. arid Mrs. Robert Don Kisamore · at Newark
transmissrons not cleaned ,
$1 ·s o a hu ndr ed Sc rap No 1.
~nweil at Gallipolis on Ohio.
'
long me tal , $1 a hundred ,
•Tuesday .
Mrs. Frank Cheesebrew of
N o 1 l ong m etal , $1 SO per
h undr ed . cle an cast $7
Gretta and Isabel Simpson Shawnee, Ohio visited her
hundred, Trn , 40c per hu nd
·spent the weekend with Mr . former neighbors, Monday,
r ed , Any m ater •al brought
into , tunk yard not sorted
and Mrs. Solon Butcher at Aug. 18.
.. . _ :
1 " w ill be gr:ad ed accordmg l y
SPencer, W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Del'6~~t'
f&gt;rt ces subje cT to c hange .
hour s frQt»·il a m to 4 p m
.. Mrs. Clara Roush spent a Morris of Athens, Mrs. Elsie
Monda y through F riday , 8
·week with Mr. and Mrs. Roush and Mrs. Marie
a m to 1? noon Saturday s
W ill p 1c k u p old autos , d o
•Robert McKelvey at Belpre. Chapman of Pomeroy spent
ha v e some part s f or aulas
Mr. and Mrs. Rob Palmer Sunday afternoon with Mr.
Ph one 985 4?97
B 19 6tc
iof Goldsboro; -N.C. and Mr. and Mrs. Francis Morris.

\'

~ ~~9

8 I :' 761c

- ..., - -- -

8 15 91c

LeonardO Da VInci 20.
9 :oo-Movle " Th&amp; Last Day" 3,4, 15;

1

Noodles a l so featured .

.· - -. . . . - · - - - -

.,

3; Merv Gri!ll n 4; Mod Squad 6 ;
Mickey Mouse Club l 8 : Bonanza 15.
5:()()-FBI 3; Lucy Show 8; Mister R09ers' Neigh borhood 20,33.
S:»--News6; Andy Griffith 8; Hogan' s Heroes 13; Get
Smart 15; Elec. Co. 20.33.
6:oo-News J.U.10.13. 15; ABC NewS6; Sesame St . 20;
Book Beal 33.
6 .»--NBC NewsJ,4,15; ABC Newsl3; AnctyGr lfflth6 ;
CBS News 8, 10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33.
7 oo- Truth or Cons 3,41; Bowling for Dollars 6; News
10; Let' s Make a Deal IJ; J lmmy Dean 15. Making

K 1tchen State Inspected
Lt ce n se d
Baker
and
D eco rator .
Homemade

I

THURSDAY, AUGUST 21 , lf75

CAPTAIN EASY

PAINT
STRIPPING
SERVICE

19 ' 7 CAMPER . parl l y ~el l
con ta•ned , m u s t seC' to
21ppre c ral e
'!. I 695
Pho ne
99] 1 1]!1

-,..

Pom('roy

Ph . 997 -2114

1971 Pl ymouth 1 d r ha rdtop , ALLI S CHA LMER S trac:tor 13
F ury
Ill ,
Se r 1a l
No
Model W1th one lb " plow and
P M23K 130872
Fa r me r 's
one spar e tire New Conn
Ba nk an d Savr ng s Com
Co rn et and case Phone 247
pany
noo
8 21 Jtc
8 1 I 3t c

Employment Wanted

8 21 lt c

CO.'~fl'

.

~

4 : 3~Bewltched

CAKE BAKING
WANTED

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

mo

- - - - For Sale

.. .

Nathan Biggs
Radtator Spec •allst

Ohto
Ph , 992-3993

$]95

'

From th e l a r gest Tru c loi or
Bulldoz er Radiato r to the
src alt est Hea te r Core

LARRY lAVENDER
A 10 l

CO RLIN DA L DOERR ,
Add r ess Unk n own,
l /\ N O~ ROOM fur n 1sh ed and
D ef c ndan1
5 n /\MILY Gara ge Sale a t .:1) 4
un tu rn 1shed
apart me nt s
No 15873
Sou th Th •r d Ave , M i d
99?
54J
iJ
Pho
n
e
A compla rn t tor d 1vor ce.
(He p a r!. lh 1s Th ur sday ,
4 1? tf c
custo d y o f c hildren . divrs•on of
F r tday and Sat ur day 10 am
p roper t y and ather pr oper
till dark
r elie f has been tded agarnst
8 70 31 C J B R Tr ailer , f urnrshe d . 1!2
E lm St . Mrddleport , Oh 10
v0l1 ·'You are r equ rred to
.,.
lnq ut r e b etwee n 9 a m and
, ans-wer the Com pla•n 1 w•th•n J FAM I L Y
Yard Sa l e at
6 p m a r th e V i l lage Gun
1wenty etght days after the
Rustic Hill s
Syracuse ,
Sho p Ph on e 99 2 5177 after 6
las t p u bl lcar ,on
F r rda y
and
Sa tur day.
p
m
ln qutre
at
225
L ar ry Spen ce r
Au gus t n and ?:l Anl 1ques.
Br oadway
Clerk o f Courts
cl oth m g. dr sh es, f urn1ture .
8 21 6t c
Me1gs Co un t y , Ohi O
baby lf em s . a Child 's sand
( 81 14. ?1 . ?8 ( 9 1 11 11 18· 6tc
box
8 ?0 "~ tc
TWO Furn tshed ap t s
Kay
Ce c il 87 South Seco nd Ave ,
GA R AG E Sale , Thur sd ay and
Middleport. Oh to P hQne
F riday Augus t ?I and nat
992 5262
109 Spr m g Aven ue . 9 a m
B 2 1 rtc
til l 5 p m P omer oy . Ohro
__
---·-----------8 70 ?tp
'The Almanac
PRIV A TE mee tmg ro om f or
YARD Sale o ff Rt 174 Rl. 7
any or ganiza t1on , phone 99?
by pa ss on Rt I A3 up b eh in d
19} s
Today is Thursday, August
Jack ' s Club Clothes c h ea p .
J 11 lfc
through F r1da y
21, the 233rd day of 1975 with
8 70 3tc APT l 1ke n ew . 3 rooms wrth
132 to lullow .
lar ge ba th , tabl etop range
RUMMAGE SA LE S. Mason•&lt;
lar ge c lose t East Matn Si
The moon is full .
T e mpl e. Mtddlep ort , Au gu st
Pomeroy Se e to appreciate
The morning stars are
/ t,
and 73, Thur sda y,
Ph one Ga ll tpO I •s d u r •ng day
F riday
an d
Sa t u rday
·14 6 1699. e venrng s 4.16 95::19
Mars, Jupiter and Saturn.
Sponsor e d bY th e F trsl
~ 10 •tc
The evening stars are MerChurch o f Gad , Syracuse 9
am 1111 d p m dally
cury and Venus.
8 70 31C F 1&gt;. RM h ouse 3 o r .:1 b edroom s
I1V1n g room , drntn g ro om
Those bOrn on this date are
and moder n kitch en . car
under the sign of Leo . BACK PO RCH SAL E and
pe tO)q 7 baths and a ha l f
Yard Sa le at ?? .t Cond or St ,
Pond for s w1mmrng atll(
&amp;itain 's Princess Margaret
Pomeroy. Oh ro Fr rday and
fi
shr n g
4 m lies w es t ...
Saturday fr om 10 a m t ill 5
was born August 21, 1930.
Ha rr• sonville
Fo r
ap
p m
Everything mus t go
po rntme nt c al l 747 37-15 be
from Sc to S1
twe en Sa nd 8 p m , Monday
8 ?0 Jtp
On this day in history:
thr ough r riday
8 18 Stp
In 1940, Leon Trotsky, a Y A RD S~le a ll th rs week Gas
prime builder of Soviet Comfurn a ce. gas h ea t er , small
a ppl•an ces , chu bby g •rls TRA I L ER lo r re n t, t , mtle off
munism, was assassinated in
Rt 143 on K•ngsb ury ·R d
clolhe s .1 th St . Raci ne
Eilhe r furnished or un
Mexico aty where he had
a 19 3tc
furni She d
Phon e 74? 31?3
lived in exile for three years.
8 ?0 t ?tc

''

STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SID I NG-SOF F ITT
GUTTERS AWNINGS

V 8, std tran s . r ad io

y.\ RO SA L E at To m Gr ueser
r es .d ence . 1675 L• n co l n
H e,ghts. Pomeroy . Thu r
sday and F" rtday . st ar t rng at

m

Service

Blown mlo Walls &amp; AHrcs

$2095

1%BMERCURYCOMET2DR.

Y /\ RD S /\l L E cor ne ro l F li th

9 a

I Radiato

Sy racU Se,

S/\ L E at corne r o f
and Matn Sl
m
Ra c .n e 1h 1S Saturday on ly
fr om 9 a m 1 ill S p m Lots
o f good c lothrng and ba by
t urn !l ure
8 2 1 7t c

O C/\ L c oup le ne ed s country
~1orn c
,n Ch ester Pomeroy
M C' il Phone 98 5 J'J J? or 98 5
1988 Che s ter

l

Insulation Services

$1295
Blk vrnyl roof, grey frn• sh , good !Ires, automa l• c.
power steering , r ad •o

Yard Sale

IEXPERIE~CED

Blown

1910 NOVA 1/-8 CPE .

!~ road

Wanted To Rent

FREE ESTIMATES

350 V 8 automatic trans , power st eeri ng and brakes,
dark green fini sh , vinyl roof . sa ddle buck et sea t s,
console , radio. like new w -w trres.

Y f, RD

'.

,..,
'·
'-

Pomeroy
OF
Co.
QUALITY
1970 CHEll . CAMARO

I

Business Services

2

RO O M
AND
BO J\ RD
Pr t vilt e atr co nd1 110n e d
r oom
ph on&lt;'
T v
all
me al s laundry plu s many
(' l&lt;.tra s V'Jr•t e Mr s M
J
Mill er no)( l OS Po m eroy ,
O h1 0
8 I ?61 p

I

r ----------------~----------------,

Alflo Saltli

J t&lt;.,. l a r em•nd erroarr c nd •h c
a uc•ion sa l e o f Mr i\nd Mr ~
L arry Wiley a s advN 1•St.' d 1n
l ast
&lt;., uf"lday' s
ltlne s
'&gt;e n tu1C I a • •he r('ar o l 1-17
'&gt; OUih T h•fd /\v c ntt(' tn
Middleport . 0111 0
Thank
You . l hc Rradl or d fl uc••on
Co mpa n v
13 '} 1 IIC

~ ~

r_... . . _._._..__ _.. ___________.._,_..__ .··--- - . .
l· Television log for easy viewing

;-o., 'l11ursd&lt;1)', 1\u~. 21. 1975

·

+

Notice

9 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy
Diet!: TRACY
·

Ideas will elude you . It will be
tough to accomplish the thrngs
you should .

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Ho¥.

do
SAGITTARIUS (No¥. 23-Deo.
21) Examme your motives tp
make sure they're not completely sel fish before you com plam about not getting c o·oper atron at home

CAPRICORN (Pee . 22-Jon.
19) You r negative thoughts ,
hold Dame Fortune back fr om
l u rnrsh rng you with a ~easan,t
surpr rse later rn th e day

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 11)
You del ud e yourself mto thtnk mg the group can 't get along
wrthout you . It's goang to cost
yo u n ght 1n the pocketbook ·

PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 201
So meone could steal the
applause that you r rchl )&lt;
deserve fo r an accomplishment Don't d esparr The day
will rrght itself

~Your
,~Birthday
Aug. 22, 1175
You wll l make two important:
changes th rs comrng year.
They'll prove very beneticiaJ
and prof•table One affects
your career, the other your
residence.
INEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I

I AmECIATE
EVEMHIN6 '!HAT
lfDIIND-HEADED

KID DOES FOR

ME ...

FURNITURE

HERMAN GRATE(
W.VA.

i"

..

:·

,.
'

I ,

• I

t

'

''
"

I

2:1)

Social obligattons turn out to
be needlessly expensrve. Don't
be trapped into doing
something you don 't want to

\

'

�(

8 ~ The Daily Senlinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Aug. 21, I1175

,

r~l!11W00~®1-'oi"-HJ-J~ For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds
~Unanamble these four JurnblH.

