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'
8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Momll!y, Sept. 8, 1975

Junior Miss rules set
Rules For the 1976 Southeast
Ohio Junior Miss Scholarship
Program hav e been arl nounced by the program
c ommiltee of t he Meigs
County Jaycees.
The ruJes are:
Contestant must be single

and

never

have

been

married , divorced or h&lt;-Jd
marriage annulled .

~~

Contestant must be u bona
fide high school scn i&lt;•r and

s hall nut graduate prior lu

May 1, 1976.
Contestant's age on March
1, 1976, shall 11ot be less than
16 or more than If! years of
age prior to May :il, 1976

Co ntes ta n t must be llf good
c haracte r and pus st'SS pui st:.
personality, in le lli genn·,
charm. attractive11css. and
guud grooming.
Co ntestant

must

fJOsse ss

a nd display a talent. This

· talent may take the form uf
sin ging. d&lt;o~nci n g, playing a

mu s i ca l instrument,
dramatic
reading ,
art
display. dress designing, ur
she may give Cl ta lk on a
subject of h~r choic e. It is
expre!3sly understoud thoJt
should any contestant's talent
routine at the Suuthee~st Ohio
finals exceed three and oneha lf ( 3 1·: !) minu tes, such
co ntestant
will
be
disqualified fr om rece i ving
any poin ts in t he c r eative ancl
performing arts categ or y.
No cuhtestaut sha ll be
denied the r ight to parti cipate

MEIGS THEATRE
TONITE
SEPT. 9

Irwin Allen 's
THE TOWERING
INFERNO
( Technicolor l

Sherman Blessing died Sunday

I.ETAK'l', W. Va .
Sher man Blessin g, 89, Letar t,
contest be l ·au se uf race,
creed or eul or .
died Sunday at the residence
Cun lestant must be a bon&lt;J
or Charles Thomas of Letar t.
fide resident uf the State of
He was a retired farmer .
Ohi o.
Funeral se rvices will be held
Contestant must recognize
at 1:30 p. HI . Tuesday rrom
!.he F oglesong Funeral Home,
the ex istence of a supreme
Mason, and burial will follow
being . All .Junior Miss conte s tan ts a r c judged on the in th e Boards Cemetery. Fr .
George Werrick in char ge.
followin!-:
ca l.cguries:
sc hulastic achievement. 15
Call ing hour s at the funeral
hurnt.'
wi ll bt.' fr om 7 tu 9 p . m.
Judges;
conper c ent;
today . Horn in November ,
:15
percent.
fr n•nLT,
1885, he wa s a sun of the late
(·n·at i vc and perform in ~ &lt;.~rts,
20 percent; poise and ap- Thomas a nd Lucy Raybw·n
Blessi 1• ~- He is survived by
.
'
pear ann • r evenmg
guw n l . I .&gt;
percent. and yuuth fitn ess. 15
percent .
l11fon:Lal iun ca r1 l&gt;e obin lhc local , state ur natiun;.tl

Services set

l ~ti n cd

by writin g Southeas t

Oh io .Juniur" Miss Prugr&lt;o~m.
P. 0 . Bux 101. Pomeruy. Ohi o
·157ti9 .

Reports given
on children at
Guiding Hand
Tht• l'&lt;mun ittec fur the
:Yh·n tal ly Retarded m e t
T1Lur s dc1y night a t the Me igs
( 'oun ty eour tho usc to hear
re ports on the Meigs CoWl ty
c hildn!n n ow attendi ng t!H:.'
Cuiding Hantl School i n
(;allia County.
Reporting we re Mrs. Kate
Jarrell , a teacher at the

Guidin g
Hand
School;
Manning Webster. president
of the Meigs Cu un ty Buctrd of
Mcnl.t.tl Hel.ardatiun 169. an d
several of the parents who
desc nbed !h e ir ch ildl'en 's
reaction lu the program of fered .
It was deci ded thal th e
committee will continue to

meel on the firs t Thursday or
each munth to hea r reports on
the progress being made by

Mei gs
Cou n ty
toward
providing fur the education of
the Meigs County retard ed
children and adults .

for Tuesday
Fun era l services w111 be

hel d 11::!0 a. m. Tuesday at
ltutlierrurd-Corbin
Chapel,
515 Hi gh Street, Worthington,
fur Marjorie Ann Overturf,
Columbus, who was killed in
an automobi le accident in
Columb us Saturday .
Burial will be in Riverview
Ce metery , Middleport .
Graveside serv ices are
sc heduled ror 3 o. m.
friends may call at the
fwwral home between 7 and 9
this evening.
Mrs. Overturf, 33, is survived by her husband, Paul;
a daugh~r , Melodie Ann,
Columbus; her parents, Mr .
and Mrs. Henry J. Henneke ;:
paternal grandmother, Doris
M. Henneke ; maternal
grandmother, Mary J . Doyle;
brothers William Louis
Henneke and John Henry
He nneke, all or Columbus,
a nd two sisters, Mrs . Walter
S.
I Barbara)
Bower,
F'redericktuwn, Pa. ; Mrs.
Paul (Christina) Suhajda,
Law rence, Kan . A son, Paul
Jr., died April 2, 1974.
She was employed by the J .
C. Penny Distribution Cen~r,
Columbus.

lfjreat
From a Great American Bank

twu brothers , Park Blessing,
£udid. Ohio, a nd Charles
Cyri l Blessing , Cleve land
Heigh ts .

SEATILE, WasiL I UPI) Coach Forrest Gregg said
before the game that
Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS the Cleveland offensive unit
Charles
McGraver,
jurt wasn 't ready to play
Rutland; Lov ie Watson, Sunday. So he substituted for
Albany; Sandra Hill , Wilkes- most of the First team and the
reserves
knocked
off
ville.
SAT U R D A V
D I Spreviously unbeaten New
CHARGF: S
Martha
York 24-20.
Rcpp,
Alicia
Sc hul e r ,
Gregg
said
Browns
Raymund Hartley , Beverly quarterbback Mike Phipps
Dowell, Gregory CundiFf.
"seemed to be the only one on
Robert Rawlings, Ruth oFFense ready Ill play" but
Wils on, Shelpa Gorad ia , even he was yanked .
Chester Mundry , Eric Knotts ,
"That New York defensive
Ralph Carl, freda Martin , line as all over Mike," said
Judy McNickel, Paul Simon. Gregg. "Phipps co uldn 't
raise hi s arm without
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Donald Pooler, Pomeroy ; somebody hitting him . So I
decided to put in a new unit.
Donna Wel ch, Coolv ill e;
Samuel Rairden,
Long They were kids with a Jot of
Bottom; Clara Radford, ,• desire.
Syracuse;
Ruby
Kin g ,
"Everybody came out but
Pomeroy; Ca rl Hubbard, the wide receivers- Reggie
Syracuse:
Lula
Bass, · Rucker and Steve Holden, "
Syracuse; Joey Pridemore, said Gregg. "( Hugh) Me
Middleport ; Sheryl Little, Kinnis and Larry Poole went
Pomeroy; Nancy Baker, into the backfield for Billy
Pomeroy; Alberta Schuler. Pritchett and Greg Pruitt.
Rutland.
·
SUNDAY DISCHARGES HEAD CORRECTED
T.errence Curlin, J ames
Barton , Arnold Bush .
The lull! I or a Fund drive For
Lonnie Lemaster, Route 2,
Pomeroy , six·year-old brain
Holzer Medical Center
surgery patien t, ha s reached
(Births, Sept. 5)
Mr. and Mrs. Alonzo $1,362 .09 . A headline in
Burris, son, Gallipolis ; Mr . Sunday's edition reported the
and Mrs . Raymond Lieving , total at $3,362.
daughter, Bidwell.
(Sept. 6)
DIVORCE ASKED
Mr. arid Mrs . Richard
Charging gross neglect or
Kingery, daughter , Vinton .
duty and extre111e cruelty,
(Sept. 7)
Charles Norman CurFman ,
Mr . and Mrs. Carl Coffey, Route I, Racine, has riled suit
daugh~r , Jackson ; Mr. and
ror divorce from Irene CurfMrs . Phillip !son, daughter , man , Gallipolis, in the Meigs
Point Pleasant, W. Va. ; Mr. Cuun ly Common Pleas Court.
and Mrs . Charles Penick, Other entries include actions
son, Gallipolis.
ror support of children under
the States'
Reciprocal
Agreement riled by Linda
VISITS HERE
fay Dinguss, Hurricane, W.
SYRACUSE - William Va., against Lanny Gordon
Hayden , Indianapolis, was a Dinguss, Route I, Dexter, and
weekend visitor or Alice and Sharon Gail Albright, MidGeorge
freel an d
or dleport, against John Randy
Syracuse.
Albright, Mason , W.Va. , and
a judgment giving the J . B.
Plumbing Supply Co. the
right to collect $899.32 in its
suit ror money against the All
Weather Roofing Co.

SQUAD CALLED
The Middleport emergency
squad was called to Apt. 102,
Riverside Apts. at 4:39p.m.
Saturday for Susie Edwards
who was taken to Holzer
Medical Center.

PTA TO MEET
The Pomeroy Elementary
School PTA will meet at 7:30
this evening at the school.

Now is the time to do that
painting chore you've been
putting off. Check with the
" FR I ENOL Y ONES" for
Work · Free PAINT and
brighten up any room in

A fire of linde~rmined
origi n at 9 p.m . Sunday
caused severe damage to a
car driven by John P . Barry,
19 of Patriot. The GalliaM~igs Post State Highway
Patrol investigated.
A deer was killed at 8:10
p.ln . Sunday on Rt. 33, two
and three tenths mile s north
of Rt. 7 in Meigs County. The
patrol reported the animal
ran into the path of a car
driven by Martha E. Lyons,
21, or Shade. There was
moderate damage.

Browns "to wm

Hospital News

there are
270,568,93.5 stars in the
universe, and he'tt believe
you . Put up a "fresh paint"
sign and he'll have to check
it for himself".

Auto damaged by fire

Subs pepped up

BOOSTERS TO MEET
The Eastern High School
Athletic Boosters will meet at
the school at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday.

SALE SET
The Freewill Baptist
Church will hold a yard sale
From 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Thursday at the Doyle Hudson
residence on Route 124, one
half mile east or the Rutland
Village limits. All proceeds
will go toward the purchase
of a new piano for the church.

"The young people wanted
to gel the job done," said
Gregg. "You could see it in
their !aces. " I was worried
about this one after the pregame meal," said Gregg.
"You can tell who's inspired,
who's ready. I hadn't felt
good about he approach or
some people.
"You could see it in their
fa ces and hear it in their
talk " ·he said. " There was a
lack of mental preparation .
Gregg said that quarterback Brian Sipe went with
exactly the same game plan
I Continued From page I)
that Phipps had been using .
"We just weren 't getting without a cutback in henefits
the execution in the First as now required.
quarter," sa id Gregg.
They cited the current
But, he added, " Phipps will budget deficit of nearly $60
start the next game."
billion and predictions it will
Sipe completed 15 of 18 hi• $80 billion or more . The
passes for 143 yards and one p1 'ram
envisions
a
touchdmm after entering the bao" nced budget "in no more
game with the Browns than three years."
trailing 10-&lt;l.
The proposal on health
Me Kinnis led the rushing insurance sets a broad goal of
attack witth 98 yards for a 5.2 protection for the elderly
yard per carry average .
from "catastrophic" illness
The Cleveland scoring without details as to how it
came on a three-yard touch- would he achieved.
down run by Poole, a one
Other provisions of the
yard plunge by McKinnis a 7 program include reForming
yard pass from Sipe to rookie the food stamp program,
Greg Parris and a 34-yard- maintaining "a strong
field goal by Don Cockroft. national defense,"
strengthening laws to stop the
NFL Exhibition Standings
flow of illegal aliens inlll the
United Press International
country and improving the
American Conference
lax system.
East
w I I pel pf pa

House

Miami
NY Jels

4 1 0 .800 75 57
4 1 0 .BOO 105 93
Buffalo
3 2 0 .600 115 119
New England
3 2 0 .600 111 103
Baltimore 1 3 0 .250 J9 68
Central

w II pel pf pa
Houston

2 2 0
X·Pitts
3 3 0
Cincinnati 3 3 0
Cleveland· 2 3 0
West

.500 72 64
.500 liB 102
.500 119 106
.400 S5 100

w I I pet. pf pa

Oakland

5 0 0 1.000 151 69
Denver
2 3 0 .400 91 112
Kansas Ci ly
2 1 0 .400 90 74
San Di ego I 4 o .200 60 91
Nationa I Conference

East
w I I pet pf pa
NY Giants

4 I 0 800 110
3 2 0 .600 77
Wash .
3 3 0 .500 132
3 2 0 .600 63
St. Louis
Dalla s
1 ' 0 .200 77
Central
w II pet pf
Green Bay 2 3 0 .400 66
Chicago
2 3 o .400 55
Minn
2 3 0 .400 67
Detroi t l 4 0 .200
69

Phil a

72
93
112
46
121

pa
93
60
89
134

4 I 0 .BOO llB 50
Atlanta
2 3 o .400 60 71
New Orleans
2 3 0 .400 B1 81
San 1 ra n 2 3 0 .400 95 B7
x -inctudes College All -Star
result
Saturday's Results
Buffalo 16 Atlanta 14
Miami 21 Chicago 10
Cincinnati 22 Detroit 14
Kansas City Jl Green Bay 3
St. Louis 13 Minnesota 6
Los Agn. 35 Phila 0
Pittsburgh 24 New Orleans 13
Sunday's Results
New Eng land 31 Dan Diego 24
San Francisco 44 Denver 10
Cleveland 24 NY Giants 20
NY Jets 35 Washington 31
Monday's Games
Balt imore at Houston

R

SMITH PROMOTED
Berlin,
Germany
Frederick J. Smith Jr., 2Q,
whose father lives at 565 N.
Front St., Middleport, has
promoied to Army specialist
five 'While serving with the
Berlin Brigade here. Spec.
Smith received the promotion
through the Army's "Stripes
for Skills program.

ASK TOWED
Francis Raymond Andrews, 30, Long Bottom, and
Nguyen Thi Tam, 31, Long
Bottom.

1776: The words heard 'round the world.
We've already a nn ounced our independence .
On July 2nd , our Continental Congress
adopted a reso lution "that these United Colonies a re, and of right ought to be, free and
independent States." That announcem.ent,
says John Adams, will make July 2nd the
most memorable day in our history. But it's
not until two days la ter that we officially
explain th e rea~ons for our independence, in
the July 4th Declaration we'll always celebrate.Our Declaration of Independence
makes America unique. Never before has a
nation actually written down reasons why it
became a separate state. Our words stir the
world. And even inspire other peoples to defend their rights against tyrannical leaders.

THE FARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS CO.

Whatever Your Taste
In Furniture, You Can
Choose With Confidence
Fmm Rexsteel
The deep·seating, long·tasting comfort
of Flexsteet 's fine furniture starts with
the unique Flexsteel springs, formed
from the finest watchspring steel and
guaranteed for life.
Flexsteet craftsmen insist on materials
of the finest quality to match their
skitted workmanship. Frames are of top
quality ~ kiln - dried hardwood, doubledowelled and corner blocked for extra·
strength and stability. The beautifu l UP·
holstery of Flexsteet furniture is the
result of expert attention to detail, deft
handling of the fine Flexsteet fabrics,
and skillful tailoring.

LIFETIME ,GUARANTEED
SPRING CONSTRUCTIO~

The Tweed Take-Over

40,000.00 Maximum InsuranCe
for [ac~ Qepositor

1

BAKER FURNITURE
'

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

I

'

game of textures and you come
out

the

winner

with

very

special

sporllooksl Bulky, cable-stitch cardigan,
roll-sleeved and shawl-collared, acrylic
knit. S-M-L.
Kicky front-pleat
skirt, poly/silk double knit.
5/6-15/16.
Both Black/White
tweed. Long sleeve polyknit shirt,
Silver Grey. 5/6-15/16.
All machine wash/dry.

-

· ·--7

~..;-/

-:;::::: ~

Chloi-ine fear
quieted today
GALI,IPOUS FERRY, W.
Va. ( UP!) - Hundreds of
toWIIllpeople were forced Ill
spend the night in make-flhilt
quarters
after
being
evacuated from their homes
when clouds of chlorine gas
from a nearby plant pervaded the atmosphere.
By 7 a.m. today, however,
roadblocks were dismantled
and
residents
began
streaming back io their
homes following a restless
night at elementary schools,
youth centers or the National
Guard Armory.
"Everything's back Ill normal, " reported Mrs. Adalee
Hart, office deputy in the
Mason County Sheriff's headquarters.
The chlorine gas leaked
from the Stauffer Chemical
Co. following a fire late
Monday night, but a company
spokesman said there·was no
explosl\m as earlier reports
indicated.

Cause of the fire and
seeping gas was under investigation. There were oo
damage reports.
stauffer sald there were oo
Injuries at the plant and the
only individual needing
hospital care from exposure
to the chlorine gas was Bob
Casey of Gallipolis who was
treated for skin and eye
irritation.
Plant officials said the
poisonous gas mostly cai!Bed
discomfort and no danger
existed after it dissipates.
The evacuation of nearly
1,500 persons, ac~'Ompllshed
in a street-by...treet alann
spread by state troopers and
sheriff's deputies, was
precautionary, officials said.
Shortly after the gas began
leaking Into the atmosphere,
hospitals and other law enforcement agenices in nearby
lllwns were placed on alert.

Junior Sportswear
Second Floor

Clear antt COLI, wuJgnt, lows
'in the 40s. Cloudy Wednesday, highs in the upper 60s
to the low 70s . Probability of
rain near zero today, 10 per
cent tonight, 20 per cent
Wednesday.

POMEROY
I .

.. .

··.~
·' '
.

''

..

CHLORINE GAS - This fearsome cloud of chlorine gas escaping
!'rom the Stauffer Chemical Co. plant at Gallipolis Ferry, W. V• . had
thousands of trkounty residents frightened Monday night and Tuesday

morning . The seepage of gas followed a fire in which no one was injured
and which had been brought quickly under control. This time exposure
was taken at night by Rohert Wingett, puhHsher-&lt;&gt;ditor of the Poin1
Pleasant Register.

VOL. XXVII

NO. I03

Now You Know

entine
'·

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

By United PreoslnternaUonal
CLEVELAND - PERSONS WHO HAD uay treatments
for such ailments as acne, ringworm, tonsl,l!tis and enlarged
thymus glands between 1930 ant\1960 were advised Monday by
the Cleveland Academy of Medicine to contact their doctors.
The academy said such x-ray treabnents of the hea(l and
neck have been linked to thyroid cancer. A past president of
the academy and t~ .qevetan.d . R'\(llolot!ical Society, Dr.
Theodore Castele, said the'treatni.dii:S were.lhought Ill be safe
at lite time they were administered. He said the treatments
were stopped about 15 years ago and the academy's warning
does not include ' 'norm.i.l x'ray pictures or radioactive iodine

~."

HONG KONG- ACI'OR MICKEY ROONEY said today he
has "found tge girl of my dreams" and will make her his
eighth wife\ialer this year, Rooney, in Hong Kong Ill begin
work on a new film, said his bride-to-be was Jan Chamberlain,
a 25-y~l!t,-old American singer~omposer who doesn't believe
in marriage.
"At long last I've found the girl of my dreams," Rooney
said as he relaxed in his hotel suite with Miss Chamberlain.
"I've got a bad case of the flu, but love can conquer anything."
Rooney will be 53 on Sept. 23.
"!don't believe In marriage myself, because it wrecks a
good relationship between people who truly love each other,"
said Miss Chamberlain. "But Mickey J?elieves so much in the
institution of marriage -and I can't disappoint him."
BOSTON- CITY OFFICIA!.S SAY they are pleased with
the opening of the second year of court-{)rdered busing despite
a rock-throwing battle with police, a firebombing, two injuries,
a fire at President John Kennedy's birthplace, and 40 per cent
school absenteeism.
"The opening day of school this year was better than last
year and better than a lot of people expected," Peter Meade,
an aide to Mayor Kevin White, said Monday.
LOUISVILLE, KY.- LOUISVILLE EXPERIENCED its
first calm night Monday since a massive couri-{)rdered busing
plan went into effect last week, but officials said strict security
will continue.
There were no major incidents reported at the 165 schools
Involved in the desegregation plan at the beginning of the first
full week of classes for 22,600 chlldren who are being bused
away from their neighborhood schools. Class attendance increased, although antibusing forces called for a boycott to
continue.
NEW YORK CITY'S 60,000 TEACHERS WENT on strike
against the nation's largest publ.(c school ~ystem tqday, forciJ)g up to 1.1 million more chlldren to do without normal classroom instruction. The New York strike, a continuing Chicago
wallrout and snialler strikes in nine other states left more than
two million students to enjoy extended vacations or sit In cold
or half-empty classrooms. San Francisco also faced a strike
threat.
Their contract expired at 12:01 a.m. EDT today and New
York teachers voted overwhelmingly to strike Ill protest
layoffs, increased class sizes and a longer work week.
•
HONG KONG- PRINCE NOROOOM Sihanouk ended five
and a haH years of exile and made a triumphant return Ill
Cambodia today, the Phnom Penh radio announced. The radio,
monitored In Bangkok, said Sihanouk and members of the new
administration arrived at Phnom Penh airport at 1
p.m. from Peking, where the prince pledged_ to help build a
''people's democrac;y" In his native land.

.,

The fir s t automobile race in
the United States , on
Thanksg iving Day, 1895 ,
between
Chi cago
and
Waukegan, Ill., was won with
an average s peed of 7V.! miles

Devoted 'l'u The lllfere.~t~ of The Meigs-M11s1m Area

UTl'LE ROCK, ARK. -REP. WILBUR MIIUl, D-Ark.,
wbo lost the chairmanship of the powerful House Ways and
Means Committee, has been expelled from the Masons, ac·
cording Ill a Jack Anderson column to be published today. The
expulsion came after Mills' Aug. 22 trial of at Lodge 874 In his
hometown of K,ensett. Arkansas Masonic Grand Master J . Lee
Overstreet of ·Texa~kana declined Ill confirm or deny Anderson's report.
Mills' Masonic trial reportedly gr~ out of the so-ca)l~
Tidal Basin incident when Mills was observed bleeding ll!ld
l!Ppare!ltly intoxicated emerging from his ca~ moments after a
woman leape&lt;. into the basin in Washington.

IN

"Everybody got the heck
out of here," one deputy said.
" That stuff just keeps rolling
and rolling, up and up, and
it's moving up the river."
Cross-river Gallipolis
warned its populace Ill shut
off air conditioners, stay off
the streets, and keep windows
closed all night. Some were
evacuated inlll rural areas of
the county away from the
river.
Later~ authorities said the
chemicals would only bother
persons
with
critical
respiratory ailments.
Police spread an alarm
throughout this sparselypopulated lllwn, and later
kept roving patrols to guard
homes, many of which were
left open or unlocked by the
frightened owners.
About 100 persons huddled
nervously on the lot of a
service station a few miles
out of town
(Conllnue&lt;t on page 10)

Weather

cambodian

ELBERFELDS

Pomeroy, Ohio

Pleasant Valley Hospital
DISCHARGES Densil
Byer, Leon; James Light,
Mason; Denver
Bates,
Gallipolis; Thomas Hunt,
Thurman;
Willard
Laudermilt, Jr., Mason;
Denise Sowards, Henderson;
lnhn
Harmon,
Point
.•!easant; Beulah Oliver,
Point Pleasant; Otis Randolph , Leon; Eva Bartrum,
Catlettsburg, Ky.; Lillian
Long, Gallipolis Ferry;
Robin
Gainer,
Point
Pleasant.
New Citizen, a son to Mr.
and Mrs. Michael Pollock,
Gallipolis.

~YfJOJt---Vickysporl plays the going

hy p t&gt; rmi ~s 10n o f THE BF 'ITMANN ARCH IVI

Werry hits
targets for
two TDs

Meet the Team Day was a
success for the Warriors
Saturday afternoon when
they defeated the 71Jers from
Washington County, 14-8, in
the Middleport stadium.
The Warriors struck early
in the second quarter on a
seven yard TD pass from
quarterback Bob Werry to
Chip li;lggerty. Then picking
Items stolen
up the momentum from an
interception, the Warriors
from iverby
marched 65 yards, capping
Gallipolis city police the drive with another pass
Saturday investigated a from Werry, this time to
breaking and entering at the Bruce Harris, for II yards
french Art Colony located at and a TO. Paul Aikman
Riverby on first Ave . kicked the PAT on both to
Someone apparently used a lead 14-0 at the half.
skelton key to open the rear
Midway in the fourth
door .
period, the 71Hors staged a 70
Missing was a pair of yard drive to paydirt. A two
electric hedge trimmers, 100 point conversion failed twice
foot extension cord, a tool
but two face mask penalties
box, hand tools, a hand drill · allowed them a third and
and several shovels. The successful attempt. The
intruder also entered the 76'ers' bid for another score
bathroom and wrote over the ended with a fwnble with 17
wail!.
seconds remaining in the
In another complaint, Mrs. contest.
Bobbi Roach, 215¥.. Second
Score by Quarters
Ave., repor~d the theft of two
Warriors
0 14 0 0-14
paintings from her home .
76'ers
0 0 0 0- 8

West
wttpclpfpa
Los Angeles

The first of two Saturday
accidents occurred at ! p.m .
on Mill Creek Rd. six tenths
of a mile south of Georges
Creek where cars driven by
Delores Young Donnell, 18,
Rl. 1 Gallipolis, and Karen
Bate;, 28, Rt. I, Gallipolis,
collided. There was moderate
damage . Mrs. Bates complained ur injuries but was
not treated .
Otto A: Marcinko, 26, or
Reedsville, was cited for
Failure to stop within the
assured c lear distance
Following an accident at 2: 30
p .m . Saturday on Rt . 7, four
~nths or a mile north or Rt.
35.
The patrol said an auto
driven by John T. Scherer II,
18 Point Pleasant, attempted
to' turn leFt and his car was
struck in the rear by the
Marcinko vehicle . John T.
Scherer, 44, a passenger in
the Scherer car was slightly
injured.

'

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1975

CHARLESTON, W. Va .
(UP!)- With two key figures
in the miners' month-long
wlldcat strike behind bars
today, only a few diehards
remained off their jobs as
thousands of miners returned
Ill the pits to reswne coal
production.
"We have a few diehards ,"

Ab use

per hour .

reported secretary-treasurer
Dennis Scarford of the United
Mine Workers District 31 in
Fairmont. " But we have just
practically
everybody
worklng in our district. ' 1
Scarford said only about
400 of the 10,000 men employed ln his district of
northern Wes t Vir~inia

remained off the job lllday.
He pinpointed the idle mines
as the Williams operation of
Consolidation Coal Co. and
the Barricksville mine of the
Eastern Associated Coal
Corp.
Canso! offlclala reported a
bOmb scare at its Christopher
Division near Morgantown

must he stopped

The Meigs County rural
solid waste collection system
could be . discontinued if
abuses .of it continue, the
board of county commissioners warned today.
The commissioners offered
the
following
(strong )
suggestions for operation of
the system:
- Materials such as stoves,
refrigerators and scrap
lwnber shall not be deposited
at the collection box sites.
- No materials are to be
deposited on the ground
surrounding the boxes.
Plastic bags are recommended for containing the

refuse placed into the boxes.
- Commercial solid waste
collectors are to transport
their loads directly to the
sanitary landfill and not use
the boxes. The boxes are
designed and placed for rural
domestic
solid
was te
collection .
- Under no circumstances
are contents or the boxes to be
set afire.
COMMISSIONERS indicated they are pleased with
the general operation of the .
rural solid was~ collec ti on
system but are concerned
that a few pers ons are
misusing the system, thus
crea ting problems ror the

Women
pi·cket
££
O • ce

majority or rural residents.
The commissioners remind
everyo ne that this system
with
e quipment runded
largely froni federal funds as
a demonstration, could be
terminated ir the box sites
a re continued to be littered
with large objects that the
sys tem is not designed for ,
and waste is scattered about
the boxes on the ground. The
months or September, October,
November
and
D€cember will be used to
determine ir the abuses or the
sys tem are corfected.
Also Tuesday the commi ss ione rs endorsed an
1Continued on page 10)

PRICE 15'

late Monday emptied the
mines of its hoot-{) WI shift, but
said the men returned to
work for the 8 o'clock shift
today .
"In essence, they're all
hack and in most cases it's a
good turnout," said Consol's
public relations supervisor
Rayburn Fraley.
The massive turnouts for
work followed the jailing
Monday of Lewis "Skip"
Delano and Bruce Miller,
leaders of the "right Ill
strike" cause which ignited
the walkout.
U.S. District Judge K.K.
Hall ordered them behind
bars after calling them a
"danger" to the coal industry
and the union.
''I really am nopeful that
you will recognize that you
are, in a sense, fighting
against the courts of the
United
States,"
Hall
declared. "If there are no
courts, there are no laws. If
there are no laws, there is no
government.
" I don't want to keep you in
jail, but for the safety of the
coal industry and the miners
themselves, you have to
either he phced in prison or

quit what you're doing. "
In Washington , a UMW
spokesman said the strike
was over .
"The men are returning to
work and only a few diehard
holdouts remain," he added.
At Beckley, the union's
District 29 said all of its men
were back on the job for the
Monday afternoon shirt, but
four large mines of Consolidation Coal Co . in northern
West
Virginia
remained closed after UMW
locals voted to slay out in
sympathy with southern miners. One or the Canso! mines

was Robinson Run , the
state's largest coal producer.
Hall told the men Ill pay
$500 fines Ill the Kanawha
Coal Operators Association ,
whose southern West Virginia
mines felt the brunt o! the
illegal work stoppage.
Miller and Delano were
sentenced to 179 days in jail,
but Hall indicated the terms
would end if they purged
themselves of strike activities.
Before making hi s decision,
Hall became encircled in a
controversy over the use of
news reporters as witnesses
in the Miller-Delano hearing
when Charleston Gazette
newsmen Andy Gallagher
and Rick Steelhammer
reFused to testify, saying the
court was putting them on
one side of a public issue.
They were jailed six hours,
then released with instructio ns to either appeal the
contempt charge in 10 days,
or purge themselves in seven.
Logan County miner Sim
Howze, a UMW local official
who was jailed six days in the
strlke's infancy, warned his
IContinu ea on page 10)

·--

1

Wives of coal miners who
have been on strik~ in Meigs
County picketed the Meigs
County Welfare office in
Middleport Monday in their
efforts Ill secure food stamps.
The picketing was in~rrupled in the early afternoon when the wives were
informed that a stale welfare
official had been contacted
and told local workers that
the miners should receive
food stamps for one month's
time, a spokeswoman of the
wives said. The amount they
.will pay for the food stamps
will be based upon the income
of each miner and his family
living expenses as provided
in State and Federal
regulations.
The spokeswoman ror the
wives said the group has been
assured that welfare workers
will work overtime in getting
the food stamps issued to the
miners' wives . However, she
added, that the picketing will
be ~eswned early 'F riday
morning if the wives have
heard nothin g from the
· welfare office by that time .

NEW RULES VOTED
WASHINGTON - The
International executive
board of the United Mine
Workers Union voted 22-2
Monday 1o Impose new
rulea, glvlng lt more power
to
clamp
down
on
unauthorlzled
work
stoppages.
The action came as a
month-long wildcat strike
the Idled as many as 60,000
miners was ending in many
coal producing stales.

FIRST PLACE HORSEMEN - Bill Cole, a law student at Cleveland
state, is pictured with Jet Reed, 11)-year-{)ld gelding which took first place
in the Appaloosa Pleasure Horse Show at the recent Ohio State Fair.
Owned by Cole Stables, Tuppers Plains, Jet Reed won a sllver tray,
rosette and $500 cash. Jet Reed also lllok se'cond in the Senior Appaloosa
Pleasure HQrse Show . .COnformation of the animals was a part of the
competition as was performance of the horse and rider in the ring. Cole
goes Wednesday Ill Columbus compete in the Ohio Western Horse Show
Assn . fall roundup , then vacation in Cape Cod for a week befor~ returning
Ill Meigs Count y fo r the fa!~ roundup of the Ohio Valley Horse Show Assn .
the weekend of SP pl. W-21.
·

HORSEMANSHIP WINNER - Gene Cole, 12, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Homer Eugene Cole, Tuppers Plains, came home from the Ohio State
Fair with first place in horsemanship in the Ohio Junior Appaloosa
Pleasure Horse Show. This is Gene's fll'st season to ride in horse shows.
He is pictured on Tribal's Todd, a three year old gelding which he rode in
the fair competition. The junior horsemanship show is for riders 12 and
under. Cole won a silver tray and rosette. Tribal's Todd is owned by
Cole'sStables at Tuppers Plains. Gene is a seventh grader at the Eastern
Junior High School.

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2- The Daily Sentinei, Mlddleport-Pqmeroy, 0 . Tuesady, Sept 9, 1975

Ford-. Democrats draw issue
on price effect of ·d econtrol
By WILLIAM E. CLAYTON

WASHINGTON (UPII Democrats have virtually
conceded they lack the votes
to overturn President Ford's
veto of 011 pr1ce controls
They pledged to play "hardball" anyway and hope the
people will turn agalJISt Ford
on the Issue.
Press secretary Ron
Nessen sa1d the PreSident
today would veto a b11l
continuing oil price controls
for six months retroactively
to Sept. I when the controls
expired.

Democratic

senators

caucused Monday and said
afterward they voted unanimously to contmue the velD
fight
" It does not look op-

~p~:~;;~~,

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Personal Notes

I

)gt and Mrs Stanley R
Lemley and daughter , Shelly,
have returned to their home
at Cherry Pomt, N.C. after a
ten day visit here with their

parents,· Mr . and

Mrs

Kenneth Darst and Mr and
Mrs. Harold W1ll. Sgt
Lemley will be going to
Quantico In January for
additwnal trammg . ·
W. 0 . 3 Robert E Will, h1s
Wife, and four children of
Fort Meade, Md were the
Labor Day weekend guests of
his parents, Mr. and Mrs
Harold C. Will
Mrs. Mildred Shuster spent
the weekend m Columbus
visiting her sister, Mrs .
Grace Meier, and other
relatives. She accompamed
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hoeflich
and Jayne who VISited Mr.
and Mrs. Mike Hammer and
family.
Mrs. Elizabeth Chase of
Dayton came over the
weekend to be w1th her sister,
Miss Helen Lochary, who
underwent surgery recently
at the Veterans Memorial
Hospital .
Mrs. Lena Huber and Mrs
John Duffy, Jr. of Hallifax,
Mass. are here this week
visiting Mr . and Mrs. Phil
Globokar and other friends
and relatives. They will
return to Massachusetts
Saturday.
Ernest Bing of Columbus
visited his mother, Mrs.
Clyda Bmg, over the
weekend. Mrs. Bing Is
recuperating at Veterans
Memorial Hospital from
surgery last Wednesday Her
daughter, Mrs. Lee Wukelich
and sons, John and Jimmy of
Belle Valley spent Wednesday and Thursday here
with Mrs. Bing. Joyce Bing
returned to Belle Valley with
the Wukelich family and then
they all came back to
Pomeroy Sunday for a visit
Mr. and Mrs. Phil Wise of
Beverly, spent Sunday here
with his parents, the Rev. and
Mrs. Cecil Wise .

ttmtsttc," Sen . Alan Cranston, D.{;ahf., said
" It's going to be tough,"
Sen Henry Jackson, DWash., srud
Sen. Edmund Musk1e, !)..
Mame, said ford Is "playmg
hardball and the only way to
meet hts imtiat1ve ts to play
1ust as hard 111 return The
people don't want his policy
and we've got to do our
damnedest to override his
veto."
There are widely dilfermg
views as to what the effect on
pnces and the economy will
be 1f Congress, votmg later m
the week, fails to override
Ford's veto
A Library of Congress
study estimat ed decontrol

LOCATION NEEDED
Anyone havmg a locallon
for a yard sa le to be held for
t he benefit of 6-}ea• -o ld
Lonnie LeMaster, Rt 2,
Pomeroy , brain surgery

patient at St
Joseph
Hospi ta l, Parkersburg, IS
asked to call Jackie Bnckle.,
992-7119 The locatiOn s hould
be on Route JJ and should be
large enough for the sale
which Is planned by severa l
women 1n the Sa li s bur y
Elementary School area
REVIVAL PLANNED
A revival will be held at the
Silver Run Free Baptist
Church beginning Sunday
with services at 7 30 p m.
each mght. The Rev Miles
Trout Will speak and there
will be special music each
mght A homecoming will
also be held at the church
Sunday with an all day
meeting and dmner to be
served at the church
Speakers will be Rev
Howard Kimble and Rev
Miles Trout. The public IS
mv1ted to both events.
FREE CLINICS
Free cancer screening
climes lor ail Meigs County
women are scheduled for the
fourth Thursday each month.
For appoinbnent call 992-7684
or 992-7531 , 9 a.m . to 4 p m.

DEVOTED TO THE

INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
ClotESTER L . TANNEHILL
E:~~ec .

Ed .

ROBERT HOEFLICH

C1ty Editor

Publtshed dally excepl
Saturday by The OhiO Valley

Pub I ist\1ng co mpany , I 1 I
Court St, Pomeroy, OhtO
45769 Bustnes.;s. Of11ce Phon
9cr2 2156 l!:dtlor1al Phone 9?2
215 7
Second cl ass postage pa 1d

at Pomeroy , Ohto
Na tto na l

adverl's'ng

representa ttve

Grtfftlh

Company,

ward

Inc ,

Botttnell• &amp; Gallagher Dtv ,

757 Th 1rd A-ve, N ew York.
N Y 10017
Subscr1pf10n
rafes
Del 1-vered by carr1er where
a-vailab l e 75 cents per week
By ~to r Rout e where
carrier
serv1ce
not
availab le, One mo nth , $3 2'5
By ma11 10 Oh10 and W Va,
One
Year,
$22 00.
S1x
months.
$11 50.
Three
months, $7 00 Elsewhere
26.00 year
Six months
1 J 50 three months, $7 50
ubscr~pt1on pr1c:e mcludes
_unday T1Q'1es Sen t, nel

would cost Amencan consumers $72 billion over the
next hve years by rrusmg
pnces of everything affected
from
by petroleum
gasolme to food
" Unless
Congress
overndes the veto and
prevents
decontrol,
America's farmers will face
substantia ll y higher operating costs, conswners wtll
fa ce even hi gher prices for
food than has been previously
predic ted and the economic
health of rural Amenca once
agam will be unpenled," said
Sens Jackson and Hubert
Humphrey, D-Mmn , who
cornm1 sstoned the study and
released it Monday
ford told Los Angeles

televisiOn mtei'Vlewer Joseph
Benti Monday night he does
not agree With predictions of
large increases 1n gasolme
prices from decontrol. There
might, he said, be a 21D kent
rncrease o\ er six months.
Alan Gr~enspan, chairman of
the Council of Economic
Advisers, said the admmistratwn expects 6nly
"minimal impact " on the
economy from the end of
controls - either abrupt or
lon g-term. One reason, he
said - IS that the economy IS
sho wmg signs of recovering
more strongly than expected

Big gains for
GOP expected
government.
"We are going to promote
the right of the indlVIdual ID
be free from big government,
big education, big labor, b1g
business and the like," he
said.
The White House reception
was held after the party
formally decided on Klylsas
City, Mo., as the site of its
national convention.
In other political developments.
- A group of Republican
feminists criticized the GOP
decision to hold the convention in Missouri, which
has
not ratified the Equal
"has done more than any
Rights
Amendment.
other single individual in 1975
-Sen. Hubert Humphrey,
... to get the Republican party
DMinn
., told a labor conback on the road to victory."·
Ford srud he hoped "every vention in Minneapolis
the
nation's
state organization can enter Monday
1976 with a balanced budget economic policy should aim
to put people back to work
and money in the bank."
Next year, he said, "we can , instead of ID balance the
wm, and I believe we will wm, budget.
If we join arms and work - George Young, manager of
together . That's the best Louis Wyman's senatorial bid
msurance I know for a happy in New Hampshire, says the
day after elecllon day, race, first run under the new
federal election laws, shows
1976." Ford said he would stick to spending limits are too tight
his
current
campaign to live with. Young, a former
themes, emphas1zmg "fiscal aide to Ronald Reagan, said
responsibility," expansion of "the campaign cannot
free enterprise and ••more deliver its complete message
local control" over programs ID every voter" under the
funded largely by the federal federal spending limits.

