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1!·:, I N' S I G ·H T -· \ \
G.M.CRAIG.JR.
t\
1: :
;$869 now 1 Dateline
mistakes . Unfortunately,

; 28 -:,The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Aug. 24, I975

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·.·.-:·:·:·:·:·:·:•·-:·:·:·:·:·:·;·:-;:::;.;·:·:·:·:·:·:·;·;·:·;·;·:·:·•n.·.···""·'·"·:·.-:.

G·ollia

POMEROY
A public
U
"fund drive to aid the family of 1
Hobart Wilson Jr.
: six-year-old
Lonnie
Lel\{aster, Route 2, Pomeroy,
BEN BUNCH, son of Mrs. Kate Morgan, Kerr , retired
a brain surgery patient at St.
J oseph Hospital , Parkers- recently as a member of t he Urbana police force after 23 years
•burg,
rea ched
$869.04 service.
-t -1 ....
Saturday morning.
A 1940 graduate of Bidwell' Latest con tributors to the
Porter High School, Bunch
fund are Mr. and Mrs . Joe
was employed by the
Stanley, Route 2, Pomeroy; Gallipolis Daily Tribune and
Mr . and Mrs. Arthur weekly Gallia Times shortly
Sylvester, Syracuse ; Yourg
after World War II.
Adult Class of Bradford
i +i
Church of Christ; Mr. and
THE following article
Mrs. Geoffrey Wilson, Route appeared in the Urbana
3, Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. J . Cit izen
after
Bunch's
S. Davis, Tuppers Plains; retiremen t:
John Goett, Pomeroy; Mr.
One day row· years ago,
and Mrs . Amos Leonard, Sgt. Benjamin Bunch was
Route 2, Pomeroy; Mr . and walking to work at 7:30a.m.
Mrs. Marvin Walker, Tup- when he heard a scream and
pers Plains; Mr. and Mrs.
saw a womf:in with h er
Lloyd D. King, Route 2, clo thing and hair afire .
Pomeroy ; Mr. and Mrs.
''Without regard for his own
James L. Fry, Route 3,
safety," Police Chi ef Bill D.
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs .
Longrell late r said, "Bunch
William Radford, Route 3,
came to the aid of the woman
Pomeroy ; Mr . and Mrs.
and, with the ass istance or
.William A. Ohlinger, Route 3,
four city em ployees, exPomeroy; Mr . and Mrs. Ray
tinguished the flames and
Pullins, Usa and Scott, Route
saved the woman's life. "
2, Pomeroy; Mr . and Mrs.
Bunch was accorded the Police Division's Medal of Valor,
Charles
E.
Blakeslee,
an
honor
that no other Urbana police officer had ever received.
Pomeroy ; Mr . and Mrs.
Police Sergeant Benjamin Bunch, 53, is r etiring after a 23Floyd E . Koehler, Mid·
year
career with the police division which began on March I,
·dleport; Ri chard M. Reuter,
.Middleport ; Ella M. Reuter, 1952, when Bunch and another probationary patrolman, Bill D.
'Middleport ; Christopher Lee Llngrell, were appointed by Safety Director Don Baker in the
Gheen, Frederick Allen administration of Mayor Frank Ewing.
"Ben wiU be sorely missed on the department, " Chief
Gheen II, and Rodney Lee
Lingrell
said. " He and I were appointed the same date and
Gheen II, Route 2, Belmont;
Mr . and Mrs . Lloyd Mqore, served OW' probationary period as partners."
"A dedicated and hard-working officer," Llngrell added,
Pomeroy.
·
. Persons wishing to con- "Ben always put the safety an d welfare of others ahead of his
own ."
.
tribute are to make checks
" It has been a privilege to know him, and he will not easily
payable to the Lonnie
be replaced."
LeMaster Hospit a lization
Bunch served in the patrol division until April!, 1968, when
Fund. The checks are to be
sent to Miss Eleanor Robson, he was promoted to the rank of Sergeant. After his promotion,
Bunch served as a watch superviso r for six years and as ad• Meigs County Recorder, at
ministrative assistant for the fin al year.
the courthouse in Pomeroy or
Sgt. Bunch attended many training sessions and schools
they may be left at her office.
while associated with the division including Criminal Investigation School at the Ohio Bureau of Criminal · Identification and Investigation, and Police Management School at
PROF. HOGBEN DIES
Wittenberg University.
LONDON (UP!) - Prof.
Bunch has accepted a position with D. O'Connor's Son,
Lancelot Hogben, scientist Inc., 116-124 E. Court St. Bunch had worked as a deliveryman
and writer, died Friday in for that company from 1947 to 1949.
hospital at Wrexham, North
"When I heard Ben was retiring, I went after him,"
Wales, at the age of 79. Best O'Connor's President Thomas Asterino said Monday .
known
for
his
book
Bunch moved to Urbana after completing his education at
"Mathematics
for
the Bidwell Porter High School in Gallia County .
Million," which sold several
He lives at 366 Windsor Ave. with his wife, Betty Jean.
million copies throughout the They have two daughters and one son.
world, Hogben was not a
+++
mathematician,
but
a
TWENTY YEARS AGO , from the files of the Daily
biologist. His work in Tribune and weekly Gallia Times ... Record 689 students
genetics and . endocrinology enrolled at GaUia Academy High School for 1955-56 te rm ...
was recognized by his Charles Swanson, swimming pool manager, reports receipts
election to· the FeUowship of total $4,615 for the summer .. . Downtown Coaches Club to
the Royal Society 11l the age support newly-organized junior high football program ... Ally .
·
of 41. He ,produced the Bill Sowers to film GAHS grid games.
Hog~n ·· test for pregnancy.

By

" JEANIE'S

~ 8EAUTY

•

SALON

.In MiddJeoort

August Special
UN I-PERM Reg. $20
FOR$15
Whole Month of
·

August

' F:or appt. call Jeanie.
. ' Brenda, ot Diane
"At .~92-3667

Restauranteurs will meet
The Ohio State Resta~ant
Associa lion has invited
members and non-members
from the southern Ohio area
to meet with industry lobbyists to discuss the 73 perceiH increase in labor costs
called for by House Bill 1050
now before the Ohio General

Assembly.
It is es timated by the
Association that this will also
mean a t least a 10 percent
increase in restauran t menu
prices. The meeting will be at
Harold 's Rest'V'rant , 1630
Gallia St., Portsmouth, at
2:30p .m., Friday, August 29.

What's BetterThan Money In

l ab~:.I.i;r;.~t~~~ly ~ne ~"!~~
mo~t tragic crimes a person

could ever commit . Certai nly
an a ct mad e a'gainst a
helpless young person is one
of no justification.
But when we th ink of this
senseless crime, we usually
envision beatings, neglect, or
hunger . However, I would
like to exami ne ano ther
disturbing kind of child
abuse, mental pressure.
So many times parents are
so concerned with the fantasy
of believing or see ing
great ness in their kids, that
they fail to See the person. We
qui ck .to criticize the
lretJort card that lacks the A's
which WE expect: and yet we
slow to accept and un derstand
our
child 's
capabilities. If a child does
his a bsolute best and receives
a 'C' for his work and effort,
then he certainly deserves hi s
parents ' total support.
Too many times parents
forget that their kids are not
so lely exte n s ion s to be
molded, but they are
separa te and unique individuals. Oft times children
are used to either relive past
glories or to amend past

POMEROY - It seems
impossible that the summer
is shot, and that schools will
open next week in Meigs
County .
What happened to all those
plans for a reaUy fun sum-

mer ?
At any rate, with schools
opening next week the buses
will be running and motorists
should take note of that
especially around the noon
hour when extra buses are
running to take morning
kindergarten children home
and pick up kids attending
afternoon classes.
TilE NEW ,branch facility
of the Pomeroy National
Bank will open for business in
Tuppers Plains on Sept. 8 and
an open house in the new
branch will be held from 9
a .m . to 5 p.m . on Saturday,
Sept . 13. · By the way, Don
Nelson, who has been
working· in the main office at
Pomeroy, wiU be manager of
the new branch. The open
house appears to be
developing into quite an
event. •We'll fill you in as
plans unfold.
I wasn't supposed to tell,
but the open house wiU be on
!he birthday anniversary of
Edison Hobstetter, president
of Pomeroy National. Now
let's see, is it the 39th or 40th ?
MRS . ALICE NEASE,
former vocal music teacher
and quite a performer, won
second place honors in
costuming at the national
coovention of Artex dealers
held recently in KnoxviUe.

Money Af MEIGS BRANCH

Furniture Department, 3rd Aoor

SAVE

w

NEXT OF TilE nice people
- and there have been a
number this summer - to
observe their 5oth anniversary will be Dick and
Leona Karr. Their day will be
next Sunday from 2 to 5 p.m. ·
at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church.

ON A

Grandfather

CLOCK

TOO BAD THAT the annual
Meigs County Fair had to be
plagued mth so much rain.
Staging the fair is a year-long
job for a handful of people
and then to fight rain during
those five big days is a rea.l
headache. 'Was strange for
the fairgrounda were hit by
rain when other areas,
nearby ones, were oot.

Of Your
Choice

And Special Sale
Prices on Better
Qpality Wall Clocks.

CHARLES DOWLER, new

24 Stale Street
Gallipolis

.,_one 446~4290

51f4%

Home 446 ·4518

per year on a 4
year certificate ofdeposit.. $1,000.00
minimum.

This is my State Farm office
where I can serve you wilh lhe
best valtie m car, home. life
and health insurance. I invite
you to call or drop in any time.

MIIGI IIANOi .

.............. , ... oW..,,.
'Riclllnl 1!. ~.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Syracuse Nursing Home.

Athens County Savings and Loan

~

Mlt"'etr·

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Carrol K. Snowden

..... .....

.' .A_

CIJ8t

'" 1 ~ 0 ..,(~

Like aaJO(ld nei&amp;hbor.
SCale Fa~ is there.
Sl.tt h1M IMurlncl

p 7190. 1

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C~~a

lbllt Ollitn· 810011int1011, W!i~M

The released the letter in his
anc I e between Creola district today.
and Dundas in Vinton County,
The C&amp;O decision to keep
OhiO once petitioned to· be the Dundas portion of the
abandoned by the Ches5ie track in service came in the
System, will conti nue to . wakeof Miller's July 251etter
operate.
to the c hairman of the board
This switch in plans was of the Chessie System.
included in a letter Friday
In a related development
from the Chesapeake and the ICC advised Miller that
Ohio Railway Co. and the the env ir onm ental impact
Interstate Commerce study cond ucted in conCommission I ICC) to Rep. junction wi.th the possible
Clarence E. Miller informing abandonment of the 83-mile
him of events that may Logan -Gallipolis - Pomeroy
further affect the future of line has """n completed and
the
Logan -Gallipolis
that a public hearing will be
Pomeroy C&amp;O line. Miller held on the issue .

Local
School . District,
speaking the other night at a
dinner m his and Mrs .
Dowler's honor, stated that
discipline is "his thing" and
that he will expect. discipline
in aU of the schools of the
district. Dowler said If you
don't have discipline then you
can't teach successfuUy.
HopefuUy, parents of .the
district will be behind
. Dowler. I mean, it is about
time · that the pendulum
swings towarda a little more
discipline.
THE BIG BEND Citizens
Band Radio Club will again
stage a safety watch over
Labor Day Weekend. The
new parks on Rotue 33 will be
headquarters
for
the
operations for the entire
weekend through Monday
night. Motorists will be encouraged stop at the club's
stations at the two parks and .
relax a bit besi9es having
some refreshments -as a step
towards
safer
holiday
weekend d¥iving .

w

VOL. XXVII

NO" 93

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

Elberfeld$ In ·p·ome
.

coal to important market
places and customers beyond
the production a rea," Miller
said.
·
Miller had encouraged the
Chessie System to "seriously
consider" the purchase of the
Corning-Hobson line, as well
as other Southeastern Ohio
rail lines facing abandonmen! under the USRA
regional rail reorganization
plan. Chessie orficials ha ve
mditated, however, that the
purchase and operation of
these Pen n Central lines
" would not be feasible ."

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IIIARIL YN LAYNE

TAMALA

DAUGHTERTY

Miners continue battle
against court actions

.(

CHARLESTON, W. Va. (UP!) - Some 100 coal
miners, diSgruntled over a series of court injunctions
ordering them back to work, milled about the sidewalk
in front of the federal building here to protest judicial
interference in their wildcat strike.
"We're not going back to work til the court stops
messin' around with us,'' said one miner who refused
to identify himself.
The protest, which was expected to gain strength
during the day, signaUed the start of the third week in
which miners have left their jobs, crippling West
Virginia 's southern coaHields.
" United we stand, divided we fall," read one sign.
Another popular slogan said "Stop court injunctions."
Also at the heart of the raUy was a protest of the
jailing of union leader Slm Howze who was incarcerated for failing to get the men back to work. He
was released w attend a funeral last week, but was
scheduled w return to jaU today.
More than 2,500 miners met at a roadside park in
adjoining Boone County and vowed to remain on strike
until coal firms sign a document permitting them to
strike over local issues without interference from
courts.
Miners began moving on the city while United Mine
Workers President Arnold Miller and the Bituminous
Coal Operators Association pressed meet an end-ofthe-week deadline, set by Judge K.K. HaU to form a
."controversial1t).member panel of arbitration umpires
to hear grievances.
· More · than - 40,000•· miners lrr West Virgiiila,
representing virtuaUy aU of the state's mining Ioree,
liave joined the strike.

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Ford determined to put
••

•

ficullies with the wording. He
said no hitches had risen yet.
Kissinger flew in ; today
with Israel's draft of an
accord, and spent 45 minutes
with President Anwar Sadat
of Egypt. The Egyptian
leader then immediately
summoned his negotiating
team and ordered them to
write their version of the
treaty .
While
Sadat,
Prime
Minister Mamdouh Salem

President Ford said today holders.
he hopes to revitalize the
Ford also said the ability of
private ecQnomy and get the private
enterprise
to
federal government "out of generate expansion was
your pockets and out of your hamper ed because of inha ...
If .
flation .
In a speech prepared for . Sunday, Federal Reserve
delivery in Chicago, the Board Chairman Arthur F .
President struck a familiar Burns labeled inflation a
theme about reform of "very serious problem "
ecQnomic regulation in the which will be stimulated by
United States.
grain sales and oil price
And to create more jobs decontrol, but a problem that
and expand the economy, can be overcome •'if we
Ford said it was necessary to conduct
our
policies
change the tax laws and properly. "
overtake inflation . Ford
He also said Sunday food
especially called for reducing price rises because of the sale
the double taxation on of grain to Russia will be
dividends, so called because higher than predicted by
dividends are taxed ooce as Agriculture· Secretary Earl
corp&lt;&gt;rate profits and then Butz.
'
taxed again as income after
But Butz said inflation in
distribution
to
share general is more to blame than

and their aides wrote,
Kissinger went off
lunch
with Egyptian Foreign
Minister Ismail Fahmi.
American officials said the
Secretary will fly back to
Jerusalem late today .
The unexpected pace in
Kissinger's
action
in
Alexandria
raised
the
chances the Secretary would
suc.ceed in his hopes of having
the treaty signed by month 's
end.

w

Kissinger had a rrived
saying he probably would
spend the day and tonight in
Alexandria .
Kissinger and Sadat kissed
in Arab fashion on meeting
and then settled into wicker
chairs on a patio of the
Egyptian Mediterranean
shore viUa for the talks that
triggered the faster pace of
the diplomacy of peace.
The last details were said to
(Continued on page 8) .

IIIIIIIMIIIII'!IWIRIIIII'!I:m:::::::;:;:;:;:;:::*:;:~~:·:::·:·:·:·:·:·::::::::::::::::::::::=::::::::::::::::::::::::-.::w::::s:

ews. . . in Brief~ Payoffs ran big

By Uolted Press Iaternatlonal
lllGH FOOD PRICES ARE NOT NECESSARll.. Y·
RELATED to sales of grain to Russia, according to the heads
of a consumer group, a farm group and the Department of
Agriculture. They blame the ubiquiwus middleman. "Prices
are·going up right now and there ought to be an investigation
as to wby," Tony DeChant, president of the Farmers Union,
said Sunday. "There is no relationship between the grain that
has already moved to Russia and the prices that went up two or
three weeks ago .
"It's obvious, it happens every time," said Consumer
Federation of America direcwr Carol Foreman. "When farm
-prices go down, food prices do not go down." She said the
Council on Wage and Price Stability should subpoena the
recqrds of processing, wholesale al)d retail food firms " and
find out just exacily why they are raising prices."
DeChant and Foreman were interviewed on ABC's Issues
and Answers. They both approved the grain sales, but caUed
for a national food policy.

WASHINGTON (UP! ) More than $100 million in
legal and illegal payments to
foreign
and
domestic
politicians and sales agents
have been paid in the past
decade by 36 corporations,
according to informa lion
tracked down in public documents.
The world's biggest cor·

poration, Exxon, made the
largest payments recorded,
$46 million to Italian
politicians. But Exxon said
they were legal.
Gulf and Ashland oil
companies and defense
contractors Northrop and
. Lockheed laid out huge

Weather
Showers
and
thunderstorms likely tonight.
Lows in the low 70s.
Cloudiness,
chance
of
showers Tuesday. Highs in
the upper 80s . Probability of
rain 60 per cent tonight, 40
per cent Tuesday .

REV. NORRIS ILL
The Rev. Charles Norris,
said Dr. Duane Freier, the hospital's acting chief of staff .
pastor
of the Baptist Church
"We've ruled out accident, drug contamination and other
at South Point, o~
· . _and
passlbl.-causes."
former pastor at Ra
,irs!
Baptist
Church,
i
in
the
USBON, PORTUGAL- THE COM?.WNISTS and seven
other lelt-wirig groups formed a common front for "offensive coronary intensive care unit,
actioo" today w prepare for a showdown with moderates in room 314, at Lawrence
Portugal's explosive political crisis.ln northern Portugal anti- Courty General Hospital. He
Cmrununipt mobs defied army buUets and wrecked the is expected to be moved from
headqUarters of a left-wing political party during pre-dawn intensive care within the next
. two dayg .
· (Ollltlnued on page B)

corporate sums, according w
data gathered from the
Securities and Exchange
Commission, the
Civ il
Aeronautics Board, the
Wa terga te
special
prosecutor's office , the
Senate multinational corporations subcommittee, the
Senate banking committee
and a House international
relations subcommittee.
Lockheed's payment s
totaled $22 million at least
since 1970, tbe company told
the SEC. The company said
the money was paid to
"foreign officials and to
foreign
political
organizations in a nWilber of
countries.'' Lockheed's
payouts were being studied in
a hearing today by chairman
William Proxmire, 0-Wis ., of
the Senate banking committee. Proxmire has been a
critic of the government's
guarantees for loans to Lockheed , a financially troubled
(Continued on page 8)

the grain sales to Russia, and
an oil company executive
said economic recovery could
be endangered by the inflationary effects of immediate
decon trol
of
domestic oil prices.
Burns said the July cost of
living figures, showing an
annual inflation rate of more
than 14 per cent, was a
"temporary setback" in economic recQvery. "Inflation
continues to be a very serious
problem" and "a warning
that we ought to take
seriously, but ... not get
alarmed about a single
month 's figures .
"U we conduct ~ur policles
properly, we can continue to
make.headway with the inflation problem," Burns said.
Burns appeared on CBS'
Face the Nation.
He estimated grain sales to
the Soviet Union will increase
domestic food prices by "a
little more" than the 1.5 per
cent figure Butz is using. " It

might be two per cent. It
might be 2.5 per cent," the
Fed chief said.
He said the forces behind
higher grain prices are
"stoppable," but only at a
heavy future cost. " I don't
think we ought to infringe on
our foreign ecQnomic policy
by trying to manipulate the
price of farm products,"
Burns said.
" .. . The increase in the
price of wheat, in corn, in
soybeans I deplore. But
there's some things in life
that we just have to accept."
Bu\2, in a speech prepared
for delivery at a White House
agr.ic ulture conference in
Milwaukee, said; " We sold
the Russians very tittle grain
last year, yet ~etail food
prices rose 14.5 per cent ....
(Continued on page 8)

• I

IIIARCIA DILLARD

GIG! ZYLA

SARA LUTTON

NINA FANNIN

Queen candidates
40 robbed have interviews
'

By Charlene Hoefli ch
The Ohio Valley Horse
Show Associa tion will name
. LOGAN, Ohio (UP!) - A its second queen on Sept. 21
masked man got away with when the annual assoc iation
an undetermined amount of round-up is held at the Rock
money Sunday after robbing Springs Fairgrounds.
about 40 persons attending a
Saturday ni ght seven
service at the First Methodist candidates for the quee n 's
Church about five miles south crown this year underwent
of Laurelville in Hocking extensive interviewing at the
County.
Meigs Inn by a panel of
The robber forced a man to judges composed of David
go with hlm in a stolen truck, Palmer, WATH, Athens;
later found abandoned near a Randy Green , WTAP-TV ,
woods along with the Parkersburg. and
Bob
unharmed hostage . An in- Hoeflich, The Daily Sentinel.
tensive police search resulted However, the final selection
in the discovery of a of the queen rests on other
motorcyclist, but church aspe c ts . Each contestant
worshipers were urable to must take a written test on
identify hiln. ·
rules of the association and
The robber burst into the each girl is given points for
rural church and announced her participation in approved
a holdup. Parishioners told horse s hows .
sheriff's deputies he had a
Officers of the association
snubnosed revolver and a were on hand to assist with
knife .
interviewing
procedures

in church

Saturday night , as was
Norma Newland who se r ves
as chairperson for the queen
selection. A dinner for the
judges was given following
the in terviews.
On Sept. 20 and 21, the
association will stage its
annual round-ur at the Roc k
Springs Fairgrounds. There
will !Je numerous h orse
events as well as a s qu&lt;-.~r e
dance on Saturday night.
TERRISHOHT
Sunday afternoon the new
qu een will be c r owned. 18, Point Pl eaS&lt;:~nt, daughti' r
Holding the crown at the of Mr. and Mrs. 1\obert S.
prese nt and first queen of the Lul ton: Ninn F&lt;:tnnin , 17.
a ssociation is Polly Berger of Mc Dermott , daughte r of Mr ·"'
Bon nie Co ri ell : Mn rc i8
Gallipolis.
Dillard
,
15 ,
Pomer oy ,
Candidates this year a re
Tamala Ann Daugherty. 15, daugh ter of Mr . and Mrs.
Route 2, Point Pleasant, Ro~cr Dillard : Gigi Zvla,
R~ve n swood , daughlcr of
dau~hter of Mr. and Mrs . Roy
and
Mrs. Frank Zyla, CHLd
A. Dau gherty; Maril yn
Layne.l8, Route 2, Gallipolis, Terri Short , 17, Ga llipolis .
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. daug hter uf Mr. and \o1 rs
Henry Layne; Sara Lutton, Gary R. Short.

Mr.

MINES IDLE
The approximately 1200
men employed at Meigs
Mines I, 2, 3 are still out
according to officials of the
Southern Ohio Coal Co. today . .

BOYS TO MEET
FEWER GOBBLEHS
All boys interested in
WASHINGTON ( UP! )
participating in Meigs Junior ·
Turkey production for 1975
High football, 7th and 8th
will be down about 6 per cent
grade, are to met Tuesday
from last year's level, an
after school on the field and
Agriculture
Department
qring shorts and sneakers . survey indicates.

' j
A CANDIDAifE FOR THE TITLE, "Queen of the Southeastern Uhio Horse Show Assn ."
urdergoes questioning at the Meigs Inn Saturday night by the judges, 1-r, David Palmer of
WATHRadio,Athens; Randy Green, WTAP-TV, Parkersburg, and Bob Hoefli ch , The Daily
Sentinel. The candidates, besides being scored on the interviews, also will be scored on A
written test and their participation in approved horse shows dUring the season.

•

I

!

',,.\ .

more vigor In economy"

Kissing~r verging on triumph
ALEXANDRIA,
Egypt
(UP!) - Secretary of State
Henry A. Kissinger was
reported so close to achieving
an Egyptian-Israeli settlement that Egypt joined
Israel today in starting to put
the draft agreement into
writing.
A
senior
American
diplomat with the Kissinger
party said the agreement was
90 per cent complete but that
there could be. some dlf-

PRICE 15'

\

,I

· ~·-o-c&gt;&lt;:&gt;-&lt;::::&gt;&lt;::&gt;&lt;~~o-&lt;:&gt;..o-c....::&gt;-&lt;::::&gt;&lt;:&gt;-c~o.o&lt;:&gt;~

I

MONDAY, AUGUST 25, 1975

drug."It looks like the drug was a dminis'tered mtentlona
.
uy,"

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 9:30 TO 8 PM.

recommend for inclusion in
Con Rail the other major rail
line co ming into Meigs
Courty 1USRA Une No. 514:
Corning to Hobson).
" lf this USRA re coln -.
me ndation to drop this
particular line is upheld, andi
if the ICC permits the
abandonment of lhe ·balance
of the C&amp;O lin e, the Meigs ·
Galli a - Vinton . Hocking
County re gion would be
virtually tsolaled in terms of
rail service. The movement
of goods by rail would cease,
as wuuld the transportation of

Devoted To The Interests of1'he Meigs-Muson Areu

w

OPEN EVERY WEEKDAY MONDAY THROUGH THURSDAY 9:30 TO 5 PM.

te s timon y [or a period
following the conclusion of
the hearings," Miller said.
Ear lier letters from Milloc
to Chessie Railway and ICC
orficials underscored several
factors s upporting the continued operation of tlle entire
Logan . Gallipolis- Pomeroy
line .
'
" First, the approva l of
the abandonment would leave
th e four co unty regi on
without rail service. The
Final System Plan of the
United
States Railway
Association ( USRA) does not

enttne

ANN ARBOR, MICH. - THE FBI TODAY began the
second week of an investigation into a hospital poisoning case
that agents said may have as many as 1,000 suspects. Agents
said the probe into a rash of mysterious respiratory arrests at
the Veterans Administration Hospital here could drag out for
months before conclusive evidence is foWld.
· They said the. list of suspects .could include the entire 750member staff at the hospital, plus payents and visitors between July 1 and Aug . I5 when at least 51 patients suffered
respiratory,lfailures and eight died. On Sunday, investigawrs
studied medical records try to find clues about a killer who
deliberately injected patients with a deadly muscle-paralyzing

Imported
German
movements
Cathedral Chimes on
many
styles.
Decorator · design.
Cherry, pine, maple
and walnut finishes.

Rep. Miller has directed
correspondence to IC C
Chairman George Stafford
saying that the hearings on
the C&amp;O line should be held
locally .
" I believe it is imperative
that public hearings will be
held locally, and at a time
convenient to those affected
by the line . We feel, also, that
adequate public notice should
be given prior to the hearings
being held and that thos~
unable to present comme nts
in person s hould be given the
opporturity to submit written

•

Son sworn into Air Force by father

JOSEPH EARL Barnhart
marked his 91st birthday
anniversary Friday. The
occasion will be celebrated
today with a family reunion
at the home of Mrs. Nial

The Bank?

Paid On
Passbook Savings

WA~HiniNGTON'

br

eit he r case re sults in
depriving the child or a
chance to find his own self.
Certainly kids must have
the discipline and advice that
parents are responsible to
deliver. But should yo ung
boys be forced to participate
in sports of which they hold
no in terest? Or should girls
be forced to play in the orchestra. if the desire is
lac kin g'?
Instead, s houldn 't parents
work with their children to
help and guide them into
finding their own personal
worth and satisfaction ?
Mental pressures are a
direct result of da ily negative
reinforcements. A child has
AIR FORCE MAJOR PAUL W. SCOT!' (ret.) swearing his son into the U. S. Air Force
last
July.
no alternative but to regress
if he is constantly made to
feel inadequate and inferior
to his parenls' demand s. In
order to avoid these mental
"hang-ups", a child should be
encouraged to be hi s own
Major Paul Wm . Scott was April after 21 years service. a student of Art, which he
man.
permitted the honor of
His wife, Shirley (Hayes) intends to pursue when he
A seven-year-o ld
acswearing his son, Thomas Scott, was formerly of Reeds- enters college.
curate ly sum med up this
Edward, into the U. S. Air ville, Meigs County., the
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J.
philosophy when he was
Force last July 3 preparatory daughter of former residents, Scott also have a daughter,
asked what he wanted to be
to enteri ng the Medical the late J ohn Hayes and Doris Mrs. Marilyn R. (Scott)
when he grew up .
School of the University of 1Hayes) Alfred, now of Mason, who is an RN at
He simply replied, "! want
Ne braska
at
Omaha, Sterling, Va.
Holzer Medical Center and
to be myself."
Nebraska, July 9 through the
Major Scott is the son of ·the wife of H. Dean Mason, a .
Air Force Plan.
Geraldine and Thomas J . teacher and coach at GAHS in
Thomas was grad uated Scott,
once
Pomeroy Gallipolis. They have three
from high sc hool during his residents, now of Rt. 2, children, Saralyn 14, Craig 12
junior year, entered the Gallipolis. His maternaL and Cindy Sue, 4.
university during the sum- grandparents were the late P.
mer se m este r and was Dana and Nellie (Capehart I
graduated magna cum laude Ables of Syracuse. Paternal
from the normal three year grandparents were the late
pre.med course in two years. Emma J. Scott and Dr. Wm .
He presently plans to enter James Scott of Syracuse. Dr.
HIT IN REAR
Alice participated in the
medicine as a ge nera l Scott,
GALLIPOLIS
No
who
practiced
costume judging as Sophie practitioner .
charges
were
filed
in
a
single
medicine in Syracuse and
Tucker wearing the bright
Major Paul W. Scott, Pomeroy, passed away car accident here Friday on
red gown with train and
Omaha, Neb., after serving in March 25, 1925.
Eastern Ave. City police said
ostrich feathers that she's
the U. S. Air Force in many
Major and Mrs. Scott have an auto driven by Roberta
worn from time to time on
different fields and areas, another son, Steven Ray, who Ann McWilliams, 28, Rt. 3,
Meigs County stages to win
retired from Strategic Air will be a senior in high school Gallipolis, was struck in the
the second place .
Command as one of its chief this fall . Steve is the lead rear by a car operated by Ed
commWJication officers last baritone in the Madrigals and L. Zuspan of GaUipolis.
AT
OUR
insistence,
Eleanor Robson, Meigs
County Recorder, agreed to
serve as chairperson of the
public fund drive for Lonnie
LeMaster, six year old Route
2 Pomeroy · youngster, who
has undergone brain surgery
at St . Joseph Hospital in
1
Parkersburg. Eleanor is
doing a great job - as in aU
her endeavors. She keeps
complete records of all income
the drive and writes
out receipts for each contribution received. Nice of
her to ·give her tlme and
energy to the drive.

I

I

�•

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_,
2- The ~1ly Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Monday, Aug 25, 1975

Another measure: man$ ,inhumanity to man

Some sponsors ofVietnamese refugees go bad
WS ANGELES (UP! ) To most VIetn amese refugees
the sponsor program looked
like a way out But to a few, 1t
was the hfe of a house servant
or par tner m sexual pleasure
- Two young men left
because theu: saonsor was a
homosexual
- A 17-year-old g1rl fled the
house of he r m illionaire

protec tors beca use th ey
made love m front of her
- Another said he was
bem g forced to e nte r a

semtnar y to

becom e

a

preacher
Som e refugees are treated
hke children by respons1ble

pansh10ners
Tran Van Son called hiS
protector an "explmter "The

Ameri can sa1d Son was
" lazy "
Theil" relationship lasted
two days
Son la ter was sent to hve m
a Los Angeles hote l w1th
other refugees wa1tmg for
reloca llon w1th an other
American farruly But he

sa1d, "I don't want to retcrn

just want to get a JOb and be
free from lorc ed labor "
They now hate the wor d
"sponsor " To them the good
1mage of Ame r1ca 1s clouded
With ha tred
The government task force
handlmg the resettlem ent of
refugees S8ld the breakdowns
represent only a mmor prob-

to any Amen can fa mily I

Four die in Oeveland stonn Sunday
CLE VE LAND (U P I) Four persons died her e late
Sunday dunn g a vwlen t
thunderstorm which dum ped
more th an four mches of ra m
onto the c ity, leaVIng scores
of hom es flooded and several
thousand per sons With out
uti11ty serviCes
Two O[ the VIctlffiS ol the
storm, which a c1ty officia l
termed one or the worst to hi t
the City m at least 10 yea rs ,
wer e killed by hghtnmg The
other two VIctuns drowned
Ernest Martm, and Ronrue
Morg an, both 12 a nd ol
Cleveland Heights, we r e
killed when they were struck
by a lightnm g bolt afte r a
Pollee Athleti c Lea gue
football practice sesswn
The two boys had sought
refuge under a tree from the
squall !me-produced storm
Ja c que line Boomer , 10,
Cleveland, had been wading
m a flooded street Wllh her
brother, Michael, 11 The g1rl

Qualification
test offered
for ainnen
The A1r For ce Airm a n
Quaiificabon
Examm•lion
will be a dmimstered at th e
Jackson, Ohw Pos t Office
each Wednesday a t 1 p m
This a ptitude tes t de termm es
the proba b1hty of a person's
success
tn
th e
admlms tra ll ve, m ec ha mcal,
electromcs a nd ge neral
kn owledge fi elds for which a n
mdivldual has not ye t
tramed
Young men and women or
th1s area are urged to ta ke
th1s apbtude test for the ir
own benefit Sergeant Ron
R1fe, AF r ec ruite r, sa1d
" Hidden t a lents may be
revealed - talen'ts which the
A1r Force 1s w1l1In g to
develop by offermg a career
l1eld w1th secur1ty, travel and
educallonal
opportumt1es
Th1s tes t IS the door to an
exc1llng ca reer wher e a
person 's ab1h1Ies are ullhzed
m a field of h1s or her des1re "
Sergeant R1fe may be
contacted at the Jackson P
0 , ph 2116-4248, or phone the
Armed Service Rec Center, 7
Pine St , on Fn day 9 1111 5, ph
446-8500

was sucked mto a n open
sewer manhole " The boy
sru d he turned around a nd she

was gone," pollee sa1d "He
said all he saw was a
whirlpool " The cover of the
sewer manhole had been
washed away by the water
Her body was round today
m t he Cuyahoga R1v e r,
wrapped around a tree trunk
Ric ha rd Ambe au, E a st
Cl eve lan d, drowned wh1le
he lpmg his son -m~aw , Lester
Hoste Uer , Zl, search for an
a uto mundat e d m th e
Umverst ty Ctrcle area
Pohce used a canoe to
recove r Hos te tl e r 's body ,
Ma ,o r Leagu e Leade r s

while boats were used by
Coast Guardsmen and f1re
offiCia ls to r escue motoriSts
from cars m deep wat er
There were some reports of
lootmg, but pohce said they
had not been able to determme how Widespread 11 was
Monkeys and other small
anunals scrambled to safety
whe n f1v e-feet of water
cascaded mto the Cleveland
Zoo when B1g Creek overnowed
"The heavy flooding was m
the area where the b1gger
an1mals are kept, the zebras,
deer, yak and elan," Deputy
Ch1ef James Johnson of the

Metropohtan Park Range rs
smd
Johnson S8ld no anunals
were k1lled m the flooding
'They waded around m the
water and seemed to have a
good tune, " he sa1d
Natwnal Weather Service
of!Icials said the heaviest
ramfall apparently occured
on the City 's southeast s1de
Old storm sewers, unable to
handle the high pressure of
the wate r, lite rally blew
portiOns of streets as high as
10 feet mto the alf
As m a ny as
14 ,000
customers of the Cleveland
Elec tnc Illummatmg Co
we re without power lor
several hours following the
storm and as many as 2,500
were still w1thout electric
power thls mornmg

Iem

Two WidoWS and thell" SIX
At Camp Pendle ton , Calif , children w~re taken to
officia ls sa1d ther e have been Phoerux, AriZ , to hve With a
about 50 cases mvolvmg some Protestant church Instead
200 persons out of the 32,000 they were put to live With
VIetnamese released from Mexican-Americans
th e camp m the past three
"The daily schedule was
months
from 6 am to II p.m ," Mrs
Th e breakdowns, m reality, Hoa1 Anh sa1d "During that
are more widespread Those time we were told to work and
who batUed openly qu1t !hell" make m oney for
the
s ponsors wh1l e othe r s , congregatiOn We ate only
because of fears and the potatoes and carrots, no m eat
lan guage barrier, chose to m three weeks
take what was giVen them
"We were not allowed to
"My wife and I were forced talk to anybody There were
to work nme hours a day and no clothes and we had to
s1x days a week for $200 a share the bedrooms with a
month," Son said "There dozen pers on s compl ete ly
was no break durmg the day, strangers to us "
even for lunch , and our 4She sa1d that when Red
year-old boy was Jus\ star- Cross representatives m vmg Th e sponsor never vestlgated her complamt the
allowed my wife to take care sponsor showed clothes
of our son durmg the day
collected for the refugees
" We were treated as slaves which they never received
and were 1/lreatened w1th
The children must attend
starva tion "
two hours of re hg~ous classes
The couple r eceived a daily a day Theil" parents were
hst of chores mcludmg fmng asked to attend the church
breakfast for the ''masters" although they sa1d they were
and makmg thell" beds
Buddhists

Meigs
Property
Transfers

Linescores

next year Holshouser 1s on
Ford's campaign adviSOry
comm1ttee and he sa1d
Rockefeller 's age, 67, will
hurt hlDl
The other chall"ffien sa1d
they d1dn 't like his reputation
as a llberal About half sa1d
they would prefer Ronald
Reagan to Rockefeller , and
Lou1s1ana GOP chauman
Jun Boyce srud his colleague
prefer "almost anybody to
Rockefeller "
Rockefeller , trymg to wm
support m the South, goes to
South Carolma this week to
meet with state party
leaders, busmess leaders and
GOP Gov James Edwards, a
long-tune Reagan supporter
Bayh, who made an appearance at the Young
Democrats c onventiOn ,
polled 23 per cent of the 610
votes Former Georgia Gov.
Juruny Carter, whose forces
were achve durmg the
convention, came m second
w1th 14 per cent and Rep

No smoking link _to arthritis

over the 7,100-yard, par-70
Coloma! Country Club course
was, indeed, an unpresstve
statistic. It was the best four
rounds ever turned In over a
course that has hosted the
Coloma! National InVItatiOn
tournament for almost 30
years
And m producmg that score
Ge1berger had to hold off a
charge by Stockton, who took
the lead for a bnef time
Sunday only to fall back and
finish w1th a sevefHUlder
273
The only other player to
break par for the tournament
was Hubert Green, who shot a
one-under 69 Sunday - the
same score turned m by
Ge1berger and Stockton - to
fmish at 275
I
Mason Rudolph, Bob
Dickson and Bob Murphy
fmished tied for fourth at 281.
Jack N1cklaus was not a
factor m the tournament
after opening day, fjnished at
287

Reds popped 5-l

ntine.

'

I

'

while Reuss scattered mne
hits.
Oliver's fust mrung triple
scored Renme Stennett, who
had singled. Oliver then came
home with the lead run on
Wlllle Stargell's sacrifice fly .
H Oliver was glad to bave
stargell back m the line up,
Stargell was even happier
"It's good to be back m the
lineup . I Just have to get my
stroke and timing straight,"
said Stargell, who had been
sidelined for several days
with a bruised rib.
"It's not 100 per cent yet,"
Stargell sa1d m reference to
his rib, ''but ~ couldn' t walt to
come back I II go with 50 per
cent (healing) and go up hill
from there "
Ohver blasted h1s 15th
homer of the year off loser
Gary Nolan (11-8) in the
thlrd, scoring Stennett, who
had smgled
Reuss raiSed his record to
!4-9 by wiMing his lith
consecutive game at Three
Rivers Stadium He has lost
only one game at home this
Year

FOOTBALL OFFICIALS' SIGNALS
2

A Chronicle of Amc:rica
•
,

Ofhhl1 ar V10I1tlen
of fr••kte~ rula

hht Start 111•1
po"t•on ar fiiOCidurt
lll-.t 1
.. .. ..

E

"

nctOICn mtnt Dlll'f

:r-~---------+~·-~·~MW~·~"':":•·~~~-=Ill=""'::•:":'':'--~--~~~~~~~s:~~~~~_jl_:''!~:m~C:•,_::,~~~

Two early naval encounten tum out well for the colonltta
on July IOa"Georgiaochooner captures the BrltlsllMCijl!lll
Carl4 ott Tybee Istaod, Georgia, and selzet the 11:1 tons
of gunpowder on board On September 2 at Beverly,
Massachusetts, George Washington authorizes !he cooversiOn of fishing vessels Into armed ships, aod directs
Nicholson Broughton and bls crew of !he sclloQDer Htlfi'IIIJA
"to cruise agalns11ucb vesoels as may be found on the biBb
seas or eloewhere
" The Hannah tbUJ beCOmes the tint
ship In "Washington's Fleet" - tbe forerunner of the Continental Navy On tbe7lh, lheHannahretumStoportwltb
her first capture, !he reconverted British mercbantman,
Unt!!/ In lhenextslxmonths, theHan'IIIJAandtheotheralx
ships m " Washington's Fleet" capture II British ships
carrying munitions tbal prove critical to Continental
for ces In early land engagements

•

Un&amp;pOrttmNihb eoMu tt Deity lttrt of twf.
111.,11 pwttclptt ton.

-1101 Fo~

10

12

F11lurt to . . ,
equ1pmtnt

ftqt.nr ld

lllogll ,....... , ...

lntlfftrentt with l11r
Cltcb " forw~n:l ,_

18
Hannah

lllllllly hku'l or
blttmo • loon btlt
AIID for f1nt touchl"'
of • kttk

I neomplttt foi"Mrd
P•-Pfl'llltv dtdtntdno pby or no ttDrt

lnll .. ~lt nclivtr
down ftlld on~

19

Pultllnt htlph,. nmnlf

or mtertockN
lftttrf«tnct.

20

Bill h d•d Fartouch

Touchdown or

blck Wl'tl lldiWill

held gotl

23

- By Roa Mac:kenlle A Jeff MacNelly/ cJ975 Unlr•:i Feature Syndicate

Morns Udall of AriZOna was happens between now and thti
th1rd w1th 11 per cent . election, " I don't Intend tO
Humphrey got 9 per cent and sleep out the next year "
fourth place, although he was
not on the ballot
In French Lick, Ind , Bayh
S8ld Saturday he has "as COPS srAKES VICI'ORY
NORTH RANDAll., Ohio '
good a chance as anybody" to
win
the
Democrahc ( UPI) - Petite Scarlet won
nommation He said it was the $7,500 Scarlet Carnallon
premature to announce hiS Stakes at Thistledown &amp;mcandidacy , but Senate day with a I 44 1-5 clocking
colleague Vance Hartke for the mile and 70 yards.
The wmner, ridden by
flatly predicted, "We will
nommate Bll"ch Bayh and Frank Licata, paid $13.40,
anybody the Democrats $3.60 and $2.20.
Rosette was second and 'nommate for president will
Xc1ta ble's Lassie third.
be elected "
Humphrey, mterVIewed by
The 2-1-3 lOtiH"ace trlfecta
UP!
m
Minneapohs, of Stay Gold, Moon Walket";,
rmterated he IS not runnmg and Bell's Reject was worth
for president but he would $227.60, and the 8-3 dally
accept the nommation "if 1t IS double of Ability Plus and
lrud before me " Whatever Stephanita returned $92.60.