I

. one letter to each square, to

~orm four ordinary words.

. ... .. ,·-

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

·~

.-,

I K
ICASSEC

[J

~ .

•'

~

I
II I

MAY 'f&gt;AY TH I'f&gt;
WiTH S0Mc"THIN6
L-IKE A SMILE.

j

BETHJI..

Now arranre the circlod letters
V" ~
to fonn the surprise answer, aa
~=~==~~~:;h~~J~=:_;suggested by the above cartoon.

I

PriiiiiiSIMIIUISWIIIIIIre

"(

l 1 XI X]"

(Aiuwert tomorrowJ

Jumhl~•· QUILT

_,

FAVOR

INBORN

PAUPER

Racine
Social
Events

For Sale or Trade

By Mrs. Francis Morris
The Booster Sunday School
Class of First Baptist Church
met in the church basement
Friday evening, Aug. 15.
Potluck refreshments were
served preceding the meeting
which opened with a
devotional program by Mrs.
Wanda Powell. The hymn,
"Win Them One by One" was
sung . Scripture reading Ps.
91 and prayer , Readings by
members were: "If I were

Young Again" "Reach Out
A
New
Beginning"
"Reminiscing" "Faithful is
He Who Promised" "Sufficient Grace" "At Peace
11

11

-

with God" " The Golden
Rule " " A New Day is a Gift"
"Lord Grant Me Faith" "A
Prayer Away" ''Our Part in

Prayer" "Passing Years"
"He Stands by Me" Mrs.
Powell read "On the Wings of
Prayer" to close devotions.
The business session was in
charge of Mrs. Helen Simpson. Get well cards were
signed and the hymn, "Thy
Word Have I Hid in My

Heart" was sung.

,,

and V •ne R a c 1ne
I hu rs
d ay Fr1day and Saturday
Pho n e 9~\l 260 7
8 21 21 c

11 1 ACRE IOI In Pomeroy. '120
11 fro ntag e on Rr 7. water.
sewer and elect n c \3000 or
wou lel rake sma ll c ar . truc k ,
or boat tor t r ade . Pho ne
! 104 ) 77 3 5975
8 21 ) I p
PUBLIC NOTI CE
To
CO R L IND A l~ DOERR
A ddress Un known
IN THE COMMON PLEA S
COURT O F ME I G S COUN TY
OH IO
DAV I D EDWARD DOEf.!R.
S.l 9 Fo r est Run Road
Rau l e 1
M• n ersvil l e Oh• o
Plamtlf l

vs

POM~p~~!vM.9,!0R
POMEROY, OHIO

L ARPEN1 RY
fl oo r1 ng
c c il1n q dnd pa n e lm ~ Phon t•
99 ~

Y/\RD S/\LE a t 371 So ut h
Se cond Mtdd l eport M en 's
women 's and Ch i ld ren's
.;t r r,c l es
F riday
and
Sat urd ay
a 21 2tc

YARD
SALE
Th ur sd ay. WI L L do odd lOb S, mowmg .
Fr1day and Saturday A l bert
haut .ng , pamfing o r roof in g
Hill t ra iler cour t, Mam St ,
Phone 99 7 7.409
Rac rn e Ph on e 949 599 1
7 29 26 1c;:
8 21 2tc
G A R AGE &lt;., ALE /\ ug 18 ?7 , 9
ro 5 p m , lo ca t ed on Rr
t -13 sou t h o f Jac k 's Club o ft
R I I by p ii SS Guns, pocke t
k n tv es , b1 cyc le to o l s new
pa •n t,ng s u ppl• es . baby
l u r n •t ure. new born an d
adult c toth1ng and m 1Sc
8 11 51p

REMODELING.
P lumbi ng .
h ea trng and a ll t y pes ol
genNal
reparl"
Work.
guaranle ed
20 years ex
pe r• ence
Phon e 992 2A 09
5 1 1f r

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

are

. !ZAN$vn.LE:,'OHI0)

SUNDAY, AUGUST24 AT 10 O'CLOCK
~

A_.M

I

'

54SPUTNAMAVE .. ZANESVILLE, OHIO

ANTIQUE FURNITURE, CHINA, GLASSWARE,
POTTERY, GUNS, AND MANY OLD ITEMS. This wi ll
be an extra good sale lasting all day . Will start se lling

'

"' antiques at 10' o' clock . Bring your lawn c hair . Having
purchased the old WholeSale hardware building a nd
other buildings built in 1854 which cont a ined many of
these unusual antiques and collecti bles such as old
' miners
lamps, ant. f~rniture, turkey feather dusters.
child'S sled, churns, pocket watchesN ron and copper
kettles, brass cuspidors·; beautiful :old picture frames,
c locks, buggy wl"'ip w · Sterling hal1dles , glass, china,
many boxes of glass &amp; china anCt' other i tem s in .thf
attic that have ne11er been unpacked, and a large
personal collection of many ant iques. Some of these
came from the Odd Fellows Hall. Come early and plan
to stay late., ~omething for e)leryone
Lunch on
premises.
Clip thl~ ad for time and directions for sale Sunday,

August 24 ·at' 10 A.M. :
s.. the Clll~mbus DlopaJch or' Zanesville Times
Recorder Sunday, Aug : 17 for complete listing.
fositive I D.

'

'

Terms-Ca'sh Day of Sate
'f Not responsible for' accidents.

·

OWNER-MR. LARRY PARKE!l
Auctioneer-Bill Janes- Phone 962 -43~7 or 557·3411

1959 FO RO 3 ~ ton flatbed
•r uck , 3 sp tran s , 8 p l y
trr es. good r unnin g con
d •t• on . Sl 75 Phon e 949 36 90
8 2 t )I C
19 11 SUPER Beetl e V W , \995
Phon (' 9tl9 56 45
8 17 Ol e

For Rent

or·

PUBLIC AUCTION

1966 F ALCO N 289 engi n e.
standa rd , 80,000 m lies S.tSO
Al so . 1970 Maver tc k , 6 cyl
automat'" S800 Phone 992
5 190
8 21 31 p

Wanted
CAS H p'a rd for al l makes and
mode l s of mob rte homes .
Phon e area code 614 423
'9531
4· 13-tf c

Help Wanted

1917 GMC ' !on ptckup !ruck .
sharp and 1n ver y good
condi t ron P r i ce S/ ,::150 Ca ll
997 ?91 7 or see Steve Our ton
81 7 l?tp

AI· C R cCJ P' ek1nges e puppi es
':. 1 '&gt; Ph on e Pt . Pl easant . 6 15
SOJU
8 19 1'tc
~ TlJ[l

Service ,
AKC
Registe red wh1 t e p oo dl e
I o r appomtm ent. call 99(
r wo .r
a 11 !fc

13 EDRM house . large k1t
c h en . central a• r
large
kllchen wa l l to wa l l car
pet 1n g
rHA
ap pro vC' d
Pho n e 99 ? 7030
8 15 6tp

~

DELIC I O U S home grown
p eac hes. whit e and ye!low
Mason Peac:h
O rch ard
Phone {]04) 773 5559
a a lfc ,

WHEAT pen n t es 85c roll
s rt ver cer tifi ca te s, \1 75
eac h . s? brl l s S3 30 eac h
l' u ffa lo n •ckels , S6 ro l l.
sliv er d ollars , \4 40 eac h ,
L•bertyn rc k els . $ 11 ro ll Ca ll
Roger Wamsley . Phon e 7-t ?
1651
8 15 I ?t c

LA UREL A N D AP ART MENT ,
6th and George St s , New
Hav en
W
Va
IM
MEDIATE
OCCU PAN CY
~elect
y ou r
? bedrm
low n ho use . Beaut iful new
apt
com pl ex
A ppliances
turn rs h ed ,
com ple t e l y
carpeted , Rent S178 and up
includ •ng utilit res
Ca l l
r est d en t r:n ana ge r. Sam o r
Becky Longanac r e, I 304
88? 7567
8 19 17 tc
BE D ROOM t ratler , $?!
w ee k /\1 1 u t rl rt• es pa id
Phone 99 ? ]:1?4
8 17 tf c

COU N1 RY
Mobile H Om e
Pa r k, Rt 33. ten mrl es north
of Pom eroy La r ge lots wr th
conc ret e p atros. sidewa l ks ,
runn e r s and off s tr ee t
~ a r k m g Phone 99 2 7479
12 :ll lfc '
apartment ,
"FURNI SHED
adults anlv ln M iddleport
Phone 992 -387.4 .
3 25 tfc
4 ROOM furnished apartment
Call 997 3658
8 17 tic
BEDRM
m ob1IE' home ,
d e p osd
a nd
re f ere nc es
r eq uir ed
Phon e 99? 34? 9
8 I S 6tp

Mobile Homes for Sale

Pets For Sale

Real Estate For Sale

ACRE lot on F l atwoods Rd
ne a r F 1ve Por nts
Sep t ic
•ank , wa t er Ta p Phone 98 5
170?
a 19 3l p
HO US E fo r sa l e in Portl and, 5
r ms an d bath . good w ei!. 2
acres o f grou nd Phon e 843
2292
8 21 61C
COUN TR Y home. 4 acres,
dr~ll ed wel L over l ooking
Ohto R rve r Phon e 247 2247
8 2 1 Jt~

For Sale

4 ROOM S and bath apt rn
Rutland area
Phone 99 2
5858
7 27 tf c

65 )( 17 F T , 19 10 Winsto n
mobil e
home ,
two
be drooms , und erp inn ed.
front porch added . stora ge
bu"ildt ng,
and air con
di lrontng, Good locat ion, 1 •
mile off R t 7 and I m rle
squt h of Tupp er s Plains,
Oht o Ca ll 161 4) 66 7 62 7!
8 19 61p
GREE NW OO D 64 x 1?
mo bil e hom e. no f u rnrture
exce pt fe frig e rator and
!itove , all elect ric , 14,000
Phone 997 5606
8' 19 6tc
'
.
lOxJ O T~AILER , 3 br . with 1~'
porch lo caled rn Hertford,
W Va , 500 feet from r i ver ,
50xl00 lot Phone (3041 882
1247
a 21 6tc

19 1'}

BOA T Motors , Reparrs
491!
Locust S t , M•d dtepo r l ,
Oh• o Phon e 992109 '
7 n 26t c

lost

OU/\LIF I ED comme r c ial and
dom es t •c r e tr tgeration and
applian ce serv•ce m an
WANTED
Ga ll1a 19'5 t R EEDOM mobi le home ,
1ake ou t pay ment s. Call
Relrtgeration co Phone 446
161-1 J 44 6 39? 1
-10 66
8 1? 171c
8 19 5tc
T OP NOT CH. mainten an ce or
rn d l wrrght man To p ,wages
pard
s la ggere d
hour s
Ca pable o f marnl e nance
supervrs1 on , on l y qual•f u;·d
maintenaf"lce m en apply
Plea se contac t 1n pe r son ,
Pom eroy r orest Prod uc t s,
Oa tley Run Road. Pomero y
a 15 6tc

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

Pinto
Phon e 19 1-t 70
GOO SENECK
SIOck trailer wilh 19 14 Chevy
8 19 .tt c
dua l whe e l. I ton P• Ckup
( ,ln b e bo u g h t tog e th er or
se parate C a ll l J / ) ? ti l
B 10 lf c
W I L L the per so n w h o f ou nd CAN NING peaches now th ru
th e tong playmg Co u n tr y
S(' pt ernbe r 10 U S No 1
we sl ern record s on Sunday ,
gra de ye ll ow Frees tone F or
Augus t 17 Pl ea se ca ll 99 7
can n rng or fre ezi n g S6 49
5978
8 ?0 )IC
bus hel. $3 .19 ' bushe l. s 1 99
peck
PLE A S E
BRI N G
YOUR
OW N
CO N
T A! N ER S Peache s a r e our
TWO H ORSE John so n t railer .
sp ec •alty
Tw o co n venient
l andem w h ee l s A l so 7'
locatrons Bo b 's Markel ,
yea r ol d Reg Qua r te r Ho rse
Mason . W va Phon e (30.1 )
s•ud co l! Ph one 99 7 715 7
I l l 517 1
a nd
M1 d way
8 18 Jtc
Ma rk el
Pom e ro y
Ohro
( 6 1J ) 99* ?5 8?
BICYC L E Repair s , Sa le s and
8 10 ?7 tc
Serv rce, A98 Locu s t Sl ,
Mid d l eport , Ohio Phon e
99 7 3C92
7 21 26 t c

a10 ,,,c

?

