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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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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)

·•

'

�I

?

'

_The Daily Sentmel , Middl~port-l;'omeroy, 0 , Tuesday, Aug. 26,1975

-~

Coal-gas plan designed
•
•
to msure mvestments
WASiflNGTON (UP! ) Rep. PaulSlillon, D-IU, plans
to mtroduce legislatiOn under
which the federal government would subsidtze pnces
for gas produced from coal
with a $1.5 btlliOn commttment over the next 15
years
The congressman from the
maJor soft coal-producmg

sta te said the allocation
would assure a profit from
the coal gasification process,
so investors would be attracted to pay for 1t The
comtrutted funds would he
appropriated only if needed.
Simon contended that coal
gas1ficat10n "1s stuck on dead
center" and warned that
ootenhal mvestors are wary

of spending great amounts of
money on somethmg whose
price LS not assured for the
future
"With mLnlillal cost to the

By BERNARD BRENNER

WASiflNGTON (UP[) The middleman got more of
Amencans' food dollars m
July than Ln the month
before, but the farmer did
even better, the Agriculture
Department says
The mtddleman received
56 9 cents of each dollar and
the farmer 43.1 cents, g1vmg
the farmer a relatiVe mcrease
Government figures last
week showed the retail price
of farmproduced food - not
counting 1tems such as f1sh,
coffee or restaurant food rose 3.4 per cent in July.
USDA officials estimated
Monday the middleman's
margin - the difference
between what farmers get
and what conswners pay rose 2.9 per cent in July, JUSt
about wiping out declmes in
that spread from Apnl

Sport Parade

assurance m order to get the

loans ''

term commitment of a
certam volume
Assured of at least that
prtce, investors would
fmance the coal gas plant.
When gas is actually produced from it, the producer
could e1ther sell 11 at the
market price, if it IS higher
than $3.20, or 1f the market Ill
lower, the government would
make up the difference up to
$3.20.
Simon said he thinks coal
gas will cost $4 per thousand
cubic feet to produce m large
quantities. Natural gas pnces
now range up to $2 for some
fore1gn liquefied gss sales,
but generally $1 50 for sales
Within the state of producllon-sales that are not pricecontrolled by the Federal
Power Commission.

THE CHAMPS - The Syracuse baseball team took
called the Ohio Valley Indpendent Baseball League and
cuts of cho1ce grade beef m
fLrst place m the Metgs Independent League and f1rst
teams will begin signmg up in March of 1976. Officers for
July even though farm prices
place m the tournament. Team members front row , 1-r
next year are Don Hupp, president, Gary Durst, vice
above a year earher.
for beef cattle declined. The
are, Jeff Hubbard, Bill Hubbard, coach, Jirruny Joe
president, Greg Roush, secretary-treasurer. Additional
At the same time, pnces farmer's return for 2.25
Hemsley, Mick Ash, Steve Stewart, V1rg1e D1ll, M1ke
information will be made available at the time the league
received by farmers for pounds of live cattle (needed
Rose, Roome Quillen; back row, Greg Roush , Rick Van
LS organized. In the championship game Rick Van Matre
cattle , gram and other food to equal one retail pound) fell
Matre, Jun Hubbard, George Glaze, Rick Ash ,. Ray
allowed siX hits and struck out 13 m defeating Tuppers
cominodihes mcluded m a 6.5 cents a pound in July, but
Proff1tt, M1ke Stewart and John Arnott Absent were
Plains ~I with Jack Rood on the mound. Rood allowed 7
typical consumer market marketing margms rose 9. 7
Rudy Stewart and Jack Bost1ck. Next year the teams
hits and fanned 6
basket rose 4.1 per cent and cents a pound.
partiClpatmg will go by NatiOnal League rules and will be
averaged 15 per cent above a
The report showed retail
year earlier
bread prices were unchanged
The report sa1d marketing at 35 6 cents for a one-pound
\
spreads widened sharply m loaf in July because midJuly for beef, pork, potatoes dlemen reduced their margin
and tomatoes while declining by 0.8 cents to offset an mmoderately for other foods crease of the same amount in
mcluding eggs, bread, fats the farm value of bread
and sugar.
ingredients.
Most of the July gain in
Compared to a year earlier,
prices paid to farmers came however, retail prices in July
from sharp rLSes for hogs, were 2.3 per cent higher
brmlers, eggs, potatoes and because the 15.8 per cent
wheat, which rose because of decline in the farm value of
PORTSMOUTH, Oh1o
sales to RUSSia.
bread ingredients was more
(UP!) - Two person&gt; are
Economtsts sa1d retail beef than offset by a 7 per cent the home of Albert Badgley at dead and two others
pnces, which have been gain
m
middlemen 's Hilliard, Oh10 this past bosp1tal1zed today following
.declmmg this .month, rose to margins.
Sunday Mr. and Mrs Davis the crash of smgl~ngine
a record $1.61 a pound for all
also vtsited wtth thetr plane two miles northeast of
daughter and family, Mr and the Portsmouth regional
Mrs Glen Johnson and Klill airport Monday rught, ofof Westerv1lle, Oh1o Saturday ficials said.
to Tuesday.
The state h1ghway patrol
Mr and Mrs Jack Forsee said the pilot, Ralph F .
and children, John, Pa ul, Kilpatnck, 48, Minford, was
Timothy, Tammy and Jason killed m the crash- and a
of Wmdmg Way, Cmcmnall, passenger, Adam Heller, 14,
Oh10, visited with relalLves in Portsmouth, died early today
At the same time, the misSion !elt - rrfront~nd the Bend Area last week.
after bemg taken to a
Mr and Mrs Joseph Sc1tes Colwnbus hosp1tal.
eastern half of the Erie- money" provided by the
SECOND PLACE WINNERS in the Meigs Independent Baseball league tournament
Lackawanna and most of the federal goverrlillent should be of Letart, W. Va. are anPolice sa1d it was believed
were
Tuppers Plains. They were also second place m league play. Front row, 1-r, are, Tom
Reading and Penn Central interest-free loans or at least nouncmg the btrth of their Kilpatrick, manager of the
Karr,
Steve Cowdery, Gary Durst, Mark Handley; back row, Jerry Burke, Jack Rood, Don
lines in West Virginia would loans with interest deferred, f1rst ch1ld Aug. 22 at Holzer regional a1rport, was piloting
Fitch, Mike Boring, Ken caldwell and Olarlie Collins.
be sold to the Chessie System. so that the reorganized lines Med1cal Center He was the Olerokee home from New
Joseph
Dean. York at the time of the crash
A total of 6,918 miles of would not have too much named
llttle-used ralls would be early debt.
Maternal grandmot her 1s m Scioto County.
The association plan also- Mrs Helen Williams, Cblton
elimihated.
InJured were the youth 's
Stock and debentures, seemed too optimistic about and parents grandparents mother, Mrs. Audrey Heller,
partly held by the federal how much revenue railroads are Mr and Mrs . K K Sc1tes and h1s sister, Amy They
government and partly would get in the future from of Letart Rt
were reported m fair conissued to creditors of the auto parts transportation, the
dttion
at a Portsmouth
Mr. and Mrs. Barney
By Bob HoeOich
the steps of a Lutheran fam1ly by raft to the
troubled lines, would be ICC said.
Hemmgway
and
two hospital.
Accordmg to legend, four
Church m Germany
The ICC recommended that daughters of V1lla Hills, Ky ,
LSSued totalmg more than $2
Monogahela River to Pittsor five hundred years ago, a
The day on wh1ch the boy burgh and then up the Ohio
for ConRall to succeed there
billion.
Mrs Ida Mae Schne1der of
baby boy was discovered on
was dJscovered was the R1ver to Knoxvtlle, Ohio.
George Olandler, director. should be a provision in the Warren, M1ch. were Sunday
Christian
Easter Day Thus,
of ICC's rail services plan- law for more liberal federal evemng guests of Mr and
Now
the
proliferous
the foundhng was named Easterdays and Ostertags
nmg office, said the com- fmancing.
Mrs Landen 8m1th.
Christian OStertag, German are scattered all over the
Mrs. Harry (Dot) Schwab
for Easterday, by h1s new- Umted States.
and son, Mark, of Baroda,
found and doting parents
The three-day reunwn in
Mich were dmner guests
BY POLLY CRA~&gt;tr.n
Descendants from that Frederick got underway on
Tuesday evening of Mr and
obscure, hwnble begmnmg, Aug. 8, a Friday evening w1th
State Auditor Thomas E.
Mrs. Landon Sm1lh. The Schmcludmg four Me1gs County dinner at the Dan-Dee
Ferguson's off1ce distnbuted
wabs visited other friends in
By Elsie Roacb
residents ,
flocked
to Country Inn, fittingly part$9,747.776 m gasoline taxes m
Mr. Loyd Riffle of New Mason They moved to
Fredenck, Md ., the weekend owned by James Easterday.
August to Ohw's counlles, Haven had rna jor surgery Baroda four years ago from
of Aug 8, to attend the second On Saturday those attending
townships,
cthes
and Tuesday at Pleasant Valley Mason.
International Easterday- the reuniOn attended three
villages.
POLLY'S PROBLEM
Mr and Mrs. Kenneth
Hospttal.
Ostertag reuniOn
coupons on lhe cans and
lectures on the1r clan
Each of the 1,320 townships
DEAR POLLY - Our cats packages good for a cash
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Reynolds, son Keith Allen,
The four Me1gs Counllans followed by a luncheon at a
rece1ved $1,200 for a total of Brinker and Tanya of Las Kelly Lynn were guests of have had qwte a few acattend1ng
were
Mary Holiday Inn : A banquet was
$1,584,000 and each of the 88 Vegas, Nevada were dinner Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Shinn of Cidents on our carpet. Durmg refund when one accumulates
Easterday
and
John staged Saturday
the
reqwred
number
The
night
coun ILes received $35,000 for guests of Mr. and Mrs. T. R. Leon Thursday evemng ,
warm weather the odor IS
Easterday, both of Racme, followmg a three hour bus
expiratiOn
date
IS
usually
a total of $3,080,000. Total Dav1s Thursday.
Mrs Lawrence Wolfe, very strong so I would hke to
and Mr. and Mrs Buel tour of Fredenck.
four months ahead but after
payments to Me1gs County
Ricky
and T1mothy and Mr. know 1f there IS any way to
Mrs Paul Randolph, Stella
Ridenour of Chester
the offer has been on SIX
Sunday mornmg the clan
villages amounted to $5,861 and Stacie Krebbs, Mrs Elsie and Mrs.-Paul Randolph and get r1d of 1!. - MARCIA
The reunion drew some 250 traveled v1a a caravan of
weeks
or
so
the
product
w1th
includmg $1,957 to Mid- Roach, Larry and Roger and Stac1e Krebs, Miss Alice M.
DEAR MARCIA - The
Easterdays and Oslertags cars to old Easterday
dleport; $2,202 to Pomeroy ; Miss Alice M. Roach visited · Roach and Mrs. Carroll Cox easiest thing is to spread salt the needed coupon cannot he
from all over the United homesteads after which a
found
on
the
shelves
of
any
of
$524 to Racme; $471 to J . Robert Roach at St. Mary's and Mr . and Mrs. Homer very thickly on the spots.
States and two from Ger- p1cmc prepared by the
the grocenes. - MRS. S. N
Rutland and $527 to Syracuse Hospital last week.
Brmker and Tanya visited After a recent accident, use
DEAR POLLY - Charlotte
many
•
Boonsboro Easterdays was
Mr and Mrs . T. R Dav1s with Mrs Robert Roach and paper towels to remove ex- wrote that she could not fmd a
The first mternatwnal held. An impress1ve evening
cess moisture. Leave salt on square cake plate to buy. I • reuniOn was held m 1972 in
attended the DaviS reunion at sons last week.
candlelight serv1ce m the
carpet a day or two or until
Germany. Fredenck was Evangel1~al Lutheran
suggest that she save square
all is dry and then remove styrofoam meat trays. When
chosen as the site of the Church WLlh the Rev. Frank
with the vacuum. Empty bag
second reunion because Ralph Ostertag of Leonia, N
covered w1th alummum foil
immediately and wipe any they can be used m many
Ostertags originally settled in
salt away from vacuum ways. I save all stzes, wash Jefferson and Boonsboro J , delivermg the sermon,
concluded the internatioal
parts.
when they migrated west reumon.
them and when dry they are
When such spots are stored and ready to use after
across the Atlantic to the New
removed the odor should go,
World
being covered w1th loLl. They
too. The Carpet Institute are mce for taking good1es to
According to MISS Hazel
When a new cell is formed the
blocks the overproduction of losmg battle Experiments
recommends absorbing
Easterday of Akron, a
DNA m the nucleus of a cell is ur1c acid by the cells and have been done by feeding
friends and around the
liquid If spots are wet, apply a hohdays when one g1ves
knowledgeable Ostertagduplicated like printing stops the process at its ongm. calves just milk, and they·
solution of one teaspoon nonEasterday researcher, a
another picture to enable the There are other medicines for grow new cells and form ur1c
special foods to fnends and
alkaline detergent, as used ne1ghbors there 1s no worry
descendant of that first
new cells to be like the old control of the acute attack of acid. M1lk contains no cells
$UPERS SWITCHED
for floe fabrics, and one about returning plates. When
Christian, Christian Ostertag
one. That 1s how your new gout and to eliminate excess and is purine-free. RegardCOLUMBUS UP! - Frank
teaspoon white vinegar to a
ha1r that replaces old hair on uric acid through the kidneys. less of how striCt the diet is,
a cake is as large as a !~inch
came to America m 1749 from H. Gray, 40, superintendent
quart of warm water. Dry
a regular basiS has the same For more details about how you can only lower the uric
Alsace, Germany. Settling of the Olillicothe Correcsheet cake I buy an
carpet and apply a dry aluminum foil pan, but for
first in V1rgm1a, Chnstian tional Institution, bas been
characteristics and color as gout affects the body and acid level a tiny amount, not
cleaning solvent. Dry and
the old hair.
what to do about it wnte to enough to prevent or control
most cakes, strudels and was chased north by Indians, named superintendent of the
brush carpet gently_ When
even p1cnic eatmg plates I escaping only w1th h1s wife Oh1o State Reformatory in
The formation of DNA ls a me in care of this newspaper, gout.
spots are already dry they
and child and one horse.
continuous process as long as P. 0. Box 1551, Radio City
Mansfield to replace Robert
Because heart disease is can be dampened with clean JUS! cover these trays with
He fmally 1settled per- C. White, who will remilin at
fo1l and they look qu1te
you live, because your body is Station, New York, NY 10019, such a conunon complicatwn
lukewarm water first so as to
pretty . -,KATHRYN.
constantly regenerating it. send a long, stamped, self- of gout 11 is a good idea to go
manently one and one half Mansf1eld as psychologist.
more readily absorb any
se,lf. Red blood cells only live addressed envel~ and 50 on a low-fat, low-5aturated
DEAR POLLY - Cleanmg m1les west of Jefferson .
further
treatment.
for 120 days and must be cents and ask for The Health fat low-cholesterol diet. You
an untidy bedroom can seem Christian became prominent,
POLLY.
and wealthy, and rrused a
a monumental task to a
replaced.
Your
body Letter number 2-3 on gout and should use the same diet
manufactures three million uric acid.
- proposed to prevent heart
young child and the hardest large family . Christian's
part
1s getting started. F1rst, brother, M1chael, also hved
new ones every second to
Efforts have be.l!n made to and vacsular disease for
DEAR POLLY An
SHA.I'i' lU U ... l ' "
replace the old ones. In some eliminate purmes from the people who do not have gout. electr1c fan blowing a1r into use a dust mop to push every- near Jefferson and ran a m1ll.
PHILADELPHIA (0PI)people this process is diet. This is achieved by
Acute
attacks
are my upright freezer does the thmg mto one corner of the He fathered nine children by · Gov. Milton J . Shapp,
associated with formatiOn of ehminating foods containing sometimes precipitated by thawing m half an hour. Mter room and w1th everything in hts first w1fe, Mary; recenUy returned from a
excess amounts of uric ac1d abundant cell nuclei. Purines excessive eating, as on washing with soda the job 1s one pile 1t looks as if half the remarried after her death, campaign swing through New
as a byproduct. Regardless of • are the basic building blocks holidays, excessive drinking done m half the usual tlille. work is already done and the moved to Boonsboro, and England, said MOitday he
what you eat this process will your body uses to make uric and excessive exercise. The Safe, too. - GLADYS
remammg half of sorting and fathered mne more children. would enter the nation's first
'
Another brother, Martin, presidential primary In New
away
looks
go on.
.
acid. However, since the rule here is to follow the old
DEAR POLLY - My Pet putting
setUed
in carroll's Manor
One of the new medicines, purines come from ammo ax10m,
manageable
to
a
child.
J
.
Peeve
1s
with
those
products
everything
in
Hampshire and later those in
His
son,
Martin, Jr., took his MaSllllchuse tt, and Maine.
allopurinol ( Zyloprim), ac1ds from protem it 1s a moderahon.
that come on ,the marlj_et w1th w.
through June The July
estlillate was 9 8 per cent

Two killed

WASiflNGTON (UP!) The multibillion-dollar
merger plan for bankrupt
railroads of the Northeast
and Midwest bas the support
of the Interstate Commerce
Commission - with some
reservations.
The ICC Monday published
a 65-page evaluation of the
merger plan drawn up by the
U.S. Railway Association,
which was established by law
primarily to work out the
reorganization of debtplagued lines in the two
regions.
The- plan seems often too
optimistic about revenues
from certain freight, but in
general seems a good one to
put the lines back on sound
footing, the ICC concluded.
The plan was drawn up
under provisions of the
Regional Rail Reorganization
Act of 1973 and was relayed to
Congress with the ICC
comments.
Under the plan, the
"ConRail System" would be
established, made up of most
of the Penn Central, the
Lehigh Valley, the Central
Railroad of New Jersey and
the
Pennsylvania-Reading
Seashore Lines, plus smaller
portions of the Reading and
the Ann Arbor.
~

•
•

--•

in plane at

-..
~

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D .

•

:.
.:
,..

.....

!"
'"
..
:
:
:
""
-

..

...

::1!

..
:
:

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:
•

DEAR DR . LAMB Within the past year my
husband has had two attacks
of gout in hLS foot. He is 48
What foods should he a void'
Is there any diet to · prevent
these attacks~ What brings
them on? Should he avoid
certain foods all the lime or
just when he has an attack?
DEAR READER - The
Idea persists that the best
way to treat gout Is by diet.
That would have been true
several years ago, but we
now have medicines th;o.t are
very effective in controlling
g011t so diet is of less import.
ance than it once was.
Gout is caused by an excess
amount of tD'ic acid in the
body. What is uric acid? It is
a byproduct of the formation
of DNA, that vital substance
of genes, in Ute nucleus of all
of the cells in your body .

...

I

Definitions in
football given

Polly's Potnters

~·

,,'

BASEBALL

'TD'