Today's

Geiherger sharp

DR. LAMB

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M. D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - Would
you kindly discuss the effects
of smoking on an arthritic
person' I feel there is some
sort of link between the two
and feel if you confll"ffied thiS
maybe it would help people
giVe up smokmg. I know a
woman m her 70s who IS
bothered with pamful arthr1tis, but while complauung
about 1t continues With her
Cigarettes
DEAR
READER
Cigarettes are a ssociated
with a lot of ills, but there IS
no evidence that tbey cause
or make arthritis worse
There IS some eVIdence
that patients with rheumatoid
arthritis are partiCularly
prone to develop lung disease
from smoking, much more so
than the average smoker and
that is bad enough already
For a discussiOn of the
effects of tobacco on health,
wr1te to me m care of thiS
newspaper, P .O Box 1551,
Radio City Stahon, New
York, NY 10019 and send a
long,
self-addressed,
stamped envelope and 50
cents, and ask for The Health
Letter number U, Tobacco ·
Ogarettes, Cigars, Pipes.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I am
so angry at myself for bemg
110 dumb. I had two gaD
' bladder attacks, so I called

'

Bayh, Humphrey, Rocky in pol talk ,

United Press Internatloual
Sens Bll"ch Bayh of InLeadmg Ba it e r s
( ba se d on 325 a t b a t s)
diana and Hubert Humphrey
Naltonal L eagu e
of Minnesota, two liberal
g ab r h pe l
Md lck Ch 1
Democrallc stalwarts, thrust
110 439 65 158
360
themselves Into the l1melight
Sr mmons St L
123 445 64 148
333
Sunday 's Baseball Res ult s
of pre-elec twn year pohhcs
Wa1s n H 112 414 58 137
331
By Umtcd Press lnternattonal
durmg the weekend
Sngll n Prt
Naltonal League
107 389 44 127
326
Ctnc nna t•
100 000 000- I 9 0
Ne1ther IS a declared canMrgn Cn l iB 40Q 86 133
325
Pitt sb ur gh
202 000 l Ox - 5 5 0
didate, but Bayh won a
Jos h S F 105 408 60 13 1
Nol an
321
Borbon
(7)
and
Rose Cn 128 531 83 169
Lore tto Redd Auvil, AJ .. Bench Reuss (14 9) and Oyer
Jl8
preference vote among 14
Br ock 51 L
L P No lan { 11 8 )
H ROIIver
fldav1t,
Olive.
candidates at the Young
104 402 65 127
316
(15t h )
Kenneth J Wolfe, Anna L
Prkr PI 116 432 59 136
315
Den'locrats convention m St
Lz nsk r P h il
Atlanta
010 000 010- 2 8 1
Wolfe
to
Carl
L
Wolfe
,
128 176 74 149
3 13
St LOUIS
310 000 02x - 6 7 2 Loms and Humphrey, who
Brenda S Wolfe, 1 4446
Card n l Ch r
Mor ton Sosa (61 Leon (8 )
came m fourth as a wr1te-m,
123 466 68 146
313 Acres, Rutland.
and Pocoroba
For sc h
Hr a
S8ld
he Will be heard from
Am encan Lea gu e
bosk y {8) and Stm m o ns WP K G Anderson, Sr , For sc h ( 12 9) LP- Mort on ( 15 next year
g ab
r
h pet
Crw Mn 118 439 79 163
37 1 Ge raldine Anderson, K
141
V1ce Pres ident Nelson
Ly n n Bs 117 423 BO 138
32 6
Gordon Anderson Jr , Susan Houslon
Munson NY
000 31 1 300- 6 14 3 Rockefeller , vacallonmg and
125 470 67 147
3 13 E
201 00 1 ooo- 4 6 o
Anderson to Alvm D Ch01cago
entertammg Republicans m
Wshngrn Oak
1er ker ( 12 13) and Johnson
11 7 463 64 \44
311 Tr1pp, Barbara S Tripp, 200
Ju t ze (81 Burns Wilcox (6 )
Mame this weekend, was at
Sn gltn Ba l
Zamo r a (7) F radm g 17) and
acres, Orange
the same time bemg raked
124 470 73 144
306
Sw tshcr
Hosley
(7l
LPMarc1a I Harr1son to Burri S ( 10 10 1 HR s Cruz 2 (6 th over the coals of Southern
Powll Cl 102 33 3 50 102
306
H rg r ve Tex
Adams Drilling Co , Meter 7th ) Joh n son (15th l Th orn ton conservatism
115 410 67 125
(8th) Wa t son ( 16th )
305
304 s1te agree , Rutland
MeR KC 118 450 55 137
The GOP chaumen of 13
Ort a Cht 11 0 424 53 128
302
Marc1a I HarriSon to {1s t Gam el
states convened m WnghtsR ICe Bs 117 462 71 139
301
New Y or k
000 25 1 100- 9 12 1
Roger Adams, Gas Line R-W, San F r an c1sc 000 020 300- 5 8 1 vllle, N C , and told Gov
Home Run s
Nahonal L eague
Luz m sk •
Matlack Apodac a Pl and
Rutland
James Holshouser PreSident
Ph il 31
Sc h m1 dl
Phil 30
Gr ote
Barr
Cal dwell
161
Raymond Rowe, Kay M
K 1ng m an N Y 26 Ben ch C 1n
Br ad l ey (81 Heav erlo (9) and Ford would be Wise to drop
24 F oster em 21
Rowe to Roger Adams, Gas Sa dek W P M atl ac k { 15 Bl L P Rockefeller from the ticket
Am encan Leagu e M ay b err y
Barr ( 11 11 )
HR K mg m an
Li.ne R-W, Letart
KC 29 Jackson Oa k 28 Sc oll
{26t h )
M tl
27
Bonds
NY
24
Merlm Teets, Ida Teets to
Burroughs Tex 22
Gam e l
Danny B Howard, Eva &lt;2nd
Run s Batted In
New Y or k
000 000 000- 0 0 0
Nat1onal L eagu e
L uz tnSk l
San F r a n e~sc 200 020 20x - 6 8 1
Howard, Sec. 2T, Sc1p10
Ph il 101 Bench C1n 99 Sla ub
Seldon J White, deed to
NY
85
Per ez
Ctn
84
Amencan L eagu e
Stmm on s St L 82
Robert S Wh1te, Esther D
FORT WORTH, Tex. (UPI)
(I sf game)
Am encan L eague Ly nn Bos
Faulkner, Cert. of Trans , Cal 1forn 1a
002 402 100- 9 13 2 89
M ay berry
KC 85
May
AI Ge1berger and Dave
New York
000 000 000- 0 4 1
Ba l l 84 R tce Bos 83
Sco tt
Orange
Stockton, desp1te bemg the
Tan an a ( 12 6) a nd Rod rt g u ez
M 1! 81
Archie E Lee, June P Lee M ay Dobson ( 51 Sawyer (ll best of friends , possess two
Stolen Ba ses
Gutd ry (7 ~an d Munson Oemp
Na1tonal L eague Lopes L A to Richard 0 Knapp , Mona
sey (81 L P - M ay ( 11 lO J H R different type personalities
57 Mo r gan Ct n 51 Broc k $1 L
P Knapp, I 07 Acre, Chester M iley (4t h )
48 Cedeno Hou 42 Ca rdenal
Stockton IS the outgomg
Ch 1 26
Roger Weaver, Cathy
type,
Ge1berger IS qu1et and
(2nd Game)
Amencan Leagu e
R tver s
Darlene
Weaver
to
Roger
A
Ca lif orn ia
010 010 11 0- 4 4 0 mtrospect1ve
Ca l 64 wa shmgton Oak 35
000 010 020- 3 10 6
Ot1s K C 33
Rem y Cal 3 1
Abbott, Susan E Abbott Lot New Yor k
Therefore, when Ge1berger
Ryan Scott (7), lang e (7)
Ca r ew M tn n and Bon ds NY 29
'
(Pt
Lot
463),
Pomeroy
Hockenberr y (6 ) , Brew er ( 8 1 completed an astomshmg
Pttchmg
(Ba sed on most v tcton es)
Marla Neutzling, Comm , and Et ch ebarr en M art1 nez four days worth of sub par
Ly l e ( 8 ) an d H errm ann WP Nahonal Leagu e Sea v er N Y
golf to wm the $250,000
Rya n ( 14 12) L P - M a r t m ez 11
18 7 Jones SO 17 7 Sutton LA Mote Yeauger, dec to V1ola
16 10
Matl ack
NY
15 8
Yeauger, Alfred Yeauger, 21 HR Nettles ( 16t h ) Herr Tournament
Players
m ann ( 5t h)
Mor ton Al l 15 14
Delma
Halley,
Maxwell
Champ10nsh1p w1th a 10Amencan L eagu e
Palm er
000 01 0 OQO-- 1 7 3 under-par 270 score Sunday,
Ba ll 19 7 Kaa t Ch 1 18 9 L ee
Yeauger, Pearl Yeauger, Det rotl
a
001 020 oox- J 10 1
Bos 17 7 Hunt er
N Y 17 12
Marvm Yeauger, Norman Mmnesot
11 was Stockton who seemed
Lot1c h (11 14) and F reeh an
W1se Bos 16 B Bl ue Oak 16 10
Yeauger , Allen Yeauger , Hugh es 112 Il l and Borgm an n
the most Impressed.
Paul Yeauger , Parcels , Clevel and
"It 's an unbelleveable
000 11 0 OOQ- 2 7 I
Salisbury
Kansas ( tty 100 220 OOx - 5 10 0 scoret''he satd "Idon'tknow
Harrt so n
Hood
(51
an d
I
Ashby
F ttzm or r1s
Bt rd (8) what AilS on I've got to fmd
and Slt nson
WP - F1tzm orn s out what he 1s takmg and take
I 13 10 )
LP- Har nson
(6 51
some of 11 myself."
H R M c Ra e (Sth l
And Gel berger , in h1s
Oaklan d
00 1 102 101 - 6 9 1
M il w au kee
00 1 000 J3x - 7 9 2 understated way, summed 1t
Bos man L ndbl ad ( 71 F m
up m one sentence
g ers (8) and Ha ney Co l born
" As tough as thiS course IS,
Rodr i guez
( 71
A us h n
(9)
M urphy (9 } and P orter W P I
would
have to say 1t was the
my obstetr1c1an He IS the thmgs, mcluding an ulcer or Rodr l guez 17'·0J L P- F tnger s
only doctor I have had smce h1atal hernia or colon ( B 6) HR S Bevac qua { 2nd }, best tournament I have ever
Yount ( 6th }
played"
my only problem has been problems The mternlSt has
Gelberger's wmnmg score
000 010 000- 1 8 o
havmg siX babies He sent me to hear the symptoms and do Ch1 cago
Boston
100 021 20x- 6 11 1
to a friend of hiS, an mterrust an exammation to make a
Wood Upsha w {7) H mton (7)
I had testa, and three days correct d18gnos1s The X rays and D ownrn g L ee ( 17 7 J and
M on tgom er y
LP- Wood ( 13
later he sa1d the radiologu;t 's help, but many people have 17) HR S Yas tr zem sk t ( 13th ).
report sa1d I had gall stones, stones and have symptoms R tce l201h l
and should go see a surgeon from somethmg else, such as Ba l ltmor e
101 300 011 - 7 14 0
PITTSBURGH (UPI) - AI
T ex as
101 030 021- B 13 1
He sent me to a surgeon a spastic colon
Grtm sl ey Gar l and ( 5 ) Mtll er
Oliver
was the undiSputed
fr1end of his because he
Except m those small (9) Jackson 191 and D uncan ,
doesn ' t operate.
commumhes where the Hendrtc k s (7), Harg an Kekt ch hero Sunday m the Pittsburgh
(4) T homas (4) Foucaull ( 8)
Pirates' 5-I VIctory over the
Now why didn 't I know that surgeon does family practice and
Sundberg
WP- Fouca ult
CinCinnati
Reds, but he gave
and go to a surgeon in the as well as some surgery, I ( 6 J} LP- Garland ( l 5} HRs
N elson ( l stl
Gr1 ev e ( 11th) ,
credit to enthuslBstic fans,
f1rst place ' I suppose all thiS recommend that all patients s mgleton ( I Jth )
4
p1tcher Jerry Reuss, and the
runnmg around is so see their family phyS1Cl8n
everybody can get a b1te out first or an mternist before ,. ,. .:.,;.,....:.:;. _,......,....~,'-'-,~-'1! return of mtured teanunate
Willie Stargell for his herOICS.
of my Blue Cross Blue Shield' seemg a surgeon. The ex"One of the reasons could
DEVOTED TO THE
I want you to tell me which of ception IS for injuries, as
INTEREST OF
bethefans,"Oliv r,sald. " A
the following
list
of from an automobile acculent,
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
Jotofpeoplecouldh eg1ven
speCialists do surgery and that are of such a nature as to
Exec Ed
ROB&amp;RT HOEFLICH ,
up on US, but when we
e
which ones don't, for future reqUU"e a surgeon
C•tv
Ed•tor
back
there
were
22,000
In
too·
use
A good surgeon really IS too
Published daily except
big crowds all
DEAR
READER
busy to sort through all the Saturday by The Ohio Va ll ey Stands and
11
' Publ t !IJ\1ng company , 111
weekend
Forgive me for not including medicalcomplaints that may 1 Court Sf , Pomeroy Ohio
•
45~69 Bus mew. Office PhoneThe Pirates returned from
your list, but you are using not require surgery at all.
;~ 5 ll56 Ed•tol'la l Phone 992
a disasterous road trip last
poor Judgment.
That Is why he limits his
class postage paid week only to be greeted by
Think how angry you would practice to surgery . A at Second
Pomeroy , Ohio
N otlona 1 adv er ti s 1 ng
season h1gh crowds on Friday
be With yourself If yoo had surgeon who 1s too enrepresen t attve
Ward
and
Saturda The
d f
gone to a surgeon and found thusiastic about surgery, and GFiltlth Company , Inc
Y·
crow o
Boltlnelll &amp; Gallagher Dlv ' 35,598 Sunday put the Pirates
out that your problem was not there are some, often has his
gall bladder disease. Then enthusiasm controlled hy the ' ~~~ T7J~~ 7 Ave ' New York, season attendance total over
S ubscr l ptton
rates
the one million mark for the
you would have seen a intermst who doesn't do Delivered
by carr i er wher e
' avatlabte 75 cents per week
sixth consecutive year
'
surgeon for no reason at all surgery
By Motor Route where
The Pir te h
-f
and would still have the
service
not
a s ave won lVe
Finally, many patients who carrier
of SIX since returning, and
problem which would reqWl'e reqUU"e surgery also have availabl e, One month , $3 25
By
mall
In
Ohio
and
w
Vo
,
now
lead the Philadelphia
1lilllllllernist
Si x
medical problems that need One Year , $2 2 00
sn so ,
Thre e
PhiiUesbytbreegamesmthe
' Your obstetrician was r1ght the sk1lls of the familY • months
onths , $ 7 00 El sewhere
26 oo veor
Sox mon ths
National League East
m sending you to an mterrust phys1c1an or the mternlst, m
lJ so fhret months , $7 SO
Oli
dr
thr
first. The diagnosis could addition to surgery
ubscr l ptlon Prt ce m c lud es
ver ove m
ee runs
unda y Ttm c~ S~!._--' With a home run 1and a tnple
have been several different
By Un tt cd Pr ess Intern a tion a l

N'ATIONAL
ALLIANCE

'I

Summer, 1775:

I

3- The Dally sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Aug 25, 1975

'

We Hold These Truths ...

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
. UPI Sporta Edltar
NEW YORK (UPI) - Horace Stoneham has agreed to sell ,
the San FranciSco Gl8nts to a group of wealthy Japanese mdustrtalists from Tokyo, and what this all comes down to lSo.
that 30 years ago baseball broke the color line for players, and:
now 1t's getting around to tbe same thing with the International"
boundary line for owners
For the fli"St time m baseball history, a major league ball
club will be owned and operated by foreign mterests next&gt;

season.

,

1,

The purchase pr1ce for the Gl81lts was slightly more than $17"
million, w1th tbe Japanese buyers getting lock, stock, barrel.:
and Ed (No Hit) Halicki, too
One or two National League owners still are opposed to doing
busmess with " outsiders," feanng perhaps some oil rich Arab •
may wake up one mornmg and decide to buy both majol'"
leagues as a couple of toys, but Stoneham Is hardpressed fo6
funds, these industrl8Iists bave come up with that rarest of aU..
commodities, cash, and besides they're from the Far East, not the M1ddle East.
The Giants' owner and the new owners shook hands on the
deal three weeks ago, Stoneham promising to turn over to the' •
Japanese at the end of the season all assets from the"
National Exhibition Company, which mclude the Gl81lts, theil' ,
entire farm system and thelf hotel and baseball complex at ..
Casagrarxje, Ariz.
•A
Some Japanese mvestors hold mmor stock m the Texas
Rangers at the present time aod a few businessmen from
Japan bought the Lodi club of the CalifQrnia League three~
years ago before eventually relinquishing 1t, but never befor~ ·
has any individual or group outside the U S. ever taken over complete control of any major le~e club.
...
Sale of the Gl8nts to the Japanese strengthens the chances of ,,
the _club remammg in San FranCISCO's Bay Area next year, ,
Califorrua has a large Japanese population. Since both the G1ants and the A's can not operate successfully In the Bay
Area at the same time, the A's now seem the logical club tcf '
move to Seattle, with the Gl8nts playing some of their home
games at Oakland next year.
",
The Japanese IU""chase doesn't necessarily mean there will ,
he a sudden influx of Japanese players With San Francisco'"
lll8smuch as the major leagues of both countries have a "no-::;
raid agreement" between them. '
1 As for any other changes among the Gl&amp;nts there are boWld ,
I to be a number of them. Horace Sbmeham ~ extraordlnarllf"
loyal to his ~ployes but the Japanese tough busine
"•
UlSlSted upon their ngbt to designate ~lr own as one~~
conditions of the sale.
,
,,
Wes Westrum will be amoog those let out He will not be _
hired as manager.
re
Leo Durocher heard Westnun was due to go whether the club-::
was sold or not and applied for his old job back
thougb'hesworeupanddownhe'dnevermanageagiun -even
'
As for Stoneham, he can stay 00 with the Gia ts
'"
sultan! if he wishes. Horace Stoneham took ove':. th': ~~'-:.; :
upon the death of his father in 1936. He was 32 then
est "
president in the history of the majors. That was 40 'y=go •
and he has many wonderful mernccies of the Giants
,"
H he could've held on to the club, If there was ~Y possible• ,
way not to sell, Horace Stoneham never WOuld've done it B t
he had no choice.
· u
They don't make club owners like HOI'ace Stoneham"-:;
anymore. Baseball may be a business to everybody else, but it":
was always a sport to him Still 1.s too and probably always
will be.
'
'

"'

I

I

I

I

Offlcltl s t1mt outfellowsS.,tl21

S.loty

26

24

Ftrlt dawn

27

28

NL's 1st no-hitter pitche-d by Halicki
BY NED.. HERSHBERG
UPI Sports Wriler
Up until SUnday , the only
thmg unpress1ve about Ed
Hahcki was his size
But 1t takes more than a 6foot-7 frame and the word
Gl81lts lettered across your
chest to gam stature m the
maJor leagues It has to be
ea rned On Sunday , E d
H\Ih ck1 game d that b1g
!eague respect his phySical
prese nce alone had bee n
unable to proVIde hun
Halicki, troubled by a
stiffenmg r1ght shoulder from
the seventh innmg on, pitched
the National League's flfst
no-hit, no-run game of the
se ason to g iVe the Sa n
FranciSCO Gl8nts a 6-0 VIC·
tory over the New York Mets
and a s pht of the1r
doubleheader
Dave
Kingman's fifth inning grand
slam proVIded the Mets w1th
a !1-5 VICtory m the opener
With a crowd of 24,1n-the
second largest of the season
m Candlestick Park cheermg hlDl on, Halicki
struck out 10and allowed only
three base runners Rusty
Staub reached base on an
error by second baseman
Derrel Thomas leading off
the firth and M1ke Vall
walked after one out m the
sixth Del Unser walked w1th

ooe out m the mnth
Hahck1 , a 22(l..pound n ghlha nder , had been bother ed
by t1ghtemng muscles m h1s
shoulder m his last f1 ve
starts Trruner AI WJ!der
ga ve him an omtrnent rubdown between mnmgs after
Hali c ki
complained
of
Ughtness m hiS pltchmg a rm
after the seventh frame
"The onl y th1ng tha t
bothe re d m e was t he
shoulder ," sa1d Halicki , who
was 1-8 m his rookie season
last year " I kept thmking 11
was gomg to stiffen up to the
pomt I was gomg to have to
come out, and I certainly
didn 't want to come out under
the crrcumstances "
Halicki also beheved that
both luck a nd the enUluslast1c
crowd we re Instrumental m
helpmg hlDl grun baseba ll
urunortahty
" I was lucky , pretty damn
lucky ," Hah ckl admitte d
" You have to be lucky to
p1tch a no-h1tter and l beheve
I was today The crowd was
JUSt great You need !bell"
rootmg too and my teammates played great behind
me My catc her ( Dave
Rader ) ' called a hell of a
game and l managed to keep
my arm loose for nme mrungs That I guess summed
1t all up "

The closest the Mets came
to getting a base hit off
Halicki was m the first mrung
when FeliX Millan lifted a
curvmg pop to n ght wh1 ch
Steve Ontiveros, norma Uy a n
infielder , raced in and caug ht
knee high near the foul lme
Halicki 's no-h1tter was only
the second m the major
leag ues th1 s yea r No la n
Ry a n p1 !che d h1 s fo ur t h
ca reer no-h itter on June 1 lor
the California Angels aga1nst
th e Baltunore Orioles
In other NL games, P ittsburgh pounded Cmc1M a t1 5-1,
Houston ha mmered Ch icago
8-4, St Lo uis sla m me d
6-2,
Mont rea l
Atl a nta
outlasted Los An geles 5-3 m
14 !Mings and San D1ego
swept a doubleheader !rom
Philadelphi a 7-2, a nd 7-4i m 12

consecutive games, powermg
Houston over the, Cu bs
Wilbur Howard rapped out
four hits to pace a 14 hit attack that gave the Astros 4~
hils lor the three-game

sertes
Cards 6, Braves t

Righ t-ha nder Bob For sch
and re liever AI Hrabosky
sca ttered seven hits and Ted
Simmons and Regg1e Smith
knocked m runs m a f1 rst
IMm g outburst that earned
the Card mals pas t th e
Braves Forsch ralSed hiS
record to 12-9 by outduehng
Carl Morton, 15-14 Lou Brock
posted his 800t h career stolen
base
Expos 5, Dodgers 3
J1m Lyttle's double capped
a three-run Montreal 14th
mmn g r a ll y afte r M1ke
1Mlfl2S
Marshalls wild pitch a nd a
Pirates 5, Red s 1
two-base throwmg error by
AI Ohver drove m thre&lt; Jo hn Ha le permitted two
runs w1th a homer a nd a oth er
ru ns to sco re,
tr1ple and J erry Reuss, 14-9, propelling the Expos over the
scattered rune h•t• as the Dodgers Dave Lopes stole
Pirates defeated the Reds three bases to mcrease hiS
Gary Nola n, 11~. was the record total to 38 straight
loser It was Reuss ' li th before he was fmally thrown
consecutive v1ctory at Three out by Gary Carter , the last
man to cut hlDl down back on
R1vers Stadium
Astros 8, Cubs 4
June 4
Jose Cruz slammed two
Padres 7.. 7, PhiiUes ~
homers, Bob Watson added
Bobby Tolan smgled home
another and Cliff J ohnson Bob DaviS fr om second base
beca me th e firs t As tros' w1th two out m the bottom of
player to hit homers m live the 12th mnmg to g1ve San

Diego a second game victory
over the Phlllies and a sweep
of their doubleheader after
the Padres' Randy Jones
pitched hiS way to his 17th
wm m the opener In the
second game , Davis drew a
ontHlut walk and moved to
second when losing pitcher
Ron Schueler balked Johrmy
Grubb struck out but Tolan
Si ngled to right-center on the
second pitch to end the four
hour 15 minute contest

Young southpaw throws real smoke
loll r1111y for ~IV

Clack stlrb.

LOll of down.

Gr1q1tn1 appantnt 1

flea protttlor

lllepl bfock

In 6-yohl btlt

EDirOR'S NOn;; -In order to bring area grid fans up-to-date on football
rules aDd to Introduce finer points of the game lo newcomers watcblug the fall
sport for the first time, offlctal rom Duncan, formerly of Pt. Pleasant aud now of
Gallla county, has submitted a series of articles on officiating to help ''kick off the
1975 high school grid campaign.

Area football official Tom Duncan
explains finer, points of the game
By rOM DUNCAN
FOOTBALL"
Yes, 1t IS that tlDle of the
year when pads are popping,
bandsmen
mar c h1ng,
clleerleaders cheermg, and
fins aruuously awaiting the
~nmg of a new high
Oool football season 1
;::Would you like to know
more about the rules of high
sebool football' Well, that IS
®! reason for thiS c olumn I
iii! gomg to be wr1ting a few
c@umns thiS week on the
®es, hopmg that they m1ght
help you enjoy your high
school football more thiS

formation wh1ch should be
covered, we m1ght wnte
another column or two
Today's column Will be
mamly about offlclatmg , so I
trust you will read and maybe
understand a little more
year
about the offlcl81s I am a
If you have any queshons
registered official m Ohio,
durmg the week or durmg the
and
thiS will be my fourth
season, you might drop them
year I am a ChriSilan, try:mg
off at tbe Tribune Office, 825
to please my Lord fll"st of all,
Thll"d Ave., GallipoliS, pr
w1th ChriStian actions on the
w1th th e Dall ¥ Se ntm ~ l 1
held as well as off
Court St , Pomeroy, c-o Tom
Thirty mmutes before a
Duncan We are planrung
football game has started, the
only the one week of columns,
game officials ( referee ,
but if enough quest1ons come
umpll"e, linesmen and l1eld
m or we think of more mJudge ) are m complete
charge. The responsibility for
makmg certam the game IS
played w1thm the rules IS
Jomtly shared by the coaches
and the off1c1als. The coaches
complished "
One of Anderson 's touch- must tea c h sk1IIs and
down tosses was a 13-yarder strategy wh1ch are m accordto halflback Essex Johnson, ance w1th the rules When
who d1d some fancy dancmg there are infractions, 1t IS the
to reach the end zone The respons1b11ity of the offiCials
game was a maJOr test of to penalize promptly and With
Johnson 's glffipy knee , and consistency
For practically all football
although the 5-10 speedster
played only the first quarter , officials, ofhclahng 1s a
hobby , a pleasant avocallon,
he held up well
"Tomght's
performance an opporturuty to continue
did somethmg for my con- associations and fnendsh1ps
fidence," sa1d Johnson, who m the world of sports. The
rambled 997 yards m 1973 modest fees wh1ch he
when he was healthy " I'm rece1 ves are usually helpful
and welcome, but they will
satisfied "
Another of Anderson 's never adequately comscormg passes was a 2().. pensate the offiCial for hiS
yarder to Lenvil Elliott, wbo lime and efforts. H1s
also eluded several would-be remuneratiOn will be m the
tacklers The reserve half- nature of continumg athletic
back was Impressive all act1v1ty, of fnendsh1ps
rught, catching five passes gamed, youth renewed and
for 56 yards and runnmg four the satiSfaction of havmg
rendered an Important
times for 33 yards
Anderson's third scormg serv1ce
I have mcluded w1th our
a,enal was a 20-yarder to tight
end Bob Tnnnpy that gave column today the Signals
Cincy a 20-0 lead late m the used by h1gh school offiCials
You may want to clip and
flfst half.
Green Bay's only br1ght keep th1s for a handy
spot was a dazzlmg 100-yard reference (Tomorrow· key
runback of the second-half def1mtwns)
kickoff by second-year pro
Steve Odom, a 5-8 bullet out of
Utah Brl1hant blocking
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) broke hilll mto the clear
Ohio
State !ramer Billy Hill
early
"The wedge d1d a good job says the Buckeyes, With only
and completely knocked one excepbon, are "in the
down everyone," said Odom. best shape I've ever seen
"The guy ran r1ght tbrough them" for the start of two-aus," applauded Brown " Just day workouts today.
The Bucks got the1r
a beautiful return "
exammat10ns
Green Bay's only other physical
score was a 52-yard f1eld goal Sunday and begm contact
pract1ces Thursday
hy Chester Marco!
''They're m a good frame of
Cincmnati reserve runnmg
back Doug Dressler wrapped mmd," satd Hill
Garth Cox , prom1smg
up the scormg on a sevenyard burst m the !mal three sophomore offensive tackle
from Washington C H , Ohio,
rrunutes
Regular
Green
Bay who will battle returnmg
quarterback John Hadl regular Scott Darmelley for a
played only the fll"st half , startmg ass1gnment, passed
hitting mne of 21 passes for 90 the physical but w1ll be slow
for the f1rst few days because
yards

'TD'

(;reen Bay sacked
CINCINNATI (UPI) Bar! Starr suffered hiS share
of sacks when he was a
quarterback, and he's JUSt
tEen decked the first time as
a head coach.
"I'm glad It was only a
preseason game," s1ghed
SU!rr after hiS Green Bay
Packers
were
soundly
whipped 27-10 hy the Cincinnati Bengals Saturday
rught
Starr, who quarterbacked
the Packers to glory last
decade, Jumped off to a good
coaching start w1th wlllS m
his f1rst two exh1b1hon
games, but he learned here
V{hy coaches get gray.
"They ate us liP With thell"
passmg and pulve~lZed us
with thell" running," groaned
Starr. " They impressed the
heck out of us We were
lackluster. I d1dn 't expect
any team to run that well on
U$ . When your defense
WI'Bkens, then the rest of the
~m sags With 1t . "
-The Bengals rushed for 202
yards and passed for another
250, total offense of 452 yards,
compared With 206 for Green
Bay.
"Even though 1t was an
e~h1bltion
game,
we
shouldn't be pushed aroWld
that way," lamented veteran
Packers defensive tackle
Mike McCoy.
"It was a goo(! everung for
us," beamed Bengals boss
Paul Brown. " I was really
plj!ased With what I saw "
Brown had to be most
pleased w1th quarterback
Ken Anderson, who completed 15 of 21 passes for 148
yards and three touchdowns
while only playmg the fll"st
half.
"'11ililgs are going better,"
sm11ed Anderson, who has
be.en sharp the last two
ga_mes after a slow start.
" You've ]ust got to get out
there and get thmgs ac-

BY KEN ROSENBERG
UPI Sports Writer
When a young , smokethrowing southpaw hke
Califorma 's Frank Tanana
bursts mto the big league
spotlight w1th a stunnmg ra sh
of stril'P.OUts, compariSOns to
Sand) Rc , .. , .., are mev1table
" I don't lcnow why
everybody expects me to be
w1ld like Koufax (when he
was young) ," Tanana sa1d
after he blanked the New
York Yankees, 9-a, on four
hits and struck out eight
batters to raiSe his maJor
league leadmg strikeout total
to 197
Well, not qmte everybody
Angels Manager Dick Wilhams, for one, prefers to
compare Tanana to the longlime master or control Whitey Ford
" Frank ha s more veloc1ty
on the ball than anyone I've
ever seen and on top of that

has the savvy or Whitey
Ford," Wllhams sa1d 'At the
age of 22 he has tremendous
po1se
and
t remendous
poSSibilities
" He IS probably the fmest
young p1tcher I've seen m a
long, long llDle "
But perhaps the most In·
tr1gwng tllmg about Tanana
IS hiS repertoue of p1tches
" I'm JUSt a two-p1tch pitcher ," Tanana said after
tossmg a shutout for the
fourth time m hiS last seven
starts to r81Se hiS record to
1~ and lower hiS earned run
average to 2 47 " I use the
fastball and the curve H you
can get maJor league control
of those two p1tches you don't
need anythmg else An occasional changeup and a few
runs from your team and
you're all set "
Fortunately for Tanana,
the anerruc-h1ttmg Angels, a
team Yankee Manager Billy

Martm once descnbed a s
"unable to hit 1ts wa y out of a
hot el lobby ," score m
unaccusto me d a bunda nce
when he pitches
" I guess I'm just lucky ,"
srud Ta nana
Shortstop Mike M1Iey,
hittmg 176 gomg mto Sunday 's doubleheader , prov1ded
Tanana w1th all the support
he needed when he slugged a
two-run , third" mrung homer
to pace a 13-hlt attack
In the mghtcap, the Angels
capitalized on s1x Yankee
errors and seven walks to
complete the sweep with a 4-3
VICtory behind the p1tchmg of
Nolan Ryan, who struck out
e1ght m s1x mnmgs to p1ck up
his 14th v1ctory of the season
and mcrease his stnkeout
total to 186
"I don 't learn too much
from Ryan ," srud Tanana
'He has been an mspll"allon
to me, though , because he
~

Giants nudge Jets Sunday
United Press International
There's only one mtra...:1ty
nvalry left m the National
Football League, but 1t's the
real thing
Wben the G1ants and the
Jets get together lor thell"
annual preseason showdown
to stake out "braggmg
nghts" to New York C1ty for
the next year, the word
exhibition IS not approprl8te
to the game .
The Gwnts ' 21-20 Sunday
squeaker over the Jets kept
the traditiOn gomg It had the
requlSite number of surpriSes, not the least bemg the
last play of the game Rookie
center Joe Fields snapped the
ball over kicker Pat Leahy's
bead as time expll"ed on a
f1eld goal attempt from the 38
that would have won 1t for the
Jets after they had moved the
ball from !bell" own 47 m the
fmal two mmutes
Cra1g Morton, the G1ants'
quarterback who came from
Dallas last year to suffer
through a 2-12 season m
which the team lost several
games 1t should have won ,
s ummed up the reaction of
his teamates
" I guess there IS some
JUStice " Morton srud
" We played so well up here
sometlffies last season when
we lost Today we stunk out

Bucks in best shape
of tonsllitlS
Fullback Pete Johnson,
who weighed 250 or more hiS
freshman and sophomore
seasons, tipped the scales at
245 Sunday
" We'd like for him to lose
another s1x or e1ght pounds,"
Hill S8ld, " but he's close to
h1s ( optimum) playmg
wetght "
lJnebacker Ken Kuhn has
fully recovered from an old
knee mJury and a lower back
mJury sustamed wh1le skimg
earher this month.
Dr. Bob Murphy, team
phys1c1an, ruled out football
th1s year for sophomore !mebacker Charles Simon of
Dubhn, Oh10

the place and won "
Morton, however , came
alive when 1t looked like the
Jets would run away With the
game
Alter Jazz Jackson fum.
bled the second baH kickoff to
start
the
moment um
swmgmg to the G1ants,
Morton got a hot hand and
f1red two touchdown passes m
the thlrd period that put the
Gl8Dts ahead to stay He hit
tight end Bob Tucker for a 13yard TD pass and followed
that w1th a seven-yarder to
reserve fullba c k Steve
Crosby for the eventual
wmnmg score
"Fortunately, we won ,"
Morton S8ld, "but I'm not
proud of the way I threw out
the re today l thought when
we came out lor !he second
half that we couldn't do any
worse than we had m the fll"st
hall I was right "
Morton completed 11-of-26
passes for 108 yards , but
many of them were dumps to
backs when h1s primary
recetvers were covered
The Jets, though disappomted about the loss, were
smiling about one of the
pleasant surpriSes of the

afternoon, the play of rookie
qua rterback J J Jones, who
opened camp as the number
four Signal caller Alter a
good showmg last week at St
LouiS, he got the nod to start
when Joe Namath InJured h1s
nbs and AI Woodall went
home to be with his ailmg
father
Jones hit 13-of-26 passes for
174 yards and two TDs , both
to J erome Barkum He also
ran for 28 yards
" We ran the ball well, we
threw the ball well," Jones
S8ld " It was JUSt!ate that we
didn 't wm ''
Elsewhere m the NFL,
Detroit came back to down
Kansas City 27-24, ChiCago
shad e d St LOUI S 14-13,
Oakland pounded Atlanta 227, Cmc iMall routed Green
Bay 27-1(), Mirmesota rupped
Dallas 16-13, M1am1 beat New
Orleans 2()..10 and Denver
downed Houston 27-21
Tight end Charlie Sanders
hauled m a 35-yard TD toss as
DetrOit exploded for three
touchdowns m the fourth
quarter to maugurate 1ts ne"
$55 7 rrullwn stadium with a
VICtor y

maxuruzes a great talent by
workmg hard all the tune "
Elsewhere m the America n
Leag ue, Bos ton ripp e d
Ch1 cago 6-1, Mi nn esota
toppe d
Detroi t
3-1,
Milwaukee shaded Oakland 76 and Texas edged Baltimore
1\-7
Red Sox 6, While Sox 1
Carl Yastrzemski slammed
his 13th homer and Jun Rice
his 20th to power an 11-hit
Boston attack to mcrease the
Red Sox lead m the AL East
to 7 games over Baltimore
B11l Lee y!e lded e1ght smgles
to gam hiS 17th v1ctory m 24
dec1s1ons while Wllbur Wood
suffer e d hiS 17th loss
rwlns 3, flgers 1
Rookie n ghf...hander Jun
Hughes p1cked up hiS 12th
victory and third straight
over DetrOit by scattering
se ven hit s After be mg
reached for a run m the fifth
1nnmg, Hughes p1tched no-hit
ball the rest of the way
M1 c key Lohc h went the
distance for DetrOit, absorbmg h1s 14th setback a gamst 11
vtctor1es
Brewers 7, A's 6
Charhe Moore's tw!H'Iln
e1ghth 1nnmg double a nd Tom
Murphy's clutch rehef pitching helped Milwaukee snap
an e1ghl1!ame losmg streak
Robm Yount opened t he
e1ghth w1th a home run to tie
the score After Hank Aaron
walked and Da rrell P orter
smgled , Moore unloaded h1s
game-wmmng blow Murphy
saved the game when he
entered w1th the bases loaded
and no out 10 the nmth , getlin g two popups a nd a
stnkeout to record his 17th
save
Ran gers 8, Orioles 7
M1ke Hargrove's ground
ba ll w1th the bases loaded
scored Len Randle w1th one '
out m the bottom ol the mnth
to prevent Baltunore from
keepmg pace w1th Boston

Mator L eague Standmgs
B y Untted Pr ess lnterrtahon al
Nat ional Lea gue
Easl
w I pet g b
7'1 56 563
P i ttsburgh
69 59 539 3
Phtladelphta
69 59 539 3
St LOUI~
66 62 516 6
New York
60 70 462 13
Chtcago
55 72 433 16l 1
Mon treal
West
wlpcf9b
Cmcl nnatt
84 -44 656
Los Angeles
66 61 527 16'' 1
San F ran Cisco 63 66 486 2J111
San Otego
60 69 465 24111
Atlanta
57 73 4JB 28
Houston
50 82 379 36
Saturday ' s Results
Houston 14 Chtcago 12
Ctnc tn nat l 11 P 1Hsburg h 7
San F r ancisc o 2 N ew York I
St Louis 7 A !lan te 1 n
San D ego 8 Phlla d el phta 3
lwtltght
Los Angeles 3 Mont real 1 l st
IWtltghl
Montrea l 5 Los Ange l es 2 2nd
n
Sundily ' s R u un s
Houston 8 Ch tca go"
51 Lou is 6 A llan Ia 2
P 1llsburgh 5 Ct nc tnn alt 1
New Yor k 9 San Fr ancisco S
lSI
San F ranc 1sco 6 N ew Yor k 0

2nd
San O tego 7 Phdad elphti!l 2, 1s t
San Otego 7 Phtladel pl"l la 6
2n d 12 mn
Montrea l 5 LOS A ngel es 3 14
&gt;nn
Monday' s Games
{All Ttm es EDTl
Ctnctnnatl ( No r m an 8 4 ) at
Ch1cago ( R Reusc h el 10 13)
2 30 p m
A tlanta (Thompson 0 41 a t
P1ttsbur gh ( Rook er 8 9 l 7 JS

pm

H ous ton ! Roberts 7 14) a t St
LOUIS (McGlot hen lJ 91 8 IS

pm
New York !Webb 55) at Sa n
O tego I Strom 5 4l 10 p m
Pht ladelphla 1Ch n stenson 7 41
a t Los Ange les jMe~se r smllh
14 121 10 lO p m
Tu esday' s Gam es
Cm ncma tt at Chtcag o
H ouston at Sl L ouis n
A tl an ta at Pi tt Sbu r g h n
New York a t San D 1ego n
Mont r eal at San F r anCISCO n \..
Philadelphda a t Los Angeles n
Am en can L eague
Ea st
w I pet g b
Boston
77 Sl
Ba ll tmorc
69 58 543
7' '
New York
64 64 500 13
Cleveland
58 67 464 17' ~
Milwaukee
57 72 442 20 1 ,
De•ro t
51 77 398 26
Wes t
w I pet g b
Oaklan d
78 5 1 605
Kansas Cdy
69 57 546 71 2
Ch1cago
63 65 492 w 2
Texas
63 67 485 J5l 1
M1 n nesota
60 69 465 IB
Cah forn a
60 71 458 19
Saturda y s Resulh
Chtcago 6 Boston 4
New York 11 Cal 1f orn1 a 4
Detro 1 6 M 1nnesota 5 12 1nn
Oakl and 6 M !waukee 3 lsi
twd tght
Oaklan d 9 M1 twau k ee 3 2nd n
Texas I 13all tm or e 0 n
Clevel and 7 Ka n sas C1ty 1 n
Sunday s R esult s
Boston 6 Ch1cago I
Mtnnesota 3 Oelr o tt 1
M t! waukee 7 Oak land 6
Ka nsa s Ctly 5 Cleve l and 2
Ca l dor n1a 9 New York 0 1st
Ca l dor n1a &lt;1 New Y ork 3 2nd
Texas 8 Ball1mor e 7 n
Monday 's Games
I All Ttm es EDT)
Cht cago
{ Kaat
18 91
at
Cleveland (Ecke r sl ey 9 51 7 30

60,

pm

Ba lt tmore (A lexan der 15 7) a t
Kansas C1 t y (Leon ard 9 SJ 8 15

pm
M 1nnesota (Dec k er 1 31 a t
M !wau k ee (S laton 11 14} 8 30

pm

De trotl I Bare 7 8) at Texas
( Umba r ger 55) 9 p m
Tu esday ' s Gam es
C.altforn1a at Boston
Ch tc ago at Cleve la n d n
Balt1mo r e at Kansas C1 t y n
M.nnesota at M tl waukee n
Oetro1t at Texas n
Oa k la nd a t N ew York n

THANK YOU!
To those of you who visited the
Eastern Athletic Booth during the
Meigs County Fair, Thank you for
your patronage!
A "Special" thank you goes to a II the
adults and students who donated so
much time and effort to make this
another successful year . Thank you
aiL so much .