East Matn

19 1 1
G RE EN
a u to ma t• c. Sl. JOO
997 ?3 8?

MO B I LE ho m e f or r ent
Phone A lberl Hill , 949 776 1

'l

DICK SEYLER

M O DERN Wal n ut s te r eo
rad• o con sol e . am f m rad•o .
1 ~ p ee d changer
Balanc e
S10 1 77 or t erm s Ca l l 99 ?
1Y6 S
8 17 I f c
H UNT I NG L rc c n se, N1ght
c r awl er s
m e a l worm s ,
TAC K LE , guns , ammo .
bows
ar r ows . camp ing
equtp . CO 's and ac cesso ry
lnd• an Joe' s. 308 Pag e 5 1 ?
s tr eets p as t M •ddl ep ort
~ wrmm • ntJ P oo l
8 p 76 t p

CLOSEOUT I

All
Air
Conditioners
AS LOW AS *139.95

19 17 ARROW Cam p er , p hon e
99? S·T68
8 I S / 61 p

POMEROY LANDMARK
HO NDA
~c ramb t e r
1970
motor cyc l e Ph on e H7 2573
8 21 31 p
WHITEROCK and Ba b coc k.
hens , $2 50 each Ph one 992 7407
8 21 ] I &lt;

. . .~a~k W . Carsey, Mgr .

Ai.a 'Phone 992-2181

Real Estate for Sale

USED refrtgerator and sta ve
tn goo d condition Phon e 992 -

5302

8 21 Jt c

WHITE and y ell ow sw eet co rn
for freezrn g and can n rng
Order mus t be called •n th e
night befor e A l so, red and
whtte potatoe s. Ph one 247
2755 o r 247 2082 v Roush &amp;
Son . Letart F a ll s
8 21 Jtc

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

STAR CRAFT cam per f or
sale . stee p s 8 Phone 99?
310?
I! 11 61p
CANN IN G to m a t oes. prck
your own
And r ew Cross,
L e tart Fa ll s, O hi o Phone
? 4 1 ?85?
8 17 6tc
BALER TWI NE . 1.000 f l 375
lbS
IS
FA RM
FER
T I LI ZER , Specia l pn ces
Ba l l Br oth e r s Fa rm s. S R
143 and Co Rd 10 Phon e
698 45?1
8 19 Otp

REAL E STA TE SALE BY
U NITED
STA TE S
OF
AME R ICA
(FARMER S
HOME
AO MINI S
TRA TI ON ) 1 Ftve room.
on e
s t ory
ho use .
ap
pr o)(tma t el y 50 yea r s o ld
on 5 acres o t land . lo cated
one mrle N o r thwest o f
Pomer oy on th e east s tde of
Stat e R out e 143 l nspect•on
P l ea se c on tact t h e off• ce of
F armers
Home ·
Ad
m .n .s lra t ion .
171
Wes t
Se cond Stre et, Po me roy ,
Oh 10 457 69 Te l eph one 991
1603 Te rm s of sa l e . 1 Cash
7 Terms availabl e to an
•n(' lt g •b le applicant ar e not
less lh an 10 percent ca sh
down and not to excee d 10
a mortized pa y m ent s l o r
b alan ce of p urchase prr ce
B •d s to be acce pt ed a t
Pomeroy O ff ic e unl it ?. 00
PM August ,9, at whi ch l 1me
b td s wil l be op en ed The
Go ver nme nt r eserves lhe
rtght to re 1ect any and a ll
b1 dS
8 17 5tc

197? CL 450 Honda, cr ashbars ,
7 helmet s, and wmdshreld ,
$695 Phone 74? 3??::1
a 19 Jtc
LET u s se r v ice your Volks
wa gen , reasonabl e r.ates.
M1dd l eport Pennzorl No r th
Second Str ee t , Middleport
MODERN KITCHEN - With
Phone 997 99 7::1
8 19 ?6 t c stove and refrigerator , ca'r ·
peting in living &amp; k itchen .
19 15 suz u K 1 ?50, 5850 See Joe
Imbod en , Welchtown Hill in Nice bath , 2 bedrooms .
M inersville
Natural ga s furnace , and
8 19 61p large lot .

iJ

NI CE while Leghorn
hens Phon e 949 366 1
a 19 3tc

CAN N lN G 1oma 1oes . green
and r ed peppers Cleland
Far ms. Geraldine Cl eland .
Ra c me Phon e 949 41?1
8 19 lfc
STEREO RADIO •
8 !rack
•ape , am fm
4 speed
changer
comb i nation
Phone $ 103.66 . or ter ms Ca l l
99 ? ]965
.
8 19 He
MOV 1N G mu st se ll : One soli d
ma pl e. .1 p•ece bedroom
s ui!e . 1 9 piece antrque
drnmg r m . sur te : 1 Gibso n
stde by S1de r efr 1ge rator
freezer combtnalron. har
vest gold . one Mag\&lt; Chef
gas st ove . harvest go ld , One
brown leather rocke r ,. 'on e
green l iving r oom chair ,
brown anliq u ~ chair om am ,
1 wooden ro c ker , 1 lawn
sweeper , bicycl e , d eco y s
(or huntrng , c lolhi ng an d
nHSC . ';A I South Fou r th St
Pho n r 99? ?97 1
·
8 19 :11c

KUHL CAKE DECOR

OUT OF TOWN - On good '
paved road . Mobile home has
3 bedroom s and L. C. water .

CLELAND

'REALIY

MAIN
PO~R6Y,o
MIDDLEPORT -

GOOD GRIEF!
HOW ~HOULD I
KNOW~ ... DOE5

I~IIIORIT&amp;P A
FEW MILLIOIJ!
SO WHATr

Pomeroy , Ohto

Stop In Or

IT

Ca11992 ·1531 8-115

Cui -

standing buy . 1 fl oor plan . 2
or 3 BR . ba th , lovely krt ·
chen , fu ll basement. New
perma - pane a l u m win
dows, new carpe tin g, new
paneling , new h ot water
tank , new carport, N G .
forced atr heat . On quret

street . JU ST $13 .000
NEAR HARRISONVILLE
- 1 lo vely acre. Brr ck &amp;
Frame . 3 large BR , 1'h
bath s, utility R ., lovely
kttchen , 27 ft . cabtnets,
range &amp; oven Front porch ,
rear patio, la r ge garage
with stor age sPace Ca r -

peted $25,900
NEAR RUTLAND - 2.77
ac r es. 1 floor plan, 3 lovely
BR .. bath, nroe krtchen ,
utility R , storm wihdows &amp;
doors , si de porch, carpo rt
&amp;
la rge
ga rage.
f ull
basement w i t h prrvate
water supp ly (cr ty tap
paid), 2 trailer hookups

THIS YOU MUST SEE
$28.000.
POMEROY - Close 5
ac r es, home has 3 B R .
Bath , nrce kitchen. por c hes Storage bldg . Asking

only $7,900.
DON'T THROW YOUR
MONEY AWAY - LET US
APPRAISE
THE
PROPERTY
BEFORE
YOU BUY OR SELL
PHONE - 992-2259

¥10 8 J

.KQ J53
4K 62

¥ Q6H

¥ KJ
t A 10 71
• J 98 3

PORT A BLE
T O ILET
REN TAL .
Cons l r uCitOn
O u t door
events
Ph one
Ga l lipo l iS .
446 478, ,
Ru s sell's Plumbt ng a n d
H eat •ng
8 19 r fc

SOUTH ID J
.AKQ
• A 972

t86
4 A 7 51
North ·Soulh vulnerable

EXCAVAT ·IN&amp; .
bacr~-noe ,
dozer and d•t che r
Gas .
e l ec lri c a nd water line
bur 1at , base m ents, footers ,
septic sys l ems and brush
c: lean.ng Wi ll hau l fill dirl ,
to p sorl , sand and gravel,
l 1mestone for dri11eways and
road s. Phone Charles R
Hatl re ld , Bac khoe Service.
R t 1, Rulland , Oh ro. 742
6092
7 11-9otc

count

UTILE ORPHAN_ ANNIE

LITTLE ORPHAN
HM-M
I'M NOT 50
SURE JUST

START THAT

West

North

Pass
Pass

2 N T. Pass
Pass
Pa ss

It 1s a cinch to lind a way to

and rtse w1th an honor
Easl will hold back his ace
Later on South will have no way
to collect more than one extra
- -d1iam1ond tnck.
South 'Will comp lain that su its
r c=::r1ever break lor him . but hrs
co mplaint should fall on deal

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

EXCAVA TIN G, doze r , lo ader
and backhoe w or k se ptr c
tank s
i n s t a ll ed ,
d ump
trucks and lo boy s for htre.
wil l hau l 1111 dirt . to p sod ,
lim es to ne an d gra ve l . Cal l
Oo b or Roger Jeff e r s. day
ph on e 992 70a9, nr gh t phone
Q9 '2 35 25 o r 992 5232
2 11 lfc

ears
DON'T MEN110N

If South stops to thmk after
taking that first spade he will

rT!

AFTER ALL , rT:S M'JOIJ
i'I&lt;EI:P fOI.ECATS LII&lt;E
"TI-4EiM ~~IN'
MION!

8 - 21

MOBI LE Crane serv ice and
doz er work Ph one 99 2-5468
8 -7-261p

Get a
load of
th1S

Poor well-meanin'
little tt~ke' She
never learned to
statJ out ,..,-vof Papo·s
thinqs'

The kid!
Where's

WOU L D YOU BELIEVE ?
Build an all steel burldrng at
Po le Barn prtces"' Golden
Grant Atl St eel Buildings,
Rt
4. eox 148, waverly ,
Oh10 Phone 9A7 2296
7 2.4 t fc

the

kid?

little

move~

'Y'!S

BACKHOE for rent , hour or
contract , r eg or exc avatory
t ype Sept tc ta nks tnstalled .
B ill Pullins , phone 992 2478 .
7 24 26tc
H A ND LET TERED SIGNS
A ND PO STE RS
FREE
E ST I MAT ES CALL M . C
C R AWFO RD , 992 7680
8 7 26t p

sanitatre

engraver

13 Dwell
14 Arrow
poison
15 Anne Ja, k-

S Of the magical arts
6 Makeup
1tem
? Hockey
great
10 Famous
3 Down
(3 wds.)
11 The East
12 Nullify

son's mate
16 Excavated
17 Outfit
18 Store
fodder
20 Actress
Arthur
21 Fall guy
22 " Peer -"
23 Nut
25 List of
candidates
26 Drooping

I&lt;IGHT!!-

$201000!r

A ._ iV'rLJ

ACIG

MODERN)

'

Time" 10.

Yesterday's Answer
16 Call to
reveiUe
19 - opera
22 Merriment
23 Comedian's
specialty
24 Arthurian
lady
25 Religious
body

27 Bolt a
party
29 Speed
merchant
30 Unearthly
34 Cross out
38 Wrng ·
(Lat. )
:n Windy City,
for short

8: 3o-(hlco &amp; the Man 3,4; Wall Street Week 33.
9:oo-Rockford Flies 3,4.1 5; Kup's Show 9; Movie " The
Men" 9; Conversation with Leon Jaworski 20;
Washington Debates 33 .
9:»--Movle "'The Night Strangler" 6.13. Movie "The
People Next Door" 10.
10:~Pollce

SEPTIC T ANKS c l ea n ed
Mod ern Sanilat ton 992 3954
o r 992 73A 9
9 18 ttc

JJ .
11 :oo-News 3,4,6.8.10.13; ABC News 33.

11

:J~Johnny

V•I'

®WHAT MADE
YOU DECIDE 10
LIFE AT SEA~
AN lwl:FATE:D
ROMANCE?

