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OsCa.r ....Wheeler died .on
Sunday
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Oscar Lee W~eeler, 66, Rt.
1·. Middleport, .died at hi s
residence Sunday morning
following a long illness.
Mr. Wheeler ''was born
Sept., 7, 1908at SweeUan&lt;j, W.
Va., the son of Elsie Stowers
Wheeler, who survives, and

the late Walter A. Wheeler. In
addition to his fa ther , he was
preceded in 'death by two
brothers and two
. sisters
. .
He wa s married Aug. 6,
19:10 to Maivera Pelfrey
Wheeler. who survi ves . as do
two sons, . Harlan Wheeler,
Dexte r, a nd Hurs hel D.
Wheeler, Rt .' I , Guysv1lle:
tw o da ug hter s . Mrs. J on
(C orr e nal · Co ttnll, Lanca s te r , an d Mrs. Veste r
1Reva) Walker . Rutland ; 17
grandchildren : fiv e · great-

Holzer Medical Center
1Births, July J)
. Mr . and Mrs . Terry Finn, a
daughlf,r. Wellston . Mr . and
Mrs . Donald May, a son,
Ches hire . Mr . and Mrs.
Fran cis Pi ckens , a daughtor,

Do's and don'ts
about swimming

SAVE $100

Freda Heines
died Saturday

'Special buy on 2 piece
living room suites by famous
makerS.

NOW

Uirmel News, ·
By the Day

'399

BAKER FURNITURE
OHIO

*
m~nean

From a Great American Bank

1773: A 'tea party for a principle.
Poor King George. He knows we're uj:i in a'rms. He knows
we're fed up with his taxes. But he just can't quite let go. He
repeals every.tax except a tiny one on tea-just to keep us in
our place. We won't be kept there. We'lllet his tea rot in tpe
storehouses. And not even the King's Governor can make us
receive the tea and sell it. He has the law on his side, but we
have Samuel Adams. And Sam isn't ·afraid to start a littie
trouble. On December 16th, Sam and sixty townspeople put
on the disguise of Mohawk Indians, board the tea ships, take
our tomahawks to the chests of tea and dump it into Boston
Ha,rbor. Oar "Boston Tea Party" is. one to remember. li1

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THE .FARMERS BANK
AND sAVINGS CO.
Ponierov,. Ohio
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40,000.00 Maximum Insurance

.1

· · .tOr Each DepOsitor · ·

A FULL
SERVICE
BANK
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M I Yl 1 ~

I! Of_~~~ _D_~~'..-~SU.AAN~

(Q~~R!'TION

POMEROY CEMENT

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Consider Retiring Early
EUCLID, OJlio (UP!) About half of the 100 most
active doctors at the Euclid
General Hospital are considering early retirement
because of the Increased
rates of medical malpractice
insurance, according to Jay
W. Collins, executive director
of the hospital.
Collins said Sunday only 11
per,cent of the 100 he talked to
expect trouble in renewing
their mal)X'actice coverage.
He said all antidpate cost
increases of up t.o 300 per cent
in the insurance. Collins said
more than 60 per cent of theqi
said they would raise fees to
cover the extra expenses.
He said a chest sw-geon
was ·considering becoming a
general " ]X'aclltioner or an
lnllustrial physician, a
pediatrician said he would IIQ
longer remove stitches, and
another doctor said he would
expand his practice to offset ·
high insw-ance premiums.

A certificate of title is
required for all boats 1~ feet
or longer and for outboard
motors 10 horsepower or .
more, reminds the · Watercraft Division of the Ohio
Department of Natural
Resources. ,

LODGE TO MEET
The Whiie Rose Lodge will
meet Wednesday all:30 p.m.
aL the American Legion Hall
in Middleport. There will be a
discussion on insurance
benefits.

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NO. 59

Devoted 'J'o 1'he luterests of The Meigs-Mason Area

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

ANNUAL JULY CLEARANCE SALE
NOW IN PROGRESS
Bargains In V~ry
Department
In
.
.
The Main
Store, Annex and W.areh~use
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FREE CUSTOMER PARKING ON SECO{fD STREET
AND AT THE MECHANIC STREET WAREHOUSE , (

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American presidents have
fathered . 80 sons ~ut only 57
daughters .

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TUESDAY, JULY 8, 1975

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PRICE 15'

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McKenzie, crew
are commended

: ON TilE LINE - Environmental control equipment is much in evidence
at the recently completed $600-million General James M. Gavin generating
station. At left and right are giant cooling 'towers which 'prevent return of
healed water to the Ohi~ River. The 1,103-fool chimney disperses into the
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upper atmosphere any gases emitted from the plant. Electrostatic
precipitators, shown on either side of the base of the tall slack, are designed
to remove 99.7 per cent of the ash particles resulting from the burning of
coaL

By Katie Crow
dil'Cussipn. council voted to
Pomeroy village council in pave Fifth St. to the town
a long session Monday rlight . PIU'king lot, which is located
commended Don McKenzie, next to the new fire station,
street superintendent, and and on Mulberry from Lasley
members of his crew, for the St. to the stop light.
. '' excellent job" being done on
Atty. James O'Brien came
village streets. Members to ask council to pave Nyle
joined to say . they ~ere Ave . on Lincoln Hili which
pleased with the work leads to his residence. He
McKenzie has accomplisheCI: said it has never been paved
McKenzie, who meets with In 25 years, and most people
council at each meeting , think it, is a private drive.
gives a detailed report of However, he said he realized
what the department has there are more important
accomplished during the streets to be taken care of,
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month .
and a lack of funds.
Monday night McKenzie
Mayor Dale Smith who
explained what streets have presided, said the parkipg lot
been paved and the cost thus wall should be under ' con·
far . Five streets have been struclion in the near future as
completed, McKenzie said, the Corps of Engineers has
being Ebenezer, Marlin, awarded a bid in the am9unt
Vale, the street around J&amp;R of $103.000 to Allan Stone of
Sports Shop, and Pleasant Chesterhill to ·do the work.
Ridge , at a total cost of
Charles Legar, Pomeroy
$11,542.95 .
fire chief, gave the following
To be paved is Prospect fire report from January
Hill which will cost $3,078, through June 1975:
and Union Ave ., $7,437.50,
A total of 32 fire calls made,
which comes to a total of in , town 1!&gt;, loss in town,
$22,058.45. Council only has $31,150; on one call the loss
$25,000 to do ail the p·a ving . was $15,000 and two were at
Following a detailed $7,500 each; there were 280
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trN;:;;·::.· ·:·:·:· · ···:··£;;···''jj:;:i·;/;\\ Heartsaver training class set
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By United Press International
The Meigs County Chapter
COLUMBUS - DEMOCRATIC LEGISLATIVE leaders
of the American Heart
are plarming a prompt decision on which of the item vetoes
Associ a li on announ c ed
tbey wlii attempt to override in the state blldget. House
Monday ,oP.e.!'ing nf a class for
Speaker Vernal G. Riffe Jr., ·D-New Boston, said Monday any
"Second Degree Heart
override action will come "within a week or 10 days."
Savfrs."
Riffe downgraded notions majority Democrats will
The class will cover
prolong the controversy over the vetoes by Republican Gov. · pulmonary resuscitation. a
James A. Rhodes, which stripped $347 million from the $10.6 basic
life
supporting
billion budget for fiscal 1976-77 a week ago.
procedure for victims whose
There is no lime limit for the legislature on overriding
lungs have ceased to function
gubernatorial vetoes. "We will decide .within a week or 10 days
but whose hearts are still
which of these items we are going to try to override," said
beating (cardiac arrest) . The
Riffe. The speaker indicated his party would probably try to
real purpose of Second Class
override vetoes on "legislative intent" langw~ge rather than
Heart Saver is to utilize the
vetoes involving ·money.
Heart Saver's knowledge of
cardiopulmonary
re CAPE CANAVERAL, FLA. -WEATHER researchers
suscitation.
are trying to find a way to short circuit thunderclouds before
The basic life supporting
they have a chance to del~ America's hall of next week's joint procedure is designed for
U.S.'Soviet spaceflight. Astronauts Thomas Stafford, Vance victims whose lungs and
Bland and Donald K. "Deke" Slayton are scheduled for launch heart have teased to function
at 3:50p.m. (EDT) next Tuesday- at the peak of Florida's effectively, and in whom
lightning season . Lightning is a major enemy to a rising rocket . sudden death has occurred.
and its electronic systems.
The most common cause of
The scheme is to drop millions of tiny strands of .cardiac al'rest is heart at;Uuminized nylon thinner than a human hair into clouds to tack, but it may also be
ble.W off electric potential before it has a chance to build up to caused by airway obstruction
lightning strength. Scientists hoped ·to conduct an ex- from choking, drowning,
perimenlal drop over the Kennedy Space Center today to see if electrocution, or suffocation .
the "chaff" interfers with vital radar tracking systems at the Suffocation often occurs
launch complex. A similar test was conducted successlully when the victim's tongue
June 27.
obstructs the airway or he is
While that work is underway, Stafford, Brand and Slayton rendered unconscious from
remain at the Johnson Space Center in Houston brushing up on any cause such as . a drug
emergency procedures and other space piloting skills in a overdose, fainting, contrainer. They fly to the Cape Sunday.
cussion, or injuies.
Whatever the ca,use of
OGALA, S. D. - · A HEUCOPI'ER USED by FBI cardiac ·arrest. CPR is
agents searching the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation for the always required. The class
killers of two federal agents was shot down; according to
federal sources. Fow- men were aboard the helicopter, which
crash-landed Frlday on a hillside five miles north of the main
reservatiorr: No one was injured.
The FBI has refused to confirm or deny reports the pilot
radioeli he had drawn ground fire ·immediately before the
helicopter went down. Asked if he would deny the helicopter
Two accidents, both ofl
had been hit by ground fire, FBI spokesman Clay ~rady of
Minneapolis said, "qf course I can't peny it.' ' The National West Main St. were inTransportation Safety Board is inves~igating the incident. A vestigated by Pomeroy police
spokesman in Kansas City,Mo ., told UP! a report would not be Monday night.
At 9:01 p.m. Barbara
really for at least two months.
·· Cornell, 33, Point Pleasant,
CINCINNATI- SALES OF ADEBENTURE ISSUE of up turned right off the Pomeroyto $50 mil,lion was authoriZed ·Monday bh the Cincinnati Bell Masen bridge, and travelling
Telephone Co. boar,d of electors. The debenture is to help pay east ~n W. Mam,, sw~n:ed to
off short-terril loans. The directors said PJe offering would be the nght to avo1d h1ttmg a
made "during the fourth calendar quarter of this year" aria- hole in the road. Her car went
the debenture. would have a maturity of not more than 40 over the curb out o£. control
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and hit '·a ~ard . rail at a
"Proceeds from the sale will enable the company to repay service statiOn. She was
sllort term loans incurred for expansion and improvement of taken to Veterans Memorial
service," directors said. Cincinnati Bell's. last sale of deben- Hospital by the Pomeroy E-R
tures was in A11gust, .1971, when the finn sold a $50 million squad, !rated and releabed.
"triple-A rated 7 and J'Bths pe"r cent issue due in the year 2011 There was medium damage
at an interest cost to the company of 7.51 per cent. '--~,.----. to the car.
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David Kearns, 27, Clifton,
was cited for failure to yield
.
right of way when a vehicle
Dave Gerard was ap- mini parks throughout -the driven by Jay Ridgway, New
pointed r treasw-er and Jim village · and a corn fest on Haven, struck his car .on W.
Schn'loll,. publicity chairman Saturday, .J uly 12, was Main near the Midway
by .chainnan K~n Gilkey· at a scheduled, the time and place. Market at 11:55 p.m .
Ridgway was travelling east
meeting of the. ~iddleport to be announced .
Other proposed projects and struck tlie Kearns vehicle
Citizen Recreation Committee Monday evening at the during the summer month s in the right lane. There was
were revifWed. The next medium damage to the
fire station .
vehicles and. no injuries.
meeting
will be July 21.
' J&gt;lans were disc~ed for
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will cover the principles of a Struble are E .M.S. inwitnessed or unwitnessed . structors for the Trade and
ar·rest .
Vocational Education Ser' The class will be taught
vice. Ohio State University,
Larry Ba~er and Joe Struble. Columbus, and both men
both certified Heart Saver completed · requirements for
Instructors. Baker and the National Registry of

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Police report

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Now You Know

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EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Wednesday tbrougb
Friilay, chance of sbowers
Wednesday and Tbursday
but fair Friday. Hlgbs ID
the 80s and lows 1D tbe lljls.

BRIGHT LIGHI'S FADE
COLUMBUS(UPI) -Gone
are the days wben people
sought out the bright lights as
. reasons to relocate in a big
dty.
Today it is beiter jobs,
better health services, good
homes and quality education
for the children.
Lawrence Brown, Ohio
State University professor of
geography, conducted a twoyear study and Interviewed
about 300 near residents in
this area. Most were on the
lower end of the socioeconomic scale. Brown said
job and health care were
rated the most bjlportant
reason for relocating. School
and housing quality were
rated second in importance.
He said the lowest on the Ust
were nearness to home and
good shopping.

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Shaner, Athens Route, Mr,
and Mrs. Fred Wood,
Gallipolis, Mr. Lincoln
Russell, Wolfpen, and Mr.
and Mrs. Clinton Gilkey,
Albany.
Family members visiting
here with Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Stout · as they ~njoy
vacations have been Mrs.
Helen Kirby, Chana and
Donnie, Elizabethton, Tenn.;
Mrs.
Frankie
Lowe,
Cleveland; Mae Howard and
Mr . and Mrs. Charles Potter,
Mountain City, Tenn.; anll
Mr. and Mrs. James Wlllls,
Gadsen, Ala.
Mr. and Mrs._Paul Gaston
vacationed in North carolina
where
they
toured
Wilmington and visited with
Mr. and Mrs . Wallon
Brigman ( the former Debbie
Gaston) and . then went on to
Myrtle Beach in South
Carolina before retvrni!lg
home.
Mr. and Mrs. Waller
Jordan and Josua attended
the wedding of her brother,
Tad Gilkey, and Vl~kle
Oberholzer both of Albany at
the Albany United Methodist
Chw-ch. Walter served as
best man for his brother-inlaw.

Efberfelds In PomerOy

BLOCK CO.

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Murl Galaway has learned
of the birth of a . great-greatgrandson, James Ray, born
to Mr. and Mrs. Randy
Ratliffe of McArthur. Mrs.
Ratliffe is the former Karen
Petty. &gt;Grandparents known
in this area are Mr. and Mrs.
James 1 Petty
(Wilma
Woodrum ) and
greatgrandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Leon Woodrum, all of ·
McArthur . The family formerly lived in this community and visit he~e quite
often.
Those family members who
gathered at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Mendal Jordan lo
help him celebrate his birthday were Mr. and Mrs .
Kenneth Crabtree, McArthur, ·Mr. and Mrs. Dwaine
Jordan, Bryan Keith and
Sarah Faye, and Mr. and
Mrs. Waller Jordan and
Joshua, all local.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Crabtree were in Nelsonville
on Sunday afternoon to attend
the reception held at the
Nelsonville United Methodist
Church for the new district
sup!. of the Methodist Church
for A!hens District, Rev.
Wesley Clarke, formerly of
Portsmouth.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Speigel, Anna and Wayne,
were weekend guests of 'her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Noble
Hamon and o,ther relatives
and Wayne stayed with
relatives for a vacation.
Recent guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Earl Starkey we~e their
daughters, sons-in-law, and
granddaughters family, Mr.
and Mrs. Donald Jones,
Nelsonvile, Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Wiseman, Harrisonville, and
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Clark,
Tarnra, Penny and Wendy,
Chester.
·
Billy Ross, Stoutsville, is
spending some time here with
his grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Wllllam Cheadle and
other relatives.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Jordan and son were
M~. and Mrs.
Norman

I

ent1ne

Carpent~r Personals

Elberfelds
In
Pomeroy
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VOL. XXVII

Market Report
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO,
July 5,1975
Sales Report of
Ohio Valley LlvestockCo.
STOCKER CATTLE STEERS - 250 to ' 300 lbs. 20
1,.-I.O-~t~;Juu to 400 lbs. 19 to 30;
, 400 to 500 llis. 21.50 to 33; 500
to 600 lbs. 21 to 33; 600 to 700
lbs. 22.50 to 32.50; 700 lbs. and.
Over 24 to 38.
·
'HEIFER CALVES- 250 to
I. 300 lbs. 17 to 23; 300 to 400 lbs.
17 to 22.50; 400 to 500 !lis. 191o
The · average housewife
29;
500 to 600 lbs. 17 to 27; 60o'
1SJtencls almost 9'12 years in
kitchen. This is enough
to 700 lbs. 16 to 25; 700 lbs. arid
to make anv woman stir
Over 20 tO ~2.50. ·crazy ...
STOCK COWS &amp; BULL'i
Spending that much time in
(By Tbe Head) -Stock Cows
the kitchen. your wife
115 to 200; Stock Cow~ and ·
deserves to have~ lovely,
Calves 145 to 26&lt;1; Stock Bulls
115 t0 235 B b c'al
modern kitchen. Why not
;
a Y
ves 5 to
talk to the "FRIENDLY
ONES" aboul a P R27.00; · (By the Pound) 1Canners &amp;.Cutters Cows 14 to
.SONALITY 'DESIG
KITCHEN, (She'll be. gla&lt;jl 18; Holstein Cows 18 to 21;
you did! I
Commercial Bulls ( 1,000 lbs.
-.
and over) 21 to 27.50. ·
VEAL CALVES- Tops 220
lbs: to 250 28 to 32. 2li; Medium
200lbs. to 300 20 to .28 ; Culls 20
Down .
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Chance of 'thundershowers
. tonight followed by clearing
and cooler weather. Lows
tonight lower 60s . Sunny
Wednesday. cooler. highs in
the upper 70s. Probability of
precipitation 30 per cent
tonight, 10 per cent Y(e(lnesday.

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ExplanatiQn demanded

MEIGS THEATRE

from the regular
low price

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WASHINGTON (UP!) - A the · Nation) ,
strongly .- "very few" Instances. He
House
subcommittee defended Hoover, who dled·in also disagreed with Levy,
chairman has demanded a
1972. He also dellied charges who described them as
.
'
Jushce
Department
'' ex- · that FBI 'COunteriritelligence foolish.
planation of a statement by a activities under Hoover were
Sullivan · also defended
Por tland .
former official that FBI either "laughable" or in "Operation Hoodwink," a
(July4)
Director . J . Edgar Hoove~ violation of civil liberties.
program designed to pit the
Mr . and Mrs. J ohn Bush , a · probably ordered some
Asked if the FBI agents Communist Party against the
son. Mason, W. Va . Mr . and' burglaries J o gather in- ever
conducted
any Mafia,
Mrs Ri chard Hall. a son, telligence .
burglaries, S.ullivan replied
"I don'llhink Its laughable
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J ac kso n. Mr . and Mrs.
Rep . Don Edwards, 0- he never participated in a at all," he said . " .... . I don't
.\ (,I I I!HHI N•qhlly
Dauell Ni ckel s, a son , Ct;lif., a former FBI agent burglary or oidered one.
think there's anything
Thurma n . Mr . a nd Mrs . and chairman of the House
TONIGHT-TUESDAY
"But," he added, "I would laughable about it regar.dless
Vir gil Peck, a dau g hter, judiciary subcommittee that assume that in the national ill what the attorney general
gra ndc hildren ; two brothers,
.I
Rufas Wheel er . Swee tland, Gallipolis.
oversees the agency, also intelligence field that has may have said about it."
Double Feillure
(July 51
and Max Wh eeler , Hamhn,
"CAPONE "
called on Attorney General occurred in some offices. I
But Edwards said "it is
·Rat ed R'
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hoff. Edward Levy to disavow think that this decision in the difficult to . imagine more
W Va., and three sisters,
Plus
man. a son, Letart. W. Va. statements by outgoing past was made by the top than a few of the ( counMrs.
John
( Vi ct oria,
"ZAR DOl"
Sowa rd s, Hamlin ; Mrs. Mr and Mrs . Wayne Massie, Assistant FBI Director officials of the FBI, the · terintelllgence) actions as
'Rated R'
Sherman 1Florence 1 Adkins , a daugh ter, Hamden .
William Sullivan defending director of the FBI, it's had anything but, outrageous,
'
1Births )
a nd Mrs. J imm y 1Oll ie 1
Hoover 's policies.
his approval. I lh,ink that many
subjecting
the
(JulyS)
Wal ls both of Swee tland
Sullivan, who resigned today it probably would have ,. goverment to civil liability,
Mr . and Mr s. Th omas Saturday after 27 years in the to have the approval of the many clearly illegal."
F un eral serv1ces will be
Fl
et che r.
a . daughter , FBI, said Sunday he assumed attorney general."
he ld Wednesda y at 10:30 a .
And, Edwards added,
m. a t the Walke r Funeral Itavenswood , W. Va .
that burglaries were apSullivan said" the coun- "some of them are just a
Hum
e
in
Rutland,
with
the
proved
by
the
director
during
terintelligence
programs scream ."
Tonigh1 &amp; Tuesday
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Rev. Ll oyd D. Grimm ofHoover's years as head of the were justified in all but a
SATURDAY 'ADMISSIONS
fi ciating . Burial will be in
agency.
David Miller, Middleport;
AIRPORT 1975
Miles .Ceme tery .
Edwards,
who
was
(Technicolor)
Margaret Donahue, PortFriends
may
call
at
the
"distressed"
by
Sullivan's
Based on the novel by
land: Ruth Thorla , Racine;
filll eral home anytime after 2
defense of such counArthu r Hail e y.
Rebecca Triplett, Pomeroy;
" Rated PG'
p. m. Tuesday until time of
terintelligence activities,
Maggie
Gilmore,
Racine
.
.
seNices . The family will
said he would ask the Justice
DISCHARGES Opal
receive
fne
nds
Tuesday
from
Department to explain to his
Show starts at 7:00p.m.
Tyree , Connie Mash, Char)es
2 to 4 and 7 to 9.
subcommittee why Congress
Payne . Ruth Wolfe, Mildred
had never been told about
As ·the swimming season aboard from any height .
Sisson , Emma Hayman.
FBI-authorized burglaries.
Avoid areas near darns and
has arrived again, Selim J.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS He said the subject would be
Susan Tracy. Pomeroy: raised at hearings July 17 and Blazewicz, M.D. of the Meigs rough, dangerous water .
Know the capacity of yowCounty Health Department
Gertrude Neece, Middleport;
19.
reminds. area residents that boat and maximum size
George Kauff, Pomeroy:
Sullivan, in a broadcast
each year over 200 Ohioans motor - do not overiOr&amp;d or
Owen Watson, Racine .
interview (CBS-TV's Face
lose their lives in drowning ove'l&gt;ower.
J}JSCHARGES
If your boat does capsize,
accidents at home, on the
Lawrence Baer, Nellie
beaches , in abandoned slay with it- it will float and
Hanlon, David Miller, Leah
quarries, ponds, and In pools. serve as a marker ·making
Rhodes .
The age group 15-24 years you easier to find .
Do· not boat on a river or
recorded the largest number
DAUGHTER BORN
Of these drownings last year. body of water which exceeds
Mr. and Mrs. Gary
Mrs. Freda Heines, 81, Unfortunately,
early yow- competence level.
Michael, Rt , I, Minersville, West Main St. , Pomeroy, died
estimates indicate that this
announce the birth of a
Saturday at Holzer Medical swimming season may prove
daughter, Kimberly Anne, Center . She was the daughter
just as deadly.
July 2. weighing 6 pounds and of the late Jacob and Sophia ·
Area drownings could be
II ow1ces. The couple also
Fick Mayer and was a prevented if residents would
has a son , Matthew W. member of the St. Paul's
follow safe swimming and
Mr. and Mrs. Shelby
Grandparents are Mr . and Lutheran Church, Pomeroy .
water
practices.
The Pickens and family of
Mrs. W. S. Michael and
Preceding her in · death following Safety. Tips were Pomeroy spent Sunday wj lh
William Frecker, both of Rt. were her husband, Estie: one
developed by Dr . !'!lazewicz Mr. and Mrs. Allan Taylor.
I,
Minersville;
great- daughter, Lorena, and five
in cooperation with the AcMr. and Mrs. James Circle
grandp~renls are Mr. and
brothers.
cident Prevention - Product of NewHaven,spentSunday
Mrs . G. L. Michael, MinerSurviving
are
two Safety Unit, Ohio Depart- with Mrs. Mary Circle.
sville, and Mrs. ,Charles Reed daughters, Mrs. Wayne
ment of Health with the
Mr. and Mrs. Arthw- E.
of Reedsville.
MIDDLEPO~T,
IMina I Swisher, Pomeroy: safety and health of all Meigs Johnson, daughter, Sheryl
and Mrs. Francis (Martha) residents uppermost in mind: LeAnn, called at the home of
Anderson, Middleport ; six
Learn to swim - if you are Mrs. Lizzie Wood on Saturday
grandchildren, _ Mrs . Keith a non-swimmer, learn the evening at Racine Route.
( Barbara) Riggs, Charles basic technique of slaying
Mrs. James Circle and
Swisher, Don Swisher, Keith afloat in water for some Mrs. Mary Circle visited with
Anderson. Thomas Anderson period of time (drown- Mr. and Mrs, Virgil Roush of
and Mrs. Ralph (Carole) proOfing).
East Lelart on Sunday afPainter;
lour
greatNever swim alone ternoon.
grandchildren; one sister, always have a buddy.
The . community . was
Mina Hess, and several
Never leave a small child saddened by ·the death of
nieces and nephews .
alone near the water.
Ralph. Lee, a fine neighbor
-Funeral services will be
Swim only in supervised and friend.
held at 2 p. m. Tuesday at areas - completely a&gt;&lt;oid
Ewing Chapel with burial quarries, gravel pits, ponds, SfRAY DOGS BEWARE
DOYLESTOWN, Ohio
following rat Beech Grove etc.
Cen\tery. The Rev. William
If you are a non--swimmer, (UP!) - It's going to be
Middleswarlh and Chaplain do not use float devices to double.trouble for stray dogs
Arthur Lund will officiate. carry you into deep water. in the Wayne County comFriends may call at the
Know yow- swimming limit munity of Doylestown.
The community is going to
funeral home any· lime .
~ do not swim to exhaustion .
get
a dog catcher --{)r rather
Learn water-rescue
dog
catchers.
techniques - often the S.fest
CLASS TO MEET
David Snodgrass and his
The Happy Harvesters method of rescue is to extend
wife
Linda voluntee~ed their
Class of the Pomeroy Trinity an object to keep the ·victim
Church will meet Friday, afloat - a long stick, your services this past week to be
July II, at 6 p. m. There will shirt, a pole, rope, anything a part-time "Dog Warden
-T eam." The couple said they
be a poUuck dinner followed floatable.
by a program under direction
Learn
mouth-to-mouth wanted to help the comof Carrie Neutzling.
; resuscitation
this munity, especially after stray
technique is effective for . dogs wandered onto their
drowning victims of all ages. , farm ~st week and killed
more than $125 worth of pet
GUEST HERE
SAFE BOATING!!!
Mrs. Laber! W. Smith,
Make it a strict policy that rabbits and chickens.
The Wayne County dog
Huntington, was the guest of everyone in your craft wears
warden
said the Doylestown
Mrs. Phillip Minehart and an approved lifesaving
Erma Smith, Pomeroy.
device -life jacket, life vest, ' area was: the farthest and
ring buoy, or buoyant cushion hardest for him to work and
bearing United States Coast appreciated the' help the
Snodgras!.es would give him.
Guard seal of approval.
Do not allow anyone to The community has been
stand up in the boat or jump without a dog catcher for
more than one year.

MASON DRIVE-IN '

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Hospital News

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. Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o~. Mondi.y, Jcly 7, l 975

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two accidents

Gerard, Schmoll appo
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No money, no
school in fall
The Meigs County Community School may not
reopen this fail after a
request for funds by the
Meigs . County Board of
Retardation to operate the
school was turned down this
morning by the Meigs County
Commissioners .
Judge Manning Webster, a
member of the board, said
after the morning meeting,
that unless available funds
can be found, the community
school will not reopen this
fail .
'The commissioners said
they would like to help the
school, but no funds are
available .
The Meigs County Board of
Mental Retardation made the
request to the commissioners
after meeting Mond~y night
to discuss sources of filllds for
the school. The board has
been operating in the red
· th d 1 t 0 f · 1 6
foIIowmg
e e ea
a ·
m1'II I evy I as t mon th ·
The board met with Judy
· d E ng 1ese .
Koc h an d Le onar
employees of tti'e Slate
Mental Health and Retardation, District 8, Athens:
who
presenfed
three
possibilities to the board.
The first suggestion ,was to
merge temporm:ily wlh the
program in Gallia County. It
was decided to inquire to see
.if Gallia County officials
would accept Meigs County
children and if so, . what
tuition would be , require~ . .
However. the b oar d d 1.d no t
appear to
favor
this
suggestion.
It was suggested and ·
decided to ask the Meigs
County Commissioners · for
funds to continue the Meigs
County Community School.
The board approved a motion

to determine the opinion of
prosecuting Attorney Hernard Fultz on whether or not
the commissioners are
required to provide an
educ~tion for the mentally
retarded of the county .
The third suggestion of
Koc h and Englese was to
raise the,needd funds on the
board's own.
The commissioners also
disc~r&gt;ssed this morning the
possibility of sending Meigs
County children lo Gallia
County , but the commissioners said the county
would have to provide its
share of the fundin g for that
school.
In the regular business
meeting of the Meigs County
Board of Mental Retardation ,
bills were paid and final
teachers payments were
made.
Attending last night's
meeting were Koch and
Englese and board· members
Wilma Parker, Grace Weber, '
Rick Crow, Mitnning Webster
and Richard Chambers.

.
Emergency
Medical
Technicians' Ambulance .
The class participants who
successfully ·complete the
course will be invited to
undertake Heart Savers
Instructor training at a later
date .
This course is designed to
be helpful to people in all
walks of life and it is
suggested that persons in
education, industry, mining,
allied medical profession
take an active part _in the
training that is offered.
Interested persons have
until July ·21 to enroll for the
Second Degree Heart Savers
class . For further informati on 992-3424 or 9925523.

EXTENDED FORECAST
Thursday
through
Saturday, fair TburJday
and Friday, chance of
showers Satut'day. Highs
will be In the 70s or lower
80s and overnight lows will
.rllllge lrom .lbe 50s to lbe
low 60s.
:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;::::

fAKEN fO HU'!PIT AL
Mrs. Fred Lemley, 67,
Leading Creek Road, was
transported to Pleasant
Valley Hospital at I: 22 p.m.
Monday by Middleport
Pollee. She had sustained an
injury to her knee.

LOCAL TEMPS
temperature
in
The
downtown Pomeroy at II
a .m. Tuesday was 78 degrees
under cloudy skies .

Skid road fire
kills. eig
• ht. men
1

By D~AN B. WHEELER
made.
PORTLAND, Ore. (UP!) _
"We don't believe there are
Eight men were killed and 26 any more people in there," he
persons injured,. eight of said.
Three fire fighters were
them critically, when an
arson caused fire swept ihJwed while · fighting the
·
through the Pomona Hotel on blaze.
Lt.
Adrian
Byerly
was
skid road late Monday night.
John A. Newvine, 62, who '!badly cut in the face by
lives 17 blocks from the glass," Lambeth said, and
Pomona, was C~.drged early fire fighter Dean Johnston
today with arson and fell down a fire escape while
homicide , Portland Police trying to r~e a str.sggling
Bureau Capt.
Richard tenant. Bill lnglesby was
Walker said. Newvine gave treated for hand and back
no reason for selling the fire, burns and released from a ·
Walker said.
local hospital.
"When w~ got there people
Lambeth said the fire
were hanging by their finger- caused
about
$135 ,000
tips from a third floor ledge," damage to the brick structure
Portland Fire
Bureau which contained shops on the .
aDS
assistant Chief
Wayne first floor and rooms on the
Lambeth said. "You'd see top two.
A fire bureau spokesman
one face at a window and
resCue him .and another one said the blaze was not a
would be right behind him. "spectacular fire because ·
The Gallia-Meigs Com" We had ~eople laying aU there was very little in the
munity Action Agency an - · over the Sldew~~ -som~ way of flames. But the
building was filled with heavy
nounced today ,tha(two new dead, some alive.
.
vans ha·.ve arrived, one for . Bob HarriS, 43, who called smoke, making it very difeach county.
'
tn the ftrst alarm at about II ficult to evacuate the resiTh
.
p.m. when he saw smoke dents."
.
e agency IS acce~ 1mg pouring out of a second story
Newvine was taken ·into
calls for · persons des1rmg window said "one man was custody two and a hall blocks
. transportation to the welfare just ha~·ing from a serond from the scene of the fire,
department .. food stamp noor window by the Crook of Walker sljid. "He was
office, health department, his arm The fire department identified as. having been at
social security office, bureau had arrlved by .that time and the scene " he added "as
'
of employment service office. they got · him down on a well as 'having purchasetl
mental health, senior citizens ladder .
gasoline from a nearby
center and senior nutrition
... 1 saw three , four, five . station."
program ; to name a few.
people hanging out of win:
ROSE TO CLINIC
In Gallia County the phone dows on the second floor and I
1'0 MEE'! l'HURSDAY
Guy Rose ,' . 39, Portland, . number to call is . 446-4612 kept lyellin~ to them, · '(jon:t ,
The committee for the
was taken to Hill Crest Clinic·, extension 72, or 367-7341. In jump. The !!fe department ~ mentally retarded will meet
G-a llipolis , at 12 : 15 p .m . Meigs County, call 992-5605. on the way'."
· at the Meigs County cow-t
Monday by the H"cine E-R · Regular scheduled r.outes will
Lambeth said a thorough • room .. Thursday evening at
Squad .
lie se t up lat et . ·
search of the building was 7:30 , The public is welcome.
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in two counties

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man hours spent, ahd 'Sf
miles on each vehicle. The
$15,000 property lo'ss was the
fire at the Reynolds residence
on Union Ave., and It was
necessary to call MiddleP'Irl,
Rutland and ·Mason for
assistance for water due to
low pressure. Legar slated,
" We hope conditions will be
changed when the new ·water
system is installed."
Out of town calls, loss,
$27,500; 312 man how-s spent;
each vehicle traveled 273
miles. Calls answered were:
Salisbury Twp. 7, Bedford
Twp . 4 (one was a false
alarm ); Columbia Twp. 3
( this contract should be
abandoned as II is too far,
Legar staled); Diester and
Sutton Twps., I each, and
mutual aid call to Middleport,
I.
A letter was read by Jane
Walton, clerk, from architects of Portsmouth in
regard to a new city building
in which they Informed
co.uncil that all grant
programs have been tied up
in the national congress and
that no grants are available.
They suggested a contact be
made with Housing Urban
Development and see if funds
could be obtained .
Jim Woodyard, owner of
the Corner Bar on Spring ·
Ave. and East Main St.
reported that the curbing had
been painted and no parking
· signs .,placed near - his
establishment along Spring
Ave. He asked council to
change the situation -as it is
necessary for him to stay in
business to have parking
facilities. Council agreed to
investigate the area and meet
with Woodyard Wednesday
evening .,
Legar asked council to split
the cost for six to seven
firemen to attend the slate
firemen's convention Aug. 1·
2-3, in Cincinnati in the
amount of $250, to which
council agreed.
Council discussed an ordinance prohibiting parking
on private property. It was
not given a reading as there
are several questions they
wish answered.
Mayor Smith read Police
Chief Jed Webster's report
for June. The department
inveslig&amp;:ed 14 accidents,
(Continued on page 8)

New phone

books out
New telephone directones
are being distributed this
we ek in the Pom~roy­
Middleport area, General
Telphone Co. of Ohio said
today, but customers are
asked to keep their old books
for calling Racine and
Rutland numbers.
Kenley R. Krnn, customer
service manager, said the
new numbers listed for
Racine and Rutland will not
be changed uri til Oct. 4'when
new call-switching equipment is put into use.
In obserVance of the United
Stales · ··!centennial
Celebration in 1976, a
specially
commissioned
pain tlng of the first official
Ameriean Flag appe~~r:; on
the front cover of the
directories. The only words
on the cover are " 1776-1976,
the 200th birthday of owCOWl try ."