OFFICERS OF THE
EASTERN ATHLETIC BOOSTERS
EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL

STATE FARM·

The l\brld's NumiJer GIN
Homeowners Insurer
More people tn su re the tr homes w tth State Fa rm
than wtlh any ot h er company That s because they 11e
lound Stale Farm o ffers t he best m ser v tce protecti o n
and economy G1ve me a call I II be glad to g w e you
all the de tatls

Steve Snowden
1258 Powell St., Middleport, 0

PH. 992-7155
Like a good neighbor Slllie Fann IS lhen!
S TATE FAFI;M Ft~E A ND CA S UAL TY COMPAN Y
Ho me O l hce Bloommgton lll tn ota

.,

..

�•

I

'

_,
2- The ~1ly Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Monday, Aug 25, 1975

Another measure: man$ ,inhumanity to man

Some sponsors ofVietnamese refugees go bad
WS ANGELES (UP! ) To most VIetn amese refugees
the sponsor program looked
like a way out But to a few, 1t
was the hfe of a house servant
or par tner m sexual pleasure
- Two young men left
because theu: saonsor was a
homosexual
- A 17-year-old g1rl fled the
house of he r m illionaire

protec tors beca use th ey
made love m front of her
- Another said he was
bem g forced to e nte r a

semtnar y to

becom e

a

preacher
Som e refugees are treated
hke children by respons1ble

pansh10ners
Tran Van Son called hiS
protector an "explmter "The

Ameri can sa1d Son was
" lazy "
Theil" relationship lasted
two days
Son la ter was sent to hve m
a Los Angeles hote l w1th
other refugees wa1tmg for
reloca llon w1th an other
American farruly But he

sa1d, "I don't want to retcrn

just want to get a JOb and be
free from lorc ed labor "
They now hate the wor d
"sponsor " To them the good
1mage of Ame r1ca 1s clouded
With ha tred
The government task force
handlmg the resettlem ent of
refugees S8ld the breakdowns
represent only a mmor prob-

to any Amen can fa mily I

Four die in Oeveland stonn Sunday
CLE VE LAND (U P I) Four persons died her e late
Sunday dunn g a vwlen t
thunderstorm which dum ped
more th an four mches of ra m
onto the c ity, leaVIng scores
of hom es flooded and several
thousand per sons With out
uti11ty serviCes
Two O[ the VIctlffiS ol the
storm, which a c1ty officia l
termed one or the worst to hi t
the City m at least 10 yea rs ,
wer e killed by hghtnmg The
other two VIctuns drowned
Ernest Martm, and Ronrue
Morg an, both 12 a nd ol
Cleveland Heights, we r e
killed when they were struck
by a lightnm g bolt afte r a
Pollee Athleti c Lea gue
football practice sesswn
The two boys had sought
refuge under a tree from the
squall !me-produced storm
Ja c que line Boomer , 10,
Cleveland, had been wading
m a flooded street Wllh her
brother, Michael, 11 The g1rl

Qualification
test offered
for ainnen
The A1r For ce Airm a n
Quaiificabon
Examm•lion
will be a dmimstered at th e
Jackson, Ohw Pos t Office
each Wednesday a t 1 p m
This a ptitude tes t de termm es
the proba b1hty of a person's
success
tn
th e
admlms tra ll ve, m ec ha mcal,
electromcs a nd ge neral
kn owledge fi elds for which a n
mdivldual has not ye t
tramed
Young men and women or
th1s area are urged to ta ke
th1s apbtude test for the ir
own benefit Sergeant Ron
R1fe, AF r ec ruite r, sa1d
" Hidden t a lents may be
revealed - talen'ts which the
A1r Force 1s w1l1In g to
develop by offermg a career
l1eld w1th secur1ty, travel and
educallonal
opportumt1es
Th1s tes t IS the door to an
exc1llng ca reer wher e a
person 's ab1h1Ies are ullhzed
m a field of h1s or her des1re "
Sergeant R1fe may be
contacted at the Jackson P
0 , ph 2116-4248, or phone the
Armed Service Rec Center, 7
Pine St , on Fn day 9 1111 5, ph
446-8500

was sucked mto a n open
sewer manhole " The boy
sru d he turned around a nd she

was gone," pollee sa1d "He
said all he saw was a
whirlpool " The cover of the
sewer manhole had been
washed away by the water
Her body was round today
m t he Cuyahoga R1v e r,
wrapped around a tree trunk
Ric ha rd Ambe au, E a st
Cl eve lan d, drowned wh1le
he lpmg his son -m~aw , Lester
Hoste Uer , Zl, search for an
a uto mundat e d m th e
Umverst ty Ctrcle area
Pohce used a canoe to
recove r Hos te tl e r 's body ,
Ma ,o r Leagu e Leade r s

while boats were used by
Coast Guardsmen and f1re
offiCia ls to r escue motoriSts
from cars m deep wat er
There were some reports of
lootmg, but pohce said they
had not been able to determme how Widespread 11 was
Monkeys and other small
anunals scrambled to safety
whe n f1v e-feet of water
cascaded mto the Cleveland
Zoo when B1g Creek overnowed
"The heavy flooding was m
the area where the b1gger
an1mals are kept, the zebras,
deer, yak and elan," Deputy
Ch1ef James Johnson of the

Metropohtan Park Range rs
smd
Johnson S8ld no anunals
were k1lled m the flooding
'They waded around m the
water and seemed to have a
good tune, " he sa1d
Natwnal Weather Service
of!Icials said the heaviest
ramfall apparently occured
on the City 's southeast s1de
Old storm sewers, unable to
handle the high pressure of
the wate r, lite rally blew
portiOns of streets as high as
10 feet mto the alf
As m a ny as
14 ,000
customers of the Cleveland
Elec tnc Illummatmg Co
we re without power lor
several hours following the
storm and as many as 2,500
were still w1thout electric
power thls mornmg

Iem

Two WidoWS and thell" SIX
At Camp Pendle ton , Calif , children w~re taken to
officia ls sa1d ther e have been Phoerux, AriZ , to hve With a
about 50 cases mvolvmg some Protestant church Instead
200 persons out of the 32,000 they were put to live With
VIetnamese released from Mexican-Americans
th e camp m the past three
"The daily schedule was
months
from 6 am to II p.m ," Mrs
Th e breakdowns, m reality, Hoa1 Anh sa1d "During that
are more widespread Those time we were told to work and
who batUed openly qu1t !hell" make m oney for
the
s ponsors wh1l e othe r s , congregatiOn We ate only
because of fears and the potatoes and carrots, no m eat
lan guage barrier, chose to m three weeks
take what was giVen them
"We were not allowed to
"My wife and I were forced talk to anybody There were
to work nme hours a day and no clothes and we had to
s1x days a week for $200 a share the bedrooms with a
month," Son said "There dozen pers on s compl ete ly
was no break durmg the day, strangers to us "
even for lunch , and our 4She sa1d that when Red
year-old boy was Jus\ star- Cross representatives m vmg Th e sponsor never vestlgated her complamt the
allowed my wife to take care sponsor showed clothes
of our son durmg the day
collected for the refugees
" We were treated as slaves which they never received
and were 1/lreatened w1th
The children must attend
starva tion "
two hours of re hg~ous classes
The couple r eceived a daily a day Theil" parents were
hst of chores mcludmg fmng asked to attend the church
breakfast for the ''masters" although they sa1d they were
and makmg thell" beds
Buddhists

Meigs
Property
Transfers

Linescores

next year Holshouser 1s on
Ford's campaign adviSOry
comm1ttee and he sa1d
Rockefeller 's age, 67, will
hurt hlDl
The other chall"ffien sa1d
they d1dn 't like his reputation
as a llberal About half sa1d
they would prefer Ronald
Reagan to Rockefeller , and
Lou1s1ana GOP chauman
Jun Boyce srud his colleague
prefer "almost anybody to
Rockefeller "
Rockefeller , trymg to wm
support m the South, goes to
South Carolma this week to
meet with state party
leaders, busmess leaders and
GOP Gov James Edwards, a
long-tune Reagan supporter
Bayh, who made an appearance at the Young
Democrats c onventiOn ,
polled 23 per cent of the 610
votes Former Georgia Gov.
Juruny Carter, whose forces
were achve durmg the
convention, came m second
w1th 14 per cent and Rep

No smoking link _to arthritis

over the 7,100-yard, par-70
Coloma! Country Club course
was, indeed, an unpresstve
statistic. It was the best four
rounds ever turned In over a
course that has hosted the
Coloma! National InVItatiOn
tournament for almost 30
years
And m producmg that score
Ge1berger had to hold off a
charge by Stockton, who took
the lead for a bnef time
Sunday only to fall back and
finish w1th a sevefHUlder
273
The only other player to
break par for the tournament
was Hubert Green, who shot a
one-under 69 Sunday - the
same score turned m by
Ge1berger and Stockton - to
fmish at 275
I
Mason Rudolph, Bob
Dickson and Bob Murphy
fmished tied for fourth at 281.
Jack N1cklaus was not a
factor m the tournament
after opening day, fjnished at
287

Reds popped 5-l

ntine.

'

I

'

while Reuss scattered mne
hits.
Oliver's fust mrung triple
scored Renme Stennett, who
had singled. Oliver then came
home with the lead run on
Wlllle Stargell's sacrifice fly .
H Oliver was glad to bave
stargell back m the line up,
Stargell was even happier
"It's good to be back m the
lineup . I Just have to get my
stroke and timing straight,"
said Stargell, who had been
sidelined for several days
with a bruised rib.
"It's not 100 per cent yet,"
Stargell sa1d m reference to
his rib, ''but ~ couldn' t walt to
come back I II go with 50 per
cent (healing) and go up hill
from there "
Ohver blasted h1s 15th
homer of the year off loser
Gary Nolan (11-8) in the
thlrd, scoring Stennett, who
had smgled
Reuss raiSed his record to
!4-9 by wiMing his lith
consecutive game at Three
Rivers Stadium He has lost
only one game at home this
Year

FOOTBALL OFFICIALS' SIGNALS
2

A Chronicle of Amc:rica
•
,

Ofhhl1 ar V10I1tlen
of fr••kte~ rula

hht Start 111•1
po"t•on ar fiiOCidurt
lll-.t 1
.. .. ..

E

"

nctOICn mtnt Dlll'f

:r-~---------+~·-~·~MW~·~"':":•·~~~-=Ill=""'::•:":'':'--~--~~~~~~~s:~~~~~_jl_:''!~:m~C:•,_::,~~~

Two early naval encounten tum out well for the colonltta
on July IOa"Georgiaochooner captures the BrltlsllMCijl!lll
Carl4 ott Tybee Istaod, Georgia, and selzet the 11:1 tons
of gunpowder on board On September 2 at Beverly,
Massachusetts, George Washington authorizes !he cooversiOn of fishing vessels Into armed ships, aod directs
Nicholson Broughton and bls crew of !he sclloQDer Htlfi'IIIJA
"to cruise agalns11ucb vesoels as may be found on the biBb
seas or eloewhere
" The Hannah tbUJ beCOmes the tint
ship In "Washington's Fleet" - tbe forerunner of the Continental Navy On tbe7lh, lheHannahretumStoportwltb
her first capture, !he reconverted British mercbantman,
Unt!!/ In lhenextslxmonths, theHan'IIIJAandtheotheralx
ships m " Washington's Fleet" capture II British ships
carrying munitions tbal prove critical to Continental
for ces In early land engagements

•

Un&amp;pOrttmNihb eoMu tt Deity lttrt of twf.
111.,11 pwttclptt ton.

-1101 Fo~

10

12

F11lurt to . . ,
equ1pmtnt

ftqt.nr ld

lllogll ,....... , ...

lntlfftrentt with l11r
Cltcb " forw~n:l ,_

18
Hannah

lllllllly hku'l or
blttmo • loon btlt
AIID for f1nt touchl"'
of • kttk

I neomplttt foi"Mrd
P•-Pfl'llltv dtdtntdno pby or no ttDrt

lnll .. ~lt nclivtr
down ftlld on~

19

Pultllnt htlph,. nmnlf

or mtertockN
lftttrf«tnct.

20

Bill h d•d Fartouch

Touchdown or

blck Wl'tl lldiWill

held gotl

23

- By Roa Mac:kenlle A Jeff MacNelly/ cJ975 Unlr•:i Feature Syndicate

Morns Udall of AriZOna was happens between now and thti
th1rd w1th 11 per cent . election, " I don't Intend tO
Humphrey got 9 per cent and sleep out the next year "
fourth place, although he was
not on the ballot
In French Lick, Ind , Bayh
S8ld Saturday he has "as COPS srAKES VICI'ORY
NORTH RANDAll., Ohio '
good a chance as anybody" to
win
the
Democrahc ( UPI) - Petite Scarlet won
nommation He said it was the $7,500 Scarlet Carnallon
premature to announce hiS Stakes at Thistledown &amp;mcandidacy , but Senate day with a I 44 1-5 clocking
colleague Vance Hartke for the mile and 70 yards.
The wmner, ridden by
flatly predicted, "We will
nommate Bll"ch Bayh and Frank Licata, paid $13.40,
anybody the Democrats $3.60 and $2.20.
Rosette was second and 'nommate for president will
Xc1ta ble's Lassie third.
be elected "
Humphrey, mterVIewed by
The 2-1-3 lOtiH"ace trlfecta
UP!
m
Minneapohs, of Stay Gold, Moon Walket";,
rmterated he IS not runnmg and Bell's Reject was worth
for president but he would $227.60, and the 8-3 dally
accept the nommation "if 1t IS double of Ability Plus and
lrud before me " Whatever Stephanita returned $92.60.

Today's

Geiherger sharp

DR. LAMB

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M. D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - Would
you kindly discuss the effects
of smoking on an arthritic
person' I feel there is some
sort of link between the two
and feel if you confll"ffied thiS
maybe it would help people
giVe up smokmg. I know a
woman m her 70s who IS
bothered with pamful arthr1tis, but while complauung
about 1t continues With her
Cigarettes
DEAR
READER
Cigarettes are a ssociated
with a lot of ills, but there IS
no evidence that tbey cause
or make arthritis worse
There IS some eVIdence
that patients with rheumatoid
arthritis are partiCularly
prone to develop lung disease
from smoking, much more so
than the average smoker and
that is bad enough already
For a discussiOn of the
effects of tobacco on health,
wr1te to me m care of thiS
newspaper, P .O Box 1551,
Radio City Stahon, New
York, NY 10019 and send a
long,
self-addressed,
stamped envelope and 50
cents, and ask for The Health
Letter number U, Tobacco ·
Ogarettes, Cigars, Pipes.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I am
so angry at myself for bemg
110 dumb. I had two gaD
' bladder attacks, so I called

'

Bayh, Humphrey, Rocky in pol talk ,

United Press Internatloual
Sens Bll"ch Bayh of InLeadmg Ba it e r s
( ba se d on 325 a t b a t s)
diana and Hubert Humphrey
Naltonal L eagu e
of Minnesota, two liberal
g ab r h pe l
Md lck Ch 1
Democrallc stalwarts, thrust
110 439 65 158
360
themselves Into the l1melight
Sr mmons St L
123 445 64 148
333
Sunday 's Baseball Res ult s
of pre-elec twn year pohhcs
Wa1s n H 112 414 58 137
331
By Umtcd Press lnternattonal
durmg the weekend
Sngll n Prt
Naltonal League
107 389 44 127
326
Ctnc nna t•
100 000 000- I 9 0
Ne1ther IS a declared canMrgn Cn l iB 40Q 86 133
325
Pitt sb ur gh
202 000 l Ox - 5 5 0
didate, but Bayh won a
Jos h S F 105 408 60 13 1
Nol an
321
Borbon
(7)
and
Rose Cn 128 531 83 169
Lore tto Redd Auvil, AJ .. Bench Reuss (14 9) and Oyer
Jl8
preference vote among 14
Br ock 51 L
L P No lan { 11 8 )
H ROIIver
fldav1t,
Olive.
candidates at the Young
104 402 65 127
316
(15t h )
Kenneth J Wolfe, Anna L
Prkr PI 116 432 59 136
315
Den'locrats convention m St
Lz nsk r P h il
Atlanta
010 000 010- 2 8 1
Wolfe
to
Carl
L
Wolfe
,
128 176 74 149
3 13
St LOUIS
310 000 02x - 6 7 2 Loms and Humphrey, who
Brenda S Wolfe, 1 4446
Card n l Ch r
Mor ton Sosa (61 Leon (8 )
came m fourth as a wr1te-m,
123 466 68 146
313 Acres, Rutland.
and Pocoroba
For sc h
Hr a
S8ld
he Will be heard from
Am encan Lea gu e
bosk y {8) and Stm m o ns WP K G Anderson, Sr , For sc h ( 12 9) LP- Mort on ( 15 next year
g ab
r
h pet
Crw Mn 118 439 79 163
37 1 Ge raldine Anderson, K
141
V1ce Pres ident Nelson
Ly n n Bs 117 423 BO 138
32 6
Gordon Anderson Jr , Susan Houslon
Munson NY
000 31 1 300- 6 14 3 Rockefeller , vacallonmg and
125 470 67 147
3 13 E
201 00 1 ooo- 4 6 o
Anderson to Alvm D Ch01cago
entertammg Republicans m
Wshngrn Oak
1er ker ( 12 13) and Johnson
11 7 463 64 \44
311 Tr1pp, Barbara S Tripp, 200
Ju t ze (81 Burns Wilcox (6 )
Mame this weekend, was at
Sn gltn Ba l
Zamo r a (7) F radm g 17) and
acres, Orange
the same time bemg raked
124 470 73 144
306
Sw tshcr
Hosley
(7l
LPMarc1a I Harr1son to Burri S ( 10 10 1 HR s Cruz 2 (6 th over the coals of Southern
Powll Cl 102 33 3 50 102
306
H rg r ve Tex
Adams Drilling Co , Meter 7th ) Joh n son (15th l Th orn ton conservatism
115 410 67 125
(8th) Wa t son ( 16th )
305
304 s1te agree , Rutland
MeR KC 118 450 55 137
The GOP chaumen of 13
Ort a Cht 11 0 424 53 128
302
Marc1a I HarriSon to {1s t Gam el
states convened m WnghtsR ICe Bs 117 462 71 139
301
New Y or k
000 25 1 100- 9 12 1
Roger Adams, Gas Line R-W, San F r an c1sc 000 020 300- 5 8 1 vllle, N C , and told Gov
Home Run s
Nahonal L eague
Luz m sk •
Matlack Apodac a Pl and
Rutland
James Holshouser PreSident
Ph il 31
Sc h m1 dl
Phil 30
Gr ote
Barr
Cal dwell
161
Raymond Rowe, Kay M
K 1ng m an N Y 26 Ben ch C 1n
Br ad l ey (81 Heav erlo (9) and Ford would be Wise to drop
24 F oster em 21
Rowe to Roger Adams, Gas Sa dek W P M atl ac k { 15 Bl L P Rockefeller from the ticket
Am encan Leagu e M ay b err y
Barr ( 11 11 )
HR K mg m an
Li.ne R-W, Letart
KC 29 Jackson Oa k 28 Sc oll
{26t h )
M tl
27
Bonds
NY
24
Merlm Teets, Ida Teets to
Burroughs Tex 22
Gam e l
Danny B Howard, Eva &lt;2nd
Run s Batted In
New Y or k
000 000 000- 0 0 0
Nat1onal L eagu e
L uz tnSk l
San F r a n e~sc 200 020 20x - 6 8 1
Howard, Sec. 2T, Sc1p10
Ph il 101 Bench C1n 99 Sla ub
Seldon J White, deed to
NY
85
Per ez
Ctn
84
Amencan L eagu e
Stmm on s St L 82
Robert S Wh1te, Esther D
FORT WORTH, Tex. (UPI)
(I sf game)
Am encan L eague Ly nn Bos
Faulkner, Cert. of Trans , Cal 1forn 1a
002 402 100- 9 13 2 89
M ay berry
KC 85
May
AI Ge1berger and Dave
New York
000 000 000- 0 4 1
Ba l l 84 R tce Bos 83
Sco tt
Orange
Stockton, desp1te bemg the
Tan an a ( 12 6) a nd Rod rt g u ez
M 1! 81
Archie E Lee, June P Lee M ay Dobson ( 51 Sawyer (ll best of friends , possess two
Stolen Ba ses
Gutd ry (7 ~an d Munson Oemp
Na1tonal L eague Lopes L A to Richard 0 Knapp , Mona
sey (81 L P - M ay ( 11 lO J H R different type personalities
57 Mo r gan Ct n 51 Broc k $1 L
P Knapp, I 07 Acre, Chester M iley (4t h )
48 Cedeno Hou 42 Ca rdenal
Stockton IS the outgomg
Ch 1 26
Roger Weaver, Cathy
type,
Ge1berger IS qu1et and
(2nd Game)
Amencan Leagu e
R tver s
Darlene
Weaver
to
Roger
A
Ca lif orn ia
010 010 11 0- 4 4 0 mtrospect1ve
Ca l 64 wa shmgton Oak 35
000 010 020- 3 10 6
Ot1s K C 33
Rem y Cal 3 1
Abbott, Susan E Abbott Lot New Yor k
Therefore, when Ge1berger
Ryan Scott (7), lang e (7)
Ca r ew M tn n and Bon ds NY 29
'
(Pt
Lot
463),
Pomeroy
Hockenberr y (6 ) , Brew er ( 8 1 completed an astomshmg
Pttchmg
(Ba sed on most v tcton es)
Marla Neutzling, Comm , and Et ch ebarr en M art1 nez four days worth of sub par
Ly l e ( 8 ) an d H errm ann WP Nahonal Leagu e Sea v er N Y
golf to wm the $250,000
Rya n ( 14 12) L P - M a r t m ez 11
18 7 Jones SO 17 7 Sutton LA Mote Yeauger, dec to V1ola
16 10
Matl ack
NY
15 8
Yeauger, Alfred Yeauger, 21 HR Nettles ( 16t h ) Herr Tournament
Players
m ann ( 5t h)
Mor ton Al l 15 14
Delma
Halley,
Maxwell
Champ10nsh1p w1th a 10Amencan L eagu e
Palm er
000 01 0 OQO-- 1 7 3 under-par 270 score Sunday,
Ba ll 19 7 Kaa t Ch 1 18 9 L ee
Yeauger, Pearl Yeauger, Det rotl
a
001 020 oox- J 10 1
Bos 17 7 Hunt er
N Y 17 12
Marvm Yeauger, Norman Mmnesot
11 was Stockton who seemed
Lot1c h (11 14) and F reeh an
W1se Bos 16 B Bl ue Oak 16 10
Yeauger , Allen Yeauger , Hugh es 112 Il l and Borgm an n
the most Impressed.
Paul Yeauger , Parcels , Clevel and
"It 's an unbelleveable
000 11 0 OOQ- 2 7 I
Salisbury
Kansas ( tty 100 220 OOx - 5 10 0 scoret''he satd "Idon'tknow
Harrt so n
Hood
(51
an d
I
Ashby
F ttzm or r1s
Bt rd (8) what AilS on I've got to fmd
and Slt nson
WP - F1tzm orn s out what he 1s takmg and take
I 13 10 )
LP- Har nson
(6 51
some of 11 myself."
H R M c Ra e (Sth l
And Gel berger , in h1s
Oaklan d
00 1 102 101 - 6 9 1
M il w au kee
00 1 000 J3x - 7 9 2 understated way, summed 1t
Bos man L ndbl ad ( 71 F m
up m one sentence
g ers (8) and Ha ney Co l born
" As tough as thiS course IS,
Rodr i guez
( 71
A us h n
(9)
M urphy (9 } and P orter W P I
would
have to say 1t was the
my obstetr1c1an He IS the thmgs, mcluding an ulcer or Rodr l guez 17'·0J L P- F tnger s
only doctor I have had smce h1atal hernia or colon ( B 6) HR S Bevac qua { 2nd }, best tournament I have ever
Yount ( 6th }
played"
my only problem has been problems The mternlSt has
Gelberger's wmnmg score
000 010 000- 1 8 o
havmg siX babies He sent me to hear the symptoms and do Ch1 cago
Boston
100 021 20x- 6 11 1
to a friend of hiS, an mterrust an exammation to make a
Wood Upsha w {7) H mton (7)
I had testa, and three days correct d18gnos1s The X rays and D ownrn g L ee ( 17 7 J and
M on tgom er y
LP- Wood ( 13
later he sa1d the radiologu;t 's help, but many people have 17) HR S Yas tr zem sk t ( 13th ).
report sa1d I had gall stones, stones and have symptoms R tce l201h l
and should go see a surgeon from somethmg else, such as Ba l ltmor e
101 300 011 - 7 14 0
PITTSBURGH (UPI) - AI
T ex as
101 030 021- B 13 1
He sent me to a surgeon a spastic colon
Grtm sl ey Gar l and ( 5 ) Mtll er
Oliver
was the undiSputed
fr1end of his because he
Except m those small (9) Jackson 191 and D uncan ,
doesn ' t operate.
commumhes where the Hendrtc k s (7), Harg an Kekt ch hero Sunday m the Pittsburgh
(4) T homas (4) Foucaull ( 8)
Pirates' 5-I VIctory over the
Now why didn 't I know that surgeon does family practice and
Sundberg
WP- Fouca ult
CinCinnati
Reds, but he gave
and go to a surgeon in the as well as some surgery, I ( 6 J} LP- Garland ( l 5} HRs
N elson ( l stl
Gr1 ev e ( 11th) ,
credit to enthuslBstic fans,
f1rst place ' I suppose all thiS recommend that all patients s mgleton ( I Jth )
4
p1tcher Jerry Reuss, and the
runnmg around is so see their family phyS1Cl8n
everybody can get a b1te out first or an mternist before ,. ,. .:.,;.,....:.:;. _,......,....~,'-'-,~-'1! return of mtured teanunate
Willie Stargell for his herOICS.
of my Blue Cross Blue Shield' seemg a surgeon. The ex"One of the reasons could
DEVOTED TO THE
I want you to tell me which of ception IS for injuries, as
INTEREST OF
bethefans,"Oliv r,sald. " A
the following
list
of from an automobile acculent,
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
Jotofpeoplecouldh eg1ven
speCialists do surgery and that are of such a nature as to
Exec Ed
ROB&amp;RT HOEFLICH ,
up on US, but when we
e
which ones don't, for future reqUU"e a surgeon
C•tv
Ed•tor
back
there
were
22,000
In
too·
use
A good surgeon really IS too
Published daily except
big crowds all
DEAR
READER
busy to sort through all the Saturday by The Ohio Va ll ey Stands and
11
' Publ t !IJ\1ng company , 111
weekend
Forgive me for not including medicalcomplaints that may 1 Court Sf , Pomeroy Ohio
•
45~69 Bus mew. Office PhoneThe Pirates returned from
your list, but you are using not require surgery at all.
;~ 5 ll56 Ed•tol'la l Phone 992
a disasterous road trip last
poor Judgment.
That Is why he limits his
class postage paid week only to be greeted by
Think how angry you would practice to surgery . A at Second
Pomeroy , Ohio
N otlona 1 adv er ti s 1 ng
season h1gh crowds on Friday
be With yourself If yoo had surgeon who 1s too enrepresen t attve
Ward
and
Saturda The
d f
gone to a surgeon and found thusiastic about surgery, and GFiltlth Company , Inc
Y·
crow o
Boltlnelll &amp; Gallagher Dlv ' 35,598 Sunday put the Pirates
out that your problem was not there are some, often has his
gall bladder disease. Then enthusiasm controlled hy the ' ~~~ T7J~~ 7 Ave ' New York, season attendance total over
S ubscr l ptton
rates
the one million mark for the
you would have seen a intermst who doesn't do Delivered
by carr i er wher e
' avatlabte 75 cents per week
sixth consecutive year
'
surgeon for no reason at all surgery
By Motor Route where
The Pir te h
-f
and would still have the
service
not
a s ave won lVe
Finally, many patients who carrier
of SIX since returning, and
problem which would reqWl'e reqUU"e surgery also have availabl e, One month , $3 25
By
mall
In
Ohio
and
w
Vo
,
now
lead the Philadelphia
1lilllllllernist
Si x
medical problems that need One Year , $2 2 00
sn so ,
Thre e
PhiiUesbytbreegamesmthe
' Your obstetrician was r1ght the sk1lls of the familY • months
onths , $ 7 00 El sewhere
26 oo veor
Sox mon ths
National League East
m sending you to an mterrust phys1c1an or the mternlst, m
lJ so fhret months , $7 SO
Oli
dr
thr
first. The diagnosis could addition to surgery
ubscr l ptlon Prt ce m c lud es
ver ove m
ee runs
unda y Ttm c~ S~!._--' With a home run 1and a tnple
have been several different
By Un tt cd Pr ess Intern a tion a l

N'ATIONAL
ALLIANCE

'I

Summer, 1775:

I

3- The Dally sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Aug 25, 1975

'

We Hold These Truths ...

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
. UPI Sporta Edltar
NEW YORK (UPI) - Horace Stoneham has agreed to sell ,
the San FranciSco Gl8nts to a group of wealthy Japanese mdustrtalists from Tokyo, and what this all comes down to lSo.
that 30 years ago baseball broke the color line for players, and:
now 1t's getting around to tbe same thing with the International"
boundary line for owners
For the fli"St time m baseball history, a major league ball
club will be owned and operated by foreign mterests next&gt;

season.

,

1,

The purchase pr1ce for the Gl81lts was slightly more than $17"
million, w1th tbe Japanese buyers getting lock, stock, barrel.:
and Ed (No Hit) Halicki, too
One or two National League owners still are opposed to doing
busmess with " outsiders," feanng perhaps some oil rich Arab •
may wake up one mornmg and decide to buy both majol'"
leagues as a couple of toys, but Stoneham Is hardpressed fo6
funds, these industrl8Iists bave come up with that rarest of aU..
commodities, cash, and besides they're from the Far East, not the M1ddle East.
The Giants' owner and the new owners shook hands on the
deal three weeks ago, Stoneham promising to turn over to the' •
Japanese at the end of the season all assets from the"
National Exhibition Company, which mclude the Gl81lts, theil' ,
entire farm system and thelf hotel and baseball complex at ..
Casagrarxje, Ariz.
•A
Some Japanese mvestors hold mmor stock m the Texas
Rangers at the present time aod a few businessmen from
Japan bought the Lodi club of the CalifQrnia League three~
years ago before eventually relinquishing 1t, but never befor~ ·
has any individual or group outside the U S. ever taken over complete control of any major le~e club.
...
Sale of the Gl8nts to the Japanese strengthens the chances of ,,
the _club remammg in San FranCISCO's Bay Area next year, ,
Califorrua has a large Japanese population. Since both the G1ants and the A's can not operate successfully In the Bay
Area at the same time, the A's now seem the logical club tcf '
move to Seattle, with the Gl8nts playing some of their home
games at Oakland next year.
",
The Japanese IU""chase doesn't necessarily mean there will ,
he a sudden influx of Japanese players With San Francisco'"
lll8smuch as the major leagues of both countries have a "no-::;
raid agreement" between them. '
1 As for any other changes among the Gl&amp;nts there are boWld ,
I to be a number of them. Horace Sbmeham ~ extraordlnarllf"
loyal to his ~ployes but the Japanese tough busine
"•
UlSlSted upon their ngbt to designate ~lr own as one~~
conditions of the sale.
,
,,
Wes Westrum will be amoog those let out He will not be _
hired as manager.
re
Leo Durocher heard Westnun was due to go whether the club-::
was sold or not and applied for his old job back
thougb'hesworeupanddownhe'dnevermanageagiun -even
'
As for Stoneham, he can stay 00 with the Gia ts
'"
sultan! if he wishes. Horace Stoneham took ove':. th': ~~'-:.; :
upon the death of his father in 1936. He was 32 then
est "
president in the history of the majors. That was 40 'y=go •
and he has many wonderful mernccies of the Giants
,"
H he could've held on to the club, If there was ~Y possible• ,
way not to sell, Horace Stoneham never WOuld've done it B t
he had no choice.
· u
They don't make club owners like HOI'ace Stoneham"-:;
anymore. Baseball may be a business to everybody else, but it":
was always a sport to him Still 1.s too and probably always
will be.
'
'

"'

I

I

I

I

Offlcltl s t1mt outfellowsS.,tl21

S.loty

26

24

Ftrlt dawn

27

28

NL's 1st no-hitter pitche-d by Halicki
BY NED.. HERSHBERG
UPI Sports Wriler
Up until SUnday , the only
thmg unpress1ve about Ed
Hahcki was his size
But 1t takes more than a 6foot-7 frame and the word
Gl81lts lettered across your
chest to gam stature m the
maJor leagues It has to be
ea rned On Sunday , E d
H\Ih ck1 game d that b1g
!eague respect his phySical
prese nce alone had bee n
unable to proVIde hun
Halicki, troubled by a
stiffenmg r1ght shoulder from
the seventh innmg on, pitched
the National League's flfst
no-hit, no-run game of the
se ason to g iVe the Sa n
FranciSCO Gl8nts a 6-0 VIC·
tory over the New York Mets
and a s pht of the1r
doubleheader
Dave
Kingman's fifth inning grand
slam proVIded the Mets w1th
a !1-5 VICtory m the opener
With a crowd of 24,1n-the
second largest of the season
m Candlestick Park cheermg hlDl on, Halicki
struck out 10and allowed only
three base runners Rusty
Staub reached base on an
error by second baseman
Derrel Thomas leading off
the firth and M1ke Vall
walked after one out m the
sixth Del Unser walked w1th

ooe out m the mnth
Hahck1 , a 22(l..pound n ghlha nder , had been bother ed
by t1ghtemng muscles m h1s
shoulder m his last f1 ve
starts Trruner AI WJ!der
ga ve him an omtrnent rubdown between mnmgs after
Hali c ki
complained
of
Ughtness m hiS pltchmg a rm
after the seventh frame
"The onl y th1ng tha t
bothe re d m e was t he
shoulder ," sa1d Halicki , who
was 1-8 m his rookie season
last year " I kept thmking 11
was gomg to stiffen up to the
pomt I was gomg to have to
come out, and I certainly
didn 't want to come out under
the crrcumstances "
Halicki also beheved that
both luck a nd the enUluslast1c
crowd we re Instrumental m
helpmg hlDl grun baseba ll
urunortahty
" I was lucky , pretty damn
lucky ," Hah ckl admitte d
" You have to be lucky to
p1tch a no-h1tter and l beheve
I was today The crowd was
JUSt great You need !bell"
rootmg too and my teammates played great behind
me My catc her ( Dave
Rader ) ' called a hell of a
game and l managed to keep
my arm loose for nme mrungs That I guess summed
1t all up "

The closest the Mets came
to getting a base hit off
Halicki was m the first mrung
when FeliX Millan lifted a
curvmg pop to n ght wh1 ch
Steve Ontiveros, norma Uy a n
infielder , raced in and caug ht
knee high near the foul lme
Halicki 's no-h1tter was only
the second m the major
leag ues th1 s yea r No la n
Ry a n p1 !che d h1 s fo ur t h
ca reer no-h itter on June 1 lor
the California Angels aga1nst
th e Baltunore Orioles
In other NL games, P ittsburgh pounded Cmc1M a t1 5-1,
Houston ha mmered Ch icago
8-4, St Lo uis sla m me d
6-2,
Mont rea l
Atl a nta
outlasted Los An geles 5-3 m
14 !Mings and San D1ego
swept a doubleheader !rom
Philadelphi a 7-2, a nd 7-4i m 12

consecutive games, powermg
Houston over the, Cu bs
Wilbur Howard rapped out
four hits to pace a 14 hit attack that gave the Astros 4~
hils lor the three-game

sertes
Cards 6, Braves t

Righ t-ha nder Bob For sch
and re liever AI Hrabosky
sca ttered seven hits and Ted
Simmons and Regg1e Smith
knocked m runs m a f1 rst
IMm g outburst that earned
the Card mals pas t th e
Braves Forsch ralSed hiS
record to 12-9 by outduehng
Carl Morton, 15-14 Lou Brock
posted his 800t h career stolen
base
Expos 5, Dodgers 3
J1m Lyttle's double capped
a three-run Montreal 14th
mmn g r a ll y afte r M1ke
1Mlfl2S
Marshalls wild pitch a nd a
Pirates 5, Red s 1
two-base throwmg error by
AI Ohver drove m thre&lt; Jo hn Ha le permitted two
runs w1th a homer a nd a oth er
ru ns to sco re,
tr1ple and J erry Reuss, 14-9, propelling the Expos over the
scattered rune h•t• as the Dodgers Dave Lopes stole
Pirates defeated the Reds three bases to mcrease hiS
Gary Nola n, 11~. was the record total to 38 straight
loser It was Reuss ' li th before he was fmally thrown
consecutive v1ctory at Three out by Gary Carter , the last
man to cut hlDl down back on
R1vers Stadium
Astros 8, Cubs 4
June 4
Jose Cruz slammed two
Padres 7.. 7, PhiiUes ~
homers, Bob Watson added
Bobby Tolan smgled home
another and Cliff J ohnson Bob DaviS fr om second base
beca me th e firs t As tros' w1th two out m the bottom of
player to hit homers m live the 12th mnmg to g1ve San

Diego a second game victory
over the Phlllies and a sweep
of their doubleheader after
the Padres' Randy Jones
pitched hiS way to his 17th
wm m the opener In the
second game , Davis drew a
ontHlut walk and moved to
second when losing pitcher
Ron Schueler balked Johrmy
Grubb struck out but Tolan
Si ngled to right-center on the
second pitch to end the four
hour 15 minute contest

Young southpaw throws real smoke
loll r1111y for ~IV

Clack stlrb.

LOll of down.

Gr1q1tn1 appantnt 1

flea protttlor

lllepl bfock

In 6-yohl btlt

EDirOR'S NOn;; -In order to bring area grid fans up-to-date on football
rules aDd to Introduce finer points of the game lo newcomers watcblug the fall
sport for the first time, offlctal rom Duncan, formerly of Pt. Pleasant aud now of
Gallla county, has submitted a series of articles on officiating to help ''kick off the
1975 high school grid campaign.