NOTATALL.I
COME FROM AMIDWESTERN STATE:.
RAN AWAY ABA
TEENAGER

WHEN I FIRST &amp;AW
THE OCEAN I WAo

CAPTIVATEO BY
IT. I WAN1EO TO
SEE EVERYTI-!INGONTHEOTHER
BIDE OF IT ,I

10; Janakl 33.
1:()()-Midnight Special 3.4; Movie " Doomwatch"' 10.
2:»--Star Trek 4; News 13.

AstroGrapt-1
Bernice Bede Oaol
For Frkllry, Aug. 22, 1175
ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll 1t) A
c o-worker upsets you and
makes you moody today
Cheer up . Eventng brings a
refreshing socral ltme
TAU~US

amused"
Arrow
porson

f----+-+-1

REALLY

E LVI NEll GOT
FUST PRIZE

AN' 'IOU COME

CGL

HFHA'M

MSJGLXS
RAG I

CGL

5f'IKE SURE 15 THIN ... I
HEARD THAT HE'S 6EEN
·LIVING IN THE DESERT
WITH THE CO'IOTES...

I(\) SECONT

CONTEST,

. MAINTAINED DURING
CLOSING POMEROY-MASON BRIDGE

HGGJ

FA

You erroneously feel you must
tmpress others Sattsfaction
comes from being yourself

VIAOO (Aug. 23-S.pt. 22) In·
sistlng upon having your way
only resu lts rn upsetting you.
The famil y will let you know
qu1ckly lhat they don't like it.

B DT M
G W D A .' - Z GSA
Q N J J C KG J D
Yesterday's Ctyptoquote : A CULTURE SPUT IN A
THOUSAND PIECES. THAT IS SEGREGATION. - ULUAN UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) You
lend to be a dreamer today
SMITH

BARNEY ·

HOLLER QUILTIN'

1 ..-+-1f--+-1 GEMINI (M01 21 -June 20)
r;
You'll feet that family members

NOT QUITE , BUT I 'LL
KEEP TRYING.AS LONGDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's
AS I'M OUT -mERE AT
CANCER (June 21-July 22) H's
5EA 1I FE EL FREE ...
AXYDLBAAXR
not
a day to take chances . Lady
Is LONGFELLOW
FREE!
Luck' has deserted your corner
One letter simply stands for an other In th1s sample A is Your good fortune comes from
used for the three L 's, X for the tw o O's, etc Single letters, a fam ily member's surprrse In
apostrophes , the length and formation of the words are all the evening
hints Each day th e code l e tters are di fferen t
LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 You
tend to be extravagant today
CRVPTOQUOTE

N

I JEST FOUND OUT
WHO WON TH' HOOTIN'

b:-1-4-+--i

(April 20-Moy 20)

Even though It's Fr iday n rght ,
you'll have a be«er ttme with
fam1ly than w1th friends Don't
feel obhgated to go out

or even your best pal won 't u nL......J.-...L-..1.,....,..11 derstand you today Don't fret ,
neetrng someone new can
how to work it: : hase boredom .

VADNRV

5 rooms

Carson 3,4, 15; Wide World Mystery

6,13 ; Movie " Onlonhead" B; Movie " Horror Hotel"