The back cover carries an
important notice that the new
Racine and Rulland numbers ·
are.not to be used until Oct. 4.
One directory wiD be sent ·
to each household. In the
past, one book was allotted
for each telephone. Business
customers wiD experience no
change. - Rising ' ~aper and
printing costs are reasons .for
the reduction,_.
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2"- The Daily Sentmel, Middleport·F:omeroy, 0 ., 'tUesday , July 8, 1975

Lmescores

Coal company fmed $122,500
CATLETTSBURG, Ky . May 19, and federal
(UP!) - A federal JUdge prosecutors ·then agreed to
Monday fined the Finley Coal drop 16 other charges, some
Co., of Hyden, Ky., and one of relating to the underground
Its coowners $122,500 for four disaster
violations of federal mme
Officials of the Umted Mme
safety laws comrrutted four • Workers Union of America In
and onehalf years ago
Washmgton have protested
The mine, several days the droppmg of the 16
after bemg cited for the charges
vtolabons, was the scene of a
No )aU sentences were
Dec. 30, 1970. underground levied against the Fmleys,
exploSton m wtpch 38 nuners although sentences of up to
were killed
three years were poSSible
But U.S D1str1ct Court Former Kentucky Gov Bert
Judge H . David Her- Combs, now with a promment
mansdorfer sa1d Monday he LoUisville
law
firm,
found no connectiOn between represented the Finleys.
the admitted violations of
Monday's sentencing had
Dec. 22, 1970, and explosiOn
been delayed from last month
Charles and Stanley Fmley, by a crowded court docket
the brothers who own the
The Finley Miilmg Co and
nune, entered pleas of no the two brothers had been
contest to the four counts md1cted for violating the 1969

Monday 's Baseball Re5ult\ )
By Un•1ed Pres.s lnternattonal

federal Coal Mine fleal.lh and
Safety Law m June, 1971 , by a
federal grand jury at
Pikeville, Ky .
The Finleys and the mining
firm still face four civil suits
10volv10g more than $13
m1lhon In requested damages
brought by widows and other
survivors of the mine vic-

tims
Hermansdorfer levied fines
totaling $85,000 against the
company and $37,500 agamst
Charles F10ley Individually.
Stanley Finley was not fined.
The flOes, by charge, were :
- The company $15,000 and
Charles $2,500 for failing to
have adequate wetting agents
at the cuttmg face of the mme
on Dec 22, 1970
- The company $20,000 and
Charles $25,000 for failue to
mst1tute an adequate search
program for smokmg and
other
Inflammable matermls
By Bertha Parker
Due to the Free Metho&lt;llst on Dec 22
- The company $25,000 and
Cam.!' Meetmg at Mansfield,
Charles
$10,000 for not
Sab5ath School attendance
July was only 50 Rev Cecil prov1d10g self-rescuers
breathing
Wise of Chester was guest (e mergency
speaker Sunday mornmg, devtces) (Or aU underground
o!fer10g from all services was employes on the same date .
- The company $25,000 for
$175 85.
us10g Impermissible ex·
~·· Edna Schaefer has
been returned home from plosiVes on Dec 22 while
Veterans Memorial Hospital. blasting out a work area In
Mr and Mrs Erney Wells, the nune.
Hermansdorfer said he
Middleport, called on Mr and
r esurrected a figure of
Mrs
Norman Schaefer levied the largest fine against
$17,()()().plus."
Charles Finley for failmg to
" We reported that but not recently
Mr
Edward
Dailey, mstltute a search procedure
the full $100,000 "
because he held a "higher
Gurney said that when he Wilkesville, VISited recently iegree of accountability "
first learned of Williams' With Mr 'and Mrs Harmon
activities, he d1d not recall if Fox
Mr Roy Howell, Indiana, IS
he asked James Groot, hiS
former
adm1mstrative spend10g some lime with h1s
assistant, if he had been family here
Mr and Mrs. Harmon Fox OLIVER HONORED
aware of the fundraiSmg
VISited
Sunday With Mr and , SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) " We didn't go into
Mrs
Johnny
Douglas who are Outfielder AI Oliver of the
specifics," he sa•d of the
Pittsburgh Pirates was
conversation. "I just asked , camping at Reedsville.
Mr and Mrs Charles Karr , named National League
him to set up a meeting for
Mrs
Katy Parker, Mrs
Player of the Week, league
me with Williams and I told
Bertha
Parker
and
Mrs
Dale
Pres1denl Charles S. Feeney
him to stop.
Coleman
attended
the
ann'ounced
Monday
" ThiS was a total shock to
Veterans
Memonal
Hospital
Oliver
hit
a boommg .500
me ."
Gurney, Bastien and for- p1cmc Sunday at Kyger for the week, with nme runs
scored and eight runs batted
mer Federal Housing Ad· Creek
Mr Vern Story, Colwnbus, m. His 16 hits 10cluded three
miniStration officials Ralph
1s
spendmg two weeks doubles, a triple and one
Koontz and K. Wayne SWiger
homer His season's batting
are charged with ralSlug an vacatwn w1th h1s family here
Mr
and
Mrs
Edward
average
stands at 294.
Illegal political slush fund
It was the third time m hns
through contributions from Archer , Roseville , Mrs
Ph1lhs
Archer,
Happy
career
that Oliver has been
Florida builders who were
Hollow,
v1s1ted
Sunday
with
of the week He
named
player
promised Federal Housing
Authority favors through Mr and Mrs . Norman won the award 10 1\Prli, 1973,
Schaefer
and August, 1974
Gurney's office m return.
Gurney, 61, also •s charged
with bribery, rece1vmg
unlawful compensation and
four counts of lymg to a grand
POINT PLEASANT - Mrs died Monday m Pleasant
jury
Mary Magdeline Wamsley Valley Hospital endmg an
Brown, 86, Pomt Plea,sant. Illness of several years.
Funeral services w1ll be
held Thursday at 2 p m from
the Stevens Funeral Home
w1th Rev George Oiler of.
ficlabng and burial m SunAll day the concessiOn
foumey Scores
crest Cemetery Fnends will
stand workers were busy
Pee Wee
be received at the funeral
seiling hot dogs, soft drinks,
Mason Angels 5.(1 forfeit home after 6 p m Tuesday
snow cones and potato chips. New Haven Yankees, New
Mrs Brown, a daughter of
A big thanks to all who Haven Dodgers 5-4 Hartford the late B S and Nancy J
helped In any way to make Bullets, Mason Angels 5'0 Wamsley, was born m Vmton,
the day one worth remem· forfeit New Haven Giants, Ohw. She was married to the
Mason Cubs 1!&gt;-2 New Haven late Harry H. Brown m 1914
bering .
To climax the day's events, Dodgers, Mason Cube 8-5 She was a member of the
the Mason Volwiteer Fire Mason Angels.
Church of God
Uttle League
Dept. held a ''magnificent
Survivors mclude four
Mason Tigers 3-2 Mason
fireworks d~lay . "
daughters, Mrs W H (Opal)
The annual celebration was Rangers, New Haven Cube 3Neal, Pomt Pleasant; Mrs
C&lt;Hlponsored by the Mason 2 New Haven Reds, Hartford
John (Thelma) Cadle, Baton
Recreation Foundation and Hornets 11-9 Mason Tigers,
Rouge, La.; Mrs. Robert
the Mason Fire Dept.
NI!\V Haven Cubs 12-2 Hart·
(Betty) Shiflet, Gallipolis,
The 1975 Mason Baseball ford Hornets.
and
Mrs . Thomas (Esta)
•· Pony League
"
Program sponsors were: B &amp;
Barton, Nederlan, Texas;
(New Haven) Citizens
B Market, Bob's Market,
two brothers, Charles WamsBurton's Sunoco, Fogelsong National 'Bank 4-3 Mason
ley, Pomt Pleasant, and
Funeral
Home,
Jim's Merchants, New Haven
Virgil Wamsley, Cheshire,
Camper Sales, Mason Barber Carpents Local 3-1 Hartford
and four sisters, Mrs. Clara
Shop, Mason Bowling Center, Padres,
(New Haven)
Staats, New Haven ; Rose
Mason County Bank, Ma!IOn Citizens National Bank 8-7
Wamsley, Pmnt Pleasant;
Fire Dept., Pickens Hard· Carpenters Local.
V1rg1ma King, Pomeroy, and
ware Co., Point Pleasant'·
Jr. Girls SoftbaU
Mabel Hostem, Detrmt; 24
Mason Auto Glasa, Riverside
Letart
27·17
Mason,
grandchildren, and 34 greatPomeroy 23-8 Rutland,
Golf Club and Vista No, 1.
grandchildren.
Pomeroy 21-17 Letart.

Laurel Oiff
News Notes

Explained late
By ORVAL JACKSON
TAMPA, Fla . (UP!)
Former U S Sen Edward
Gurney says he waited two
years to report most of the
$100,000 collected for hun by
fund-raiSer Larry Williams m
1971 and 1972 because there
was no way to explain It.
Gurney
completed
testunony Monday after four
days on the witness stand at
his
federal
briberyconspiracy trml.
The attorney for former
Gurney aide Joseph Bastien,
one of three c&lt;Hlelendants In
the federal trial, appeared
likely to begin hiS case today,
although Gurney's attorney,
C. Harris Dittmar, had not
formally rested his case
Under cross-&lt;!xammation
by
prosecutor
Harvey
Schlesmger, Gurney said he
could not report the funds
after hearing of their
existence on June 11, 1972,
• because he had no campaign
organization.
• "I think we reported a part
• of It after thiS thing surfaced
In 1973," Gurney said . "I had
a rundown made of the
money spent for expenses of
our field offices . We

Mrs. Mary Brown, 86, dies

Big day had by all on 4th
1By Elsie

Roach
MASON, W. Va - July
Fourth was an exciting day
for all who attended the
annual celebration and
·baseball tournaments.
Thursday evening a free
cracker dance was held at
the fire station with music by
the Jay Stewart band.
Friday, the Fourth, at 9
a .m. the games started
Champions crowned were .
Pee Wee - Mason Cubs, 11-5
over the Mason Angels
Little League New
·Haven Cubs 12-2 over the
'Hartford Hornets.
Pony League - Citizens
National Bank of New Haven
8-7 over Carpenters' Local.
Jr. Girls Softball
Pomeroy 21-17 over Letart.
Men's Slow Pitch Softball
- Mason Oldtimers 16'9 over
Mason Fire Dept. Each
champion team received a
trophy.

DR. LAMB
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_Aspirin won't slow bone decay
•

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By-Lawrence E. Lamb, M.I:J.
DEA!'l DR LAMB - Your
column on " Softer Bones
Come w1th Age" was of
particular 10terest to me
My aWJt has osteoporosis¢
the spine and has had several
compressed vertebrae and
has been on calc1wn, vitamin
D and fiuorlde for some time.
However, a friend of hers
mentioned a drug, Mbtrin,
which IS ~upposed to be a new
drug used for thiS condition,
~ as well as for arthritis.
Are you familiar with this
type drug, and ~ll'also being
used for osteoporlsis? I~.
Motrln mostly a pam kiilin@
drug1
•
DEAR READER - Motrln
Is a new drug In the Umted
States. It hJ!s been used for
some time In canada and"
other cCIIIJltrles. Because 1t ~
new It Is getting a certain
amount of play. You should
"IIlii* of It u a substitute for
Nflltrln. Ills mostly for pain

commonly used for · In·
flammat10n The same is true
of aspirm.
Neither Motron nor aspmn
will arrest or slow down the
process of dissolving bones
Wllh age that so commonly
occurs after the menopause
m women, and later In men.
Both may help to relieve any
associated pam from the
condition. The medicines
your aWlt IS already taking
are the ones used to help slow
or stop the bone softening
process.
Send your quesUons to Dr.
Latnb in care of this
newspaper, P . 0. Box 1551,
radio City Station, New York,
NY 10019. For mformatwn on
arthritis, send 50 cents and a
ion g, self-addressed,
stamped envelop~ to the
· 'l&amp;me address and ask for the
Health Letter nwnber 4-10 on
osteoarthritis.
DEAR DR LAMB - On
two or three occasions I have
lll!Uef! •
~ ~'
read some unsettling comThe manufacturer~ claim 1t ments concerning the ~lie of
II uaeful ' in larger .doses1ban

"I

¥

•

I

\

Valmm One article Indicated
that it was habit forming but
did not say that usage would
lead to addiction
I have· bi!en usmg Valium
for quite some tune and
didn'teven know that it was a
tranqUilizer when I first
started using it. Is there any
factual information on its
dangers? In view of the large
nwnber or' persons uSing
Vahum, I'm sure many
people would jo10 me in
welcoming your views on 11.
It :w:as prescribed for me to
treall Menlere's DISease.
DEAR READER - T'lere
is no completely safe
medicine. Even life-giving
oxygen can kill you. AlSo,
because people behave so
differently 1!1 respon_lle to
medicines, what saves one
person's life can Induce a
fatal reaction In another.
Recently efforts have been
made to prevent abuse of
prolonged habitual use of
Vallwn through strict federal
controls.
(

Valiwn is a good medicine.
It causes few problems and
helps a lot of people. As With
other ~icmes there is a list
of Pospible bad effects as long
as your arm The most
"""hmon problems, though,
{Ire over responsiveness to
the ,tranquilizing effects,
inducmg drowsmess and
fatigue . Some patients have
trouble w1th their balance
which we call ataxia.
In people taking Vallurn a
long t1me there IS occasionally a reductiOIJ In
formation of white blood cells
and disturbance in liver
function. For this reason
periodic evaluation of "the
blood count and liver function
IS 8 good Idea .
The other point I'd like to
stress IS that Vallwn doesn't
nux well w1th alcohol. Both
depress lhe function 'of the
nervous sy,s;etn. ·Those who
uae Vahwn ,should not use
alcohol or other sedatives or
tranquilizers except under a
doctor 's directions

•

•r

By JOHN KNUDSEN
MINNEAPOLIS, Minn.
( UPI) - U there were no
"Rozelle Rule" In the
National Football League,
the top players would move to
pleasant climates and glamor
ctties.
That was the testimony In
U.S. District Cow1 Monday of
defense witnesses Willie
Davis, former defensive end
for the Green Bay Packers,
and Lamar Hunt, owner of
the Kansas City Chiefs.
Fifteen
players
are
challenging the rule which
empowers
NFL
9om·
rmssioner Pete Rozelle to set
compensation when an
athlete plays out his option
with one team and signs With
another club.
"Yes, I feel there should be
some form of compensation,"
said Davis, an all11ro six

3!... The Dail~ Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, July 8, 1975

Indians were
outhit but,
won 14 to 9

Tigers double
Yanks' score

Scioto results

Softball play

Syracuse club
slugged out

16-2 victory

By FRED McMANE
UPI Sporta Writer
Hi! statistics speak out, but
' the name AI Hrabosky
" remains VIrtually
' anonymous
With a name like Hrabosky
and the best reUef pitching
credentials m the National
League , it would appsr
there would be no difficulty m
becommg ret'ognlzeq
But, the 26-year-()Jd left.
bander of the St LOUIS
Cardmals
has
been

overlooked,
or
unapprectated, m the selection for
next Tuesday's All.stllr game
at Milwaukee.
Hrabosky, the No. 1 relief
)lltcher In the NL so far th1s
season, picked up hiS 14th
save, tops m the league,
Monday mght when the
Cardinals defeated the
Montreal Expos 8-6, but he
was saddened to learn that he
had mot been selected by Los
An geles manager Walter
Alston of the Los Angeles)

Blazers sweep ,
Syracuse in 2
CHESHIRE
The
Cheshire Blazers Pony
baseball team took to their
home field last week to sweep
a pair of games fr om
Syracuse by scores of 12.0
and 6-0 These two shutouts
moved the Blazers shutout
mark to SIX on the year
Cheshire moved the1r record
to 1~1 for a share of fir st
place with the Pomeroy A-s
who are also 1().1
In the first game Steve
Baird went to the mound to
take the wm while Riffle was
stuck w1th th~ loss
Cheshire )wnped right on
the ball by scormg six runs 10
the first, four m the second
, and two m the third
Here's how Cheshire's big
10mng
went
R1ck
Wmebrenner opened the
game w1th a tnple and was
followed with s10gles by
Dallas Sayre and Baird, off
Slone reached on a fielder 's
chmce before Claude Cornelius doubled and Greg
Mulford smgled
The game was shortened by
the 12 run rule, which only
went five 10mngs
For the p1tchmg statistics,
Balfd went 5 mmngs, fanmng
15, walking 1, and g1vmg up 2
hits For Syracuse Riffle
went two and two-thirds
mmngs f.anning 3, walkmg 4,
g1v10g up 10 hits and 12 runs ,
Hendricks came on m relief
and fanned 3 and allowed one

Yanks win 4-3
over Pirates

ArtCarved
wedding
nngs.

GM confirms
across board

1M

11'

Th•s Week's Spec1al

r:;:;;;;:;:::l··
a~:~~•

USED CARS

71 OLDS. CUT.
SUPREME CPE.
VB. auto , P S , P B , V

roof. a1r NICE'

hi I
Hitters m the first game for
Syracuse
were
Kelley
Wme brenner w1 th a double
and R1ffle with a smgle.
For Cheshire Winebrenner
had a lnple and a smgle.
Sayre a double and smgle
with 2 RB!s, Baird a double
and 2 smgles w1th I RBI; Jeff
Slone a double and 1 RBI ,
J1m Harris a triple and three
RB!s , Cornelius a double and
2 RB!s, and Mulford a smgle
and I RBI
As a team, Cheshire was 11
for 27 a t the pla te for- a 444
batting avera ge Cheshir e
committed only one error
SECOND GAME
In the second game, which
was won 6-0 by Cheshire,
Claude Cornelius picked up
the wm 10 gmng five and twothirds 1hmngs He struck out 7
walked 2, and gave up 3 h1ts
Jeff Slone turned m a fme
rehef performance gomg one
and one-third He fanned 3
and walked 1 He did not g1ve
up a h1t 1n that lime
For Syracuse, flendncks
went the distance fanmng 3,
glVlng up 4 walks on 9 hits and
6 runs
Cheshire '6eored m the
second mmng by gethng 1
run, 4 m the fourth and I m ore
m the sixth
Here 's how Cheshire 's b1g
mmng went
Cornelius
reached on an error, Mulford
and Amos smgled, Ph1lhps
walked, W10ebrenn er
smgled, Sayre~walked, Baird
reached on a fielder's chOice
and Slone got on by an error
Gettmg the hits for
Syracuse were Forbes , a
double and Wmebrenner and
Riffle each ~ single .
Sharmg the 9 hits fgr
Cheshire
were
R
Wmebr enner a sui'gle and 2
RB!s, Sayre a smgle , Baird a
double and RBI , Slone a
tr1ple and smgle w1th 1 RBI ,
Harns a smgle, Mulford a
double and smgle and I RBI
and Amos a smgle and a RBI
Cheshire was 9 for 30 for a
300
batting
average
Cheshire did not commit an

error

•2595

Cheshlfe will play Racine
this evemng, the only team to
defeat Cheshire Ra c me
defeated the Blazers 2·1 10 10
mmngs at Racme m an
argwnimt.mfested game The
game will hegui at 6 p m at
Cheshire's home park

Karr &amp; Van landt
You'll L1ke Our Quality
Way of Domg Busme_~
GMAC FINANCING'

992 5342

Pomeroy

Open Evenings 1hl 6 00

Tll5 p.m Sal

TM

.. !.: :· .,_

... ,

For those
who believe
in lasting
. love.

rtCatved

GOESSLER'S

Jewelry Store

a

•

'

.

,L

/

Dodgers to represent the NL
m the annual midseason
ClaSSlC .
Instead
of
selechng
Hrabosky as one of his two
relief pitchers, Alston went
for h1s own Mike Marshall,
who missed a total of SIX
weeks earlier this season
an
mJury,
and
w1th
Philadelphia's Tug McGraw,
who also was disabled for a
time.
Ted Sunmons, who catches
Hrabosky regularly, thinks
Alston made a miStake
"If I had to p1ck a pitcher
from Marshall, McGraw ljDd
Hrabosky ," said Sunmons,
"I'd take 'AI "
Smunons, of cour se, lS
preJudiced, but there IS no
doubt Hrabosky had kept the
Cardinals m the race thus far
He relieved a battered Ron
Reed m the seventh Innmg
Monday rught and protected
an 11-5 lead untU the n10th
when the Giants touched hun
for a harmless run.
It was only the second run
Hrabosky has allowed m hiS
last 14 appearances. In that
span, he has pitched 15 2-3
mnings, struck out 16, won
two games and saved eight
Reed benefl tied from

•
Hrabosky's rehef work to will ' h1s seventh J"oss m 14
his nmth game aga10st eight declSlons
Mels 3, Braves 1
losses, ' but hiS fifth in ~1ght
decisions smce commg to the
Rusty Staub and Dave
Cardinals from the Atlanta Kmgman hit homers m
Braves on May 28.
support of Hank Webb's SIX·
The Cardmals scored four hit pitching as the Mets
timeS m the first mnmg . w1th &lt;tefea ted the Braves. Staub's
LuiS Melendez' triple and ~er was a solo shot m the
Ken Reitz' double the b1g hits, fourth wh'ue Kingman , who
and Sunmons added a two- struck out hiS four other
times at bat, hit a two-run
run homer m the fifth.
In the only other scheduled homer In the seventh.
NL
games, Cin c mnah Astros 5, Expos 1
,
defeated Philadelphia 7-3 ,
Wilbur Howard 's tw&lt;&gt;-run
New York beat Atlanta 3-1, smgle capped a fiv e-run
Houston whipped Moptreal 5- fourth mnmg which enabled
•
1 and Pittsburgh blanked the Astros
to defeat the
Expos Larry Dierker went
Chicago 5.(1
New York topped Texa1 f&gt;-2, the distance for Houston,
Boston defeated Minnesota 6- ailowmg only eight hits, to
3, DetrOit edged Ch
2-1, gam his eighth VIctory while
trmt
Steve Rogers went the route
Milwaukee mppe
and
Oaklan
downerl"--.L,r Montreal m suffermg hiS
Cleveland 7-3
Amencan seve
loss m 12 games
League games.
Pirates , Cubs 0
Re ds 7, Ph es 3
AI Oliver hit a three-run
Tony Perez and George homer m the ninth mnmg and
Foster hit two-nm homers to three pitchers combmed on a
power the Reds to victory five -hitter to spark the
over the Phillies The victory Pirates' victory over the
boosted the Reds ' lead to 81'. Cubs Ken Brett, Ramon
games over Los Angeles m Hernal)dez and Dave Giusti
the NL West. Pat Darcy went blanked the Cubs w1th Brett
eight mnings to gam hiS gammg credit for hi• fifth win
fourth wm m nlne decisions m seven decisions
while Steve Carlton suffe red

Pomt "Pleasant City Ice and only four hits but took fd·
Fuel, the defendmg cham· vantage of walks for its win.
p1ons, capt ured the l1rst Get!mg hits for the Winners
game of the 17th Annual we~e Mark Dooley; Mike
Kyger Creek Tournament for Spears, Todd Pr•tlmore and
Li t tl e Leaguers Monday David Spencer
Lea ding the Middleport
mght. 13·9· over the Mid·
attack
were Keith Pwnmel
dleport
Mets
34 J) 44 i 14
Monlr~al
and
Tye
Herman with two
West
In other games, Vinton's
w 1 pet
g b
Dodgers blasted the Rutland h1ts each. Bob Fox and John
Ctnc tnnat•
55 i 9 655
Bla ke had the only other
Los Angeles
J7 38 553 8' • Reds, 1!&gt;-3 and pomeroy "s
San FranCISCO 39 44 470 15 1 • Giants scored an 11.0 romp
Middleport hits
San Otego
38 45 458 16 1 ,
C Allen hurled a no-bitter
over the Galhpohs Sena tors
Atlanta
36 46 439 18
Houston
30 57 345 16 1,
Pmnt Pleasant musteted In pacmg the Pomeroy Giants
Monday ' s Res'l!llh
to their easy Win over the
P•ttsburgh 5 Chtcago 0
New York 3 Allanta .1
Gal hpoils Senators Leading
Houston 5 Montrea l 1
the Giant attack were J
Sl LOUIS 8 San F ran ctsco 6
C1nctnna t t 1 P hlladelphta 3
F ields, C McKmney, R
(O nly gam es schedul ed)
WINNERS NOTED
Smith , and T Jewell with two
Toda v's Proa bal e Ptfch ers
( All Ttm es E OT )
h1ts each
San 0 1ego (Jon es
11 51 at
The
Onoles
and
Tigers
D Spencer, M Martin, G
Ch1cago {S tone 6 31 7 30 P m
New York ( Koosman 7 6 ) a•
posted v1cto n es Monda y Deel, B Hamilton, J . Moore
Allanla (Morl an 9 81 7 35 p m
mght m the Gall ipolis and D Roberts slammed two
Los An ge les fMesse rsm tl h 12 5 )
at P1f1Sburgh (E il tS 6 4) 7 35
Swnmer Leag ue program or more hits
10 leading
pm
Onoles
defeated
the
Red
The
Vmton
's
Dodgers
to a 15-3
Phtlade lph•a (Und erwood 9 5 )
at Cmcmnatt 1No l an 7 SJ 8 05
Sox, 11-5 while the Tigers victory over the RutlQlld
pm
dwnped the Cubs 14-4
Reds m the tournament's last
Sa n F ra netsco {Falcone 6 61 at
St LOUIS i Gtbson 7 '! J 8 JO
of three openm g games
pm
Monday
n1ght
Bollin,
Montrea l (Renko o1 51 at Ho us
ton (Roberts 4 IOJ 8 35 p m
Snowden and Williamson had
Wednesday's Games
Son Otego at Ch tcago
h1ts for the Reds
New York at Atlanta n 1ght
Tomght , the Pomeroy
Montr eal at Houston n tghl
Pirates meet the Cheshire
Los Angeles at
P ti!Sburgh
n ghl
Tigers,
Syracuse's Astros
San FranCtSCO at Sl
loutS
battle the Middleport In·
n1ghl
Ph •lade lphta
at
Ctnc, n natl
Ma tor L eague Leaden.
d1ans, and Pt Pleasant
n •gh t
By Untted Press I nt er nationa l
Johnson's Market play the
l eadtng Batters
( ba sed on 200 at bah )
Galhpoils
White Sox
Am encan L eag ue

Major Lea9uc Stand tngs
B v Untied Press International
Naltona l L ea gue
East
w 1 pet 9 b
so 31 617 1
Ptllsbur g h
47 ) 7 560 4 1
Phtladelphta
4\ 38
s 19 8
New York
39 47 481 11
St LOUIS
39 45 46A 1? 1 'I
Ch1cago

Leaders

Tony he beet long one
CINCINNATI (UP! ) That was a Babe Ruth model
bat Tony Perez used to slug
his two-run homer as the
Reds knocked off the Phillies,
7-3, Monday mght In the
opener of a three-game senes
here.
And Tony's homer, which
landed In the red seats, the
uppermost
section
of
Riverfront Stadium, was one
which would have done the
Babe proud
"The Babe never h1t one
that far," said a grmrung
Perez "Well, not righthanded anyway "

Perez's tw~run homer was
one of two unloaded by the
Reds as they boosted' their
lead over the idle Dodgers to
8 1-2 games m the National
League West.
George Foster slammed
the other homer , his 15th of
the season and one which
came after a walk to Perez
The homers were two of
rune hits the Reds made as
Pat Darcy, With mnth mnmg
help from Rawly Eastwick,
notched his fourth victory m

East

w

three straight singles, acnme deciStons
Perez's homer, his lith of counted for the other two runs
the season, was only the third m the innmg
The second smgle by
hit mto the red seats since the
Reds moved mto the stadium Bench, who also sWiped two
bases during the mght to g1ve
June 30, 1970.
And of the other two , both him seven m seven attempts
hit m 1970, Tony ·h•t one of th1s season, scored Griffe/
them Montreal's Bob Bailey w1th the Reds' fourth run In
the third mrung
~ ci&lt;, · •ne other&gt;rMerv Rettenmund , leading
"1 don ' " ink that was the
longest homer I ever hit," off the sixth with a walk,
S8ld Tony. " I still say the came home w1th the Reds'
longest was the one I hit in fifth run on a throwing error
Milwaukee m 1965. The bali by D1ck Allen
Foster' s two-run homer
cleared the left held
wound
up the Reds' scor10g m
bleachers and landed in the
the seventh
parkmg lot
" If George's homer had not
" I hope I go to the All...Star
gone
over the fen ce , It'd goM
game 10 Milwaukee," added
Perez " Then, I show Joe through 1t," exclauned the
and
Davey Reds' Pete Rose
(Morgan)
" I've never seen anyone hit
(ConcepciOn) where I hit that
more
vicious homers than
homer''
A triple by Ken Griffey and Foster," chuned m Reds
Morgan 's sacnf1ce gave the coach Alex Grammas " Nol
Reds the first of the 1r three even Willie Stargell or W1l11e
runs In the first mnmg as they McCovey
" Foster ISn't as big as
tagged Steve Carlton with hiS
seventh loss against seven Stargell and McCovey," said
Grammas , " but he 's really
VIc tones
Perez's homer, follow10g put together "
the first of Johnny Bench's

Brewers' elixer is youth
By BILL MADDEN
UP! Sports Writer
Nobody can understand
how the Milwaukee Brewers
keep hangmg
10
the
American League East
pennant chase
The secret IS youth.
First there's 19-year old
Robin Yount, young!'5t player
m the A.L., who's still among
the top hitting shorstops m
the league at 284. And , of
course, there's been the two
outfielders with the funny
names, Sixto Lezcano ( 21)
and Gorman Thomas ( 24) both of whom have contributed consiStently of late m
the home run and RBI
department
And Monday mght, it was a
24-year old second baseman
named Bobby Sheldon,
playing In only h1s second
game this year, that kept the

surpriSmg Brewers a game
behind the Boston Red Sox m
the A L East Before a
National TV audience,
Sheldon,
playmg . only
becuase of a back mJury to
regUlar Brewer second baseman Pedro Garcia, drove In
three runs - mcludmg the
game-wmner -in a 3-for-4
rught at the plate durmg a 4-3
Milwaukee victory over the
Kansas C1ty Royals
" ThiS was JUS! great for
me, " Sheldon said after
slapping a bases-loaded t'fO·
out single m the sixth mnmg
that gave the Brewers and
winner Jim Slaton ( 7~) their
fmal run "Three hits and
three RB!s on national TV
has got to be as great a thrill
as you can have."
Sheldon, recalled from Sacramento earUer m the week,
also singled home a run In the

SAYRE H~RDW-~RE
NEW HAVEN W.VA. ,

...

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UP! ) Basketball player Johnny
Neumann testified Monday
that Umvers•ty of Mississippi
athletic officials paid all
living expenses for him and
his wife m 1970 and 1971, but
the MISSISSippi offiCials
promptly denied thl charge
The former Ole MISS 8\:Br,
now with the Vrrgmm Squires
of the American Basketball
Association, testified at hiS
divorce proceeding that the
school paid for rent,
groceru;s and other bills fot
the couple
" Anybody that knows any·
thing about ,o;ports knows
basketball players are given
&amp;d -there were a lot of
alurnm that used to give us
$100 here, $100 there Coach
(Robert) JarviS gave me the
money to go to Alabama to
get married,'.' he testified.
He also told the court hiS
wife took a JOb arranged by
the athletiC department
because the school wanted
the couple to be able to show

·some rncome
"I think I would have
known about 11 if there was
anythmg illegal gomg on,"
Athletic Director John
Vaught said m Oxford " I
hate to say thiS about the boy,
but we all know he's not
reliable. I would question
whether he told the truth as
unrelmble as he IS."
" I did not give hun the

money to get marr1ed, "
Jarvis said " I think 1t IS best
a player IS not married - •t
Just brmgs on
more
problems "
Neumann's wtfe, Mrs
Carolyn Devmey- Neumann,
22, filed for divorce m August,
1974, on grounds of cruel and
inhuii]an treatment. They
were mamed the summer
betweeh .Neumann's fresh·
' sophomore years. ,
m a n I!Jl&lt;\
Th,e 24-year-()ld star left Ole
Miss ·after hls sophomore
year to jom the ABA Memphis team He staye!l w1th
Memphis for 2- v, yea r s
before JOining the..lltah Sta~s

City Ice &amp; Fuel
romps over Mets·

BASEBALL

fifth after a double by catcher
Charlie Moore
Elsewhere m the American
League Monday, Boston put
away Mmnesota 6-3, Detroit
shaded ChiCago 2-1, New
York downed Texas f&gt;-2, and
Oakland
crmsed
past
Cleveland 7.J
Over m the National
League, 1t was Pittsburgh
blanking Chicago 5.(1, New
York atop Atlanta 3-1, Cincinnati drubbing
Philadelphia 7-3, St LoUIS
over San Francisco ~. and
Houston on top of Montreal :;.
1
Red Sox 6, Twins 3
Rookie Jun Rice belted a
three-run frrst-mnmg homer
and comebacker Rick W1se
lasted SIX mnmgs to gam his
lOth tr1wnph of the season as
the Red Sox mamtamed their

Neumann had it real good

~

~

\

Alst~n . ignores NL '~ best .r eliefer

RJzelle.'rule is needed

times for the powerful at KanBas City," Hunt s*ld, Packer teams of the 1964m. "I "but I think there would be
feel very strongly that teams some Interest in leaving.
F ratl tng f9J Dettore ( 9l and
are built around certain We'd be WOI"Se' off because
Mrtterwald WP ~ Brett ( S 2)
playerS at times and for one we'd have an unstable
LP Reusche l (5 1Ql H.R - Oitv
(9)
of those players to leave product. n.e--iiiurie would
without restraint would hold true for e~ry team."
N ew Yor k
000 100 2oo- 3 8 1
At l anta
000 000 100- I 6 0
create a morale problem."
Webb
(2 3)
and
Grote
Davis, who played with
Easterly Beard ( 7) Sosa 18 )
and Correll LP Easterly ( 1 3 )
Bart Starr, Jim Taylor and
HRs Staub (8t h )
K.ngman
Paul Hornung on three
( 14th)
straight world champion
San F ran
001 020 201- 6 14 0
teams under coach Vince
5 1 l.OUIS
410 020 lOX- 8 1J 0
Ca ldwell , Heaverlo { 6) La
Lombardi, aaid he thinks
velle (8J and H tl l
Reed.
most players today accept
Hrabosky (71 and Stm mons
W P- Reed (9 8 ) LP- Ca ldwt- 11
the "Rozelle Rule."
{5 8) HR St mmons ( 11th)
The Middleport Indians
U the rule were removed, were outh1t 8-7 by the Salem
Phtl a
000 200 001 - 3 10 1
he said, "They'd leave a city
Cmcy
301 001 20x- 7 9 0
Center Pirates but came out
or team they didn't par·
Carlton
Hoerner
18) and
on the big end of the score as
Oates . Darc y, Eastwtck (9) and
tlcularly
want
to
be
with."
Bench WP - Dar cy ( 4 SJ LP they walloped the Pirates 14-9
DaVJS, now a pro football
Carllon 17 7J HRs Perez
Monday.
The win put the
( lith ) Foster {15th )
color analyst for a television
Indians' record at 2-1 In the
network and a Los Angeles second half of play and the
M ontreal
000 100 oob--- 1 8 0
Houston
000 500 OO•- S A 0
area beer distributor, aald
Rogers {5 n and Car t er .
loS$ made the Pirates slate ~
the majority of players would
Oterker f 8 9) and J$nson
3.
prefer to play for teams on
Shane Smith started onJ!"
the West Coast and Miami, mound for the Indians, going
Amencan League
Chtcago
010 000 ooo-- 1 8 o
where the weather is
4 mn!ngs before beln~
Detrott
000 200 OOx - 2 8 0
favorable,
or in the large relieved by April King who
K aat ( 13 5) and Down.ng
Walk er (3 6 ) anq Freehan HR
metropolitan areas, such 8ll
worked 1 mnlng, and finally,
- Hen der!ton (4t h )
New York or ChicagQ.
by John Cremeans, who
Milwaukee
000 11 2 ooo- 4 13 1
Hunt said elimination of the
worked 1 inning .
Kansas Ctty 000 300 ooo- 3 11 o
rule would lead to "subSlat on , Rodr•ouez (7l and
Stony Johnson started on
Moore
Fttzmorrts , McDaniel
stantially more player
the hill for the Pirates and
( 6) and Sttnson WP - Siaton (7
movement than is the case
8) LP F tt zmorrt s (9 Sl
went 2 mnings; Tackett went
The Pomeroy Tigers today.
2, and Ed Lester pitched 4.
Mtnnesota
100 001 001 - 3 8 0
"Maybe not a mass exodus
Boston
400 010 01 x - 6 8 1 doubled the score on the
Hitters for the Indians were
Hug hes
A lbury
rel and Pomeroy
Yankees
m
Borgmann Wtse Burton (7) ,
Steve Carson w1th a
Pomeroy little League play
Willoughb y ( 7) and Blackwell
homerun , double, and single,
WP - Wts e ( 10 6 ) LP - Hughes Monday night by downing the
(7 7) HR - Rtce 1131h)
and Steve Hood a homerun
Yanks 84. Steve Ohlinger
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Red and double, and Scott Har·
Te~~.as
200 000 ooo--- 2 9 o went the distance and picked
VIking won the featured ting~r and Dave Hoffman
New York
100 200 20•- S 6 1
up the wm for the Tigers as he eighth race, a $1,300 pace, at
Hands (5 51 and Sundberg ,
each had a smgle.
Medt ch 0 10 ) and Munson HRs fanned 15 and walked 6.
Scioto
Downs
here
Mooday,
- Whtt e {7th) , Nettles ( 14th )
For the Pirates K. Thomas
Harvey Whitlatch also went covering the one.rnile In 2:06
Mason (2nd)
homered,
tripled,
and
the distance for the Yankees, and returning $8.40, $3.40 and
doubled;
W.
Garnes
had
a
Cleveland
000 000 12Q- J 8 0
Oakland
031 001 Tli - 7 10 0 and was tagged With the loss
$2.60.
homerun and single, Ed
E c kersley , Brown {7) and
Whitlatch fanned 10 and
Back by one and one- Lester, Denms Thornton and
EiltS , Perry F angers (7) and
walked 5.
Tenace WP - Perry (3 7l LPquarter length was Early Terry Hutton each had a
Eckersley 15 2 ) HR S- WIIIiam s
The Yankees scored ail Retirement and Racealot
IJOthl . Rud1 2 (10th , 11th ).
single
four of thell' runs m the thrrd showed.
Powell ( 1-Jth l
Inning after being down 3-0,
..
A 4-8 nlghUy double combo
·= ·=· .·:·
then led 4-3 un Ill the Tigers of Moon Drop and Jeffs
scored a sihgle run m the Pretty Boy pa1d $99.80.
Pete justified
fifth The Tigers i!dded four
Meigs Jr. and Sr. Girls
Attendance was 4,313 and
msurance markers m the the night's handle was . Softball.
now in crying
sncth.
SENIOR
$266,153.
For the Winmng Tigers
Tuesday, July 8 Hits 'N
'I wuzz robbed'
Ohlinger had a homerun and
Misses vs. New Haven at New
single, Kevm Smith a double
Haven - 6:15.
and
single,
and
gettmg
Tues , July 8 Forest Run vs
CINCINNATI (UP!) '
M &amp; Rat Racine - 7:15.
The pollee and not umpires, smgles were R1~h Icenhower,
are hearing Pete Rose's Robbie Davis and Laura
Thurs , July 10 M - R vs
latest complaint that "I wuz Sm1th (bunt and smgle). For
Hits 'N Misses at Minersville
the Yankees, Mike Whitlatch
robbed."
- 6: 15.
A restaurant owned by the and J1mm1e Snyder each
Forest Run vs. New Haven
smgles
Cincinnati Reds star was
at New Haven - 6: 15.
Syracuse defeated
robbed of $3,700 over the
JR. LEAGUE
Pomeroy 16-; Sunday In
weekend.
Wt\41., July 9
Independent Baseball action
A restaurant hostess said a
Forest Run vs. Letart at
Rick Ash started on the Letart- 6:15.
man had handed her a dollar
mound for the winners and
bill and asked for change.
Mason vs. New Haven at'
picked up the win go10g seven Mason - 6·15
When she went to the cash
mnmgs. Rick Van Matre
register the man said,
Rutland vs. Pantherettes at
In Pomeroy Little League f1015hed, working the eighth Rutland- 6:15.
" Forget the change and give
action the Pirates mpped the and nmth inni!)gs.
me your bills."
Pomeroy vs. Racine at '
Tim Demoskey was the Racine - 7:15.
The hostess said the man Yankees 4-3, sconng twice In
the
first
and
third
innings.
losing
pitcher for Pom,roy,
held his hand In bls pocket as
thoagh be bad a gun. She The Yanks scored single runs gomg 6 Innmgs Mike Werry
handed over the money, the m the first, thrrd, and Iouth. relieved Demoskey and
robber stuffed the bills "in a The Yankees outh1t the worked the final three
Pirates 7 to 5.
frames .
doggie bag and fled.
Syracuse batters hit four
Chris Judge pitched the
:· first mning, walking 2 and 1 homeruns, one triple and 5
fannmg 2. John Morris came doubles. Pomeroy hitters had
•
on in relief m the second and one homer. The big Syracuse
Inning
was
m
the
seventh
fanned 6 and walked 5 while
on the hill.
when seven runs crossed the
J . R . Wamsley started on plate. The Pomeroy runs
•
•
pncemc~e
the mound for the Yanks and -came In the first and the
gave up 2 hits and 2 walks seventh .
DETROIT
(UP!)
General Motors Monday before he was relieved by
confirmed It has notified Todd Fife who finished
dealers that pnce Increases fanning 6 and walking 3 while Harrisonville is
of up to 8 per cent - an giving up 3 hits
Hitters for the winning
average $300 a car - will be
Buccaneers
were John 5-l over Pirates
charged to fleet buyers of Its
1976 model cars and trucks. Morris With 2 smgles and
In Jr . Bahe Ruth action the
It was the clearest In· · Chris Judge and Lyle Moon Harrisonville squad defeated
d1catlon that Detroit's each had a smgle. For the the Rutland Pirates f&gt;.l at
automakers. plan substantial Yankee getting singles were Harrisonville last Fnday.
mcreeses on the new models Todd Fife, J. R. Wamsley, Robbie Williams pitched a
when they debut .this fall Harvey Whitlatch, Shawn fine 4-hitter with the help of
despite the fact that car Gilmore, and Scott Harrison. relief man Gary Howard
Jim Morris manages the
buyers are balking at 1975
Hitters for the winners
Pirates
and Bob Wamsley were Howard and David
model prices. In tqe past two
model years, prTh!8s have manages the Yankees.
Harper with 2 smgles. Raridy
jumped an average ,1,000 a
Mitchell and Lewis Harper
cat.
_
each had a single. Arnold had
GM's notification to dealers COMPLICATIONS FOUND
a double, and Eblin had a
covers only fleet purchasers,
ATLANTA (UPI) - Dr. single and double. For the
but is considered an In· James C. Parkes diagnosed a
Pirates, Wilford and Mowery
dicatlon of the price Increase deviated septum Monday had smgles and Dink Ken·
that will be passed on to the when removing stitches from nedy and Mike Wayland each
average car buyer.
1 · the nose and face of New had a double.
York Mets relief pitcher Bob
J
.
Apodaca.
BANHOFFER CHOSEN
Apodaca suffered a com.Daily'"~tineJ
NEW YORK ( UPI)
pound fracture of the nose oo
DEVOTED TO Tlto:
Striker Uri Banhoffer, who June 29 when he was struck
INTEREn OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
scored a hat trick last week In on the nose PbiladelPbla's
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL
Exec. Ed.
leading the Los Angeles Johrmy Oates line drive In a
ROBERT HOEFLICH
Aztecs to a f&gt;-1 victory over game at Shea Stadium.
. (lty Edlfot
I
P"Ublished dally e•ceJ; . I
Pele and the New York
At the time of the accident,
:Saturday by The Ohio Valleyl
Cosmos,
Monday
was •14 stitches were 'required to
l~ubltsh•J'Ig Company.
1Court Sf , Pomeroy . Oh lo
If you believe In
selected Player of the Week • close the wound and Dr.
45769 Business Office Phone !
2 2156 Edltori21tl Phofte 992
lasting love. select
by the North American Parks
discovered
the
57
•
your wedding ring
Soccer League.
,
deviated septum Monday
Secon.d class posi'age patd f
Pomeroy, Ohio
The hat trick was the when removing the stitches.
from
our ArtCarved
bN_!lf • O~I
advertlsin§'
collection today .
second Banhoffer has~
representaftve
Ward•'
1 Grtfflth Company, Inc f
this season and It was the
Botttnelll &amp; Gallabher Oiv
757 Third Ave , N""ew York~
second time he was sleeted
, N Y 10017
Player of the Week.
I
S.ubscri'pt "'"
I a til:~ (
Delivered by carrier where
Banhoffer has scored 10
75 (ents per week .:
The Ohio Department of •avatlable
goals and four assists In his
By Motor Route wher•
arr•er.
service
no!t
Re.sources '
last nine games and Is second Natural
vallabte. One month , ll 2~
•
y ma•l in OhtO and W '\la j,
In the scoring table with '¥1 Division of Watercraft urges
ne
Year
,
S22
~
.
Slltl
points behind Miami's Steven boaters to carry hand flares
onths,
Sll 50 ,
Three
months. S7 oo ElseWhere
Davld,whobuSipolntt from and smoke flares In a S26
oo ...,.._ar. Six month~
11 ~
lour
,..,_ watertight container In their 1Sll50
. ihl'ee months . $7 50
C
ubscnpllon price ,nctud&amp;s, 1
I!.Urt St., Pomeroy
craft
~
be
Uled
in
caae
of
Roch!:ster'• Tommy OnltUD
und_.-Y_T~mwes.. ~~tln~_4 ,'Lo,.--- · - - - -....,....J •
tmlf'ltncy .
hN '¥/,..,

Nat.onal League
P tttsburg h
000 100 004 5 ~ l
· Chicago
000 000 000- 0 5 1
Brett. Hernandez (8) G•ustt
(81 and Sangudlen
A eusche l

I '

In early 1974. He was traded
to the Vrrgima Squires after
the season and returned to
the team after a stint with the
Indiana Pacers
Earlier this year, he filed a
bankruptcy petition listmg
debts of $87,588 and assets of
$26,731.