Area football official Tom Duncan
explains finer, points of the game
By rOM DUNCAN
FOOTBALL"
Yes, 1t IS that tlDle of the
year when pads are popping,
bandsmen
mar c h1ng,
clleerleaders cheermg, and
fins aruuously awaiting the
~nmg of a new high
Oool football season 1
;::Would you like to know
more about the rules of high
sebool football' Well, that IS
®! reason for thiS c olumn I
iii! gomg to be wr1ting a few
c@umns thiS week on the
®es, hopmg that they m1ght
help you enjoy your high
school football more thiS

formation wh1ch should be
covered, we m1ght wnte
another column or two
Today's column Will be
mamly about offlclatmg , so I
trust you will read and maybe
understand a little more
year
about the offlcl81s I am a
If you have any queshons
registered official m Ohio,
durmg the week or durmg the
and
thiS will be my fourth
season, you might drop them
year I am a ChriSilan, try:mg
off at tbe Tribune Office, 825
to please my Lord fll"st of all,
Thll"d Ave., GallipoliS, pr
w1th ChriStian actions on the
w1th th e Dall ¥ Se ntm ~ l 1
held as well as off
Court St , Pomeroy, c-o Tom
Thirty mmutes before a
Duncan We are planrung
football game has started, the
only the one week of columns,
game officials ( referee ,
but if enough quest1ons come
umpll"e, linesmen and l1eld
m or we think of more mJudge ) are m complete
charge. The responsibility for
makmg certam the game IS
played w1thm the rules IS
Jomtly shared by the coaches
and the off1c1als. The coaches
complished "
One of Anderson 's touch- must tea c h sk1IIs and
down tosses was a 13-yarder strategy wh1ch are m accordto halflback Essex Johnson, ance w1th the rules When
who d1d some fancy dancmg there are infractions, 1t IS the
to reach the end zone The respons1b11ity of the offiCials
game was a maJOr test of to penalize promptly and With
Johnson 's glffipy knee , and consistency
For practically all football
although the 5-10 speedster
played only the first quarter , officials, ofhclahng 1s a
hobby , a pleasant avocallon,
he held up well
"Tomght's
performance an opporturuty to continue
did somethmg for my con- associations and fnendsh1ps
fidence," sa1d Johnson, who m the world of sports. The
rambled 997 yards m 1973 modest fees wh1ch he
when he was healthy " I'm rece1 ves are usually helpful
and welcome, but they will
satisfied "
Another of Anderson 's never adequately comscormg passes was a 2().. pensate the offiCial for hiS
yarder to Lenvil Elliott, wbo lime and efforts. H1s
also eluded several would-be remuneratiOn will be m the
tacklers The reserve half- nature of continumg athletic
back was Impressive all act1v1ty, of fnendsh1ps
rught, catching five passes gamed, youth renewed and
for 56 yards and runnmg four the satiSfaction of havmg
rendered an Important
times for 33 yards
Anderson's third scormg serv1ce
I have mcluded w1th our
a,enal was a 20-yarder to tight
end Bob Tnnnpy that gave column today the Signals
Cincy a 20-0 lead late m the used by h1gh school offiCials
You may want to clip and
flfst half.
Green Bay's only br1ght keep th1s for a handy
spot was a dazzlmg 100-yard reference (Tomorrow· key
runback of the second-half def1mtwns)
kickoff by second-year pro
Steve Odom, a 5-8 bullet out of
Utah Brl1hant blocking
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) broke hilll mto the clear
Ohio
State !ramer Billy Hill
early
"The wedge d1d a good job says the Buckeyes, With only
and completely knocked one excepbon, are "in the
down everyone," said Odom. best shape I've ever seen
"The guy ran r1ght tbrough them" for the start of two-aus," applauded Brown " Just day workouts today.
The Bucks got the1r
a beautiful return "
exammat10ns
Green Bay's only other physical
score was a 52-yard f1eld goal Sunday and begm contact
pract1ces Thursday
hy Chester Marco!
''They're m a good frame of
Cincmnati reserve runnmg
back Doug Dressler wrapped mmd," satd Hill
Garth Cox , prom1smg
up the scormg on a sevenyard burst m the !mal three sophomore offensive tackle
from Washington C H , Ohio,
rrunutes
Regular
Green
Bay who will battle returnmg
quarterback John Hadl regular Scott Darmelley for a
played only the fll"st half , startmg ass1gnment, passed
hitting mne of 21 passes for 90 the physical but w1ll be slow
for the f1rst few days because
yards

'TD'

(;reen Bay sacked
CINCINNATI (UPI) Bar! Starr suffered hiS share
of sacks when he was a
quarterback, and he's JUSt
tEen decked the first time as
a head coach.
"I'm glad It was only a
preseason game," s1ghed
SU!rr after hiS Green Bay
Packers
were
soundly
whipped 27-10 hy the Cincinnati Bengals Saturday
rught
Starr, who quarterbacked
the Packers to glory last
decade, Jumped off to a good
coaching start w1th wlllS m
his f1rst two exh1b1hon
games, but he learned here
V{hy coaches get gray.
"They ate us liP With thell"
passmg and pulve~lZed us
with thell" running," groaned
Starr. " They impressed the
heck out of us We were
lackluster. I d1dn 't expect
any team to run that well on
U$ . When your defense
WI'Bkens, then the rest of the
~m sags With 1t . "
-The Bengals rushed for 202
yards and passed for another
250, total offense of 452 yards,
compared With 206 for Green
Bay.
"Even though 1t was an
e~h1bltion
game,
we
shouldn't be pushed aroWld
that way," lamented veteran
Packers defensive tackle
Mike McCoy.
"It was a goo(! everung for
us," beamed Bengals boss
Paul Brown. " I was really
plj!ased With what I saw "
Brown had to be most
pleased w1th quarterback
Ken Anderson, who completed 15 of 21 passes for 148
yards and three touchdowns
while only playmg the fll"st
half.
"'11ililgs are going better,"
sm11ed Anderson, who has
be.en sharp the last two
ga_mes after a slow start.
" You've ]ust got to get out
there and get thmgs ac-

BY KEN ROSENBERG
UPI Sports Writer
When a young , smokethrowing southpaw hke
Califorma 's Frank Tanana
bursts mto the big league
spotlight w1th a stunnmg ra sh
of stril'P.OUts, compariSOns to
Sand) Rc , .. , .., are mev1table
" I don't lcnow why
everybody expects me to be
w1ld like Koufax (when he
was young) ," Tanana sa1d
after he blanked the New
York Yankees, 9-a, on four
hits and struck out eight
batters to raiSe his maJor
league leadmg strikeout total
to 197
Well, not qmte everybody
Angels Manager Dick Wilhams, for one, prefers to
compare Tanana to the longlime master or control Whitey Ford
" Frank ha s more veloc1ty
on the ball than anyone I've
ever seen and on top of that

has the savvy or Whitey
Ford," Wllhams sa1d 'At the
age of 22 he has tremendous
po1se
and
t remendous
poSSibilities
" He IS probably the fmest
young p1tcher I've seen m a
long, long llDle "
But perhaps the most In·
tr1gwng tllmg about Tanana
IS hiS repertoue of p1tches
" I'm JUSt a two-p1tch pitcher ," Tanana said after
tossmg a shutout for the
fourth time m hiS last seven
starts to r81Se hiS record to
1~ and lower hiS earned run
average to 2 47 " I use the
fastball and the curve H you
can get maJor league control
of those two p1tches you don't
need anythmg else An occasional changeup and a few
runs from your team and
you're all set "
Fortunately for Tanana,
the anerruc-h1ttmg Angels, a
team Yankee Manager Billy

Martm once descnbed a s
"unable to hit 1ts wa y out of a
hot el lobby ," score m
unaccusto me d a bunda nce
when he pitches
" I guess I'm just lucky ,"
srud Ta nana
Shortstop Mike M1Iey,
hittmg 176 gomg mto Sunday 's doubleheader , prov1ded
Tanana w1th all the support
he needed when he slugged a
two-run , third" mrung homer
to pace a 13-hlt attack
In the mghtcap, the Angels
capitalized on s1x Yankee
errors and seven walks to
complete the sweep with a 4-3
VICtory behind the p1tchmg of
Nolan Ryan, who struck out
e1ght m s1x mnmgs to p1ck up
his 14th v1ctory of the season
and mcrease his stnkeout
total to 186
"I don 't learn too much
from Ryan ," srud Tanana
'He has been an mspll"allon
to me, though , because he
~

Giants nudge Jets Sunday
United Press International
There's only one mtra...:1ty
nvalry left m the National
Football League, but 1t's the
real thing
Wben the G1ants and the
Jets get together lor thell"
annual preseason showdown
to stake out "braggmg
nghts" to New York C1ty for
the next year, the word
exhibition IS not approprl8te
to the game .
The Gwnts ' 21-20 Sunday
squeaker over the Jets kept
the traditiOn gomg It had the
requlSite number of surpriSes, not the least bemg the
last play of the game Rookie
center Joe Fields snapped the
ball over kicker Pat Leahy's
bead as time expll"ed on a
f1eld goal attempt from the 38
that would have won 1t for the
Jets after they had moved the
ball from !bell" own 47 m the
fmal two mmutes
Cra1g Morton, the G1ants'
quarterback who came from
Dallas last year to suffer
through a 2-12 season m
which the team lost several
games 1t should have won ,
s ummed up the reaction of
his teamates
" I guess there IS some
JUStice " Morton srud
" We played so well up here
sometlffies last season when
we lost Today we stunk out

Bucks in best shape
of tonsllitlS
Fullback Pete Johnson,
who weighed 250 or more hiS
freshman and sophomore
seasons, tipped the scales at
245 Sunday
" We'd like for him to lose
another s1x or e1ght pounds,"
Hill S8ld, " but he's close to
h1s ( optimum) playmg
wetght "
lJnebacker Ken Kuhn has
fully recovered from an old
knee mJury and a lower back
mJury sustamed wh1le skimg
earher this month.
Dr. Bob Murphy, team
phys1c1an, ruled out football
th1s year for sophomore !mebacker Charles Simon of
Dubhn, Oh10

the place and won "
Morton, however , came
alive when 1t looked like the
Jets would run away With the
game
Alter Jazz Jackson fum.
bled the second baH kickoff to
start
the
moment um
swmgmg to the G1ants,
Morton got a hot hand and
f1red two touchdown passes m
the thlrd period that put the
Gl8Dts ahead to stay He hit
tight end Bob Tucker for a 13yard TD pass and followed
that w1th a seven-yarder to
reserve fullba c k Steve
Crosby for the eventual
wmnmg score
"Fortunately, we won ,"
Morton S8ld, "but I'm not
proud of the way I threw out
the re today l thought when
we came out lor !he second
half that we couldn't do any
worse than we had m the fll"st
hall I was right "
Morton completed 11-of-26
passes for 108 yards , but
many of them were dumps to
backs when h1s primary
recetvers were covered
The Jets, though disappomted about the loss, were
smiling about one of the
pleasant surpriSes of the

afternoon, the play of rookie
qua rterback J J Jones, who
opened camp as the number
four Signal caller Alter a
good showmg last week at St
LouiS, he got the nod to start
when Joe Namath InJured h1s
nbs and AI Woodall went
home to be with his ailmg
father
Jones hit 13-of-26 passes for
174 yards and two TDs , both
to J erome Barkum He also
ran for 28 yards
" We ran the ball well, we
threw the ball well," Jones
S8ld " It was JUSt!ate that we
didn 't wm ''
Elsewhere m the NFL,
Detroit came back to down
Kansas City 27-24, ChiCago
shad e d St LOUI S 14-13,
Oakland pounded Atlanta 227, Cmc iMall routed Green
Bay 27-1(), Mirmesota rupped
Dallas 16-13, M1am1 beat New
Orleans 2()..10 and Denver
downed Houston 27-21
Tight end Charlie Sanders
hauled m a 35-yard TD toss as
DetrOit exploded for three
touchdowns m the fourth
quarter to maugurate 1ts ne"
$55 7 rrullwn stadium with a
VICtor y

maxuruzes a great talent by
workmg hard all the tune "
Elsewhere m the America n
Leag ue, Bos ton ripp e d
Ch1 cago 6-1, Mi nn esota
toppe d
Detroi t
3-1,
Milwaukee shaded Oakland 76 and Texas edged Baltimore
1\-7
Red Sox 6, While Sox 1
Carl Yastrzemski slammed
his 13th homer and Jun Rice
his 20th to power an 11-hit
Boston attack to mcrease the
Red Sox lead m the AL East
to 7 games over Baltimore
B11l Lee y!e lded e1ght smgles
to gam hiS 17th v1ctory m 24
dec1s1ons while Wllbur Wood
suffer e d hiS 17th loss
rwlns 3, flgers 1
Rookie n ghf...hander Jun
Hughes p1cked up hiS 12th
victory and third straight
over DetrOit by scattering
se ven hit s After be mg
reached for a run m the fifth
1nnmg, Hughes p1tched no-hit
ball the rest of the way
M1 c key Lohc h went the
distance for DetrOit, absorbmg h1s 14th setback a gamst 11
vtctor1es
Brewers 7, A's 6
Charhe Moore's tw!H'Iln
e1ghth 1nnmg double a nd Tom
Murphy's clutch rehef pitching helped Milwaukee snap
an e1ghl1!ame losmg streak
Robm Yount opened t he
e1ghth w1th a home run to tie
the score After Hank Aaron
walked and Da rrell P orter
smgled , Moore unloaded h1s
game-wmmng blow Murphy
saved the game when he
entered w1th the bases loaded
and no out 10 the nmth , getlin g two popups a nd a
stnkeout to record his 17th
save
Ran gers 8, Orioles 7
M1ke Hargrove's ground
ba ll w1th the bases loaded
scored Len Randle w1th one '
out m the bottom ol the mnth
to prevent Baltunore from
keepmg pace w1th Boston

Mator L eague Standmgs
B y Untted Pr ess lnterrtahon al
Nat ional Lea gue
Easl
w I pet g b
7'1 56 563
P i ttsburgh
69 59 539 3
Phtladelphta
69 59 539 3
St LOUI~
66 62 516 6
New York
60 70 462 13
Chtcago
55 72 433 16l 1
Mon treal
West
wlpcf9b
Cmcl nnatt
84 -44 656
Los Angeles
66 61 527 16'' 1
San F ran Cisco 63 66 486 2J111
San Otego
60 69 465 24111
Atlanta
57 73 4JB 28
Houston
50 82 379 36
Saturday ' s Results
Houston 14 Chtcago 12
Ctnc tn nat l 11 P 1Hsburg h 7
San F r ancisc o 2 N ew York I
St Louis 7 A !lan te 1 n
San D ego 8 Phlla d el phta 3
lwtltght
Los Angeles 3 Mont real 1 l st
IWtltghl
Montrea l 5 Los Ange l es 2 2nd
n
Sundily ' s R u un s
Houston 8 Ch tca go"
51 Lou is 6 A llan Ia 2
P 1llsburgh 5 Ct nc tnn alt 1
New Yor k 9 San Fr ancisco S
lSI
San F ranc 1sco 6 N ew Yor k 0

2nd
San O tego 7 Phdad elphti!l 2, 1s t
San Otego 7 Phtladel pl"l la 6
2n d 12 mn
Montrea l 5 LOS A ngel es 3 14
&gt;nn
Monday' s Games
{All Ttm es EDTl
Ctnctnnatl ( No r m an 8 4 ) at
Ch1cago ( R Reusc h el 10 13)
2 30 p m
A tlanta (Thompson 0 41 a t
P1ttsbur gh ( Rook er 8 9 l 7 JS

pm

H ous ton ! Roberts 7 14) a t St
LOUIS (McGlot hen lJ 91 8 IS

pm
New York !Webb 55) at Sa n
O tego I Strom 5 4l 10 p m
Pht ladelphla 1Ch n stenson 7 41
a t Los Ange les jMe~se r smllh
14 121 10 lO p m
Tu esday' s Gam es
Cm ncma tt at Chtcag o
H ouston at Sl L ouis n
A tl an ta at Pi tt Sbu r g h n
New York a t San D 1ego n
Mont r eal at San F r anCISCO n \..
Philadelphda a t Los Angeles n
Am en can L eague
Ea st
w I pet g b
Boston
77 Sl
Ba ll tmorc
69 58 543
7' '
New York
64 64 500 13
Cleveland
58 67 464 17' ~
Milwaukee
57 72 442 20 1 ,
De•ro t
51 77 398 26
Wes t
w I pet g b
Oaklan d
78 5 1 605
Kansas Cdy
69 57 546 71 2
Ch1cago
63 65 492 w 2
Texas
63 67 485 J5l 1
M1 n nesota
60 69 465 IB
Cah forn a
60 71 458 19
Saturda y s Resulh
Chtcago 6 Boston 4
New York 11 Cal 1f orn1 a 4
Detro 1 6 M 1nnesota 5 12 1nn
Oakl and 6 M !waukee 3 lsi
twd tght
Oaklan d 9 M1 twau k ee 3 2nd n
Texas I 13all tm or e 0 n
Clevel and 7 Ka n sas C1ty 1 n
Sunday s R esult s
Boston 6 Ch1cago I
Mtnnesota 3 Oelr o tt 1
M t! waukee 7 Oak land 6
Ka nsa s Ctly 5 Cleve l and 2
Ca l dor n1a 9 New York 0 1st
Ca l dor n1a &lt;1 New Y ork 3 2nd
Texas 8 Ball1mor e 7 n
Monday 's Games
I All Ttm es EDT)
Cht cago
{ Kaat
18 91
at
Cleveland (Ecke r sl ey 9 51 7 30

60,

pm

Ba lt tmore (A lexan der 15 7) a t
Kansas C1 t y (Leon ard 9 SJ 8 15

pm
M 1nnesota (Dec k er 1 31 a t
M !wau k ee (S laton 11 14} 8 30

pm

De trotl I Bare 7 8) at Texas
( Umba r ger 55) 9 p m
Tu esday ' s Gam es
C.altforn1a at Boston
Ch tc ago at Cleve la n d n
Balt1mo r e at Kansas C1 t y n
M.nnesota at M tl waukee n
Oetro1t at Texas n
Oa k la nd a t N ew York n

THANK YOU!
To those of you who visited the
Eastern Athletic Booth during the
Meigs County Fair, Thank you for
your patronage!
A "Special" thank you goes to a II the
adults and students who donated so
much time and effort to make this
another successful year . Thank you
aiL so much .

OFFICERS OF THE
EASTERN ATHLETIC BOOSTERS
EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL

STATE FARM·

The l\brld's NumiJer GIN
Homeowners Insurer
More people tn su re the tr homes w tth State Fa rm
than wtlh any ot h er company That s because they 11e
lound Stale Farm o ffers t he best m ser v tce protecti o n
and economy G1ve me a call I II be glad to g w e you
all the de tatls

Steve Snowden
1258 Powell St., Middleport, 0

PH. 992-7155
Like a good neighbor Slllie Fann IS lhen!
S TATE FAFI;M Ft~E A ND CA S UAL TY COMPAN Y
Ho me O l hce Bloommgton lll tn ota

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4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Monday, Aug. 25, 1975
~ -·- -

'Class makes
contribution

Polly's Pointers'
U~

PULJ .VCRAMER

Paint stains
on polyester
are there to stay and can
.POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - The lirst offer no suggestions. You did
time my expensive polyester not mention the fabric or
pants suit was washed color. - POLLY.
someone threw a cloth with
DEAR POLLY - Dorothy
green outdoor paint on it into
tl,if' washer. As a result my could put pretty adhesive
pants suit has green speckles backed vtnyl paper on her
all over it. How can l white refrigerator that does
remove this oil base paint ? not match her other apShe
needs
Also , my daughter ha s pliances .
marking pen spots on one or something to smooth it out
her dresses . This is not a after pieees, eut to £it, have
water-soluble ink so please been put on. Miter corners
tell me how to remove those when poss ible . If small
bubbles appear prick with a
marks . - WENDY.
DEAR WENDY - You pin then. and smooth over
certainly have two difficult with the fin gers . Surfaces
problems. With today's many should fir st be dean and dry .
new fabrics I always suggest It will take two to three hours
that If a similar piece of to cover a refrigerator .
Another way is to paint it .
fabric is available (can be cut
off a seaml one should first Get a spray can of epoxy
try anything to be used for fini s h paint for appliances
spot removal on the sample to and follow the directions very
see how the color and fabric carefully , Mask any areas
are affected. For hard paint NOT to be painted. If done
spots as you have lhe properly such a job can resul t
American
Institute
of in what looks lik e an original
Laundering suggests soaking finish but it does tie up the
with turpentine, roll up appliance fo r from 24-48
garment to let paint soften hours while the paint really
and then scrape off paint with dries . My husband did ours so
a dull knife. Finish the job now I have a harvest gold
with another application of refri gerator that looks like
turpentine. Another authority new . The cost of doing it
suggests going a bit further either of these ways is
by rubbing with bar soap minimal, if you do the work
after rinsing out the tur- yourself. - KAREN.
DEAR POLLY - As I read
pentine. Rinse again and then
launder with an enzyme the paper and see things I
detergent. If you still have want to clip and save or send
the green paint can a solvent to someone I mark them with
may he . usggested on its a colored pen . After the rest
of the family have read the
label.
paper I go back and at a
The permanent marking pen dalns on your glance can spot the articles
little girl's dress are anotner that interested me. Before
matter. I really think they starting this I would forget
and sometimes have to go
through the entire paper
giving every page close
We can help
scrutiny so this really saves
time and I never miss any
wanted piece . - PEGGY.

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pay your

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P. J. PAULEY

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307 Spring Ave., Pomeroy

PH. 992-2318

,.

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a«f• NATIONWIDE

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Njj lllflw•de U u1u11 1n1ur1~e• co muny
Nellonwlde ll le I!'IU11nce Compen r

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Home Olfln : ColumOul, Oll•o

iuo

GRANDE - School
super vis or s
f r om
Southeastern Ohio held their
annual summer meeting Aug ,
18 at , Rio Grande College.
Outgoing president, Robert
Reed , Superintendent of

~~~~~~~~~~~~W~a~s~h~in~g~t~on~C~o~un~ty~Sc~h~o~o~ls~,-.

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A Public Service or This Newspaper &amp; The Adve rtising COUI'1Cil

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A $25 contribution to the
Senior Ci tiz;ens Fund was
made by the Busy Bee Class
of lh e Middleport First
Baptist Church meeting
Thursday night at the church.
The c lass a ls o made
arrangements to remember
Mrs . Dana Hamm al Arcadia
Nurs ing Home with a gift on
her birthday. Read at the
m ee ting was -a letter of
thanks from Mrs. EJecta
Souders for remembrances
,during her recent illness.
.,!frs. Rosemary Lyons
presided at the meeting
which opened with the class
song. Mrs. Dora Pullins gave
devotions using " Discovery"
as her meditation topic.
The birthdays this month of

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Calendar

Mr s. rva TW'ner, Mrs. F'ern
Bradbury , Mr s . Floren c e
Hannay, Mrs . Irene Cross,
Mrs . Agne s White, Mr s.
Isa belle Winebrer1ner and
Mrs . Dana Hamm were
noted. A bakeless bake sale
was held with $22.50 being
added to the treasury .
Mrs .
Beulah
White
presented the program using
an old -fa shioned spelling
bee. jokes, and poems by
Helen Steiner Rice. Miss
Dorothy Reyno lds san g an
original song , " Birthday in
the Sky ." Hos tesses were
Mr s. Roma Hawkins, Miss
Freddie Houdashelt , Mrs .
Jessie Houdashelt and Mrs.
Nora Jordan, . assis ted by
. Mrs . Eloise Wilson.

Auxiliary approves
hospital purchases
Purchase of a s urge ry cart
and a sewing machine for
Veteran s Memorial Hospital
was approved when the
Women's Auxiliary met
recently at the home of Mrs.
Charles Karr .
Mrs . Janice
Daniels
presided at the meeting
which was preceded by a
potluck
dinner
and
homemade ice cream served
by the hostess . It was noted
that draperies had been
purchased for the cafeteria
and the x-ray room at the
hospitaL A thank-yo u note
was read from Connie
Grueser for a graduation gift.
The present officers were
re-elected for another year.
An invitation was extended
from Dr . R . R. Pickens for
the September meeting to be
held at his home.
Seventeen members attended the meeting with

Area supervisors
hold annual meet

when.you can '1!
II you' re si tK or disabled
and can 't wo rk, Nationwide
can help you lo.eep your
lamlly and home together.
Call an &amp;Qen\ and see.

;

~---·s-o~~i~~~~
- Mrs. Arnold Hupp surprised ....

presided.
The group heard presen~&lt;!lions from Dr. Charlotte
Carver, chairperson of the
Division of Education at Rio
Grande College, who !&lt;liked
on the up-grading of standards and certification for
teacher training at the
college, and Arthur Shumate,
Superintendent of Ross
County Schools, who gave a
resume of recent slate
legis lation as it affects
education. Dr. James Lantz
and Mrs. Tolson from the
Ohio State Department of
Education presented an
overview of the new state
standards for Ohio Schools.
New officers for the coming
year are Ruth Mangus,
president; Don Jenkins, vice
president; Kay Kriebel,
secretary; Grella Suttle,
treasurer; and Pat Schultz,
district representative.
Area supervisors attending
were Don Jenkins and Jim
Mains, Ironton City; Pat
Schultz, Lawrence County;
Marge Evans, Pickaway
Coun ly ; Kay Kriebel · and
Buddy
Ciccantel l ,
Washington County; Bob
Crotty and Mary Cottle, Pike
County;
Grella Suttle,
Russell Moore, and M;.ry
Bacon , Meigs cou nty ;
Margaret Beard, Perry
County;
Iva
Snyder,
Nelsonville'JVS; and
Everette Park and Ruth
Mangus, Ross County.
The next meeting will be
Oct. 20 at Rio Grande College .
Topic will he " Needs Assessment (State Department) . All
area school s upervisors are
cordially invi ted.

guests including Kathy Galo,
Dr . R. R. Pickens, Mr s. Reva
Beach , Charles Karr , John
Fry and Harold Masser.

Clint Birch
honors 81st
PORTLAND - Clint Birch
celebrated his 81st birthday
Aug . 17 with a dinner at his
home .
Born on Aug . 20, 1894, he is
a veteran of World War I and
a life member of the
American Legion and the
Disabled American Veterans.
Attending the celebration
were his children, Mr , and
Mrs . Joe Lipps, Gale and
Terry. Vincent: Mr . and Mrs.
Thomas Birch. Waterford:
Mr . and Mrs. Loyd Lipps,
Chuck and Toni, Little
Hocking: and Leota Birch,
Portland.
Others attending were Mr .
and Mrs . Frank Wallace ,
Racine: Mrs. Ada Van Meter,
Portland: . Mrs. Pamela
Enlow, Newport; and Miss
Angela Navarini, Clarksburg, W. Va .

Dinner party
Mrs. Beulah . While entertained recently with a
dinner party in celebration of
the 80th birthday of her
sister, Mrs. Florence Hannay.
Gifts and cards were
presented to her by Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas Darst and sons,
Craig, Jeffrey Darst, Kitty
Metzger , Mr . and Mrs .
Charles White , Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Well and Mrs. Pearl
Hoffman. Mrs. Hannay also
received a flower from the
deacons of the Middleport
First Baptist Churc h.

MONDAY
OH-KAN
COIN
Club
regular business meeting , in
the social rooms of Colwnbus
and Southern Ohio Electric
Co. building , M_ill St ., Middl e por t. Social -hour and
trading session precedes 8
p.m . business meeting when
out-af-lown cDin dealers will
be present to buy, sell or
trade coll ec tor items. Coin
auction to be he ld , refreshments se rved. Area residents
invited.
TUESDAY
MEIGS Athletic Boosters,
7:30p .m . at the high sc hool.

AMERICAN
Legion
1\uxil iary , Drew We bs te r
Pos t 39, 7:30p.m . at the haiL
Conve ntion reports will be
heard.
CORVE'ITE CLUB meeting
a t the home of Yvonne Scally,
870 Ash St., Middleport. All
Corvette owners are urged to
atte nd as electio ns will be
held and plans for future
activities will be made .
THE MASON
County
Ed ucation Association of
Cla ssroom Teachers will
provide a free luncheon for
all Mason County classroom
teac he rs at the Point
Pleasant Junior High School
cafeteria :&lt;
OHIO ETA PHI ·chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 6:30
p.m . Royal Oak Park, gel·
HOME FROM HOSPITAL
acquainted picnic .
Kalhern
Smith,
PAST
MATRONS,
hospitalized
for
many
weeks
Pomeroy Chapter 186, O.E.S.,
7:30p.m. at the home of Mrs. in Columbus, is now at the
home of her paren ts, Mr . and
Hartwell Curd.
Mrs. Albert Roush.
WEDNESDAY
· POMEROY Lions Club
annual
fam ily
picnic,
Pomeroy Golf Course, 6 p.m .
HERE FOR VISIT
All Lions and their families
Mr.
and Mrs. Leonard Van
invited. Take a covered dish .
WILDWOOD Garden Club, Meter Sr ., Ebenezer St. ,
8 p.m., al the home of Mrs. Pomeroy, had as their guests
Erma Roush. Members are to recently Miss Pamela Croft,
l&lt;lke a flower specimen.
Mrs . Kay Bailes and
children , Scott , Todd and
THURSDAY
Lori, New Jersey, and a
AMERICAN
Legion
niece , Mrs. Nancy Pickerell
Auxiliary,
Feeney-Bennett
an d children, !lilly, Kim,
Post 128, 7:30p.m. with girls
Nanette
and
Jennifer,
state delegates and •their
Chillicothe, While here the
parents invited guests.
ninth birthday of Nanette
Delegates to present their
Pickerell was celebrated .
reports. 6:30 p.m . dinner to
Part of their visit was spent
precede the meetin~.
at the Van Meter's Ohio River
AMERICAN
Legion
camp site, Sandy Acres .
Auxiliary Juniors, Drew
Webster Post 39, 7 p.m. at the
legion hall.

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Red

FIRST CHILD BORN
Mr. and Mrs. William P .
Rizer. Syracuse, annoWtce
the birth of their first child, a
7 lb., 7 oz. daughter named
Kristy Lynn born Friday,
Aug . 22 at Pleasant Valley
HospitaL Maternal grand. parents are· Rev. and Mrs .
Milton Bartram of Van, W.
Va . ( formerly of New
Haven ),
and
paternal
. grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. William E. Rizer of
Minersville; great grand·
mothers are Zelma Rawley,
Minersville; Clara Lavender,
Syl-acuse and Mrs. Bessie
Criag. Tecumseh,' Mich .

lhe··c ood
Neighbot.
,.

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Lois, Charlie and Steven
Cline, Tammy, Kenn Y,·
Robbie, Jimmy, Patty, Clara
Robinson, Johnny Davl1,
Gary and Jo Ann Wilford,
Tony Pierce, Max Jr., Gloria,
Cottrill,
Diana
Bruce
Ridgway, Roger and Edith
Manuel, Bill , Nan Davis,
Gerri Rought, Sid, Charles
Manuel, Danny Roush, La.i-ry
Hupp , Arnold Hupp, Tirit
Wolfe , Ruby , Don, Brian,
Chris Hupp, Jane Hill, DOlly
Wolfe, Dolly Hill, Raymond
and Kay Rowe, Don, Joyce,
Do nita. Robin Manuel ,
Robert Fife, George Parsons,
Wayn e and Betty Wilson ,
Gladys Hutton, Margaret ,
Craig Cot trill , Tom Manuel,
Ronn ie Wagner , Dave and
Hope Wolfe, Mel Waldnig,
Edward Hupp and the
honored guest.
Sending gifts were Mr . and
Mrs. Kenneth Bass, Mr . and
Mrs. Jack Hoffner, Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest Bush, Mr. and
Mrs. Clarence Hupp.

Hours were from 9 p.m . till 2
a .m . The doOr prize went to
Mrs. Pauline Wolfe which
was a little red pig . Attending
were : Charl es, Nancy, Tina
and Miki Hupp of Columbus ;
Cindy. Sharon. David Ed·
ward Hupp, Roberta , Dana
Lewis, Katie Bass, Charlotte
Lewis of Clifton, W. Va . :
Russell and Bernice Roush ,
Herbert and Mary Roush ,
Early Roush . Eileen Buck ,
Grace Knighting. Terry, Jim
Km ghlin g, Roc ky Hupp ,
Dale, Ruth, Jim , Steve , Ca thy
Riffle, Pauline and Chri s
Wulfe. Me lvin Barnell Roush ,
Gary , Peggy, Jamie Wolfe,
Patsv and Wall Laudermill,
Red · and Betty Ste wart ,
Mariann Hendric ks, Craig
Fife , Ra y and Evely n Van
Meter, Danny and Ri chard
Slone, Sheryl Walters , Mo_nk,
Mildred, Melinda, Alvin
Barnell. Deb , Goldie. Eric,
Pam, Sharon Milliron, Dorsa
and Bessie Parsons, Stan
Davis, Joy Neig ler , C'harl es,

ADULT MEAL

FOR KIDSFUNMEALTM

Big Shef ·
Reg. Fr cncl1 Fncs.
Turn ove r &amp;

Fu n Tray,
Fu nb u rg~r · .

Reg. Fr e1.1c h Fries,
Surprise Prize,
Reg. Soil Drink &amp;

l &lt;uge So tl Drmk

a Sweel Treat

PT. PLEASANT

2325 Jack &gt;'bn Ave.

GALLIPOLIS
~SOl

Eastern Ave . .

BACK HOME
Mr. and Mrs . Hugh McPhail and children, Corey.
Scott and Heather, have
returned from a two week
vacat ion at Ocean City, Md .
They also visited Mrs. R. S.
Corson, Morgantown , W. Va .,
and Mrs. Hugh McPhail,
Grafton.

BIRT!i:DA YS CELEBRATED - Christopher Lee
Gheen and Frederick Allen Gheen, sons of Mr. and Mrs.
Frederick Gheen, Rt. 2, Belmont, celebrated their birthdays recently with a party at their home. Christopher was
one-year~ld July 25, and Frederick was two on May 25
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Sanford Gheen, Belmoni
and Mr. and Mrs. Carl Hudson, Bellaire. Greatgrandparents are Mrs. Sarah McCloud, Mr. and Mrs.
John Sawyer, Belmont, and Mr. and Mrs. Carl 0 . GllE'en of
Racine. Frede~ick Gheen is employed with Ohio River ,
Collieries of Lafferty.

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By Mrs. Herbert Roush
An outstanding event took ·
place al the home of Mr . and
Mrs. t\rnold Hupp , Racine .
Ohio Rl. 2 recently , Mr s.
Hupp was pleasantly surprised by their so n, Edward ,
who held a party in the barn
on the Hupp !arm which wa s
decorated with pink, blue and
red crepe paper stream e rs
with " Happ y Birthd ay ,
Mom " on the posts . Edward
was assisted in decora ting by
the employes who work on the
farm.
" The Red Stewart Band "
rw-ni shed music throughout
the evening with their dim
li ghts scattered throughout
the barn, which gave a Dance
Hall effect. Edward and his
heipers made tables set all
over the barn decorated with
white table covers. Refres hments of potato chips, pop,
punch, cake were served
throughout the evening.
Mrs. Hupp received many
lovely gills includin g three
ca kes, one decorated in red
and white icing with "Happy
Birthday Mom ," one given
her by the employes of the
farm decorated with four
green man goes on each
corner, red tomato in the
middle with " Happy Birth·
day ."
One hundred and thirteen
guesL' attended the party.

Clean energy.for tomorrow
••• gas from coal.
·:"'here is enough coal in the ground 10
last for centuries. But. with our •t rivinc

plant is st ill- fur down the road. and 'It
will be expensive. But. w ith the dcvel- ,
opmc nt o f coal gasification, a wh@)c
nc·w industry will be born. 'with job• for
thousands o f people . And this · new
:-.nl1rcc i'Pr t!as will he lp _ the .flation
1\.:dw.:c it~ gro\ving dependence on
n,r~.· i~n :-. u ppl i~:s of energy .
Coal gasi fication will mean mor..:l'lh.'rgy fnr tomorrow. And even with
hig.h•.: r 1.:os1~ . gas will still he the most
~.·~..:onomk·aJ fuel for your home .

for a cleaner environment. much of ~

Play it o8fe and· iure
It may be time to
have yo~r preeent

policy updated .
'

let's .rcll~

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s-n

can't be used.
Columbia Gas is working on prol:esscs that will convert thi s (Oal into
clean-burning gas . 1n cooperatio n with
the government. and indcpendcmly.
Columhia is·movin g ahcaJ .in .coa l !!~ls i­
·fication fCSC~IfCh . Expc rirn c ntal rlants

urc in. operation , and n11.1k ing progress.
The first commerCial coa l gasification

0 U Theater announces Helen Help
upcoming season 's plays Us•••
MAN AND MARIJUANA; fHEGOOD,BAD,ANDUGLY
By Mn. Eva Walker, Chester Garden Clnb
Thousands of years before it became the super star of the
drug culture, Cannabis was cultivated for fibers food and
medicine. However, strange things happen to planls after a
long and intimate association with man . They travel around
the wocld, grow In unusual and often inhospitable soils and
envlrorunents. They often hybridize or escape cultivation and
become weeds. The biological evolution of tbe cultivated plant
and the evolution of its uses cannot be divorced from the study
of natural forms that make its new and perhaps unnatural ro'•
What is Cannabis' A genus of the mulberry plant fan.uy ,
"Indian Hemp." Recent studies indicate several species. The
Cannabis plant grows from 3 ft . to 6 ft. tall depending on
cultivation. It is a herbaceous annual, a leafy plant with tittle
oc no woody parts, which grow for a season, dies and requires
·both male and female to reproduce itself.
The male plants display a yellow-green flower which on
matlD'Ity, shed pollen profusely. The female flowers are inconspicuously hidden among small leaves at the end of the
branches. The flowers emit a characteristic odor. The mature
stems are fluted, or four-cornered, often with nodes at intervals of four to 20 inches and many attain a thickness of two
inches. The stems are bare of foliage except a foot or two from
the top. Each leaf has a n odd number of leaflete with notched
edges. The resinous alkaloids from the flowering tops are
collected on tiny hairs at the base of the female flower . This is
the portion that is collected and pressed into cakes and sold as
hashish, (9-TiiC, themostnarcoticpartoftheplant) .
Cannabis has been cultivated for five principal purposes hempen fibers, oils, seeds, narcotic properties, and
therapeutic agent in folk lore, and modem pharTIUicnpoeians .
HEMP FIBERS -Cannabis is the oldest cultivated source
of fiber and the first to spread so widely. Hemp threads have
been found in excavation sites in China, Turkey, Taiwan and
Egypt, dating back to the 20th century b.c., and some before
that.Hemp garmentfound in Egyptian tombs resemble that of
our linens today.
Cannabis arrived in Europe from the North. It became a
major cultivated crop during the · Christian era. Henry VOl
required farmers to plant hemp and during the Elizabethan
times there was such a demand for the fiber for rope and
clothing that it was introduced in the New World, and exported
to England by the Colonies. After the Revolutionary war the
plant became quite important to the U.S. and huge plantations
in Kentucky thrived until the Civil War, when the rising labor
costs killed the industry. In 1870s, there was little hemp grown
commercially in the U.S., but Cannabis seeds spread from the
unkept plantations and became weeds, mainly in the NorthCentral, Middle Atlantic and New England States.
Russia, Spain, Italy and Poland still cultivate hemp for its
fiber and food.
FQOJ){)ILS - The mature seeds are devoid of intoxicating principal and are rich in fat . It is eaten in Eastern
Europe, Ukrane and Manchuria. In the U. S. it is used in bird
and poultry feeds ; as a substitute for linseed oil in paint and
varnishes; soap making, and as a lubricant. The seeds contain
19 to 35 percent of a drying oil, a greenish-yellow fluid used for
emulsions in pharTIUicy.
MEDICINE - Cannabis dates back to the earliest
cultivation of the plant. It was used as a cure aU for various
ailments; malaria, beriberi, constipation, rheumatic pain,
abs'ent mindedness, female disorders, deaden pain during
surgery and childbirth.
Jn spite of Cannabis plants long role in medival
and folk lore, modern Europe and America medical
ma not become seriously interested until the 19th century.
Because of the difficulty in standardizing the potency of the
preparation it was dropped from the official drug list in 1937.
REUGION -Due to Its narcotic hallucinogen properties
It was.believed to be a gift of the gods and was used in many
religious cults. It is thought the word, "assassin" was i!)·
traduced into the English language from ,one of the Arable
cults; the word hashashen (eaters of hashish the most narcotic
part of the plant), they would commit murder.
DRUG - The modern use of Cannabis known as
Marijuana began in Texas about 60 years ago when Mexican
Laborers introduced smoldng it, (until this time it was used in
cult ceremonies only), and in 1920s was firmly established in
·many areas. In 1937 the Marijuana Tax Act was passed, which
made it illegal to possess or grow marijuana. However this did
not stop the smuggling or the use of the drug. Alcohol is a
depressant drug whereas marijuana is a halluninogen (makes
everything appear rosy (or all right).
Marijuana is a dangerous drug. Even small amounts can
damage the thought process, heighten hostility, induce temporary Joss of memory, and produce paronaia. Heavy users of
9-TIIC (the sticky resin), can cause ill effects - loss of appetite, insomnia, sexual impotence and permanent physical
deterioration; brain damage, disarranges and confuses the
nervious system.
Users may have a reduction of body temperature, inability
to coordinate body movement, reduction in glucose, desire for
sweets, appetite increases, nausea, inflammation of the mucus
membrane (dilated pupils) the eye muscles become absent
and the eyes stay in a fixed position (sometimes as long as two
weeks); also, the white of the eyes appear red. Many users
wear dark glasses to hide the red and protect their eyes from
light.
Younger adolescents than ever- boys and girls in Junior
High and grade schools are experimenting with the drug. Lawenforcement authorities have begun to acknowledge that our
jll'es4mt policies are unworkable in terms of sheer number; and
especially unfair to the young and impressionab~e first. offenders responding to peer pressure, current fashiOn or JUS!
plain curiosity. 'I n most states arrests can never be erased . .
Here are three suggested ways to think about the problem :
1 - Selling and dealing in marijuana could remain a
criminal offense but not th~ possession or use .
2 - Marijuana could be classified as a -mild sedative,
obtainable only under a doctor's prescription.
3 - It could be sold essentially as an alcohol by licensed
dealers, wi,th prices controlled by taxation; the tax could be
used in combatting the drug generally and It could also make
the cost prohibitive to the young.
How do we discourage the use of MarijuaQa if we
decriminalize it?
'
.
What lies ahead for the man.bemp association? Certainly
the relationship will continue. There can be no doubt that a
plant that has been In association with man since the beginning
of his agricultural efforts, and has served man in many ways,
and that under the search light of n;!odern chemical study has
yielded many new and interesting compounds, will continue to

992-2143
102 W. Main

Pomeroy

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Mrs. ·Ellen Couch hosted il
meeting of the Magnolia Club',
Thursday night at her home:.
By Helen Hottel
MiS!l Erna Jesse open~!&lt;! '
th e meeting . with devotions
•
using scripture from Romans
Ex·HW!band Keeps " Rights"
8
with the Lord's Prayer in·
the investigation of show Dear Helen :
My ex-husband keeps saying we 'll he remarried, but he unison . A name game· was ·
business by the Un-American
played with prizes going to .
Activities Committee evokes won ' t set a date. We split up because of finances , but now he Mrs . Gladys Cuckler,
'
the !947-1958era of suspicion, has a good job and can afford me and our son .
Georgia Watson and Mrs.
Up
until
last
week,
he
spent
his
"visiting
privileges"
long
coercion, betrayal and fear .
Margaret Rose .
F'or seaso n subscription after our son was asleep, but then I said, " No dice !" My
The next meeting will be at
information call 594-525t or " marriage-&lt;Jr-nothing" decree hasn ' t seemed to botber him the home of Mrs . Rose. Mrs.
wri te
Ohio
University much - he just comes over and plays with the boy . But he
Ella Smith will have the
Theater . :!05 •Kantner Hall , expects me to wait until he makes up his mind about a wed- program, and Burton Smith,
ding . I've already waited over a year'
Athen s, Ohio 45701.
··
Should I be irresponsible and flighty and start dating other the devotions .
Mrs
.
Couc
h
served
a salad ··
men 'I - DON'T KNOW WHAT TO DO
course to those named and
Mrs . Eth el Stewart and Mrs .
Dear Don't:
1
What's " irresponsible and flighty" about a divorcee's urge Doris Grueser .
to date other men ' If your Ex thinks he may lOse you, he might
speed up the wedding. - H.

Drexl er will have a revised
vers ion of the original play
for this production in the
Forum Theater.
The last produc tion, " Are
You Now or Have You Ever
Bee n" by Eric Bentley, will
a lso hav e it s Am eri c an
College Premiere with the
Ohio University. Theater
April 30. This timely tal e of

Mrs:

Jewelry workshop
scheduled at au ~
ATHENS - Mary Lee Hu ,
na t ionall y known me talsmith, will conduct a workshop on Wire Cons truction
Technique• in Jewelry Oct.
25, at Ohio University . The
works hop will be sponsored
by Ohio Designer Craftsmen
Sout heaster n IODCSE I.
Mary has conducted work·
shops at the World Craft
Counci l
Co nference
in
Toronlo, Univers ity
of
Wisconsin
Milwaukee,
Michigan Sl&lt;lte University ,
University of Iowa , Kent
Sl&lt;lte and Smith College,
among others . Her work has
appeared in six publications,
m ost recently in Craft
Horizons (June 1975 ). Her
work will appear in the forth coming books J e welry
Techniques by Oppi Untracht
and Textile Techniques in
Meal by Arline Fisch.
· ·At the end of the workshop,

he a part of man's economy. Experts think Marijuana rnay be
theunexploited wonder drug of the future. It would be a luxury
that we could ill afford if we allowed Cannabis to deter
scientists from learning as much as possible about this ancient
and mysterious plant.
There is ample evidence of the harmful effects of all
narcotics on the human body and mind. The medical
profession has done a first class job in grinding out facts and
providing the knowledge ; the public has been slow in using this
information.
Is this a medical care failure' NO. It is the future of our
society to do what needs to be done for their health and the
bealth of their children.

Mary
will
present
a
travelogue on her recent
travels in Taiwan, Southeast
Asia, Bhutan . Sikkim, Nepal
and Northern India, where
she collected native crafts
and jewelry .
Enrollment in the workshop will be limited to 25.
r Attendance
at
the
Tr ave log ue will not be
limited . J Previous
experience with metal is not
req uire d.
Simple
and
multiple-looping. wrapping.
weaving, and crocheting wire
will be among the techniques
l&lt;lughl.
The deadline for enrolling
is Sept. 15. Fees will be $13
I $10 for ODCSE members I;
the Travelogue
is
$2.
Overnight accommodations
are available at the Ohio
University Convocation
Center for $5 per night.
Copies of the workshop
prospectus, which includ~s
the official application form ,
may be obtained by writing
or callin g Nancy Crow,
Workshop Coordinator, 32
Second St., Athens, 45701 ;
telephone 593-8938.

OFFICE
. 12.-2 to 5 I C-LOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.). EAST COURT
a isis.
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Dear Helen :
I have a gripe : Seems like every news story these days is
filled with initials. Many times the writer doesn 't even bother
to tell us what they stand for , figuring, I guess, that everyo~
should know what "OPEC," 41 SALT," "FEC," 1 1AFTRA,"
ete., etc. means. Heck, I just barely know the meaning of
"HEW." And I still can't get used to no periods between the
letters , as if these were established words.
Please say something about the overuse of acronyms
!words made up of initialed letters) - FEELING DUMB

Scouts hold
picnic at park

SYRACUSE - Boys of Cub
Scout Pack 42, Syracuse, and
their families held a picnic'
Dear F .D.:
Thursday at the Syracuse-A journalistic rule !sometimes not followed ) is : spell tbe Park . Cubmaster is Hugh··
whole thing out at least once at the beginning of every a rticle , McPhaiL
.
i.e .: FEC 1Federal Exchange Commission ). Even so, it's darn
Attending were Mrs. Larry::;
confusing, though initials DO save precious space.
Ebersbach. David and Chris.::
Here are some new acronyms, as invented by Candice Mrs. Robert Gibbs, Robbie_·
Cutler, a clever editor for the New England Telephone Gibbs, Mrs. DOrlene Jeffers,.
Company's bulletins. Her object, I think, is overkill: (Or Eugene , Patty and J. L., Mr.::.
should I say "0K" 7 )
and Mrs . Hugh McPahu;::.
TRU ( Thirst Reduction Unit) : Water founl&lt;lin.
Corey and Scott, Mr. and:'""
U-DMS (Upward-Downward Mobility System I: Elevator. Mrs. Pete Michael, Greg,.;;
OSEC (Optional Starvation Elimination Center): Lori and Patricia, Mr. an _
Cafeteria .
Mrs. John Philson, Eric an AAM (Arbitrary Assignment Manual ): Company Sarah , Mrs. Don Roush and';'
Directory .
.
Darin, Mr . and Mrs. Austin;:,
DWRS (Digitally-powered Word Reproduction System ): Wolfe, Jerry and Amy. • Typewriter .

-

L1rge Selection
For
Back To School

A thought for the day :
British poet Robert Southwell
said, " When fortune smiles, I
smile to think how quickly
she will frown."

.heritage house
Your Thom MeAn Store
Middleport , Ohio

INGELS FURN . has slashed prices on everything you Gould want for your
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beautiful carpet and rugs in an array of textures and colors ... luxury bedd1ng 1n
twin lo king .size ... count less decorator accessories! Their famous brand names
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DALE C. WARNER

ATHI:;NS - ~'ive American
plays will he presented by the
Ohio University Th ea ter
during its 1975-76 season
announced producer , Alvin S.
Kaufman .
The first will be Tennessee
Williams' most s uccessful
play, "Ca l on a Hot Tin Roof"
which will open Oct. 24 for
seven performances in the
Forum Theater . Big Dadd y's
birthday party is the reason
for the gathering of the
famil~ on
his Southern
· .,... .on. but the real story
is Maggie 's attempts to
reg ain the love ol her
husband Buck and inherit Big
Daddy's plantation .
" The Time of Your Life" by
William Saroyan is the next
production. It opens Nov, 7 in
lhe Patio Theater for seven
performances through Nov.
15. Kindly Joe's search for
happiness and answers to the
far reaching enigmas of life.
takes him to Nick's water front saloon where hi s friend
and errand boy falls in love
with a fragile lady of the
evening.
The third play will be the
opera "Madame Butterny "
produced in conjWlclion with
the Ohio University School of
Music .
Puccini 's
and
Belaseo's opera is about a
Japanese woman
who
marries an American sa ilor .
This immortal love s tory
plays Feb. 13, 14, and 15 in
Memorial Auditorium .
Feb. 277 will be the Amnerican Co llege Premiere of
" The Line of Least Existence " by Rosalyn Drexler.

Club meets ...

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Bold OIOIJOrhons dts tnlt l tve detali1110 and tlt&lt;e ]J roth O il~
stam for'IISh cao t Lore the he a• t~ mooc ot authen t •c Cc.unt ·~ s t ~long tt s
but II olseii!'CI har&lt;Jw ood~ an[J oak Qlillfl engraved n arlrtle t:ooard "' ''" ·
somu late&lt;l wood oecorat•ve elemen ts Grouo mclu[JU f., 4 , 16 ~ 31 tr •
ole d resse r 5 1•6•41' ; rleck rnt rror )1•13·~1 aoltlOLrf! headOOit• d'
pllr5 a tu • u••ou5ty '"'" tvtl.srl t' mat t•~&gt;ss a no bO • so • ong Pnse.,ble

I·NG·ELS .FUR N·I.TU R·E

PHONE 992·2635
MIDDLEPORT

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4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Monday, Aug. 25, 1975
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'Class makes
contribution

Polly's Pointers'
U~

PULJ .VCRAMER

Paint stains
on polyester
are there to stay and can
.POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - The lirst offer no suggestions. You did
time my expensive polyester not mention the fabric or
pants suit was washed color. - POLLY.
someone threw a cloth with
DEAR POLLY - Dorothy
green outdoor paint on it into
tl,if' washer. As a result my could put pretty adhesive
pants suit has green speckles backed vtnyl paper on her
all over it. How can l white refrigerator that does
remove this oil base paint ? not match her other apShe
needs
Also , my daughter ha s pliances .
marking pen spots on one or something to smooth it out
her dresses . This is not a after pieees, eut to £it, have
water-soluble ink so please been put on. Miter corners
tell me how to remove those when poss ible . If small
bubbles appear prick with a
marks . - WENDY.
DEAR WENDY - You pin then. and smooth over
certainly have two difficult with the fin gers . Surfaces
problems. With today's many should fir st be dean and dry .
new fabrics I always suggest It will take two to three hours
that If a similar piece of to cover a refrigerator .
Another way is to paint it .
fabric is available (can be cut
off a seaml one should first Get a spray can of epoxy
try anything to be used for fini s h paint for appliances
spot removal on the sample to and follow the directions very
see how the color and fabric carefully , Mask any areas
are affected. For hard paint NOT to be painted. If done
spots as you have lhe properly such a job can resul t
American
Institute
of in what looks lik e an original
Laundering suggests soaking finish but it does tie up the
with turpentine, roll up appliance fo r from 24-48
garment to let paint soften hours while the paint really
and then scrape off paint with dries . My husband did ours so
a dull knife. Finish the job now I have a harvest gold
with another application of refri gerator that looks like
turpentine. Another authority new . The cost of doing it
suggests going a bit further either of these ways is
by rubbing with bar soap minimal, if you do the work
after rinsing out the tur- yourself. - KAREN.
DEAR POLLY - As I read
pentine. Rinse again and then
launder with an enzyme the paper and see things I
detergent. If you still have want to clip and save or send
the green paint can a solvent to someone I mark them with
may he . usggested on its a colored pen . After the rest
of the family have read the
label.
paper I go back and at a
The permanent marking pen dalns on your glance can spot the articles
little girl's dress are anotner that interested me. Before
matter. I really think they starting this I would forget
and sometimes have to go
through the entire paper
giving every page close
We can help
scrutiny so this really saves
time and I never miss any
wanted piece . - PEGGY.

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P. J. PAULEY

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307 Spring Ave., Pomeroy

PH. 992-2318

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a«f• NATIONWIDE

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Njj lllflw•de U u1u11 1n1ur1~e• co muny
Nellonwlde ll le I!'IU11nce Compen r

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Home Olfln : ColumOul, Oll•o

iuo

GRANDE - School
super vis or s
f r om
Southeastern Ohio held their
annual summer meeting Aug ,
18 at , Rio Grande College.
Outgoing president, Robert
Reed , Superintendent of

~~~~~~~~~~~~W~a~s~h~in~g~t~on~C~o~un~ty~Sc~h~o~o~ls~,-.