3 :30-Movle "Never on Sundav" 41.

~~~::~:::==:::::=:::::::=-~==::~::~~~~~--------_:~--------~~~~~~· 40 "We - not~r+--t--t--t--t--

l

Woman 3,4, 15; News 20; Paul Nuchlms

5:3G-Movle "Nearly a Nasty Accident'" 4.

letter
29 Draw back
31 Bit of
advice
32 Perform
33 Producer
Harris
:15 Twine
37 Nucleus
38 Whirled
39 Greet

~'"'~~"'' niNG~~-BUT NOT-C
Lr;u_
?HRt~!!- THIS MINK WAT !!-

'

MASO~

ne wspaper The most in ~
teresrmg quest1ons will be
used m the column and writers
w111 rece1ve cop1es ol JACOBY

6:25-Farm Report 13.
6:»--Five Minutes to Live By 4 ; News 6; Public Af.
fairs 10; Bible Answers 8; Blue Ridge Quartet 13.
6:Js--columbus Today 4.
6:45-Mornlng Report J ; Farmtlme 10.
6:55-News 13.
7:oo-Today 3.4.15 ; A.M. America 6, 13, CBS News 8, 10.
8:oo-Lucy Show 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8.10; SeS&lt;lme St.
33.
8:»--Big Valley 6;
9.()()-A.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4, 15; Muriel Stevens 8;
Sc~oolles 10; Morning with D. J . 13; Consumer's
World 33 .
9·»--Not For Women Only J; Dinah 6 ; Galloping
Gourmet 8; Popeye 10; New Zoo Revue 13;
Biography 33.
9 : ~ huck White Reports 10.
10:0G-Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3,4, 15; Spin-Oft 8, 10;
Mike Douglas 13; Jodv's Body Shop 33.
10 :31&gt;-Wheel of Fortune 3.4, 15; Spirit of 1/lctory 4;
Price Is Right 8; Bandstand 10; Designing Women
33.
I 1·oo-High Rollers 3.4, 15; One Lite lo Live 6; Gambit
8.10; Film JJ.
11 : »-Hollywood Squares 3,6, 15; Brady Bunch 13;
Midday 4 ; Love of Life 8.10.
11 : 55--Take Kerr 8; Farmtlme 10.
12:oo-Magnlflcent Marble Machine 3, 15; Showoffs 13;
Bob Braun's 50 -50 Club 4; News 6,8, 10; Mister
R09ers 33.
•
12 :»--Jackpot 3.15; All My Children 6,13; Search for
Tomorrow 8.10; Elec. Co. 33 .
12 :55-- NBC News 3,15; Ryan's Hope 6.13; Magnificent
Marble Machine 12; Phil Donahue 8; Young &amp; the
Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15; VIlla Alagre
33.
1:»--Daysof Our Llves3,4, 15; Let's Make a Deal6,13;
As the World Turns8.10; To Be Announced 33.
2:()()-$10,000 Pyramid 6,13; Guiding Light 8,1 0;
Woman 33.
2 : 3~Doctors 3,4,15; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,13; Edge of
Night 8.10; Masterpiece Theatre 33.
3:()()-Another World 3,4, 15; General Hospital 6.13 ;
Match Game 8,10; Interface 20.
J : JO--One Life to Live 13; Bewitched 6; Tattletales
8,10; Boarding House 20; Spotlight On 33 .
4:oo-Mr. Cartoon J; I Dream of Jeannie 4; Somerset "
15; Mickey Mouse Club 6; Musical Chairs 8;
Sesame St . 33; Movie " Handford's Point" 10;
Dinah 13.
4:31&gt;-Bewltched J; Merv Griffin 4; Mod Squad 6;
Mickey Mouse Club 8; Bonanza 15.
s :oo-FBI 3; Lucy Show 8; Mister Rogers' Neigh borhood 33.
5:J~News6 ; Andy Griffith 8; Hogan's Heroes 13; Get
Smart '15; Elec. Co. 20.33.
6:oo-News 3,4,16,8,10,13.15; ABC Nws 6; Sesame St.
20; Jean Shepherd' s America 33.
6:»--NBC News 3,4, 15; News 13; Andy Griffith 6; CBS
News 8, 10; Jody's Body Shop 33.
7:()()-Truth or Cons. 3,4; Bowling tor Dollars 6;
WCHS-TV Report 8; News 10; Jimmy Dean 13;
Phil Donahue 15.
7:3~PorterWagoner 3; Pop Goes the Country 4; New
Candid Camera 6; ; Pop Goes! he Country 8; Movie
" Old Mother Riley In Society" 9; Treasure Hunt 10;
To Tell the Truth 13; Black Perspective o~ the
News 33.
8:oo-Sanford &amp; Soo J, ; Movie " The Mark ot,;z.orro"
6. 13; Preobe 4 ; NFL Soffball 8; Movie "One More

27
.,:u~L:_:AB~N~ETR~----~~:---;,..AiJ::J=::::-7Y(ij":jlf:iiiTktAiO~~O\i::ieu(T::I
Espied
f
YaJ THINK NO...JEY CAN BUY
28 Greek

S EW I NG
MA C HINE .
R e p~rrs. se r viCe. a ll mak es
992 228 4 The F abrr c; Shop ,
P om eroy Aut h o'rf zed Singer
~a l es
and Serv•c e
We
sh ar p en s c .ssors
3 29 II C

Phone

(Vo you ha ve a quest1on lor
the Jacobys? Write '"Ask the
Jacobys"' care ol th1s

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
1 Seaweed
1 Cabbagelike
5 Mountain
plant
( comb.
2 Rousseau
form)
work
8 Chinese
3 Ideal mates
island
( 2 wds )
9 Bleu or
4 Famous

EL!WOC D SOWER S REPAII'
Swee pers, loa sters , iron'S,
a ll sma ll CIPPI•a n ces Law n
mower, n ex t to State Htgh
way Garag e on Route 7
Phon e 985 38?5
4 16 tf c
CUS TOM
P I CTUR E
F RAM IN G
OR I G IN AL
SE ASCA PI;: AND LAND
SCAPE P AI NTING S E
JOYCE MILLER, 99? 7680
8 10 ' .tip

tXIII

•Axx .
The answer is that we would
like to know all the bidding but
that in general with this sort of
hand our best chance to ~at the
slam is to plunk down the ace
and hope. At least the opponents aren"tlikely to make a
grand slam .

~N41~

OUR LOCAL SUSINESS-

6:00 A.M. TIL 8:30 P.M.

/

A Kansas reader wants to
know 1f we would lead the ace
of clubs against six spades. Our
whole hand is given as :

By Oswa ld &amp; James Jacoby

WEEKDAYS ON WMPO AM

I

INT
3NT

6XX . X I I I

D &amp; D tt&lt; l=.t:. Tnmming , 10
yea r s expe rr enc:e. Insured,
tree est rm a l es . Call 99 2 1057,
Coolville
Phon e { 1l 667
JO.t l
A 30 tf c

Dave Beningo and Jay Hill.

NEEOED - 100 ACRES OR
MORE ON HA~D ROAO
WITH WATER. CALL 992·

~ m~~

set al three notrump. All
has to do is to lead a diatowa rd dummy at tnck

5PENDYOUR

wi th bath , modern kitchen,
nat gBs heal and basement on
good str eet .
ACREAGE 97 a cre s of
privacy, 15 or more of b Ottom .
A Dante! Boone re sort

South

East

Opemng lead - J •

1\ELLO ,
. YOU SURE
MADE A FAST TRIP -·EVERYTHIIICO WENT FINE,
EH? HOW DID YOU FINO
THINGS THERE 7

\'ltiEN I' ll

Kt:: A DY M I X CO N C ~ETE
de l . ve r ed rr g ht t o your
pr o1e c l Fas t an d easy Fre e
es llm ates Phone 992 3284.
Go eglein Ready Mi x Co
M • ~dleport , Oh10
o 30 trC

WORLD

tals .
,
INCOME - 4 apartments and
business room to let in Mid-

dleport .
NEW LISTING -

EAST
• 61 J

+ 92

Hear David Strang,

NEAR STORES - 12 rooms ,
bitth, nat. gas and large lot.
Lots of ~ossibllities for ren -

WEST
. JI0812
4Q 10

IrS A SUPER SUMMER
AT WMPO RADIO

Nat . gas furnace .

see that three diamond tricks
will be enough to give him his
contract He will remember
that diamonds do break ~2
more often than 3-3. and he will
find the safety play to take care
of that ~2 break.
When he leads that diamond
he will play low from dummy .
East won 't be able to do better
than to Lake his 10 Later on
South will play one of the diamond honors to knock out the
ace and w111 use dummy's king
of clubs as an entry for the rest•
of Lhe diamond sw t.
Simple , when you stop to

• 95

service
Volkswagens. a nd other
foretgn cars .
Wilbur Ward,
Mgr &amp; Mechanic
8-21 -1 mo .

a I so

MAW --

77~5592

.,

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

Safety play brings home 3 N. T.

Systems .

1

FRIDAY, AUGUST 22,1975

New

WIN AT BRIDGE

21

20;
'

Movie " Adventures of the Queen" 8; Movie "But
Not for Me" 10; Janakl 33.
12 :»--Wide World Special 6.
1:oo-TQmorrow 3.4; News 13.

8:oo-Ben Vereen 3.4. 15; Almost Anything Goes 6, 13 ;
The Waltoos 8,10. Evening At Pops 33; Life of

NORTH

Married" 8;

Not

11 :oo-News 3.4.6,8, 10, IS; ABC News 33.
11 J~Johnny Carsoo 3.4. 15; Wide World Special 13;

Truth 13; Amer ican Outdoorsman 15.

MATTER~

13; ; Movie "We're

••'·

.
Streets of San

Movie " Rio Conchas" 10; Firing Line
Phllad&lt;ilphla Folk Festival 33.
IO·oo-Harry 0 6,13; News 20; Woman 33 .

Price is R1ght 8; Wild KingdOm 10; To Tell the

Phone 992-9913
North 2nd Street
Tune - Ups - Batteries
Shock Absorbers . Tires
Muffler-Tatlptpes · Cooling

---

608 E .

7: 3G-Hollywood Squares 3,41 ; Ohio Lottery 6;

!&gt;LIRE, I

F !at woods, Ohto

We

, Francisco

it Count 20, Nova 33

MIDDLEPORT
PENNZOIL

WOOD METAL - PLASTIC
ANTIQUES
MODERN CHEMICALS

1974 SILVER Caprr for sa l e ?9'. A M P el ectrr c welde r l•k c
car t 667 6 18 5
new . \11 5 et'r'lon e 99 ? 7759
8 21 61p
8 70 41(

WILL
do
roof
pa1n l•n g
shmgtm g , r emod el .nt error
C I C Call 949 591 3
8 ?0 6tc

Mr. and Mrs. Jake Lee are .
n,
in Colwnbus. Mr. Lee will '
undergo orthopedic knee
surgery in a Columbus
bospital on Monday, Aug. 18.
S. Sgt. Stephen Wagner,
going to Korea, has moved
his family here.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert K.
Swift of Columbus visited her
parents, Mr . and Mrs .
Francis Morris to celebcate
her
fathers
birthday
Saturday, Aug. 16.
Mr. - and
Mrs .
Bill
McKenzie, Phil, Jeff and
In 1951, the United States
Jozie, of Gallipolis were ordeted construction '
the
dinner guests Sunday of Mr. world's first atomic sub- .JLD furn1tur e. tee boxes,
brass beds , or comp lete
and Mrs. Roy Riffle. MrS'. marine.
house holds
Write M
D- •
MiH.~r. Rt
4, Pomeroy ,
Marvin Chaffin of Colwnbus
Ohio Call 992 7760
visited with them in the af10 7 74
.,,-, , and-Mrs. Phil Miller of Anna, - -- .......
ternoon.
BUY~, ~ E L. L.or lrad eany U S
Mr . and Mrs. Marvin , . Ohio .Were weekend guests of
cotn~ o r cu rr en cy Will pay
'5 ? 60 lor Sl fa c e, 1964 and
Olaffin of Colwnbus spen~ their parents, Mr. and Mrs.
olde r dtm es, qua rt e r s, and
the weekend with Mr. and Gedrge Neigler.
halves Ca ll Rutland 1&lt;1~
. Mrs. Jerry Powell.
M,r. and Mrs. Arthur T . 365 1, Ro ger Wams ley
8 15 l?tc
, : Mrs . Lillian Wood of .Baiills of Jeffersontown, Ky.
Colwnbus and Mrs. Rachel
here visiting with her HALL' S Salvage on o ld Rt 33.
IVS' ac ro ss fr o m Grueser's
,McBride of Syracuse visited mother, Mrs . Clara Roush.
, Chipper. will buy 1unk autos
wtlhout motors $16 to \,0,
:Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Badgley
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
wtth moto r s, SIB to S73 .
•Monday afternoon.
Turley and Kenny spent
Co mplete S/0 to S75 This
d oesn't m c lude compact and
~ Mr. and Ml's. Ed Mlller Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
fore•gn cars, motors. and
' visited Mr. arid Mrs. Robert Don Kisamore · at Newark
transmissrons not cleaned ,
$1 ·s o a hu ndr ed Sc rap No 1.
~nweil at Gallipolis on Ohio.
'
long me tal , $1 a hundred ,
•Tuesday .
Mrs. Frank Cheesebrew of
N o 1 l ong m etal , $1 SO per
h undr ed . cle an cast $7
Gretta and Isabel Simpson Shawnee, Ohio visited her
hundred, Trn , 40c per hu nd
·spent the weekend with Mr . former neighbors, Monday,
r ed , Any m ater •al brought
into , tunk yard not sorted
and Mrs. Solon Butcher at Aug. 18.
.. . _ :
1 " w ill be gr:ad ed accordmg l y
SPencer, W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Del'6~~t'
f&gt;rt ces subje cT to c hange .
hour s frQt»·il a m to 4 p m
.. Mrs. Clara Roush spent a Morris of Athens, Mrs. Elsie
Monda y through F riday , 8
·week with Mr. and Mrs. Roush and Mrs. Marie
a m to 1? noon Saturday s
W ill p 1c k u p old autos , d o
•Robert McKelvey at Belpre. Chapman of Pomeroy spent
ha v e some part s f or aulas
Mr. and Mrs. Rob Palmer Sunday afternoon with Mr.
Ph one 985 4?97
B 19 6tc
iof Goldsboro; -N.C. and Mr. and Mrs. Francis Morris.

\'

~ ~~9

8 I :' 761c

- ..., - -- -

8 15 91c

LeonardO Da VInci 20.
9 :oo-Movle " Th&amp; Last Day" 3,4, 15;

1

Noodles a l so featured .

.· - -. . . . - · - - - -

.,

3; Merv Gri!ll n 4; Mod Squad 6 ;
Mickey Mouse Club l 8 : Bonanza 15.
5:()()-FBI 3; Lucy Show 8; Mister R09ers' Neigh borhood 20,33.
S:»--News6; Andy Griffith 8; Hogan' s Heroes 13; Get
Smart 15; Elec. Co. 20.33.
6:oo-News J.U.10.13. 15; ABC NewS6; Sesame St . 20;
Book Beal 33.
6 .»--NBC NewsJ,4,15; ABC Newsl3; AnctyGr lfflth6 ;
CBS News 8, 10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33.
7 oo- Truth or Cons 3,41; Bowling for Dollars 6; News
10; Let' s Make a Deal IJ; J lmmy Dean 15. Making

K 1tchen State Inspected
Lt ce n se d
Baker
and
D eco rator .
Homemade

I

THURSDAY, AUGUST 21 , lf75

CAPTAIN EASY

PAINT
STRIPPING
SERVICE

19 ' 7 CAMPER . parl l y ~el l
con ta•ned , m u s t seC' to
21ppre c ral e
'!. I 695
Pho ne
99] 1 1]!1

-,..

Pom('roy

Ph . 997 -2114

1971 Pl ymouth 1 d r ha rdtop , ALLI S CHA LMER S trac:tor 13
F ury
Ill ,
Se r 1a l
No
Model W1th one lb " plow and
P M23K 130872
Fa r me r 's
one spar e tire New Conn
Ba nk an d Savr ng s Com
Co rn et and case Phone 247
pany
noo
8 21 Jtc
8 1 I 3t c

Employment Wanted

8 21 lt c

CO.'~fl'

.

~

4 : 3~Bewltched

CAKE BAKING
WANTED