Salt removes
kitty odors

,.,

~~~kling

wolfpen

News Notes

Doubleheader

for all stars
is Sunday at 1

---

RETREADS
All

,,

$11.95

PASSENGER
SIZES

'GENE AL-- TIRE
SALES

'

,.

Big Ten's top two "heing
crowded by more toughies

Hayes makes 2 switches~~~'7is~la i1 ~ mll..

What causes gout attacks?

••••
•

•
•
••
:
:.
:-

Losers always
cry cheap shot

Portsmouth

DR. LAMB

ft

••
•••

Mason Area
News Notes

Owners, players, talk

about like old friends

Meigs Easterdays attend reunion
weekend of August 8 in Maryland

Gasoline tax
distributed

career run. The Reds had siJI:
Mrls 4, Padres 0
Natiooal League Roundup
leading the Pirates to a W yourself out there."
delpltla defeated Los Angeles
Hank Webb tossed a five- doubles, including two each
By FRED McMANE
Willie
Stargell, still 4-2, New York blanked San
victory.
UPI Sports ·Writer
hitter
and rook1e Mike Vail by George Foster and Dave
bothered
by
a
cracked
r1b,
Diego W , Cincinnati crushed
The 32-year-&lt;&gt;ld left-ltander,
Jim Rooker, who blames bothered by control trouble supported Rooker with a pair Olicago 11-4 and St Lo u1s collected four st raight hits to Concep&lt;"on . Jerry Morales
himself
for the PittsbtD'gh for much of the season, of runscoring singles as the and Houston was called by spa rk the Mets to v1ctory and Bill Madlock homered for
By MILTON RICHMAN
Pirates' failure to run away walked only one and struck Pirates tagged rookie Mike rrun after 10 inrungs w1th t he over the Padr es Webb d1d the Cubs
UPI Sports Editor
not walk a batter a nd struck Cardinals 3, Altros 3
WLth the National League out four in posting his lOth Thompson WLth hLS fifth loss score t Led 3-J
NEW YORK (UP!) - Haseball is missmg the boat, says East, figures there's still
The cardinals averted a
out
two m notchmg hLS fir st
m
as
many
decisions.
victory against nine losses.
Frank Lane, and as usual, he's right.
b1 g leag ue shu to ut Vall, loss when Cliff Johnson 's lith
time to make amends.
"The cracked rib is gomg to
Phillles 4, Dodgers 2
The victory enabled the
He's talldng about the electing of players to the Hall of Fame
Rooker, who won IS games Pirates to remain three bother me for a while," sa1d
Mike Schmidt lied for the rece ntly ca lled up from mnmg homer was wiped out
and the rap former Cleveland outfielder Earl Averill took at a year ago in helping the
games ahead of PhlladelpltLa. Stargell, who returned to the maJor league lead w1th h1s Tidewate r wh e re h e " as by a ramstorm which forced
that system during his induction mto the shrme at Cooper- P1rates win the Nallonal
"Since I've been here, I've lineup Sunday after an ab- 31st homer and Greg Luzmsk1 lea dmg th e l nte rn at tonal the ump1res to postpone play
stown, N.Y., last week. Voted m by the special Veterans' League East, has been very always
had good control, but sence of 12 days. "It's not mcreased h1s maJor league- League 10 runs batted m, had after a two-hour and 14Committee, Averill, 73, was grateful, but he was also angry erratic for most of this year,
earlier this year I was wild going to go away so I try not leading rb1 total to 103 w1th a two doubl es and two smgle s mmut e delay. The score
over having to wa1t 34 years He said there were CO\I!ltless but with five weeks to go in
reverted back to the last of
and I'm not the kind of pit- to think about 11. Besides, I pa1r of run-scormg smgles as and also drove m a run
others like him being passed over in favor of Johnny-corne- the pennant race he looms as
Reds
It,
Cubs
4
the
lOth and the game will be
cher who can work behind the never was smart enough to the Philhes def eated th e
latelies.
Darr ell Cha n ey . bal lin g re)\la yed in 1ts entirety
a key f1gure in Pittsburgh's batters," said Rooter. 141 feel think about two things at Dodgers to remam three
Frank Lane says Earl Averill Is 100 per cent right. What's chances to repeat as divlSion
on
ly 212, drove 10 four runs torfight as part of a douI've let the club down 'cause once When I'm out there I games behind Pittsburgh m
more, he has an idea which he feels would rectify all that and wmners.
if I had the year that was have to concentrate on the the NL East Gene Garber w1th a s10g le an d h1s first bleheader. Johnson was debenefit the players, the fans and baseball at the same time.
That LS, if he pitches the expected of me we'd be three game. I can really feel the was the wmner m reh ef while homer of the yea r to lead the pnved of what would have
From Dallas, where he's scouting American League clubs way he did Monday night
or four games farther out m pam when I swmg and m1ss Andy Messers mith was Reds ove r the Cubs The Reds been h1s s1xth homer in six
for the california Angels, Lane was so enthusiastic about his when he blanked the Atlanta
front Maybe I was just la•y. so 1t's mce to make contact " charged w1th h1s 13th loss 10 ba nge d out 19 hits, wtth Tony games, only two short of the
1dea, he sounded as if be was gomg to jwnp nght through the Braves on three h1ts while
Perez dn vmg 111 hts l ,OOOth maJor league record.
In other NL action, Ph1la- 'l7 deciSIOnS
You have to disciplme
telephone.
"My ideaLS to designate certam established stars as Hall of
Fame nominees while they're still playmg," sa1d Lane. "In
other words, each year the baseball writers would vote for
.,
certilin players who in theLr judgement were Hall of Fame
'nominees.' No player would be eligible for nommallon unless American League Roundup
A 20-year rookie right- game - first Cleveland and moth . It was a letdown to
he had at least 10 years m the majors. And after a player was
By FRED DOWN
hander from Fremont, Calif ., pttcher to achieve that total see Melton get the smgle 10
nominated, he 'dautomat1callybecome eligible to he voted mto
UPI Sports Writer
Eckersley started the season this season - when he p1t- the seventh but I wasn 't gom g
CHI CAGO \ UP!) - The chance that National
the Hall of Fame Itself three days after be ofhcraUy retired as
Down there m fourth place m the bullpen but graduated ched a three ./titter and struck to let 1t get me down Bemg m
Football
Leag ue players mtght be able to negotiate a
a player.
oul eight m the Indians' 5-l the bullpen m the hegmrun g
1n the American League to the starting rotation on
contra ct w1th club ownets for the first time m more :~
' 'These players not only would have the distmcllon of puttmg East, 17 games behind the May 25 with a three-lui triumph over the 011cago of the season was a b1g help
than a ye ar bnghtened today after an extended,negom tbeLr last few years as off1ctal Hall of Fame nommees, but first-place Boston Red Sox, shutout over the Oakland A's White Sox.
because I always came in 10
llatmg sessiOn m a "cordial" atmosphere which exthe fans would have the added enjoyment of being able to see the Cleve~nd Indians don 't and has been an ey~pener
The
Texas
Rangers tough s1tuallons "
tended mto the small hours of the morning
them while they're still playing and knowing beforehand they have much to think about for Manager Frank Robinson defeated the Detroit Tigers 1" I didn't know much about
The negotlatmg sesSLon came as a surprise and 11
were beaded for the Hall of Fame. Think of the advantage-to except 1976.
and the rest of the Indians 0 and the Minnesota Twins Eckersley m sprmg traLrUng
appear ed that 1t m1ght continue on Tuesday
the players, to the fans and to baseball.
beat the Milwaukee Brewers but I knew he was a fme
In Dennis Eckersley, howe- ever since.
Pla yer representatives were called together to hear
"H the player did somethmg in his last few years to ver, they may have a lot to
Eckersley won his lOth 6-3 m the only other American prospect," said Robtnson
a progress report on negotiations from the National
disqualify him from being elected, then the wr1ters needn't think about.
League games Baltimore's , "He has been a tremendous
Football League Players Assoctation President Kermit
automatically vote him in after he was finished. In that way,
scheduled game at Kansas help to our club and he has
Alexander and executive director Ed Garvey. But
there would be no shooins, and nobody could sneak m, either."
City was rained out.
not surpr1sed me He has got
midway
through thetr session, Garvey contacted
Lane was just getting warmed up.
In the National League, 1t a lot of heart and determanagement
representatives and they agreed to Oy to .·:
"I believe m flowers for the living. Why do they have to wait
was Cincmnah 11 011cago 4, mmation."
Ch1ca go la te Monday afternoon to resume
for a maq to die and tben put flowers on his grav~ You can't
Pittsburgh 4 Atlanta 0, New Rangers I rigers 0
negotiations
::
smell 'em after you're dead. Under the present votmg rules, a
York 4 San Diego 0, PhllaRookie J1m Umbarger
Both
Al
e
xa
nder
and
Garvey
had
Indicated
::
Hall of Fame candidate can't be considered until he has been
delplt1a 4 Los Angeles 2 and pitched a three-lutter to rruse
management
wanted
to
d1scuss
first
the
"The
owners
.:;
out of baseball five years, but why should that be? The game
St LouiS 3 and Philadelplt1a 3 his record to 6-5 for the
keep saymg we must negotiate the Rozelle Rule," ·..
should promote its players while they're actually playing, not
CmCAGO (UP!) - Dave Darrel Chaney who took time in a t1e game halted by ram Rangers. The Rangers scored
Garvey sa1d "Three courts have indicated that 1t's
after they'reall through. Sure the writers do the actual voting, Concepcion's label as the out to laud ConcepciOn . after 10 innmgs.
the only run of the game m
illegal and tf we negotiated a settlement on it all we ~:
but what's wrong with them accepting a suggestiOn. Even National League's all-star Chaney had started at
Eckersley, who was backed the second mnmg when Jim
would be domg 1s addmg ourselves as defendants in a
from someone m baseball. I thmk baseball missed the boat by shortstop should read "all- sro1 -•no because of an in- by homers by Robinson and Spencer SLngled, moved to •
·:
smt. We're not going to do that."
~cepclon's hand . Olarlie Spikes, had a no. not thinking of somethmg like this before. Baseball IS always star cheap shot," according jury to
second on a walk and scored
In the Monday night negotiatmg session, the two
to Chicago Cub Manager J1I11 Chaney celebrated his h1tter unlll B1ll Melton on designated hitter Tom
talking about the need for added promollon."
d1scussed all proposals from both management :;
sides
Marshall.
greatest day at the plate by SLngled m the White Sox' run Grieve's smgle. Ray Bare
Frank Lane makes a good point.
and the players, mcluding the Rozelle Rule, in a ::
Marshall was v1sibly upset dr1ving in four runs with a with two out m the seventh was the loser for the Tigers
Probably no man in baseball has made more trades than
"cordial" atmosphere, a spokesman said
..
Lane while general manager of the Olicago Wh1te Sox, Cleve- Monday after Cincmnat1's 11- single and hLS fifth major but was disappointed m
fwlns 6 Brewers 3
TI1ere
was
no
deadiine
set
on
how
late
or
how
long
the
..
land Indians, St. Louis cardinals, Kansas C1ty A's and 4 drubbing of the Cubs m league home run.
losmg the claSSic effort .
Dave McKay homered and
negotlatwns would contmue since both sides apBut U!aney was replaced m
Milwaukee Brewers. A septuagenarian now, Lane rates which the Reds pounded out
" It would have been ruce to Lyman Bostock had three
parently believed progress toward an agreement could
consideration as a Hall of Farner in his own nght, but like 19 h1ts, including a pa1r of the Cincmnati seventh when have a no./titter, in fact 1t hits and drove m two nms to
be made The negotiations broke down a year ago
Concepcion hit for him. "I would have been out of lead the Twins' attack. Bill
everyone else, he has his own candidates. Two m fact, Larry doubles by Concepcion.
yesterday , Aug 25, 1974, when the players gave up on
When ConcepciOn nicked was not surpnsed at Sight," S81d Eckersley. " It Butler relieved Joe Decker
MacPhail and Jimmie Dykes.
their 55-day str1ke and went on to play Without a con"Larry MacPhail introduced mght baseball and was an Cub th1rd baseman Bill (Manag er) Sparky An- would have really put the w1th the bases fllled and none
tract.
innovator in the truest sense of the word," S81d Lane. "And I Madlock in the ninUt mnmg derson's move." Chaney lcmg on the cake for th1s out in the fourth and allowed
Smce then there have been negot1at1ons but no ···
the Brewers JUS! two h1ts the
think it's a crime Jimmie Dykes LSn't in 11. Look up his record. while going from second to said. "I have played for him season.
progress on a new agreement and the Monday night .·
He played 22 years; had a solid .280 lifetime batting average; third ori a long fly ball, for seven years and am ac"I started to ttre in the f1fth rest of the way The loss was
meeting offered the bnghtest prospect yet for a set. ..
hit .421 in the 1929WorldSerles to lead the Philadelphia A's to a Marshall retaliated by customed to bemg pulled m mnmg but the no-bitter kept the Brewers' nmth m their
tlem ent
world championship and managed capably for more than 20 yelling at the Cincinnati and out of ball games. I know me going," he added. 1 lost last 10 games
. •, . ... .
shortstop.
what my job is, and that is to my fast ball m the sixth but 1t
years after he was finished playmg. As Earl Averill says''To me it was nothing but a fill the gap. But you really came back to me m the eighth
what does a guy have to do to get in? I'd like to see J1IIlmte
receive the honor while he's still livmg. No one would ap- cheap shot," Marshall sa1d. cannot complain about not
"Cincinnati was already SIX bemg m every day because
preciate it more than him; no one deserves it more "
runs ahead. It showed me you're playing behind the allthat ConcepciOn has no star shortstop."
class."
The Reds, who reduced
Madlock, who was forced to their magtc nwnber to 17
leave the game with a bruised games, celebrated Tony
shin, took the incident quite Perez' l,OOOth nm batted in. - · calmly.
Madlock,
the Perez was batting just .1110 on
runners
Chubby
iEDifORS
NOfE: quar t erba c k Dennis w1th
league's batting leader, sa1d, May 20 and smce has ra1sed
Franklm,
but
he
has
Gordon
Phill1ps,
Steve
Greene
and
Following is a s1zeup of the
Amencan League Standmgs
"Concepcion
was
just
testing
his
average
104
points.
By
Un•ted
Press
l
nternattonal
upcommg football season m Bell and Rob Lytle for potent Lon me Perrin, but quarBy TOM DUNCAN
East
Jose
Car
dena!
's
throwmg
Rick
Reuschel
of
the
Cubs
runmng, a nd a gam the terback Kurt Steger will have
For our second column on
w I pet g b the Midwest
arm
and
I
don't
think
be
gave
up
nine
hits
in
just
two
77
51
60?
Boston
nucleus of a strong defense m to come through On defense,
high school football, we would
69 58 543 7 . '
Balt•mor e
would
have
deliberately
tr1ed
mnmgs
of
work
to
absorb
his
By
ED
SAINSBURY
Dan J1lek, Tim Dav1s , Jeff Dean March and John
like to start w1lh somelhmg
New Yor k
6&lt;l 64 500 13
to
sp1ke
me."
14th
loss
against
ten
wms,
17
59
67
Writer
UPI
Sports
Cleveland
Perhnger and Don Dufek . DeFelic1antonlo were among
very basic, definitions
57 73 m 21
While none of the Cin- while Fred Norman picked up M •l wauk ee
And lhe Wolverines never are the best in the Big Ten and
CHICAGO
(UP!)
The
Live ball- Ball m play that
5 1 78 395
Detro •I
wm
with
relief
help
cinnat1
players
heard
Marhis
ninth
cau
West
gh t short tn reserve coach Bob Blackman should
Btg Ten's " B1g Two " of
has been legally snapped or
shall's
remarks,
it
was
from
Clay
Carroll.
w ' oct • b
be able to fill most gaps
midwest college footba ll, st rength
kicked.
Oakt an d
78 5 1 60 5
11
KCnsa
s
c
,,
v
69
57
s.ta
7
M1ch1gan
State
has
17
of
22
The rest of the B1g Ten has
Oh1o State and Michiga n,
Dead ball - Period be- and mahciously dr1vmg the
might have to make room for starters back with Charlie br1ght spots on each roster,
tween downs, and may only helmet mto a player who IS
down
,
or
one
who
1s
held
so
a
" Btg Three" or even a " Btg Baggett at quarterback and but enough holes to make
come ahve by a snap or kick
Caltforn•a
60 71 458 19
runmng backs Levi .Jackson , doubtful any chance to
Four" in 1975
Player possession - Ball that he IS goi ng down, or one
COLUMBUS (UP!)- Ohio Initial results. The morning
Monday's Results
R1ch Baes , Claude Ge1ger challenge for the title.
·
·
1
din
in
Cle'leland
5
C1'11cago
l
,
ntght
who
1s
held
so
that
his
forThe
Buckeyes,
ranked
No
3
controlled by a player.
state football coach Woo d Y drill, me u g spr ts, was Texas 1 De troll o, n •ght
Indiana has the league
Team possession - Ball ward progress ts stopped, or Hayes put his 109 prospects shortened to permit news M tnnesota 6 Milwaukee 3, nt g ht last year, and M1ch1gan, and Ted Bell among them
leading
passer, Terry Jones,
The
defense
should
be
solid
one
who
IS
obviously
out
of
ranked
No.
5,
w1ll
be
good
·
·
full
d
bl
·
1
tak
f
h
Balt•more
at
Kansa
s
C1t
y
controlled by a player or a
through their hrst
ou e p1c ure
mg or an our. noghl , ppd ram
and
cha
nces
to
plug
the
ofreturnmg along with running
agam, perhaps gomg agamst
ball loose followmg loss of the play .
drill today in getting ready
Hayes S81d the players
Tuesday's Games
fenstve
holes
are
excellent.
(All
romes
EDT&gt;
back Courtney Snyder, and
each
other
for
the
chammfractwn
Foul
Rule
player possessiOn.
for the season opener a t wo uld pra ct tee without pads Cht cago ( Os teen 6 12l ar
Purdue's
Alex
Agase
extwo hne hnebackers in
Loose ball - Pass, fwnble, (penalty)
Michigan State Sept. 13.
through Wednesday, and the Cleveland (Bob by 4 131. 7 JO pionship on the fmal Saturday
pects a fir st wut wh1ch can
I Contmued on Page, 4 I
THERE ARE MANY
or kick. A loose ball continues
Hayes welcomed the group first Contact WOuld be held ~~to mor e &lt;Alexander (5 71 and of the season
nval,
but
cha
llenge
any
M1ch1gan
Stat
e,
But
to be loose until a player defimtwns, but I feel these Monday and Immediately the next day. The double Palmer 119 71 at Kan sas C1ty
Purdue and concedes he eould have a
'tched tw opa
) yers · Doug drills were e""""ted
to run 2(Leonard
9 5 and Bus by 15 9 1 W1scons1n,
secures possession or the ball are the most Important
SWl
..t'...._
7 00p m
possibly
lllinms
could turn problem In depth. Mark V1tali
becomes dead (out of bounds,
Bargerstock, Taylor, MICh., tllrough the middle of next M tnn esa ta I Goltz 12 IO J at
etc.)
sophomore, was moved from week, before Hayes eases off ~ ~;~~ ee ( Broberg 10 11 1 mto darkborse challengers , ii "'ll be at qua rterback and
Blocking - Obstructing an
defensive tackle to fullback to a single daily workout.
Delro il 1 Ruhle 10 10 ) a1 Texas not for the champiOnship, Sco tt D1erkm g and M1ke
Pruttt handle the bulk of the
opponent by contacting hun
and Herman Jones, Miami of
Buckeye trainer Bill Hill ;Jat;~~J 3 r1i/~b:r~o ~ ;;' at Ne w then for VIctory over one of runnmg The offense has
the high ranked clubs some
with any part of the blocker's
Florida sophomore, was said all of the Buckeyes, York IHunter 17 12 1. s oo P m
plent y of experience, and the
a ( F lgueroa 1l 10 J at autwnn Saturday
shlfted from def enSive back except one ' were "in the best Cal•lorn•
Bo ston (T1 ant 15 12 ) 7 30 p m
There'll be more of the defense was shored up by
- A defensive
to split end.
shape I've ever seen them ."
same too m the Mtd-Amenca tr ansfer of runmn g ba ck
player's use of hands or arms •
Hayes mdicated after the The squad got their pltys1cal
National League Stand1ngs
Conference, wtth Mtamt, M1ke Nort hin gton to defenBV Un.ted Press lnternahonat
to hold a runner or throw hun
opening day practices that exams Sunday.
East
Ohio, boastmg the longest SI Ve !Jack
msura n c e ' Con tac t
to the ground
''we got a lot of work done"
w I 0 ~t• 9 b wmnmg streak among the
me today!
W1
scons
m
boasts
the
73 56 5
Clippmg - Throwmg the
P IIISburgh
and seemed pleased WLth
STEVE
major schools (23 games) t he na twnal scormg leader , Billy
70 SV 54 3 3
Ph ilade lphia
body across the back of an
69 59
St LOUIS
SNOWDEN
Marek
,
top
fullbacks
m
Ken
~~ ' favorite to wrap up the crown
67 62 ~~~
opponent's leg or chargmg or
New York
12S8 Powell St .
Mrs. Geneva Shumate
Starch and Larry Canada and
60 71 458 "
SAN
FRANCISOO
(UP!)
again
w1th
the
toughe
st
Ct11 CclgO
Middleport.
0
falling into the back of an returned home Fnday after
55 72
Montr eal
33 17
lmemen
m
Terry
sta
ndout
'
competitiOn
from
Bowling
For
his
no-run,
no./tit
perforPH
992
7155
west
opponent who 1s not a runner , spending two weeks with Mr
Stieve and Denrus Lick, the
w I pet g b
Green and Kent State
(We cannot rule chppmg and Mrs. Leon Shwnate and mance, San Francisco Giants
Ctn c 1nnat 1
85 44 659
Notre Dame , wtth a new latter perhaps t he best in the
UHf fUM Y~TUH
Los A ngeles
6B 62 523 17 112
unless we see the inillal family at Bandytown , W. Va. pitcher Ed Halicki today was
nation at tackle The Badgers
AUT OMOIIU
named
the
National
League's
San F ran CtSCO 63 66 488 22
coach
,
Dan
Devme,
had
contact.)
!UIIUJIC( tOII"JIY
Recent visitors of Mr. and
San 01ego
60 70 462 25 1 1 heavy losses and will be hard
w1ll
have
good
depth
and
s1ze
,
Player of the Week .
HIIM Dille•
A tl anta
57 74 435 29
Fumble - Loss of player
IIN•I .. I.. ltll~tl•
p 621097
1 '~
.,., possession other than by Mrs W. A. Elam were Mr
too
pressed
to
climb
as
high
as
The lanky righthander
Houston
50
82
379
3
6
SYRACUSE - Sunday
and Mrs. Wayne Tillman of faced 30 New York batters,
~onday's Results
lllinms1has a solid backfteld
No. 6 m the ratings agam
here at ml,tniclpal park an C1nc1nnat• 11 Ch1cago 4
kicking, passing, or handing. Piscapaway, New Jersey.
Oh10 State lost 13 starters,
only three over the minimwn,
all star doubleheader wlil P1ttsburgh 4 Atlanta o, n 1ght
Muff- Touching of a loose
Mr. and Mrs . Clinton as the Giants defeated the
Houston 3 Sl
LOU IS 3, 10 but coach Woody Hayes
be played between teams of 1nnmgs called ra1n
ball in an unsuccessful at- Gilkey of Albany were
never LS caught short for reMets,
6-0,
Sunday.
New York 4 San D1ego 0. n 1ght
the
north and south In the
tempt to secure possess1on Sunday evenmg v1s1tors of
Ph il adelphia 4 Los Angeles 2
placements, and sa1d bluntly,
Meigs County Independent mght
(accidental kick included). Lincoln Russell.
"I think we'll be all right "
Tuesday's Games
Baseball League wblcb has
Spearing - Deliberately
Mr. and Mrs. M1ckey Jones
(All T1mes EDT)
Anti-Breeches
Among
the
returnmg
completed a successful
C1nC1nnat1 (8dl1ngham 14 6 l at
and family of Charleston, W.
Trousers became popular m
Buckeyes
are
the
ent1re
Ch 1cago (S tone 11 61 , 2 30 p m
PI US RECAPABLE
Va. visited Sunday with Mr Amenca after the War of 1812 season aod tournament.
At lanta
( Easterly
1 6)
a t backfield,
headed
by
Starting
at
I
p.m.
all
ttsburgh
(
Dem
ery
6
3
),
7
35
Pi
and Mrs. W. A. Elam and Mr as a reactwn against the stlk
He1sman trophy winner
p m
CASINij
and Mrs Jack Elam and breeches-and-hose syndrome stars from Letart, PortHouston (N1ekro 4 4 and R1c h
Archie Griffin, quarterback
land,
and
Tuppers
Plains
that
srpacked
too
much
Of
ard
9
Bl
at
St
LOUIS
(
Rasmu
ss
family
BOOSTERS TO MEET
en 2 2 and Reed 119 1, 2 6 30 Cornelius Greene and flanker
thmgs British The Duke of
Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Elam Welhngton actually helped pop- (north) wlll play stars from
CHESHIRE - Tbe Kyger
pm
Brian Baschnagel. Losses
Syracuse, Pomeroy and
New York (Ta te .tl 12 ) at San
Creek Athletic Boosters Club and grandciJildren Bill and ulanze trousers in England by
0 1ego ( Frersleben 5 lJ l -1 lO oo were greatest on defense, and
Minersville
(south).
will meet at 7:30p.m. Thurs- Carolyn Elam were Wed- wearmg them to state funcpm
Ohio State should get a tough
• President of the inPhiladelphia {Underwood 12 8 )
day at the high school. nesday visitors of Mrs. ltons Early trousers were
at Los Angeles { Ra u 10 9 1 openmg game test, against
dependent league Is Don
1 drl; ·''··• 1
f\/\
. 'l••tllr)d
' .. , . "
I
' .
'
Boosters are asked to attend Elam 's mother and Paul s1mply something to prot~ct the
10 30 p m
Michigan
State
Hupp.
Montreal
{
Frym"'n
8
91
at
fancy
breeches
•when
ndmg,
'1'1'/ /11'.1
and famtly
of
, 10 order to make plans for the Jones
Mtcltigan 's Bo SchemSan F ran c 1sco {F al cone 8 9)
s1m1lar
to
chaps
worn
by
cowCharleston
upcoming football season
bechler ba&amp; to repl ace
boys out West
:: ··:..:·: · :·· :·:· ... ·:·: ,...,.,.,., :·: ::&gt;:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·: :·. :· 11 05 p m

Eckersly is finishing strong

.. . . . .

ICC likes rail merger ~plan, but
with some specific reservations
By WilLIAM E. CLA YI'ON

.

Rooker strong in Pirates' stretch

Today's

He sa1d he will mtroduce a
bill for "a federal profit
guarantee to would-be ingovernment.
we
can vestors 1n expenstve ...
guarantee a market to those commercwl coal gasification
who must seek $600 to $800 plants. "
million m private cap1tal to
Under his idea, the governbu1ld a commercial plant," ment would take bids for
he said. " They need th1s future sales of "coal gas." It
would accept the low bid, for
example $3.20 per thousand
cub1c feet of gas, for a long-

Farmers got bigger slice

,,

.

�I

?

'

_The Daily Sentmel , Middl~port-l;'omeroy, 0 , Tuesday, Aug. 26,1975

-~

Coal-gas plan designed
•
•
to msure mvestments
WASiflNGTON (UP! ) Rep. PaulSlillon, D-IU, plans
to mtroduce legislatiOn under
which the federal government would subsidtze pnces
for gas produced from coal
with a $1.5 btlliOn commttment over the next 15
years
The congressman from the
maJor soft coal-producmg

sta te said the allocation
would assure a profit from
the coal gasification process,
so investors would be attracted to pay for 1t The
comtrutted funds would he
appropriated only if needed.
Simon contended that coal
gas1ficat10n "1s stuck on dead
center" and warned that
ootenhal mvestors are wary

of spending great amounts of
money on somethmg whose
price LS not assured for the
future
"With mLnlillal cost to the

By BERNARD BRENNER

WASiflNGTON (UP[) The middleman got more of
Amencans' food dollars m
July than Ln the month
before, but the farmer did
even better, the Agriculture
Department says
The mtddleman received
56 9 cents of each dollar and
the farmer 43.1 cents, g1vmg
the farmer a relatiVe mcrease
Government figures last
week showed the retail price
of farmproduced food - not
counting 1tems such as f1sh,
coffee or restaurant food rose 3.4 per cent in July.
USDA officials estimated
Monday the middleman's
margin - the difference
between what farmers get
and what conswners pay rose 2.9 per cent in July, JUSt
about wiping out declmes in
that spread from Apnl

Sport Parade

assurance m order to get the

loans ''

term commitment of a
certam volume
Assured of at least that
prtce, investors would
fmance the coal gas plant.
When gas is actually produced from it, the producer
could e1ther sell 11 at the
market price, if it IS higher
than $3.20, or 1f the market Ill
lower, the government would
make up the difference up to
$3.20.
Simon said he thinks coal
gas will cost $4 per thousand
cubic feet to produce m large
quantities. Natural gas pnces
now range up to $2 for some
fore1gn liquefied gss sales,
but generally $1 50 for sales
Within the state of producllon-sales that are not pricecontrolled by the Federal
Power Commission.

THE CHAMPS - The Syracuse baseball team took
called the Ohio Valley Indpendent Baseball League and
cuts of cho1ce grade beef m
fLrst place m the Metgs Independent League and f1rst
teams will begin signmg up in March of 1976. Officers for
July even though farm prices
place m the tournament. Team members front row , 1-r
next year are Don Hupp, president, Gary Durst, vice
above a year earher.
for beef cattle declined. The
are, Jeff Hubbard, Bill Hubbard, coach, Jirruny Joe
president, Greg Roush, secretary-treasurer. Additional
At the same time, pnces farmer's return for 2.25
Hemsley, Mick Ash, Steve Stewart, V1rg1e D1ll, M1ke
information will be made available at the time the league
received by farmers for pounds of live cattle (needed
Rose, Roome Quillen; back row, Greg Roush , Rick Van
LS organized. In the championship game Rick Van Matre
cattle , gram and other food to equal one retail pound) fell
Matre, Jun Hubbard, George Glaze, Rick Ash ,. Ray
allowed siX hits and struck out 13 m defeating Tuppers
cominodihes mcluded m a 6.5 cents a pound in July, but
Proff1tt, M1ke Stewart and John Arnott Absent were
Plains ~I with Jack Rood on the mound. Rood allowed 7
typical consumer market marketing margms rose 9. 7
Rudy Stewart and Jack Bost1ck. Next year the teams
hits and fanned 6
basket rose 4.1 per cent and cents a pound.
partiClpatmg will go by NatiOnal League rules and will be
averaged 15 per cent above a
The report showed retail
year earlier
bread prices were unchanged
The report sa1d marketing at 35 6 cents for a one-pound
\
spreads widened sharply m loaf in July because midJuly for beef, pork, potatoes dlemen reduced their margin
and tomatoes while declining by 0.8 cents to offset an mmoderately for other foods crease of the same amount in
mcluding eggs, bread, fats the farm value of bread
and sugar.
ingredients.
Most of the July gain in
Compared to a year earlier,
prices paid to farmers came however, retail prices in July
from sharp rLSes for hogs, were 2.3 per cent higher
brmlers, eggs, potatoes and because the 15.8 per cent
wheat, which rose because of decline in the farm value of
PORTSMOUTH, Oh1o
sales to RUSSia.
bread ingredients was more
(UP!) - Two person&gt; are
Economtsts sa1d retail beef than offset by a 7 per cent the home of Albert Badgley at dead and two others
pnces, which have been gain
m
middlemen 's Hilliard, Oh10 this past bosp1tal1zed today following
.declmmg this .month, rose to margins.
Sunday Mr. and Mrs Davis the crash of smgl~ngine
a record $1.61 a pound for all
also vtsited wtth thetr plane two miles northeast of
daughter and family, Mr and the Portsmouth regional
Mrs Glen Johnson and Klill airport Monday rught, ofof Westerv1lle, Oh1o Saturday ficials said.
to Tuesday.
The state h1ghway patrol
Mr and Mrs Jack Forsee said the pilot, Ralph F .
and children, John, Pa ul, Kilpatnck, 48, Minford, was
Timothy, Tammy and Jason killed m the crash- and a
of Wmdmg Way, Cmcmnall, passenger, Adam Heller, 14,
Oh10, visited with relalLves in Portsmouth, died early today
At the same time, the misSion !elt - rrfront~nd the Bend Area last week.
after bemg taken to a
Mr and Mrs Joseph Sc1tes Colwnbus hosp1tal.
eastern half of the Erie- money" provided by the
SECOND PLACE WINNERS in the Meigs Independent Baseball league tournament
Lackawanna and most of the federal goverrlillent should be of Letart, W. Va. are anPolice sa1d it was believed
were
Tuppers Plains. They were also second place m league play. Front row, 1-r, are, Tom
Reading and Penn Central interest-free loans or at least nouncmg the btrth of their Kilpatrick, manager of the
Karr,
Steve Cowdery, Gary Durst, Mark Handley; back row, Jerry Burke, Jack Rood, Don
lines in West Virginia would loans with interest deferred, f1rst ch1ld Aug. 22 at Holzer regional a1rport, was piloting
Fitch, Mike Boring, Ken caldwell and Olarlie Collins.
be sold to the Chessie System. so that the reorganized lines Med1cal Center He was the Olerokee home from New
Joseph
Dean. York at the time of the crash
A total of 6,918 miles of would not have too much named
llttle-used ralls would be early debt.
Maternal grandmot her 1s m Scioto County.
The association plan also- Mrs Helen Williams, Cblton
elimihated.
InJured were the youth 's
Stock and debentures, seemed too optimistic about and parents grandparents mother, Mrs. Audrey Heller,
partly held by the federal how much revenue railroads are Mr and Mrs . K K Sc1tes and h1s sister, Amy They
government and partly would get in the future from of Letart Rt
were reported m fair conissued to creditors of the auto parts transportation, the
dttion
at a Portsmouth
Mr. and Mrs. Barney
By Bob HoeOich
the steps of a Lutheran fam1ly by raft to the
troubled lines, would be ICC said.
Hemmgway
and
two hospital.
Accordmg to legend, four
Church m Germany
The ICC recommended that daughters of V1lla Hills, Ky ,
LSSued totalmg more than $2
Monogahela River to Pittsor five hundred years ago, a
The day on wh1ch the boy burgh and then up the Ohio
for ConRall to succeed there
billion.
Mrs Ida Mae Schne1der of
baby boy was discovered on
was dJscovered was the R1ver to Knoxvtlle, Ohio.
George Olandler, director. should be a provision in the Warren, M1ch. were Sunday
Christian
Easter Day Thus,
of ICC's rail services plan- law for more liberal federal evemng guests of Mr and
Now
the
proliferous
the foundhng was named Easterdays and Ostertags
nmg office, said the com- fmancing.
Mrs Landen 8m1th.
Christian OStertag, German are scattered all over the
Mrs. Harry (Dot) Schwab
for Easterday, by h1s new- Umted States.
and son, Mark, of Baroda,
found and doting parents
The three-day reunwn in
Mich were dmner guests
BY POLLY CRA~&gt;tr.n
Descendants from that Frederick got underway on
Tuesday evening of Mr and
obscure, hwnble begmnmg, Aug. 8, a Friday evening w1th
State Auditor Thomas E.
Mrs. Landon Sm1lh. The Schmcludmg four Me1gs County dinner at the Dan-Dee
Ferguson's off1ce distnbuted
wabs visited other friends in
By Elsie Roacb
residents ,
flocked
to Country Inn, fittingly part$9,747.776 m gasoline taxes m
Mr. Loyd Riffle of New Mason They moved to
Fredenck, Md ., the weekend owned by James Easterday.
August to Ohw's counlles, Haven had rna jor surgery Baroda four years ago from
of Aug 8, to attend the second On Saturday those attending
townships,
cthes
and Tuesday at Pleasant Valley Mason.
International Easterday- the reuniOn attended three
villages.
POLLY'S PROBLEM
Mr and Mrs. Kenneth
Hospttal.
Ostertag reuniOn
coupons on lhe cans and
lectures on the1r clan
Each of the 1,320 townships
DEAR POLLY - Our cats packages good for a cash
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Reynolds, son Keith Allen,
The four Me1gs Counllans followed by a luncheon at a
rece1ved $1,200 for a total of Brinker and Tanya of Las Kelly Lynn were guests of have had qwte a few acattend1ng
were
Mary Holiday Inn : A banquet was
$1,584,000 and each of the 88 Vegas, Nevada were dinner Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Shinn of Cidents on our carpet. Durmg refund when one accumulates
Easterday
and
John staged Saturday
the
reqwred
number
The
night
coun ILes received $35,000 for guests of Mr. and Mrs. T. R. Leon Thursday evemng ,
warm weather the odor IS
Easterday, both of Racme, followmg a three hour bus
expiratiOn
date
IS
usually
a total of $3,080,000. Total Dav1s Thursday.
Mrs Lawrence Wolfe, very strong so I would hke to
and Mr. and Mrs Buel tour of Fredenck.
four months ahead but after
payments to Me1gs County
Ricky
and T1mothy and Mr. know 1f there IS any way to
Mrs Paul Randolph, Stella
Ridenour of Chester
the offer has been on SIX
Sunday mornmg the clan
villages amounted to $5,861 and Stacie Krebbs, Mrs Elsie and Mrs.-Paul Randolph and get r1d of 1!. - MARCIA
The reunion drew some 250 traveled v1a a caravan of
weeks
or
so
the
product
w1th
includmg $1,957 to Mid- Roach, Larry and Roger and Stac1e Krebs, Miss Alice M.
DEAR MARCIA - The
Easterdays and Oslertags cars to old Easterday
dleport; $2,202 to Pomeroy ; Miss Alice M. Roach visited · Roach and Mrs. Carroll Cox easiest thing is to spread salt the needed coupon cannot he
from all over the United homesteads after which a
found
on
the
shelves
of
any
of
$524 to Racme; $471 to J . Robert Roach at St. Mary's and Mr . and Mrs. Homer very thickly on the spots.
States and two from Ger- p1cmc prepared by the
the grocenes. - MRS. S. N
Rutland and $527 to Syracuse Hospital last week.
Brmker and Tanya visited After a recent accident, use
DEAR POLLY - Charlotte
many
•
Boonsboro Easterdays was
Mr and Mrs . T. R Dav1s with Mrs Robert Roach and paper towels to remove ex- wrote that she could not fmd a
The first mternatwnal held. An impress1ve evening
cess moisture. Leave salt on square cake plate to buy. I • reuniOn was held m 1972 in
attended the DaviS reunion at sons last week.
candlelight serv1ce m the
carpet a day or two or until
Germany. Fredenck was Evangel1~al Lutheran
suggest that she save square
all is dry and then remove styrofoam meat trays. When
chosen as the site of the Church WLlh the Rev. Frank
with the vacuum. Empty bag
second reunion because Ralph Ostertag of Leonia, N
covered w1th alummum foil
immediately and wipe any they can be used m many
Ostertags originally settled in
salt away from vacuum ways. I save all stzes, wash Jefferson and Boonsboro J , delivermg the sermon,
concluded the internatioal
parts.
when they migrated west reumon.
them and when dry they are
When such spots are stored and ready to use after
across the Atlantic to the New
removed the odor should go,
World
being covered w1th loLl. They
too. The Carpet Institute are mce for taking good1es to
According to MISS Hazel
When a new cell is formed the
blocks the overproduction of losmg battle Experiments
recommends absorbing
Easterday of Akron, a
DNA m the nucleus of a cell is ur1c acid by the cells and have been done by feeding
friends and around the
liquid If spots are wet, apply a hohdays when one g1ves
knowledgeable Ostertagduplicated like printing stops the process at its ongm. calves just milk, and they·
solution of one teaspoon nonEasterday researcher, a
another picture to enable the There are other medicines for grow new cells and form ur1c
special foods to fnends and
alkaline detergent, as used ne1ghbors there 1s no worry
descendant of that first
new cells to be like the old control of the acute attack of acid. M1lk contains no cells
$UPERS SWITCHED
for floe fabrics, and one about returning plates. When
Christian, Christian Ostertag
one. That 1s how your new gout and to eliminate excess and is purine-free. RegardCOLUMBUS UP! - Frank
teaspoon white vinegar to a
ha1r that replaces old hair on uric acid through the kidneys. less of how striCt the diet is,
a cake is as large as a !~inch
came to America m 1749 from H. Gray, 40, superintendent
quart of warm water. Dry
a regular basiS has the same For more details about how you can only lower the uric
Alsace, Germany. Settling of the Olillicothe Correcsheet cake I buy an
carpet and apply a dry aluminum foil pan, but for
first in V1rgm1a, Chnstian tional Institution, bas been
characteristics and color as gout affects the body and acid level a tiny amount, not
cleaning solvent. Dry and
the old hair.
what to do about it wnte to enough to prevent or control
most cakes, strudels and was chased north by Indians, named superintendent of the
brush carpet gently_ When
even p1cnic eatmg plates I escaping only w1th h1s wife Oh1o State Reformatory in
The formation of DNA ls a me in care of this newspaper, gout.
spots are already dry they
and child and one horse.
continuous process as long as P. 0. Box 1551, Radio City
Mansfield to replace Robert
Because heart disease is can be dampened with clean JUS! cover these trays with
He fmally 1settled per- C. White, who will remilin at
fo1l and they look qu1te
you live, because your body is Station, New York, NY 10019, such a conunon complicatwn
lukewarm water first so as to
pretty . -,KATHRYN.
constantly regenerating it. send a long, stamped, self- of gout 11 is a good idea to go
manently one and one half Mansf1eld as psychologist.
more readily absorb any
se,lf. Red blood cells only live addressed envel~ and 50 on a low-fat, low-5aturated
DEAR POLLY - Cleanmg m1les west of Jefferson .
further
treatment.
for 120 days and must be cents and ask for The Health fat low-cholesterol diet. You
an untidy bedroom can seem Christian became prominent,
POLLY.
and wealthy, and rrused a
a monumental task to a
replaced.
Your
body Letter number 2-3 on gout and should use the same diet
manufactures three million uric acid.
- proposed to prevent heart
young child and the hardest large family . Christian's
part
1s getting started. F1rst, brother, M1chael, also hved
new ones every second to
Efforts have be.l!n made to and vacsular disease for
DEAR POLLY An
SHA.I'i' lU U ... l ' "
replace the old ones. In some eliminate purmes from the people who do not have gout. electr1c fan blowing a1r into use a dust mop to push every- near Jefferson and ran a m1ll.
PHILADELPHIA (0PI)people this process is diet. This is achieved by
Acute
attacks
are my upright freezer does the thmg mto one corner of the He fathered nine children by · Gov. Milton J . Shapp,
associated with formatiOn of ehminating foods containing sometimes precipitated by thawing m half an hour. Mter room and w1th everything in hts first w1fe, Mary; recenUy returned from a
excess amounts of uric ac1d abundant cell nuclei. Purines excessive eating, as on washing with soda the job 1s one pile 1t looks as if half the remarried after her death, campaign swing through New
as a byproduct. Regardless of • are the basic building blocks holidays, excessive drinking done m half the usual tlille. work is already done and the moved to Boonsboro, and England, said MOitday he
what you eat this process will your body uses to make uric and excessive exercise. The Safe, too. - GLADYS
remammg half of sorting and fathered mne more children. would enter the nation's first
'
Another brother, Martin, presidential primary In New
away
looks
go on.
.
acid. However, since the rule here is to follow the old
DEAR POLLY - My Pet putting
setUed
in carroll's Manor
One of the new medicines, purines come from ammo ax10m,
manageable
to
a
child.
J
.
Peeve
1s
with
those
products
everything
in
Hampshire and later those in
His
son,
Martin, Jr., took his MaSllllchuse tt, and Maine.
allopurinol ( Zyloprim), ac1ds from protem it 1s a moderahon.
that come on ,the marlj_et w1th w.
through June The July
estlillate was 9 8 per cent

Two killed

WASiflNGTON (UP!) The multibillion-dollar
merger plan for bankrupt
railroads of the Northeast
and Midwest bas the support
of the Interstate Commerce
Commission - with some
reservations.
The ICC Monday published
a 65-page evaluation of the
merger plan drawn up by the
U.S. Railway Association,
which was established by law
primarily to work out the
reorganization of debtplagued lines in the two
regions.
The- plan seems often too
optimistic about revenues
from certain freight, but in
general seems a good one to
put the lines back on sound
footing, the ICC concluded.
The plan was drawn up
under provisions of the
Regional Rail Reorganization
Act of 1973 and was relayed to
Congress with the ICC
comments.
Under the plan, the
"ConRail System" would be
established, made up of most
of the Penn Central, the
Lehigh Valley, the Central
Railroad of New Jersey and
the
Pennsylvania-Reading
Seashore Lines, plus smaller
portions of the Reading and
the Ann Arbor.
~

•
•

--•

in plane at

-..
~

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D .

•

:.
.:
,..

.....

!"
'"
..
:
:
:
""
-

..

...

::1!

..
:
:

:
::;
:
•

DEAR DR . LAMB Within the past year my
husband has had two attacks
of gout in hLS foot. He is 48
What foods should he a void'
Is there any diet to · prevent
these attacks~ What brings
them on? Should he avoid
certain foods all the lime or
just when he has an attack?
DEAR READER - The
Idea persists that the best
way to treat gout Is by diet.
That would have been true
several years ago, but we
now have medicines th;o.t are
very effective in controlling
g011t so diet is of less import.
ance than it once was.
Gout is caused by an excess
amount of tD'ic acid in the
body. What is uric acid? It is
a byproduct of the formation
of DNA, that vital substance
of genes, in Ute nucleus of all
of the cells in your body .

...

I

Definitions in
football given

Polly's Potnters

~·

,,'

BASEBALL

'TD'

Salt removes
kitty odors

,.,

~~~kling

wolfpen

News Notes

Doubleheader

for all stars
is Sunday at 1

---

RETREADS
All

,,

$11.95

PASSENGER
SIZES

'GENE AL-- TIRE
SALES

'

,.

Big Ten's top two "heing
crowded by more toughies

Hayes makes 2 switches~~~'7is~la i1 ~ mll..

What causes gout attacks?

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•
•
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:
:.
:-

Losers always
cry cheap shot

Portsmouth

DR. LAMB

ft

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Mason Area
News Notes

Owners, players, talk

about like old friends

Meigs Easterdays attend reunion
weekend of August 8 in Maryland

Gasoline tax
distributed

career run. The Reds had siJI:
Mrls 4, Padres 0
Natiooal League Roundup
leading the Pirates to a W yourself out there."
delpltla defeated Los Angeles
Hank Webb tossed a five- doubles, including two each
By FRED McMANE
Willie
Stargell, still 4-2, New York blanked San
victory.
UPI Sports ·Writer
hitter
and rook1e Mike Vail by George Foster and Dave
bothered
by
a
cracked
r1b,
Diego W , Cincinnati crushed
The 32-year-&lt;&gt;ld left-ltander,
Jim Rooker, who blames bothered by control trouble supported Rooker with a pair Olicago 11-4 and St Lo u1s collected four st raight hits to Concep&lt;"on . Jerry Morales
himself
for the PittsbtD'gh for much of the season, of runscoring singles as the and Houston was called by spa rk the Mets to v1ctory and Bill Madlock homered for
By MILTON RICHMAN
Pirates' failure to run away walked only one and struck Pirates tagged rookie Mike rrun after 10 inrungs w1th t he over the Padr es Webb d1d the Cubs
UPI Sports Editor
not walk a batter a nd struck Cardinals 3, Altros 3
WLth the National League out four in posting his lOth Thompson WLth hLS fifth loss score t Led 3-J
NEW YORK (UP!) - Haseball is missmg the boat, says East, figures there's still
The cardinals averted a
out
two m notchmg hLS fir st
m
as
many
decisions.
victory against nine losses.
Frank Lane, and as usual, he's right.
b1 g leag ue shu to ut Vall, loss when Cliff Johnson 's lith
time to make amends.
"The cracked rib is gomg to
Phillles 4, Dodgers 2
The victory enabled the
He's talldng about the electing of players to the Hall of Fame
Rooker, who won IS games Pirates to remain three bother me for a while," sa1d
Mike Schmidt lied for the rece ntly ca lled up from mnmg homer was wiped out
and the rap former Cleveland outfielder Earl Averill took at a year ago in helping the
games ahead of PhlladelpltLa. Stargell, who returned to the maJor league lead w1th h1s Tidewate r wh e re h e " as by a ramstorm which forced
that system during his induction mto the shrme at Cooper- P1rates win the Nallonal
"Since I've been here, I've lineup Sunday after an ab- 31st homer and Greg Luzmsk1 lea dmg th e l nte rn at tonal the ump1res to postpone play
stown, N.Y., last week. Voted m by the special Veterans' League East, has been very always
had good control, but sence of 12 days. "It's not mcreased h1s maJor league- League 10 runs batted m, had after a two-hour and 14Committee, Averill, 73, was grateful, but he was also angry erratic for most of this year,
earlier this year I was wild going to go away so I try not leading rb1 total to 103 w1th a two doubl es and two smgle s mmut e delay. The score
over having to wa1t 34 years He said there were CO\I!ltless but with five weeks to go in
reverted back to the last of
and I'm not the kind of pit- to think about 11. Besides, I pa1r of run-scormg smgles as and also drove m a run
others like him being passed over in favor of Johnny-corne- the pennant race he looms as
Reds
It,
Cubs
4
the
lOth and the game will be
cher who can work behind the never was smart enough to the Philhes def eated th e
latelies.
Darr ell Cha n ey . bal lin g re)\la yed in 1ts entirety
a key f1gure in Pittsburgh's batters," said Rooter. 141 feel think about two things at Dodgers to remam three
Frank Lane says Earl Averill Is 100 per cent right. What's chances to repeat as divlSion
on
ly 212, drove 10 four runs torfight as part of a douI've let the club down 'cause once When I'm out there I games behind Pittsburgh m
more, he has an idea which he feels would rectify all that and wmners.
if I had the year that was have to concentrate on the the NL East Gene Garber w1th a s10g le an d h1s first bleheader. Johnson was debenefit the players, the fans and baseball at the same time.
That LS, if he pitches the expected of me we'd be three game. I can really feel the was the wmner m reh ef while homer of the yea r to lead the pnved of what would have
From Dallas, where he's scouting American League clubs way he did Monday night
or four games farther out m pam when I swmg and m1ss Andy Messers mith was Reds ove r the Cubs The Reds been h1s s1xth homer in six
for the california Angels, Lane was so enthusiastic about his when he blanked the Atlanta
front Maybe I was just la•y. so 1t's mce to make contact " charged w1th h1s 13th loss 10 ba nge d out 19 hits, wtth Tony games, only two short of the
1dea, he sounded as if be was gomg to jwnp nght through the Braves on three h1ts while
Perez dn vmg 111 hts l ,OOOth maJor league record.
In other NL action, Ph1la- 'l7 deciSIOnS
You have to disciplme
telephone.
"My ideaLS to designate certam established stars as Hall of
Fame nominees while they're still playmg," sa1d Lane. "In
other words, each year the baseball writers would vote for
.,
certilin players who in theLr judgement were Hall of Fame
'nominees.' No player would be eligible for nommallon unless American League Roundup
A 20-year rookie right- game - first Cleveland and moth . It was a letdown to
he had at least 10 years m the majors. And after a player was
By FRED DOWN
hander from Fremont, Calif ., pttcher to achieve that total see Melton get the smgle 10
nominated, he 'dautomat1callybecome eligible to he voted mto
UPI Sports Writer
Eckersley started the season this season - when he p1t- the seventh but I wasn 't gom g
CHI CAGO \ UP!) - The chance that National
the Hall of Fame Itself three days after be ofhcraUy retired as
Down there m fourth place m the bullpen but graduated ched a three ./titter and struck to let 1t get me down Bemg m
Football
Leag ue players mtght be able to negotiate a
a player.
oul eight m the Indians' 5-l the bullpen m the hegmrun g
1n the American League to the starting rotation on
contra ct w1th club ownets for the first time m more :~
' 'These players not only would have the distmcllon of puttmg East, 17 games behind the May 25 with a three-lui triumph over the 011cago of the season was a b1g help
than a ye ar bnghtened today after an extended,negom tbeLr last few years as off1ctal Hall of Fame nommees, but first-place Boston Red Sox, shutout over the Oakland A's White Sox.
because I always came in 10
llatmg sessiOn m a "cordial" atmosphere which exthe fans would have the added enjoyment of being able to see the Cleve~nd Indians don 't and has been an ey~pener
The
Texas
Rangers tough s1tuallons "
tended mto the small hours of the morning
them while they're still playing and knowing beforehand they have much to think about for Manager Frank Robinson defeated the Detroit Tigers 1" I didn't know much about
The negotlatmg sesSLon came as a surprise and 11
were beaded for the Hall of Fame. Think of the advantage-to except 1976.
and the rest of the Indians 0 and the Minnesota Twins Eckersley m sprmg traLrUng
appear ed that 1t m1ght continue on Tuesday
the players, to the fans and to baseball.
beat the Milwaukee Brewers but I knew he was a fme
In Dennis Eckersley, howe- ever since.
Pla yer representatives were called together to hear
"H the player did somethmg in his last few years to ver, they may have a lot to
Eckersley won his lOth 6-3 m the only other American prospect," said Robtnson
a progress report on negotiations from the National
disqualify him from being elected, then the wr1ters needn't think about.
League games Baltimore's , "He has been a tremendous
Football League Players Assoctation President Kermit
automatically vote him in after he was finished. In that way,
scheduled game at Kansas help to our club and he has
Alexander and executive director Ed Garvey. But
there would be no shooins, and nobody could sneak m, either."
City was rained out.
not surpr1sed me He has got
midway
through thetr session, Garvey contacted
Lane was just getting warmed up.
In the National League, 1t a lot of heart and determanagement
representatives and they agreed to Oy to .·:
"I believe m flowers for the living. Why do they have to wait
was Cincmnah 11 011cago 4, mmation."
Ch1ca go la te Monday afternoon to resume
for a maq to die and tben put flowers on his grav~ You can't
Pittsburgh 4 Atlanta 0, New Rangers I rigers 0
negotiations
::
smell 'em after you're dead. Under the present votmg rules, a
York 4 San Diego 0, PhllaRookie J1m Umbarger
Both
Al
e
xa
nder
and
Garvey
had
Indicated
::
Hall of Fame candidate can't be considered until he has been
delplt1a 4 Los Angeles 2 and pitched a three-lutter to rruse
management
wanted
to
d1scuss
first
the
"The
owners
.:;
out of baseball five years, but why should that be? The game
St LouiS 3 and Philadelplt1a 3 his record to 6-5 for the
keep saymg we must negotiate the Rozelle Rule," ·..
should promote its players while they're actually playing, not
CmCAGO (UP!) - Dave Darrel Chaney who took time in a t1e game halted by ram Rangers. The Rangers scored
Garvey sa1d "Three courts have indicated that 1t's
after they'reall through. Sure the writers do the actual voting, Concepcion's label as the out to laud ConcepciOn . after 10 innmgs.
the only run of the game m
illegal and tf we negotiated a settlement on it all we ~:
but what's wrong with them accepting a suggestiOn. Even National League's all-star Chaney had started at
Eckersley, who was backed the second mnmg when Jim
would be domg 1s addmg ourselves as defendants in a
from someone m baseball. I thmk baseball missed the boat by shortstop should read "all- sro1 -•no because of an in- by homers by Robinson and Spencer SLngled, moved to •
·:
smt. We're not going to do that."
~cepclon's hand . Olarlie Spikes, had a no. not thinking of somethmg like this before. Baseball IS always star cheap shot," according jury to
second on a walk and scored
In the Monday night negotiatmg session, the two
to Chicago Cub Manager J1I11 Chaney celebrated his h1tter unlll B1ll Melton on designated hitter Tom
talking about the need for added promollon."
d1scussed all proposals from both management :;
sides
Marshall.
greatest day at the plate by SLngled m the White Sox' run Grieve's smgle. Ray Bare
Frank Lane makes a good point.
and the players, mcluding the Rozelle Rule, in a ::
Marshall was v1sibly upset dr1ving in four runs with a with two out m the seventh was the loser for the Tigers
Probably no man in baseball has made more trades than
"cordial" atmosphere, a spokesman said
..
Lane while general manager of the Olicago Wh1te Sox, Cleve- Monday after Cincmnat1's 11- single and hLS fifth major but was disappointed m
fwlns 6 Brewers 3
TI1ere
was
no
deadiine
set
on
how
late
or
how
long
the
..
land Indians, St. Louis cardinals, Kansas C1ty A's and 4 drubbing of the Cubs m league home run.
losmg the claSSic effort .
Dave McKay homered and
negotlatwns would contmue since both sides apBut U!aney was replaced m
Milwaukee Brewers. A septuagenarian now, Lane rates which the Reds pounded out
" It would have been ruce to Lyman Bostock had three
parently believed progress toward an agreement could
consideration as a Hall of Farner in his own nght, but like 19 h1ts, including a pa1r of the Cincmnati seventh when have a no./titter, in fact 1t hits and drove m two nms to
be made The negotiations broke down a year ago
Concepcion hit for him. "I would have been out of lead the Twins' attack. Bill
everyone else, he has his own candidates. Two m fact, Larry doubles by Concepcion.
yesterday , Aug 25, 1974, when the players gave up on
When ConcepciOn nicked was not surpnsed at Sight," S81d Eckersley. " It Butler relieved Joe Decker
MacPhail and Jimmie Dykes.
their 55-day str1ke and went on to play Without a con"Larry MacPhail introduced mght baseball and was an Cub th1rd baseman Bill (Manag er) Sparky An- would have really put the w1th the bases fllled and none
tract.
innovator in the truest sense of the word," S81d Lane. "And I Madlock in the ninUt mnmg derson's move." Chaney lcmg on the cake for th1s out in the fourth and allowed
Smce then there have been negot1at1ons but no ···
the Brewers JUS! two h1ts the
think it's a crime Jimmie Dykes LSn't in 11. Look up his record. while going from second to said. "I have played for him season.
progress on a new agreement and the Monday night .·
He played 22 years; had a solid .280 lifetime batting average; third ori a long fly ball, for seven years and am ac"I started to ttre in the f1fth rest of the way The loss was
meeting offered the bnghtest prospect yet for a set. ..
hit .421 in the 1929WorldSerles to lead the Philadelphia A's to a Marshall retaliated by customed to bemg pulled m mnmg but the no-bitter kept the Brewers' nmth m their
tlem ent
world championship and managed capably for more than 20 yelling at the Cincinnati and out of ball games. I know me going," he added. 1 lost last 10 games
. •, . ... .
shortstop.
what my job is, and that is to my fast ball m the sixth but 1t
years after he was finished playmg. As Earl Averill says''To me it was nothing but a fill the gap. But you really came back to me m the eighth
what does a guy have to do to get in? I'd like to see J1IIlmte
receive the honor while he's still livmg. No one would ap- cheap shot," Marshall sa1d. cannot complain about not
"Cincinnati was already SIX bemg m every day because
preciate it more than him; no one deserves it more "
runs ahead. It showed me you're playing behind the allthat ConcepciOn has no star shortstop."
class."
The Reds, who reduced
Madlock, who was forced to their magtc nwnber to 17
leave the game with a bruised games, celebrated Tony
shin, took the incident quite Perez' l,OOOth nm batted in. - · calmly.
Madlock,
the Perez was batting just .1110 on
runners
Chubby
iEDifORS
NOfE: quar t erba c k Dennis w1th
league's batting leader, sa1d, May 20 and smce has ra1sed
Franklm,
but
he
has
Gordon
Phill1ps,
Steve
Greene
and
Following is a s1zeup of the
Amencan League Standmgs
"Concepcion
was
just
testing
his
average
104
points.
By
Un•ted
Press
l
nternattonal
upcommg football season m Bell and Rob Lytle for potent Lon me Perrin, but quarBy TOM DUNCAN
East
Jose
Car
dena!
's
throwmg
Rick
Reuschel
of
the
Cubs
runmng, a nd a gam the terback Kurt Steger will have
For our second column on
w I pet g b the Midwest
arm
and
I
don't
think
be
gave
up
nine
hits
in
just
two
77
51
60?
Boston
nucleus of a strong defense m to come through On defense,
high school football, we would
69 58 543 7 . '
Balt•mor e
would
have
deliberately
tr1ed
mnmgs
of
work
to
absorb
his
By
ED
SAINSBURY
Dan J1lek, Tim Dav1s , Jeff Dean March and John
like to start w1lh somelhmg
New Yor k
6&lt;l 64 500 13
to
sp1ke
me."
14th
loss
against
ten
wms,
17
59
67
Writer
UPI
Sports
Cleveland
Perhnger and Don Dufek . DeFelic1antonlo were among
very basic, definitions
57 73 m 21
While none of the Cin- while Fred Norman picked up M •l wauk ee
And lhe Wolverines never are the best in the Big Ten and
CHICAGO
(UP!)
The
Live ball- Ball m play that
5 1 78 395
Detro •I
wm
with
relief
help
cinnat1
players
heard
Marhis
ninth
cau
West
gh t short tn reserve coach Bob Blackman should
Btg Ten's " B1g Two " of
has been legally snapped or
shall's
remarks,
it
was
from
Clay
Carroll.
w ' oct • b
be able to fill most gaps
midwest college footba ll, st rength
kicked.
Oakt an d
78 5 1 60 5
11
KCnsa
s
c
,,
v
69
57
s.ta
7
M1ch1gan
State
has
17
of
22
The rest of the B1g Ten has
Oh1o State and Michiga n,
Dead ball - Period be- and mahciously dr1vmg the
might have to make room for starters back with Charlie br1ght spots on each roster,
tween downs, and may only helmet mto a player who IS
down
,
or
one
who
1s
held
so
a
" Btg Three" or even a " Btg Baggett at quarterback and but enough holes to make
come ahve by a snap or kick
Caltforn•a
60 71 458 19
runmng backs Levi .Jackson , doubtful any chance to
Four" in 1975
Player possession - Ball that he IS goi ng down, or one
COLUMBUS (UP!)- Ohio Initial results. The morning
Monday's Results
R1ch Baes , Claude Ge1ger challenge for the title.
·
·
1
din
in
Cle'leland
5
C1'11cago
l
,
ntght
who
1s
held
so
that
his
forThe
Buckeyes,
ranked
No
3
controlled by a player.
state football coach Woo d Y drill, me u g spr ts, was Texas 1 De troll o, n •ght
Indiana has the league
Team possession - Ball ward progress ts stopped, or Hayes put his 109 prospects shortened to permit news M tnnesota 6 Milwaukee 3, nt g ht last year, and M1ch1gan, and Ted Bell among them
leading
passer, Terry Jones,
The
defense
should
be
solid
one
who
IS
obviously
out
of
ranked
No.
5,
w1ll
be
good
·
·
full
d
bl
·
1
tak
f
h
Balt•more
at
Kansa
s
C1t
y
controlled by a player or a
through their hrst
ou e p1c ure
mg or an our. noghl , ppd ram
and
cha
nces
to
plug
the
ofreturnmg along with running
agam, perhaps gomg agamst
ball loose followmg loss of the play .
drill today in getting ready
Hayes S81d the players
Tuesday's Games
fenstve
holes
are
excellent.
(All
romes
EDT&gt;
back Courtney Snyder, and
each
other
for
the
chammfractwn
Foul
Rule
player possessiOn.
for the season opener a t wo uld pra ct tee without pads Cht cago ( Os teen 6 12l ar
Purdue's
Alex
Agase
extwo hne hnebackers in
Loose ball - Pass, fwnble, (penalty)
Michigan State Sept. 13.
through Wednesday, and the Cleveland (Bob by 4 131. 7 JO pionship on the fmal Saturday
pects a fir st wut wh1ch can
I Contmued on Page, 4 I
THERE ARE MANY
or kick. A loose ball continues
Hayes welcomed the group first Contact WOuld be held ~~to mor e &lt;Alexander (5 71 and of the season
nval,
but
cha
llenge
any
M1ch1gan
Stat
e,
But
to be loose until a player defimtwns, but I feel these Monday and Immediately the next day. The double Palmer 119 71 at Kan sas C1ty
Purdue and concedes he eould have a
'tched tw opa
) yers · Doug drills were e""""ted
to run 2(Leonard
9 5 and Bus by 15 9 1 W1scons1n,
secures possession or the ball are the most Important
SWl
..t'...._
7 00p m
possibly
lllinms
could turn problem In depth. Mark V1tali
becomes dead (out of bounds,
Bargerstock, Taylor, MICh., tllrough the middle of next M tnn esa ta I Goltz 12 IO J at
etc.)
sophomore, was moved from week, before Hayes eases off ~ ~;~~ ee ( Broberg 10 11 1 mto darkborse challengers , ii "'ll be at qua rterback and
Blocking - Obstructing an
defensive tackle to fullback to a single daily workout.
Delro il 1 Ruhle 10 10 ) a1 Texas not for the champiOnship, Sco tt D1erkm g and M1ke
Pruttt handle the bulk of the
opponent by contacting hun
and Herman Jones, Miami of
Buckeye trainer Bill Hill ;Jat;~~J 3 r1i/~b:r~o ~ ;;' at Ne w then for VIctory over one of runnmg The offense has
the high ranked clubs some
with any part of the blocker's
Florida sophomore, was said all of the Buckeyes, York IHunter 17 12 1. s oo P m
plent y of experience, and the
a ( F lgueroa 1l 10 J at autwnn Saturday
shlfted from def enSive back except one ' were "in the best Cal•lorn•
Bo ston (T1 ant 15 12 ) 7 30 p m
There'll be more of the defense was shored up by
- A defensive
to split end.
shape I've ever seen them ."
same too m the Mtd-Amenca tr ansfer of runmn g ba ck
player's use of hands or arms •
Hayes mdicated after the The squad got their pltys1cal
National League Stand1ngs
Conference, wtth Mtamt, M1ke Nort hin gton to defenBV Un.ted Press lnternahonat
to hold a runner or throw hun
opening day practices that exams Sunday.
East
Ohio, boastmg the longest SI Ve !Jack
msura n c e ' Con tac t
to the ground
''we got a lot of work done"
w I 0 ~t• 9 b wmnmg streak among the
me today!
W1
scons
m
boasts
the
73 56 5
Clippmg - Throwmg the
P IIISburgh
and seemed pleased WLth
STEVE
major schools (23 games) t he na twnal scormg leader , Billy
70 SV 54 3 3
Ph ilade lphia
body across the back of an
69 59
St LOUIS
SNOWDEN
Marek
,
top
fullbacks
m
Ken
~~ ' favorite to wrap up the crown
67 62 ~~~
opponent's leg or chargmg or
New York
12S8 Powell St .
Mrs. Geneva Shumate
Starch and Larry Canada and
60 71 458 "
SAN
FRANCISOO
(UP!)
again
w1th
the
toughe
st
Ct11 CclgO
Middleport.
0
falling into the back of an returned home Fnday after
55 72
Montr eal
33 17
lmemen
m
Terry
sta
ndout
'
competitiOn
from
Bowling
For
his
no-run,
no./tit
perforPH
992
7155
west
opponent who 1s not a runner , spending two weeks with Mr
Stieve and Denrus Lick, the
w I pet g b
Green and Kent State
(We cannot rule chppmg and Mrs. Leon Shwnate and mance, San Francisco Giants
Ctn c 1nnat 1
85 44 659
Notre Dame , wtth a new latter perhaps t he best in the
UHf fUM Y~TUH
Los A ngeles
6B 62 523 17 112
unless we see the inillal family at Bandytown , W. Va. pitcher Ed Halicki today was
nation at tackle The Badgers
AUT OMOIIU
named
the
National
League's
San F ran CtSCO 63 66 488 22
coach
,
Dan
Devme,
had
contact.)
!UIIUJIC( tOII"JIY
Recent visitors of Mr. and
San 01ego
60 70 462 25 1 1 heavy losses and will be hard
w1ll
have
good
depth
and
s1ze
,
Player of the Week .
HIIM Dille•
A tl anta
57 74 435 29
Fumble - Loss of player
IIN•I .. I.. ltll~tl•
p 621097
1 '~
.,., possession other than by Mrs W. A. Elam were Mr
too
pressed
to
climb
as
high
as
The lanky righthander
Houston
50
82
379
3
6
SYRACUSE - Sunday
and Mrs. Wayne Tillman of faced 30 New York batters,
~onday's Results
lllinms1has a solid backfteld
No. 6 m the ratings agam
here at ml,tniclpal park an C1nc1nnat• 11 Ch1cago 4
kicking, passing, or handing. Piscapaway, New Jersey.
Oh10 State lost 13 starters,
only three over the minimwn,
all star doubleheader wlil P1ttsburgh 4 Atlanta o, n 1ght
Muff- Touching of a loose
Mr. and Mrs . Clinton as the Giants defeated the
Houston 3 Sl
LOU IS 3, 10 but coach Woody Hayes
be played between teams of 1nnmgs called ra1n
ball in an unsuccessful at- Gilkey of Albany were
never LS caught short for reMets,
6-0,
Sunday.
New York 4 San D1ego 0. n 1ght
the
north and south In the
tempt to secure possess1on Sunday evenmg v1s1tors of
Ph il adelphia 4 Los Angeles 2
placements, and sa1d bluntly,
Meigs County Independent mght
(accidental kick included). Lincoln Russell.
"I think we'll be all right "
Tuesday's Games
Baseball League wblcb has
Spearing - Deliberately
Mr. and Mrs. M1ckey Jones
(All T1mes EDT)
Anti-Breeches
Among
the
returnmg
completed a successful
C1nC1nnat1 (8dl1ngham 14 6 l at
and family of Charleston, W.
Trousers became popular m
Buckeyes
are
the
ent1re
Ch 1cago (S tone 11 61 , 2 30 p m
PI US RECAPABLE
Va. visited Sunday with Mr Amenca after the War of 1812 season aod tournament.
At lanta
( Easterly
1 6)
a t backfield,
headed
by
Starting
at
I
p.m.
all
ttsburgh
(
Dem
ery
6
3
),
7
35
Pi
and Mrs. W. A. Elam and Mr as a reactwn against the stlk
He1sman trophy winner
p m
CASINij
and Mrs Jack Elam and breeches-and-hose syndrome stars from Letart, PortHouston (N1ekro 4 4 and R1c h
Archie Griffin, quarterback
land,
and
Tuppers
Plains
that
srpacked
too
much
Of
ard
9
Bl
at
St
LOUIS
(
Rasmu
ss
family
BOOSTERS TO MEET
en 2 2 and Reed 119 1, 2 6 30 Cornelius Greene and flanker
thmgs British The Duke of
Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Elam Welhngton actually helped pop- (north) wlll play stars from
CHESHIRE - Tbe Kyger
pm
Brian Baschnagel. Losses
Syracuse, Pomeroy and
New York (Ta te .tl 12 ) at San
Creek Athletic Boosters Club and grandciJildren Bill and ulanze trousers in England by
0 1ego ( Frersleben 5 lJ l -1 lO oo were greatest on defense, and
Minersville
(south).
will meet at 7:30p.m. Thurs- Carolyn Elam were Wed- wearmg them to state funcpm
Ohio State should get a tough
• President of the inPhiladelphia {Underwood 12 8 )
day at the high school. nesday visitors of Mrs. ltons Early trousers were
at Los Angeles { Ra u 10 9 1 openmg game test, against
dependent league Is Don
1 drl; ·''··• 1
f\/\
. 'l••tllr)d
' .. , . "
I
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'
Boosters are asked to attend Elam 's mother and Paul s1mply something to prot~ct the
10 30 p m
Michigan
State
Hupp.
Montreal
{
Frym"'n
8
91
at
fancy
breeches
•when
ndmg,
'1'1'/ /11'.1
and famtly
of
, 10 order to make plans for the Jones
Mtcltigan 's Bo SchemSan F ran c 1sco {F al cone 8 9)
s1m1lar
to
chaps
worn
by
cowCharleston
upcoming football season
bechler ba&amp; to repl ace
boys out West
:: ··:..:·: · :·· :·:· ... ·:·: ,...,.,.,., :·: ::&gt;:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·: :·. :· 11 05 p m