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A Public Service or This Newspaper &amp; The Adve rtising COUI'1Cil

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A $25 contribution to the
Senior Ci tiz;ens Fund was
made by the Busy Bee Class
of lh e Middleport First
Baptist Church meeting
Thursday night at the church.
The c lass a ls o made
arrangements to remember
Mrs . Dana Hamm al Arcadia
Nurs ing Home with a gift on
her birthday. Read at the
m ee ting was -a letter of
thanks from Mrs. EJecta
Souders for remembrances
,during her recent illness.
.,!frs. Rosemary Lyons
presided at the meeting
which opened with the class
song. Mrs. Dora Pullins gave
devotions using " Discovery"
as her meditation topic.
The birthdays this month of

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help?
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Calendar

Mr s. rva TW'ner, Mrs. F'ern
Bradbury , Mr s . Floren c e
Hannay, Mrs . Irene Cross,
Mrs . Agne s White, Mr s.
Isa belle Winebrer1ner and
Mrs . Dana Hamm were
noted. A bakeless bake sale
was held with $22.50 being
added to the treasury .
Mrs .
Beulah
White
presented the program using
an old -fa shioned spelling
bee. jokes, and poems by
Helen Steiner Rice. Miss
Dorothy Reyno lds san g an
original song , " Birthday in
the Sky ." Hos tesses were
Mr s. Roma Hawkins, Miss
Freddie Houdashelt , Mrs .
Jessie Houdashelt and Mrs.
Nora Jordan, . assis ted by
. Mrs . Eloise Wilson.

Auxiliary approves
hospital purchases
Purchase of a s urge ry cart
and a sewing machine for
Veteran s Memorial Hospital
was approved when the
Women's Auxiliary met
recently at the home of Mrs.
Charles Karr .
Mrs . Janice
Daniels
presided at the meeting
which was preceded by a
potluck
dinner
and
homemade ice cream served
by the hostess . It was noted
that draperies had been
purchased for the cafeteria
and the x-ray room at the
hospitaL A thank-yo u note
was read from Connie
Grueser for a graduation gift.
The present officers were
re-elected for another year.
An invitation was extended
from Dr . R . R. Pickens for
the September meeting to be
held at his home.
Seventeen members attended the meeting with

Area supervisors
hold annual meet

when.you can '1!
II you' re si tK or disabled
and can 't wo rk, Nationwide
can help you lo.eep your
lamlly and home together.
Call an &amp;Qen\ and see.

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~---·s-o~~i~~~~
- Mrs. Arnold Hupp surprised ....

presided.
The group heard presen~&lt;!lions from Dr. Charlotte
Carver, chairperson of the
Division of Education at Rio
Grande College, who !&lt;liked
on the up-grading of standards and certification for
teacher training at the
college, and Arthur Shumate,
Superintendent of Ross
County Schools, who gave a
resume of recent slate
legis lation as it affects
education. Dr. James Lantz
and Mrs. Tolson from the
Ohio State Department of
Education presented an
overview of the new state
standards for Ohio Schools.
New officers for the coming
year are Ruth Mangus,
president; Don Jenkins, vice
president; Kay Kriebel,
secretary; Grella Suttle,
treasurer; and Pat Schultz,
district representative.
Area supervisors attending
were Don Jenkins and Jim
Mains, Ironton City; Pat
Schultz, Lawrence County;
Marge Evans, Pickaway
Coun ly ; Kay Kriebel · and
Buddy
Ciccantel l ,
Washington County; Bob
Crotty and Mary Cottle, Pike
County;
Grella Suttle,
Russell Moore, and M;.ry
Bacon , Meigs cou nty ;
Margaret Beard, Perry
County;
Iva
Snyder,
Nelsonville'JVS; and
Everette Park and Ruth
Mangus, Ross County.
The next meeting will be
Oct. 20 at Rio Grande College .
Topic will he " Needs Assessment (State Department) . All
area school s upervisors are
cordially invi ted.

guests including Kathy Galo,
Dr . R. R. Pickens, Mr s. Reva
Beach , Charles Karr , John
Fry and Harold Masser.

Clint Birch
honors 81st
PORTLAND - Clint Birch
celebrated his 81st birthday
Aug . 17 with a dinner at his
home .
Born on Aug . 20, 1894, he is
a veteran of World War I and
a life member of the
American Legion and the
Disabled American Veterans.
Attending the celebration
were his children, Mr , and
Mrs . Joe Lipps, Gale and
Terry. Vincent: Mr . and Mrs.
Thomas Birch. Waterford:
Mr . and Mrs. Loyd Lipps,
Chuck and Toni, Little
Hocking: and Leota Birch,
Portland.
Others attending were Mr .
and Mrs . Frank Wallace ,
Racine: Mrs. Ada Van Meter,
Portland: . Mrs. Pamela
Enlow, Newport; and Miss
Angela Navarini, Clarksburg, W. Va .

Dinner party
Mrs. Beulah . While entertained recently with a
dinner party in celebration of
the 80th birthday of her
sister, Mrs. Florence Hannay.
Gifts and cards were
presented to her by Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas Darst and sons,
Craig, Jeffrey Darst, Kitty
Metzger , Mr . and Mrs .
Charles White , Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Well and Mrs. Pearl
Hoffman. Mrs. Hannay also
received a flower from the
deacons of the Middleport
First Baptist Churc h.

MONDAY
OH-KAN
COIN
Club
regular business meeting , in
the social rooms of Colwnbus
and Southern Ohio Electric
Co. building , M_ill St ., Middl e por t. Social -hour and
trading session precedes 8
p.m . business meeting when
out-af-lown cDin dealers will
be present to buy, sell or
trade coll ec tor items. Coin
auction to be he ld , refreshments se rved. Area residents
invited.
TUESDAY
MEIGS Athletic Boosters,
7:30p .m . at the high sc hool.

AMERICAN
Legion
1\uxil iary , Drew We bs te r
Pos t 39, 7:30p.m . at the haiL
Conve ntion reports will be
heard.
CORVE'ITE CLUB meeting
a t the home of Yvonne Scally,
870 Ash St., Middleport. All
Corvette owners are urged to
atte nd as electio ns will be
held and plans for future
activities will be made .
THE MASON
County
Ed ucation Association of
Cla ssroom Teachers will
provide a free luncheon for
all Mason County classroom
teac he rs at the Point
Pleasant Junior High School
cafeteria :&lt;
OHIO ETA PHI ·chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 6:30
p.m . Royal Oak Park, gel·
HOME FROM HOSPITAL
acquainted picnic .
Kalhern
Smith,
PAST
MATRONS,
hospitalized
for
many
weeks
Pomeroy Chapter 186, O.E.S.,
7:30p.m. at the home of Mrs. in Columbus, is now at the
home of her paren ts, Mr . and
Hartwell Curd.
Mrs. Albert Roush.
WEDNESDAY
· POMEROY Lions Club
annual
fam ily
picnic,
Pomeroy Golf Course, 6 p.m .
HERE FOR VISIT
All Lions and their families
Mr.
and Mrs. Leonard Van
invited. Take a covered dish .
WILDWOOD Garden Club, Meter Sr ., Ebenezer St. ,
8 p.m., al the home of Mrs. Pomeroy, had as their guests
Erma Roush. Members are to recently Miss Pamela Croft,
l&lt;lke a flower specimen.
Mrs . Kay Bailes and
children , Scott , Todd and
THURSDAY
Lori, New Jersey, and a
AMERICAN
Legion
niece , Mrs. Nancy Pickerell
Auxiliary,
Feeney-Bennett
an d children, !lilly, Kim,
Post 128, 7:30p.m. with girls
Nanette
and
Jennifer,
state delegates and •their
Chillicothe, While here the
parents invited guests.
ninth birthday of Nanette
Delegates to present their
Pickerell was celebrated .
reports. 6:30 p.m . dinner to
Part of their visit was spent
precede the meetin~.
at the Van Meter's Ohio River
AMERICAN
Legion
camp site, Sandy Acres .
Auxiliary Juniors, Drew
Webster Post 39, 7 p.m. at the
legion hall.

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FIRST CHILD BORN
Mr. and Mrs. William P .
Rizer. Syracuse, annoWtce
the birth of their first child, a
7 lb., 7 oz. daughter named
Kristy Lynn born Friday,
Aug . 22 at Pleasant Valley
HospitaL Maternal grand. parents are· Rev. and Mrs .
Milton Bartram of Van, W.
Va . ( formerly of New
Haven ),
and
paternal
. grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. William E. Rizer of
Minersville; great grand·
mothers are Zelma Rawley,
Minersville; Clara Lavender,
Syl-acuse and Mrs. Bessie
Criag. Tecumseh,' Mich .

lhe··c ood
Neighbot.
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Lois, Charlie and Steven
Cline, Tammy, Kenn Y,·
Robbie, Jimmy, Patty, Clara
Robinson, Johnny Davl1,
Gary and Jo Ann Wilford,
Tony Pierce, Max Jr., Gloria,
Cottrill,
Diana
Bruce
Ridgway, Roger and Edith
Manuel, Bill , Nan Davis,
Gerri Rought, Sid, Charles
Manuel, Danny Roush, La.i-ry
Hupp , Arnold Hupp, Tirit
Wolfe , Ruby , Don, Brian,
Chris Hupp, Jane Hill, DOlly
Wolfe, Dolly Hill, Raymond
and Kay Rowe, Don, Joyce,
Do nita. Robin Manuel ,
Robert Fife, George Parsons,
Wayn e and Betty Wilson ,
Gladys Hutton, Margaret ,
Craig Cot trill , Tom Manuel,
Ronn ie Wagner , Dave and
Hope Wolfe, Mel Waldnig,
Edward Hupp and the
honored guest.
Sending gifts were Mr . and
Mrs. Kenneth Bass, Mr . and
Mrs. Jack Hoffner, Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest Bush, Mr. and
Mrs. Clarence Hupp.

Hours were from 9 p.m . till 2
a .m . The doOr prize went to
Mrs. Pauline Wolfe which
was a little red pig . Attending
were : Charl es, Nancy, Tina
and Miki Hupp of Columbus ;
Cindy. Sharon. David Ed·
ward Hupp, Roberta , Dana
Lewis, Katie Bass, Charlotte
Lewis of Clifton, W. Va . :
Russell and Bernice Roush ,
Herbert and Mary Roush ,
Early Roush . Eileen Buck ,
Grace Knighting. Terry, Jim
Km ghlin g, Roc ky Hupp ,
Dale, Ruth, Jim , Steve , Ca thy
Riffle, Pauline and Chri s
Wulfe. Me lvin Barnell Roush ,
Gary , Peggy, Jamie Wolfe,
Patsv and Wall Laudermill,
Red · and Betty Ste wart ,
Mariann Hendric ks, Craig
Fife , Ra y and Evely n Van
Meter, Danny and Ri chard
Slone, Sheryl Walters , Mo_nk,
Mildred, Melinda, Alvin
Barnell. Deb , Goldie. Eric,
Pam, Sharon Milliron, Dorsa
and Bessie Parsons, Stan
Davis, Joy Neig ler , C'harl es,

ADULT MEAL

FOR KIDSFUNMEALTM

Big Shef ·
Reg. Fr cncl1 Fncs.
Turn ove r &amp;

Fu n Tray,
Fu nb u rg~r · .

Reg. Fr e1.1c h Fries,
Surprise Prize,
Reg. Soil Drink &amp;

l &lt;uge So tl Drmk

a Sweel Treat

PT. PLEASANT

2325 Jack &gt;'bn Ave.

GALLIPOLIS
~SOl

Eastern Ave . .

BACK HOME
Mr. and Mrs . Hugh McPhail and children, Corey.
Scott and Heather, have
returned from a two week
vacat ion at Ocean City, Md .
They also visited Mrs. R. S.
Corson, Morgantown , W. Va .,
and Mrs. Hugh McPhail,
Grafton.

BIRT!i:DA YS CELEBRATED - Christopher Lee
Gheen and Frederick Allen Gheen, sons of Mr. and Mrs.
Frederick Gheen, Rt. 2, Belmont, celebrated their birthdays recently with a party at their home. Christopher was
one-year~ld July 25, and Frederick was two on May 25
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Sanford Gheen, Belmoni
and Mr. and Mrs. Carl Hudson, Bellaire. Greatgrandparents are Mrs. Sarah McCloud, Mr. and Mrs.
John Sawyer, Belmont, and Mr. and Mrs. Carl 0 . GllE'en of
Racine. Frede~ick Gheen is employed with Ohio River ,
Collieries of Lafferty.

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By Mrs. Herbert Roush
An outstanding event took ·
place al the home of Mr . and
Mrs. t\rnold Hupp , Racine .
Ohio Rl. 2 recently , Mr s.
Hupp was pleasantly surprised by their so n, Edward ,
who held a party in the barn
on the Hupp !arm which wa s
decorated with pink, blue and
red crepe paper stream e rs
with " Happ y Birthd ay ,
Mom " on the posts . Edward
was assisted in decora ting by
the employes who work on the
farm.
" The Red Stewart Band "
rw-ni shed music throughout
the evening with their dim
li ghts scattered throughout
the barn, which gave a Dance
Hall effect. Edward and his
heipers made tables set all
over the barn decorated with
white table covers. Refres hments of potato chips, pop,
punch, cake were served
throughout the evening.
Mrs. Hupp received many
lovely gills includin g three
ca kes, one decorated in red
and white icing with "Happy
Birthday Mom ," one given
her by the employes of the
farm decorated with four
green man goes on each
corner, red tomato in the
middle with " Happy Birth·
day ."
One hundred and thirteen
guesL' attended the party.

Clean energy.for tomorrow
••• gas from coal.
·:"'here is enough coal in the ground 10
last for centuries. But. with our •t rivinc

plant is st ill- fur down the road. and 'It
will be expensive. But. w ith the dcvel- ,
opmc nt o f coal gasification, a wh@)c
nc·w industry will be born. 'with job• for
thousands o f people . And this · new
:-.nl1rcc i'Pr t!as will he lp _ the .flation
1\.:dw.:c it~ gro\ving dependence on
n,r~.· i~n :-. u ppl i~:s of energy .
Coal gasi fication will mean mor..:l'lh.'rgy fnr tomorrow. And even with
hig.h•.: r 1.:os1~ . gas will still he the most
~.·~..:onomk·aJ fuel for your home .

for a cleaner environment. much of ~

Play it o8fe and· iure
It may be time to
have yo~r preeent

policy updated .
'

let's .rcll~

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s-n

can't be used.
Columbia Gas is working on prol:esscs that will convert thi s (Oal into
clean-burning gas . 1n cooperatio n with
the government. and indcpendcmly.
Columhia is·movin g ahcaJ .in .coa l !!~ls i­
·fication fCSC~IfCh . Expc rirn c ntal rlants

urc in. operation , and n11.1k ing progress.
The first commerCial coa l gasification

0 U Theater announces Helen Help
upcoming season 's plays Us•••
MAN AND MARIJUANA; fHEGOOD,BAD,ANDUGLY
By Mn. Eva Walker, Chester Garden Clnb
Thousands of years before it became the super star of the
drug culture, Cannabis was cultivated for fibers food and
medicine. However, strange things happen to planls after a
long and intimate association with man . They travel around
the wocld, grow In unusual and often inhospitable soils and
envlrorunents. They often hybridize or escape cultivation and
become weeds. The biological evolution of tbe cultivated plant
and the evolution of its uses cannot be divorced from the study
of natural forms that make its new and perhaps unnatural ro'•
What is Cannabis' A genus of the mulberry plant fan.uy ,
"Indian Hemp." Recent studies indicate several species. The
Cannabis plant grows from 3 ft . to 6 ft. tall depending on
cultivation. It is a herbaceous annual, a leafy plant with tittle
oc no woody parts, which grow for a season, dies and requires
·both male and female to reproduce itself.
The male plants display a yellow-green flower which on
matlD'Ity, shed pollen profusely. The female flowers are inconspicuously hidden among small leaves at the end of the
branches. The flowers emit a characteristic odor. The mature
stems are fluted, or four-cornered, often with nodes at intervals of four to 20 inches and many attain a thickness of two
inches. The stems are bare of foliage except a foot or two from
the top. Each leaf has a n odd number of leaflete with notched
edges. The resinous alkaloids from the flowering tops are
collected on tiny hairs at the base of the female flower . This is
the portion that is collected and pressed into cakes and sold as
hashish, (9-TiiC, themostnarcoticpartoftheplant) .
Cannabis has been cultivated for five principal purposes hempen fibers, oils, seeds, narcotic properties, and
therapeutic agent in folk lore, and modem pharTIUicnpoeians .
HEMP FIBERS -Cannabis is the oldest cultivated source
of fiber and the first to spread so widely. Hemp threads have
been found in excavation sites in China, Turkey, Taiwan and
Egypt, dating back to the 20th century b.c., and some before
that.Hemp garmentfound in Egyptian tombs resemble that of
our linens today.
Cannabis arrived in Europe from the North. It became a
major cultivated crop during the · Christian era. Henry VOl
required farmers to plant hemp and during the Elizabethan
times there was such a demand for the fiber for rope and
clothing that it was introduced in the New World, and exported
to England by the Colonies. After the Revolutionary war the
plant became quite important to the U.S. and huge plantations
in Kentucky thrived until the Civil War, when the rising labor
costs killed the industry. In 1870s, there was little hemp grown
commercially in the U.S., but Cannabis seeds spread from the
unkept plantations and became weeds, mainly in the NorthCentral, Middle Atlantic and New England States.
Russia, Spain, Italy and Poland still cultivate hemp for its
fiber and food.
FQOJ){)ILS - The mature seeds are devoid of intoxicating principal and are rich in fat . It is eaten in Eastern
Europe, Ukrane and Manchuria. In the U. S. it is used in bird
and poultry feeds ; as a substitute for linseed oil in paint and
varnishes; soap making, and as a lubricant. The seeds contain
19 to 35 percent of a drying oil, a greenish-yellow fluid used for
emulsions in pharTIUicy.
MEDICINE - Cannabis dates back to the earliest
cultivation of the plant. It was used as a cure aU for various
ailments; malaria, beriberi, constipation, rheumatic pain,
abs'ent mindedness, female disorders, deaden pain during
surgery and childbirth.
Jn spite of Cannabis plants long role in medival
and folk lore, modern Europe and America medical
ma not become seriously interested until the 19th century.
Because of the difficulty in standardizing the potency of the
preparation it was dropped from the official drug list in 1937.
REUGION -Due to Its narcotic hallucinogen properties
It was.believed to be a gift of the gods and was used in many
religious cults. It is thought the word, "assassin" was i!)·
traduced into the English language from ,one of the Arable
cults; the word hashashen (eaters of hashish the most narcotic
part of the plant), they would commit murder.
DRUG - The modern use of Cannabis known as
Marijuana began in Texas about 60 years ago when Mexican
Laborers introduced smoldng it, (until this time it was used in
cult ceremonies only), and in 1920s was firmly established in
·many areas. In 1937 the Marijuana Tax Act was passed, which
made it illegal to possess or grow marijuana. However this did
not stop the smuggling or the use of the drug. Alcohol is a
depressant drug whereas marijuana is a halluninogen (makes
everything appear rosy (or all right).
Marijuana is a dangerous drug. Even small amounts can
damage the thought process, heighten hostility, induce temporary Joss of memory, and produce paronaia. Heavy users of
9-TIIC (the sticky resin), can cause ill effects - loss of appetite, insomnia, sexual impotence and permanent physical
deterioration; brain damage, disarranges and confuses the
nervious system.
Users may have a reduction of body temperature, inability
to coordinate body movement, reduction in glucose, desire for
sweets, appetite increases, nausea, inflammation of the mucus
membrane (dilated pupils) the eye muscles become absent
and the eyes stay in a fixed position (sometimes as long as two
weeks); also, the white of the eyes appear red. Many users
wear dark glasses to hide the red and protect their eyes from
light.
Younger adolescents than ever- boys and girls in Junior
High and grade schools are experimenting with the drug. Lawenforcement authorities have begun to acknowledge that our
jll'es4mt policies are unworkable in terms of sheer number; and
especially unfair to the young and impressionab~e first. offenders responding to peer pressure, current fashiOn or JUS!
plain curiosity. 'I n most states arrests can never be erased . .
Here are three suggested ways to think about the problem :
1 - Selling and dealing in marijuana could remain a
criminal offense but not th~ possession or use .
2 - Marijuana could be classified as a -mild sedative,
obtainable only under a doctor's prescription.
3 - It could be sold essentially as an alcohol by licensed
dealers, wi,th prices controlled by taxation; the tax could be
used in combatting the drug generally and It could also make
the cost prohibitive to the young.
How do we discourage the use of MarijuaQa if we
decriminalize it?
'
.
What lies ahead for the man.bemp association? Certainly
the relationship will continue. There can be no doubt that a
plant that has been In association with man since the beginning
of his agricultural efforts, and has served man in many ways,
and that under the search light of n;!odern chemical study has
yielded many new and interesting compounds, will continue to

992-2143
102 W. Main

Pomeroy

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MBIA GAS ·;, tlumg
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sunt&lt;'thin~ ahu 1'!1&lt;'1'~1'
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Mrs. ·Ellen Couch hosted il
meeting of the Magnolia Club',
Thursday night at her home:.
By Helen Hottel
MiS!l Erna Jesse open~!&lt;! '
th e meeting . with devotions
•
using scripture from Romans
Ex·HW!band Keeps " Rights"
8
with the Lord's Prayer in·
the investigation of show Dear Helen :
My ex-husband keeps saying we 'll he remarried, but he unison . A name game· was ·
business by the Un-American
played with prizes going to .
Activities Committee evokes won ' t set a date. We split up because of finances , but now he Mrs . Gladys Cuckler,
'
the !947-1958era of suspicion, has a good job and can afford me and our son .
Georgia Watson and Mrs.
Up
until
last
week,
he
spent
his
"visiting
privileges"
long
coercion, betrayal and fear .
Margaret Rose .
F'or seaso n subscription after our son was asleep, but then I said, " No dice !" My
The next meeting will be at
information call 594-525t or " marriage-&lt;Jr-nothing" decree hasn ' t seemed to botber him the home of Mrs . Rose. Mrs.
wri te
Ohio
University much - he just comes over and plays with the boy . But he
Ella Smith will have the
Theater . :!05 •Kantner Hall , expects me to wait until he makes up his mind about a wed- program, and Burton Smith,
ding . I've already waited over a year'
Athen s, Ohio 45701.
··
Should I be irresponsible and flighty and start dating other the devotions .
Mrs
.
Couc
h
served
a salad ··
men 'I - DON'T KNOW WHAT TO DO
course to those named and
Mrs . Eth el Stewart and Mrs .
Dear Don't:
1
What's " irresponsible and flighty" about a divorcee's urge Doris Grueser .
to date other men ' If your Ex thinks he may lOse you, he might
speed up the wedding. - H.

Drexl er will have a revised
vers ion of the original play
for this production in the
Forum Theater.
The last produc tion, " Are
You Now or Have You Ever
Bee n" by Eric Bentley, will
a lso hav e it s Am eri c an
College Premiere with the
Ohio University. Theater
April 30. This timely tal e of

Mrs:

Jewelry workshop
scheduled at au ~
ATHENS - Mary Lee Hu ,
na t ionall y known me talsmith, will conduct a workshop on Wire Cons truction
Technique• in Jewelry Oct.
25, at Ohio University . The
works hop will be sponsored
by Ohio Designer Craftsmen
Sout heaster n IODCSE I.
Mary has conducted work·
shops at the World Craft
Counci l
Co nference
in
Toronlo, Univers ity
of
Wisconsin
Milwaukee,
Michigan Sl&lt;lte University ,
University of Iowa , Kent
Sl&lt;lte and Smith College,
among others . Her work has
appeared in six publications,
m ost recently in Craft
Horizons (June 1975 ). Her
work will appear in the forth coming books J e welry
Techniques by Oppi Untracht
and Textile Techniques in
Meal by Arline Fisch.
· ·At the end of the workshop,

he a part of man's economy. Experts think Marijuana rnay be
theunexploited wonder drug of the future. It would be a luxury
that we could ill afford if we allowed Cannabis to deter
scientists from learning as much as possible about this ancient
and mysterious plant.
There is ample evidence of the harmful effects of all
narcotics on the human body and mind. The medical
profession has done a first class job in grinding out facts and
providing the knowledge ; the public has been slow in using this
information.
Is this a medical care failure' NO. It is the future of our
society to do what needs to be done for their health and the
bealth of their children.

Mary
will
present
a
travelogue on her recent
travels in Taiwan, Southeast
Asia, Bhutan . Sikkim, Nepal
and Northern India, where
she collected native crafts
and jewelry .
Enrollment in the workshop will be limited to 25.
r Attendance
at
the
Tr ave log ue will not be
limited . J Previous
experience with metal is not
req uire d.
Simple
and
multiple-looping. wrapping.
weaving, and crocheting wire
will be among the techniques
l&lt;lughl.
The deadline for enrolling
is Sept. 15. Fees will be $13
I $10 for ODCSE members I;
the Travelogue
is
$2.
Overnight accommodations
are available at the Ohio
University Convocation
Center for $5 per night.
Copies of the workshop
prospectus, which includ~s
the official application form ,
may be obtained by writing
or callin g Nancy Crow,
Workshop Coordinator, 32
Second St., Athens, 45701 ;
telephone 593-8938.

OFFICE
. 12.-2 to 5 I C-LOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.). EAST COURT
a isis.
'.

++-+
Dear Helen :
I have a gripe : Seems like every news story these days is
filled with initials. Many times the writer doesn 't even bother
to tell us what they stand for , figuring, I guess, that everyo~
should know what "OPEC," 41 SALT," "FEC," 1 1AFTRA,"
ete., etc. means. Heck, I just barely know the meaning of
"HEW." And I still can't get used to no periods between the
letters , as if these were established words.
Please say something about the overuse of acronyms
!words made up of initialed letters) - FEELING DUMB

Scouts hold
picnic at park

SYRACUSE - Boys of Cub
Scout Pack 42, Syracuse, and
their families held a picnic'
Dear F .D.:
Thursday at the Syracuse-A journalistic rule !sometimes not followed ) is : spell tbe Park . Cubmaster is Hugh··
whole thing out at least once at the beginning of every a rticle , McPhaiL
.
i.e .: FEC 1Federal Exchange Commission ). Even so, it's darn
Attending were Mrs. Larry::;
confusing, though initials DO save precious space.
Ebersbach. David and Chris.::
Here are some new acronyms, as invented by Candice Mrs. Robert Gibbs, Robbie_·
Cutler, a clever editor for the New England Telephone Gibbs, Mrs. DOrlene Jeffers,.
Company's bulletins. Her object, I think, is overkill: (Or Eugene , Patty and J. L., Mr.::.
should I say "0K" 7 )
and Mrs . Hugh McPahu;::.
TRU ( Thirst Reduction Unit) : Water founl&lt;lin.
Corey and Scott, Mr. and:'""
U-DMS (Upward-Downward Mobility System I: Elevator. Mrs. Pete Michael, Greg,.;;
OSEC (Optional Starvation Elimination Center): Lori and Patricia, Mr. an _
Cafeteria .
Mrs. John Philson, Eric an AAM (Arbitrary Assignment Manual ): Company Sarah , Mrs. Don Roush and';'
Directory .
.
Darin, Mr . and Mrs. Austin;:,
DWRS (Digitally-powered Word Reproduction System ): Wolfe, Jerry and Amy. • Typewriter .

-

L1rge Selection
For
Back To School

A thought for the day :
British poet Robert Southwell
said, " When fortune smiles, I
smile to think how quickly
she will frown."

.heritage house
Your Thom MeAn Store
Middleport , Ohio

INGELS FURN . has slashed prices on everything you Gould want for your
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DALE C. WARNER

ATHI:;NS - ~'ive American
plays will he presented by the
Ohio University Th ea ter
during its 1975-76 season
announced producer , Alvin S.
Kaufman .
The first will be Tennessee
Williams' most s uccessful
play, "Ca l on a Hot Tin Roof"
which will open Oct. 24 for
seven performances in the
Forum Theater . Big Dadd y's
birthday party is the reason
for the gathering of the
famil~ on
his Southern
· .,... .on. but the real story
is Maggie 's attempts to
reg ain the love ol her
husband Buck and inherit Big
Daddy's plantation .
" The Time of Your Life" by
William Saroyan is the next
production. It opens Nov, 7 in
lhe Patio Theater for seven
performances through Nov.
15. Kindly Joe's search for
happiness and answers to the
far reaching enigmas of life.
takes him to Nick's water front saloon where hi s friend
and errand boy falls in love
with a fragile lady of the
evening.
The third play will be the
opera "Madame Butterny "
produced in conjWlclion with
the Ohio University School of
Music .
Puccini 's
and
Belaseo's opera is about a
Japanese woman
who
marries an American sa ilor .
This immortal love s tory
plays Feb. 13, 14, and 15 in
Memorial Auditorium .
Feb. 277 will be the Amnerican Co llege Premiere of
" The Line of Least Existence " by Rosalyn Drexler.

Club meets ...

"

•

.

.
Bold OIOIJOrhons dts tnlt l tve detali1110 and tlt&lt;e ]J roth O il~
stam for'IISh cao t Lore the he a• t~ mooc ot authen t •c Cc.unt ·~ s t ~long tt s
but II olseii!'CI har&lt;Jw ood~ an[J oak Qlillfl engraved n arlrtle t:ooard "' ''" ·
somu late&lt;l wood oecorat•ve elemen ts Grouo mclu[JU f., 4 , 16 ~ 31 tr •
ole d resse r 5 1•6•41' ; rleck rnt rror )1•13·~1 aoltlOLrf! headOOit• d'
pllr5 a tu • u••ou5ty '"'" tvtl.srl t' mat t•~&gt;ss a no bO • so • ong Pnse.,ble

I·NG·ELS .FUR N·I.TU R·E

PHONE 992·2635
MIDDLEPORT

�0

~-The Dally

Sentinel, Moddleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Monday, Au~ ,., 197''

: ORDINANCE NO 10 31 7S
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S ECTION I Tha t Cot u 1 bW
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Com pany 1ts successors dn d
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addd on to the c harq es set
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c'l nd
forth m Sect1o n I '1bove the n
De perate l y n eed homes
&lt;&gt; pee I1 C&lt;li1 0 n s .1 r1d 1n~ tr uct1o n .,
Com pany will eac h rr o n th
Co nta ct
Me tgs
County
lor b1ddf'r'&gt; w lh '111 fl(' CCS S lf).
app ly the foll ow1nq fu e l .:~d
H u m ane Soc rety Pho ne 997.
1 11 n1 f' rs
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f&gt;(J
1 us tm e nl to the tota l a-.eragc
S427 o r 949 4916 949 4917 or
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Milll ng
Th e energy charge .1p
p t cable to a ll kdowalt ho urs Actdr(• so; nnx I ( I es ter 1 t c
of e n ergy &lt;:o n sum ed sha ll be nqht s r eserved o rf.'!i" CT 'lny
mc r ease d or d ecreased DOll e or 111 bq.J s
l rds wil l be o pcncct i\ug
6
per KW H per each l ull one
tenth cen t ( 1c ) 1ncrease or cl I p 11
aec rease above o r be tow fort y
H I ) IR
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one cents 1 41 c l 1n the averag e
cos t per mdl1on I 1 GOO OOOt
BTU of fu el co n sumed at th e
Com pan y s
gcn e r at1ng
s tat •on s dur 1n g t h e most
WILLIAMSPORT ,
Pa
recent month preced ng the
(UP!)
Lakewood,
N
J
b I ling date lor wh1c h fu el
NOTICE FOR SERVICE
cos ts havl"' been d e term .n ed
BY PUBLICATION
potcher
Bobby
Del
Conte
saod
SECTION J
Payment fo r
the
se rvtce
t urn Shed TO He r ma n Gt ll llan Gla dys he " got a little shook up "
he r eunde r Sh a ll b e- -nade Cozart Cha l mer G tltTi an and after he gave up a forst-mrung
mon thly n accordance w th the unknown h e 1r s dev sees
homer to Tampa, Fla 's
b•lls rendered th ereto r by the and n ext o f k1n of wes l ey G
Co rnpany at The end of ea c h G ill Ja n al l of whose pla ces of Rockoe Crum on Saturday's
pe r1od each paym en t Ia be res dence are unknown and
due w thtn I S day s of the c annot
w1th
re a sonab l e Uttle League totie game
subm ISS to n of the b1 ll t he ref or
dil1ge nce be asce rtam ed
But Del Conte settled down,
ove rdue payme n ts to bear
You arc he reby not1f red thar
his
teammates scored four
mterest at the rat e o f 6 p er ce nt you
h a-.e
been
na med
per annum unt I pad Should def en dant s n a l egal aclton nons on the second lnnong, and
th e Munt ct pal ty defau t l
n e n t tt! ed Mr l dred G1l l tlan
four (4 ) successtve paym ent s Admm s tr atr x of th e Es ta te Lakewood won the decoding
the Com pany m ay at a ny t 1m e of
game of the Uttle League
W es l ey
G
Gtlt1lan
d1scon t mue serv1ce hereu nd er d eceased
Pia nl tfl
-.s
Champlooslnp Seroes, 4-3
wtl ho ut noll ce so lon g as any Law ren ce G titia n
e t al
defa u lt
extsls
provrded
In fact , the homer was the
De f endants Thrs act.o n has
howev er tha t no c har ge shall bee n asstgned Case No 21 322
be made bY the Company for and 1S p end 1ng tn the Court of only hit Del Conte yoe lded on
sen1 tc e hereunder durtng any Common
He went the
Plea s
Pr oba t e the game
per1od m wh1ch ser-.r ce rs so D VIS IOn
Of MetgS Cou nty
distance, strikong out four
dtsco ntmue d In t he eve n t of Pom e r o y Ohto 45769
su ch default th e Company
T h e obtect ol th e compla 1nt and walkmg four
upon wr1tten not1Ce to th e 1s tor a uthor ty to sell th e real
Nme Lakewood batters
MuniC tpa ltly may term nat e es tat e of the decedent to pay
thts agreement
went to the plate m the second
the debts and c ost s of ad
SECTION 4 The Comp a ny m n s ter1n g h 1S es tate wh 1Ch
agrees dur 1ng the term he r eof rea l esta t e ts descr rbed a s ummg when they got three of
to 1nstall add11lonal s tre et follows
theor siX hits, off Tampa lefty
ltghts of the type and s tze
Twenty four (2 4) acres off Vance Lovelace A basess peclfted
above
when the east en d of the followmg
autho r 1zed to
do so by real esta t e
to wtl
Forty loaded mfleld songle by
resotut1on of the Council
acres of land out of the w es t George Starr got the wonners
Provtded how eve r that t he half o f Lot No 1212 tn Sec t ton
new street l1gh ts shall be 2 Taw nshtp 2 and Range 12 tn theor flrst run, a wild potch
located W1thm 750 feet of a th e Ohto Company s Purcha se
d t slrlbUI I on ct r cull of th e tn Letart Townsh 1p Met gs accounted for the second, the
Com pany
and
prov1ded Cou n ty Oh10 satd 40 acre lot thord came home on Jay
further that no add 1t 1ona t betng m the nor th part of the
Teotlebaum's mfoeld out and
tncandescent st r eet l1ght s
west half of the 160 ac re lot
s halt be ~nsta ll ed
above menttone d a nd be 1ng the fourth on shortstop Cecol
SECTION 5 The m1n mum the same properly conveyed
Coley's error
number of s tr eet lights shall by Nancy Ptekens et at
to
be not less than th e sum of the Jose ph Martm Ptckens by
Two bases on balls, one
total nu mber spec ~f 1ed above deed dated March 24 1937 and
mtentional,
proVIded Tampa
and whene-.er
add1t1onal recorded tn Book 140 at Page
l1 ghts are 1nstalled
t h e 591 of the Deed R et:ords ot woth a thord onnmg nm John
m 1n 1mum number of l1ghts Me1gs County Oh10 exce ot
Davos walked and Crum, woth
shall
be
tn c reased
ac
four acres off the wes t stde
cordtngly
th ere of t:onvey e d by Jos eph two out, was mtentionally
SECTION 6 It tS turth er Mart tn
P 1ckens to
Elva walked Then Casey Shef1eld
agreed that the Company shall P1ck~ns Vartan a nd Robert P
move street ligh ts to new Vartan by deed dated March lined sharply to left field and
tocat10ns o r c hang e the type
25 1937 and r ecorded tn Book
of ftxture s to ano ther typ e 141 at Page 337 of the Deed Edwards dropped the ball,
spec lf te d above as reques te d R ec ords
teav tn g
twenty Davos scorong
by t he Coun c il by reso lut 1on
acres co nv eyed h er e by
For the fo.rst time smce
prov1ded how e ver that the
Deed Referen ce
Volume
a-ctual cos t to the Company m 16 1 Page 449 Me1 gs County 1956, foreogn teams were
maktng such r e toc at 1ons or
Deed Rec ords
excluded from the Lottie
c; hanges m the f ixt ur es shall
You are requtr e d lo an sw er
be
pa1d
tor
by
the the c omplatnt w thtn 28 days League senes held here
Mun 1C1Pi'll1 ty
a ft er t he last publica! on of annually League offoc1als
SECTION 7 Th e Company lht S nottt: e
wh t: h w ill be
s,hall make every effort to
publ iShe d on ce ea&lt;:h week for voted last year to limit the
k.eep the street
l1ght1n g StX success1ve w eeks The last
sys tem cont racted t or
n p u bl tea l on wtll be made on senes to Amerocan teams
operalton dur~ng the l tm e Se ptember 29 1975 and the 28 after teams from Natoonalist
pr.ov1ded If for any r eason days for answer will c om
Chona had won love of the last
the Company fads to do so for
m ence on t hat date
more t han an aggreg ate of
SIX
sertes
In case of your fa ilu r e to
four(4 J hours 1n any one
answer o r o therw se r es pond
Earlier Saturday, Medford,
rpo nth
and upon wrllt e n
nQI1ce of suc h aggr e gat e a s r equ 1red by t he Ohto Rules Ore , behmd the two-hot
of Ctvtl Procedur e tudgment
o-utage furn tshe d
to
the
by de f au l t will be rendered
of
Usa
Company by the Mun c 1pa l lly aga 1nst you for th e ret1ef potchong
w•t h tn ten ( 10) days of th e end
Killongsworth,
defeated
Dox
dema nded tn the complatnt
of such month there shalt be a
Rolls, N Y , 1-0 on an
p(o rata r etluctton from th e
Mann .n g D Webs t er
/Jill to cover suc h outages No
Ju dge and Ex o ff1C 10 unearned nm m the fourth
Ttabll tly shall attach to the
Cl erk of the Co mmon mnong to won the Lo ttle
Campany for any outag e
Pl ea s Co urt
SECT ION 8 The Company
League all-gorl softball
Probate D tviS on
sha ll not be requtr e d to rnstall
M e1gs County Oh10 champoonshop
addtltonal stre et l 1g h ts or
m a1ntam or repla ce la mps 1n
tl'le
event
t hat
th e ( 8 ) 25 (9 ) 2 8 1S 22 29 6t c
Munlc iPattty ts tn arrears tn
pttyment for serv1ces r en
dP"red nor s hall the Company
be requrred .to tnstall mor e
than SIX (6) s tre et l 1ght s
lctaw&amp;I.J
durmg the last year wh1ch lh 1S
11y HENnt ARNOlD oUIU DOD LEE
Or:dtnance tS m effect
SECTION 9 The Company Unscramblt these four Jumbles,
at~
115 own expense sha ll
exerctse reaso nabl e dil1g ence one letter to each square, to
to msure that the l tgh l tng form four ordmary words .
system tS 1n good order and
that all s treet
lights are
burntng and shall make
replacem ents as soo n as
posstble followmg not1f1catton
by the customer of the need
for such servtce
but the
C6mpany shalt no t be requ1r ed
to.'
perform
any
such
replacement or ma mten ance
ex~ept durmg regular workmg
hour s
SECTION 10 The Company
shall save the Munlctpaltty
!J:,ilrmtess from any and all
~abtl1tyoccas•oned by the sdle
tregltgence of the Co mpan y m
TO MAKEAW~H
Jlhe construction mamtenanc e
NECTION I
~d o peratton of !Is street
((ghttng
system
1n
the
A{! lin tCtpaltty
t1 SECtiON II
T1tle to all
Now arrange the cirded letters
~Ire , poles , lamp s and ap
to form the surpr1se answer. aa
l)'urtenance s used by t he
~ompany ul furntshmg th e
by \he above cartoon.
S'fvl.ce contempla ted m tht s
Orumance ts and shall be tn
th~
Company
SECTION 1? All the rtghls
(Aatwen lomorrow)
and privileges granted to , and
lf:t' obltga t ton rmposed upon
Jumhln BIPED CI.OAK SCRIBE VERMIN
Satd Company a s rec tle d Salurd•y'•
,,t ltltS ContraCI
shall
Anlwf'r Mag ht seuhd for 1u cr(( 11 - LIPS
I