Boston
New York
M•lwaukee
Balllmore
Clevela nd
Det r o1t

44

I
37

4) 38
39
38 4 1

44

]7 44
34 46

pet

g b

543

531
530
481
457
425

1

l
5
7
9'

2

Wes t
w t pel g b
Oakland
51 31 622
K an sa s C1ty
45 37 549 6
Texas
40 "4 476 12
Chtcago
18 42 475 11
Ca l tt orn ta
]9 46
459 13 1 1
M1 n nesota
37 45 451 14
Monday' s Resu lt s
New York 5 Texas i
Oel r o1t 2 Ch cage 1
Boston 6 Mtnnesola 3
M ilwa u kee 4 Kansas Ctty 3
Oa k lan d 7 Clevel and 3
(Only gam es sc heduled )
Today s Probable Ptt chers
( All Ttme s E OT )
Mmnesota I Cam pbell 2 41 at
Boston fTtanl 11 Bl 7 30 p m
Texas fBacstk. 1 21 at New
York (Hunter 11 8 ) 8 p m
Ch cago ! Wood 6 121 at Del r ott
(Co leman 4 17l 8 p m
Mttwaukee ( Tr ave r s 4 1 J at
Kansas Ctt y { L eona r d J 4l 8 30

pm

Balllmore
Caltfor nta

( Pa l me r 13 51 , at
( Ryan 10 7)
10 30

pm

Clevela nd ( Hood 2 4 ) at Oa k
land 1HoltZman 9 1l 11 p m
Wednesdav 's Games
M tn nesota at Boston
Cleve land a t Oa k lan d
ex as at New York n •g h t
Ch 1cago at De trod n tght
Balltmor e at Calt f o rn• ~ n1ghl
M ilwaukee at
Ka nsas ~·
n gh 1

1

one-game lead over the
Brewers and Yankees m the
AL E:ast Doug Griffm and
R1ck Miller also drove m runs
for the Red Sox, who played
without the services of Fred
Lynn (still InJUred) and Carl
Yastrzemsk1 (sick)
Yankees 5, Rangers Z
Roy White, Gra1g Nettles
and Jun Mason all belted
homer s and Doc Medich (7·
10 ) scattered nine hits over
the distance to give the
Yank ees
their
second
straight after seven straight
losses All three Yankee.
homers were solo shots, but
Nettles also smgled home a
run durmg a two-run Yankee
fourth
Athletics 7, lndlans 3
Joe Rud1 hit a pair of solo
homers and Billy Williams
added a two-run blast to push
the three-time defen dmg
world champiOn A's SIX
games ahead'o! Kansas City
m the AL West Veteran Jun
Perry went 6 1·3 Innmgs to
gam " his third Win m 10
deciSions Rudl had been
hitless In his previOus 12 atbats before breaking loose for
his two homers.
rigers 2, White Sox 1
Leon Roberts tripled home
the tymg run and then came
home to score the gamewmner m the fourth mrung,
l maJ&gt;ling the Tigers to stop
Ch1sox ace Jun Kaat (1 3-&lt;i )
from beconung the maJor
leagues' top w10ner AL runproducmg leader Willie
Horton drove 10 Roberts w1th
a sacrifice fly, hiS 60th RBI of
the year Tom Walker ( 3-6)
went the. route for the Win

Now Featuripg

STRAWBERRY
~FIORTCAKE

Adolph's Dairy Valley

' Sun .- Thur.
Hrs.: 10:00 A.M. Til11 :00 P.M.
1 10:00A.M. TII12:00 P.M. Fri . &amp; Sat.
•
992-2556
W. MAIN
POMEROY, O.

N a t.onal League
g ab r
h
pet
Morgn en 76 212 59 96 353
Mad l ck Ch 75 302 43 106 3Sl
Cash Ph1l 84 354 62 118 333
Bowa P htl 58 25 1 32
83 331
San gln PI 71 257 2c;l
84 327
Parkr Plf 70 258 40 84 326
watson Ho 79 295 38 96 325
Joshua SF 65 243 34 78 32 1
Garvy LA 85 359 46 115 320
Gr tffey Cn 69 226 50
72 319

Amencan Lea gu e
g ab r
h

Car w Mnn
Hargrv h:
M un sn NY
Lynn Bos
Wash Oak
Htsle Mnn
McRa KC
MddX N Y
May Ch •
Bra n M nn

17 284 51 105
74 260 48
87

pel
370
335

44 97 327
?.62 54 85 324
8 1 321 47 10 1 315
60 220 34
69 314
81 3 13 39 97 J \ 0
55 2 18 36 67 307
76 277 3 1 83 300
66 218 26
65 2c;l8
Hom e Run s
Nal•ona l League
Luzmskt
P htl 27 Bench C1 n 17 Foster
C n and
Par ke r ,
P1t1
15
Ktngman NY
Schm td l
Ph il
and Starge l l P 1tt 14
Amenca n League Bond s NY
19 Jackson Dl'lk 111 Hendr ick
Clev Horto n De l , Maybe rr y
KC and Burroughs Tex 16
Runs Batted In
Na t tona l League
L uzmskl,
Phil 73 Benc h Cm 69 Morgan
Ctn 59 Watson Hou 57 Stau b
N Y 56
Amencan League
Hor tOn
Dct 60 Lynn Bos 58 Scott Mtl
57 May Ba ll and N etll es NY
78
73

797

WOMEN'S SUMMEk

DRESS SHOES
Reg. s12.99 to $18.99

Sale~

To

heritage house
Your Thom MeAn Store
Middleport, OhiO

agents in
more places
means more

55

Stol en Ba ses
Nal tonal League
Morgan
Ctn 38 Br ock St L 34 Cedeno
Hou
JJ
Lopes
LA
32
Concepct on Ct n a,nd Mano ua l
Mtl 19
Amen c an l eague
R 1ver s
Ca l 46 washtngt on Oak 32
01 s KC 29
Nor t h Oak 13
Remy Ca l an d LeF lore Det
Ptlchmg
(Ba sed on most v tcton es)
Nat anal L eag u e Se ave~ . N Y
1'2 4
Messersmllh
L A 12 5
Su tlon LA 17 8 Jones SO 11 5
B lllngham Ctn 10 3 Mat lack
NY and McGlothen St L 10 6
Ame rt ca n League
Palmer
Bait and Kaa t Ch t 13 5 Bl ue
Oa k 116
B usby
KC 11 6
T1ant Bas and Hunter N Y 11 8

$}3

service lor you.
Ste11e Snowden
1258 Powell 51
Middleport, 0

n

PH . 992-7155
lt ke a good
fle1ghbor
State Farm
IS there

"""'

.......

IHJIJit4HCI

•

Ill I I UI,I t.I UIU•l •uTOWOIIlf 1-UIUtl
tC I,IIIH Mnu t OIIICI I IDO III I. CIO• It

p 71 105

Save on These Fine Frigidaire
Appliances from the Home
Economics Rooms of the local
High Schools.

-NEW WARRANT\' From Fng1da1re and General Motors, a
mobile dishwasher that converts to a builtin anytime.
Th ts Fngtdatr8 Mobtle Otshwasher ghdea to ,
the smll fast and easy then hooks up to
the hot wa ter faucet tn seconds Super·
Su rge Washmg Achon scrubs soft lood
was tes oH tableware po ts and pans eltmt·
nates tQe need to pre· nns1ng o l normally
so1leel dtshes Use the h andy Form1ca•
b rand top tor e~~:tra wo rk space When
you ve made your last mo ve so has vour
Frtgtdatre Mobtle Otshwasher It .nstalls
"'~'.llr::"' rtgh t under a standard-height counteJ any,r
11me (conversto n kit av••table at extra
charg e)

Carefree. automallc cookmg
and near-etfortless clean1ng
make lh1s our most popular
Frrg1da1re 30" Electnc Range.
So that you can get more
done duMg.a busy day the

and stops
by its•,lll
you preset
the Aulo·
;~~~E~~~l·;~~~~start~
1 Cook Master control
save you even more time,
lh1s mode! features an
Electrl-clean oven thai can
clean 1tse1f, leavrng JUSt a
trace of ash to w1pe out.

'31995

BAKER FURNITURE
-~Middleport,

Ohio

II&gt;

�'

'

\

..
r

.'
'

'

l

2"- The Daily Sentmel, Middleport·F:omeroy, 0 ., 'tUesday , July 8, 1975

Lmescores

Coal company fmed $122,500
CATLETTSBURG, Ky . May 19, and federal
(UP!) - A federal JUdge prosecutors ·then agreed to
Monday fined the Finley Coal drop 16 other charges, some
Co., of Hyden, Ky., and one of relating to the underground
Its coowners $122,500 for four disaster
violations of federal mme
Officials of the Umted Mme
safety laws comrrutted four • Workers Union of America In
and onehalf years ago
Washmgton have protested
The mine, several days the droppmg of the 16
after bemg cited for the charges
vtolabons, was the scene of a
No )aU sentences were
Dec. 30, 1970. underground levied against the Fmleys,
exploSton m wtpch 38 nuners although sentences of up to
were killed
three years were poSSible
But U.S D1str1ct Court Former Kentucky Gov Bert
Judge H . David Her- Combs, now with a promment
mansdorfer sa1d Monday he LoUisville
law
firm,
found no connectiOn between represented the Finleys.
the admitted violations of
Monday's sentencing had
Dec. 22, 1970, and explosiOn
been delayed from last month
Charles and Stanley Fmley, by a crowded court docket
the brothers who own the
The Finley Miilmg Co and
nune, entered pleas of no the two brothers had been
contest to the four counts md1cted for violating the 1969

Monday 's Baseball Re5ult\ )
By Un•1ed Pres.s lnternattonal

federal Coal Mine fleal.lh and
Safety Law m June, 1971 , by a
federal grand jury at
Pikeville, Ky .
The Finleys and the mining
firm still face four civil suits
10volv10g more than $13
m1lhon In requested damages
brought by widows and other
survivors of the mine vic-

tims
Hermansdorfer levied fines
totaling $85,000 against the
company and $37,500 agamst
Charles F10ley Individually.
Stanley Finley was not fined.
The flOes, by charge, were :
- The company $15,000 and
Charles $2,500 for failing to
have adequate wetting agents
at the cuttmg face of the mme
on Dec 22, 1970
- The company $20,000 and
Charles $25,000 for failue to
mst1tute an adequate search
program for smokmg and
other
Inflammable matermls
By Bertha Parker
Due to the Free Metho&lt;llst on Dec 22
- The company $25,000 and
Cam.!' Meetmg at Mansfield,
Charles
$10,000 for not
Sab5ath School attendance
July was only 50 Rev Cecil prov1d10g self-rescuers
breathing
Wise of Chester was guest (e mergency
speaker Sunday mornmg, devtces) (Or aU underground
o!fer10g from all services was employes on the same date .
- The company $25,000 for
$175 85.
us10g Impermissible ex·
~·· Edna Schaefer has
been returned home from plosiVes on Dec 22 while
Veterans Memorial Hospital. blasting out a work area In
Mr and Mrs Erney Wells, the nune.
Hermansdorfer said he
Middleport, called on Mr and
r esurrected a figure of
Mrs
Norman Schaefer levied the largest fine against
$17,()()().plus."
Charles Finley for failmg to
" We reported that but not recently
Mr
Edward
Dailey, mstltute a search procedure
the full $100,000 "
because he held a "higher
Gurney said that when he Wilkesville, VISited recently iegree of accountability "
first learned of Williams' With Mr 'and Mrs Harmon
activities, he d1d not recall if Fox
Mr Roy Howell, Indiana, IS
he asked James Groot, hiS
former
adm1mstrative spend10g some lime with h1s
assistant, if he had been family here
Mr and Mrs. Harmon Fox OLIVER HONORED
aware of the fundraiSmg
VISited
Sunday With Mr and , SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) " We didn't go into
Mrs
Johnny
Douglas who are Outfielder AI Oliver of the
specifics," he sa•d of the
Pittsburgh Pirates was
conversation. "I just asked , camping at Reedsville.
Mr and Mrs Charles Karr , named National League
him to set up a meeting for
Mrs
Katy Parker, Mrs
Player of the Week, league
me with Williams and I told
Bertha
Parker
and
Mrs
Dale
Pres1denl Charles S. Feeney
him to stop.
Coleman
attended
the
ann'ounced
Monday
" ThiS was a total shock to
Veterans
Memonal
Hospital
Oliver
hit
a boommg .500
me ."
Gurney, Bastien and for- p1cmc Sunday at Kyger for the week, with nme runs
scored and eight runs batted
mer Federal Housing Ad· Creek
Mr Vern Story, Colwnbus, m. His 16 hits 10cluded three
miniStration officials Ralph
1s
spendmg two weeks doubles, a triple and one
Koontz and K. Wayne SWiger
homer His season's batting
are charged with ralSlug an vacatwn w1th h1s family here
Mr
and
Mrs
Edward
average
stands at 294.
Illegal political slush fund
It was the third time m hns
through contributions from Archer , Roseville , Mrs
Ph1lhs
Archer,
Happy
career
that Oliver has been
Florida builders who were
Hollow,
v1s1ted
Sunday
with
of the week He
named
player
promised Federal Housing
Authority favors through Mr and Mrs . Norman won the award 10 1\Prli, 1973,
Schaefer
and August, 1974
Gurney's office m return.
Gurney, 61, also •s charged
with bribery, rece1vmg
unlawful compensation and
four counts of lymg to a grand
POINT PLEASANT - Mrs died Monday m Pleasant
jury
Mary Magdeline Wamsley Valley Hospital endmg an
Brown, 86, Pomt Plea,sant. Illness of several years.
Funeral services w1ll be
held Thursday at 2 p m from
the Stevens Funeral Home
w1th Rev George Oiler of.
ficlabng and burial m SunAll day the concessiOn
foumey Scores
crest Cemetery Fnends will
stand workers were busy
Pee Wee
be received at the funeral
seiling hot dogs, soft drinks,
Mason Angels 5.(1 forfeit home after 6 p m Tuesday
snow cones and potato chips. New Haven Yankees, New
Mrs Brown, a daughter of
A big thanks to all who Haven Dodgers 5-4 Hartford the late B S and Nancy J
helped In any way to make Bullets, Mason Angels 5'0 Wamsley, was born m Vmton,
the day one worth remem· forfeit New Haven Giants, Ohw. She was married to the
Mason Cubs 1!&gt;-2 New Haven late Harry H. Brown m 1914
bering .
To climax the day's events, Dodgers, Mason Cube 8-5 She was a member of the
the Mason Volwiteer Fire Mason Angels.
Church of God
Uttle League
Dept. held a ''magnificent
Survivors mclude four
Mason Tigers 3-2 Mason
fireworks d~lay . "
daughters, Mrs W H (Opal)
The annual celebration was Rangers, New Haven Cube 3Neal, Pomt Pleasant; Mrs
C&lt;Hlponsored by the Mason 2 New Haven Reds, Hartford
John (Thelma) Cadle, Baton
Recreation Foundation and Hornets 11-9 Mason Tigers,
Rouge, La.; Mrs. Robert
the Mason Fire Dept.
NI!\V Haven Cubs 12-2 Hart·
(Betty) Shiflet, Gallipolis,
The 1975 Mason Baseball ford Hornets.
and
Mrs . Thomas (Esta)
•· Pony League
"
Program sponsors were: B &amp;
Barton, Nederlan, Texas;
(New Haven) Citizens
B Market, Bob's Market,
two brothers, Charles WamsBurton's Sunoco, Fogelsong National 'Bank 4-3 Mason
ley, Pomt Pleasant, and
Funeral
Home,
Jim's Merchants, New Haven
Virgil Wamsley, Cheshire,
Camper Sales, Mason Barber Carpents Local 3-1 Hartford
and four sisters, Mrs. Clara
Shop, Mason Bowling Center, Padres,
(New Haven)
Staats, New Haven ; Rose
Mason County Bank, Ma!IOn Citizens National Bank 8-7
Wamsley, Pmnt Pleasant;
Fire Dept., Pickens Hard· Carpenters Local.
V1rg1ma King, Pomeroy, and
ware Co., Point Pleasant'·
Jr. Girls SoftbaU
Mabel Hostem, Detrmt; 24
Mason Auto Glasa, Riverside
Letart
27·17
Mason,
grandchildren, and 34 greatPomeroy 23-8 Rutland,
Golf Club and Vista No, 1.
grandchildren.
Pomeroy 21-17 Letart.

Laurel Oiff
News Notes

Explained late
By ORVAL JACKSON
TAMPA, Fla . (UP!)
Former U S Sen Edward
Gurney says he waited two
years to report most of the
$100,000 collected for hun by
fund-raiSer Larry Williams m
1971 and 1972 because there
was no way to explain It.
Gurney
completed
testunony Monday after four
days on the witness stand at
his
federal
briberyconspiracy trml.
The attorney for former
Gurney aide Joseph Bastien,
one of three c&lt;Hlelendants In
the federal trial, appeared
likely to begin hiS case today,
although Gurney's attorney,
C. Harris Dittmar, had not
formally rested his case
Under cross-&lt;!xammation
by
prosecutor
Harvey
Schlesmger, Gurney said he
could not report the funds
after hearing of their
existence on June 11, 1972,
• because he had no campaign
organization.
• "I think we reported a part
• of It after thiS thing surfaced
In 1973," Gurney said . "I had
a rundown made of the
money spent for expenses of
our field offices . We

Mrs. Mary Brown, 86, dies

Big day had by all on 4th
1By Elsie

Roach
MASON, W. Va - July
Fourth was an exciting day
for all who attended the
annual celebration and
·baseball tournaments.
Thursday evening a free
cracker dance was held at
the fire station with music by
the Jay Stewart band.
Friday, the Fourth, at 9
a .m. the games started
Champions crowned were .
Pee Wee - Mason Cubs, 11-5
over the Mason Angels
Little League New
·Haven Cubs 12-2 over the
'Hartford Hornets.
Pony League - Citizens
National Bank of New Haven
8-7 over Carpenters' Local.
Jr. Girls Softball
Pomeroy 21-17 over Letart.
Men's Slow Pitch Softball
- Mason Oldtimers 16'9 over
Mason Fire Dept. Each
champion team received a
trophy.

DR. LAMB
.•

_Aspirin won't slow bone decay
•

J

By-Lawrence E. Lamb, M.I:J.
DEA!'l DR LAMB - Your
column on " Softer Bones
Come w1th Age" was of
particular 10terest to me
My aWJt has osteoporosis¢
the spine and has had several
compressed vertebrae and
has been on calc1wn, vitamin
D and fiuorlde for some time.
However, a friend of hers
mentioned a drug, Mbtrin,
which IS ~upposed to be a new
drug used for thiS condition,
~ as well as for arthritis.
Are you familiar with this
type drug, and ~ll'also being
used for osteoporlsis? I~.
Motrln mostly a pam kiilin@
drug1
•
DEAR READER - Motrln
Is a new drug In the Umted
States. It hJ!s been used for
some time In canada and"
other cCIIIJltrles. Because 1t ~
new It Is getting a certain
amount of play. You should
"IIlii* of It u a substitute for
Nflltrln. Ills mostly for pain

commonly used for · In·
flammat10n The same is true
of aspirm.
Neither Motron nor aspmn
will arrest or slow down the
process of dissolving bones
Wllh age that so commonly
occurs after the menopause
m women, and later In men.
Both may help to relieve any
associated pam from the
condition. The medicines
your aWlt IS already taking
are the ones used to help slow
or stop the bone softening
process.
Send your quesUons to Dr.
Latnb in care of this
newspaper, P . 0. Box 1551,
radio City Station, New York,
NY 10019. For mformatwn on
arthritis, send 50 cents and a
ion g, self-addressed,
stamped envelop~ to the
· 'l&amp;me address and ask for the
Health Letter nwnber 4-10 on
osteoarthritis.
DEAR DR LAMB - On
two or three occasions I have
lll!Uef! •
~ ~'
read some unsettling comThe manufacturer~ claim 1t ments concerning the ~lie of
II uaeful ' in larger .doses1ban

"I

¥

•

I

\

Valmm One article Indicated
that it was habit forming but
did not say that usage would
lead to addiction
I have· bi!en usmg Valium
for quite some tune and
didn'teven know that it was a
tranqUilizer when I first
started using it. Is there any
factual information on its
dangers? In view of the large
nwnber or' persons uSing
Vahum, I'm sure many
people would jo10 me in
welcoming your views on 11.
It :w:as prescribed for me to
treall Menlere's DISease.
DEAR READER - T'lere
is no completely safe
medicine. Even life-giving
oxygen can kill you. AlSo,
because people behave so
differently 1!1 respon_lle to
medicines, what saves one
person's life can Induce a
fatal reaction In another.
Recently efforts have been
made to prevent abuse of
prolonged habitual use of
Vallwn through strict federal
controls.
(

Valiwn is a good medicine.
It causes few problems and
helps a lot of people. As With
other ~icmes there is a list
of Pospible bad effects as long
as your arm The most
"""hmon problems, though,
{Ire over responsiveness to
the ,tranquilizing effects,
inducmg drowsmess and
fatigue . Some patients have
trouble w1th their balance
which we call ataxia.
In people taking Vallurn a
long t1me there IS occasionally a reductiOIJ In
formation of white blood cells
and disturbance in liver
function. For this reason
periodic evaluation of "the
blood count and liver function
IS 8 good Idea .
The other point I'd like to
stress IS that Vallwn doesn't
nux well w1th alcohol. Both
depress lhe function 'of the
nervous sy,s;etn. ·Those who
uae Vahwn ,should not use
alcohol or other sedatives or
tranquilizers except under a
doctor 's directions

•

•r

By JOHN KNUDSEN
MINNEAPOLIS, Minn.
( UPI) - U there were no
"Rozelle Rule" In the
National Football League,
the top players would move to
pleasant climates and glamor
ctties.
That was the testimony In
U.S. District Cow1 Monday of
defense witnesses Willie
Davis, former defensive end
for the Green Bay Packers,
and Lamar Hunt, owner of
the Kansas City Chiefs.
Fifteen
players
are
challenging the rule which
empowers
NFL
9om·
rmssioner Pete Rozelle to set
compensation when an
athlete plays out his option
with one team and signs With
another club.
"Yes, I feel there should be
some form of compensation,"
said Davis, an all11ro six

3!... The Dail~ Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, July 8, 1975

Indians were
outhit but,
won 14 to 9

Tigers double
Yanks' score

Scioto results

Softball play

Syracuse club
slugged out

16-2 victory

By FRED McMANE
UPI Sporta Writer
Hi! statistics speak out, but
' the name AI Hrabosky
" remains VIrtually
' anonymous
With a name like Hrabosky
and the best reUef pitching
credentials m the National
League , it would appsr
there would be no difficulty m
becommg ret'ognlzeq
But, the 26-year-()Jd left.
bander of the St LOUIS
Cardmals
has
been

overlooked,
or
unapprectated, m the selection for
next Tuesday's All.stllr game
at Milwaukee.
Hrabosky, the No. 1 relief
)lltcher In the NL so far th1s
season, picked up hiS 14th
save, tops m the league,
Monday mght when the
Cardinals defeated the
Montreal Expos 8-6, but he
was saddened to learn that he
had mot been selected by Los
An geles manager Walter
Alston of the Los Angeles)

Blazers sweep ,
Syracuse in 2
CHESHIRE
The
Cheshire Blazers Pony
baseball team took to their
home field last week to sweep
a pair of games fr om
Syracuse by scores of 12.0
and 6-0 These two shutouts
moved the Blazers shutout
mark to SIX on the year
Cheshire moved the1r record
to 1~1 for a share of fir st
place with the Pomeroy A-s
who are also 1().1
In the first game Steve
Baird went to the mound to
take the wm while Riffle was
stuck w1th th~ loss
Cheshire )wnped right on
the ball by scormg six runs 10
the first, four m the second
, and two m the third
Here's how Cheshire's big
10mng
went
R1ck
Wmebrenner opened the
game w1th a tnple and was
followed with s10gles by
Dallas Sayre and Baird, off
Slone reached on a fielder 's
chmce before Claude Cornelius doubled and Greg
Mulford smgled
The game was shortened by
the 12 run rule, which only
went five 10mngs
For the p1tchmg statistics,
Balfd went 5 mmngs, fanmng
15, walking 1, and g1vmg up 2
hits For Syracuse Riffle
went two and two-thirds
mmngs f.anning 3, walkmg 4,
g1v10g up 10 hits and 12 runs ,
Hendricks came on m relief
and fanned 3 and allowed one

Yanks win 4-3
over Pirates

ArtCarved
wedding
nngs.

GM confirms
across board

1M

11'

Th•s Week's Spec1al

r:;:;;;;:;:::l··
a~:~~•

USED CARS

71 OLDS. CUT.
SUPREME CPE.
VB. auto , P S , P B , V

roof. a1r NICE'

hi I
Hitters m the first game for
Syracuse
were
Kelley
Wme brenner w1 th a double
and R1ffle with a smgle.
For Cheshire Winebrenner
had a lnple and a smgle.
Sayre a double and smgle
with 2 RB!s, Baird a double
and 2 smgles w1th I RBI; Jeff
Slone a double and 1 RBI ,
J1m Harris a triple and three
RB!s , Cornelius a double and
2 RB!s, and Mulford a smgle
and I RBI
As a team, Cheshire was 11
for 27 a t the pla te for- a 444
batting avera ge Cheshir e
committed only one error
SECOND GAME
In the second game, which
was won 6-0 by Cheshire,
Claude Cornelius picked up
the wm 10 gmng five and twothirds 1hmngs He struck out 7
walked 2, and gave up 3 h1ts
Jeff Slone turned m a fme
rehef performance gomg one
and one-third He fanned 3
and walked 1 He did not g1ve
up a h1t 1n that lime
For Syracuse, flendncks
went the distance fanmng 3,
glVlng up 4 walks on 9 hits and
6 runs
Cheshire '6eored m the
second mmng by gethng 1
run, 4 m the fourth and I m ore
m the sixth
Here 's how Cheshire 's b1g
mmng went
Cornelius
reached on an error, Mulford
and Amos smgled, Ph1lhps
walked, W10ebrenn er
smgled, Sayre~walked, Baird
reached on a fielder's chOice
and Slone got on by an error
Gettmg the hits for
Syracuse were Forbes , a
double and Wmebrenner and
Riffle each ~ single .
Sharmg the 9 hits fgr
Cheshire
were
R
Wmebr enner a sui'gle and 2
RB!s, Sayre a smgle , Baird a
double and RBI , Slone a
tr1ple and smgle w1th 1 RBI ,
Harns a smgle, Mulford a
double and smgle and I RBI
and Amos a smgle and a RBI
Cheshire was 9 for 30 for a
300
batting
average
Cheshire did not commit an

error

•2595

Cheshlfe will play Racine
this evemng, the only team to
defeat Cheshire Ra c me
defeated the Blazers 2·1 10 10
mmngs at Racme m an
argwnimt.mfested game The
game will hegui at 6 p m at
Cheshire's home park

Karr &amp; Van landt
You'll L1ke Our Quality
Way of Domg Busme_~
GMAC FINANCING'

992 5342

Pomeroy

Open Evenings 1hl 6 00

Tll5 p.m Sal

TM

.. !.: :· .,_

... ,

For those
who believe
in lasting
. love.

rtCatved

GOESSLER'S

Jewelry Store

a

•

'

.

,L

/

Dodgers to represent the NL
m the annual midseason
ClaSSlC .
Instead
of
selechng
Hrabosky as one of his two
relief pitchers, Alston went
for h1s own Mike Marshall,
who missed a total of SIX
weeks earlier this season
an
mJury,
and
w1th
Philadelphia's Tug McGraw,
who also was disabled for a
time.
Ted Sunmons, who catches
Hrabosky regularly, thinks
Alston made a miStake
"If I had to p1ck a pitcher
from Marshall, McGraw ljDd
Hrabosky ," said Sunmons,
"I'd take 'AI "
Smunons, of cour se, lS
preJudiced, but there IS no
doubt Hrabosky had kept the
Cardinals m the race thus far
He relieved a battered Ron
Reed m the seventh Innmg
Monday rught and protected
an 11-5 lead untU the n10th
when the Giants touched hun
for a harmless run.
It was only the second run
Hrabosky has allowed m hiS
last 14 appearances. In that
span, he has pitched 15 2-3
mnings, struck out 16, won
two games and saved eight
Reed benefl tied from

•
Hrabosky's rehef work to will ' h1s seventh J"oss m 14
his nmth game aga10st eight declSlons
Mels 3, Braves 1
losses, ' but hiS fifth in ~1ght
decisions smce commg to the
Rusty Staub and Dave
Cardinals from the Atlanta Kmgman hit homers m
Braves on May 28.
support of Hank Webb's SIX·
The Cardmals scored four hit pitching as the Mets
timeS m the first mnmg . w1th &lt;tefea ted the Braves. Staub's
LuiS Melendez' triple and ~er was a solo shot m the
Ken Reitz' double the b1g hits, fourth wh'ue Kingman , who
and Sunmons added a two- struck out hiS four other
times at bat, hit a two-run
run homer m the fifth.
In the only other scheduled homer In the seventh.
NL
games, Cin c mnah Astros 5, Expos 1
,
defeated Philadelphia 7-3 ,
Wilbur Howard 's tw&lt;&gt;-run
New York beat Atlanta 3-1, smgle capped a fiv e-run
Houston whipped Moptreal 5- fourth mnmg which enabled
•
1 and Pittsburgh blanked the Astros
to defeat the
Expos Larry Dierker went
Chicago 5.(1
New York topped Texa1 f&gt;-2, the distance for Houston,
Boston defeated Minnesota 6- ailowmg only eight hits, to
3, DetrOit edged Ch
2-1, gam his eighth VIctory while
trmt
Steve Rogers went the route
Milwaukee mppe
and
Oaklan
downerl"--.L,r Montreal m suffermg hiS
Cleveland 7-3
Amencan seve
loss m 12 games
League games.
Pirates , Cubs 0
Re ds 7, Ph es 3
AI Oliver hit a three-run
Tony Perez and George homer m the ninth mnmg and
Foster hit two-nm homers to three pitchers combmed on a
power the Reds to victory five -hitter to spark the
over the Phillies The victory Pirates' victory over the
boosted the Reds ' lead to 81'. Cubs Ken Brett, Ramon
games over Los Angeles m Hernal)dez and Dave Giusti
the NL West. Pat Darcy went blanked the Cubs w1th Brett
eight mnings to gam hiS gammg credit for hi• fifth win
fourth wm m nlne decisions m seven decisions
while Steve Carlton suffe red

Pomt "Pleasant City Ice and only four hits but took fd·
Fuel, the defendmg cham· vantage of walks for its win.
p1ons, capt ured the l1rst Get!mg hits for the Winners
game of the 17th Annual we~e Mark Dooley; Mike
Kyger Creek Tournament for Spears, Todd Pr•tlmore and
Li t tl e Leaguers Monday David Spencer
Lea ding the Middleport
mght. 13·9· over the Mid·
attack
were Keith Pwnmel
dleport
Mets
34 J) 44 i 14
Monlr~al
and
Tye
Herman with two
West
In other games, Vinton's
w 1 pet
g b
Dodgers blasted the Rutland h1ts each. Bob Fox and John
Ctnc tnnat•
55 i 9 655
Bla ke had the only other
Los Angeles
J7 38 553 8' • Reds, 1!&gt;-3 and pomeroy "s
San FranCISCO 39 44 470 15 1 • Giants scored an 11.0 romp
Middleport hits
San Otego
38 45 458 16 1 ,
C Allen hurled a no-bitter
over the Galhpohs Sena tors
Atlanta
36 46 439 18
Houston
30 57 345 16 1,
Pmnt Pleasant musteted In pacmg the Pomeroy Giants
Monday ' s Res'l!llh
to their easy Win over the
P•ttsburgh 5 Chtcago 0
New York 3 Allanta .1
Gal hpoils Senators Leading
Houston 5 Montrea l 1
the Giant attack were J
Sl LOUIS 8 San F ran ctsco 6
C1nctnna t t 1 P hlladelphta 3
F ields, C McKmney, R
(O nly gam es schedul ed)
WINNERS NOTED
Smith , and T Jewell with two
Toda v's Proa bal e Ptfch ers
( All Ttm es E OT )
h1ts each
San 0 1ego (Jon es
11 51 at
The
Onoles
and
Tigers
D Spencer, M Martin, G
Ch1cago {S tone 6 31 7 30 P m
New York ( Koosman 7 6 ) a•
posted v1cto n es Monda y Deel, B Hamilton, J . Moore
Allanla (Morl an 9 81 7 35 p m
mght m the Gall ipolis and D Roberts slammed two
Los An ge les fMesse rsm tl h 12 5 )
at P1f1Sburgh (E il tS 6 4) 7 35
Swnmer Leag ue program or more hits
10 leading
pm
Onoles
defeated
the
Red
The
Vmton
's
Dodgers
to a 15-3
Phtlade lph•a (Und erwood 9 5 )
at Cmcmnatt 1No l an 7 SJ 8 05
Sox, 11-5 while the Tigers victory over the RutlQlld
pm
dwnped the Cubs 14-4
Reds m the tournament's last
Sa n F ra netsco {Falcone 6 61 at
St LOUIS i Gtbson 7 '! J 8 JO
of three openm g games
pm
Monday
n1ght
Bollin,
Montrea l (Renko o1 51 at Ho us
ton (Roberts 4 IOJ 8 35 p m
Snowden and Williamson had
Wednesday's Games
Son Otego at Ch tcago
h1ts for the Reds
New York at Atlanta n 1ght
Tomght , the Pomeroy
Montr eal at Houston n tghl
Pirates meet the Cheshire
Los Angeles at
P ti!Sburgh
n ghl
Tigers,
Syracuse's Astros
San FranCtSCO at Sl
loutS
battle the Middleport In·
n1ghl
Ph •lade lphta
at
Ctnc, n natl
Ma tor L eague Leaden.
d1ans, and Pt Pleasant
n •gh t
By Untted Press I nt er nationa l
Johnson's Market play the
l eadtng Batters
( ba sed on 200 at bah )
Galhpoils
White Sox
Am encan L eag ue

Major Lea9uc Stand tngs
B v Untied Press International
Naltona l L ea gue
East
w 1 pet 9 b
so 31 617 1
Ptllsbur g h
47 ) 7 560 4 1
Phtladelphta
4\ 38
s 19 8
New York
39 47 481 11
St LOUIS
39 45 46A 1? 1 'I
Ch1cago

Leaders

Tony he beet long one
CINCINNATI (UP! ) That was a Babe Ruth model
bat Tony Perez used to slug
his two-run homer as the
Reds knocked off the Phillies,
7-3, Monday mght In the
opener of a three-game senes
here.
And Tony's homer, which
landed In the red seats, the
uppermost
section
of
Riverfront Stadium, was one
which would have done the
Babe proud
"The Babe never h1t one
that far," said a grmrung
Perez "Well, not righthanded anyway "

Perez's tw~run homer was
one of two unloaded by the
Reds as they boosted' their
lead over the idle Dodgers to
8 1-2 games m the National
League West.
George Foster slammed
the other homer , his 15th of
the season and one which
came after a walk to Perez
The homers were two of
rune hits the Reds made as
Pat Darcy, With mnth mnmg
help from Rawly Eastwick,
notched his fourth victory m

East

w

three straight singles, acnme deciStons
Perez's homer, his lith of counted for the other two runs
the season, was only the third m the innmg
The second smgle by
hit mto the red seats since the
Reds moved mto the stadium Bench, who also sWiped two
bases during the mght to g1ve
June 30, 1970.
And of the other two , both him seven m seven attempts
hit m 1970, Tony ·h•t one of th1s season, scored Griffe/
them Montreal's Bob Bailey w1th the Reds' fourth run In
the third mrung
~ ci&lt;, · •ne other&gt;rMerv Rettenmund , leading
"1 don ' " ink that was the
longest homer I ever hit," off the sixth with a walk,
S8ld Tony. " I still say the came home w1th the Reds'
longest was the one I hit in fifth run on a throwing error
Milwaukee m 1965. The bali by D1ck Allen
Foster' s two-run homer
cleared the left held
wound
up the Reds' scor10g m
bleachers and landed in the
the seventh
parkmg lot
" If George's homer had not
" I hope I go to the All...Star
gone
over the fen ce , It'd goM
game 10 Milwaukee," added
Perez " Then, I show Joe through 1t," exclauned the
and
Davey Reds' Pete Rose
(Morgan)
" I've never seen anyone hit
(ConcepciOn) where I hit that
more
vicious homers than
homer''
A triple by Ken Griffey and Foster," chuned m Reds
Morgan 's sacnf1ce gave the coach Alex Grammas " Nol
Reds the first of the 1r three even Willie Stargell or W1l11e
runs In the first mnmg as they McCovey
" Foster ISn't as big as
tagged Steve Carlton with hiS
seventh loss against seven Stargell and McCovey," said
Grammas , " but he 's really
VIc tones
Perez's homer, follow10g put together "
the first of Johnny Bench's

Brewers' elixer is youth
By BILL MADDEN
UP! Sports Writer
Nobody can understand
how the Milwaukee Brewers
keep hangmg
10
the
American League East
pennant chase
The secret IS youth.
First there's 19-year old
Robin Yount, young!'5t player
m the A.L., who's still among
the top hitting shorstops m
the league at 284. And , of
course, there's been the two
outfielders with the funny
names, Sixto Lezcano ( 21)
and Gorman Thomas ( 24) both of whom have contributed consiStently of late m
the home run and RBI
department
And Monday mght, it was a
24-year old second baseman
named Bobby Sheldon,
playing In only h1s second
game this year, that kept the

surpriSmg Brewers a game
behind the Boston Red Sox m
the A L East Before a
National TV audience,
Sheldon,
playmg . only
becuase of a back mJury to
regUlar Brewer second baseman Pedro Garcia, drove In
three runs - mcludmg the
game-wmner -in a 3-for-4
rught at the plate durmg a 4-3
Milwaukee victory over the
Kansas C1ty Royals
" ThiS was JUS! great for
me, " Sheldon said after
slapping a bases-loaded t'fO·
out single m the sixth mnmg
that gave the Brewers and
winner Jim Slaton ( 7~) their
fmal run "Three hits and
three RB!s on national TV
has got to be as great a thrill
as you can have."
Sheldon, recalled from Sacramento earUer m the week,
also singled home a run In the

SAYRE H~RDW-~RE
NEW HAVEN W.VA. ,

...