Eckersly is finishing strong

.. . . . .

ICC likes rail merger ~plan, but
with some specific reservations
By WilLIAM E. CLA YI'ON

.

Rooker strong in Pirates' stretch

Today's

He sa1d he will mtroduce a
bill for "a federal profit
guarantee to would-be ingovernment.
we
can vestors 1n expenstve ...
guarantee a market to those commercwl coal gasification
who must seek $600 to $800 plants. "
million m private cap1tal to
Under his idea, the governbu1ld a commercial plant," ment would take bids for
he said. " They need th1s future sales of "coal gas." It
would accept the low bid, for
example $3.20 per thousand
cub1c feet of gas, for a long-

Farmers got bigger slice

,,

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Essex Johnson passes
By RICK VAN SANf
CINCINNATI (UP! )
How did Essex Johnson run in
the first major test of his
questiooable knee'
''Slam~g .wham...boom , ''
offered Cincinnati Bengals
coach Paul Brown .
Translated, that means
Essex ran well.
Johnson got his first start of
the year Saturday night
against the Green Bay
Packers and although his
display was brief, it was
impressive.
In for only two series of
plays, the 0-foot-10 scatback

ran twice for 19 yards. He
dodged and darted like the
Essex of old.
The eight-year veteran
from Grambling College also
caught a 13-yard touchdown
pass, a play in which he did 99
per cent of the work. He took
the screen pass on about the
20-yard lin e and then
scampered and whirled his
way past lunging tacklers
into the end wne.
After that, Brown decided
he'd seen enough and benched Johnson to make sure he
stayed healthy.
"We wanted to see if Essex

Defensive back
cut by Browns
KENT, Ohio (UP!) - The
Cleveland Browns have cut
loose
defensive
back
Eldridge Small, the man they
acquired from the New York
Giants after Thorn Darden
was injured.
Cleveland traded a draft
choice to get Small, but the
deal was contingent upon
Small making the team so no

draft choice was lost.
"He was too far behind and
didn 't seem in very good
condition, ' ' Coach Forrest
Gregg said of SmalL " We
didn't feel he 's as good as the

players we have, so there was

•
•

was sound and you could see
that he was," concluded
Brown .
Johnson, who is still with
the Bengals only because he
signed a statement relieving
the club of any medical
liability for his knee, said he
was "satisfied and confident"
because of the showing .
''I've really been working,"
he grin ned. " I've been
dedicated and the response is
good and strong."
Essex, the Bengals' alltime leading ground gainer ,
stormed for 997 yards in 1973
but was nothing last year
because of the knee injury .
Sat urd ay nig ht 's "slam bang-wham-boom" indicates
Johnson's off.,;eason surgery
may have been a success.
Quarterback Ken Anderson
was sharp in Cincy's 27-10
thrashing of the Packers,
hitting 15 of 21 passes for 148
yards and three touchdowns.
A Jot of his passes were
ca r ef ully-eoncocted short

ones.
"Short passes are a big
part of our offense," Anderson explained. "I like to
think our fullback will catch
50 passes a year."
Rqokie quarterback Tom
Shuman of Penn State got
quite a bit of playing time and
Brown said he was " very
excited and was having
trouble getting the offensive
timing."
Shuman
is
battling
Brigham Young University
rookie Gary Sheide for a spot
oo the roster. Brown says he
will not keep both .
The Bengals, now 2-2 for the
pre«ason, play the Eagles
in Philadelphia in their next
exhibition game Thursday
night.

no sense in keeping him."
Darden, a defensive leader
last season, will miss the
entire 1975 campaign because
of a knee injury.
Gregg said the Browns will
co ntinue to look for a
defensive back but added,
" We're not beating the
CINCINNATI (UP!) bushes
for one, however ."
Venturous Lady scored a 10Rookie tight end Oscar
length win over Fihn Festival
Roan
may return to action
in the $3,800 featured eighth
race at River DOwns Monday. against Buffalo Monday ,
pending an examination of
Cri Damour was third.
his
ribs. Roan, a standout in
Jockey Juan Soto rode the
the initial exhibition games,
winner over tbe one-mile turf
course to a $4.20, $3.20 and missed the last exhibition
contest because he suffered
$2.80 payoff.
separated
ribs when he was
The 3-4 daily double of ·
Molly Holy and Reason for hit while catching a pass
during practice .·
Music returned $90.
Quarterback Mike Phipps
The 3,921 fans bet $338,946.
is expected to play most of
the game against the Bills. In
NORTHFIELD,
Ohio the final quarter Gregg is
(UP!) -Raider John put on a
expected to replace the , DU QUOIN, Jll. (UP!) strmg drive In the stretch to former Purdue star so he can With his cloak of near inovertake favored
O.J . get another look at backup vincibility soiled by an InSkipper and win the featured rhan Brian Sipe and Ken diana misadventure, favorite
$3,000 ninth race at Northfield Polke, a rookie who has yet to Bonefish may have more
Park Monday nightcompany than he had barget into a game,
Pacific Almahurst third.
gained for in ~turday's 50th
Raider John trotted to a
anniversary Hambletonian at
nose victory in 2 :04 4-li, the
the Du Quoin State Fair.
fastest winning mile of his
Bonefish was the bay
car-, and returned $12.80,
everyone seemed to be
$8.00 and $3.80.
planning to bet on in the
The tenth race Big Triple
Hambletonian until his
combination of 6-3-1 returned
Saturday, !1-5 finishes in the
$2,688.60.
Horseman's Futurity at the
A crowd of 3,582 wagered
Indiana State Fair. ·
COLUMBUS
(UP!)
Cliff
$319,~.
In 1974, Bonefish was voted
won the $24,350 Ohio State
the best 2-year-old trotter and
Trot in straight heats at the
has the best time of I: 58.1 this
state fairgrounds Monday by
COLUMBUS (UP!)
year. Trainer-driver Stanley
FranciB Time came up from stepping two easy miles.
Dancer, who twice has won
It was the ninth consecutive
third at the three-quarter
the Hambletonian, has said
pole and edged Baron Paul to victory for the Hawley ToddBonefish may surpass any
win the featured $1,500 eighth owned bay, which has earned
trotter he's handled.
race at Scioto Downs M011day more than $19,000 during 11
But Bonefish threw a shoe
wins in 17 starts this year.
night.
in the first heat and fmished
" The colt has been
Lakewood Dort was third.
ninth, and managed only fifth
bothered
with splints lately,"
F'riUicls time covered the
in the second heat. Meanmile 2:05 U in gaining the Cliff's trainer-driver Frank
while, his stablemate,
three-quarter length victory Todd Jr. said. "But he was
Surefire Hanover, and
and returned $8.80, $3.80 and the best horse out there
Glaagow were trading heat
today."
$3.00.
wins with Glasgow's win in
Cliff won the first heat by 1:59 shading Surefire-HanoThe 4-9 nighUy double of
Ronnie Maguire and Big three lengths in a leisurely
ver's time by one-fifth
Time Gene was worth $22.20. 2:09.1, breaking first and
second.
The 3,659 fans bet $211,921. maintaining his lead. The bay
led all the way in taking the
I
second heat in 2:08.3.
In other races opening day
State Fair harness racing,
DEVO_TE D TO THE
INTEREST OF
Oaklawn Victory took the
MEIGS- MASON AREA
$5,100 trot for two-year old
CHESTER L . TANNEI:'IILL
Exec. Ed .
fillies. The $1,500 two-yearROBiiRT HOEFLICH
old Consolation Trot went to
City Editor
Published dall y ext;ept
Goddess Lobell in 2:10.1.
Sa turday by The Ohio Vallev.
Publ i sl\ing com pany , 111
Sulky racing continues at
Court St ., Po meroy . Ohio
the State Fair today,
45769 . 8usine~ Off ice PhoneIn a recent game at Mid- highlighted by the Buckeye
99~ · 2 156 . l!:ditoi1Ht Phone 9922157 .
dleport between the Pan- State Pace for two-year-olds.
Second class po st age paid l
therettes and the Pt. Pleasant Seventeen entries have been
at Po n:eroy . Ohio.
N~lt o nal
advert i sing
All Stars, the Pantherettes listed, with the top four
r e pr esentative
Ward Griffith Company. Inc . ,
won :!i).ll.
finishers in each of the beats
Bottlne_lli &amp; Gallagher Dlv .,
GetUng hits for the All returning for a linal heat,
757 Th trd Ave ., New York
N .Y . 10017 .
.'
Stars were Lesa Thompson, a worth $13,340. ,
S ubscription
rates:
Delive red by carrier where
single, Mar,tha Boonsue, a
Chris Time Pick, a winner . available
75 cents per week .
single and triple; T. Lane, in 2:03.2 thisyear, is favored.
By Motor Route where
service
not
single ; Debbie Heslep , He has seven wins and earn- carrier
avallat?t~. One month , S3.25 .
By mall 1n Ohio and w . va .,
double; Rosemary Hearns, Ings so far this year of
One
Year.
S22 .00 ;
Si)l:
single and double ; Suzy $14,342.
months .
S11.50 ;
Three
months. S7 .00 . Elsewhere
Durst, single;
Tammy
26.00 year ; ·s i)( months
Ewing, 3 singles ; Tonia
S1J .SO ; three months , S7 .50 .
MINNEAPOLIS (UPI)
ub scrl ption price includes
Wopley,
single ;
Beth Coach Cal Stoll said M011day ~~.~nday
Tlmes -Sentl nel.
Stickler, single ; D. Smith, he was very pleased with tbe
single; and Carol Smith, 2 total physical condition of his
alngleis.
.
Minnesota Gophers football
For tbe Pantherettes, team. .
.
{ge
1011
Missy c.Ie bad.4 singles, Fay · Some 114 persons reported
Herman, 2 singles ;_ Peggy Monday on the opening day of
Johnson, double; Glenda the Gophers' practice-a rouBrcnm, double; Terri Wilson, tine day of teaching and
-,Ingle; 2 doubles; Jo condltlooing. Stoll said the
McKinney, 3 singles: Vicki Gophers would -practice
Ebenbacb, 3singles; ~on through Wednesday without
Karr, ll!tsle: Marcia Cale, 2 pads. The team wW hold Its
singles; ·Jayne Coleman, first scrimmage Saturday.
The Gophers open tbelr fall
slagle; Brepda f!town, 3.
Your Thom MeAn Stor~
.mgJes and Chris Ebersbach, · football, season Sept. 13 at
Mid&lt;!' cport. Ohio
1hlngle.
IndianIf.

how they ran

Oiff wins

Rich trot

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Pantherettes

The Daiij sentinel

put it onto

all star club

La

Select'

For

i-

5- 'nleDally

-I

first hard game test
'

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.c

_4- n.e Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Au~. 26, 1975

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Lin~cores
MQnday 's Baseball Results
By United Pren lnternatio r.al
Nationdl League
Cincinnati
013 030 112- 11 19 0
Chicago
001 OOJ DOll--- 4 8 0
Norma n , Carroll
( 6) ;md
Pl umm er . R . Reusc hel , Dell ore
(]f . W ilcox ( 6 ), Knowl es I ll
and Sw is her . M i lterwa l d O J
W P Nor m an
( 9 4)
LP R
Reu sche l ( 10 14) . HR S-Madloc k
(7t h l. Ch an ey { l SI ), Morat es
r IOth l

Rutland Reds win tournament
The second ann ual Big
Bend Tourney wound down
Friday evening to the end,
with the Hartford Hornets
beating the Rutland Reds by
a score of 9-4 and the Rutland
Dodgers winning 6-1 over the

Atl anta
ooo ooo 000-0 3 2 Middleport Braves.
Pi lhburgh
102 100 nox- 4 9 1
The tow-nament directors
Th ompson, Sad ec ki (4), ·
Be ard 16l. Ho use 18J an d Gene Wise and Mil.ford Hysell
Cor r elL
Rook er
( 10 9 ) and termed this year 's tourney a
Dyer l P Th ompson (0 -5} .

complete success, This year
12 learns from the Bend area
competed . A lot of talent was
exhibited by the players, and
above a il , good sports(s 5)
manship . There were four
Philadelphia 110 010 101)-4 10 0
Los Angeles ooo 011 ooo----2 so games that were decided by
Chri sten son . G&lt;'Jrber ( 6 J and one run : Rutland Reds 5
Oates : Messersmit h . Ho ug h (9 )
Indi ans
4,
and Ye ager . WP Ch risl(•nson ( 8 Middleport
4)
L P Messer smith
f l 4-l 3l. Rutland Dodgers 4 -Pomeroy
H R Schm idt (3 151] .
Giants 3, Middleport Braves 2
( 10 inning s, game ca ll ed , r ainJ
Pomeroy Yankees I and
Houston
010 000 001 1-l 11 J
St. loui !i.
002 000 000 1-l 6 0 Middleport Braves I Hartford
Rob ert s, Gra nger ( 9 J. Cos Hornets 0. Also there wen!'
gro ve (9 ), Craw ford ( 10 ) and
Johnson ; M cGloth en . Hrabosky four shutouts and two no
(9 /, Garman (9 ). Curlis ( 101 hitters. There were three
and Rudo lph , Si mmon s ( 101 .
home rtms hit over the fence
those coming from Mik~
American League
Ba} t im o re at Kan sas City , ppd . Miller with two and Steve
rar n
Fife, 'both from the MidChicago
000 000 I OQ--- 1 3 I dleport Braves.
Cleve land
010 010 OJx-5 8 o
The most home runs trophy
Kaal ( 18 10) and Downing:
E c k e r sl~y
r 10 51 and A shby . went to Mike Miller of the
HR S Sp rk es
(8 th ).
Robi nson
Braves with two home nms;
(9th )
Todd Snowden, the Rutland
Detro it
000 000 OOil-----0 J 0
Texas
·010 000 00.- 1 6 2 Reds , and Greg Kearns of the
Bare
(7 .9) and
Freehan ; Hartford Hornets received
Umbarger (6 5 ) and Sundberg .
th e most hils trophies, each
Minnesota
030 120 OOD-6 1o 1 had seven hits .
Milwaukee
010 200 OOQ--3 3 2
The most valuable player
Deck er ,
Butter
( 4 l . and
Borg mann ; Sl aton , Cu rr ence or the tournament went to
(4) , Aust in ( 9) and Moore . WP
New York
010 010 002- 4 11 0
'Sa n D iego
000 000 001)-0 s 1
Webb ( 6 5J and Grot e; Str o m .
M c intosh ( 6) , Tomlin (9 ) and
Da v i s, K en d al l (61 L P Str om

Butl er (2 ·•0 . LP .Siaton (11 15)
HR M c Kay (2nd ).

Set-aside
NEW YORK (UP!)- Leftbander Bill Lee of the Boston
Red Sox, wbo pitched two
complete game victories last
week, wa s named the
American League's player of
the week today by league
president Lee MacPhail.
Lee shut out the Kansas
City Royals S-0 on four hits
and beat the Chicago White
Sox 6-1. He has gone 23 1-3
innings without allowing an
earned run.

Big Ten's
(Continued from page 3
Donnie Thomas and Craig
Brinkman.
Iowa is deep In running
backs with Jim Jensen, Rod
Wellington and Ed Donovan,
and a strong defensive backfield sparked by Rick PeMy,
but quarterback could be a
problem. Minnesota has a
solid signal caller in Tony
Dungy, power running from
John Jones, J. Dexter Pride
and Larry Powell, but the line
has too many holes.
Northwestern needs a
quarterback to help two
stellar runners, Jim Pooler
and Greg Boykin, and depth
as always will be a problem
at every position.
Notre Dame's best quarterback
prospect,
Frank
Allocco, had surgery for a
spring shoulder separation,
and there's a dearth of
running skilla, too, with Art
Best, Tom Parise, Mark
McLane and Russ Kornman
the most likely to work out.
The offensive line was riddled, the linebackers must be
replaced, and only Steve
Neihaus, one of the nation's
best, Jeff Weston and Jim
Stock remain on the defensive line.
Fl ve of the six players
suspended from school for a
year return and they should
help, particularly defensive
back
Luther
Bradley,
defensive ends .Ross Browner
and Willie Fry and running
back Al Hunter. The defensive bac'lfield could·be strong
since Randy Harrison and
John Dubenetzky are hack to
help, too. But the best that
can be said for tbe Irish now
is they're "very thin" almost'
everywhere.

cropland
out again

Guy Shuler . Shuler won three
ga mes for the Rutland
Dodgers and had thirty-three
strikeouts to his credit and
also set a new tournament
record of 13 strikeouts .
· The Dodgers came in ftrst,
Braves sec'ond , the Horn ets
third and the Rutland Reds
fourth.
Following are accounts of
the consolation and the
championship games.
Consolatio n Game
In_the consolation game the
Hartford Horn ets beat the
Rutland Reds 9-4. Shawn
Fields started on the hill for
the Hornets with Barry

VanMatre coming on in
relief. Fields and VanMatre
combined for 10 strikeouts,
giving _up but one walk and
allowed 4 run s on six hits. The
winning pticher was Shawn
Fields.
Robbie Berger started for
the Reds and was r elieved by
John Van Meter . Berger and
Van Meter combined to strike

crop ( except marketing
quota crops) or any conserving crop ( including
approved volunteer cover)
used for hay or for grazing in
order to preserve their wheat
or feed grain allotments.
Secretary Butz said today's
announcement will provide
farmers with informatioh
they need to make their 1976
crop planting decisions. The
programs are designed to
provide fa rmers decisionmaking freedom to produce
for th e marketplace . Additional program -provisions
will be announced after the
Department ha s had an
·. opportunity to review . additional 1975 production data .

RIO GRANDE - The two
auto mechanics inslructors at
the Buckeye Hills Career
Cente r are Douglas M.
Crabtree, Sr., and George
Ronald Sheets.
Crabtree graduated from
Oak Hill (Ohio) High School
in 1963. He will receive his
four -year provisional
teaching certificate this fall.
He has worked as an auto
mechani~ for nine years,
receiving eight years experience at Dallas Chevrolet
Company in Jackson and one
year at Abele Auto Sales in
Oak HilL
He ha s taught Auto

NY 26 ; Bench , Cin 24 ; Foster ,

Ci n 21.
A meri can league : Mayberry ,

KC 29 ; Jac kso n . Oak 28; Scott,
Mil
27;
Bonds,
NY
24 ;
Burroughs , T ex 22.
Runs Batted In
National League : Luzinsk i,
Phil 103; Bench. Cin 100 ; Staub.
NY
87;
Per ez.
Cin
86 :
Si mmons , St.L 82.
American L eag ue : Lynn , Bos
89; Mayberry, KC 85; May ,
Ball 84 ; Rice, Bos 83 ; Scott,
Mil 81.
Stolen Bases
National League: Lopes , LA
58 ; Morgan , Cin 51; Brock, St.L
49 ; Cedeno, Hou 42 ; Cardenal.
Chi 26.
A merican League : Rivers,
Ca l 64 ; Washington , Oak 35 ;
Otis, KC 3J; Remy , Cal 31;
Care w , Minn and Bonds. NY 29.
Pitching
(Based on most victories)
Nat ional L eagu e : Seaver, NY
18·7; Jones, SO 11-7; Sutton, LA
16·10 ;
Matlack .
NY
15-8;
Morton, All 15-14.

American League : Palmer ,

Bait 19 -7: Kaat. Chi 18 -10; Lee,
Bos 17-7; Hunter, NY 17-12 ·
Wise, Bos 16-8 ; Blue , Oak 16-10·.

WHEN YOU SEE ME,
DON'T THINK OF
INSURANCE ... BUT
WHEN YOU THINK OF
INSURANCE, .SEE MEl

- .

BEAUTIFUL

AMERI CAN
Legion
Auxiliary, Drew Webster
Post 39, 7:30p.m . at the hall .
Convention reports will be
heard.
--- - ·
CORVETTE CLUB meeting
at the home of Yvonne Scally,
870 Ash St., Middleport. All
Corvette owners are urged to
attend as elections will be
held and plans for futur e
activities will be made.
THE MASON Co unty
Education Association of
Classroom Teachers will
provide a free luncheon for
all Mason County classroom
teachers at the Point
Pleasant Junior High School
cafeteria.
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 6:30
p .m. Royal Oak Park, ge tacquainted picnic .
PAST
MATRO NS,
Pomeroy Chapter 186, O.E.S.,
7:30p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Hartwell Curd.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY Lions Clu~
annual
family
picnic,
Pomeroy Golf Course, 6 p.m.
All Lions and their families
invited. Take a covered dish.
WILDWOOD Garden Club,
8 p .m ., at the home of Mrs.
Erma Roush . Members are to
take a flower specimen.

teachers
announced

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D. CRABTREE SR.

GEORGE R- SHEETS

•

...•,
Academy High SchooL
He and his wife, Gladys •.
••
have two children, Ronnie II •
and Donnie. They reside at •
Eureka
Star
Route, ::
Gallipolis.

Mechanics
at
Gallia
Academy High School the
past two years. Crabtree and
his wife, Sharon, who have
two children, reside at Route
4, Oak Hill .
.
Sheets graduated from
Gallia Academy High School
in 1955. He served in the U.S.
Navy 3'h years. He attended
the University of Cincinnati
and graduated from Nashville Auto Diesel College,
Nashville, ·Tenn.
He has worked at several
jobs in the auto mechanics
field. He was auto mechanics
teacher at Jackson Manpower Training Center for
seven and a half years and for
the past three years, auto
me.chanics teacher at Gallia

Back To School

Colors to match any
decor.

·~~~·

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USED CARS

73 NOVA

4 DOOR

--

Six

cylinder, auto . trans.,
and power steering .

•
•r

.Karr &amp; Van Za_ndt
You'll Like Our Quality
Way of Doing Business .
992-5342

.-.

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'2695

GMAC FINANCING

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Pomeroy :

:

Open Evenings 1til6:00 '- :
Til S .m. Sat.
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School Days
Ahead ...

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•••

For Lads

••

and lasses

~

l
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''

Going Back
To Qasses.

Burova

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European

styilng.

Br_a~elet with satin · finish ·

alligator pattern

SIS.OO

heritage house ·

~dley's Florist
59 N. Second Sf .
Middleport, Ohio

.'-

17 1ewe1s.

I
Goesleit Jewelly_.Stcn '

Mick Childs

Mr. and Mrs . Charles
Meinhart of Tulsa , Okla.
spent several days here
visiting Miss Erma Smith
and Mrs. Phillip Meinhart.
Eugene
Norris
and
daughter, Eugenia, Kingston ,
were recent visitors of hi s
mother, Mrs. Helen Norris.
Susie, Millie and Penny
Tubbs, daughters of Mr. and
Mrs . John Tubbs , have
returned to their home in
Washington Court House
after vacationing here with·
their grandmother, Mrs .
Mildred Tubbs, Condor St.
Mr. and Mrs. John Austin
and children, Julia, Mary,
Iris and Aaron have returned
to Richmond, Va. after a
week '~ visit here with Mrs.
Austin's parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Aaron Kelton :-- Julia,
Mary and Iris were here for
two weeks, coming especially
to go to the Meigs County
Fair .
Mr. and Mrs. John Young
and family of Lancaster were
Sunday guests of her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Carpenter.
HOMECOMING l\ET
MINERSVILLE
A
homecoming has. ~ set for
Sept. 7 at :the •Min'ersville
United Methodist Church. A
basket dinner will be held
from 12:30 to I :30 p.m. An
afternoon program will
feature music by the "Gospel

SUPERIORS USDA CHOICE

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BLADE
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69e lb.

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BONELESS

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ARM ROAST
lb. 89C
ENGLISH ROAST
lb. 99e

CHUCK ROAST

GROUND '
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INSTANT COFFEE

TO CELEBRATE 25TH
TUPPERS PLAINS - Mr .
and Mrs. Marvin Walker will
celebrate their 2Sth ·wedding
anniversary Sunday with an
open house from 2 to 4 p.m. at
their residence. HosUng the
observance will be their
daughters,
Mrs. Mary
Newell, Mrs. Ruth Mills and
Mrs. Allee Curtis. Relatives
and friends of the couple are
invited to call during the open_,
house hours.

KRAFT
MIRACLE WHIP

SALAD

DRESSING
•

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Thursday Onl,y

200
ct. box

RC

Wrigley Chewing Gum

10FOR89e

16 oz. bots.

'8$

09

PAK

R£6~ ' '1.39

Vanilla Wafers
FROZEN FOODS

seen LAD

ICE MILK
'h~l·59e
crt.

GALLON

1.09

Sunshine
11 oz. box

JIF

Ruffo Shortening

18:89

can

Johnson's Pledge
14 ounce

size

HASH BROWNS

4

'100

BANQUET

Buffet Dinners

'159

2 lb.

SWEDISH

2-lb.
bags

49e

PEANUT
BUTTER

Pringle's
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POTATO
CHIPS

19

Triple$

2 lb.
box

'149

Friday Only

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DIET RITE
FLAVORS

4

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for

$100
PltJ ::. Uep .'

ALL WEEK LONG

Prince Cheese Dinners

4

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P.eanut Butter Cups
Reece
10 paks

Dad's Root Beer
8 pak 1:39

Diet Rite Cola
8 pak 1.19

SPECIAL LOW PRICE

Coke &amp; Sprite
16

oz.

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5-Stick
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qt. jar.

Tones."

DAUGHTER BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth R.
Searles ( Tammy Luster )
announce the birth of a
daughter Aug. II at the
Holzer Medical Center. The 8
lb., 9 oz. infant has been
named Ailgela Rae . Maternal
grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. George T. Luster Sr .,
Middleport, and the paternal
grandparents are Kenneth
Searles,
Rutland,
and
,raullne Searles, Fostoria.

0\ampagne dial.

'

MIDDLEPORT 0.

GROUND BEEF

•,

International League
Standings
United Press International
w. I. pet. g . b.
Roc hester
81 52 .609
Tidewa1er
80 52 .606
112
Syracuse
70 60 .538 9 112
Charleston
68 65 .5 11 13
Richmond
60 69 .465 19
Memphis
61 72 .459 20
Toledo
57 76 .429 24
Pawlucket
51 82 .363 30
Monday's Results
Memphis B Richmond 4
Toledo 4 Sy racuse 1
Tidewater 6 Charleston 3
Roches'ter 8 Pawtucke t 5

Trim

We reserve the right to limit quantities.

•

This Week's Special
--.

-~_ .,dband .

, William D.- Chil,_s

Corner Mill and Second Sts.

PHONE 992-3480

lb. 69e

Tixturld .
VQidtone

$495

We Accept Federal Food Stamps

THURSDAY
AMERICAN
Legion
Auxiliary,
Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, 7:30p.m. with girls
state delegates and their
parents invited guests.
Delegates to present their
reports . 6:30 p .m. dinner to
precede the meetin~ .
AMERICAN
Legion
Auxiliary Juniors ; Drew
Webster Post 39, 7 p.m. at the
legion halL

A.OW~RFrom

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily 9 to 10
Sun. 10 to 10

n

DRIED
ARRANGEMENTS

CHUCI&lt; ROAST

TUESDAY
MEIGS Athletic Boosters
7·:30 p .m. at the high school:

Mechanics

Secretary of Agriculture
Earl L. Butz has said there
set-aside
will
be
no
req uirement for the 1976 Feed
Grain and Wh eat Programs.
It will be the third consecutive year for the Feed
Grain and Wheat Programs
in which no set-aside was
Major League Leaders
required.
By United Press International
Feed Grain and Wheat
Leading Batters
(based on 3'25 at bats)
producers a r e not being ·
National League
encouraged to take cropland
g ab r
h pet.
out of production next year, Madlock, Chi
443 66 160 .36 1
Department officials explain, Sim mon s, 111
St.L
because even though this
124 446 64 148 .332
Watsn , H 113 419 59 138 .329
year's corn and wheat crops Mrgn , Cn l 19 413 87 135 .327
are expected to be at record Sang uillen , Pit
389 44 127 .326
levels, export demand is Rose , en 107
129 536 84 17 2
321
Josh , SF 105 408 60 131 .321
strong.
As announced in 1973, there Brock , SI .L
105 406 67 129 .318
will be no conserving base Lu zinski, Phil
479 74 151
.315
requirement for the duration Prkr , Pt t 129
117 435 59 137 .315
American League
of t he Agriculture and
g ab
r
h pet.
Consumer Protection Act of Crw , Mn 119
444 79 165 .372
1973 (through the 1977 crop lynn. Bs 117 423 80 138 .326
year). The Secretary an- Munson, NY
125 470 67 147 .313
nounced also at that time that Washington, Oak
463 64 144 .311
effective through 1977 crop Singleton, 117
Bal
year he · will not use his
124 470 73 144 .306
Powll . Cl 103 333 50 102 .306
discretionary authority to MeR
, KC 118 450 55 137 .304
limit feed grain and wheat Hargrove , Tex
41 3 67 125 .303
plantings to a percentage of R ice , Bs 116
117 462 77 139 .301
allotments.
Orta . Chi 111 428 53 129 .301
Home Runs
In 1976, as in the present
National League : Luzinski
year, producers may sub- and Sch mid t, Phil 31; K ing m an ,

stitute any non--conserving

-Social
Calendar

on the evening. Paul Michael
a single, Dave Spangler and
Andy Pocklngtoo each
doubled, and Troy Brook had
a double and a single. The
ljraves co mmitted eight
errors that really opened the
door for the Dodgers.
Individual trophies and
team trophies were presented
at the conclusion and a party
,s held at the Middleport
.-'ark by the Dodgers and
Braves to cap off their
seasons.
The Daily Sentinel and the
Dan Thompson Ford Agency
co-sponsored this year's
tourney and a big thanks go
out to all the fine folks who
helped make this year's
tourney a big success.
Also thanks go out to
Pointview TV Cable who let
us use their equipment to
take some of the ball games,
to be viewed at a later date to
be announced; also to Perk
Ault and Dave Dodson for ..
their fine job of umpiring.

o.ut six Hornets and walked a
total of three, gave up nin e
~un s on six hits. Fqr the Reds
Mike Willford , John Jacobs
and John Van Meter had
si ngl es, Craig Taylor a
double and Todd Snowden
two singles.
For the win ners Shawn
Fields and Barry VanMatre
each had singles, Shawn
Paugh and Jeff Roush had
doubles and Greg Kearns two
singles.
Championship Game
In the final game of the
tourney the Rutland Dodgers
beat the Middleport Braves 61 on a no-hitter pitched by
Guy Shuler . Shuler, had 13
strikeouts and walked but one
batter . For the Braves Jeff
Wayland and Mike Miller had
eight strikeouts and no walks.
The only score the Braves
could muster up was when
Mike Miller walked, stole
second and third and scored
on an overthrow at third
base .
The Dodgers had five hits

Tuesday', Aug. 26,1975

_/.

�.