By United Press
In·
ternatlonal
President Ford predicts
widespread election gains for
the Republican party next
year "if we JOin arms and
work together ."
He addressed about 300
party and elected officials in
the White House East Room
Monday mght and srud he
would keep traveling around
the country to help rruse
funds for the GOP
Party chairWoman Mary
Lou1se Smith told the crowd
Ford's efforts have brought
in $1.7 million and that he

DR. LAMB

Rapid heart beat is a mystery

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Letters of oplnlon are welcomed. They should be
less than 300words long (or be subject w reduction by
the editor) and must be signed with the signee's address. Names may be withheld upon publication.
However, on request, names wiU be disclosed. Letters
should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personalltles.

I
I

Hope they become adults
Dear Sir·
On the front page of the paper last Thursday everung,
"Miners' w1ves want free food stamps," made me stck, and I
mean sick. To thmk a group of people would have the guts to
want free food, when they are on a wildcat strike anyway
One person said her husband only made $103 m two days I
make $108 in a week, but I work for it, and don't ask for free
hand outs
How can we as a ChriStian nallon, keep wanting something
for nothing ' All of these men could be workmg l hope the 40
pius people become adults and go earn their own living , as the
rest of us are doing - R. M Athorten, RD 3, Pomeroy., Ohio .

Voc-ed students will be assigned

CHAPMAN REENLISTS
VISITED RECENTLY
Manne Sergeant Stephen
Mr and Mrs Richard
P Chapman, son of Mr and Beach and children of Sabma
Mrs. Marlm J Chapman of were recent VISitors or his
Route 2, Pomeroy, ha s mother, Mrs Henry Beach
reenl is ted for four years and Mr and Mrs Lawrence
wh1le servtng at the Manne Dou gla s, Syracuse While
Corps Air Sl&lt;tlion, Cherry here Mrs Beach enU,rtmned
Pomt, N. C
with a cookout for the family
Attendmg were Mr and Mrs
Clifford Jacobs, Mr and Mrs
HOMECOMING SET
A homecommg a l the Jack Jacobs, son, Sean, Mr .
Langsville Chrisllan Church and Mrs Ernest Van Inhas been set for Sunday wi th wagen, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
a basket dmner at 12:30 p m Van Jnwagen, Mrs. Clyda
and special services at 2 p.m. Bmg and daughter , Joyce,
and Herman Michaels
The public IS mv1ted.

By
E. Lamb, M.D. calves of legs. I am tired and were . They may have
DEAR DR. LAMB - l am depressed, which IS unlike somethmg to do w1th your
general nerv10usness.
being treated for mild high my prev1ous nature
My doctor says everything
We don't always knovv what
blood
pressure
with
Hydropress and take Valium. is O.K., and my blood causes such attacks. Unless
I'm 46, male, 5 feet 9 inches pressure IS good with they are part of some other
and weigh 205 pounda. I'm a Hydropress, but l get no heart problem , they are
good 40 pounds overweight. satisfaction on what causes usually not dangerous. They
My work is 60 per cent the rapid heart attacks or can be caused by an
overactive
thyroid
sedentary and I'm just what to do about it.
recovering from a broken
Is this a side effect of the probably not your problem m
view of your tendency to
ankle that keeps me down. Hydropress?
My bad habite include
DEAR READER - To obesity - alcohol, coffee,
smoking a pipe without identify exactly what your anxiety and sometimes on the
inhaling and a drink now and rapid heart action is, it would basis of an inherited
tben. I use decaffeinated be necessary to get an variation in the heart 's
coffee, and other than the electrocardiogram during electrical mechanism.
If your attacks are severe
above I have always been in one. The description of
good health,
,
sudden onset does suggest and frequent, your doctor
My problem is attacks of one of the tachycardias could give you medicine to
rapid heart action. I can be causes by an irritable spot m calm your heart down. I do
sitting reading with a heart either the atria or the ven- not mean another sedative,
rate of 68 when it suddenly tricles. They can be very but medicines such as
jumps to 100 or 125. disagreeable, often depend- quinidine (there are now
Sometimes this is ac- Ing on how fast the heart rate many others) that have a
companied by very weak actually is. I have seen rather direct action on soothing the
feelings. One attack was so healthy men with this heart.
roblem who had attaclis
The Hydropress ordinarily
• . bad my wife called the rescue
IICIUBd, as I felt I was going "'""~rates of 100 to 120, and does not cause these types of
ever knew the heart problems.lf you have washed
under.
Also,ln the morning hours I was ng this. I suspect you out a Jot of potassium,
have very heavy, achy are more aware of your body though, from elimination of
feelinp In ~ thighs' and and its behavior than they flmd as a result of

~--- -----------~--------- ---

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Hydropress, then you might
be more susceptible to such
attacks. You could help ensure that you have enough
potassium in your system by
drinking three glasses of
orange juice a day.
You really do need to lose
that weight. Your blood
pressure might be all right if
you lost a 'good 50 pounda. I
have been repeatedly impressed with the value of
eliminating even a small
amount of obesity in lowering
blood pressure, often to
normal levels. A1l soon as
your ankle permits, I would
recommend a dally, light
exercise program, perhaps
walking or swimming or both
to help you get rid of your
pounds and put you back In
shape.
For more information on
blood pressure, write to me in
care of this newspaper, P. 0 .
Box 1551, Radio City Station,
New York, NY 10019, send a
long,
stamped,
selfaddressed envelope and 50
cents and ask for The Health
Letter number 1-ll.

also for expanded evau!at1on
procedures
Pupil
transportatiOn
ope rati on reimbursement
revision are designed to increase amounts for school
districts ID offset higher costs
of fuel and repall's resulting
from inflatiOn and make
payments more equitable
under varymg transportation
conditions
Public hearings on the
st,andards will be held Oct. 13
in Columbus.
The board also approved
th e transfer of 150 acres from
Lakota Local Scbool District
in Sandusky County to
Fostoria City Scbool District
and the transfer of 30 acres
from Lmcolnview Local
School D1stnct m Van Wert
County ID Van Wert City
School District .
Six
districts
vvere
authonzed to seek voter
support of bond issues for
classroom construction. They
are Centerville City in
Montgomery County, $2.35
million ; Columbia Local 1n
Lorain County, $520,000;
Highland Local in Medina
County,
$2.8
million;
Mapleton Local m Ashland
County , $1.475 million;
Southern Local in Meigs
County, $420,000; and West
Clermont Local in Clermont
County, $6.5 million.
The board also enlarged the
PIOneer Joint Vocational
School District to include the
city districts of Bucyrus and
Galion and the local districts
of Col. Crawford and Wynford , all in Crawford County,
and dissolved the Tiffin Area
and Putnam County joint
vocatiOnal scbool districts.

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
46 Ohio school districts which
have not met legal reqwrements
for
providing
vocatiOnal education will be
assigned
to
existmg
vocational centers, the State
Board of Education said
Monday .
The state board Will begin
the as~ignments Oct 13.
"The s tate board fully
mtends w assure that all
youth m Ohio have the opportunity
to
pursue
vocational education," said
state board member Wayne
E. Shaffer of Bryan.
"Assignments are to be
completed no later than Nov.
10.' '
Shaffer said representatives of 38 of the districts
and 13 jomt vocational school
distncts met Saturday With a
state board committee ID
review the various assignment faci&lt;Jrs.
" Additional time will give
all board members time ID
consider suggestions from
Saturday's session and
thoroughly analyze the
student, financial
and
geographical data associated
with each of the districts and
the various vocational centers to which assignments
might he made," Shaffer
said .
•. .
The board also said it would
adopt revised standards for
disadvantaged pupil program
funds and pupil transportaton
reimbursement to school districts, and to set standards
for education of the gifted .
Standards
on
disadvantaged pupil program
funds call for targeting on
basic skills to assure
academic achievement and

Polly's Pointers
BY POLL\' t:RAMER

Yellowed plastic
resists treatment
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - How does
one remove the yellow film
from a convertible car plasllc
window ? Ours has turned
yellow and will not come off
with any commercial spray
cleaners. Can this be restored
or is a completely new
window more advisable? Can
you give me an estimate of
thecostofanewone? - K. B.
DEAR K:B. - You might
as .yell stop your efforts since
they will be In vain. New
plastic windows have a
coating on them that wears
off with \\ashlng, etc., and
then the sun fades or causes
the window to turn yellow.
That Is why the new convertibles have glass windows.
If your top Is In good shape II
would be advisable to get a
new window Installed and, of
'course don't get an entire new
top. This column cannot give
estimates and prices might
vary in different places but I
am sure a local body shop
would gladly give you one.
One of the repair men I spoke
with quoted prices that made
a new top about three times
the cost of a new window. POLLY.
DEAR POLLY- I solved
the problem of scarcely being
able to swallow pills by
taking them with a carbonated drink and find the
nastiest tasting ones go down
much easier. - EILEEN.
DEAR POLLY My
granddaughter, 3, wrote all
over my piano keys with a red ,
marking pen and the things 1
first tried did not faze the

"

marks but when I used that
spray for stains that one puts
on laundry the marks wiped
nght off. I also have
discovered this is good for
removing pamt from one's
hands. - MILLIE
DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Peeve is with those people
who wait until they get in line
at the bank drive-in window
to make out their deposit slips
or write checks. This holds up
the entire lme while they hunt
m purses for the slips to fill m
when they should make 11 all
out before getting in the line.
- DEB.
DEAR POLLY Like
Desperate l, too, had an odor
in my refrigerator (however
mine was not fish) and I did
as you suggested - cleaned it
good with soda, but still It
remamed. Then l tried the
vinegar treabnent but the
odor seemed worse. Finally I
checked on my drip pan and
found that was where the
odor was coming from. After
giving this pan a good
cleaning the odor was gone.
This was many years
ago
and
taught
me
a _good
l~sson .
Now
I clean the drip pan every
time the refrigerator gets a
good cleaning. Perhaps that
could be Desperate's trouble ,
too. - ELVA.
DEAR POLLY- I always
found the lid cover on a
bathroom set 'so scant that
the edges holding the
drawstring would fray out or
the cover would keep sliding
at an angle. Now when buying
a new set I purchase matching color blanket binding,

•

and snaps Kansas City's

Viet Cong was
Sport Parade

in everything
By ALAN DAWSON
BANGKOK , Thailand
(UP!) - Only now can It be
seen in South Vietnam just
how riddled With V1et Cong
were the ranks of the proAmerican admimstrattons in
that country
Fam1liar names and faces
pop up daily Some of the
fanatic
anti·
mo st
Communists, tt seems, were

Evident only now
after it's over
working all along for the
other side
My personal souvenll' of
Vietnam IS one of those p1th
hehnets worn by combat
troops of North VIetnam and
the Viet Cong
It
is
personally
auwgraphed by the military
pollee commander who gave
It w me. He worked for years
mside the South VIetnamese
Central Intelligence Agency
headquarters while waitmg
lor the VIet Cong vici&lt;Jry .
A new province chief wday
is a Viet Cong lieutenant
colonel who also holds rank 1n
the North VIetnamese army.
HIS former job vvas chief
translator and interpreter for
U.S. CIA agents in his home
province .
The day Viet Cong forces
captured his home provmce,
he was with the American
adviser there. He was considered by all Americans who
knew hun ID be a dedicated
anti-Communist who likely
would have his head chopped
off by any North Vietnamese
troops who captured him.
An American still in
VIetnam recently did a
survey of the 20 Vietnamese
who had worked in his architect's office before the
ProVISIOnal
Revolutionary
Government wok over the
natwn April 30.
Carckarrying memhers ~f
the PRG included the chief

very sensitive jobs, u

~"''

NEW YORK (UP! I - Brooks Robinson gave it a lot of
thought, maybe all of 30 seconds, tben made up his mind .
•~ He'shitting .195, and having his worst time with the bat smce
he first began playing ball back in the third grade, but he 's not
., quitting. He isn't going to hang 'em up.
~ · "I'm goona .play next year .. -.somewhere," says Baltimore's
: _33-yearo(lld thll'd baseman, a cinch to wind up in BasellaU's
~ Hall of Fame after he's firushed. "I'd like to stay in Baltimore ,
.. but if things don't work out that way , l still wanna play. I'm not
gonna be in any hurry lo hang 'em up."
" At the end of each season for the past few years now, Frank
Cashen, the Orioles' highly capable executive vice president
": and general manager, has sat down with Robinson and had a
~· private talk With hun . Cashen generally starts off asking
- . Robinson how he feels, Ulen works hiS way around to other ·
· related subjects. Like whether Robinson wishes w continue
_, playing and for how much money ' The Orioles are paying him
$125,000 now.
'" The two men will have their little talk agam in five or six
•"weeks and Robinson will tell Cashen he wants to play again
'." only this time he is likely to get a different answer than he did~
' " year ago when he finished up hitting .288. The Orioles may tell
Brooks Robinson there is a chance he might finish his career in
••some other city .
,. In the past, they'dnevercooslder a dealfor hbn. They felt he
_ should finish where he started, the same as Joe DiMaggio, Ted
"williams, Mickey Mantle and AI Kaline did .
'" Now, though, Baltimore no longer is able to afford the luxury
••or carrYing three glove men like Mark Belanger, Paul Blair
~',and Robinson at the same time, and with Doug DeCinces, their
~good-looking 25-yearo(lld third baseman at the point where the
Orioles have to either play him or deal him, Robinson becomes
,_expendaQle for the first time since he joined the club 20 years
ago.
' ' It is doubtful whether any club would give very much for him
: and that means if Robinson does pia} next year and doesn't hit
' "any rmre than he 's hitting now, he'd be a henchwarmer. He
_Jully llnderstands that.
"l'n gonna play next year and Ulat'll be it," he says. "This
" year I've just been struggling. No excuses. I just haven't been
,_swinging the bat good. l honestly don't think I've regressed
that far.
I don't see how anybody can go hack that far in one
I II
,,
year:
F'uodamentally, Robinson 's trouble has been a slow bat. He
.'llas driven in 50 runs, only nine less than last year, but hasn't
~lleen'getting around on the fast boll too well.
o o In the field, he is pretty much the same Brooks Robinson he
, !'~ways has been, the hwnan vacuum cleaner as they call him,
who has whisked up everything in sight and won 15 straight
Gold Glove awards since 1960.
' ~inst Cleveland 1n the opener of a doubleheader a week
' 'ago, he came up with four extraordinary fielding plays in three
.. innil1gs and Baltimore vice president Jack Durm, who has seen
· Robilson play more games than anyone else, called it the
"grettest single performance of his entire career.
, , Nat night during infield practice, he took 3(}.35 ground balls
off tile bat of coach George Staller. He has been doing the same
Uli.nt for nearly two decades now.

a

foreign ministry spokesman
m Saigon said.
U.S. intelligence o'l'ce estimated about 20,000 Viet
Cong agents had infiltrated
U.S. and South Vietnamese
ranks. The number was
probably right.
No one realized, however,
just how high the penetration
went.
'
Said a disconsolate offi~r
who was on the losing side:
"There was no way we
could win with penetration
mto our ranks like that."

I

~

Generation Rap
By Helen and Sue Bottel

~

·J

•:

~X

Baldy,AreYou For Real?
Helen and Sue ·
I have two problems.
I. My Dad likes p1pes and cigars and since he does, I must
also. So every night I smoke a cigar and his pipe. I don't mind
Ulat, but he wants me to do it in public? Isn't age-14 too young
for that?
2. Dad IS also a gambier. He made a bet in poker, and if he
lost, he would shave my head. He lost! So he shaved me bald
and I must remain that way for two months. Help!
Don't these problems sound unbelievable? But they
aren't! - BALD, If&gt;-YEAR.QLD PIPE SMOKER
Dear Smoker ·
Your problems sound like something out of National
Lampoon's phony-phunny "Tell Debby." Prove you're real
and we'll answer with something more than -(Take it, Sue:)
- (HELEN)

+++
Dear Baldy:
The best I can come up with on short notice is: Cover the
top of old smokey with a wig, and if your father persists in
teaching you bad habits, stuff his pipes down the disposer. -

SUE
Rap :
"Still Looking," wbo can't find a good baby -&lt;litter, should
look on the other side of the fence.
Here are some things that sitters complain about - and
with good reason :
I. We're turned off by people who try to chew your rate
down, and then are forever owing it to you.
2. When we agree to baby-&lt;~it for one family, we don't
appreciate several other kids being brought in under the same
rate.
3. That $1 an hour is hardly enough when Ule household
chores are politely dumped on you.
4. How about the kids wbo are angels until the parents
leave and then turn into devils? And If you reprimand them,
,
they "report" all kinds of exaggerations.
5. When parents return to a quiet, safe, under-eontrol
household, do they express their appreciation? Usually not. We
sitters could use praise when we deserve it.
Maybe someday people will depend on machines to watch
Uleir little blessings, and not error-making hmnans. Untll theri,
please give us good ones some credit! -HAD ENOUGH
'
Dear Rap:
I've baby-eat for six years, and was never fired. But
fired several families. I wonder if "Still Looking's" kids bl~,
scratch, spit and kick? Do they need dlaclpllne which parents
don't give, but expect the sitter to hand out (with no use of
hands)?
,
And how about the couple who says "We'll be home nb
later than midnight." and then waft in at 3:30 a.m., whDe the
sitter's parents are worried frantic -and maybe the llitter haS
an exam that morning, which being half asleep won't help. The
man in this family Is often the type who makes a hall-drunk
pass at you when he drives you home.
:
I don't sayS. L. fits this description. But if llhe's a reaJ[v i
good employer, she 'U eventually find a really good sitter.
go together. - IS ONE

I've,

fold (leaving the ends open),
sew to the original edging and
run the drawstring through
this second
eding. This

•

American League Roundup
By FRED MeMANE
UPI Sports Writer
The Oakland A's, receiving
a bit of a challenge from
Kansas City m the last week,
l&lt;lok some of the bravado out
of the Royals Monday night
when they used homers by
Sal Bando, Gene Tenace and
Claudell Washington to score
an 8-2 vlci&lt;Jry and /lllBP KC's
eight-g,me winning streak.
Bando and Tenace each hit
a two-run homer and
Washington addold a solo shot
as the A's l&lt;lok the first of a
three-game set with the

makes a much stronger cover
and no effort Is required tiD
fasten It on the lid. -MRS. C.
J. G.

Royals and boosted Uleir lead while ''
to six games m the American
Ken Holtzman benefitted
League West with oni3' 20 to from the power attack ID wm
play.
his 16th game agamst 12
The A's, always at !hell' losses while rookie Dennis
best in the most bnportant Leonard was charged With
games, have now woo four in the loss Manager Whitey
a row and seven of their last Herzog of Kansas City was
nine as they seek to lock up criticized for USing Leonard
their fifth straight AL West m such a crucial game but he
defended his p1ck by menIItle.
"When it means something, homng the youngster's
the adrenalin starts to flow," records agamst other top
said Bando, the A'~' team pitchers
captain. "We knew we had a
"He beat (Llusl 'Nant ,
JOb wdo and we went out and (Jun ) Palmer and (Jim )
did 11. Don't forget, we've Hunter m recent starts and
been doing this for quite a you can't hardly beat better

SAN DIEGO (UP! ) - The
Cincinnati Reds started their
20-game countdown with a
winner Monday
night,
beating the San Diego Padres
:1-2 on a two-run Johnny
Bench home run in the eighth
inning.
The Reda, who clinched the
NatiOnal League Western
Division title Sunday, came
west for a seven-day road
trip. They have 19 games left
in the season.
Bench, who hadn 't hit a
bomer since Aug. 26, was
more than pleased with hiS
gamewinning smash.
"l knew I hit It well but I
didn't think it would carry,"
Bench 5ald. "It was a fastball
and I haven't had many of
those lately. This one lit up
my eyes."
Bench says all the pressure
ISil't off just because they've
clinched the division title.
"!have ID gear myself and

get things togeUler physically
and mentally, " he said. " I
have to figure that I have 19
more performances before
Oct. 4 (when the playoffs
start), 110 I have to do it
right."
Reds Manager Sparky
Anderson says the team went
all out to win.
"I think we have a bUnch of
pros and I'm proud of them
all," he said. "PeOPle oune to
the park and pay to see us
perform. Our players never
give up and that's what the
people are paying for."
Padres Manager John
McNamara has his sights on
third place although San
Francisco presently holda it
with a 6'h game lead.
"We just can't seem to get
that tall punch when we need
it," he said. ~~ we're taking
our cuts. We are not striking
out. The balls just aren't

~

MSU charges

. ·.·.

.........
• 0:•

.•.•
•' •

·.·.
Amen can League Standmgs
Bi Umted Press International
East
W. L Pet. G B.
,..B&lt;:ston
84 58 592
B~lltmore
78 6.4 . 549 6
11 t-.ltw York
72 71 503 12 1 1~
;:r,,CI~veland
68 70 493 14
M !waukee
62 82 431 23
Detro 1t
54 88 380 30
West
~-,.
W. L. Pet. G . B.
- Oakland
86 56 606
Kansas City
80 62 563 6
v Te-xas
69 75 479 l7 lf:~
Ct'ticago
68 74 479 l7 1h
Mmnesota
66 72 4713 1 7 11~
Callfornta
65 78 455 21
Monday ' s Resul1s
Cleveland 4 Boston 1, n tght
' New York 3 Detroit 0. ntght
Balttmore 6 Milwaukee 2,
! night
, Oakland 8 Kansas City 2,
• n1ght
Tuesday's Games
(All times EDT)
Texas (Umbarger 7 5 and
Perry
15 16 ) al
Mtnnesota
(Goltz 13 11 and Butler 3 4), 2, 6
u

"P
m
,. Kansas Ctty

ISpllttorff a Bl at
Oakland (Blue 18 11), 11 p m
Cailforn1a I Figueroa 12 12 } at
Ch1cago (Wood 14 -18 ). 9 p m
Baltimore (Alexander 6 Bl at
Milwaukee
(Broberg
12 13) ,
"e JOpm
Boston (Lee 17 8 1 at Cleve
land (Wa ilS 3 t) , 7 30 p m
1•
Detro1t (Bare 8 101 at New
York (Medich 12 16) , 8 p m

..
Major League Leaders
By Un1ted Press International
Leadmg Batters
,,
(based on 37 s at bats)
National League
g ab r
h
pet .
Mdlck, Chi
••
124 493 76 179
363
,6,mmns, St L
337
137 498 71 168
J26
Mrga, en 131 451 96 147
325
~Wtsn, Ho 126 467 65 15.2
.:Sng1lln. P1t
323
117 424 50 137
321
Jshu, SF 116 455 68 146
317
,Fster, Cn 120 413 65 131
316
l:;rvy, LA 142 586 71 185
315
.Rose. Cn 143 591 98 186
3 14
Grffy, Cn 119 417 84 131
American League
g ab r
h pe~
Crw. Mn 127 475 B3 174
366
Lynn, Bs 129 469 89 152
324
Munsn , NY
315
•
140 531 76 167
312
Rice, Bs 131 516 86 161
:Orta, Ch1 124 478 60 147 .JOB
1{Vshngtn, Oak
130 514 74 158 .307
MeR , KC 126 480 58 147
306
Jngltn, Bait
302
139 530 76 160
'i!rlt, KC 140 557 74 167 300
299
.ern, Mn 120 408 60 122
Home Runs
"' Nat1onal League: Schmidt,
..Phil 32 ; K lngm .=-"', NY and
Luzlr1skL Phil 31 , Bench . C1n
26: Evans, AtL Fostt;r. ''"·
(.ey, LA and StargeiL P1tt 22
Amencan League Mayberry ,
-.&lt;:C 33, JackSOn , Oak Jl. Scot!,
Mil
2.8,
Bonds ,
NY
26.
Burroughs , Tex 25 .
Runs Batted In
National League : lUIInSki ,
Phil 110 . Bench , Cin 10.5. Perez .
Cln
98 ;
Staub,
NY
94 ,
Simmons, St L 91.
Amer 1can League: R1ce. Bos
·~ 6 • Lynn , Bos 95 , Mayberry ~
,¥. ,C and Jackson. Oak 94 ; Scott ,

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sporia Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio ( UPI) Nat•onal League Standmgs
Ohio State Coach Woody
By Un1ted Press International
Hayes refused Monday to be
East
W. l Pet. G.B drawn into a verbal battle in
Pitt sburgh
81 60 574
St LOUIS
75 67 528 6lfz connection with the NCAA
.Philadelphia
75 68 524
7
investigation into alleged reNew York
73 70 510 9
cruiting
violations
by
Ch1c ago
67 77 465 15 1h
Mon treal
63 79 444 1Bl/1 Michigan State University.
West
Hayes told his weekly press
W L Pet G.B
x C1ncinnati 96 47 671
luncheon just five days pr1or
Los Angeles
76 6a 528 20'1' to the long-awaited rematch
San Francisco 70 73 490 26
San D1ego
64 80 444 32'12 between the Buckeyes and
Atlanta
63 81 438 33 /~ Spartans that he would
Houston
56 89 386 41
neither confirm or deny
x clinched division t1tle
Monday's Results
charges he instigated the
Montreal 6 New York 5, lst ,
fW1i1ght
investigation.
Montreal 6 New York 1, 2nd ,
"I don't think I have to,"
n1ght
Ph1ladelph1a 6 51 LOUtS 3, night Hayes said. I'm not the one on
Pittsburgh 4 Chtcago l, night
trial, you know. We've been
Houslon 9 Atlanta 6, ntght
asked by President (Clifton
Cmcmnati 3 San Diego 2, night
Los Angeles 4 San Franctsco o, R.) Wharl&lt;ln of Michigan
n1ght
State not to say anything
Tuesday ' s Games
(All Times E DTl
about it and we are honoring
St
LOUJS
(Denny
9~
or
Rasmussen 4 3J at Phtladelphla that request."
(Carlton 11 13&gt;. 5 00 p m
The controversy surfaced
New York
(Swan
1 2}
at
Montreal (Warthen 6 6), 8·05 last week when a Mich1gan
pm
State news release on the
Ch1cago { Bonham 12 13) at
Pti!Sburgh &lt;Rooker 11 9 ). 7 35 game said that "Buckeye
pm
Coach Woody Hayes has been
Houston C01erker 1314) at
blamed for bringing charges
Atlanta COev1ne 0 0), 7 35 p m
San FranciSCO (Barr 1l -12l at of
recruiting violations
Los Angeles &lt;Reu 13 9) , 10 30
against
Michigan Stale which
pm
C1ncmnat1 (K1rby 9 5} at San resulted in an NCAA inDiego (Folkers 59), 10 30 p m
vestigation. These charges he
has never denied."
The NCAA, in an unusual
move, came to the support of
the veteran Buckeye coach,
66 , Morgan. C1n- 54, Brock , St L
saying it was "a newspaper
53, Cedeno, Hou 44 , Cardenal.
and three other members of
Ch1 30
Amencan League
Rivers , this association" who brought
Ca l 64 , Wash ington , Oak 40 ,
the alleged violations to the
OilS, KC 38, Remy , Cal 32,
Carew, M1nn 30
NCAA's attention.
PitChing
"Ohio State has only per1 Based on most Vldor.es)
National League Seaver, NY formed its duties as a
21 7 , Jones , so 18 -9. Morton ,
All 17 15 , Matlack, NY and member in cooperating with
1

Reuss , P1tt 16 10. Sulton. LA 16
12. Messersm1 th, LA 16 14
Amen can League
Palmer ,
Ball 20 10 . Kaat, Chi 20 1 t ,
Hunter, NY 20 13: W1se , Bos 18
9 , Blue, Oak 18·11

Mo190

.......

Stolen Bases
National Leaque ,L opes . LA

mvestlgallon "
Dave Cawood, Byers'
assistant, sa1d in a telephone
conversation Monday "there
is nothing more to say except
that Ohio State did not do the
turning in.
"One of the reasons Mr.
Byers made the statement
was because the game
Saturday is going to he highly
emotional," Cawood sa1d.
"It's a shame so much
misinformation has come out
about Ohio State hecause that
could he pretty hairy up

there."
Saturday's game is a rematch of the 16-13 Spartan
win last Nov. 9 which ended in
mass confusion and Hayes
accusing game officials of
letting Michigan State
players stall out the closing
seconds of the game by not
permitting the Buckeyes w
line up for another play.
It was more than 30

NOW AVAILABLE

USED CARS

70 DiEVROLET
EL CAMINO

NCAA Executive Director
Walter Byers. We contacted
them in the process of our

Green With black top.
motor. auto and P S

behind the Padres 1 "
Th e two teams meet here
agam tomght with the Reds '
Clay Kirby, 9-5, workmg
agalruit Rich Folkers, 5-9.

Was
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I

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WHEN YOU SEE ME,
DON'T THINK OF
INSURANCE ... BUT
WHEN YOU THINK OF
INSURANCE, SEE MEl
While , t wasVIslflng a./ sick
fr1end 1n the hospital, I reard
!his on th e P A system.· Your
allentlon\ please A baby wu
tu st born 1n the maternlly
ward, and the fam dy does not
hav e msurance coverage Is
there an ins urance man in the
house ? Repealing. fh11 is an
emergencv
" Fortunately I
was I h ere and saved the day
But 1 st dl say, when yov ue
me don 't thi nk of msurance ,
but Nhen you think of m
surance see me

~ William 0. Child•
Mick Childs

rxmrli~~s
MIOOLEPORT,OHIO ·

•

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''

41
The mterest tn the league
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Tbe
Cincinnati Reds said Monday champwnsh1p ser1es 1s
they have returned 15,000 "mply fanta stic," said Dale
checks for $5 "prionty Stoeber, dire ctor of ticket
form " tickets for the National .}trvices . "We were overLeague championship whelmed with pr10nty orders
for the $5 tickets But as in the
playoffs.
The Reds ticket office Is past, vve will still offer tickets
now making plans for a mail ID the general public by mail
and over-the-counter sale of and over the counter sales."
D$ils on the public inail
$3 tickets for the series which
will be played Oct. 4-5 at sale of $3 reserved seat
tickets will be announcced
Riverfront Stadium.
The sellout 1s nothing new Wednesday . The over the
for the Reds , who have at- counter sale will be held
tracted a club record sometime durmg th e week of
Sept. 15-20.
The orders which have
Cincmnall was the first
team m either league to sell been returned represented
out a champiOnship senes requests lor about 125,000
game (game 3 1n 1972) and lickets, two and a half times
the first ID sell out all the total capacity of Rivercltampwnship series games front Stadium.
A1l in the past, the Reds
in advance (1973), but even
offered
the $5 reserved seats
the Reds have never faced a
Situation such as the current w their customers VIa a
"priority form " that was sent
one.
ID persons on the Reds'
ma1lmg list.
minutes after that game
before the flll81 outcome was
announced and the MSU wm
spo1led a perfect regular
season for the then No 1
ranked Buckeyes.
Hayes said the Saturday
game agamst the Spartans is
probably the toughest opener
in Ohio State history, but
added, " Fred Benners was a
pretty tough opener though "
Hayes referred to Ohio
State's 7-&lt;l vicl&lt;lry over SMU
m 1951, Hayes' first year as
Buckeye coach. Benners was
the Mustang quarterback,
passed the Buckeyes silly,
but couldn't score.
"We certainly expect a
great football game by both
teams Saturday,'' Hayes
said. "We expect to play a
good, solid clean game."

luto

fr

Thos Week's Specoal

Riverfront sellout
expected Oct. 4, 5

our investigators," said

STATE FARM
For State Farm
National
Convention

remauung to play with San
Francisco, our job Is ID stay
as close as we can to them .
But we can't close our eyes ID
Atlenta 1trrulmg one game

finding the holes or some
fielder comes up with a
spectacular play.
"We still got third place m
our sights. With seven games

10-12-15-21 PIECES

¥

New York 6-5 and 6-1 and
Houston outslugged Atlanta
~ m NatiOnal League act ion
Indians 4, Red Sox I
Fra nk Duffy drove in two
runs and John Lowenstein
belted his lOth homer as
Cleveland ran Its winning
streak to four ga mes with a
VIctory over Boston Don
Hood went the distance for
the second tune th1s season as
he scattered seven hll'i m
piCking Up hiS SIXth VICtory
against eight losses
Orioles 6, Brewers 2
Tommy Davis had three

TFJ'Oody
mUm OR 2,t~.n5fanssofarthisyear.
W

•'•' . ,
.·.·
•:•

·:·

guys than that ," sa1d Herzog.
"He had t rouble gettmg his
breaking balls over and once
those veteran A' s knew he
had to throw the fa st one ,
they lowered UJe boom "
in the only other scheduled
AL games, Cleveland beat
Boston 4-1, New York blanked
Detroit 3-(1 and Baltunore
trunmed Milwaukee 6-2.
Los Angeles shut out San
Francisco 4-0, Cmc mnata
edge d San Diego 3-2,
Philadelphia downed St
LouiS 6-3, Pittsburgh topped
Clucago 4-1. Montreal swept

Bench's homer sinks SD Padres, 3-2

:o

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

·:·:

eight-game winninr streak

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor

surveyor - who was in
charge of drawing plane for
highly classified ammunition
si&lt;Jrage sites and basea- and
an office maid who emptied
Ule trash every day.
The surfacing of these longtime Communist agents Is an
education in security and
intelligence. It makes It clear
the Communist side had good
security and intelllgence,
while the American side had
little or none.
Names of men in the
Communist hierarchy, totally
unknovvn to sophisticated
agents of the American CIA,
pop up ahnost dally.
Newsmen scour old documents and flies trying to find
out who are men such aa
Nguyen Van Linh, Vu Van
Kiet - and often find no hint
as to their former joba.
Since May, these men and other mysterioua names
like them - have appeared
on reviewing stands at important celebrations. On
official lists, their names
appear before those of betterknown Viet Coog, indicating
they are the real powers in
the new government.
According to the lists, most
are members of the shadowy
People's Revolutionary
Party - the Communist
party in South Vietnam.
"It was not possible before
our victory to speak of these
men, because they were in

hits , including a two-run
homer, to give Baltimore and
Mike Torrez a victory over
Milwaukee. Davis singled In
the fll'st and third and then
put the game away with a
two-run blast in the seventh
to give the Orioles their final
margin of victory .
Yankees 3, rlgers 0
Graig Nettles' homer &amp;lld
Bobby Bonds' run -scor~g
single led New York over
DetrOit behind the seven-bit
pit ching of Rudy May .
Nett!es opened the second
with his 19th homer off loser
Mickey Lolich and the
Yankees added two runs in
th e fourth .

HomeOwne• Loon Up to S15000

�.'

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2- The Daily Sentinei, Mlddleport-Pqmeroy, 0 . Tuesady, Sept 9, 1975

Ford-. Democrats draw issue
on price effect of ·d econtrol
By WILLIAM E. CLAYTON

WASHINGTON (UPII Democrats have virtually
conceded they lack the votes
to overturn President Ford's
veto of 011 pr1ce controls
They pledged to play "hardball" anyway and hope the
people will turn agalJISt Ford
on the Issue.
Press secretary Ron
Nessen sa1d the PreSident
today would veto a b11l
continuing oil price controls
for six months retroactively
to Sept. I when the controls
expired.

Democratic

senators

caucused Monday and said
afterward they voted unanimously to contmue the velD
fight
" It does not look op-

~p~:~;;~~,

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Personal Notes

I

)gt and Mrs Stanley R
Lemley and daughter , Shelly,
have returned to their home
at Cherry Pomt, N.C. after a
ten day visit here with their

parents,· Mr . and

Mrs

Kenneth Darst and Mr and
Mrs. Harold W1ll. Sgt
Lemley will be going to
Quantico In January for
additwnal trammg . ·
W. 0 . 3 Robert E Will, h1s
Wife, and four children of
Fort Meade, Md were the
Labor Day weekend guests of
his parents, Mr. and Mrs
Harold C. Will
Mrs. Mildred Shuster spent
the weekend m Columbus
visiting her sister, Mrs .
Grace Meier, and other
relatives. She accompamed
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hoeflich
and Jayne who VISited Mr.
and Mrs. Mike Hammer and
family.
Mrs. Elizabeth Chase of
Dayton came over the
weekend to be w1th her sister,
Miss Helen Lochary, who
underwent surgery recently
at the Veterans Memorial
Hospital .
Mrs. Lena Huber and Mrs
John Duffy, Jr. of Hallifax,
Mass. are here this week
visiting Mr . and Mrs. Phil
Globokar and other friends
and relatives. They will
return to Massachusetts
Saturday.
Ernest Bing of Columbus
visited his mother, Mrs.
Clyda Bmg, over the
weekend. Mrs. Bing Is
recuperating at Veterans
Memorial Hospital from
surgery last Wednesday Her
daughter, Mrs. Lee Wukelich
and sons, John and Jimmy of
Belle Valley spent Wednesday and Thursday here
with Mrs. Bing. Joyce Bing
returned to Belle Valley with
the Wukelich family and then
they all came back to
Pomeroy Sunday for a visit
Mr. and Mrs. Phil Wise of
Beverly, spent Sunday here
with his parents, the Rev. and
Mrs. Cecil Wise .

ttmtsttc," Sen . Alan Cranston, D.{;ahf., said
" It's going to be tough,"
Sen Henry Jackson, DWash., srud
Sen. Edmund Musk1e, !)..
Mame, said ford Is "playmg
hardball and the only way to
meet hts imtiat1ve ts to play
1ust as hard 111 return The
people don't want his policy
and we've got to do our
damnedest to override his
veto."
There are widely dilfermg
views as to what the effect on
pnces and the economy will
be 1f Congress, votmg later m
the week, fails to override
Ford's veto
A Library of Congress
study estimat ed decontrol

LOCATION NEEDED
Anyone havmg a locallon
for a yard sa le to be held for
t he benefit of 6-}ea• -o ld
Lonnie LeMaster, Rt 2,
Pomeroy , brain surgery

patient at St
Joseph
Hospi ta l, Parkersburg, IS
asked to call Jackie Bnckle.,
992-7119 The locatiOn s hould
be on Route JJ and should be
large enough for the sale
which Is planned by severa l
women 1n the Sa li s bur y
Elementary School area
REVIVAL PLANNED
A revival will be held at the
Silver Run Free Baptist
Church beginning Sunday
with services at 7 30 p m.
each mght. The Rev Miles
Trout Will speak and there
will be special music each
mght A homecoming will
also be held at the church
Sunday with an all day
meeting and dmner to be
served at the church
Speakers will be Rev
Howard Kimble and Rev
Miles Trout. The public IS
mv1ted to both events.
FREE CLINICS
Free cancer screening
climes lor ail Meigs County
women are scheduled for the
fourth Thursday each month.
For appoinbnent call 992-7684
or 992-7531 , 9 a.m . to 4 p m.