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

mo

- - - - For Sale

.. .

Nathan Biggs
Radtator Spec •allst

Ohto
Ph , 992-3993

$]95

'

From th e l a r gest Tru c loi or
Bulldoz er Radiato r to the
src alt est Hea te r Core

LARRY lAVENDER
A 10 l

CO RLIN DA L DOERR ,
Add r ess Unk n own,
l /\ N O~ ROOM fur n 1sh ed and
D ef c ndan1
5 n /\MILY Gara ge Sale a t .:1) 4
un tu rn 1shed
apart me nt s
No 15873
Sou th Th •r d Ave , M i d
99?
54J
iJ
Pho
n
e
A compla rn t tor d 1vor ce.
(He p a r!. lh 1s Th ur sday ,
4 1? tf c
custo d y o f c hildren . divrs•on of
F r tday and Sat ur day 10 am
p roper t y and ather pr oper
till dark
r elie f has been tded agarnst
8 70 31 C J B R Tr ailer , f urnrshe d . 1!2
E lm St . Mrddleport , Oh 10
v0l1 ·'You are r equ rred to
.,.
lnq ut r e b etwee n 9 a m and
, ans-wer the Com pla•n 1 w•th•n J FAM I L Y
Yard Sa l e at
6 p m a r th e V i l lage Gun
1wenty etght days after the
Rustic Hill s
Syracuse ,
Sho p Ph on e 99 2 5177 after 6
las t p u bl lcar ,on
F r rda y
and
Sa tur day.
p
m
ln qutre
at
225
L ar ry Spen ce r
Au gus t n and ?:l Anl 1ques.
Br oadway
Clerk o f Courts
cl oth m g. dr sh es, f urn1ture .
8 21 6t c
Me1gs Co un t y , Ohi O
baby lf em s . a Child 's sand
( 81 14. ?1 . ?8 ( 9 1 11 11 18· 6tc
box
8 ?0 "~ tc
TWO Furn tshed ap t s
Kay
Ce c il 87 South Seco nd Ave ,
GA R AG E Sale , Thur sd ay and
Middleport. Oh to P hQne
F riday Augus t ?I and nat
992 5262
109 Spr m g Aven ue . 9 a m
B 2 1 rtc
til l 5 p m P omer oy . Ohro
__
---·-----------8 70 ?tp
'The Almanac
PRIV A TE mee tmg ro om f or
YARD Sale o ff Rt 174 Rl. 7
any or ganiza t1on , phone 99?
by pa ss on Rt I A3 up b eh in d
19} s
Today is Thursday, August
Jack ' s Club Clothes c h ea p .
J 11 lfc
through F r1da y
21, the 233rd day of 1975 with
8 70 3tc APT l 1ke n ew . 3 rooms wrth
132 to lullow .
lar ge ba th , tabl etop range
RUMMAGE SA LE S. Mason•&lt;
lar ge c lose t East Matn Si
The moon is full .
T e mpl e. Mtddlep ort , Au gu st
Pomeroy Se e to appreciate
The morning stars are
/ t,
and 73, Thur sda y,
Ph one Ga ll tpO I •s d u r •ng day
F riday
an d
Sa t u rday
·14 6 1699. e venrng s 4.16 95::19
Mars, Jupiter and Saturn.
Sponsor e d bY th e F trsl
~ 10 •tc
The evening stars are MerChurch o f Gad , Syracuse 9
am 1111 d p m dally
cury and Venus.
8 70 31C F 1&gt;. RM h ouse 3 o r .:1 b edroom s
I1V1n g room , drntn g ro om
Those bOrn on this date are
and moder n kitch en . car
under the sign of Leo . BACK PO RCH SAL E and
pe tO)q 7 baths and a ha l f
Yard Sa le at ?? .t Cond or St ,
Pond for s w1mmrng atll(
&amp;itain 's Princess Margaret
Pomeroy. Oh ro Fr rday and
fi
shr n g
4 m lies w es t ...
Saturday fr om 10 a m t ill 5
was born August 21, 1930.
Ha rr• sonville
Fo r
ap
p m
Everything mus t go
po rntme nt c al l 747 37-15 be
from Sc to S1
twe en Sa nd 8 p m , Monday
8 ?0 Jtp
On this day in history:
thr ough r riday
8 18 Stp
In 1940, Leon Trotsky, a Y A RD S~le a ll th rs week Gas
prime builder of Soviet Comfurn a ce. gas h ea t er , small
a ppl•an ces , chu bby g •rls TRA I L ER lo r re n t, t , mtle off
munism, was assassinated in
Rt 143 on K•ngsb ury ·R d
clolhe s .1 th St . Raci ne
Eilhe r furnished or un
Mexico aty where he had
a 19 3tc
furni She d
Phon e 74? 31?3
lived in exile for three years.
8 ?0 t ?tc

''

STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SID I NG-SOF F ITT
GUTTERS AWNINGS

V 8, std tran s . r ad io

y.\ RO SA L E at To m Gr ueser
r es .d ence . 1675 L• n co l n
H e,ghts. Pomeroy . Thu r
sday and F" rtday . st ar t rng at

m

Service

Blown mlo Walls &amp; AHrcs

$2095

1%BMERCURYCOMET2DR.

Y /\ RD S /\l L E cor ne ro l F li th

9 a

I Radiato

Sy racU Se,

S/\ L E at corne r o f
and Matn Sl
m
Ra c .n e 1h 1S Saturday on ly
fr om 9 a m 1 ill S p m Lots
o f good c lothrng and ba by
t urn !l ure
8 2 1 7t c

O C/\ L c oup le ne ed s country
~1orn c
,n Ch ester Pomeroy
M C' il Phone 98 5 J'J J? or 98 5
1988 Che s ter

l

Insulation Services

$1295
Blk vrnyl roof, grey frn• sh , good !Ires, automa l• c.
power steering , r ad •o

Yard Sale

IEXPERIE~CED

Blown

1910 NOVA 1/-8 CPE .

!~ road

Wanted To Rent

FREE ESTIMATES

350 V 8 automatic trans , power st eeri ng and brakes,
dark green fini sh , vinyl roof . sa ddle buck et sea t s,
console , radio. like new w -w trres.

Y f, RD

'.

,..,
'·
'-

Pomeroy
OF
Co.
QUALITY
1970 CHEll . CAMARO

I

Business Services

2

RO O M
AND
BO J\ RD
Pr t vilt e atr co nd1 110n e d
r oom
ph on&lt;'
T v
all
me al s laundry plu s many
(' l&lt;.tra s V'Jr•t e Mr s M
J
Mill er no)( l OS Po m eroy ,
O h1 0
8 I ?61 p

I

r ----------------~----------------,

Alflo Saltli

J t&lt;.,. l a r em•nd erroarr c nd •h c
a uc•ion sa l e o f Mr i\nd Mr ~
L arry Wiley a s advN 1•St.' d 1n
l ast
&lt;., uf"lday' s
ltlne s
'&gt;e n tu1C I a • •he r('ar o l 1-17
'&gt; OUih T h•fd /\v c ntt(' tn
Middleport . 0111 0
Thank
You . l hc Rradl or d fl uc••on
Co mpa n v
13 '} 1 IIC

~ ~

r_... . . _._._..__ _.. ___________.._,_..__ .··--- - . .
l· Television log for easy viewing

;-o., 'l11ursd&lt;1)', 1\u~. 21. 1975

·

+

Notice

9 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy
Diet!: TRACY
·

Ideas will elude you . It will be
tough to accomplish the thrngs
you should .

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Ho¥.

do
SAGITTARIUS (No¥. 23-Deo.
21) Examme your motives tp
make sure they're not completely sel fish before you com plam about not getting c o·oper atron at home

CAPRICORN (Pee . 22-Jon.
19) You r negative thoughts ,
hold Dame Fortune back fr om
l u rnrsh rng you with a ~easan,t
surpr rse later rn th e day

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 11)
You del ud e yourself mto thtnk mg the group can 't get along
wrthout you . It's goang to cost
yo u n ght 1n the pocketbook ·

PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 201
So meone could steal the
applause that you r rchl )&lt;
deserve fo r an accomplishment Don't d esparr The day
will rrght itself

~Your
,~Birthday
Aug. 22, 1175
You wll l make two important:
changes th rs comrng year.
They'll prove very beneticiaJ
and prof•table One affects
your career, the other your
residence.
INEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I

I AmECIATE
EVEMHIN6 '!HAT
lfDIIND-HEADED

KID DOES FOR

ME ...

FURNITURE

HERMAN GRATE(
W.VA.

i"

..

:·

,.
'

I ,

• I

t

'

''
"

I

2:1)

Social obligattons turn out to
be needlessly expensrve. Don't
be trapped into doing
something you don 't want to

\

'

�i

I.

'

·'

..

.i

· 10 - The Daily Sentinel, Midrlleport.Pomeroy , 0., 11uu-sday , Aug. 21. 197~ 1

Area Deaths
.

WILLIAM CONNOLLY

· ··'

TORC H - William H orner
Connolly. as. Torch, died
Wednesday a I the Monterey
Nursi ng Home in Grove City
followin g an extended ill ness .
Mr . Connolly was born in
R ichmond , Va. , the son of the
la te William B . and Ellen
Nu tter Connolly . A ca rpent er.
he was a retired employe of
the North American Aviation
Corp., Col u mbus. He had
resided in T or ch 25 years .
Surviving
are
t wo
daug h ters , D o nn a T oylor·.
Torch , and Sara Chris ty of
Columbus ; thr ee grand
ch ildren, and seve ral niec es
and nephews .
He was preceded i n death
by his wife, Anna , in 1970. a
son , Marvin Jay, t hree
sis te r s, and fiv e broth ers
Funeral servi ces will be
held at 2 p . m . Friday a t the
Wh i te F une ral Hom e in
Coo l v i l l e wi th fht:~ R ev
Harold Lem ley officiating
Burial will be i n the Coolville
Cemetery . Fr iends may ca ll
al the fun eral hom e anytim e

JAMES T. TAYLOR

V irginia ; Carden. Racine;
James of Athe ns, a nd Leo of
Hebron : four si sters, Mrs
Gay Richard s, Mr s. Fl oss ie
Winters and Mrs . Matti e
Maxwell ;· all of Ripley. and
M rs . Fl on ni e Spears of
Col umb us
Fun era l services will be
Sn turd ay at 2 p . m . at the
Johhs on Me Kellar
Funeral
Home in BnltimorC' w i th the
RC' v . Shelli e Bonduran t of
ticiati n g. Friend s m ay call at
HlC' funerrt/ hom e today fr om
7 to 9 Fri day ? to J €
1 nd 7 l o 9

MA VHF.
SAN FIIANCISCO!UI'Ii
- ;\ h•ntatin· eontraet WHS
A!aiEF.ME~T.

~HIIlOUIH'l'&lt; l

in lht•
st r ik l' hy
poli('(' and
firt•mt•n hut M.a ynr Jost.•ph
,\Ji oto sa id tht• "situation
will r ema in tht' same" until

Uu· pad

today

rt'l'(' i\'l'S

fimll

a)JPfll\·al.

Funeral services tor Jam es
T. Taylor , 47, M iddlep or1.
who
died
Tuesday
.1 t
Coshoc ton , wil l be held nt 9.1
m . Friday af lhe Rawlings
Coa ts Funera l H ome wi th the
Rev . Dona ld Cole off iciating .
Fri end s may ca ll at th e
fun eral home any ti me thi s
eveni ng . Followin g services
here. the body wil l be flown fa
Ootham , Ala ., for se r vices at
the Joh nson Fune r al Hom e,
2105 West Main St ., at 2 p . m .
Saturday . Buria l will be in
the Bethlehem Assembly at
God Cemetery in Houston
· County , Alabama .

Aliotjl. who rea c hed lht·
agrt•t•mt•nt
with
rt'Jlrest.'ntativt.•s of tht•
striking unions during talks
thut went into the early
morning hours. said the
proposal must be approvt·d

both the strike rs and tht•
eity Board of Supervisors.
hy

Thl' supervisors Wed·
ues1lay proclaimt•d a sta te

of emergeney and urgrd
the calling in nr hi ghway
patrolmen.

RUFUS RANDOLPH
Rufus

Randolph ,

67,

120

North Liberty St., Ba ltim o r e,
Ohio, died Wednesda y a t
Doctor's North Hospital ,
Columbus .
Mr . Randolph was born in
Roane County, W. Va .
He is survived by hi s wife,
Doris ; six chi ldr en , and 17
grandchildren ; tive brothers,
Thec:x:tore and Wi lla rd , West

KERWINS VISITED
EDEN - Mr . and Mrs.
Darre ll
Helz er
visited
recenlly with Mr . a nd Mrs .
Mike Kerwin.

JlRANDONSHULER

Birthday
celebrated
Mr.

and

Mr s.

Kc.J:Jny

Sale!

one's
jumping ·
into

MISSES and
JUNIORS

~

JEANS
Misses siz es 8 to 20.
Junior sizes J to 15.

Grueser &amp; Son Plumb .

Regular 10.00 Jeans
Regular 11.00 Jeans
Regular 12.00 Jeans

Nea_cit Carsey 419.

On many winter days , it uses heat from
outdoor air to warm your ho me . Gives
exceptional heating economy that can 't
be ·rnatc,hed by other heating systems .
During the summer, it efficiently cools your
home. It's-an all-electric, completely
·automatic comfort system . And Amana
quality assures you of lasting deper.~dability
and operating efficiency .
Before you replace your heating system, .
find out more about 'an Am.ana heat pump .
For no·obligation ,estimate. ca ll : · ·,

a

· PhoneFOREMAN and ABBOTT
rt, Ohio
I

\

Sale 7.99
Sale 8.79
Sale 9.59

Sale I

7.14

Blue Jeans

7.57

88~

aJUPLE WELCOMED - New Superintendent Charles Dowler and Mrs. Dowler, left,
were officially welcomed to the Meigs Local School District Thursday night when L. W.
McComas, right, hosted a dinner in their honor at Meigs High School. Welcoming Supt.
Dowler with a handshake is Carol Pierce, president of the Meigs Local Board of Education.
Remarks were given by McComas, Dowler and Pierce. Others attending were Mrs. Me.
Comas, Mrs. Pierce, Joe Sayre, Mr. and Mrs. Virgil King, Mr. and Mrs. Wendell Hoover,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Snowden, Mr. and Mrs. Emerson Jones and Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Hoeflich.

School Name

SHIRTS
Short sleeve s . whfte with
school name and emblems
printed on.

- MEIGS - EASTERN
Reg . 3.50 Boys
and Girls Shirts

Save On
Lee Tech Twill

WORK UNIFORMS

Jeans
Slacks . Blouses
Jackets · Taps - Sweaters.
Perfect
back - to -s chool
se l ection .

9.98 Pants
Sale 6.99

Sale Prices

3.75
4.00
4.50
5.00
6.00
6.50
7.oo
8.00
9.00

10.00
11.00
12 .00
13.00

Sportswear
Sportswear
Sportswear
Sportswear
Sportswear
Sportswear
Sportswear
Sport:J -.
Sportswea
Sportswea
Sportswear
Sportswear
Sportswear

Sale 2.99
Sale 3.19
Sale 3.59
Sale 3.99
Sale 4.79
Sale 5.19
Sale 5.59
Sale 6.39
Sale 7.19
Sale 7.99
Sale 8.79
Sale 9.59
Sale 10.39

JEANS
Ideal for back -to.school
wear. Regulars, slims and
huskies 8 to 18. Includes
entire stock.

5.95 Fashion Jeans

Sale 4.74
6.95 Fashion Jeans

Sale 5.54
7.95 Fashion Jeans -

Sale 6.34
Fashion Jeans

Sale 7.14
'

Sale I

School

GIRLS'
SCHOOL·

MEN'S AND
YOUNG MEN'S

Supplies

lndudes entire stock.