Essex Johnson passes
By RICK VAN SANf
CINCINNATI (UP! )
How did Essex Johnson run in
the first major test of his
questiooable knee'
''Slam~g .wham...boom , ''
offered Cincinnati Bengals
coach Paul Brown .
Translated, that means
Essex ran well.
Johnson got his first start of
the year Saturday night
against the Green Bay
Packers and although his
display was brief, it was
impressive.
In for only two series of
plays, the 0-foot-10 scatback

ran twice for 19 yards. He
dodged and darted like the
Essex of old.
The eight-year veteran
from Grambling College also
caught a 13-yard touchdown
pass, a play in which he did 99
per cent of the work. He took
the screen pass on about the
20-yard lin e and then
scampered and whirled his
way past lunging tacklers
into the end wne.
After that, Brown decided
he'd seen enough and benched Johnson to make sure he
stayed healthy.
"We wanted to see if Essex

Defensive back
cut by Browns
KENT, Ohio (UP!) - The
Cleveland Browns have cut
loose
defensive
back
Eldridge Small, the man they
acquired from the New York
Giants after Thorn Darden
was injured.
Cleveland traded a draft
choice to get Small, but the
deal was contingent upon
Small making the team so no

draft choice was lost.
"He was too far behind and
didn 't seem in very good
condition, ' ' Coach Forrest
Gregg said of SmalL " We
didn't feel he 's as good as the

players we have, so there was

•
•

was sound and you could see
that he was," concluded
Brown .
Johnson, who is still with
the Bengals only because he
signed a statement relieving
the club of any medical
liability for his knee, said he
was "satisfied and confident"
because of the showing .
''I've really been working,"
he grin ned. " I've been
dedicated and the response is
good and strong."
Essex, the Bengals' alltime leading ground gainer ,
stormed for 997 yards in 1973
but was nothing last year
because of the knee injury .
Sat urd ay nig ht 's "slam bang-wham-boom" indicates
Johnson's off.,;eason surgery
may have been a success.
Quarterback Ken Anderson
was sharp in Cincy's 27-10
thrashing of the Packers,
hitting 15 of 21 passes for 148
yards and three touchdowns.
A Jot of his passes were
ca r ef ully-eoncocted short

ones.
"Short passes are a big
part of our offense," Anderson explained. "I like to
think our fullback will catch
50 passes a year."
Rqokie quarterback Tom
Shuman of Penn State got
quite a bit of playing time and
Brown said he was " very
excited and was having
trouble getting the offensive
timing."
Shuman
is
battling
Brigham Young University
rookie Gary Sheide for a spot
oo the roster. Brown says he
will not keep both .
The Bengals, now 2-2 for the
pre«ason, play the Eagles
in Philadelphia in their next
exhibition game Thursday
night.

no sense in keeping him."
Darden, a defensive leader
last season, will miss the
entire 1975 campaign because
of a knee injury.
Gregg said the Browns will
co ntinue to look for a
defensive back but added,
" We're not beating the
CINCINNATI (UP!) bushes
for one, however ."
Venturous Lady scored a 10Rookie tight end Oscar
length win over Fihn Festival
Roan
may return to action
in the $3,800 featured eighth
race at River DOwns Monday. against Buffalo Monday ,
pending an examination of
Cri Damour was third.
his
ribs. Roan, a standout in
Jockey Juan Soto rode the
the initial exhibition games,
winner over tbe one-mile turf
course to a $4.20, $3.20 and missed the last exhibition
contest because he suffered
$2.80 payoff.
separated
ribs when he was
The 3-4 daily double of ·
Molly Holy and Reason for hit while catching a pass
during practice .·
Music returned $90.
Quarterback Mike Phipps
The 3,921 fans bet $338,946.
is expected to play most of
the game against the Bills. In
NORTHFIELD,
Ohio the final quarter Gregg is
(UP!) -Raider John put on a
expected to replace the , DU QUOIN, Jll. (UP!) strmg drive In the stretch to former Purdue star so he can With his cloak of near inovertake favored
O.J . get another look at backup vincibility soiled by an InSkipper and win the featured rhan Brian Sipe and Ken diana misadventure, favorite
$3,000 ninth race at Northfield Polke, a rookie who has yet to Bonefish may have more
Park Monday nightcompany than he had barget into a game,
Pacific Almahurst third.
gained for in ~turday's 50th
Raider John trotted to a
anniversary Hambletonian at
nose victory in 2 :04 4-li, the
the Du Quoin State Fair.
fastest winning mile of his
Bonefish was the bay
car-, and returned $12.80,
everyone seemed to be
$8.00 and $3.80.
planning to bet on in the
The tenth race Big Triple
Hambletonian until his
combination of 6-3-1 returned
Saturday, !1-5 finishes in the
$2,688.60.
Horseman's Futurity at the
A crowd of 3,582 wagered
Indiana State Fair. ·
COLUMBUS
(UP!)
Cliff
$319,~.
In 1974, Bonefish was voted
won the $24,350 Ohio State
the best 2-year-old trotter and
Trot in straight heats at the
has the best time of I: 58.1 this
state fairgrounds Monday by
COLUMBUS (UP!)
year. Trainer-driver Stanley
FranciB Time came up from stepping two easy miles.
Dancer, who twice has won
It was the ninth consecutive
third at the three-quarter
the Hambletonian, has said
pole and edged Baron Paul to victory for the Hawley ToddBonefish may surpass any
win the featured $1,500 eighth owned bay, which has earned
trotter he's handled.
race at Scioto Downs M011day more than $19,000 during 11
But Bonefish threw a shoe
wins in 17 starts this year.
night.
in the first heat and fmished
" The colt has been
Lakewood Dort was third.
ninth, and managed only fifth
bothered
with splints lately,"
F'riUicls time covered the
in the second heat. Meanmile 2:05 U in gaining the Cliff's trainer-driver Frank
while, his stablemate,
three-quarter length victory Todd Jr. said. "But he was
Surefire Hanover, and
and returned $8.80, $3.80 and the best horse out there
Glaagow were trading heat
today."
$3.00.
wins with Glasgow's win in
Cliff won the first heat by 1:59 shading Surefire-HanoThe 4-9 nighUy double of
Ronnie Maguire and Big three lengths in a leisurely
ver's time by one-fifth
Time Gene was worth $22.20. 2:09.1, breaking first and
second.
The 3,659 fans bet $211,921. maintaining his lead. The bay
led all the way in taking the
I
second heat in 2:08.3.
In other races opening day
State Fair harness racing,
DEVO_TE D TO THE
INTEREST OF
Oaklawn Victory took the
MEIGS- MASON AREA
$5,100 trot for two-year old
CHESTER L . TANNEI:'IILL
Exec. Ed .
fillies. The $1,500 two-yearROBiiRT HOEFLICH
old Consolation Trot went to
City Editor
Published dall y ext;ept
Goddess Lobell in 2:10.1.
Sa turday by The Ohio Vallev.
Publ i sl\ing com pany , 111
Sulky racing continues at
Court St ., Po meroy . Ohio
the State Fair today,
45769 . 8usine~ Off ice PhoneIn a recent game at Mid- highlighted by the Buckeye
99~ · 2 156 . l!:ditoi1Ht Phone 9922157 .
dleport between the Pan- State Pace for two-year-olds.
Second class po st age paid l
therettes and the Pt. Pleasant Seventeen entries have been
at Po n:eroy . Ohio.
N~lt o nal
advert i sing
All Stars, the Pantherettes listed, with the top four
r e pr esentative
Ward Griffith Company. Inc . ,
won :!i).ll.
finishers in each of the beats
Bottlne_lli &amp; Gallagher Dlv .,
GetUng hits for the All returning for a linal heat,
757 Th trd Ave ., New York
N .Y . 10017 .
.'
Stars were Lesa Thompson, a worth $13,340. ,
S ubscription
rates:
Delive red by carrier where
single, Mar,tha Boonsue, a
Chris Time Pick, a winner . available
75 cents per week .
single and triple; T. Lane, in 2:03.2 thisyear, is favored.
By Motor Route where
service
not
single ; Debbie Heslep , He has seven wins and earn- carrier
avallat?t~. One month , S3.25 .
By mall 1n Ohio and w . va .,
double; Rosemary Hearns, Ings so far this year of
One
Year.
S22 .00 ;
Si)l:
single and double ; Suzy $14,342.
months .
S11.50 ;
Three
months. S7 .00 . Elsewhere
Durst, single;
Tammy
26.00 year ; ·s i)( months
Ewing, 3 singles ; Tonia
S1J .SO ; three months , S7 .50 .
MINNEAPOLIS (UPI)
ub scrl ption price includes
Wopley,
single ;
Beth Coach Cal Stoll said M011day ~~.~nday
Tlmes -Sentl nel.
Stickler, single ; D. Smith, he was very pleased with tbe
single; and Carol Smith, 2 total physical condition of his
alngleis.
.
Minnesota Gophers football
For tbe Pantherettes, team. .
.
{ge
1011
Missy c.Ie bad.4 singles, Fay · Some 114 persons reported
Herman, 2 singles ;_ Peggy Monday on the opening day of
Johnson, double; Glenda the Gophers' practice-a rouBrcnm, double; Terri Wilson, tine day of teaching and
-,Ingle; 2 doubles; Jo condltlooing. Stoll said the
McKinney, 3 singles: Vicki Gophers would -practice
Ebenbacb, 3singles; ~on through Wednesday without
Karr, ll!tsle: Marcia Cale, 2 pads. The team wW hold Its
singles; ·Jayne Coleman, first scrimmage Saturday.
The Gophers open tbelr fall
slagle; Brepda f!town, 3.
Your Thom MeAn Stor~
.mgJes and Chris Ebersbach, · football, season Sept. 13 at
Mid&lt;!' cport. Ohio
1hlngle.
IndianIf.

how they ran

Oiff wins

Rich trot

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Pantherettes

The Daiij sentinel

put it onto

all star club

La

Select'

For

i-

5- 'nleDally

-I

first hard game test
'

I

'I
.c

_4- n.e Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Au~. 26, 1975

••

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Lin~cores
MQnday 's Baseball Results
By United Pren lnternatio r.al
Nationdl League
Cincinnati
013 030 112- 11 19 0
Chicago
001 OOJ DOll--- 4 8 0
Norma n , Carroll
( 6) ;md
Pl umm er . R . Reusc hel , Dell ore
(]f . W ilcox ( 6 ), Knowl es I ll
and Sw is her . M i lterwa l d O J
W P Nor m an
( 9 4)
LP R
Reu sche l ( 10 14) . HR S-Madloc k
(7t h l. Ch an ey { l SI ), Morat es
r IOth l

Rutland Reds win tournament
The second ann ual Big
Bend Tourney wound down
Friday evening to the end,
with the Hartford Hornets
beating the Rutland Reds by
a score of 9-4 and the Rutland
Dodgers winning 6-1 over the

Atl anta
ooo ooo 000-0 3 2 Middleport Braves.
Pi lhburgh
102 100 nox- 4 9 1
The tow-nament directors
Th ompson, Sad ec ki (4), ·
Be ard 16l. Ho use 18J an d Gene Wise and Mil.ford Hysell
Cor r elL
Rook er
( 10 9 ) and termed this year 's tourney a
Dyer l P Th ompson (0 -5} .

complete success, This year
12 learns from the Bend area
competed . A lot of talent was
exhibited by the players, and
above a il , good sports(s 5)
manship . There were four
Philadelphia 110 010 101)-4 10 0
Los Angeles ooo 011 ooo----2 so games that were decided by
Chri sten son . G&lt;'Jrber ( 6 J and one run : Rutland Reds 5
Oates : Messersmit h . Ho ug h (9 )
Indi ans
4,
and Ye ager . WP Ch risl(•nson ( 8 Middleport
4)
L P Messer smith
f l 4-l 3l. Rutland Dodgers 4 -Pomeroy
H R Schm idt (3 151] .
Giants 3, Middleport Braves 2
( 10 inning s, game ca ll ed , r ainJ
Pomeroy Yankees I and
Houston
010 000 001 1-l 11 J
St. loui !i.
002 000 000 1-l 6 0 Middleport Braves I Hartford
Rob ert s, Gra nger ( 9 J. Cos Hornets 0. Also there wen!'
gro ve (9 ), Craw ford ( 10 ) and
Johnson ; M cGloth en . Hrabosky four shutouts and two no
(9 /, Garman (9 ). Curlis ( 101 hitters. There were three
and Rudo lph , Si mmon s ( 101 .
home rtms hit over the fence
those coming from Mik~
American League
Ba} t im o re at Kan sas City , ppd . Miller with two and Steve
rar n
Fife, 'both from the MidChicago
000 000 I OQ--- 1 3 I dleport Braves.
Cleve land
010 010 OJx-5 8 o
The most home runs trophy
Kaal ( 18 10) and Downing:
E c k e r sl~y
r 10 51 and A shby . went to Mike Miller of the
HR S Sp rk es
(8 th ).
Robi nson
Braves with two home nms;
(9th )
Todd Snowden, the Rutland
Detro it
000 000 OOil-----0 J 0
Texas
·010 000 00.- 1 6 2 Reds , and Greg Kearns of the
Bare
(7 .9) and
Freehan ; Hartford Hornets received
Umbarger (6 5 ) and Sundberg .
th e most hils trophies, each
Minnesota
030 120 OOD-6 1o 1 had seven hits .
Milwaukee
010 200 OOQ--3 3 2
The most valuable player
Deck er ,
Butter
( 4 l . and
Borg mann ; Sl aton , Cu rr ence or the tournament went to
(4) , Aust in ( 9) and Moore . WP
New York
010 010 002- 4 11 0
'Sa n D iego
000 000 001)-0 s 1
Webb ( 6 5J and Grot e; Str o m .
M c intosh ( 6) , Tomlin (9 ) and
Da v i s, K en d al l (61 L P Str om

Butl er (2 ·•0 . LP .Siaton (11 15)
HR M c Kay (2nd ).

Set-aside
NEW YORK (UP!)- Leftbander Bill Lee of the Boston
Red Sox, wbo pitched two
complete game victories last
week, wa s named the
American League's player of
the week today by league
president Lee MacPhail.
Lee shut out the Kansas
City Royals S-0 on four hits
and beat the Chicago White
Sox 6-1. He has gone 23 1-3
innings without allowing an
earned run.

Big Ten's
(Continued from page 3
Donnie Thomas and Craig
Brinkman.
Iowa is deep In running
backs with Jim Jensen, Rod
Wellington and Ed Donovan,
and a strong defensive backfield sparked by Rick PeMy,
but quarterback could be a
problem. Minnesota has a
solid signal caller in Tony
Dungy, power running from
John Jones, J. Dexter Pride
and Larry Powell, but the line
has too many holes.
Northwestern needs a
quarterback to help two
stellar runners, Jim Pooler
and Greg Boykin, and depth
as always will be a problem
at every position.
Notre Dame's best quarterback
prospect,
Frank
Allocco, had surgery for a
spring shoulder separation,
and there's a dearth of
running skilla, too, with Art
Best, Tom Parise, Mark
McLane and Russ Kornman
the most likely to work out.
The offensive line was riddled, the linebackers must be
replaced, and only Steve
Neihaus, one of the nation's
best, Jeff Weston and Jim
Stock remain on the defensive line.
Fl ve of the six players
suspended from school for a
year return and they should
help, particularly defensive
back
Luther
Bradley,
defensive ends .Ross Browner
and Willie Fry and running
back Al Hunter. The defensive bac'lfield could·be strong
since Randy Harrison and
John Dubenetzky are hack to
help, too. But the best that
can be said for tbe Irish now
is they're "very thin" almost'
everywhere.

cropland
out again

Guy Shuler . Shuler won three
ga mes for the Rutland
Dodgers and had thirty-three
strikeouts to his credit and
also set a new tournament
record of 13 strikeouts .
· The Dodgers came in ftrst,
Braves sec'ond , the Horn ets
third and the Rutland Reds
fourth.
Following are accounts of
the consolation and the
championship games.
Consolatio n Game
In_the consolation game the
Hartford Horn ets beat the
Rutland Reds 9-4. Shawn
Fields started on the hill for
the Hornets with Barry

VanMatre coming on in
relief. Fields and VanMatre
combined for 10 strikeouts,
giving _up but one walk and
allowed 4 run s on six hits. The
winning pticher was Shawn
Fields.
Robbie Berger started for
the Reds and was r elieved by
John Van Meter . Berger and
Van Meter combined to strike

crop ( except marketing
quota crops) or any conserving crop ( including
approved volunteer cover)
used for hay or for grazing in
order to preserve their wheat
or feed grain allotments.
Secretary Butz said today's
announcement will provide
farmers with informatioh
they need to make their 1976
crop planting decisions. The
programs are designed to
provide fa rmers decisionmaking freedom to produce
for th e marketplace . Additional program -provisions
will be announced after the
Department ha s had an
·. opportunity to review . additional 1975 production data .

RIO GRANDE - The two
auto mechanics inslructors at
the Buckeye Hills Career
Cente r are Douglas M.
Crabtree, Sr., and George
Ronald Sheets.
Crabtree graduated from
Oak Hill (Ohio) High School
in 1963. He will receive his
four -year provisional
teaching certificate this fall.
He has worked as an auto
mechani~ for nine years,
receiving eight years experience at Dallas Chevrolet
Company in Jackson and one
year at Abele Auto Sales in
Oak HilL
He ha s taught Auto

NY 26 ; Bench , Cin 24 ; Foster ,

Ci n 21.
A meri can league : Mayberry ,

KC 29 ; Jac kso n . Oak 28; Scott,
Mil
27;
Bonds,
NY
24 ;
Burroughs , T ex 22.
Runs Batted In
National League : Luzinsk i,
Phil 103; Bench. Cin 100 ; Staub.
NY
87;
Per ez.
Cin
86 :
Si mmons , St.L 82.
American L eag ue : Lynn , Bos
89; Mayberry, KC 85; May ,
Ball 84 ; Rice, Bos 83 ; Scott,
Mil 81.
Stolen Bases
National League: Lopes , LA
58 ; Morgan , Cin 51; Brock, St.L
49 ; Cedeno, Hou 42 ; Cardenal.
Chi 26.
A merican League : Rivers,
Ca l 64 ; Washington , Oak 35 ;
Otis, KC 3J; Remy , Cal 31;
Care w , Minn and Bonds. NY 29.
Pitching
(Based on most victories)
Nat ional L eagu e : Seaver, NY
18·7; Jones, SO 11-7; Sutton, LA
16·10 ;
Matlack .
NY
15-8;
Morton, All 15-14.

American League : Palmer ,

Bait 19 -7: Kaat. Chi 18 -10; Lee,
Bos 17-7; Hunter, NY 17-12 ·
Wise, Bos 16-8 ; Blue , Oak 16-10·.

WHEN YOU SEE ME,
DON'T THINK OF
INSURANCE ... BUT
WHEN YOU THINK OF
INSURANCE, .SEE MEl

- .

BEAUTIFUL

AMERI CAN
Legion
Auxiliary, Drew Webster
Post 39, 7:30p.m . at the hall .
Convention reports will be
heard.
--- - ·
CORVETTE CLUB meeting
at the home of Yvonne Scally,
870 Ash St., Middleport. All
Corvette owners are urged to
attend as elections will be
held and plans for futur e
activities will be made.
THE MASON Co unty
Education Association of
Classroom Teachers will
provide a free luncheon for
all Mason County classroom
teachers at the Point
Pleasant Junior High School
cafeteria.
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 6:30
p .m. Royal Oak Park, ge tacquainted picnic .
PAST
MATRO NS,
Pomeroy Chapter 186, O.E.S.,
7:30p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Hartwell Curd.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY Lions Clu~
annual
family
picnic,
Pomeroy Golf Course, 6 p.m.
All Lions and their families
invited. Take a covered dish.
WILDWOOD Garden Club,
8 p .m ., at the home of Mrs.
Erma Roush . Members are to
take a flower specimen.

teachers
announced

..

••

••
•

•
••
~

"
•••
"
••
••
~

·-.

D. CRABTREE SR.

GEORGE R- SHEETS

•

...•,
Academy High SchooL
He and his wife, Gladys •.
••
have two children, Ronnie II •
and Donnie. They reside at •
Eureka
Star
Route, ::
Gallipolis.

Mechanics
at
Gallia
Academy High School the
past two years. Crabtree and
his wife, Sharon, who have
two children, reside at Route
4, Oak Hill .
.
Sheets graduated from
Gallia Academy High School
in 1955. He served in the U.S.
Navy 3'h years. He attended
the University of Cincinnati
and graduated from Nashville Auto Diesel College,
Nashville, ·Tenn.
He has worked at several
jobs in the auto mechanics
field. He was auto mechanics
teacher at Jackson Manpower Training Center for
seven and a half years and for
the past three years, auto
me.chanics teacher at Gallia

Back To School

Colors to match any
decor.

·~~~·

.••
•
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USED CARS

73 NOVA

4 DOOR

--

Six

cylinder, auto . trans.,
and power steering .

•
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You'll Like Our Quality
Way of Doing Business .
992-5342

.-.

•
•

'2695

GMAC FINANCING

•"
:

'

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Pomeroy :

:

Open Evenings 1til6:00 '- :
Til S .m. Sat.
•

•

~

~

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•'

School Days
Ahead ...

'•
'•

•••

For Lads

••

and lasses

~

l
•''
'
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''

Going Back
To Qasses.

Burova

'
•
•
•
,•

European

styilng.

Br_a~elet with satin · finish ·

alligator pattern

SIS.OO

heritage house ·

~dley's Florist
59 N. Second Sf .
Middleport, Ohio

.'-

17 1ewe1s.

I
Goesleit Jewelly_.Stcn '

Mick Childs

Mr. and Mrs . Charles
Meinhart of Tulsa , Okla.
spent several days here
visiting Miss Erma Smith
and Mrs. Phillip Meinhart.
Eugene
Norris
and
daughter, Eugenia, Kingston ,
were recent visitors of hi s
mother, Mrs. Helen Norris.
Susie, Millie and Penny
Tubbs, daughters of Mr. and
Mrs . John Tubbs , have
returned to their home in
Washington Court House
after vacationing here with·
their grandmother, Mrs .
Mildred Tubbs, Condor St.
Mr. and Mrs. John Austin
and children, Julia, Mary,
Iris and Aaron have returned
to Richmond, Va. after a
week '~ visit here with Mrs.
Austin's parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Aaron Kelton :-- Julia,
Mary and Iris were here for
two weeks, coming especially
to go to the Meigs County
Fair .
Mr. and Mrs. John Young
and family of Lancaster were
Sunday guests of her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Carpenter.
HOMECOMING l\ET
MINERSVILLE
A
homecoming has. ~ set for
Sept. 7 at :the •Min'ersville
United Methodist Church. A
basket dinner will be held
from 12:30 to I :30 p.m. An
afternoon program will
feature music by the "Gospel

SUPERIORS USDA CHOICE

I

CHUCK ROAST

Fresh Ground From

USDA Choice Beef.
It's Better!

BLADE
CUT

69e lb.

CENTER CUT .................... lb. 79e

USDA CHOICE

BONELESS

USDA Choice Beef

ARM ROAST
lb. 89C
ENGLISH ROAST
lb. 99e

CHUCK ROAST

GROUND '
.CHUCK

lb. • ,

lb.99e

09

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GROUND ROUND
lb. 1.09

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SHORT RIBS OF BEEF
lb. 99e

U.S. GRADE ASMALL

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Chock Full of Nuts

INSTANT COFFEE

TO CELEBRATE 25TH
TUPPERS PLAINS - Mr .
and Mrs. Marvin Walker will
celebrate their 2Sth ·wedding
anniversary Sunday with an
open house from 2 to 4 p.m. at
their residence. HosUng the
observance will be their
daughters,
Mrs. Mary
Newell, Mrs. Ruth Mills and
Mrs. Allee Curtis. Relatives
and friends of the couple are
invited to call during the open_,
house hours.

KRAFT
MIRACLE WHIP

SALAD

DRESSING
•

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Thursday Onl,y

200
ct. box

RC

Wrigley Chewing Gum

10FOR89e

16 oz. bots.

'8$

09

PAK

R£6~ ' '1.39

Vanilla Wafers
FROZEN FOODS

seen LAD

ICE MILK
'h~l·59e
crt.

GALLON

1.09

Sunshine
11 oz. box

JIF

Ruffo Shortening

18:89

can

Johnson's Pledge
14 ounce

size

HASH BROWNS

4

'100

BANQUET

Buffet Dinners

'159

2 lb.

SWEDISH

2-lb.
bags

49e

PEANUT
BUTTER

Pringle's
~

POTATO
CHIPS

19

Triple$

2 lb.
box

'149

Friday Only

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DIET RITE
FLAVORS

4

qts.
for

$100
PltJ ::. Uep .'

ALL WEEK LONG

Prince Cheese Dinners

4

for

P.eanut Butter Cups
Reece
10 paks

Dad's Root Beer
8 pak 1:39

Diet Rite Cola
8 pak 1.19

SPECIAL LOW PRICE

Coke &amp; Sprite
16

oz.

8·PA
I

- --~ -

!(leenex Facial Tissue

5-Stick
Pack

qt. jar.

Tones."

DAUGHTER BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth R.
Searles ( Tammy Luster )
announce the birth of a
daughter Aug. II at the
Holzer Medical Center. The 8
lb., 9 oz. infant has been
named Ailgela Rae . Maternal
grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. George T. Luster Sr .,
Middleport, and the paternal
grandparents are Kenneth
Searles,
Rutland,
and
,raullne Searles, Fostoria.

0\ampagne dial.

'

MIDDLEPORT 0.

GROUND BEEF

•,

International League
Standings
United Press International
w. I. pet. g . b.
Roc hester
81 52 .609
Tidewa1er
80 52 .606
112
Syracuse
70 60 .538 9 112
Charleston
68 65 .5 11 13
Richmond
60 69 .465 19
Memphis
61 72 .459 20
Toledo
57 76 .429 24
Pawlucket
51 82 .363 30
Monday's Results
Memphis B Richmond 4
Toledo 4 Sy racuse 1
Tidewater 6 Charleston 3
Roches'ter 8 Pawtucke t 5

Trim

We reserve the right to limit quantities.

•

This Week's Special
--.

-~_ .,dband .

, William D.- Chil,_s

Corner Mill and Second Sts.

PHONE 992-3480

lb. 69e

Tixturld .
VQidtone

$495

We Accept Federal Food Stamps

THURSDAY
AMERICAN
Legion
Auxiliary,
Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, 7:30p.m. with girls
state delegates and their
parents invited guests.
Delegates to present their
reports . 6:30 p .m. dinner to
precede the meetin~ .
AMERICAN
Legion
Auxiliary Juniors ; Drew
Webster Post 39, 7 p.m. at the
legion halL

A.OW~RFrom

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily 9 to 10
Sun. 10 to 10

n

DRIED
ARRANGEMENTS

CHUCI&lt; ROAST

TUESDAY
MEIGS Athletic Boosters
7·:30 p .m. at the high school:

Mechanics

Secretary of Agriculture
Earl L. Butz has said there
set-aside
will
be
no
req uirement for the 1976 Feed
Grain and Wh eat Programs.
It will be the third consecutive year for the Feed
Grain and Wheat Programs
in which no set-aside was
Major League Leaders
required.
By United Press International
Feed Grain and Wheat
Leading Batters
(based on 3'25 at bats)
producers a r e not being ·
National League
encouraged to take cropland
g ab r
h pet.
out of production next year, Madlock, Chi
443 66 160 .36 1
Department officials explain, Sim mon s, 111
St.L
because even though this
124 446 64 148 .332
Watsn , H 113 419 59 138 .329
year's corn and wheat crops Mrgn , Cn l 19 413 87 135 .327
are expected to be at record Sang uillen , Pit
389 44 127 .326
levels, export demand is Rose , en 107
129 536 84 17 2
321
Josh , SF 105 408 60 131 .321
strong.
As announced in 1973, there Brock , SI .L
105 406 67 129 .318
will be no conserving base Lu zinski, Phil
479 74 151
.315
requirement for the duration Prkr , Pt t 129
117 435 59 137 .315
American League
of t he Agriculture and
g ab
r
h pet.
Consumer Protection Act of Crw , Mn 119
444 79 165 .372
1973 (through the 1977 crop lynn. Bs 117 423 80 138 .326
year). The Secretary an- Munson, NY
125 470 67 147 .313
nounced also at that time that Washington, Oak
463 64 144 .311
effective through 1977 crop Singleton, 117
Bal
year he · will not use his
124 470 73 144 .306
Powll . Cl 103 333 50 102 .306
discretionary authority to MeR
, KC 118 450 55 137 .304
limit feed grain and wheat Hargrove , Tex
41 3 67 125 .303
plantings to a percentage of R ice , Bs 116
117 462 77 139 .301
allotments.
Orta . Chi 111 428 53 129 .301
Home Runs
In 1976, as in the present
National League : Luzinski
year, producers may sub- and Sch mid t, Phil 31; K ing m an ,

stitute any non--conserving

-Social
Calendar

on the evening. Paul Michael
a single, Dave Spangler and
Andy Pocklngtoo each
doubled, and Troy Brook had
a double and a single. The
ljraves co mmitted eight
errors that really opened the
door for the Dodgers.
Individual trophies and
team trophies were presented
at the conclusion and a party
,s held at the Middleport
.-'ark by the Dodgers and
Braves to cap off their
seasons.
The Daily Sentinel and the
Dan Thompson Ford Agency
co-sponsored this year's
tourney and a big thanks go
out to all the fine folks who
helped make this year's
tourney a big success.
Also thanks go out to
Pointview TV Cable who let
us use their equipment to
take some of the ball games,
to be viewed at a later date to
be announced; also to Perk
Ault and Dave Dodson for ..
their fine job of umpiring.

o.ut six Hornets and walked a
total of three, gave up nin e
~un s on six hits. Fqr the Reds
Mike Willford , John Jacobs
and John Van Meter had
si ngl es, Craig Taylor a
double and Todd Snowden
two singles.
For the win ners Shawn
Fields and Barry VanMatre
each had singles, Shawn
Paugh and Jeff Roush had
doubles and Greg Kearns two
singles.
Championship Game
In the final game of the
tourney the Rutland Dodgers
beat the Middleport Braves 61 on a no-hitter pitched by
Guy Shuler . Shuler, had 13
strikeouts and walked but one
batter . For the Braves Jeff
Wayland and Mike Miller had
eight strikeouts and no walks.
The only score the Braves
could muster up was when
Mike Miller walked, stole
second and third and scored
on an overthrow at third
base .
The Dodgers had five hits

Tuesday', Aug. 26,1975

_/.

�·,J

7- The Dally Sent;in~e=J·:::~::~.ero:;

8"'-The DaUy Sentinel. Middle])Or t-Pcmerov. u .. Tu esday. il&lt;•g.

SHOWBOAT

Shower entertains
Success swims after engaged couple
Roy Scheider

Generation Rap _
By Helen and Sm· Bottel
" Words " Stump ColumnJsts

•

Rap :
My girlfriend and I doubledated the other night. They
wanted to mess around, and th e other guy told my fr iend it was
okay because he 'd use his ca rdigan . She wen alo ng with him,
as she didn 't want to act ignorant.
· But today she asked me what a cardigan is. My problem is
how can I explain it to her ' She 's a little slow and I don't wan t
to offend her . - T. X . tFOR THAN X 1

By Dick Kleiner
HOLLYWOOD - ( NEA) '"Jaws" may turn out to be
the bigges t box office hit
ever . With a giant hit, the
success always r ubs off on
everybody connec ted with it
and Roy Scheider is finding
that out.
He 's in demand now, with
people offerin g him all kinds
of par ts for all kinds oi
mon e y . That 's ni ce, but
Sc heider 1wh o pla ys Brody,

T.:
What's a "cardiga n" besides a s weather ? If you know
something I don 't know, please clue me in ' - !lEI EN 1Who is
also a little slow .) .

+++
T.:
If this guy also calls the new drug store dispenser a

"condominitun ," let's hope she didn't go along with him" too
far. - SUE

+++
NOTE TO RE ADERS:
Speaking of " conundrums ," here's anot her letter that has
us stumped :

+ -1+
Dea r Rap :
In Trenton , N. J ., we have the a nswer: "Psychede li c
contraception ~ "

No m or e worr y aOOut unwanted pregnancy.

It 's the great est thing since Adam and Eve. Please tell your
readers. - IT'S ALL IN THE KNOWI NG
DEAR IAIK :
Agreed, one way to avoid pregnancy is "a ll in the no-ing ,"
but what in blue blazes is "psychedeli c contraception.,., HELEN (Who feels very UNkn owin g today. )
NOTE FROM Sl "-;;: We must be a little slow out here on
the West Coast. I ne.·er heard of psyc hedelic contrace ption:
cauld it mean you gel so stoned nothing ha ppens except your

imagination ?
... Which isn 't on our recomm ended list 1 - SUE

+++
Rap :
I would like to have the book I 've writt en published. Morn
says she won't pay a publishing compa ny, a nd I only ha ve $20
which would cover about twc pages of the cost . I'm too yo ung
to work . What should I do ' - BROKE AUTHORESS, 12
Authoress :
Maybe you should settle for typing your book, with lour or
five carbons. But if you must pay for the typing, even that will
cost you more than $20. Since you already ha ve the or iginal,
there are better ways to spend your mon ey : like on more paper
so that you can do more prac tice writing, and eventually
produce a hook that will sell .
Sorry .. . - SUE
Authoress :
I don't believe in giving up without a struggle . Nor do I
believe in paying a "puff" publisher (one who charges the
writer ).
!J your book is good enough, a publisher will pay YOU, so
type it up and send it on. (You can get names and addresses at
your local library.) Be sure to enclose return postage - and
keep a carbon copy in case your original is lost. - HELEN

Mr. and Mrs. Donald E. Hartley

Couple celebrates
25th anniversary
NE W Hi\ VEN - A surprise
party was h~ld a l th e
Ameri L'an Legion Hall her e
t\ug . 16 for Mr . and Mrs.
Donald E . Hartley of New
Hav en in observ an ce of their
twe nty-fifth wed di ng a nmversar y.
They wer e marri ed Aug . 16,
1950 at the First Baptist
Churc h of El ea nor, W. Va. by
the Rev. Mickey Wick.
Mr . a nd Mrs. Da vi d
Bus kirk , Middl epor t. served
as hos t :fd hostess. Robert
Coc kre ll , Mrs. Hartley's
br ot he r, intr odu ced t he
honore d couple and th ey
received their guests. Mr s.
Hart!E:y was then prese nted a

corsage by Steve Denney of
Newport News. Va.

Mr . a nd Mrs. Hart ley,
assisted by th eir daug hter
Sherry a nd son , Dana, opened
m any g if~s from fri ends a nd

relat ives. James Jon es and
Gr ayson Will iamson se rv ed
as toas tmaster s. Mi ss Connie

Gilland, Mr s. Debbie Panaro
an d Miss Nancy Buskirk
se r ve d ca ke an d punc h.
Co nn ie a nd De bbi e a lso
registered guests.
Those a ttendin g were Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Dodd , Mr.
and Mrs . AI Evan s, Mrs.
Vera Thomp son , Mr. and
Mrs. Don Gilbert , Mr . and
Mrs. Dwight Sa yre, Eldon
Roush, Mr . and Mrs. Robert
Redmond , Mr. and Mrs.
Dan iel Workm an , J ohn
Ferg uson , Mr . an d Mrs. Bob
Dugan , Billie Jun e Hayes,
and Mr. and Mrs . Grayson
Willi a m so n, all of New
Haven; Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Davis Jr ., Mr. and Mrs.
Robe r t Roush and Miss

man Buskir k Jr. and Nancy,
M i dd le p o rt ;
M a rtin
Br oder ic k, Po me r oy; Mr .
and Mrs. Robert Cockrell and
Mr . and Mrs. Robert Coc krell
II . Par kersburg; Mr . and
Mrs . J am es J ones and Judy ,
Mr. and Mrs. Alden Sheets,
Ton ia and Am y, Mr. and Mrs.

Steve Ha rtley and Joe Muck,
Nitr o; Dy mple Cockrell ,
Eleano r ;
Mrs.
Debbie
Pana ro, Dunbar ; Mr. and
Mr s .
J a mes
Painte r ,
Charleston; Mr . and Mrs .
Wilbert Hartl ey and Mr. and
Mrs. Da le Ha rri son and
Joetta, Red House; Steve
De nney, Newport New s, Va . ;
Mr . and Mrs. Doug Hartley,
St. Alba ns; Mr . and Mrs.
Edsel Ha rtley, Winfield; Mr .
ard Mrs. James Jones II,
Kenova; Mr . and Mrs. Paul

William son , Barboursville ;
Mr . and Mrs . Rich Hawley,
Columbus, and Mrs. Ruby
Harmon and Ruth Wolford,
Titusv ille, Fl a.
Sending gifts were Mr . and
Mrs . Che t Campbell, Mr . and
Mr s. J ohn Morgan , Mr . and
Mrs . Jerr y Morgan , Mrs.
Loui se Powell , Mr. and Mrs .
William Powell, Mr . and Mrs.
Steve Hals tead and Mr. and
Mrs . Roy Cooke, local ; Mr.
ar d Mrs. James Hartley,
Ti tusville , Fla . ; Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry Harlley and Tammy,
Red House, W. Va. and Mr .
an d Mrs. Bill Wolford 1 of
Rockledge, Fl a.

Potluck picnic
held at park

CARNIVAL

by Dick T ul'ner

hom e.

Enjoying the evening were
Robe r ta Youn g , E velyn
Ste wa rt , Ma thilda Noble
Laura J ohnson, Nancy Va~
Meter, Clar a Willi a ms
Li lli a n
Rous h ,
Hel e~
Willi a m s, Hazel Smith
Dorot hy Queen , Mr . and Mrs:
Landon Smi th and guest,
Laura Dunbar .

SOCIAL PLANNED
TUPP ERS PLAINS - The
Tupp er s . Pl a in s Boos ter
Association will hold an ice
cr eam social Saturday at the
Plaihs Elementary
ISchool beg inning at 4 p.m .

is n't jumping at the first big
pay check to come his way.
" My cri terion for picking·•
ROY
SCHEIDER:
part, " Scheider says, "has 'Jaws' got to him, too.
alway s been is it something I
would want to see ?·Whe never
I deviate fr om that rule, I get
in trouble.
now , after "Jaws," he 's a big
" I took the part in 'Sheila name.
Levine' because I felt it would
One other thing "Jaws" did
be good for me to do a for him. He loves to swim in
romantic part, even though I the ocean - "but", he sayS,
didn 't think the picture had a "since 'Jaws ' 1 don 't swim
chance to make it. It didn't ; it out so far."
was a turkey . But I don 't
regret making it - nobody
Hollywood's ladies have
else would have taken a long loved to flaunt their
chance on me playing a jewelry in public. It was a
romantic part."
status thing, of course, and
But, with "Jaws", it was a they reveled in having the
different story . He always biggest and gaudiest of
felt it was destined to be a baubles.
success , although he says he
But wtih the crime rate
had no idea it would turn out soaring, the flaunting Is seen
to be as big as it has.
less and less these days.
He says it was a tough film Matthew Mazer, of the
to make - "seven grueling Joseph . Mazer
fashion ·
months".
jewelry firm says that many
"I used to be in the water," women today are buying
he
says,
" with
that fashion jewelry - which used
mechanical shark knocking to be called costume jewelry
me off the mast and wonder - and wearing that instead.
what I was doing there. The
Mazer ~s that Hollywood
first few months you don't is today a bigger influence on
mind it so much , but then it the accessory trade than is
begins ge tting to you.
Paris.
" And , when we had
" If Cher wears a certain
finished shooting it, for a few kind of jewelry on her show,"
months I couldn't get back on Mazer says, "the next day
my fee t. I was restless, I hundreds of women are in the
didn 't feel well . It was pretty stores trying
to find
bad ."
something just like it."
Scheider is fr om New
But it is in the area of stars
Jersey and started out with wearing relatively inexthe dream of becoming a pensive jewelry that the
lawyer. He was a pre-law trend is most clearly seen.
student at Franklin and Instead of diamonds, they
Marshall College . But he wear fashion jewelry. Annbegan doing college plays and Margret has buckets of
soon realized that he was diamonds, but at the Cannes
enjoying the plays more than film festival she wore a $200
h,\s pre-law studies.
Mazer necklace. She wasn't
So he switched . It took him about to risk her diamonds in
a long time to make it. but the mob scene .