DEVOTED TO THE

INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
ClotESTER L . TANNEHILL
E:~~ec .

Ed .

ROBERT HOEFLICH

C1ty Editor

Publtshed dally excepl
Saturday by The OhiO Valley

Pub I ist\1ng co mpany , I 1 I
Court St, Pomeroy, OhtO
45769 Bustnes.;s. Of11ce Phon
9cr2 2156 l!:dtlor1al Phone 9?2
215 7
Second cl ass postage pa 1d

at Pomeroy , Ohto
Na tto na l

adverl's'ng

representa ttve

Grtfftlh

Company,

ward

Inc ,

Botttnell• &amp; Gallagher Dtv ,

757 Th 1rd A-ve, N ew York.
N Y 10017
Subscr1pf10n
rafes
Del 1-vered by carr1er where
a-vailab l e 75 cents per week
By ~to r Rout e where
carrier
serv1ce
not
availab le, One mo nth , $3 2'5
By ma11 10 Oh10 and W Va,
One
Year,
$22 00.
S1x
months.
$11 50.
Three
months, $7 00 Elsewhere
26.00 year
Six months
1 J 50 three months, $7 50
ubscr~pt1on pr1c:e mcludes
_unday T1Q'1es Sen t, nel

would cost Amencan consumers $72 billion over the
next hve years by rrusmg
pnces of everything affected
from
by petroleum
gasolme to food
" Unless
Congress
overndes the veto and
prevents
decontrol,
America's farmers will face
substantia ll y higher operating costs, conswners wtll
fa ce even hi gher prices for
food than has been previously
predic ted and the economic
health of rural Amenca once
agam will be unpenled," said
Sens Jackson and Hubert
Humphrey, D-Mmn , who
cornm1 sstoned the study and
released it Monday
ford told Los Angeles

televisiOn mtei'Vlewer Joseph
Benti Monday night he does
not agree With predictions of
large increases 1n gasolme
prices from decontrol. There
might, he said, be a 21D kent
rncrease o\ er six months.
Alan Gr~enspan, chairman of
the Council of Economic
Advisers, said the admmistratwn expects 6nly
"minimal impact " on the
economy from the end of
controls - either abrupt or
lon g-term. One reason, he
said - IS that the economy IS
sho wmg signs of recovering
more strongly than expected

Big gains for
GOP expected
government.
"We are going to promote
the right of the indlVIdual ID
be free from big government,
big education, big labor, b1g
business and the like," he
said.
The White House reception
was held after the party
formally decided on Klylsas
City, Mo., as the site of its
national convention.
In other political developments.
- A group of Republican
feminists criticized the GOP
decision to hold the convention in Missouri, which
has
not ratified the Equal
"has done more than any
Rights
Amendment.
other single individual in 1975
-Sen. Hubert Humphrey,
... to get the Republican party
DMinn
., told a labor conback on the road to victory."·
Ford srud he hoped "every vention in Minneapolis
the
nation's
state organization can enter Monday
1976 with a balanced budget economic policy should aim
to put people back to work
and money in the bank."
Next year, he said, "we can , instead of ID balance the
wm, and I believe we will wm, budget.
If we join arms and work - George Young, manager of
together . That's the best Louis Wyman's senatorial bid
msurance I know for a happy in New Hampshire, says the
day after elecllon day, race, first run under the new
federal election laws, shows
1976." Ford said he would stick to spending limits are too tight
his
current
campaign to live with. Young, a former
themes, emphas1zmg "fiscal aide to Ronald Reagan, said
responsibility," expansion of "the campaign cannot
free enterprise and ••more deliver its complete message
local control" over programs ID every voter" under the
funded largely by the federal federal spending limits.

By United Press
In·
ternatlonal
President Ford predicts
widespread election gains for
the Republican party next
year "if we JOin arms and
work together ."
He addressed about 300
party and elected officials in
the White House East Room
Monday mght and srud he
would keep traveling around
the country to help rruse
funds for the GOP
Party chairWoman Mary
Lou1se Smith told the crowd
Ford's efforts have brought
in $1.7 million and that he

DR. LAMB

Rapid heart beat is a mystery

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Letters of oplnlon are welcomed. They should be
less than 300words long (or be subject w reduction by
the editor) and must be signed with the signee's address. Names may be withheld upon publication.
However, on request, names wiU be disclosed. Letters
should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personalltles.

I
I

Hope they become adults
Dear Sir·
On the front page of the paper last Thursday everung,
"Miners' w1ves want free food stamps," made me stck, and I
mean sick. To thmk a group of people would have the guts to
want free food, when they are on a wildcat strike anyway
One person said her husband only made $103 m two days I
make $108 in a week, but I work for it, and don't ask for free
hand outs
How can we as a ChriStian nallon, keep wanting something
for nothing ' All of these men could be workmg l hope the 40
pius people become adults and go earn their own living , as the
rest of us are doing - R. M Athorten, RD 3, Pomeroy., Ohio .

Voc-ed students will be assigned

CHAPMAN REENLISTS
VISITED RECENTLY
Manne Sergeant Stephen
Mr and Mrs Richard
P Chapman, son of Mr and Beach and children of Sabma
Mrs. Marlm J Chapman of were recent VISitors or his
Route 2, Pomeroy, ha s mother, Mrs Henry Beach
reenl is ted for four years and Mr and Mrs Lawrence
wh1le servtng at the Manne Dou gla s, Syracuse While
Corps Air Sl&lt;tlion, Cherry here Mrs Beach enU,rtmned
Pomt, N. C
with a cookout for the family
Attendmg were Mr and Mrs
Clifford Jacobs, Mr and Mrs
HOMECOMING SET
A homecommg a l the Jack Jacobs, son, Sean, Mr .
Langsville Chrisllan Church and Mrs Ernest Van Inhas been set for Sunday wi th wagen, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
a basket dmner at 12:30 p m Van Jnwagen, Mrs. Clyda
and special services at 2 p.m. Bmg and daughter , Joyce,
and Herman Michaels
The public IS mv1ted.

By
E. Lamb, M.D. calves of legs. I am tired and were . They may have
DEAR DR. LAMB - l am depressed, which IS unlike somethmg to do w1th your
general nerv10usness.
being treated for mild high my prev1ous nature
My doctor says everything
We don't always knovv what
blood
pressure
with
Hydropress and take Valium. is O.K., and my blood causes such attacks. Unless
I'm 46, male, 5 feet 9 inches pressure IS good with they are part of some other
and weigh 205 pounda. I'm a Hydropress, but l get no heart problem , they are
good 40 pounds overweight. satisfaction on what causes usually not dangerous. They
My work is 60 per cent the rapid heart attacks or can be caused by an
overactive
thyroid
sedentary and I'm just what to do about it.
recovering from a broken
Is this a side effect of the probably not your problem m
view of your tendency to
ankle that keeps me down. Hydropress?
My bad habite include
DEAR READER - To obesity - alcohol, coffee,
smoking a pipe without identify exactly what your anxiety and sometimes on the
inhaling and a drink now and rapid heart action is, it would basis of an inherited
tben. I use decaffeinated be necessary to get an variation in the heart 's
coffee, and other than the electrocardiogram during electrical mechanism.
If your attacks are severe
above I have always been in one. The description of
good health,
,
sudden onset does suggest and frequent, your doctor
My problem is attacks of one of the tachycardias could give you medicine to
rapid heart action. I can be causes by an irritable spot m calm your heart down. I do
sitting reading with a heart either the atria or the ven- not mean another sedative,
rate of 68 when it suddenly tricles. They can be very but medicines such as
jumps to 100 or 125. disagreeable, often depend- quinidine (there are now
Sometimes this is ac- Ing on how fast the heart rate many others) that have a
companied by very weak actually is. I have seen rather direct action on soothing the
feelings. One attack was so healthy men with this heart.
roblem who had attaclis
The Hydropress ordinarily
• . bad my wife called the rescue
IICIUBd, as I felt I was going "'""~rates of 100 to 120, and does not cause these types of
ever knew the heart problems.lf you have washed
under.
Also,ln the morning hours I was ng this. I suspect you out a Jot of potassium,
have very heavy, achy are more aware of your body though, from elimination of
feelinp In ~ thighs' and and its behavior than they flmd as a result of

~--- -----------~--------- ---

1

Hydropress, then you might
be more susceptible to such
attacks. You could help ensure that you have enough
potassium in your system by
drinking three glasses of
orange juice a day.
You really do need to lose
that weight. Your blood
pressure might be all right if
you lost a 'good 50 pounda. I
have been repeatedly impressed with the value of
eliminating even a small
amount of obesity in lowering
blood pressure, often to
normal levels. A1l soon as
your ankle permits, I would
recommend a dally, light
exercise program, perhaps
walking or swimming or both
to help you get rid of your
pounds and put you back In
shape.
For more information on
blood pressure, write to me in
care of this newspaper, P. 0 .
Box 1551, Radio City Station,
New York, NY 10019, send a
long,
stamped,
selfaddressed envelope and 50
cents and ask for The Health
Letter number 1-ll.

also for expanded evau!at1on
procedures
Pupil
transportatiOn
ope rati on reimbursement
revision are designed to increase amounts for school
districts ID offset higher costs
of fuel and repall's resulting
from inflatiOn and make
payments more equitable
under varymg transportation
conditions
Public hearings on the
st,andards will be held Oct. 13
in Columbus.
The board also approved
th e transfer of 150 acres from
Lakota Local Scbool District
in Sandusky County to
Fostoria City Scbool District
and the transfer of 30 acres
from Lmcolnview Local
School D1stnct m Van Wert
County ID Van Wert City
School District .
Six
districts
vvere
authonzed to seek voter
support of bond issues for
classroom construction. They
are Centerville City in
Montgomery County, $2.35
million ; Columbia Local 1n
Lorain County, $520,000;
Highland Local in Medina
County,
$2.8
million;
Mapleton Local m Ashland
County , $1.475 million;
Southern Local in Meigs
County, $420,000; and West
Clermont Local in Clermont
County, $6.5 million.
The board also enlarged the
PIOneer Joint Vocational
School District to include the
city districts of Bucyrus and
Galion and the local districts
of Col. Crawford and Wynford , all in Crawford County,
and dissolved the Tiffin Area
and Putnam County joint
vocatiOnal scbool districts.

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
46 Ohio school districts which
have not met legal reqwrements
for
providing
vocatiOnal education will be
assigned
to
existmg
vocational centers, the State
Board of Education said
Monday .
The state board Will begin
the as~ignments Oct 13.
"The s tate board fully
mtends w assure that all
youth m Ohio have the opportunity
to
pursue
vocational education," said
state board member Wayne
E. Shaffer of Bryan.
"Assignments are to be
completed no later than Nov.
10.' '
Shaffer said representatives of 38 of the districts
and 13 jomt vocational school
distncts met Saturday With a
state board committee ID
review the various assignment faci&lt;Jrs.
" Additional time will give
all board members time ID
consider suggestions from
Saturday's session and
thoroughly analyze the
student, financial
and
geographical data associated
with each of the districts and
the various vocational centers to which assignments
might he made," Shaffer
said .
•. .
The board also said it would
adopt revised standards for
disadvantaged pupil program
funds and pupil transportaton
reimbursement to school districts, and to set standards
for education of the gifted .
Standards
on
disadvantaged pupil program
funds call for targeting on
basic skills to assure
academic achievement and

Polly's Pointers
BY POLL\' t:RAMER

Yellowed plastic
resists treatment
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - How does
one remove the yellow film
from a convertible car plasllc
window ? Ours has turned
yellow and will not come off
with any commercial spray
cleaners. Can this be restored
or is a completely new
window more advisable? Can
you give me an estimate of
thecostofanewone? - K. B.
DEAR K:B. - You might
as .yell stop your efforts since
they will be In vain. New
plastic windows have a
coating on them that wears
off with \\ashlng, etc., and
then the sun fades or causes
the window to turn yellow.
That Is why the new convertibles have glass windows.
If your top Is In good shape II
would be advisable to get a
new window Installed and, of
'course don't get an entire new
top. This column cannot give
estimates and prices might
vary in different places but I
am sure a local body shop
would gladly give you one.
One of the repair men I spoke
with quoted prices that made
a new top about three times
the cost of a new window. POLLY.
DEAR POLLY- I solved
the problem of scarcely being
able to swallow pills by
taking them with a carbonated drink and find the
nastiest tasting ones go down
much easier. - EILEEN.
DEAR POLLY My
granddaughter, 3, wrote all
over my piano keys with a red ,
marking pen and the things 1
first tried did not faze the

"

marks but when I used that
spray for stains that one puts
on laundry the marks wiped
nght off. I also have
discovered this is good for
removing pamt from one's
hands. - MILLIE
DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Peeve is with those people
who wait until they get in line
at the bank drive-in window
to make out their deposit slips
or write checks. This holds up
the entire lme while they hunt
m purses for the slips to fill m
when they should make 11 all
out before getting in the line.
- DEB.
DEAR POLLY Like
Desperate l, too, had an odor
in my refrigerator (however
mine was not fish) and I did
as you suggested - cleaned it
good with soda, but still It
remamed. Then l tried the
vinegar treabnent but the
odor seemed worse. Finally I
checked on my drip pan and
found that was where the
odor was coming from. After
giving this pan a good
cleaning the odor was gone.
This was many years
ago
and
taught
me
a _good
l~sson .
Now
I clean the drip pan every
time the refrigerator gets a
good cleaning. Perhaps that
could be Desperate's trouble ,
too. - ELVA.
DEAR POLLY- I always
found the lid cover on a
bathroom set 'so scant that
the edges holding the
drawstring would fray out or
the cover would keep sliding
at an angle. Now when buying
a new set I purchase matching color blanket binding,

•

and snaps Kansas City's

Viet Cong was
Sport Parade

in everything
By ALAN DAWSON
BANGKOK , Thailand
(UP!) - Only now can It be
seen in South Vietnam just
how riddled With V1et Cong
were the ranks of the proAmerican admimstrattons in
that country
Fam1liar names and faces
pop up daily Some of the
fanatic
anti·
mo st
Communists, tt seems, were

Evident only now
after it's over
working all along for the
other side
My personal souvenll' of
Vietnam IS one of those p1th
hehnets worn by combat
troops of North VIetnam and
the Viet Cong
It
is
personally
auwgraphed by the military
pollee commander who gave
It w me. He worked for years
mside the South VIetnamese
Central Intelligence Agency
headquarters while waitmg
lor the VIet Cong vici&lt;Jry .
A new province chief wday
is a Viet Cong lieutenant
colonel who also holds rank 1n
the North VIetnamese army.
HIS former job vvas chief
translator and interpreter for
U.S. CIA agents in his home
province .
The day Viet Cong forces
captured his home provmce,
he was with the American
adviser there. He was considered by all Americans who
knew hun ID be a dedicated
anti-Communist who likely
would have his head chopped
off by any North Vietnamese
troops who captured him.
An American still in
VIetnam recently did a
survey of the 20 Vietnamese
who had worked in his architect's office before the
ProVISIOnal
Revolutionary
Government wok over the
natwn April 30.
Carckarrying memhers ~f
the PRG included the chief

very sensitive jobs, u

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NEW YORK (UP! I - Brooks Robinson gave it a lot of
thought, maybe all of 30 seconds, tben made up his mind .
•~ He'shitting .195, and having his worst time with the bat smce
he first began playing ball back in the third grade, but he 's not
., quitting. He isn't going to hang 'em up.
~ · "I'm goona .play next year .. -.somewhere," says Baltimore's
: _33-yearo(lld thll'd baseman, a cinch to wind up in BasellaU's
~ Hall of Fame after he's firushed. "I'd like to stay in Baltimore ,
.. but if things don't work out that way , l still wanna play. I'm not
gonna be in any hurry lo hang 'em up."
" At the end of each season for the past few years now, Frank
Cashen, the Orioles' highly capable executive vice president
": and general manager, has sat down with Robinson and had a
~· private talk With hun . Cashen generally starts off asking
- . Robinson how he feels, Ulen works hiS way around to other ·
· related subjects. Like whether Robinson wishes w continue
_, playing and for how much money ' The Orioles are paying him
$125,000 now.
'" The two men will have their little talk agam in five or six
•"weeks and Robinson will tell Cashen he wants to play again
'." only this time he is likely to get a different answer than he did~
' " year ago when he finished up hitting .288. The Orioles may tell
Brooks Robinson there is a chance he might finish his career in
••some other city .
,. In the past, they'dnevercooslder a dealfor hbn. They felt he
_ should finish where he started, the same as Joe DiMaggio, Ted
"williams, Mickey Mantle and AI Kaline did .
'" Now, though, Baltimore no longer is able to afford the luxury
••or carrYing three glove men like Mark Belanger, Paul Blair
~',and Robinson at the same time, and with Doug DeCinces, their
~good-looking 25-yearo(lld third baseman at the point where the
Orioles have to either play him or deal him, Robinson becomes
,_expendaQle for the first time since he joined the club 20 years
ago.
' ' It is doubtful whether any club would give very much for him
: and that means if Robinson does pia} next year and doesn't hit
' "any rmre than he 's hitting now, he'd be a henchwarmer. He
_Jully llnderstands that.
"l'n gonna play next year and Ulat'll be it," he says. "This
" year I've just been struggling. No excuses. I just haven't been
,_swinging the bat good. l honestly don't think I've regressed
that far.
I don't see how anybody can go hack that far in one
I II
,,
year:
F'uodamentally, Robinson 's trouble has been a slow bat. He
.'llas driven in 50 runs, only nine less than last year, but hasn't
~lleen'getting around on the fast boll too well.
o o In the field, he is pretty much the same Brooks Robinson he
, !'~ways has been, the hwnan vacuum cleaner as they call him,
who has whisked up everything in sight and won 15 straight
Gold Glove awards since 1960.
' ~inst Cleveland 1n the opener of a doubleheader a week
' 'ago, he came up with four extraordinary fielding plays in three
.. innil1gs and Baltimore vice president Jack Durm, who has seen
· Robilson play more games than anyone else, called it the
"grettest single performance of his entire career.
, , Nat night during infield practice, he took 3(}.35 ground balls
off tile bat of coach George Staller. He has been doing the same
Uli.nt for nearly two decades now.

a

foreign ministry spokesman
m Saigon said.
U.S. intelligence o'l'ce estimated about 20,000 Viet
Cong agents had infiltrated
U.S. and South Vietnamese
ranks. The number was
probably right.
No one realized, however,
just how high the penetration
went.
'
Said a disconsolate offi~r
who was on the losing side:
"There was no way we
could win with penetration
mto our ranks like that."

I

~

Generation Rap
By Helen and Sue Bottel

~

·J

•:

~X

Baldy,AreYou For Real?
Helen and Sue ·
I have two problems.
I. My Dad likes p1pes and cigars and since he does, I must
also. So every night I smoke a cigar and his pipe. I don't mind
Ulat, but he wants me to do it in public? Isn't age-14 too young
for that?
2. Dad IS also a gambier. He made a bet in poker, and if he
lost, he would shave my head. He lost! So he shaved me bald
and I must remain that way for two months. Help!
Don't these problems sound unbelievable? But they
aren't! - BALD, If&gt;-YEAR.QLD PIPE SMOKER
Dear Smoker ·
Your problems sound like something out of National
Lampoon's phony-phunny "Tell Debby." Prove you're real
and we'll answer with something more than -(Take it, Sue:)
- (HELEN)

+++
Dear Baldy:
The best I can come up with on short notice is: Cover the
top of old smokey with a wig, and if your father persists in
teaching you bad habits, stuff his pipes down the disposer. -

SUE
Rap :
"Still Looking," wbo can't find a good baby -&lt;litter, should
look on the other side of the fence.
Here are some things that sitters complain about - and
with good reason :
I. We're turned off by people who try to chew your rate
down, and then are forever owing it to you.
2. When we agree to baby-&lt;~it for one family, we don't
appreciate several other kids being brought in under the same
rate.
3. That $1 an hour is hardly enough when Ule household
chores are politely dumped on you.
4. How about the kids wbo are angels until the parents
leave and then turn into devils? And If you reprimand them,
,
they "report" all kinds of exaggerations.
5. When parents return to a quiet, safe, under-eontrol
household, do they express their appreciation? Usually not. We
sitters could use praise when we deserve it.
Maybe someday people will depend on machines to watch
Uleir little blessings, and not error-making hmnans. Untll theri,
please give us good ones some credit! -HAD ENOUGH
'
Dear Rap:
I've baby-eat for six years, and was never fired. But
fired several families. I wonder if "Still Looking's" kids bl~,
scratch, spit and kick? Do they need dlaclpllne which parents
don't give, but expect the sitter to hand out (with no use of
hands)?
,
And how about the couple who says "We'll be home nb
later than midnight." and then waft in at 3:30 a.m., whDe the
sitter's parents are worried frantic -and maybe the llitter haS
an exam that morning, which being half asleep won't help. The
man in this family Is often the type who makes a hall-drunk
pass at you when he drives you home.
:
I don't sayS. L. fits this description. But if llhe's a reaJ[v i
good employer, she 'U eventually find a really good sitter.
go together. - IS ONE

I've,

fold (leaving the ends open),
sew to the original edging and
run the drawstring through
this second
eding. This

•

American League Roundup
By FRED MeMANE
UPI Sports Writer
The Oakland A's, receiving
a bit of a challenge from
Kansas City m the last week,
l&lt;lok some of the bravado out
of the Royals Monday night
when they used homers by
Sal Bando, Gene Tenace and
Claudell Washington to score
an 8-2 vlci&lt;Jry and /lllBP KC's
eight-g,me winning streak.
Bando and Tenace each hit
a two-run homer and
Washington addold a solo shot
as the A's l&lt;lok the first of a
three-game set with the

makes a much stronger cover
and no effort Is required tiD
fasten It on the lid. -MRS. C.
J. G.

Royals and boosted Uleir lead while ''
to six games m the American
Ken Holtzman benefitted
League West with oni3' 20 to from the power attack ID wm
play.
his 16th game agamst 12
The A's, always at !hell' losses while rookie Dennis
best in the most bnportant Leonard was charged With
games, have now woo four in the loss Manager Whitey
a row and seven of their last Herzog of Kansas City was
nine as they seek to lock up criticized for USing Leonard
their fifth straight AL West m such a crucial game but he
defended his p1ck by menIItle.
"When it means something, homng the youngster's
the adrenalin starts to flow," records agamst other top
said Bando, the A'~' team pitchers
captain. "We knew we had a
"He beat (Llusl 'Nant ,
JOb wdo and we went out and (Jun ) Palmer and (Jim )
did 11. Don't forget, we've Hunter m recent starts and
been doing this for quite a you can't hardly beat better

SAN DIEGO (UP! ) - The
Cincinnati Reds started their
20-game countdown with a
winner Monday
night,
beating the San Diego Padres
:1-2 on a two-run Johnny
Bench home run in the eighth
inning.
The Reda, who clinched the
NatiOnal League Western
Division title Sunday, came
west for a seven-day road
trip. They have 19 games left
in the season.
Bench, who hadn 't hit a
bomer since Aug. 26, was
more than pleased with hiS
gamewinning smash.
"l knew I hit It well but I
didn't think it would carry,"
Bench 5ald. "It was a fastball
and I haven't had many of
those lately. This one lit up
my eyes."
Bench says all the pressure
ISil't off just because they've
clinched the division title.
"!have ID gear myself and

get things togeUler physically
and mentally, " he said. " I
have to figure that I have 19
more performances before
Oct. 4 (when the playoffs
start), 110 I have to do it
right."
Reds Manager Sparky
Anderson says the team went
all out to win.
"I think we have a bUnch of
pros and I'm proud of them
all," he said. "PeOPle oune to
the park and pay to see us
perform. Our players never
give up and that's what the
people are paying for."
Padres Manager John
McNamara has his sights on
third place although San
Francisco presently holda it
with a 6'h game lead.
"We just can't seem to get
that tall punch when we need
it," he said. ~~ we're taking
our cuts. We are not striking
out. The balls just aren't

~

MSU charges

. ·.·.

.........
• 0:•

.•.•
•' •

·.·.
Amen can League Standmgs
Bi Umted Press International
East
W. L Pet. G B.
,..B&lt;:ston
84 58 592
B~lltmore
78 6.4 . 549 6
11 t-.ltw York
72 71 503 12 1 1~
;:r,,CI~veland
68 70 493 14
M !waukee
62 82 431 23
Detro 1t
54 88 380 30
West
~-,.
W. L. Pet. G . B.
- Oakland
86 56 606
Kansas City
80 62 563 6
v Te-xas
69 75 479 l7 lf:~
Ct'ticago
68 74 479 l7 1h
Mmnesota
66 72 4713 1 7 11~
Callfornta
65 78 455 21
Monday ' s Resul1s
Cleveland 4 Boston 1, n tght
' New York 3 Detroit 0. ntght
Balttmore 6 Milwaukee 2,
! night
, Oakland 8 Kansas City 2,
• n1ght
Tuesday's Games
(All times EDT)
Texas (Umbarger 7 5 and
Perry
15 16 ) al
Mtnnesota
(Goltz 13 11 and Butler 3 4), 2, 6
u

"P
m
,. Kansas Ctty

ISpllttorff a Bl at
Oakland (Blue 18 11), 11 p m
Cailforn1a I Figueroa 12 12 } at
Ch1cago (Wood 14 -18 ). 9 p m
Baltimore (Alexander 6 Bl at
Milwaukee
(Broberg
12 13) ,
"e JOpm
Boston (Lee 17 8 1 at Cleve
land (Wa ilS 3 t) , 7 30 p m
1•
Detro1t (Bare 8 101 at New
York (Medich 12 16) , 8 p m

..
Major League Leaders
By Un1ted Press International
Leadmg Batters
,,
(based on 37 s at bats)
National League
g ab r
h
pet .
Mdlck, Chi
••
124 493 76 179
363
,6,mmns, St L
337
137 498 71 168
J26
Mrga, en 131 451 96 147
325
~Wtsn, Ho 126 467 65 15.2
.:Sng1lln. P1t
323
117 424 50 137
321
Jshu, SF 116 455 68 146
317
,Fster, Cn 120 413 65 131
316
l:;rvy, LA 142 586 71 185
315
.Rose. Cn 143 591 98 186
3 14
Grffy, Cn 119 417 84 131
American League
g ab r
h pe~
Crw. Mn 127 475 B3 174
366
Lynn, Bs 129 469 89 152
324
Munsn , NY
315
•
140 531 76 167
312
Rice, Bs 131 516 86 161
:Orta, Ch1 124 478 60 147 .JOB
1{Vshngtn, Oak
130 514 74 158 .307
MeR , KC 126 480 58 147
306
Jngltn, Bait
302
139 530 76 160
'i!rlt, KC 140 557 74 167 300
299
.ern, Mn 120 408 60 122
Home Runs
"' Nat1onal League: Schmidt,
..Phil 32 ; K lngm .=-"', NY and
Luzlr1skL Phil 31 , Bench . C1n
26: Evans, AtL Fostt;r. ''"·
(.ey, LA and StargeiL P1tt 22
Amencan League Mayberry ,
-.&lt;:C 33, JackSOn , Oak Jl. Scot!,
Mil
2.8,
Bonds ,
NY
26.
Burroughs , Tex 25 .
Runs Batted In
National League : lUIInSki ,
Phil 110 . Bench , Cin 10.5. Perez .
Cln
98 ;
Staub,
NY
94 ,
Simmons, St L 91.
Amer 1can League: R1ce. Bos
·~ 6 • Lynn , Bos 95 , Mayberry ~
,¥. ,C and Jackson. Oak 94 ; Scott ,

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sporia Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio ( UPI) Nat•onal League Standmgs
Ohio State Coach Woody
By Un1ted Press International
Hayes refused Monday to be
East
W. l Pet. G.B drawn into a verbal battle in
Pitt sburgh
81 60 574
St LOUIS
75 67 528 6lfz connection with the NCAA
.Philadelphia
75 68 524
7
investigation into alleged reNew York
73 70 510 9
cruiting
violations
by
Ch1c ago
67 77 465 15 1h
Mon treal
63 79 444 1Bl/1 Michigan State University.
West
Hayes told his weekly press
W L Pet G.B
x C1ncinnati 96 47 671
luncheon just five days pr1or
Los Angeles
76 6a 528 20'1' to the long-awaited rematch
San Francisco 70 73 490 26
San D1ego
64 80 444 32'12 between the Buckeyes and
Atlanta
63 81 438 33 /~ Spartans that he would
Houston
56 89 386 41
neither confirm or deny
x clinched division t1tle
Monday's Results
charges he instigated the
Montreal 6 New York 5, lst ,
fW1i1ght
investigation.
Montreal 6 New York 1, 2nd ,
"I don't think I have to,"
n1ght
Ph1ladelph1a 6 51 LOUtS 3, night Hayes said. I'm not the one on
Pittsburgh 4 Chtcago l, night
trial, you know. We've been
Houslon 9 Atlanta 6, ntght
asked by President (Clifton
Cmcmnati 3 San Diego 2, night
Los Angeles 4 San Franctsco o, R.) Wharl&lt;ln of Michigan
n1ght
State not to say anything
Tuesday ' s Games
(All Times E DTl
about it and we are honoring
St
LOUJS
(Denny
9~
or
Rasmussen 4 3J at Phtladelphla that request."
(Carlton 11 13&gt;. 5 00 p m
The controversy surfaced
New York
(Swan
1 2}
at
Montreal (Warthen 6 6), 8·05 last week when a Mich1gan
pm
State news release on the
Ch1cago { Bonham 12 13) at
Pti!Sburgh &lt;Rooker 11 9 ). 7 35 game said that "Buckeye
pm
Coach Woody Hayes has been
Houston C01erker 1314) at
blamed for bringing charges
Atlanta COev1ne 0 0), 7 35 p m
San FranciSCO (Barr 1l -12l at of
recruiting violations
Los Angeles &lt;Reu 13 9) , 10 30
against
Michigan Stale which
pm
C1ncmnat1 (K1rby 9 5} at San resulted in an NCAA inDiego (Folkers 59), 10 30 p m
vestigation. These charges he
has never denied."
The NCAA, in an unusual
move, came to the support of
the veteran Buckeye coach,
66 , Morgan. C1n- 54, Brock , St L
saying it was "a newspaper
53, Cedeno, Hou 44 , Cardenal.
and three other members of
Ch1 30
Amencan League
Rivers , this association" who brought
Ca l 64 , Wash ington , Oak 40 ,
the alleged violations to the
OilS, KC 38, Remy , Cal 32,
Carew, M1nn 30
NCAA's attention.
PitChing
"Ohio State has only per1 Based on most Vldor.es)
National League Seaver, NY formed its duties as a
21 7 , Jones , so 18 -9. Morton ,
All 17 15 , Matlack, NY and member in cooperating with
1

Reuss , P1tt 16 10. Sulton. LA 16
12. Messersm1 th, LA 16 14
Amen can League
Palmer ,
Ball 20 10 . Kaat, Chi 20 1 t ,
Hunter, NY 20 13: W1se , Bos 18
9 , Blue, Oak 18·11

Mo190

.......

Stolen Bases
National Leaque ,L opes . LA

mvestlgallon "
Dave Cawood, Byers'
assistant, sa1d in a telephone
conversation Monday "there
is nothing more to say except
that Ohio State did not do the
turning in.
"One of the reasons Mr.
Byers made the statement
was because the game
Saturday is going to he highly
emotional," Cawood sa1d.
"It's a shame so much
misinformation has come out
about Ohio State hecause that
could he pretty hairy up

there."
Saturday's game is a rematch of the 16-13 Spartan
win last Nov. 9 which ended in
mass confusion and Hayes
accusing game officials of
letting Michigan State
players stall out the closing
seconds of the game by not
permitting the Buckeyes w
line up for another play.
It was more than 30

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NCAA Executive Director
Walter Byers. We contacted
them in the process of our

Green With black top.
motor. auto and P S

behind the Padres 1 "
Th e two teams meet here
agam tomght with the Reds '
Clay Kirby, 9-5, workmg
agalruit Rich Folkers, 5-9.

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WHEN YOU THINK OF
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While , t wasVIslflng a./ sick
fr1end 1n the hospital, I reard
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allentlon\ please A baby wu
tu st born 1n the maternlly
ward, and the fam dy does not
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Mick Childs

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MIOOLEPORT,OHIO ·

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41
The mterest tn the league
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Tbe
Cincinnati Reds said Monday champwnsh1p ser1es 1s
they have returned 15,000 "mply fanta stic," said Dale
checks for $5 "prionty Stoeber, dire ctor of ticket
form " tickets for the National .}trvices . "We were overLeague championship whelmed with pr10nty orders
for the $5 tickets But as in the
playoffs.
The Reds ticket office Is past, vve will still offer tickets
now making plans for a mail ID the general public by mail
and over-the-counter sale of and over the counter sales."
D$ils on the public inail
$3 tickets for the series which
will be played Oct. 4-5 at sale of $3 reserved seat
tickets will be announcced
Riverfront Stadium.
The sellout 1s nothing new Wednesday . The over the
for the Reds , who have at- counter sale will be held
tracted a club record sometime durmg th e week of
Sept. 15-20.
The orders which have
Cincmnall was the first
team m either league to sell been returned represented
out a champiOnship senes requests lor about 125,000
game (game 3 1n 1972) and lickets, two and a half times
the first ID sell out all the total capacity of Rivercltampwnship series games front Stadium.
A1l in the past, the Reds
in advance (1973), but even
offered
the $5 reserved seats
the Reds have never faced a
Situation such as the current w their customers VIa a
"priority form " that was sent
one.
ID persons on the Reds'
ma1lmg list.
minutes after that game
before the flll81 outcome was
announced and the MSU wm
spo1led a perfect regular
season for the then No 1
ranked Buckeyes.
Hayes said the Saturday
game agamst the Spartans is
probably the toughest opener
in Ohio State history, but
added, " Fred Benners was a
pretty tough opener though "
Hayes referred to Ohio
State's 7-&lt;l vicl&lt;lry over SMU
m 1951, Hayes' first year as
Buckeye coach. Benners was
the Mustang quarterback,
passed the Buckeyes silly,
but couldn't score.
"We certainly expect a
great football game by both
teams Saturday,'' Hayes
said. "We expect to play a
good, solid clean game."

luto

fr

Thos Week's Specoal

Riverfront sellout
expected Oct. 4, 5

our investigators," said

STATE FARM
For State Farm
National
Convention

remauung to play with San
Francisco, our job Is ID stay
as close as we can to them .
But we can't close our eyes ID
Atlenta 1trrulmg one game

finding the holes or some
fielder comes up with a
spectacular play.
"We still got third place m
our sights. With seven games

10-12-15-21 PIECES

¥

New York 6-5 and 6-1 and
Houston outslugged Atlanta
~ m NatiOnal League act ion
Indians 4, Red Sox I
Fra nk Duffy drove in two
runs and John Lowenstein
belted his lOth homer as
Cleveland ran Its winning
streak to four ga mes with a
VIctory over Boston Don
Hood went the distance for
the second tune th1s season as
he scattered seven hll'i m
piCking Up hiS SIXth VICtory
against eight losses
Orioles 6, Brewers 2
Tommy Davis had three

TFJ'Oody
mUm OR 2,t~.n5fanssofarthisyear.
W

•'•' . ,
.·.·
•:•

·:·

guys than that ," sa1d Herzog.
"He had t rouble gettmg his
breaking balls over and once
those veteran A' s knew he
had to throw the fa st one ,
they lowered UJe boom "
in the only other scheduled
AL games, Cleveland beat
Boston 4-1, New York blanked
Detroit 3-(1 and Baltunore
trunmed Milwaukee 6-2.
Los Angeles shut out San
Francisco 4-0, Cmc mnata
edge d San Diego 3-2,
Philadelphia downed St
LouiS 6-3, Pittsburgh topped
Clucago 4-1. Montreal swept

Bench's homer sinks SD Padres, 3-2

:o

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

·:·:

eight-game winninr streak

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor

surveyor - who was in
charge of drawing plane for
highly classified ammunition
si&lt;Jrage sites and basea- and
an office maid who emptied
Ule trash every day.
The surfacing of these longtime Communist agents Is an
education in security and
intelligence. It makes It clear
the Communist side had good
security and intelllgence,
while the American side had
little or none.
Names of men in the
Communist hierarchy, totally
unknovvn to sophisticated
agents of the American CIA,
pop up ahnost dally.
Newsmen scour old documents and flies trying to find
out who are men such aa
Nguyen Van Linh, Vu Van
Kiet - and often find no hint
as to their former joba.
Since May, these men and other mysterioua names
like them - have appeared
on reviewing stands at important celebrations. On
official lists, their names
appear before those of betterknown Viet Coog, indicating
they are the real powers in
the new government.
According to the lists, most
are members of the shadowy
People's Revolutionary
Party - the Communist
party in South Vietnam.
"It was not possible before
our victory to speak of these
men, because they were in

hits , including a two-run
homer, to give Baltimore and
Mike Torrez a victory over
Milwaukee. Davis singled In
the fll'st and third and then
put the game away with a
two-run blast in the seventh
to give the Orioles their final
margin of victory .
Yankees 3, rlgers 0
Graig Nettles' homer &amp;lld
Bobby Bonds' run -scor~g
single led New York over
DetrOit behind the seven-bit
pit ching of Rudy May .
Nett!es opened the second
with his 19th homer off loser
Mickey Lolich and the
Yankees added two runs in
th e fourth .

HomeOwne• Loon Up to S15000

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(BAKED BY
BETSY ROSS

GATEWAY BRAND

WITH MACARONI NEWBURG

•

PEAS

BROUGHTON'S
LOW .FAT
CHOCOLATE gal.

LB.

POTATOES
20 LB.

...
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••••••••
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23~ oz. box

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7·9¢

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SPINACH

.

.

5/

POTATO BUDS

.

3/'1 00
'

ICE CREAM

a

QTS.)

oz.

_ BETTY CROCKER

$100

STRAWBERRIES

12 PlUS 2

In: "

10

. 32 oz.
BOTTLE

' 1001.

28

NOVELTIES
f :f

W~h

::
Coupon : .

.

.· .

GOLD MEDAL FLOUR
NO. 205 ,
10 lb. bag

$}59

WOOLITE

.EASY ON SPEED STARCH

FABRIC SOFTENER

With

NO. 155
64 OL

Coupon

EXPIRES 9-13-75
TWIN CITIES GATEWAY

$129 '

NO. 205

With
Coupon

oz.

... . . .....

'

CRISCO SHORTENING
:

.3 lb. can $149

;

.!

WITH

'

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EXPIRES 9-13-75

Ay

105
NO.

GOLDEN ISLE

CANDY SBARS

99¢

SNICKERS Hb, MILKY WAY 1 lb,
MARS ALMOND 12 oz,
WITH
MUSKETEERS 1 lb..
COUPON.
YOUR CHOICE .
EXPIRES 9-13-75
TWIN CITIES GATEWAY

:

PINK DETERGENT
32 oz.

2I 79¢

EXPIRES 9-13-75
TWIN CITIES GATEWAY

.

.

:

:: : :

: :' : :
: :~ : :
Coupon . - ~ . .

GOLDEN ISLE

PEANUT BUTTER .

With

18 OZ.
JAR

59¢

With
Coupon

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: -k · :

EXPIRES 9-13-75
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TWIN CITIES GATEWAY
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49~

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EXPIRES 9-13-75
TWIN CITIES GATEWAY

J. j

'

LEAF

BROUGHTON'S

..' ..
..

SPINACH 10 oz.

J/89c
5IJS. 100

COUPON ~·

EXPIRES 9-13-75
TWIN CITIES GATEWAY

HO: 115

•

.