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UP! ) Basketball player Johnny
Neumann testified Monday
that Umvers•ty of Mississippi
athletic officials paid all
living expenses for him and
his wife m 1970 and 1971, but
the MISSISSippi offiCials
promptly denied thl charge
The former Ole MISS 8\:Br,
now with the Vrrgmm Squires
of the American Basketball
Association, testified at hiS
divorce proceeding that the
school paid for rent,
groceru;s and other bills fot
the couple
" Anybody that knows any·
thing about ,o;ports knows
basketball players are given
&amp;d -there were a lot of
alurnm that used to give us
$100 here, $100 there Coach
(Robert) JarviS gave me the
money to go to Alabama to
get married,'.' he testified.
He also told the court hiS
wife took a JOb arranged by
the athletiC department
because the school wanted
the couple to be able to show

·some rncome
"I think I would have
known about 11 if there was
anythmg illegal gomg on,"
Athletic Director John
Vaught said m Oxford " I
hate to say thiS about the boy,
but we all know he's not
reliable. I would question
whether he told the truth as
unrelmble as he IS."
" I did not give hun the

money to get marr1ed, "
Jarvis said " I think 1t IS best
a player IS not married - •t
Just brmgs on
more
problems "
Neumann's wtfe, Mrs
Carolyn Devmey- Neumann,
22, filed for divorce m August,
1974, on grounds of cruel and
inhuii]an treatment. They
were mamed the summer
betweeh .Neumann's fresh·
' sophomore years. ,
m a n I!Jl&lt;\
Th,e 24-year-()ld star left Ole
Miss ·after hls sophomore
year to jom the ABA Memphis team He staye!l w1th
Memphis for 2- v, yea r s
before JOining the..lltah Sta~s

City Ice &amp; Fuel
romps over Mets·

BASEBALL

fifth after a double by catcher
Charlie Moore
Elsewhere m the American
League Monday, Boston put
away Mmnesota 6-3, Detroit
shaded ChiCago 2-1, New
York downed Texas f&gt;-2, and
Oakland
crmsed
past
Cleveland 7.J
Over m the National
League, 1t was Pittsburgh
blanking Chicago 5.(1, New
York atop Atlanta 3-1, Cincinnati drubbing
Philadelphia 7-3, St LoUIS
over San Francisco ~. and
Houston on top of Montreal :;.
1
Red Sox 6, Twins 3
Rookie Jun Rice belted a
three-run frrst-mnmg homer
and comebacker Rick W1se
lasted SIX mnmgs to gam his
lOth tr1wnph of the season as
the Red Sox mamtamed their

Neumann had it real good

~

~

\

Alst~n . ignores NL '~ best .r eliefer

RJzelle.'rule is needed

times for the powerful at KanBas City," Hunt s*ld, Packer teams of the 1964m. "I "but I think there would be
feel very strongly that teams some Interest in leaving.
F ratl tng f9J Dettore ( 9l and
are built around certain We'd be WOI"Se' off because
Mrtterwald WP ~ Brett ( S 2)
playerS at times and for one we'd have an unstable
LP Reusche l (5 1Ql H.R - Oitv
(9)
of those players to leave product. n.e--iiiurie would
without restraint would hold true for e~ry team."
N ew Yor k
000 100 2oo- 3 8 1
At l anta
000 000 100- I 6 0
create a morale problem."
Webb
(2 3)
and
Grote
Davis, who played with
Easterly Beard ( 7) Sosa 18 )
and Correll LP Easterly ( 1 3 )
Bart Starr, Jim Taylor and
HRs Staub (8t h )
K.ngman
Paul Hornung on three
( 14th)
straight world champion
San F ran
001 020 201- 6 14 0
teams under coach Vince
5 1 l.OUIS
410 020 lOX- 8 1J 0
Ca ldwell , Heaverlo { 6) La
Lombardi, aaid he thinks
velle (8J and H tl l
Reed.
most players today accept
Hrabosky (71 and Stm mons
W P- Reed (9 8 ) LP- Ca ldwt- 11
the "Rozelle Rule."
{5 8) HR St mmons ( 11th)
The Middleport Indians
U the rule were removed, were outh1t 8-7 by the Salem
Phtl a
000 200 001 - 3 10 1
he said, "They'd leave a city
Cmcy
301 001 20x- 7 9 0
Center Pirates but came out
or team they didn't par·
Carlton
Hoerner
18) and
on the big end of the score as
Oates . Darc y, Eastwtck (9) and
tlcularly
want
to
be
with."
Bench WP - Dar cy ( 4 SJ LP they walloped the Pirates 14-9
DaVJS, now a pro football
Carllon 17 7J HRs Perez
Monday.
The win put the
( lith ) Foster {15th )
color analyst for a television
Indians' record at 2-1 In the
network and a Los Angeles second half of play and the
M ontreal
000 100 oob--- 1 8 0
Houston
000 500 OO•- S A 0
area beer distributor, aald
Rogers {5 n and Car t er .
loS$ made the Pirates slate ~
the majority of players would
Oterker f 8 9) and J$nson
3.
prefer to play for teams on
Shane Smith started onJ!"
the West Coast and Miami, mound for the Indians, going
Amencan League
Chtcago
010 000 ooo-- 1 8 o
where the weather is
4 mn!ngs before beln~
Detrott
000 200 OOx - 2 8 0
favorable,
or in the large relieved by April King who
K aat ( 13 5) and Down.ng
Walk er (3 6 ) anq Freehan HR
metropolitan areas, such 8ll
worked 1 mnlng, and finally,
- Hen der!ton (4t h )
New York or ChicagQ.
by John Cremeans, who
Milwaukee
000 11 2 ooo- 4 13 1
Hunt said elimination of the
worked 1 inning .
Kansas Ctty 000 300 ooo- 3 11 o
rule would lead to "subSlat on , Rodr•ouez (7l and
Stony Johnson started on
Moore
Fttzmorrts , McDaniel
stantially more player
the hill for the Pirates and
( 6) and Sttnson WP - Siaton (7
movement than is the case
8) LP F tt zmorrt s (9 Sl
went 2 mnings; Tackett went
The Pomeroy Tigers today.
2, and Ed Lester pitched 4.
Mtnnesota
100 001 001 - 3 8 0
"Maybe not a mass exodus
Boston
400 010 01 x - 6 8 1 doubled the score on the
Hitters for the Indians were
Hug hes
A lbury
rel and Pomeroy
Yankees
m
Borgmann Wtse Burton (7) ,
Steve Carson w1th a
Pomeroy little League play
Willoughb y ( 7) and Blackwell
homerun , double, and single,
WP - Wts e ( 10 6 ) LP - Hughes Monday night by downing the
(7 7) HR - Rtce 1131h)
and Steve Hood a homerun
Yanks 84. Steve Ohlinger
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Red and double, and Scott Har·
Te~~.as
200 000 ooo--- 2 9 o went the distance and picked
VIking won the featured ting~r and Dave Hoffman
New York
100 200 20•- S 6 1
up the wm for the Tigers as he eighth race, a $1,300 pace, at
Hands (5 51 and Sundberg ,
each had a smgle.
Medt ch 0 10 ) and Munson HRs fanned 15 and walked 6.
Scioto
Downs
here
Mooday,
- Whtt e {7th) , Nettles ( 14th )
For the Pirates K. Thomas
Harvey Whitlatch also went covering the one.rnile In 2:06
Mason (2nd)
homered,
tripled,
and
the distance for the Yankees, and returning $8.40, $3.40 and
doubled;
W.
Garnes
had
a
Cleveland
000 000 12Q- J 8 0
Oakland
031 001 Tli - 7 10 0 and was tagged With the loss
$2.60.
homerun and single, Ed
E c kersley , Brown {7) and
Whitlatch fanned 10 and
Back by one and one- Lester, Denms Thornton and
EiltS , Perry F angers (7) and
walked 5.
Tenace WP - Perry (3 7l LPquarter length was Early Terry Hutton each had a
Eckersley 15 2 ) HR S- WIIIiam s
The Yankees scored ail Retirement and Racealot
IJOthl . Rud1 2 (10th , 11th ).
single
four of thell' runs m the thrrd showed.
Powell ( 1-Jth l
Inning after being down 3-0,
..
A 4-8 nlghUy double combo
·= ·=· .·:·
then led 4-3 un Ill the Tigers of Moon Drop and Jeffs
scored a sihgle run m the Pretty Boy pa1d $99.80.
Pete justified
fifth The Tigers i!dded four
Meigs Jr. and Sr. Girls
Attendance was 4,313 and
msurance markers m the the night's handle was . Softball.
now in crying
sncth.
SENIOR
$266,153.
For the Winmng Tigers
Tuesday, July 8 Hits 'N
'I wuzz robbed'
Ohlinger had a homerun and
Misses vs. New Haven at New
single, Kevm Smith a double
Haven - 6:15.
and
single,
and
gettmg
Tues , July 8 Forest Run vs
CINCINNATI (UP!) '
M &amp; Rat Racine - 7:15.
The pollee and not umpires, smgles were R1~h Icenhower,
are hearing Pete Rose's Robbie Davis and Laura
Thurs , July 10 M - R vs
latest complaint that "I wuz Sm1th (bunt and smgle). For
Hits 'N Misses at Minersville
the Yankees, Mike Whitlatch
robbed."
- 6: 15.
A restaurant owned by the and J1mm1e Snyder each
Forest Run vs. New Haven
smgles
Cincinnati Reds star was
at New Haven - 6: 15.
Syracuse defeated
robbed of $3,700 over the
JR. LEAGUE
Pomeroy 16-; Sunday In
weekend.
Wt\41., July 9
Independent Baseball action
A restaurant hostess said a
Forest Run vs. Letart at
Rick Ash started on the Letart- 6:15.
man had handed her a dollar
mound for the winners and
bill and asked for change.
Mason vs. New Haven at'
picked up the win go10g seven Mason - 6·15
When she went to the cash
mnmgs. Rick Van Matre
register the man said,
Rutland vs. Pantherettes at
In Pomeroy Little League f1015hed, working the eighth Rutland- 6:15.
" Forget the change and give
action the Pirates mpped the and nmth inni!)gs.
me your bills."
Pomeroy vs. Racine at '
Tim Demoskey was the Racine - 7:15.
The hostess said the man Yankees 4-3, sconng twice In
the
first
and
third
innings.
losing
pitcher for Pom,roy,
held his hand In bls pocket as
thoagh be bad a gun. She The Yanks scored single runs gomg 6 Innmgs Mike Werry
handed over the money, the m the first, thrrd, and Iouth. relieved Demoskey and
robber stuffed the bills "in a The Yankees outh1t the worked the final three
Pirates 7 to 5.
frames .
doggie bag and fled.
Syracuse batters hit four
Chris Judge pitched the
:· first mning, walking 2 and 1 homeruns, one triple and 5
fannmg 2. John Morris came doubles. Pomeroy hitters had
•
on in relief m the second and one homer. The big Syracuse
Inning
was
m
the
seventh
fanned 6 and walked 5 while
on the hill.
when seven runs crossed the
J . R . Wamsley started on plate. The Pomeroy runs
•
•
pncemc~e
the mound for the Yanks and -came In the first and the
gave up 2 hits and 2 walks seventh .
DETROIT
(UP!)
General Motors Monday before he was relieved by
confirmed It has notified Todd Fife who finished
dealers that pnce Increases fanning 6 and walking 3 while Harrisonville is
of up to 8 per cent - an giving up 3 hits
Hitters for the winning
average $300 a car - will be
Buccaneers
were John 5-l over Pirates
charged to fleet buyers of Its
1976 model cars and trucks. Morris With 2 smgles and
In Jr . Bahe Ruth action the
It was the clearest In· · Chris Judge and Lyle Moon Harrisonville squad defeated
d1catlon that Detroit's each had a smgle. For the the Rutland Pirates f&gt;.l at
automakers. plan substantial Yankee getting singles were Harrisonville last Fnday.
mcreeses on the new models Todd Fife, J. R. Wamsley, Robbie Williams pitched a
when they debut .this fall Harvey Whitlatch, Shawn fine 4-hitter with the help of
despite the fact that car Gilmore, and Scott Harrison. relief man Gary Howard
Jim Morris manages the
buyers are balking at 1975
Hitters for the winners
Pirates
and Bob Wamsley were Howard and David
model prices. In tqe past two
model years, prTh!8s have manages the Yankees.
Harper with 2 smgles. Raridy
jumped an average ,1,000 a
Mitchell and Lewis Harper
cat.
_
each had a single. Arnold had
GM's notification to dealers COMPLICATIONS FOUND
a double, and Eblin had a
covers only fleet purchasers,
ATLANTA (UPI) - Dr. single and double. For the
but is considered an In· James C. Parkes diagnosed a
Pirates, Wilford and Mowery
dicatlon of the price Increase deviated septum Monday had smgles and Dink Ken·
that will be passed on to the when removing stitches from nedy and Mike Wayland each
average car buyer.
1 · the nose and face of New had a double.
York Mets relief pitcher Bob
J
.
Apodaca.
BANHOFFER CHOSEN
Apodaca suffered a com.Daily'"~tineJ
NEW YORK ( UPI)
pound fracture of the nose oo
DEVOTED TO Tlto:
Striker Uri Banhoffer, who June 29 when he was struck
INTEREn OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
scored a hat trick last week In on the nose PbiladelPbla's
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL
Exec. Ed.
leading the Los Angeles Johrmy Oates line drive In a
ROBERT HOEFLICH
Aztecs to a f&gt;-1 victory over game at Shea Stadium.
. (lty Edlfot
I
P"Ublished dally e•ceJ; . I
Pele and the New York
At the time of the accident,
:Saturday by The Ohio Valleyl
Cosmos,
Monday
was •14 stitches were 'required to
l~ubltsh•J'Ig Company.
1Court Sf , Pomeroy . Oh lo
If you believe In
selected Player of the Week • close the wound and Dr.
45769 Business Office Phone !
2 2156 Edltori21tl Phofte 992
lasting love. select
by the North American Parks
discovered
the
57
•
your wedding ring
Soccer League.
,
deviated septum Monday
Secon.d class posi'age patd f
Pomeroy, Ohio
The hat trick was the when removing the stitches.
from
our ArtCarved
bN_!lf • O~I
advertlsin§'
collection today .
second Banhoffer has~
representaftve
Ward•'
1 Grtfflth Company, Inc f
this season and It was the
Botttnelll &amp; Gallabher Oiv
757 Third Ave , N""ew York~
second time he was sleeted
, N Y 10017
Player of the Week.
I
S.ubscri'pt "'"
I a til:~ (
Delivered by carrier where
Banhoffer has scored 10
75 (ents per week .:
The Ohio Department of •avatlable
goals and four assists In his
By Motor Route wher•
arr•er.
service
no!t
Re.sources '
last nine games and Is second Natural
vallabte. One month , ll 2~
•
y ma•l in OhtO and W '\la j,
In the scoring table with '¥1 Division of Watercraft urges
ne
Year
,
S22
~
.
Slltl
points behind Miami's Steven boaters to carry hand flares
onths,
Sll 50 ,
Three
months. S7 oo ElseWhere
Davld,whobuSipolntt from and smoke flares In a S26
oo ...,.._ar. Six month~
11 ~
lour
,..,_ watertight container In their 1Sll50
. ihl'ee months . $7 50
C
ubscnpllon price ,nctud&amp;s, 1
I!.Urt St., Pomeroy
craft
~
be
Uled
in
caae
of
Roch!:ster'• Tommy OnltUD
und_.-Y_T~mwes.. ~~tln~_4 ,'Lo,.--- · - - - -....,....J •
tmlf'ltncy .
hN '¥/,..,

Nat.onal League
P tttsburg h
000 100 004 5 ~ l
· Chicago
000 000 000- 0 5 1
Brett. Hernandez (8) G•ustt
(81 and Sangudlen
A eusche l

I '

In early 1974. He was traded
to the Vrrgima Squires after
the season and returned to
the team after a stint with the
Indiana Pacers
Earlier this year, he filed a
bankruptcy petition listmg
debts of $87,588 and assets of
$26,731.

Boston
New York
M•lwaukee
Balllmore
Clevela nd
Det r o1t

44

I
37

4) 38
39
38 4 1

44

]7 44
34 46

pet

g b

543

531
530
481
457
425

1

l
5
7
9'

2

Wes t
w t pel g b
Oakland
51 31 622
K an sa s C1ty
45 37 549 6
Texas
40 "4 476 12
Chtcago
18 42 475 11
Ca l tt orn ta
]9 46
459 13 1 1
M1 n nesota
37 45 451 14
Monday' s Resu lt s
New York 5 Texas i
Oel r o1t 2 Ch cage 1
Boston 6 Mtnnesola 3
M ilwa u kee 4 Kansas Ctty 3
Oa k lan d 7 Clevel and 3
(Only gam es sc heduled )
Today s Probable Ptt chers
( All Ttme s E OT )
Mmnesota I Cam pbell 2 41 at
Boston fTtanl 11 Bl 7 30 p m
Texas fBacstk. 1 21 at New
York (Hunter 11 8 ) 8 p m
Ch cago ! Wood 6 121 at Del r ott
(Co leman 4 17l 8 p m
Mttwaukee ( Tr ave r s 4 1 J at
Kansas Ctt y { L eona r d J 4l 8 30

pm

Balllmore
Caltfor nta

( Pa l me r 13 51 , at
( Ryan 10 7)
10 30

pm

Clevela nd ( Hood 2 4 ) at Oa k
land 1HoltZman 9 1l 11 p m
Wednesdav 's Games
M tn nesota at Boston
Cleve land a t Oa k lan d
ex as at New York n •g h t
Ch 1cago at De trod n tght
Balltmor e at Calt f o rn• ~ n1ghl
M ilwaukee at
Ka nsas ~·
n gh 1

1

one-game lead over the
Brewers and Yankees m the
AL E:ast Doug Griffm and
R1ck Miller also drove m runs
for the Red Sox, who played
without the services of Fred
Lynn (still InJUred) and Carl
Yastrzemsk1 (sick)
Yankees 5, Rangers Z
Roy White, Gra1g Nettles
and Jun Mason all belted
homer s and Doc Medich (7·
10 ) scattered nine hits over
the distance to give the
Yank ees
their
second
straight after seven straight
losses All three Yankee.
homers were solo shots, but
Nettles also smgled home a
run durmg a two-run Yankee
fourth
Athletics 7, lndlans 3
Joe Rud1 hit a pair of solo
homers and Billy Williams
added a two-run blast to push
the three-time defen dmg
world champiOn A's SIX
games ahead'o! Kansas City
m the AL West Veteran Jun
Perry went 6 1·3 Innmgs to
gam " his third Win m 10
deciSions Rudl had been
hitless In his previOus 12 atbats before breaking loose for
his two homers.
rigers 2, White Sox 1
Leon Roberts tripled home
the tymg run and then came
home to score the gamewmner m the fourth mrung,
l maJ&gt;ling the Tigers to stop
Ch1sox ace Jun Kaat (1 3-&lt;i )
from beconung the maJor
leagues' top w10ner AL runproducmg leader Willie
Horton drove 10 Roberts w1th
a sacrifice fly, hiS 60th RBI of
the year Tom Walker ( 3-6)
went the. route for the Win

Now Featuripg

STRAWBERRY
~FIORTCAKE

Adolph's Dairy Valley

' Sun .- Thur.
Hrs.: 10:00 A.M. Til11 :00 P.M.
1 10:00A.M. TII12:00 P.M. Fri . &amp; Sat.
•
992-2556
W. MAIN
POMEROY, O.

N a t.onal League
g ab r
h
pet
Morgn en 76 212 59 96 353
Mad l ck Ch 75 302 43 106 3Sl
Cash Ph1l 84 354 62 118 333
Bowa P htl 58 25 1 32
83 331
San gln PI 71 257 2c;l
84 327
Parkr Plf 70 258 40 84 326
watson Ho 79 295 38 96 325
Joshua SF 65 243 34 78 32 1
Garvy LA 85 359 46 115 320
Gr tffey Cn 69 226 50
72 319

Amencan Lea gu e
g ab r
h

Car w Mnn
Hargrv h:
M un sn NY
Lynn Bos
Wash Oak
Htsle Mnn
McRa KC
MddX N Y
May Ch •
Bra n M nn

17 284 51 105
74 260 48
87

pel
370
335

44 97 327
?.62 54 85 324
8 1 321 47 10 1 315
60 220 34
69 314
81 3 13 39 97 J \ 0
55 2 18 36 67 307
76 277 3 1 83 300
66 218 26
65 2c;l8
Hom e Run s
Nal•ona l League
Luzmskt
P htl 27 Bench C1 n 17 Foster
C n and
Par ke r ,
P1t1
15
Ktngman NY
Schm td l
Ph il
and Starge l l P 1tt 14
Amenca n League Bond s NY
19 Jackson Dl'lk 111 Hendr ick
Clev Horto n De l , Maybe rr y
KC and Burroughs Tex 16
Runs Batted In
Na t tona l League
L uzmskl,
Phil 73 Benc h Cm 69 Morgan
Ctn 59 Watson Hou 57 Stau b
N Y 56
Amencan League
Hor tOn
Dct 60 Lynn Bos 58 Scott Mtl
57 May Ba ll and N etll es NY
78
73

797

WOMEN'S SUMMEk

DRESS SHOES
Reg. s12.99 to $18.99

Sale~

To

heritage house
Your Thom MeAn Store
Middleport, OhiO

agents in
more places
means more

55

Stol en Ba ses
Nal tonal League
Morgan
Ctn 38 Br ock St L 34 Cedeno
Hou
JJ
Lopes
LA
32
Concepct on Ct n a,nd Mano ua l
Mtl 19
Amen c an l eague
R 1ver s
Ca l 46 washtngt on Oak 32
01 s KC 29
Nor t h Oak 13
Remy Ca l an d LeF lore Det
Ptlchmg
(Ba sed on most v tcton es)
Nat anal L eag u e Se ave~ . N Y
1'2 4
Messersmllh
L A 12 5
Su tlon LA 17 8 Jones SO 11 5
B lllngham Ctn 10 3 Mat lack
NY and McGlothen St L 10 6
Ame rt ca n League
Palmer
Bait and Kaa t Ch t 13 5 Bl ue
Oa k 116
B usby
KC 11 6
T1ant Bas and Hunter N Y 11 8

$}3

service lor you.
Ste11e Snowden
1258 Powell 51
Middleport, 0

n

PH . 992-7155
lt ke a good
fle1ghbor
State Farm
IS there

"""'

.......

IHJIJit4HCI

•

Ill I I UI,I t.I UIU•l •uTOWOIIlf 1-UIUtl
tC I,IIIH Mnu t OIIICI I IDO III I. CIO• It

p 71 105

Save on These Fine Frigidaire
Appliances from the Home
Economics Rooms of the local
High Schools.

-NEW WARRANT\' From Fng1da1re and General Motors, a
mobile dishwasher that converts to a builtin anytime.
Th ts Fngtdatr8 Mobtle Otshwasher ghdea to ,
the smll fast and easy then hooks up to
the hot wa ter faucet tn seconds Super·
Su rge Washmg Achon scrubs soft lood
was tes oH tableware po ts and pans eltmt·
nates tQe need to pre· nns1ng o l normally
so1leel dtshes Use the h andy Form1ca•
b rand top tor e~~:tra wo rk space When
you ve made your last mo ve so has vour
Frtgtdatre Mobtle Otshwasher It .nstalls
"'~'.llr::"' rtgh t under a standard-height counteJ any,r
11me (conversto n kit av••table at extra
charg e)

Carefree. automallc cookmg
and near-etfortless clean1ng
make lh1s our most popular
Frrg1da1re 30" Electnc Range.
So that you can get more
done duMg.a busy day the

and stops
by its•,lll
you preset
the Aulo·
;~~~E~~~l·;~~~~start~
1 Cook Master control
save you even more time,
lh1s mode! features an
Electrl-clean oven thai can
clean 1tse1f, leavrng JUSt a
trace of ash to w1pe out.

'31995

BAKER FURNITURE
-~Middleport,

Ohio

II&gt;

�.
'

'

l

.
••

.

' I

4- 'Ihe Dailv Sentin!!l. Middleport-Ponierdy, 0., Tuesday,'July 8,1975

'

.

.

?.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:-:::.:~:·:::~::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::;~::::::::::::~:~~1....

6th birthda_y
..,' celebrated

i~

by Michl King
...
••
•. .
•

By Helen anc) Sue Bottel

~

•

..
- ~

..

Will Trip Spot! Romance?
Rap :
· I'm 15 and have two problems . Both of them are my
boyfriend . First, I 'm going on a school-sponsored trip w
Alaska, this s ummer, and I'm afraid he might get tired Jlf
waiting for me a lmost two monihs .
Second , in nine months of fiOing_ w~ether,_ we've been !0
exactly two movies, and one of those was a double-date
suggested by the other guy. I hinted for a whole week before he
took me to the other movie: I have even suggested something
free,likea picnic, but he'd rather watch TV.
I know a 15-ycar.()ld guy doesn't have much money, but he
sisn't destitute because he goes wconcerts with !elias and they
eost $5.50. He also buys lots of tapes and new records, and
spends oodles on the care of his bike.
Outside of not taking me places, he is very loyal and
loving. He isn 't getting tired of me - he 's always been a nospe nder. But he MIGHT find another girf while I'm gone.
How do I stop worrying about that, and also get hirr) to
treat me more like a girlfriend? - LEFT BEHIND (OR
LEAVING HIM BEHIND')

Michl King , son or Mr. and
Mr s .' Arland King, Rock
Springs, was honored on his
sixth birthday July 5 with a
cookout and · party at his
home .
· Enj oying the cooko ut were
his grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs . Clare nce King and Mr .
and Mrs. Tony Fowler, oil or
Middleport, and Mr. and Mrs .
Mark Mowler, Cambridge ,
and ~is sister, Marsha Beth .
R e fr eshme nts o f
homemade ice cream and
cake in the sha pe of a racing
car were served la ter in the
evening at a party . The re was
also a cake baked by his
gr andm other, Mrs. Fowler,
in the shape of a race track
with two small ca rs.
Attending the party were
those above and Mr . and Mrs.
Roy Stone , Rock Springs; Mr.
aM Mrs. Gene King, Randy
and Lisa, New Haven ; Paul,
Shawn, and Amy Goeglem;
April Clark and Lisa Rende .
Michl a lso received gifts
from Mrs. Beulah White and
Mrs . Suzanne Hich nfond .

Dear L. B.:
Perhaps your trip will make him r ealize you're worth as
much as his bike and concerts with the buys .
Have fun and stop worrying - he'll be waiting when you
return . - SUE

-

Colorful Zesty
MR. GRONINGER,PAUL,MmS. GRONrnNGER,MATT
FOLLOWING A YEAR OF ministering at the
Pomeroy Church of Christ, Mr. ·and Mrs. Terrell
Groninger and th~ir two sons, Matt, 5, and Paul, 3, above,
will be leaving t.he area July 13. They will reside in Lincoin, Ill., where Mrs. Groninger will finish her BA degree
at Lincoln Christian College, and he will work on his
masters qegree in Bible . The family will work weekends
wraise missionary funds go wBrazil in the sununer of
lfll7 wnere they plan w work as missionaries. They spent
the swruner of 1973 on a missionary internship in Chili .
The Groningers' hometown is Flora, Ind.

''

DRIED ·
FLOWER_
S

'

Star Flowers
Happy Flowers
Hill Flowers

Belva Johnson betrothed ·

'.

Polly's Point-a.-.Musty odor
eludes treatment

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6-8.

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t'•~~

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B
d
S
h
May ennett jgs in out west
·

on

Summer Special For New Hom~

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Family picnic
1

held Saturday

.

.;• :ttleme:tofyour

IN POINT PLEASANT
CONTACT
HARLEY HENDRICKS

li~rary

'

IN MIDDlfPORT
CONTACT
DONNA STEWART
992·2145'

67~2460

...

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.•

"':

RETREADS.
ALL .

$}1_.95

.

AND ~EW CENTRAL HEATIN&amp; SYSTEMS
.AND SPACE HEATERS

PASSENGER
SIZES
I•

- ..&lt;

CITY ICE &amp; FUEL CO.
.

. Point Pleasant W. Va.

-·•-..

·~

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~· _· ~-;';'-::-- \-~~-

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The
family picnic
was held at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Gerald Morris,
Jlutland, last Saturday. ·
Attending..were Mrs. Myrle
Knapp, Dayton; Mr. and Mrs.
Gnlg Sanders and children
LaW'ie, Brenda, Doug and
Schelly, Dayton ; ~ , and
Mrs. Do'n Sag,ders, Athens;
Mrs. ~tty Gordon, Athens.
· · Al~o,' . Mr. and Mrs·.
Leo Morris and childref!
Cathy aild Steve.• Rutland;
Mr. and · Mrs. Ator, Albany;
. Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Morris,
Pomeroy; Mrs . Myrta
.Stanley, . A]bany; Mr. and
Mrs. Earl Morris, New
Marshfield; Mr . and Mrs.
Everett · I:Jachner, . Middleport;. ~ . Electa Souders,
·Middleport ;· Frances Roush,
. • Jruddleyort and Mrs. Alberta ·
Lo!tls and daughter , Bet:
tyann, Pomerey .

••
••
-!• .. ,.,....c~~-,--,c-"-

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.."''-:;..

••
- .... -.""- f

r.ti~ ·oloo

'
ai'inual

•

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•

First Time OHerlng by Mark V

to Limit'

I.

We Feature Superiors USDA Choice Tender Beef
,FRESH AND LEAN
Fresh &amp; Lean

GROUND· BEEF
lb.

'

GROUND CHUCK

89~

lb.

Specially Prepared
Fresh &amp; Lean

..

GROUND ROUND

lb.

$}29

lb.

99~

lb.

89~

Home Made

HAM SALAD

Superiors
USDA Choice Beef

Superiors All Meat

CUBE STEAK
lb.

$}19

BOLOGNA

$179

•

and Packaged from USDA Beef

Here ·~

a

firs t

t ime

treat w i th g r e at
flavor - season ing
adtte d , and mad e
from U S DA b ee f .
Pa ckage d .4 to 6 In

$}49
lb.

cello tray .

Fresh Baby· Beef

~. 99~

-

LIVER

•

.•
••

FAYGO

M A RKV

...

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••

RC
16 oz. DOts.

8

SATURDAY ONL Yf

DRINKS

.F AVORITE

·.

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BREAD

$}09
:
PAK
.

.

(NO RETURN BOnLES)

Friday Only
'·'

16 ounce

'1 •

lvs•

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-

S PE( IAL

16 oz.

•
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All Weel&lt; Price

.

Mr. and Mrs. Keith Curtis
and daughter, Gayla Lee
have ·· retW"ned home after
spending several days with
Mr. and Mrs . ~nnis Smith
and children, Ralph and
Denean Renee, Lincoln Park,
Mich.
· ··
While thel,'e they attended
the horse races at.lhe Hazel
· Park lfarness Raceway.
They also attended a party in
honor of Edwin Srhith's birthday. He was 75.
Accompanying them home
were Mrs. Smith, the former
Beverly Beav'l{;and children
who are spending two weeks
with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. John Beaver of Nye .
Ave.

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WP. Accept Federal_ Food Sb,mp.•
PHON£: 992-3480 .

Visitors to
Michigan· are
returned home

·-

•I

SUPER MARKET - Open~ Daily 9.to 10 - Sun; 10 to 1

1:30; Arms La ne'McCallum ,
· 2-2: 15; Pomeroy Library,,
3: 30-4; Baum's Addit ion ,
4:30-5; Kroger's Parking Lot,

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.....,.,.....

p.m.; Bowman's Run, 1: 15·

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Mr. Eddy's Meigs Coun!y
schedule for Thursday July 10
and Friday, July 11 :
THURSDAY
Por!land Eie. and vic. ,
11 : 30-noon;
Portland
Community , 12 : 15 - 12 : 45
p.m .; Riverview , 1-2; Reedsville, 2: 30-3; Eden Church,
3:30-4; Long Bo!tom, 4:30-5;
Stiversvllie. 5:30-6: 30; Grea!
Bend, 7:30-8.
FRIDAY
Racine and Vic., 11 a .m ..
noon; Soulhern. 12: 15-12: 45

I)&amp;D MEAT

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A New Barbecue Treat

Eddy 's schedule

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FRIDAY
MEIGS County Pomona
Grange, 8 p .m., at the Rock
Springs Grange Hall. Athens
County Pomona Grange will
visit: Potluck refreshments.

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Joe Smith
·Introduces
.

• RACINE Grange at the
Grange Hall at 8 p.m .
TIIURSDAY
ROCK Springs Grange, 8
p.m . Inspection and county
contests will be held .
CATHOLIC .Women 's Club,
Sacred Heart Parish, monthly meeting, 8 p.m. preceded
by Mass 7: 30. Hostesses Becky Broderick, Emma
BrOderick, Susan Baer, and
Mildred Wells.
HAPPY Harvester Class of
Trinity Church Friday at 6
p.m. Potluck dinner followed
by program under direction
of Carrie Neutzling.

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WEDNESDAY
PAST Councilor ' s Club,
Chester Council, Daughters .
6f America, 7 p.m . at the
. ..borne of Sadie Trussell with
Dorothy Lawson, co-hostess.
Beverage, dessert and table
service furnished by the
hostess .

59 N. Second St.
Middleport, Ohi

6 DAYS
A WEEK

•

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. WINDING Trail Garden
Club, 8 p.m. home of Mrs
Mildred Deeth. Program b;
Mrs . . Faye Pratt, Qn gar~ening ·without poison . For
roll call, members are to take
a day 1Uy specimen.

w

Mason Area
News Notes

.

TUESDAY
REGULAR MEETING ,
Racine Masonic Lodge 461,
F&amp;AM, 7:311 p.m. Work in.the
first degree; all Master
Masons Invited.
SPECIAL' MEETING,
Middleport Masonic Lodge
363, 7 p.m. Work in the entered .apprentice degree; aU
Master Masons invited.
'
- . ...-·MEIGS Chapter 53, DAY,
meeting 7:30p.m. at home on
Butternut Ave ., Pomeroy.

..