PEMBROKE, Mass. - The
90th birthday of Mrs. Lena
Huber, formerly of Pomeroy,
was celebrated with a party
hosted by her granddaughter
and husband, Mr. and Mrs. J .
L. Coiak, on their lawn in
Pembroke, Mass .
The lawn area was
decorated with balloons ,
flowers and a sign which read
"Happy Birthday." A buffet
supper was enjoyed by Mrs.
Huber and four generations
of her family .

and Mrs. Don Ball and Mr.
and Mrs. Arnold Roush,
Letart; Mr. and Mr s. Sher-

MASON , W. Va. - Tuesday
evenin g
th e
Mason
Homemaker Club of Mason
had a potluck pic nic at the
Mason City Park preceded by
a shor t business meeting.
Mrs. Dorothy Queen opened
the m eetin ~ by r eading the
Cl ub Pledge ; Nancy Van
Meter had devotions, taking
the sc rip t ure from 11
Timoth y ; Hazel Smith gave
th e treasur er's repor t, and
Lau r a John so n r ead the
minutes of the July workshop
he ld at Mrs. Landon Smith's

the town sheriff , in " Jaws " )

90th birthday observed

Connie Gilland, Mason; Mr.

MARRIED SIX YEARS - Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Luadermllt, ahove, celebrated their sixth wedding an"!versary Saturday with a party hosted by Virginia Riffle,
Sister of Mrs. Laudermilt . Relatives and friends of the
couple attended. Gifts were presented to the couple a nd
the door prize was awarded to Mr . a nd Mrs. James Riffle.

Miss Rebecca Ann WUl and
Dan Cotterill, whose wedding
will be Aug. 29, were honored
recently at the Enterprise
United Methodist Church
with a bridal shower.
The church choir of which
Miss Will is a member hosted
the shower . Decorations
featured yellow, pink and
blue streamers with white
wedding bell accents . The
refreshment table was
covered with a yellow lace
cloth and centered with a
large white cake decorated
with wedding bells and yellow
and pink flowers . Served with

Present

were

her

'

and Jennifer Kauffman, and
Melanie Marie Duffy.
Numerous cards and letters were received from
Pomeroy residents as weU as
gifts from the relatives attending \he celebration .
On the sixth of September,
Mrs. Duffy will accompany
Mrs. Huber to Pomeroy for a
week 's visit at the GlobOkar
home .

ECE pupils
to register

daughters, Ruth Kauffman,
Katherine Duffy and her
ANDY STAm'Rri
husband, John, Halifax,
POINT PLEASANT - All
Mass.; Mrs. Alice Globokar Early Childhood students
and her husband , Phillip, must register at the ECE
Pomeroy; grandchildren , center nearest their homes on
Mrs. Sally Erwin, Pomeroy; Tuesday morning, September
Gene Kauffman and his wife, 2. Parents will furnish their
Janice, Edward, Richard and own transportation to the
Paula Kauffman, Robert school for this registration . It
Duffy, and Jed Duffy and his is not necessary that the child
Andrew Charles Stafford, wife, Georgia .
accompany the parent for
son of Mr . a nd Mrs . Marvin
registration.
Also pr~seni were ~lve
Stafford, celebrated his
~··•••-granddaughters , Polly
All stude~ts registering for
second birthday recently with
and Kristina Cozak, Heather ECE classes must have
a pa rty at the Syracuse Park.
immunizations for DPT
Games were played with
polio, rubella, and rubeol~
prizes going to Shawn and
and present record card to
Dee Dee Fields and Bobby
the center. A birth certificate
Ritchie who also won the door
. HERE FOR VISIT
for the child will also be
prize . Favors and candy were
Mrs. Dale K. Roush and required.
presented to all those at- · daughter, K"athy, Apple
. Children who have birth
tending .
Creek, were weekend guests · dates between November 1
A ~'Snoopy and his Dog- of her parents, Mr . and Mrs.
1969 and October 31, 1970 ar~
house'' theme was carried B. F. Turner, Middleport.
eligible to register for ECE
out. The cake , inscribed
classes.
" Ha ppy Brithday, Andy, 2,"
was served with ice cream
and Kool-Aid.
Attending besides those
named were the honored
g ue s t 's g randmother, his
aunts, Chris and Jean
Ha rrah,
a
great-aunt,
Marlene Fields, Darlene and
She rry
Ritchie , Be.cky
Broderick, . beron Stafford
'
, and Mrs. Marvin Stafford
who gave the party.
s.il)ding giU.s were Mary
.· '
and Kinuny Hamm. A cake
Hrs.:
lO:OOA.M. nlll:OO ·P:M. Sun.-TIIur.
was presented to Andrew
1 10:00 A.M. Tll12:00 P.M. Fri. &amp; S.t.
e~rlier in the week by Mr .'
.
'
992-2556
and Mrs . Harrah, grandW.MAIN
POMEROY. a. )
parents .

Birthday
celebrated

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Children
honored

the cake were frui t punch,
mints and nuts.
Games were played with
prizes going to Joyce Davis,
Mrs. Martha Husted, Darlene
Casto and Beverly Will who
also won the door prize .
Others attending were Mrs.
Delores Will , Brenda and
Brian, Mrs. Carol Ohlinger,
Ann and Laura, Mrs. Goldie
Dill, Mrs. Nan cy Walker ,
Mrs . Agnes Dixon , Mrs .
Gladys Brothers, Emma Lou
Davis, Candy Brothers ,
Karen Sloan , Mrs. Karyn
Davis, Mrs . Susie Pullins,
Mrs . Carla Carter, Kathy and
Vicky , Mrs. Sara Dill , Patty
Edwards, Mrs. Kay Logan ,
Mrs. Beatrice Buck , Mrs .
Jennie Warth, Mrs. Marjorie
Bowen , Miss Freda Ueving,
Mrs. Beulah Utterback, Mrs .
Cordelia Bentz, Mrs . Dorothy
Smith and Mrs. Frankie
Hunnel.
Sending gifts were Myrtle
and Dorothy Long , Mrs.
Mary Bowen, Mrs. Addie
Brown, Mrs. Agnes Week,
Mrs . Ruby Frick, Mrs .'
Mildred Mitch, · Mrs . Leona
King, Mrs. Mabel Kesterson ,
Linda Pullins, Mrs. Rachel
Jennings , Mrs . Hariett
Spencer and Mrs . Mabel
Moore .

Three childre n
were
dedicated during the morning
worship service at the Laurel
Cliff Free Methodist Church
Sunday morning.
Dedicated were Brian
Keith, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Brian Friend, and Randy and
Sean Hawley, children of Mr .
and Mrs. Randall . Hawley.
Rel~tives attending included Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Friend, Mrs. Patty Johnson, r--~------=;
Mrs. Edna Faulk and the maternal
greatgrandmother of Brian Keith
Friend, and Mrs . William
Sheridan and Mrs . Norman
Hawley, grandmothers of
Randy and Sean Hawley .

\'o~

Services held

A service of singing,
testimonies and readings was
held Sunday night at the
Do your
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
come in bunches? ·
Church.
Mrs. Kathy Pullins was at Never fear.
the piano for selections by the
You can set them·
choir composed of Jane right in a hurry. By
Jacobs, Diana Lewis, Jo Ann
Clark, Jim and Donna making sure.you're
Gilmore, Shirley and Belinda covered through an
Friend, Sharon Wright, Uoyd
Wright, Clifford Kline, Steve
agerit.
Eblin and the Rev. Floyd
We're experts on
Shook.
Mrs. Clark and Betty Will Itrotublle. And we're
had a duet, Mrs. Bertha !available
Parker gave readings, and
Steve and Becky Eblin and l~rhtlt.o. giveyoupi'oMrs. Pullins sang. Readings 1fes~sionllll service and
and prayer were given by lhe1p v&lt;ru
your
Doris Shook; Mrs. Clark had
a solo, the Rev. Mrs. Shook
joined Belinda Friend and
Diane Lewis for special
music, and Miss Lewis and
Jane Jacobs had a duet.

troubles

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8"'-The DaUy Sentinel. Middle])Or t-Pcmerov. u .. Tu esday. il&lt;•g.

SHOWBOAT

Shower entertains
Success swims after engaged couple
Roy Scheider

Generation Rap _
By Helen and Sm· Bottel
" Words " Stump ColumnJsts

•

Rap :
My girlfriend and I doubledated the other night. They
wanted to mess around, and th e other guy told my fr iend it was
okay because he 'd use his ca rdigan . She wen alo ng with him,
as she didn 't want to act ignorant.
· But today she asked me what a cardigan is. My problem is
how can I explain it to her ' She 's a little slow and I don't wan t
to offend her . - T. X . tFOR THAN X 1

By Dick Kleiner
HOLLYWOOD - ( NEA) '"Jaws" may turn out to be
the bigges t box office hit
ever . With a giant hit, the
success always r ubs off on
everybody connec ted with it
and Roy Scheider is finding
that out.
He 's in demand now, with
people offerin g him all kinds
of par ts for all kinds oi
mon e y . That 's ni ce, but
Sc heider 1wh o pla ys Brody,

T.:
What's a "cardiga n" besides a s weather ? If you know
something I don 't know, please clue me in ' - !lEI EN 1Who is
also a little slow .) .

+++
T.:
If this guy also calls the new drug store dispenser a

"condominitun ," let's hope she didn't go along with him" too
far. - SUE

+++
NOTE TO RE ADERS:
Speaking of " conundrums ," here's anot her letter that has
us stumped :

+ -1+
Dea r Rap :
In Trenton , N. J ., we have the a nswer: "Psychede li c
contraception ~ "

No m or e worr y aOOut unwanted pregnancy.

It 's the great est thing since Adam and Eve. Please tell your
readers. - IT'S ALL IN THE KNOWI NG
DEAR IAIK :
Agreed, one way to avoid pregnancy is "a ll in the no-ing ,"
but what in blue blazes is "psychedeli c contraception.,., HELEN (Who feels very UNkn owin g today. )
NOTE FROM Sl "-;;: We must be a little slow out here on
the West Coast. I ne.·er heard of psyc hedelic contrace ption:
cauld it mean you gel so stoned nothing ha ppens except your

imagination ?
... Which isn 't on our recomm ended list 1 - SUE

+++
Rap :
I would like to have the book I 've writt en published. Morn
says she won't pay a publishing compa ny, a nd I only ha ve $20
which would cover about twc pages of the cost . I'm too yo ung
to work . What should I do ' - BROKE AUTHORESS, 12
Authoress :
Maybe you should settle for typing your book, with lour or
five carbons. But if you must pay for the typing, even that will
cost you more than $20. Since you already ha ve the or iginal,
there are better ways to spend your mon ey : like on more paper
so that you can do more prac tice writing, and eventually
produce a hook that will sell .
Sorry .. . - SUE
Authoress :
I don't believe in giving up without a struggle . Nor do I
believe in paying a "puff" publisher (one who charges the
writer ).
!J your book is good enough, a publisher will pay YOU, so
type it up and send it on. (You can get names and addresses at
your local library.) Be sure to enclose return postage - and
keep a carbon copy in case your original is lost. - HELEN

Mr. and Mrs. Donald E. Hartley

Couple celebrates
25th anniversary
NE W Hi\ VEN - A surprise
party was h~ld a l th e
Ameri L'an Legion Hall her e
t\ug . 16 for Mr . and Mrs.
Donald E . Hartley of New
Hav en in observ an ce of their
twe nty-fifth wed di ng a nmversar y.
They wer e marri ed Aug . 16,
1950 at the First Baptist
Churc h of El ea nor, W. Va. by
the Rev. Mickey Wick.
Mr . a nd Mrs. Da vi d
Bus kirk , Middl epor t. served
as hos t :fd hostess. Robert
Coc kre ll , Mrs. Hartley's
br ot he r, intr odu ced t he
honore d couple and th ey
received their guests. Mr s.
Hart!E:y was then prese nted a

corsage by Steve Denney of
Newport News. Va.

Mr . a nd Mrs. Hart ley,
assisted by th eir daug hter
Sherry a nd son , Dana, opened
m any g if~s from fri ends a nd

relat ives. James Jon es and
Gr ayson Will iamson se rv ed
as toas tmaster s. Mi ss Connie

Gilland, Mr s. Debbie Panaro
an d Miss Nancy Buskirk
se r ve d ca ke an d punc h.
Co nn ie a nd De bbi e a lso
registered guests.
Those a ttendin g were Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Dodd , Mr.
and Mrs . AI Evan s, Mrs.
Vera Thomp son , Mr. and
Mrs. Don Gilbert , Mr . and
Mrs. Dwight Sa yre, Eldon
Roush, Mr . and Mrs. Robert
Redmond , Mr. and Mrs.
Dan iel Workm an , J ohn
Ferg uson , Mr . an d Mrs. Bob
Dugan , Billie Jun e Hayes,
and Mr. and Mrs . Grayson
Willi a m so n, all of New
Haven; Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Davis Jr ., Mr. and Mrs.
Robe r t Roush and Miss

man Buskir k Jr. and Nancy,
M i dd le p o rt ;
M a rtin
Br oder ic k, Po me r oy; Mr .
and Mrs. Robert Cockrell and
Mr . and Mrs. Robert Coc krell
II . Par kersburg; Mr . and
Mrs . J am es J ones and Judy ,
Mr. and Mrs. Alden Sheets,
Ton ia and Am y, Mr. and Mrs.

Steve Ha rtley and Joe Muck,
Nitr o; Dy mple Cockrell ,
Eleano r ;
Mrs.
Debbie
Pana ro, Dunbar ; Mr. and
Mr s .
J a mes
Painte r ,
Charleston; Mr . and Mrs .
Wilbert Hartl ey and Mr. and
Mrs. Da le Ha rri son and
Joetta, Red House; Steve
De nney, Newport New s, Va . ;
Mr . and Mrs. Doug Hartley,
St. Alba ns; Mr . and Mrs.
Edsel Ha rtley, Winfield; Mr .
ard Mrs. James Jones II,
Kenova; Mr . and Mrs. Paul

William son , Barboursville ;
Mr . and Mrs . Rich Hawley,
Columbus, and Mrs. Ruby
Harmon and Ruth Wolford,
Titusv ille, Fl a.
Sending gifts were Mr . and
Mrs . Che t Campbell, Mr . and
Mr s. J ohn Morgan , Mr . and
Mrs . Jerr y Morgan , Mrs.
Loui se Powell , Mr. and Mrs .
William Powell, Mr . and Mrs.
Steve Hals tead and Mr. and
Mrs . Roy Cooke, local ; Mr.
ar d Mrs. James Hartley,
Ti tusville , Fla . ; Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry Harlley and Tammy,
Red House, W. Va. and Mr .
an d Mrs. Bill Wolford 1 of
Rockledge, Fl a.

Potluck picnic
held at park

CARNIVAL

by Dick T ul'ner

hom e.

Enjoying the evening were
Robe r ta Youn g , E velyn
Ste wa rt , Ma thilda Noble
Laura J ohnson, Nancy Va~
Meter, Clar a Willi a ms
Li lli a n
Rous h ,
Hel e~
Willi a m s, Hazel Smith
Dorot hy Queen , Mr . and Mrs:
Landon Smi th and guest,
Laura Dunbar .

SOCIAL PLANNED
TUPP ERS PLAINS - The
Tupp er s . Pl a in s Boos ter
Association will hold an ice
cr eam social Saturday at the
Plaihs Elementary
ISchool beg inning at 4 p.m .

is n't jumping at the first big
pay check to come his way.
" My cri terion for picking·•
ROY
SCHEIDER:
part, " Scheider says, "has 'Jaws' got to him, too.
alway s been is it something I
would want to see ?·Whe never
I deviate fr om that rule, I get
in trouble.
now , after "Jaws," he 's a big
" I took the part in 'Sheila name.
Levine' because I felt it would
One other thing "Jaws" did
be good for me to do a for him. He loves to swim in
romantic part, even though I the ocean - "but", he sayS,
didn 't think the picture had a "since 'Jaws ' 1 don 't swim
chance to make it. It didn't ; it out so far."
was a turkey . But I don 't
regret making it - nobody
Hollywood's ladies have
else would have taken a long loved to flaunt their
chance on me playing a jewelry in public. It was a
romantic part."
status thing, of course, and
But, with "Jaws", it was a they reveled in having the
different story . He always biggest and gaudiest of
felt it was destined to be a baubles.
success , although he says he
But wtih the crime rate
had no idea it would turn out soaring, the flaunting Is seen
to be as big as it has.
less and less these days.
He says it was a tough film Matthew Mazer, of the
to make - "seven grueling Joseph . Mazer
fashion ·
months".
jewelry firm says that many
"I used to be in the water," women today are buying
he
says,
" with
that fashion jewelry - which used
mechanical shark knocking to be called costume jewelry
me off the mast and wonder - and wearing that instead.
what I was doing there. The
Mazer ~s that Hollywood
first few months you don't is today a bigger influence on
mind it so much , but then it the accessory trade than is
begins ge tting to you.
Paris.
" And , when we had
" If Cher wears a certain
finished shooting it, for a few kind of jewelry on her show,"
months I couldn't get back on Mazer says, "the next day
my fee t. I was restless, I hundreds of women are in the
didn 't feel well . It was pretty stores trying
to find
bad ."
something just like it."
Scheider is fr om New
But it is in the area of stars
Jersey and started out with wearing relatively inexthe dream of becoming a pensive jewelry that the
lawyer. He was a pre-law trend is most clearly seen.
student at Franklin and Instead of diamonds, they
Marshall College . But he wear fashion jewelry. Annbegan doing college plays and Margret has buckets of
soon realized that he was diamonds, but at the Cannes
enjoying the plays more than film festival she wore a $200
h,\s pre-law studies.
Mazer necklace. She wasn't
So he switched . It took him about to risk her diamonds in
a long time to make it. but the mob scene .

PEMBROKE, Mass. - The
90th birthday of Mrs. Lena
Huber, formerly of Pomeroy,
was celebrated with a party
hosted by her granddaughter
and husband, Mr. and Mrs. J .
L. Coiak, on their lawn in
Pembroke, Mass .
The lawn area was
decorated with balloons ,
flowers and a sign which read
"Happy Birthday." A buffet
supper was enjoyed by Mrs.
Huber and four generations
of her family .

and Mrs. Don Ball and Mr.
and Mrs. Arnold Roush,
Letart; Mr. and Mr s. Sher-

MASON , W. Va. - Tuesday
evenin g
th e
Mason
Homemaker Club of Mason
had a potluck pic nic at the
Mason City Park preceded by
a shor t business meeting.
Mrs. Dorothy Queen opened
the m eetin ~ by r eading the
Cl ub Pledge ; Nancy Van
Meter had devotions, taking
the sc rip t ure from 11
Timoth y ; Hazel Smith gave
th e treasur er's repor t, and
Lau r a John so n r ead the
minutes of the July workshop
he ld at Mrs. Landon Smith's

the town sheriff , in " Jaws " )

90th birthday observed

Connie Gilland, Mason; Mr.

MARRIED SIX YEARS - Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Luadermllt, ahove, celebrated their sixth wedding an"!versary Saturday with a party hosted by Virginia Riffle,
Sister of Mrs. Laudermilt . Relatives and friends of the
couple attended. Gifts were presented to the couple a nd
the door prize was awarded to Mr . a nd Mrs. James Riffle.

Miss Rebecca Ann WUl and
Dan Cotterill, whose wedding
will be Aug. 29, were honored
recently at the Enterprise
United Methodist Church
with a bridal shower.
The church choir of which
Miss Will is a member hosted
the shower . Decorations
featured yellow, pink and
blue streamers with white
wedding bell accents . The
refreshment table was
covered with a yellow lace
cloth and centered with a
large white cake decorated
with wedding bells and yellow
and pink flowers . Served with

Present

were

her

'

and Jennifer Kauffman, and
Melanie Marie Duffy.
Numerous cards and letters were received from
Pomeroy residents as weU as
gifts from the relatives attending \he celebration .
On the sixth of September,
Mrs. Duffy will accompany
Mrs. Huber to Pomeroy for a
week 's visit at the GlobOkar
home .

ECE pupils
to register

daughters, Ruth Kauffman,
Katherine Duffy and her
ANDY STAm'Rri
husband, John, Halifax,
POINT PLEASANT - All
Mass.; Mrs. Alice Globokar Early Childhood students
and her husband , Phillip, must register at the ECE
Pomeroy; grandchildren , center nearest their homes on
Mrs. Sally Erwin, Pomeroy; Tuesday morning, September
Gene Kauffman and his wife, 2. Parents will furnish their
Janice, Edward, Richard and own transportation to the
Paula Kauffman, Robert school for this registration . It
Duffy, and Jed Duffy and his is not necessary that the child
Andrew Charles Stafford, wife, Georgia .
accompany the parent for
son of Mr . a nd Mrs . Marvin
registration.
Also pr~seni were ~lve
Stafford, celebrated his
~··•••-granddaughters , Polly
All stude~ts registering for
second birthday recently with
and Kristina Cozak, Heather ECE classes must have
a pa rty at the Syracuse Park.
immunizations for DPT
Games were played with
polio, rubella, and rubeol~
prizes going to Shawn and
and present record card to
Dee Dee Fields and Bobby
the center. A birth certificate
Ritchie who also won the door
. HERE FOR VISIT
for the child will also be
prize . Favors and candy were
Mrs. Dale K. Roush and required.
presented to all those at- · daughter, K"athy, Apple
. Children who have birth
tending .
Creek, were weekend guests · dates between November 1
A ~'Snoopy and his Dog- of her parents, Mr . and Mrs.
1969 and October 31, 1970 ar~
house'' theme was carried B. F. Turner, Middleport.
eligible to register for ECE
out. The cake , inscribed
classes.
" Ha ppy Brithday, Andy, 2,"
was served with ice cream
and Kool-Aid.
Attending besides those
named were the honored
g ue s t 's g randmother, his
aunts, Chris and Jean
Ha rrah,
a
great-aunt,
Marlene Fields, Darlene and
She rry
Ritchie , Be.cky
Broderick, . beron Stafford
'
, and Mrs. Marvin Stafford
who gave the party.
s.il)ding giU.s were Mary
.· '
and Kinuny Hamm. A cake
Hrs.:
lO:OOA.M. nlll:OO ·P:M. Sun.-TIIur.
was presented to Andrew
1 10:00 A.M. Tll12:00 P.M. Fri. &amp; S.t.
e~rlier in the week by Mr .'
.
'
992-2556
and Mrs . Harrah, grandW.MAIN
POMEROY. a. )
parents .

Birthday
celebrated

Now Featuring

FRESH PEAat SUNDAES::·

.

AND MILK SHAKES

.....-------------Adolph's,·Dairy .ValleY

·--~~----------

'

.

'

'

Children
honored

the cake were frui t punch,
mints and nuts.
Games were played with
prizes going to Joyce Davis,
Mrs. Martha Husted, Darlene
Casto and Beverly Will who
also won the door prize .
Others attending were Mrs.
Delores Will , Brenda and
Brian, Mrs. Carol Ohlinger,
Ann and Laura, Mrs. Goldie
Dill, Mrs. Nan cy Walker ,
Mrs . Agnes Dixon , Mrs .
Gladys Brothers, Emma Lou
Davis, Candy Brothers ,
Karen Sloan , Mrs. Karyn
Davis, Mrs . Susie Pullins,
Mrs . Carla Carter, Kathy and
Vicky , Mrs. Sara Dill , Patty
Edwards, Mrs. Kay Logan ,
Mrs. Beatrice Buck , Mrs .
Jennie Warth, Mrs. Marjorie
Bowen , Miss Freda Ueving,
Mrs. Beulah Utterback, Mrs .
Cordelia Bentz, Mrs . Dorothy
Smith and Mrs. Frankie
Hunnel.
Sending gifts were Myrtle
and Dorothy Long , Mrs.
Mary Bowen, Mrs. Addie
Brown, Mrs. Agnes Week,
Mrs . Ruby Frick, Mrs .'
Mildred Mitch, · Mrs . Leona
King, Mrs. Mabel Kesterson ,
Linda Pullins, Mrs. Rachel
Jennings , Mrs . Hariett
Spencer and Mrs . Mabel
Moore .

Three childre n
were
dedicated during the morning
worship service at the Laurel
Cliff Free Methodist Church
Sunday morning.
Dedicated were Brian
Keith, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Brian Friend, and Randy and
Sean Hawley, children of Mr .
and Mrs. Randall . Hawley.
Rel~tives attending included Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Friend, Mrs. Patty Johnson, r--~------=;
Mrs. Edna Faulk and the maternal
greatgrandmother of Brian Keith
Friend, and Mrs . William
Sheridan and Mrs . Norman
Hawley, grandmothers of
Randy and Sean Hawley .

\'o~

Services held

A service of singing,
testimonies and readings was
held Sunday night at the
Do your
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
come in bunches? ·
Church.
Mrs. Kathy Pullins was at Never fear.
the piano for selections by the
You can set them·
choir composed of Jane right in a hurry. By
Jacobs, Diana Lewis, Jo Ann
Clark, Jim and Donna making sure.you're
Gilmore, Shirley and Belinda covered through an
Friend, Sharon Wright, Uoyd
Wright, Clifford Kline, Steve
agerit.
Eblin and the Rev. Floyd
We're experts on
Shook.
Mrs. Clark and Betty Will Itrotublle. And we're
had a duet, Mrs. Bertha !available
Parker gave readings, and
Steve and Becky Eblin and l~rhtlt.o. giveyoupi'oMrs. Pullins sang. Readings 1fes~sionllll service and
and prayer were given by lhe1p v&lt;ru
your
Doris Shook; Mrs. Clark had
a solo, the Rev. Mrs. Shook
joined Belinda Friend and
Diane Lewis for special
music, and Miss Lewis and
Jane Jacobs had a duet.

troubles

•

••
•

•

••
•

ROUND BONE
SUPERMARKET

SHOULDER
ROAST

786 NORTH 2ND AV.E., MIDDLEPORT,O.
OPEN MON.-SAT. 9 A.M. T09 P. M.
•
.•

QUANTIT~ES-RIGHTS RESERVED

W&amp; WILL BE CLOSED SUNDAY
\,

AND MONDAY IN OBSERVA.NCE
OF LABOR DAY.

CHUCK
ROAST

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

100%

PURE
LEAN

GROUND

BEEF
LB.
You'll go for our
superior spedalsf

TOP QUALITY
TOP VALUE

EXTRA LEAN

STEW BE.E.F
CHUCK
CUBES
STEAK
LB.

En loy Every Ounce

DAIRY
BROUGHTON'S
•

~~:;:E~~.... .. _
. . . . ~~-. 4 9 e
~GAL 69~

ICE MILK
All FLAVORS
(10' OFF)

llteuter-8rogan
INSURANCE.

•

"9t2...Silt

BAI&lt;ERV
GATEWAY BRAND

22 oz.

~-BOTTLE

......1'9y

. can.ntJbody

if we can't -

:.-

you,

PAR KAY
MARGARINE

THE
INSURANCE
STORE.

HAMBURGER and
HOTDOG BUNS

1 lb.
pkg.

. GATEWAY

LOAVES

BAR B QUE SAUCE

Pre-

BOrnE

WYLER'S
LEMONADE

REGULAR, CHICKEN
OR LIVER
6-16 .OZ. CANS

HEINZ KETCHUP

COLOR TV's

39 ~

'

Get ready

.with ADMIRALJ

BAKER ,FURNITURE ,
'

, OHIO

.'

MAXWELL HOUSE
INSTANT COFFEE
· 10 OZ. JAR

NESTEA INSTANT TEA

$} ?9
3

With
Coupon

OZ. JAR

With ;
Coupon

ANY

noc om

PKGS.

•

•

•

HEINZ 57
·STEAK SAUCE

0

•

•

•

•

•

HEINZ .SALAD, TARRAGPN,
OR WINE VINEGAR 12 oz. SIZE

99~

FREE

With Purchase of
2 HEADS OF LETTUCE

Expires 8 -30-7)
GATEWAY SUPERMARKET
o

49 pz. BOX
COUPU N

FOR

2

•

•

'

•

•

o
•

o
•

o
•

o
0

o
..

o
•

0

0

I

•

... . . . . . . . .
I

~UPON

.
10'()Z. JAR

I

0

0

0

I

0

0

J

KEEBLER COCONUT

69~

GATEWAY SUPERMARKET

\

·'

32 OZ. BOffiES

3 oz.

With Coupon
Expires 8-30-75

GATEWAYS~PERMARKET

.

r

99~

Expires 8-30-75

,,
Expires 8-30-75
riATEWAY SL'" ERMA RI(F T .

DEBBIE PINK DETERGENT
DEBBIE LEMON DETERGENT
DEBBIE FABRIC SOFTENER

CHEER
DETERGENT

'

rntJPn N

L_ COUPON-~

69~

5-

2-28 OZ. CANS

14 OZ. BOTTI,E

MIX AND MATCH

JAR

PORK 'N BEANS

16 OZ. JAR

89~

oz.

VAN CAMP

TEEN QUEEN
MUSTARD

ON 1975

18

CHUNK OR
CREAMY

VETS DOG FOOD

SALE

g~

SKIPPY PEANUT
BUrrER

18 oz.

2-200 CNT. BOXES

WHITE OR
ASSORTED

6

8 PAK

2-20 oz.

BREAD

OPEN PIT
ORIGINAL
ONION
HICKORY SMOKED

for this· year's
World Series

B

English Roast
Chuck Roast

with

lf1 S\ICIIIION

Y. ou

Boneless ·

day and

PLAN HMECOMING
LONG
BOTTOM
Homecoming
at
Hazel
Community Church off SR
124, between Long Bottom
and Portland, Sunday with
dinner to be served at noon.
The Rev. George Fisher will
be the speaker and Dan
Hayman and the Country
Hyrnntirners will provide
entertainment in the afternoon.

LB.

BAG
Exp~res 8-30-75

With
Coupon

I

GATEWAY

.,

PERMARKET

�'

.

l1 ",

•
I'

I·
I

'
l'
TT'
'T'h
s'
•
l
Cl
.fi
d
or .r ast . ·e su ts use .. _._ e eatzne . assz _e s
Sales
Sales
f·~--B
~
. u_s_in
___e__:s_
_ s___S
~
erVI
._c.__:.:.:.e=s
. - ____:._.:_,.,.1

,.4 8- The_Daily Sentinel, Middlepor!:Pomeroy, o., Tuesdav. Au~ . 26, 1975

~: ~1t!11M®llirn®tk.J "&gt;tuoi'J .....J ,_. 'v
••

~::c::.~~·~~h~:.-J'"'::u·.~~·~

.~.",:;~

r

, . form four ordinary words.

YUPPP

I I

ALFACI

0

[J
IUMPING ~

I I

AN EAR'LIE.R FOR:H
1

OF ' POP.' '1

~· ow arrange the circled letters
to form the surprise answer, as

J

su rrested by the obo,·e cartoon.

I.___Prill
_· _
llle....:,
SURPI
__ISI
= ANSW
= Ift::..:::
he::.:..
re __jl 'T X I

I I I

rJ

II

IAn11wrr• tomorrowt

Yr•lerd•r'•

I

J umiJI~• PATCH
AIIII'IOPr .

na~h

lo

SHYLY

UNLESS

111(/1..1 · fl ( f/f/1/(' {

QUEASY

fmfl. - HYPHEN

PUBL IC NOTICE
TO All credrtors of Cla u de L
Smith Esra re

You

writ

take no t i ce that

Date Sm rth has fried an ap
plication in the Probat e Court

of

Mergs

Co u nty,

Ohio,

lost

to

retreve the esta te of Claude L
Sm rlh , n ow deceased , tram
adm rn rs tr at ro n , a nd that such
application will be heard o n
the 9th day of September , 197 5,
at 10 00 O'Clock A .M

Dale E Sm 1lh
( 8) 26 (9 ) 2. 9, Jl c

WANT A D )
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
Day
Before Pub
'
p M
loc at,on
Monday D eadl1nt:' 9 a m
Ca n ce llal1on - Corrections
Wil l be accepted until 9 am
for Day of Publication
REGULATIONS
The P u bl 1sher reserves the
r1ghl to edil o r r e 1ec l any ad'
deemed
ob1ect,ona1
The
publiSher
will
not
be
r es p on s1ble tor mo r e than one
1ncorrect m sert ton
RATES
For Want Ad Serv1ce
S ce nl s per Word o ne 1n sertton
M1n1mum Cha rge $1 00
1·1 ce nts per word th r ee
con se cut1v e m se rtt on s
?6 cen l s per word SIX con
sec ut ,ve 1n Se rtton~
25 P er Ce nt D tsc oun t on pa1d
&lt;~d s and ads pa1d w1lh1n 10
day s
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; Obituary
S2 00 fo r 50 word m1n 1mum
Ea c h addtt 10nal word Jc
BLIND ADS
A ddttto na l 25&lt;: Charge per
Adve r1 1se ment
OFFICE HOURS
8 30 am to 5 00 p m Dndy
B 30 am
10 12 00 Noor
Sal urday

,.

Auto

1 SIGNS

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

OF
QUALITY

FREE ESTIMATES

1971 MATADOR

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

$1495

4 door , loca l ca r. atr condittoned ,

fu ll equipment

1970 CHEV . CAMARD

S2095

350 V 8 a utom a t ic trans , power steering and brakes,
dark green fm1 sh, vtny l roof, sadd l e bucket seats.
conso le , radto. l ike new w -w ttres.

Nathan B 1ggs
Radiator Spectaltst

51295

Ohio

F'h . 992 -2174

4 10 1 mo

1968
BARRACUD~
p s
a ul omatic Phone ~49 2220
a 26 6tc

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

1969 CHEVROLET I pala , 2
dr
custom coup~.
low
m1leage S85 0 Pho~ e 9B5
42·15 . Chester
8 6 Stc
197.1 5..1-L.VER Capn for ale
Call 667 6185
8 '} 61p

ON THUR SDAY, August 28 al
2 p m the ho usehold goods
of Altce Dav1s wt!l be for
sale at th e home ol Adotc
Pul l1 ns on Cou nty Rd 82.
Te~~:as Communi t y, ' '4 m tle
east o r Mt H ermon Chu rch
8 26 2tc

W IL L
do roo f
pamttng,
Shtngltng . r emo de l tnt ertor ,
etc Cal l 949 591 3
8 70 61c
.:..A.RPENTRY- .
llo o rtng ,
ce tlmg and pan etm g Phone
QQ ?

?7 59

OaOySIIt tng tn my
horne. 5 days per week
Mond a y through Fr 1day.
an y age 11m1t Phone 949
3405. Ractne, Oh10
8 26 6tc

WILL

t.lO

All Sizes on hand , prices
start at $324. 69 ,
- l Wood Burmng Stove
1n

for $15 .00 discount .

Pets For Sale
TO GIVE awa\1 7 medtum
sized dogs , S!)( months old , J
females , 4 males One black
and wh1te , Schnauzer type ,
espectally
appea l 1ng .
Deperately need homes
Contact
Meigs
County
Humane Soc1ety , Phone 992 5427 or 949 49 16. 949 4917 or
992 5906
a-25 Jtc
1\KC R eg P e ktngese pupp1es
sn Ph one P t P l easant , 675
50]0
B 19 17tc

Phone 992 -'2181

WHEA T pennies 85c - ro t t:
St i ver ce rllf1cates . S t 25
each, S? btll s, $J JO eac h
Buffa l o nickels , $6 roll ,
Stiver dollars, $4 40 each,
Ltberty n1cke l s , $ 11 roll. Cal l
R oger Wamsley , Phone 741