COO~ IE MIX

'

I

••• •
···=:···
••••••••
••••••••

.

BETTY CROCKER SUPREME

'

•

100,

CHOPPED

MILK
.

,

ORANGE, GRAPE,
GRAPEFRUIT, ORANGE
PINEAPPLE

FROZEN VEGETABLES ·

MIXED
3/89~
VEGETABLES 10 o~

RED
GRAPES

_COUPON_

AGNER DRINKS

GOLDEN ISLE

HAM BURGER BUNS •••••• ~!~~.

LB.

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COME TO
OUR

5 _The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o ., Tuesday. Sept. 9, 1975

.
100 BAGS OF GROCERIES TO BE
GIVEN AWAY THIS WEEK.

SUPERMARKET
786 NORTH 2 ND AVE ..• Ml DOLE PORT,O
OPEN MON .-SAT. 9 A. M. T09 P.M.

WINN ERS POSTED IN STORE.
.'

BEST PARTS

LB.

ISLE
WHOLE KERNEL
CORN,
CREAM STYLE CORN, .
CUT GREEN BEANS,
PEAS~ OR
MUSHROOMS

I

FRYING CHICKEN

~~~~:s.........69~
12

GROUND BEEF

ASSORTED
COLORS
2 .,ROLL
PKG.

YOUR CHOICE

'

VELVEETA
CHEESE
49

WINGS ......... 39~.

oz.

2 LB. BOX

BETTY CROCKER

PACKAGE

SUPERIORS

c

NECKS ..........

WIENERS

21

WITH NOODLES AND CHEESE

CHOICE

TUNA HELPER

aoz.

PACKAGE

JOY

TUNA HELPER '

a oz.

LA

FRESH QUALITY

.

'

LB.

•

TISSUE

BREASTS....... 79~

FRESH
GROUND
FAMILY
PACK
SIZE

SOn W.EVE
BATHROOM

DISHWASHING
SOAP
22 oz. bottle

WITH NOODLES AND CREAM SAUCE

PRODUCE

FRESH
BANANAS

~-~:~~·"'

'

.•.

(BAKED BY
BETSY ROSS

GATEWAY BRAND

WITH MACARONI NEWBURG

•

PEAS

BROUGHTON'S
LOW .FAT
CHOCOLATE gal.

LB.

POTATOES
20 LB.

...
:: ...
••••••••
••
1111111""'

I - · I'Q 11-.,
• •)J\
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""nii'-T

BAG .

23~ oz. box

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7·9¢

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SPINACH

.

.

5/

POTATO BUDS

.

3/'1 00
'

ICE CREAM

a

QTS.)

oz.

_ BETTY CROCKER

$100

STRAWBERRIES

12 PlUS 2

In: "

10

. 32 oz.
BOTTLE

' 1001.

28

NOVELTIES
f :f

W~h

::
Coupon : .

.

.· .

GOLD MEDAL FLOUR
NO. 205 ,
10 lb. bag

$}59

WOOLITE

.EASY ON SPEED STARCH

FABRIC SOFTENER

With

NO. 155
64 OL

Coupon

EXPIRES 9-13-75
TWIN CITIES GATEWAY

$129 '

NO. 205

With
Coupon

oz.

... . . .....

'

CRISCO SHORTENING
:

.3 lb. can $149

;

.!

WITH

'

f

EXPIRES 9-13-75

Ay

105
NO.

GOLDEN ISLE

CANDY SBARS

99¢

SNICKERS Hb, MILKY WAY 1 lb,
MARS ALMOND 12 oz,
WITH
MUSKETEERS 1 lb..
COUPON.
YOUR CHOICE .
EXPIRES 9-13-75
TWIN CITIES GATEWAY

:

PINK DETERGENT
32 oz.

2I 79¢

EXPIRES 9-13-75
TWIN CITIES GATEWAY

.

.

:

:: : :

: :' : :
: :~ : :
Coupon . - ~ . .

GOLDEN ISLE

PEANUT BUTTER .

With

18 OZ.
JAR

59¢

With
Coupon

·

: -k · :

EXPIRES 9-13-75
· :~ : :
TWIN CITIES GATEWAY
.. ' .
. . ... ........ . -~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·!~(

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49~

22 oz.

EXPIRES 9-13-75
TWIN CITIES GATEWAY

J. j

'

LEAF

BROUGHTON'S

..' ..
..

SPINACH 10 oz.

J/89c
5IJS. 100

COUPON ~·

EXPIRES 9-13-75
TWIN CITIES GATEWAY

HO: 115

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COO~ IE MIX

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••• •
···=:···
••••••••
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100,

CHOPPED

MILK
.

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ORANGE, GRAPE,
GRAPEFRUIT, ORANGE
PINEAPPLE

FROZEN VEGETABLES ·

MIXED
3/89~
VEGETABLES 10 o~

RED
GRAPES

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AGNER DRINKS

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was announced

that

Mrs .

Pauline Atkins has been
made State Granger of the
Year by Jim Ross, state
master. Legislative reports
were given by Earl Sl&lt;!rkey
and Leo Story with Norman
Will reading a letter from
··Hot Line' ' co ncernin g
religi ous broadcasts being
1 from
ba·
radio and
te11· • · and reporting that
t} ' ' t
.casts will continue
since /00,000 letters were
received pr ot est ing the
bannin g.
Degree day will be he ld
Sept. 21 at the Raci ne Grange
ha ll with a potluck dinner to
follow. All gra ngers were
urged to gather Buckeyes for

the National Grange session
which will be in Columbus in
November .
The
program
was
presented by Mrs. Elizabeth
Jordan , lecturer . Prese nt to
talk on the mental health
program and the renewal
levy to be voted on this fall
was Mrs. Maxine Plwnmer,
executive director . The
Grange endorsed the levy
renew HI.
The program carried Jut
the theme "Your Country a nd
You" with Ashley giving "I
Am the Nation, " Mr s. J ordan, "Patriotism and Stars
and Stripes," Pauline Atkins,
" When the Going Gets
Roug h" Everett Holcomb,
"Seeds of Gold ," and Mrs.
Jordan, "The Tra il Leads
Home .'' The group sang
"America."
Star Grange members
were hostesses for t he
mee ting with the Ohio Valley
Grange to hos t the November
mee tin g.

Memorial held
1\ memorial sen•ice was Mrs. Chlorus Grimm .
held for Beulah Darby at th e
Re fr eshm e nts of waterMonday night meeting of melon by Ralph Webb and
Racine Chapter 134 , Order of cookies and coffee by Opal
the Eastern Star.
Diddle were served at the
Opal
Diddle,
worthy conclusion of the meeting .
matron, and Ben Philson, Refreshments will be served
worthy patron, presided at by Margare t Wes t a nd
the meeting. Several com- Barbara Dugan at the Ocmunica liOns were read tober meeting .
concerning Grand Chapter .
Also read were thank-you
notes an d invitations to
visitations a nd receptions.
The District 25 party was
announced for Oct. 4 at the
Middleport Masor '" Temple
•
with a· reception to .... ... Held for
Mrs. Maryln Wilcox.
Pre-registration for those
An organizational meeting
going to Grand Chapter by
bus was comple ted and Mrs. for the Ladies Auxiliary of
Cora Webb announced that the Big Bend Ci lizens Band
starting time is 6 a.m. Radio Club was held ThursThursday from the Rock day night at the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds.
Springs fairgrounds with
Officers elected were Mrs.
each person to take a sack
Rose
Hysell , president : Mrs.
lunch .
Linda J et!, vice president;
The Past officers picnic
Mr s.
Mary
Robinson,
was announced for Thursday
sec r eta ry ; Cindy Aeiker,
at 6:30 p.m . at the home of
treasurer; and Mrs . Etta
Will, news reporter.
Fund raising projects were
discussed, and Mrs. Joe
Young donated a crocheted
bedspread for use in raising
terson and sons , Roy H . Bush,
mon ey for the club. A
Mr . and Mrs. Lawrence
Halloween party was planned
Bush, Mr . and Mrs. Ernest
for Oct. 25. A Christmas party
Bush, Mr . and Mrs . Lewis
will also be held, and a
Ours, Mr. and Mrs. Roy
meeting will be conducted
Donohew, Martha Wolfe and
twice a month. At the Sept. 18
Danny Wolfe, Racine .
meeting a layette shower will
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Gaul
be held for a member. The
and sons, Chester, Arvil
club
also planned a bake sale
Sims, Velda Sims, Crown
for the firs t Saturday in
City; Mr. and Mrs. Charles
October.
Ours, Eloise Ours, P auia
Mayse and Matthew and Opal
Gould, Huntington, W. Va. ;
Ray Blake and Maxine Blake ,
Scottown; Marguerite Bule ,
The annual Meigs County
Bradenton, Fla. ; Mr . and
Buck family reunion was held
Mrs .
Bill
Hysell ,
Labor
Day at the Rising Sun
Chesapeake; Mr. and Mrs .
Park in Lancaster.
Bud Sarner and Ray Ours,
Going from here for the
Columbus; Ada Halley,
reunion were Mr. and Mrs .
Huntington , W. Va.; Mr. and
William
Watson ,
Mrs .
Mrs. Roger Deem and
Georgie
Diehl
and
son,
daughters , Middleport; Mr.
Charles, Mr. and Mrs. Pearl
and Mrs. Norman Deem and
Jacobs, Mrs. James Gilmore
family, Syracuse; Mr . and
and Dennis, Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. John Ours, Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Haggy and daughter,
Ernest Johnson and Mrs.
Pam, Mr. and Mrs. Clifford
Phyllis Blazer and daughter,
Jacobs
and Diana Lewis, Mr .
Belpr e; Mr . and Mrs .
and Mrs. Steve Eblin, Becky
Howard Perkins and Mrs.
and Greg and Miss Susan
Charlotte Decapio Ours, East
Fleshman.
Liv e rpool; Mr . and Mrs .
Others attending included
Willard Ours, Wellsville ;
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Jacobs
Robert Ours, Warden Ours,
and
family, Southshore, Ky.;
and Mr. and Mrs. Vinton
Mr.
and
Mrs. William Jacobs,
JoneS', Long Bottom; Paula
Mr . and Mrs. James Archer
Barnett, Syracuse ; Donald
and
sons, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce
Blake, Lola Raines, Weirton ,
Jacobs, Mr. and Mrs. Earl
W. Va.
Preston, Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Preston and daughter, ·Mrs.

Auxiliary
organtzes

Ours family reunites
The 25th Annual Ours
family reunion was held Aug.
31. at the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds with a basket
dinner at 1 p.m.
During a business meeting
held following the dinner,
new officers were elected
including Warden Ours,
president ; Roy Bush, vice
president, and Ruby Jones,
secretary-treasurer.
Presented gifts were
Robert Ours, the oldest man
present; Florence Circle, the
oldest woman ; Matthew
Mayse, the youngest boy, and
Teresa Deem, the youngest
girl.
Door prizes were awarded
to Phyllis Blazer, Maxine
Blake, John Ours, Paula
· Barnett, Vera Ours and Brent
Patterson . Balloons and
suckers were given to all of
the children. A sheet cake·
with the inscription "Ours
Reunion" was presented by
Donald Blake, Weirton, W.
Va .
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Ours and family,
Mrs. Gladys Deem, Portland;
Ralph
Murray ,
Roanoke, Va.; Mr . and Mrs.
Ollie Martin, Cbrleston, W.
Va.; Larry Spencer, Mr. and
Mrs . Charles Deem and
family, Don Bush, Mr. and
Mrs .
Douglas
Circle ,
Florence Circle, Jim Pat-

I

Mrs. Beryl Wilson was
honored recently with a
layette shower at the home of
Mrs. Paul Roush, . Rt. l,
Ret!dsville. Hostesses were
Mrs. Roush, Mrs. Joe Bowers
and Mrs . Joe Sayre.
Decorations featured pink
and blue streamers extending
from the draperies to a
bassinet filled with gifts.
Cake, nuts, mints and punch
were served.
. Games were played with
prl~s goillg to Mrs. Carol
lee, Mrs. Virginia Wilson and
Mrs. Suzy Carpenter.
. Others attending were
Marie Probert, ~ancy Rousb,
Dorothy Gooding, Mary
Bo.wers, Marsha Wilson,
Hilda
Stanley,
Jacque
Gaddis, Pauline Dawson,

Sentinel, MlddleJXII'I-Pomeroy, 0 .• fuesday, Sept. 9, 19'15

Libby Sayre, Nancy Crow,
Unda Damewood and Pat
Shrivers.
Sending gifts. were Frona
Riffle, Susan Oliver, Mary
Swain, Kathy K.opcheck, Tam
and Pam Bowers.

POMEROY - A do nation
for the annual fe stival of St.
John 's Seminary at Bloomingdale Oct. 12 was made by
the Catholic Women 's Club at
a meeting Thursday night at
Sacred Heart Church.
The meeting was opened
with prayer by the Rev . Fr.
Paul Welton and the pledge to
the nag . Officers' reports
were given along with CJ
report on the Nativity
Deanery
me eti n ~
held
reeently .
Announced at the meeting.
was the men's dinner to be'
held on Sept. 14 whic h is open
to the public . The Catho li c
Women's Club wi ll serve
dessert a t th e dinner .
It ws noted that Bishop
Mussio of Steubenville will be
in Pomeroy Oct. 20 to , administer the sac rament of
confirmation to 15 people. A
rece pti on will fo ll ow the
service.
The annual bazaar was
a nn ounced for Nov. 6 with
final plans to be comp leted.
Refreshments were served
by Mrs. Ja ne t Duffy, Mrs.
Rita Hamm and Mrs. Helen
Handl ey. The door prize was
won by Rose Sisson.

heritage hOuse

Over 300 fri e nd s a nd
relatives attended an open
recepti on at the Pomeroy
United Met hodi st Ch urc h
recently to honor Mr. and
Mrs. Dick Karr on their
golden wedding anniversary.
Hos tin g the ce le br a ti on
were their daughters a nd
sons-in-laws, Mr. and Mrs.
Edward Bap.er, Marion, and
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Matthews,
Huron , and their son a nd
daugh te r-in-l aw, Mr . and
Mrs. Richard Karr, Middlepor t.
Flora l arrangements , gifts
to the couple, decorated the
social room for the occasion .
Guests were registered by
Mrs. Polly Ann DeConnick,
Marion ; Miss Susan Lytle,
Syracuse; Mrs. Beverly
Karr, Pomeroy, and Mrs.
Barbara Karr , Middleport .
Presiding at the re fre shment ta ble were Mrs .
Margueri te Karr, Huron ;
Mrs.
Thelma
Lytle,
Syracuse; Mrs . Thurma
Theiss, Roanoke, Va.; a nd
Mrs. Mary Karr, Millersport.
Relatives and friends
gathered at the Karr horne
fpllowing the reception for
a dinner hosted by Mrs. Nora

Wiley Stein, Mrs . William
Davis, all of Columbus; Mr.
and Mrs. William Buck and
children, Springfield; Mr .
and Mrs. Charles Haley and
Mr. and Mrs. Mickey Buck
and sons, Zanesville; Mrs .
Thomas
Darst
and
daughters , Hilliard .

DILLON ON CRUISE
REEDSVILLE - Nav y
Seaman Roy G. Dillon, son of
Mrs. Pearl E. Dillon on Route
2, is embarked on a
Mediterranean deployment
aboard the fast combat
support ship USS Detroit,
homeported at Norfolk, Va .
He and his s hipmates, who
will participate in training
exercises with other units of
the U. S. Sixth Fleet, are also
scheduled to visit seve ral
European countries.

COLONEL SANDERS

BAR-B-CUE
•

MEMBERSHIP CAMPAIGN UNDERWAY - The
Tri-Olunty Community Concert Association's annual
drive for new members and renewal of old memberships
officially began last night with a kic k-off dimer held in
Gallipolis. Four co unties were represented. Heading this
year's campaign are ( 1-r ) Mrs . Evan Roderick, president

Marriage
plans made
MASON, .... Va . - Plans
have been co .. 1pleted for the
ope n church wedding of Rita
Catherine Ryan, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs . Edward A.
Ryan , Mason, to Edward
Allen Ha yes , son of Mrs.
Mildred Hayes, Pomeroy.
The weddin g will be an
event of Sept. 17 at 7:30p.m .
at the St. Joseph Cat holi c
Chu rc h , Mason . An open
reception will foll ow the
cere mony .

Rice and Mrs . Reva Beach,
Middleport.
Out-&lt;&gt;f-county guests were
Mrs.
Frances
Car ig,
Roderick Jones, Fred a nd
Aloise Rei be l, Co lumbu s;
Darrell
a nd
Mad e lin e
Pickens, J ea nn e Pickens,
Elizabeth Pickens,
Charleston, W. Va .; Mrs.
Ethel Elberfeld , Mr. and
Mrs . Samuel
Herse h y,
Sprin gfi e ld : Miss Sher ri
Williams, Mr . an d Mrs. Roy
Rowe , Mrs. Marguerite Karr,
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Matthews,
Mickey William s and Mac
Williams, Huron; Mrs. Zoe
Merkle, San Francisco,
Calif. ;
Floyd
Griffith,
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Karr , Stacey and Tommy,
Mill ers por t: Willi s a nd
Es th er Al esh ir e. Dayton;
Ralph a nd Agnes Eichinger,
Columbus ; Mr . and Mrs .
William Er vin, Springfield;
Senator Oak ley Colltns ,
Ironton ; Mr. and Mrs. John
Weeks , Gallipolis; The Rev..
and Mrs. Car l Hicks, Belpre;
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Ka rr ,
Millersport ; Mr . a nd Mrs.
Edward C. Bower, Marion:
James Karr and sons, Aaron
and Todd, Millersport ; Mrs.
William Buck, Springfie ld;
Jill Barber, Grove City; Mrs.
Jeanni e Pernhagen, Mike
Schaal , Columbus ; Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Brown , and Mr.
and Mrs. John Fry, New
Haven, W. Va.

HOSCHAR PROMOTED
WEST COLUMBIA, W. Va.
- Johnny R. Hoschar , 21, son
of Mr. and Mrs. George F.
Hoschar, Route 1, has been
promoted to Army private
first class as a cannoneer in
the 25th lnfan try Division at
Schofield Barracks, Hawaii.

of th e Concert Association: Bill Dunn, representing
Jackson County: Mrs. Nolan Swackhammer, Mason,
honorary chairman of tbe membership drive ; Mrs.
Donald Hippensteel, drive chairman ; Mrs. Russell
Bibbee, Mason County division chairman; Mrs. Harold
Sauer, Meigs County division chairman.

Annual membership campaign
starts with kick-off dinner
The annual membership harpists.
drive of the Tri-County
Also attending last night
Concert Association officially wer e members of the
go t un derway last ni ght with assocation's
board
of
a kick-&lt;&gt;ff dinner at the First directors, campaign division
Pre,byterian Church, State chairmen, team captains a nd
co-workers .
St. in Gallipolis.
Carolyn
Roderick ,
The cam paign to enroll new
area subscribers continues president of the association,
through this week and con- paid a special tribute to C. R.
cludes Saturday . Previous (Mac) McGinness who died
members were given the recenUy . Mr . McGinness was
chance to renew their sub- a member of the Concert
scrip tions during the past few Association for 25 years . He
weeks. Admission to con: served as president and
certs here and in the area is treasurer of the organization .
Mrs. Roderick also honored
permitted through membership only.
Mrs. Nolan Swackhamer of
Special guest a t las t night's Mason, honorary chairman of
dinner was Mrs . Helen the membership drive. Mrs.
Fillback , th e New York Swackhamer has served in
representative of Community many capacities on the board
Concerts, In c. Mrs. Fillback, in the 27 years she has been a
in her talk to the group, said member. She first joined the
the concert se ries planned for Concert Association Jan. 17,
the upcoming season " offers 1948.
some thing for everyone."
Other mem!Jers introduced
Tentative agreements for included Mrs. Donald Hipthree concerts have been pensteel, general chairman
signed. These include the of this year 's membership
Uttle Angels of Kore, 30 drive ; Dr. Louis Schmidt,
Korean children who present past presiden t of the
exotic national dances along association, and his wife
with ancien t musical in - Joan; division chairmen for
the drive, Mrs. Harold Sauer,
struments ;
Veri
and
Hamanis, duo-pianists; and Meigs County; Mrs. Russell
Bibbee, Mason County. Bill
Lonstreth and
Escosa.
Dunn represented Jackson
:·;.o_q·~o:· ·=e·,."«. . . . ......_~"&gt;Qoo~~~~;&gt;,; ,o;.
,.. .........................."N.t . • -~
County.
Lesa James and Bill Griffin
entertained the group with
three musical selections.
Tri-County Community
Concert Association memberships are available at $10
for an adult, $5 for a full-time
TUESDAY
student through college · and
EASTERN High School senior citizens and $30 for
Athletic Boosters meeting, family memberships. Drive
7:30p.m. at the high school.
headquarters are located in
WEDNESDAY
the Gallipolis Chamber of
VFW MEETING, 7:30p.m. Commerce offices, 16 State
at Jack's Club near Pomeroy . St. in Gallipolis. People
THURSDAY
wishing information may
SOUTHERN Local Chapter contact Box 253, Gallipolis or
0453 OAPSE meeting, 8 p.m . 446-8559.
at Southern High School.
FREEWILL
Baptist
Church yard sale, 10 a.m. to 5
p .m. at Doyle Hudson
residence, Rt. 124, one-balf
mile easl' of Rutland Village
limits; all proceeds go for a
new piano at the church.

' Social
Calendar

~:WII,~---fti.t-'

Soyou ctida be,.up
jobonalightpole.

And now you're

I ha·Yinl troUble IDIIIrinl
mtol your t:roUbleL
Well, tbere'luolu.tion. Hurry on down
to a ftl8l troUblelhcJOt.: your irJde.
pendent inBurancf
agent.
· We •!'i!:eiPJIIree•umnt~
finlt. And we worklO
expedite a fast, fair

ll8ttJeo •tent af yoW'
clainii;

Reuter-Brogan

INSURANCE
PILtft..SIM
117SYCII....,.

If we can't
. .you, nobody
THE
INSURANCE
STORE.

FRIDAY
MARY SHRINE 37, Order
of the White Shrine of
Jerusalem, at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple. Potluck to
follow the meeting .

Whatever Your Taste
In Furniture, You Can
Choose With Confidence
From Rexsteel
The deep·seating, long-lasting comfort
'of Flexsteet's fine furniture starts with
the uniq ue Flexsteel sp rings, formed
from the finest watchspring steel and
guaranteed for life.
Flexsteel craftsmen insist on materials
of the fin es t quality to match thei r

skilled workm anship. Fra mes are of top
quality kiln -dried hardwood, double dowel.led and corner blocked for extra st rength and stability. The beautifu l up holstery of Flexsteel furniture is the
result of expert attention to detail, deft
handling of the fine Fle?tsteel fabrics,
and skillful tail oring.

SPRIN~

~

·hang ups e;rre bracelets.
If you're hung-up on something or someone spe~.
show It! There's a hang up bracelet for sports buffs,
music fllns, and lovers. Twelve In-all to choose from.
Gold ruled 'or sterling sliver chain.

CONSTRUCTION

NOW AVAILABLE

CROW'S STEAK -HOUS.E

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT,

'

Sun. 10 to 10

KELLY JOHNSON

'\

OHIO

Goessler's Jewelry Store
•

COURT S'l'.

POMEROY

Birthday
·celebrated
MASON - Mrs. Vonda
Johnson entertained recenUy
with a party honoring KeUy
Renee Johnson on her second
birthday .
The party was held at the
Mason City Park where
games were played with
prizes awarded to the winners . Cake, ice cream, candy
favors, potatO chips and soft
drinks were s~rved .
Attending were Kelly
Renee's grandmother, Mrs.
Goldie Ingels, her aunts,
Kat hy Farr and Patty
Laudermilt, cousins, Normie,
Lori and Barbie Laudermllt
a nd Davy Farr.
Others attending were Julie
Johnson, . Unda Casto and
daughter, Renee, Tammy
Cas to, Barbara Van · Maire
and daughter , Melinda, Sue
Darst and son, Shannon .
Presenting gifts were Mrs.
Ingels, Kathy and David
Farr, the families of Patti
Laudermilt, Shirley Williams
and Unda Casto.

Pack

- Open Daily 9 to 10

SUPER

LlmiME GUARANTEED

Your Thorn MeAn Store
Mid~ leport , Ohio

r

Family

Reception honors 50th

WIDE SELECTION
OF

FALL
SHOES

•

Donation
made to
festival

Reunion enjoyed at park

layette shower given
for Mrs. Bertha Wilson

·,

'

Grange .selects royal couple
painting; Judy Holliday , "do
your own thing" contest, and
banner contest: Billy Dyer,
creation from egg cartons:
and Gary Holliday, monkey
face cooki es.
Ins pection was conducted
by Menda l Jordan, deputy
maste r, and Mrs·. Jordan. It

I

- ·-,

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middlepo~t-Pomeroy , 0., Tuesday, Sept. 9, 1975

Pam Holcomb, daughter of
Mr . and Mrs. Evere!!
Holcomb, Pomeroy , and
Kenneth Enevoldsen, son of
Mr . a nd ' Mrs . Darwyn
Enevoldsen, Reedsville , were
se lected prince and princess
of the Meigs County Pomona
Grange at a meeting Friday
night at the Rock Springs
Gra nge Hall .
The two earned the ti lies
through a grange testin g
program a nd will be goj,qg to
the Ohio State Grange session
in October to represent Meigs
Coun.ty . Pam is a member of
Laurel Grange and Kenneth
be longs to the Rock Springs
Grange .
Contests were judged at the
meeting by Mrs . Frances
Roberts with all first place
winners to compete on the
state level. The winners were
as foll ows: needlework ,
crocheted stole, first pla ce ,
Mary Easterday, Racine
Grange: croc heted afghan,
Ruth Smith, a non-grange
member sponsored by Mary
Easterday; a crocheted baby
afghan , first place, Rose
Hooper , Columbia.
1\' :· :ional Grange patch war... ~ mow con test. first to
Mrs . " 'ifford Morris, Racine
Grange: second to Helen
Quivey, Hemlock, and third
to
Carolyn
MacBiane,
Laurel : state sew ing contest
fo r nightgown, first to Mrs .
Margaret
H ann in g,
Hemlock; second to Nina
MacCumber, Star : and third
to Caro lyn
MacBlaine ,
Laurel.
In the cooking " Melting
Moments ," state baking
contes t, first place went to
Mrs . Frances Goeglein, Rock
Springs ; second to Mrs .
Sarah Ca ldwell, Alfred
Grange; and third to Mrs .
Avanell Holliday , Laurel
Grange. Winner of the state
youth CWA contest with his
butterscokh fudge wa s Ke ith
Ashley , Racine , who alson
won the national banner
contest.
In the junior contests the
winners were Patty Dyer of
Star Junior Grange, popsicle
basket , wooden keyboard ,
paper plate plaque and r ock

·I

We Accept Federal Food

Stamp.~

PHONE 992-3480
Corner Mill and Second Sts.

We reserve ' the right to limit quantities.

MI

LB.
MARK V DAIRY DEPARTMENT

COTTAGE
CHEESE
Hb.
crt. 59~

2%
MILK
gallon

plastic

$129

WELKER'S
GRADE A CHICKEN

BROUGHTON'S

BROUGHTON'S

BROUGHTON'S

Chocolate

CHICKEN BREASTS
lb. 89C

MILK
2 Qts.gg~

LEGS AND THIGHS
lb. 79e
CHICKEN DRUMSTICKS
lb. 89C
CHICKEN THIGHS
lbo 79e

for

1

~~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~1.....................~~....................

Social
Calendar

MARl&lt; V EVERYDAY SPECIALS
SCOT LAD

CORN, PEAS, GR. BEANS ••••••••••••••••••••••
KML~
~ORK

3

4
&amp; BEILNS •••••••••••••••••••••• •••

3
ttc:»IW\Itt,•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

VANC"AMP' S

JOAN OF ARC

TUESDAY
MEIGS COUNTY Chapter
· 53,DAV,meeting7:'\(lp.m.at
chapter home, Butternut
Ave., Pomeroy.
SPECIA.L
MEETING
Middleport Masonic Lodge
363, F&amp;AM, 7 p.m. Work in
entered apprentice degree;
all Master Masons invited.
RACINE
FIREMEN
Auxiliary will meet at 7: 30
p.m. at the fire station.
RACINE Masonic Lodge
461 F&amp;AM at 7: 30p.m . Work
in second degree. All master
masons invited .
EASTERN Band Boosters,
7:30 p.m . in band room.
WINDING TRAIL Garden
Club, a p.m. at home of Mrs.
Faye Pratt. Mrs. Pat Holter
to demonstrate bread dough
flowers. Mrs. Cora. Beegle to
have program on growing
chrysanthemums . for the
home garden.
AMERICAN
Legion
Auxiliary, Lewis Manley Post
263, Middleport, borne of Mrs.
Frank Wa s hington,
Gallipolis, 2 p.m. _ ..
MEIGS Athletic Boosters,
7, 30 p.m. at Meigs Hi~h
School. All junior and semor
high parents and other interested persons urged to
attend.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY
MID,
DLEPORT Lions Club. noon,
Meigs Inn.
POMEROY Chapter 80,
Royal Arch Masons, stale
convocation, 7 :30 p.m.,
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
All R.A.M. urged to attend.
Bosworth Council 46, Royal
and Select Masters, will hold
state assembly following the
chapter meeUng at 8:30p.m .
. LETART FALlS United
Methodist Women, 7:30p.m.
at tbe home of Mrs . Ernest
Shuler.
WHITE Rose Lodge, 1:30
p.m., American Legion Hall,
Middleport. Report of recent .
international convention of
the Ladies Auxiliary, U.T.U.
to be given.
- MIDDLEPORT Amateur ·
Gardeners, 8 p.m., home of
Mrs . Harold Lohse .
·
THURSDAY
LAUREL CLIFF Belter
Health Club, 7:30p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Nellie Tracy
with Mrs. Iva Powell,
hostel'• m
PRECEPToR Beta Beta
Sigma Phi, 7:45p.m. at home
of Margaret Follrod.
_

KIDNEY BEANS•••••••••••••••••-••• ••••••

3

16 01 .

Cans

•

m,

o1.

Can s

$1
$1

CHICKEN WINGS
lb. 49~
BACKS AND NECKS
lb. 29~
CHICKEN LIVERS
lb. 99c
HEARTS &amp; GIZZARDS
lb. 69C

20 oz .
Cans

$1

17 oz .

Cans

ALL WEEI&lt; LONG

Red &amp; Golden Delicious

.'

BREAD

'

FLAVORS

6

Coke &amp; Sprite

FAVORITE

DIET .RITE
qts.

.,

SATURDAY ONLY

PRODUCE BUY

APPLES

$}00

4

lbs.
for

.,00 4 :•100
Thursday Onl,y

RAIN BARREL

RC

FABRIC SOFTENER

!6 oz. bots.

48 ounce

09

bottle
CARNATION

Friday Only

..

DIET RITE
FLAVORS

..

INSTANT BREAKFAST
package
Now Only

KLEAN &amp; SHINE

4

SPRAY WAX
8 ounce
can only

..

o

bottle

for

,::.

~

/

IDAD'S i ~i I ~

EASY MONDAY

.2.

Plus Oep.

~":!"' ..

-=-=="'..,"•

32 ounce

s1oo

ALL WEEK LONG

PINK LIQUII) DETERGENT

ROCK SPRINw; lirange, 8
p ,m. at tlie hall.
MEIGS coUNTY H~ane
Society, Middleport Village.
Hall, 7:30p.m.
pAST Officers Club, 7:30
p.m :, Jtaclne O.E.S., home of
M ···· v..-.f't f!..,i~m

qts.

~

99~

Dad's Root Beer

·s pak 1.39 ~~-

' '

.I

Diet Rite Cola

8 pak 1.19 ;;:;;:.

'

'

'

�1.. ,

I

was announced

that

Mrs .

Pauline Atkins has been
made State Granger of the
Year by Jim Ross, state
master. Legislative reports
were given by Earl Sl&lt;!rkey
and Leo Story with Norman
Will reading a letter from
··Hot Line' ' co ncernin g
religi ous broadcasts being
1 from
ba·
radio and
te11· • · and reporting that
t} ' ' t
.casts will continue
since /00,000 letters were
received pr ot est ing the
bannin g.
Degree day will be he ld
Sept. 21 at the Raci ne Grange
ha ll with a potluck dinner to
follow. All gra ngers were
urged to gather Buckeyes for

the National Grange session
which will be in Columbus in
November .
The
program
was
presented by Mrs. Elizabeth
Jordan , lecturer . Prese nt to
talk on the mental health
program and the renewal
levy to be voted on this fall
was Mrs. Maxine Plwnmer,
executive director . The
Grange endorsed the levy
renew HI.
The program carried Jut
the theme "Your Country a nd
You" with Ashley giving "I
Am the Nation, " Mr s. J ordan, "Patriotism and Stars
and Stripes," Pauline Atkins,
" When the Going Gets
Roug h" Everett Holcomb,
"Seeds of Gold ," and Mrs.
Jordan, "The Tra il Leads
Home .'' The group sang
"America."
Star Grange members
were hostesses for t he
mee ting with the Ohio Valley
Grange to hos t the November
mee tin g.

Memorial held
1\ memorial sen•ice was Mrs. Chlorus Grimm .
held for Beulah Darby at th e
Re fr eshm e nts of waterMonday night meeting of melon by Ralph Webb and
Racine Chapter 134 , Order of cookies and coffee by Opal
the Eastern Star.
Diddle were served at the
Opal
Diddle,
worthy conclusion of the meeting .
matron, and Ben Philson, Refreshments will be served
worthy patron, presided at by Margare t Wes t a nd
the meeting. Several com- Barbara Dugan at the Ocmunica liOns were read tober meeting .
concerning Grand Chapter .
Also read were thank-you
notes an d invitations to
visitations a nd receptions.
The District 25 party was
announced for Oct. 4 at the
Middleport Masor '" Temple
•
with a· reception to .... ... Held for
Mrs. Maryln Wilcox.
Pre-registration for those
An organizational meeting
going to Grand Chapter by
bus was comple ted and Mrs. for the Ladies Auxiliary of
Cora Webb announced that the Big Bend Ci lizens Band
starting time is 6 a.m. Radio Club was held ThursThursday from the Rock day night at the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds.
Springs fairgrounds with
Officers elected were Mrs.
each person to take a sack
Rose
Hysell , president : Mrs.
lunch .
Linda J et!, vice president;
The Past officers picnic
Mr s.
Mary
Robinson,
was announced for Thursday
sec r eta ry ; Cindy Aeiker,
at 6:30 p.m . at the home of
treasurer; and Mrs . Etta
Will, news reporter.
Fund raising projects were
discussed, and Mrs. Joe
Young donated a crocheted
bedspread for use in raising
terson and sons , Roy H . Bush,
mon ey for the club. A
Mr . and Mrs. Lawrence
Halloween party was planned
Bush, Mr . and Mrs. Ernest
for Oct. 25. A Christmas party
Bush, Mr . and Mrs . Lewis
will also be held, and a
Ours, Mr. and Mrs. Roy
meeting will be conducted
Donohew, Martha Wolfe and
twice a month. At the Sept. 18
Danny Wolfe, Racine .
meeting a layette shower will
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Gaul
be held for a member. The
and sons, Chester, Arvil
club
also planned a bake sale
Sims, Velda Sims, Crown
for the firs t Saturday in
City; Mr. and Mrs. Charles
October.
Ours, Eloise Ours, P auia
Mayse and Matthew and Opal
Gould, Huntington, W. Va. ;
Ray Blake and Maxine Blake ,
Scottown; Marguerite Bule ,
The annual Meigs County
Bradenton, Fla. ; Mr . and
Buck family reunion was held
Mrs .
Bill
Hysell ,
Labor
Day at the Rising Sun
Chesapeake; Mr. and Mrs .
Park in Lancaster.
Bud Sarner and Ray Ours,
Going from here for the
Columbus; Ada Halley,
reunion were Mr. and Mrs .
Huntington , W. Va.; Mr. and
William
Watson ,
Mrs .
Mrs. Roger Deem and
Georgie
Diehl
and
son,
daughters , Middleport; Mr.
Charles, Mr. and Mrs. Pearl
and Mrs. Norman Deem and
Jacobs, Mrs. James Gilmore
family, Syracuse; Mr . and
and Dennis, Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. John Ours, Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Haggy and daughter,
Ernest Johnson and Mrs.
Pam, Mr. and Mrs. Clifford
Phyllis Blazer and daughter,
Jacobs
and Diana Lewis, Mr .
Belpr e; Mr . and Mrs .
and Mrs. Steve Eblin, Becky
Howard Perkins and Mrs.
and Greg and Miss Susan
Charlotte Decapio Ours, East
Fleshman.
Liv e rpool; Mr . and Mrs .
Others attending included
Willard Ours, Wellsville ;
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Jacobs
Robert Ours, Warden Ours,
and
family, Southshore, Ky.;
and Mr. and Mrs. Vinton
Mr.
and
Mrs. William Jacobs,
JoneS', Long Bottom; Paula
Mr . and Mrs. James Archer
Barnett, Syracuse ; Donald
and
sons, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce
Blake, Lola Raines, Weirton ,
Jacobs, Mr. and Mrs. Earl
W. Va.
Preston, Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Preston and daughter, ·Mrs.

Auxiliary
organtzes

Ours family reunites
The 25th Annual Ours
family reunion was held Aug.
31. at the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds with a basket
dinner at 1 p.m.
During a business meeting
held following the dinner,
new officers were elected
including Warden Ours,
president ; Roy Bush, vice
president, and Ruby Jones,
secretary-treasurer.
Presented gifts were
Robert Ours, the oldest man
present; Florence Circle, the
oldest woman ; Matthew
Mayse, the youngest boy, and
Teresa Deem, the youngest
girl.
Door prizes were awarded
to Phyllis Blazer, Maxine
Blake, John Ours, Paula
· Barnett, Vera Ours and Brent
Patterson . Balloons and
suckers were given to all of
the children. A sheet cake·
with the inscription "Ours
Reunion" was presented by
Donald Blake, Weirton, W.
Va .
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Ours and family,
Mrs. Gladys Deem, Portland;
Ralph
Murray ,
Roanoke, Va.; Mr . and Mrs.
Ollie Martin, Cbrleston, W.
Va.; Larry Spencer, Mr. and
Mrs . Charles Deem and
family, Don Bush, Mr. and
Mrs .
Douglas
Circle ,
Florence Circle, Jim Pat-

I

Mrs. Beryl Wilson was
honored recently with a
layette shower at the home of
Mrs. Paul Roush, . Rt. l,
Ret!dsville. Hostesses were
Mrs. Roush, Mrs. Joe Bowers
and Mrs . Joe Sayre.
Decorations featured pink
and blue streamers extending
from the draperies to a
bassinet filled with gifts.
Cake, nuts, mints and punch
were served.
. Games were played with
prl~s goillg to Mrs. Carol
lee, Mrs. Virginia Wilson and
Mrs. Suzy Carpenter.
. Others attending were
Marie Probert, ~ancy Rousb,
Dorothy Gooding, Mary
Bo.wers, Marsha Wilson,
Hilda
Stanley,
Jacque
Gaddis, Pauline Dawson,

Sentinel, MlddleJXII'I-Pomeroy, 0 .• fuesday, Sept. 9, 19'15

Libby Sayre, Nancy Crow,
Unda Damewood and Pat
Shrivers.
Sending gifts. were Frona
Riffle, Susan Oliver, Mary
Swain, Kathy K.opcheck, Tam
and Pam Bowers.

POMEROY - A do nation
for the annual fe stival of St.
John 's Seminary at Bloomingdale Oct. 12 was made by
the Catholic Women 's Club at
a meeting Thursday night at
Sacred Heart Church.
The meeting was opened
with prayer by the Rev . Fr.
Paul Welton and the pledge to
the nag . Officers' reports
were given along with CJ
report on the Nativity
Deanery
me eti n ~
held
reeently .
Announced at the meeting.
was the men's dinner to be'
held on Sept. 14 whic h is open
to the public . The Catho li c
Women's Club wi ll serve
dessert a t th e dinner .
It ws noted that Bishop
Mussio of Steubenville will be
in Pomeroy Oct. 20 to , administer the sac rament of
confirmation to 15 people. A
rece pti on will fo ll ow the
service.
The annual bazaar was
a nn ounced for Nov. 6 with
final plans to be comp leted.
Refreshments were served
by Mrs. Ja ne t Duffy, Mrs.
Rita Hamm and Mrs. Helen
Handl ey. The door prize was
won by Rose Sisson.

heritage hOuse

Over 300 fri e nd s a nd
relatives attended an open
recepti on at the Pomeroy
United Met hodi st Ch urc h
recently to honor Mr. and
Mrs. Dick Karr on their
golden wedding anniversary.
Hos tin g the ce le br a ti on
were their daughters a nd
sons-in-laws, Mr. and Mrs.
Edward Bap.er, Marion, and
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Matthews,
Huron , and their son a nd
daugh te r-in-l aw, Mr . and
Mrs. Richard Karr, Middlepor t.
Flora l arrangements , gifts
to the couple, decorated the
social room for the occasion .
Guests were registered by
Mrs. Polly Ann DeConnick,
Marion ; Miss Susan Lytle,
Syracuse; Mrs. Beverly
Karr, Pomeroy, and Mrs.
Barbara Karr , Middleport .
Presiding at the re fre shment ta ble were Mrs .
Margueri te Karr, Huron ;
Mrs.
Thelma
Lytle,
Syracuse; Mrs . Thurma
Theiss, Roanoke, Va.; a nd
Mrs. Mary Karr, Millersport.
Relatives and friends
gathered at the Karr horne
fpllowing the reception for
a dinner hosted by Mrs. Nora

Wiley Stein, Mrs . William
Davis, all of Columbus; Mr.
and Mrs. William Buck and
children, Springfield; Mr .
and Mrs. Charles Haley and
Mr. and Mrs. Mickey Buck
and sons, Zanesville; Mrs .
Thomas
Darst
and
daughters , Hilliard .

DILLON ON CRUISE
REEDSVILLE - Nav y
Seaman Roy G. Dillon, son of
Mrs. Pearl E. Dillon on Route
2, is embarked on a
Mediterranean deployment
aboard the fast combat
support ship USS Detroit,
homeported at Norfolk, Va .
He and his s hipmates, who
will participate in training
exercises with other units of
the U. S. Sixth Fleet, are also
scheduled to visit seve ral
European countries.

COLONEL SANDERS

BAR-B-CUE
•

MEMBERSHIP CAMPAIGN UNDERWAY - The
Tri-Olunty Community Concert Association's annual
drive for new members and renewal of old memberships
officially began last night with a kic k-off dimer held in
Gallipolis. Four co unties were represented. Heading this
year's campaign are ( 1-r ) Mrs . Evan Roderick, president

Marriage
plans made
MASON, .... Va . - Plans
have been co .. 1pleted for the
ope n church wedding of Rita
Catherine Ryan, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs . Edward A.
Ryan , Mason, to Edward
Allen Ha yes , son of Mrs.
Mildred Hayes, Pomeroy.
The weddin g will be an
event of Sept. 17 at 7:30p.m .
at the St. Joseph Cat holi c
Chu rc h , Mason . An open
reception will foll ow the
cere mony .

Rice and Mrs . Reva Beach,
Middleport.
Out-&lt;&gt;f-county guests were
Mrs.
Frances
Car ig,
Roderick Jones, Fred a nd
Aloise Rei be l, Co lumbu s;
Darrell
a nd
Mad e lin e
Pickens, J ea nn e Pickens,
Elizabeth Pickens,
Charleston, W. Va .; Mrs.
Ethel Elberfeld , Mr. and
Mrs . Samuel
Herse h y,
Sprin gfi e ld : Miss Sher ri
Williams, Mr . an d Mrs. Roy
Rowe , Mrs. Marguerite Karr,
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Matthews,
Mickey William s and Mac
Williams, Huron; Mrs. Zoe
Merkle, San Francisco,
Calif. ;
Floyd
Griffith,
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Karr , Stacey and Tommy,
Mill ers por t: Willi s a nd
Es th er Al esh ir e. Dayton;
Ralph a nd Agnes Eichinger,
Columbus ; Mr . and Mrs .
William Er vin, Springfield;
Senator Oak ley Colltns ,
Ironton ; Mr. and Mrs. John
Weeks , Gallipolis; The Rev..
and Mrs. Car l Hicks, Belpre;
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Ka rr ,
Millersport ; Mr . a nd Mrs.
Edward C. Bower, Marion:
James Karr and sons, Aaron
and Todd, Millersport ; Mrs.
William Buck, Springfie ld;
Jill Barber, Grove City; Mrs.
Jeanni e Pernhagen, Mike
Schaal , Columbus ; Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Brown , and Mr.
and Mrs. John Fry, New
Haven, W. Va.

HOSCHAR PROMOTED
WEST COLUMBIA, W. Va.
- Johnny R. Hoschar , 21, son
of Mr. and Mrs. George F.
Hoschar, Route 1, has been
promoted to Army private
first class as a cannoneer in
the 25th lnfan try Division at
Schofield Barracks, Hawaii.

of th e Concert Association: Bill Dunn, representing
Jackson County: Mrs. Nolan Swackhammer, Mason,
honorary chairman of tbe membership drive ; Mrs.
Donald Hippensteel, drive chairman ; Mrs. Russell
Bibbee, Mason County division chairman; Mrs. Harold
Sauer, Meigs County division chairman.

Annual membership campaign
starts with kick-off dinner
The annual membership harpists.
drive of the Tri-County
Also attending last night
Concert Association officially wer e members of the
go t un derway last ni ght with assocation's
board
of
a kick-&lt;&gt;ff dinner at the First directors, campaign division
Pre,byterian Church, State chairmen, team captains a nd
co-workers .
St. in Gallipolis.
Carolyn
Roderick ,
The cam paign to enroll new
area subscribers continues president of the association,
through this week and con- paid a special tribute to C. R.
cludes Saturday . Previous (Mac) McGinness who died
members were given the recenUy . Mr . McGinness was
chance to renew their sub- a member of the Concert
scrip tions during the past few Association for 25 years . He
weeks. Admission to con: served as president and
certs here and in the area is treasurer of the organization .
Mrs. Roderick also honored
permitted through membership only.
Mrs. Nolan Swackhamer of
Special guest a t las t night's Mason, honorary chairman of
dinner was Mrs . Helen the membership drive. Mrs.
Fillback , th e New York Swackhamer has served in
representative of Community many capacities on the board
Concerts, In c. Mrs. Fillback, in the 27 years she has been a
in her talk to the group, said member. She first joined the
the concert se ries planned for Concert Association Jan. 17,
the upcoming season " offers 1948.
some thing for everyone."
Other mem!Jers introduced
Tentative agreements for included Mrs. Donald Hipthree concerts have been pensteel, general chairman
signed. These include the of this year 's membership
Uttle Angels of Kore, 30 drive ; Dr. Louis Schmidt,
Korean children who present past presiden t of the
exotic national dances along association, and his wife
with ancien t musical in - Joan; division chairmen for
the drive, Mrs. Harold Sauer,
struments ;
Veri
and
Hamanis, duo-pianists; and Meigs County; Mrs. Russell
Bibbee, Mason County. Bill
Lonstreth and
Escosa.
Dunn represented Jackson
:·;.o_q·~o:· ·=e·,."«. . . . ......_~"&gt;Qoo~~~~;&gt;,; ,o;.
,.. .........................."N.t . • -~
County.
Lesa James and Bill Griffin
entertained the group with
three musical selections.
Tri-County Community
Concert Association memberships are available at $10
for an adult, $5 for a full-time
TUESDAY
student through college · and
EASTERN High School senior citizens and $30 for
Athletic Boosters meeting, family memberships. Drive
7:30p.m. at the high school.
headquarters are located in
WEDNESDAY
the Gallipolis Chamber of
VFW MEETING, 7:30p.m. Commerce offices, 16 State
at Jack's Club near Pomeroy . St. in Gallipolis. People
THURSDAY
wishing information may
SOUTHERN Local Chapter contact Box 253, Gallipolis or
0453 OAPSE meeting, 8 p.m . 446-8559.
at Southern High School.
FREEWILL
Baptist
Church yard sale, 10 a.m. to 5
p .m. at Doyle Hudson
residence, Rt. 124, one-balf
mile easl' of Rutland Village
limits; all proceeds go for a
new piano at the church.

' Social
Calendar

~:WII,~---fti.t-'

Soyou ctida be,.up
jobonalightpole.

And now you're

I ha·Yinl troUble IDIIIrinl
mtol your t:roUbleL
Well, tbere'luolu.tion. Hurry on down
to a ftl8l troUblelhcJOt.: your irJde.
pendent inBurancf
agent.
· We •!'i!:eiPJIIree•umnt~
finlt. And we worklO
expedite a fast, fair

ll8ttJeo •tent af yoW'
clainii;

Reuter-Brogan

INSURANCE
PILtft..SIM
117SYCII....,.

If we can't
. .you, nobody
THE
INSURANCE
STORE.

FRIDAY
MARY SHRINE 37, Order
of the White Shrine of
Jerusalem, at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple. Potluck to
follow the meeting .

Whatever Your Taste
In Furniture, You Can
Choose With Confidence
From Rexsteel
The deep·seating, long-lasting comfort
'of Flexsteet's fine furniture starts with
the uniq ue Flexsteel sp rings, formed
from the finest watchspring steel and
guaranteed for life.
Flexsteel craftsmen insist on materials
of the fin es t quality to match thei r

skilled workm anship. Fra mes are of top
quality kiln -dried hardwood, double dowel.led and corner blocked for extra st rength and stability. The beautifu l up holstery of Flexsteel furniture is the
result of expert attention to detail, deft
handling of the fine Fle?tsteel fabrics,
and skillful tail oring.

SPRIN~

~

·hang ups e;rre bracelets.
If you're hung-up on something or someone spe~.
show It! There's a hang up bracelet for sports buffs,
music fllns, and lovers. Twelve In-all to choose from.
Gold ruled 'or sterling sliver chain.

CONSTRUCTION

NOW AVAILABLE

CROW'S STEAK -HOUS.E

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT,

'

Sun. 10 to 10

KELLY JOHNSON

'\

OHIO

Goessler's Jewelry Store
•

COURT S'l'.

POMEROY

Birthday
·celebrated
MASON - Mrs. Vonda
Johnson entertained recenUy
with a party honoring KeUy
Renee Johnson on her second
birthday .
The party was held at the
Mason City Park where
games were played with
prizes awarded to the winners . Cake, ice cream, candy
favors, potatO chips and soft
drinks were s~rved .
Attending were Kelly
Renee's grandmother, Mrs.
Goldie Ingels, her aunts,
Kat hy Farr and Patty
Laudermilt, cousins, Normie,
Lori and Barbie Laudermllt
a nd Davy Farr.
Others attending were Julie
Johnson, . Unda Casto and
daughter, Renee, Tammy
Cas to, Barbara Van · Maire
and daughter , Melinda, Sue
Darst and son, Shannon .
Presenting gifts were Mrs.
Ingels, Kathy and David
Farr, the families of Patti
Laudermilt, Shirley Williams
and Unda Casto.

Pack

- Open Daily 9 to 10

SUPER

LlmiME GUARANTEED

Your Thorn MeAn Store
Mid~ leport , Ohio

r

Family

Reception honors 50th

WIDE SELECTION
OF

FALL
SHOES

•

Donation
made to
festival

Reunion enjoyed at park

layette shower given
for Mrs. Bertha Wilson

·,

'

Grange .selects royal couple
painting; Judy Holliday , "do
your own thing" contest, and
banner contest: Billy Dyer,
creation from egg cartons:
and Gary Holliday, monkey
face cooki es.
Ins pection was conducted
by Menda l Jordan, deputy
maste r, and Mrs·. Jordan. It

I

- ·-,

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middlepo~t-Pomeroy , 0., Tuesday, Sept. 9, 1975

Pam Holcomb, daughter of
Mr . and Mrs. Evere!!
Holcomb, Pomeroy , and
Kenneth Enevoldsen, son of
Mr . a nd ' Mrs . Darwyn
Enevoldsen, Reedsville , were
se lected prince and princess
of the Meigs County Pomona
Grange at a meeting Friday
night at the Rock Springs
Gra nge Hall .
The two earned the ti lies
through a grange testin g
program a nd will be goj,qg to
the Ohio State Grange session
in October to represent Meigs
Coun.ty . Pam is a member of
Laurel Grange and Kenneth
be longs to the Rock Springs
Grange .
Contests were judged at the
meeting by Mrs . Frances
Roberts with all first place
winners to compete on the
state level. The winners were
as foll ows: needlework ,
crocheted stole, first pla ce ,
Mary Easterday, Racine
Grange: croc heted afghan,
Ruth Smith, a non-grange
member sponsored by Mary
Easterday; a crocheted baby
afghan , first place, Rose
Hooper , Columbia.
1\' :· :ional Grange patch war... ~ mow con test. first to
Mrs . " 'ifford Morris, Racine
Grange: second to Helen
Quivey, Hemlock, and third
to
Carolyn
MacBiane,
Laurel : state sew ing contest
fo r nightgown, first to Mrs .
Margaret
H ann in g,
Hemlock; second to Nina
MacCumber, Star : and third
to Caro lyn
MacBlaine ,
Laurel.
In the cooking " Melting
Moments ," state baking
contes t, first place went to
Mrs . Frances Goeglein, Rock
Springs ; second to Mrs .
Sarah Ca ldwell, Alfred
Grange; and third to Mrs .
Avanell Holliday , Laurel
Grange. Winner of the state
youth CWA contest with his
butterscokh fudge wa s Ke ith
Ashley , Racine , who alson
won the national banner
contest.
In the junior contests the
winners were Patty Dyer of
Star Junior Grange, popsicle
basket , wooden keyboard ,
paper plate plaque and r ock

·I

We Accept Federal Food

Stamp.~

PHONE 992-3480
Corner Mill and Second Sts.

We reserve ' the right to limit quantities.

MI

LB.
MARK V DAIRY DEPARTMENT

COTTAGE
CHEESE
Hb.
crt. 59~

2%
MILK
gallon

plastic

$129

WELKER'S
GRADE A CHICKEN

BROUGHTON'S

BROUGHTON'S

BROUGHTON'S

Chocolate

CHICKEN BREASTS
lb. 89C

MILK
2 Qts.gg~

LEGS AND THIGHS
lb. 79e
CHICKEN DRUMSTICKS
lb. 89C
CHICKEN THIGHS
lbo 79e

for

1

~~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~1.....................~~....................

Social
Calendar

MARl&lt; V EVERYDAY SPECIALS
SCOT LAD

CORN, PEAS, GR. BEANS ••••••••••••••••••••••
KML~
~ORK

3

4
&amp; BEILNS •••••••••••••••••••••• •••

3
ttc:»IW\Itt,•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

VANC"AMP' S

JOAN OF ARC

TUESDAY
MEIGS COUNTY Chapter
· 53,DAV,meeting7:'\(lp.m.at
chapter home, Butternut
Ave., Pomeroy.
SPECIA.L
MEETING
Middleport Masonic Lodge
363, F&amp;AM, 7 p.m. Work in
entered apprentice degree;
all Master Masons invited.
RACINE
FIREMEN
Auxiliary will meet at 7: 30
p.m. at the fire station.
RACINE Masonic Lodge
461 F&amp;AM at 7: 30p.m . Work
in second degree. All master
masons invited .
EASTERN Band Boosters,
7:30 p.m . in band room.
WINDING TRAIL Garden
Club, a p.m. at home of Mrs.
Faye Pratt. Mrs. Pat Holter
to demonstrate bread dough
flowers. Mrs. Cora. Beegle to
have program on growing
chrysanthemums . for the
home garden.
AMERICAN
Legion
Auxiliary, Lewis Manley Post
263, Middleport, borne of Mrs.
Frank Wa s hington,
Gallipolis, 2 p.m. _ ..
MEIGS Athletic Boosters,
7, 30 p.m. at Meigs Hi~h
School. All junior and semor
high parents and other interested persons urged to
attend.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY
MID,
DLEPORT Lions Club. noon,
Meigs Inn.
POMEROY Chapter 80,
Royal Arch Masons, stale
convocation, 7 :30 p.m.,
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
All R.A.M. urged to attend.
Bosworth Council 46, Royal
and Select Masters, will hold
state assembly following the
chapter meeUng at 8:30p.m .
. LETART FALlS United
Methodist Women, 7:30p.m.
at tbe home of Mrs . Ernest
Shuler.
WHITE Rose Lodge, 1:30
p.m., American Legion Hall,
Middleport. Report of recent .
international convention of
the Ladies Auxiliary, U.T.U.
to be given.
- MIDDLEPORT Amateur ·
Gardeners, 8 p.m., home of
Mrs . Harold Lohse .
·
THURSDAY
LAUREL CLIFF Belter
Health Club, 7:30p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Nellie Tracy
with Mrs. Iva Powell,
hostel'• m
PRECEPToR Beta Beta
Sigma Phi, 7:45p.m. at home
of Margaret Follrod.
_

KIDNEY BEANS•••••••••••••••••-••• ••••••

3

16 01 .

Cans

•

m,

o1.

Can s

$1
$1

CHICKEN WINGS
lb. 49~
BACKS AND NECKS
lb. 29~
CHICKEN LIVERS
lb. 99c
HEARTS &amp; GIZZARDS
lb. 69C

20 oz .
Cans

$1

17 oz .

Cans

ALL WEEI&lt; LONG

Red &amp; Golden Delicious

.'

BREAD

'

FLAVORS

6

Coke &amp; Sprite

FAVORITE

DIET .RITE
qts.

.,

SATURDAY ONLY

PRODUCE BUY

APPLES

$}00

4

lbs.
for

.,00 4 :•100
Thursday Onl,y

RAIN BARREL

RC

FABRIC SOFTENER

!6 oz. bots.

48 ounce

09

bottle
CARNATION

Friday Only

..

DIET RITE
FLAVORS

..

INSTANT BREAKFAST
package
Now Only

KLEAN &amp; SHINE

4

SPRAY WAX
8 ounce
can only

..

o

bottle

for

,::.

~

/

IDAD'S i ~i I ~

EASY MONDAY

.2.

Plus Oep.

~":!"' ..

-=-=="'..,"•

32 ounce

s1oo

ALL WEEK LONG

PINK LIQUII) DETERGENT

ROCK SPRINw; lirange, 8
p ,m. at tlie hall.
MEIGS coUNTY H~ane
Society, Middleport Village.
Hall, 7:30p.m.
pAST Officers Club, 7:30
p.m :, Jtaclne O.E.S., home of
M ···· v..-.f't f!..,i~m

qts.

~

99~

Dad's Root Beer

·s pak 1.39 ~~-

' '

.I

Diet Rite Cola

8 pak 1.19 ;;:;;:.

'

'

'

�'•

8 - The Daily Sentmel, M1ddleport-Pomernv n , Tuesda,v, Sept. 9, 1975

~c~~~~~®lk.J4c.... ".J-.~P- For ·Fast

ont letter to each square, 1~

form rour ordinary \\Otd s.

!JEFOI&lt;:E

~~
r:·
. I

I'---L__
l L__D~

1(

.

~

t

1111S! ......... "

l.l .

••
HE SHOWEI7 TK-'T
'?O UF: pgEVIOU:O &gt;&lt;41RI70
WA'Oo A ti~ISTAKE.

RARELY

A flu ..r "'lllflri~IIHI

lm11 { Jr, 11 r 1 1 r/114t

WAITER

d' - EYEBROWS

::;:-:·=·=·=-=·=·:·:;:.:;:·::::::!:::::::::::.;::.;:;::::=:·:·:·:·:·=·=·=·=·=·=·:-:·:-;·:·: v .. "t'M :

\t~ Mason County

:;;::;;;;:;:;::::;::;.;::;;~:=

News Notes :\ [

QUALITY

-

MIDDLEPORT
PENNZDIL

North :lnd Street
Tune Ups . Batteries
Shock Absorbers - Tires
Muffler-Tailpjpes - Cooling
Systems.
We
a I so
service
Volkswagens and other
foretgn cars.

1971 OLDS CUTLASS "S" CPE.
S2J9S
"$" Cpe, grey fmrsh, blk mtenor , bucket seats &amp;
conso le , radio. tape, automatic , power steerrng &amp;
brakes, local 1 owner car

POME~~! E~E~-~~~ co..@)
POMEROY, OHIO

Employment Wanted

99' l/59

---~------

1964 l NTERNAIIONAL 1600
truck . 5 5 P and 2 sp Long
wneel base new clutch, new
pam f good condition Henry
Bahr (6141 985 3988
9 9 3tp
- ~------- -----

1968 DODGE
green 8 c yl
992 3350

HT, PoL!!ra .
1600 Phon e

PIANO Tunrng , Lane Dantel s,
B I ? ?61c
9 7 )t C
Ph one 992 2082
8-18 26tp RE M06E i.. ING
Plumb tng ." i97o -PLYMO iJTH~
hea tong ana all lyp es of
Phone 992 2557
genera l
repa tr
Work
9 5 6tp
gua ranteed 20 year s ex ·
p erre nce
Phone 992 2409
1974 VW eull , liKe new . 14,000
5 1 tf'j"
PO RCH SA LE , Sept 10 and 11
m lies Pnone 742 488 5
al lhe Barley restden ce. 405
9 7 3tc
Grant St , Mtddteport . from
9 t rl l 5 p m
1967 PLYMOUTH Fury 19 65
9 8 2tc TO GIVE AWAY - Very nrce
cnev P tc kup , 1 , ton tru ck
female Beagle dog. 4 5
Phone 949 38 3 1
months old
Needs good
9 5 3t c
PORCH
and
Yard
Sa le
home
No nunters need
starting Monday at 9 a m
apply Call evenmgs, 992
1970 VOLKSWAGEN, needs
thru Thursday Lots ot good
5427 or 992 5910 Metgs
sta r te r 5250 Call '?92 7658
c hildren ' s
and
adult
Humane Socie ly
9 5 3tc
clo thtng, some new Otshes
9 9 3tc
and
other
rtems
too
numerous to mention. al the TO GIVE AWAY Meigs
J tm Rrffte Residence , just
County Hu ma ne Society
above Letart F alls
desperl!ltely need home lor 7
9 7 4t,c
m txelji breed puppres, 6 or 'l PLAYER ptano , need not be tn
months old Will not be large
working co ndlt ron , also
FREEWILL Baptist Church
dogs. gentle. healthy and
ptano rolls Phone 742 5625
Yard Sal e, TI'1UrSday from
c lean Ideal for house pets
9 7 6t c
10 a m ftll 5 p m AI Doyle
Call 9&lt;49 4917 or 992 5906
Hudson restdence, Rt 12.4,
after 12 noon
'1 mtle east of Rutland , Ctty
9 9 6tc ..)LD turn tfure , rce boxes .
L rm Its All pr oceeds go to - " - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - brass beds , or comp lete
purchase of a new ptano for AKC Reg Englrsh Springer. 3
households
Write M
0 .
the chur ch
month pups, brown and
Mtller , Rt
4 , Pomeroy .
9 9 2tc
while Pllone 992 2639
Oil to Ce ll 992 17~0
9 9 61p
10 7 7 4
PORCH Sa les, Sept 10 and 11
at Batley residence. 405
AKC: Reg Poodles . two blue
Grant 51 from 9 trll 5 p m
and 1 chocolate , 1 apricot
9 9 21p
Phone (304) 882 3205
8 27 12tp 12- )C 70 MANHATTAN 2
MR S NORMAN Reynolds w rlt
bedrm , 2 fUll baths , uttlrty
have a 1 day sale only,
butld1n9 , washer and dryer
Thur sday, Sept 11,9 am to FREE ca ts and small pupptes
Pnone 843 2826
ce n tral arr , deluxe fur
5 p m
at Mrs Cather tne
9 5 6tc
ntlure Call £304) 882 3340 ,
Sm rth 's re srdence across
after 5 p m
from the fire house, Mason .
9 3 6tc
w Va Lo ts of men 's and AKC
REG
female
women 's ctotlling, all 1n
Dachshund, 2'n years old ,
good cond tlton For more
had shots , spaved
Good SOME~N£ need ed___to take
rnformatton , call 1 (304) 773
with children , S65 C811 (614)
over payments on a mobile
985 4124
5128
nome Phone 992 3152 .
9 9 2tp
9 7 3tc
9 7 Jtc

.uOGTx

Yard Sale

-~~- -- -~-- ----~

Pets For Sale

Wanted To Buy

Mobile Homes for Sale

LAST WEEK for yard sale
Clothing, dlslles, 1!2 price.
turnlfure, J white t&amp;vator•es
1;3 eech. lruc"- car chain, 1
BEORoOM
turn 1 st1ed
Kenmore wasn.er with sud
mobde home No pets Call
saver, Sunbeam coffee pot,
9917479
Ham ilion Beach Mixer with
9 22 tfc
bowls , whfle uniforms. Sl
eacn , stze 16, black vern, 111 2 BEDROO M tra der extra
prrce Phone 742 6273.
nice Phone 992 1124
9 9 tfc
8 26 lfc
3 F AMILY Basement Sale.
Salem St tn Rull&amp;nd Little 2 BEDRM trailer, 527 per
bit of everythmg, Monday
week All utlltl les patd
Phone 992 332•
' ttl ')
9 7-1fc
9-9-3tc

For Rent

-- ~----- ------

4

Mason, Area Personal Mention

FAMILY Garage Sate, PRIVATE meetrng room for
Tnursday and Frrday, Sept
any organtzal!on. phone 99'l
11 and 12, 9 am till 4 p m
3975
204 Lasley St , Pomeroy.
3 11 lfc
01'1 10 Across from old Sugar
Run School
Depression
glass and a few collector's :cou NTRY Mobil e Home
tfem s Very nrce clothing
Park R l 33 ten mrles north,
9 e Jtc
of Pomeroy Large lots wtlh
conc ret e pattos stdewatk s
rvnners a n d off stree t
park tng Phone 991 7.J79
1
12 Jl ttc

1974 CASTLE . 12 X 65 , 2
bedrm 2 full baths . total
elec, furntture. washer and
dryer Phone 949 3655
9 4 6tc

--------to i ' rent, hour or

BACK HOE

For Sale
19 J? ARROW Camper phon e
99? 51 68
8 15 26 tp
SUNDY Trombone , excellent
condttlon . Used one school
term by begmner Ca ll 949
2472
9 9 3tp

EVERYBODY

Shops the

WANT AD WAY

__ ___________

I

..
'

I

'~
"

TO
·smith Estate
.
You wtll take nottce that
Dale Smtth has flied &amp;n ap

bring you
extra cash
for
shopping' sprees

pltcetton in the Probate Court
of Metgs County , Ohio, to
relieve the estate of Clauae L

Smtih. now deceased, from
admintstratlon. and that such
application Will be heard on
th~

Pomeroy , Ohio, has been duly
appointed Executor of the
Estate of louise Dr.yan ,
deceased, late of Middleport ,
Me tgS CoUnly , Ohio
creditors are required to
Ill~
•herr cta1mS wrth sard
It due 1ary within four months
Dated thrs 23rd day of
Au gusl 1975

Mannmg D Webster
Judge
Court of Common Pleas .
Probate OtVIStOn

9th day of September, 1975,

at 10 00 O'C tol k AM

1.......,..--~-....o-~--' ' 18 1 26

191 2.

.

Dale E Smtih
9. Jtc •

(H)

'I

2~

(91 1. 9, Jtc

Select your 2 bedrm . town
house , Beautiful new apt
complex, appliances fur nished, completely · car peted , Rent S128 up in
ctudinv
utllftles
Call
resident manager, Sam or
Be'c ky Lonoanacre , , 1-304
1!82-2567 . If no answer, ~alll

(304 I 882 2788

"

9 3 12tC

4 ROOM furnished apartment
wrt~ wall to . wall carpet
Phone 992 5908
9 3-ttc

· ·--- -- -- --;- -------

Money short, lay -a way
your fall hunting needs New
Fall ·store ftours startmg
Sept s.. 10 am . to 9 p.m .,
Monday -Saturday
Village
Gun ~ Shoppe ; 266 Mill st. ,
Phone 992 -5117, financing
available
• ..
• ~....
9 3 26tc

-~ --~---"':.--- ----

191~

FOA'-D semi -tractor, 472
cubic lncti gas engine. Less
than · 5,000 . miles . Phone

1304) 273-3019 Mrs Gordon

Staates, Sandyville. W Va
9 3 6tc

I NDU5 TRI~5-!

.

EAST i DI
A AKJ86
¥Q
• AJ

WEST

Ali l05\
• 74 •
•

BORN LOSER

~

H ti 5 '1

.KQJ6 5

... \0 2

SO LTil

Pomeroy

.._ H I N E
all makes
99 2 2284 The F,abrtC1_ Sh op ,
Po me roy Auth oriz ed S•nger
~al es a nd se rv1 ce
we
sha rp en Sc tssors
J 29 t fc

. THt:N,
5Cm'; Til I IJ&lt;o
BeTlfR CNv'E

I IIJ~ ey,.'L'I

c:AllrJb

, - Au -TREE~ T~~~; rng . :tu

A 941

8RllTUS1iLL

Al..Qt.Jb

~THI~

SAW IV'f; Wl111

B€ITE:I&lt;
CA.M,E.

• AKJ953

•K li
... 8 3

l'.isl West \uln erable

N£)

1

\\ t•s t

&amp;'RUTUS ..

\ \

A.L-ONb.. .'

,.

Easl

~orth

South

~m~~

lA
4 ...

Pass