s.oo
6.00
7.00
8.00
9.00
10.00
11.00
12.00
13.00
14.00
15.00
17.00
18.00
•

DRESSES
DRESSES
DRESSES
DRESSES
DRESSES
DRESSES
DR ESSES .
DRESSES
DRESSES
DR ESSES
DRESSES
DRESSES
DR ESSES

•

Reg. 12.49 Lee Blue Jeans - · - · · Sale 9.88
Reg. 10.95 Wrangler Blue Jeans
Sale 9.39
Lee 14.99 Denim Jackets · , - - Sale 9.88
Wrangler 12.98 Denim Jac"kets
Sale 11. 44
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE

-.

3.99
4.79
5.59
6.39
7.19

Boys Brushed Denim

.

LEISURE
SUITS

162.

'

MEIGS THEATRE
TONITE
THURS., AUG. 21
NOT OPEN

Sizes 8

to· 20 in Jackets

with

Pants to -match . We stern

styling as picfured .

Sale Prices

Friday thru Sunday
August 22· 24

THE GODFATHER
PART II

SALE PRICES

7.99

8.19
.9.59
10.39
11.19
11.99 .
13.59
14.39

MEN'S
DOUBLE KNIT

BOYS
SHIRTS
Includes boys long
sleeve knit shirts number shirts and· a
fine selection of sport
and dress shirts.

Sizes 3 to 7
and 8 to 20

·SALE
'
. PRICES

DRESS
SLACKS
Sizes 29 to 42. Includes
our entire stock. Solid
colors and patterns.

MENS
MENS
MENS
MENS
MENS
MENS
MENS

1D.95
11.95
12.95
13.95
.14.95
15.95
16.95

SLACKS
SLACKS
SLACKS
SLACKS
SlACKS
SLACKS
SLACKS

SALE
SALE
. . SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE

ELB'ERFE . DS IN ·p o EROY

8.20
8.95
9.70

10.45
11.25
11.95
12.7S

Charles
L.
Dowler,
superintendent of the Meigs
Local School District, has
announced new teachers who
will begin their duties in the
district next week.
The teachers and their
assignments are:
Jolane Curtis, high school
French and English.
Mike Gerlach (returning
from leave). high school
History.
Donald Leigh, high school
Guidance.
Dorothy Oliver. high school
English.
·
Richard ' Roseberry , high
school Welding .
Linda Yonker, high school
cosmetology.
Margaret Barr, Middleport
4th grade.
Teresa Casci, Bradbury 6th
grade.
Twila Childs, Middleport
2nd grade.
Carol Crews, Elementary
·· Title I Speech Therapist.
Jim Crow, Elementary
Physical Education ...

.

'

~eigs

holds court.
Coal production was at a
near standstill in DistrictS 17
and 29, the UMW's two
biggest districts, and pickets ·
were reported northward in
Nicholas County in District
31.
"We' re practically out
solid," said
President
Richard Carter of District 29
in Beckley.
Picketing also shut down
about 30 per cent of Eastern

I

l

I'

1, 2 and 3

-

Kentucky's work force in
District 30, plus about 700
miners at six coal operations
in Virginia's District 26.
District 26 President Ray
Marshall said only one of the
mines in his area was off
work in sympa thy with the
West Virginia strike. Employes at the other five mines
walked out over local
grieva·nces.
" I don't think it's directly
involved to the problems
those folks are having'over in

West Virginia and Kentucky," Marshall said .
Meanwhile, a federal judge
in Benton , Ill., Thursday
ordered miners who are
provoked over shift rotation
to end their walkouts against
the AMAX , Old Ben and
Zeigler coal companies.
A spreading walkout that
began last week in Illinois
Thursday idled an estimated
5,000 or more of the some
12,000 United Mine Workers
Union miners in the stale .

" This .particular action
hqpefully will cut to the heart
of the dissatisfaction ,"
Taylor said.
UMW President Arnold
Miller has promised there
will be a meeting in District
17 between lop union and
industry officials to discuss
grievance procedures.
However, more than 300
dissident miners met in
Boone County Thursday night

Pauline Horton, Rutland
Ti tie I Reading.
Randy Hunt, Meigs Junior
High Vocal and Instrumental
Assistant Band
Music,
Director .
Barbara Leonard, Meigs
Junior High EMR.
Deborah May, Harrison.
ville and Rutland Kindergarten .
Teresa Newfeld, Rutland
EMR.
Barbara Schultz, Pomeroy
Title I ·Reading.
Donna Weber, Harrisonville 3rd grade.
New Administrative
Positions are Donald Hanning, Principal at Bradbury; '
Eric Hart, Principal at
Rutland; Greg McCall,
Principal at Harrisonville
and .Jeffrey Weaver (new),
Principal at Meigs Junior
High.
Hanning, Hart and McCall
are not new in the district, but
will start as principals the
first time.

.

Eastern district
takes up Tuesday.
of

kindergarten ,

morning.
Kindergarten classes are

schedul ed to begin Friday in
half-day sessions . Between
now and then parents will
meet with the teacher for
conferences.

Teachers of lhe Eastern
District will meet at the high
school at 9 a .m. Monday for a
shorl session before going to
their respective buildinga
about 10 a .m. for meetings
with their principals.
The Eastern Board of
Education has accepted the
resignation of Bill Phillips as
a teacher in the district.
Earlier, Phillips resigned as
head basketball coach . The
board has accepted the
resignation of Ollie Sayre as

I

'

PRINCIPAL JOHN LISLE OF THE Salisbury Elementary School and Miss Conn ie
Zsambok Division of Dental Health of the Ohio Department of Health, Thursday arranged
details fo; the beginning of a three year toothbrushing program at the school this fall .

Salisbury pupils will
prove tooth brushing
While today 's education
has come a long way from the
three Rs, one does not normally find "toothbrushing" a
par\ of a school program .
However, .that 's the way
it's going to be at the
Salisbury
Elementary
School, not only for the next
year but for the next three
years.
The Salisbury School is one
of (our schools in Ohio
selected to take part in a.pi!ot
program which deals with
proper toothbru s hing
techniques. The program is to
be conducted under the
supervision of Miss ·Connie
Zsambok of the Ohio Department of Health, division of
dental health .. Salisbury was
selected for participation due
to the excellent cooperation
of John Lisle, principal, and
the school's faculty, Miss
Zsamhok comments.
The program will survey
students ' toothbrushing
habits and through the
program an evaluation will
be made of the effectiveness

of toothbrushing programs in
schools. The goal of the
program is to instill effective
daily toothbrus hing habits for
promoting general health.
On Sept . 17, an initial
survey will be conducted a!
the Salisbury School by Miss
Zsambok and Linda Miller of
the Department of Health to
determine an individual oral
hygiene survey for baseline
statistics only. There will be
statistics gathered
on
cavities and no referrals will
be made as a result of the
SW'vey.
:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Sunday
through
Tuesday,,. generally fair,
with norm,al temperatures
during the forecast period.
Highs will lie In the mid 80s
north and 85 to 90 south.
Lows will be from the
middle 60s to the lower 70s.

On Oct. 6, teachers will be
given details of the program
after which time a classroom
" brush-in" will be held . The
latter event will be held to
outline the program to the
participating students who
will be composed of first ,
second and third graders.
As a part of the program ,
students of the three grades
will brush their teeth after
lunch every day of the school
year. The brushes will be
provided by the health
department and the toothpaste by the school. Second
graders will be given a
special fluoride toothpaste to
use during the school year.
This, too , is to be provided by
the health department.
In May, an evaluation
survey will be made again by
Deparlmen~ of Health personnel for
comparison
statistics on ly and a progress
report will be sent to the
school following the program.
The final report wi ll be on .
the progress of groups, not
individual students ..

full time maintenance man .
However, Sayre will serve as
a bus driver and will work
parttlme with maintenance
until November when he
expects to enter the armed
· forces .
The board has employed
F'lorence Wyers as kin·
dergarten aide and Opal
Hollon, as aide at Chester,
and Delores Frank as a junior
high school study hall
monitor.
Helen Caldwell has been
added to the list or substitute
teachers and Mitchell Holley ,
Sr ., and Otto Marcinko to the
substitute bus driverS' list or
the district. The board has
employed Emily Street of
Massillon, a teacher with
three years experience. to
teach French-English
replacing Carol Swogger who
resigned recently .

Pile of pot
set record
WASHINGTON (UP!) The huge cache of marijuana
discovered Aug. 16 in the
Bahamas by U.S. Customs
Service helicopter pilots is
the largest such seizure in
history. customs officials
confirmed today .
The 1,049 sacks of high
grade Colombian marijuana
were officially weighed at
86,280 pounds-slightly more
than 43 tons- before they
were burned in a Pompano
Beach, · Fla . incinerator
Thursday, officials said.
· The officials said the approximate monetary value Of
the load on the "elicit"
market was estimated at
$23.8 million.
Previously, the largest re·
corded seizure of marijuana
was the 42 tiuls discovered in
the Mexicali.Calexico area on
the U.S.•Mexico border June
23, 1974. Prior to that, there
had been a 26-l.on seizure at
Culican, Mexico in March,
1973.
After customs piots discovered the cache in Sandy
·Brush on Deep Water Cay
just east of Grand Bahama
Island, it was loaded on a
Coast Guard cutter and
transported to Florida where
it was destroyed at the
request of Bahamian police .
•

.,

any possible demonstrations
along the motorcade route
used on previous shuttles and
departed for Alexandria at
J :09 p .m . (6:09 a.m.EDT) .
Kissinger met for four and
a half hours with Rabin and
his negotiating team in the ·
first business session of his
renewed shuttle mission
designed to avert another
Arab.Jsraeli war.
" We clarified some outstanding points," he told
reporters. " I am going to
Egypt and plan to return
tomorrow night and to con·
tinue the discussions with an
attitude of hope."
The length of the session
delayed for half an hour his
departure for Alexandria,
where he wili meet with
Egyptian President Anwar
Sadat . He flies to Damascus
on Saturday and returns to
Israel Saturday night, and
probably will return to
Alexandria Sunday and
Monday before visiting Saudi
Arabia and Jordan .
"We spoke as friends about
all aspects of the agreement
and all aspec.ts of our
bilateral " relations,"
Kissinger said.
The talks on bilateral rela·
tions apparently referred to
the U.S.·Israeli section of the
accord In which the United
States has pledged to give
Israel at least $2 billion in
economic aid, guaranteed oil
supplies and advanced
weaponry.
The site of the Kissinger·
Rabin meeting was switched
at the last minute to avoid
more demonstrations.

I .

Supt. John Riebel said this

Tuesday

Collins urges
bridge work
be expedited

soldiers argued vehemently
with police. A policeman
fired two warning shots in the
air. In Jerusalem thousands
of protestors surrounded his
hotel and shouted antiKissinger slogans.
Kissinger flew to Tel Aviv's
Ben.Gurion Airport aboard
an army helicopter to avoid

exception

Full day
RACINE - A full day of
classes · will be held Tuesday
when schools of the Southern
Local school district open for
the new school year, Bobby
Ord, superintendent, said
today.
All schools will have the full
day schedule including
special education and kindergarten and the hot lunch
program will be in operation
Tuesday .
On Monday, teachers of the
district will meet !rim 9 a.m .
to 10 a.m. at the high school
for a social hour followed by a
business session from 10 to
noon. Following lunch,
teachers will go to their
buildings for meetings with
their respective principals.

at a major intersection where

All classes of the Eastern
Local School District. will get
underway for a full day 's
session Tuesday with the

,J
' I

PRICE 15'

FRIDAY, AUGUST 22, 1975

said the talks were conducted
in a friendly atmosphere.
Kissinger, asked whether
the shuttle would be con.
eluded in a week, said he and
the Israelis agreed to move
ahead with "a ll appropriate
speed " but that he did not
want to set any deadlines.
Reporters were IPld that
Kissinger would make three
more trips to Jerusalem and
two more to Alexandria,
though the shuttle schedule
was open.
Today 's K1 ss ingcr -Rabin
meeting meeting was held at
Rabin 's house instead of the