Wanted

Pets For Sale

LL title to
Lakewood

JJW!OOID'l!.!£®

HYLYS

0

ILESUNS

..-1 s-

lk.t

I

I

ISAQUEYj

I (

.,,

._I_....:Prill=lii:::.,=SI·=-'=ISI~ANSWIII=:::.:::IIIre.:;_____JI

'"t

I

•

I

J

Dark red whtte v tnvl too loaded wtfh extras rndud1nq
at r cond ftlt w heel ([VJse Control custom tntertor
power &amp; r eclt ntng sea t AM radto tape r ad tal w s w
ltres less than 4,500 miles by local owner SA VE

U09S

3SO V 8 autom atiC trans power brakes good GR70 15
ra dtal l 1res dark brown flntsh blk v 1n yf tnlenor
radto

1972 COMET 2 DOOR

I

a::x l l D

PENN2DIL

Blown
Insulation Servtces

North lnd Street
Tune Ups
8,;rttertes
Shock Absorbers
Ttre1
Muffler Ta1lp1pes Cooli119

Blown tnto Walls &amp; Atttcs 1

serv1ce
Volkswagens and other
foretgn cars
Wtlbur Ward ,

6 cyl std tran s radto ltke new w w t1re s blue frntsh
ru ce car wtth good economy

P I C
'J~F
O RIGINAL
SEASCA P~
AN D LAND
SCA PE PAINTINGS
E
JOYC E MILLER 99 7 768 0
8 10 ?4 1p

1971 SILVER Capr1 for sate
Ca ll 667 6 18 5
8 21 6t p

Notice
ROOM
A ND
BOARD
Pr tv &lt;He a1r cond !toned
r oom
phone
T V
att
m('a ls laundry plus many
ex tr as Wrlle Mrs M
J
M1 1l e r Box 105 Pome roy
Oil o
8 I 26tp

Ro om and Bo ard
ROOM AND
BOARD l or
se n1o r t: 111z e ns Low tn come
l 1v1ng very n 1ce Phone 992

19 77 GMC
ton p c kup truck
shar p and
n -.e ry good
condll ro n Prtce S7 350 Ca ll
99 / 791/or see Steve B urton
8 17 1'lt p

fOJ Rent
3 1\. ND 1 ROOM furntshed and

un f u r niShe d
apartments
Phon e 9f"/ 7 543&lt;1
4 17 J fc

J509

6 24 26t c

J

Yard Sale
PORCH sa l e A ug 28 30 9 30
a rn 6 30 p m
Ctolhtng
men s women s some lar ge
s1ze m ens c lolhmg m 1s c
ar t 1c tes
37 8 Second St
Po m eroy Oh10
8 24 St c
YARD Sa te on 68 1 east of
Tupper s P la1n s turn r ghl
a! Soh10 Stat.on August 2S
26 27 Two saddles
TV
D• sh es t: l ot h es and m sc
1tem
8 22 ) lp

Wanted To Buy

H /\ L L 5 Sa lvage o n old R t JJ
I US I across fr om G ru es er s
Ch pper w dt buy 1unk .;~ vt os
w1thout motor s $16 to S70
w .tll motors
$18 to $'1J
Comp l et e $? 0 t o $7S Th1 s
doesn t nclud e compac t and
fore1 gn car s mo lar s and
tranc;m,ss, on s not cleaned
$1 50 a hu ndred Sc rap No 7
l onQ meta! ~ ~ a hundred
N o 1 tong rn e ta l ~1 50 p er
hund r ed
c l ean cast S7
hun dre d T tn 40c per hund
red A n y mat er 1a l b r ought
1nto 1unk yard not sor ted
wt ll b e g rad ed acco rdm gly
Pr 1ces s ubtect to &lt;:ha ng e
hours fro m 8 a m to 4 p m
Monday through Fr day 8
il m
to I ? noon Saturdays
Wil t p c kup old autos do
hav e so me parts for autos
Phone 9B Y4 ?9 7
B 19 6t c

.OLD

turn1ture
1c e boxes
bras5 bed s
or complete
households
Wrtle M
o .,
Mt!ler
Rt
4 Pomeroy
Oh10 Call 992 7760
10 7 74

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

Pets For Sale
AKL Reg Pektngese pupp1es
S7S Phon e Pt P lea sant 675
SOJO
8 19 12tc

F OUR
AKC
Reg1stered
Cocker Spantel pupp1es
Worme d and shots Ready to
go $7S Phone 949 d1 13
8 22 3tc

----

----------

AKC GERMA N Shepherd
pupp te s good blood tme s
gentle drspostt1on wormed
and ready to go Phone 992
562]
8 24 6tc

TWO Furn 1Shed apts
Kay
Cecil 87 Soulh Seco nd Ave
Mtddleport Oh 10
Phone
992 S2 62
8 21 tt c
TRAILER space for rent on
SR 174 to Me1gs M1nes Call
7111 5986
8 22 3tc
BEDROOM
furn1shed
mobtle home No pets Call
992 7479
8
tf c

n

PRIV A TE mee tm g room for
any o rga n1Za1 10n phone 997
39'S
3 II lie
LASALLE Hotel M1ddleport
Oh10 Rooms S5 up Specta l
rat es by week or month
T v ac
8 24 26tc
NEWLY f urn1shed 2 bedr m
apt wall to walt c arpetmg
a c no pet s or c htldren Call
949 3783
8 24 3tp

3904

8 17 lfc

Employment Wanted
W I L L d(l odd 10bs rnowmg
haul1ng pamtmg or rooft ng
Phone 992 7409
7 29 26tc

.._1\ RPENTRY
flo or tn g
ce tltng and panelmg Ph on e
99 ') 77S9
8 I? 76tc
WI L L babystl tn my home
Phone 992 7647
8 24 7tc

~REMODELING

Pll.tmbtng
h ea l1 ng and all types of
general
repatr
Work
guaranteed
20 years ex
perten c e
Ph one 992 2409

s 1 "f
- - - - -- - -- -----

Help Wanted
EXPERIENCED
auger
operators hydraultc and
carr1age operators needed
unton pay Vtrgmla Auger
Corp . Phone 992 5367
a 24 3tc

---------SOMEO NE to l1ve- ;

- ;;,h
elderly couple Coolvt ll e
Ohfo Good salary Phone
667 3833 or La ncaster 653
4578
8 24 Jtc

---------- ---Wanted To Rent

LOCAL couple needs coun try
hom e 1n Ch ester Pomeroy
area Phone 985 3937 or 985
3988 Che s ter
B 19 lit e

19 /S FREEDOM mob il e home
take out
payments
Call
!6 14 ) d46 3911
8 t ? 171c
10 x50 TRAILER 3 br wtth 15
porch tocated m Hartford
W Va
500 feet from r•ver
50x100 lo t Phone (304)882
)247
8 21 6fc
x 1'} FT
1970 W nston
mob1le
hom e
two
b~droonh
underpinned
fr o nt porch added s torag e
butldtng
and atr
con
drt1 0 ntng Good locat1on 1 ,
mde off Rt 7 and 1 m ile
south of Tuppers Platn s
Oh10 Ca ll ( 614 ) 667 6777
8 19 61p

1977 GREENW OO D 64 x 17
mobrle horne n o furr 1lure
exce pt refrigerator and
stove all e l ectr iC
54 000
Ph on e 997 5606
8 19 6l c

For Sale
19 77 CA MPER
pa rtly self
con ta1ned
must see to
apprec ate
S1 695
Phone
99 ? 77 )8
8 15 9tc
TWO used Sli h l cham saws
Call Pomeroy Home and
Auto P hone 992 2094
8 22 3tc

TR A ILER fo r ren t ·~ mdeo off
R 1 14] On K 1ngsbury Rd
Ellher furni Shed or un
t ur n1shed
P hone 74? 3113
8 ?0 121c
MOBILE hom e for rent
Phone A lber t Htl l 949 2761
8 20 17 tc

19 77 ARROW Camper phone
99? S468
8 15 261 p

4ROO MS and bath apt rn
Rutland area
Phone 992
5858
7 27 lfc

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

LAURELAND APARTME NT
6t h and George Sts
New
H ave n
W
Va
JM
MEDIATE
OCCUPANCY
Select
your
2 bedrm
townhouse
Bea ultful new
apt
complex
Appltances
furn1shed
c ompletely
c arpeted Rent $128 and up
1n&lt;:lud1ng utd1hes
Ca ll
res1dent manager Sam or
Becky Longanacre
1 304
88? 2S67
8 19 12tc

COU NTRY Mob1le Home
Park Rt 33 ten miles north
ol Pomeroy Large tots W1lh
cont:rere pa t 10!t Sidewalks
runn e rs and off street
parktng Phone 992 7479
1231Hc 1

4 ROOM furn1 shed apartment
C all 997 3658
8 17 lf c

~URNISHED

apartment
adults only rn Mtddleport
Phone 992 3874
3 25 lfc

-------------for Sale

TREE
rrpened
Alberton
cann1ng pea ches now at the
Mason peach Orchard S6
and $7 bu Please brrng own
con tamers 9 am to 6 p m
8 24 Jtc
KENNEBEC potatoes for
wtnler Phone Tom Sayre,
Phone 843 2491
8 24 31p
TR AV EL trailer Concord 23
tt
Sl 900
Col l ege Rd
Sy racuse Oh to Phone 992
2797
13 24 3tc
THREE
Holzer
Medical
School nurstng untforms
stze 9 lfke new $30 A l so 1
patr nurstng Shoes, slze 8 ,
$8 One deep well pump new
motor $&lt;15 Phone 992 2280
8 24 3tc
3 TON cen tr al atr condtfloner
untt Comfortaire 36 000
B T u s, Phone 247 3941
8 24 6tc
REGISTERED
Polled
Hereford bull large gentle,
4 yrs old Phone 1304) 773
5405
8 24 31C
STOKERMATIC coal stove
refr igerator , free long hatr
ktltens Phone 742 4406
8 24 5tp
WARM
Morning
Heater ,
Electr1c sewtng machine
10 ton tack Phone 843 2645
af.ter 6 p m
8 24 3tp

---

-

---'--

-------

see

Ph

4 10 1 mo

~92

Pom er ov

2174

East Marn

Ph

Stop In Or
Call992 7S37 8 1 75
WOULD YOU BELIEVE ?
Build an all steel butld1ng at
Pate Barn pnces? Golden
Gtant All Stee l Buildtngs
Rt 4 Box 148 Waverly
Ohto Phone 947 2296
7 24 ttc
EXtAVA TING doz er loader
and backhoe work
sep l tt.;:
lank s
tns t a tt ed
dump
tru cks and to boys for htre
will haul ftll dtrt tap sotl
ltmestone and grave l., Call
Bob or Roger Jeff e rs day
phone 992 7089 n1ght phone
992 35 25 or 992 5232
2 11 tt c

-- - - ...

--

SEPTIC TANKS c l eaned
Modern San1tat1on 992 395 1
or 992 7349
9 18 tfc
PORT A BLE
TO ILET
RENTA L
Constructton
Out d oor
e-.ents
Ph one
GallipOliS
446 47 !l2
Ru ss ells Pl umb ng and
Heat 1ng
8 19 lfc

m

D &amp; D TREE Tr•mm ng

J
bedroom rec room bath &amp;
Now under constructton

lf2 double garage b 1 level
home stfuated on an acre of
ground w1fh all uttl ttt eS 1 on
the Wtld Wood Estates
located on flatwoods road,
between Route 7 and 33
Wtll be ready to sell m 6
wks by owner

TIME, BVT

pnces

All s1zes on hand,

S324 69
-1 Wood Burntng Stove

n92

Cll P THIS AD and brong ot
rn for

slS 00

dtscount

POMEROY LANDMARK

UTI'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-SO HE WON'T TALK,

rJJ:CfR:==TA=I~:ili:Y:IiTHOSE:=E::G::E=M=S::::::::-'J
A~E. MINE-OUG "flY\ UPOH

MV OWH PROPERTY IN A
COUtHR'f 10 THOUSAND
MILES FROM HERE-

20

WliA!? WHY SHOULD I
TELL 'I'OU WHERE IT WAS
AND HAVE EVERY SHARP·
S~OOTER IN THE WORLD
SWARMING OVER MY
PROPI'RT;.'f..;•.,...,.,.....-

CANNING tomatoe s
green
a nd red peppers Cle lan d
Fa rms Geraldtne Cleland
Racme Phone 949 4121
a 19 lfc
STEREO RADIO 8 track
tape
am tm
4 speed
c hanger
com b t nalton
Phone SlOJ 66 or terms Call
997 3965
8 19 tfc
HUNTING L cense
Ntghf
crawlers
meal worms
TACKLE
guns
ammo
bows
arrows
camptng
equ tp CBs and accessory
fndran Joe s 308 Page Sl 2
st reets past Mtddleport
Swtmmtng Pool
1974 20 FT
GOOSENECK
s tock trailer Wtth 1974 Chevy
dual wheel 1 IOn PICkup
Can be bought together or
separate Call 742 3767
8 10 lfc
CANNING peaches now thru
Se ptember 10 U S No 1
grade yellow Freestone For
cann tn g or freezmg
$6 49
bushel 53 49 1' bushel 51 99
peck
PLEA S E
BRING
YOUR
OWN
CON
TAINERS Peaches are our
spec1atty Two conventent
lo cal tons Bobs Market
Mason w Va Phone (30d )
773 5711
and
Mtdway
Mark e l
Pomeroy
Ohto
(610 997 1587
8 10 27tc

OH, YOU'D KEEP MY
SECRET, EH? THAT'S A
GOOD OHE. WHAT"?
l"HEH 'I'OU'LL KEEP "THE
10 BILLION IN GEMS.,

EH!

r;:~tG:::JO:o::AA=E=A=D=-n:I='M=OII=E==:""":::-1
WHO CAN LOSE llifM AIID
STILL GET AlOIIo:; WllHOUT
MAKING A BEEF- ·· NO,
I DIDN'T CALL YOU A
THI
YOU'VE GOT
\ S&lt;)MfoTHING 1l1ER!', FRIEHD-

- - - --.--

S EWING
MACHINE
Rep61rs se rv1ce all makes
991 228-l Th e F_abnc;. Sho p
Po me roy Autho'l' f zed S1nge r
we
Sa t es and Ser v 1ce
sharpen Sc tSSor s
J 29 ti c

I'M ALLEY

Real Estate for Sale

C\?1': AN' -n-IlS

128 Laurel 5 1
Fo r fur ther 111
ca ll 992 3868
8 24 lltp
.....__

WELL I 'M M161-11Y
PLEASED T'MEET
YOU GEWTS ' IM

STOREKEEPER
SMrrH'

____ _

UH WH.ol;TS
\OUI&lt; FIRST
NAME 7

8 l5

I'd qe-t more
sense -talk1n' t
t11 jUQ 1

You sa4
som'thm' 'bout
a Juq, Joe l?

So larium ,
room
3
bedrOoms ,
P /2
baths
basement and garage Good
restdent1al area
$25 000 00
MODERN - Ntce 3 bedrooms
wtth storage closets
large
bath, basement garage wrth
3/ 4
shop
and
acre
lot

wtth dug well

,O

trailers

and

Woll hold 2
then

$4500 00
POMEROY

ntce
kitchen ,
full
basement. nice rec R All
electric, carporf storage, 1

bedrooms wrth closets, dmtng,
modern kttchen . full basement
near school and st ore s

acre JUST 522,700
TUPPERS PLAINS on Rt

$17,500 00
S BEDROOMS -

7 -

older home wrth modern
krtchen and 2 baths Large
porch and large corner lot

21/2 acres

Home has
new stee l stdtng, 2 B R ,
bath d1n1ng R own water
&amp; ctty water garage, lots

ol buddong soles $10.500
POMEROY - Htgh on a
holl 2 B R . bath, noce
kttchen, uttlrty R
arr
cond nat gas heat Tool
shed 2 car garage ll/ 2 acre

very provale SACRIFICE
PRICE $13.000
MIDDLE PORT - Older 2
story

home

Good

IF I CAN'T HAVE THIS COAT
-NO OTHER GIRL CAN rr-

Mv roght hand opponenl opened
one heart What should I have
bod• '
The answer lo hts queslton ts
that he should have passed Hos
hand would be a sound one-club
openong but ot os a most un
sou nd vulnerable two-club over
ca ll Overcalls (particu la rly at
tile two levels are based pnman
ly on playong trocks not hogh
cards A takeout double woth
only two spades ts madvt sable
and a notrump overcall would
be absurd
(Do you have a quastton for
fhe Jacooys? Wnfe 'Ask the
Jaco' Jys
care of tht s
new spaper The most tnterestmg questiOns wtfl be
used m fhts column and
wnters wt/1 receJVe coptes of

JACOBY MODERN)

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
39 German
I Stroke of
nver
liglotning
40 Fender
5 Maxun
rrushaps
10 Ool-yoeld41 Trust
mg tree
DOWN
II Scholar
I
Cow and
13 For fear
Jmgle
that
2
W lnd
14 Nebraska
rtver
sorcery
15 New
3 Get cold
Gumea
feet
town
( 3 wds )
16 Wo.re meas- 4 Voetnamese
urement
holiday
17 Pullet
5 Have
18 Loke
hopes
tropocal
6 Procrastonate
weather
7 Second
20 Kmd of
Mrs
table
Sonatra
21 p-;:;;,:;.iss&gt;:orylli1!"'13'i4-

10 DO-Celebrity Sweepstakes 3,1S, Stale Fair '1S 4.
Spin Olf 8 10. Mike Douglas 13
10 30-Wheel or Fortune 3,1S, Pr ice Is Righi 8 Band
stand 10
11 ro-High Rollers 3."', 15 One Llleto Live 6 Gambit
8.10
11 30-Hollywood Squares 3,1S, Brady Bunch 13,
Midday 4, Love ol Life 8,10
11 S~ Take Kerr 8, Farmllme 10
12 ro-Magnlflcenl Marble Machine 3,1S. Showolls 13,
"
Bob Braun's 50 50 Club 4, News 6,8,10
12 30-Jackpoi3, 1S, All My Chlldr~n 6,13, Search for
Tomorrow 8,10

..

12 5~NBC News 3,15
•'
1 ro-News 3, Ryan 's Hope 6,13, Phil Donahue 8. No!
For Women Only 15
I 30-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15, Lei's Make a Deal6,13.
As The World Turns 8,10
2 ro-$10,000 Pyramid 6,13, Guiding Ugh! 8.10
2 30-Doctors 3 •.1S. Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,13, Edge of
Nlghl 8,10
3 ro-Anolher World 3,4,15. General Hospital 6.13.
Match Game 8.10. Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20
3 3~ne Life lo Live 13, Bewitched 6 , Taltlelales
8,10 The Romagnolls' Table 20
4 00-Mr Cartoon 3. I Dream of Jeannie 4, Somerset
1S, Mickey Mouse Club 6. Musical Chairs 8,

Sesame Sl 20,33 Movie " VIlla" 10 Dlnahh 13
4 30-Bewllched 3, Merv Griffin 4, Mod Squad 6,
Mickey Mouse Club 8 Bonanza 15
5 ro-FBI 3 Lucy Show 8 Mlsler Rogers' Neigh
borhood 20,33
5 30-News6, Andy Grlflllh 8, Hogans Heraes13. Get
Smart IS, Elec Co 20,33
6 ro-News 3,4,8,10 13,1S ABC News 6, Sesame Sl 20.
Catch 33 33
6 30-NBC News 3,..,,15. ABC News 13. Andy Grlllllh 6 ,
CBS News 8,10 Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33
7

~Truth or Cons

3,4 Bowling for Dollars 6, What's

My line 8 News 10, Movie " II Happened One
Nlghl" 13, To Be Announced 1S. Antiques 20. Jean
Shepherd' s America 33
7 30-Hollywood Squares 3,4, lei's Deal With It 6

Buck Owens 8

Edition with Martin
9 New
Price Is Rlghl10, Scene One, Take0ne33
8 ro-Adam 12 33,4,15, Happy Days 6, Good Times
8,10, When Television Was Live 20.33
8 »-Movie "T he Big Ripoff" 3,4,15 Happy Days 6,
Agronsky 20

Yesterday's Answer

8 Nerve
oneself
t 2 wds )
9 - cordiale
12 Compassoo11ate
16 Boundary
19 Herbaceous
plant
22 Put on 23 Propose
6

24 Marone alga
25 Wrest
27 Uppozaner
and
Appaloosa
29 Small anvol
30 Dnve back
31 All
36 Wone ( Fr )
37 Throce
( mus )

1

9

Evening

Movie

I'LLWA IT

HERErr-

Renovated

-·.--' .,-.J_-

baths, natural gas furnace
basement, ctty water and
large lot Garden space Only

825

WlNNIE
YES i"PSTHEONLY
' HOME'' .I REALLY

992 332f

HAVE TVE BEEN
ON THE SEA
M06TOFMY

I UNDERSTAND1
AND I CANT
FAULT YOU I'OR
PURSUIN0 l&gt;OUR
DREAMS

WOW! I'M A

WHY, I DO
BEUEVE
THEoY'RE

KISSING'

LIFE

8,10, Nova 20.3..
9 10-Movle " Fall Safe,

13
10 DO-Pollee Story 3,4,15, Barnaby Jones 8,10, News
20, Interface 33
10 30-Woman 20 Mqnly Python 's Fyl lng Circus 33
11 ro-News 3 4,6,8,10 1S
11 30-Johnny Carson 3."',15 FBI 6, Movie "Fool
steps Nice Guys Finish Last 8 Movie " I Wanl
You" 10 News 13 Janak! 33
12 ro-Wide World Mystery 13
12 30-Wide World Mystery 6
1

oo- Tomorrow

34

I 30-News 13
e rr attc tem p erament neg ates
any thmg someone mtgh l do tr'l
your b ehal f In ad d tlt o n tl
causes you to pro tect a poor
•m age

'tl sandwoch
28 Lofeguard's
hue
29 Monkly
haLrcut
32 Dostaff
sheep
33 Shrew
34 Gun the
motor
35 War of 37 Bonding
substance
38 Create

For Tuesday, Aug 26 1975

--+--+-1

cau l ous when you are workt ng
or trave!tng You re tn an tm
puis ve m ood today Thts could
spel l trouble

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)

BETTER MATCH·
MAKER THAN

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-

I. THOUGHT .I
WASf

os

Here's how
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

apostrophes, the length
hmts Each day the code

to work it ·

and formahon of the "ords
letters are different

are

all

CRYPTOQUOTES

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

GJDG

UDA

NYKl

GJDG

SKII

Nl

MNIKIG

JNI

MNIPHU

MJH
Nl

ZKDSMHZGJ

- IHVZDGKI

Yesterday's Cryptoquote· HAPPINESS :&gt;Nt;AKS 11'
TIIROUGH A DOOR YOU DIDN'T KNOW YOU LEFT OPEN
- JOHN BARRYMORE

HOW COME 'IE DON T
PITCH IN AN' DO '10RE
WASHIN', MAW?
..d''--'"'

OKAI{ ..00
STVPIO CAT

TH' LINES
~USY RIGHT
NOW, PAW

LET us se rv tt:e your Volks
wagen
reasonable rates
Middleport Pennzod North
Second Street Mtddleport
Phone 99? 9973
8 19 26tc
1975 SUZUKI ?50 $850 See Joe
Imboden Welch town Htll 1n 1
M 1nersvllle
8 19 6tp

J

J'

ARIES (March 21-Aprtl 19)
Because yo u teet luckrer than
you are to d ay you co uld mts
, ca lc ula te and cause il loss fo r
the lam fy We gh decrs1ons
carefully

TAURUS (A pro I 20-May 20) Be

One letter s1mply stands for another In th1s sample A IS
used for Lhe three L s, X for the two 0 s etc Si ngle letters

ROOM house, 8 acres
a tr ea dy ftnanced
Goes
turntsh e d $6 500 Phone 985
4290
II 22 5tc

' Forever Amber "

Mash 8 10 Consvmer Survival Kit 20,33
9 00-Movle ' Man In the Wilderness " 6 Hawaii Five

26 Hotbed

AFIER IT!!-

Mur ie l Stevens 8 .

Govrmnet 8 , Popeye 10. New Zoo Revue 13
9 S~huck While Reports 10

XX

Oswald
How about some
articles on percentage plays onvolvmg several SLD.ts?
Jom
Here s a hand you
played woth me roght after you
got back from the Korean war
You took your ace of clubs
drew trumps led a club to the
kong ruffed the last club, led a
s pade to dummy 's ace and the
seven spot back to your hand
When East played hos kong you
clao med sonce you would be able
to dosca rd one of my doamonds
on your queen of spades It took
me an hour before I reahzed
what a good lone of play you had
taken
Oswald It really was a good
hne I was sure to make my

Phil Donahue 4 15

gadget

JUMP IN

MODERN Walnut stereb
rad10 console am tm radto ,
4 speed changer Ba lan ce
SlOt 72 or terms Call 992
]965
a 12 tfc
BALER TWINE 1 000 ft 325
lb s
Is
FARM
FER
Ttl!ZER
Spectal pr1ces
Ball Brothers Farms S R
143 and Co Rd 10 Phone
698 4571
8 19 6tp

6•

3

Schoolles 10, Morning wllh D J 13
9 30-Nol For Women Only 3, D lnah 6, Galloping

nver

woth alley $34 500 00
OLD BRICK - 10 room s, 2

5

9 00--A M

25 Kotchen

LIL ABNER

noce

$12 000 00 NEW LISTING
LOOK AT OUR PICTURES.
WE HAVE HERE AT THE
:OFFICE DROP IN OR CALL

Farmllme 10
6
1 ro-Today 3,4,15, A M America 6,13, CBS News 8,10
8 ro-Lucy Show 6, Capt Kangaroo 8,10, Sesame Sl
33
8 »-Big Valley 6

A Massachusetts correspondent asks
I was vulnerable
and held
•xx¥Axx+K xx ..,AQx

dell 23 French

con

d1loon , 3 B R • 2 baths,
utololy R , donong R ,
storage bldg. smal l yard
Close to shoppong JUST
$8,300
FOR GOOD HOMES PRICED RIGHT ~SEE
OR CALL US TODAY.
PHONE 992-2259

'---- -

3

I.