~~~

Opc nm g lead - 3 •

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
The ostnch 1s supposed to
st1 ck 1ts hea d tn the sand on the
theory that no one Will be able
to see 11 North s b1ddmg of
iodav ·s ha nd wa s along the

IJTTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

A reader from Rhode Island
w ants to kno w the correct standard Amerocan openmg bid
With
• K I0 9 • J I0 5 4 + K 3
"'A K J 9
The correct opemng btd ts one
notrump 1n sp1te of the fact that
you onl y have 15 hogh -card
points You sho uld count the
two lOs and two mnes as a 16th

same lmes He couldn' t ra 1se
fro m t wo lo three d1amonds pomt
sm ce th at ca ll would encourage
(Do you have a quest1on tor
h1s oppone nt s to brd on to ga m e rh e Jacot&gt;ys? Wnte ' Ask the

11 30--Johnny Carson 3,4, 15 W i de World Myststtry
13. FBI 6, Movie " The Orrty D o zen " 8, Movie

" VIva Vlllo" 10
12 30-Wide World Mystery 6
1

00- Tomorrow 3.4.. News 13

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1975
6 QO-Colvmbus Today 4, Sum me r Semester
6

~ . 30-New

Zoo Revue 4. New s 6 , B1ble Answers 8,
Farmtlme 10, The Story 13
6 41f--Publlc Atfalrs lO
6 .45-Mornlng Report 3
6 Ss-Chuck White Reports 10 , News 13

7 00--Todoy 3,4, 15 AM America 6,13 , CBS News 8.
Popeye 10
7 30---Schoolles 10
8 QO-Lucy Show 6 ; Capt Kangaroo 8, 10 , Sesa me St.

33
8.30-Big Valley 6
9.00--A .M 3, Phil Donahue 4, 15 . Lucy Show 8, Mike
Douglas 10, Morning wtth D J lJ
9 · 30-Nol For Women Only 3. One Llle to Live 6 ,
Musical Chairs 8. New Zoo Revue 13.
10 Oil-Celebrity Sweepstakes 3,4, 15 , Dinah 6:· GiveN

Take 8, 10; Mrke Douglas 13
10 31f--Wheel of Forlune 3,4.15 . Price Is Right 8.10
11 .00--High Rollers 3,15. I Dream of Jeanie 4
11 30-Hollywood Squares 3, 15 . Happy Days 13;
Midday ; , Love of Life 8,10
11 ;55--Take Kerr 8, Dan !mel 's World 10
12 oo-Magnlflcent Marble Machine 3,15. Showotfs 13 .
Bob Braun's 50-50 Club 4, News 6,8, 10
12 30-Jackpot 3.15. All My Children 6, 13 . Search for
Tomorrow 8, 10.

12 55----NBC News 3, 15
1 00:---News 3, Ryan 's Hope 6,13 , Phil Donahue 8,
Young &amp; fhe Restless 10, Not For Women Only IS

CORNER LOT , 8 ROOMS,
AIR GAS FUR NACE CALL

4·30-Bewllched 3. Mod Squad 6, Partridge family 8 ,

2 STORY
GOOD

ON

butourex - Jaco~ y s

c are

ol th1s

exc use
.JACOBY MODERN)
Anywaj . whe n East dtd btd
Nt 'A S!' AI'~ H ~ N THn&gt;ttls ~ ASSN

Real Estate for Sale

FRAME HOU SE,
LOCATION

Maybellwould

p e r1 e nce ts that when East newspaper
The most mopen s th e btddwg and h1 s tere st mg quest1ons will be
partner g 1ves hun a ra1se , he I S u sP. d In th1s c olumn and
gomg to game w 1th any sort of wnters Will rece1ve copres of

" Drums of Africa" 10 , Otnah 13

1'h BATHS , GARAGE , HOT

For Rent
or Sale

992 -3731
FOR
POINTMENT

•

AP

ALLEY OOP

9 7 3tc

DANG IT! NOW l'LL

YOU KNOW, ALLEY, IF
HAFTA MAKE A
MOLLY'S GOING TO WAIT
WHOLE NEW BATCH ON TABLES FOR US, I
01' STEW.'
l'HINK S HE SHOULD

11 RM HOME . 1 baths , new
roof and alumrnum Siding in
Pomeroy
Phone 992 7556
9·5-6tc

by Land Contract
Offtce Butldrng wtth 700 sq.
ft. of space located on 107
Sycamore 51, Pomeroy .
Would sell on land contract
or rent. Gerald Reuter,

Phone 992'2490

Matn St, 8 rooms, bath, porch,
2 car garage and lof for

garden S12,000
NEW LISTING - 8 rooms. 4
bedrooms, Jlh
baths, n1ce
. kitchen , hot water heaf,
basement
with
garage

MAIIII

.....ii!!iiiiiiiliiil.

l&gt;OMEROY, 0

FUEL OIL
Heating Stoves
All s1zes on hand, prtces

start £t 5324.69.
-1 Wood Burnmg Stove

CLIP THIS AO and bring tl
in for $15.00 discount.

1'1'1. acres,

R , patio, garage, all rn
excellenf condition. $8,300

POMEROY - 2.77 acres,
lovely home. 3 BR. bath,
mce
kitchen.
full
basement, patio. carport ,
garage, 2 tratler hookups .

LIMA BI::ANS and Gnmes
Golden apptes Phone 949
2803 or 949 5721.
9 7 3tc
1972 YAMAHA, 2 helmets,
5, 000 mi les, very good
condition Contact Larry
Fretds , Syracuse, Ohro 992
9 7 3tc

1933 JOHN Deere Model A
tractor , completely re bur II
Phone H2 5025
9 7 6tc

135 acres.

city water available, close
to S.tate Park, minerals

JUST 5123.00 per acre.
RUTLAND - Recently
renovated, 2 BR. bath,
llving has fireplace,
ches, garage. $9,500.

home

has

L'tl u:~ ser vice yoUr Volks
wagen, reasonable rates .
Mtddleport Pennzo!l North
Secane Stree t, Middleport
Phone 997 99 71.;
8 19 76tc
- -:- _-:;: - - --~HAY tor sate P!1one 843 2524

-

BR,

house , good well, mrnerals
$175 00 per acre

$20,000
NEW LISTING - 7 rooms. 3
bedrooms. bath, drilled well
and 2nd building
servtce stafton . I

used as
acre for

$8,000.
HARRISONVILLE - 6 acres
and 3 bedroom 70x 14 mobrle
home wrlh 1'11 baths, $17 ,500.
2 FAMILY HOME II
rooms, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths,
and extra rooms far another

us~

th'
pi'chur'

Funn4

apt. Sl2,500.
26 ACRES - Of nice rolling
land , 3 bedroom
recently redecorated

Joel a

Seemed
l1ke he
were
enjol.l1n'

up an'
leave

home
Orrlled

well , 2 ponds, bath . barn, dbl
garage and fenced $28,000
MODERN HOME - Brtck

Look like we
·walks home.
Miss Melba~
Too bad
we d1dn't
q;t t'
seeth'
pi'chur!

veneer , 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
marvelous krt and dining wtth
sltdrng glass doors
Full
basement , 2 car garage

$39,000.
LAND CONTRACT

-

We'll
ketch
1t when
1t come
on 1V 1

4

bedroom home, bath, nice kif,
basement w1th garage and 2
famtly rooms

IJL ABNER

ROTTt:='N LI'L GRAY

AH KIN BE POFOOLAR
AXED OUT TO DiNNER-

MEBBE EVEN A
GAL WILLGO

OUT WITH

ClOUD GONE-

Q

...--;/

,.

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

=-----------_;;""'-"---..1.""'-----• .__..____

l'IME 1 BI LLY !

CANNt~G

tomatoes , gre·en
pe:ppers Ctetand
~arm s' Gerald rne Cleland .
Racrne Phone 949 41 21. '*..
s 19 ttc

and

r ed

Dollars 6, Pop Goes the Country 8, News 10;
Country Muslc Jubdee 13, Outdoors with Ken 15,

Yesterday's Answer
Ia Facihtate
25 O.T.
21 Indian
patriarch
shell
27 Tin or
currency
lead
22 Willy
29 Fountaon
remark
orders
23 Where a
thorn poerced 31 Unassisted
Androcles'
32 Cowpoke
lion
35 Fencing
24 " Heart of
foil
Dtxle"
37 Rich rock
state

Book Beat 20, Romagnolls' Table 33
7·30-Last of the Wild 3; Name that Tune 4. Wild Wild
World of Animals 6, Match Game 8, Evening
Ed1llon with Marlin Agronsky 20, The Judge 10; To
Tell the Truth 13. To Be Announced 15, Episode
Action 33
a 00--LIItle House on the Prarr ie 3,4, 15. When Things
Were Rotten 6, 13, Tony Orlando &amp; Dawn 8, 10,
Feeling Good 20,33
a 30-That's My Mama 6,13 , Man Builds, Man
Oestroys 33 , Phlladelph ra Folk Fest rval 20
9 oo-Ooctors Hosprtal 3,4, 15. Baretta 6, 13, Cannon
8, 10. Masterptece Theatr e 33
9 3D--Jean Shepherd's Amenca 20
10 00--Petrocelll 3,4,15; Starsky &amp; Hut ch 6 13. Kate
McShane 8, 10, New s 20 . Amer rcan Odvssey 33

11 oo--News 3,4,6,8,10,13.15; ABC News 33
11 Jo-Johnny

Carson 3,4,15 , Mavt e "T rtlogy of
Terror" 13; F Bl 6; Movie "The Drrty Doze n" 8 ,

Movie " Goodd New s " 10
12 · 30-Movle " Trilogy of Terror" 6
1 00-- Tomorrow 3,4, News 13
Forgo pteHsur able pursurts tr ll
se rro us mauers are attended
\0

Lots of lrttle mterr up trons early
tn th e day wrll s•d etr ack you
tempor arily Later you II get rn
hrgh gear

For Wedntodoy, Sop1.10,1g75
ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll 11) SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-Dec.
The actions ol one you re 11ery
tond ol writ d1sappomt you to+
day Howe ve r she II soo n be
back 1n your good graces

b+--t-

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)

b.-+--1--+--+-+---

1=--t-+-+----i

Early to day you wont take yo ur
:ommrtments as senousty as
y ou sh ou ld Later you II
ra llonaltze your rea sons

fE-+-1-+-J

GEMINI (May 21-Juno 20)

A X Y D L B A A X R

Shun

hmts. Each day the code letters are different

stores carryrng

iu)(ury

PISCES (Feb 20-Merch 20)

rtems tnat mt ght tempt you today Your w•ll 15 l ar weaker
tha n you r whrm

Rather than be •nac1rve today
do somet hrng to get the blood
crrcu latrng a bt l You It feel
better tor •t

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You trnd
dozens of fl rmsy reasons lor

CRYPTOQUOTE
SKE

,.