365 1
8 15 1?lc

190 A RROW Camper, pho ne
99? 54 6B
8 15 26tp
LET us serv1ce your

Volks

Zanesville. The rnnnersnn
wagen
re as onable rates
Middlepo rt Pennzotl N or th
were Dee Ann Grooms,
Second Slr eet. Midd l eport
Adams County; Tammy ROOM A N- D- -BoARD Phone 99? 997 3
'
F OUR
AKC
Reg 1s tered
Pr1vate a 1r condllion .: d
Cocker
Spanie
l
pupp
es
8
19
16tc
1
Walters, Fayette County ;
room, ph one, Tv , all
Wormed and shots Readv to
- --- -· --mea l s, laundry plus many
Holly Stefanyk , Ashland
go $75 Phone 949 4113
WILL babysi t 1n my home
MODERN Walnut stereo
extras Write M r s M
J
Phone 997 7647
8~2 Me
County; and Kathryn Hronec,
radto co n sole, am f m radio ,
Mtl. l er, Box 105, Pomeroy
8 14 7t c
4 speed ch anger
Bala n ce
Oh10
Guernsey County.
--- --AKC GERMA N Shepherd
$101 72 or terms Ca ll 99 2
8 1 261p ,.
pupp tes, good b lood lin es,
The 62 awards were given
3965
- ----- ---REMODEL IN G ,
Plumbi n g,
gen tle disposition , wormed
8 12 lfc
Room and Board
heat1ng and all types of
out to youth and four to
and ready to go Phone 992
ROOM AND BOA RD for
genera I
rep a tr
Work
5623
alwnni at a 4-H Club breakseniO r c itizens Low tncome
guar ant eed
20 yea r s ex'
a 24 6tc 19 14 70 FT GOOSENECK
l
tvtng,
very
n1
ce
Phone
992
pertence
Phone
992
2409
fast in the areas of leaders lock tra tl er Wtth 19 14 Ch evy
3509
dual w heel. 1 ton Ptckup
STUD
Se
rv
1ce
,
AKC
ship , c i t i zen ship ,
8 24 261c -~----- - ~- -- __ _:_~t~~·
Can be bought l oge t her or
Reg ts l ered while poodle
achievement and projects.
separa t e Call 74'1 3767
Fo r appo1ntment , call 99 ?
Homes
8 10 lfc
3904
The four alumni were
8 11 tfc
recognized for their con· PORC H sale , Aug 28 30 , 9 30 1965 HI LLCREST , 10 x 50,
CA NNIN G p eaches ~~w- thr u
$2.495
For
more
1n
Se ptemb er 10 U S No 1
tributlons to 4-H as a result of
a m 6 JO p m
Clothing,
format 10n call 949 ·52 61
grade yellow F ree stone Fo r
men
's,
women's,
so
m
e
large
their affiliation with the 4H
8 26 6t c
cann1ng or freez1ng
$6 49
size men 's c l othing m1sc.
bushel . $J 49 1 , bushe l. S1 99
program.
i'lrllcles
378 Second St ,
ripened
Albe rton
peck
PLEASE
BRING
lOx 50 TRAILER . 3 br Wtlh 15' TREE
Pomeroy. Oh1o
Kathy Baker of St. Paris
cannmg peaches. n ow at t he
YOUR
OWN
CON
porch
localed
1n
Hartford
,
8 24 Stc
Mason p eac h Orc ha rd. S6
TA IN ERS Peac h es a r e o ur
W Va , 500 f ee t from rtver ,
won the Ohio State Fair
and S7 bu Please brmg own
specialty
Two conven1en 1
50l&lt;100 l ot Phone (3041892
Junior Division Swine Show YARD SALE, 592 Lau r el St,
con tamers 9 a m to 6 p m
loca t ions Bob's Markel,
3247
1Vi1ddleport
C l othi ng, odd
a 24 3tc
Mason . W Va . Phon e (304 )
when she displayed her
8 21 -6tc
S. 1zes.
bedspreads
and
77 3 57?1 '
and
M 1dway
b l a n~ ers 10 am . 1111 6 p m
January gilt in the Ladrace
TRAVEL tra rl er. Concord, 2J
Ma rk el
Pom eroy, Oh1o
We dn esday through F r1day
(614) 99 ? '158?
ft
$1,900
Co l lege Rd .,
breeding gilt division. The
B 26 21c
Rent
Sy r acuse, Ohi o Phone 992
____ - ~ ~ 37 tc
reserve champion was a
2797
:lAND 4 ROOM furniShed and
8
24
-31c
March gilt showed by Teresa Wanted To Buy
unfur ntshed
apartments
Phone 992 5434
Dawn of West Milton. The
THREE
H olze r
Medical Real Estate
B UY . SEL L, or trade any u S
4 12 tfc
Schoo l nu r s1ng unttorms ,
spotted breeding gilt division
CO inS or cur rency Wtll pay
size 9, l ike new S30 A l so. 1 5 ROOM house , 8 acr es,
S? 60 for S1 fac e, 1964 and
wilmer was Dennis Jenkins of
BR
Tra
ile
r
,
turntshed
,
a2
pa1r nur smg sh oes, size a,
3
already f1nance d
Goes
Old er d1mes , quarters , and
$8 One deep well pump, new
Elm Sr , M 1dd l epor L Ohio
Urbana, and the reserve
furnished $6,500 Phone 985
halv es
Call Rutland 74?
Inquire between 9 a m and
motor, $45 Phone 992 -2280
429Q
I
365 1, Roger Wams ley
champion was shown by Tom
6 p m at th e Village Gun
a
24
3tc
8 15 1?tc
___ _ _
8 22 -Stc
Shop Phone 992 5177 afte r 6
Groves of Shelby.
___ !__ __ _ p
m
InQ u ir e ar
225
J TON cen t ral air condil 1oner
Ohio Fair's Junior Division PLAYER p1ano , .Aeed no t be in
Broadway
unit. Comfo r taire, 36,00 0 HOUSE at 128 Laur e l St,
, working condition A l so ,
Pomeroy
Fo r f u r th er in
8 T U 's, P h o ne 247 -]941
B 21 6tc
FFA
Grain-Hay
and
wanted p1ano rolls. Phone
formal ton . cal l 992 3a68
8 ·24 -6tc
742 5625
Vegetable Show was held
a 24 lllp
26 6tc- TWO F urn i shed a pt s
Kay
REGISTERED
Polled - -- - - - - - -- - Monday, with the hay grand --- - ~-------8 -Cecil, 87 Sou th Second Ave,
Hereford bulL larg e, gen tl e, 2 STORY fram e hou se, flood
championship going to North- .OLD f urniture , ice boxes
location on corne r lol , 8
M i ddl epor t , Oh10
Phone
4 yrs old Phone ( ]04) 773 bra ss beds. or com plef~
r ms , garage, w 2 baths , gas
992 5262 .
5405 .
western Clark FFA chapter
ho useho lds
Wr1te M
o.
heat 1n M iddleport. Rodney
8 21 !f c
8 24 Jtc
at Northwestern High School,
M1ller, Rt. .4, Pomeroy
Down tn g,
Real
Estate
Ohio Cal! 992 -7760
Brok er
Call 992 J731 for
Clark County.
STOKERMA TIC coa l sto'.'e ,
BEDROOM
furn1shed
appo
in
tme
n
t
10 7 7
refrigerator , free long ha 1r
mobde home N o pets Call
The potato championship ' ----- --.----- - --8 24 -3tc
ktl te ns P hon e 742 4406 ,
992 7479
was won by Ed Scott of '
a 24 5tp - - - - - - - - - - - - - a 22 t f c
Help Wanted
- - - - - -- - - ---;
Federal Hocking High School
WARM
Morning
H eater. 1
auger
TRAILER space for r ent
FFA chapter, Stewart, EXPERIENCED
E lectric sewing mac h1ne ,
REAL ESTATE
operators, hydrau l ic and
P ho n e A lb er t H ill. 949 2261.
10 ton tack Phone 843 2645
Athens County, in a field of 43
FOR SALE
ca rr 1age operators n eeded ,
a 26 7t p
afler 6 p m
un 10n pay Virg1nia Auger ---- ---------Now
under
con stru ct ion , 3
entries.
8 24 Jt p
Cor p Phone 992 -5367
2 BEDROOM trailer , extra
bedroom,
r
ec.
room, bath &amp;
The tomato contest drew 47
n 1ce Phone 992 -3324 .
8 24 -:Jtc
1/ 2, double garage, bi-l eve l
HUNTIN G L1cense. Night
8 26 -tfc
competitors with Mark Miller
crawlers,
mea l worms
home sit ua ted on a n acre of
SOM EONE to l1 ve m with
TACKLE,
guns,
ammo:
of Delaware Hayes High
ground
wtth all util ities. on
elderly couple, Coo l v ill e, PRIVATE mee11ng room tor
bows , arrows. cam p1ng
OhtO, Good salary Phone
the
Wild
Wood Estates.
School wilming.
any organ 1zation , ph o ne 992
eQu ip . CB's and accessory
667 3833 or Lancaster , 653
]975
- \
located on flalwoods road ,
lnd
1
an
Joe's,
JOB
Page
St
..
2
In the wheat displays, the
4578
.-3 11 -tt c
be t ween Route 7, and 33.
st r eets past Middleport
8 24 Jtc
champion FFA exhibitor was
Swtm m m g Pool
Will be r eady to sell tn 6
John Mattinson of North- ,
LASALLE HOTE L , MI D
8 \3 261p
wks , by ow ner.
DLEPORT , OHIO ROOMS
- - ------- -----George Hobstetter
eastern Clark High School,
$5 UP SPECI AL RATES CANN I NG tomatoes , green
Owner
IN THE MATTER OF THE
Springfield.
BY WEEK OR MONTH
and red p eppers Cle la nd
ADOP T I O N
OF
TV, AC
Phone 985-4186
'Farms
,
Geraldine
Cle
l
and
The oats exhibit was won
CHRISTOPHER MATTHEW
B-26 26tc
Rac ine Phone 949 41 2 1
McGRA TH
by Paul Messenger of River
-----------8 19 tfc
Valley High School FFA,
Charles Milton McGrath, c 0 NEW LY furn is hed 2 bedrm . STEREO -RA DI O,
am - fm,
apt, wall -to -wall ca rp e tin g,
Boy l e Volkswagen , Lake C it y,
Marion County. The chamconsole, 4 speed c hanger
a
c
,
no
pets
or
Childr
en
Call
Flor tda. wtll ta k e n ot 1ce tha t a
Balance $101.86 or terms
pions soybean exhibitor was
949 37BJ
p eti t 1on has been ftled 1n the
Ca ll 992 -3965
8
24
3tp
Loren
Schwochow
of
Common Pleas Cour t, Probate
8 26 He
D tv ts ton Meigs County , Ohio.
Fremont.
by M 1ckey R Hutton, 10 adop t TRAILER for renl , ' 4 mtle off SILVER Queen sweet corn,
Matthew
Diana Clouser of Nova , Christopher
Raymond Fu r bee, 843 -2437
Rt 143 on Kingsb ur y Rd
McGralh stat ing that you have
E.
Either f urn1shed or un
Rt
124 , 6 m rles east of
Ashland County, took the two
Wtllfu Hy failed and neglec ted
Racine , Ohio
furntshed
Phone 74? J l 'ZJ
MAIN
top prizes out of 51 entries in for m o r e !han the past two
8 26 3tc
B 20 12tc
y ears 10 prov tde the necessary
- ---------P_OME
,_0
the Ohio State Fair Junior suppor t for sai d c hil d , that
1974 STARCRAF T f old down
LAURELAND
APARTMENT
,
sa1
d
petition
for
adoption
wilt
Division wool judging. She
cam p er w i th awni ng , sleeps
5 MILES OUT ON RT. 143
6th and George Sts, New
be heard on September 70,
8, S1 ,900 Prto ne 992-2514.
showed both the champion
NEW - 2 B. R.. bath.
Haven ,
w
Va
IM
19 15 at 10 00 am
m sa 1d
8 ·26 ·6tc
nice
k itchen ,
full
MEDIATE
OCCUPANCY
and reserve
champion cour 1
Se l ect
your
2 bedr m
basement,
nice
re
c.
R
.
All
CEMENT
M
IXER
Wtf
h
motor
nl!eces. In the three-&lt;!ighths
townh ouse
Beau t i ful new
J B O'Brien
on wheels F'hone 992 -5275.
e lectric, carport, storage, 1
apl
comp lex
Applia n ces
fleece category, Jerry
A llorney for
Car l Arnold
8 26 -Jtc
acre JUST $22,700.
furni shed,
co mp lete ly
Mickey
R
Hut
ton
Wildermuth of Canal Win1
carpeted, Rent S12B and up ONE H ereford steer . Prtone
TUPPERS PLAINS on Rl.
100 Court Streel
in cl ud i ng utilities . Ca ll
chester placed first.
Pomeroy , Oh1o 45769
843 -2353.
7 2112 acres . Hom e has
resident ma nag e r , Sam or
8 26 -Jtc
The 4-H Electric Day had (8) 19, ?6 (9) 7 Jtc
new
steel siding, 2 B.R .•
Bec ky Longanacre , 1 J04
--~---'--- --- -- bath,
dining R ., own water
882 2567
131 entries. The winner of the
CA NNING tomatoes
Pi ck
8- 19l?tc
&amp; city water , garage, lots
your own
Also, melons,
beginning electric project
Andrew Cross, Letar t Fa ll s,
of building si tes. S10,SOO.
NOTICE OF
was Steve Lerbrand, licking
APPOINTMENT
-4 ROOMS and bath apt
rn 1 Ohio . Phone 247 ·2852 .
POMEROY - High on a
Rutland area
Phone 99'1
8-26 -6tc
County . Tim Nicholson,
Ca se No.l 1,5 97
hill.
2 B. R. , balh, nice
5858
.
Estate of LOUISE BRYAN .
Muskimgum County, took
kitcheri,
utility R .. air '
9
PIE
CE
antiq
ue
din1ng
roo
m
D eceased.
7 27 lfc
SUIIe , good COndi tiOn . 30"
con d .• nat . gas heat. Tool
honors in the intermediate
No tice tS he reby g iven that ------ -------.\Aag ic Chef gas range , boy's
Berna rd V . Fultz , of Box 723.
shed, 2 car garage, 1112 acre
group. Steve Henunelgarn,
26" Murray bicycle. Phon e
Pomeroy , Ohio. ha~ been duly ,CO U NTR Y Mob 1l e Home'
very pr iva te . SACRIFICE
Park.
Rt
JJ,
ten
miles
north
'
992
-7107
.
Mercer County, won the appointed Executor of t he
of Pomeroy . L arge lots with ·
8
PRI CE $13.000.
Estate
o
f
Lou
ise
Bryan
.
conc r e t e pat10!; Sid ewalks ' ____ _ _______ _!6~1c
trophy for the third level dec.eased, late ot Middlepo r t,
MIDDLEPORT - Older 2
runners and off st reef; S IGNET wooden c lari net.
project. The trophy wilmer in Me1gs County, Ohto.
story home. Good con
r;arking . Phone 992 7479
U sed 1 year, $125. Phone 99 2Cre
d
itors
are
r
equ1red
to
1
the advanced category for a fi l e the 1r c l a1ms wilh sa 1d
dition. '3 B. R.. 2 baths.
12·31 ttc.
'2924
a 25 3tp utility R ., dining R .,
heat, light, power and con- f i duciary with in four months
Dated this 23rd day of 4 ROOM furnished apar tm ent
1976- C HRYSLER- boal;- ,n
~~orage bldg ., small yard
trois , exhibit was Mance! August 1975
Ca l l 991 3658
s
to
ck
al
1975
prices
A
l
so,
ose to shopping. JU ST
8
1
1
7-tf
c
Samples, Medina Co11nty.
Chrysler fi Shing
boats
$8,300 .
Mannmg D . Webs t er
- -·-..,.. ---- ~--Fred Anderson , Richland
Seve,.al used boat s for sale
FOR GOOD HOMES Judge :-r 'URNISHEO
a pa rtme n t".'
Longf el low Motor s, Raven s PRICED RIGHT SEE
_County, took th~ award for
Co ur t ot Common Pleas ,
adults only in Middleport :
Probate
Division
Phone
992
-387-'t
.
·:
"f,~ofS94W
Va
.
Phone
(3041
OR
CALL
US
TODAY.
the best electronics and
3 25 tfc
PHONE 992-2259
8·26-61&lt;
conununications
exhibit.
(8 ) 26 (9 J 2, 9, Jtc
-----~-- ~ -

YaiiL.Sale

.Mobile

For

For Sale

'

•

-'------------

8-1 75

Misplay upsets sure contract
, - - - - -- - - -- - - , kmg . Now South relaxed He led
NORTII
26 a second diamond to dummy's
• 74
10. East discarded a spade 1
• KQ
West asked. "No d1amonds
• Q 10 8 6 42
partner'" After a repeated
10 8 3
EAST
question East produ ced th e
WEST "'
•
Jaek It won the tnck and si nce
10 9 52
•KQJB6
East had exposed a spade he
• J 7s3
• 10 8 6 2
had to lead it. South we nt one

Tune - Ups - Batteries
Shock Absorbers • Tires

Muffler-Tailpipes . Cooling

Pomeroy

Ph 992-2798

Systems.
We
also
service
Volkswagens and other
foreign cars.
Wtlbur Ward,
Mgr . &amp; Mechanic

8-21 I mo.

7 24- l mo.

CUSTOM
PICTURE
FRAM IN G
ORIGI N AL
SEASCAP£ AND
LA ND
SCA PE I':A INTIN GS . E
JOYCE M I L LER , 997 7680
8 10 24tp

WELD IN G and culli ng se r
v 1ces, Porlable Phone 949 .
4114
8 24 -6tp
OLD 4 rm hous e 1n Sy ra cuse
on t wo 10 x 52 lOIS , $],250
Phone 992 5892
8-26 31c
HAND LETTERE D SIGNS
AND POSTER S
FREE
3 BEDRM house m Sy racuse
ESTIMA T ES CALL M C
by grade school Phone 992
5891
CRAWFORD . 992 -7680 .
8 7 26tp
8 26 -Jic

... s 4

FOR ~PPL-E:S I
WHAT PID
'iOU C:O,

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

RAI?f 'F5M

WATER
Solari um.
TV
room,
3
bedrooms,
1112
baths,
basement and garage Good
res1denttal area
$25,000 00
MODERN - Ni ce 3 bedrooms
wi th st orng -: c loset s, large
bath, basement , garage' with
s h op
and
::V.o~
acre
l ot.

$23.500.00.
26 ACRES - N ea r town , large
barn w tfh concrete floor. and 7
room house , next to sc hool.
Move right 1n. $31,500 00

3 ACRE LOT - Near m1ne
w1th dug well. Will hold 2
and

then

some .

$4500.00.
POMEROY
J
ni ce
bedrooms with c losets, dining ,
mode rn kitchen full basement
"
'
n ear schoo l and
stor es.

s11 ,soo.oo

S BEDROOMS -

older

hom e

Renovated

w tlh

modern

k1tchen and 2 bat hs Large
porch and large corner lot
w ith alley . $34.500.00.
OLD BRICK 10 rooms, 2
baths, natural gas furnace,
basement, city water and
large lot. G!trden space. Only

112,000.00. NEW LI STING
LOOK AT OUR PICTURES,
WE HAVE HERE AT THE
OFFICE. DROP IN OR CALL

992':3325:

.

A Toronlo reader asks.
"' What do you think of the Cana·
d1an Acol bidding system' "
West
North East
Sout b
We haven't space to descnbe
it
m full . but It . is a sound.
Pass
Pa ss
I +
2 NT
freew
heeling system that IS
Pass
3NT Pass
Pass
slightly
mferior to sta ndard
Pass
~
Amencan . Although our Canall-26
Opemng lead - K •
L _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.Jdian friends who use it will be
likely to d1sagree.
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
One interesting feature is the
THE TEN BILLION
suit two-bid . Two clubs is a for·
I?,~E~~~n~~:]~ coFntract
ive d1amonds 1s a better ci ng catch·all. other two-bids
than three notrump. are one·round forces and show
but expe rt Sooth was 1n three s tr ong diStnbutwnal hands
notrump He ducked one spade. without an in.ordinate number
So m et1mes defenders s hift of high cards Thus ·
su1ts, but a second spade wa s •AKQJ543 ¥AQ32 t2
led .
• 2 would be opened two spades
He needed a successful club m Canadian Acol. So would
fm esse to collect 10 tricks, but many slightly weaker hands.
South saw there was a slight extra cha nce . East just . might roo you have a question for
ho ld the Singleton kmg of the Jacobys? Write "Ask the
d1amonds .
Jacohys " car e of th1s
~~ Anyway, So ut .h was n ' t newspape r The most In ·
~
vulne rable and dec1ded 1t was te res ting questtons w1(( be
worthwhile to play the diamond used 1n thiS column and
ace Lo see what would happen w"ters wtll rece1ve copies of
He did and East dropped the JACO BY MODERN)
IF I ~A\IE 10 LI STEN

..

UTrLE ORPHAN ANNIF

LiTTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-SO THEY TOOK
r====:;:-::::~~

SAY · ALL THAT

SlUFF DUCi

WHAT DID
YOU DO
WITH IT?

HO' HO'
I'MOlDI'R
THAH YOU.
OLIVER-

ALLEY OOP

II

ONE MORE -,.!ME, I 'M GOI I.JG TO

STAR'T PACI(I NG A GUN!

S~EP TI C

TAN -KS. c l eaned
Modern San1tat1on 992 395~
or 992 -7349
9 - 18 He

PORTAB LE TO I Lt: I
RENTAL ,
Conslructton
Outdoor
events
Ph one
Ga ll ipo l is.
446 a7a2,
Russell's Plu m bing and
Healing
8 19 lfc

-- - --- -

t::"XCAVATTNG,
ba c khoe ,
dozer and ditcher
Gas,
electr i c and water line
burtal. basements , footers,
septic sys tems and brush
cleaning Will haul fill d irt ,
top soil, sand and grav e l.
limes to ne for drtveways and
roads
Phone Charles R
Hatfield, Backhoe Service,
Rt. L Rutland, Ohio, 742

An' a·

Haw! Haw,
Beck4! Haw.'

"oate~"

at t h' 1\"whoclur
8iJOU 1

6092

7 11 -90tc
- ~:;;---;-::.--::--~----:--:..:- -:..-:- .,..;

READY

MIX CONCR ETE
r 1g h t to your
pro1ec t Fasl and easy F r ee
estimates Phone 992 -3284
Goeg l ein Ready M1l&lt; Co:
Mu•dleport , Oh10 .
6 30 -ttC'
de l 1~ered

D' - TRE-E Trimmrn~~
yea r s experience Insured,
fr ee es t 1mates. Call 992 3057,
Phone (1) .667
Coo lvtll e
3041.

&amp;

HA!r- f'..DTHING

--::---------- --MACHINE

~cvv rN G

Rep61rs, service , all makes'
992 2284 The F,_abric:;. Shop ,
Pomeroy Authorfzed"'Singer
Sa l es and Serv ic e
We
Sharpen SCISSO r S
3 29 tfc

MAINTAINED DURING
CLOSING POMEROY-MASON BRIDGE

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
I Codfish
1 Sensible
6 "Julius
2 Boast
Caesar"'
l Surf's
character
sound
11 Redolence
t General
12 Revoke a
Bradley
grant
5 Wee bit
13 Good
6 West Point
thinkmg!
student
Yesterday's ADiwer
( 4 wds. )
7 Mine en22 What a
34 Talking bird
~ S Pitcher
trance
relief!
(var.)
16 Greek
8 Tranquilizer
Beckll saL.!
23
High
point
35
Vedic fire
9 Passing
cheese
24 Ending for
god
17 Newt
grade
account
36 Word with
18 Little
10 M.D.'s org.
25 Family
dig or bone
14 Troubled
one.
21 Dismay
17 Large deer
member
37 Galley mark
1Brit.
19 RussiBn city 27 Plaything 36 Perched
sp.)
20 British con- 31 Bright
39 Ending for
k!~~ 25 Modernist
servative
33 Enter
client
painter
(2 wds. )
40
--r.~~,....;
26 Muse on
10
(3 wds.)
o.\ -:-c:-···::l..\!!;28 Pup 29 Attractive
30 Beard
on
grain
31 Eyelid
~r- YOU'LL GET

the ·cater"'

IrS A SUPER SUMMER
AT WMPO RAi)IO
Hear David Strang.

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

HSO

EKZQ

KQQ

MOBU

E DZZ

SDBO

WSOTI ZU

SDXLOZQ

TL

a_::~:=:::l S 0 B R . - B V L L D T F

SAIRV HAWKINS JEST
WROTE ME OUT HER OC
FAMBLV RECIPE FER
CUCUMBER
PIE

(SNif·SNIF)
IS THAT

T

12 :Ss-NBC News 3,15.
1:OG-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6,13. Phil Donahue 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1:»-Days of Our Lives 3,4, 1S;; Let's Make a Deal
6,13; As the World Turns 8.10.
2:0G-Sl0,000 Pyramid 6.13; Guiding Light 8.10.
2:»-Baseball 3,4; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,13; Doctors 15;
Edge of Nlg~I'B.10 .
3: ~eneral Hospltal6.13; Another World IS; Match
Game 8,10; Caught In the Act 20.
3:30-{)ne Life to Live 13; Bewitched 6 ; Tattletales
8, 10; Jeanne Wolf with 20.
4:0G-Somerset 15 ; Mickey Mouse Club 6; Musical
Chairs 8; Sesame St. 20,33; Movie "The Bellboy"
10; Dinah 13 .
4:31)-Mod Squad 6; Mickey Mouse Club 8; Bonanza 15.
5:0G-FBI 3; Merv Griffin 4; Lucy Show 8; Mister
Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33.
s ·»-News6; Andy Griffith 8; Hogan's Heroes13; Get
Smart 15; Elec. Co. 20.33.
6:0G-News 3.4.8,10,13,1S; ABC News 6; Sesame St. 20;
You Owe II To Yourself 33 .
6:31)-NBC News 3,4.1S; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6 ,
CBS News 8,10; Jody's Body Shop 33.
7:()()-Truth or Cons. 3,4; Bowling tor Dollars 6; What's
My Line 8; News 10; Movie "'Good Neighbor Sam"·
13; To Be Announced 15; Book Beat 20; The
Romagnolls' Table 33.
7:»-Pollce Surgeon 3; Name That Tune 4; Let's
Make a Deal 6; Wilburn Brothers 8; Evening
Edition with Martin Agronsky 20; Episode Action
33.8:0G-Llttle House on the Prairie 3,4, IS; That's
My Mama 6 ; Tony Orlando &amp; Dawn 8,10; Feeling
Good 20.33.
8:31)-Movle "'The House That Wouldn ' t Ole" 6; Man
Builds. Man Destroys 33; Philadelphia Folk
Festival 20.
9:00-Cannon 8, 10; Masterpiece Theatre 33

9:31)-Jean Shepherd's America 20
9:41)-Movle "' Born Yesterday"' 13 .
lO : ~Petrocelll 3,4,15; Jim Stafford 6; Mannix 8;
Charles Kurall at the Fair 10 . Nws 20; Olga 33.
11 :()()-News 3,4,6,8, IO,IS; ABC News 33.
11 :31)-Johnny Carson 3,4,1S; FBI 6; Movi e "'The Tiger
Makes Out"' 8; Movie "'Anything Goes"' 10; Janak I
33.
12:()()-News 13.
12 :»-Wide World Special 6,13.
1 :00-Tomorrow 3,4

2:0G-News 13 .
change 1n tn ougnt or d 1recl10n
pr o ves fo r tunate for you . You
can ga1n benefit s from your
new 8 !11t ude
·

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 2:i)

(April 20-May 20)

A
happy day for the fam1 ly Yo u
can now solve the problem of
how to get along wtlh a loved
o ne who h as been a b 1t testy
lately

Ideas you have for the home
to d ay are good ones Get out
and shop You 'll fmd exactly
w hat you want

LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) You 'll
hear from a friend today who
has an e)(cellent suggestion on
how to get somethmg you 've
wanted Heed him

L S 01- VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 23)

I BKM0 B p
• Yesterday's Cryptoquote: THAT MAN IS WISEST WHO
REAUZES HIS WISDOM IS WORTHLESS. - SOCRATES
(~ 197 5 Kin1 Features Syndtcate. Inc.)

WHAT I
SMELL,
COOKIN?

8, 10.

CANCER (June 21-July 22)

CRYPTOQUOTES

'

Tomorrow

GEMINI (May 21 -June 20)
-..&amp;.-..1...-.L..-L,:-,.,.J

'

HERMAN GRATE
MASO W.VA.

9: 55-&lt;:huck White Reports 10.
10:«»-Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3. 15; State Fair '7S 4~
Spin-Off 8,10; Mike Douglas 13.
10:31)-Wheel of Fortune 3,15; Price Is Right 8; Bandstand 10.
11 :OG-High Rollers 3.4.1S; One Life to Live 6; Gambit
8,1 0.
11 :»-Hollywood Squares 3.1S; Brady Bunch 13;
Midday 4; Love of Life 8,10.
11 :Ss-Take Kerr 8; Farmtlme 10.
12 :0G-Magnlflcent Marble Machine 3,1S; Showoff513;
Bob Braun's 50-50 Club 4; News 6,8, 10.
12: »-Jackpot J,IS; All My Children 6,13; Search tor

A.-t-+-t--1---f

One l e tter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
u sed for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
h i nts . Each day the code letters are different.

·"'ASON FURNITURE

6 : ~rnlng Report 3; Farmtlme 10.

6:55-News 13
7:oo:-Today3.4.15; A.M. Amerlca6, 13; CBS News8.10.
8:0G-Lucy Show~ ; Capl . Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame Sf
33.
8:»-Big Valley 6; Sesame St. 9.
9:0G-A.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4,15; Murie l Stevens 8;
Schoolles 10; Morning with D J . 13 .
.
9·»-Not For Women Only 3; Dinah 6; Galloping

You can accomplt sh a great
deal today Tackle lhat tough
proJect you ve found dtlftcult to
=-+-+-+--!-~ comp lete m the past

Is

Phone 773-5592 ·

6 .oo-Sunrlse Seminar .4; Summer Semester 10.

6:25-Farm Report 13.
6.»-Five Minutes to Live By 4; News 6 ; Bible Answers 8; School Scene 10; The Story 13.
6·35-Columbus Today 4 .

-+-t-+--f TAURUS

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:

KISSING!

WEDNESDAY , AUGUST27, 1975

Team up w1th so meone who
has the same work objecttves
II could prove ver\1 prof1tab le
for bot h parttes

44 Grease -

WHY, I DO BELIEVE YOUR
MOM REALLY LIKE&amp; CHAT
5HANGHAI FELLA. -mEY'RE

You r e espectally &lt;Htracttve today , and stand ou t among
f nends Th1s happy day cou ld
alter some tdeas you ve had
about anothe r

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0&amp;C.
21) The development of a
lrte n d s hlp wil l he lp
pol 1lt cal ly tn areas both
1mportant and v1tal to yo ur
sonal sat 1sfactt on

19) Hard work . p lus a ltttle help
from Da me Fo r tune br1n gs
long - soug ht success tn your
JOb or ca reer today

AOUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 19)
A tra nsformation 1n behavtor
on lh e part of a loved on~
results 1n a better understan.
dmg and a happ1er day for \IOU .

PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 20)
Keep yo ur self busy at home today Your efforts w 1ll brtng
about a dramat 1c cha nge
welcpmed by the fam1!y

~Your
·
~Birthda{
Aug. 27, 1975

Some eJCtra effort IS all you 'll
need today to get you over the
top tn a ta sk that has been g1v 1ng you f tts Get gomg

An e_)(cellent year ltes ahead for
you Added funds tn your
pocketbook w tll enhance your
prest 1g e and a!so brtng yo4
personal sat1slact1on .

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) A

I NE:WSPAP~:H E NH ;RPR ISE ASSN ! ,

CAN TAKe

THIS CAT!

•

Dave Beningo and Jay ·Hill.
WEEKDAYS ON WMPO AM

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

f-------"

,.

·,
.'

new
you
very
per-

CAPRICORN (Ooc. 22-Jan.

Ot(AI(, SPIKe,

'(00

•

1: 30-News 13

ARIES (March 21-April 19)

l~·~··~~~~~:_::~----------------:3~~~---------------=~il~~----~~~~~43Wordwith
"'
bopper
WINNIE

20; ln1erface 33.

10 :»-Woman 20; Monty Python's Fyllng Circus 33.
11 :OG-News 3.4.6.8.10,15.
11 :»-Johnny Carson 3,4,15 : FBI 6; Movie "Footslops : Nice Guys Finish Last" 8; Mov ie " I Want
You" 10; News 13: Janakl 33.
12 :0G-Wlde World Mystery 13.
12: 31)-Wide World My stery 6 .
1 :OD- Tomorrow 3,-4,

.,.:+-+-+--1--1-~ For Wednesday, Aug. 27 , 1975

of Conn.
38 ClairvoyLr-rorr,.. ant's knack
(2 wds.)
41 Fatigued
12 wds.)
~-'- ' ~-...:._. l,f/,~ 42 ·• Little Rooney"

MOB fL E Crane se rv 1ce a nd
dozer work Phon e 992 -5468.
8 -7-26 fp

Oe\\'Jell SetvJte

~?et1Dtd'

t::LSE WAS NECESSARY
YOUR $25.00 SHARE OF MY MILLION -[:::()LLAR FEE
32 ~~~~m
WHEN YQJ C:O ONE: MORE - ER-SMALL ,JCB' and
(--:-,-~~r--:::=::-------------------- fever
34 Neighbor

4 30 -tf&lt;

\)

7:31)-Hollywood Squares 3,4; Let's Deal With It 6;
Buck Owens 8; Evening Edition with Martin
Agronsky 20; Movie " Forever Amber" 9: New
Price Is Right 10;; Scene One, Take One33 .
8 :0G-Adam-12 33,4,15; Happy Days 6; Good Times
8,10; When Television Was Live 20.33.
'
8:30-Movle " The Big Ripoff" 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6;
Mash 8,10; Consvmer Survival Kit 20,33.
9:00-Movle " Man Jn the Wilderness" 6; Hawaii Five·
8.10; Nova 20.33.'
9 .10-Movle " Fall Safe;; 13.
IO :OG-Pollce Story 3,4,15; Barnaby Jones 8,10; News

Gourmet 8; Popeye 10; New Zoo Revue 13.

I.

IOLW0c::JDif?rWERS REPAIR
-- Sweepers , toasters, iron'S ,
aH small appl ia n ces Lawn
mower, nel&lt;t lo Slat e High
way Ga rag e on Route 7·
Phone 985 3825
4 16 tfc

1:!

down and to make matters real ·
ly bad the club finesse was on
all the t1me .

Ea st-West vulnerable

~OtJfW.,.FZ

UP-

- - - - - - - ------::;;..

2

t A 75
• AQJ97

WOULD YOU BELIEVE?
Build an all steel bui lding at
Pole Barn prices' Go ld en
G1ant A ll Steel Buildings ,
R t 4, Box 148, Waverly ,
Ohi o Phone 947 -2296
7 24 -lfc

HOU SE for sale 1n Po rtland. 5
rms and bath , good well, 2
acres o·f ground Phone B4J EX CA. VAT 1N G·, dozer, loader
and backhoe work. sep t1 c
2292
tanks
i nsta l led .
dump
8 21 -61 c
truck s and lo boys for hire,
wil l hau l fil l d1rt. to p soil,
l1mes tone and gravel,; Call
Bob or Roger Jeff er s, day ~
phone 992 7089, ntght phone .
:
992 3525 or 992 5232 .
' 211tfc

SOUTH tDI
• A3
• A94

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

6 RM HOUSE tn Letart Falls,
good dn lled well and large
outbutldtng
Priced
for
qutck sale Calf 742 -5415
8 26 6tc

!~;

t 93

~1~1'1'1 Cfl&gt;lTS

·Real Estate tor Sale

trailers

WIN AT BRIDGE

Phone 992 -9973

for Sale

For Sale

U5 UP:

~ESIDE5 ·· BEIN 6

5TUC K HERE 151J'T
50 TERRI6LE .. 4 .;
LON6 A$ WE !i!E
T0&lt;5ET HER:

North 2nd Street

DICK S£YLER
East Matn

JUST BE CAUSE HE DOE'&gt;N' T $16NAL
BA CK PROVES NOTH IN6 .. HE MAY
6E RAD IOI N6
FOR A RESCUE
Gl:AFT TO PICK

Ml
PENNZOIL

DOZER WORK . Excavat1ng.
land clear tng . ponds and
basements ,
and
l .o~nd
scapi n g
Pu!11ns
Ex
cava t1ng , phone 992 2&lt;178
8 26 30tc

POMEROY LANDMARK

AiL

Stop In Or
Caii99'2 -7S37

WOOD· M ETAL - PLASTIC
ANTIQUES
MODERN CHEMICALS

q1 P THIS AD and bnng i1

...~ack W. Carsey, Mgr .

Employment Wanted

____________ _! _~~ ltc

FUEL OIL
Heating Stoves

(.JH, EAS¥ ; DIOt-J'T T HAT Pll.O r
EVEN SEE OUR 5 1G &gt;J &lt;; ....
M · M · MAYBE WERE SfUCK
HERE FOREVER!

Pomeroy, Ohio

PAINT
STRIPPING
SERVICE

KENNEBEC potatoes for
w1 n ter Phone Tom Sayre ,
Phone B43 2&lt;~91
8 24 Jlp

197? GMC ' · ton p1 c k.up t ru1.1&lt;.
sh vrp and tn v ery qood
condttton Pr tc c $7JJ50 Call
99? ?917 or see St ev e Bur ton
8 17 121p

• ·»-Bewitched 3; Merv Griffin 4; Mod Sauad 6;
Mickey Mouse Club 8; Bonanu 15.
S:OG-FBI 3; Lucy Show 8; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33.
5.»-News6; Andy Griffith 8; Hogan's Heroes'1Ji Get
Smart 15; Elec. Co. 20,33.
6:0G-News 3,4,8, 10,13, 15; AB.C News 6; Sesame St. 20;
Catch-33 33.
6:»-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 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 " It Happened One
Night" 13; To Be Announced 15; Anllques 20; Jea"
SheJ&gt;!lerd's. Ame':_lco ~

CAPI'AIN EASY

F la1woods, Ohio

Pome -

~

For :sale

In Memmy

KUHL CAKE DEa&gt;R

SMITH NEI,_SQ_N
MOTORS, INC.

Ph. 992-3993

Blk vmyl roof, grey ltnt sh , good t1res, au tomatic ,
power steenng, rad_io

Kttchen State Inspected
Ltc e nsed
Baker
and
Decorator .
Homemade
Noodles also featured .

F=rom the largest Truck or
Bulldozer Rad1ator to the 1
~~alles t H11ater Core

LARRY LA~E~DER.
Syracus~.

1970 NOVA V 8 CPE

TUESDAY, AUGUST 26, 1975

CAKE BAKING
WANTED

Blown
Insulation Services
Blown tnto Wa lis &amp; At1tcs

:wanted

at fair today

ifirm,

Auto

S1egler &amp; M onogram

Notice

..

j .

LOS I
IN MEMORY of PFC T homas
BL ACK A N D TAN Coonho un d
R L tnd U S Mar1ncs who
male,
b e tw ee n
Sa l em
wa s ktlled m Vtetnam on
Cenler and LangSville , n ear
Au g 26. 1968
the coal m 1ne
Ken ne th
Bl ess 1ng , Leon , w V a or We o ft en th 1nk of b vronl! days ,
c all colle cl B95 JJ95
WlH'n wr ... r-rc
I together
CASH patd for all makes and
T toe litrt • d , {_,,.~,
1S br oken
mode l s of mobi le homes
II OW
Phone a'rea code 614 423
'95] 1
Bu tt memortes ltve forever
To us h e ha s not gone away
~ 1J ifc
Nor h as he traveled far
J ust enler ed God's eterna l
ho me.
And l eft the door a1ar
Sadly m 1ssed lJy h is W I LL do odd rob s. mowing ,
parents , Mr and M r s R e m o
haulmg , pam11ng or roof1 ng
L1nd and hts grandparents ,
Ptlone 992 7409
Mr Edward Hoeflt ch and
7 29 261C
Mrs Em il L1nd

Boone, singers
being featured
OOLUMBUS (UP!) - Pat
Boone and the Young Americans were to give the free
grandstand
entertainment
today at the sixth day of the
Ohio State Fair.
Paul Anka performed for
capacity crowds at the
Monday program, which was
designated as Ohio Fair
Manager's Day, Children 's
Home Day and Auctioneer's
Day.
There were 181,136 fair
visitors Monday, boosting the
total since Thursday to
995,784to assure the millionth
customer will appear today.
The 197~ five-day total was
slightly under a year earlier,
when 1,018,697 had gone
through the gates in the same
period.
citizens from
. Senior
Belmont, Carroll, Coshocton,
Guernsey, Harrison, Holmes,
Jefferson, Musklngum,
Tuscarawas and part of the
Akron, Bellefontaine and
Wheeling, W.Va., group'!,
were
honored
visitors
Monday.
The honorees today were
from Delaware, Fairfield,
Fayette, Franklin, licking
Madison, Pickaway and
Union counties and from
zanesvllle, Dayton and
Washington, Pa.
A local hamburger chain
purchased the Ohio State
Fair Grand Champion Steer
"' Monday for a record $26,680,
· or $23 a pound, from Mike
'· Baumgarner,
Mechanics.. burg.
I
· ~ ; Officials said the purchase,
" 'by Wendy's Old-Fashioned
' 'Hamburgers, Inc., set both a
·· total. price and a per pound
record, as did the sales
.. Monday of the other cham~ pion livestock. The previous
: record for sale of a Grand
Olampion Steer was set in
1970 when the State Fair
"ehamplon went for $22.40 a
~jJound, to total $25,536.
: R. David Thomas, board
" chairman of the hamburger
, chain, bought the Reserve
:.Grand Champion Steer for
• $6,588. 7~. or $5.25 a pound.
·'The Reserve Champion was
· raised by Chris Gilbert,
•.Creenvllle.
~· In
other
champion
sales,
Dan
. jlvestock
Westlake's Grand Champion
Lamb brought S6,875, or $55 a
pound, from Pennington
Bak!rles of Columbus. The
Reserve Grand Champion
,,Lamb was bought by Ren..zettl•a IGA of Columbus from
•.Lou Ann OrwiCk Of McComb
""for $3,570, or $30 a pi&gt;und.
In the barrow cia~, the
Grand Champion, raised by
_Rusty Coe, Jeffersonville,
l brought $8,280 from Bob
: ~ Farms, Inc., and the
: J\eserve Grand Champion
, brol!lht $2,880 Joe Elunan,
: ~. from Jerry Kalten! beck for the Fair's midway
Gooding Amusements,
.
1 Inc.
:! 'lbe w1mer of the 1975 Miss
1~ Co~mty and Independent .
•,..... Queen title Monday was
Lifelanle
August,
17,

.R

v

.

9 - ThP nauy ~ntinel M"ddl
OICII; "fHAo;j':_
• 1 eoort-Pomeroy, 0 .. Tuesday. Aug. 26, !97!i

·•

�'

.

l1 ",

•
I'

I·
I

'
l'
TT'
'T'h
s'
•
l
Cl
.fi
d
or .r ast . ·e su ts use .. _._ e eatzne . assz _e s
Sales
Sales
f·~--B
~
. u_s_in
___e__:s_
_ s___S
~
erVI
._c.__:.:.:.e=s
. - ____:._.:_,.,.1

,.4 8- The_Daily Sentinel, Middlepor!:Pomeroy, o., Tuesdav. Au~ . 26, 1975

~: ~1t!11M®llirn®tk.J "&gt;tuoi'J .....J ,_. 'v
••

~::c::.~~·~~h~:.-J'"'::u·.~~·~

.~.",:;~

r

, . form four ordinary words.

YUPPP

I I

ALFACI

0

[J
IUMPING ~

I I

AN EAR'LIE.R FOR:H
1

OF ' POP.' '1

~· ow arrange the circled letters
to form the surprise answer, as

J

su rrested by the obo,·e cartoon.

I.___Prill
_· _
llle....:,
SURPI
__ISI
= ANSW
= Ift::..:::
he::.:..
re __jl 'T X I

I I I

rJ

II

IAn11wrr• tomorrowt

Yr•lerd•r'•

I

J umiJI~• PATCH
AIIII'IOPr .

na~h

lo

SHYLY

UNLESS

111(/1..1 · fl ( f/f/1/(' {

QUEASY

fmfl. - HYPHEN

PUBL IC NOTICE
TO All credrtors of Cla u de L
Smith Esra re

You

writ

take no t i ce that

Date Sm rth has fried an ap
plication in the Probat e Court

of

Mergs

Co u nty,

Ohio,

lost

to

retreve the esta te of Claude L
Sm rlh , n ow deceased , tram
adm rn rs tr at ro n , a nd that such
application will be heard o n
the 9th day of September , 197 5,
at 10 00 O'Clock A .M

Dale E Sm 1lh
( 8) 26 (9 ) 2. 9, Jl c

WANT A D )
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
Day
Before Pub
'
p M
loc at,on
Monday D eadl1nt:' 9 a m
Ca n ce llal1on - Corrections
Wil l be accepted until 9 am
for Day of Publication
REGULATIONS
The P u bl 1sher reserves the
r1ghl to edil o r r e 1ec l any ad'
deemed
ob1ect,ona1
The
publiSher
will
not
be
r es p on s1ble tor mo r e than one
1ncorrect m sert ton
RATES
For Want Ad Serv1ce
S ce nl s per Word o ne 1n sertton
M1n1mum Cha rge $1 00
1·1 ce nts per word th r ee
con se cut1v e m se rtt on s
?6 cen l s per word SIX con
sec ut ,ve 1n Se rtton~
25 P er Ce nt D tsc oun t on pa1d
&lt;~d s and ads pa1d w1lh1n 10
day s
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; Obituary
S2 00 fo r 50 word m1n 1mum
Ea c h addtt 10nal word Jc
BLIND ADS
A ddttto na l 25&lt;: Charge per
Adve r1 1se ment
OFFICE HOURS
8 30 am to 5 00 p m Dndy
B 30 am
10 12 00 Noor
Sal urday

,.

Auto

1 SIGNS

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

OF
QUALITY

FREE ESTIMATES

1971 MATADOR

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

$1495

4 door , loca l ca r. atr condittoned ,

fu ll equipment

1970 CHEV . CAMARD

S2095

350 V 8 a utom a t ic trans , power steering and brakes,
dark green fm1 sh, vtny l roof, sadd l e bucket seats.
conso le , radto. l ike new w -w ttres.