prime .ministers office as
originally plaMed because of
a threat of protest demonstrations, but no protestors
showed up at either site.
Kissinger 's visit to Israel his lOth mission to the Middle
East - was marred by
violent demonstrations in Tel
Aviv and Jerusalem. Asked
by reporters if the demonstrations caused him concern; Kissinger replied, "You
forget, I come from Harvard
and I'm used to them."
Before Kissinger mel with
Prime Minister Yitzhak
Rabin demonstrators in Tel
Aviv protesting a new Israeli·
Egyptian pact blocked traffic

weekend .''

Sen. Oakley Collins said
Thilrsday he has personally
called on Richard Jackson,
director of the Ohio Department of Highways, to expedite repair of the Pomeroy·
Mason bridge .
The senator said he asked
Jackson to press the repair
firm - whose contract with
the Stale permits it to keep
the bridge closed until Dec. 15
- to use two shifts daily
instead of one.
Work at the bridge,
minimal to date, is at an
apparent standstill at least
until . Aug. 28 when steel
Kanauga woman out ori bond
needed in the project is
reported scheduled to arrive.
Sen. Collins said he also
Shirley Oliver, 21, of 307
POINT PLEASANT - A
suggested to Jackson that he
· Kanauga
woman
was Upper . River Road, was
urge the local state and
.. released under bond totaling charged by city police with
county highway departments
$800 . after a car ·she was stri~ing an unattended
to cooperate in improving the
, allegedly driving struck five vehicle, (!riving. without an
Pomeroy levee which has
cars here early Wednesday; operat.o t's license, failure to
proved
inadequate as a ferry
·. destroying it and another and report an accident, and
landing during periods of
· cau'sing an estimated $1,175 lea1(iilg the scene of• an ac·
high water or fast current.
in damages to the other four. cident.

r
.'I

Judge K.K. Hall of U.S. and made it clear the central
District Court in Charleston reason for the work stoppage
Thursday directed the UMW in that area was a series of
international union and the injunctions and penalties
coal association to implement issued by Hall against
a 10·member arbitration striking union locals.
"District ~7 is staying out,"
panel for the union's District
17 before the end of August. ·-one local.. union ·ieader, who
Slowness in establishing asked that his name not be
the panel was blamed as one used, said after the meeting
of the factors in the strike, at a football field in Danville.
"We had the rally to stress
under way since Aug. 11,
which idled more than 30,000 the .point of why we 're staying
miners in southern West out," he said. "IPs for the
Virginia and thousands more right to strike and to protest
in neighboring Kentucky and all the fines and injunctions,
the men in jail and so forth."
Virginia.
The spokesman said a
John Taylor, an attorney
"
massive
rally" was planned
for Charleston.based District
17, said the panel selection today at the federal building
process ''will be going on all in Charleston, where HaD

:New teachers assigned
in Meigs Local schools

~d selection of waist
stzes and lengths. Flare
and straight leg styles. 14
ounce weight .

Tablets - Penci Is - Rulers .
Erasers and many other items
you'll need ·next week.

Prints - Plaids • Solids

The approximate 1,200 men
of Meigs Mines 1, 2 and 3 were
still off their jobs this morning, the office of David
Baker, personnel supervisor
for the Southern Coal Co.,
said today.
The mines supply coal to
the Gavin Power Plan l.
No specific reason has been
given for the work stoppage
began
Monday.
which
However , earlier it was
reported that it has been
generally understood the
walkout is "in sympathy"
with West ,Virginia miners
who are demonstrating in
opposition to the courts' free
use of the injunction and jail
sentences to enforce mine
labor policies. Meetings were
scheduled by miners in mines
I and 2 yesterday and today.
•
The United Mine Workers
leadership
and ·
the
Bituminous Coal Operators
Association have been told to
act within 10 days in settling a
dispute over coal min
grievance procedures - one
of the issues involved in a
widespread wildcat strike
centered in West Virginia .

BLUE JEANS

Visit Elberfelds lsi Floor.
Select what you need for backto-school class room and home
work . Paper - Binders .

DRESSES

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 92

1,200 mmers still idled at

Mens Department, 1st Floor

Sale!

enttne

•

8.98 Matching Shirts
Sale5.99

was "hopeful" of success.
Israeli . Foreign Minister
Yigal Allon, a member with
Defense Minister Shimon
Peres of the negotiating
team, told reporters in
Jerusalem that progress was
made In five hours of talks in
Jerusalem today· but that it
was too early to make a
judgment.
" We managed to achieve
so me progress , clarifying
ce rtain important points
which makes me more
hopeful," Allon said. "It's too
ear ly to judge the final
conclusion but we should be
in a better position than even
today when Dr. Kissinger
returns from Egypt."
Both Kissinger and Allon

Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area

BOYS
.FASHION

8 . 9~

new Israeli-Egyptian interim
agreement.
Kissinger's visit to Israel
·was marred by violent
protests in Te I Aviv and
Jerusalem against his peace
efforts and against Israeli
Prime Minister Yitzhak
Rabin for what the right-wing
demonstrators said was a
pact giving away too much
for too little .
Egyptian Foreign Minister
Ismail Fahmi and War
Minister Gen. Mohamed
Gamassy spent most of
Thursday poring over maps
of the Sinai and details of the
proposed agreement and
Sadat was presenting it to
Kissinger
today.
A
spokesman said Sadat also

•

at.

Sale I

·

By RICHARD H. GROWALD
ALEXANDRIA.
Egypt
(UPI) - Secretary of State
Henry A. Kissinger flew here
today from Israel with an
"attitude of hope" that his
talks there with Israeli
leaders and with Egyptian
President Answar Sadat
would lead to a new
agreement that could avert a
new Middle East War.
Hopes for any quick overall
Middle East settlement received a jolt today in Damascus when Syria and Jordan two of the countries Kissinger
will visit - aMounced formation of a joint command to
coordinate their armies
against Israel and called on
the Arab world to rejeci any

•

VOL. XXVII

Sale I

Sale 3.49

Sizes 3/6 thru 11/14

Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Req.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg .
Reg .
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg .

PAIR

and Ladies Shirts

Pre-TEEN
SPORTSWEAR

24
28
38

Hogh Game - Men : Eddie ·'
Whitt 197, Mose Norman 176;
Women : Ruby Hupp 163 and

6.77

Sale 2.99
Reg. 3.95 Mens

Ellis &amp; Sons Soh io
38
Team No. 5
52
fJigh Series - Men: Eddie
Whitt 500, Bob Pocklington
457 : Women : Ruby Hupp 469,

-FREE

Blue Jeans

Boys 8.95
Blue Jeans
Boys 9.50

WAHAMA - SOUTHERN

WL
40
36
26
26
12

6.34

Back .To.SchooiSale!

fNefy

Team Standings

WMPO

Blue Jean s

yYhite with color tops. Boys
s1zes.6 to 11. Mens sizes 9 to 11.

FRIDAY NITE MIXED
Aug. 15, 1975

Spencer's Spares

s. 97

Shirts
SJacks . Vests Blouses · Knit Tops . Jackets.
Sizes 4 to 6)1: and 7 through 1.4.

Boys 8.49

News •. in Briefs

52 12

Blue Je-an s

TUBE SOCKS

Ydcrans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Charles
Eads,
Rutland;
Edith
Woolard, Pomeroy .
DISCHARGES Eula
Welker, Connie Musser, Vera
Drehcl, Jack Cornell, Oma
Smilh, James Cochran,
Henry Milliron , · Char les
Sauer.

Crow's Steak House

5.54

Mens and Bovs .

Pleasant Valley
DISCHAHGES - Patricia
Slove r , Ashton; Teresa
Gleason, Point Pleasant;
(Continued from page 1)
Roena Meadows, Glenwood;
filed court suits in the case.
Mrs. Charles Conard, Apple
Grove; James Riggs, Point
WASHINGTON - SEN. Wll~LIAM PROXMIHE , D-Wis., Pleasant: Michael Edwards,
gave his monthly "Golden Fleece" award today to a govern- Racine; Guyanna Scarberry,
ment study of airline stewardess' measurements. The st udy Ga llipoli s Ferry; Crystal
cost $57,800, and Proxmire said "it seems like a bust to me." Car har t, Point Pleasant;
The award went to the Federal Aviation Administration for a Lidia Corne ll , Glenwood;
survey of 423 young women training to be American Airline Mrs . Charl es Litchfield,
stewardesses at the academy in Fort Worth, Tex.
Southside; James Bolds,
"The study was done ostensibly for the design of safety Point Pleasant , and Roy
equipment," Proxmire said, "but the 103iJage report dealing Ellis, Pomeroy .
With 79 measurements from head to foot seems like a bust to
Holzer Medical Center
me." Proxmire said the study showed weights varied from 94
(Discharges, Aug. 20)
to 145 pounds, height from 5-feet-1 to 6-feet-1, busts from 29 to
Sarah
I. Adams, Donald
37'h inches, and waists from 2lto 28 inches .
Harland Anthony, Hilda M.
"About all that can be said to aircraft designers is that
Bailes. Renee K. Bennett,
stewardesses are young women with the body measurements
Eva 0. Carruthers, Mrs. Paul
of young women/' he said.
Richard Casto and infant
daughter, Sara L. Cheney,
William K. Cox, Wendy A.
Critser, David P. Crusan,
Bilha Ellen Escue, Richard
Allen Franklin, Harold Keith
German, Janie M. Good,
Gregory A. Gooderham, Ruth
Griffith, Myrna J. Hall, Paul
Eugene Harris, Sophie Ernes tine Huggins,l\1rs. Robert
Herman Kight and infant son,
Donna Kay Lambert, Donna
S. Maynard, Mrs. Michael
Vincent McCormill and infant
daughter, Kelly Ann McGee,
Pearlie M. Morrison, Jeffrey
Scott Varsons, Shirley
Preston , Jane R. Rader,
Marvin H. Robinson, Teresa
K. Snider, Noel Eugene
Slover, Kathy M. Vance,
Edward F. Waugh, Lucy
Williams,
Connie
L.
Woodruff.
(Births)
Mr . and Mrs. Coy E. Ball, a
daughter, Bidwelf; Mr. and
Mrs. William Wamsley, a
son, Gallipolis; Mr . and Mrs.
William Patterson, a son,
Point Pleasant ; Mr. and Mrs.
John Karakis, a son, Rio
Grande; Mr. and Mrs. james
Gibson Ill, a son, Ewington.

Cut
them
.
and enj~y the
clean, safe
efficient heat
of an
.,,..
electric heat
pump

Boys 6 .95
Blu e Jeans
Boys 7.49

Boys 7.95

Buy $ 16.00 Dres ses tor 511.99 .
$30 .00 Dre55es for S22.49
$36_. 00 Dresses lor 526 .99
SJO .OO Dresses for S29 .99 .

Hospital News

SPORTSWEAR

Regulars - Slims . Huskies.
Sizes 8 to 18 . 14 ounce weights
and 10 ounce denims .

Sizes 3 throug h l5 . So lid colors
and prints . Thi s sale i nclud es
new se l ection of Juni or Pant
Suits .

Mr . and Mrs . Mark Beegle
and Niki, and Mark Davis.
Sending gi fl&lt; were Mr . and
Mrs . Paul Beegle, Mrs. Edna
Shields and Mr. and Mrs.
Car roll Cleland a nd Dodie.

GIRLS

JEANS

JUNIOR
DRESSES

Honnic and Missie ,

School Salel

BWE DENIM

Sale I

Shuler. Racine, entertained
recen lly with a party in
celebration of the £irsl bir·
!hday of the ir son, Brandon
Matthew .
Fr ef reshments
were
served and games were
played after Brandon opened
h1s gifts. Altendmg were his
grandmol.her. Mrs. Robert
D.c~v is,

BOYS

qet ready ...
for ~c.hool !

I

hopes hit ·
snag in Syria, ordan

ELBERFELD$ IN .POMEROY

I

•

Kissi~ger's

"

!

.

•

'

.-------------·- -t----------- I

II

.,

•

Girl missing
•
•
zn
paJamas

at bedtime
A missing person's report
ha s be e n filed with the
Gallipolis Police Department
for Windy Layton, IS-year old
s tep -daughter of Thomas
Roettker of 1021 Second Ave.
Officers said the girl was
last seen at bedtime Wed·
nesday night. She is 5-4,
weighs 115 pounds has light
brown hair and when last
seen was wearing pink and

white pajamas . Anyone
knowing her whereabouts is
asked to notify police immediately .
City police Thursday
arrested Kessler L. Adkins,
21, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, Timmy
R. Adkins, 19, Dayton. and a
16·year old juveni le on
charges of petty larceny in
the theft of auto parts from
Smith Buick·Pontiac on
Eastern Ave. Warrants were
filed by Vaught Smith :

Weather
Mostly• cloudy tonight and
Saturday, not as warm,
chance of showers and
thundershowers.
Lows
tonight in the middle to upper
60s. Highs Sat\lfday in lower
80s. Probability of rain 40 per
cent tonight, 50 per cent
Saturday. '

.,

'

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