TARRIVED

Dear L .B.:
lre'll be waiting·, mainly, I'd guess, because he doesn' t
appear 10 be the boyevery girl dreams about. If his idea of a
REUNION SET
great date is sitting in front of a TV set, he won 't get many • MASON , W. Va . - The
third annual Logan County,
chan ces to be untrue this summer. - HELEN
W.
Va . reunion will be held
MRS.
Kathryn
Johnson
is
announcing
the
•
engagement and forthcomin g marriage of her daughter
+++
DearHelenandSue : Sunday, Aug . 3 at Camden
is Pleased
••
Belva, to Jeff Miller, son of Mr . and Mrs. Herbert Miller of
I'm a very athletic girl, 5feet I inc~ . 105 pounds, age 17, an Park, Huntington . Last year
••
to
there were 150 guests from
honor student, with a real big problem. Two of them!
Letart Falls, Ohio. Miss J ohnson is also the daughter of
'
'•
the late Howa rd Johnson. The wedding will be an event of
f matured late, and amazingly. From a size 32 six months eight states prese nt.
Present.
ago, I grew to a size 36 bra. All those things do is get in the way.
Aug. 9, 1975 at 7 p.m. at the United Methodist Church jn
Mason, W. Va . The gracious custom of an o pen church
I play basketball and tennis, and they're always flopping
B~AUTIFUL PORTR-AITS
wedding will be observed .
around. My shoulders hurt. My breasts hurt, I'm beginning to
stand stoop-shoulder, beeause I look like a pouter pigeon.
IN NATUR.A•L LIVING COLOR
.
A'ITENDS
WORKSHOP
My
parents
don't
know
I'm
upset,
and
I
won't
tell
them
! •
RACINE - Southern High
until fhear from you about a possible "reducing" operation
, : · on my bustline. If I've grown this much in six months (wtthout School was represented at the
putting on weight elsewhere), think what J'U be when I'm 20! fifth annual Moffit Marching
Please tell me if it 's possible to get rid of excess that only a Band Workshop at Otterbein
College, Westerville, June 211centerfold
girl would want. - TOP HEAVY
HYPOLLY CRAMER
July 3 by· Joy Bigler, band
instructor .
Dear T .H. :
Breast reductions a re expensive (around $2,000 or more) .
A good plastic surgeon would not perform such an operation if
COMPLETE
he suspected your problem isn't so much "excess" as a subPOLLY'S PHOHLEM
WITH
example, I wrote to a yarn conscious fear of growing up .
Inflati on was ru nning so rarn- ·
Is
Talk w your family doctor. If he believes pendulous or toopant when th i s nation was born
DEAR POLLY - A room company to ask if a certain
THIS AD
that beef that cos t 16 pounds. 10 we close orr during winter brand of their yarn was heavy breasts are affecting your posture and your well-being, Mansfield, Ohio visited
Pius 50c
s hi llings a barrel i n months smells musty and mothproof so I would know he'll refer to a specialist. (But probably not until he's sure recently with relatives in the
Handling
Bend area. They ~Jere
Philade lph ia ctrca Janu a r y this odor penetrates even the how to s tore my afghan . They you've stopped developing.) - HELEN AND SUE
'
Charge
i779. sol d for 242 poun ds, 10 mattress and springs. Last
overnight guests of her sister,
did not answer . Thi s
• shillings by Decem ber of the
Elsie Roach and family at
s ummer I put them outside especially peeves me when I
sa me year. Part of the reason
A Regular
Mason.
Geo r ge Was htng ton's army a nd left them for two weeks . e nclose a s tamped enve lope.
$20.00
·Mr. and Mrs. Homer
went hun gry at Valley · Forge Every · day the sun wa s - RUTHANNE .
Brinker
of
Las
·
Vegas,
Nev.
Value!
CA R WASH SET
wa s that in 1778, butter was shinin g I pulled them out into
DEAR POLLY - I am a
have returned to Mason
Th e Me igs High School
selling for the equivalent of it. I have tried deodorant widow. In the past when I had
stay
through the swnmer, ONE Bx 10 NATURAL LIVING COLOR PORTRAIT.
$2 .40 a pound in today ·s money . sprays and burning incense. I some painting to do my varsity chee rleaders will hold
while here, Mr. Brinker is Minors must be accompanied by o parent. Only one advertiud
Tea sold at $45 a pound , The am going to repaint that room husband always stirred the a car wash at Welker's
offer per subj8ct and one per lamily every lhree monlh1. Group•
remodelling his· home in 51
World Alm a nac reports.
and would like to eliminate paint for me with a clean Ashland in Pomeroy Wed.00 exira per person .
Mason.
1NEWSI'A P ER ENT!o:H!'Il fSE ASSN. I
nesday
from
9
a.m
.
!Ultil
3
the
odor
before
painting.
Any
paddle or the electric pain t
PRES EM THIS AD TO OUR PHOTOGRAPHER
Copyright (c ) 1975
BYELS1EROACH
Mr. and Mrs . Harold Davis
ideas' - MRS. C.E .W.
stirrer . I did not have a p.m.
Saturday, August 2, the visited with her parents, Mr.
JULY9
VISITED MOTHER
DEAR MRS. C.E.W. paddle and was afraid to use
,
annual
John
and
Amanda
and Mrs. Hobert Fridley at
AT
.
Mrs. Kathy Clonch, In..,
This Is rather an elusive the stirrer so hit on the idea of
Aumiller
Roach
reunion
will
Ripley,
W.
Va.
on
J.ucy_4th.
FIRE
HALL,
MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO
problem. Th e odor could using a long-han.dled slotted dianapolis, Ind ., and her
be held at the New Haven
Roy Dale Crites visited Bring Grandparents in for a Free 8x10 Color '' ""
come from many things. I kitchen spoon in my gallon of friend , Mrs. Loretta Are ns,
Park,
New
Haven.
Welcome
Thursday
night and Friday Portrait OF them.
suppose you have U,ft all the four-year-old paint. It worked also of Indianapolis, spent the
·to
all
relatives
and
fiiends
.
with
Larry
and Roger Roach ,
window s open on sunny, wonders and was easier to weekend with Mrs. Clonch's
Mr. and Mrs. Theodore
•
breezy days to air it. Vanilla use than a paddle . I could mother , Mrs . Margaret
Casto and sons, Ray and
• •
candles are one of the best reach the bottom and lift the McKenzie, and return ed
Joey, of Lorain, Ohio visited
odor removers I have ever heavy paint on the bottom home Monday .
•
MON. thru.SAT .
Thursday through Saturday
•
used. Try bur.ning some in the and then thoroughly mix it
with Mr . and Mrs. Ottie ·
room and, of cnurse, be very alL Since this paint can be
Roach.
I
t•arefuL Ca ~ litter is quite a washed out with warm soapy
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Lyons
deodorizer. Sprinkl e it about. wa ter I washed my brush and close the carton. The waxed
830 E. Main
and
family held a cookout on
carton helps prevent freezer
leave.•
for
a
time
and
remove.
roller
and
stood
·
the
roller
up
Pomeroy; Ohio
July 4, for Mrs. Lyons'
Do any of you readers have to dry. As it dried I brushed it burn . - HELEN.
brother,
Gene Elswock and
•
DEAR READERS- Sorry
_any suggestions for Mrs. with an old nylon hair brush
4 t;f.lllTH
SUTTON TOWNSHIP
..,..
we cannot answer your family and Benny and
TWP. CLERK
C.E.
W.'?POLLY.
•.
it
is
soft
and
fluffy
again.
so
••
,MEIGS COUNTY
questions by personal letters ·Elgena Vanhuse.
- MRS. H.M.J.
RACINE, OHIO 4S771
Deputy Dayton Raynes is
IS UII'IARI ES '
'
DEA R POLLY - Slip
DEAR POLLY - Start so please do not send stamped recuperating at his home in
'I
•'"•
plastic golf club protectors saving those waxed butter envelopesforthts. -POLLY.
•
·Mason after having major
'"
over the rods in your clothes and margarine cartons . I find
""
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surgery
at
Holzer
Medical
closet, especially over metal they make excellent conr&lt;X! s. They are easier to keep tainers for freezing home
You wtll receive a dollar if Center.
Mrs. Betty Shoaf and
clean. - MRS. R.RC . .
uses your favorite
grown vegetables. Place a Polly
SJ:!erri
of Palatine, Ill. was on
DEAR POLLY - My Pe t plastic bag inside carton, fill homemaking idea, Pet
Jl
Peeve is with the lack of with vegetables. Place a Peeve, Polly's Problem or vacation here with Mi's.
answers one gets from plas tic bag inside carton, fill solution to a problem .. Write Shoaf's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
•·
business places when writing with vegetables, tie the bag Polly In care of this news- T. R. Davis and brother,
Harold
and
wife,
Evelyn.
On
'
'
So you did a bangup for informa tion I, For opening, shut and Ughtly paper.
their way home they visited
with her sister, Thebna, Mr.
•'
job on alight pole,
and Mrs. !}len Johnson and
•
. .. •
Andnowyou're
daughter, Kim, at Westerhaving troo1ble 11Illlking
ville,
Ohio.
.bles
Relatives in Pomeroy have ago.
Boy's Ranch , the Southwest
h
f
trou
li
E
g t-o your
· learned of the death of May Mr. Bennett passed on1 Indian School, helped start Mr. and Mrs. Burwn Webb,
Well, tbere's.aaolu- Vincent Bennett in Young- some years ago, but MFr. the Women's Service Guild of
tion. Hurry down
town , Arizona who was born Bennett remained in Young- the church, and .w as proud of
••
to areal troublein Pomeroy May 1( 1886.
town where she was one of its her D.A.R. membership .
•
•
·
She was the youngest outs tanding citizens. She was
In Kansas she was active in
t
shooter: yourinde·
daug hter of c. J. Vincent and on the official board of tpe the Presbyterian Church,
i;Jendent insuranOI'
Martha Larimer Vincent . Community Church, on its · women's ·literary clubs and
agent.
Her . father owned and original building committee. was State Historian for the
1
operated a marble shop on She gave the steeple and the Kansas Women's Clubs.
We
.,pi 2 ent you
Front St. with his sons, lighted cross on the · new
She was the last surviving
•
first. And we work to
George, Jl.lont and ·Art. They church in m~mory of. her member of her family . Her
•
'
perlite fast, fair
also lived in a home on Front husband.
closest livhig relatives are a
'
St. , known in recent years as' .She star ted the
niece and nephew , Mrs. Ivan
the Vail 'Tourist Home. May club, founded the Youngwwn R. Adams: and Arthur Vin '
clai.Ois;
Vin cent taught in Sugar Run Library , was an officer on the cent Hardin g, co-owners of
r
. school ·for two years after Community Fund, active in Fur-Fish-Dame magazine,
'
I,
I' .
graduating
.from
Pomeroy
the
work
{or
the
Arizona
Colunnb115, Ohio.
' '.
High SchooL Her sister
••
••
Marilla Vincent Harding also
••
~
· taught there 10 yeats before
,
• •f
her marriage. ··
I~
t
.
Reuter~Brog•n
Mrs
.
S~nnett
then moved to·
'
INSURANCE
~~- ......... ·
Columbus, Ohio, where she
..
entered
business , college.
' '
After graduation, she was
employed as office manager
by her · brother-in-law for
PLUS RECAPABLE
•
:
Hunt · - Grade : Trapper
••
magazine . She moved to .
CASING
•
Kansas City ·after her
••
'
. marriage to .Elmer S. Ben•
•
nett, ·where they owned and
••
operated a. residence. hoteL
•
••
Their firs t retirement was to
'
Ottawa , 1 Kansas,
followed · ·
•••
some . time later to Youn g.
••
. town, _Arizona ovez: 17- years
•

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·Social
Calendar ·

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_5- Tbe Dally Sentinel,

REuNJONSET
~ second annu81 Snyder
teunion will be held Sunday,
July 13, at the state park on
Rt. 33 South. There will be a
basket lunch at noon, and a
phqwgrapher will be present.
;_ Those attending are asked to
bring money
pay for the
~ pictW"es .

Generation Rapl:

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DIET RITE

bottles

FLAVORS

·CASE OF 24 •••.•..••.......• $3.50 .

4

$100

qts.
for

Plvs Dep.

All Week Price
FROZEN FOODS
Queen of Scot Frozen

Strawberries

HEINZ

SPECIAL

57 SAUCE

2% MILK

pkg.

gal.$1.29

Scot Lad Shoestring

POTATOES

DIET RITE
COLA

16 oz. bottles

5 oz.
bot.

NEW! NEW! NEW! NEW!

MR
.
...
o·~
JR.
'
REEZE . PA
'

Sterling Cream Curls·

STRAWBERRY

.CREAM HORNs·
¢
pkg.

AND ORAN.GE
.

'

(4 SQUEEZE

.fREEZE· PAKS)

now

oz.

pl~s

19
dep . .

COKE

EDON BRAND

OR

TOILET TISSUE

PACKAGE

pkg.

SPRITE

· SWISS· MISS

PUDDING CUPS1

-

59¢

~~

~~$ 1 49
8
Sprite

•

COUPON

4 pak
on~

'

SPAK$1
16

4·.Roll

bag

I'

ROOT ORBEER

-OR-

_,

~

4-lb.

DAD'S

VALLEY BELL

·¢-·

10 oz.

MARK\/

SANK A
(

INSTANT
COFFEE
I .
. •
~:rz.

$}.99 •

limiJ t coupon per

·cust~mer

Good Only at Mark V

OFFER

EXPIRES:

7-12' 75

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4- 'Ihe Dailv Sentin!!l. Middleport-Ponierdy, 0., Tuesday,'July 8,1975

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?.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:-:::.:~:·:::~::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::;~::::::::::::~:~~1....

6th birthda_y
..,' celebrated

i~

by Michl King
...
••
•. .
•

By Helen anc) Sue Bottel

~

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Will Trip Spot! Romance?
Rap :
· I'm 15 and have two problems . Both of them are my
boyfriend . First, I 'm going on a school-sponsored trip w
Alaska, this s ummer, and I'm afraid he might get tired Jlf
waiting for me a lmost two monihs .
Second , in nine months of fiOing_ w~ether,_ we've been !0
exactly two movies, and one of those was a double-date
suggested by the other guy. I hinted for a whole week before he
took me to the other movie: I have even suggested something
free,likea picnic, but he'd rather watch TV.
I know a 15-ycar.()ld guy doesn't have much money, but he
sisn't destitute because he goes wconcerts with !elias and they
eost $5.50. He also buys lots of tapes and new records, and
spends oodles on the care of his bike.
Outside of not taking me places, he is very loyal and
loving. He isn 't getting tired of me - he 's always been a nospe nder. But he MIGHT find another girf while I'm gone.
How do I stop worrying about that, and also get hirr) to
treat me more like a girlfriend? - LEFT BEHIND (OR
LEAVING HIM BEHIND')

Michl King , son or Mr. and
Mr s .' Arland King, Rock
Springs, was honored on his
sixth birthday July 5 with a
cookout and · party at his
home .
· Enj oying the cooko ut were
his grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs . Clare nce King and Mr .
and Mrs. Tony Fowler, oil or
Middleport, and Mr. and Mrs .
Mark Mowler, Cambridge ,
and ~is sister, Marsha Beth .
R e fr eshme nts o f
homemade ice cream and
cake in the sha pe of a racing
car were served la ter in the
evening at a party . The re was
also a cake baked by his
gr andm other, Mrs. Fowler,
in the shape of a race track
with two small ca rs.
Attending the party were
those above and Mr . and Mrs.
Roy Stone , Rock Springs; Mr.
aM Mrs. Gene King, Randy
and Lisa, New Haven ; Paul,
Shawn, and Amy Goeglem;
April Clark and Lisa Rende .
Michl a lso received gifts
from Mrs. Beulah White and
Mrs . Suzanne Hich nfond .

Dear L. B.:
Perhaps your trip will make him r ealize you're worth as
much as his bike and concerts with the buys .
Have fun and stop worrying - he'll be waiting when you
return . - SUE

-

Colorful Zesty
MR. GRONINGER,PAUL,MmS. GRONrnNGER,MATT
FOLLOWING A YEAR OF ministering at the
Pomeroy Church of Christ, Mr. ·and Mrs. Terrell
Groninger and th~ir two sons, Matt, 5, and Paul, 3, above,
will be leaving t.he area July 13. They will reside in Lincoin, Ill., where Mrs. Groninger will finish her BA degree
at Lincoln Christian College, and he will work on his
masters qegree in Bible . The family will work weekends
wraise missionary funds go wBrazil in the sununer of
lfll7 wnere they plan w work as missionaries. They spent
the swruner of 1973 on a missionary internship in Chili .
The Groningers' hometown is Flora, Ind.

''

DRIED ·
FLOWER_
S

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Star Flowers
Happy Flowers
Hill Flowers

Belva Johnson betrothed ·

'.

Polly's Point-a.-.Musty odor
eludes treatment

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6-8.

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t'•~~

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B
d
S
h
May ennett jgs in out west
·

on

Summer Special For New Hom~

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Family picnic
1

held Saturday

.

.;• :ttleme:tofyour

IN POINT PLEASANT
CONTACT
HARLEY HENDRICKS

li~rary

'

IN MIDDlfPORT
CONTACT
DONNA STEWART
992·2145'

67~2460

...

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"':

RETREADS.
ALL .

$}1_.95

.

AND ~EW CENTRAL HEATIN&amp; SYSTEMS
.AND SPACE HEATERS

PASSENGER
SIZES
I•

- ..&lt;

CITY ICE &amp; FUEL CO.
.

. Point Pleasant W. Va.

-·•-..

·~

...

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~· _· ~-;';'-::-- \-~~-

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The
family picnic
was held at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Gerald Morris,
Jlutland, last Saturday. ·
Attending..were Mrs. Myrle
Knapp, Dayton; Mr. and Mrs.
Gnlg Sanders and children
LaW'ie, Brenda, Doug and
Schelly, Dayton ; ~ , and
Mrs. Do'n Sag,ders, Athens;
Mrs. ~tty Gordon, Athens.
· · Al~o,' . Mr. and Mrs·.
Leo Morris and childref!
Cathy aild Steve.• Rutland;
Mr. and · Mrs. Ator, Albany;
. Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Morris,
Pomeroy; Mrs . Myrta
.Stanley, . A]bany; Mr. and
Mrs. Earl Morris, New
Marshfield; Mr . and Mrs.
Everett · I:Jachner, . Middleport;. ~ . Electa Souders,
·Middleport ;· Frances Roush,
. • Jruddleyort and Mrs. Alberta ·
Lo!tls and daughter , Bet:
tyann, Pomerey .

••
••
-!• .. ,.,....c~~-,--,c-"-

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.."''-:;..

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- .... -.""- f

r.ti~ ·oloo

'
ai'inual

•

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First Time OHerlng by Mark V

to Limit'

I.

We Feature Superiors USDA Choice Tender Beef
,FRESH AND LEAN
Fresh &amp; Lean

GROUND· BEEF
lb.

'

GROUND CHUCK

89~

lb.

Specially Prepared
Fresh &amp; Lean

..

GROUND ROUND

lb.

$}29

lb.

99~

lb.

89~

Home Made

HAM SALAD

Superiors
USDA Choice Beef

Superiors All Meat

CUBE STEAK
lb.

$}19

BOLOGNA

$179

•

and Packaged from USDA Beef

Here ·~

a

firs t

t ime

treat w i th g r e at
flavor - season ing
adtte d , and mad e
from U S DA b ee f .
Pa ckage d .4 to 6 In

$}49
lb.

cello tray .

Fresh Baby· Beef

~. 99~

-

LIVER

•

.•
••

FAYGO

M A RKV

...

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••

RC
16 oz. DOts.

8

SATURDAY ONL Yf

DRINKS

.F AVORITE

·.

'·

BREAD

$}09
:
PAK
.

.

(NO RETURN BOnLES)

Friday Only
'·'

16 ounce

'1 •

lvs•

•

-

S PE( IAL

16 oz.

•
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All Weel&lt; Price

.

Mr. and Mrs. Keith Curtis
and daughter, Gayla Lee
have ·· retW"ned home after
spending several days with
Mr. and Mrs . ~nnis Smith
and children, Ralph and
Denean Renee, Lincoln Park,
Mich.
· ··
While thel,'e they attended
the horse races at.lhe Hazel
· Park lfarness Raceway.
They also attended a party in
honor of Edwin Srhith's birthday. He was 75.
Accompanying them home
were Mrs. Smith, the former
Beverly Beav'l{;and children
who are spending two weeks
with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. John Beaver of Nye .
Ave.

~

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WP. Accept Federal_ Food Sb,mp.•
PHON£: 992-3480 .

Visitors to
Michigan· are
returned home

·-

•I

SUPER MARKET - Open~ Daily 9.to 10 - Sun; 10 to 1

1:30; Arms La ne'McCallum ,
· 2-2: 15; Pomeroy Library,,
3: 30-4; Baum's Addit ion ,
4:30-5; Kroger's Parking Lot,

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.....,.,.....

p.m.; Bowman's Run, 1: 15·

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Mr. Eddy's Meigs Coun!y
schedule for Thursday July 10
and Friday, July 11 :
THURSDAY
Por!land Eie. and vic. ,
11 : 30-noon;
Portland
Community , 12 : 15 - 12 : 45
p.m .; Riverview , 1-2; Reedsville, 2: 30-3; Eden Church,
3:30-4; Long Bo!tom, 4:30-5;
Stiversvllie. 5:30-6: 30; Grea!
Bend, 7:30-8.
FRIDAY
Racine and Vic., 11 a .m ..
noon; Soulhern. 12: 15-12: 45

I)&amp;D MEAT

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A New Barbecue Treat

Eddy 's schedule

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FRIDAY
MEIGS County Pomona
Grange, 8 p .m., at the Rock
Springs Grange Hall. Athens
County Pomona Grange will
visit: Potluck refreshments.

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Joe Smith
·Introduces
.

• RACINE Grange at the
Grange Hall at 8 p.m .
TIIURSDAY
ROCK Springs Grange, 8
p.m . Inspection and county
contests will be held .
CATHOLIC .Women 's Club,
Sacred Heart Parish, monthly meeting, 8 p.m. preceded
by Mass 7: 30. Hostesses Becky Broderick, Emma
BrOderick, Susan Baer, and
Mildred Wells.
HAPPY Harvester Class of
Trinity Church Friday at 6
p.m. Potluck dinner followed
by program under direction
of Carrie Neutzling.

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WEDNESDAY
PAST Councilor ' s Club,
Chester Council, Daughters .
6f America, 7 p.m . at the
. ..borne of Sadie Trussell with
Dorothy Lawson, co-hostess.
Beverage, dessert and table
service furnished by the
hostess .

59 N. Second St.
Middleport, Ohi

6 DAYS
A WEEK

•

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. WINDING Trail Garden
Club, 8 p.m. home of Mrs
Mildred Deeth. Program b;
Mrs . . Faye Pratt, Qn gar~ening ·without poison . For
roll call, members are to take
a day 1Uy specimen.

w

Mason Area
News Notes

.

TUESDAY
REGULAR MEETING ,
Racine Masonic Lodge 461,
F&amp;AM, 7:311 p.m. Work in.the
first degree; all Master
Masons Invited.
SPECIAL' MEETING,
Middleport Masonic Lodge
363, 7 p.m. Work in the entered .apprentice degree; aU
Master Masons invited.
'
- . ...-·MEIGS Chapter 53, DAY,
meeting 7:30p.m. at home on
Butternut Ave ., Pomeroy.

..

TARRIVED

Dear L .B.:
lre'll be waiting·, mainly, I'd guess, because he doesn' t
appear 10 be the boyevery girl dreams about. If his idea of a
REUNION SET
great date is sitting in front of a TV set, he won 't get many • MASON , W. Va . - The
third annual Logan County,
chan ces to be untrue this summer. - HELEN
W.
Va . reunion will be held
MRS.
Kathryn
Johnson
is
announcing
the
•
engagement and forthcomin g marriage of her daughter
+++
DearHelenandSue : Sunday, Aug . 3 at Camden
is Pleased
••
Belva, to Jeff Miller, son of Mr . and Mrs. Herbert Miller of
I'm a very athletic girl, 5feet I inc~ . 105 pounds, age 17, an Park, Huntington . Last year
••
to
there were 150 guests from
honor student, with a real big problem. Two of them!
Letart Falls, Ohio. Miss J ohnson is also the daughter of
'
'•
the late Howa rd Johnson. The wedding will be an event of
f matured late, and amazingly. From a size 32 six months eight states prese nt.
Present.
ago, I grew to a size 36 bra. All those things do is get in the way.
Aug. 9, 1975 at 7 p.m. at the United Methodist Church jn
Mason, W. Va . The gracious custom of an o pen church
I play basketball and tennis, and they're always flopping
B~AUTIFUL PORTR-AITS
wedding will be observed .
around. My shoulders hurt. My breasts hurt, I'm beginning to
stand stoop-shoulder, beeause I look like a pouter pigeon.
IN NATUR.A•L LIVING COLOR
.
A'ITENDS
WORKSHOP
My
parents
don't
know
I'm
upset,
and
I
won't
tell
them
! •
RACINE - Southern High
until fhear from you about a possible "reducing" operation
, : · on my bustline. If I've grown this much in six months (wtthout School was represented at the
putting on weight elsewhere), think what J'U be when I'm 20! fifth annual Moffit Marching
Please tell me if it 's possible to get rid of excess that only a Band Workshop at Otterbein
College, Westerville, June 211centerfold
girl would want. - TOP HEAVY
HYPOLLY CRAMER
July 3 by· Joy Bigler, band
instructor .
Dear T .H. :
Breast reductions a re expensive (around $2,000 or more) .
A good plastic surgeon would not perform such an operation if
COMPLETE
he suspected your problem isn't so much "excess" as a subPOLLY'S PHOHLEM
WITH
example, I wrote to a yarn conscious fear of growing up .
Inflati on was ru nning so rarn- ·
Is
Talk w your family doctor. If he believes pendulous or toopant when th i s nation was born
DEAR POLLY - A room company to ask if a certain
THIS AD
that beef that cos t 16 pounds. 10 we close orr during winter brand of their yarn was heavy breasts are affecting your posture and your well-being, Mansfield, Ohio visited
Pius 50c
s hi llings a barrel i n months smells musty and mothproof so I would know he'll refer to a specialist. (But probably not until he's sure recently with relatives in the
Handling
Bend area. They ~Jere
Philade lph ia ctrca Janu a r y this odor penetrates even the how to s tore my afghan . They you've stopped developing.) - HELEN AND SUE
'
Charge
i779. sol d for 242 poun ds, 10 mattress and springs. Last
overnight guests of her sister,
did not answer . Thi s
• shillings by Decem ber of the
Elsie Roach and family at
s ummer I put them outside especially peeves me when I
sa me year. Part of the reason
A Regular
Mason.
Geo r ge Was htng ton's army a nd left them for two weeks . e nclose a s tamped enve lope.
$20.00
·Mr. and Mrs. Homer
went hun gry at Valley · Forge Every · day the sun wa s - RUTHANNE .
Brinker
of
Las
·
Vegas,
Nev.
Value!
CA R WASH SET
wa s that in 1778, butter was shinin g I pulled them out into
DEAR POLLY - I am a
have returned to Mason
Th e Me igs High School
selling for the equivalent of it. I have tried deodorant widow. In the past when I had
stay
through the swnmer, ONE Bx 10 NATURAL LIVING COLOR PORTRAIT.
$2 .40 a pound in today ·s money . sprays and burning incense. I some painting to do my varsity chee rleaders will hold
while here, Mr. Brinker is Minors must be accompanied by o parent. Only one advertiud
Tea sold at $45 a pound , The am going to repaint that room husband always stirred the a car wash at Welker's
offer per subj8ct and one per lamily every lhree monlh1. Group•
remodelling his· home in 51
World Alm a nac reports.
and would like to eliminate paint for me with a clean Ashland in Pomeroy Wed.00 exira per person .
Mason.
1NEWSI'A P ER ENT!o:H!'Il fSE ASSN. I
nesday
from
9
a.m
.
!Ultil
3
the
odor
before
painting.
Any
paddle or the electric pain t
PRES EM THIS AD TO OUR PHOTOGRAPHER
Copyright (c ) 1975
BYELS1EROACH
Mr. and Mrs . Harold Davis
ideas' - MRS. C.E .W.
stirrer . I did not have a p.m.
Saturday, August 2, the visited with her parents, Mr.
JULY9
VISITED MOTHER
DEAR MRS. C.E.W. paddle and was afraid to use
,
annual
John
and
Amanda
and Mrs. Hobert Fridley at
AT
.
Mrs. Kathy Clonch, In..,
This Is rather an elusive the stirrer so hit on the idea of
Aumiller
Roach
reunion
will
Ripley,
W.
Va.
on
J.ucy_4th.
FIRE
HALL,
MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO
problem. Th e odor could using a long-han.dled slotted dianapolis, Ind ., and her
be held at the New Haven
Roy Dale Crites visited Bring Grandparents in for a Free 8x10 Color '' ""
come from many things. I kitchen spoon in my gallon of friend , Mrs. Loretta Are ns,
Park,
New
Haven.
Welcome
Thursday
night and Friday Portrait OF them.
suppose you have U,ft all the four-year-old paint. It worked also of Indianapolis, spent the
·to
all
relatives
and
fiiends
.
with
Larry
and Roger Roach ,
window s open on sunny, wonders and was easier to weekend with Mrs. Clonch's
Mr. and Mrs. Theodore
•
breezy days to air it. Vanilla use than a paddle . I could mother , Mrs . Margaret
Casto and sons, Ray and
• •
candles are one of the best reach the bottom and lift the McKenzie, and return ed
Joey, of Lorain, Ohio visited
odor removers I have ever heavy paint on the bottom home Monday .
•
MON. thru.SAT .
Thursday through Saturday
•
used. Try bur.ning some in the and then thoroughly mix it
with Mr . and Mrs. Ottie ·
room and, of cnurse, be very alL Since this paint can be
Roach.
I
t•arefuL Ca ~ litter is quite a washed out with warm soapy
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Lyons
deodorizer. Sprinkl e it about. wa ter I washed my brush and close the carton. The waxed
830 E. Main
and
family held a cookout on
carton helps prevent freezer
leave.•
for
a
time
and
remove.
roller
and
stood
·
the
roller
up
Pomeroy; Ohio
July 4, for Mrs. Lyons'
Do any of you readers have to dry. As it dried I brushed it burn . - HELEN.
brother,
Gene Elswock and
•
DEAR READERS- Sorry
_any suggestions for Mrs. with an old nylon hair brush
4 t;f.lllTH
SUTTON TOWNSHIP
..,..
we cannot answer your family and Benny and
TWP. CLERK
C.E.
W.'?POLLY.
•.
it
is
soft
and
fluffy
again.
so
••
,MEIGS COUNTY
questions by personal letters ·Elgena Vanhuse.
- MRS. H.M.J.
RACINE, OHIO 4S771
Deputy Dayton Raynes is
IS UII'IARI ES '
'
DEA R POLLY - Slip
DEAR POLLY - Start so please do not send stamped recuperating at his home in
'I
•'"•
plastic golf club protectors saving those waxed butter envelopesforthts. -POLLY.
•
·Mason after having major
'"
over the rods in your clothes and margarine cartons . I find
""
'
surgery
at
Holzer
Medical
closet, especially over metal they make excellent conr&lt;X! s. They are easier to keep tainers for freezing home
You wtll receive a dollar if Center.
Mrs. Betty Shoaf and
clean. - MRS. R.RC . .
uses your favorite
grown vegetables. Place a Polly
SJ:!erri
of Palatine, Ill. was on
DEAR POLLY - My Pe t plastic bag inside carton, fill homemaking idea, Pet
Jl
Peeve is with the lack of with vegetables. Place a Peeve, Polly's Problem or vacation here with Mi's.
answers one gets from plas tic bag inside carton, fill solution to a problem .. Write Shoaf's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
•·
business places when writing with vegetables, tie the bag Polly In care of this news- T. R. Davis and brother,
Harold
and
wife,
Evelyn.
On
'
'
So you did a bangup for informa tion I, For opening, shut and Ughtly paper.
their way home they visited
with her sister, Thebna, Mr.
•'
job on alight pole,
and Mrs. !}len Johnson and
•
. .. •
Andnowyou're
daughter, Kim, at Westerhaving troo1ble 11Illlking
ville,
Ohio.
.bles
Relatives in Pomeroy have ago.
Boy's Ranch , the Southwest
h
f
trou
li
E
g t-o your
· learned of the death of May Mr. Bennett passed on1 Indian School, helped start Mr. and Mrs. Burwn Webb,
Well, tbere's.aaolu- Vincent Bennett in Young- some years ago, but MFr. the Women's Service Guild of
tion. Hurry down
town , Arizona who was born Bennett remained in Young- the church, and .w as proud of
••
to areal troublein Pomeroy May 1( 1886.
town where she was one of its her D.A.R. membership .
•
•
·
She was the youngest outs tanding citizens. She was
In Kansas she was active in
t
shooter: yourinde·
daug hter of c. J. Vincent and on the official board of tpe the Presbyterian Church,
i;Jendent insuranOI'
Martha Larimer Vincent . Community Church, on its · women's ·literary clubs and
agent.
Her . father owned and original building committee. was State Historian for the
1
operated a marble shop on She gave the steeple and the Kansas Women's Clubs.
We
.,pi 2 ent you
Front St. with his sons, lighted cross on the · new
She was the last surviving
•
first. And we work to
George, Jl.lont and ·Art. They church in m~mory of. her member of her family . Her
•
'
perlite fast, fair
also lived in a home on Front husband.
closest livhig relatives are a
'
St. , known in recent years as' .She star ted the
niece and nephew , Mrs. Ivan
the Vail 'Tourist Home. May club, founded the Youngwwn R. Adams: and Arthur Vin '
clai.Ois;
Vin cent taught in Sugar Run Library , was an officer on the cent Hardin g, co-owners of
r
. school ·for two years after Community Fund, active in Fur-Fish-Dame magazine,
'
I,
I' .
graduating
.from
Pomeroy
the
work
{or
the
Arizona
Colunnb115, Ohio.
' '.
High SchooL Her sister
••
••
Marilla Vincent Harding also
••
~
· taught there 10 yeats before
,
• •f
her marriage. ··
I~
t
.
Reuter~Brog•n
Mrs
.
S~nnett
then moved to·
'
INSURANCE
~~- ......... ·
Columbus, Ohio, where she
..
entered
business , college.
' '
After graduation, she was
employed as office manager
by her · brother-in-law for
PLUS RECAPABLE
•
:
Hunt · - Grade : Trapper
••
magazine . She moved to .
CASING
•
Kansas City ·after her
••
'
. marriage to .Elmer S. Ben•
•
nett, ·where they owned and
••
operated a. residence. hoteL
•
••
Their firs t retirement was to
'
Ottawa , 1 Kansas,
followed · ·
•••
some . time later to Youn g.
••
. town, _Arizona ovez: 17- years
•

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·Social
Calendar ·

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_5- Tbe Dally Sentinel,

REuNJONSET
~ second annu81 Snyder
teunion will be held Sunday,
July 13, at the state park on
Rt. 33 South. There will be a
basket lunch at noon, and a
phqwgrapher will be present.
;_ Those attending are asked to
bring money
pay for the
~ pictW"es .

Generation Rapl:

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DIET RITE

bottles

FLAVORS

·CASE OF 24 •••.•..••.......• $3.50 .

4

$100

qts.
for

Plvs Dep.

All Week Price
FROZEN FOODS
Queen of Scot Frozen

Strawberries

HEINZ

SPECIAL

57 SAUCE

2% MILK

pkg.

gal.$1.29

Scot Lad Shoestring

POTATOES

DIET RITE
COLA

16 oz. bottles

5 oz.
bot.

NEW! NEW! NEW! NEW!

MR
.
...
o·~
JR.
'
REEZE . PA
'

Sterling Cream Curls·

STRAWBERRY

.CREAM HORNs·
¢
pkg.

AND ORAN.GE
.

'

(4 SQUEEZE

.fREEZE· PAKS)

now

oz.

pl~s

19
dep . .

COKE

EDON BRAND

OR

TOILET TISSUE

PACKAGE

pkg.

SPRITE

· SWISS· MISS

PUDDING CUPS1

-

59¢

~~

~~$ 1 49
8
Sprite

•

COUPON

4 pak
on~

'

SPAK$1
16

4·.Roll

bag

I'

ROOT ORBEER

-OR-

_,

~

4-lb.

DAD'S

VALLEY BELL

·¢-·

10 oz.

MARK\/

SANK A
(

INSTANT
COFFEE
I .
. •
~:rz.

$}.99 •

limiJ t coupon per

·cust~mer

Good Only at Mark V

OFFER

EXPIRES:

7-12' 75

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, G.;t The Daily SentiiJCl, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, July 8,1975

:

· ]itn -Thorpe: L~end

In Memory

hfe . If a national vote was
JIM fHORPE, Pa.- Even held, Thorpe ;s. the Olympics
when he died Jim Thorpe had comm11tee would be , no
contest.
troubles.
And perhaps Thorpe does'
Refu sing to bury him until
des
erve a win over the
a perma nent monument was
erected , Thorpe's widow gen&lt;\fally skimpy and sancwandered the nation peddling timonious minds that control
amate ur
wo rld 's
various proposals to mostly the
disinterested e ntrepeneurs athle tics, 1f only in deference
Then, in 1954, learnmg that to the Indian 's magnificenc-e
Mauch , Chunk and East afield. Yet there is a counMauch Chunk, Pa., were tr.rpomt If Miss America
co mbining community m- must be disq ualified when
wrests and c ho osing a new her pregrn~ncy is discovered,
name, the widow popped the so too was it rig ht to slap
question here. The citize ns Thorpe for h1s indiscretions
voted 10 to 1 to become The rules were clear , Thorpe
Th orpe's final restmg place clearly broke t he m a nd
and namesa ke , thereby pre Jured himself early on by
presumably e nding the heavy say ing he hadn't. True, his
misfortun es of th e ' most punishmen t was excessive,
gifted athle te in the nation's perh aps event ually contributing to the ter rible wa ste
history .
of
his adult life. Yel there is
la te r ,
Two
d ecades
howeve r , it's clear the no .;aying It was unjust.
In any event, one wonders
Thorpe saga has not ended .
Factions once again ~ a re if lhe Jim Thorpe argument
arguing 'ove r deeds done has an end a t a ll, If the divers
more than a half century ago, Thorpe loya lists will ever be
and this time Congress is in satisfied. His family by Itself
on th e squa bble . ThJrpe, a has all along been divided as
Sac and F'ox mixed-bl ood to what would co nstitute
Indian, was str ipped of appropr ia te vindication. The
$50,000 worth of 191 2 Olympic widow who negotiated his
medals when amateur of- graves1te , Patricia, third of
ficials determined that he his three wives, was said to
had disqualified himself by be more Interested in
playing professional baseball monetary reparation than
prior to the games. Two record book revamping. And
dozen congressmen have today some of his six sons and
resurrected for the ump- daughters want his amateur
teenth time the question of status restored , some want
fairness, and are pressuring his trophies returned, and
the lnwrnatiollal Olympics some want both.
Committee to at long last
Beyo nd
the
family,
restore the man's victories.
moreover,
there
are
extended
It is if anything a debaw
fraught with confusion , interes ts ge tting in their
contradiction and popular grumps. Liberals want an
emotions. Though Thorpe admission that Thorpe's
himself is not remembered Indian heritage worked
by many Americans, his against lenient treatment by
image is. Burt Lancaste r turn of the century amateur
portrayed the athlete in a offi c ials . And some confilm version of Thorpe's life, se rvative s promote the
and over the years its return of the medals lo
showing on wlevision alone demonstrate that subsidized
has no doubt converted more Soviet athletes should not be
fans to Thorpe's'-5ide than the only professionals to win
ev cr cared for him m real Olympic events with impunity .
Altogether, it seems, most
of America has hooks in the
fhe Almanac
issue. A merchant here in
By United
Press
In- Jim Thorpe says he'd like to
ternational
see the battle won -because
Today is Tuesday, July 8, the news might brlng tourists
the !89th day of 1975 with 176 to town "and , boy , could I use
to follow.
·
th e \msiness."
The moon is new.
Lost in all of thiS, obThe morning stars are viously, is Thorpe himself,
Mercury , Mars and· Jupiter. the man who could win the
The evening stars are Olympic pentathlon and
Venus and Saturn.
decathlon back to back and
Those born on this date are then go on a roaring
under the sign of Cancer .
Stockholni ·drunk; ihe man
American capitalist John who was led to believe that
D. Rockefeller was born July kicking a football 90 yards
.8, 1839. This is actress Kim was something liRe having an
Darby'S 27th birthday.
unlimited· credit card; the
On this day in history :
man who died an alcoholic,
In 1835, the Liberty Bell in penniless and in personal
Philadelphia cracked while shame. The real sadness of
being rung during the funeral his life as not the silly abof United States Chief Justice · sence of liis awards, but the
John Marshall.
absence of his values. With
In 1951, Paris celebrated its all his muscles, and all his
2,000th anniversary .
friend s, he hadn't the
In 1969, withdrawal of strength . or the support to
American
troops • from face reality . or adversity
Vietnam began as 800 in- anywhere but in an arena .
•
fantrymen arrived af McJim Thorpe h~s been
Cord Air Force Base in buried for two decades now ,
in a proper tomb north of
Washington stale.
In 1972, President Nixon town. But still he doesn't rest.
announced the sale of $750 The fools continue tO argue
·million worth of grain to his old wars ; one of his sisters
talks · of having his body
Russia.
moved back to the Indian
A thought for the day: country where he was born.
·American naturalist John No doubt Burt Lancaster's
Burroughs said, "Life is a dreadful movie is enjoying
struggle, but not a warfare." revival on the late night
shows. In death as in life the
man remains the greatest
athlete of his country's time,
but also, more is the pity, its
•
FRIDAY NITE MIXED
most
abused .
July 4 , 1975

By fom fiede

Loqll Bowling
Team Sta1ndmg s

Gru eser &amp; Son Plumb
Craw's Steak Ho use
Team N o A
WMPO

W
14
10
10
' 6

L
2
6
6

10

TeamN o6
610
Team No . 5
2 14
High Series ~ Men · Edd 1e
Wh tft 599 , Bob Poc kli ngton
480; Worrien
D1a.na Whitt
488 . J'Ud i Poc k I m gt on and
,Betty Wh ltlatch 476
H igh Game - · M en Eddie

. Betty Whltla!ch 169.

. .. 'L

Ada BISSell
Clerk

(7 ) 6. llc

Boaters
should
not
overload their craft. An
RUTLAND TWP .
overloaded boat easily
t• Noti c e rs" hereby Q , ven that
811JWnps or capsizes because on t he 18 t h day of Ju l y , 1975 , at
It .cah't properly react to 7, 30 p m a pub li c heanng wil l ~
b e held
on
th e
budget
waves,
the
Watercraft . prepared by the Townshi p of
Division · of
the
Ohio Rut lan d, Metgs Co unty , Ohio ,
for th e nex t succeed tng f i scal
Departmlmt of Natural ye ar en di n.g Oecernber 31.
1976. I
-ResO!,IJ'ces says.

.

Such h erirr n g w rll be he ld at
the
Township
Of f iCe
at

·~

......... ~~tland

Pets For Sale,' f-REE .te mal e kilt ens '-' Ph one

992·3HO

~

. t

....

---

-~-

.:.

-

- ...... - .

7 3 6tc

(I

L 8_. .. 1.t c

Ed n a Sw tck ,
Cl€'rk
Ru tl an d Towiish1p

'
'.

a~d

.. .

H a ve passed s1 n cc you went
away

t rust

Now Dad has gon e away and I
thank God,
That he gave us a Dad who
cared
Fo r our 10y an a hap p ine ss
Th ose yea r s to sha r e. now he
will be forever w1th God .'
W tt hout troub l e or tear to
bea r
Sadly m tssed by daughter .
N eva . g r an dchildren
and
great grand c hild r en
7 8 Hp

1911 MATADOR

SI295

V1nyl roof, grey fr n 1sh , h1gh mrleage, good fires,
.automatic, pO\oVe r st eering , radio, silver fi ni sh Bl ack
''

1972 FORD " 8" PICKUP

S229!

5-14 I mo .

w -w tir es , chrome bumpers and wheel tr rm. Clea n .

6 '17)

625t.fc

TWO b l ack Ca .rn T er r~ e r s on
Co Rd 7B R eward Phon e

CA MER A eQuipm €' nt betw een
Alhe n s and Ga ll rpo l! s W1lh
in for ma t to n ,
ca l l
Ke n ,
c o ll ect 592 3774
7 a Jtp

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

YEL L OW • and white t o ng
hatr€'d ki ll en w rt h whtte fl €'a
co l lar Lo s t near Beec h St. .
Middleport SIO Rewa r d d
ret urned Pho n e 99 7 54 16, tf
no answer , ca ll 992 50 16
7 8 3t c
- - --- - - - - - - - - -

Help Wanted

RM
h o use , bat h , f ront
por c h , gas h eat , ut d Jty
room, references requ 1red
Call 949 365 8
7-B 4tc

J BEOR M home in Che!ter
Phon e 9as 3582
78 8 6tp

TRAILER spa ce for renr 10
Middleport Phone 992 5434
7 a 6tp
I TR A I LER , Off old Rl 33 at
Kingsb ury
Road
'l
bedrooms , 1 c hild p e r
m ilted , n o pets Ph on e 74'1

31 23

7

B Jtc

3 BEDROOM mobile hom€'
lo cate d on 143,2 miles from
Pomeroy Phone 992 5858
7 2 tt c
FURNISHED
apartment,
adults only m Middl e port
Phon€' 99 2 3137 4
3 25 tfc

1969 DA 'l SUN Plymouth 5 10
S€'dan Also , 1968 Pont 1a c
Cata li na w 1l h fa c tory at r
c onddton m g
Phone 9a5
336 5
7 6 3tc

CARRlER"

Free Estimates
PH. 992-2550
l27 N 2n&lt;!