Nathan B 1ggs
Radiator Spectaltst

51295

Ohio

F'h . 992 -2174

4 10 1 mo

1968
BARRACUD~
p s
a ul omatic Phone ~49 2220
a 26 6tc

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

1969 CHEVROLET I pala , 2
dr
custom coup~.
low
m1leage S85 0 Pho~ e 9B5
42·15 . Chester
8 6 Stc
197.1 5..1-L.VER Capn for ale
Call 667 6185
8 '} 61p

ON THUR SDAY, August 28 al
2 p m the ho usehold goods
of Altce Dav1s wt!l be for
sale at th e home ol Adotc
Pul l1 ns on Cou nty Rd 82.
Te~~:as Communi t y, ' '4 m tle
east o r Mt H ermon Chu rch
8 26 2tc

W IL L
do roo f
pamttng,
Shtngltng . r emo de l tnt ertor ,
etc Cal l 949 591 3
8 70 61c
.:..A.RPENTRY- .
llo o rtng ,
ce tlmg and pan etm g Phone
QQ ?

?7 59

OaOySIIt tng tn my
horne. 5 days per week
Mond a y through Fr 1day.
an y age 11m1t Phone 949
3405. Ractne, Oh10
8 26 6tc

WILL

t.lO

All Sizes on hand , prices
start at $324. 69 ,
- l Wood Burmng Stove
1n

for $15 .00 discount .

Pets For Sale
TO GIVE awa\1 7 medtum
sized dogs , S!)( months old , J
females , 4 males One black
and wh1te , Schnauzer type ,
espectally
appea l 1ng .
Deperately need homes
Contact
Meigs
County
Humane Soc1ety , Phone 992 5427 or 949 49 16. 949 4917 or
992 5906
a-25 Jtc
1\KC R eg P e ktngese pupp1es
sn Ph one P t P l easant , 675
50]0
B 19 17tc

Phone 992 -'2181

WHEA T pennies 85c - ro t t:
St i ver ce rllf1cates . S t 25
each, S? btll s, $J JO eac h
Buffa l o nickels , $6 roll ,
Stiver dollars, $4 40 each,
Ltberty n1cke l s , $ 11 roll. Cal l
R oger Wamsley , Phone 741

365 1
8 15 1?lc

190 A RROW Camper, pho ne
99? 54 6B
8 15 26tp
LET us serv1ce your

Volks

Zanesville. The rnnnersnn
wagen
re as onable rates
Middlepo rt Pennzotl N or th
were Dee Ann Grooms,
Second Slr eet. Midd l eport
Adams County; Tammy ROOM A N- D- -BoARD Phone 99? 997 3
'
F OUR
AKC
Reg 1s tered
Pr1vate a 1r condllion .: d
Cocker
Spanie
l
pupp
es
8
19
16tc
1
Walters, Fayette County ;
room, ph one, Tv , all
Wormed and shots Readv to
- --- -· --mea l s, laundry plus many
Holly Stefanyk , Ashland
go $75 Phone 949 4113
WILL babysi t 1n my home
MODERN Walnut stereo
extras Write M r s M
J
Phone 997 7647
8~2 Me
County; and Kathryn Hronec,
radto co n sole, am f m radio ,
Mtl. l er, Box 105, Pomeroy
8 14 7t c
4 speed ch anger
Bala n ce
Oh10
Guernsey County.
--- --AKC GERMA N Shepherd
$101 72 or terms Ca ll 99 2
8 1 261p ,.
pupp tes, good b lood lin es,
The 62 awards were given
3965
- ----- ---REMODEL IN G ,
Plumbi n g,
gen tle disposition , wormed
8 12 lfc
Room and Board
heat1ng and all types of
out to youth and four to
and ready to go Phone 992
ROOM AND BOA RD for
genera I
rep a tr
Work
5623
alwnni at a 4-H Club breakseniO r c itizens Low tncome
guar ant eed
20 yea r s ex'
a 24 6tc 19 14 70 FT GOOSENECK
l
tvtng,
very
n1
ce
Phone
992
pertence
Phone
992
2409
fast in the areas of leaders lock tra tl er Wtth 19 14 Ch evy
3509
dual w heel. 1 ton Ptckup
STUD
Se
rv
1ce
,
AKC
ship , c i t i zen ship ,
8 24 261c -~----- - ~- -- __ _:_~t~~·
Can be bought l oge t her or
Reg ts l ered while poodle
achievement and projects.
separa t e Call 74'1 3767
Fo r appo1ntment , call 99 ?
Homes
8 10 lfc
3904
The four alumni were
8 11 tfc
recognized for their con· PORC H sale , Aug 28 30 , 9 30 1965 HI LLCREST , 10 x 50,
CA NNIN G p eaches ~~w- thr u
$2.495
For
more
1n
Se ptemb er 10 U S No 1
tributlons to 4-H as a result of
a m 6 JO p m
Clothing,
format 10n call 949 ·52 61
grade yellow F ree stone Fo r
men
's,
women's,
so
m
e
large
their affiliation with the 4H
8 26 6t c
cann1ng or freez1ng
$6 49
size men 's c l othing m1sc.
bushel . $J 49 1 , bushe l. S1 99
program.
i'lrllcles
378 Second St ,
ripened
Albe rton
peck
PLEASE
BRING
lOx 50 TRAILER . 3 br Wtlh 15' TREE
Pomeroy. Oh1o
Kathy Baker of St. Paris
cannmg peaches. n ow at t he
YOUR
OWN
CON
porch
localed
1n
Hartford
,
8 24 Stc
Mason p eac h Orc ha rd. S6
TA IN ERS Peac h es a r e o ur
W Va , 500 f ee t from rtver ,
won the Ohio State Fair
and S7 bu Please brmg own
specialty
Two conven1en 1
50l&lt;100 l ot Phone (3041892
Junior Division Swine Show YARD SALE, 592 Lau r el St,
con tamers 9 a m to 6 p m
loca t ions Bob's Markel,
3247
1Vi1ddleport
C l othi ng, odd
a 24 3tc
Mason . W Va . Phon e (304 )
when she displayed her
8 21 -6tc
S. 1zes.
bedspreads
and
77 3 57?1 '
and
M 1dway
b l a n~ ers 10 am . 1111 6 p m
January gilt in the Ladrace
TRAVEL tra rl er. Concord, 2J
Ma rk el
Pom eroy, Oh1o
We dn esday through F r1day
(614) 99 ? '158?
ft
$1,900
Co l lege Rd .,
breeding gilt division. The
B 26 21c
Rent
Sy r acuse, Ohi o Phone 992
____ - ~ ~ 37 tc
reserve champion was a
2797
:lAND 4 ROOM furniShed and
8
24
-31c
March gilt showed by Teresa Wanted To Buy
unfur ntshed
apartments
Phone 992 5434
Dawn of West Milton. The
THREE
H olze r
Medical Real Estate
B UY . SEL L, or trade any u S
4 12 tfc
Schoo l nu r s1ng unttorms ,
spotted breeding gilt division
CO inS or cur rency Wtll pay
size 9, l ike new S30 A l so. 1 5 ROOM house , 8 acr es,
S? 60 for S1 fac e, 1964 and
wilmer was Dennis Jenkins of
BR
Tra
ile
r
,
turntshed
,
a2
pa1r nur smg sh oes, size a,
3
already f1nance d
Goes
Old er d1mes , quarters , and
$8 One deep well pump, new
Elm Sr , M 1dd l epor L Ohio
Urbana, and the reserve
furnished $6,500 Phone 985
halv es
Call Rutland 74?
Inquire between 9 a m and
motor, $45 Phone 992 -2280
429Q
I
365 1, Roger Wams ley
champion was shown by Tom
6 p m at th e Village Gun
a
24
3tc
8 15 1?tc
___ _ _
8 22 -Stc
Shop Phone 992 5177 afte r 6
Groves of Shelby.
___ !__ __ _ p
m
InQ u ir e ar
225
J TON cen t ral air condil 1oner
Ohio Fair's Junior Division PLAYER p1ano , .Aeed no t be in
Broadway
unit. Comfo r taire, 36,00 0 HOUSE at 128 Laur e l St,
, working condition A l so ,
Pomeroy
Fo r f u r th er in
8 T U 's, P h o ne 247 -]941
B 21 6tc
FFA
Grain-Hay
and
wanted p1ano rolls. Phone
formal ton . cal l 992 3a68
8 ·24 -6tc
742 5625
Vegetable Show was held
a 24 lllp
26 6tc- TWO F urn i shed a pt s
Kay
REGISTERED
Polled - -- - - - - - -- - Monday, with the hay grand --- - ~-------8 -Cecil, 87 Sou th Second Ave,
Hereford bulL larg e, gen tl e, 2 STORY fram e hou se, flood
championship going to North- .OLD f urniture , ice boxes
location on corne r lol , 8
M i ddl epor t , Oh10
Phone
4 yrs old Phone ( ]04) 773 bra ss beds. or com plef~
r ms , garage, w 2 baths , gas
992 5262 .
5405 .
western Clark FFA chapter
ho useho lds
Wr1te M
o.
heat 1n M iddleport. Rodney
8 21 !f c
8 24 Jtc
at Northwestern High School,
M1ller, Rt. .4, Pomeroy
Down tn g,
Real
Estate
Ohio Cal! 992 -7760
Brok er
Call 992 J731 for
Clark County.
STOKERMA TIC coa l sto'.'e ,
BEDROOM
furn1shed
appo
in
tme
n
t
10 7 7
refrigerator , free long ha 1r
mobde home N o pets Call
The potato championship ' ----- --.----- - --8 24 -3tc
ktl te ns P hon e 742 4406 ,
992 7479
was won by Ed Scott of '
a 24 5tp - - - - - - - - - - - - - a 22 t f c
Help Wanted
- - - - - -- - - ---;
Federal Hocking High School
WARM
Morning
H eater. 1
auger
TRAILER space for r ent
FFA chapter, Stewart, EXPERIENCED
E lectric sewing mac h1ne ,
REAL ESTATE
operators, hydrau l ic and
P ho n e A lb er t H ill. 949 2261.
10 ton tack Phone 843 2645
Athens County, in a field of 43
FOR SALE
ca rr 1age operators n eeded ,
a 26 7t p
afler 6 p m
un 10n pay Virg1nia Auger ---- ---------Now
under
con stru ct ion , 3
entries.
8 24 Jt p
Cor p Phone 992 -5367
2 BEDROOM trailer , extra
bedroom,
r
ec.
room, bath &amp;
The tomato contest drew 47
n 1ce Phone 992 -3324 .
8 24 -:Jtc
1/ 2, double garage, bi-l eve l
HUNTIN G L1cense. Night
8 26 -tfc
competitors with Mark Miller
crawlers,
mea l worms
home sit ua ted on a n acre of
SOM EONE to l1 ve m with
TACKLE,
guns,
ammo:
of Delaware Hayes High
ground
wtth all util ities. on
elderly couple, Coo l v ill e, PRIVATE mee11ng room tor
bows , arrows. cam p1ng
OhtO, Good salary Phone
the
Wild
Wood Estates.
School wilming.
any organ 1zation , ph o ne 992
eQu ip . CB's and accessory
667 3833 or Lancaster , 653
]975
- \
located on flalwoods road ,
lnd
1
an
Joe's,
JOB
Page
St
..
2
In the wheat displays, the
4578
.-3 11 -tt c
be t ween Route 7, and 33.
st r eets past Middleport
8 24 Jtc
champion FFA exhibitor was
Swtm m m g Pool
Will be r eady to sell tn 6
John Mattinson of North- ,
LASALLE HOTE L , MI D
8 \3 261p
wks , by ow ner.
DLEPORT , OHIO ROOMS
- - ------- -----George Hobstetter
eastern Clark High School,
$5 UP SPECI AL RATES CANN I NG tomatoes , green
Owner
IN THE MATTER OF THE
Springfield.
BY WEEK OR MONTH
and red p eppers Cle la nd
ADOP T I O N
OF
TV, AC
Phone 985-4186
'Farms
,
Geraldine
Cle
l
and
The oats exhibit was won
CHRISTOPHER MATTHEW
B-26 26tc
Rac ine Phone 949 41 2 1
McGRA TH
by Paul Messenger of River
-----------8 19 tfc
Valley High School FFA,
Charles Milton McGrath, c 0 NEW LY furn is hed 2 bedrm . STEREO -RA DI O,
am - fm,
apt, wall -to -wall ca rp e tin g,
Boy l e Volkswagen , Lake C it y,
Marion County. The chamconsole, 4 speed c hanger
a
c
,
no
pets
or
Childr
en
Call
Flor tda. wtll ta k e n ot 1ce tha t a
Balance $101.86 or terms
pions soybean exhibitor was
949 37BJ
p eti t 1on has been ftled 1n the
Ca ll 992 -3965
8
24
3tp
Loren
Schwochow
of
Common Pleas Cour t, Probate
8 26 He
D tv ts ton Meigs County , Ohio.
Fremont.
by M 1ckey R Hutton, 10 adop t TRAILER for renl , ' 4 mtle off SILVER Queen sweet corn,
Matthew
Diana Clouser of Nova , Christopher
Raymond Fu r bee, 843 -2437
Rt 143 on Kingsb ur y Rd
McGralh stat ing that you have
E.
Either f urn1shed or un
Rt
124 , 6 m rles east of
Ashland County, took the two
Wtllfu Hy failed and neglec ted
Racine , Ohio
furntshed
Phone 74? J l 'ZJ
MAIN
top prizes out of 51 entries in for m o r e !han the past two
8 26 3tc
B 20 12tc
y ears 10 prov tde the necessary
- ---------P_OME
,_0
the Ohio State Fair Junior suppor t for sai d c hil d , that
1974 STARCRAF T f old down
LAURELAND
APARTMENT
,
sa1
d
petition
for
adoption
wilt
Division wool judging. She
cam p er w i th awni ng , sleeps
5 MILES OUT ON RT. 143
6th and George Sts, New
be heard on September 70,
8, S1 ,900 Prto ne 992-2514.
showed both the champion
NEW - 2 B. R.. bath.
Haven ,
w
Va
IM
19 15 at 10 00 am
m sa 1d
8 ·26 ·6tc
nice
k itchen ,
full
MEDIATE
OCCUPANCY
and reserve
champion cour 1
Se l ect
your
2 bedr m
basement,
nice
re
c.
R
.
All
CEMENT
M
IXER
Wtf
h
motor
nl!eces. In the three-&lt;!ighths
townh ouse
Beau t i ful new
J B O'Brien
on wheels F'hone 992 -5275.
e lectric, carport, storage, 1
apl
comp lex
Applia n ces
fleece category, Jerry
A llorney for
Car l Arnold
8 26 -Jtc
acre JUST $22,700.
furni shed,
co mp lete ly
Mickey
R
Hut
ton
Wildermuth of Canal Win1
carpeted, Rent S12B and up ONE H ereford steer . Prtone
TUPPERS PLAINS on Rl.
100 Court Streel
in cl ud i ng utilities . Ca ll
chester placed first.
Pomeroy , Oh1o 45769
843 -2353.
7 2112 acres . Hom e has
resident ma nag e r , Sam or
8 26 -Jtc
The 4-H Electric Day had (8) 19, ?6 (9) 7 Jtc
new
steel siding, 2 B.R .•
Bec ky Longanacre , 1 J04
--~---'--- --- -- bath,
dining R ., own water
882 2567
131 entries. The winner of the
CA NNING tomatoes
Pi ck
8- 19l?tc
&amp; city water , garage, lots
your own
Also, melons,
beginning electric project
Andrew Cross, Letar t Fa ll s,
of building si tes. S10,SOO.
NOTICE OF
was Steve Lerbrand, licking
APPOINTMENT
-4 ROOMS and bath apt
rn 1 Ohio . Phone 247 ·2852 .
POMEROY - High on a
Rutland area
Phone 99'1
8-26 -6tc
County . Tim Nicholson,
Ca se No.l 1,5 97
hill.
2 B. R. , balh, nice
5858
.
Estate of LOUISE BRYAN .
Muskimgum County, took
kitcheri,
utility R .. air '
9
PIE
CE
antiq
ue
din1ng
roo
m
D eceased.
7 27 lfc
SUIIe , good COndi tiOn . 30"
con d .• nat . gas heat. Tool
honors in the intermediate
No tice tS he reby g iven that ------ -------.\Aag ic Chef gas range , boy's
Berna rd V . Fultz , of Box 723.
shed, 2 car garage, 1112 acre
group. Steve Henunelgarn,
26" Murray bicycle. Phon e
Pomeroy , Ohio. ha~ been duly ,CO U NTR Y Mob 1l e Home'
very pr iva te . SACRIFICE
Park.
Rt
JJ,
ten
miles
north
'
992
-7107
.
Mercer County, won the appointed Executor of t he
of Pomeroy . L arge lots with ·
8
PRI CE $13.000.
Estate
o
f
Lou
ise
Bryan
.
conc r e t e pat10!; Sid ewalks ' ____ _ _______ _!6~1c
trophy for the third level dec.eased, late ot Middlepo r t,
MIDDLEPORT - Older 2
runners and off st reef; S IGNET wooden c lari net.
project. The trophy wilmer in Me1gs County, Ohto.
story home. Good con
r;arking . Phone 992 7479
U sed 1 year, $125. Phone 99 2Cre
d
itors
are
r
equ1red
to
1
the advanced category for a fi l e the 1r c l a1ms wilh sa 1d
dition. '3 B. R.. 2 baths.
12·31 ttc.
'2924
a 25 3tp utility R ., dining R .,
heat, light, power and con- f i duciary with in four months
Dated this 23rd day of 4 ROOM furnished apar tm ent
1976- C HRYSLER- boal;- ,n
~~orage bldg ., small yard
trois , exhibit was Mance! August 1975
Ca l l 991 3658
s
to
ck
al
1975
prices
A
l
so,
ose to shopping. JU ST
8
1
1
7-tf
c
Samples, Medina Co11nty.
Chrysler fi Shing
boats
$8,300 .
Mannmg D . Webs t er
- -·-..,.. ---- ~--Fred Anderson , Richland
Seve,.al used boat s for sale
FOR GOOD HOMES Judge :-r 'URNISHEO
a pa rtme n t".'
Longf el low Motor s, Raven s PRICED RIGHT SEE
_County, took th~ award for
Co ur t ot Common Pleas ,
adults only in Middleport :
Probate
Division
Phone
992
-387-'t
.
·:
"f,~ofS94W
Va
.
Phone
(3041
OR
CALL
US
TODAY.
the best electronics and
3 25 tfc
PHONE 992-2259
8·26-61&lt;
conununications
exhibit.
(8 ) 26 (9 J 2, 9, Jtc
-----~-- ~ -

YaiiL.Sale

.Mobile

For

For Sale

'

•

-'------------

8-1 75

Misplay upsets sure contract
, - - - - -- - - -- - - , kmg . Now South relaxed He led
NORTII
26 a second diamond to dummy's
• 74
10. East discarded a spade 1
• KQ
West asked. "No d1amonds
• Q 10 8 6 42
partner'" After a repeated
10 8 3
EAST
question East produ ced th e
WEST "'
•
Jaek It won the tnck and si nce
10 9 52
•KQJB6
East had exposed a spade he
• J 7s3
• 10 8 6 2
had to lead it. South we nt one

Tune - Ups - Batteries
Shock Absorbers • Tires

Muffler-Tailpipes . Cooling

Pomeroy

Ph 992-2798

Systems.
We
also
service
Volkswagens and other
foreign cars.
Wtlbur Ward,
Mgr . &amp; Mechanic

8-21 I mo.

7 24- l mo.

CUSTOM
PICTURE
FRAM IN G
ORIGI N AL
SEASCAP£ AND
LA ND
SCA PE I':A INTIN GS . E
JOYCE M I L LER , 997 7680
8 10 24tp

WELD IN G and culli ng se r
v 1ces, Porlable Phone 949 .
4114
8 24 -6tp
OLD 4 rm hous e 1n Sy ra cuse
on t wo 10 x 52 lOIS , $],250
Phone 992 5892
8-26 31c
HAND LETTERE D SIGNS
AND POSTER S
FREE
3 BEDRM house m Sy racuse
ESTIMA T ES CALL M C
by grade school Phone 992
5891
CRAWFORD . 992 -7680 .
8 7 26tp
8 26 -Jic

... s 4

FOR ~PPL-E:S I
WHAT PID
'iOU C:O,

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

RAI?f 'F5M

WATER
Solari um.
TV
room,
3
bedrooms,
1112
baths,
basement and garage Good
res1denttal area
$25,000 00
MODERN - Ni ce 3 bedrooms
wi th st orng -: c loset s, large
bath, basement , garage' with
s h op
and
::V.o~
acre
l ot.

$23.500.00.
26 ACRES - N ea r town , large
barn w tfh concrete floor. and 7
room house , next to sc hool.
Move right 1n. $31,500 00

3 ACRE LOT - Near m1ne
w1th dug well. Will hold 2
and

then

some .

$4500.00.
POMEROY
J
ni ce
bedrooms with c losets, dining ,
mode rn kitchen full basement
"
'
n ear schoo l and
stor es.

s11 ,soo.oo

S BEDROOMS -

older

hom e

Renovated

w tlh

modern

k1tchen and 2 bat hs Large
porch and large corner lot
w ith alley . $34.500.00.
OLD BRICK 10 rooms, 2
baths, natural gas furnace,
basement, city water and
large lot. G!trden space. Only

112,000.00. NEW LI STING
LOOK AT OUR PICTURES,
WE HAVE HERE AT THE
OFFICE. DROP IN OR CALL

992':3325:

.

A Toronlo reader asks.
"' What do you think of the Cana·
d1an Acol bidding system' "
West
North East
Sout b
We haven't space to descnbe
it
m full . but It . is a sound.
Pass
Pa ss
I +
2 NT
freew
heeling system that IS
Pass
3NT Pass
Pass
slightly
mferior to sta ndard
Pass
~
Amencan . Although our Canall-26
Opemng lead - K •
L _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.Jdian friends who use it will be
likely to d1sagree.
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
One interesting feature is the
THE TEN BILLION
suit two-bid . Two clubs is a for·
I?,~E~~~n~~:]~ coFntract
ive d1amonds 1s a better ci ng catch·all. other two-bids
than three notrump. are one·round forces and show
but expe rt Sooth was 1n three s tr ong diStnbutwnal hands
notrump He ducked one spade. without an in.ordinate number
So m et1mes defenders s hift of high cards Thus ·
su1ts, but a second spade wa s •AKQJ543 ¥AQ32 t2
led .
• 2 would be opened two spades
He needed a successful club m Canadian Acol. So would
fm esse to collect 10 tricks, but many slightly weaker hands.
South saw there was a slight extra cha nce . East just . might roo you have a question for
ho ld the Singleton kmg of the Jacobys? Write "Ask the
d1amonds .
Jacohys " car e of th1s
~~ Anyway, So ut .h was n ' t newspape r The most In ·
~
vulne rable and dec1ded 1t was te res ting questtons w1(( be
worthwhile to play the diamond used 1n thiS column and
ace Lo see what would happen w"ters wtll rece1ve copies of
He did and East dropped the JACO BY MODERN)
IF I ~A\IE 10 LI STEN

..

UTrLE ORPHAN ANNIF

LiTTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-SO THEY TOOK
r====:;:-::::~~

SAY · ALL THAT

SlUFF DUCi

WHAT DID
YOU DO
WITH IT?

HO' HO'
I'MOlDI'R
THAH YOU.
OLIVER-

ALLEY OOP

II

ONE MORE -,.!ME, I 'M GOI I.JG TO

STAR'T PACI(I NG A GUN!

S~EP TI C

TAN -KS. c l eaned
Modern San1tat1on 992 395~
or 992 -7349
9 - 18 He

PORTAB LE TO I Lt: I
RENTAL ,
Conslructton
Outdoor
events
Ph one
Ga ll ipo l is.
446 a7a2,
Russell's Plu m bing and
Healing
8 19 lfc

-- - --- -

t::"XCAVATTNG,
ba c khoe ,
dozer and ditcher
Gas,
electr i c and water line
burtal. basements , footers,
septic sys tems and brush
cleaning Will haul fill d irt ,
top soil, sand and grav e l.
limes to ne for drtveways and
roads
Phone Charles R
Hatfield, Backhoe Service,
Rt. L Rutland, Ohio, 742

An' a·

Haw! Haw,
Beck4! Haw.'

"oate~"

at t h' 1\"whoclur
8iJOU 1

6092

7 11 -90tc
- ~:;;---;-::.--::--~----:--:..:- -:..-:- .,..;

READY

MIX CONCR ETE
r 1g h t to your
pro1ec t Fasl and easy F r ee
estimates Phone 992 -3284
Goeg l ein Ready M1l&lt; Co:
Mu•dleport , Oh10 .
6 30 -ttC'
de l 1~ered

D' - TRE-E Trimmrn~~
yea r s experience Insured,
fr ee es t 1mates. Call 992 3057,
Phone (1) .667
Coo lvtll e
3041.

&amp;

HA!r- f'..DTHING

--::---------- --MACHINE

~cvv rN G

Rep61rs, service , all makes'
992 2284 The F,_abric:;. Shop ,
Pomeroy Authorfzed"'Singer
Sa l es and Serv ic e
We
Sharpen SCISSO r S
3 29 tfc

MAINTAINED DURING
CLOSING POMEROY-MASON BRIDGE

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
I Codfish
1 Sensible
6 "Julius
2 Boast
Caesar"'
l Surf's
character
sound
11 Redolence
t General
12 Revoke a
Bradley
grant
5 Wee bit
13 Good
6 West Point
thinkmg!
student
Yesterday's ADiwer
( 4 wds. )
7 Mine en22 What a
34 Talking bird
~ S Pitcher
trance
relief!
(var.)
16 Greek
8 Tranquilizer
Beckll saL.!
23
High
point
35
Vedic fire
9 Passing
cheese
24 Ending for
god
17 Newt
grade
account
36 Word with
18 Little
10 M.D.'s org.
25 Family
dig or bone
14 Troubled
one.
21 Dismay
17 Large deer
member
37 Galley mark
1Brit.
19 RussiBn city 27 Plaything 36 Perched
sp.)
20 British con- 31 Bright
39 Ending for
k!~~ 25 Modernist
servative
33 Enter
client
painter
(2 wds. )
40
--r.~~,....;
26 Muse on
10
(3 wds.)
o.\ -:-c:-···::l..\!!;28 Pup 29 Attractive
30 Beard
on
grain
31 Eyelid
~r- YOU'LL GET

the ·cater"'

IrS A SUPER SUMMER
AT WMPO RAi)IO
Hear David Strang.

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

HSO

EKZQ

KQQ

MOBU

E DZZ

SDBO

WSOTI ZU

SDXLOZQ

TL

a_::~:=:::l S 0 B R . - B V L L D T F

SAIRV HAWKINS JEST
WROTE ME OUT HER OC
FAMBLV RECIPE FER
CUCUMBER
PIE

(SNif·SNIF)
IS THAT

T

12 :Ss-NBC News 3,15.
1:OG-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6,13. Phil Donahue 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1:»-Days of Our Lives 3,4, 1S;; Let's Make a Deal
6,13; As the World Turns 8.10.
2:0G-Sl0,000 Pyramid 6.13; Guiding Light 8.10.
2:»-Baseball 3,4; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,13; Doctors 15;
Edge of Nlg~I'B.10 .
3: ~eneral Hospltal6.13; Another World IS; Match
Game 8,10; Caught In the Act 20.
3:30-{)ne Life to Live 13; Bewitched 6 ; Tattletales
8, 10; Jeanne Wolf with 20.
4:0G-Somerset 15 ; Mickey Mouse Club 6; Musical
Chairs 8; Sesame St. 20,33; Movie "The Bellboy"
10; Dinah 13 .
4:31)-Mod Squad 6; Mickey Mouse Club 8; Bonanza 15.
5:0G-FBI 3; Merv Griffin 4; Lucy Show 8; Mister
Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33.
s ·»-News6; Andy Griffith 8; Hogan's Heroes13; Get
Smart 15; Elec. Co. 20.33.
6:0G-News 3.4.8,10,13,1S; ABC News 6; Sesame St. 20;
You Owe II To Yourself 33 .
6:31)-NBC News 3,4.1S; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6 ,
CBS News 8,10; Jody's Body Shop 33.
7:()()-Truth or Cons. 3,4; Bowling tor Dollars 6; What's
My Line 8; News 10; Movie "'Good Neighbor Sam"·
13; To Be Announced 15; Book Beat 20; The
Romagnolls' Table 33.
7:»-Pollce Surgeon 3; Name That Tune 4; Let's
Make a Deal 6; Wilburn Brothers 8; Evening
Edition with Martin Agronsky 20; Episode Action
33.8:0G-Llttle House on the Prairie 3,4, IS; That's
My Mama 6 ; Tony Orlando &amp; Dawn 8,10; Feeling
Good 20.33.
8:31)-Movle "'The House That Wouldn ' t Ole" 6; Man
Builds. Man Destroys 33; Philadelphia Folk
Festival 20.
9:00-Cannon 8, 10; Masterpiece Theatre 33

9:31)-Jean Shepherd's America 20
9:41)-Movle "' Born Yesterday"' 13 .
lO : ~Petrocelll 3,4,15; Jim Stafford 6; Mannix 8;
Charles Kurall at the Fair 10 . Nws 20; Olga 33.
11 :()()-News 3,4,6,8, IO,IS; ABC News 33.
11 :31)-Johnny Carson 3,4,1S; FBI 6; Movi e "'The Tiger
Makes Out"' 8; Movie "'Anything Goes"' 10; Janak I
33.
12:()()-News 13.
12 :»-Wide World Special 6,13.
1 :00-Tomorrow 3,4

2:0G-News 13 .
change 1n tn ougnt or d 1recl10n
pr o ves fo r tunate for you . You
can ga1n benefit s from your
new 8 !11t ude
·

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 2:i)

(April 20-May 20)

A
happy day for the fam1 ly Yo u
can now solve the problem of
how to get along wtlh a loved
o ne who h as been a b 1t testy
lately

Ideas you have for the home
to d ay are good ones Get out
and shop You 'll fmd exactly
w hat you want

LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) You 'll
hear from a friend today who
has an e)(cellent suggestion on
how to get somethmg you 've
wanted Heed him

L S 01- VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 23)

I BKM0 B p
• Yesterday's Cryptoquote: THAT MAN IS WISEST WHO
REAUZES HIS WISDOM IS WORTHLESS. - SOCRATES
(~ 197 5 Kin1 Features Syndtcate. Inc.)

WHAT I
SMELL,
COOKIN?

8, 10.

CANCER (June 21-July 22)

CRYPTOQUOTES

'

Tomorrow

GEMINI (May 21 -June 20)
-..&amp;.-..1...-.L..-L,:-,.,.J

'

HERMAN GRATE
MASO W.VA.

9: 55-&lt;:huck White Reports 10.
10:«»-Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3. 15; State Fair '7S 4~
Spin-Off 8,10; Mike Douglas 13.
10:31)-Wheel of Fortune 3,15; Price Is Right 8; Bandstand 10.
11 :OG-High Rollers 3.4.1S; One Life to Live 6; Gambit
8,1 0.
11 :»-Hollywood Squares 3.1S; Brady Bunch 13;
Midday 4; Love of Life 8,10.
11 :Ss-Take Kerr 8; Farmtlme 10.
12 :0G-Magnlflcent Marble Machine 3,1S; Showoff513;
Bob Braun's 50-50 Club 4; News 6,8, 10.
12: »-Jackpot J,IS; All My Children 6,13; Search tor

A.-t-+-t--1---f

One l e tter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
u sed for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
h i nts . Each day the code letters are different.

·"'ASON FURNITURE

6 : ~rnlng Report 3; Farmtlme 10.

6:55-News 13
7:oo:-Today3.4.15; A.M. Amerlca6, 13; CBS News8.10.
8:0G-Lucy Show~ ; Capl . Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame Sf
33.
8:»-Big Valley 6; Sesame St. 9.
9:0G-A.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4,15; Murie l Stevens 8;
Schoolles 10; Morning with D J . 13 .
.
9·»-Not For Women Only 3; Dinah 6; Galloping

You can accomplt sh a great
deal today Tackle lhat tough
proJect you ve found dtlftcult to
=-+-+-+--!-~ comp lete m the past

Is

Phone 773-5592 ·

6 .oo-Sunrlse Seminar .4; Summer Semester 10.

6:25-Farm Report 13.
6.»-Five Minutes to Live By 4; News 6 ; Bible Answers 8; School Scene 10; The Story 13.
6·35-Columbus Today 4 .

-+-t-+--f TAURUS

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:

KISSING!

WEDNESDAY , AUGUST27, 1975

Team up w1th so meone who
has the same work objecttves
II could prove ver\1 prof1tab le
for bot h parttes

44 Grease -

WHY, I DO BELIEVE YOUR
MOM REALLY LIKE&amp; CHAT
5HANGHAI FELLA. -mEY'RE

You r e espectally &lt;Htracttve today , and stand ou t among
f nends Th1s happy day cou ld
alter some tdeas you ve had
about anothe r

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0&amp;C.
21) The development of a
lrte n d s hlp wil l he lp
pol 1lt cal ly tn areas both
1mportant and v1tal to yo ur
sonal sat 1sfactt on

19) Hard work . p lus a ltttle help
from Da me Fo r tune br1n gs
long - soug ht success tn your
JOb or ca reer today

AOUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 19)
A tra nsformation 1n behavtor
on lh e part of a loved on~
results 1n a better understan.
dmg and a happ1er day for \IOU .

PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 20)
Keep yo ur self busy at home today Your efforts w 1ll brtng
about a dramat 1c cha nge
welcpmed by the fam1!y

~Your
·
~Birthda{
Aug. 27, 1975

Some eJCtra effort IS all you 'll
need today to get you over the
top tn a ta sk that has been g1v 1ng you f tts Get gomg

An e_)(cellent year ltes ahead for
you Added funds tn your
pocketbook w tll enhance your
prest 1g e and a!so brtng yo4
personal sat1slact1on .

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) A

I NE:WSPAP~:H E NH ;RPR ISE ASSN ! ,

CAN TAKe

THIS CAT!

•

Dave Beningo and Jay ·Hill.
WEEKDAYS ON WMPO AM

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

f-------"

,.

·,
.'

new
you
very
per-

CAPRICORN (Ooc. 22-Jan.

Ot(AI(, SPIKe,

'(00

•

1: 30-News 13

ARIES (March 21-April 19)

l~·~··~~~~~:_::~----------------:3~~~---------------=~il~~----~~~~~43Wordwith
"'
bopper
WINNIE

20; ln1erface 33.

10 :»-Woman 20; Monty Python's Fyllng Circus 33.
11 :OG-News 3.4.6.8.10,15.
11 :»-Johnny Carson 3,4,15 : FBI 6; Movie "Footslops : Nice Guys Finish Last" 8; Mov ie " I Want
You" 10; News 13: Janakl 33.
12 :0G-Wlde World Mystery 13.
12: 31)-Wide World My stery 6 .
1 :OD- Tomorrow 3,-4,

.,.:+-+-+--1--1-~ For Wednesday, Aug. 27 , 1975

of Conn.
38 ClairvoyLr-rorr,.. ant's knack
(2 wds.)
41 Fatigued
12 wds.)
~-'- ' ~-...:._. l,f/,~ 42 ·• Little Rooney"

MOB fL E Crane se rv 1ce a nd
dozer work Phon e 992 -5468.
8 -7-26 fp

Oe\\'Jell SetvJte

~?et1Dtd'

t::LSE WAS NECESSARY
YOUR $25.00 SHARE OF MY MILLION -[:::()LLAR FEE
32 ~~~~m
WHEN YQJ C:O ONE: MORE - ER-SMALL ,JCB' and
(--:-,-~~r--:::=::-------------------- fever
34 Neighbor

4 30 -tf&lt;

\)

7:31)-Hollywood Squares 3,4; Let's Deal With It 6;
Buck Owens 8; Evening Edition with Martin
Agronsky 20; Movie " Forever Amber" 9: New
Price Is Right 10;; Scene One, Take One33 .
8 :0G-Adam-12 33,4,15; Happy Days 6; Good Times
8,10; When Television Was Live 20.33.
'
8:30-Movle " The Big Ripoff" 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6;
Mash 8,10; Consvmer Survival Kit 20,33.
9:00-Movle " Man Jn the Wilderness" 6; Hawaii Five·
8.10; Nova 20.33.'
9 .10-Movle " Fall Safe;; 13.
IO :OG-Pollce Story 3,4,15; Barnaby Jones 8,10; News

Gourmet 8; Popeye 10; New Zoo Revue 13.

I.

IOLW0c::JDif?rWERS REPAIR
-- Sweepers , toasters, iron'S ,
aH small appl ia n ces Lawn
mower, nel&lt;t lo Slat e High
way Ga rag e on Route 7·
Phone 985 3825
4 16 tfc

1:!

down and to make matters real ·
ly bad the club finesse was on
all the t1me .

Ea st-West vulnerable

~OtJfW.,.FZ

UP-

- - - - - - - ------::;;..

2

t A 75
• AQJ97

WOULD YOU BELIEVE?
Build an all steel bui lding at
Pole Barn prices' Go ld en
G1ant A ll Steel Buildings ,
R t 4, Box 148, Waverly ,
Ohi o Phone 947 -2296
7 24 -lfc

HOU SE for sale 1n Po rtland. 5
rms and bath , good well, 2
acres o·f ground Phone B4J EX CA. VAT 1N G·, dozer, loader
and backhoe work. sep t1 c
2292
tanks
i nsta l led .
dump
8 21 -61 c
truck s and lo boys for hire,
wil l hau l fil l d1rt. to p soil,
l1mes tone and gravel,; Call
Bob or Roger Jeff er s, day ~
phone 992 7089, ntght phone .
:
992 3525 or 992 5232 .
' 211tfc

SOUTH tDI
• A3
• A94

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

6 RM HOUSE tn Letart Falls,
good dn lled well and large
outbutldtng
Priced
for
qutck sale Calf 742 -5415
8 26 6tc

!~;

t 93

~1~1'1'1 Cfl&gt;lTS

·Real Estate tor Sale

trailers

WIN AT BRIDGE

Phone 992 -9973

for Sale

For Sale

U5 UP:

~ESIDE5 ·· BEIN 6

5TUC K HERE 151J'T
50 TERRI6LE .. 4 .;
LON6 A$ WE !i!E
T0&lt;5ET HER:

North 2nd Street

DICK S£YLER
East Matn

JUST BE CAUSE HE DOE'&gt;N' T $16NAL
BA CK PROVES NOTH IN6 .. HE MAY
6E RAD IOI N6
FOR A RESCUE
Gl:AFT TO PICK

Ml
PENNZOIL

DOZER WORK . Excavat1ng.
land clear tng . ponds and
basements ,
and
l .o~nd
scapi n g
Pu!11ns
Ex
cava t1ng , phone 992 2&lt;178
8 26 30tc

POMEROY LANDMARK

AiL

Stop In Or
Caii99'2 -7S37

WOOD· M ETAL - PLASTIC
ANTIQUES
MODERN CHEMICALS

q1 P THIS AD and bnng i1

...~ack W. Carsey, Mgr .

Employment Wanted

____________ _! _~~ ltc

FUEL OIL
Heating Stoves

(.JH, EAS¥ ; DIOt-J'T T HAT Pll.O r
EVEN SEE OUR 5 1G &gt;J &lt;; ....
M · M · MAYBE WERE SfUCK
HERE FOREVER!

Pomeroy, Ohio

PAINT
STRIPPING
SERVICE

KENNEBEC potatoes for
w1 n ter Phone Tom Sayre ,
Phone B43 2&lt;~91
8 24 Jlp

197? GMC ' · ton p1 c k.up t ru1.1&lt;.
sh vrp and tn v ery qood
condttton Pr tc c $7JJ50 Call
99? ?917 or see St ev e Bur ton
8 17 121p

• ·»-Bewitched 3; Merv Griffin 4; Mod Sauad 6;
Mickey Mouse Club 8; Bonanu 15.
S:OG-FBI 3; Lucy Show 8; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33.
5.»-News6; Andy Griffith 8; Hogan's Heroes'1Ji Get
Smart 15; Elec. Co. 20,33.
6:0G-News 3,4,8, 10,13, 15; AB.C News 6; Sesame St. 20;
Catch-33 33.
6:»-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 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 " It Happened One
Night" 13; To Be Announced 15; Anllques 20; Jea"
SheJ&gt;!lerd's. Ame':_lco ~

CAPI'AIN EASY

F la1woods, Ohio

Pome -

~

For :sale

In Memmy

KUHL CAKE DEa&gt;R

SMITH NEI,_SQ_N
MOTORS, INC.