Soulh

Report 13

3~olumbus Today 4
•~Morning Report 3
5~News 13

6
6

~~~~

22 Commedia 1o

some

5 Ml LES OUT ON Rl 143
- NEW - 2 B R , bath,

East

2~Farm

6

6 30-Five Minutes to Live By "'· News 6, Bible An
swers 8 Concerns &amp; Comments 10 Rev Cleophus
Robinson 13

unfrrendl y

~Mf·~-

2 STORY fra me house good
local tOn on corner lot
B
rm s garage 1' 1 baths gas
heat tn Mtddleport Rodney
Down tng
Real
Estate
Broker
Ca ll 992 37 3 1 for
appointment
B 24 3tc

Near town, large
barn with concrete floor, and 7
room house. next to school
Move rrght tn $31 ,500 00
3 ACRE LOT Near mtne

NorttJ South vu lnerable

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

16 ACRES -

.aiiA, Phone 992 2181

•AQ

North

6 00-Sunr lse Seminar 4, Svmmer Semester 10

Furthermore, of East held four
spades to lhe kong he moght
make a rrusLake and grab ho s
kong roght away

... A 6

J •
Pass
Pass
Pass
Opemng lead - J ""

$23 500 00

:....~ack W Carsey, Mgr

spades were

VIJBELlfVABI..E' I

lhe El1te's qot a
lhel.l a1n't hear a
word I sa4'

8 21 6tc

K 9

... Q 5 4 2
SOUTH IDI
• Q5 4 2
• A Q J 10 3

Pass
Pass

HE:'S

Phone 985 4186

start at

•

TI-lE'~

Owner

HOU SE tor sate m Portland 5
rms and bath good well 2
acres of ground Phone 843

• 97
•10 9652

ldJM /&gt;.IJD WALK

yea r s e)( pert ence Insured
fr ee estt mates Call 992 3057
Coolv il l e
Fhone ( 1) 667
3041
4 30 tic

________

REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE

SQI.\E i'&amp;::*'LE'
SO A\LIKVJARD,
i.WT C.HI:W

Pomeroy

~ --

• 10 8 6 3
¥ 8
.KJ 84
... J 1098

2798
7 24-I m&lt;&gt;:_

M IX L U N CRETE
del l( e r ed r1gh t to your
pro tect Fast an d easy Free
es ttmat es Phone 991 3284
Goeg tcrn Ready M1• Co
M1Gd teport Oh1 0
6 30 ttC

--

EAST

IK~ 1

~E AOY

HOU SE at
Pomeroy
form at ron

Real Estate For Sale

BORN LOSER

EXCAV A TING
ba c khoe
doz e r and d!lc her
Ga s
electr tc and water l 1ne
burral basements footers
sept1c systems and brush
cleantng W dl hau l fil l dtrl
top sot! sand and gravel
ltmestone for drtveways and
roads
Phone Cha r les R
Halft eld Backhoe Servtee
Rf 1 Rutland Ohto 742
6092
7 11 901 c

- - --.-'"

ELWOOD BOWERS""FrEPAIR
Sweepers loasters ~ron 's
a ll smatt appl tan t:es Lawn
mow er ne)(f to State H 1g h
way Garage o n Route 7
Phone 98S J82S
4 16 lfc

.t.K 7 I

DICK SEYLER

Flatwoods , Ohto
Pomeroy Ohto

kong small of spades of spades
broke 3 3 of I dropped a
songleton kong or finall y of the
spades dod nol behave I would
be able to fall bac k on the doa
mond finesse
Jom
That s ot exac tly You
gave yourself lhe best c ham:e m
spades wh1le managtng to re
tam the diamond hnesse m case

. 73
\\EST

TUESDAY. AUGUST 26, 1975

contract tf e1ther opponent he ld

25

• K6 542

WOOD METAL PLASTIC
ANTIQUES
MODERN CHEMICALS

KUHL CAKE DECOR

1 oo- Tomorrow 3,4
1 25--News t3

Spades hold percentage edge

SERVICE

K•tchen Stafe Inspected
L•censed
Baker
and
Decorator
Homemade
Noodles also featured

11 2~News 13
11 »-Johnny Carson 3 &lt;.IS FBI6 Movie " Maroc 7"
8 Movie The Glass Sphinx" 10. Janak! 33
11 5~Wide World Mystery 13
12 »-Wide World Myslery 6

516N l'

PAINT
STRIPPING

WANTED

Stegler &amp; Monogram

FUEL OIL
Heating Stoves

O LJR

NOR Til
• AJ7

CAKE BAKING

9 l Q-Movle ' On the Waterfront" 13
9 3Q-Boardlng House 3J
10 00-To Be Announced J3
11 ro-News 3 4 6 8 1015 ABC News 33

WIN AT BRIDGE

w iLL THE PILOr

George HobsleHer

8 \ 3 261p

~ - -- - - ----

WILL
do
roof
pa1nttng
shm gt1ng remodel tnter1or
etc Cii ll 9.39 5913
8206tc

Mobile Homes for Sale

WHE A i pen n1es RSc roll
S1lver ce rttft cates
Sl 25
each $7 btl Is S3 30 each
Buffalo n1ckefs
$6 roll
sdver dollars S4 40 each
L 1be rty n1cke ts S11 roll Call
Roger Wamsley Phone 74?
365 1
8 15 11tc

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

STU D
Se rvtc e
AKC
R eg 1s tered whtle poodle
For appo1n tm ent call 997

Ph 992_3993

WELDING ..,nd cutrmg ser
vtces Phone9494114
8 24 6tp

6S

2

BUY SEL L o r tr ade any U 5
cons or c urr e ncy W ill pay
~1 M/1 lor ~ 1 la ce 196-l and
old er d1mes quarters and
h al-.es
Call Rut l and 7J?
J6.'&gt; 1 f.!oge r Wamsley
8 15 17 1c

BR Trailer f u rn 1shed 82
Elm St
M ddleport Oh10
lnqu.r e b etween 9 a m and
6 p m at the Vtllage Gun
Shop Phon e 99 2 Sl 77 after 6
at
225
p
m
l nq u 1re
Broadway
8 21 6t c

HAND L ETTERED SIGNS
AND PO S TERS
FREE
EST IMATE S CALL M C
CRAWFORD 99'1 7680
8 7 261p

V M 1 60,H !

SMITH NELSON
MOJORS, INC._

C- U S TOM
FRAM IN G

MOBILE Crane se r-.1 ce and
dozer work Phone 997 5468
8 7 26 1p

CBS News 8,10, Jody's Body Shop 33
7 ro-Truth or Cans 3,•. Bawling far Dollars 6. What s
My line 8. News 10, Movie " Firecreek" 13
Wally 's Workshop 1S Man Builds. Man Deslroys
20. No Honestly 33

Nathan B1ggs
R adtlfor Spec•ahst ..

Syracuse, Ohto

Tennis 20

8 I~Baseball 3,15
9 ro-Movle The Legend ol Lizzie Borden" 6,
Baseball 4 Beacon Hill 8.10 School for Wives 33

6 »-NBC News 3.• IS. ABC News 13. Andy Grlflllh 6

From the l argest Truck or
Bulldozer Rad tato r to the
S!)l all es t Heater Core

lARRY LA_VE~DER

Mgr &amp; Mechanic
8 21 1 mo

11850

rEXPERIENCED

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

Systems
We
a I so

SAVE SAV E
1972 NOVAS S CPE

FREE ESTIMATES

Phone 992-9913

SAVE

5 ro-F B I 3. Merv Grlflln "· Lucy ~now 8, Mister
Rogers' Neighborhood 20 33
5 »-News6. Andy Griffith 8. Hogan 's Heroes 13. Get
Smarl 15, Elec Co 20,33
6•ro-News 3,8,10,13,15, Sesame Sl 20. ABC News 6.
Jeanne Woll Wllh 33

Business Services

QUALITY Motor Co.
1975 MONTE CARLO LANDAU

7 30-Thai Good Ole Nashville Music 3. NFL cllon '7S '
&lt;, Pollee Surgeon 6. S2S,OOO Pyramid 8, Evening
Edition wllh Marlin Agronsky 20 Municipal Court
10. Unlamed World IS
8 ro-Jae Garaglola 3 IS. Rookies 6, Sale ol Cham
plans • Cher 8, 10. Black Is a Beaulllul Woman 33,

MONDAY , AUGUST 2S, 197S

2 SfGNS Pomeroy
OF

[ ]

r==~i,;~~~~~~~~~·:u~g~glested

•

Auto Sales

Auto Sales

WHO

LIVES
NE~T OOOR!1
THIS IS IT!

You r pocketbook •s -.ulnerable
today Someone tS ready to
take advantage o t your happy
go lu cky nature
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Jus ! when th tngs seem to be
opentng up lor you a sudd e n
proble m at home preven ts you
from gett ng what you want

LEO (July 23-Aug 23) Walch
what you say o r do today A
t houghtle ss remark or act
coul d mak e you WISh you cou ld
dt sappea r qu ckly
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sepl 22)

Shy
away fr om borrowtng anythmg
today Th1ngs w tll not hap pen
as you a nlrcrpal e A lnends h tp
coul d be severely damaged

LIBRA fSept 23-0cl 23) Yo ur

HERE CO'riES M'( !!ROTHER.!
HE'S NOT SI&lt;INNI{ AN'o' MORE II
HE'S AS FIT AS A FiDDLE!

SCORPIO (Ocl 24-Nov 22)
You cou ld ftn d yourself worlt
1ng alone on a mess someonee lse sta rte d Tht s won I put you
1n the best frame of m nd
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-Dec
21) Tho ughtless ac 11ons of a
lr end produce some c hanges.
fn your pla n s th at aren t what
you 1n tended or des~re d

CAPRICORN (Dec

22-Jan.

19) A pa r tne r or assoc tate
cou ld cau se a problem for you
by p tl 1ng add1 t1 o nat heavy
r es ponstbd t es on yo ur
sho ulders

AQUARIUS (Jon 20-Feb 19)
You wtll have dlfltculty today
applymg yoursel f to ment~ ,
work becauSe o f u nu sua l and •
frequent tnlerrupt ons

PISCES (Feb 20-March 20)
Keep romance out of the PICtur e today Unexpected ex
pen ses w II pop up 10 put tt
damper on yo u r enJoyment

~Your

~Birthday
,
Aug 26, 1975
,~

Some very lucky breaks come -..
your way thi s year They IL
prove to be qut l e profitable 1
However don I b lo w you (
wmdfall o n unnecessary tuxunes

FAT A5

A CELLO?

'
I ,

I

J

'

.'

�0

~-The Dally

Sentinel, Moddleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Monday, Au~ ,., 197''

: ORDINANCE NO 10 31 7S
.l\N
O R D IN ANCE
10
PR OVIDE
FOR
fUR
l.I IS HING OPERATING A ND
MAINTAINING/\ LIGHTIN G
SYS TEM T O LI GH T THE
S TREET S
ALLEYS 1\Nl
PUBLIC PLACE S I N lHE
VILLAGE
Or
MID
D LEP O RT
MEIGS COUN
TY

OH 10

S ECTION I Tha t Cot u 1 bW
and Sou thern O h o E ec rr1 c

Com pany 1ts successors dn d
ass,qns
(here,n ca led 111c
Company
The

I

IS

r1ghl

hereby ves1uJ
IQ

l 1glll

etecl r tc ty rh e s treet s

w It

.1ttey s

'"

l f' rtwl l ! f ' l c ! !
ll f'ftby l f'pf'll t (l

Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds

"

( ( ll f I( I

t lltlt

EC 1 10 N

I t
I I 1
11 \ IS
91 1 llo.('
ftP (I
t ro 1 l ct 11 f' r
!r om to., P•l ':&gt; ltH o t

( 1 r(!l H1 CC' &lt;;f
cln d tH 1n tor r

111 r y

BE IT ORDA I NED f\Y THE
COUNCIL OF THE VILLAGE
OF
MIDDLEPORT ':.T!\lE
0 F OH 10

Wilh

p lr ' ' lf tf'rt ot
(Q11::, 1&lt;, ~ I Of

rl,ly ~

(&lt;;I p C' I IO Ct Ill( W t Cl IJ y
l:1w lnd'&gt;ll'll rentlll\ 11 t ll f'C '
tor 1 IJ tr au o t t vt 1 1 vc &lt;~r s
Ir on t c; Pd'&gt;"&gt; '1 r
&lt;; ub1r c 10
pr o r
t r 11 na 01
us
It
rl ll t r
~·ovt.lld
1
! hf' t

HI

\ ( ( I Oil

I

I

l

prOVIdC'd
I rlV bjC ( n

l ur ht r 11,11 1 Shdl l
1Ct:f' plt d IJ{ lit ( t J llf.Jllly IJ y
wr t n i'lr cr pl l ll CC' I It d 11 hf'
P II ICl o t l ht ( I• rio. o t lh{
fl.\

lll ( pl dy

WANT Au~
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P M
Day
Be f ore
Pub
1ocdl1o n
Monday Deadl1ne 9 a m
Cance!lat on
Correc t on s
W II be a&lt;;cepted un til 9 a m
for D ay of Publ1ca1 10n
REGULAT ION S
ihe P ub l i She r r ese r ves the
r ght to C'd 1 or rer ec t a n v ad s
deemed
obJeCtiona l
The
publiSher
w II
not
be
r es pons1ble t o r mar(' than one
In co rr ec t 1nsert 1on
RATE S
For Want Ad Serv 1ce
5 c e nt s per Word o ne 1n strl 1on
M1n1mum Charge St 00
11 ce nts pe r word thr ee
consccu1 1ve 1nse rt 1ons
?6 ce nts per wo r d s x con
~ec ul -.e rn se rt1o n~
7') Per Cen t D sc ount on pa1d
ad s ilnd &lt;tds pa d wllh n 10
dav s
CAR D OF T HAN KS
&amp; Ob1 t uarv
~] OU tor SO word m n mum
Ea c h add t1onat word 3c
BLIND ADS
/\ ddd1 o nal ?Sc ChMge PN
Ad II er ltSC rll en I
OFFICE HOUR S
B 0 a rn to ~ OO pm Dady
A 30 a m
to 12 00 Noon

Ef fi O N I
lt1,1t
h f'
and other publtc plac es n !11c
I\ Ull Cl p 111 V t) ).
l tii ') I'IIIV (
nuntc1p alty o f
M dd i C'port
lCI 1111 or hr C 1 p l y • !1 1 I
O h10
(here,n
C&lt;l ll ed
t h!"
1tr 1 '
Munrctpal,ty
and
r he t tvt t f' r Qh I(J 1 r n
I 1::,
Com pany Shall t1av c H c_ r 1q t 1 (l l "C f' II C'C IV( d,llt Ol
o t 'l 'f
yt,lr
•o cha rg p and r('ce•ve Iron ttH 0 t i l rl te
I ll( l Q
rl
1'1
111(1 t il
Munlct p al,ty paynHnt f or ~il cJ COl
sc rv,ccs •n ac cor d ~ le-e w th (! nq 11 ll HO Th ':&gt; Ord n 1n cc
(I rrlu 1
LOt
the sc hedul e o f rat es SPl !orrt1 1 rt tt.e r1t e
&lt;1
lrl n '-. f' fl 1on 1 o f lh1"&gt;
below t II f 1xturcs shall IJl
moun led on wood po es un less Ont n lll Cl U t.H 11 wr.r en oo t 1cC'
I ret.,. n nthf't patty 1 Lrf'tu t l
Slil l f'd
l !ld
o therWI SE'
I&lt;
'l'&gt;l ~ rty I lO ll&lt;ly&lt;; p r or 1r
energ1zed
by
uve rt1 c~d
'i ! l d
'
11 ,, {jl d ti l
dtstr1bu on
Pl
•d
~ 1':.
l i lt
t11y
fa c il1 1e"
N umb! r 189
7P
f 1 q 1 &lt;, I I I
n L u men;, 8000 T YIJt:
011 '-.
Me r cu r y vapor
l&lt;otr P t r
1\ I 1 I
Lamp Pe r Month "..I 00
51Ze In Lumen s f!UOU I YIJ !.: G • n Gr 111
~at urdoy
OBS Me r cury Vapor N ew (. t r 1o.
f PPk OV Efl 1\ uqu st II 1J )
Pale
Rate Per Lamp Ptr
r erJ Holt 11 iln
J\1\onth SJ 75
r"'dyo r
Numbe r
11
'w H '
I!
I umens '"~5000 TypP
Gin&lt;&gt;&lt;,
CASH pad to r a 1 makes and
E n c lose d Ra t t: Pt:r L ,l p Pe
I K !H
'i ~ lc
mode l s oi mobd c homes
Month '56 SO
Phon e area cod!'! 6 t&lt;t 423
S1ze In Lumens •sooo T ypl
'9 SJ I
Glass Enclosed N tw Po le
4 !3 lfc
P U B LIC N OTICE
Rate P er Lam p P('r M on th
I If'
T upp1 r
PI dillS
$6 7r..
SECTIO N 7 n e arr aunt o t Ctlf'&lt;.trr N,11r r [1 s tr1 ct 1S
b ds
t o r c on
energy u sed l)y eac h amp 1S l ( ( • p nq
". fi! ( IQ
ol l
(.Q ll lb ll ltiU
ca lculated on th e bass o f at
11 g h t bur n n g l' verv day ot th e 1 lf1 cc 1 d q ;11 aq e hu IU1 q o
TO G I VE a way 7 med tum
11 C 10n o t
year or appr ox m&lt;'lte ty 1000 b t lo c cll( r1 11 f 1
s1zed d ogs Stx mo nth s old 3
1n d Orcnnr t 1 ow ns h p
hours pe r year (cl n average of \ R
fema l es 4 ma tes One black
Rtt
HO r''f'ICJS Coun ty
lJJ 3 hours pe r
no n tr
In
a
nd while Sc hn auzer type
i
cll
f'
d
b1dS.
nrc
to
be
'u
iJ
addd on to the c harq es set
espec1a llv
appeal1ng
td
Pl ans
c'l nd
forth m Sect1o n I '1bove the n
De perate l y n eed homes
&lt;&gt; pee I1 C&lt;li1 0 n s .1 r1d 1n~ tr uct1o n .,
Com pany will eac h rr o n th
Co nta ct
Me tgs
County
lor b1ddf'r'&gt; w lh '111 fl(' CCS S lf).
app ly the foll ow1nq fu e l .:~d
H u m ane Soc rety Pho ne 997.
1 11 n1 f' rs
Hum r
f&gt;(J
1 us tm e nl to the tota l a-.eragc
S427 o r 949 4916 949 4917 or
(Ofll l clL I
KW H per mo n th tor a t th e 111 1 Sl rd tOI
99'} .'&gt;906
rlocu
n
('
l
&lt;,
elf('
tva
d
.'lb
(
'lll(]
l&lt;:~ rnp s
b li ed
dur1ng
th e
8 25 3tc
n
1y
hl'
.
p
c
k
t;d
up
1n
hf'
off,
cc
penod
1
Ct1 cs l c r
Oh o
Milll ng
Th e energy charge .1p
p t cable to a ll kdowalt ho urs Actdr(• so; nnx I ( I es ter 1 t c
of e n ergy &lt;:o n sum ed sha ll be nqht s r eserved o rf.'!i" CT 'lny
mc r ease d or d ecreased DOll e or 111 bq.J s
l rds wil l be o pcncct i\ug
6
per KW H per each l ull one
tenth cen t ( 1c ) 1ncrease or cl I p 11
aec rease above o r be tow fort y
H I ) IR
•c
one cents 1 41 c l 1n the averag e
cos t per mdl1on I 1 GOO OOOt
BTU of fu el co n sumed at th e
Com pan y s
gcn e r at1ng
s tat •on s dur 1n g t h e most
WILLIAMSPORT ,
Pa
recent month preced ng the
(UP!)
Lakewood,
N
J
b I ling date lor wh1c h fu el
NOTICE FOR SERVICE
cos ts havl"' been d e term .n ed
BY PUBLICATION
potcher
Bobby
Del
Conte
saod
SECTION J
Payment fo r
the
se rvtce
t urn Shed TO He r ma n Gt ll llan Gla dys he " got a little shook up "
he r eunde r Sh a ll b e- -nade Cozart Cha l mer G tltTi an and after he gave up a forst-mrung
mon thly n accordance w th the unknown h e 1r s dev sees
homer to Tampa, Fla 's
b•lls rendered th ereto r by the and n ext o f k1n of wes l ey G
Co rnpany at The end of ea c h G ill Ja n al l of whose pla ces of Rockoe Crum on Saturday's
pe r1od each paym en t Ia be res dence are unknown and
due w thtn I S day s of the c annot
w1th
re a sonab l e Uttle League totie game
subm ISS to n of the b1 ll t he ref or
dil1ge nce be asce rtam ed
But Del Conte settled down,
ove rdue payme n ts to bear
You arc he reby not1f red thar
his
teammates scored four
mterest at the rat e o f 6 p er ce nt you
h a-.e
been
na med
per annum unt I pad Should def en dant s n a l egal aclton nons on the second lnnong, and
th e Munt ct pal ty defau t l
n e n t tt! ed Mr l dred G1l l tlan
four (4 ) successtve paym ent s Admm s tr atr x of th e Es ta te Lakewood won the decoding
the Com pany m ay at a ny t 1m e of
game of the Uttle League
W es l ey
G
Gtlt1lan
d1scon t mue serv1ce hereu nd er d eceased
Pia nl tfl
-.s
Champlooslnp Seroes, 4-3
wtl ho ut noll ce so lon g as any Law ren ce G titia n
e t al
defa u lt
extsls
provrded
In fact , the homer was the
De f endants Thrs act.o n has
howev er tha t no c har ge shall bee n asstgned Case No 21 322
be made bY the Company for and 1S p end 1ng tn the Court of only hit Del Conte yoe lded on
sen1 tc e hereunder durtng any Common
He went the
Plea s
Pr oba t e the game
per1od m wh1ch ser-.r ce rs so D VIS IOn
Of MetgS Cou nty
distance, strikong out four
dtsco ntmue d In t he eve n t of Pom e r o y Ohto 45769
su ch default th e Company
T h e obtect ol th e compla 1nt and walkmg four
upon wr1tten not1Ce to th e 1s tor a uthor ty to sell th e real
Nme Lakewood batters
MuniC tpa ltly may term nat e es tat e of the decedent to pay
thts agreement
went to the plate m the second
the debts and c ost s of ad
SECTION 4 The Comp a ny m n s ter1n g h 1S es tate wh 1Ch
agrees dur 1ng the term he r eof rea l esta t e ts descr rbed a s ummg when they got three of
to 1nstall add11lonal s tre et follows
theor siX hits, off Tampa lefty
ltghts of the type and s tze
Twenty four (2 4) acres off Vance Lovelace A basess peclfted
above
when the east en d of the followmg
autho r 1zed to
do so by real esta t e
to wtl
Forty loaded mfleld songle by
resotut1on of the Council
acres of land out of the w es t George Starr got the wonners
Provtded how eve r that t he half o f Lot No 1212 tn Sec t ton
new street l1gh ts shall be 2 Taw nshtp 2 and Range 12 tn theor flrst run, a wild potch
located W1thm 750 feet of a th e Ohto Company s Purcha se
d t slrlbUI I on ct r cull of th e tn Letart Townsh 1p Met gs accounted for the second, the
Com pany
and
prov1ded Cou n ty Oh10 satd 40 acre lot thord came home on Jay
further that no add 1t 1ona t betng m the nor th part of the
Teotlebaum's mfoeld out and
tncandescent st r eet l1ght s
west half of the 160 ac re lot
s halt be ~nsta ll ed
above menttone d a nd be 1ng the fourth on shortstop Cecol
SECTION 5 The m1n mum the same properly conveyed
Coley's error
number of s tr eet lights shall by Nancy Ptekens et at
to
be not less than th e sum of the Jose ph Martm Ptckens by
Two bases on balls, one
total nu mber spec ~f 1ed above deed dated March 24 1937 and
mtentional,
proVIded Tampa
and whene-.er
add1t1onal recorded tn Book 140 at Page
l1 ghts are 1nstalled
t h e 591 of the Deed R et:ords ot woth a thord onnmg nm John
m 1n 1mum number of l1ghts Me1gs County Oh10 exce ot
Davos walked and Crum, woth
shall
be
tn c reased
ac
four acres off the wes t stde
cordtngly
th ere of t:onvey e d by Jos eph two out, was mtentionally
SECTION 6 It tS turth er Mart tn
P 1ckens to
Elva walked Then Casey Shef1eld
agreed that the Company shall P1ck~ns Vartan a nd Robert P
move street ligh ts to new Vartan by deed dated March lined sharply to left field and
tocat10ns o r c hang e the type
25 1937 and r ecorded tn Book
of ftxture s to ano ther typ e 141 at Page 337 of the Deed Edwards dropped the ball,
spec lf te d above as reques te d R ec ords
teav tn g
twenty Davos scorong
by t he Coun c il by reso lut 1on
acres co nv eyed h er e by
For the fo.rst time smce
prov1ded how e ver that the
Deed Referen ce
Volume
a-ctual cos t to the Company m 16 1 Page 449 Me1 gs County 1956, foreogn teams were
maktng such r e toc at 1ons or
Deed Rec ords
excluded from the Lottie
c; hanges m the f ixt ur es shall
You are requtr e d lo an sw er
be
pa1d
tor
by
the the c omplatnt w thtn 28 days League senes held here
Mun 1C1Pi'll1 ty
a ft er t he last publica! on of annually League offoc1als
SECTION 7 Th e Company lht S nottt: e
wh t: h w ill be
s,hall make every effort to
publ iShe d on ce ea&lt;:h week for voted last year to limit the
k.eep the street
l1ght1n g StX success1ve w eeks The last
sys tem cont racted t or
n p u bl tea l on wtll be made on senes to Amerocan teams
operalton dur~ng the l tm e Se ptember 29 1975 and the 28 after teams from Natoonalist
pr.ov1ded If for any r eason days for answer will c om
Chona had won love of the last
the Company fads to do so for
m ence on t hat date
more t han an aggreg ate of
SIX
sertes
In case of your fa ilu r e to
four(4 J hours 1n any one
answer o r o therw se r es pond
Earlier Saturday, Medford,
rpo nth
and upon wrllt e n
nQI1ce of suc h aggr e gat e a s r equ 1red by t he Ohto Rules Ore , behmd the two-hot
of Ctvtl Procedur e tudgment
o-utage furn tshe d
to
the
by de f au l t will be rendered
of
Usa
Company by the Mun c 1pa l lly aga 1nst you for th e ret1ef potchong
w•t h tn ten ( 10) days of th e end
Killongsworth,
defeated
Dox
dema nded tn the complatnt
of such month there shalt be a
Rolls, N Y , 1-0 on an
p(o rata r etluctton from th e
Mann .n g D Webs t er
/Jill to cover suc h outages No
Ju dge and Ex o ff1C 10 unearned nm m the fourth
Ttabll tly shall attach to the
Cl erk of the Co mmon mnong to won the Lo ttle
Campany for any outag e
Pl ea s Co urt
SECT ION 8 The Company
League all-gorl softball
Probate D tviS on
sha ll not be requtr e d to rnstall
M e1gs County Oh10 champoonshop
addtltonal stre et l 1g h ts or
m a1ntam or repla ce la mps 1n
tl'le
event
t hat
th e ( 8 ) 25 (9 ) 2 8 1S 22 29 6t c
Munlc iPattty ts tn arrears tn
pttyment for serv1ces r en
dP"red nor s hall the Company
be requrred .to tnstall mor e
than SIX (6) s tre et l 1ght s
lctaw&amp;I.J
durmg the last year wh1ch lh 1S
11y HENnt ARNOlD oUIU DOD LEE
Or:dtnance tS m effect
SECTION 9 The Company Unscramblt these four Jumbles,
at~
115 own expense sha ll
exerctse reaso nabl e dil1g ence one letter to each square, to
to msure that the l tgh l tng form four ordmary words .
system tS 1n good order and
that all s treet
lights are
burntng and shall make
replacem ents as soo n as
posstble followmg not1f1catton
by the customer of the need
for such servtce
but the
C6mpany shalt no t be requ1r ed
to.'
perform
any
such
replacement or ma mten ance
ex~ept durmg regular workmg
hour s
SECTION 10 The Company
shall save the Munlctpaltty
!J:,ilrmtess from any and all
~abtl1tyoccas•oned by the sdle
tregltgence of the Co mpan y m
TO MAKEAW~H
Jlhe construction mamtenanc e
NECTION I
~d o peratton of !Is street
((ghttng
system
1n
the
A{! lin tCtpaltty
t1 SECtiON II
T1tle to all
Now arrange the cirded letters
~Ire , poles , lamp s and ap
to form the surpr1se answer. aa
l)'urtenance s used by t he
~ompany ul furntshmg th e
by \he above cartoon.
S'fvl.ce contempla ted m tht s
Orumance ts and shall be tn
th~
Company
SECTION 1? All the rtghls
(Aatwen lomorrow)
and privileges granted to , and
lf:t' obltga t ton rmposed upon
Jumhln BIPED CI.OAK SCRIBE VERMIN
Satd Company a s rec tle d Salurd•y'•
,,t ltltS ContraCI
shall
Anlwf'r Mag ht seuhd for 1u cr(( 11 - LIPS
I

Wanted

Pets For Sale

LL title to
Lakewood

JJW!OOID'l!.!£®

HYLYS

0

ILESUNS

..-1 s-

lk.t

I

I

ISAQUEYj

I (

.,,

._I_....:Prill=lii:::.,=SI·=-'=ISI~ANSWIII=:::.:::IIIre.:;_____JI

'"t

I

•

I

J

Dark red whtte v tnvl too loaded wtfh extras rndud1nq
at r cond ftlt w heel ([VJse Control custom tntertor
power &amp; r eclt ntng sea t AM radto tape r ad tal w s w
ltres less than 4,500 miles by local owner SA VE

U09S

3SO V 8 autom atiC trans power brakes good GR70 15
ra dtal l 1res dark brown flntsh blk v 1n yf tnlenor
radto

1972 COMET 2 DOOR

I

a::x l l D

PENN2DIL

Blown
Insulation Servtces

North lnd Street
Tune Ups
8,;rttertes
Shock Absorbers
Ttre1
Muffler Ta1lp1pes Cooli119

Blown tnto Walls &amp; Atttcs 1

serv1ce
Volkswagens and other
foretgn cars
Wtlbur Ward ,

6 cyl std tran s radto ltke new w w t1re s blue frntsh
ru ce car wtth good economy

P I C
'J~F
O RIGINAL
SEASCA P~
AN D LAND
SCA PE PAINTINGS
E
JOYC E MILLER 99 7 768 0
8 10 ?4 1p

1971 SILVER Capr1 for sate
Ca ll 667 6 18 5
8 21 6t p

Notice
ROOM
A ND
BOARD
Pr tv &lt;He a1r cond !toned
r oom
phone
T V
att
m('a ls laundry plus many
ex tr as Wrlle Mrs M
J
M1 1l e r Box 105 Pome roy
Oil o
8 I 26tp

Ro om and Bo ard
ROOM AND
BOARD l or
se n1o r t: 111z e ns Low tn come
l 1v1ng very n 1ce Phone 992

19 77 GMC
ton p c kup truck
shar p and
n -.e ry good
condll ro n Prtce S7 350 Ca ll
99 / 791/or see Steve B urton
8 17 1'lt p

fOJ Rent
3 1\. ND 1 ROOM furntshed and

un f u r niShe d
apartments
Phon e 9f"/ 7 543&lt;1
4 17 J fc

J509

6 24 26t c

J

Yard Sale
PORCH sa l e A ug 28 30 9 30
a rn 6 30 p m
Ctolhtng
men s women s some lar ge
s1ze m ens c lolhmg m 1s c
ar t 1c tes
37 8 Second St
Po m eroy Oh10
8 24 St c
YARD Sa te on 68 1 east of
Tupper s P la1n s turn r ghl
a! Soh10 Stat.on August 2S
26 27 Two saddles
TV
D• sh es t: l ot h es and m sc
1tem
8 22 ) lp

Wanted To Buy

H /\ L L 5 Sa lvage o n old R t JJ
I US I across fr om G ru es er s
Ch pper w dt buy 1unk .;~ vt os
w1thout motor s $16 to S70
w .tll motors
$18 to $'1J
Comp l et e $? 0 t o $7S Th1 s
doesn t nclud e compac t and
fore1 gn car s mo lar s and
tranc;m,ss, on s not cleaned
$1 50 a hu ndred Sc rap No 7
l onQ meta! ~ ~ a hundred
N o 1 tong rn e ta l ~1 50 p er
hund r ed
c l ean cast S7
hun dre d T tn 40c per hund
red A n y mat er 1a l b r ought
1nto 1unk yard not sor ted
wt ll b e g rad ed acco rdm gly
Pr 1ces s ubtect to &lt;:ha ng e
hours fro m 8 a m to 4 p m
Monday through Fr day 8
il m
to I ? noon Saturdays
Wil t p c kup old autos do
hav e so me parts for autos
Phone 9B Y4 ?9 7
B 19 6t c

.OLD

turn1ture
1c e boxes
bras5 bed s
or complete
households
Wrtle M
o .,
Mt!ler
Rt
4 Pomeroy
Oh10 Call 992 7760
10 7 74

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

Pets For Sale
AKL Reg Pektngese pupp1es
S7S Phon e Pt P lea sant 675
SOJO
8 19 12tc

F OUR
AKC
Reg1stered
Cocker Spantel pupp1es
Worme d and shots Ready to
go $7S Phone 949 d1 13
8 22 3tc

----

----------

AKC GERMA N Shepherd
pupp te s good blood tme s
gentle drspostt1on wormed
and ready to go Phone 992
562]
8 24 6tc

TWO Furn 1Shed apts
Kay
Cecil 87 Soulh Seco nd Ave
Mtddleport Oh 10
Phone
992 S2 62
8 21 tt c
TRAILER space for rent on
SR 174 to Me1gs M1nes Call
7111 5986
8 22 3tc
BEDROOM
furn1shed
mobtle home No pets Call
992 7479
8
tf c

n

PRIV A TE mee tm g room for
any o rga n1Za1 10n phone 997
39'S
3 II lie
LASALLE Hotel M1ddleport
Oh10 Rooms S5 up Specta l
rat es by week or month
T v ac
8 24 26tc
NEWLY f urn1shed 2 bedr m
apt wall to walt c arpetmg
a c no pet s or c htldren Call
949 3783
8 24 3tp

3904

8 17 lfc

Employment Wanted
W I L L d(l odd 10bs rnowmg
haul1ng pamtmg or rooft ng
Phone 992 7409
7 29 26tc

.._1\ RPENTRY
flo or tn g
ce tltng and panelmg Ph on e
99 ') 77S9
8 I? 76tc
WI L L babystl tn my home
Phone 992 7647
8 24 7tc

~REMODELING

Pll.tmbtng
h ea l1 ng and all types of
general
repatr
Work
guaranteed
20 years ex
perten c e
Ph one 992 2409

s 1 "f
- - - - -- - -- -----

Help Wanted
EXPERIENCED
auger
operators hydraultc and
carr1age operators needed
unton pay Vtrgmla Auger
Corp . Phone 992 5367
a 24 3tc

---------SOMEO NE to l1ve- ;

- ;;,h
elderly couple Coolvt ll e
Ohfo Good salary Phone
667 3833 or La ncaster 653
4578
8 24 Jtc

---------- ---Wanted To Rent

LOCAL couple needs coun try
hom e 1n Ch ester Pomeroy
area Phone 985 3937 or 985
3988 Che s ter
B 19 lit e

19 /S FREEDOM mob il e home
take out
payments
Call
!6 14 ) d46 3911
8 t ? 171c
10 x50 TRAILER 3 br wtth 15
porch tocated m Hartford
W Va
500 feet from r•ver
50x100 lo t Phone (304)882
)247
8 21 6fc
x 1'} FT
1970 W nston
mob1le
hom e
two
b~droonh
underpinned
fr o nt porch added s torag e
butldtng
and atr
con
drt1 0 ntng Good locat1on 1 ,
mde off Rt 7 and 1 m ile
south of Tuppers Platn s
Oh10 Ca ll ( 614 ) 667 6777
8 19 61p

1977 GREENW OO D 64 x 17
mobrle horne n o furr 1lure
exce pt refrigerator and
stove all e l ectr iC
54 000
Ph on e 997 5606
8 19 6l c

For Sale
19 77 CA MPER
pa rtly self
con ta1ned
must see to
apprec ate
S1 695
Phone
99 ? 77 )8
8 15 9tc
TWO used Sli h l cham saws
Call Pomeroy Home and
Auto P hone 992 2094
8 22 3tc

TR A ILER fo r ren t ·~ mdeo off
R 1 14] On K 1ngsbury Rd
Ellher furni Shed or un
t ur n1shed
P hone 74? 3113
8 ?0 121c
MOBILE hom e for rent
Phone A lber t Htl l 949 2761
8 20 17 tc

19 77 ARROW Camper phone
99? S468
8 15 261 p

4ROO MS and bath apt rn
Rutland area
Phone 992
5858
7 27 lfc

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

LAURELAND APARTME NT
6t h and George Sts
New
H ave n
W
Va
JM
MEDIATE
OCCUPANCY
Select
your
2 bedrm
townhouse
Bea ultful new
apt
complex
Appltances
furn1shed
c ompletely
c arpeted Rent $128 and up
1n&lt;:lud1ng utd1hes
Ca ll
res1dent manager Sam or
Becky Longanacre
1 304
88? 2S67
8 19 12tc

COU NTRY Mob1le Home
Park Rt 33 ten miles north
ol Pomeroy Large tots W1lh
cont:rere pa t 10!t Sidewalks
runn e rs and off street
parktng Phone 992 7479
1231Hc 1

4 ROOM furn1 shed apartment
C all 997 3658
8 17 lf c

~URNISHED

apartment
adults only rn Mtddleport
Phone 992 3874
3 25 lfc

-------------for Sale

TREE
rrpened
Alberton
cann1ng pea ches now at the
Mason peach Orchard S6
and $7 bu Please brrng own
con tamers 9 am to 6 p m
8 24 Jtc
KENNEBEC potatoes for
wtnler Phone Tom Sayre,
Phone 843 2491
8 24 31p
TR AV EL trailer Concord 23
tt
Sl 900
Col l ege Rd
Sy racuse Oh to Phone 992
2797
13 24 3tc
THREE
Holzer
Medical
School nurstng untforms
stze 9 lfke new $30 A l so 1
patr nurstng Shoes, slze 8 ,
$8 One deep well pump new
motor $&lt;15 Phone 992 2280
8 24 3tc
3 TON cen tr al atr condtfloner
untt Comfortaire 36 000
B T u s, Phone 247 3941
8 24 6tc
REGISTERED
Polled
Hereford bull large gentle,
4 yrs old Phone 1304) 773
5405
8 24 31C
STOKERMATIC coal stove
refr igerator , free long hatr
ktltens Phone 742 4406
8 24 5tp
WARM
Morning
Heater ,
Electr1c sewtng machine
10 ton tack Phone 843 2645
af.ter 6 p m
8 24 3tp

---

-

---'--

-------

see

Ph

4 10 1 mo

~92

Pom er ov

2174

East Marn

Ph

Stop In Or
Call992 7S37 8 1 75
WOULD YOU BELIEVE ?
Build an all steel butld1ng at
Pate Barn pnces? Golden
Gtant All Stee l Buildtngs
Rt 4 Box 148 Waverly
Ohto Phone 947 2296
7 24 ttc
EXtAVA TING doz er loader
and backhoe work
sep l tt.;:
lank s
tns t a tt ed
dump
tru cks and to boys for htre
will haul ftll dtrt tap sotl
ltmestone and grave l., Call
Bob or Roger Jeff e rs day
phone 992 7089 n1ght phone
992 35 25 or 992 5232
2 11 tt c

-- - - ...

--

SEPTIC TANKS c l eaned
Modern San1tat1on 992 395 1
or 992 7349
9 18 tfc
PORT A BLE
TO ILET
RENTA L
Constructton
Out d oor
e-.ents
Ph one
GallipOliS
446 47 !l2
Ru ss ells Pl umb ng and
Heat 1ng
8 19 lfc

m

D &amp; D TREE Tr•mm ng

J
bedroom rec room bath &amp;
Now under constructton

lf2 double garage b 1 level
home stfuated on an acre of
ground w1fh all uttl ttt eS 1 on
the Wtld Wood Estates
located on flatwoods road,
between Route 7 and 33
Wtll be ready to sell m 6
wks by owner

TIME, BVT

pnces

All s1zes on hand,

S324 69
-1 Wood Burntng Stove

n92

Cll P THIS AD and brong ot
rn for

slS 00

dtscount

POMEROY LANDMARK

UTI'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-SO HE WON'T TALK,

rJJ:CfR:==TA=I~:ili:Y:IiTHOSE:=E::G::E=M=S::::::::-'J
A~E. MINE-OUG "flY\ UPOH

MV OWH PROPERTY IN A
COUtHR'f 10 THOUSAND
MILES FROM HERE-

20

WliA!? WHY SHOULD I
TELL 'I'OU WHERE IT WAS
AND HAVE EVERY SHARP·
S~OOTER IN THE WORLD
SWARMING OVER MY
PROPI'RT;.'f..;•.,...,.,.....-

CANNING tomatoe s
green
a nd red peppers Cle lan d
Fa rms Geraldtne Cleland
Racme Phone 949 4121
a 19 lfc
STEREO RADIO 8 track
tape
am tm
4 speed
c hanger
com b t nalton
Phone SlOJ 66 or terms Call
997 3965
8 19 tfc
HUNTING L cense
Ntghf
crawlers
meal worms
TACKLE
guns
ammo
bows
arrows
camptng
equ tp CBs and accessory
fndran Joe s 308 Page Sl 2
st reets past Mtddleport
Swtmmtng Pool
1974 20 FT
GOOSENECK
s tock trailer Wtth 1974 Chevy
dual wheel 1 IOn PICkup
Can be bought together or
separate Call 742 3767
8 10 lfc
CANNING peaches now thru
Se ptember 10 U S No 1
grade yellow Freestone For
cann tn g or freezmg
$6 49
bushel 53 49 1' bushel 51 99
peck
PLEA S E
BRING
YOUR
OWN
CON
TAINERS Peaches are our
spec1atty Two conventent
lo cal tons Bobs Market
Mason w Va Phone (30d )
773 5711
and
Mtdway
Mark e l
Pomeroy
Ohto
(610 997 1587
8 10 27tc

OH, YOU'D KEEP MY
SECRET, EH? THAT'S A
GOOD OHE. WHAT"?
l"HEH 'I'OU'LL KEEP "THE
10 BILLION IN GEMS.,

EH!

r;:~tG:::JO:o::AA=E=A=D=-n:I='M=OII=E==:""":::-1
WHO CAN LOSE llifM AIID
STILL GET AlOIIo:; WllHOUT
MAKING A BEEF- ·· NO,
I DIDN'T CALL YOU A
THI
YOU'VE GOT
\ S&lt;)MfoTHING 1l1ER!', FRIEHD-

- - - --.--

S EWING
MACHINE
Rep61rs se rv1ce all makes
991 228-l Th e F_abnc;. Sho p
Po me roy Autho'l' f zed S1nge r
we
Sa t es and Ser v 1ce
sharpen Sc tSSor s
J 29 ti c

I'M ALLEY

Real Estate for Sale

C\?1': AN' -n-IlS

128 Laurel 5 1
Fo r fur ther 111
ca ll 992 3868
8 24 lltp
.....__

WELL I 'M M161-11Y
PLEASED T'MEET
YOU GEWTS ' IM

STOREKEEPER
SMrrH'

____ _

UH WH.ol;TS
\OUI&lt; FIRST
NAME 7

8 l5

I'd qe-t more
sense -talk1n' t
t11 jUQ 1

You sa4
som'thm' 'bout
a Juq, Joe l?

So larium ,
room
3
bedrOoms ,
P /2
baths
basement and garage Good
restdent1al area
$25 000 00
MODERN - Ntce 3 bedrooms
wtth storage closets
large
bath, basement garage wrth
3/ 4
shop
and
acre
lot

wtth dug well

,O

trailers

and

Woll hold 2
then

$4500 00
POMEROY

ntce
kitchen ,
full
basement. nice rec R All
electric, carporf storage, 1

bedrooms wrth closets, dmtng,
modern kttchen . full basement
near school and st ore s

acre JUST 522,700
TUPPERS PLAINS on Rt

$17,500 00
S BEDROOMS -

7 -

older home wrth modern
krtchen and 2 baths Large
porch and large corner lot

21/2 acres

Home has
new stee l stdtng, 2 B R ,
bath d1n1ng R own water
&amp; ctty water garage, lots

ol buddong soles $10.500
POMEROY - Htgh on a
holl 2 B R . bath, noce
kttchen, uttlrty R
arr
cond nat gas heat Tool
shed 2 car garage ll/ 2 acre

very provale SACRIFICE
PRICE $13.000
MIDDLE PORT - Older 2
story

home

Good

IF I CAN'T HAVE THIS COAT
-NO OTHER GIRL CAN rr-

Mv roght hand opponenl opened
one heart What should I have
bod• '
The answer lo hts queslton ts
that he should have passed Hos
hand would be a sound one-club
openong but ot os a most un
sou nd vulnerable two-club over
ca ll Overcalls (particu la rly at
tile two levels are based pnman
ly on playong trocks not hogh
cards A takeout double woth
only two spades ts madvt sable
and a notrump overcall would
be absurd
(Do you have a quastton for
fhe Jacooys? Wnfe 'Ask the
Jaco' Jys
care of tht s
new spaper The most tnterestmg questiOns wtfl be
used m fhts column and
wnters wt/1 receJVe coptes of

JACOBY MODERN)

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
39 German
I Stroke of
nver
liglotning
40 Fender
5 Maxun
rrushaps
10 Ool-yoeld41 Trust
mg tree
DOWN
II Scholar
I
Cow and
13 For fear
Jmgle
that
2
W lnd
14 Nebraska
rtver
sorcery
15 New
3 Get cold
Gumea
feet
town
( 3 wds )
16 Wo.re meas- 4 Voetnamese
urement
holiday
17 Pullet
5 Have
18 Loke
hopes
tropocal
6 Procrastonate
weather
7 Second
20 Kmd of
Mrs
table
Sonatra
21 p-;:;;,:;.iss&gt;:orylli1!"'13'i4-

10 DO-Celebrity Sweepstakes 3,1S, Stale Fair '1S 4.
Spin Olf 8 10. Mike Douglas 13
10 30-Wheel or Fortune 3,1S, Pr ice Is Righi 8 Band
stand 10
11 ro-High Rollers 3."', 15 One Llleto Live 6 Gambit
8.10
11 30-Hollywood Squares 3,1S, Brady Bunch 13,
Midday 4, Love ol Life 8,10
11 S~ Take Kerr 8, Farmllme 10
12 ro-Magnlflcenl Marble Machine 3,1S. Showolls 13,
"
Bob Braun's 50 50 Club 4, News 6,8,10
12 30-Jackpoi3, 1S, All My Chlldr~n 6,13, Search for
Tomorrow 8,10

..

12 5~NBC News 3,15
•'
1 ro-News 3, Ryan 's Hope 6,13, Phil Donahue 8. No!
For Women Only 15
I 30-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15, Lei's Make a Deal6,13.
As The World Turns 8,10
2 ro-$10,000 Pyramid 6,13, Guiding Ugh! 8.10
2 30-Doctors 3 •.1S. Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,13, Edge of
Nlghl 8,10
3 ro-Anolher World 3,4,15. General Hospital 6.13.
Match Game 8.10. Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20
3 3~ne Life lo Live 13, Bewitched 6 , Taltlelales
8,10 The Romagnolls' Table 20
4 00-Mr Cartoon 3. I Dream of Jeannie 4, Somerset
1S, Mickey Mouse Club 6. Musical Chairs 8,

Sesame Sl 20,33 Movie " VIlla" 10 Dlnahh 13
4 30-Bewllched 3, Merv Griffin 4, Mod Squad 6,
Mickey Mouse Club 8 Bonanza 15
5 ro-FBI 3 Lucy Show 8 Mlsler Rogers' Neigh
borhood 20,33
5 30-News6, Andy Grlflllh 8, Hogans Heraes13. Get
Smart IS, Elec Co 20,33
6 ro-News 3,4,8,10 13,1S ABC News 6, Sesame Sl 20.
Catch 33 33
6 30-NBC News 3,..,,15. ABC News 13. Andy Grlllllh 6 ,
CBS News 8,10 Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33
7

~Truth or Cons

3,4 Bowling for Dollars 6, What's

My line 8 News 10, Movie " II Happened One
Nlghl" 13, To Be Announced 1S. Antiques 20. Jean
Shepherd' s America 33
7 30-Hollywood Squares 3,4, lei's Deal With It 6

Buck Owens 8

Edition with Martin
9 New
Price Is Rlghl10, Scene One, Take0ne33
8 ro-Adam 12 33,4,15, Happy Days 6, Good Times
8,10, When Television Was Live 20.33
8 »-Movie "T he Big Ripoff" 3,4,15 Happy Days 6,
Agronsky 20

Yesterday's Answer

8 Nerve
oneself
t 2 wds )
9 - cordiale
12 Compassoo11ate
16 Boundary
19 Herbaceous
plant
22 Put on 23 Propose
6

24 Marone alga
25 Wrest
27 Uppozaner
and
Appaloosa
29 Small anvol
30 Dnve back
31 All
36 Wone ( Fr )
37 Throce
( mus )

1

9

Evening

Movie

I'LLWA IT

HERErr-

Renovated

-·.--' .,-.J_-

baths, natural gas furnace
basement, ctty water and
large lot Garden space Only

825

WlNNIE
YES i"PSTHEONLY
' HOME'' .I REALLY

992 332f

HAVE TVE BEEN
ON THE SEA
M06TOFMY

I UNDERSTAND1
AND I CANT
FAULT YOU I'OR
PURSUIN0 l&gt;OUR
DREAMS

WOW! I'M A

WHY, I DO
BEUEVE
THEoY'RE

KISSING'

LIFE

8,10, Nova 20.3..
9 10-Movle " Fall Safe,

13
10 DO-Pollee Story 3,4,15, Barnaby Jones 8,10, News
20, Interface 33
10 30-Woman 20 Mqnly Python 's Fyl lng Circus 33
11 ro-News 3 4,6,8,10 1S
11 30-Johnny Carson 3."',15 FBI 6, Movie "Fool
steps Nice Guys Finish Last 8 Movie " I Wanl
You" 10 News 13 Janak! 33
12 ro-Wide World Mystery 13
12 30-Wide World Mystery 6
1

oo- Tomorrow

34

I 30-News 13
e rr attc tem p erament neg ates
any thmg someone mtgh l do tr'l
your b ehal f In ad d tlt o n tl
causes you to pro tect a poor
•m age

'tl sandwoch
28 Lofeguard's
hue
29 Monkly
haLrcut
32 Dostaff
sheep
33 Shrew
34 Gun the
motor
35 War of 37 Bonding
substance
38 Create

For Tuesday, Aug 26 1975

--+--+-1

cau l ous when you are workt ng
or trave!tng You re tn an tm
puis ve m ood today Thts could
spel l trouble

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)

BETTER MATCH·
MAKER THAN

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-

I. THOUGHT .I
WASf

os

Here's how
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

apostrophes, the length
hmts Each day the code

to work it ·

and formahon of the "ords
letters are different

are

all

CRYPTOQUOTES

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

GJDG

UDA

NYKl

GJDG

SKII

Nl

MNIKIG

JNI

MNIPHU

MJH
Nl

ZKDSMHZGJ

- IHVZDGKI

Yesterday's Cryptoquote· HAPPINESS :&gt;Nt;AKS 11'
TIIROUGH A DOOR YOU DIDN'T KNOW YOU LEFT OPEN
- JOHN BARRYMORE

HOW COME 'IE DON T
PITCH IN AN' DO '10RE
WASHIN', MAW?
..d''--'"'

OKAI{ ..00
STVPIO CAT

TH' LINES
~USY RIGHT
NOW, PAW

LET us se rv tt:e your Volks
wagen
reasonable rates
Middleport Pennzod North
Second Street Mtddleport
Phone 99? 9973
8 19 26tc
1975 SUZUKI ?50 $850 See Joe
Imboden Welch town Htll 1n 1
M 1nersvllle
8 19 6tp

J

J'

ARIES (March 21-Aprtl 19)
Because yo u teet luckrer than
you are to d ay you co uld mts
, ca lc ula te and cause il loss fo r
the lam fy We gh decrs1ons
carefully

TAURUS (A pro I 20-May 20) Be

One letter s1mply stands for another In th1s sample A IS
used for Lhe three L s, X for the two 0 s etc Si ngle letters

ROOM house, 8 acres
a tr ea dy ftnanced
Goes
turntsh e d $6 500 Phone 985
4290
II 22 5tc

' Forever Amber "

Mash 8 10 Consvmer Survival Kit 20,33
9 00-Movle ' Man In the Wilderness " 6 Hawaii Five

26 Hotbed

AFIER IT!!-

Mur ie l Stevens 8 .

Govrmnet 8 , Popeye 10. New Zoo Revue 13
9 S~huck While Reports 10

XX

Oswald
How about some
articles on percentage plays onvolvmg several SLD.ts?
Jom
Here s a hand you
played woth me roght after you
got back from the Korean war
You took your ace of clubs
drew trumps led a club to the
kong ruffed the last club, led a
s pade to dummy 's ace and the
seven spot back to your hand
When East played hos kong you
clao med sonce you would be able
to dosca rd one of my doamonds
on your queen of spades It took
me an hour before I reahzed
what a good lone of play you had
taken
Oswald It really was a good
hne I was sure to make my

Phil Donahue 4 15

gadget

JUMP IN

MODERN Walnut stereb
rad10 console am tm radto ,
4 speed changer Ba lan ce
SlOt 72 or terms Call 992
]965
a 12 tfc
BALER TWINE 1 000 ft 325
lb s
Is
FARM
FER
Ttl!ZER
Spectal pr1ces
Ball Brothers Farms S R
143 and Co Rd 10 Phone
698 4571
8 19 6tp

6•

3

Schoolles 10, Morning wllh D J 13
9 30-Nol For Women Only 3, D lnah 6, Galloping

nver

woth alley $34 500 00
OLD BRICK - 10 room s, 2

5

9 00--A M

25 Kotchen

LIL ABNER

noce

$12 000 00 NEW LISTING
LOOK AT OUR PICTURES.
WE HAVE HERE AT THE
:OFFICE DROP IN OR CALL

Farmllme 10
6
1 ro-Today 3,4,15, A M America 6,13, CBS News 8,10
8 ro-Lucy Show 6, Capt Kangaroo 8,10, Sesame Sl
33
8 »-Big Valley 6

A Massachusetts correspondent asks
I was vulnerable
and held
•xx¥Axx+K xx ..,AQx

dell 23 French

con

d1loon , 3 B R • 2 baths,
utololy R , donong R ,
storage bldg. smal l yard
Close to shoppong JUST
$8,300
FOR GOOD HOMES PRICED RIGHT ~SEE
OR CALL US TODAY.
PHONE 992-2259

'---- -

3

I.

Soulh

Report 13

3~olumbus Today 4
•~Morning Report 3
5~News 13

6
6

~~~~

22 Commedia 1o

some

5 Ml LES OUT ON Rl 143
- NEW - 2 B R , bath,

East

2~Farm

6

6 30-Five Minutes to Live By "'· News 6, Bible An
swers 8 Concerns &amp; Comments 10 Rev Cleophus
Robinson 13

unfrrendl y

~Mf·~-

2 STORY fra me house good
local tOn on corner lot
B
rm s garage 1' 1 baths gas
heat tn Mtddleport Rodney
Down tng
Real
Estate
Broker
Ca ll 992 37 3 1 for
appointment
B 24 3tc

Near town, large
barn with concrete floor, and 7
room house. next to school
Move rrght tn $31 ,500 00
3 ACRE LOT Near mtne

NorttJ South vu lnerable

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

16 ACRES -

.aiiA, Phone 992 2181

•AQ

North

6 00-Sunr lse Seminar 4, Svmmer Semester 10

Furthermore, of East held four
spades to lhe kong he moght
make a rrusLake and grab ho s
kong roght away

... A 6

J •
Pass
Pass
Pass
Opemng lead - J ""

$23 500 00

:....~ack W Carsey, Mgr

spades were

VIJBELlfVABI..E' I

lhe El1te's qot a
lhel.l a1n't hear a
word I sa4'

8 21 6tc

K 9

... Q 5 4 2
SOUTH IDI
• Q5 4 2
• A Q J 10 3

Pass
Pass

HE:'S

Phone 985 4186

start at

•

TI-lE'~

Owner

HOU SE tor sate m Portland 5
rms and bath good well 2
acres of ground Phone 843

• 97
•10 9652

ldJM /&gt;.IJD WALK

yea r s e)( pert ence Insured
fr ee estt mates Call 992 3057
Coolv il l e
Fhone ( 1) 667
3041
4 30 tic

________

REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE

SQI.\E i'&amp;::*'LE'
SO A\LIKVJARD,
i.WT C.HI:W

Pomeroy

~ --

• 10 8 6 3
¥ 8
.KJ 84
... J 1098

2798
7 24-I m&lt;&gt;:_

M IX L U N CRETE
del l( e r ed r1gh t to your
pro tect Fast an d easy Free
es ttmat es Phone 991 3284
Goeg tcrn Ready M1• Co
M1Gd teport Oh1 0
6 30 ttC

--

EAST

IK~ 1

~E AOY

HOU SE at
Pomeroy
form at ron

Real Estate For Sale

BORN LOSER

EXCAV A TING
ba c khoe
doz e r and d!lc her
Ga s
electr tc and water l 1ne
burral basements footers
sept1c systems and brush
cleantng W dl hau l fil l dtrl
top sot! sand and gravel
ltmestone for drtveways and
roads
Phone Cha r les R
Halft eld Backhoe Servtee
Rf 1 Rutland Ohto 742
6092
7 11 901 c

- - --.-'"

ELWOOD BOWERS""FrEPAIR
Sweepers loasters ~ron 's
a ll smatt appl tan t:es Lawn
mow er ne)(f to State H 1g h
way Garage o n Route 7
Phone 98S J82S
4 16 lfc

.t.K 7 I

DICK SEYLER

Flatwoods , Ohto
Pomeroy Ohto

kong small of spades of spades
broke 3 3 of I dropped a
songleton kong or finall y of the
spades dod nol behave I would
be able to fall bac k on the doa
mond finesse
Jom
That s ot exac tly You
gave yourself lhe best c ham:e m
spades wh1le managtng to re
tam the diamond hnesse m case

. 73
\\EST

TUESDAY. AUGUST 26, 1975

contract tf e1ther opponent he ld

25

• K6 542

WOOD METAL PLASTIC
ANTIQUES
MODERN CHEMICALS

KUHL CAKE DECOR

1 oo- Tomorrow 3,4
1 25--News t3

Spades hold percentage edge

SERVICE

K•tchen Stafe Inspected
L•censed
Baker
and
Decorator
Homemade
Noodles also featured

11 2~News 13
11 »-Johnny Carson 3 &lt;.IS FBI6 Movie " Maroc 7"
8 Movie The Glass Sphinx" 10. Janak! 33
11 5~Wide World Mystery 13
12 »-Wide World Myslery 6

516N l'

PAINT
STRIPPING

WANTED

Stegler &amp; Monogram

FUEL OIL
Heating Stoves

O LJR

NOR Til
• AJ7

CAKE BAKING

9 l Q-Movle ' On the Waterfront" 13
9 3Q-Boardlng House 3J
10 00-To Be Announced J3
11 ro-News 3 4 6 8 1015 ABC News 33

WIN AT BRIDGE

w iLL THE PILOr

George HobsleHer

8 \ 3 261p

~ - -- - - ----

WILL
do
roof
pa1nttng
shm gt1ng remodel tnter1or
etc Cii ll 9.39 5913
8206tc

Mobile Homes for Sale

WHE A i pen n1es RSc roll
S1lver ce rttft cates
Sl 25
each $7 btl Is S3 30 each
Buffalo n1ckefs
$6 roll
sdver dollars S4 40 each
L 1be rty n1cke ts S11 roll Call
Roger Wamsley Phone 74?
365 1
8 15 11tc

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

STU D
Se rvtc e
AKC
R eg 1s tered whtle poodle
For appo1n tm ent call 997

Ph 992_3993

WELDING ..,nd cutrmg ser
vtces Phone9494114
8 24 6tp

6S

2

BUY SEL L o r tr ade any U 5
cons or c urr e ncy W ill pay
~1 M/1 lor ~ 1 la ce 196-l and
old er d1mes quarters and
h al-.es
Call Rut l and 7J?
J6.'&gt; 1 f.!oge r Wamsley
8 15 17 1c

BR Trailer f u rn 1shed 82
Elm St
M ddleport Oh10
lnqu.r e b etween 9 a m and
6 p m at the Vtllage Gun
Shop Phon e 99 2 Sl 77 after 6
at
225
p
m
l nq u 1re
Broadway
8 21 6t c

HAND L ETTERED SIGNS
AND PO S TERS
FREE
EST IMATE S CALL M C
CRAWFORD 99'1 7680
8 7 261p

V M 1 60,H !