HAY for sa l e. del tvered or
pi c ked up in f i el d Phone
742, 3743
7 8 6tc

3529 .

For Rent or Sale

1 8 etp

COW and c a•lf
after 5 p rn

Ca ll 997 7 165

7 8 31C

p

SO RREL cont est pony Ben
Brckers , BaSh!" n Rd , 94¢:
4605
•
7 6 Jtc

5 ROOM ho u se , 159 N
5th
Ave , M i ddle por t
Pho ne
b€'fore 5 p m 7&lt;1 2-5625 or see
Mar10 r1 e Mi lhon at Rutland
~ 7 1-6t c
- -,- - ---- -- - - - - - - -

Real Estate For Sale
F ARM and 2 h omes, y ear old ,
total elec
Double w1de
trail er, co mpletely car
peted, 3 large bedrooms
wtfh larg e closets , a nd 2 full
baths. home also has den,
liv i ng room , dinmg room ,
and ki tc hen with pl enty of
storage space
A lt large
room s
A lso p o ncf above
trailer
Also, on same
pr oper ty " a 2 Slory 1 rm
farm h-ouse, real g ood
pl um b tn g, plenty of well
wat er , and newly painted on
th e outside . Huge barn a nd
garage , other building s too
Grea t grazing and gard en
land . All on 20 acres for sa le .

MODERN stereo rad10 , am
fm . a track 1ape c om
btnatron Ba la nce $ 101 69 , or
t erms Call 992 3965
7 2 tf c

a1

~~~~~ ~eg

~~

- -

-

" ROOM unfurnished house ,
1650 Lin c o ln H~ts , phone
992 381 &lt;.
1 6-ttC

5 RM S

and bath , n.rce lot,
large outbuild tng , front and
back por c hes , front shaded ,
needs repair lo c ated In
Clt f!On , W Va . Ca ll 992·5325 .
, 7 3-7tc
-· - -- - - - - - ""-- - . - - - -

NOTICE
PUBLIC HEARING ON
SUTTON TOWNSHIP
ANNUAL BUDGET
FOR 1916

7 6-3tp

--- ----- - ---ONE Milssie Harr 1s tra c tor

REE ~ E

eQua11ze:r hitch , draw
bars , extra ball, outside
mtr,rors and brake switch
Can be seen at Kingsbury
Home Sales or ca ll 992 -7034
Monda-v throu.gh Saturday

Real Estate for Sale

i, 'u:RIE'=-'t'aR'
BR,'

1

shopping, 2-story frame,

1 eaford RPalty

,.

'-~'
11 I '

..

&gt; ,'

I•.• II•
)&gt;,, '

NEW
COLONIAL
- 5
bedrooms, 3 full baths. central
air, and heal, large family
room , sun deck , lovely kit-

refrigerator and other
furn ., some carpeting, new
natural gas forced air futn .
and HW tank, excellent at

chen, dishwasher, stove'" and
refrigerator. Doub le garage
and extra features . NEW

$10,000.00.
CALL 992-2259

____________ __ _
-- - ------

.

1

•

...

a - ---w

6:~Sunrlse Seminar .4: Summer Semester 10.

NT tree bid takes stopper
- - -- -- - - - - -- minimum T~e diamond suit IS
NORTH tD)
8 nothing to sing paeans of JOY
about
.8B
When the spade bid comes
• K 2
around to South he can b1d
tAK 76 4
nolrump and jumps to two with .
... K 63
his 12 high'Card points
«
EAST
WEST
North raises lo game. West
• J 10 3
.AQ974
.9 .., II
opens his fourth best spade and
•JI0765
South rattles off his nine tricks
t3
t9852
and wins the rubber .
... Q 10 8 4
... A J 2
Since might-have·beens are
SOUTH
worth discussing we must point
• K 2
out that if West had passed .
• AQ843
North WOJild have b1d one
• Q J 10
notrump
. South would have
... 9H
raised to three and East would
North -SOuth vulnerable
have been on lead.
East might well have led the
jack
of spades. rather than his
Nonh East
fourth best club and the hand
would have collapsed
Pass
1•
Pass
Pass 2 NT
Pass
3NT Pass Pass

,.

Pass

SEW 1NU
MACHINt:,
" Repeirs, service, all makes .
q92 226 4 The Fabric Shop.
Pomeroy Authorlzed Singer
Sales and Se rvi ce
We
shar p en Sc tssors
3 29 tfc

6:25-Farm Report 13
6:30-Five Minutes to Live By 4; News 6 ; Bible Answers 8; School Scene 10; The Story 13.
6·35-Columbus Today 4.
·
6. .j$-Mornlng R"'!!rt 3; ·Farmtlme 10. ·
6:55-News 13 .
7·GO-Today 3,4,15; A. M. America 6,13; CBS News
8, 10.
8:GO-Lasste 6; Captain Kangaroo 8; Schoolles 10.
Sesame Street 33.
8:30-Big Valley 6; Popeye 10.
8:55-Chuck White Reports 10.
9:oo-A .M. 3; Phil Donahue 4,15; Murles Stevens 8;
Captain Kangaroo 10; Morning With D. J . 13.
9:30-Not For Women Only 3; Dlnohl 6; Galloping
Gourmet I ; New Zoo Revue 13.
lO :ClO-Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3,4,15; Spin-Off 8, 10;
Dlnahl 13; Jody's Body Shop 33 .
10:30-Wheel Of Fortune 3.~. 15; Gamqlt 8.10; French
Chef 33.
11 :GO-High Rolters 3,4,15; One Life to Live 6; Tattletales 1. 10.
'
1:30-Hollywood Squares 3, 15; Brady Bunch 13;
Midday ~ ; Love of Lite 8,10.
, 1:55-Take Kerr I ; Dan Imel's World 10.
12:GO-Magnlflcent Marble Machine 3,15; Showoffs13;
Bob Braun's 50·50 Club 4; News 6, 18, 10; Mister
Rogers 33 .
12:30-NBC News 3, 15.
1:GO-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6,13; Phil Donahue 8; •
Young ond the Restless 10; Not For Women Only
15; VIlla Alegre 33.
1:30-Days Of Our Lilli'S 3,4,15; Let' a Make A Deal
6,13; As the World Turns 8, 10; Folk Guitar 33.
2:1)0-$10,000 Pyramid 6,13; Guiding Light 8,10; The
Way li"Was 33.
2:30-Dodors 3,4, 15; Rhyme and reason 6, 13; Edge of
Nlghl a, 10; Evening al Pops 33.
J :oo-Another World 3,4,15; General Hospital 6,13;
Price Is Right 1,10; Music olthe People20.
3:»---ne Life to Live 13; Lucy Show 6; Match Game
8, 10; The Way It Was 20; Erica 33.
3 : ~5-Theonl.-33 .

4:oo-Mr. Cartoon 3; I Dream of J~annle 4; Somerset
15; Gilligan' a Island 6;' Musical 'Chairs I; Sesame
Street 20,33; Movie "The Man Called Flintstone."
10: Mike Douolas 13.
4:30-Bewltched 3; Merv Griffin ~; Mod Squad 6;
Mickey Mouse Club 8; Bonanza 15.
5:GO-FBI 3; L~cy Show 8; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Ironside 13.
5:30-News 6; Andy Griffith 8; Get Smart 15; Electric
Company 20, 33.
.
6 : QO-News 3s,4,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 6; Sesame
Street 20; You Owe It To Yourself 33.
6:30-NBC News 3,.t, 15; ABC News 13; Bewitched 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Jody's Body Show 33.
7 :GO-Truth or Consequences 3,4,1S; To Be Announced
15; Bowling For Dollars 6; What's My Line? 8;
News 10; Country Music Jubilee ,13; Book Beat 20;
The Romagnolls' Table 33.
7. »-Pollee Surgeon 3; Name That Tune 4; Let's
Make A Deal 6; Wilburn Brothers 8; Evening
Edition with Martin Agronsk'y 20; The Judge 10; To
Tell The Truth 13; Episode Action 33.
8:GO-LIHie House on the Prairie 3,4,15; That's My
Mama 6,13; Tony Orlando ·and Dawn 8.10; Feeling
Good 20,33.
8:3D-Movle " The Day The Earth Moved 6, 13;
Philadelphia Folk Festival 20; Another Look at
· Appl\lachla 33 .
9:GO-Lucas Tanner 3,4,15; Cannon 8,10; Masterpiece '
Theatre 33.
9:30-Jean Shepherd's America 20 .
lO :GO-Petrocelll 3,4,15; Bare«a 6, 13; Mannix 8, 10;
News 20; Family at War 33.
11 :oo-News 3,4,6,8,10, 13, IS; ABC News 33.
11 :3D-Johnny Cal'son 3,4,15; Wide World Special 13;
FBI '6; Movie "Big Rose" 8; Movie " Island In the
Sun" 10; Janakl 33.
·
12:3D-Wide World Soeclal 6.
1: ~Torr1orrow 3,4; News 13.

1 .

t'St.tUJI ~trf

ALLEY OOP

by THOMAS JOSEPH

,, 8LJT HE
OLSON MADE HIMSELF
A BUNDLE 8¥ SE:~ING · HAD ONE
PECULIARITY
FOOD 10 'THE: MINE:IZS
ANO 10WNSPEOPLE IN

YOU l::itLIEVE ?
Budd an all steel burlding at
P ol€' Barn prrces? Golden
G tant All -Steel Bu i ldings,
Rt
4, Box 148 . Waverly,
Oh tO Phone' 947 -2296
6 -24 -26tc

HE DIDN'T
"Tt&lt;:UST 1

"THEN WH.tr DID

ACROSS
1 Hebrew
measure
5 Stud, e.g,

HE DO WliH 7
HIS MONE'( •

SANKS ·

PANAMINT CITV ...

41 Famed

ItalaD
family
U Prevaleht

10 Specter

DOWN

11 Goddess of

I Chicago
airport
z Taciturn
one
(4 wds.)
3 Avon's earl
4 Trust-

peace
I% Window
pane
13 Raise
U User of
caustic
language
16- Beta

'

worthy

s Michel-

Kappa
17 Ship-shaped
clock
18 Surprise!
-19 Paving

angelo
statue
6 Hockey
great
7 Be eremitic

substance

ELWOOD HUWt:.K~ t&lt;t:.t-'AIR
- Swee p€'rs, toasters. iron'S,
all sma ll appliances Lawn
mower. next to State Htgh
way Garage on Route 7·
Phone 985 3825
4-16 tfc

wds.)
8 Charm
9 Pensioner
(3

20 Temple, old
style
~~~~
· · 2Z First-rate

l'

Yeslerday's A01wer

10 Gyrate
Z7 Briny deep
15 " - Stoops H "I told ·
to Conquer"
you!"
Zl Statute
31 EmbalikZ2 · Candlenut
men!
tree
32 ScandinaZ3 Twined
Vian meas24 Lionllke
ure
25 "The
35 capital of
Faerie
Portuguese
Queene"
author

Timor

r7 Extra bed

Z3 Chosen
25 Struck

26 Salamander
27 Reach

WILL TRIM or cut trees dn d
shrubb€'ry and paint roofs
P hon e 949 -322t or 742 -4441.

across

6-2&lt;-26tp

cos ts It s best you be tdea ltsl1c ,
'
ra t he r than exp ed1e nt

28 Dejected
GENERAL l&lt;epa tr , c l ean -up
and
ha u ttng ,
cutteng,
weldrng,
carpentry,
plumbrng , elec ma so nry
and g efle ral remodeling
Ca tt Skii -Pool. Phone 992 -

5126.

29 Foursome's
meeting

6-17 -tfc

VVI-IY Nor ?- IT'S
THE FASTE:'ST

EXLAVA rJNG, dozer, loader
and backhoe work , septt c
tanks
rn s talled.
dump
trucks and to boys for h1re ,
will haul fill d1rt, top soil,
limes tone and gr~vet , Ca ll
Bob or Roger Jeffer s, day
phone 992 7069, nrght phone
992 3525 or 992 5232 .
2 1 , ttc
--- --- - - -' - ...,.- - - ---=-- "'
CARPET tnstallatton, $1 25
per yard
Call
R tch ard
We s~. phone 843 -2667

WAY

NATURALLY~­

DOWN~!-

')CUR

.

5/DEWALK.r:-

6-+-+-

· SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.

place
30 Old musical note
33 Black

•Bemtce
Wodnndoy, July 9, 1975
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19)
For

cuckoo

INDESTRUGIBl.E
(var.)
-WHIQ-1 IS
34 Good luck
MCRETHAN I
gift
36
"The OdysCAN SAY FC&gt;f&lt;.

Oomest 1c p ressu res wrll be a
b 1l heav1er today th an u sual
Sttuations won I be helped tl
- + - + - - l you let out s tders p t; l m therr
two-cents· wo rt h

1;-;.-+-+-

sey" sor·
cereas

TAURUS (AP&lt;il

38 Strainer
39 "Witch

SHE'S STILL SEEING HIM, BUT WHAT ABOUT HIM!
DOES SHE GIVE ANY

SAYS ""EY WENT lD A
MUSEUM,""EATER AND

Mattress
Sale Now
.In Prog1ess
, At•.

A CHARMING FRENO-!
RESTAUR'\NL ALL

MORE INFORMATION
THAN SHE GAVE IN

HER lf.IST LETTER. ?

;N ONE DAY/

II

LONGFELLOW

apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the rode !etten are difl'erent.

DRSU G
ORG ·

ZHJJSD

LRS

'

HOG

THUD

OGTGHD

yD.
~

OGVGVPGO

,

FGSOFG

(

.DHAHJH

22) ll
w1ll be a bit d rff1cult to set a
course of act 1on today and
st 1ck to tt Pr t or~ties w1ll be
neg lected

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) It s

ZSJQGVJGQ

~

Your che ckbook wrll have to be
trea ted w tt h respect o r 11 m ay
not tally at d ay s e n d Don 't
take any flyers

CANCER (June 21-July

One letter simply standi for another. In lhls sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc..Single letters,

CRYPTOQUOTE

·MASON .FURNITURE

20)

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR

AnniversaiJ

~y

-::-+-+--1--+--IWe lg h your word s carefully
agatn tOday Cer t am partres tn
the wrng s are look.ng t or a
reason to take a pot shot at
you

40 of
Actress
~~~~;::~
- "
Terry
~

SEALY

MIDDLEPORT - 2 bedroom

•

WIN "·T
BRIDGE
'

,.

usua l to let others t htnk for you
Today you wrll Unfortunately
lhetr suggeslrons may not be to
you r bene f it

DS YlRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22)

U H J

You
s t1ll have to be ca r ef u l tn
arrange me nt s With friendS
where m oney o r some thm g of
a ma tena l nature rs at stake
Proceed wrlh cautron
r

It You're tfot Listening

Yeslenlay's Cryptoquote: CYNICISM IS AN UNPLEASANT LIBRA (Sept. 23 -0cl. 23)
Behave today so that your
WAY OF SAYING tHE TRUTH.-ULLIAN' HE!LMAN
reputal ron rs protected ~~ all
·
fC 1IT_6 KiDa Featw.a Syndi, te, Inc .)

1 NEED A
PENCIL

WHAT CAN

; to, Dave ·s trang
You're Missing .G reat :_

'

FER
SCHOOL
HOUSE, SILAS ..
TH' CHEAPEST
'IE GOT

I DO FER ·
'IOU, MISS .
PRUl\IELLI(?

·Radio '

7 to 10 A.M.

WMPO 1.390 ·~~010
•

,.
'

.

.

.
a- a

I -

•

~,

,

r

.

I

•

•

•

f

•

lO :ClO-Pollcae Story 3,4, 15; Marcus Welby, M.D. 6,13 ;
Barnaby Jones 8,10; News 20; . Inlerface 33.
WEDNESDAY, JULY 9, 1975 ,

' """"tiD- '""'"

WOULD

nat. gas, F.A. furnace , sliding
glass doors. 2 porches and
double garage.

"

6; What's My Llne? ·8; News 10; Name That Tune
13; To Be Announced 15; Antiques · 20; Jean
Shepherd's America 33.
7; 30-Hollywood Squares 34; Let's Deal With It 6 ;
Buck OWens · 8; Evening Edition with Marlln
Aor.onsky 20; New Price Is Rloht 10; To Tell The
_ Truth 13; Car ond. Tr~ck 15; Spotlight On 33.'·
8:oo-Adam-12 3.~.15 ; Happy Days 6.13; Gooil Times
8.10; The Way It Was 20,33.
8:30-Movle " Death Stalk" 3,4, 15; Movie " The Gun"
. 13; Mov ie " Night Slaves" 6; M-A·S-H 8.10; Consumer Survival Kit 20,JJ .
9:GO-Hawall F lve-08,10; BurnsandAIIen9; Nova20;
Saga of Western Man 33 .

Opemng lead - 7 •
' i'"rom lime to time we are
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ asked if honors count when held
by a defender The answer is
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
thallhey do . It usually amounts
to extra loss since few con"';;:;;:;;;;r:.;u:;~~~
There is one free rebid that tracts are ever fulfilled when a
BUT 'THOI'SPHOS
does have a special meanin~
'"" ll&lt;OJSA"D9
That is the free r e bid In def e nder holds a hundred
o· Met&lt; WORION '
no trump ll must show that you honors against declarer
"""" ~Ell£ .. lME
can s lop the suit that your opp&lt;&gt;: Oh. yes ' Honors also count
o· TH' TERRIFIC
nent has been kind or unkmd when dummy holds t~em .
PAY ROLL!
enough tO bid .
(Do you have a question for
..,r-...,..-~ Thus. North has a very normal one-nolrump 'rebid after the Jacobys? Wrtte " Ask the
South's ·one -heart response . Jacobys' c are of this
When West bids ·a spade. North news paper The most injust can't bid one notrump I he terestmg questio ns will be
used m thts column and
can' t stop spades . l
writers
wtl/ recetve c optes. ol
· He m1ght try two diamonds.
JA
COBY
MODERN.!
hut his hand is • rnmplete

1-6-12tc

bedroom
home ,
stove,
refrigerator, &amp; dishwasher,

,, a

.

/ :DO- froth or Consequences J,.C; Bo-. .. u!:rl to• ,,..... Iars

·-·

1-2-26tp

furnace, new hot 1(\'ater tank, new pi umbing,
double garage, priced to sell fast at $12,500.
.Locate~;!· in Racine, Ohio across from grade
school.
George S. Hobstetter Jr •
REAL&lt;'ESTATE BROKER
~ Phone 949-3211, Hilton Wolfe; Silesman

'

~·

· Ph. 99?.1993

little bunga low.
NEW LISTING - Renovated 2

\

l

Syracuse, Ohio

A neat conservative

ditives.

.
c

LARRY iAV.E8DE.R

l.ISTING
NEW LISTING - 2 bedroom•.
b;&gt;th, nat . gas. F .A. furnace,
6ak floors and storm ad-

REAL ESTAtE FOR SALE

No ti ce is h~reby g 1ven that ·
on t h e ath day of July 1975 at
8 00 a .m
o 'c lock., a publ 1c
hearing will be held on the
budget prepar€'d by the SuJton H O NDA 750 with extras , only
5,000 m tie s Phone 992 -5671.
Townshtp ' T rus t ees of Me i gs
7 6-3tc
Coutlty . Ohio , t o r the n ~x t
:tucceeding f isc al year en d in g
'
FlS HIN C li cense • . Canadian
0('cember Jl, 19?6.
Nile c rawlers, 60c doz Dug
Suc h h ear l 'ng will be heJd at
wor m s . 3 doz Sl Other hart ,
Sy ra cuse
Town
Hall ,
ta c kle . guns , ammo , cb's ,
Sy r ac u se. Ohio
lnd ran Joe's Sports
308
P aQe S t
Phone 992 3509
Wil l iAm f" H ar rt s
7 l -26tc
~
, Clerk
•
I
U ) 8: lie

3

BR, 2 baths, ut. room ,
located oo good street,
$8,300.00.
157 ACRES- Near Dexter,
land is clean and lays nice,
2 story frame home. barn
and other outbuildings ,
good wel l with water
system, $7,600 down, bal .
$290 · per mo., including
Interest ; Iota I $38.000.00.
POMEROY - 'Wh story
frame, coutd have 2 apts ., 5
BR. 2 baths, range,

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

I

tiath,

s

posts A lso , 1965 Ford L TO
Phon e 742 3656
5 23 -52 t p

o

0

yrs . old . $16,000.00.
MIDDLE PORT - Close to

I 72 ACRES land , and lo cus t

fl.

I

DOZER work. land c lear 1ng
by the acre , hourly or
cont ra ct
Farm
ponds ,,
roads , e tc Large dozer and
ope rat or with over 20 years
ex p erre n ce
Pullin.s E x
cavattnQ, Pomeroy , Ohio
Ph o ne 992 -2478
12-19 -tf·

nice kitchen, din. area, ut.
room , carpeted, carport,

333 , 1 Ford two row corn
home, bath, nat . gas heat.
planter , 3 p ; On€' 3 P .
dining,
utility, 2 porches and
Cultivators, two row , One 12
r o w fi e ld spray wtth 290
midget
garden
on
street.
1-6 3tc
gallon a1um 1n um tank . Call
--------..,-----.:::Want only ~!,)i'N'r ·
99 2 7692 after 5 p m.
IF YOU Y1
7 6 3tc · BAND saw, good worktng
condlfton , $150 586 Lincol n
- -- - .---;----- - -- - Sf, Mtdd h',•por t Phone 992 .
FA BRIC SALE. Larg€'sl a nd
7624
Best sale since open ing of
7-2-6tc .
our busi Qess . All material tn
shop on sale Double knit - - .- - -----------ac rylic Sl 49 per yd , a g ood GOOD i-n1x ~o rtdy P-hone 992 _.
5302.
selectron of first qual it y
7-6-3tc
polyester knits, fan e res and
. solids $2 .29 per Vd Sale on e
week on l y Monday Ju l y 7
thru Sat , July 12 Open 9
a m to 5 p m Satu rday . We
Wtll b€' c losed fo t vacalten
from July 14 to July 28.
Caroltna FabrtcS , Rt . 7 one
h.;tlt m tie north of Chester ,
Broom fr~me· house, 3 bedrooms, bath
Oh 10
H enry a nd Mary
H unter , owners .
1h basement, 2 porches, new gas
&amp;
lavatory,
-·_,_ 7-66tp

•

•

o·&amp;

f\1\10 BEDROOM house f or
sale Phone 985 4102
6 10 26 f c

For Sale

1 MUELLER .and 1 Lenno x
fuel
o il
furnace , both TWO Wh€'el Shasta c amp er ,
c omolete , also 1919 model T
sleeps s tx , '5900 Phone 949
Ford truck Will se ll or tra de
5161
for
Ford
tractor
and
7 6 -6tc
equ1pment Also Kenmore
gas range Phone 965 -4118 PH ILCO 14 cu ft. retrtgerator7-7 Jtc
freezer. Whit e, $120, 31h
years old. Phone 742 672 2
1-6-&lt;tp
TOMATOE S,
c u c umber s,
Cleland Far rn s, Ger..atdine 19 71 TRUCK camper . overcab
C leland
sl eeper, f i ts any 6 ft . bed
7 -6-lfc
truck . Was carried on a
- - -- - - - - - - ' - - - - - Datsun pickup. Excellent
1971 B SA 650 Thl.mderboll
.condition Can b~ seen at
motorcycle, crash bars. 10"
Kingsbury Home Sal€'s or
Z bar s , &lt;1.600 m i les , small
·c a ll
992 7034
Monday
sissy bar, excellent con
t hrough Saturday
dltion Phone 742 -4647 , .afl €'r
7-6 Jtc
4 p .m '

REA DY MIX CO N C'r&lt;ETE.
de l ivere d rtght to your
p roj €'ct Fa9t and easy Free
es li mat€'s Phone 992 3284 ,
Goeg tern Rea d y Mix Co,
M1 ddl eport, Ohro
6 30 -tt C
- - - -- -----D TREE T rtmming , 20
years €'Xpert€'nce Insured ,
fr ee est1 mates Call 992 3057 ,
Coo lvtl/ e
Phone (l) 66 7
304 1
4-30 -lf c
- - - - - - - -- - - - -

7-7-6tc

.,,

~

•

4 10_1_ mp ._

Call 992 1590

V11 cli 1\

J

S pout r ng ,
S EPT IC fA 'NK.S CLEA NEO . ROOFING,
a luminum and v •nyl sidmg.
Reasonable RATE'S Phon e
c omp l€' te
remodeltnQ
J46 4782 Gallipolis
Johr
Phone 742 -6273 or (304) 773
Russell. owner
5684 . Free est1mates
_
4 9 tt c
6 25 26tp
HOU SE and roof pamting and NEE~-A . ne:-;.ome~buiit~;
repairs Fo r tree €'Stimates ,
your lof? Contact M~o B
call 992 6190 or ' 992 583 7
Hutchison, Rutland , Oh'io
6 -15 26t c
Phon e 742 36 15
~-==--=--~
--------5 8 ttc
S EPTIC TANKS c l ea ned
------- - - -- ---~Mod e r n San1tation 992 3954
WILL do oda 100 ~. ~ u .... , .. y,
or 992 7349
roofing .
haul 1ng
and
9 IB tf c
mowing . Phone 992 ·7.409.

HOU SE on . 2 l ots , c tty water,
gas , R t 62 c lose to Mason
Br1dge Call {304) 773 5978
7-6 3t c

•f

SIDING-SOFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

5-8·1 mo .

Middleport
5 30-1 mo.

•s

~Ei&lt;E 1 ~ts

A~~N~~~'t;~

John St., Next To
Grade School
992-2549 Syracuse, 0 .

1971 350 CL Honda , Phone 99 2

- v ----------------

FI&lt;DM E!W.K

Blown onto Walls &amp; AHies
STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT

BEAUlY SAWN

ROOFING

for Sale

8 WEEK o ld baby ch1ck s Cal l
843 29 11 or 949 38 36
7 8 3tc

CARPENTRY
WUI&lt;K.
Ce il1n g, pan €'l 1ng . floorm g,
et c Phon e 992 2759
6 211 27 t c

~ HITTI~

Pnm erQY

f'h ll92 -'2114

~D 1D

Blown
Insulation Services

lOLA'S

Roofing
Siding · I
Complete
Home I
Maintenance.

- - - ---------- -- ' s

Employment Wanted

\Jr\t ''""

SMiTH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

FREE EstiMATES

Merle Norman
Cosmetics

[WE DO:

Construction
and Plumbing

Want~

7-7- \ mo

Does your home
require any of these
I services?

YOUNG rabbits for sa l e ,
R e edsvt l l e Phone 378 6261
7-a 7tc

CAS H p o
for all mak€'s and
model s of mob il e hom es
Phon €' area code 614 423
953'1
4 13 tfc

Open 9-5 Wed. through 'Sun .
Ph . 667 -J858

Evenings 742 -4902
7-7-1 m o .

BORN LOSER

Nathan Biggs
R•d•ator Specia~i_s1

Rt . 7, Tuppers Plains , 0.
Shop Us Last &amp; Save

Ph. 992-7601

BE A
"SENTINEL

On
Lincoln Hill
Pomeroy and
in Syracuse
Phone 992-2156
TODAY

Fr om the largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
smalles t Heater Core .

"At Caution Light.,

ALl-WEAntER

PORTA-COOL"'
ROOM-to-ROOM

ONE large trailer Jot. gas,
water, electricity available .
Htgh St , Middleport . Phone
99 2 2864 .
7 6 3tc

VIOL~NT

ALL N&amp;;6ATIII/E.I

6-11-1 mo.

BARGAIN CENTER

We Carry

19 73 CHF.VROLET Imp ala
Custom, air cond AM &amp; FM
8 Tra c k , excel l en I co ndillon .
Ph one 992 7485
7 1 5t c

Wanted To Buy

CO UNTRY
Mobtle
H ome
Park , Rf 33 , ten mtles north
of Pomeroy Large lots wit h
con cre t e pat ros , St d ewa lk s,
runners an d o ff s tr eet
parkmg Phon e 992 7479 .
12 31 tfc

TYPE WAS SO

f!&gt;ECAUSE 1T WAS

KUHL'S

Liab1lity Insurance

~

rURN ap t 5 room s and bath ,
n1ce large yard , ba th a n d 1 " ·
390
So ut h
Sec ond
St ,
M •d dl e p or t . a dult s on l y
P h one 992 52e2 evenmgs
'
5 2 1 tf c

REAll:ZE THAT MY

REACTION TO VOUR

FORO Pt c kup truck , 32. 000
m des Phon e 99 2 56 12
7 8 Jtp

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

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

TO A PICTURE OF YOU}

Guaranteed
appliances,
used furniture at

\Onyl s ld1ng, aluminum
siding, pat 1o covers, storm
windows,
kitchen s,
bathrooms and garages .

197) DU ST ER , br own ml;:rd t
fl ake w tth whtte st r1p e Ai r
c ond!l to n ed ,
p s,
p .b ,
auto mat 1c tr ansm tssio n .
75 , 000 m ties , 340 mopar
enc.p n e , am fm r adio , good
c on di t1on Call 99 2 7766 a ft er
5 p m
7 8-6tc

PAINTING 10Side and oul , 1974 YAMA H A
360 MX
free est1mates Phon €' 992
Phone
3759 or 667 365 2
37
17
- -- 7 2 5tp
7 3 6tc
TR A IL ER, sp ace , all ut i l it1es ,
c h ea p Phone 992 -5535
1973 KAWA SA K I . 350 B1g
6 29 lfc R EM OD ELIN G .
Plumbm g ,'
hor n Engtne · ,n t op shape ,
heatmg an d all types of
good r u bber , and 3 b 1k e
g e n era l
repatr
Wo rk
tr a i lers Phon e 992 7 110
J BEDRM 65x 12 mobile home
guaranteed
20 year s ex
7 2 6tc
fo r ren~ . util1t1es paid ,
perience
Phone 992 2409 '
- - - - - - - -----l oca t ed tn Burli ngham Ca'll
5 1 If
992 775 1
r SWEE T co r n and potato es for
7 1 tfc _ __ - - - - - - - - - - - - sa le at Dav1d Yosts, R t 338,
WIL L do babysitting 409 W
Great Bend, Ohto
Matn St , P omeroy Phone
J 1\Nb J RO O-M furn tS hed a n d
7- 6 3tp
99 2 509'1
unfurnished
a partm ent s
7-7 6t c
Phone 992 5&lt;13 4
REG Angus hetfers, bred or
__ __ - - .,/4 12 11c
open Call Bill W1He. Rock
Sp r1 n g s 992 2769
PRIVATE m€'et1ng room for
7 1 6tc
any organizalton , ph one 992
USED wb te r ·hau l ing tank
J97 5
Approx .JOO gal l on s Contact
3 11 tf c
H€-nry W el ls , 99 2 3652 or
Doris Woodyard , 992 5519
A PT li ke new . 3 rooms , w rth
alter 5 p m
l a r ge b a th , tabl e t op r a nge ,
7 6-Jtp
large c loset E as t Mam S l ,
P omeroy See to apprecrate
P ho ne 992
Phon e Ga llipof l s during day , USE D camper
5502
J 46 7699, eve ninos 44 6 9539
7 8 3tc
159 95
" 10 tfc
- ---------.-- - - - - - . - . - c::·~c, ,
I 39 95
!RAILER spac-e, 1 mil e from ! 000 BTU
ic e bo xP. s, ·
Pomeroy
Phone 99 2 5856 . OLD fur ~rt ure ,
C..nly 431 b
brass
Beds,
or
complete
5-2-tfc
her mod els
households
Write M
oon sa te.
Mtller. Rt . 4, Pomeroy ....
•'
4 RM
apt w1th wa ll to wall
Ohio Call 992 ·7760.
',
ca rpet. 10.4 Spr1ng Ave,
10-7-74
Pom eroy Call 992 ·5908
- - - - - - - ----=-=--=-6 22 li e

-

DON'T KIP ..,. THAT JERK
'!OURSELF! DR. KLUTZ DIDN'T '

!5REATE5T EMOTIONAL REACTION

CASH 'N CARRY
SAVES US 's oo

J6HNSON
REMODELING

YARD Sa l e . July 10 and 11th,
Ra tn or shine. Third St ,
Sy r a c use on R t 124 Hou rs
10 a .m ttl I 8 p .m Cloth1ng.
d tshes . tools , h1Qh c ha 1r ,
sc hoo l desk, wall tel €' phone ,
wooden bowlS , 1runk , olher
m 1sc 1tems , ant1 QU€' S, and
co ll ec tible s
"" H OUS-E KE E PER . m u st ltvc
7 6 Jtp:
1n : t ar m home If 1nterested .
wr1te to M r
.H o l l1e E
- --------------YARD Sa t e, July 13, a ll day
St archer , R t
I, Box 114,
Drshes ,
avon
bo ttles,
Portland , Oh10 45770
m ISce ltan eo u s
Refresh
6 '1 5 12tp
men-ts , So ld by Me i gs Co H
S From SR 7 turn off at F 1ve
Points onto Flat Woods
Road Follow si gns
7 8 4t p

For Rent

. IT TURNED OLJT I 5 HOWJ:D THE '

'

Lost

TU'tSDAY ..IULY t, 1_975
J ::JO-.OM Life To Live 13; Lucy Show 6; Match Game
8,10; The Romagnolls' Table 20; Folk Guitar 33.
~:011-Mr . Cartoon 3; ·1 DrHm of Jeannie~ ; Somerset
15; Gilligan's Island 6; Musical Chairs 8; Sesame
StrMt 20,33; Movie "From The Earth to the Moon"
10; Mike Douglas 13.
~ : 30-Bewltclled 3; MeN Griffin ~; Moll Squad 6;
Mickey Mouse Club 8; Bonanza 15.
,
5101&gt;-FBI 3; Lucy Show 8r Mister Rogers' Neigh- ,q
borhood 20,33; Ironside 13.
S:30-News 6; Andy Griffith I ; Get Smart 15; Electric
Comoany 20,33. ·
6:GO-News 3,~,8,10;13, 15; ABC New 6; Sesame Street
20; Cetch-33 33,.
•
,
6:30-NBC News 3,~. 15; ABC News 13; Bewitched 6;
CBS news 1,10; Lilias, Yoga end You 33.

..

.CAPT A1N
. EASY

Phone
992-3313

Also Repatrs on All
Riding Tr.ac1ors
08 Locu St .
M1ddl e
Ohio

Phone 992 5682 or
992-7121

XL T Tr1 m , P. st eeri ng , w h 1te-w all tires, rad io, li ke new

7 2 6t c

YARD SALE
e ve r y Thu r s
day , Frtday and Sa t urday ,
qua'r ter
· mtle
lr om
L af\gS vl lle o lf De x ter Road
Fo l low t he s 1gn s Phone H2

and
Small Appliance .
Repair

Ground

top .

;

A 30-MILE ZGNE.

Washer &amp; Dryer

Sales &amp; Service
992-9092

and
Automobile
Transmission
Repair

4-doo r , loca l car, a rr condrtJon ed, full eq u rpm enf .

1970 NOVA V-8 CPE .

WILKINSON
SMAI,L ENGINE

Roger Hysell's
Garage

'

I

SLOW DOWN,THIS IS

Business Services

_

SI&lt;95

9&lt;19 .1609

Yard Sale

_

-

•

I

- ~--

.....

Notir"

NOW selli rt'l:ol t=u ll er
Brush
Produ c ts, phone 992 34 10
1 24 ttc

4

L, _

.

•,

;

Pomeroy
OF
QI:JALITY Motor Co.

11

Ev ery day I mi ss you more
And WI Sh tha t you could tJlavc
stayed
Th e flow ers now are in fr ee
b l oom
But so o n th e sn o w wt ll fly
1 know you ar e safe from all
th e cold .
In t llat man s 1on m th e s ky
D lt d alway s t aught u s r1ghl
from wrong ,
And wh er e to put ou r failh llnd

-

2 SIGNS

year s

2 BEDROOM trader , $27 per
week , ut ilii1 €'S pa1d Phone
PUBLIC NOTICE
992 3324
Notr c i' rs he r eby g i ven that
7 6-tfc
on th e 16th day of J uly 1975 at 7
PM a pub l ic hear ing w i ll b€' 3 - BEoRM -h~us~ - -u n
held on the budget prepared
furnish€'d Also. 1 furnish€'d
by
th e
Olive
Townshtp
ap t Phone 99 2 2780 or 992
Tru s tees
~ .
3432 .
Such ea rH'lg , w i ll be h€'!d at
th e office of t he Trus tees

PUBLIC IIIOTICE
NOTICE OF HEARING
OF BUDGET OF .

•. I

Dad , Ju l y 1S her e again

'-- ---- --- - .....L---

Whit t 234, Edd ie Whitt 189 .
. Women : D l~n a Whitt 182,

'
· ·
· ··
·
• Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Tuesday. J'\lf8,1~5

'

Auto Sales ·

IN L O VING memory o t Riley
S Mantey who passed away
J uly 7, 1964

-a nd victim revisited

r.

Dauv Selltinel

_

For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds

· TaM TIEDE

'.

I ,

\

22)
Do n 't champion an unpopular ,
c au se to d ay regardless of how '
stro ngl y ., J u feel about 11 Wart ·
lilt th e odd s are more m your •
favor

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. •
21)/ Your " marker s" may be

ca l e d rn today on ob ligatiOns ~
to 1two different pa rt1 es Do
what yo u c a n to c lea r th1ngs up

now
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . .
19) Try n ot t'o tel o thers ·
pressu re you 1nto dec iStons
!hat, are ag amst you r be tt er
1udgme nl A 'tlrm " No IS better
th,:tn a weak 'Yes "

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 19) .
It's not a go od day to cha nge
prov e n wo r k ro utrn es An
opera t tonal ct1ange cou ld
prove t o ba t h e l o ng way :
ar o un d

PISCES •(Feb. 20· March 20)
,Yo u re luc ky to day but only
wtt h1 n ce rl a rn bound s Don I
take an y f oo lt sh rjrsks or .,
c hances
--

~YOUr
~Birthday
July 9, 1975

A c areer opportunrty comes u
you r way thiS: year , but it will
on ly be a door· opener What · ·
you make of 11 will depend ·
upon how drlrgently you res - ...
pond an d ho w eell you ' re
prepared
' NE WSI'I\ PER ENTE RPRISE ASS N 1

•

�'

.

••

I .

'

I

•

r

••

•
~

-'rho

, G.;t The Daily SentiiJCl, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, July 8,1975

:

· ]itn -Thorpe: L~end

In Memory

hfe . If a national vote was
JIM fHORPE, Pa.- Even held, Thorpe ;s. the Olympics
when he died Jim Thorpe had comm11tee would be , no
contest.
troubles.
And perhaps Thorpe does'
Refu sing to bury him until
des
erve a win over the
a perma nent monument was
erected , Thorpe's widow gen&lt;\fally skimpy and sancwandered the nation peddling timonious minds that control
amate ur
wo rld 's
various proposals to mostly the
disinterested e ntrepeneurs athle tics, 1f only in deference
Then, in 1954, learnmg that to the Indian 's magnificenc-e
Mauch , Chunk and East afield. Yet there is a counMauch Chunk, Pa., were tr.rpomt If Miss America
co mbining community m- must be disq ualified when
wrests and c ho osing a new her pregrn~ncy is discovered,
name, the widow popped the so too was it rig ht to slap
question here. The citize ns Thorpe for h1s indiscretions
voted 10 to 1 to become The rules were clear , Thorpe
Th orpe's final restmg place clearly broke t he m a nd
and namesa ke , thereby pre Jured himself early on by
presumably e nding the heavy say ing he hadn't. True, his
misfortun es of th e ' most punishmen t was excessive,
gifted athle te in the nation's perh aps event ually contributing to the ter rible wa ste
history .
of
his adult life. Yel there is
la te r ,
Two
d ecades
howeve r , it's clear the no .;aying It was unjust.
In any event, one wonders
Thorpe saga has not ended .
Factions once again ~ a re if lhe Jim Thorpe argument
arguing 'ove r deeds done has an end a t a ll, If the divers
more than a half century ago, Thorpe loya lists will ever be
and this time Congress is in satisfied. His family by Itself
on th e squa bble . ThJrpe, a has all along been divided as
Sac and F'ox mixed-bl ood to what would co nstitute
Indian, was str ipped of appropr ia te vindication. The
$50,000 worth of 191 2 Olympic widow who negotiated his
medals when amateur of- graves1te , Patricia, third of
ficials determined that he his three wives, was said to
had disqualified himself by be more Interested in
playing professional baseball monetary reparation than
prior to the games. Two record book revamping. And
dozen congressmen have today some of his six sons and
resurrected for the ump- daughters want his amateur
teenth time the question of status restored , some want
fairness, and are pressuring his trophies returned, and
the lnwrnatiollal Olympics some want both.
Committee to at long last
Beyo nd
the
family,
restore the man's victories.
moreover,
there
are
extended
It is if anything a debaw
fraught with confusion , interes ts ge tting in their
contradiction and popular grumps. Liberals want an
emotions. Though Thorpe admission that Thorpe's
himself is not remembered Indian heritage worked
by many Americans, his against lenient treatment by
image is. Burt Lancaste r turn of the century amateur
portrayed the athlete in a offi c ials . And some confilm version of Thorpe's life, se rvative s promote the
and over the years its return of the medals lo
showing on wlevision alone demonstrate that subsidized
has no doubt converted more Soviet athletes should not be
fans to Thorpe's'-5ide than the only professionals to win
ev cr cared for him m real Olympic events with impunity .
Altogether, it seems, most
of America has hooks in the
fhe Almanac
issue. A merchant here in
By United
Press
In- Jim Thorpe says he'd like to
ternational
see the battle won -because
Today is Tuesday, July 8, the news might brlng tourists
the !89th day of 1975 with 176 to town "and , boy , could I use
to follow.
·
th e \msiness."
The moon is new.
Lost in all of thiS, obThe morning stars are viously, is Thorpe himself,
Mercury , Mars and· Jupiter. the man who could win the
The evening stars are Olympic pentathlon and
Venus and Saturn.
decathlon back to back and
Those born on this date are then go on a roaring
under the sign of Cancer .
Stockholni ·drunk; ihe man
American capitalist John who was led to believe that
D. Rockefeller was born July kicking a football 90 yards
.8, 1839. This is actress Kim was something liRe having an
Darby'S 27th birthday.
unlimited· credit card; the
On this day in history :
man who died an alcoholic,
In 1835, the Liberty Bell in penniless and in personal
Philadelphia cracked while shame. The real sadness of
being rung during the funeral his life as not the silly abof United States Chief Justice · sence of liis awards, but the
John Marshall.
absence of his values. With
In 1951, Paris celebrated its all his muscles, and all his
2,000th anniversary .
friend s, he hadn't the
In 1969, withdrawal of strength . or the support to
American
troops • from face reality . or adversity
Vietnam began as 800 in- anywhere but in an arena .
•
fantrymen arrived af McJim Thorpe h~s been
Cord Air Force Base in buried for two decades now ,
in a proper tomb north of
Washington stale.
In 1972, President Nixon town. But still he doesn't rest.
announced the sale of $750 The fools continue tO argue
·million worth of grain to his old wars ; one of his sisters
talks · of having his body
Russia.
moved back to the Indian
A thought for the day: country where he was born.
·American naturalist John No doubt Burt Lancaster's
Burroughs said, "Life is a dreadful movie is enjoying
struggle, but not a warfare." revival on the late night
shows. In death as in life the
man remains the greatest
athlete of his country's time,
but also, more is the pity, its
•
FRIDAY NITE MIXED
most
abused .
July 4 , 1975

By fom fiede

Loqll Bowling
Team Sta1ndmg s

Gru eser &amp; Son Plumb
Craw's Steak Ho use
Team N o A
WMPO

W
14
10
10
' 6

L
2
6
6

10

TeamN o6
610
Team No . 5
2 14
High Series ~ Men · Edd 1e
Wh tft 599 , Bob Poc kli ngton
480; Worrien
D1a.na Whitt
488 . J'Ud i Poc k I m gt on and
,Betty Wh ltlatch 476
H igh Game - · M en Eddie

. Betty Whltla!ch 169.

. .. 'L

Ada BISSell
Clerk

(7 ) 6. llc

Boaters
should
not
overload their craft. An
RUTLAND TWP .
overloaded boat easily
t• Noti c e rs" hereby Q , ven that
811JWnps or capsizes because on t he 18 t h day of Ju l y , 1975 , at
It .cah't properly react to 7, 30 p m a pub li c heanng wil l ~
b e held
on
th e
budget
waves,
the
Watercraft . prepared by the Townshi p of
Division · of
the
Ohio Rut lan d, Metgs Co unty , Ohio ,
for th e nex t succeed tng f i scal
Departmlmt of Natural ye ar en di n.g Oecernber 31.
1976. I
-ResO!,IJ'ces says.

.

Such h erirr n g w rll be he ld at
the
Township
Of f iCe
at

·~

......... ~~tland

Pets For Sale,' f-REE .te mal e kilt ens '-' Ph one

992·3HO

~

. t

....

---

-~-

.:.

-

- ...... - .

7 3 6tc

(I

L 8_. .. 1.t c

Ed n a Sw tck ,
Cl€'rk
Ru tl an d Towiish1p

'
'.

a~d

.. .

H a ve passed s1 n cc you went
away

t rust

Now Dad has gon e away and I
thank God,
That he gave us a Dad who
cared
Fo r our 10y an a hap p ine ss
Th ose yea r s to sha r e. now he
will be forever w1th God .'
W tt hout troub l e or tear to
bea r
Sadly m tssed by daughter .
N eva . g r an dchildren
and
great grand c hild r en
7 8 Hp

1911 MATADOR

SI295

V1nyl roof, grey fr n 1sh , h1gh mrleage, good fires,
.automatic, pO\oVe r st eering , radio, silver fi ni sh Bl ack
''

1972 FORD " 8" PICKUP

S229!

5-14 I mo .

w -w tir es , chrome bumpers and wheel tr rm. Clea n .

6 '17)

625t.fc

TWO b l ack Ca .rn T er r~ e r s on
Co Rd 7B R eward Phon e

CA MER A eQuipm €' nt betw een
Alhe n s and Ga ll rpo l! s W1lh
in for ma t to n ,
ca l l
Ke n ,
c o ll ect 592 3774
7 a Jtp

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

YEL L OW • and white t o ng
hatr€'d ki ll en w rt h whtte fl €'a
co l lar Lo s t near Beec h St. .
Middleport SIO Rewa r d d
ret urned Pho n e 99 7 54 16, tf
no answer , ca ll 992 50 16
7 8 3t c
- - --- - - - - - - - - -

Help Wanted

RM
h o use , bat h , f ront
por c h , gas h eat , ut d Jty
room, references requ 1red
Call 949 365 8
7-B 4tc

J BEOR M home in Che!ter
Phon e 9as 3582
78 8 6tp

TRAILER spa ce for renr 10
Middleport Phone 992 5434
7 a 6tp
I TR A I LER , Off old Rl 33 at
Kingsb ury
Road
'l
bedrooms , 1 c hild p e r
m ilted , n o pets Ph on e 74'1

31 23

7

B Jtc

3 BEDROOM mobile hom€'
lo cate d on 143,2 miles from
Pomeroy Phone 992 5858
7 2 tt c
FURNISHED
apartment,
adults only m Middl e port
Phon€' 99 2 3137 4
3 25 tfc

1969 DA 'l SUN Plymouth 5 10
S€'dan Also , 1968 Pont 1a c
Cata li na w 1l h fa c tory at r
c onddton m g
Phone 9a5
336 5
7 6 3tc

CARRlER"

Free Estimates
PH. 992-2550
l27 N 2n&lt;!

HAY for sa l e. del tvered or
pi c ked up in f i el d Phone
742, 3743
7 8 6tc

3529 .

For Rent or Sale

1 8 etp

COW and c a•lf
after 5 p rn

Ca ll 997 7 165

7 8 31C

p

SO RREL cont est pony Ben
Brckers , BaSh!" n Rd , 94¢:
4605
•
7 6 Jtc

5 ROOM ho u se , 159 N
5th
Ave , M i ddle por t
Pho ne
b€'fore 5 p m 7&lt;1 2-5625 or see
Mar10 r1 e Mi lhon at Rutland
~ 7 1-6t c
- -,- - ---- -- - - - - - - -

Real Estate For Sale
F ARM and 2 h omes, y ear old ,
total elec
Double w1de
trail er, co mpletely car
peted, 3 large bedrooms
wtfh larg e closets , a nd 2 full
baths. home also has den,
liv i ng room , dinmg room ,
and ki tc hen with pl enty of
storage space
A lt large
room s
A lso p o ncf above
trailer
Also, on same
pr oper ty " a 2 Slory 1 rm
farm h-ouse, real g ood
pl um b tn g, plenty of well
wat er , and newly painted on
th e outside . Huge barn a nd
garage , other building s too
Grea t grazing and gard en
land . All on 20 acres for sa le .

MODERN stereo rad10 , am
fm . a track 1ape c om
btnatron Ba la nce $ 101 69 , or
t erms Call 992 3965
7 2 tf c

a1