DFDXDHTPZU

WSDZRBOF

TBO

nol handlrng an unpleasant
ABTWOQVZ

POQKBO

s•tuatlon today It wrll nave to
be resol11ed eve ntuall y W hy
nol do 11 now?

HSOU VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopl. 22) Be
caref ul or your ltttle fllrtattons

ZOTBF

••
PF\RDON ME, MA'F\M --I'M

DF\DDV,
BF\BY DOLL

I.

HERMAN GRATE
MASON, W. VA. '

Fl Fl !!

FOR A LI\ TLE PET

LODGE AND l'M LOOKING

COME TO

'
Phone
7"r3-5592
MASON-FURNITURE
'

FIFI !J

STA'/ING AT THE TOURISTER

yoo-Hoo,

MAIN l AI NED DURING•
:LOSING POMEROY-MASON BRIDGE

FIFI !!
,.

•

'

'

'.

HK

RTFWO

-LTXVOZ today cou ld cause you some

H

THAR '-IE BE I

COUSIN

WKZOBDRAO
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: ANY MAN MAY MAKE 1
MISTAKE, BUT NONE BUT A FOOL WILL CONTINUE IN 11
-CICERO
(It) 197&amp; Kina Feature&amp; Syndicate. Jne.)
PI \"1 I '

CAPRICORN (Dec 22 -Jan
19} Don t e;.;pect more fr om
trrends and assocra tes tod ay
than you wou ld be prepared to
grve tf the rol es we re reversed

L 0 N G F E L L 0 W

.__._ _,__-'-!~

Is

21) You wont be able to call
the snot s as tndependently as
you Cl trke toda y An othe r wri t
have some control over your
comtnGS and gotngs

Though 11 may be a tr1fle tn + AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb. 19)
c:onvemen t shop a b tl to gel Goals rmportan t to you can be
better prices to day fo r even tile attamed now tf you don t sad
trllte thrngs
dle yoursel f wrth an ally lac k rn g
CANCER (Juno 21-July 22) tnrt•atrve

of

One letter s1mply stands for another. In t his sample A lS
used for the three L 's, X for the two O's, etc . Single letters.
apo5trophes, the length and formation of the words are all

·-

____

1 :oo-Truth or Cons 3, To TeH the Trv1h 4, Bowl1ng for

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:

.

:'

38 Kind
deck

IVE SUSPECTED
-mAT FOR A LONG

STEREO 92.1

. 'WITH
Craig' Ramsey, Mike $tevens, Genny
Turner and Bred· Nogar from 6:~0
.A.M. , Jii "M~~ight ·:.

~L

Gt~~~:t:::..:q~q-:!__ _ _ _ __:::::::::;;.

WINNIE

IN DASH 23 Channel Crttott:n ::;
Band transceiver, &amp;m fm
mpx radio , 8 track stereo .
Call ,992 -3965 .
9-• -ttc
mirror , new 45 calibre
muzzle loader. electric logs
with heater . Call 992-7291
after 4 p m
9 4-tfc
_.__

one
29 Kond of
serpent
30 Kmd of
trumpet
33 Oil-yieldong
tree
34 Desde·

..

WMPO-FM

9-5-6tc

--------------6 DRAWER Dresser with

Teaching Children 33
6: 30-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13, Andy Grrtfllh 6,
CBS News 8, 10, Book Beat 33 .

SCORPIO (Ocl 24-Nov. 22)

mate
36 " By the old
Moulmein

GREAT COUNTRY STEREO
IN THE BIG BEND

Phone

992 3702

12 13; Get Smart 15, Elec Co 20.33
6 00--News 3,4,8, 10.13,15 , ABC News 6. Sesame St 20;

mona ' s

9·S-31p
--------------1971 CHOPPER IT\Oiorcycle,
65.0 Triumph Tiger

5 30-Adam 12 4; News 6. Beverly Hrllblilles 8, Adarp .

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _'""".:_ _ _ _ ,,. Cowardly

-WITH THAT

INVESTERS BECOME
WEAL THY. TRY US OR
LL 992-3325.

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
39 Ethically
I Lynx,
msenstllve
ocelot,
40 Sea eagle
n Fords
etc.
5 Exp1re
42 Fulda
10 Yearn
tributary
II Chinese
DOWN
1 Character m
coty
12 Magt's
"Julius
guode
Caesar"
13 Downnght 2 Thespian
14 Maontaon
3 Words of
16 Suffix
for treat
gratitude
4
17 25 Down's
Spanish
muralist
creabon
5 Fat
Htmgarian 6 Ventilate
poet
7 Words before
Medii.
" and Pass the
island
Ammunition''
(abbr. )
8 Felt
Girl's
9 Recorded
nickname 11 Coxcomb
22 Measure
out
Aesop
specialty
Illustrious
Bread
spread
Wardrobe

Bonanza 15
s·oo-Bonanza 3. Family Affair 8 , M lster Rogers 20 ,33

terror

WHY
WASTE
TIME
WHEN YOU SELL - LET
US HELP YOU
CALL 992-1259

Marine Sales
16 FT GLASTRON boaT, 45
h p motor , tr8!1er Phone
9 7 3tc

2

bath, dining R.. part
basement, lots of building
sites. $10,500.
SCIPIO TWP. - 138 rolling
acres, lots of timber, old

4 x I! UTI,LITY trailer, $75
Ideal tor farm use Phone
992 5247
9 7 31c

992·3296.

por -

TUPPERS
PLAINS
RIGHT ON RT. 1 - 2'1,
acres,

POMEROY LANDMARK
9'./ack W. Carsey, Mgr.
.8ill Phone 992-2181

5823

POMEROY -

dose 1n, 2 BR . bath, utility

$28,000
ROUTE 681 -

Siegler &amp; Monogram

WEAR A UNIFORM'

on

I

608 E.

H Vt'&gt;l1tNG Ltcens e, Ntgh t
c ra w l ers
m e al worms .
TACKLE , guns . ammo ,
bows
arrow s
camp1ng
equrp . CB's and accessory
lndtan Joe's , 308 Page Sf i
streets past Mrddleport
Swtmmtng Pool
8 13 76tp

lo

25-- Farm Report 13

1.30-Dys ol Our Lives 3,4, 15. Let's Make a Deal 6, 13,
As the World Turns 8,10
2·oo--s10,000 Pyramid 6, 13. Guiding Lrghl 8.10
z·JO-Doctors 3,4,15, Rhyme &amp; Reason 6.13 . Edge of
Night 8,10 8.10
3 00--Another World 3,4, 15, General Hospital 6.13,
Match Game 8, 10. Hcklng Valley Bluegrass 20
3 30--()ne Life to Lrve 13, Bewitched 6, Tattletales
8.10, Jeanne Wolf With ... 20
4.00--Mr Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 4, Somerset 15 ,
Mickey Mouse Club 6,8, Ssame 51 20.33, Movie

-------

For Rent or Sale

game our ostnch -hke North
pulled h1s head out of the sand
and b1d fl; e d1amonds
Perfect defense would have
sel South three tncks . but after
the defenders failed to shtft to
clubs on t1me. South was able to
se l up dummy's Jack of hearts
for a c lub di scard
"N tce play. partner," sa1d
North " Down 300 1sn' t bad '
" L1ke l1il1ng at wmdmtlls,"
repli ed South If you had b1d
three diamonds nght away you
wouldn 't have been Impelled to
b1 d f1v e Ne1ther would land we
would have set four spades one
tnck to show a prof1l of 100
pomts mstead of a loss of 300 "

NOR Til
¥ 10862
• 10 7 " 2
... \ 9 7 4

:-., t: W t N G
rv1 ,....
Rep ~trs se rvt ce

11 00--News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13,15, ABC News 33

Bad players misplay bad cards
A7

lo{_TUN..L'/,

Nova 20.33

WIN AT BRIDGE

IT? J UST A
TESTtN6
T IME -

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

e, 10.

9 00--Pollce Story 3,4.15 . Rookies 6.13 . Swllch 8, 10,

PRECISELY THE WO~D .
A;; YOU LL SEE WHEN YOU

Nathan B•ggs
Radtator Specralist _

Ph 997 7174

8 3Q-Welcome back Kotter 6, 13 , Joe &amp; Sons
Consumer Survival Kit 20 ,33

I?

RUSH &amp;ACI&lt;: TO M,KEE

•

8, 10. When Television w as Live 20.33

•'UP," M"' DE:AR EA$"

OUR. L.OVE

LIHA DEAR!

' I

·I

MAKE SURE

WON 'T 6E T C IW~HED UNDER
YOUR UNCLE~ BILLION~

Fro m the largest Truck or
Bulldoz er Radtator to the
s'Ji alles t Heater Core

MOUSE TQr ~a·~ rn Rutland ,
56,500 Phone 992 -5856 .
8 31 tfc

+

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

-TO

GOOD BY,

Radiata
Service

13 ._ Scene One Take One _J:l

B 00--Movln' On 3,4, 15, Happy Days 6,1 3. Good Ti mes

10 QO-Joe Forrester 3,4, 15, Mar cus Wlby , MD 6, 13 .
Beacon Hill 8, 10, News 20, In terface 33
10 30--Woman 20,33

THI? 15N ' T

EXPERJEN~ED
' ~

Real E$te For Sale

L ET T I:::REO

For Sale

Several Mason Extension Homemakers went to the Up
INTERNATIONAL
1965
Towner Inn In Huntington for dinner recently. These of the
Travel All VB, standard
club what attended included Mrs. Woody Queen, Mrs. Matilda
Slltfl. air condttroned. tinted
glass Call 992 2622 after 5
Noble, Mrs. Evelyn Stewart, Mrs. Alburtlce Young and Mrs.
pm
Nancy VanMeter.
9 9 6tc
Help
Wanted
NEW
VILLAGE
Manor
Chalky McDaniel visited his aunt and tmcle, Mr. and Mrs.
Apartments rn Mtddleport, 1 7 H P WHEEL Horse tractor
Henry Schwarz and hiS cousin and family, Mr. and Mrs. LEt ' S BE HONE ST 1 If you -, bedroom
apts from S10• plu$
with mower and blade Can
weren't looking for a new
be seen at house next to
)i:mmett Simpson, Henry, Sissy and Daren at White Sulphur
elec . C,BII 992 -3273 or see
career - You wouldn ' t be
Mrs
Keatley, Apt
101.
Salrsbury School on Rt . 33
Springs, recently and attended the West Virginia State Fair.
readtng thiS ad
If we
R rverside Apartments
9-9 Jtc
weren't looktng tor someone
1-:11-26tp
Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Petry and sons spent a vacation
to do a lob , liltS ad wouldn't
1973 HUSKY 400 MX . Good
viSiting relatives which included her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
be nere
You can earn
condttlon, $400 Also, one
TWO Furnrshed apts
Kay
SlO ,OOO to S15 000 your frrst
Frank Hudnall, and his mother, Mrs. Jean Petry near
wrecked 1963 Chevy dump
Cecil.
87
south
secon
d
Ave
,
year m sales We witt send
truck, complete Phone 992
Mtddleport. Oh10
Phone
Charleston. They also visited in Fayette Cotmty with Mr. and
you to school for 2 weeks.
5647
992 5262
expenses
paid,
trarn
you
•n
Mrs. Delbert-Underwood and family; Mr. and Mrs. Danny
' 9 7 Jtc
e 21 -tfc
the field selling and ser
Hudnall and son; Mr. and Mrs. Fred Calhoun and sons, Mr.
vrcrng estabttslled accounts
TRAILER space for retit In 12GAUGE pump shotgun, $85
up to seoo a month to start
and Mrs. Arnold Green and family, Mr. and Mrs. Allen
Phone 992 ·22.&lt;t4
guaranteed Must be 21
Middleport ~ Phone 992-5434
Johnson and family.
years or over, goal oriented,
8 29 26tc
9 7 3tp
bondable , am Dr1ious, and
--:---:---------------::-:
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Strother and Todd of Louisville, Ky.
sports
minded
Fringe ~URN I SHED
apartment:
visited recently with her mother, Mrs. Lucille Schwarz in
benef1ts offered are mator
adults only in Mrddleport
com prehens 1ve med i cal,
I · BUSINESS FOR SALE
Phone 992 387 4
Mason.
pension , and savings plans
3 25 tfc
Mr. and Mrs. Shennan Ford visited recently with Mr. and
Call tor apporntment , Mr
---------------.
One (1) Tavern completely
Steve Gura, (6141 592 2269,
Mrs. John Hughes at Graceland, Ky.
eQurpped with D 1 and 0 2
Monday. Tuesday, and 4 ROOMS and bath apt rn
Rutland area Phone 992
Miss Guy!a Roush, a student at P'arkersburg Community
license located at 118 West
Wednesday from 7 p m 1111
51! 51!
Main Street, Pomeroy ,
10 p m
College, visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Roush over
7 27 -ttc
,Qhlo, . also the real estat-e
9 8 2tc
the weekend. Also visiting at the Roush home were Mr. and
consisttng of the business
building occupied by tile
LASALLE
HOTEL
,
MID
Mrs. Ted Riley of Clifton.
tavern mEintioned above .
DLEPORT
.
OHIO
ROOMS
Wanted
Jason Hysell fell recently while playing football and
55 UP SPECIAL RAT-ES
paid for aH makes an'a
BY WEEK OR MONTH
reportedly broke an arm. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Roger .CASH
models of mobile homes
TV AIR CONDITIONING
Calt 992-2186 ar see Gutdo
Hysell.
Phone area code 614 423
8 26 26tc
at the above tocatlon be·
'9531
tween the hours of 10 a.m.
Sgt. and Mrs. Andy Galford and sons of Hamlin, visited
4 13 tfc 4 R OO"M'S +8nd bath un
and S p. m.
recently with her mother, Mrs. Clara Smith.
furnished house. 1650 Lin
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Cochran of St. Albans, W.Va. visited her
coin Hts Phone 992·3874
'---------,---9 5 tfc :sisters, Mrs. Clara Smith and Mrs . Lola Jeffers in Mason.
- - - - - - - - - -- - - 5 FT BRUSH hog , J P! hllch ,
2 BED~M · mobile home, air
5225 Phone (6\4) 985'3594
Mrs. Vernon Roush and Thomas Henry visited at Dexter
conditioning, Racine area
9·3-6tp
City, Ohio with her sister and family, Mr. and Mrs. William D.
Phone 992 5851!
- - - - - - - -- - - -- 9-3 -tfc 10 10 JOHN Deere dozer . new
Lee.
engine, paln1, steering
Berry Johnson, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Johnson of
3 AN D 4 ROOM furnrshed and
clutches, canopy. wlnctJ,
unfurn tshe d
apartments
hvdraulte blade , $'1,500
Clifton, left today for the Navy and will receive training at
Phone 99? 5434
Phone (614) 985 -3594.
•. Great Lakes.
4 11 lfc
9-3 6tp
-GUNS
- ---.......------Mrs. Kenneth Ault of Columbus, visited her sister, Mrs.
and Ammo. Our fall
4 RM FURNISHED apt. for
Laura Jolm.On, over the weekend.
NOTICE OF
stock
is
now
here
rent. Phone 992 -3658 .
APPOINTMENT
Complete line of Rem Mr . and Mrs. Ralph Russell and children have moved their
..._
9 3-tfc
case No. 21 ,597
ington,
Wlnc~ester ,
·mobile home to their lot in Clifton.
Estate of LOUISE BRYAN .
lthica. Savage Slug barrels
LAURELAND
APARTMEN
I '
Mr. and Mrs. William Zerkle visited over the weekend with Deceased
in stock for most brand shot
6th and George Sis , New
Not rce rs hereby given that
guns, but In short supply
Haven ,
w_
va
tM
Rev. and Mrs .. Clarence McCloud in Charleston.
Bernar d V Fultz. of Box 723 ,
Get · them while they last .
MEDIATE
OCCUPANCY
PUBLIC NOTICE
All credttors of Claude L

4 10 1 mo

years ex perte n ce Insured ,
free estrmates Ca ll 992 3057
co ntract
Reg
or
ex ·NEW EARLY Amerrcan sofa,
gold
and
whrte
floral
design.
Coo
tvr tte
Phon e (1) ~ 661
cavaltng type Sep tr c tanks
90 tn long , 5175 2 pteces of
JOdi
rnstalled Brll Pullins !!'hone
No 4 ot electrrcat c.able 20
4 JO tf c
992 2478
- - - - - - - - - -- ft and 25 ft Phone 992 2779
8 27 ffc
9 9 3tc .READY MIX C O NCRETE
delrl/er ed rtgh I to your
WOULD YOU Bt:LIEVE'l
protect F asl and eas y F ree
Butld an all steel building at NEAR
estim ates Ph on e 992 32 84 ,
Pomerov
,
new
J
Pole Barn pr rces ., Go lden
Goeg le tn Ready Mrx Co
bedroom , 11/ 2 baths , carport ,
Gtant A ll Steel Buildrngs ,
Mtddleport , Ohr c
mud
rm
.•
ul
tltty
sun
deck.
Rt
4 Box 148, Waverly ,
6 30 tiC'
large lrv1ng room , kitchen
01'1 to Phon e 94 7 2196
dintng
area ,
paneled ,
7 24 lfc
refrrgerator and Tappan
SEP TIC TA N KS c leaned
range rncluded Also, wtlt
Mode r n San rtatton 991 3954
POR TA- BLE
TO ILET
he lp finance Pnone 992 7790
or 992 7349
RENTA l
Co n s tru c t ton
after ~~ p m
9 18 tfc
Out door ev.:-n ·~
Pll o ne
11 27 8tc
Ga t ltpO i tS
d46 478'1 ,
_WOOD B dWERS r&lt;t:PA!R
R ussel l s P l umbtng and
HOUSE , J oedrooms , n~w
- Swe epers , ro aster s. rron'S .
Hear tng
Sears cabrnets, Indoor all s mall applran ces Lawn
8 19 tfc
outdoor carpeting , chain
mower n ex t to State H rgh
lrnk fence . utrlrty bulldrng , 2
way Garage on Rout e 7
WILL TR tM or ·cut trees and
lots Washer , dryer , ref and
Phone 985 3825
shrubbery Phone 949 3221
stove S12 ,500 Phone 992
,1 16 tf c
or 742 4441
7430
9 7 241c
9 7 6tc

1969 PMC 12xS2 mobile home
tncludrng two porches Call
(6141 91!5 3504 . If no answer ,
992 5596
9 4 6tc

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

LETART - Harley and Lorena Bonecutter bave annotmced tllat a revival and deliverance services will begin at
the General Assembly of Body of Christ on Sand Hill Road, Rt.
15, Letart. The service will commence on Sept. 13tlf at 7:30
p.m. Evan Damon Adams of Marietta, Ohio will be in charge.
Everyone welcome.

SI GNS
POSTER S
F REE
EST IM A TES CALL M C
C R A W FO RD , 992 7680
8 7 26 1p

HAN D
A t&gt;.;D

I STIL-L. THINK W~ P:E MA~ tN 6
M15TAI&lt;E .. P05TP ONtN 6 OU R
WSDDIN6! !IUT l CAN'T MAI&lt;E
'IOU MARR'I M~ !

Dollars 6; Wilburn

7 30-Hollywood Squares 3,4, Let's Oeal with It 6.
$25,000 Pyramid 8. Evening Edition wllh Martin
AQronsky 20 . Price 15 Right 10, To Tell The Truth

CBS N ews 8, 10 , Your F utu re ls Now 33
A

Bowling for

Brothers 8; News 10. Name That Tune 13,
Wrestling 15 . Ant rques 20 . J ean Shepherd' s
America 33

3,4,8.1 Q, \3.15 . ABC News 6 , Sesame St
20, Jody 's Body Shop 33
6 JO-N BC News 3,4. 15. ABC News 13 . Andy Grr ff rth 6,

Ph 992-3993

..... X.CA\JA liN GdoM:r . toa d('r
ba c kh oe,
and bA ckhoe work
se pt tc EXCAVA TING .
doze r an d ditcn er
Gas ,
t ank s
tnstal!ed
dump
electric
and
wat
er
l tne
tru ck s and ro boys for htr e
bUrtal . basement s~ toot er s
"'·il l h aul I ttl drrt top s oil ,~
se pt1c sys tems and bru sh
ltmesrone and grav el_. Ca ll
c leantng Wtlt haul f tl l drrt.
P.ob or Roger Jeff ers. day
top sorl , sand and gravel ,
phone 992 7089, ntg hf phone
l tmes tone for drrvewavs and
9'/1 3525 or 992 5232
roads
Phone Charles R
2 ll lf c
Hiitt re ld . Ba ckhoe Service ,
Rl 1, Rutland Ohto 7~2
DOZER WORK . Etoc:eavattng ,
6092
l and c l eartng. ponds and
71190tc
basements,
and
land
sca ptng
Pultrn s
Ex
3 BEDRM - llou se Wttll wall IV
cavatrng phone 992 2478
wall carpet , central atr
I! 26 JO IC
Phone 992 7030
8 31 61C
C U 5 T-U M
P I C T U R E
r RAMING
ORIGINAL
S EA SCA P~
AND LAND MOBILE t.rane ~e rvrc e a 11u
dozer work Phon e 99 '1 5468
SCAPE PAINTING S E
8 7 :?6 tp
JO YCE M IJ_.LER 99? 7680
8 10 ?41p

Kingdom 6,

Cartoon J, Merv urn11n 4, Somerset 15 ,

~do- N ews

svracuse , Ohro

-------~-----------

1 00-- Truth or Cons 3; To Tell the Truth 4, Wild

197S

Boanza 15
5 oo- Bonan za J . Fam rly Affair 8; Mi ster Rogers 20.33 .
5 30-- Adam 12 4, N ews 6 , Beverly Hillbill ies 8 ; Adam
12 13 ; Gel Smart 15. Elec Co 20,33

LARRY LAVE~DER

Dan's Shoe Repair
9.2.1 mo

9,

Mt ckey Mouse Club 6,8. Sesame Sl 20.33. Movie
"Off Lrmits" 10, Dinah l3
4 30- Bewllc hed J , Mod Squad 6 . Partridge Family 8.

STORM
WINDOWS&amp; OOO~S
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING-SOFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

TEXAS WESTERN
BOOTS
KNAPP SHOES
SHEBOYGAN
Steel Toe Safely Shoes

8 21 I mo

4 VO--Mr

Blown tn10 Walls &amp; AHtCS

Jobber In

Wilbur Ward,
Mgr &amp; MechaniC

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER

Blown
Insulation Services

M•ddleport. o.

318 N 2nd

'

I

FREE ESTIMATES

Dan's Shoe Repair

Phone 992 -9973

1913 CHEVROLET IMPALA 4 DR.
12995
Less fhan 9,500 miles by local owner, spot le ss rnstde &amp;
out, tires show llftle wear, aufomatic, power steering &amp;
brakes, radio. blk . vrnyl top, green frnrsh .

Board
WI L L TAKE elderly women rn
ROO M fiND BOARD for
my home Phone 992 3397
!;Cn tOr ClltZe OS LOW In CO m e
9 7 Me
l tv tng very nrce Pnone 99'1
3S 09
-.. 1\ r.!PENTRY
ll oortng
8 '2~ '16tc
cc il•n g an d panel •nq Ph one

MASON - Every year when we go to the West Vtrgoma
State Faor we meet Mr . and Mrs. Emmett Sunpson and thetr
chtldren, Henr', Sissy and Daren and Mrs. Simpson's parents,
Mr and Mrs. Henry Schwarz all of White Sulphur Sprmgs.
Mrs. Sunpson, better known here as Debbie Schwarz, vosoted
here wtth her parents quote often . They came to see Mr. Schwarz's late mother, Mrs. Nelhe Schwarz and other relallves.
A. L. Hardman, m his colwnn on sports, patd tnbute to the
ever-popular Emmett Simpson, manager of the tenrus and
golflclubs at the Greenbner for 28 years.
It seems that being popular wasn't enough - when new
management took over last January at the Greenbner Hotel in
White Sulphur Sprmgs, Sunpson was called into the olfice and
reportedly was gtven the decosion - wither resogn or be fired.
The only reason given, said Sunpson, "I dtdn't concur with
management's philosophy ."
Simpson said : "When they called me m the offtce on June
17, I thought they wanted to give me a pat on the back. We had
just finished the greatest 15 consecutive days of business in the
hotel's history and I felt good about it ." But instead of
congratulating me, they told me I had a decision to make,
either resign or be fored."
The Simpson and the Schwarz family have served in
various capactties at the Greenbrier many years. In 1911
Emmett's late grandfather served there as operator of the
hotel antique shop until his death in 1937.
His father was superintendent of inside maintenance from
1931 to 1958, when he died .
Mr. Schwarz was the head of the bakery at the hotel for
several years, and his wife was also a faithful employee.
Durmg his many years at the hotel, Simpson made many
friends, among them governors and senators. But most imporl;lnt to hun, he had become the friend of the little man. "!
will sure miss them - I love people," he said.
Sirllpson was succeeded by Gil Patrick, a friend of the new
golf pro, Jack Bell.
Simpson has a new job now with the West Virginia Dept. of
Mental Health.
The Sunpson's and two other families have another brain
storm after the kiddies won so many trophies, stuffed animals
at the W. Va. State Fair and qUite large, they got the bright
idea of heaving a checking station. For the past two years all
these huge creatures, some almost as big as the winner of the
trophy and packages, cameras, etc. are checked at the West
Va. State Fair Checking Station.
The Simpson's and her parents are great and the Marshalls wish them much luck in future ventures.

Classified 'Ads

....... _...__..__.....,...

9- The Dailv Sentinel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, o.. Tuesday, Sept. 9, 1975
biC(TRACY

Business Services

-

1913 BUICK LeSABRE
13295
Custom H T. Cpe , local oWner, that's really sharp
inside &amp; out, good w w fires , custom wheel s. dark
green vinyl roof. green finish, AM radro &amp; tape , tacfory
a•r, automatk. P steering &amp; brakes

Notice
~\\ Roo
m and

':!;

-.Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS
OF

9 am

~

By Alma Marshall

\

Dcadl.n~

Put

For Want Ad Servrce
5 ce nts per Word one Inser t ion
Mtnrmum Charge 51 00
'
14 cents per w ord three
conseculfve tn sert lons
26 ce nts per word slx con
sec ul rve on s ertton~
25 Per Ce nt Dr scount on patd
ads and ads patd wlthtn 10
days
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; Obrtuary
$2 DO lor 50 word m .n tmum
Eac h addrltonal wo rd Jc
BLIND ADS
A ddrtr onal 2Sc c narge per
Adverttsement
OFFICE HOURS
8JOam to500pm Da tly .
B 30 am
to 12 00 N oon
Satur day

( An.on•n lumurro"oo I

PROBE

Day _ Before

RATES

J::
above cartoon.
1cI I Jvou r I I r r J

Juuob1r• WHOSE

liesults Use The Sentinel .Classifieds
AutO Sales

Can C"ella t •on
Corre c !ton s
Wt ll b e acce pt ed until 9 am
for Day ol Publ tcat ton
REGULATIONS
The Pub lrsher reserve s th (
r tght to edrt or retecr anv ads
deemed ob1ectronal
The
publts he r
will
n ot
b~
r es ponsrble for more th an on e
mcorrecr rnser tton

Now arrantre the circled letten
~
\J to rorm the aurpriee answer, u
~==·==L:::::::==~==~-~:;:;:.!l:.,;•:u:grested by the

1 ........

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES

loc att on
Monday

- ~- .

IHACCl'TI
I [ )

·I vu•ut:R1
I V

PM

I. 1

•&lt;'

,_.._..
_________________ ..
! Television log for easy viewing
I

.

AF TEF:.

~I

1.~ tt'5~jl
/lVFEG

,

1-lE'S 8EEN HlTTlN6 8ALL5
AGAINST THAT 6AiA6f
FOR WEEKS...

embarrassment Though they
may be harmless they could
offend a third party

LIBRA (8opt. 23-0cl. 23) Thrs
can be a profttab le day 11 you
keep your mrnd on bus rness

A, Your
WBirthday
Sop!. 10, 1975
A lrtends htp of a lasltng nature
wtll b e d eve lo ped thr s co mtng
year wtth one sltghtty older
than yourself Th ts person can
be retted upon when a rea l pat
IS needed
NF \1\ SP APER E:'IITER PRI SE ASSN

I

THE
6ARA6E!

�'•

8 - The Daily Sentmel, M1ddleport-Pomernv n , Tuesda,v, Sept. 9, 1975

~c~~~~~®lk.J4c.... ".J-.~P- For ·Fast

ont letter to each square, 1~

form rour ordinary \\Otd s.

!JEFOI&lt;:E

~~
r:·
. I

I'---L__
l L__D~

1(

.

~

t

1111S! ......... "

l.l .

••
HE SHOWEI7 TK-'T
'?O UF: pgEVIOU:O &gt;&lt;41RI70
WA'Oo A ti~ISTAKE.

RARELY

A flu ..r "'lllflri~IIHI

lm11 { Jr, 11 r 1 1 r/114t

WAITER

d' - EYEBROWS

::;:-:·=·=·=-=·=·:·:;:.:;:·::::::!:::::::::::.;::.;:;::::=:·:·:·:·:·=·=·=·=·=·=·:-:·:-;·:·: v .. "t'M :

\t~ Mason County

:;;::;;;;:;:;::::;::;.;::;;~:=

News Notes :\ [

QUALITY

-

MIDDLEPORT
PENNZDIL

North :lnd Street
Tune Ups . Batteries
Shock Absorbers - Tires
Muffler-Tailpjpes - Cooling
Systems.
We
a I so
service
Volkswagens and other
foretgn cars.

1971 OLDS CUTLASS "S" CPE.
S2J9S
"$" Cpe, grey fmrsh, blk mtenor , bucket seats &amp;
conso le , radio. tape, automatic , power steerrng &amp;
brakes, local 1 owner car

POME~~! E~E~-~~~ co..@)
POMEROY, OHIO

Employment Wanted

99' l/59

---~------

1964 l NTERNAIIONAL 1600
truck . 5 5 P and 2 sp Long
wneel base new clutch, new
pam f good condition Henry
Bahr (6141 985 3988
9 9 3tp
- ~------- -----

1968 DODGE
green 8 c yl
992 3350

HT, PoL!!ra .
1600 Phon e

PIANO Tunrng , Lane Dantel s,
B I ? ?61c
9 7 )t C
Ph one 992 2082
8-18 26tp RE M06E i.. ING
Plumb tng ." i97o -PLYMO iJTH~
hea tong ana all lyp es of
Phone 992 2557
genera l
repa tr
Work
9 5 6tp
gua ranteed 20 year s ex ·
p erre nce
Phone 992 2409
1974 VW eull , liKe new . 14,000
5 1 tf'j"
PO RCH SA LE , Sept 10 and 11
m lies Pnone 742 488 5
al lhe Barley restden ce. 405
9 7 3tc
Grant St , Mtddteport . from
9 t rl l 5 p m
1967 PLYMOUTH Fury 19 65
9 8 2tc TO GIVE AWAY - Very nrce
cnev P tc kup , 1 , ton tru ck
female Beagle dog. 4 5
Phone 949 38 3 1
months old
Needs good
9 5 3t c
PORCH
and
Yard
Sa le
home
No nunters need
starting Monday at 9 a m
apply Call evenmgs, 992
1970 VOLKSWAGEN, needs
thru Thursday Lots ot good
5427 or 992 5910 Metgs
sta r te r 5250 Call '?92 7658
c hildren ' s
and
adult
Humane Socie ly
9 5 3tc
clo thtng, some new Otshes
9 9 3tc
and
other
rtems
too
numerous to mention. al the TO GIVE AWAY Meigs
J tm Rrffte Residence , just
County Hu ma ne Society
above Letart F alls
desperl!ltely need home lor 7
9 7 4t,c
m txelji breed puppres, 6 or 'l PLAYER ptano , need not be tn
months old Will not be large
working co ndlt ron , also
FREEWILL Baptist Church
dogs. gentle. healthy and
ptano rolls Phone 742 5625
Yard Sal e, TI'1UrSday from
c lean Ideal for house pets
9 7 6t c
10 a m ftll 5 p m AI Doyle
Call 9&lt;49 4917 or 992 5906
Hudson restdence, Rt 12.4,
after 12 noon
'1 mtle east of Rutland , Ctty
9 9 6tc ..)LD turn tfure , rce boxes .
L rm Its All pr oceeds go to - " - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - brass beds , or comp lete
purchase of a new ptano for AKC Reg Englrsh Springer. 3
households
Write M
0 .
the chur ch
month pups, brown and
Mtller , Rt
4 , Pomeroy .
9 9 2tc
while Pllone 992 2639
Oil to Ce ll 992 17~0
9 9 61p
10 7 7 4
PORCH Sa les, Sept 10 and 11
at Batley residence. 405
AKC: Reg Poodles . two blue
Grant 51 from 9 trll 5 p m
and 1 chocolate , 1 apricot
9 9 21p
Phone (304) 882 3205
8 27 12tp 12- )C 70 MANHATTAN 2
MR S NORMAN Reynolds w rlt
bedrm , 2 fUll baths , uttlrty
have a 1 day sale only,
butld1n9 , washer and dryer
Thur sday, Sept 11,9 am to FREE ca ts and small pupptes
Pnone 843 2826
ce n tral arr , deluxe fur
5 p m
at Mrs Cather tne
9 5 6tc
ntlure Call £304) 882 3340 ,
Sm rth 's re srdence across
after 5 p m
from the fire house, Mason .
9 3 6tc
w Va Lo ts of men 's and AKC
REG
female
women 's ctotlling, all 1n
Dachshund, 2'n years old ,
good cond tlton For more
had shots , spaved
Good SOME~N£ need ed___to take
rnformatton , call 1 (304) 773
with children , S65 C811 (614)
over payments on a mobile
985 4124
5128
nome Phone 992 3152 .
9 9 2tp
9 7 3tc
9 7 Jtc

.uOGTx

Yard Sale

-~~- -- -~-- ----~

Pets For Sale

Wanted To Buy

Mobile Homes for Sale

LAST WEEK for yard sale
Clothing, dlslles, 1!2 price.
turnlfure, J white t&amp;vator•es
1;3 eech. lruc"- car chain, 1
BEORoOM
turn 1 st1ed
Kenmore wasn.er with sud
mobde home No pets Call
saver, Sunbeam coffee pot,
9917479
Ham ilion Beach Mixer with
9 22 tfc
bowls , whfle uniforms. Sl
eacn , stze 16, black vern, 111 2 BEDROO M tra der extra
prrce Phone 742 6273.
nice Phone 992 1124
9 9 tfc
8 26 lfc
3 F AMILY Basement Sale.
Salem St tn Rull&amp;nd Little 2 BEDRM trailer, 527 per
bit of everythmg, Monday
week All utlltl les patd
Phone 992 332•
' ttl ')
9 7-1fc
9-9-3tc

For Rent

-- ~----- ------

4

Mason, Area Personal Mention

FAMILY Garage Sate, PRIVATE meetrng room for
Tnursday and Frrday, Sept
any organtzal!on. phone 99'l
11 and 12, 9 am till 4 p m
3975
204 Lasley St , Pomeroy.
3 11 lfc
01'1 10 Across from old Sugar
Run School
Depression
glass and a few collector's :cou NTRY Mobil e Home
tfem s Very nrce clothing
Park R l 33 ten mrles north,
9 e Jtc
of Pomeroy Large lots wtlh
conc ret e pattos stdewatk s
rvnners a n d off stree t
park tng Phone 991 7.J79
1
12 Jl ttc

1974 CASTLE . 12 X 65 , 2
bedrm 2 full baths . total
elec, furntture. washer and
dryer Phone 949 3655
9 4 6tc

--------to i ' rent, hour or

BACK HOE

For Sale
19 J? ARROW Camper phon e
99? 51 68
8 15 26 tp
SUNDY Trombone , excellent
condttlon . Used one school
term by begmner Ca ll 949
2472
9 9 3tp

EVERYBODY

Shops the

WANT AD WAY

__ ___________

I

..
'

I

'~
"

TO
·smith Estate
.
You wtll take nottce that
Dale Smtth has flied &amp;n ap

bring you
extra cash
for
shopping' sprees

pltcetton in the Probate Court
of Metgs County , Ohio, to
relieve the estate of Clauae L

Smtih. now deceased, from
admintstratlon. and that such
application Will be heard on
th~

Pomeroy , Ohio, has been duly
appointed Executor of the
Estate of louise Dr.yan ,
deceased, late of Middleport ,
Me tgS CoUnly , Ohio
creditors are required to
Ill~
•herr cta1mS wrth sard
It due 1ary within four months
Dated thrs 23rd day of
Au gusl 1975

Mannmg D Webster
Judge
Court of Common Pleas .
Probate OtVIStOn

9th day of September, 1975,

at 10 00 O'C tol k AM

1.......,..--~-....o-~--' ' 18 1 26

191 2.

.

Dale E Smtih
9. Jtc •

(H)

'I

2~

(91 1. 9, Jtc

Select your 2 bedrm . town
house , Beautiful new apt
complex, appliances fur nished, completely · car peted , Rent S128 up in
ctudinv
utllftles
Call
resident manager, Sam or
Be'c ky Lonoanacre , , 1-304
1!82-2567 . If no answer, ~alll

(304 I 882 2788

"

9 3 12tC

4 ROOM furnished apartment
wrt~ wall to . wall carpet
Phone 992 5908
9 3-ttc

· ·--- -- -- --;- -------

Money short, lay -a way
your fall hunting needs New
Fall ·store ftours startmg
Sept s.. 10 am . to 9 p.m .,
Monday -Saturday
Village
Gun ~ Shoppe ; 266 Mill st. ,
Phone 992 -5117, financing
available
• ..
• ~....
9 3 26tc

-~ --~---"':.--- ----

191~

FOA'-D semi -tractor, 472
cubic lncti gas engine. Less
than · 5,000 . miles . Phone

1304) 273-3019 Mrs Gordon

Staates, Sandyville. W Va
9 3 6tc

I NDU5 TRI~5-!

.