SMITH NELSON
MOJORS, INC._

C- U S TOM
FRAM IN G

MOBILE Crane se r-.1 ce and
dozer work Phone 997 5468
8 7 26 1p

CBS News 8,10, Jody's Body Shop 33
7 ro-Truth or Cans 3,•. Bawling far Dollars 6. What s
My line 8. News 10, Movie " Firecreek" 13
Wally 's Workshop 1S Man Builds. Man Deslroys
20. No Honestly 33

Nathan B1ggs
R adtlfor Spec•ahst ..

Syracuse, Ohto

Tennis 20

8 I~Baseball 3,15
9 ro-Movle The Legend ol Lizzie Borden" 6,
Baseball 4 Beacon Hill 8.10 School for Wives 33

6 »-NBC News 3.• IS. ABC News 13. Andy Grlflllh 6

From the l argest Truck or
Bulldozer Rad tato r to the
S!)l all es t Heater Core

lARRY LA_VE~DER

Mgr &amp; Mechanic
8 21 1 mo

11850

rEXPERIENCED

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

Systems
We
a I so

SAVE SAV E
1972 NOVAS S CPE

FREE ESTIMATES

Phone 992-9913

SAVE

5 ro-F B I 3. Merv Grlflln "· Lucy ~now 8, Mister
Rogers' Neighborhood 20 33
5 »-News6. Andy Griffith 8. Hogan 's Heroes 13. Get
Smarl 15, Elec Co 20,33
6•ro-News 3,8,10,13,15, Sesame Sl 20. ABC News 6.
Jeanne Woll Wllh 33

Business Services

QUALITY Motor Co.
1975 MONTE CARLO LANDAU

7 30-Thai Good Ole Nashville Music 3. NFL cllon '7S '
&lt;, Pollee Surgeon 6. S2S,OOO Pyramid 8, Evening
Edition wllh Marlin Agronsky 20 Municipal Court
10. Unlamed World IS
8 ro-Jae Garaglola 3 IS. Rookies 6, Sale ol Cham
plans • Cher 8, 10. Black Is a Beaulllul Woman 33,

MONDAY , AUGUST 2S, 197S

2 SfGNS Pomeroy
OF

[ ]

r==~i,;~~~~~~~~~·:u~g~glested

•

Auto Sales

Auto Sales

WHO

LIVES
NE~T OOOR!1
THIS IS IT!

You r pocketbook •s -.ulnerable
today Someone tS ready to
take advantage o t your happy
go lu cky nature
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Jus ! when th tngs seem to be
opentng up lor you a sudd e n
proble m at home preven ts you
from gett ng what you want

LEO (July 23-Aug 23) Walch
what you say o r do today A
t houghtle ss remark or act
coul d mak e you WISh you cou ld
dt sappea r qu ckly
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sepl 22)

Shy
away fr om borrowtng anythmg
today Th1ngs w tll not hap pen
as you a nlrcrpal e A lnends h tp
coul d be severely damaged

LIBRA fSept 23-0cl 23) Yo ur

HERE CO'riES M'( !!ROTHER.!
HE'S NOT SI&lt;INNI{ AN'o' MORE II
HE'S AS FIT AS A FiDDLE!

SCORPIO (Ocl 24-Nov 22)
You cou ld ftn d yourself worlt
1ng alone on a mess someonee lse sta rte d Tht s won I put you
1n the best frame of m nd
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-Dec
21) Tho ughtless ac 11ons of a
lr end produce some c hanges.
fn your pla n s th at aren t what
you 1n tended or des~re d

CAPRICORN (Dec

22-Jan.

19) A pa r tne r or assoc tate
cou ld cau se a problem for you
by p tl 1ng add1 t1 o nat heavy
r es ponstbd t es on yo ur
sho ulders

AQUARIUS (Jon 20-Feb 19)
You wtll have dlfltculty today
applymg yoursel f to ment~ ,
work becauSe o f u nu sua l and •
frequent tnlerrupt ons

PISCES (Feb 20-March 20)
Keep romance out of the PICtur e today Unexpected ex
pen ses w II pop up 10 put tt
damper on yo u r enJoyment

~Your

~Birthday
,
Aug 26, 1975
,~

Some very lucky breaks come -..
your way thi s year They IL
prove to be qut l e profitable 1
However don I b lo w you (
wmdfall o n unnecessary tuxunes

FAT A5

A CELLO?

'
I ,

I

J

'

.'

�I.

I

8 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Aug. 25, 19i5

HOSPITAL NEWS
Holzer Medical Center
r.eon; Mrs. Steve Rtchmond
(Births, Aug.22J
and son, Poinl Pleasant:
Mr. and Mrs. Harold H Ruth P t.•ar~o"n, Clift on;
Russell , a son, West Raymond P ope, Bidwell:
Columbia, W. Va .. Mr . and Mrs Nur man l ..audermilt,
Mrs. Delmar Harns. (.1 son. Mason ; Cathcnnc Pearson,
Coalton; Mr. and Mrs. Joseph New 1-lrtven . Mrs ~ James
D. Sciles, a son, Lel&lt;!rt, W Harlley , Pmnt Pleasant.
Va .; Mr. and Mrs Roger
SERV ICES SET
Rader, a son, Wellston: Mr.
Mrs
Marvm McG uckin , 4:l
and Mrs. Ernest Barns, a
t fo r me rly
Kathryn /\nn
son, Minersville .
Mlllt'
r
)
of
Pomeroy,
dlf'd
!Aug 2:11
Mr. and Mrs . I.awrrnLL' Sunday ;~r Norwalk llospttal,
Rosenberger , a son. Jack sm1; Nono\·;lk, Oh iO ShC IS surMr and Mrs. Harold Junwr VIv ed by her hu s band,
Will, a daughter, Masrm, W Marvin, two sons, Dav id and
Va.: Mr . and Mrs . .James !-{andy, and her lllother, Ruby
Hubcl , ~Jfld a hos t or rei a lives.
Ohltnger, a son , Middleporl
Fune1 ~ll s e r v1ce s will be
(Au~. 211
WP41n t&gt;sday at 1 :w p m a t the
Mr . and Mrs . Ooa.:dd K
Woolum, twin so ns , Ja&lt;'kson. KuiJ&lt;-~ch-Snuth FWlcr&lt;JI Home
Mr. and Mrs Calv1n Stumbo. 1n \'(J rw ~dk
a son, Bidwell
~lE I :TING SET
'llle
r..·1cJgs
Co unty
" rh•ssert" rneelwg uf the TriVeterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADM ISSIOI\S Cour llv Community Conce rt
Edward
I.aud e rllllit . As soc;at1on team captain s
and workers w1!1 be held at
Pomeroy .
8
:{0 p. m Tuc s de~y evemng at
SATURDAY
DlSCHARGE:S
E:velyn the :Yleigs Inn ra ther than at
Young, Ava Greenlees
the home of Mrs. Harold
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS -· S&lt;Juer I ,oca l captams arc
Murlc Evans , Portland. JultJ Joan Wolfe , PomeriJy: Sibley
Sch ul tz, Pomeroy: .l rJffi(' S Slack. Middleport, and ' "'"
I ..ce, [{acme
Barton, Add1 sun.
SUNDAY DISCHARGf'
LOCAL TEMPS
Fred Hill.
The
temper&lt;:Jture
in
downtown Pomeroy at 11
Pleasant Valley Hospital
a. m . Munday was 86 degrees
DISCHARGES - Tommy
unde r sunny skJCs .
Dabney, Henderson, Gena
Johnson, New Haven; Laura
Rainey, Point Pleasant; Mrs .
Densil Legg, Letart ; Mrs.
Cecil Byer ,.Leon; Mrs. Peter
(Continued from page I)
Ford , So uth side; Cat hy
aircraft maker . Lockheed
Adkins, Gallip olis Ferr y:
borrowed $250 million with
Uoyd Riffle , New Haven ,
federal support in 1971.
Gary Treadw ay,
Point
Northrop paid $450,000 in
Pleasant: Mrs. Ot1s Neal , bribes to two Saudi Arabian

Payoffs

MEIGS THEATRE
MON. thru THURS .
AUG. 25 -28
NOT OPEN
FRI . thru SUN .
AUG .2931
Agatha Chnst1e's
MURDER ON THE
ORIENT EXPRESS

{Technicolor)

generals and $1.1 million in
illegal domestic political
contributions in addition w
$30 million in questioned
comm ission payments to
foreign agents.
The Pentagon explained in
a 1974 memo made public th1s
sun:uner how payments to
foreign agents are used w
bribe government officials.
Proxmire said some of the
Lockheed payments were
"bribes ranging from a few

.,

Mary Beard of
Pomeroy dies
at age of 84
MI SS Mary M I Benme)
Beard, 84 , of 2.14 West Main
St., Pomeroy, a Rutland
businesswoman for many
years, died Se~turday evening
at the Holzer Medical Ce nte r
followin~ a three month
illness
Miss Beard ca me to
Rutland as a milliner ,
operating a hat shop ror a
number of years. Later she
\\oit.s a
part owner and
manager of the Rutland
Departme nt Store She made
her home for many years
w1th the late Mrs. Bertha
Rathburn . Fullowwg Mrs .
Rathburn's death, Miss
Beard moved to Pomeroy,
Miss Beard was a member
of the Rutland Um ted
Methodist
Chur c h a nd
belonged to the women's
~:: r oups of that church . She
was a member uf the Lad1es
Auxilie~ry nr Drew Webster
Post 39, Amencan Legwn,
and the Meigs County
Humane Society .
M1 ss Beard was born
Marcil 31, 1891 10 West
Williams Twp .. Middlesex
County, Province of Ontario,
Cana da. She IS survived by
two s is ters, Mrs. Ruth
Melchler, Cleveland, and
Mrs. Sarah Pawter of
Vancouver, British Colum·
b1a, and several nieces and
nephews.
Funeral services will be
held at 2 p.m. Tuesday at the
Rutland Chapel of the Walker
Funeral Home with the Rev.
W1lli a m H. Middleswart
officiating. Burial will be in
M1les Cemetery . Fnends
may call at the funeral home
at any time after 2 p.m.
today.

poml

B.Y Norma Newland
Leresting .
Ha s n't this been a week and
Clair and Ruth Perry of
a half'J I exped that everyone Derry, Pennsylvama visited
1s glad the fair 4s over, even with Mr . a nd Mrs. Veri
tho it is a lot or run . Seems Tuttle. They all attended a

like the fair and garden s turt family
get-toget he r
in
Middleport, lou.
Niesel Weatherman ha s
returned home after a week's
vacation 10 Columbus visiting
w1lh Mr. and Mrs . Wallace
McDonald. While Niese) was
there, she v1s1ted w1t h a great
man Yfriend!i in the area. The
only bad note of the vacation
~,~;a s the tr ip home when they
were ca ught in one of those
really bad thunderstorms and
torrents uf rain between
Col umb us and Tuppers
Pla1ns. Niese! had a little bad
luck at home and a little good
luck. The bad luck was she
fell 10 the kitchen and was
unable to get up or make
anyone hear her calls for
help. The good luck was when
her companion, Ruby, came
in to help her an d to find that
beautiful old-fash1oned a lthough bruised up, she
evemng gown. I hope every suffe red no real injury
one of them gets a _ grand
Mr . and Mrs. Clarence
champion award. Then Robm N]{.'hols v1s1ted her Sisler 1n
Ritchie will be going w1lh her Ravensw ood on a recent
horse and we wish her luck , Sunday afternoon
too .
Mr . and Mrs. Rubert Durst
Then or course, we have our attended the Dorst reunion in
hllle beauty queens. Mirna Lancaste r on Sunday.
and Marvm Walker haven'(
Mr and Mrs Joseph Rine
carne down tu earth yet, I of Bethesda , spent several
don't beheve, because now days w1 th Mr and Mrs.
everyone knows what they Blaine Taylor. Other visitors
knew all along, Misty Dawn were Blaine's brother and his
Newell is the prettiest baby w1fe, Mr. and Mrs. Harry
her age in Me1gs County I and Taylor of Glen Easten, W.
probably in the world. And Va.
our own Dee Chne (daughter
Mr. and Mrs. Charles
of John and Le1gh Cline 1 IS a Nichols of Casey, IllinOis and
beauty queen in her own Mr. Clarence Morton of
nght. Of course , Dee could Dayton were recent visitors
have won a perso nality of Mr . and Mrs. Clarence
contest, too, because w1th her Nichols , spendmg seve ral
smile and those eyes, there days with them .
would be no way she could
Wayn e Birckles' s ister
lose .
visited w1th him and Evelyn.
Grandparents Rufus and Mrs . Stanley and husband
Beulah Cline have more than Jack res1de 10 Athens.
one peach m the family , don 't
Mr and Mrs. Jerry Carter
they '
and family
of Roc ky
Which reminds me, have Mountain, North Carolina,
thousand dollars w several
million dollars" that had you bought your peaches spent a week w1th Cecil and
nothing w do with sales from Clines this year' They Mildred Caldwell ... visihng
co mmissions to foreign are surely good. l froze some also \\'lth Kenny and his
agents or contributions w of Jhose good Sun Hi they family.
foreign political candidates. have for those cold days when
You r emem ber reading
fre sh peaches will bring the about Evelyn Bnckles' s1ster
sunshme back.
vis1twg her ? Well , she
Well , let's get on with the became ve ry ill and is
news :
hospitalized in Three Rivers,
Effie Sanders spent a week Michigan , when she had gone
in Chandlersville with Mrs . to visit her daughter. Evelyn
Elsie Founds. She and Elsie was very discouraged over
visll"ll w1th Gary Founds of her conditiOn and we all hope
Hebron 1Els1e 's son I while that Evelyn will receive word
she was there. Then Elsie of Improvement very soon.
came back to spend a week
Mr . and Mrs . Don Green of
with Effie. On the way back, Charleston, W Va ., spent
they swpped off at Mc- Sunday with Mr . and Mrs.
Connelsville to visit E:lsie's Everett Parker and Mr . and
AuntOphie Baker. She will be Mrs . Darrell Landon.
98 years old in December.
You may not know Barbara
Preparations fbr the Miller- Black had a bad accident. She
Balser wedding are reaching was on a riding mower
a fever pitch. There have mowing between the p1er and
been fittings for weddmg the mail box at their
c lothes, consulta lions on driveway when something
accessories, discussion of happened and she went down
hair styles, study of etiquette over that extremely steep
and protocol - and that's just bank. Barbara really doesn't
the guys!
know what happened other
I called Rev. Meece and
than she went down backchatted briefly with him . He wards and the mower upset
is feeling much better, on her. The miracle is she
although very weak. Rev. doesn 't have a single cut on
Meece and l will get together her. Some dandy barbed wire
over the next couple of weeks prints across her back, tho,
and get a report written on
since she tangled with a fourhis trip to England. l know
strand bra bed wire fence . She
that will be extremely in- never lost consciousness and

won.

Benjamin Franklin is back from England, where he did his
best as a diplomat. Now, he admits that d1plomacy won't
work. We go into battle at Lexington. We take Fort Ticon deroga . In June, the Bnt1sh storm us at Bunker Hill and
give us three bloody fight s. Our gu npowd er is low. To save
what we can, our cry becomes, "Don't fire until you see the
whites of their eyes." The British far outnumber us. And
soundly defeat us. But we give them what-for. And heavy
losses. Our backwoods militia marksmanship strikes fear
into their hearts and inspiration into our own. They used to
laugh at our lack of spit and pol ish. They're not la ughing .
anymore: And we're beginning to feel we just might have a
chance for independence one of these days. I?

THE FARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS CO.

come a t the same t1me .
If you are like me, the
lomat{)('! s and the grapes are
beJ;!inning to get me down and
I haven't even begun on the
corn and s hell ie beans Ir I
can rnake 1t to August 29, I
wi ll have a month's vacatiOn
and then I'll get even (I
hope 1.
Tuppers Plaws has some
very fme representatiOn. We
h;.wc Theres&lt;::~ C~:~r r going to
Culwnbus for the Grange
tale nt competition and sister
Suml.l and her teammate Sara
Jane Goebe l will be go ing to
the stale fa1r fur a team
demonstratiOn in leat he r
work Theresa will also be
workmg on a demonstratiOn
in nutr1lion. Ne1sal Duval will
be g01ng also with her

Pomeroy, Ohio

40,000.00 Maximum Insurance
for Each Depositor

1

Pre-

go

UNIT CALLED
The Pomeroy E-R squad
answered a call to the Frank
Casto residence at 8:25p.m.
Sunday for Mark Casto who
had suffered a back injury.
He was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospil&lt;ll.

l3ANI&lt;

ford

And more than 80 per cent of
that rise canoe from costs
added after the raw product
left the farmer's gate."
The main factor in higher
food prices has been higher
costs for labor , transportation, fuel, packing,
machinery and other farm,
processing and distributioo
costs, Butz said.
Another key factor in
nomic recovery ls the price of
oil. One major U.S. producer,
Mobil, said Sunday immediate
decontrol
of
domestic oil prices would be
inflationary and could be "too
big a shock ID America's
fragile economic recovery .''
Mobil chainnan Rawleigh
Warner wrote members of
Congress Sunday warning

eco-

Clara C. Rees, 84, West
Mam St., Pomeroy, was
found dead at her residence
Sunday
evening.
The
daughter of the late John and
Susan Cook, she was also
preceded in death by her
husband, Dan Rees . She is
survived by several cousins.
Grave services will be held
Tuesday at 10 a.m. at Beech
Grove Cemetery with the
Rev. Wilbur Perrip officiating. There will ' be no

(ConUnued lnm page I)
be the number of American
civilian technicians who will
help man early warning systems in the Sinai, the exact
mapping of the lines to which
Israel will fall back in the
Sinal and Israeli demands
that Sadat mske some of his
concessions public.
Kissinger, showing the caution born of his failure in
March to bring about a pact,
told reporters, "We are
making progress but Issues
remain w be settled."

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cotton kn1t keeps 1ls shape and fll
yet gives automatic comfort-stretch I
The HANES Brief' The longdistance performer with a h1n1of
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Heat-resistant ela~tic in waist-band
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good lime fo do !hal iob
you've been going fo do all
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Visit
"FRIENDLY ONES"
the fools and materials

VOL. XXVII NO. 94

POMEROY MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

TUESDAY. AUGUST 26, 1975

Also a complete selection of Boys TShirts and Briefs, sizes 3 to 20.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Coal mines
still quiet

!

'

I

A QUANTITY OF JE:WELRY was stolen from the Goessler Jewelry Store on Court St.
about daybreak this_morning. Both corners of two large display windows were broken out
and two suspects- whose names have not been released this morning - used a stiff wire to
"fish" merchandise from the windows into their possession. A witness who observed the
incident and called Pomeroy Police who apprehended both suspects with merchandise
walking down Court St. toward Main St. N. W. Compton identified some of the merchandise
this morning. Compton and his wife operate the business.

CHARLESTON,
W.Va .
(UPI ) - Coalfield rebels,
smarting from a run-in With
police during a prot est march
10 West Virginia 's capital,
today defied the United Mine
Workers union 's latest
maneuver w call their hand
in an illegal work stoppage.
Virtually all of West VirgJ.ma 's underground mines
remained silent, as did others
in Virginia, Ohio, and Kentucky.
Now mto its third week, the
strike has idled 40,000 of the
nation's soft coal miners and
sapped production at a time
when energy sources pose a
global problem.
Hundreds
of
miners
swarme d
through
Charleston's streets Monday,
heaping scorn on UMW

Israel approves draft
of interim peace step

President Arnold Miller and
vowing wprolong the wildcat
until coal operawrs consent
to a " right to st rike "
provision in the 1974 contract .
But in Washington, the
UMW's International
E:xecutive Board ·insisted it
couldn't legally reopen the
pact, and voted unanimously
to order striking miners back
to the pits. The board called
on district union officials to
exercise 11all steps within
their power" to enforce its
decision.
Miners, Pollee Clash
When police tried w rout
miners from a one~way
street, fistfights erupted. A
handful of lawmen who tried
w re.,.oute the march backed
away after a pollceman was
beaten to the pavement.
Miners left wwn, saying
they wouldn 'I return, but
instead would "sa ve our
gasoline" for picketing in
Tennessee, Illinois, Indiana
and Pennsylvania - coalproducing areas not heavily
wuched by the walkout.
The UMW board in its

Teachers

~

I

SUMMER VACATION E:NDED TODAY for several thousand Meigs County school
students as they returned wthe classrooms this morning to start another school year. Erich
Philson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jotm Rush Philson, Syracuse, wok time out Monday evening
from a last minute shopping spree w pose with a "school marm" featured as a part of a
"back w school" display at E:lberfelds in Pomeroy. E:rich entered the fourth grade at the
Syracuse Elemenl&lt;lry School today .

will be subject to renewal building in Jerusalem's United States.
annually.
Valley of the Cross. Foreign
The three-nation treaty
As details of the agreement Minister Yigal Allon told
would co ntain Egyptian
began to unfold the Israeli Israelis on the state radio of pledges to ease its economic
government officially broke the territorial concessions. an d trade boycott and
the news to the Jewish nation
The diplomats wld UPI political and propaganda
SOUTH POINT, Ohio
that it would be ceding staff cor re spo nden t Allen campaign against Israel. The
territory to Egypt.
Alter that with the draft U.S.-lsraeli pact would spell (UP!) - The Ohio Industrial
Commission has Issued a
Diplomatic sources in Israeli -E:gyptian p act out increased American
report
that the South Point
Jerusalem said Israeli Prime completed, the negotiators economic and arms aid for
Two suits for money, five
school board acted imMinister Yitzhak Rabin and turned w the writing of lsrae(o
properly in firing 113 divorce actio ns , one for
Kissinger with their aides proposed versions of comKissmger was shuttling to teachers last May.
dissolution of marriage, and
hammered out the draft panion pacts, one to be signed Alexandria, E:gypt, to confer
The members of the South another granted have been
treaty
in
a
nonstop by Israel, Egypt and the with Sadat tonight.
Point
Association . of filed m Meigs County Comnegotiating session m the United States and the other w
In an interview on the state
mon Pleas Court.
prime
minister's
office be signed by Israel and the radio, Allon said Israel would Classroom teachers began
The First Natwnal Bank of
their classroom boycott last
lose one-seventh of the May 5 when negotiations Mariet ta, Belpre Bran ch ,
Sma1- taken by Israel in the broke down. The school board filed suit in the amount of
1967 Middle East War- w then fired the teachers and $1,063.08 aga w st Lorraine
E:gypt. There would be a new replaced Jhem w1th sub- Osborne, Reedsville
and wider U.N. buffer zone. stitutes.
Janet Oyler, Canton, filed
Egyptian forces and the
Schools reopened here sUlt for money due· on a
United Nations now occupy Monday.
promissory note w the
The Industrial Ccom- amount of $950 against James
and money have enabled Dav1d wwithstand about one-tenth of the
By RICHARD H. GROWALD
peninsula.
mission report said the school David Parsons, Syracuse.
Goliath. The Israelis know this. They do not
UPI Senior Ediwr
He said the Egyptian strip board " impr perly terlike a thing about it, for it does not soothe
0
JERUSALEM (UP!) - It is a site in
on t he east bank of the Suez minated the services of the
Filing ror divorce were
their pride.
Christian lore but Israel's Jews take ironical
Canal
would
be
widened
from
teachers mvolved in the work Steven Lane, Middleport, vs.
And it is the Americans, led by President
note that their Prime Ministers office is in
10 miles to 13 miles by taking stoppage and this action is Lorretta Lane, Middleport :
Ford and Kissinger, who have been telling
the Valley of the Cross.
over the current U.N. buffer not in accordance with the Shirley A. Hubbard , Rt 3,
the Israelis that the odds are against David
For many Israelis feel they are more a
zone. Moreover, Egyptians law and that they should be
Pomeroy, vs. Wayne Hupwinning every battle against Goliath. The
martyr w their American connection than
would
be
given
about
four
reinstated to their positions." bard, Syracuse ; Carolene F
Arabs grow larger and stronger each year.
master of their own destiny in accepting the
square · kil ome ters
of
The report also said the Moore, Rt. 2, Pomeroy, vs.
The only salvation is making peace.
interim peace treaty with Egypt negotiated
territory
now
held
by
Israel
South Point sehool board has Carl E. Moore, Syracuse, and
Israeli leaders accept this but would have
by Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger.
w
the south of the canal w "funds which are readily William Morris, Racine , vs.
preferred w wait most of a decade before
They don't like it. But they go along. They
give them easier access to the available to meet the
Robin Wills Morris, Racine ,
plunging into peace. They reckon it would
believe they have no other choice.
Abu !Wdei !Wdeis oil fields (bargaining ) proposal of the each on charges of gross
take that long for the West to achieve energy
For a generation Israelis lived a wugh but
(Continued on page 10) - Association.''
neglect of duty and extreme
independence from the Arab oil fields-they
heady life. For 2,000 years the Jews have
cruelty and Janet J . Bailey,
did not want to negotiate with the Arabs
been patsies of the Western world and now,
Rt. I, Rutland, vs . Robert
holding the oil ace in bargaining.
in the rebirth of Israel, they exulted in a
Bailey, Perrysburg, on
Washington
pressed
them.
But
nationalism typical of a new nation.
charges of extreme cruelty.
R unnerup wants to win in '76
Washington turned off the supply spigot
They fought four wars against their Arab
Filing for dissolution of
until Israel came around and did the deal.
neighbors. Although outnumbered 70-1, they
Something new has been added to the sports scene. It
marriage was Ronnie Allen
The Israeli leaders grit their teeth but
lriwnphed. They felt themselves an inis called a bathtub race. Donald H. Miller, Syracuse,
White, Pomeroy and Dorothy
accept the unpalatable belief that in the long
vincible David ID the Arab worlds Goliath.
finished second in the anuual bathtub race at Rupert Lake
Louise White, Pomeroy.
run their only salvation is accommodation
near Hamden in Jackson· county Sunday.
But now they are giving up to Egypt part
Rutha Ann Mulford was
to American policy in the Middle East.
of the Sinai Desert they seized in the 1967
A bathtub race is one in which an bmertube is plated
granted a divorce from
One added woe to Prime Minister Yitzhak
Middle E:ast War. In return they are getting
around the tub and then a 6 HP motor Is attached to ihe
Conme
Mulford.
Rabin 's government is that many Israelis
tub.
word of hope for a more peaceful Middle
have not accepted this. The opponents of the
East.ltis not a bargain in their eyes.
Attending the races Sunday In addition wMiller were
treaty include such figures as national war
LOCAL TEMPS
Then why are they doing it?
' Mrs. Donald Miller, Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Miller and
hero
former
Defense
Minister
Moshe
The
temperature
1n
Answer: American pressure.
Jeff and ·Mr. a~d Mrs. Mllte Walker and Stepbanle , Miller
Dayan.
Rabin
was
struggling
w
keep
one
down
town
Pomeroy
a
I
11
:
30
Is anticipating winning next year's event.
America has been the sugar daddy to
majority
in
parliament
in
line
to
ratify
the
a .m . Tuesday was 86 degrees
Israel in its times of trial. American arms
treaty none of them really like.
under sunny skies.

•

wmone Suits filed. ~:~:···:·i~·
for money

foreig;."l news commentary

Why Israel goes along

•

I

PRICF 15'

•

By RICHARD H. GROWALD
JERUSALEM ( UPI) Israel I&lt;Jday approved a draft
interim peace treaty for
Secretary of State Henry A.
Kissinger w take to Egyptian
President Anwar Sadat for
consideration , diplomati c
sources reported.
Egyptian political sources
in Alexandria, Egypt said it
would be initialed Friday or
Saturday. They said it would
go inw effect inunediately
after it is initialed, that it will
be valid for a year and that it

)

The firsl park10g meter
WHS installed in Oklahoma
Cil) on .Jul y 16, 1935.

Devoted To The interests uf The Meigs-Mmson Areu

visitation. Ewing Funeral
Home is in charge of
arrangement.s.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Kieger explained that the village does not have to enter
into a 5() year lease. He, in fact, recommended a shorter
period. He explained that improvements can be made at the
marina and the facilities expanded. These improvement.s must
be made at village expense and must be approved by the Corps
of Engineers, Kieger said .
The question arose as w the possibility of the Chamber of
Commerce accepting a lease on the marina. Kieger explained
that it is more satisfactory for a village whold a lease from the
standpoint of security and protection of the facility . Kieger
explained that the lease on the marina can be broken or
discontinued by the village advising the corps via letter 30 days
before the lease is to ~discontinued.
Childs stated that a new plan will be drawn up on improvement of the manna and that the plan will be used w
secure state aid on the protect.
Council then passed 4-1 a motion w rescind its action at the
last meeting , turnmg down a 5() year lease on the marina and
then passed 4-1 a measure to acceot fhP marina from the Corps
(Continued on page 10)

en tine

•

that immediate decontrol,
scheduled for Sept. I, would
cost· conswners $8 billion a
year.

BURIAL SET
Henry Bruce Bullard, 68,
who died in Tampa, Fla., will
be buried Tuesday at 2 p.m.
in Memory Gardens instead
of Pine Grove Cemetery as
the family announced. Ewing
Funeral Home is in charge of
arrangement.s.

propria ted $500 w the planning commission and that expenses
at the marina in 1974 ran just over the $500. Childs also sa1d
that the Middleport Cllamber of Commerce until1974 has given
at least $300a year whelp with the maintenance of the marina.
Cllilds said money can be raised ~ mail)tain the marina
without having to disturb any village funds . The marina, he
said, is valuable w the community because it draws people of
the area into the community, and these people spend money
which helps the economy of the town .
Edison Baker, secretary of the planning commission , also
spoke urging council w accept the marina facility in order Jo
mterest outsiders in coming into the town .
Both Childs and Baiter pointed out that Page St. Is up for
improvement through state funds and said that the project
" does not stand a chance" lf the marina Is not accepted by the
village.
Councilman James Brewer observed that the marina IS
just at a point where it will cost the village money and Brewer
backed his opinion with a negative vote when the time came w
vote on the lease measlU'e.

Now You Know

l.Jlws tonight 1n the upper
60s. Sunny Wednesday, lnghs
in upper 80s . Probability of
rain 50 per cent today , 40 per
cent tonight , 10 per ce nt
Wednesday.

Clara C. Rees died on Sunday

''

weekend .{if you're nof
planning a trip) would be a

Childs stated that the marina had not cost the village any
money up until19i4. He said that marina construction was a
project of the Middleport PlaruJing Commission dating back to
1962 and that it was 1969 before the lease was signed between
the village and the Ohio Department of Natural Resources.
The Planning Commission, Childs stated, has had no
village funds. He recalled that the commission had secured the
towboat, " Atlas," as a gift and had sold equipment from the
.boat to raise over $4,000 for the planning commission. With
these funds, the commission had purchased a tractor-mower
for the marina , chain saws and various hand tools and had
used the money to hire an employe for maintenance for a
couple of years.
He said also that the commission had secured the services ·
of two community action program employes in 1972. Childs
said the equipment purchased by the commission is in the
wwn 's possession and has been used at other town facilities.
The wwn also had the services of the CAP employes at other
facilities, he sa1d
Corning up w 1974, Childs said that the village ap-

w~.ather

Kissinger

I

(Continued lnm page I)

\

for thi~ year's
World Series
'
with ADM.RALI

By Bob Hoeflich
Middleport village council Monday night reversed an
ea_rUer decisjon and voted 4-1 tn enter iniD a lease on the
Middleport Marina with the U. S. Corps of Engineers.
Meeting with council to discuss the lease were Bill Childs,
chairman of the Middleport Planning ·Commission, and Ron
Kieger of the Corps of Engineers.
At its last meeting, council voted unanimously against
accepting the marina on a 5() yard lease, on grounds it did not
serve a majority of Middleport people and therefore, money
spent at the marina could not be justified.
The planning commission had recommended that the
village enter inwa lease agreement with the Corps.
Childs last night expressed concern that village officials
had rejected the marina. Councilman Allen Lee King, not
present at the last meeting, said the rejection was, "One of the
worst things that has hllppened."
Councilwoman Jean Craig again stated that the marma
does not serve a majority of the Middleport people and
therefore the expenditure of funds could not be justified.

CLEVELAND- DAVID DUNCAN,~. LAS VEGAS, was
crowned "Mr. USA Go-Go" bere Sunday night during a danceoff attended by a screaming female-only audience.
About 300 women of all ages cheered the contestants and
streamed on stage several times during the contest held at a
motel here w grab varwus items of clothing ctis&lt;;Brded by the
contestants as they stripped from street clothmg to multicolored bikinis. Duncan competed with 15 other finalists 1D win
a $750 scholarship wa local school of cosmewlogy, luggage, a
watch and assorted male accessories from a national cosmetic
firm .

BRIEFS
3 for 419

BAKER FURNITURE

'

rioting.
·
The govenunent-owned national radio network reported
that Prime Minister Vasco Goncalves could resign withm
hours. The prime minister's office refused w conflnn or deny
the report. Another radlo station, Radio Cljlb, also said a final
decision in the 'crisis was only hours away.
New rumors of an Impending coup swept the capita! for ~e
third day in a row, with workers at the national radio • mam
station accusing unspecified military unlts of holding
rehearsals for the occupation of their facllllle~. President
Francisco da Costa Gomes added ID the confUSIO~ by withdrawing his Sunday endorsement of p~mmunist Prime
Minister Vasco Goncalves .
The U. s. Embassy in Usbon denied left-wing reports that
American Ambassador Frank Carlucci met with Costa Gomes
before the president retracted the endorsement.

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
Andrea Avins, 2, Cleveland,
was l&lt;!ken to Holzer Medical
Center by the Middleport E-R
squad at 6:54p.m. Saturday
with a possible broken or
dislocated shoulder suffered
in a fall while her family was
visiting in Middleport.

COLOR TV's

Middleport Couricil in about face with MariRa

(OolltiDued fnlm page 1)

I

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
'

walked up the driveway to
meet Herman. He rushed her
to the emergency room at the
Selby General Hospital in
Marietta. She had a concussion a nd a badly bruised
face and body but they hhink
she is going to be fme. They
will, however, keep her
several days for observatiOn
and to be sure everything is
A.OK. Her room number is 12
at the Selby General Hpsp1tal
m Marietta.
Oh yes, Barbara didn't hurt
the mower except to bend the
steenng colwnn a little.
I called Mrs Tracewell to
ask about B1ll: darn 1f Bill
didn 'l answer the phone He
is progressing, but very
slowly. Bill and I
back
many years when we both
worked for the Cole Lumber
Company, me 10 the office
and Bill un lh e sawmill.
Chatted w1th Mrs. Frank
Darst and asked about her
mother , Ethel Stout. Ethel is
m the Turtle Creek Convalescent Center which is
located un Liberty Street in
Parkersburg Ethel IS undergoing therapy for her
broken h1p and has graduated
tu walking a little with a
walker and some as.oe;istance.
Mrs. Darst says they are
amazed at the progress her
mother IS making. l know
Ethel would appreciate
receivmg a ca rd from her
friends and neighbors. Why
don'l you drop her a line?
Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Habbarl and Vada Giffin
were Sunday dinner guest.s of
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Tracewell.
Also, their daughter,
Pamela Gordon visited with
them. Pamela is from
Cleveland , Tennessee and is a
singer in the gospel group of
H. Richard Holl. She will be
returning soom to spend an
extended vacation with the
Tracewells.
And, mece Elsie Roach
from Chester IS s pending
some t1me at the Tracewell
home .
By the way, I have a
chicken! Jimmie Osborne
came to my rescue with a
prelty little brown hen who
we have named Lady Singer.
James fell in love with her at
first s1ght and they are
already a devoted couple.
Jimmie, l undersl&lt;!nd has
veterinary medicine as a 4-H
project and does he have the
patients to work on. He has
dogs and chickens and a
mama goat and two of the
cutest h . .·in kids 1 have ever
see n. If you have not seen a
pair of kids play, you have
nussed something.
Well, the dmger on the
pressure cooker has dinged
and it is time to take the
tomato sauce off. I'll talk to
you some more later.

Get ready

A FULL
SERVICE

News •• in Briefs

Tuppers Plains newsletter

From a Great American Bank

1775: A battle lo st, but a

•

B;i;foi.

Ry United Press international

:·:

NE:W YORK - AMERICANS WILL HAVE: to cope with a
permanent energy shortage in the next decade, scaling down
livmg habits, eating less, economiZing, and walking and riding
a bicycle ihstead of a car, aceordmg t o Abrham M. Sirkin, a
former member of the pohcy and planning staff of the State
Department.
In a paper published today by the Aspen Institute for
Humanistic studies, Sirkin said the cutbacks ore not a ll that
bad. Less consumption will cut ha ck on pollution and create
healthier living conditions, he sa1d. He said Amen cans "will
be Jess dependent on the outomob1le than before .. . more
Americans w1ll switch to bicycles as a means of getting to
work and doing household errands."
Sirkin said the Umted States would become eve r more
dependent on fuel IITlports with the nse m population and
consumption .
DETROIT - MID-MONTH NEW CAR SAl~ E:S jumped 36
per cent from the first part of August and were within 6 per
cent of last year when buyers pushed sales t o near.,.ecord
levels as they tried w beat price hikes. The four U. S auto
companies, trying w clear out 19i5 models before the higherpriced but largely 'unchanged '76s make their debut, reported
Monday that Aug. 11-20 sales totaled 201,17i cars. That wa s the
lowest since 197f, but much stronger than the first 10 days or
the month which were at a 14-year low.
The results ranged from an eight-tenths of I per cent Increase at Ford to a 27 per cent drop at Chrysler, compared
with last year. All four companies improved from the first 10
days of the month, rangmg from 8 per cent at American
Motors w 57.5 per cent at Chrysler. Other bright spots il1 the
saies reports included a record mid-August for Cadillac with
the sale of 6,426 of the luxury cars, a combined car and truck
sales record for Chevrolet ·and a"new sales mark for Dodge
trucks.
WASHINGTON - PRE:SIDE:NT FORD SAYS that "too
often in the past, administrations have listened only to lobbyists in Washingwn." In contrast, he says, he is in touch with
people from all walks of life . Ford made that comment Monday night in Milwaukee on the last lap of a 15-day " working
vacation" at Vail, Colo., during which he made side trips to the
Midwest and managed w combine business, pleasure and
politics.
He appeared exhilarated by his contacts with a variety of
persons during the past two days when en route to Washington
' .
. . 1Conunuea on page 10)

·•

'

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