~~~~~ ~eg

~~

- -

-

" ROOM unfurnished house ,
1650 Lin c o ln H~ts , phone
992 381 &lt;.
1 6-ttC

5 RM S

and bath , n.rce lot,
large outbuild tng , front and
back por c hes , front shaded ,
needs repair lo c ated In
Clt f!On , W Va . Ca ll 992·5325 .
, 7 3-7tc
-· - -- - - - - - ""-- - . - - - -

NOTICE
PUBLIC HEARING ON
SUTTON TOWNSHIP
ANNUAL BUDGET
FOR 1916

7 6-3tp

--- ----- - ---ONE Milssie Harr 1s tra c tor

REE ~ E

eQua11ze:r hitch , draw
bars , extra ball, outside
mtr,rors and brake switch
Can be seen at Kingsbury
Home Sales or ca ll 992 -7034
Monda-v throu.gh Saturday

Real Estate for Sale

i, 'u:RIE'=-'t'aR'
BR,'

1

shopping, 2-story frame,

1 eaford RPalty

,.

'-~'
11 I '

..

&gt; ,'

I•.• II•
)&gt;,, '

NEW
COLONIAL
- 5
bedrooms, 3 full baths. central
air, and heal, large family
room , sun deck , lovely kit-

refrigerator and other
furn ., some carpeting, new
natural gas forced air futn .
and HW tank, excellent at

chen, dishwasher, stove'" and
refrigerator. Doub le garage
and extra features . NEW

$10,000.00.
CALL 992-2259

____________ __ _
-- - ------

.

1

•

...

a - ---w

6:~Sunrlse Seminar .4: Summer Semester 10.

NT tree bid takes stopper
- - -- -- - - - - -- minimum T~e diamond suit IS
NORTH tD)
8 nothing to sing paeans of JOY
about
.8B
When the spade bid comes
• K 2
around to South he can b1d
tAK 76 4
nolrump and jumps to two with .
... K 63
his 12 high'Card points
«
EAST
WEST
North raises lo game. West
• J 10 3
.AQ974
.9 .., II
opens his fourth best spade and
•JI0765
South rattles off his nine tricks
t3
t9852
and wins the rubber .
... Q 10 8 4
... A J 2
Since might-have·beens are
SOUTH
worth discussing we must point
• K 2
out that if West had passed .
• AQ843
North WOJild have b1d one
• Q J 10
notrump
. South would have
... 9H
raised to three and East would
North -SOuth vulnerable
have been on lead.
East might well have led the
jack
of spades. rather than his
Nonh East
fourth best club and the hand
would have collapsed
Pass
1•
Pass
Pass 2 NT
Pass
3NT Pass Pass

,.

Pass

SEW 1NU
MACHINt:,
" Repeirs, service, all makes .
q92 226 4 The Fabric Shop.
Pomeroy Authorlzed Singer
Sales and Se rvi ce
We
shar p en Sc tssors
3 29 tfc

6:25-Farm Report 13
6:30-Five Minutes to Live By 4; News 6 ; Bible Answers 8; School Scene 10; The Story 13.
6·35-Columbus Today 4.
·
6. .j$-Mornlng R"'!!rt 3; ·Farmtlme 10. ·
6:55-News 13 .
7·GO-Today 3,4,15; A. M. America 6,13; CBS News
8, 10.
8:GO-Lasste 6; Captain Kangaroo 8; Schoolles 10.
Sesame Street 33.
8:30-Big Valley 6; Popeye 10.
8:55-Chuck White Reports 10.
9:oo-A .M. 3; Phil Donahue 4,15; Murles Stevens 8;
Captain Kangaroo 10; Morning With D. J . 13.
9:30-Not For Women Only 3; Dlnohl 6; Galloping
Gourmet I ; New Zoo Revue 13.
lO :ClO-Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3,4,15; Spin-Off 8, 10;
Dlnahl 13; Jody's Body Shop 33 .
10:30-Wheel Of Fortune 3.~. 15; Gamqlt 8.10; French
Chef 33.
11 :GO-High Rolters 3,4,15; One Life to Live 6; Tattletales 1. 10.
'
1:30-Hollywood Squares 3, 15; Brady Bunch 13;
Midday ~ ; Love of Lite 8,10.
, 1:55-Take Kerr I ; Dan Imel's World 10.
12:GO-Magnlflcent Marble Machine 3,15; Showoffs13;
Bob Braun's 50·50 Club 4; News 6, 18, 10; Mister
Rogers 33 .
12:30-NBC News 3, 15.
1:GO-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6,13; Phil Donahue 8; •
Young ond the Restless 10; Not For Women Only
15; VIlla Alegre 33.
1:30-Days Of Our Lilli'S 3,4,15; Let' a Make A Deal
6,13; As the World Turns 8, 10; Folk Guitar 33.
2:1)0-$10,000 Pyramid 6,13; Guiding Light 8,10; The
Way li"Was 33.
2:30-Dodors 3,4, 15; Rhyme and reason 6, 13; Edge of
Nlghl a, 10; Evening al Pops 33.
J :oo-Another World 3,4,15; General Hospital 6,13;
Price Is Right 1,10; Music olthe People20.
3:»---ne Life to Live 13; Lucy Show 6; Match Game
8, 10; The Way It Was 20; Erica 33.
3 : ~5-Theonl.-33 .

4:oo-Mr. Cartoon 3; I Dream of J~annle 4; Somerset
15; Gilligan' a Island 6;' Musical 'Chairs I; Sesame
Street 20,33; Movie "The Man Called Flintstone."
10: Mike Douolas 13.
4:30-Bewltched 3; Merv Griffin ~; Mod Squad 6;
Mickey Mouse Club 8; Bonanza 15.
5:GO-FBI 3; L~cy Show 8; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Ironside 13.
5:30-News 6; Andy Griffith 8; Get Smart 15; Electric
Company 20, 33.
.
6 : QO-News 3s,4,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 6; Sesame
Street 20; You Owe It To Yourself 33.
6:30-NBC News 3,.t, 15; ABC News 13; Bewitched 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Jody's Body Show 33.
7 :GO-Truth or Consequences 3,4,1S; To Be Announced
15; Bowling For Dollars 6; What's My Line? 8;
News 10; Country Music Jubilee ,13; Book Beat 20;
The Romagnolls' Table 33.
7. »-Pollee Surgeon 3; Name That Tune 4; Let's
Make A Deal 6; Wilburn Brothers 8; Evening
Edition with Martin Agronsk'y 20; The Judge 10; To
Tell The Truth 13; Episode Action 33.
8:GO-LIHie House on the Prairie 3,4,15; That's My
Mama 6,13; Tony Orlando ·and Dawn 8.10; Feeling
Good 20,33.
8:3D-Movle " The Day The Earth Moved 6, 13;
Philadelphia Folk Festival 20; Another Look at
· Appl\lachla 33 .
9:GO-Lucas Tanner 3,4,15; Cannon 8,10; Masterpiece '
Theatre 33.
9:30-Jean Shepherd's America 20 .
lO :GO-Petrocelll 3,4,15; Bare«a 6, 13; Mannix 8, 10;
News 20; Family at War 33.
11 :oo-News 3,4,6,8,10, 13, IS; ABC News 33.
11 :3D-Johnny Cal'son 3,4,15; Wide World Special 13;
FBI '6; Movie "Big Rose" 8; Movie " Island In the
Sun" 10; Janakl 33.
·
12:3D-Wide World Soeclal 6.
1: ~Torr1orrow 3,4; News 13.

1 .

t'St.tUJI ~trf

ALLEY OOP

by THOMAS JOSEPH

,, 8LJT HE
OLSON MADE HIMSELF
A BUNDLE 8¥ SE:~ING · HAD ONE
PECULIARITY
FOOD 10 'THE: MINE:IZS
ANO 10WNSPEOPLE IN

YOU l::itLIEVE ?
Budd an all steel burlding at
P ol€' Barn prrces? Golden
G tant All -Steel Bu i ldings,
Rt
4, Box 148 . Waverly,
Oh tO Phone' 947 -2296
6 -24 -26tc

HE DIDN'T
"Tt&lt;:UST 1

"THEN WH.tr DID

ACROSS
1 Hebrew
measure
5 Stud, e.g,

HE DO WliH 7
HIS MONE'( •

SANKS ·

PANAMINT CITV ...

41 Famed

ItalaD
family
U Prevaleht

10 Specter

DOWN

11 Goddess of

I Chicago
airport
z Taciturn
one
(4 wds.)
3 Avon's earl
4 Trust-

peace
I% Window
pane
13 Raise
U User of
caustic
language
16- Beta

'

worthy

s Michel-

Kappa
17 Ship-shaped
clock
18 Surprise!
-19 Paving

angelo
statue
6 Hockey
great
7 Be eremitic

substance

ELWOOD HUWt:.K~ t&lt;t:.t-'AIR
- Swee p€'rs, toasters. iron'S,
all sma ll appliances Lawn
mower. next to State Htgh
way Garage on Route 7·
Phone 985 3825
4-16 tfc

wds.)
8 Charm
9 Pensioner
(3

20 Temple, old
style
~~~~
· · 2Z First-rate

l'

Yeslerday's A01wer

10 Gyrate
Z7 Briny deep
15 " - Stoops H "I told ·
to Conquer"
you!"
Zl Statute
31 EmbalikZ2 · Candlenut
men!
tree
32 ScandinaZ3 Twined
Vian meas24 Lionllke
ure
25 "The
35 capital of
Faerie
Portuguese
Queene"
author

Timor

r7 Extra bed

Z3 Chosen
25 Struck

26 Salamander
27 Reach

WILL TRIM or cut trees dn d
shrubb€'ry and paint roofs
P hon e 949 -322t or 742 -4441.

across

6-2&lt;-26tp

cos ts It s best you be tdea ltsl1c ,
'
ra t he r than exp ed1e nt

28 Dejected
GENERAL l&lt;epa tr , c l ean -up
and
ha u ttng ,
cutteng,
weldrng,
carpentry,
plumbrng , elec ma so nry
and g efle ral remodeling
Ca tt Skii -Pool. Phone 992 -

5126.

29 Foursome's
meeting

6-17 -tfc

VVI-IY Nor ?- IT'S
THE FASTE:'ST

EXLAVA rJNG, dozer, loader
and backhoe work , septt c
tanks
rn s talled.
dump
trucks and to boys for h1re ,
will haul fill d1rt, top soil,
limes tone and gr~vet , Ca ll
Bob or Roger Jeffer s, day
phone 992 7069, nrght phone
992 3525 or 992 5232 .
2 1 , ttc
--- --- - - -' - ...,.- - - ---=-- "'
CARPET tnstallatton, $1 25
per yard
Call
R tch ard
We s~. phone 843 -2667

WAY

NATURALLY~­

DOWN~!-

')CUR

.

5/DEWALK.r:-

6-+-+-

· SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.

place
30 Old musical note
33 Black

•Bemtce
Wodnndoy, July 9, 1975
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19)
For

cuckoo

INDESTRUGIBl.E
(var.)
-WHIQ-1 IS
34 Good luck
MCRETHAN I
gift
36
"The OdysCAN SAY FC&gt;f&lt;.

Oomest 1c p ressu res wrll be a
b 1l heav1er today th an u sual
Sttuations won I be helped tl
- + - + - - l you let out s tders p t; l m therr
two-cents· wo rt h

1;-;.-+-+-

sey" sor·
cereas

TAURUS (AP&lt;il

38 Strainer
39 "Witch

SHE'S STILL SEEING HIM, BUT WHAT ABOUT HIM!
DOES SHE GIVE ANY

SAYS ""EY WENT lD A
MUSEUM,""EATER AND

Mattress
Sale Now
.In Prog1ess
, At•.

A CHARMING FRENO-!
RESTAUR'\NL ALL

MORE INFORMATION
THAN SHE GAVE IN

HER lf.IST LETTER. ?

;N ONE DAY/

II

LONGFELLOW

apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the rode !etten are difl'erent.

DRSU G
ORG ·

ZHJJSD

LRS

'

HOG

THUD

OGTGHD

yD.
~

OGVGVPGO

,

FGSOFG

(

.DHAHJH

22) ll
w1ll be a bit d rff1cult to set a
course of act 1on today and
st 1ck to tt Pr t or~ties w1ll be
neg lected

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) It s

ZSJQGVJGQ

~

Your che ckbook wrll have to be
trea ted w tt h respect o r 11 m ay
not tally at d ay s e n d Don 't
take any flyers

CANCER (June 21-July

One letter simply standi for another. In lhls sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc..Single letters,

CRYPTOQUOTE

·MASON .FURNITURE

20)

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR

AnniversaiJ

~y

-::-+-+--1--+--IWe lg h your word s carefully
agatn tOday Cer t am partres tn
the wrng s are look.ng t or a
reason to take a pot shot at
you

40 of
Actress
~~~~;::~
- "
Terry
~

SEALY

MIDDLEPORT - 2 bedroom

•

WIN "·T
BRIDGE
'

,.

usua l to let others t htnk for you
Today you wrll Unfortunately
lhetr suggeslrons may not be to
you r bene f it

DS YlRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22)

U H J

You
s t1ll have to be ca r ef u l tn
arrange me nt s With friendS
where m oney o r some thm g of
a ma tena l nature rs at stake
Proceed wrlh cautron
r

It You're tfot Listening

Yeslenlay's Cryptoquote: CYNICISM IS AN UNPLEASANT LIBRA (Sept. 23 -0cl. 23)
Behave today so that your
WAY OF SAYING tHE TRUTH.-ULLIAN' HE!LMAN
reputal ron rs protected ~~ all
·
fC 1IT_6 KiDa Featw.a Syndi, te, Inc .)

1 NEED A
PENCIL

WHAT CAN

; to, Dave ·s trang
You're Missing .G reat :_

'

FER
SCHOOL
HOUSE, SILAS ..
TH' CHEAPEST
'IE GOT

I DO FER ·
'IOU, MISS .
PRUl\IELLI(?

·Radio '

7 to 10 A.M.

WMPO 1.390 ·~~010
•

,.
'

.

.

.
a- a

I -

•

~,

,

r

.

I

•

•

•

f

•

lO :ClO-Pollcae Story 3,4, 15; Marcus Welby, M.D. 6,13 ;
Barnaby Jones 8,10; News 20; . Inlerface 33.
WEDNESDAY, JULY 9, 1975 ,

' """"tiD- '""'"

WOULD

nat. gas, F.A. furnace , sliding
glass doors. 2 porches and
double garage.

"

6; What's My Llne? ·8; News 10; Name That Tune
13; To Be Announced 15; Antiques · 20; Jean
Shepherd's America 33.
7; 30-Hollywood Squares 34; Let's Deal With It 6 ;
Buck OWens · 8; Evening Edition with Marlln
Aor.onsky 20; New Price Is Rloht 10; To Tell The
_ Truth 13; Car ond. Tr~ck 15; Spotlight On 33.'·
8:oo-Adam-12 3.~.15 ; Happy Days 6.13; Gooil Times
8.10; The Way It Was 20,33.
8:30-Movle " Death Stalk" 3,4, 15; Movie " The Gun"
. 13; Mov ie " Night Slaves" 6; M-A·S-H 8.10; Consumer Survival Kit 20,JJ .
9:GO-Hawall F lve-08,10; BurnsandAIIen9; Nova20;
Saga of Western Man 33 .

Opemng lead - 7 •
' i'"rom lime to time we are
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ asked if honors count when held
by a defender The answer is
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
thallhey do . It usually amounts
to extra loss since few con"';;:;;:;;;;r:.;u:;~~~
There is one free rebid that tracts are ever fulfilled when a
BUT 'THOI'SPHOS
does have a special meanin~
'"" ll&lt;OJSA"D9
That is the free r e bid In def e nder holds a hundred
o· Met&lt; WORION '
no trump ll must show that you honors against declarer
"""" ~Ell£ .. lME
can s lop the suit that your opp&lt;&gt;: Oh. yes ' Honors also count
o· TH' TERRIFIC
nent has been kind or unkmd when dummy holds t~em .
PAY ROLL!
enough tO bid .
(Do you have a question for
..,r-...,..-~ Thus. North has a very normal one-nolrump 'rebid after the Jacobys? Wrtte " Ask the
South's ·one -heart response . Jacobys' c are of this
When West bids ·a spade. North news paper The most injust can't bid one notrump I he terestmg questio ns will be
used m thts column and
can' t stop spades . l
writers
wtl/ recetve c optes. ol
· He m1ght try two diamonds.
JA
COBY
MODERN.!
hut his hand is • rnmplete

1-6-12tc

bedroom
home ,
stove,
refrigerator, &amp; dishwasher,

,, a

.

/ :DO- froth or Consequences J,.C; Bo-. .. u!:rl to• ,,..... Iars

·-·

1-2-26tp

furnace, new hot 1(\'ater tank, new pi umbing,
double garage, priced to sell fast at $12,500.
.Locate~;!· in Racine, Ohio across from grade
school.
George S. Hobstetter Jr •
REAL&lt;'ESTATE BROKER
~ Phone 949-3211, Hilton Wolfe; Silesman

'

~·

· Ph. 99?.1993

little bunga low.
NEW LISTING - Renovated 2

\

l

Syracuse, Ohio

A neat conservative

ditives.

.
c

LARRY iAV.E8DE.R

l.ISTING
NEW LISTING - 2 bedroom•.
b;&gt;th, nat . gas. F .A. furnace,
6ak floors and storm ad-

REAL ESTAtE FOR SALE

No ti ce is h~reby g 1ven that ·
on t h e ath day of July 1975 at
8 00 a .m
o 'c lock., a publ 1c
hearing will be held on the
budget prepar€'d by the SuJton H O NDA 750 with extras , only
5,000 m tie s Phone 992 -5671.
Townshtp ' T rus t ees of Me i gs
7 6-3tc
Coutlty . Ohio , t o r the n ~x t
:tucceeding f isc al year en d in g
'
FlS HIN C li cense • . Canadian
0('cember Jl, 19?6.
Nile c rawlers, 60c doz Dug
Suc h h ear l 'ng will be heJd at
wor m s . 3 doz Sl Other hart ,
Sy ra cuse
Town
Hall ,
ta c kle . guns , ammo , cb's ,
Sy r ac u se. Ohio
lnd ran Joe's Sports
308
P aQe S t
Phone 992 3509
Wil l iAm f" H ar rt s
7 l -26tc
~
, Clerk
•
I
U ) 8: lie

3

BR, 2 baths, ut. room ,
located oo good street,
$8,300.00.
157 ACRES- Near Dexter,
land is clean and lays nice,
2 story frame home. barn
and other outbuildings ,
good wel l with water
system, $7,600 down, bal .
$290 · per mo., including
Interest ; Iota I $38.000.00.
POMEROY - 'Wh story
frame, coutd have 2 apts ., 5
BR. 2 baths, range,

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

I

tiath,

s

posts A lso , 1965 Ford L TO
Phon e 742 3656
5 23 -52 t p

o

0

yrs . old . $16,000.00.
MIDDLE PORT - Close to

I 72 ACRES land , and lo cus t

fl.

I

DOZER work. land c lear 1ng
by the acre , hourly or
cont ra ct
Farm
ponds ,,
roads , e tc Large dozer and
ope rat or with over 20 years
ex p erre n ce
Pullin.s E x
cavattnQ, Pomeroy , Ohio
Ph o ne 992 -2478
12-19 -tf·

nice kitchen, din. area, ut.
room , carpeted, carport,

333 , 1 Ford two row corn
home, bath, nat . gas heat.
planter , 3 p ; On€' 3 P .
dining,
utility, 2 porches and
Cultivators, two row , One 12
r o w fi e ld spray wtth 290
midget
garden
on
street.
1-6 3tc
gallon a1um 1n um tank . Call
--------..,-----.:::Want only ~!,)i'N'r ·
99 2 7692 after 5 p m.
IF YOU Y1
7 6 3tc · BAND saw, good worktng
condlfton , $150 586 Lincol n
- -- - .---;----- - -- - Sf, Mtdd h',•por t Phone 992 .
FA BRIC SALE. Larg€'sl a nd
7624
Best sale since open ing of
7-2-6tc .
our busi Qess . All material tn
shop on sale Double knit - - .- - -----------ac rylic Sl 49 per yd , a g ood GOOD i-n1x ~o rtdy P-hone 992 _.
5302.
selectron of first qual it y
7-6-3tc
polyester knits, fan e res and
. solids $2 .29 per Vd Sale on e
week on l y Monday Ju l y 7
thru Sat , July 12 Open 9
a m to 5 p m Satu rday . We
Wtll b€' c losed fo t vacalten
from July 14 to July 28.
Caroltna FabrtcS , Rt . 7 one
h.;tlt m tie north of Chester ,
Broom fr~me· house, 3 bedrooms, bath
Oh 10
H enry a nd Mary
H unter , owners .
1h basement, 2 porches, new gas
&amp;
lavatory,
-·_,_ 7-66tp

•

•

o·&amp;

f\1\10 BEDROOM house f or
sale Phone 985 4102
6 10 26 f c

For Sale

1 MUELLER .and 1 Lenno x
fuel
o il
furnace , both TWO Wh€'el Shasta c amp er ,
c omolete , also 1919 model T
sleeps s tx , '5900 Phone 949
Ford truck Will se ll or tra de
5161
for
Ford
tractor
and
7 6 -6tc
equ1pment Also Kenmore
gas range Phone 965 -4118 PH ILCO 14 cu ft. retrtgerator7-7 Jtc
freezer. Whit e, $120, 31h
years old. Phone 742 672 2
1-6-&lt;tp
TOMATOE S,
c u c umber s,
Cleland Far rn s, Ger..atdine 19 71 TRUCK camper . overcab
C leland
sl eeper, f i ts any 6 ft . bed
7 -6-lfc
truck . Was carried on a
- - -- - - - - - - ' - - - - - Datsun pickup. Excellent
1971 B SA 650 Thl.mderboll
.condition Can b~ seen at
motorcycle, crash bars. 10"
Kingsbury Home Sal€'s or
Z bar s , &lt;1.600 m i les , small
·c a ll
992 7034
Monday
sissy bar, excellent con
t hrough Saturday
dltion Phone 742 -4647 , .afl €'r
7-6 Jtc
4 p .m '

REA DY MIX CO N C'r&lt;ETE.
de l ivere d rtght to your
p roj €'ct Fa9t and easy Free
es li mat€'s Phone 992 3284 ,
Goeg tern Rea d y Mix Co,
M1 ddl eport, Ohro
6 30 -tt C
- - - -- -----D TREE T rtmming , 20
years €'Xpert€'nce Insured ,
fr ee est1 mates Call 992 3057 ,
Coo lvtl/ e
Phone (l) 66 7
304 1
4-30 -lf c
- - - - - - - -- - - - -

7-7-6tc

.,,

~

•

4 10_1_ mp ._

Call 992 1590

V11 cli 1\

J

S pout r ng ,
S EPT IC fA 'NK.S CLEA NEO . ROOFING,
a luminum and v •nyl sidmg.
Reasonable RATE'S Phon e
c omp l€' te
remodeltnQ
J46 4782 Gallipolis
Johr
Phone 742 -6273 or (304) 773
Russell. owner
5684 . Free est1mates
_
4 9 tt c
6 25 26tp
HOU SE and roof pamting and NEE~-A . ne:-;.ome~buiit~;
repairs Fo r tree €'Stimates ,
your lof? Contact M~o B
call 992 6190 or ' 992 583 7
Hutchison, Rutland , Oh'io
6 -15 26t c
Phon e 742 36 15
~-==--=--~
--------5 8 ttc
S EPTIC TANKS c l ea ned
------- - - -- ---~Mod e r n San1tation 992 3954
WILL do oda 100 ~. ~ u .... , .. y,
or 992 7349
roofing .
haul 1ng
and
9 IB tf c
mowing . Phone 992 ·7.409.

HOU SE on . 2 l ots , c tty water,
gas , R t 62 c lose to Mason
Br1dge Call {304) 773 5978
7-6 3t c

•f

SIDING-SOFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

5-8·1 mo .

Middleport
5 30-1 mo.

•s

~Ei&lt;E 1 ~ts

A~~N~~~'t;~

John St., Next To
Grade School
992-2549 Syracuse, 0 .

1971 350 CL Honda , Phone 99 2

- v ----------------

FI&lt;DM E!W.K

Blown onto Walls &amp; AHies
STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT

BEAUlY SAWN

ROOFING

for Sale

8 WEEK o ld baby ch1ck s Cal l
843 29 11 or 949 38 36
7 8 3tc

CARPENTRY
WUI&lt;K.
Ce il1n g, pan €'l 1ng . floorm g,
et c Phon e 992 2759
6 211 27 t c

~ HITTI~

Pnm erQY

f'h ll92 -'2114

~D 1D

Blown
Insulation Services

lOLA'S

Roofing
Siding · I
Complete
Home I
Maintenance.

- - - ---------- -- ' s

Employment Wanted

\Jr\t ''""

SMiTH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

FREE EstiMATES

Merle Norman
Cosmetics

[WE DO:

Construction
and Plumbing

Want~

7-7- \ mo

Does your home
require any of these
I services?

YOUNG rabbits for sa l e ,
R e edsvt l l e Phone 378 6261
7-a 7tc

CAS H p o
for all mak€'s and
model s of mob il e hom es
Phon €' area code 614 423
953'1
4 13 tfc

Open 9-5 Wed. through 'Sun .
Ph . 667 -J858

Evenings 742 -4902
7-7-1 m o .

BORN LOSER

Nathan Biggs
R•d•ator Specia~i_s1

Rt . 7, Tuppers Plains , 0.
Shop Us Last &amp; Save

Ph. 992-7601

BE A
"SENTINEL

On
Lincoln Hill
Pomeroy and
in Syracuse
Phone 992-2156
TODAY

Fr om the largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
smalles t Heater Core .

"At Caution Light.,

ALl-WEAntER

PORTA-COOL"'
ROOM-to-ROOM

ONE large trailer Jot. gas,
water, electricity available .
Htgh St , Middleport . Phone
99 2 2864 .
7 6 3tc

VIOL~NT

ALL N&amp;;6ATIII/E.I

6-11-1 mo.

BARGAIN CENTER

We Carry

19 73 CHF.VROLET Imp ala
Custom, air cond AM &amp; FM
8 Tra c k , excel l en I co ndillon .
Ph one 992 7485
7 1 5t c

Wanted To Buy

CO UNTRY
Mobtle
H ome
Park , Rf 33 , ten mtles north
of Pomeroy Large lots wit h
con cre t e pat ros , St d ewa lk s,
runners an d o ff s tr eet
parkmg Phon e 992 7479 .
12 31 tfc

TYPE WAS SO

f!&gt;ECAUSE 1T WAS

KUHL'S

Liab1lity Insurance

~

rURN ap t 5 room s and bath ,
n1ce large yard , ba th a n d 1 " ·
390
So ut h
Sec ond
St ,
M •d dl e p or t . a dult s on l y
P h one 992 52e2 evenmgs
'
5 2 1 tf c

REAll:ZE THAT MY

REACTION TO VOUR

FORO Pt c kup truck , 32. 000
m des Phon e 99 2 56 12
7 8 Jtp

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

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

TO A PICTURE OF YOU}

Guaranteed
appliances,
used furniture at

\Onyl s ld1ng, aluminum
siding, pat 1o covers, storm
windows,
kitchen s,
bathrooms and garages .

197) DU ST ER , br own ml;:rd t
fl ake w tth whtte st r1p e Ai r
c ond!l to n ed ,
p s,
p .b ,
auto mat 1c tr ansm tssio n .
75 , 000 m ties , 340 mopar
enc.p n e , am fm r adio , good
c on di t1on Call 99 2 7766 a ft er
5 p m
7 8-6tc

PAINTING 10Side and oul , 1974 YAMA H A
360 MX
free est1mates Phon €' 992
Phone
3759 or 667 365 2
37
17
- -- 7 2 5tp
7 3 6tc
TR A IL ER, sp ace , all ut i l it1es ,
c h ea p Phone 992 -5535
1973 KAWA SA K I . 350 B1g
6 29 lfc R EM OD ELIN G .
Plumbm g ,'
hor n Engtne · ,n t op shape ,
heatmg an d all types of
good r u bber , and 3 b 1k e
g e n era l
repatr
Wo rk
tr a i lers Phon e 992 7 110
J BEDRM 65x 12 mobile home
guaranteed
20 year s ex
7 2 6tc
fo r ren~ . util1t1es paid ,
perience
Phone 992 2409 '
- - - - - - - -----l oca t ed tn Burli ngham Ca'll
5 1 If
992 775 1
r SWEE T co r n and potato es for
7 1 tfc _ __ - - - - - - - - - - - - sa le at Dav1d Yosts, R t 338,
WIL L do babysitting 409 W
Great Bend, Ohto
Matn St , P omeroy Phone
J 1\Nb J RO O-M furn tS hed a n d
7- 6 3tp
99 2 509'1
unfurnished
a partm ent s
7-7 6t c
Phone 992 5&lt;13 4
REG Angus hetfers, bred or
__ __ - - .,/4 12 11c
open Call Bill W1He. Rock
Sp r1 n g s 992 2769
PRIVATE m€'et1ng room for
7 1 6tc
any organizalton , ph one 992
USED wb te r ·hau l ing tank
J97 5
Approx .JOO gal l on s Contact
3 11 tf c
H€-nry W el ls , 99 2 3652 or
Doris Woodyard , 992 5519
A PT li ke new . 3 rooms , w rth
alter 5 p m
l a r ge b a th , tabl e t op r a nge ,
7 6-Jtp
large c loset E as t Mam S l ,
P omeroy See to apprecrate
P ho ne 992
Phon e Ga llipof l s during day , USE D camper
5502
J 46 7699, eve ninos 44 6 9539
7 8 3tc
159 95
" 10 tfc
- ---------.-- - - - - - . - . - c::·~c, ,
I 39 95
!RAILER spac-e, 1 mil e from ! 000 BTU
ic e bo xP. s, ·
Pomeroy
Phone 99 2 5856 . OLD fur ~rt ure ,
C..nly 431 b
brass
Beds,
or
complete
5-2-tfc
her mod els
households
Write M
oon sa te.
Mtller. Rt . 4, Pomeroy ....
•'
4 RM
apt w1th wa ll to wall
Ohio Call 992 ·7760.
',
ca rpet. 10.4 Spr1ng Ave,
10-7-74
Pom eroy Call 992 ·5908
- - - - - - - ----=-=--=-6 22 li e

-

DON'T KIP ..,. THAT JERK
'!OURSELF! DR. KLUTZ DIDN'T '

!5REATE5T EMOTIONAL REACTION

CASH 'N CARRY
SAVES US 's oo

J6HNSON
REMODELING

YARD Sa l e . July 10 and 11th,
Ra tn or shine. Third St ,
Sy r a c use on R t 124 Hou rs
10 a .m ttl I 8 p .m Cloth1ng.
d tshes . tools , h1Qh c ha 1r ,
sc hoo l desk, wall tel €' phone ,
wooden bowlS , 1runk , olher
m 1sc 1tems , ant1 QU€' S, and
co ll ec tible s
"" H OUS-E KE E PER . m u st ltvc
7 6 Jtp:
1n : t ar m home If 1nterested .
wr1te to M r
.H o l l1e E
- --------------YARD Sa t e, July 13, a ll day
St archer , R t
I, Box 114,
Drshes ,
avon
bo ttles,
Portland , Oh10 45770
m ISce ltan eo u s
Refresh
6 '1 5 12tp
men-ts , So ld by Me i gs Co H
S From SR 7 turn off at F 1ve
Points onto Flat Woods
Road Follow si gns
7 8 4t p

For Rent

. IT TURNED OLJT I 5 HOWJ:D THE '

'

Lost

TU'tSDAY ..IULY t, 1_975
J ::JO-.OM Life To Live 13; Lucy Show 6; Match Game
8,10; The Romagnolls' Table 20; Folk Guitar 33.
~:011-Mr . Cartoon 3; ·1 DrHm of Jeannie~ ; Somerset
15; Gilligan's Island 6; Musical Chairs 8; Sesame
StrMt 20,33; Movie "From The Earth to the Moon"
10; Mike Douglas 13.
~ : 30-Bewltclled 3; MeN Griffin ~; Moll Squad 6;
Mickey Mouse Club 8; Bonanza 15.
,
5101&gt;-FBI 3; Lucy Show 8r Mister Rogers' Neigh- ,q
borhood 20,33; Ironside 13.
S:30-News 6; Andy Griffith I ; Get Smart 15; Electric
Comoany 20,33. ·
6:GO-News 3,~,8,10;13, 15; ABC New 6; Sesame Street
20; Cetch-33 33,.
•
,
6:30-NBC News 3,~. 15; ABC News 13; Bewitched 6;
CBS news 1,10; Lilias, Yoga end You 33.