Ph. 992-3993

Blk vmyl roof, grey ltnt sh , good t1res, au tomatic ,
power steenng, rad_io

Kttchen State Inspected
Ltc e nsed
Baker
and
Decorator .
Homemade
Noodles also featured .

F=rom the largest Truck or
Bulldozer Rad1ator to the 1
~~alles t H11ater Core

LARRY LA~E~DER.
Syracus~.

1970 NOVA V 8 CPE

TUESDAY, AUGUST 26, 1975

CAKE BAKING
WANTED

Blown
Insulation Services
Blown tnto Wa lis &amp; At1tcs

:wanted

at fair today

ifirm,

Auto

S1egler &amp; M onogram

Notice

..

j .

LOS I
IN MEMORY of PFC T homas
BL ACK A N D TAN Coonho un d
R L tnd U S Mar1ncs who
male,
b e tw ee n
Sa l em
wa s ktlled m Vtetnam on
Cenler and LangSville , n ear
Au g 26. 1968
the coal m 1ne
Ken ne th
Bl ess 1ng , Leon , w V a or We o ft en th 1nk of b vronl! days ,
c all colle cl B95 JJ95
WlH'n wr ... r-rc
I together
CASH patd for all makes and
T toe litrt • d , {_,,.~,
1S br oken
mode l s of mobi le homes
II OW
Phone a'rea code 614 423
'95] 1
Bu tt memortes ltve forever
To us h e ha s not gone away
~ 1J ifc
Nor h as he traveled far
J ust enler ed God's eterna l
ho me.
And l eft the door a1ar
Sadly m 1ssed lJy h is W I LL do odd rob s. mowing ,
parents , Mr and M r s R e m o
haulmg , pam11ng or roof1 ng
L1nd and hts grandparents ,
Ptlone 992 7409
Mr Edward Hoeflt ch and
7 29 261C
Mrs Em il L1nd

Boone, singers
being featured
OOLUMBUS (UP!) - Pat
Boone and the Young Americans were to give the free
grandstand
entertainment
today at the sixth day of the
Ohio State Fair.
Paul Anka performed for
capacity crowds at the
Monday program, which was
designated as Ohio Fair
Manager's Day, Children 's
Home Day and Auctioneer's
Day.
There were 181,136 fair
visitors Monday, boosting the
total since Thursday to
995,784to assure the millionth
customer will appear today.
The 197~ five-day total was
slightly under a year earlier,
when 1,018,697 had gone
through the gates in the same
period.
citizens from
. Senior
Belmont, Carroll, Coshocton,
Guernsey, Harrison, Holmes,
Jefferson, Musklngum,
Tuscarawas and part of the
Akron, Bellefontaine and
Wheeling, W.Va., group'!,
were
honored
visitors
Monday.
The honorees today were
from Delaware, Fairfield,
Fayette, Franklin, licking
Madison, Pickaway and
Union counties and from
zanesvllle, Dayton and
Washington, Pa.
A local hamburger chain
purchased the Ohio State
Fair Grand Champion Steer
"' Monday for a record $26,680,
· or $23 a pound, from Mike
'· Baumgarner,
Mechanics.. burg.
I
· ~ ; Officials said the purchase,
" 'by Wendy's Old-Fashioned
' 'Hamburgers, Inc., set both a
·· total. price and a per pound
record, as did the sales
.. Monday of the other cham~ pion livestock. The previous
: record for sale of a Grand
Olampion Steer was set in
1970 when the State Fair
"ehamplon went for $22.40 a
~jJound, to total $25,536.
: R. David Thomas, board
" chairman of the hamburger
, chain, bought the Reserve
:.Grand Champion Steer for
• $6,588. 7~. or $5.25 a pound.
·'The Reserve Champion was
· raised by Chris Gilbert,
•.Creenvllle.
~· In
other
champion
sales,
Dan
. jlvestock
Westlake's Grand Champion
Lamb brought S6,875, or $55 a
pound, from Pennington
Bak!rles of Columbus. The
Reserve Grand Champion
,,Lamb was bought by Ren..zettl•a IGA of Columbus from
•.Lou Ann OrwiCk Of McComb
""for $3,570, or $30 a pi&gt;und.
In the barrow cia~, the
Grand Champion, raised by
_Rusty Coe, Jeffersonville,
l brought $8,280 from Bob
: ~ Farms, Inc., and the
: J\eserve Grand Champion
, brol!lht $2,880 Joe Elunan,
: ~. from Jerry Kalten! beck for the Fair's midway
Gooding Amusements,
.
1 Inc.
:! 'lbe w1mer of the 1975 Miss
1~ Co~mty and Independent .
•,..... Queen title Monday was
Lifelanle
August,
17,

.R

v

.

9 - ThP nauy ~ntinel M"ddl
OICII; "fHAo;j':_
• 1 eoort-Pomeroy, 0 .. Tuesday. Aug. 26, !97!i

·•

�'•

16- .'l'hP na nv ~ntinel , MiddlePOrt-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Aug. 26, 1975

Virgir.tia Wolfe died Tuesday
Mrs. Virginia A. Wolfe, 59, all of Syracuse; three sons,
Third St. , Syracuse, died Charles, Route 2, Racine, and
-early Tuesday ~ t the Holzer Franklin Arthur and Pa ul ,
Medical Center .
. both of Syracuse; two sisters,
Mrs. Wolfe was born Nov . Mrs. Allah Teaford , Hebr on,
'EI, 1915 a t Hartford, W. Va., and Mrs. Bert (Mar tha I
the daugh ter of the late Grueser, Mi nersv ille; 24
Charles a nd Rose Moore Hall . grandch il dren, and two
She was a lso preceded in g rea t-gr andchildre n.
death by her husband ,
Funeral services wi ll be
Raymond A. Wolfe in 1967; a he ld at 2 p.m. Thursday at the
sister, two brothers and two Syracuse Ch ur ch of the
grandchildren.
Nazarene with th e Re v.
Sur viv ing
are
six Harold [J]ack off iciating .
d a ug h ters, Mrs . !.eland Burial will be in the Letart
(Florence) Bumgarner , Mrs. Falls Cemelery . Friends may
Thom as (Maxin e) Oldaker , call at the Rawlin gs-Coats
Mrs. Robe r t (Mary) Ed- F Uil eral Home from 2 to 4 and
wards, a ll of Letart, W. Va., from 7 to 9 p.m . Wednesday ,
and Mrs. Allah Lambert, and until noon on Thursday
Mrs . Clifford 1Carol ) Smith, when the body will be ta ken to
Mrs. Paul 1Barbara 1 I.ew1s, the church.

" If you just look my way, you'll see

everything is looking better!"

Myla W. Hudson died Tuesday
SYRACUSE -- My la W.
Hudson, 66, Syracuse, died
this morning at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Mr s . Hudson wa s the
daughter of the late Charles
and Bertha F lowers Howe ll.
She was a lso preceded in
death by fo ur brothers and

two sisters.
She was a member of the
Syracuse Church of God and
Veter a ns Memoria l Hospital
Auxilia ry.
She is surv ived by her
husband, Virgil B. Hudson,
four sons, Virgile E. of Pans,
Pa.; Dencil R., of Racine ;
Glen E. , of Syracuse, and
Ralph V.. of Portsmouth ; one

br othe r , Ear ly Howe ll ,
Lancas ter; four sisters, Vella
Gerlac,h and Reatha Brooks,
both of Le ta r t, W. Va.;
Estella Rector, Ha r I em
Ce nter, and Hazel Onde na,
Fonta na, Calif.; 13 grandc hildren,
one
gr ea l·
gr a ndc h il d , and severed
nieces and nephews.
F un era l ser vices will be
held Thursday at 1 p.m. at
Ewin~ F Wleral Home with
the Rev. Ge orge Oil er officiati ng. Buri a l wi ll be in
Baden Presbyterian Church
Cemete ry, Mt. Al to, W. Va.
Friends may call a t the
-fune r al ho m_e af ter Wednesday mor nin g.

Fund stands at $919.04
A public fund drive for
Lonnie Lemaster, 6, Route 2,
Pomeroy, br a in s ur gery
patient, r eached $9 19.04
Tuesda y m or ni ng, Mi ss
Eleanor Robson, c ha irperson, repor ted.
The fund is being conducted
to he lp th e family with
hospital expenses incurred in
Lonnie 's hospitaliza tion. He
has been allhe hospi tal since
July 17. A fri end visiting
Lonnie Sunday said that a ll
bandages have now been
removed from Lonnie a nd he
is able to be in a whee l cha ir
but is now permitted to leave
his room. The youngster has
received about 100 card s
from well wishers. Mrs. Ed

MEIGS THEATRE
TON ITE lhru THURS.
AUG. 26-28

NOT OPEN

·-

FRI.Ihru SUN.
AUG . 29-31
.gatha Christie's

MURDER ON THE
ORIENT EXPRESS
( T echnicolor)

HOSPITAL NEWS

Holzer Medica l Center
(Disc harges, Au g. 25)
Rona ld Ray Bachtel, Mrs.
Lemaster, his mother, is
Coy
E. Ba ll an d infa n t
stayin g a t the hospital with
daugil ler, Earl C. Barn ey,
him .
Samue
l Mi c hae l Bexon ,
La tes t contributor s ar e Mr .·
Rosemar
y Blain , Mrs. Dean
and Mrs. Richard G. Ash,
Syra c use; Mr . a nd Mr s. F . Brown a nd infant son, Mrs.
Jam es Cla tw or lhy, Mid - Clar e nce Edward Clary a nd
dl e port ; Mr . a nd Mr s. infa nt s on , R e becca Lee
P a tric ia
Ann
Cha rles Goeglein , Rou te 3, Coffey,
P ome r oy ; Mr. and Mrs. E ldr idge, Dianne Ha le,
Millard
Va n
Mete r , Dona ld B. Ha rd en , Mrs.
Pome roy; Mrs. Beulah F . De lma r F . Harris and infant
H ayes , Middleport, and Mrs . son, E ffi e Hayes, David Lee
Leota Smith, Hemlock Grove. Hively, J ohnnie L. Ki ng, Alli e
Checks are to be made Mae Mallick, Me lody Lyn n
pa ya bl e to th e Lonni e Mor ga n , Robe r t Tr ace
Louise
Le mas te r Hos pita li za tion P a r so ns, Li nda
F Uild and may be se nt to Miss Peni ck, Nellie Pearl Rollins,
Robs on , Me igs Co unty Donna J oan Schmoll , Morgan
Rec order , at the courthouse Wayne Turner, Mrs. William
in Pomeroy or may be left a t E . Wamsley and infant so n,
Edn a Wayland .
her offi ce.

FOUR FINED
RUTLAND
Four
defendants were fined $10 and
costs each Monday night by
Rutland May or Eugen e
Thompson for speeding . They
were David Lowell Carte,
Cottageville, W. Va .; Belly
Longs tr eth ,
La ngsville ;
Arnold Grate , Rutland , and
William Smith, Rutland. The
arrests were made by Officer
Richard Hysell.

GO
TO
CITIZENS
NATIONAL
FOR THE GREEN

Autos damaged
Three cars were damaged
in an a ccident on South Third
Ave . at 12: 30 a .m. Tuesday.
Police said a southbound
car driven by James A.
Snyder , Middleport, struck
the rear of a parked car
belonging to Robert C. Fife ,
Middl e port, whi ch wa s
shove d into the r ear of
another parked car owned by
Gla dy s Fife, Middleport.
Snyder, who was unhurt, will
be charged with driving while
intoxicated, police said.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMI TTE D She rry
P a tterson, Racin e; Dori s
Adam s, Raci ne; Ma rj ori e
Gibbs, Columbus ; Karolene
Rutl a nd;
Vi c tor
Bing,
Ha nn a hs, Pome r oy; J ohn
Taylor, Sr., Mason ; E ll/l ice
Ha lse y, Tupp e r s P la ins;
Ve nedi a Kni ght, Rac ine ;
Ca therine Sa wyers, Mason ;
Tanya Cwnmins, Racin e.
DISCHARGE D - Wesley
Cla rk , Freda Buc ha na n ,
Edilh McCoy, Sally Sayr e,
Amanda Dars t.

mayor's race .
J ames A. Cleland has wi thdra wn his peti tion of ca ndid acy to r U/1 fo r ma yor of
Racine Village, the Meigs
Co unty Boar d of Elections
said today.
Wtlh the r edr a wa l of
Cle la nd an d th e recen t
declaration of the petition of
Frederi ck J . Stobard as in vali d on residency groll/lds by
the board of elections, two
candidates remain in the
race. They ar e Charles Py les,
in c lu m be n t. a nd George
Wilham CUildi ff.

PLEASANT VALLEY
DI SCHARG E S Ri ba
Bright, P oi nt Pleasa nt ;
THREE R UNS MADE
Raymond Gandy, Le on ; Mrs .
The Pome r oy Fire Dept.
Ri chard Fa uve, Leon ; Tracy
was called Monday at 2:52
Osborne , Oa k Hill ; Mr s . p.m. to a brush fire behind
1Henry Neal , Point Pleasant ; Karr a'nd VanZandt Motor
,Mrs. Lee F lora, Southside ; Agency . At 11: 25 p.m . theE Mrs. Larry Whitt, Clifton ; R Squad was called to the
Mrs. Larry Rainey, Gallipolis Dic k Rawli ngs hom e for
Ferry.
Robert Craig Rawlings, 27,
BIRTHS - A daughter to
who was taken to Veterans
Mr . and Mrs . Rob ert Memorial Hospital. At 9:24
Cremeans, Rutland , and a a .m. today the squad was
son to Mr. a nd Mrs. Pa ul called to Butternut Ave., for
Fowler, Buffa lo.
Sybil Green who was taken to
Holzer Medical Ce nter.
WRECK AVOIDED

UNIT CALLED
The Middleport E-R squad
answered a call to 312 Pearl
St. a t 8:12 a. m . Tuesday for
Susa n Ve ith , a me di cal
.;:;:::::::::;:;:::::::::::.:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::;:·:;:;:;:·:·:::··
pa tient, who was taken to
Holze r Medical Center.
EXTENDED FORECAST
.. Thur s da y throu g h
Saturday,
chance
of
MEETING SET
showers Friday and mostly
A regular meeting of the
fair Saturday. High will be
executive committee of the
in the 80s and lows will be
Meigs County Re gional
in the 60s.
P lanning Commission will be
held at 3 p.m. Thursday in the
ASCS conference room of the
Farmers Bank Building.

LIGHT ON YOUR
NEW CAR LOAN

Just 2 left in

Berry's World

Time for a new car? Let
us help you own your

new car now. Choose the
car you want. then see
us for an Auto Loan at

A two car accid~nt was

avoided Monday alll p.m. on
CoUilty Road 4, in Rutland
Towns hip , the Me igs CoUilty
Sheriff 's De pt. reporte d .
William L . Klein, 22,
Pomer oy, wa s tr aveling
south when an Ullidentified
van traveling in the opposite
direction came left of center
and crowded Klein off the
highwa y. The incident is still
Wider inves tiga tion .
CALLE D SOUTH
John Moon and son,
Stanford , left Monday for
Conyers, Ga., where they
were ca lled by the dea th of
his sis ter , Mrs. Elizabeth
Bryant , age 83. Mrs. Bryant
died Saturday as the result of
an automobile accident. Mr.
Moon is now the only survivor
of the family of 11 children.
Flowers· were sent to the
- Mount
Mo riah
Baptis t
Church.

Coal

(Continued from page 1)
sta tem ent declare d th at
provisions of the c urrent
workin g a greement must
rema in undisturbed until it
expires in December, 1977.
But min er s a t protest
gatherings said they were
determined to remain off the
job until given s igne d
documents by the Bitwninous
Coal Operators Association
that no court restraining
orders or injunctions would
be imPOsed on tbem fo r
sta ging strikes at mines over
local grievan ces.
However , one coal leader.
President Quin Morton Ill of
the Kanawha Coal Operator s
Association , said he could
never en vision a "right to
strik e" clause for th e
strikers.
"! just cannot see how any
business can give a ny contract to any group of people
and have a strike clause in
it ," he said.
Morton warned that stee I
mills and power plants, whicl.
rely on bituminous coal, soon
would feel serious impacts of
the strike, but he declined to
say wha t moves , if any, coal
officia ls would contemplate if
the miner s continued the ir
strike.
"Probably only 6 per cent
of the miners are leading this
strike," Morton estimated .
" Not over 10 per cent. A very
small minority is agitating
this thing."
"Right ro Strike"
Morton said he wa s hopeful
tha t
" e ventually ,
the
rna jority of the miners takes
control. "
A "right to strike" issue
has upstaged several other
issues that originally figured
in the walkout. One demand
was met Monday.
In Washington , the UMW
and coal operators agreed on
the membership of a lO-man
committee of arbitration umpires to ponder grievances
that arise at coal mines. The
delay in setting up this panel
weighed heavily in the infancy of the work stoppage .
But even without this panel,
Morton insisted Ujal miners '
complaints wer e being
hancDed with · more dispatch
than those of workers in any
other industry. Morton said
the grievance procedure was
" somewhat slow, due to the
terrific caseload we have. "
Despite the formation of
the conuniltee, miners raised
clenched fists and marched
defiantly through the capital
city, shortly after union
leader Sim Howze willingly
returned to jaiL A federal
judge offered clemency if he
would go back to· work, but
the president of a Logan
County union local politely
declined.
While blue lights of prowl
cars cleared the streets,
miners walked 10 and 12
abreast , chanting protest
slogans, like :
" Will we mine the coal?
Hell, no. ''
" Will the judge mine the
coal ? Hell, no ."
Who will mine the coal •
"Nobody! "
Miller, a target of ·verbal
abuse from miners who
berated him as a "scab "
'
meanwhile, called on tbe
BCOA to help his union gel
the ra nk-and-file back on the
job.
"Now," the leader said, in
a harshly-worded message,
"! think it is time fo r West
Virginia coal operators to
make an equal good faith
effort."
Miller said operators should
talk to miners at mining
operations to learn the
reasons for walkouts and
abandon a practice in which
they " bludgeon the m en back
to work '' with court injunction .

_M iddleport'
(Continued from !J81le 1)
of Engineers for a five year period. Votmg for the measure
were coUilcil members Craig, Carl Horky, M. L. Kelly and
King . There was no definite plan decided upon as to how fwuls
will be r aised to provide money for lhe upkeep of the facUlty.
Council heard a complaint in regard to a sewer problem in
th e Sycamor e-Laurel St. area and will look into it at once.
Council also heard a complaint from Hennan Haddox in
regard to drainage near his HamiltOn st. JrOperty. Haddox
said ihal he ha s swept water for eight years and cleaned lhe
street. It was agreed to do something about Haddox's problem
and to contact the gas company to see if ll can help.
David Gerar d, a council candidate in the fall , suggested
that arrangeme nts be made through which a council member
be elected from each precinct of the town so that residents
would know who to contact with a problem . However, it was
noted that it is difficult to get anyone to run for village offices ,
and Mayor Fred Hoffman said residents calling into his office
will be referred to the proper committee chairperson. ·
Coun cil discussed drainag e near the Gra vel Hill Cemetery
and agr eed to study the problem.Cierk-Treasurer Gege Grate
pointed oulthalthere ar e not enough funds on hand to pay bills
at the swimming pool for the season . It was agreed to make
another fUild transfer - th e second one to date - of $500 to
cover the bills. A request that Dock St. be mowed was passed
on to maintenance supervisor Harold Chase.
Council dlacussed the no parking markings on south ·mll'a
Ave., noting that some people have only a few inches of no
parking markings near their driveways while others have as
many as I~ feel. It was agreed that the marking should be
more unifonn.
At the r equest of CoUilcilwoman Craig it was agreed to
place " children playing signs" on Vine and Dew Sts. King
brought up another sewer odor area between Ash and Park and
also pointed out tha t a grating is missing and that there is
danger to children there. Chase reported that he will be
placing a new fire hydrant in the Beech st. area close to the
school soon. Mayor Hoffma n said center stripes will be placed
on several village streets in early fall as a part of a new federal
program . Councilman Brewer said parking m eters should be
put on an area .near the fonner Rawlings Garage and tbe
matter was refe rred to Chase. Also attending the meeting
besides those m entioned earlier was Police Chief J . J.
Cremeans.
to c heck on military
movements by either the
Egyptians or the Israelis.
Kissinger
has
said
(Continued from page I)
Washington would not imbeing ceded by the Israelis. plement the technician plan
Allon said the Israelis unl ess
it
receives
would pull back even further congressional
approval.
to give the United Nations a President Ford said in Milnew and wider buffer zone of waukee, Wis ., Monday he
II to 28 miles in width.
would require an okay by
The foreign minister said both houses for the "very
the Egyptians have agreed to limited number" - 100 to 100
Israeli demands for allowing men-needed to man the
U.S. volunteer technicians to buffer zone bases.
set up two manned early
Kissinger was not anwarning stations in the Milia nounc ing any negotiation
and Gidi passes of the buffer details . The secretary has
zone . He said also the made it clear he prefers to
Egyptia ns agreed to allow the have no details made public
Americans to set up two until he has the document
unmanned electronic stations signed by both parties.

Department

•

lsi Floor

Just arrived! America's fav orite ties;
the Flora and Faun a Collection as seen or TV.

In fabu lous Wemlon by Wembley.
Knot 'em' '":' rush 'em! even Wash 'em!tlluy'll stay fresh as new.
Sele ct several ties today.

(Continued from page 1)
and was ready to take on a busy week of activities, including a
meeting with AFL-CIO President George Meany and Labor
Secretary John Dunlop today on the longshoremen's boycott of
grain sales to Russia.

"THE FRIENDLY BANK"

MIDDL£PORT. OHIO
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation ·
DEPOSITS INSURED TO '40,000

IS) 197!) by NEA,

Inc ~~_...,

"Dear, will yo u please stop yelling 'Decontrol!
·
Decontrol!' I can 't ·get to sleep!"

JACKSON , MISS. - CHARLES C. " CUFF" FINCH, who
makes $150,000 a year as an attorney but works one day a week
as a laborer to keep in touch with the " working man," battled
U . Gov. William F. Winter today in Missis"'ppi's Democratic
runoff for governor, Although Winter, who handily defeated
Finch in the race for lieutenant goVernor four years ago, led
the first primary Aug . 5, Finch's "working man's campaign"
has steadily gained monenlum during the past three weeks.
A turnout of I~ than the 789,89( voters in the first primary
was expected for loday's runoff. The runoff was marred by tbe
deaths of two candidates Sunday night in a private plane crash ~
near Decatur. The victims, stale treasurer candidate Doxey ' ""'
~
Fisher, 44, and legislative candi~ale Danny Keyes , 25, died
""'-----~---;..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.,

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

: t r : . : _ r k Jones. 20, when the plane went down in a

'

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I,

'I

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hi gh com pared to 268 last
year; 11 5 at Leta rt Falls w1th
last yei.ir 's ri gu re bein g 118 :
180 a t the R.adne Elementar y
wilh la s t yea r' s figur e bemg
166 ; H 7 at Syrac use cornp&lt;:~r e d to last yea r 's 150,, a nd
82 at Portland w1lh ope ning
day enro ll ment la s t yea r
being 80.

The Mr1gs l. oca l Sc hool

•

D1 s tn c t ha d a Tuesday
en rollment of 2,823 comp&lt;;ired
to 2,897 last year. a dec rease
of 74 .
Enrollments included: high
se houl. 9:~0 co mpared to htst
yea r 's 951 , 486 at the jumor
high compared to 486 last
yea r : tOO at Bradbury whir.:h
had lli stud enlo; la st veltr;
16~ at Harn sonvlile wit.h trru

VOL XXV II NO. 95

POMEROY-M IDDLEPOR T. OH IO

enrolled last year; 2.12 a llhe
Middl epo rt Elem e ntary
compared to 2.18 last year ;
406 at Pomeroy comp Rred to
395 las t year; 220 at Hulland
compadrt to 244 last l car ;
115 tn compari son to 130 !II the
Salem Center School la s t
year and · lfi7 at Sa li sbur y
compared to 168 last yea r
F'tve l ea r mng d isCtbility
s tud ents rounds out tht" total.

Now You Kno)\'

enttne

Acco rdinJ..:
to
the
mea surements 1n the Btblc.
Noah's ark w::1s about ha lf the
length
th e ocean llllf'r
Queen MarY

nr

PRI CE 15'

WED NESDAY, AUGUST 27 . 1975

Six held in jewelry robbery
Six Meigs Coll/lty me n have
bee n apprehended in connection with the robbery at
the Goessle r .Jewe lry Store ,
Cour t St. , Pomeroy, early
Tuesday.
Two display windows were
broken and jewelry taken between midmg ht and 5:30a.m.

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MARC IA DIIJ.ARD ON HER registered qua rter hor se " Eme ry's Choice" displaying
her Ohio Stale Fair trophy for fir st place in western hor semanship.

horsemanship

For men with their own
ideas about fashion

year . Total enrollment --last
year was recordl'd at l,O:lO
compared to thi s year 's lOtH .
Bob Ord. s upcnntcnden t of
the
Southern
Distri ct,
reported enrollment Tue sda y
at 1,098 compared to 1.0671ast
year on the openin~ day . The
en roll ment tnclud es 325 3t the
high· sc hoo l compared to 283
last yea r : 249 in the JUnior

Clear toni ght with lows 60
to 65. Highs Th ursday will be
in the mid and upper 80s .
Probability of rain near ze ro
today and tonigh t , 10 per cent
Thursday.

•

WembleY

District was 221 ~:tl Cheste r m
con trast to 230 la st year; 124
&lt;:tt Rivervtew compared to 133
last year ; 163 at Tuppers
Plains with 86 kind er ga rte n
pupils to star t next week
compared to 3 tolal of 234
induct in g kindergarten last
year, and the junior and
se nior high sc hoo l had 470
sludenl'"&gt; compared to 4:1:1 last

W~&gt;:ather

First in Ohio

~

Mens and 'eoys

News •• in Briefs

VVALK-UPTELLER WINDOW AND
AUTO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
FRI. EVENINGSS To 7 P.M.

F' or example, th e opening
in the Eastern D1stric t was
marred by a school bus ac·
c ident but Supt . J ohn R~ebel
reported that no s tudenlc.;
were injured . The incident
occurred on the Swnner Roa d
when a milk truck backed
into the s ide of the bus.
Total
open1n g
day
enro ll ment m the Eastern

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

advan.teges of pilylng
cash for your car . Its
needs here.

The Eastern and Southern Monda y had 4,985 names on
Local School
Distric-ts sc hool r osters; a year ago,
s howed
tncr eaSes
in 4,994, nine s tudents fewer in
enrollme nt on the openin g Meigs County thi s year
day of school whil e a compared to last year .
decrease was reflected in
Opening day of school in
ope ning day figures of the Meigs County Tuesda y went
Meigs Local District .
well although admimstrators
By coll/lty, the 1975 tota l pointed out that even when all
s howed besides the shift fr om goes well. a ftrst day usuall y
town to country, a few less brin~s problems.
ouo ils in 1975. Opt-mn g rlrl y

Israeli

bank rates. Enjoy the
easy to gel the green
light on all your loan

Schools show town to countrY shi

To be a trophy winn er at
the Ohio State Fair is the
dream of every 4-H hor seman.
So when Marcia Dilla rd,
daughter of Mr . an d Mrs.
Ro ge r Dilla rd, left for
Columbus last week with
Emery's Choice, a registered
quarter horse , she left with
that dream , yet fully aware of
the keen competition .
And she return ed with a
trophy, her dream fulfilled.
Marcia placed first in the
stale in horsemanship for 14
year olds.
· A member of the Meigs
County 4-H Pleasure Riders,
the trip to the stat e fa ir with
her horse was a "fir st" for
Marcia. She was selected as a
Count y
4-H
Meigs
r epresentative on the basis of

her performance a t th e Meigs
Coti)Ity Fair.
rf was in Th ursday's show
that she receiv ed the trophy
awa rd for hor sema nship. On
the day before s he had
received a third place in the
slate in showma nship.
Marcia has been a member
of the Meigs County Pleasure
Riders for five years a nd also
belongs to the Meigs County
Ridin g Club. She keeps her
horse a t the fa irgrounds and
twice a day, ra in or shine, she
goes there to care for her
animal. Her future interests
a re
in
th e
field
of
ve t e ri na r ia n me di cine.
Marc ia, a s opho m or e at
Meigs High Sc hool, is a
candidate for queen of the
Ohio Va ll ey Hor se Show
Association .

E MPEROR DI ES
ADDIS AB ABA, Eth iopia
I UP I) - Former Emperor
Ha lle Selass le of E thiopia
is d ead at 83, Ra dio
E thi opia sa id tod ay.
Th e bro a dcas t sa id
Selass ie was found dead in
bed this morning by a
serva nt.
Selassie ruled Ethiopia
for 57 yea rs with th e till~ of
" King of Kinds, Elec t of
God, Conquering Lion of
the Tribe of Judah" uotil a
military coup deposed him
in 1974.

·'

from $125

.

bond, a nd Steve Pul li ns. Doug cha rged with rece1vmg and
Burns and F:a rl Phe lps, all of reta ining ce rtain property
Pomer oy, remain 1n custody . being jewelry valued in exAcc ordmg to the offi ce of cess of $150
Prosecuting Altorney Bernad
Butcher wa s c harged with
F'ultz, Pehlps and Mayle obtawwg and exce r t ing
trespassed by force into lhe control ove r cert.ain pr operty
jewelry store to comm1t a m the store valu ed at more
theft . Th ey furt her are than Sl50, and Pullins, Burns
and P hi llips with rece ivi nJ::

and
retaini ng
ce rt&lt;1 in
pr operty ( jewelry 1 va lued tn
excess of$150 pr operly .
Wr: bste r
s aHI
(.tp ·
proxtma tely $1 ,000 worth of
jewelry wa s ta ken 1n the
theft . All of it has no t been
r eco ver ed. The SIX will
appear in county court this or
n ~xt week, Webster said .

Only words hold
up Sinai peace
By RICHARD H. GROWALD
ALEXAN DR IA , Egypt (UP! )- Only the wordin g of a single
clause is blocking Egyptia n-Isr aeli agr eem ent on a n inter im
peace se ttlement in the Sina i desert, an aide to President
Anwa r Sadat sa id today.
Sadal 's press secretary Tahsin Bashir sa id the clause will
say that the Sin ai t roop disengagement agreement is onl y one
of a series of Arab-Israeli ag reements needed to brmg permanent peace to the Middle East.
Bash ir and other Egyptian officials told reporter s they
be lieve the clause will be agreed upon and that the setllement
will be initia led by Egypt Frida y, or al leastthis weekend .
All t hr ee of Cairo's big newspapers- A! Akhbar , Al Ahram
and AI Gomhouria-said today the pac t would be initi aled
Friday and formally s igned next month in Geneva . Bashir
called these reports "premature."
Egyptia n so urces said military commanders and not
political lea der s will init ia l the disengageme nt pact a nd then
sign it forma lly later in Geneva.

Water plentiful
for Ohio plant

COLUM BUS ( UP!) - An
Ohio Sl&lt;l te Uni versity student
has deter m ine d th ere is
enough wa ter a long th e Ohio
and Muskingum rivers in
southeastern Ohio to quench
the mammoth thirst of a coal
gas ifi ca tio n plan t , shou ld
such a fac ility be buil l in t he
slate.
Kristine Ann Rebholz, 23,
The Meigs County comColumbus,
who will rece ive
missioners Tuesday aphe r m ast er's deg ree in civil
prove d a re quest by Dr
eng
in ee r i ng during com Donnerber of the TB and
Health Clini c to increase each m e n ce m e n t ceremo n ies
visit fr om $125 to $150 for Friday at OSU, investigated
the
various
coa l ~o-gas
ope rat ion of the clin ic .
p
rocesses,
wate
r t a ble
Bar bar a Shule r , welfa re
direc tor , was prom oted fr om profil es and stream flow dal&lt;l
Step 4 to Slep 5 with an in- in areas of south eastern Ohio.
Most coal gasification procrease in wages from $5.94 an
cesses no w co nsid ered
hour to $6.10 .
feasible,
s he said , require
Mildr ed J acobs, ma tron
By United P ress International
about 10 million gallons' of
CLEVELAND - THUNDERSTORMS TEMPORARILY and s uperin tende nt of the water per dAy . None of the
flooded roads and low-lying areas here Tuesuay, setting back Meigs Coll/lty Infirma ry, was water would be re turne d to
mop-up operations underwa y since a four-inch rain killed four g ive n per m issio n to hire the ea r th 's hydr ologica l
persons and caused an estimated $10 million damage Sunda y. Susan Tracy as bookkeeper. system .
Ma nning Webster met with
One west side intersection collapsed , injuring six city utilities
Miss Rebholz said even at
the comm issioners in regard
work ers who were repairing a water main leak . P oli ce said
period
of low flow, the Ohio
to stor ing equipm'en t that had
overloaded storm sewers undermined the pavement , opening
been used for the me ntall y
up a hole 22 feel deep and 40feel wide.
retard ed. II was pointed out
The six workers wer e treated for cuts and bruises a t a
thill
the com missioners will Firemen calle d
hospital and were r eleased. The new slonn cam e in off Lake
Erie just as officials of the Ohio Disaster Services Ad - have to pa y tr ansportation
rnini,slral ion (ODSA) began to lour damaged areas m an- costs fo r men tally retarded to local hotel
ticipation of declaring the city a disaster area. The s tate was to s tudents to attend classes a t
The Middlepor t E-R squad
Cheshire.
relay a request for disaster designation to President Ford so
Attend ing were Hen r y answered a ca ll to Route 7
low-interest loans c ould be granted to affec ted properly
owners and the city could gel federal aid to restore dama ged . We lls, Wa rden Ours, and below Hobson at 1: 0'1 p.m.
Gi lkey,
com - Tuesday for Bill y LoJJli ns,
Be rn a rd
municipa l properly.
who had ches t pams. He was
m i ss i o rt ~ r s, an d Martha
taken
to Veter a ns Memorial
Chamber s, cle rk .
NASHVILLE , TENN . - CHILDREN AT AN apartment
Hospita l.
complex tortur ed two ponies for a week, beating and riding one
At 7: 31 p.m. Tuesday , the
of the animals to death after setting fire to its mane and ta il,
Middlepor t F ire Dept. was
POlice said Tuesday. Officials said the children will be
called
to th e LaSalle Hotel.
prosecuted if id entifi ed.
Fire Chief Bob Byer said that
"Nashville just can 'llolera te s uch cruel thin gs as this," ' EXTEN DE D OUTLOOK
the stdewalk in fro nt of the
said Youth Guidance Div ision Maj . George Currey . He '!9id he
Friday through Sunday,
hotel had been washed and
assigned two officers to the case and ordered a thorough inwa rm and hum id with a
wa te r apparently went into
vestigation . One of th e POnies c olla psed and _die d durin g the
chance of showers Friday
an electrical box, causin g a
ordeal that included being ridden to exhaustiOn Wlthout food
and again a bout Sunday.
breake r to blow out.
or water in 90-&lt;legree heat. Police sa id the anirpals were
Highs will be 85 to 90 and
Smoke developed around
beat~n with slicks a nd boards in an effort to ltee p them
lo" s will be 65 to 70.
the
front door in tne lobby and
moving .
.
' fi remen were called as a
Finally, when one pony r efused t.n budge, someone se t its
safety measure .
(COntinued on page 16)

Fee raised

Tuesday.
Pomeroy Poli ce Ch1ef .Jed
Webster ide ntif ied the men as
Roge r Butcher, Rutland, who
has bee n released on $100
bond:
Lar r y
Ph illips.
Pornerov
. re leased on $100
bond ;
Calv in
Mayle,
Pom eroy. out on property

Ri ver a nd t he lower portion of
the Mu skingum River could
meet such a need.
·• w ater is necessar y in
making natural gas from coal
because the hydrogen in the
water is combined with the
(Continu ed on page 16)

THE UPPER PARKING LOT is being extensively repaired m Pomeroy by the Stone
Const ruct ion Co., Chester' !I. Repa irs costing $103,100 were made possibl e through Co ng.
Cla rence Miller and the U. S. Corps of Engineers. Village off icials contended that th e
collapse of the wa ll two years ago wa s due to th e eros ion of the Ohio River .

Middleport man causes havoc
CHARLESTON , W. Va .
!UP! ) An Ohi o man
rammed his auto through a
cha in li nk fe nce on to
Kanawha Airport runways
Tuesd ay an d disrupted a&lt;r
tr affic Ull til 15 law officers
shot out the car's tir es and
subdued him with tear gas.
Herschel G. Burkh art, 62,
of Middleport, Ohi o. was
be ing hel d today at t he

Blast hits
laundromat
The Me igs County Sher iff's
De pt. r epor ted that an explosion occurred Tuesday at
6:25 a .m . at the Tuppers
Plai ns La ll/ldromat owned by
Will iam Connolly. Its cause
was Wlkn own .
According
to Deputy
Randall Carpenter , the explosion raised the roof 6 inches and broke a 2x8 ceiling
joist. A bl oc k building , its
glass was blow n 60 feet away.
The State Fi re mars ha ll
was cailed to in vestigate and
the Tuppe.-s Pla ins Fire Dept.
answered a call. The building
was not destroyed, cwd
dam "'ges were est imated as
"moderate ." The incident is
still under investigation .

Kanawh a Coun ty Jail on
charges of carrymg a de adl y
weaPJrl Wit hout a permit and
failure to obey police office rs.
Corporal J.T. Meadows of
the s heri ff 's office said
pschia lrtc a id e was being
sought for Burkhart on belief
he might be sufferin g a
nervous brea kdovvn.
Mea dows said Burkhart,
who had driven from his

Mi ddl e port Ch ief of
Poli ce J . J . Cr em ea ns sa id
today Mr. Burkha rt has
resided seve ra l years in
Middleport at Ill So uth
Front St. with his wife a nd
has a lways been a model
citizen.

.

home to Charle s ton la te
Monday, ranuned his 1972
a uto through the a ir port
fence shortly after midnight,
gaining access to the landing
field . He refused to leave ,
prompting airPOrt officials to
call for help.
"Everytime we'd try to
stop the car, he 'd run from
us," sa id Meadows, ex~
plainmg the enormity of the
wide..open runway s.
Meadows said she nff's
deput ies, aided by city
POlicemen, finally boxed him
in at th e a djacent Air
Nat10nal Guard hangar and

Immobilized Burkhart's car
by shooting out the tires.
" I gave the order to shoot
out the tires when it looked
hke he m1ght ge t away from
u.s," Meadows satd. " We
wanted to keep him out there
on the runway away from
peop le ."
Beca use Bu rk hart had
bra ndished a pisto l at officers
during the ehase, a tear gas
ca nister was tossed into the
rea r window or the Ohioan 's
car to subdue him fo r captu re.
Th e airport was closed to

Two accid ents
are in vestigated
The Middl e port P olice
Dept. mvestigated two accidents Tuesday . At 12:30
p.m . a car driven by E leanor
~· aul k , Middleport, traveling
west on Locu!) l St., struck a
car owned by George Korn.
Pomeroy . Mrs . Fa ulk was
ctted to mayor's court on an
as su red c lear distance
charge.
At 5:30 a ca r driven by
Wayne Vanhoose, Coolville,
tra veling the wrong direc tion
on South Third Ave . Ia oneway s treet) struck a car
driven by James Ke'nnedy,
M1ddleport. Vanhoose \\'as
e h ar~ed with DW1.

air traffi c for a hout a halfho ur while Burkhart was
bei ng appreh ended , forL"in r..;
at least one plane to circle t l1t·
fi eld repeatedly until tlw
runways were c lear('d.
Meadows Said Bur khar t.
who he dcscnbed a o "totally
confused," may have bern
att r acted t o th e a 1r port
because he had a relative who
was a fighter pilot dur ing
World War ll .
It was not kn own whv
Burkhart hac! d riven t~
Charleston .

Sl'ITS nu:D
A s.uit askin g di ssolut ion of
marnage and ;:tnnther for
divorce have been filed m
M e1~s Co unty Common Pl eas
Cour t.
Honda L. Jeffers. Rt. 1.
Lan gsvil le , i:!ncl Drwid B.
Jeffers . Jr , same &lt;tddr ess.
filed for dissolut ion of
marriage. F illng for divorce
was Gary E. While. Rt . 1,
l angsville from Conmc Rae
Wh ite. Worthin !:(ton, on
char ges of gr oss neglect of
duty , extreme cr ue lty and
adultery.
LOCAL TEMPS
The
temper at ure
in
downtown Pomer oy at II
a. m . Wednesday was 84
_degrees under s.unny skies.

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