EAST i DI
A AKJ86
¥Q
• AJ

WEST

Ali l05\
• 74 •
•

BORN LOSER

~

H ti 5 '1

.KQJ6 5

... \0 2

SO LTil

Pomeroy

.._ H I N E
all makes
99 2 2284 The F,abrtC1_ Sh op ,
Po me roy Auth oriz ed S•nger
~al es a nd se rv1 ce
we
sha rp en Sc tssors
J 29 t fc

. THt:N,
5Cm'; Til I IJ&lt;o
BeTlfR CNv'E

I IIJ~ ey,.'L'I

c:AllrJb

, - Au -TREE~ T~~~; rng . :tu

A 941

8RllTUS1iLL

Al..Qt.Jb

~THI~

SAW IV'f; Wl111

B€ITE:I&lt;
CA.M,E.

• AKJ953

•K li
... 8 3

l'.isl West \uln erable

N£)

1

\\ t•s t

&amp;'RUTUS ..

\ \

A.L-ONb.. .'

,.

Easl

~orth

South

~m~~

lA
4 ...

Pass

~~~

Opc nm g lead - 3 •

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
The ostnch 1s supposed to
st1 ck 1ts hea d tn the sand on the
theory that no one Will be able
to see 11 North s b1ddmg of
iodav ·s ha nd wa s along the

IJTTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

A reader from Rhode Island
w ants to kno w the correct standard Amerocan openmg bid
With
• K I0 9 • J I0 5 4 + K 3
"'A K J 9
The correct opemng btd ts one
notrump 1n sp1te of the fact that
you onl y have 15 hogh -card
points You sho uld count the
two lOs and two mnes as a 16th

same lmes He couldn' t ra 1se
fro m t wo lo three d1amonds pomt
sm ce th at ca ll would encourage
(Do you have a quest1on tor
h1s oppone nt s to brd on to ga m e rh e Jacot&gt;ys? Wnte ' Ask the

11 30--Johnny Carson 3,4, 15 W i de World Myststtry
13. FBI 6, Movie " The Orrty D o zen " 8, Movie

" VIva Vlllo" 10
12 30-Wide World Mystery 6
1

00- Tomorrow 3.4.. News 13

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1975
6 QO-Colvmbus Today 4, Sum me r Semester
6

~ . 30-New

Zoo Revue 4. New s 6 , B1ble Answers 8,
Farmtlme 10, The Story 13
6 41f--Publlc Atfalrs lO
6 .45-Mornlng Report 3
6 Ss-Chuck White Reports 10 , News 13

7 00--Todoy 3,4, 15 AM America 6,13 , CBS News 8.
Popeye 10
7 30---Schoolles 10
8 QO-Lucy Show 6 ; Capt Kangaroo 8, 10 , Sesa me St.

33
8.30-Big Valley 6
9.00--A .M 3, Phil Donahue 4, 15 . Lucy Show 8, Mike
Douglas 10, Morning wtth D J lJ
9 · 30-Nol For Women Only 3. One Llle to Live 6 ,
Musical Chairs 8. New Zoo Revue 13.
10 Oil-Celebrity Sweepstakes 3,4, 15 , Dinah 6:· GiveN

Take 8, 10; Mrke Douglas 13
10 31f--Wheel of Forlune 3,4.15 . Price Is Right 8.10
11 .00--High Rollers 3,15. I Dream of Jeanie 4
11 30-Hollywood Squares 3, 15 . Happy Days 13;
Midday ; , Love of Life 8,10
11 ;55--Take Kerr 8, Dan !mel 's World 10
12 oo-Magnlflcent Marble Machine 3,15. Showotfs 13 .
Bob Braun's 50-50 Club 4, News 6,8, 10
12 30-Jackpot 3.15. All My Children 6, 13 . Search for
Tomorrow 8, 10.

12 55----NBC News 3, 15
1 00:---News 3, Ryan 's Hope 6,13 , Phil Donahue 8,
Young &amp; fhe Restless 10, Not For Women Only IS

CORNER LOT , 8 ROOMS,
AIR GAS FUR NACE CALL

4·30-Bewllched 3. Mod Squad 6, Partridge family 8 ,

2 STORY
GOOD

ON

butourex - Jaco~ y s

c are

ol th1s

exc use
.JACOBY MODERN)
Anywaj . whe n East dtd btd
Nt 'A S!' AI'~ H ~ N THn&gt;ttls ~ ASSN

Real Estate for Sale

FRAME HOU SE,
LOCATION

Maybellwould

p e r1 e nce ts that when East newspaper
The most mopen s th e btddwg and h1 s tere st mg quest1ons will be
partner g 1ves hun a ra1se , he I S u sP. d In th1s c olumn and
gomg to game w 1th any sort of wnters Will rece1ve copres of

" Drums of Africa" 10 , Otnah 13

1'h BATHS , GARAGE , HOT

For Rent
or Sale

992 -3731
FOR
POINTMENT

•

AP

ALLEY OOP

9 7 3tc

DANG IT! NOW l'LL

YOU KNOW, ALLEY, IF
HAFTA MAKE A
MOLLY'S GOING TO WAIT
WHOLE NEW BATCH ON TABLES FOR US, I
01' STEW.'
l'HINK S HE SHOULD

11 RM HOME . 1 baths , new
roof and alumrnum Siding in
Pomeroy
Phone 992 7556
9·5-6tc

by Land Contract
Offtce Butldrng wtth 700 sq.
ft. of space located on 107
Sycamore 51, Pomeroy .
Would sell on land contract
or rent. Gerald Reuter,

Phone 992'2490

Matn St, 8 rooms, bath, porch,
2 car garage and lof for

garden S12,000
NEW LISTING - 8 rooms. 4
bedrooms, Jlh
baths, n1ce
. kitchen , hot water heaf,
basement
with
garage

MAIIII

.....ii!!iiiiiiiliiil.

l&gt;OMEROY, 0

FUEL OIL
Heating Stoves
All s1zes on hand, prtces

start £t 5324.69.
-1 Wood Burnmg Stove

CLIP THIS AO and bring tl
in for $15.00 discount.

1'1'1. acres,

R , patio, garage, all rn
excellenf condition. $8,300

POMEROY - 2.77 acres,
lovely home. 3 BR. bath,
mce
kitchen.
full
basement, patio. carport ,
garage, 2 tratler hookups .

LIMA BI::ANS and Gnmes
Golden apptes Phone 949
2803 or 949 5721.
9 7 3tc
1972 YAMAHA, 2 helmets,
5, 000 mi les, very good
condition Contact Larry
Fretds , Syracuse, Ohro 992
9 7 3tc

1933 JOHN Deere Model A
tractor , completely re bur II
Phone H2 5025
9 7 6tc

135 acres.

city water available, close
to S.tate Park, minerals

JUST 5123.00 per acre.
RUTLAND - Recently
renovated, 2 BR. bath,
llving has fireplace,
ches, garage. $9,500.

home

has

L'tl u:~ ser vice yoUr Volks
wagen, reasonable rates .
Mtddleport Pennzo!l North
Secane Stree t, Middleport
Phone 997 99 71.;
8 19 76tc
- -:- _-:;: - - --~HAY tor sate P!1one 843 2524

-

BR,

house , good well, mrnerals
$175 00 per acre

$20,000
NEW LISTING - 7 rooms. 3
bedrooms. bath, drilled well
and 2nd building
servtce stafton . I

used as
acre for

$8,000.
HARRISONVILLE - 6 acres
and 3 bedroom 70x 14 mobrle
home wrlh 1'11 baths, $17 ,500.
2 FAMILY HOME II
rooms, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths,
and extra rooms far another

us~

th'
pi'chur'

Funn4

apt. Sl2,500.
26 ACRES - Of nice rolling
land , 3 bedroom
recently redecorated

Joel a

Seemed
l1ke he
were
enjol.l1n'

up an'
leave

home
Orrlled

well , 2 ponds, bath . barn, dbl
garage and fenced $28,000
MODERN HOME - Brtck

Look like we
·walks home.
Miss Melba~
Too bad
we d1dn't
q;t t'
seeth'
pi'chur!

veneer , 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
marvelous krt and dining wtth
sltdrng glass doors
Full
basement , 2 car garage

$39,000.
LAND CONTRACT

-

We'll
ketch
1t when
1t come
on 1V 1

4

bedroom home, bath, nice kif,
basement w1th garage and 2
famtly rooms

IJL ABNER

ROTTt:='N LI'L GRAY

AH KIN BE POFOOLAR
AXED OUT TO DiNNER-

MEBBE EVEN A
GAL WILLGO

OUT WITH

ClOUD GONE-

Q

...--;/

,.

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

=-----------_;;""'-"---..1.""'-----• .__..____

l'IME 1 BI LLY !

CANNt~G

tomatoes , gre·en
pe:ppers Ctetand
~arm s' Gerald rne Cleland .
Racrne Phone 949 41 21. '*..
s 19 ttc

and

r ed

Dollars 6, Pop Goes the Country 8, News 10;
Country Muslc Jubdee 13, Outdoors with Ken 15,

Yesterday's Answer
Ia Facihtate
25 O.T.
21 Indian
patriarch
shell
27 Tin or
currency
lead
22 Willy
29 Fountaon
remark
orders
23 Where a
thorn poerced 31 Unassisted
Androcles'
32 Cowpoke
lion
35 Fencing
24 " Heart of
foil
Dtxle"
37 Rich rock
state

Book Beat 20, Romagnolls' Table 33
7·30-Last of the Wild 3; Name that Tune 4. Wild Wild
World of Animals 6, Match Game 8, Evening
Ed1llon with Marlin Agronsky 20, The Judge 10; To
Tell the Truth 13. To Be Announced 15, Episode
Action 33
a 00--LIItle House on the Prarr ie 3,4, 15. When Things
Were Rotten 6, 13, Tony Orlando &amp; Dawn 8, 10,
Feeling Good 20,33
a 30-That's My Mama 6,13 , Man Builds, Man
Oestroys 33 , Phlladelph ra Folk Fest rval 20
9 oo-Ooctors Hosprtal 3,4, 15. Baretta 6, 13, Cannon
8, 10. Masterptece Theatr e 33
9 3D--Jean Shepherd's Amenca 20
10 00--Petrocelll 3,4,15; Starsky &amp; Hut ch 6 13. Kate
McShane 8, 10, New s 20 . Amer rcan Odvssey 33

11 oo--News 3,4,6,8,10,13.15; ABC News 33
11 Jo-Johnny

Carson 3,4,15 , Mavt e "T rtlogy of
Terror" 13; F Bl 6; Movie "The Drrty Doze n" 8 ,

Movie " Goodd New s " 10
12 · 30-Movle " Trilogy of Terror" 6
1 00-- Tomorrow 3,4, News 13
Forgo pteHsur able pursurts tr ll
se rro us mauers are attended
\0

Lots of lrttle mterr up trons early
tn th e day wrll s•d etr ack you
tempor arily Later you II get rn
hrgh gear

For Wedntodoy, Sop1.10,1g75
ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll 11) SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-Dec.
The actions ol one you re 11ery
tond ol writ d1sappomt you to+
day Howe ve r she II soo n be
back 1n your good graces

b+--t-

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)

b.-+--1--+--+-+---

1=--t-+-+----i

Early to day you wont take yo ur
:ommrtments as senousty as
y ou sh ou ld Later you II
ra llonaltze your rea sons

fE-+-1-+-J

GEMINI (May 21-Juno 20)

A X Y D L B A A X R

Shun

hmts. Each day the code letters are different

stores carryrng

iu)(ury

PISCES (Feb 20-Merch 20)

rtems tnat mt ght tempt you today Your w•ll 15 l ar weaker
tha n you r whrm

Rather than be •nac1rve today
do somet hrng to get the blood
crrcu latrng a bt l You It feel
better tor •t

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You trnd
dozens of fl rmsy reasons lor

CRYPTOQUOTE
SKE

,.

DFDXDHTPZU

WSDZRBOF

TBO

nol handlrng an unpleasant
ABTWOQVZ

POQKBO

s•tuatlon today It wrll nave to
be resol11ed eve ntuall y W hy
nol do 11 now?

HSOU VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopl. 22) Be
caref ul or your ltttle fllrtattons

ZOTBF

••
PF\RDON ME, MA'F\M --I'M

DF\DDV,
BF\BY DOLL

I.

HERMAN GRATE
MASON, W. VA. '

Fl Fl !!

FOR A LI\ TLE PET

LODGE AND l'M LOOKING

COME TO

'
Phone
7"r3-5592
MASON-FURNITURE
'

FIFI !J

STA'/ING AT THE TOURISTER

yoo-Hoo,

MAIN l AI NED DURING•
:LOSING POMEROY-MASON BRIDGE

FIFI !!
,.

•

'

'

'.

HK

RTFWO

-LTXVOZ today cou ld cause you some

H

THAR '-IE BE I

COUSIN

WKZOBDRAO
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: ANY MAN MAY MAKE 1
MISTAKE, BUT NONE BUT A FOOL WILL CONTINUE IN 11
-CICERO
(It) 197&amp; Kina Feature&amp; Syndicate. Jne.)
PI \"1 I '

CAPRICORN (Dec 22 -Jan
19} Don t e;.;pect more fr om
trrends and assocra tes tod ay
than you wou ld be prepared to
grve tf the rol es we re reversed

L 0 N G F E L L 0 W

.__._ _,__-'-!~

Is

21) You wont be able to call
the snot s as tndependently as
you Cl trke toda y An othe r wri t
have some control over your
comtnGS and gotngs

Though 11 may be a tr1fle tn + AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb. 19)
c:onvemen t shop a b tl to gel Goals rmportan t to you can be
better prices to day fo r even tile attamed now tf you don t sad
trllte thrngs
dle yoursel f wrth an ally lac k rn g
CANCER (Juno 21-July 22) tnrt•atrve

of

One letter s1mply stands for another. In t his sample A lS
used for the three L 's, X for the two O's, etc . Single letters.
apo5trophes, the length and formation of the words are all

·-

____

1 :oo-Truth or Cons 3, To TeH the Trv1h 4, Bowl1ng for

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:

.

:'

38 Kind
deck

IVE SUSPECTED
-mAT FOR A LONG

STEREO 92.1

. 'WITH
Craig' Ramsey, Mike $tevens, Genny
Turner and Bred· Nogar from 6:~0
.A.M. , Jii "M~~ight ·:.

~L

Gt~~~:t:::..:q~q-:!__ _ _ _ __:::::::::;;.

WINNIE

IN DASH 23 Channel Crttott:n ::;
Band transceiver, &amp;m fm
mpx radio , 8 track stereo .
Call ,992 -3965 .
9-• -ttc
mirror , new 45 calibre
muzzle loader. electric logs
with heater . Call 992-7291
after 4 p m
9 4-tfc
_.__

one
29 Kond of
serpent
30 Kmd of
trumpet
33 Oil-yieldong
tree
34 Desde·

..

WMPO-FM

9-5-6tc

--------------6 DRAWER Dresser with

Teaching Children 33
6: 30-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13, Andy Grrtfllh 6,
CBS News 8, 10, Book Beat 33 .

SCORPIO (Ocl 24-Nov. 22)

mate
36 " By the old
Moulmein

GREAT COUNTRY STEREO
IN THE BIG BEND

Phone

992 3702

12 13; Get Smart 15, Elec Co 20.33
6 00--News 3,4,8, 10.13,15 , ABC News 6. Sesame St 20;

mona ' s

9·S-31p
--------------1971 CHOPPER IT\Oiorcycle,
65.0 Triumph Tiger

5 30-Adam 12 4; News 6. Beverly Hrllblilles 8, Adarp .

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _'""".:_ _ _ _ ,,. Cowardly

-WITH THAT

INVESTERS BECOME
WEAL THY. TRY US OR
LL 992-3325.

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
39 Ethically
I Lynx,
msenstllve
ocelot,
40 Sea eagle
n Fords
etc.
5 Exp1re
42 Fulda
10 Yearn
tributary
II Chinese
DOWN
1 Character m
coty
12 Magt's
"Julius
guode
Caesar"
13 Downnght 2 Thespian
14 Maontaon
3 Words of
16 Suffix
for treat
gratitude
4
17 25 Down's
Spanish
muralist
creabon
5 Fat
Htmgarian 6 Ventilate
poet
7 Words before
Medii.
" and Pass the
island
Ammunition''
(abbr. )
8 Felt
Girl's
9 Recorded
nickname 11 Coxcomb
22 Measure
out
Aesop
specialty
Illustrious
Bread
spread
Wardrobe

Bonanza 15
s·oo-Bonanza 3. Family Affair 8 , M lster Rogers 20 ,33

terror

WHY
WASTE
TIME
WHEN YOU SELL - LET
US HELP YOU
CALL 992-1259

Marine Sales
16 FT GLASTRON boaT, 45
h p motor , tr8!1er Phone
9 7 3tc

2

bath, dining R.. part
basement, lots of building
sites. $10,500.
SCIPIO TWP. - 138 rolling
acres, lots of timber, old

4 x I! UTI,LITY trailer, $75
Ideal tor farm use Phone
992 5247
9 7 31c

992·3296.

por -

TUPPERS
PLAINS
RIGHT ON RT. 1 - 2'1,
acres,

POMEROY LANDMARK
9'./ack W. Carsey, Mgr.
.8ill Phone 992-2181

5823

POMEROY -

dose 1n, 2 BR . bath, utility

$28,000
ROUTE 681 -

Siegler &amp; Monogram

WEAR A UNIFORM'

on

I

608 E.

H Vt'&gt;l1tNG Ltcens e, Ntgh t
c ra w l ers
m e al worms .
TACKLE , guns . ammo ,
bows
arrow s
camp1ng
equrp . CB's and accessory
lndtan Joe's , 308 Page Sf i
streets past Mrddleport
Swtmmtng Pool
8 13 76tp

lo

25-- Farm Report 13

1.30-Dys ol Our Lives 3,4, 15. Let's Make a Deal 6, 13,
As the World Turns 8,10
2·oo--s10,000 Pyramid 6, 13. Guiding Lrghl 8.10
z·JO-Doctors 3,4,15, Rhyme &amp; Reason 6.13 . Edge of
Night 8,10 8.10
3 00--Another World 3,4, 15, General Hospital 6.13,
Match Game 8, 10. Hcklng Valley Bluegrass 20
3 30--()ne Life to Lrve 13, Bewitched 6, Tattletales
8.10, Jeanne Wolf With ... 20
4.00--Mr Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 4, Somerset 15 ,
Mickey Mouse Club 6,8, Ssame 51 20.33, Movie

-------

For Rent or Sale

game our ostnch -hke North
pulled h1s head out of the sand
and b1d fl; e d1amonds
Perfect defense would have
sel South three tncks . but after
the defenders failed to shtft to
clubs on t1me. South was able to
se l up dummy's Jack of hearts
for a c lub di scard
"N tce play. partner," sa1d
North " Down 300 1sn' t bad '
" L1ke l1il1ng at wmdmtlls,"
repli ed South If you had b1d
three diamonds nght away you
wouldn 't have been Impelled to
b1 d f1v e Ne1ther would land we
would have set four spades one
tnck to show a prof1l of 100
pomts mstead of a loss of 300 "

NOR Til
¥ 10862
• 10 7 " 2
... \ 9 7 4

:-., t: W t N G
rv1 ,....
Rep ~trs se rvt ce

11 00--News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13,15, ABC News 33

Bad players misplay bad cards
A7

lo{_TUN..L'/,

Nova 20.33

WIN AT BRIDGE

IT? J UST A
TESTtN6
T IME -

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

e, 10.

9 00--Pollce Story 3,4.15 . Rookies 6.13 . Swllch 8, 10,

PRECISELY THE WO~D .
A;; YOU LL SEE WHEN YOU

Nathan B•ggs
Radtator Specralist _

Ph 997 7174

8 3Q-Welcome back Kotter 6, 13 , Joe &amp; Sons
Consumer Survival Kit 20 ,33

I?

RUSH &amp;ACI&lt;: TO M,KEE

•

8, 10. When Television w as Live 20.33

•'UP," M"' DE:AR EA$"

OUR. L.OVE

LIHA DEAR!

' I

·I

MAKE SURE

WON 'T 6E T C IW~HED UNDER
YOUR UNCLE~ BILLION~

Fro m the largest Truck or
Bulldoz er Radtator to the
s'Ji alles t Heater Core

MOUSE TQr ~a·~ rn Rutland ,
56,500 Phone 992 -5856 .
8 31 tfc

+

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

-TO

GOOD BY,

Radiata
Service

13 ._ Scene One Take One _J:l

B 00--Movln' On 3,4, 15, Happy Days 6,1 3. Good Ti mes

10 QO-Joe Forrester 3,4, 15, Mar cus Wlby , MD 6, 13 .
Beacon Hill 8, 10, News 20, In terface 33
10 30--Woman 20,33

THI? 15N ' T

EXPERJEN~ED
' ~

Real E$te For Sale

L ET T I:::REO

For Sale

Several Mason Extension Homemakers went to the Up
INTERNATIONAL
1965
Towner Inn In Huntington for dinner recently. These of the
Travel All VB, standard
club what attended included Mrs. Woody Queen, Mrs. Matilda
Slltfl. air condttroned. tinted
glass Call 992 2622 after 5
Noble, Mrs. Evelyn Stewart, Mrs. Alburtlce Young and Mrs.
pm
Nancy VanMeter.
9 9 6tc
Help
Wanted
NEW
VILLAGE
Manor
Chalky McDaniel visited his aunt and tmcle, Mr. and Mrs.
Apartments rn Mtddleport, 1 7 H P WHEEL Horse tractor
Henry Schwarz and hiS cousin and family, Mr. and Mrs. LEt ' S BE HONE ST 1 If you -, bedroom
apts from S10• plu$
with mower and blade Can
weren't looking for a new
be seen at house next to
)i:mmett Simpson, Henry, Sissy and Daren at White Sulphur
elec . C,BII 992 -3273 or see
career - You wouldn ' t be
Mrs
Keatley, Apt
101.
Salrsbury School on Rt . 33
Springs, recently and attended the West Virginia State Fair.
readtng thiS ad
If we
R rverside Apartments
9-9 Jtc
weren't looktng tor someone
1-:11-26tp
Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Petry and sons spent a vacation
to do a lob , liltS ad wouldn't
1973 HUSKY 400 MX . Good
viSiting relatives which included her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
be nere
You can earn
condttlon, $400 Also, one
TWO Furnrshed apts
Kay
SlO ,OOO to S15 000 your frrst
Frank Hudnall, and his mother, Mrs. Jean Petry near
wrecked 1963 Chevy dump
Cecil.
87
south
secon
d
Ave
,
year m sales We witt send
truck, complete Phone 992
Mtddleport. Oh10
Phone
Charleston. They also visited in Fayette Cotmty with Mr. and
you to school for 2 weeks.
5647
992 5262
expenses
paid,
trarn
you
•n
Mrs. Delbert-Underwood and family; Mr. and Mrs. Danny
' 9 7 Jtc
e 21 -tfc
the field selling and ser
Hudnall and son; Mr. and Mrs. Fred Calhoun and sons, Mr.
vrcrng estabttslled accounts
TRAILER space for retit In 12GAUGE pump shotgun, $85
up to seoo a month to start
and Mrs. Arnold Green and family, Mr. and Mrs. Allen
Phone 992 ·22.&lt;t4
guaranteed Must be 21
Middleport ~ Phone 992-5434
Johnson and family.
years or over, goal oriented,
8 29 26tc
9 7 3tp
bondable , am Dr1ious, and
--:---:---------------::-:
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Strother and Todd of Louisville, Ky.
sports
minded
Fringe ~URN I SHED
apartment:
visited recently with her mother, Mrs. Lucille Schwarz in
benef1ts offered are mator
adults only in Mrddleport
com prehens 1ve med i cal,
I · BUSINESS FOR SALE
Phone 992 387 4
Mason.
pension , and savings plans
3 25 tfc
Mr. and Mrs. Shennan Ford visited recently with Mr. and
Call tor apporntment , Mr
---------------.
One (1) Tavern completely
Steve Gura, (6141 592 2269,
Mrs. John Hughes at Graceland, Ky.
eQurpped with D 1 and 0 2
Monday. Tuesday, and 4 ROOMS and bath apt rn
Rutland area Phone 992
Miss Guy!a Roush, a student at P'arkersburg Community
license located at 118 West
Wednesday from 7 p m 1111
51! 51!
Main Street, Pomeroy ,
10 p m
College, visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Roush over
7 27 -ttc
,Qhlo, . also the real estat-e
9 8 2tc
the weekend. Also visiting at the Roush home were Mr. and
consisttng of the business
building occupied by tile
LASALLE
HOTEL
,
MID
Mrs. Ted Riley of Clifton.
tavern mEintioned above .
DLEPORT
.
OHIO
ROOMS
Wanted
Jason Hysell fell recently while playing football and
55 UP SPECIAL RAT-ES
paid for aH makes an'a
BY WEEK OR MONTH
reportedly broke an arm. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Roger .CASH
models of mobile homes
TV AIR CONDITIONING
Calt 992-2186 ar see Gutdo
Hysell.
Phone area code 614 423
8 26 26tc
at the above tocatlon be·
'9531
tween the hours of 10 a.m.
Sgt. and Mrs. Andy Galford and sons of Hamlin, visited
4 13 tfc 4 R OO"M'S +8nd bath un
and S p. m.
recently with her mother, Mrs. Clara Smith.
furnished house. 1650 Lin
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Cochran of St. Albans, W.Va. visited her
coin Hts Phone 992·3874
'---------,---9 5 tfc :sisters, Mrs. Clara Smith and Mrs . Lola Jeffers in Mason.
- - - - - - - - - -- - - 5 FT BRUSH hog , J P! hllch ,
2 BED~M · mobile home, air
5225 Phone (6\4) 985'3594
Mrs. Vernon Roush and Thomas Henry visited at Dexter
conditioning, Racine area
9·3-6tp
City, Ohio with her sister and family, Mr. and Mrs. William D.
Phone 992 5851!
- - - - - - - -- - - -- 9-3 -tfc 10 10 JOHN Deere dozer . new
Lee.
engine, paln1, steering
Berry Johnson, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Johnson of
3 AN D 4 ROOM furnrshed and
clutches, canopy. wlnctJ,
unfurn tshe d
apartments
hvdraulte blade , $'1,500
Clifton, left today for the Navy and will receive training at
Phone 99? 5434
Phone (614) 985 -3594.
•. Great Lakes.
4 11 lfc
9-3 6tp
-GUNS
- ---.......------Mrs. Kenneth Ault of Columbus, visited her sister, Mrs.
and Ammo. Our fall
4 RM FURNISHED apt. for
Laura Jolm.On, over the weekend.
NOTICE OF
stock
is
now
here
rent. Phone 992 -3658 .
APPOINTMENT
Complete line of Rem Mr . and Mrs. Ralph Russell and children have moved their
..._
9 3-tfc
case No. 21 ,597
ington,
Wlnc~ester ,
·mobile home to their lot in Clifton.
Estate of LOUISE BRYAN .
lthica. Savage Slug barrels
LAURELAND
APARTMEN
I '
Mr. and Mrs. William Zerkle visited over the weekend with Deceased
in stock for most brand shot
6th and George Sis , New
Not rce rs hereby given that
guns, but In short supply
Haven ,
w_
va
tM
Rev. and Mrs .. Clarence McCloud in Charleston.
Bernar d V Fultz. of Box 723 ,
Get · them while they last .
MEDIATE
OCCUPANCY
PUBLIC NOTICE
All credttors of Claude L

4 10 1 mo

years ex perte n ce Insured ,
free estrmates Ca ll 992 3057
co ntract
Reg
or
ex ·NEW EARLY Amerrcan sofa,
gold
and
whrte
floral
design.
Coo
tvr tte
Phon e (1) ~ 661
cavaltng type Sep tr c tanks
90 tn long , 5175 2 pteces of
JOdi
rnstalled Brll Pullins !!'hone
No 4 ot electrrcat c.able 20
4 JO tf c
992 2478
- - - - - - - - - -- ft and 25 ft Phone 992 2779
8 27 ffc
9 9 3tc .READY MIX C O NCRETE
delrl/er ed rtgh I to your
WOULD YOU Bt:LIEVE'l
protect F asl and eas y F ree
Butld an all steel building at NEAR
estim ates Ph on e 992 32 84 ,
Pomerov
,
new
J
Pole Barn pr rces ., Go lden
Goeg le tn Ready Mrx Co
bedroom , 11/ 2 baths , carport ,
Gtant A ll Steel Buildrngs ,
Mtddleport , Ohr c
mud
rm
.•
ul
tltty
sun
deck.
Rt
4 Box 148, Waverly ,
6 30 tiC'
large lrv1ng room , kitchen
01'1 to Phon e 94 7 2196
dintng
area ,
paneled ,
7 24 lfc
refrrgerator and Tappan
SEP TIC TA N KS c leaned
range rncluded Also, wtlt
Mode r n San rtatton 991 3954
POR TA- BLE
TO ILET
he lp finance Pnone 992 7790
or 992 7349
RENTA l
Co n s tru c t ton
after ~~ p m
9 18 tfc
Out door ev.:-n ·~
Pll o ne
11 27 8tc
Ga t ltpO i tS
d46 478'1 ,
_WOOD B dWERS r&lt;t:PA!R
R ussel l s P l umbtng and
HOUSE , J oedrooms , n~w
- Swe epers , ro aster s. rron'S .
Hear tng
Sears cabrnets, Indoor all s mall applran ces Lawn
8 19 tfc
outdoor carpeting , chain
mower n ex t to State H rgh
lrnk fence . utrlrty bulldrng , 2
way Garage on Rout e 7
WILL TR tM or ·cut trees and
lots Washer , dryer , ref and
Phone 985 3825
shrubbery Phone 949 3221
stove S12 ,500 Phone 992
,1 16 tf c
or 742 4441
7430
9 7 241c
9 7 6tc

1969 PMC 12xS2 mobile home
tncludrng two porches Call
(6141 91!5 3504 . If no answer ,
992 5596
9 4 6tc

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

LETART - Harley and Lorena Bonecutter bave annotmced tllat a revival and deliverance services will begin at
the General Assembly of Body of Christ on Sand Hill Road, Rt.
15, Letart. The service will commence on Sept. 13tlf at 7:30
p.m. Evan Damon Adams of Marietta, Ohio will be in charge.
Everyone welcome.

SI GNS
POSTER S
F REE
EST IM A TES CALL M C
C R A W FO RD , 992 7680
8 7 26 1p

HAN D
A t&gt;.;D

I STIL-L. THINK W~ P:E MA~ tN 6
M15TAI&lt;E .. P05TP ONtN 6 OU R
WSDDIN6! !IUT l CAN'T MAI&lt;E
'IOU MARR'I M~ !

Dollars 6; Wilburn

7 30-Hollywood Squares 3,4, Let's Oeal with It 6.
$25,000 Pyramid 8. Evening Edition wllh Martin
AQronsky 20 . Price 15 Right 10, To Tell The Truth

CBS N ews 8, 10 , Your F utu re ls Now 33
A

Bowling for

Brothers 8; News 10. Name That Tune 13,
Wrestling 15 . Ant rques 20 . J ean Shepherd' s
America 33

3,4,8.1 Q, \3.15 . ABC News 6 , Sesame St
20, Jody 's Body Shop 33
6 JO-N BC News 3,4. 15. ABC News 13 . Andy Grr ff rth 6,

Ph 992-3993

..... X.CA\JA liN GdoM:r . toa d('r
ba c kh oe,
and bA ckhoe work
se pt tc EXCAVA TING .
doze r an d ditcn er
Gas ,
t ank s
tnstal!ed
dump
electric
and
wat
er
l tne
tru ck s and ro boys for htr e
bUrtal . basement s~ toot er s
"'·il l h aul I ttl drrt top s oil ,~
se pt1c sys tems and bru sh
ltmesrone and grav el_. Ca ll
c leantng Wtlt haul f tl l drrt.
P.ob or Roger Jeff ers. day
top sorl , sand and gravel ,
phone 992 7089, ntg hf phone
l tmes tone for drrvewavs and
9'/1 3525 or 992 5232
roads
Phone Charles R
2 ll lf c
Hiitt re ld . Ba ckhoe Service ,
Rl 1, Rutland Ohto 7~2
DOZER WORK . Etoc:eavattng ,
6092
l and c l eartng. ponds and
71190tc
basements,
and
land
sca ptng
Pultrn s
Ex
3 BEDRM - llou se Wttll wall IV
cavatrng phone 992 2478
wall carpet , central atr
I! 26 JO IC
Phone 992 7030
8 31 61C
C U 5 T-U M
P I C T U R E
r RAMING
ORIGINAL
S EA SCA P~
AND LAND MOBILE t.rane ~e rvrc e a 11u
dozer work Phon e 99 '1 5468
SCAPE PAINTING S E
8 7 :?6 tp
JO YCE M IJ_.LER 99? 7680
8 10 ?41p

Kingdom 6,

Cartoon J, Merv urn11n 4, Somerset 15 ,

~do- N ews

svracuse , Ohro

-------~-----------

1 00-- Truth or Cons 3; To Tell the Truth 4, Wild

197S

Boanza 15
5 oo- Bonan za J . Fam rly Affair 8; Mi ster Rogers 20.33 .
5 30-- Adam 12 4, N ews 6 , Beverly Hillbill ies 8 ; Adam
12 13 ; Gel Smart 15. Elec Co 20,33

LARRY LAVE~DER

Dan's Shoe Repair
9.2.1 mo

9,

Mt ckey Mouse Club 6,8. Sesame Sl 20.33. Movie
"Off Lrmits" 10, Dinah l3
4 30- Bewllc hed J , Mod Squad 6 . Partridge Family 8.

STORM
WINDOWS&amp; OOO~S
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING-SOFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

TEXAS WESTERN
BOOTS
KNAPP SHOES
SHEBOYGAN
Steel Toe Safely Shoes

8 21 I mo

4 VO--Mr

Blown tn10 Walls &amp; AHtCS

Jobber In

Wilbur Ward,
Mgr &amp; MechaniC

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER

Blown
Insulation Services

M•ddleport. o.

318 N 2nd

'

I

FREE ESTIMATES

Dan's Shoe Repair

Phone 992 -9973

1913 CHEVROLET IMPALA 4 DR.
12995
Less fhan 9,500 miles by local owner, spot le ss rnstde &amp;
out, tires show llftle wear, aufomatic, power steering &amp;
brakes, radio. blk . vrnyl top, green frnrsh .

Board
WI L L TAKE elderly women rn
ROO M fiND BOARD for
my home Phone 992 3397
!;Cn tOr ClltZe OS LOW In CO m e
9 7 Me
l tv tng very nrce Pnone 99'1
3S 09
-.. 1\ r.!PENTRY
ll oortng
8 '2~ '16tc
cc il•n g an d panel •nq Ph one

MASON - Every year when we go to the West Vtrgoma
State Faor we meet Mr . and Mrs. Emmett Sunpson and thetr
chtldren, Henr', Sissy and Daren and Mrs. Simpson's parents,
Mr and Mrs. Henry Schwarz all of White Sulphur Sprmgs.
Mrs. Sunpson, better known here as Debbie Schwarz, vosoted
here wtth her parents quote often . They came to see Mr. Schwarz's late mother, Mrs. Nelhe Schwarz and other relallves.
A. L. Hardman, m his colwnn on sports, patd tnbute to the
ever-popular Emmett Simpson, manager of the tenrus and
golflclubs at the Greenbner for 28 years.
It seems that being popular wasn't enough - when new
management took over last January at the Greenbner Hotel in
White Sulphur Sprmgs, Sunpson was called into the olfice and
reportedly was gtven the decosion - wither resogn or be fired.
The only reason given, said Sunpson, "I dtdn't concur with
management's philosophy ."
Simpson said : "When they called me m the offtce on June
17, I thought they wanted to give me a pat on the back. We had
just finished the greatest 15 consecutive days of business in the
hotel's history and I felt good about it ." But instead of
congratulating me, they told me I had a decision to make,
either resign or be fored."
The Simpson and the Schwarz family have served in
various capactties at the Greenbrier many years. In 1911
Emmett's late grandfather served there as operator of the
hotel antique shop until his death in 1937.
His father was superintendent of inside maintenance from
1931 to 1958, when he died .
Mr. Schwarz was the head of the bakery at the hotel for
several years, and his wife was also a faithful employee.
Durmg his many years at the hotel, Simpson made many
friends, among them governors and senators. But most imporl;lnt to hun, he had become the friend of the little man. "!
will sure miss them - I love people," he said.
Sirllpson was succeeded by Gil Patrick, a friend of the new
golf pro, Jack Bell.
Simpson has a new job now with the West Virginia Dept. of
Mental Health.
The Sunpson's and two other families have another brain
storm after the kiddies won so many trophies, stuffed animals
at the W. Va. State Fair and qUite large, they got the bright
idea of heaving a checking station. For the past two years all
these huge creatures, some almost as big as the winner of the
trophy and packages, cameras, etc. are checked at the West
Va. State Fair Checking Station.
The Simpson's and her parents are great and the Marshalls wish them much luck in future ventures.

Classified 'Ads

....... _...__..__.....,...

9- The Dailv Sentinel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, o.. Tuesday, Sept. 9, 1975
biC(TRACY

Business Services

-

1913 BUICK LeSABRE
13295
Custom H T. Cpe , local oWner, that's really sharp
inside &amp; out, good w w fires , custom wheel s. dark
green vinyl roof. green finish, AM radro &amp; tape , tacfory
a•r, automatk. P steering &amp; brakes

Notice
~\\ Roo
m and

':!;

-.Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS
OF

9 am

~

By Alma Marshall

\

Dcadl.n~

Put

For Want Ad Servrce
5 ce nts per Word one Inser t ion
Mtnrmum Charge 51 00
'
14 cents per w ord three
conseculfve tn sert lons
26 ce nts per word slx con
sec ul rve on s ertton~
25 Per Ce nt Dr scount on patd
ads and ads patd wlthtn 10
days
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; Obrtuary
$2 DO lor 50 word m .n tmum
Eac h addrltonal wo rd Jc
BLIND ADS
A ddrtr onal 2Sc c narge per
Adverttsement
OFFICE HOURS
8JOam to500pm Da tly .
B 30 am
to 12 00 N oon
Satur day

( An.on•n lumurro"oo I

PROBE

Day _ Before

RATES

J::
above cartoon.
1cI I Jvou r I I r r J

Juuob1r• WHOSE

liesults Use The Sentinel .Classifieds
AutO Sales

Can C"ella t •on
Corre c !ton s
Wt ll b e acce pt ed until 9 am
for Day ol Publ tcat ton
REGULATIONS
The Pub lrsher reserve s th (
r tght to edrt or retecr anv ads
deemed ob1ectronal
The
publts he r
will
n ot
b~
r es ponsrble for more th an on e
mcorrecr rnser tton

Now arrantre the circled letten
~
\J to rorm the aurpriee answer, u
~==·==L:::::::==~==~-~:;:;:.!l:.,;•:u:grested by the

1 ........

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES

loc att on
Monday

- ~- .

IHACCl'TI
I [ )

·I vu•ut:R1
I V

PM

I. 1

•&lt;'

,_.._..
_________________ ..
! Television log for easy viewing
I

.

AF TEF:.

~I

1.~ tt'5~jl
/lVFEG

,

1-lE'S 8EEN HlTTlN6 8ALL5
AGAINST THAT 6AiA6f
FOR WEEKS...

embarrassment Though they
may be harmless they could
offend a third party

LIBRA (8opt. 23-0cl. 23) Thrs
can be a profttab le day 11 you
keep your mrnd on bus rness

A, Your
WBirthday
Sop!. 10, 1975
A lrtends htp of a lasltng nature
wtll b e d eve lo ped thr s co mtng
year wtth one sltghtty older
than yourself Th ts person can
be retted upon when a rea l pat
IS needed
NF \1\ SP APER E:'IITER PRI SE ASSN

I

THE
6ARA6E!

�I .

..

•'
'~ n - ~ "1'ily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy .'0.,
' Tuesday, Sept. 9, 1975
•

~r
: ruek er

~clear

th rown Otlorine
of wreck

James R. Blanton, 43, Rt . 1,
Dexter, escaped pr obable
death at 9:55 a .m . Monday
when he was thrown from the
tanker truck he was driving
on Rt. 544, two tenths of a
mile west of Africa Rd
The Gallia-Metgs Post
'State Highway Patrol satd a
rear tire blew out causing
Blanton to lose conb"ol of the
'tanker loaded wtth gasoline

•

:Arraignments
•

8re conducted

and di esel-fuel owned by the
Meigs Coun ty Farm Burea u
Co-op.
The tru ck turned over four
t1mes over a s teep e m bankmenl . Blanton wa s
throw n c lea r fr om th e
wreckage
He wa s take n to Veterans
Memonal Hospital by the
Mtddle port Rmerg ency
Squad for treatment of nunor
injun es. The Middleport F ife
Depa r tment was ca ll ed 'at a
pr ecautiOnary
mea su re
There was no hre, howeve r
Je ff ery L
Roth, 15,
Galltpolis, was c tted to
.Juvemle Co urt for havmg no
driver 's li ce nse following a
traffic acc1de nt a t 4 40 p .m
Monday on Rt . 588 at Cr ouseBeck Rd
The pa tr ol s aid Rot h
dnvtn g wes t lost co ntrol of
his car when the n ght rear
ltre blew out. The vehicle left
the htghway an d trave led
over an emban kment There
was modera te damage.
A fma l accide nt occurred at
7 · 20 p m on Lou Southe rn
Rd. at the JUnclion to Rt 553
where ca rs dn ve n b y
Roosevelt P lumley, 35, Scottown and Paul McComas, 21,
Scottown, collided at a htllc res t There was modera te
damage.

Three persons charged tn
connection
with
lo cal
.burglanes arratgned before
Judge John C. Bacon in the
Meigs County Common Pleas
· Court have pleaded innocent.
· Larry
Phillips ,
20,
Pomeroy, and Steven Pullen ,
26, Middleport, were tndtcted
for burglary and possession
of stolen property by a recent
gran j jury ,following a
burglary at the Goess ler
Jewelry Store in Pomeroy .
Their ll"ial dates were set for
:Sept. 24. Both are free on
-bond.
. Danny
Walker,
18,
: Columbus, through his at; torney, entered a plea of
: innocent to a charge or armed
: robbery at the Kroger Store
..in Pomeroy this swruner. Hts
~bail was set at $20,000 and he
(Continued from page I )
! remains confined in the
~ county jail. His tnal was se t coworkers against " lettmg a
small handful tear our unton
: for Oct. 1.
apart."
"The idea may be good,"
Howze said of the right-tostrike demand , "but th e ttme
is wrong. ''
Miners returned en masse
on the heels of last Friday's
TONITE
appearance here by UMW
President Arnold Miller.
SEPT. 9
About 200 local officers met
Irwin Allen ' s
with Miller and voted to
THE TOWERING
encourage their m en to
INFERNO
resume production .
(Technicolor)
The strike sent ripples
through coal-dependent in'
"
Starring: Steve McQueen
dustries,
causing hundreds of
And Paul Newman
furloughs among railroads.