..

.CAPT A1N
. EASY

Phone
992-3313

Also Repatrs on All
Riding Tr.ac1ors
08 Locu St .
M1ddl e
Ohio

Phone 992 5682 or
992-7121

XL T Tr1 m , P. st eeri ng , w h 1te-w all tires, rad io, li ke new

7 2 6t c

YARD SALE
e ve r y Thu r s
day , Frtday and Sa t urday ,
qua'r ter
· mtle
lr om
L af\gS vl lle o lf De x ter Road
Fo l low t he s 1gn s Phone H2

and
Small Appliance .
Repair

Ground

top .

;

A 30-MILE ZGNE.

Washer &amp; Dryer

Sales &amp; Service
992-9092

and
Automobile
Transmission
Repair

4-doo r , loca l car, a rr condrtJon ed, full eq u rpm enf .

1970 NOVA V-8 CPE .

WILKINSON
SMAI,L ENGINE

Roger Hysell's
Garage

'

I

SLOW DOWN,THIS IS

Business Services

_

SI&lt;95

9&lt;19 .1609

Yard Sale

_

-

•

I

- ~--

.....

Notir"

NOW selli rt'l:ol t=u ll er
Brush
Produ c ts, phone 992 34 10
1 24 ttc

4

L, _

.

•,

;

Pomeroy
OF
QI:JALITY Motor Co.

11

Ev ery day I mi ss you more
And WI Sh tha t you could tJlavc
stayed
Th e flow ers now are in fr ee
b l oom
But so o n th e sn o w wt ll fly
1 know you ar e safe from all
th e cold .
In t llat man s 1on m th e s ky
D lt d alway s t aught u s r1ghl
from wrong ,
And wh er e to put ou r failh llnd

-

2 SIGNS

year s

2 BEDROOM trader , $27 per
week , ut ilii1 €'S pa1d Phone
PUBLIC NOTICE
992 3324
Notr c i' rs he r eby g i ven that
7 6-tfc
on th e 16th day of J uly 1975 at 7
PM a pub l ic hear ing w i ll b€' 3 - BEoRM -h~us~ - -u n
held on the budget prepared
furnish€'d Also. 1 furnish€'d
by
th e
Olive
Townshtp
ap t Phone 99 2 2780 or 992
Tru s tees
~ .
3432 .
Such ea rH'lg , w i ll be h€'!d at
th e office of t he Trus tees

PUBLIC IIIOTICE
NOTICE OF HEARING
OF BUDGET OF .

•. I

Dad , Ju l y 1S her e again

'-- ---- --- - .....L---

Whit t 234, Edd ie Whitt 189 .
. Women : D l~n a Whitt 182,

'
· ·
· ··
·
• Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Tuesday. J'\lf8,1~5

'

Auto Sales ·

IN L O VING memory o t Riley
S Mantey who passed away
J uly 7, 1964

-a nd victim revisited

r.

Dauv Selltinel

_

For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds

· TaM TIEDE

'.

I ,

\

22)
Do n 't champion an unpopular ,
c au se to d ay regardless of how '
stro ngl y ., J u feel about 11 Wart ·
lilt th e odd s are more m your •
favor

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. •
21)/ Your " marker s" may be

ca l e d rn today on ob ligatiOns ~
to 1two different pa rt1 es Do
what yo u c a n to c lea r th1ngs up

now
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . .
19) Try n ot t'o tel o thers ·
pressu re you 1nto dec iStons
!hat, are ag amst you r be tt er
1udgme nl A 'tlrm " No IS better
th,:tn a weak 'Yes "

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 19) .
It's not a go od day to cha nge
prov e n wo r k ro utrn es An
opera t tonal ct1ange cou ld
prove t o ba t h e l o ng way :
ar o un d

PISCES •(Feb. 20· March 20)
,Yo u re luc ky to day but only
wtt h1 n ce rl a rn bound s Don I
take an y f oo lt sh rjrsks or .,
c hances
--

~YOUr
~Birthday
July 9, 1975

A c areer opportunrty comes u
you r way thiS: year , but it will
on ly be a door· opener What · ·
you make of 11 will depend ·
upon how drlrgently you res - ...
pond an d ho w eell you ' re
prepared
' NE WSI'I\ PER ENTE RPRISE ASS N 1

•

�I'

I

-.'

I

'

/

......

•,

.'

.'
-{

'

Cos t of the tw n-tmit plant is
111 excess of $600 millin11 .

General James M. Gavin
power plant~ s ituated he r'e rm
the .Ohio River midway be-

Appr(JximHtely 15 pe r eenl of
tha i a n)ount wa s spen t for i:tir
and water polluti on CDn trol
and Mid- · equipm~n t . namely :

dleport-Pomer~JY. · is in fu ll ·-· Elec trustn li c: precipital.urs

HOSPITAL NEWS

pany.

and opera tion of this plant' not

" The deVelopment of the
M (!' ig s mi n.etrto ·pr ovide

r 1nly

(;nvin 's c oal
cus tomer s

effect on the econ"my, locally
a nd throughout the Ohio
Power service territory . We

as.."'w·es uur
that
fuel

has had 1 but will continue to hav e, a beneficial

reqtti rernents will be met
eff i c icr1 tly
and

are

co nfident

in · the

Holzer Medlcal Ceoter
(Discharges, July 7)
Brenda Adrian, Sharon
Bailey , Debra Bradshaw ,
James Cline, Matthew
Collins, }1rs. Sherman
Crabtree and infant son, Mr~.
Michael Dameron and infant
son, Nellie. Eblin, Gary
Exline, Wendy Gatewood,
Paul Harris, Alice Hoschar,
EWlice Houston, John Lewis,
Rosa Martin, Mrs. Darrell
Nickels and infant son, Elsie
Pfeasant, Jennifer Robinson,
Mrs. Roger Warren and infant son, Cornie Williams.
(Births)
Mr.. and Mrs. William .
Albtight,
a . daughter,
Wellston; Mr. and Mrs.

are des igned to re move 9!1. 7
pe r ('CIIt &lt;&gt;f lhc fl y ash par-

econ omica lly," according to

foreseeable future · that . no

the utility official.

businesses or industries

1.3-milli on-kw gene r at in g
Wlits has ju~ t been pla ced in

ficl(' s that result fr om the
bw·ni ng of coa l

" The origi na l cos t est im ate
for the plant whe:1 con s truc-tion started in March
1971 was $488-nullion." Mr .
Rien n oted . " The actual cos t

s• rv e will have to close down
and no jobs will be los t due to
a shortage or e lectric power,
thanks to the power output of
Gavin Plant and other

of $600-million is attributable

generating s tations operated

..to the ravages of infl;;~:tion ,

by' Ohio Power Company. "
The plan l,is named for Lt.
Gen. James M. Gavin, U. S.
Army tR~tired ). who during David Saunders , a son,
World War 11 was com- Jackson.
mandPr of the 82nd Airborne
Division. He personally led
his paratroopers on their
history-making drop behind

se rv ice.

Its

operational sta tus raises Ohiu
Power Company' s generati ng
capability to ~.9 million kw

-

The 1.10 :~-fool stac k

nouncem c nt, Frank Bien,
executive vice president of

which se rves both Wlils puts
e mi sshm s into the
upper atmosp he re where th e
~ascs arc dtluted '(nd
di s pt:'rsed, e limi nati ng h.arm fuJ &lt;:onl'cnlrations at g ruund

Ohio Power, said. " Addition

lt•vcl.

In

ma kin g

the

an-

gaS(&gt; I )lJ S

lncludirlg the in cr eased cost
e nv ir onm e ntal equip-

,,f

ment. "

of thi s unit will he lp us ensure ·
- Two cooling lOwer s 1 one
our 575, 000 eustomers in Ohio fur e&lt;-~c h uni t l crea te a closedan ample an d d epefldable d rcui t cooli ng system for the

supply of electric power at

plant's operati on. Purpose of

leas t through the remai nder
of this deca de "
He added that some other
sections of t he nation a re not
in such comfortable situation,

the cooli ng tuwars is to
preven t the return of warmed
water tn the river after it ha s
• s team m
.
coo led
t he condenser.

so far as power capacity is
concerned. It is generally
agreed within the elec tri c
utility industry that certain
areas of the country .will

NOW THAT THE POWER
plantts in ftul operati on. it is
expected to burn about eight
rnillwn tons of coal per year.
Most of that coal will come

experience

b lac kout s,

fr um a se ries of mines be ing

brownouts or some form of
electricity curtai lments by
1980 or before. he said .

developed north uf the plan t.
by an Ohio Power subsidiary,
Southe rn Ohio Coal Com-

He said that it is fortunate
for til e ' company and its
c ustomers that construction

of the plant started ' when it
did . " If we began building
Gavin Plant today , instead of
costing $600 million, it would
carry a price tag of about $1
billion," Bfen sa id .
He pointed out that during
construction of the plant,
employm ent peaked at 4,025
in February, 1974, and that
cons truction payrolls totalled
$150 million . Almost 300
people presently are on the
permanent operating payroll.

we

Contributions
to be inVited
.

German lines in Normandy

un D-Day, 1944. A director
since 1961 of American
On SWlday, July 13, ther e
Electric Power Company,
parent com pany of Ohio will be 84 volWlleers conPower, he now is chairman of . tacting friends and neighbors
Arthur D. Little, Inc., an in Middleport, Pomeroy ,
Cheshire
and
internationally known in- Racine ,
Rutland
to
acce
pt
co
ndustrial
research
and
trrbutions for the 1975
management
consulting
company in Cambridge , "March Against Muscular
Dystrophy" .
Mass .
Volunteers will be idenBien said , "Construction
tified byofficial Jerry
Lewis marcher badge, and
brochures and receipts will
be available . Contributors
are reminded that con tributions are tax deductible.
FWlds raised will be used to
Mills for the , past · six the James M. Gavin Plant as
months has served as reron a boilermaker and at one provide authorized patient
investigator for the G.allia time was employed at Bob care for those patients in
County Prosecuting Al- Evans Farms. The son of Meigs CoWlty as well as to
help defray costs for the
torney's Office .
Jack L. and Eleanor Mills of
A native of Gallia CoWlty, Gallipolis, he is married and national research program
maintained by the Muscular
he graduated from Gallia has two sons.
Dystrophy Association . For
Academy Hi gh School and
Mills was appointed in
additional
information
Marshall University with a accordance with the terms of
B.S. Degree in Education . the city charter of Gallipolis. · persons may contact the
Mills served three years in an He will serve at the discetion MDA District Office at 4770
airborne division of the U. S. of the city commission. Indianola Ave., Colwnbus.
Army and was a squad Terms of his salary were not
leader.
disclosed, Willer was paid
Prior to becoming a felony $17,300 per year.
AGNEW ARRESTED
investigator,, Mills worked at
BALTIMORE (UP!) - The
29-year-&lt;Jld son of former
Vice President Spiro T.
Agnew has been arrested on a
trespassing charge stemming
from what the chief witness
against him says was a
"Peeping Tom " incident.

an

Dick Mills new city manager
c

Com- Willer wrote, "As mutually
Gallipolis ' City
missioners today appointed agreed under Section B of my
RichardT. (Dick) Mills, 32, employment agreement with
of 19 . Evans Hei ghts, the City of Gallipolis, I resign
Gallipolis, city manager ' my employment with the City
replacing Paul Willer who of Gallipolis, effective this
resigned.
'
da,le, July 8.
In a letter submittP.d to
Willer came to Gallipolis
John Allison, President of..the two years ago from Lake
Gallipolis City Commission, Orion, Mich. , where he
served in a similar capacity.
He has been in management
10
years .
1
Under the terms of Willer's
' / ,I till W \id
contract signed with the

MASON DRIVE-IN
;, ( .r '•Hill

Nrq~lllv

TONIGHT

Double Feature
"CAPONE"
' Rated R'
Plus
" ZARDOZ 11
' Rated R'

MEIGS THEATRE
TONIGHT
AIRPQRT 1975
-~~ . f.lechriic:alor}
Based on the novel by
Arthur Hailey .
"Rated PG "

Show starts al7:00 p.m.
'

former

city

commission

composed of Richard Carter,
C. H. McKenzie and Wymond
Bradbury, the city manager
could leave on his own if he
desired to take another
position, could leave by
mutual agreement of him and.
the city commission or could
be terminated .
Under : the codified ordinance form of goverpment
for the City of Gallipolis, the
city manager serves at the
discretion of the commission .
During Willer's tenure, the
city began work on its new
muni cipal pool, secured
grants for a new water
treatment
plant,
a
recreational
complex,
developed off-streh parking
and began re-modernization
of the city's traffic light
~vstem .

--

HSTOMEET
The Meigs CoWlty Hwnane
Society will meet Thursday at
7: 30 p.m . at the Middleport
Village Hall. The public is
welcome .

&lt;c:::::~-

@

19nbvNEA. Inc~(6~

"Of course, we're delighted that you have all A's
and B's in your college courses, but we've just
read tliat so does almost everybody else!''

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WE HAVE
MOVED

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The Downing-Orilds Agency

•

IS ...
•

is Meigs County's oldest
and largest insurance agency.
After 108 years at the same
location we have moved to
155 North 5econd,

...

Middleport.
(l'fonnerly Grover Studio)

._ Conie IIi and See Us For All _
Your Insurance Needs .- . '

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Uotrodde~s plan

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Conservatzves

8 event schedule

surround Ford

1-.

.

operation.
The sound of tw o identtca l

commercial

.

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J. l

••

Gavin Plant ·at full go
tween Gallipolis

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_8,--- The Daily Sentinel, Middlepor t-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, July 8, 1975

· CHESHIRE · The
2,600,00o - kilowalt , coal-fired

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Downing~Childs

,}'gency l.nc.

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES Mrs.
BobbyStargill, Beaver, Ohio;
Mrs . Richard Garfield,
Pomeroy; Mrs. Kenneth
Jeffers, ·Southside ; Mrs .
Elmer Haleny, Buffalo;
Daniel Bush, Gallipolis ;
Dolly Lockhart, Crown City ;
Mrs. Jason Sturgeon, Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Donald
Sprague, Tuppers Plains .

•

McKenzie

·ber Federal .Depcis;t Insurance .

•.-o.ooo

...

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ONE OF THE MOST UNUSUAL groups to stop at the Big Bend C. B. Club Holiday break
at the state parks on U. S. 33 over the 4th was a caravan of five Model A cars. The group , of
Dearborn, Mich ., had traveled 1,800 miles. Members of the Big Bend C. B. Club are thanking
Holsum and Betsy Ross Baker y , Royal Crown Bottling Co., Roger Hysell Garage, Rutland
Dept. Store, Rutland Furniture Store, AnteMa Specialists, Powell 's Super Val'!., Kroger
Store, Fred Berson , Evelyn's Grocery, the Churches of Christ at Bradbury, Brjidford,
Rutland and Keno for donation s making the operation possible.

2,000 PERSONS SERVED - Approximately 2,000 persons took advantage of the July 4,
5, 6 Big Bend C. B. Club Holiday Safety break. The club served coffee, donuts, pop and
cookies to the motorists that stopped at the stqte parks on U.S. 33. A total of 357 man hours
was contributed. Motorists from California and Alaska stopped at the parks. Above, some
girls, mPillbers ofa ball team "on the road" took advantage of the free drinks and food .

•

enttne
Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-MIISOII Area

VOL. XXVII

NO. 50

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WEDNESDAY, JULY 9. 1975

PRICE 15'

a

A budget calling for $2,553,080 In 1976 was approved py the only mustaches.
Meigs Local BOard of Education Tuesday night at its regular
Resignations were acmeeting, the last with Supt. George Hargraves.
cepted from Wendy Frieder,
The budget will be submitted to the county budget com- teacher ; Russell Mo ore ,
mission by July 20.
jWlior high school principal ,
Fred Ruth, assistant band
director; Austin Phillips, bus
1976 budget P.,oposal for Meigs Local School District
driver , and Willard Miller,
General Fund
welding teacher .
Anticipated balance, January 1, 1976, $137,484.38
Jolane Curtis was aprotal anticipated reveaue, 1976, $2,550,000 _
pointed as a teacher of
Anticipated Expendltures
French and English, Greg
. AdmlnlstralloJI,. f.74,!!8!!McCall as Title I coordinator,
lnstructlon; $1,533,000 .
libraries, $30,500.
and Sam Crow as gralle 9
. football coach .
'Transportation, pupils, $194,000
other auxiliary agenclesJ $385,000
The board appointed the
Operation of scbool plant, $270,400.
following as substitute bus
drivers,
pending
cerMaintenance of school plant, $52,700
capital outlay' $12,500
'Total estimated expenditures, $2,5S3,080
Anticipated balance, January 1, 1977, $134,404.38.

·-··

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El.berfelds-, ln Pomeroy

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By United Press International

WASHINGTON - CLOSE ALLIES OF FORMER·
California Gov. Ronald Reagan w!ll.establish a Reagan-for- , .
President Co/nmittee this month to convince him to challenge
President Ford for the GOP nomination.
.
· Sources close to the California conservative said the
conunittee's formation will be announced by the end of the
month In Washington, although- Reagan has still made no
decision on whether he_will seek the nomination. Nonetheless,
Reagan strategists told UPI Tuesday, the fonner ~ovef110~ has
told supporters he is "neither encouraging nor d1scouj-agmg"
their efforts. ·
' ·
One key figure In the group doing the groundwork for the
committee, who did not wish to be identified, said Reagan will
decide to run by the end of the sununer.

NEW F ACE•LIFT - The building which houses the Green Lantern on the first floor and
the office of attorney James B. O'Brien on the second floor is being painted by Sail} Pickens.

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. CbLUMBUS --'- LT. GOV. RICHARD F, Celeste is_ planr_Ung
to SJJQIIS!Ir a ~ries of Cj)ntests In small .and med1~..s1zed
counties to encourage cutting goverrunent red tape. Prtze for
· the best suggestion will be a $25 U..S. Savings Bond. .-_
. ·
· Celeste said ~esday he will put on ·a "Red Tape CUtl!Dg
ComJ)etition" 'lit Democratic party _boo~hs at 36 COIJI!tY f~trs,
Starting with the Jackson County Falf this month. _A bipartisan
panet:of local civic· and goveniment leaders will judge tbe
competition in each county. · . •
_ .· . .
.
· · ·If .the idea works, the lieutenant governor satd, 1t may be
expanded next year . . ~ · ·
·. '
' •· ~ .
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_
·. WASHIN(jTON - 'I.'HE HOUSE WAYS AND , MEANS
Committee is enterlng,ll)to a revision of tax laws with onlr. one
decision almost certain: current lower Individual tax rateli will
hll ·extended into next year.
··
Treasury Secretary William· Simon told the committee
·
Continued on Page 14

one for Supt. George
was taken.
Downing-Childs Insurance ·Hargraves who expressed his
Agency was again contracted gratitude to the board and the
for student accident in- former boards for the opportunity to work in this area.
surance .
The board, having received He said the work had been a
reports that the auto shop's challenging and demanding
request for supplies was 'ell'perience, and that he
overestimated, met with wishes only the best for the
Vocational Director Ray school district in the future :
Attending were Hargraves,
Goodman and will meet again
McComas,
members Hoover,
auto
mechanics
wlt!l
teachers. _
Kin g, Joe Sayre , Carol
Pierce
, and Bob Snowden,
The board also met with
John Beaver, in charge of and Goodman, Willard
buses and bus maintenance , Miller, Beaver, and Printo review the present con- cipals Robert Morris and
James Diehl, and Asst. Supt.
dition of buses.
Charles
Dowler .
The meeting was the last

SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Village Council Tuesday
evening gave Oris Hubbard,
supervisor · of maintenance,
authority to regulate use of
the mWlicipal park during
day light hours - 8 a .m . to 6
p.m . - and Mayor Herman
London announced the village
ha s been accepted into the
National Flood Insurance
Program effective July 2,
1975.
Acceptance in the flood
insurance program means
- that property owners are
eligible to buy flood insurance protection at - affordable federally-subsidized
rates, offering more extensive coverage under the
expanded
program
authori-zed' by the 1973 Flood
Disaster Protection Act.
Since flood insurance is ,
now available, the law .
requires that it must b~
purchased by owners of
property in areas identified
as flood-prone by the Ho\lsing
Urban Development (HUD ) . .
In order to be eligible for
virtually all forms of federal
or federally related financial
assistance for building
· purposes in those areas.
This would include FHA or
VA mortgages, loans from
the S111all Busin~ss Ad-

any federally regulated or
supervised banks and savings
and loan institutions.
While flood insurance is
available to all residents of
the commWlity, J . Robert
Hunter, federal insurance
administrator, emphasized
L~ t the federal economic
sanctions against buildings .
assistance will not apply to
property outside the danger

subsidized rate of 25 cents per
$100 coverage. The rate goes
to 40 cents per $100 for nonresidential building.
The " contents of all
residential buildings can be
insured up to $10,000 per unit
at 35 cents for $100 coverage
and the rate goes to 75 cents
per $100 for the contents of
non-residential structures up
to a maximilln of $100,000 in
zones .
coverage per unit.
Under
the
expanded
In other business council
program, broader coverage discussed the possibility of
ca n be obtained for all entering into its own
buildings and their contents. sanitation service. The first
The limit of insurance for step for COWlCi! would be to
single-family homes is now purchase a dwnp truck for
$35,000 and $100,000 for other garbage pick up.
residential
and
nonCounc il also discussed
residential building ~. at the
Conti nued on page 14
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ministration , or loans from

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Budget adopted by Eastern District
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AND-AT .THE MECHANIC STREET WAREHOUSE ·

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WASHINGTON- GOVERNMENT INVESTIGATORS say
It costs the taxpayers $84 million a year to provide junior Nary
and Marine officers with servants to fix ·their meals, do thelf
laundry, make their beds and shine their shoes. The G~neral
Accounting Office, in a report released by Sen. William
Proxmire, D-Wis., said the officers get cut-rate meals for
which -the average check is one-third the cost of buying and
·
preparing the food.
Proxmire said the GAO has identified 8,416 enllsted men 5 429 stewards a hoard ship and 2,987 at shore Installations - in
addition to 500 servants who are assigned to generals and
admirals. "The Navy and Marine Corps are the only services
which use servants for lower-ranking officers,". Proxmire
said. "The Army and Air Force have no s~r program.':
"The $84 million provides Nary and Marme Corps officers
_ with the pr(vileg\!!1 of a 'closed mess' - meaning _a spedal
cutrate food service using tax dollars - and free ma1d service
on shore and ship," Proxrilire said.
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Bargains
In Very Department Ira
.
.

FREE CUSTOMER fARKJNG -ON SECOND STREET

has a chance at the
nomination will depend .a
great deal · on the performance of the President
between now and next summer ," McClure told UP!. "!
don 't think the President has
an automatic right to the
1
nomination that precludes
someone else from seeking
the nomination.
"!think the question of wbo
will get the nomination is still
an open question," McClure
said . "! don 't mean to imply
that I'm opposed to Jerry
, Ford. It's still a loll! time
· Wltil the convention next
year."
Ford did not refer direetly
to Watergate -the scandal
·that thrust him into the
presidency - !&gt;ut said he
would conduct "an open and
aboveboard campaign."
''I want every delegate and
vote I can get ... within tbe
spirit and the letter of the
law, " Ford said .
He named these campaign
aides : the director, Howard
" Bo" Callaway, former ,
Georgia congressman and
Army secretary; the finance
chairman, David Packard,
form er deputy defense
secretary; the campaign
treasurer, · Robert Moot,
former Pentagon camptroller; and a campaign
adviser,
Dean
Burch,
Republican national chairman during Sen. Barry
· Continued on page 14

Park control assigned

',

I!News . . _in Briefsll

NOW IN. PROGRESS

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·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :::::::;:;.;.;::-:-:·!·!·!·!·!·!:!:!·!:!:!:!::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::

ANNUAL JULY CLEARANCE SALE

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rey, Ramona Hawk, Meriwn the COWlty board of education
Hoffm an, Adeline Snowden, which makes Martin Luther
Diana Phillips, Marv el King Day a school holiday,
Quill en , Marie Birchfield , and approved participation in
and Shirl ey Priddy .
the Southeastern Ohio Sp~&gt;cial
A year's leave of absence Education
Regional
was gran ted Phyllis Hackett Resource Center for the 1975to attend graduate school . 76 school year .
Member Wendell Hoover
Clerk Lee McComas read a
moved that the board ap- letter from Carl R. Hysell ,
prove the leave, but the juvenile officer, asking that a
motion got no second . After smoking area be reinstated at
further discussion, Virgil the high sc hool. No action
Kin g made the motion and was taken.
Hoover · seconded it, and it
A letter from Mary Carolyn
passed Wlanimously .
Wiley , kindergarten teacher
The board approved the at P omeroy ·Elementary ,
revised school calendar fr om asked for the return of Lois
H~ wley a s an aide . No action

In other business:
The high school student council requested that beards be
allowed to be worn during the school year, but the board voted
unanimously to continue-the present dress code which allows

Elberfelds In PomeroY

'

tifi c ati on : J ohn Ar no tt,
Roger Black , Warren Bla ck,
Virgil Carl , Raymond Co tterill , _ Donna
Daniel s,
Charlotte Dillard , Co ra
Loftis.
Beverly
Long,
Charlotte Marriner , Carl
Morris , Leland Parker, Sue
Smith, Amos Tillis, Harold
White, and Lee Wood.
Appointed as subs titute
cooks were Trecie Abbott,
Alma Beller, Sylvia Neece,
Addalou Lewis, Eva Milliron ,
Dorothy
Long , Connie
Quivey, Katherine Powell,
Ella Southern, Ruby King ,
Joan Kaldor, Millie Hwnph-

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Hy WESLEY G. PIPPERT
· WASHINGTON (UP! ) President Ford has begWl his
own bid for election to the
White House by renouncing a
Watergate-type
campaign
and assemblin g". a group of
largely conservative, Pentagon-&lt;Jriented campai gn
m'des.
Although a committee to
seek
th e . Republican
nomination for Ronald
Reagan is expected to be
formed this month , there was
an air of optimism at the
White House as Ford an"
noWlced his candidacy .
One aide, who asked to
remain Wlidentified, said the
White House "is not the least
bit disturbed by the Reagan
camp" and "things are going
just beautifully ."
The three-minute public
announcement in the Oval
Office Tuesday was no surprise. The "President Ford
Committee" In June filed a
statement required to raise
campaig n funds tantamounl' to a legal declaration of candidacy.
Sen. James McClure , RIdaho, a conservative spokesman and chairman of the
Repu~lican Senate Steering
Comrhittee,
said
that
although
Ford
had
strengthened his claim on the
nomination,
the
announcement had not block,ed
out other contenders.
I "Whether any other person

•

Meigs Local '75-76 budget set at $2,553,080

Free enterprise in the hospital room

The MClin Store, Alu1e~ and Warehouse

'

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use

miles, issued
1,370tickets
collected
$3,439
from and
the
parking meters. The police
•
car
was serviced twice.
Advertising the convenience of a check·
Ralph Werry reported $549
lrig account In thla day and a1e eeems
had been collected from .old
kind of allly-but there's still many pf
parking tickets · billed by
Captain Henry Werry of the
you out there that are using that old·
··
police fore.
fashioned stuff called 'cash. You know,
Norma GOodwin, through
you don!t need a.lot of money to open a
the mayor, ·asked if council
coWd
control the rates of the
checkln'g account-a11d you'll love the
local cab company . Mrs.
convenience!
·
Goodwin, a florist, has the
cab operators walk the
WALK-UP TELLER WINDOW AND
flowers
frQm her shop to the
AUTO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
· flinerai home which is only a
FRI. -EVENINGS5 To7 P.M• .
shor,t distance .. At first they
charged 50 cents, then in"THE FRJ.t:NDLY BAJVK"
creased to 75 cents, then to·$1.
Council · noted that . they
RGit
could not control the cost but
·it was suggested that when
. she needs the service, call tlie
police department and they
I
. would do the job free.
..
4 \ Attending were MayQr 1
Smith, RaJph Werry, LQu
..,
··"---- -- -- ----~ Osborne; John , Manley and ·
William Snouffer, cou·n~il.Jilen; McKenzie·, Henry
(A)rporation
Werry, Web~ter, Legar,
·Edith Sisson , Ph¥llis HenOl~~IT$
INSURED
10 .
.
.
.
.
.
.
nessy, tr~asurer, and Mrs.
Walton, clerk .

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The standard advice given to patients considering which hospital to choose has been
"profit-making no, nonprofit yes."
The concept was·based on the idea that any hospital in business to make a profit, couldn't,
at the same time,also be in the business of taking the best possible care of patients.
Also, the proprietary, or profit-making hospitals, received a had name because they were
often owned by groups of physicians who also staffed them- a situation that could (and often
ASK TOWED
did) lead to conflicts _of interests that caused the patient to suffer both financially and
William Nelson Morris, 38, medically.
·
.
Racine and Robin Annett
Today, however, things have changed ari&lt;l.,~ere is an increasing amount of attention being '
Wills, 18, Pomeroy; John shown toward investor-&lt;Jwned and operated hosplta~. Ownership ol such hospitals has changed
Stewart Thomas, 22, Mid- from Individuals and small groups of giant corpora tlons listed on the major stock exchanges.
dleort, · and Bronwyn Ann
And according to Barron's business and financial weekly, these lnvestor-&lt;Jwned hospitals
Dailey, 21, Middleport.
are the fastest growing segmentofnon-goverruneot health care.
Everybody knows hospitals of all sizes have been notorious for red tai;&gt;e, poor customer
DIVORCE GRANTED
of capital. Because of the bureaucracies that
service, substandar.d food and inefficient
Donna Koehler has been developed In many large nonprofit hospitals, archaic fmancial and management systems often
granted· a divorce 1 om John 'became more firmly entrenched Instead of outmoded.
Koehler.
.
Coupled with booming operating costs the mismanagement has led to real problems.
Hospitals patients may pay more than $200 per day and the hospitals still lose money. Consumers wonder how they can pay more than twice what they would have to shell out for a
SERVICES END
luxury hotel, and still receive poor service and unpalatable meals.
The Bethlehem Baptist
The idea behind the.invi)Stor-&lt;Jwned and operated hospital groups is that the free;enterprise
Church will discontinue system'can return more satisfying patient care at lower costs.'-._
Sunday night services until
For example, nine months after the Lorna Linda (Calif.) Conltnunity Hospital had opened,
further notice.
$700,000 had been lost and the hospital was near bankruptcy. .
But within only two' months after. the hospital's management was taken over by Hospital
Affiliates, one of the larges~ hospital management firms, "the staff was FUt, laboratory contracts
renegotiated, three internal medicine specialists recruited, collections doubled from
·'
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$100,000 to $200,000 and the h~ital was operating in the black," Barron's notes.
The tide is turning, albeit slow, and the dlly may soon come when all hospitals are either
privately
owned .or professionally managed. When that time comes perhaps the patients will
(Continued from page 1)
to
receivo.
me services they are entitled to.
begin
made 68 arrests, drove 4,256 .

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· the outcome of the ·1976
Winston World Championship
Seri
Thes. Winston Series ne:U
yea/will open with the 16th
annual ·winter· nationals at
p
Calif • Jan -2!1-Feb
· om:"win con~lude ·with
1
w:rld Finals at Ontario,
Calif., Oct. 11-10 _
In between, the '76 schedule
.includes the Gatomationals,
Gainesville, F1a., March 12-- 14 . the Springnatlonais,
eoiumbus, Ohio, JWle 11-13;
the
Summernationals,
EnglishiDwn, N.J. ,' July 9-11;
the Grandnatlona!Molson,
Aug . -. · th us
Montrea1'
. ....,; e ..
als India
Us Sept
Nation •
napo .' , ·
U andSethe
Se'
t Fallnationals,
_
11
at e, P · 17 19·

With most of us not even look' 1g, the United States is in the process of picking up a few
additional square miles.
Not many - 246, to be exact. And these divided among 14 islands stretching across 500
miles of open Western Pacific.
·
They are the Northern Marian&lt;!l&gt; since World War II a United Nations Trust Territory
Wlder U.S. administration whose vo~rs '14,000plusof them -have n_ow opted Ina plebiscite
for commonwealth status "in political union with the United States."
The Marianas people may have spoken, but the vote is only a first step in what could be
a lengthy and complicated process of ratification. Next must come presidential and
congressional approval and, eventually, UN Security Council agreement to dissolution of ·the
trusteeship and transfer of full soverengnty to the United States. When and if all this comes to·
pass, around 1980 as expected, it will mark the first major U. S. territorial acquisition since
.
purchase of the Virgin Islands In 1917.
A glance at the state of the islands today might raise questions as to why the Marianans
would want closer association. Claimed by Magellan for Spain ijl1521, the Marianas (with the
exception of Guam, aU. S. possession since the Spanfsh-~erican war) were held successively
by Germany and Japan before passing to the Uni\ed States through conquest In the closing
months of the Pacific war.
The names of the major islands - Saipan, taken by storm In 1944, and Tlnian, base for the
sturation bombing of Japan - still evoke the island&gt;hopping course of that conflict.
Liberation, U. SA;iyle, has turned out to be something less than happiness ever after for
the 14,000 Marianans, however. Under previous rulers, the islands at least had functioning if
primitive economy, bas&lt;:&lt;! on sugar cane and copra . Under U. S. administration, agriculture
has deteriorated and the economy is fu~led primarily by $10 million plus that Washington
pumps Into the islandS'-anmlally. Saipan has been described by some resident Americans as
"an island slum."
Washington's pump-priming is probably what most voters had In mind In favoring commonwealth. Once legally inside the Union, the islands will be eligible for a full range of federal
aid programs from Medicaid to mortgage Insurance. Direct U. ~-expenditure In the isalnds is
also expected to go up to $14 million annually, a clear dollars and cents gain for the Marianans.
On paper, at least .
.
That raises the question, however, of why the United States should want to shell out even
mdre on an existing economic liability. The answer is geosraphy. Five-thousand miles from
California, the Marianas are only 1,500 miles fromthe coast of Asia. Tinian, already openly
earmarked for major troop facilities and potentially an air base, would replace Okinawa and
various U.S. footholds In allied coWltries on Asia's fringe. There would be no question of host
goverrunent changing heart and policy and kindly asking U.S. forces to depart.
The military advantages are cheap at many times the price In Pentagon eyes. They are
also obvious to other eyes. Which may make Security Council acquiescence, necessarily including the Soviet Union and People's China, something more than an automaticformality.
Nevertheless, with the prize in question already firmly under U. S. control, opposition is
Wllikely to develop into an immovable object.
·
And if anyone·should ask whatever became of Manifest ~stiny, the irresistable force that
once devoured a continent, it seems to be alive and twitching out there In the far Pacific.

MIDDLEPORT, ·OHIO

- MIDD...POtrr, 0.
• Ma-2342 -

·
L
NORTH HQLLYWOOD ,
Calif. (UP!) - Bolstered by a
1975 attendance increase ol
-18.1 per cent, the _National
Hot Rod Association Monday
announced . an elght-&lt;&gt;vent
national championship
racing. schedule for next
year, mcluding a -stop at
Colun,tbus, Ohio .
In 76, drivers may earn
po~ts toward .world 1hg
racmg champiOnships m
three categories-top fuel,
fuMy _car and pro stock.
A nmth major event, ~he
Sportsna tionals at Bowling
Green, Ky., May 23-30, does
. cl d
titi
.
no t m u e compe on m
either of those three
·
professwnal
brackets and
thus will have no bearin.l! on

.
Manifest destiny strikes again

-

'155 N. SECOND•ST.

,

A
PERSONAL
CHECKING
·A'CCOU.NT

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS - Agpes
Isaacs, Coolville; Shirley
Rawson, Racine; · Linda
Preston, Rutland; Melinda
Cu.ster, Middleport; Betty
Brooks, Albany; Dayton ·
McElroy, Minersville; Lovie
Watson, Albany ; S~even
Hankla, Cincinnati.
DISCHARGES---= - .James
Reynolds, Alice WiUba.~ger,
CUrtis Smith, Steven Hankla.

.

.

Eastern Local Board of
Education · Tuesday night
adopted the . budget for the
1975'76 school year and hired
. several teachers.
Elotse Boston , clerk,
r~ported that the budget will
be at the school for anyone to
view for . the next 10 days.
The board hired · the
following: Maida Y,ng, an
English and Social Studies
teacher; Joseph . Mi t~hem,
eltomi!'ntary
physical
educati on . te acher and
assistant baseball · and

,.

football coach, . and Duane as bus driver and a~nOWlced . Plains Elementary Schools
Wolf!!, who. was hired e~rlier that there, are three openings and agreed to replac~ the
as . principai and teacher at for regular bus drivers , and locks on the old high school
Ch.e ster. Elementary . and substitute drivers are also building.
head ba~~etball coach at needed:
A thank-you note was '
Eastern'"'i:li.gp School. as
The amen'ded· .school addressed to the board room
. a·!;Sisiant football coach .
· HARTINGER PINS ON THIRD STAR- The United
calendar calls for n~ school the Middler class who used
States Senate confirmed the Pres.ident's . nomination of
Dorothy Myers was named .on Jan . 19, Martin , L~ther the · Riverview . Eleml!ntary
James V. Hartinger to the grade of Lieutenant General,
assistant custodian and 'Janie Kin g Day:
School for Bible school. ·
United States Air · Force, effective July 1,' 1975. ·The
Head! y was hired as
They also approved par- · ~,ttending were Howard
promotion coincided with General Hartmger's being
secretary · to ,John Riebel , ticipating
in
speciaf C&amp;IC!well, president ·of the
made Commander of Tactical Ali- Command's l'jibth Air
superintendent, and assistant education regional program· board ; Oris ' Smith , and
Foree, Shaw AFB, South Carolina. Fellow jet fighter pilot
clerk-treasurer.
and hired I\'IUTray Sheet Dorsel
Larkins , board
and son, First LieutenantJimmer Hartinger, who flies the
1 Th~y
ac cepted
the Metal to repair the roofs at members, John Riebel and
F-106 with the Florida Air National Guard; is showrt
.resignation of Cecil Caldwell the (:hester ·and Tuppers Eloise Boston .
pinning on his father 's third star.
j

,._
I

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