Diehards

MEIGS THEATRE

Now Featuring

FRESH PEACH SUNDAES,
AND MILK SHAKES

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

Adolph's DailY Vall!l

Hrs.: lO:OOA.M. Tilll:OO P. M. Sun.-Thur.
lO:OOA.M. Ti112:00 P. M. Fri.&amp; Sat.
992-2556

-N. MAIN

~

!~~----~----

POMEROY, 0. I

AUTOMOBILE LOANS
Keep the cost of a new car down by
using a bank finance plan, You pay
only reasonable bank loan ·rates and
improve your credit standing in the
community.
'WALK-UP TELLER WINDOW AND
. AUTO l"ELLER WINDOW OPEN
FRI. EVENINGSSTo7P.M.

"THE FRIENDLY BANK"

'

!Continued from page 1)
Two di vorce act ions , both
tng gross negl ect of
·'They went out orderly, but charg
duty and extreme c ruelty ,
very conce rned," said editor have been filed In the Meig s
Bub Wingett of the Pt. County Common Pleas Court .
Pleasant Register. who was Mary L. Woods. Pom eroy ,
seeks a d ivorce from Thomas
wt th dep uttes when the
K . Woods, Middleport. and
asks custody of one minor
evacua tiOn started.
Larger towns upstream put child . Patn cia Ann Ste1n ,
Middleport, ask s a divorce
fire and police units on fr om Edwln Lee Stein Ill ,
eme r gency standby, and Potnl Pleasant, and seeks
police warned anyone within c us tody of two minor
children .
a fivemile radius or the exploswn to leave.
ALL SUBSTITUTE cooks
Roadblocks were set up two of the Meigs Local School
01strict may pic k up their
blocks from the scene of the sc
hool passes fr om Av1ce
explosion, and newsmen were Bailey in the cafeteria of
not permitted beyond them. Meigs High School.
Polic-e hadn't gone on the
premises of the plant two
hours after the incident, and
one deputy explained, "We
haven 't had time, we're got
(Continued from pa ge 1)
our hands full with all the application of the Veterans
peop le "
Memorial Hos pital
fur
TI1ere were no reports of assiStan ce thr ough the
looting, but police said they Na ti ona! Health Service
had to secure the area as a
-Corp. for recruilment of
precautiOn .
phy s ician s.
Th e
corn-

Abuse must

GALLIA EXCITED
Galli a County Civil Defense
Director Mike Swisher of Rt.
1, Cheshire, and Gallipolis
City Manager Dick Mills
were up all night handling
operattons in Gallia County
during
the
emergency
situation Monday night in
Mason County.
Swisher was assisted by
Gallia County Sheriff Oscar
Baird while Chief of Police
John Taylor and City
Solicitor Dean Evans was on
hand to help Mills. Mills
called all volunteer firemen
and
stationed
them
throughout the city to
monitor air pollution and if
necessary help evacuate the
City.
Mills reported that no
organized evacuation was
gtven by city officials
although some residents left
the city and went to the Paul
R. Lyne Center at Rio
Grand e , North Gallia or
Kyger Creek High Schools
and Ches hire-Kyger
Elementary School.
The city manager said that
chemists from the Ohio
Environmental Agency
tested the air around 4 a .m.
and could not detec~ anything
of hazardous nature.
Several Gallipolis residents
wound up in Rio Grande
College-Community College's
Lyne Center around 2:30
a .m., reminalng there until
around 5:30a.m. today. Bob
Hoff, dining hall manager at
Rio
Grande
CollegeCol1111'unity College, served
residents hot coffee during
the wee-morning hours .
· Northup,- located about six
miles southwest of Gallipolis
off Rt. 141, was abnost totally
evacuated.
A State Patrobnan residing
in the little community
alerted
his
neighbors.
Everyone got on their phones,
thus phone circuits were
overloaded and no one could
call in or out for awhile , It
was the bridge disaster of
1967 over again. __
Dean H. Conklin, State
Patrolmen who resides on
Lincoln Pike, Northup, informed his wife who in turn
alerted orther Northup
residents.
Some
residents
had
determined to go to Colwnbus
to stay with relatives.
However, they checked at tbe
Rt. 35 service station In Rio
Grande and learned- the
situation was clearing up, so
returned home .
Many residents owning
police scanners or monitors
remained in their homes
listening to the latest
developments
as
area
lawmen from Gallia, Meigs,
Mason ,
Jackson
and
Lawrence Counties conferred
with each other throughout
the night.
However, there were many
who didn't even know
anything had happened when
they got up to go to work this
morning. Schools in the city
district were delayed one
•hour according to Supt. Don
Staggs. Classes were held In
all county schools today .
Some schools remained
closed in Mason County.
It took quite some time for
local law officials to get official word from anyone in
authority at the plant on how
serious the situation was, and
what they could do to inform
people on the Ohio side of the

river.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
llembir Federal Deppsit lnsufll!'ltc~ Corpoidlbt
DIPOSm INSU"ED TO 140,000
I'

Notices, local news in briefs

·

It was after 12:30 a.m.
before local officials were
able to get anything definite
from anybody . Had the
overcast remained in the
area like it was last week at
the same time, there could
bave been greater problems,
lawmen said.
,•

missioners heard a report by
Extenswn Agent J ohn R1ce
on a B1centenmal observance
in Racine at the Greenwood"
Cemetery Sunday
Mrs. Mtldred Jacobs ,
superintendent of the Meigs
County Infirmary, requested
a person to do the bookkeeping of the Meigs County
Infirmary formerly done by a
CETA employe who has been
transferred. Mrs . Jacobs
reported also that she had
refused to sign tim~ cards of
one employe who had
allegedly not worked the time
reported on the card. The
commissioners appomted a
bookkeeper for Mrs. Jaoobs.
Mrs. Jacobs also signed a
watver of some $7,000 whtch
was declared due her by a
Bureau of Employment
employe
because
the
minimum wage has not been
paid at the county infirmary
over a certain period of time.
Mrs.
Jacobs
waived
receiving the money by her
stgning.
Four other employes have
been awarded some $6,000,
also due to the fatlure of the
minimum wage to be paid at
the infirmary .
Attending the meeting were
Commissioners Henry Wells,
Warden Ours and Bernard
Gilkey, and Martha Chambers, clerk.

FUNERAL SE RVICE S for
Ernes t Hartinger , 86 of
Athen s, a form er Middleport
restdent, will be held at 1 p.m .
Wedn esday at the Hughes
Fun e ral Home in Athens .
Burtal wtll be in Burlingham
Ceme tery Mr Hart1nger , a
former Western and Southern
Insurance agent, is survived
by ht s wtfe , Bertha ; two
daughters , and three grand
children
THE MIDDLEPORT E. R
squad an swe red a call to 353
North Fourth Ave. at 7:1 1
a .m . Tuesda y for William
Reynolds who was dea d upon
the squad's arrtval
STEPHEN
EUGENE
Smith , 19, Route 2, Pomeroy ,
and
Rebe cca
Jean
Houda s helt , 22. Pomeroy,
have applied for a marr1age
l1cen se.
A REGULAR MEETING of
Shade R 1ver Lodge 453.
F&amp;AM, will be held at 7: 30
p m Thursday at the hall in
Cheshire All Masons are
invited .
DUE TO THE LACK of a
quorum , the regular meeting
of Middleport Village council
scheduled Monday night was
nof held Plans were made for
a
Wednesday
evening
sess ion
THE RAC INE em ergen cy
squad wa s called to the
Rac tne Elementary School a t
10 50 a m Monday for Kim
Bickers , 11. Route 1, Rac ine ,
who had fallen . She was taken
to the Holzer Medical Center
w1lh a possible leg fracture .

SQUAD CALLED
The Mtddleport emergency
squad was called to Route 554
about seve n miles from
Cheshtre at 9:56a .m . Monday
where a Landmark gas truck
driven by James Blanton
went over an embankment.
The sq uad took Blanton to
Veterans Memorial Hospttal
for a c heckup. Middleport
firemen members were on
hand until4 p.m. to 10sure the
truck did not catch ftre .

REUNION SUNDAY
The annual reunion of the
descendants of the late
James C. and Ethelinda
Stone Moore wtll be held
Sunday at the Sutton United
Methodtst Church, RacineBashan road. A basket dinner
will be held at 12 :30 p.m .
Friends and relatives are
invited .

GasCo asked to de~ay plan
COLUMBUS ( UPI )
Industry representatives
have asked the state Public
Utilities Commisston to delay
by one year a proposed
Columbia Gas of Ohio plan
curtailing · the supply of
natural gas to indusb"ial and
conunercial users.

The plan, which the utility
has asked PUCO for permission to implement Nov. 1,
1975, would halt supplies to
industries which use more
than one million cubic feet or
more a month to heat boilers.
After that, the proposal
calls for all industries using
one million cubic feet or more
onn a a month to be curtailed on an
-~ equal percentage basis and
•
the supply to commercial
users who require the same
amount
reduced on a pr!H'ata
CUFTON, W Va . - James
basis.
Ivan Young, 62, Clifton, died
Residential
c ustomers
Monday at hls residence . He
would
not
be
affected
was a coal miner and truck
under the proposal.
driver by occupation.
" If it is app-oved as of Nov .
Funeral services wiU be
he'ld Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. 1, 1975, it could easily result
in employe layoffs," said
from the Foglesong Funeral
Home, Mason . The Rev . Kenneth B. Beckmann, chief
engineer for General Tire and
George Hoschar will officiate
Rubber Co. plant at Toledo .
and burial will follow in the
"Approval of Colwnbia 's
Graham Cemetery . Friends
wiU be received at the funeral application to amend their ,
home from 6 to 9 p.m. today. curtailment plan will result in
Born in West Columbia serious financial loss, " said
August 18, 1913, he was a son
Joseph Berish of the Harshaw
of F1etcher B. and Olevia N. Chemcal Co . , Cleveland.
Hoffman Young, di!Ceased.
"This could mean a loss of 125
Surviving are four brothers,
jobs ."
Alburttce and Gordon A.
However, R.W . Williams,
Young, both Clifton; Russell assistant plant manager of
Young , Sr., West Columbia, the Union Carbide plant at
and William Marvin Young,
Canten, 0., and two sisters,
Mrs. Isaac (Charlotte )
Lewts, and Mrs. Lester
(Lera ) VanMeter, Clifton.
Holzer Medical Center
I Discharges, Sept. 8)
James Arthur , Hayman
Fire damages car
Barnitz, Cathy Bryant, Ina
A 1964 car owned by Voshel Cherrmgton , Shirley Coburn,
Donohew of Portland was Roger De Weese, Mrs . Wayne
damaged to the extent of Devers and son , Rachel
Eisnaugle, Alice Greene,
about $350 when it caught fire
Mrs
. Ronald Kapp and son,
at 5:56 a.m . Tuesday near
Midwest Steel on E . Main St. , Harold Mar shall, Michele
Pomeroy. Wiring under the Martin, Sandra Peck, Mimi
dash caused the fire. Fifteen Slone , Kenneth Theiss, Paul
Pomeroy firemen answered Thomas Sr., Homer White.
I Births)
the call, the 50th of this year.
At 11:15 a.m. Monday the · Mr . and Mrs. Frank
Pomeroy E-R squad went to Crump, son, Gallipolis
Meigs High School for James Ferry , W. Va .; Mr. and
Colburn, a student, who was Mrs. Bruce Gilbert, daughill. He was taken to the Holzer ter, Jackson ; Mr. !:Inn
Mrs. Robert Kincaid If,
Medical Center .
daughter, Mason, W. Va.;
Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Lambert, daughter , Wellston; Mr .
LOCAL TEMPS
and
Mrs. Daniel Ondera,
The
temperature
tn
daughter, Jackson; Mr. and
down town Pomeroy at 11
Mrs . Darrell Patterson, son,
a.m. Tuesday was 72 degrees
under sun ny skies.

James I. y
died on Mond ay

Fostona' s&amp;d hiS company
supported the curtailment
plan.
" We believe that on 1Y
under such a program can
industry in this state cootinue
to function in the face of the
severe shurtages of natural
gas projected for the
Columbia
system
and
others," Williams said.
An attorney represententing Columbia at the
PUCO meeting, James L.
Fullin said, "The curtailme'nt
is
essential,
otherwise the situation will be
wunanageable."
"We face the most severe
shortage the company has
ever faced in its history,"
Fullin
told
the
commissioners.
He said as long as. the price
of natural gas r~~ low, a
greatde~nd will emt and
supplies will be short.

: -:·:EXTENDEDOUTLOOK
·:·:·:-:·:=:·:=:-:·:=:-:=:-: : :.:=:·:-:=:·:·:·:·::: : :=:·:=:·:=:·:·:·:

Teacher pay i:U.creased
TUPPERS PLAINS - A
new salary schedule in ac-

cordan ce with the 1975 sc hool
btl! signed by Gov. J ames
Rhodes
wa s
a dopted

Tuesday night by the Eastern
Local School District Board
of Education .

Gas just won't go around
COLUMBUS ( UPI )
James L. Fullin , counsel for
Columbia Gas Co., said the
utility simply doesn't " have
enough gas to go around " and
feels the Public Utilities
Conunlssion of Ohio would
make only minor changes m
Columbia's gas curtailment
plan thls winter .
PUCO opened hearing s
Monday on the plan and the
hearings are expected to run
through next Tuesday .
Lined up against Colwnbta,
which wants to end all suppltes to industrial customers
who use more than I millton
cubic feet per month to heat
boilers, are some of the top

industries m Ohto.
" I am up agatnst the top
lawyers and big industry,"
said Fullin. " But we don't
have enough gas to go around
and som e guys are going to

POPE HAD TO WAIT
CASTEIGANDOLFO, Italy
fUP I 1 - Uganda President
Idi Amin got stuc k 10 traffic
today and arnved 18 minutes
la te for a pnvat e audience
with Pope Paul VI Vati,·an
officials sa td 11 was the f~rst
hme tn their reco ll ec hon a
foretgn head of stale had kept
a Pope walling .

lose."
Columbia also wants to
reduce supplies to other large
industrial consumers on a
percentage basis and to big
commerical user s on a
prorated basis.
Fullin said some minor
changes may be made in the
plan by the commission .
"I think the most that wtll
G"ome are a few exceptions to
the plan," he said. "I would
hav e no quarrel with that, but
they can't make too many."
NOW YOU KNOW
There are 4,400 ktnds of
crabs. ail edible

•

A chance of showers
Thursday
and
again
Saturday with daily highs
In the mid 70s nortb and 75
to 80 in the south portion.
Lows will be ln the 50s.
.,.,:,:-.::::::::::;:::·:::-:-:·::·:·:-:·:'':':::::::::::::::.:::::::::::::::

Devote£/ Tu The

HOSPITAL NEWS
Ravenswood, W. Va. ; Mr.
and Mrs . Hiram Pierce,
daughter, Hamden ; Mr. and
Mrs. Elwin Potter, daughter,
Oak Hill; Mr. and Mrs. Ray
Queen, daughter , Letart, W.
Va .; Mr . and Mrs. Richard
Shanton, daughter, Ray .
Veterans Memorlal Hospital
ADMTITED - Frashier
Birchfield, Rutland; Wilma
Riggs, Racine; Jean Smith,
Coolville; Clarence McDaniel, Middleport; Jane
Cundiff, Syracuse; Leslie
Artrip, Pomeroy.
Leland
DISCHARGED
Nelson.

PLEASANT VALLEY ,

DISCHARGES - Vera
Martin, Point Pleasant ; Mrs.
George
Payne,
West
Columbia, and Tammy
Mates, Gallipolis Ferry.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy Furniture Department, 3rd Floor

Celebration

VOL XXVII

NO. 104
•

Nl ~~

~

~~

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1975

MONTGOMERY, ALA . - GOV . GEORGE WALLACE
says he hopes to "see some electrocutions in this state" now
that he has signed into law a biU restoring the death penalty in
Alabama. "There are a lot of bad white folks and a lot of bad
black folks who ought to be electrocluted ," Wallace told
reporters Tuesday as he signed the biD.
The bill reinstates the death penalty for murder when any
of a variety of aggravating circtunstances are present, but
allows the trial judge to reduce the sentence to life unprisonmen! if he feels circumstances do pot warrant death . Black
members of the state legislature filibustered agamst the bill,
claiming the discretionary provisions would be unfairly applied against blacks. Wallace disagreed.
Black legislators succeeded in delaying the effective date
of the law for six months, by which time they hope the U.S.
Supreme Court will have struck do\\11 simtlar laws m other
states.

.

PO RTSMOUTH - Marvtn
Whtt e .
Col umbu s,
prestdent of Co lumbi a Gas of
Ohio, Inc ., and s ix other
Ga s
Syste m
Columbia
Distribution companies, will
be the pnnctpal speaker at a
meet ing of the Southeaste rn
Ohio
Regi on al
Coun c il
Thursday, Sept. 25, at th e
Elks Country Club here .
Bob Evans, founder and
head of Bob Evans F arms,
Inc ., pres ident of the
Regional Council, satd Whtte
Will provide an overall vtew
of the current energy crisis
wilh emphasis the critical
need for government actions
to help overcome the na tural
gas
shorta ge
that
is
threatening the economy of
Ohio and the natton .
The dinn e r meeting is
schedu led for 6 30 p.m.
following the annual SEORC
Golf Tournamen t wht c h
played during the day. Golf
parltcipan ts wtll begin play
at 8 a.m. o\·er th e 18-hole
course in four somes of their
choosmg.
A former Southea ste rn
Dtstncl Industrial sa les
manager for Columbia Gas of
Ohto wtth headquarters m
Athen s, Whtte ]O tn ed th e
Columbia Sys tem in Jul y,
1947, a s an mdust nal
engineer in Mansfield and
was promoted to commercial
representative there m 1951
He was promoted to the
Athens posttion m 1953.
White wa s named Industnal sales manager for
the Central District, with
headquarters m Colun1bus , m
1959 and was promoted to
manager of md us tnal sales
for Columbta Ga s of Ohio and
Ohi o Valley Gas m November, 1960. He was e lec ted vtce
president m c harge of retail
sales for the two companies
in Jun e, 1967, an d wa s elected
a senwr vtce president in
July , 1970. He was named to
hts present posi tton April 1,
1973.
Born m Oklahoma City,
Okla . White was gra duated
fr om Athens Htgh School m
1942 and received a bachelor
of sctence degree 1n civil
eng m ee nng from
Oht o
Uni verstly in 1947.
Durmg World War II he
served as a Na vy radar
te c hmctan 10 the Pacific
Theater.
Whtte is a member of the
Board of Directors of Huntm gt on Nationa l Bank ,
Co lumbus ; Columbus Area
Chapter of the Am erican Red

E.

Coach attends first meeting of association

·.

Makers of famous

PERFECT SLEEPER•

PRICE 15'

~

By Uolled Press International
I.J)U!SVILLE , KY . - GOV. JULIAN CARROLL says he
will file a claim with the federal goverrunent for the costs of
activating the Kentucky National Guard to halt disorders
against court-ordered busing .
Classes were conducted calmly Tuesday and attendance
Increased 15 per cent over Monday. The re were 85,923
elementary and secondary students in school Tuesday and
67,151 the day before. The figures represented 72 per cent of the
projected enrollment of 119,000, school offiCials said . Louts ville
Mayor Harvey Sloane said he wants the nearly 1,000 guardsmen to remain on patrol across trouble areas of the city a nd
county at least through the weekend .
11
We're not out of the woods yet," he sa1d.

CLEVELAND - APPEALS WERE EXPECTED to be
filed this week by attorneys for victims of the 1970 Kent State
University shootings of the verdict returned agamst them las t
month in the $46 million civil b"ial here .,
Tim Doyle, bailiff for U. S. District Judge Don J . Young m
Toledo
. ' who heard the case, said the lawyers had until Sunday
to file a motion that the verdict be set aside and a new trial
granted . The plantiffs had indicated Aug. 27, when the jury
returned its verdict, that such a motion would be filed but as of
Tuesday, it had not reached the office of Young, who was on
vacation.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

of The Meig.tt-Ma.m n / lreil

company's
White
,,
II
k
c
il
WI. spea to ounc.

WOOD RIVER, ILL - MR. AND MRS. J ohn Sheraka
planted tomatoes in thetr backyard and got marijuana. The
Sherakas said they planted 13 tomato plants bought from a
mail-order firm that advertised the plants would grow 20 feet
hlgh.
Mrs. Sheraka said she was watching a television program
whlch showed a marijuana plant, and it looked like the plants
in her backyard. A careful check showed the Sherakas had
been growing one tomato plant and 12 marijuana plants. The
Sherakas notified police, who asked the couple to destroy the
three pot plants tha t were stiU living Tuesday .

Here's a terrific bedding
value.! You get innerspring
construction, great overall
SUJ&gt;PO'rt with relaxing comfort,
quilted mattress cover. Big featur·e s--vet priced for small budgets.

Belmont Countian
succeeding Swope

1~;.,;;,;;;;·: :·:·: -:·=· =·=·=:=·=i·~=·=·=·=jj;i;==~~\\ Gas

DETROIT - FOR MORE THAN A MONTH , James
Hoffa's son steadfastly maintained his father was still alive .
But Tuesday, 40 days after the former Teamsters union
president vanished, the younger Hoffa said publicly for the
first time he believed hls father was dead."[ don 't think we 'll
ever see him again," James P. Hoffa said.
"I think he was assassmated .."
Although he did not say exactly what changed his mind,
the younger Hoffa indicated it was the length of time Hoffa ha s
been missing. He also said he doubted investigators would ever
find his father's body . Hoffa disappeared July 30 after telltng
his family he was going to a suburban Detroit res taurant for a
meeting with three men . He was last seen in the restaurant's
parking lot.

mattress and foundation

Gary Swope, left , Metgs County game pr otector for the past six years, has been
promoted to the positton of law enforcement agent and will be lea ving the county Hi s
successor Is Greg Taylor who ha s served as ga me protector in W(:lshmgton Co unty , three
years . before commg to Meigs County .

enttne

lntere.~t.~

POM EROY-MIODLEPORT, OHIO

-

'· '

•

--~·~-~·~------------------------------------------

WASHINGTON - AFL-CIO CHJEF George Meany has
relented in his battle over the loading of grain on ships bound
for Russia .
He will allow union longshoremen to load th e grain for the
next 30days in exchange for the administration's extending its
moratorium on grain sales to the Sovtets the same length of
time. In addition, the White House will establish a board to set
policy for possible negotiations on long-term U.S ..Soviet grain
dealings.

this week

The new schedul e provtd es 28.
The
Ri g ht -To - R ead
an increase in lhe present
Prog
ram
,
which wt ll be ofbase salary of $7,200 to $i,400
fered
10
the
Tuppers Pl a10s
ann uallly for tea chers. an
inc rease of $100 per year for Elementary Schoo l, was
bus dnvers, and an tncrease approved an d the 1976 budget
of 10 ce nts an hour for all as a pproved by the Met~ s
other non'"(·e r tlfied employes . Coun ty Budget Comnusston
Th'e board, review10g the wa s adop"1.ed. It was agreed to
pr obl e m of tran s porti ng tran sfer se hou l funds a t the
ju nior hig h and r Pse r ve Pomeroy NatiOna l Ban k to
athletic team s to Wahama for the new bran!=' h bank of the
contests determmed to tran s- Pomeroy Nationa l Bank m
por t them by way u[ Po101 Tuppers Pla10s.
The board contracted with
Pleasa nt to avmd us mg the
Mary Rose for lhe transferr y serv tcc
portation
of sc hool comTh e board aut hunzed
certain sta ff members lo rnotht!Cs fr om .Jaekson to th e
a ttend spec ial meetin gs and several sc hoo ls of th e dtstrtct
Attendin~ the meetmg we re
workshops They a re Nancy
Arnold, a match workshop m board members On s S mt th ~
Columbus. Ocl 8-9. Turn Howard Caldwel,l , Jr ., Dorsel
Kelly , an arliculatto n work- Larkins, Starling Massar and
shop on Sept 17 a t R1o Sup t . J ohn Ri be l, Cle rk
Grande,
and
Ches ter Elo tse Boston and Tuppers
Prin c tpa l
Bea
Good mg. th e state pnnctpals' Pl a tn s
Douglas
mee ttn g 10 Columbus, Oct 27·

Mrs. Robert Oliver, the
new high school girls yolley
ball coach, was present for
the Iirst time Monday mght
when the Meigs High School
Girls' Athletic Assn . met ·
The group agreed to purchase volley ball s hirts tmprinted with letters and
names on them and it was
reported tha't $34.43 was

collected from bottle caps It
was announced t hat th e
assoctation will have three
representatives present each
Friday for the operation of
the pizza shop at games and
the boys group is to have
three representatives on
hand each evemn g. II
refrigerator with a rree?.er is
needed for the operation uf

the shop . Any one wtshmg to
donate a smtable refrigerator
should contac t Mrs . Kenne th
McLa ughhn , president, or
Mrs . Harry Clark, secretaryreporter . Other office rs for
the year ar e Sue Grueser,
vtce
presiden t:
E lli e
Blaett nar and Harold Ma ue,
ways and means committee,
and J oy Bentley , treasur er

,

Cr oss. and ts a member of the
Soc te ly for Advancement of
Mana ge ment,
Indu s tnal
Executives Club , American
Ga s
Ass n. ,
Columbus
Ahtleltc Club and Swim and
Rac que t Club and , Covenant
Presb yt ertan Churc h ,
Columbus.
He is a member of the Hall
of Flame , the honorary
soc te ty of the American Gas
Ass n for mdu st nal a nd

commercial personnel, and
was awarded AGA 's 1966
Industrial
Commercial
Achievement Award .
Tickets for the meeltn g
may be obtained locally from
Rog er
Barron of the
Gallipolis
Chamber
of
Commer ce and 10 Mtddleport
and Pom e roy from Atty.
Be r nar d Fultz a nd Oht o
Power Co . manager Fred
Morr ow

MARVIN E. WHITE

' Metgs County has a new
ga me prolA!dor succeeding
Gary Swope, who has held the
positiOn for stx yea rs and has
been promoted .
Tn e new gam e protector ts
Greg Taylor, a nahve of
Belmont County, who c omes
to Me igs Co unt y from
Was hin gton County wh ere he
had he ld game protec tor
post lion for the past three .
years
Ta ylor and his wife, Dtana,
res tde at Rout e 4, Pome roy .
Any one nee dtn g any In formation m rega rd to wildlife or who wis hes to make. a
cornplamt may call Taylor at
992-:!213 m the mornin gs
before 9 a .m and late m the
evenings . If Taylor cannot be
reac hed persons may co nta ct
the Athen s Office of the
Department of Na tural
Resources, Dtvision of Wtld life, 592-2333.
Swope a nd his wtfe,
Marjori e, ha ve restded on

Explanation of rates wanted COLUMBUS I UP! ) - State
Audttor Thomas E . Ferguson
wants
Co lumbus
and
Southern Ohio Electric Co. to
explam " how it can charge
such an exorbitant rate"
since he says 1t has the
highest rates of a ll electric
utilities in Ohio.
''A compar ison or rate s
shows that Columbus and
Southern's rate ts 60 per cent
higher than the customer rate
charged by Cincinnati Gas
an d Electric," Ferguson
said " As of July 1, 1975,
Columbus and Southern 's
rate was $74.02 while Cinc innati Gas and Electric
charged $46.32 per 2,000
kilowatt hours.
"I would like Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co. to
explain to the pubhc how It

ca n charge such an exorbitan t rate," Ferguson said.
" Is tt because of poor
management, or ts the utility
paying
tis
executives
outrageously high salanes at
the expense of the electric
consumPrs of centra] Ohio ?"
"1\'h; such a discrepancy
m rates?" asked Ferguson .
"The uttlittes are paymg the
same amount of taxes. I don't
think the consumers of
centra l Oh10 should be
penalized by mefftcient
management of Columbus
and Southern Electnc Co.
Ferguson said the utility 's
fuel adjustment cost is htgher
than any other electnc
utility
" In fact between January
and July of this year all
utilitie s
in
the
state

decreased thetr fuel adJUStment costs, except
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric
Co.,"
satd
Ferguson .
He noted that fuel adju s tment
costs
are
a utomaltcally passed on to
conswner~ wtthout any pnor
aut honz atwn from any
regulatory agency.
Ferguson also ctticized a
plan by the uttltty to spend $1
million for advertising " to

$15,000
needed

RA CINE - Racine Vtllage
co un c tl has pa ssed a
resolutiOn to borrow $15,000
from the Racme Home Na tt onal Bank to pave tis
streets. Counr tl also in Its
recent meet mg accepted the
repor t of the Metgs Coun ty
September 14 ts the day to R ac tn c Amencan Leg10 n 1976 Bud~et CommiSs ion a nd
remember m Meigs Comnty Pos t Remarks w&gt;ll be offered revtewed the prospects for
It 's when
the
Ohto by Congressman Clarence pa ssa~e of a three mtlllevy to
be voted upon tn the vtllage 10
Htstortcal Marker to Captat n Mtller .
J oseph C. McElroy at the
A reception wt ll foll ow the November to provide for
Greenwood Cemetery at home of Mr. and Mrs. Paul added street li ghts and street
Ractne will be dedicated at 2 Huston of Syracuse, once the repairs. Offtctals satd the
p .m ., then at 5 p.m. at the old home of Captain McElroy's present ope rahn ~ levy fail s to
Chester
Courthouse
in dau ghte r a nd frequ e ntly prov tde enough income to
m ee t prese nt costs.
Chester approprtal e vist ted by him
Th e cou nctl passed an
ceremomes will be conducted
Desce ndants
of
the
maktng Meigs County a McElroy famtly hvtng tn ordman ce req uiring that a $1
bicentennial commumty .
Meigs County ar e extended a fee mus t be paid for a perm tt
Captain McElroy served on special invitation to attend. to solic it or peddle m town
the Ractne Village Counctl,
At
the
Btcentennial Stgns wtll be pos ted Perm tts
fought m the ClVll War, and ce rem ony at Chester a are to be secured on the first
served 14 years in the United certtficate and a Bicentenmal Monday of each month at
States House of Represen - flag will be prese nted to the village hall Also , signs are to
tatives. The dedication wtll CoWlty Comrihsswners · wtth be pos ted reqUinng heavy
open wtth an invocatiun- b~
Rev . Mtddleswarth giving the trucks to remam on marked
Rev.. Howard Shively, ana mvocation and the American streets tn the communtty.
presentation of colors by the Legton presentmg the colo rs.
Eldon Kra e ut er co m pl ained about water runm ng
.;· :::.:;: .;.·: :···:·: :··-:···:·:·:-:;:::·:::·::·: ;:-:;:· :=:=:·::· ··:· ;: . :: •• ;: ;:: ::. : :. :' ':. :&gt; .:: ··:: :.: :·· ;.·. ·=· ·:· onto hi s property a nd counctl
;.
agreed to correct it.
·:·:
Suspects use wheelchair prop
.;:
In an other ma tter tl was
:·:
·.·.
reported
that lht&gt; new roof of
:·
POR fSMOU rn,Ohio Ul'I- fwo men-one of them
.·: town ha ll continues leaking
in a wheelchair-were apprehended ruesday as
-::: Payment of $1,600 for the new
':: burglary suspects as a pair left a supermarket here.
··· roof IS bem g wtthheld pendScioto County sheriff's deputies apprehended
\
ing corrections .
Ibomas E. Cantrell, 18 of Scioto County, and B.C.
&lt;;: Holland, 23, Portsmouth, who was ln the wheelchair.
At te ndt ng were Ma yo r
..::
C: harl cs Pyles. Clerk Ma e
!be two were held In jall. Officials, who recovered lhe
:::'
Ueland and co unc tl men
stolen money, said they did not know why Holland was
{
Glenn
Rtzer , Linley Hart ,
in the wheelchair.
\
Grace Roush . Henry Lyo ns
..
·::·
.·.
·.·-:
·:
an
d Albe rt Htll
. '

History will he
noted on Sunday

i

improve thetr unage with the
consumer
"It doesn 't take an advertising campa ign to give
them a good image with the
cons umer, " said Ferguson.
" All the electric utilities have
to do is cut out the fat in their
operations and
reduce
rates ' '
The auditor ca lled on the
legislature to cons ider laws
" pr ohibtting
s uch
expenditures.
"Ohio doesn 't permtt schools
and other local governmental
units to spend public money
to promote bond tssues and
o1 vies , so why should utilttes
IJe allowed to spe nd money to
lobby the people who are
the ir capttve customers,"
said Ferguson

EXTENDEIJ OUTLOOK
Fnday th roug h Sunda y. a
chance of showe rs friday
and mostly fair Saturday and
Sunda y. Ht ghs will average tn
the low 70s m northern Oh to
and 75 to 80 m the south Lows
wt ll be near 60 early Fnday
a nd 1n the 50s Satu rda y and
Sun day

Women bound
over on charges
Tw o P om eroy Route 4
women were bound to the
gra nd Jury Tuesday afte rn oon on martjuana re lated
c ha r ges
fo llowtng
a
pre liminary heartn g m the
Meigs Coun ty Court of Judge
Robert Buck.
Anna Gellett, 23 was bound
to the grand Jury on charges
or possess ion , harvesttng an d
possess iOn of marijuana fur
sale. Ka thryn Edwards, 26,
was bound ove r on charges of
po ssessiOn and harvesting
ma rijuan a The women a re
fre e on bond

WEATHER
Cloudy tonight , chan ce of
s howers, lows tn the lower
60s Thundershowers lik ely
Thursday, highs m the low
80s . Probabi lity of rain 10 per
c ent today , 30 per cent
tonight, 60 per cent Thursday

High St , Middl epor t, s ince
cormng to Metgs County .
They have two sons, Aaron , 3,
and Adam . 1.
Swope, a native of Zanesvill e, served in Wood County
before co min g to Mei gs
County . He has
been
promoted to the pos iti on of
law e nforceme nt agent and
will be moving to the LoganNew Le xin gton area He wtll
se rv e
Hoc kin g,
P erry,
Morgan and Vin ton Counties
in hi s new posttion .

Six DWI
offenses
charged
'r'Yenty-mne arrests, stx ror
dnvmg whil e intoxicated,
were made by the Middleport
Police Department during
August, according to the
report of Police Chief J . J
Cremeans.
Other offenses for which
arres ts were made include
four for speeding; four ,
dtsorderly manner ; three ,
fatlure to yield the nght of
way: two each for spmning
ttres, no operator's hcense;
one each fo r assured clear
distance, reckl ess operatiOn,
petty theft , bad c hec ks, a tte mpted theft an d des truction
of proper ty Charges were
dropped in two ca ses.
Dunng the m on th , the
department mves ttgated 18
traffic
acc td e nts
a nd
collectto n of m eters totaled
$1,208. The pohce crutser was
dri ven 4,394 mtl es during the
month

Stauffer's
pipe failed
GALLIPOLIS FEHRY , W.
Va. ( UPI J A pipeline
fa ilure a ppare ntly touc hed
off a lire that propelled tht ck
cl ouds of phosphorous an d
chlon ne gas througho ut thts
nverfront town Mond ay ni ght
leacl1ng to a mass evacuatwn,
the che mt cal plant mana ger
sa1d Tuesday
More than 1,500 restdents
were led out of town shor tly
after a fire erupted mstd e the
Stauffer Chemical Co pla nt
late Monda y night
Whtl e
tnv est t gato r s
searched through the debris
of a burned"ut chemica l
rea ctor , plant manager T R
Friar said the tentative ca use
appeared to be a fault m the
ptpeline Due to static atm ospheric condi llD ns, Friar
satd the firm felt 1t " prudent
to evac uate the residents of
the area ."
Other than the treatment of
Bob Casey of nearby
Gallipoli s, Ohio, for eye an d
skin Irnlalwn, the re were no
mjurt es. By dawn Tuesday,
the gas had dtssipated and
residents were allowed to
re turn to the1r homes.
CASE DISMISSED
A divorce action, Jack

Kenneth Spires, Langsville,
agalllSt Carolyn Jean Spires,
Williamsport, has been
dismtssed in the Meigs
County Common Pleas Co urt .

mattresses and foundations

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